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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-08-05 - Orange Coast PilotIUlll c• YDll lllRllWI DAllY PAPll THURSOAV.AUC.IJ'.,f I 1YB2 OflANGF COUN f Y C Al If OHNIA 25 CENl S Hotel, high rises planned for Mesa ByJOPICADENHEAD o£h 0.-, HM IWI A developer with ties to C.J . Segeratrom & Sona has unveiled reviled plana for a 12-story hotel and three high-rise o ffice buildings south of the San Diego Freeway along Bristol Street in Costa Mesa. Officials of California Pacific Properties submitted the plans to the city for constr uction of a 500-room hotel, three 7-atory offices and a one-atory building on 13.6 acres fonnerly oocupleCl by Montgomery Ward and Co. The latest plan for the South Coast Corporate Center is somewhat d ifferent from one presented in April that called for an 8-story, 350-room hotel and offices ranging from 3 to 8 stories. Although the porUon of the plan call1na for the hot.el aa high as 124 feet exceeds the recently adopted 85-foot limit for the area , local homeowners have indi~ted support for the plan. "It's better than having 30-foot sh ope that will tum into junk in a couple of years," said L ea Thompson, president of th e nearby Brookview Homeowners Association. "We've gone on record In support up to 130 feet. That's great," he added. ''lf they go over 130 feet, then that's another ball gaJne." Thompson said that the homeowner association signed a legal agreem ent to limit future build.Ing heights with California P acific and James Gianuliaa, part-owner of an adjacent four acre parcel. Faced with preuure from developers to increase allowable building heighta the City Council In May adopted the Bristol Street Specific Plan that hiked h eights from 30 to 85 feet south of the freeway. To build above that limit, Callfornia Pacific would have to w in approval for a variance from th e specific plan, said senior city planner Greg Shaffer. One and a half floors of the propotied 12-tJtory hotel will be underground , including the banquet rooms and a portion of the lobby, said Shaffer. "They're trying to get lit t'Vt!rything they can and keep lt as low as possible," said Shaffer. S haffer said the project would not come before the planning commission until September. (See MESA, Page AZ) Harrold's Atomic warhe3d tested election Underground blast s hakes Nevada desert 'invalid' By DAVID KUTZMANN Of h O.ity Pltot Sl•ft Two months ago, Santa Ana a ttorney Dan Charles Dutcher's campaign accusation that West Orange County Municipal Court Judge Joanne Harrold was not a legal resident of the county went unheeded by most voters. On Wednesday, six mon ths after he claimed that Harrold was a resident o f Riverside County, a superior c.'Ourt judge in Sant.a Ana invalidated the June 8 election victory of Harrold and scheduled new balloting in November Harrold is not eligible to run. Judge Ronald Owen's ruling was believed to be u nprEX.'edented -the first time a judge's electJOn m California hac: been ~oided and overturne d because of falsification ol a candidate's documents relating to residency. Judge Harrold, who maintained throughout a week- long trial that she was a legal r esident of Orange County, quickly left Owen's courtroom and declined to comment after the ruling was announced. Dutcher said he was not surprised by the ruling. "(Judge Owen) didn't do what was easy. h e did what was right," the attorney/candidate said. Dutcher, who sued Harrold on the residency issue after the e lection in June. finished a distant second lo the Westminster jurist. Coming in third was Costa Mesa attorney Ronald Nix. Both will face each other agam in November. Harrold's attorney , Eleanor Stegmeier, said an appeal would be filed almost immediately with the 4th Distnct Court of Appeal in San Bernardino. "W e'll definitely appeal , certainly based on the way the judge worded his dec ision." Stegmeier said. Owen, saying that Harrold's ''credibility had been shattered beyond repair," ruled that the re-elected judge was untruthful when she Hlled out a declaration of candidacy Feb i 3 listing Newport Beach as her Orang{' County residence He found instead that her true residence at the time was in Riverside County. Owen said he was conVlnced by the evidence that \;larro ld took up residence at the $2 milli o n h o me o n Ne wpor t Beach's Lido Isle in mid-March after seeing campaign material by Dutcher a ccusing her o{ actually living in R1vers1de County Delly Piiot ~o by l"•trtclt O'Ooftneft FAVORITE PERCH -Gertrude Cooper of Arcadia has been coming to the Huntington Beach pier more than 40 years. She says h er fishing pole dates from 1937, but her hat is newer an d the next catch will tug at the line any minute. Beach • • v1s1tor, 18, rescues fishernJan An 18-year-old beach visitor found herself playing lifeguard this week when a fisherman tumbled o ff the end of the Balboa Pier, striking a piling as he fell to the water. Vernona Fath, a Santa Ana resident and a poli'ce Explorer Scout, took a running jump off the end of the pier and swam to the man, who was floating face- down in the water. Newport Beach lifeguards said the youn,g woman's efforts likely saved Pete Milosavijevic. listed in stable condition W~nesday at Hoag Memorial HospitaJ. Guards said the fisherman was sitting on a railing at the end of the pier at 1 p.m . when he fell backward into the water Tuesday. was f ace-down and wasn't moving . I think he was unconscious. "I turned him over, tipped his head back and he started ,,.l'9. breathe." .I~ Lifeguards said anot<e"'r . pier visitor, Charles Grant, 21 , also jumped mto the water to assist the young woman in her rescue effort. Guards said the Santa Ana woman and the man held the dazed fisherman in the water until a lifeguard boat pulled up. "I've never done anything like this before." the young woman said. Reagan planning 13-day \tacation MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -An underground test of an atomic warhead with a yield many times that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima sent shock waves rolling across the Nevada desert today. Ene r gy Secretary James Edwards and alx>ut 30 reporters witnessed the test, which went off with a muffled b o om precisely at 7 a.m . A ground television camera alx>ut ¥.-mile from the scene was knocked out by the blast . Twenty -one minutes later. a 1,000-foot-wide expanse of desert C'Ollapsed alx>ve the site where the lx>mb had been placed 2, 100 feet underground. The blast site, a desolate expanse oC desert 77 miles northwest of Las Vegas known as Yucca Flat and 100 square miles larger than the state of Rhode Island, is pocked with indentations caused by hundreds of previous underground tests. T he huge, two-story concrete control b uilding 10 miles away shook noticeably in a rocking motion and seismograph needle jumped e rratically when the test was detonated. Edwards sat next to the test controller, who gave the final say on the shot. Department of Energy off1c1als said the test was between 20 and 150 kilotons. s e v e r a l t 1 m e s l h a t 4f t h e 13-kiloton bomb dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, l 945, the ftrst use of the lx>mb on a city. Mmutes after the blast, an Air Force heltcopter swooped low over the detonation area, taking readings to set' 1f any radioactive gases had escaped. For the first tirne in two years, reporters w e re allowed to Wllnt.>ss thl' t~l on dosed-circuit television, but securit y was extremely tight and members of the news media were checked three s eparate t imes a nd confined to a basement viewing room at the control center. The test also marked the 19th annivers ary of signing of the Limited Test Ban Treaty between the United St.ates and the Soviet Union, banning atmospheric atomic' testmg. Cops seek motive in double slaying Orange police investigators have released the identities of two men found shot to death in a home Wednesday but said they still have no motive for the apparent murder-suicide. The men we re identified as Billy Ray Bryant, 30, and J ohn Broo k s, 29. Bryant's wife, Patricia, 27 , 1s r eported in satisfactory condition a t UC Irvine Medical Center after undergoing surgery for injuries she suffered when beaten , -apparently by Brooks. at another location earlier Wednesday Brooks' and Bryant's bodies were found in the Bryant home at 396 Oak St. in Orange al about 11 a .m. We<tnesday following a nearly five-hour stakeout b:t (See VICTIMS', Page A%) Harrold testified last week that she began moving into the Newport home in November, 1981 . when sh e s aid her grandmother turned the house over to her . (See JUDGE, Page At) "I just heard a splash and ran up and saw him floating in the water," explained the young woman, a swimming instructor who was at the pier on a fishing outing. ''Nobody seemed to be coming to his aid so I just jumped off and swam over to him," she said. "He WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan is scheduled to fly to California on Aug. 11 for a 13-day vacation at his ranch near Santa Barbara, deputy While House press sec retary Larry Speakes says. MOVING IN -Members of the Orange Poltce Dept. SERT team suit up with gas masks and weapons befor e moving in on house w h ere 09411 Piiot Ptloto by L .. 1".,nt they believed a shotgun-wielding man had himself barricaded. TELEVISION NBC spotlights Thursdays NBC hopes to one-up its two rival s with a "quality" Thursday menu this fall that will include "Fame," "Taxi," and "Hill Street Blues." Page C8. COUNTY Frontier backed by U.S. The federal government has taken the side of F rontier Airlines in its bid .to overturn the J ohn Wayne Airport rule that Uml1a lltghts to distances of 500 miles or less. Page B6. Was 'E.T.' a ripoff? Did Steven Spielberg "ateal'' the idea for hie hit movie "E.T ." from an uncredited playwright? He's facing a $750 million lawsuit. Page C6. SPORTS ~ Angels break the jinx The Angels turned the tables around for a ch ange by winning in t h e bottom of the eighth inning. P age C l . Dodgers host Atlanta T h e Dodgers host the Atlanta Braves in a key series beginning tonight at Dodfer Stadium. The Braves are 5 ~ games In front o the second-place Dodgers with four J(ames scheduled. Page C l . Youngblood Rams' veteran Jack Youngblood ls the veteran ln years of eervice for the Loe Angeles Rama as they prepare for the 1982 aeuon. Page Cl. INDEX At Your Service A4 Movies C6 Erma Bombeck A7 Mutual Funds B4 Business B4-5 National News A3 Cavalcade A? Public Notices C3-5,D2 Comics C7 Sports Cl-5 Croaword C7 Dr. Steincrohn A7 Death Notices' D2 Stock Markets B5 F.ditorial A6 Television C8 Entertainment C6 Theaters C6 Horoecope A7 Weather A2 Ann Landen A7 World News A3 NATION Stockman said 'sexy' At least Playgirl magazine has 10methin& nice to say to David Stockman. He's been named to the mag81lne'a list of .exieet men in America. Pap A4. .. Beirut enclave shrinks By Tbe A11oclated Preu larael conaolldated It• tank po1ltlon1 aro und the P LO'• 1hrlnkln1 west Beirut enclave ~oday, v ow ed to 1tep up the military preeaure and adviaed the tJ .N. atoc re tary-ge neral not to ';vi.sit Yauer Atoafat. . After 20 hours ot fighting Wednesday that left at least 2~0 civlllana and 19 Israeli soldiers dead and 670 Lebanese wounded 'by official count, I1r aell tanks d ug in on Beirut's southern outskirts and behind the city's racetrack . O ther Israeli armor pulled back from the harbor area In the north, however. and no tanks could be seen on the road used t.o stonn across the m1dc1ty Green Line into the Palestine Liberation Organization enclave. Meanwhile in W ashington, O.C., the Reagan administration attempted t.o get negouations for a PLO evacuation Crom west Beirut back on track today, but officials said the Ctghting in the Lebanese capital made 11 extremely difficult for special mediator Philip C Habib to operate . T he cnsis atmosphet e th at flared w hen lsrael stepped up 1~ military pressure on tht' PLO eased somewhat, but officials here described the situation in Beirut as still dangerous. T hey s ·d P residen t Reagan had sent essages to a num~f Arab g ernments, urgmg them to ink' ify their efforts to arrange the P O's withdrawal from the city. T e ofhc1aJs, who asked not to be -ent1fled, also confirmed that R aga n's m essag e to Is raeli Prime M1ruster Menachem Begin on Wednesday wa s 1n "considerably stronger terms" than his public statement that called a cease-fire an .. absolute necessity" A car bomb exploded outside th e Alexandre Hot el in Christian-rontroUed east Beirut, woundmg several people with flying glass and st•tting fire to several cars. About 100 foreign journalists rovering the war are housed at the hotel, but no deaths were reported In Vienna, U N Secretary- GeneraJ Javier Perez. de Cuellar appealed to th e I s raeli government to accept U N cease~fire observers m Beirut and offered to travel to Lebanon for tal k s "wi t h all part i es <-'OllCem ed." I s r aeli Prime M inister Menach e m Begin sa 1d his governm ent would welcome a visit ·trom Peret de Cuellar but only "1f there were not a parallel vwt to Arafat," a U N statemC'nt 1~ed in Vienna said. SCHOOL BLAZE -Sixty firefig hters from Orange County and Stanton battled . a fire Wednesday night that caused an estimated $386.000 damage to Vessels Elementary School, 5900 Cat hy Ave , Cypress Fare .., NoNnt l(oeltlaf origin. One firefighter who received a minor injury in the in ciden t was r e leased after treatment at Los Alami tos General Hospital. The fire, first repor ted at 11 :32 .p.m., ~equ1.red three hours to control. fire officials said. mvest1gators SaJd the blaze was o f suspicious ________________ _ ~' \\.,.._ Continued stories J UDGE H ARROLD. • • However, she a~mtlled on the witness stand that tht-Novt.•mber date on a qwt.cla deed gwmg her possession of he house was falsely dated and notaraz.ed The document. she said, actually was signed by her grandmother in 1982 and not in 1981 It also was disclosed in the trial that Harrold used the Newport address in 1979 when she applied to the governor's office for a JUd1c1al appointment in Orange County At the ume, sht.> was living in Riverside County. This revelation pr omptl•d Owen to shar ply cnt1c1z.e Harrold in court Tuesday as bP1ng untruthful wtth the governor and the cle<.·tor'ate Owen said Dutcher hadn't proved that Harrold was not y rl-s1dent ol the county 54 d?9S before the June 8 clecuQJ'(. as required by state law But he did rule Lhat Harrold did not have her principal rt>Stdence. or domicile, in Orange County when she was appointed 1n Mart·h , 1980, and did not l'<;tabltsh her residency m the county unul March 18 of this year when utility and phone bills s how that full-time use of the Lido Isl<' home began. VICTIMS' IDENTITIES • • • police at lhe home Found unharmed in the home by p olice w as t h e B r yants' 3-year-old daughte r, Bran dy Al9o unharmed was the couple's 6-year-old child, S hante, who had run from the h ouse w hen shots we re fired. A police spokesman said this morning that investigators believe Bryant was shot t.o death as he lay as~eep in his bedroom at the Oak !:itreet home It is beheved that Brooks first killed Bryant and then shot hunself to death Brooks' body was found lying near Bryant's a nd a 12 gauge shotgun was found nearby. Police began their stakeout of th e home early W edn esd ay morning afU>r Mrs. Bryant, w ho hved at the Oak S treet house, was found beaten outside a home m another part of Orange . Slightly warmer Suic ide pac t claims two in county ln an a p parent dea\h pact, Robert Trudeau H ill , 54, of Lemon Heights shot and killed his terminally 111 wife Wednesday morning. and then committed suicide with the same .'l!)-caliber handgun, according to Sh~,f's Lt. Wyatt Hart. EJ1i.abeth BacheUer Hills. 56, had been suffering from cancer for t he past three years. a.nd Lieutenant Hart said the Hills had told a close friend they didn't know 1£ they could handle a Lingering death Hill was round m tht> bushes m t he fron t yard or lhe couple·s home at 11241 Vista Del Lago. Mrs, Hill's body was discovered in the bedroom. Hart said lhc murder/suicide occurred betwet'n 9.30 and 10:30 a.m. Also, tne H ills left a list of family members to be contacted, together with 1.0StructJons about lhe d1Soos1lion of their pro!X'rtv From Page A1 MESA . • • Meanwhile'. t•1tv planning comm1ss1one rs a re scheduled to meet Monday to consider two 5-story office buildings along Bristol bet wc>t•n the Ward ,,1 tc and the San Diego Freeway (;oast a l the mid 601 tn downtown Los Angeles 10 a coas1al low ol 60. from lhll mid 501 !O lhe mlO 60s In mountain• and from !he mid 609 to the mid BOa In !he deaerta, oeoending on the loc:•tlOn. For three years l>ta nuhas and his partner have failtc•d to gain approval for various projects that range from five to 14 stories "It's pursuant to what the plan is," said Gianuhas. noting that Fair today with hoghs at the oeachu 70 to 75 and inland arau 80 to 85 Continued fair tonight with overnight Iowa or 64 lo 68 Alao laJr O<'t Friday but wl1h patchy ..,iy morning low clouds along the coaat of Orange Coonty High• 11 the bellc:heS on Friday 70 to 75 and Inland areos 82 to 87 'l'etu per a tures NATION HI Lo Pep 83 59 92 58 60 4-4 92 70 77 67 100 78 89 6" 92 70 ·~,~ Nf'af'\~~f "O•• .J s O.O• o1 c"""" .. '' the proposal falls within the 85-foot hmtt "We're following the guidelines. We hope there's no oppos1t1on " Vampaign spe~ding heavy Barbara Wiener a nd Larry Aaran not o nly were elected June 8 to the Irvine City Council wlth equally broad community 1uppo rt, but they a l10 1pe nt 1lmllar amounts of money on their campaigns. Latest campaign contribution report.a filed at City Hall 1how that Mrs. Wlener raised a record $32,076 for her campaign and Agran amaaaed $29,159. 'Bot h also e nde d up with campaig n de ficit• that reflect m o n e y they loan ed the ir campaJgna in the final weeks of the race. Mrs. Wien er's campaign s h ows a $3,300 deficit w hile Agran's shows a larger $7,520, according to t heir campaign rP.parta. ·Agran was top vote getter m the elec tion with 8,510 votes. Mrs. Wiene r waa next with 8,157 They won two open council seats John Nakaoka, who finished thtrd with 5, 778 votes, raised $26,824 and repor ted a $6, 136 deficit. Four th-place finisher Edwa rd Do rnan, with 5,470 votes, said he raised $3,933 and had a $270 deficit. BiU Pozzi raised just $85'/ and received 2,041 votes. He reported a $114 surplus, which re flects the re fund given candidates who in itially paid a $300 flat fee to have thei r q u a l i f ica tions statemen ts printed in a sample ballot. Marjorie Keiser, w ho d id not solici t funds nor s pend any , finish ed last with 1.125 votes. Ge othermal plant mulled by Huntington Huntington Beach o!ficials said today tha t a pending study on possi b le geother mal e n ergy un der the city's oil fields could lead to a pilot plant using the hot water to h e a t h omes or businesses. Aided by a state grant, lhe city is to launch a $41,500 study next month on the potential of gettJng C'nergy from the thousands of gallons of hot water pumped up daily with crude oil Crom depths between 2,000 and 5,000 feet Currently. the crude 01J from lhe city's 1,000 weUs is separated rrom the naturally heated wate r and the water is cooled and dumped into the ocean or the c-tt y's sewer system "That water IS being pumped out anyway, so if we c.an find a use for it in close proximity to the oil wells it seems that geoth ermal power could be econo mically feasible tn Huntington Beach ... said M ike Multari, city coastal planner. The briny scald ing water ranges in temperature from 100 degrees to 150 degrees. Mult.ar1 said, adding that some "hot s pots" produce water at temperatures above 300 degrees OMEGA ...... D..., ......... ......_ NE W MAYOR -Laguna Beach Co u nci I m a n N e i 1 Fitzpat r ic k w as th e unanimous council choice to serve as mayor Councilman Robert Gentry was nam ed mayor pro tem . Fitzpatrick n a m e d may or of Laguna Laguna Beac h Ci t y Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick was u n a n imous ly n amed mayor Tuesday night a fter forme r mayor Sally Bellerue announced one year in the I.Op elected post was enough for her. Councilman Robert Gentry was named mayor pro U>m. Whe n M rs Bellerue was named mayor a year ago filling the post vacated by departing Mayor Wayne Baghn. she said she would serve only one year in that capacity Tuesdav me_h t she fulfilled her pr-:m·.1se, announcing s h e w_as stepping down "to tum the )Ob over t.o someone else." Both Fitzpatrick and Mrs. Bellerue have one year each left in their four-year tenns ") appreciate the honor to sc·r vc> for a period o f tim e ,'' F1t2patrick said a f ter the 5-0 vote "l hope we continue the tradition of passing the job along. and I'd lik t:' to see t he t hree remaining council members get the opportunity " In a separate motion, the counc1l cll><:ted Gentry t.o the post o r mayor pro tern on a 3-2 vote. Council members Fitzpatrick railed in his motion t.o name Dan Kenney to t he post. Three seek Mesa seats Thret> candidates have entered tht:' Costa Mesa City Council race. Two arc incumbents. Mayor Arle ne Schafer and Councilwoman Norma Hertwg were JOtned by Plann i ng Commissioner Lynn \Ian Aken, w ho filed papers th1S week. Dave Wheeler, a Newport Beach attorney living in Costa Mesa has taken out papers. but has not filed them. The deadline for fili ng is Friday Elae•hera lrom Point Conce ption to the M exican bord..-and out 60 mllea Night and morning llght v81 labMI winds ~ _, to southwest 11 to t8 knota In the elternoons South-I awetl ol I lo 2 feet l'flgtil and morning low c:louda Wfih aome loc:el log but during la t.lr In tile eftarnoon• Albany Albuque Anchorage Allanra Atlenlc Cty Au111n Battm()(a Bum1ngt1m Bismarck BooMI Boston Bullalo Burlington Charlstn SC Charlsln WV Charlell NC Cheyenne Chic,. go Clnclnnetl Clevetano Clmbll SC COiumbus Oal r! Wlh OAVIOn O!lnver 88 57 0 1 84 51 75 61 Fronts Cokl .-. Warm .,.. Occlu<Jed .or Stahonary •• WHEN YOUR TIME IS PRECIOUS. -f).S. Sllllllllflr )' • Jhunoera1orm• orougn1 nogn E• and 1>eavy rein to the central ed Stalet todey. with Sl()(ms In lower Mluourl Valley. ecrou ~naaa Int o aouthweatern C olorad o arid th<t T exas ~handl<I • a nowert and 1~n(;e,,1orms ...... widely ac:allered ov.,r Illinois V)e Ohio Valiey and IMIAl·Central l'Qdlana Shower• slso w11re cjioponed In lhe nor1he<n and mld- Allanllc Co11St. cenlral Mont11na ~ eealern New MexlCo There ~ wldely IC8119fed ah~rs In ~them Fl()(lda Flllr .ic'" -e predominant In ll)il W•I •" wu llOI W!ldnN<Jay In KanM.1 Md MIMOUrl. with a recotd high fd,-the dll• IMll at the Kanaas City ti.tarnallonal Alrpott 100 .,_ "•l_n WICNla, Ket\ It WH 10-4 and ,. Dodge City, Ru .... I And Saline It 102 In Mluourl wfMll• It wu 1n Sprlnoflald. lhe Na11one1 •tiler Sarvlc11 !ore c e11 MMl•lnO ,_, eo•ln today !iPor later today and Frld•y. ~ and thund..-elorme -e ~all over th• northern and i tr •t A tlantlG Co•el , the ollnM, the Ohio Valley South 01a •nd tl\a cenl!•I Plalna n<lll<'•t()(me _,. expec19d tu>n• and tlOUtfMlln FIOfldA, ... tno-a ~ Wll8fn gton etete Sunny lklea e -· In tl\a f()(llCHI f;alifornia • llle NetlOnal WHlti.r &..-vice lltf9 8outh.-n Clllll()(nl•'• weather E be t.i. Frld•Y 8Jt<J9PI f()( a c e o l all e r,,oon --· In a-I .,_ 14IOha w111 ranoe from u In Loe • to 12 In ~ V8'Wof. 7t 10 t4 In mountlllfl .,..,._ to 10-4 1n nortMm Oea«ta to lnlMlow~. ~ '°"" are toreoeat In • Oes MoonM °"''°" Ovit 1th El PHo r alrbonks reroo n11os1a11 Greal Fall~ Hartford Helena HO<'tOlulu Houston 1nonapll1 Jac:kan Jac:kanvne Kana City Knoxvllle l N V8QH Llltl<I Rock Loultvtlle Memohlt Ml•ml Mtlw.ukoe Mplt-St P Nutwllla N-Orl<l•n1 N-V°'~ N()(fOllc Okie City Omaha Orlando Pl\lledphla Ptooen•• Plll•burgh Ptland, Ma Piiand, Ore Pro~ Aetlo Rl<:hmonO s .. , L•k• San Antonio s .. 111a ShraytpOrt Slou~ Falla 81 Louil 81 P-Tlmpe 8pok-8yrecuM TOC*ll 81 68 49 80 56 87 H 88 68 01 88 70 76 62 85 74 29 9;> 71 05 85 71 98 91 68 81 70 34 99 78 92 71 93 82 60 25 91 74 54 87 14 75 58 96 70 66 46 95 58 RO 46 16 41 83 61 87 48 89 75 ·~ 80 02 72 93 71 91 71 100 79 9t 89 tOI 74 96 76 94 73 96 79 85 78 82 70 48 Ill 76 g1 70 92 73 81 70 85 69 96 72 llO 79 90 73 89 89 t08 8-4 83 85 70 67 77 50 78 80 83 •• 99 e8 02 86 00 77 73 52 Q5 72 88 70 011 81 00 T3 81 57 " llO Oii 78 oe Tucson 96 Tulsa 10 , Wunongln 90 Woch1ta 104 CALIFORNIA Ela• Ar ~t•elef B1)'1t'e Eure•a F,esno Lancaster LOS Angeles Marysvtlle Monterey Needles Oakland Paao Robl~ Red Blull Redwood Coty Sar.ramen10 SRllne~ San Ooeoo San Fr anclKO Santa Bart>ar• Sant11 Marla Sloc;klon Therm111 Uk Ith Bare tow BIO Bear Bllh<>P Cataline lOOO 8HCh t.Aonrovle Ml Wllaon N-Por1 Beach Ontario Pelm Sprlno• P11saden1 Sen Be<nardlno San JoN Sanl8 Ana Santa Crur TahOe V&lley f'AN~MCAN 8 B1bado1 Bafmucla Cureceo Freeport Hav1nt KlnQl lOn Montage 81y Marki• Ma•lco Cl1y Monterrey N_, San Jyan. P R TeguclQalpa Trlnlded 70 10 11 77 94 7' 107 68 52 92 65 92 6? 83 68 89 88 107 74 54 94 58 88 84 78 56 85 S7 89 49 78 ee 65 S4 73 54 73 90 58 106 87 98 71 77 37 04 52 77 80 88 "3 07 61 711 58 74 82 94 58 107 811 89 59 07 57 78 62 84 83 78 63 78 JO 85 75 811 77 91 81 91 72 86 715 811 76 00 73 07 78 72 52 100 75 00 73 00 10 117 se 80 72 CANADA caigery Edmonlon Mo,,treal 0118W8 Reolne Toronto Vancouver Winnipeg E:\:le n d ed w<;a the r 73 42 71 38 78 59 60 81 52 78 62 7 t 54 81 52 SOUTH"'AN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAI N AREAS Generally talr t>ul wt111 e•rly morning low Cloud• oeer the coaat ond l1ol1led afternoon 1nunc1ershowe19 In mountallll Hogh 1emper11urM In lower 70. at the 1>e1ch11, 77 to 87 In t h• COHiil cltlH and 88 10 08 In tnlend veli.yt Lowt Olf*•lly 57 to 70 Highs In mounieln1 78 to 118 end Iowa 47 lo lower 60s m og Where to call (loll treel for lelest smog lnfOfmaUO<'t Orenge County (800) 445-3828 Loa Angelu County (800) 242-4022 Rlveralde and San 8arnardlno rountlel (8001387-4710 AOMO Eplaod41 Cent8f (800) 242-46&8 Tides 1'00A'f Stcond low o4 03 pm. 2.2 Stcond high 10 10 p m 8,0 nllOAY Flrat low 5. 13 a m, 0.2 F'lrat htolt 1138 1 m. 4.2 S.Concf IOw 4:38 p,m 2. I S.COl\d high 10 42 p.m. 5. 7 Sun "'' tod1y at 7:50 p,m., rl-,rlday •t 8:011 a.m Moon rlMt toci.y at 11;42 p.m., Mii Ftld•Y at 11:"4(1 a,m .. > . ----------------- The rare combination of technology and art Omego A legend in Sw iss w atchmaking since 1848. each Ome<1o 1s as impeccably accurate o s if 1s oes- thet1cot ly pleasing. Come see our entire collection Ladies' quartz bracelet watches in 14 karat yellow gold: A. $795 B. $9 75. C $895 §LAVI CK'§ Fine~ Since um Whtr-t rht bts r .surpnses be.gin. f'ahlon lllend ('7'1C) IMC-tJllO• ~ 9-kl' NII>~ I.al~· Sen Dll9D ·Lia~ ' ANOTHE R VIEWPOINT -Tourists are flocking to new viewpoints around the stiU- active Mount St. Helens. Since the restricted Red Zone around the volcano was reduced U Wlf99Mto earlier this year, the U.S . Forest Service has established several new viewpoints. One of the most popular is Independence Pass, above, about five miles from the mountain. Fire, pollution, pipe bills dead SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Senate committee has stopped an atte mpt to avoid a n other Anaheim firestorm, held down a proposed raise in air pollution penalties, and relaxed safety restrictions on plastic pipe. Also Tuesday, the Senate Governmental Organization Committee killed a fourth biU to require air pollution control districts to consider the impact on neighboring areas when adopting regulations. The conservative-dominated panel is frequently accused of being a graveyard for legislation opposed by special interests, particularly business groups. The committee, by a 9-l vote, referred the Anaheim fire bill to interim study, a step sometimes uSt.'d to quietly kill controversial legislauon. "':.e move allows the bill to be studied at a hearing this fall, but prevents any action on the subject until the Legislature meets in 1983. The bill . AB3797 by Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana, would have required the use of fire retarda nt materials wh e n r e- placing 50 perc ent o r more of a r oo f . The ... s t a t e f i r e ROBINSON marshal could grant exceptions when requested by cities or counties. Robinson said th~ bill was an attempt to avoid another urban firestorm like the wind-blown blaze April 21 in Anaheim that burned 524 residences and left l.000 people homeless and eight injured. Robinson said he had voted against such legislation in the past but had been "reborn on this issue after touring the devastation. It was very similar to bombed- out areas that I witnessed in Vietnam," he added. But with Sen. Alfred AlQuist, D-San Jose, complaining that the committee was late for lunch, panel chairman Ralph Dills, D-. Gardena, suggested that the measure be scheduled for an interim hearing. Robinson didn 't object. "I realize I am in tremendous difficulty on the bill," he said. Earlier , the committee approved a small increase m air poUut1on penalties after stripping much greater fines from a biU by Assemblyman Tom Ha nnigan, D-Fairficld. And it rejected for the second time a biU by Assemblyman Lou Papan, D-Millbrae, to continue current restrictions on the use of plastic water pipe until an environmental impact report was completed. The Hann igan blll, AB2525, would have authorized penalties of up to $10.000 per day in fines and imprisonment for violations of regulations barring the release of toxic substances into the air. Supporters testifie d that current penalties are regarded as a "joke" and have failed to deter polluters. How a killer got his guns Former men tal patient lied to beat federal law I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Federal law proh1b1ts former mental patients and ex-convtcts from buying handguns. But it can't keep them from lying. David Goldblatt Arien was a liar. Last month, be became a murderer when he used two of his five guns to kill his wife, a police officer and himself. A federal invest1gat1on. conducted at the request of San Francisco police, revealed the ease with which the sick man armed himself against the world around him. With city flags still waving at half staff. the story appeared in Tuesday's San Francisco Examiner. Arien, a physician who was discharged from the service because of mental problems, was picked up seven times for deranged and violent behavior in Louisville, Ky. Once he aimed a gun at a police o fficer. then hurled a butcher knife at him. The charges were dropped. was arrested on drug charges and was wanted for wntmg a bad check. Kentucky yanked his medical license (Georgia revoked it twice) because of Arien's "continuing mental disorder." The Alabama Medical Licensure Commission put him on the inactive list after ' a 1979 drug arrest in Kentucky. On Jan. 28, 1980, Arlen walked into the Outhous e, a Montgomery. Ala., spor ting goods store, showed his Alabama driver's license and ordered a Raven .25-caliber automatic pi.Mo!. He filled out a federal form, but !Jed where it asked if he was a convicted felon o r former mental patient. He waited 72 hours while the sheriff's depa rtm e nt clea r ed the application, and then he got his gun. Asked how Arien's mental problems and extensive arrest record escaped detection . Arien, 41 at the time of his sheriff's deputy John Balint said, death, waa in and out of mental "That happens all the time." He institutions in Kentucky and said some people use aliases that Indiana during the late 1970.. He don't show up in computer CIH 1tn.d adWt'tlllft9 714"42·M11 All other ~rtrMnt9 142-4321 MAIN Off1CE Kay Schultz Yloe,,,_ 91>11 Olrtlctor of --..i Tom Murphlne I.Ill« Mlk• Harwy °"*'°' ............ ~I Ken Goddard OW-of~ ~8CL•n Tom Mccann ..... Idiot lat WH1 -.,.11.., C..C. #NM, CA. INll 4tckl,....: aoa1S.O,G..WMfte.CA.n.M C011yrltfll 1"' Or .... C..lt l"ulllltlllftl CempMy. Hon-••'°""-llh1t!ratl011a, HN«l•I man.r Of' ... ¥0ftl .. l'Mftll..Jleretn mey IMt r~ed wlttlollt -••I pet'll"l!Mloftof cOPYf'9M-r. VOL. 75, NO. 218 c hecks. Ar1en used several names. On March 25, 198 l , Arien bought a .22-caliber nfle from a Sears R oebuc k store in Louisville. Several mo·n ths later, h e bought a Walther P -38 from the Dellmuth Coin Shop in Louisville. Owner Carl ~llmuth said Arlen, who was interested in astrology, came back five or six times. "The more he came in, the more weird I thought he was," said Dellmuth. "But I didn't think he was crazy." About a month after buying the first pistol, Arlen went to the store and said the P-38 had been stolen from him in Washington, D.C. Dellmuth sold him another P-38. "Th e spelling of Waithe~ meant something to him," recalled the merchant. "He could take a hand calculator and make it come out triple sixes -the sign of the devil." Arlen filled out the federal forms each time. Each time he lied. But Charles Nixon, spokesman for the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau, says the federal government doesn 't perform background checks. On July 16, a highly decorated young San Francisco police offi cer named Sgt. John Macaulay saw Arlen's car parked outalde an e lectronics shop. Macaulay, whoee keen memory had solved many cases, recognized the car aa the one Wied in a recent ahopllttfna cue. Macaulay approached Arlen, and Arlen shot Macaulay with the Raven. Th en Arlen got in hl1 car1 drove lntQ a nearby alley ana 1hot h la youhl wife, J onelle, through the head wlth th e Wal~r. 'nlen he ahot hilmelf. We'Te Listening ••• , __ What do you like about the Dally Pilot ~ What don't you Uft? Ca ll the number below and your message will be recorded. transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answertn1 servtre may be used to record let• tens to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contrtbutora must Include their nam, and telephone number ror vertrlcation. No circulation cal s. pleue. Tell us what's on your mind. I .. Arthritis drug halted 53 die; Britain suspends sale of Oraflex WASHINGTON (AP) - Britain la IUlpending Mle of the arthriU. ~g Oraflex, which has been ueoclated with at leaat 45 deaths in that country and eight In the United Statea, a congre11lonal committee was told. Arthur Hull Hayes Jr., commlaaioner of the Food and Drug AdminiBtration, aald sales of the Eli Lilly and Co. drug would be halted baaed on "their review of new data ... " Hayes told a House Governme nt Operati o ns subcommittee that U.S. offidals were c hecking details of the British decision "so we can act appropriately ." British authorities suspended sale of the drug, marketed there under the name of Opren, for 90 days. Bill Grigg, an FDA spokesman, said the British decision was based on reports of 3,500 adverse reactions and possibly 61 deaths in Britain. • E:dgar G . Davis, vice president for corporate affairs of Eli LiUy, issued a statement saying, ''Eli Lilly and Co. was informed this morning of the action by the United Kingdom Health Ministry to suspend for 90 days the produc t licenses fo r the drug Opren (benoxaprofen) pending a r eview by the Committee on Safety of Medicine . The co mp a n y ha s informed appropriate U.S. officials of this action and is reviewing the lituatk>n at the preient time." "Within the hou.r we have learned that consequen t u pon their review of ne w data on benoxaprofen, or Oraflex, the Brililh wUJ auapend aal• of the drug In the Unlted Kinadom," Haye1 said during a subcommittee hearing on the procedures FDA uaes ln approving druga. Oraflex has the generic name benoxaprofen. It has been available ln Britain, under the trade name Opren, for two years, and waa approved for American distribution last April 19. Also at the hearing, Hay~s· staff released a letter he bad sent to a consumer group which had sought a ban on Ame rican distribution of Oraflex. The letter, sent to Public Citizen's Health Research Group, said, "we are not prepared at this point to provide a response to your peuuon. "The information we have now concerning adverse effects as.sociated with benoxaprofen is preliminary in nature," Hayes wrote . "Bo th we and the manufacturers are engaged in trying to obtain more information about the reported occurrences (side effects)." The health research group, joined by the American Public Health A ssociation and the National Council of Senior Citizens, filed suit in U.S. District Court on Monday seeking an A~ Wl,.,,tMito DISNEYLAND WELCOME -The grandchildren of India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi pose with Mickey Mouse during a recent tour of the Magic Kingdom. At left is Priyanka. 10. and at right is Rahul. 12. The children accompanied the prime minister on her tour to the U.S. this month. immediate halt to the Mlee of ~~';,:i~.lmminent dana•r 'Cf The subcommittee ~ Hayes to tatily how t he Jl'QA cleared Oraflex without learnlha that it waa auoclated wHli jaundice, u well aa othei" uv• and kidney problem•. nauffj, ulcers, light senaitlvity and fingernail aeparaUon. · Rep. L.H. Fountaln, D-N.C., the subcommittee chalrm al). suggested that both the FDA al\d the drug company were at fatili. On Tuesday, FDA officla,1s acknowledged that the infonnation about jaundice cuef, contained In British medical journals, did not come to thei,r attention until after the drug waa approved for American dlstribuUon In April ... Orallex is one of about nine anti -Inf 1 am mat or y d r \l g,s available for treating arthritis. Aspirin is a member of that drug class. JDO hid for rally rejected FONTANA (AP) -C ity Councilmen in state Ku Klux Klan leader George Pepper'-s hometown have rejected a bid from a militant Jewis~ group to stage an armed "death to the klan" rally on the steps of City Hall. ,,... With no debate, the five- member council denied the request for a rally permit by a leader of the J ewish Defense Organization. ' In a brief. h eated speech before the council, JOO leader Mordechai Levy predicted the city would eventually experience a "race war." "You have a choice: give us the right to hold our rally and the right to arm ourselves, or if you don't, God forbid, if the klan continues to burn crosses. there'e going to be a race war," Levy said. He blasted the council for ignoring "a racist threat" in the city, located about 50 miles ~t of Los Angeles. He claimed that local government and poli~ officials "have neve r d o n e anything" to stem the threat. Levy, 21, who says he Is a Los Angeles college student, was accompan ied by a half dozen other JOO members. ! Before the meeting, Levy : indicated that he did not actually ; want to win the permit to rall)' • on Sept. 5. "I want them (the council) to show just how hypocritical they are," he said. "The k.lan got }. permit in five days to rally." ~ The council rejected the permit• request on advice from Fontanai City Attorney John Rager. who• said the group's n:9.uest to bear· arms at its rally "is actually a : request to violate a c ity' ordinance." • ' The Fontana ordinance forbids; the possession of firearms in dty: buildings or on city property,: Rager said. Not only Champagne But Concert Specials! Come visit us from 7-9 p.m. for Free Champagne and 40°/o off select jewelry and watches ... .. I I I I Terlailt 's rights in sale • By PAT HOROWITZ • .-or .. .,_,....._ DEAA PAT: ft• laoeae I reat 11 for aal• u4 ftm 1ola~raay •i" all tlle real estate peopl• PG••• o• my door all day loq. My lucllord AYI am r!\utred by law te 1bow "' property, b•t I doa t tlililk It'• fair &Pt I uve ao Idea wbea a1•1t1 are 10181 to la1l1t • belat allowed to lhJJ tbe lto11e. Do I bave uy rll .. tl la tlll1 1ltutlODT P.S., Fountain Valley . Yee. Section 19~4 of the California Civil Code allows a landlord or his agent to enter a tenant's home to show the place to proepective buyers, but this can only be done during "normal business hours," and the landlord must give the tenant "reasonable notice" - presumed to be 24 hours. You would be. wlthln your nght.s to bring this invasion of privacy to your landlord's attention as well as to tell real estate agenta that you kre b~ and insist that an appointment be made in advance before you are willing to show the house. If talking doesn't produce results, a tenant's next step is to write a polite but firm letter inal.sting on advance notice, that entry be made at reasonable hours, and that the landlord not abuse the right of access. Keep a copy of your letter. If the landlord tries to evict you in retaliation for your trying to exercise your legal right to privacy, you will want to show your copy of the letter to the judge as part of your defense. This sort of letter al8o would be valuable if the landlord persists in violating your rights and you sue for damages (up to $1,500 in Small Claims Court). A d vice on gasoh ol use DEAR PAT: I read that gasoltol produces a cleaner blgb octane fuel than gasoline and it ls now sold at more titan 10,000 service stations across the country. Can you tell me where this fuel can be bought? G.S., Laguna Niguel A YS couldn't locate a service station selling gasohol, but perhaps one of our readers can come up with the infonnation you want. II not, you may want to contact the Conservation and Renewable Energy Inquiry and Referral Service by phoning (800) 523-2929 or by writing w P.O. Box 8900, Silver Spring, Md. 20907. The service can provide information on active solar, passive solar, e nergy conservation, wind energy, photovoltaics, bioconversion, wood heating, solar thermal, small scale hydroelectricity, alcohol fuels and ocean energy. li you do locate a gasohol source, be sure to check your car's warranty before using it. Some manufacturers deny coverage if gasohol has passed through the system once. Also check with the manufacturer of the gasoline to see if it Is compatible with alcohol. Some are not. If you use gasohol, remember that the aleohol in it will act as a cleansing agent. Pollutants left behind by previous fuel will be trapped by the fuel-line filter. This is good for the engine, but it means the filter should be changed more often to keep the engine functioning at maximum level Manulacturen aenerally recommend a chanp after tw4» full \anb of peohol. Auto parts costs rise DEAR PAT: A eoaplt of rean a10 you publl11led &lie coat to replace al "•r.,rt• la a car. At I rffall1 It wu •ore ~ t O,lff for u IC!ODOmy•type car. Bu diet flpr• 1•• ., or don't G.C., HaaU.1toa Beac .. Up! Buyma all the replacement parta for a tot.ally demolished subcompact car would coat about S.8 times more than the orllinal sticker prk'e, ac:oording to thia year's stucfy by the Alliance of Amerl•n Inaurers. That'• slightly higher than the 3.5 ratio of parts for a comparable domestic car lut year. The Alliance, a national lnaurance trade organization. hired a profeeaional auto damage appraiser to determine the coet of buying replacemeflt parta and materials tor a popular 1982 (orel1n hatchback model with a manuf~rer'a sussested retail price of $7 .-. 128. Parts and paint costs added up to $26,787, excluding labor. In real Ute, only a fraction of a new car's parts have to be damageP before the cosu of repairs are greater than can be economically justified due to labor costa for straightening and replacing the damaged parts. Ill such cases, the insurer usually pays the owner the pre-craah value of the car and accepts title to the vehicle. The damaged cars typically are sold as salvage and stripped for their recoverable parts. Insurers also encourage straightening ins~ of replacing damaged parts where feasible and encourage Installation of r ecovered body parts if available. Fee eyed for p amphlets DEAR READERS: The days of free public interest government pamphlets may be coming to an end. The Consumer Information Center is tentatively planning to impose a $1 fee on orders of two or more free booklets, according to Acting Director Teresa Nasif. , Over the years, the center has distributed millions of booklets providing information to the public about government programs and consumer interest topics. A single booklet still would carry no charge, she said, and the limit of 20 no-ooet booklets would likely remain in effect. The fee is not a c harge for the publications, which would still be listed as free, but a service charge for handling the order. Such user fees have been encouraged by the Reagan administration. • "Got a problem? Then write to Pat· Horowitz. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities In government and business. Mail your questions to Pat Horowitz, At ce, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Carta Mesa, CA 92626. As many 1etamJ u po68ible will be answered, but phone ilyquiries or letters not including the reader's flill name, address and business hours' phone number . cannot be considered. ----------•cuPCOUPON _________ _ I I I I I of hls1 h11r party. Coupon good ~ when being 54!1tted. Th" through ~1ember 2. 19R2 § ••>Uflon ,, yood fr,, $1 on vii Coupon of no redeemoble l!i th,> Mjul.ir · fuYler pnce of moneiary value May not be c:I ~ 50 11 """ IJ.g Y11lk-M I fou.,.. used In conjuncnon with ocher I Rt-,rAuMnl P~e appl1~ tu cJ1scoon1 offers. adul1 t '""'" .md ,lduh m<'mhers fn Car<kn Crovc fn Costa Mtsa W2 I I I ---------•CUPCOUPON _________ _ All you can e.at e.ach day of the week for oDly $5.50 I t"s the best dining deal in toom! Simply bring the coupon to any Big Yellow House. any day of the wee k. and every adult member of your party will dine for only $5.50 (kids even less). That's a full dollar o ff our regular dinner price! And what a dinner it is ... with seconds, thirds ... even fourths and fifths on the house! We always serve two delicious entrees: our famous fried chicken. plus another that "varies from day to day: beef nbs with barbecue sauce. roast beef. trHip steak . po rk chops with stuffing. and so on. There's also a tureen of steaming soup. a crisp garden salad, vegetables. mashed potatoes and gravy. and plenty of hot cornbread and honey butter. Save again and again! When you give this coupon to your waitress, she'll give each adult member of your party another dollar-off coupon for the next visit. And since this offer is good only through September 2, you'd better huny on in. The sooner you start, the more times you can save. r'D.J Offer good through September 2, 1982 ~ 'f!!!nd~~!!~~~~~use Saturday. 4· 10 pm: Sunday. 3-9 pm; Sunday Brunch, 10 atn·2 pm. In Costa Mesa at 3010 Barbor Blvd. Comer of Harbor & Baker adjacent to Feclco Reaervationa accepted (714) 6'9--0310 . ' In Garden Grove at 9100 Traak Ave. Reaervationa ~ccep~ (714) 891-2809 In Cantos at W05 E. 183rd St ~accepted. (213) 924-8120 J males listed SANT A MONICA (AP) - P1ay1lrf ma1a1ln• uy1 comedian Oeorae Burnt, ••Toda[" 1how hoat Bryant Oumbe, "E.T." d1rector Steven Spielberg and -who ea..? - federal bud1et chlef David Stockman are uncJl\I the ywa 10 aexleat men. Othera on the Uat Include Wa1hln1ton Poat Editor Ben Bradlee, conductor Seljl Ozawa, actor Mel Git.on, rock atar Paul Slmonon, pitcher Tommy John and baaketball atar Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. "Stockman la a ao-called whiz kid, which probably mean1 he built toy satellites In hl1h echooJ," the artlcle explaina. "We think the prt!9enJ director of the Office of Management and Budget might be better aulted behind a desk In the Library of Congress, ~t just the same we'd love to muaa hUI hair and loosen his tie." The 10 Sexiest Men of 1982 feature will appear In the magazine's September edition, which hits newsstands today, said Peggy Gillespie, an advertising representative in New York for 1.he Santa Monica-based magazine. She said that according to the article, "good looks, ambition, fame, virility and intelligence don't hurt, but ... these men have that h ard-to-define something that places them far above the average." The article says 87-year-old George Burns' cred e ntials include his performing career from vaudeville to recent efforts such as films "Oh God!" and its uel, "Oh God! Book II." the article notes that Abdul- Jabbar, who plays center Cor the World Champion Los Angeles Lakers, is also a social activist, jazz buff and movie star. Tommy John, a left-handed New York· Yankee pitcher, was honored for being a soft-spo~en low-key player who has survived 20 ''remarkable years on the mound." Playgirl says Gwnbel "once a mere sportscaster," is now a newsman on the "Today" show and that Spielberg is "the world's most popular director." Bradlee was called the "dynamic editor of the Washington Post." ~-······ DANCER -Ron Reagan, son ot President Ronald Reagan', does a pirouette during taping of the ballet, "Pavlova," in Montreal. The television special is being produced by Radio- Canada. CondO shifts OK'd if rents curbed ( The Orange C-ounty Board of Supervisors told apartment developers Tuesday they can convert future rental units into condominiums if rent controls are ever enacled here. The board una n imously approved a resolution which said that builders of new apartments would have an .. absolute right" to qualify for a condominium pennit, but only if future boards were to approve some form of rental controls in Orange County. The action Tuesday, according to county officials, was meant to create a more favorable climate for apartment house construction. The board attached several conditio ns fo poten"tial condominium conversions - among them that rental units granted condo permits remain as rentals until rent control is actually adopted and that developers submit a tenant relocapon plan 1o county officials and pay relocation cosu up to four times the tenant's monthly rent. Supervisol' ~lph Clark said the need for new apartment construction in Orange County is so "pronounced" that "we should be doing everything we can to support the building" of such units. The resolution eventually will become an amendment to the county's zoning code. No rent control measures have yet been proposed in Orange County. Two 'Dynasty' actors shaken up LA traffic accident "DyftMty•• Mar , ... ,..,., .. and another .ctor ta -...... ::JL~t ln a LOI~ l'onythe, actor J.U \Jam" and Uve production crew memben were In a tma11 van that WM ltNCk from the rear' by another van on Santa Monlca Boulevard, 11ld Rachel McAWa~!i .. ~ _•s>e>kesw~ tor Aaron Spewna Producdonl. Foraythe and Jamee were treated at a medical cUnlc for minor lnjurtea, ahe aid. Rep. Slalrley Clahlaolm. D-N.Y., wlll teach at Mount . llolyokt Collep, th• nation'• oldtlt 111-wome~··· coll•I•· ~ tn re~. coU11e otfldala~. Space Center helped put th• · Start and 8trtpea on the moon, MYI he wW be leavinl NASA at the end of th1I w"k. Brook Unlveralty Ho1pltal, where he w11 admitted for obeervatlon July 20. Ho1pltal 1poke1man Jim Rhatl1an tald Javit1, 78, who auffert from a deaeneraUve nerve aJ.lnwmt, wu releued th1a week. to It.I coffen dwinl ttw. tint months of 1982. She already hu announc planl to teek N-elect.ion ln 108 • Mn. Chl1holm, &7, the tint bla woman '° win a IMt In the HouH ot Repreaentatlve11 announced earlier th1a year she would not 1eek an elahth term becaUle of the frwitratfona of the job under the Rea1an adminJltration. Harriett Woode, a state eenator 1rom 1uburban St. I.puil a the aecond wornan to be nominated to the U.S . Senate thl1 year. 1 WU told I couldn't win and I w,,. told I couldn't ra1lt ~. , btit I did," Mid Mn. Wood.I, a Democrat who defeated 10 candrdatea to face Republican U.S. Sea. Joa Dul'"'-She aid the central illue of the cam~ would be Danforth'• aue::: for the econornk pollcla of dent Rea a an. Dr. C1arl1toplaer C. Kraft Jr., who u c:Urector of the Joh.mon Pa. •• ••onlc STEREO TO GO PLUS 4 ARISTA LPS PLUS 4 ARISTA CASSETTES HUNDREDS OF OTHER PRICES • $50 WILD WEST GIFT CERTIFICATES • AIR SUPPLY CONCERT TICKETS •DETAILS AT PARTICIPATING . WILD WEST STORES Kraft, 08, earlier had announc.d ht.e restanatlon from the National Aeronautic• and Space AdmJniatratlon, but did not 1peclfy a date then. He will be auceeded by Gerald D. Grllfla, formerly dej>uty director of the Kennedy Space Center ln Florida. ' Former U.S. Sn. Jacob Jav1&1 ha1 been released from Stony .I Mayor Diane Fela1tela haa atuhed away more than •169,000 for her 1083 re-election campalp, accordlns to flnanclal atatementa filed with the San Francllco reaiatrar of votera. The report• showed that the Committee to Re-elect Mayor Dianne Felnateln added •109,682 9 She wu named mayor la November 1978 followln1 the ...... 1nauon of Mayor Geor1e Moec:oae and won election ln a runoff agaln1t S•pervllor QfftaU. Kopp ln 1979. Solidarity union leader Leela Waleta has shaved off tM full beard he had grown lince being interned ·laat December and restored hit diatinctive handlebar muat.ache, hla wife Mya. oy' s Levi' S® reshrunk . enim Jeans. ' Bellbottoms and boot cut styles. Boys 2-7, 8-14, Students 25-30, Huskys 27-36. Sfyle numbers 6681, 1609, 1709,4609 W1D WEST 0\5YOU1"E LOWEST LE\IT'S PRICES. WE GUARAHTEE m 0£0< AHVOTHER OJIREHnY ~PRICE (NlWSPAPER NG NlWSPAPER MERTS)ON LEVI'S CORDMSICSOR PRE-SHRl.N< oe.tS. F JT ISL<»O THAN<XMS. llRNjACOfl'VOf rnENl TOWl.DM:ST. \M.:N YOU BUY FROM US, \\fl.I. MEET TltA T PRICE ... NG PAV YOU lATEST 1"E RU CASH OIFfERENCE. OUMNfT& 0000 Ofl 4 Mm PD aJl1'0MEll OMV THE L<»ST PRICED L£VrS1 wa.D WEST ... WE'VE GOT m GUARANTElDt Of'FE.lt GOOO lMIU SIJ'O\Y, 59'1090t 19 OfiST'tU#'S4a 4'1 ..... ltlS.1902 Offer good thru Sunday or while ~uandtles lait MELISSA MANCHESTER HAIRCUT ONE HUNDRED ALBUMS BY: -.. ----·-· ............ ..,, ...... I J. W &'tt' s coastal oil plan sorely flawed C• The Preeldent of Shell OU Co. say1 Interior Secretary James Watt's plan to open up the entire U.S. coutllne for offshore oil and gas drilling ia ·gbod for the coµntry. Watt's plan is seriously flawed. Critics, includ~ Orange Coast officials, say Watts plan ii triainly good for the oil companies and is a detriment to the environment and to future federal mvenues from offshore. leasing. Shen•s John Bookout, Jr. cont.ends Watt's five-year plan is t>eneficial because it will quickly generate oil production royalties for the federal treasury and will allow the country to determine the extent of its oil reserves. This, Bookout cont.ends, will allow government and industry to know when they must turn to alternative sources of energy. While Bookout cont.ends that Watt's plan will rapidly increase oil royalties, critics of the plan point to a trend of lower oil company bids for individual federal offshore tracts. The critics reason that the competitive edge has been taken off the bidding procedure because with so many millions of acres to choose from, oil companies are bidding lower on individual tracts. . In the short term, the critics argue, the federal treasury will reap large profits by leasing more tracts. But in the long term, the overall federal income from the tracts could fall billions of dollars short of what lt could have been under a controlled, gradual leasing program. Besides lower prices for lndividual tracts, critics point out that with the country's entire coastline open for leasing, the administration just doesn't have the resoUtteS to provide ad~uate, specific area studies of pot.enJia} environ~~!1tal damage from offshoredrllllng. Kenne th belino, Newport Beach assistant to the city manager in charge of coastal resources, makes a good point when he says that Watt's plan is unbalanced in favor of oil exploratton with no regard for environmental dangers. He says a unique, pristine coastal environment is also (ood for the country -and local aties -and should be given equal consideration with oil exploration concerns. Watt appears to be following his of ten-stated philosophy that the country's natural resources should be tapped and used. But it appears the Interior Secretary has disregarded long- term economic conce rns and environmental safeguards. Jiis proposal follows his philosophy, but' poses the threat of being unba lanced a nd reckless. President Reagan, or the courts, sh ould s tep in and add some sensible balance to this proposal before it is too late. Costa Mesa should push housing ahead General plans for cities usually fail to generate a lot of excitement. As a result, the Jong- wmded reports don't get a lot of space in newspapets. It remain~ important, however, for citi7.ens to keep up on the events surrounding future guidelines for their home towns. Last July, the Costa Mesa City Council adopted a general plan covering land use, ei\vir onmental resources and community development. Included in the 289-page report was a list of some 44 ~licies, many things already done by the city such as providing a minimum of four acres of ~rmanent open space for every 1,000 residents. R ecentl y, City Gouncil members sat down and looked over the list of policies and • selected 63 that they would like to see accomplished. The list will be further reduced to about 10 to 15 policies that can be implemented during the next few months. The 63 policies chosen by the council included revising plans for the mast.er plan for bikeways, the city noise ordinance, L ions' Park expansion and enco~agement of solar energy use. Following the November election, citizens' advisory groups will be chosen to advise the council on the land use studies. W e hope there will be widespread participation by citizens in the advisory groups so that the Costa Mesa of tomorrow will be a Costa Mesa in which people will want to live. It should be a community that takes pride in planned progress. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex· preuedon this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit· ed. AddAu The Daily P ilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 6'2·'321. L.M. Boyd /What 'Grade A' means If "Grade A" means anything at all on a carton of milk, it means the dairy contend• the milk was processed under sanitary standards. No, sir, to turn out "Grade A" you don't have to \Lie dlstilled water when you cut it. Just keep it reasonably clean. A thousand years ago in China, colnl were preaed in spedal shapes to signify what they'd buy. The pear-Wped coin was traded for fruit. A coin cut roughly to look like a human boaY, was for clothes. Si.. Nicholas, 80 long eaoctated with ChrUtmu, allo ia the patron saint of pewnbrokera. Understandable. \ Moel bank robberies happen on Friday. . '-Q. How a., doel lt t.lk.e a good pro to atrtna a t.erinia racket? ~· Al>out 45 minutes norm•. lly. • 1;raat'• an avenaie 60-pound strinliri8 Job. Tabs twice that Iona for B]om &.-... 91· and 92-pound webe. . '•You •W°' ~la Ump? Soak lf foe an tn a water aNS add a teupoon ol ~· Q . Where else, besides central F1orida, are the moet sink holes? A. Alabama, South Georgia, some parts of Texas. Q. How many teeth on a snail'• tongue? A. Figure it th1a way: 135 rows with 105 teeth in each row -14,175 teeth. Among youngsters in that age bracket from 9 to 12, girls tend to be better athletes than boys. So contend the students o1 physical fitness.. A 10-year-old girl, they say, almost invariably can beat a 10-year-old boy of about the ume weight and height in a boxing match, if both get similar lell80JlS. This tomboy stap i9 the only age bracket ln which girls Pllle9I physical superiority. You don't tee it demonstrated much beoauee prll are enQOU.l'8&8d to 1fOW out of It With all deliberate tpeed. , I Memo to the dieter: 1The FDA require. food proce11or1 to llat ln11"edlct1 from moet to leut in ~ ~ on a*k• labela. So 1f ~ want. to cut dOWri an yowo ,.,.. ~Intake, don't buy~ wtth quo lilted hilMs' tbllil ·~·.p1a. '\ Letters to the editor Wooden roofs: Another view To the Editor: On July 16 a San Bernardino paper ran an article on a residential fire in Rancho Cucamonga, started when laundry was ignited by a water heater, where a mother and her two children "luckily" escaped unharmed. Several facts of this news item are of unusual interest. The fire was already fully involved before anyone was aware of it. It happened at 1:30 a.m. when the family was asleep. The roof was burned off the house, yet no one was injured. I visited this house the following day and talked.. with the occupants who were shaken but unharmed, and it became obvious why a great.er tragedy had been averted. This house had a wood roof. A wood roof that vented the fire allowing the toxic fumes and smoke to escape. and undoubtedly saved th.P 11ves of the occupants. I The mother stated that, although the flames were shooting from the roof by the time they were aroused, they were able to walk out unharmed because there was no smoke inside. Further indication of this was the evidenoo that, although fire damage to the kitchen, garage, and roof W&S extensive, there .. was no smoke damage throughout the house, no smoke damage to the contents of the house, and1 most of all no smoke damage to the occupants. NATION AL FIRE Protec tion Association statistics show that over 95 percent of all home fires start INSIDE the house. In high fire hazard brush areas, or areas adjacent to hfilsjde brush areas, it is apparent that fire retardant construction is necessary. But in our recent emotional eagerness to legislate £ire retardant roofing for tingle family dwelllnp throughout c.alifornia are we sacrificing th~ life safety of 95 percent of the families whose fires will start INSIDE their house? During an intensive 30-month study made in Dallas, Texas, 88 people l08t their lives in fires. None of th~ deaths were under wood roofs. Tight, fire retardant roofs trap super-heated smoke and to).Qc fumes inside the building and do not'1low them to escape. In recent months a pregnant woman and her 8-month unbos:n baby in Montclair, an 11-year-old boy in Chatsworth, three people in Crestline, and ~ 3-year-old girl in Los Aneeles all died of smoke lnhalatfon under tight, fire retardant roofs. More were injured. WW the.e statistics increase when homeowners have no choice but tight roofing? In some of these instances the apparent structural damage seemed minimal. But. the fire began inside, the smoke could riot. escape, and people died. It is amall consolation to a homeowner that his fire retardant roof ls still intact if he, or a member of his family, died from smoke inhalation. Right now there is one owner of a wood-roofed home in Ranc:ho Cucamonga who will suffer the pain \:>f rebuilding a house, but, much more important. will not suffer the agony of ~a famlly. ~A.MITroN Police thanks To the F.c:lltor: Tlie Newport Beach Police Department oommendl the Dally PUot for lea efforca to provide a laf• Fourth of July" • . The NIUlationa reetrlctil'\a the u.e of flreworkl are aometlmee dllflcult to ~ 9nd often praent an opportun.lcy for crhiclam or nrcum ae to their eafotcement of theH lawa and ~the nepUV. ~pect &hat tMy .. TIM Dally .PUot h• taken ~_very DO'SUw 9'tftUile lD d..una I with tlm ... It hlil dearly ...... thit ........ few Wile....,.llGIW'lnd hal~ It• readen to t•k• advanta1• of ~~~~to ... y the T~iii.wtoba • Ollelot~ Newport Beech MAILBOX Ghastly action To the F.ditor: It was another shocking display of devil-take-the-hindmost, survival-of- the-fittest, and do-it-yourself, consumer. For, apparently in the interest of saving the rich taxpayer· money, an arrogant Orange County Board of Supervisors' majority recently - wickedly -cut the heart out of the Consumer Protection Agency, bravely " standing against public interest and protest. This in the teeth of records showing the agency saved non-rich Orange Countians millions. But one guesses the real reason may have been. sweeten~ by a do-it-yourself philoeophy, to use the money for such development-oriented. projects as the hated San Joaquin Corridor freeway should the court& reject our suit. I'm surprised opponents of the conswner agency didn't come right out and say, "Big Business doesn't cheat;" or, "Who needs a Consumer Protection Agency? Ask your neighbor -he'll tell you who's reliable." (My neighbor's wife back in Florida used to ask the iceman which stocks to buy.) Or, "You can't fool the American public." But accolades must go to Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark who fought the cut. Perhaps they read the voter mind clearer. Or better, they still believe a decent government's role is to do what the poorer individual cannot do: protect him8elf from scams. One has to wonder, however, why one of the cutters didn't join Riley and Clark in return for their past votes for massive developments. There's still another question that rn not put. All I ask now is, How long, Oh Lord? How long? TOM ALEXANDER Column uni air To the F.ditor: Until I read Mr. Von Hoffman's column so unfairly d epicting and condemning Israel's military thrust into embattled Lebanon (July 16th). I considered his comments to be fair and worth noting. Being a pacifist by nature, the brutal eUects of all armed conflicts have ever evoked loathing from me. If fairness would have tempered his moral outrage, I might have forgiven his damning words. AB is, I can only ask him; Where were his righteous outcries when other , Lebanese children were driven from their homes, orphaned and maimed from PLO firing? WHERE WAS HIS eloquent and moral wrath when Israeli schoolchildren were fired upon ln their northern settlements and in achool buses? How many deprecating columns did he write when entire Jewish-populations were uprooted from thelr hi1toric homelands in Yemen, Syria. and many other Arab lancla, with only the clothes on their backs? desecration against women and chlldrer\, churches and gravesit.es. "A sweet and lovely land was ravaged. Those who dared to oppose the PLO were murdered. Homes and fanns and villages were pillaged. Lebanese- governmental authority was defied and ultimately destroyed. "IN COLLUSION WITH the Syrian occupation army, the PLO made war on the people of Lebaon. From, 1975 to 1981, the toll among civilians was 100,- 000 killed, 250,000 wounded, count.less thousands made homeless. Thirty-two thousand children were orphaned. "And the world was silent." Now that in a desperate effort when Israel is trying to put an end to PLO atrocities, many eloquent voices such as Von Hoffman's have risen up to decry Lebanese casualties. Where were they in the last seven years of needless suffering of the innocents? PAULA WARSAW Fire safety To the Editor: I would like to extend our sppreclation to you and your newspaper for running the "No Fireworks in Laguna Beach" public service announcements prior to the Independence Day holiday. Although busy as usual, this Independence Day holiday weekend was characterized by minimal fireworks- related public safety problems, and by a calmer celebrative mood on part of the general public. We believe your running our public service announcements positively affected this year's less destructive Independence Day holiday weekend celebration. RONALD E. ADAMS Fire Chief, Laguna Beach Seniors' view To the F.ditor: I am writing this letter to you in regard to what the mayor and City CoUncil of Fountain Valley are trying to do to us seniors. On Tuesday, July 20, when we had a meeting with the mayor and City Council, I was amazed, surprised and disgusted to see and hear how little they regarded the seniors. Don't they ~ that their wives will be aenion too some day? And I'm sure a lot of them have a mother that is a senior alao. AB I was coming out of the building, I approached a member of the council and asked him what he thought about all this? His answer was that we all have our p~blems. This I thought wu quite an answer. I told him that a lot of theae seniors who are quite elderly and don't have a family look forward to Wednesday and Friday to go to the Recreation Building on Brookhurat where they all meet to play Bl.nao and play alrds and have a little refreshment. Rather than call upon my own meager knowled1e of what tranaplred ln tortured Lebanon, 1111 quote from a recent media ad of the n·auonwlde Ametica.n Lebaneee League, numberml around 2 million eoula: lan't this better than to have to my home and twiddle their thumbs and eet to depl"elled that they may land tn the nursing home? There la an old aayina you are only .. old u you feel, and I'm IW'e lf they ~ve to 1tay he>me all the tbne It IW'e tm't Ftns to make them feel In)' )'9Unaer". "SEVEN YBAU AGO, Lebanon WU occul>ied by PLO ietrortata who had been expelled from Jordan aft.er havlna failed to overthrow Kina HutHin. Durtn1 thoH Hven ~eau they coinmltted an OrrY of altOClU .. and G.L. very Concerned Senior- • Artificial limb. no ha.ndicap for this feader DEAR ANN LANDl:RS: I felt 10rry for Mnt. L.C .. who objected to appearlnf. without her artifk:ial limb 1n her brother-in-law 1 home movta. I, too, am a uniped, ao I can help her. Once I aocepWid the fact my lea wu not aolna to arow back, I Cleclded lf all my frlendi knew .na ''didn't bother them, it didn't matter lf a Wc>tld full oJ atranaen knew. ' When I fo dancing I wear my coameUc prosthesis. U am mowing the lawn, I wear an old-fashioned peg leg I found in a aecorid-hand atore. I use the wheelchair if I'm going to a ahoppl.ng mall. For the beach or the pool, I put on my one-piece bathing auit and.grab my crutches. U people stare, I figure it's their problem, not mine. Some folka wear glasses, others need hearing aids. My problem happens to• be a little more obvious. So what? -UNRUFFLED IN CALIFORNIA DEAR CALIF.: Some "handicapped" people are jaat about aa handicapped as tbey allow themselves to be. To me, you sound Uke a lady with .