HomeMy WebLinkAbout1982-06-17 - Orange Coast Pilot..
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -Pr~1ldent Rea1an, lgnortna a
Soviet challenae to reoou.nce flnt
\lie of nuclear weapona. accwed
Kremlin leaden today of
oomplllna a 0 record of tyranny"
throuah alobal -are-Ion and
tryina to manipulate the pNCe
movement in the West.
In a 1peech before a aped.al
U.N. General Allembly -son
o n d llarmament, R e'a&an
IHl lH'.lll\1 JllNI 1. I •H.'
portrayed the United St.atei u a
champion of amw control lince
World War ll, and~ the
Soviet• to demdn1trate by
"deed., not words" that they are
llncere .about c:urb1ng the &rm1
race.
Rqgan ~ the Soviets of
violating exiatir\lr arma control ~nta and the 1925 Geneva
protocol bannina Ule of chemical
weapona.
,.. ........
STACKED ARMS -Bridah muinef pOe up riflel handed
over by Argentine 80ldien, lininc up in background, outside
Port Stanley following the Argentine aurrender.
Argentine ignores
cBre of prisoners?
By Tile A11oclatecl Presa
· Prime Minister -Margaret
Thatcher accuaed the Argentine
governJ11ent today of
"in difference" to the state of
Argentine prisoners in the
Falkland la1anda, many of them
1u ffering from exposure,
malnutrition, trench foot and
d isease in frigid winter
temperatures.
She told the House of
Commona that Britain bas not
procured a cease-fire in the
South Atlantic and not.eel:
"So far Argentina baa not
agreed a safe conduct 10 allow
UMlle prilonen 10 be repatriated
to any Argentine port. She's
attempting to insist that they go
to Montevideo (Uruguay) which
la a Jot further and would take a
lot longer." In answer to a
lawmaker'• question. the prime
Evidence r eadied
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Police investigating a burglary
ring that allegedly involved at
least 10 Hollywood Division
police officen say they plan to
preeent evidence to the district
attomey aoon.
NATION
minister crltized "Argentine
indifference to the state of their
priaonera.
"We're trying very hard to
return the younger conscripts as
soon as possible," she said. "The·
ship Canberra will be loaded by
this evening with some 5,000
young Argentine prisonen of
war."
She said the estimate of 15,000
Argentin e ~ruoners she.
announced in the Commons on
Tueeday, the day after British
forces completed the recapture of
the Falklands, was based on
figures provided' by Argentine
military commander Gen. Marlo
Menendez.
''The latest estimate is 10,660
but the final figure is not yet
confirmed and the only thing
will be to do an actual count 10
make certain of the numbers
who are there," she said.
Foreign Office spokesman
Nicholas Fenn told a news
conference in London earlier
today that "Arfentina has
lndicat.ed by way o Brazil that it
la unwl1llng to receive priaonen
of war at Argentine ports." Bfazil
rep19e11ta Argentine interests in
London since the rupture in
(See FALU.A.ND, Pate A!)
Nixon doesn't look back
Ten yean after the Waieraate tcandal that
de9troyed hia praldency, IUclwrd Nixon aaya he never
Joob &.ck. P.,e A8.
Diet prevenlB cancer r
A menUfic pael hM found a p<Wble link
between hich-fat dietm and cancer. It lldvtw •Una
more fnllta. ...,_ and whole cer.11 to lower ttie
rick. Piii JM.
TELEVISION
•
\ .
OHA NGf COUN I Y CAL If OH N IA 25 CENTS
SoViet 'tyranny i-eCord'
"m the nuclear era, the major
powers bear a 1pecial
reaponalbllity to ease these
IOW'Cel of conflict and refrain
from &ggrelllon,11 Reagan aakl
''That la why we are IO deeply
concerned by Soviet conduct.•
· The president 1poke before the
same forum where Soviet
Foreisn Minister Andrei
Gromyko drew heavy applaUle
Tuesday with a declaration from
Sovie't Prealden t Leonid
Brezhnev that hil ooun'try will
not U1e nuclear weapons tinJt in
any conflict.
While Reeon did not addrem
that illUe in llia apeech, a .en1or
admlniatraUon oflidal lhruaed
off the Importance of the Soviet
pledl{e, uying the United St.ata
coufd not baae ltl military
~ limply on a declaration Moecow.
In hil 1_peech, Reqan cited a
U.S. arfTUl control record that
began in 1946 with a proposal to
tum control of nuclear weapom
and atomic energy over to an
lnterna tlonal authority, a nd
continue with hJa recent plan for
reduc ing U .S . and Sovie t
stockpiles of nuclear warheads.
R ecalling the words of
President Eisenhower, Reagan
.
said, "We are for peaoe, f:lnt, lut
and alway1 ... "
While committing the Unit.eel
Stat.ea 10 work for real anna
control measures, Reagan said,
"We need more than mere worda.
more than empty promisea,
before we can proceed."
In perhafs his h arshest
indictment o Soviet behavior,
Reaean said the Soviet Union (See REAGAN, Pase A%)
·2 HB wonien .slain;
police arrest suspect
·Missing
children
found
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
O(tfle Deity Not .....
Police have arrested a man
suspected in the grisly slayings of
a young woman and her mot.her
whose mutilated bodies were
discovered Wednesday in a
Huntington Beach home.
Huntington Beach pol.ice_ Lt.
Merle Schneblin said officers also
have found three young children
missing from the Sunnycrest
Lane home, describing the
youngsters as alive and safe.
He declined to release the.
name of the murder 1uspect on
advice of the Orange County
District Attorney's office.
He also declined to reveal
where the murder suspect was
arrest.eel or where he was being
detained today. •
Schneblin did say folice
haven 't mad e a inal
identification of the murder
victims because of the condition
of their bodies.
OUARDED -Police cordon off the home at
14952 Sunnycrest Lane, Huntington Beach,
where a young woman and her mother' were
.,..,,... ...........
murdered and badly mutilated, A suspect has
been arrested in the slayi.ngs, police said.
"The bodies were so badly
mutilated that we'll have to go
through dental r ecords and
fi ngerprints to make the
Identification," he said.
Israelis continue PLO attack
But authorities did confirm
that the S\.lnnycrest Lane home
was known to be the residence of
(See SLAYINGS, Page A%)
Beirut Airport sh elled ; secret p eace talks 11o urish
Hassle du~
over schools
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Assembly Speaker Wllne Brown
says huge cuts are likely for local
government unless the
Re publicans stop insisting on
raising school funding without a
tax increase.
But Democrat Brown 's
Republican counterpart says
Brown is threatening to cut local
goverrunent in order 10 force the
Republicans in10 supporting tax
increases.
Brown, D-San Franciaco, and
Assembly Minority Leader
Robert Naylor, R~Menlo Park,
held separate news conferences
Wednesday to explain party
"positions on the state budget bill
for fiscal 1982-83, which begins
in two weeks.
COUNTY
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
Beirut airport came under
heavy shelling today and Israeli
annored columns moved against
Y asser Arafat's guerrillas ~ of
Lebanon's t:apital.
The fighting came a~id
reliable reports that the Palestine
Liberation Organization offered
to discuss with the Lebanese
government "a new form ~f
Pales tinia n presence in
Lebanon."
The PLO leadership denied
reports it was prepared 10 lay
down its anns, but engaged in a
flurry of secr e t diplomatic
.activity involving U .S .
presidential envoy Philip C.
Habib and Lebanese President
Elias Sarkis.
The Tel Aviv command said
Palestinian guerrillas bombarded
Israeli troops around the airport,
damaging three parked '1fliners.
It said Israeli forces east ot Bein.it
also came under a barrage of the
Will GO~ blow it again?
. ·Considering the brouhaha bolling over in the 43rd
Congrealonal Dl1trict, can 1\ be possible that a
Democrat will .Up through thet Republican beckbiting
and get elected? COMting column. Page Bl .
S TA T E
HusliM tcliolarsliip eyed
A pell' of Howard H\Chel tam want to let up an
aviadon ICholanb.l..J> 1n bi name at a Lei AnltJel
WG111*1 di .... ftp A 7.
Miiltly. la H•w.il1
TOuitN retulntnl to Caldornla fNiD Haw.at ~ flil .............. , .......... fruit p1 11fbly ...
wilb .......... -·-· .... Cl.
rockets and Israeli gunboats
bacl~
· But Salim Salam, the
managing director of Lebanon's
Middle East Airlines, told
reporters that Israeli gunboats
shelled the airport and "two
Boeing-720s belonging to MEA
were wrecked and the airline's
building sustained several direct
hits."
A smaller jet and a Lebanese
helicopter also were destroyed. A
group of Lebanese and foreign
preos photographers saw the
wrecked airCraft on the tarn'8C in
front of the previously damaged
terminal building, n ext to
another Middle East Airlines
Dollar clim bing
LONDON (AP) -The U.S .
dollar climbed in early European
trading today to record highs
against the French franc, Italian
lira and Canadian dollar and a
26-month high against the
Japanese yen. Gold was lower.
Boeing burned out earlier in the
fighting.
Salam app e aled for
neutralization of the airport
compound, saying further
damage would be a "national disaster.,,
The airport, closed since the
Israelis invaded 12 days ago to
stamp out the guerrillas, has
been in the center of bitter
fighting as the Israelis and
Lebanese Christian allies cloee in
on Palestinian strongpoints
located nearby.
Lebanese state radio said
Wednesday the Israelis and their
rightist Lebanese Christian allies
seized a key Palestinian position
near the airport. Israeli aouroes
said the Christians overran
PLO-held buildings on the east
side of the airport's runway. The
PLO said it repelled an Israeli
.assault there, killed 26 soldlen
and wrecked two tanks. • A PLO communique said
Israeli armored columns tried to
(See ISRAELI. Pase A%)
INDEX .
A4
B2
Cl0-11
B2
04-8 •
Bl
Be
AlO.~ ~
Dl-2
B2
SPORTS
•
Ann Landers
Movtea
Mutual Funda
Public Notice9
Sports
Stock Markets
TeleYWon
Theat.en
Weather
World News
B2
Dl-2
ClO
D2,3,4
Cl-4 cu a
Dl-2
A2
A3
·,
I I
I
• A
a 27-year-old nurH named
Shirley Harbular Dayco; her
mother, Amelia Harbular, ea,
and the nune'• three children. ·
.,.. 7, & and 1.
. SchnebUn said th11e were the
' children who wore found aafe
''early today.
Mn. Dayco wu known to be
aeparated from her ._husband,
Rene Dayco.
After the grtaly ckx>very WU
made Wedne9day, ottlcen began
aearchlng foe Dayco.
A female relative contacted
police Wednesday because 1he
had been unable to re.ch Mn.
Dayco by telephone and becauae
the nurse had not come to work
as scheduled. She was employed
at St. Joeeph H;ospital in Orange.
At about 11 a.m .. officers
found the partially clothed
bodies of the two women in a
bedroom.
"The bodies were hacked,
rather than bei ng a tabbed,"
Schneblin M.ld.
He Kid no murder we.poet
waa found on the premiaea,
althouan the alaylnp appeared
to have been conunltted by aome
tort of cuttlnl inltrwneQt wltb ~ Lona bl.Ide, auch u a meat cleaver
or a machete.
Schneblln aaid police believe
the murdert were committed late
Sunday or early Monday.
A spokeswoman for St. Joeepb
Hospital aaid Mn. Dayco had
been employed there aa a
Ucenaed vocational nune for two
years, working first in the
dlalyaia unit, then the aurgical
unit.
"She was a lovely woman,"
said Alice Paone, vice president
of patient care services at St.
Joseph. "Her co-workers·and the
staff at the hospital are terribly
saddened by this tragjc event."
REAGAN AT U.N. • •
since World War II had amassed
a "record of tyranny" by
dominating F.astern Europe and
erecting the Berlin Wall, ~ ·
over Czechoslovakia, Hungary
·and Afghanistan 'and
•orchestrating the military
•crackdown in Poland.
"Soviet-sponsored guerrillas
and terrorists are at work in
Central and South America, in
Africa, the Middle T.ast. in the
Caribbean and in Europe,
violating human r ights and
unnerving the world with
violen ce,'' Reagan said .
"'Communist a trocities in
Southeast Asia, Afghanistan and
elsewhere continue to shock the
free world as ref~ escape to
tell of their horror.
On nuclear policy •. he declared:
"The decade ot so-called
detente witnessed the most
massive Soviet buildup of
military power in history ...
While we exercised unilateral
restraint. they forged ahead and
today possess nuclear and
conventional forces far in excess
of an adequate d eterrent
capability. ...
"Soviet opptesaion ls not
limited to the countries they
invade. At the very time the
Soviet Union is trying to
manipulate the peace movement
in the West, it is stifling a
budding peace movement at
home. In Moecow, banners are
scuttled, buttons are snatched
and demonstrators are arrested
when even a few people dare to
spe.ak out about their fears.".
FALKLAND ISLANDS. • •
diplomatic relations.
British ofticials speculated that
·the reason for the Argentine
decision was that the arrival
home of thousands o1 defeated
troopa in Bcitiah ablp1 -would
humiliate President Leopoldo F.
Galtierl'i junta, already facing a
public backlash.
Britain is askina-e number of
other countries If they will
receive the priaoners, who
surrendered Monday when
British forces retook the islands.
Uruguay has received' previous
batches of Argentine captives.
the South Atlantic, not just i.n the
Falklands, have ceased.
British commanders in the
Falklands have told war
correspondents that ships loading
Argentine prisoners -the
requisitioned liner Canberra and
the ferry Norland -will not
leave until ~rgentina agrees
their safe passage.
Some of the Argentines ran
amok Wednesday night and
"loo1ed and destroyed the post
off.ice ·and town ball," British
Broad c.a st i n g Co r p .
correspondent Robert Fox
reported from -the Falklands
today.
He said a company of British
marines was called to restore
order.
AP~••
encirclement of the Lebanese capital this
week.
INVADERS -Israeli armored personnel
carrien are positioned near a moaque on the
outskirts of Beirut. Israeli troops completed the _ ___: ________________________ ~
From Page A1
ISRAELI. • •
advance today Into the leftist
stronghold of Aley, 12 miles east
of Beirut, behind a massive
barrage of nrtil.lery and rockets.
''Our forces engaged the
enemy force in fierce and
continui ng combat," the
communique said.
In a move apparently desi,gned
to demonstrate the PLO's
authority in west Beirut, where
Arafat and his leadership have
been trapped by the Israelis since
Monday , the guerrillas
announced that their military
police executed three guerrillas
convicted of armed robbery.
The announcement did not
indicate when the trials or
executions took place. The men
preswnably were shot by firing
squad in west Beirut.
"The fist of the revolution will
remain hanging over those who
threaten the security of the
masses or private property. S uch
attempts are tantamount to
national treason in this critical
time," the statement said.
In Tel Aviv, the Israel Bonds
organization said Prime Minister
Menachem Begin, who is in New
York, will launch a drive among
foreign Jews for $100 million to
offset the economic impact of the
invasion.
Begin to arrive
WASHING TON (AP) -The
State Department says Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin
will meet Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. on Friday
morning in New York.
Newport brokerage
liquidates securities .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Following announcement of an
investigation by the California
Department of Corporations, the
Newport Beach-based securities
brokerage firm of Comark is
voluntarily liquidating its trading
in government securities.
Corporations Commissioner
Geraldine D . Green said
Wednesday that Comark, whose
financial condition and record·
Irvine boy, 11,
hit by auto
An 11-year-old Irvine boy was
in critical condition today at
Western Medical Center after
being struck by a car Wednesday.
afternoon.
The youngster, who police
wouldn't identify pending
notification of all of his parents,
was riding a bicycle a t the
intersection of Walnut Avenue
and Lime Street when h e was hlt
by a car driven by Marshall
Robinson,69,ofTustin.
He suffered head injuries and
was taken to the trauma cent.er at
West.em Medical by the Orange
County Fire Department, police
said.
Robinson wasn't injured in the
incident.
~
Fire guts eatery
keeping practices were being
probed, is also beginning an
orderly liquidation of two of its
three wholly owned subsidiaries.
Comark confinned in a press
release that it planned to "wind
down" operations. The firm
referred all cal.ls to Managing
Director Jack Haraburda, who
reportedly was out of the office
late Wednesday afternoon and
did not return a message.
T~e two subsi~iari.51a._to be
liquidated were iden:wed as
Comark Securities Inc. and
Comark Commodities. Ms. Green
said it was not known how long
the liquidation would take.
The Department of
Corporations began its
examination of the firin in March
when Cornark officials said they
could not file their required
annual financial report because
of difficulties in converting books
and records from a manual
system to a new data p('()CeSSing
system.
M s . Green said th e
investigation will continue and
will cover the liquidation process.
A statement from the
department said unconfirmed
preliminary financial reports
from Comark indicated an
operating loss of about $4 million
for the fiscal year ending
December 1981. Fenn said Britlan has not
received an answer to the other
part of the message it sent to
Buenos Aires on Tuesday, via the
SwiSs government, asking for a
declaration that all hostiliti~
~-------------------------------------------,
Banning
fate up
to vote?
BY STEVE MARBLE or .. o.1r,......,
WW voters in Newport Beach
get the chance to decide the fate
of the 73-acre Be.nnlDa Ranch
development next fall?
For the time, that appears to
be a quett.lon that hM no an1Wer.
The City CouncU has delayed
until Jul)'. a decilion on whether
the buildlna plan should be put
on the November bellot or JWt
junked.
Many council memben Nid
they're waiting for a tignal from
developer llancock "Bill"
Banning, waiting to aee lf he's
even interested in fighting for hia
project.
Banning, meanwhile, said he'a
waiting for the council to make a
move and is undecided whet.her
the development, sreatly
modified by the council. makes
economic sense.
And the leader of the West
Newport Legislative Alliance,
the group, that spearheaded the
referendum now threatening the
project, said she's as curious aa
the next person about what's
going to ha=pen. · Several going on behind
the acene coul otfer·a clue.
Banning recet\tly huddled
with political consultant Robert'
Nelson. Both sides said the talks
so far have been informal.
Nelson had been brought
aboard by the Irvine Company
last fall when the firm's Newport
Cerner expansion plan was
clouded by a referendum. The
project later was repealed and
never put to a citywide vote.
Mayor Jackie Heather ,
meanwhile, has fonned a three--
member council committee to
draft language for a ballot
'-measure on the Baruiing Ranch.
Five of the seven council
members appear to favor the
election route .
Proponents of tne project have
pointed to SPON (Stop Polluting
Our Newport) as being ·a likely
group to add muscle to the
referendum push.
Police rout
pajama party
SAN JOSE (AP) -Four
women clad in scanty nighties
staged a pajama party on a
highway overpass, snarling'
commuter traffic for three miles
and attracting four private planes
and a helicopter.
Still cool
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A pre-
dawn blaze investigators said
was deliberately set roared
through a San Diego restaurant
Wednesday, causing $225,000
damage. It was the fourth
restaurant to burn in the San
Diego area in the past six months,
!ire officials .said.
"I Qave the same questions as
you have," said Bram Goldsmith,
chainnan and chief executive of
B everly Hi I ls -based City
National Corp. H e said he
invested $150,000 in a Comark
limited 'partnership in 1979 and
was notified Tuesday of the
firm's action.
"They said they experienced
some losses and think it's in the
investors' best interests th.at an
orderly liquidation of the firm's
business be initiated." he said.
The women, contestants in San
Jose's forthcoming Ms. Nude
America pageant, appeared on
the Winchester Boulevard
overpass of Interstate 280
Wednesday to call attention to
the contest.
The women waved balloons
and blew kisses to motorists until
California Highway Patrol
officers trying to break up the
traffic jam asked the women to
Coastal
Ch IC.go Cincinnati
Cleveland Clml>la SC
'Columbus
Dal-Ft Wth
LIQIU. vatlable wtnd9 ,... to Oeyton
aouthwell 10 to 18 t111011 Denver
afternoon and evening tlou~. Del MolnM
Southwell ewetl 2 to S IHt. Detroit
Conalderable low cloud• and Duluth 1oCa1 log through tonight. El Puo
Felrt>enka
• Fatgo U.S. Summary ~:!,'~e1 ..
S-e thunderttorme formed Hanford
WednHday trom th• Hatern Helene
Gull CoHt Into Iha aouthern Honolulu
Appatachlana end eouthern Houlton
Atlantic atat••. 1p1wnlng lndnapll•
tomadoM In -el ltat• Jec;ktn
Tornadoe• touched down In Jecilsnv"a
northwHtern Kentucky nea1 Kan• City w 1nct1 .. ter, Flemlng1butg end La Vaga
Vanc:.eburg, caullng tubaUIMlal Little Rock
darnaoe anc1 .....,.. 1niuna lout1v111e ~ thundarltorm lll9taMI Memphlt
_. ._,., CN9f mudl of the Miami
.outh cent,., AppMldllaM and MllweukM
from eouthem Penneytwta Into Mpl9-St.P
North Carolina. Nutwllle
Showere and lhund9'1tonn1 N-Orlean•
COVWl'9d moat of the eui.-n Vllrd . New York
ot th• nallon, end •Ito were Norfolk
1oattered over th• northern Olli. City
Rocklae and from the OllQ>taa Omaha
Into Mlnneeota. Thu~• Orlendo
111eo formed over the Greet Buln. Phllldphl•
Ca)ifornia
Pr\Oenlx
Pm11>urt PUend.
P11end. Ore
LOW ~ end locel loQ ,_. Provldenee
the COM!, otherw!M n-o, tllf '*'°
thrOugtl Fnday. Little cNrlgl In ~
'9mperlture. , Salt --· Orange County can •'401 8alll Amonlo hlahe ee to 73, fowl In so.. s-t1te
lniend ~ ... "---In ~
the 10.. 1ow1 ,_ eo. SloUJI ~--Mountalnl cen upeot ....,. 78 St Loult
to 85, lows 48 lo 58. ~Tempe
Northern deHrt• wMI llave -
wHterly wlndt 15·25 ~n ~ .,..,_. end _,.,,. TOl*a
ta to 10s. low• a4 10 2. Tuc:eon 8outhsn deeef1 hlgl18 100 ID 110, TulM 1oWe ee to 78. WlllfllnOtrt
62 70
61
91
70
85
69
77 76
63
65
95
52 78 n
73
82 75
87
91
67
78
95
75
101
80 87
79
&4
68
83
78
88 87
IM
80 76
91
83
105 75
73
71
80 92
85 80
t2
80
83 18 .. t3 ae ea
11
100 ...
88 78 Not1tlem Ind Oentnl ~ Wlohlt•
moecly llllr thrOugtl F~ -.pt
fOf low cloud• end toe Mong
OOMt. lcaUered lflOW'8ft -_Sllrr9~
CA&JPONllA === a.mow ,,., I . 8-lmont .• empera ures · ~
MATIOM 8ly"'8
"' c.tlllne 71 ..
II • 11 n .. .. " ..
.. te
104 100
85 78 ...
10& ..
48
66
58 71
63
68 62
45
53
58 35
64
44
52
40
55
&4
5-4
73 7S
60
66 70
58
Fronts: Cold.. WIJ(m.,..,
""'a Snowfm
Show •• Flurriesl!i}
71 , ______ ;.._ ______________________________ __
64
65
69 79 47
49 67
70 77
70
81
50
75
·~~
&4 55 57
82
51
88
57 n
58 .. 47
82 75
68
81 57 ee
&4 72
5t
Culver City
Freano Ltncuter
Long Beach
Loe Angalae
MOl\roYle
Montel>elto
Needlae
Oaldand
Ontario Palm Springs
PUlldena
RMrtlde Red~lutt
Redwood City
Seoremento
San Bernardino
San Gabnel
San Diego San Frenollc:o
San JoM
lent• Ana Santa 8erbar9 8anta Cnll Sant• MaN Salllta MoNca •
TehoeV*t n.tmal
Torrence Y.i.-
71 too
98
89
88
78
78 107
87
74
101
74
75
103 70
92
78
78 N
68
78 ee &4
70
88
&4
81
102
N
104 .. .,
18
11
18 ..
t3
80
80 t3 to tO ..
59 T rlnldld 81
90
73
78 88 Ver9Cfv:I
85
: 'Smog. 69 The Air Ouallly Manegement ~ Olatrle1 predict• unhealthful elr
54 quellty for 1«1llllve people loday
56 In mott -ot the South Coast 71 ' Air Sulh, with good lir quality
57 torec:ul !Of the "-'la, ooutli
68 end mountain reglone.
89 w-. to oall (toll ,,.., '°' ...... se --.~
60 ~ c-tr. (edo) .....
57 Loa A119elee Co11nt1: (IOO) 5f ...... I
&4 ..._.._ Md .. .._ ....
50 _.._ <•> 111-4710 57 AQMO I,..._. Cet1ten (IOI)
54 ---54 Or-.. c-c,: (Iii •• -~ LH AlltelH Ce•fttJ: (Ht)
58 ata-4m 48 ..._..... ...............
87 _..... (.., .,...,,. •
5t AQMO l,ee.de Cet1ten (MO)
71 ........
Lo.
78
11 72
78 71 es
7S
77
73
11
17 ee
Extended
For"ecast
. ,
Saturday•MOnday: Co111a1
are... nltllt and rnornlno low
doude. odW'Mle fair. HWll 70 to 74 at beldlel Ind 11 to 14 lnllnd ~ l.-57 t.o es. MowntaWI
.,. .... fair bul IOl'M ~
doudt. Aaeoft leYtll hlgtlt 74 to I 84. lowe In IN &CM.
lllf llPDRT
v .
Sailcloth Is /Yot
Just FOr ·Sails •••
It also makes a great casual pant. because It Is dura-
ble, llghtwelght. and comfortable. Perfect for the
active man. or as Storekeeper Michael Bueche sug-
gests, for the man who just wants to relax.
Available In 10 colors.
father's day ...
Sunday,
June
20th.
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIThur.d-1 June 17, 1182 8
\
t
Kremlin talkiitg· tough
Soviets sarcastic as arms talks approach
IEll llllYlll Unlonar:A.~._Genev!t meanwhile, the aamuuatration aay1 it will
give top priority to redud.n8 that
Soviet edge in heavy ICBMs.
Callin thla approach trickery,
yko accused the
Uf'lTED NATIONS (AP) -
The . Soviet Union la taldria a
hard -and evei\ llU'CUUc 1 Tine
toward the United States u the
two countries approach
negotiat.iona on a new treaty to
reduce strategic nuclear
weapons.
While President Reaaan hu
1oft·pedaled the "advenary
relatfonahip," Soviet Forelan
Mlnia\er Andrei A . Gromyko
uaed the U.N. apecl.al aelllon on
dila.rmament as a platform for
attacking U.S. weapons policies.
Gromyko la cuatomarily bard
on the United State. in his U.N.
speeches. Thia time, he peppered
hia 80-m inute addre11 with
aocuaatlona of barbartam, deceit
and "ootorioua aina."
Beneath lt all WU the Soviet
contention that there ii a rough
equivalence in weapons now
between East and West.
ation of gloalng over ·
the U.S . edge in lont:!nge
CNiae misliles, 1trategjc ben
and ballistic mt11ile1 on
submarines .•
Ac c using the Reaaan
administration of trickery and
"concoctions of all sorta,"
Gromyko aaid T'leaday a
"military frenzy" and "a spirit of
militarism" were driving the
United States to seek.supremacy
over the Soviet UnJon.
The Reagan admlnlatration
takes the view that the Soviets
gained significant advantages in
land-baaed intercontinental
ballistic rru.iles while the United
States eased development of
nuclear weaf'Ons in the 1970s.
This, Gromyko said, ia "being
deliberately muddled" ana
hushed up.
"What all this adds up to la a
desire to swttle the existing
parity in tl'le field of nuclear
arms," Gromyko said.
LOOKING IT OVER -A young boy has a
cloee view of a destroyed rocket launcher once
u8ed by a Palestinian guerrilla unit. It is
located outside of Khalde, south of Beirut, in
~-...... the Israeli 0ccupied area of Lebanon. The
The aim. Gromyko said, is "to
keep it EU"ed, as simple as that
-to keep it ICared."
Soviet President Leonid I.
· U.S. defenae spending iB being
boosted even while the United
States is pursuing anna control
agreements with the~oviet
The debate is likely to continue
at Geneva and might impede
treJ')' negotiations. SALT 11. the
l~t U:S .-Soviet strate&I~
weapons agreement, took elg}it
years to complete.
weapon was put Olit of action during fierce
fi~ting between the Palestinians and Israeli torees. ·
Brezhnev took a loftier tone in a
message to the special 9e88ion ln
which he unilaterally renounced
the tint uae of nuclear weapons.
High court challenge sought
And yet, in the message read
by Gromyko, the Soviet leader
apparently could not resist
baiting the United S\ates and its
allies a bit.
State a sk ed to rule on legality of Proposit ion 8 Brezhnev· questioned whether
North Atlantic Treaty
by opponents of Proposition 8, Organization doctrine was based SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state Supreme Court is belng
asked to take jurisdiction over a
court challenge to Proposition 8
10 that its legality can be quickly
determined.
· The request was filed by state
Attorney General George
neukmejian.
Deuk.mejian, the Republican
candidate for governor, was
joined by Proposition 8 sponsor
Paul Gann, 47 Republical\ and
six Democratic legislators; San
Diego Mayor Pete Wtlson, the
Republican U.S. Senate nominee,
and Assistant Attorney General
GeQrge Nicholson , th e
Republican candidate for
attorney general.
The challenge was filed in a
state appeals court Wedneaday
the anti-crime initiative adopted on the "dangerous premise" of
by the voters in the primary poesibly using nuclear weapons
election a day earlier. first.
Their suit contends that Reagan, who addr~ea the
Proposition 8 violates several aemon on Thursday, has played
state ~titutional requirements, down differences with Moeoow
lnclUdll1g a rule that initiatives since he outlined his treaty
can cover only one subject. It proposal in a Mother's Day
asks for a ban on enforcement speech last month.
while the case ii~· "Basically, the primary
Deulanejlan said he wants a ~lem today," he said May 24,
quick statewide ruling. He said a 'is reducing the store of nuclear
ruling by an appeals court with anns that threaten the peace of
limited jurisdiction would create mind, certainly, of all the people
confusion. of the world, and do pose a threat Federal road funds
said insufficient
But an attorney for the to all of us physically."
opponenta, Stanely Friedman, Reagan may strike a tough
asked the Supreme Court on stance in bis U.N. speech. But, so
Tuesday to leave the challenge in far, his recent statements sharply
the llPJ>eals court, which he said contrast with Gromyko's -and --.u -.-. ...
cou ld bloc k enforcement the president's own scathing COMFORTING EMBRACE -Bambi Sheppard receives a WASHINGTON (AP) -The
interstate highway ayatem la
wearing out and, financing
arrangements are not adequate
both to repair the system and
continue building uncompleted
aegmenta, the Congreaaional
Budget Office aaya.
The office recommended that
Congress undertake a thol'OU8h
· review of the system's financing
structure within the next year
and decide whether to scale back
b uilding plans, increase fuel
taxes or turn some of the
financing over to sta~ and local
governments.
The agency said 95 percent of
the 42,944-mlle interstate system,
begun in 1956, has been
completed, but that "massive
repain'' ooeting an estimated $16
blllion are needed to restore
lnltial aectiona of the system that
are wearing out.
Federal officials estimate the
system will be completed by 1992
at the current average spending
level of about $4 billion a year.
T h e Cong reaaional B u dget
Office said that spending level is
inadequate.
The agency noted that the
s •vernment planned to spend
,3.6 billion on new ,!:,,\Tl;:ay construction and $800 on
repair and reconstruction in fiacal
1983 ending next Oct. 1. But lt
aald new construction projecta
currently planned will cost about
~. l billion a year foe the next
teYen f:i9cal years, repairs are
expected to cost $2.9 billion a
• year and reconstruction will take
ft.4 billion.
"Current policy programs .,.e
~ to do too much with too
little,• 9aid the report prepared
for the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee.
The budget office estimated
the ''current tax on motor fuel.a
would need to be nearly triple its
current level of four cents per
R,allon" to raiae enough money to 00 all that is needed.
The agency suggested that
Congreaa must decide q uickly
whether to continue with the
current program, to finish only
eaaential r ou tes and leave
projects of local importance to
the states, or to adopt a plan
between thoee two ex1remea.
It gave these financial options
for CongretlS to consider:
-Increase federal gasoline
taxes by eomewhere between 3.5
cents per gallon and 5.1 cents per
gallon, depending on whether
current plans would continue or
be ecaled back.
-Reduce the federal matching
share for repairs ana
reconstruction. Thia would
reduce the need for auch a drastic
increase in g asoline taxes,
although an increue of 1.3 cents
to 3.9 cents per gallon still would
be needed.
-Restructure federal aid by
transferring projects of local
importance to the states. Under
this aoenario, states would take
over more respon1lb lllty for
secondary and urban roads,
releuing about $1. 7 billion in
highway trust fund revenues and
reducing the need for new tax
revenues.
Under thJa plan, the agency
estimated guoline taxes would
need to be rai8ed between 1.3
cents per gallon and 1.9 cents per
gallon.
ORANGE COAST
D1ily Pilat
CIH•lftecl ltdwertt.tng 7141142-M71
An otMr cMp41rtmenb M2-4m
Thomae P. HIMY ....... -a. .t.M!w OMc.r
MAIN OfflCE · ..... 8e\'M.,C.... Mew.CA.
Mell ...... : ._IJM,C.UMeu,CA. ...
c-.rltM,.. Or-.~~.,..,.~ . ... _ _...,,.....,.._,..._..,.......,. ...
_.. ................ !Mr -~ ........ ......... " ....... .,~-.
statewide. attack on the Soviets in his first reassuring hug from her husband, Jim, after the couple's
Proposition 8, approved by 56 presidential newa conference mobile home was flattened in• heavy thunderstorm in Delhi,
percent of the voters, limits Jan~981. m. The atQnn damaged several other mobile homes as it
plea-bargaining, lengthens In c Cold War rhetoric, ripped t""....,.ugh the Indian Lakes Estates, located .. inht miles sentences for some repeat crimes, Reagan then said the Soviets •uv "'"&"'
allows some illegally seized "reserve unto themselves the north of Alton . Fortunately, the Sheppard.a were not at home
evtdence to be used, narrows the right to conunit any crime, to lie, when th e storm struck. and authorities said there were no
insanity defense. and lets victims to cheat." serious injuries in the area.
testify at parole and sentencing ,--------;:=============================::;;------....-.. ~~~ .. hearings, among other things.
One provision singled out by
the opponents as a violation of
the single-subject rule is the
declaration of the right to safe
public schools. But the supporters
contend that all the provisions
are related to a single subject -
reducing crime.
Prosecutors and judges are
approaching Proposition 8 with
caution, but there has been
considerable disagreement on
how to use its wide-ranging and
broadly written provisions.
Friedman told the Supreme
Court that "procedures by wbicli
justice is being dispensed in this
state vary from courtroom to
courtroom" because the judges
have no guidance on how to
apply Proposition 8.
Th"e opponents said the
initiative "will cause numerous
criminal defendants to forfeit
their liberty and will embroil he
courts ... in chaotic litigation
which will prevent the orderly
administration of our system of
justice."
But Gann told a news
conference that the opponenta
were the ones causing the
confusion, by their lawsuit.
Appearing with Gann,
Aaeemblyman Patrick Nolan, ~
Glendale, contended that the
opponents. by suing in the
appeals court, "intended to allow
the Supreme Court to avoid
dealing with th.is issue until after
the November election."
Four Supreme Court justices.
including three appointees of
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., will be
on the Novem ber ballot for
retention in office .
Some opponents of Proposition
· 8 have augpat.ed that the true
motivation of the lnltiative was
to defeat Brown '• Supreme
Court appohlteea after the court
ruled-th • l n ltiatlve
unconstitutional. •
But Nicholaon said the t1mina
of November'• vote on the court
appolnteel wu "one of those
fortu.ltiea," and predicted the
oourt would find Prop;llition 8
oonatitutlonal.
.,
~ .... _ ..
SALE
WOMEN'S AND·
BOYS' CLOTHING ,.,,,,-
250/o OFF
WOMEN'S ' SIZES 6 TO 16
SELECTED WOMEN'S SUMMER JACKETS,
SLACKS, SKIRTS, DRESSES,
SHIRTS, SW
SHOES
(Shoes not available at ewry branch)
BOYS'
SIZES 8 TO 12, 13 TO 20, 35 TO 40
SELECTED BOYS' SUMMER SUITS,
SPORT JACKETS, TROUSERS,
CASUAL OUTDOOR JACKETS, SHORTS
• .
LIGHTWEIGHT SPORT AND KNIT SHIRTS
Pl.US OTHER SELECTED FURNISHINGS
IN SIZES 8 TO 20
~n sale "°"' tltro..,1' !tnN 261/t •
HlAllllMIO 1'11
What do you Uke 1boul the Dally PiloU Whet don't you llkt?
Call the number below and your m ... ••• will be rtcordtd, tran•crtbed and dtllvtrtd to the 1pproprt1tt tcUtor .
.~~
The ume M·hour IMweriftl ""'•may be ..ct to ... ~. ten to lht eclltor on any laplt. llallbox contributor• muat lnohidt their name and telephone ... .._ ror vertneaUon. No elreYlaUon
e1ll1 plHM,
Ttll UI wMl •• OD fOUI dalad
GO~@D
l\amlahtno• for llttl . WO mm -lou• ,_W ·r TFH ITIUUIT.W>llANUMl,jMl,UAl.aR
P. IUUON IMl.ANI>. NMWPORT RHACll.<: I.It'.
'
.. ,
.' t I
I
F
.
f.
1
I
I
Bt PAT eoaowm .,. ................
DUA PAT: 1"91 M&IGM .afftnat Idell • clo*'1q U..t 11 .. ,,.... .. pnvlM ... .
....... ~t Mn ...... ta ..... M1 na •• ,,.., ... •tlttn .., flamt..retlltaat ., .
flam•rttmt._a. WW YH tell mt llow tMM
Idell '1ffer la &MIY,roteodoaT
E.J., B•tla1tM leadl
!'lame-retardant l1 a 1ub1tance that
lmpedet or lloWI down ~. Fabrics may•
b• treated chemically to -,Ive flame·
retardance. Flame-remtant means the fabric
will not burn readily or char. Wool la
naturally fiame-reailtant without chemical
treatment. Flame-proof means the fabric will
not 1upport combuatl.on, but the ph)'lical fonn
may change. Some plutlca tit UU. catepy.
Your ooncem about clothi.nc fire fa well
founded. Each year, an estimated 150,000
penona in the U.S. are aerioualy bumed in
accidents in which their clothing la eet on fire.
Thousands more are burned ln accidents
involvin8 hou.ehold textiles. Most fatal bums
ln children are cauaed by flammable clothing
-a mortality rate of 23 percent, compared to
3 percent i n o the r types of burns.
man tnto phylklal fltr\eM than t.ennl• it ii
true that flY'lnl anti have a walltllne. and
termitet do not. Subterranean or sround-
eau.n, terml• ve by far the mOlt deltructive
e>f wOoct ... tinc tnllc!tl. They au.ck bWJd1nla
and other woOd producta in wery at.ate but
Aluka. Tennit. uaually emer19 or IWAnn'
fl'Qftl tbe IOll or. wood. Another way to tell
them apart from flylna anti, which can
appear at \he wne time, II to check their·
winp. All lou.r termite wtnp are the same me. whl.W anta have one pair larpr than the.
Qther.
Other lllJlll of termitetl, how to battle
suocellfully with them and how to prevent
them altoptber ~ d1acu8led in a booklet
from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. For
your copy of "Subterranean Termitel." eend
Sl.7~ to Conaumer Information Center, Dept.
182K. Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
Cat collectors abound
DEAR PAT: I bve a tar1e colleeU.. -f·
cat t11arlaet. Some of Uaem are very aH1Hl. Do yoa now of aay way I caa
eoataet odaer colleetont I am tlalwkt•1 aboat
aelllq part of my colleedoa. -M.N., Costa Mesa.
.. .
.. .
lnformadon, write to Marilyn Dpboye, 31311
BJa1r Drive, WlnW'. M.Ach. 48092.-'nw club
al.lo publ11hn a bl-rpontbly new1l1tt.er.
Annual dues .... •to.
Prepan,.'! A void alcobol
DEAR PAT: J _.,rt .... tMt MAJ~
alltlilorttl• MW wara =llal al.Ml • .,., ,........ey. Doti ..... ,.......,
womu 11MN11d avol4 ad kverqn, or 11 mo4ente .,. acce,&UleT
· U.,C..taM ...
The U.S . Surjeon General advlu1
women who are ~ia:J': CONklertnC presnancy) not to drink beveraae-at
all and to ba aware of. the alcoholic content of
food and dn.leL U you want to reed more
about th1a. request i copy of J'ood and Drua
Bulletin (Vol 11, No. 2) on alcobo1 UM during
precnancy by wrid.na to: HHS, Public Health
Service, FDA, HFl-22, RockvWe, Md. 208~7.
• Got • J)l'Obkml' 'I7wp wd~ to P.t Horo-. .. j wlt:a. Pat wW cur red upe, 1ett1ng the
«1ultles In ~t and ,,,.,,.,.... Mail Termites look'diflerent There la a nationwide "Cat Collecton" cldb whoee memben collect cat figurines,
books, artwork, advertisements, calendan,
paper products, needlework, jewelry, antiques
and anything elae pertain1D4J to cata. For more
•
amwen and acclon you need to .olve ln-
your q QIU to Pat Horowlu, At Your Service, ~ a.t Da11y Pllor. P.O. BoK 1660, Costa meu, .
. CA. Q2626. A.a many Iet~n M poalble will be aJJ8-
u ..,., ....
DEAR PAT: Bow can yoa tell tile
difference between termite• ud flylq uta?
B.F., lrvlae
While there's no proof that flying anta are
wered, but phoned Jnqulria or ktt«w not Including
the reader'• lulJ name, add.tta and buaineaj>oun'
. phone number ~t be 00/lllldered.
Robinsons
DOGGIE BAG -Norm McCartKy of Selah,
Wash., didn't want to take a chance on leaving
his new bo~er puppy alone in the car while his
son w ent on some carnival rides, so the pup
w ent along for a ride of his own.
SUMMER SALE
AND CLEARANCE
25% off
LIZ CLAIBORNE TERRY $EPARATES
White or summer bright cotton/polyester J.Qr S·M·l.
V-neck pullover. Reg. $24. Sale S17.19. Elastic waist
short Reg $22 Sale S15.99. Robinson's Young
Designer Sportswear. 105.
33% off
JONES NEW YORK'conoN PIQUE SEPARATES
White or ye(low for 4 to 14. Band-collar shirt wtth cap
sleeves Orig. $39. Sale $24.99. Side-tie apron skirt.
Orig. $52. Sale $34.99. Pant. Ong. $52. Sale $34.99.
Short Orig $43 Sale $28.99. Robinson's V.l.P.
Sportswear. 3.
516.99 #
LANZ SIGNATURE PRINT
GRANNY GOWNS
Orig. $23·$26. A collection of patterns in lightweight
polyester/cotton P·S·M·l. Robinson's Junior Lingerie. 83
519.99
POINTELLE KNIT GOWN
Orig. $32 With cap sleeves. shirred scoop neck.
ribbon tnm and pockets. Summer pastels in lightweight
polyester By Gilligan & O'Malley for P·S·M·l.
Robinson's Contemporary Sleepwear. 144.
527.99
EVE STILLMAN PINDOT
LONG GOWN
Orig. $40. With contrast smocked front. satin beading,
white lace accents. and front tie. Pink or aqua on
white polyester/cotton. S·M·l. Short gown. Orig. $34.
Sale $24.99. Robinson's Designer lingerie. 172.
517.99
LIGHTWEIGHT BATISTE GOWNS
Special Find a whole collection accented with lace.
tucks, embroidery, and braid trim. In an assortment of
summer pastels. Polyester/cotton for P·S·M·l.
Robinson's Lingerie/Sleepwear. 11
551.99-556.99
FAMOUS MAKER SUMMER DRESSES
Orig. $68-$76. A lighthearted collection accented with
flounces. scoop neckltnes. and mor,e. Cotton or
polyester/cotton poplin for 6 to 16. Robinson's
Dresses. 50.
~9.99
conON CALICO PRINT FLOATS
Special. From Belle France In l ssorted patterns and ' colors. 4 to 12. Robinson's Young Designer Dresses. 17
STARTS TOMORROW. SPECIAL SHOPPING HOURS:
FRIDAY 10-9:30. SATURDAY 10-7. SUNDAY 11-6.
543.99
TAN·IARING $UNDRESSES
Ong $56·$62. With spandex tops and polyester/cotton
skirts for a sensational fit too. Assorted brights lor both
P·S·M ·l . and 6 to 14. Robinson's Dresses. 135
521.99
SOFT SUMMER DRESSES
Special A deltghlful collection of weightless polyester
styles, perfect tor the office and after. For 8 to 18 by
JSE Robinson's Career Dresses. 46;
517.99
FAMOUS MAKER FITIED
DRESS SHIRTS
Special. Suitably pinstriped in blue. pink. yellow. or tan
on white pol1ester/cotton. 14 V2 to 16 V2 . 32/33 and
34/35 sleeves. Robinson's Men's Dress Shirts; 20.
513.99
JWR SHORT SLEEVE OXFORD
CLOTH SHIRTS
Reg. $18.50. Button-down style for summer in white.
blue. or yellow cotton/polyester. 14 V2 to 16V2 .
Robinson's Men's Dress Shirts. 20.
S6.99
conoN KNIT TIES
Ong. $10. Red, light blue. yellow. kelly green. navy,
cobalt. cream, brown. burgundy; or taupe (but hurry for
best selection). Robinson's Ties. 156.
59.99
FAMOUS MAKER SUNGLASSES FOR MEN
Special. A wide se1ection of European styles. all with
gradient lenses. Robinson's Men's Accessories. 93.
50% off
MIN'S SUMMER ROIES
Reg . $45. Sale $21.99. All designed for lightweight
comfort and travel ease. Come choose from the many
colors. stripes. and prints available. One size
Robinson's Men's Robes. 157.
521.99 .
FAMOUS MAKER PRINT PAJAMAS FOR MEN
Orig. $30-$35. Among the possibilities: elegant
foulards. colorful paisleys, tailored stripes. In
lightweight polyester/cotton for S·M·L-XL. Hurry for
best selection. Robinson's Men's Paj amas. 157.
Sl3.99-Sl6.99
... MAKIR MIN1I conON
Orig. S20•$27.50. Lush Interlock knit ln,1ky blue, white,
maize. kh1kl, red. or navy aolld; 1trlpe1 and aprlng
IOllda, too. S·M·L·XL. Roblhton'• Mtn'I Knltt, 21 . J
A<MMneon'1 lummlr lllt Ind Qeeranoe lfMll-"'"' •·
521.99
FAMOUS AMERICAN DESIGNER
SAILCLOTH PANTS FOR MEN
Orig. $30. Classic style in tan white oyster b ue or
navy pglyester/c otton (hurry lor best se·ec:1on 30 10
38. S·M·L lengths. Comes with belt Roo1n!:.on '.> Men s
Sportswear Casuals _123
Sl6.99
JWR STRIPE COTION POLOS
FOR MEN
Orig. $24. A trad1t1onal favorite 1n !>Orted color
combinations (hurry for best selPction) S M L XL
Robinson's Men's Knits. 21
521.99
FAMOUS AMERICAN DESIGNER
SHEETING PANTS FOR MEN
Ong. $,32. Sporty good looks in blue grey oyster or
cocoa cotton/polye ster (hurry 1n lor best choice) 30 to
38. S·M·L lengths Includes belt Robinsons Men s
Sportswear Casuals. 123
sis.99 any size
FIRST QUALITY IEDSACK ·SUPREME
MAnRESS COVERS AT ~%·60% OFF AND MORE
Quilled on all four sides. as well as the top to protect
your mattress with upholstered luxury
Cotton/polyester cover. polyester f1berf1ll By Perfect
Fit. Twin. Reg. $30 Twin x·long Reg $38 Full
Reg. $38. Queen. Reg . $47 King Reg $55 Robinson s
Domestics. 30.
s6.99 anv size
FIRST QUALl1Y IEDSACK· SUPREME PILLOW PROTECTORS AT
36~%0FF
The finishing touch in collon/polyester w1111 polyPs ter
fiberfill. By Perfect Fit Standard Reg $1 1 Oueen
Re~. $12. Km~. Re~ $13 Robinson s Domes11cs 30
55.99 bath
CORONATION conoN TOWELS
AT 4'0%•'5% O'F
Lushly absorbent -cotton terry loop irregulars 1n
parchment, dusty rose. peach, yellow. m1dn1gh1 blue.
or brown (hurry for best choices) By Cannon· Bath
If perfect $11 . Now SS.99. Hand. If perfect $8 Now
14.41. Wash. If perfect S3.50 Now $1.99 Bath sheet
If perfect $25. Now 114.99 Roblnso'n·s Bath Shop. 31
With Just the right blend of teathers and down for
medium 1upport wllr"I aurface aoftne11 Whlle·on white
cotton covers. By Northern Feather Standard
Orig. MO. Ouffn. Orig S~O. King Orig S60
AobtMOn'I Bedding 54.
Hurrv ln White quent1t111 ara DllnUful •Od llltoUON 1•t1ntlY1. All lllfM ~t to DtlOJ NI• 'I • • 'l
...
TM Texu Supreme Court
~~own th• claim of a wood .... ,..., ........
wM .act n II tntltr.d to a all at •waM B11laH' .. tate
........ maniedlWn twice ln
Uae 1MOL ' TM lawalit by Ma. Moore, now &O, uld •h• met the.
blWonatre Hu.f::." ln 1$48 ln =.~~y.:r.
1oven , Nulholland Drlve1 in
Lal ~II ft Mid, llCCOl'd1na
to an oPnkln by the 14th Couri
of ASll • 111 In HoUlton. ' '1"69 ectre9. who •ppMred in
abo~t 30 fll'nu, lncludina: ''GlllUaht.'' 0 M.lahty Joe You;na,lJ
''Beneath the 12"-Mile Reef' and
"Shack Out on 101," allo aaid ahe aDln married Hughes in UM9 on bOard a Y4Cht at Ilea off the
California cout. . .
Comedian· Deu Mu1ba faces
arraignment In Beverly Hilla
Municipal Court on gun charges
Friday -th~ day after his ~5th
birthday.
He was charged with having a
concealed weapon and having a
1Q8ded .38-<:aliber pistol in hJJ car
when fil California Highway
patrolman stopped him May 9,
said Al Albergate, a spokesman
for the Los Angeles County
District Attorney's Office.
..
the NMOll fer hla ttay.
Th• &7 ~Y••r·old juttlc• l• expected back on the Job
')ometlme next week," ~ olhil
ltaff memben aaid.
• The ht1hw•y patrolman R.hnQwn entered the~tal
thoufht Martin wu drlvlna fOt' wbaf·wM oWdally bed err a lcally. The comedian u 0 mlnor IW'l9l'Y·" But hoaPtal
volunteeNd to take a blood teat and court ·~ Nfuled to to determine tf he wa1 be more 1pecUlc about hi•
lntoxlcated and th_e tett wu ailment.
nepdve, AlberDte uid. . -------Martin .. 6een holpltalilled
tor about a week tor a Complete
phYlical an4 U.tlnent of~ and a kidne)' ailment, accord1n8
to hll aaent. Mort Vbaer.·
J3rUl, Gen. Junu L. Doller,
kidnapped by Itaiy•1 Red Bri8ade9
lut 1lecember , aaya he la
worldna with the Pent.aeon and
State Department to draw ·up
procedure• for Americana
atationed oveneaa who might be
victima of abnilar terrorism.
Dozier , speaking at a
Washington luncheon honoring
him, safd he is working to put
together auldelines for families
in the aorl of situation he wu in
when he went through his
42-~y ordeal. •
U.S. Supreme Court Justice
William H. Relmqailt ended a
brief Washington hospitalization,
but still refused to make public
PntW.t"Beapa aot a t&0.-
000 advance from T.XU Gov.
WllUam P. Clem•ta' cmaDAlel ~· paymeh~ for hla trfp _lo HbUlt.on. to attend a ~und-ralalnl
dinner for the pemor.
uwe always inailt 9D the
manely up front beca...-e polldcal
people are the hardelt to ooUect
from." ~··political dlNctor,
Ed Ro1Ua1. told report.en aboard
Air Force One.
Rollins aald the Clement•
campaign was P-8ytng the entire
cost of Beagan a 24-liour trip ~
Houston becauae it was-atrlctly
political.
Newark Mayor KenneU1 A.
Gibson, a fraud and rni8conduct
indictment clouding his future,
pledged to improve city aervices
after wimUng an unprecedented
fourth term as chief executive of
New Jeney's largest city.
Iacocca
in White
'House?
DrraolT (AP)-Lee
lacocca mt1llt not be
runnlna for preetdent,
but M far u New YOl'k
YW.. owner 0.0.... 8 t e 1 n b r e n ft e'r f I
concerned, the Cheytler
Corp. _chairman ii
qu.alWed for the job.
At a $100-a -plate
tutimonlal dinner
bonol'lna Iacocca aa·
Detroit'• man of the
year, Steinbrenner J>Rll!ed him u a man
who can handJe ID09t any
problem.
Steinbrenner Joked
about Iacocca'a amall-
town upbrln1tn1 ln
Pennaylvanla and hl1
appearancm ln Chryller'
televlalon commerdala,
then~ b1a AkXlell in Chry.ler beck
from t e brink of
bankruptcy aeveral yean
ago.
"I can think of no one
in the world -not just
the United Statea ~ that
I would sooner folJow
than Lee Iacooca -as
president of Chrysler or
as preside nt of the
United States,"
Steinbrenner said.
Robnsons
TRIS MAY BE 11 _l
bronzo 1tatue
ed '''You n1
/' on display at
aton Mua~um,
y be one for wh.lch
actre11 Bette Davia
poeed at age 18.
SUMMER -SALE
AND Cl FARANCE
\
·60% off 111a••• POICILAIN
Reg. Si75. Sa~·-· Crafted In the ancient
Chin ... tradttton cit porcelain making, our Tleahan
collection reflects the same delicate translucence
Marco POio dlecovered In 1295 AO. Shown here In our
multl·hutd SUNn pattern, but you'll find four other
pattema u well. Each Mt lnoh . .ldee eight each: dinner
plate, Nl8d plate, eoup bowt, cup and Nucer. Ptue 14•
oval platter, round wgetlble bOwt. coveted 1ugar and
creamer. Aabtnton'I China. 87
STARTS TOMORROW. SPECIAL SHOPPING HOURS:
FRIDAY 10-9:30. SATURDAY 10-7. SUNDAY 11-6.
Kensington
Optic
s3.89 each WLL LIAD e~AL
Ascot
•.
Save 801/t a!'1d more on two exquisite patterns In
gc)t>1et, wine, flute champagne~ and cordlal ·11zes.
And watch how even tl'le almpteat of repa1t1 becomes
a apeclal occa11on. Kensington Optic.
Reg. $12.95 each. Sale ILll. AlcOt.
Reg. 111.95 each. S.le ILll. S.le qoantltlel limited
to etoclton hand. Roblnton'• GIU1Wart. 86. •flute
champagne In Kenltngton Optic onty.
I
Sophisticate
52% off . .
lllJlt~NLlll 16· .. ICI
Reg. $125. Sa.le ...... Select from these two
dlstlnctlv•IY different lool<a, and you'll be setting your
table with all the craftsmanship and expert design
International Is noted for. (Not ta mention the easy
care of stalnleul) Sets Include etgt'lt eacn-: Knife, tort<
sa1aa torK and soup spoon. Ptua 16 teaspoons, and an
ts1>teC• no1tetalaervlng eet. .Rot>tnson·s Sltver
flatware, 181
To order. call toll·frM 1.-.M11m1. -...
I
1:
'
"LOOK FORWARD" -
Fonner President Richard M.
Nixon says he never looks
back to the \\'atergate
acandal 10 years ago, which
destroyed his presidency.
AMA backs
limited-burn
• cigarettes
CHICAGO (AP) -The
American Medical Aasocia1ion
haa called on the tobacco industry
to produce self-extinguishing
cigarettes to reduoe the number
of deaths, injuries and damage
resulting from cigarette-sparked
fires.
The AMA's House of
Delegates adopted a resolution
telling the tobacco industry the
A.MA endones the concept of
aelf-extinguishing cigarettes,
which have to be relighted if not
llDOk.ed for about four minutes.
Self-extinguishihg cigarettes
are available, but none of the
major cigarette manufacturers
makes them. They contain fewer
chemicals than ordinary
c:lgarettes and bum more slowly. William Toohey, a spokesman
for the Tobacco Institute, said the
organization would have no
comment on the AMA reaolution.
•;'laL llfdl d-NchudN.
Hbam ~ aad forward to
hl1tory. But whll• hl1tory I•
;:ndl~ _he11 followlnl the '~•="~=-· HlxoD akl, 10 ~ fl'om w • ....-. 111 never look blck.•1
... Don't look .... IOIDICb.lq
may be olnbW on yw.." advt.a
Paip, 'the b1llC!i )lttchlr wbo dl..t
Jut week at the ADPrOXlma• • of ?G. He D8V9I' IOobd b-=k to
aay how o1d be Na1l1 w-.
To Hixon, today'• annivw.ry of the Waterpte ·~-ln that beam tu. political'~ II an
unplwt nminder, but not an
OC"'8ikJn tor review.
••. . . It remindl me, of coune,
of the fact that I went thtouah it
10 yeara a10 and relived It
aeveral times mnoe,'' he Aid In a
CBS-TV interview. ">.. far u
I'm concerned, I 've said
everything I can oo the subject; I
have nothing to add and rm
looking to the future rather than
the put."
Nixon, 69, said he eees that
future "primarily In the foreign
policy area," traveling at his
expense, but with the knowledge.
of the administration. He didn't
explain his foreign policy role
beyond ~t, but said his travels
would be penonal trips.
Long before Watergate and
resignation, Nixon felt, and said,
that history would judge him
more favorably than many
contemporaries. He said the
perspective of history would
magnify the achievements of his
administration, particularly in
foreign pol.icy.
Ironically, that concern was a
factor in his undoing. One of the
explanations for the White House
taping system that recorded
Watergate evidence against him
was Nixon's concern th.at there
be a full, accurate record of his
presidency for future historians.
' Even now, .Nixon said In the
CBS interview, he gets a half-
dozen letters a week asking why
he didn't burn the tapes.
"It shou).d have been done," he
said. "But the main part is, ther,
should never have been started. '
Vietnam War, and (I) the tint
1trate1tc arm• UmltaUon
£.m•nt wlth the Sovtet
At home, Nixon promoted the I
pro1r•r:n of revenue-1h1rtn1
~ to ahare money, and
u.itfore power, with ltate and
Joca1 ~ti. It WU the
tint ltep in.~ Prellldent
Reapn still ls punuinc. Allo. the
Environmental Protection
A1ency was created during
Nixon's admln1straUon.
.. My feelin8 ls that history ls
1otn1 to treat my presidency
perhaps considerably more
objectively and I ma}' say,
80meWhat more pneroua!y than
my contemporaries," Nixon said
in the CBS Interview, "becau.e
his1ory will tee what we were
trying to do In the long term. ••
He said the China opening will
be recorded as "the major
geopolitical event since World
War Il," and the arms control
agre~ment also wlll get high
marka.
"~ far as otherwise, history
probably without question will
have to refer to that I waa the
first president to resign ... " he
added. "But as years go on, the
verdict of history is one th.at is
objective."
Burger joint
'historic'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Qty Council has decided to put a
tiny downtown hamburger
restaurant In the ofticial repter
of historic bu1.ldinp, along with
such landmaru as the state
Capitol and Sutter'• Fort.
Jim-Denny's eatery, wedged
behind a downtown bua station,
ls the last of the downtown
diners, and, "reflects the idiosyncrasy of urban
economlcs," said City
Preservation Director Richard
HastingB as the council approved
the list of bulldlnga:
Permits OK'd
.....
' ..
A
13.75% 15.3096
Annual Yield Annual Yitld '
13.10% 14.50%
Annual Rate
3 Months, $1 ,000*
I Year, $500
Annual Rate 2~ Years, $500
Our money market thrift certificates pay higher
interest rates than Federal law allows on com~able
plans at banks and savings and· loan assoaations.
Interest is compounded quarter)~ Early withdrawals
earn 6% annual interest. .. theres no forfeiture of up
t.o three months' interest or loss of principal.
· High interest is only part of our story. We will
give you $10 cash when you purchase a thrift certifi·
cate for $500 or more. This offer is for a limited time
only with one cash bonus per household. Internal
trarrsfer of funds is not included. Available to
California residents only. Rates offered on accounts
opened through Monday.
• Yidd ku4 °" ,.,,._Is ol llN JOJM "°''· Rok "'oy cJuu1ge ol l'tt1n.>0L
' COMM!ICIAL CREDIT
COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN, INC.
Anaheim, 6.50 S. Brookhurst St. 92804. 774-6740.
COllUI M-. 370 East 17th St. 92627, 645-8700,
HutJ.DQtoo Beach, 16075 Golden West St. 92647. 847·7771,
Ml•loo Viejo, 24395 Alicia Parkway 92675. 770.2651.
Santa Ana. 1224 East 17th Street 92701. 547-587 1 ..... -
, ..
To make it clear that doctors
are not tacitly endorsing
smoking, the A'MA resolution
reiterated the organization's
opp<Stlon to smoking, but aid
the 8elf-extinguiahing cirgarettel
could uve lives.
The achievements most likely
to secure~· n's place in history were a · during his first
term as pres dent, befor~
Watergate, re-election and the
second term cut short by
resignation.
Among them were ( l) the
reopening of Ametican relations
with China after a generation of
bostillty, (2) the negotiations that
~ U.S. participation In the
HAYWARD (AP) -Six
land-use permits for 1,060
addition.l power-generating
windmilla in the Altamont P ..
area have been granted by.
Alameda County Zoning
.Administrator RJch.ard nynn.
Deliver the D1ilj· ilat Boys and girls 10 or older -
-Call 642-4321 and apply today. Daily Pilat
MEN'S IZOD SOLID-
COLOR KNIT SHIRTS
~ si 99 Save '!JI
~shirt wtih the tradition$ Ot
champiof'!s:.'1t>u knoW tzocf's ram0us quaUty, Dad knoWs
they atways fcJOk gteatt Save
on our SOiid color i lteftod<
1cn1t shfrt, stylf #4IJ90, ,ana wroe as.sortme"tt of CX>lors.
RegutMy S24.
--
Lev rs LEVI'S ACTION SLACKS
s17~99
Save on the most comfortable slacks
a man can wear. Levi's Action Slacks
have 2-way stretch that keeps them
lookingjust-pre II day. Assorted
colors. Waists 3
. NUVO FLARES
s1·7.99
Regularly S 21
Great girt savings on the
popular Levi's Nuvo flares.
perfect for casual or work
wear. Easy<are sta-prest f abrlc.
'1bur choice of U. blue, navy,
chocolate, camel or white;
In waists 30--42.
larly S21.99
. . .
OnnQe Colet DAILY fttLOT~. June 17, 1112
AHEAD OF HIS TIME -Howard Hughes lits
behind controls of plane in this 1947 photo
demonstrating a radar device he believed
would prevent many airline crashes. Two
"" ... , ..... promoters are trying to raiae at least $10,000 to
establish an aviation scholarship in his name at
Los Angeles' Northrop University.
Hughes schol8rship planned
Two promoters seek to honor billionaire aviator
LOS ANGELES (AP) -He
left behind a legacy in aviation
history, the aeroepace industry
and American folklore, and two
fans think it's about time
somebody named an aviation
scholarship after Howard
Hughes.
"Nobody's ever done anything
like this before that we know
about," said Larry Green, a
promoter who, with partner
Kathy Gillies, is trying to raise at
least $10,000 to establish a
ICholarship in Hughes' name at
Northrop University, an
aerospace college in Los Angeles.
"We're both pilots and we've
both been admirers of Howard
Hughes fQr a long time," Green
explained. .
He said the pair invested
"quite a few thousand dollara" of
their own in a benefit scheduled
Saturday and Sunday at the
Shrine Auditorium, with tickets
on sale through Mutual agencies.
The event, emceed by actor
Cliff Robertson, wlll feature
appearances by the Smothers
Bro\hera, Jao.e Ruaaell and
longtime Hughes friend and
UllOCiate Glenn Odekirk. along
with a documentary film on
Hughes' aviation career.
"We're really sticking our
necks out," Green said, noting
that he has no idea what the
turnout will be and that the
scholarship is "going to depend
on what we raise. We want to
raise at least $10,000 for a
Treasury bill 80 we can pos&bly
feed a new acholanhip just of1
the interest every year.
"I don't anticipate a large
profit on this, to say the least.
We're ta.king a chance that there
~ a lot of people that both
admire the thing$ that Howard
Hughes did and are aviation
buffs and besides which we've
got a darn good show going,'' he
said.
Green, 30, said Hughes "has
been a hero of mine since I was a
kid. The things the guy did were
just incredible. The astound me
still. When I find ihe conditions
that he did certain things under,
the pre8IW'e that he was under
when be was building the flying
boat (the Spruce Goose) for
example .. ''
He said films and books have
often focused on the
eccentricities of the billion.aj.re
who founded Hughes Aircraft
and once owned RKO Pictures
Corp. rather than ~>n hia
contributions.
"He opened eyes to aspects of
aviation that were never focused
on before -flying transports
around the worla, going at
spee ds that had never been
attempted before. His planes
were ao aerodynamically superior
to any other planes that were
being built at the time," Green
said. "The guy was just way
ahead of his time.''
Hughes gained fame as a
motion picture producer in the
1930s and 1940s and as an
aviator .. He set several speed
records and in the 1940s designed
the largest plane ever built up to
that time, a 700-pueenger eight.-
engine wooden flying boat
nicknamed the Spruce Goose
that is now houaed as a tourist
attraction in a dome at LoDg
Beach Harbor. \
Hughes re~ 1rom the public
eye in the mid-19508. becoming a
reclusive and mysterious figure
who refused to"be photographed
and never appeared in pubUC. He
died in 1976.
Save on our cord
walkshorts for
1!11 :!. .
~
'/11 :1.
·WlllMlll'f
'ill i.·
1t:fti
'//1 :1.
!!:tr :f.1
/~ :1..,
''''':I...
r boys and men
58.99
Boys' regularly S13; men's $16.50.
The palm tree emblem stands for quality
workmanship, and these cargo-pocket
shorts are summer's favorite style I
Assorted colors. Men's 28-38. Boys' 22-30.
SALE POLICY: Sale prices on
lzod knit shirts, ~vi s Action
Slactcs, Nuvo flares. and
WUd ~st walkshorts
are effKtJve thru Ju~ 20,
1982, white supplies last.
Sorry, no ralnchedcs. -~--..
You're not Just playing-you're learnlngl
The Texas Instruments· Home Computer Console-The "lraln" Of The System
This efficient home computer connects to Texas Instruments 10 · video monitor.
or with the RF modulator. directly to your TV set Sole price includes both the
console and the RF modulator _Monitor ov9iloble a t reguJar low. Kmort· prices
• 1912 te•o• lntlrumentt lneorpo<oteo
Speech Synthesizer At Su~r SavJng1
Lets your home computer talk! (Requires
customized command modules that use
speech.)
Software for the whole family!
K mart comes o wide selection of Tl software
for the Home Computer 1n easy to use plug-in
command modules Subjects include Home
Finance. Education and exciting games. all
at attractive i>rices
Each Your
Cholc•
Texas Instruments~
~puter Programs
•"Household Budget
Management
•"Attack"
• '"Add & Subtraction II"
• '11 Invaders"
~VAil.Aili ONLY AT THI FOLLOWING K MARTI: ........ . ... , .. , ~ -... 1.ev-......., o..-..
~ ....... ......"~ ..... v........ ~o.lla
o...te ...... ~
,-...... ... ....... .... ~-9ed ...............
................
LM~
'-9 ...... ,_ ....... ,......
LOTS OF ADDITIVES -Willia Gortner,
co-author of "The Food Additives Book,"
checks the stock in a San Francisco
supermarket. Gortner, former head of the U.S.
AP.-iuss11
l>epartment of A8rlculture Hwnan Nutrition
Laboratory, 1aya the avera,e person consumes
•about 160 additive. a day, moat aa!e.
·Community work ordered .after hazing
• PALO AL TO (AP) -Six Zeta
Psi fraternity brothers at
St.&¢ord University each muat
perform 100 hours of community
service as a penalty for leaving
two pledges bound face down in
a muddy paddock last December,
a judge baa ruled.
The six studenta pleaded guilty
to violating the state's hazing
law, and Santa Clara Municipal
Judge Timothy J . Hanilin
advised them of their
punishment but set formal
sentencing Sept. 21.
They could face trial if they
fail to perform the volunteer
work, said Hanifin.
ltUFFELL'S
UftHOLSnRY
.... h ......... s...
1922 ~101 ILVD.
COSTA MISA -141·1116.
!¥'.i:t
All CONDIYICl•ID IOI.Al WAlll HIA,_
UTNIOOM...,._ St lot 217U7 s.w. Time suna at YOIJI eoo. le.I Store,-YOIJI ....... ,
COSTA MISA 641-1289
1526 N.wpert 11¥4.
MISSION VllJO 495-0401
2"'H c..NM ,,., ,_ =·
I'-..... """· ... .., ....., .•
CAN YOU SPARE
A DAY FOR DAD?
bi~
R. Ph.
Too often, Dad geta lost
in the shuffle of a great
many important June '
activities. Of course,
gradua\ion la important
and so is the end o f
sct\ool. And, June
weddings are beautiful
occasions; however, the
guy that very often
makes them all poaeible ·
gets too little recognition.
Instead of our usual
weekly health meuage
we •ould like to dedicate
thi11 s pace to all the
F athers in o ur
community and take a
moment to wish ·them all
a -.
HAPPY FATHER'S DAY
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you r-1
a medidne. Pick up your
p reacription If 1hoppln1 Marby, or we will deliver
promptly without extra
charp. A grut many people •
e n trull u1 with their
pre1crlptlon11. May we
compound and di1pen1e yowl!
f'AlflC I.JOO l'HAllllACY ,,,..,,.,,..,,
#1 ,,,.,..,,..., .,,,,.,, .... .. ,. .
If it's got wheels
l ou'll move It
aster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.call
642-5671 and , I a friendly
ad-visor will
hilp"'9turn yourwhlels
lntocash. .
JCPenney
Garden · Shop Sale
June 18 June 19 & June 20
Friday Saturday-Sunday
-------E~~-----
sha•ta 8" Houseplants Daisies
reg. 5.99
Sale
3.99
1 gallon reg. 3.49
Sale 2.29
.... ~.,.... Perlwlnkle
1 gallon reg. 2.99
2.29
4" Bedding Plante
reg. 99• Now 77•
Flowering
Landscape
•
8" Hanging
Begonias
Plants
1 gallon
marguerltes or
pelargonlums
reg. 2.99
Now 1.99 ~~
Speclal 3.99 ~~,..-~··~ ~
~}Vt · ~. : · 8" potted
8,, Hanging~· Marlgold•
Impatiens lJ· :: Petunias reg. 2.99
Speclal ·3.99 Now 1.99
Great
barbecue buy. Boston
Ferns S" 22" kettle
reg. 59.99
Now 54.99 Specie I
. :12.99
P9largonluma
, 2 gallon
~· 6.99
Now 4.99
-•
rl'ax cut: $6 per week
That'• ·what . mediao income can exp~t
WAIHINOTOIC (~P) -~
~ worW With a.,__ ....
'wo chlldr•n who •arn1 \lae medW\ weekly 1nDome of "81
wtJl take home an ntra '8 a
WMk under the federal 1noame
tax cut 'Mt will lhow up in
pa~heckl •W'tlna July 1. n. amount ot. federal income
tax Withheld from that wortm'•
paycheck will drop to tQ.lO a
week. a reductloo ol 10.1 percent. That ii down 14.8 percent (f9.SO)
fJUft the $62.90 withheld before
the ftm ltep of the IJ'adua1 tax
cut enlded 1-.t year went into
effect Oct. 1.
The cut ln withholdN will
from 40 centa a weeli for a
e penon tlOO, to
$ 0 for th~O-a-week
married worker.
A1 a rule, the drop in
withholding ta fairly cloee to the
actual tax reduotion at eech wage
level, meanina mo1t taxpayers
are unlikely to eee a major, lhift
in what they owe the
government or get· in refunds
when they file their returns next
spring.
The Internal Revenue Service
has mailed withholding tables to
give the nation's employers time
to prepare for the second stage of
the tax reduction. The third step,
al.so in the 10-percent ranJe, ls
due to show up in paychecks
July 1, 1988, unlea Congreu cbana-plana in an effort to
ncluce the federal defidt. Tull ~ reduced Oct. 1 at a
rate that would average 6
percent on a IWl yw1 buia, but
th.a' WM barely felt becawie It
wu in ett.ect for only one quarter
of the yefU'. And althouah tax
ratee went down an avenae 10
J>ercent Jan. 1, molt taxpayen
have seen no benefit at all
becauae the chanp hu yet to be
reflected in withholdtpa rata.
· Thus, the reductio n In
withholding next month will
provide, for most .Aflertcan.s, the
first noUceable benefit frorn the
tax cut worked out by Congrese
and Pr.iffent Reapn.
For most w~. the extra
money they will pocket starting
next month will not be enough to
offset the increase in Social
Security taxes that tooY effect
Jan. 1 and the higher income
taxes that result when a worker's
pay raise pushes him or her into
a higher tax bracket.
AB an example, the Treasury
Department says, the one-earner .
four-membe r family at the
median income level -$467 a
week or $24,300 a year -will
end up with a oomblned federal
tax lncreue of t127 t.hJa yeu.
The $137 rtae in 8odal Securtty
taxee alone wipee but a1moet half
the income tax cut.
The Social Security tax on
each covered worker wu 8.6&
percent of the first $29, 700
earned in 1981, a maximum tax
of $1 ,97&. Th1I year, the rate la
6.7 percent of the f1rlt $32,400, a
maXimum tax of $2,171.
Workers who received a J.arae
income tax refund t.hJa yNr may
be able to qnlficantly reduce
their withholdlni on 1982 income
by cla1.m1ng a larpr number of
allowances. One allowance
exempts $1,000 of income from
withholding, although not
neoessarily from tax UabWty.
Additional allowances may be
claimed to oft.et tax reductions
caused by alimony paymenta, the
earned-income credit for the
working poor, the child-care
credit, contributions to an
Individual Retirement Account
and the new "marriage penalty"
deduction that will mean extra
tax cuta th.is year for millions of
married couples.
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NEWPORT FASH10N ISLAND
. '
. .. . •
There's only one beer that's naturally
made for the times when just one
beer won't do. Only Coors is specially
made for the way you really like t.o
drink beer. Made naturally pure and
fresh~th pure Rocky Mountain
spring water, always packaged and
'shipped cold t.o avoid extreme, taste-
killing heat, and always stocked fresh
so your last Coors tastes as fresh as
your first.
t NOTHING
EVER
GOES INTO COORS.
Most beers start with chemically
altered tap water. And then go on t.o
·use additives and preservatives.
' Not Coors. Only Coors beer
starts naturally pure, naturally
fresh with pure Rocky Mountain
gpring water.
And only Coors stays pure.
' Brewed more slowly, and naturally
·~ed longer with no additives or
p~servatives.
• . . . .. ....
Orange Coelt ~LY PILOT/Thul'9dey, June 17, 1912
COORSBElll'S •T•BEWll .. llEAT 'tHJlT KD·LS
BEFeRTBh'E.
Extreme heat destroys beer taste. In
fact, because of the way other beers
are proce~d and shipped, they are
exposed to 140 ~egrees of this taste-
killing heat even before they
reach your store.
Not Coors. Only Coors is always
packaged and shipped cold from the
brewery to your store. In fact, Coors is
kept cold longer than any other beer
-and that means fresher tasting
beer for you. ·
Sure, it would be easier to allow
Coors to be exposed t.o extreme heat.
And maybe some beer drinkers
wouldn't taste the difference. But
we think real beer drinkers would.
Because keeping it cold is the only
way t.o assure fresh beer taste.
~ I • .
I
• . • . •
1
' Any beer can get stale as it sits in ;
your store. In spite of this fact, other f
leading beers can sit on the shelf for
up to 120 days. By our standards, i
that's not fresh beer. I
And that's not Coors. Coors takes !
absolutely rio chances when it comes l
tn fresh beer taste. That's why Coors
has a 60-day freshne~ policy, the
stri~at freshne~ policy in the beer
industry. Thi$ policy a&sures that
Coo~ is always·stocked fresh so your
last Coors tastes as fresh as your first.
Coors after Coors, it's always
first-beer fresh. That's why Coors is
the beer made for the way you really
liie tsO drink beer. · .
I
I ' I -
,, The state bepartmen~ of
i Parka and Recreation and the ~California Legislature have
1• botched up the handling of Cl')'1Stal
Cove's cottages and they've
.. botched it badly.
I , l This condition seem• quite
'clear after state functionaries at
' long last unveiled future plans for
., the 45 cottages that are included
"'within Crystal Cove State Park.
between Corona del Mar and
\Laguna Beach. r , By way of background, it
, should be noted that there is a
i-legislative mandate that the
., Crystal Cove shoreline be opened
•for public use and that the
cottages be preserved as a
r historical reminder of early-day
California beach communities.
We have no quarrel with
these objectives. Cryst.al Cove may
indeed be one of the last examples
of early shoreline villages.
The state plan, however, sees
fit to evict all the present cottage
tenants for the purpose of turning
the buildings over to overnight
renters or for use as hostels for
'~bikers or hikers. People with experience in
beach renting might well wonder
how long these historic cottages
I~ ill remain upright under these
rroposed kinds of uses.
AdditionaUY, just down the ~ach at El Morro, state officials
w fit to ~rant mobile home
~
dwellen 2.0~ear-••tenalona on
their beechfront ie ....
'nWt ~ be fine. But 1taw reuoninC for removal of Crystal
Cove cottage dwellen WM that it
11 necellal'Y In order to usu.re
public acce11 to the beach.
You are left to wonder how
the blufftop cott.aae dwellen block
acce11 to the beach while the
·mobile home dwellers on the land
at El Morro do not.
The plain fact 11 that the
disparity defiee lolic. .
If state officials have thoughts
that overnight Wiers will preserve
the little con.gee better than the
present renters, those state
officials·better have·a re-think.
Again, if state officials have
determined that private Wle of the
cottages is incompatible with a
public beach, does it become any
les,, incompatible for the cottages
to be used privately by hikers,
bikers or school groupe?
As it now stands, the present
Crystal Cove cottage dwellers are
taking their cue to court where it
would 1eem they might have a
very good cde for retaining their
rental rights for a similar period of
time as the mobile home
leaseholders at El Morro.
It is tragic, however, that the
issue cannot be aettled by the
state, with uniform appllcation at
both ends of the beach, and thus
bypass everybody getting
ensnarled in a court action.
>
~tudents prove point
I Huntington Beach school In some areas, the fUPils were
J:>fficials have a right to feet proud. a year ahead of. their national I At a time when schools are counterparts.
F x p e r i e n ci n g d e ~ l i n i n g In th Ocean Vi District, all nrollments, cutbacks m money . e ew . crltitism in some quarters, the pupils di~ well but the eighth
test scores of the pupils continue to graders did best. 'Ibey generally
improve. acored bet-.:veen the 75th ai:id 80th
Results appear to be about the percentile .m reedlna. English and
same for pupils in the Huntington mathematicS.
Beach City (elementary) School
istrict and the Ocean View
School District.
In the city district, students
from lhe first through eighth
grades tested well above averagt!.
Categories included reading,
mathematics, language and
spelling.
. (A national normal pereentile
would be 50 -half would be
below 50 and half above.)
Both diatricta have clung to an
emphasis on basic educa~on even
when innovations were ln vogue.
The test scores show the wisdom
of their~.
Basil Peterson's gift
Men of v1s1on are rare and
their passing should be noted,
~en by those who didn't know
h e~. They leave important
gac1es.
Such a man was Basil H.
Peterson. founding president of
E
ange Coast College, who died
t week in Northern California
the age of 74.
Dr. Peterson retired 18 years
go and left the area, so a lot of
folks who live here now never had
µie opportunity to know him.
• On the occasion of Dr.
feterson's retirement, Walter
Burroughs, the former publisher
of the Daily Pilot, wrote:
"I am sure hundreds and
hundreds o~rsons had the same
sinking heart whe n Pete
annOUQCed he would be forced to
retire becaUBe of his health. He
bas been OCC, and OCC has been
him, for 10 long, it seems
impossible to teparate the two.
''His gift to our community
has been a greet junior college, an
institution that has tranacended all
previous notiom of what a junior
college should or could do lor its
district, its citizens and its
students.
"All of ua awe him a deep
debt of gratitude for tlUa gift .. "
That sums up Bull Petenon's
legacy pretty well. . -
Opinions expressed in the space above are those Of the O.lly Pltot'. Other views.ex-pressed oo this page are those of their authors and artists. ReMer comment Is invit-
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. ·eox 1.560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321 .
L.M. Boyd I Bartending trick
Experienced bartenders who 1erve
weak drinks zip in the soda, then pour
in the whiskey, and don't mix. No, not
becawie this makes a better tall one.
But the customer's first sip tastes
stronger.
Q. How do you account for the fact
that the percentage of twins
worldwide la r1aing?
A. A sizable proportion of twine~
born prematurely, and more preeWe9
tul'Vive the8e dayw, what with better
l n-c u bat or care. After that
conalderatlon comes the fact that
twinl tend to breed twins.
Thirty-five times a ru,ht t. about
how often you cliange your aleeplna
position, lf typica1.
Q. Who fim ln1r0dumd the ~ into~ And why?
... roatnER ~c~
ON 11ll5E ~~' C~ OF ADDRESS
CARil) 50 nm. Lia
~ FIND ME IN MY
MOST COUNTY ...•..
Soviet subs a prime threat
WASHING TON -A.Ide from the
pomibillty of a musive Argentine air
strike, the British bad three "wild cafda"
to worry about• in the Falkland lalands
-the enemy submarines Salta, San
LuJa and Santiago del F..tero.
'lite Salta and the. San Lui.I, built
eight years ago in West Gennany, are
equipped with the ume deadly Tigerfiah
torpedoes the British Uled to alnk the
Argentine crui9et' General Belgrano. The
Santiago del Falero, though a relative
antique built by the United States before
1945, baa a range of 12,000 miles
between refuellnp and oonatituted a
major threat to the British invasion fleet.
THE BRJTISB CONCERN over the
Argentine subs waa,thaM. though with
a certain detachment, by U.S. milltary
officlalft. The Pentagon baa spent millions trying to make sure the United
St.ates has auttident and eophiaticated
anti-submarine w arfare weapons to
protect our fleet from Soviet underaea
marauden.
The full nature of the submarine
threat la detailed in a aeries of .ecret and
top-.ea"et Pentagon and CIA documents
shown to my _,aate Dale Van Atta.
The Pentaaon estimate• that the
Soviet Navy now has 71 nuclear-
powered submarines of various types
that ~re also armed with JlUClear
weapons. They are considered to be the
prime undersea threat to the · United
States.
ln addition, the Soviets have 285
atta& submarines carrying conventional
weapons, and can count on four eacn
G.
-JA-Cl-11-1-IR-SD-I -~
from the Poles and Bulgarians. Thus the
U.S. and NATO forces have a total of 364
Soviet-bloc subs to worry about.
To combat them, the Allied a nti-
submarine force has a total of 1,045
fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, with
an additional 149 in reserve. These sub
chasers carry a knockout punch: nuclear
depth bombs: They can be delivered by
either pJanes or helicopters.
In addition, the U.S. arsenal includes
an an.ti-submarine nuclear rocket. Galled
As.roe, which is fired from surface ships,
and a similar sub-to-sub rocket called
Subroc. However, the Subroc nuclear
rocket is technologically obsolescent and
will be phased out by 1989.