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 32-ynr-old dlvor"Ced woman who baa a aood •xecuttw polftlon, a lovely apartn.eni, a new car and eome lnheriWid money. I tell you thil 10 you wW know I am not broke, huna:ry or ln need of finanda1 help. An att.rac:Uve man who jolned the firm la.It year has been my steadleat eacort, but only becau.e my frlenda invite him or l buy Ucketa to the ballet, the theater, the opera, symphony, etc. I like h1m a lot. but be has never apent one dime on me. He loves my cook1na an<I hates to eat out ... aaya lt gives hlm lndiaesUon. I remembered him on h18 blrthday. He forgot mine. Ch.Ntm.u. noth.lna. On Valentine'• Day he drew a fWUly picture and banded it to me. I should confess that he is excellent company and sexually we are very compatible. Should I overlook this flaw which others have noticed? I think this man could be my bird of paradise. What do you think? FLUMMOXED IN NEWl'ON, N.J . DZAR l'LUM: U JR cloa't mllHI a bird wlto IMI ueMep ~," )'H'Ve pt ~ ldMI mu. At a ....... WOIDU I cu tell JM I woalda't stve ..... pu •tudlal roem at a Mull ra111e. ~ANN: I've been reedlnl you for yeera and nevw iaw thll problem. Many office worken wW ~~ ~ lf l'O" prtn! m_y letter: DEAR PROUD JS A.RENT: I know how th.rUled you are with your new baby, but pleue don't bring him to the office. I am tired ot pretend1ng to be interested when I couldn't care le.a. I'm sure you think your baby la lp8Clal, but all babies look alike to t.hme of ua who aren't ,.elatives. When you brina your baby ln, everyone feela he must drop everythtna and fuaa over the kJd. It'• a bore and a nuisance. So if you want your colleagues to .ee your progeny, lnvlte them to your home or arrange to meet ln a coffee shop nearby. - JUST BEEN THROUGH IT IN N.Y. DEAR N.Y.: Some colleapea eajoy 1eelu1 t .. e new bablea, bat I a11ee, It 11 dltnaptlve ud 11cb T Punch rou1 HEALTH DR. PETER J. STEINCROHN Diet's not the answer DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Your reply to a reader wbo asked about gout bothers me very muclt. I beg yoa to live t~• poor mu another word of bope regarding Cliet and controt of gout without dally pills. What do you mean when you say "Diet? If the patient can take it without too mucb trouble, It'• all rllbt." Wbat troultle If It controls goat! Please! Let tlail man know all be baa to do to control Ilia goat. He 1boald avoid: peuats and all other legumes .• Sbellflab -clams, etc. No matter bow ... mucb be loves tbem. Raw apples. Raisins. Uver. Tbese restrictions are no bardalaip, surely, but tltey are poison to goat-prone men. How do I know? Becaaae my baabaud was lucky enoagb to go to a GP who gave bJm some diet guide to control goat. I admit my husband still baa more attacks tllau he'd Uke. Bat the only time be gets Into trouble la wben be eats some offending food. I'll be watching for farther words. Your reader sorely dJdn't get the best advice from you. -MRS. H. DEAR MRS. H.: Your husband might not be still having attacks of gout if he were willing to take medicine we know ls effective in controlling ·uric acid metabolism. Don't blame it on indiscretiOllS in his diet. His attacks come either because too tnuch uric acid is being formed or too little excreted. I'll reiterate: control of diet Is of minuscule importance compared to taking pills which you seem to abhor. It's likely your husband will continue to have attacks of gout if he doesn't take medication. If his doctor relies on diet only in treating his gouty patients, for your husband's sake, better change doctors. Most doctors agree that preventive medication is more effective than purine-free diets. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I'm %7 years old. I'm married to a man 17 years my senior. I was sarprlaed to learn tbat be had a vasectomy almost 15 years ago. I've never married before and want so much to bave my own baby. We are conalderlag adopttaf a baby. Wbat I want to know is the chances o a "reverse" operatioll. -MRS. L. DEAR MRS. L.: I'm sorry to say I thank the ~ are practically nil Nevertheless, I suggest you consult the doctor who pe rformed the operation. He is better qualified to give you the verdict. New techniques have been devised in recent years which "reverse" the operation effectively. A point I'd like to make is this: Prospective husbands should inform their wives they've had a vasectomy. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I am golug tuoagb ta.e cltuge. I am 50 ud It began a few months ago. I've bem getting bot flashes every boar or ao ud 1everal times alptly. Tbey're ex.bausttag. Are yoo for or apluat tJte aae of eatro1ea1? -MRS. G. DEAR MRS. G .: rd have to know more about you. Some doctors say NO without reservation becauae of the dangers of uterine or breast cancer. Others aay YES il the patient will take smaller doees and be under constant supervision by her doctor. Your own doctor will make the decision, depending upon your past history and preeent state of health. ~ •vASHLEIGH : • •&RILLIANT f •'f- FREEDOM IS HOT THE GOAL, BOT' YOU NEEiD FR:EE.DOM e,EFORE YOU CAN OECIOE WHAT THE G~L. I!. • ____ .... , "It's the man from the Guiness Book of .. : · Interest shrinking SAN FRANCISCX> -A.$ everybody expected. Miguel de la Madrid was elecied president of Mexico. A friend writes me: "We don't expect miracles down here. Mexicans have a saying: 'Man belongs to the earth, aod belong• to heaven. Inflation will probably go on'." I put a little money lnto Mexico a few years ago. The income waa attractive and I like Mexico. The government waa stable. There hadn't been a bank failure in 30 years. "I advbe you to put your money ln.to pesoa," said the broker in Guadalajara. I did this. A year later the pe90, steady aa a rock theee many years, was devalued. Ah, but wait. I sold the pe909 six months ahead of thia time! Changed them for U.S. dollan. I said to the children: "Your father was not behind the door when the brains were pasaed out." I GOT OUT THE GUITAR and gave them a few bars of "The Man Who Broke the e,m.k at Monte Carlo." Here's a bright summer day In our village of North Beach. I had lunch ln the Wash. Sq. with F.d Fleiahell. He goes to Mexico once a month for game fishing. He said: "I read all theae people who say Mexico is a bargain since devaluation. Let me tell you it isn't. It's more expensive. You get more pe909 for the dollar. But everything has gone up. ''The boat rental is more. I said to the owner: 'How come?' He said: 'Well. Senor. everything costs more.' "I said: 'How can it cost more? You hire local labor. You haven't done anything for theee boeta in fifteen years. Except maybe put in a new carburetor'." Fleishell said: "My hotel room went up 40 percent. A margarita uaed to C08t $2.50 U.S . -a pretty high price conaiderlng it's local tequila. STAii DfUPUNf AROUND THE WORLD That's gone to $3. And they're making it with canned lemon mix." I DON'T KNOW WHAT got into me to play with Mexican pe906. I was ln Guadalajara with an American friend who said: "Nearly all the grirlgos who retired here put their dollan into pe909. "The banks pay you 28 percent on your deJ>OGt." He said: "U you wanted to buy pe905 here, they would pay you the same and send you the interest in dollars.'' It turned out you didn't have to deposit a bundle. You could put in a thousand dollars. Immediately I took a thousand to the broker. Went home and began to read the financial pages. "Mexican OU Reserves Second Only to Saudi Arabia." I got out the guitar. Gave the children a few licks of "See What the Boya in the Beck Room Will H.ave." ' Horatio Alger's boy heroes were "Bound to Riae.'' But they did not rt.ae by dodgy lnvestmenta. They shined shoes. They held the bank door open for the banker. I BAD P ~ED THAT point but I got a lot of mileage out of Mexico. I told the lunch crowd: "Took a little flutter In Mexico recently. I ,wppose you've noticed what their oU reserves are." E.F . Hutton phoned me: "Talk. I just want to listen to you." GOIEN ON BllDGE BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF Both vulnerable. South deala. WEST •101164 O kT <> QIO • 10815 NOaTB +U O JO <>&II •AOJ41 SOUTH +AIU O AtU <> ATCI •H EAST •QU O QIOll <> Jtll •&• The blddln~ S.•tll WM& N.U £ut lNT P ... INT P ... p ... P ... Openinr 1 .. d: Five of •. The rubber bridp player learns to put the aafety of h1I contract above all ei.e. The dupliclte player baa to wetah riak va. pin in the punu.lt of overt:ricb. South'• decllion to open one no tnanp ii In keepins>with modem thliary. TM--. II that It t. mote Important to pt the hand off '°"" dMlt wt&b one bld than to worry about the fac\ that ~ haw a w.k doub&etGD ID one adt and I.bat the hind mtcht play better from the ott. llde, er ln ane other ltl"aln. North'• nme to three no tnlmp .. automatic. • The rubber bridge player should always make tht. contract. The auplicate player will, in all probabllity, go down -if the defense la sharp enough. Assume that you are playing in a tournament. You capture the queen of apades with the king and take a club nne..e. If F.Mt la a wily defender, he allows your jack to win! Now you can't be blamed for returnln• to yoltr hand and repeatina the fineae. Thia tlme East wins the kin& and, atnce you have only one entry to dummy, you cannot both aet up and ~joy the Jona-card trick in the club suit. The rubber brtda• player hu learned to reapec:t money. He reallll89 that he needl only three trtcu from the club suit to make h18 contnct. U he la a aood teclWdan, he wil1. lead a low club from his b&nCl and duck in dwnmyl That auarantees the contract lf cluba break no wane than 4-2. M the carda lie, Eut can win the tint club trtck With the ax and return a lplde. Dec1uw wlnl and caic. the club im-e. EYet\ thouah thia 1mee to r..t. declarer le on top of the wodcl. He oao wtn any return by r.t. Cl'Oll eo tbe table wtd\ the kin& of dJamorida and draw the lMt two cluba with UM ~ Dwnmy'a lowJy four of cluba la his nlnt!> trldt. vl11C1 IHeld be t1tremely brief. 'Re womea ID my ofllce llowever d14 Mt fMI a• •tro1talY H you. 'Rey bedeve yoa doa't lib die mamas. ud your necatlvlam rubs off oa "9 ~ 1eaeradoa. la tbl1 possible? . What lclnd of wedding 608 with today'a neMll life atylea? Does anything go? Ann Lander•' compleU?ly new "The Bride's Guide" U?Jl.s WM&'• right for today's weddings. For a copy, send "' doJJar, plus a Jong, self-addressed, stamped en~lope (37 cents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chlcago, W. 00611. flMA 80M8fCI ATWIT'S ENO Reniedies refilled .. If a foreigner watched American television for an entire evening, he would end up believing the most influential man in our lives is our druggist. There isn't a person on a commercial who will make a move without him. Every night. there's a caravan of. malcontents. who drag in whining, "Gee, Mr. Brewster, do you know how long it's been since rve eaten blueberry pie with these dentures?" He fixes it. THE NEXT ONE, a militant, registered cavity-fighter says, "I don 't care how it tastes, Mr. Harper, my child only had three cavities last' month." Then Mr. Harper. that 'sly old fox, will slip her a tube of toothpaste that will give her child zip cavities. Or the one I love, where the woman doesn't open her mouth. The druggist just looks at her and saya, "Embarrassing itching, Mrs. Miller? Try this.'' The steady stream of people into the drugstore who come to worship at the Mecca of quick remedies goes on all night. A throbbing headache? Try this. Indigestion? Try this. Painful sunburn? Try this. Disgusting roaches? Try thia. I have a neat Clrugg:ist. I don't know his name. I just drop off pracrlptions and he smiles and fills them. He wears a white jacket like they do on TV. I have a lot ol respect for him becal.18e he reads my doctor's h&ndwriting. I have never diacussed my irregularities with him. It's nothing peraonal. It's just that I have to be married to someone for at least five years before I diacuas the subject with them. We've gone through a lot of trends on televialon~ westerns, police shows, lawyers and doctors. Ever since Quincy broke through with his practice of forensic medicine, druggists have been restless. I THINK IT'S ONLY a matter of time before 4 druggist will star in his own TV series. Each week he'lldeal with a mouthwash that's being recalled or a whole city that becomes constipated. I see it as a Love Boat of sickies. HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA Friday, ~u1t 6 \.-\ AR (March 21-April 19): Hidden interests come to light. Talents which had been subdued are, activated. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Focua on putting ideas, concepts to work. Wishes can be transfonned into realities. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): New approach necessary in connection with assignment, business enterprise. Pisces person continues as an allv. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Cycle indicates end of search. Transactions are completed, sales and purc hases are decided upon -you reach understanding with those who opposed your plans .. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Protect self from. loopholes, nefarious schemes and from individuall" who want aome~inll for nothing. Accent on taxes. . VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on restrictions, delays, location of needed material. Security measures are heightened, you are able to, build on a more solid base. LIBRA (Se'pt. 23.-0ct. 22): Be ready for change,1 travel, variety and new outlook concerning employment. Details unfold, you learn where vou stand and you a.re able to review. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Good lunar upect coincides with personal magnetlam, physlclil' attraction and an outlet for creative c.apabilltiel.1 SAOrrfARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 22): You learn who ii sincere aa contrasted to tho9e who par llf> Mrvlce, who make cla1ma without anyth!M to ~l them. •I CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You make ~ul contect. Netahbor bu ldM which ~ im~ acurl\Y and perhaps add to lncome. Be a aoOd ltaten•r and a shrewd analyat. Another • AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Feb. 18): SMJ)halla on pe,.mntl. colledions, locauna lost aitlcl.e and lncteUin& Lncome Potenual. PISCES (Feb. U-March 29): Lunar and ftUIDlldcal ~·hiahlllht freeh apprwh. renew9d vllOl', Ull'@llenf~ arid the~lian of Pl'edlt tOoll. ' .. -lri-A~ar'' J Have you seen Tova Borgnine lately? She · really looks great! In fact, according to her husband Ernest,' Tova now has the skin of a teenager! And what about Ernie himself? His friends are all saying he looks younger now than he did 10 years ago. Actually, he looks so good many of his co-stars have accused him of having a face-lift. ·But Ernie hasn't had a face-lift and nei- ther has his wife Tova. Both of them, how- ever, do have a certain little secret. Fortunately, for the rest of us, this "little Hollywood secret" isn't so secret anymore. Soon it will be in stores all over the country and even now you can get it by mail! Offi- cially, it's called TOVA 9. but everyone in Hollywood simply refers to it as "Tova's Face-Lift-In-A-Jar." It is certainly not cheap but the star~ who use it say it works liJCe magic. The whole process takes only half an hour and insiders .'' say there is nothing like it for ·anybody who wants to look years younger than their actual calendar age. • It is easy to use. All you do is apply the cream to your face and wait. "The cream is pink when you apply it, and gradually turns white," says Tova. "After it turns white it should be removed. One of the great things about it is that there is no guess work. It 'knows' what to do by itself!" Mrs. Borgnine says the secret of this re- markable look-young· treatment was first discovered by the Aztec Indians centuries ago. She says it comes from the roots of a very rare cactus plant and that it is 100% naural pure and, until Tova came into the picture, it was only available in certain very remote sections in Mexico. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "I have not had a facelift. The only reason I look younger today than I did 10 years a·go is because of what my wife has discovered." -Ernest Borgnine November 3, 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• feature. Consequently, I guard it with my life -no sun, watch my diet, proper rest and the use of marvelous products such as TOVA 9." -Jayne Meadows It goes on and on. A complete list of every- body who uses TOVA 9 would fill up this· entire page and it would read like a virtual "Who's Who In Hollywood." Actually, many of your favorite movie and TV stars absolutely swear by it. In fact, author Harold Robbins (The Carpetbaggers) says flatly, "I won't travel without it!" and order "Tova's Secret Weapon" by mail or telephone. Then, try it out in the privacy of your home, and take a close look at the amazing change you will see in your mirror! \ After that, if you are not 100% satisfied, simply send back the empty container and Mrs. Borgnine will personally ~ee to it that you get a complete refund with no questions asked. · Remember! You can't lose money but you can lose years off your appearance! It is easy to order. Just fill out the coupon below and send it to Mr~. Borgnine with your payment. Or, if you wish to order by Would you like to try this remarkable Visa or Mastercard, you can dial (800) 824- discovery? Would you like to have the beau-7888 [in California dial 1 (800) 852-7777] ty of youth without the scars and expense of and ask for Operator 471, Dept. 252. But what about the results? Does it really surgery? If so, her~'!~~:Jou can try TOVA Either way, your order will be sent promptly work? Here is what others say: 9 without any ris~ Simply go ahead by return mail. Thank you. " ... The results are obvious'!" I · -Brenda Vaccara r--------------NO·AISK OADEA COUPON --------------~ " M k · I h f,, I . (Please fill tn ind mail tod1y) VITAL HOTEi I ... y s 1n oves t em. TO: MRS. ERNEST BORGNINE Cred1tc1rdordersc1nbehandledby I -Jessica Walters I c/o TOVA-9 Corporation phone. 0111 (800) 824-7881 or. In I I 5933 Corvette St., Dept. 252 g~~~~~~·.~~ea~t:~~ and Ilk for I "TOVA 9 has a fresh just showered feel-I Commerce. CA. 90040 REMEMBERI " •• TOLL fREE ing ! " -Connie Stevens 1 1 11 Dear Mrs. Borgnlne: . "I couldn 't be more pleased with the I Yes, I want to try your amazing TOVA 9 discovery that all the stars are calling "Tova's Secret Weapon." I am 1 1 results ... '' J -Maureen Dean I encloslng$39.00plus$2. 75 postage and handling (Total$41 . 75) and I understand I must be 1000/osatisfledorthatafter I 30-days I return the empty product container and receive a complete refund with no questions asked. "I am amazed with the texture of my face ... " -Jed Allen " .... Tova certainly has something for everyone!'' -Debbie Reynolds NOTE: Check here If you wish to order by credit card. 0 Visa 0 Mastercard 0 American Express Card Number -----------~ Expiration Date ~------- Address I I • I I I I " ... A total beauty treatment as well as an City State Zip I indulging, pampering treat!" I -Tommy & Jo Lasorda P.S. Checks and Money Orders should be made payable to TOVA 9 and California retldents muat add 61h•1t sales tax 1 1 "M I · · t I I t t ($2.54) for a total payment of $44.29. Also. all ordera recetved wfthln 14 days wfll receive 1 personal letter and a free gift y comp ex ion IS no on 'Y very mpor an from Mr. and Mra. Borgnlne. ·Thank you. I to my career, but it is considered my best L---------------------=------------------U .I --- . ... l . "> 1 . ~· ---------------~ Tll lllPHllH }&~ would augment the already-crowded conditions that exis\ ln the present county lockup in Santa Ana. Hearings have been held around tbe county, near where the poaible hooaegow could be bull} . THE COMMITl'EE IS finding °'lt thit just about the same thirig applies to a jailhouiie as OOuld be said about a regional jet airport. That ia, everybody wants one, but not in their own back yard: Some hearinas were held about poesibly planting the jail down in the Siddleback Valley. Residents came IWring in to declare that no v(ay should rotten criminala be hol.-d near their nice homes. The committee fled, searching for a more friendly reception. JUST AT· THE END of last month, the advisory group studied a parcel off Weir Canyon Road, up io the Anaheim-Yorba Linda eector of our central county. More than 200 dtiz.ens showed up at that hearing. You could have fired a cannon through the place and hit nary a soul who thought Weir Canyon Road would be a great place for a county slammer. Homeowners of Santa Ana Canyon were against it. The Anaheim City C.ouncil and Plaoentia Unified School District both ..presented resolutions decrying the whole notion. Even the chairman of the Santa Ana · Flood Protection Agency blasted the site, declarihg the jailhOU8e could be "wiped out" in event of high water. IT SHOULD BE CLEAR now that jailhou.ees are aboUt as popular as jet airports in various nei~borbooda. Maybe the aolution here would be-to locate the new jail on acreage at John Wayne Airport, since that jet aerodrome already takes heavy knocks from nearby horneownen. You could reaaon that you're sticking all the objectionable stuff in one location. With all the jet noise out at the airport. however, you surely couldn't house prisoners on the property for very long. Somebody would sue the county for subjecting the com to cruel and unusual punishment. I I S,000 raised . i- 'Bike T~ek' benefit Grads sought Ava1on Hl&h School on Qdalllll w.nd .. aeeld.nc tanner ....... ,,. a reunion planned 0t:t. 12-23 In Avalon. ...... tram 1114 to lib aft ~ID ....... tbt "91\ al tbt ~·lb.acm.lldolW'=la avaUable bJ telephonin1 Mto.oal or **:If ·O. Joi 1. .... Calf. • IM 85 , . . ... . -- Tbe PUC ba approved a plan tbat would •• ve Paollle Telephone c•lomen moae1 by buyins daelr own phone. '?age B4. Newport reverses HUD policy BJ ITEVB M.UmLB O(tllit ............ Newport a.ach, th• only or.n,. County dty that doee not uae federal hou1l n1 and community developmenl money, ~epar1n1 to reverH th•~ ~ dty hu beeh under fire tn recent years for not u1ln1 Houm.n, and Urban Development funcla and for alleaedly not dolni e nou1h to he1p_ low ana moderate-income ~mlllee find ~· City offiolal1, aa part of a year-lon1 effort aimed at providing aUordable boullnl. are aet to apply for $496;-000 th.roush the Community Development Block Grant Pro8ram. Several City C&&ncil members are lea than enthuaiastlc about the policy change. The motivation behind the policy change, said Councilman Don Strau11, i1 an un1ettled lawsuit filed nearly two yean ago by a legal aid group and a fa1r hoUltnt orpnb'atlon. 11wt .Wt charpl that Newport haa dHcrlmlnatory hou1ln1 ~Part of the complaint .. that Newport ha• not made r•1~lar u1e of the federal hoUalna prosram. Several other council memben said privately that Strauaa'. claim ii accurate. The lut time Newport Wied the federal block srant program wa1 ln the late 19701 when money wu used to help aet up a aetU« citlzen complex ln Corona del Mar. City officials aald they have not wanted to form an extra layer of government t o adminilter the funcll and long have stuck to the belief that the city l1 beat involved where . private enterprise can't do the job. Coeta Mesa, by contrast, haa been an acti'lle uaer of the federal block arant money, recently over.eeinga7~unitprojectfoc eenior dtizens. \ I CUrrentlb'.c.tl\ouah' Coeta M-11 ln a jllln uae of the federal prGll'am. The dty hu 1pent $1.8 mOJJon purchaablg land for low· lnc:ome apartments but can't land ft:defal mone_y to aublidlze rent.I. The project Ii at a 1tandltlll. CraJ1 Bluell, a city planner, aid Newport hat taken aeven.l recent 1te p1 toward creatlna affordable hou1lnf and h u encoura1ed aevera kinda of federal Pf'Oll'a.ma. He aaid the city encouraaes a government-funded aulatance program for re11ters and helped a Corona del Mar church ge t federal money to con1truct a 101-u.nit senior citizen housing complex. Neither of these program•, though, ll administered by the city. Bluell aaid juat becal&le the city ii applying for federal howalng money doesn't mean the city ls in for "a bunch of block-1haped bulltfln-painted pink and all ln a ro~r He u1d the block grant money doe1 not have to be uaed for housing Pf'Oll'&lnl. He laid lt can b e u1ed fo r commercial rehabllltatlon and even pubUc work.I project.I. Crean views. Israel attack Iarael'1 uaault on Beirut and the Palestine Liberation Organization wu ju1tifiable, according to congreulonal candldate Johnny Crean, who visited Beirut recently. He said the hraelil 1howed considerable restraint be.tor e moving on the PLO. "L e t 's 1ay the people in Tijuana were ahel.l.illj San Diego randomly. How long would it take our tanb U> get to Mexico City, two days? I don't think we would ~ aa patient," Crean laid. Rams coach 'Distinguished Eagle Scout' By PAMELA STEINRIEDE Ofltleo.9JNotltMf At a benefit luncheon attended Wednesday by sport• stars; political le~dera , bu1iness executive• and-700 Boy Scout supPorters Los Angeles Rams coach Ray Malavasl received the .. Diltir\gulshed F.agle ScQut Award" from the Orange County Council Boy Scouts of America. While the ~ouncil honored Malavasi, together with ex-Rams ,quarterback Pat Haden, Rama safety Nolan Cromwell and Calllomia Angels first bueman Rod Carew, lt alao netted about $65,000 for over 36,000 area acouts. One scout who will benefit . from the Good Scout Sports Banquet held at the Mariott Hotel in Anaheim ia Huntington Beach High School aenior David Barton. Geology class due at OCC California - a geologic ahowcue -ls the aubject of a three-unit .geoJosy c:oune being Offered at Orange Coast College beginning Sept. 7. Fall semester claues at the Costa Mesa college begin Sept. 7. Titled "California Geology" (GeololY 140), the claaa meets Wedneaday eveninp from 6-9 Reptration far fall clules is Aug. 12 throuah Sept. 10 in the OCC Admi11ions Office. For re1lstration information, telephone 556-5772. Barton presented the award plaque to Malavasl, who has contributed his time and efforts for many acout events. The 17-year-old Barton has earned 119 badges aa a acqut, 80 of whkh he has aecured ln the past two years. Only five othen in the history of ICOUting have acquired ju.It aa many badges. "I had a lot of support from my family and school too{" sai4 Bart o n , an a s p r t ng neurosurgeon. Another good BCOUt, Malavasi . has supported acouting since 1944 when he earned his acout rank in Clifton, N.J . "I never thought that attaining the badges I worked for would come to this." aaid Malavaai. The "Dl1tlnguished Eagle Scout" preeented to Malavaai ls given to F.ag.le Scouts who have Ciistinguiahed themaelves in their career or in public life. Haden, Cromwell and Carew each were g iven the "G ood Scout" award for their aervioe to loc al youth activ itle1 and ecout1ng. "I gr.ew up as a scout in Ka.nus," said Cromwell, "and I know what it meaht to have some guidelines about what it take• to be a good citizen. It meant 90 much to me.•• . Political figures in attendance included Atto rney Ge neral George Deukmejian, stale Sen. John Seymour, !\-Anaheim, and Orange County supervisor s Bruce Nestande, Harriett Wieder and Thomas Riley. J . Robe rt Fluor II of the Irvine-based Fluor Corp. and Marion Knott of Knott's BerrJ Fann alao attended the banquet. DellJ ..... lteft "*° GOOD SCOUT -David Barton and Ray Malavasi talk about s couting after the coa c h o f the R a m s r eceived th e "Distinguished F.agle Scout" award. Berton, who hQ!! earned 119 badges as a scout, presented tl!e award to Malavasi. No new· ·clues found in lock box • crimes Lock box burglarlea will continue ln Irvine until the 'thievea niak.e a miltake, aaid Sgt. Richard Bowman. Irvine Police Department. All efforts to apprehend the thleve1 who've been robbing homes after en~ them with keys obtained from real estate lock boxes have been un- IUCCellful. The Irvine Board of Realtors even re-keyed it.a lock boxea in April, said Irvine Crime Prevention Supervisor Mike Weiss, "but It didn't eeem to do much good. Ala a matter of fact, thinp have gotten progreaively wane. May and June were the heaviest months." He added, "At th1I point, we can definitely aay there's IOU)eOl'W out there with a key.'' Tbe lrYtne Police Depertment baa been c:mductlng an intensive invesU,ation and campaign to atop the burg1ariea. <>ff.an have run down clue afW clue to no avail, Bowman said. "There's been a lot of udaanl1ni of infonnaUon with other ~lice department.I.'' he said, becauae the lock box buralar* ~·t jun in lrvine. But, everybod ti around at the meeting• an pulll out their hair." lrvtne hu bad about 65 ao- ealled lock box burl).arfea this ,_, W. mdd. There wen two in ·Ja~r_y,.:~• in febru3 thnil • llMdl. leYen In 11 ID lilaJ, 9Yeft ln June an ........ ~lnJul1. 11We'r• l~l lock box ntl'IM becw re hOIDliS tbat haW --with DO llp al .......... i but tlwv all baw lock i._. • ~f, :W•~md :eo.itman Mid ttieN'• mon ... _ ... _=-s 'Oilli hil ... petty .............. ··Dta,y ....... ~ .,....nt .ud, •..wliJJe anothet haa been stealiflg sterling silver." Generally, Weiss sa id , the thieves have been taking "very portable items, things that are easy to conceal like money and jewelry." Hal Tamblln, president of the Irvine Board of Realtors. said the board isn't planning to re-key but, instead, is waiting for new lock boxes which have magnetic devices to ldefltify their users. "T o r e·k e y is a $19,000 expense for thia board," Tamblin said. "That's a little stiff." He said he's sent sp ecial messages to the 650 members of the Irvine board "which indicate all the things agents can and cannot do to protect clients." Tamblin said he doesn't know how many of the 1,500 homes listed with the Irvine Board of lrvin.e police seek • reserve recruits The Ir v ine Pol i c e Department'• complement of reaerve officers is down to 19, 90 for the eecond time ln recent months. It'• looking for recruit.I. "We're authorized 30 re1erve1," aaid Lt. Robert Lennert, who explained re.ervea u1ually end up u re1ular officers, thereby deplettnc the . l'8lefV8 ranks. · The department 11 doing back1round cbecka on aeven peslOlll who ..-ect pnlimlnary teltina ln the preYioul ex=l: drtve, be said. · "But, bMed Oil pu\ I we'll probably drop a half of thoee ln background," he added. Applications for reeerve officer poaltiona are due at the l.'ity Hall ~tlonllt at 17200 Jamboree I Irvine, by 5 p.m. Aug. 18._ Rearve officers are required to volunteer a minimum of 16 hours each month, Lennert explained, and they're trained to two nllhtt a week and all day Saturday for 20 weeka. "Raerve police officers are an inf.elral part of Irvine'• public safety penonne1. .. Lennert said. Information on the reserve pn>1ram ii available by calling 7M·S600. Named to 01useurn unit Anne C. Badbam, Newport BMeb hM been nomtnat..:I by Pt~~tobealllilmber' ~l M._....a.vm ~Blehm wm bie one of 13 1111• IN of \he boa.rd, wblch -~~t­~-omc. GI tbi IMlllull or Mu1eum Servi••• ln WlllilalnOa.D.C. The D-oard la a aoapald, policJ·makt111 'bodJ that •ta Realtors have lock boxes, "but they're a good majority." He also noted members of o th e r r eal estate boards , including Fountain Valley and Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa, "run a real risk," Weiss said . "There's ~ lot of lock box keys out there and there's a very real possib ilit y that t he people committing the bur~es have (See LOCK, Page B2) Festival congratulated President Re agan, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., Ora.nge County Supervisors and the Laguna Beach City Council have sent congratulation s to the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts on its 50th anniversary. The president !•Uded the festival for "furthering the arti1tlc development and acoompliahmenta of our nation." Gov. Brown termed thil year's f•tival "a very 1pedal occuion," • and reeolutfona from supervt8on and La1un• council membera cobgratulated the 10Jden annivenaey. Jewish Center sets classes A deyt1me pro1ram of folk danctn1. exerclae, history and c:ultun beClna A"'i. 2& at the Jewtah Community Center of South Onn1e County, 288 aro.dW.y In l...,una a.ch . The pl'Olr'Ull naw from 10 a.in. to 2 p.m. ad pudciputa are .... to~ .... lun&lll. c. la U per IHllOD for center membeu and •a for non· memben. l'cw lnfomaatlon, c&ll theeien• at ns-1017. . -. -~-- ·~ , tll!~~llr::t·:~,·· ,. 1 1 · From P 11 ~~ P. 8 cour LOCK 80X THEFTS. . • • 1 de/eat asked lesltirnate 1oCC9M to thoM ken; olNUmttaneet IUCh U people to screen Open 11am Expires Aug . 11, 1982 187 E. 17th St1 Co1ta Meta P"on• •ltHd tor IHtHwlce (71 4) 631-1992 --- No matter how often the lrvUie encertna homet for 111• who I SAN J'l\ANCISCO (AP) -A board te·k•Y•· If • pel'IOn .... rniaht no& look .. ~ &hity',. • ima•,a · law crea\lnt 18 new Court of Jeatt.lmate ~. theY may .. t realion. ev. I Apptel ~C. 8j9 ~ ~ tn;!':;i.kTi~~ lock boxet on .~;>:: ~~t~f:en~• ~ 0 Aia IWnllll cil .... ., I appellate COW1I t an. out.he their homtt 1hould keep a aenerally from out of our clty •rman artlit O.lsm' I be dec1aNd lnv~-~uae watchful eye on pro1pectlve elaceelibTultln,SantaAna~ Flachln1er wlll b• IAllalatunt dkin t ..,. __ money b " W "' N1d nd Oa.rdtn G " W ill Mid .. and rtE=..., ~UI· 20 at the Limit 3 to pay for th• new "®rtl, the ~t: them• alone u!. ~he = uaually the1Y:!; you~ adulta." Bifleb MUIMD I Calltornla Supreme Court hu "Thla lnch,des walk-lnl durlna He added, .. It'• unfortunate to of I I been told. an open houle,'' he explained. charaict.eriJ:,e them thll way, but Jl'1.chlneef 11 nMld ._ 11 The Supreme c.ourt,·wtth four They a1lo ahoWd put all money they usually don't look Uke h1I animated ti.ID\ lhiDttit. I Court of Appeal jUltkee littfnl and jewelry In a .eatety deposit protetlk>nal people." Ad.rNlllon ii •2.50 flllr on -1anment, heard argument. box and secure things such u museum members and · I on an injunction which blocked .Uverware ln a ufe, hJdden area •S.50 for non-rnemben. •• 1 I Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. from of ~.he home. . . C•ll 842-5171. The~program will t>. •••••••• .. making coveted election year Call the police," he said, "lf Put• few word• alred at 8 ,.m . at the ; • judldaf appolntmenta. you observe any suspicious to work for ou. mu.eum, SO Cliff Drive . Straw Hat 1·1: .. A 10 w.tta per channel, minimum rms Into 8 ohme from 20.20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.4~ THO STA-7 by Reallstic9 Save•so ~ 129!~5 ' Only 31/2" high, yet with bi{>-receiver features! Lighted tuning meter, bass and treble controls, tape monitor. Special "EO" switch for ~ bass from our Minimu~ series and other mini-speaJ<ers. #31-1968 Save More on This Complete Hi-Fi System!. Save •1ooao s259· ~ .. :m~· Hi-fi to '1<)1 Record off-th&-air, or "live" with built-in mikes. NormaVCr01 tape selector. AC/battery operation. #14-n2 Auto-Search Music System Locates Selections Qulckty Batteries extra VHF-Air/Shortweve AM/FM Portable DX-06 by Realistic Sav 520 4 95 -Reg. 69.95 Mounts und9r dash, In gloyebox or console of most vehldM. #12-1803 ,.. ... 6-Channel, 5-Watt CB Walkie- Talkie Cut 30% ·~~~!:sue 69 95 :.~5 Save Each &ch '30 Take It wherever reliable portable communica- tion Is needed. Range-Boost antenna system for extended signal reach. With Ch. 14 crys- tals and case. #21-1651 Batt«IN, eryetell fof llddltlonal chanMla extra ~drive ''alone"? Have in-.c-nt acoes1 to Ch. 9, the CB emet~ channel. PA faclf.- lty. #21-1 • 61'2" Woofer • 21'2" Tweeter Buy two for the regular price of one! Walnut veneer finish- no plastic or vinyl. Removable grille. 13'/2 x 87/e x 51/,.". #40-1979 • Bullt-ln Mike • Tone Control $18.07 off! Tape counter, Auto- Level, LED battery/record indicator, jacks· for remote mike and aux in- put. With earphone. #14-806 3788:15 #12-1863 40 watts of power, plus five slide-action boosVcut tone controls for great autosound. Save '7 on This Handy AM/FM Pocket Radio By Reahatlc Cut 41010 Goes anywhere! Slide-rule tuning dial, 21 /2" speaker, telescoplc FM antenna. With earphone, wrist strap. #12-634 Banery •• ,,. All makes, models ·and colors. · in the Classified Auto Advertising Daily Pilat .. FINAL REDUCTIONS UST FEW DAYS! PllCE . Selechcl Styles ,, ..... St.. All Sales Final #14 PAIHIOM lllMe, MIWPOeT llACH 17141 644-4UJ #27 MAIM.,_,,, ALM'._A 111 JI l'2·M11 ----- RED HOT . ·SUMMER SALE All Wallpaper 30% Offl Excludlng Kinney Bi:os. Over 100,000 Patterns To Choose From In Stock Papers from J0-40% Offl Super Sa ~lngs on Mini Bllnds 60% With This Ad M&B Wood Bllnds 40% Offl SUNMASTER VERTICAL BLINDS 60% QfFI · -·~tl> On Sale $12!~ Now! ARMSTRONG DESIGNER SOLAR IAN® FLOORING Written Gu•r•ntee on r..bor •nd Mllterl•I• C•ll For Pree In Home E1tlm•t• PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS l' f iVr. and Mrs. W. Bailey Smith f Sm ith -O'Keef e W. Bailey Smith and his bride, the former Karen Helene O'Keefe, are residing in Laguna Beach. Their wedding was perfc:mned in St. James Episcopal Church in Newport Beach. William J. O'Keefe and Marilyn Twitchell · are parents of the bride and the bridegroom is the son of : the late Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur McCoy Smith. NIW 'l2 MIRCEDES·llNZ DIESEL SEDAN R eilly -J ack son St. Mary Presbyterian Church. Newpott Beach, was the eett4ng for the marriage of Aliaort Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Scott JackaOn of Irvine, and John Reilly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Reilly of San Rafael. The newlyweds are residing in San Franciaoo. Carrozzo -Zembik Annette Marte Zembik and Guy Anthony Carrozzo exchanged wedding vows at St. Hedwl1'1 Church In Loa AlamJf.08. Their parents 8J"e Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zemblk Jr. of Conroe Tex.as, and Mr. and Mrs. Guy -aarrozzo Jr. of Fountain Valley. How does Last cal for Y oath Artists Student artists under 21 eligible to enter their original art in Huntington Center's Youth Art competition Aug. 9 thru 15. Entry forms available in center of mall. CHILDHOOD NOSEBLEEDS ARE COMMON ~: R. Ph. The ~ moat frequent rea1o n1 for a child'• nc.ebleed att a dryn-of the mucou1 membrenu. rubblna or plcklna at the note d .. rlna sleep and • anaII ~ &l"ft ln tM llOM. U r..-ted often, conault a ph~ the problem can be 001 rec:led by lmprovfnl the humldlflcatlon In tM home and the appliaition of white petr<>lewn Jelly to the lnaide of the noatrlb to prevent dryne11. If needed your doctor can. In • 1lmple procedure, cauterlR • ll1'llll ulcerated &l"ft. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prHcrlptlon If ahopplng ne.rby, or we will deliver ·promptly without extra ctMqe. A areat many people. entrull u1 w ith their pre1crlptlon1. May we compound and d l1penH youn? Businessmen I / you are doing business under a . Fictitious B"si ness Name you are required by law f BU&ineas and • · Pro/esliona Code. Sec. , 17900 to 17930 J to file a : FfcHtiou• Buatneu : Name Statement· and : have it ptlbliahed for : four conNCUtivt weekl. W& at the DAILY , PILOT can Mlp with ; both. Call the LgGAL I D EPARTMENT at r S42·021 Ezt. 332 for ; furth1r in/ormat~. Now stack up? 5mg 4mg 4mg 4mg 3mg At the bottoin. . . . • Mr. and Mrs. Cameron Quinn Quinn -Rhod es After their wedding in St. Andrews Presbyterian Chul'Ch in Newport Beach, Costa Mesans Neeta Rhodes and Cameron James Quinn cruised to Mexico. Their parents are 1 Mra. Wanetta Rickman of Joplin, Mo., the late Mr. Howard Rickm~ and Mrs. Millie Quinn of Newport Beach, and the late Dr. Morgan E. Quinn. Ct1U•1 .. ....._Mfoec:Cl<'O 1 ·-NISHED BUT EMPTY -Construction has · · completed at this condominium project •crbss Alicia Parkway from Lake Mission jViejo and the units lack only one feature- ~pant.s. Despite the weeds growing at this 0.-, ~ ..... ""°'° particular development, recol'ds indicate Mission Viejo is one area where real estate has.,.. not been u affected by high interest rates as adversely . as others. WE'RE BRANCHING OUT ••• Announcing the opening of our new office in Newport Beach at 4525 MacArthur Blvd. (at Birch). SDG&E forced to cut rates SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -San Diego Gas and Electric Co. electric customers will get a one-time rate reduction of $4.4 million ·this year because of the utility's "imprudent and unreasonable" purchase of oil 1n 1979 to produce electricity. The California Public Utilities Commission said Wednesday the reduction w i ll be handled ln a rate review this fall and is expected to amount to 23 oenta a month for a typical residential customer using 500 kilowatt hours of electricity. The PUC said eviden c e of the "imprudent" transaction came to light during a hearing on oil swaps San Diego Gas negotiated with United Petroleum Distributors of Houston. It said in~cember 1979 the co ny paid $4,436,716 to uire 107,000 barrels of oil Tosco, an oil refiner. Three months earlier ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-t Toaco offered to deliver ,. .· .. .. . r LONDON BROIL Slices of mannaced <;Cc;tk topped wtth burgundy wmc sauce. A rrcac wtth ~arden fresh vegetables and pom ocs. ALET OF SOLE BONNE FEMME 'S Sole filers poached with mushrooms and scallions in butter and white wine. Served w1rh pocatoes and vegetables. FETIUCCINE ALFREDO. Dclicace ribbons of pasca . wssed with a vclvcry sauce of burter. crearn and Italian cheeses VEAL MARENGO CREPE. Tender veal. tomato and onion in wh.itc wine wrapped in a crepe. Surrounded by potmoes and vege tables. - There's a world of new dishes at the Magic Pan. Including these four European classics. Each dinner co mes with your choice of a mixed green or orange almond salad. You can enjoy any one of them for just $5.95. So visit us soon. There's always something new to come back to . ... South Cout Plaza (714) 556.1225 Brea Mall (714) 99().4343 Offer p>d aftar 5 PM ·•· ...... ·~ -- 500,000 barrels free under an agreement the refiner had with United Petroleum. San Diego Gas waived its right to the Cree oil in Septe mber when the utility thought it had enough oil on hand, but a month later it predicted it would run short of oil in early 1980. To compensate for the money paid Tosco, the utility was ordered to place that amount in its fue l -cost balancing account along with interest since Nov. 1. At the next fuel cost review, the total will be subtr.acted from any rate in~rease found necessary or to any decrease that might be made. The PUC said that in early 1978, San Diego Gas found itself with excess fuel oil supplies and entered into a series of oil exchanges with United Petroleum. It said the utility took a loss of $26 million in 1980 and $4.6 million in 1981 because of similar transactions. ·auFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY ............ ...is.re ltU HAlllOI ILYD. COST A MIS. -'41-t 11 .. ' I ' • hone buy plan () Price range $19 for, rotary, $49 for Trimliael SAN J'RANCISCO (AP) -to allow Pa~Ulc Telephone PacUle Telephone haa bHn CUillClrMn an opportunity to buy autharU9d tlO ~ euMornerl the telephonet at coet before the opUol\ al buytnc thef.r telephor.-federal ~ detetUla* from the aampmy or cond.nulnc the market. New phone Dl1cee co pay 1 monthly rental t... are t.O be ~c.ed u of l'an. 1 The ~L~.ffective Oct. 20, and could ~. w11 approvtd fl1 the Calltomia Cuatom•r• now ~)' Paclflc PubJJc UtWU.. Commllelon on Te~ monthly rental feet Wedn.-..1 and will rffult In from $1.08 for rotary dial lower purch•H prlcee for to .6 tor Trim11ne touchtone. ttlephone1 already in a New cu.tornen and thoN with CUl~I home UWl o.rta1nally telephonee already In p1-oe will prol)Oled by both the PUC ltaff have· teveral purchue opUona And the phone cocnpany. available, lncludtna Immediate The aalea-rental option la payment or a aht or 12 month appUcable only to 1tn1l• line lnltallment progl'am. • pWa·lll phonet and will cover r For example, a pert0n with a about •Ix mllllon homeowners rotary phone at home could buy and two million bua1neelet with the equipment at a cost of $1.74 a an eatlmated 16 million month for 12 months and no telephones. longer have to pay the $1.08 Prices for in-place equipment monthly rental. wW ranee lrom '19 for a •tandard Thia would mean the full $19 roeary d1al telephone to $49 for cart would be saved In a ~ and the top of the line Trlmllne a half. touchtone model, lt handled by John Dennis, a Pacific mall. The propoeed price range Telephone vlce president, said had been $26 to $56. the company "would of oourae ,, The prices for new telephona have llked to receive the higher will run from $35 to $75, sale prloea it sugge-sted" but la unchanged from previous making no protest. proposals. He pointed out that the PUC Prealdent John Bryson telephpnes were being sold at no said the program was approved profit. Bryeon Mid If any ~ &. deriWd, tt mull be r.cum.t to ,. ..... ywa. Dlrinla Mid Ped& ,....,.._. ii the tint Bell a,._ co J my to tnldtute IUCh • ~·,...,t General Telephone,Of ~l and~ TeleDhaae In JfeW Yotlc have had llmllar ......... The PUC •aid Pacific' Telephone may implem•n~ aooner than Oct. 20 if C\lltolml'I, have at leut 30 daya notice. Within 60 daya the COlllpany must tend notlce by mall al the option to purchase. Th .. wUl . lnclude equlpmef\t liltinp, pn:. and a form ~ 1n1t.late pm:hMe' and payment. A leCODd round of notices would be 1ent within the next 60 days. Pacific Telephone now paya ~ to a cu•tomer who return•• telephones to the company upon termination of aervice. Bryson aald that despite th1a, • many phones are loet or stolen and the ratepayers bear the cost ••• which runs into the millions. Now, the company will bill customers the tale price of in-· place equipment tor all phones not returned when a cuatomer discontinues service. Data processing classes set Three five-week business information systems oouraes that examine data base management, structured programming, and distributed processing will be offered at Orange Coast College In Costa Meaa. Fall semester classes begin Sept. 7. The three clasaes are ottered on Thursdays from 7 to .10 p.m. The first class is titled "Data Base Management'' (Busineaa Information Systems 161). The coune runs through Oct. 7. ''Structured-Programming'' (Business Information Systems 162) begins Oct. 14 and runa through Nov. 11. "Distributed Data Procasing'' (Busineu Information Systems 163) begins Dec. 9 and runs through.Jan. 20. lnstr\Jctor for all three couraes is Luis ·Diehl, a veteran in data processing. For information, phone 556-5772. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND 1 , J • s • 1 • ' 10 11 12 13 14 IS .. 11 11 2S It 1sl ~ 2,3'3 21 l.a.5 23 1-:, ,. 1'.m .lOO 21 -UMmEn un Hlmslo Omnlb UnAmEn Unhlcll us Os..., SWl11En ~ AUE• un ll"-"'Y o ... Jfl'I DecaEn = ACtyllll tnc.aRs 9 OllSecvr ~ GeM!En un H-RAI ~~,~~ T- DOWNS .'"t. + "' . "' . " : ~ . ..... • 1 + ,... • \lo + "' + -+ 'Al + "' + "' + I.It + ~ + -. . "' + -. + "' + -+ "' + "' + "' . "' Pct. up au Up 14.J Up 14.J Up 14.t Up IU Up IU Up II.I Up 11.1 ~= :::: Up t.I Up M VII U Up LJ v. ... Up >J Up 1..S Up 1.J VP 1.1 Up >.I u. 6.1 Up 6.1 Up .. , Up U Up .. , Up •. J I.HI C"9 li'tt. • -2 Ott ... 214 -17·l2 Off It. I '"' -"' Ott ... , ~ -1\41 Off 14.J J V. Ott IU JV. VI Off IU Jiii -Ott IU 2.. -Oft IU 2'6 _, Ott IU 2 14 Off II.I 2 V. Off II.I 3 ~ Off II.I J ~ Off II.I 2 V. 8:: II.I :v. :· Oft :::; ,.,. 'Al Oft lt.J 2\.\ "' Off lt.5 --1\41 Oft lt.J ..... "' Off ,... ""' -"' Oft IO.A ;~ = ~ g:: :::: •• •V.-V.Otf .... ,. -l Off t .7 ~" . ..,.. ..... ---·--,..-----------·--------"'--,.....--------··--.4 • • • JOint venture WARIU!:N, Mich. (A.P) -The vecant 0.-.S Moton C«p, Ulembly plant ln l'Nmon~ .. •cftr •. ~ •• (or a jotnt prOcluctlon venture ~ =! and Toyota Mob" Co. of Japen. OM'• chmnnan •Y.. ·. Rofer' B. 8mlth allo lald at a newt oonttirmce : ' Tueeda1 ipOtllCbtina an .i.cucm.1c-filled coacept • :: for the future that bM and Toyota wW meel .pin:· "about the nUddi. or lac. end of thJa month." ·: He added, however, that dt1cut1lon1 will :: conUnue and that the South Oaie, Calif., plant -.-;: W.. -rema1na lq the l'U1Ulina u well. • • .. .. · . .. Stores may be occupied ~~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Recently VllCated storel of : • th• ll'edMart Corp. may be taken over by' Tarcet · • dilcount ftore9. a division of the MlnnNpolil-bued Dayton·Hudlon C«p., a new11p9per ays. - The Tribune ln San Dleao uid an announceroent that Tarpt and Ralphs 1Upennarket chain will 1eue certain FedMart sites In Southern· California u expected at a news conference Thunday. Taraet haa 151 atorea but no outleta west of Denver. Ralphs i8---~~ of Cincinnati-hued F..i.n.ted De-t • \ 'Blender' bill gaill_s SACRAMENTO (AP) -Leplat1on tba~ three guoline retailen say could put them out of buslnem baa advanced despite one of them 1elllng at a 60 percent diaoount to dramatize the protest. The 9-3 vote Tuesday by the Aaaembly Transportation Committee, advancing ·the bill another 1tep toward puuge, was a defeat for the retallen, aJao known a "blenders." Regal 1ervloe stations, which import from the People'• Republic of China, are staging four day. of aalea th1a week at 50.8 cents per gallon to .attract attention to ita opposition to the bill, AB508 by Aleemblyman Walter Ingalls, D-Rivers.lde -a play on 50.8 cents for AB508. Holiday Inn nixed --SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Holiday ~ hu dropped plans to build an 805-room hotel in San FranciBco'a Tenderloin area, but a project leader aa!d the hotel plan will proceed "with another operator.'' DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW VORK(API Fll\el.OowJ-..... •°Toc:ri·· Auo. 4. • _, Ind °r:':'.a ~~ ~ fi=t1 10 Tm D.• Jll.ll m.11 Ut 15 Ufl 105.'IO -.21 lM.41 -1a .S 5aL Jtt.IS t1M2 ., .... .,._ '-• ~'=' .·.·:::::.:·:.:-.-.·::.::·:.:· 1e.m Utllt .......... ............ :J;t;i ., Sttl ••••••• ••.•••••••••••• .., .. ,. WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VOlllC. CAPJ All!lo 4 -·· AYl:•DrO Wed. • ,.. ,., • 1%1 NEW VORK (AP) Mi9-4 METALS Wed. ,. ,.. -1.U • ., -m ,.. '"' t1 .., -~ -= u IS NEW YOAK (AP) -Spot !Mlllf«fOUt metal P"Cel Wlldneect.y. Co~ 72'41·75 cent• • pound •. U.8 MllMtlONI.. Leed ff.ft CIOl'l19 • pGlnS. Die 17-40 q9ft10. PoUfld, .._,..., '111 IUOIT .._.. W.. _.,...lb. ........._ ~11 _,.. o pclUlld. N. Y • ...._, tMl.00 per ..... ,,........ Ut•.OO-UI0.00 troy --N.V. Sil VER Wlld'*49y Limit p venting Frontier from non-stop service to Denver fU,b" daiq ,..Ji., the airport, 1r1u .. th• 1tof tn Lu Ve1N aceaclH ln t h• act(on, th• wan ta the ~eel pertroetar lncrtllH f ue conaumptfon Department of Tr~portaUon, rul9 llfied ID tb8l It aan belin unn.o...rtly. hderal.'Aviadon ~don non-et.op aervice '-tw ... ONftp In par.n filed th.la Wffk 1n Md Civil Aeronaµtb Board. County and Denver. Denver ii U.S . D 1trlct Court ln Loa The Frontier -fede ra l about 850 mllea from Oranae ~-the U.S. Department of covernment requtft that the County. J\lltkle da1med the county hu no perimeter rule be lifted ta Becau. of tlw pertmtter rule, lep1 riaht to lmpoet ~ echeduled for an Au,. us heal'lna Frontier fllahll between Orance on tntantata tuahta. Only the tn Loa Anaelea before Juda• County and Denver make an federal aovetnment may reauJate Terry Hatter Jr. Juda• Hatter lntannedlata atop tn Lii Vepa. lntentate QOmmerc:e, accordlni to for more than a year hu been Frontier clahna that the atop the documenta. prealdtn1 over airport-related inconventence1 thouHnd1 of The Ju1'1ce Department 111 litlptlon. Supervt.ton liDpoMd a SOO·mO. perimeter rule 12 yeara •ao. County offidala 11y there ii a re1-Uonahlp between jet nolae I durine takeoffl and the of the fliaht. perimeter rule, they 11y. helpe the county maintain John Wayne A(rport aa a facility atrictly for "abort haul'' OJchta. Frontier clatina there ta no ~for the county'• contention ~t relaUonsbip exiatl betweep takeoff nolae le vels and the C.11 142-1171. 'ut • few word• to work for ou. p111•naera monthly. It alao repreaenUn1 three fede l'al The Orange County Board of ~...;..~~~~--~~~---~--:-~~~~~~~---'"--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:-~.L-~~~--:-~~~~:-- •. •: .. + .. fit': ••• •.. . · ,;:: •.. ~): .r~· . • ,1 • ••• =t'-: ...... •• 1:. :1 . !t NEED YOUR .~EWELRY REPAIRED? •• r. .. •• :: •• :: :: lilt •• :1 ... •• ... ., •• 2: •• ... •• We do It on the premises at our Newport Beach store. Also, we do appraising, watch and clock repalrlng, engraving, pearl and bead stringing, jewelry designing and manufacturing. 8.D. HOWES and SON FINE JE~fLERS FOtt FOUR GENERATIONS ~TBEACH 3412 VIA ll>0/675-2731 :J . . C! PASADENA/SANTA BARBARA/PALM SPRINGS ii HAWAII/PEBBLE BEACH/SAN FRANCISCO General Electric YESl~O~AD 24 DELUXE PIECES • ~ Ill these trulJ princelr bargains · in a king size August Sale? ... Quit• WllJ~fl@ of JOU, IM Hlit old chap. When are rou going to start drening like regular folk "eith' and why 11 that ft . • bird In the heading? , HAftDWAftE Where Friendlu Service ' is a Family Tradition · SENIOR MEMBER - ·Defen sive end Jack · Youngblood will begin his 12th season in the NFL, tops on the Rams. • Who will be next ENTERTAINMENT COMICS to assume coachins reins of Yankees? C2 BJ. JORN U:V ANO °' ... ...., ........ TV Wlth the retirement of Rich Saul and the departure of Fred Dryer lui IM!UOn, Jack YGUnlblood hu moved to the top u the Rama' .Uor member. Beainn1na hia 12th year of .ervtce in the NFL-= all with the Rama -only Jim Youngblood, 1tartlng hla 10th aeaaon, and. Larry Brooks, in hia 11th (amwnlng Brooke doesn't retire), come cloee to matching Jack Youngblood in eenority. Y oungb1ood bu mixed feelingl about obtalnina auch a lofty atatua. On the one hand, tne defensive end'• poaitlon commands reapect, admiration, leadership and a certain degree of power. On the other. thou1h, such a ranking usually means a player la not too far from the end of the line. "It's funny," atarta Youngblood u he lays under the sun, sipping OJ} a glass of iced tea in front of hia room at the Rama' Cal State Fullerton lrainlng camp. "In other professions, the more experience you obtain the better off you are. For an athlete, too much experience ls almost detrimental." Youngblood compares a football player'1 career to a 8Cale. TM ti.rat four (yea.rt old). but your body It that of a wont. I want to walk out a wtiantt. I or five years, the aca1e 11 Upped toward a 40-year-old. ll'a a tough psychological want to walk out on top." player'• ability. 'nle next four oi:-five, point In a player'• career." · Which meant Youngblood ii hopeful the acale bala~ce , with ability and Younablood aay1 he's probably two the Rama can reptn the magic of '79 and experience wor in WU.On. The lut yeara away from reachinc auch a stage. reach the Super Bowl again in the next four or five years acale becln.t to tip Althouah he ad.mitt hit ability may have year or two. in the other directlon, however, leavtna dropped a notch, Youngblood contends "I could probably play until I'm 36 or experience u a player'• main aource ol he has enough left to get the job done. 37 years old, and atill be u good as ~ survival. "I think the eamo caliber II thei:e l've of the players in the NFL today," he Youngblood la honest in admlttin1 ·had the put couple of teMOna:·· says. "But there's a personal upect heN whJch way the 8Cale ii tilted with him. Last year, a teuon the Rama would that has to be considered -and that 11 l "I'm probably two years away from juat u ldorl forget, Younablood led the don't. want to be an average player." • team in quarterback aacka (11) while . Would Jack Youngblood contemplate 'Last year we didn't have totallng 37 tackles and 24 ualata. retiring If the Rama reached the Super ~-le • tb ,.,.., e Somewhat ironJcally, it's because of Bowl this eeaaon? e~ryone wor Jn e aam the Rama' dismal campaign -in "It would be a very appropriate ~ direction. You could tell which they finlahed 6-10 and missed the to do something like that," he says. "l that by the outcome of our playoffs for the fint time elght years --would have to take a look at a lot ot that Youngblood la still willing to bump thin19 -my future, the team . . . season.' heads on Sunday and add more "Win or 108e, at least I would finiah on pun.iahment to hia body. top." balance," he says. "At 32, my body has On more than one occaaion during the Youngblood is encouraged by what taken a tremendous beating the last 12 off-season, Youngblood seriously he's seen in camp so far. The players are years. considered joining teammates Saul, Pat eager, the coaches enthusiastic, and "Experience can carry you for three or Haden and Doug France on the sidelines. there'• that hunger again to be the beat four years, but then there comes a But the sour taste of the 1981 campaign that seemed to be missing last year. certain time when you're physically not was too much to swallbw. "There's no re.uon in the world why capable of performing any more and "I've spent 11 very suoceasful years in we shouldn't do well," he says. "e have that's hard f0r an individual to accept. the NFL," Youngblood explains, "and I the talent. I think the coaching staff la "The mind still thinks yo_u_'re_2_3_o_r_2_4 __ di_dn_'_t _w_an_t_m""'y..__caree __ r_to_en_d_wi_._th_th_e __ "'"'"{Se_e_Y_O_U_N_G_B_LOO __ D_,_, ...;;.P_a .... se_C_!'--) Downing rescues Angels with ho:rner Minl)Ml{ta 's rally th warted this time By CURT SEEDEN or ... DellJ ,... ...,, "f OU can blame Brian Downing .tm t.Ae Angels' 8-6 victory over the Minneeota Twins Wednesday night. The Angels had once again held a comfortable lead in the late going only to see it vaniah into thin air -just as Tim Ltuder's three-run homer did in the top· of the eighth inning to get Minneeota even at 6-6. On the two previous eveninga, the Twins, who have occupied Most of tbe guys have been around for a long time. They're not going to let a couple of come-lrom- bebind wins get to them. the cellar of the American League West most of the aeaaon, tu.med what looked like Angel victories into Angel defeats and dropped Manager Gene Mauch'• crew out of first place in the same division. • So with the acore notched 6-6, Downing came to the plate in the bottom of the eighth inning just hoping to get pinch-runner Rob Wilfong into acoring position. Instead, he belted a Terry Felton pitch over the left field fence to help the Angela snap a demoralizing two-game losing streak t<f"the Twins and move his club back to within percentage points of the division-leading Kansas City Royals. Blame the Angel victory on Downing's bad aim. "I was looking to hit something up the gap," the Angel leadoff hitter admitted. "He (J'elton) got the best of me last night." BecaUBe the Twins had gotten the best of all of the Angels the last two nights, a short team meeting was called before Wednesday night's game, but none of the Angels said it was a panic llelBion. "We weren't really talking about getting down on ounelves. We just talked about battling and playing together, although I can't really say we've been apart," Downina aid of his teammates. The Twins did their best to rip the Angela apart, though. Looking for a sweep at Anaheim Stadium, Minnesota managed to battle back after the Angels had acored two runs in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings. Earlier, the Twins bad owned a 2-0 advantage as Bobby Mitchell tripled in the third inning and scored on Kent Hrbek'• RBI single, and Mickey Hatcher tripled in the fourth and came around on Lenny Faedo's RBI hit. . After s~out to lead off the Angel first , Downing managed to play a part in four of the Angela' eight runs. His RBI single ln the fifth knocked in Tim Foll. who had doubled. And, he walked and eventually acored in the seventh. · His winning blast in the eighth came after Bobby Grich had walked and Rob Wilfong was inserted as a pinch-runner. "Most of the guys have been (See ANGELS, Pa&e C3) (W)right approach Rookie pitcher leads Dodger win CINCINN~TI (AP) -Ricky Wright wasn't looking to do anything special in hit first major league start. ''I didn't set any goala," said Wright, who pitched ax aterlil'll lnningl to port the victory in the Loa Angeles Dodgers' 8-2 PoUndina of the Qnct.rm.aU Reda Wednesday. "I told myaelf, 'Look. tt'• yow-fint at.art Just ao out there and throw atrikea, make 'em hit lt. • "I I d1d the Job." . Quft:-'well, be mi1ht have added. The left..hander Umited the Red• to two hiu ln aix lnn1n11, then sot help from relievenJMBeckwithandTerry Fanter tn the four-hit.victory. Font.er came in af1er Beckwith walked two batten following a 40-minuie rain delay with two out. in the ninth. Wri1ht, whet wa1 called up from the J>odaent' Albuquerque farm dub July 28 when Vlcei\te 1'°mo wmi on the dilabled lilt. pve up a leldoff llnale to Tom Lewie. In the ftnt innlne. then didn't allow another hit untll Dave Ccmcepclon rapped hi• ..,.s hoam' of the ,..,. wtth two out and ant cm in the Uth. 0 1 ~ 'em out. We 1ot the ........ l )ilt trtild to hold lt.'' "6d WrWtt. whO ~ up bfa fbt......., tn bll ~major • league appearance. With hls starting rotation trained bl.a:jury and a busy achedule, rda decided to go with the 23-year-old left-hander. "He went out and did a 80C><I job," Lalorda said. "It wu a much-needed performance. He did exactly what we had. hqped for him to do ... Steve Garvey aluaed a three- run homer to help-the Dodaen pin their alxth victory in teYen games. ClncJnnati Manager Ru11 Millon called a cloaed-door meeUnc after the Reds' 88th io. lD 107 pmee to reprhmnd the team for aloppy =· •11 can ~pt metl1nl ~. but they IUlf haw to be told," Nixon aid. "No one pipa owr fundamental mJstabl more than I do.'' The Dodaera took a 1-0 leed in the third when Steve SaJC ~. took llCOnd on Bermyt'1 tblrcl wOd pitda of the .... and IClOl'ed one ou\ lat« on a two. ~ hJt by JUck Mcnday, who had two doublee and ....... Loi ~ then .-upeed for four rum in the fourth ~ ..m-. Ondnnatt ....... BnlL'lit .....,., a.11. Ron Oey .. off With a walk Mid WM foleed at ~ by a.rwy, who '""' to &hlrd on M1b 8abd.i'1 ~· A KID'S GAME -Sons· of Angel stars have recently been visible watching the action at Anaheim Stadium. At left, Aaron Boone sits on the dugout steps while taking in the proceedings. Ten-year-old Don Baylor Jr. sees his dad blast· , U.S. tea01 trying to regroup ' GOAYAQUll., F.cuador (AP) -s~ by winning only four gold medala on the lint three days of the World Swimming Championahipa, the U.S . team spent Wedbe9clay trying to relax and regroup befon competition re.urned today. "We ahouJd be at.ranger in both men'• and women'• evenla in the lui three days of the meet," U.S. Coach Mark Schubert aaid. "Mary T la c.bompana at I.he bit and Craia Beardaley .. reedy to swim.'' "Mary T ii Mary T. Meqher of LoWIYi.lle. Ky., double world record·holder in women'• butterfly eventa. The 17~year-old baa two lndMdual racee and one relay on the 1Mt three dayl here, but the Ma not anpMed 10 far. BeardlJey, of Harrtncton Park. N.J .• holda the world record ln the men'• 200 butterfly, which will be held Friday. In coinpetltlon Wednetday, Wendy Wyland of lilllll6on Viejo t1nw.c1 aecand m tbe WC11qen•1 platform quallfyU.1 for lh• World Dl•tn1 Cha~toftahtp. ICOl'inl fM.82 .... Thit WI I W Wll.Chln xs.cma of die ......... ReDubbc Of Cbliaa. •bi' '*1Ued at.at. Meanwblle, Clinada won Ate ~ medal in 'hrH .............. ~ "'°' ....... .., Mclwd ....... one during batting practice and young Boone (below) chats with Twins coach Jim Lemon, who played with Boone's grandfather, Ray Boone, in Cleveland. Off-road race begins Saturday By HOWARD L. HANDY OftMDellr ......... RIVERSIDE -The Orange Coast area will be well represented this weekend in the Bridgestone SCORE off-road world championahlp1 at Riverside International Raceway. The father-son combination of Gary and Steve Myen Uves in Newport Beach and will be among the contenders in the mini-truck competition. Mlke Lund of Huntingtoru Beach will compete ln two diviliona and many others wW be on hand for the variOUI truclc. bug, motorcycle, three-wheeler and other typee of vehlclea to bt raced in the 22 clamM. Kent and Kurt Pfeiffer of Costa M .. wtll be on hand f01 the motorcycle dlvialon wt\_. Bobby Neth, the eon of the~ Mw polke chief, ~ .. 0-1-1900. • Compeddcn ~ undii' •y °' S.lurday and conch• ~ at the Turn 8 area 6f th • Rlwnlde triCk. ~ ·Lund Ril1lid an ott-rmd elPt,..,. .. But be foUnd flictai'J-bUOt ... too for hi• limited bud1•t •• ~ '° build hll own maehlne. He put .... ~ ( ... OPP·ltOAD, .. • King to continue ·as Raiders' voice From AP dilpetcu1 LOS ANGELES -Bill Kina and [iJ Rich M•rotta 'wlll handle the ••• broadcaetlns chorea for the Loa Angeles Raiden durlns the 1982 National Football League aeaaon, radio station KNX announoe<l Wedneaday. . Kina. the R'.a.ldera' play-by-play announcer since 1967, will continue in that capacity while Marotta, the sports editor for KNX, su<.'Cee<h Monty suckles as the analyst, it was announced jointly by ~rge Nlcholaw, the KNX general manager, and Al Davis, managing general partner of the Raiders. King also does play-by-play for the Oakland A's and the Golden State Warriors. Marotta has been the sports editor at KNX for two years. Unless last-minute legal efforts by the NFL to force the Raiders to move back to Oakland are successful. the Raiders will be playing their first season in Los Angeles. Quote of the day ''As long as Kareem (Abdul-Jabbar) feels he is making a contribution and en~ying himself, he'll continue to play, If hes not enjoying himself any more, well, he'll go buy himself some rugs." -Laker owner Jerry Bu11 in di~cussing an extension of Jabbar's contract. Jabbar is an oriental rug collector. Red Wings tab Polano as coach Nlck Polano, an assistant coach of II the Buffalo Sabres, Wedneaday wu named coach and asalstant general manager of the Detroit Red Wlnp, a National Hockey League team with 12 coaches in the last 15 years. The 41-year-old Polano. who was presented with a three-year contract. had been coach and general manager of the Ene Blades of the former Eastern Hockey League, now the American Hockey League, before he came to the Sabres . . . The Denver Nu.zgets of the NBA have officially been sold to businessman B.J. "Red" McComb• of San• Antonio . Television, radio TV: No events 11Cheduled. RADIO: Baseball -Atlanta at Dodgers, 7:30 p.m., KA.BC (790). Few surprises at Pre-Olympic Regatta By ALMON LOCK.ABEY 0.-, Not 9Mtlftt Wrtter LONG BEACH -The long-time favorites in international sailboat racing moved to the head of their respective classes in the Pre-Olympic Training Regatta as they were allowed to throw out their worst race in aoofin6 the standings after four races. The final standings will be based on the best six of seven races when the regatta comes to a close Saturday. Biggest· reversal came in the Star Class where Bill Buchan of Seattle moved ahead of Buddy Me!ges of Zenda, Wiac., by winning the fourth rare HOT WHEELS -Riverside International Raceway will be the site for this From Page C1 and throwing out a aiaqualtfication in the third race. The throw-out gives Buchan a record of 6-1·1 for a low score of 11.9 points. Melges, who b sailing for Germany in this regatta has a low acore of 19.4 points after throwing out one of hia fourth places finishes. Both Buchan and Melges are former Star Class world champions. Melges was a gold medal winner in the Solina Class in the 1976 Olympics and is considered one of the world's top sailors in any class. Randy Smyth of Huntington Beach was edged weekend's Bridgestone SCORE off-road WQrld championships. OFF-ROAD COMPETITION. • • hia garage and started racing it in 1975, calling the machine the Lundco Special. It is expected to be one of the top contenders for the winner'• circle. "I decided to aee 11 life really begins at 40 four years ago," Gary says. "I've been racing for four years now and feel this ls the way to go." "For awhile we debated about the wiadom of taking the old car out to Riverside again this year," Lund says. "All of th~ newer equipment we will have to compete against will make It tough. Son St.eve, 16, participated in the San Felipe 250 and the Baja International race while a daughter serves in the pita. They will drive in the Datsun mini-truck race. "However, in the end, we decided it deserve• one more shot at the world championship. So it gets its last hurrah before we retire lt for good this weekend." Joselle Garza ia expected to make his debut in off-road racing this weekend and will join Rick Meara and brother Roger for the competition. • The Lundco has appeared in a number of epiaodes of CHIPS on television. Lund, a bachelor, will also drive in the two-seater cla~ along with defe nding his single-seat Lundco title. Myers, the father, is a CPA and holds a partnership in a Toyota dealership in Eecondido. He raced yachts for eeveral years before getting h ook ed on the off-road competition. Walker Evana and Ivan Stewart will square oft in the Pernod heavy metal challenge, a race that covers only 17 miles b\lt pays off $30,000. Both have been victortoQ& this y~ in deaert races and each bu won the Baja 1,000. Ticketa will be available at the pte with further Information available by calUna 653-1161 or (213) 889-9216. Palmer has one elusive goal TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Winnln8 the PGA champlonahip oontinuea to be an elusive goal for Arnold Palmer, golf king of the 1960s, but hope keeps adrenaUn pumping In his ~2--year-old velnl. "My chancel this "1ffl' are at ijett allm, '' the old char&er aald Wedneeday u he prepared to take bJa 26th thot at the only mUx' F1f tttle to acape hlrn. · .. ,Palmer wu liven a apeclal t\it•mpUon for thh year'• toUmmMDt, which nan.cl toda~ ~ th9 Southern WU. COW'le ">..a.a •I'm plli~ I ;\u ·MY• f .. l ( can't WlD 1t," be 6dd9d afW. ftw-hou.r pnc:tb ... &ft .... terlnl bMt. ''If l tot ... '!!f'J.Pd pconftdenoe ln 'l\Y.·--· wbo k.nowlT \ · .. 1 am hitting the ball farther than I have in aeveral years. I am using a lighter driver with a power shaft. All I need 1a to keep it going." . Keeping it a<>ing has been the main obltacle tor the ~ of Amie'• Army who bad a aood start in the BriU.h Open at Troon last month and before ~t won a aenion' tow1\amel\t at Marlboro, Mui. "I )mow people Will II.)' lt'I not the same thln8," ht aald, referrtna to bil 11Ncn victory. "But I played epbwt the ...,. 8\&YI I had '9 l>eat when I WM In my prtme. 'nie 11me iav.t WM •tUl then. "l'rankly. St save my conftdenoe a bM ~· Palmer, who 1'M won bOth the ' PGA and USGA aenion title., t. down to a trim 180 pou.nda. He keel» his eye m the ball bet1er with oontact lenlel. Winner of four Matten; two Britilb~lua .S .• AUstrillan and Spanish •· loaina three other r can Open1 ln playof MJd he never let hll failure in the PGA w"'8h on him •a "jinx." "I didn't play ln the PGA until 1WM29, bArred fiW ~by tM POA aperentb ride. a. mid. 0 1 al~ felt I WOUid Wiil .,_. da7. Then It 1tartd' ~'Un1 ,........ -farther.....,, ..... Wll~~~ ...... In lMt tO 8cfalir ---1• to JuJtw Boroi IDit lt'JO to Daft Stockton. • for first place ln Wednesday's race, but after two previous races he has finist\es of 1-1-2 for three points after throwing out an 8th place in the second race in which he was the victim of a dramatic windshift. Peter Gilmour of Australia maintained his lead in the Soling Class by throwing out a premature start penalty in the first race, leaving him with "keepers" of 10-1-1 for 16 penalty points. Craig Healy of San Franciaco stayed on top of the Finn Class with finishes of 2-1-2 for 8.7 points. His throwout was seventh in Wednesday's race. Full slate for sailors Top yachting event this weekend will be the final three races of the Pre-Olympic Regatta at Alamia Bay Yacht CJub with 205 sailors from 22 countries sailing off the Long Beach breakwater over three Olympic cirdes. On the local front Bahia Corinthian Yacht CJub will provide a busy week for sailors with three events scheduled. On Saturday a fleet of International Offshore Rule and Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts will aet sail off the Balboa Pier in the annual Newport to Coronado race co-sponsored by Coronado Yacht Club. BCYC is also running its Luna del Lido race for Lido-14s and L Boat Invitational race Saturday. Balboa Yacht CJub will resume its 66 Series for IOR and PHRF boats with a race around the buoys Saturday. Newport Harbor Yacht Club is host to the Laser Western Regional championahip for sailors 19 and under Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Southern California Yachting Association calendar: Alamlto• Bay YKlll CIUb -Olympie Cla-Regatta. todll)'. Friday, Saturday, Sunday Cabf1llo 8aach Yacht Club -Summer Regatta (all cl-•> Saturday. Sunday a.nu MoNca .., King Harbor.Santa Barbati Yacht CluM -Slt'lll Barbara to King H11t>or r-. S.turd.ay, Sunday Santa Monica Yadlt Club -lntrec:lub race. Saturday; Auguat B<emaa r-(Thorpe Ser!M) Sunday Wlndlemmara Yacht Club -I.eland Tr()phy pr9dlcted log r-. &Hiday. ..,..,.... Coronado Yacht Club -Flnl1h N-port to COl"onado r-. Sunday. Coronado Caye Yac:ht Olub -Fall Claaalc. Sl1urdey Ml11lon Bay Yacht Club -NACAA·S lnvltallonal, SatUf'dly, &Hiday. Santa Clara Racing A11oclallon -South Bay champlonahlp, SatUf'day. ~ 1nc1 mland Sant• Barbare Yect>t Club -81.n Santa Barbera to King Hatflet r-. Saturday. Point Dume Yaotlt Club -F"I s.n.e. VanlUfl 8abot, Sunday. Plafpo4nt Bay Yectlt Club -CNIM to Goleta, Sal\Hday. SuNSay. Hobie-Ill eh•mplonshlp planned Hobie-16 sailora from all over the world are getting their pre-championship ac\S together in preparation for invading the beaches of TahJtl for the fourth H~ie-16 world championship regatta. Aug. 11-15. It will be the first time a Hobie Cat world champlonahip hu been held in glamoJ'OUI French Polynesia llnce 1974 when the Hobie-14 wodd'• was held oU Papeete, Tahiti. • .. LaJilest reg:latration is expected from <>ranee County and other Southern Callfornia area1 • thJa is the home of the famed Hobie Cat aallinC craft. Other partldpanta are expected from t.hroUOout the U.S ., Canada, Mexico, Europe, J•pan. Hone Kong, Auatralla, New Zealand, Fljl, .New Ou.loeti, New Caledonia, Bruit, South Alrlca and other countries where Hobie Catll a.re ..ued. Will • 1ng survive? Few have in NY BlBE~WAL&~ • 'iS\v""'oRK -How about Earl Weaver .. manqer of the New York Yanked? How about Billy Martin or John McNamara? How about a lot of J?90Ple7 · [n the event-oriented world that 11 New York Y.ankeea bueball, anythlna is pc191ble. The Yankeea have 1one through five pit.china coachee thla aeuon and now are wor)dna on their thJrd manaaer -Clycje Kina -who wu named to the poet on an "interim" bula a1tes: owner George Stelnbrenn•r fired Gene Michael for a aeoond KINO time early Wedneaday. WITH NINE MANAGERIAL changes in 10 seasons under Steinbrenner, all Yankee managers might be called "interim." King, thouaJl, has the title, implying that yet aomeone elae may be at the Yankee helm come 1983. Michael had been set to return in 1983 aa manager, before Steinbrenner fired Bob Lemon - for the second time -earlier this year and replaced him with Michael. Follow that? ''Thia is my fourth job with the Yankee1 this year," King said Wednesday. King, a former n)anager with the Atlanta Braves and San Francisco Giants who has been in the Yankee organization for seven years, is known as a pinstripes-in-the-wool company man. "I've always done what Mr. Steinbrenner has asked me to do," said King. "I dJd not seek this job. He told me he wanted me to take over the ballclub for the rest of the year as a favor. "IT'S NOT WHAT l'D choose to do if I bad my druthers," said King, who added that he didn't dislike rna.naging. King said he and Steinbrenner would talk later about whether King would return next year. And if he doesn't return and adds his name to a growing grocery list of ex-managers, who will Steinbrenner go shopping for? How about Michael or Lemon for a third time? Steinbrenner said Wednesday he still wants Michael with the organization. "George told me to take some time," Michael said from hia New Jersey home Wedneadaf. "We'll be talking in the next couple of days. Right now, T'm tired and want to get aome rest." Lemon, sc::Outing for the Yankees on the West Coast, said he hadn't consideted returning to the dugout. "No, I haven't thought aboi,.tt it," he said, aware of the perils. ''It's usually the procedure that when things aren't going good, the manager gets it," said Lemon, fired in the 1979 season after helping take the Yankees to a World Series triumph the previous season. How about two other fonner managers now with other clubs -Billy Martin and Bill Virdon? The on -again, off-again feuds between Martin and Steinbrenner are legendary. Martin -fired twice by Steinbrenner -is now managing the Oakland A's, having revitalized that team and led them to the American League West playoffs last year. Now, though, the A's are mired in fifth place, 16 games out through Tuesday. When it comes to Martin-Steinbrenner, one never knows. From Page C1 YOUNGBLOOD. • • suoer. The only thing that can stop us is (lack of) luck and injuries. "Last year we dlctn't have everyone working in the same direction. You could tell that by the outcome of our season." Is there a difference this aeason? "I think so." says Youngblood. "It started in the off-season. There were a lot more veterans working out who were taking a look at themselves . . . their positions . . . and their futures." Jack Youngblood should know, he was one of them. WRI lllZlll IDllLS External Degrees and Credits 1AA&11A1 Fully Accredited Universities 2 Lectures Dally 9 & 1 :00 p.m. 8/6 & 817 at Education Center $10.00 per -Fri. & Sat. 8071 Slater Ave. M2·70IO Huntington 8"ch SAVE ELECTRICITY hi· Sit$ SALB 17.m. •ec. ma 8AL.e 127.IO • ~ ' . . ' .. " MAJOR LUQUI IT ANDtNGI ==~ W L '9t.Q8 ~ Cltf H 45 517 eo 41 .SM 55 eo .52• .,.. ... It St 53 .605 814 OMlMd 49 13 .422 16 .... T-41 82 .3111 11Yi ~I.I 37 70 .341 23\.4o lAtTtllN DMalON ............ et " .tel 8otton to •• .Me l'A Balllmote St 47 .&-« 4 ~ 63 51 .510 7'A Oelron 51 51 .&QO 8Yi New York 61 51 .500 8'A T«onlo 4g 55 .•Tt t ,.,. ........ ,. ..... ....... 8.Mlnneeota8 S..llle w, Daklend 2·• New Yon M . Chicago 2·7 Mllwlllk• I, TOtonto 0 Clr<elanCI I , T-• llltlmcwe .-, eo.ton 2 Oetroll 1. K.w\111 City 1 Tedef'•O..-Mr-t (O'Conno< 4-31 at ~ (Tlarlt 0.0) Toronto (lMI 8-8 anel SlleO 11· 10) at OelrOlt (U)Clw 4-5 MCI MO<rla 12· I 1) 2, l·n Ken111 City (Blue tl·7l at Baltlmore (P.imet 8-3). n Tu .. 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Montreal 4 Pltttburgh 5, St. Lowle 2 Today'10- Allanta (Pwu O-fJ at Oocfeara (Valenwlla 14·81. n ' · MontrHI (Laa 7·81 at Plllladelpllla (8r:.°"' 3-31 •·1) Y0<k (Puleo 7·7) 11 Clllcago tMart.t Plt11burgh (McWUliarM 7-41 11 St LOUii (M11<1 9·7). n Clnclnna11 (SHver 4· 1 t) 11 San Diego (lo#llt I 1·5~ n Houlton (Ruhle 5-71 11 San F11ncltc:o IHammlkar 8·8), n AMERICAN LEAGUE OtWea •• 9'ad lo• 2 Boa1on 100 001 000-2 e o Balllmore 100 010 02•-• I o Eckerelay, St1nl1y (8) and Aflanaon, Flanegan, St~CI (91 and Oempwy. w-F 11negan. 8·1 L-Stantay. 1·•. S - Stoddarel (ttl HRa-B09ton. Ev-(171. Steplllon ( 10), B11tlmore, Bumbry (3) A-25,826 ..:.~::. t::c. i&; ga m:: : g lelttle MCI a-., ICllltMM ~(II and M. Haalll.1. W-lnljl_el 1•1 l - IClllt'Nn, t •l • .:o......,.:.. 9-M (I~ ............... tNttle . 000 IOO IOI-' I 0 ~a.: .. c:in ~ .=.~.ri.~~ Ill and lwM~elty, IMrd (1) end ~1111. W-, .. 1. L-iaot• o.a. 1-IH td Ill H"9-l .. ltl•, Zl•ll (11). Oeillanel, ""1ouetie ( 10), A/MM ( 111. Lot* (10~ A-ll,62t. 'lltfQM9 v ... -......... ClllotoQo 010 010 .Ob0-2 15 t H..,. \'0tll Ott 0~.,.'01,-1 11 0 HOyl, Htelley (8~ I-"°• (I) llld 'lak. Owlcfty, Oo111g• (I) end Ceton• w-Ouldry, 11·• L-l10yt. tS-10. 1-00IMQe 1101. H"1-c111e190, fllodnou•• 1:11: Hn 'iOril, Nettlel ~A==~~ WNM ... P,YIM ... I ~ 100 "OCI 011-1 ti 0 ~ \'n ooo ooo 000-0 a ' !MN tnd ... : Jol>n end F001e. C.-(4). w-eurna. 11-4. L-JoM, ... Hflle-Clllcaoo. "·Law (3). Kemp (10~ A-2UtL .,_.,. ....... .,.. MllwMlll• 002 020 013-1 lf 0 T«onto 000 000 000-0 1 t Cllclwoell end Slmmont, Gott. Owvlll (9) and I . M11tllnft. w-c1~1. tl•IO. L-Oou. 2·7. HFlt-MllwaukM. Molitor (t2). COOi* (22l. O. Thom .. (281, Simmon• (17), A-17,521. lndlaMI, ........... Teu1 000 OO') 001-9 0 CleYeland 200 010 3211-1 ti I Mediell, Mlflbella (7), Oet"'4n (7). Comet (91 llncl s..ndbefO, W.it1, Anci.nGn (91 and HHM'f W-Anel11t10n, 1·1. L-Medlcll. 1· 10 HR-Tak ... 0 . Wrigllt (I). A-7, IN Tieen 1, "°71111 1 0.1ro11 020 010 aot-7 t3 o ICMMa City 000 000 001-I 4 0 Patry end Parrlall; Gut•. C•llro (tll and Sl1UQ111 W-Petry, t2-8 L-Ou11, 12·1. HRe-Oelro41, Lemon (8); Kanaaa Qty, 8<111 (14~ A-28.340 AncMle I. hrlne I ....... IOTA CAUf'OflNIA alHlllll .Orlllll Mllcnall cf 5 1 1 0 Downing 11 4 2 3 3 Wunlngtn 2b • t 1 o Benlq111z u 0-0 o o Btunan11<r rf 3 1 0 0 ca .... lb 3 0 0 0 Hrl>all lb ' I 2 2 RoJackeon lb 2 1 1 o W11tel II • o 1 O ~ 3b 4 t 2 O Gaaltl 3b 4 0 O O R9.Jac:kton rt 4 O O 1 LMldner o 4 It 3 Claltc rt O O O O HalctlW di> ' 1 2 0 LyM cf 4 1 1 2 Faaclo .. 3 o 1 1 eay1« on • t 2 o 8"1h pl> 1 0 0 0 Grid! 2b 3 0 1 t Wiifong 2b 0 1 0 O FOii M 4 1 I 0 Boonie 4001 Totlll9 311e11 e To1111 :ie 8 11 9 ._. by IMlflee MIMMOta 001 100 040-8 CaNtomla 000 022 2b-8 E -R. W111llnglon, O.Clncee DP -CaJllomla 1. LOB -Mlnnnota 8. CaMl«nll 6 28 -Or1c11, Foll 38 -Hatcher. Mltchelt HR -Lauelner (5), Downing ( 171 SB -81yt0< Min-ta II> H II Ell N ID w 1111.,,.. e•,.. a s s 1 ' Llllle \'> 2 1 0 0 I Fellon (L.0-10) 1 I 2 2 t O C.ittomle F«tcll Tit> 8 6 2 3 4 OOIU (W,&-31 1'1\ I 0 0 0 t PB -Laudner. T -2:22 A -21.054 Angel aYHegM IATTINO Down4ng Lynn Cer .... o.cv.c. Beytor ReJacklOll Ro Jackson Beniquez Orlctt BC>Of'e FOii C'-rk ~~ Burlelon K....,_ Toi.ls All II H H9I Ml l'ct. 403 76 120 17 47 298 349 87 ICM 14 51 2N 321 51 115 t 28 2N 378 59 109 ltl 84 .288 414 51 11• 18 61 275 343 s• 94 25 e 1 .214 85 8 23 1 13 274 113 14 25 1 ' 21111 337 42 89 11 47 284 312 211 82 • 311 263 334 37 97 2 38 2tO 84 a te 2 5 250 55 5 12 1 4 218 125 ,. 22 0 1 175 45 4 7 0 2 1511 31 • 1 0 0 032 3117 517 988 114 480 273 """ ': ,.,. ,. !r4 II = J J J .: 'l1 tt: Witt Iott\ 101 IP ... tol I._ ~~ N 41 ta .. 14 t .. E" ua:: :n :; n , t.t :.aoB Qon M 1t ti .. M I. POftCll 1tfl\ 111 SI .. 10.7 't ltnollel ., " •• 3' •·• .... Ooltl "" .. .. "° .. , 4 •• Totell 11 I~ tlt J41 411 ...... 3 1' .... =._· Ian FtMCllco 200 001-' I 0 ...,..,,,. ioo 000-1 1 0 , ...... ..,, (4~ 1u: r.> ..o~.~. (I). II end Poc:orvbl. W-L•velle, l •I , l - lledroelllt, t-3 ~MlnlOll (11). ...-.-1111 FrlllellGo. "· llMll Ilk Allant .. "°"* 1131 A-1a.eo1, ,._.... ....... Monu..i ooo aoo o 10-• 1 o F'fllt..-iPllle ooo I03 oow-a ' o C Sand.,eon, I . lmlll't (7) end Carlar; ""Oii end DIAi W-C•tllOll 115-9. L-llllderlOn, .. , Hflt-MQfllrMi, Wallacl'I t (14) A-$9,114. • -..1c•• New Yorti 00~ 111 000-7 12 1 Clltcaoo 010 001 200-• 12 0 SwWI, LMCll (7), FelC:lone tn ..0 a own1, .l1n1tln1. Proly (8), W. HernendH 171. Cempbeif 111 eno M0tllllnel w-i:swen 7-4. L-Jenlilf11, f.13 1-F*-llll H~Hew Yon. Swan In A-t .237 ~ .............. , Sin Diego 000 004 o 10-5 10 O HouelOn 020 000 000-2 5 1 Monlelutco Ind T. Kennedy; 81111011, C1ppun1Uo 171. L10 ou (I) ano Alllb)r. w-Mont•luMJo, 1·8. l -8u1ton, 10·1. A-1,705. Plratee I Car•nat1 a Pllteburgll 0Q0 120 110-5 II I flt. loula 000 001 010....:2 7 1 CanC11lu l1 Scurry {T) and T. P1n1: l aPOlnt, Lallll (71, Bair (I). J Merllll (9) and Tan11e1 W-Canclel11tl1, 9-<C l -LaPolnt, S.:S $-Scurry (ti) A-20.873 NATIONAL L~AQUE Dodaetel,Rede2 LOI ANGl'Lfa· -CINCINNATI Seit2b landruc:f M t lllll M r hlll ~l " R ell 0uarr9fo rf Cay 3b GlltVey lb Sc:IOec:la c Balanger .. Wr'9M p Beclcwth p 5 t 2 2 Lew!Na 2b 4 0 t 0 5 0 0 0 Milner cf 4 0 0 0 3 t 3 t Cncpcn u • t 2 2 2 0 1 0 Veit II 3 0 0 0 4 1 tO Dtlnen ib 2000 4000Hoentdrrt •0 10 • 2 2 3 °"'" 3b 2 0 0 0 \ I 1 0 lllbrnelt p I 0 0 0 3 I I 1 Walker pn o o O o 3 t 1 t VanGrdt c 2 0 0 0 1000 Rlttnar ph 1000 Belanyt p 0000 Harrie p 0 000 ~toy3b 1100 8enctt~ 1000 Totll1 38 8 12 9 Totlll 29 2' 2 ._. by '"'*"' Los AtlQ9le9 001 ~ 000-11 Clncinnatl 000 002 000-2 E-Mllner lUll-LOI Angal•a II, C1nc1.,net1 7 28-Mondey 2 Su. Wrlghl. HowHhOl<lar HR-Ge~ ( t ti. ~ 121 Slleranyt Loe A,,...._ Wrlghl(W. t-01 Bacl<wttn " Fontar Cincinnati II> H lllllNIO e 2 2 2 • • 2'1t 2 0 0 2 2 1'100000 Beranyt(L,8· 11) • I 7 7 2 2 Harrie 1 1 t 1 ~ Lllbrandt 4 2 O 0 2 Berenyt pllelled 10 2 l>lllare le the 51 WP-BerMyt 3 T-237 A-}t,484 Top 10 (llaeod Oii -at bah) AlftJbCAJf LUQUll WllSon KC. Harrah. Cle Yount, M~. Hrbak. Min. Wlllte. K.C Cooper, M". Pacloralt, Chi. Gantner, Mii. Garcia. Tor Bonn.Ml, Tor. QAlllllfPct. IO S<C4 47 117 3t<1 103 .oe 91 134 .330 99 403 71 133 330 12 380 55 1111 322 12 331 llO 108 32' ta 411 er 132 321 eo 2113 37 " .321 91 288 28 15 .317 100 4211 63 138 .J t7 'I t2 209 49 g4 314 "'"'° """' ThomH, MlrweukM. ll8: "'· Jacltaon. A,...i.. 25; Thornton, ~. 24; Ogll'lll. Miiwaukee. 23; Harrah, Cl1v11enel, 22: Cooper, MllWIUlt-. 22 "-Uiad lfl ~CRH. Kan1H City, 14. Tllornton. Cla;111ane1. fl.4. Cooper, Mllwalll<M. 111, ~U. Mllweult•, 12, Llaln1~I Cllicaoo. !'ta.IC NOTICE Ptll.IC NOTICE Ptll.IC NOTICE ~ PUBLIC NOTICE '1CTITIOUI BUllNHI NO~ fO CMDn'Ofll NOTICI OI' FIUNG MUNICIPAL COU..T 0, THI NAMa ITA'r.MENT OI' auuc TilAN&n" WRffTIN q~ Of 8TATI Of' CAUFO"NtA The lollowlng peraon 11 doing (a-.. e101~101 U.C.C.) llMRAU UIWICI CHUG.£ CENTRAL ORANOI COUNTV bulineu u : a Notic e le llar•byJlven to Ille FOR l'lllC~ YIAJt tm/8' JUDICIAL OtlTRICT GENUINE JEAN COMPANY credllort of PAUL Kl and DONNA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thet 100 CMo C•nt« Drive Weil. 2428 Newport BIYd., No. 3, Costa l YNN KIM Tronelerora, wlloH lt>e Boerd of Dlt9Ctort of Emereld l•nll Ana, Callf«Hnle l2'101 MMI , Calllornla g2827 home eddt .. I la 14 Portet, City of BtY Service Ol1trlct adopted Pl A INT IF F ; RIC MARO T Julio Pierce. 2431 Orange 1rv1no. County of Orange, Stele of O"'lnenc. No. 3 on AprN 21. 1geo, HORSTME'l'ER. M O Av•nua, Colle Meta, California C1llfomla thet a bulk tren1f81 It providing lor Hll bll•llm•nl ot OEFENOANT OENNIS CHASE. 92827 •boul 10 bo m•d• to JULIUS Hwer10• Hrvlco c;llarg•• lor DOES 1 tlltough 10. lnclul!Ye Ttllt butlrlffl 11 conducted by an ERDOE. MARGARET EROO£. llNDA -· 1oc111u ... and llloctlng to SUMMON• lndlvtd~ Poerc• M. EROOE 111\d AGNES V. EROOE h1v• au ch Hw.,ag• H tvlce UNt.AWfU\. DnAINER Tr~-~ hOlne addr-le c:hwgee collocted on IM Orange ITA'n HOUSING LAW Th•• .... _, WU f11oc:t With Ille 1212 StanlOfd AYO. City ot Redondo County tax rOll for MCl'I fl9c:8I )'Ml (5 D.11¥ MIPONll Titlll) County Cletk of Orango County on BHch. County of Loe Ang•IH. oommonclng with IM llecal )'Ml' CAii NUflfCIElll 1 .... 11 July 20, ig82 Flatn State of Calllomll 1980/ 8 1, and d l,.ctlng Ill• NOTICll YCHI llaM been IVOCI. The propol1y to bo tr-larr9d le preperatlon llHng oC a written The CCMirt mey !Mcldo eeelnat you Publlalled Ot1nge Coast Dally dMc:rlbod In general u ; All atoelt In tlPOfl cont lnlng dOSC1tlpUon1 ol without your bo1ft9 ~d unlffl Pilot. July 22. 2Q, Aug. 5. 12, 1982 tree!•. flxtur ... aqulpment end each perc I of reol property JOU raepond within 5 deya. Read 325$.112 Oood wlll of that A"taurant wtth re c eiving uch 1ervlces end Ille lnfCHmetloft below. !'ta.IC NOTICE bMr and wine bulinesa known u locllllies, an IM omount of the If you wjah to -II the advice ot --....... =~-.....=~ ..... ~.~ ..... ,..-.., .. ----1 "ORIGINAL SAM'S" and localed 81 charge lor OICll parcol for Ille en attorney In 1111& melter. you ....... ,...,., .., 57115 E. La Pelma, City of AnaheCm, fortncom ng llecal yo or. ea SllOUld do eo promptly so tnet your NAMI ITATiltll!IMT County o l Orang•. S tate of prM<:rlbed Mid Ordlnaoce. wrlllen tesponM. u eny. mey be The lollowlng por.on 11 doing Calllomla S AID WR TEN REPORT llH llled on lime' ~u: The bulk 1r1net1r wlll b• been duly pr fllOd wltll AVl l O I Uet•d ho a ldo SU 8 URBAN DES I G N & coneummated on or oflor tll9 30th Ill• S•cretory ol Em• Id Bay damand•do. II ltll>unal pueda ENGINEERING, 6110 .Anlte Street. day ot Augu91, 1912 ot 10-00 A.M Serva Dletrlct on .luly 20, IQ82, decldlr conlre Ud. eln audlencle e lAguno BMch, c.lltomla 9a851 et w .. tern Mutuel Eacrow Corp end II evalloble for ln9pectlon In tM manoe qua uci. rHponda denlto J-S. Jofwmon, &e0 Anita Attn: Metllyn W•lmorel&nd, wllooe Olelrlct Otllce. 800 t:mweld Bay. de 5 diao. LN le lnt°'maclon qua Str .. t, Llgune S.och, Celllomla addr-la 1"°81 S Yort>e St. Suite Laguna S.ecn. Calllornla g265t. llgue. tl:ze51 101. Tustin g2ea0. Cellfomla. The Mid r9'Klrt lndlcalM •Charge S I USlod duoa aollcllar e l Thia bullneee II conducted by an That 1119 IUI dete ICM' fllJng Claim• of S 100.00 par dwelClng unit for the conM10 de un abogado en ute lndtvlduat In tho tl9CtOW refwr9d to herein II ll8cel )'98' t ll82/83. • s u n I 0 d • b • r I • h • c e r I 0 J-S. Johnston AuguSI 29. 1982. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that 1nmec:tlatamlflte. d• .. ta manota Ttw. atotement wu filed wt1h tM So fer ~e 11 known to the tM Boerd of Oltoctor• hu Ml IM su r1199Ue1te NC""· al hay elguna, Coun1y C*11 or Orange County on Tran1lorH1, all bualneH namH time and ~ f« lleerlng on Mid puede ser reg11trld• a tlempo. July 23, 1982 and add ra 11 n u H d by 111 • repon, and eny end al1 oblectlon1 or I TO THE OEFENOANT A clvH 1'191M5 Troneleror1 lot IM PH I thrM veer• pro1 .. 11 lo Mid report, ICM' Auguel compt11nt l!U t>oen Iliad by the Publl1hed Otano• Coo1t Dolly aro: SAME. g, 1'82 et 5:30 p.m. In tl\9 otnc:. ot plllnttlf aga11111 you. II you wisn 10 Piiot, Jul)' 29, Aug. 5, 12. 19, iga2 Jullu1 Erdoe lhe Dlatrlct. 800 Emerald Bay, delend thl111wsull. you mull. witt11n NI.IC NOTICE 31g3-112 Margaret Erdoe Laguna eoocn. Celelornla 92651. 5 daya alter 11111eummona1e MtVed Linde M. Erdoo OATED; July 21. 1g92 on you. Ille with 1n1e court a wrllten Agnee Enloe A.A. Seymour te&PoflN to th• complaint. UnlOt& Publl1hed Orongo Coatt Dally 8ecretlll'Y of Emerald you do 10, your defeult wtll be P1to1, Aug. 5, 1982 Bay SoNlce Olottlct entered on eppllcatlon of the 3503-82 PubU1hed Oronge CoHI Dally pt11n1111. and thl• court mey entet • Pllol, .Jut)' 2Q. Aug 5, 1982 judgmonl egalnat you for the rellel 33g3.a2 demanded In tN complaint. whM:ll --------11'-..,..-TIC-E-"-'"~ could rHult In garnlahmenl ol ,.~ nu weges. taking oC "'°"'>'or property or o lllor rofl•I roqu••l•d In the compl11n1 Oeted Al>fll 8. 19112 ROBERT B l(UHEL. Clerk, By· R. P.,lln, Ooputy MA"IUN Ii. ILIFMAN, Eeq. 1I01 I . PeJltcourt Piece, lull• 1·102 lonla Ane, Ce"lomle t2701 111'> •n·toa0 Pi:bll1hod Otange Co111 Delly Piiot, .Jul)' 22, 2Q, Aug. 6, 12, 1ga2 3310-82 LITTUI LIAQUI AU·ITA.RI Meilot'l(1M~) MC'JJOfML T NT (II .,........ Po.ti, .,...) •"""*r'•'-w .. t Y0tbe Lind• •• NOflflNlt Santa.,.. 1 TOllCfht'aGMte C1n1ret Garden Orovo •• WHt Yorba Lind•. 1 p,m (Note· anothar oemo wlll bo played "'Idly night II 7 If w .. 1 YOt1>4 Linda w1n1 tonlgnt) t•CTIONALTOUftHAMSNT (atllotllnwoM) .......... ._.. No.walk Cantrel 4, DcMnYlew National 3 (M OUMVleW A--..i LL) ·~··---Ball 01rden1 3, W'Ht Lakawood 2 (D lnnlnga) TMlfllt'e GafM 8111 Garclent ..,. o-m.w Netlonel, 11:30 p.m. 11-~Hr-oldf OIVllK*AL TC>tMHAMENT (II a....lt ~· U Puente) Tonltlll e Game Co<ona Nlllonel v1. Roblnwoo<I, 5.30 p m u.e. c1., Court Chemrlon•htpe (at l!ldleN(ltOll• Men'• hcond llOUftd 81ng1M JOM--LUll Clerc (Argentine) del AM9fl Jarryd (Sweden), &-2. 8'2: Angel Olm-1 (Speln) dal Pet., McNamara IAuetralla), 7-!>. 8-3. Jo" Hlguer .. (Speln) Clef Roll Gihring (G.,l'l\4nyl. 9·2, 1-2; Met Purcell (US I def Eric Fromm (US I. 7-6. 7-5. Pablo Arrey• del Jim Ovrtain, 3-6. l-1, l-1, Mllt1 C111H1 (US ) del Craig MN.., (Australia), 1-2. 8-4 ·-·· TMrd Aound ....... Virginia Ruzlel (Romanill def lv•nna Madrug1-0u11 fArgant1n1). 6·4, 11·2, Mlcllello TOflla (US.) Clal Pller VUQlill (US J, 1-2, &-3. Olenne Fromholtt (Aullrllla) 1·9. 9·3. 8·•, Kathy Rlna1C11 (US ) Clef Cethenne T........, (Franoal. e-t. 6-0, Suaan Mucatln (US.) dll Co<tnne Vanier (France~ 8-0, 7·11. Bonnie Oaouaelc (U.S I dlt. Vlclty Nellon (U.S 1. 9.4, 11·2, Halina Suko•• (C1achoalovek111 def Jenny Ktltch (U.S.). 4-8. &-1, 7.5 ~·· toumem.nt (at Col ..... bue. Ottlo) Thlfd "9wld Sina'" Han!< Pfialar (Us I Clef Jol\n Saeln (ll$ J 6-4 3·9. 7·5. Bruoa Manaon (US I Clef VIC10< Amaya (US ), 7-15. 8-t, Nici< SIVlano (U S ) Clef Kan Barton (Auatr-), 5-3, 3-t. 15-3 Nl.IC NOTICE k~­NOTICI TO CMDITORI Of' auuc TRAN8'U ta.ca. 1101 .. 101 u.c .c .) Notte• I• ller•bY given to crodltot• ol tll• within nemeel tr anl1«or(a) that 1 bulk trenater i. about 10 be mi d• on p.,aonal propony llet'eln•lt« dellor1bod. Then.,,,.. and ~ addr- of Ille lnlended tranaleroti•I .,, WILLIAM H. DIAMOND and RUTH E. DIAMONO, 113g PIUl«lno A,... Colla MeM. CA g2629 The iocallon In Colttornla of the Clllef ••ecull,.. olflco or prlnclpll bualnHt olllc • of lho •nt•nd•d tranlf«Ot le; (If .. _ u allOYe", so"'""-· All oth., bu•ln•11 name• ano oddretM• uHd by th• lotendec:t traneteror within lllrff y"r' IHI peat 10 ler •• known to tile Intended ttanlfetM are: (II "none". to 1ta11.1 18tne Tii e nam1(1) and bu elneu e ddr••• of Ill• lnt•n d1d transfer••(•) era RONALO J. WYATT, 5Q8 Merquett• Clrcle. Coll• M•n . CA tl28211 and EDWARD l MULBERRY, JR , 5g1 FeY9(te Clrcto, Coeta M-. CA tnat the prop.,ty pertinent hereto le deecrll>Od In ~at .. 111 11oca In trtlde. lhtturea. equipment, trade n•m• •nd good w111 ol 1 cortlin GI ... and Mirror bull,,_, end 11 lo<:eted et· 93g P•ularlno Ave .. Coate M .... CA g2628. The bulin-n•me UMd l>y Iha Hid tt1'n1l.,Of(•l at Hid tocallon ia· HUNT'S 01.ASS co. •Ito known .. HUNT'S GLASS and MIRROR Tllll u ld bulk 1tanelar Is Intended to be coniummatOCI el the offkMI ol: BURROW ESCROW CO . 2070 N. Tuelln Av• .. Senlo Ana, c.llfomCa g2T05 on or oMr AUQUll 23. 1g12 Tiiie bulk lranetor II eub)Kt to ..... ~ ...... .. ............... , ......l&N41cl ... 1 (~ Wlido. ....,. OWt1e, lllc:lty "'"'' Cll•ntel Lavtoietl•, Kelly K~•. llWClll HlllletOOll, '*1111 Ar1W9J, , .. 2t ~ta. 2 United,..._ (Tr.,.~ T1t1 C•ITl.,on. C•nOy Cotti•. 81tell Jo~. Holly ._,. "411fY ~· "•t>ln Watt.,, J.11111 w111'111. fH u. 3' Jfll>.,, 112 05, 4 Tiie Hetllerltlldt, 171 ... I Ot .. t Brlllln, 172 fO: I lwlUMtMd, :: ~· T w .. 1 O«~. t83 If t Melllclo. ·-··"""""'DMttt 1 Cn111 lCi•o• .. (People'• ~bllo ol Cnlnei. •52 3 I POlnte; 2. Wen~y Wyll nel (Min ion Vlalo>. •38 tl2, :s, znov .IOllono (Cl>lne), 40 t fo ..... ,. ... HUllQlll\I t , Holland e UnllN ,, ...... *i>ain. 8ovtet Union t 1. w .. 1 Germany e CW. I , YUOotievle I CC"1Mlldoft 9'ac:llet) Egypt tO, H.-l.Mlencl 7 Fr~l.Gt-9 c.tl4'd1 t2. ClllN I ltlly tO. Auttfllla t OMp ... n.Nno AllT'I LANOING (New1N11 a-Ill -99 llf\Ollf'L t&. afbaoO<I, 4 barrKUda, 3t bonCIO, !Ill mac6rll. 12 rock fltn, 45 aarlCI ~. 5 llCUlpln, 78 klfp blM, I llllMplhHd, t white -bul. OAV.V'I LOCKI .. ("9w1Nf11Md1) -24 I anglar1 4 llbacore, 51 barracuda. f85 bon4to. 31 callco beaa. 593 mKllarel t rod! IW!, l5U llnd bate DAMA WHAlll' -302 MQiln 857 b .... 14 battecudl, 92 bonito, 151 mackerel. 2 rocl! 11111, t Wlllla M• bau . llAL tlACH -241 engl•re. O b1rr1cud1, 12 bonito, • cellco ben. 1 hallb\11, 1150 mackerel, 952 Hnel b•u. 5 twlpln. BM .. -87 angla<S. 1 11a111>u1, eoo mackaret, • aand b .... 400 white crollcar. 150 q_ ,,.,, IAN OllQO (H&M Landln'I -4~2 •no.... 142 atbac0<1, 1 t>tua fin. una. 5 big eye tune Wedn.ad•Y'• trenucllon• IA'HaALL Amlt'ICMLMgUe • NEW YORK YANKEES -Callee! UP ROdney Scott. Infield«. from Columbwa of the tntarnatlOnel League. Dealgn1ted Butch HOl>llOll. lnfleld«, IO< ..-t. Natlonal Leeew ATLANTA 8RAVES -Raneweel Ille contracl 01 Bob Wateon. first b-. 10< 1983 NEW YORK METS -Trad ed JOa l YoungblOOd. outltelelar, to the MonlrN I EICpoe IO< • pllyer to be named ...... eAIKETIALL Mallone! 9Mltllball ._ .. ,Ion DENVER NUGGETS -Announced Iii. Hie OI the Cl<Jb to BJ. "Reel" Mc<:ombe Of Sen AntonlO. Te.u FOO'BALL Natlone( foolball LNOU4t BUFFALO BILLS -Cut Daryl Wllltafton, noM tackle Announced 11111 8111 Gompl, t1neb1elcar. heel left earnc> CLEVELAND BROWNS -Bruce Hutllar. llnebackar, retired Mri PeutMn guard. left camp SAN FRANCISCO 49EAS -Sloned O<enl Huoeon. Clal1naiv1 llneman Cut Rulu1 Crawlorel rwnnlng baclc, end Cllarlaa VN«y. Oefen.ivo 1-11. HERO -Brian Downing'• eighth-inning two-run homer was the d eciding blow ln1 Angels' 8-6 w in over Minnesota Wedn~ay. From Page C1 ANGELS • • • around for a long time," Downing said . "They're not' going to let a couple of come-• from-behind wins get to them." l Still, Mauc h had to bef agonizing a little blt when thef Twins scored four unearned runs l in the top of the eighth inning off j starter Ken Forsch to notch the 1 score. ~ "Ken Fonch knows how bad I he's going t o f eel when· something like that happens," Mauch said after the game. "I'm not saying what he should do .--: just refuse, refuse to let it happen." * ANGEL NOTl!I: A"" m1•no eight gemM wttn • •trained rlgllt calf. llrtt buoman "Gd Car-returned to 1119 A"OO(e' el11111ng lineup Wec:tnetcSey nlaht. Ho ltlowod hll ruetlntll" witll 1 rare 11tllieou1 In Ille llrl1 apoeer-at Ille plate ... DOUf o.a.--tlltoo-#lome run portor~nc. TUMOey nlgtlt w .. 1119 ltr.t of hi• cer-. bul II m~ 1119 11th lime ,.,. nu hll 1wo In • g•m9 and 11\lrd 11,,,. tllie HHon . . . Tne lrl911 Downing batting 1t1noe loolt-allll• contHt award go .. to Twine' catm. Tim UulMof . . Down on the Of' tlltm, llllnga •• coneidetabl)t brigM•. For Spotc-. lho Angell' Plldflc Cout L011gUe atldleto, rlghl·handor 8'"9 ~ toeeed a · IW0-1111. 2-0 vtc:tory OYOf Vancouver .. the lndlan1 fncteoaeo tholr Nori'*" Oivlelon IMd to lour gan>M. Brown did not •How • tunnw 10 rMc:tl IOCOtld l>ua U 119 Mmed hit 1211\'. • victory agalnat elghl delHt• . . . N._,, Ang.t flllclly I.._, Ille llgllMWIOOO flfieWr C:•llec:t up from SPOk•ne to ~ veteran 0out CCN9ott. )ol'*1 tho t.wn Wed~~ • Former Angel Tom arueon•llJ WH ! 7-for-12 1n hll 1811 three g-coming 1n10 W•dnosdey nlgllt'e g•m• . . Al"r thi. a1ternoon'1 g-. tM Angol1 -• Mt to dtoart on • 11).gerne roed trip wftll etopo tn SHl!I•. MlnnHote •nd Oaklend. Ftldoy night I 7:35 game With IN MN!nets wt." 1>9 1*"'-1 by KTLA, Channol 5 forest fires destroy mafty h~mes. .;. Only you can prMnt forest fires. m A r11N1, ..... ,.,,.,,rTh" :-:n"1"1f•:r & fh, AJHr11•m11C-nu"'1( . ' • ... ' • ' . . • • ! . • .. Calllotnl• Uniform Comm•rclel :============t============1r============ Code Sec11on 111 oe Th• ne.m• and eddtHI ol Ill• Mt.IC NOTICE Pl&IC NOTICE P\aJC NOTIC( IJ«IOl1 wttll whom cleJ~ may bo RCT1110Ut .,...... FICTITIOUI IWSINIH IC.-.n tiled II BUAAOW ESCROW CO., ...._ ITATIMINf NAa tTAT'IMINf FICTTnOUa ilU9lllftl 2070 N. Tuatln AVfl .. Senta Ana, CA Tho IOflowlng penone are doing Tho lollowfng peraon1 aro doing NAm aTATDmNT , g2705 Roi: EKtow .-37355F, Ind ~ M ! buslneu •• TM fotloWtng ,,.,_ .... doltlg . ttle IUt dey IOt flHno Clelmt by any O NYX INVESTORS, 20401 T & J ENTERPRISES. 25285 bu..,_ at: ' Cl'edllor 911811 ~ Augu1t 20. 1tl82, Allport Lano, Huntington a.acti. CA Peclllce, Mlaalon Viejo. CA g2egt, FIRST C APITAL: FIRST: wllkltl le IM bl.I'"-' day bofo,. lN tl2&48. E'AWIN R FAEISCHLAD. 34101 CAPIT A l C 0 AP .: C 8 G I > eon1urnmet1011 d•C• tp•clfl•d DANIEL STAHLECKER, 20401 Aurelie. Oana Point. CA 9797g, ASSOCl~Tl!S, 17891 Mllohell', ·~~ J•..._ 20. 1...,! Allport Uine. t4unttngton a.octl, CA JOAN A. FAEISOtiLAD. 34101 Hotth, !Mne, Cellfor'n'-112714 1 ... .,,, .... 92t48. Autetle. Dene Point, CA 9787tl. F I A s T c A p ' T A L c 0 A • ~ =. t ~~L . .If. SANOAA STAHLECKER. 20401 SAMUEL THOMAS STAGG, Ill, P 0 A AT I 0 N , a Ca I (I o r n 1 e . Int .......... Tr--~ Allport Lane. Hllfl\lnglon e.cn. CA 25215 Paclllea. MIMlon VlefO, CA OOtPCl'•llon, 1788' Mllchll Notth, ' ...,_ _,.,__ 92649. 2691 lntlne, Cellfomle 02114 • • Pvbllalled Otong• Coo•1 Delly CAAL 8.IOAl<OVIST, a1g Onyx JOAN M STAGG, 25285 Thia buellleee .. conduclod by. Piiot. Aug.&. 1882 A--, 8'11>oe lelatl<I, CA Pectllca. MINlon Viejo, CA t12891 corporation l ---------•3.;;.~;;.;;..;;82;;1 SHERI BJOAKQVIST, 3111 Onyx Thll bualnHI 11 c:onductod a Flrlt Cepltal Corp. Avenue, 8a11>oe ltlfind, CA. lunltod P8rl<*INP. Mlot19ll A. Cohen, Thia ~ le conctuclod by e S.T. Stegg Ill P'81MMnt gtnerel pertn«ttll9 Thia 1lot_,t W .. tlltd with IM Thie ttaterntn( -fMod wfUI ,. Daniel Stellladler oun1y Ci.r11 on Jufy 20. 1982 County C"'1I of Orange County ~ TllCI •'111-t ... flllCI with tM ,,_,, July 7, 1M2. County a.II of Onlngt 00\lnly on PubCl•h•d Otango CtHt Delly 1'11116 JUiy 28, 11182. Pelot, July 22, 29. AliQ, 5. 12, 11182 Pubfllhtd Otenge Co111 O•I!~ ,,._,. 33011·82 Piiot, Jiiiy 15, 22, 21, Aug. 5, ttea Publl•hod Oraneo CoHI D•llY P\8JC NOTICE UOW2 Piiot, Jlilt12t, AUV· I , 12. 111, tM2. PWlJC NOnCI Al·--------""-20-_12 ~~A=:r PICnTJOUI .,.... I '90"'10U9 ._ .. NAmlTA~ Tho ~ pereone .. dOfnO ~-· COUM' l>OC'*INT lfAVICI!. 2110 ..... Verde Ofhr•, No. o. Coeta ...... CA tMat T,.ANICINO IUllHUI 8YSTIMS, INC., • O•Hlotnlt CIOfPOrtllon. 2110 ...... Vtfd• Ottv•. NO, O, Coale MIH, OA ..... TNa ...... ltOOl $1 ... .,. The fOllOWlnO ~ Mt dolnQ Nam ITA~ bl*'-' -Tho tolloMrll .......... dO«tfl fll·R.A.T, RACINO, 1017 W ~ -· tt01 I~, OOelle ...... Ce11torNt FL nlHHL l'Al'ITN!AS. * 12taf Onya, aolbo• ltlend, C..tlfomta All9n H llatf\. U .. I Otrne9y, lltU Sima Ana. ~ ta107 Ned H Le9¥ltt Ji., 302 ~ flltay A. DeWa, t?tOt llrtletoo, lllboe lalllnd, ~ nt11.....:.;.tJ eoeta ~ Clllfafnlli tltM flllofWCI H. Ven 0. V-, _, TflOlftU I . '•Ir, 17102 CllltHil _"!~~· l•1una •• .,11, "'11M1e, OOeil• MeM; 0....... C9llfOf'llll ... , . ~ ....., •• llown. 4401 ~ Ronald 1'4outlev•, 1UOI 0.... Dt., l.a C9Mda. C8lfllellll = .... Ootee ...... CelltofM 110~ "· ........ ~ P9fliif' TNe--..11 .......................... ~-,, •vttn... ......., ,..,..,._ n. ._... 11 • f 1 If w.e .. Mell"·""' ................ . CIOlpof ... 1. TreMHf!O ~.,... .... 0.. .............. . ,,.= ,_ ..... _ .. .,.., ., C)fWllll OiNllf,M -..... PPt.,1t•t1n11r•••••• DC.ill PM;.... .. • • e race results Trojans add v.oll eyhall trio ._ .. .. =.-t = ..... ..... °"'-110 uo ~·= g=:;: (~)( • 00 l:.o ... ,...., ... lo Men, ~. D9llM LWll. Wiii ~. °"*" ....,, llOb ""' ~11.11 • IJIAOTA (M) Ptld MUO. llOOMD AACI. 400 ~ N10111bO (LIGk~) t IO 4 00 ' 00 Wlletlln (Delombt) s,oo 2.40 Sit fWnblln Men (lwd) 2 IO Aleo r.aect1 TM Utile HUmmet, Tidy Puetll9, empire bprffl, Propernl Oondu. lob1 " ... &.!.1. kl01Y9 l(lpty, En Owolrt Limit. Time! w .Tt. • THIN> MCI. 400 yerdl. Skip Oonoo (Tonlcl) 15.20 a .20 2.10 Seel• Clabbet (Pllkenlon) T.IO uo Aoatet Sntippet (Tl"eMUte) 4.IO Mio r-S: NatMI Emperor, Top .,.. Nol, l(lu .... Lanny. Time: 20.30 MCI. 400 yarOI (°""'Gll • 20.eo 1 40 & 20 OlfWyl Bir (Tonlla) 4 20 3.40 FllCf Dale (ClefllN) 8.00 A.Ito raced: Tru Eighty Nin«, M1hogany Ptlll.IC NOTICE' °".,... ~· ........ A-. .... ....._ Wflo, AnMMt, _..,,.,_ ~ Tlmt:IUf. • UAOTA 4M) plld ,, 1•.IO. """ MCI. 110 >W•· ""'"° (MW) t IO 4.00 4.10 t·lllf lt!WttlMftt ICNYll) UO J IO •1-MltO(~ 1.40 ~IO ·-~ Aleo rllMd H .. lwlll• Rici. J11c1oe i..111 O«ratt, h¥tn De VIiie, CMfOll .. l'oclcteb#. Tim.· 41H. ltXTM MC& "° )'91'cll ~ Ot Devil (Hlft) I IO a 40 UO ter..o«> •.oo a oo 111111 (ClrOOH) 2.40 o raced: Coney 1111ncl Whl11, H.CS• Aochtt, , .. , Aooate, 81\0n .i.t, l..ICWt ChlO Time: "·"· 12 HACTA (T-8) Pllcl 119.4(), llWNTM RACI. 400 y11d1, P11r11rch (CfMOll') 1.00 3.20 uo ReqUMI Clwg.tr (HM1) 2,80 2.10 The F•llY111 (Clfdou) 2.IO AIM> r~. I Juan.1 Tudor, l.C>YelV Lou AnM, Umln10, 11oc1i Md T.o.i.. Time. 20 17. 12 IXACTA (5-7) paid $15 40 llOHTH MCL 350 y11d1. N1tlw Oamblet (Hunt) 9.20 5.40 4.00 Ooc NM (Creaq«) , 4.40 2.IO Priam But (FryOl)I) 1.40 Ptlll.IC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING alDI ORANOa COUNTY atD ITWM NO. 111 IUPIRIOft COUftT NC>TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lh1t 700 Chlo Centet' Or. WHt M11eO prOPOlll• wlll be r-ivad by 1'.0 . aoa ae the J::lly ol Cotll M .... ~wlb ~ lenta AM, CA tt7Ga City Counclf. P.O. Bo11 1 1 .~.! l't..AIN'T'N'f': C~ V. CROH. MeH. C1llfornl1 928211. on or Dl,ENDA HT: lflNllT C . before lhe hOUr ol 11:00 1.m. on CROii, CUMll INI UftANCll! Frld11Y. Augual 20. 1982-It 11'1111 be IOCIETY, INC., a Wleconeln the teeponllblllty ol 1ri. bidder lo c o r p o r a t I o n , W I I T E A N de!NW hit b10 lo the City Clerll't MORTGAQI CORl'ORATION, e Office by the proper 1nnounceO ~ ~ DOIEi 1-X. llmC. Bide wlH be publk:ty openad lncluelYe. Ind teed eloud 11 11:00 e.m .. or u IUMMONI eoon tharHltw u prectk:1bl• on C-No. 11-n-a Frld1y, Augull 20, 1982, In the NOTICE! You hll'le Men l4led. Council Chambllf'•, City Hall, 77 Fair Tiie court m1J decide eg.in.t you Drive, Co111 M111, C1lllornl1 without ,_ bllnt heard 111\teH 92628, ror lhe lurnl1hlng ol JOU reepoftd within :IJO deye. ft..o REPAIRS TO CIVIC CENTER ROOF. the Information below. ' I• a '* loeN IUI. Kiii...... ' AllOa Ttwn ~. flMfla ~ Time: 11, I. • ,., ... , ...... 0. •..ice • lr.t·•-1-e.11 _.. 11,ssuo with 80 wlMlno .1 ... 1 lflw llMlll I ~ llll oonaoleltori P*d '"00 With,,. wlMlno tlollett (10\lr hof ... ) la l'lctl llK IOtllCfi coneo11llon =::.:~1.10 with 7f •Inning tldlttt (UV. , one IClllCfl) *"" MCI.. uo ywdl. Owet1 Roell .. (Triel . I llO 3 20 UO My lMy 5E-I 12 20 T.20 Vlllllllfe ,., C-) 100 Alto r.-t: ... ffOUbie !!Ml, l(lpe Angel, l11tlM1•911ec1'°' Milo II•, "-In ti•. 900M Aevelellon, Truty Oh Timi: 17.11. 12 IXACTA 11-t) J*c1 131.40 Atlendencw. T,411, Del .. ., WIDNHOAY'I :LIULTI 111tt1 _.,.... tMt~ mMt1ne> mtlT RAC&. I lurlong1. Making HIY (Qepltllne) 111.10 t .40 1.20 Bettolfnl (~tfgue) 5.40 4.00 Pt.Oli.ctlon (Bltdl) 7 .00 Aleo r~: JenMn't Prlno., Twice The Chlfge, Effortleaaly, TatrllOtlel. E'1 Tradlllon, Wind N Honey, Coon CrMll. Timi: 1:10 215 HCOM> MCI. I luttonol. Flr1t Chief (CUlanedt) fUO 24.10 10.20 Truxton'• Double {Oelahou ... ye) 8 20 4.20 Stable Pll {Orleoa) 5.00 A 0 d 111 0 n • I •• I • 0 I t h • II you wish lo Nik lhe advloe Of epeolflcatlon1 may be obleln.O at an allorney In this miller, you the Office ol lhe Purchulng Agent lllOUJO Oo ao promptly IO lhll your 11 17 Fllr Drive, Co111 Meu. wrltten rNPOf\M, II 111y, may be Cefflornla. Bid• lhOuld be returned flied on Oma. tc the 1t1enllon of the Cily Clatll, A V I I 0 I U I I e d II e I I d o within Mid time Hmll, In • "8ted dem1ndado. El tribunal p uede en....iope. IMnll!Mld on Iha outside dedcftr contr• Ud. lln M1dl1nda • with lhe Bid Item Number and the -.-Ud. t.eponde deMto Opening Cele de :IJO dlea. LM la lnformedofl que NO DEALER SALES AD STARTS THURSDAY Eecfl bid 111811 IP4'C'ty Men ltlO 1lg1M. every llem 11 HI torlh In the ~I U111d dHel 1ollcl11r el 1peclflc111on1 Any 1nd ell conNfO de un •boOado en •t• e11cepllon1 to tne 1paclflc1Uon• 1 au n t o . d • be r f • h • c er Io mvtl be clnrly 1t11e0 In the bid. lmmedl1tamente, de Mii men«•. 1nO !allure 10 Ml torlh any llem In tu reapveet• MCrlll, el hey elguna, the epeotfk:1llon1 lll•ll be gounds ~ _. regl1trad11 1 tlempo. for raJaollon of 1111 bid. 1. TO THE' DEFENDANT: A civil Eac;h bid 1h1ll Mt lorlh Iha full complelnt 11•• been filed by 11141 n1me1 1nd re1ldenc11 ol ell pl1Jnlllf agalnll you. If yoo with 10 ~aon1 1nd per11 .. lntw .. ted In deland thf111weult. you musl. Wilhln the propo111. II the bid Is ISy • 30 days •fl•• Ihle 1ummon1 I• '9E''°"· 1111a 111e n1mn of Iha Mf'veO on you. nte with this court 1 1 wllOcanalgn111 eor_,,.,,t wrlllen reeponH to lhe complllnl on atf of tri. corporation and Un .... you Oo ao, yOUI' Oefllilll will whetller inora lhen one officer must be entered on 1ppllc1tlon of the lign. If lhe bid 11 by • petlnerlhip or pfllntllf, and lhl• coun may ent8' 1 • )olnl venture. 1111• tri. ~ and Judgmenl agllnel you tor the rifle! 1ddr_. ol 111 e-at partners Oemlnded In lhe compt11n1, which ano )olnt venturw1. If lhe bidder ii 1 could rHull In garnl1hmen1 of sole proprietorship or 111otner enUly wegn, tllklng of money or property th•I doea bualnMI under 1 lletlllous or olher relief reque1ted In lhe name, the bid shill be In the ralf complalnt. name ol lh• bidder with e 0111<1 Aprll 27, 1982 dHlgnellon following showing Laa A. Branch. Cl«k "OBA (th• llCllllOUI name)"; c. Keeter. Dopuly provided, however, no flolllloua IEOMOHO i.M.PH ANDl!fllON Jfl. nwne shall be ueed uni..s !hint la 1 23101 Moulton Pkwy ti 103 current rlQlatrallon with Iha Orange lagUM ...... CA t2e63 County rlecordar In cue or Published Or•ng• CoHI Oally corpor1tl0nl. Include the names ol Pilot, Juty 15, 2~ ~. Aug. 5, 1982 the Prealdenl. Secretaty. Tr111SUrw.. 3194-82 11\d Manager ~ The City Council ot lhe Clly 01 Ptlll.IC NO !!CE Co•I• M ... r_.. .. the right 10 1----.,-{R_-o1_145)_..._ ____ I retec;1 ll'l'f or all bids DATED July 30 19112 NOTICE OF OllSOUITION Of' Publl1hed Ore~ga Co111 Dell) PARTNERaHll' or JOtNT VENTUM PllOt, Aug 5. 1982 3500-82 Nolle• 11 given pu11u1n1 'to -----------Sacllon 15055.5 of lh• -·1c NOTICE CO<PC>Bllon• Cod• of th• Siii• ol ____ l"uut. ________ California lh1t M1tk Ill Propenlea, .. ,,. NOTICE Of' AVAJ\.ABIUTY Of ANHUAL REPORT Puttuent to S.Cllon 11104(d) of the lnlwnal R.....,,.,,. Code. notice IS hereby glvetl thal lhe annual repor1 tor the fl.cal yeet ended Oclobw 31. 1g81 of The Fluor Foundation, e pnv•t• toundellon. Is avellable at the found111on·1 pr1nclpel office for 111apec11on during reguler busl""9 hour11 from 8'()() • m 10 4·00 p.m by 111y citizen .mo req~ts II wjthln 180 01y1 •lier the data of this pubOcatlon The loun01tlon's principal office IS localed ,, 3333 Mk;helton Drive, Irvine, Callfornl1 92730. The prlnclp11 manager of the foundetlon Is Richard B. Humbert. Publl1had Orange CoHI Dall)> Piiot. Aug ~. 1982 3468-82 Pta.IC NOTICE Inc. 1nd Uni-Cal Flnanclal Corporation, heretofor• doing buslneaa •• P1t1ner1 or Joint Venlurara under lhe firm n11n1 of Sunset Hills Dove40ptnant Company 1ndlor Sunni Hiiie Oevelopmanl Co . 11 2950 Al<I Hiii. Coste Mesa. C1lllorn11 921211. have dissolved lhelr Plrtnwllllp or Jolnl Ventura as or Mldnlglll, June 30. 1982 by mutual conMnl, and lhll al1et said dlssolutlon no Pllf'IOll or enllty heel authority 10 Incur 1ny obllgallon9 on bel\elf of aald Pann.lhlp or Joint Venture Oiied July 27, 1982 MAAK Ill HOMES. INC .. 9UCGMSor In lnlw•t to MARK Ill PROPERTIES. INC. By Sleven H Sandberg Prealdenl UNI-CAL FINANCIAL CORPORATION By JKk Buller, Eacullve Vice Preaklanl Cherin Sonuly Secf•lllY The following peraon Is doing Pu1>fl1had 011nge Coaat OaJlv bu*'-lu· ' NEWPORT PERSONNEL PllOI, Aug 5, 1982 34~2 AGENCY INC. (• Calllornl• PUBUC NOTICE corpo11t1on). 2192 Merlin. Sulla -----------255. lrvlne, Ca 92715 FICTlTIOUS aU91NE88 Aulh Urban, 14 I"'-Loa Courl, NAME ITATEMIENT Newpon se.cn. Ca. 92663 The followlng Pllf'IOntl are doing Thi• bull-II ~eO by I bualneu .. : 00<por1Uon. E )( C E L L E N T B U I L 0 I N G NEWPOAT PERSONNEL MAINTENANCE. 21891 SellCl'etl AGENCY INC. Lane. Huntington Belldl. Ca. 92948 . By: Rulh Urben, 011nge Counl y 8ull01ng PrMIOent Mllnl•n•nce Comp1ny, Inc. (1 Thia 1111emen1 w11 llled wt1h Iha Cellfornl1 corportllon), 21891 County Ctwk of Of1nga County on Seacfeat Lene, Huntington Beech, July 2?, 1982 Ca 925411 F1t4141 Thia bull..-. la conducted by I Publl1hed Orenge Co111 Dally C()(potallon PllOI Aug 5. 12, 19, 28. 198~ Orange County 8ultdlng 3486-82 Maintenance Compeny, PtllllC NOTICE ~19UllNH8 NAm ITATI!fftNT Th• followlng p111on 11 doing bu~u: Inc o.nlel A. l~. PTealdenl Thia 111temenl Wat lllecl with Ille County Ctwk ol Orange County on July 29, 1982 fi1MS:lt Publl1hed Orang1 CoHI Dally Pllol Aug 5, 12, 19, 28, 1982 341...a2 LUCKY SHANGHAI INC. (1 Calllornl• corporauon). 2510 E. =man Ave .. City ol Orange, C1. Peter Shih Ho gieng, 22715 rtllllC NOllCE P1mel1 Ln •A, Coete M .... Ca. F1CT1T10UI _, ...... 112927 ...._ IT~TUEirr Thie~ .. conducteO by. The followlng penone .,. doing corporallon. ~ -LUCKY SHANGHAI INC. AQUA VENTURES, 123 23r0 ~-=Cheng, Slreel, ~ Bw:fl. Ce. 92M3. Thie 1111-1 WU llieO with the tllh ~ .... eo!ta C~~Ca~~er7 COunty Clet1t of Orenge County on Thi• ~ I• conducted by a .My 30, '982. f1MUI \ corpor1tl0n.J PublllhlO Or1no• Coatl 0111) SEA 8UrT8 OF Pllol Aug. 5, 12, 19, 21, 1982' ~~·.,,::·Bradley 3471-82 pr~. . ___ 11111 ___ 1C_NO_Tl_"r___ Thie 1111emen1 wu flied wllll IN ---"'-"""----~-----County CWti of Orenge Cc>Ul)ty on ------.. AUQUat 2, 11N12. rNMiii'T"'AmiiNr , .. , The following petlOlll .,. doing f>ubll1tll0 OrlllQe Coetl Dally ~ N: Pllol Aug. 5, 12, 18, 28, 11N12 MAAKITEL. 31ff "A" Alrwsy 3403-a Avenue. eo.ta MeM, CA 92821 P\aJC NOTia MAN.0 EAICKSOH. 339 WM ~. Suf1• 101, hn Diego, CA tJiOt. • A08EAT C. HU88ERf, 31ff The following parton It doing Nrw9'; All9tllle. Colla Mela. CA ~ a: m2c. OOLDl!N CHARIOTS, 11 Lill llEAURl!OAAD, 1102 &er9na Coun, Nwpott l!Mdl, C. 81111110 Ava1111t, V•n Nuye, CA tate3 9140t Derek l'ar1on1, 11 l1re11e Thie "'*'--.. oondUC* by a Court, ~ ..... c.. Ntllt ..,.,.. per1lltrtHp Thll bUlllnelt ta ~ ~ en NOer1 0 HutlMr1 lndMdUll Thie 111 .,.,. .. -.o w1Ut.,. o.M.,....... CouMr Cl"9I of Or.-..~ on ~n.. *' , ....... .,... .. ~ ID. ttn. Clllt ... Or-.. OOtlftty: • • ,..,. JAi/I/ • \ 1912. ~.~~= ~ '~"r.~°'n.•-=. ' ....... OAK TAMBOUR ·PANEL 2377 4X8 Make youreelf a roll top dHlr like Abe Lincoln or mayb. you'd like a coff- table. planter. or wall co••red wlththl11tuU. Jt'1uptoyou. HOYNE CLEAR MIRROR TILE 67•L\. . .. ., ·. In the word1 of Humphrey Bogart. ''Her•'• loolrln' at you. kid". U It wa1 good enough for Humphrey. It'• good enough for me. 12" JC 12" tllee. KREBS 303 SPRAY KIT I 11977 ~ 11- Sur• b.at1 etandlng on a wobbly ladder to do yow palnUng. lncludH #30alrleH1prayer. 8' euc1lon tub.. R6 45" nonle for enamele. noule extenalon and paint tHter. ill ~ BEHR PLUS 10 EXTERIOR STADf 7 44 GAL. For new wood. pre•louely painted or etalned 1wfaee1. etuccoand ma1onry. An oil-latex formula that clean• up with wate.r. GLIDDEN SPRED ROUSE PAlllT Lot1olcolor11ocbooeefro111. goe1oneasy.andcleall111p 997 wtlJ\ 11111 waler. (C... what l1 thl17 !ltral9h1 adHrll1lng CAL. ClftoMelhlng7) GLIDDEI SPRED LATEI GLOSS ROUSE •TRIM PADIT Olldd.a le one ol the blffl••· n..,--Uth•fOOd 1hall lhat la11e and la11uo l'Oll don't ha.,. to paint rwr houM for,...,. to co .... MIO f909d• T._, ~ Wiii, HO otlov, Mt. Mild, TIOI T .... Oenoer, ~tivlllm, 11 Ml Amigo. .. Time. II tO I/I • DAll,.Y ooua8 lt ·fO) ptfd 1691,00. ,__ MCa. One mlle IMlltlfut GltM (MGClrron) UO I 40 2 20 Olamofoue llten (l'lnCiay) 3 20 2 tO Wtw111 ..... (8'1Ge!nlktrl 3 00 Aleo r~· Vttll 'Otoe. luNNne 8tarltllne, bllad Timi t SI • tUCTA (4·11 peld l lUO. ,OUln'H MCL I 11.trtonot. 8~ Ledy (Plnc:W} I 40 UO 3.40 Count H TllM (Clpltflnel 5.00 4 00 DucflNI l'eltone (Vertlf•l 5.IO Aleo raced: Jenny Faolor, Wl1h'1 811r. Ott1)y Day Lid)' Curfew Time, RevllOhl, Cati ktrlWI, Aven 8t00m, Milkmaid, My Frack ... count • Time: 1111 111. l¥TH RACI. 1141 mllM CHI turf. WllO O•t• (Toro) 5.40 3.20 2.80 Prodlg!Qut (Ortega) 7.40 5 20 Mr. ~or (8hoemalcet) 5.20 Alto raoed. Prlncellln, Oogo, Pierre L• Mont, . K........,., Slgememar, Baltan.u. Time: 1.49 3/11 a IXACTA (2·5) paid $9UO llXTH MCL I 1118 mlel. Oululcll (De!MouMaye) 44.20 17 00 8 80 Prlnc:eea 'toy /Shoemeket) 14.IO 1.80 !Ole Ouor-CaollllM) 12.00 AllO tao.cl· Tllfl'I TrHIUll, Deltotlble, lallY l<noollen, 0.,._11 8elt, Vlbfllltly, Loet Loo\, LOI/I lnow, Oolcl4ln Llcly ...... i.un ""''*~· Tltne U4 2/1. llVINTtt Met. One mite on lllrf, Aldou1.ole tlhoemeicar> 8 20 s eo a eo Cleer V•dlct (~) 10 00 8 IO lhuhy {Vllenluela) uo AllO riced. ,, •• o. A•• HOUH , Mulll, TrMIUfY leolltll';, AQlilmonl, N8 loore, LIQht Heft Time 1 H 111 • IXAOTA (4-10) palcl 1147 50 h l'IOIC Ill (10·4-1·2·12•1t) peld ..... 0.1 20 with one wlllnlno 11e11e1 11111 horalel u Pick Slw cont0t11lon pelO 1430.00 wllh 19 wlnnlno llOkll• (tlw hor-). •IOHTM AACI. 8 furlollg1. 1-Bomt Kind• Flirt (Vlnll•f 2.80 2. 10 OIJI Hop'a Perleollon (Cotlen) 2. 10 out •·Bo<ly T•lk (McClrton) 2.llO 2. 10 OUI • -coupteo. Alto r-0: Faahlon KnowleOge, lflth Lollt Time. 111, II IXACTA (1·4) peld 120.00 NINTH RAct. 1-11111 m1te1 • Captain Double (Delahuy) 27 40 10 20 5 20 Swamp Lark (Oll'mwl 4.eo :s eo BtMdleO (~) 3 90 Aleo raced. He M1111 Sam, 9ICI w-. ~ Sport, P fNI Ctoucl, ONVelo, Lotty LOlllH' Tim.; 1:43 3/5. 11 IXACTA (5-3) plkl $317 50 All'°cSence: 20, 173. u:>8 ANOZLl'.8 -Maw De Hlsh'a U.. N4"drinchau., • 0-7 b1ckcourt apeci1J1at, LI one of three wom.n vol.Jeyball .Pll)'ft9 recently to alp letters ol. lntent to attend t6e Unlver1lty of Southern Calllomfa thlt fall. Al10 Jolnlna the two-time defendJn!itfonal champlona wW be Clark and Leslie Devereaux, th from El Toro High. Clark la a ~-10 ~ left-alde hitter who wu an All-CD' 4-A aelectton, a hlsh 1chool AH- American and a member of the U.S. Junior National Team. Devereaux wu a teammate of Clark's at El Toro. A 6-1 middle blocker, Devereaux was al.lo an All-CIF 4-A selection, a prep All-American and member of the Junior National Team. SPARTAN OAK PANELING RED QUARRY UNGLAZED HERITAGE nASR nLE PAYERS 4" I I" PAVER < 35cL\. Gotto pan the walk before my wife' 1 mother get• here. (She'• all right aa mother-ln-law1 go. but 1benenrdoe1.) GREY THllf SET MORTAR 3 44 25LBS. Started readJng the title and It reminded me of my halr •.. grey. thin. I don't know why I'm eo Hnaltl•• about myhalr. I haven'tgotany. MOllTERY MILLS CARPETDfG i:~:::· FIKE FUR BATB • YU CARPET r,--~ ... , Ooodlortbeba1hor•an r . butdon'llrycmdmolr• 2•r /,~vp1;"'(! ,..11 rourwlte ocooloulolll. ~!; :i,V.~ t'll:._/ Shewon'lgolort•. UN. n . Auoned colon . S fool wldlJ\. 11J1U. NULTI-PUllPOSE CllPET lfo•·•kkl bocking ond mll<t.w re1l1lonl. 2 97 When II 9el1 1a11ngy, 11111 toet It In IM wcnher.C-H ln$1ootwldth. UN. n . Enrythlng you need fot yow baa le: paint lob. The Obly thing you don't getlt aomebody to do the work • you'll hon to do that yourMU. FOREllGST flllCROWIYE UTILITY CART . 3177 HOO Oak flDlllh ad all you llMCI la a ecrewdrl•., to CISM IDble. (I 1Use to~ Cll'OUDll my motMr-... law la bot~. ................ , 4 Look at the price on thl11tuff. Heclr. I paid moN than !hat for my lunch at McDonald' 1 ye1terday. (Probably loolra b.tter than h<rTlng Big Macs pla1tel'9d on the wall a. too.) 33 4X8 ARMSTROIG YERlllY YDIYL 110-WAX FLOOR TILE ~..-947t EA. S.U-etlclrlng 1tuU In the popular Summer Dance (I lo .. to go danc:lng. gotta do that 11<>me time) pattem.12" x 12" tllff. ARMSTRONG CUSTOM SOLARWI nooR nLE 977cEA. Yow Im-• will lo .. you for th le, Chow about yow linephew?) It nenr need1 wClltlng. S.U·etlclr. In Imp:rtal Porcelain Glau 12" x 12" tJle1. TEAK PARQUET ~3 nooR nLE I 4 9 12"xl2" Mo. 1lrree. you'Nnot gonna get me to do th~ old •.. Parquet? Butter. Parquet? Butter .•. thlng. I refuH to do It. \ "" YOaJC ~ ,.._ Oerry l'aUI& mlY M th• ainli teo1Mll coeeh 1n ~­•ldna forwucl .-a Mhed\al• whlch lnlludll t.M Mm if Mldt!!i: Miami, fl&\. Pen St.ate and Sou~ , Ill likely to be ranked 1n the pn1111on Top Twen&y. Aher a •naatlonal career at ~U'• Moeller Hiah School, huat received a rude weloome to blc·time colleae football tut tall ln h1I debu& ., Notre Oa.me'1 head COKh. The Ftahtlnl lrilh fqht their way to 1 &-e record, the ecboo1'1 first lot.ln8 earn~ llnoe 1963. room for improvement, ~we'll be a betw tMm th&a y.w, even ~ °"' ich;d&.&Je II even toU&her. L.Ut y.-. oW' adledwe wu' raWd 'the fourth touahttt 1n &he country, Md Ulla yev It eouTd be No. 1. 11( don't know what our record wlll be, but we'll be a be\ttr tHm -a little qulektr, • little •trona I', • UtU. bit more moxie. We're pretty well eatabllahed in every area exc:ept wtnn.ma. I feel we have ct\.&allty )'OUl\I men and I feel we can win, althouah there are five or lix teama on our 1ehedule who probably have better talent than we do." .. ,, J tMmtd an)'lhtna !Mt year, ll'• that ln t'01lqt football you're tolnc to 1-aame 1amH; thtr• tr• very few undefHted tMma," he Mid. "It'• wry dltficUlt for me to llC."C.'ept a la, but at tht c:olle .. ltvel you've 1ot to accept lt and bounce 1-k. I don't know If I bounced back well enc>uah laat wuon but I wtll do lt thll ~· "I don't l:,;ueve In pulina the buck. The buck atopa here, and when you lote, lt'1 the head coach'• fault. But you've aot to be reaUIUc-you can't be the best every year becauae of the ba1&nce In collep footb.11. MANk~TO. MtM. (AP) - Minnesota VHdn11 General Manapr MIM Lynn •)'II t.hett la no way tha' Coach Bud Grant :D and hll -.tani., who •Y ~ "'*Y boycott th• Hall of F•nM " football pme Saturday, can bl 111ured of beln1 paid for the pme. "ft wu 1 ~ year tor me, a tough year for ev.rybody, • aald Fau.t, who wu in town tbia week to participate In the annual ' N~ABC promotion '°'11'· ''We'd 'better improve our record, and I The 1982 1M10n wu •rude awakenma fo#J F1u1t, to whom lo11na waa almost unknown. It may have been a bletling In d11auiae· "And the two main reason.1 for the balance are the limit of SO acholanhis-a year .nd the 2.0 arade polnt prediction rule, which allow1 almost anyone to ~o to college/' CHALLENG E -Gerry Faust hopes tb improve on last seaaon. "I don't know anyone who can make that declslon,'' l..ynn Mid. "I don't think there'• any one penon In the league who hal the ' authority to make that decllJon. Thi.I game l1 controlled by the 28 owners In the leaaue and lt depends on them." Atnnout 9UWH NOTICI llCYf1WeQ ml ~ ITAn.NT Notice 11 Mre«>y gl_, that the The lollowlng l>WIOl'll are doing Board ot Tru1tH1 ol the Co11t bUt1ntN u: Community Collage Ol1trlot of SANTA ANA AR"4Y & NAVY, Orange County, Calllornle, wlll 1002 Eall 17th Strael, Santa f.na. receive Haled bid• up to t.1:00 Oelitomla t2701 a.m .. Monday, ,4ugu1t 23, 1t12 at MICtlMI Jerome Sharman, 4781 the PurchUlng 0ec>tM1mant of Mid Und1trom, lf"Ma. Cafflornla t2714 college dlltrlot located at t370 Jodi Lynn Sll•r1T11n. 4781 Adami Avenue, Coate MHa, Undstrom, livlna. Callon\la t2714 Celllomla, at whloh time Mid bld9 Loul9 Sharman. 305 W Betgtn wilt ba publlcly opened end reed tor. Ct., Fox Point, Wltconlin 53217 THREE.YI! AR LE A 8 E' • Annetta Sherman. 306 W PURCHASE OF COMPREHENSIVE Befgln Ct., Fox Hunt. Wl1con1ln TELEPROCESSING SOFTWARE !l.Ul7 CONTROL PROORAM This bulloaa 19 conducted by • All bid• 1ra 10 ba In accordanQe corporation. with the Bid FCHm 1n.truotlon1 and Jodi Sharman COOdttlonl and Spaelflcatlonl which Michael Sharman 1re now In Ille end ~ ba N<:Ured EnllfpriM& In Iha oltlce ot the Purchulng Agent Mlc:hMI Shetman, of Nld co11ega dlltrk:1 Prllldant Each bidder mutt eubmlt wtth hl9 This tl•t-• was lllad with the bid a c.1hlar'1 chack, e41nlllad County Ctant ot Orange County on check, or bidder'• bond made July 8, tN2 payable to the order ot lha Cout f1mtl Community Collage Dlttrlct ~d P11bllahed Or1nge Co111 Dall', ol Trull-In an amount not lea Piiot, July 22, 211. Aug. 5. 12. 1982 thltl live pwc.nt (5%) of Iha turn 3314·8~ bid 1t a guarani" that Iha bidder ---111-m-alC_NO_TI_CE ___ will enter Into Iha propoaad I"~ ContrllCI If Iha eama II awarded to flCTmOUI IUalHIH NAiii ITAn.Nl Tti. lollowlng pereon 11 doing bUalnael u : SIMMONS CONSTRUCTION, 10912 Peon St .• Garden Grove. Ca 112840 Mary Jane Walla, 4725 Cra11 Ave., Alvat'llda, Ca. 112503 Thll bolll'IMI II oondueted by In Individual. Mwy J-Walll Thie ltlt-1 WU flied with the County Qarll ot Orange COunty on Auguat 2. '1182. ,,....,.. Publl1had Orange Co111 Dilly Piiot Aug. 6, 12, 19, 25, 1g92 3435-82 NII.IC NOltci flCTmOUS .uwii MAllllTA~ him. In Iha avant of tllllur• to enter. Into IUCtl oorttreot. Iha Pf~ of Iha Ill** wtlt ba forfatlacl. or In IN c:aM of I bond. Iha lull tum tharaof wlll b• torfelled to H id college dlatrlet. No bldda< may withdraw hla bid tor a period of torty·llve (45) daya ener Iha d•I• Ml fOf Iha opel\lng thereof. The Board of Trull-rHerYell Iha pf'lvllaga ol rejecting any end all bid• or 19 wal\la any irraoulefltlel Of lnlorm1lftlas In any bid or In Iha bkkllng. NORMAN E WATSON Sec:ratety, Boetd of Trust-. Cout Community Collage Dillrlc:t Put>llahed Orange Co11t Delly Piiot, Aug. 5, t2. 1g92 3"55"82 l'tllUC NOTICE Th• tollowlng penon 11 dotng -----.. -11-121-----~-W.F. FUTURES FUND NO t, NOTICE Of' f1UNO 19128 u.....,.... St.. Sta. 203B~. Of' ~ATIOM .. ..._,_ CONNECTION WITH Huntlngtoo 8-:h. Ca. 92645 MANCH ACOUltmON Rooald W. FlghtmPI.,. 8451 Thi• it to lnlOrm the pul>tlc: that. Jenny Or. # 114. Huntington Beech. uodar Section 648.2 and s.ctlOn ea. t2e4e Thi• t>ualnaet II condue1ed by I 545.14(•) of Iha RulH and llmlted partnarentp. Ragulallona ICH Iha Fed«ll Savings Ronald w. FlghlmHtar ind Loan Syetam. Co111 Fadarel Savings and Loan Aaeod•llon, 655 Thi• 11atament WU lllad with Iha South Hiii StrHI, LOI Angelu. County Clarit ol Orange County on C11ilornla, hu Iliad branch Augutl 2, 11182 __ .. • ...... ._. ion ...._ ,,MID appllcatlon _.., an ......-1 "" Publllhad Orange Co111 0111., pwmilllon to lnc:r.-eccountl ol PllOt A 5 12 111 25 11182 an lnlu<eble type by ,_, ol the ug. · · • · acquisition ol bra nch olllca of 3"38-82 Pecltlc Federal SaYlnQ9 and Loan -----------Aa9odatlon, 23.4 Eu1 17111 Streat-~ NOncE Coat• M-. Callfornla. located 11 127 t 1 ·Venturi lloutaverd, Studio City. California. YOU AM .. DIJIAULT ~RA DUD M TMIST DATID M.Y 10. 1•1. UNUU YOU TAklE ACTION TO '9Kn1ECT YOUll "'°""TY, IT MAY M 80U> AT A ~ 8ALI , IP YOU NllO AN UPUMATICNI CW THm MA'T\IM M THm ll'ROCllED9IQ AGAJN9T YOU, YOU eHOULD COW'fACT A LAWYER. NOT1CI CW TM18ftr8 8ALI r.a. No. aam NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN, that on Waclnaaday. August 11, tll82 at 11:00 o'c:locl! Lm. ot Mid day, In IN room Ht H id• lor conducting T NltM'I 811111. within Iha otftcel ol REAL ESTA1.E SECURITIES SERVICE IOCll.tel at 2020 North Bfoedway. Sult•' 208. In the City of Santi Ana. 8tatv of CelltCHnll. SAN MARINO SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATIO N. a Calltornla corporation, H duly 1ppolntad Truttae under and pureuant to Iha power or 1111 conferred In th1t cenaln Dead ot l'ruat uac:utact by RICHARD P. JARVIS end ANN R. Anyone may write In l1vor or protatl ot th• appllc1t1on Ycwr c:ommanta may dtacu11. but 1111 not llmltad to, the ~t·a record of pertormanoe In halp4ng to INlt the credit naad1 ol Ill local communltJM. Four coplaa muet ba rac:aivact by "Sus>ervieo<y Aoant. Fedefal Homa Loan Bink of San Frencltco, 800 Calltornll Streat, Po11 Olllca Box 71148 , Sin Francleco, Calllornla 114120," by August 22. 1982. An llddhlonll 20 dl)'I to IUbmlt commante may ba obtained, ptovtdad IUCtl r~ la re ceived In writing by the Suparvlmory Agent by Auguat 2.2. 11182. Anyone tandlng • 1u1>111nt11I prote11 may raqua11 an oral ar,gumant on Iha lll>Pfk:allon u Mt tortll In Section 643.2(f) For 1 protest to be cona ldarad 1ubt l1nllal, It mull ba wrlltan, rac;alvad on time. and con11ln II leal1 Iha lollowlng: 1) • eummwy ot the ,_ tor Iha protMt; 2) the JAAVl8 , hu1band end •II•, lpaelflc mattare obleeted to In the -dad J\*f 31. 11181. In 8ook appllcallon °' In the 1ppllc1nt'1 14 t82 ot Otflc:lal Racotda ot llld COf'M'lunlty ~ record. 3) tacta, County. II pege 1ta0, Aaoordar'I lneluding any relevant aconornlc Of IMIMMnl No. 44023. by rNIOtl of financial Information, which support • bfNCh or dallUll In payment or the protaat. and 4) 1ny advaraa performance ol Iha obllg1llon1 aflacft on your organization or Hcured thereby, lncludlnq th1t community whleh m1y raeult trom bfMCtl or dal1ult. Notlelt ot which approval ol the applk:allon. 1"!"'9-----!'1------------------' NO DEALER SALES AD STARTS THURSDAY RUBBERMAID ROUGHNECK S~clally detigned ao that the garbage guya can't 1ma1h it. craah It, or da1h It and it won'tcrack from the weather either. 32 GALLON · TRASH CAN 977 Get• the trimming done aippo bang. (I wonder If thia la the model Uncle Herky"• barber uaH to cut hi• hair?) SUNBEAM 18" DELUXE TWIN BLADE ELECTRIC MOWER 12999 #3129 RICHCO o/a" ULTRA HOSE s999 #UH-550 A SO fl. hoH that roll a up to a 9" diameter circle (that' a about aa big 01 a rhubarb ple ... mmmm) and lt'a a llght touch. fl exible. and compact. . YALE BRUDYWINE KEYED ENTRANCE LOCKSET Lemme Me here. It 1ay1 Brandywine .•. well, no wonder It'• key.di Hoa a 'h'' bolt throw and deadlocking latchbolt. Bright Bra11 flnl1h. ~~~ YALE HIGH SECURITY DEADBOLTS, FULL I" SllGLE CYLlllDER 8 97 COLEMAN PACKHORSE D TRAILER wttH FENDERS 18997 Cargo bed 1149"x41 "'. ha1 a payload of 1063 pound1. atoNaeaay. receued talllght1 Jet.you atand It on end. You put It together. IMPERIAL AUTOMATIC TRARSMISSION FLUm COOLER I 5 55 #242008 fr:) \§ Time to get It In gear. for car•. van1. plck·upa towing 1mall boata or utility trallera under normal condltlona. SHELL FIRE Ir ICE IOW/40 WT. MOTOR OIL 84•QT. UH your own labor lo change the oil end you can probably get the whole lob don• for a few buckl. Pick up what you need off our di a play. ALLISON DOUBLE CYLllfDER I 2 97 No. no. not deac:l!Mott: I tald d.adbolle ... that'll 91 .. ya oecurlty. r uu I" boll, t lHl 1elnlort'ed and pin tumbler oecurlty. Brighi lrau llnlah. EMERSON CEILING FUS -_, ; ~,..7,' .. :;s..,, ~ ~' 52" 9918 #Cf20S2 Keepa the place cool. Walnut or antique flnl1he1on36" or 52" bou1lng1; 42" haa Pollahed Brau fin lab. 42'" 11918 #Cf2042PB CWSIC DECORATIVE 52" FU I 7988 #Cf529 DRYER DUCT HOSE · FT. Aa eaay 01 pie to lnatall. Comea In whll• only. (My wife ha1 lt aa eaay 01 pl• a.nd 11111 want a It ala mode.) WATERLOO TOOL BOX WITH TOTE TRAY 5 97 #PL·l9 Now Napoleon won't be the only one to meet hla Waterloo. )uat think you could go down in hlatory too. Dlmenalona 19" W x 1" D x 7"H. . ......, .. WU raoofdad Al>(ll 15, 11182, aa You ~ 1001t at Iha 1ppllcall0n Racorda r'1 lnatrum1n1 No and all commanll lllad 11 the 12·132987, Wil l SELL AT PUBLIC Fedlfal Homa Loan Bank of San AUCTlON TO THE HIGHEST Francisco, unlau 1 ny auch IMOOER FOft CASH. lftful money mat...-.. -exempt by law lrom of IN United Stat-. or a c:eafllar'1 public dladolura. If yOU heVll any ctledl drawn on • atata or natlonel que1llon1 conce rning th••• bani!, • 1111a or fader al credit pro cad u r a 1 . conta ct th a union. or a ... ,. or tadaral Nvlnge Suparvl90ry Agent ., Iha Fed«al and loatl uaoclallon domldled In Homa Loan Bank of San Francilco. lhll 1t11a, all payable at Iha tlma of Publlanad Orange Coaat Delly Mia, Ill rtotit. tltla and lntlfllt held Piiot, Aug, 5. 11182 QUAKER PINEBROOK SUN VISOR ... by II, H Tru1t11, In that real 3484-82 proCllftY tltuat• 111 NICI County and l-------f----Sta1e, ct.cnbaO 11 follon: fUl.IC A lu~lnntolel Estate In and 1----,..~---~~~~--10 the Sou!Mlltarty UIO feel of lot NOTIC• CW t 11 , I II o I Lot 1 8 a n d t h a (NOTICIA M ~tarty 18.00 feel ot Lot 20, NOTICE IS HERE Y GIVEN that a In 8lock t6 ot Tract No. 772, u par G-aJ Munlclpal map raoordad In Book 23. paigae 5 held In the City If ta ~ on and e of Mllcallanaoua MIPS. In IN TUllday, Iha 2nd da 'November, otfloe of the County -dar ol Mid 1982, tor Iha I ic..; County. {NOTICIA SE DA A 18TE l[ilceptlng therefrom tha M£Df0 qua una a.n.at EleoCloo Nonhweetarty ~.00 ,_ ot Lot 20. Munlclpel tanclra luger an le Cludad Tiie 1treat addr111 or othar da ea.ta Maea. mert11. el dla 2. da common daalgnaUon ot the real Novtambfa, da 1N2. para llaQlr IOe proCllftY ~ ~load II of1c:la6al llgulant11): purported to be1 44t Pro1pact For two (2) Member• ot Iha Qty Sttwt. Newpor1 laectl. Oellfornla. Coundl (Ful term ot lour years) Th• und aralg nad hereby (Pera doe (2) 60Cloe da la Jwlla dt1b111m1 all llablllty tor any Munlclpal) (Plano plato da cuatro lnoorract-In Mid et,.. eddf-8"09) or olhaf oommon dallgnatlon. The pOlll wMI ba open between Said .... wllt be meda wtthout the houri of 7:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. -ranty ~ « """'*'· ,.. (Lea luOlr9' da wtllllllon ..,..,, aardlnll IM. per rulcn, Of~ 1blartoa antra IM llorll da 7:00 &r1nc-e1, to ut11fy the prln-Lm. y 8:00 p.m.) dlJal b11an01 of tN no.I Ot o4tier Eft.EEH P. PHINNEY ~ ...., w M6d 0"9d of City Ctert of the Trwc, wll\ ~ and ~ 11""9 City of Coata Mela. .. prooMed tMraln; plut ---. -CaiNomll If my; Ul}dat ... --tMt90f and (8e«etarto MUftlclpal .,,... bn Mitt ---. Ind plua da ta CNded de ... cMrvel and ~ of ... Cott• MerA. Callfomlil) TNltle Md of tM tn*a Cll'MCed W 0.1~: JUN 2'1, 11112 Hid 0 .. d Of Trult. The total {'«ha Jvnlo 21, 1N2) MIOUftt of Mid ObllfdOI,. lndudlne Publlehad Orange Co11t Oalty rr .. Dflel:lt1~ ..... CINr1ll9Not,~5, 1N2 and ...... c4 tt1 TNllea. al 1'19 W2.-Z ... .. ...... putll oatlOfl of We Notk1e. ...... a .11. "8JC NOTIC( OMad: """ tti 1tu rtCTmOUe ...... = ~ IAVIHGI ..,_ ITAT891T AMC>06ATION The toUowtno l*IOfl 11 ctotng blllineMM: :. ~ OOf'OOl'lttOn, CAEATIVl CIP£NING8, 22438 =TATI ~ O!'., a TOfo, 0.. 12830 IVIVIOI. Wlll'MI LOU!e Abtllofl, 22411 • ......... ~Or .. II 'Ton>, 0..12130 .. AJ!'!'.'., Tiiie ..._II CIOI llUCJllll by In ==~·.J ....... ~MIMIUMIMleflNln --•-:wwwt .. llld with Vie ... .... --.. a.ti at Orenot Cownty °" ..... Ma, CA tVOI ~I. ttt2. T__. (1Ml ..... 10 ·-~ OrJW119 c.... D9l4y lltubfl~ Ota~ Coa1t r>-, """· Mt n. •. Al.lg. '· 1:..... ..... Aug. ti 11, w. It, '':a..u ' SHEDS 61/2 x s· 8 788 10' x 6' 13788 10' x 9' 14788 Made of hot-dipped ateel frame component•. Eaay a11emblywlth pre-number.d and pt•aligned par11. No.minal alzH to reflect out1lde eave dlmen•lona. • 'i 5/a" TEXTURE Tl-11 I ; ' 1. • '. I ~ SIDING ~ ' • I \ ' 11 • I 277 . •,j : .. ~ ~ • 1·· I . . . 4X8 I 1 . . . ... '~· You can UH thla atuff • •• '. • lndooraorout. Hey. why not . •I ' ! .. . , !\' ~ uH lt both placH .•. you . ~ •• '1, 11 .... know matching motif a. '' j Grooved 4" on center. ~ I• .. \ \ I• o/a" SANDED SHOP PLYWOOD 6 77 4XI J kuw ca girl ln high 1chool who wcr1 a1 pu,. a1 Snow Whit•. W•ll. I e-1• eh• ha• 1lace d.rUtecl quite Cl bit. - - r. 1 55 #1242 . Thia 11 better than the kind that block1 yow vl1lon. worn more Ilk• a big pair of aun gla11H. YALE ENGINE OVERHAUL m 3 88 NEOK Red11cH bumJng oil qulet1 val•••· and re1to,.• power. (Sur• are a lot of ITY Leaguel'9 ln tbl1 ad. thl• 11 the lblrd llom Y al•.) IDIDICI• POWia ClllD ELECTllC Cllll SAWS ' Hai the comfy crulHr aaddl• (you ride very much and you '11 know why that' a Important). coaster brakH and balloon whltewalla. YOUR CHOICE MEI'S OB LADIES' 8888 #2-5032 -#2·5033 GEllE Va IP DELUIEIGldDBIYE UUIE •R OPEIEB .. . ; "E.T." Steven f3plelberg'1 tale of the Jovable, stranded alien, U ue1 to aet new for gross receipts e. The film has in $169.8 million at the box offlc, in 52 days through last weekend. Ms. Lltchfield, who Uats telepathy irnd Clairvoyance among her psychic ak.U.la, conceived ~e play for the purpose ..,JJ.f "conveying a strong ~tateQlent of the personal emotion and love of all ~ga." the suit states. The suit also claims Ma. Litchfield received a letter from Universal Studios President Ned 'l'anen in 1979 wherein Universal, a subsidiary of MCA, rejected "Lokey from Maldmar" as a possible movie production. .. Ahtr a cart hat NIC:l1.nl l'm afraid I jult don 't •hart your enthutlum for lu potenUal," the letter alleaedly M)'9. Tne 1utt ukl for an tnjunctton to atop ahowlnal of "E.T . .'' and •2~0 mlillon pneral and •~oo million punl\lve dama1ea from MCA, Unlverul Studio•, Steven Sp l e,l berg Produc,iont, writer Mellasa Math.lion, Tanen and co-prod ucer Kathleen Kennedy . -AH Ol 5 ia.R ANDAe191UMAN' •A MIUCLI 1Mr·WIU UAtla YOU ...uNG 10 flDTTALL• ~ .... .\ -11--.,111 i.t:T\IU ~ ................ _ ... __ _ ... __ ' ------NOWPLA~NQ ~~~ ......... ...,,. ...... --E~ttd• Vit,o Twwl~ OMClomit PIClllG'I OtlllOt Omit Iii UD HJO 93~ t553 SH 7022 .. ,,.., lllU Eow11os Ntwpon ClMlnl 144 .0710 WllTM .. ITlll £dw111d1 Ctl\tll'll West '" ,.,~ ....... ua.c:cv1H _ ............. ~, Piiot Logbook -D ·1 p·1at I Ca~ide~~=:~:~ II J I °"'"° '°"'" l'tlSIXn KA.ISTY McNICHOL CHRISTOPHE.It ATKINS .. 'iliE PIAATt MO\llE" ·-TED HAMILTON ... _.""" BILL KEJlll ·GAARY McOONALD·MAGGIE KJIUCPATIUCk ~°'~ .trMOC:MllNIOCIUCll ........ ~ ROBIN COPPING. A.C.S. ·DAVID ANDERSON · TED HAMILTON ~-~'" ...rwDllf DAVID JOSEPH • TlUYOR fAAAANT · KEN ANNAKJN -~ .. TtAAY BRITTIN, KIT HAIN. SUE. SHIOON Md 8IUAN ll08EllTSON ~· STARTS FRIDAY CITY CEnTER F'~ IH TH( CffY ClHTlll OllAHOE • G4<t212 ''lrrevenmt, vulgar, eometlmes disgusting, and delightfully funny ••• iloved IL" ---.-... llllXT·"· ... - 11t lwlltilttSllewlea10NUS2JAU.ltuOtlitrwbelllte4 S II irel44•Xutl6 I 6'~ 2ss' 1~~1 ) FOR FOOi EXCIT~mEOTI V1t1tOur .. , ARCADE of GAMES• ;.··, .:;'," *BARGAIN MATINEl!S • Monday lhru s,turday All PerformancH before,5:00 PM lbeept lpeclll En9111ment1 1nd Holld1y1) l A M tllA(JA MAI l Muodo ot lo•ecron• LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99'•24'00 "AN CWFICP AHO A Ol!NTLEMAN" 1111 ----- "ANNIE",,.., ·----- LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK IN "THE •UT LITTLE WHOREHOUSE IN TEXAS" 1111 ___ ,.. ... _ "ROCKY Ill" Cl'G> IN roMM ~v enuo ---.... -· .... LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAI• IN Foe Al Dt1 NM> 211 614-tlll ANAHll~ ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ft•.-.°' t1 ot l•moft St 179·9150 -COMAN n.:..AMMIAN" ,.., I "THI n.G" 1111 ...... _ au1 N,. ~•P• BUENA PARK DRIVE IH U~Olf"I A•• wed Of tCno" 121·4070 l\IJf NA f•Arn: LINCOLN DRIVE·IN \•MOtfl A•• .... o• 1r.on 121·~070 • __)VNfAI,_,. FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE IN "llOCllY Ill" IN ! -·cu.aH Of' T"9 TITANI" INI Ct11l11- "NtOHT *"'"" !Ill -•&NY WMICH WAY 'YOU CAW' .,.. Cl'lf,,_ "··•'-"'" LA HABRA !J~ IVI IN "NtOHT IHtfT'' 1111 -· ... --- THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GAAP"1•1 ......... , ........ "A _,,..,...... NIGHT'S tu COMIDY" CNI ---;:.-:';.:l ·-.... ~-....­ "THI! eltT LITTLI WHOlllHOUH IN TallAt" 1•1 -"Al.L NIGHT LOff0" 1•1 "flOCll'Y IW' INI -"Tltla"' 1111 .... ,~ THI UTilA·TlltMaTltlAL" {N I -"DIAD .. N DON'T MAii PLAIO" '"'' "THI WOllLO ACCON>ING TO QAlll""l~I ..... ·Al'ITHUtl· , ... , "THI Mt'f UTT\.I WNCIMHOU'.t,. .. THAI" 1111 "AU HIOHT LONG" flOI "THI THIHO" 1111 -11.AO. llUMNlll" l~I Cl'lt " IOU'IO..;;._ __ "'YOUMO DOCT~· IN Lovr t•I •AlllP\.ANI" CNI CMIA~ "THI NIT UTTLI WMOMHOU .. IN TIXAI" {II) ,,. -·-•-• .... a...,...... "AU. NIGHT LON0" 1111 17MH2 --.... •. ' OQANGE 11111'11 .... \ I • • Tiii f,\MILW Cl•Ct;I 1 I f ''Mmml This is scn.mptious!" • "Con I hove some scrumptious, Mommy?" MARMJ\Dt.:KE "Look at that! Marmaduke's learned how ~ to honk the horn!" Jl'DGE PARKER WIDNllDAY't PUZZLI IOLVID 815 GIOKCll -- . ~ J f ' •• .. lnfl1tlon personified!" WILL YOU LENO ME SOME MONEY? Da.SMOCK eu1" 1"He CIRCUS Pie> <01ve YOO .A voe. MISS KIMe>e~i...y, 50 NOW WHYARe YOU 91"1 &.+-Pl!! PRf SSec::> ... HOW DO YOU ALWAYS HAVE 50 MUCH? MY~uN·r I GIVES IT TO ME--- rr ~AINlt.> I~, MINNIE ... ll)W., "A~<, IM 'f"E:,RE ... rt WILL ~LL V~~ ~f ONE. OA·n by Ernie Bushm1ller BECAUSE S~E THINKS I'M PACKED TO RUN AWAY FROM HOME AA E:t.AMM,1~ ~ i 'fAA't ~ 1'U~OA'4S, f'E.o4U I eo~ M~ !>'f~~lUR'f ICE lRUtM 1'"~ AM~ ~E.R \'L~~ '· 'CAUSe. l'HRTS ALLWECOJLD Fl~Dl 'Ill H-.11" -1W1••- M01--~ THllAifT l.W.A.T. ' HAWAII fllva.o • OVl"Ult ~ oornedhln Olea ~. Or. Jolln Ferqutw, r.:::..'r~ """°"°" 1"e,,.,.,.. .. Arctlltec1\lra: MMntno In IA==· N9CNIW8 SEARCH -Magnum (Tom Selleck) searches for a missing sailor on "Magnum, P.I." tonight at 8 on KNXT (2). MOVIE 1lf * "The Beltlmcwe 9\11- let" (1980),,...... ~n. Orner Sharif. A emaa.1lma pool hustler muet ,., .. '20,000 end win • big townament t>elore ha Ct111 W.W • rematch with an old OClf)Onenl -wllo NII - loatal eny~ 'PO' (B)MOVE *. ~ ''Nevw Nevw Ulnd'' (I ee 11 Petula Clllttc, ca1~ lean Naablt. A nlM-)'Ul'- old Olf1 from a broken home ~ tonel'- lhl'OUO'I the Peter Pan l:to ~-CAVETT -~ ~ "lndMdlMI Rlgllta" at=::MtU.£R 7:00 I cea NEWs .NeCNEWS KUHOF'U Caine turn• an ol(I enemy Into a Irland. 8 ABCNEWS II KOJAt(~ _, .. e w·A·s·H Wlnc:ti.ler end Hol Llpl get food poboning from en Imported c:en of pMulnl and Hawkeye la repri- manded for fighting. • JOtCER'S W1l.D •• BUSINESS lllEPORT Cl) P.M. MAGAZIHE A patented 11ntl-anorfn0 device: a IOok at a been. lor· letnar houMhold. 0 ENTERTAINMENT TONIOHT An lntemew with Bruoa Dem. 8 THE MUPPETII cm MOVIE **'A "Hometown U.S.A." (1t79)GarySp.lngar, Daw Whorl. The problaml !Ind anidetlaa °' .,..... 9dofae.. oenta copng with growing up In th• '50a era Cir'~R' * • "Outrageoual" (197~) Craig Ru11all, Holll• MclAran. A QOOd-MIUfWCJ hair~. who moon- llgllll M 11n ~tor of female calabrltl ... Mier• 11n llparlmanl end • plaloolc ralllllotllhlp with. adltzophranlc: young wom-an. 'A' 7=*1 8 2 OH THE TOWN FMtured: a visit 10 Egypt for a lour of the pyramlda, the Sphinx, a oNIM e6ong the Niia and the elghll of Ille modem matropoh I 8 FAMll Y FBJO Tl4A T'8 HOU. YWOOO "Sten 0-F«gol" .... ,,. .•. " Frllnk i. dri\oen by hll jHlouay of Trapper Into propollng to Hot Lipa. • Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH • MACNEIL I LEHRE.A "90RT • FAWlTY TOWERS Ballll attampta 10 ~ FllWlty T~ Into a gout· rnat'1 patlldlM. (Patt 8 of II) 9 YOU ASKED~ rT FMlurad: "Shootout At The O.K. Corr1r· !Ind "The Atllleee It An Armadillo " (J[)MOHIY MATTIM A l•t·pacad ~ axamtnaa how to cut food bllla dfutlcalfy and how to • .. .,. money by catetogue ahopplng: (J) AEA091C18a oat 1n a11aoe. look QOC>d. end leaf grMt wflh lllia phyalcal lltnaaa Pl'oeram. l:OO 8 Cl) MAGNUM, PJ. Megnum -Cflel for • man who dl .. ppeared wnlte aalllng through a ch•nnal lr•dltlon•ll)' laarad u "curled." (R) 88FAM£ Danny trlM lo ,.,.. money eo 11111 L.,OV', motllW Ctlll -her eon dllnCe, and Mr. 5norofllty .. reunited with en old IOYe. (A) 9 MOVIE • • • "Banyon: w.a Up And Ola" (1971) Robert Foraler, Darren Mc:Oavln. A 1930• private eye becomea a prime euapact wtl4lf'I • girt II found deed In hie office 8 di MOAK & MINDY Mindy opla for exotic togetharnaae wlttl Mork wnlla Mearth la wwey for a week.(Rl D MOVIE * • "The Lady In Tiie Lella" ( 1~7) Robert Mont· gomery, Leon Am.. Pri- vate lnvHtlgator PhNlp Marlowe become• Involved with murder, oren end bM\lllNI 10:00 ...... • P.M. MAOAZlHE A patented entl-tnor'lng dev1ce; a look ••• baclle- lor-lalher hOuMllOld. II) MOVIE • * * "~ "Roman Holiday" ( 11153) Gregory Pack, Audrey Hepburn. A pnn.. cea tallt In tow with a ~an wlllle on 11acatlon In Rome. • u.a. CttAONICU: "Hol Chlpa I Cold Cah" The growing r11.11nbar of tneft• ol c°"""""' ~ from Celllornla manulac- ,.,,..,, 11 axemlned. ID SHIM PAIVIEW8 Roger Ebert and Gena Slaltal hoat 11n lnfonnalflle look II wllal'I ,_ at Ille moviaa. (C)MOVIE 'h "Nightmare" (19811 Belrd Stalford, 6llaron Smith. Deaplta a drug P'• scrlpllon that 11 eup~ IO IOOlhe llll hOmk:ldal landenc: ..... -aty dls- lutbed young men c:ontln- uH to commit grlely ha1dle1 mutdara. (][)MOVIE * * "Cout To Coast" ( 19801 Oyen cannon, Rob- ert Bl•k• A run•way houMWlla end • acrappy trucker h1ullng c•ttl• cout 10 coaet become the tatget of • wlld croaa- country c11aM. 