This means, as a Pentagon report
notes, that unless a replacement weapon
is developed for Subroc, U.S. submarines
"will have to rely on the shorter-range,
conventionally armed MK-48 torpedo.
whose effective use will require 'them)
to close within the Soviet detection
envelope and within range of existing
Soviet weapans.''
THESE NUCLEAR torpedoes and
depth charges, of course, cannot be used
in any limited war. For their •use would
surely touch off a nuclear exchange that '
could escalate into a ho locaust. With this
in mind, the Pentagon must also look to
j ts con ventional aftti-submarine
weapons.
But this in turn leads to another
problem, as a Pentagon document points
out: "Because individual kill probability
tends to be low in conventional anti-
submarine warfare, it could take as long
as three months to bring the Soviet
submarine threat under control in the
Atlantic and the Pacific. During those
months. if typical estimates are valid, we
could lose as much as 15 percent of U.S.
and allied reinforcement and resupply
shipping, while the Soviets could loee up
to 70 percent of their submarines."
And it seems unlikely that either aide
would put up with such severe 108SeS
without resorting to nuclear weapons.
Good intentions don't pre.vent wars
To the Editor:
I suppoee the current nuclear freeze
movement is no different from any other
such movement in history; and I do not
doubt for a moment that the leaders of
today's movement are every bit as
sincere in their beliefs and convictions as
were thoee leaders of similar movements
in past history.
And as for history, who will ever
forget the pathetic spectacle of Neville
Chamberlain returning from Nazi
Germany in the late '30s, waving the
doc:wnent that Hitler had just signed
renou.nd.ng aggreilPon and announcing
to the world that "this document means
peace in our time"?
Or who can forget our own American
folk-hero Charles Lindbergh preaching
to Ame*8 all during the 30a that we
should Willaterally disarm as a way to
convince Hitler of our desire for world peace? -.
PEARL HARBOR changed all of that
kind of Ivory Tower thinking on the
morning of December 7, 1941 at the
inltlal cost of 2,000 American aallors'
lives. The final cost of that war that
could have been prevented wu 50
million lives. The morning after Pearl
Harbor, everyone in the free world woke
up aimu.ltaneoualy to the realization that
what Winston Churchill h ad been
preaching for a decade was OOlT'tlCt; that ·
a strong defeNe ia and alwaya baa been
the only deterrent that can prevent wars
with aggressive nations -not pieces of
paper, not bellot propoli~ not the
good intentions of a)l the
well·lntendoned peopJe in OW world.
Agreu{ve bullies, whether tuy be
indfvlduak or nadonl IUdl • the 80vllrt
Union, .._pact only one thin& •·th.~
power Cl( u,. thnet of that ~
Fortuna•ly for m. there w. dme for
U1 afMlr l'Wvl Ht.rbclr to rebuild oUr
pathelk def.-. that had been .now.ct
to deterknte to IUCh a daD8ll'OUll llate
of unpnpuectne.. 'n. mcJl'ftlns 8lt« a
lllMk att.ldc in the nuclear • wl1l not
be ~ 10 fcqlvtni of ' l'hme who ,..,.... to hoe nUky *Jl"Mde w with an bwtlldblt ....,,
Ito war ln hlliory bu ever been lf.al1Mt. Jilt ... "8, l&4'ft MllNUIW
nation that penelftd"'"l&a P.i\41n1ae1
8ilh•W'J •--.•.._,. p:__. for
war than &uetr. Tit• ·Romane
aclmowi.daed this and .._. • phrme
for ll whlc6 la • en... today • It WM 20
centurl .. .,o: .. If you d...,. peace, ....,.,.. tor war." JM It .... tM\ the
....,... ..... ol ~..,~I« a ........... ,. ... ..,.,.
~ ........ ...., ..... IMn
tONIWtL"
· ·1 ;, mn"""' ,...,_,,,. B
memories of what a truly inspirational
man he was.
I started attencting clases in his army
barracks in 1962. I was present at his
retirement whe n the student body
presented him with a color television. I
was there for the dedication of the Basil
MAILBOX
Peterson Gymnasium, But I recaU two
instances with Dr. Peterson more than
these.
Dr. Peterson used to umpire our
student softball games. One day he called
me out on strikes. I vigorously insisted
the pitch was low. He said it was not. I
lost. After the game he approached me
and admitted the pitch may have been
low; that he was watching the side of the
strike zone. He told me that even when
there is doubt one must stick to bis
judgments. The world, he said, has no
place for the wishy-washy, no room for
the mu~umper. One must make a
decision and stick by it.
On the day after President Kennedy
was shot. Dr. Petenon called a spedal
student asaembly. John Kennedy was a
hero to us. We felt he somehow favored
the young, that he was on our side. His
ideals were clear and important. His
death stajlgered us'. We were los t ,
confused. The student body was numb.
There were plans of cancelling all
d1~ and social events and e ven • . Dr. Peterson knew how we fell,
for I th1rik he too felt our loss. He told us
that John Kennedy waa not the aort of
man who would cancel anything, but
would pre18 on with the job a-t hanCl with
even renewed vigor.
Take a deep breath, he said, muster
your mu.rap, .for w.e have the same job
to do now as we did before, only now we
mua\ dolt without John Kennedy.
And now we will hav~ to do It without
Basil Peter8on. •
DA V1D A. HUGHES
Hidden costs
To the Editor:
The Orange County Development
Plan for Bo&a Ch.lea contains hidden
COltl th.at may make the public Ua.ble (or
· mllllqna of do11'rt on a perpetually
• npetltlve bMla in the future. above and ~yond the public coeta of $179 million
~~ by thil plan . 1'w peopiMCI w entnnoe to Bolla
Chica, c:ompl•t• wHh J•UIH end ..... , .... , -.y 10 ~ nawral Mnd
disposition along the Huntington Beach
to Newport Beach coastline, that the
beaches downcoast from the jetties will
suffer constant erosion without natural
reple n ishment of sand. This will
necessitate repetitive dredging of sand
from offshore back onto the beaches, at a
public cost in the millions of dollars.
WE SEE this phenomenon in action
today. The Army Corps of Engineers is
now dredging sand back ooto Sunset
Beach because of jetties built upcoast at
Anaheim Bay. The cost-$6.6 million. A
similar phenomenon is ha~rung in
Oceanside now where the hes are
having to be rebuilt at a cost of several
million d ollars because of upcoast
man-made development and disruption
of the natural coastline?
Do we not learn from history? Can we
n9t. learn from current events? The
Ora:nge County Board of Supervisors is
placing the whole Hundbgton Beach
coastline in great jeopardy with their
ill-conceived plan for llolaa Chica. ·
And they are doing it on the backs of
the public.
"What therefore God hath joined
together, let not man put asunder"
Mark 10:9
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD
Clari/ ication
To the Editor:
Regarding Ref. Jones' rebuttal to my
letter of June 2, want to clarify that my
letter was referring to the "new" Irvine
Company, and in no way waa it meant
to reflect on the "old" Irvine c.ompan.y.
All those accolades were well cleler9ed
and earned by the "old" Irvine Campany
-and to aet the recont straight, the
Irvine Founation ta not a aubakliary ot
TIC.
In our 21 years with the Irvine
Company, in both agliculture and land
development departments, we were with
both the "old" and the "new" Irvine. 1
have many fond memoriet of the "old"
company.
BOBBIE ALLEN
· .
..
Of'~ CoMt DAILY PILOTR'hurtday, June 17, 1M2
There's a plant that fits ~very persQnality
OM oi dw IDOlt depr 111~11P1CU of
Wt om.~ In which I worll II Uw
,_
,.. plana
You Would think that, ln a new.paper
offlot, 10'.l would be able to avoid the klnd of ambiance that you 1•t ln
reRluranta with watt.en and watu--
who t.u you \heir names. But not here; ~ 10 feet or '°I you atumble upon
pr1IUne white tuba noldlna luah, p-een,
utiY p.lanta.
' TRB NEWSPAPER de>H not own the
~I.anti. ~t ren11 them from a flnn called
Tropical Plant Rentala Inc. Included In
the rental fee are regularly echeduled
maintenance vilita by plant speciallJta.
F0t years I have been haruaing thete
plant apeciali.lta whenever they come
around. I feel that the exiat.ence of the
plants ln the newspaper office
slinificantly lowers the quality of llle.
A few weeka ago the newest plant
lady appeared in the office. Her name
waa Kristin Anderson Janickl, she
studied plants in college (I am not
making th1a up), and she waa rather
perky. She sat down to talk planta with
me.
I told her that, one, I did not want to
talk plant.I; and two, if I did want to talk
plants, I would say that plants are
hideous-looking, they (contrary to
-
popular op&nlon) rob you ol you.r oxyaen,
\hey bNed bu&I, they make the room
mugy, and the IWWlpl'r: would do W.U · to \eke the mont t lpendi on
rented plan~ and ~ 1~ on hJ.rinc a
few more reporten i;;;.d,
Mra. Janlcld thm launched into the
•lplanta·mak .. you .. f•l-better..at..work''
Ill CIEINE .;...;;..;........; __________ ~ ...... -.a. ..........
routine. I think ahe expected me to be
lmpremed With thla line of reuonlna;
she did not know that lt wu the ume
line that baa been uaed by all the plant
ladies servicing the newspaper before
her, and will be Wied by all the plant
ladies servicing the neW1paper after ahe
ia gone. I told her that plant.a did not
belong in newspaper Cl'fices; can you
imagine "The Front Page" being acted
out with ficuaes and phllodendrona in
the background?
I BELIEVE that Mra. Janicki began to
come to the conclusion that I had an
unple~t personality, because her face
clouded over. She ended the visit, but
befon lbe left W eald that I lhe WU
IOlna to~ -. aome pl.anti ..l-free -
' lor my office.
"I don't thlnk 1°" undentand.,11 I aald.
111 do not haw plan ti In my of t!ioe· I do
not want plant.I In my otftoe. J '!anti do
not be1cnc in my office." • ·~ wW be tpectal plant~·· Mn.
Janlcld uid. "I have to 1pecl.At-onter
them. They are tallored to ;tlt your
penonality perfectly." •
"That'• lmpomlble," I Mid. '"liwre I.I
no plant that would fit my pendnallty."
''Trust me;" Mn. Janicki aald.1
Several weekl went by. I for8''1t about
Mrs. Janicki, and I .. umec1 she had
foraouen about me.
Until, one morntna. I arrived at. work.
and all of the peopfe ln the vicinity of
my office were ahudderlnac and
tremhlln.r,
"Whai"s ao1na on?" I said.
I walked into my oftlce.
There -on the desk, on the ficu, on
the chain, on top of .the video di.splay
terminal -were a dozen containlera of
the moet wonderful planb I bad ever
seen. It waa a revelation; I don't know
anything about theee pl.anti, but I '\mew
I loved them.
"Why, what are these marve lous
flowers?" I said.
''They're not 0ow--.·· 10rDeOM yelled
from out.lide the office. The .~·· vQ6ce '"'1*i to ~ fear. "What are
they?'' t_repeateci:-W-RC*l Uwt labeta,0 the
voloce yelled. .
I dJd. On the COll\ISner holdlna ..ch
plant WM • neatly printed notation: ·•vern.11' flytrap."
And under that, the explanation:
"lNectl are attracted by an aroma
lnlt.de the trap .and are caught when
aenaitive ha1n tn.ide the trap triger the
trape to~. The trap will reopen when
lnlect I.I fully dlgelted. Do not fertillte;
feed, amall bita of hamburaer
occUlonally lf lDllec:i. are not available."
I 1tared tn wonder. There weren't
any fllee in the office; eo l took a paper
cllp1 Jt:railhtened lt out and gingerly
mick .ft Into the mouth of one of the
fiytrape. The fiytrap munched on the
Quote8
"The new executive order appean to
have been designed primarily for the
oonvenlence of bureaucrat.I who want to
hide their actiona from the public." -
Rep. Gleu Eqlla~ D-Ok.la., chairman
of a House Government Operations
subcommittee on information, commen-tinS ~ new government aecrecy rules.
peper cllp .. it lt w~aa Mac. My bean aldpped y. Thia WM
true love. The9e are mMnllt plani.
you evef aaw. Not only a_!• they
camlvoroua, they're downrt,ilt nuty.
YOU me. with theee plant.I, you're aotJ\I
to pt bitten.
NO MORE OF thete llmp-wrlated
pl.ante that watt for aomeone to come
around and water them. U my Venus'
flytrape feel like. eattnc, they'll juat take
un.k out of 1he wrlat of the first
to wander by. They're thrilllna; I en take my ahoe9 off ln the ot6oe
nymore, becaU8e the fiytrape might~
1 pJclc them up and eat them. •
1 can work in peace now. I just put one
of the Venua' flytrape by the door, and lf
1omeone tries to come tn without
knocking, he geta~. I don't have to
lock my desk at t.' The flytrapa are
all the security I need. Someone cornea
sneaking aroWld, he loees a finger.
Mra. Janicki baa made me bU.fully
happy. I hurry to the office each
morning. Riaht now I'm waiting for
work to encf and for everyone to go
home. My flytrape and I have a plan.,..
aoon aa the place empties out, we're
goma into the city room. We're going to
eat a1l the other plant.I. ~
dad~ day,jum 20th
our ,J/.oni+'a.Vn£ 1am~l
v-nczck~.
More cluck
. for yo.ur~ . uck. our ~t µJpUlar
S"IMZOW, modcz of thz.
£\met 2ply lam~l
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camfurtoblq. ond ·
practical fbr yz.ar h::urrl
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. . •
T UMDAY, JUNI H, 1HI
CAVALCADE
COMICS
92
96
. .. ' \ -
Charse• doctors a dd
to bills attract patients'
interest. Ann Landers
explains wh y on Page B2. I
.. ..
I
I
-"/
·Graduates face toUghest test
Findh,g·empl oymen t is b ecomin g most difficult scramble since mid-1970s
are laughing
~
RICKY TICKY P0Lrnx -Current Republican
flapping in the new 43rd Congressional District, wherein
the party's official standard-bearer for November appears
to face write-in challenges. aounds like political history
repeating itself. ·
It's almost like seeing the ghost of Ron Cordova.
What's happening here is that one Johnnie Crean, a
rich kid on the block from
· San Juan Capistrano way,
captured the GOP
--------,,...."\ _ nomination in the new
TIM MORPHINE ~1/-oongremional district. Now ~ it appears there are a _______ .....,....__.,._Jw ho 1 e bunch of
Republicans displeased with this tum of events.
In the f i.nal tallying, which was slower than slow, as
usual, Crean seems to have edged out Carlsbad Mayor Ron
Packard and former football pro Bill McColl:'
"It'• very toug_h," aaJd Carol
Sweetland, executive dlrector for
the Youth Employment Service
in Costa Mesa. "Thia year'•
graduates are a little more aware
about the competition."
The employment center is
listing about 40 percent fewer
jobs ibis summer, a.he said. Ai.o,
many college atudenu are
returning from universities to
compete with high sch ool
students for jobs that pay only
$3.35 an hour.
SoDle need to earn even a
minimum wage in order to return
to college in the fall. Others have
decided to simply drop out of
college until the economic picture
improves, sald Ma. Sweetland. •
Business and technology are
the catchwords for the college.
bound. Jobs for high school
graduates can st.ill be found in
the aecretarial field, acoou.nting,
bookkeeping, computers,
d~livery operatlona and fut food.
"It's very, very bleak in the
area," aaid Mimi Bin:h, a career
and education coordinator for
Newport Harbor High School.
"Very few employers are calling
me. And many students a re
coming in too late for jobs."
The outlilok for college-bQund
ttudenta is not overly optimistic
either. Ma. Birch saidi. that two
high school alums recently
returned to the area unable to
tlnd work after receiving
univerai ty degrees in social
services.
"All o~parents want their
kids to go to college, but many
don't finish or they go into fields
that are not in demand," said Ms.
Birch.
A r e~en t poll of 1980
Newport-Mesa graduates found
that 43 pen:ent were attending
four-year colleges and another 37
percent were enrolled at two-
year schools.
"I would say that this is one of
the worst years I've seen," said
Dick Wt_tta, director oi career
education for the district.
Watts said that college
graduatea could ~ in a tousher
position than hlgh 1c6 ool
grad ua te1 bee a use many
compa.nie. now would rather pay
less for employees they can train.
"Many of our kids come in
with the Idea going to college will
answer all their problema,'' said
Bob We rley, a counselor at
Corona del Mar High School.
"Just because you're going to
college doesn't guarantee you'll
get a job."
Werley said many students
who should attend trade achoo1B
wind up going to college because
of parental pressure and
eventually fail.
He said also that parents who
never before conside~ sending
the ir children to community
colleges are now force d to
because of the economy.
All those interviewed agreed
that current economic times
would play a large part in the
future education and car eer
decisions of 1982 graduates. AMID MUCH GRUMPING, both Packard and McColl
are~ making noises a.bout mounting write-in. campaigns
against Crean in November.
This GOP flailing at each other has served as an
enormous encouragement to one Roy "Pat" Archer. Finances start classmates of '82. • •
You've never heard of Mr. Archer? Of course you
haven't.
He's the Democratic . nominee who will be facing
Crean, and maybe Paclalrd and maybe McColl in the
November general election.
And if the Republican voters manage to scatter
themselves all over the ballot between three candidates, and
all of the Democrats alive in the 43rd District. coupled with
a few disgruntled GOPers and independents, vote for
Archer, a funny thing might happen.
The unknown Mr. Archer might find himself packing
his bags for Washington. He could just get elected.
BECAUSE RE PUBLICAN registration lists so heavily
to starboard in the new 43rd precincts, you might suggest
that such a notion of a Democrat capturing the election is
preposterous.
Then you never saw the specter ,of Ron Cordova.
Just a few years back, there was a California Assembly
district that stretched from Newport Beach down into the
southerly reaches of our coastline. Listen, th.is district was
so heavily Republican that they should have just called off
the voting and mailed it in.
In th.is particular election a few eons back. Marion
Berge9on, the current assemblywoman from th~ area,
appeared to be a shoo-in for the GOP nomination. But a
political Ul)known, Newport auto dealer Jim $lemons, was
Shades of yesteryear: S/emons, Berge.on and Democrat Cordova
pouring a lot of money into the primary campaign. Some of
his mailers accused Mrs. Bergeson, a respected Newport-
Mesa school trustee, of being part of the poor standing of
education in the failure of kids to know their 3 R's.
. WHEN THE DUST settled, $lemons had won the
GOP nomination and a heck of a lot of Republicans were
mad about it. Mrs. Bergeson launched a write-in campaign
for that November general election.
· · The result was that the Republicans proved capable of
snatching defeat from certain victory.
Ron Cordova, a former Orange County deputy DA and
the Democratic nominee, won the seat in the Assembly. It
was incredible. Mrs. Bergeson had split the GOP vote like
she'd hit it with a meat ax. .-
CORDOVA WENT ON to serve our coastal region for
two years with considerable distinction. But Mrs. Berge90n
made it clear she'd have another go at it two years hence.
Cordova then bowed out with an unsuoceaafu1 run for the
state Senate.
Mrs. Bergeson went to Sacramento where she too
serves with distinction. Republican order bad been
restored.
Now lf current eventa llUITOUDdina Crean. Packard,
McColl and the anonymous Dttoocrat Mr. Archer IOWld
familiar, you may be lhaking your head and wondering if
bJatory la indeed repeating It.elf.
Or are Republfcana just slow leamers?
• ... moving
into medicine
Trish Chapman says she b8.rely
had to study in order to maintain
a 4.0 grade point average at
Corona del Mar High School.
The 17 -year-old Newport
Beach coed ia headed for Yale
University this fall after turning
d own offers from Corn~ll
University and the University of
Pennsylvania and making the
alternate list at Princeton and
Brown Universities.
"School was nevei: hard," she
said lightly. "I never studied
much unless it was absolutely
neoeaury.
"" H er grandpare nts set up a
trust fWld for her when she was
born that will allow her to pay
for the $10,000 per year tuition.
Trish said she isn't worried
about the ~conomy and she
doesn't believe her friends are
concerned about getting into the
best college or finding the right
job.
"Newport Beach is sort of a
dream world," she said. "1 don't
think most kids think about the
future. They think they'll have
their parents to fall on."
Although she was attracted to
the east.em school because of the
music opportunities, the dark-
• ... e ntering
the Air· Force
Even his best friends told
Kevin Bums that he'd wind up
dropping out of school when he
transferred from &it.ancia High
School to Newport Evening High
School
The 17-year-old Costa Mesan
was only a junior last September
when he decided to attend school
at night, 90 he could work d~
the aa, to help pay 80tne billi.
His father had to quit working
becauae he had cancer.
. A friendly young man with a
ROckwell painting face and sun-
bleac hed blond hair, Kevin
speaks softly but with firm
determination.
"I always said I'll get my
diploma," said Kevin. "That
paper means a lot to your life."
He's worked in fast food
restaurants since he was 15. He
likes to pay hla own way.
"Nothing'• easy," he said.
"You only rt something if you
work for it.
He worked all day and went to
echool up to five boun a night.
After fwi father waa well enough
to return to work in March
Kmn left his job to my bmDe
all day and study.
He tncr ! 11ed hil work load in
order to p-.duate with hla 45
cleemata. The achool la clminc
th1a WM due to cutbecb in the
district.
Kevin said he actually
SEEltS CHALLENGE
Trish Chapman leaves Corona
del Mar High School with 4.0
GPA.
haired teen-ager said she is
planning a career in medicine.
The only thing Trish is positive
about right now is that she will
not return to Orange County.
"The sunshine bothers me,"
she sai d . "I want to go
somewhere where the trees grow
naturally. I'm not sure I'll like
the winters, yet," she added.
DETERMINED -Kevin
Bums is finishing Newport
Evening High School •
preferred Evening H.ig)a School
to Estancia because he W\s able
to work at his own pace ..
"I felt I was learning more.
Some people say that the work la
a little bit easier. But you learn
your whole life."
In March Kevin joined the Air
Force under a delayed entrance
program that will allow him to
go into the eervioe next March.
"I feel rm aoh'I to do i.l1y aooci in the 8el'Yice. rm ao6na to
take advantaa4! of everythlna
they bave.'l"' he 1ald. "I'm
motivated and rm-~L rw
Ft to tel th1a done.'1
• . . . worrying
about sacrifice
Tim O'Brien said he worries a
lot a bout the sacrifices his
parenta are making to send him
to the University of Southern
California.
One of six childre n , the•
&itancia High School graduate
said he's afraid current economic
conditions could make it even
harder for his family to afford
the $12,000 per year tuition and
expenses.
"You feel kind of bad," said
the dark-haired articulate teen-
ager. "It will' definitely put
premure on me next year. I can't
go up there and screw around."
Still, the outgoing C.O.ta Mesan
is looking forward to the changes
college life will bring. Active in
football, tennis and track in high
school, he plans to get involved in
everything he can at USC.
"I think I'm going to grow. I'm
expecting such a change. I don't
know what it is yet," he said.
"It's not something I can put
my finger on," he continued. "It's
like a dark room, not in the 9Cal')'
sense, but when you're ready to
turn on the light and see what's
in the room."
Looking back on high school,
Tim says that he had fun, but
wishes that he had tried harder
. .. working
·toward a wish
Dawn Rolfe is a shy girl with a
sunny smile and an easy manner.
She wears a freshly starched red
and white striped dress for an
interview.
At 18, the Newport Harbor
High School graduate is a symbol
of the kind of conservative
student that has replaced thOlle
who made scruffy jeans and long
hair popular on campuses during
the late '60s and early '70s.
Dawn is looking for a job as a
waitre. 90 that she can live with
an older sister in September. In
the meantime, she plans to keep
working as a hostess and move
out of the cramped trailer she
shares with her mother in
Garden Grove.
~to stay with a family
in co.ta Mesa for the summer,
she bites her llp when she thinks
of a c.laamate who will live with
her boyfriend.
"MOit of my friends are going
to conese. Their families are all
pretty wealthy,'' said n-wn. "I
wiah it were me kind of. But rm
glad it's not being banded to me
on a .Uver platter."
Dawn continued to attend
Newport Harbor af1er the move
to Garden Grove two years ace>·
Ber pl.am are unclear now. Sbe
make tab a few night clMlet at Oranae CoMt . e.oueae. but f\lll-
Ume 8Chaol II out ol the qvesdon
"I doo't want to ha~ to aelc
DEVELOPING -. Tim
O'Brien graduates today from
Estancia High School.
and been more involved.
"Teen-agers today are more
concerned about having a good
time and then getting into the
best college pos&ble," he said.
"l think that kids are worried
about social issues. But they .feel
it's out of their hands," he said.
"So the first thing on their mind
is money,"
Covering all bases by majoring
in business and then going into
law, Tim says, "I'll do good in
what.ever I do. I'll do all right.
When I want something, I'll
work for it."
•• ....... I '·~ I
. (\·/··f(~
... ~
~1'.; '~ ~ ~ ~ "1flt· \ • I
ENTERPRISING -Dawn
Rolfe receives her diploma
from Newport Harbor High
School.
my mom for money," said Dawn.
"No one ever gave her money to
take ca.re of her when she had
four kids. She needs to have a·
little bit of luxury."
A bright student, who
maJntalned a 3.4 grade point
average. Dawn also tbade·
straight A's in a recent night
COW'le on businell mech1nes. •
"They have It made," laid
Dawn of her friends going bn to
college. "I don't know If any ot
them are worried about
anything. 1 know rn an a FC>d
Job." .
Supervisors' split vote defeats construction of ~gran~y units'
Under the~ poar11m, p_ropoHl wete 1upervl1ora
unltl of up tO MQ ~ feet ThomM Riley, H.arrteu W*le:r
could h ave been constr ucted and 8r\ICI Ne.unde. '
~son:. ~ .. ~fy Mu. Wieder called the ~ ... jiOpiilll •. ~ toward ''mdal
Tia• propoaal oarrled • ~
..., I wwwt that "'---be _ ....... , ....... ~ clo '" IDlalw tr' the ........ bJ ,._ eo,... old or ....... "Do .. ...w 10 a.w olUc. -a condition tounty. anodler ~ offa.1111 coDMded would be , dlfllult to...... Undlr 1 .... LtW ch9t _. y .... Waat 1...,_ lhe eUtet Ian. 11 tountl•1 ere
yean old would. withttand a
court challmp.
RUey 1ald he had u1rave
car.-.ri' .about the lmpect Ol
ad ditional ·bou1~
... 11 II ocm&al
wblre PlllidDI al.ready II lllMirl In .....,,
Clark, defended the pnJpCm1..
•ytftc, ''It la an natlknt .._ tq
aet more houaln1 In Ora~ ,
Counly, •peclall1 for MDiOt
du-."
Re reminded other board'
........ that "°' aD .. wt1h
hOulli an. thlm Woiild CiUillll>' b' .. 1raany unlll" 88d that tht
=pkll~rwWwjl -.... UllMl--'t
Midi "' ~ .... --.
•
I I
DMR ANN I.Am>ERS: I am boWnc
Q*i. How much more la the avenae penon
auppmed to take from the money-bu.nary,
•vUtdoua medical protemon? . , I )mt relld that the Amertcan Medical
~tlan chanpd lta bylawt 1n December
;o allow phY*ianl to 0 .dd lnteren OI' other
wmnable Ch.arpe to deUnquenT'acoouna.''
rm taJdni th1a right out of the newtpaper.)
The docton in th1a town live better than
inyone eJle. I thought they were suppmed -.
. HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
' .
·1Capricorn:
·Use talents
'riclay, Jane 18
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Stops are
. • ut -path is cleared for financial gain.
Corizons are broader -perspective comes
: ito focus. Talk is completed, you recover
rhat had been lost, missing or stolen. Libra
. nd another Aries play key roles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Cycle
· adicates renewed vigor, more confidence,
. ew starts, independence and love. You'll'
· 1 1ake rjgh t move at right time -
' .rcumstances turn in your favor.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Follow
· ll'OUgh on first impressions. Teach and
~ ~arn. Loo.k behind scenes for answers.
' emporary confinement ultimately works to
: our advantage. You are on brink of
i reakthrough -know it, be confiden\.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Diversify
· -communicate, accept invitations, display
· ?rsatility and humor. Gemini, Sagittarius
I ersons figure prominently. You meet
' <citing people, wish is fulfilled and you get
ews of promising business opportunity.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on
· nbition, willingness to make sacrifice in
. :-der to achieve goal Some revisiona are
ecessary. An Aquarian could point out
' 10phole in legal document. Individual in
osition of autho(.ity maket important
>nceai.on.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Good lunar
1pect coincides with distance, spiritual
alues, communication and travel. You'll
!arrl where you stand with a very special
el"80ll. Focus on messages, calls, style and
ain through writte~ word.
· LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Costs, lqans,
nancial status of partner or mate -these
re highlighted. You are provided with a
latform. You express views by sound and
i writing. Taurus, Scorpio and another
.ibra figure prominently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Plans
· Jbject to change; individual who }Dakes
Her may not have legal right to do so. Have
ltematives at hand. Aura of deception
. ominates ecenario. Be alertl define terms
nd eee places, people in realistic light,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):
ndividual who is heavy handed may be
~uffing. Know it, stick to basic course and
bn't veer from main objective. You'll have
?ore responsibility, there will be an added
hallenge and a relationship will heat up.
. CAPRICORN (D~c. 22-Jan. 19): :ircumltances turn in your favor -you'll
1ave chance to utilize natural tale nts,
,,Uities. Accent on personal magnetism,
thysical attraction, creative resources. You'll
omplete important aaignment.
AQUARIUS. (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be ready
or new start in new direction. Accent on •
ndependence, originality and achievement
·,4 objective via unorthodox procedures. '8sic il8UeS dominate. Security improves
md you're aided by older individual w,ho
~ benefit of experience.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): First
tpp.ressions prove accurate. Lunar emphaaia
jl short journeys, visits and a telegram
which contains good news. Cancer,
~apricorn , Aquarius natives figure
~tly.
..
. . It 4 !-.. ~
\ •HOROSCOPE
on medical hills draw interest
to be hwnanitadaiw, not lou lhark:I. Pleue
atve my letter the IJ*l8 it deMrvee. S!Jp\ me
-ASHAMED OF A ORCE
MUCH-ADMIRED Pl\Ol'ESSION
DEAi\ ASllAMED: Muy people '8•e
$e .. u. tkat all a*.J_alelul are ro111D1 ID
moD•Y. Not tr1e. Mor.-over, tlaey are
trtpped by tie MP eost of ll'flDI, J111 like
~rntot .. u. MOMy eo1&1 .... ,, ud die doctor
mut paJ ~ reat, Illa......., bey espeulve
141upmeal ud malpnettee tuaruee -
wlllcll II 011 of alpt Doll'1 for1e1 Ille yean
of tralnlas, lDtei"aUI» ud. residency -
woald yoa belleve U yeara for some
1peclaldea?
· Tr•e, 1ome play1lclan1 are
mony-laan1ry, bat 1•11 h a la a man
condldon ud no one aroap llu a monopoly
on p-eecl. Too oltea tlle NYlldan ud Ille
deatltt are tlle Jaat to 6e paid. I believe
addtq Interest to dellnqweat bill• ln't a .,.. ilea.
08, DEER -RU88ell Bruegge-ann, 64, • of
Boise, and hil wile, Helen, 61, escaped injury
· when a young deer ran into the path of their
car eut of Fairfield, Idaho. The deer was
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please try to
put yow..elf in our shoes and tell ua what
you would do.
A couple we know quite well accepted
an invitation to ~1 lit-down dinner party at
our home. The lhvitationa were sent out
three weeks ago. Mrs. X telephoned to say
they were attending THIS one, bl!t in the
future she and her hUJband would not
accept any invitation unlees they were free
to cancel at the lut moment.
The reaaon given for ~ 0 conditional
acceptance" is aa follows: 0 We don't want
our friends to plan'our lives. We want to do
as we please, whenever we feel like it. We
may want to stay at home that night, or we
may get an in vita ti on that is m~re
appealing.''
My husband and I believe this couple
would be hurt if they were excluded from
our parties from now on, yet we are not
comfortable about waiting 'til the last
minute -not knowing whether they will
Al' Wlrephoto
thrown through the windshield and went out
the back window of the car. The deer was
killed.
GOREN ON BRIDGE • BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
North-South vulnerable.
West deals.
NORTH
•A J 109 7 5
IV 8
0 107 5
•864
WEST EAST
+Q4 •K812
c;;1 J094 IV 65
0 84 O JtU
• A 10 97 5 3 • K J 2 SOUTH
+3
c;;i AKQJ732
0 AKQ6
•Q
The bidding:
We.t Nerth Eut 8Mdt
p.., Z • P ... 3 i;:;>
Pua 3 + P ... 4NT
p.., 5 0 Pu• f c;;i
P ... P ... Pue
Opening lead: A~ of •. • •
Some players find the
darndeat waya to lo.e trieb.
'This hand ia from the·.
Women'• Paira Champion·
ship or t he American Con-
tract Bridie League'• Spring
North American tonuwnent,
held In Niagara Falls in
March.
The bidding needs some
explanation. The opening bid
wu a weak two-bid, and
...
South's three heart response
was forcing. Sout h simply bid
a slam when she found out
that her partner held an ace.
West led the ace of clubs,
and Eut signaled with the
jack -the two might have
been a better choice. Now
West continued with a low
club, aod declarer ruffed
Eut's king. Declarer was
Karen Alu.on of Toronto,
who hu represented Canada
in world championship com-
petition. She was quick to
take advantage of that
defense.
Declarer ran off all her
heuts but one, then cashed
the three top diamonds. T his
was now the position:
NORTH
• AJ
c;;i -
0 -+8
WEST . EAST
+ K .8
IV -
0 J
• Q4
c;;i -
0 -
•1
SOUTH • s
c;;i 2
0 6 ·-
·-
When declarer led her lut
' .
trump. the defenders were
caught in a double squeeze.
West had to hold her club. so
she was forced to let go a
spade. Dummy's club was
discarded. and East had to
hold a diamond Lo guard
against declarer's diamond,
so s.he too had to discard a
spade. Dummy's ace-jac.k of
spades now took the last two
tricks.
West can break the
squeeze by shifting to a
spade al trick two. But a
simpler method would have
been to lead the ten or clubs
at the second trick. Then
East could preserve the king
of clubs in the end position,
coming down to the king or
spades and a card in each
minor suit. Now the squeeze
does not operate beeause •
West simply holds on to two
spades.
-How do yoa ehooH the
be•t opelllq lead? Charlet
Gorea hu tile UH~er. For a
copy of .. W1.aa111c Opelliaa
Lead•," •Hd U .85 to
'"Goroa-Le.wh," care of tlal•
Dew•peper, P .O. Box 259,
Norweocl, N.J. 0'1648. Make
cMeb peyable to New•
paperlMeb.
show . What do you think? -
CONDITIONAL ACG:EPTANCE IN
TORONTO
DEAR CONDITIONAL: I woald
plea1antly Inform tlae co•ple l~at yow
andentand tbelr position ud respect It. I
would lben tell diem yoa 11or llaey will M
equally tolerant of YOU coDdllloaal
invitation. In other wordl, U, al tlle latl
moment, yoa decide to lnvtle aaotlaer
coaple In tllelr place, tbey sbollld nol feel
burt U you telephone tbem ud uk tbem to
1tay bome.
After THAT converuUon Utey 1bo9ld
not be 1urprl1ed wben daey receive ao
fatare tnvltaUon1 to yoar laome. Sacb
arrogance!
CONnDENTIAL to Apple·C-eeked
Boy's Motber In Wlscoutn: Plea1e don't
1end tbat letter to his commanding officer.
Your ion wUl wind ap on latrine daty for 1lx
months. Let "Apple Clleekl" handle It on~ •
own.
Discover how to be date bait without
falling hook, line and sinker. Ann Landers'
booklet, "Dating !Jo's and Don '~" will help
you be more poised and sure of yourself on
dates. Send 50 cents al.ong with a long,
stamped, self-addressed envelope with yow-
request to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995
Chicago, m. 60611.
flMA IOMlfCI
AT WIT'S END
Moder~-day
dad the best
"Dad 1982" is not the same Dad we paid
tribute to a d~de ago.
A funny thing ha'ppened to him on the
way to the women's liberation movement.
He became liberated too.
Th~stereotyped-features are gone: the
stiff upper lip in the face of sorrow, the
preoccupation with car mileage, the garage
full of power tools that he hated, the burden
of being the sole breadwinner. In their place
is a father who is allowed to cry, to sweat,
and to fail.
HE'S A MAN WHO CAN CHANGE a
diaper and heat a bottle without losing his
manhood. He can smell good and wear pastel
shirts and not raise eyebrows.
He can kias his sons in the same spirit in
which he kisses his daughters, and fight for
custody of them and stand a fair chance of
winning if he has to.
He can wear tennis shoes on airplanes
and go on a diet. He can get a job as a nurse
or a secretary and not be unique.
He doesn't have to pace the floor of a
waiting room while his child is being born,
nor does he have to lose face because his
wife supports him while he is finishing his
education or is between jobs.
The old "Wait till your father gets
home" that used to mean an hour of talks
and discipline, now means, "We eat dinner."
He can ~ up gusto for something
dietary and no one cares. A hurricane can
bear his name. Putting gas in the car and
changing the oil is no longer a job for
MALFSONLY.
He 'can make stroganoff, a good cup of
coffee, treat ring-around-the-collar, and find
the working end of a vacuum sweeper.
BE IS LESS THREATENED by
women, children, and responsibility as he
becomes more aware of our similarities and
not our differences.
. Retinal reattachnient stllgery success£ ul
Never in the history of civilization have
fathers been elmer to their children. They're
no longer that elusive figure who Uled to
appear on cue, count them, have dinner with
them, and peck them aood night on the
cheek as they went to bed. Dad 1982 la a
vital part of their lives. ' r U8ed to ay, '4God invented man and
said, 'I can do better than that,."
rm not ao sure anymore.
rou1 HIAL111
OR. PETER J . STEI NCROHN '
.POTSIOIS
BY AStiLEIGH BRILLIAm
. ' •
I
1
For
Fathe;'s Day
..
Choose a gift 'from our excellent collection
of silk neckwear from Robert Talbott and
other fine makers. Offerad in stripes,
foulards, and clubs in all of Dad's favorite
colors.
17th & Irvine Ave., Newport Buch, Calif. (714) 645--0792
The Write Gift for Dad·
Crafted from richly grained natural woods,
H~ writing instruments are the gift Dad
will treasure for a lifetime. Dress up his
rorrespondenc:e even more with this distinctive
new stationery by ~. Stationery $150;
Notes $3.75.
Choose a musical stein,
a super letter opener,
scra:pbooks and address books.
Don't forget the Graduate!!
Cards • party goods and
gifts • napkins • matches
and stationery imprinted.
·..w
~ li'4~~
PAPER UNLIMITED
I
The.Sport
Duffel •
These colorful bags are made ofl100%
cotton duck, are water repellent and
have a zippered "laundry-chute"
pocket ~hat Is waterproof. Perfect for
the active rather In your
family.
father's Day
Sunday,
June 20th
•
A store that offers nne traditional sportswear
for men, women ·
and boys.
IOU llww. Nowpoit S.n c.w-""""661.?0ol
A· 811Hi•I Dad
De1erve1 A 811.HJ.al (Jj/L
Gift Ideas ...
Gourmet
Coffees
Chocolate
lnitiab
Jelley
Bell~
Tr a ya
Unbreakable
Glu ...
. .
Mug1
The
Red
Plate
<J}fer,/<f ifl ~'in~~
COLLECTIBLES CONSUMABLES
1100 Irvine Ave.
In.side N.-port Balboa S.9inp
(714) 648-8771
tan/creme
nevy/creme
country tan
white bµck
dirty buc«/burnt ivory
I Ol2 llVIMI A VI. S 41 1614
-~-
htlale Elegance
For" Father's Day
Eminently proper man's ring in
heavy 14K gold. Inlaid 1rame of
black onyx defines the oval, a
brilliant diamond stars in· the
center. ·Matching cuftlinks ...
available.
,
Mary Barr. Certiti~emologist
-CHARLES H. BARR
I
I
I I
•
-,,, ..........
TENDS GRAVE -Every week. Marion L. Massey places flower-, on·
the graves of Bing Crosby and five family members at Holy Crea
Cemetery in Loe Angeles. Besides the late singer, Mrs. Masse>:_ tends the
lf&Ves of his first wife Dixie; his father and mother, Harry and
Catherine; his brother Laurence, and grandson Brian. ·
Scientists link diet
o cancer risks -
WASHINGTON (AP) -People
y be able 10 prevent many common
cancera by eating leea tatty meata and
more ve~~blem and grains, the
National . emy of Sclencea saya.
The report, issued Wednesday after
most comprehensive study of the
lnk between cancer and general
utrition, said many cancers appear to
food related, though researchers
't know why.
Nevertheless, people may be able to
uce their risks by developing good
ting habits even before the final
vidence is in, an academy panel said.
"We should try to put what is
earned to use as soon as possible to
void any unnecessary delay in taking
reventive action, given the long time
~rame over which most. cancers jdevelop, 11 the report said.
, Dr. Clifford Grobstein , an
experimental biologist from UC San
Diego, cautioned that the dietary
recommendations should not be·
· ~arded as aaauring a cancer-free We.
Eat more fruits,
vegetables and
whole-grain cereal
products daily.
"Our knowledge is not adequate
today and, indeed, may never be able
to provide such assurance," but
preventive measures appear to be the
best way to achieve significant cancer
reduction, he said.
Grobstein noted the suggested diet
is similar to others recommended to
reduce risks of heart disease, diabetes
and other diseases.
"In general, the evidence suggests
that some types of diets and 90ine
dietary compo~nts tend to incre8le
the risk of cancer, whereas others
tend to decrease it, 11 said the reeearch
panel
The committee, made up of
prominent scientista and food experts,
said there is not enough data to
specify what percentage of cancer
risk.s can be attributed to diet or how
much improved eating habita might
lower risla.
But the study said some evidence is
strong enough to recommend these
guidelines designed to reduce the
risk.a of developing cancer:
-Eat lea food high in any kind of
f.ata, aaturated or unsaturated. Tbe
main IOW'C.."eS ot fat in the American 4iet are meat and pooltry, whole-milk
4a1ry producta and cooking oila.
-I.at more fruits. vegetables and
=aif~ain cereal products daily, y thoee high in vitamin C,
. qarotene (a subatanoe that converts
into vitamin A in the body) and other
Rrptective products. These foods
ti'dude citrus fruits, dark-green and ~eep-yellow vegetables, carrots.
winter squash, 10matoes. cabbage,
broccoli and Brussels sprouts.
-Eat very little salt-cured, salt-
pidded and smoked foods, including
sauaa1e1, smoked fish and ham,
baOon. bot. dop and boJosna.
-Drink alcohol on ly in
moderation. Excessive consumption of
alcohol, particularly combined with
cigarette smoking, is associated with
increased risks of stomach and hmg
cancer.
The committee cautioned that the
guidelines are "interim" and could
change as scientists learn more about
diet and cancer.
The group recommended that the
National Cancer Institute, which in
1980 asked the academy to su.mmari?.e
what was known about nutrition and
cancer, review the guidelines at least
every five years.
The report said the strongest
evidence for a link between cancer
and diet was with fats. Human
lifestyle studies and animal tests show
higher rates of breast, colon and
prostate cancers in p opulations
consuming large amounts of fat, it
said.
The average American diet gets 40
percent of its calories from fat and the
committee said a "moderate and
practical target" would be to reduce
this to 30 percent.
The American Meat Institute
condemned the recommendations,
~they were hued on insufficient
evidence which does not show that a
reduction in protein and fat will result
ln a decree8e in cancer.
nie trade aaeociation said the study
dilagreed with previous diet reports
from the academy and others.
Grobstein a c knowledged this
disagreement, but stood by the new
recommendations.
Diabetes study
focuses on
• immune system
SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -A form
of diabetes that affect s children
apparently results from an attack on
the pancreu by the body's Immune
system. which normally prot.ectl the
bc>dy from. invading organisms,
re8eU'Chers say.
Diabetes resulta' from a failure of
the pancreas to produce· lnaulin,
which helps the body use sugar.
Without insulin. diabetics can fall into
fatal comas.
The findinp apply to a type of
diabetes known as T y pe 1 , o r
juveline-onset, affecting about 1.5
million of the 11 million Americans
with diabetes, a ccording to Dr.
William G . Blackard of the Medical
College of Virginia.
Blackard. who chaired a symposium
at a meeting of the American Diabetes
Association, said the discovery al8o
fueld hope that a way may be found
to 2revent Type 1 diabetes .
Type 1 dfubetes la caused by the
deterioration and disappearance of the
"islets of Langerhans," which are
small insulin-secreting pocket• of
tissue in the pancreas.
But what causes the immune
system to break down and attack the
pancreas is not yet understood,
according to Dr. George Ei.se.nbarth of
the JOllµl Clinic ln Boa10n.
..
• •
Women's Hall of Fame
SEN.CA FAUS, N.Y. (AP) -A
woman who championed labor and a.c.me tM tint temai. C.blnet member
wUl b• tnduct•d into the National
Women'• Hall of Fame.
The late Franc. Perkina, who wu
MCntary of labor under Franklin D.
ftomevelt, will be inducted wtth another
woman, u yet uncholen, ln a ceremony
at Dlenhower Collele he,.. July 17, aaJd
Marilyn Bero, preslaent of the Hall of
J'ame.
The hall of fame, located ln Seneca
tall.a becaWle the Fint Women'• Rlchll
Convention WU held Mre ln 1848, bepn
ln 1M8 and 10 yeuw later lnducted lta
flrtt .mftftben, lnclu.dlnc auffra,euea !:Uzabeth Cady Stanton and Suaan B.
Anthony, femlnlat joumaliat Amelia
Bloomer and Harriett 1\abman. a leader
of the 11under1round railroad" that 1p1rtted alavee out of the South before
the CMJ War.
The board of dlrectora tnclude1
columnlU l!rma Dombeck, race car
driver Janet Guthrie, Jane Pauley of the
"Today Show" and cookbook author
Julia Child.
• Ma. Pvklna, who died ln lM&, WM a
principal architect and fdvocate ot
JWoeeyelt'• New Deal . .Before that, lhe
wu New York lndUIU'tal comm1'1ioner.
work.Ina to lmprov• condlUone ln sweat
1hopa.
"The pl'OfP'ell1ve rnuaurea that lhe
pioneered a.rid fought to aee enacted into
law, particularly minimum hour and
wage laws, fac10ry ufety regulaUone.
and Social Securlty. are no longer
exceptional, but are an important part of
our llvett,11 Ma. Bero aald ln announcing ·
the .erection. 1
Sfllf
Entire Store 25%to40%off I
LIMITED
TIME
ONLY N~C'TWD fTHll PCWDaD _______________ _
FAMOUS
$28 LEVI'S HOPSACK
4 Popular Colort I Cleaelc Knit s 19· GOLF SHIRTS
10 Fatnlonable Colora
$15
OUR REG. PRICE S25
MANHATTAN
DRESS SHIRTS
LONG OR SHORT SLEEVES
SOLD REG. $25
s1 I DACRON/COTTON · 2 POCKETS
7 SPORTS SHIRTS $1 7
SOLIDS e PLAIDS • . •
HALF SLEEVES OUR RETAIL $25.
FASHION FIVER
2 PANTS
SUITS $1 I HAGGAR
5 9 EXPAptp.0-MATIC
I LAC KB
WITH AEVERSIBl.E VEST
c:;ALLWOOL
SPORT COATS
REG. $225 Our • 1 Seller In Slac;M sgg
522& VALUE
8YPAlM8EACH • BOTANY600 •STAHLEY Bl.ACKER
l~HewthorneBlll<I.
(Old Town MaJQ
W Co. f'ul>IOn Pie~•
:H ... l lo 8"Hoclcal
FLORAL DESIGN PLASTIC ::;;~...._ UCQUERWARE
From Japan
Pretty chrysan·
themum design In
white and gold
on rich dark blue.
FLOWERY WHITE PORCELAIN
SOAP DISH 6 TOOTHBRUSH
HOLDER From Japan
Pretty lavender blossoms on
graceful contoura.
DISH ""
•
SHELL SOA.
41!."x5" '-...::
1.99 .
TOOTHBRUSH
r_-,-~....., HOLDER
4''/a " wide
3· ta11
TRAVS
101/t • dla.
11 '/, • dla.
5'1•"x7•/i"
EARTHENWARE PLANT
TENDERS From Taiwan·
Insert lender In soll and
waler will seep slowly
through unglazed surfaces.
Six assorted shapes.
To appro>e. 5• Jong .89.each
TWO TONE
NATURAL
CAMI! ·sHILF
UNJTS
·From
Slngapote
H1nda<>mt
sturdy units
· to hold
tow.11,
boolta or
· plants.
19.81
28.11
II.II
Appro>e.
29" long
1.99
3.99
•27
REG. $35.
NATURAL TEAK
CARVING 6 SERVING
PIECES From Thalland
Rlchly grained teak
adds utlllty and style
to the dinner or
party table.
COSTA MESA 1912Harbor81vd. (71 4)642·3177
----f PALM SPRINGS 320 N Pelm Can on (71•) 326-5-455
SIMI VALLEY . K·MAAT PLAZA • lll05152Nll 18
NATUR~L
TEAK
WALKING
STICK
From
Thailand
CHEESE, SNACK OR
UNDERLINER TRAYS
With
carved
detall
for a
Jaunty
Dad.
FROM OUR
CLOTHING
SECTION
COTTON
"RUGBY" PANTS
From Pakistan
Roomy cut panls
have elastlclzed
drawstring
walstllne,
8" SQ.
1.69 Approx.
4'0" long
.99
Make all
work a
pleasure.
9 SIZES
9" to
20· dla. av,• 10
11· deep
1.59
to 7.99
lwo ln·seam
pockets and
one back
pocket.
Assorted Colors
Tan and
brown
jar keeps
those
tools
nealand
handy.
H~· dla.
7V. • tall
3.29
S·M·L
11 .44
DOUBLE LA YER
PALM RIB SUN HAT
From China
Cool and jaunty!
3.79
BAMBOO
TIKI
GARDEN
TORCH
From
The
Philip·
pines
'A long
shaft of
bamboo
holds
a metal
container
and wick
to llght
a garden
party.
Uses
regular
lantern
oll.
s2• ta11
4.49
72" tall
5.55
WALNUT FINISH
BENTWOOD STOOL SLENDER OILONQ
From Romania ,._ .... ..,, NATURAL TEAK
Handsome, rugged 'ARSONS TAILE
etool has a •J~ed. From Hong Kong
molded plyaeat. Teak *'"' tep on solid
29• tall teek lega forma a trim
29 89 contemporary claaalc. •
•
.,~
QUEEN ARRIVES -Queen Beatrix of the
Netherlands is greeted by Georgia's Gov.
G eorge Busbee upon her. arriv~ at the airport.
The Atlanta visit is the start of a two-week
tour of 10 American cities to commemorate the
bicentennial of peace and friendship between
the U.S. and the Netherlands.
'DIATH· NDllCIS
MULVEY sisters Mary Kathman and
PEG GY E. MULVEY, Audrey Hejlek of St. Louis,
passea aw ay on J un e 1'1 1 Missouri, 5 grandchildren.
1982 et Mission Commuruty Rosary and Funeral Mass at
H ospital A lon g tame St. Sunon & Jude Catholic
resident of Laguna Beach, Church, Hunungton Beach,
Ca. Mrs. Mulvey LS survtved Ca. on Friday June 18, 1982
by her son Tim Mulvey or at 9:00AM with interment at
Anaheim. Ca Memo ria l Queen of Heaven Cemetery,
service s w ill be he ld on Rolling HeighU>. Ca. Dilday
T hursday. Juhl' 17, 1982 a t Bro t h e r s M o rtua r y ,
2:00PM m the ch a pel at Hunungton Beach directors.
McConruck Mortuary. 1795 842-7771.
Lag una Can yon Road , HYMAN
Laguna Beach. Ca. with Dr SADIE HYMAN , a
Andrew Straley orflciatmg resident of Newport Beach,
Inummenl wall be private. Ca. Passed away on June 15, M cCor m ick Mortuary, Laguna Beach d irectors l982. She is survived by her son Dr. Marvin Hyman, 494-94 15. daughter Enid Barkan. 2 KOFFORD M. E. RINK KOFFORD. sisters and 1 bro ther, 3
SR., resident of Oil City , grandch ildren and 2 great-g ran c d c h l l d re n . S h e Pennsylvania Passed away be longed t o the S e n ior on June 15, 1982 He was a former resident of CdM. Ca. Cit.l.1.ens Club of C.OSta Mesa
M r. Kofford was a 1922 and Oasis Club o( Newport
gradu ate o f Alle ghen y Beach, Ca. Services will be
College in M eadville. held on F rid ay, June 18,
Pennsylvania. he worked for 1982 a t l O:OO AM a t the
the Pen?.oil Com~ny until Pacific V iew C h apel.
his retirement an l960. Mr. lntennent at Pacific View
Kofford IS survived by tus Memorial Park. In lieu of
son M.E Rmk KoUord. Jr. Oowen the family request,, donations be made to the and family of Newport KJdney Foundation. Pacific Beach, Ca SclVlces will be h e I d i n 0 1 1 C 1 t y , View Mortuary directors.
Pennsylvarua Friday. June OLSON
18, 1982 VIOLET E.A. OLSON, a
BAXTER reside nt of H unting ton
JODI ANNE BAXTER, Beach, Ca. Passed away on
age 22. a n .>s1derit or Corona June 15. 1982 at the age of
de! Mar, Cl. Passed away on 91 She is survived by a son
June 14, 1982 Survtved by Carl B. Olson o f Canoga
t-lovmg parents Leonard and Par..k , Ca .. l daughter
Nancy &xter of Corona del Avyoe A. Ceci o( Costa Mesa,
M a r . C a . . m a t e r n a I Ca .. 1 brother Fred Pheeney
grandparents Cha rles a nd o f M a ss a c husetts , 7
Margaret Small o ( Pasadena. grandson s and 8 great-
I Ca .. paternal grandmother g randchildre n . Funeral
' Celeste Hood of Huritrngton services w ill be held on
Beach, Ca and also survrved Friday. June 18, 1982 at
by several unck>s, aunts and l :OOP M at Pierce Brothers
cousins. Memorial services Bell Broadway Cha~) 'with
will be held on Thursday, R ev. Charles D . C lark
J une 17. 1982 at l l :OOAM at officiating. Inte rment at
the Pacific View Cha pel Pacific View Memorial Park .
with Dr. Gllbert P. Prince P ier ce Brothers B e ll
oH iciating lnurnme nl at Bro a dwa y M o rtua ry
Pacific View Memonal Park. dlrectors.
In lieu of flowers memonal JONES
contribuuons may be made RUTH s. JONES, resident
to the Cancer Socie ty or of Newport Beach, Ca. since
Hoeg Memon aJ Hospital 8th 1926. Passed away on June
Floor Cancer Ward Pacific l6, 1982. Born December 25,
View Mortuary direct.Ors. 1899 in New York. Survived
GEHL by her daughter Carol J. and
CELF.sTE F. GEHL, age son-In-law John Cazier of
67, resident of Huntington Loe Angeles, Ca. Memorial
Beach, Ca Passed away on serv ices will be held on
J une 14, 1982 Survived by Friday, June 18. 1982 a t
h e r d a ughter Sandy C 2:00PM at Pacific View
P a r r ick o f Huntington M o rtuar y C h ap e 1 .
Beach. Ca .. son Henry P . Entombment at Pacific View
G ehl of La Mar da, Ca .. Memor ial Park, Newport
IAL Tl IUIGHOH
SMITH & TUTHILL
· WESTCLIFf CHA,ll
427 E 17th Sr
Costa Mesa
64n·937 t
rtHCl .. OTHEIS
SMITHS' MOUUAI Y
627 Main SJ
HuntmQ1on BJach
536-6539
'ACVfe YllW MINOalAl. ,._.
Cerretery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
~2700
McCO.Mta MOITUAllH
Laquna Beach
• 494-!M15
Laquna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
.....oa' u.w*-MT. oun
Mortuary •Cemetery
Cremiitorv
1825 Gisler Ave
CotttMffl 540-5~4
Beach . Ca. Pacific Vie w
Mortuary directors.
COHN
TU.LIE COHN. a resident
of Orange County aince 1963.
Passed away on ,June 16,
1982. She was active in the
Neugart.en Sunshine Club in
Detroit, Michigan a nd a
member of the both Temple
Be t h S h olo m and their
Senior Citizens Club. She iJ
surivived by her IOllS Walter
of Michigan and Sherman of
California, her sister Rae
Cohen, 4 grandchildren and
4 great -grandchildren .
Graveside services will be
held on Friday, June 18,
1982 at l:OOPM at Harbor
Law n -M o unt Olive
Memorial . Services und~r
the direction of Harbo
t.awn-M o unt Ollv
Mortuary o f Coata Mesa,
MO-MM.
Fly spray
study OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr. hH 1tgned a blll
alloc1tln1 f870,000 to
itudy wbeiher anU-
medfly 1prayln1 ln-
creaHd the rits of
t>lrtb Ufecta . The ~t..88U4by8en. Olan• wateon,, D-Lo1
An1elH, flaancH 1
thrtt·part reHarch ,,..,. ..
.. --·1
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, June 17, 1182
'El Sh~inko' nOt 'Love Boat'
Paycliologist ho t couples on way to divorce court,
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -Before
heading to dlvorce court, a
payc h o loalu la l nv l tln1
combatant coupl to apend three
daya with hlrn on a 33-foot
crulter as a $1,S~ 10lution to
their problema.
The p1~cholo1lat, Ricardo
Glrona of Toledo, aaya he'a had
no taken on hie Lake Erle
crul9o-workahop, which he calla
a unlq_Ue approach to marrlage
COUl\lellng.
"In ..U the years I've been
practicins psychology, I've never
heard of anything like It,'' says
Girona, who a.pent 14 years on
/
I
th flCUlty at BowlJna Green
State University.
Olrona's cruiae Uiolatea couplet
In a neutrat' environment and
Ill.Iowa him lntenaive, etcht-hour
perloda to evalua~t what'I
breAking up the . "l\'a common payc ologlcal
-practice to teU a couple with a
marriage in trouble to take a
weekend p fl, get out of town, get
away from your troublea,"
Girona said. "Basically. th1a ii the
same kind o1 th.Ing, but I am
aboard the boat to obeerve the
peop"l e and how they
communicate with each other. Or
wh f ther they don 't
communicate."
The fee covera all flM!ala, he
-~· 'By the time you flaure ln the
coat of operaUn1 the boat,
fuollne and the Ucenled captain
hire, I barely break even. But l
think lt'a an lnteret1tlna idea that
I believe will help 101ne people,"
he aa.ld.
''Thia lan't anythlna killky,"
Girona added. "It lan't called the
'Love Boat' or anything like
that."
The name of the boat? "El
Shrinko."
•
ASSAULTED? -
Colle1e 1tudent
Richard M. Turcott.e
chime two U .S .
Marine• at th•
embauy. In Moecow
cut hil hair, made h1m
do calhthenlc1,
verbally abUllld h1m
and threatened to
mutilate him. He 11
1hown here two
month~ after hh
alleged ordeal.
. .
•• {
by 811 Keane
Mli\RMJ\Dt:KE by Brad Anderson
..
"Watch your Ice cream cone ... one lick
and It's gone."
~.A LIEUTENANT
eTEVE~ JU& f't.()NED ANO~ FOi{
O.&.! HE 1..EFT A MEOOA(;E' HER CLIENT
JOHN J. JONE£:> If> MCK lN JAii.. I HE meo TO MOt.D UP A UQVC)ft 5TORE!
by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
l
' ff ( r ,
:
"Poor old Elt1rm1n la atlll 1uff1ring from lnaomnlt
1111.11 •
Hank Ketchum
' ;
i
1
-~~~~~~;;;:::::::;~,, IR
•lSNT ™1 SWfET? 6~ IS TfAO{JNS H~ 10 ~0.#
·by Harold Le Ooux
AND ~HEN ~ DOES,
Re.MIND ME NOT TO &AY.
't TOLD 'IOU 50''
PMNIJYI
. .
by Charlea M. Schulz --------. Mm'S nl ~p FWJS
ATTOllHEV ON HIS llji\V
TO THE 'mlAL ...
IF VOtl1'E GOIN& TO
COORT, 'rOO SHOOlO
REMEMBER TMIS ...
·NANCl'
AUNT FRITZl---YOUR
OLDWOOOEN
LAW'N CHAIR IS
DISAPPEARING
GORDO
t'l:NKl' "INKER•E.tN
Not oruY is the Westvjew
}{jgh School Scapegoat
Marching Band one of the
iAP
TAP
and.thus eminently
qua1.i.fi.ed to march in
the Tournament of Roses
lMAT "'°"1 Mfl FrT
IN MV 8«JEFCASE !
by Ernie Bushmiller
c---~ ....
CAJJ'r HLJJ<Tf
EJEiTl!li(
'THAJJ POIA10
CHI~
Tl-IE.'{
57l.JFI!.
THEIR
by Gus Arriola
f:ATHEAD.5 • wrru t.JOWf
by Tom Bat1uk
but there isn~ a. single
member of the band who
is allergic t.o flowers !
by Jim Davis t.op bands in the state ... Parade ...
MOON MI: LLI NS . --TtlAT MUCH ® ... Bur IT
To Rf:-C~PET WEARS
MY H,All ?? Ot.JTSO
F}ST!
EMMA!
WHAT AP£
YouDo1N<5
INMY
dVEf<A,LLS?
48 Golf dub
49 w.tric unit
50 Legurntia
52Grlin--
~ -Baba
_.,.IDAY'I
l'VZZLI IOt. VED
57 Yechllng
trophy:
2wordl
eoMk#a ., Dlfllt
82 Rope
13 Letter
... Btldge Mitt ~ioiie
-'---'~
DR.SMOCK
\alMIC~ Ot4£. '? ~ rr f"I~
....___.., LIT1\.t 91~'1 '?
SO IF ybu Ff:fSt,, L..IKE: YOU'RIS ee>NNA FA1N-r OR PASS ou-r, KIDDO ...
-I
'1 t.
:r .
'l 11 • l
I
f
I
•
Otange Cout OAjLY PILOT/Thurtday, June 17, 1H2 117
' High. school -tO quit using subliminal tapes in Riath
IANTa (AP) -PupQI lp&nd l1molt dally by 180 pupOa. ay ln M.:lce Mid In an lnWYSew. few wordl on the tap11 to IUlt hit n,ht to expeci to be taupt math, the__.• 61 =e -pu1: "Jl\Wy ICtlon. every word,· 11Th ... k!de are nol problem own purpcw. and a rl1ht not to have hl•
ti11r lnatb ...... we ew.ry thoulht. and Wfl'Y fMlinl t. lddl. They are normal, everyday "U a atudent "4Pl1 up for a maCh ~ed with while hi'•
they wwe m4ftl)ed wtUa cllltanl iovln.aly sulcSM and dlncwd to teen • ...., and they don't need clam. cw any other ci... he Ml the U..,'' the .
,., of crillb1nl wawe; ~ lnto my ute and Into my that kind of motivation." ~~=~~=u ~~:y •u 00e 11 and tt:':.·rx~ .. ~~~ 'Pretenders' guitarist dies
-.cher Rot.t DIPtnto cs.:rtbed Doria found out aboui It po•ltlve ln thll worl d ol L08ANOELl'S(AP)-Jam. 1poke1man Bob Merli• In Lot
11 a 1UbUmlnal way of bollWtna two week• afo when her ion heptMty." · Honeyman &ott. a cuJtaritt with Ante•· He Mid an autoply wu
ciDilfidlnct and Polldve ~. tnmd91'Nd ou ol IXPlnto'1 clMI Superintendent Robert i,.. Pyle the rock lfOUP The Pretenden, planned to det.ennine the cau. of
Ju tM eouncl of wa"9 he1jed atw hAI A 8rlldel had Wien to laid, 0 I don't think the taf>ee wW wu found dead eerly Wednelday death.
&M pupUa concentraw and relax at ~. the lild. be Wiid next 11me1ter becau.e I of W\koown caU11e1 ln London, a
the w time, DIPtnto Mid the SM aom• DiPlnto of playine don't think ~ will ~ able tO IJ>Oketman for W.arner BrotheN . Scott, 26, w11 Jeed Cwtarilt and ~ -repeat.cl 212 till* In a with the mlndll of children. ahow any empirical evidence that Recordl laid. performed keyboarda and voaalt
U-m!nute clau -encouraaed 11It'1 m~ It t. not within their Ule hal fJnproved aradel." "H• w .. found at a friend'• for the four.member 1roup. A
them to 1trlve for protpet'[ty, hia Job ptlon to be foollna Mr1. Maclle aatd, HTbere'• a apartment ..,.ly thil momlnl &n tormer i.uuar 1aluman from
IUCl'ell and aood health. around with thele lddt' hMdl ln jrftt potential for abu.e with thi9 London. He apparently died tn hJe Hereford. J!!ncland, he Jl*ied the AP• 0 INT ED -The tapes, wh1cb were heard the IU1le ot a math ~" Mn. activity. Someone could ~ a 1leep," aald .warner Brothen poup in 1978 when it f1nt fonned.
CJeoraeW.Aucott.47, ~----;...._----------------------------------------------------------------..;.__-----------~-------------------------------ha1 been named
pre1lden t of the
World Tire Group of
the-Firestone Tire and
Rubber Co.
Builders
schedule
• seminar
The California Land
Tltle Company of Santa
Ana is sponsoring a
leminar entitled "How to
Market Troubled Real
Estate in a Troubled Real ~te Market."
~willbe held at 8 a.m. June 3't> at
the Marriott Hotel in
Newport Beach .
Speakers will be:
-Steve DeMarco,
president of Developers
Reeearch ln Tustin.
-Barbara Stewart,
chief executive officer of
B..J. Stewart Advertising
and Public Relations,
Inc. of Newport Beach.
-Beverly Tltompeoa,
president of Beverly
Thompson, Inc. in
Newport Beach. ' -Laareace S .
Webster, executive vice
pres ide nt of RFS
Development Cor-
poration ln Orange.
-Marge Ulloa, a
su~r at California
Land Tltle Company.
-Terry O'Neil ,
eJGeCUtive vice president
of Builders Sales Corp.
of Santa Ana, and Marslaall I. Gralaam,
dire c t o r o f the
guaranteed purchase
division of that firm.
For Information call
835-5575, extension 239.
Son, 4,
upstages
governor
Savings to 50% and ·morel
s S 0 F.REE Chicago Cutlery . s ·• paring knife ~Ith purchase
every two
OR LESS
Kingsford
Charcoal (10 lb. bag) ........ 2.49
Leviton push-push
' rotary dimmer ... . .. . ... . .. . . .. 2.88
6' household
extension cord . . . .. . .. .. . . . . . . . 88C
D Con Flea Stop f oggers
(6 oz), also kills.
pre-emergent fleas . . .. . . .. . 3.88
Super Glue (SUP 1) ............ 77e
Foot air pumps
Include air gauge .. ...... ... . 3.88
Armorall vinyl protection
4 oz .................................. 9k
4 ft. fluorescent tubes
by Sylvania (F 40CW) ...... 9k
Zynolyte speed enamel
spray paint .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 9k
Zynolyte Rust Mate spray .... 1.19
Zynolyte Epoxy spray ........ 1.99
Megulars Cleaner I
Wax for autos ......... .... . ... 2.88
Plug-in Tlmer-
lntermatic (D 111 B) ........ 4.88
Propane torch fuel 14.1 oz 1.99
Master Combination lock
(#1500) ........................... 2.99
Stanley Utility knife
( #299T) ..... ..... ... ..... .. . . .. ... 1.88
Stanley mini-hacksaw
(# 15-210) ........................ 2.49
Sytvanla soft white bulbs
2 pac, 60 or 75 watt ........... W
Stainless steel
salt and pepper set ........ 1.49
Water softener salt (50 lb)
(Anaheim Hills only) ........ 1.99
Masking tape (3/4") .............. 8k
Georgia Pacific llquld pool
.chlorine (Anaheim Hiiis only)
(2 gal. pkg. llquld) .~ ........ 2.88
Sanyo
portable radio (#AP 1250)3.88
SUPER DAD
license plate frames . . . . . . .. 9k
OR LESS
Brite llte 24"
fluorescent fixture
w/replaceable bulb ......... 7.88
Trashcan, 32 gal , .
brn, Loma ......................... I.II
Charm rock
for gas BBQs (50 pc) ...... 9.88
Beach chairs, blue canvas
with alum. frames ........... ...
Stanley powerlock
tape measure, 1"x25' ..... 8.88
Pruner by Corona
clipper Includes free
4
leather sheath .. . . . . . . . ........ 9.99
Fire extinguisher
by Kidde (#1A 10BC) ..... 9.88
Stanley hacksaw (#1265) .. 1.88
Salad spinner .. : .................. 5.88
Luggage cart ........ : ............. 8 ...
Glass domed
cheese server ................. 7.88
Stainless steel
butter server .. .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . 7 .88
Sanyo hand-held
calculator (#CX 110) ...... 8.88
Sharp wallet-style
calculator ( #309B) .......... 8.88
ToUet seat (m100) ................ SM
SPECIAL
BARGAINS
Black and Decker Workmate
accessories .............. · 25% off .
Towle Supreme
Stainless steel flatware
(all our patterns) ...... 25% off
Cuisinart cookware .. . .. 20% off
I
Cuisinart parts
and accessories .. . .. . . 20% off
All gourmet foods .... ... 25% off
Chicago Cutlery knives ( # 102$)
s 0
OR LEss ·
Pittsburgh PaJnts
Wallhlde Latex Flat.. ....... 10.11
Lo Lustre
Latex Satin Hide ............. 13.88
Multiple outlet block,
Electripak, 6 outlet
w/pllot & breaker ......... 12.88
Krups food &
coffee mill (#50) ........... 18.88
Wear.ever popcorn pumper 17.88
4' Shop lights .
with bulbs . . . . . . . . .. .. ......... 14.18
Conalr pro blower,
1500 watt (#091) .......... 19:88
Scott's turfbuilder,
4000 sq. foot size .......... 13.88
Flexogen hose,
518"x50' ........... ... ....... .. 14.88
Black· and Decker
auto Spotllghter . .. . ........ 19.88
Travel smoke alarm by
First Alert ......................... 14.81
Overseas voltage
converter kit by
Franzus to 1600W ........ 12.88
Triple Timer digital by
West Bend, LED Display
(#40,000X) .................... 18.88
Black & Decker
Stowaway stepstool . . . .. 18.88
Juicer attachment
to fit Culslnarts . . . ... ... . .. . 14.88
Heavy-duty luggage cart . 11.88
Braun Cltromatlc II
Juicer . .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . 19.88
Atari cartridges
· video games ........ from 11.88
Activision cartridges,
video games .. ...... from 18.88
Pro hair dryer Conalr,
1250 watt ( #085) .. .. . .... . 13.88
Conalr Vagabond
tr-evel hair dr\'er,
dual voltage . . . . ....... .. .. . . . 10.88
First Alert
Smoke Alarm < #5A8RC) .... 14.11
OR LESS
Bunn-o-matlc
coffee maker .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 39.88
Black and Decker
portable hose and reel . 24.88
West Bend electric wok
with FREE $5.50 cook book
(#5109X) ................ :: ..... 37.81
B.Y.O. wine chiller ........ · .... 27.88
G.E. Travel Iron (#F 49) .. 27.88
Black and Decker
dust buster . . .. . .. . .. . . ... . . . .. 25.88
Workmate,
Black & Decker (79-003) 34.88
Black & Decker
drop-leaf workmate
(#79-021) ... , ... "' ............. 34.11
Mini-cassette player stereo
w/helldphones by Sanyo
(#MG 10) ~ .................... '. 39.88
Clock radio LED ultra thin,
battery back-up AM/FM
by Sanyo . .. .. . ... . . . . .. ... . . ... 39.88
-Black & Decker
Circular Saw (#7308) ...... 21.a
MO.ETHAN
s 0
·Hoover Portapower
vacuum ............. ..... ....... 54.88
Ducane gas BBQs (#806) 175.00 ·
# 1500 .............................. 211.11
# 2000 .............................. 348.11
Culsinarts . . . DLC 1 OE ... 99.99
DLC SF ....................... 141M
DLC 7E ....................... 1••
DLC 7 Pro .... .. . ...... ..... 211.11
Shampooer /polisher
'Hoover (#F4143) .......... 59.88
Hoover top o line Concept upright
w/power drive, cord retractor,
hdlte Incl dlx tool set (U3101-9)
241.U
Deluxe power head cannister
Hoover vacuum S3201 289.81
. Hoover best standard upright
Decade 80 w/tools
U4·161-9 ...................... 139.88
Flooramatlc best
st'tampoo/wax/pollsher . 99.88
MERCHANDISE .GIVEAWAYS IN ANAHEIM HILLSI ·
, • • Sale prices begin Saturday when doors op~n • •
Sorry, no presales - -no dealer sales • LlmMed to stock on hand
Prices good through Monday, J 1, 1982
CROWll
HARDW
. 642·1133
. ,.
I
I
,I ,I •I
I
I
I
·l ·,
I-
.,
.•
' •J
'
..
our moet p?pUlar
ev.AZOt.Jl.f, medci d' thi
~ 2 ply lamb5v.o:>1
~i\cbltz. ,ond ~t
canibrtoble and
practical fOr yz.ar round
'Ml.Or:
44 Fosh100 Island· Newporr Broch· 7141644·5070
1()01 Westwood Bluel.· ~stwood VII.· 21312~273
100% Cotton. Con·
trast collar and
raglan sleeves.
Three button front .
$35.95
OU8GI
1802 E ICat«llA
I -· -. o( ..._ rwy.
tJJ·lalO
81Wl'Oft aucJI . .-....... --·-.. M4-JlJl
Polyester/Cotton.
TWo front pockets,
and elastk:ized rear
waist-band.
$4 •. 95
Polyetter/Cotton.
classic shirt that
looks and feels
g<eat.
$19.95
PVUU"lm
U»LC...-,....._ ... u1..,.
1104171
FATHER'S DAY
TEE OFF IN STYLE.
The perfect gift for the executive golfer. He'lr
be a "pro" no matter what his score.
Included In the set: Top grain leather case
with solid brass green. repair tool, spike
tightener. and ball marker. Glft-boxed. $15.
Engraving additional.
SLAVICK·s
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Where the best surpnses ~
Fllhlon llflntl (714) 644-1380 • NewpOrt 111Mctt Abo~ Loi Angllls. Sift °"90 • Ln ~
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Here v.<e fea1ure Slubble' .pin-wale WCllk shorts
'With elastic bock in a rainbow of colors.
Add a great lool<lng IZod' Lacoste• knit shirt with
a pair of dutOble leather sandals by Rainbow'
and you'Ye got Ood set ror summec.
..
-----------------
66 FASHION ISi.Ai«> · NE\WOl?T BEACH • (714) 644·7030
..
'
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DELIVERS -Bob Boone
singled-in the first two Angel
runs in Wednesday night's 7-1 ·
win.
' ·../ .....
Boone· is a big ·hit.
Speedway racer Gene Woods ..
doean't mind living
in the shadow of his
brother Ripk. See C3.
• ID N0.9 spot
fie settles it with two-run single after Renko settles ilowii
BJ CURT SBEDEN al.ngle provided Renko with all the runa muahroomed after that. He had to work "It's nice to be appreciated," the a:>ft-
0(.,. .,._,....... he needed said h1a pitcher's flrat-lnnlng like hell to overcome that." 1poken catcher aaid. "Th.rou&hout my
At 37, Steve Renko lm't aetttnc any problems ~t.emmed from one bad pitch. The Angel bitten, meanwhile, didn't career, I've hit pretty low in the lineup.
5 . In ff!Ct, boil\ Renko and Anpl "He had real good command of all hla have to work too ha.rd to make up tor rm not a home run1hltt.er and I'm not
r Gene Mauch probably aged pitches. He threw a bad change to · their poor showing one night earlier fast, but I get my share of RBI. I just
erably in the flnt lnnina of (Damaso) Garcia then a bunt and when Blue Jays starter Jim Clancy have to take a positive approach to a11 of
Wednesday night'• game with the (Lloyd) Moeeby bit' a good pitch" Boone thoroughly stifled them in a 2-0 aetback. this.
Toronto Blue Jaya. recounted. ''They had the~ of a The Angela pounded out 14 hits, three "And with all the fans and my friend.a
'The veteran right-hander, revi~ big inning and he 1topped them cold." by Tim floli and two apiece by Don in the stands, well, it's tough when they
this 8eUOn with a regular spot m the . Baylor, Doug DeCinces, Fred Lynn and leave the 'ne' off."
starting rotation, watched the Blue Jays Renko, tS-1 after picking up his third Boone. . There were no boos for Boone
smack three of his first four pitches for complete-game victory! never did In fact, it was the latter part of the Wednesday night. Nor were there any
hue hita and a quick run before many of emerge from the Angel training room 88 ·Angel lineup that did most of the for Carew who extended his bitting
the 20,970 in attendanoe had settled in to he .. kept his right arm packed in lee. damage against Blue Jays' starter Dave streak to 20 games with a leadoff lin&le
their Anaheim Stadium seats. J:le worked the eq~valent of about Stieb (5-7). in the seventh inning.
But Renko went on to allow the Blue 11 inning~ tonight, n~ted Mauch Boone raised his average to .297 with He would have preferred to get the hit
Jays Juat th.ee more hlta over tlie final afterward. 'That ~t inning waa like two hits in helping the Angels move into a little bit earlier.
eight lnn1ngs; Bob Boone provided the working three lnnlhgs. But he never let a virtual first-place tie with Kansas City "My thought was to-gel a.hit the first
hit that counted and Rod Care w the game get away. in the American League West, and he or second time up. I wanted to get a hit
collected the hit everybody's counting as "He knew he got in trouble with that admitted it's nice to play a role in the early because he (Stieb) is a good
the An&ela rolled to a 7-1 victory. one bad pitch to the leadoff man Angel offense despite his No. 9 posit.ion competitor. He comes rlJU\t at you. He
Boone, whoee second-inning, two-run · (Garcia's inning-ope~ double). "It just in the lineup.. (See BOONE, Page C3)
-Sweep keeps
Dodgers close
Padres contenders --Garvey
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Perhaps
Steve Garvey summed it up best.
''The way we played, we could
nave beaten anybody' .. said
Garvey after the Los Angeles
Dodgers blanked the San Diego
Padres 6-0 Wednesday night to
sweep their three-game series
and move back to the .500 mark
at 32-32.
I "At this point, I still think the
Padres are contenders," the
Dodgers first baseman added.
''They didn't give any of the games away. We just beat them."
Right-hander Bob Welch, 7-4,
pitched the seoond shu'°'1t in as
many nights against the Padres,
whO entered the series as the
hlflheat scoring team In the
Natl!onal League. San Diego bas
DO'll been held scoreless in their
last 22 inninp.
Welch allow~ just three hits
in recording his third shutout of
the year and it helped the world
1
champions attain their first series
sweep of the Padres since April
1977.
''They did a heck of a job on
us," said San Diego Manager
Dick Williams. "Now we're going
to find out what we are made
of/' ~ After a day off, the Padres
open a 13-game road trip Friday
in Houston.
Welch got offensive help from
Pedro Guerrero who hit a run-
scqfi ng sing_le and two-run
~r. and Dusty Baker, who
added a eolo home run.
"It seems like everything came
together for us in this series,"
said Baker. "We've got to go on
from here playing good, sound baseball.,.
The Dodgers moved to within
four games of the second-place
Padres and accomplished their
victory against San Diego's best
pitcher, Tim Lollar, 6-2. Lollar
pitched six innings and gave up
four runs on seven hits.
Los Angeles took a 1-0 lead in
the first inning on Bill Russell's
single, a wild pitch and
Guerrero's single to left.
Baker's fourth inning homer
made it 2-0 and the Dodgers
added a pair of runs ih th4! sixth
when Russe ll singl ed and
Guerrero cracked bia 11th homer
to give him 42 RBis on the
season.
Steve Sax closed out the
scoring with a two-run single in
the ninth off rookie left hander
Dave Drabecky.
Welch only allowed one Padre
baserunner as far as second base
throughout the game.
The only real threat came in
the seve nth when Garry
Templeton singled and Sixto
Lezcano walked, but T e rry
Kennedy struck out to end the
inning.
Los Angeles Manager Tom
Lasorda was pleased about the
sweep after the Dodgers dropped
four straight in San Diego in
April.
Algeria pulls upset
over West Germany
Host Spaniards hel~ to deadlock
-MADRID (AP) -It was
tuppoeed to be a cinch. Top-rated :W-ert Germany waa expected to
have no problem with the rookie
Algerians and euily win the
Group Two opening game at the
World Soccer Cup finals.
The Algerians, making their
World Cup debut, stunned the
two-time Cup winners 2-1
W~y night in an UJ>Rt at
GiJon before 3~.ooo, which
Included 80IDe 3,000 singing and
fiaa-waving A]gerians. '1i still can't believe we last to
AI1eria," said shocked West
Oennan Coach Jupp Derwall.
A1prian Coach Mahddienne
Khalef believed it. explaining:
'"lbe West Germana were strong
opponents but we 1aw their .
delecta and took. llClvantage of
them.''
against C hile and ·Austria to
advance to the second phase.
It was an agonizi.ng night for
Spain, which as host nation was
rated a World Cup favorite.
Playing before a crowd of 4°1\000,
including King Juan Carloe, the
Spanish team trailed 0-1 against
unrated Honduras in the first
half. Honduran forward Hector
Z-elaya acored only eight minutes
into the match.
The Spaniards uved face at
the 66th minute through ·a
penalty kick by Lopez Ufarte to
get the draw.
In England's victory, B'l:H
Rot.on scored a goal ln each
and Paul Mariner ecored the
third. Gerard Soler put ln the
only French goal.
BACK IN TIME -Don Baylor beata • pickoff attempt by·
Toronto shortstop Alfredo Griffin Wednesday night at
D.., Noe f'tlotoe bJ Ncfwd KoeNw
Anaheim Stadium. Play occurred in fifth inning of game won
by Angels, 7-1.
SPORTS EDITOR
CRAIG
SHEFF
Quiz setting
sizzling pace
QUICK QUIZ: Who's the best relief pitcher in
major league baseball?
U you answered Dan Quisenberry, you'd get
very little feedback.
Quisenberry, the Costa Mesa High and Orange
Coast College product, has been the savtna grace
(pardon the pun) of the Kansas aiy Royals this
seaaon.
Thus far in the Royals' 60 games, Quisenberry
has pl'C¥fuced a 3-2 record with 17 saves and an
ERA of 1.79.
Thoee 17 aaves have put him on a record-
breeld.ng J*'9. If be CIOftUnuet to pile Up UYel, be
could tnek the major ~ matlt of 38 let by
John Hiller of the Tl8en in 1973. ('nle AL recOnl la
37 held by three pitcnera). ,,
.·
In other pmm. Spain l)eel'ly
Iott to Honduna befon drawina
at 1-1 in Valenda ID itl 01J8111na
Group l'lve saatch. En11ana
out8coced rr... 3-1 In ... tint
Group J'OW' smtcb In Bllbm.
About the only aa.rpNe ln the J'..ncland-France match WU that
Brlti1h fans, renowned for
temperament, took the victory in
relative stride. Pollce reported
all waa falrl_y guiet in the
northern French-frontier town.
Quisenberry'• success s tory baa been
repeatedl)' told, but ;.t to quickly refrelb your •
memoey, tle w a aood pitcher on below a~
t.teml at MeN Hilb ancl OCX:: and really didri t
come into his own until he moved on to La Veme
Collep. A181ria'• Afrbn 8paa laDen of
th• Year, Lalrhdar Bellownl,
fired the ...... pl In the e9'll minute md cww an
equaliser by Karl-Heinz .............. ilUrope'• J'oo«hel .... iitJt\4 Year ... uouml al10
.... lilllhlllld In the flnt All 1ln pl "f b ward R.a.h llMJlr.
It wu the MGOnd time an
~--~~ ...... UiO .............. a.,
...................... 0.0 ... Pwv. ,..,...,, w.a. ..... ..
. .,, ......... ~
•
Coliseum, Raiders
near agreement
, ;
'
\
.-...-.-------
..
Oftnge OOUt DAILY PILOTIT'hurlday, Junt 17, 1982
"}1119-------------------t~
Parker's monologue
in black and white
From AP dltlMltellet '
PITTSBURGH -While atlll -
l'eC.'OWring from a wriat injury, Dave la Parker of the l-lU1bur1b Pirates
alrMdy le 1n top 9Drm wl\en It comee ..
to hia familiar polfpmt oratory.
The racial makeup of the Piratet waa hia
topic when repor1en arrived In the locker room
after a lS-3 romp over the New York Meta T\aelday night. .
It waa a typically loud,
laughing monologue by
Parker. Whether he really
meant any of it was just a
' guess becauae he no fonger
grants tnt.erviewa.
"Hey, Howie," Parker
shouted at Pirate ecout Howie
Haak, 71. "See what happens
when you shoot your mouth
off in the pape rs . Two
Ori~ h9ip1 YankMI twMC>
&.. Grtlf•1 trMCked hll fowth 11 homer of ~ 11UOn and drov9 1n two
""" to blck Dave Rldtttl'• t.hnte-hl tter a1 the New York Yankttt
def•ted the Bolton Red Sox, 4· l ln a rain·
ahortemd, llx·tnnina l&me Wec:tn.day ntaht.
The vk1ory completed a three-pine aweep f~
tht Yank .. , who had lott aeven of dJht games
be aeriee . . . Ei.ewhere In tho
American League, Keat
Hrbek doubled ln two runa
and llCOl'ed another and Tom
Brnuaaky 1luaed a two·
run homer aa Frull Viola
re-corded hit flrat maJor-
•league victory by hurflng
Minnetota J'llt Kan1u City, 6-2 ... Maaay Caatlllo
stroked a bum-loaded, two-
run double and J.Uo Cra1
Ml'fllY a1ammed a three-run homer,
helptna 43-yev...,ld Gaylord Perry plck up hia
302nd victory of his career aa Seattle downed'
Texas, 7-2 ... A rain1torm following the
ninth Inning forced umpires to halt the game
between Milwaukee and Baltimore with the
acore tied 2-2. The game will have to be replayed
in lta entirety ... Gres Lu1Jn1kt aingled home
Ron LeFlore from second ba&e in the 10th inning
to give Chicago a 7-6 victory over Oakland.
Chambllaa powers Braves to win
Cltrlt Cltambll11' solo homer la
with one out in the top of the 10th
inning lifted the Atlanta Braves to a
o.mocrat1 out11ug Aepublloana
WASHINGTON -Ohio ~ Ron Mottl pitched the a HOUie Democrata to 1 7-5 vfctory
Wtdnuday nt1ht over their
Btpubllcan counterparts In the annual concre-ional bueb&U pme.
Mottl, who waa defeated ln a primary
electlon lut week, checked the RepubUcanl on
aeven hita In wtnntna hla Wth pme tn et,ht ot
the annual affain.
The Oemocrata puahed ~ the winn1na
l'W\ In the bottom of the lixth without benefit Ol
a hit.
Walter Fauntroy, the non-voting Dlat.rlct of
Columbia delegate 1n the HoUIO, re.coed fint on
an error by 1hortatop Mike Ox,ley, R-Ohlo.
F,untroy atole aecond and on the followtna pltc)\
swiped third. When catcher Lyle Willl.ama'1fuow
went into left field Fauntroy _trotted home.
Baseball today
On thia date In baseball In 1943:
Botton Red Sox player-manager Joe
Cronin belted a pinch-hit home run in each
game of a double-header against the
PhiladelJ>hia A's.
Today a birthday:
Cincinnati shortstop Dave Concepcion ls
34 .
~alone selected MVP In NBA
Moaea Malone of the Ho1JS10n • Rockets waa named the National
Basketball Aasoclation's Most
Valuable Player for the 1981-82
Open spe,cial
tO Nicklaus
He seeks filth title this weelc
BY WILL GRIMSLEY -M'.,...., Clefl'I I I -· I PEBBLS BEACH -Golf II a toldln crown oi
jewell for the "Golden Bear.'' Jack NickJ.auai and be
never loeet1 hia lnutlable appetite for more.
"Sure, I want to win It." the world'• all·Ume
major tit.I& collec1or replMd to an ~ ~uestion after oompletiJli preparationl few the 82nd
U.S. Open championlhlp, which ~ 1oday. "Nol
just beca1.11e it would be my filth OsieDt not beca'* It would be my 20th major or my· 70th U.S.
~tvicto .
0 rd like to :t\ becau.e rm an American 9IMl
it'• the championship of my country. It'a the bl..-
and harde.t to win. More than that, lt'a at Pilible
Beach."
Thia plcturesque aeaslde Unka la a favodte
blrdJe huntlna preeerve for·the 42·year-d.d f.alrway
king who won hia aecond National Amateur crown
here In 1961 and followed with three Ctoeby even11
and the 1972 U.S. qpen u a pro.
"WHY DO YOU have ao much tuc:lCe9I at
Pebble Beach?" Nicklaus was aaked at hi.a
Wednmay news conference.
,.,.... brothers go down the tubes."
5.4 decision over the Houston Ast.ros
Wednesday night in the Astrodome. The Braves
had rallied to tie the game at 4-4 with two outs in
the ninth on a pinch-hit sinJZle by ex-Astro Bob
WataoD ... Elaewhere In the National League,
Andre Dawaen'a three~run double cap'ped a
season Wednesday after being the league's top
rebounder and second-leading scorer. Buck
Wtlllam1 of the New Jersey Nets was voted the
league'• Rookie of the Year, beating out Kelly
Trtpacka of the Detroit Pistons . . . Wlll
Cloney, who In 36 years guided the Boston
Marathon from the low-budget days of
competitive running to the present high-~oney
era, has retired amid controversy over
commercial aponsorahip for the race. Tom
Brown. the BAA vice president, was chosen to
succeed t:loney aa president.
,'Because I shoot low aoc>res," he replied tartly.
Some writers interpreted his attitude aa
touching on arrogance but cla.er aaaodatee aaw• lt
instead as a Nicklaus brimming with confidence.
Rarely has the blond Ohioan been aeen in a
looser or more buoyant frame of mind.
I Haak made 1-dlinea recently when be said
he thought the Ptrat.es could not draw fans if
they fielded an .U black team. He said the club
~ht have to trade for some young white -• piayen-.::.. a OOlRirwlilell~ by Pirate
management.
Parker was on the disabled list with a tom
cartilage in bis right wrist when the lf.a.<t.k story
was first publiahed.
But Parker revived the matter Tuesday
after Pittsburgh traded Bill Robinaon, who is
black, to Philadelphia in a deal that brought
WaYM Nordhagea. who is white, to Pittsburgh.
Quote of the day
Cltacll F.....Ua, the coach, president
and part owtl9' of the New York team in
the new Unialll States Football League:
; "The first th9I we ~ve to do ia go buy a
football, .,.... ... and pencils, find a p1lice
to play . . . ~ stuted from acratch
before, but not quite this scratch."
five-run uprising in the
second inning, powering the
Montreal Expos to an 8-3
~ctory over St. Louis. The
win shaved the Cardinals'
lead to three games in the NL
F.ast . . . Ryne Sudberg
singled with one out in the
bottom of the 11th inning to
drive in the winning run as
c.....uae the Ch icago Cubs handed
Philadelphia a 7-6 setback,
the Cubs' third straight victory and the l'hlls'
fifth consecutive defeat ... Ceaar Cedeno
slammed two home runs and drove in six runs,
powering Cincinnati to a 7-3 win over San
Frandaco. Marlo Soto 6-4, picked up the win ...
Wed.ne9day night's game between Pittsburgh
and the New '(/ ork Meta waa poetponed due to
rain and no makeup date was announced.
Televlslon, radio
WORLD CUP SOCCER -Czechoslovakia
vs. Kuwait, 11 p.m.: Channel 34. Taped.
RADIO: Baseball -Toronto at Angels, 7:30
p.m., KMPC (710).
FRIDA 'Y'S TELEVISION
8 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER -
Italy vs. Peru. (Live).
11:45 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER
-Brazil vs. Scotland (Live).
"It's a links type course, like the counes in
Britain," he said, referring to the rocka and rilla,
tricky winds and waves whipping in otf the Padflc
Ocean and Carmel Bay.
"It has subtle bounces and ihconslltencies It
r equir es a lot of thinking and shotmaking
management. The course has been aet up fairly, no
tricks with greens on which one won't have to
scramble. It reduces the number of players who can
win. I like that."• ·
While the names of Craig Stadler, Tom Watson
and Ray Floyd are being bandied about as leading
threats for the championship, it's the awesome,
lingering shadow of Nicklaus that hovers over the
course from the clubhouse to the sea.
IT'S A PERFECT setting for the game's
premier player. Nicklaus has won almost twice as
many major titles as anyone in history. He is
playing on his favorite course and he has put bis
game and his mind in what he Considers perfect
harnlOny.
Young athlete crying may not be a bad thing
"I haven't spent the last week beating balls,"
he said. "I went home. I traveled about 12,000 miles
looking oyer golf courses I'm building -Denver,
Phoenix, Salt Lake City, Grand Rapids and
Southern California. I didn't worry about the Open.
I came here relaxed." Psychologist gives his views on the effects of placing a heavy burden on children to excel Nicklaus, one of the phenomenons of sport, has
had a career which has gone through three phaees
marked by periodically dire predictions that he was
burned out or over the hill.
M1AMl (AP) -Dr. Jack Llewellyn wants kids
to have fun with sports. To do that, he wants
parents to realize there's more to youthful athletics
than the pt'06pect of a fat professional contract. and
that a child crying over failure on the field may not
be such a bad thing.
Llewellyn, the psychologist for the Houston
Astroe' organit.ation and a professor at Florida
International Univenity, conducts about 75 clinics
for parents and co.ches of young athletes each year.
The objective of Llewellyn's rresentation is to
educate adults about the effects o placing a heavy
burden on youngsten to excel and win in sporta at
an early age.
"MANY PARENTS THINK that for a kid to be
a tremendous athlete, they have to start early. The
earlier the better, when actually that is not true, he
said. Matching skills with physical and emotional
growth is much more important, he added.
Television feeds the mµ.conception that, to
become a champion ·er outstanding professional, a
child must start to develop skills in a particular
sport at age 4 or 5, Llewellyn said.
As a result, youngsters are being placed in
stressful situations tbat take their toll. By 13 or 14,
the child has had enouch of athletics.
"Burn ouf ii the reason given," Llewellyn.
said. "Some kids loee interest in sports in general
because they've only done one thing for nine or 10
years and don't have the skills to play anything
else. ·
"Many times, even though a kid may be
physically attuned to what is going on, emotionally
they are not ready to deal with competition.
"THEl:'RE NOT READY to deal with losing,
which they will do. They are not ready even to deal
with all the pressures that come with being a
winner."
Several signs can alert a parent to a child's
problem, the psychologist said, i ncluding
withdrawal from situations; reluctance to go to
practice or enter games when coaches say to, and a
reluctance to talk about athletic experiences.
"Most people would come up with crying as a
dang~r sign," Llewellyn said. "I think crying is
healthy. Let them cry. That'll pass." •
Some are sponsored by the NFL Alwnni, a
group of retired National Football League players
who banded together tQ help youngsters through
various programs started by the Fort Lauderdale-
baaed organization.
AT THE CLINICS~ Llewellyn diacw&ea topics
such as conditioning, growth, and winning against
losing. He al*> gets help from a panel which usually
includes an orthopedic surgeon, a trainer and
former NFL atars such as Earl Morrall, Dick "Night
Train" Lane and JUly Nitschke, to field questiOM
from the audience.
"Those guys, I think, add a perspective to
answers th at I give that maybe adds more
credibility, simply because they've been there and
their kids have been there," said Llewellyn.
Llewellyn uses a light-hearted approach
during his presentation . The emphasis is on
demonstrating the importance of parents stres&ng
the "fun" aspect of sports, ratht!r than winning.
Richard sent to minors
HOUSTON (AP) -The Houston Astros have
a.ssianed pitcher J .R. Richard to their Class A
affiliate at Daytona in the Florida State League, the
National League team announced Wednesday.
Richard, who suffered a stroke July 30, 1980,
was expected to report in 10 days. He has been
~Itching in the Florida Instructional League at
Saraaota, where he posted a 3-2 record in eeven same--In 32 inninp Richard has an earned run
average of 3.38. ·
He starts his routine in a business suit. When
the discussion tums to coaching, he peels down to a
funny-looking outfit with the word "coach" written
across the front. By the time the talk turns to Llttle
League mothers, the psychologist has slipped on a
wig.
"I'VE ALWAYS FELT that you can know
everything in the world about something, but if you
can't keep people's a~ntion it really doesn't make
much difference," he said.
"When people come to these programs, they
really don't want to hear some of the things that
you're going to say about the pressures they're
putting on their kids, about screaming and yelling
and about coaching their own kid.
"It's interesting because people seem to enjoy
the entertainment. They laugh and then two or
three days later, they'll sit back and think, 'Geez. he
was talking about me.' "
Llewellyn said surveys h ave found that
youngsters would rather play on a losing team than
sit on the bench of winner.
"I think it's very important to point out that
probably 90 percent of the kids who engage in
youth sports have a great time," he· said. "But
there's that small percentage of kids that are having
bad experiences and those are the ones we're
talking about.
"There are a lot of positive things that come
from participation -self-discipline, socialization of
self and learning to deal with one's own abilities.
But there are a lot of negative things, too. U there
weren't, then kids wouldn't drop out."
~
From a 16-year-old whiz kid beating p-own
men in tournaments, he won the first of bis two
National Amateur titles at 19, beat Arnold Palmer
for the U.S. Open in his rookie year as a pro at 22
and went on to become the scourge of blgtime golf.
In his 21 years as a pro, he has soored 69 tour
victories for a total of 87 international triumphs and
19 major national titles and the Masters, adding up
to almost $4 million in prize money.
In the midst of his career, he changed from an
overweight, crew-cut 200-pounder to a lean,
golden-haired matinee idol who draws sighs from
females in the gallerv.
Scully in accident
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Vin Scully, veteran l
broadcaster for the Los Angeles Dodgers, sustained t
a gash under his right eye Wednesday in an
automobile accident in San Diego.
Scully was injured when the car he was riding
in was broadsided by a van at an intenection in La
Jollir, he said. He was taken to Scripps Hospital in
La Jolla where doctors closed the cut with nine
stitches, Scully said.
The announcer said he was going golfing with
broadcasting partner Jerry Dogge tt and the
Dodgers' equipment manager, Nobe Kawano, when
their car was broadsided by a van at a La Jolla
intersection. Kawano and Doggett were uninjured
in the accident.
F!n\ISheim ®
Imperial
Kenmore
In
Black C.hmere
Brown Caahmere
Brown Shell Cordovan (amall)
I
Kenmore
in
Black Cashmere
Brown cashmere
Brown Shell Cordovan (small)
I
I
NIPPED -Angel hue-runner Tim Foll reacts
after being called out on a force play in the
sixth inning Wednesday night at Anaheim
Stadium. Angels won, 7-1 .
Weekend sports on TV, radio
S.tllrd•y's TJ', r•dlo
TELEVISION
8 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER -
Poland vs. Cameroon.
10:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBALL -Montreal at
Chicago.
11 a.m. (5) -WCT TENNIS -Ivan Lendl vs.
John McEnroe in the fin.ala of the WCT, taped.
11 :45 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER -
Belgium vs. El Salvad<lr.
12:30 p.m. (7) -U.S. OPEN -Third round
play from Pebble Be.ch.
_ 1 p .m. (4) -BASEBALL -Toronto at
Oakland. (11) -BASEBALL -Doctaera at
Cincinnati.
3:30 p.m. (2) -CBS IPOllft IATVUAY -
Jaime Gan.a (34-0) VI. Carmelo Necrcm (18-1) In a
scheduled 10-round junior featherwetaht bout
taped in Laa .vepa. Alm: A repmt &cm the
international bicycle c1amic, an 11-<iay ataae race
held in Colorado.
4:30 p.m. (34) -SOCCER -USSR VI. New
Z#al•nd.
5 p .m.. (2) -WORLD GAMES -Part 2 of this
event, taped in 1981 in Santa: clara, includes ·
Yachts race
·off Ne-wp()rt
B .. ALMON LOCltABEY :>' ... .,. .........
Newport Harbor Yacht Club and Balboa Yacht
Club will join forces Saturday and Sunday to send
two fleets of ocean racing yachts in a contest around
the buoy. oU Newport &ach.
For NHYC it will be the fourth and fifth races
of ita Ahmanaon Series for International Off.shore
Rule ratings and the Dickson Series for
Performance Handicap racers. It will be the aecond
and third races of BYC'a 66 Series.
Small boata will see action in Lido We Yacht
Club's June Regatta to be sailed over couraes inside
the bay Saturday and Sunday.
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club will have a
double-header with the eecond race of ita ocean
racing aeries for PHRF yachts Saturday and a
dinghy regatta inside Dana Point Harbor Sunday.
Yachting calendar: Oraqe Couty
Newport Harbor ~ acht Club -Ahmanaon-
Diclt.edn aeriest Saturday, Sunday.
Balboa Yacht Club -66 Series, Saturday,
Sunday.
Lido Iale Yacht Club -June REGATTA,
Saturday, Sunday.
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club -Ocean Racing
Series, Saturday; dinghy regatta, Sunday.
Lot Aqeles-Loq Bead
Long Beach Yacht Club-llland Series 3 & 4,
(F.menld Cove and Return) Saturday, Sunday. . Suta M..a .,
Kine Harbor-Redondo Beech Y-=ht Clubs -
Pandile Cove race (Spinnaker-Series) Saturday.
Callfom1a Yacht Oub -Malibu Trambay race
(Overton Series) Saturday; North Bay Boomeruc
race (PHRF-MORC) Saturday.
Santa Monica Yacht Club -Guys and Dolls
race (PHRI') Sundalg
c:onimdo CaYt Yecho:-sub -Georae Luko
Sldnl Serie1. Saturday. -Milllk1D Bay Y-=ht Cub -Short C.ou.ne
.... (PHRI') S.turda_y.
Oceanalde ·Yacht Club -Coutal Serles, ~ to Dana Point, S.tunt.y; Dana Potnt to
OneNtikle S.turct.y.
Santa Clara Raclr..1 A.aloclatlon -U.S. ~ Wiit.em ~ fteptta.
';:hr.';; tCht Qub -OaMnlWI Ovwnlcht ~IDID') S.Q&rday, ..._. ,,;; = Y.tat Qub-J'aWin Da1 Rllot
(hm p) ....,. .........
............. ~Club-Tam ...... ...... (1'1111') ........ ~__,. "=' =-.... Dmll Yllh• a.1111-3 .. (Plllr, ..... ) ......,,
Y•.··a.c.1.:-"~ KMt ....... .
coverage of karat.e and tumbling.
RADIO
Baseball -Dod~rs at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.,
KABC (790); Chicago at Angels, 1 p.m., KMPC
(710).
S••ll•y's TJ', r•dla
8 a.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER -
Germany VI. Chile.
11:10 a.m. (11) -BASEBALL -Dodgers at
Cincinnati.
11:30 a.m. (2) -AUTO RACING -Start-to-
finiah covenp of the NASCAR Michigan 400 from
Brooklyn. Mich. . 11:4~ a.m.. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER -.
. Yuplavla YL Spein.
1 e..m. (7) -U.S. OPEN -Final round play
from Peb)>le Beach in the U.S . Open golf
toumammt. •
__ ~~:!Q_J>.m. (4) -WIMBLEDON TENNIS
PREVIEW -"Wimbledon '82: A fo~ht of
Tnditico" examines the 105th All-England t.ennia
championahipa.
3:15 p.m. (34) -WORLD CUP SOCCER -
England vs. C7.echoslovalda.
3:3..0 p.m. (4) -SPORTSWORLD -Frank
.•"fhe Animal" Fletcher (14-2-1) defends his USBA
middleweight title against Clint Jackson (18-1) in a
scheduled 12-round bout taped at Atlantic City.
Abo: 'Ille men's white wat.er swim and raft in the
Survival of the Fittest, the women's high ruve
classic and a look at Floyd Patterson's recapture of
the heavyweight crown from lnRemar Johansson.
. RADIO
Blaeball -Dodgers at CiAcinn.ati, 11:10 a.m.,
KABC (790); Chicago at Angels, 1 p.m., KMPC
(710). ,
from Page C1
SHEFF COLUMN. • •
record with 33 saves and a 3.08 ERA.
But the way he's pitching now, those sta'\.s
could easily be wiped out.
AREA ALL-STARS? While Quisenberry
flgures as a sure pick for an American League
All-star spot, former University High and
Saddleback College product nm Wallach has to be
considered for an NL berth.
Wallach ia not on the All-star ballot, but is
having a lizzllng llea80n. ~·s currently hitting a
little over .300 and ranks among the top five third
buemen in fielding in the Natlm;W League.
But there's a problem, namely too tpany
"establiabed atara" who will probably be selected
before Wallach. Thus his chances of being in the
All·star pr11e ·are slim. . •
Still, Wallach baa some things going for him.
One, the game is in Montreal this year, and two,
Wallach baa hit exceptionally well against the
Dodgers thb eea.on~ And since the NL manager ii
Tc:mmy LMorda ... who knows?
ADD QUIZ: Qui8enberry baa allowed only two
walks UUI ...an in 5~ innlnp. He had qne streek
of 40 f.nnlnp without a bMe on bUJI.
PASSING THE BUC: Robb MUDllOO. relief
apeclallat aupreme for Oran1e Cout Colle1e'1
t.eball tam th1a pMt a.on.~ playing for the
Cook Inlet Bum, a eemi-pro team in Anchorage,
A.l.Mka. .
He'll be there until mid-August. Tbe top thrw
tama In the lllx-teun Alllkan league earn bdtba in
the <pre1tla,lou1 National Baseball Con1r••
townammt In Wkhita. Kanllll.
MUDIOD, who prepped at Edl8on Hl&h anct·will
return to CoMt next _,..., la livln& with a family
in AlMka. worldna durl.nl the day ..... pla,m,
b•1bll at nlCht.
Muman •YI club offtdU told hlm b1a "Job" ~~ ...... ~\he Wamlnl track ot
Two --occ ......... catoMI' Dl\fja md.....t-u •ll6Holldniareallo
In AlllU ,. ......... :-.: Thal'•
•=Uedalitidltd9fiillll t:
Or~ Cout DAILY PILOTIT'hunday. June ff, 1912
f?:O.!~.:.c:..:~
aherward.
Carew 11 now battl& .uo
(32-fOl'-78) durtna hil •treik. and hla 1ln1l• wu lollowed by a
two-ru.n horoer off the bAt of Don Baylor.
One lnnln1 ~ater, DeClncea
wheeMd h1I ellhth homer of the
· ye&r, but It toOk a while before
anyone knew If the ball had
cleared the Jenee or if It wu in
the 1love ot leaplna center
fitider u.o.by.
A televlalon replay •howed
that Moeeby actually knocked
the bAll aver the fence with b1a
~WM a ~ au.rprile to
"When I hit that ball, t
tboueht it WM adna to 80 a lot
farther than lt dld. 8ut with thb he9vy air . . . When I MW h1m
(Mmeby) put hil ~up, I .W,
"Oh. DO, not aoln.' but he tipped
it. That's OK. I delerved it,"
DeCtnc.9 aaid.
With hJa two RBI. DeCincee
bas now knocked ln 17 runs in
his last 15 games.
It WU the Angela' 15th corne-
from-behind victory. Boone's
second-inning single turned out
to be the winning hit, and hi.a
two . RBI gives him 26 -two
more than all of last seaaon.
"Batting in the ninth spot ii a
little different," Boone noted.
"Sure, you'd like to get up there
with all the power hitters, but
Timmy (Foll) and I have fun
down there (in the bottom of the
lineup). We try to chip in as
much as we can.
"There's advantages to hitting
ninth, too. It keeps you away
from thoae O-for-4 nights. It also
gives me the opportunity to see
what the other hitters are doing
against the pitcher," Boone
added.
* • ~ MOTii: M1N1m Siaotum wlll be one of tN llt• for the 11111 ennull Jlll)en-
USA Collegt1te B11eb1ll Ch1mpton1htp s--. In feet. the ftret OlfM of the bllt-ol-
_, --... be p4lyed ~. June 27 tonowtng thl ~ City game. The
_,.. pita toe> co11ege pi.yers from bOth
,countrlel. Among thl o.a. 111 ... to comciet• ,.
.............. .......,, wtlo pll)'9d 11 0r111C19
Cout COiiage llllt Y'llr and then lf-*'9d
to USC 11 1 1ophomore. Montgomery
olubbed 9lght hOrN NM fof the Troi-thll y.., ... Tu.dey nlgtlt'e lhutout II the hind•
of the Blue .Jep -only the MOOnd of thl v-tor the Angele. T-i ,,.. bllnkld thlm In 1 6-0 Y 11111.. YlctOfY on Aptil 21 In
New York ... The Blue J1y1 l11d th•
Amltlcen llllQIUe In lhutout Ylctoriel with _, ... Dtl1l D9lle, IOQIMed by Toronto from~ T~. ii expedld to join
thl '-" In tlnle '°' tonight'• --llnlll. 0.. batted ..279 wlttl two homlt9 Ind _,
RBI wtlMI ~ In 21 g11n11 for the
~ Ihle Y'llr ... Dleplle their tllllpln II '-. Jtie Angell oontlnul to r.-w lolld
~-
WopdS doe'Sn't
live· .iri sli8ilow
He I ollows ln brother's lootstepe
By HOWARO"L. BANDY or .. .,. .........
Gene Woode has lived ln the
shadow of brother .RJck for a
number of yean but c:ontrary to
popular belief, he doesn't re.ent
hia po.ltlon. especially when It
comes to rldlng speedway
motorcycles.
Woode, of C.O.ta Mesa, U8ed to
IO to the races u. a younaster to
watch hia brother perform ancht
the ume Ume pick up a little
change b)' aeWna magazinell in
the grandstands.
Rick retired from racing about
the tlme Gene becarne old
enough to ride after winning a
nwnt>er of U.S . short track titles.
Gene, like so many of the
other riders who gained a start
on the short track oval at Costa
Mesa 's Orange County
. F~ds, tried his luck on the
Engllah circuit fast ·year. But he
returned here this. season and ls
currently leading the point
standings.
"The racing ls much better on
a short track," Gene says. "It's a
lot cloeer, surfaces are a lot better
and spectators get more involved.
"In Europe, you can get atuck
in.a rut for a year. There are only
two or t\lree riders making a
name for themselves. Racing
here, ihere is a lot of money to be
made." ,·
Before he went to England to
ride, Woods had a few problems
with promoter Harry Oxley -
some real and many imagined.
But he's a staunch supporter of
Oxley now.
"Out of every promoter I have
ever ridden far in the world,
Harry's the best there is.
Anybody who doesn't ride on
Friday night in Costa Mesa is a
fool The purse is usually $9,000
and if you do well in both events,
you can win close to $2,000. for
one niRht.
"l average between $30,000
and $50,000 a year aJ)d the top
three riders should make that
much."
Woods also has a tie-in with
7-Up. '"The deal I have with
them is worth too much to me to
race in Europe all the time. We
TOP CYCLIST -Gene
Woods ls the top speedway
racer at Costa Mesa's Orange
County Fairgrounds.
won th e world team
championship in Holland though.
and that helped the sponsor, too.•• ..,.,...
Injuries are a part of speedway
racing and Gene has had hia
share but it doesn't bother him.
"I broke my leg and arm. have
tom my little finger nearly oU
and have been injured quite a
bit," h e admits. "I have a
~houlder that goes out on me all
the time, especially if I take a fall
the wrong way.
"But I plan t o stay in
speedway until I can't do it
anymore or until I get a good car
ride. I can maJ<e a good living
riding speedway, more than a lot
of the champ car guy. do.
"Right now I'm completely out
of every type of racing except
speedway but I would like to get
a chance in a car, especially at
Indianapolis.''
Gene is 10 years younger than
his bro,ther R.ick. The two
brothers and theu dad operate a
marina in Ne~port Beach,
Wood's Marina.
Chang tops area entry -
G e ne rides regularly at
Ventura on Tuesday night, San
Bernardino on Wednesday "riight
and at Costa Mesa Friday night.
J3ut when the opportunity to race
in a special event some place elae
in the country comes along. be he
takes off. A who's who of Orange Coast
area prep basketball players
dominate the Orange County
entry in the U.S . Development
summer league at Cal State Los
Angeles, led by Orange County
Player of the Year Richard
Chang of Edison.
It's also a virtual list of the
South All·star team which
competes in the 17th Orange
County All-star game Saturday
at Orange Coast C.OUege with
nine of the 12-man South team
on the Orange County roster.
In addition to Chang, the
14-man roster includes Costa
Mesa's Ken Bardsley ,
Uni verstty's Brad Guess,
Fountain Valley's Jeff Hughes,
Ocean View's Jim Usevitch,
Corona del Mar's Chris Lynch.
Capistrano Valley's Dan Dargan,
Santa Ana's Rob Lucas and
Foothill's Rich Thomas. •
Also competing will be
Fountain Valley 's Rob
Whitehair, Ocean View's Byron
Ball (formerly of Newport
Harbor), Ocean View's Scott
DeBrouwer, Capo's Walt
DeCasas, Orange's Mike Kelly
and Newport Harbor's Joe
~er.
· Pfay opens June 26 and the
Orange County entry is coached
by Tony Lipold of BoJaa Grande
Hi h. ~nother entry, the Metro
teem, includes four others from
the Orange Cout area -Corona
del Mar's Mike Hess and Ocean
View's Dave Dresnick, Steve
Moaer and Shawn Werner.
"I d o quite a bit of crosa
country travling during the
year," Gene says. "I go to Denver
and Texas and ride in the U.S.
Open in New York in August. I won that race last year."
Woo d s graduated frpm
Newport Harbor High and
des pite having a few doors
opened for him because of the
prowess of brother Rick, bas
pretty much made it on his own
in speedway racing.
"A lot of doors were opened
for me by my brother ,l>ut there is
more to it than just having the
door opened," he says. "Ypu
have to know what to do once
y9u get inside."
And Gene Woods knows
exactly what to do when he •ta
inside.
LEASE FROM $115 PER SQ. Ft I ......------------.
U-1 l"" lux1iriaos alb suillls'""" 950 kl 20.000 _. , . feet. loc"9d in the wsy heart ot Ofqe ~. It the lnWsedion of the Newport and Corona del Mar freeways-from juSt SUS per S(Jln foot!.
CREEKSIDE GARDEN OFFICES
2900 Bristol/Costa Mesa,,CA 92626
... (714) 97~7133 or (714) 544-2484
EHDWSIVE
OFFER I ID
NEW 1981 "LA TE SERIES"
DE LOREANS
$19,995
Now, for a limited time, we are
offering all new De Loreans at
prices far below normal value .
Here's a rare opportunity for you
to buy a one-of-a=·klnd automo-
bile at an extraordinary price.
,.
. ~
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MttM1 1 .. ., .... . " ....... . IO M .M4 11M
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AmNCAN LUOUI Maele7, lllueJen 1
TCNIOtft'O C~ONU •rhlll 8"'rhlll Oel'CIA 2b 4 1 1 0 Downing If 5 0 1 I
MUl!nlte3b 4 0 1 0 C.-fb II 1 1 0
Moeeby cf 4 0 1 I 8eylor dll 4 1 2 2 ~ 1b 3 o o o Ae.Jclten rt 4 o 1 o
"-"Cl dll 1 0 8 0 R.Qeni rt 0 0 0 0
Woodell 4010Gtlch2b 4 000
8Wftlild rt • 0 0 0 Lynn cf 4 2 2 0 8.Mer1nz c; 4 0 I 0 oecnc;. 3b 3 2 2 2
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Toronto 100 000 000-1
Cellomle 020 200 21•-7 E-Orlllln, Stieb. LOB-Toronto I , C.-om1e 7. 28-0llrda, Fol, HR-lleytor Mo.ar-cn s-~
T__.. • H 111'!11 •IO
S1l9b (L.~7) 8 12 8 4 I 1 91 ._._ 2 2 I I 0 1 ~ .
Aenko(W ... 11 I 8 1 1 4 II
Stieb pllcMd to 2 belt.. In IN 7th.
f-2:12. A-20,870.
~ ... ..,..
MTTWeO
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115 12 S5 I 2t .217
IM lM «Ml 3 14 .213
243 :ie ee 10 ae .290
Ill 2t 56 1 32 .278
200 n 111 2 u .m
243 2• a3 I 37 .2se
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28 2 7 0 3 .2•1 117 24 .... 10 25 .236
405113.2211
21 2 8 o o .222
88 8 14 0 II .1117 46 4 7 0 2 .IN
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~
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7~ 73 II 34 11-1 2.74
13" t1 22 32 1.2 2.17
80" 82 21 M 3-1 1.02
11'141 21 12 18 3-o 3.13 I~ • 23 2t M ). Ill ee 111 :ie 36 s-2 a.41
41 47 21 18 2.e 4.13 *' 47 11 25 1-8 e. 13 1178 UI IN 290 3a.2t 1-18
TMMl._,..I ,,.,_.. 010 002 020--11 I 0
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T.._ ....... ._1 ~ ooo• 010-1 • o
.... YO!tt ' 100 201_. I 0
Tudor, 8. Stenley (5) and Alleneon;
RIOlleUl end WYMO«• W-AIQllettl, ~.
l-Tudor, S.S. HR..;. .... Ycwil, ~ (4).
A-ao.111.
...... a.o.w-1 t.ellMult• 000 011 000-2 II 2 ....._. 002 000 000-,2 • 0
VuckoWltl end aw.-; 0. MertlMK, T.
Mer11nS (a). 810dderd (8) end Nolen. HR-.. •*-· Younl (I). A -13.211.
....... 1 ........ 1
T-OOt 000 O~a I 2 ... 030 010 Ob-7 7 0
HOYgh, 9ulefter (I). MlreMlle (I) Md
~~.:.=~'":~ M ... -T..... (4 ....... J.
Crw(•). A-10,0M. ..... , .....
ONoleo 000 010 -,_,. 11 1
OmldllW 000 '°° 001 0-t • 0
111me, laoatr~~-~~·-.,. (1).
..... (')..... •1 ..... m. ~ ••• (10) and ._........
.. ,.L_.__.4-4."" CtH Ml.~ QJ ,, .... ~ LMlldllllll Cito,,,,_ •
MTIOMA&. LUOI• .... J::ll:• .. "'::.I. . '.... .. , .... ... 1011 ......... 1100
----1210 ..... J.4010 ...... 4111r..-4010 ..... rt I 1 I I ...,_,,._di 0 0 0
GmWf111 •OOO '=" lilO 0.... • , 1 0 ~-•• 0 0 ....... Clf•110--00
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Hernden, o.ro11 M 221 ae n .w
While. ~ °" . 111 206 *' .. .S22 .............
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MIMMoCI, 11>; Aoenlcllte, "'*-. 14; Q. n-. ..,,._..., ta: Herrllll, °"""""""·
12; HemOon. Detroit. 121 OglMe. .........
12. ...............
MoRee, KenaH City, 118: Thornton.
Clev•l•nd, 59; Hrbek, MlnnHote, .. ; Lllllnlkl. ~. 47; OC1i1. ~ a.y, ~. .................. ,
Guidry, N•w 'Vork, •· t ; Vultqvloh, ......... a.a; ...... a..-. 1..a; c.uc.. 8-1118. 7-2; ~ Chloego, to.3; Seltler,
CleMend. W ; Clency, Toronto, 7-3; llllnw.
Chll:ego. T -3.
MATIOMAL LaAG&ll QM II H ,_
T'honlpeon, Ptttlbllrgl'I 116 202 31 87 .3.U ,.,_,,St. Louil ... 11a 11 31 .u1
lotQ, 81. l.oull 48 1'1 • 38 .324 a..,.,,., ..... Yen 51 IN 11 M .'23
Au • .io.... Sen Dlevo 58 208 44 87 .322 CedMo, ancnlllCI 51 197 24 80 .321 ~ Monlr9ll ... 131 1• 42 .321
Knight, Howton 62 244 32 71 .320 0.-. MontrMI 117 213 30 ... 311 ~. Allerlle 116 115 311 81 .313 ........... ~. Au.ma, tt; IQnglftM. New Yortt..
11; Tho~mp1on, Pltt1buryh. 14; aeker,
~11;8-=~-
Murptl\I, Atlln1a. 114; 8. Olu. Pr!Mtd91pHa. ... : ~. CtllCIOO. 43; J. ~. :.:::· ~; :r-New Yen, 42: ~ .......... ,
foredl, ~ .. 2; Aooer-. uonu.i.
74; Mtool. "'°'*°"· 14; ....... ~ 7~ V...._., ~ _,. Andujer, St.
Louie, •·•; Welk, Atl•nte, 8-4; 8010, Clnc:llnNltl, 8-4; J. Hleltro, Houeton. M .
..... WOll-llT"'lta~ 9t! ~.,---=
Ill bonito, 213 b•"· 1 9 mackerel. 1 hllbul. 22 roc:lt lllh. <o...n ~) -1n ~ 2 ~ && bonllo, se&
...S bMa, 73 c;eloo blm, I ~ 34
roc:lt IWI. • htlbut. 515 "**-"I..
DAMA WHAW -283 ~ .. bMa, 3 barrecvde, 10 t bonito. 7 h•llbut. I )'llloll\li. 1t2 madienl. ~roe:(' IW\.
OCUJlllM -125 ~ ee bonllo. 53 c;eloo .... 472 .... beM, 5 heltlut. 7
roc:lt 111111. 333 ....::Mr9I. tM DllOO (MUI~,....._., ..... 1-, -1'1 enQlen: 201 llblcor'e,
25 .,....,...... 309 ~ II bMa, 1'
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LOtM allACN (9etiaet1t l'tet) -14
~ 210 roc:lt fW\. ..... -32 ~
2 bonito. 14 Mnc:1 bllM, II hellbut, 200 "'**··· (0.... .. WIWf) -10t engien' 21 berr8Qlde. 1411 bonllo. 220 calloo beMi
~ Mnc:I be9. 6 hallbut, 4 1 roc:ll lllh.
IU.L. ..,.Off -87 englerl: 380 roc;lt
IW\, 12 Miid beM. 75 bonito ...... -41
eng1era: I bonito, 14 Mnd beM. 5 hlllbul, 200
mack ....
Lee ....... .. .. , .......... '" =r~w•••......, ~~(~JA0t4,IO .. ~ :::...~~ ... ::: =, ..... ~ .... ,....
• ,_ Tiii .... ,,... ~ ..... ............ l'1Mle 11.0t.
• UAOTA (M),... l1aul!•
llOOee u.oa. NO~
... Wlmd (AnNWOl'tO) '·'° uo uo oi... (lfolbl 4 • .0 ••• IMft (Hen) a.~ reoed:.,... lnlllY Moan~~ ........... ""4--. ....... -.. Old' 81~, .._ TM Uimlt. Heddi le A
~11.tl. -
tMlllD llACL ll'O lfW'da. ltlQllt IJOIOV (~ uo uo uo Allilld ,,....., 7.20 •.•
llf'* ~~ 1G.IO Alllo ~. WOf!Oer
No More, l!l•n.. hOrokff. OhlOll ear ...,_., .... Menger
Time: 41.n. '°""'" UC8. MO~ l!I Pldlo (PtlleMOtl) ••• • • .a uo Mcwn1 ...... Cl>Clri.-:> tt • .a UO
Doe "*' (*'1) ... 1'110 reced: l(llam•n "o•drunn•r.
3GWnltficlll. Umlled "'*Y· ~ "':: ... llO LllllM o.-. HooonM
Time: 18.Cfl'. • IXACTA 1241Olld 1106.00.
"'"" llAC9. 400'.,.,.. Sound Ol ""'-ldlrwPUO 13.00 1.00
LlmldllCta ~ 7.tO 1.40 0oc; ,.... 1er..gw1 a.oo
Alto raced: C•r•lot. Fe•ture 8•by. ,Chenllleet. lllulng Jo .., JM. ~
'eter, Apple o.-.
Timi: 11.88 .
eamt llACC. 440 yerda. ~ For CW! tCerdca)l.80 3.00 2.40
...., Honey Att4 9p1oe (L.adt9YI a.20 2.40
lnkyt o.llgllt (Mltdlell) UO
Aleo rllOed: uttte CM1W Oedl, Hurry On Now, Toy ,._t._., Mr Golclminer, Mct(ay
WMI. Time: 21.71.
• DACTA (2-3) Olld 111.40.
UWN1'M ltAC9. 440 .,.,..
o-Me e1a11on g-.ei::> 1.80 •.80 uo, Sound Venhn ( ) S.00 2.80
Ea & Te (Lllcll~) 2..IO
Al10 reoed: S11dd en OHh. Oerll L.~ EMy Jtila Wlndl, The Bomb, Fowy Chebol'6e
Time: 21.82. ... UACTA 1•7) peld 125.40.
mGHTM MC&. 440 .,.,..
~ Hoo (Lllcllevl uo 2.40 2.80
Senlllor 8eee (Hetti 2.40 2.40
Heu Tru AeOll (Clel'lelel 1.40
Aleo reoed: Aoaltele Blilne, NelNe T-.
Kit• S•tl•. Oood f HIUrM, Thr .. Wiid ~'-Ealy. l1me: 21.85.
11UACTA17-4) peld 112.40.
• '9CIC ea (3-2~ .... n Plld 111.111uo wllh ...,.. wh*'G llcMU (llX horWe). 12
Pie* 8bt --wb• l*d 1121.80 with n
winning tk*ele CM ~).. 12 PICllt Six
-.!Ch OOI~ jlllld 166,40 with Ill """"'"° tk*eta (lour hOr.-. -ecretdl).
M9fTlt MCa, 400 yerde.
Mlddle Town t.4an (Crgr) )UO tt.00 7.40
as.80 11.00 7.40
Hee CIMw (Mllrl a.oo a.oo
UI Aanoh ~encl (Of"tdlY) t .80
Aleo reoacl: Hlgh9r Oider, Cllll Me Biker,
Mr ShlkHpenny Too, My S•tln DKlt.
Sumpln Brown, ~. Celdl L&O.
Tim« 20A2. • DACTA (W) peld 11115.80.
Attenclence: 11,821.
~.:.=.r1
( ...... ..., ....... , ...... ,
~T RAC«. 8\.\ fur1onot. 1mmanen1..,. IOuerreJ f1.ao 8.80 1.20
Berlollnl (f'tercal 8.00 5.20
Ollle Al¥el' (Orlega) 12.80
Alto reced: Arndean, l!d't Novel.
Seminole Kid, Clotlllil Trendt, Oeffero,
K.ugwon. My Mondll)' SMlla. ~ <Mvter.
Olympled PromlM. tlrM: I t5 4/1.
•COMO UC.. I 1118 mle. LOW861•(~) 17.80 1.10 11.00
TudoNle (Pleroe) 11.10 8.40
One More Hlahl (AamlrW) 4.90 AflO r•c;ed: ll•r"iry Sey, VIUa Pec;lflc,
EHier Liiy. Louper, fHtlvel Knight. ~ AIQetonl ~. Tll A IOa
Time: U5 f/11. II DALY~ (3--4) peld 11112.80.
THMD llAC9.. 8 lur1onge..
Ton(t OlrtnQ (Vlde) ll.20 3.20 2.80
• a.tlefectu91 lfileroel 8.80 oo Ooon'e Doi (WO r•eye) 1.40
Al•o r•c;•d: Golden Ledy 11•11•, I'm
Smoochln, Sendr• Z, 8. lnvlnclble.
Chwmlng MMy. Tll>ron. ~ ~It'•
... Aofiln.
Tlnle: 1.10
• HACTA (12-8) peld 184.50.
'OUllTH uca. & fur1onot. Run For TrM (Slblla) 1.20 4.80 4.20
onen1a1 Q\emp <H-L 37.oo ia.40
Predomlnenl (Mc;~ 10.80 Alto rllOed: • Or...-d In Blu•. Ledy Of • , Coo'• 8•by, Deer Shllamer, Fleet Weed. In..,_. AMe.
Tlrno: .58.
,..,,. llACa. 8 tunonge.
Ortngo Jim IShoerNlt•I t .20 4.80 UO
8poQ1aculer Boe (Toro) 10.00 9,00
Ouk:lt AlepoflM (c.tanedal 1.20
Alto raced: Femlllar Tune. Ceme't T9f1. Aeb't Outlaw. Aarllble on John. Stacy Jo,
Cepl'n Arphy, Murteu, E111ra Oulc;lt, ~-Tlmc I: 10 t/5.
• DACTA (Ml peld SIN.00.
eocnt AACa. 1 lur1onge.. eon a1 •Dodo (Vlra) 1.00 a.oo 2.40 ~ ~ ,...,_.,, 2.80 2AO
~ <OuerT8l 3.oo 2.eo OH-OMdheel for~
Alto reced: No No; c-'• ""*'· Time: 1:21 1111.
: IDIACTA (3-t) peld 824.00.
UACTA 13--41 Olld ae.oo.
IP9fTM MC&. Im ll#tonaa.
HOC Low(~ UO a.to 2.40 Wind of ~ oro) 20.AO l.IO
01ooo1 Mo1T1 1 a.AO Alto reoe« • Ledy Oebr1'll. Mill'• Olrl, 8WllC Olplomlt, 8w*Npt hi. My
F-"9 Aytit. ni.: t: ts 11&.
• IJIACTA (1-4) peld 8247.00.
••. NIC 3 .... J,..7~ p .. d 18,· 350.00""" 21 111*• ... ~). 12 ,_ 81• Plld l'l.00 with
4n winning**• CtM --~ '2 1"11* Six -lldl GOt&Ol&ll0t1 .,.., 1148.40 """' 213
wlnnlnt .... (tDI# hot-. -..... ). IClratdl 000101111011 peld 1148.40 with 2P
........... (1olA' hcnM. ---=til.
...,... UC& 1\t m1ee on tur1. ::z r,.._. (Plnolly) 2tAO UO UO
1n c•1tr1 '-~ a.eo 2AO ,...,. ... ~ 1.00
Aleo reoocl: M-CIUfld, Croe.ll\191y, i.--. "-Tlldlr. ,__ 1:.41.
_.,.. ¥C8. 1 t/11 ,.,..,
Ylnlrtl ..... (MllCemln) uo ~ uo Allt The OOll..... • MO LID .... ... ., ... ccuu.. ......
Alie rwd: -~ ...... LI' ""'" Goody, MarlO Cr , MIM!flt tn
......... Cllalalll --• TIIM. t:44 t/I.
' '"t'lm..tl!I ,,
...... ;;;; .. ,, ?;4 .... s=:. ':".a:'ICMlll, , ...
t.1: u-:. or.-..r.c:: = N. ..... J.fc ..... I.,.. .,Ull -~ :'~ ::i.·,t,t,~~ ...... . .... ~ ....... 1 • ...-.. .
MlrtOI HMOYlf', ••• , l •t.i. t • I J•ltll ............ llM....,.,. ... .., . tp..zg:~ M-"'............. ~ e.£~11 ~ ..... ..,, ltJrtl MlnW, I
T·f, t·tl VIit terrl ... ~.!!._HI~ .......... ,~ ...... ~ ::r:.. = ..... 7~ -=.: .... ~,....w,t.a. ... ,~ ==-i=:sic:= .. ,......1n ... ~....__.-= ........ ~~ .. ,.,_
.. nllC lie "'-~ .. lftCI of --·--=~ , .. ........
JOM Moliwoe. u.e •. 111 .... v .. ww.y, u.a. =~=::= .... lollllMtoe .......... ~we.~ llourN. u.a. INoe ....,_, u.a ...... Ole* ltoanon,
U.S.
Jolwl fl'ltlller*, Au*elle. "'-M OBn9e, ~ He111r ,...., u.a ...... Mii Puroll, u.e. Sten Smlttl, U.I .• vt. Andr• Gomei,
"°'*'°'''' lrlen Gotth1ed, u.a .. 11•1 "'· a111 .. ...... ,.,_ .
ltiy ~ U.8 ., we. Mgel OW-..
8pMI
o.wtd cer.. "'*11111. \II. --POiier, F'9llOI ~ """'!'-• U.a., \II.~ Fenoutt,
,.., IWlnlrt. u.a. ..... OIMd Terr. 8cMtl
Alrtce Jonelh•n lmllh, lrlt•ln, n . Juen A..-.0.lplM PtW'Ellw,w.et~ ..... ..... ~ .... .loltln Klt&k. .... ~ ~._..u.a..141-."--. ZllllbllMo
Ollllllet "' a.orv-Qoiffn. ,,_ Tlftl ...,..._ u.s,. 111. ,..... """*'8. u.a. Olltller .... ,...,... .... ~ au.-. .... awll ~ AulltW
.-L.epldul. u.s.. .... ldtM l<ulwlky,
Hungery • Vic ~ U.8 .. w.. Hldt llrowft. Main
Andere Jenyd, Sweden, vt. Buller
~ lf1tM'I (It)
Brl•n f eec;her, U.8 .. v•. Shlomo ~ ......
P•t Dupre, U.S., VI. "od frewley, ,.._,....
8tel11,n SlmonHon, lwaden. "'· 8111 8c:8nlori. U.S. Leo Pelln, Flnlend, o . Crelg Miiier, ......,...
Quellfler ••· Slenlt l•• Sl rner, ~ Adr1lll'lo Pmnlltta. lt*y, w. Alcll f eotl, U.S.
Ndl*a Odllor, Nlglfle. ,,., JoM Lopea-
~ ~dt. 8wltwtend, ,,., Meta
Wlllnder, a-clerl (7) .............. ,..., MoNenwa. ~ (8) .... CNp
Hooper, U.8.
,_,..... Blmpeon, ..... Zeeland ..... John
Lloyd, 8r1tlllrl
819Ye ~U.S .. ft. Maroo1.._.,,
Brlld
RMCllCO Oonlalea. "'*'° Alco, w. Soon MoCeln, U.8. · ~ .... JoMlnt Nw9lnlm. Sweden Rem•h Krllhnlfl, fndla, \II. Andrew
~ ._.,,
Qulllter .... ~ Soor-. 8razl
Mar1ln Oevlt. U.S .. va....,,. Edrnondeon. ........,...(121 Rot~oe hnner. U.S .. (15) •t. Henri Leccll*. ,.._
f111z ~ U.S.. w. Mike a.p, U.8
JOfln Au1t1n, u.a .. ••· Puc:ei Pon ...
~
.Jell BorowWI, U.S.. w. quellller (luc*J
loeer1 8emerd Fttb. ff-. .... Sergio eo...
8'Milrl T-Bn*I. ~lldl.."" Rk:flerd ~ ...
Oenle vi-. South Atrlu. ••· 8ruc;e Dertn. .... z.-nd
Oulllter ve.. Yllle OenMltla. u.a. (3)
0... ~. U.S., (I) ve.. T1m au..on,
U.8. llrlld o.-n. Au9lrW. .... Qlalllller
Queller \II. Alejendro Cot-. Colclmtll9
Ettc; Fromm. U.S .. va. Qlalllller ~ OoM. llrazl ..... Ctwte LNle. ....
Zaellnd
Tom Olaaon, U.S .. IL Jererrr'/ Selee,
8tbln
Oullllfler va. T etTY Moor. U.8. John 8edtl. u.s .. va. a1-Denton, u .e . Yentllc* Hoeft, frence (10). va. Bot> L.utt.
U.8. Pai Nc:HalMe, Auelr..._ Vii. Mell Ooyta, u.s.
Bernerd llO!Meu. a.gun, .... ""'°" ...,, Petten. U.S.
John "-· artwln. w. KO'llln ~. South Aff1Ce
Thierry T ulMna, F-. va. QIMllfler' Ou•llller n . Andre11 Meurer. WHI
Oermlny John Aleunder, Au11ralla. ••· Kim Werwlc* • .._.,....
Andrew Pelllton, U.8 .. VI. Jimmy Connors. U.S. (~
~ ....... , ........
t.eert1na .._...._, u.a .• 11>. .... ""9
BIDblltl .io.... llltlAllll. .... 8elll Nonon.
U.S.
L9n DuPont. u.a.. va. ,.,.,__, Whlle. U.S.
Anne...,..,, ,..,..... • ,,.,_ Croft. lll1tlln. ... L*'8 !Ion.-,
Aonwll!I ,,.,_ H*ll. llrttlln. •
Zin• Oarrlton, U.8 .. ve. Leigh Ann ~U.S. e-onn. OooMgong. AullrWlk (18). • ~":::.~a-::~~
U.8. ...,,... T-, ~ ""9
Alldr'9I r-i. HllnflrY, .... Dilrw
Oelllor, U.S.
Ro-.C......U.S .. ""9
PM! CwJe. U.S., .... ~~ U.S. a....~u..a ...... .-..._....
U.8. • Mimi a-. y__...... (I)..
Mdr'll Jeeoer. u.a .. (4). ""9 Olyrlle Colla. lrltMn, .... DIAi .... LM,
K-ROii f ..... 8outfl ...,,_ .... ql.!llMer
Bllillbeltl llalltbodY. lll1tlln. • CoftNle v.-. ffiMo, • . WetWN~u.a ...... ......, Qutfe ~ ..... w.. ._ Leo.
Aultlrelll
Anne 8INlfl. u.&.. (t3). ""9 1en1n1 ..... U.8.,(11).. ~ T .... Frw-. .... Lttfe Allln,
U.S. Mlftorte lllcllwood.. CIMM. w.. •
Jo Owte.. ......... Vlr$INll .... ..,,... u. ...... u ............ ... u.a.. "-T ... &:,U.a.,""9 ~ ... o..-~u.t.. MaN .._ .,,., Clertu• •(ll. ¥ ._ .......
Wllldr~ ...... -.-...,.... .......... uww-. ...
-...... u ... lid~ .. ~ ......... .................... ~ .... LA&Ntltl 111•1. v.t.,.w.. ......
\
..
. -(__ > .
.... , , .. ._..
Adgill1e 2. WMt,Oermeny I Englllr1d a. Frence 1
Sl*n 1, HondurM I
T ..... 0..-CNll ve.. Auttrte el Ollledo (GrOUfl 2)
Cnc:lloelO\llld• .... Kuwait •I VllllM!olld
(Oroup 4)
Yugotlevl• \II. Northern lr•llnO " ZMuoge (Oroup 5) ,....,.o.-
n111y \II. Peru 11 Vigo (Oroup I)
Atgentlnli VII. HunQa.ry et Allc:ante (Group
31 8t1id ve. Soollencl II SeYllle (OrOUP 81
NA8L at.nclnge ......... ~ WLGf'GA•l'tl
11 2.30 15 28 12
10 82120 2414
8 8 23 11 11 ee 3 10 It 3 1 II 31 .......IMNICltl
Fon IAudercWe II 7 37 37 T~ 8ey 7 10 25 33
TlllM 8 I 29 31
Jldl.-wlle 8 1 21 a
W..-niDhWen
34 II
22 14 27 83
21 57
a.rt ,Jom 10 5 28 20 22 80
v-8 s 24 22 20 n
Serl Dlevo 1 8 24 28 II 57 s..t1le 5 I 23 23 20 48
Edmonton 5 9 18 30 15 41 Por11and 5 I 11 15 13 341
Six po1nte •• -dell for • rwQUlatlOn or -um. Yletory. Four polnte tor • lhOOIOU! lllC:tory. One bonut point tor _., gOll
_.., "'"" • mulmum °' lhrM per Cl-· No bonul point .. .w'Cled lot cwer1lme Ot
thOolOU! GC*t-• *' t ,. • .__ Toronto 1. Porllend o
Seattle 4, CtllCIOO 2 T'*e II, Edmonton 1 Sen Joee 3, S.. Otego 2 (OT) y.,_ 3, Tempe Bey 0 ,. ................
Noa-~
Wedn11w-.:.~
~ ....... BOSTON RED SOX -Slgntd Tim
Oofdon, "*'CS ~. encl s-Nettla,
outfteldlr. AllliOMd Oordon to Wlnslon-a..ni al the Cerolne lMiGU8 end Nettle to
Bmn al the ..... Ycwil·Penn lMiGUe-TOftOHTO llLUE JAYS -Signed AAlflte Scflmldt. lf\orUllop, 9'ld -'GI*' lllm lo
l<lrwton, N.C .. of the Cerolne LMQU8. ............... .cHCAOO COes -"**I 01c1t1e Nolet, plloher, on I.he 21 -dey d lHbled lltt r•oecltte to JI-. 11. Nl!W YORK MET8 -lJlgned Floyd v-. pltdler, and aellQned hlm to
Klngeport, Tenn .. of the Appalec:hlen
i..oua. llarled AonllCI "'""'°"'· w..., Oerilner, ATolt P9UI. John 8oytee end Miii• w.ton. pltOhen; Cert Holle end .JoM9ll AHflOkl, 1hort1top1; Alen CermlchHI.
o.tc;Mr; 81-SOrtnaor. outfielder. and
.ION\ --... ·third~. POOTUU. ~ ............... MONTREAL CONCOROES -Nem•d
li!dftlond Alc8rd CIMlnllen al tfle boer<I. ......................
CHICAOO 8EAA8 -Signed Perry
Hertnen • .-ell .Jetry Ooerger. ladtle. end ~"°':o~T-Nots -8ignecl
Ndly 8tilfth, ~ PITT'l8UAOH 8TEELEAS -81onec1 Rick
Woode. ~ back, to e lhr ... )'Mt oonnat. ~. LOUii CAN*AL8 -Signed Ctv1e ~ ....._ llnenw\. to•..-ol oi;r:-m:=...WKS .:_ ~ ~ =-.. --:-·, ....... :~.,~~ """"-=.,..... .......
08fY8I CIOl.D ---"'° Miier ............ =..,_.... .
QMtCA::;i"~·H'l:tKf -Hwned °""' , ....... -=-
OOMffftCAN -Ne1"10d Oellllle Finn .....................
When th• qu.allf}'tna rou.nda tor the 83rd iOu\bcrn California
Golf Auoclatfon a mateur
champfqnahlp and handtcap
iou.mameht are played MQnday
and 1\.teeday, eome 69 Orange
Coast aroa players wUl be
participating ln the four flighta .
lrvtne COMt Country Club ln
' Newport Beach will be the slte of
the champlonthlp fllght ~
qualifying competition with 18 of
the 59 playera entered from ,the
area. There are also five othen
from Mi.ion Viejo Country Club
and Old Ranch CC.
Only 17 of the 59 will advance
to the finals at Bakersfield'•
Stockdale CoWltry Club June 2~-27. The tournament fa the
longest running contested
amateur champiorubip in the U.S., having started in 1900.
Greg Twigp, 21, of Stardust
CC In San Diego, ia the
defe nding champion. He is
exempt from qualifying.
In the President's l1ight, for
those with handicaps of 5-8,
there are 18 area players vying
for seven spots in .Bakep.field.
In the Vice-president's flight
(9-12), there a.re 15 area players
in the field of 62 seeking one of
aeven positions in the finals .
QUALFllNQ ROUNOS ..._..,_,,__,
Cflem9kMrehlp A$ht
(.t IMM C-t C-try Club)
Aree en1ran11. Oenlel Bibb (Big canyon); Cun 8'eirfute (lnllne CoMI CC); Gery Otxon
(FV M lle Squere), Robert Flat11g1n
(MHdowlark CC. HS); Greg Frederick
(Huntlnglon Seactllf); D•vo Hobby (Senti Arte
CCI; Mk;heel Ivy (Meea V•de CC); Mlc:tlMI
O'B<len (Big Cenyoo CC): Paul O'ShM (""'"9
Coul CC). Kemp Rlcillrdton (El Hlguel CC);
Wllllem Selmen (Sant• Ana CC); Mn• Taylor (~ Verde CC), Kenn T ... (El Niguel CC);
Doug Thompton (El Hlguel CC); Ooneld
Turner (Meu Verde): Chrlttopher Wood
(Irvine Coul). Eric Wooda (lrvlne Cout).
Ottier1:Mlc:t1MI Stum (Old Randi); 8r9d Or-.
(Mlstlon V111jo): Fred MHla. Jr (Mlaalon Viejo);
Doug Rybicki (Old IWlc:h); Kyte TOiiy. Jr .
MISslon Viejo): Tom Weode (Mlaion Vliejo).
Preeklenl'e Fllgftt
(el Alb Vt.bi CC)
Robert Allen (Big Cenyo n CC): Wllll•m
Danko (FV Mlle Squere); Roneld Fo.ter (lnllne
CoHl CC). Chuck Gauthier (Rancllo Sen
Joaquin), CharlM H.,rls (lrvlne Coat); Robort
H1r1men (lrvtn• CoHtl : Rlc;hud Holmes
(Colt• M-CCI. Kendell Jaco~ (IMne
Cout); Rlc:h•rd Kiiien (Cotti ....._.); Robort
Kratt (lrvlne Cout Rick Lehman (FV Mlle
Squere); Robort May (Sen Juan Hiiie); Rlc:hatd
Plummer (M ... Ve<de); Kirk ROM (El Hlguel):
Rolaod Spottord (Coll• MeM): Morse TraYerS
(Sant• An•). Velley Voyles (LaQun• Hiiie).
Olhor•· Oeve Hellman (Mleslon Viejo); Tom
Hoeg (Mlulon VICIJO)
V~t'e'11gftt
(.t lmpetlal CWf C--)
Ed Cestlllo (Renc:llo San Joequln): w.,.,..,..
Clarll (MOlldowlm): Oevld Cotllng1on (Sen
Ju•n Hlll1). JemH Oerllng (Renc;ho Sen
Joequln). Sob OeHerl \FV' Mlle Squere);
MIC:haol Grimley (M ... Ve<de): John Hopton
(El NIQV&ll. Julea Mer~ (lrvlne CoMI); 8ot>
Mlhelll.o (Cott• M eH ), M1c;heel Mc;Cue
(HIHlUnglon Selcllff). Forest Purlta (FV Mlle
Square). Joma Richards (FV Mile ~);
Randy Smith (Rancho Son Jooquln); Leelle
Swanson (FV Mlle Squere) OthoB: Mlctwlel
8utby (Miiiion Vi9Jo); Roti.tt Emridl (Old
Rendl). Gordon Gii)' (Sen Juen HUit); Gery
Hemm (SJ Hiiis): Kent Harltlne (SJ Hlllt):
Thoma• MlllOr (SJ HMlt); Jim Slretton (MIP!on
Viejo). J9"1 Ye1g11t (Old Ranch).
locfftMY'• '1ltht (at 1mpw111 Qolf c-1 Wiiiiam Bec;ltwllh (Huntington Seecllll);
Wllllam Etherton (FV Mlle Square); Bob Gover
(El Toro). Ch&rles Haneline (Lagun• Hiiia~
Edward Kasablam (Meedowlark); Donald
Lef ever (Irvine CoHI); Henry Lelc;htfrled
(Ranc;ho San Joaquin). A J . Melle•
(Huntington Seacllll); Bryan McDonald
(Renc:ho Sen Joaquin): Hervey Miii« (UlalHl•
Hiiia). John Perry (Huntington Soacllfl): f:red
Pltla (Randlo Sen JollqUln): Wllll11m Roee (El
Nlguel). Wllllem Slngley (Colle ~); Mitton
S1en1on (MHdowlerlt); Mlc;heel Streno-
(Or•nge County Coll Aseocielion): Anlfy-'fung
(Orang• County GA). Thomee Wellec;e
(Huntlng1on Seeclltf). Othere:Joe Clrewey (EJ
Toro). Bob Fretb«g (Sen Juan Hiiie): Dive
Kingston (Sen Juan HUI•). Bob Lucu fSan
Juan Hiiie). Stephen Polllo (Mleelon Vl9jo);
Welle< Slenstrom (Sen Juan Hlllt).
George
defends
Yankees
NEW YORK (AP) -New
York Yankees principal o\vner
~rge Steinbrenner, who has
often openly criticized his team,
Wednesday defended it.a poor
showing by blaming injurlee.
"There is no reason foe me lO
take issue with this team with
them being as injured as they
are,'' Steinbrenner said. "Any
other team would be 22 pq.es
ou\ by now. I haven't eeen at
many injuries on one team in all
my years ln sports."
Steinbrenner noted that
infielders Graig Net1lea and
Butc h Hobson. catcher Rlck
Cerone, pitchers Rick Reulchel
and Rudy May, and outfieldet
Dave Winfield have all 1pent
time on \he diaabled Uat thSa
INJIOn .
"l don't u1u1Hy harp on
injuries," Stelnbrenner ~.
'1bu\ thia la just IO unbe1iev9ble
· and IO unreel." •
The Yankees, defendla1
champtona ln the American Letcue, are 29-29. and ln fifth
place In the AL ket, aeven ~behind the~ a.ct
8twlnbrenner held out hODe
that the club would Nbnmdln uw ............ al the-.
~ ~.'T"~:;-,....-lf .. -... .. .. .. ...... .,.......... -~
'"' •o•t ••••ua1 .ruar 1"4 ~-~=~=--... , Mow $Mt "
; . ! . . . .
f
,1
I
.
1111 l{'-11\'
-EVINltG-
... , •• NIWI OHAM.11'1 ANGl1.I
THllAINT "TMa--·1~" 1 1.W.A.T.
~·All~
• 'Mf '°""'AAS> ''Oemle" A IOOlt II lelltn
111Mut9of~M
~ ... mllllery
MM Md eoplllelloaled
loon:'.:"""'·
MCNIWI ...CNIWI
MON ~ "8k111ecown u S.A "
( 1111) 8oott Belo, Oreg
8racfford. A MndlOIM
young 111•1« f ... In loll9 It
the local rollw-4'11Co rink.
.... he .. c:Nllllnged by
• etreel gang ...... In •
champlo1111llp co11IHI.
'PO' t:IO. cw.M THMll
"The Print World Of Tatye.
N Oroema11" Roaamond
e.rnlet le Iha guide for a
tour of U11"'-NI Umlled
Ml Edttlona, conalder4d
by many to be tha belt
prl11I wortlahop Ill Iha
world.(R)
111 ...... MPORT .....
MRHIVMILLP
<B)alflMYCNQ(ET
PM8INTI 90NQ()
A lr81ried bMI' NCapee
lrom lhe circus alld looka
lor adwnture 111 tM wtld.
g MOW * * "Homa Movlea"
( 1880) Kellh Gordoll. Klrtc
Douglaa. A young Nm 11u-
da11t aullara from •
bedgerlllg tMCher and All
attrectlon to Illa brotr.ar'a
llencM. 'PG'
1:00 I cee NIWI N9CNIWI
HM'PoY DAY8 AGAIN
I MCNIWI .
KO.WC ii M•A•l•H
Hawkey•'• ••tr•m•
uh-11on mMlteeta ltMlf
111 the lorm 01 llOCturllal
bHkelb•ll gamn a11d
i lll1t1lllQ nlghlmer•.
JOKl!fl'I WllD
11 lllNIEll MPORT
MAGIC~Oll
PAINTING
··o..rt SullNI''
Cl) P.M. MAGAZJNI!
A g-lhow COlllMIAlll
achoo!; lnn«..Qty youths
who are acc:ompllllhed
aaot>all. 9 IENTUIT~
TONIGHT
All ln19Mew with T alla
Slln.
al THE MUPPETI
Gu.t: Oom O.LulM.
(t)MOW
**** ''OrllNI lliu.lon"
(1937) ,law\ Gabln, Ettc:h
Von Slrohalm. Wortd War I
prisonera conllk:1 with •
Oerman commandant. ~MOW * * "Nlglll Sdlool" (1981)
Leonard Mann. Rachal
Ward. Ni an11vopotogy
pr~ with • penct\anl
for c04da ,. auapected ot
Ille brutal murder• of
-of 1119 former bed
pert11«1. 'R'
(Z)MOW • * * "My Cousin Rachal" ( 1953) Otlvla IM Havllllltld.
Rlchard Burton. Baaed on
Iha llOY9I by Daphne du
Matrler. The hair to a con-
lldarabla for1une 1ttempta
lo find out If the worneo he
io-la really • mwcs..u.
7:to. I ON THa TOWN
Featured: • prollle ol
lnduatrlallll Armand H-. the man who
-.
INTERVIEWS -Markina the 10th
Ulniverl&l')' of the Waterpte break·1n.
David Fro1t'1 fir1t interview with
President Nixon wW be aired tontaht at
10 on KOCE (50) and at 11 on ltCET (28).
helped to lflACle OUf Oii· ,.,,, economic and polltlcal
relellOnaNp llllltl t"9 Sovie!
Union; mMI • 14-yMt-old
glrl wtlO eutter• from
Down'• Syndrome; a look
al the UCLA women'• row-
i a,MYnuD
LA~&IHINiY
&COf#ANY
Lawme and Shirley help
Squlggy pue • wrl1t111
drlvtng 1•1 eo that he ca11
kHp . hi• Job al th•
br~. 8 EVIONLA.
FMtured: MW faahlont for
big women: a report on
hotel thef11; the "Hart To
Hart" baNball team.
• M"A"l•H
The opfl< .... ve KorNn
heet gall to ~.
eapec:lally Kllnger.
I Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
MACHO: I LEHRER
AUORT ID NOeOOY DOU IT
IETTEI' THAH YOU,
AMEAICA
Hott Ed Alller ~ at the
lnc¥edlbla rMUlll Amet1ce
hH achieved through
teamwork. Music by Cerol
Bliyer..S.0-and MaMrl
Hamllech.
(JI YOU AIKED FOR IT
FMturad: "Kung Fu Medi-
cine SllOW'' and "Ct\arlla
Brown: Bahllld Th•
~.·· CJD TWO IN A BOX
The mime team of Robert
Shlalda and Lor-Yarnell
ting, dllllCe and perform
mime 111 1 _... of Mlateh-•· • (I) AEA08ICl8I.:
BEOIHHPTO
INTEAMBMATE
Get In 11\ape. look good.
8lld fMI grMt with l.hla
ph)'9lc8I m,_ program.
1:00 8 Cl) MAGNUM, P.L ·
AbMUtfful~-
811 '*" Magnum to find
lier WMltJly ~ ~
b.nd. wf'O -llldnllPC)9d
and la being held '°' All
••otbltlnt ranaorn. (R)
D alFAlff
Da1111y'1 achoolworll
auttan ~ of his )ob
at a loclll comedy dub. (R)
• 7MOl.Y8THAT
CHANOB> AMl'.NCA
Mency Olckeraorl nerrat•
Ihle documentaty wtllc:h
tree•• th• Watergate
Scandal from the brMk-#1
on June 17. 11112. to..,.._
dent Nl11on'1 rMlgllltlon
two yeara later a11d
lndudaa lntenllewl wtth
Gerald For'd, John Slrlca,
John Ehrllctlman and Elliot
Richardton. 8 MOVIE
*'Ar "The l11trydar Within"
( 1981) Chad Everett,
JOMP'I Botloma. Wort<.,.
on a11 laol•ted olt rlQ .,..
terrorized by a prehlatorlc
cr•ture.(R) D MOYIE ** "A Time For ~ ..
( 1973) Rick Juon. J-
Merrow. Two dtfler111t m111
have different protllams
ooi-111!1glt'9lf~ ., ..... ~
A IMll Mio hM me09 I
~ bel1irlO Oft aportlng -1•:~hMlth
prot>lem• through hair
11181y911.
• MOYll ** "Top lecret" (11171)
8111 Coltly, Tracy Reed. All
A"*lcal'I 911 dMler la 1111t
to Rome on e11 undercov.
mlaalon to retrieve 120
pound• of llolell p1u1ol\1.
um.
• IMTCHANCI
caARAGa
Brad SMre dlacu-pr ..
~t•Uve malnt111anoe. CD 8N1AK l'MV1EWS
Roger Ebert and 0-
Slakel r....W "Star Trek II:
The Wrath Of Khat1" and "E.T~. Tha Elctra-T.,,..trl-
at"
OMOVIE
***'A "The Pink Pa11ther
Slrlllaa Agal11" ( 1971)
Pater Saller•. Har~
Lom. The manlacal lcfnnM
pol~ ~or Ontyfue
~ • dozlll MNMlne
to allmlnal• the bungling
l111pactor Jacque•
~. ®MOVIE
***'~ "Atlantic City"
( 11110) Burt La11eu1ar,
Suaan Sarandon The
eatranged huabend of "'
oyater ber waltr-arrlVM I
with her pragNnl younger
..._ and aome stolen
heroin, which he wanta All
eglllQ hood to NII lor him.
'R'
(.l)MOVIE * * * "The Return Of Tiie
Sec:aucua s.v.n·· ( t980)
Mark Arnott, Gordo11
Clapp. The member• of a
group ol oollegt atudenta
active In the prot•t move-
ma11t durl11g the ·eoa
galller for a WM11111d
reunloll. 'R' .MOVIE • * ~ "The Po11ma11
Always Ring• Twice"
(1911) Adi Nlcholaon,
Jea9ica Lange. A )'OUllQ
woman and her lover plot
to murder her hulbend 'R'
a:ao • ODO OOUl9l.I
Oecar Ind Fellx aper!d •
rainy ..-enc1 In the coon-
~ looking lot • Iott girt
• INEN( '9WWWI
Roger Ebert and ~
Sl91tel review "Ster Trell II:
The Wrath Of KNll" and
"E.T .. The &1,..Terre9tr1-
el." IDIMT~
GAMOe
Bred S-.. taia about
how 10 lllld • reliable
mechanic and wtlat loola
are needed to do your own
~•wwortc.
9:00 8 Cl) KHOTI l.AHDIHQ
Sid II• paralyl9d In the
hOlpltel tollowlng • -· lalel cer accldelll. (R)
D8Dff'MNT
STIO<a
Wiiiie la Jiited by hit gll'l-
fl'lend. (R) 0
CHANNEL LISTINGS
• ..W<lNff'IN
Gueeta: Mc'--! St-·
eon. ONQOtY~.
a11 amateur chlldre11'1
-c:8llad ......... Pul On
·~:·
8 KNXT ICBSI
D KNBC INBCI
• ICTLA)lnc:t.)
9t<ABC (ABC)
e KFMB ICBSI
D l(HJ. TV (Ind.I
e KCST !ABC)
• KTTV (Ind.I
'e KCOP·TV Ond.I
. e KCET (PBS)
• K~~ j~l!,Sl •
cm On-TV
(1) Z·TV
CH> HBO
(Cl 1c1.,.rnu1
Cf) IWOR) NY., N,Y
ill) (WTBS)
(J) (ESPN)
Cl) ISflowtlme I
• $90Ulght • IC•bl• News Network)
• NUMIROUNO
• Arg9Mlna'• fMl9d ·-'* dmw, JuM MMUll Fan-
QIO, .. proftled.
• MA11:uw•ca ™EATN
"Aidt .... Amie hlrel All
M\abllfled ac:treel with I
~t ..... and•
derMndlng tampw-1
to lier In hie lllm, (Part •I
~MOW * * ''The Vlellor" (1971) Mel ,._, JoM Huaton.
.,. ........... ..... ..._ .......... ..
~111-•w-..... .................... ....... I,....,.. ...,,...,,,...""'
(D)MIMI
• • • "l"'tiAll .... "'"9-""' (1llO) ..... ~ ....... ,... Tfle we ~ ., lflMltl
ortMIMI "'°"" ~· ... In"'*"'· .......... end Ille MW ... 9fl ile eut•
lid9 It ohronldld. '"' (J)MON
........ ~ liellje-"*'" (IMO)~ HeMI. llleM It-. A -..o-
do ~ ............ . .., ~ ... """" ..... Ing lite .. of..,,_
~Oft ...... wedding
~t·'"' t'.IOll!J8 .... A9MAK tl·Y .. r·olcl lel!IM'tll•
.... "" ...... IQYed -"' ........ '°"" ........... (1\)
• Ul'AHD~
"The N.-Kid" The WM•
aona MoOIM ~of
• tough, 12•Y99'-old ........
tNOii~:::n .....
~ Furilo ~
tor the murderer of •
young black public
defellder. L.aAue neo. • drug deal., a11C1 Fay
beool'llM All .,.,..t Nmln·
llat.~ •• NIWI
§ 20/IO
TO THC~
90fllN
Richard t>eoom" very
ettantlve to A~. wt>O
hurt her back dol11g
chorM.
ID THll NCXON
~WITHDAVIO FROIT
A poat-Watargat• lnler·
view with former Prea1<11111
Richard M. NIKon.
®MOVIE * * * "Sliver Streak"
I 1978) 0-Wiid«, Jiii
Clayburgh. A mlld·
ma11nared bOOk editor
accidentally bacomH
Involved In a elnlater art
thief'• blzerre plot during •
etoaa-oounlry tral11 ride.
'PG'
(l)llZAIN
"The Bigot F•rr*r"
.MOVIE
**~ "Olaappearance"
(1977) Donald Sulherland.
Fralldna ~ .. All Inter·
llltlONI hit mall blcomM
otie.Md with llndlng hla
mlMing wife. 'R' te>:aol N1W1 UPPOMPU
CAii ~ MUKKlNUE
aA TTlJ HOM 0 ll'ETEA IEUMl.I~
MUUJGAN •
A rare a11d YWl.lable lnslru·
ment I• stolen from • -· ~WHAT HAPflt!HI TO
THEMAIL
Cl) WACt(( WON.D OtF
JONATHAH WINTEM
Ou.I: Mclean St-aon.
11:008D8Cll9al
NIWI
• 8ATUN>.\Y NIGHT
Hoel: 8udl Henry. 0-11:
Tom Petty and the Heert·
break ....
G YOU AMID FOR IT
Featured: "Stra11ge11
Mawac:Mter" and "Bird·
mwi Of London."
• M•A•t•H
Hawkeye and B.J. become
loat In enemy tanttory
• MNNYHLL
Benny pWf9 ~ ... •---bel--'ld'-11-•
ter of • par'k bend.
• NIXON INTVMlWI
WITH DAVID F'AOl'T
Marking the tanlh annlvw·
eary of the Watergate
break-In. OeYld Froat'a IQ.
torte llrlt lntarvllw wftfl
lormer PrMldent Richard
Nl•on wfll be -for the
flrat time llnce Ill orlglnel
broedcut In 11177.
(C)MOVll
* * *'lo "Monty Python
And The Holy Grell .. (197')
Graham Chapma11, Joh11 c...... King Arthur and
hi• band ol k11lght•
encounter glarlt•. riddlera
9lld • leroelua rabbit In
their -ch for the legend-
~ =v.
***~ "Allantle City"
(1H0) Burt Lancuter.
8u1111 Sarandon. Th•
aettar'Old hulband of All
aye• bllr wn.. ~
with ..... pregnant younger
elater Ind -stOlan heroin, whldl he .., .. All
eglng hood to Ml tor him.
'R'
{l)MOVll **"' "Alnar1c:M Gigolo" (1880) Richard a.re. lJlu.
r111 Hutton. A a.-ty Hiii
gigolo ~ .. ptlme
~ In a murdlr "'-
{!r.:V:' **"' "Black Moo11"
(19751 Clltwyn Hamaon.
ThWMe Or1eM. When bit·
KT~A (D) 1:00 -11784 Day1 that·
Cha.npid America." Nancy Dtckencm
narntH documentary that tracH,
cbarilaWI .nd dramatic event. from \he
Wa__.tt breM-ln to Prel&dent N1.xon11
rWlp&Uon. Review, below •
KABC (7) 8:00 -'The Intruder WlthJn.0
OlAd ~ Jcmph Bottoma 1tar ~
mcwte about worken on an llolated oU rta
wbo are terrorl••d by a preh11torlc
d"MWN.
KNBC (4) 10:00 -"Hill Street Blu.ee."
Captain J'w11lo March" for killer of youna black public defender.
KOCE (50) 10:00, KCET (28) 11:00 -
"The ~ixon Intel'view1 with David
Froet." P09t .. Water1ate interview wiih
former Preeldent Nlxon. See photo, left.
• .... oMI .. ,... .,,.... °"' In
"" oountry, • ~ ..,. fleMthe~--· 11:t1• TONY~ ~
"How CIYlflu tlon Wu
OlltrO)'ld" Tony 9rOMI
•llAll'llnea wtly Afrlcenl
now find thelnlll\w II .,_.
bottom °' ~ aooiety'• llddlr. (R)
11:to. Cl) QUWOY DatTONGHT
Holl: Johnny Cenlon.
8 0 U.9.C»IN
Hlghltohtl of ht.round
play (from the Pebble
8Mch Goff Unlll In Call-
forllia).
G MOW • * "The Fifth Dey Of
Peace" ( 1972) Richard
Joh11eon, Franco Nero. 11'9
fete of a pair of Oerm.tn
POWa la decided 111 the
final deya of World War II.
.THIJURMONI
Fk>renoe la movlllQ up ...
llld out. (Part 2)
• LOVI. AMINCAN STYii .MOVll * • "Squeeze Play"
(1911) Jim Harrie, Jenni
Hetrick. The glr1frlenda of
eohball playera decide to
torm their own team .. •
way of avengll'IQ their
nagleel. 'R'
11:'480 MCNeWI
NIOHT\JNE
QB CAl'TIONED MC
NlWI
11:615 CJD MAC DAVIS IN
~
Taped at the Sporting Club ,
In Moma Cerio. Mac elngs,
lol<• and d8ftQ8a In • pet•
to<mtnce backed up by
the ta61111ed alnQ*-dall-
~·of Strut.
12.-00 • IHTUITAINMeH'T TONtGHT
All lnlervl9w wtlh Tella
Shire.
• MOVIE **'~ "Strenge Cargo"
( 1940) Clark Gable, Joell
C<ewtord. After eac:apll'IQ
from a penal laland, a
group of men find p..-
and llepplMU through
reMglon.
• LOYI. MmlCAH
fTV\.I
12:11•9 vmAt
Dell Mlpa Lt. NellOl'I hunt
down • -metclng '**" lie llttaclll on Ille Ne6lon
family. (R)
12:10 a a LATE NIGHT WITH
DAVID LETTIMIAN
Ou•t•: comedla11 Jey
Leno. alnger Uvtnga1on
T9)1«. \lldeO JOumallat Jon
Alper1. (RI
IF
• •~ "Continent II
Divide" ( 1911) Joh11
Belulhl, 8lllr Brown. A
Chicago 11ew1papar
co1umn111 travela to the
Roctll• lo~
pollllcel heal alld Interview
• arectulllve Nturallat. 'PG'
12:al CC) MOVle
• "A Chant. Of S-"
( 1910) Shlney Maclalne,
A11thony Hopld111. A mld-
dle-ligad couple try OUI
younger pert,_. dur111Q •
mounlMI v.etllon 'R'
12:.0 8 Cl) MCMIUAH & WR I
A eporta car rally that Mac
and Siiiy .,. i*11c1pm1ng
In .. plagued by Pl'ri•
and ffMk aocldetlta. (A)
1t:ll (II) MOvtl
·~ "OMd And ""'*'" (1M1) J-F91111llno.
Melody Anderton. A amal-lown po11oemw1 11weatJ..
getee a -* of llOMr•
mur.derl. 'R'
1:00• MOVIS
* * * "The ACCUMd"
(1141) Loretta Young.
Robert Cumml11g1. .MOW
• *'Ar "Th• Ho•t•g•"
( 11M17) Oallny Martini, Don
O'Kelly.
Cl) WHATI ~ AMaNCAJ
FMtured: auction• from
Chrl•ll•'• 111 ,.._ Yori< lo
the bac:kroada of Alabama:
donor• and eoup1ea who
employ the a«v1cea of ~eparm b111k1; the 2111
N1llonal Tractor Pull. euo1111 • * •.; "Stay A• You Ara"
( 11180) Marcello MutrolAll·
nl, Nut~ Kl11Ull. A
married, mlddte-aged ma11
embark• on 111 atf.W with •
lllll·aga glr1 who may be
••tad to him.