'PO' (1)0MOW **IA "RagQedy Men" ( 198, l Staay Specek, Erle Roberta. In 19<$4, • tete- pl>ooe operator In a lm8ll Tu .. town 111crlltcel .. standing In the community wtlen ahe h .. a allort •lfelr CHANNR LISTINGS fJ KNXT (C8Sl D KNBC INBCI e i<TLA (I nd l .l<ABC (ABCl O KFM B !CBS> t) KHJ·TV llnd J 8KCST (ABC! • KT'fV (Ind > e KCOP-TV (Ind I • l<CET (P BSl eKOCE IPBSl o OnTV l Z TV H HBO C CConema•l t (WORl NV , NV 11 fWTBSl E IESPNl S IShowt1me> " Spotlte~hl Cl <Cablr New~ Network ) wltfl • --.I-bound .... or. 'PO' t;to. 0 I080M 8UOOID Kip and Atfl'( go to • tattoo parlor In an •ttampl to prove their rHp.otlva IOYM for Sonny and Henry .,. more tl'Mln ttltn ~- ~ ~ COUPU! In 11n attempt to get a- 10 1111 eon, Feb ~ Ille coedl of Ille boy' I football teem. • IHEAK PAEVIEW8 Rooar libert end ~ 81akal 11911 an lnlormetlw look at whal'I ,_ 11 the "'°"'*-!~ ** "Penltentlaty" (1980) Leon IHIC Kennedy, Thommy Polllfd. A young bllldl u-hi• bolfnO ."" to llUfVive In pr'flon. 'A' 9:00 • Cl) 8atON" u.tON A.J . •nd RJcil Innocently become Involved In • count1rfall ticket ICAm Involving • rock mu9'o 11111 (RI ea Dlff'RDfT 8T1'0KE8 An alderty ....idant of Ille bulldtng that Mr. Drum- mond' I constnictlon oom- pany p11n1 10 tMI' down garnara the tupport of the Ofummond c:tllldran. (RI g •a 8AAHEY MIUE1' Wojo ... , off a IUIMcMI lnvHtlgatlon when he ~•robber, end a couple .,, 11m1ated for aaaaulllng a private adlool olflclal who rejected tllaU eon.(RIO • MSW OAIFf'IH au..11: Phytli• Diiier. Lacy J. Dalton, Doug Barr, ~ w.,ren Thoma, Cher. • IAELANO:A TtLEWMOH HISTORY "Flln'llnac 11145-11149" TM -of the eo-cellad pot•to lamina II tr~ llQng with the_.. IMd· Ing to the decimation of Cllhollo Ireland. -~ nEATM "Pride And Prejudice" EllDbetll ....... p~ end _., Mr. Oerc:y agein; Ille begllll IO regret !oat opportunltJaa end .. dlltraaaed by the ,_ or Lydl•'• elopement with CZ>lck~(Pert 5) (A) Q • * "Frldey The 13th" (1N0) 8etay Palmer, Adri- anna KfnO. The reoc>enfng of • aummar came>. cloMd 20 )'9W'I --lll\ar tNea mufdera, •ttractl • vindic- tive klllar who knll" untuae>ecilnQ I~. 'A' 9:308 8~A BREAK Chief Kanlaky kMll • man for the flnt time In Na ~· on the force. (RI 8 9 POUCEIQUAD Dal. o..ebln _.. off the we1amon1 when lie i-a • log horn In the badt- ground nolaa Of • tape Mnl by kldnappen. (Al 10:00 8 Cl) KNOTS LAHOIHO Karen'• former college roommate offera lier a job In New y orlt. and Laura. about to INY9 Rktlard, lalm• tllal.,,. .. ~ (A) 8 8 HIU. STREET llWE8 Waahlngton _. evl- danoe to CIMr a bigoted cop of Wflat lj)pMl'l 10 be • redalfy motivated tllOOt• Ing, !Ind prot>larnl .,... ~ partnera LUG)' endJcM..A) 11.,,":'8 TO THE MANOR 9C>Nt Alcherd'• t>uw-crlall lore•• lllm to ••II UP~'·,~ v ......... ,.. ....... ...... -...._ .. """" ........ "' .. ... ,........ ...,.,,. .. ... .. _ .. ......., ... . ~..., ...... . ~ ..... ... i>MCMI • • • "lk#flf' l1t10) ...... Ion .,.,..., IVlttato ... ..,_, A emel ,.,,.._ lllMd'• ........ -...: .............. by. Ottltyl~lfWI r.:w. .,,. "Under The~· (1tlt)()t-rot..e, o.rn. FlllW. TN 1IO lllldflilll wtlO -Ill ·-for the ~ of .. ,..,. Mlltd Of Oa.'' tum • Calllofnle llOtel ;;::.-·'PO' *** "OUttew ll!UM" (1977) P..., Fonda, luMn 8111nt Jll'fttl, Wiien I country-... ••n llf\Ott ....,. 1111 .ono. an •~ trlH dHperllllY to retrieve hi• r9Cordlng rtgllta while baMlng lhe polloe. 'PG' euow ***~ "Tall Me A Rid-dle" ( 1180) ~ Doug. tu. U1e Kedrova. A wltl\to dr•wn, elderly woman. --thllt Ille .. dylnO, embatlt• on • tong joUmey to raecquelnt barMll wltll haf geographlcelly end emottonelly HP.,•t•d femlly, 'PO' ~1a-- ··~ "It'• My Turn" ( 1980) Jiii Cl•yburgll, MlchMI Dougtae. A btl- lant Cllk;eoo mattl prot.-'°' rNllua the problame In her llve-ln ratatlonllllp When Ille ftndl a ,_ tow wlllla In New York for her f1tnar'1 r-rlage. 'R' 10-..36 (J) MOVIE * * "Friday The 13111, Pwt H" (1981) Atfly Stael, John F._.,. The grtely kmtnoe con11nue at • llUl'fV'MI' cemp that Nld bMrl CIOMd clown altaf a Mrlaa of bizarre murdeB occurred there. 'A' 11:00ea•woa NEW8 • SATUAOAY MOtfT Hoet: Relph ..... au.I: George ean.on. G YOU ASKED FOR IT FMlured: "Rel C.lc:har Of Tokyo" end "Dering Tot FMll." • y •4•1•H Tiie doctora oonapl,. IO ratwa a gung-ho ootof'8I whoea mllltwy ~ .,. making the hoePlal bualar thM '**-• llENNY HtU. Benny ... henpeeked ""'" band with Ill\ eye f« • pretty girt. • BU84HE88 AEPORT G OOCTO.. IN THE HOU8E Mlchael end Didi ate oho- _, to ~ In a docu- mentary ebo\lt St. Swlth- ln'1. 11:30. OUM:Y A &..tin Amarlc:en dlcUltor It thrMtenad b)' In - llln wtllte racalvlng medlcal treatment In the United ....... 88TONOHT Hoel: Jollnny C•r1on. Gu.1s: ltihM PerlmM, Mar11ne NewatloYe. .._.. Hard men. •@ MCNlWS NIGH1'UNE 8 MOVIE * • "PraHntlng Liiy M.,, .. (1t<f3) Judy Ollt- land. Van Hellln. A~ girl with lllltS In '* ayw llilnl for blg-t""9 - on BfoedwrJ. • THEJUffMONS TM rnambar1NP commit· tM of en exd\lllw tenrlll club lnvlt• Oeotga to jo6n. eBAHFON>AMOION A t>ut'glllt ,.._ Ille gun In the Stlnford llOUea attar LMnonl end Rollo -· him oll. • UNDBWTAHDNI HtMAN 91HAWlft ••p--.....on· .. • CA"'10HB> MC NEW8 Cl) NCH MAH.~ MAN:900KI Alter an un1ucce11lul -ell lor hie wife end eon, Tom (Nick Notte) raturne to the ring ~ ~ a aparrtng Pllt- ner lor Joa~ Ou11 .. (OeofQe Maharll). .MO'M * * * "Get Out Your H•ndkarchlaf1" ( 1971) Oerwd Daplltdlau, P•lrlck o.w...... A young end optlmlltlc huabend 0-to almoet unballev••bfa langthl to anaure Illa...,.., ~'A' 11l46 CB> M<Ml ** "Atteck Force Z:' ( 1980) Jolln Pllllllp Lew. Mal Glbaon. A t~ Au•tr•ll•n •tt•ck unit KNXT (2) 8:00 -"Mqftum. P J." Mqnum Marchel for a man who dJMppeared while u.Wnc Ulrouch a 1'Cuiwc:l11 channel. See photo1 left. • KCET (28) 9:00 °1reland: A Televtaion Hlltory." ''The COW'M ot the IO<&l18d potato famine 11 treced. KNXT (2) 10:00 -'1Know Landina." Karen'a former colle&e roommate often her a job ln New York. KNBC (4) 10:00 -11Hlll Street Blues." Wa1hlngton uncover• evidence to clear a bigoted cop of what appean to be a radally motivated shooting. penetr•t• -v ....,._ ~ ~ to perform • dlllflO ,_ mlMlon. (J)MC>Vte ***'A ''WOiien" (1981) Albar1 F'fnMY, ~Veno­ ra. Pollce ere~ with en ""'*'91 Pf°'*"' .. .... Yottl City II lnYllded by I peck of dlapleced woiv.. 12:00~~ ~--An Interview wltll Bruoe Dam. eowcw A~ n-eddlct ,_ Den'I food wltll PCP. (A) • MOVte ** "Only TM Vllienl" (IHI) Gragcwy P9ck. Ber- bera Payton. A ceVlldry unit ragalna raapect for their IMdar Wfl8n he --them from en lndllln atteck. • LOW. AME.NCAH 8TYLa "Low And TM Big G-•· ~ .. ~ting •• bridge. "Love And TM Second Time" If I the chl- dren w11o -00110• nad wnen the pereM1 -out letaon•d•te. · (C)MOVIE • • • "Mallogany" ( 1975) Diana Roa. Anthony Par· kine. A young IMlldl gin ralted In the lk#M of Clll- cego~ a -tut IMhlon daalgnar. (D)MOWE * * "Flgutaa In A l..anG-ec1pa" ( 1970) Robert Sllaw, Mllleolm McDowell. In en unn9l'nad country, two men flee their mlllt..-y ~ In Iha !Iopa Ille! • !My «*I rMdl the border before c:ej)tl.ff. ·PO' 12:tl(J)MCME * • . 'The 8lllJtnorw 8uf· lat" (IMO) J-Coburn. Omar Sherif. A ~time pool hultlet muat ..... $20,000 end win • big tournemant bef«e lie can haYe • remetdl wtttl 11n old opponent -who hM ,_ 1oet •l ltl'ff 0-· 'PG' 12:30 8 8 LATE NIQHf wrTH DAVID l.ETTEN&AN Guell: director Frank Cepra. ·~AMENCAH sm.e "Low Md The Gurv" .... end Dorie 111• h8PC1)' untl they mMI a guni. "Low And The ~.. Boni 8"111\gae • plly9lc.i '°' '* ~without '*" knowtno n. tl:40. TitE WOAD TM m-1pt la euttlen- tlcated by • wottd-r'ak· nowned 8lbllcal edloW 1M Randell tr1ea to de1ey pUbilcatlon .,.., '*"1o the ltory of • former Dev- 11'• ll&arld lrvnet• (Ron Mood)'). (Pert 3)(R) 1:00• MCME *••IA "Oodawortll" (11341) Welter Huston, Rutll Chalt811on. A ~ men find• hla buCOllc fife dfaruiSted wllen ha and hie wife retire to Eur099 wller9 theo)' -confronted by • -lltaetyle and .,..__ • MOVIE ••'i'"Arat~On V8f!U8" (19112) YOko Tllnl, Oldrlc* LVk-. In IMO, algllt llClentltta dlecover a Pl'oO,....Ye cMllDtlon on the Dlenel v-. ,I •• UCMI ••It "Dlvoroe Hera" (1972) Elll:mbetll Teytor, Alcll•rd lllrton. Tiie eflecta of. merltal "*' -...,_ IYom the wlte'e IU!nd- polnl. , .. 1= **'A "Hmnlly Wotklng" (1N1) .Jeny Lewie. a.-i OIMr. A,_ the oltcul a-down,.~ ~.,...'*!lend .. --loul Jobe, ,..,,,. lll1larMlly atdlem ... 'PO' 1:acl •• Hee NIW8 ova••rr .MCMR •• "SIUOlnt Bodlaa" An IOllPlant. Piii* «*P and bltlckboerd .,,_ 111e -ofthe "lllttllil~ Of1911 '-' by • kflllr on • ~ ICllool c:emp\16. 'A' 1:40 Cl) THm MAKJNG a# AaOeOM ...,_.., ooeturne fltt. Inge, mall.up ....,,., and tlla pl•nnlng of c:lnamet~ end light- ing -dw~ In. belllnd·tM-eoal-etudy of the unique ~ flt----. 1:M~MOYIR *'A "Ollaac>ar To K.ap Har" (IMO) Mee De*, Tovatl ~.In «dar to meet Ille ~ pey- mentl, • r~ dl¥oroed private dateethie .,.... down dellnQuent llulbendl tor • dlvorc:e tawyar. 'A' ._.MOVIR *** "Yallowneck" (1955) Un Mc:Carllly, St• pllan ~-A ll'O\IC> of CMI Wer 6ae8l1ars llelld for IY99dom tfWO\IQll the F'londa Ewrgladae. (J)MOVIE • * • • "The Sorrow And TM Pity" ( 1972) Ooc:um9n- tary. Directed by Mu Ophull. An eumlnatlon of public ecqu'-to Nazi b8'b9rlty during the German occup•tlon of France In Wortct Wer ti; lndocited -lntaMews wflll AJbar1 Spaar and Plart9 Mwldae Fr-. a:ao• MOVIE •• .''HoQtor Ai... From The Tomb" (1970) PllUI Naachy, Emme Cohan. A young Frantll couple lnfwlt • cur. from their anCHIOrl Wiien tlley return to tM CMtla wtWN • Frwndl knlgllt end 1119 mlatr-. died. tM·= Cl) LADID NICIHf our ITAMINCI PUOGYI Comedienne Pudgy llOate an lllMMM *ti> lftow In • -•lone! -ino of entattalnmant from CNc>- pendala '• nlglltdub In Loe ,,.,..... 2:41. NlWI 2:IO (][) MCME *** "SST: DlaMwr In The Sky" (1977) Lome Or-. Burgeaa Merectfth. The meldan lllght of • aupanon1e tr"lfllPO'l tume Into • 1 lighlrMre Mien " ~,...... •dalldly Wua. 1:00. MT f"Amol. Tiie Rat P•trol mu1t dwtroy.,, air-drop Of Ger· men lll'nm4.Wlloh bafof'9 • convoy .,.,._ to pick II uo JOHN DARLING NBC touts top TV on Thur'sdays • BY FRED ROTBENBEl\G A#T~Wlttef NEW YORK -"Same time, bett.er station." That'• the on-air promotional pitch for "1'axi," which begins ita reprieve leUOO Sept. 30 on NBC after four award-wlnnln& years at ABC. NBC announced laat week that the new "Taxi" would be driving the same route. That meant ThW'lday. at 9:30 p.m., giving NBC the be.t single nlaht oo televiaton. It starts with "F-." at 8, then a highly touted new comedy called "Cheen," followed by "Taxi'' and TV'• finest hour, "Hill Street muea." NBC did ...-all a favor by movinl 'llfaxl" into the 1pot held down by '!Qlmme A are.k." Now we don't have to .-itch the dial to watch "Hill Street." ''I'm really exdted about belna • part of that Tbunday Nght ICbedule," uy. J.,net L. Brooka, executive producer of .. Taxi." "It'• kind of ambttlom f« NBC to pr'Ofp'am a quality nl&ht like that." . In fact, NBC plana to exploit that tchedule'a ~tty owr other m,h11 at all three networks; Ttie necwortt pl.ulS to IMmch a cwopalan that Will ... 1Dril th'-: .. ,.. thc9I who think-then~ nOl inUth .r..n.it on ta~ watch NBC on~ ~ .... ~ ABC:~ off the mew on ''Taxi;'' which won be.t-comedy F.nunya in each of lta fl.m three eeuons, becaUle of erodinJt audiencee. One of tl)e only ABC comedlea to play up to the public's inteWpnce, ''Taxi" ranked 10th and 13th in the ratlnp nee in lta first two 1ea1ona. Lut year, lt wu 53rd. "Barney MWer," the ~ ~\eel ABC comedy, Unlahed Mth. That lhow WM al8o dropped from the ac:hedule, but that wu becauu the producers were ru11ntn1 out of ideu and they pulled the rua out themeelvea. Brook.t reacted angrily to cancellatlon of ''Tut" wt 1prin,a, ca1Una tt "an incompetent dedlion." After 'NBC came to the rm:ue, ABC axed the eerie9' rerww. ABC la allowed t~ pla~ on MCh eplmde, but the network atopped ~•'Taxi" June 10. ln contraat, "Barney Miller'' ii 1ett1n& a full tummer lbow'tnC· '11 f.Ueta it '°"" a buaineu declalon," MY• Sroqka. 'ABC didn'warlt to do_~ .clwrtla1nc for NBC. They didn't take a . fJnuidal batb1 but they aoet eome money.•• .ooa la lmittm With tblril-nt.d NBC end hi c:btllnnan Grant T&nar. Brollai workied • lft'M Pradud6am whlft Tlnli9I' .. the~· illJ1IMr ttyle _. ta.n aput."..,. &ftiob.71W w • till!' 'l'hlllre'1 no difta_. a.tt~ Iii ll'Dt hi "Taxi" for ABC or NBC. Brooks aay. ABC never nixed story icte. or ateered \he pn>ll'alll away trom the producers. But ABC had developed an lndifferent attitude. "We were a bclrderlme attuatkln ln their mbld8. They weren't exdted about our abow ln meetlnp, and W9 &O' little IUpport" Not~. 8roob ._ "an infuaon cit~ and IU~ fw \II at NBC. It' a IOI'\. ot like a ntW job!' In a bum-wn inolt1y by ratlno. not quality, ''Ta)d" wee•an Iffy ahow at ABC. But all tbla attention mlfht attract more vl•wera, partjcularly u '"Taxi' winl lw fourth t:rmn;y In four yean next IDOMh. . "I care more abOut lbe numben than ever befon," •ya Brooa. "All of ta are more nll'YO'l8 than other I !IW,11 That cmDa from the add9i •"'Ill lllltlllltyof ~well for.~ ... ebOftd ,.. ... - .... • * M ""'' My T11m" HllOI .HM O~tfl, ................ ,. .... --a-..-~ . ....... ........... .,. ................. . .................... .... Ill .._ YOftl W her .......,..,......,.. 1:t1• MCMI ***"TN..,.,,..,._. ..... Of .... ~· ( 1tH) IC•t•n 111011, Qaore• H1mlllon . A llOYHlt l .. 'a pet1IOMll\y or.-..Y .._ un111 • ...._. --wtlO -----~--· ... ""'_.'°,... 90JTOM "'.,.. llA ''TUfll ... The Cloe*" CC>~ * * *"' "Women In Love'' ~1910) Giel* Jecbon, Aletl ...... IMecl on IN no¥t1 by D.H. ~ -~~ * * "TM LM VaQM 81~ t'(' (1tll2) Vlot« Mature, Jene RulMll. A women'• old ,._ attenlPt• to olNt llW llulbMd of murder ~0-- 4:00 (J) MOYIE •• * "LI Ctige Ault. Folae II" (1NO) I.Joo ToOMZJI, MlcMI Serr""-A mlddl9- eged gay CO&IPla -.. quwry of. _.. ~ utton trying to get tlle mlcrolllm 11111 one of them '-llllowed. 'A' 4:21 CB> MOVIE * * "Cout To Coaet" (1NO) ~ c.,,non, ~ 8'1 81eka. A run•w•)' llouNwlta end • ecfllPP)' trucker haullng cattle c;out to OOMI bacOrne the tatget of a wtkl or~ oountry chaM. 'PO' 4:acl. Vat~ TO THE llOTTOM Of' ntE IEA "The Shape Of Doom" .MOYIE * * "Frld9y TM 13111" (IMO) 8«ey Pelmer, ~ aone KfnO. The •<iOPal•IO Of • --cemp, c'°8ed 20 yean Mrllar attar tiw.e rnurden, •ttracta • 111ndic- tlve klller wllo knll•• unauapectlng teerHllgar'I. Frida11'• Da111 I~ =/ffe"I~• 1:00 Cll) * * * "CIMh Of TM Th-" (1N1) Herry Ham- lin, 1...-enc:e OIMar. Myttlo- IO llWo P.,..... la llelpad by Ille fettlal z-'" • _... of clengarOUI taekl .. he trlaa to wtn Iha hand of • Pnoenlden prtnoaM egelf'9lttle.W..of• vengeful -goddeaa. 'PO' 8:IO (J) • *. ''The Kiiiing" (ltae) 8t8'11ng Heyden. Vince Edwlllda. An ax· convlat'• lllltartng ,,,.,. Noe IMdl to Illa downfall when lie plota • rK91rl!Ctc """'· t0:00 ~ • * ... "PliC)llon" (1913) 81-~. Owalln Hoflmen.. A pelt of Oellll'• llland con~• epend their """ planning tllalr aecepe. Cl> * •• "ISNdow On Tiie Wiii" (1950) Ann 9olllem, 2ect\afy &Cori. A P')'Cl*lllll ftr1Cll INI • women'• lluebend II noc r9lllkt • ll'IUfderw .,.... -""' with their ..... ter end curing her __... 10:11(J) •• "IMclma" (1971) Jolln ..... <:arol WMa. A y0&#'8 llouMkaepar covetl IN 9IMlled fott\lne of lier mlMli)' afllf)lcJyW •• -fnOIY JmpowriaMd old twmar. 'PO' 10:IO. * * .... '"T .. Me A Riddle" ( 19110) Mal'i)'n Ooug1M. Ula Kedrcwa. A wltlldr~ ekler1y Mlman, llNIWW8 tNlt Ille .. dylflCJ. ambllltl on • tone Joum9Y 10 rMOqUalnt ,...,..., wltll '* geograohlcally !Ind emollonally HPU•led larnly. 'PO' 1 t:IO (J) * * ... ''Sterd\191 Memo ortea" ( 1MO) Woody Alar\, ~ Remplng.. A.- ~ director ,.,.. • par90nlll crtell .. "' trtaa to mlk• aome m9'or ded- 1Non9 In hie llte. 'PO' 12:00 • *. ''White Cetvc>" , .. ...,...., .... ......... A ...... ................. ... .......... ... __ ......... .. ............. ....... ~ . ..., ~ ...... ..... ,,...,.,. ......... ... ......,.,....,..~ MN .. AllM ,.....,. ............ ••••"We'~ Mt*"C .... l~l'f ...... Nl/IO ~. '""-~ ......... e _e,,.,.. .. ®••~·.,,....., ...,_,.,ttn) ..... h ....... Ctw1Ma1,_ ..._.,,.~ ..... ...,.. .. ..,,.,... by. ~ --""° lurtlll "' ............ ll#'l'OUflOo ~.,. ..... INMloft. •••14"ledlfiloedl" \1111)1..-y,_,T~ lM '*--A hodl.-9'd • downooofW'Je .. bo•• ,,...Md,.. .. 111 .-di of. ,... ..... ,_. (J) ..... ''VloeCllY' (1911) ~ lteloM. lMal*' Caine. OUt1no WOftd W11 II, AIMld "'1N1 -!Nit lie*• to h9dom In • matcll between tbelr IOCCW tew'll and IN Oar· llW'I Nellonll TMm In Pit· 11.'PO' 1:00 ~ * * ~ ''TM OllW In The Ofb'' (1979)..., &.Int ,,_, BMllM• Edan. All llmbllloul -.. ope .. n6Wno to CClfllWe lier w.y• Into • poaltlCMI of pow. In • flltlloneble department '*°''· ...... "8lecllbo«d Jungle'' (19551 Glenn F«d, A.-Fr#ICll. A ~ldld y0&#'8 Medler '"'"'Pl9 '° ,..._ Older In • b6o-dty tr•lnlng eclloof'" wller• t..,.. ....... _end vlolellCe tiew taken rooc. 2:aO (JI) •• "The Ntgtlt Tiie Ughta Went 0vt In Georg. .... ( ltl 1) Kttlty McHlotlol, M"1I ...,.,._ A btoltltr- ~ ~ duO haw many ectvenwre• wtlle~lo .. out• ll¥lng on ttw ~­ em drcull. 'PO' l;IO CZ) * * * '"The Klllng'' (19M) St.nlng H•)'dlln. Vlnoe Edwlrdl. An ex· c:onvlc1'• feltertng ,,,., • ,.. .... ,c, hie downfell wllen he plota • ,..., .. ........ 4:00. * *. "Joflnny Eager" (tt<f21 Robert Teytor. LMa Turnw. A y0&#'8 eocloloOY INl)ot f ... In loW wltll Ill\ lmportenl 09"9 laeder. ~ *•'A "Totty And TM KOIN Beer'' (1981) Rolf Harrla. uw eel.Ion end .,,.. m1111on oomt11ne to t .. ttw .... of • young boy end hie .,.. kOllle In ,.._, .... , '"""* IMy9. .. Cl)** ''T-leland'' (1972) Onon w ..... Kim Buttllld. A oourev--boy joint the "''-.,., ... Long John 811Yer In ecoul· fnO IM ... lor lf"Pa cer- rylng bounty WOf1h ....... ~·G' ..... ~"(1978) --Hampton. Qvteto. plW ~-Mamber9 of Ille United Stet• c.nMy try to edJuet to rldfn9 cam- • '"9teed or llor9M 1n o. untamed, ....... TeicM of the 1eoo.. 'G' 1:00. ** * "au.v.'1 T,._ 1191s" ( 1939) Animated. a....s on Iha etory by JonetNn Swift. A men II ltllpwree:ked '" the land o1 Iha~ LJmputlena. (JI) ••• ''The Hldae- .... (1973) Ingrid eerv- man. .Jdtnnt Doren. Two cNldren ""' _ _, from home end lllde '" .... Yottl Cley'e Metropoltln ~ofAtt,wMrwtMy -1*!1911ded by • tplrtt. edr---.'G' (D) Three young L.A. bach- ~ de¥ot• their~ IO the 8'>0f1 of dreg rw:6fl0. 'PO' • 1:11(%)•• "Ouk:lma"(1971) JoM Milla. Cerol White. A young lloueakaapar coveta Ille "8l1led tor1une of ll9r ml9arty ..,..,,.,, • -fnOIY lmpowrialled old 18"n8r. 'PO' .-CC)**** "M"(tt30) ....., Lone. Ellln Wld· rnenn. Polee perafya9 the undelWOl1d .. ll'9Y ~ Oueaeldoff for • Pl)'Cllotle c:lllld murderer. by Armst~ng & Batluk CLASSIFIED INDEX ,, .... ,.. ... Cell &42·5171 IMISftlSAU ~~: .... :·:: aF:· .. ::... a ft_... -,...v..,. :: ,.,......~ , .. ~.... , ... iS=' .:: '"-4 -..... vi.i--::. S:!..'::" = _,,_~--..... _ ,. -·.... , .. ............ ,. ,........, . ·-_.._._. . .. Dlllll Adverti- sers should check their ads dally and UEST&Tt ~--~$:­~rdal~ c.i-1111...;;s:r;· . ~Uoitllalo .' .......... -..... -,_,,_,, =--..._,, -lo K• Trlt Ma •• report errors Im- :: mediately. The :: DAILY PILOT u-1: sumea •llablllty for :: the first lncorrec1 : Insertion only. ---OeMrt.•--8:.7~~ .. o..a.r-.rr.. . ~T.~ ... 11441-•- ----IM --IOOAl.S ........ ,.,.._ J .. =~~ ·= ~-''"" -=.i=-,.,!!.•' = .,_u.1 -o..ln• ..... -~Uol = """u"""" --""" ...... Uol --··· -............ --..... . .. ~._, aUI _______ , ...... "',.,. ...................... ... .i 1•1 ...................... TEIUOE VIEW Betit model, Npt Terr.ce . Lrg 3 Bdr 2'h Ba town- home wllront loutlOn & etrlklng view. Lowly Bdrm IUlt• l lolt. Call for llnandng detella. Full prloe 1131,000. '151-31111 c:::. '>I I I ....,...,. \'Iii I 1t .J • f l ~\::::, :: ~...;..;.;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;::;;:;:=:;:=~1 ~:::-:; :: mmuu YI LL ~·..... -•I 8'n% Ot1 this 4 Wrm =".!=~ ... home on E'llde of Co.ta lllw= !: M ... with pool, ap•. and ::.: .:.::.-= many other amenlttea. llMtlllftf t.-ttT S110,000. In UMJmab1e __ ,,,,, mtu,. loan•. owe. On • cut- MOfT, fll&ltC( de-UC toot Reduced to ==-= 1159.900 Call 1179-6370 :===· = \ f >11 / tl F H _,...... -_,, .. _ --..-.m·a -. . . . .. '• ' ....CCMDm, ms.Ats& LOST & f otllfl llSlllllU Y.A LL •I SIMI. on • 3 Bdrm, 2 b• home with large lot, saw wet ti.I, ftreplo end = ~inunlty, ~· ~· la. "-· -·-.... -. ~ Only 1120.000. call = 11711-$370. \ f >I I I d /'It -DRAMATIC ""' n• -COUNTRY ... IN -ESTATE --.... -8000 911 on 1 ecre. --mllMIYe etec1r1c: g•t•. -cobbleaton. motor cour· --tyard, ll)eCtllCUW entry. -a bdrm. a b11t1s. 5 trp1 "" -huge frplcl. Room for -t No. Tustin ' • -· 0rllllgl • with view, --12·15 min. ... lrwya, -airport, So Plaza. --$1.400.000. -RICK All>ERETTE ---........ 11 ..... ,., 111 ..... /111·1111 :: ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii::il = •••1Wl• = ., ... = PRIVATE COMMUNITY, -3&-4 bdrm ~ OUf SELLERS wlll ANANCE • tt1t or · DISCOUNT for cutil •ta e.tt• hu~ on thelel t\Jt s ::I tllrtlng at 1111,0001 ..... ..,,,.,. .. ....,. ••n-1•• :: 1111.1111 IPL. = ... Just etep out the Matt : Br door. Charming 3 Bdr •N home f91t-remodel -kltchtn wltruh compao- -tor. ()all ... ttoortng end new ~1ea1. Many U1rMI Full prtce 11211,000. 751-31111 c::. . ' ~ '' l .\ l , (I!' I (I nen.•1,.tuff.-t BOAT ON THE BAY. PLAY ON THE OCEAN Spacloua, open & .unny all view home .,,, . penofamlc decka, on tlUge prime laland Point + docking & prkg galore, + you own the land: + owner financing, all for $965,000. OSMJn Set. 11·5. 4028 Channal Place, Newport · lalend, Newport Beedl. 87U202 . PllllllU 11111 Prize Welt S.y bayfront. Slips fOf' 2 boats, remodeled 3 bdrm, 3 bath $1,200,000. Ocean & jetty vieW11. Marine room, 4 bdnn, 3 bath, 3700 aq. ft. $1,385.000. Oceanfront. UM llLI •El Prime Lido Nord bayfront. :> bdrm. :>!ti bath. Lee L.R .. 2 00..t allpe $1,!i00,000. Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. nn. beam celllnp, fum1.shed, patioa. $420,000. Lllll llU IAYFIHT La&oon view from 8 bdrm, :> bath, playroom. dark nn, den. Boat allp. Now $1,800,000. IAYllH MYI Spec:ulC'Ular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br, 2 ba dn. 2 boat allpe $1,000,000. OllllUll OAYI Coronado la1and cust. bayfront Jot. 8!>' boat dock. Plana avail. Red. $370,000 w/t.enna. 1L1n1a.• Sm,Je story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba on Wpst greenbelt. $250,000. • BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR ~ .. t . ,, ~) • . ~' ... f) 19 ) f-, f) FORECLOSlltE 11111.m 111& Plckup over 1£00~f.1UeQFIJ.X ovemtabt. Once a e . ve never teen a better buy. Won't lut. Prime Oranae Cty 2 ~ IKft hill tor. OCEAN VU:W NEW ESTATE. Poo, 1pa, waterfalla, electr. ptea, ~ eq ft w/360 degree view of all O.C. Tennil court + HELICOPTER pad area. ASSUME LOANS & TERMS. Orlglnally Hated for $2,200,000. Sacrifice at $1,128,382.63 approx. with 1380,000 approximate cuh down. Only the eerioua need call directly to PATRIC=ENORE 760-8702 or 631-1266 /MAX Realtors,• agt. 8loken we . R&IM~ of Costa Mesa ITUTll.U 1 Br·S70,000 Irv 3 Br-1103,000 FVISA 2Br2Ba1108,500 Irv 3 Br 2 Ba $108,500 lfv 4 Br-111-4,llOO C.M. 3 Br-$129,llOO H.B. -4 Br-$128,llOO O.M. Cell ua for ftnanc:lng ~ tllla. 831-7370 TR\DI 1 1< }\ \I ~I \I I) c,, .. , ,,, .,, 1111 ...•...•.••••......•.. OllEllBIEI Sll27,500 with lend. Of• matlc COUftyd with pool. Ocean and Hwbor ottew. Privet• beachee. 3 Br 4"' be. call for appt. IPYIUSI 5 Bdrm, femlty rm, lge bonus rm. 4'.11 bl. Southport mdl on OUI· de-lllC. llt·1• 144-1111 ~<r---~ •UL ESTATE H4·1lt7 C..I• ,,,., 1114 .•.••••.•...•.••.•.... ~/or a career #I aalea? See~· Help Wonted ads, claili~tion 1100. PAYlll 11111'1 HAVE GOOD INCOME??? SHORT ON OOWN PAYMENT??? PAYING TAXES??? W1th our ln\lfftOt, 11111 & LIQUIDATION 1412 Santiago-Dover Shores. Lrg Spmilah pool home. FEE. 1*tuced from $425,000 to $318,000. ALM 1918 Seadrift-Irvine Terrace. Remodeled pool home, FEE. Now only $325,000. ~ Q!USt & will be 12lij. Call now! atel or Fred Tenore, 631 -1266 or 760-8702. Agent.a, R&I M f\X of Costa Mesa 111tama 29.000 eq, tt. lnduttrlal bldg dMc*S ~to 5.000 eq. tt. units. exc.llent rental hlltory. loclated on 1.4 ec:r... Tift up conttructlon. 1950,000 terms •velleble. 17141 67).4400 IJIJ'62'·1111 HARBOR ~ DI v1s1on of llarbor Investment Co glln •PPfecl•tlon In -----~~,;;_;_---=======- fent•tlo 3 Br. 3 a.. new ·-------·-------Utl t.1 l1l1 UH condo, next to aH ehop-• •• • •••• • • • • ••• • • •• ••• p1ng. No down payment. ILlffl UIUll 111 OAIYH UllH 11111 minimum c:uh needed Y11U own the lend. 2,000 "Wide Open Spacea" 11 Approx ~ acre. Wiii NII for ctotlng oo.i. Phone Ml It, 3Br, lam rm. 2'.11 1he fHllng when welklog or joint venture. Value 831·5055. 642·2000. . Ba. wide Greenbelt, nHI' Into thl1 4 Bdrrn, dining $500,000. Cell 8-40·7865 pool. F11 below m11k1t room condo 111 g•ted I I .._ 1 Plrlect lloorplan, (2 or 3 12-45.000. Wiii lffM oo-community. A dream kl! •• -t• I Br. 3 8• ,_condo). For tlOn. Bier. 64~13-4 chin oe>en• 10 • large h1A1••I ZIOO CC>-9Ufch... with friend aide ylfd •nd trelll1 • • • •• • • • • '• • • •• • • •• • • • or ref•tlve. En..... ~ ... ~ 8 ..... 11 Let's .... A hall Itta (tu & ~•tlon) ~ -4 BR. eeltb•y arM. v«-.. pa o, • View, •nd of owneral'llp Su,,_ 3,200 aq. ft, j)fVI. comm.. Iott Of privacy. Thia Corpor•llon desires to location wfth ai1 1,Mni~ '3e7,500. Wiii ,tr•dl for hOme haa much to offer trade 135,000 eQulty In tlM No down minimum property. TO a. Wiii the laatldlous buyera. ••eepllonal 3 Br. New· · • ieu.optlon or low 1725,000. port a..eh Condo. All oloelnQ cost. c.11 831·51 down. RMdy to dHlf 1 .. 2 "IZOO auumeble tlnanctng. $10,000 ul'lder mat11et. 5 Owner/Broker • • Went Income prc>perty. Br. 3 Ba. 12% lrltereet. 71...,544-oe14 · '"taur•nt. or wh•t have Only I t85.000. Prlncl· · you? Asking $229,500. P•I• only. Tony, Agent, Beyfront view condo, 2 BR Agent 8-48-1044 offloe 130-1222, home 2 B•, HO. bldg. Boat lilp S48·ae33. IYall. 1500.000. By Bt•lll f•,.ilffl .... 11u.-ownrl bllr. 875-8637 9j;j;;,;··············· 112.000 down, no quail· ll1ffs/ll1tr1ss l••la••I• 1111 fylng, 30 yr loan, 3 BR 2 Bonlt• plan, 3 Br 2 81, BIG CANYON ••••••••••• •••••• ••••• Ba, 15•20 edd on, lplc, end unit. Pvt p•llo, Winter Rental RV ecoeu, w/oonlider greenbelt. Owl'llf Very nice 2 bdrm. patio, TO'a, motor hme, etc., u 78G-10ll7 or 752-8871. OPEi HOUSE garege. laundly. down. 1128,500 owe It $550/mo + deCIOllt t 1%, egta. •tt.. S4s-1oet SELL 01 TllllE 11 Rut Ytrtt 873-5615 ., OWIEI llUMI 11111 .,.. lally 10 .. It -c.-,,-.-.-,,-,-.-.,-,-,n- Prlme residential lot. A•· I•• • •• ••••••••••••••••••• 3bl'l2b• nr SC Ptua. Sell klnn l500,000. ,,.." 7.,,,,,, 3 BDR'• • 2,• ... BAT., 3 BR 2 Ba, huge garage, 1-491<: rent 146()/mo. ... .....,... ....., ... ,. n ti ah k oof Brine '"•1-8077/"•1.•7•• $4911 000 Owner/Bier pa 0• • • r · ng .-,... • •• · your penon•I llema. The 12.11-. UllUIU ... t1.,,.,, WU... flURl•I ••t IH 211-410-HIO 1 rest Is llefel Avall Aug. 15 $1100 mo. <ftown.a de/ .Alai , ... ...., 10-.11YDm Superb etattemanllhlp. Juel In time for 1Umm« ••• • • • • • •• • ••• ••• • • • • • Prominent builder'• own thl• lovely PoOI ~ S6500 down, 2 BR, loll, 1 home. Four bedrooms. INtur" t«rlllc llnan· yeer MW oondo. N_. Huge ~ celling In c:lng. -4 large bdrma, ,_ OQMll, Flexible tarme. = ~:'")..,~~ =:o..~ oe:: -:: -:::--.-98_7 ____ 1_0H_.. brick patio end ~. 11311,llOO. 6-40-1151 •••••••••••••••••••••• $475,000. OPEN F'RIOAY Br•nd N-H°"'" & 1-5. 1118 SOMERSET Condos, no money down LANE. while lhey lut. (714) U1-llM 5-46-9522 Ag1. 91111.MtmLlll --llL llU 3Br. 2B•. dbl car garage, Form« Brlarc:llff mdl i. PllOMetter executive home located In Weslellll Grove priced In the mid "400.000•. Ready for lmmedl•t• oocupancy. Qualifying av•ll•ble through builder. C•ll agt et 5-4$-5092 . L· -. fl.. - ,.. , ... .•• ~'A!~'!!~! ..•• !.~t i600 mo. p•yment for 2Br. 28• condo. 9~% VA loen, aaklrig SlM,500 661-3380 ~l~ • 673-84911 *1 E. Cont""'" C.. .a.D 2 p•tlos, llagetone lrplc, located right on th• !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Recently complltaty C>Wnlf-cuatom bit home. w•ter. Ownet wtlt tlke custom unit w/UMCI bl'tcfl 11211.1150. With 1211.1150 .... than 10'% dwn. ,.... .. ..,.., .. ,.... For alx montha oo brand new townhome In eo.t• M... F .. turtng 2 mMtlr IUlt•. enc:IOMd g1ng11 & privet•~­ fyard. Only I 114,950. 2810 San Miguel Of .. Newport e..ch. 7511-1501 or 752-7373. .......... ··-....... . Cute and dMrl 3 bdrm cottage wlpetlo. Beem• end paneling. You c.n !Ive • la or eYentuall)' bulld .,_, PtaN fOt Cape Cod we l1lcluded w/Nlea prtce of $2115, 000. Drive by 205 Topaz and call. ftrlplece. Mulcan tu.a. down. Ownet wltl catry king onty S259,llOO. • vaulted eel""91. MBR 18t lolln. ~I "'*'brtd IUll• w/c:.thedral ._ llJ .... ~1 IMr, ~ dowa. 2 BR rear unit & 141-'Jln fteilll poee, gueet qtrat or .. t I~~~~~~~~ SS l ·3000 llnenclng. $35&,000. Call ... Sharoo Colllnaor Mllll)'n LI 1W1f WTSml tt21 .. rr .. C"• """""•'"" Hiii. • Cute 2Br nou.. Owner Nr UCl, 1 bl' condo. $111, GEORGE ELKINS CO 79-1100 llaxlble. Siu 536-1-453 900 Aatuma.ble, no ~uel. 553-1352. 5S2·5&83 a.I .. IWLll .... ,.. '"' Uttle okt fUhk>ned hOU-••• •• •••••• • •• •• •••••• ~ ..... a LIM Newer Monaco model with plDD end 120.000 pr1ca reduction. Mexican pawn. mirrored Wllf· drobel, patio C>Yertlangl M on a good lot tnet la zoned for duplex. Both for Juat the lot prtoe. Drive by 204 OJ>al. S2811. 000. 57a..oo. . ...,.,... ..... U1·1• - WATI HI HONT 110MI .. a-. REAL ESTATE 6.ll 1400 Out of 111111 owners w111 ~~~~~~~~ he4p llnanca. $2211,000. A llatlng of Rite Boland You don't need • gun to u.-.1oot 11()~1(1 "drew fut" when you • place .,, ad In the Oelly Raliliors, 875-eOOO PMoc Want Adel Call now -I '42·5178. AESIOENTIAl AEAl ESTATE SERVICES .............. Look no more!! All the amenities of thia lovely 4 BR Por\ofino plan will convince you to purchase!! Fee land, view, jllcuzzi, cul-de-sac & gorgeou. yard -plu1, plus owner 10~ finandng. Ill llEWPORTCEllTER 644..g0.60 P A '-L E I I' I I P £ D l T r I I I llUll OUll Redecorated 38r 2bl on prime locltlon. Olfage, IUnd«:k, plrloa. Hf. No. Bey. Owl'8' wllt oone6der llnan. 875-53111, 873-5291 e..u '"., 1m ...•.....•.....•...... llmlTIMMI 11 ... FIRST TIME OFFEREO: Thi• neel 38R 2bl with OYI' 1800 Ml It with lo- vely petloa Ind gardena. Owner will flnanoe IU~ •tentlll tat TD et 12% Int ~:: .. '~~ lea . '"'nu /.Jn NIG[l GAll..l ~ ~ ASSU[IATE5 • . " . .. • . TJle ...... "' ..,.... •• ... J'R'!'I. -~J"I; ·~~ ..... '"' ~.v.:.a:.:.o:.: :.-.u: -..=: ttllr~ -~TiCA .!0.11 =:..,It . ~ INtiMet ............. .. .........:~ vt1t91 CA ... 1. INC, .._. .._. ..._.. le IAl'llA IHOft. J'l'Ne ----ta cioo•i.-.. ~ .. toto ~ ~Mf, Coe•• wt.. on ~ ao. IHI v .. ..., .-.t•• M•H.' Celltefflle, tM toltnl"I 111• 11r•"'•e•• 11 1'11 Herber ~Cl :r=; ...,...0, oo.t• ...... CilHomll, ~ .... I ... -the t~=r .:::.:~~·&:.: .:::.. Ille tOllOWlllt peftOf\11 •topotty ,MV.jl ~ ot Ot*"'9 °" Col te All IN etoell411-lrede, l'll'NIMd llD.n' ..... .Mt • tMI ,._ ~ ~ CIQil.,_.,c., • llldl _... lfon GNll'I; welfl ,11llllltlod Orona• OOH\ Delly c:= --'re:·m.IMt~ ~ ~ ~ ... "*"· iM1 at, Aue I , 11. 1t, 1NI 9HOP", 011d looelod •• 1020 1 ~'10 , ;-1 1411"'2 N""'1 lou....,_,d, Coetl MeM. !~I • O er 111 I , -...... -.. -_;.;a_IC_Jl)_TIC(_..;;.;.;.;..;.;ic.11101111,. Tll• tra1111or ot tll• Cllf ..,._ ~ l*IClllO llOll• --=~~.....;.;,;;~;.._--~"...!"'= 10 0-clol , loolloaM ... "'41vee) """nou. iUiiiu Code .... _. .. .... ,. NAM1 ITATllmNT Wltllln llne ~11Mt ~t eo tar 1 Aplif11Mf1" •toYG Tiie foHowlflt -raon I• ... 1n11 .. kllOWll 10 Ill• Ulldore01011ed 1 Aoom dM~ atltched bu""-.. : ,,. " · " tran1ferM, THI TUNC·UP SHOP 1 k1* Gti .. r ONI ITOP AU'TO SUPPLY, ll,11 not llUll 1111 lddltlonel I 811olnPoO allolr UOU lrookllur11 ltrHt, buf.:'"' n~ .. tndlddfMMt. ~ ::::' •tlnd• HUl'ltlngton e..an, Calltomle u 148 • lnten .. e.. tr111et•t wlll bo 1 81001 (4 cuter•) P•ter O . t<alb, 204tt 11011 •ummatad Oii or tlt•r tNNl\IQ4'•8' opproxlmataly MoonorHI Olrol•. H11nt1ng1011 8oe>lomb« 16, tH2. al tlle o"'°9 ; OMlt w11or ooo'i.r a.oc11. Callfornla 112848 of, 1nd olalml tor dobte of tll• 1 Sllt4I 1• •I' IPPtOXlmatlly Tiiie ~ 19 oondYcltd by 111 tran1foror may bo llltd wltll, OAL6 4 Ulm"" •M•ed 10 well lndl~ a. KIMSEY. Attorn.y II Lew. 2001 ... -,;..., o. Kalb Eut Four111 Str•t. Sult• 112, Santa 4 Pi.ct tttlld fO( bOll ... T ............ _ Alla, Callfoml• 112705. Tiie ·-· dato 1 Wlll•k bfOOM ·-_ _.._,t wu ftltd with tM tor llllno clalme tor d•bt;";t tho 1 Chait lld~tClf fO< cNl<lren County C1et11 Of Otanga County on trtoat•or le ._1om.._ 10 t"•" t M •ta I • t • n d 7 '-' ft t t , July 12. 1H2. ..._ _. • .-. llC>9foxlm11t1y P111• Deled; 2t July 11182 2 Wooden barber tltl1dl Publlllltd Orange Coel1 Delly STl,..f:N Ot8100U 3 W et Pllot. Jili( 15. 22. "· Aug. 5, 1N2 cM.D.~U AND IC .. MY II Br:-~d• 314 t-82 I001 .._, '°""" llfMt ,. 1 6 Foot 1teci IMldOf ------------..:..:. lwtt. 111 3 Chait• P\B.IC NOTICE =ta ~~ 1 NC1cW1 "°" "Barbor Shop" PICTinOUI .u..... P11~hed Orene-Cout Delly ~ ~~ NAMI: ITATUMNT Piiot, Aug,. a. 11182 1 M; bu~o:::wlng ""on 11 doing ---'":"'.'-------~*,;.;_5-1_2:.1 1 Cup contalMf tor drink• ALLEN & CO HAIRPORT. P\B.IC NOTICE • ~ ~:" 164117 M9gn()lle, Wwtmlnstor, CA '1CTTTIOUI IU..... 1 EnC1mf1 u<lnet 112"3. N",._ • ARLENE GAYLE SIEBER. -ITATaMOn 1 "Foot leddot te515 Walnut St., Foonwn Valley, Tho foltowlftg por'IOf\I aro doing 1 Glarwd recoro playef CA 112708. bu84,_. aa: t Mirror 4' x 11·. approxlmately Thie 00.I I ond t-' b H.L. CROUSE & ASSOC 1 MlrrOf (Ilia unable to ttll) Individual. neu s c uc ""' Y an t0780 Watl!Of A--. Suite 202: t Stetu. 3 n .. approx1m11ory Arlene G. Slebet Fountain VIiie)', CA 112708. 2 Mlrrot1 ln1tallocl Thll atllement wH filed with Ille CHUCK ARNOLD, t6312 Mt. t 0.,k room wtltl lholvee, l4nll1. County Clefk 01 Orange Counly on Ackerman, Fount1ln Valley CA etc. 112708. ' I TOiiet and OM •Ink attlud July 20· 111112 Flt311I ED HAYES, 11542 LOIS Clrcle 2 Sllempoo, bowll llllKed Publlelled Orange coaat Dally Hunllngton S.ach, CA. , • II you own any of 11111 property, Pilot, July 22, 29. Aug. 6. l2, J982 HOWARD CROUSE, t0738 El you may cl1lm II II t914 Herbor 3254•82 Tiburon. Fountain Valley, CA 112708. Boulevard. Coell MMI. Calllornla. P\B.IC NOTICE '1CTmOUI .UIMll ..,._8TATIMllNT The tollowlng perton 11 doing buslnea a: T.E.F. ENTERPRISES, 981 "J" W. 11th Street, Cosll MOM. CA 92e27. THOM.AS EDWARD FAIR, 608 38111 s1r .. 1, Newpor1 BMch, CA 1129&3. This ~ 11 conducted by an lndtvldual Thc>rna E F llr This 1111-1 WU lllocl with Iha County Clerk of Otenge County on July 2t, 11182 '11M081 Publlthed Orange CoHI 01lly PllOI, July 29, Aug 6. 12, tll, 1982. 3332-112 P\8.IC NOTICE Tiii• bull,_ Is conduc:ted by 1 UnlNI you pay Iha rauonable coll o-aJ partnerlhlp. of 11ou1ge 1nd Ilka POIMellon ot Chuclt Arnold tho property lo which you are llllt 1111-t wu llled with the orillllad not titer 11111'1 Auguel tll, County Cl«k of Orange County on 19112 . 1111• property may b• July 14, 1982. dl9PQMd of purauant to Clvtt coes. F1._ Secllon 1988 Publi1hed Orono• coaat Dally II you flil to rectelm tri. ptoperty, Piiot, July 15. 22. 29. Aug. 5, t982 II wm be eold •I I publlo .... aner 3140-82 nolloe of the .. 1e 1111 bMl'I gtv.n by _________ .;..;..;.;;...;;,;;. publlcatton. You 11..,. the rlgl'll to PlBJC NOTICE bid on th• property at tlll• HI• FlCTTTIOUI llU ... H N.,_ ITATIMENT Tl'•• followlng pw1on1 are doing bull-• MEDIA ELe.4ENTS. 16234 Sen G1brl•I St., Founloln Valley, Ce 92708 Howard JetnM Reekie. Hl23A Sin Gabrlel SI., Fountain Valley. Ca. 92708 Oebrlele Kebal, 18234 Sen Gabriel St., Fountain Velley, Ca 112708 Alter Iha ptC)perty le eold and the co11 of 11orage. advertlllng. and 11le la deduc;ted. tho ramalnlng mon1y wlll b• peld over to th• coun1y. You may clalm Ill• rornelnlng moMY II ll'IY limo within one~ alter the ()()\j(lty rec.IYH the money. DATED July 7, t982 SHIRLEY HOFF By AMon• & Aaron•. Inc. By V .. ma M Aarona AllO<ney In Feel FICTfTIOU• au .... 8• Thi• ~ " conducted by • NAME 8TATEMENT llmlled '*''*lhlp. Publlah•d Orenge COHI Dally Pitot. August 6. 12, 11182 34115·112 Howwd Jamea Ree«le TM loltowlng pereor11 .,. doing Till• llltllmlt'll WU flied with ... ~ bull-•: .. .. Pl&JC NOTICE ....... ,_ nm'll=· TO-~ .. ~~'16m-.I ':n. ........ ""9M...... .. ..... le 11 .. ., lfveft .. , .. :.'{ff.~~~--:-::"'"''"' oo .... Lf;~; J:~ IJW,: ......... ftlll 0. ftll MW T....,.. W-r, No, t , C... M;;i, °'JOfltlClfl fta1111C1ttt WttoM CW iiilNUllllllll AMIMltjOA '::'a Ld IOI Hit\ 9'NOC will ... o4dr .. la 1101 A"on .,~ IMGUUt COllTACT A NowoortlMafl C4fttl0 ' .... """"'··~ OI °' .... u N011l:9 cw TllUITWe IAU · . ...,_ t . ~. tol Mltl ...... tel• of Oallf0t11la. tllal e ~.-Ta, .... l9t ~ 1Mo11 OA t2t10 ,.,..._ le Ueul lo M IMdt 1CI MOTicl Mt Hl"llY OIVIN fltl Tiiie b\lelneM I• condil01od ~ "AOI "!'.!rU"AHT 00., I Oii w..,..... ~ ;,, i:MI, .. llldMdl·• (tMMncl . Ml) b\I ... :.z!·~:i t 00o'dOCll •1111ol Mid cler. Ir\ tN ....,. I L9ftll llCHI Avenve 1""'8 Ceunt of t..;Oom ~1 .. Id• tor cond11ct111a C:: ':':' ~ ~-~ tN Ofanoe, eiato 0. 0..-.. ' 1Nat•1 ... 1.wllllln ltleol'lloeeol ~ anoe ..,......,, Oii TN pt000f1Y •o '8 tr....,,00 11 1.aAL llT AT l llOUflllT Ill Jvty ' ,,., , .... •ooat•d It 2UI • Mo1111teln :~::,.io:y =r'aotat'tll'IOIO.IN c':: Publlelled Orano1 Co11t Dally Avtt111e. Onlarlo, CoUllty Of Sen lante ~. Ooullty of Oteno-, tlett Piiot, AllO I , ti. 11, at, 1H2 -..~~~o::.~ r. =d lfl Of Callfotnl•. IAN M.AAINQ ut2.u oenttll .. :All8'00llllllt-~~· I A V I N G 9 A N D L 0 A N . '"'*""'' "'*-11/IO'llfl M IOfl'8 AllOCIATIOlll •• C•llfornl• "8JC NOTIC( "--ant 111\d tooeled ., nu .. corporation. u duly •PPOlnted '9CTITJOUI llU ... H Mountlllll Aveno., Qnte;Jo, County Tl'lletM 1111der Ind purtullftt lo the ...._ ITAT'lmNT ot 8 111 lernerdlno. lltt• or l)Owlr ot HI• cont•rr•ct 111 that Tiie fottowlno PClrtOflt .,. dot"" CallfornlL :ig•ln o..ct ol Truet lkeouted by buelnlM ... ..., Tho bulk lran•t•r will b• HARO J. WINN, a married min, A LL A M e A I O A N H O M I OON1Ur11malod on 0t after lhO Htll ~;*'t ~8.; ~'.:. 8 In BOC* IMPfllOVeMINT. 11228 Wiit d•1 Of Augu1t, 11112, and Cllalm• 0 --d• Of llld McO\llmott , .. INIM CA t271• m1y b• fifed at WILL.e FAPIGO ~~.·~ae83t Aloord!,'I JIAEMY P. ANWYL. 22182 IANK. N.A .. horow Dep#tmenl, 1>r.-011 or dtfMllt in...,~.,., Abrazo, MlMlon Vlelo CA 82"1 file; l!lorow No. "'-'000, lull• perlormance ot lllo obllgauo:! CfllAIO FUl'MAN, 20722 ~~~J"brc:;;, Hc11rad tll•r•by, 111cludlng tll•I ~ LAne. Huntington &Mctl, 1t1te of ClltfOtllll or by Mall It broecll or ~llAlltJ • Notlce 2 • of .. ~ lllll bll~neu 11 CIOnductod by an PO. loa 7210, NtwPClfl .. ooh, WU t'Oc:Of....., 1nUe1Y "' 1 .... ~. II ·-t""~ 1..., I II 1 .. _. Celtomlo t2ta Rtcorder '• lnttr11mon1 No . ""'";'pora ... HIOC 1 on ° ,,.. Allc:lalmemutl ii.~etttlle 12.()33921, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC then PlflJ:.= p Anwyt addr-by tho 25111 day Of A\IOUlt AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST Thie ttal-t wet lllod wolh tho 11112, 1111IOll lllO b\1111 tranefw ...0 BIOOEA FOR CASH, lawful money County Clettl of Ot~ County on lnClllllH tho tra1111., of llq11or of the United St•t•. or a COlhlor'a July 23. 1982 llCClfllO, Ill Wlllcll CaM, all Cl•lm• c:hec;k dr1wn on 1 •t•I• or nauon.r • ,1..,1 mutt be r....,., pt10r to the ow bank, a 111te or federal cradlt Publl•ll•d orange Coaal Dilly 011 which th• lfquor lloenH 11 union. or • •l•lt or federal .. 111nga Piiot, July 29, Aug. !I, 12• Ill, tM2 tra11tlerred by tM o.port1Mnt of and loan aeaod4atlon dC>ITllchcl In 33 t8·82 Alcohollc 8oYerage Controt. 11111 ""'· 1111 payable 11 tht Ume of So flf u known to the tr-fer .. ..... alt right, tltle and lnter"t lltld .... IC NOTIC( Ill bu-"-~ and addr .... by It , 11 Truale,, In tllet real ,._ ulOd by traneleror tor tllt throe Pfot>OrfY lltuete lo .. kl County and FICTmOUI IU ... 18 Y9l'I ,.., put, II dltteror11 trom the Stall. dffcrtbod u lollowe; ..,... ITATWMINT e1>9w CllCI Sarne. "IXIMt'T A" . A Condomlotum CONlt!lng ot t~ ... ~ followlnG... l*IOl'ol are dotng lotlowl . .....__ • PAllcir· 1, PEP ENTERPRISES, 22 t• Unit No.' 2, loc:llled on Lot 1 Of ~~f;" Orlvt. Cott• MHI, CA Tract No. 8094. CllY of ~ PETER oEokE POCHATKO BMdl. County of Orenoe. Slat• of 2214 Rutgor1 Orl1141, Cotta M...: Calltornl1, H tllown on a Map CA 92827. rOGOrded In book 3111, IMIQM 31 and EA ALENE EL I Z ABET H 32 of Mlaoeff•noou• Maps, rocordt POCHATKO 2214 Rutgcn Orl\141 of Or1nge County, ca11torn11. and Co111 M ... ,' CA 92827. • It 11\own on Ille Dec:l.,•tlon and Thie butlllOll It CJOnduclld by • Condominium Plan recorded Aprll genorel pannerlhlp. 13, 1973 M lntlrument No. 13388 In Peter George Poc:hatko book t0644. f>IQI 482 or Ottk:lal This 1111ement wu ftlod with the Record• or Or1ng• County; (the Counl)I Clerk Of Oraoga County on "Condominium Plan") end July 6, t1182. Amendmenll thOreto r«:orclod In book 11562, page 518 11\d In book 11552, page 528. both or Offlclel Record•. 'UCEL 2: 1'1t:rnl Publl1hed Orang• Co111 Dally PllOt. July 29, Aug 6, 12, tll, 1982 3381-82 An undivided 1118 lnter911 In Lot flt8.JC NOTIC( I of Traci No. 8094, a lllOwn on a --,=..,,,,~,.,.....,..,.,.. ____ , Map record41d In book 318, pagee AC'1TIOU8 IUIMU 31 end 32 of Mltc:ellanOoul Mape, ...._ ITATIMIXT record• o t Oreno• County, The followlng per-..,. dotng Cllllomle. ll'IOwn and cS.llned M bu*'-u; Common Arn on tl'I• above G L 0 BA L L 0 C A T OR rel•rr•d to Oeclaretlon and COMPANY, tn·F ~ Drive. Condominium P1an. N.wport eeacn. CA 92te3. Au1111tng therefrom 111clullvo SUZANNE Y. DOVE, 1 t 82 .. 1tment1 over the "Restricted Luc:lncll Way, Twttn, CA 112880. Common Ar ... " (U tn. -aro JOHN J. MILES, MT1 l.Mthom allown ind d•llned In eald Offle, H\lntlngton Bead!, CA 92&48 Oec:latlllon end Condominium Plen THEOOOAE RICHARD RITTER, H amended) ror 1111 UHi and 4291 P:O.-, lrvMe, CA 92714. purpose• 1e1 torth tn said Thie bu.i-le conducted by 1 Oeclerlllon end Condominium Plan. general partnerlhlp. John J. Mllee 4200 Marinholm Road Scllllter Pltk, IL 80t711 3121878-8004 0penoct; I 0-26-71 135 S. Elmhurtl Rood 0.. Plal,_, IL fl0018 3 t2/840-7350 ()peMd: 9.9. 71 5990 W. Dempster SI. Monon Gr...,., IL fl0053 312/HS.2278 ()peMd: 12-2·71 34170 Grootbec:l< Hwy FreMt, Ml 4802tl 3131792..0050 Openodl t0·9·72 2920 E. Nutwood Ave. Fullerton. CA 112$34 71 41112'.()910 (),_.cl: $.22-72 821 E Rand Rood Mt. Proep.ct. IL ll006e 3t2/2~•50 ()poMtl: 11-t7. 72 3511 W o.¥on Ave ChlcaQo, IL ~ 312/588--04111 °'""4d: 4.25.73 ACTION WOAD PROCESSING County Clefk or Orange County or CENTER. No 4 Acacia Tr .. Lane, Augu1t 2, 19112. . PAfllC(L :t.: Thia stat-I WU llted wllh Iha NOTICE TO C"EOfTOft8' Exc:lualv• eesementt eppur1tt'lln1 County Clet1t ot Oteno-Counly on Of' IUlK nv.NIF11" to tho unit 0Nc:rtb41d above, for UM July 28, 11182. 2403 BelUIM Allon, IL 82002 1118/466-71122 °'""4d: 11-31-73 Irvine, California 927t5 f'1MS30 David Terris. No. 4 Acacia Tree Publl•ll•d Orange Coaat Diii) Lane, lrvl1141, California 92715 Piiot Aug. 5. 12, 111, 28, 111112 Artene L Terris, No. 4 Acacia ---------..:3-4..:.:.8&-:....:.:8~ Tr .. LaM, lrvtne, Calllornia 92715 MtlC NOTICE This butlnen le conducted by en 1--~=.,,...,-----..:.:.--- lndlvldual. .. FICTITIOUS .UllNESS Artene L. Tortll NAiii! 8TATEMENT Thie 1ta1emon1 WU filed wlth Iha The IOllOwlng l)erlOlll 1111 doing County Clerk of Orenoe County on bu•I~ n: · July 12. 1982. (I) PACKAGE DEAL (2) THE '11'1tl HERB GARDEN, 111472 Warren Publl1lled Orang• Co11t Delly Avenue. Tuatln, CA 112680. Pliot. Juty 16, 22. 29, Aug. 5, 11182 BULLSEYE. INC.. 1 California 3142-82 c:0tpor1Uon (lnc:orpo<aled March, =-::Dl----ll_H_N_D_Tl-Cf-S ;~:.~~· C~s:;~warren Avenue. Thia buliMls II conducted by I corpor lllon . -----------· Buflsey., Inc (8-. 8101 .. 101 U.C.C.) and oocupency of the Ratrlc:tod '194041 Nollc:e I• hereby given to Common Ar-ll'IOWn ano o.flllod Publl•ll•d Orange Co11t Dally c:rodllore or 1111 within named In Iha above referred to Oec:laratlon Piiot, July 211. Aug. 6, t2, tll, 11182. tranaler<>rC•l 11111 a bulk tranelor 11 and Condominium Plan u .,... ~7-112 •bout to b• rn•d• on P•t1ona1 •l'°"ted for e>IClutlve uee by tllO PfoPWIY 114w•lnalter d111Crlbe<I. owner or the unit dooc:rlbod aboYI, fltlll.IC NOTICE Th• nam•(•) and bualneu being, Patio C-2; Balcony 8-2; end 1 d d r e I a o I I II e I n I o n d e d ParkTng Spece P·2. trensleror(•) are· Terry Aallley and 'UCU 4: Har.-. Siter or The Flower Fec:tory, Non·exc:1u11ve ea11ment1 for 21582 Brookhurll . Huntington ~.Ing,_ end 41gr-. UM end 841ach. CA enjoymenl of Ill• Common Arae The loc:lllon In California or llM ll'IOWn and d«inoe:f In Iha ab<WI Chief Hecutlve ol1lc:e or Pflnclpal r•ferred to Oecleretlon 1nd bu1lne11 olllco of th• lnlend•d ConOclfr\lnlum Plan. tranlf.,Of Is (If "aame a •bc>Y9". Excepting tllarelrom tho•• ao etete.) 2t582 Brookllurat. portion• ot th• Common Area Huntington BMc:tt, CA thOWn and doflnod u fllOltric:ted Alt ot.,.r bu1lne11 nam .. and Common Ar .. In eald Ooc:laratlon addrHffl uMd by the Inland.CS end Condominium PIM. •11111 -Netalle L Deel . DUPSLOFF Presl<llt'll tr1n1tetor within lhr .. yea11 lut Tiie 1tr111 1ddra11 or otll., MI L D R E D L This s1a1-1 was !tied Wllh lhe past •0 rer a• known to tht common dHlgnallon of th• raal Intended tren11or .. .,_.(II "none", J>'opert)' heraloebow cs-ibed Is t60 E. 7th St. Upland, CA 1127118 7141982-8034 OpoMd: 10-2t-73 t0011 Cet'ltrll Exp.-ay Della. TlC75221 2141389-8972 ~'1·2·73 3350 PatkOf Aoeo Aorl-t. MO 83033 3H l837-3952 ~4-4-74 "49 Mllwauk .. Ave NllM. IL 808411 3 U/1165--4155 Opened: 10.23-73 DUPSLOFF, a resident of Coun1y Cletl< Of Or11'1Q41 C0U<11y on to 11111.) None purported to be 833 Lido Park Sant.a Ana. Ca. Passed away July 20 19112 '1'3179 Th• namo(a) and bualn .. a Drive. E· 1. Newport Beech, o n August 3, 1982. She 11 Published Orange Coasl Delly addre•• ol 1111 Intended CalllornlL survived bv her son Carl, Pilot. July 22. 29. Aug 5. 12, 1962 lransferMC•l era· Flowerland Inc The und•relgnod hereby ., 808 N. Mllt1 St., S1nla An1. CA dl1clal 11 11 blllt I brothers Charley, Keneth 3312·82 112101 mi 1 • Y or any ~ °" 1'11.JNQ Of' AJ'PUCATION .. CO...CTIOM Wrnt UANCH ACOUtamoN Thlt Is to lnlorm the public !hat, under S.Ctlon 648.2 .,,d S.Ctlon 5 46.14(•1 or th• Rulo• and Reguletlona for the Federal Sevlng1 Ind Loll\ Syal~. Cout Feo.tal Sl'olinQS 11\d loan AMOdetlon, 855 Soutl) Hiii Strfft, LOI Angelea. Callfornle. 11•1 lll•d branch 8'>Plic:ltlon 11\d 111 appllcetlon for permiMlon to inc:r-ICCOUrl~ or "' lneuraDle fyJll by rCllOOn the 1c:qul1111on or bran1111 oft • or Peefllc Fedefel SClvtnge ond loen AllOQatlon, 234 Eu1 17111 Sir..,, eo.11 MMe. Ca.Utornla. tocatoo 11 12711 Vefttura Boulriatd, Studio City, Cllllornla Anyone may wrlle In fevor or protest ol th• eppUc:atlon Your comment• may dlecuM, bul -not Umlled to. tr. epplican1'1 r.c:Otd Of por1orm4'1Ce In '*Ping to mwt the cr•dll need• of 111 local corMIUnlti... Four coplM mu11 be r~ved by "Sup•rvleory Agent. Federal Home Loan Senk or San Fr1nc:l11Co, 600 Cellfornl• Slroet. Poll Ollie• Box 71148, S en FrenollCO, Celllornla 114120," by Augut1 22, 1982. An addHlonal 20 days to Mibmlt comrnonta mey' be obtained, prO<lldod ludl requoet le rec:el'lled 1'1 writing by the Supervleory Agent by Augu1t 22. 19112 4750 LOI CoyotOI Diagonal Long hac:h, CA 908t5 213/6117·2015 ~5-10.74 ~reel,_. In Mid 1tre9! lddr-and Dude Rush. sister Lois 11111-1c MnTICE That Ill• property pertinent or oth« common "-"-•lion. N. Niche las, 2 grandchUdren 1----'"-~--""-----'*410 11 0-lbe<I In O-•I a1 Said .... wlll ~ wttllOut and 2 great-grandchildren. flCmK>Ua IM.lllNEal Th• Flower Shop known H Tile werranly, npre11 or Implied. S NAllllS ITATa•NT Flower Fectory, II• llxturH and ragerdlng tltle, po11e11lon, or ervicea will be held o n The tottowtng persona are doing equipment ptua tlock end Is loc:eted encumbrancH to 11ll1fy tho Saturday, August 7, 1982 at bullnese u : et: 21582 Broo1t11u111, Huntington pt1nc1pa1 balanoe of the Not• or 10:00AM at the Harbor LYN NE VALENT I N E Beech, CA other oblloetlon MCUred by aald Lawn Memorial Chapel with PROPERTIES, 3 Civic: Plue. Tile bualMN name utod by Iha Deed 0t Trust, with lnt-t and . N.wport Beech, Callloml• 92e80 Mid transferor(•) 11 .. Id loca1lon 11· other aum1 at provided tll.,eln· 1 n t e rm e n t s e r v i c e s Jacob• AMlty, Inc .• a Callloml• The A-FllC1ory plu• actven.Qff, 11 any, under 1~ immediately following-. 11orporatlon, 2919 Newport BIVd., Thal nld bulk trantler 11 term• thereof en<1 lntereat on IUCl1 Services under the direction Newpor1 Beecll. Celllornl• 92863 lnleno.d to be c:onM#Ylmatod at 1111 edvancea. end plui t .... Charges of Harbor Lawn-M ount Tiii• bullneu 11 conducted by a office or· Oon•l<I °'Mara Brollor• and ••pen-of the l!'llltN lod of Olive Mortuary of Costa corporation. Auocl•t••· Lak• El•lnore. tho trueta crNted by eald Deed ot M MO u:u Jeoobl RMtty, Inc. Cllllfornl1 92330 on or anor Augu.t Truil ltl• 10111 •mount of M id esa. .,,,,.,..,, John w. Jecobe., 23. 11182. obllg1llon, Including reHonebly PrOlldent This bulk 1t1n1rer I• aub).c1 lo ••limited feH, c:llergH and 8ALTZIHGHOH SMITH & TUTHILL WISTCLtff CHArll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 P'tttlCI llOTHHS s..uTHS' MOITUilT 627 Main St HuntonQton &ach 536-6539 'ACtffC YllW MIMOllAL,AJW Cemetery Mortuary Chapel·Crematorv 3500 Pac1hc View Om1e Newpon Beach 64A·2700 McCOllMICIC MOITUAllH LaQuna Beach 494·9't5 Laouna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 HAlll09 L.AW~MT. OUYI Mof1uarv • Cemete"' Ctem1torv 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa S40-SSS4 ...Cl•OTHHS l&l•OAOWAY MOtl'TUAIY t iO Bro.ctway Costa Mesa 642-9150 f. Thll •t•l-t -tiled ,..,,, ti.. Celllornl1 Uniform Commerol•I •l(perl-of the Trust ... at tllO time ounty Ctenl Of Orange County on Code Section etoe ol lntllll publlcaUon of this Noclce 11 July 12. 11182 The name •nd addrHI of Ill• $31,014 99. ' F1GtT1 peraon with whom clalma mey bl Dated July 26, 11182. Publllhed Orange Co11t Dell) ni.<i i. Ooneld 0. MClta Brokerl 8AN MA,.INO IAVINOI AND Pilot July 15, 22, 29, Aug. 5. 1982 ANoc •. P 0. Box 80. Lake Elllnore, LOAN AISOC. ________ .....;:3;,.;,1::;32:.;-82=I CA 92330. Ind tri. lut day fOf ftllng A Coltforn&e C-... .. Trua• cr.lrn1 by eny credlt0< "'411 bewtllcll 9r1 MAL llTAfE SICUMnll fltBJC NOTICE Is the bu11nen day before th• H""1Cl, • Cellfomta CClf'P,. F1CTTTIOUS .UllltESS con1umm11ton date apeclfled ltll Aeenl ~ STA~ •boYe O~ Morllf, ltl "4eldeflt TM loltowlng perlOOI are dOlng 0.led Augu1t 4. 1982 2G:lO M. lroedw'1, No.. 208 ~ u : AlcNird La Neve lallla Ana, CA moe A·AUTO ACCIDENT, 4400 Aower1and Inc (714) ta-1110 MacArthur Boule'llerd. Sutte 370, Intended Tr-lorMC•I Publl1hed 011nge Coaat Dally Newpotl BMch. Califomle 112eeo ,.,:;:,b~-:. ?::;g• COHI Diii) PllOt, July 29, Aug !I. 12, tll82 ALLEN I FLA TT. A 11°"'9)'1 at 35 t 4-8~ 34<»-a2 Lew. 4400 MacArthur Boulellard, ____ ,..,... ______ _ Sull• 370, Newport Beach. Calll0tnla 112eeO This bu84,_ Is conducted by an Individual. Ro4*1 F. Allen Jr. Thia ltlt-1 WU lllocl with the County C*" or Otange County on July 2, 1982. '112112 Publl1llod Oreno• Coaat Dall~ Piiot, July 15, 22, 28. Aug. 5, 1982 3204-112 P\B.IC NOTICE POBUC NOTICE f'tC11TIOUt IUl*lll FICTITIOUI 8UIMll N""" ITATl•NT NAME ITAT«MINT (A) TEQUILA CUERVO S.A:i (Bl The lollowlng poreons are doing GRUPO CUERVQ S.A.: (C) u$0 butlne11 11. NEO"O S.A. Kdll Cont•r. Bulle MARIA'S TIJUANA TAXI, 31904 3000. 4000 MaoArtllur Blvd .. 11th Avenue, South Laguna . Newport Beoc:h. CA 112eeo. Celllornl• 92877 GRUPO CUERVO S .A.. M1rlaEllube111MllCl'ltll,3190~ M••lcon Holding co., ragttterod In 9111 Avenue, South Laguna. M•xlco, Botqu. d• Ourunoe 69, Ce11rornl1 92877 8otQuCI d• Lom ... Mexico 10 OF. Waller GUlord Mllchtll, 31904 "8-IC NOTICE Me11fco, 9th Avenue. South L1gun1, Anyone Hndlng 1 subtlenllal prot••I mey requeet en oral 1rgumen1 on the llP9flcatlon u Mt forlll In Sec:llon 643.2(1) For 1 prol••t to b• 11on1ldered tubtlantlal. It mull b• written. recelv.d on llmo, end contain a1 lees! the followlng t) • aumrnary of 1ri. r_.,a tor the ptOIMI, 2) tfle tOldllC INltterl oO~ 10 In tfle epplleatlotl or In Ill• appllcent'1 c:ornmunlty Mtvloo record: 3) I0011, lndlldlng Inf ,....,Wit oconomic: Of llnetldal lnf«mellon. wtlkft 1UP9Qr1 11'4 prot•ll, ettt:r 4) any adv•rM elfecte on your org1nl111lon or ~nlty wNc;to may rwult trom 8')ClfO'llll Of tn. applc:atlon You may look at the llClj)llclallon end a ll 11omment1 lll•d a1 Ille Federll Homo LOClll Bank ot 8tin Franclaco, unl•11 any auoll m1tor1el1 ire exempt by l1w tror11 public: dlecloeur•. If you have wiy quH1lon1 conc•rnlng tll••• prooedurta , contect 1111 Sup.rvllOfY Aglt'lt et the FodOfal Homo Loon Sri of Sen Frenctaoo. P11bll1hod Orange OoHt Dally PllOt. Aug S. 12, 1982 349M2 P\B.IC NOTIC£ -Thlt bulinOll Is c:onduc:ted by • Cllllorn11 112577 FICmtOUI •,u·~· corporetlon. ThlS bullnMI ,. conducted by Ill PIC"""""' ......... MAMI STAT Ml"' Bf Cu1fvo S Individual .. ..:.~--Tiie rollowlng pereon I• dolno U$>O .A. Marie Mltc:hell ..._ ITATlmNT bualnMa u . =: ~d= Thia st11ornon1 wu tiled Wlll'I tho Tll• followino P•reo11 It dol11g SLIPPERY DUCK. H123 w. Tllll •111-t WU llled wlltl the Coun1y Clerk of Orengo Couoty on ~ ~TCH MAINTENANCE. ::= Blvd., Newport BIVd .. CA County Ctortl at Orang. Couroly Oii July 20, 11182 1880 Lake StrCIClt. H1111t111g1on July t4, 1882 '113111 Boac:ll. Coll1orllll t2t4t MARK ST RICKI.ANO. 1823 w 1'1tal0 P11bllth•d Or1ng• CoHt Delly JomH Tll•y .. B•rn•y 411 ::= 8lvd • Newport 9Mcfl, CA Publlehed OtengCI CoHt 0•11) PllOt, .k;ly 22. 29, Aug. 6. t2, 11182 Mai11 Street. SuHe ~· Hunt~ Thie bullnlll 1a conducted by an Piiot, JWf 15. 22, 29, A119. 5. 1H2 _________ 3;..;:2..:.534~· 2 Beocll. Callfomla IHd lndMdull 31ff-t2 Pl8..IC N()TIC( Thie~ le oonduetod by an Maril Strtctdalld --.....,....;..,;.......;;...;.;.;..;.~---lndMduol. Thl1 stat-t -filCld wltfl the "8.JC N0TIC£ 'ICTmOUI llUIMll "-T. 8er"9y Couoty Clol'k o1 Or-'04 County on ~ NA• tfATI*"' Tllll lta1-lt • llocl with "'8 July 20, 1912 .. !!J!OU'IT·~-NTaa TM following ,__,. -doing Qounty Cllrtl of DflillOO CcMlty °" ,,... -.... bullnwl ... Jlil't 12. 19112. Publllh.O Orange Coaal Dally ~~Ill ~ 8'• doing (Al PJS WEIT; (9) EPCO f'91111 P1lol, July 22, H , Aue 5. 12, 1N2 PADOY CAl<E8, 11915 -..:...., WES l'. I 86 0 1 8 u r k • Lan. Publlellod Ora1109 COUI OallJ 3.:zt0.a2 ,.._ ...... , ........ o.J-..... ,. .. ,:-1,,.....,4ft Hunllngton a-t\, CA 1126'7. • "'°" iM; 1$. 22. tt. Aue· 5, IMa 1-----------...,..,. ....,, w""-"'" • ALIERT J . GIBSON, 4208 315'-ta .... "' --THe PAOOY WAOON INC,, • River Avo •• N-p .. rt Baac ........ ,_,..,... __________ , ... _ ""'-c1111or11I• ootpor111011. 1Tt t5 9aet3 ·-" " "" ,. "'°nnoue ....... Skvwtl Olrcfe. s. •. ~. CA JIFF Ql8SON, 4881 c.nlllld. , __ ...,..,MUC=-----"° ..... ru ___ _. ..,.... .,.,.,_..., 12114. PltQCllltle. CA t2610 TM followino "°"°"' .,. Oolllo Thi• bullnClet 11 COtlOllClod by • OAN 018SON. 181 8ereloga. ~ea: OOf'POtatlon. ~111, CA U•70 -------""""""--"""' AlLIAOl!I CONTROL PtctdyW~lno. CA AL O LION , 14 t CENTER. 23632 Aoctltleld Road, W. Patrica Co.I.too, laurerwood. Ptectntll, OA 120?0 OUTD<>Of' Pfi'QOUOTI, 918 No. 102, El 'T«q, CA t2130. Pr8lidClm Alben J ......__ A......._ •-• •~ "" -1-AOlllA'T 0 . CASOEH, 2&4t~ T'111 ltlt.,_,. -tVeCI With Ille '_.....,, -'• _,, ""'"'' ""' -"'"' PeolflOll. .. .....,, .,......, CA ..... 1. County°"" Of°'-Coun"' Oii Tiii• •t•llm«lt wae llltd wllll the (1) w. WlLfY '°°'"" 119 ·-r>" • Ju"' t .... -...-., eouotv c1or11 or Or•noe Oouotv on Avtton, ..,, .. Alie, CA mot ff* butlnoM It OOf!ducted by en •• • 1 .... 2. July 20, tN2. NANCY A lllOOLl1. t11 I llldlvtCMll '~ P1-1 AllltOn ..,_ AN. CA NrOt. "°"" Q, Oetdel\ Publl•llff Of11109 CdUt Delly lllubll1hoo Ottnqt Co•t D.ity Tilll --la CIOndUotlad-, cc!:v -~~llledec::v '= "°'· Nff It. Aue· 1. 12• •:.;::. lllllOI. J\lt'f 22, 2t, AllO I. ia. 1Mt tMMdtlll (HulOMd 6 wir.>. ...... 21, 1....... ,,.,.,a w. = fl08lo i -· .... -Tllll ----fled""' .. -~ Olettl Of °'°"" COUller ,.:.~.t,..anr,,~~~3=' I;.M.Boyd informs ....., •. ,... ,.....;........._ _____ ,.~,,;...:""~j in t e ,.."...., ~ o.- Clwtfied Ade &42·!171 -----~---.i...;----....::z-----"' ....,., -... --~ 11. • r 9075 N. 78111 SI Mlfwaull ... WI 53223 41413~1328 ~ t0.28·73 5300 S. 78111 SI. Orwndate, WI 53129 4 t41421·7830 °'""4d: 11·10.73 1783 t 17th SI. • Tustin, CA 2880 7141731-0«4 ()peMd: 7.7.73 t918 W Ar10lla Compton. CA 90220 2131839-8700 ()peMd: $.25·73 511 W. 1.41 TunOI Drive Arc:adle, CA 91008 2 t 3/ «5-(13 7 4 ~ 12-21·'3 11:192 Wa~ Aood c:r.twood. MO 83129 314/~t33 ~12-14-73 13183 Aooooo BIYd. Vf/11 ~CAt1402 21317"-Stee ~3..a.7• 300 w. Golf ScfltllnlbufQ. IL 80172 3t2/8"..()()5e C)pMod: 3-3-7 4 t300 Lak1 St. Loots 81. Lallo St. Louis, MO 833t8 1141825-4038 C>,..,.c 9-13-r.J 15280 w. 8luomOuftd Elm OrO'lle, WI 53122 41417M-<M16 ~ 11-30-1a 5220 N. Hariom Ave. Cllic:;ooo, IL eoell8 a 1211'34020 0....-.: 1·11-14 1470 N. Poln4 WMHfl01on GJondale. WI 5S2t7 414/SH-4030 ~&.a5-n '7171~1\. F0\11\taln Valley, CA t210t 714/Ma-1132 o,_..si 7~14 506W.~Ad. 1.0ft'tlerd, IL to 141 11a1.......oe10 °""'8* t-20-711 1 SflO I. ""'*1111 Hwy. La ~·CA 10134 213,....._ °'°""* 1~ M4 "°" °"'°",._, M lou!llWO. Ml 4101t 1131 ....... 7 ~··ft.7t ' =~'~ 1111.-. .... .......... fl tlOI OUllOle ,.... ..... Growe, l&. IOMO ltl/llMOMI .,..... .. , .. , . 11114 WllOr• It Houelorl, TX 71071 1t314tl-1404 _......, .. 71 1ll8t N. Central .,...Witt Dellel. TX 71n1 at .. nts-1101 ~M ... 11 20Me Collma llloocl Walnut, CA 917 .. 714/fff.Mll 0...-.WO-IO 2200 N HtrbOr llvd, 'lllllf'ton. CA tma 7141818-11922 °'**" 8-&·Te 2750 Harbor llvd. Cqeta M .... OA tU2e 7141549-120 OpeMdl 12""-7• 20A6 Hawthorne 91\1d. TOtrtllCCI. CA 90503 2131311 ....... ~9·9-78 6818 N.1-35 Au1t1n. TX 1175 t 812/413-1314 °'"""* 544-77 toO N. 8f1110I ~ 8Mctl. CA 112880 7141752·2601 OpoMd: 2·10.77 5580 ClalrornOnt MOM Sen Diogo, CA 92117 71416e0-1402 °"9ned: 7·26-77 !868 ShOal \;rMlt t:llVO Austin. TX 78575 512/451·3488 Openod:11·18-78 1531 Lu V41g .. Blvd S. LM V4t11M, NV 89104 7011184-31 t9 OS**f: 7·24·78 926 N. w11c:r.,1 Houston. TX 770711 713/1132· 1390 ()peMd: 9·4-77 6415 Rlehmond Ave Houston. TX 77057 713/977·7038 OpeMd: 8· t0.77 4430 FM 1960 HOUiton. TX 78058 7 t3/440-t831 OpeMd: 12·28-77 11111 W. Airport Fwy. IN!ng. TX 75062 2141253-7611 ()poMd: 10.20. n 23000 Lake For•I Or. Laguna Hiiis. CA 112853 7 147768-t 781 OpeMd: 5-24· 77 350 N. Mannheim Road Hllllllc:le, IL 60182 3121544· 1404 °"9ned: 6-28-78 9135 Gel-•y w .. 1 El Puo. TX 79925 1115/692· 1258 o,ian.d: 5-15· 79 8373 Mira M"' Blvd. Siii Diogo. CA 112128 7141566-4420 OpoMd: 4·18-7~ 2021 MWocentOf 81Vd. NMftvllle. TN 37218 8151259 .... 590 Opollod: MS. 78 812 8ellllM Hwy S Moblle. AL 38609 205/~~ ()poMd: 9-29-78 3780 I.All V41QU Blvd. S l.M V41g11, NV 119109 702/~501 Opeftod: 11-24-711 1415 Motor St Dattu, TX 75207 2141830-99411 Opollod: 3· tll-78 1050 Gayley Ave LOI Aogelel. CA 90024 213/aoe-3718 Opened: 1-27. 79 4880 S . Marytan4 Parkwey Lal V41QU, NV 811109 702/73M9011 OpeMd: 3·11-711 2020 Loulavllle Monroe, LA 71201 3111/322 .... 700 OpeMd: 2·9-711 230 W. l.lyton Ave. Mllweuk ... WI 53207 414/483-7008 Opanacl: 7 • 19· 78 1~10 Seawlll dlvO Galvelton. TX 77550 7131783-51154 OpeMd: S.22·78 8'01 WMt Markham Uttle Rodi, AR 72205 5011225-7382 Op9Mct: 3-22·78 2780 WOil 'l'Olh St ShttvePOf1, LA 7 t t06 3111835-1182 Opeftod: 8-30-80 33t7 E OM$lon St ~~78011 Opanacl: 11-19-79 2700 NW. t85tt1St. Portltnd, OR 117229 503/64S-8884 OpeMd: 8-12·7• 11099 NOflh-1 Fwy. Houston, TX 77092 713/881·7480 Opeftod: 11·27-78 720 E. North A'*"" Carol Sl,_-i\, IL 80187 312/888-1490 C)paMd: •211-19 1280 W. VIiie)' P"'11way EaQondldo. CA eaoas 1 w1•a.281a OptMdt 12-la.to 150 e. Htmltton ~.0At5006 408/374-3233 ~J.1-711 2aoo w. 81. PllJI Ava WaukOlha. WI SS IM 414, ... 7 .... 143 ~W4-11 ._,.w.....,"'°" Sall Antonio. TX na,. 512n ... ,~ °"""* wt-Tl 242 E. HOCIPlt*Y LAM SCll'l ltmalcMno. CA 12409 1141 .... nt1 ~t-ta..n 4aM OlclllW on111 ~.ncnuo nitU4-11'3 0..-1-IHI ~.:., __. .. ,1 .. ......... ~4til t::~n .,..,, _..... .. ,,., . tlotAeW• ..... -......~GAttat1 IOl/4tf·11tT ---741·79 1121 t ,_ Oe Mlclla L...-.... CA ttffl 7'~/Mt-tatl .... f.JO.Tt 4t10aotuoelv.1 TWM». ~L U.01 tt3117 ... N45 OpeMi6 "*" ttotW~"M lndlanapotle, JN ... 3t11172..e311 ~ tt-10.Tt 3111 Btoedwlly El Cejon, CA 92020 7141"2.QO& ()peMdi 8-22·71 2236N.~f>'­ Colorado s111inoe. co aoeoe 303/lte.-463t OpeMd: 7·29-711 11300 a.w. 8arne1 Rd. PortleM, OR 97226 5031292-0270 ()poMd: 3.30-79 80511 I.BJ Fr~ •Dallu. TX 75243 214123 t -563e ~tt·23-711 9505 E.A.L. Thor1on F 011111, T)( 75214 2141321..()()311 ()peMd: 2-28-81 3440 OcMn Park Blvd. Santi Monica, CA 90406 2131450-825 7 OpMocl: 5-26-711 11711 Aftede BIVd. N0t1hrldge, CA 111324 213/3411·71119 OpMocl: 11-6-79 50 S CemU11 Memphll, TN 38101 90 11522-11177 OpeMd: 6-25-711 42·258 Bob Hope Or. AanchO Mirage. CA 92770 7141568·5050 ~9-11-80 16480 eoon. Ferry Lake o.w.go, OR 117034 5031838-84$4 OpeMd: 7.7.79 1507 South C:0..1 Or. Cos1e ~. CA 112827 714/645-2351 Opeftod: 6-1()-80 824 Contra Coete Blltd. Ptouanl Hon. CA 94523 4t511127·1S50 ()peMd: 7·25-79 8001 s 8<-00CS Hous1on. TX 77098 7131723-2423 Opeftod: 2-17 -80 7505 Out>lln Road Dublin, CA 9456e • t 51829·8422 OpeMd: 11-111-80 10800·A Pear Tr .. SI. Ann. Mt) 63074 314/423'4e22 Opened: 1-111-80 531 Foster Clly Blvd. Foster City. CA 114404 4151572-8355 °"9ned: 9-28-79 1525 West A'llOllUO K Lanc:atter, CA 113$3.4 8051345-5187 OpeMCI: 8-19--80 185 Dyne OtMo Houston. TX 7704!0 713/"5-7899 OpeMCt 12·21·79 730& E. 21tt St lndlanepolis, IN 482111 3 171353-«150 °'**" 6-1&-8, 13233 Slemmons DallN, TX 75234 214/243-1732 °'*""9! 6-1~ 111711 H1Qhw1y 69 Humble. tx 71338 7t3/446-11111t OpeMd: 5 .. -80 2322 S. Mountlln Ave. Ontario, CA 1111111 7 141984--31130 OpeMd: 11·20-80 2005 Vlllano111 Drive Ret'lo, NV 69509 7021323·2423 Openod: 12-0 1-80 6880 Eut Evant Denver. CO 80208 ~3/8112-ot97 Of**': S.26-«I 825 8flatwood C4rde Or. Ann Albor, Ml 48104 313/662-0624 ~8-2-81 4000 Unl....ity A- Medllon. WI $3705 608/233-20411 ~4-25-11 7680 P9c:oe s1r .. 1 o.nvar. co 90204 3031427·2050 OpeMd: 2-12-80 5115 E El camlno Real Sunnyvale. CA 9'40117 408/133·11'87 Opellad: t 1-8-80 3485 8ouldor Hwy. LOI V41111, NV 88t21 7021457-4381 OpeMd: M&-80 411811 3'ttll Street N. SI. Po'ereburg, FL 83713 1131522·5248 Opanacl; 4-20-81 39<! 1 Hlghw9y 41 fllor111 Evanevllle. IN 417 11 1112/425-14N ~6-6-80 100 t 8. Abtlene SI. Aurora, co H133 430t &tltllM Rood o.rtM, TX 75234 214/leCM957 ~2 ........ 1 11107 HIQtlwey 78 N. HO\ietOll, 'TX 1'7080 T 14/~T ..eo64 W5,~Aw, • St Joolc)h. MO ... SOt 1181231-143' ~2·1M1 Dotocl; My 14. 1112 GAAOE Allf AU,.ANT co. bft.f~ .. ~.~ .. ~.~ .. ~.If.~ 'Tr·;·," ~:;:.. ~ ... " ~!.'!l!c.'!!.'!M ... 1.{'! !•.-.W!.~.f~~.'f.!H.! ~.':!!Hl .... 1.~! ~ ........ '"' .___. a.-At ,., • ...,, ...,. '''' .... ~.~!!'.t ............... e:n• ........ ~1· ................... u. BE A c H I RE A 2 er. 2 81. PtnlhOUM lo l xeo Fum lultt PflrM m:;.~ ••••••••••• ""'•' IMf •• -....... ":-1n:' ............................... "-·· •'!' . ••'J·~ C..11 ·-Jl64 ·~,, .... "'' " share, outr•p•ou1. N ....... -~ind co-2 ... 1 Ba. d •••••••••••••••••••••" .a-..-.,..,. o1•. "' ••• L I Ubtr1 .. ,,, . . ....... ,., .... ,. ..... WI °'1>t•. rpe. ...-r-•.. ••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• • •••• •••••••••••••••• •:un • "" • plet 1v1U. 1221/mo verct, l!lsldt. 1595/mo. Tur11tt0Gk 1750 llf, 2 ~bdrmhl'nwlloYllyVlew ... EASTSIDE 2 Br. 1'4 e. 2 ... "' $77/wk •II ..e21•· Ht-1719 . ••o-u1e &7&--!IOee. ma1r bdrma. coun~ kit• to Nature Center. 1815 TownhOutt, tnct9d ge-1.,.. rnlll to ~ KltcMnltte-Mlld-Pool 8hr 2bd 2b• furn apt, (9Ye) 2 .,. 1 ea.,,..,., fie>«, cpt, cnen. 2'4bl. 10 rno. ~eo. •M-On& rege, frplc, """' 09! olc. Eve e-11931.,.11e Nwpt llvd l WllfOn tt.&111\ Club, t~."poolt -E•_•_c_u_t1_11_1_0_11_1c-,-.u-1-te-. 110vt ·~n, ~o .,.... pool. AY911 Seol 1• Undtrl11tld f.ltgenet GtMt loo L.lrge 2 Br 1 B• Willi COUNTRY Cl.UB LIVING CCI••...... &41-9756 1376. 644•1•17 COl'ntr of 405 Fwy ...., 1950 8, 'Pt. (HOUM S3W277• 752-6492 hw T....... HIOOD TSL Mgmt. 6'42· 1803 garege, d/~. 11undfy rm: IN NEWPORT BEACH Yearly on lht b..ctl hotll NB townllouM, 3 bdrm, H&rl>or DIYd, Tll<t O"llf In beck), 25 l ct.p. CALL NOW 2bf 2b• For ..... 2800 eq It. 2 8TUNNINO lerge 1 er. 1-4115. A 10111 1n11lronm1nt room llllchen & .ho-2~ ba, pool, Jae, laundry, ...... 1800 eq.ft. at ~ _.,.34&4 SUNNY pool, IP•· bll·lf\• bdrm and dtn, 2~ b•. LIFE'' gerden apt, pool & rec Alto ltg 2 Br. 1Ba:1490. 1Plftmtnt community on 8320/mo. plus .-:. d.: etc. s2eo mo, '.Al utll. It c.a 111-11~ 8--• 1 ... ,,., ...... .......... •580 Golt cour• view. NHr rm 710 W. 1llth. St. Avail 9·1. 645-88211 th• UPP•r 81y Private rio•lt 2308 W Oce•n· A11all 9/11111·1824 Fountain V11teu Office ....... .,., ••• """....... OC-AENTALS 750-S314 clubhOUH Ind ht•lth • . , y•d~. 55. Drtw by 790 Ooe1n 'ull Hcurlty. UM .. .., l•n•• Smlll 1 er. $326. 1 pttton •Pt!· 1 tennl• courta. 7 toM. N•wport 811ch L•k• ForMt 3 bdrm eon· spaoe, 2500 tQ.ft. et tlOt w. _. 873-e33e, Tunle ~ 4 BR 2~ ba. a Club with Pool • .,,., 1tn-YIAR.fM>UND PUN: 18r • ~ lgarmge only. No pate. Oo '": pools, cloM 10 buelnest. 873-• 154. do 3 b• Sun 11\d Sell 1 11. Oood 1wpo1ure, 1 Br, Ba houM, Off·•l car gar, lam rm, patio, nit. 71 ... 7s.G476 8 ootal ActlVl11H '4eS. a.en w/;tlo, Cat· 1918 ··c" Wallec:e Ave. airport. FHhlon lelend. l••••t leallll 4100 club prtvlltgel. 1350. ·~ 0000 'Ptf1ltno. Tllbltt I pllg .. encf. yard. lJtll pd. gtdnr Inc. $1200 mo. oomy 2 Br. 2 Ba. COndo D I r • c Io r •Fr•• port $4'05. frplo, pool. Don·1 well only 1 latge 3 Con111nlent ah ope on •••••••••••••••••••••• u 111. 1 •I • n d I a• t. Bro o II h u r • t. Ca II Agt. '315 mo. 075-1&42. AYlll now. 133-1927 In Clllf Haven, frplc, S und• l 1p1, 11undry. Quiet. no er. 111all with 2 81 .• pe-1111. Unlumlthed beche-1 Br 11ttp1 "· ecrota the 869·l973 •It 8 _7_11_1_-8_1_9_1 ____ _ Special 2br 2ba w/huge •er. 2 ea. 19971 Antioch. oommty pool. N50/mo. ~z=:~!'•• pe11. M... Pines. uo, In quiet arta, large 1or1. 1 & 2 bdrm •Pt• and ;~:rk '6~~~1ch • NWPT: rnp .. clean F/M 10 llWPllT llAOI gef. patio bl14ne 14'6 81100/mo. 875-1051. much mo<e. &-49-24•7. pool. 1850. 645-3381 or townh~:': 11000 w shr nice 3br/2ba hom• ...... um ~ENTALS 750-.331• Aglf'lt 541•5032· HARMI 5 bf, 3 ba HVH. Q" •AT 875-5949· o--11 bee~-'--• end t WHILY RHTALS on Canal. II~ 10 ooean. No d-11•1 Lu•urlou• 3 2 pool Frenctl d l b 811 ....,....., ,,_,.. $326. &45--2495 (Molly) -.. --THIS HOT Cl.II• 2bt home Rare br ba w/911, • ~ .. ,,, )ara.cuul.•v-1-1800Y·. RIC R ~AT t ON i Ila» 1ihl 31ZI Bdrrn units future fine Anlleble Agt 875-8170 new olflcH, Including 13 wife Mlltr'I kltch, multl-" T • n n I •• Fr• e -....m-.:.any •••••••••••••••••••••• d 1 1 11 e and Empt F to 1hr lr111ne r~t1on111. answering w/hll-upa, bit-Ins 25 lem olt. $435. Kids & em 2523, 833-~375. Leeeon• (pro & pro ~u ~ 2 Br 2 Ba. ocean w , 1525. "gnerlelur~ ur 1 1 NB. ll2 Br. weekly, tllps home, pref nontmkr. 11r11lc1, conference OC-RENTALS 750-331" pat fine. NWPT HOTS AREA eh op)• 2 H .. 11 h fgllY W -1 Br $400. Both with ~~:eMrve o~:r ~u! to bch. 1275 up. GrHI 1300 + '.+ ut111. 544-6016 room. etc. 752-6408. Cn.tmlng 2br w/double BEST lee 639-8191 2b11'b•. No pats. $e26. Clube•Seuna• Beaullfully landsclPtd O/W & stove. 881·1192 mer month•. Smartly locale. 754·0938. 9\IS Newport Airport Araa 400 ~·A~~~lo /~~t. 3 BR 2 Ba condo, no pet1, 845-1•47 Hydromaueg.. garden 1p11. POOi & Spe. 105, big 2 br, oc11n furnished model• open 38r •Ip• 8. pool. CdM. Fem. 45 •hr 1ge 111111h to 2•00 eq ft office • pool. A/C, $700 mo. De-IUILY llW ~~~IQP.•~OC?fl Colllftd. perking. No view. C-25081 LI Cresta. dally. :;~5;~~'1250 mo. Aug twnhse w/retf> w()r1{1ng apsce. from 90e 1/1 ln- E. Side. 3 bdrm, 2 ba, nlM, 971-8157 Of ... ~ pate. 2 children wel· Owner •94-~8 • fem. unbehe111ble rooms. eluding J1nlt0f eervlc.. newly cl«:. Frpc. blt-ln1. 552·9~9 2 BDRM & loll. 2'11 beth. 1 IAUT 1' U '-come. On JambOrM Rd at I CdM 2 br, 2 be ept. So ol overlook Ing brook & It.IC, Ill:. lmmtd. ocou- 2 car gar, gardening. Specious & bright condo. A' A" TM 1 HT 1 : t Br. 1475 Bull•flM Sin Joaquin HUI• Rd. PCH. aundeck. A111ll &18 w1ttr11n. Poot, Jae. lake, pency. LM or mo/mo. 042·1710att4 Tur11eRocll,trl..-.....,3br, N11rupper81ck8ay Slnglea , 1&.2 131E.18th. 848-8816 "''' 3140 844-1100 ioll/4 $600wk or 1tc.NB/CM1rea.lrom 540·2"0 2'11 bl condo. Pvt patio, with mini l/llW. Flrepleoe, Btdrooms•Fumllhtd 3 Br, 2 Ba. $626 •••••••••••••••••••••• I s1eoo mo. 673·3• 15. $325. 760-8045 ---------3 Br. den, lrplo, d.r .. lncd lrplc, 111. 2 car OI/.. lerge p1Uo, AC, 2 cer & Unlurnl1h1d•No 151 e. 2111 s1. 548-2•08 ftlFFLmR 1 Br 1 Ba. yrly 400·900 PLUS 1•00 sq. It. yd, plllo, quiet et.. eep· tennis c11. pool + more, g1r1ge w/opener. Sp1. P1t1•Model1 Open 1 & 2 Br. Discount on $600/mo. 811 Penln . blk to beech. Rmmte w1nted to shr 4 Br PenthOUN Btyfront Sul· ger. 185 Buoy. $850/mo. $826. Children OK. seoo. 6-48-5092 delly 11 to 8. 1 Br. new carpal, newly eom• models. Pool, Spe, 673-3355 patio. ape, $350 pr wk condo, Npt 8lulf1, $240. 11. parking, p1t101. 559'-1033, M&-8287. 851-1142 k OaLwoo... painted, $416/mo. plus G 'Im . s IU n •• •I c 855-1743. 673-9384 720-0572 673-1003 Br. 2'/•B•. Bae Bay a w $200, utu pd, no pete. 9 Cozy 2 bdtm. 1 be., t>ea· ---------3 Bt. 1~ 8a. garege, fncd 3 Bdr 2'Ai Bl townh<>me, 1re1. Chlldren ok . larM pool. ldeel lor quiet m•· 846-081 · med cetrs, Patio, G•· BAYFRONT PVT BEACH N.B tux condo. Herbor IEWPllT 1001 yard. 245 E. Wllaon. l9m rm, patio, AIC, up-s 1 o o o / m o Ag t ture W<>f'klng couple 5360 Bech. furn. Pool, reg•. Npt Heights No Balbo• Penln. Jull corn-Ridge, tit''/ shr, straight EJ!ee. offlcet 11000 n 10 "95/mo. 04&-3027 no gredtd, pool, tennf1, 842-3850. ~ ......... /le. 548-7089. •P• 18992 Florlde p111, $525. 645-1682 pitted · labulou1 view 1550. 752-9•42 dy1. 1850 ti). Allrlcilw W9ll calll alt I. parll, evall. lmmld. GOLF COURSE VIEW ....... .,...., Lge 2Br 2b• condo. Nr 842-2834, 842·3172 Large Blull1 condo, 2 Piii prk'g. Spac 2Br 2ba 640"2434 eves. m1ln1aln1d bldg. Nr E/Slde 3 br, 2 ba, lge encl. $8&5/mo. 689-1543 Big Canyon .prof. dee. 2 880 Irvine So. Cat. Most ulll p~. Near beach 2 er. 11,; Be bdrm. a-ba. 2 cer gar plu/o convert. den. alps 6· Private entrance. deck, Hoag Ho1pllel, c11pat1, bacll y11d, lrplc. 1750. 11111• Ill .ll&tlll aty. 2 br, 2 be+ den, din. (at 16th) A/C, pool. sp1. $67S. crptt, drpe, bit-Ins, lrpto, with opener. Greenbelt. =~sl:'::V-752"9511 or private path, meln kit· mlnl·bllnd1. Otdlceltd ~0-3ee& Twnh• ON GOLF COUR· rm. Agt 6-42-1183 • (714) 845-1104 832-1786 enclld gerege. S5801mo. eay View Secluded P•· chen to lhere Female pr11·g. Prof. enlltronment $325 28r HOYMI SE. Spot level, 2 br. den. ··-1 ·-· ·-· ....,... .... ""· N s c Pl 38r 2ba Ctll 538-0921 Ito $875. 