1:25 8 MOVIE •'It "Franke111taln
Conquers The World"
( tHe) Nick Adama, Seuko
Tagami
9 NIWI
1:30 D QJ HEWI
2*> (I) MOVIE
• • "FlrllCflldler" ( 1981)
JIUllll K...,_, Darby Hin·
ton A female martial arts
teacher travel• to Iha
Orient In -Ch of her
mlaalng ... ler. 'R'
2:18. MOVIE * * * "Tiie Boy With
Gr..,, Hu" (19'8) DMri
Stodlwelt, Robert Rya11. A
young orphan muat learn
lo deal with rej9Ctlon wMf'I
Illa hair tuma grean.
(Z)MOW * * * Y, "Derby O'Glll And
The Uttla People.. ( 11159)
Albert Sherpa, SeAll Con-
rwy. All old lrlah ceretaller
wt>O la abou1 to ION hie )ob
10 • younger men c:apturee
IMklng of the~
Ind rorcae him to grant
three w!ahee. 'G'
2:21(t)MOW
**IA "Ouadrophanla"
(11179) PNI OenWI. Mark
Wlng911. Mualc by The
Who A Brlthlh youth
rejacta the v..-pf hie
family for the "freedom" of
the Modi. onty lo dlacover
that WI ,_ IOdal group
II -more conatr1etlng. ·R· 2:*>. MOVIE * "Frlllk-1aln'e Bloody
Terror" (1971) Paul Nu.
chy, Olalla ZurL
CJD M<>W
***IA "Allanllc City"
(11180) Burt Lancutar.
SuHn Sarandon. The
•trar>gad hulbend of an
oyater bar waltr-arrlVM
with her pregnant youriger
elater 111d some atolen
heroin, whloh he wanlt an eo•no hood 10 ... , lor him.
'A' 2:A61 HEWI 2:11 NaW8
l!OO MOW
*'.+ "The Sevenlh Sul'YI·
YO<'' ( 11M5) Auetln Tr..-.
John Stuart.
JOHN DARLING
l:.o IAMTOUDM OJI
~ .............. ..... ..... ._ ........ ~ ..
~-"'..-.. ......... _......,.
.. Wetl .. Melllll~ ............ ,,...... .... _ .........
1111• MOW ••14 "IMWr Low A
..,.,...,.. (11M) JeM
Dr" leuyMOre, Lii• ... rtirAAM • ..,.. .... ,"""1/i(.
... MON
• * "O.Vll'• Oanyon"
(1ta) VlrglrM M •• 0.
Aoberteon.. •
(J)MOvtl .... * '"Ttle ~ Of Tiit lec:auoue ......, .. (1N0)
Mark Arnott, Qordo11
Olllc>P. TM mem'*9 of a
group of oollega lludent•
eotlve In the proteet ~
ment dwlng tn• ·eo1
0•111« tof a WMllend
~.'R'
.MOYll *'-' "~" ( 1'7t) Mar·
OIU• .._,.IQWIY. .Mne
llenoroft. A lop flilhlon
Model .. hul'llllllted Ind
fNatrM41d by lier -
oa.IUI lllefnptt lo -
111101 IN """' wtlo raped '* to prtaan. 'R' {Z)MOYll
• .... ''Sl'IOdl Comdor''
(11M13) Pel• If«*. Cori·
atance T--. A writer'•
commitment to • m111tal
lnstlWtlOn ,_,,,. In • Pul-
.._ Pttae. but the beat·
Inga Md ahocka ,_,., In
~enle.
•:11 ® vmo .M<UOX ':IO. VOYAGa TO THE 90TTOU CW THE HA
"Reecul"
(t)MOW * * "The Jau Slriger ..
( 1980) Nell Diamond. Lau·
rellCe Olivier.
•:'4®MOW * * "8$1rdey The 1'1h"
(t911) Rjchard Benjamin,
Paula Pr111t1ia.
Frida•'•
Dat1• l•e Movie•
l:IO W * * ''T«Tor Train"
(1980) Bwi Johnaon. Jamie
Lea Curtla.
Im (%) **'A "ou.drophenla"
( t9711) Phil Oenlela, Mark
Wingett. MIJelc: by The
Who. A British youth
reject• the Y1llu9I of hie
family for the "lrMdorrf ' of
the Modi. only lo dlacover
that Ihle MW aoc:lel group
la -more conalrk:llng
'R'
7:00 ®***'Ar "Darby 0'0111
And The Little People"
( 1959) Alber! Sharpe, SMll
Cotin«y. All old lr1ah car ..
taker who la •bout to io..
hi• )ob 10 a younger man
captur• the king of the
i.c>rec11aun1 and loroaa
him to gra11t three wtanM. ·o·
7:GI {C) * * * "The Concert
For Kampuc:Na" (19801
Paul MoCartoey, The WhO.
7:80 Cl) * 1A "On The Right
Tr.ck" (1981) Gaty COle-
1111111, MlehMll L.emble*. A
IOQlel worker tl1ea to find a
ll«mel home for • trMI
atmlon ~boy with
• talent for plc:lclng the
poNea. 'PO'
• ** "Horne Mo¥181"
( 1980) Keith Gordon, Klrtc
Oouglaa. A )'OUr'C1 lltm 111'·
de11t aulfera lrom •
~ tmcn. and .,,
etttlefion 10 his brother'•
""-.'PO'
l.'00 (%) * * "Verboten!"
(t968) J-Beet. Sua8ll
Currwnlngl. An Amer1clll
unoovera • Oermall youth
organization lormed by a
~oup of ... Nazla.
l:IO CC) * * "High Country"
( 198 1) Timottly Bottoma.
Unda Purl. All eecliP9d
COllvlcl and hie handl-
capc>ad glr1trtend flee to
the mountain•. 'PG'
9:00. "J.D. Alld The Sall Flat
Kid"
IU6(%) ***'Ar "Mant\attan"
(1979) Woody Allen,~
Keeton. A ..._ Yori< City
comedy writer br'Mk• up
with hla ~time glri-
trllnd to aqulre around 1111
lntelleclually vapid tlerl-
ager. 'R'
•,
-Cl>·~ ''Oft Tfle ...... T1'91111" (tMt) ca.y 0..: -. ........ ~,. ..... .............. . ,.,..... .... .. . .,.... .................. ..... ..,,......._
~.,.. Cl>••· .............. ,,. Yeut" (lt?I) ..... .._, ,_,...., .. ....,....
................... to '*"' .. .., '°"' ... . ~a:> ............ ,..,,.
(1t71) ----....... NfMlt4 ...... nw. ................ ................
of New Y"11 Oley OOlllOlfll "'* ., .... of Miine and
lw-.n In._~ 10
..... Miier ltv.I fOf
ttllle--. 'PG'
·····~""°" (117t) .i..... Clen, ......
Iha ...... loon ""' .. ...............
""""" ,.._WIC!y '~ In l0\19 'Ollft. •PO,
H:IO CJ) * * * "High Allk"
(1911) JllftH lroll11,
0...-.. UttM. A trio o1
~ ..........
roMlety ol • ll'lllllon ....,.. "°"' • loultl ~ df'llO....,, ·w
, ... * ·~ .. ....,,, Doller
Mlnhllnf' ( 1M7) RlcNnl
DIMlrle. Ceroll .....--..
A _,,. ~ unocwra a
apec:tecu1ar WOttd Ww •
counllrtatl"'v oC*8tlon.
• *** ''WfloW•Thee
L.ady7" (IMO) Tony 0urU..
OMn Mertln. A oollege
PfoNMor enll9ta the aid of
a Wfllolf lttand to help
•XOlalll to hie w11e why 118
-lllealng • lludant. • * * '..\ "The 8lg Carni-
val" (19511 KJrk OouglM,
JM St"*1g. 111 order 10
booat hie oweer. • report· ., •KPl<>lt• the auffoertngl of
the wit. of • man trepped
In a c:a ...... ln.
Cl>* •'lo "Contlnlntal.
Divide" (1981) Johri
e.luahl. 8lelr 8rown.
1~ Ct) * *'A "A Flalful Of
Oynwnlte" ( 1972) .,_
Coburn, Rod Sttilger. An
lrlah r9Vdutlonary and •
Me•lc:an thi91 who ·-up to rob banltl IOmlNM
wind up being heroea of
the Meldcan ~ ® * * y, "The Sl.ntvor""
(1981) Robert Powell, Jiii..
ny Aguiler. A plot -""-
• Qe\Mtrophlc 7•7 ~
UQterelohad and -en.
tor the man raaponalble.
1:00. * •'h "Continental
Divide" (1911) John
Belulhl, 8lalr Brown. A
Chicago nawepaper
columllllt travels to the
Roell* to eacepe -
polttlc:al heet and lmerMw
a recluaive neturellet. 'PO'
1: 11 (%) * * * ~ "Atlalltlc City''
(1910) Burt Lancuter,
SuH11 8ara11do11.
2:00 CB) * * "Hog Wiid" ( 1880)
Panl O'Arbanvl ... MlehMll
Blahn. A high achool c.m-
pue ~ the Nr1lng
point for wlld prenka and
hllarlly when -· deM-cut younga1era decide to
tall• on a '"°""" motorcy-de geng. 'PG'
t:aO Cl> * * 'h .. Joum9Y 8eck
To Oz" (1972) Animated.
V«*)aa of Ura ..,,_.,
Paul Lynde. Dorolhy
retume to IN LMid of Oz
Ind WICOW!tln the .....
of the Wldtad Wiich of the
Weet.
S:OO (%) * ....... Bon Oeber·
,.. .. (1M1)0Nrtot1e L'-
r1er. Merle Tifo.
S:IO ®**~"Chu Chu And
The Philly Ruh" (1IMI 1)
Alan Atttln, Cerol aum.tt. •:OO . **'""Cry Of BlltW'
( 1 IMl3) Van Heflin. Rita
Moreno. The overlndulgld
eon of • AllpW1o ~ meonat• ~ maturi-
ty when he '°"" ... Amer1--
Cll'I ~unit.
Cl) * * y, "The Sllogun
Warriors: Gailltlng" Ari.-
mated. A powerful rObOt
defenda Earth when It la
thrMtanad by l<JllQ Oer1ul
and the Death Horror
Corp.
•••• "~ltBe"
( 1970) ]'ha e..u...
l:tO Ct> *. * ''The Conoert
F0t l<ampuchla" (1980)
Peut MoC4w1ney, The Who .
by Armstrong & Batluk
10 years later, Watergate scandal recounted
J
bnek·in to pt the CIA involved in the oover:UP -Wtama w..t admit that be WM WJ'ODI. Before
television cameraa, W1a1Lna panes -hurt,
betrayed. Re can barely apeU..
Mostly, there la Hixon. at..,_ tun he can
shake off hil pc'Oblem with ~ men tpeeeb. ~
t.elevilllon. In one telllna ecene, Nlxon, aeeldn1 a
l)'l'Dpatbetic audience, aic-to NaabvWe met at the
Grand 01' ~ plays "Ood me. Amelica" OD the p.no.
In anotbw, he ..U. ~ edlkn: 'Tm not
• crook. rw eemed eYtl')'thlnc rv. -·· In anodMf, ha promfw _alndar. 1-na.. cm be
no wbitewllb et the Whl• lfom9." A.Ad finally, be 3ra. OD ~..._ .... .........,._ a tbe
next dey ..... II the cldmd ~
"'My ~ WM a llAnt," he IQI. llE"Cbmil
foe' ......... ID ray. "Iba wOl bllYll DO booi wn.-..... o ..... but ...... .ml." ,_lllllatthedlarofa'rM•.-~tbe ........... of GU11Lt' ' d--. ._..... ....... Va.l\lil-W'lll~--·-i'·
1-
':
"'•11ttllt
YOUTH IN POLITICS -Eleven-year-old
Todd Martindale is a registered lobbyist in
Ohio, where he battles projected cuts in
education funding. He has struck up a
friendahip with Gov. James A. Rhodes.
' I _,,, .
Start s ummer
with niy stery
•
By BUGH A. MULLIGAN
IJl.,_...C...r11pa!MlllM
· RIDGEFIELD, Conn. -The clang of
horaeshoes on a nearby lawn, the zap and sizzle of a
blue bulb bug lamp, the golden glimmer of the first
bikinied jogger out my north window all portend
that summer at last is a'oomin'.
The time has come to string the h.am.mock and
laze away the long swmy afternoons in the quiet,
cultured company of the Mulligan._ Stew summer
reading liat, now coming at you for the fifth
succe9Sive season.
At the relaxed pace of a book a week. this
year's list offers three months of light literary
exercises that will hone your mental agility,
lncreue. your conversational prowess and transport
/ .
HUGH MUlllGAll
you to romantic, blissful climes with no strain on
the family budget beyond the energy costs of
getting to the public library.
Somehow, summer always strikes me as the
most agreeable time for mystery and murder and
mayhem. I suspect more mystery writers contrive
their foul deeds on languid summer days than on
snowbound winter weekends.
Didn't Mary Shelley produce Dr. Frankemtein
and his monster as a holiday ~lie, a vacation
exerdae entered into among friends who had grown
bored with croquet and boocl or whatever was on
the program at their Italian resort?
And Mary Roberts Rinehart, I am told, did her
nastiest work at her pleasant summer house up in
Maine, where even. the sight of a dead moth on the
porch screen was inspiration enough to make her
day.
Writers who We their typewriter ribbons with
blood can be very fastidious, wbich is why this year's
summer reading llat begins with Hector Munro, an
elegant writer doling out delicate, delightful malice
under the pen name of Saki. Do try to get hold of the recently published
"The Complete Works of Saki," with a splendid
introduction by Noel Coward. Actually Saki might
have been suspected as the pen name of Sir Noel
had that sophisticated playwright indulged a secret
paasion for the sinister and macabre.
Read the stories at random but begin with the
oft anthologized "The Open Window" and the
lesser known "The Disappearance of Crispina
Umberleigh" to start your sununer off with spine-
~shudders from one of literature's more malefactors.
After Saki on our reading list, summer's long
1badow of horrors moves on to John Collier,
another master of the macabre happily enjoying a
revival after years of neglect by the critics.
Collier was an erudite, oaceful British author
who hid from fame in Hollywood, of all places,
where be turned out memorable ICript:s like "The
African Queen" and aome of the finest overlooked
abort stories of our time.
''The Best of John Collier" takes the vacation
reeder to an exdtlner evil fantasy world where
department store dwDmtes come menadn&ly alive,
the hero of "Bottle Party" ii juged. corkecl and put
on sale •. and a aalesmam calla room aervice in a
Chicago ~otel to order chee\e for-the live
demonstration mou.e be U8e8 in selling his new
invention, •ltJ'be Steel Cat." Great "stuff.
Under the heading of "Booka You May Have
Mileed But Shouldn't Have," I enthusiastically
recommend wickedly, witty "Burr." Gore Vidal in
his beet form makes a lovable
thero out of one of history's
Ulains and etche1 in acid
terestina character studies of
eorae Wublngton. Thomu
!Jefferson and Alexander
Hamilton.
Invitina Vidal to add.rem a ~effenon-J"acbon Dey dinner
iwould be akin aft.er this novel to
~ a St. Valentine'• Day
--. ~ 1n a pr-. In ChJcaao.
For ICholarty reediD8 this IU!Dlllel', we depart
from our UIUal cwt.om of W'linC ..ne negleCted
dMllc and bwteld call your attentloo to "Yean of
Upheaval.'' the~ vqlume of Henry Klmlriaw'• _.,...,
You may admire or abhcr our former~
ol ...... but hll Intimate 1"11,P of hiltory. bll
penchant for Ulwnlna!!:A.:ecdotet and hi• ..-.i literary .tyle to produce the
Bwllllt. moet r.dable politicel memotn llnee
JIMGldlfldlolaL
llMl.&1, DOW thli!.1"!'!1~ -lhe TV --...... timl&: ..... IMllD ........ ~illiiiiill
leekl' r llld Ind out WM& ~ • :;::-• ._
• • o1 -.a ._, ind MilWll9 -=-s•• WI' ........ -............. .. ~ ........ ...,c ... -.. . • ~==.,.... ,.T.r-
NO . .DEALER SALES AD ST ARTS THURS.
WEED EITEi
BOME-1-YIRD 1~, ~BLOWER ~ 4'"
3988 ~I .,
#2500 ~ ~~ \\
Do you bellHe th11 thing whl1k1 away the
lea .. 1 and Junk and blow1 alr at 125 mph?
(Would I kid you? Me. who l1 cm honeat.
r .. pectable perlOn?)
ONE GILLOM
·COLOR
13~.
First thing I thought of when I aaw
the title wa1 a gallon of paint.
(What a dum·dum I aml) We ban
Vlnca1. Ja1mln• or lmpatien1.
3 RllfG TOMATO
BASKET
59•
Keep• the tbmatoe1 up off the ground
and healthier and that' 1 the name of
the game when It come• to tomatoe1.
right?
BUDDY L
HOODED WAGOI
CBARCOM, GRILL
337
!435X
A 1plffy looking deal. ha• 5
po1itlon flrepan. 2 •ent
control• end lip top hood. (I
ne•er get lost ...... ryone tell•
me wher. to gol)
STYLE I IE PORTABLE
BAR SERYllG CART
1088
How about that. Margo, a
little bar for the patio.
DURALITE
Comee with ice buclret and
tidbit container1. 20" x 23".
In Caaablcmca White.
OUTDOOR
FURlllTURE
Ah. great bring on the
hot weather and cold
driw.1· .. be.n
waiting all year for
th11.
BOIWE.IYE
Yellow and white
boxwean patten;i. ..... -UC& CUii
74" FILDllC
.
I 7 :st.
SffiiiWI
CHAISE 3 3~42
STIClllC S1UP
Hl-luatre. heayY
gauge, fade real1tant
PVCatrapplng. Yellow
1trap1 with white 'accent1.
CUii 25~~1
74W'
5 .... 55" 131111: #75'1
ftll:llSPlml
Like 11_.lDg oa a Cl'9Clm
pat(. la cbocolat• cmd
CIMlll plaid.
WEED · EATER '
TRl~MERS
ELECTRIC
lllCI
Forymdlo(tbat'1 a patio
yard) lawn1. Manual line
ad•ance with 12 tt. of
Une.
.J
• II llCI
Haadl .. th• 1mall to
medium lawn. Tap-N·Go
cutting bead with 35 ft . of
line. 24.88 .
#409
11 llCI
For the large lawn or
b9Q'Yy gra11 and w-.d1.
Tap-N-Go cutting head
with 50 tt. of line.
w
Cuti a I 7" path (10 ther..
DayY Crockett). Heu 40 tt.
of llne ln Tap-N·Go
1y1tem 26.2 cc engine.
SPRDfKLER
TBDf KER
ONE STATION
4444
FIVE STATION 55ss
Hooks right up to your exl11ing YahH and you don•t
n-.d any AC electrlcal wiring ' cau1e thll i1 battery
powered. Ba1tery not included.
¥4" URDWOOD
PLYWOOD SHEETS
.,.17"' ~ I.! ,I. • v •\
MAHOGANY 2777
DAKUA 2977
BIRCH 3377
ASH 3577
o.u 3777
' \ \
I I '
The kinda 1tuff you
n-.d for maldn ·
furn!tun. cablnet1.
onhel• ... Don't
UH it on Junior' 1
1C1Ddbox. though.
DISSTOI CBALLEIGER D
unu~-i~•_.-~
31•
A 26" blade with 8 point• per
Inch (Th11 may look Uke Ju1t a
regular •aw to you but it can
make mu1lc. right. Jim
"SupeHGW" Leonard?)
TBOMIS llDUSTRIES
SPBlm AIR COMPRESSORS
IV.IP 387'f'f
'Va!' 167""
StabUIAd air dell•ery
1.8 CFM at 50 PSI. 8
gal. tank. Regulator
extra.
V.IP 217'1'1
StabUlMd air dell•ery
2.2CFMat50PSL 12
gal.tank.Regulator
iDchadecL
s.awu .... air cWl"'f· I.I CFM ~ 50 PSI. 20 gal.
kllak. Replator lDcluded.
M'' IUIEB IPDYllRI
QT.3" OAL 11"
..,acoat••tetcl9orlalde
............... diie.tv.ff .,...,-...ru ... outu.. _.,..,. .............. cmc1 ...........
2'. x 2' CEDAR
DECK SQUARES ~ r~
~ 3•7 EA.
See. we already did the hard worlr tor you. All
you h~e to do i1 put the frame work together
for a patio, dee Ir. walkway or whate•er.
Yz" ('LAT YllfYL
Vacation uaually ~
conmta of 2 week• ?"
which are 2 abort
aher whlcb you
return 2 worlr 'cauH
you 2 broke not 2
comeback.
ROLL-UP
BLOOJS
3 x 6 4 .,,
'x 6 6 ,,
8x6 8 .,,
• x 6 12""
10 x 6 16""
MICROWIYJ:
CIRTWttB
TAMBOUR
DOOR
39•!.
Hold HerythlDg. don't ue up that
•aluable kitchen countenpaee for the
micro. (la that a gen.era! order? Y eab.
taco. tr1 .. andacoke.) l.D.
-
-i....-.....
KELLER ALUMIR·UM LADDERS
~DEIS
27" 1247
4' 1997
S' 2397
6' 2597
8' 4797
EITElfSION LADDERS
14' 3797
16' 4797
20' 6797
Gets you up for fixin' up the house. (My house is
split-level, the bank owns half and I own the other
half.)
m ULTRA 80
ELECTRO RIC
TELEPBOIE
WITH FREE
BOLDER Why pay Ma Bell that
19Dt on the phone. buy
yow own and 1crn the
money for a bu1 ticket
to Co1ta Meaa. ln
almond beige or cocoa
b10wn.
3997
LllCE
YIDEO
MASTER
199#~775
Total control (I loYe It. I lo•e It) center for
your home •ldeo 1y1tem. Let1 you book
up yow TV. VCR. di1c ,Player. ~·•
andatuff.
CAROL CABLE
75 n. llEIYY
DUTY 16-3 SIT
OUTDOOR
EXTEISIOI CORD
Thl1mucheord canget a1
tangled a1 old Aunt Edna'•
halr but don't get Iii an
uproar. You get a FREE
CORD CADDY with the ol'
exten1lon cord.
797
S.G.L WIBEB
llOTLl-OUTLET · ~ STRIPS , -.
4 97 • I
OUTU:T 11 #4SPDX '
8 13•7 1~\ OUTLET ftSPDX
I uMd to UM theM a bunch. had cm
, ot&.that-.JybadtwoouU.t1.droH
IM Cl'CDf ~bone caD go Cl1t faet GI th•
lllCIMf JOU bet OD him).
Jt
WET 799
#?1
Hospe model with remo•able .
aheU. ln1lde Dlmen1lon1:
lS"H x 12"Wx9Yt''D.
Room.ler and ha1a19mo•able
drcrwer. ln1lde Dlmen1lona:
lS"H x l2"W x 13''D.
Hold1 l8" ledger boolrl. ledger
tray1 or caihngl1ter tiaya.
lnalde dlmenaloia:
lS"H x l~"W x 18W'D.
Underwriters Laboratorie1 (UL) aay1 thHe
guy• can wlth1tand a 1700-fire for about an
hour. Changeable comblnatlon. loddng bolt
wlfhCli<iaDolf1 on ciD Ofree. --
MURRAY BICYC.LES ........
WIWYClllSEI
Balloon wbltewal11. coa1ter brake. full foam
type grip handlebar and Flamboyant Red
llnl1h. ~ ~ . ~'= ~;~ 99•• ~ v #1-6541
Buclrlkin and Sand Unl1h with chrome touring
handlebar.
WATERLOO
UIDYMll'S
CllRY-ALL BOX
I I 9 7
#210.l
IMpe all your 1tuff in one place. Dlmen1loia1
21 "W x l"D x lO"H. (I>td you bear about the
~who had a baby in the 1prlng?)
,
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ThurtdtY, June 17, 1882
' •~.
'iOU 5'Nr! ~~OQ.t
Wlllf \J~ Tb J)O .
J>AD ~1'9f+t '
S'nLL HA\IE ~S
Mo~LGFr~
COLEMAN
PACKHORSE D
TRAILER WITH
FEllDERS
18997
<1 Wonder how tho•• ol'
mining codger1 made
llwltbanol' DCJckhone?
Cargo bed 11 49"x41",
bolda 1063 pound1.
Rece11ed tallllghta
10 i I can be atored on end.
SHELL nRE 81 ICE
ILL SEASON
MOTOR OIL
84t QT.
lOW/40 WT.
We got a full dJ1play of the atuff in the a tore.
(Boy. my relrlgerator malte110 many lee cubea.
Jcan't bellnemylce.)
PRESTON£ D
SUMMER COOLANT
Am-FREEZE
3 8!AL.
Holda down the bolling polnt of the radiator 10
ye.a don't haYe to worry about drl•lng out to
the d~Mrt or Las Vegas in the heat.
ALLISOI
AIR COOL CUSBION
I ~.~1102
TheM bablH cue 1elling llke hotcakH. No.
they're not botcakH. You don't t}\ink we'd
really ITV to ••ll you hotcakH. do ya?
·~\1\~
STARLIT£ WRANGLER
SEIT COVERS
.... l \·.·t;. '. I ~ I 22••
SaH the ol' uphol1tery. C.t thH• for your
Mlnl Plck·Up. Standard T.ruck. Low Bucket or
• High Bucket aeat1. ln Blue. Black or Brown.
A friend of min• got
one of tbeM. U. aay1
1t'1 gNGI you can't
ml11acopcomln' up
behind you. (I like
that.) ,
p -
28" FOUR PANEL 1077
35" FIVE PANEL 1177
CIL CUSTOll BIWI
CUITOll WIRE
PANEL CLOSE-OUT
All are 4 x 8 1heet1. Limited
quantlllH.(Hey. l1a
Far-Out the oppo11te of a
Cloae-Out? Think about Ill)
DIPLOMAT CRYSTAL ELM
577
ii ' t ,,
) , I ·COMBINATION CHESTNUT
COft1BINATION WEAVE
COMBINA TJON PECAN
VERA CRUZ " ' ..
I ' '
111 I ; I
'I
I YOUR
CHOICE I• 'i ' Il l I: 11 •
777
MILL PLANK PINE 1277
PACIFIC ASPRIL T
DRIVEWAY
RESUllFACER
8 77
SGAL
Thi1'll make the ol' driveway good QI n•w.
(Inflation baa changed tblng1. Now one ca.n
live QI cheaply a1 two.)
DOMINO ELECTRONIC
COMBllfATION ' ' I LOCK _ CJ
14e4 ~!\ .
UM th11 with yow automatic garage door
opener. Put It up on the out1lde to thegarqg•
In caH you forget your tran1m.ltter or key.
r •••••-• KOOPON ------.. . I I CElllE Y3 BP DELUXE I
1 ~\~rGE 1
I I I I I I I I I I I I
II Pu1hbuttoneaaeandMCUtltyforyour I
garage,. Hey. and ll1ten the ln1tallatlon II ha1aonefullyearwarrantyonlt.Cbeok I
out the coupon I 1
I 12~~ .I,
I I
I I
I I
~
..
I
Orange OoMt DAILY ftlLOT~. June 11, 1111
-~-von-Wln&-
Marketlng
Accolade
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. -
Vona Grocery Co. received: the
1982 Diogenea Ethics in
Marketing Award from the Sala
and Marketing Executives
Asaocia ti on of Loa Angeles
recently •t ttie. Biltmore Hotel.
The award, for the highest
ethical marketing practices by a
Loa Angeles company, was
received by Kenneth Olsen,·
Vons' president.
The Diogenes Award is
presented arunually following
extensive studies of Southern
California companies by students
from the UCLA Graduate School
of Management. Three finalists
were formally presented to the
SME Board of Directors who
made the final selection la81
month.
AN
ADVERTISING
SUPPLEMENT
ORANGE
COAST
DAILY PILOT
. -Affor dable
Computing
Is Here
MicroAge Computer Storea,
Inc. baa been approved to offer
franchisee i n the state of
California and recently
announced the openin1 of itl
franchiaed re1'11 store at 1~10-A
East Edinger in Santa Ana,
Calfornia, owned by Mr. Tom
~e Santa Ana ltor'e ii the
thirti~th of a projected 60
Micro.Age Computer StQre
franctQaes t.o be opened by the
end of 1982," said Jeffrey D.
McKee\re r , president of
MicroAge Computer Stores, Inc.
"Our store ia designed not onlt
to display prod\.lC1B," Tom Ong
said. "It allows U1 to demonstrate
the various. systems, and let the
customers 8ctually operate the
computers' themselves."
, Lida Sokolow, th e UCLA
student who studies Vons'
marketing program, said she felt
Vons is deserving because of ita
"dedication to customers" as
·exemplified by the time and
effort put into informing
shoppel'S of the nutritional values
Fedco .Opens Store In Ontario
Mr . Onll said the store will
cat er to lirst-time computer
us ers, specializi ng in
mlcrocomputera for small
business and professional use.
"Our store is unique in its
'systems and solutions' approach
to computer mar~ting. We carry
systems for w.6rd processing,
automated accounting, client
reporting and time manag~t
as standard items, ranging in
price from less than $5,000 to
more than $10,000(" Tom Ong
said.
of foods, CPR, and other matters
of general public concern, and
the "time and e ffort spent
responding to customer questions
and problems.·~ She alao noted
that Vons provides courtesy
payment booths for ·shopper
convenience which the company
operates at a loss.
In another exampl e of
community service, it was noted
that Vona donated a building in
South Central Los Angeles to a
local boys club. Sokolow pointed
out that Vons continues to put a
high priority on customer ,
aw~ness as demonstrated by
the companies recent distribution
of earthquake survival manuals.
The judges specifically looked
for examples of effective self-.
policing in selecting the winner.
Vons was found to be the first
Southern California supermarket
chain whose standards in meat
handling were judged sufficient
by the Food and Drug
Administration as to not require
the presence of FDA inspectors
on a regular basis. The ·judges
also noted that quality control
laboratories, staffed by Vons'
scientists, test all product before
it reaches supermarket shelves.
Jolly Roger
Hawaiian
Sweeps.takes
The Jolly Roger Restaurants
has just announced the first
sweepstakes promotion in the
corporation's 34 year history. By
means of six separate drawings,
one a week for six (6) weeks, The
Jolly Roger will award fabulous
family vacations to six (6) lucky
winners. Each vacation package
for a family of four (4) includes
round trip transportation, a
week's luxury accommodations,
1IJld $400 in dining certificate.. ~
The Hawaiian t"amily Vacation
campaign launches a new Jolly
Roger menu item called the
"Hawaiian Luau Dinner." This
"island feast'' of Bonelela Breast
of Chick.en, tender Pork Back
Ribs, and a Prime Rib Bone,
accompanied by Rice~ l're8li
Tropical Papay1t and Pineapple
.garnished with Strawberries and
Coconut, your choice of Clam
Chowder, Soup, or Salad, and a
half-loaf of warm Bread and
Butter.
• The Jolly Roger restaurants
are traditionalfy known for
moderate prices, and the
Hawaiian Luau Dinner 11 no
exception at $7 .95. tthe debut of
the special menu item cotncidel
with the first week of the
contest, beginning June 14, 1982.
Entry blanka and ruk!8 will be
available at each of the 22 Jolly.
Roger locations in California.
Sweepetakes particlpanta mmt
enter each week to qualify for
that week's drawln&, the tint to
be held Friday, July 2, 1982. On
that date, the tint family of four,
. or two couplea, will be awarded a
cotnplete Hawaiian Vacation .
· Then, between J uly 2nd and
A~u•t 3rd, ~ m.or• lucky ~-will win! Round trip air
trawl wU1 be provided COUl'telY
of World A1rway1, wUh
departure• from either Loa .,...._. or Oaklanc:I alrponl.
QMil .. Hawaii. ...... wtl1 -----r----~ cm :,w-.trm-t\ .JI -----~ ...............
ONT ARIO, CALIF. -The
Grand Opening of the new Fedco
Ontario Membership Department
Store will be held this week.
Located at Archibald Avenue
and the Pomona Freeway, this
new store is Fedco's largest to·
date. -Mr. Edward L . Butterworth,
President of Fedco, will be
attending the ceremony, along
with representatives from the
Indoor S'1ootlng Range
Preparing for Opening
Already a booming success in
Northridge, the Firing-Line, an
indoor shooting range whose
concept has attracted national
attention, is set for a Mid...June
opening in Orange Ccunty,
according to owners C hris
Vrakelos and Mike DeKofsky.
Now nearing completion at
17921 Jamestown Lane in
Huntington Beach, the n e w
F iring-Line will join its San
Fernando Valley parent
opera.tion to provid e
Southlanders )ith the nation's
finest competition-ranges. ·
"These are not shooting
galleries. They are sophisticated
facilities designed to provide safe,
space-age accommodations for
target sportsmen," said
DeKofsky.
Howled in the attractive $750,
000 structure will be 16 fully-
a u to mated safety booths,
soundproofed and equipped with
target retrievers. Appropriately
illuminated, the r:::Je is
constructed with reinfo steel
walla, ha&-a .steel-plated -safety
ceiling and Leadalator bullet
traps. .
"We are ·obviously concerned
about providing a trouble ... free
envirorunent as well as satisfying
the recreational needs of our
customers and members," said
DeKof.sky.
AlthoU,h hanc:tgun calibers up
to .44 magnum and .22 caliber
rifles can be used at the Firing.
Line, co-owner Vrakelos is quick
to point out that they will not sell
fi,reanns.
"We are in the business to
enable target shooters to have a
comfortable sports facility for
everyday use d espite the
weather. Outdoor fadllties are
not only not as safe, they are not
always available," be exp14Wed. Open seven days a week -until
10 p.m., the Firing-Line will~
be in the business of providing
qualified instruction in basic
firearms safety, civilian tear gas
training, and security officer
certification.
·Target shooting partjcipanta
will virtually line up on the most
modern range facility in the
country.
A spectator viewing area will
enable visitors to watch
competition matches.. and a pro
shop and lounge will add to the
comfort of Jll(mbera and guests.
In addition to membenhips,
hourly uae of the facilities will be
available, it was pointed out.
To famlliari2:e Orange County
residents with the Firing-Line's
multi faceted Jff'ograms, this
weekend's openhouae will beg.in
a series of open-to-'the-public
even ta.
INSTRUCfOR KAREN SHEETZ helping the two childret,l in rnalring -
homemade puta at FU1er0'1 lntema'1onal Cookware on May 22'.
Other information on cookina ~. call 673-2343.
Westminster Mall Manager
WESTMI?tSTER, CALIF. -
Homart Development Co. hu
appointed Mt. Philip S. ML'Cown
wlltant m.maer of Wwbnl.,.,..
Mall, Oranp County'• 1ar19t
reDma1 lhaiPlna cen•. PJ1cl' tO
jofning Roalart-; Mr. McCowu
wa1 re1pon1I b l e for the
manace!Mnt of varlout retal~ divildOrw within Seara, Roebuck •Co.
de1ree. Mr. McCown enjoy1
aalliJlC, fl1h1n1, r~adln& and
t'llOquetball. Mr. Mc.awn reaidee
in the Loni BMch u.. w ........ Mall ii ~ted at
the 405 J'reew-ay and the
Goldenwat St. offramp.
Houn are Monday thru
J'dclu, 10:00 to 9:00, Saturday, lO:db-to 8:00, and on Sunda1I.
IMO' tb 1:00.
eve,Y Sunday!
City of Ontario. Mjss America
and Miss California will alao be
present.
In celebration of the new store
opening, Fedco is holding an
O_pen House from June 17
through 26 , when no
membership card is necessary to
enter the Ontario store. As of
June 27, all membership
requirements will be observed.
Earl's Plu~blng
Grand Opening
Earl's Plumbing ia celebrating
the Grand Opening of their
newly remodeled Anaheim
showroom. The celebration will
continue thru Wednesday, June
30th. They ba.ve many new
products on display with a new
line of special leisure products.
The Habitat, Super Spa and
Pristine (whirlpool) bath will be
demonstrated in the Anaheim ~
showroom eve·ry Friday and
Saturday throughout the month
of June. They Will wrap up our
celebration with a drawing for
$300.00 credit towards labor and
installation on any Habitat, spa, ,
or whirlpool tuQ purchase.
You can't live in a perfect
climate. But that doesn't mean
you can't own one. The Habitat
b y Kohler is ' re markable
enviro nmental e nclosu re •
design~ to let you experience
the soothing elements of warm
S un. refreshing Rain and
cleansing Steam, a delightful
option. All in one unit. Our
showroom has the only working •
Habitat· on display ln Orange
County.
In the center of the showroom
there is a complete working spa
from Kohler. This spa is one of
t he highest quality a nd best
construction on the market. It
can be installed permanently
indoori or out . . . or it can be , I
dismantled and move with you
when you move.
The new Anaheim store is •
located at 1533 W. Lincoln Ave., 1
THE MOLLl&PARNIS FAL,L 82 collection will be featured on June just w4:st of the Santa Ana
'21 and 22 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Coutere Department of Freew~y . Other stores ~re
Neiman Marcus. Fashion Ialand. Shown from the coll~on . . . ~· ted m Costa Mesa, Mission
Georp Samen tops a three-piece suit with 'a blouseon )3Cket of 1ejo, Orange and Fullerton.
pluah imported cotton herringbone velvet over a slim grey flannel ·
skirt.
Crown Opens
Fourth ·Store
Co~panv, develop ers and
builden of VllllurbanDe.
0 Th• three~~; Su.mbcP-, lllllbGwe,,... .. rwAw_.
,
•
0r'M9 0out OAJLY PILOTlThurtday1 June 17, 1N2 ·-....
A~ti-medfl! ad pro~&m slated
BAPTIST BEAD -
Rev. Jamee T. Draper
of Euleu, Texa1, 11
the MW pnmident ol
the 13.6' mtllton -
member So uthe~n
. Baptilt Con.fere~
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -An
......... prop-. abned at JINWfttir\a
Epl• from bri~na Mediterranean tu.. lnto Celffomla on frult from
Iii wu lntdated by the etai..
Th• J>IOltam lncludn a 10-MC!Ond ·
televtalon ad, radio anno,..ncementa,
broohur•• for Haw aii tourlau and
....... fw the San Frandlco Md Loe
...... alrporta •
.\11 '811 people not to l:lrtna a medfly
from Haw aii to California on
• unlnapected fruit.
State Food and ~tun Director
RlcMrd Romtnpr told a Capitol newa
cca.hnnce Wedneeday the •100 m1Wcn
campaign to eradicate the medfly from
Own Part OfA.
Small El~t Hotel
On San Francisco's
NObHill
The Nob H.ill Inn is magniAccntly restored from the Edwardian
era. The ambience is Victorian.
A Avc·minutc walk from Union Square
Personal service. Turned down beds at night. Shoea shined, button•
sewn while you sleep. Breakfaa~ served in your room.
Shares of the Inn arc now available in modestly priced
' timeshare units. Purchase ia fee aimple.
Buy a week or more to uae annually in increments a1 brief aa
24 houu at.,. a time. Like other real e1tate, your time1hare1 can be
re1old, rented, traded or bequeathed. Full price (one rime only) from
$7,500 plua nominal annual maintenance fee and applicable taxes
t which may increase. Excellent tcnn1.
,
,,., ,J;.,, b·'-'--'•-.... and vWton from other'-· and •our. ·~~=-.....,_-...,...___.. ...... ,.he~ .
u I. s.&d-the .. the procram ~ nawaJJ 1ruJt ta,..el , atUfer ba11a1a lnapectlona for
pa11m1en feavinc HawaU. Romlnaer
aid lf the Hawail iNpectioN by the U.S.
~t of ~ture don't work.
CalLfqlnla wW ltart 1rwpectina baaue
arrlW.. • Saia FrfDd8c . OI' Lo. Anlelea
fron;a Hawail.
The 1tate ha• also reor1anlzed lta
medfly forces and la ready to start aertal
1prayJn1 over any new lnfeata Uon
within '8 houri, Rcmlnpr 181d.
He eaJd the ad program WU developed
by a San J'randJco company, Padflcon,
for $91,500.
STA -110 by RMll1ttc•
Saves120
159~~ I ~. i i-6 6 0. liii i .A A -5 • ______________ vlliii __ v ____ ... Bargain-priced, yet with a~ple power to
BAN Jl'1\A.N01800
TI•· \\,1rtmh.1h,· Jur.~"lhll.
d ....... 1 ...... 1 .. ~h.J ......
n'~ "" J . I\.,.. I •lll. Svitn ~~ .. 1'U"'
Ttavtf a1Ta"ftnleNs a>wrw, N~ HUl
Inn. Offer limiud. Visiron CJIKf co
aumd a sales preuntalion In San Fran-
dsa>. Minimum a,e 21; If lllmTied. both
~rtiu miul acund.
NOW
n.u><.ill E"'' '" ·' "-·l''"""" y,, n .. 1l1-hol.11f•,......,•~·I •
l'n. ..... •ll'll'\l .11'1ll l"' .. '"''l"'I
'-' r .th h .u\J \\\'.tr "''""'·'"• ~1...J1 l\'u"'~ An"'·" ,,.,
I , ·l 11 11
FREE 1:-..·Hl )t-.1E EST1f\1A TE-11'\~TAIJ .A Til )~A\ ,\II Al\1.1:
\lt'n11,·11 ( i11.1r.11lll't' 1111 l\1.1t1·rr.1I .... m,I Lol..,•r.
On Sale
Now!
/\RMSTRONG
DESIGNER ·
SOLAR IAN~
SA VE '4.0Q SQ. YD.
4
PACl~IC
DECORATING.
CENTERS
• Auto-Maglc9 F1ne-Tune1 and Locks-In FM St.tlon1 Automatlcatly
drive even two sets of speakers. Lighted
tuning dial, 11-step bass and treble con-
trols, LED Indicators for AM, FM, FM
• 10·LED Signal Strength Indicator • G~ LED FM 1\lnlng Indicator stereo, phono and aux. #31-2093
~ ~attl per channet, minimum rm1 Into I ohma from 20·20,000 Hz, with no more than o.or;. THO
High-Performance Component
Stereo. System Slashed 30%
ByRMll1ttc
$ave'21080
5499
33%0fft Stereo ca-tte Deck
SCT-23 by RMlldc
Electronic controls and eolenolds for.
precise tape handling. Oofby· NA. Peak· ]gm5 hold fluorescent level meter. Plays
m~tal, CrOt and normal tape. #1~ ::ls
"TM Dolby L'9bonll°"'9, Inc. , -·
Padded earcushions seal
out noise, seal in rich
dual-speaker sound! Sid'e-
mounted controls #12-186 .
SCR-2 by Reall1tlc
Save•4o r.""1,
Records "live" with bullt-
ln mikes or dlrectJy off-
the-air. Stereo-Wide .. cir-
cuit adds realism. AC/bat-
tery operation. #14-805
IOMlnute1 . 2.r
.. • ..
\ ..
,
J
• .. •
{
..
i
.
l
j
u
I
I· 1 I
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i ' : ~ • T' i :
.,. ..... au; -..,.,, L. ... baYt ...... ,,,... ...
of T\&IUh u vt~ pre1ldent,
to11lmlftUI ao.... llUI w• with =:-...::.-: ... ~
JHl•~ N•PH Jr. hu been
named •XIC\.ltift We .,....._.t
'of the WJI• Laieratorlu
mlectronicl Mark•ttnc Group, -.dlnltYtne. .
1Joy4 I!:. Gomn ot l:l Toro hM
been named director of
operatlona:.. ITT Co:~eat1
Grwp -~•'*'Am ud Cm• -WorWwW., bued in Fountain Valley.
Pamela J. Pvvtt ot Santa
Ana hll been appc>lnted catertna
aalea ~for TM
reeort hotel in
Newport
Beech, NCent·
.lY acquired
by Newport
Beach·baaed
Ridgway Ltd.
She book•
caterlng
function• at
the 26·acre """"'
~roperty undergoing a
$10.miWon renovation.
She was a.ffillated with the
Quality Inn in Anaheim.
Jame• F. Jeulnga ·has joined
the C~arlea Daaa Company'•
Orange County office as a aales
representative. He had been an
assistant adminlstralor of the San
Pedro Peninsula Hoepital.
B.J. Stewart Advertialq ud
P•bllc Relatloaa lac., of
Newport Beach has been .elected
by Betta Eacrow of Santa Ana
~ handle public relations. I I ' Robla Bloklber1 ._. joined
JS.J. Stewart Advertl1la1 ud
'1abllc Relatiou, lac., Newport
JSeach, as a public relations
J!iCCOUDl executive. She has been
~ith Kerr and Associates of
puntington Beach. ,....
, J .A. Stewart Coaatractloa
Company, lac. of Westminster I • I I
-•
w.aut a.11 ... at~
vice preatdent of ftaan~o1 treaaurer and c:hl•f ftaancw
officer at TRE Ootpola"°'\_._
been named the &a. of the TOlt
by the Irvine amw cbal*t o1
the Amerlcu ........... ..
AIHdadoa.
· artu s. c.m.-oi1 o.Mw.a
aaakel' IHtUalleaal .Llal••
l•r•lc••' ttaff haa been
appointed a \llce.JA ...... &. He II
• raldent of Loa Alunl•
U.S. S&L pa~el
to appeal "1
Fidelity ruling
' SAN FRANCISCO (APJ_;j; •
.The Federal Home Loe
Board hu won permtulon in
fedel"al court to appeal a lower
court's deciaion to lift the
receivership placed on the
Oakland-ba8ed Fidelity Savtnca
and Loan Amodatlcn.
.. ..
Space shuttle
rental costs .
will triple
WASHIN<rroN (AP) -The
cmt oil rmUnc Amerit:a'• apace
ahuttJe Will triple in 1986 -bun tao ~ to about tao mil.Uan
-but will remabl competitive
wltb the challenging West
.Buropean ArlQie rocket and
'offer more aervlcea, tlie
covernment apace a1ency npG(tm. .
The Nadcnal Aeronautb and
Space Admfniatratlon Mid the
majar r1 MClW foe tbe increue to'
cuatomen wtabtna to place
payio.dl In orbit are inflation., an ~ low initial charge
and a red~ launch rate.
NA.SA in 1977 .et an original
price of $18 milliCll\ to rent the
manned apllC!8hJp'1 cargo bay for
.cienUflc and ottier aatellltea.
'!bat ._ a firm price -plus
inflaticln -until Oct. 1, 1985. The 9th U.S. Cl.rcuit Court of
Appeals' action came after
complalnta by the bank boud Beaauee of inflation. the figure
that it wu left "powerlell to ii up to $30 mlWon and agency
handle the current flNnctaJ a1lia official Dr. Stanley Weiaa
in tbe eavtnp and bn tndUltry" estimated it will· be $45 million
when recetverabJp wu lifted by 1984, jwt before the new
June 3 from the financially three-y&ar policy becomea
troubled imt19Jtion. eff~ve.
,.-~~~~~~~~ ......... ~-+~--.~~~~~~-...
l .. •WSEFROMS PER SQ.Ft-•
oine phone rate
ay triple: .PUC
UnbeliMbiel ~ease luxurious ofl'lce suites from 950 lo 20,<KX> squaie
feel loc*f in the 'lfJY heart of Oran&e ~· ·the intenection "the NNpoft Ind COrqn1 del Mir hewlyj-from just SUS per sqqn foot!
CREEKSIDE GARDEN OFFICES
2900 Bristol/Costa Mesa, CA 92626
014) 979-7133 or tn4) 544-2484 -•
25 a month charge seen
,.. SAN FRANCISOO (AP) ~ California's Public
Utilities Commiaaion has warned that the OOl!lta of
-resldenUal-pbMe service could mar to $25 a IllOll1h .
by 1984 unless the Houae venion of the 1982
I• Telecommunications Act is paaaed by c.on.ue-.
'"llUa bill meana maintenance of affordable
telephone service in the future," declared PUC
OWIEI WltL TUBE
IEWLY lmaELEI
.. IUHLUllllSE
umlFllMWIY
President John Bryton in asking Californians to
urge their congressmen to support the measure.
11
"Without this bill, local rat.ea coUld more than triple
by 1984."
The bill would counter predicted effects of an
antit.rust eettlement between American Telephone
and Telegraph Co. and the Justice Department
Owner will trade thia beautifully
remodeled throe bedroom famil1
room home for $415,000 worth of tract
houaea, contlomlniuma or rental
Ulllta. Will trade with debt or clear.
being reviewed by a federal judge in Washington.
The PUC staff, Pacific Telephone and
oommimiona in other atatea believe fhe Mittlement'
could have conside-rable impact on phone rates.
DID YOU KNOW:
You can own ycu office ~ci.
You can stop ycu rent from romc ...
Yau can own the land -not Jease. Yoa CIR rent wtlll the aptlan to Illy.
AIRPORT WEST BUSINESS PARK
241 Fl9cMr MM' Red HUI, C.M.
Call Mr. Davia 711-7400 .,..,. eoa,...Mlon
Houae haa $440,000 lOU1 @ 15.S'h.
amortind oftl' 30 yoara, fl•• year
rollo•er.
. If you ha•• the doaln to own thl1
bNudful hom.-and ha•• anytbins or
any comblnatl~ of thins• with a
Mtl,000 •alue, Ull me -for example,
I will trade for your four new condoe
that won't aoll or three $150,000
houHe that coet you $50,000 each or
11' A trade could .. .,. you tu ...
Call C...1 at owner'• office
(714) 841-0181 w•kda,.a I to 5
•
' But will economic savio~ play the role?
~JOHN CUNNIFF llmm AMAll :=-v= -attbanlr ays IR8 1111111.Ylll .. It Jookl ae if the ~r ill 8'l&DI to leed the way out of the YalJeY.'' And Menil1 Lynch '"' two poaltf ve 1t1n1 that the
ooneumer 11 pcUed t.o 1.ci the
upturn.
~Then'• nothinl atypJcal about
such expe.ctatlona, not at i...t 1n
the pMt few montha, when the
corwumer 1eem1 to have been
eJevated to the rank ol general,
1tven ~mmand of economic
forcee and told to advance. h te a r•r• oonaen1u1 of
1overnment, bualneu and
academic ana1ysta, and one that
hardly could have been fore.een
a ,_,. • True, you can usually aay that econormc recoveries are
~led, but th1a time there
appears to be a campatp under
way at make h1m a national hero.
But the que9tlon ariaee about
the camumer'• willlngneea and
abWty to be thn.wt into that role,
and aa time aod experience have
demonftrated, today's better
lnfonned oomumer has a mind of
bla own. ,
Thoee who aeek to forecast
c:omumer movementa point to a
amall' increase In the use of
tmiallment credit and what is
uJd to be a rise in retail sales durtnc May. Con.sumer debt is
UC> auppmed to~ back in better
relatiOnahtp to inccme. And, with
iQflatlon 1ub1idtn1. aome
lndicaton qf consumer buying
c::.~ are beginning to look
11'e 10 percent income tax cut
beginning July 1 ii viewed as a
bonus, the icing on the cake, the
dnaert the conaumer can eat
after a welght-ahedding diet.
Certainly, it ii uJd, he cannot
MUTUAL FUND
Nlilt lndw.lna.
Wtll, eay tne contrarlana
few tn number, etron1 In
c<>nvlction -don't be too aure.
The ooNU.mer iln't a mindle.a
robot, they aay, even lf eome
forecaatera make that claim.
~u.e M hat the abUhy to
apend doesn't mean that he will
apend. He must have wil1lngnesl
too.
By most measure• that are
deeigned to probe the feelinp of
con1umer1,
they are wary
an<l uncer·
taln . That,
of cour se,
is hardly
the atmosphere
In wh ic h
people spend,
either in the
stock market llllllAi
or in Wool--worth's.. CUMNWP
M ore than 17 million
Americans are unemployed,
temporarily removed from the
labor market or involuntarily
working part Urne rather than
full time. They will n ot be
inclined to spend. And, the
contrarians point out, neither
will thoee workers who uae the
jobless atau.tics as a measure of pow secure or tenuous is their
own hold on a full-time job.
The much-troubled 10 percent
Income tax cut that becomes
effective July 1 may be
welcomed by consumers, but
they might not view it as dessert
to be consumed. For the typical
'worker it will mean just $6 a
week.
That doHn't mean he can
1ptnd h . Bentflta for moat
worktra, tn fact, w9n'l be
IUffldent to ot&tt the lncn•• ln
Social Security i.xee and the
lmpect of bracket creep, or the
aacenaion Into hf1her tax
bracketa that retulta from pay
rahea and co1t-of-llvln1 tncreaaea.
If t)e doea come out with
money, there lt11111 no oertalnty
a worker wW apend ft. What do
you auppoee are the consumer'•
thoughta' about inflation? He ill thankful. It would eeem, for the
decline in the rate at which
price• are rlalng. But hu he
f or1otten the experience of
dquble-dlgit inflation? Hardly.
Worried about It's return?
C.ertaJ.nly.
Habita might be cha.n8ln.l a1->.
During the 1970. many people
felt free to spend rather tlwl
save because, they reaaoned,
their houae was riling in value
and would in effect provide them
with a bank account.
At the moment, the hou.e im't
serving that purpose. Price•
might be rising, but the rate of
increase is lower than it waa five
years ago. The house offers
shelter, but not quite the same
financial security.
M eantime, the.,iire are
lnducementa to save rather than
spend, which ii the oppomte of
that whlcb prevailed in the
1970s. Interest rates are high,
and inflation la subsiding, if
perhapa only for the time being.
And there are many more
financial instrument.a, such aa
money market mutual funds, into
which savings can be placed at a
. real profit.
And ao the question ariaea: Is
' the consumer the new leader?
DOWNS
Last Cfl9 111. -,
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Up ..... Ve 10.l_ Op t.A Up 9.A
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Up '·' Up 9.1 Up U Up 1.7 Up l.J
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~t. Off 21.6 Off IU Off' tu Off. IU Off 11.t Off tt.1 Off lt.1 Off It.I
Off to.s Off ..... Off 10.0
Off tO.O OH 10.0 Off I0.0 Off ... °" '·' Off t.1 °" t.t Off 9.1
Off '·' Off '·' Off 1.7 Off LJ Of! .. ,
Off ...
NYSE COMPOSI'fE TRANSA.ORONS
•UOfAflOlilt 1-.nllot fUOHttl T .. l .. IWYelllC,MtNIHT,PACIPIC, Piii', ... JM, OITlOIT HO (OllCINll.4fl UOC• l•CMAllOltA .. Oll""OlfU l't'fllltl&tOAlll•l111•f1ifi~,
8 Cll•
SAN FRANClSOO (AP) -The state PubUc
tJtilltiee Com.m.l.-ion baa granted General Telephone a
$60.2 million annual rate lJ\Cl"6Ue that wW mean
higher billa for CU1toment.
The ruling cam.a Tuesday on an application
General filed ln March 1981 .eek.Ina a $29e mU1Jon
incttue. Of the total, $192.6 million Nia been sru\ted. livtna the finn a chance to earn a 12.78 percent retum
on inveetment, up f.rom 12.71 percenL
The lateft lncreue will result in resldendal Oat
rate aervice on rotary dial phonea 1olng from $6.20 to
$7.76 a month and touchtone rate. fl'Clln $7 to $1UO.
The buainett rate In the Lo. A.Jlaefo• and Oraue
countiee metropolitan areaa will go fri>m $6.50 to $1.'20
a month with the per·outgotnc·call unit rate
lncreaaing from fOW' to six centa.
Office complex started
Groundbreaking waa held for Cyprem Pointe
Busineea Centre, a multi·phue development by John
D. Lusk & Son, Irvine.
The projecfaite is at Katella Avenue and Holder
Street in Cyprea.
The first phase is slated for completion In
February 1983, and consists of twin two-story
buildings of 36,000.square feet each.
One building will hold Marmac Systems
F..ngineerlng, located in Long Beach.
Stock sale postponed
Printronix Inc. of Irvine announced today it
decided to postpone indefinitely a proposed sale of
common stock due to unfavorable mark.et conditions.
A registration statement, covering 380,000 shares
to be offered by the company and 125,000 shares by
certain selling shareholders through an underwriting
group managed by Robertson, Colman, Stephens &
Woodman, was filed -with the Securities & Exchange
Commission on May 24.
Printronix designs, manufactures_ and markets
medium and low speed matrix impact line printers.
Bank capitalization analyzed
It cost.a more to capitalize a bank in California
these days.
DaUl compiled by F.dward Carpenter & Aasociates
Inc., Los Angeles -:.based financial institutions
consulting firm with offices in San Franciaco and
Newport Beach, show the average beginning
capitaliz.ation of new national banks roae to $4.8
million in 1981, up from $3.3 million a year earlier and
$1.3 million in 1975. The average startup outlay of
new sUlte banks advanced to $3.4 million in 1981, up
from $2.8 million a year prior and $1.4 million in 1976.
Highest capitallz.ation among the 15 new national
banks last year was $15 million and the lowest $2.~
million, noted Carpente.r.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
• 114
__
-~ -lh .....
+ \,\ _,,,..
NEW YOltKC"'PI Fi,..I Oow-J-. -woc:r·· Jun. 1•.
JO Ind ci: .. :r.:1 ~ f::'9,._ ~ 20 Tm JIUS JIH7 a" JIO.n-2.02 IS Ull lOl.&l 109.'l 1&09 lOI.-O.JI U SU. 311%2 )IS.• JOtM Jll.0-1.10 '"""' .............. 11,m.JllO Tr•n ........ ... .. .. . 1m.-Ull1& ...................... Ila.. •s Siii 13,SSl,IOO
WHAT STOCKS DID
N EW YORK CAPI Jun. "
NEW YORI( CAP) Jllft "
Wed.
llM m 1ft ,..
7
l l
METALS
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonlen'ou•
metal prioe1 Wed~
c...., 7~7~11. pound, u.s deltlnellona_.,
LMd 25.27 oenta • pound, Z1M 35-37 oenta a pound, cMll¥et9d
T1n $&.N15 Mel.all w.-~·
lb. ~ 1&-n oenta a pound, N.Y • ..._., *'10.00 per ftmlc. ,....,_ 1297.00 troy oz., N.Y
SILVER
Hand)' & Harm\n. H .'00 .,.r troy ounce.
GOLD QUOTATIONS~
~ mon1inO ftltlng: IS 1t.16, up
11.86.
~afternoon fbllno: '317.00, up '2.00. ,.... .ti.moon fixing: *311.11, up "·"· "'~ 131S.02, up 11.00. ,.,...... t.ett tb11no: 1315.oo, 1111 S3.00 ~'it.OONlced, • ..._ °"" deify quol9 un 111> 12.00. ~ ...... oNt dally~ tst7.00. llP 11.00.
SYMBOLS
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Orange Oout DAILY PILOTl'l'huted1Y, June 17, 1812
€1ifford Irving seek'$ respect 'as·. M:~iter
NJ:W YORK (AP) -It reed like a c1-1c
miovM ICript, wtth an array of anwttna charticten
and enou,h pret.lel paUem1 in the plol to'hatch a
Hitchcock ceper.
~ a ~ but channlna itinerant
writer named Clifford .wlth a pretty ancf capridoua
wlf o and an exotic 'nd eenaual blond lover, a
f9C!U.llve and eccentric bW1onalre.
Locale: a tlny Mediterranean laland. Swt._..land, New York.
Plot: rlp oft the publf1hlng indu1try for
'450,000·plua with a faked autobl08faphy of the
eccentric bWJonalre.
' Qenouement: jail.
Sequel: chann.lna ex.con craves cred.lbillty aa a
leJ'ioul writer.
M .,.. "I've been with the ume woman, unbroken
and untnwnatiled. ''
HI.I lo~ life had Jol:aa been quixot.lc, bectnntnl
u an under&nduai. at c.omeu, where he wrote hil
flnt -and never publlahed -novel and marrted
hil flr'lt wife.
"That wu my flnt milt.Ike," he aid.
After aractuatlon and • dlVOC'Cle, Irvtna held
varlOU1 )>be -copy boy for The New York Tlmea.
Fuller Sruah man, wheat harvtttet, driller of hoie.
in the atreetl of Ithaca, N.Y., a worker in minee.
"I wanted to collect things to put on the back of
a book jacket," he said.
The)' haet all lied to make the four-month journey. H.11 11eCOnd wtte wu k.llled in an automobile
accident. Irvtrll'• third wife wu a British model.
lrW'I arew up on Manhau.n'e Upper Wen
Slde, thu IOI\ of Jay Irvtna. who had created the
comk: ab.ip "Potay."
''Mv family clldn~t want me to be a writer " he
uid. ·'T'bey wanted me to nm my uncle'• ~
bualnem. I have rwver reacted well to pnmure, eo I
never cuved in to them."
lrvllJ'll hu written 10 book.I and h.u 1larted a
new ono.
"It' 1 called 4Crlmes,' but it'• not about me," he
said.
Clifford Irving,
who a dec ade ago
spearheaded the real,
infamous autobiography
hoax of the late
billlonaire Howard
Hughes, is trying to
establish himself as a
eerious author who can
indeed write and who is
not just anothe r con ·
artist.
He finally went to Europe and married Wife
No. 2., who ran ~W'antl in.London. With her, he
uile9 a echooner frorn Mexico to France. No one on the ~2-foot boat had aa1llna experience, he uid. Irv Ing would not perpetrate the Hughes hoax
-or ai.ny other -today, he uid. CLIFFORD IRVING •.• Beeb respect
Hi s ticket to
literar y respect is his
new novel, "Tom Mix
and Pancho Villa: (St.
Mat'tin's Pr~. $16:95).
"I love this book,"
Irving said. "It was a
TOM MIX real labor of love. It took
me five years on and off to write. I researched
while I wrote."
It is a romantic adventure set during the
Mexican revolution, involving the unlikely
Americans who fought with Pancho Villa. One was
silent film star Toiii Mix, Holly wood's first
glamorous celluloid cowboy. The story is told from
his point of view . c .
Mix goes to Mexico in 1913, where he meets
the charismatic rebel leader. He journeys with the
revolutionaries through war-tom Mexico. In the
midst of deatlf and aestruction are Tom's great
loves: his Jewish fiance from Texas and a young
Indian woman.
Though the book bas been well received by
critics, who praised !Jving for his prose and for his
use of action in the novel. Irving had trouble
gaining the acceptance of the publishing
community.
"There was a lot of prejudice against me from
publishers and reviewers," Irving said. "They were
not taking me seriously . . . I was just constantly
·being referred to as a con man.
''The past is dead to me,'' he said. "Every
interviewer always wants to ask me about the hoax.
The subject bores me.
"When I got out of jail, I had a need to justify
myself -to convince people that I wasn't a
criminal," he said.
Irvine was sentenced June 6, 1972, to 2 Yl years
in prison for trying to swindle McGraw-Hill Inc.,
out of more than $650,000. The writer told the
publishing house he had compiled an autobiography
of Hughes as the result of 100 secret meetings.
The meetings never took place, and the book
was deemed a fraud.
Edith Irving, the writer's German-born Swiss
ex-wife, served two months in a federal facility for
her role in the caper.
She had deposited more than $650,000 of
McGraw-Hill money in Swiss bank accounts and
then withdrawn it -allegedly for Hughes. The
money was to have been paid to Hughes for
material used by Irving in the faked autobiography.
The Irvings were also fined $10,000 each.
Irving filed for bankruptcy in 1976, listing
debts of $110 million. He said this included a libel
. :
·-
action involving a previous book,
and $450,000 h e owed for
federal taxes on the mon ey
McGraw-Hill had given him for
the Hughes project.
"I don't consider it a crime
now," he said. "I knew I had
done something wrong, but I
returned the money. I was not
out to hurt anyone."
Sijll, there were those close
mmt llMNQ to him who suffered as a result
of the publishing scandal that made Irving an
instant celebrity and put him on the cover of Time
magazine as "Con Man of the Year."
"U I feel any guilt, that's where I feel it the
most," he said. "My kids came out of it beautifully.
I saw them a lot when I was ln prison and I had a
child psychiatrist see them."
The children -Nedsky, 14, and Barney, 11 -
live ln Ibiza, an Island off the coast of Spain, with
·their mother -Irving's fourth wife, Edith. She
divorced him and married a lawyer who handled
one of Irving's publishing lawsuits. The children'
will soon join their father in this country so they
can complete their education.
"'My parents died before I did it," he said. "I
couldn't have done it lf they were alive. Phillip
Roth (the writer) once said that no Jewish boy is a
man until his parents die."
It was Edith Irving who was perhaps hurt
moat. She served 14 months in a Swiss prison on
fraud anc;t forgery charges: Using the aliases "Helga
R. Hughes" and "Hanne Roeenk:ranz" and a fake
passport, she transported the ch ecks from
McGraw-Hill to Swiss bank accounts.
She a1ao had to publicly face her huaband's
Jove affair with '"'the Uthe and legendary Baroness
N'ma van Palland~ who revealed that lrvinR was
with her in Mexico during the tJme be clairnec:f to be
interviewing Howard Hughes for the
autobiop'aphy.
Irvlni ball a bearded, n.iged fll(le, lined from
wea1her and worry. 'The blue eyes that penetrated
the hearts of 8COl'el of w~l are atW as blue as
the waten oU Ibiza. The impmn smile and devtliah
lau,b are q__uick and 1-tini· The ~ may have been imperfect for Irvtna. ixJt time ha blUlhed well. He ii content in hil
country life on~ Ia1and. where he lives with his
low of etaht ~ Valcii Sherwood. · I ••1 ~ a lot from women. but it takes IO long,''
after all,
armor all
Armor All Protect.ant la a scientific
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vinyl and leather 1eats, vinyl to.pa, and
tires looking new. 16 oz. Twin Pack.
Reg. 7.39
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Black and decker 'I• .. drill for light duty
work, building and remodeling jobs.
#7004. Reg. 16.99 12••
tanks 1 lot
7-plece torch kit Includes propane
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pencil, brush flame, 14'' chisel point and more.
#TT99 Reg. 22.19
..
kHp tabs on the time
lnterma.tic Time-All plug·ln timer
turns lii;Jhts on and off at desired
lntervnls. Also for small ap·
pliances etc. 01110.
Reg. U.39
lllalle H a llolllty
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Drem<el Power Woodcarving set with ~
complete Ml.ctlon of hob-
by acceuorl ... Com .. In 3911 handy carrying cue. #2!110
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Distinctive design and rugged
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~~··· Sturdy propane bbq, with tank. Conve-
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#7130 Reg. 223.95
to stay
In hot w1tw
30-gallon water
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shut-off. Beat glasa-
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12qt. cooler chest and ~ gal.
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H111 I trill ,111t
•
. .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurlday, June 17, 1982
llJERlllllllT / CUSSIFIED
BJ TOMTITUI or ... .._ ........
ParlrDouftt'I b&aet\ faux pu
ln orderina a Mq~ to the huply
IUCCellful 't()niue'' WU in DOt ia.o&nc Jlm Jacot. and Warren
Cuey, cteaton of the Ori81nal
Broadway mu1tcal which
1pawned the flnt movie version.
'4Gre111e 2" la • llghtwel&ht,
u,hthearted flick which lhould
be enjoyed by the post-Dimey
generatlon, but it pale1 more
than moet aequell by compariaon
to the original. It I• to tta
predece.or wha~.~~nt leather
ahoea are to the ~tor variety. Where .. Greaae' -deapite
being a bit diluted from the
1uper-hit stage version -
retained both its vitality and ita
'Watergate,'
the musical
on the boards
ATLANTA (AP) -Richard
Nixon will lightheartedly concede "a mistake or two" and a
group of Cubans wW be singing
the "Wiretap Blues" in a musical
intended to get a few laughs out
of the Watergate scandal.
But the creators of "Watergate:
A Musical" insist the show isn't
intended to exploit the break-in
and bugging at the Democratic
National Committee
headquarters 10 years ago today
that eventually led to former
President Nixon's resignation.
"It's not really satirical," said
Tommy Oliver, who created the
musical with F.dward J. Lakso,
during a break in rehearsals
Wednesday. ''The line we like to
use is we've made a lot of
statements and no judgments."
Still, they hope to have the
audience laughing through most
of the production as Nixon,
shown cleaning out his desk on
his last day in office, defends
himself to a 12-year-old White
House visitor. ·
'DIE REVIEW
uUrlcal tQbute to the late 1950s,
''Oreaae 2" i1 merely well-
choreop'aphed 111llnees. In fact,
the el'\lemble dance numbers are
the movie's 1tronge1t point,
under1tandabl e 1ince
~pher Patricia Birch also
Thia ti.me around i\'1 1961, two
years alter the C1ua of 1959
departed from Rydell High.
School. The principal (Eve
Arden) and her -..nt (Dody
Good.man) are ltill around, aa are
the beauty school dropout
Frenchy (Didi ColUl) wbo11 now
studying chemistry and the coach
(Sid caesar) who pope .up no~
and again.
Two new faculty members
arrive in a pair of Fifties
!favorites, Tab Hunter and
Connie Stevena, but they, like
the other grownues, aren't given
much to do. Mores the pity.
Where "Grease" made much of
hot rods, "Grease 2" focuaes on •
~ and the 1enathl a newcomer to the 1chool
(Maxwell C..ulfleld) baa to ao to
lmpre11 the queen ol the Pink
Lad.lee (MicheUe Pfeiffer). Mile
Pfeiffer, though atrikina, la in a
constant 1tate of petulance and
aeema hardly worth the trouble,
while Caulfield, one lmagtnea,
would have little effort eecurt.ng
the attentiona of another )'oung
lady. He's not exactly: your
garden variety nerd.
While these leading
performers lack the appeal of
John Travolta and Olivi•
Newton-John from the orjglna1.
the supporting T-Birda anc:fPink
Ladies have even leaa aoln8 foe
them in the way of charillna.
Loma Luft as a teen-aae Marilyn
Monroe has aome nice ecenes and
Pamela Segall as her wile acre
kid sister recalls to mind
MacKenzie Phillipe in "American
Graffiti."
To ahore up the aaggtng plot,
director-clloreographer l3hcil has
interapened several flashy dance
numbers to celebrate back to
9Chool day, a night at the bowling
alley and a Hawal.tan luau. Thia
ii the meet of the picture, and it
nearly makea one for1et tl\e
flaw1 of Ken Finkleman'a
aautna ICript.
J>aralnount among theee (If the
studio will forgive the choice of
terms) i1 tb.e premi•• that
Caulfield ta capable of sweeping
a normally reluc tant Mlu
Pfeiffer off her feet by donnina a .
cycle helmet and goales which
hardly mask h.la Identity. And
what Caulfield does wlth his
homemade two-wheeler ta right
out of the Ssturday morning
cartoons.
About the only real zinaer that
establishes the time frame ii an
attempted aeduction in a fallout
shelter to the tune of "Let's Do It
for Our Country ." The
"Reproduction" number in
Hunter's sex education class also
la good for a few laughs.
Mostly, however, "Grease 2" la
a cotton <:81t:9Y trifle offered as a
low-cal de8sert for the burger
and fries entertainment of the
original "Grease." It's refreshing,
but not filling.
Summer stake8
• movies Space
li8ttle 'Rocky'
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
annual mttfe to eee who can coax
the moat 1ummer movle box
office ctol.lan from the public la
under -ay, wlth two outer apace
fantaalee and a boxing movie the
top contenders in what could be
the moat 1ucce11ful movle
awruner ever.
"Rocky ID," the latest in the
aerlea of Sylveater Stallone
boxing 1agaa, had toppled all
challengers in sheer box office
mu1cle through Sunday,
amaaeing a huge $43,748,403 in
17 days release in 1,232 theaters.
Despite competition from the
Holmes-Cooney heavyweight
boxing match Friday night,
"Rocky ID" managed to take in
$8,222,095 in its third three-day
weekend, according to MGM-UA
studio officials.
Not far behind was"Star Trek
Il: The Wrath of Khan," which
~ grossed $31,028,226 in 10
days at 1,621 theaters -nearly
10 percent of the nation 's movie
screens.
The new total wu a 10-day
record for a Paramount film; I.he d
e revioua champion had been
'Star Trek, The Motion Picture'' 11:
in 1979.
The third contender, Steven
Spielberg's eagerly awaited
"E.T., The Extra-Terrestrial," '-·
sped across the land wlth a bia
$11,911 ,438 aooountig in ita first
three days at l,101 theaters,
according to Univenal Pictures.
The film's average $10,188 per
ecreen outshone the $8,801 per
screen aver age registered by
"Star Trek II" in lta o~
weekend. By comparison, ' Rocky
ill" grossed an average $17,056
per screen at 939 theaters when
it opened Memorial Day
weekend.
If theatergoers continue to
flock to the big movies and pay
enough attention to the rest of
the fie ld, the total dollars
accumula nnl in this year's •
Memorial Day-Labor Day period ~ •
could exceed the $1.16 billion '
record established last summer.
Registering a big total so far ''
due to a h ead start on the
competition, was Universal's ~11
"Conan the Barbarian," which r.
had totaled $35,136,281 in five :·
weeks. But the film grabbed an 1 •
anemic $949,861 from 456 of 730
theaters reporting this past
weekend, showing signs it was '.
beginning to stumble. •.
Ano ther Spielberg entry,
MGM-UA's "Poltergeist," added
$5,379,673 to its coffers in 890 •!
theaters to raise its 10-day total
to $15,840,440. r:
Trailing the leaders by a wide J !
margin was a pack of promising ; ~
ne w com e r s and also-rans. "
Warner Bros.' "Road Warrior"
registered $703,089 in its fourth 1~
wee kend in 357 theate rs. Its •!•
17~~e~IL~ t~~6 ~~~ount "~
sequel to the s~ful Olivia ... ;
Newton -J ohn-starring film,
slipped coming out of the starting
blocks this past weekend, picking
up $4,654,411 in 1,250 theaters.
''Annie" was holding steady,
bringing in $374,950 in just 14
tneaters for a 24-day total of · · Gene Barry. who starred as ·a
lawman and cane-toting dandy in
the televisio n series "Bat
Masterson," plays Nixon.
GREASERS -The new crop t>f seniors at Rydell High
-explodes in chore<>fUaphic pandemonium in this opening scene
from "Grease 2," set in 1961, two years after the original
"Grease" movie. The dances are the strong point of · the
sequel.
$2,751,328. The Columbia r
Pictures n!lease goes into more '"
than 1,000, theaters on Fliday for le:
its real trial-by-fire.
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LOI ANOILl8 (AP) -Nblk tlllYtilort atatioft 1tC&"I' h o•• IDOJ'• hyof h •Ad ~ oMalNnl aru• ~ private foundaUonl. a1xordlNr to a memo from Charlt1 Wel11,
execuUve con•uhant to tht
et.ation'• boud.
a-a ""' ............ July l, but WetN iild Jl faced "• ~r ftnaiWal ailcl ~bltm .. ~~TV. felen1
IW'Vtw.
!Mela on KCllT'1 ltudio u. due
June H . w.1 .. Hld option•
bemct. outrlabt ..i. tnclude a
leue-beck lllftftPIM.nt or a Joint
venture wJth an .. educational
lNUtutlon" he didn't identify.
KCIT twiouahed about 60 ot * -....... thia )Wr and =to reallae bttw"o •n
and •1e m1lUon from the o le of it• S.1-acre •tudlo on
Sw:mt BoWe\lard.
"Unb1\anately, there wW be
layotta.1• DrObably announoed on Ju.ne~IO -*baj memo Mid. But lt • ·~tM-• ilMilD '° ......... -in "'-llOt taio daltM~ ~·,;.;
wWbe~.··
, WM aid KCETt Anancl.i
1tn11w ~w promptld '-'don by
ltl ~ llUppurMla: )>l'iw"9
loundatlonl.
....
More TV
romance urged
In a "ttate of the 1tatlon"
memo to employeee Monday, w-. ~ &rim blcta with t.he~ pledge that KCET II "evwything pomible to pt U1 to the bett ahape."
"We are in debt to three banlm:
Security Padfic, Welle hrao and
Bank of America.'' Weill wrote.
Tho public television et.adon
bad a fS.8 million indebtednell
for new equipment in Januaey
b ut h as decreased that
lndebt.ednell during the put few
months and pa.id off a workinl
capital loan of more than a
million dollars, said Barbara
Goen, director of public
il).f ormadon.
The station ls "determined to
have a balanced budget" for the
0 We are con.f~t &hit once
we are able to ardcWtte eXl!Ctly
what KCET la, where It la aolnc
and how lt la aoma to get there,
tha1 totll\ of fina.ndal support
wW continue," he takl, "but WlUl
that Ume and until o u r
~t establlahee a better
financial bMe, we cannot look
rea1.laticall.y to the f oundatlona
for additional funds." Wei11
added that national
programmlna probably will be harae.t hit by tbe money crunch,
althou1h the apokHwoman
predicted "bread-and-bu tter"
shows like t h e l,>ubli c
Broad casting Service 1 1
Masterpiece Theater would
PHILADILPHIA (AP) -
Author Janet Dailey, whoae
romantic nowi. have aold more
than 90 million copl••· aaya
there'• a .. 1tunntn1 lack of
romance" on televtaion.
In an article for the June 19
1-ae of TV Guide, Mila Dalley
ukl the rocmnUc hero abould be
"ruthle9, naaed and relentless
-with rake and rosue not far behind." .
The Ideal · heroine, ahe aald,
ahou ld b e In her 201 ar.d
"wholeaomely auractlve,
independent and epirlted."
MI.a Dalley, whoee latest book
"-''Thia c.aJ4er Ranae." auggests
the netw0tkt eee to it that each
romance bu 101ne puaion J!l lt. _
Rigby makes
debut in musical
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -Former Olympic
gymnast &thy Rigby made her stage muslc.al debut
in a performance of "Meet Me In St. Lou.if," and
her performance drew both praise and critidam
from a newspaper.
Miss Rigby, 29, was a U.S. competitor in the
1968 Olympics in Mexico City and later in the 1972
Olympics at Munich, West Gennany. ·
The musical is a John Kenley production at
E.J. Thomas Performing Arts Hall at the University
of Akron.
Akron Beacon Journal drama critic Bill
O'c.onnor gave Miss Rigby high points for her vocal
abilities, although she had only two solo aonp.
"Clearly, Miss Rigby can sing and she can do it
well," O'Connor said in his review. "But this novice
actress is still a "novice actress. She often eeerm to
contemplate gestures before she makes them, and
at.ands watclili1g her fellow perfonners like a kid
waiting to hop into the middle of a couple of other
kids jumping rope."
After a week-long run in Akron. the show will
move to Dayton.
... KOCKY'in·
WINNER AND STILLCHAMPIONI"
-~-............ dfiZiiA. '.
NOW PLAYING
IMA COITl •U _ .... OllUll
UA Mo¥1G Hll1lor Tw111 Yleil Twtll Orange 0nw In 990 •022 131 3501 UO·fttlr 55' 7022
MU r AM •llVllT•TOll IUat ....._ wtlTMffllTQI
8uena Park °''""' Edwards~ Clnedornt Ellw1<0S Cinema Wnt 821 •070 848 0388 .,. 2553 891 3935
•COIT& •U LAIUU IUQI I•·----roa nt11 ........... I Edwns 11ttS101 Soul~ eo.si · · 5<10 744' 0• 15U •Ptesen1ect m3Smm£D_..._,
SC<-TRN::I< IDIOOL!!!T@ PFESENTATION _...r __ _,..._ .. ,.,.. -~WU» -----··-11u1•tMno --Uo\ ... .. l M4t . ___ .__
LUXURY HE TRES
---&Jlf771
.. E.S. $2.60 h t 2 Matinee Showings Uni .. Notn
S 11ar,144.1utl6i~2ssJ/J:::.~~)
FOR FOOi EXCrmnenTI YlSltOur ...
ARCADE of GAMES• ~~'. . ·· ..•
* •ARQAIN MATIN•ES *
Monday ttvu l1turd1y
All ftertormanoea before 5:00 PM
(~ J,.aai 1191 .. Mntl IM Holld1ys)
.,..._., ... Aj•A~A lt Mlrodo 01 •011cron1
LA MIRADA WALi< IN 99•·2•00
"POL TEROEllT" (N l -----
"POL TEROEl8T" (ll'Ol ------
"GREASE 2" "'°l -. ......... 1 •.
LAKEWOOD
C ENTE~ WAllC IN
HROCKY m~·,=, IN ?OM DOLaY 0 ____ ,...._,_
"STAR n.IK 11:
THE WRATH OP KHAN"
7'llM DOLIY IT'llilO (ll'G) --... -.-
lAl<EWOOO C ENTUl
SOUTH WAI ~ IN
"HANKY PANKY" (N l tt•----1
"Titl ROAD WARRIOR" ..., __
"VlllnNG H0UR8" ... ,. ...
... MTMKM:
THI WllA TH 0, KHAN"
,,_ OOUV •TUWO (f'Q) .......... __
"ROCKY Ill" (ll'OI ............ ,.... ... ,,,,.
,OCUlly OI Condl••OOd
211/111·9110
"GREASE 211 '"°1 ,_ ___ __
"GREASE 2" tN> ...... _,,.,_
-·~ Cootl Hlwoy ) ol lroodwoy
•M-1514
"ROCKY Ill" <NI _""_ ... , _____ _
... ... ii. • -Sit. .... 7:15 ... starts .. °"'*
IMPORTAttT NOTICE! CNll ORl M UNOlR 12 FREE! ......... ._ ....... fll 7i00 • s.t ........... ,. 1:00
~ ._ • YOUll All CAii MOIO IS YOUll Sf'lNl.lll
1• NO All CM llAOe W!ll IGNIT10ll ACCUJallT l'llSl!10ll
_.. M MlllllU.I •Mi Clll.fl GllVWIS • 1111 NIA MOii
4.N .A•1f1M
ANA HEIM DRIVE IN
'-woY ti ol Lell\Ofl SI.
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"9IO WIDNISOAY" (NI
____ 17'-__ t _l _IO _______ Cl!!·!'~-IM)----
"TM1 ROAD :..A#f/fOll/IV 1111 '-.oM,.!;"' 1111
...,.., ALL THI WAY" 1111 "DSA'" ........ 1111
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LH>colft 11¥e W_, 01 KMn
12M070
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LINCOLN ORIVE·IN
ltnco•~ A•• Well 01 Knoll
121·4'070 ,,.t"ft•.U'I
Son l>i-.O lfWY 01 floollh1111t (SQ I
I N2·2411
CM· Pl SOUllO .._..r.., -.... llNDNISOAY"' '"I
Cltlf • " IOllllO
4. A ~ • I
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"ROCKY llt" ire1 -"CLA8H Of THI
TITAH8""1
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IAfa •MfllllTOll IUCll 011M1t4 UA ••• ttO •OU ( .. ltdl C.-~
COIT& MC.. 141 OHi U• 103
IOwarO\ lllWllll IWUTMl .. Tlll ,aUMu• ~ C.Ot• fdw.,dl WOOdbtOOQt ld•ftd\ ~ ll< wt I• tit 4141 U1 OtU C-Wt\\ •7tl00
•COtTA MtU MIHIOll WK.IO tt1 ,.35 WUTMMITlll l ... _ So.Ill C..ll v.,. ...... "'wwv lt o ....... '"""C. ..... TH •114 UO•ttO •Mmm HI l6t3
u TOM E"'"°' s--..~ 511 mo CDi*MIOiifl ·---11···-·
..... ",.~ The tollowlng PtnOnt are dOlflt Tiie ~ '*"°"' .,.. doll'O bu"'-u : bUllNel Ml
1'Ati, 4230 Perk Newport. MAMHLLI llAUTY ~v. 1¥11, """°" IMoh. CA tneo. 1701 Hl tltor llvd., ,.,, CMtl
AOHALD A. HAOI"· 4:11M> l'lttf ...._ CA IHlt. !Newport, #307, ~ lilldl, CA MICH A 11. HA IUU I 0 .. .~. CUNNINGHAM. 441 PretftOfttOl'Y
ANITA HAOl ... 4UO Park Dtl\19 w .. 1. Nt'#~rl SMoll, CA
Newport #307, Newport 8eec11 CA HMO. lateo. ' ' THOMAI IDWA"D~,
Thlt bUllneM 11 oonducted by 1 IM10 AlclQe Oltn "°911, ,
limhed ""'*11111P· CA neoi.
AMI Hfi09f Thie bullnele le, OOftClua'9d by a
Tiiie tt8*ntnt wee lll9d Wltll llll ..,_ .. ~
Coun1y CW\ ol OtlllOI COUllC)' on t-' I O II .. I H e r t I I o ,.
June •• 1H2. CIMlillllQllMI
'""" Thie ~ ... llled wlltl tt. Publlllleel Orang• Co11t OaUy Cowltv Cleltl of ~ County Oii Piiot, June 10, 17, 24, July 1, 1HJ, Mty 1•. 1H2. 2"8-t2 ,._
l'tCTmOUI IUllllM
Pub11111ec1 Or•nr cout 0111y Piiot, June a. 10, 1 , u , 1MZ-
24""'2
..._ eTA~ rtaJC MOT1C( Th• followlno pereon It Clolng _______ ,;,,,;.. __ _
~u: ~mn ------------------------4 SIMPLIFIED BOOKIJ;EEPINO NOTIC8 Of TMM.,.... IAU 8ERVIC1!8, 177·F Rlvertlde Otl JtAy 1, 1112 .. 11:00 e.m.
A'*-, Newport 8-oll, OA 82"3. FI " 8 T A M llU 0 A N T I T L I!
Merion L. Cerpenter, 444 INIU .. ANCE COMll'AN=Y 1 Pro1pect. Newport HCll, CA Celtomle corponillon • T
92913. °' lllOOWOJ TNtlel « 811111 Thie bull!-. le ~ by 1n TNllee, of tNl 01ne1n DeM of
lnCIMd\Hll. -Tru11 executed by WILLIAM
Merion L. c.rpenter VISCOMe and CEL£8T£ VllCOM£.
. Thll 111temen1 WU Iii.ct w1111 IN and r.cotdeCI AUGUIC 21. 1M1 M County Cleric of Orenge County on lntlrument no. }1005, In booll
.tune f. 1ea2. 14111, i>eoe eoe of Ofllclll 1111oordl
,,..,, of onnge County. Celilomll. Ind
Publltheel Orenr cout D1Ky ~ 10 1111t cerWn HoUoa of
Piiot, June 3, 10, 1 , 24, 1N2 Deteull enel Election to 8•11
2332-82 ~ t9C:Otded F*'*Y 23.
---1111-._ -.,.-llft-Tll'_r___ 1882 M lnetNmenl no. 12.oe1SM, ,..._,.,, ""I~ In booll • ob . OI .,....._
NOTICI Of' TMllTD'• IALI ......
On JtJtt 2, 1882, 11 11:00 A.M .•
S111ewlcf1 Forecloeure '6ervtcee,
Inc. M duly eppolnleel TrualH
under 1nel pu11uenl to O..CI of
Trutt '9COl'ded Fet>Nlry 6, 1881, M
lnttr. No. IMM book 13838, pege
1234. of OlllcUI Record•,~
by: C.OI Brwlnen Chule u truetor.
In tlle offtoe of tlle Col#!ty Recorder
ol Orano• County, Stet• of
callfor'1M. W1U SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER
FOR CASH (peyable 11 time of NII In l1wful money of tll• United
Stl1•) 11: South front entrenoe to
the Orenge County Old CourthouM,
City of Sent• An•. 8111• ol
c.lltomle, .. rlgllt, title end Int--~ to encl now hllCI by II
under Mid D..ci of T ruet In the
property lltueted In NICI County
and 81111 deecttbed -lot 3 of Trect 6023, In Ille City ol Co111 MHe, County ol Orenge,
Sl•I• of 'C1llfornl1, 11 per m1p recorded In booll 182. p1ge(1)
35-38 of Mleoelleneoul Mape, In the
office ol tlll County Rec:«der of
ulCI County.
Th• 1trHI 1ddreu end other common dellgnetlon. ".eny, o1 the ,.., J>f'operty Cleecnbed lboW ..
purported to be: 1138 E Cemlno.
Colle Mela. CA Th• uneleralgned Trual••
Cllacl1lm1 eny lleblllty tor 1ny
lncorr9Ct..-01 t11e atr..i lddr-
encl otller common dellgnetlon, "
eny, lhown --· Sele! Hie wlll be meele, but
wllllout covenent or wurenty,
•Xl>f' ... or lmplled, r911erdlng tllle,
P<Ml•••lon. or encumbrenc.. to pey the remelnlng 1)11ndpel tum of
the notl(a) ..cured by NICI D..ci of
Tru11. with lnterHt thereon, at
provided In NICI ncM(a). ~.
" eny. unCl9" the lerm9 of Mid D..ci
ol Tru11, feee. chug•• enel ·~ of the T-ruat• llnCI of the lruata crHleCI by HICI Deeel ol
Trust. lor tlle emount ,_,ebly
eetlmeled 10 be: $4,715.00.
The beneflc;Nry under Mid D..ci
of Trull hefetofcn eucu1ed end
Cletlvereel to th• uneleralgneel • wrttten Decler•tlon of OellUlt lnCI
Dlmend for Sele. llnCI • wrttten Notice ol Deleult end Election to
Sell. The undlrtlgned C1UMC1 NICI
Notlee ol Defeull end Election to ~~---~~~-t--_ ....... _._..__+-----------Seit to be1'9COrded In llllcounty
where the reel property It IOcated.
Dile: June 2. 1882.
Stlt9Wlde Foredolure SINtoM. Inc.
uNICI Tnmee
Offtclel Reoordt of' lllcl County, ,.. under lllld purtulnl to Mid Died OI
Tru.t ... at publlc IUCtlon lor CMh,
lewNI moMY of tlle UolteCI ....... of ~tea, et t11e memi entnftoe to
Flrlt Amerlcen Tiiie ln1urance
ComoenY IOceled el 114 Ellll Flfttt
Street. lrt tlle city of Santi AM. Cllltomla. 111 11111 right, tftle encl
lnt«Mt oonvwed 10 end now lleld
by II under NICI Deed of TNl!t In Ille
prapeny Illumed In Mid County
end Stat. ~bed -lot 5 of Trect No. 2316, M ~on• mep '9COl'ded In~ 62. pege 38 of Mllcellill_. Mepe.
record• ol Or1n9e County,
Cel"omle.
Exoeptlng ... oll. ou. mlnetlla.
hyelroc1rbon1, 11pll1ltum end
releteel 1ub1t1ncet lylng In anel
undw Nld llnel, together with Ille rtgllt to UM thet pot1lon ol'lo/ of lllc:t
lend wtlldl undertlea • pllw'9 per ....
to end 600 feet below t11e preMnt
turf-OI NICI llnCI lor ~ OI
~I end/« eictrectlon 01
1ny oil , ge1 . ml n•r•I•.
h)'Clrocert>ona, uc>lllltum or Nllted 1uba11nc11 by m••n• of well•
Clrlled Into IU~ of lllc:t llnCI
from Clrlll 1llH on oilier lenel.
without. '-· the rtgllt to eni.
on Mid llnCI or to UM Mid llnCI or
tll'fY Portion of Mid lend to MIC!
dec>lh of 600 fMt for tlr'f purpoee
wtletaoever, M r--.ied In the deed
from 8.8.K.&H .• lne. 10 Rlc:hlrd ArMt
Sehrt encl wife, r-ded Mllrdl 1,
11166 In booll 2978, pege 581 of
OfflcMI Aecordl..
The 11r111 edelr111 or otller
common Clealg netlon of H ICI propeny la purported to be: 804
Well Bey StrHI, Co111 MH•,
Calllornl•.
SelCI ..,. wtll be mede without
COY9l\8n1 or werr111ty. expr-. or
Implied. M to tllkt, pc111111con «
encumbr I009I to utlefy tlle unpelCI
blllence due on the note « not•
MCUr9d by Mid Deed of Tn.iat. lo
wit: I 13.309.24. '*" the following H llm•t•CI coa11, upen1H end
edYallOll II the time of the lnltl ..
publlcellon of thla Nolloe ot Sele: sn1.oo.
Oeted: June 3. 1882
92702
FIRST AM£AICAH TITLE
INSURANCE COMPANY,
• Cllfomlll corporetlon
Den Onneroel,
Authortz.d Officer
114 Eat Fifth Street
S1nt1 Anl, C1lllornl1
(714) 556-3211
Publl•l'leel Or•i• Coul Dally
Piiot. June 10, 17, 4, 111822616-82
BySu~tlM.lon ~~~~~~~~~
R.A. Jvt, Preeldent Pl&JC NOTICE
5925 Cerrlloe Ave.
Cypr-. Cellfornle
Tel: (714) 82e-.3280 P~bll1tied Orange Co111 Delly Piiot, June 10, 17, 24. 1982
2517-82
Nil.IC M>TICE
•• '
. .
,.,~~
BOOTH OBELISK -The exact location of
John Wilkes Booth's grave at Baltimore's
Green Mount Cemetery has been a mystery for
more than a century. The only indication the
assassin of President Abraham Lincoln is
interred at the cemetery is this family obelisk,
which contains his name.
Wilkes grave ..
guarded s·ecret
BALTIMORE (AP) -So mewhere in a
well-tended grassy plot surrounded by a low stone
wall at the Green Mount Cemetery, rests the body
of the man who assassinated President Abraham
Lincoln 117 years ago.
But the exact location of John Wilkes Booth's
grave has long been a mystery for visitors to the
Booth family plot. An obelisk in9cribed with his
name is the only clue that the man who shot
Lincoln at Ford's Theater in Washington April 14,
1865 I.a buried there.
"His grave is visited more than any other and
there are over 60,000 people buried here," said
Ethel Felber, manager of the cemetery. "He's an
infamous person, I don't know what the attraction
is. "l think they're more interested in the
mystery, in the fact that it's unmarked and we are
reluctant to tell them," said Mrs. Felber, who
admits she knows the secret.
"Let's put it this way, the office has to know in
the event there is another interment and there are
Booths still living,'' she said.
Four years after Booth was killed by federal
authorities, President Andrew Johnson released his
body for burial in Baltimore with the stipulation
that the grave's location be kept aecret.
The .Booth family plot is about 30 by 40 feet.
Fifteen family members are buried there, including
Booth's parents, brothers and sisters.
The historic cemetery also contains the graves
of a host of equally prominent but less notorious
Americans, including eight Maryland governors, 16
Civil War generals. philanthropist Johns Hopkins
and the poet Sidney Lanier.
Philanthropists Moees Sheppard and Enoch
Pratt are buried at Green Mount along with Robert
Garrett, the first president of the Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad, and A.S. Abell, founder of the
Baltimore Sun.
Elizabeth Patterson Bonaparte, a Baltimore
woman who married Napoleon's brother, is also
buried in the rolling cemetery that is landscaped
with dogwood and flowering fruit trees.
"We like to think of Green Mount as a prestige
cemetery," Mrs. Felber said.
The cemetery has also been listed' on the
National Register of Historic Places, Mrs. Felber
said. "It means nothing will ever happen to Green
Mount. it will always be here."
· fnethodists hope
to save church
BALTIMORE (AP) -A call has gone out for
$1 from each of the nation's 9.6 million MethodiSts
to save a dUapidated church that is considered the
mother church of American 'Methodism.
The lovely Lane Methodist Church, the first
church designed by New York an:hitect Stanford
White, has fallen into disrepair since lta completion
in 1887.
Its congregation was founded in 1772 by one of
J ohn Wesley's personal missionaries, said the
current pastor, Emora T. Brannan. He said the
fund-raisina drive to restore the SVUCture has been
authorlr.ed 6y the General c.onference of the United
Methodist Church.
Scots like vodka
. ·-.,-.. ..
NV RQNMINTAL OQNT"OL
I ANOI Aftl 00.1 MllllON JoM ..__ Oulr, lt10 IJMc
NVl"O MINTAL OQNTROL ~No. ttt, """*1 e.otl. ~00.:CAtaeeo.
MIM!ON IHVl"<>NMINTAL Thie~ .. ~ by en UMCeoAftl 00., 100I .... tl'ttl lncfMdutt, ....._ W.. 04, llme AM. OA JOhn 8. Ou1r 'll10t: Thie ltatement -tlled With IN Jtl~~~o~~~l~No:•~LL~~=: ~. =· ot OrMee County on
~· OA talOT. · '1'11n
• iJOVOI LVHNI WILLIAMt. Publltll•d Ortn,. Coatl Dally H 1 I . Oounlty Olub Lan•. PllOt Jun9 a, 10, 1 • 14, 1N2 ~~IOT. . 071.fa .... .. oonduoied by • , __________ _
....,.... '*'1111-. NlJC NOTICE l IN09 M, Wltllemt TNt .taM!Mnt -!led With the K.-~ =· °' Oranoe County on ~1.~"
,...1 ni. lollowlng '*'°"' -doing ----------ftublllhec9 Ot1n11• Ooaet Dally ~ 11: NlJC NOTICE
Plot1 JUll9 f, tO, t1, 24, 1N2. MULLIOAN'8 8TEW POT, -----------231~ 2704 1 La PU Rotld, No. A, Mlnlt'a !"""."'----------vmaoe. Ml111on Vltlo. Callloml• ~ 92881 COUNTY OP CMlAltGI Mary J ana 811rkt. 20915 •.._,.......,ti.._,.
flllCnnGUe waa Wlndw.,d Drive, Laguna Niguel, tfoHIHlll 1 ti I MAim SfATW c.tlfomll 92t77 IC ... G.y ... ...._.
Thi fo11ow1ng per.one -doing Palrlde L Prtoa, 24892 La r. C"-81 ti ..._,
Ill! Pl•I•. Laguna Nlguel, C1lllornl1 Ne. A·U-
C I! 8 8 I N 0 L A 8 ; ll2en ON>P TO IHOW CAUM OIFT PAOOUCTIONS; Eugene G. Price, 24992 La .1177 ~RICAN PHOTO ASSOCIATION, Plata, L~una Niguel. C1llfornl1 Wherau. KENNETH GARY
2222 Manin Avenue, Sulla 212, 92177 McNAMARA. ~. '-llllCI • Jrma, CA 927115. Thia l>ulinea .. conductlCI by I oetltlOn wntl ttle a.ti of tllll OCM1
2-TEL INTERNATIONAL. INC.. oar-at pertntnhlp. tor an order cl'llnglng ,,.. ,_from
' C1llfornl1 corporation, 2222 Mary~ Bu<ke KENNETti GAR\' ~cNAMA"A to Me111i11 A--, ~ 212, !Mnt. CA Patricia L. Prlcl KENNETH GARY MeQHAMAAA: ' lt2115. Eugine G. Prlcl IT IS ORDERED that Ill S*90f'I
; Tiiie ~ i. oonductlCI by 1 Thia •l•t-1 w11 flied with.the lnlatJHled In th• 1bov1 tn11114d '
pofl)Oratlon. Coun~leril of Orange County Of\ mati.r ~ before Ihle court 11
• 2-Tll lmematfonll, lno. May 25, 11182. • 10:30 on ltlt 7th dty ol July, t982 In
, Ket., D. Nixon, '180190 department number 3 al 'TOO Civic
I Secr9tat)"-T,.,,.,., Publl•h•d Orange CoHI Dally Center Drive W111, Sant• Ana, Thie atat-t wu flted with the Piiot, May 27, June 3, 10, 17, 1982. cai11orn11 92701 and lhow cauae. 11 County Clerlc of Oranoa County on 1 __________ 233_s..e_21 any, wny the s-flllon for chetlQI of
~ 1, 1982. 1111m11C NOTICE name ahould not bt oranted. f1-.:I '"~ fl IS FURTHER ORDERED lhel 1 ! Publllhed Or•n1• COHI Dally '1CTinOUa llUSM.. copy of this Order lo Show c-
Pllol, June 3, 10, 1 , 24, 1982. NAME STAT'EmNJ bt publlahed In the Orange County
2374-82 Th• lollowlng peraon 11 doing Dally Piiot. • newlPIPll' of general
-,----------bull,_ u : clroul11lon, printed In Orange' "8.IC NOTIH" A.R. ANTHONY & SON. eM t County, Clllfomll once 1 W91k for ,.--===~~-' ~------PNlldlo DrlYI. Huntington 8-;h, four conMC1Ut1w ~· prior to the ACTITIC>Ue .,..... CA 92848. date Ml for '-Ing of petition.
MAm 8TAT'lmNT Allee Ruth AnlhOny 81141 Dile: May 25, 1982.
Tiie followlng pereon 11 doing Prllldlo Drive, Huntington 'Beach, ~~ ~tlohlnl ~ u: CA 92648. .._,,...of -_...,.. C-1
HOSHI MAYU SEAFOOD, 2924 Alloe Ruth Anthony .1Am8 II.. IC"'-HO.
Che11nut Avenue, Coate M111 Thie •t•l-1 wu ftled with the ,_ Wllltllr9 -.d. Callfornla 92tl2e ' County C1eR of Orange County on , _ ~·...._ 19M
Oordon Allan MlllhouM, 2924 June f. tll82. ...-CA tooM
Ch11tnu1 Avenue. Cotta Men f1to570 (21 ) ~ Clllfomla ll2f2e ' Publlahed Orange Co111 Dally Published Orange Co111 Dally
Thie ~II oonduc:tlCI by an PllOt, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1982 Piiot. ~ 27. June 3, 10, 1~}~ lndMdull. 2445-82 ,,,__2
G.A.M~ Thia ... ,_, -"*' wtth thl ___ "8.JC ___ NO_T1C£ ____
1
___ Nl.JC ___ N0_11CE ___ _
County Clerlc of Orange County on ACT1Tl0Ua IU8Ml88 F1CTTTIOU9 .ua .. aa Mey 28, 11172. NAm 8TAnMEfl NAME STATEMENT
Publlthed Orange Co1:.1: ~o:::.-lng pereon la doing bu~h~o::::wlng peraon 11 doing
Plot.June2,ll, 17,23, 1982 SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT, VIDEO MEMORIES, 222
2402-82 24e71 La Hennoe1 A~. ~ Lugpnta Sll'MI Newpor1 Beect\ CA Niguel, CA 92817. 926el. ' .
John Kllslanla, 24871 La RICHARD L. SINOR, 222
HefmoN Avenue, Laguna Nlguel, Lugonla Slr .. I Newport 8Mch CA
ACTI110U8 -·· CA g2877. 926&3 ' ' ..,,,.. 8TATIMrNT JOhn ~ Thia bullneaa II conductlCI by an The followtng peraon 11 doing Thia •t•t-1 w11 ftled with the lndMdull.
~ u : County Clerk or Orange County on Rk:hard L. Sinor
WESTLAKE VI LL AG E June i. 1982. Thie buelne .. wu NllCI with the
APARTMENTS, 711 WHI 17th f1-County Clerk ol Orange County on
Street, No. 312, CO.ta M-. CA Publl•h•d Orange Cout Dally June 8, 1982. 92927. PllOI, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1932 '1'°'72
R ichard R. Cantrell , 8 2375-82 Publlahed Orange Co111 Dally
Northttar, NO. 104, Marina Del Rey. 1111_.,. NOTll'r Piiot. June 10, 17. 24, July 1. tll82
CA 90291. I"~ 1iw. 2500·82
Thia ~ IS conducted by an FICTITIOUa 8tJS*EH
lncllvld\Mll. ~d R. C....1'911 NAME 8TATDllENT
Thia 11•1-t -ftllCI wtth lilt The followlng pet'l«la -doing
Coun ,.._._ ~ ... ty .,._,. of Orange County on C A L I F O R N I A C L A I M S
Pla.IC NOTICE
FICTmoua BU81NEH
NAM£ 8TATU.NT
~25 1982. • '1tet10 CONSULTANTS, 1000 M11eAnhur The lollowlng peraon la doing
Publlahtd Orange Coaat Dall 8'Yd .. Sant.a Ana. Cellfomla 92704: bull-11·
Pilot, May, 27, June 3. tO, 17, 1eeI Mac~u~· B~· ~ :~ w. MAGNUM MARKETING. 5e01 2342-82 " n • na. ~Drive. Huntington BMdl, Cllfomil 92704 CA 92849.
Dentlll Malloy, 10381 Hammon DAVID W. SMITHSON. 1&465
Tr ... Garden Grove, C1llfornl1 Coast Hwy . Sunni 8Hch. CA
92643 90742. PlCTIT'IOUS llUUNlaa Anne Marie Lannon. 24072 Thia bullneu la conducted by an
....... STA~NT SIQOtr sv.t, El Toro, C.iite>mi. lndlvldual
The fOllOwlng penona .,. doing 112630 Devlcl W. SmllhlOf'I ~ u : . Luan M•Jora, 301 E. Taft This statement wu tutd wtth 1111 ADDED CLASS. 3157 Birch A__,. 0rMoa. Cellfomle 92865 SllMI, Suite 2111. Newpor1 8Mdl SaMt Odeh. 301 E. Taft Avenue County Clerk of Orange County on
CA 92ee0. ' Orange, Clllt-92865 • June 8. 1982.
AANOLD LEE JACKSON, 807 Thll ~ la conductlCI by 1
N. Chippewa, -150, Anaheim, CA genarlll pertnerwhip.
92801. LOUii N. Saint Lot MONICA DE LA ROSA. 7941 Thi• .... ,_, was nled with the
F1JOl71
Published Orange Co111 Dally
Piiot. June 10, 17. 2•. July 1. 1982
2502-82
Inwood L-. Le Palr'M, CA 90e23. County Clettc of O<ange County on -----------Thia bull,_ la conducted by • May 21. 1982. Pl&.IC NOTICE
Nmlted partnenhlp. F1...0 FICTlllOUS IU ... M
Arnold L. Jackaon Publlshed Orange Coul Dally NAME STAnMENT Thia atalament wu tlltd with Ille Piiot, May 27, June 3, tO, 17, t982. The IOllOwt d........, County Clerlc of Orange County on 2327-82 ....,,_,_ a.· no peraona are ~ ....
June 8, 1982. 1------------.......,,_ -l'tlllln WIL MOORE & ASSOCIATES,
Publlthld Ora.nge Coast Dally NIUC MOTi( 4121 W11terly Piece, Suitt 201,
PUot. June 10, 17, 24, July 1. 1982. Newpor1 Beach. CA 92880. . 2475-82 FICTIT10US 9Ua1NE•• Newport w111.,n eorpore11on,
-----------NAMI 8TATE•NT a C1lllornl1 corporation. 4121
MUC 1111CE The fot1011rlng person 11 doing Westll'I)' Place, SUit• 201, Newpor1
II-u : Beech, CA 92880.
CLP ENTERPRISES, 10052 Thia bull._ 19 conducted by a Aennoua .,..... dye Drive. Huntington Beach, corl)Ofetlon.
NAMS STATIM!NT allfonila 928A8 Newpor1 Weetam Corp The followlng peraona .,. doing Cart L Petty Jr .. 10052 Edyw Wiibur Moore. Jr.
, buaw-u: I'll. Huntington 8eech, cantomll Pr.aiOtnt
PEACH TREE. 444-8 No. 2&48 =~ctrl Boulevard. Newport "*bu"'-la conducted by an .-c.wom11112ee0 ndlvldual.
WARREN DEVELOPMENT, a Cwt L Petty Jr.
c.IHornl• corporation 444-8 No, Thia ll•I~ 'Wll flied With the
F~
Publllhed Oran,• Co11t Dally
Piiot. JI-. 3. 10, 1 • 24, 1982 • 2377-82
Newport Boul1v1rd, Newport ty Clerlt ol Orange County on a.di, Cellfomll 92960 une 6, 1982 I
Thia bua1M1e 11 conductlCI by 1 Ftt1025 119f*ll per1ntrll\lp P11bll1h4KI Orange Cont Dally K-~ .. D. Werr-• llOI, JuM 10. 17. 24, July 1. 1~ flCTTTtOU8 ........ ... ...,, . _,, 2535-82 MAm 8TA~
Thia ... '1:, wu flied with Ille 1------------The lollowlng p«•on 11 doing
Coun Cllr1I ~ -: i, of Drange County on "8..IC NOTICE ERNIE'S GOURMET MEATS. "t= ~· 8Uf'lllllOR COURT 4e2 E. 17\11 Street, Coate MeN.
WYMAN. MUTZQ. ROTMIAN, MC~ Callfomle , ICUCltSL a aMJn COUNTY ~ ~ Denny Lee 8'*11man. 1908 w. A ..... ......, ......... no ctwtc Clfttlf °"" w .. t Palalt Road, Anaheim, C1lllornl1
PU'I 11 I , Cerper..._ ,.o . ._ • 92= bull-II 'conduct-' by an -...._., C...-Dme, ...... AM. CA tr7Q2 .., ..... 7lt • PLAINTIFF: DENISE F. HUNT lndlvldull. ................ Caltomle ._ DEFENDANT; ROBERT JAMES Denny L• Boktlmln ' f1~ ILLIAMS, DOE 1 through DOE This statement W'll ftltd with the
Publlelied Orang• Cont Dally lnolUll\19 County Cieri! of orange County on Piie«, June 10. 11. 24, July f. 11182 • IUwOM June e. 1982.
215155-8 ,,,.. ~ ~t f1*70 2 c-No. ...... it Pubfllheil Orange CoHI Dally
----.---.,.-NO-Tll'r____ N0net1 v., tie" 11eet1 auec1. Pl~. June 10. 11. 24, Juty 1. 1882
l"U8U\o ·~ -' _, dectd9 ........ JOU 2516-82
l HCHhOU8 --·· ,_ ..... ,_... ...._ .._ SfA~ • ,....-. ""'*'•.,._Reed Piil.JC l9tl(
T• t«*owtno peraon le doing -.mal11t IMM!w. •-----------• ~ -If you wlltl to Nik IN advloe of TRACEY ENTEAPNSU, 2100 n 111orn9'f In Ihle m1111r, you -.cnnoua WU
Nof1'I Mein 81Nlt. 9enca Ana.·CA an C:.:,,..~~."!!.r: The :=,:gr~~ doing llJ'I01• on time. -·· .. _,. bUllntl8 • 'CAmtl~· 3 Alflwood, irw., AV1801 Uale-fie aide VITAOAAPHIC 8ERVIC!8.
TNll ~ 11 oondwc1ed by lfl altdeff. 11 trthtttl ..,_. 9182 kmuda Drt'l9. Huntl"91on
.,..1:NM --. w. • a .. • Beedlcn.C:1• ll2t4t
Ha1Tr909Y .~.~ .. ,....I ........ IWrnudeDrM~~=. Tilll ••a ••It -tied wWI the - -. .......... ·~-... ~· ~ Clarti of Oranoe County CelHOtnlt ll2M ,,.. t. 1t11. on I Vtt•d dtH• eollcltar el ~bullneaa 11 ~by WI
,._,1 de "" ll>OGttdO an aat9 · ~ 0r.,.. Cou1 Olllly •unto, deberfa h•c•rlo ChandW J. ICA!Medy
......... ~· tO, ,,, a... '~ '""==':W: ~ "=' ~ ~ =.lledcc:, '=
-regllCrada • ttampO. ..._ ,,, 1tl2.
_.,. -1. TO THI" DEFlNOAHT: A oM1 ,._. ,._ ""''-)Dol'flPlllljnl ._ ti.rt Ned by tM Publlahed Otanoe Co111 Delly ;."'!'4M1iii1h;;,; ... iiiii-iiiiiiiii1 --~ )'OU. If )'DI.I ~.to Plot, June to, t7, l4, Ntt t, 11Q .... .,.,~ ""'a.-Nt, JOU,,.,..,""'*" 2NH2
Tiie •••111 ,.,.. .. dolftt 0.,... .,.. tlllt --.. -----------· ...._ • on )'OU. • wfttl tHa oourt •
• YAU.I ~A UTA~ reJPOMe to thl ~1t. .-. ~a.. ...... 0A )'OU do IO, your Olfd Wiii T ._ .... .en IC I .,,.... Oii .. , .... or IN ~ --:e-.=.·c~i~ ·~'='="--:; .................
le Ill ...... ~ I 0V tll~t.ut In tatftltfltMnl Of ,tlll or~or~
........ ._ o•llef r ,....alM In t!M =i -..~-
'
SERVICES
Str"•<• Oi.tilt'tW)
£M'lOYMENT &
NE"RATION Schoab lrutr\ICltOft JottWa•ted• ..... ,,..-11 ...
MEICHANDISf _
~T.:u A.,.._ :::r.i:: lhlH1•b CatNn.• • £4wp,...na c.u Deca
rtt.10 '"" ,..f'ftit.,,. c .. .,.s.i. -._c-. ,_.,.
'-'••t.otl ...... ._.,,
Mt1tttl1newa Mlw•fll1.MOU.f \\ •n•M WID'o l '"•tnuntnh Ollltt ,.,, .... &<llM• P.U ~':~~~~,.':t~ ~un1 Cood• Slot•,Jt"tauo~ 1Mr-~-•r..,,...H1r1.S4<n<>
BOATS f. MARINE
EQUIPMENT
llOl
DX
J)O(
:MO! ~ ~
~ ~ )II)(
INI lltatt ••••••••••••••••••••••
EQUAi. MOUSINO
0"011TUNITY
,......,,, ......
All real eatata ldvW11MCI
In thla nawtpap•r 11
tubJect to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1988
wtllctl makM II IUegal to
ad'*11H "any pr.ieren-
Qe, Um1t1Uon or dltcrlml-
n11lon bu•d on r~•.
color. rellglon. ••• or
nallonal origin, or any
Intention to ,.ak• an~
auch preferene., llmlta·
tlon or dlacr1mln11lon."
Thia newspaper wlll not
knowingly accept any
advertising lor real ••-
11te which 11 In vtotatlon
of the law.
HlllHa Adverti-
sers should check
their ads dally and
report errors lm-
m ed I ate I y. The
DAILY 'PILOT as-
sumes llablllty for
the first Incorrect
Insertion only.
~ .................. ..
Bt•HI /11 Wt
OranQ' Coa1t re1ldent1 bought 42% o/
oll new car1 1old in the count11 hut 111ar
even through tMJI compme only 30% o/
the county'1 population . ·
Orange Coast Market Place
~.<'!IM ....... ~•.{'!.!!'! ....... ~,m.!'!1e.~ ...... ~Hf .!'!I.¥! ....... .. ~~~ ••••.••• ,l!M ff!!~~. . ..... !.'!I ~~~ ......... J.ljl c.. ..... •.• '''. •.~ 11.u
,. ••• u ••••
Priie Weit Bay bayfront. SUpa for 2 bolata,
remodeled 3 bdrm. 3 bath tl.200.000. •
Ocean & jetty vlew1. Marine room. 4 bdrm. 3
bath, 3700 tQ.h. •1.386,000. Oceantront.
Ull llLI 11111
.t>rune Lido Nord bayfront. 5 bdrm. 5~ bath.
Lge L.R .. 2 boat 1Upa Sl.500.000.
Remodeled 3 ~. 2 bath + large rec. rm.
beam ce~. furnished, pat.101. $420,000.
LlllA llLE UYJlllT
...agoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath. playroom,
dark rm. den. Boal sltp $1,350.000.
II YSIDE COYE
Spectacular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 boat allpa Jl,800,000. ,.
COllOIADO CAYS
O:>ronado Island cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat
dock. Plana avail. Red. $370,000 w/terms.
ILIFFI 01111
Single story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba
on largest greenbelt, $250,000.
Piii L8I
3 bdnns. 2 \J'J baths rondo near pool. $145,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
)4 1 Boy\odt· 01 •· '• ~ b7S b l bl
OCEANFRONT LAOOON
150' OF Bl!AOH l'OOO tq ft bulldlnQ pad. .ee Ao LaCoet•, Oart•
bad 12115K. 15&Ml8915
............ ,.
COM'S .BEST
Thlt dUP'9.11 t + lnctudM
two 2 bdrm unit• + an
•irtra l•ro• ou .. 1 quar·
tera. Owner fa making 11 alW 11111 avallable at ~erday't
DECORATOR'S DE· ptlc9 11 *249•500· Wiii pOHTI Ellttll!Mly PoPV· cooperate. Call IM0-78el5
lar 3 br plan INturlno l&lllflll
magnlllc9n1 d.cofatlng, F*!uc»d by 1100.000 -
frplc, y;:rrnet llMlncl kit· now Sl5915,000. lrvln•
Chen, rml din, fmly rm & Ttrr-4 bl", 3 be, view,
ln·hOUM laundry. "" lhle ooot. 10% down, 1 U%
& more for only '389,000 Int., 27 yra Poaa. trade
FEE. 2870 San Miguel for ISO' boat. By owner.
Dr. Newport Beach. 1152-7691
759-1501 M 762·737~ ---------ft!!~.!!~••••••!•~~1 ~ Walker & Lee
.IWlllE'I '1111T
Top quallly home In gate
guarded area 3 Br end
unit on quiet cul-dt-<tac.
Beaullfully decorated
home, aurrounded by
wide greenbelts Perking
•Pa<::et galore. Call UI.
$427 ,500. Murlel Barr's
llstlng. 75g.9100
GEORGE ELKINS CO
3 Br 1 Ba. houM on large
80Jt1715' 3 unit lot. 436
Hamilton. Do not dltturb
tenanu. 1129.000.
648-5041 evee & wtmda,
631-3520 wkdys .
IWllll IHn O&SI
2 Br 1 B• + 1 Br. 1 Ba
7211105' R2 IOI. Do not
dl1turb tenanll. 1528
O r ange. S 1211,000 .
548-604 1 evea & wlind1,
63 t-3520 wlidya.
lll,2U
Large covered patio,
fireplace, double car ga-
r age. E11cellen1 condi-
tion. $135,000. Owner
wlll carry 111 loan. Best
of terma. ••r •oOu41t, lttr. ,ua.1121
2 Br, 2 be condo nr S.C.
UGl ·~;;;i•••••••••i•iii ...................... i---------FllER wm l YI *IAfflm* llATIUP
IEU WOODS
WllTOLlfF'
Excellent financing Co-
venlenlly located three
bedroom. two bath
nome. Double lirepl-
Spartdlno pool and ape.
$265,000.
Plaza. 3 yra. old. AJC,
patio. dwnstre. Family
aeet. Sec gate. uaum
$52,900 11.37% Int owe am. 2nd TD. F.P
190,000 Ownr. 894-2592
Thi• house need• Iota of
elbow grease but wtiat •
wo view! Fantastic home le<
-poolsld• entertaining.
-Full price $149,500.
¥1111 ~lO ~u
751-3191
c::. ~fl f ( l
-t'"" PH< JP! ~~ • I\ 'l
UIMO
Beautlful cuatom cabi-
netry by a master craf1-
ernan really Mta this 3
Bdrm 2 Ba home apart.
Lovety gazebo and bea·
ring fruit lrees. Low rate,
('tfJW roan av all able. Full
price S149,000.
751-3191
Privet• bHch, 1111 &
cheery comfortable
home. 3 large bedroom•
& der1. 2 bathe, n~
and much moral Wiii
trade downl INCLUDES
THE LANOI Owner/
Ag•nt 873-9187 or TllPLD e15.1oeo. 15111,0001 :: --------~ --10% dwn. Step• froml~~~~~~~~~ ---------sand. Unbellevable l)f1C41.
Perfect condition. Call _D_a_1_1y_P_11_o_t _c_1a_as1_11ec1_1_. -l-Se_n _ld_le_tt_em_s_64:......:2:...-56:...::..:.7.:8
Tim Rhone now .
'IOll6 l<ll$
11CIO
lWlll> ••• 1111)
631-1266
tu unm . ....
2 br. 2 ba, In PlecenUa.
many faciHtlM .• nr. 57 &
91 Frwyt. Hu gd I•·
nant.
111,111 .. 1" .... U~4X., 11 Jr. LM1
851-033 t or 9 76--09345 -C) And out about the high
: earntno real eatat• ulea
-car-opportunltlel with = THE REAL ESTATERS.
11em llcenalng achool I•••
:: completely refundable to
-school of your cholc.. .is Extensive selel training.
:,: For lnlormatlon. call
IOI! 751-6191 = __ R_E_M_E_M-BE_R_O_A_O_I _
-with• ::! father's Day meaaage
-6-42-5678 :: Win 4 FREE TICKETS!
to an Angele Game
Dally Piiot
Claaalfled Ada
=NEW VIEW TO WN · = HOMES. 2 Mealer Sul·
-tea. View of ocean & '°'° night llght1. Oulet ArM .
:: Parke. opfn 1pacH.
-$125,800 dn. Xlnl Fin.
Hal or Pat Bauer, Agtt.
1111 813-7300
llJI --------~ • llJI
*It! IUI ,,.
tilt 11• -
l&IOIUT Sitt•
lmpreealve i. lhe word
that comes to mind wh«I
you VleW the Fr. provin-
cial eJ11erlor of thlt loV91)'
cuatom home. The~
cious Mllr Bdrm hu •
Hla & Her dr-'ng aree.
sunken tub & atnum. The
3 remaining Bdrma "' located In a Hparata
wing w/2 Betha. Ideal for
91'11ertalnlng with a a.rv-
tormal dining room &
-lb11t. The family room
& living room both off9r
the warmth of tlrepe.oet.
Aeaum• •~ting loan.
Call ua for a viewing
appt. 831-7370.
TR,\DIT IO\,\I
RL\I "T '
What it
means fur
your ad
to be
"clflssif ied"
IEWPOIT IS. llYFROIT
la lfftr4aMe ,,.., H fH Wlftr wftta
,ltr /.U, fer SO' Hit. E ... J t"'4ffr liris1
wltfl •• ,,. ••ti• •14 4tt•. u1,t1flft
mlMeM •• H .... .,.. ...... IWC
lire• 284 ll. Utl,oeo fet 111·'1'•.
••
WATERFRONT HOMES.1..,c
Ml "I 1 'l"Ti
s.;.. ~ .... _.. "-v-
2436 W Coasr Hwy
Newport Beach 631·1400
nrStOFNTIAI Rf A\ FSIAIE SERVICES
--Ill IWI llll,000 Quiet elegance just a few doors
from ocean. Beautifully appointed,
unique residence on 30 x 118 lot
with leasehold rights to tne
adjoining parcel. 2 BR + den.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
'==' S@\\.ci1~-~£~s·
-'°T CLAY L l'Ol4NI -----
•r:'':..i.:"r-:. ~ """'"''°""""" ........ -·
t-TK,,.....,A,..._w ... c__,1t~1 .. 1 The trouC>le with moving 10 •
14 I I I .. amall town la that ycur hoUM
. . _ _ I• llw•YI known by 1111 name
,--------. ct 1111 peoc>lt WhO lived thtrl
I BOFDIR j -YoU>
........... l' ..... l ........... l•.....11 .............. 1 ~J • f:"r..11:: !'" ... "'=. '*:::; _ ........... ,.,-..
111-lHO I.I.
VACANT-MVST SELL 4 Bdr, 2'11 Ba, 10 yrs,
2100 aq 11, long term. low
Int financing w/15'Y. dwn
Miiiea otter Robin Keith WHINtHE Atty 788-4008
Charmtn~~dwood" FLUJILE FHIAllOlll
Model. 3 BR. 2.,,. BA. di-on Ihle Immac ul ate 3 bdrm home with enclo-nlng aru, profeaalonally aed patio, tamlly rm,
decorated In sprlno col· 1 k • ors. Large patio & alr apr n Iara .. more. Ow-
condlUoned. Community ner amcloua. $129.500
pool, 1ennl1 court and _c_al_I _g_79_·_53_7_o ___ _
lake. $155,000. Donna
Godahall «M4-6200.
Ullll YI ltW
14X.1mam
12% FIHICll&
A beaulltully upgraded 4
Bdrm home with many
amenities Sellers will
carry $100,000 at 12v. or
A.I T.D 11 12•1 •. $1'45,
000. For more Informa-
tion call 979-5370
.\'( >l.l/ 1/J,•11
f.4{ Al•' I\ -... , f_ •, ftJt,f NT')
Quiel, park·llke MlllnQ. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Rm for paddle tennis and
ooot. Great for orchard
Cul de sec II 3 bdrma .
tam rm. $379,500 lnclu·
ding land Alk about 1
1% loan on thl9 home.
1TAYLOR co.:
\..I)_ ' '-~--•l• I
2-BR Single Family Home
In H.B. $97 ,950. Only
$20.000 dOW1}. Eitcellent
terms with low lntereat
assumable loan. Shar-
pest house In the tract
Call Mike tor more Infor-
mation. (714) 720-0391
lllflE
II THnEllOI
Outstanding 5 Bdrm view
home. Park llke yard.
llllDOllED
SLISHED
$30,000!
1IO he. Yltw
Meu Verd• mansion,
over 2400 eq.tt.I View of
Catallna. sun1e11 and
city llghtsl 4 king bdrms,
3 blth1, m111IV9 family
room, new e11eryth1ngl
$38,000 moves you int
NO OUALIFYINGI Call
IHI. can't IHI Ill low. low
price! 898-2636
open. spacloua lloor1~~~~~~~~~ plan, soaring celling, wtth1•
a11umabl • financing ... ., Flall•l•C
S29i.OOO lee. Setler wlll carry loan for
UNl()Uf t1().~(S qualllled buyer Great
Reattora, 87s-eooi> t«m• 3 Bdr 2 Ba. Mesa 1::=~~==~=~1 Verde Hlghl1nd1, boat trlr I CC... s 130.000. ••••-••• ••t 3 28 1 Colorado L n -.... ..._.. Ownr/agt 559-6221
L11ge bayfronl lot wlthliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii private pier and 11011
Ataum•ble tow lntertl1
111 T.D. 11.1115,000.
17141 673-4400
12lll Ut-2121
HARBOR
WMI ltlul '°" ...•..........•..••.••
W1111E
Come and -this cnar-mlno home. Great loca-
llon wl1h beama. llre-
pl-& 3 bdrm. 2 bath.
Mo......in condition. Bring
Children & 1>91110 play In
huge yard with alley ac-
ceu. $1'47,500. ....
Lido Realty
673--7300 Unique & charming 3 br &
loll. LH/09t or trade lor
unit•. 873-8585. ~~~~~~~~~
·11~4' ...... '"· •Prloacl al only '399,000
•2 StOtY 3yr old cul1om
oCall 104' lntonnatlon
BKR. 875-Sa51l
ININl.114"1
210 GAAHD CANAL
Lltll• leland. Sharp 3
Bdrm 2 bath on th• -t•. owe. 1575.ooo.
UNIOVE HOMES
Ma or rom Bolend
87s..«M>O ....
•• J!l!l!!~ •.••• JM!
" llUNm ~· llJ. lxoellent
ldlttOli. s ldml """'
Ml '"'°"" Md b4ltlla. Pf'IO· 9181,000, haa fl· fWIOlrlt • Ml-llM
UStwllAlm
3 9dr 2 ea. ape. entry
Cftyrd, ..... opt. 1'1811.
Owner wlll help flnenca.
1225.000. Celt Binnie Di-
xon, agt, 15~9100 .
• ...... Li-.
In 1hle 4 bdrm home wttti
add-on famlly rm. Many
.. tru lncludlng n•w
catpet. Large~
loan and ownet wllf ... *-I 1S6.000. Cell fOt
mot"9 Info. tTt-6310
\ ( . -/ /. / t / /'If
,. .. ~!ff..{'!.~! ....... lkttli.f'-!it.., .... o.;.•,•"""11,. ,,. !?m!.~ .. l!fn.~ .. !em.~ .. ll!!!lf1~11.!PP.llM4 ~::... ~r.. 1m111."'1Hl.e 1 ;.'!!I"" .__,, -~ ... ~. • .... bftlH 11H C.u .._... 1. .,...,, .._.. .1 #f--n ........ 1.1• ... ":::::....-... ........... ::nr:lt.......... •llllT .. u 1_.. r ........ ~ m •• llf\l YM&O • ......................... -..mr......... . .. -. .. ..-i.~ ... T•• .. r""'iu.1l1'11"u• u":f c.,11 .... .UM.__. a.-A 11f1 6 eowN'la w °"
................. ;:;-;1 ••".!'!!. __.. ........... T• ..._..... mJ n llY flM 41r .. l.,.l•.1. community lluftl IO 3 br, tam rm. ~ ................. r..'1; ... Wf.;.-:mT ........ ~-""°" OOl'llMU-
U. MWI. IWl ~lquen::=.;;;e, ';";' NMl'new.;i'bek'l'n a.ti you Matted In,... po7o11.~ ~r~~~2~.) ~·~.!':',t~~1060 "a.. ~~~aor,:!-;;: 2="~~ e~~= ~fJ:'.Z-,.!..Condo ntty~~ ~ ~ i ''· TownhOUH, df· I ... .0•111• lot. "'~ I beth Hoh unit with •• ,. ownerthlp. .. ,,_ -....... "'Vb ··-.. IO 175-41 " -· --llghll.tl end unit with P-. d9'achld awea-. f1Jt. ftNplaoe, IMIOMd pdO, I It. NOtttl OoMa MeM. 4 "· ColleQI Pattc Homa auper .,,.,, 3 Id, fWnll)'
11 °'*· *":Molle on...._ tlo, community pool l ooo. u1.1104 f •vii & ~ .___ 1•. ~ 1478/rno. nHr poo1, 1ohoo11 & rm. den, pool,~ OuW _. ___ ,, Not HOta 2 Bf\. 1 ... be, UDO IA't'..c>HT e.dlelon. 1 & I ldrM.
kldclyyerd. 1.owdownOf wltncl• Nt-Hao•c1ye. 0111\ flow. Now 1111, t Ir. TownhouM with perk. Avail. 1.20. rettdentl•I loo•llon. ~-"=i.a....a fpo . ger, no pete. a&A21AtttoO/mo.'Jttl New fumllhlnte. ~I
11ke ov., Hllll~ VA • &AA, 1111 "ru·""', •ttr, pool, H.I . 11179/rno. 1 1 111 m 0 . 1 v e, 11 ... " .... 1-t••• .,.,_ Mfflmo, 142-6722 e73-4a1t (ttiiau.-,m montN)' from .... .,.,.,, "' '"'' ., ..... .....,, ...,... ...,. _.. •••••••••••••••••••••• f 1.A/•.A.L1 .. IO.w1 F'Unpfle911 ,IOO. -a--17M111. 1 Br. vupte11. 811t1lde 640·1H9, Oar-/Wknd• •-ta..... w .. 1lldl 1-MY 2bf " -
Agent. 182•1100. , -"-' •••• , -O.M. 1450. Uf.1291. II' MAT U ..-tb1 11p
1
p;;:'""'t426imo, -...... ..... rmrt SM>0,000 Total Prloel ------• Le\'1oetyourlnVM1rMnl WOOdbrl.._ ~IR 2 ..... Lull.~ Br 2"' 9a oonclO, IMJal.J. tat/IHt, ola•nlng. No ... .,. _..
Cullom pool & •P•· 11• 8"1 buy Qn OCMnftont, boellent oentr.i oomer ltartled. vv-• ~· 1"' blk• to OCMn. Yrty. •••••••0 ••••••••••••• P• .. '!i.!dull• only. a.... ...
tume + OWO 11 t&%. xlnt IOC.1321000 QI.II\+ looetton. 3 bldge. 0..-Aotlnt llt-1700 upgrd. nr llChlt. lllopl, 815•1776 f75-70t0 OCl!AN,"OHT 2 br, 2 bl, 54.,...1.,., COUNTRY CLUB UVlNG CNml home.~ a ticim. 8 39r, t\~ Ba. MD. R.E. eHumebte t7SK. 10~ llntinOlnf pool. No Pitt. HSO. ' yrfy, lnol't, lot perko. _________ 1 (213) 434-4401 ~lee e7MJOO 1'11.... 6111·2246. Qulll1Y 3 BR, 3ba, den. deoel. H60 per mo. CIMn egl edult quiet 1 Ir IN NEWPORT HACH t>a, 2 bike belCfl/toWI, TP. Owner 840-7tt0. Irv. Terr. Som. f\irn. Lie. 68t-let2 aft &PM w/ger, atove refrlg 1 A tottl environment Auo MOO per wti,
"BR, 11~ 0ba· Only $5000 •-~...'...-,._ ,. MM 2 bdrm, 2 be, VlfY 11109 UITIU 8734100 1t-~-~flH. •• water pd. No peta or aplltment community on 4l7•S2U
dwn 1 70. monthly. ..........._. "'-..... ~.n!fN!t.~ oondo. 2 oar 01r1g1. 2. 3 and 4 bdrmt. lfOl1)1 --chlldran l3e5 548-3~ the ~ Bey. Private OCEANFRONT lll'LIN Call: Agt. 731-1587 ...... ...,.. Pool, air cond., newly 1&26 to 11300 Nlt kh condo. 3 8d 2 Ba. •••••••••• • •U•••••• ' olubhOUH end heetth • e.v OWNER Trl·level Oarlltl..... OAU die. MC gete & r.c rm, 7001mo. 83M2M. Ro-Oualnt 2 Br. t 9a. 114 futlldl 3 Br. 2 Ba. petlO, IPl1 I tenni. 00Uttt. 7 ,._.,, lumOORhm .. _ 4. ULI. Tl* t700 mo. ber1 Mlllll<en. 90t J11mln1. IHO yrty. lfplo, 2 atc>ty. &eeO/mo. poo11 ciloel to bull,_ ...,.,...., ·-· ~$,2,i>oo~ih 2n~ s.,. 1239 llllllT MIUllll 17s-2ne, off. HARBOR VIEW HMS. 176-4912 Brok•. ~7 11,po;. ,..,..ton llltnci' with 2 ea., tnol brlok
d.d. 11"'7,ooo. "OU 38R.2BA. 11' .500,.. 831·12el 979-68t4 ........ M-~.'"'~to LS atudlo •nt, ...... cpt, Convenient thop1 o~ lrpto . w1hr/dryr, " ' , .. , ()'Ml« wt OIN)' w '" ........ ...,,_,, .....,.. ..... • .. -MESA VERDE 2 Br. 1 Ba. alt• Unlumlltled bam. d1hw1h r. 2 oar ,., . Qulllty Andy, 63$-2647 5% down. by owner Eutllde Charmer 1 er., ~Ing. 11025/mo. rp1, pa!t, mo./l'(IO. t• oer, Included. Lero• Iott 1 & 2 bclrm-•lftd 12000 for June 1H1.
daya, 900·0898 evea l 1179-!923 •llTI W11111 ea. recent remodel. O °' 873-3174 n1ncy. •50Q mo. 191. y11d, IOW9f unit. No peg. tow~llOUMI. ...... 11200 A119u1t 2...a.t.
wknda. ' CAMEO SHORES Trade for N.8 . oceen· t6110/mo. Lero• yard. 2 bf, 2 ba condo, bey 1 551.e130 • $476. Wkdy1. pit calf: U40 11000 4th. Single fwnl)' fl#/, lrm• lH4 Cullom 4 Br. 3 Ba. pool, tronl home. Owner. 64M124 ocun vu, prof. deci. c.,u #Hot UM 759-4229. Sewrll ~end 1 No pelt. 944·11U.
•••••••••••••••••••••• Jaouul, kol pond, 3 !~!~·~~~~l811 Sii· EASTSIDE. ~. c1Mn 2 Pool, elubhle, 110. •••••••••••••••••••••• PINE BLUFF APTS. Bdrm unltt leetur. fine 2131827-61()9·
2bdrm,2baWoodl>rldge lrptc'a, 1 4 76,000 bdrm, gar. prlv yd. 11600 mo. 731-0443, •CIMn3bf,nrSCPlaz.t. 2Br.28a.1dllld0k,no d11lgner lurnltureand WIUl.fmTILI
SFD 3 p1ym'11 11.-• 875-5830. 25 Old• Unite Common. pool $5115, No ~513CAMN5Dl·JR'/ltf~ 558-1193 SA. Oar. pool, lfMl. $780. peta. Patio, view, lrplc, aoceaon.. MOYI In to-Avifl. now. 1360 ..-~5~~2~:;. le H • 1 p --L IOIE Cash flow 2.2 Ac<ll. Zo-pelt. Mgr 2453 e Orange Hatt>« View Horne 3 Br. 2 ~lld ·=· 762·5822 Of JIQUDI, pr., OU 110\'I dty Of r-IOI' -up Agt. 875-8170 ""'"' ned-41 Condoe. Tu1t1n. Ave WOODBRIDGE 28r, den, Be. lamlly rm. llOOO/mo. 1·1 · $580. es1.e101. mer montha. Smartly __;._·......;;. _____ _
PIUCf.lllllOH +llEIT APT $lM. Agt. 975--0879 STARTER HOME 1bf w/ al e. w/d, relrlg, lrple. l.MM. 844-8977. 1 IL I IL I II, 1 BR, tplc:, D/W, walk In ~u!~'hed model• open *.,*:~ ~it22 ~°"of°::;
IU,000 ONE·OF·A·KIND: 4 Bd, FORECLOSURE . gar, patio, lncd yd SAll5 1775/IM, 551-2042 Beaut. BalOOI COV913 bf, Newly decor. 011 pd, cfoHt, encl gar, '385. · of,.,". ~1**
on this Wiiiow wood lam rm + blfl pool $27K min bid. 49% under QC.RENTALS 750-3314 W ••• ..... 3141 3 ba exec. home, pvt encl gar, dw1hr, pool, Aak for Betty, f46..9101 On JembOf• Rd at
Mod t i In the De1ne en1ertalnino aret. Sep.. m8fket, Bkr. 543-8381 2 Br lncd yard ~ar .. 'I................... beach & dock. 12500. bbg. Adulta, no pell. Dua,., UM San Joaquin Hllll Rd. ~~2f'.,J,
Homes 4 bdrm, 3 ba. rite QUM1 8'>1w/kg1Z Br .. tut·'---..1 I k'lda'1peta OK. '1 so'. Charming beach lront M•n. Ellen 952-2025 &42•5073· • ••••• • ••• 1ff0 & lovely lfv rm wJ lrple. ,.1 .u., -r ' - ' • • ••••••• • ••••• ... 8 • 1 5 · 11 4 8 • 3 1 t I ' Or formal dining and lfvlng Only 1335.000. A'/t 1,,.,, J400 2 2 1 5 A p 0 mo n 1 . home, apec;1aeular view, NewPOtt Terr. condo. 28r 2 bdrm. 1 be. oc.M vu · . 553-1202 • rma. Exhcell
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•76 •••••••••••••••••••••• 646-6238 brick court y8fd enlry. 4 2,h ba, Frplo, pool, .._...._8~ relurblahed. Ince Utlf. 2 BR, 21A Ba, 2 aty twnh· • near sc oo •. poo. an .. .,... or.,.. ... UIE dRIWIW Br. 311\ Ba. large ffvlng rm s7251mo. 957.a177 ~•u nu S485 mo. No pell. 24851 ... pool, apa, all tacit. Furn. ap1. nr Balboa
1ennls Call today for In· 4Br. 2Ba, 1 blk to the bch, Lake lront/H1mllt1Jr A CUTE 2br unit, extre & dining rm, beach room, APAIMITI Selva. 831-7220 18711. 882 Halyard St. leiand, July l ~. 1
rormallon on llnanetng. b
1
11u111u1 1n11de & ou1. bdrm, 3 ba. $876,ooo. ~~R:~r1~~rrx;:1,. ~~~~b=:~~~:~,= cr,~~,d~a~& !.va.~"/y: Beautllully 11nd101ped Studio wllufl kitchen & 540-7799 :;~~3•· rHaonabl•
169,500. 631-7853 or OWC. 714-646-3278 for appt. 7u1e55.2473 llghte, Jacuul. 51,100. g1rdlll apt1. Pool & Spe. beth, M4N<lng qule1 ma-2Br. 28e, 1 car g81age,1---------
544-6018 "-t 111_ ,_ F~1~!Y1~~~h·~:.Rga~~: wkdye 8.5, &40-2523, 833•2376. Covered parking. No lure edult, no pet1. dahwthr, refrlO. frplc, wtr BEACON BAV FOR AUG. 11••11a VIEW lllE• v• • -u., pe11. 681-3853 pd, no peta. seoo mo. Huge 48r home.. 814IP9 to .._ • ,,. .. ,,.. · JSSO ner, relr~. W/D, 0/W, Furn. or Untvm. Emerald 2 Br. ptua Den w/hot tub, Bechllor $400 lull•slN 979.9574 or 842-4858 pvt bctt l Bllboa. Vfll:la..
By Owner. Must seffl •••••~•·"·••••••••••• Dl1p. 172 mo. 979-8899 Bay, pool, prlvlte beleh, tennis & poola, 11ep1 to 1 Br. l4e() ..... evea. lion w/all 1he tux AYall
Reduced. $198,000 L·H. DuplalC, Rancho Mlrege, EXEC 3br unll. gar. poof tennfa eou1t1, oeeen beech. 1850/mo. Agt. 2 Br. 1~ Be. $5211 ,,,, , ....v July 21·Auo 21. '4000
Monaco 3 Br. low down. C· 1 property, SB0.000. patio, loaded NOW $800 11lew1, 3 Br. 3 Ba. lrplc, &42-3850 t81 e. 18th &42-o85tl ••••••••••n•••••••••• ... CJ•nll 1111 for mo. Call Robin (A.Qt) Open Sun 1·5. 644-4269. Two M$>1flle unite, 2 Br, OC-RENTALS 750•331, aep1rate gUM1 f11e. Avall Deluxe ~. xtr1 lar· •••••••••••••••••••••• &4&-7276 1200 sq It each. By Ow-yeer round July 15th. lu Jiu o• 2br , 2be, bltnt, Clean. tunny 2 8r 1 be.--------' WUTll Tl llY ner. Great financing. SUPER MESA VERDE 3 7141497-16&4. ~ C.•-'lllUI ,111 -. .... lllY1 dawtir, 1"' mflee beach. gar, lndry, refrlg. $A50, 2 bdrm tum houal. N1o1 "S,,3 C• .. "''S f\..,fnvtl(E NEWPORT HOME. Fee 1·326-5555, 340-1&46 Br. $800/mo. 1111 lull ••••~'••••••••••••••• $460/mo. 2 Br, 1 Be. Adulta, no petL S500mo. no pet•, 493--2710 tam fly erea. Step• to
'I , ,..,"' Jiil "" L and Have SA0,000 $300 security. No pets. Clean 2 Br. 1 Ba. houae, SPECTACULAR VIEW apta. patloe, e1rporte. 538-8382 I B h S beech, 1hop1. Bell
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iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil cash Send offers to. PO CARLSBAD waterfront, 644-6996 walk 10 beach, avall. July 3 br, 2 bl, pool lac. July Sm pet ok. Won't 181111 Adu.I c . lludlo. 111, Wiike •II• open. From
Box 197" Newpor1 magnllleen1 view. beaull· lit. 1650. A9A·2578. 1. $676. 1·128--4511 thla p<lclel WllFn.mll retrlg, utllt. $275. t580 $400 wk 875-3148 TIRTLERICll IUI Beach CA 92883 lul lg 2Br, 2Ba condo E·slde 2 br, lncd yd, 2 ear TSL Mgmt 642•1803 1 & 2 Br. Oltcount on rn<MMn. 496-8452
Ow Auume exfttfng roan g11 wl opnr, stv & retrlg. PRIME HOME nr Emerald WntlliuNI '"' tome modlll. Pool, Spa, f•JtU UH VMlda lnt.llflll PEIFEOTIH Condo bJ n-w/sm down or llJCOllc ear. w/grdm $685. 960-6419 ~:ik3~~· ;c~~· /~to: ..•...•...•••.......•. Gym . s. u n a . •I e .••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
A flawless 4 bdrm 11ng1e (714) 631-3689 • IE•• -·H • 49,_.87, 2 Br. 1 Ba..d ~no~ garage. ••~tft._... 84&-0ltt. 1 bdrm, 1 t>a. nkll .,.._ OCEANFRONT 2 l 4 er.
story on an ldetl low Ir J-·• 11• -un 1 ehll 0 · 0 P•1•· •--=--=--Deco111ed. $495 mo. Av ... now. Weetdy ttwu traffic a1ree1 1n model 4 bdrm 2 be euy n1 .. till 3 Bdrm ltmlly home P1utlglou1 High Dr. Water paid. SA75/mo. APAITmll WI WW $100 See dep. Avail Im-aummer. 873-7873.
h?'"• condition Protea-terms 2;31445-7671 or lxtiU•I ZIOO Formal dining plu1 bonus ocean 111.1, walk lo beaet\, 545-2000. Agent, no IM. Beautiful g1rden eptt. Lrg 3 Br. Townhouae med . 9 6 3 . 5 1 7 1 , --------
s1ooally landscaped. 21314_.7•2992 •••••••••'•••••••••••• rm. Pvt matter tulle. SPECTACULAR remo· C.•.6..u.J .. I Patlol/deei(a. Hett plid. Apartment. Frplc, encitd 566-1083 833-0818 Newport ocean front 2 Br. nandyman·s g1rage. 2 · FREE & CLEAN $680/mo without g11~ deled home 3 Br 2~ Ba. •1 No pell. 2 children._ gar. luge yard. Near • ' 2 Ba. 1leep1 8. Avalf.
l•plcs. community pool. lndua1 Park. Gen. pert-ner. 642-3005 backyard. lrplc, tac. U,,Jsndd«J 14 Hunt. Harbour. Children A,.rtmntl tualdfl Jua. 19 to July 3rd.
spa and 1ennl1 Only 5 TIE TU UI ner lnteresl. Approx. Coat• Mesa 2 9d 1 Ba alarm, loedl of Fr. dOOfl ~-i1;;·;;,~it~;:c;.·;,; ~·2 Be. $550 OK. 1&75. 84<Ml807. ,, u.nn ,,.1....;7·5~2-·_SMee __ . -----
yrs old Transferred ow-otllfT1I S l tO.OOO yr net 100 $400/mo Robert Mllll· & 1kylltee. $1500/mo. SC Plza. Poof, grdnr. 398 w Wllaon 1131-5583 Near belch 2 Br. 2 full Be. •••••••••••••••••••••• North Laite Tahoe. Lalt•
ner will hflp !Ina.nee. Ao 2 Bdrm and dell home on 1715•000 equity & 1260• ken 494-8741 °' A94-1577 Dtux 18r. No pett. 1475 unique apt. huge deci<, IUWlll lronr houae. S300 to ueltfng new offering, Lid I le flh !er nd 000 aales comm. Want 631 1266 & $35 I 775 *2 br nr S.C. P12. S.A. $400/wk 873-9052 eompelhlvetv priced at o I w P a home or home. boll. • OCEANFRONT Mobile ut I. ·2580. Pool, IP•· 1550. Carp«1. privacy, teparate en-YIWIE 1----·-----
1315.000. ~~~~. ·~~.:~,T~IMv~~~ plane. Smf loans or free Ideal foc:allon 3 Br or 2 Br Homee-Adlla only, $1000 Highly upgraded & elMn 752·5822 or 641·14&o. tr~. ro pell. $650. New 1&2 bdrm. luxury r.t.IJ,. ... ,.
CALL 144·1211 SELL. Call SA0-1151 for & clear. Beach area. plus den townhouse. 2 ~~!~;8~0 mo. Agt. Cotta ·Meta, 3 bdrm Fireplace, pool, pvt patio 833 330 . apta In 14 plant. 1 Bdrm ••••••••••••••••••••••
more lnlormatlon. and Own/agt. 975--0142 ba, 2 car gar, pool, twoh11. 2 car g1rag1. a. dlhwther. x lg l&.2 er. 2 Br . a p 11 • v a 11 . rrom 1515, 2 bdrm from
appl 10 see. 1.,1 Ellllt lwnhse. A11all 711, $800; £.ui•I BUI• 3JSO $580. tat & fut ptu1 dep. gerden apta. on E/llde SA75·1525. 2 Br. 1 Be. & $570, Townhouae from
111 H --8A7-3563. 557-2 179 ••'••••••••••••••••••• No pets. 213-465-9248 from SA50. 5117-2841. 2 Br. 2 Ba. patio & tmall $640 + poola. tennlt, "''•I ~ c 4Br 2Ba CtJHl&-sac nice yard, dthwthr, 1lngle weterfellt, pondal Oat •••••••••••••••••••••• herml,ng E. Side 3Br, pa.I I 0• .a 7 3 5 'm 0 Hunt.· Harb., dlx 2 br, 2 ba, S~out 2 Br. 1 ea. $A25. g1rane. 1 ehlld ok, no den, 2~Ba. spa w/2 p111 553_1,05 ,. · 2 eer gar .. HC., rec. 3 Br. 1,_. Ba. $475. ....., lor cooking & heeling
W UTEI .... yds. $900 mo. 6A6-3532 1800. 714-673·465A L•undry tee .. pool. ~:5~:00:.:~~. ~~!: ~~~~ ~r,~:_ s:~,~~·~~
Tutrtlerock 2Br 2ba. con-Exenaoge for Real Ea-Euc 3 Bdr family rm £11.1•• #11.111 JUI 548-9658 Beach to McFldden to do. $159,900. 20¥. dn. f•Jfd ' lOH tale, must be clear or home Cul·d&-sao near •• ••••••• •••.-••••••• Ar.!!!'!ull Ptnldfl 2Br, 1'!\Ba, 1375 mo. + S t d V 111 •
~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS .. . . '
IOOlllTE
FllDEIS
Oldelt & largeet IOlf!CY.
All ellenta ecreened With
photoe & ref~.
Credltl: Coemopofftan
Good Morning Amertc:a. owe 2nd pp 675•3450 •••••••••••••••••••••• near clear. Taoeger Pk 192•5/mo "'LAKEPARK" Country • •••••••••••••••••••• •2 Br. 1 Ba. Newly refur· 1375 dep. Cpta, drpa, nr (7~:)8;3-~196. 1 g FHIOI •llAllY $500,000 to $10,000,000 A M c I . setting nr Beaeh & Sant• C.t• •.u nM blthed. 1495/mo. No B11ch Blvd. & McF•d· --"'---'-------'
£1•Rlll ltltA IHI your tax contultanll ap. 63n n 266 c a 1 • n d Ana, 3 Br. 2'n BL Auoe. •••••••••••••••••••••• peta. 833-81174. den. No petl. 893-4894 .. ··'··.r················ Incredible bleuty on 2v. proval aolleltated Rel• 1• 1 """" IP• 40 9C lake ca•• IE ••• .. 'e ..... ...
The Tomorrow Show. *'n oll• to ell new
c:llentl wtlO need • pleOa.-OLDE LAGUNA CHARM acres with marble, oak . >"""• • • .. • ·•95/mo. 2 Br. 2 •. 2 Br 2 Ba + D«I Town--..................... .
Unique 2 bdrm floor panetlnq. 11one eolumnt, !um. Bkrs tubmtt. Di•• l•l•I 3za. ~5::'.13 1~~· tennla. ALL UTILITIES PAID Apia. BHmed celling, houM, 1ennl1 & 9'>11. nr Eutlldl C.M. Fum prtv •• ...,. 141·1•
plan, 1 belll, nv rm wl Iron fence, llec gat11 & Ill •NUTIOI ••••••••••••• • •••••••• · · lrple, garage, lllUMry rm. beech. 2202 Hell Cir. room end betti. R.trtg.
b1tmed eelflngs. lllld· exqOlalte fandtcapfng. 714-631·2144 2 STY. 3 br nome. 2 frplca, lljilit• Vi•'• JZl1 Compare before you Avail. June. ae0-3745 1285. REMEMBER DADI wOOd floor• & oozy log $1,295,000 • 1ubmlt. fem rm on quiet 11. Cit ............ '/.......... renl. Cuatom daalgn TSL Mgmt &42-1803 I iliftM 873-7544 with•
burning lrplc. $167.500 Riek Afderett• R111tor WANTED 10 bel\ & marina. $875 3 Bdrm. t'h Be condo. teaturu: Poof, bbq, C1wl 2 U Femlle ted Nr 0 C Fllhet'• Day murage
Full Price. Developer 731-4444 or Oceaofronl tot, Laguna pet mo A93-4750 evee AIC, w/w c1rpe11, mo-cov'rd garage, turroun-* Br. MacArthur BllN81 . 314Z wan · · ' · ..,.2•5178 MISSION REALTY 731-5115 IOf detaJls.. N 8 dam eppflenees, gar, ded with pluah latldKa-Vig., SA Tennie, pool, •••••••••••••••••••••• College. Room w/prlv. Win A FREE TICKET81 A94-0731 ~60r -95e96wport each f1ul1ia V•lltr 3Z34 pello close 10 pool & rec ping No pet• 1p1. 1800. Adultt. STUDIO CONDO. Frplc, 1225/mo. Rel't req. to an ............. ,, __
---------1 W, '-'• In lfll ••••••••••••••<I'••••••• area In beautiful Mlulon 1 er: turn. • $600 752-6822 °' 641·14e0 refrlQ. patio, apa. llCl'OSI 5'W-06()8. D;j'"Piiot',.
OCEAN VIEW •• !!~ALiFYiNG0•• lt•llh 3 ~~~~ ~~:5 R~eld VfeJo. S62.5 FI L plus 365 W. WlllOfl &42-1971 1370-$380. 1 8r. 1 Ba. from bc"h. $475 mo. MIF 1 room for rent $155 Clual~ Adi
Classy
2
2
1
er & atudy
1
, 21 Spantlh dlartner wl1h 2 •••••••••••••••••••••• yard & garage Kid• & $100 c1ean 962-0793 •u:i· .__ .('pt. enelad o•rage/ 962-4914 mo. Co.11 Meta. Full l'lae balll rplea. sp r a welcome 545 2000 eves a ; •-eerport. pa11o, lndry rmt, Jnut JIU prlv. Mall 3$-45 lhr 5bf, 2bl
s1alrcase $1500/per mo. lrplea on oversized 1<>t B1run l'lnhiH pets 1 • IH 314 blt·lna. cloM 10 Ill. ••••••••••••••• ... ••••• 631-6510"' h• nr S Co Plaza/ FrwtJ.
Charter Realty 49&-8122 Country khchln. AMlfHI •••••••••••••••••••••• Agenl, no ee HOME FOR RENT •••••••••••••••••••••• TSL Mgmt &42·1003 L.arge,_ 1 Br.condo for F I "-ta Spa. 1226+ lhare utlll. or 493•868~ $129,900. Submit your W•U• •id 3141 BHtllfll• 3 Bdrm. $750. Fenced ...... ,_. u.C.I. mlcfo-um. room n my,......_ 641_..913
---------• 1erm1. Bkr IM6-070ll ••'••••••••••••••••••• yard & g11ege. Kida & HI' FllEST t Br ElelcM. am bu1 cqry wave, !rple, w11her/ Meaa home. Hatpor/ Fllr1------
ELEGANCE A BR, new dee, tum, Sec ""' 3Z40 pete welcome. 545-2000. • • S wllota of neturll wood. dryer aree. $850/mo. 1rea. Pool, laund .
ON THE SAND Olill ltll Eltlll gete, prlv Bch .• tennis. •••••••••••••••••••••• Agenl, no lee 9Span11ah1 Eatate 1LkMngf 1370. 851·9522, 3-5:30. J 0 an n a ll 5 5. 183 3 . $226+$10 parking fM.
Exclusive realdence lo •••••••••••••••••••••• Ownr. 496-A038 REIT Tl llY PW 11 IH L ~-I eaut tu perk-I • aur· 53$-8720 75-4-1747 alt 5pm. fa~ted 'Laguot11" with lldUt Bo•ll Gala you atarted In real '!!!!tt!! •••• !!'. •• t.a."!. rounding a. Terraced W1111lde Lg 1 Br w / ----·--------------i 60 of t>uchlront. Two f,ft •ilt llOO BHIOI U•/,,,.}JtH Mtlle owner9hlp. Lease or tease option Ja. pool. Sun)ten gu bbq, earPOtt, D/W, 11'\dry, av.II CONDO UCI Twn Ctr 2 bf, Room $235. Working
1e11els w/3 Bdr & Bath• ••••• f~••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. Townhoute wltn smine Creek no 6 plan 1parkllng lountalnl. 7-2 $400 mo. 645-8825 1 & ~ plut 'n ba, 2 ear· man, pvt entr9flCI, c:oo-$2,500,000 64A-7020 Newport Beach De Anza C.•1111 3Z02 pool. H.B $575/mo. 3 Bdr den ·~111enn1s' Speclou1 rooms. Set>•· Super 2 Bdr 1 Be, pluah ports, new. vacant. $750 king, pool. A94-4458 LlllO IUL EST&Tt baylron1 P11k . M ini •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br Nor1h Cotta Mesa. $1750'. A t. 760-9333 . ra1e dining aree. Walk-In carpet, Piiio, port & mo. 552-9419 Own/Agt. B111J1 #11111 41 ---------1 cond. "78 dbl wide. fir&-1,t It~/ l1t.ra $475/mo. g close11. home llke klteh· pool BBQ &45-0382 £••1u lt1tA 3141 ••••••'••••••••••••••• --------£•1.u• 1111,••l /OSZ place. brick patio. Beeutllul & lge 2Br In t Br. Duplex, E11telde SPACIOUS 3 br, 2 ba en & c:ablnell. Wal.k to ' · ••'••••••••••••••••••• lllL&lll MTEL Fem rmmete wanted to
•• ••••••• ••••••••••• 158,500. Alto 2 br., 2 VIiie Balboa, 2 patios. c.~. $450. condo, frplc, bit-Ins, 2 Huntington Center. 1 BR APT. O/W, New IOUIFlllT Wkly rental• now ivalf. lhr 3Br, 28e apt, CdM. LJRIE LOT ba .. double wide, comer s 12ooi mo. L•1 •get your lnve11men1 cu gar., pools, new d&-1Bdrm-lurn,1505 paint & epta and drap11. Mott elanant apl. bldg. 1105 & up. Color TV. $235 mo. 957-6402 dye. wltlt 110 411, wltWI 101 139.000. Biii Grundy Ctll/ lit.nt started. cor. VllC4nt. $950/mo. 2 Bdrm-tum from $605 Carport. S400 /mo: ..... 676-1412 evet
Darting 3Br 2bt. Quiet 875·8181. In China Cove with !ant· Agent 882•1700 1142"1155 2 Bdrm TownhouM fum. 851"2175 ~~nl~ ~br':.~~ ~= ~vd~CC~. 2274
FIM to ahr 2 Br. H.B.
streel. Wiii lease option II t .... 1 .. 1 Wltl attic oeeen vlewl, eleva-OC-RENTALS westcllfl 3 BR 1¥. bl, from 16711 2 Br. pool, g8fage. 1525 taking vlewl, all bultt·lna, 846-7445 houte. Pelt OK. Pvt
or??? $155,000. II • " • t t tor, spa, 3 Bdrm, pvt 1·5br"e 1200 to $2000 SllOO mo. Also Irv. Terr., No pelt. mo. No pelt. 1395 "B" he a I e d po o I . yard. 902-6769 Kurt. La1H1 Vlll11• l.E 2 bdrm, 1'"' ba, edits beach. 12000. 750-331" open 7-daya 4 BR 2'h Be, $1500 mo. Utlfltlet Freel W Baker. 841-0783. aub.-ge11ge, elevetor. ,,_,, lnt'11 4M Rmte ___.__. 2 8r ........._
4.l 11•1 Large fol. Sml pe1 OK. waterfront Homes Inc , Both frnh & clean. no 2 BR 1 .... cptt, drpt, L .... only $650 & up •••••••••••••••••••••• ,_,_. ""'""" • Nr. Shopping. Low rent. Realtors 631•1400 3 bdrm, tv. bdrm Cleen pell. Avl now. 646-2388 .,. · · UmtlT nr UCI. Fully furn. 2 be.
1
.&. 11 lOSS $25,000. 8"1·2954 Fenced yard Nr Traoap. LA QUINTA HERMOSA bllnt, no pelt. $425. 330 Clllf Or. 494-8063. gar, poof/Jae, tennla. ,,_,,.,,., C.tMlltl#ll 3ZJJ 988·264A Blutte area condo. 4 Br 16211Partclldeln,1blk 2272Maple.1131·2927 Lge2br,terrtllcooeanvu. -4 bdrm, 4 bath. 8ltldy $218/mo pfua utll.
•••••••••••••••••••••• Double wide 2 br, 2 ba. In •••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ba, frple, gar w/etf>e W. of ee.ctt. 3 bike S. ol 2 Br. wlrefr~ No pelt. 2607 Sol1n1 beech. pier & lloet. 553-0263 Hunt. Betch. Reduced Owner moving 7•1•82. 2 Br & den 2 Be Condo. opnr. New cpta & paint. Edinger. Wrt. call 497-3-495. $8000 tor Auguat. 8111 ---------Pllll PUCE $7500 Near beeal. Prln. Must tease. 1eue option Pool, •P•. tennlt, no 1 1 050/mo &44~5512 141-1441 2273 Maple. 5. Grundy, Rltr, 175-8111. OOfglout 428', 28a Cort-
EST'TES only. Agt. 968-4593 or ? 2 plut den 3 b&. pet1. 1700/mo. Incl gu • • 645-5004 Oceen front, teeluded la--._ ... I U. do , w 0 CC. FI u or .
640-7000 & water. 111. fut plut QC.RENTALS Quiet Junior & 1 Bra. 1 Br Bachelor Apt w/ rge 2 Br. 3 Ba. In Old .,.1 •• -11.er 882·2247 aft 4 & wtlnda 4 IR, 2~ ll, ~Ha IUl1 · tee. dep. 962-2531, 1·5br't $200 to 12000 From S376. Pool, rec. kitchenette. 1375 mo. utlf med. v1fle on efllf f1Vftlf· Summer rental. Spl11I Roommet l\OfHmkl lot
BETIER THAN 2A"x6A GREENBRIER 2 ·BR, 1 ba. beam celling. 963·7979. 750-331" open 7-<leyt rm., aaun•. encltd ga-Incl. 656-9098 looklng ocean. Slept to ltelrs akyllghtt ••
MODE HOME. Lge LR Din. Rm. pool, bit-Ins, decU, $800 9301 V I d 3B 2b rage. 17301 KeellOn off private bHeh. Leaded lrple Pvt• IPL 1"'. blllt bMll1 lg N.B. apt. '225
HAS EVE~HING kit opena 10 Fam Rm, 1 ... 673-0473 • ar 0· r a, IEACll IOISE Slater. 642-7848. 2 8r, 1 ba. SA50. 2e52 wlndOWI, 3 lrple'a. bee-t>eaCn. Weekly. 855-1743 mo. Catolyn 557-2421
Cul-d&-tae ttreet w, elblr 2 BR. 2dBIA. Llghll C..tl #ou 3114 ~/~dl~ig;. "=:al~~ (I ... ) S.A. Ave. #4. OPEN. See med c:111ng1. many On the Wllter. 4 Br. 3 Be. Mall. female 2 bdrm, 2 bl
Sun &SallllClub nt .• young a 11 we ·•••••••••••••••••••••• aeceea. & $725/mo By lhe month only BUT Studlo.nr.beaetl~ooll& llrstthenc:all.951~8 treea .• 295oimo. yrly. furn. houae on Balbo1 lg apt. Nr bctl. '325, ~
20 min 10 come 139•500· 540-5937 IHW Tn'•lm 1et/lut plut depotlt ptu1 only 1900/mo lor 2 Br 2 ~,~:1r.'53e-1~ lllTUT • 840-5621' lallnd. 1~. utll. HB. Eva 551-011'
Newport C.01er MOBILE HOME dbl Wida 2 Br, 2~ ba, p1ut lrple, 2 $100 cteanlng. 97M781 81, walk to beach. Avail. $430mo. 2 Br. 1 Ba. pool,
S210,000 with $180,000 2Br, edit pk, walk to ear gar, pool, Jae, all wl· alt 5:30 pm. from June 20. ~-.... 11fl laundry rm., Halllde.
II 12% fixed rate & 1upermark1t. $25,950. thin biking distance 10 '!\ml bctl Clean 3er 2bt. ;• •••L_;•••••;;:••;•t• Cllll lor appt.
fully emorttzed. Agt. 557-9380 be 1 ch . S 8 o o Imo. 2 ear gar Oard.,;., & 2Br. bOlt dek $600/wk ~~"ry· tt!t',~!.. :!t~~ TSL Mgmt. 142-1803
No point• °' quall..,.ng 675-2311 ~ "'~8-2239 · ....-.
770-03.-7 '1' A,.rt•••tl ~ ~ w • t • r Inc . I 1 5 O. lBr. !)Oat dek $400/wk TV, eauna, maid MNlce. 1 Br. w/carport a. pe11o,
Owner/Agent ltt: 1'1• IJOO ~RENTAbS &94-6489 JAMii IU&.lT phonu. S 115/wHk. =t 1dult1, no pela. ~~~~~~-~~~!•••••••••••••••••••••• 1..sbr, 1200to12000 Iii tiJI ,. PllP •••••mm .-w.2221. • 310 c Monte viete.
Oii REME~?t~~ DADI 750-3314 open 7-deya ';,,:.: 1111 ITM1ll •--'.... '111 1 Br. g111g1, yerd. No !•!!r.!!.~~!~ ... J.... Father's o1 me•seo• IEW TIWll•EI ...................... •••-.r.;;.............. p111. 1425/mo. 317 8 llSOLUTE 542.SVe1a 3 Br, 2'hbl, plua fire-Dix 2 br. 2 ba condo. g1r .• Spectacuter ooHnlbay THE Hamilton, 141--0783 STEILI Win 4 FREE TICKETS! piece, 2 ear gar, pool, He., pool. Jae. tennfa, Vu. Abr, 2'M>a, OR, lam. E.llde 2 Br, 1'h ... D/W,
to an Angele Game Jae, Ill within biking di• $600. 71"·873-4864 rm. eleglnt. S1G75 mo. encl. garage, no pell.
Lovely lrg 3 Bd hou.. Dally Piiot tan e e to b ••ch . Im 3144 Pvt. comm. 75~2 or '' • ODD ...._1955. wi den, ape l forever vu. Clanffled ad• 1900/mo. 875-23 11 or •••• "!!•••••••••••••••• eal~lec1 408-996--0581 ______ ..._ __ 1
Only $359,900 FM. Celt 1--------~ 648-2239 UNIV PK, apec; 38', 291 B 3 B I di Baehelor, Elltlldl. DIRECT to Petrick or Jul•,., C r. •· •m rm. n rm. 1235/mo.
Fr• d T •nor•. •gt &...... lfll II -• lwnhM, ger. A • lrplc, no 3 car, view. many ittru. LIFE" 640-38M
631.,., • ., Ot 7""'-•102 • r,. .. ,,. ,... ........ -pell, IN, 529--0384 · $1850/mo. Alt 6PM. •~ ~ •••••~;;~•••••••••••• 1115 .... , r&w 4-4014 ~llOYe Pre•tchool bid\ S.A. Rent tn Cott• MH1'1 Turtlefoctc • 18g71 Anti.. &4 YEM~ PUN: i.e. No;.::, RVM*
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"'"· highly Ue>t,.dld, 1mmaour111 llll·,000. ~ Wll'I *vi IOM, low Clown. Qutrd•d
cornm11n11 • 1111wn by , ,,
Lle'd. 7200 IC! n (bldg NEWEST gated 20 ~.4 Br.2of8e..Cl~rm, 38r.38e..2ttory,pool/ Soclal AotlvlllH 13 , 1500).S90K.844-0782 Townhome VILLAGE In rm.vu U ... Get· tenntt.11080. Olreetor•Fre•
COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 8r. dentr, wtr & 11111'1 duea PROPERTY HOUSE S de 'I ONE WEEK AAEE RENT c-...hJ 2~ ea. 1600-1800 aq. It. lneld. LAue 11100 mo. &42-3850 642·1010 ~88Q'a• 2 bf, 2 ba condo. SC ,,._,,. I ol pure luxury. Gat11g1a, Agt. 541-5032. PlftMlePIUI Plue. New crpt, drp1, ••••·-"••:r. •••• ••••••• •P•• In every home • 4 Bl' 3 Be. beeut. decor, mudl mor9. .-.fT10. Pooll. catport, in.. MWNIT a.n. a O'IHter aulte, dining LlllESU lrg deck, tab. V\I, ouar· OR I AT dry. 0 n bu 11 1 n •.