830-0645 CdM. A111U Aug I, com-pre I err. d L. gun. • quiet ., ... 645-3323 ·-fH t•t-l1H 2'At ba. lie, xlnl view. ~~.~ ••••••• '!.~ 700 6 S r. · a.ta. • N-"'---· 3Br. 281.1.......... pletely furn 38r home Beach $425/mo 1ncld1 _d)'I _______ _ -· • $975/ Al/Ill Segt 1 1 1 th t. upper. decll plllo, pool, ARLINGTON APTS. ,,,_,..,, ....... Short walk lo bch urns Otyl Mike Rossetl mo. · ill-4'2. • '325 Ren11 1 br dplx (Dover at 16th) children/ pet1 olt. $650, Quiet, spacious town-gerege, 2 bike to bch, 1500/wkly plus dep 7141640-3225, EvH Share new office IC> wtlh 2 Br 1ba, $500 plus ulll.. 754-7900; eve !fll 14 chlld pat. Avail now (7 14) 642-5113 873-8086 or 645-3886 house 2 Br. 1'At Ba. Neer yrly 673-2571 . 673·8349 499-4264. us nur Dyer. SIA up to C':0113,no garage. £••••• lebi '141 THE BEST let 539-6190 I Br, $390, 110111/ relrlg/ beach. S 5 2 5 /mo Lido baylronl, yrly leate. 3 1 700 tq. II. Prefer Ina. ---------••'••••••••••••••••••• Jecuzzl, Pool enhance 1 N Ad 1 , 960·8856 DUA NllT "Laguna Charmer" 2 blka brkr or almllar office uN. 1111 I PITS H EMERALD BAY. 3 Br. 2 1tyll1h 2 br condo, pvt ~~W.oB:.''s.a.:5',:P·· DELUXE 3 Br. 2 Bl In ~~~l·s:1~ ,vd;3LI~~ $1200 mo 111all 8/4 to lrom Beach 2 BR house. 714/~9-2120 2 Br. 1 Ba. Wlll11de. B1. frplc. brick Piiio with gtrage & more 2Br. 2Ba. completely furn. • Pl bit I 675-3551 $12507mo 1012182 • Exec~t111e 3 S3•0t mo 1st & last. Newport Center Olllce ••75 19• 11500. 213/ $480. Cell the BEST 11nen1. dllhel, etc. Nr AYUWU llWI · u . · na, crpte, bdrm and den, ocean 497•2621 s-. . 1167..,, 11 . 4""" -· 876-2255 H H Wiii ·"on hk-upe, drps. dbl ger 2 B 2 8 i ---------1 .. ~ ...., .... 4 Br. W..ilkle, big lncd · , .. 63M190 oag o~. .,, 1 bdrm, carport, pool, lrplc $6~0 No pell lmmae r • nr L do view. •rsnls. pool, spt Pro 11s11 on a I M 11 e olllcH. Lge rec.pt. rm ywd. hHleft I Mrw lfi mJ. t 3Zfl ~~2S43 ~Tnawer "l~ l1undry. No Pets Bike to 5•0-4484 ett 6 M·F ~g·;:i:1~8~~16rs.Jogil· •93·82 9 Straight, non-smoker, · aupply rm, Telex & word Alli ebou1 ln11t1tment OClAN VIEW. 2 bl, 2 •• !! ••• !'!.,!•••••••••• #281, 6'42·•300 24 hrs. 819eathchSlt.14C~~/mo. 931 W DELUXE 2 Br 2 B1. In Laguna Bch Cottege • 2B5·38W. to •,haret 3B ~'j ~I procenor lecll. $1.00 plant lrpc $1150 mo Incl w1ter Oerege lhop dbl 1h1rp 2 .., 2Br, 1'Ai8e T'1Wnhae, din Woods Cove. 3Br. lrplc, 8 · aterron a 1 • P • r •II· M r Green Agent 682·1700 780·8378 · br, c~untry llltch, pvt 1 E!R, quiet, pl/I, prop on 141•0412 ;',;:,•e:nc::;gisg.ar~'~::u~1!: rm. 2 p1t101, btlcony, wlk to bch. $500/wk may consider female. &44-9800 3 bdrm 2 ba 2 car gar lncd $470. Kid• llnt. bey. Blka to bch. G1r, $525 N 1 5•0 4484 garage, no pete $600 495-0571. 494-6942. _9_60_·2_•_7_1 ______ 1 2no floor walll-up omc.. lerge Yard. s7zs. ' W•••• •l•stJ 3111 BEST lee 539-6191 $-495. 673-8338; Specious 2 Br, 2 Ba. new · o Pl s. • mo tit, Int + dep. •114-0349 Newport Beach townhou· $1504250/mo. Carpeta, 173-30•8 ••'•••••••'••••••••••• "-~·-'-' ~2-teee. DI• 1 BR, crpt1. drtpes. good all 8 M-F. 642-211•9 eve1/wknda 11 fully rurnlahtd Fe d apes penellng CdM ---------1LAKE PARK • FoxgloY• ...--••• quiet, pvt, ~ on bey. eastslde location. Deluxe poolside x1r1 large lor eppt. Vu•liea •••1'114ZSO male 25-35 Own bdr~ 7;2.1a3o ' · 11200 mo. Plf1 lum. & Mdl. 1v111 Sept 1. $800 U~'-tahAH 3415 Blk• to bch. Oat. 1-495 1-475/mo. Mature edulll 2or. 2 b•. bttns. d1Whr. c;ce;,;.;;,;,0;..T·.;4·;-9; and be Pool. 1ennl1 poolhouN, 5 Bdr, 3 Ba. mo. on 1 yr IN. Comer •••• ;::••••••••••••••• 673-833e only. S.. Mlntgtr 147 11.+ mites beach. Adulte WestcllH wu. xtre large 1 court •n1 S•25 mo y, pool, 836 Prllldlo tot w/vlew, 2Br. dtn, WESTBLUFF VILLAGE E. 18th. St. ••4", C.M. no Piii. $500/mo: Br. 1p1, pool, patio & Avall now. Weel\I~ thru · ..... · ' IHl6-5306, 031-7370, vaulted cell~•· lg metr C.M. Nr new 2BR. 1'.+ Inti L••H• 3111 S 3 B 2 B FR 538-8382 carport. 645-8.162. summer. 673-7873. uUI. 640-6004 881-7822 bdrm. 2435 8orr1110 BA, lrg na1., pool $650. ••••••••""•••••••••••• 820/mo. r. a. . . C d-.. 2 B 3 $250/mo. Avell. immedi1----------1 Court. 831-2230 or 876-011S ttr1C1l11e Studio. tm· Clean. freshly p11nted, lewly lt4Htreft4 Ble~. ':cpg~""s130/° le•l•ll II Si•t• 4300 te~ Coate Me11 near Nk:ie Eattakie 3 Br large pt--.A female non good ne6ghborhood a. rp '"""""' mo. •••••••••••••••••••••• S Pie .. 860 .. 9180 =...... fncd . ~ .... 1-323-1tt0 N~I Terrace, 3 Bdr •• ::k;"', Ce"''-rv.' .....,,,....·. Agent. no lee 871-2299." 2 bdrm, 2 bl, no pe11. 957-3177. I 117 ltt••lft i--·--~------1 ....... ,__ F I ..., _.. .,,. .... ~~ amall child oll. 1315 mo MI F I It\ cond /mo. $300 clap. lie> Wh ,.,.., 1111 150/mo. am ly pr • w/d, bacti llltch, c1ean 2 bdrm twnfi11. 1'At b 1168-9174 Rimi IUOllJ tlT Cont1c1 largut Gay o r o. ocean peta. 045-5527 ···~··•••••••••••••••• red. 6-45-3785 bed, prlwte entranc., garage, patio. '4ll5. Nr Mlvir II TllAY Mlle F1m11e Mf"lllc4t In v I e w • 1 m 1 n 111 •1 · 130 OflWller.2br+den, rllPld pool,spa.tennll,welkto 191h & Pomona 38r,281211y,btlne.lrplc, H So Cllll 5•0--6716• $350/mo Incl ullll. 1~k:~ e-g~ dr8fi:: lrplc, ale, pvt dock. ,.,,:: 3IZS bMch, Oii• guerd pree-548_8357 2 blkt to bch. $780 mo. WATER 6~~ NT -30 • lor~eou• 2br. 2b1 condo 1_64_2_.,._69_1 ______ , $825. 3244 Idaho Lane. ~ 1~;~ 1 · 81:: ;9oJ O · •••••••••••••••••••••• ltge lftl. 1350· Avell. E lid 2 B 1 B Avell lmmed. 5•0•1077 2Br duplex nr Udo VII· w/pool. spa, 1menlt111. C.11'1.fl /er •••14350 557 ... Sfi 545-2428 ~.:~. 559....21• or N E w p 0 RT c RE s T Sept 1· 493-~90. ~~ •• ,.. r. ne!; Im.. 3144 I I II )(Int toe Nr SC Piii ••••••••••••••••••••• Eu llde BR Ba t TWNHS. by bctt. 4 br, 3 achooll no pell •• •••••••••••••••••••• t&~8s ~~·fs~·50g ..!t~o':ii ?CC, Ftoi.r 662·22•7 elt Gerege wanted for small I 4 1 • 111111•• "''~ •-1 ba, w/d pool lee Ianni. Ai,.mt ti . . Orangetree Condo 2 Br 1 d ....... , 675 ""52 4 & wknd .. or 979-• 180 sports c:at. vie Oakwood uwd. 23e~ta M ... t. .,,. <1-• • • • •• S450/mo. 631-0155. 81 pool. s6oot mo ........ ,. """ "' Gardens No. 645-7278 1 ••••••••••• •••••••••• 2'11 car gat9ge. 1 'If· tea· lff-1--1-L~ ta60. 675-1594 HOME FOR RENT ... $1300 mo. NHd ••• ~'!!~!!'::'........ 2 ••• 1 I& 857-8087 Tracy. +LUX. Jr 1 br Versallles, p~ Btu~~~~ATR:GE SINGLE GARAGE FOR Seating Down? StlrtlnQ out ? Lower 0111rhe1d malnleln lmao-. ofllot 11 Regency Center, Exec IUllM In Newport nr AIT- port. fully equipped &. 111ll1d lor •very buel• nest need. lndlv olllcll mo/mo. from $375. 833-9970 lief Int•• ..... II MICArthur & Jembo-' ,.. lnterMCllon. LOYlly gerden 1tyl1 building. 820-1200 IQ ft. Monttl to. : month avlll. Call Sendy , • 1 '4. 8 3 3. o 8 2 o or· 213-820-8857 •• EiC::,.~ d~~.e~·,,:;, ~o=·.~~a,:9: ~•3mj•_Y5~101~~2;.~!!~ ~.~!!!!~ ... !.'.!! :i~~;::~· s:,~.::cur~~ 3P~;io.1'!,~~ t~~~th~7;: ~~~~~a~"o~r· ::~~gs:c~ ;,~~~.s~~~~1~2~MB~~ :J~:,~g3:-'b':2~'· CM. prlY•I• P•llo. I S.5/mo. geregH. Kldl & plll 875-7977, 673·2336. Yrty 2 bdrm, I ba. Deck, pats. Woodbridge So. LlkM, $ 4 9 5 . 6 4 0. 0 4 3 7 . 9PM 1---------1 so. LAGUNA. 3 Arch Bay. 380 18th. Pl. 851.g522 welcome. 5'45-2000. ,.. __ 11 M-· ""'"'···tttul 2 br. ldry. No pats. $650 Cell Beth 631-5230 pools, tennis. $775 mo. 760-a390 Ollit• l••l•l 4400 500 IQ tt with~ hwy A~t no ,.. vu. ·-~ •1"' ""•9 .u• 01n1 Pt 111-Condo • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• •• • 97 51 LAaae/OP11on. dtllrable ' 2'Ai ba, dbl attechtcl gl· v ..-u.-•2 BR. Duplex 1-475• Call Denny 645-2018 2 Br. 1 Be. Steps to WOITIYI Simi lllllblllty. 4 • M ... Verdi 1111, 4 8'. 3 LMM Miiiion Viejo, 770 rana. $775. ,_.M-0363. 1.t·•L-. N-p·'nt, l1r9! ~•·.. we1kd1y1: 546-5833 'besch $625/mo. PRO· for 3 mo • master 1ull1 RV NE Ph •••-M ... Id "'-' • -'... -.---°' .,,......, & p E R T y H O U S E with trplc, pool. •P• I I one 1n1we· ._., .... _ Ba, pool lmmee cond ..,r ..,.,. ..... go. ....... pello 2261 "A. Pomona. -wtmds. 9 1 1 11 pd 11300/mO. 522-0332 .,; view. pool, spa,. Br. n. A-"-atl tualdH , •• i. • .i1 3101 645-949• ,, ••• •-... L 3141 642-3850. ~2-1010 1-496-2661. 844-953 ~~~·'lc:.",vsr.m~.~~ •110' dWPMT am OPM Of wt!nd• ea. 11•001mo. Owner .• .,.....--;;............... •••••••••••••••••••••• 'I. -·· .., With UH of reception •• ------· ---No pet1. 855~0830 all ~ 2 bdrm, 2 ba ,,_ dplx. Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. crpl/ •• ••••••••••••••••••• Sia Cl••••I• 3111 IAtture L•g'I 10 ~hare desk spece •15olup. conl. room. kllch, phone, 0... 111•1 3111 8PM '-J ••01 '/fly. Mature non-amllra, drp1. nr/OCC. no pelt , IOWFlllT •••••••••••••••••••••• home In °811 118 5•o-97•5 aecretsrltl & WOfd pro-•••••••••••••••••••••• · 1ea .. 1a I ,.,. no petl. 1760 x 3 $550. 751•3898. Moat elegent ept. bldg. Near new 1 Bdrm. 1pt. Move In Sept 111. $325 520 " Sl 00 --·• Malt & 3 Br sg1 level. beeu11ful • ..,..,, lf•tl 3111 •••••••••••••••••·2·9; 2131799-4195, 257-9792 In Llgune Beach. finest with bunt-In•. cerpetlng plua 'At urns. 5•0·•979 SQ • • per sq -no. mMUOI let beadl •• -.-..-••••••••••••••••• Beaut. custom 2 Br 1 & 2 Bdr trslle<s, 1200 & locttlon In town, bfNlh-& drepes. leundry laclflty. Btwn 6·9PM. It • 3975 Biren., N.B ""'· •viii. seperattly If ~. -::;. M from S::,~ Tll lltFFI blk . •o beach. spire I '450. 2 Br. utll. pd. 410 up &. $150 tee. No chit· talllng view$. Ill bulll·lne, under roof carports and :em Rmmte, 1 blk !torn Agent ~1-5032 g:::'td. ......., . $6t0. 493-3349 · 3 br, 2'4 ba. prof. dee. :lll~•a ~~1~·1':91/°,; ~~ :::.1~7.1~~boa. No dren Of dogs. 133 E. h 1 1 1 e d p 0 0 1. polu~llc t1nnl11g;o~~ ~ beacfl. resp, $226 111 & 1617 Weatclltt, N.8. 266 714nao-o 1oo """1 am• n 111 e I . I 1250. 1 12001mo. 673-9384 •fl 16th St. IP. 42, CM 1ub.-garage. 11e111tor. g course r 1 """'' n tut. 931-5568 evet. to 4000 lq. tt. 111 noor ,,..,. V.Un "" 52M983 6 2BR 1BA yrly. adults. no •2BR ··20 8 ...... Le ... only. $850 & up. property. Close to eve-Agent 5• 1-5032 lff10I wnrmam ••••••••••••••"'••••••• · pats. $800 mo. Incl urn. 1 N. -· earn .....,. 330 Clllf Dr. 494.8083. rythlngl 1395/mo~th . \Ion amkr, 3 BR condo, 1---------1 Pool Seettere grab this 3 QC-RENTALS C.,.., lel #11 ,1U Agent 873-8880 Ing. o pet•. A111U1ble August 15. one furn, $200 mo. & ,,., utll. L1wy1r1 Oroup 1u11 Sr. 2 Bah~ In lamlly 1·5br'• 1200 to l200() •••••••••••••••••••••• 2265-0 M~le 845-949• ., ... ,, ... ti 3111 or two adults only & no s160 dep. 964-3654 HB. :0111~ out. ?!;P~':~· eree. '595. Lots 01 xtru. 750-3314 open 7-dl'JI Oceen 11l1w. beaullfully Y~ leale 1 Br. 1•90. 2 BR 2 peraona, ... -..-................. pets. Cell owner et (7141 nr OCC r•P• • pent • BEST 1 .. 539--6191 EASTBLUFF: 3Br, 2b1. furn. townhou11, lrplc, /mo. Sa'Ymge. Wiide ~Ito 325 J. 17th Pl. NO FEEi Apt. & Condo 642--0138 ~ .. pon1lble rmmt C<™. ~· .. '~ s::.;:~oF~ . lu..,.. Avlll Now. s12001mo. pool & patio. 1895/mo. 'Co. 07s-eaoe e.46-St37 aft 11AM rent:~U:~2 ':1o':'.!. Saal• Aa• 3UO S325 plus u1111, pool, .,,..,~-1002 Buch Blvd .• ....,} 3140 M0-9019 873~· C.... '-J Ill.I JIU EASTSIOE. Lg. 2 bdrm In •••••••••••••••••••••• lrptc, carport Av1ll Aug ~;::'"'° _.,. t79-e889 Of ~144. •••••••••••••••••••••• CHI• .,,, 1114 •••••••••••••••••••••• 4/plllt. Prlv IUndlCk end '" llSEIYI m 1 Br Apt. CIOM to 17th. & 15th. 720-1495 ./ 11 .. -0C-RENTALS 28r 2b1. pvt ~Ir. IPI. •••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br, 181 Cotulge. $650 ger $510 Adltl not NEW 0,:1ed 20 To n Mein. $325/mo. ./r.,. _.__, H11bor & Baker, 2•0 eq. 1-5br'1 $200 to $2000 Modern. lots o llorege, O&Sl IE llO mo. Incl 1111 uUI, g,1reg1, ""'la· · • w • 836-0706 Newport Beech loll lor ./ ,,.. .. ,.._ II . prl11111 1n111nce. • 750-3314 open 7-daya w1lk In cloae11, 2 cu lrplO patio 1v1U Sept 1. .--· home ILLAGE COM· rent Femny 11mo1pner1 ./....,.. ,.._.,. S200/mo. Sierra Mgmt. prk'g, Wiik to bMch (1 ALL UTILITIES PAID 552..0300 • 752-2650 MUNITY. 2 & 3 Br. 2'A s..,. ,,, ••• , '"' Full use of hOuM. Near 6'41'·132• 5 81119 to ocelln. Elegant 2 Blk) 1750 Incl utll. A11all I B G den A t I & Bl. 1600-1800 aq, 11 of ••••••••ill• .... ••u••• pool & p1rk Rent Incl ---------8'. FamMy Rm & Den. 8 /20, 900-58 44 or Compare before you NEW CONDO. $900. r. 81 P · 1 ove pure luxury. GeregH, 2 bdrm duplu, VIEW. utll 1375 mo 759.0780 •uan1 .. Ill 4411 1850 Mo. Plulh crpt1. 645-177 1 (Iv meg) rent. Custom design Ocean I/few. 1 Bdrm, "'mrN>. ~~~ 1377.pell. •P•• In every home • pr1v1te t>eacl\, no smllrs. •••••••••••••••••••••• 2'Ai Ba. Cedar l glan., !Mtures: Pool, bbq. lrplo. modern kltehtn. m1111r suite. dining $625 499-3758 Lrg NB home, Prof M . *llLID tlFICU* R91tll ''°" 11 2150 A~ :::.*.u1iy"~11~y~ •e~:.~~~.~unll. =·'!.,r'i: :'~:! :r.osS;'· 87 3- 3271 °' 1i!'i.clttn' ~~im~ ~1~~;::c.:.0~,c~~:;!~: A,.tt•••llhnl1iH ~:'~~=r352t3~,:~·:. From 1roomto3rooms. ~~·o=-14~am~ 1 No pets. lnqul,. •t 527 2412 Vista Hoger. No ping. No peta. 2 Br. 1 Ba. lrplc, micro· S.8-9950. ovene, prh11t1 patio• & ., U•l11• 3IOO 631-1266 = ~~~~r:i.'1af· 1:~ Office and Leboretory , 18th. St. INI0-0331· P 1 It· I 8 5 O · mo· 1 Br. !Urn. $515 waw. $700. can 2 Br. 1'h Bl, prl1111e Pl· yerds,gerdener provl· •••••••••••••••••••••• Miiter Bdrm, be, wlk·ln porter Inn. 2172 Dupont IPICI ·up to 7500 eq ft. Nr BCH 2br home w/huge 760-1573· 465 W. WlllOo 6'42·1971 875-7697 110. no pata Avail. now. ~;c',;,1~~~:~~ IUWllD clout Nr beac h & Cah AM 833-3223 MS-2111 Ask IOf Joi gw, sunMI & P•llo. '430 WllTOUff lltVI NEWPORT VILLAGE If-fl .. ,., ••1·~ 1526. 1552 B Elm St. lalatld. 1 mlnutea to S.C YILWE Ad• m • · P 11 t. Y 1 rd 1-•y Ha-C..•trrill OC-RENTALS 750-3314 4 Bdrm 3,L ... th, 2 _, ......... llUI ... ......., .,..1 ...,. ,.1 -"' 646-3827 no calla 1tt 8. Pl O C .,1 I N 1•2 bd I . $250/mo. 960·7874. s"r--,. .,. ,_ -· --r..... . •••••••••••••••••••••• 1z1 or . . ... rpor 1w "' rm uxury 960-8030 Eicecuttve olflcl In c an-Int.Ii 441$ Clean 3 Br. 114 Ba. lencd old Paoeaetter executlv9 Petlol & dec:tt, gu & wtr 1 A. 2 ... I .. , •IOITlftl./ftlfr• Juel eut ol Newport eptt In 14 pl1n1. 1 Bdrm VIII s4501 0 •••••••••••••••••••••• yard, nMI' beach. hOml with Hbrary, lemlly pd. pool & llUnl, tennis Newty decor Gu pd Blvd. & so. ol Sen Diego from $515. 2 bdrm from HouHmate wanted tor nery 11,1· m · "'10I. S. 1876/rno. Deya only room. torm11 dining eris, und, 11olteyblll crt, encl g•r c!Mnr • poo1' 1 Br. encled. b•lcf'I· Fr w y . I 11 o o I mo . S570, TownhouH from 2Br home In Col~ Pk, Broker 87 •4912 In ,_ bldg on Cout 97~5120. Mr Taylor. room end 3 llrepleCll. ~ ~1B~e,:i,~~3ol4n?:. bbO. Ad~lll, no pa11: =~· 1!i~~~~~~· q~t 631·5•39, 2473 Orenge $840 + pooll, tennis. C.M. $336. Call A 1ltter WEITllllllTll Hwy, South LAguna. Ap- AANCH HOUSE ON-HILL 12100 mo. or ..... op-~ 557..()()75 S.~·6013. tingle. No Pelt. Water & A111., Costa M9N, w11erf1ll1, pondsl Gii •2611. 642 ... 300 24 hr1. 1200 or 2400 sq. tt. De-proJC. 500 eq. lt. Ext* ~now. Nu crplfpt. ~ioe~all •gent 11 spec1ou9 2 er 181 1425 gupd.1375mo. Spac.3 8R28a.fplo,gtr, ~o:ldcoFrk~::,"s'e:~,~~~ Frmmte20-28wentldlor luu office or store lent prl111te parlllng llldl/peta. $750. •utUflf• 3 Br. 1in ·8 .. ·1475: 145£.11th 645-2708 beach2blks,$1k>Oyrly. F ·di N rthon 2 o r apt In lriil ne spec..14302& 1430• bahlndl>ldg.$S25mo 131~20. EAST8LUFF 1500 eq. rt. 3 JtMj 3140 Lau~ lee.. pool. 2 Br. wlgtr. '450. Crptt, No pats. &45-1682 ~:lh 1~ ":cF•~den 10 '300/mo. 867-8551 Beach Blvd. 81wn 2 Turner Aa8oc:. 414-1177 Br. 2~ Ba. lrplc, 2 cer • •••• •••••••••••••• .... .,5 F~. CMc Ctnltt Vil-~-2 BR. HOUSE '495 • • • ---weter pd. $500/mo. 1 Br. 1 B1 1pt, Se aw Ind V 111 • g • Prof F 25-30 to lhr 2 br. 2 1101 Shopping center. /Mulrlll ... ,al., Kid• 09! ok redone ~'i'Y w.=:: :::!.i:"n!;: ll.l.'t FllEIT 1410/mo. :z Br. 1 Ba. ept., 1571 "A" Orenge enc•l•d gerage, lndry (71•)893·5198. be CdM apt w/lrplc & Pr1me 1ocitloo. 919-88~9 •••••••••••••••••••••• rt• bit-Ins fncd nt bch borhood. 840-935<> deya. belmtd c.lllng, laundry 1-5 83~120 lac., cloM to beach. Cit I 4 ger. S331 mo. Nonsmkr. or 660--01.w N,.,e .• 03,971511Blfch1. M·l~oneqe.· BE8Tfee53M190 e>--leflEatate LIYl-1 pool A It J ly Call of<. nod""'•· .... 573-1775, 033-9887 . "• 780-83'8 91/M. Mr. Begg ..._, ... rm.. · 111 · u · ... •••••••••••••••••••••• N Alrpor1 trM • bee. Su4-AQ«lt 541-5032. 139011br. be9t tingle'• Eu1bluff exec OCMn City 8Nu1JIUI plrt·llll• tur· for app1. 2 BR 2~ b• duplex. 1eoo TSL Mgml. 642· 1603 Pool, t•nn11, lakt, club, lllClY IM. From 22$-450 eq 11 padl Yd • 09! & pool • view, pvt pool, Jee •• 3 '~en Tin'= TSL Mgmt 842-1803 eq.tt. ol twcury. Every LIDO DELUXE 2 Bt. lrplc washer/dryer, l\Jll El TOfO M/F 1nr 3Bdrm twnh.. $1 I*' lq. tt. Meny lCt;..: S750 up. 2180 ft. lndU· you. 63M1to ""·,.. Bdr, 2~ Ba. din rm. fem ~........ C1eina'. $530/mo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. !!.'!.t ~~2 gar, fncd yd. Ilg b(lck patlO OR. Adtte. hOUM prlY ~ u1111. $280 Pool Fnt Valley, ctoee to Cell 557-7010 llr1al . Of'lloe. 18101 ,._ bttutll 1 ltlM s~ rooms.. Sep• Townhou ... cer Port•· ..,_, -·teee 11050. t75-e359. 111. & tut. ~ IY schist trwy. 13so+ utll. dondo Clrcl• I M & T ~•••••••••••le.f s~5oo. ~J3"' . rs1e dining .... Wllk•ln patlol, Ill blt4ns, 1007 luttHW a.t * BAYFRONT * meg. 964-5303 lite..,.., OlllTIYI 111111 ;,u2~;~.ton, a .. ch . LUIEIU . 810 CANYON TWNHSE cloael1, hOIM Ilk• kllch-tm, '""" pat olc. Won I Total pl'lvacy. N~ 1 PVT SUITE/OARAOE EASTSIOE CM, Private Live on ooean In NB. 181 Dov«. NB. ~1-3&51 3 Bdrm dltact'9d homea on Big Cnyn Oolf Cour•, en & cabinets. Wilk to lull bdrm, gar. ..25. No RESPONSIBLE N-SMKR unfurn. room a bath. MIF to lhr 28r •Pl Prof otflot 111eoe In Npt .... WAlllHll In excellent.,... AY811ao-2Br, 28a + den, prof Huntington Center. TSL Mgmt. 6'42·1803 pata.. 759'191•. $750/Mo. 073-1521 Bel Utlla. Incl .. relrfO,. la15 vriy .... 7&0-e510 Center for 1ttorney o; Appro• 2000 sq It. Nr ble tmmedlattly. dtoorattd, b11ut1fully 1 Bdrm-tum, '505 Aft. 5, 6-42~221 873-5788 llPM ~ef>.!73.754,, betw" Sunny CdM twnhll evall OV\er prol ... ton.i UM Crown Vlllly Pkwy. & MOO/mo on 1 ~ leMa. lnd1opd, pvt 11nnl1 & 2 Bdttn-fum from leo6 Flreplaot, pool, di~ ,__ •...Jal 314~ · to eht w/11m 25-3011h, of rte•Pllonltt, Xero•. FOfbel Rd., Mlal6oft ~ .,,._ ot'"-•o ..........__ ..,,._,,.,,, , ....... 11.....,. ..... , 2 Bdrm TownhoUM rum. wutltr ,,... P•llo X LG ~ UYJ "' 1 bloclt fr .._~ ... W/~, 2'"· 1'"''"• ...._.~d-llW 11:-7.:.AYlll lmfntd,, )0 (714) 545-0211 ~ ..... ' .... ~ • .,.... ... , ....... 9WfiJ fJ'\N ''"" f 0tn le71 • 1 ,....,,, • •a•A •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ~f D'f, nu.,. Jf'VV"-t rn, [~l'~ -m ~7._1r9q. °'~!aet7 .. !!'!* r Gerdln 2 Br. ........ 28 or older. 1215 mo, 11 3 blk• 10 bOh. mo call IOf 1111. Mllckl °' 1300 eq. 11. 1426• • eao ..., -...-. 557-2041. a.1u1. No pete. M0-8818 + 14 utll. PIHH cell Art 7 1•195~21'11 1800 '""·ft. 1571 No pats. an 1 ~ \\bod•r•d-3 yr old. Npt Ht•. 3 Pkt• Utllltlel F,...I NEW BREED APT&. • • • WO(l(lng female 26 10 40 Conlllt wit 041~·1 or EJl<*!fn1 Otfloee ~ Up to Front office, fer~ ,.., ,,. loft or 48r, 3 ba. Frml din 1 Br a loft, Frple, rec ~L AS~ non amolle. '4 blk bch. hmlmeg 7eo-ef59 40QIJIQ fl. 1801 Newport dOOr. t77t Whittler A-... Reihl rm, firm, •12t0. Qrdnr. I.A QUINTA Hl!AMOSA 1~, pool, epa, gae I ~' 1.~ NB. SSOO. 875-1708 ell 4 SELi. ldl• Items with a BMS, 0.M. &411-2111 Alk De~40·tH2• Ew .. 5SJ·3000 Op 1 n 8 111 S u n • 16211 Plftlaldt LI\, 1 blk w;11r peld. NO 1)911. H3 VI l.&OuM furn rm, pvt bl, o.lly pllot Clutlfltd Ad lor Joe M 1 10 f'\•>.lrvlltf 04M719, 131·21n w. Of a..ctt, a bike a. ot Httnl"on. C 1\4. ~ non-amllf, 011., 40, TV. • --"--' HURRY! 3rm w/PoOI Lg Edlngw.... t-•••1 845-441'. p o o I . 8 u I I P r o f. IBTM.I C'· cuta kltch. "OW .._ OffktC>fl" 494-0451 1 '0 t.=a~11 oJ.~l!NTAI.& ?&0-.33t• La.. .. .._. 11fl WV&atfteld Luxurious 11duh & family livine In an all -M-1F_t_o_1_h_r _3_b_r -ho-u-....... , i---------1::'1'·":'::'··············· ••a-· ......, cn11ntry u.Hing. I, 2, & 3 Bdrms. ltncad, !/Sid• C.M. f or ..... 0t ..... option Coiy L.-Trwtop tipt, _._.,_,.,. '"~ "" """ s1ao & dap. Marlen ta,IOO mo or MI0,000. taetudld. wooded YleM, ._,.,. ,-cMn -L Amenities Include: 831·7tH :,:,,.,~~ = ~11 ... •150 ~. ~:-...... , pe6cl •Ret.1Ga~ RMRt •Tot lottw~nbtlt~ -~--IOt-,.,,-l-'200---mo.--i ... ..-. ...... k CALI. ;llM Jodell modtl, nerbor • rf..... 1'I I lrt.~ ... -* Oi(hwt1~hfr1d1 posal * PatiotsundeC ~1""43t, e...2.5091 ,..., aorgeoue "'-· ly 9'.Vf!:.............. * "· Wlllof\ a'~ .... l nd ' I 1 "'* Jeo;.1en v....-.. lrO 2 1r 2 aa "*"""° c111n. 2 It. 1,,. '* Orape-Ycar~tlng • ~u ry tat• 11es 1 er 11Ai be COndO, pa1IO. 1 penttiouM. roomy kMCfl., ea.· MfO ,..,_,, 111111 * Rtcreation room *Air conclitloninR Cw g«. Pool/ape. t700. din rm, fyplo, bMut. Wlw pefd. "81nga. 2 emall C-,,_ ... -f-L...:.... • .J...o.t--. T• W. "!!11,.'!!Jt/f ••• I.~ .. ""•11111. Mtw,.,..... MW evell. P " 4 t 1 • 4 2 0 I O r of ~. YW ..... ....,,.,. oil, no peet, """" ...,. .., ,...,.. "' WM -IMI ______ ,.... 1 lfS.11M '800. IMdlidef. tMD W.._ .. 2-4ICll Y• loap to 1011-*r a.. In tnlnt. (Ill; A"80" VllW HOMH '47'. 146-Mf1 tlOO/MO. I Ir. J IL ... °"9tcwcilltd,4tldml.fwn a. 1k IMO mo. 'Ir • ....., ..,..., pdo, rm, pool. l•"Pttonel 2k 8150 mo. Aoroee 9'plo, lndfy fllilG.o .,... lt40 I up. Cotof TV. "'°'* In '""'· 1174 ......... """'·QM. .... ,441 rtntet l1SIO mo from bell. hpt.Junt. °" ,,... • IN4414 (113) ..... uu Tl&. Mgm1. ....,. '· Ju t by sending address and· by wat~hlng for yoar name In the classified ads of tile o a Uy enoc.. Win llcktt to the circus. &rf'tA 111nUMment eurac 11uM or tpqc"'tlftl ~H•nl• Ju1t 1111 out thl1 coupon •nd moil ii tod•) tt> IM l -------"'°' lllM08 '11 ...... 14H "INALD'I '"•· orlnll ...,.,.:~...,,"' ·MC MOVIHCl -•OHOOl: O,INl"fO UMl10 Quldt, I~,,.. M4 •lllMnM °'**• o.eM ...... ''"· tlT ..... later • .,~ '1'99.-m1y1 -~10 Howl l1H mo. Open -- -TAAVIL.IMCI? •• 1--· ffiifli. •••.•••..•••.. 00 IT HOWi ..... , .... Your ()ally Piiot kVIOa Directory 81\tmpOO I..._,,, Glean. e xte nded oare. Nr H.,..T.,.......•lell ltudl lhtvt>lnet.. ~~•••••••• H? '' -· Oolor bflQfltenere, wllt YorktOwf'/lrooktuuet, Llo:~•·N2-1Mt Tr•~ A081H'I Ol.IANlt«I WelHlno'*n Maee couple In . Yfl _,, MOtNL.I lllWtCa .....-..nal ......... NB/CM fl42-t612 l tlOAM·IPM. lol\oo l w .. •t~MINlllo Lftn.lr_. .__...._,_ '"·LINO YOUR HOU• T:re-; .. ..,, ~ - etple • 10' min, t>letcll, .,!H~,!8,!(!'11~·!l !l40!!1!4!11~~ jlff;ii;J ____ 1 . ~ oar-."°'°'*"'O ler*9 • a tflol'OUINV a v a I I • at I e m I d • IW Mel Hall, llv/dln. rmtl1fl; avg = . ,,.. •tlfnate Ml-tOIS olean houee ~&'1 leptember lo lloUM alt No lme. nc>-tH3 ..._.,,. ._.._. room lt.eo: couch 110: C.11,,,,.,. .__II 0 oueuouuou•••• JOM1a C!Mnlne 1er*9 In Newport, Laguna, STARVING COL.LaU mn:a.11;...-..,. ••• crir '5. Guar. ellm. pet •••••••••••'•":':m•••• 1!1.!0HllCIAN-Prlc•d ~ Houeee-Apt .. fWIUlll Hul'llfnoton °' MeM. Wiii STUOl!INTS MOVING -,-,---11-t -1 -1-,-, -t-I -1Alatm Co. (Uc'd). leMttY odor. C"'t ,..,air. 111 yn AIMODIL/ADO-ONI rloht, frM ••tlm1te on •••• •""••••••••••••• OMcM. 540-1211 m•"•ge propertr.· P•Y CO. Uc. r 124 ... 38 ° 11 qua,~ ~ • 1 1 on, 1y1tem1 tor llome A ewp. Do work myHlf. & 0.rpentry. Uo'f . H laree or 1111111 )Obi. IXPIAT H.ANOYMNil 1>1111. forwatd tnel ' k"" lnlUred. '41•&427 Cl :. '92°.t"'.,':5rH. l>UllMM 8ec ~I A.ta. 1131"<)101 yrs exp. ltwln 54 .. 2111 Lio; 3Ma21. 173-035' Carpentry. "°°11~ Hiid ~ mlld or a h ... clean • ..,~ .. "'..... WATCH Ul!I O"OWI Mr v te 4 ev• .. 11m1t .. fr ....... &-MN ~tl11W ....... ., .. tit. HJ exc~!'o~~~.~~R! WAY CONSTAUOTION o~:r.·~~,~~::~~... ':.:·:::t:4~.int13 ~::p~PIH~-k~ re'~~ :'1e~':1~ lll•l'-t~J!~~~~ ....... fl!@.!ii! ........... . AnNll"-Owner/oper1tO< Llo~2-Ad:..~200 __ ,,... __ .. _1._ea_1_.10_1_2_T_o_m_, & home Improvement VleJo 8ervlo1 Agy. rlenced, ref1Tencu. ••••·,·.::'1'··, ... ·,;;;;;:;,•••• **8"YANT 8** 8!1MCE & All'AI" •••••••:TAoo••••••••• "-r-t upllol arM run _., ""'15231 0'1~. bonded by St. .. .... 4240 -·-WattooverlnO Removll Van Oppene ~Co DON'T MAD THIS .... ...... • • -· l!ILECT .. IOlAN . or Calif. _ .... _ .... _______ by Rlcllerd Sinor. Lie. All Typee. e.42·1:M3 (114) UMllO . Ufl/Ll$8 c~1 ... w::_1,u:r 1441'~· 8ml jobl/,...,alr1. Lio. Carpentry, Cabinet•. TIRED OF HASSLES? HMCle~ng. hOUM titting 280e4.4. 13 yra of "9PPY ,,, .,.,,,, .. ,. .., •• You're tired ol Bank ,r .. "t. Ren. pnoee. 233106-C-10. 1141-5203 ,itumb., Crain Cteanlng. & c:oolclng tor PIOf wo-looel Cl.lftomert. •••lf~~r.:e. ,.,,_ St1t1rnen11 or k"ptng 11-rmt'',,_,,_._._,. Ouel.wortc.Llo.~7199· • ._....,,_,_ !leot., Tiie, Aera. Rellabllcteantno"-!pla "*'·beetl.eto.Atlleble Tlltnll"""•,831,..410 •••:o·~a·p·: .. ~:T•E•:1··~··· •••••••••••••••••••••• Bualneu Record•. Call ~-~.--.'1.~:"/::!'aooo• 11131·2345 ~.'"' • ..-Aoo•••••••••• oee.GHV herel Reta. H0·?4fl2 14e.ea..o ,~ M:t.t pe~lt;;;;.. TILE INSTALi-20 ttw Aceutl .. People. CARPET & UPHL CL&A· -.. -------.-m-.. --1 HOUSECLEANING --------PAINTER NEEDS ALL TYPES All l<lndt Ouetlni.ed H&B Accounting Ser· .... N!R -·• TRiii H0-1239 8 ScandlflaYI Ledy Jul..W WORl<I 30 ytl ••P. Int/ Ref1. John 840-9217 vtoea. 3 rm1, .,,a, wood fir alt EAemodel8Tl .. "TES~~/3Com10"~ TGPl*S/removecl. CIMA Call for eml conetructlon. Expy'd ~2171 •••••••••T•E••,•••o•,•f•1•••• fx1er. Ac:oultlc celllnga. ,_S4_w __ 25_a ______ , Chuctc For Tiii Wortt .. 93• 5543 ..,.. ...., ••• I.Ip, I-...-. 781-3478 reptlrt, eleotr ... plum· • LOW AA · oet , Oavtt Plln1...,, M7·51M p• ""TEA PATCHING (714) 1148-7444 WOt,. ouar. ... Medlt•r.,,..,, .... , .... ..,... bl 315 Thorough Old·faall~ bidof. Vacendes. 1tt1p a "'V '"""' FrM e.t. Op 540-6188. Anlulf C1/ll-Anf11tJ1 Contt1\IC11o4' Inc. MOWING ·CLEAN UPS ng, yrt e>tp. Complete hMClelnl_np. w a 11 . etc. CH RI S HOUSEPAINTINO ~~=~~..'.;tt.::_129~~ Evt, wtcnda 875-6100 tt"~i"·-·~ .............. ..-...,.............. 549-1078 Ult fOf Joe Haullng ·Land~ C.,pentry. Muonry ~ Jan 53M199 714-teO-eSH In & out. Fr .. eet, frH Lnkf O(lv-~~~.!!~ P,rv~ ·~,~.O::f:: Free eat. e.42~9907 Roofing. P1umblng MA1os OF ORANGE co. '-'"•-'-eai1BNCe912-4118 !!~!!M~t. ................. iLowR-'reSi ... .. S~llt 131_.1ff"Llo a5t-ea1e f!~f!!.!~~.f. Jeuie'a Gardening D!'ywllll ·Stucco· T.._ Ouellty Teem CtMnlna ....... ~ .......... Int/Ext. lowut ratH, T rl ml & II "9P' ---------1 Kit Remod .• Olr8ln)c 1111. CIMn-upe, tree trim & Remodel J.8. M&-9990 Bonded, toe. 13l-82h n.U aTllAnt prompt, neet ~. 10 ATLAS PLUMBING & ~ 1 m no,~· oan Hiii!~ Gr9dlng C..1atlC1•1ftr. a.blnett. Cell now. free rnelnt. --.i. 540-8035 •• ..,,~ "'-~ sod, mprlnlller & allrub Yr9 In., ... IM&-5ea4 HEATING • Specializing ~017 a. PIY!ng Co. Ret/coml. • ...... ,.............. atlmlte. 842-4881 Oiiff ..... I lllffi '!'!.~~.!~ ...... General Hou1ec1eanlng lnltellatlon. our wor11 •BtlhOp & Son Pllntlng In Repelrt & Replace· !. Uc 397e<M 1142-1720 ~~~~ Dtfti. ~ lll .. l•1 lnltall·Reftnllh-cleen =~~0r9:. ~o Y'• exp. only loolla e11pen11ve. 30 yre 911p. In BHch ,_men __ , 1_7_14_1_84_5·_1_888__ P•t•d•I. ••• ~-z-...... ~.............. ~· _ _ Wu. Swedllhcre"aman. a · Cllectl our ptlcle before ., ... Free eet. 682-1718 IMMlll• •'I• u ... M .. ; ·;,~······;:,•;•• • -r~• '381057 Rob ~7•2883 Decorative waterproof RON'S GARDENING Slnoe 1e.1. Commlr91. Exper· • Ho"•a Cleanlnn. you buyl Lio. 204518. ---------••••••••··''~ •• 'r...... 0' "' '· • . •• ···~·"••••••••••• 1 ......, • ••• 5•1 Cuttom work Int 6 ext Day/..,. & 110/hr. , BA8YSITTINO·my llome, Concrete-am all or lge decl!lng, repalre & rec· 9 yrt NB/CdM. OUlllty Cl81· 1891727-37~ Rellable. Rei.. Cati Judy, ....,,.1 " • , • • Mr, Morgen &45-~178 • tn<;d yd, hot mea11. Any· Jobi. Remove, replllQe or oYer apeclall1t. Oouglat at reu. ratN. Mall\I/ 553-18'15 U.J4'1 lw4tl ..., ~21~f.11 ~~:;;•!~ M4'n ·h1l1•-ltfH4. time. ~-2874 repeir. 845-8512 Field• Co. 873--5779 Landleape. 876--0388 BHll•• Free Nt. Rea1. priaa. rllun CJ,..lllf. ••••••""'•••••••••••••• Complete Vecant •Pt Brlcl!·Blook-Tlle-Conc-5:30PM. OUel. worJi. Lie 337199. •••••••••••••••• ••••• INFANTS & UP Orlv", patio•. walkt. Free Deantit Yard melnt. & clean-up DUMP JOBS cleanlng, painting & c:er· Deck•, covera, fencet, ---------531·2345 "Let the Sunltllne In" Dey or Night, $50/wll. Ell. No Job too •men. •••••••••••••••••••••• Job•. LOCll ref. 01y & & Small Moving Job• pet care. e.42-0357 John etc. Lie. D<>Ug. e.46-0781 L. BATES PAINTING ---------1 Cell S~malllne Window .Coet1Mesa 846-5759 538-2607 •KATRINA'S: LIVE-IN evea.842·8795Neel CallMIKEMS-1391 SPECIAL1Ext.sgl$500; ROOM ADDITIONS. Cleenlng,Ltd. 548-8463 hsl!pra dally maid MfV _________ , HOUSECLEANER n .. d ...... ,.. 2 aty $800 1 coat. Honett,Retl•ble & Refe-20% Monthly Di.count Child care In my Cotta Cu1tom concrete brlcll· olllce cleanlng, crpi llf4nle1 Welfel HAULINO·GAAOINO wOl'I!. Chrletlan. ••••••"'•••••••••••••• 845-0383 renoes. JC&B con11. uc. MHa home newborn/ block wallt·patlot· cleenlnn. 835•21 16 Mowing, edging, r1klng. demolltlon, clHn-up. 892-3232 atter 5:30 BRICKWORK: Small Jobe. _C_A_N_Y_O_N_P_A-IN-T-IN-G-.-1• #347677. 974·7865. W11l ln1n1l•f. up Full or PIT 645-0327 toundallona. Llc'd ··• •weeping. Free ••ti· Concrete & tree removal. Newport, Co1ta M ... , ., ---------1 ••••••••••••••• •••••• · · 536-5013 matea. 845-5737. Quiel! ""'· e.42·783& tCla111fled Adt are Ille lrvlne Reft 875•3175 yr1 In O.C. Satltfactlon In••• lfrrlll Computer word proce• ----------• People who need people answer to a 1ucce11ful · • guar. 494-4541 •••••••••••••••••••••• •Ing. Fut, ac:cur11e MfV. 'fll-In town? Claulned Read the clttalfled ed1 lor 1hould always checil lhe K&O Landacape Malnt. HAULING & MOVING garege or yard 1alel lt'1 e Cu1tom Brkll!-Stone PROFESSIONAL RE· R .... rllN . Notary. Free ·can htJp )'OU meet m1ny lh• best deal• In apart· Service Olrectory In the Reaid/Comm. Cle1n-up. Local. Student w/truck. better way to tell more Bloctl-Concrete-Stucco Sell thing• fut with Dally SUMES & CAREER pkup & dellvery. Len, of your need1. 842·5Cl78 ment rentals, 1142-5678 DAILY PILOT Lill lleullng. S49·24et Lewll 876-8160 people! Rel•. Free eat. 549.9492 Piiot Wint Ade. COUNSELING 851-0700 751·1318 h;:::.~':i:i''/ f!!!.~.!!.-.!~ .•.• 11.~ !'.l!!P.!!!! •••••••••• IJ.'.'I..'!!!~'!. •••• !.~'! IJ.•}1..'!.~.'!!. •••• !.'.. • l1•tal1 WulM fHO ......•..........•.... IJ.'.11. .'!!!'!t .•.• !!.!f IJ.•.11. !!!!~~ .... !.~ '! l.t!I. !!~~'!. .... !}.!f IJ.•.11. .'!!!'!!. •••. !.~!! Receptlof'lat • AIR ROUTE PERSON FAMILY need• 4-br home to rent or 1e1ae REA· SONABLE. 6"2·2150. Hit I leul Found: Bassett Hound lfiHll I OllOIHIE General Office, lntereatlng •••••••••••••••••••••• mele, approx 11 yra. lailnlfllN 1115 'NHded for lu11ury La-poernon IOI' an alert, ln-All••••c..,•ll SlH Dana Pt, nr L• Create/ •••••••••••••••••••••• guna Beach Hotel. 4 telllgent appllcant. Mac-• • • ••••••• •••••••• •••• Gold. Lantern. 498-3828 days 1 weett • Weekend• Gregor Yacllt CO<poratl· lulam/lllnit/ SCRAMLETS Found: Female wilt Spitz, • mutt. Contact Mr•. on 1531 ~tie. C.M. IJ.un Femai. beige Sl'lepMrd· Vaughen-Purdie HAIRSTYLIST. P-'er me· i;;i;;;;••••••••••• •• Lab mix. Numerout a.ta •-TIHI •-II 4~8480 ture with cllen~:ie. CM ANSWERS & 1 puppy. Newport --tn OlllTU IELP area. 5 48·4291 or ... ".fr.!!~~!l ... !.OJM Men809 • Lapel ~!.ac3~ .. ~nlmal Shelter u4I Experlenoed. Part/time. 548-2788. Join the leader In the Tepid . Snugly ~ """" llAft Etll .. EIT Herb or Cle an er a. ----------t swimming pool chemical PAYMENT Found: BaaenJI. yg red .. IHllTlll 839-2555. 1111 ITYUIT HUDY 111.PD Full or part/time. Some experience preferred. Newport Beach . 675-3352 OFFICE s.tlout per.on w/good bkkp'g bCl!grnd -nted tor lull time otnc. help, non·amkr. 811. Penln. 87~3591 aervlca buelneu Be 1 They uy being rlctt can't wtit M, In Northwood, Ir· Exper. ttylllt w/Cllentele "aparkle water treetment buy happlneaa. That may vine. Mutt 10. 898-3828 -National Job pt-t ottml 1ELP to Join progreaalve aalon. ----SM()----6--• t>e true. but you can uee uel1tance ORY CLEANING PLANT. S • I / com m I v • c · STOP KIN ayatema deal1r." Llc'd 11 tor a 1Ubstantl1I down Found: Collle. sable & -Ananclal aid avallable 309•• ---t "'wy, South 540-8889 territory evalleble, whl tern Chol< h I A d M b -....,.. " ---------1 Orange Cout area, no PAYMENT. te. . e can • core . em er Laguna, 499·1985 • Help, need 25 IUpetvl· GET THIN WI 840-5111 N.H.S.C. ---------1 p h I .• e11per. nee. 11 train. Hll .t feu' 5300 HSO ·Correa./RHldenl trtl· llTA ElllY OUll '°'' IT. nu welg I ON }:q~d~0~0~~111~'::c~~~ •••••••••••••••••••••• f!!!!!IJ! •••••••• f;'. •• nlng lmmed opening for 10-g;~~:O-t · Wltriln, MAKE MONEY .avaHable. Wiii net 140, * * * INFORMATION mion• exper In Data Your own houra to teach 000 plua. Call collect FOUND ADS Atl11tis P1rlor 7141634-3986 24hrs entry. Complete resp for Hosteu/Cattil« othert about new end ·Mon-Fri 9-6PM. Asl! lor 1725 S. Oouol•• Suite B Input of merchandlte The Good Earth R91teu-Tlm 4081867-0111 Open 24 hrs a day Anehelm, Ca. 92806 Info & prep of reporta. rant & Bal!ery 11 loolclng unique productt. New ARE FREE 7 days• wee1< (RN. trno Rialto Ca.) Wiii tr1ln. Full benellll. tor 12 lull. time hard chewing gum ttopa Want a bualneaa of your Jacuul. Sauna. Local• 1725 S. ALTO, Ca) xlnt working condt. Send working lndlvldualt Who emoklng habit.· New own for minimum cott? as well as tourl1t1. • brief letter to: Admln Mgr enjoy working with the Fructoee Diet Drink and 'Compl. tetup plua bu•I· Call• BankAmarlcard, M11ler • .. _ .., i-~ .,015 Bo11 619, 16835 Algon-public. Good pey, com· more. Ginn: 8 2 ne.ss consulllnt. Guar • Charge. American Ex-"!!!'!.:!!!.~ •••• !~... quln, H.B. 926"9. pany lnturance & vace-___ 7_1_4_-4_6-_9_4 __ 1 ·profit. 850-0219 t•2-llll press, Diners. All wel· Young merrled man wlll h-atl l•-t-a..-A tlon avellable. A1>9ly In Part time. Seti the mott come 7 U/645--3433. do general handy work. •• no•-• peraon. The Good Earth advanced Burgler Alarm *ILIEPlllT Ot. 2112 Harbor BL CM Call evH 6 wkendt, Blllngual and ROA pref'd. RHtaurant 6 Bakery, Syatam 100SS below Central O.C. Location Lost· Gucci porse In Univ. COEDS _ Would love to 972-9625. Tues thru Fri, &-12 Sat. 210 Newport Center Dr competition. TRUE · S90K yr1y gron S35,000. Or, lrvlne. 8: 15 pm, Fri party with yc>u. Call Sue Mature Lady. IMI In com· 84&-2411 be'-1 3-5 PM $2000 per month. Alt0 <714)633·0225* July 30. R-•rd Please or Kathy anytime . pinion 10 aldefly, New· Dependable woman with •llUEPOl/letl ~!!dm~ ~3~~l~d9 T;kt: #l•flfl If i... SOIS call 6'44·9«9 953-9363 port 83 days ttrong pef'aonellty u llve Balt>oe Bayfront home. 1 85S-e807 •••••'• ••••••••••••••• Canvea Sall B.,, with Sella In companion/ COOlc for wee1c only .,.,._.., ,...., ---------1 Pvt ltw•tor hu $500,000 -. BI ftulf4 1100 Newport Bch woman. · ~·, ....... • 10 loan on 111 TO on Inside. t81h St, beyalde. llllll a Yllll'I ·-'•'-••••••••••••••••• --••"" ,_,,., ......... , ......... ieman nd1 eJq>f'd peraon PUT i. prime rental Income Lo1t 7-27. REWARD. PHOTO MODELS Accountt ReoelY/Recep ;fit;":Mu-;Mi;;t'.,~ from Aug 29 to 5-pt 4. Evee and/or weellenda. property 3.5 yra. 18111% 548-0030 ESCOR1'S/OANCERS AI R computer e11per. 10 T.J.O. P.O. Box g14• Must have own car to do Reeponalbte adutta, owr 4.5 polntt Call (714) LOST Brown "surfer OUTCALL 24 HRS Re1pon1lble for entire Balboa, c.. 92681. marlurllng. Salary open. 21. with outltanc:tlng. at· 499-5254 type" wallet. vie. Car-111-0Hl AIR tor e growing pro----------1 Bob 496-2229 trectlve per1ona111i.. to away or 1 v e . c M . l~~~~~~~~~I perty management co. O..k Cieri!. Motel. nee-HouMkeeper, child care, worl! with youth (egH #'G::/."' rr.11 54s-3147 I-R«leptlonltl typing enc:t dec:t, 3 ~ thlfta, 2 mature, PIT. xlnt ..... ~ 10· 1"). Cell 2-5PM. S035 _________ ,WANTED: MALE MOO· varlout duties. 538-7551. nlgllt lhlft. tOme expe-Muit have driver~~. 842"4321, Ellt. 348. EOE .-•••••••••••••••••••• Found gray & white M ELS for pN>to work. Le-Lindi rlence. cathler/ pllone. 847-8973 I I llT11.fl striped kitten, vie Ha-gltlrnate. 4gg...5635 Witt train. Start S3.75/hr. ---------• .. Peraon Frldey" • Home ' ' m 11 ton & Bushard· liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil AllE/ft•lll Cell 957-3063. llllUIOI . Oecoretlng S~. Anew. •rts11• O.. I••• 968·2572 SUNNY'S Ellecutlve •o 60 Old t F.G.S. ln1urance ha1 phone•. 111111 cutt'a, Speclallzlno In tat 6 2nd ., to yra o c:at9 OlNNER COOKS, exper In minor blckg, etc Cu1tom TD'I afnce 1949 Found· 8 I k and w ht Stresa-R9ductlon: tor 94 yr Old, Nml·lnvalld home ttyle cooking for 099fllng In renewal d• s~ & Dr ShOp Robt. Sattler NH/CM Springer Spaniel/ Lib Ottic.-hm-OutcaH men. Hra: Sun. Tuet, amall retirement home In partment for perlOn to apery • mix. VIC CM Tennl1 Clb, 631-«)77 Thura, 10pm lo 7am. Sat L~una. Some wl!ndi, quote 1nd follow·up on 3535 E Coelt Hwy, CdM. •. R.E. Broker Bd Realtor• ~~~~~~~~ 880 1 •73.7930 6"1-7524 .:.. 8am to 6:30 pm. A • p . 494-9458 ren-ala. Auto rat ng or -0 --------642"2171 545-0611 1-F-0-U-N-0--5-he_p_m_l_x_p_u_p-,' Need Pet'90n to there•· LUTELV NO tmol!lng, underwriting exper pre· P.YWI Ill.El 11nnuY1m1. Receptlonlat, typing and Soh Watlf Co. SJC aree. v1tlou1 dutle1. AIR Truck driving exper Marketing dept. hea computer e11perlence. helpful. Good driving r opening In NPT SCH. Reapontlble for entire COl'd 1 must. Pd Vee:. Ina, Fin. 8VC9I firm. Good ty· AIR for a growing pro-etc. 4~535 pin~. S/H tklllt, Ettper. t req d. Non-tmkr perf perty menagemen co. Selel Cell tµO-Ot23 536-755l, Linda Account Executive•========= Rep1. Exciting new com-wenttd for Per1onnel pany, ground llr oppty, Placement Arm. No 911 mulll-level ml!tg, highly perlence required. C1ll contumable product. 0 a n F r • n k Min lnvettment. days or 7 t4/558-1172 11m.fllll0111111 and nimbi• mind requl- r9d for fut peoed c:on- aultlng firm. Word PfO-ceaeing, Mag Card &/Of eves. 673--8302 SALES 1 apHd typing exper re-otllll, I Miii quired. Non-smokers cl only. Unlqlle women'• othl COLLINS ASSOCIATES R.E. Sal81/Llc. ReQ. HOIElll ttore teek1 energetic N-port Center Today there are unllmll· people with flalr for I•· (714) 644-5771 _, rt 11•-1 1 thlon &/or modeling ex ..., oppo un ... a n rea perlence helpful. Apply In Service Stttlon Attendant. estate .. 1 ... If you Join peraon at Alexla Natural Expr'd. Apply Shell Sta· the dynamic teem ol Fuhlon1, 260 For .. 1 Av.. tlon, 17th/lrvlne, NB. profeulonals at Coldwell Benker. Foreat E. Olson. Laguna Beach. llt•••M l11htMt Realtors. Our program Salee needed tor buay aelon. will supply you with the LI 1 d N wpo t winning combtnetlon tor F&IMHI llS llOIP c raqu ,.. 390 • r auoceaa. Conalderlng a career Beach. 631'1 ctJano• In 1082? Con-STOCI< PERSON position 'R.E. LICENSE COURSE slderlng entering the open, female pret. over (2·dly. $49) ran1!1 ol tht Hlf em-t8 ye1r1, full time for "COMPLETE SALES ployed? If you are Inter· tmlll retell atore. P1eale TRAINJNG "led In operating your Inquire Tuea-Frl 10·5:30 'CONTINUOUS EOUCA· own ln1urance egency, uk tor Jim 760-8650. TION lnvett 1 hour ol your time S W I M M I N G 'SECURITY OF A LAR· at our Facta Semlnu. INSTRUCTOR-Equally GE DYNAMIC COM· Call Bonnie for det1ll1 et Quallfled swimming PANV 963-4518 "HIGH INCOME POTEN· ---------1 ln1tructorltlleguerd for TIAL Salet .helP wanted. oper perl! In C.M. Certified. 'MGMT GROWTH OP· prel d, call or apply 557·723" lor 'PP'· PORTUNITIES Crown Harclwere. 16t4 T I _..__ •-1-.. San M i guel. NB . ••..---. 6«-8570 Matt Beat pey In townl Apply UC:enMd or unllcented. • 779 W lllth St, Ste H, II you would Mlle to know Salea Cotta MMe. Part time OI' more abolst • career In lmllEI" tutt time • real estate. call the I ---------company that speclallzea In aucceaa. In Huntington Beach Chuek Stoffel or Biii Biessing 714/894-7521; 982-5585 In Costa M ... Looking tor e11tr1 In· T~ tolicttorl nee-come? Try Pert· Time ded 111 rate reeort QO. ulea, Tueld1Y thru Fri· tor Lagune Shores Pro- dey, 9 AM to 12 Noon perty. Xlnt wortllng eond. Apply PENNVSAVER. Top compenaatlon. Call 1660 Pl1centla Ave, Tim 9am-llpm Coll• Meaa. Aek tor Mra. 494--0748 MOT LllE vie Victoria & Monrovia. pente on trip to Mid~. drinking or drug•. Mull DomHtlc Hou1ekeeper, lefred. S1lary commen· Enjoy worl!lng with kid•. !There are several OP· CM 645_2692 leaving Sat. 646-3124 have own reOable tran1-live In. e11perlenoed, En· aurlle with eitperlence and wlttl lncreued 9.,. Sales TIE M YH llU tlona rether than lore-·----------•Prol man desires female portatlon. S450/mo. ¥ 111 tJ 'P •a II 1 n g · Call Ralph, ~M909 nlnga. utlllze your out· Wanted 191f.motlv1ted IS WAITING Jacque Kemp 845-0303 White closure. Without coet or Found· yg M Pharaoh housekeeper & glrl Fri· 549•9&91 Sl·H55· JR. ACCOUNTANT w/ golng peraonallty, learn per1on1 1nter91ted In FOR YOU NOW obllgatlon. get the lacta, Hound, cen'I lleep. OW· dey, muat t><Organlz9d Auto dealer need• ttierp DRIVERS. muat be 16 OI' good prlnclpal accoun· how to become• trained developing own bualneu But It won't be -ltlng then decide which pltn ner or 1cood home. <2131 6 capable of handllng glrl for twitch board & older w/dependable car, ting bkgrnd to atalat fl-Hle1 coun1elor · Call w/n-ly marketed pro· long. A repreHntallv• would be beat tor you. 57&-0l household dut .... anop-bl!kp'g. Sall Chevrolet, neet IPP99r. l>leue •P-nanclal an1lyt1 with 2·5PM. 842·4321, E11t. duct. Mlnlmel 1nv .. 1ment from STOP 'NGO wtll be :circle Home Loena. • Found: lrl•h Setter M. ping & It cootclng. In••· Lllguna Sch 48~t 131. ply In P9f'lon w/proof of budgeting for property _34_6_._E_oe______ ,c.:Jlr.~.-!Olll needed. Ph PBR 1n1•1 at the Stop 'N Qo mar1let •d Ir. c I I • n d. r . purebred, 2·3 yrs old, change for •Pl In So. IKt 200 Ins. Reliable MnMnger mgmt co. Xlnt company IUL m&11 IALll (714) 631-3296 dyl or located •• 4555 Pac: Cit : 7tM499-2261 Ilic Nwpt Bch. 54S..709 t Laguna on the bHch. II I 111_ Service, 3001 Redhill benefit•. Send R-.ume · · · An Equel Oppty Co. (7 t4) &7S.5418 eve1 Hwy. N.8., on Thura, Aug WIDOW HAS SSS IOI' TO'a Please cell Terry (7t4) bte an nt .. r Ave Bldg 1, Ste 217. w/aalary req to: Person· Need 2 •llP"· people In IESTlllln 5th betwHn 9 am & 1 Found Mele kitten, •P· 979•2230 btwn 9•5 or Exp er 1en01 d 1 n a II CM. 751-0451. net. PO Box 145e, Coate commercltl and lndu· lalftklt ... ., pm. 10 tell! 10 )'OU about RE L9111t. IOI< Up. No prox 3-4 mo. Grey & blk 4~2293 eves. ph ..... 40 hre Beneftt• ---------Mesa. Ca 921526 11rlal ,... 911119 lor IUC· The flnMt nouvelle ree-tor aandwlch anop CaN I 'Credl1 Checll. No Pen-Tabby 6'45-72~ Huntington Sch . DRVCLEANING ---------1 ceuful and growntng taurant In Orange 645.tlOOafler 4 PM 1•9111&118'1111 l .:;i1~•aon & Aaaoc Found White straw purae 11n111'1 536-e5&1. :~tart 1°' fully lq81 ... , .. .,, llrm. Beat woritlng con-County la Interested In ---------• a. h.,.rt ..... Call to Identity lfnltn 5'IO -8-e-tll-1-1-d-e-7-A-M---1-P-M-1, ........ I Newport Center Real ~:~~'!.n71 l,n ... '!•50wp1ort quallfted ~net. We IOTIY/IEllPT Day and evening POii· 2•4 Tl 846-9194 •••••••••••••••••••••• Mon·Frl, .,_t VIiia. " C llllr Eatate Lltlgetlon Firm ........... 1-. ....,,,.. 5' tre ac~ptlng appllc•· SelN ,..., Agency In Ir· tlon• avalle~ O S Cl d ....... ....., E :ei1 d need• uper legll Mere-IUL 11Tl11 •at H lion• ~ e-11 am Typt 1. S/H, llllng 6 M DP •OISSllY n an amente u-Found 2 dogs Vic. Hell & Emlll llll1.DUI 4000 Hilaria Wey, NB • •c• lent Hlary an tery. Xlnt 1yplng. dlcte-_. dilly for tlle followlng vlnephone e::Oper r..:,,ulred Good t ............. ~ Mt plex. 21% yield. 13<1.000 Springdale Escor1 fOf Women 842·5881 ttrong Compeny benefits phone and ahofthand • oo you heve: R.E. Ileen-poal11onal --. • --'V -•· red'd. Ag1 1•758-0318 846-7171 4 9 7 . S 7 2 S (bet w •wait )'OU mult Salary open M ? 2 Yfl experlence In HOSTESSES Call Jeannette, S46-M44 ~~~fyi~ PI P need• $120K ttt TO. Found ---" bl-.. & ...... lte 8am-8pml HST PUT·W 'Great opportunity with: 640-89e0 reel eetate aalee or 5 Yf'I WAITRESSES Sculptured nell detlgner more Information, cell led ld'I .,,_, -.... • .... II -lnt'I recognized Drll*Y ---------1 In other outtlde aelea? 333 S.Y81de Dr1 led Le Beech owner occup rH dog In Woodbridge area _. ••w• Cleaning llrm. • ---Sufficient lln1nc11 to ..........,.... .. _ ........ ~If wen 77 gune 774-9210 prop. Prln. only. pleaM 559-6-490 • I Sf•lt Be • , ................ "'omo-E t di t M'll5 --·~....-• .._.., ..,.. 494-e!i • 0 E T.L.N. 177-F Rlvertlde 1----·-----1•t•N -tlon clerkf~~i;:ai MW· ' 11 reor nery repu •· E e I ce preferred IUpp<>f1 youraelf N'4fal · · Av .• N.B. 928&3. Found Wht S1moy1d. Y.i;.;;i"ciii;;0~~·1j1j;~.~~ •P•P•r. Private dHk, uon ~r,;,. •.!'.o....,y . ....,Y month• w1111e becoming s.111t.1wt9t118iteSfi S~:!'i~ ~ ~~ ·M~/F~~~~~~~ H-~htnn 10 ....... ,7 Fem. 1px 1 yr Vic S 0 1 On"' ul 1 .. 0 1388 negotlable with ••P•· Mtabllahed In CO""'*· .,,...... .:: •• .,. ...,. ...... .,, _,. M•gnolla/Tatbe t HB 3 O/ beat offer cuualattre ., req • • • rlence. Apply In perlOn clal 1nd/or uclualve ClullftedAOae.42·7887 '900.957-8388 WanlAd1 C.116"2·5878 Clutlfled ad• do It well 962·3261 r 557-7196 rement 11 a good phone COIT between 3.5 PM. 210 reeldentlal •lee In New·--======::.:..::========::.:========\ A 0 SOON VOV'LL BE SEEING SIGNS .t,AOUNO TOWN CALLING ATlENTION TO Ela' ES! Tl Uft I llllDIFIL ll.Ull llU (Of Ytlfd ..... lttate ..... etc.) 1. Place your 1d In :he D•lly Piiot Clauln.ct 9'1)11on (It'• belt to tun 3 days for mdimum expoeure). If ~ pay tor your 8d In edvlnC» we' II run It 3 days and onty charge you for 21 2. Get your FREE Gar. Sale IJgnt (all you have to do It COfM In to tr. Deity Piiot & PIY for your Id In ldvanoe -we wm atve you tvto 11 x 17 Signe - FREE of charge). 3. Prio. "°"' piec. ~f l'Mf'ChandlN" 4. Have otenty ot crtano• on hano (nlcket1, dimes. quartere, hatvee, one and ftve dollar bllll). Rel~, haw tun, and count your ITIOn9Y at tn. end of tn. dey. YOloe and Iota of enthu-,._ Or port s .. ch? 11 10, c111 i1asm -·-y OWIUI Newport ..,...ter .• Npt · Houre _._ Bch. Leo Henne, Sr. V.P. Moo-Fr1. 5:30-9:30PM 1Hl lep1 ltt 0. I . Tll ... UITI Wetl•J I. Tiiier Ot. Sit 0:30AM-1:30PM Equll Opp Employer Aealton M"-4910 $84.00 to •tart. 11,'m"""!!!. LIQUOR CLEAi<, full or REAL ESTATE LOANS Atter let week, ttiare In ,_ ..... a- partneralllp profit•. Be a cerrl•r counHlor part tlrne. 278 BroedWay, rts"' ""• For Interview, tor 8 local newapiper. L11gun1 Bcl't. Aggreulve Newport 11 r 8PM "E 1 . 2 3 d Beecll tlrm teelca motl-~ 11*' ~°,y~~C:~':~•1;~ L;..~iss C::.. da~~O:: v1ted lndlYldual. Terri• 142•1111 8 WMll. l75 to •tart plut muat be vereatlle. tory ogen. Herbot· m 112 additional allare ol pert· 813-3023 PIClflc. 55-0073 nerlhll'f• proflt1. LIW In oornpenlon for .._ 1191111111' Man~~~1inl· derly lady on Balboa with typing 1111111 lor rMI 1111, For lnter.,lew o•ll PenlMUll. 780-8030 eatat• oftfoe. Non '"'°'" Wiil lleed co. w/ llmlled after 8:00 PM, e.42·5878, Maki Wented. PIT 8 deya lier. 18CM&l1 poteriu.e. Fanfutlo op-ext 312. •week. s.. atn Motel. Real eat.1e co;;\t portunlty for the rlollt Furniture 494-1717 I.Ml ••Hn• .,._. Serld r-.ime to: .,_ M Aggrffalve eatabltthed Bolllf CEO Box 14'1. len ......... firm Hek• Quallfl•d Juan Cepl1treno, Cl. PAnm, ..... CHUC~C::use·a FNMAIFHl.MC P•™>n. 92te3 lmm9d •t• o,.nln9. fOf p T __ ,. N.8. office. HlrbOt· Q~ and _.,., d 119 Ina Im• • ..... etre ,. P9dflo ff&-0073 11rnna 11111\Qa and 1>41'"'"' me-IOOtllno '°' • lhlr1> out--------· .011111 ker tor c&M goodt f\lr• OOl"O lndtvldu.I to 00-R.o.pt1onl1t10ttlce Ml• llltwe mfg Co. on W• ordinate 9"del swomo-nager, Ortt1odontto o(· If ~ are a NII charge C:O.t. lion• and carry out llce. downtown Lllgune bl! who i. worth t'f8. I. p ._..._ marketing runctlon1. 8Mch. ••P9fi.tlce pre- ' • -NHl appearance and !erred. Full Time. 000 and CM prOYI h, we ........ ~to~ wttll P90-4t7~21/ 4M-141'1 would Hite to 1.-c to YoU· ltl1 .. .,., M. '* o.11 K.tv :r:=g• ::'~4/:::. ._..a... tlfll •ov:"kfT.'13, Tu". ~·~pro-PlnY wflo Wiit praWte a ttwu Frldtly 1M. C I eneltenoe and a futUfe, -ll ..,. -..-...me ~':;. "::' !..~::•;,., Looated In G1tden Ute tlkll1>9o" potting, ty· AHlitant. ,.ront offloe llOuf. 10 AM tot PM, G r o v • • Ca I I ping. R.I!. loen baofc· •llf)· lneurenoe 1 ~ 1494421 =~..()2&3 ~:W-::!'1w1= OUllnO-81Mftte, PIT II-lll&rtl•lf "Jtidt Of All rrldee" to M&-OO'Ta (M for Qtlll). *noont. 641-o433. Country Club In Npt llCfl helP bulld our new 16' -u ... MlOICAL AICaPT, part. ...... Ml ltme ......,.. MlibOlll. ~t M'". --time. no _.,., nee. ..-n11t. ~ t>e lf'llCIUIMI, MeoOtetOf Yllotlt Cor· W It.,._ ,..... fOf trlln llf.t?' °'*t'f\11 l p!OF••DMI "°'Mlon tNt PleoeMle. emell ortloe. Typh~ ~/drlwr AfllllY to MnCle......,.. C.M. pl\OMt, at """t~ ~ -lt1rYln9 Collete Stu• Merel a noell. 1YPl"9 ~ r, · Hr ~. dent• are 1ookln1 tor .... .,. _..... llOIM =t~ AndefMn Co. •J1Pet fflov•rl ftWtf, .. ek•nf lloura. c;:all """' Nw 9000 *Mill ~ ,.nd wtlat'fou wt In teOQfd, a1 or o.r. otl '!!!' !!..•' o.v "'°' Qlll1l9l1... 14......, --·· ( ( ) ) \UTBD ( c---<0)----> > Newspaper Carriers tor routes in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley & Newport Beach • Good Eami~s Super-Trips • • Great Priu1 Antlk1: oak, Orl•nt1t1. c;twa, tble, drln, dOckL 2485 lrvlne. Fri-Sun 10em lol T91> DOlar Paid '11 O•tlllfl 110 I dt, 4 1pd, run• 90Qd ndl body wor". NOO /ofr. '484021 ' 'ft 11210 Mwt .... 11100. '°' Y0411 c.J 17,_..12 JI•• • -'74 DetlUn 710 Wgn, llttl Lii•• .... .., CIHn. 12000/blt oh. 2t2t H1tbQf IMf. _e_1_M49 __ 1 ____ _ Coel• MeM 640-5830 '13 0.tll.ll\ 240J,. ~. ~ ptto. at•eo caa Muet ...., paid f()( W'f ueed C8' '2700. 548-15)1 '':~°' c!cs~' S.. U. Fltltl f!!!!!l •••••••••• "9!. '11 Citroen l .M. O•r" blue, 5 9" OM Owww. 115,000. 14W1M. . \ I t I llACH IWOUS ... Dove 8trHt. Nriport e..cn. Tel. 752-0900. call ue. we're the 1~1ali1ta for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot, Saab l Me~r•tl . · · ,~ ~· • I ... "'-'' j '4. ,· -----·--01\t Ce • M~TCH THE NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES NIWPGaT DATSUN 888 Dove Street, Newport BMetl. Tel. 133-1300. At th• trlangi. of Jamb« .. , MacArtt>ur l Brlatol behind Vlctorta Station. Sa ... , SeNtce, Leulng a Parta. Wa make greet d .. 111 • NAIHS CADIUAC 2800 Harbor Blvd., Coata Meaa. Tel. ~9100. Ora;nge County'• Largest Cedlllec deelef. See.. Setvlce. L.eu- lng. • DAVID J. PtlWPS IUIQWIOM'nAc.MilDA Sal•• • Service • L.Mllng ~'888 Allcla PllrkWlly 837·2400 • IOI LONGPltl POMTIAC 13600 BHch Blvd., Wfftml,_.,, Tel. ~1 . Orange County'• oldMt and largeat Pontiac dear.,.hlp. Sales, Service. Parta. • DICK MILLll PIATILA'NCIA "Probably the l9WMt prloed Fleta "1 eou,hern Califorl"' 1" (Loc:ated'1 mlle north of South Coast Plaza nMI Mein St and Wern« Ave. In Sanla Ana.l 120 W. Warn«, Santa Ana 657·2132 • • SAMTA ANA DATSUH 2001 E. 17th StrHt, Senta Ana. Tat. 59·7811. Your1 Orlglnel Dedlcai.ct Dataun Deeler. COSTA MESA DATSUM 2945 Hatt>or Blvd .. Coat& Mee&. Tel. 540-MtO. Serving Ofange County for 16 yMra. 1 Mlle So. 40t5. SUMSIT FORD, IMC. (Home o4 Willie the Whllle~ 5440 Gud9't Grove B~d.. w.tm.lnetw. Tel. ~10. ill Stree LOS ANG&LSS (AP) - NBC'1 "Hlll Street Blue1" ,......lld 111 IDlnde of 1Mt year today, capturln1 another 21 Jhm1 naminatlom for the Mth annual preHntatlon of the teleYlllon .,...... The off-beat police ahow, which wm nine J:amnya In 1081, dominated many of the drama Har.rold's election 'invalid' BY DAVID KUTZMA.NN or ... .,..,,.. .... Two months a,ao, Santa Ana attorney Dan Charle. Dutcher"a· campaign accusation that West Orange County Municipal Court Judge Joanne HarroJd was not a legal resident of the county went unheeded by most voters. On Wednesday, six months after he claimed that Harrold waa a resident of Riveralde County, a superior court judge in Santa Ana invalidated the June 8 election victory of Harrold and scheduled new balloting in November. Harrold la not eligible to run. Judge Ronald Owen'• ruling waa believed to be unprecedented -the first time a judge's election in California bad been voided and overturned because of falsification of a candidate's documents relating to residency. - Judge Harrold, who maintained throughollt a week- long trial that she was a legal resident of Orange County, quickly left Owen's courtroom and declined to comment after the ruling was announced. Dutcher said he waa not · ~b~~)~i do what .......-and an· one completely owrwhelmed all oppollUon with five nomlnaUont for beat 1upport1n1 actor In a drama .... The cbelt ClCmpitUtor with 12 nomination. wu 1'Fame," an NBC 1"00kle ...._ bMild Oil the hit movle about New York'• < 1 ~ I\ r' ( , t ( 1 11 1 N 1 ) 1 /\ 1 11 < 11 ; ~ J t fl ; '• <, t l'J · '-, lues' repeats rnirflcle HJab School fCr the Pwrfonnln, Anl. NBC, third ln the rat1n11, 1wamped 1\1 more popular C)J>poeltlon with • total of 90 l:mm~ nomination.. CBS, the front·nmntna network ln the ~ had 83, and ABC aot 70. PBS received 29 nomlnatlona, lncludlna 11 for "Brldnhead Rev!llted" and 13 nominattona went to avndicated ahowa. Other 1how1 recelvlns muhlple nominations Included CBS' "M·A.S-H," with 10, and NBC'a "Ain't Milbehavin'.'' the comedy ahow ABC canceled and NBC matched up with eight. "Lou Grant,'' the new1peper drama wboae unexpected cancellation by CBS cauaed a Ito.rm of protest, received etaht. ABC'a "Inside the Tfllrd Reich," NBC'a "SCI'V Network" and Operation Prime 'nme11 "A Woman Called Golda" each received seven. "Barney Miller," the adroit pollce comedy ABC put on the reUrement llat, got five nominatlona. • "HW Stleet Blues," lMt year'' bia winner, wu nominated ~ best drama aeries. and l'lanW J ! Travantl wu nominated u bes( lead actor ln a drama aeries. 'nlC show took all five nominatlo~ for beat 1uppor\jng actor In ~ • drama aeries. Bomb shakes Nevada • Nuke testing called 'necessary evil' I MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -An underground nuclear test with a ~d many times that of the b dropped on Hiroehlma aent shock waves rolling acrou the . Nevada detert today. ' Energy Secretary James F.dwards, who witnetaed the 7 a .m. teat with about 30 reporters, aaid afterward h e believes nuclear teating is a necessary evil. "War la hell and I hope we never get into another one," he said. "But if we're aoln.I{ to get into war, I want to come out No. l, not No. 2. That'• the Reagan administration f.Oal -peace through strength. ' A ground televla1on camera about .. _mile from the acene was knocked out by the blast. Twenty-one seconds later, a 1,000-foot expanse of desert collapeed above the site where the teat went off, 2,100 feet underground. A helicopter television camera had ahown indentations near the site seconds after the detonaton, but OOE spokesman Dave Miller said they were from prevlot.ll tests. The blast site, a deaolatf expanse of desert 77 mllep northwest of Las Vegaa kno~ as Yucca Flat, is pocked with indentations cauaed by hundreds of previous underl(l'Ound testa. The huge, two-story conc:re1e control building 10 miles away shook noticeably in a rocking motion and eeiamograph needle jumped erractically when the test was detonated. Highway carnage rampant Traffic accidents kill seven people in 12-day period By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or .... DeMJ "°' s..,, Excessive driving speeds and pedestrian care1esane9I appear to be the common factors in a string of seven traffic deaf.ha that have occurred ln Huntington Beach during a recent 12-<iay period. That's the preliminary concluaion of police traffic investlgaton who are reviewing the rub of fatalities. During the first 6 ~ montha of 1982, the city recorded seven traffic de.tha. But in the 12 days between July 22 and Aug. 2, the city had another seven traffic deetha, bringing the year's to1al to 14. review of the recent fatal accidents: •On the morning of July 22, motorcycltat Fred Rodney Molola, 19, of Huntington Beach, wu belng pursued by an officer for an alleged speed violation when he crashed into an auto along Pacific Coast Highway near Bolsa Chica State Beach. Molola died one hour later. Two people in the auto were Injured. •The same day, shortly before midnight, Jeffrey Shawn Yoakum, 20, of Weatminater, waa allegedly speeding when be crashed his Dodge Challenger into a block wall on the Adams Street frontage road near Piccadilly Lane. He was fatally injured. (See mAFFIC, Page A%) Huntington honors six men as heroes was eaay, he did what was right," the attorney/candidate said. Dutcher, who sued Harrold on the residency laaue after the election in June, finished a dlatant second to the Weauninater jurist. Coming In third was Costa Mesa attorney Ronald Nix. Both will face each other again in November. .,..,,...,....._, ....... ~ FAVORITE PERCH -Gertrude Cooper of Arcadia hu been coming to the Huntington Beach pier more than 40 years. She says her fishing pole dates from 1937, but her hat is newer and the next catch will tug at the line any minute. Several other people were Injured in the recent mlahape, Including two young men who remain noapitallzed in critical and aerioua condition. Traffic investigator Jim Dowling obeerved that the recent accidents were JlOt confined to any particular section of the city. He said the common factors were that several of the motort.ta exceeded 1peed limits and two oedestriana cromed busy streets 1n an unsafe manner. J. Harry White stopped at the 8Cene of a traffic accident to help free an Injured woman trapped within a burnin~ car. Neither expected to be hailed months later aa a lOC4l hero. But heroes they were Wednesday afternoon by ,proclamation of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, which honored them at lta 11th annual public safety awards luncheon. Harrold'• attorney, Eleanor Stegmeier, said an appeal would be filed almost h!lmediately with the 4th Diatrict Court of Appeal in San Bernardino. Recall broadened Dave Seibt braved flames and smoke to search a downtown Hun~ Beach borne after he was tofd two elderly residents might be inside. "We'll definitely appeal, cer.talnly based on the way the judge worded his decision," on eye, nose d:riops Police released the following Both men say they acted instlnct1vely without considering the risk of injury to themselves. Four other men received awards of merit during the ceremonies. White wu the only (See BRAVERY, Pqe Al) Stegmeier said. · Owen, saying that Harrold'• ''credibility had been shattered beyond repair," n.tled that the re-elected judge was untruthlul when she tilled out a declaration of candidacy Feb. 23 listing Newport Beach as her Orange County residence. He found instead that her true residence at the time was in Riverside County. Owen said he was convinced by the evidence that Harrold took· up residence at the $2 million home on Newport Beach's Lido Isle in mid-March after seeing campaign material by Dutcher a ccusing her of actually living jn Riverside County. Harrold testlfl~d laat week that ahe began movl.ng Into the Newport home in Nov.ember', 1981. when ahe aald her grandmother turned the hou.e over to her. (See JUDGE, Pqe Al) By PAT HOROWITZ or ... .,..,,.....,. Consumers are being asked to return eye and nme medications purchaaed from Alpha Beta markets throughout Southern California today as the musive recall of the products waa bro.dened. Either C.ramer. •pokeswoman for Alpha Beta. said, "Alpha Beta baa expanded the recall Into Ora.nae Q)unty in the Interest of public~. "No con~inated products have been 'found In Orange <:ounty at thta time. Surveillance baa t*n lncreued Jn all ltor'es. M&Maen have been alerted to advise clerks that no recalled producta are to be 80Jd.'' l\ecau.e the mediaaUona have beet> laced with aulfUrlc ldd. at least three people have been injured •o fH, and acid- contamlnated eye dropa were found at a fourth store w.ben a 8tock of Murine PlUI WU pWJed from the ahelf, SUMn Bond of the 1tate Health Department'• NBC spotlights TbWiaays NBC hope• to one-up ltl two rtva)•·~th a "quality'' ThUl'8day menu thit faD that wU1 Include "Fame," "Taxi," and "HID Street Blum.'' Paa-C8 .. COUNTY Frontier backed by U.S. The federal aovemment hM taan the ikle of Frontier Airllnee lo lta bid .to overturn ~n Wayne Airport rule that llmlw ~· tO of 500 mn. or 1-. p_,. Be. . Rama coacll geta scoutW ·~•ftl ~ Malavul, c:oecb of tta. RiiU, bu tiMn honor with the .. ~ .... ._ SeoUr.· .ward. Pa,. Bl. --.- Food and Drug Section said Wednetlday. "We have determined that this contamination waa not an accident by the manufacturer bec:au.. we have checked other containers from the same lot number, and they are okay," she said. But abe aaid the store had received no extortion demands and that no lead• had been turned up as to who put the add In the containen of Murtne and Murine Plus. Thia la the aecond time In eight months that the supermarket chain haa been the target of someone contaminating products with dangerous ac:lda. Lut December, •ven people reported suffering injurlee when a penon walked through aeveral Alpha Beta matketa and Thrifty dru1 sto.-s, putting 1ulturic, hydrochloric and acetic acid and chlorine Into a wide ranee of eye and DOie med.lcationa. "Everythin,c baa been removed (See RECALL. Pa•e At) HEROIC LINEUP -The Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce honored six men for heroism and merit Wed~esday during the organlzatlon•a 11th annual public safety awards luncheon. From left are lifeguard Dave .............. _,i.....- Seibt, fire marshal Frank Kelly, citizen hero J . Harry White, police detective Richard Hooper, and city traffic maintenance employees Duane Wentworth and Ronald C. Hall SPORTS INDEX Angels break the jini The Angela turned the tablee around for a change by winning 1n the bouom of the elahth lnnlng. Pap Ct Dodgen h0st Atlanta The Dodaen hmt the Atlanta Drawe th a key aertee belfnnlnc tonlaht at Dodpr Stadium. The Bravee are &~ pmet in front of the 18COnd-pt.Ce Dodcen with four pmm lcMdull!d. Pap Cl. . A4 A? JM..5 A7 C7 C7 D2 Ae a A7 A7 NATION MoYtes Mutual Fund.a National New1 Public Notk:el SPGl1S Dr.Stetnc:rohn Stock Marketa Tel9vWon Tblai.ra W•thet WGrld Newa C6 84 A3 a-5.D2 Cl-8 A7 85 C8 a A2 A3 ~ employee t.o be At 9~15 a.m. la1t April 29, Whltet 40, a HunUnctoft Buch retldtnt who repaln 1pu and whtrlpooll, wu on hll way to ,. Jake h1a plbi~ to work when .t-came upon a traffic llCddent at ! Golden Weat St.reet and Gartteld ~venue. . , Two can and a motorcycle were involved. One of the cars, a . Qadutac, had flipped over and bunt into flames. "I uw one woman crawllnff 'out of the car when I pulled up, ' White recalled Wednetday. "She waa pointing at the car. She was ·in hysterics but she flnally aaid .her mother-in-law waa atlll tlnalde." 1 One bystander unsuccesafully ,tried to break the car window by kicking lt. White then picked UP, part of a "Walk-Don't Walk ' traffic sign that had been broken in the crash and used it to sm'.ash a rear window ln the auto. With the help of an unidentified young man, he pulled the woman out of the burning auto. "In a situation like that, there's no time to think," he said. "You just do it. Later, though, I felt ~ about it and almost passed out." White , a major in the California Army National Guard, .recently jumped in to assist when a jeep carrying four people Oipped over during war games in Korea. While expressing gratitude for the heroism award, White said he regretted that the woman he helped rescue had died of her injuries five weeks after the accident. The second man honored for valor was Dave Seibt, 22, an Edison High School graduate who works as a city lifeguard and as an ambulance driver. While working the overnight lifeguard shift at 3 a.m. last May 8, Seibt spotted smoke near Lake tHr•et and Pacltlc Coau Hiahway. 'Re drove a> a ~ at 208 2nd SUHt alld radioed for flrett1hten when he .. w the ,_, of the ~ ln flarnle, Before they arrived, Seibt beaan bMainl on the door and window• after a n•tahbor u.ld two elderly reaident• were p~bl'y lnllde. • "There wu a lot of amoke," he recalla. "l couldn't aee \hrouah the wtncSowa and the door wu locked." Finally, the llf91\W'(l k.lcked ln the door and began crawllna through the bumlna houte to search for the resldentl. The heat and amoke eventually forced him to retreat. When fireflghten brought the blaze under control they di8covered the residents had not been lnalde. During Wednesday 's ceremonies, these incidents were spotlighted: ,•Huntington Beach police detective Richard Hooper, has been involved in numerous difficult cases including 1a complicated probe last year that led to the arrest of a Hun~ Beach man for allegedly his stepfather in what ha appeared to be a truck accident. He was· lauded for hia work with Neighborhood Watch. •Huntington Beach Fire Marshal Frank Kelly, a 24-year veteran of the department was cited for developing a fire emergency management system that has been a dopted nationwide. •Duane D. Wentworth and Ronald C . Hall, traffic maintenance employees, were credited with saving the city more than $20,000 annually through their invention of curb and crosswalk painting devices. RECALL BROADENS ... from the shelves, and we have increased security at all of our stores,•' M s. Cramer said Wednesday. "We have nothing to go on at this time, and we don't know where it will happen next." The supermarket chain has asked anyone who purch~d any eye or nose drops or nasal spray from any of its 50 area markets within the past month to return them. "This stuff (sulfuric acid) is much stronger than the normal ~ypes of acid we are used to like the vinegar or lemon juice," said Ms. Bond. "It's comparable to the acid you put in your swimming pool." She said sulfuric acid could theoretically cause blindness or at least scar eye tissue, especially if not treated promptly. "But this stuff I.a ao strong that people only get one drop ln their eye and immediately waah it out and seek treatment," ahe uid. Sulfuric acid la readily detectable because it smella like rotten egga. Ms. Cramer said the products taken off the shelvea last December only began reappearing in stores on July 4. ......... fa1\·food pure ue at BHch aoulevaril and York\OWD .,,..... WhnilllM tUt ~ ... er a 111 d BNch while onoom.an. riffle heel the IN!ll' u.h' ...a ' WM ltruck by an auto. She died .... .,. .... ol bet tQlrtli. •At 11:&0 p.m . .on Jily •· another pedffttlan, Joeepb ·o. QUarello, 21, of Fountain Valley, •• hl' while ati.mptlna to crom Hamilton Avenue Dear 'Bpy,._ Lane. The ped•trlan, w..nn, dark cloth• at the time, waa pronounced dead at tht acene. •Early 1ut Saturday, a dri\ler who alle1edly exceeded the 1peed limit and Urnored a atop s11n •'ruck a 1'1>68 Corvalr carrylna a youna man and hJ.a 11.tlfriend. The mj.ahap, at the fnteraectlon of 14th Street and Olive Avenue, clalmed the life of the young woman, Wendy Lynn Lyon, 19, of Lakewood. The two driven remain hoapit.allzed. •Early Monday, a 1981 Porsche that police say was traveling at more than 80 miles per hour on Golden West Street near Yorktown Avenue crashed into a row of palm trees. The two people in the auto were killed instantly, police aaid. They were physician Michael Robert Jeffries, 35, and hia companion Rita Feerer, 28, both residents of Huntington Beach. Traffic investigator Dowling said officers are awaiting lab test results to determine whether alcohol or drugs were a factor in any of the recent mishaps. He noted that Huntington Beach had a total of 29 traffic· deaths in 1981. "We're still behind last year," he said. "But we're catching up fast." Su i cide pac t cla ims t wo • 1n county In an apparent death pact, Robert Trudeau Hill, 54, of Lemon Heights shot and killed his terminally ill wife Wednesday morning, and then cornrnitted suicide with the same .45-callber handgun, according to Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart. .. Elizabeth Bacheller Hills, 56, had been suffering from cancer for the past three years and Lieutenant Hart aaid the' Hills had told a cloee friend they didn't know if they could handle a linaering death. Rill was found ln the buahes ln the front yard of the couple'• home at 11241 Vista Del Lago. Mrs. Hill's body was diacovered in the bedroom. Hart said the murder/suicid~ occurred between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m. A.lao, the Hilla left a list of family members to be contacted, together with instructions about the disposition of their prooertv. Sllghtly ~armer Felt today with hlgha at the beach" 70 to 75 end Inland ., .. , 80 to 85. Continued lelr tonight with OV«nlghl lowt of 84 to-ea. Aleo lair on f!tlday but with ~ ~ morning IOw doude along the ooaet or Orange County. Hight at the ~ on FrtcSay 70 to 75 end ltllend .,_ 82 to S7. Elaewhere . from Point Conception to tile M••lcan bord« and out eo mllM: Night •od rnomlnO llghl Y8tlabte wtnda becoming -t to IOUt"-t 12 10 HS knota In the attemoona. SouthwMt awell of 1 to 2 feet. hi and morning low Clovde eolM loc.i log but c:te.tno telr In the aftemoone. lh• mid 1101 In downtown Lot Ang.... to t coatt• low of 90, lrom the mid &Oe to the mid eo. In mount.,ne 111\d trom the mid eo. to the mid 80a In the deHrtt, depending on the locetton. Temperatures NATION .. lA PN. Albin)' 83 • Albuque 92 87 ArMnllo H ea ....,,.... ... 81 17 Atlanta 92 72 Atlante Cty n 11 Austin 100 re Baltimore 89 13 ..22 :Zm, 89 14 92 12 ~de 88 58 .01 8olM 17 97 BoetOll 75 17 Brownevle • 711 euttak> 81 • 8ur11ngton 14 112 .10 Ce8C* at M CM11etn SC 87 74 CMnlln WV aa ee .O t Cllelltte NC aa 73 Ch9yenne 78 54 CNc:ago 85 12 .01 ClnclnMtl 92 71 .48 c......,and 85 72 .oe Columbue 111 ee .39 Del-Ft Wth 99 11 Deyton 92 ea .H DenV« 82 59 .03 OMMolnet 91&71 2.4t Detroit 87 e9 Duluth 75 5t El Peeo " 99 Fargo 95 84 Flegttllff 80 49 GrMIFala tS ft .Ot Hertford 83 • ......... 87 63 Hou91Qn 94 IO lndnaplle 112 n .13 Jedcan MS 93 70 JK!tlffltle 91 72 Kant CllJ 100 73 .e1 Kno•Yllle tt 73 LMV~ 10t 72 Uttle~ " 78 Loultvllle IM 78 .32 L~ H 11 =-M • aa II ......... 82 ea ......... 91 73 NellfMle 91 10 .... ~ 92 73 NewY~ u 74 Norfolk 16 72 No. Platt• et eo .25 Oltta City " 72 Omllha 80 74 Orltn40 80. 74 Phlladr.I• 89 73 Phoe!'I • 108 85 Ptttabur' 83 17 Ptland, 10 eo .ee Pt.land, Ott 11 sa PrO'tldenoe 78 .. =r°"Y 81 72 88 87 t .IO A9flo 13 47 Aldwnond et 7t Stilt Lall• 92 " Sen Antonio " 7t Seattle 73 81 :=1.: 96 70 .. 73 StU.. M 81 81 P·TllTIPI IO 78 .oe St lte Merte • '7 Sc>c*tne 11 154 Syreouee M .. T°"9ka .. 72 .M lllf 111'111 ........ :~ .... ~...,,,. e:=d· =-== , .. ..., ............... ~ . 1-1 ::: .... Hfldlt.~ 1~ = lllboe Wtdtt M ~ ,.,.,. :::: =··· Mi. 14 -=-Ian~'* t-2 T~ • CAllADA CelgMy Edmonton Montr ... Ottawe Regina Toronto VtnCOUYW Winnipeg Extended weather n 42 11 38 78 lie eo 81 52 78 62 71 54 81 52 SOUTH!.AN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -o-.ity lair but with .arty momk'G low cloudt -the coaat and ltotated afternoon tllunderellowere In mountain•. Hlgl'l 1~ In IOWW 70e 9' • tile bHOllH, 11 lo 87 In "" COHtal oHIM and .. to t8 In Inland ~ Lowa ~ 17 to 70. HIOha tn mountelne 79 to It ilnd !Owl 47 to lower SO.. Smog What• to call (toll lrH) for 111*1 11'1'°9 lnlomwitlon: Otangt County: (800) 44IS-382t Lo• Ano•••• County: (100) 142-4021 ~ end San ....,_dlllO oounttm: (IOO) 3f7-4710 i:.= _.... ~ ceoo> Tides TOOAV , 8eoond loW 4:03 p.m. 2,2 hoOl!d lllOh 10:10 p.m. t .O ,_AY Fnt iow e:n a.m. ·O.t ,..,.. 1111" 11:• &I'll. 4.t leoond' IOW UI p m. 2. t leOOfld ~ 10:41 p.m. 1.7 14"1 .... t~ 9' f;IO P-"'" ,..,,. ...... "' .. MOOfl ...... ~ .. 8:41 p.191., .... ,,. .. t .40 .. "' • SCHOOL BLAZE -Sixty fitefighters from Orange County and Stanton battJed a fire Wednesday night that cauaed an estimated $386,000 damage to Vessels Elementary School, 5900 Cathy Ave., Cypreaa. Fire investigators said the bla7.e was of ~usplcious .,.., .......... ~ ........ origin. One firefighter who received a minor injury in the· incident wa1 released alter treatment at Los Alamitos General Hospital. The fire, first reported at 11:32 p.m., required three hours to control, fire officials said. From Page A1 J UDG E . • • However, she admitted on the witness stand that the November elate on a <Juitclaim deed giving her poeaeSSton of the house was falsely elated and notarized. The document, she aaid, actually was signed by her grandmother in 1982 and not in 1981. It also was disclosed in the trial that Harrold used the Newport address in 1979 when she applied to the governor's office for a judicial appointment in Orange County. At the time, she was living in Riverside County. This revelation prompted Owen to sharply criticize Harrold in court Tuesday as being untruthful with the governor and the electorate. Owen said Dutcher hadn't proved that Harrold was not a resident of the county 54 days before the June 8 election, as required by state law. But he did rule that Harrold did not have her principal residence, or domicile, in Orange County when ahe was appointed in March, 1980, and did not establish her residency in the county until March 18 of this yelU' when utility and phone bills show that full-time use of the Lido Isle home began. Dutcher, represente d b y attorney Kenneth Golden in the proceedings, conceded that he would have momentum going into the November election because o f his s u cces s ful challenge of .Harrold .. ~ victory. However, he said he would put off any celebrating until the day after the November election - "the day we win." It ls believed that Harrold, who could not be reached for comment later in the day. can finish out her term through December. Her successor would take office .Tan. 1. Co'ps seek motive in double slay ing Orange police Investigators have released the identities of two men found shot to death in a home Wedneeclay but said they still have no motive for the apparent murder-suicide. The men were identified as Billy Ray Bryant, 30, and John Brooks, 29. Bryant's wife Pa trlcia, 27, is reported i~ satisfactory condition at UC Irvine Medical Center after un~ergoing surgery for injuries s h e suffered when beaten , apparently by Brooks, at another location earlier Wednesday. Brooks' and Bryant's bodies were found in the Bryant home at 396 Oak St. in Orange at about 11 a .m. Wednesday following a nearly five-hour stakeout oy police at the home . Isr ael consoiidates Beirut t~nk posts By The Aasoclated Pre11 Israel consolidated ita tank positions around the PLO's shrinking west Beirut enclave to~.ay, vowed to step up the military pressure and advised the U.N. secretary-general not to visit Yasser Arafat. After 20 hours of fighting Wednesday that left at least 250 civilians and 19 Israeli soldiers dead and 670 Lebanese wounded by official count, Israeli tanks dug i n on Beirut's southern uutskirts and behind the city's racetrack. Other Israeli armor pulled back from the harbor area ln the north, however, and no tanks could be seen on the road used to storm across the midci ty Green Line into the Palestine Liberation Organization enclave. Meanwhile in Washington, D.C., the Reagan administration attempted to get negotiations for a PLO evacuation from west Belrut back on track today, but offidals said the fighting in the Lebanese capital made it extremt-ly difficult for special mediator Philip C. Habib to operate. The crisis atmosphere that flared when Israel stepped up its military pressure on the PLO eased somewhat, but officials here described the situation in Beirut as still dangerous. They said President Reagan had sent messages to a number of Arab governments, urginjl t}lem to intensify their efforts to arrange the PLO's withdrawal from the city. The officials, who asked not to be identified, also oonfinned that Reagan's message to Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin o n Wednesday wa s in "considerably stronger terms" than his public statement that called a cease-fire an "absolute necessity." A car bomb exploded outside the Alexandre Hotel in Christian-controlled east Belrut, wounding several people with flying glass and setµng fire to several cars. I~~------------------~--~ • OMEGA WHEN YOUR TIME IS PRECIOUS. The rare combination of technology and art - Om ego. A legend in Swiss watchmaking since 1848 eoch Omega is os impeccably accurate a& it Is aes~ thetically pleasing. Come see our entire collection. lodies' quartz bracelet watches in 14 karat yellow gold: A. $795. 8 . $975. C. $895. SLAVIC K'S Fine~ Snee 1917 Whert rht ~sc surpmes beein. ,MNOft llllnd(114) .... ,., • Newocwt IMtt\ NlttO r.r.. &...,.... SW! Dleigo .... ~ NATION • WA81UNQTON' (AP) -Two automobll9 ~...:r ,, wW be .,...bll for tbD to ...-a eoun oc'dlr ~ all new mnlbe~iped with automaflo' ..at bitltl or air In the tall of 1813. ...... W..m.day, WU a •tbick for • automobile lndU1try and tnaJ:! a..n 1Klmlni8tntion. whk:h had ICl"lpped die. reqUlrement 1Mt )'Ml' delplte belt.ct complalnta trolJ) consumer aroupa and the lnau rance lndu.try. • A dne·Judae federal •PPMll COW't told the ':l'nnlparladOn O.parmwnt that lt ml.Wt inforce a naJj that requirtll CUI to be equipped wtth •Uher alr b111 or Hit beha that faaten automadaally when a penon 1h1 tn • car. With ln houra of the rullna, two manut~n. Chryaler and Amer1can Moton, lllued ltatementl bi Detroit •Yllw they coWd not meet the Sept. 1, 1988 deMifine~ Panel approv~s income tax withholding WASHINGTON (AP) -Looking for way1 to fatten tax revenuee, Jl Senate-House conference committee hu aa.reed to require 10-pen:ient lncome tax withholding on interest and dividendl. But the committee ahowed a more generous llde, slipping a bonus for U.S. Savlnp Bonda holden lnto the compromile tax-Increase bill now belna readied to f.ce votee in the Houae and Senate. The withholdina plan, approved Wednetday niaht. la a major element of a bill puled by the Senate that would raiae a record $98.9 bUlJon over the next three yea.n in an attempt to cut federal borroWlna and reduce interelt rates. The withholding provision would go into effect next Jan. 1 If finally approved. Hiring of high school pages defended ' . WASHINGTON (AP) -A special House panel lnve1tigating the hiring of high school paaee for congt'ellional errands appears ready to recommend continuation of the practice, but with tight.er aupervlsion. "It'll be a teen-age group," said Rep. John Myers, R -lnd., a m~mber of the Speakers' Commlsalon on the Pages. "I think the ~eneral COOle'MUS is that. . .college students Wouldn't fulfill our need.I.'' House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill created the special panel three weekl ago to examine the page system after allegationa that some teen- agers had been Involved with drugs and illicit sex. The commission's recommendations are expected within days. GOP leader s predict approval of c uts WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate Republican leaden are predicting swift passage for a $12.2 billion installment of their deficit-reduction package after winning narrow approval for a 4 percent limit on cost-of-living Increases for millions of federal retirees. One GOP aide, who declined to be identified by name, said a test vote Wednesday on the pension issue was the principal hurdle to passage of the bill a.s drafted. In addition to the 4 percent cap on pension increases for civil service and military retirees through 1985, the measure includes $2.5 blllion in cuts in food stampe over the next three years and anQJ.her $1.5 bllllon reduction in dairy price supportl:". . Judge rules 'co verup' in radiation suit SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -An attorney says he will seek $100 million for Utah ranchers who claim their sheep were killed by radiation in 1953, after a court ruling that the government was "intentionally false or deceptive" in the original trial. WORLD , U.S. District Judge A. Sherman Christensen ruled Wednesday thai the government had covered up evidence in a 1956 trial -which he heard -in which ranchers claimed that fallout from nuclear~xploslons at the Nevada Test Site · killed 4,390 sneep. He ordered the case reopened. U.S., S o viets con! er on arms r e duction GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) -U.S. and Soviet representatives confe~ for three hours today in the 12th full negotiating eesslon of the Strategic Anns Reduction Talks. The customarily brief American statement annC>Wlcing the duration of the meeting said the negotiating teams are to meet next on Aug. 10. The talks are expected to be recessed in mid-or STATE late August to allow for con s ultations in Washington and Moecow. Both sides have agreed to refrain from public diacusaiDn in Geneva about the course of the negotiations begun June 29 with the aim of reducing U.S . and Soviet nuclear missile arsenals. ACLU su es o ver women's studies prog ram LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fears that Cal State Long Beach will cave in to pressure from "New Right fundamentalist groups" and conservative state legislators has prompted faculty members of the university's Women's Studies program to gear up to sue in defense of the P!Oll"am. The suit. to be filed by the American Civil lJbertles Union in Loe Angeles Superior Court, names &1 defendantA university president Stephen Hom , the Board of Trustees of the California State University and Colleges, Chancellor Glenn Dumke, and Cal State Lon,g Beach vice presidents Glendon Drake and John Haller. The ACLU says the university ls guilty of sex discrimination and viol•tlng the First Amendment rights of the Women'• Studies faculty members. Business s tops labor-supporte d bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -Business won its biggest legislative victory over labor this year when an Assembly committee shelved a bill to require firms to notify workers and pay severance when closing planJS. In a hearing Wednesday marked by outbursts from angry workers, the Assembly Ways and Meam Committee voted to recommend that the bill be given a study this fall. That meam there can be no further action on the bill thll leSlion. A new bill would have to be introduced next year. Air Force launches Minuteman missile V AND'ENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -An unarmed Air Force Minuteman 3. lntercontinental 'bal.llatic mlsaUe was launched at 7:05 p.m. Wedneld.ay by a milllle crew from the 2nd Atrborne LB:lch Control Squadron at Offutt Air Force , Neb. reports from throushout California and Nevada of an explosion or a red fireball streaking across the western skies. However, Lt. Col. Pick Heil; public affairs officer at Vandenberic, Mid thoee reports could not be connecced with the m18aile launch. Colncldentall , the te1t ftrlng brought ~lddtl VD,,.... ... or... °' MMrtllillt Tom Mur1)htne .... ~.:.,~ ~ KMGoddsd 011'81Wflf~ ~ Tom ~cCann .......... .., ........ .., ........... . . Motherhood bill killed SACRAMENTO (AP) -A propoeal to regulate 1urrogate motherhood ha been killed by an Amembl)' committee \hat WU clearly unnerved by the llSue of a woman•a ~t to bear a dlild for an Infertile couple. 'IM bill Would have '*" the flnt ln \he naUon to resulat.e 1ur ro1ate moth e rhooa, 'an ~t b1 a woman to bear a c b)' artlfldal lnMmlnaUori frillD a men whme wtfe eunot &1w birth. · We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Wha t don't you Ub" Call the number below and yeur meaaa1e wlU btt l'ffOtded, transcribed and delivered to the appropr1ate editor . The same 2A·hour an1wer1n1 aervlce may tM uaed to record let· ters to the editor on any toplt. Mailbox contributon mutt Include their name and telephone number for verlrtcatlon. No circulation calls. please. Tell us what's on your rnlnd. I BA C K I N -Davld Begel man, who quit as chairman of United Artists after a string of movie flops, hu been named president of a new film company, Sherwood froductiona. Helicopter loses fuel ·on beaches A disabled helicopter from the Marine Corps Air Station (Helicopter), Tustin, landed safely at Camp Pendle ton Wednesday after raining kerosene-like fuel on sun bathers on the beach in the Encinitas area. The ch opper dumped 1,200 pounds of jet fuel over two miles of beaches after suffering engine failure over the ocean about a mile from Solana Beach at 3:10 p.m., according to Marine Corps sources. The CH-46 helicopte r from Marine Air Group 46, a tenant reserve unit at the Tustin base, was piloted by Capt. T .J. Gordon of Laguna Hills and co-piloted by Lt. Col. E. Hall of Encinitas, both reservists. "It sounded like it was raining over the water," said Elizabeth Master, 32, after the fuel was dumped. An Investigation was ordered, said Capt. Anthony Rothfork at El Toro Marine Air Station. Lifeguards and fire rescue t ea m s w ere besiege d b y complaints of eye and skin irritation. One lifeguard, Jeff Milton, said that from 700 to 1,- 000 people at Moonlight State Beach were sprayed lightly by the keroeene-\lke fuel. • ID BY STEVE MARBLE or .... .,..,,......., Sam Gibb• h&1 nlahtmare1 when 'he remerrtbet1 he'• the man who·killed l)()nald Warner. He ha1 nightmare• remembertna how the body atnaahed Into his car'• WindthJeld that September evening ln Newport Beach. He feel• 1ick when he recalh how he panicked, driving quickly from the death scene wlth gla11 blowing back in hit face. He ha1 nightmare• remembering how he stopped, crying and confused, and wondered whether he should go back. "If I could do anything to change what happened, I'd do it," said Gibbs. "The last thing I'd ever want to do Is to kill 1<>mebody. I wish I could bring him back." Gibbs is a 21-year-old from Orange. He comes from a tight- k nit family, works for his father's moving and storage firm and likes to surf and ski. Friday he finds out whether he must spend the next 210 days in jail on convictions of felony hit and run and manslaughter. Warner also was a young man who enjoyed the beach and came from a close family. He was crossing Balboa Boulevard, heading to his apartment, the night he was struck and kill¢. The hit-and-run case, now nearly a year old, bu drawn considerable attention over the months. Gibbs was deacribed as "an animal" during a courtroom preliminary hearing and was criticized by the Warner family because he had not made an effort to apologi:ze. Gibbs, who was driving with a friend that night and later abandoned his car in a shopping center parking lot, talked about the case this week. "I'd like to talk with the family. I'd like to show them that I'm not an animal. I made a big mistake but I'm not an animal.'' Gibbs said he and a friend had been driving in the beach area that night, trying to meet girls. I He uid they were headed home. drivtna on Balboa Boulevard. "l remember a couple of aujw runntna acroa1 the 1treet.~We were ju1t drivtn1. I chan,.e'd lane. and then the body wu rlght ln my wlnd1hleld. It happened 10 quickly, I dld~'t even have time to hit t>h'e brakes.'' .; He l&Jd he etopped brtdly, "'w people running to the body~ then took off. "I just freaked out. I wa1 1cared to death. I rememb6r 1topplng and uying, 'Oh, Goct.trI can't even explain the feeling I had. I knew the people thete were going to get my llcen1te number. "When I left, it wasn't Wq~· I was trying to get away wit.,h something. I ju.at figured the best thing would be to talk wil,h somebody.'' , He said he pulled over in a residential tract off Pacific Coast Highway and smashed the rest of the windshield out. "I thought I should go back,.! · was crying and acared. I figured it was too late.'' Gibbs retained an attorney who later told police where the car could be found. On the advice of his attorney, he did not talk with police but did submit to being photographed. · Two months passed before the Newport police located a witness able to identify Gibbs a1 the driver. Gibbs was arrested. Gibbs said the incident was "eating" at h im 10 badly he wanted to turn hirriaelf over to authorities the day after tM accident. He said his attorney said no, suggesting the police didn't have a case. • When the case reached OranK,~ County Superior Court, Gibbis agreed to a plea-bargain deal, accepting a 210-day jail sentence, He said he 'tegrets that move and blames his decision on hil attorney. He has a new attorney and is hoping to get a full jury trial. Robert Keefe, Gibbs' original attorney, said it would be improper for him to comment on the case or the statements h1s former client made. "Unless rm ordered to testify;: explained Keefe, "I still have &lJ obligation to Sam not to talk about the case." James Merwin. Gibbs' currel)l attorney, Said a move to get i full-jury trial for his client is a gamble. He said Gibbs could end., up with a reduced sentence or a• lonl{er stint in jail. : Gibbs. of course, de\,esntt: believe he belongs in jail. ;· "Jail Is for criminals, for the scum and the slime," said Gibbs. "I'm not a criminal. I made a badl mistake but I don't feel I belong/ In jail." . ~ I 'the Warner family feels the: 210·day sentence was ~ light.: UWlr.,._..o J UST A HANDFUL -Amelia, an orphaned baby wallaby, peers from a zookeeper's hand at the Beardsley Park Zoo in Bridgeport, Conn. The creature bas spent most of its time in an improvised pouch made of flannel. They have expressed outrage( that Gibbs wants to go back ~ court. ! At the hearing Friday, it will. be decided whether Gibbs is toa have a trial or begin hfs jail, sentence. -· ii .Not only Champagne But Concert Specials! Come visit us from 7-9 p.m . for Free Champagne and . . . 40°/o off select jewelry and watches The Pl'ftldent of Shell Oil Co. aayt Interior Seeretary Jame• Watt'• plan to open up the entire U.S. coutline for offahw:e oil and gas drllllJlg is good for the country. Watt's plan is serious ly flawed. Critics, lu~ Orange ~ offic:tall, aa Watt a plan ls WWnly good for oil companie. and la a detriment to the environment and to future federal revenuea from offaho~ leasing. Shell'• John Bookout, Jr. contends Watt's-five-year plan Is beneficial becau.e it will quickly eenerate oil production royalties for the federil treasury and will allow the country to determine the extent of its oil reserves. This, Bookout contends, will all<>W government and industry to knoy when they must turn to alternative aources of energy. While Booltout contends that Watt's plan will rapidly increase oil royalties, critics of the plan point to a trend of lower oH company bids for individual federal offshore tracts. The critics reason that the competitive edge has been taken off the bidding procedure because with so many millions of acres to choose from, oil companies are bidding lower on individual tracts. In the short term, the critics argue, the federal treasury will reap large profits by leasing more tracts. But in the long term, the overall federal income from the tracts could tap billions of dollars short of what it could h41ve been under a controlled, gradual leuing program. Besides lower prices for individual tracta, critics ~lnt out that with the country 8 entire coastline open for leasing, the administration just doesn't have the l'elOW'Cel ~ provide adequate, specific area studies of potential environment•l damage from offshore drilling. Kenneth Delino, Newport Beach assistant to the city manager in charge of coastal reaourc:es, makes a good point when he says that Watt's plan is unbalanced in favor of oil exploration with no regard fot environmental dangers. He says a unique, pristine coastal environment is also good for the country -and local cities -and should be given equal consideratiorr with oil exploration concerns. Watt appears to be following his often-stated philosophy that the country's nat1,1ral r e!;ources should be tapped and used. But it appears the Interior Secretary has disregarded long- term econ omic concerns and environmental safeguards. His proposal follows his philosophy, but poses the threat of being unbalanced and reckless. President Reagan, or the courts, should step in and add some sensible balance to this proposal before it is too late. Errors at the 01arsh Coastal Commission officials have what appears to be an unsolvable problem o n their 1'ands. A 15-acre coastal parcel identified as a wetlands wildlife habitat.twas plowed up recently in Huntington Beach, but there appears to be no one to blame. Thus, there's no one the commission can order to restore the area to a salt marsh and what commission officials say is a violation of the Coasia1 Act apparently can't be corrected. The parcel is owned by Mills Land and Water Co., which has long opposed the wetlands designation on the property that forbids development. '. Last April, some part-time city workers incorrectly posted the parcel for weed and trash cleanup. ; City officials say the order was supposed to ~ only for trash cleanup, because people h ave pul!ed vehicles up to the property, located south of Hamilton Avenue off Newland Street, and dumped trash, creating a health nuisance. Robert L. Moore, part-owner of Mills, hired City Councilman John Thomas' truck and crane company to level and grade the area. Coastal Commission official Karl Hinderer h eard that a wetlands was being plowed and he wen( to the site, but found that Thomas, at the time, was plowing • a smaller parcel several hundred feet outside the coastal wne. Hinderer says he didn • t bother to warn Thomas and Moore not to grade the nearby coastal parcel. This is k:noWJl as a failure to communicate. The next day, the nearby salt marsh also was plowed under. Coastal Commission legal advisers initially thought they had a good case against Thomas and Moore and asked the state Attorney General's Office to file a lawsuit for damage fines and restoration costs. But then city officials stepped forward and admitted the property had been incorrectly posted for weed abatement. The commission is still investigating, but the city's mistake and Hinderer's admitted silence seems to weaken any case the coastal commission may have had. Moore and Thomas say they were following the city's orders. It must be noted that both Thomas and Moore have dealt with ~tal Commission red tape before. and should have known that permits are needed to grade in the coastal zone. But the bottom line is that the field is plowed and there's no single person, agency or company to blame. It's abnost a comedy of errors. But not quite. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex· prelMd on this page are those of their authors a nd art is ts. Reader comment is invit- ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) ~2-421. L.M. Boyd /What 'Grad! A' means If •4Qrede A" means anything at all on a c:.rton of milk. it means the dairy CQntend1 the milk was processed under unitary ltandarda. No, sir, to tum out "Gnide A" you don't have to we .c11stilled water when you cut it. Jwt aep it reuonably clean. A tbou8and years ago ln China, cotm were pre 11 ed ln apeciA1 shapes to 1J1n1fy;w)tat they'd buy, The ~~coin WM traded for fruiL A. coin cu) rou,bly to look lib a hwmn body WM fOI' dotbea. ~~~-· ., lolJI woci.ated with ~ allo .. the patron II.int of pawnlllalln u~. . A. Abe>Ut 45 minutes normally. 'That's an average 60-pound stringing job. Takes twice that long for Bjorn &rg's 91-and 92-pound webe. Among younesters in that aee bracket from 9 to 12, girls tend to be better athlete. than boys. So contend the studenu of phyaical fitnea A 10-year-qld girl, they say, almost invariably can beat a 10-year-old boy of about the 1a11W wetpt met helabl ln a boJCi111 match, lt both -llmOiar .....,., Thia tomboy ..... Ji 'the only • bnckitt ln which pla sx-pbY*aJ sus-iCJrity, You dOn't .. lt demamtrated much beclu.. pla are ~ to crow out ol tt wtth .n deltbente epeed. -- - ... AARt)to BILt&Vl-rH15 ARIA WAS ONCE ALL ORAN~E ~ROV&S AND SMODGE POTS ••• ALTMOUGM rMERE IS A cerrAJN CONTINU 1,.r, .. ~ ........ 1 1 Letters to the editor Wooden roofs: Another view To the Editor: On July 16 a San Bernardino paper ran an article on a residential fire in Rancho Cucamonga, started when laundry was ignited by a water heater, where a mother and her two children "luckily" escaped unharmed. Several facts of this news item are of unusual interest. The fire was already fully involved before anyone was aware of it. It happened at 1:30 a.m. when the family was asleep. The roof was burned off the house, yet no one was injured. I visited this house the following day and talked with the occupants who were shaken but unharmed, and it became obvious why a greater tragedy had been averted. This house had a wood roof. A wood roof that vented the fire allowing the toxic fumes and smoke to e9Cape, and undoubtedly saved the lives of the occupants. The mother stated that, although the flames were shooting from the roof by the time they were aroused, they were able to walk out unharmed because there was no smoke inside. Further indication of th1a was the evidence that, although fire damage to the kitchen, garage, and roof was extensive, there was no smoke damage throughout the house, no smoke damage to the contents of the hOUle, and, most of all no smoke damage to the occupants. NATIONAL FIRE Protection Association statistics show that over 95 percent of all home fires start INSIDE the houae. In high fire hazard brush areas. or areas adjacent to hillside brush areas, it is apparent that fire retardant construction is necessary. But in our recent emotional eagerness to legislate fire retardant roofing for single family dwelllnp throughout Calllomia are we sacrificing the life safety of 95 percent of the families whose fires will start INSIDE their house? During an intensive 30-month study made in Dallas, Texas, 88 people lost their lives in fires. None of these deaths were under wood roofs. Tight, fire retardant roofs trap super-heated smoke and toxic fwnes inside the building and do not allow them to escape. In recent months a pregnant woman and h er 8-month unborn baby ln Montclair, an 11-year-old boy in Chatsworth, three people ln Crestline, and a 3-year-old girl in Los Angeles all died of smoke inhalation under tight, fire retardant roofs. MQl'e were injured. WU1 the.e statistlca increase when homeowners have no choice but tight roofing? In some of these instances the apparent structural damage seemed minimal. But the fire began inside, the smoke could not ~pe. and peopJe died. It is amall conaolation to a homeowner that his fire retardant roof ls still intact if he, or a member of his family, died from smoke inhalation. Right now there is one owner of a wood-roofed home in Rancho CUcamonga who will suffer the pain of rebuilding a house, but, much more important, will not suffer the agony of burying a family. BETTE A. MITTON Police thanks To the Editor: Thli Newport Be•ch Police Department commends the Dally Pilot for ha etforu to provide a aafe Fourth of July; • 'Ille replatior» reattlctlng the U1e ot flreworka are 80metlmea difficult to 80Cept and often .,...._.t an opportw\lt,y for ctlticlam or •rcaam as to thefr enforcement of then lawa and ~ the nepuve lmptiet that they am'liav.. 2he Dally PUot haa taken a ~•r'J pOlltlw attitude ln dea11na . with thil -... It hai dearly shown tlMt ratlonile for dWll ,...tionl Ind hlil~ it• readers to tak• advant•C• of altem.tin ~"!!to enjoy the hlltanc. diaDlay 9f flNwwtca; We IMMijou @"~;~: CHAJU.a lt GROSS Odet Of PolkY Newport !Mel. . MAILBOX Ghastly action To the Editor: It was another shocking display of devil-take-the-hindmost, survival-of· the-fittest, and do-it-yourself, consumer. For, apparently in the interest of saving the rich taxpayer money, an arrogant Orange County Board of Supervisors' majority recently - wickedly -cut the heart out of the Consumer Protection Agency, bravely standing against public interest and protest. This in the teeth of records showing the agency saved non-rich Orange Countians millions. But one guesses the real reason may have been, sweetened by a do-it-yourself phlloeophy, to use the money for such development-oriented projects as the ha ted San Joaquin Corridor freeway should the courts reject our suit. l 'm surprised opr.on e nts of the consumer agency didn t come right out and say, "Big Business doesn't cheat;" or, "Who needs a Consumer Protection Agency? Ask your neighbor -he'll tell you who's reliable." (My neighbor's wife back in Florida used to ask the iceman which stuks to buy.) Or, "You can't fool the American public." But accolades must go to Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark who fought the cut. Perhaes they read the voter mind clearer. Or better, they still ~lieve a decent government's role is to do what the poorer individual cannot do: protect himself from scams. One haa to wonder, however, why one of the cutters didn't join Riley and Clark in re~um for their past votes for maaslve developments. There's still another question that rn not put. All I ask now is, How long, Oh Lord? How long? TOM ALEXANDER Column unfair To the Edit.or: Un til I read Mr. Von Hoffman's column so unfairly depicting and condemning Israel's military thrust into embattlea Lebanon (July 16th), I considered his comments to be fair and worth noting. Being a pacifist by nature, the brutal effects of all armed conflicts have ever evoked loathing from me. If fairness would have tempered his moral outrage, I might have forgiven his damning words. ~ is, I can only as)< him: Where were his righteous outcries when other Lebanese children were driven from their homes, orphaned and maimed from PLO firing? WHERE WAS HIS eloquent and moral wrath when Israeli schoolchildren were fired upon in their northern settlements and ln school buses? How many deprecating columns did he write when entire Jewish populations were uprooted from their historic homelands in Yemen, Syria, and many other Arab lands, with only the clothes on their backa?' Rather than call upon my own meager knowled1e of what transpired In tortured Lebanon, I'll quote from a · recent media ad of the nationwide American LebaneM Lffgue, numbertnl around 2 mUJJon touJa; '"SEVEN YEARS AGO, Lebanon WM occupied by PLO terrori1t8 who had been expftled from Jordan after havtnc failed to overthrow Klna Huasetn. Durln1 those seven years they committed an or1y of ati'oclUft and • LtUf'rf from rtO/Ura art w.k'omt 'TM . reghl 10 c°"""•t ltU#rt lo JU fJ10Cf or •hm111otr llhtl •• r111'11fd. 1Ati61 of 30lll wordl « liu wtU bi ,... ,,,.,.,.,_.., AU lelf#t'I mMlf lllt ... ..,.., .......... oddrru but MmH "'GI bf.....,•,.. quul I/ nn1ct•r&I rHtOll ti ~ Pott~ wtU fMW N ~ ..,,,_ ...,._ W ltl~l&bftfd , ........ ~ .• .,. .... ,..... '' !1'1• •r o/ lw rontriblilor '""°" t. g1.,_,. /01 11t•r,11cation pll?pONI. desecration against women and children, churches and gravesites. "A sweet and lovely land was ravaged. Those who dared to oppose the PLO were murdered. Homes and farms and villages were pillaged. Lebanese· governmental authority was defied and ultimately destroyed. "IN COLLUSION WITH the Syrian occupation army, the PLO made war on the people of Lebaon. From 1975 to 1981, the toll among civilians was 100,~ 000 killed, 250,000 wounded, countleas thousands made homeless. Thirty-two thousand children were orphaned. "And the world was silent." Now that in a desperate effort when Israel is trying to put an end to PLO atrocities, many eloquent voices such as Von Hoffman's have risen up to decry Lebanese casualties. Where were they in the last seven years of needleM suffering of the innocents? PAULA WARSAW Fire safety To the Editor: I wouJd1ike to extend our appreciation to you and your newspaper for running the ''No Fireworks in Laguna Beach" public service announcements prior to the Independence Day holiday. Although busy as usual, this Independence Day holiday weekend was characterized by minima] fireworks- related public safety problems, and by a calmer celebrative mood on part of the generaJ public. We believe your running our public ser vice announcements positively affected this year's le" destructive Independence Day holiday weekend celebration. RONALD E. ADAMS Fire Chief, Laguna Beach Seniors' view To the F.ditor: I am writing this letter to you in regard to what the mayor and City Council of Fountain Valley are trying to do to us seniors. On Tuesday, July 20, when we had a meeting with the mayor and City Council, I was amazed, surprlaed and disgusted to see and hear bow little they regarded the aenlors. Don't they realbe that their wives will be seniors too 9CXlle day? And rm sure a lot of them have a mother that is a senior also. As I was coming out of the buildln.I, I approached a member of the council and asked him what he thought about all th.? IS. His answer was that we all have our problems. This I thought wu qwte • answer. I told him that a lot of thae seniors who are quite elderly and don't have a tamily look forward to Wednesday and Friday to 10 to the Retreatlon Buildlng on Brookhum where they all meet to play &nao md play cards and have a little refreafunenL Ian 't this better than to haw to ~ home and twiddle their thumbs arid 91t • so depl'emed that they may land ill the nuning home? There ia an old la)'ing you are ~ • old • you feel, and I'm aare if tbt; haw to stay home .iJ the time It .... tm't • 80lnl to make them feel IQ)' ~· OU Very C.onoatbiid ~ ·r \ 0Ptn 11am Expires Aug. 11 , 1982 .,,., '" "' .... ~1 ,., •'t•lt/Ulft tffo' h "" fllf\ "'"''' .,,,,. 0()00 ONLY AT: 187 E. 17th St, Coata ~eaa Phone •ltHd tor ,.,, .. ,,,c. (714) 631 ·1992 --------- Straw Hat ~·1:, A 10 watta per channel, minimum rma Into 8 ohm. from 20-20,000 Hz, with no mofe ltuu10.4~ THO From P • 81 LOCK BOX THEFTi ~Umate ~ to t~ keys. No matter how often the IMne board re-keye, It a penon hu l.,Stlmate ACCl99, they may ,.t t.M new keya." P•ople with lock boxH on their homH 1hould keep a watcbJul •Y• OQ pro1pectlve buyert1 Welu wd, •hd never leave tnem alone ln the houle. OltcU_..ftMI auch u people tnterln1 home1 for ••le wbo ma.ht not ~ M tlloulh theYre Ntit.on. "The avt,..• bwllJir ln our area It -ff nof a· jUveNltt - 1enerally from out of our city, placet like Tuatln, Santa Ana and Garden Grove," Welti said, "and UIUall)' they're YOUl\I adulta." He added, "h'1 unfortunate to characi.rile \hem t~-way, but they u1ually don.~ok like prof..ional people." Call 142-5171. Put a ftw worda to work for ou. Mu11eum • imasern An..,,..,. ol 61.,, German art11t O.ker J'ltchln1er wUI be .,.._..,tld_,~UC· 25 at tM UIW)a 8-dl MUMUm of Art~~ F'llchtnaer II noud W his animated ft1ai ~ AdmJllion la $2.50 tiw mu1eum memben and $3.M for non·membert. The prbgram will be aired at 8 p.m. at the muaeum, 307 Clltt Drive. 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Alf Sales Final "4 fASHIOM ~. ~ llACH 11141 M4-4UJ "»MAIM lftllT, .ALM•.-11 Ill,, ata.1671 ----- RED HOT SUMMER SALE All Wallpaper 30% Offl Excludlng Kinney Bros.· Over 100,000 Patterns To Choose From In Stock Papers from · J0-40% Offl Super Sa~lngs on Mini Bllnds 60% With This Ad M&B Wood Bllnds 40% Offl SUNMASTER VERTICAL BLINDS 60% OFFI -•~r~ On Sale ,, ·Now! .. ARMSTRONG DESIGNER SOLAR IAN® FLOORING I -•-- Bank of Irvine-. picks president The Benk of Irvine hail named DonaJ4 J. Mm. • ' pnetden• end ~f exec:uUve offJcer. • J: ~ c. Aldrich, phlldlnt IDd <;IX>~ 117-t:: will canUn~ ... direct.or. :-: Mll11, an Anaheim bu1lne11 ancl banklDI~ eJtecuUY9, WU formerly pNlident of IBPA<:; !q!: Anahetm-beMd firm 1ptdal1%1n1 ln ftnance ~: manz:e:: ~ .. -r~ in 1974 Md~~~ two omc. tn IMM and one ln t..acU11A HWa. ~: benk ai.o hat facUltle1 at MCAS, El Toro, and:~ • MCAS(H), Tultin. ::: :-': _Stang income drops ;~; · 8taJ11-HydronSca Ioc. of San Clement.o reJ)Ol1ed:: net income of '19,06& fot' the nine monti. ended JUl'Mf·! 80 • compared to net 1nc!ome of $1,088,808 for tN9 ~ 1 perkxt ln 1981. 1be company e9!1lf!d t.02 per thare ae compared to $1.41 per lhare ln 1981. Stana manufacturel pumping equipment and I other proprietary products for commercial ano ~tary applJcationa. _Auto sale8 plunge :.: DE'l'ROIT (AP) -New car ulee at the ~.: U.S. automaken alumped laat month to their lowelt· level in 21 years. The companies reported Wednmday that they 10ld 189,052 new cars from July 21-31, down • 8.3 percent from 206,234 in the same period in 1981. 1be dally eelling rate wu 18,905, the lowest Iii.nee 1981, when 15,894 were 80ld. AZ! industry analyst called it "a pretty lousy, pretty dbcouraging" showing. Swedlow sets dividend The board of directors of Swedlow Inc. of Garden Grove declared a regular quarterly cub dividend of & oenta J1er share, payable Sept. 3 to abarehoJden of. reoard Aue, 20. Swedlow ia a manufacturer of proprlecary acrylic and armor product.a utiliz.ed for a variety of military and~ applications. Food increase slows By Th Auoclated Press The i.ncreue in the cost of food may be alowtng even more th81) flnt expected. An W10ffldal outlook 1-ued Wednaday by the AcricUlture Department said retail food pi1ces may go up an •veraae of 4.9 percent this year oompared with a 5.2 percent p1n lndk:ated a month ace>· The Agriculture Department'• offJdal forecast calla for food prioe9 to gain between 5 percent and 6 petUnt thil year, still down sharply from las\ )'Mr'• ~ .9 percent tncrew.. DOW JONES AVERAGES · HEW YORKCAPI FIMI o-..i-..... ~1oc::4" Aug ... JO '"" °l::'.a :Ms .= =:-ft lO Trft .... Jle.tl -.u ... ft-I.al IS Utt 1CIUO *-27 IOU1 lf$,07-1M 65 $1111 JlLJS J'IUll 117M .,.,._ '-• I~ ..................... S..174,• Tr.., . .. ..... ... 1.-.- UUIS .................... 1.--U Siii ••• ..•• .............. 1,1..,_ WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORK CAl'I ""I· 4 w.d. .. ,,. llU • 111 HEW YORK (API A ... 4 SILVER w.d. Mii JM ., ,., • •• ...... ~ -., 7tl tt n H111dy & H•rlftan, ... Ito pef' "°" ~ SENIOR MEMBER - Defensive end Jack · Youngblood will begin his 12th season in the NFL, tops on the Rams. ' ce 07 08 to auume coachins rein• of Yanlceesf C2 By JORN IEVANO player'• cuwr to a ICale. The fil"lt four (years old), but your body la that of a wont. I want to walk oui a wb\ner. I of .. Dllf,......,. or five yea.rs, the 8Cale II tipped toward a 40-year-old. It'• a touah peycholockal want to walk out on top." With the Ntirement of Rich Saul and player:a ablUty. The next lour or five, point in a player'• career." Which means Youngblood la hopeful the~~ of _Fred Dryer lut aeuon. the scale baiancn, with ability and Youngblood aaya he'• probably two the Rama can regatn the magic of '79 and :Jeck Younat>Jood hu moved to the top experience world.na in unllOI'\. The 1ut yNn away from reaching auch a stage. reach the Super Bowl again in the next .. the a.m.· leftior member. four or five yean aw aca1e bel1na to tip Althouch he admit. hla ability may have year or two. Belinnlna hla .12th year of eervSce in in the other direc:tlon, however, leavlna dropped a notch, YoWllblood contenda "I could probably play until I'm 36 or the NFL -= all with the Rama -only expedence u a player'• main llOutee o1 he has enouah left to pt the job cfone. 37 yean old, and 1Ull be aa good u eome Jim Youn1blood, 1tart1n1 hla 10th aurvtvaJ. "I think the aame callbef' la there l've of the playen ln the NFL today," he eeuon, and Larry Brookl, ln h.la 11th Youngblood la honest ln admlttina had the put couple of lleUON:" say.. "But there'• a penonal aspect here (--.unin8 Brooa domn't retire), come whJ.ch way the 9Cale la tilted with him. Lut year, a eeuon the Rams would that haa to be considered -and that la I cloee to matchlnc Jack YounabJood in "rm probably two yean away from juat u 800n forget, Youngblood led the don't want to be an avel'88e player." aenorlty. team In quarterback aacka (11) while Would Jack Youngblood contemplate Youngblood hat mixed feel.lql about 'Last year we didn't have totallni 37 tack1es and 24 auiata. retlrlhg If the Rama reached the Super obtatnin8 auch a lefty 1tatu1. On the one .i, k • h .Somewhat ironically, It'• because of Bowl thia teuon? hand, tne defenalve 'end'• poaltlon e,eryone wor ID t e same the Rama' dismal campaign -In "It would be a very appropriate time' command• respect, admlratlon", direction. You could tell which they finished 6-10 and missed the to do aomethifl8 like that," he aaya. "I leadership and a certain degree of h b h f playoffs for the fint time eight years -would have to take a look at a lot of power. On the other, though, auch a t at y t e outcome o our that y011nablood la still willing to bump t~ f ... _ th _ .. .,h... uall la •-t too , --o -my u ...... ,,, e team . . . ·-~ .. ua Y means a piayer .. no season. head a on Sunday and add m ore " in or loee, at least I would fini.ah on far from the end of the line. punishment to his body. top." I "It'• funny," at.art.a YOWllblood u he balance," he aaya. "At 32, my body has On more than one oocaalon during the Youngblood la encouraged by what lay. under the aun, lip~ on a glue of taken a tremendous •beating the lest 12 off-season, Youngblood ser iously he•a seen in camp so far. The players are iced tea in front of his room at the Rama' yean. considered joining teammates Saul, Pat eager, the coaches enthusiastic, and Cal State Fullerton training camp. "In "Experience can·carry you for three or Haden and ~g hance on the sidelines. there's that hunger again to be the beat other professions, the more experience four years, but then there comes a But the sour taste of the 1981 campaign that aeemed to be rnilaing last year. you obtain the better off you are. For an certain time when you're physically not was too much to swallow. "There's no reason in the world why athlete, too much experience is almost capable of performing any more and "I've spent 11 very auoceaful years in we shouldn't do well," he aaya. "e have detrimental." that's hard for an Individual to accept. the NFL," Youngblood explains, "and I the talent. I think the coaching ataff Ja - Youngblood com pares a footb_a_l_l ___ "Th_e_.;.min..;.;;.;;.;d;;...;.;atlll=-..;;;thlnks==--Y,o;:;.:u:...:'re;.;:...::2:..::3...::o::::.r-=24~-...::di=dn=-'..::...t ....:.w;...:;an::.::..:..t .;..m:.::y~caree;;;;..;:..;;.;;r_.;.;to:_e.;;.;;nd..;..;:.__wi....:.·th....:..:._t....:.h:.;;e __ (:..::See=...::Y:...:O:...:U:;.:N.:..G::.B::.LOO==Di., .:..P.::aa:ge:....:;C!.::..>:.._ Downing rescues Angels with homer Minnesota's rally thwarted this time By CURT SEEDEN or-.o.1r,...,..., rou can blame Brian Downing for the Angels' 8-6 victory over the Mlnneaota Twins Wednesday night. The Angels had once again held a comfortable lead in the late going only to see it van,ish into thin air -just as Tim Lauder's three-run homer did in the top of the eiahth Inning to get Minnetota even at 6-6. On the two previous evenings, the Twins, who have occupied Most of the guys have been around for a long time. They're not soins to let a couple of come-from- behind wins get to them. the cellar of the American League West most of the 8e890ll. turned what looked like Angel victories into Angel defeats and dropped Manager Gene Mauch's crew out of first place in the same division. 4 So with the ICOre notched 6-6, Downing came to the plate In the bottom of the eighth inning just hoping to get pinch-runner Rob Wilfong into acoring position. Inatead, he belted a Terry Felton pitch over the left field fence to help the Angels snap a demoralizing two-game losing atreak to the Twins and move his club back to within pereentage points of the divilion-leadlng K.anaaa Oty Royals. Blame the Angel victory on Downing'• bad aim. "I WU looking to hit eornething up the gap," the Angel leadoff hitter admitted. "He (telton) got the beat of me last night." Becauae the Twins had gotten the best of all of the Angela the last two nights, a short team meeting was called before Wednesday night'• game, but none of the Angels said it was a . panic IM!8lion. "We weren't really talking about getting down on ounelves. We just talked about battling and playing toaether, although I can't really uy we've been apart," Downing said of his teammalel. The Twins did their best to rip the Angela apart, though .. I,.ooking for a sweep at Anaheim Stadium, Minnesota managed to battle back after the Angels had scored two runs in the fifth, sixth and aeventh inni.nga. Earlier, the Twins had owned a 2-0 advantage aa Bobby Mitchell tripled in the third inning and scored 'on Kent Hrbek'• RBI single, and Mickey Hatcher tripled in the fourth and came around on Lenny Faedo's RBI hit. After striking out to lead off the Angel first, Do wning man.aged to play a part in four of the Anaels' eight runs. H.la RBI single in the fifth knocked In nm Foll, who had doubled. And, he walked and eventually acored In the teVenth. Hia winning blast in the eighth came after Bobby Grich had walked and Rob Wilfong was lNerted as a pinch-runner. "Most of the guya have been <See ANGELS, Pqe C3) (W)right approach Rookie pitcher leads Dodger win CINCINNATI (AP) -Ridty Wrlsht waan't lookina to do anything apecial in hll tint major league atart. "I didn't aet any pla." said Wright, who pitched l1x aterllna lnningl to post the victory in the Lo• An1elea Dodaera' 8-2 W:"'dina of the CindnnaU Reda edneaday. "l told myaelf, 'Look, lt'1 your tint atart. Just go out there and throw atrlkea, make 'em bit it.' "I ~ I did the job." Qulte well, he m11ht have added. The lef~bander' limited the Reda to two hit• in aix innln••· then sot help from relleven Joe Beckwith and Terry Forater in the four-bit victory. Forster came In af1er Beckwith walked two betterl foUowtna a 40-minute rain delay with two OUtl In the ninth. Wrl1ht, who waa called up frcm the Dodawl' Albuquerque fann club July 28 when Vtcente Rc:mo wmt on the dlabled 1.lat. pw up a IMdoff llna1e to Tom Law'-1n the um lnnlne. then dlcln't allow another hit until Dave Concepclon rapped bl1 ~ bonm ot the ,.... with two out and cne on In the Utb. •' 111 Sot 'em out. We 1ot tM J.d, md I JI.wt tried to hold l~" lllid Wrtlbt, who pcud up h.11 tint decWotl in hla aeoond ma.toe' league appearance. With hi• starting rotation trained by injury and a buay IChedule, Luorda decided to go with the 23-year-old lefti.hander. "He went out and did a good job," Luorda aaJd. "It WU a much-needed performance. He dkl exactly what we h.cl hoped for hlm to do!' · Steve Garvey lluaed a W.. run h<lmer to help -en. Dodaen pin their 11.xtb vlct«y In le'Yell pmee. Cincinnati ~anaaer. Ru11 Nixon called a cloattCl-door meettnc after the Redlt' e&th -In 107 aam-to reprimand the team for aloppy ~· "I c.n .ocept "'-'na up. but they still have to be told;' Nixon aaid. "No one ll1P91 over fundamental mJstabl mon than I do." • The Dodaen took a 1--0 i.d in the thlN:I when Steve Sax .an,Md, took .aocxt on e.r.yt•1 third wild pitch of the pme:and eoond one out la• on a ~ -.. bit by Riek ~. who had two dou~ md a ..... Lot ~ thin .uptild for four rum In the fourth ~ ....... . Qnc:tnnaU ......... BnD ~ &-11. Ron °'l ,,... off With • walk and ........ at .ad by o.rwy,. who w.at '° third on Milce Sdoilda'• ..... A KID'S GAME -Sons of Angel stars have recently been visible watching the action at Anaheim Stadium. At left, Aaron Boone sit$ on the dugout steps while taking in the U.S. ·team trying to regroup GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador (AP) -Stunned by wtnnina only four gold medall on the llrat three day• of the World Swimming Champiomhips, the U.S. team apent Wedneeday tryinl to relax and reazvup before oompetltion reauned today. "We ahould be atronpr In both men'• and women'• eventa In the lalt three daya of the meet," U.S. Coach Mark Schubert aaid. "Mary T II chomp.na at tbe btt and Crata BeardlJey .. reedy to awtm." "Mary T ii Marx_ T. Meaaher of Loullville, Ky., "Bauble wcrid record-bolder In women'• butterfly events. The 17-y.ar-old bu two u.:ttvidual rac.. and one relay on the 1Mt thr. da}"I here, but the hae not competed IO far. Beilrdlley, of lf.arrlnlton Pwk .• N.J.. hoJdl the ww&d IWXll'd in tb!I men'• 200 butterfly. wbJcb will be held Friday. In competition Wednnday, W9ndy Wyland of M......_ Vie~ ftm.hed ~ In the women• platform 1.qualUytn1 for the World Dtvtn1 Cbamplouhlp, ICOrin..438.92 polna The wtnMI' .... <:&Ii x..... of the P9icde .. .KeDubllc of Cblna. who calUed 4d.a1: MeenwhUe, Cu.di won tu ~ me4al In thrH ~ewn• . . 0.., ............. ., ...,_I(......, proceedings. Ten-year-old Don Baylor Jr. sees h is dad blast one during batting practice and young Boone (belo~) chats with Twins coach Jim Lemon, Off-road race begins Saturday "'" orse race results I Trojans add c-...~...._.._..,..._ Wiie • .MNMC, ---·""" ...... r-. .... ,. • DMTA IMI -119'- ..-ne MOL m ..... ..... CfWllll uo uo 4 90 ......., .. , ... _,~ 140 llO ...,.. ... ~ a.40 110 ._ ........ AIM '"" · N•IMl'llll•. ""· Judo• Levi ca.,, .. ,, ..., o. v... ~ J11oc11 .. .,.,. TlrM:•s.11. IUTN MCI. NO ylll'dl. ll'flde Of o.vt (Hartl UO t '° t.10 .IW)' (Creeoef) 4.00 3.00 MC4*D uca. 400 yttdll. "'*'" CIMll~ t.10 4.00 I 00 WhlUllf9 (o.tolilbel 3.00 2.40 llf fW'lltllln Man ,..,d) a.eo MIO rlOld: Tht Uttlt H-. Tidy Putb!O, l111plre lbw.•"· Propereat Oondu, lob• .... ~1 lye IC"'ty, En Devolrt Limit. Trloti tu1t1 (Cerdou) 1.40 Aleo reced: Coney l•l•nd Whlu. N•d• Ttlnl: N.7 . lllOOtcetl, l'Mt FloOrte, lhol1 J«, Lecllfe Cltllo, Tln\I: 11.ta. • IUCTA (7~1 Plld t19,40. THllD llACf. 400 )'ltde. 11111) ConGP (Tonk•) 8.:tO uo 2.90 llVINTH MCI. 400 Ytfdl. P1trl1rch (CIMOl'I 8.00 uo a.40 A«!ueet cn.roer tfienl a.eo a. 10 The F•llvll (Cttdoul uo 8cet1 CIUblr (Pllllet11on) uo 4.80 ~~(T~) 4.90 ~ reoi4: Net~ !mperor, TOP Ml Nol, KMllee Lenny. Aleo reoed: I Juen• Tudor, Lowlv Lou Anne, Umitl!O. 111oC11 Md TICllll. 1'M: 20.30.. Mu.n. llACL 400 ywdl Timi: 20.17. 11DACTA1&-11 Plld a1uo. ao+ftn ~ (OmnQi) • 20.eo 1.~ s 20 llOHTH uca. 3!0 yerd•. NlllYll Gembler (Hunt) 11.20 6 40 4.00 Doc Neeil 1cn.ger1 4.40 uo ~ Aid .... (Tonkl) uo 3.40 Faqt Dete (CW1911 1.00 Ail9o raoecl: Tru Elg.hty Niner. Mlllogany Pnem Bug (Fryday) 8.40 • -• NOTIC• llMT1NO K>I OltAMG9 COUNTY • -ITlll NO, 111 I~ COURT ~TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhet 100 Civic C-W Dr. Weet INtad pr°"°"" wll bl rtc*Wd by ,,0 , ..... ttll ~ of Cotta ~~b Ttl; lantll AM, CA tl70a ~. P.O. 8o• 1 -~.! "'-AtNTWI': CAllOl V. CftOlt. M•fl. C•lllornta 92828, on or Dl,INDANT: .. ,NllT c. blfffe th41 hour of 11:00 1 m on Cfl018, CUMll INIURANCI Frldey. Augutl 20, 1912 It 111111 bl 80CllTY, INC., • Wtec•n•ln the felC>Onlll>lllty of the bidder to o ., P o re t I o !I W 11 T I fl N dlMWr hl9 bid to lhl City Clerk'• MOflYQAOll CORPOflATION, a Olflet by th• proper announced Cellfomla cotpOfatton, DOel Ht. ti~ Bid• wilt bl publlcly ~ lncluelVe. end read 110ud at 11;00 1.m .. 0t u 8UMMONI tOOn thlrHttlf' 11 practlcabte on c-No. '7·12.a Frt~ay, Augu1t 20. 11112. In th• NOTICll You hllwe been lued. CotJ!lcll Ch1rnblr1. City Hall. 71 Fair Tiie court may deotde eplnet you Orio#•. Co1t1 M111, Cellfornl• wlttlout yow belnt hMld unll11 92829, for the lurnl1hlng ol you reepond within 30 llley1. flMd REPAIRS TO CIVIC CENTER ROOF. tM Information betow. Add It I 0 n •I I 111 0 I th. " )'OU will\ lo ... the advice ot 1P9Clltcatlon1 m1y bl obtained 11 1n ettorney In lhla matter. you the Olll~ ol the PurchulnQ A~t lhOYlcl do IO promptly IO that your at 17 Felr Drive, Coll• M111, written rllPC>flM. II any. may bl CalllClfnta. Bldt ehould bl returned filed on time. to the 1ttentton ol 11}1 City Clerk, A v I • 0 I u I I. d "a • Id 0 within laid time llmlf, In a toaled d1 mand1do. II lrlbunal puld• en~. k:llnlllled on the OYtllde decldtr oontt1 Ud. lln Mldllnda a with thl 8lcl Item Number end the -que Ud. "'f'Oflde dentro Opening 0111. • Ill .... Lea .. lftfon11ecton .,. Eacfl biCI 111111 apeclly Hell ""° 11o111. every Item 11 111 forth In the ~I U111d d111a aollelter el 1peetllc1tlon1 Any and ell eonMjo de un abogldo en •t• exception• to th• 1peclltcallon1 11 unto. d • b • r I a ha e er Io muat bl CIMtly atlll<I In the bid. lmmedlatamen11. di 111a ~. end flllur• to Mt fonh any Item In r~t• llC'lla. ti hay alguna, the epeclflcatlonl 111111 bl oouno• -reglatreda a tlempo. l0t rtfle11on ol the bid. 1. TO THI: DEFENDANT: A eMI EAldl bid INll Ml tonh 1111 tu• plaint hU ~ mec1 by the nan111 end ruld1nc11 of ell i'>lai'1tllf egalnlt you. If you wlltl to pereone end penl1t lnter11tld In ~end tllll 1.-ilt. you must, within the propo .. 1. II rh• bid 11 tly • 30 day1 11ter thl1 1ummon1 11 corporlllon. at111 the nam. ol the Mrved on you, flle with tni. cour1 a omc.r. wtio cen llgn en ag<Nmlllt Written reaponM to the oomplalnt. on bllllll of lhe corporetlon and UnleU yoo do ao, your dllault wtll Whether more then one olflc« mull OI entered on application of the llgn. 11 lhl bid It by a pert""8hlp 0t 1ptalnlllf, and Ihle cour1 mey enter 1 a joint Y1nture, 11111 the n-and judgment aglln1t yex1 for the rellef •dd,..... ol 111 g.91\lf'll pertnen ldemendld In the complaint, which and joint Ylnturere. If thl blOdet 11 • could r11ult In g1rnl1hment of aoll proprietonhlp 0t another entity wagn, tlklng of money °' property 11111 doll bullnlll under a lletllioue 1or other rellef reque111d In the namt, Ille bid lhall bl '" the r .. I ICOmplalnt. na1111 ol the bidder with 1 Dated Aprll 27, 1982 d11lgnaUon lollowlng 1howlng Lee A. Bnineh. Clerk "OBA (th• llctlllOUI name)": c. Keeler, Deputy provided, however, no llctltlou1 EDMOND RALPH ANDERSON JR. neme 1111111 bl ulld unlelt there 11 11 23101 Moulton Ptcwy # 103 current reglttratlorl With the Orange UtgUNI Hiiia, CA t2la County Recorder In c••• ot Publlehed Orange Co11t Dally COtJ>Or•llON. Include the ,,_ ot PllOI, July 16, 22. 29, Aug. 5, 1912 the Prllldent, Secretary, Treuurlf'., 319'-82 NO DEALER SALES AD STARTS THURSDAY OAK TAMBOUR PANEL 2377 cxa Make yourHU a roll top desk like Abe Llnc:oln or maybe you'd like a c:offH table. planter, or wall covered with thl11tuJf. It'• up to you. HOYNE CLEAR MIRROR TILE 67•EA. ln the worda of Humphrey Bogar1. "Her;·, ~t!'~ciouncu ol 1111 Clly ot ____ Pllll.J __ C_NO..;;...TI.;.;CE.:... __ Costa M... r1MtV11 the right IC · - retect eny 0t all bide. DATED: July 30 1982 NOTICE ~ D4110LUT10N ot' look In' at you, kid". If lt wa1 good enough for Humphrey. lt'sgood enoughforme.12" x 12"tllH. Published Ora~ge Co111 Dilly PA"1lfeRIH• «JOINT V£NTUM Piiot, Aug. 5, 1912 3500-32 Nolle• II given pur1u1"1 to -----------Section 15035 .5 of the Pta..IC NOTIC£ •11m NOTICE M AVAIL.AM.ITV OP ANNUAL MPORT Purauant to Section 910 .. d) of llMI Internal ~ Code, notloe la hereby given lha1 the lnnUll repon IOf' the nse11 yMr ended Octoblf' 31, 1911 of Thi F1uOt Foundlllon, • prlvll• loundetlon, 11 1vall1bl1 11 the f<M.tndlllon'I pnncipel offloe f0t lnapeetlon dVrlng reguler buslnlla hoor1 from 6:00 e.m. to 4:00 p.m by any cltlun wtlO reqUISll It within ISO days alter the d111 of thl• publication. The lex1ndatlon'• prtnclpll office II located at 3333 Mlehelaon Orfvl. lrv\ne, Callf0tnla 92730. The prtnclpel meneger of the IOYndatlOn la Rtch1td B. Humbel'1. Publl1hed Orenge CoHt Dally PllOI, Aug. 6, 1982 a.e&-12 IUIUC NOTICE CorPOt1tlOn1 Codi of the Stet• of Cllllornla that Martt Ill Properties, Inc. e n d Unl·C •I Flnanel1I Corporation, heretofore doing bu1ln111 •• Pertnera or Joint Venturers under the ll'rm name ol SunMI Hiiis Oevelopment Comptfly l"d/Ot Sul\Mt Hllll Development Co • It 2950 Aid Hiii. Colle Mesa. Cellfornle 112629, have dlasolved their Parlnerllllp 0t Joint Venture u ol Midnight, June 30, 1982 by mutull con..,t, end tnal alter laid dltllOfutton no per'°" 0t entity had euthOttty to Incur 1ny ot>llgatlonl on behalf of aald Pertnershlp 0t Joint Venture. Oiied: July 27. 1982 MARK Ill HOMES. INC .. IUCCl980r In lnter"t to MARK Ill PROPERTIES. INC. . By Steven H. Sandwg Prnldlnt UNI-CAL FINANCIAL CORPORATION By Jlcic Butter, f'ICmtOUI •u1 ... 1 ExlCUllvl Vice President NAMa ITATl..wT Chlflll Sonzaly, Secretary Th• lollowlng per1on la doing Publlahed Oren e CoHt Dell~ t>uslnessu· g NEWPORT PERSONNEL Piiot. Aug. S. ta82 3413-8 AGENCY INC. (• Catllornl• Pta.IC NOTICE corporetlorl), 2192 Martin. Suite-----·------255, IMne, ~ 92715 ACTITIOUI ....... Ruth Urt>en, 14 lmll LOI Court. NAm ITArn.NT Newport 8ledl, Ca. 92963 The follOWlng ptr90fl8 ate dolrig Thll ~ .. condue1ed by a bu*'-.. corporetlon. EXC EL LE NT Bu IL 0 1 NG NEW!'OffT PERSONNEL MAINTENANCE, 21891 Seacrnt AGENCY INC L-. Huntington Beach, Ca. 92648 By. Ruth Urben. Orang• County Bulldlng PTealdlnt M1lnt1nanc1 Company. Inc. (a Thia 11•t-t wu lllld with the C1lllornl1 eorporellonl. 21191 County Clerk of Orenge County on Se1er11t i.-. Huntington Beldl, July 2~. 1982 Cl 92646 '1 .. 141 This bull._. It conducted by 1 • Publl1hed Orang• Co111 01lly corPOtatlon. Piiot .Aug. 5, 12. 19. 29, 1912 Orange Cou"IY Bulldlng a466-12 Maintenance Company, Inc. Dentel A. Teppllner, • Prealdent Nil.JC NOTICE f1CTITIOU9 ...... Thll ,,,,_, ... lllld with the NA• ITATl•NT The lollowlng peraon 11 doing Coonty Clerk ol Oranoe COU11ty on July 29, 1912. F1Mm Publl1lled Orenga Coaat Dally PHot Aug. 6. 12. 19, 21. 1982 M74-a2 ~ .. : LUCKY SHANGHAI INC. (I Calllornla eorporetlon). 2910 ~ ~ Awe., City of Orenge, Ce Pt8.IC NOTICE Peter Shih Ho Cheng, 2211 Pa!Mla Ln. #A. Cotti M-. Cl. --'1C11T10US----..... ---.. --92t27 Thll bullrllla .. conducted by a MAm STATUmNT corp«lllon. The followlno per'IOnt .. doing ~-LUCKY SHANGHAI INC AQUA VENTURES, 123 23rd By: Peter Cheng, Street, ~ Beach, ca. 92ta. Pr..icsent S. Suite of CA. "'°~ 831 W. Thia statement wu lllld with the 11th Street. eo.ta Mwa. C.. 92827 County a.ti of Orenge County on Thia ~ le ~Id by 1 """' 30. 1982 COl'POtation. ,,... Pubtllhed Otanoe Coall Dalt) SEA SUITS OF Piiot ,\up. a. 12, 19, 21. 1"2 CA., fNC. :J.47&-82 By. Jedi 8'adley, PTllldent rta.JC Mft'l'll'r Thie atetement -ftled with tne ------""-'-~---County Cllftl of Orwlgl County on '1CT1TIOU8 .,..... Augual 2. 1982. ,.._1 MAm STATl•NT Publlthed Oranoe Co .. t Dally ~ ~ l*'IOnl IWI doing PllOC Aug. I . 12, 19, 28, 1Nll MARICETEL. 3119 "A" AlrWly ~ Avenue. Colt• M-. CA tae21. "8.IC NOTICE t,4ARLO ERICKSON, 339 W11t -~~...,..~~..o..,.....,~--1 It~. Sul.. 101, 8111 Oleooi l'ICTIT10UI .,... .. CA •101. NAm ITA,._,.., l'OBER"T c. HU98EAT, a1st Th• rollO'#lflG l*IOn ,. doing Airway A_.,., ~I M.. C~ ~II: t2ta. ' OOLDl!N CHARIOTS, 11 LH llAIJR!OARD, 6102 lerena Coul1, Newport BMch, C&. lullelo Avenue, V•n N11y1, CA t:zte3 11401. Dltlll l'ttton•, 1 1 81f.lll Thill ~ 11 conductlCI by a Coun, ~ laadl, ca. taM:t OilMfal .... :.a. Thie ~ la. oonclllOted by lfl "' Hubbert lndlvlduel. TNt 1•••~1111c1 wt11 ttte O.M • ......,. ~ C ~ «1 Thie .... INl11 ... llllCI ...,.. 1M .My '°' , t I CoufllY Dlfll. ~ ~ ~ Oii , »'! tt;.:.a Pub..._.,· Qillf'89 C.111 y ,._ Plol.~ ... -. •• 12. 'Pu~~-::: KREBS 303 SPRIY KIT 11977 ~ Sure beat a 1tandlng on a wobbly ladder to do your painting. lnc:ludH #30alrlH11prayer. 8' auction tube. RB cs• noule for enamel1. noule exten1lon and palnl IHter. t l.t.;u IU ~OllO COlD~ ->l"AIN ~- BEHR PLUS 10 EXTERIOR ST AIR 7 44 GAL. For new wood. preYiou1ly painted or atalned 1urfacH. atuc:co and ma1on.ry. An oil-latex formula that c:lean1 up with water. GLIDDEI SPRED BOUSE PlllT Loto ol colon to ci-.. Inna. fllMI Oft eoor. and c:leoao up wltll J1111 water. 10... what l1 thl1? ltra19htad ... nl1l119 Of 10motl1ln9?) 9 97 GAL. GLIDDEN SPRED LATEI GLOSS BOUSE • TRIM PlllT OUclde11 l1 OM of tho blftl•e. They make the good 111111 that la111 alKI 10111 ao you don't hClff lo point yo11r houM IOf yocue to co- Aleo rMed: Teo ,., .... ~J. ~ lellv KNeMn . ...,... ... ~~. '--' L~. L0119 lnow, OOldM LMy ..... """ MIMr""" =, ... , . """ M09. OM m-. en Wt! "9dcMIDll C"'°9mllctrl t IO I IO I 90 CIMf' V9'dlc1 (0.W.D .._., 10 00 I 90 lllMllr (V___, 190 Aleo reoedi l'r110, A .. HouM, Mufti, TrlMUl'Y a-.twy, AQllemOnt • .._ loofe, Ua/11 ........ 'Tlmr ,.,. 111 .. • llACTA (4-101plld1141.SO. .. "CIC 1111 (10~·8·1·1l•'tl "'4 tff,. 04UO Wllll OM winning llek91 (•bt hor-). la Ploll 8111 conaolallon pe.ld M30.00 w1111 It winning 11Ckl1• (five "°""" ltGHTH llACI. I MlOflOI . •..Some Kinda ''lrt (Vlnzl•I 2.eo a. 10 ex1t Ho~·· Perf9cll0n (CONNI) a. 10 exit •·Body Talk (MoOarronl 2.80 a. 10 out • -COUpjld. Aleo raced: Fll,llhlon Knowledge, lfllll Love. Time: 1:11. II IXACTA (1 ... ) peld 120.00. NINTH MCS. 1-1118 l!!llel. S9'Jlaln Dou~ (Oelltl~I 27.40 t0.20 6 20 o•lmp Lartt (OllVlfll) 4,80 3.eo BrMClllCI (Plneey) 3.eo AllO tlC*I He Man Sem, 11iO Wewa. f1eo111 Sport, Great Cloud. DMwio, LOfty L<NW. Tllftr. 1:43 316. • IXACTA (WI paid $311.60. Allltldlllel: la, 113 . volleyball trio l.08 ANQILl8 -Maw D1i HJch'• U. M~ a ~'1 b.ckcourt •J>Hl•lllt, Ii one of three women ~ p&a19ft recoently to "8n i.u.n ol lntmt to attend th• Unlverally of SouttMtm Califomla clUa fall. Al10 jolnlna th• two-time deftndlna natfonal chaml!:i:: wW be Tracy Clark and Devereaux. both from El Toro Htah. Clark 11 a 6-10~ left-1lde hitter who wu an All-CIF 4-A selection, a hlah 1chool All- Amerlcan a,,d a member o! the U.S. Junior National Team. Devereaux wu a teammate of Clark'• at El Toro. A 6-1 mJdd.le blocker, Devereaux wu allO an All-ClF 4-A selection, a prep All-American and membtt of the Junior National Team. SPARTD OAK PANELING RED QUARRY UlliLIZED HERITAGE FLASH TILE PAYERS 4" I I" PAYER 35•EA. Gotto pan the walk befoN my wife'• mother get• here. (She'• all right 01 mother-ln-law1 go. but she never doe1.) GREY THDf SET MORTAR 3 44 2sLBS. Star1ed reading the title and lt reminded me ol my hair ... gNy. thin. I don't know why I'm 10 Mnsltl•• about my hair. I hcrYen'tgotany. MOITERY MILLS CARPETllG ~ "' rm FUI llTI • YU CUPE! .r..., t'4 Ooodfo.tlteba1honcm . '-bvtdoft'tttycmdmo... 247 rnvf'.tf ···"'~ . p11n•l~ocooto11totlt. ..;,JMiitl~__. ..... ~ ...... 1to11~· Shewootgoloflt. UN."· AH«1ed colon. S foot width. lfoe·1ktdbaclll119ondmlldowre1l1tcmt. 297 When II 9011 m11ngy. J111t toe1 It In tbe waeher. Co-• In S loot width. UH. n. EHrythlng yoia need for your baaic paint jol>. The only thing you doo't g.t la someb9cfy to do the •orlr. 10u'U tu.Te to do that youraell. FOBDIOST IGCBOWIYE UTDJTY CART 337 '#800 Oak llnlah and all JO'& DMd le a ...,.....,to a ... mble. (JIO.tobe moUDdmr ---.1a.lft la .. ot weather. ......... cold.) Look at the price on thl11tuff. Heck. I paid more than that for my lunch at McDonald'• yHterday. (Probably looks better than hcrYtng Big Mac:• plastered on the wall1. too.) 33 4X8 ARMSTROlli YERllY YDfYL 10-WIX noon TILE ~ ..... 947c .... S.U-sUcking stuff In the popular Summer Dance (llo.,. to go dancing. SJOtfa do that aom.e tlme) pattern. 12" x 12" tlles. ARMSTROlli CUSTOM ~ ~ ti ~ ~ ~ SOLIRWI noon TILE 77•EA. Yow lmffl will loft you for this, (bow about your knephew?) It neftr needs waxing. Self-stick. In imcrtal Porcelain Glm• 12" x 12" tll••· TEii PARQUET ~J nooR TILE I 4 9 12"xl2" No. 1lrrff, rou'N not gonna get me to do thCll old ... Parqu .. ? Butter. Parquet? lutter ... tblng. I refuH to do U. Laguna: skip Tor~ site idea The Laguna Beach City Council has sent a letter to the Southern California Aleociation o• Governments, urging that / gi<>up's executive' committee to elbnlnate consideration of Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro,"' aa a regional airport. In a letter sent to Pat Russell. president of SCAG'a executive commi~, the council said it is concerned that the Southern California Aviation System Study "does not sufficiently address the transportation, noise and community development problems inherent in consideration of the El Toro Marine Base as a regional airport site." SCAG is currently in the process of selecting a site for a new airport and a previous study two years ago indicates the most appropriate site would be in the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor area. . But the result of a later study recommends two additional potential sites, including a portion of the sprawling Marine Corpe hue at Camp Pendleton, and the air station at El Toro. The SCAG executive committee will be making ita recommendation on one of theee sites when it meets early next month. The council letter to SCAG suggests the panel look not only at the technical feasibillty of airport locations, "but also at the economic and social lmpacta of that location." Specifically, the council said expansion of the mllltary air station for commercial use "would apell disaater for our already overburdened transportation aystem and would severely and unneceasarily impact the lives of a large number of residents." And while the council said it realif.es the same problema might be experienced at the other two locations, it urged the panel to "reoogniz.e that the teast feasible location ii El Toro." Laguna city officials are currently formulating a detailed analyaia of issues involved in the SCAG study and will return to thfa City Council at its Aug. 17 meeting with a report. The council could, at that time, formulate additional argument& against the El Toro site to be forwarded to the SCAG committee prior to that panel's Sept. 3 meeting. .., .......... .,, ........ O"D•••llll FAVORITE PERCH -Gertrude Cooper of Arcadia has been corning to the Huntington Beach pier more than 40 years. She says her fiah.ing pole dates from 1937, but her hat is newer and the~ catch will tug at the line any minute. on eye, nose drops By PAT HOROWITZ of'IMhlfr ..... Meft Conaumen are being aaked to return eye and ll08e medications purchased from Alpha Beta markets throughout Southern California today as the rnuaive recall of the product• waa broadened. Esther Cramer, spokeswoman for Alpha Beta, said, .. Alpha Beta has expanded the recall into Orange County in the 4lten!st of public ate~. "No contaminated producta have been found in Orange County at this time. Swwillanoe has been incruaed in all storea. ~pn pave been alerted to advt.e clefka that no recalled product& .,. to be 90ld." Becauae the medlcationa have been laced with sulfuric lldd, at leaat three people have been injured 10 fa.r, and acid- contammat.ed eye dropa were found at a fourth store when a ltOCk of Mu.rl.ne Plus WU ~ from the llhelf, Suaan Bond of the 1tate Health Deputment'a. Food and Drug Section said Wedneeday. "We have determined that this contamination waa not an accident by the manufacturer because we have checked other containers ·from the aame lot nwnbe~ and they are okay," she aaid. But she said the store had received no extortion demanda and that no lead• had been turned up as to who put the acid in the containen of Mu.ri.ne and Murine Plus. . Thia is the aecood time in eta.ht months that the supermarket ch•ln bas been the target of aneone contaminatina product& with dangerous acids. Lut December, seven people reported suffering injuries when a penon walked throu&h aevera1 Alpha Beta marketa and Thrifty drug atores, putting aulfuric, hydrochloric and acetic add and chlorine into a Wide ranee of eye and noee medbtiona. . "~bu been removed <See MCALL. Pa1e Al) , SPORTS "Barney MllJer, 1' the adroit police c.'otnedy ABC put on ~ retirement llat, got Uve nomlnadonl. 11H1ll Street Bluee.'' lut year>a bt1 wtn.ner, wu nominated u belt drama aeries, and Daniel J . Travantl WU nqminated U best • I BomlJ shakes Nevada l f Nuke tes·ting calle d 'n ecessary evil' . . MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -An underiJ"Ound nuclear teat with a yield many timea that of the bomb dropped on~ •nt ahock waves rollinl acrcm the Nwada deeert today. Energy Secretary Jamee Edwards, who witnessed the 7 a.m. test with about 30 reporters, aaid afterward he belleves nuclear testing is a neoeesary evil. "War is hell and I hope we never aet into another one,'' he 'said. "But if we're going to get into war, I want to come out No. 1, not No. 2. That's the Reagan adminlatration f.Oal -peace throuah strength. ' A ground televlalon camera about ~-mile from the ecene waa knocked out bv the blaat. Twenty-one second• later, a 1,000-loot expanse of deaert collapeed above the lite where the test went off, 2,100 feet underground. A helicopter television camera had ahown indentations near the site seconds after the detonaton, but OOE spokesman Dave Miller said they were from previous teats. Park grills ousted Neighborhood ire brings barbecue ban in Laguna The mnell of hamburger& and hot dop cooking over an open barbecue is pleasant to most. But not nieht after night, argue representatives of the North Laguna Homeowner& Aaeocl.ation who on Tuesday night successfully petitioned the eity Council to remove a half dozen city barbecues in Heisler Park. The barbecues have been in the park for years, and for years nearbv residents on Cliff Drive have had to put up with smoke fumes, especially during the summer months. Ben Blount, representing the homeowner group, asked the Clty Council to take out the permanent barbecues and to install signs prohibiting any fires or barbecues in the park. Portable barbecues always have been prohibited at the park, but city officials admit it is diff.lcult to tell picnickers they cannot cook in their own barbecue when n~arby visitors can use city barbecues. Council members agreed the barbecues should go, citing the danger of flr;es from discarded coala as well as the inconvenience to residents of nearby homes. But they held off ordering the removal of city barbecues until Jan. 1 in order to poat signs infonning visitors of the pending change. Design board terms limited . Future members of the city's Design Review Board/Board of Adjustment will terVe only two year term• following City Council action in Laguna Beach. The five-member board currenUy aerves for three years, but the council aaid it would prefer two-year terms in order to ensure that the panel ls "in aync" with the philosophy of the ·city Council majority. Last month the council reduced terms of future pJ.annina comm1amionen from four yean to two veers fot the same reeeon. The Design Review Board meem weekly in public and study -'oll8 to approve architectural deaiRn• for residential and commercial properties in Laguna Beach. A suggestion that terms of the nine-member Arts Commission ~ be limited to two years was tabled by the council. That commiuion is less political in nature than the others and council members said it would be too much trouble to appoint new members every. two yeen. STARS SHINE -The always competitive Star Clul geia off to cloee start in the Pre-Olympic regatta at Lon& Beach. Trygve Liljeatrand (6464) of Sweden took an earlv lead but wound up aecond behind Bill BuChan of the U.S. Llljestrand 11tanda third in the overall ICOrlng. (Related story C2). .. INDEX Angels brealc the jinx A4 A? a 84 AS , The Aft&ell turned the iablee around for a chanP by winnin& in the bottom of the eighth lnnlng. Paae Cl. ~6 A7 C7 C7 D2 Ae a A'l A? C3-~.D2 Cl-~ A7 B5 C8 ~ A2 A3 If'! '8CllOOL BLAZE -Sixty firefighters from Oranp County ~d Stanton battled a fire !,Wedneaday night that caused an• estimated 1$388,000 ~amage to Vessels Elementary iSchool, 5900 Ca~hy Ave., Cypress. Fire lfnvealpto.n aid the blaze was of suaplcioua ................ .., ........ ~ ol'fain. One firefighter who received a mihor injury in the incident was reU!ased aftef treatment at Loe Alamitos General Hoepital. The fire, first reported at 11:32 p.m., required three hours 'to control, fire officials said. lJECALL BROADENS ... from the shelves, and we have Ms. Bond. "It'• comparable to the !.P.~ aecurity at all of our acid rou put in your swimminB l,l9rea," Ms. Cramer said pool.' \'{edneeday. "We have nothing to She said sulfuric acid could g0 on at this time, and we don't theoretically cause blindn~ or know where it will happen at least acer eye tilaue, especially next.!' if not treated promptly. .,. "But this stuff is 80 strong that .,.The aupermarket chain has people only get one drop ln their a•ked anyone who purchased eye and immediately wash it out lµly e;e or noee drops or nasal and aeek treatment," lhe said. ,pray from any of Its 50 area Sulfuric acid is readily markets within the past month to detectable because It smells like retum them. rotten egp. "Thia stuff (sulfuric acid) is Ms. Cramer said the products much stronger than the nonnal taken off the shelves last types of acid we are used to like D e c e m b e r o n l y b e g a n the vinegar or lemon ju.lee," said reappearing in at.ores on July 4. ~uicide pact ~een in couple's death • •· ln an apparent death pact, Robert Trudeau Hill, 54, of ·Lemon Heights shot and killed 11'h terminally lll wife Wednesday morning, and then committed suicide with the same .45-calibef' handgun, according to Sheriff'• Lt. Wyatt Hart. for the put three years, and Lieutenant Hart aaid the Hilla had told a clme friend they didn't know if theth could handle a ~~ouDd in the buahes in the front yard of the coupJe'• home at 11241 Vista Del Lago. Mrs. Hill'• body wu dlacoVered in the bedroom. Lost dog signs OK'd for beaches Laguna Beach'• voluntary Pet lleaponalbility Committee has won City Council approval to inatall signs on temporary llfquard stands advt.al.ng people witli lost dogs where they might find their animala. The oomnuttee, which works out of the animal shelter on Laguna Canyon Road, offered to purchase, install and maintain the 1lgn1 to be placed on the city'• beaches. The signs will read "Lost Your Dog?" and give the 1helter address and telephone number as well as the number for the Pet Responsibility Committee. ln addition, the council approved the placing of ligna in municipal parking lots warning vW_ton not to lock their dogs in can while shopping. On a hot summer day the lnlide of a car can quickly heat up to 102 degrees in just 10 minutes, the council was told. In 30 minutes, the temperatuH inside a vehicle can reach 120 dqreea. The Animal Protection lnaUtute in Sacramento aaya a dog can withatand a body temperature of 107 degrees for only a abort time before Nffcring brain damage or death. · 'El.lzabeth Bacheller Hills, 56, 'had been suffering from cancer ~~'·"\' ~'n ........... ~m<,dt-tloOao scl~-~.!.-low~-LIO!t, -tl_y_w ___ ar_m-er-~, ~~ " ,........ _.., .,. Tht FONCMt For I p.m. EDT "-In• ..... (ll1 from th9 mid 509 to tha mid IOa In ThurSdaV AuQtisl 5 , '.Co-a1tal Fair today Wllh high• II tl\9 bHc:n.t 70 to 75 and Inland II' ... IO to 85. Conllnu.cl fair tonight ....,.. ~t Iowa ot .. to ea. ,,,... '* on Fl1dey btlt Wltll plltdly Mlty momlnO tow .. tlone Illa cont of Orang• ~ Hlgfl9 at Iha bMctlt8 on F~ 70 to 75 and Inland ., .. tl2 to •7. L El•••ll•r•. front Point Con•eptlon to Ille Meldc:et1 llordlt .,,. 'out 80 mllea: """' ::,:.~ ~ .... --: to,,_...._~-..~. l[JOu ......... of ' .. 2 '-l t .... ~ low doud9 "* '1'1:;.:~.L~ --- mountain• and from Iha mid IOa to • T .. Showen th• mtd 80• In th• d•Hrtl, ~Ing on tl\9 loceC141n. Temperaturea NATION .. '--.... a• 92 " .. . 87 •1 92 12 11 71 100 70 • 73 .21 . .. t2 72 • .. ... 01 at sr 71 " • 19 · 81 • .. tl2 .10 . .. , 17 14 .... .01 " n 71 ... 15 72 .01 92 71 .... 16 12 .oe '1 .. .3t "n 92 .. M 82 " .03 111a11 2.41 17 • 75 M Ill • H M 80 ... 91 51 .01 13 • 17 63 M IO 92 n .ta 13 10 t1 72 100 r• .e1 111 n 101 n " 1t 94 H .82 .25 ... Extended weather It 71 71 11 SOUTKl!llN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN AREAS -0.W811y faff ~Wlltl'I Mlty "'°"*'Cl tow .. -.. coHt and ltolated all.,noon thund9ral'IO-fl In m01.1n&a11t1. High ..,,... .... "" io.. 111 • the b .. Chea, 77 to 11 In tlte co .. tal cit ... •nd H to tt lfl Inland Yll!ly9. L.OWI ~ 11 to 10. Hlglll In l'llOUflWnl 1t fo N Ind 1ew1 47 to IOwet eo.. Wiier• to call (toll ''") for lltaet lfnlll lnform•lon! OrMge c:ounty: (IOO) ~Witt Lo• ~neat•• Counl~; (toO) 241-402! ,.._..... Ind len ..... IO ~ CIOOt MH710 ...-. AOMO ...... 0...: ,_, 241 .... Tft manthl •· leftQi Ana •UiellrMY Den Chidll Dutd'Mtt'I' -~ ~don \hat W•t Qrmil ~ Munam.,.a CdUrt ~ ...... Wiina&• ••rnt of tlll ooumy wmt by most votert. On Wednuday, alx month• afW he claimed that Harrold wa1 a r•ldent of IUvenlde County, a IUperior court ~ in Santa Ana lnvalldated the June 8 elllcdon victory of Harrold end 1cheduled new balloUna in Nowmber. Harrold la not ellaible to NIL Juct,. Ronald Owen'• rulln1 wa1 believed to be ented -the tint time a lection in California had lded and overturned becauH of falaltlcation of a cucHdate'• doc:wnenta rekUng to l'9lldency . Judge Harrold, who maintained throughout a week- lOlll trial that ahe wu a lepl rHl4ent of Oran1e County, quickly left Owen'• oourtroon;i and declined to comment aftet the ru1ina WU announced. Dutcher Hid he waa not Al~ by the ruling. ~'(J~ciie Owen) didn't do what waa eaay, be did what was right," the attorney/candidate aald. . However, ahe edmltted on U. wttnw 1tand \Mt tbt NoWimlller date~• uJtdlim dMd Pini her OI\ oC the houi9 •• falle y dated and notarbed. The docwnmt\ ahe Mid, ~y WM •tined by her a:randmodMr ID 1982 and not in f 981. -_ It al.lo WU dJ8dcMed la tllie litlll that Harrold Ulld ~. ~ add.rem in 1979 wMn -to the 1overnor'1 office • a judicial appointment in .Orlftle County. Cops see'!c motive in double slaying Ora: police lnve1tlgatora have ind the identities of two mm found lhot to death in a home Wectn.day but laid they 1tlll have no motive for the apparent murder ... Wdde. . The meri. were identified u Billy Ray Bryant, 30, and John Brookt, 2t. Bryant'• wife, Patrlcla, 27, ii reported In J J Out.cher, who sued Harrold Of) the rea.ldency issue after the election In June, fini1hed a diatant second to the Westmlnater jwitt. Coming in third was Costa Meaa attorney Ronald Nix. Both wW fllO! each other apin in November. Harrold'• attorney, Eleanor Stegmeier, said an appeal would be {lied almollt immediately with the 4th Diatrict Court of Appeal in San Bernardino. · aatldeetory condition at UC Irvln• Medical Center after underaoinl ~ for injuries ·aha auffered -when beaten. appanntly by Brookl, at another location earlier Wednelday. Broob' and Bryant'• bodle1 were found in the Bryant boml at aM Olk St. in Oranp at abou1 11 a.m. Wedne9day fOlJowinti a Brooks' body WU found l)'inl near Bryant's and a 12 gau1e shotgun wu found nearby. ' Police began their ltakeout of the home early Wedne1day morning after Mn. Bryant. who • lived at the Oak Street hOUlle, wu found beaten outside a home Courses Offered in job program The _Capistrano-Laguna Beach Regional Occupational Program begins lt1 fall eemester Sept. 13 with 35 free job skill couraes offered. Registration for cla11e1 begins Aug. 16 at the ROP office, 31522 El Camino Real •The 11th annual Laguna Beach Women's Volleyball Tournament will be held at Main Beach Park Saturday and Sunday, with 1tartin1 matches beginning at 9 a.m. • Laguna Beach residents Mertel Zlnk and Dr. Ratla Stafford have been named to h ea d a, n e w c h e m i ca 1 dependency r ecovery program for women at College Hospital ln Cerriio.. Offerin11 ran1e from a1rtculture (o retail occupation• and prepare South County 1tudenta for '1ntry level 1kill• in the woridne world. For Information, call 496-3118. Final matcbe1 are ICheduled to bealD at 1 p.m. Sunday with individual award• to be pr .. nted to fint throuah fourth place teanw. M1. Zink, an alcoholism treatment coun1elor, ls pro1ram director. Dr. Stafford, a cl'inical psycholaPt.. will direct the apedaU.t procram. ln another part of ~· Israel asked to surrender Beirut gains · By ne As1oclatM Preti The Rea1an admlniatration today called on Israel to surrender the military gains won in its recent attackl into West Beirut and retreat to the OMSe- fire lines in place tut Sunday. The appeal appeared to represent a ahift ln administration policy announced Wednesday, under which the Israelis were called on to maintain a "strict ceue-flre in place." In aakina the hraelia to relinquish what they had won in Wednesday'.s heavy filhtln1. State Department apokeaman Alan Rombert aald he wa1 unaure what the U.S. rMpome would be lf llrael isnores the administration'• request. Defense Secretary Caapar Weinberger told reportera, meanwhile, that he LI dptlmistic presidential ~ envoy Philip C. Habib will succeed In hla renewed attempta to secure a PLO evacuation from the guerrillas' west Beirut enclaves. Addressing Habib'• efforta, Weinberger added, "I think he can~.·· The rore comblnatlon~~nology ond art - Omega. A legend In &Wiit making since 1848, each Omega 11 OJ ll"ftpeCer;IWy accurate as It la ae1- thetlcolly pleaal~. COflfie .. our entire colledlon. ladies' quartz bftxelet wotche1 In 14 korot yello'f' I gold: A. $795 .•. $975. c. Sl95. ' I I' I .. 1TM PreUdent of Shell Oil Co. aa)'1 Interior ~ecretary James Watt~• plan to open up the entire U.S. coutltne for oUahore oil and gaa dfllll,Jla " cood for 'he CQuntry. Watt's plan is seriously flawed. Critica, lnclu~ Orange Cout_ ~ uy Watt a plan 18 dlnlt ~aood for the oil companies and l• a detrtmen t to the en~t and to future federal re.YeQ\tes from Ott.bore leuing. • 1¥,ell'• John Bookout, Jr. ::ohtenidls Watt'• ftw-year plan is benef.idal becaU.. it will quickly lt&teme oU production reyalties for the federal treasury anc1 will ill.ow ibe country to determine the !xtent.ot its oil reserves. • Thia, BOokout contends, will illow aovernment and industry to mow wh• they mU.t turn to tltemative IOUl'ce8 of energy. While Bookotrt contends that . Mltt'a plan will rapidly increase >if r~tl•. critics of the plan >oin,tf,td a trend of lower oil :otniy bids for individual '.ede offshore tracta. · critics reason that the :om , . tive edge has been taken >ff bidding procedure because ~th to many millions of acres to :hOOR from, oil companies are >idc::linc lower on individual tracts. In the short tenn, tlle critics t.rgue, the federal treasury will -eap large profits by leasing more racts:. But in the long t.enn, the 1wrall federal income from the racts could fall billions of dollars abort of what It cOUJd have bMr) under a controued, cradual leutng pt'OIJ'am. Besides lower prlce1 for Individual tract.a, crltica ~t out that with the country 1 entire coastline open for leasing, the adminlatratlon jua~ doesn't have the reeource1 &o prOvlde .dequate, specific area atudi• of pgtentJal environmental damaae from off.shore drilling. Kenneth J>e.ltno, Newport Beach assistant to the city manager in charge of coastal resources, makes a good point when be says that Watt'• plan ls unbalanced in favor of oil explo»ation With no regard for environmental ~en. He says a unique, prtattne coastal environment ii also good for the country -and local cities ~ and should be given equal co:mtderation with oil 'xploratlon concerns. Watt appears to be following his often.stated philosophy that the country's natural resources should be tapped and used. But it appears the Interior Secretary has disregarqed long. term .economic concerns and environmental safeguards. His proposal follows his philosophy, but poses the threat of being unbalanced and reckless. President Reagan, or the courts, should step in and add some sensible balance to this proposal before it is too late. I :l guna's vexation k a steep rent increase ,,,,..~ parking lot to get the ntion, but it now appears ~ Beach is finally em on finding a solution to the ·~ decades·old parking probleM. , Laguna Beach operates seven parking lots in the downtown area, of which four are leased to th~ by landowners. e'}tly, the owners of a • Ol' on Ocean Avenue Ulli::i::elllt<Mlae lea1e to the City from $6, a year to ·sso.388. And, were the other lot oWnen to follow suit when their lease dates are up, the city could firuf iUelf financially strapped. ,. the lease increase prompted the City Council to appoint a pafk:inc coounittee, which in turn hired a eonsu1tant to study the Glenneyre lot between Laguna Avenue and Legion Street as a pc.rten'tial site for a parking structure. That $5,000 study has been • completed, and the consultant recommends a plan that would see a three-story structure constructed on the lot, creating a total of 334 vehicle spaces. The parking committee, which is-also exploring other means of expanding Laguna's parking inventory, is to make its recommendation to the City Council lat.er this month. Laguna Beach currently has about $1 million in Its Parking Authority Fund, which would pay for about half the Glenneyre construction, if it is approved. The other half, city officials say, could come from sale of bonds. Newspaper accounts dating back as far as 1946 call for the construction of a parking structure, and the issue has been debated, discussed and shelved for decades. Perhaps this time around something will be done to alleviate Laguna's paucity of parking. Oplnln exp(essed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-pr....,°" thls peoe are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invlt· ~,]jf"*' The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642 . L.M ... Boyd /What ~Grade A' means· U "Grade A" means anything at all on a C9ftoJ1 of milk. it means the dairy contenda the milk was prdcessed under ..Utary standarda. No, sir, to turn out ''Grade A" you don't have to w.e dilellled water when you cut it. Jiwt keep It reuonably clean. I A Oliouland years ago in China, colDs,.... premed ln 1pedal shapea to 1lgntfr what they'd buy. The JM*r'"lhaped coin was traded for fruit. A ~ l.~t roughly to look like a human ipuuy waa for clothes. · St. Nlcholu. ao long .-octat.ed with ~ ai.o 19 the patron aaint of pa~ Undemandable. MOit bank robberl• happen on ~· Memo to the dieter: The FDA requires food proceaaora to list ingredients from most to leaat in de9Celldi.ng order on package labels. So if you want to cut down on your sugar intake, don't buy anything with sugar listed higher than fifth pface. A. About 45 minutes "ormally. That's an average 60·pound stringing job. Takes ¥ce that long for Bjom Borg's 91· arid 92 ... pound webs. Among youn11tera in that age 'bracket from 9·to 12, girls tend to be better athletes than boys. So contend the student:& of physical fitne.. A 10-year·old girl, they aay, almott invariably can beat a 10-year-9ld boy of about the same wef&ht and he!&bt lb a ~ atich, if both aet lhpl]ar ~ Thia tombOY~ II the only L" ·m ,.WfUCb tir1I ~ IU~. You clDn't -It ted .... ptii .. ~ to frOfll out~ It 1'ttb a1l deliba9• ....... I Letters to the editor Wooden roofs: Another view To the F.dltor: On July 16 a San Bernardino paper ran an article on a residential fire in Rancho Cucamonga, started when laundry was ignited by a water heater, where a mother and her two children "luckily" efeaped unharmed. Several facts of this news item are of unusual interest. The fire was already fully involve<) before anyone was aware of it. It happened at 1:30 a.m. when the family was asleep. The roof was burned of( the house, yet no one was injured. I visited this house the following day and talked with the oocupants who were shaken but unharmed, and it became obvious why a greater tragedy had been averted. This house had a wood roof. A wood roof that vented the fire allowing the toxic fumes and smoke to escape, and undoubtedly saved the lives of the occupants. The mother stated that, although the flames were shooting from the roof by the ti.me they were aroused, they were able to walk out unharmed because there was no smoke inside. Further indication of this was the evidence that, althe>Ugh fire damage to the kitchen, garage, and roof was extensive, there was no smoke damage throughout the houae, no smoke damage to the contents of the house, and, most of all no smoke damage to the occupants. NATIONAL FIRE Protection Aaoc:iation statistics show that over 95 percent of all home fires start INSIDE the house. In high fire hazard brush areas, or areas adjacent to hillside brush areas. it is apparent that fire retardant construction is necessary. But ln our recent emotional eagerness to legislate fire retardant roofing for single lamlly dwellings throughout California are we sacrificing the life safety of 95 percent of the famili~s whose fires wlll start INSIDE the!r house? During an intensive 30-month s~dy made in Dallas. Texas, 88 people lost their lives in fires. None of these deaths were under wood roofs. Tight, fire retardflnt roofs trap super-heated smoke and toxic fumes inside the building and do not allow them to escape. In recent month• a pregnant woman and her 8-rnonth unborn baby in Montclair, An ll·year--0ld boy in Chatsworth, three people in Crestline, and a 3--year--old girl in Los Angeles all died of smoke inhalation under tight, fire retardant roofs. More were injured. Will the1e statistics increase when homeowners have no choice but tight roofing? In some of these instances the apparent structural damage aeemed mlnimal. But the fire began inside, the smoke could not escape, and people died. It is small consolation to a homeowner that his fire retardant roof is still intact if he, or a member of his family, died from smoke lnbalation. Right now there is one owner of a wood-roofed home ln Rancho Cucamonga who will suffer the pain of rebuilding a house, but, much more Important, will not suffer the agony of ~afamily. BEITE A MITroN To the Editor: The Newport Beach Police O.~t ~ the Dally PllOt for l .. etfort:a to provide a Mfe Fourth of July;~ -Thit ~tlona ~ thl u. ol ft.Nworu are aometimet dlffkUlt to ~ Md often preeent an oppOrtunity for erltlcl1m or aarcaun .. to their enforcement of theH lawe and :c' the neeauw ~that they ~ Don:r Pllo\ ~ a very POlldve attitude ID With thw ..... 1'F.,,,,. m.-. for .... ........... ti = to t•u •• , ....... of ~~~ enJD1.,. w. ;. .. .,. >•/\ arARLl8 . OROS' Chief of Police, Newport~ • MAILBOX Ghastly action To the &iitor: It was another shocking display of devil-take-the-hindmost, survival-of- the-ftttest, and do-it-yourself. consumer. For, apparently in the interest of saving the rich taxpayer money, an a rrogant Orange County Board of Supervisors' majority recently - wickedly -cut the heart out of the Con.sumer Protection Agency, bravely standing against public interest and protest. This in the teeth of records showing the agency saved non-rich Orange Countians millions. But one guesses the real reason may have been, sweetened by a do.it-yourself philosophy, to use the money for such development-oriented. projects as the hated San Joaquin Corridor freeway should the courts reject our 1uit. l'm surprised opponents of the consumer agency didn't come right out and say, "Big Business doesn't cheat;" or, "Who need1 a Consumer Protection Agency? Aak your neighbor -he'll tell you who's reliable." (My neighbor's wife back in Florida used to ask the iceman which stocka to buy.) Or, "You can't fool the American public." But accolades must go to Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark who fought the cut. Perhal?S they read the voter mind clearer. Or better, they still believe a decent government's role is to do what the poorer individual cannot do: protect himaelf from ecams. One has to wonder, however, why·one of the cutters didn't join Riley and Clark in return for their past votes for massive developments. There's still another question that I'll not put. All I ask now is, How long, Oh Lord? How long? TOM ALEXANDER Column unfair To the Editor: Until I read Mr. Von Hoffman's column so unfairly depicting and oo~ Israel's military thrust into embattled" Lebanon (July 16th). I considered his comments to be fair and worth noting. Being a pacifist by nature, the brutal effects of all anned conflicta have ever evoked loathing from me. If fairness would have tempered his moral outrage, I might have forgiven his damning words. ~ i.s, I can only ask him: Where were hi.a riahteoUa outcries when other Lebanese Children were driven from their homes, orphaned and maimed from PLO firing? WHERE WAS HIS eloquent and moral wrath when Israeli a:hoolchildren were fired upon ln their northern settlements and ln te:hool bU11eS? How many deprecating columns did he write when entire Jewish papulationt were uprooted from their historic homelands in Yemen, Syria, and many other Arab lands, with only the clothes on their becka~ R.\Mr than call upon my own rnelfe" knowleda• of what tranapired in tortured Lebanon, I'll quote from a recent media ad of the nationwide American Lebane9e League, nwnberine around 2 mll1lon aou1a: • "SEVEN YBARs AGO, Liebanon WM occ:upled by PLO terrorilta who bad beef\ ~Ued from Jordan afWi' havfnl failed to overthrow Ktn1 Hu ... in. Durln1 those aeven years they committed an Ql'IY of atroeltlea and desecration against women and children. churches and gravesHes. "A sweet and lovely land was ravaaed. Those who dared t.o oppose the 1'LO were murdered. Homes and fannl and villages were pillaged. Lebaneae- governmental authority was defied and ultimately destroyed. "IN COLLUSION WITH the Syrian occupation army, the PLO made war on. the people of Lebaon. From 1975 to 1981, the toll among civilians was 100,· ooo killed, 250,000 wounded, countless thousands made homeless. Thirty·two thousand children were orphaned. "And the world was silent." Now that in a desperate effort when Israel is trying to put an end to PLO atrocities, many eloquent voices such as Von Hoffman's have risen up to decry Lebanese casualties. Where w-:re they in the last seven years of needless suffering of the innocents? PAULA WARSAW Fire safety To the Editor: I would like to extend our appreciation to you and your newspaper for running the "No Fireworks in Laguna Beach" public service announcements prior to the Independence Day holiday. Although bus y as usual, this Independence Day holiday weekend was characterized by minimal .fireworks- related public safety problems, and by a calmer celebrative mood on part of the general public. We believe your running our public service announcements positively affected this year's less destructive Independence Day holiday weekend celebration. RONALD E. ADAMS Fire Chief, Laguna Beach Seniors' view To the Editor: I am writing this letter to you in regard to what the mayor and City Council of Fountain Valley are trying to do to us senion. On Tuesday, July 20, when we b8d a meeting with the mayor and City Council, I was amued, surpri9ed and disgusted to .ee and hear bow little they regarded the seniors. Don't they l'l!8llze that their wives will be seniors too acme day? And I'm sure a lot of them have a mother that is a senior also. & I waa coming out of the building. I approached a member of the council and asked him what he thought about all this? His answer was that. we all have our problems. This I thought was quite an answer. I told him that a lot of theee senion who are quite elderly and don't have a family look forward to Wedneaday and Friday t.o go to the Recreation Building on Brookhurat where they all meet to play BUwo and play cards and have a little refreefunent. Isn't th.ii better than to have to my home and twiddle their thumbe and ll!l 90 depreaed that they may land m the nuning home? There 19 an oJd MY1na you are Olil1 • old .. you feel, uMt rm ... u tbil7 haft to stay home all the time It mn m•t. Pna to make them feel aft1' ~· O.L. Very eooc.Oad -...r LOS ANGELES (AP) - NBC'a "Hill Str•et Bluea" repeated lt. ~of lut year today, capturtna another 21 Brnmy norn.lnatlona for the 34\h annual presentation of the televiaion awards. The off-beat police ahow, l which won nine Emmya ln 1981, dominated many of the drama f . cateaorfee and ln one completely ·Laguna: Skip Tor~ site idea · The Laguna Beach City Council has aent a letter to the Southern California Aalociation of Governments, urging that group's executive committee to eliminate consideration of Marine Corpe Air Station, El Toro, as a regional airport. In a letter sent to Pat Russell. president of SCAG's executive committee, the council said it is concerned that the Southern California Aviation System Study "does not sufficiently address the transportation, noiae and community development problems inherent in consideration of the El Toro Marine Base as a regional airport site." SC"AG ls currently in the process of selecting a site for a new airport and a previous study two years ago Indicates the most ti approp~te site would be ln the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor 1 area. But the result of a later study 1 recommends two additional , potential sites, Including a 1 portion of the sprawling Marine ' Corps base at Camp Pendleton, 1 and the air statlon at El Toro. The SCAG executive committee will be making Its recommendation on one of these sites when it meets early next month. overwhelmed all oppoeidon wtth flve nomlnaUon1 for beet 1ui>poritn1 actor In a drama aerlea. The c1oaest competitor with 12 nomlnatlona waa "Fame,'t an NBC rookie ten. bued on the hit movi19 about New York'• High School for the Perfonn1na Arta. NBC, third In the ratin11, swamped ttl mo'f• poplllar oppoa1Uon with a total of 90 Emmy nomlnattona. CBS, the front·runnln1 network' In the rt~ had 83, and ABC tot 70. PBS received 29 nomlnatlona, lnchfdln1 11 for "Brldeahead RevWted" and 13 noroinatlona went to avndlcated ahowl. Other ahowa receivln1 multiple nominations included ~ ......... ~ ..... O'D• ... CBS' "M·A-8-H,'1 wit.h 10, and ~· .. Ain't Mlabehavin' ," die comedy lhow ABC cances.d end NBC anat.ched up with ..,ait. ''Lou Gnnt,'' the newapeper drama whose u.nexJ>ected cancellation by CBS caUMd a It.Orm ot prot.t, ,..._ Mht. ABC'a "lnalde the Tlllrd Retch," NBC'1 11SCTV Network" and Operation Prime Tlme'a "A Woman Called Golda" each NCltWd eeven. 0 Barnty Mlller," the ajlrolt palioe comedy ABC put on the reUrement llat, 1ot flve nomlnatlona. . "Hill St.reet Bluee," last year'• bla winner, wu nominated u ~ drama aerlee, and Daniel J . Travant! wu nominated aa best lead ac10r 1n a drama ..n.. nw ah.ow took all 'ive nomlnadona for best aupportlna actor bl 1 drama 1ertee: Taureen Blacque, Michael C.onrad, Cbarlee Hald. Michael Warren and Bruce Wela. Barbara Bo1on and Betty 'Thoma were nominated for ~ aupportlna actrea In a drama aeries. Bomb shak,e§ Nevada Nuke ·testing callecY'lie.,cessary evil' MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -An a.m. test with a~t 30 reportera, administration goal -peace underground nuclear test with a aald afterward he believes through sttength.'' ~d many timea that of the nuclear testing is a necessary evil. A ground television camera b dropped on Hiroehlma 1ent about ~-mile from the 1Cene waa shock waves rolliflB acrou the "War is hell and I hope we knoc ked out by th-' blast. Nevada desert today. never get Into another one," he Twenty-one seconds later, a said. "But i.f we're going to get J ,000-toot expanse of desert Energy Secretary Jamea into war, I want to come out No. collapsed above the atte where Edwards, who witnessed the 7 l, not No. 2. That's the Reagan the test went off. Hotel, high rises planned Project envisioned for Mesa's South Coast center By JODI CADENHEAD "'lM o.ltr Plot ..... A developer with ties to C.J. Segerstrom & Sons has unveiled revised plans for a 12-story hotel and three high-rise offlc~ buildings 90Uth of the San Dleg6 Freeway along Bristol Street ln Costa Mesa. Officials of California Pacific Properties submitted the plans to the city for conatructlon of a 500-room hotel, three 7 -story offices and a one-atory buildina on 13.6 acres fonnerly oocupie<l by Montgomery Ward and Co. The latest plan for the South Coast Corporate Center la somewhat different from one presented ln April tpat called for an 8-story, 350-room hotel and offices ranging from 3 to 8 stories. ''It's better than having 30-foot shops that will turn into junk in a couple of years," said Lea Thompson, president of the nearby Brookview Homeowners A.s8ociation. "We've gone on record in support up to 130 feet. That's greet," he added. "li they go over. 130 feet. then that's another ball game." Thompson said that the homeowner association signed a legal agreement to limit future · building heights with California Pacific and James Gianulias, · part-owner of an adjacent four acre parcel. the specific plan, said senior city planner Greg Shaffer. One and a half floors of the proposed 12-story hotel will be underground, including the banquet rooms and a portion of the lobby, said Shaffer. "They're trylng to get in everything they can and keep it as low as poesible," said Shaffer. Shaffer said the project would not come before the planning commission until September. Meanwhile, city planning commissioners are echeduled to meet Monday to consider two !>-story office buildings alorig Bristol between the Ward site and the San Diego Freeway. For three years Ulanuliaa and his partner have failed to gain approval for various projects that range from five to 14 stories. "lt'a ~t to what the plan j.s," 881d Glanulias, noting that The council letter to SCAG suggests the panel look not only at the technical feasibility of airport locations, "but aho at the economic and social Impacts of that location." FAVORITE PERCH -Gertrude Cooper of Arcadia has been coming to the Huntington Beach pier more than 40 yeari. She says her fishing pole dates from 1937, but her hat is newer and the next catch will tug at the line any minute. Although the portion of the plan calling for the hotel aa hiRh aa 124 feet exceeds the recently adopted 85-foot limit for the area, local homeowners have indicated support for the plan. Faced with preeaure from developera to increa8e allowable building heights the City Council ln May adopted the Bristol Street Specitlc Plan that hiked heighta from 30 to 85 feeJ aouth of the freeway. . To bulld above that limit, CallfOnUa Pacific would have to win approval for a variance from the proposal faJJs within the 85-foot limit. "We're following the guidelines. We hope there's no oppoe.ition." Specifically, the council said expansion of the military air station for commercial use "would spell disaster for our already overburdened transportation system and would severely and unnecessarily impact the lives of a large Recall broadened ' number of residents." By PAT HOROWITZ oflM Dellr Not ..... I And while the council said it 1 realiz.es the same problems might be experiencec:t at the other two locations, it urged the panel to "reoogni1.e that the least feasible location is El Toro." Lagun'8 city officials are cwnmtly formulating a detailed analysis of iaues Involved ln the SCAG study and will return to the City Council at its Aug. 17 meeting with a report. (See AIRPORT, Page A%) Medical Center cost corrected A story In Wedneeday'a Dally Pilot incorrectly stated that the cost of the entire Irvine Medical Center complex will run between $50 million and $60 million. That estimate waa only for the initial pbaae of the project which Includes a hospital, nursing tchool ana outpatient clinic. Consumers are being asked to return eye and noee medications purchased from Alpha Beta markets throughout Southern California today aa the massive recall of the products was broadened. Esther Cnmer, spokeswoman for Alpha Beta, .id. "Alpha Beta has expanded the recall lnto Orange County in the interest of public safety. "No contaminated products have been found. in Orange County at this time. Surveillance has been incre11ed ln all ltorel. Man.agers have been alerted to adviae clerks that no recalled products are to be aold." BecaUle the medications have been laced with sulfuric acid. at leaat three people have ~n Injured 10 fu, and acld- contamlilated eye drops were found at a fou.rth store when a atock. of Mu.rine Plua wu pulled from the 111\elf, Su.an Bo,nd of the 1tate Health Department'•· TELEVISION NBC spotlights Thursdays NBC hope• to one-up it. two rival1 with a "quality" Thunday menu th1I fall that Will lnc1Uide "Fame," "Taxi," and '•HID Street Blues." P'91i CL •- COUNTY Frontier bac.lcedfby U.S. The federal governmerit hu taken the lide of Frontier Airllnet ln lta bid .to overturn the John Wayne Airport rule that limlta flighta to d1ltahma of 600 milet or le11. Page 86. . Food and Drug Section said Wednetlday. "We have determined that this contamination waa not an accident by the manufacturer becauae we have checked other containers from the aame lot number, and they are okay," she said. But she aaid the store had received no extortion demands and that no leada had been turned up aa to who put the add ln the oontainen of Murine and Murine Plua. Thia ls the 8eCOnd time in eight months that the supermarket chain haa been the target of aon*ll'lle contaminating producta with dangeroua adds. Lut December, 1even people repor1ed suffering injuries when a penon walked through aeveral Alpha Beta markets and Thrifty drug atorea, putting aulfurlc, hydrochloric and acetic acid and chlorine Into a wide range of eye and noae medicatlon1. "Eve~ haa been removed (See RECAU, Paa• AZ) MARILYN MURDERED? -As Marilyn Monroe lookalike. Bettina Llpinald looks on, private investigator Mile Sperigllo (right) explains during a Loe Anaele1 press conference ......... why he and his client Robert F . Slatzer (center) believe Marilyn· was -murdered 20 years ago. SPORTS INDEX Angels break the jinx The Anpls turned the table9 around for a change by winn1ng in the bottom of the eighth lnninl· Pap Cl. Dodgers host Atlanta The Dodcera host the Atlanta Braves ln a key terlet bealnnlnc ton(&ht at Dodfer Stadium. The Bravea are 5 ~ 1amea in front o the eeeond·plp Doctcen with four ~ ICheduled. Pace Cl. A4 A.7 84-~ A7 C7 C7 D2 A6 a A7 A? Movi• Mutual Funds National News Public Nodcm Sports Dr. Stelnc:rohn Stock. Market9 Televlllon Thee*9 Weether We.Id Newa C6 B4 AS C3-~.In Cl-~ A.'I 85 C8 °' A!1. A.8 l .SCHOOL BLAZE -Sixty firefighters from Orange County and Stanton battled a fire 1 Wednesday night that caused ah estimated ,.$386,000 damage to Vessels Elementary 1School, 5900 Cathy Ave., Cypress. Fire Jnvestigators said the blaze was of ~~ous ...... orilin· One firefiehter who received a minor injury in the incident was released after cre.trnent at Los Alamitos General Hospital. The fire, fll:lt reported at 11:32 p.m., required three hours to control, fire officials said. JtECALL BROADENS ... .from the shelves, and we have Ms. Bond. "It's comparable to the increased security at all of our acid you put in your swimming stores," Ms. Cramer said pool." Wednesday. "We have nothing to She said sulfuric acid could !go on at this time, and we don't theoretically cause blindness or know where it will happen at least tear eye tissue, espedall)l next." if not treated promptly. -'the supermarket chain has jlSked anyone who purchased ~Y eye or nose drops or nasal 'pray from any of its 50 area marketa within the past month to return them. "This stuff (sulfuric acid) Is tnuch stronger than the normal types of acid we are used to like the vinegar-or lemon juice," said ''But this stuff is 90 strong that people only get one drop in their eye and immedi.atelr, wash it out and seek treatment, ' she said. Sulfuric acid is readily detectable because it smells like rotten eggs. Ms. Cramer said the products taken off the shelves last December only began reappearing in stores on July 4. AIRPORT SI~E ... · Th&rouncil could, at that time, formulate additlonali arguments agaVist the El Toro site to be ,forwarded to the SCAG committee prior to that 'pilnel's Sept. 3 meeting. Nude driver gets the gate WASHINGTON (AP) -A nude driver and his companion have been arrested after craahlng their car into a White House gate during a chase with police. Joeeph l'eU'O, a Secret Service spokesman, identified the driver as Roland Martin, 29 , of tuburban Dts1riCt tteighta, Md. I\ pusenger, Carl Wellman, 35, of Waahincton, also wu arresled Wedneeday night, Petro said. The District of Columbia police communications office said the vehicle had been the objlct of • police chase juat b~fore lt rammed the steel J{ate. Suicide pact claims two • 1n county In an apparent death pact., Robert Trudeau Hill, 54, of Lemon Height.a shot and klilea hil terminall y ill wife Wednesday morning, and then committed suicide with the ume .45-c.aliber handgun, according to Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart. Elizabeth Bacheller Hills, 56, bad been suffering from cancer for the put three years, anci Lieutenant Hart aid the Hills had told a cloee friend they didn't know If they could handle a lingering death. Hill was found in the bushes in the front yard of the couple's home at 11241 Vista Del Lago. Mrs. Hill's body was discovered in the bedroom. Hart said the murder/suicide occurred between 9:30 and 10:30 a.m. AJso, the Hills left a list of family members to be contacted, together with instructions about the diapoeition of their prooertv. Reagan planning 13-day vacation WASHINGTON (AP) President Reqan la 9Cheduled to fly to California on Aug. 11 for a 13-day vacation at his ranch near Santa Barbara, deputy Whi.te Houae pre11 secretary Larry Speakes •YL Slightly warmer ·co(utal ' Felr todey wltll lllgh1 et the beech .. 70 to 75 1nd Inland ., ... 80 to 85. ContlnU«t lelr tOnlal'tt with overnight !awl ot t4 to et. Allo lelr on Ffldey but with petehy _.ty morning tow c6oudl •long the co111 of Orenge County. Hlghe et Ille ~ on F~ 70 to 75 end Intend.,_. 82 to a7. El1ewher1, from Point Conception to tll• M•alc•n bOtder end out eo m11ee: Hight end morning lght vwteble ""* becoming W9ll to IOUttlweeC 12 to 18 knot• In the aft~ Southwett .... of 1 to 2 fMt. hi end morning low ctoud• IOl"9 IOcel tog but dMr1ng • '* In the an.11000 .. th• mid I01 In downtown Loe Angetee to • coutll IOw of eo. from the mid llOe to !tie mid IOe In mountelnl end ll'om the mid eo. to th• mid Sii• 111 th• de1ert1, depending on tn. loc:atlon. l.Uf)bq MernpNa Miami ........ M~.ft ....... N9wOrieMI NewYorll Norfolc No. Plett• Ollll City Omllhe Orlendo ~ Pltllbut'r:. PUend, Pllend, Ore PrOYldenoe =rClt; Reno Rldll'nond lelll.ak• 8411 At1tol'llo leenle .. ,. .. ........ It~ St P·T8mP9 ......... ---~ Topake 11 CANADA IO ~ T3 ta 12 71 al .. Montr9111 7t • 7S on-IO 70 Regine 81 12 71 Toronto ~, a 74 VllnQOUYW 54 72 Winnipeg 81 u eo .25 72 74 E~tended 74 73 ea weather 87 eo .ae SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 55 .. COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS -Gener~ ""' -"" Mrty '"°"'N low .,.. IN 00111 and aolated afternoon thunderthowera In mountalfle. Hlgll ,.,.,.,..,.. In lower 10t .. the beach .. , 11 to 17 In tM 0011111 olt ... end H to II Ill lnlend---~IT to 70. Hlgfle In fl to • end lows 47 \0 IOWW IOe. . . • JD Oran1e police inve1t11ator1 nearly five-hour 1takeout by have releued the ldentitlet of pol.lee.at the ~· two men found that to death ln a A u ..... 1.-.... laid thll home Wectn.day but l&6d they po ce ,...,_.. ..... 1till have no motive for th• morning that (nvHtt1ator1 apparent mwdet-.wdde • believe Beyant wu eho\ to ct.th The men w111re ldenUfled u u he lay uleep ln hil bedn>om at Billy Ray Bryant, 301 and John the Oak Street home. I ( l1 Brook1, 29. Bryant'• wife, believed that Brooks flnt ld.Ued Patricia, 27, la reported In Beyant and then abot hhme1f to Htitfactory condition at UC death . lrvlne Medical Center after Brooka' body wu found lying undellD'nl Mlf8ll'Y for inJurie9 near Bryant'• and a 12 pu1e the auffered ~when beaten, shotgun wu found neerby. a~ ~ Broolca, at another Pol.lee began their atalceout ol · locadon wlier WedneMtay. the home early Wedneaday Broob' and Bryant'• bodies morning after Mn. Bryant, who were found ln the Bryant homf lived at the Oak Street houae, at 396 OU St. in Orance at about wu found beaten outside a home 11 a.m. Wedneiday followlng a in another part of ~· Israel asked to surrender Beirut gains · ·Catalina campout slated by Irvine By 'ne A11oc1ated Preti The Reagan adminlatratlon today called on hrael to surrender the military gains won in it.a recent attacb into West Beirut and retreat to the cease- fire lines in place 1ut Sunday. The appeal appe·ared to represent a 1hift in administration policy anoounced Wednesday, under which "the Israelis were called on to maintain a "strict cease-fire in place." Irvine's Community Services Department ls ll)Oll.IOling a Catalina Island campout lor children aged 9 to 14 from Wednesday to Friday, Aug. 18 -20. .Fee for the event is $80 pet camper. l\ includes adult supervision, tn.urance, boat transportation, food tent.a and a camp fee. Campen ~ ~y at ~itt.lE Fisherman l:amppund 011 the lslan.d. Some bikini h required.to reach the ca.mi: and participants muat C&IT) thelr own gar. Cam~rt will leave frotr Irvine City Hall at 7:30 a.m WedneldaX and return aboul 9 p.m. Friday. Parents car register their children b) calllng the de.,_rtmenf a1 754-3639 or Deerfielc Community Patlt at 551-8638 ------- •A new principal has been hired at a salary of $37 ,250 for Loe Naranjoe Elementary School in Irvine's Villlge of El Camino Real. Deml.11 Gibb, who has been an elementary 1chool principal in the Redlands Unified School District for the past three years, will •Jen Yu , UC Irvine profeseor of physical medicine and rehabilitation, has been appointed chairman of the depar1ment at the College of Medicine. He takes the place of Dr. Jerome Tobis, who Is directins:t a new geriatrics and The Irvine Senior Citizens Council will hold a 9:30 a.m. meeting Thursday to diacuss a memorial to the late Isadore Schnelder. The council, at it.a monthly begin duties at Loe Naranjoe this fall. He replaces Pa~rlcia Novotney who was transferred to Alderwood Basics Plus School as principal last spring. Gibb baa a mute.r's degree in administration, earned at the university of Redlands. gerontology program in the college. Dr. Yu has specialized in the neurophysiologi~ basis of rehabilitation medicine. The Irvine resident has been at UCI since 1981. meeting at the center at 3 Sandburg Way, abo will review poesible additions for its facility and reorganization of members. The meetlnlts are open to all people qed 55 or older. OMEGA In asking the Israelis to relinquish what they had won in Wednesday's heavy fighting, State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said he was unsure what the U.S. respoNe would be if Israel Ignores the administration's request. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told reporters, meanwhile, that he is optimistic presidential peace envoy Philip C. Habib will succeed in hla renewed attempt.a to 1ecure a PLO evacuation from the guerrillaa' west Beirut enclaves. Addressing Habib'• efforts, Weinberger added, "I think be can succeed.'' About 100 foreign joumal.iata covering the war are hou.ed at the hotel, but no deaths were reported. In Vienna, U.N. Secretary- General Javier Perez de Cuellar appealed to the Israeli government to accept U .N. ceue-fire observers in Beirut and. offered to travel to Lebanon for ta 1 ks ••with a 11 p.a rt i es concerned." Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin sdd bis government would welcome a visit from Pere% de Cuellar but only "If there were not a parallel visit to Arafat," a U.N. statement issued in Vienna said. WHEN YOUR TIME IS PRECIOUS. The rore com bl notion of technology and art - Omega, A legend In SWt11 watchmaking since 1848, each Omega is os tmpecmbty ocxurote os it ls aes· thetlcolly pleasing. Come ... our entire collection. ladles' quartz btOtelet watches in 14 karat yellow gold: A, $795. 9. 1975. C. $195. SljA.~1cK·s . .......... ,.t7 Irvine needs study on. its ·tr8ffic traps I • 11 attitudee are ehaped at all t>y envtronment. then Culverdale · residents of Irvine must at (Imes feel trapped within their streets by lncreaalng traffic on 1um>undlna thorouahfares. Residents, In fact, received what sounded like assurances last week from the Irvine City Council ~at ape will be taken to eue Problem8 of fuming onto the two streets that border their develo~t. . Council members said traffic Sign.ala should be placed at Culver Drive and Ferris Avenue and at Main Street and Thiel Avenue- t'he two intersections lf!ading to Culverdale. However, the council gave itself latitude by a sking their a-d vis o r y Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n Committee to review the plans. If that committee disagrees, one supposes the council could still alter lb decision. About two dozen Culverdale ~sidents attended the council meeting and many of them were wi1Ung to detail the problems they've had fighting traffic, especially during morning rush- hour, to get to work « echool. Currently, no atop atgna or signals stop tr a ff le at the two lnteraectiona, ao ~dents say they must walt until a break ln traffic occurs, or until they work up the nerve to pull into the flow. However,' reports from city traffic experts say the aituation when monitored wun't u terrtble 81 Culverdale residents Mid. St.aff members had sugeeted not to add signals, but they were overruled. New traffic signals coet the city about $90,000 each to install. They also add another delay to commuters who use the streets, so decisions to add more should not be made without a sound reaaon. Before the Transportation Committee reviews the council's proposal. it would seem wile for city employees to invest more time ·monitoring the traffic to deten:oine how necessary signals really a.re. If Culverdale residents are as trapped as they say, the signals . seem merited. But the city should have distinct findings that prove the need for the signals before committing to the expense. Schools can't delay Irvine Unified School District officials say they are in a dilemma because they want to buy the ir own building and stop paying $180,000 a year rent for district offices. They'd like to put that building in the Irvine City Center but the city doesn't have a site pinned down yet. The district wants to build a new school in Woodbridge with state money. It's all tied in together and district officials are up against the wall on a deadline. U ,they don't settle on a district office site next week, they risk losing $5 million in bond money. The district does. indeed, have a dilemma. ... It can't wait for the city to firm up arrangements with the Irvine Company for a City Center site. That could take months. It would have been nice to have the school district central offices in the city center. But, it'd be nicer to save Irvine taxpayers money and that's what district officials are trying to do by pushing to get their construction plans off the ground immediately. The school district must push ahead. North Star beach vote due North Star Beach on the Upper Newport Bay is a misnomer. It's not really a beach, at least not a genuine one. Mainly, North Star is a mud flat with a lot of weeds. And if one was even tempted to visit the pl.ace, he couldn't go in the water ljecause it is contaminated. But the stretch of public property, located on the west side of the bay just above Dover Sliorea, could be in for a change. A group of human-powered boating enthusiasts have formed a non-profit group and are hoping to establish an aquatics center at North Star. It would be a public operation, and canoes and kayaks would be in use. There's only one hitch -the Newport Beach City Charter prohibits leasing any bayfront property without first getting • permission from the voters. So that's what will happen. Voters will be asked in November whether a portion of the beach should be leased for 25 years to this non-profit group. North Star actually is jointly owned by the city and Orange County government. The two parties are expected to get together and work out the arrangements if the election is successful. We think the aquatic center plan sounds good. North Star Beach is under-utilized and appears to be a perfect spot for this sort of setup. Our concerns are with parking (where are people going to park?) and that the center does not evolve into some sor t of private club. It has to be open to the public. Opinions expressed In the space abqve are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex- press.don this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invlt· .cl. Addf"ess The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·43:l1. L.M. Boyd /What 'Grade A' means U .,Grade A" meana anything • all on a carton of milk, It means the dairy c~ntenda the milk was processed under aanitary standards. No, sir, to tum out "Grade A" you don't have to wae dlstilled water when yt>u cut It. Just keep It reaaonably clean. A thousand yea.rs ago in China, oolns were preaed ln special shapes to aignlfy what they'd buy. The pear_...ped coin wu traded for fruit. A com cut roughly to look like a human boay wu for clothes. st. Nlcho1u. ao iona MBOCiated with Oi.riltma. alto II the patron ulnt of pawnbnlken. Undentandllble. 'Mott bulk robberiea happen on rrtdq. Q. How Jollf dam It take a good pro "1 ~·a ..w. nicket? "-A. Anou' 4& miAutea normally. . 'lllat'• -..,..... 80-pOund ~ Job. '!'Mill twice that 1or11 for Bjorn Bott• ti-lbd ft.pound wet.. ' . Q . How many' teeth on a snail's tongue? A. Figure it this way: 135 rows with 105 teeth in each row -14,175 teeth. Among youngiters in that age bracket from 9 to 12, girls tend to be better athletes Uwl h9ys. So contend the students of physical fitness. A 10-year-old girl, they say, almost invariably can beat a 10-year-old boy of about the game weight and height ln a boxing match, If both aet l1milar lessons. 'Thb tomboy s~ is the only age bracket ln which girls ~ phyScal superiority. You don't tee it dernorlltrated much beeau. pit are encouniced to _.,ow out of it with all deliberate apeed. t .. Letters to the ·editor Wooden roofs: Another view To the Editor: On July 16 a San Bernardino paper ran an article on a residential flre ln Rancho Cucamonga, started when laundry was Ignited by a water heater, where a mother and her two children "luckily" escaped unharmed. Several facts of this news item are of unusual interest. The fire was already fully involved before anyone was aware of it. It happened at 1:30 a.m. when the family was asleep. 'The roof was burned off the house, yet no one was injured. I visited this house the following day and talked with the OOCUpal\ta who were shaken but unharmed, and It became obvious why a greater tragedy had been averted. This house had a wood roof. A wood roof that vented the fire allowing the tox1c fumes and smoke to escape, and undoubtedly saved the lives of th'e occupants. The mother stated that, although the names were shooting from the roof by the time they were aroused, they were able to walk out unharmed because there was no smoke inside'. Further indication of this was the evidence that, although fire damage to the kitchen, garage, and roof was extensive, there was no smoke damage throughout the house. no smoke damage to the contents of the house, and, most of all no smoke damage to the occupants. NATIONAL FIRE Protection As8ociation statistics show that over 95 percent of all home fires start INSIDE the house. In high fire hazard brush areas. or areas adjacent to hillside brush areas, it ls apparent that fire retardant construction is necessary. But in our recent emotional eagerness to legislate fire retardant roofing for single family dwellinga throughout California are we sacrificing the life $8fety of 95 percent of the families whose fires will start INSIDE their house? During an intensive 30-month study made in Dallas, Texas, 88 people lost their lives in fires. None of these deA\hS were under wood roofs. Tight, fire reta)'dant roofs trap super-heated smoke and toxic fumes inside the builc:ling and do not allow them to escape. In recent months a pregnant woman and her 8-month unborn baby in Montclair, an 11-year-old boy in Chatsworth, three people in Crestline, and a 3-year-old girl in Los Angeles all died of smoke Jnha}ation under tight, fire retardant ''toots. More were injured. WW these statistics increase when homeowners have no choice but tight roofing? In some of these instances the apparent structural damage seemed minimal. But the fire began inside, the smoke could not escape, and people died. It la amall consolation to a homeowner that hta fl.re retardant roof is still Intact if he, or a member of his family, died from smoke lnhalation. Right now there is one owner of a wood-roofed home in Rancho Cucamonga who will a\.tffer the pain of rebuilding a house, but, much more important, will not suffer the agony of burying a family. BE'ITE A MITI'ON Police thanks MAILBOX Ghastly action To the Editor: It was another shocking display of devil-take-the-hindmost, survival-of· the-fittest, and do-it-yourself. consumer. For, apparently in the interest of saving the rich taxpayer money, an arrogant Orange County Board of Supervisors' majority recently - wickedly -cut the heart out of the Consumer Protection Agency, bravely standing against public interest and protest. This ln the teeth of records showing t he agency saved non-rich Orange Countians millions. But one guesses the real reason may have been, sweetened by a do-it-yourself philosophy, to use the money for such devel9pment-orient.ed. project.a as the hated San Joaquin Corridor freeway should the courts reject our suit. . I'm s urprised opponents of the consumer agency didn't come right out and say, "Big Business doesn't cheat;" or, "Who needs a Consumer Protection Agency? Ask your ~igbbor -he'll tell you who's reliable." (My neighbor's wife back ln Florida used to ask the iceman which stocks to buy.) Or, "You can't fool the American public." But accolades must go to Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark who fought the cut. Perhaps they read the· voter mind clearer. Or better, they still believe a decent goverrunent's role is to do what the poorer individual cannot do: protect himself from scams. One has to wonder, however, why one of the cutters didn't join Riley and Clark in return for their past votes for massive developments. There's still another question that I'll not put. All I ask now is, How long, Oh Lord? How long? TQM ALEXANDER Column unfair To the F.ditor: Until I read Mr. Von Hoffman's column so unfairly depicting and condemning Israel's military thrust into embattled Lebanon (July 16th). I considered bis comments to be fair and worth noting. Being a pacifist by nature, the brutal effects of all armed conflicts have ever evoked loathing from me. If fairness would have tempered his moral outrage, I might have forgiven his damning worda. As is, I can only ask him: Where were his righteous outcries when other Lebanese children were driven from their homes, orphaned and maimed from PLO Llrlng? WHERE WAS HIS eldquent and moral wrath when laraeli schoolchildren were fired upon in their northern settlements and ln school bu8ee? How many deprecating columns did he write when entire Jewish populations were uprooted from their historic homelanda in Yemen. Syria, and many other Arab Janda, with only the clothes on their baclca? Rather than call upon tny own meager knowled1e of what tranaplred in To the F.dltor: tortured Lebanon, I'll quote from a The Newport Beach Police recent media ad of the natlqnwide ~t commencb the Dally •Pilot "-American ~ Leque, numbertnc for lta effona to provide a aafe Youtth of ~ 2 mil1Jon 80Ula: July.. ' The replatlonl tt!S\rictlni the llae Of flreworka ·are .omeUm• difflcull '° *'°'Pt lind often ~t M oppcll'tUDltj for crlticl1m or Arcum •• to thetr enforcement of theH l•w• and ~the neptMi Un~ that they The Datly PUot hU Wien a v~ry DOllth'• attftUde ln ~· with this ..... It hill dear)1 ihOwa·tlM ratloaale form.it npla1'oni ... -~ It• readen to tak• advenl•I• of alla'INU¥e o~u. tO tmjoy the ~°'eJi'toaoea 'Ollef of PoUce Newport Beech ''IBVEN YICAAS AOO, Lebanon w• occupied b7 PLO terrorists who had been e..,.u.ct from J~ alter~ failed to overthrow Kln1 Hu11eln. Durlnf thoae Hven yeara the).' committed an oray of atrodtln and desecration against women and chil*en, churches and gravesites. ''A sweet and lovely land was ravaged. Those who dared to oppose the PLO were murdered. Homes and farms and villages were pillaged. Lebaneae- govemmental authority was defied and ultimately destroyed. "IN COLLUSION WITH the Syrian occupation army, the PLO made war on the people of Lebaon. From 197~ to 1981. the toll among civilians was 100,- 000 killed, 250,000 wounded, countless thousands made homeless. Thirty-two thousand children were orphaned. ''And the world was silent." Now that in a desperate effort when Israel ls trying to put an end to PLO atrocities, many eloquent voices such as Von Hoffman's have risen up to decry Lebanese casualties. Where were they In the last seven y,ears of needless suffering of the innocents? PAULA WARSAW Fire safety To the .Editor: I would like to extend our appreciation to ·you and your newspaper for running the "No Fireworks in Laguna Beach" public service announcements prior to the Independence Day holiday. Although busy as usual, this Independence Day holiday weekend was characterized by roinimaL f.irewoclcs.- related public safety problems, and by a calmer celebrative mood on part of the general public. We believe your running our public service announcements positively affected this year's less destructive Independence Day holiday weekend celebration. RONALD E. ADAMS Fire Chief, Laguna Beach Seniors' view To the F.ditor: I am writing this letter to you in regard to what the mayor and City Council of Fountain Valley are trying to do to us aenJon. On Tuesday, July 20, when we had a meeting with the mayor and City Council, I was amazed, surpriaed and disgusted to eee and hear how little they regarded the aenJors. Don't they realize that their wives will be seniors too llOIDe day? And rm sure a lot of them have a mother that is a senior also. As I was coming out of the building, I approached a member of the council and asked him what he thought about all this? His answer was that we all have our problems. This I thought wu quite an answer. I told hi(n that a lot of 1.heae seniors who are quite elderly and don•t have a family look forward to Wednesday and Friday to go to the 'Recreation Building on Bropkhurst where they all meet to play Bingo and play cards and have a little refreshment. Isn't this better than to have to ~ home and twiddle their thumbs and aet eo depreseed that they may land In the nuralng home? There ia an old saying you lre only • old u "°" feel, and rm IW'e lf they haw tO llay home all the tlme It ..,.. lm't '°"""to make them feel any~· O.L. Very Conoel ned seBior' ' I I . Hotel, J,igll rises planned for Mesa .; • ~ ' lb JODI CADENHEAD or .. IMlr,... '"" A developer with iiee to C.J. Segentrom & Sona hu unveiled reviled plans for a 12-atory hotel and three h11h-riae office bulldlnp aouth of the San Diego Freeway along Brtatol Street in Costa Mesa. Officials of California Pacific Properties submitted the l>lans to the city for cohatrucdon of a 600-room howl, thrff 1 .. 1tory offlcee and a ~story bU1ld1n8 on 13.6 acrea formerly occupteCI by Moni,omery Ward and CO. The latest plan for It* South Coast Corporate Center ii somewhat different from one' presented in April that C*lled for an 8·a1ory, 3~0-room hotel and 'offl~ea ranging from 3 to 8 stories. Al~ouah the portion of the plan caWni for the hotel _., hl&h u 124' feet aceedt the recen11y adopted BO-foot lln>lt for the area, local homeownera have indicated aupport for the plan. "lt'a better than having 30-!oot ahope that will tum into junk in a couple of years," uid Lea Thompson, preaident of the nearby Brookview Homeowners Am>cl&Uon. "We've aone on record In aupport up to 130 feet. That'• areat.''. he added. "If they 80 over 130 feet, then that'• another ball gaine,'' Thompaon aald that the homeowner ...x:iatlon aianed a legal .,reement to lJmit futw-e buildlt\8 hetahta with CaUfomta Pacific and Jame• Gianullas, part-owner of an adjacent four acre parcel. J'aced with preaaure from One and a half 0oon' ot I.he ~pen to increue allow.ble prol>Oled 12-atory hotel w1l1 .,. buildlnl hetghta th• City Council underground, includln1 che in ~)' adopted the Br1atol Street ba~ roome and a portion of Spec:Uic Plan that hlked hel&hta the by, Mid Shaffer, from 30 to 85 feet south of the \ hey're trylna to a•t tn freeway. _ · -~rythtna they can and keep it To build above 1 hat limit, aa low as po•U3le," aaid Shaffer: C&Ufontia Pacific would have to Shaffer MW the project would win approval for a va.rtance from not come t>.fore the planntn1 the spec\fic plan, said senior city commillton until September. planner Greg Shaffer. (See MESA, Page AJ) • { ~ Laguna; skip TorQ site idea s ·pecia-. j'Udge . Vote set i Jurist's election voided over residency suit · The Laguna Beach City Council has sent a letter to the Southern California Association of Governments, urging that group's executive committee to eliminate consideration of Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, as a regional airport. In a letter sent to Pat Russell, president of SCAG's executive committee, the council said it is concerned that the Southern California ·Aviation System Study "does not sufficiently address the transportation, noise and community development problems inherent in consideration of the El Toro Marine Base as a regional airport t site." SCAG Is currently in the process of selecting a site for a new airport and a previous study two years ago indicates the most appropriate site would be in the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor area. . But the result of a later study recommends two additional po ten ti al sites, including a portion of the sprawling Marine C.OZ.ps base at Camp Pendleton, and the air station at El Toro. By DAVID KVTZMANN OflheDt!IJPllotlblff · Two months ago, Santa Ana attorney Dan Charles Dutcher'& campaign accusation that West Orange County Municipal Court Judge Joanne Harrold wu not a legal resident of the county went unheeded by most v9tera .. On Wednesday, six months after he claimed that Harrold was a resident of Riverside County, a superior court judge in Santa Ana invalidated the June 8 election victory of Harrold and scheduled new balloting in Nuclear bomb test shakes Nevada ·. MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -An undergrowid nuclear test with a yield many times that of the bomb dropped on Hiroshima sent shock waves rolling across the Nevada desert today. Energy Secretary James Edwards, who witnessed the 7 a.m. test with about 30 report.era, said afterward he believes nuclear testing is a necessary evil. The SCAG executive committee will be making its recommendation on one of these sites· when it meets early next month. .,.., Not ""* .., ........ 01*w191 FAVORITE PERCH -Gertrude Cooper of Arcadia has been coming to the Huntington Beach pier more than 40 years. She says her fishing pole dates from 1937, but her hat is hewer and the next catch will tug at the line any minute. ''War is hell and I hope we never get i,nto another one," he said. "But if we're go~ to get into war, I want to come out No. l, not No. 2. That's the Reagan administration goal -peace through strength." A ground television camera about ~-mile from the ~ne· was knocked out by the blast. Twenty-one seconds later, a 1 ,000-foot expanse of desert collapsed above the lite where the test went off, 2,100 feet underground. The council letter; to SCAG suggests the panel look not only at the technical .feasibility of airport locations, "but alao at the economic and social impacts of that location." Rec811 broadened Specifically, the council said expansion of the military air station for commercial use "would spell disaster for our a 1 r e.a d y o v e r b u rd e n e d transportation system and would severely and unnecessarily impact the lives of a large number of residents." on eye, nose drops A helicopter television camera had shown indentations near the site seconds after the detonaton, but DOE spokesman Dave Miller said they were from previous tests. And while the council said it realizes the same problems might be experienced at the other two locations, it urged the panel to "recogni7.e that the least feasible location is El Toro." Laguna city officials are currently formulating a detailed analysis of issues involved in the SCAG study and will return to the City Council at Its Aug. 17 meeting with a report. The council could, at that time, formulate additional arguments against the El Toro site to be forwarded to the SCAG committee P10r to that pallet's Sept. 3 meetiiig. By PAT HOROWITZ Of the Dfllly Not 8teft Consumers are being asked to return eye and nose medications purchased from Alpha Beta markets throughout Southern California today as the massive recall of the products was broadened. Esther Cramer, spokeswoman for Alpha Beta, said, "Alpha Beta has expanded the recall into Orange County in the interest of public safety. "No contamiqated products have been found in Orange County at this time. Surveillance haa been ,increaaed in all atoree. Managers have ~ alerted to advise clerks that no recalled products are to be eold . ., Because the medica~ have been laced with sulfuric acid, at least three pepple have been Injured 10 far, and acid· contaminated eye drops were found at a fourth store when a stock of Murine Plus wu pulled from the shelf, Susan Bond of the state Health Department's TELEVISION NBC spotligbts Thursdays NBC hopes to one-up i" two rivals with a "quality'• Thunday menu this fall that will Include "'tame," "Taxi,'' and "Hip Street Blum.'' P.,e C8. COUNTY Rams coacb gets scouting award Ray Malavasl. coach of the Rarn1, ha1 been honored with the ''Diltinguiabed ~ Scout'• award. P~Bl. Frontier backed by U.S. The federal goyemment bu taken the aide of Frontier Atrllnea in ltl bid to qvertum the John Wayne .c\lrport rule that Umlt. f1ilht1 to e11atanCee of 500 mile. or lell. Pace B6. • Food and Drug Section said Wednesday. "We have determined that this contamination was not an accident by the manufacturer becaw,e we have checked other containers from the same lot number, and they are okay," she said. But she said the store had received no extortion demands and that no leads had been turned up as to who put the acid in the containers of Murine and Murine Plus. This is the second time in eight months that the supermarket chain has been the target of aomeone contaminating products with dangerous aclda. Last December, seven people r reported suffering injuries wtien · a penon walked through several Alpha Beta marketa and Thrifty drug atorea, putting sulfuric, hydrochloric and acetic acid and chlorine into a wide range of eye and noee medications. "Evet'Ylhln.lt has been removed (See RECALL. Paie A!) SPORTS The bl-ast site, a desolate expanse of desert 77 miles northwest of Las Vegu known as Yucca Flat, ia pocked with indentations cauaed by hundreds of previous underground tests. • The huge, two-a1ory concrete control building 10 miles away shook noticeably in a rocking ~motion and seismograph needle jumped erractically when the test wu detonated. Edwards sat next to the test controller, who gave the final say on the shot. Department of Energy officials said the test was between 20 and 150 kilotons. several times that of the 13-kiloton bomb dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, the beginning of the end of World War II. Referring to current nuclear freeze movement, Edwards said. proponents are "talking about the thing that will preserve their right to diseent." Angels break the jinx The Angela tutned the tables around tor I\ change by winning in the bottom of the eighth inning. -Page Cl. Dodgers host Atlanta The Dodgen hOlt the Atlanta Btavea in a key series beginning ·tonight at Dodger Stadium. The Braves are 511i 1amea in front of the eecond~place Dodgen with four teamee ec:heduled. Page Cl. November. Harrold is not eligible to run. Judge Ronald Owen's ruling was believed to be unprecedented -the first time a judge's election in California had been voided and overturned because of falsification of a candidate's documents relating to residency. Judge Harrold. who maintained throughout a week- long trial that she was a legal resident of Orange County, quickly left Owen's courtroom and declined to comment dter the ruling wu announced. Dutcher said he was not surprised by the ruling. "(Judite Owen) didn't do what was easy, he did what'wu right,'' the attorney/candidate said. Dutcher, who sued Harrold on the residency issue after the election in June, finished a distant second to the Westminster jurist. Coming in third was Costa Mesa attorney Ronald Nix. Both will face each other again in November. (See JUDGE, Page AZ) " DellJ Plot Pftoeo bJ LN P8JM DRY SUMMER -Charlie Gray (left) and Scott Taylor, both 11, both of Costa Mesa-, are just two of the legions of . area youngsters looking in vain for water in the TeWinkle Park slide this season. Slide dried Kids shut· off at Te Winkle Youngsters waiting around the dirt-crusted water slide at Costa· Mesa's TeWinkle Park for lhe gushing water to turn back on can go home. City officials report that the popular water slide, closed since sununer began, will be dismantled due to escalating water costs and orders by the County Health Department to install expensive new features. Last spring the county officials told city officials to install a filtration and cholorination system, refinish the slide and set up radio communication between the top and the bottom. Costa Mesa already was lasing money on the slide, opened two years ago during the summer months, said Jon "Rip" Ribble, recreation superintendent. The fresh water that fiowed through the winding slide and emptied into a nearby lake cost $3,400 a summer. Supervising the slide cost another $4,600. At a charge of 50 cents an hour per person, the slide generated about $5,000 in revenues. "I feel real sad about it," said Ribble. "But you're talking about a capital improvement program on a prqject that's losing money." · Ribble estimated \hat it would cost $50,000 to repair the slide Wied by 10,000 children a year. INDEX At Yow Service A4 Movies C6 Erma Dombeck A7 Mutual Fund.I B4 ~ B4-~ N•tional Newa A3 Cavalcade A7 Public Notkles C3-ao2 Comb C'1 Sports 1-S cro.word c:t Dr. Steincrohn A'l Deeth Notices D2 Stock Markete & llditorial Ae Televilllon C8 Entenalnment, C6 Theet.en a Horoecope A7 Weathm' A2 Ann Landen A'I World Newt A3 NATION :.CONFAB -OUst.ed Municipal Court Judge Joanne Harrold '•!