Top 1001tlon.-;r1c1d roomt, wood burning 38dnndelachldh0rnel ded gate . H .H . "IClllllATIOlh Non1rnkr1. UU+.
right, Approx 1800 aq ft lltepl10et, mtcro-wave In excellent .,..._ Avalll-S2YOO/mo. T 1 n ,. , 1 • 'r • e t4M142
In ........_t ....... """"'' ,. .. OV9M. private petloe l b I e Imme d I a 11 I y . LAeeof'9 ~ & ~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil """ ...... -" ltOO/mo on 1 )'eel'-.., 3 Br 38a. vu, pool, ten-''°'• arM In rear. ri.. yard1,gud1ner provl· F nit, 1,uarded ,.811 1hop).• H•• th ~it mtm18 ~d right. For h.1rther ded. s.o-n1 IMng onty Ive othlrt to ohoo11 ., ~Saunee ad 15 """"* trom ~ trom.. We're ttll OMI to S 1700 mo
Info. MEL FUCHS lllland. 7 mlnutll to S.C. cell for ....... ___ 2 Br 3 81 den beyfront hr IJIMJf tB kJ
·-lltr. Pl•JI or O.C.AltpOtl. 1~ ......... po11. bo'at dOck, MC:· lf"-tTM111 J8~!] :"' ofol _,N_!~ ~i fl\J\lll9 ·~ bldg, 11f00/mo, lot> OI be "Al-,....:t:~· 1-----_,,..---1 '""· • '°· ..... .,...,... •--a.1 Dovie Koop, 1gt, Re/ (;fUlSlfll1D.li
.. '"""· Starttno • MOO • ~11 ....._ 22 month. 831-5'39, 2473 511·3Mt Ma 7...,..1 1 TU •LTD Orang• An .. coat• • rr•at• ,._,. lt?IM llu"9 3 Br. 2 k pool. .. llVUTlllll MIM. ' cloM to ldlool, lfloSll I
Sen C..,_.tt pride of g er 3 9a, MeM clel Mer. Lu.lWftOUI TurtlefOOll 3 br, P-'.!.~.: ... I I 0 0 I mo . OWMnNf>. MOdem lpa. tro y.,.d 1t211mo. &ob°' 2 tit. orptt, •· ~ 7...,.__
nllh 1tyl1 lour unit Oovte KooP. flt-1221 ~~i~ lwll , .......
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onl" '"'"Jt'earl oti, llQ, •"a., 01 f''· 1 =· ·~ ~ ·-J .. uul\ 1700 1q f . I ' ..., ...,, ........... t / d If 1 ..._ -....., 1loty 1MMAOULATI. :::-.-:.w;; ,-;;: ~'~ n' • 1 u 141 tt, ,,,.., 11er' ~' 111;u..11110.
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Father's Day
.
Wish Dad a
Happy
Father's Day
for all the
world to
see and
WIN 4 FREE TICKETS
to an
Angels . Baseball Game
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1ft~ll!l5;,N••;•• .. • lllfltl!::AL... • ............. ~!!~!!!t.~· • •••••••••••• ll•!IM •••••••• : .•... !!9 •.••••..•.••••. t~ ...... . I' ·mu.-~!11 ..WKATllUNA'I : LIVl·IN ~ IHIVO'I taAN>INING DUMP JON ·AIC MOVI~ M ~ ....-..n• W.-. au.I. ...-. ._ ...... ~ n..id ~. ,....,_..,..... ' "Tot.II Vwd C..'' 1 lmlll MIMle Jolie O\lldt, Oeretul~ ALL 'TYPla INYLBT tr... ...... IM10lf .... Ml'~ otfloe OIHnln,. orpt ,,...... ""1·1317 Mo/'#llly. 111.aaa 9'19 Cell MIKI Mf'.1'91 ,,.. • .,,, ..... ee1"°410 ""H HT. ...... .. ....: ~ .-·=.1-: AIM&.. .............. , ,..... ~Yd ClnUPe Hdng. ltudent Wll hlWI •&-1 --· PLAfTI" PATOHIHO -------vHt"'ent I property nnr.r.r.-............ lll/ltll6. ffnlnf a.-Tr .. tf'lm.llcpert mefnt. enythlfte, fllree .. t. Ao-Top quality, ~ O«e R .. tucco1. lntlext. 30 v!'F-' =:"Co.
""".""'"' aoooUI\• u.. ~o~ A~WiCTUAAL ~Ni ..... .. ;"ff'':;...... ln1getton. Jim N1.01" Wt. 71....._114' 1n hendllng. 28 Y'9 .-p. yra. Neet. PIM! &45-2977 ( 14> ue •ee•
tine. l?l-'10I ., ,.., o.M ..... i::-"°" lutLDINQ Pl.WIT •••••• -., Totlil YWO ewe bY ....... ,.. No~~ j'!t~..... Pl.MTl"INQ ~ Cl'llld ewe. llo'd .......... "911dentlal lddtoon• I Ollt6lllM I Id ~7'111 THI GMalHOPPI!" ffl'SU':m............ ............. .,.,.. -.INT/EXT • ..UTUOCO. f!P.ft ............... . 1'nn'ln•••••• .. •• .. •• Vie jo home, Allola I remodel. Don 147-MOI ,.._ +iafw ~Dependable "09IN'8 C~~ "&TARVlNO COLL!GI! 81ook Wiiie. eae..ff2 lalh-~8tucco
....... ......... JeronllftO, MV'\'lfM1 .....,, 1nn.11!a~....... Dominic 141-4111 ~ .. ~, STUDENTS MOVING II•·"'-Teicturw-Thin Wall ~ _.,, .. M:IOClfl\, ....... Rl'•'lm.............. ~=~~ .............. *-" . ., co. UC. ~2~. ..~............ Stucco enctt. uc·cs. °""°"' .,,.,_.,.... ORYWALL/ACOUITIO • r.:ni:nr............ PIOlfle HouMCliMt'lno lnaured. ,TV"' . • ILL --TUI Gary 567-0TH a ,...e:QU;;· .... IS yre I oldlr, .. a..i1na1 ""*"· new I old. 11 Uo. 1·1 HOME IM~VIMIHT • yrl ....,. )(Int'*'· ti•WATOH U8 QAOWI ·-. "'* .,,_
I.lo. ,.-1 ,_ -<' proeram lnol. "-dl"I - -... Bud aea-1112 fM•l'f« lftftft Ml'Al"-l'LUMllNO irree elf. lorl er~ ~ -• • ..,. ~ • , ... ....-••-..iii 1w.-.1a•A .. I"-_...,. ·-...................... . ......... aee-N11 . ..._. -w .. ~AoouttiO • • . • n• Oetpentryvlllo..._n_ T.L.C. HOUMtlMO!ha ...... ·-··· ........ ~.,,_ ~ <C«emlo Tiie 6.-CHILD OAflll Htino-T...etMI etud9 """'"I INITALL .... No Job too lf'Mll, eervtoe Low.~l.. -Pmnll ;w._.. ... r.;;......... Prompt. Cell OhUclt, eve r:um!'I............. My llOfne, OoM• ._.. UC. ....... 1•532-6&4t =: H~.. ~ 94&-z• 11 Tonl eeM2.0l/ett.Q.400 ~~~~~d .!'~~r ~ .. ~0~~8:. o~~. 842-e6841175-1401 dYt
fllNCll & OlOKI t7i-TMI OllMVALl TAPINli" =ry ·~ ~lee Houeekeeplng local Ollltomn. auto, oomm I. 841-5208 CERAMIC-UNOLEUM ~If ,::: 1~=9 ~'!!>!!l!fc.ffmfl.. F~T:lU::,::::::. ~............ =. itUOC: -l'lte • fumWI vlQUum & Think you 831..,.10 IMM 11, ,/awl• ~~· Freeeo-:'~:51 -;rn;n· •••• ;.......... AIMOOIL/ADO-OHI . O~Mted . J.I ...... '"° IUppllel. Kitty 841 ... 170 PAINTER. NEEDS •••••• !::ilu::rm ••• ---------~·:.=~~ ;::i11~:!'-~~.r:h~e I O#pentr;. Uo'd. H ll#fdNI 1MwO'Ml1eeplOtl'nn'g •• ,re' 1""'ea~t : !XPIAT HANDYMAN HOU8ECL.EANINO WORK! 30 yr1 exp, Int/ WM .............. Oave'it~r1:.:!:teme, ' tt"l ~ yra exp. lrwln ~71t •••••••••••••••••••••• mat•. 145-STS7 • O"'*"ry .. Roofing IS OUR 8U81NES81 Exler. Aoou.allc oelllnO•· Free eet. RMa. pt1cee. 7TO-l lO 1 M8·"8PM ISt-41 lo MM909 Fine Flnllhe4 OAl1*ltrY Er~OE~~:~l~t;:;~c:: Ptumblng, .. o. e.42-8013 J1nlce'1 Rigged~ Ann Devte PalnUng 841-618t Qua!. wortt. UC. 3311t9. --------
ALl.tTATI PAVING Remod. 9"0. Rind.rt 11r-Of amell )Obt. lAWN CARE JACK 0' ALL TRADES Eat. 10 _Yl"I· 8 6-2514 EXT£AIOR PAINTING 831·2:345 ftH •mn
a...coetln0..Str1Dln0 ,#!a...,........ Uc. 41'581 7a<l-1MO uo".""'nee21. 8'73-o359 Comm/reeld. Nwpt/CM can Jack d~ ot n"'ht PROF. HSEOLEANINO Cullom work. Fr .. eet. • •••••••••••••••••••••
---Comn,./Aeeld. :::l'l':.r.-;;ni........ Xlnl. ,... wortt. e.so 'V AMI •Aelllble'Refl ·~·· LOW RA TES· TrM trim· Uc #311312 MM181 No 8ttllfft/No 8harnpoo COMM'l.fRE810. UC'D l!LECTRlCIAN ON/opf, lany 845-7412 ••1 14* Wlndm Gary 551-8137 ~·st llne~~~ti:tll· .::::':'............... ming & ·removal, ...
Stein 8PeelaMt. FMt Remod·Add'M-~tl Que!. wortt·AMI. ret.. COMPL. HOMI M~INT. ' n ng. ~ REPAIRS $25 to S186 cleanupe & truh hauling. &°:'~Hall~ ~~I city. Free eat. 83 .. 1582 Vety ,_., UC. 3 250 Fr• eat. 831-5072 Tom 11111 Ctri>, plumb, paint, heul, JOM'• CIMnlnQ 8ervloe ll•d.. Fr .. eet. Call enytlme, Free e It. MI r 11 n • i
, ,.. •91 ' ....... 1720 Crptl lnetlll/~ Jiiek H. BenMtt. Jr. Toppec:l/'9m0Wd, C!Mn yd olnup. Free eat. Houl H~lng. Re-••'•"•.-A•••;••••••••• WALT n0-2726 554-7017 .._,.. -Flood detneae· StMtn Oen. Contr. 662·9142 TOP QUALITY up, lewn renov. 751-34'7& 4t6-32t1 Ila*· ref•. 10 yre exp. Farthing Interior O..IQn Hu"'-Roofltv>-&11 ·-· ---------Lj. M-1-6-.. __ , ........ .,.. "610. t1W588 Bonded & lneul'9d ELECTRICAL WORK M2.0510 aft. 4 HANGlNGISTRIPPING ..... ... , ... --,,,,,, •• -~., _,._, -'V·-' Reel. "*· 581..ec>55 Re1ldent111. Clean-up1, ••"-I Vlaa-MC Scott 845-9325 New-NCOVW-<Seok• •••••••'•••••••••••••• S"__,, & o1e1n Li hftllM I IH · '"' l,al111al•f. Lie. #411ll02. 64&·91a. , Moet tub}ecta, I<· 14 • ••••••••••••• ·-·...-. .,..,,.. . • ELEs;;TRlCIAN gerden tervlce, m1lnt., •••••• •••••••••••••• • •••••• ~ •••••••••• ASA PAPERHANGING 0a"4Ve-1Ummer S10Wtl • • 111111 Color brlght•n•re. Wht Lie. 30$888. Remodel, Sml jOOt/Repalre. Uc. frH lrlm. Fr.. .... HAULING-GRADING Ren ~ k "'JOHN HENRY co..... , 5-5 7& .... crpt1 • 10 min. blMch. edd'nt, e&blnet1: 2'"'"1"*' ""10 ..... "203 841-1-Cell Wiiiy) demollllon, ole1n-up. ovating-n *' 1 yr• loCal exp. Guar. Roofing tor Fine Homee Mr. Morgen, 84 1
Steflm ~ enQI. .:r Hitt, llv/dln. rm.a S15i avg 84e-at588/~ -.,.._.. . .._... "'"""' New lawn !Mn up work. PrloH atert at Uo. 415232. 5-48-8213 a.../,
& deckl. MeGh l, ti· room 11.80: eouc:h 110: llecitrlcal Contrector ,.,., .. ....., &::'et•' Ir .. :rfJ'e Dew 842~8S3 $8/roll. Alee 151.1021 !~ ....... '!f .....
oal hand)lman work. ctir $5. Guar. ellm. pet ..................... Ind., Comm,"-· Lio Free Mt. Ken tst-5035 ""'· • Bud ~9-285 Cuatom wall papering. ~Illa• "Let the Sunthlne In"
t75-7951 odor. Crpt repel(. 15 yra Free Mt.~ Pflcel. 333217. Ph 557-173& D80 E MAINT HAULING & MOVING .... .,. 1ttlafactlon guaranteed, •••••••••••~••••••••• Call Sunshine Window
CHAR'S Cl}STOM TEAK e1ep. Do work myHlf. Qual. work. UC. 331168. • .................. ComLAN _ __._~ & =· Local. Student w/tMI<. •••••"'•••••••••••••• For .. I: Frank 775--0714 BUDGET RATES Cleanlng, Ltd. 548-e853 =...._ t _,._ Rafi. 531-0101 '31·2345 ---.. ..,....,I .,P,;1 Lewie &75-8180 BRICKWORK: Small Jobi. Lo min. Sml Jobi OK. Uc. 20% Monthly Olecount ""'" ...,.....,.,.., managemef'l t.... ..._.... c t M B , .. _ n11 from$81o$10 Fr .. •t. In• 641-7581 ---------pit rllCka EXCEL CARPET CARE General Contractor ll1·7211 , ' Heullng I qulc:k clMn-up, ....... ...,.., °'a .... 'Y '"' r'f'' . •RESIDENTIAL* eto 25 """ 646-3749 J~" ... _..,,. Ind., comrn'I, ,... 145-2'42 Ron I Gardening: 8 yrl ud1. gar-. , JolHlt•, & lrvlne. Reta. 875-3175 Call M IOY • 551 ·4195 •-... •• MonthlyQtrly ot..,.~·nl . i··· o;;.,1~: I.le. 333211. 557-1138 A Uc. 410908 Hm• ., ... Ou•111r It pr 0 p m~ t. RI ck Brick, bloc;k, conc<•I•. <6•9Pm) lrvlne. ~:::::............... Chrl• 957·83U ~.......... Catpet, uphol,.,... rug It---~~ • ~. . ', •• d •. rete•N· BM/C•dnMt/ 831--0865. 831-otS3 stucco, V«y ...... lie. ,, .. , ..... 11 .. ~!'!!;~,SN-ERV~~. ---------.__. T~ clMn~Wortt ~uar. .. .. ,.,. ,._. lllllfll Wmll •n •cape. · Bob 548-7t50/S38-9906 ••'••••••••••••••••••• .................. ., ....,_ .. ,.., .. _ F a~•1 71 ................... • &75-9318. PROF. SERVICE ••BRYANT'S** NB/CM only. 642·9552 For CIMlfflec:I NJ
Smoooothed 7t ,.. · .... .,.. Crown moulding entry Haull'? • ua•d cleenup Flreplecee-Planl.,. Wel'--~I"" n--a1 . ACTION ' •We don't make you wait MOWING c "'" U 1 -B Q .....,,,.. .. ., "'""""'' """" C...llC.•ttlt doors. mantle1, book-Uo. SToeet. 831 .. 7823 • L .... N PS Qulc:k cleln. Fr .. •t. B '•Palloa-Veneer All tyi>ee. 842-1343 You don'I need a gun to -..-• ••••••·'~••••••••••••• e&MI, ceder lined cto-Hauling • L.andeceplng 878-05'8 Reta. Free •t. ~ "draw t11t" when you Dalty Piiot 0r1• patloe, Wllli(t. Fr ... Mt•. Wood IOlullonl 10 Th• flltHt draw In th• Fr .... t. 842·tt07 SELL Idle lt•m• With • plac. an ad In the Delly AD-VISOR e.t. No Job too wna11. wood problemel Weit .•• a Dally Piiot Hive torMthlno to NII? "•ve aomethlng to NII? Delly Ptlot Clullfted NJ. J>llot w1111 Adel c.. naw 84i-6e78
539-2807 831-1528 Claallftecl NJ. 842-1178. Clutlfled Adi 842-5878 CIMllfled ede do It Well. ' Cleallfled ede do It Wiii. 842-1118. I 842-11''7,8.
DOLLAR DAY DOUGH SAVERS
Sell yqU_r no-longer-needed Items for cash.
If It doesn't sell, we'll run It another 3
days FREE. ·one Item per ad, must be priced.
Sorry, no real estate or commercial ads.
Call today for full detalls .
..... ............. btra .... ttJIO)
3 3D~YS
INES
. CLASSIFIEDs642•5618
OLLA RS
~~!!!.!!!W..11.!! "="' f'nlt WI m!.,.f.'!!!i .... !~ f!'.f!!U'!~! .......... IJ.-Jl..'f!!.'!!. ... ~!.~'!f IJ.•.'l..'f.~!!!. .... !.~f! ~!.'l..'f.~t-J. .... !.~lj IJ.-Jl..'f.~t'J. .... !J.!f
Retell 1tore 1t 2850 Avon •••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Mllll cuetom lltver J• rtuttl 1111 COSMETICIAN Lic d. for Marine engine & or Marine llAL mtn ULll St .. 1840 eq. ft. plus 8 I.I. Umll 10 bracelet, J~ 11, Ir-•••••••••••••••••••••• fltlme makeup poa. In hardware atore mgr. ex-PAIT Tm In
car ~age. 641-8777. ...... 0. IH vine Meedowa Rock LIVE-In hOUHkeeperl top Npl. beauty aaJon. per. Send RHume to: Rll•U ~ ~al ellitriCi 1 • & 2• d Concert. GrHt 1ent1-companion. _., perr-C • 11 : Laur•. Mr Anderson 1n F RI-Aallt In marlletlng atudy MHilUt f aucceafUI llWPllT llTll. S~0• '!fi n ~~9 n mental v1lue. Steven manenl po•. Ref'a. 213--274-8575 v•;•lde or . .' Newport for exciting local n•w· ~ growl~g ~lrm Beat ~nt 'fd91i~h~::~= Robt. s!tti:e NH/CM ~7:."~2714'840"7824: 838-l163 COUNTER HELP wanted, Beech, Ca. 92663. apeper. Only quallflca-working condltl~na In W. It IMlf 4M OlllH lalll . 44 bwyuelneH site. A rox. R.E. Broker Bd Realtor• ••I• Wuttl TIOI expar or wlll train. Dry-MEDICAL, F/tlme, front tlon 11 • good phone Na w Po r I B •a ch •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 1000 ft 845-71i::, 842·2111 545--0&11 FOUND: Short heir blk & •••'•••••••••••••••••• cleaners, 30848 Coaat otc. poeltlon. Mlaelon voice. No Illes Involved. 714-646-5051 SP*=lout. bright & ~ CdM dtx ~It•. A/C, am~ sq . . bm male dog. Poea. I.ab Salel Hwy, So. Laguna. Viejo. Req'a. medical .... Mon lhru Fri. 5:30-9:30. ---------
2500 aq ft condo to pkg, utl pd. 2855 e. It ULUIY llW ,,._....,.,.,,/ German Shep mix. FrlMllite lelet lllltllll IYI llP cretarlat exper. tncludtng $94.00 week to start, Tnht/IH•"'"'9f
lhwe -evenbelt«than Hwy.S595.e7Mt00 LAGUNABEACH.Prlme •----• .. / ~54 S100,000perye1rcal-' l naurance blllln g. then .ahara of part-Sf~permonthtostart. moat apt1. Bayview, pool Costa Mau 250 If. eulte loc 352 No Coast Hwy r,,._1 lbef comm A challenging opportu-49s.1060 nerahlp• prollta. Accurate and fut typing
& t>Mut. grMnbelt. N.B. $175mo. Utll tncld. 779 L ,·e $ 9 5 0 Per m 0 • I..I I 1 ... 1 Blk Newtoundl1nd neul. · nlty la open it Schweber Great tor colleglatea and a muat. Start lmmedla·
557·7883;.or 640-6339 w 19th St. &51..ee28 4974411 760-8287 : •••••••••••••••••••••• male. 5 yra, lov" chll· To Hll minuticturlng Electronlc1, • leading IEllO&L SIOllTllY moonllghtwa. tely. Expel' pret'd.
Br fr • .... ......... ,, BIOG dren. To good home. k I A.. elecrtronlc dlltrtbulor, tor Npt. Bch. Some college Call ltlar 8:00PM 71,.:.720-o941 4-· oceefl ont home on Exec 1ullea, full aerv., ... ,..,. 11w4, a ........ -.-............. 760-e832 ev pac age n your r · an lndlv. who le 1elf-& medical bkgrd. pref. 642-5&78, ext 313 Newport Beech to ahar•. fum/unf\lm., greatly re-•1 I.it Go Of Alcohollsml Comm. 12.580' per ..... motivated, ha1 good M 1 1 15 IEOEn/ ... 1111
'own b d rm , M I F . duced No IM. 764-0274 Top loc. ~ corrml · Don't let llcotlollam pull Found: yg German Shor· Send reeume to PO Box communicative ekll.la and 75~1eaf Pe wpm· If you're get w/ftgurea
873-1219 -i.iiiii.itl•irilMiii•ii-~pp~ox It~ 30:: t f~ you lo Mlf-dHtructlon. their Polnl«, F, vie. T• 6201, L.agun& Nlguel. Ce. one who paye attenuon Pereon to work oyater org1nl:r.ed, ~eat & de~
rol\ w aq Let go & llve • llfe of winkle School. 54()..9155 92677 to detall. Jr. College MODELS for llngerle bar, 5 dy wk, bayfront pendable-need you at S::,:~at~:i:0r:: '!!'.:!.... ~~1 a;ea C::. ".99"· ~ eobnet)' with the help of Found· V«'f 1ge M German ll•Elll education pret., bvt not shop. Over 18 prel'd. r•taurant, xlnt company our front ore. order desk
dep. 841 -4825 or -1111 M~tFUCHS The Moorings. With• Shep: mix, blk/bm, 11t& Succe11ful yacht com· required. PIMM contect s.~. Scanty Penty ~:~~~~~~·e!111 train. for buey men'e tolletries
tee-8479 Plulh, newly-dec«ated, .._.n_ •1&.. natlonally recognized lrll, CdM. 873-4347 pany In N9wport requlree Barbara at. 5&8-3880 Motel co. In lrvlne. Exp. req'd. ---------i ( r-n-UJWI ""'' o.utpatlenl treatment 1 1 Plat_,,.. 10'-k.o to.u.ch. type Super view, pool. •P•. In lmate 1tmo1phere. lla.1120 program.you never need Found: turquoise Para-full charge flnancla lllTIL &llllTllT llUIEIS (IPL) 50·60. $1,000 comp.
130-264 eq. fl In loWly ---------• to be h09pltalli.ed. ml11 keet (CAL·A92·2·014), accounting pereon. Dynamic, p1ttent orient-exp'd. for 31 unit motel IPIUTll pkg. 540--0737 ••c. g·ate, lennlt, garden type bldg. Rent C....mW time from work, or time vlo. F1lrvl ew, S.A . Beautllul wor1llng oondl· ed N.B. prectlce neada In Dani Pt . Call : Ornamental plant exper. ---------
S245tmo & hakpg. Incl. recapttollllt, phone I ,_, ~~1• from vour famllv Mor 554 1294 · Uona, on water, c:ono--"""ht, motivated, enthll· 493·1546 required. Wiii train for llOIPTllllST 780-9307 enewwlng. ClOPMr etc. flfflll ,,. " ' ,. .. .. . nlal u1oclatu. Dream v•.,. realdentlal/ Industrial.
LADlES ONLVI EXECUTIVE •••••••••••••••••••••• . nlng &evening programa Found: grey & wtill• M Jo.b for right pareon. alaetlc team member. lllll. IOllPTllU Agrlc. peat control. l&LEI PDSll
Beautiful Npt 8ch prtv. CONNECTION .,,... • .. ev1llable a ln1urance cal, vie. 8rookhur1t ' Mu1t be mature, with ROA or comparable ex· We are turning away $ 9 5 o S 1 2 5 o t'leeded for a ,_ excl-
home. $325. 848-S355 1800 Dove, Sult• 330 In ~ bldg on Cout APC>f'l'lloved..... IU Yorktown, H.B. 968-3465 lmpecc1bl• reterenc.e. P • r • •a I a r Y 0 P • n · buelneaa and need 1 ex-• ' m 0 · ting lltnen & f11hlon
762-6408 Hwy. South Laguna. Afr Call Mrs Luk• 645--6351 848-2481· 646-7 .. 1 center In Faahlon laland. Clean, nlfPOll. female to ----------• pn7X. 500 sq. ft. Excel· 1853 E. Llncoln. Orsnge Found: strawberry blondel bet. 10 & 12 n0on. DOG pr'd prof. nail acutpt.reu Contect Richard Ouellet·
share new luxury lown· ..,..,..., llU. lent pc Iva ta perking 4647 Long BMch Blvd.. F pul>t)Y, "vie. Beck Bay C::~· ~~· with 1 llttle lollowlng. Top PllTllUPIU te Salon. 200 Newport
hOUM w/eame. $375+ 'h 1200 or 800 l/f, 00c per behind bldg. $525 mo. Long Beech Dr., N.8. e7&-6~2 ANSWERING Serv. Fl 84+-4000 ~fu~':dd~;. ~:~.·:~~~ Earn top pay taking Center Dr .. N.B.
utll. Pool, Jee. 642-09'1 all. Mo to mo. or ...... Turner Aaaoc. 49-4-1177 hll 1~11·1111 FOUND: Blk. male kitten tNolme, P/tlme ~~ •vallty2 INIT ••-ram. Education avalla· ane.pahota In your an1a. RECEPTIONIST-tor pra-Mullan Realty. 540-2960 In Three Arch Bay So exp. nee. v".,m .--ble Amateur photographers Female to lhare Balboa H.B. ofe &/or lndust ap-•-••Mr , ~ 499-4722 • · p 1 n g r • q · d . c a 11: Ea""' AM shift. No exp. 8. amp~ & '"'-'ltah needed Part/full time sttgloue ealon, pereon Island home. private •---avail. FOf IM 1t1rtlng at ....,,. 180-1000 EOE "' ~· ..,.,. · · who enjoys people & can Bdrm & bath, $345. Ann .., .. -... ..,• ..... -$450 mo. 847·9954 PlTID'I IAYl Found: Milamute/Shep . nee. Pl/llme. Apply In South Coat Plua ·No experience°' ~llnf handle busy phones. &75-0830..,.., 873-0300 ........ 111111 with aepeclal rnH11age ln Ix fem 4-& BABYSITTER-mature pet-person: D11)9lty Donuts. A9k for Glorla 546-7186 required. Write to. Un Must be faahlon con·
cs.ye. With UM of recepllon,. ITlll/lfflll the Dally Piiot. Let Oed ~arbors;"/~·.,, C:: IOl'I, 3 In per day, all 18S. Newpoft Blvd. C.M. -~l·~~·cBo~3. sclous. Richard Ouellette
¥•1• rmmata sher• 3 bdrm hae In lrvtne. Bdrm
untum. 1200 mo plu1 '.-\
utll. 551·3156
cont. room, klldl, phone, 300 sq ft. Foot traffic, aea hi• neme In print on 549•2&84 or 962.,.780 day TuH., no wknd1. IUIYltl.111111 1111111 lllll on• • a. Salon, 200 Newport
eecretar1al & word pro-Ontwn Laguna 49-4-5688 June 20th. If you pl-1 Rm req. 873-7594. Wanted: Uo'd. Electr Center Dr., N.B. ~.ngav·alMl.al~ rneuaoe,t ..... If ·-~ •• 1dll IM1114,,, greeting tor Did you wHI FOUND: Blk male cat, wtit r111. "A Place Of Health Conv • long lenn care PlllFElllOULS -• -1 UHi be eligible tor the drt· colla.r & wtltlpot on aide. Banking .. __ .. ty·• ....... 7,, .. 2 exp. req'd, Excell. wor-RE~IT
dHlred. Call: Judy. N~a3975·Bi;ct:.·;eoo·~ wing of Univ Pk, Irv. 562·9257 muu .,.,.., ._.,.. -king oonde. & benefit•. Sll .... /YUI For plush office In New·
Shere be1ut. 4Br CM 7141780-0100. ft. or le11. MIA zone. 4 RU TIOlnl FOUND: Fem. American ex-rlenoed. Part time FDllU n.IT F/tlme, 7-3:30, 3•11:30. CA.UBER ONLY port Center. Applicant
home. 122011350. Pvt -..... A t "'•1 50"2 S It ht F I .. -s 1 h h d' 71 4-642-80« or apply In Ex 'd In real es bath In 1 rm. 642_1737. nsw gen ~ • ., . to an P z; w . em, m 11 (20 hf1I wk.), and Ml time wlm, etc wt an ,. person: 486 Flig•hlp per. req . • muat hive plealent per-
Jotln or JIJllen WelHppolnted office w/ 1715 up. 2180 tt. lndu-AmLI Shepherd; J•n & whl. po1lllon1. Huntln8ton capped girt. Light dutlee. Rd., NB tate, '9Adll~. Mlel or IOl'lallty, wlth1Tont omc. ---------• Nwpt Harbor view, •P· atrial . Office. 18081 Re-IAlllALL llME Fem, mix etter; Blk. Savings & Loan, 967 own trane. Nonemoker. managemen . appearance. Accurate Mat wm Wllhel to ahr 1g prox. 1000 eq ft. dondo Circle #E Hunl· Kitten• to gd. home. Warrtf(I., H.B. Min. 34 hre/wtl. Off Fri. & People who hive rea· typing at 55 wpm. No 1um hae w/reepmat wm, 846-7l00 1...:.. Beech 842 2834 Call 642-5&78 and place Newport Bffch Animal Sat. 840-5335 N.B. NURSES Aides. Full time, cited a lor1< In the roed & shorthand. CaM Evalle at
non«nkr. 54M3&9 ''V'on• · • · your me11age now for Sheller, 844-3e5e 1 to 3 & 3 to 11. Apply: would Ilk• to be repro-6«-2507.
--------iExec. oftlce: 705 E. Bal· ••tlll ffgttl '4111 only $6.00 .____,_ I'• MIT IUITl*ll UI ITITlll llPll1 Hunt. Bch. Conv. Hoapt., grammed for a,_ ca-RECEPTIONIST/TYPIST HOUie to lhare In C.M. bo1 Blvd. Nr Bilbo• •••••••••••••••••••••• Vll&/Mutercard Guaran-rn.....-•· Mutt be •llP•rlenced. fain $10-$12 p6r hr. p/ 84 7 ·3515. Pre-Cert. rear. Appl. only. Call '310 lneludlng·ut. The1tre. 525 sq ft, Retired, .Palm Springe teed 11 you qu.atlfy1 Fl· •••••••••••••••••••••• W1"t permanent em-time. 848-5781 Wlllle cl ..... are offered. 9AM-Noon, Mr. Kelly, Raeldenllal real ••1ate
· 846-8330 $425/mo. Af c, bath. couple looking tor fur-ntnelng avill. Cleat er• Lil• da • VilCki'S p1oy9e. 928 w. 17lh St, p•-_ 830.,.945 °8~11h~roo.,,m°!'!"~~: &75-3800 nlahed houM for all or dh oftle 7141641--0565 C.M. lllllllL lfflll -• .,_ ""' " .., ,__ . ..,,... ltw ... 14311 551~/857-8111 part of eummer. Cell lo-pro . Temporety help needed e--and/or WMl<end1. P.TWI ULU nable Individual. Muat be ••• ~-·••••••••••••••• - -• •-----ft,__ t •-·-E ...., ............ , with kid ev,_ w/.._..._ lklMa of 8ecUte d~ In CM for ..,.-, ... _ cally, 873-4982 scn•u LETS .._ •• ------to""''""'' -0 m ..... o-RMpontlble &dultl, over n,..,, ....... ng •• ........ '"'"'V rrww -M • --1--Part llme, retell~•· fllm. Could leld to per· 2l, with outltandlng, 11• and with )nereaaed ear-4s.e<>wpm. UoenM P'• atotage. mo. EXecu'llw office In Can-Looking lor unfum 3 bl' -•• =-~ a/Pl m1nenl poaltlon .• Call: tractlw -·•ltlel 10 nlng1, utlllzeJour out· ferred. Call Mery, 780-837.ll rto{ VIII•~, •£50/mo. lPI or condo w/endoled ANSWERS OUTCALL 24 HM. College 1tudent1. Full Jim ...... ...,.,... ...., ~-"'ol"" ,_..,..,. 11y, !Mm 631-1288 --------· -, s mare oc llM2ll ......... ...,. work with youth <•g•• ............ ~.. • ______ _ E-elde CM. agle on Pffv er 91 912 garage or . llm• pot. lor the 1um-HOUSECLEANERS·H•lp 10-14). Cell 2·5PM. hoW to become a trained ""1 ~ clean 11orage 1tuden11. No 1m0klng, same · Orone mer. Need 1ggreHlv• .... 2 .... 21 .,,_ 343 EOE HI•• counHIOr. Cell Make your 1hopplng ••· oNj' 110 'e15-3e00 3879 eq ft office IPflCI at drinking or partying. WrlCI<. Forbid peraon to gather lnfot-W*'!ted, mu11 ·have oiwn '" _, • ~·· • 2·5PM. 642-4321. Ellt. tier ~=th• Dally
• . 11.05 aq ft In preetllJloul Need for ~. 11t, '82. BEFORE * * * mat Ion In 0 range trenap. top doll er pd. Want Adi C.. 842.a818 343. EOE Piiot Adi. -latll ffll Pacific Plaa. Wll ~bdl-Rent guwenieect bY pe-The trouble wtth moving • .,. _ _.1 Pll'ltr County. ~ attire & Clll Miit& 845-6355 :.::;;:::==:;:::;;;±;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;=~z;;;J;;;;:;::;;;:;::;;;:;::;;;:;::::;ii~-
•••••••••••••••••••••• vtde, 234 e. 17~8t, ate. renta.. local family. Plee-to • WMlll town la that ,....... c.. a muet. -contact Lol9 HOU8EKEEPER-f1mll)I r
1e11 Weatcllff. N.B. Want 109. c . M . 0 r ca I I .. cell (114)851-e829. your hOUH II 1lw1y1 Open 24 hrl a d4ly GRU88 & ELLIS lootllng for reaponalble
flnanolal lnlt. 10001.t. 646-3120 known by the name of 1 deya • WMI< 833-2900 mature llve-oul hOUH· U1~~~oo r . Agent . PIDTIMIH ··~~~I/ th• people who llved ~:OU:!lil ~~u~r:!~ ueper. Some eve youth ... alL ,..,._ lher• BEFORE you. BenkAmerlcal'd, Mue.r • 11111 chlld care. Mu1t have
520 eq. ft. 11.00 per sq. •••••••••••••••••••••• Charge, American f>c. a. -, _ _..___ own C..-& knowledge of ft., 3975 Birch., N.B. ........ ...... 11.41 ... ,,. · prell, Dlnert. All w•I· ....._ _. hHlth food gourmet
AQent 541-5032 1100 1q ft., luxury .__,_,,,. .... come 7141145 .. 8433. ...... ••11t1 oooktng. Non«nkr. Reta
ground nr. eulte. Over-••• ~;tt.;<1•••••••• 2112 Hert>or 81. CM WOUid you Ilk• to IP«ld req. '8(3-9192.
look.I Qa"den courtyard. 3 wMI It the beech,
3 eicec. ofCI. Cont. rm. Fr...ience writer looking and get paid for It? Oo ......
Supply nn. 2 a.c•ya. 2 yr. tor '*"°" 1n-..1ed In you like young cNldren? FGS hat e>penlng1 tor ~. C..: 965-2649 ,,,., .& ,_. room. bc>Wd. Md Nlery LO\llng '*"°" need.cl to eip'd. lndMduall fo ..,. •••••~•••••••••••••••• In ~ for oompe. cer• tor my 2 artd vtoe P9r9onal Une .ccta.. O.C. Airport Exeollplln nlonltllp Md llQht hou-.,_ .......... .._...,._In -Mutt have gd. oral &
Mtgr'1 rep1/11ttellt1 f(lll) ADS Mkeeplino. ldMI'" ror oo4-u;;; i;ii'~ 'ae Wf1tten communl011tlon ..._ t't dM IP·· Full IAG• or Mlf•employed 11w In Mon. ttlN Fri. c.ii •• 8alery oommtMU-:.1:0 "*·Elegant ARE FREE ~i:;:~n~0rn•nt.'gh:~: Jan at tsW434 ~ ::=:. ::':: '
1 .. ,_ Cal•. e.ctl et 494-0421. COMPAHIOH AIO: Oo you oement potential. For
........ ....., YOUI' Cer A1rftecta You ;::? :.0~~ ~all: Paullne,
· --• firat· a.. • fUll ..vioe Ml .... 11 Oultom Wex I DMal help. Male or female,
__ ... ~ EXEC. omo... lnclud.. .._.•Tony 141-8241 room. board I .. 11ry. l •..a Sec
·-w all amenlttee. From ~-ProfHllOnal Man H M2·nrt bef, 10em, flft. If• y . "°"" 1 room to a,.,.... 1225/mo. 844-'711t. Leet .,.... .,. lffk• r .. pontlble et• tpm, PAM 1'Mll 2 to'\ ~ · ''°"' 11.1e • *}: "· No a. i.....,., COIM 11wy • ., .. ,0• old e.n... t~ YoUna women to iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil nlnOl I*""' for"*"' .... ~. ot. a Noh Bey 500 eq ft golden color Cooker INN ~ ......, COMPUT!" """ ope. flow.• PM'°'~ =.-:~~· wtaood·-·
1
...;.,.· vtel~tilt)I: panlel. ·Hewer1 to pool, boat, eto. In ex~ nlna new brMOtl oflOee. ~. Non-amole• 4tf·231 can d 1. o a 11 Lu c v ~.!.~ for eome lltflt M•nae«• neectect. No only. Newport Cent• BAYFmfT MCH4~. ;:;-;~~ :._.re:=::: _&4M __ m _____ ,
,.... ...... 113-1003 ~~~1nt.. .......... f'eCIUhd, :
114-T72•C»111
-.'Jl S TCLIH BL t 11:. j
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I •J. H ,,. •• • I
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{,.. __ (05 ___ .... ) )
NewsPQper
Carriers tor routes
in Huntington Beach,
FoUntain Valrey & Newport Beach
CALL
CIRCULATION
OIPAATMINT
•
...
llAJJlll~'HiW-.•••••••• •••••• • •!!"!·~·!~Jl:·~il .. !,~!~!~!£;~11 ic....---•Drw-· ••••I h!.'\1!.":JonCllttH. .....-. ,_==AUTO I ~-'•~ 1 1 11 ~ ~.M111L,_,· lllllf•tz HI Ill I a=o.~:f1,"*'· ,.~w• . .:*."4t
tMMHie, 1110 1ww ~ ,,._,, iiOO. 111nt Muat reduce lnventor1 (tl.100.000) • w to.. nMy All Ct*Y trUC* Ditti:: 'W
:;, \~,~--:;::. ~-1141 Jmmecliatel¥l 11 pc, tcnWdriYff Mt 1~'-1n~:t"n .. da IUU• to~ to d1uef. l'!itt. tum. 1no1 Mt t11c1e-ta.88, 4-way hand ~tit.ti tao wa ·tlOf'IC lnalllded It.,...., "'*'1t•on trorn 111• .old, NOllnlfle on;., bit Kenmore port1bl• 11eo. l.~ cu. tt. procr~ w..;ow1ve ~· oond • ..:::"y -. t up. 114-1llO -'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I .. ooee. .... ,,....,.. """ ..... &.d~. Aot ... •018 "& I.ii.fl .I...& ---1...A • NW, IO HP ""' .. ,.,. T 10k 1'1-1M Med9 11\urBW = lctwlen ttll i. Oflrl 1111tot1' w I tr • I 4 0 0 0 a 0 • own ~ •• •~ pc. n gnW _.. ... new etertlnt Olblff l I .,.,;. ....,_ IOC> Z2t MD CCU• ftUIUUNlnQ ~Mf/lal. rWwood tbt & tMnot.' MM7M .14.9&, & pc. cutlery a9t t?.90, 11 pc. C)Ontjw l otw eoot1c. t.:O ui• =::-:: ~~~ =: '=':. "EJii~'::..'~7··~·.::: :.;;i.:":=-to;:."·~r·...e~·~ "~J:i:'::''· =~.:..~~ --------t u.:::v·
o" tfl• t1l..,..of!• and :::,'=·~ing ":: :;: =: "~ ' •"41• ' fuDy warrant.cl. 100'1 more lt.m!ll 14' "~ With tlltlno bocty -· 839-tm 1...oa-.-... 111cwy
.. rnlnt money 1t 011 II .. '9QU!Nd. b90UtM eto: Cph t ':;. Q.I ...,., a tl9o. dfyw. t• :'::: a. I& triller encl 40 HP lvtn---------1 Mlllk!n Y11fO
Y ' I I k e ....... ,... 113-4 ,..... ,__... M1 .... _.. ....... ~ _... • ••••• m.:::;........ .._, ... .-. ~i.i MP'· 1 mult, - -matoNnt~· Ill<• new, na..... --...-L. rude. freeh tic. tHO. Aa• ,_ .... (A-..rlbdt off l.f)
our euoo.11,,11 .. •• Non·•mo er pref. •II • ........ .... --II"'• U1 a• ' ... -· -~ --· IMPORTANT ..OTICI Open...,,. ·~·~ en1b11 940-0113 .. 9rnrr;r.rtt"tt'i.... ·:~~ • ' - -4Ho.6Ut To RIAD!M AND -~ :r ... t:A•lflttd~ HCAITAAY • Hvy. tr· GA.RACH IA.I.I: MOVING Wen• I t7S. • .. _ OOMMV•--'tt-'71 27' .. ft , ... , LINI!.. AOVlATillN
Oepar1m1nt ping: exo.ii. •• P4U• • ~heme,... y ~1'11. ....... ••• ~MOO·""'--·, "VlotOl'i;," ,.;y brld~ The prlol of lt""9 ed·
oommlHIOft oft llOteokM. r..cMr ..-q'd, ~~Ol':J! ....... ,rt1,...!!!.:· KING INNIMPMIO IX-...,...,.0 _.. VH,.redle», b•lt tank. ~.~ .... by~ ... ~ M • No ehor1hand, non-emlcr. -..n. -0 • 1 ,.,.,.,... LINll'tATIQN TAA l'IAM -"' ........ _ _. If you llaVe ... Mllllty AeotY i., oonftdenol to: riC* Lant. tt.8. Megnolla "(V'U newr ulld ~· ..... P• deP~.i-OUtrloaert, fled edwrtllll'la OO!llfW1 ...... ..__ ___ ---t
.,. •........,_Md •e COLLINS AAOOIATH & Yortltown. SALE Ho. U4f det. Neve; IRAH. Never wMd 4 •"'*..::l.f"""· =-~ t~~ -11111 CR£VIR ~,_we Wiii train you ~ : ~~ ,,.. ue•d quffn u , warth -..... 0. auo. l"'°:~~!!l;!!!!~~ tra!\lfer ftH, flnenc1 Top dollare tor l portt ................... Ill CIMl:ll'lttd prooedura • .,..... • ...................... 811Hng all tPPltanoel at 1389, 0 .. 11 only, 1211 IM 1100. 1114711 11r GALAXll. vo cNlgea.,... for f/tf poe.. Care,~·· C1mpare, II.._:: a!!!! =.:.~="=~ s.ntatta1 c::':r.1:::~.~o~ ~:::ig~~:~:~· •• d~r:: ~:L~u•11r ho"'•·'t:"fr":t.=a:: ~~1oorn.ia~: ~T:C.~~oc:,d:~: 914i..ctot·~,oMoA a-~-::':i'ID Peraonne~ Dt~t. •t lutlllht IHftllrY toye, mllo. Ftf 3-7• Sat wH ll•r•, r1ng11, bltn · ot11dect :¥., bHn 1---...------1 dooum1ntery prepera· --Wt~;;;•
141"'4a21, IXt. l7 • HeedQuartere ~. of the M . 3802 AldWoOd St. ov•n• & ooolt tope,,.& -~. ~. fnqul,. 'ti 11' ...... tlof! oharg .. l/nleu ...... PMn-• W .uf Jolly Roger AMleurant .__.,,.,. hOOde. K .... & -et MWlll Bt:>oitftllt•. 310 Ctytler otl\erwlN 1p.clflld by 1170 ltedl'IMt.
330 W a.y St en _,,.,.d. Exto. 8IOr-. ·THE GREAT AFFAIR· 1141 ... I.I. "'"' '"" """'"'""· ~Slla -------.-.,.. --•t11 11&.Y Pl.IT ohtfn hM en opening for •••er.-.••••••••••••••• """' ....... .. -D'1-'1• -~ .... p--.... enatnea. , ... , tsa;SOO. tM ad'lltttW. HUNTINGTON HACH Ull• -1111
Colt' MIN ' t.,Yto the Vloe Preeldent Glftl.. Treuur11 & Gour· "1 TWMCI eote fOOd oondl-W atcweh M_.. 1--------1 b*'-/ _. -An Equtll ~ Emplyr of ()p«atlone. Poe. re-met food Rummege Sale ..... JI tlon. 1125.' tag a! I II w a I • r • 18'9" lapettllk1 Tilomp. er.af1r 1111 WI -208 W. 1et
qulrlt uo1U thotthand & &. Boutique to eupp9rt &47-4913 87~1 eon w/trallet, 50% ,... •••••••••••••••••••••• Senta Ant UU11LD1 typing tklllt & otter1 t The Newport ShorH Werd'I o .. Dryer 4 mo 1.W ,... • to r ed. '700. Call ~ Ml"sJ fm 111111 Cloled Sunday
Mature woman pref'd. variety of r11pon1fblll Swim Team. 511 Canal, S200. ~·· Otnnette Ill Tlvee eolld 04ll< 111_,ltw • • &41..o41S Stwly t9PffCM; plokupa & a llnm Ull ~ 102 22nd St. NB , •• Pl'IOI' rettturant IX• N•wport Beach. Follow S100, -•nut ooftee &. 2 ohalrt, ~~:'"3 :.~~·Ii: ,:~r;~r. "'E~:. '58 CENTURY ·1S'. Hull & OOUP••· 4 to ohoOH ~ ............ !!~ ..
a.. =-.~.:.r~~~~ ==:.Hs~10J:n'r1r. :!r.tb:..i~~~ ~~MATCHING Sofa & !:ov. 714-l&M71S . :f11':J.d.::~ n1~ ~).(~~~~l~~t r"~S!ll!9!!! ___ ~·79cAPRlll.blk.,AM/FM,
W fM.,S .... h• 1•plpl.lybr~•pl~r::~kf~~~ 9AM-3PM. Cherie. 1 ... 22~ ~~t~7 etrtpee. 1111 .... 1 ..... watei, ti.Ip avail IOI' ~m-., ~~t1r:!'& ~~~: llPf 8:00AM t 4·00PM t· Boy Scout Gwage Sale REFRIGERATOR Fr1tl "· .. _.,lu StlM 't, I, 10 dr ...... mer. 3500. Oreg. earl $2,800. 54-018S
Mutt !\aye '= C T.HE JOtLY RoC:eR lndlan Springe bat. 22nd Ir•. Worltl well St5. HEAVY Wood table wtth llou ... r tlaoke, ewe ... 213/449-8948 or ff
!MM795 Of 78 INC • & 23rd off lrvtne AY. Sat. a.4-7129 btnchea. u11 Indoor or tere, bluera, evening 2tS/357-3587 -----~~ari !'!1.!! •••••••••• r:.~
Stilet. Deltv.ry Mill Plf· 17042 Glltetta Ave.. 8t l9, only M . out. S75. 4'M187 =n~~ome nt;~ '79 S11 .Swtrl 17', V·8 MYlll 'M
eon. l60to$100ptrday. ll"ilne. 71~331 SUPER GARAGE SALE · Go!~ng ~ltlon WOODEN Kitchen tlblf. ... 49&-1~ OhMC pl/O, tr11rt, 1up1e1r 3100-W. COMt Hwy. lllZI 011fi1
Ctll Meny Item• hvy duty S20 • • r m u • • • NWport leedl 730-91t1an10:30 llOllTllY work btnoh'. exerclH S80/0BO. 846-2971 498--5187 Sink to~•n), dark IH50t otr. 944.4135; -======== 141...al T·~:o•I Lf(=~ ~
Ul.11 Hlghly qu1llll1d, Hlf· bike, tool• of alt kind•. 15 cu It upright Freeur .... _ 111. ~ • • to match MC)..6800 '95 Thunderbird, 98% ___ _...____ ~r-
UIS. 12 motivated lndlv. With •X· clay poll, plant•\dothet, Admlrll xlnt c:ond 10 yrt _. .. w 41 d2' 75. 4M-&468 ...,, "" "" r•ttored. 83.500/olfer. WAITED! ., -· 10 to 5 hr. Un-,,_.tlonal ......_ lklH• for boo kt, heat amp & old S100. ~1-809i an 9&2-4471, "8-9853 ta 000 Full Femtty Mem-•••••'•••••••••••••••• &45-4749 •-deroovar Wear home -.... '"''""" c:hllda 10 epd bli{e, 1230 8PM. Patio rurn Brown J ........ A b9rtn1p In John w--. Sunfllfl 14' Mela Model. 1 --------Lett modef Toyotu, ....... ., .. Ptttlll. 846-n44 profeHlontl Hrvlcat/ Somenat Ln. N.8. (off " ...,_,., T 1 Cl b. r ·•·;-month old. Ll•t price '11111'1 ...... VolVoa, Plckupl & V•n•. Oove/Ou s
Siiia trtlnlng dept. Knowledge Hlghland). Stt M . Cuti 11~111 #II tab 1 t • 4 c: ha Ire• 2 inn e u or on y S1396 WUI 1111 for $895 Beautlful lhoW car. Mu.t C911 ue todlryf NEWPOR'T all8EA~H of Mag Card II. Newpon only •• ;1:: .. ••••••••••••••• loungee, S360. 955-1134 ttoo. 714-e21-1li03 H .. _,; 7..,.. 1175 . ....... . .._.__ • ..,,..,. OBO Unoerle Home Patty Beech .,. ... 840-8950 · 15 IPd cuetom touring. All .tt "'' '' ~.,.. · -· .,.,_ .... -133-1111 con.ultantt. Xlnt SS$. No LIDO ISLE 8 tm Sat only. European on Mondla 24" Cu1tom uphol. cllalr1, ....,...., Saltboa1 25' ClaMfo Lu-838-7850 de T~a1
kit otlarge. 835-4273 SEWING MACHlNE ~PE· 104 VI• Palermo. Come lrtme. At new. $850. bf'own/bllge chintz. xlnt. ,, .. ,.,, ,., def• w/anp In Nwpt Sch '54 PLYMOUTH PLAZA
Siiia RATORS. Exper, quality eatlyl 873-0851 1180 pr. 9!5-lt3" •••••••••••••••••••••• saoOOIOBO See at 28th Nead1 lit OMf. RUNS .
• 11••1 a 11111 minded, plac:a ratat. 24" Schwinn Crul11t Solld pecan w/glala cof· USl!1> CARPETING In St. MarlnL 61s.e1se S300/ofr. 848-5724 or
.... • Cotta Meat &42·9852 #mild#• 2 mot old, xlnt cond. '" & end tabl91/ mat· good cond. Neutrtl or ..,.. &41·2875 ITAIT IEIE •••••••••••••••••••••• $125. 548-7903 c:hlng wall unft1. Elegant, earthtc;:::"adet ICCIP-....... H
T1'4t Loe Angelee TlmM TAN WHILE l•••er 111011 quaUty eot1 bed. :::'approx~~~· '80 Nevw 11••<'. fully ..,,.,,,.." Clrculatlon 01pt. cur· flllll'l IAY lmlllla, never u11d, $400. &45-1n1 Iv mag . equlp'd. Take over 12% VMJ1ln 1131 ~== .. ==-===~I
rentty has poetttona open wtth a apeclal MMUQe ln ~ttdW "'' 85()..1880 · loan end aHp. •••••••••••••••••••••• .. ,
In ...... M • Fleld Re-YOU EARN the Dally Piiot. Let Did •••••••••••••••••••••• Queen •lie green Sol• WANTED. Zel~ler F~l•I 875-5653 c:=. ~~:. buggy. 2 USED CARS a. TRUCKS
=tattve. you'll wn "' ... hi• name In print on llW llo/n , Bed. Good lhtpe. With Exarct11t. Ct 1 •tt 5·30· 1974 Erlceon •loop wt 546-2917 COME IN OR CAU FOR
wage & generoua Reeort Interval• i. now June 20th. fl you pl!Wle • Redwood 2x8 decking, ~ SM. 548-8147 Me 8005 Avon &. 0 18 , brt1tol. --------Pm .......
commlulont. Houri hiring for pubflc rel•· greetlnglorDadyouwtfl 4-20'1ono;tltoredwood O/ll#r.nJtrutl 130,000 net . Oya f Rfllllrlnf Ifft Connlel'-OIUlk)
"'9PM. For Information tlont. Call: be ellglble IOf th• dr•· lenc:lng. Call Jim Of Ken lllY ... SH .._,_..1 Ml 2 t 3/llt86·9800, tv•• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~
o.tl: 714-957-2381, Ext. Mark 531_2401 wing ol anytime, 775-1491. Good cond. ~817 ••"'';"'Jiu•••••••••••• i-87_5-4&_..,._21______ .., 'll ,.., 18211 BEACH BLVD. ·eo 2eo zx 1204 4 flU TlllfTS Clear redwood ihelvlng 5 ~ White ProY1ncttl 9 wood dltlca & twlvel 18' PRINDLE Cat. dbl. C wma lllft HUNTINGTON BEACH
S.... Perton. mature. P/ .After 2,. to 1111 1x12 .. vtrloue ltngtlle. bedroom Mt, tlngle bed. ctlalra, Country Frenc~ trapea, gcS. oond. 2 Mt• " ton model. automatic 141.-1, 141-1111 *"" llU1f In -Sup91' New Condttlon ttrne,HBglftlhop, llllU s1oo tl Call 551-8099 $380. 581·1019 eve-o.lgn,newcott1 S1800. Hiii. Trailer. U .600. tr-.4read)'f(5795).EZ 983-8900 llllULL UMI alt· 8pt,r' nlng1. Sacrttlce at 550. Call 84()..8427 ftnandngl T..., .... S.U.lttn . 833-MOO, Mk for o.wn. •-------•t ..... , •HES Call &42·5&78 tnd plac. ,.__ I Queen Air Form water II O&L II ....,_. ..._ W• need gd. PIOPte to your m111aga now for __ ,,,. bed. Solid ltate l!Mter, SCM Copier, IBM type-2 "'----. 1 jib, 1 .... ~ PT/FT. Own In. Trtln Mt appte. lrom our Npt. only S5.00 lt...l-•I 1131 p ed . c • 1 h s 1 9 o. writer, ctlcolttOf, toner ._...,.. ..... ~ you to bUlld own buel-Bctl. olc. IOf holiday & ••"':--""•••••••••••• 752•8471 & peper. Xlnt. No reu. ntkw. Honde outboerd. neea. Call 645-9210 fOf new travel club. Saltry A.ti.... 1111 Nlkkormat FT3. black, otter Nfutad. 54a-9492 Standard VHF radio.
8'>P\. plu1 comm. plut bonua. ••••'-•••••••••••••••• ·70.150 zoom. 2X con· S400 Berg1trom1 Baby aft. 7pm & wtlndt. New rigging. 19,850. Of --11-L-1-.---1-111---• Call: 833-3740 alt 1PM L.Jtl9Allll llLI vertar. tripod, flHh &. Crib for S1SO. Good beet offer. Call Amy at .rm; TOPLESS MODELS June 15, 9AM, up to 50% llght meter. Mint cond. cond. SwlYll baa otnot ct\tlr. 213-434-3401
,75 DAY • PAID DAILY on alt Inventory. Mwga-1400 or beet offer. 846-2335 S111. Call Event~ <M' Beaut. Swedl9h tloof>. =• g=m~:l. no exp• nee• 82&-2583 m Nord Antlquee (Beck Ma-5407. Thomuvtlle OrMMr. 8 It. 54~ S29,500. 714·552·3701
omntUT'l2• 4 WllD. llM ............
SllVer&do model & loa· dedt (8553). EZ llntn-ctngl ., 111,1111
r...., high etmlnga Must Dool') 189& Harbor, CM. 0 LY M P US X A ( 2) xlnt oond. $225 hfl 1#1 Of 714-821-1503
.::..""b..,.ht hard wOrtclng W.,.,,ou .. per90n. S50 to Manntflclent 7' Square "PoCket" 35mm c.mera 873-8052 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ..... -..""'' .,. '"" • S100 per day. Call • 1 11 t ti ' COCKATIEL bird with -and tmbltloul. No door 730-9111 alt 10:30 Grand Plano • Hanat u y au ome c. never SAG-GUARD DOUBLE '55. V tame. ...,, IU,, Oove/~I Ste.
to door Niii, no ewe or 1880. RoMwood oa11, :::~19:•d 185 OB9 . BED. Part. cond. S80 cage 557~ ~ Hff NEWPOffr BEACH 1--~c"-"'_,..._ul pr~ tr• .__ "'-canted I~•· 8aorlflc• · -645-52-tt> -•••••••••••••••••••••• 133-1111
ntng. Ctlf for appt. =~··············· aaooo. 720-1211. .... "" ,,..., , a-..,,,,, . ......... • ... C....,.. OAK DlrWla tbl 14 oak ~~••••••••••••••••• Unll Wlllll Fiii ••••••••••":'3~•••••••• Side ljaa '79 BRONCO 4x4 •••••••••••••••••••••• .. 1 1 w , 7 Month old pure bred· Part<lng IOI ea1e -belt 'RENTAL PIANOS' n; l1•/Ul-ll4t ll•l•ll.. ohra., 1 • oaptelne. Coffie Fr11 rlcet I USA 11765 Open~.115.mo. To18ftMWCU9Channel. *lll'flBJ..*
Everything OC* a.t..fJun t.~?7~ 8 4 2. 9 0 2 11 eee.:19&7 ~ding•~. 1' blk w. Of FI• Id • p h n 0.' $125. 873-8145 -· DeNrt nme ,. H••l,Exlt.
SALES RETAIL. 9-2. "3 Sefldcaetll .,.t ... ,. .. people Boar Htrbor. 839-7239 714-83&-2n1 Sllpe •Vllll up to 35 It. model with CUit. Int ..
Top Dolar
Paid
with ~ow mlfe1. l.UIRll')'
Ed. Pkg. with pow ........
CNIM, WbK-. Yeu
tupply the fun. (180711).
Juat nMd ....... ~
to make email ~ Fet YOllJI Ctrl pmtt. No old contnact. JI•• I -to auume. No beck ~:~ .':'!. ~ .. ~':0~5,~1'::
Costt ~ 540-5830 Proto UM. ~----~-~
.. ,
Prtmlum prtcee '79 3100X. AM/FM cu-
paid for any ulld car Mtte tape, lo mile&, good
(,Of ....... Gt dome8tlc) cond. $3200. 641-1200,
-V" ext. 2235 d•-. 843-3222 In condition. ,. Pntl evee.
SOL'T, I ~\.l/'U I I 119.•ll!~ '79 310GX: Ntw amlfm
c:atMttt & tlr•. 0... cond. S4300/offer.
84+-0228 Dodge: '71 Dtttun 510 wagon.
IUpef neat, depend ...
$1650. 548·8448 •
642-8836. • General participation. Baby ltemt. tumltln. ., OAK DrMMf wlbeveled ding & Oroom~·Pood~ 6 otl t -dell< d 8 Upright Ctbl• Nelton COM Ari.I. 19/ft. Call ~~01 .. 1~. J(acttDK3~7an31 wicker rattan furniture, -."" Ot"-_._ ltema mirror, 8 dr-.. $200. 1 le "·7 ... 8.. r ~ k 1 hanl Plano Walnut flnlth Part ::tn•g y Patt11on (714) .. ,_., ·-" :l888 llarbor Hh·d non-smkr ...,.r "'" ... _ ....-... ·-,,_ . '""" """•J '""2·7""'" pupa or ... • ..,., ., pawn !Uo er c a rt. . . 7" ......... •" Jutt need .... , ........ P•"" . 'I ooratl id~ •• ~~ 41!5'A Hatlobope a.t M """"""'-' .... ~UV ~ PRICED RIGHT. REPOS. 0 0 n d . 2--y-r-t . -.... ------_.,........., ~·.l l=~-'h• ~·r.;i ~~ • '7.3-0attun.240Z..~
tul s;&,,Wk & commi. Garage Sile ( amodellng) OAK Commode. 3 drt· U. htrltnr 549·8810 S 9 o O I m • k e WANTED: Ood< llPIOl IOf ~t~akJo -:;:''=.:~ Hlghett cUll Immediately AC, m1g1, rune good.
• 1'0 n . Hr• 1 O. 8 . Elec rang:. vacuum ..,., 1 cabinet. Towel AKC PUPPIES, male and .. , ._ .. let 75$.'208 Und• 18' runabou1 & any other to a11um1. No back for your vehlclt. Do· S2800. 548-9435
839-7 163 C all bet leane Cocktall table rtck. $175. 642·9021/ lemele. Yellow. Avall ",."'" Plano New Yamaha up-avell 1hor1 moortng1, pmt1. due. Mk IOf ROM meltfc or foreign. 78 8210, xlnt mpg, tent·
10-12. • · · i.th r:,O,,, vanity. Gtaai &42·7208 6t24. $175 wltll •hot•. 1 Wk old. Colt S800 1111 right w/walnut flnl•h 875-7474 842·4400. 568-1008 551-8285 utlo 2nd ctr. Must ....
SECRETARY . PIT Cllandeller. doore and WMtt1e Ste, Wtlt ReMrve Now. 962'"°4" s2so. 213-630-5252 $2300. 673-3685. • .. 11-11' .... Proto. L/M. 11700 OBO Call CMt,
Acc:utllte typing 50 wpm wlndow1, 38 In wood I• ANTIQUES hu Ju1t ope-Clllhuahuu AKC. male & Den rum. Sola, bf'own vi-BALDWIN Acroeonlc 891-_....._ .... -....... 1980 Toyota 4x4 AC xlnt A•"'1 '-1!'!!!!. 857·9413 + tblllty 10 tran1etlbe the, lloueehold Item•. ned In San Clemente.. A lemale, ltwn color, 5 mo. nyt. qn u llld..._bed & net Ill• walnut FNnch _,. ,..., ....... cond $8.000 557.ja80 ••••• ••• •••••••••••• -.8-1-0-1--2-0-8-8-0-0 Good wlpeople, to ru~ etc. 305 Orchid Ave (In fine H1ortment ol ex-old 548-0471 matching overstze c:halr. ieoi & match'g1
• benctl. l1t1re1t1• ltl ltll · or 495-9139 · ~!!.aJ. ••••••••• !!.!! m 11: ,•,un, I~ w' 1e111 ,
one pei1on cllurch of-alley) Fr1 and Sat, June ceptlontl quality anti· WlreFoxTerrlerAKCpup. 4 brn vinyl club cllrt. Xfnt. cond. S800. ttnl ...... 0111 .... -.--------'82 Honda Clvlce 4 dr. $4798/bltolr.543--0115,
flee CM 548-2237 lath end 19th. 9 AM to 5 quee ha tie.I hand... Female. $300. 6'44•7701 714-522-8281 A• # 171 73 Toyoi. ~d Crullef $131:41 "";..tu,,.., mo. &45-3921
i iii. i .ii.iiiiiiiiiiii PM e WI r ' Wtgon, cu11om bucket ..,.... ,..... --------,.__ .. lec:ted from the H~ (714)828-0224 Bmn 11111 Plano. oak, 1111&11 upright, Ml-4IOO 14 •n. ... t•. AM/FM cauette, Cl<>Md and 48 mo 1ea ... '75 Oat 810 4 ~ good
E lllllTllY ~!~.~!!i........... ~:'tanC::~~~: ~~-FrH 1, ,,. IHI ···niiiiiiiiii.i··· ~ nne cond. 1n &. out, suP WANTED • excHG CB. S2iSO. 875-833.5. ALL s7~ie:L,189 c:ondltton. s1.ooo 0, belt
ntry level ad agency turel9ourepeclalty 412 •••••••••••••••••••••• tuned, hat 1tool, can IOfUMOfmagnlflOent-47' fnW ffl/J ofler.831-7188
poatttlon avall. Mult be SWAP IEO No E. Camino Reel. Free to good llome, 2 yr wtetand S1SO 840-8n7 deltver. S750. 847·5672. e1 •••••••••••••••••••••• 1981 Detain 200 sx. W. taep0n9ible, Ofganlzild & 4118·6225. Open Tuel· old neut. M cat, decla· J,..l 1110 Klngtbuty Upright Plano, er. tallboal 57·2894 lmYllUT '12 II REMEMBER DADI xury pkg, hu -vthlng.
type 50 WPM. Salary Every Sunday, 8tm-3pm. Sat 11-5 or by appt. wed, fovlng. M0-?018 ••••••"'-•••••••••••••• good tone, nice origlnet m-a.. llarlu with • Very c:latn, mult HU.
l800 mo. Call &41.0111. Orange Cout College. ... • ... Older male Cockapoo. Colombian ~MERALOS Cae4net. $495. 847·7017 Slfpe-;:ij'Jay, wk or mo. IUZD 2 W.I, Father'• "-'Y MMUQe $8,500. 1-6415-4783 or ~~~~~~~~ .Felrvlew & Arlington. --good dlapoiltlon, nd• Your choice, only $20 · ~51 Automatic tran1., tlr &42·5878 aft 5 , ... 97.1135 Coett Meta. Admlttlon Sat-Sun J une 19-20. good hme w/older per· per 1tonel 84()..8888 ,,..,,,_.... 1114 oond. &. O.D. (4448). EZ Win 4 FREIE TICKETS ~Alf/TYPIST free to buyert. Seller Free tdmlalon exhibit & eon Ev. 983•1172 .~....,•••••••••••••• WANTED: 85' allp or ltntndngl to an..,..,. a.,,,. ·75 D1t1un 280Z, xlnt
With p!Maant ~ Reeervatlont/lnfo. ealM. Huntington Cent• · ' llJl#Jla..,, "" R~ • 1 Auaw mdl n; 3 mooring for Hllboat, •Y 111,1121 Olllty ~..... cond, new U... AM/FM, fOf pkllh offtce In New-556-5880 Mall 405 Frwy & Beech LOVMble black Lib type 9 •••••••••••••••••••••• #1. & 2 1~··· 2 Win· Npt. Sch. Joe, 84+-0502 a..tftad..... tlr, $4250. 552·1823
r,ort Center. Accurate Blvd, H.B. mo. old puppy to good INTERARMS MK. X clleat« M22 L 1 MauMr • -.., ,.1 II
Yplnn at 85•70 wpm Garage Sale • l.ot• ol home. 842·3557. Profe11lon1lly Cu1tom 270; 1 Python. 1350. DOOi< SPACE. 10. min. t~ -·-• • AJh..... f'/i 'll 241 Z word •proott1I · Ooodlell SaVSun 10-4 Amer. otk 1ldeboud, F 1 C k S let Buflt Rlfle. Heavy Barret 873-0851 N.B. Jetty, 18 & 32 ... UI PIKIP •-••••••••••••••••••• N-... , •. Rebullt en·
rtence. helpful niu~x=t 879 Arbor St. (Nr seth l china clolet & early elec. = e chi: tr t p~ .22·250 with Rtdflald FrHll water tack II 4 avtll. NOW. 873-6204 SlfWfado rnodell (490e). llW • nn glne. Very cllln. 15,000.
nl'0111afy. No 1hor· Monl'OYI•). c.M. •tove. 873-6423. home. ~71. ~.B. ~009:_:c:f~ ~;:t !:; Penn. reet. v reuo-..,,. 11#1 I EZ nnanc1ng1 ALFA .. hi _64_2·-345 __ 8 ____ _
thend. Evalll, 944-2507. Garage Stle 386 e. 19th ....... Ill 11"1, M Golden Retrtewr H~ &42-1&70 556-048(). nabte. Ctll eeo-"XM4 'iiJ HIO •Y 111,1111 or~t:,..0:-t '74 Dat1un 280Z. 2+2 11.n ..
'
ST. CM, Sat. 9·2. Clo· $125 848-0378 old lweet t ' ' -•-~i-•••••••••••••••••••••• and Ip! New bltek paint. Wire
thea,toye book• yrt • empert-•••M--''m"" 14' Ski Boat w/75HP ................ Beforeyou yourAJf9 wheelt. Afr, amlfm. PART TIME. 20 llour1 ' · · A-"••HI Ill ment. 642-8020 8 to 20. ,_.., 36t per It ,,... "" Evlnrude, and trtlltr. Dove/Quall Ste. Romeo ~ coma $4500/ bit otr. 847-7072
flel(lbll. Small R&D firm Small Home Day Care .'Tm:':'.•••••••••••••• 3 blk 9 wk klttent free 77,,1491"".:0.~ . •••••• ••••••••••••••• t1700. 548-3304 NEWPORT BEACH __ ... i... nteda general Slc:f9tary. ltemt. Other houMtlold & . HARBOR AREA ...... 'w-·__... & lltt ' box " en, mo-. BEAUTIFUL 25" RCA In and ~ 19t ... .,.., t,,.. '72 240Z. New Ptrelllt,
Accurate typing, llght garage mite. Sat (June APPLIANCE SERVICE ;;';;d s;t'..7385 ¥ Lftl IAUM Color TV ..... 2 yr wmty. f. fj 133-1111 GTV8 and SplOlf Veloc.I Rlcaro ... 11. Xlnt run-
bookkeeptng exper dell-19th). 9-4. 207 Santa Wulfl recond., guar. · 30 Hlflum Ballona •148. F,... dell~. .!!-! .. !!~.!!....... 1001 ... Tl nln9 cond. '2500.
rad. Stnd reeume and ll&bel. Coet• Meat. appllancM. 549'-3077 Free: "Suki''. Poodle/ Delivered +card Perfect TV John'• &4&-1788 c.,,,_,, i.Ji '12 TlllTI 4d 848 Dove Street 642-1737 Douglal
Mlary ~emente to G , .. I I Sal I "'llPUlllll Terrier F. 2~ yrt old, lor every occulon. 25" Color Con1ol• TV, ,.., "" Long bad P.U. Only 3200 NEWPOR'T BEACH '73 240Z. amllm, ale.
B Leb, Inc 201 W. Dyer II• a llf I La 9574133 ·~~d, lie d . •lloti. Batutlful for brld•• & derk walnut cabinet, •••••••••••••••••••••• ml. Mullt 1111. '8016. 112-1111 aut12~.~~'.a~~ good. Ad. Unit B, Santa Ana FRI/SAT 8:30 to 4j)m. Wkobft~ 548--2201 (Marie oraet fOf qradUatlon &. work• greet. S195 . '75 Toyota. JClnt, ner-1ft9, 548-0351 vvv .....,......._
92707 Honda blk .. furn, anow W.....,/Or'Jflf S125 MCh. M In) Father'• o.y. 873-4419. .,.1'80. ~I""· tlrte, $2950. '53 Ford F-100, 316 CtleYy '78 A&.FUT"I\, ellvef, mint ,,., , •
... Idle ltenll e.u-Se7e •kit, Iota more great AefrlgetatOf 1225. D1tt11 Fr• Kitten•. M. & F.. CHANDELIER. Brue & Two 28" color ·TV'•, xlnt ""' ang, turbo 400 tra,ne. cond .. 52~ ml, 13.999. ••••••••••••••••• • ..:; thlnge. 25& Sherwood St. wuhlr S100. 846-5148. 8 Wk•. Crvttal. 20 lh-. 24" Ill~ cond, ttlkl bOttl, 1250 • ..,,,,,., ... 1141 Xlnt body&. lntr. l.ott of M0-5SS$10AM-10PM
1. Place yow ad In th• Dally Piiot
Cl .... fttd aectlon {It'• beet to run 3
cSap fOf mUlmum expc>tUN). If you
pay tor your eel In ldvenoe we'lt run It 3
.. and only oharge you tot 2t
2. Get your Fl•'E 0.,. Sate llgnl (Ill· you hJNe to do le oome In to the Deity
Plol I. pay fOf Vo4Jt eel In advMCe -"'••you two,, x 17 ltgN -,,. tA c:NfOe).
3. "'°' ... pliloe Of merchandile. . . . . . .
M&-7803 3 0 '' w Id 1 . S 2-2 5 , 813-1544 9119, 845-7194 •••••••••••••••••••••• dwome. S3000 or beet -Aune er-at. Mlllt .... 2 lono haired klttent, (blk) 641...&970 dyt Foxl: tarve. ext~. Offer. 846-1151. lllJI 111 $4800. &40 89"
approx 12 Wka. Fr ... tp COIN COl.LECTION -·-- -"•w ·:-~-r o~ 1275 ;75 CMv ~ Pickup. good ......... ~ ........ ,... ..... .,.,
gd home. 813-1107 PAPER MONEY - -..-. · tlrM lft9lnl, 2 Olla tllnkt CHOICE INVENTORY -•••••••••••••••:.:.':l
Free to good home, tM-BASEBALL CARDS ....... ,, tee-98&3 78 Motobleanl Moped, ueOo. 646-2Me VOLUME SAi.ES
pherd pupptea. 10 wkl. STAMPS Todd 536-0832 24" Color TV, RCA, re-gd ~ ~ 080. 77 Ford F250, 4 wtll ~r, 4 ....
e3l-3nt .OUTSTANDING WHEEL· moteeofttnlt, IWMllflOof 7M208 epd manutl trent, AM/ ~ -l'lnltrut "" CHAIR. Llk• new m•· rriodel, top condition. '78 V!8PA CIAO !TIOPld. PM. 13150. 141-5008 .... .. I La.EI
• • • • •• ••• ••••• ... ••• • • ollank:tlly & nM)' rau· l2t0/0IO. Ae-41885 aood condition. ~ Of I **' BUY** =ltered In llght blue ...,, '.... Mel on.. t7M208 1:!,l~.::Cut""' ~ ..
t1e5 eu-1409 ._h••t •,_,.,,,! "'*-MOO· aa1::c,•:=_.:= Good Ulad Fumltur9 l . ..ta=r.............. ...... flM 875-48GI La Hebr'9 • ~ 1 wlll Mii eu.tom made fem..._ ._., •II ••••••••••••••••••••.,.. '87 forcr FtOO 2~ ton ....... Of SELL for Yo.1 maguln• rack•, win• ~••••••••••••••• "II -1.,. aotit.11 380' CID ~ 1111111 _,.. raolte, •tool• & m•a MMeM9!R DA.ct MOO oeo 17&-1421 eftCI ¥en plua ntt t• °'*' llandly
...... UMlll ~:.::--~~.. ,atMr'.1:,~ l<AWA '79, 1<2400. Xtnt :=t~~o:raa:~~ -lll&h!I I 1ft n•IM Art· OI PetntlnO 141-4e71 oond. Onl~ 1100 mt. ter 5 pm ~
La 1&14133 ~ CUCAAO WI!\ 4,,.. TlCKfTSI SMO. 71"""°"°10 •
Apprelaad '3000 le en Angell ca... Honoa IT to 700 tocet J.-.a MN
-fUll-ala men... ... 8AOftflol t1800.. =-mlllle -• :"~ ...... -.. .r.~: 190. N::,;rn 11:&1, 120-1211 Cl-led Ml 918-0tN 11 PON> :.OONV!1'-
100'
7
ST ..... , couiOTION8 1111111111 ... 11Y.-.400 xa. 1,0&0 .-n l&Lw .~ ~~·
A;tb =~~ PU"CHAllO. DAYE tlftCIMlft. Nlw ml, .dent9cl tenlc lftuet .....,_ TllM le.._.. N.JI '-""\Va\.
Sle01090. ,.,... COON,. ........ , .......... ull. UOO oao, o.p .... wit" 4 cap. fCl.l$IOltE •lf.tV
i..r .. pf~OUM oome ...._ .... Mt-.. tafM tMlln, owt. lflt. .. I ·~.~ -:"o~d~uc:'f end IM It tTI. • ~.--IY llU ~"=•=: ..t:: Uu.. ~ ...... .,. 14Me10 ---.:.=: ~· CT.::.. 1IOO ...... ,_...., ...... '1:,
IMutltul 0111 1•1oom ~1: :"~ ,._"$-. "-. ::-:.J~\": "': n.:o~ OM .. Tl M n! ... ..... •9111 e1111U .,.fttty ~.71~~¥!~~---'!"I
• 1111). ~~a 110 ;• ~'U'Jf:'I:: ,.... ._ v~ r:t.=..:.' .. ':'~= ml
Conte"'porary lof1 t loN -~ f'tlll¥ • • ., flfll.\. ,_. ••WI e .... -•.... .....
L,.ve a.t..t Xlftf .. fti. to lftlllll. ~ .. a 1t' ...... y OIRll. lllltllfftt, 41-4400, ltt•1tOI ::==.~~~r-1
OtltlMlr ~*1-:.1.--9-loft ot .,.,,,.., UOO & -. Du9I &JM. ... -..... -... 090. ,....,. • ••• .,., ........ m ....... iiii.uW.:iiJ.illliiiffi'".... .... .... ~ ... m ... ..,_ 11111111-· . ''"' ' " •••. • . ... ..... 1 ... -.......
A l!'!W~Me-!"'tlit_.11-,."'!!l!"'wtr-t-liti--1 r:.:. ... ......
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• ATLASCHIYSUll.ft.YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa. Tel. 5'1&-1934. 3 blocks!
eouth of San Diego Freeway off H..t>or Blvd. Complete
tbodV ahop. Sal ... Service. Pans. Service Dept. open
Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday.
HACH IMPottTS .'i
141 Dove Street. Newport Beech. Tel. 752-0900. Call ua,
... ,. the specialists for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot. Saab&. ~at t.
THIODORllOllMSPOID
Modern NIH, Mf'Vice, parts. body, pelnt & tire depta.
Competitlw retea on i.ue & d.ily "*'tall. 2080 Harbor
8'¥d .. Costa M .... 842-0010 or 5404211.
JOHMSOM & SOM UMCOLM timCUIY
"29~ Blvd .. Coata MeM. Tel. IMC).M3(). 57 YNrl
of frtendly family aervice -Or.nge County's oldeat Lin·
ootn-M9rcury dnlerlhip.
MIWPOITM-1
1100 w. Coatt High~•~. Newport Beach •
.. 94Cllitit0-t7M. The Ferrlri ........ 1
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NIWPOIT DATSUN
888 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the•
trtangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Brlatol behind Vletorta
Station. Salea, Service, Leasing & Parts. We make great
deal91
• NAIEAS CADILLAC .
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mela. Tel. 540-9100. Oran09
County'1 Largest Cadillac deeler. Sal ... Service. Leu-
Ing.
• DAVID J. PtlWPS IUICl(.fOMTIAe.MilDA
Salea • SeMoa • LMalng
Laguna Hilla
24888 Aliela Parkw8y
837-2400
• CHIC1l IVRSOM POISCte.AUOl-VW
415 E. Coast Hwy .. Newport BNch. 873-0900. The only
dealerthlp In Orano-County with theM three great
ITWc• under one roofl ·
• ALAM MA4'MOM ~s...IU
2* Harbor Blvd .. Coeta Mae&. Tel. 548 4300. 8eHle, a.me., Lwlng. :·Mr. Goodwrenct .. " •
• • IOI LONGPRI POMTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange
County'• oldest and largest Pontiac dealership. Safes.
Service, Parts.
• DICK MILLll ftAT/LANCIA
"Pr<>bebly the loweat priced Flats In Southern Calltornle"
(Located 1 mile north of South Coes1 Plaza near Main SI. and Warnet Ave. In Santa Ana.)
120 W. Warner, Santa Ana 557·2132 ...
~AMTA AMA DATSUH
2001 E. 17th Street. Sarita Ana. Tel. 558·781 1. Yourl
Orfginal Dediceted Dataun_ Dee!fr·
• MllACLI MAZDA
We"'9 mc>Yedl Our new location Is 1425 Baker Street,
Costa Mela. Tel. 546-3334. Stop by & v191t OYr brand new
lhowroom and '" why we're the J1 Mazda dealer In Southern California. Sala, Service, Ptlf1S and Leasing.
AMAHBM'MAJDA
"OllJO.C. .............. ..
"" .... ~c:... ..
IOt S. Anehelm Blvd .. Anllhelm _.1820. Jute. north of
Senta Ana Frwy. on ANhelm IMS. Cell ue firatl
'WE ARE HARD TO FN>-eUT WORTH IT!"
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-&410. Serving
Orange CountY for 1.~ years. 1 Mlle So. 405.
SUNSET FOID, IMC.
(Home of Willie the Whale~ 5440 Garden Grow Blvd.,
W.tminster. Tel. 83&-4010.
• OIANOI COUNTT VOLVO
,. 10120 Garden Grove Blvd .. Gerden Grove
Tel, 530-9190. Exclualvely Volvo to cover all vour Volvo
requirements.
New-Uted•Salea•leulng•Partt•SetvlceeBody Shop
Freeway ctOM In the heart of Or8ng8 County .t Gwden
Grove 91Yd. & Brookhum . • COMM&&. CHlftOLlr
.2828 Harbor Blvd., Coata MeM. ~ 20 YMFS MNlnt
ONnge County! S•'"· IMelng • .vice. Cell 546-1200; epec:ial parts tine: 5*9400; body shop tine; 7~.
0
IOY CA.IVll IOu.S IOYCl-IMW
15"40 Jamboree Road. Newport a..ch. IMO 1444. hlea. s..toe, Perts And Leuing.
·fOR FURTHER .. INfiORMATIO.N, OR TO BE PLACED
N THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY. PILOT REP. 642·
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(
UHA N C,f COUN I Y CAL II OHNIA 25 CEN TS
NeW BolSa Chica plan hit by COU·nty
~ ROBERT BARKER airins Friday when the .. .,.., .......... commiHion deliberates on a An altemaUve plan for the county plan that it faulted at a long-dl1puted de~ of hearlna in April in Loe Anaelee. the Bolu Chica is The ataff member• are encountering criticism from
Orant. County officials and recommending denial of the
ocean ting enthuaiuts. county plan.
The alternative plan was Friday's hearir'fi is scheduled
developed by the staff of the at 9 a.m. at the ueen Mary in
California Coastal CornmilSion. Long Beach.
It is expected to receive an Ron Tippets, project manager
~ .......... " ........ ic...... BIG DAY ~ Miriam Limon, 18, ia congratulated by friend
Leonore Berumen at Ocean View High School graduation
Wednesday. More than 4,000 Huntington Beach and Fountain
Valley seniors were saying final farewells to ;chools in
ceremonies Wednesday and tonight.
Argentina ignores
"\
care of prisOners?
By The Asaoclated Preti
Prime Minister ·Margaret
Thatcher accused the Argentine
government today of
"indifference" to the state of
Argentine prisoners in the
Falkland Islands, many of them
auffering from exposure,
malnutrition, trench foot and
dlaease in frigid winter
temperatures.
She told the House of
Commons that Britain has not
procured a cease-fire in the
South Atlantic and noted:
"So far Argentina has not
agreed ,a safe conduct to allow
theee prlaoners to be repatriated
to any. Argentine port. She's
attempting to insist that they go
to Montevideo (Uruguay) which
ia a lot further and would take a
lot longer." In anawer to a
lawmaker's question, the prime
mlni1ter critized "Argentine
tndifference to the state of their
priaonen.
"We're trying very hard to
return the younger conscripts as
IOOl'l as pos&ble," she said. "The·
NATION
ship Canberra will be loaded by
this evening with some 5,000
young Argentine prisoners of
war."
She said the estimate of 15,000
Argentine ~r1soners she.
announced in the Commons on
Tueeday, the day aft.er British
forces completed the recapture of
the Falklands, was based on
figures provided by Argentine
military commander Gen. Mario
Menend~.
''The lat.est estimate is 10,660
but the final figure is not yet
confirmed and the only thing
will be to do an actual count to
make certain of the numbers
who are there," she said.
Foreign Office spokeaman
Nicholas Fenn told a news
conlerence in London earlier
today that "Argentina has
indicated by way of Btwil that it
. is unwilling to receive prisoners
of war at Argentine porta." Brazil
repreeents Argentine interests in
London since the rupture in
diplomatic relations.
Nixon doesn't loolc back
,_.
Ten years after the Watergate scandal that
. destroyed his presidency, Richard Nixon says he never
looks back. P8'9 A8.
Diet prevents cancerf
A .:Mmtlfic panel has found a ~ble link
between hiah-fat dieta and cancer. It advt.I eating
more fru.tta, ereem and whole cerea1a to lower the
rick. Pace JM.
TELEVISION
• I
I ..
::JmBolaa Chica for Oran1e 6,000 realdenUal unit& plu1 a 'access ls cut to the ocean by 1987 . costa, estimated by the cosmty to ty, said the county oppoee1 650-room hotel would create too The alternative plan developed be $180 milllon."
the new ooutal COl1Ul\1-lon .iaff aevere an lmpect on surrounding by the commlaion staff doesn't Another key fropou.1 by the
alternative plan tor a number of areas. include an access to the ocean. col1U1liasJon Ital has drawn the reuons. fire of boating enthuaiaata. Tippets ai.o claima that the The report saya that about $34
There is 9pposition. he aaid, to county would loee 230 .acree that million could be saved by not It involves a suggestion for a
the clusterln& of residential unita &aroviaionally came to the county creating the access. The report small boat Lau~ facility to
and a hotel along Warner a 1973 Bolaa Chica land trade said that associated bridging of be developed Ins of a fixed
Avenue In the ~ntlngton agreement. the Pacific Coast Highway and 1,800-alip facility. •
Harbour area. The county would !et formal Warner Avenue could be avoided The report aaid a dry boat
He said that the plan for about ownership provide that an "and dramatically reduce public (See BOLSA CHICA, Pase A!)
·2 HB slain;
police arrest suspect·
women
·Missing
chi1dren __
found
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ofttie D.., Not lteff
Police have arrested a man
suspected in the grisly slayings of
a young woman and her mother
whose mutilated bodies were
discovered Wednesday in a
Huntington Beach home.
Huntington Beach police Lt.
Merle Schneblin said officers also
have found three young children
iNssing from the Sunnycrest
Lane h ome, describing the
youngsters as alive and safe.
He decllned to release the
name of the murder suspect on
advice of the Orange County
District Attorney's ofllce.
He also declined to reveal
where the murder suspect was
arrested or where he was being
detained today.
Schneblin did say police
haven't made a final
identification of the murder
victims because of the condition
of their bodies. ,
GUARDED -Police cordon off the home at
14952 Sunnycrest Lane, Huntington Beach,
where a young woman and her mother were
Dliltr ...............
murdered and badly mutilated. A suspect has
been arrested in the slayings, police said.
"The bodies were so badly
mutilated that we'll have to go
through dental records and
fingerprints to make the
identification," he said.
Russia: 'record of tyranny'
But authorities did confirm
that the Sunnycrest Lane home
was known to be the residence of
(See SLA VINOS, Page AZ)
R eagan accuses Soviets of aggression ii\ speech at U .N.
Hassle due
over schools
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown
says huge cuta are likely for local
government unless the
Republicans stop insisting on
raising school funding without a
tax increase.
But Democrat Brown 's
Republican counterpart says-
Brown is threatening to cut local
government in order to force the
Republicans into sup~ tax
~: D-San Franci.lco, and
Assembly Minority Leader
Robert Naylor, -R-Menlo Park,
held separate news conferences
Wednesday to explain party
· positions on the state budget bill
for fiacal 1982..83, which begins
in two weeks.
COUNTY
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -
President Reagan, ignoring a
Soviet challenge to renounce first
use of nuclear weapons, accused
Kremlin leaders today of
compiling a "record of tyranny"
through global aggression and
trying to manipulate the peace
movement in the West.
In a speech before a special
U.N. General Assembly session
on disarmament, Reagan
portrayed the United States as a
champion of anns control since
World War IL and challenged the
Soviets to demonstrate by
"deeds, not words" that they are
sincere about curbing the anns
race.
Reagan accused the Sovieta of
violating existing arms control
agreementa and the 1925 Geneva
protocol banning use of cht{nical
weapons.
"In the nuclear ~ra. the major
powers bear a speci•l
responaibili ty to ease these
so~ of conflict and refrain
from aggression," Reagan said.
"That is why we are so deeply
WiU GOP blow it agam?
. Corilidering the brouhaha boWna over in the 4Srd
Congreulonal District, can it be poulble that a
Democrat will allp through thei Republican backbiting
and get elected? Coutlng column, Pace Bl.
STAT E
Hughes scholarship eyed
A pair of Howard Hwrbm fans want to let up an
aviation acbolanhij) tn hi name at a LOI AnpJa
aerompece colJeae. p_,. A 7.
Medlly in H•wallt.
TvWlril ntUrnlnl to.OIU6rila. b'OID Hawaii ala.)'.
fw n.hGrtaUam aboi&t brinillW fruit pomblJ lldll\
wtda the,_.. -..a, .... Cl. . .
\•
concerned by Soviet conduct."
The president spoke before the
same forum where Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko drew heavy applause
Tuesday with a declaration from
Soviet President Leo nid
Brezhnev that his country will
not use nuclear weapons first in
any conflict.
Beirut Airport
hit by shelling
By Tbe A11ociated Presa
Beirut airport came under
heavy shelling today and Israeli
armored columns moved against
Yasser Arafat's guerrillas east of
Lebanon's capital
The fighti,ng came amid
reliable reports that the Palestine
Liberation Organization offered
to discuss with the Lebanese
government "a new form of
Pales tinian ptesence in
Lebanon."
The PLO leadership denied
INDEX
reports it was prepared to lay
down it:s anns, but engaged in a
flurry of secret diplolllatic
activity Involving U .S .
presidential envoy Philip C .
Habib and Lebanese President
EliM Sarkis.
The Tel Aviv oouunand said
Palestinian guerrillas bombarded
Israeli troops around the airport,
damaging three parked airllnera.
It said Israeli forces east of Beirut
also came under a barrage of the
(See ISRAEU, Pase A!)
At Your Service A4 Ann Landen B2
Erma Bcmbeck B2 Movies Dl-2
Busineel Cl0-11 Mutual Funds ClO
Cavalcade B2 Public Notlca In;3,4
Oae.tfied Df-8 Spor11 Cl-4
Comk:a ~ Stock Marketa cu
en.word B6 TelevWon a
Death Noticies 85 Thee ten Dl-2
Edhm1a1 Al0-11 Weather A2
Sn~t Dl-2 World NeW'I A3
&rolmpe B2
SPORTS
I
I -
·~
l •
l • •
0ranoe OoMt DAILY PllOTmturldey, June 11, 1112 , •
. ...· ... · ...................... ~------------~!""""-.-~----~---"!!!"-11111111'"'!"'""'!'------------------------------------------------
ALTERNATIVE LAND USE PL.AN -Bolsa Chica •
SLAYINGS SUSP ECT. • •
a 27 ·year-old nurat named
Shirley Harbula.r Dayco; her
mother, Amtlta Ha.rbular, e&,
and tM nune'• &hi. chJ.Jdten,
IP' 7, 0 and 1.
Schneblin aaJd ~ were the
chllclren who were found sate
early today.
Mrt. Dayco wu known to be
11paraied from her hu1band,
Rene O.yco.
After the grlsly dia."ove.ry WU
made Wednelday, oftk:en began
aearching for Dayco.
A female relaUve contacted
police Wedneaday becau.e she
had been unable to reach Mn.
'Dayco by telephone and beca1.&1e
the nune had not come to work
as echeduled. She was employed
at St. Joeeph Hospital in Orange.
At about 11 a.m., officers
found the partially clothed
I SR AELI. • •
bodJee of tho two women in a
bedroom.
"The bodlea were hackocl,
rather than beln1 1tabb d,
Schneblln llid.
He llid no murder weapon
waa found on the preml1ea,
althouah the elaytnp appeared
to have been committed by aome
eort of cuttlna lnltrument with a Iona blade, 1\ich u a meai cleaver
or a rMChete.
Schneblln said polke believe
the murders were committed late
Sunday or early Monday.
A spokeswoman for St. Joeeph
Hotpltal said Mrs. Dayco had
been employed there as a
licensed vocational nune for two
years. working first in the
dialysis unit, then the surgical
unit.
/
.· ..
rockets and Israeli gunboats
back. •
neutralization ot the airport
compound, aaylng further
damage would be a "national
disaster."
PROPOSED PUBLIC MARINA
Cw/launch rampa)
B~t Salim Salam, the
managing director of Lebanon's
Middle -East Airlines, told
reporters that Israeli gunboats
shelled the airport and "two
Boeing-720s belonging to MEA
were wrecked and the airline's
building sustained several direct
hits."
The airport, closed since the
lsraells invaded 12 days ago to
stamp out the guerrillas, has
been i n the center of bitter
fighting as the Iaraelis and
Lebanese Christian allies cloee in
on Palestinian strongpoints
located nearoy.
A smaller jet and a Lebanese
helicopter also were destroyed. A
group of Lebaneee and foreign
press photographers saw the
wrecked aircraft on the tarmac in
front of the previously damaged
terminal building, next to
another Middle East Airlines
Boeing burned out earlier in the
fighting.
Lebanese state radio said
Wedneeday the Iaraelis and their
rightist Lebanese Christian allies
seized a key Palestinian position
near the airport. Israeli sources
said the Christians overran
PLO-held building& on the east
side of the airport's runway. The
PLO said it repelled an Israeli
assault there, killed 26 soldiers
and wrecked two tanks.
ALTERNATE PLAN -Map shows various proposals for
development at the Bolsa Chica marshlands as recommended
From Page A1
BOLSA CHI CA. • •
Salam app~a.led for storage and parking facility could
be located after dredgi·ng to
Senior hits graduation ban
While about 400 of his Ocean
View High School classmates
were participating in graduation
ceremonies Wednesday night,
Eric Reinholtz went out to dinner
with his parents.
"Graduation is a family kind of
thing," Eric said. "I feel l let my
mom and dad down.
"I know what I did was
inunature. But I feel cheated.
The principal (George Bloch) is a
neat guy, but he went too far."
Abbott said the van suffered
further damages at the hands of
a crowd that gathered after the
air was let out of the tire.
Eric ia a senior with a B-plu.s
grade average, he says. Superintendent Frank "Jake"
Abbott said today that Bloch had
been very clear with both
students and parents that pranks
wouldn't be tolerated,
particularly in the last week of·
school.
He said the taillight and
headlight were kicked out, but
not by Reinholtz or Crawford.
But he and friend Brian
Crawford had been banned from
participating becau.e they let the
air out of the tires of a achooJ van
late last month.
Mrs. Reinlloltz, an employee
' with the Ocean View School
District, questioned the form of
discipline.
The two boys and their parents
went to court but were
unsuccessful in convincing a
Superior Court judge to overturn
the school decision.
Eric, a football and baseball
player, and his mother, Joyce,
had pleaded for another form of
punishment.
"They are super kids but they
were forewarned and knew the
consequences.
"We want to have a dignified
graduation that all parents can be
proud of. We've had problems in
the past with kids goofing off in
the last week."
"They let him participate in
the fun activities like the senior
breakfast and an all-night
graduation party but not
graduation. It affecta us as a
family."
Diplomas for the two boys
weren't withheld.
-ROBERT BARKER
Coastal
Pertlal c11erinO In the Intend .,_ this 1nemoon C'*-ol
meaaurebl• drlr:zl• 10 percent
today. Low cloud• toNght 111'.d
Friday with p1rll1I 1ftemoon Cleaflng. Overnight lowS 64 to 62.'
High• Friday 6 4 to 72 .
Tempeflluree In the Huntington-~ 111'114 r1nge lrom 1 low of
611 to • high of 69.
ChesaPNk• BllY or the ooeen.
but 22 rNChed eh«• on their
own.
Al the N.w Rivet Air Station ne1r Jackaonvltle, N.C., five
M.nn. -• lnju(ed when their 12-ton CH-33 Sea Stalllon
heliooptlf WU ov.rtumed OI) t"41
ground by 1 60-mph blHt ol
wind. Two_. lnjuted Mrloull)'.
IUthorttlM Mid.
A tornldo overturned moblle
homH, uprooted Mverel large tr-Ind knocked dOWn teVflf11
powet NnM In e rvrll pan ol
Hernett County, end 1everal
.... , .. -· NPOrted In other pert• ol North Carollna.
In Allentown. Pa .. • dinner
honof1nQ ,_ Eegle Soouta w ..
lntlfl'UPled wt*1 an overllowlng
1torm d<lln began pouring w1ter
Still c ool
Ehewhere, lrom Poln\
Conception to the Me11lc1n
border end out 60 mllea: Ughl
v1rl1bl• wind• thla 1ftemoon,
becoming -t to eouthwelt 10
to 16 knoll thla evening
South-1 ewe11 o1 2 to 3 t.et.
Low cloud• and locel tog Uw'Ough
tonight. through a gl-..ncloled getlef), __ ...;~----------------Into the greod blllroom of the
Allentown Hiiton. About 400 tferk1 aftd Northumberland S S mary people trudged through the countlM, and locel floodlno wu • • Um llood1d g1llery Into the IHI reported In aome communlllee.
Soutn Florida t>r9*1 ror-. eleglnt. but dryw hotel lobby.
thundey1torm1 1od1y ftetti a Utllltl•• reported p~wer
troplcel <*tuf'blnc;e ttiet ..,_ ~'" &udll. Mon~ •• rrem· pe•atures the eYICUIUone ~ ~ of f I • '
peop .. In centr11 and weetefn • •
Cuti• )ult two WHkl •"-'. c·-•~lor.m·a hurrlo1ne hit th• Mme v 11, .aJil 1 .. Lo '-
Cll.lllng 23 deltha. The N1tlonet W•thlf Service Atl>eny 77 611 .~6 El1ewhere, a •••• of aay1 Southern C1llfornl1'1 AlbuQUI H 85
thundetatorme patklng 80-"'911 per1l1tent morning eloudln•H' Amatlllo 82 et
wlndl, hell Ind tornedoel '"Pl could produoe 19t'lnklM Friday. Aahevtlle 84 66 .01
eaat through the mld·Atllntlc but 1n11et1 moet .-lllould get Atllnta 69 67 .02
1tat11 Wed.-day night, klllng a hazy aunehlne IOl'Mllme befor9 Atllntc Cly 72 65 .02
beby In Wiii Vlrglnlll. ~ "mael. Aua11n 112 71 aellboell oft the Virginie COMI 1eo41ted t11underlll-• could Bellllnofe Ml M t.22 end ftlpplng I Mlt'IM hellc09t« In hit mountelna. ~ end the 81111nga 75 55 1.36
NOf1h CerollnL ~ V"""-Y and tlfl'IJ*et~ Blrmlnghm 9' ff R4111dertta of Olde end "-d l .. bl oooler. lllmlrQ 75 53 . 13
oountlee -. told to ~ for Frld1y'1 high• ere predicted Balle 84 66
etrong gu1ty wlnda, 1tre1t from 10 In Loe Ang41lee to • eo.ton 85 65 .69
lloojllng Ind lightning tocMy end. m1xlmum 16 et the beechff, Ir~ IM 76 ~. t>et.-i 78 enc1 ee 1n ~. lluffllO e1 53 .01 H~ r9dlo Mid tadey 1,400 • from 112 to 102 In the high dellrt lluftlngton 68 66 .03
peop .. and 9,000 clttl• were end ~ M end 109 In low ~ .,. 74 48 • 18
011-Ft Wth
Deyton
Dlnv.r
Del MolnM
o.trott
OUtUttl El PMO
Fergo
Fllgatalf
Greet Fiiia
Hlltford
Hellnl
HonolulU
Hou.ton
lndne4>411
Jecl<en MS
JICklnV!le
Kena City
l..M VegM
Uttle Rock
Loulev\1111
Lubl>octl
Memphle
Ml.ml
Mll'nuk•
85 ee ee 67 .156 n 64 76 156
&4 51
85 44
115 85
78 63 n 48
73 63 .03 85 65 .70
76 54 .20
87 72
111 76
67 411 eo 1a 2.ee
115 73 .07
75 156 101 75 ao 62 73 58 .31' ao 62
711 71
" 19 .28 158 45
~ from Plrw Oii Alo In dellrte.. ... _ ... , ...... llO n ·s mog." . wHtern Cuba 11 • re111ll ol 8oeter9 l'Yom Point CCMiceptton CNrtetn WV 87 9' .48
:t1oodlng from a tr~•I tottle Melllcln border_,~ ctwtnl NC 81 II .23 The Air Qulllty Menegement depf .. elon OVef the n II llgfrt, 'IWtlble wlndl lonlgM end ~ 73 50 .21 D11tf1et ~ ~ t/11
vuo1t1n Penln11111 1nd th• eerly Frid•)'. becomlnr _.t-~.... 82 46 quality for Mnlll1w l*IPMS
neertJy wet9r9 of the IOUlflMlt eoutll .. •t et 10 to 1 knot• ....,_,,,.,. 10 to . 17 In moet .,... of "" 8outtl
GIJlf of MelCJoo end c.1bbMr\ during th• 11ternoon with • ~ t1 56 .ft Alf &Min, with good •
.... IOUthwe1 '"" runn1nO 2 to 3 C1rnb11 SC 111 70 .10 loreoMI fof thl o..t1, ooeet.i Plf1I of 32 nottMrn oounllel In ..... COlumM 70 .. .62 end "*'""111 ,.glonl. . .::,,~od':'9•= :":::. Where to olll (toll frM) fpr
'il*Me biiilf' of wind Md rain .._. ~ulatil :::-~~-IURf RIPIRT. ,!i!""' .. ·=::c= T~.W.Va.,hllfof• ..._.....Md .. ..,...IO
1CMndl ---tree ... on 1 OOYnt1e1: (I00) 111 ... 110
mobll• 11om1 end 111rtocated AQMO ._. CerMr: (IOOI l ·montll·old Alcherd ".,..." • . ~ _a_u _ _... __________ _
~ UI. Mid.,.,..,...•. !.!.':r!.I ... A~ ,,...J. :'.)~
Utlll1)'
0
olflcl1l1 l l ld 11,000 ~. -M"i." .:::d ':" .f , U~a ,__Md~ -...., ,,...., ....,. ,.._ 11 TODAY
,...., d11tln1th•1tona i nd =-~...::.,,_, ~= = 11 ...-i. 1ttl1P.ll\. =:;o,:.=--.. u: = ll _..,,....w .... =-~l!i~· m = 1 ' 1:: ~
l'i ;7• !ii.15! .... ..=.. ~=--.;. _
,., I .. .. ...,.... ft ....... , t.11\,
t, at .... Twl~I T~'I TIOH1 Hlf'I f1H l.M. IA'# tJtr ''"'' ._.. •.:-:.:r: .. II ... , t.M.,
I • .,. tiiii OINliMI ........ """
' '
support a public marina for an
estimated 33,000 boats on trailers.
It said the boaters could be
accommodated by lifting the
Warner Avenue bridge to a
height of 30 to 35 feet.
But Bill Hartge, president of
the Huntington Harbour
Property Owners Association,
claimed that the plan would send
too many boats through the
harbor.
"We've got as many as we can
handle now."
Hartge, a former city engineer
and public works director in
Huntington Beach, also said
there Is an insufficient area to
increase the height of the bridge.
There is a substantial
difference between th e
alternative plan and the county
olan on the issue of wetlands.
The alternative plan calls for
the restoring of 850 acres of
wetlands in add! tion to the
existing ecological preserve. 1:'he
county's pl.al) calls for restonng
364 acres.
Development is prohibited on
wetlands.
There's yet another argument
on the restoring of wetlands by
the use of reclaimed wastewater
as suggested in the alternative
plan.
•
.. . .. , . ..... : : ...
LEGEND
~YISITOlt S£RVING FACILITl£S ~ (w/p1rtttn9 below 9r1de)
~ CMSTM. lllfl£MOUIT D.-J lllOUSHY/ MASH
~LOW OCNSITY RESIDENTIAL ~ 4 du/1c -60 units tot1l
D ..:D. DENSITY RCSIO£HTIAJ..
lS du/1c -1140 units tot1l
l'J;l POTUfTIAl S ITC f Olt
~ CONSOllOAT[O Oil
PROOUCT I ON
~HIGM OEHSITY RCSIOfNTIAL ~""Sil 20-35 du/1c -5~50 units tot1I
~ L IMCAR PAJIK/Cl'[N SPACE
~l'UBLIC ACCESS
Sourer: Technlc•l Servlc~s Division, C111 f . Co1st1l COll91sslon
by the staff of the California Coastal Commission. Residential
areas show number of dwelling units per acre.
,
Huntington hoy
• contest -winner •
A 9-year-old Huntington
Beach boy is the winner of
the Boys Club of America fine
arta contest for a water color
of a covered brid_ge.
Sacha Balon, who attends
Eastbluff Elementary School
and Is a member of the Boys
Club of the Harbor Area in
Newport Beach. took grand
prize in the 7 to 10 category.
More than 1,000 boys clubs
•Four students from
Orange Coast, Golden W~t
and Coastline community
colleges have received
scholarships from Local ~11
of the American Federation
of Teachers. Total value of
the grants exceeded $700.
The winners are Nbuog Thi
across the nation participated
in the Washington D .C.
contest sponsored by the
Epstein Arts Foundation of
New York. •
Hason 'a work will be
displayed in the Corcoran
Gallery of Art in Washington
D .C. and will be shown
around the country, before
being returned to Newport
Beach next May.
Kim Pham, a Coastline
student from Huntington
Beach; Jonatlwl Noavok, an
Orange Coast student from
Costa Mesa; and BODI VI
Cbi~m and Tbo V. Dou, both
Golden West students from
Westminster.
Sailcloth Is.!Yot
Just For Sails •••
It also makes a great casual pal')t, because it is dura-
ble, lightweight, and comfortable. Perfect for the
active man, or as Storekeeper Michael 6ueche sug-
gests. for the man who just wants to relax.
Available In 10 colors.
rattrer's day ...
Sunday.
June
20th.
..
JDL claim s responsibility for auto bomb
BJ TM ........ Prat
ROMll -A Palelttne Llberation Orpnlzadon
· official 'W• killed today when a bomb· e~
under hll ·CU' on a Rome tuwt. and a Le&ulile 1\Udent wM lhot and killed in another au.ck, JtOllce
..sci.
.
Kamal Hu11etn, 33, of Amman, Jordan,
identified by the PLO N deputy director of lta
Rane office, WM killed tnatantly when a bomb
I
connected to ~e tpUUon system of hla car exploded,
inveet.lgaton l&ld.
A man cla1mlna to relritent the Jewt.h Armed
Rellatance of the Jewfah Defen11e League called the
New York headquarters of The Aleociated Pre9I
early today and Hid hi• organization was
responsible for the uu-1.natlon of the two Arabi in Rome.
1
:Over-the-air TV deregulated
. WASHINGTON -The Federal
Communications Commission voted today to
dereaulate over-the-air pay te.levi.alon, raising the
possibility of such service being initiated in dozens
of cities.
By a unanimous vote after brief diacussion, the
agency agreed its existing rules had served to.
restrict development of the. industry and thus limit
the diversity of programming.
A pay TV station operates like a conventional
station with one major exception. Instead of
continuously transmitting a signal that can be
.received by any TV set, such a station trammits a
scrambled signal that can be received only with the
aid of a decxiaer. .
GOP agrees to back federal budget
WASHINGTON (AP) -House and Senate
Republicans agreed today to back a federal budget
for next year calling for a $20.9 billion tax increase
but leaving a deficit of slightly over $103 billion,
officials said.
''We have an agreement among ow.tlvea.'' Sen.·
Pete V. Domenici, n -N.M., chairman of the Senate
Budget Committee, said after two days of private
talks involving GOP leaders from both houses.
Republicans sought the agreement among
themselves so they could present a united front in
1ormal negotiations on a compromise with
Democrats.
Cleveland Press prints last issue
CLEVELAND -The Cleveland Press will
cease operations with today's editions, according to
notices posted in the building of the 103-year-old
daily newspaper.
"Today will be the last issue of the Cleveland
', Press," according to a statement given to employees
by publlaher Joeeph Cole.
The Presa is the sixth major daily afternoon
newspaper to collapse in the past year.
:Housing hill 01ired in Congress
WASHINGTON -An emer~:.~
appropriations bilf containing $3 b'1lion 1n
. aid for middle-income families ia heecffna t.:k to
the Senate, mired in a bitter dJspute awr the
personal finances of members of c.ciacn-.
Unless senators .gree to llmit their outmde
earnings to $18,200 a year -58 of them earned
more than that last year -the $8.9 billion bill could
~TiffiTia
die, leaving aeveral government agencies pennil~
for the next three months.
And even if the Senate settles the question of
members' earnings, President Reagan is expected to
veto the entire package because he oppc!t!S the
housing-aid provision. Backers say a vote to
override any veto would be cloae.
Indictment due in draft case
SAN DIEGO -Two San Diego youths who
failed to sign up with the Selective Service System
have been notified indictments charging them with
failure to register are being prepared against them,
a U.S. Attorney said Wednetday.•
"They have one option left and that is to
register before the indlctments are delivered," said
Peter Nunez, ~.S. Attorney in San Diego.
Nunez said four San Diego youths are on a
Justice Department list of 225 draft-age men facing
proaecution fee failure to register. He said fhe
maximum penalty on conviction is Cive years in
prison and a $10,000 Cine.
Judge blasts censure efforts
SAN FRANCISCO -Mono County's only
Superior Court judge, smarting from a state
commission recommendation that he be censured by
the California Supreme Court, uys his accusers
were poll~y motivated.
Harry Roberts said by telephone from his home in
Bridgeport after the recommendation Wednesday.
"Naturally I am upeet and chagrined by ~. but
there ia no question of moral turpitude."
Roberta, 67, said that the move by the state
Commi.alion on Judicial Performance "raises some
very serious fundamental problems" about the
independence of judges.
"I bad a sterling reputation as a lawyer and
thought I had a good reputation as a judge," Judge
Court fees OK'd for abortion case
SAN FRANCISCO -The California Court of
Appeal has ruled the state must foot the legal bill
. for thoee who fought restrictions on abortions for
would be shared by various groups, but American
Ovil Libertiee Union spokeswoman Elaine Elinson
said Wednesday lt may reach ''hundreds of
thoulanda of dollars." · poor women. .
It wasn't known bow much money ultimately
I
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
ThomM P. HIM¥ ,...... _.a.{-.... Olllaer
ec:r,~
• ... DllwMlr .. .-.......
Tom Mwphlne ...,
••H9'W¥ I C.....'111 ........ ,,.., • 4
MAIN Of'1CE • ..... a.,a, C-MeM. CA . ............ , .. u ... c....-...c ......
c:.y ...... ,.. 0r-. c.tl ~·-... ~. ____ , ..................... ,,......,, ...
~ .... .,..., ........... .... _. ... ,... 'll!r .,,~--
Orpha n porpoise
dies of 'st ress' ,
REDWOOD CITY -Stress
may have been the cause of
death for Bradley Stinaon, the
orphaned, week-old harbor
porpoile J\IU'Ded in part after the
Marin County beach where he
, WM found atruggllng for life last.
week.
The tiny mammal. teparated
from ita mother at birth, epent
most of ita life in the intensive
1 cm"e tank at a wild animal park,
lt Wal declared dead Wecmie.tay
by, Marine World president
M.lchllel DemetriOUI.
Mn-e Listening ••• . \
Whal do )'OU likt about the Dally Piion What don't you like?
Call the number below and your me1u1e will be recorded,
tranaibed eod delivered to the appropriate editor.
TM NIM l.l·hour an1wtrtnc Hrvlct mar bt uaed to record let· Len to the edit.qr Oii uy -.t. MaAlbox eontrttMlton mull Include
thet,. ,......, • tel~ number for virrtftteU.. No etreullt6oft
et1U1,plnM. -
Teti YI .Ul'• oe your llWld.
. . . . .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurld1Y, June 17, 1882 HIP
TOP OFF TEMPORARILY -Freeway
travelen have noticed the Holly Sugar factory
taking its lumps lately. But Herb Wilson,
general manager, says the roof is down so
processing ~hinery can be moved to sister
Deltr Not,.....~ .........
plants in Brawley, Tracy and Hamilton City.
The Santa ~ site, now a packaging and
distribution center for bulk and liquid sugar, •
will regain its roof in about two weeks.
Slaying haf fles victiID' s kin
Councilm an says pair were 'as brothers'
Westminster Councilman Gil
Hodges said he's completely
baffled by a shooting episode at
John Wayne Airport last week
that left his brother dead and his
cousin in jail on murder charges.
"The whole thing's just crazy,"
the councibnan said. "The two of
them were as cloee as brothers."
The councilman's brother -
Barkley Hodges -was shot once
in the head as he sat drinking in
an airport restaurant with his
cousin and an unidentified third
man.
Authorities a rrested the
cousin, 32-year-old Laguna
Beach sailmaker Kelly Russell
Daniels. He goes to court June 25.
Witnesses told Orange County
Sheriff's deputies that the y
heard a crack of gunfire, saw
Hodges slump over on the table
and observed Daniels sitting,
allegedly still holding the gun.
The third man ran. Officers
located him later. He was neither
arrested nor identified.
Councilman Hodges dispelled
rumors that he was the third
''mystery" man. He said he was
at his home, studying for the
..
state bar exam at the time.
"Everyone at the restaurant
says they (his brother and
cousin) were friendly, shaking
hands -it doesn't make any
sense."
The councilman said it would
be completely out of character
for his cousin, Daniels, to be
Shot Marines
• r eco vering
Two Camp Pendleton-based
Marines shot during an apparent
holdup attempt Tuesday night
remained in stable condition
today , Camp Pendleton
authorities reported.
Lance Cpl. Lawrence Chavez,
19, of Los Lunas,·N.M. was being
treated at San Clemente General
Hospital for a gunshot wound to
his stomach while Lance Cpl.
Richard Miller, 20, of Edmonds,
Okla., was being treated fOT a·
woun~ his right ann at the
base's Naval Regional Medical
Center, according to a Marine
Corps spokeswoman.
~ _ ..
SALE
carrying a gun. He said he
believes his brother and Daniels
had met to discuss a possible/
business venture making
windsurfers.
"From what I understand,"
Councilman Hodges said, "he
(his brother) had just flown into
town. My cousin was interested
in getting his help on this
project."
He said he's• been told that
following the shooting his cousin
kept repeating, "Now why did I
do that.''
The dead man, a former
Westminster resident, was
scheduled to go to court later this
month on cocaine selling charges,
authorities in Huntington Beach
revealed.
Huntington officers said
Barkley Hodges was arrested last
March on the drug charges.
CoUllCilman Hodges said his
brother recently had moved out
of the state. He descnbed him as
a successful businessman who
had dabbled in real estate,
produce and had served as a vice
president with several finna.
-STEVE MARBLE
.,. _
WOM'EN 1 S AND
BOYS' CLOTHING
25°/o OFF
WOMEN'S
SIZES 6 TO 16
SELECTED WOMEN'S SUMMER JACKETS,
SLACKS, SKIRTS, DRESSES,
SHIRTS, SWEATERS, KNITS
AND SLEEPWEAR
PLUS ASSORTED SHOES
AND ACCESSORIES
(Shoes not available at ewry branch)
BOYS'
SIZES 8 TO 12, 13 TO 20, 35 TO 40
SELECTED BOYS' SUMMER SUITS,
SPORT JACKETS, TROUSERS,
CASUAL OUTDOOR JACKETS, SHORTS
"
LIGHTWEIGHT SPORT AND KNIT SHIRTS
PLUS OTHER SELECTED FURNISHINGS
· 1N SIZES 8 TO 20
On 1011 now tltroqltJun1 26tlt
HTAl41SMIO 1t1t
,
~: Huntington Beach and
1 Fountain Valley and other
., part.ldpating cities are not gettlna
ta a very clear financial picture on
what to expect from cable
~television revenue.
11 It has been heralded recently
t\hat the cities would begin
o receiving cash the first of next
!>year from Dickinson Pacific
s-Cablesystems.
The money was supposed to
"<arrive in time to be plugged into
ti the 1982-83 city budgets. 1'Huntington Beach was expected to
' ~receive an estimated $120,000;
~Fountain Valley, $30 ,000;
0 Westminster, $32 ,000 ; and
Stanton, $14,000.
r . But the good news was
reversed shortly after it had been I released at the behest of a Public
Cable Television Authority
official.
It seems ttrat the PCT-A
officials made an embarrassing
bookkeeping error and the cities
won't get any revenue until
_ January of 1984. Television
programming began in the
summer of 1980.
The PCT A oversees and
supervises cons.t.ruction and
operation of the system. A city
council member from each of .the
~ cities is a director on the
1~"'£A.
I Dickinson Pacific and its
forerunner paid about $380,000 in
(
advancie teee to the PCTA from
1974 to the prwent ln ordet to
meet e~ Incurred ln •ttlna
up the ay1tern.
When gom, throuP bookl,
the money owed bacll to the company by the PCTA from 1974
to 1979 IOIDehoW wu overlooked.
Thia haa been the IOW"Cle of
the problem becauae the cltlet
can't receive any ·televl1ton
revenue until all the advance
paymenta are paid pff. ·
The queetlon of the forgotten
debts not only la confllllng but
embarraaslng.
News of the. "new money''
coming to the cities was grandly
announced to the Huntington
Beach citizenry in a city press
release as well as ln a city news
letter that went to all homes.
Now the little bonanza has
vanished. Some might think thJa is
a rather comic epi.eode-of now you
see it; now you aon't, but in these
days of financial atress for local
governments, it isn't really very
humorous. ·
Some offidala are calling ..f.or a
complete study but it is certain
that clear steps should be taken to
assure that valid accounting
practices are being used and that
projections of city. income from
cable television are accurate.
There should be no repetition
pf this kind of fiscal
embarrassment.
( . ,
fStudents prove poi~t
I Huntington Beach school
'
officials have a right to feel proud.
At a time when schools are t xperiencing declining
nrollments, cutbacks in money
and criticism in some quarters, the
t scores of the pupils continue to
improve. .
Results appear to be about the
same for pupils in the Huntington
Beach City (elementary) School
District and the Ocean View
School District.
L In the city district, students
ifrom the first through eighth
!grades tested well above average.
Fategories includeg reading,
t.mathematics, language and
~pelling. , •
In some areas, the pupils were
a year ahead of their national
counterparts.
In the Ocean View District, all
pupils did well but th,e eighth
graders did best. They generally,
scored between the 75th and 80th
percentile in readingt English and
mathelnatics.
(A national nonnal percentile
would be 50 -half would be
below 50 and half above.)
Both districts have clung to an
emphasis on basic education even
when innovations were in vogue.
The test scores show the wisdom
of their course.
i}Jasil Peterson's gift
I
' ~. Men of vision are rare and
heir passing should be noted,
ven by those who didn't know
hem. They leave important
egacies.
Such a man was Basil H.
eterson, founding · president of
ge Coast College, who died
week in Northern California
t the age of 74.
Dr. Peterson retired 18 years
go and left the area, so a lot of
, olks who live here now never had
he opportunity to know him.
On the occasion of Dr.
eterson's retirement, Walter
ughs, the former publisher
bf the Daily Pilot, wrote: r "l am sure hundreds and
•
hundreds of persons had the same
sinki ng heart when Pete
announced he would be forced to
retire because of his health. He
has been OCC, and OCC has been
him, for so long, it seems
impossible to separate the two.
"His gift to our community
has been a great junior college, an
institution that has transcended all
previous notions of what a junior
college should or could do lor its
district, its citizens and its
students.
''All of us owe him a deep
debt of gratitude for this gift."
That sums up Basil Peterson's
legacy pretty well.
pinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Oallv Pilot. Other views ex· ressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit·
d. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 9262f>. Phone (714)
42-4321.
.M. Boyd I Bartending trick
1 Experienced bartenders who serve
weak drinka zip in the soda, then pour ln the whiskey, and don't mix. No, not
because this makes a better tall one.
But the cuSt.omer's first sip tastes
'Fnger.
I You want to check your child's
~? Teach the tot to name the
colon. Color names contain all the
lounda the yoWl8Jlter \vill need to
bronounce worda properly. You'll
know right away if \here's an rpediment. .
The typical turkey ia ao stupid you
bave to teeeh lt how to eat. Here'•
how: Put IDlll'bte. in ita mMb. The
bUd pecka at the marbl-. Tbe bd1
aUdel off into the food. Pretty IOOll it
Itta the idea and you. can put .Way
PM marbleil.
Q. A pumpkin Vine can p'OW ftft
inches a~-Nothfna in the v9table
worlcLbeata that, rtaht!
A. Believe aome of the kelp along
the Padtic COMt grows. faster. A hall
inch an hour baa been reported.
-Q . Who WU the fint U.S. praidmt
who learned· how to drive a car?
A. Warren G. lludin8. And afW
him, Calvin Cooltdae allo drove, but
never while in office, and never faster
than 16 mph.
Q. Who tint tnU'oduced the couch
into~? And why'?
A. Noae ~than &a8mund J'rwd
hilmelf. 8-llid be oouldn't ~to
be MNCi at~ hows I day.
Why .. tt the ........... repea~y contend· that Ubra ....,... are men
araceful tllan otbenf Not all
~ ............... I) ..........
1
Soviet subs a ,p~ime threat
WASHINGTON -Aaide from t.he that are also armed with nuclear
pomibility of a maasive Argentine air Weapons. They are considered to be the
strike, the.Brit.iah had three "wild cards" prime undersea threat to the United
to worry about in the Falkland lalands States.
-the eneQly submarines Salta, San In addition, the Soviets have 285
Luis and Santiago del FAtero. attack submarines carrying conventional
The Salta and the San Luis, built weapons, and can count on four each
-__ G eight years ago in West Germany, are
equipped with the same deadly Tigerfish
torpedoes the Britiah Wied to sink the
Argentine cru1-er General Belgrano. The
Santiago del FA1ero, though a relative
antique built by the United States before JACI AflOIRSOfl 1945, has a range of 12,000 miles ~ between refuelings and constituted a
major threat to the British invasion fleet.
THE BRITISH CONCERN over the
Argentine suba waa shared, though with
a certain detachment, by U.S. military
officlals. The Pentagon has spent
mil.lioDa trying to make sure the United
St.at.es has suffident and sophisticated anti-aubmarin~ warfare weapons to
protect our fleet from Soviet undersea
marauders.
The full nature of the submarine
threat is detailed in a .mes of aecret and
tol>".'aecret Pentagon and CIA documents
sho\vn'to my ~te Dale Van Atta.
The Pentagon estimates that the
Soviet Navy now has 71 nuclear-
powered submarines of various types
from the Poles and Bulgarians. Thus the
U.S. and NATO forces have a totat't>f 364
Soviet-bloc subs to worry about.
To combat them, the Allied a nti-
submarine force has a total of 1,045
fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, with
an additional 149 in reserve. These sub
chasers carry a knockout punch: nuclear
depth bombs. They can be delivered by
either planes or helicopters.
In addition, the U.S. arsenal includes an anti-submarine nuclear rocket, called
Asroc, which is fired from surface ships,
and a similar sub-to-sub rocket called
Subroc. Howeyer, the Subroc nuclear
rocket is technologically obsolescent and
will be 'phased out by 1989.
This means, as a Pentagon report
,..,. _)
notes, that unless a replacement weapon
is develo~ for Subroc, U.S. submarines
''will have to rely on the shorter-2e,
conventionally anned MK-48 to o,
whose effective use will require ( em)
to close within the Soviet detection
envelope and within range of existing
Soviet weapons."
THESE NUCLEAR torpedoes and
depth charges, of course, cannot be used
in any limited war. For their use would
surely touch off a nuclear exchange that
could escalate lnto a holocaust. With this
in mind, the Pentagon must also look to
its conventional anti-submarine
weapons.
But this in turn leads to another
problem, as a Pentagon document points
out: "Because individual kill probability
tends to be low in conventional anti-
submarine warfare, it could take as long
as three months to bring the Soviet
submarine threat under control in the
Atlantic and the Pacific. During those
months, if typ~ estimates are valid, we
could lose as much as 15 percent of U.S.
and allied reinforcement and resupply
shipping. while the Soviets cowd lose up
to 70 percent of their submarines."
And it seems unlikely that either aide
would put up with such severe loeses
without resorting to nuclear weapons.
Good intentiohs don't prevent .. wars
To the Editor:
I suppose. the current nuclear freeze
movement is no different from any other
such movement In history: and I do not
doubt for a moment that the leaders of
today's movement are every bit as
sincere in their beliefs and convictions as
were those leaders of similar movements
in past history.
And as for history, who will ever
forget the pathetic spectacle of Neville
Chamberlain returning from Nazi
Germany in the late '30s, waving the
document that Hitler had just signed
renounci.pg aggression and announcing
to the world that "this document means
peace in our time''?
Or who can forget our own American
folk-hero Charles Lindbergh preaching
to America all during the 30s that we
should unilaterally disarm as a way to
convince Hitler of our desire for world
peace?
memories of what a truly inspirational
man he was. ...,
I started attending clases in his army
barracks in 1962. I '¥as present at his
retirement when the student body
presented him with a color television. I
was there for the dedication of the Basil
MAILBOX
Peterson Gymnasium, But I recall two
instances with Dr. Peterson more than
these.
Dr. Peterson used to umpire our
student softball games. One day he called
me out on strikes. I vigort>usly insisted
the pitch was low. He said it was not. 1
lost. After the game he approached me
and admitted the pitch may have been
low; that he was watching the side of the
strike zone. He told me that even when
there is doubt one must stick to his
judgments. The world, he said, has no
pl.ace for the wishy-washy, no room for
the mugwumper. One must make a
decision and stick by it. ,
On the day after President Kennedy
was shot, Dr. Peterson called a special
student assembly. John Kennedy was a
hero to us. We felt he somehow favored
the young, that he was on our side. Hi$
ideals were clear and important. His
death staggered us. We were lost,
confused. The student body was l'.\Umb.
There were plans of cancelling all
sports and social events and even
classes. Dr. Peterson knew how we felt,
for I think he too felt our loss. He told us
that John Kennedy was not the sort of
man who would cancel anything, but
would p~ on with the job at hand with
even renewed vigor.
Take a deep 6reath, he said, muster
your courage, for we have the same job
to do now as we did before, only now we
muat do it without John Kennedy.
And now we will have to do it without
Basil Pet.ersdh.
DAVID •A. HUGHES
Hidden costs
To the Editor:
The Oran1e County Development
Plan for Bola Chica contaiN hidden
casta that may make the pUblk liable for
milllont of dollara on a perpetually
repeddYe bellt ln the fu1Ur'e, above and
~ the public com ot $1 '79 million
~..==•&ranee'° Bolaa Chle1, complete whh JettlH 1nd
tftlkwa• mlJ IO dllnapt NINl'll llnd
disposition along the Huntington Beach
to Newport Beach coastline, that the
beaches downcoast from the jetties will
suffer constant erosion without natural
replenishment of s.and. This will
n~itate repetitive dredging of sand
from offshore back onto the beaches, at a
public cost in the millions of dollars.
WE SEE this _phenomenon in action
today. The Army Corps of Engineers is
now dredging sand back onto Sunset
Beach because of jetties built upPOQSt at
Anaheim Bay. The cost -$6.6 million. A
similar phenomenon is haC!::ning in
Oceanside now where the hes are
having to be rebuilt at a cost of seve.ral
million dollars because of upcoast
man-made development and disruption
of the natural coastline?
Do we not learn from hi.story? Can we
not learn from current events? The
Orange County Board of Supervisors is
placing the whole Huntington Beach
coastline in great jeopardy with their
ill-conceived plan for Bolsa Chica.
And they are doing it on the backs of
the public.
"What therefore God 'hath joined
together, let not man put asunder"
Mark 10:9
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD
Clarification
To the Editor:
Regarding Reg. Jones' rebuttal to my
letter of June 2, I want to clarify that my
letter was referring to the "new" Irvine
Company, and in no way ·was it meant
to reflect on the "old" Irvine C.ompany.
All those acoolades were well deserved
and earned by the "old" lrvtne Company
-and to set the record straight, the
Irvine FounatiQn is not a su.bsidiary of
TIC.
In o\lr 21 years with the Irvine
Company, in both agriculture and land
development departments, we we~ with )
both the ''old" and the ''new" Irvine. I/ ~ have many fond memories of the "old'
company.
BOBBIE ALLEN
•
-
NYSE COMPOSITE 'F R:ANSACTIONS oven .. , ..... '"""" .......... '"' .... , ............ ,. '6<1PIC. ,.., totftMI, DHIOIY ••• COfCOtllATI noc• uc. ............. ,.. ..... ,.. .... .... .......... .
....
C"9 ..... "'' ,. t I* ci.w '"'
H/F Cll
Home building
shows upswing
By 'Re AalOClatecl Pre11
Actual and planned home bulldln1 jumped
u.nexpec(ed)y lut month, the govenunent aaid, and a
home builden ifOUP Mid that wu "the fln& 9'gn" of
reoovery for one of the nation'• ID09t deprW>d
industries.
The C.ommeroe Department aaid Weclneeday that
May houaing 1tart1 roee 22.3 percent ftoen the month
before to the htgheat level ln a year. It alto Mid
building pennita for future oomtruc:1ion roee 10.2·
percent from the prevtoua month.
The department 118.ld houaing start.a roee to an
annual rate of 1.086 million. Tb.it wu the hJahest
since the 1.172 million rate reponed ln May 198[
Building under construction
C.Onatruction h.u begun ln Monrovia on the $3.1
million Huntlnston Oau Office Building, aald •
spokesman for J . A. Stewart Conatruction C-ompany,
Westminster. It will be occupied by Kinetics
Technology International C.Orporation.
Gas shortages eyed
WASHINGTON (AP) -Motorista, already hit
with gasoline price increases of a. dime per gallon. will
see prices climb even higher and could face shortages
before summer is over, according· to a group critical of
the oil industry.
The Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition said
Wednesday it was likely that both guol.lne and
beating oil prices will "increase dramatically" in the
next few months.
But the chief lobbying ann of the oil industry
called that allegation "economic nonsense" and said it
ignored the fact that even with the recent hikes,
gasoline prices are still lower than a year ago.
Marketing contract gi ¥en
The Orange County office of the Charles Dunn
Company bas been retained by the Cypress Land
Company, Long Beach, to market 10 acres which is
part of the Cypl"etl8 Center in Cypress.
The property is locat«I just east of Katella
Avenue and Valley View Street. ·
T_rade balance shol+'S surplus
WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's foreign
trade~ jumped back to a $1.2 billion surplua ln
the first' quarter of thia year after dipplng to a deficit
of nearly $1 billion ln the final quarter of 1981, the
Commerce Department reported today. /'""'
Officials are predicting that the balance of
payments -the broadest foreign trade measure and
sometimes referred to as the •~current account" -will
show a surplus for the year, the third in a row.
However, government analysts concede that one
reason the account is back in surplus is the winter and
spring w.eakneas in the U.S . economy, with the
recession keeping Americans from importing very
much foreign merchandise and thereby running up a
deficit.
Pen sion funds inl'ested
LOS ANGELES (AP) -More than $930 million
from pension funds of state government workers will
be invested in new mortgages and small-busineaes as
part of a program to stimulate California's economy, a
state official says.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORK(API Fin.ti Oow~J~ ~ .few w.o., Jun. 16 STOCKS
+1\lo _._ _ ._
-1f't
+ "' + i..
-1Vt
0.-. Hllill Law C.._ C119 30 llWI IO:a.At. IOf.11 7'13.*5 l'tUO-4.iJ
20 Tm Jl2.tt JU.S7 *" 310,,._ t.lll IS Utl 101.13 109,., IOI.Of IOI ..... O.Jt 65 Slk >1122 JU.• JOUI 311.0)-1.10 '"°"' 11,JIUOO Tr en 1.lUAGO
Ulllt . •• • .• . .. .. . .. llJ,GllO
U Siii .. 13,Ul,ICIO
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAPI J 1111. 16
Wed. 620
IZO 424 , ....
13 111
NEW YOllK (Af') J..,, 16
METALS
w.s.
104 m t~ ,,.
7 JI
-~ '115
01 •1 7
114
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonfwYou9
me1111 pflOM Wedneed9y;
C...-r 7CM-75 oent1 a pound. U.8.
dwtlnatlona.
Leed 211-27 Ollnll. pound.
Diie 35-37 cent• • pound, ~. Tiii '6.N15 Mtllala w .. oompoeltt
lb .
......._ 1&-n oeni. a pound. N.Y • ..._, 1370.00 .,., fllllk. ,..,..._ '297.00 troy oz... N.V
·~------------------------SILVER
Handy & Harman. H .400 per troy ounce.
., ..
'
..
..
51\J!_ , .. "" .. ._. <M"I •· ... MVtfM*ll :':'W"IOIUAflOM I~-........... .M1'0Nh M 't~v4: I. t=C~~J1,f~~ii~.•,1.~ =4~W.'l:·w':l~
A'-OOHl L lleoft. ~ Tltfltt M no~ Vldeott•
l ••H•ttttf1P·l NII 10~ .1otw1 ...,_ °*• auo ...,_, lttvto.•, 1110 .1 • C•lltornl• "" OON "o~ ......,., No. ltt,......,......., oortt•r1ttoni l•U t11nllo•or
.. -..~..-"'ilJ QA.... ·~-. Cot • w.... Oalltonil• -9·-·.. T'Nt~lt~bylft ..... 00.. 100I .... '"" lncMdual. lfttiDllWt, IM """°" ..,.. o.t, ..... -. CA .1oM I DI'* Toronto, Qntwlo, C::--. M41oW
TNt •9'•111flt _. flled wtlll ._ Tillt ~ It OOAiluoted by a
aflUCI MAflTIH Wll.1.IAMI. ONtlY .. t1I Orenea Oownty on OIM'll f*1.Mrlfllp.
1 HI t I . 00111110 01111» La no • .11.w1e t ,..., • TlftlM Mirr« AMNM!, CA tll01. ,._. V109Ma ....._Ina.
• JOYOI LVNNI WILA.IAMI, Pul>llahed Oran,• Ooeet Delly Dumarll J. ~ Htt I . Oounlry Olub l.1n1 , Piiot, Julle s. 10, 1 , 14, 1NI Alllel1t1t ~ • j AMM!ltl, CA ~f, H11-12 TNt lltlelNnt ..,. flled .ttt1 \hi I..: ~ GOnOUoled Dy I Qounty O!lftC Of' Orlf\Ot County Otl
; ~WMIMll "8.IC fl)1lC( M-.y rr. 1N2. ,,... 1~ ':'t' ... flled w1tt1 the "°nn&P.,.... Put1111he0 of•na• coe•• 01111 l.June f, Ilea. OrlllQI County on U.. ITA,_-, Piiot, Mey 11. Julle :t, 10, 1!i,.1r2·
I ~t Thi followlng l*'IOM .,. doing ~ .-a
"'bl4tMd Oranae COMt 0111y ~ • PWtJC N0l1C( Nol, Aw.IS. 10, 1f, 14, 1"2. MUll.IOt:J STEW POT, ----------2'12"'*2. 17041 ~ Pu , Mo. A. Miner'• ~ COUfrT OP
-----------VlllllQ9, MINlon Vleto. C.Ulornll c~ P\a.IC lllMIH t2tt1 • • cowrrv °' ~ ""''~ Mary Jene lurk•. 24110 lit Ille....._ II ..
PICilhOUl lllll•H Windward Oriya, L19un1 Niguel, "41Jl11•1• 11 Mm IT.AW Callfornle 9H11 K..-. OerJ'..........,. Tiie fOlklwlnO paraone .,. doing Pltrlola L Prlol, 24892 lA tw C._.. 11 .._., 11u11n1a1 • Plata, L1gun1 Nlguel, C111fornl1 Me. A·tt-
P A 0 C I S 8 I N G L A 8 ; 92911 OROD TO IHOW CAUU ~NOAH GIFT PAOOUCTIOHS· Eugene O. Price, 24882 LI ·111P
AMIAICAH PHOTO ASSOCIATION. Plata, Laguna Nlguel, Calllornl1 Wh1t111, KIN NETH GARY
21tt Martin Avenue, Suitt 212' 82971 MoHAMAAA, ~.hoe flled • IMM, CA 12715. ' Thll bullnte1 It QOllducled by 1 petition with the Cllfk OC WI ooun
2-TE. INTEllHATIONAL. INC Q9fl«al ptftnenhlp. lonn order dlllnalnD hie NIM trom
a Calllornl1 corporetton, 2222 MelY J-Bur1!1 KENNETij GARY ~ONAMAAA to ~A~. Su111212 1Mne. CA Plltrlda L Prlct KENNETH QAAY Mac:NAMAAA: 82715. ' Eugene O. Prloa IT IS OROl!!REO !Nt .. 1*90N
Thll ~ II oonducWd by 1 Thie lta4'"*'1 -llltd with the lnttr1tled In the 1bove entltled
oorpcntloh. County a.t1t of Orll'IQI County on matt• ~ befot9 lhll OOUf1 at 2·Tel "*""tlonll, Inc. Mey 25, 1882. 10:30 on the 1th day of Jvly, 11112 In
Kinn o. Miiion. ,,.,. dlpattment number 3 11 'loo CMc a-..r,.T--Publllhed Orenga Co11t Deity Center Drive Wiit Senta Ana
Thll ltatemant -flltd with the PlloC. ~ey 27, June 3, 10, 17; 1882. Celllomla 12701 and 'lhow CMMe, tf
County Qertl of Orlngl County on 2335-82 eny. .tiy the petition for change ol
i, 1882. • ·-.,. NO~ neme ehould not t>e Qranled. f1Ma r~ t 1'4 IT IS FURTHER ORDeAED Chat a
Publl•hed Oren,1 CoHt Dally P1C'RTIOU8 llUalNRH copy of thlt Ord« to ShOw CIUM Plot, June 3, 10, 1 • 24, 1982. NAm 8TATDmN'T . be publl8hld In the Or111g1 County
2374-82 The lollowlng per1on I• doing D.ity Piiot, • ,_..,..,_ of oenatll
-----------~ •: olroul1t1on, prlnltd In Oreno•' A.I\. ANTHONY a SON 6841 County, Cellfomla.onca. --for -~==......,-~;.;;.;;;. ___ PT9lldlo Drlw. Huntington B.Neh. lour conaeoutlY9 W.-• prior to thl Ptennoue 1t111•.. CA 92948. data Ml for hMrtnQ of pethlon.
MAim 8TA,_.,. Alie• Ruth Anthony 8841 Date: Mey 25, 1fe2.
Tiie foltowlng PetlOn 11 doing Pr..idlo Ortve, Huntington •Beech, P'*lll O_llGNI .. """"-a.: CA 92648. ,,..... If h ...,_ C..t
HOSHI MAYU SEAFOOD 2924 Ab Ruth Anthony Mimi II. Km, HO ..
Clleetnut Aven11•. Co1ta MeH, Thll etalemeol •• fled with ti. 1-.,~ lt\ld. CllfomM t2e2t1 County Cllf'k of Orange County on -,_ Gordon Allan M~ 2924 J-1. 1982. Loe .,.._, CA.._
Cll"tnut Av1nu1, Cot11 M11• ,,_,.. (211) ~ CellfOtnla 92e2tl • Publl•hld Orang• Co111 Dilly Publl1hed Orenge Co111 Dally Thll ~ 11 oonduoted by an Piiot, June 3, 10. 11, 24, 1982 Piiot. Mey 27, June 3, 10, 17, 1883
lndMduel. ' 2445-82 2343-82
G. A. MlllhouM Thll atat"'*1t -llled with Ult Ml.IC N0T1C[ rta.IC NOTICE tCounty Cler1I of Orll'IQI County on -~,.~IC~Tn'IOU8=~~.~.,,.,, _ _,... .. ---1---,-IC-TmOU---,-.U...---,-.--
,~ 28, 1972. ,,.._ 8TA,.....,. NA• ITATl•NT i P\ibll•hed Or1ng1 Co.:I'= ~o::::wlng peraon 11 doing bu~o:::.wlng p1reon la Ootng
ptloc, June 2, 9, 17, 23. 1982 SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT. VIDE O MEMORIES. 222 I 2402~ 24e7 I la HermoM Avenue. Laguna Lugonla Street. l'Mwport a.ch. CA
I Nlguel. CA 12977. 92663 : P\llJC NOTIC( J ohn Klttl1nl1, 241171 l• RICHARD L SINOA. 222
H«moN A_,., l.aguM Nlgull, LUOOftla Sir•. l'Mwport BMdl. CA
PICTrnOUI .,_.. CA 92t77. 92ea3.
MAim 8TATDmNT John Khllenle This bullnMS It oonduc:ted by an
,,. ~~-l_ollowlng per•on I• doing Thlt Ital-I -Ned with the lndlvldull.
---County c..tll Of 0rll'IQI County on AlohatO L SI~ WEST l AKE V 1 L l AGE June 1, 11182. Thll bullnMI wu filed with the APARTMl!NTS, 111 W11t 17th ,,_ County Cl«k of Or1nge County on
8traet, No. 312, COlta ...._, CA Publlahed Oreng1 Coell Dilly June 8, 1882. 92C7. Piiot, June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1982 '1e.72
RI oh Ir d R. CI n I rt I I, II 2376-82 Publl1hed Orange CoHt Dally
Hotthltar, NO. 104. Mat1n' Del Rey, --.,. NO~ Pllol, June 10, 17. 24. July 1, 1982. CA 80291. ~ •~ 2~82
Thll bull!-. 11 c:onduo1ed by an PK:nnoue • 11 ...
lndMdual. Richard R. Cantrell ..... ..,.,,_,,.. PUllUC NOTtCE
• Thll etat"'*'t -llltd w1tt1 the Thi lolkJwlng ~ .,. doing ACTmOUI _, ..... ~-~~otOrenoeCountyon CALIFOAH IA CLAIM N.u.ITAT'DmNT 25· 1 ,,..,.,.. COHSULTANTa. 1000 MecAtttlu! Th• following pe,.on 11 doing
Publl.tlec:I Orange CoHt Dally Btvd .. Senta Alla. ~ tz704. ~ ae:
Plot, Mey. 27, .llMM 3, 10, ~1~ Mec~u~· eS::.. ~n~n~: ~~.~~:is!:~
Cellfomla 92704 CA 92649
-----------Dennll Meloy, 1°"81 Hemmon DAVID w. SMITHSON, 164&5 PUllUC N0T1C[ TrM , Garden Orove, Calllornl1 CoHI Hwy., SunHt BHcih. CA ---===~~~-----92643 907•2 ~~., .. ~u Anne Merle Lannon, 24072 ~ bualnMS la oonduotfKI by an ,._ ... 5_ .. , Sagger Street. El Toro. Celllomla lndMduel.
The followlng Plf90ll• .,, doing 92MO Devld W Smithton ~ • lu•n Matort, 30 1 6. Tait This mtement wu f11ed wttn 1he
ADDED CLASS, 3857 Birch Avenue. Or111gt. Cellfomla 82te6 County C1ertt of Orange County on 8traet, Suh• 2111, l'Mwport Beedl Simi Odlh, 301 E. Tilt Avenue, June 8. 19112.
CA tHeO. ' Orange, Celllomla 92ee5 ,1_,,
ARNOLD LEE JACKSON, 807 ~ ~ conduo1ed by I Publlehed O"ng1 CoHI Delly :UC,~ fl 150. Anaheim, CA Loull N. Selnl Lot Pllol. June 10, 17. 2•. July 1, 11182.
MONICA OE LA ROSA, 71M I Thie Ital~ wu flled with the 2502-82
Inwood Lane, la Pllma, CA 80623. County Cllt1I Of Or111gt County on P\8.JC NOTIC( Thll ~II concluc:tld by• Mey 21, 1882.
Jmlllid pertnertfllp. p _.. f'1-.o PIChilOUS W..-Amold L. '**'°" · ubll•h.., Oreng1 Cont Dally NAlm ITATWlllEMT
Thll ttattmtnt wu flled with lht Pilot. Mey 27. ~ 3. 10, 17, 1982. The lolloWlng pertont .,. doing
Counly Cl4n of Oranoe County on 2327-82 butinMt u; 4'-II, 1912. 1------------WIL MOORE & ASSOCIATES.
' Publl•hed O"nge co:.~y PlllJC •TIC£ 4121 W11terly Pl101, ~Jiii 201.
,llol, JuM 10. 17. 24, July I, 1942. ~!;~!2~atlon,
---------2-47_5-8_2 1 C1lllornl• corporation. 4121 Wlltlrty P'-. Suite 201, l'Mwport
Belc:h. CA tHeO.
Thie bual1)41U la conduc:ted by •
OOfl)Ol'lllon.
Prllident
l'Mwport W"1em Corp.
Wiibur Moore, Jr.
·~ Publl1hed Orange Coal1 Delly
Piiot. June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1882 23n..a2
SEIYICES
Orange Cocut r11idnt1 bo..QM 42% o/
all MW COrl IOld fn tM Cf)lmlfl lalt ~ear
, evm thrmigh IMfl com,,,U~ oral11 .10% of
the count11'• population. ·
~ftft.~!M ....... !!!ft.~~ ...... ~.~!:W ....... ~.~!iw. ..... ~
'1r..~ ..... ,, .. J.~ ~~ ......... J!M "1!!.~ ......... J!M ~.~.lffl .. 11.ff
............ .......
AU r ... Mtete advenlMd
In 1hl1 nowepapor le
1 aubi.ot 10 Ille l'edera l 1eu Fair Houllng Act Of 1"8
:: which INlkll It llleOal to
lO'M advertlM "any prefor .... :: ce, llmltlllon or dlocflml· '* netlon bued on race,
:: color, rellglon, Hx or
utt natlonal origin. or any
Intention to m1ka eny
tueh pr1ferance, llmlt•
tlon Of dlocM!lnellon."
Tht. ~ wlll not
knowingly accept any
1dvet1l1lng tor rNI M·
.... wtlldl le In Ylolallon
of the lew.
: Hltlla Advertl·
: aers should check := their ads dally and
-report errors lm-
ll« mediately. The
: DAILY PILOT as-
sumes llablllty for
the first Incorrect
Insertion only.
••un /11 lal•
\ OClA~l'M>HT LAQOOH COM'S BEST ~Ill.I 11111 . 10001~ ~l"~H p.d. TNtduCllU++tnoludtt
Prlie Weet S.~ yfront. Sliro for 2 boaU, ·85 Ac L.Oolla.1..~1• ~ a bdrm unite+"'
mod_,_. • • .__ h $1 00 000 b9d t271SK, 1181......o utra large gueet quar· re .~ " • " .,.t • • · Mn. OWri« le melclnO It
Ocffn & jetty ~WI~ n>Oft\, 4 b(lrm. 3 JAlllll -1Y911-* It ~d~I
beth, 1'700 eq.h. •t,M5,000. ~L DEOOAATOA'8 0 =-~U°':!1.':
UllllU ...
t'rime Udo Nord baytront. 5 bdrm,~~ bath.
l.ge L.R., 2 boat llip1 $1,:I00,000.
Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + larie· rec. rm.
beam oelllnp. fumlahed, patioe. $420,000.
Ulll llU UYflllT
·...agoon view from 6 bdrm, 5 bath, playroom,
dark rm. den, Boat slip. $1 ,350.000.
BAYSIDE COYE
Spectacular bayfront view 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 boat llip1 $1,800,000.
COIOUDO CAYS
Coronado Laland cust. bayfront lot. 85' boat
dock. Plana avail. Red. $370,000 w/tenns.
ILIFFI Ollll
Single story end unit, expanded 3 br, 3 ba
on largest greenbelt, $250,000.
Piii L8I
3 bdrms. 2 ~ baths condo near pool. $145,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
! -l ' Boy, d .. D,... ~. B 6 7 S 6 1o1
LIOHTI !xtremety "t1::1\_..;..~iiiiiiiii--lar 3 bf plan ib. .....
magnificent cleoofatlnQ Aeduoed by I 100,000 •
frplc, gourmet !Mand kff . now HH,000. lnln• °'*'· frml din. lmtv rm & T.,t9CO 4 bf, 3 be. Y!ew, ln·hoUN 18undl)'. Alt peol. 1~ ctown, 11.5"
& m«o kw only 1389, Im., 21 yr-. Poee. trade
FEE. 2970 81n Mlgue fOt 50' bOet. 8V owner.
Or, Newport Beach. 752.-7M1
1at-1501 or nt-7313
~ Walker & Lee
9!1.'f.lf!ff •••••• !!!f a 8'. 1 ea. hOu9ll on large
llOJl175' 3 unit IOt. •:M
Homlhon. Do not dllturt>
tenan11. 1129,000.
546-&041 ...... ' wknda, ...... nmsT 631-3520 wtcdya.
Top QUllltlY home In gate ........
guarded W... 3 8' end IUI
unit on quiet cul~aec:. 2 er. 1 ea_+ 1 er. 1 ea.
BHutllully decorated 72X105' A} lot. Do not
home, 1urrounded by dlaturb tenant•. 1528
wide gr..,beltt. Partclng Or ano•. S 128, 000.
epaoee galore. Cell ua. 548-6041 -& wknd•.
'421,500. Muriel 8-rr'a 631-3520 wk'"'-
lltllng. 759.9100 iiiiiiiiiiiii"iii
1
··--·
GEO RGE ELKINS C O
'
111,llA
Large covared patio. nr.p1ece, double car ga-
rage. Excellent condi-
tion. 1135,000. Owner
wUl oatry 111 loen. Beat
ol terms. .., ··~1 lltr· Ml-lln
2 Bl, 2 be condo "'· s.c. :·· ,;;;;i·········i·iii ...................... i--------· FIUll WITI A YI MEil WIOIS
WllTIUf f
Excellent fln1nelng. Co-
venlently loe1t1d thrM
bedroom. two bath
home. Double flrepleoe.
Sperkllng pool and apa.
$285,000.
Plaza. 3 yre. old, A/C,
PJllO, dwn1tre. F1mlly
Met. See g11a, auum.
$52,900. 11.37% Int.
OWC, am. 2nd TO. F.P.
$90,000. Ownr. 894-2592
-Thll houM needt lotl Of
-elt>ow gr• ... but wtlat 1 !: vlewl Fantutlc home IOt
-poolalde antartalnlng.
-Full price •'149,500.
-Mi
l lGt -•10
1111$
751-3191
c::. ',( I I I '
-1""' 11qc P • •· • • ·,
TU•UD --2 bf. 2 ba, In Placantla.
many lacffltlel. nr. 57 &
91 Frwya. HH gd, 1e-
nant.
111 ..... 11,. .....
12~41., II Yr. LeM
851-0331 "'111~ --And out about tile high
: earning r .. I •tat• aalaa
-oar-oe>90ftunltlea with = THE REAL E8TATER8.
-Llcen1lng 1chool faat
: completely refundable to
-achool of your choice. em Ex1ent1Ye lalaa training.
:;: For lnlormellon, cell -., ------
751~191
REMEMBER OAOI
with.
Fa1her'I Day mMMQe
642-5e78
Win 4 FREE TICKETS!
to an Angel• Oame
Diiiy Piiot
CIHSllled Adi
!IOto NEW VIEW TOWN · a HOMES. 2 MHter Sul·
-te•. View of ooeen a ,.. night llghl1. Quiel ArM.
:: Parka, open •P•CH.
-$125,800 dn. Xlnt Fin.
Hal or Pat Bauer, AgU.
tlK 673-7300
·~ ~~~~-~~~ IAYOIUTPN• t ll(
tlC t Jll t•« 1111: 91« -lmprealYe la tile word
that c:omee to mind wMrl
you view the Fr. PfOVln-
elal extlfior of thl1 lowty
cultom heme. Tile ~
tim olou• Mttr Bdrm hM 1 = Hl1 & Her draallng ar•. -eunken tub a etrlum. The
:: 3 remaining Bdrma ..
• .,. located In a Mperata = wing w/2 BatN. Ideal IOf en1wtalnlng with • twge
formel dining room I
welbar. The tamlfy rooni
& IMng room both ofW
the warmth of flreplecel..
Auume exl1Ung loan.
Cati u1 for a viewing eppt. 831-7370.
TR,\DITIO\ \I
~I .\I"
What it
means for
your ad
ff) be
"clf1ssifi£d "
I
I
I
I
Beautllul ouatom cabi-
netry by a mu1er craft· aman really Mtl thll 3
8drm 2 Ba home apWt. LOY9ly genbo and .,.._
nng fruit tr .... Low rate,
MW loan available. FuM
price $149 ,000 .
751-3191
IEWPllT II. llYfllllT ............. ,,... .... ...., ..... ,..,, ..... w ..... ...., ....., NNc
.... ..,,. •·"· .. , , .. ~. u ...... .
ml411H .. M ...... trllw.t•
.... 2114 "· ........ 111-1..0.
WATERFRONT HOMES. IN<
RIAi t'\lATI
5oloe. llMl.Je. .......... w.......-
2436 w Coast Hwy
Newport Beach 631-1400
RE SIOfNllAI Rr Al I STAI£ SERVICES .......... llll,llO
Quiet elegance just a ~w doors
from ocean. Beautifully appointed,
unique residence on 30 x 118 lot
with leasehold rights to the
adjoining parcel. 2 BR + den.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
LABFEF I
I r I I 11
:
R E N D 0 I i I I I I'
1l KAW CR r I I I
IOFOIR I' I I' I I
111·1• ....
VACANT· MUST SEU
4 Bdr. 2~ Ba. 10 yr1.
2100tQ11. long term, low
Int nnanc1ng w/15% dwn.
Make on.. Robin Keith ........ 1 Atty 7Sl-4008
OW FUmllfWAH•I Chermln\ "Redwood" on thla lmmeoulate 3 Model. 3 R. 2~ BA. di bdrm home wtth enclo-
nlng ar-. Pfofeealonelty d 1 decorated In tprl"" ae patio, amlly rm, ... aprlnklwa & m0ta. Ow·
Oft. Large patio & air ner a111uou1. 1129,500. conditioned. Community ,._., o pool, tennl1 court end _....., __ 9_1_9-53 __ 1 ___ _
lake. $155,000. Donna 12% FllUClll Godlhall 644-6200. A ~tllulty upgraded 4 'f!: Macnab -Irv me
lllUaYl-.U
141. llTllllT
Bdrm hOme with many
amenltl11. Sellere wlll carry $100,000 11 12% Of
A.l.T.D. at 12%. $145, 000. FOf mOte Informa-
tion c:all 079-5310
\( >ll/ 1l/:9 /f . . •, ...... ,., ·.·
Quiet, peitl..ilkl Mtllng. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Rm l0t paddle tenni. end
peol. Great l0t orchard.
Cul de uc It. 3 bdrm•.
lam rm. $379,500 lnelu·
ding land. Atk 1bout a
1% loan on 11'11• home.
144-4110
-----~------
ITAYLOH CO.
\, --:. -""'"'-
2·BR Single Family Horne
In H.B. 107,950. Only
$20,000 down. Excellen1
term• with low lntereat
111umable loin. Sher·
peat houte In tile tract.
Cati Mike f0t mOf9 Infor-mation. (714) 720--0391
.... I
• TllTUllll
Outllandlng 5 Bdrm view
home. Par1t Ilk• yerd.
lllllOIED
SUS II ED
131,1881
111 .... ""' M111 Verda man11on.
OW< 2400 IQ.ft .I View of
Catallna. 1un11t• and
city llghtal 4 king bdrma, 3 bathe. ~ family
room. n-everylhlngl
$34,000 mowa you 1n1
NO QUALIFYINOI C1M
lat, c:an't lut at low. low
prlo.I 898-2838
open, 1paclou• floor ~~~~~~~~~ plan, eoarlng OllHng, with _
auumabl• financing ...., ........
1299,000 tee. Selllf wlH carry loan fOf
UNIOOf ~i qualllled buyer. GrHt ,.__ terma. 3 Bdr 2 8' Maaa ii,__ii:i"i°":• i57;:;;1 Verde Hlghl1nd1, boat i trlr aoo1u. $130,000. •••• llUll 3281 Colorado Ln. -Ownr/agt 559~221.
Large bayfront lot wlUiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii private pier and float.
Aalumable low lnter•t
1'1 T.O. •1.915,000 .
17 I 4J 671-4400
IZlll U~ZIZI
HAR.OR
.... IJlal l ...........•.•....•...
~
Come end IM INI char-
ming home. Or•t toe-.
tlon with beam1, llre-
plaCI a a bdrm. 2 beth.
MoY.ln condition. 8r1ng
chlldr«t & peta to play In
huge yerd with alley ec-
-. S 141,500. ...
Lido Realty
673-7300 unique a charming 3 bf &
loft. LM/opt or lrade '°'
unite. S13-8SS5. ~~~~~~~~~ * 11~41. tftM. .... UITW r1-1
•Pr1ced at orly '38t,OOO 3 8dr 2 8' ..,._ ~ •2 Story 3yr old ewlom d ............. -Call IOf Information c:.1Y' ' -oP'· . 8KA. 87WIM OWrw .. help flnenoe. '225,000. Call ...,_ [)I.. ...... ,1 ....
210 GRAND CAHAL
Lilli• "l•nd. Sharp 3
ldrm 2 bath on ti\•
w.ter. owo. '510.:.~· • UHIOUEHOMu Alta or Toin lotend etMOOO
,
11on, aot. 7M-t100. . ...........
In "* .. bdnn hOIM '""' ~ fW'lllly rm. Manv
extrH Including now cwp«. Lllt09 ......... lo.n and .........
lllt. ltM,000. Clll tor ll'ION ..... .,.....70
\f .·///1U '1t
•
'
---~~ ---~---~---------.._ __________________ '--_______ ...... _ ..... ______ ._ ________ ..... ____________________ ....
• ATLAS CHIYSUl.fll. YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd .. Coate Mel&. Tel. s-46-1934. 3 blocq
IOUth of San Diego Freewrt off H8rbor Blvd. Complet.
,body shop. Sale•. Service. Ptm. Service Dept. open
Monday thru Friday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday.
IEACH ....ollTS
M8 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel. 752-0900. Cell ua.
we're the 1pec1all1ts for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot, Saab & MaMratl. .
• THIODOIEIOllNSl'OltD
·Modern aai.., Mrvlce, parts, body, paint & tire cfepta.
Competitive rat" on le ... & dally rental•. 2060 Harbor
Btvd .. Coat9 Mela. &42-0010«540-8211.
JOH .. SOM • SOM UMCOLM ..-cuay
2928~bor Blvd., Coata Meaa. Tel. 5'40-6830. 57 v ....
of friendly family Mrvlce -Or~ County's oldeet Lin·
COin-Mercury dealership.
-------·--·-----
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMIERS IN THE BOXES • NIWPORT DATSUN
• 888 Dove Street. Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the
trlangM of Jambor•, ~ a Brlatol behind Vlctorta
Station. Sale9, Serviee, Leealng & Parts. we make greet
deelsl
• HAllltS CADILLAC
~ Harbor Blvd., Coata Meaa. Tel. 540-9100. Orange
County's Largest Cadillac dMler. Sal•. Service. Leu ·
ing. ..
DAVID J. PHILUPS lutCIC-IOHT1AC4'4A%DA
Sales • Service,• Leulng
24888 Alicia P•kWrt
Laguna Hilla 837-2400
• . CHICIC IVBSOM POttSCHl-AUDt-YW
415 E. Co•t Hwy., Newport BMch. 1113-0800. Th• only
dealership In Orange County with theM thrM grNt
rNket under one roof!
• ALAM MAGMOM PC:>tfnAC.SUIAl&r
2'480 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Mita. Tel. 649 4300. 8el•.
BeMce. L• .. lng.~'Mr. Gooctwrench." •
• • IOI LOM(iPll POMTIAC
t3600 Beach Blvd .. Westmlnner. Tel. 892-6651. Orange
County's Oldest and laro-tt Pontiac dealership. Salee,
Service. Parts.
• DICK MILLll flATILANCIA
"Probably the IOWlllt priced Flatt "-Southern California"
(Located 1 rnle nOtth of South Cout Plaza near Main St. and Watne< Ave. In Santa Ana.)
120 W. Wilmer, Santa Ana 557-2132
• SANT A AMA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th Street, Sai\ta Ana. Tel. 5!MJ.7811. Yourl
Original Dedicated Datsun Delller.
• MllACU MAIDA We..,. rncwedl Our new IOClllkln la 1425 &Mer Street.
Cotta Mela. Tet. 546-3334. atop~ I vlalt our brand new
ehowroom and ... wtiy we're the 11 Mada dealer In
Southern California. Salft, s.vtce. Pem and l .... nSJ .
• AMMmMMAIDA "CWrO.C. .... ..., ..
......... &.e.C.."
801 S. Anaheim Bl'td .. Anlhelm ... 1820. Juat nonh of
Sant9 Ana Frwy. on Al"'*"' Blvd. Can ue flratl
'WE AAE HAAD TO PIND IVT W0"1'H ITI"
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Hatt>or Blvd .. posta Mesa. Tel. ~10. Serving
Orange County for 18 yeats. 1 Mlle So. 405.
·-· SUNSET FOID, IMC.
(Home of Willie the Whatei 54-40 Garden Grove Blvd ..
Weetmlnster. Tel. 636-4010.
• GaANOI COUNTY VOLVO
10120 Garden Gt0¥9 Blvd., Gwden Grove
Tel. 530-9J90. Exolualv.tv Votvo to cover all your Volvo
requirements. ... • · • • • . ·
NeweUMd•S .... •Lealng•Perta•~ Shop
Freeway clOM In the l'IMtt of Orange County at Garden
Grove Blvd. & Bfookhtnat .
• cot•• L CHlftOLIT
.21128 Hart>or Blvd., Cot .... 0ww 20 ~ MfVlng er.,. County! sai. . .....,.. aemo.. Call 641-1200;
IP9dal pertl line: 5'.441 t •OO: bodJ ahGp tine; ~-
IOY CAIYa IOU.S IOYCNMW •
1540 Jamboree Roed. ~ e..t\. '40 t U ........
Service. Partf'And L ... lng.
I
I · I
j
t
I I
umllUa/--
lttl't:·.(,,',\ lllNI I 11 Ol~AN C .l <.OU N I ' ( f,t if U HNIA 1:, CEN TS .
McColl ha~ks Packard Write-in
By JEFF ADLER OflMM!r"'4 ..... Repu~ Btu Jt«~ll cleered
the way for Carllbad Mayor Ron
Packard's November write-In
campaign challenge t.o 43rd
Con1re11lonal Dlatrict GOP
nominee Johnnie Crean when he announced Wedneeday nlaht he
was dropping his own bto u a
write-In candidate.
Following a meettna that
laated more than an hour,
McColl who ftniahed third In the
18.candtdate GOP Cield, aald he
wu wlthdrawlnc Crom the rece
and threw hia support to
Packardh the aecond-j>lace
fin1lher w 0 l08t to Crean by 100
votes.
Crean, a 33-year-old travel-
traUer tycoon from San Juan
Capistrano, Packard and
Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, an
FAcondido college .profeaaor, will
square off in the November
general election.
. "I r,1t at this -Ume it WU best
to endorse him (Packard) and let
him carry the ball," said M~U.
an ex-r.rofeulonal football
player. 'I felt Ron and I both
shared the same objective and
the same views, but we had
different strategies on how to
accomplish it."
McColl also acknowledged that
one '"'°" that perauaded him to
step uide In favor of Padcard
WU the groundaweU of IUpport
Packard fiu received in the daya
followlna the hotly conteaied
primary election.
"It wu apparent Ron dld have
the aupport. it wu ap~nt he
had the momentum, ' McColl
commented.
P~, who claims to have
the aupport of all 16 of the other
GOP candldaiea who aotAght the
Repµblloan nomination. 1ald
McColl'• d ecision was the
"gentlemanly" thing to do.
"I persuaded him that lf we
were both going after the same
money it would hurt wa, if we
were both going after the same
VO.tel it WOWd hurt apd that one
of us needed a c lear shot,''
Packard said of the Wednelday
meeting.
He said that not only did
McColl f,ledge hit "\ll)quallf led
support, ' but alao contributed
$100 to Packard'• write-In
campaign effort.
When asked to comment about
the lastest developnent In the
topey-turvy race, Qoean said, ''I
think Ron Packard will
recognize lt'a not in the national
interest to run.
(See PACK.ARD, Pase Al)
Niguel group seeks
condo
By PATRICK J . KENNEDY o<tM 0.-, Not .....
A Laguna Niguel homeowners
association plans to ask Orange
County supervisors to reject a
proposed 384-unit beachfront
condominium project, approved
this week by California coastal
mmissioners.
eeting in Long B each
esday, coastal commissioners
also approved plans for a $70
million resort hotel in Laguna
Niguel on the blufftop above Salt
Creek beach.
Commission officials say there
was no opposition at the meeting
to the proposed 20-acre resort
hotel, an Avco Community
Developers project.
POMP AND POSEY -Lagun... Beach High
School senior Kristin Boyd pins corsage on
fellow coed Lynn Kessler prior to Wednesday's
graduation ceremonies in Irvine.Bowl. A total
of 250 seniors received their diplomas
Delly "'°' ..... l'tloto
following an address on motivation by Dr.
William Parker. author and founder ot the
Community Church by the Bay. An all-night
senior party. hosted by Laguna parents,
followed commencement.
However, the condominium
proposal, an 18.51.acre plan to be
developed by Irvine-based
Canna/Sandling Group on the
ocean side of Pacitic Coast
Highway, aouth of Selva Road,
has strong opposition from local
homeowners.
Legal battle
for Diedrich
about to end
Cops nab suspec~
in HB slayings
Robert Coldren, an Irvine
attorney representing the
Citizens Concerned for Local
Land Uae, says co unty
supervlsora will be asked to
reduce the number of units in the
project, thereby allowing more
landscaped open space between
coast highway and a six-foot-
hlgh sound wall
B FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL ........... ,,..,
The long legal odyasey of
former Orange County
Supe rvisor Ralph Diedrich,
convicted of bribery-related
offenses in 1979, will draw to a
cloee Tuesday in a San Diego c.ount courtroom. Oi~ch. 58, is scheduled to
surrender then to begin the
one-to-14-year termein state
prison to which he was sentenced
three years ago. He has remained
free while the judgment was
appealed.
The California Supreme Court
in a ruling May 6 upheld
Diedrich's conviction on one
count of bribery and one count of
conspiracy. A second bribery
count was overturned, however.
The high court alao affirmed
co-defendant LeRoy Rose's
conviction on a simple conspiracy
c.»\lllt.
Diedrich and Rose were
charged in a 1977 Orange County
Grand Jury indictment wit!)
conspiring to commit bribery in
connection with county
government approval for
development plans for Anaheim
Hills. •
At the ti.me, Diedrich cast a
vote in favor of releasing about.
2,200 acres of the north county
. property from agricultural
preserve status. That designation
precluded development.
NATION
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
O(aM Deir NII bi8
Police have arrested a man
suspected in the grisly slayings of
a young woman and her mother
whose mutilated bodies were
discovere d Wednesday in a ·
Huntington Beach home.
Huntington Beach police Lt.
Merle Schneblin said officers also
have founq three young children
missing from the Sunnycrest
Lane h ome, describing the
youngsters as alive and safe.
NB man guilty
of theft rap
A Newport Beach man has
been convicted of attempting to
sell land owned by actor Fred
M.acMurray in Riverside County
by forging the actor's signature
on a land deed.
Deputy District Attorney
David Pomeroy said defendant
Bobby Joe Yarbrough could be
sent to state prison for up to ~
years and four month.a when he
returns for sentencing proceedings in Santa Ana July
23.
Yarbrough was convicted by Oranae County Superior Court
Judge Donald A. McCartin on
grand theft and conspiracy
charges earlier this week
following a November jury trial.