(right) confers with her attorney, Eleanor Stegmeir, in court after her June election victory was overturned Wednesday. Erom Page A1 JUDGE HARROLD··· .. Hatrold'a attorney, Eleanor Stegmeier, said an appeal would be filed almost immediately with 'the 4th I>lltrict Court of Appeal 'In San Bemardlno. · · "We'll definitely appeal, certainly baaed on the way the 'judge worded his decision," ··Stecmei4tr said. · Owen, saying that Harrold'• "'eredibWty had been shattered, beyond repair," ruled that the l'fe-elected judge wu untruthful .._hen she filled out a declaration •'of candidacy Feb. 23 liBtlng Newport Beach as ber Orange County residence. He found instead that her true ·residen~e at the time was In ·'R1verside County. Owen said he was convinced •PY the evidence that Harrold .,tqok up residence at the $2 . million home on Newport Beach's Lido Isle in, mid-March after seeing campaign material by Dutcher accu1ins her of actually living in Riverside County. Harrold testified last week that she began moving into the Newport home in November, 1981, when she aaid her grandmother turned the house over to her. However, the admitted on the witnell stand that the November date on a quitclaim deed giving her pome8lioll of the hOU8e was fallely dated and notarUed. The document, lhe ta.id, ectually WU slped by her gandmother in 1982 and not in 1981. It a1IO WU di9c1oeed 1n the trial that Harrold used the Newport address in 1979 when she applied to the governor's office for a judicial appointment in Orange County. · i.aN'tl It& more "pular ,.._.ltoft wfflt a total Of IO ~y i\om&ftaUoaa. c.8, the frolil•NnnJq network bl the n~ Md 81, Incl ABC 90' 10. PU received 29 nomtnaUonl, ,,JDchadlnl 11 for "Brtdnhead ~&ed'' aDd 13 ~ .... '° nndlcai.d lhowi. ,\ OthH 1how1 noel~ awlUple n9mlnationa Ind ''°"'Page A1 RECALL. • • from the 1helve1, and we have ~ MC1.IJ'ity at all of our 1tore1," M1. Cramer aald Wectn.day. 11We have nothin8 to ao on at thla time, and w. don't know where It will happen ~; 1upenna.rket chain hu uked anyone who purchued any eye or nc.e drops or .,_i 1pny from any of lta 60 8J'ff m.rketl within the peat month to return them. "Thia atuff (1ulfurlc acid) .ta m\Eh stronger than the nom\a1 types of add we are U8eCl to like the vinegar or lemon juice," said Ma. Bond. "It'• comparable to the aidd YOU put in your IWimm1nl pool.'" She aald 1ulfuric acid could theoretically cauae blindness or at least acar eye tilaue, especially If not treated promptly. "But this atuff la ao strong that people only get one drop in their eye and tmmedlatelr, wuh it out and eeek treatment, ' she said. Sulfuric acid ls readily detectable because it smells like rotten egga. Ma. Cramer said the producta taken off the shelves last December only began reappearing in at.ores on July 4. From Page A1 MESA ... Meanwhile, city planning commissioners are acheduled to meet Monday to consider two 5-atory office buildings along Bristol between the Ward aite and the San Diego Freeway. For three years Ulanullaa and his partner have failed to gain approval for various projects that range from five to 14 stories. "It's pursuant to what the plan la," said Gianullas, noting that the proposal falls within the 86-foot limit. "We're following the guidelines. We hope there's no opposition.'' Reagan planning 13-day vacation WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan ls acheduled to fly to California on Aug.· 11 for a 13-day vacation at hla ranch near Santa Barbara, deputy White House preaa secretary Larry Speake1 says. Slightly warmer Coastal ' Fair todey with hlgh1 at the beac:hH 70 to 78 and Intend ., .. a 80 to 85. Conllnu.ct lair tonight with OYemloht lowt of 84 \q 98. Al8<> lelr on frlday but with patchy ewty mcwntng low cloud• ilong the c:oHt of Oreng• lCounty. Hlgha at the bNc'-on Friday 70 to 75 and lnlllod .,_ 82 to 87. El1ewhere, from Poi nt Conc:epllon to the Mexican cl« and out eo mllee: Night ., momlnO light vwlable wlnda becoming -t to aoutr-t 12 to 18 knOta In the attemoona. Sovltiw.t ewe!! Of 1 IQ 2 feet. ht end morning low cloud• -local fog but ~ ,.., In the.,.._ Tnunoer11orma orougnt n1gn a and hMvy rein to the oentral Stet .. today, with ltorma In tow." Mleeourt Vt/ftrt, 9C(0M 11a•• Into 1ou1hweatern loredo end t11• T•••• th• mid 801 In downtOWI) lo• Anoeln to a c:oaatal low of eo. from the mid 50t to tile mid eoa In mountelns end from the mid eoa to the mid 80• In th• d•a•rta. d9'*l(llng on the loc:etlon. Temperatures NATION .. Le ""-Albany 83 89 Alt>uque 112 87 AmetlllO 94 ea Aan.Alle 87 87 Atlanta 112 72 Atlante Cty n 7t Au.tin 100 78 Baltlmor9 89 73 .22 Bllllngs 89 84 Blrmlnghm 92 72 8ltmerctl 88 58 .Ot BolM 87 57 eo.ton 75 87 Btown1vtte M 78 BuflllO t1 • Burllnglon 84 82 .to Caper 89 58 Chartatn SC 87 74 Ohettltn WV 88 88 .Ot Chetltte NC 88 73 Cheyenne 78 S4 Chicago 86 72 .07 Clnc:innetl 92 71 .4e ~and 85 72 .oe Columt>ut 81 ea .39 Oel·FI Wth " 77 Dayton 92 88 .M OenY9t 82 59 .03 Dea MolnH 91&71 2.41 Detroit S7 89 Duluth 15 5t El PMO M 89 Ferv<> " 64 l'lllgataft 80 49 GrMt Felle 15 81 .01 Hertford 93 • Helena 87 a Howton M IO lndMp4lla 12 n .11 Jecltan MS 93 70 Jecll:arw!le 9t 72 Kene City 100 73 .87 Knoxvtle 91 73 Lee Vegee 101 72 Uttle Aoc:ll H 78 l~ tM 7S .aa Lubboc:tc Memphla Miami MllwwAI .. Mple-StP Nalwlle NewOrlMna New York Nonolk " 71 CANADA . .. IO ~ 7l 42 15 82 Edmonton 71 38 12 85 Montrul 78 se ., 73 Ott-eo 91 70 Aegln• et 52 12 7S Toronto 18 a2 83 7• vanoouver 71 54 85 72 Winnipeg 81 52 No. Piette 91 eo .25 Ollle City Omeha Orlendo Ph:I• Ptioen x Pltttburt Ptltind, Ptlend, Or• PrcMdenc:e ="City Aetlo ~ 8aft I.Ab San A1*lfllO 8eettte ::.1.: St loule It P-Tempe ., ... Marte IMI 72 90 74 Extended 90 74 89 73 108 85 weather 93 87 70 eo M I 11 16 80UTtU£RN CALIFORNIA COASTAL ANO MOUNTAIN 71 ... AREAS -0.-~ bUt -" 11 n Mr1y ~ low '*' ... .. I? 1.80 13 • ., coaat end 10lated eltetnoon thunderallowera In movntelM • • 12 High ,.,,..,...,,_ In io... 70I It = ft th• b .. OMI, 1,,l.Jo t1 In '" c:oaat•I cit'" II to M Ill 71 ,, Inland ...... ~ 11 " to If JI I to70. ~11'1 7'toM .... end lowt 47 to ioww eo.. to n ,Of • •7 ~ ~~ T~ 11 14 Smog .... " n Where to call (toll frM) tor ...... ~Ion: ~ ·Jtool'46oMM nt•IH aunty: (IOI) 21.,.~ and ......... OOllfll.: ~ MT-4710 M*D ..... CMllr: CM> .~ ....... C98" "M·~&·• .with 10, ~ NBC'I .. Ain't Milbehavin'," the CCllLidJ lhoW ABC ce.neeltd and NBC maldwd up *lib etcht. 0 L0u Grant," the newspaper drama whoH unexoected can~llatlon by CBS cauMd • ltDnn ot Pf'Ot*lt. recelwd es.ht. A 9C11 "ln1ld1 the Tlitrd .... NBC'a ••scrv Network" .met 9PfraUon Prime Tl.me'• "A • Ir Women Called Oolda" each ~lmtl'\. 'BUDey M~' the adroit pol;kll oamady ~t on the retirement llu, aot five nomlnadana: "HW Sv.t Bluel," 111t YMI"• bll wuu~r. wu nominated u belt drama .... and Daniel J. Travantt wae .nominated aa bmt lt6d ~ ln, dnma .-. nae ahow look aU ftve .nomlAldoN for beft 1upporttn; actor ln a dnlna --= Ta~ BlliOqUe, Michael ConrAd, Ch.vi• HaJct, Michael Warren and Bruce w.au. Barbara Boaon and Betty Thoma were nominated f« t.t aupportln1 actreat In a drama tertea. Cops seek clues in 2 slayings lrVin·e Medical unit. eyes ·hospital bid Oranae police lnve1Ugatora have relealed the ldentiUea of two men found shot to deeth in a home Wedneeday but Mid they atUl have no motive for the apparent m~IUk::lde. T he men were ld~l)tlfied u Billy Ray Bryant, SO, and John Brook1, 29. Bryant'• wife, Patricia, 27, ii reported in Htilfactor)' condition at UC Irvlne Medical Center after underaoing surgery for lojurtea ahe auffer~d when beaten, apparently by Brooks, at another location earlier Wednesday. Brookl' and Bryant'• bodief were found lo the Bryant home at 396 Oak St. in Orange at about 11 a.m. Wedneaday following • nearly five-hour stakeout by police at the bpme. A police spokesman said this morning t h at inveatigatou believe Bryant wu shot to death as be lay asleep in hla bedroom at the Oak Street home. Irvine Medical C.enter (IMC) ii expect,ed to be the aecond srouP to formally 1ubmlt a permlt apf.!!f1atton to 1tate health oU for a ~ hospital lo Irvtne. IMC offidala plan to announce Friday that they will file a certificate of need (CON) a)>pllcatlon wttn the Office of Statewide Health PJ.ann1na and Develoon>ent. The Chataworth- bued llealthWeat Foundation last week aubmitted a 'CON for a ~ milUon medk:al center to be located at UC Irvine. In ~tion, TuaUh Community Hoepltal haa ab own Interest in butldtnf a 120-bed acute care hoapJta in the city. Western Medical Ce.(!ter dropped Its hO(pital planl and lnatead baa propmed a $l0 mllllon·outpatient inedical cllnlc ottering many o{ the services p roposed by HealthWeat and IMC. The IMC proposal, auJ>Ported by the gasa roota sroup.-f>eople for an Irvine Community Hoapital, calla for a 222-bed hospital at the hub of a Mesa dra\Vs up ideas on policies The City Council in Costa Meaa• has aent planners a shopping Hat of 63 policle9 they'd like to see adopted over the next few yean. City officlala are expected to return to~ council with estimate on the time and coat involved with each recommendation. The list will then be whittled down to 10 to 15 policies that can be implemented during the next few months . Edward Lobel of Newport Beach has won UC Irvine's first annual Howard Babb F.aaay Competition. The comfetition, which carries a 100 award. is sponsored by UCI's Department of English and Comparative Literature in memory of Babb, one of the department's founding members and Its chairman Last Jl.lly the City Council adopted a general plan cove r in g land use, environmental re90W'Cea and community developmenL Included lo the 63 policies chosen by the council are: -Update of the master plan for blkewaya. -R evising city noise ordinance. -Re-evaluate future plans for Lions Park. expansion. -Eslabllah guidelines to encourage solar ~rgy use. from 1S69 to 1972 and again from 197~ until his death in 1978. The competition is open to all undergraduate humanities majors at UCI. Lobel, a junior majoring in English, intends to study law. His essay was titled "Imagination, Reality and Illusion in • >,.. Midsummer Night's Dream."' OMEGA major health care complex planned, eventually to include a library, health museum , reatauranta, 400-aeat auditorium. exercile field, hotel·like lodalnl for patlenta and famlllea and facllltlea for a nuraing achool, educational program• and research. The medical center ii to be built near Barranca Parkway and Jeffrey Road. Initial pl.am call for construction of a nuratng education building to 1erve health care programs at Saddleback Community College, which operates a satellite campWI adjacent to the medical center site. IMC officlala are negotiating a land agreement with Saddleback College. Construction of the entire medical center complex would be done on a piecemeal basis after the nursing achool and aix·story hospital tower have been built, according to IMC president Dave Baker. The faclllty is to be managed by Hoag Memorial Hospital, he said. Israel asked to surrender Beirut gains · By Tbe Alaociated Prea1 The Reagan administration today called on Israel to surrender the military gains won In Its recent atta.cks into West Beirut and retrS'at to the cease- fire lines in place last Sunday. The appeal appeared to represent a shift i n adminiatration policy announced Wednesday, under which the Israelis were called on to maintain a "strict ceue-fire in place." In asking the Israelis to relinquish what they had won in Wednesday's heavy fight ing, State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said he was unsure what the U.S. response would be if I.arael ignores the administration's request. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told reporters, meanwhile, that he Is optimistic presidential peace envoy Philip C. Habib will succeed in his renewed attempts to secure a PLO evacuation from the guerrillas' west Beirut enclaves. Addressing Habib's efforts, Weinberger added, "I think he can succeed." About 100 foreign journalists covering the war are housed at the hotel, but no deaths were reported. WHEN YOUR TIME IS PRECIOUS. I • The rare combination of technology ond art - Omega. A legend in Swl11wotchmoking since 18~8, e0ch Omega is os im~bty ocxurote as It Is aes- thetically pleasing. Come ... our entire colledlon. Ladles' quartz bracelet watches in 14 karat yellow gold: A. $795. 8. $975. C. $895. SLAVICK.§ ,.....,. Slfica tlt'7 Whmchebes1J~bqin. :=.r-==z.= I .. • e c Costa Mes & sllould push housing ahead General plans for cl tie a usually fall to generate a lot of exdtement. Aa a result, the long· winded reports don't get a lot of space in newspapers. It remains important, however, for citizens to keep up on the event1 surrounding future guidelinea for thelr home towns. · Laat July, the Costa. Meaa City Council adopted a general plan covering land use, environmental resources and community development. Included in the 289-page report was a list of some 44 pollciee, many things already done by the city such as providing a minimum of four acres of permanent open space for every 1,000 residents. Recently, City Council members sat down and looked over the list of policies and aelected 63 that they would JJke to aee acoompliahed. The list will be further reduced to about 10 to 1~ policies that can be implemented during the next few months. The 63 policies chosen by the council included revising plana fm:._ the master plan for bikewar,. the city noise ordinance, Uona Park expansion and encouragement of solar energy uae. Following the November election, citizens' advisory groups will be chqsen to advise the council on the land use studies. We hope there will be widespread participation by citizens in the advisory groupe so that the Costa Mesa of tomorrow will be a Costa Mesa in which people will want to live. ·It should be a community that takes pride in planned progress. Mesa citizen h elp needed General plans for cities usually fail to generate a lot of excitement. As a result, the long- winded reports don't get a lot of space in newspapers. It remains important, however. for citizens to keep up on the events surrounding future guidelines for their home town. Last July, the Costa Mesa City Council adopted a general plan covering land use, environmental resources and ~unity development. --· Included in the 289-page report was a list of some 244 polides, many things already done by the city such as providing a minimum ot four acres of permanent open space for every l,000 residents. Recently , City Council members sat down and looked over the list of polic ies and selected 63 that thev would like to see accomplished. The list will be further reduced to about 10 to 15 policies that can be implemented during the next few qionths. The 63 policies chosen by the council included revising plans for the master plan for bikeways, the city noise ordinance, Lions' Park expansion and encouragement of solar energy use. Following the November election, citizens' advisory groups will be chosen to advise the council on the· land l.tse studies. We hope there will be widespread participation by citizens in the advisory groups so that the Costa Mesa of tomorrow is a Costa Mesa in which people will want to live. It should be a community that takes pride in planned progress. North S tar b e a ch vote due North Star Beach on the Upper Newport Bay is a misnomer. It's not really a beach, at least not a genuine one. Mainly, North Star is a mud flat with a lot of weeds. And if one was even tempted to visit the place, he couldn't go in the water t>ecause it is contaminated. But the s tre t c h of public prope}'ty, located on the west side of the bay just above Dover Shores, could be in for a change. A group of human-powered boating enthusiasts have formed a non-profit group and are hoping to establish an aquatics center at ' North Star. It would be a public operation, and canoes and kayaks would be in use. There's only one hitch -the Newport Beach City Charter prohibits leasing any bayfront property without firs t getting • permission from the voters. So that's what will happen. Voters will be asked in November whether a portion of the beach should be leased for 25 years to this non-profit group. North Star actually is jointly owned by the city and Orange County government. The two parties are e xpec t e d to get together and work out the arrangements if the e lection is successful. We think the aquatic center plan sounds good. North Star Beach is under-utilized and appears to be a perfect spot for this sort of setup. Our concerns are with parking (where are people going to park?) and that the center does not evolve into some sort of private club. It has to be open to the public. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex- preued on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is inlflt· ed. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7141 642-4321. L .M. B oyd /What 'Grade A' ·means .. U "Grade A" means utything at all on a carton of milk, it means the dairy contends the milk was processed under sanitary standards. No, sir, to turn out 0Grade A" you don't have to u.e dlstilled water when you cut it. Just keep it rea80nably clean. ~ A thousand yean ago ln China, colna were presaed ln special shapes to signify what they'd buy. The peer-ahaped coin was traded for fruit. A ooln cut roughly to look like a human boay waa for clothes. St. Nlcholu, .o lona aaociated with Chril1mM, aho la the patron saint of pawnbrokers. Understandable. . MOit bank robbertn happen on i'rida1· Q. How kg dc1-it 1ake a aooci pro to Strini • c.nnil 19Ck.et! i& Q. Where •lte, bealdee central J'lortda, ... the aat link holel? A. AltlbeaW, Sou~ Georpa. .mrne pat11of TtdC& Q. How many teeth on a snail's tongue? A. Figure it this way: 135 rows with 105 teeth in each row -14,175 teeth. A. About 45 minutes normally. That's an average 60-pound .•trlnging job. Takes twice that long for Bjorn Borg's 91-and 92-pound webs. Among younsatera in that age bracket from 9 to 12, girls tend to be better athletes than boys. So contend the studenta of physical fitnet8. A 10-year.old girl, they aay, almost invariably can beat a lO·year..old boy o1 about the ume welcht and beabt in a boxing match. lf both aet llmDar ie.ona. nu. tomboy Nit la .the only ace bracket ln wtucb Pit pc.- phySlcal superiority. You don't .ee fl aein11111iitrated much .... P"ta are encounjed_~~ crow out of Ii with an deliberate lpeed. Letters · to the editOr W o oden r o of s: Anoth er view To the F.d.ltor: On July 16 a San Bernardino paper ran an article on a residential fl.re ln Rancho Cucamonga, started when laundry was ignited by a water heater, where a m0ther and her two children "luckil[" escaped unharmed. Several facts o this news item are of unusual interest. The fire was already fully involved before anyone was aware of it. It happened at 1:30 a.m. when the family was asleep. The roof was burned off the hoUR·, yet l\O one· was injured. I visited this house the following day and talked with the occupants who were shaken but unharmed, and it became obvious why a greater tragedy had been averted. This house had a wood roof. A wood roof that vented the fl.re allowing the toxic fumes and smoke to e9Cape, and undoubtedly saved the lives of the occupants. The mother stated that, although the flames were shooting from the roof by the time they were aroused, they were able to walk out unharmed because there was no smoke inside. Further indication of this was the evidence that, although fire damage IO the kitchen, garage, and roof was extensive, there waa no smoke damage throughout the hou.e, no smoke damage to the contents of the houae, and, most of all no smoke damage to the occupants .. NATIONAL FIRE Protection Association statistics show that over· 95 percent of all home fires start INSIDE the house .. In high fire hazard brush areas, or areas adjacent to hillside brush areas, it is apparent that fl.re retardant ·construction is necessary. But ln our recent emotional eagerness to legislate fire retardant roofing for single family dwellings throughout California are we sacrificing the life safety of 95 percent of the families whose fires wlll' start INSIDE their house? During an intensive 30·month study made in Dallas, Texas. 88 people lost their lives in fires. None of these deaths were under wood roofs. Tight, fire retardant roofs trap super-heated smoke and toxic fumes inside the building and do not allow them to escape. In recent months a pregnant woman and her 8-month unborn baby in Montclair, an 11-year-old boy ln Chatsworth, three people ln Crestline. and a 3-year-old girl in Loa Angeles all died of smoke lnhalation under tight, fire retardant roofs. More were inj\p'ed. Will the.e statistics increase when homeowners have no choice but tight roofing? In some of these instances the apparent structural damage seemed minimal. But the fire began inside, the smoke could not escape, and people died. It 1a small consolation to a homeowner that his fire retardant roof is still intact if he, or a member of his family, died from smoke inhalation. Right now there ls one owner of a wood-roofed home in Rancho Cucamonga who will suffer the pain of rebuilding a house, but, much more Important, will not suffer the agony of burying a family. I BETTE A. MI'ITON Police than ks To the Editor: The Newport Beach Police Depu1ment commenda the Daily Pilot fM ita efforts '° provide a ule Fourth of July.'. ~ rej\aljtiorll l"e9trictinl dw Ult Of fJreworu are eomettmee dtftlcult to ~Md Often ..-ent an oppon..anity for crltletam or aan:um q to th~lr enforcement of theH lawa and r•= the nepuwwpact that UMrJ .. . . The Daily Pllot baa taken • very DOIMve atdtiade ln dMUM 1'tth thle fliut; It hll C:IMlrly shown-the ratlaMle •thtilt~and -~ lti readere to l'ake advant•I• of alWna~ ~dee to enjo)' the T~Ei\a ... Chief ot 1toUce N~BMch MAILBOX Ghastly action To the Editor: It waa another shocking display of devll-take-the-hindmost, survival-of- the-fittest, and do-it-yourself, consumer. For, apparently in the Interest of saving the rich taxpayer money, an arrogant Orange County Board of Supervisors' majority recently - wickedly -cut the heart out of the Consumer Protktion Agencyr bravely standing against public interest and protest. This in the teeth of records showing the agency, saved non-rich Orange Countian11 millions. But one guesses the real reason may have been, sweetened by a dG-it-yourself philosophy, to use the money for such development-oriented. projects as the hated San Joaquin Corridor freeway should the courts reject our suit. I'm surprised opr.onents of the consumer agency didn t come right out and say, "Big Business doesn't cheat;" or, "Who needs a Consumer Protection Agency? A.al( your neighbor -he'll tell you who's reliable." (My neighbor's wife back in Florida Wied to ask the iceman which stocks to buy.) Or, "You can't fool the American public." But acoolade.s must go to Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark who fought the cut. ~ Perhapa they read the voter mind clearer. Or better, they still believe a decent government's role is to do what the poorer lndividual cannot do: protect himself from aca.ms. One has to wonder, however, why one of the cutters didn't join Riley and Clark ln return for their past votes for massive developments. There's still another question that I'll not put. All I ask now is, How long, Oh Lord? How long? TOM ALEXANDER Column unfair To the F.di tor: Until I read Mr. Von Hoffman's column so unfa~rly depicting and condemning Israel's military thrust inlO embattlea Lebanon (July 16th), I considered his comments to be fair and worth noting. Being a pacifist by nature, the brutal effects of all armed conflicts have ever evoked loathing from me. U fairness would have tempered his moral outrage, I might have forgiven his damning words. AJJ is, I can only ask him: Where were his righteous outcries when other Lebanese children were driven from their homes, orphaned and maimed from PLO firing? - WHERE WAS BIS eloquent and moral wrath when Iaraell schoolchildren were fired upon in thelr northern settlements and in school buaes? How many deprecating columns did he write when entire .Jewish populations were uprooted from their historic homelands in Yemen. Syria, and many other Arab 1anda. with only the clothes on their backat Rather than call upon my own meaaer knowled1e of wha\ transpired tn tortured Lebanon. I'll quote from a recent m.dla ad Of the nallonwide American CebaNle ~ numbertnl iround 2 mlllJOn IOU1a: . _, "SEVEN YE.AU AGO, LebinCln W11 occupied by PLO terroriata who bad been nP.tDed from Jonlan after havlnl failed to overth'row Ktn1 Hu .. ln. Durtn1 tboae aeven year• they comml ted an oray of atrodtl• and Ltct1r1 from r~• art ~. Tlti nght to t'~H i.u1r• lo /fl ,,_. Of' tl1m1M11 llbtl fl N••rwd L.fttm 0# • wcwdl or ~ .. tAU Jaf ~ ,,,.,.,, ... ,, All .,,,,,. ,,.., _,... ..,...,..~~ addNll ,,.., "°1MI "'Gf fW OR • QUlf 61~.~t&l/itfftf ,..... ... =:=~,~-1111m!>n o/ Jw eoftfnhlor ~.~ tor 11trtftcallofl P'l'POffl r desecration against women and children, churches and gravesites. "A sweet and lovely land was ravaged. Those who dared to oppose the J>LO were murdered. Homes and !arms and vi llages were pillaged. Lebanese- governmental authority was defied and ultimately destroyed. "IN COLLUSION WITH the Syrian occupation army. the PLO made war on the people or Lebaon. From 1975 to 1981, the IOU among dvillans was 100,- 000 killed. 250,000 wounded. countless thousands made homeless. Thirty-two thousand children were orphaned. "And the world was silent." Now {hat in a desperate effort when Israel is trying to put an end to PLO atrocities, many eloquent voices such as Von Hoffman's have risen up to decry Lebanese casualties. Where were they in the Last seven years of needless suffering of the innocents? PAULA WARSAW Fire safety To the F.dllOr: I would like to ext.end our appreciation to you and your newspaper for running the "No Fireworks in Laguna Beach" public service announcements prior to the Independence Day holiday. Altho ugh busy as u s ual , this Independence Day holiday weekend was characterized by minimal fireworks- related public salety problems. and by a calmer celebrative mood on part of the general public. We believe your running our public service announcements positively affected this year's less destructive Independence Day holiday weekend celebration. RONALD E. ADAMS Fire Chief, Laguna Beach Seniors' view To the F.ditor: I am writing this letter to you in regard to what the mayor and City Council of Fountain Valley are trying to do to us seniors. On Tuesday, July 20, when we had a meeting with the mayor and City Council, I was amazed, surprised and disgusted to aee and hear how little they regarded the 1eniora. Don't they realize that their wive.a will be seniors too some day? And I'm sure a lot of them have a mother that is a senior alao. · AJJ I was coming out of the building, I approached a member of the coundl and asked him what he thought about all th. ? IS. His answer was that we all have our problems. This I thought was quite an answer. I told him ttlat a lot of theee seniors who are quite elderly and don't have a famtly look forward to Wednesday and Friday to go to the Recreation Building on Brookburat where they all meet to play BinJlo and play cards and have a little ref.resfunent. Isn't this better than to have to stay home and twiddle their thumbs and aet .a depressed that they may land in the nl.l.rslng home? There is an old aaying you are only M old .. you f~. and I'm an lf they h9W '° l'-Y harm all the Ume lt aire 11n't. ... to mike them t.e1 a.l\Y yaunes. O.L. Very ConcenWd Seniar • By JODI CADENHEAD ·0.--.....,,... ..... A develope' with ti• to C.J . Sepntrom & Sona hM unveiled revt.d plana for a 12-atory hotel and three hl1h-rlae office buI1dinp south ot the San Diego Freeway aiona Bristol Street In Costa Mesa. Offlciala of CaUfornla Pacific Properties submitted the plans to the city for con1truetfon of a 1500-room hoiel, three 7 ·•t.ory offices and a CJM4ory ~ on 13.6 acre. fotmerly ot1CU by Monteomery Ward and . The latest plan ·for the South Coast Corporate Center 11 aomewhat different from one preeented in April that called for an 8-story, 350-room hotel and offices ranging from 3 to 8 stories. Althouch the portion of the plan ~ for the hotel u h1ch .. 124 feet exceedl the ncently adopted 8'-!oot llmlt for the area, local homeowner• have indk:ated support few the plan. "It'• better than havine 30. -foot ahopa that will tum into junk 1n • couple of years," said Lei Thompson, president of the nevby Brookview Homeownen "-od.aUon. "We've aone on record tn aupport up to 130 feet. That'• great," he added. uu they 80 <YV« 130 feet, then that'• another ball prne.'' Thompson said that thei homeowner a.odation stlned ~ lecal a,reement to llmlt tuiun~ bu.UdlnC heiehta with Callfornilt Paclfic and Jamea GianuU11 , part-owner of an adjacent fourr acre parcel. .Faced with presaure from developen to lncreue allowable buildina helahll the Qty Council ~ ~)' adopted the Bristol Street 5pedftc Plan that hiked hef&hta from 30 to 85 feet south of the freeway. To build above that limit, California Pacific would have to win approval for a variance from the apec:lfic plan, said senior dty planner Greg Shaffer. One and a hail floon of the poPOted 12-etory ~1 wW be uncler1round, lncludtn1 the · banquet rooms and a portion of the lobby, Mid Shaffer. • ''They're tryln1 to s.t iri everythtna they can and Jt u low aa pcmlble,t' uJd Shat•·' Shaffer uJd the project would. not come before the plannina commilalon until September. (See MESA. P11e A!) Laguna: skip Tor~ site idea Special judge vote· set Jurist's election voided over residen~y suit . The Laguna Beach City Council has sent a letter to the . Southern California As8oclation of Governments, urging that group'• executive committee to eliminate consideration of Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, as a regional airport. In a let1er !lellt to Pat Rusaell, president of SCAG'a executive committee, the council said it is concerned that the Southern California Aviation Syatem Study "doea not sufficiently address the transportation, noiae and community development problems inherent in consideration of ihe El Toro Marine Base as a regional airport site." SCAG is currently in the process of selecting a site for a new airport and a previous study two years ago indicates the most appropriate site would be in the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor area. . But the result of a later study recommends two additional I potential ait,es, including a ; portion of the sprawling Marine 1 Corps baae at Camp Pendlet:On, I and the air station at El Toro. By DAVID JtUTZMANN °' ... DellJ ..... ...,, Two months ago, Santa Ana attomey Dan Chlrles Dutcht:r's campaign accusation that Wiest Oranp County Municipal Court Judge Joanne--Harrold was not a legal resident of the county went uJl,heeded by most voten. On Wednesday, six montths after he claimed that Harrold was a resident of Riverside County, a superior court judge in Santa Ana invalidated the June 8 election victory of Harrold and scheduled new balloting in Nuclear bomb test shakes Nevada MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -An underground nuclear test with u yield many times that of the· bomb dropped on Hiroshima aent shock waves rolling across the Nevada desert today. Energy Secretary James :Edwards, who witnessed the 7 a.m. test with about 30 report.era. said afterward he believes nuclear testing is a necessary evil. The SCAG executive committee will be making it.a recommendation on one of these site;s when it · meets early next month. ~,... ...... ..,'9erWI ~ FAVORITE PERCH -Gertrude Cooper of Arcadia has been coming to the Huntington Beach pier more than 40 years. She says her fishing pole dates from 1937, but her hat is newer and ·the next catch will tug at the line any minute. "War is hell and I hope we never get into another one," he said. "But if we're golnR to get into war, I want to come out No. l, not No. 2. That's the Reagan adminlstratlon g oal -peace through streJlllh ..• A 1round television camera about "'·mile from the acene was khocked out by the blast. Twentl-one seconds later, a l ,000-oot expanse of desert collapsed above the aite where the teat went off, 2, 100 feet underground. . . The council letter to SCAG suggests the panel look not only at the technical feasibility of airport locations, "but al.lo at the economic and social impacts of that location." Recall broadened Specifically, the council said expansion of the military air station for commercial use "would spell disaster for our already overburdened transportation system and would severely and unnecessarily impact the lives of a large number of residents." on eye, nose dr9ps A helicopter television camera had shown indentations near the site aeoonda after the detonaton, but OOE spokesman Dave Miller aald they were from previous tests. And while the council said it reallies the same problems might be experienced at the other two locations, it urged the panel to "recognize that the least feuible location is El Toro." Laguna city officials are currently formulating a detailed analysis of Issues involved in the SCAG study and will return to the City Council at its Aug. 17 meeting with a report. The council could, at that time, formulate additional argument.a against the El Toro site to be forwarded to the SCAG committee prior to that panel's Sept. 3 meeting. . By PAT HOROWITZ Of tM .,.., .......... Conaumen are being asked to return eye and noee medications purchased· from Alpha Beta markets throughout Southern California today as the massive recall of the produc ts waa broadened. :Esther Cramer, spokeswoman for Alphlll Beta, said, ''Alpha Beta has expanded the recall into Orange County in the interest of public safety. "No contaminated products have been found in Orange County at this time. Surveillance Ml been incre8lll?d in all stores. Manapra have been alerted to advt.e clerk.a that no recalled producis are to be IOld.'' Becaute the medicationa have been laced with aulfuric ~ at least three people have be•n injured 10 fa.r , and actd- contamlnated eye drops were found at a fourth store when a atoc:k of Murine Plus wu pulled from the aheU, Susan Bond of the atate Health Department'• TELEVISION NBC spotlighl8 Thursdays 1 NBC hope1 to one-up lta two. r.tvali with a "quality" Thu.nday menu th1t fall that will lnclUde "Fame," "Taxi," and "Hill Street Blu.." ~ C8. COUNTY Rams coach gelB scouth:J6 award Ray M.tavul, coach of the Rama, hu been honored with the "DlaUniWahed l'AIJe Scout" award. Page Bl. Frontier biclced by U.S. Food and Drug Section said Wedne8day. "We have determined that this contamination was not an accident by the manufacturer becaU9e we have checked other container• from the same lot number, and they are okay," ahe said. 'But she said the store had received no extortion demands and that no leads had been turned up as to who put the acid in the oontalnen of Murine and Mur'iM Plus. This Is the second time in eight months that the supermarket chain has been the target of eomeone contaminating product.a with dangerous acids. Lait December, seven people reported suffering lnJurles when a penon walked through several Alpha Beta markets and Tb.rtfty dru1 atores, putting sulfuric, hycliochlorlc and ace~ acid and chlorine into a wide ranae of eye and noee medications. "Everythtn,{ baa been removed (See RECALL, Paie A%) SPORTS The blast 1ite, a desolate expanse of desert 77 miles northwest of Las Vegas known aa Yucca Flat, ls pocked with indentadons caused by hundreds of previous underground ie.ta. The huge, two-story concrete control building 10 mUea away shook noticeably in a rocking motion and seismograph needle jumped erractically when the test was detonated. Edwards aat next to the test controller, who gave the final say on the shot. Department of Energy officials said the test was between 20 and 150 kilotons. several times that of the 13-klloton bomb dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6,-1945, the beginning of the end of World War II. Referring to current nuclear . freeze movement. Edwards said. proponent.a are "talking about the thing that will p:reeerve their right to diaent." Angels break the jinx The Angels turned the tablea around for a change by winning in the bottom of the ei,hth inning. Page Cl. Dod&ers host Atlanta '1'he Dodcen bolt the AUMta BraV. in a key .ertee beatnnlnC toni&ht at Dodfer Stadium. The Bravee 1i1Te &'1S 1amee ln front o the aecond-place Dod&en with four ~ acheduled. Pace Cl. Yoruwblood Baau' veteran Jack Y~ 11 U. fttlrm In y.n of .-vlct • for the Lea Ailallm Baim• tlMy prepare tar die 1882 llUDIL ~Cl . .-' Novembel'. Harrold is not eligible to run. · Jud&e Ronald Owen's ruling was be lieve d to be unprecedented -the first time a judge's election in California had been voided and overturn ed because of falsification of a candidate's documents relating to residency. Judg e Harrold, wh o maintained throughout a week- long trial that she waa a legal resident of Orange County, quickly Jieft Owen's courtroom and dec'Dned to comment after the ruling wu announced. Dutcher aaid he was not surprised by the ruling. "(Judge Owen) didn't do wha* was easy, he did what w .. right," the attorney/candJdate said. Dutcher, who sued Harrold on the residency issue after the election in J une, finished a distant second to the Westminster jurist. Coming in third was Costa Mesa attorney Ronald Nix. Both will face each other again in November. • (See JUDGE, Page A!) .,.., Net .,.... bJ .._ ...,.. DRY SUMMER -Charlie Gray (left) and Scott Taylor, both 11, both of Costa Mesa, are just two of the legions of area youngsters looking in vain for water ln the TeWinkle Park slide this season. Slide dried Kids shut off at Te Winkle Youngsters waiting around the dirt-crusted water slide at Costa Mesa's TeWinkle Park for the gushing water to tum back on can go home. - C~ty officials report that the popular water slide, closed since summer began, will be dismantled due to escalating water costs and orders by the County Health Department to install expensive new features. Last spring the county officials told city officials to install a flltratJon and cholorinatlon system, refl.niah the slide and set up radio communication between the top and the bottom. Costa Mesa already was losing money on the slide, opened two years ago during the summer months, said Jon ''Rip" Ribble, recreation superintendent. · The fresh water that flowed through the winding slide and emptied Into a nearby lake cost $3,400 a summer. Supervising the sllde COit another $4,600. At a charge of 50 cents an hour per person, the slide generated about $5,000 in revenues. "I feel real sad about it," said Ribble. "But you're talking about a capital improvement program on a project that's losing money." Ribble estimated that it would cart $50,000 to repair the slide uaed by 10,000 children a year. INDEX At Your Service A4 Movtel a Erma Bambeck A7 Mutual Funds B4 a.tne. 84-0 National News A8 Cavalcade A7 PubUc Notke9 C3-6,D2 Comica C7 Sports Cl-5 Cramword C7 Dr. Stelncrohn A'I Death Notlc.w D2 Stock Marketa BO l';dl&orlal A6 Televtlion C8 l:nWUinment ce Tbeallll"I a HOroecope A7 Weether A2 Mnl.anden A7 W«ld New. A8 NATION CONFAB -Ousted Municipal Court Judge Joanne Harrold ''(right) confers with her attorney, Eleanor Stegmeir, in court after her June election victory was overturned Wednesday. F:rom Page A 1 JUDGE HARaOLD· · · · Harrold's attorney, Eleanor Stegmeier, said an appeal would be filed almost immediately with the 4th Distnct Court of Appeal tn San Bernardino. "We'll definitely appeal, certainly based on the way the judge worded his decision," Stegmeier said. OWen, saying that Harrold's "credibility had been shattered. beyond repair," ruled that the re-elected judge was untruthful 'when she filled out a declaration bf candidacy Feb. 23 listing Newport Beach as her Orange C.Ounty residence. Beach's Lido I.ale in mid-March after seeing campaign material by Dutcher accusing her of ac tually living In Riverside C.Ounty. Harrold testified last week that she began moving into the Newport home in November, 1.981, when she said her grandmother turned the houae over to her. However, ahe admitted on the witne.. stand that the November date on a quitclaim deed giving her r-'ssion of the h~ was falle y dated and notarlied. The document. ahe aid, actually was signed by her grandmother In 1982 and not in 1981. tW•P•d lU •ore p~ r ,.._llloft wlG· a total Of IO lminy nomlnat&OM. CB8, the lron&-runnt .. MtWork la tbl ~Md A, ..S ABC ... to. PBS nteelved 18 nominaUona lncludtn1 11 tor 11Brtdnbead ftevtltied" and II nclllli&natlonl '""' to avndlcellld lhOwl. .. Other 1how1 reoelvtn1 multiple nomlnationt lncludH From Page A.1 RECALL. • • t'rom the shelves, and we have t ncreued MCUrity at all of OW' 1.torea," Ma . Cramer aatd Wednellday. "We have no\hinl to "'on at thia tlme, and we don't ll1now where lt wlll happen next:• The supermarket chain bu uked anyone who purchased any eye or noee dtop1 or nua1 spny from any of tu 00 area nutrkets within the pMt mpnth to return them. •'Thia stuff (aulfurlc acid) iJ m\.dl atronger than the nonnal types of acid we are uled to like the vinegar or lemon juice.'' said Mis. Bond. "It'• comparable to the acid rou put in your swimming pool.' She said sulfuric acid could theoretically cauae blindness or · at least llCal' eye tissue, especially lf not treated promptly. "But this stuff is so strong that people only get one drop in their eye· and immediatel~ wash lt out and seek treatment,• ahe said. Sulfuric acid ls readily detectable because it amells like rotten eggs. Ms. Cramer said the products taken off the shelves laat 0-ecember only began reappearing in stores on July 4. From Page A1 1'flESA. • • Meanwhile, city planning co.mmissioners are 11eheduled to meet Monday to consider two 5 .. story office buildings along Bristol between the Ward site aind the San Diego Freeway. For three years Uianullas and his partner have failed to gain upproval for various projects that 1:ange from five to 14 stories. "It's pursuant to what the plan is," said Gianulias, noting that 1:he proposal falls within the 05-foot limit. "We're following 1:he guidelines. We hope there's 1no opposition.'' Reagan planning· 13-day vacation He found instead that her true residence at the time was in 1\fverside C.Ounty. Owen said he was convinced by the evidence that Harrold took up r esidence at the $2 million h o me on N e wpo rt It al.lo WU dilcloeed in the trial that Harrold used the Newport address in 1979 when she applied lo the .governor's office for a judicial appointment in Orange C.Ounty. - WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagan is 11eheduled to fly to California on Aug. 11 for a 13-day vacation at his ranch near Santa Barbara, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes says. Coastal F•lr todey with hlgha et the beeches 70 lo 75 and lnlend er ... 60 to 85 Continued felr fc)nlght with OYernlght tows Of 84 to ea. Aleo fair on Frld•y but wlltl patchy Ntfy momlng tow cloud• along the coal! of Oreno• 'b:>unty. Hight •t the ~ on Frl<ley 70 to 75 MCI JntMCI :z 82 to 87. El1ewhere . f rom Po nt Con ception t o the Mexican border end out 60 mite.: Nlgll1 fllld morning tight ver11ble wlndl becoming_, to IOUlh-t 12 to 111 11no11 Jn the 1tternoon1. outh-•t ewell of 1 to 2 fMt, ht and mor ning tow c1oud1 -local too but clMt1ng felr tn the 1f1emoon1. .S. sumniary Tlluno1r1torm• orougnt ·nigh 1 and heavy rein to the centre! led StatM loday, wt1h atorms In lower MIMoufl Vllll9y. ecrou n••• Into 1outhwe1t ern o loredo e nd the T ex11 Slightly warmer the mid 601 In d owntown Lo• -'ngetes to • cou1•1 low of 60, from the mid 50a to the mid eo. In mountains and from the mid 80e to t he m i d 8 01 In the deHr l1. depending on the tocetton. Temperatures NATION .. Lo .._ Albany 83 89 Albuque 112 117 AmarlHo M 68 Alhellllle 87 e7 Atl11t1t1 82 72 .Atlante: Cty n 71 Autlln 100 711 e.ttlmof• • 73 .22 81111ngs 89 84 81rmlnohm 112 72 81amarck a. 58 .01 BolM 87 57 Boston 75 87 Browna.,,.. M 71 8uftalo 81 81 Burlington .. 112 .10 C8999t " 58 Ch1rt11n SC 81 74 Chartatn WV 118 68 .01 Chertne NC 118 73 Cheyeone 78 54 Chlc:ego 85 72 07 Clnc:lnnall 112 71 . .e c~ 85 72 08 Columbus 81 68 39 Oel-Ft Wth " n Oa}'1on 112 88 .lie OlltlV« 82 511 .03 Dee Molnee 111&71 2.41 Oetrolt 87 811 Duluth 75 511 El Puo M 89 Fergo 115 84 Flllgllllfl 80 411 Greet Fent 85 51 .01 Hertford 83 " Helen• 87 53 Houllon M 80 lnctneplil t2 73 .13 Jacilen MS 113 70 JecUnvtle 111 72 Kerw Chy 100 73 .87 Knoxvllle 81 73 LU VegM 101 72 LIUle Roell 88 78 Louhlvttle 94 75 .32 • Lubtlodl t5 71 ~ " 80 Miami 85 82 Mllwellk• 82 115 Mpta-St.P 111 73 Nuhvtlltt 181 70 New Orteen1 •)2 73 New York (l3 74 NorlOlk 0 5 72 No Plane 11 1 80 .25 Ot!le Chy ro 72 Omllhe 74 Ol1endo 110 1• Phlledptlla 89 73 Phoenhl 1oe 85 Pllltbur~ 83 87 Pl lend, ~ 80 .se Plllll'ld, Ore 55 PrOlllcMnce 1~ 84 ="Chy I .. e ~uo Reno Rlc:hmond 72 8elt Lall• 815 sen Amon1o 78 S..ttle 51 ~ 70 n St LOUii ~ 11 St P-Tempa I n .oe 818t•Merle u Spolc-~, 54 SyrllClUM ... Tooalla 72 .38 CANADA Calgary n •2 E<lmOnton 71 38 Mon tr.., 71 59 Ot1aw• 80 Regina 11 52 Toronto 78 82 Vencou.,,., 71 5' Winnipeg 81 52 Extended weather SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COASTAL AND MOUNTAIN AREAS -Genlf~ but wtttl awty ~low -Iha coHt end eolated •fltrnoon thunderehoweu In mountain•. High tamperetural In lowel' 70e et Iha bHCtlH, f7 to 17 In '"' c:oHlal cltlt• end II to N In Inland vtleyt. ~ ~ 17 IO 70. Hlgtll In ~ 71 to • end towt •7 to to.et toe. Smog TODAY leoond low •:OI p.m. leoond """ 10-. 10 p.m. "9AY l'1f1f -!i' ...... l'1f1f 1111111 1 .... ......... '""' .......... --~ .. , "'" -..... 1:90 , .... -----rs----~ MMIP-"'·• .... ,,. ....... Cll' ''M·.\4;R." with 10. and IGC],HAin9t ........ V'lft'," the or:ia• .,. AJIC ~ and NBC .. tahld up With .._t; "Lou Onrit," the newtpaper drama whoH unexoected cancellaUon by CBS cauMd a donD of prc>Wlt, Neetved •llht. A 9C'• "ln1lde the Tl\lrd &lch " NBC1 "SC'rV Network" ..nd Qp;;;Uon Prime Tilne'a "A Wo•q Cal ... O.lda11 eaoh ,.,..wdmwn. "8'raey M&Uu " the adroit palklt cxwmdy Ail: "'' 00 the reUrement Hu, 1ot Uve norn.m.uar.. "HW StrMt Bluee,'' 1Mt year'• bll winner, wu nominated aa belt drama --and Daniel J. Travantt wu ncminated u belt leed IC10C' tn • drama ........ The •how lOOk Ill flw nominatl.oN for bnt 1up~ .nor 1n a .... ...-: 1'aulW m.pa., Mkhael Conrad, Chari. Haid, MkhHI Warren and Bruce Welti. Barbara Boson and Betty Thoma were nominated for belt 1upportln1 actreu In a drama Mriel. eops seek clues in 2 sl~yings Irvine Medical unit eyes· hospital ·bid Orange poJlce investi1ator• have released the identities of two men found ahot to death in a home W«t.neaday but aal,d they stlll have no motive for the appll\'nt murder-IUicide. The men were identified u Billy Ray Bryant, 30, and John Brooks, 29. Bryant'• wife, Patricia, 27, ia reported in aat11factory condition at UC Irvine Medical Center after undergoing surgery for injuries ahe suffered when beaten, apparently by Brooks, at another location earlier Wednesday. Brooks' and Bryant's bodlM were found in the Bryant home at 396 Oak St. in Orange at about 11 un. Wednesday following • nearly five-hour stakeout by police at the home. A police spokesman said thh morning that lnvestigatora believe Bryant was shot to death as he lay asleep in his bedroom at the Oak Street home. Irvine Medical Center (IMC) iJ ex~ to be the leCOnd group to formally 1ubmit a permit applicatton to state health offidala for a major hospital in Irvine. IMC offk:iala plan to announce Friday that they wlll file a certificate of need (CON) application with the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development. The Chatsworth- baaed HealthWeat Foundation las( week eubmitted a OON for a $50 million~ center to be located at UC Irvine. In addition, Tuatin Community Hatpital haa shown interest in buildlna a 120-bed acute care hospital in the city. Western Medical Center dropped i ta hoepltal plant and lnatead has ,propoeed a $10 million outpatient inedlca1 cUnlc offering many of the aervlcea proposed by HealthWest and IMC. The IMC propoeal, supported by the grass roots IJ'OUp, People for an Irvine Comniunity Hoepital, calls to' a 222-bed hospital at the hub of a ~Mesa draw-sup ideas ·o·n policies The City °"incl} in c.o.ta Meaa haa aent planners a shopping list of 63 policies they'd like to see adopted over the next few years. City oftidala are expected to return to the oouncil with estimate on the time and cost involved with each recommendation. The list will then be whittled down to 10 to 15 policies that can be implemented during the next few months. Edward Lobel of Newport Beach has won UC Irvine's first ann'-"l Howard Babb Essay C.Ompetition. The competition, whic.h carries a $100 award, ts s po n s·o red by UC I • s Department of English and Comparative Literature in memory of Babb, one of the department's founding members and its chairman Last July the City Council adopted a general plan coveri ng land use , environmental reeources and community development. Included in the 63 policies choeen by the council are: -Update of the master plan for blkeways. -Revising city noise ordinance. -Re-evaluate future plans for Lions Park expansion. -Establish guidelines to encourage solar energy use. from lf;69 to 1972 and again from 1975 until his death in 1978. The competition is open to all undergraduate humanities majors at UCI. Lobel, a junJor majoring In EnglL'lh, intends to study law. His essay was titled "Imagination, Reality and Illusion in 'A Midsummer Night's Dream.'" OMEGA major health care complex planned eventually to include· a library, health mu1eu}tl. restaurants, 400-aeat audJtortum, exercise field, hotel-like lodging for patients and famillea and facllitlea for a nuralng school, educational programs and research. The medical center la to be built near Barranca Parkway and Jeffrey Road. Initial plans call for construction of a nursing education building to serve h e alth care programs at Saddleback C.Ommunity C.Ollege, which operates a satellite campus adjacent to the medical center site. IMC officials are negotiating a land agreement with Saddleback C.Ollege. Construction of the entire medical center complex would be done on a piecemeal basis after the nursing school and six-story hospital tower have been built. according to IMC president Dave Baker. The facility is to be managed by Hoag Memorial Hospital, he said. Israel asked to surrender Beirut gains · By Tbe A11odated Pre11 The Reagan administration today called on Israel to surrender the military gains won in its recent attacks into West Beirut and retreat to the cease- fire lines in place last Sunday. The appeal appeared-to represent a shift in administration policy announced Wednesday, under which the Israelis were called on to maintain a "strict cease-fire ln place." In asking the Israelis to relinquish what they had won in Wednesday's heavy fighting, State Department spokesman Alan Romberg said he was unsure what the U.S. response would be if Israel ignores the administratioh's request. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger told reporters, meanwhile, that he is optimistic presidential peace envoy Philip C . Habib will succeed in his renewed attempts to secure a PLO evacuation from the guerrillas' west Beirut enclaves. Addressing Habib's efforts, Weinberger added, "I think he can succeed.'' About 100 foreign joumallsts covering the war are houaed at the hotel, but no deaths were ~eported. WHEN YOUR TIME IS PRECIOUS. Th~ rare combination of technology and art - Omega, A legend 1,, Swl11 watchmaking sl oce 1848, each Omega Is 01 Impeccably occurote os it is oes- thetlcal ly pleoslng. Come &ee our entire collection. ladies' quortz bracelet watches In 14 'korot yellow gold: A. $795. B. $975. C. $895. SLAVICK.§ '1nl ........ !lncll ltt7 f WJwrc rite bes« SM1J>'U'.'1 btain. 'n\e Pre.ident of Shell OU Co. 1aya Interior Secretary James Watt's plan to open up the entire U.S. coastline for offshore on and gas drilling 11 good for the country. Watt's plan ls seriously flawed. Critics. incl~ Orange C08lt officiak, 1ay Watt a plan la rlWnly good for the oll companies and ls a detriment to the environment 81\d to future federal revenues &om offshore leasing. Shell'• John Bookout, Jr. contends Watt'• five-year plan is beneficial becauee it will qulckly • generate oil production royalties for the federal treasury and will allow the country to determine the extent of Its oil reserves. This, Bookout contends, will allow government and Industry to know when they must turn to alternative sources of energy. While Bookout contends that Watt's plan will rapidly inci;ease oil royalties, critics of the plan point, to a trend of lower oil company bids for individual federal offshore tracts. The critics reason that the competitive edge has been taken off the bidding procedure because with 80 many millions of acres to choose from, oil companies are bidding lower on individual tracts. In the short term, the critics argue, the federal treasury will reap large profits by leasing more tracts. But in the long term, the overall federal income from the tracts could fall billions of dollars short of what It could have been under a controlled, gradual leasina program. Besides lower prices for individual tracts, critics ~int out that with the country a entire coastline open for leasing, the adminlitration juat doesn't have the resouicet to ~rovlde adequate, specific area studies of potential enviro~~tal damage trom offsho~. Kenneth Delino, Newport Beach assistant to the city manager in charge of coastal resources, makes a good point when he says that Watt's plan ls unbalanced in favor of oil exploration with no regard for en~ronmental dangers. I He says a unique, pristine coastal environment is also good for the country -and local c~ties -and should be given equal consideration with oil exploration concerns. Watt appears to be following his· often-stated philosophy that the country's natural resources should be tapped and used. But it appears the Interior Secretary has disregarded long- term economic concerns and environmental safeguards. His proposal follows his philosophy, but poses the threat of being unbalanced and reckless. President Reagan, or the courts, should step in and add some sensible balance to this proposal before it is too late. North Star b e a c h vote due North Star Beach on the Upper Newport Bay is a misnomer. It's not really a beach, at leas~ not a genuine one. Mainly, North Star is a mud flat with a lot of weeds. And if one was even tempted to visit the place, he couldn't go in the water becauae it ia contaminated. But the stretch of public property, located on the west side of the bay just above Dover Shores, could be in tor a chanj!e. A group or" human-powered b(>ating enthusiasts have formed a non-profit group and are hoping to establish an aquatics center at North Star. It would be a public operation, and canoes and kayaks would be in use. There's only one hitch -the Newport Beach City Charter prohibits leasing any bayfront property without first getting • permission from the voters. So that's what will happen. Voters will be asked in November whether a portion of the beach shou1d be leased for 25 years to this non-profit group. North Star actually is jointly owned by the city and Orange County government. The two parties are expected to get together and work out the arrangements if the election is successful. We think the aquatic center plan sounds good. North Star Beach 'is under-utilized and appears to be a perfect spot for this sort of setup. Our concerns are with parking (where are people going to park?) and that the center does not evolve into some sort of private club. It h as to be open to the public. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex· pres_... on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invlt· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1.560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone <7141 642-'321. L .M. Boyd /What 'Grade A' means U "Grade A" means anything at all on a carton of rnJ.1k. it means the dairy contends the milk was processed under sanitary standards. No, sir, to tum out "Grade A" you don't have to use d.Jstill~ water when you cut it. Just keep it reasonably clean. A thousand years ago in China, coins were p~ in special shapes to signify what they'd buy. The pear-wped coin was traded for fruit. A coin cut roughly to look like a human body wu for clothes. I St. Nicholas, 90 long usociated with Cbrtltmal, a1ao ls the patron saint of pawnbroken. Understandable. M<Mlt bank robberies happen on Friday. Q. How Jooa doe8 it take a &ood pro to ltlinc a t.enn1a racket? • Q . Where elte, be1ldea central Florkfj, tft UMt meet lillk hole97 A. Alabama, South Qeoraia, aome partaol,...... • Memo to the dieter: The FDA requires food proceHon to Hat ingredients from most to least In descending order on package labela. So if you want· to cut down on your sugar intake, don't buy anything with sugar listed higher than fifth place. A. About 45 minutes normally. That's an average 60-pound •trinFg job. Takes twice that long for B.)Orn Borg's 91-and 92-pound webs. Among youngaters In thai age 'bracket from 9 to l~, girla tend to be better athletes than boys. So contend the students of physical fitnea. A 10-year-old girl, they say, almost invariably can beat a 10-year-old boy of about the aarne weight and !:!ft~: in a booting match, if both aet · le90na. Thia tomboy ataae • the only aae bracket 1n which atr• ~ physical auperiority. You don't 1ee lt demol•trated much bean• itiii are ~ to crow out ot ft with all deUbefate lpeed! • Letters to the editor Wooden roofs: Another view To the F.ditor: On July 16 a San Bernardino paper ran an article on a residential fire in Rancho Cucamonga, started when laundry was ignited by a water heater, where a mother and her two children "luckily" escaped unharmed. Several Cacts of this news item are of unusual interest. The fire was already fully involved before anyone was aware of it. It happened at 1:30 a.m. when the family was asleep. The roof was burned off the house, yet no one was injured. I visited this house the following day and talked with the occupants who were shaken but unharmed, and it became obvious why a greater tragedy had been averted. This house had a wood roof. A wood roof that vented the fire allowing the toxic fumes and smoke to escape, and undoubtedly saved the lives of the occupants. The mother stated that, although the flames were shooting from the roof by the time they were aroused, they were able to walk out unharmed beca..tse there was no smoke inside. Further indication of this was the evidence that, although fire damage to the kitchen, garage, and roof was extensive, there was no smoke damage throughout the house, no smoke damage to the contents of the house, and, most of all no smoke damage to the occupants. NATIONAL FIRE Protection Aasociation statistics show that over 95 percent of all home fires start IN'SIDE the house. In high fire hazard brush areas, or areas adjacent to hillside brusl) areas. it is apparent that fire retardant construction is necessary. Bl,lt in our recent emotional eagerness to legislate fire retardant roofing for single family dwellings throughout Califonila are we sacrificing the life safety of 95 percent of the families whose fires will start INSIDE their house? During an intensive 30-month study made in Dallas, Texas, 88 people la.t their lives in fire\. None of these deaths were under wood roofs. Tight, flre retardant roofs trap super-heated smoke and toxic fumes inside 'the building and do not allow them to escape. In recent months a pregnant woman and her 8-month unborn baby in Montclair, an 11-year-old boy ln Chatsworth, three people in Crestline, and a 3-year-old girl in Los Angeles all died of smoke Inhalation under tighi, fire retardant roofs. More were injured. Will theee statistics increase when homeowners have no choice but tight roofing? In some of these instances the apparent structural damage seemed minimal. But the fire began inside, the smoke could not escape, and people died. It la small consolation to a homeowner that his fire retardant roof la still intact if he, or a member of his family, died from smoke inhalation. Right now there is one owner of a wood-roofed home in Rancho CUcamonga ~ho will suffer the pain of rebuilding a house, but, much more important, will not sulfer the agony of burying a family. BETTE A. MITl'ON Police thanks To the Editor: The Newport Beach Police Department commends the Deily PUot fOr lta effOC'la to provide a ..te Fourth o( July. The reculaUona tt9U1cting ihe u.. of firework• are tometlmes diftlcult to ...-ept and oft.en J)n!lmt M opponunjty for crltlclam or aarcum u to their enforcement of tbeae lawa and ~-the hegaU~ Im~ that they cift.&ave. The Dally PUot hu taken a very poelUw attitude ln dffllfta . .net. tNa .... Jt .. deu'ly *""' .• raUoMle tor &hlle Npladanl arid haii ~ tt1 r•ade .. 1 to take advaata1• ot alttrnatlve ~"-to lftjo)' the ~B1S.,cm Newpwt a.ch MAILBOX Ghastly action To the Editor: It was another shocking display of devil-take-the-hindmost, survival-of- the-fittest, and do-it-yourself. consumer. For, apparently in the interest of saving the rich taxpayer money, an arrogant Orange County Board of Supervisors' majority recently - wickedly -cut the heart out of the Consumer Protection Agency, bravely standing against ,public interest and protest. This in the teeth of records showing the agency saved non-rich Orange Countians millions. But one guesses the real reason may have been, sweetened by a do-it-yourself philosophy, to use the money for such development-oriented projects as the hated San Joaquin Corridor freeway should the courts reject our suit. I'm surprised opponents of the consumer agency didn't come right out and say. "Big Business doesn't cheat;" or, "Who needs a Consumer Protection Agency? Ask your neighbor -he'll tell you who's reliable." (My neighbor's wife back in Florida used to ask the iceman which stocks to buy.) Or. "You can't fool the American public." But accolades must go to Supervisors Thomas Riley and Ralph Clark who fought the cut. Perha~s they read the voter mind clearer. Or better, they still believe a decent government's role is to do what the poorer individual cannot do: protect himself from scams. One has to wonder, however, why one of the cutters didn't join RUey and Clark in return for their past votes for massive developments. There's still another question that I'll not put. All I ask now is, How long, Oh Lord? How long? TOM ALEXANDER Co/pmn unfair . . To the F.ditor: Until I read Mr. Von Hoffman's column so unfairly depicting and condemning Israel's military thrust into embattled Lebanon (July 16th), I considered his comments to be fair and worth noting. Being a ~fist by nature, the brutal effects of all armed conflicts have ever evoked loathing from me. If fairness would have tempered his moral outrage. I might have forgiven his damning words. A& is, I can only ask him: Where were his righteous outcries when other Lebanese children were driven from their homes, orphaned and maimed from PLO firing? WHERE WAS BIS eloquent and moral wrath when Israeli achoolchildren were fired upon in their northern set'1ements and in school buses? How many deprecating columns did he write when entire Jewish populations w ere uproo\ed from their historic homelands in Yemen, Syria, and DWly other Arab lands, with only the clotheS on their bacla? Rather than call upon my own meager knowled1e of what \ran1pired in tortured Lebanon, I'll quote from a recent media ad of the nationwide American LebaneM Leque, numberin& around 2 millJon aoula: "SEVEN YEARS AGO, LebanOn wa occupied by PLO terrorist.I who had been expelled from Jordan after havin& failed to overthrow Kln1 Huaaeln. Durln1 thoae aeven yean they commltted an oray 6f atroclUea and desecration against women and children. churches and gravesites. "A sweet and lovely land was ravaged. Those who dared to oppose th"e PLO were murdered. Homes and Canns and villages were pillaged. Lebanese· governmental authority was defied and ultimately destroyed. "IN COLLUSION WITH the Syrian occupation anny, the PLO made war on the people of Lebaon. From 1975 to 1981, the toll among civilians was 100,- 000 killed, 250,000 wounded, countless thousands made homeless. Thirty-two thousand children were orphaned. "And the world was silent." Now that in a desperate effort when Israel is trying to put an end to PLO atrocities, many eloquent voices such u Von Hoffman's have risen up to decry Lebanese casualties. Where were they in the last seven years of needless.suffering of the innocents? PAULA WARSAW Fire safety To the F.dltor: 1 would like to extend our appreciation to you and your newspaper for running the "No Fireworks in Laguna Beach" public service announcements prior to the Independence Day holiday. Although bu:;y as usual. this Independence Day holiday weekend was characterized by minimal fireworks- related public safety problems, and by a calmer celebratlve mood on part of the general public. We believe your running our public service a nnouncements positively affected this year's less d~trucUve Independence Day holiday wei!kend celebration. RONALD E. ADAMS Fire Chief. Laf(Una Beach Seniors' view To the F.ditor: I am writing this letter to you in regard to what the mayor and City Council of Fountain Valley are trying to do to us seniors. On Tuesday, July 20, when we had a meeting with the mayor and City Council, I wu amazed, surprised and disgusted to see and hear how little they regarded the seniors. Don't they realize that their wives will be seniors too some day? And I'm sure a lot of them have a mother that is a senior also. As I was coming out of the building,.! approach~ a member of the council and . asked him what he thougt)t about all this? , His answer was that we all hav~ our problems. This I thought was quite an answer. I told him that a lot of theae seniors who are quite elderly and don't have a family look forwa'td to Wednesday and Friday to go to the Recreation Sl.ailding on Brookhurat where they all meet to play Btnao and play cards and have a little refreafunent. lsn'\ this better '1lan to have to my home and twiddJe their thumbs and aet • 90 depressed that they may land in tlie nursing. home? There ls an old saying you are only• old aa you feel, and rm aun if they haW to nay hOme all the time it sure llia't IO'na to make them feel any )'OUlllll'. G.L. Very Conces1111d ..... • Bink of 1rvlne baa named Donald J. Milli .... ~t and chief executive officer. :•:• :;., ...... C. Aldlicb. pl'tllident and CIX>.U:-107-t::· wru .oui.u. .. a director. • ... llUla, an Anaheim buaine11 and bankin1 . necutlve, WM formerly president' of IBPAC, an . Anabeim-bued firm 1pectallzin1 ln finance and ~t ~-rvicea. Bank of friti.ne was founded In 1974 and operates two offtces ln trvtne and one in ~ Hilla. nw benk l1ao hu facWtiea at MCAS, El Toro, and, Mr.a.AIU'l~ TwUn. :-:; ~&.&] •• _Stang income drops :;:; 8tana-Hydronics Inc. of San Clemente reoorted ' net income of $19,055 for the nine months ended June. 30 u comi-red to net income of $1,088,808 f~ tha · period in 198 l. The company earned $.02 per aha.re as compared to $1.41 per share in 1981. • Stans manufactures pumping equipment and i other proprietary products for commercial ana · military applications. Auto sales plunge -DE'l'BOrr (AP) -New car aales at the ~ U.S. automakers alumped last month to thetr lowest level in 21 years. The companies reported Wednerday that they told 189,052 new can from July 21-31, aown 8.3 percent from 206,234 in the tame period in 19f.U. The daily .elling rate wu 18,905, the lowest •mce 1961, when 15,894 were sold. An industry analyst called it "a pretty l•ou.y, pretty dfalouraglng'' showing. Swedlow sets dividend The board of directon of Swedlow Inc. of Garden Grove declared a regular quarterly cub dividend c:>f 5 centa per ahare, payable Sept. 3 to shareholders of record Au,. 20, Swedlow la a manufacturer of proprietary acrylic and armor products utilized for a variety of mlJiltary and commerdal applications. Food increase slows ... By TIM AIHd8tM Presa . The lncreue in the oo.t of food may be"alowing even more than tint expected. An unoffldal outlook ·ilsued Wedneeday by the Agriculture Department aald retail food P*es may go up an avenge of 4_.8 percent th1a year compared •with a 5.2 pen:ll!llt pin ifldicated a month Al'>· ·STOCKS IN THE SP~TLIGHT AMERICAN LEADEFlS SILVER Handy a HarmM, M .ltO pet troy ouno..