Nixon doesn't loolr back
Ten yeara after the Wateraate scandal tha1
demoyed bJa prelidency, Rk:bard Nixon says he never
1ooka beck. ~ AB.
Diet prevents cancer r
A ldenUflc panel hM foond a pomble link
between blah-fat diets and cancer. It advt.. eating
more fnalta, P'ftDI and whole cel'Mla to lower the
rick. Paae JM.
TELE VI SION
He declined to release the
name of the murder swapect on
advice of the Orange County
District Attorney's office.
He also declined to reveal
where the murder suspect was
arrested or where he was being
detained today.
Schneblin did say police
haven't made a final
identification of the murder
victims because of )the condition
of their bodies.
"The bodies were so badly
mutilated that we'll have to go
through dental record s and
fingerprints to make the
identification," he said.
· But authorities did confirm
that the Sunnycrest Lane home
was known to be the residence of
a 27-year-old nurse named
Shirley Harbular Dayco; her
mother, Amelia Harbular, 65,
and the nurse's three children,
ages 7, 5 and 1.
Schneblln said thete were the
children who were found safe
e&-1y today.
Mrs. Dayco was known to be
separated from her husband,
Rene Dayco.
After the grisly discovery was
made Wednesday, officers began
searching for Dayco.
A female relative cont.acted
police Wednesday because she
had been unable to reach Mrs.
'Dayco by telephone and becauae
the nurse had not come to work
as scheduled.
COUNTY
"They're trying, to cram too
many units in that 18-acre area
and the aound wall that ~
l.300 feet along the highway
would make the coastal route
look like an alley," Coldren
claimed. He also says the project
will cause tralfic congestion in
the communey.
The condominium project,
which would have 225 units for
low and moderate income buyers,
was initially approved by county
Hassle due
over schools
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown
says huge cuts are likely for local
government unless the
Re publicans stop insisting on
raising school funding without a
tax increase. •
But Democrat Brown 's
Republican counterpart says.
Brown is threatening to cut local
government in order to force the
Republicans into supporting tax
increases.
Brown, 0-San Francisco, and
Assembly Minority Lead e r
Robert Naylor, R-Menlo Park,
held separate news conferences
Wednesday to explain party
positions on the state budget bill
for fiscal 1982-83, which begins
in two weeks.
Will GOP blow it again?
Considering the brouhaha bolling over in the 43rd
ConJtresaional District, can it be posaible that a
Democrat will slip through the Re~blican backbiting
and' get elected? Couting column, Paae Bl.
' ,
S TA T E
Hughes scboliuuip ·eyed
A. pa!, of Howard H\.Ulhee ~ want to 9et up an
aviation ICholanh.lp In hJi name at a Loe Anpm aeroepace con..,.. Paae A 7.
Medlly in H•wail '!
~-........__-~Toudltm ~to CaUlam&a from Hawa&J maY ·
flOI nhartaUanl aboUt brtnllnl fruit .,._bly lldei\ wUh the WNd IDldfly. ~Cl. .
• • re1ect1on ·
planning comm1ss1oners last
week. But the county supervisors
have authority to overrule the
planning commission and modify
the plan, thereby requiring the
coastal commissioners to
reconsider a modified plan.
Dave Loomis, a coasta l
commission planner. sa ys the
condominium project meets the
requirements of the Coastal Act
because it doesn't block the
Eye on state
existing view of the ocean from
Pacific Coast Highway:
He says commissioners voted to
require that two condominium
buildings be removed from the
plans to preserve the ocean view
from coast highway.
''The locals have a problem
with the project but it meets
requirements of the Coastal Act."
Loomis said. "li the supervtaons
want to change it that's up to
them."
Laguna approves
tentative budget
Laguna Beach City Council
members have adopted a
spending package for 1982-83,
but city officialA won't be writing
out any checks until the state
announces how much money
~ will receive. .
The council had to approve the
budget Tuesday because of a
municipal code requirement
calling for its adoption before
July 1.
But, as was the case last year,
the state L egislature hasn't
completed its deliberations on the
state budget. Because Laguna's
revenues are heavily dependent
on state action, the tentative
budget approved Tuesday might
look quite different when the
council meets !gain July 20 to
* * *
reconsider the document.
City Manager Ken Frank
propoees a $7. 79 million apendi.ng
package for the new fiacal year.
He anticipates revenues to be
about $7 .9 million, which would
leave a balance of $157,700.
In May, the city figured to loee
about $254,000 in state money,
and that figure was left out of
budget projections.
Now, says Richard Reese, the
city's finance director, Laguna
could loee another $350,000 .
And while the city bas a
carryover reserve of abouJ $1.2.-
rnillion, that loss would~represe~t
about 5 percent of the city s
spending budget.
Loss of additM>nal state funds
(See LAGUNA, Paae Ai)
* * *
Sew-er,
climb in
trash fees
Laguna
""' Taxpayers in Laguna Beach
will see increases on their
property tax bills this year for
sewer service and trash pickup.
But they'll realiz.e a modest
reduction ln street lighting fees.
Unanimous action by the City
Council means: -Sewer fees will increase
from $10.50 to $11.50 per month
for residential units; from $6.50
t.o $7.15 per month for vacant
parcels; and from 96 cents per
100 cubic feet of water to $1.05
per 100 cubic feet of water for
commercial properties and
residential units of six or more.
-Trash pickup fees will be
~ by 6 percent effective
July 1. with residential rates
going from $4.46 per month to
INDEX
$4 .73 . Commercial a nd
residential complexes with six or
more units will pay $13.54 for
per month once.a-week pickup.
-Street lighting costs will
dec rease for residential
customers from 23 cents pe..;_
adjusted front footage, to (6
cents.
As an example, a resident with
a standard 50 "foot frontage
would pay $8 per year.
Commercial businesaes will be
assesaed a 24 cents per front foot,
compared to 35 cents last year.
City officials said the decre88e
'in street lighting costs is due to
the city being able to carry over
some surplus funds from last
year.
At Your Service A4 Ann Lan<len B2
Erma~ B2 Moviee Dl-2
Buslne9 Clb-11 Mutual Funda ClO
Cavalcade B2 Public Nodes D'l,3,4
C1allif:led 04-8 Sparta Cl-4
Com1al B6 Stoc:k Marketa cu
era.word B6 Televtlion a
Delrth Notkm & Tbeatert Dl-2
Edikltial Al0-11 Weather A2
Fntenainment Dl-2 World News A3 .
~ B2
SPORTS
l I
. ..
L Orange Cout DAILY PILOT~. June 17, 1111
"Prelldunt R 11an need1
Republigma ln ~and a
RepubllEai\ VertUI a Republican
la not ln the national lnt.ereet
when there la a chance of a
Democrat going to~ from
the 43rd district, ' Crean
continued.
Turnlf\g hi• attention to Crean,
Packard said he ti "convinced
people do not want to elect Crean
or An:her."
He said he hope. to raiae
$600,000 for a campaign that ln
order to succeed must educate
voters on how to file a write-in
ballot.
"Our job ia to beat the system,"
said ~~kai:d· "\l{e're _on our way
• •
now, l thlnk, and we have a ~ry
wlnnablo caml)alln."
What amounts to a "Stop
Crean" campaign developed ln
the days following the primary
election as votes ln the very clo.e
race continued to be counted.
Packard, who moved to a alim
86-vote 18'd the momlna after
elecUon, eventually lo.t die race
in the 43rd diJtrict by 100 votes.
The diJtrict includet portiona of
10Uthem Orange and northern
San Diego County.
Throughout the primary
campaign, Crean was aocuaed of
buylng the race and of employing
questionable and often dirty
campaign tactics.
I L~GUNA BUDGET . • •
would affect how much the city's
182 employees receive in .cost of
living raises, city officials say.
F.ach 1 percent raise would cost
the city about $45,000, Reese
said, and a 9 percent increase for
employees would reduce the
city's reserve account to $820,000.
Negotiations between the city
and three employee organizations
are continuing.
The budget proposes m.or-:
than $5 million for capita!
Improvements, with the largest
expenditure being $3 million to
repay a loan for the Aliso Water
Management Agency coastal
treatment plant construction.
Other pro;ecta included in the
budget are construction of stonn
drains, resurfacil)g El Toro Road,
development of Moulton
Meadows Park and various road
and building repairs.
Newport brokerage
liquidates securities
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Following announcement of an
investigation by the California.
Department of Corporations, the
Newport Beach-based securities
'broker.age firm of Comark is
voluntarily liquidating its trading
in government securities.
Corporations Commissioner
Geraldine D. Green said
Wednesday that Comark, whose
financial condition and record-
keeping practices were being
probed, ·is also beginning an
orderly liquidation of two of its
three wholly owned subsidiaries.
Comack confinned in a press
release that it planned to ''wind
down" operations. The firm
referred all calls to Managing
Director1 Jack Haraburda, who
reportedly was out of the office
late Wednesday afternoon and
did not return a meaage.
The two subsidiaries to 6e
liquidated were identified as
Comark Securities Inc. and
Comark Commodities. Ms. Green
said it was not known how long
the liquidation would take.
T h e D epa rtm e nt of
Corporations began its
examination of the firm in March
when Comark officials said they
could not file their required
annual financial report because
of difficulties in converting books
and records from a manual
system to a new data processing
system.
M s. Green said the
uwestigation will continue and
will cover the liqujdation process.
A statement from the
department said unconfirmed
preliminary financial reports
from Comark indicated an
operating loss of about $4 million
for the fis-cal year ending
December 1981.
"I have the same questions as
you have," said Bram Goldsmith,
chairman and chief executive of
Beverly Hills -based Ci.ty
National Corp. He said h e
invested $150,000 in a Comark
limited partnership in 1979 and
was notified Tuesday of the
firm's action.
"They said they experienced
some losses and think it's in the
investors' best interests that an
orderly liquidation of the firm's
business be initiated," he said.
AP 'ftetlf\OtO
GOING HOME -An injured
Britifh soldier leaves the
hospital ship HMS Hecta
with bums of the face and
hands. He was on the assault
ship Sir Galahad.
British hit
Argentina on
• prisoners
By Tbe Associated Pre11
Prime Minister ·Margaret
Thatcher accused the Argentine
~overnment today of
'indifference" to the state of
Argentine prisoners in the
Falkland Islands, many of them
suffering from exposure,
malnutrition, trench foot and
disease in frigid winter
temperatures.
She told th e House of
Commons that Britain has not
procured a cease-fire in the
South Atlantic and noted:
"So far Argentina has not
agreed a safe conduct to allow
these prisoners to be repatriated
to any Argentine port. She's
attempting to lnslst that they go
to Montevideo (Uruguay) which
is.a lot further and would take a
lot longer." In answer to a
lawmaker's question, the prime
minister critized "Argentine
indifference to the state of their
prison en.
"We're trying very hard to
return the younger conscripts as
soon as possible," she said.
Drizzling da.y
Coastal
Pet1lal clearing In 11'11 Inland
., ... this afternoon ChanQe ot
meuurable drlule 10 1>«cen~
todey. Low ctouda tonight end
Frld1y with pertlel elternoon
ci.atlng. ""'8rnlght lowt 54 to 62'
Highs Friday 64 to 72
Ttmperatures In the Huntington
NtwpC>rt arN rang9 from a tow of
59 to a high of 69.
Elaewhere. from Point
Conc•pllon to lhe M•xlcan bo<dlt and out 60 mllle, Light
varllble winds this alt1rnoon.
becoming west 10 IOllt'-1 10
to 16 knots this 1v1nlng
South-I awen of 2 to 3 feet
Low clouds and loc•I log through
tonight.
.S. Summary
At least alx lornedoe9 touct.d down In South Florid• today.
•.nodllng out plet~.._ ....._ Ind tOPC>flnO .,_ end ..,_,
Dut caU9lng no lnJuriea, of'lldals
Mid.
TM tropical dllturbanoe wNch
caueed the 1torm1 alto '°"*' tHit evacuation• of hundred• of
P•OPI• In c•ntral end -.et•rn
spoktsm1n Jeck Sullivan. In
nearby Surfald•. potlc:e 11ld 1
fence 1nc1rc11ng a beach
construc11on sit• wu blown Into
ColNnt AlllnUI by a tornado
California
Thi National WMther Service
aays Southern Callfornla'1
persistent mornln11 cloudlneu
could produc. epnnlda Frldey,
b\11 In.is,. mott er-lhould ge1
hU)' aunthlne aometlm. befor•
9UnMt
lsc>llt.cl thunderWlowerl COOld
hit moun11ln1, dMettl and the
Owens V•lt.y and lttnperatvr ..
will be eoot.r
Friday·• hlgha ••• predlr.ted from 70 In Loa AngelH 10 a
mulmum 76 al the beachee,
belwMn 78 and 83 In mountaJne,
from 92 10 102 In the high ~
and be'-ea and 1oa 1n tow dM«la.
Boatlrl from Point Conception lo the Mexlcen bofd« can expte;i
light, verlebll wlndt tonight and
early Friday, becoming wHI·
aouthwell at 10 10 11! knota
during the 11tarnoon with a
touth..,..I •well Nnnlng 2 to 3
feet.
Cube Juat two wHkl •fl•r a 'T'
hurricane hit th• .. m • .,... J. emperatures
cauelng 23 deeths
El1ewhere, a wev• of
thundetW1orm• peclllng 60 mph
wlnd9, hell and tom.00.. l'#ePt Albany
eaat through the mld·Atlanllc Albuq~
ltat .. Wedf'IMday night. killing a : Amartllo
baby In Welt Virginia, ~ng AIMvllle
u111>oa11 off th41 Virginie OOM1 AUenta
end fllpplng • Mer1"9 hellcopW In Atlentc Cty
Nontl Carolina. Austin
N11rly the entlr1 111te of . Baltlmore
Florlda wH put undar •llhtr Bllllnga
tornado or thund•retorm Blrmfnghm ·~t9of0edlend8towerd ='"* countlel --. to4d to preper'9 ~ eo.ton
atrong gu1ty wlnda. 1tr11t Bf_..,...
flooding end llghtnlng todey Ind Buffalo
tOftlOht. Bur11ng1on
Three funnel cloud• ~ the Oaap«
Atlantlo coat _. r~ by Otl8'1ltn 8C
th• Broward County tf\erllf'a C~n WV
.. Lo fl'qt
77 59 .2&
89 65
82 6t
84 85 .01
" 87 .02 12 ea .oi
92 71 ee 6& u2 75 55 1.38
84 99
75 53 .13
84 se 65 es .ee
94 75
87 53 .01
• 58 ,03
74 48 .18
llO 17
87 64 .41. •
Fronts: Cold .-. Warm w. OcckJcled .,... Stationary••
88 88 23
73 60 2t 62 45
10 eo 11
61 55 69
91 70 .10
70 59 52 65 &e
89 57 56
77 54
76 56
84 51 65 ...
95 65
78 53
77 48
73 53 .03
65 65 .70
76 54 .20
87 72
91 76 67 49
IO 70 2.88 ts 73 .07
75 56
101 75
IO 62
73 54 .31 IO 62
79 71
... 79 .26 54 45 83 84
78 91 .01 88 69 1.21
87 69 ...
11 73 .13
No. Platte
Olde City
Omehl
Oflendo
Phll9dphle
Phoenix Plttaburgll
Ptlend, Me
Ptland, Ore
Providence
RallfOh
FWlo Rk:hmond Salt Lake
Sen Antonio
S..ttle ~-:r.r. SI Loul1
St P-Tarnpa
St Ste M9M
Spokane
SyrecuM Tooeic•·
Smog.
78 65
80 68
76 59
91 73 .18
16 &e 1.31 1os es
75 25 .29
7S IO .22
65 68
81 61 .12
90 &II .14
112 eo .11
90 73 88 S4
92 88
IO 68
83 66
78 68 .69
72 59 .05
89 74 .45
60 35
.. 60
75 H .99
17 S7
Th• Air Ouellty Man~! Ol1trlet ptedleta llftl!Mlthfut llf
qulllty fOf -*thle l*IClle todey In moll .,_ of the South COl9t
Air a.in, with good elf quellty
loreout fOf the delaft•. COMtll
and mountain reglona.
Where to call (toll lrM) ro;
lalllt ""°' lflfomlttlon: office thl• morning, and th•
Netlonat WMIMf a.MM Mid'
dt-. ll)Otted • twtlter -the Fort Lauderdel• E••cutlve
~ Red6o Mid todly 1,400
peot1l1 and 1,000 cattle were IURf REPORT
OrWlQI COl#lty: llOO) oWMm
Loa Ano•• .. Co11nty: (100) 242-4022
AMtlldl and San a.matdlno countlel: (IOO) H7_.71P
~ from Pin# °" "'° In wllttrn Cuba •• • •••1111 of•
lloodlno ftom • ~' ctep1•Hlon over the t
Y11oet1n Penln11111 •Rd th• ~ ...... ofthe ....... Glllf of Meldoo and o.Meall
't;.. Qouftty ~ NICI
two ,., ........ '°"°'*' """ ==~'--= -=:.., ............... ..... ............ .,, ........ \""•• ~----"-.... mn.T.T •• ':1.-=rt:n
AOMO EpltocM c.nt.: (IOO)
242.4tM T=::. w ... a-. ~..... • .... ) .:;:d ':" 1en1e /llM "'-' Jany ,M a poor e1 TODAY
Tiiles
4°"' It.~ ,.. .. poor ., leoolld '°"' 11!21 p.m. 1.2 nN It.~ M 11 ...., t1 leoolld hlttl UI P""-U ..._ w.._ M II poor et "9AY
....... ....... M. "°' to """ low 1:11 Lift. o, ..... ...... ". poor to em 1: .. Lift. • .. Mfl poor IO ,_ 1:01,.1'1\. U ,. .. . ,..,..... ., .. ,, . ., "'' ... lull -..._ M t:OI p.fll., IT ... " • ,..,.. ., ,.. ,...., .. f:4t Lift. -
TOMOllllM>W'I Tlot:l1 Hlfll ?:N t .lft, L.-. 1:01 p,M, IWell .._. ,_ ...., M Ut Lift., ~: .... ... ... ...... '"'·
• • •
..
•
Soviel 'tyrani:iy' hit
Reagan calls for arms race deeds at U.N.
UNITED NATIONS {!.P) -
Pr 1ld nt Reaaan, l1no=ln a
Soviet challenae to renounce
UM of nuclear weapona,
Kremlin leader1 today of
complllJ\I a "record of tyranny"
throu1h 1lobal aagreNlon and
t.ryina to manipulate the peace
movement ln the Wett.
In a speech before a special
U.N. General Allembly Bellion
on dharmament, R4laaan
portrayed the United States u a
champion of arms control since
World War II, and challenged the
Soviet• to demonttrat• by
"deed.a. not wordl" that they are
fincere about curblna the arm1
race.
Rea&an aiCCWlld the Sovietl of
viol.atlna ex11tlna anm control
qreementl and tne 1926 Geneva
protocol bannln& uae of chemical
weapons.
"In the nuclear era, the major
powera bear a special
re8ponslblllty to ease these
IOUrcet of confitct and refrain
from qgresaion," Reaaan said.
"That la why we are eo deeply
concerned by Sovtet condUt't.··
The pretldent •poke ~fore the
tame forum where Soviet
Foreign Mlnhter Andrei
Ororeyko drew heavy applau.e
Tue.day with a decJaraUon from
Soviet President Leonid
Brfthnev that hia country will
not uae nuclear weapons first ln
any conllJct.
Beirut Airport
hit by shelling
Whlle Rea1an did not addrem
that lltue In hla •~. a tenior
ad.mlniatration ofiiclal thrugged
off the importance of the Soviet
pledge, saying the United States
could not base Its military
planning limply on a declaration
from Moecow.
In his 1yeech, Reagan cited a
U.S. arms control record that
began in 1946 with a proposal to
tum control of nuclear weapons
and atomic energy over to an
international author~. and
continue with his recent plan for
reducing U .S . and Soviet
stockpiles of nuclear warheads.
By Tbe Attoclated Pre11
Beirut airport came under
heavy shelling today and Israeli
armored columns moved against
Yaaer Arafat's guerrillas east of
Lebanon'• capital.
"The fighting came amid
reliable reports that the Palestine
Liberation Organization offered
to discuss with the Lebanese
government ~·a new form of
Palestinian presence In
Lebanon."
The PLO leadership denied
reports it was prepared to lay
down its arms, but engaged in a
flurry of secret diplomatic
activity involving U .S .
presidential envoy Philip C .
Habib and Lebanese President
Elias Sarkis.
The Tel Aviv conunand tWd
Palestinian guerrlll.as bombarded
Israeli troops around the airport.
damaging three parked airliners.
It said Israeli forces east of Beirut
also came under a ~age of the
rockets and Israeli gunboats
back.
But Salim Salam, t"le
managing_direc~r. of Lebanon's
Girl Scouts
offer classes
in boating
Classes in rowing, canoeing
and sailing for beginning and
intermediate boaters who are at
least 10 years old and can swim
are being offered ln Newport
Beach and Dana Point by the
Girl Scout Council of Orange
County.
Separate classes for children
and adults are available Monday
through Friday, day and
evenings, beginning June 21 at
the Newport Dunef ln Newport
Beach and Dana Harbor in Dana
Point.
The courses consist of 15 hours
of instruction and cost $25, plus a
$1 insurance fee for non-Scouts,
said a program spokesman.
For further information, call
979-7900, or write to Boating,
Girl Scout Council of Orange
County, 1620 Adams Ave., Costa
Mesa 92626.
'
Recalling the words of .
President Eisenhower, Reagan
sald; "We are for peace, fl.rat.Jut .
and always . . . "
While committing the United
States to work for real anns
control me~. ~Jin-Mid.
"We need more than mere words,
more than empty promises,
before we can proceed."
on arts
panel reappointed
Three members of the
Laguna Beach Arts
Commission have been
reappointed to new, three-
year terms by the City
Council.
Elaine Dines, Be ve rly
•The picture books of
illu.trator and _author Eira
Jack Keats are the theme of
ore-school storytimes at
Laguna Beach Library on
next Tuesday and
Wednesday.
Keats, tits, haA c reated
numerous picture books in
the past 20 yea.rs. Many have
been made into films, slides,
•Openings remain in many
classes scheduled for the
summer recreation program
by the City of Laguna Beach.
Most classes begin next
week and registrations are
accepted through the summer
for cou rses inc luding
aquatics, dance, martial arts,
g~>lf· .. holistic health and dog
lnspeek and Stuart Katt all
sought reappointment to the
nine-member board which
acts in an advisory capacity to
the City Council in matters
pertaining to art and culture
in Laguna Beach.
cassettes and recordings.
An artist since the age of 4,
Keats ~an writing seriously
in the early 1960s.
Laguna pre-schoolers will
learn about Keats and his
books on June 22 and 23 at 11
a .m . Storytime r o r
kindergarten -bound
5-year-olds is June 22, at 2
p.m.
obee11ence.
Special activities this
summer will include the
Laguna Cuervo Gold Open
volleyball tournaments,
softball, the Brook's Street
Surfing_ Contest and
basketball tournaments.
For recreation information,
calJ 497-3311, ext. 201.
·Sailcloth Is JYot
Just Por Sails •••
rt also makes a great casual pant, because it is dura·
ble, lightweight, and comfortable. Perfect for the
act.Ive man, or as Storekeeper Michael Bueche sug·
gests, for the man who just wants to relax.
Available In 10 colors.
father's day ...
Sunday,
June
20th.
r
~rnmaoo
P'.tO ot:ficial killed .
JDL claims responsibility for auto J;omb
· • I f TM AIMcllaW Pna ROMS -A Pallet1ne Liberation Orpnl&JUon
offidal WM k1Uld today when a bomb exploded
under lm ear on a 1'anw ltNet, and a Lebu8e
..._,WM.,. and killed ln another au.ck.' police
IUcl. Kamal H u11ein, 38, of Amman, Jordan,
kllnttfild by the PU) • deputy dlrector of ita
Rome o~, WM ki1Jied lnltantly when a bomb
~mu~rnm
connected to the lp.ltJon •)'Item of h.lt car exploded,
inveetlptora ea!d.
A man cJaim1n1 to reprfJlent the Jewilh Armed
Realatance of the Jewiab Defeme Lea,ue called the
New York headquarten of The Allociated Preea
early today and sald his organization was
responsible for the aasuaination of the two Arabi in ·
Rome.
Over-the-air TV deregulated
W A SHINGTON -T h e Federal
Communications Commission voted today to
deregulate over-the-air pay television, raising the
pOlllibruty of such service being initiated in dM.ens
of cities.
By a unanimous vote after brief discUISion, the
agency agreed its existing rules had served to.
restrict development of the industry and thus limit
the diversity of programming.
A pay TV statiOJ\ operates like a conventional
station with one major exception. Instead of
continuoualy transmitting a signal that can be
..r.ec:eived by any TV set, such a station transmits a
scrambled signal that can be received only with the
aid of a decoder.
GOP agrees to back federal budget
W ASlilNGTON (AP) -House and Senate
Republicans agreed today to back a federal budget
for next year calling for a $20.9 billion tax increase
but leaving a deficit of slightly over $103 billion,
officials said.
"We have an agreement among ourselves," Sen:
Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Senate
Budget Committee, said after two days of private
talks invo!'ting GOP leaders from both houses.
Republicans sought the agreement-among
themselves so they could present a united front in
formal negotiations on a compromise with
Democrats.
. Cleveland Press prints last issue
CLEVELAND -The Cleveland Press will
cease operations with today's editions, according to
notices posted in the building of the 103-year-old
daily newspaper.
"Today will be the last 1-ue of the Cleveland
Press," according to a statement given to employees
by publisher Joeeph Cole. -The Press is the sixth major daily afternoon
newspaper to collapse in the past year.
Housing aid hill mired in Congress
WASHINGTON -A n emeqren_cy
appropriations bill containing $3 billion in houling
aid for middle-income famU W. is heed1nl beck to
the Senate, mired in a· bitter dispute owr the
penonal finances of members of c.onan-. '
Unless senators agree to limit their outside
'earnings to $18,200 a year -58 of them earned
more than that last year -the $8.9 billion bill could
: lndictmerit due
SAN DIEGO -Two San Diego youths who
·tailed to sign up with the Selective Service System
have been notified indictments charging them with
failure to register are being prepared against them,
a U.S. Attorney said Wednesday. .
"They have one option left and that ii to
register before the indictments are delivered," said
.
die, leaving several government agencies pennil~
for the next three months.
And even if the Senate settles the question-of
memben' earnings, President Reagan is expected to
veto the entire pack.age because he opposes the
housing -aid provision. Backers say a vote to
override any veto would be cloee.
•
in draft case
Peter Nunez, ~.S. Attorney in San Diego.
Nunez said four San Diego youths are on a
Justice Department list of 225 draft-age men facing
pl'O!leCUtion for failure to register. He said the
maximum penalty on conviction is five years in
prison and a $10,000 fine.
Judge blasts censure efforts
SAN FRANCISCO -Mono County's only
Superior Cour t ,Judge, smarting from a state
oommlsa1on recomlnendation that he be censured by
the California Supreme Court. says his accusers
were polit;ically motivated.
"I ~ a 1terllng reputation as a .lawyer and
thought I had a good reputation as a judge," Judge
Harry Roberts said by telephone Crom his home in
Bridgeport after the recommendation Wednesday.
"Naturally I am upset and chagrined by this, but
there is no question of moral turpitude."
Roberts, 67, said that the move by the state
Commission on Judicial Performance "raises some
very serious fundamental problems" about the
independence of judges.
Court fees OK'd for abortion case
SAN FRANCISCO -The California Court of
Appeal has .ruled the state must foot the legal bill
for thoee who fought restrictiona on abortions for
would be shared by various groups, but American
Civil Liberties Union spokeswoman Elaine jlinson
said Wednesday it may· reach "hundreds of
thousands of dollars." -poor women. .
It wasn't known how much money ultimately _
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
~P.Helev l'llllllflW .... a.w (...-Ollloa-
~ ... ':."'!2
' .., 1111-.r fll ~
=~
••H~ Oll.-wfll ........ ,_, ...
~Qodderd ....., .. ~ ::............,_
a.....Looe ...........
I
Orphan porpoise
dies of 'stress'
REDWOOD CITY -Stress
may have been the cause of
death for Bradley St:inlon. the
orpha ned, week-old harbor
porpoiae named in part after the
Marin County beech where he
was found atruallng for life last
·week .
The tiny mammal, 1eperated
from its mother at birth, spent
moet of ita U!e in the lntenllve 1 care tank at a wild animal park.
It W118 declared deed Wedneeday
by Marine Wor ld prealdent
Michllel Demfttoul. •
•• Ml're Listenlllfl •••
What do you like a bout lhe Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your mt1u1e will be recorded,
tranacribtd and delivered to tbe appropriate editor.
The 1ame al·hour auwtrins Mrvlce may be Uled to retord let·
ten to the editor on HJ top6c. MaUbo• conLrlbuton mutt Include
their name and telephoH number for vertlluUon. No clrculaUon talll,p&e ....
T.,I UI what'• on your mlnd.
<
" Orange Oout OArLY PILOT/T'hurtday, June 17, 1882 L .u
TO P OFF TEMPORARILY -Freeway
travelers have noticed the Holly Sugar factory
taking its lumps lately. But Herb Wilson,
general manager, says the roof is down so
processing machinery can be moved to sister
Dlllr,...,.... _, a.-.......
plants in Brawley, Tracy and HamiltDn City.
The Santa Ana site, now a packaging and
distribution center for bulk and liquid sugar,
will regain its roof in about two weeks.
l _,r Slaying baffles victim'~n
Councilman says pair were 'as brothers'
Westminster Councilman GiJ
Hodges said he's completely
baffled by a shooting episode at
John Wayne Airport last week
that left his brother dead and his
cousin in jail on murder charges.
"The whole thing's just crazy,"
the ·councilman said. "The two of
them were as close as brothers."
The COWlCilman's brother -
Barkley Hodges -was shot once
in the head as he sat drinkJng in
an airport restaurant with his
cousin and an unidentified third
man.
Authorities arrested the
cousin, 32-year-old Laguna
Beach sailmaker Kelly Russell
Daniels. He goes to court June 25.
Witnesses told Orange County
Sheriff's deputies that they
heard a crack of gunfire, saw
Hodges slump over on the table
and observed Daniels sitting,
allegedly still holding the gun.
The third man ran. Officers
located him later. He was neither
arrested nor identified.
Councilman Hodges dispelled
rumors that he was the third
"mystery" man. He said he was
at his home, studying for the
state bar exam at the time.
"Everyone at the restaurant
says they (his brother and
cousin) were friendly, shaking
hands -it doesn't ma.ke any
sense."
The councilman said it would
be completely out of character
for his cousin, Daniels, to be
Shot Marines
• recovering
Two Camp Pendleton-based
Marines shot during an apparent
holdup attempt Tuesday night
remained in stable condition
today, Camp P e ndle ton
authorities reported.
Lance Cpl. Lawrence Chavez,
19, of Los Lunas, N.M. was being
treated at San 'Clemente General
Hospital for a gunshot wound to
his stomach while Lance Cpl.
Richard Miller, 20, of Edmonds,
Okla., was being treated for a
wound to his right arm at the
base's Naval Regional Medical
c.enter, according to a Marine
Corps spokeswoman.
~ -4'
SALE
carrying a gun. He said he
believes his brother and Daniels
had met to discuss a poesible
business venture making
windsurfers.
"From what I understand,"
Councilman Hod~es said, "he
(his brother) had JUSt flown into
town. My cousin was interested
in getting his he lp on this
project."
He said he'S' been told that
following the shooting his cousin
kept repeating, "Now why did I
do that."
The dead man, a former
Westminster resident, was
scheduled to go to court later lh1s
month on cocaine selling charges,
authorities in Huntington Beach
revealed.
Huntington officers said
Barkley Hodges was arrested last
March on the drug charges.
Councilman Hodges said his .
brother recentllr had moved out
of the state. He deecribed him as
a successful businessman who
had dabbled in real estate,
produce and had served as a vice
president with several firms.
-STEVE MARBLE
WOMEN'S AND
BOYS' CLOTHING
25°/o OFF
WOMEN'S
SIZES 6 TO 16
SELECTED WOMEN'S SUMMER JACKETS,
SLACKS, SKIRTS, DRESSES,
SHIRTS, SWEATERS, KNITS
AND SLEEPWEAR
PLUS ASSORTED SHOES
AND ACCESSORIES
(Shots no1 .awilabl1 at ewry branch)
SIZES 8 TO 12, 13 TO 20, 35 TO 40
SELECTED BOYS' SUMMER SUITS, . '
SPORT JACKm, TROUSERS,.
CASUAL OUTDOOR JACKETS, SHORTS
UGHTwEIGHT SPORT AND KNIT SHIRTS
PlUS OTHER SELECTED FURNlSHINGS
IN SIZES I TO 20
()ft sal• noai tltrot1.1lt Jw"• 261#1
ISlAllllMID 1111
..
., •.. L
~Crystal Cove plans
I
~:face court challengt:
~·. The 1tate Department of'
1 Park• and Recreation and the
->California Le1i1lature have
,. botched up the handllna of Crywta1
Cove'• cottages an~ they.:_.ye
f\ botched it badly.
> This condition aeema qulte
J clear after state f unctlonartes at
' long lui unveiled future plans for
., the •5 cottages that are included
?. within Crystal Cove State Park,
between Corona del Mar and
I V Laguna Beach.
r By way of background, it
.. ahould be nDted that there ii a
clegi1lative mandate that the ~Crystal Cove shoreline be opened
l for public use and that the
cottages be preserved as a
historical reminder of early-day
California beach communities.
We have no quarrel with
theae objectives. Crystal Cove may
indeed be one of the last examples
of early shoreline villages.
The state plan, however, sees
fit to evict all the present cottage
tenants for the purpose of turning
the buildino over to overnight
renters or for uae as hostels for
bikers or hikers.
People with experience in
beach renting might 'well wonder
how long these historic cottages
will remain upright under these
proposed kinds of uses.
Additionally, just down the
fbeach at El Morro, state officials
t;aw fit to Rrant mobile home (
~
dwellen 20.year extenatona on
their beechtront .... . · nu. may be 'tine. But _.
reMOft1na tor ~ of CeyN1 Cove cottqe dwellen Wll that It
la nee 1111ry In order to wure .
public ecc.. to the t.cb.
YOU are left to wonder bow
the blufttop cotqp dw.llen block
acceN to the biach while the
mobile home dwellen on the mid
at EL Morro do not.
The plain fact 11 that the
disparity deu. loldc.
If state offidala have thouahtm
that overnight \mn will cerve
the little cottacea better the
present rentera, thoae atate
officials better bave a re-think.
Again, lf st.ate offidala have ·
determined that prlvete \.we ot the
cottages is incompatible with a
public beacJi, doee it become any
less ~J>8tible for the coltap8
to be used privately by hikers,
bikers or school aroupe?
AJJ it now at.ands, the J>ftlellt
Crystal Cove cottaae dwellers a.re
takina their ca.e to court where it
woula seem they miaht have a
very good cue for retaln1ng their
rental righta for a similar period of
time as the mobile home
leaseholders at El Morro.
It is tragic. however, that the
issue cannot be 1ettled by the
state, with uniform application at
both ends of the beech, and thua
bypass everybody getti ng
ensnarled in a court action.
pil fight continues
While the state has won at ,The council'• letter argu_.
east a temporary victory over the the~ is no need tor an accelerated
jlnterior Department on deletion of leasing achec:lu1e, eepee{ally when
l~ffshore oil tracts, Laguna Beach previous leasea have not been
isn't resting on its laurels. completeJy developed and their
· . City Council members have impact we.eel.
dispatched a letter to local and In addition, the dty la crtUcal
tate legislat ors e xpre11ing of the Interior J)epartment'a
concerns about future oil leue environmental •• •Wit pncaa..
aales scheduled fortl984 and 1986 which tt tenm wpe, and which it
that involve Southern California •YI appliea to Iaraie ooean area
tracts. rather -than 'J)"dfic oO tracta.
The Department of the The dty •YI it woukl never
Interior's five-year Outer get away with 1uch impreciae
Continental Shelf Oil and Gas environmental reports, and
Leasing Program would result in neither ahould the Interior
Lease Sale No. 80 in 1984 and Department.
Lease Sale No. 95 in January 1986. The letter, to be went to
Both of the~e sales would Congreaaman Robert Badham;
include tracts near Laguna Beach Senators S.l Hayakawa and Alan
and could result in 211 more Cranston, and Gov. Brown, la an
exploratory wells, 920 production indication Laguna Beach ta willlna
wells, 37 platfonna and 30 new · to continue its battle to keep oil
~lin es off the Southern rigs off ita oout u long as it is
· ornia coast. necessary to do IO. .
School choice .was clear
When Laguna Beach school
irustees went about the task of
.electing a new superintendent,
they didn't have to look far.
• Bill Barnes, who bas served aa
director of educational services for
the school district for the past
teVen years, was the unarWnous
choice of the five-member board
of education.
Barnes will assume the
district's top admiQistrative post
July 1, replacing RoDert Sanchis,
who becomes superintendent of
the Glendale achool system.
The n e w 1uperintendent comes with more than just a grasp
of the local IChool .<fistrict.
He has been shown to be an
effective admini9trator in a small
school district beset with financial
problems.
In his years in Laguna Beach,
Barnes has d irected special
education programs, guided many
community task force group1,
coordinated classroom curriculwn
and repreaented the dlatrict as
chief negotiator with teacher,
c l assified and counaeltng
employees. '
The board credited him with
bis ability to find coneemua amGhl
"divergent poaltlona, •• ln
negotiations.
In addition, Barne• waa
imtrwnental tn prepartna many
grant proposal.a and doc-umenta
required by the st.ate and federal
government, a tMk that meant
money to the finandally ltnlpped
district.
~ l\lperintendent, his tint
task will be to reor1antze the
administration of the IChoo1I and
the d.iatrict. His pri.ndpal attention
will be the development and
enhancement of the cu.rrb&lum.
It will be a challenae, but.the
ICbool board belleva It •lect.ed
the best man for the job.
We w lah him well ln the
cballen&es ahead.
L.M. Boyd I Bartendins trick
Experienoed bu1enden wbo 8el'V8
wMk drinkl dp in the IOda, then pour
in the whilkey, and dcm't mix. No, not
becawe thla makes a better tall one.
8ut the cuatomerl tint lip Wt.el
lll'anlS·
'lbirty·five till* a nicbt JI about
bow oftm you chanp your lleeplna
politkm, lf typlaal.
Q. Wbo ftnt inll'Od..ad the couch
., ~y-.T And whyt
Tltl-A.MlllJlll•1 ..... ... ...... ,. ....... .. ........ ,........,
,,.
• • '
Soviet subs ··a prime threat-
W ASHING'l'ON -Allde from the
po.tbility of a ~ve Araentlne air
mike, the, Britlab bad three ''wild carda''
to worry about in the Falkland Ia1andl
-the enemy IUbmarinel Salta. San
Luis and Sanu.go del Enero.
The Salta and the Sm Lula, bWlt
eight years a&O in West Germany, are
equipped with the lame deed1y Tlaerflab
torpedoes the Britlab \..t to llnk the
Argentine cndRr General BeJcrmo. nie
Santiago del r.tero. though a relative
antique built by the United Stat. before
194~. has a rana• of 12,000 mile.
between refuellnea and constituted a
maj>r threa.t to the Britilb lnvlillcln fleet.
THE BIU'l'llll OONCBJlN over the
Argentine IUba WM~ thoucb with
a certain detachment, by U.S . mWtary
officiala. The Penta1on ha1 1pent
millJonl trytnc to make "'"' the United
Stam ha auffident and aophlstlcat.ed
antl-au~marine warfare weapona to
protect 0ur 6eet from Soviet undenee
marauders.
The Ml . .Qa.ture of the aubmarine
t.hre9t .. detailed in .... ol aecret and
t.op-eecret PentaccJb and ClA document.
shown to mj -.:late Dale van· Atta.
The Pentaaon fftlmatea that the
Soviet Navy now baa 71 nuclear-
pow~ aubmarinel of various types
that are also armed with nuclear
weapona. They are considered to be the
prime undenea threat to the United
Stat.a
fn addition, the Soviets have 286
attack IUbmarines carryinc conventional
weapons, and, am count on four each
-.-i-•• -.1.-•• -.-£.
from the Poles and Bulpriana. Thus the
U.S. and ~A TO forces have a total of 364
Soviet.bJoc subs to worry about.
To combat them, the Allied anti-
aubmartne force has a total of 1,045
fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters. with
an additional 149 in re9el'Ve. These sub
chuen c:arry a knockout punch; nuclear
depth bombs. They can be delivered by
either planes or helicopters.
In .adition, the U.S. arsenal includes
an anti-submarine nuclear rocket, called
Aaroc. wbk:h is fired from surfaoe ships,
and a similar sub-to-sub rocket called
Sulxoc. However, the Subroc nuclear
rocket Is technologically obeolescent and
will be phased out by 1989.
Thia meana, aa a Pentagon report
I
notes, that unless a replacement weapon
is developed for Subroc, U.S. aubmarinee
"will have to rely on the ahorte~-r ,
conventiopally anned MK-48 ,
whoee effective use )Vil1 require ( . )
to close within the Soviet detection
envelope and within range of existing
Soviet weapons."
THESE NUCLEAR torpedoes and
depth charges, of courae, cannot.be uaed
in any limited war. For their u'8 would
surely touch off a nuclear exchange that
could escalate into a holocaust. With this
in mind, the Pentagon must al8o look to
its conventional anti-submarine
weapons.
But this in tum leads to another
problem. as a Pentagon docwnent pointa
out: "Because individual kill probability
tends to be low in conventional anti-
submarine warfare, it could take as long
as three months to bring the Soviet
submarine threat under control in the
Atlantic and the Pacific. During those
months, if typical estimates are v~ we
could 108e as much as 15 percent of U.S.
and allied reinforcement and rea.apply
shipping, while the Soviets could be up
to 70 percent of their aubmarineL,'
And it aeema unlikely that either side
would put up with such eevere Jomes
without re90rting to nuclear weapons.
Good intentions don't prevent wars
To the Editor: ·
I auppoee \he current ~freer.e
movement ia no different t..oni any other
such movement in history; and I do not
doubt fer a moment that the leaders of
today's m oveme nt are every bit as
sincere in their belieC. and convictions u
were thoee leaders of similar movements
in put history.
And u for history, who will ever
forget the pathetic spectacle of Neville
Chamberlain returning from Nazi
Germ.any in the late '308, wavillJ the
document that Hitler had just atgned renounclna aggrelllon and announcing
to the world that "this document means
peece in our time''?
Or who can forget our own American
folk-hero Charles Llndbereh pr'MChing
to America all dwinl the SOI that we
should unilaterally cli9arm • a way to
convince Hi\ler of our dslN for world
peace?
PEARL BARBOR chanpd all of that
kind of Ivory Tower thinking on the
morning of December 7, 1941 at the
initial ooet of 2,000 American ..Uon' 11vt9. The final ooet of that war that
co~ have been prevented was 50
mUlion lives. The IDOl'l'llnl after Peerl
Harbor, everyone ln the free world woke
up llmultaneoualy to the realization that
what Win1ton Churchlll bad been
prMChing for 8 decade WU ccrrec:t; that
a atrona defeme ts and alwa)'I bu .,
the only deterrent that am prevent wan
with aggremlve natiohll -not piec.'el of
peper, not" ballot propolitiona. not the
1ood intention• of all th e
well·intentioned people (n the world.
Aareuive bullies, whether they be
iDCllvlduala Oil natiom IUCh • the Soviet
Union. relpeCl only one tbinf and tilt II
poww Oil the tbrMt ol tMt poww.
1'ortunUtly R W, tbefe WU time fai'
UI aftw Pearl Hlftar tD '""'1ci our
pethedc defemee that hid .... allowed
to ........ to IUch a .......,_.. It.ate
of~ The...,.... after a
mieU atiack in the QUdeer ... will Ml be .-rJy IO ~ .t .... Who ,.._to fllC8r.litJ.a1*.Wide UI with m IMIDdble .,._
lfo war In h~ Ml nw Men
i&aNd, ...... .,.n. is -418falW netloa tlaat ,.,_...,. I• ~Ual ....,, ............ ,,1·--war than luelf. I'•• ••••• admow~ tit.II wt ....... ,.._
far lt wldci 11 •'true _.., 11 l\ -IO
eenturl• atG: uu JOU ._,.'..JIMGe, ~ .......... , .. _ .. ..
.._. ..... ol~ff!/ltllll&lara ......... ,... ..... ~c
.............. ~. •lllliilllfllll-• .......... ~·--·
memorietofwhatatrulyi.nspirational
manhewu. -·
I started attendlns clues in his army
baJTacka in 1962. I waa present at hia
retirement when the student body
pre9en1ed him with a color television. I
wu there for the dedication of the Basil
MAILBOX
.. . ..
Petenon Gymnasium, But I recall two
Uwta.nces with Dr. Petenon more than
theae.
Dr. P e terson used to umpire our
student softball pmes. One day he called
me out on_.ltrikea. I vigorously insisted
the pit.ch .fta low. He said it w• not. I
loat.. After the game he approeched me
and admitted the pitch may have been
low; that he wu watchina the aide of \he
ltrlke zone. He told me that even when
there la doubt one mUlt stick to bis
judgments. The world. be said, has no
place few the wiahy-wuby. no room for
the mugwumper. One must make a
decision and stick by it.
On the day after President Kennedy
waa shot, Dr. Petenon called' a special
student amembly. John Kennedy wu a
hero to ua. We felt he aomebow favwed
the )'OU.DI, that he wu on our lk:le. His
idMla were clear and lmpxt.ant. His
death ataagered u1. We were 101t,
confWled. The atUdent body was numb.
There were p1aN of cancelling all
1porta and social events and even
clallea. Dr. Petenon knew bow we felt,
for I think he too felt our lea. He told ua
that John Kennedy was not ~ IOrt of
man who would cancel anything, but
would p-em on with the job at banCl with
even renewed viaor'. Take a deep &-eath, he Mid, m\.Wter
your oouraae. for we have the same job
to do now • we did before, only now we
ml.Wt do it without John Kennedy.
And now we wW have to do it without
BMll Petenon.
DAVID A. HUGHES
Hidden COit•
To the Sdltor:
The Or~ftl• County Develo=
Plan for Bolla auir:... contaim
... daat mq m.-Uae public liable fOll
m1WaM of dollMw on a perpetuall1 ............... ,....,above md
., .... ~ .... ol ''"' mlWaft ~..:.=-=---to .... Clalea, co••l•t• with jeUlH and ....... , • .., ....... tuna ...
d.laposition along the Huntington Beach
to Newport Beach ooutline, that the
beaches downooast from the jetties will
suffer constant erosion without naiural
r e plenishment of sand. Thia w ill
necessitate repetitive dredging of sand
from offshore back onto the beaches, at a·
public cost in the millions of dollara.
WE SEE this p henomenon in action
today. The Army Corps of Fngineers is
now dredging sand back onto Sunset
Beach becauae of jetties built upoout at
~eim Bay, The coat -$6.6 millioil. A
similar phenomenon ia happening in
Oceanside now where the beaches are
having to be rebuilt at a ooet of several
million dollars because of upcoast
man-made development e.nd disruption
of the natural coastline?
Do we not learn from history'! Can we
not learn from current events? The
Orange County Board o! Supervillors is
placing the whole Huntmcton Beach
c:oast1ine in great jeopardy with their
ill-conceived plan for Sola Chica.
And they are +>in8 it on the badts of
the public.
"What therefore God hath f,lned
together, let not man put asunder'
Marie 10:9
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD
Clarification
To the F.ditor:
Regarding ae·f. J ones' rebuttal to my
letter of June 2, want to clarify that my
letter wu referring to the !'new" Irvine
Company, and in no way wu it meant
to reflect on the "old" Irvine c.ompeny.
All tho.e accolades were well delle.r .red
and earned by the "old" Irvine Compeny
-and to aet the.. record =t. the Irvine Founation I.a not a ~ of
TIC.
In our 21 years with the Irvine
~,;om y, in both aariculture and land
t departments, we were with
both "old" and the "new'' Irvtne. 1
have many fond memoriel of the "old"
company.
•
111111 llnll '
I 11l1 H • ( l.i l JI j ,.,. , I I I:'. llHAN(,l U)lJN I 'f •./\I It UH N IA 25 C fNT S
._UCI pres_er__~ __ Jninorit¥-lear.ning plan
!'. JOEL C. DON a pt'Olrun that aldl economlcally combined with the Student "marlct. a new partnenhi&" 1981, according to a UCI offlcial. Commlaaion spokesman Rlllty ·
1 ............... dlladvanSapd 1tudent1. Affirmative Action (SAA) between the univenlty and e Gomez waa on official leave of Kennedy said the chancellor Offidall at UC Irvine have =am, and both wOl "°"' be coalltJon. He invited' coalition ablence for 'wo yean during the ahowed "aincere interest" with
decided to cancel a plan to In a formal announcement er the Office of· ~ repreeentativea to partidpate on EOP re1tructurin1. Since h11 the concema of the coe.lltion. reoraanlae the Educational Wedneaday, UCl Chancellor Affairs. The EOP and SAA a caMP'.11 advilory committee to return, he haa been reusi.C to "I waa very lmf.relled with his OpportW'Uty Pro8ram (l!X>P) and 1Daniel G . Aldrich Jr. utd programs had t,o be directed b~ l!lOP and SAA. early outreach, which is at
rem.tat.eel itl former director. Manuel Gomez wW retum u the Office of Relatlona wit junior and aenior high 11Chool penonal interest,' Kennedy said
admlnlltrator of l!X)P. Under a Schools and Colleges. Gomez wlJl The univenlty had propoeed atudenta. today. ''He (Aldrict)) came Into
The actlon wu h4lled bfr a hOlt ~viOUI propou.1, Gomez W'9 to be in charge of both prosrama. the l!lOP reo~tion becau.1e the community; into th e
of Orange County m norlty e rea11lgned to an early of 1ub1tantla -J;'owth in the The Orange County Hwnan neighborhood. He didn't have to
IJ'C>Upa that had critidzed what outreach 1e1men t of the Aldrich met with a coalition of p!'Oll'am. The P budget had Relations Comml.ssion mediated do that.
they aaw H the unlver1ity'1 reorganized m . minority groups Tueaday and muahroomed from $400,000 ln the dispute between the minority "I think they (UCI official&)
apparent attempt to "fragment" Aldrich a1ao said JOC>P will be later declared the meeting 1978 to more than $1 million in coalition and UCI. (See EDUCATION, Pase AJ)
•
··Two ~xercr'!ssings_ -t
Irvine hacked· • ·ID
By GLENN SCOTT or .. D.ier ,... ,...,
Two overeroaaings propoeed to
span railroad tracks in Irvine are
ranked among the top six on a
funding priority list recently
released by the state Public
Utilities Commission. ·
The high ran.kings were hailed
today as "good news" by Brent
Muchow, city public works
director. He said he's 90 percent
confident the projects will
receive state funding when
reviewed next April by Caltrans.
Ranked sixth by the PUC was
the well-known proposal to drop
Santa Fe Railway tracks into a
10-foot-deep channel between
Culver Drive and J effrey Road.
Overcrosaings, the first phase of
the project, would be built at
Culver and at Jeffrey. A bridge
propoeed at Yale Loop is ranked
18th b y the PUC and is
considered a separate project.
Thia railroad ''ditch'' project
was the subject of Measure A. a
local ballot proposition. passed by
74 percent of Irvine voters at the
'Beeord at tyranny'
Reagan tells Russ:
• • prove s1ncer1ty
um+Eo NATIONS (AP) -
President Reagan, ignoring a
Soviet challenge to renounce first
uae of nuclear ~eapons, accu9ed
Kremlin leaders today of
compiling a "record of tyranny"
through global aggression and
trying to manipulate the peace
movement in the West.
In a speech before a spedal
U.N. General Asaembly session
on disarmament, Reagan.
portrayed the United States as a
champion of anns control since
World War Il, and challenged the
Soviets to demonstrate by
"deeds, not words" that ~ey are
sincere about curbing the anns race. ·
Reagan aocwted the Soviets of
violating existing anns control
agreements and the 1925 Geneva
protocol banning use of chemical
weapons.
"In the nuclear era, the major
powers bear a special
reaponaibility to eaae these
aource9 of conflict and refrain mm aggression," Reagan said:
"That ii why we a.re 90 deeply
concerned by Soviet'conduct."
The president spoke before the
same forum where Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko drew heavy applause
Tuesday with a declaration from
·Soviet Preside nt Leonid
Brezhnev that his country will
not use nuclear weapons first in
any conflict.
While Reagan did not address
that issue in his speech, a senior
administration official shrugged
off the importance of the Soviet
pledge, saying the United States
could not base i ts military
planning simply on a declaration
from Moecow.
County rescinds
• • airport. exp~nsion
BY FREDERICK. SCROEMEHL or ... D.ilr,......, ' Complying with a recent court
order , Orange County
aupervisors have rescinded a
February, 1981, resolutfon
approving a $100 million
expansion program at J ohn
Wayne Airport. .
The board's action Wedne8day
was considered a legal fonnallty
Ii.nee ~lementation of the plan w• bl by an order i9ued in
January by· Orange County
Superior Court Judge Bruce
Sumner. '
However, it was not until two
NATION
weeks ago that Sumner, in
issuing the final judgment in the
case, ordered supervisors to·
rescind the 1981 action.
While the county is free to
appeal Sumner's ruling -an
action that is expected -no
major phylical changes at the
airport can take place, nor can
the limit of 41 jet departures per
day be mcrea.ed.
Sumner struck down the
mast.er plan following a trial in
which attorneys repre.enting
Newport Beach and the group
Stop Polluting our Newport
(See AIRPORT, Pace A!)
Nixon· doesn't look back
~-
Ten years after the Watergate scandal that
destroyed h.ia praddency, Blcbud Nixon aaya be ~er
look:a &.ck. Page Ae.
Diet prevents cancer J'
A Kientific panel has found a po.ible link
between hlch·fat dieU and cancer. It advt.ee eating
man fn<a, pee11a and who.le cereals to lower· the
riak. P• 84.
TELEVISION
June 8 e l ec tion . Voters
authorized the city to sell a $1
million bond to complement $9
million in funds anticipated from
the state railway.
Ranked second by the PUC
was a project to Cl'088 the tracks
at Bake Parkway in the Irvine
Industrial Complex-East. The
state would pay half of the
estimated $1.7 million cost of the
project.
The Orange Co unt y
government would be expected
to pay half of the city's share
because the crossing would open
traffic between Irvine and
unincorporated El Toro and Lake
Forest. ·
Bake Parkway eventually is
planned to extend west through
the industrial district and cross
the San Diego Freeway south of
its interchange with the Santa
Ana Freeway. The crossing is
part of plans for developing
Irv ine Ce n ter, Muchow
explained.
But he said planners haven't
recommended yet whether the
bridge should include ramps
leading to or from the freeway.
TASSLED TRADITION -Smiling Irvine
High School students head for graduation
ceremonies at the school stadium. Diplomas
were given to 435 students Wednesday
evening. Elsewhere, 482 seniors went through
graduation at University High School's Senior
D.ilr Net ....... .,...,. I(....,
Lawn and 48 students received diplomas at
SELF High S chool's presentation at UC
Irvine's Little Theater. Woodbridge High
School will graduate its first senior class next
spring.
Mu chow s a i d be waa
somewhat surpriaed by the high
PUC ranking for lhe Bake
P arkway crossing tsntil he
studied the relatively small coat
in proportion to large amounts of
projected traffic.
"The minute we complete that
link, there's going to be traffic,"
he predicted.
Cops nab ·suspect
in HB slayings
Legal battle
for Diedrich
about to end
Saved from sewer
KANSAS CITY-; Mo. (AP) -
A youth cutting w eeds in a
heavily wooded area heard faint
cries for help and discovered a
26-year-old man who bad been
trapped in 'a storm sewer for two
days. The victim, Allen Gaage,
was in good co ndit ion
Wednesday night.
Irvine boy, 11,
hit by auto ·
An 11-year-old Irvine boy was
in critical condition today at
Western Medical Center after
being struck by a car Wednesday
. afternoon.
The youngster, who police
w ouldn't identify pending
notification of all of his parents,
was riding a bicycle at the
interaection of Walnut Avenue
and Lime Street when he was hit
by a car driven by Mar•hall
Robinson, 69, of Tustin.
He suffered head injuries and
was taken to the trauma center at
West.em Medical by the~
County Fire Department, j>olice
sru'd.
Robinson wasn't mjured in the
incident.
COUNTY
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN or tM D.ilf PW Se.ft
Police have MreSted a man
suspected in the grisly slaying:s of
a young woman and her mother
whose mutilated bodies were
discovere d Wednesday in a
Huntington Beach home.
Huntington Beach police Lt.
Merle Schneblin said officers also
have found three young children
missing from the Sunnycrest
Lane home, describing the
youngsters as alive and safe.
He declined to release the
name of the murder suspect on
advice of the Orange County .
District Attorney's office.
He also declined to reveal
where the murder suspect was
arrested or whe.re he was being
detained today.
S c hneblin did say police
haven't mad e a final
identification of the murder
victims because o( the condition
of thelr bodies.
"The bodies were so badly
mutilated that we'll have to go
through dental r ecords and
fingerprints to make the
identification," he said.
But authoritiea did confirm
that the Sunnycrest Lane home
was known to be the resi~ of
a 27-year-old nurse named
Shirley Harbular Dayco; her
mother, Amelia Harbular, 65,
Will GOP blow it asain?
C.Onaldering the brouhaha bolling <:Ner in the 43rd
Conareaional Dlatrict, can It be poaible that a
Democrat will aUp throujb the Republican beckbitlng
and get elected? Coutina column. Pace Bl. ·
STATE
Hushee 8Cho1an.1Jip eyeil
A pair of Howard H~ ~want to •t up an
avtadon ICholanhl_p in bJI Mme at a Loe AnceJea
aermpllCe coUe ... ~ A7.
and the nurse's three children,
age5 7, 5 and 1.
Schneblin said these were the
children who were found safe
early today.
Mrs. Dayco was known to be
separated from her husband,
Rene Dayco.
After the grisly discovery was
made Wednesday, ofticers began
searching for Dayco.
Hassle due
over schools.
• SACRAMENTO (AP)
Assemb:y Speaker Willie Brown
says huge cuts are likely for local
g ove rnm e nt unl ess th e
Republican s stop insisting on
·raising school funding without a
tax increase.
But Democrat Brown's
Republican counte rpart says
Brown is threatening to cut local
government in order to force the
Republicans into supporting tax
increases.
Brown, D-San Fra.nclaco, and
Assembly Minority Leader
Robert Naylor, R-Menlo Park,
held separate news conferences
Wednesday to explain part~
positions on the state budget bill
for fiscal 1982-83, which begjns
ln two weeks.
INDEX
The long legal odyssey of
fo rme f Ora n ge County
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich,
con victed of bribery-related
offenses in 1979, will draw to a
close Tuesday in a San Diego
County courtroom.
Diedrich, 58, is scheduled to
surrender t hen to begin the
one-to-14-year term in s tate
prison to which he was sentenced
three years ago. He has remained
free while the judgment was
appealed.
The California Supreme Court
i n a ruling May 6 uphe ld
Diedrich's conviction on one
count of bribery and one count of
conspiracy. A second bribery
count was overturned, however.
The high court also affirmed
co-defendant Le Roy Rose's
conviction on a simple conspiracy
count.
Diedrich and Rose were
charged in a 1977 Orange County
G rand Jury indictment with
oonspiring to commit bribery in
connect io n with count y
government approval for
development plans for Anaheim
Hills.
At the time, Diedrich cast a
vote in favor of releasing about
2,200 acres of the north county
property from agricultural
preserve status. That desi,gnation
precluded development.
At Your Service A4 AnnLanden B2
Erma Dombeck B2 Movlel Dl-2
Busine9I Cl0-11 Mutual Funda ClO
Cavalcade • B2 Public Notices D2,3,4
04-8 Sporta Cl-4
B6 Stock Marb111 Cll
B6 Te1evWoo cs
B5 TheatM'a Dl-2
Al0-11 W•ther A2
Dl-2 World News Nj
B2
SP ORTS
.
McColl quits
AIRPORT EXP ANSION. • •
(SPON) con t ended that
envlronm ntal 1naly1l1 of tht
lmpacu of t h e propond
expanaion wu inadequate.
lioard c hairm an Bruce
Neatan de wondered aloud at
Wedneeday'a dlacUllion whether
reacl11lon of the ma1ter plan
resolution would affect two
airport-related atudiee called for
In the 1981 master plan package.
One study ta aeared to
developing a specific plan to
regulate future growth and land use ln Santa Ana Helihta, the jet
no~impact.ed conununity south
of the airport, the other toward
finding a site for a new regional
jet airport in or near Orange
County.
County CounaeJ Adrian I Kuyper said in a memo released
1 later ln the day that both studies
may proceed.
The Santa Ana Hel1hta atudy
had been halted following
SWMer'1 January Nltna.
According to K\4yper'I ruling,
the helghta study may proceed '°
long as it doet not incorporate
conclusion• contained ln the
muter plan and a related
document, the Airport Notae
Control and Land U1e
Compatibility plan.
A ••blue ribbon" panel of
bu1ine11 and industry leader•
examining potential sit.es for a
new airport is expected to make
recommendations to the board at
a July 14 meetlnj{:
Unlike the sltUation with the
Santa Ana Heights specific plan
committee, the regional airport
site study panel's work waa not
halted by SumnE!{'s January
ruling.
Cornart declares
$4 million loss
Comark, a Newport Beach
securities and .commodities
broker-dealer that announced
plans earlier this week to
liquidate its operations, showed a
$4 million loss last year,
authorities said today.
Geraldine D . Green,
cornmi.smoner for the California
Department of Corporations said
the Newport Beach firm's losses
for the fiscal year ending
December 1981 could be even
higher.
The California Department of
Corporations began Investigating
the company's fina.ndal condition
and reooi:d keeping practices last
week after Comark requested an
extension in filing a 1981
financial statement.
Ms. Green said that four
department employees are at the
Newport Beach office Wday.
Comark blamed the delay in
filing the financial statements on
a switch from a manual record
k eeping to a computerized
system.
"If you don't have adequate
books and records you're
basically out of business.," said
Ms. Green. "The problem we're
having is reconstructing who has
paid and who hasn't."
Comark is a limited
partnership with two general
partners aI¥i approximately 165
limited partners.
Ms. Green said that it appears
that many bank records were
mixed up and complete})! lost
when the company attempted to
computerize its system.
EDUCATION PLAN • • •
. changed their minds when the
chancellor saw the facts and
looked at the concern.a."
Kenne dy n o ted that the
number of minority student•
enrolled in EOP significantly
declined while Gomez was on
leave. While Gomez was in
charge of the program, there
was a surge in minority
enrollment, he added.
Kennedy also lauded the
transfer of EOP and SAA to the
Office of Academic Affairs. He
said it was a "logical" move since
academic affairs is linked to
admissions as well as· tutoring
Coastal
and other educational programs.
Assistant Chancellor for
Administrative Affairs Ramon
Curiel said Aldrich was
concerned about the
effectiveness of FX>P.
He said the new organiz.ation
of IDP and SAA under academic
affain would meet COGll'Dunity
needs and the univenity'a goals.
"We see it primarily as an
acceptance of the fact that there
is community concern about the
overall effectiveness of the
program," Curiel said.
· Gomez will assume his new
p<>St July 1, he said.
Partlel clearing In the ~
., ... thla afternoon. C'-OI meaaur•ble drtzzte to percent
today. LOW cloude tonight lll'td
Frldey with partlel afternoon
cteartng. Overnight tows 54 to 62'
High• F rld•Y 84 to 72
T9m99raturM In the Hur\tlogton
Newport .,. .. renge from a low of
59 to• high 01 89.
California
The Nation.i w .. "* Service 11y1 Southern C'lllornla'1
perel1tent morning cloudlne11
could prnduce lpf1nk1ee Ft1dey,
but lntllll moat er-lhotlld get
hazy eunlhloe -time bet<><•
auneet.
ltolated lhu~ could
hit mountain•. "-I• end the ~ Valtey ln<t tempeF"alur•
race
By JEFF ADLER
oftMDeltJNettQff
• Ill
Republican Bill McColl cleared
the way for Carl.Ibid Mayor Ron
Packard'• November write-in
campalan challenge to 4Srd
Gongreatlonal Dl1trlct GOP
nominee Johnnie Crean when he
announced Wedneed~y night he
was dropplna hll o~ bid as a
wtite-ln candidate.
Following a meeting that
luted more thaq an hour,
McColl, who flnl.thed third ln the
18-candid.ate OOP field, said he
wu withdrawing from the race
and thre w his aupport to
Packard, the second-place
finllher who loat to Crean by 100
votes. •
Crean, a 33-year-old travel-
trailer tycoon from San Juan
Capistrano, Packard and
Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, an
Escondido college professor, will
square off in the November
general election. .
"I 'felt at this time it was best
to endorse him (Packard) and let
him carry the ball," said McC.oll,
an ex-r.rofessional football
player. 'I felt Ron and I both
shared the same objective and
the same views. but we had
• Ill
Irvine's Community
Services Department will
offer six five-day semions of
its Horizon Day Camp
beginning Monday.
'the weekday camps for
children aged six to 12 will be
staged at the city's newly
acquired Bommer Canyon.
Fee is $55 a week or $100 for
two weeks per child.
A.ctivities included in the
camp are crafts. games,
archery, recreational
•Thomas Saine, chairman
of UC Irvine's Department of
German, has been awarded
two fellowships to study the
impact of the French
Revolution o n German
intellectuals.
Dr. Saine has received
Guggenheim and American
Council of Learned Societies
Eleewhare , from Point
Conception to th• Mexican
border end 0U1 eo m11ee: Ught
.. arl•bl• wind• thl1 afternoon,
bec;Omlng weal to IOUI~ 10
to te knoll thl• evening Soutr-1 ewell of 2 to 3 feet
Low CIOud1 and local log ttvough
tonight.
wm be cooler. Frld1y'1 high• .re predicted
from 70 In Lo• Angeles to a
mulmum 78 at the beach ...
~ 711 and 88 In mountalna,
Fronts: Co6cS .-. WtJ"tl 99
from 92 to 102 In the ~ deMrt Chwltte NC 88 ea .23 .S. Summary =.o~ 118 •nd 1 '"1ow ~ ~ ~ 21
No. Platte
Oki. City
Om8h• Orlando
Phlladphl•
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Piiand, Me
Piiand, Or•
Providence
Raleigh
Reno
Richmond
Sell Lake
San Antonio
S..tlle
Shreveport Siou• Falla
St Louie
711
IO 76
91
86
105
75
78
115
S1
90
92
90
55
58
511
Al 1eUt 1ht tomedoee touched 8oater1 from Point Conception , Cincinnati 70 80 . 17
down In South Florlda today. to the Me.Kleen border can •JllMICI CleYeland 81 55 .ee
knoclllng out p1a19111ua wtndowl light, vertable wind• 1onlght and Clmbla SC 111 70 .10
and toppllog tr-and "'1oaa, early Friday, becoming weat-Columbus 70 59 .52
but causing no lnturtee. ofllc:lel• IOUlhWHt at 10 to 18 knot• Dal-Ft Wth 115 ea Mid. during th• elternoon with a Oaylon 811 57 .58
The trilplcal dleturt>ance 1litllCl'I IOUthweet swell running 2 to 3 OenV« 77 ~
clUNd the 1t0<m1 all<> f<><oed the fMt. Dee Moina 78 5e
tvaou1t1on1 of hundred• of Detroit 8'4 ~l people In centrel end wMtern Duluth 86
Cuba Ju•t two WHk• alter • T . a tores El Puo 115 :g
hurrlcene hit the ume area, .f emper Fargo 78 •• C8Ullng 23 deeth1 Flegttalf 77 ...,
EI 1 e where , 1 w I ye o I HI Lo ,....,, GrNt Fllle 73 53 .03
thundemO<ml plclllng 80 mph ...... Hertl0<d 115 e5 . 70
wlndt, haM end t0<nlldoee fWePI Alt>eny 71 511 ·211 Helena 75 54 .20
eeat through the mld·Atlantlc :~:: : ~ Honolulu 117 ~~
etet• Wed~!:f.J!lght, kllng a · AIMYtlle &4 85 .01 Houet4111nd•......, =~ 411 beby II\ W•t """"'la, ~ 89 87 02 •....-Nllbolte off IN Virginia OOlll1 Atlanta • Jecilen MS IO 70 2.ee end lllC>c*lll • Merine helloopetr II\ Atlante Cty 72 e6 .02 JecktlWte 96 73 .07
Nofttl C.Ollne. Auetln 82 71 K.-etty 75 59
Neerly th• entire etate of • Beltlm<n : : t: l.M veci-101 75
Florlda WH put under either ~ &4 89 Uttle Rock 10 82
St P·T1mpe
St Ste Marie
Spollane
Syracuee
Topjka
"'86
112
llO
83 71
72
1111 eo ea
75
77
73 .18 ee u1
85
25 .211 eo .22
58
et .12 !! .~4
"" .17 73
54
811
58
811 58 .89
59 .05
74 .45
35
IO se .ee
57
tornedo or thunderetorm 8llrnardt 75 53 .t3 ::U~ : ~ .31 StfWg. ·~u of Dede end lrwsd 8olM .... M MempHe 711 71 TM Air Quality M~t
coumtel _. told to~ for Boeton : ~ ·81 Miami &4 711 .211 Olttrlct predict• untlelllthful air
etrong guety win •· t trH t :=--er 53 .01 ~ l: :: ~ ':-~ = = ~ end llgt\tnlng tom, end 8ul1ll1gtOn 81 M .03 rn. 71 81 .01 A~''Mn, w1tt1 good e1r qumity -~ "'"'* doudl ... ... Ceeper 74 48 .11 .... 0!1Mnl .. " 1.21 fcncllt for the deeer1t, ~
AdtntJC coeet _. ~ by Chlr1ttn sc 90 n ,._ Yor1t 17 ee .1111 • end mountein r9Qlont. .
th• Broward County 1Morttt'1 Chertetn WV • 17 94 •49• Norfolk t1 73 .13 Where to call (toll ftM) for otllo• tlltt morning, altd tll• .. ._.,. __________________ teteet emoe ~Ion:
NlttoMI WM.tiler 8eMoe Mid' • · •• -Orenge~(I00)44Melt ctll*'8 llPOMd a twitter ""'... Loe AngelM Oounty! (100) ~~u:::~:~:: ·:···, .... _: sl·l.Rf llPllT =.--rM7s:7r:-dM~
P90pte ·/Ind t ,000 cattle -• . ·~-AQMO Epltode C«1t1r. (IOO} ' ~from ~ Otl No"' 242 .......
wutern Ouba •• • rH llll 01. ----------
tt ood In 9 fro m a t ~O!IUI ·-'!'ilf .. =:r.d A~lt rrJ•d-es ci....ion o.,,.r the ,,...,., -.. .......,.... .I •
'1'11oetan '•nlneula .... tll• =:t:,.., ~ ..... Of Ille ........ ....., M• p00r tt lOOAY °"" of Melltoo and c....... ... ,._,., ..... # 14 " poor 11 leoond low 11:11 p,fll, u '&... Cowlty aut,__ llN = ~t. ~ = = llOO' 11 leoond l\lgfl l:N p.m, t.I two tMl\MoM t~,5 51ilfll N I = ~ ,_ loW ~:1 Lift. 0.0 = .. ~ ....... ~ BE N• ,.., IO ~ '::JUI. ...
-• ---N• J::.. ~ I;;;=. :.-:::: ~
43rd
different atrat.egles on how to
accompU.h It."
McColl a1lo acknowled1ed that
one reMOn that penuaded him to
step ulde ln favor of Packard
was the groundswell of aupport
Packard hu received ln the day1
following the hotly conteated l>rlllw'Y election,
· "lt was apparent Ron did have
the support, it wu ap~ent he
had the momentum,' McColl
co~nted.
Paekard, who claims to have
the support of all 16 of the other
OOP candid.at.es who 1<>ught th-:
Republican nomination, aaid
McColl's decl1ion was the
"gentlemanly" thing to do.
"I persuaded him that if we
were both going aft.er the same
money it would hurt us, if we
were both going after the same
votes it would hurt and that one
of us needed a clear shot."
Packard said of the Wednesday
meeting.
He said that not only did
McColl f,ledge his ''unqualified
support, ' but also contributed
$100 to Packard's write -in
campaign effort.
swimming, and excursions.
The fee covers those costs and
including a T -shirt.
Camp days will begin at 9
a.m. and end at 4 p.m. If
enough demand exists,
officials say, some children
might be accepted from 7:30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. for an extra
$15 per week .
More information can be
obtained by calling the
Community Services
Department at 752-6076.
Fellowships. which will allow
him to do research on his
topic at specialized libraries in
the United States and abroad.
Saine came to UCI in 1975
after serving as professor of
German at Yale University.
He received his bachelor's
and doctorate degrees in
German from Yale.
Al' Wlnlphoto
STACKED.. ARMS -.British .marines pile u_p Jifles banded
over by Argentine soldiers, lining up in background, outside
• Port Stanley follo~ing the Argentine surrender.
Argentine leader
loses command?
BUENOS AIRES. Argentina
(AP) -The independent
Argentine news agency DYN
said Wday that President Gen.
Leopoldo F. Galtieri was relieved
of his command of the Argentine
army.
There was no immediate
confirmation from the joint
chiefs of staft DYN said Galtieri
was being replaced by Gen.
Christino Nicolaides as army
commander in chief.
attempting to insist that they go
to Montevideo (Uruguay) which
is a lot further and would take a
lot longer.'' In answer to a
lawmaker's qu~tion, the prime
minister critized "Argentine
indifference to the state of their
prisoners.
"We're trying very hard to
return the younger conscripts as
soon as possible," she said. '"the
ship Canberra will be loaded by
this evening with some 5,000
young Argentine prisoners of
war."
She said the estimate of 15,000
Arsentine ~r1soners she
announced in the Commons on
Tuesday. the day after BritiSh
forces completed the recapture of
the Falklandi-.
There was n o word on
whether he was also being
relieved of the presidency he has
held for six months. Galtleri
shared power in the ruling
military junta with the chiefs of
the navy and air force. He has
been president since Dec. 22 and
commander in chief of the army
since f\ecember 1979.
Prime Minister Margaret Doctors to discu ss
Thatcher accused the Argentine
government today of sports injuries "indifference" to the state of
Argentine prisoners in the Two UC Irvine medical
Falkland Islands, many of them instructors who also are team
suffering from exposure, physicians for local high schools
malnutrition, trench foot and will discuss shoulder and el.bow
disease in frigid winter injuries in baseball at 7:30
temperatures. tonight in Irvine. Nuke halt a sked She told the H ouse of Robert Blelen (F.dison High
Commons that Britain has not School) and Benjamin Rubin
COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) procured a cease-fire in the (Servite High School) are guest
Southern Presbyterian s have South Atlantic and noted: speakers at Irvine High School's
called on the United States and "So far Argentina has not Auditorium for a meeting of the
Soviet Union to halt production agreed a safe conduct to allow Irvine Sports Exchange and
of nuclear arms and begin these prisoners to be repatriated Young Sportsman Club.
_rec1 __ u_c_in_g_th_e_i_r_n_u_c_l_ea_r_arse __ n_a_1s_. __ t""'o-'-a""'n~y~Argentine port, She's __ A_d_m_~_io_n_is_fr_ee_. _____ _
Sailcloth Is JYot
Just For Sails •••
It also makes a great casual pant. because It Is dura-
ble. llghtwdght. and comfortable. Perfect for the
active m an , or as Storekeeper Michael Bueche sug-
gests, for the man who just wants to relax.
t Available In 10 colors.
father's day ...
Sunday,
June
20th.
11:., .......... JT'=: t: .... N• ._ .......... W ,_,; et"4 --~....._ ~-NI ,_,.... tt ,._ ,.._ M Ml Ml.
__..... ".... "T"~..ow·e TIOll; t4WI ?1M '·"'• l.ew 1:0? '"'· ..... --:.::::-M .... , ..,.... lliiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiil'51ilil •• • ~i1'fle'=l.Dlr DllellM lllJIF Al
• ' j •
• <?
I ·-Ale 'I
~l!!"''!"'!"' .... -------------------..... ~~--"!l!'----.... --.-----~--!I~ '(
·'Citizens merit voice
,,
l
future planning
I I
Irvine re1ident1 ~·overwhelmingly have called
f arowth and development the molt
eerioua laaues facing the nat19n'1
'-l largeat planned community. ! That report came out of UC
, Irvine following a aurvey
• conducted by the Graduate School
? of Management. The study was
done by four graduate studenta as
.,a winter quarter project and
1 earned them recognition as
1 Distinguished Student Scholan.
<.. The city currently boasta a
J population of 70,000. In 1971,
... officials roughly estimate about I , c 10,000 ·lived in the community.
' And. 26,000 out of an estimated .
I ·r 48,000 acres of city land have bee~ 1 ! J developed for homes, businesses. I · manufacturers, parks and other
I uses. t Clearly Irvine has seen -I relatively rapid growth during tl\e
I past 11 years. More will come. ' I It should be anticipated that
1 I residents increasingly are upset by
congested highways, dwindllng
areas of wide-open spaces and
increased population that is a
result of a migration of people to a
city they beU.W wort.:
But what city °'Uctala
couldn't plan on 1'•• the
dlacontent tha1 ~ "9ntually
1row aa the community
mushroomed. A decade •10,
reaident1, by vll'tue of their
amaller numben, milht hayt felt
they had more aay ln community
developmenta.
Now theSippare~ bellew
their voice ls lllmcid by the
sheer numben o newcomen ~
moved1 to Irvine for the same
reasons as mo9t of the 0 o1dtimen"
-good sehoo.h. planned
neighborhood•, protection from
crime, apacioua parka ,
well-equipped recreation cenwn
and other amenities.
The UCI atudY may IUCPft It
is ~ f« dty ofiida1I to expand
their eff ortl •t communtcattn1
with l'elidenta u n.w add1UoN to
the community are planned.
Irvine, no doubt, won't turn
back ita commitment tq planned
growth. At \he aame tlm.e,
however, future city plannina
should welah tM cancema of the
citizens.
~lear policy needed
1 l John Nakaoka and Lee Sicoli,
both trustees for the Irvine ~Unified School District, resorted to
cseriously questionable tactics in
r.Nakaoka's recent unsuccessful bid
:to be elected to the Irvine City
' Council. l Nakaoka sent out three
(mailers during final days of the
, J' election that were deceiving
· Jthrough unauthorized use of
1official government seals and logos
~d misleading messages. One of
ose letters was signed by Mrs.
coll, who currently i.s president
of the district's Board of Trustees.
Mrs. Sicoli. "who works with
Nakaoka, had every right to
personally endorse him for the
·council. But the letter mailed to
many voters not only came
marked with the district's logo,
but even with a serious distortion
in the text. She implied that the
council has power to niakeiaitical
decisions affecting local education.
Nakaoka later cleared. Mrs.
Sicoli of responsibility for the
logos. She agreed she didn't know
her letter would be mailed to
appear falsely as a district
communication. But surely the
president of the school board
knows better than to tell voters
that the council plays som e
important role affecting quality of
education. That is strictly her
board's function. About the best
the council am do la aalM land for
IChools. provide crolllna guards
and make aft traffic· lawa are
enforced around ICboUI. ~
For his part , Nakaoka
included allegations In other
letters aimed at .painting
incumbent Larry~ u a aecret
ally of Tom Hayden. The
allegations wen pri.!nted in a
manner to suggest Agran was in
some sort of clandestine aocialist
plot despite the fact that he had
been quite open in h.ia opinions
during his previoul four years • a 'd>uncilman.
Several unh1&ppy residenta
appeared at laat week's school
board meeuna to demand that
Nakaoka and Mn. Siooll resign for
violating their elected trust. Some
of theee crttica, but not necetUrily
all, had au pported other
candidates in the ooundl election.
Writing these tactic8 off as
'"'pl>litic~ is no-i •ppropriate.
Nakaoka and Mn. Sicoli will have
t-0 account !or tJieir action. ln
future elections. But l'e9ignation is
too high a price to JJ9Y, and a recall
is out of the question.
Members of the achool board,
meanwhile, took a well-advised
step last week by calling for a new
policy clarifying when ita logo can
be used. They can start by croesing
out future political campaigns.
Time to cool controversy
I I
j I
I
I
j l
1 I
I
A 48-foot long mural painted
by 17 Irvine High School students
is now hanging on public display
at the campus library, despite
considerable controversy that
surrounded the art work earlier.
Titled, "One World-One
·People," the debate centered on
just one portion of the massive
,piece. It was a section that
depicted black people, flames and
Ku Klux Klan members.
Opponents of the mural
branded the work aa r~t. The
st.udent arti8ta who accomplished
th~ work, howevet, were trying to
depict a bleak and tragic period in
United States history and the
oppression of a people.
As a result of the controversy,
public di.splay of the mural was
withheld "for many months. Now
that it is on public display, there
have been no signs to date of any
turmoil .. ,. result.
This ia perhap a very healthy
aignal. In addltion: there have
been some rather J>09itjve aide
effects from the mural debate.
For one, Irvine High School
atudenta, u well u community
•
residents, have been helD1h, and
thinking about the trafic and
oppressive relUhl of ndlln during
the time of controYeny.
It haa given everybody
concerned an opportunity to re-
examine their own attitUdes and
their own tt:ip(ftlibilitia M good
citi7.ens.
Other leuoa• i.ave been
learned by the 1tudent anlttl
thermelWSt whO cl11df' Nndend
the work ln 1111 pJd faith that
they would '9e c9p1munbUna the
same meaaage to every· mural
viewer.
It didn't tum out quite that
way. Communicatidl ln any form
is a difficult art. It Al not alwaya
received in cont.ext with the intent
of the sender.
We have 8tl'Olll empathy with
the student '"'8tl an that poinL
Editorial •rltdl h1¥e had a
•
similar ex;rlence '!:!:l the medium of printed
Let \&I hope~ lmae'•
mural contruv~ hM 60W beell put to felt and t we h8w aD
learned eomeUUlll bmefidAlj from
lt.
Opinions e>eprnHd In the 5PK• ebove •r• those of the Da111 Pltot. Other views tx·
pressed on this~ •re those of their •uthors •nd artists. R..eer commeftt It lftvlt·
ed. Address T.,. Dellv PllOt, P.O. Bo• 1160, Costa MeM, CA ..... "*-(714>
'42·,321.
,
subs a prime threat
W ASHINO'OON -Aside from the
pomlbOity of a rb8mlve Araentine air
ltrike, tM. Britlah hid three "wild cards"
to worry about In the Falkland lalandl
-the enemy submarines Salta. San
Luia and Santiaac> del Eltero.
The Salta and the San Lula, built
eight years aco in Wm Germany, are
equipped with the --dMdly Ttaerfiah
1IOl"'pedoes the Bridlh Uled tD sink the
AJ"aentine c:nd8er General Betsrano-1be
Santialo del r.tero. though • relative
antique built by the United States before
11145, has a ran1e of 12,000 miles
between refuelinp and comtituted a
major threat to the Britiah inYalioo fleet.
TBE BRITISB CONCERN over the Af'sentine sube was abated. thouch with
a certain detachment. by U .8 . military·
officials. The Pentegon has apent
millione trytna to make sure the United
States has a&ffideat and aopht.tk:ated
antl-aubmarlne,warfare weapon• to
protect our fleet from Soviet underaea
marauders.
The full nature of the aubmarine
threat la detailed in a-.eties cl secret and
top-aectet Pefttacui and CIA documenta
lhbwn to my _,o,aie Dile Van AU..
The Penta1on ~timatea that the
Soviet Navy now haa 71 nuclear-
powered submarines of vai1oua types
that are also armed with nuclear
weapona. They are CONktered to be the
prime undenea threat to the United
States. .
In addition, the Sovleta have 285
attack aibmuinm ClfTY1nl convention.al
weapons. and mn count on four each
G. -.,ac-.-•• -1-111_1_1 -~ ~
from the Poles and Bu.Jgarians. Thus the
U.S. and NATO fOl"d!s have a total of 364
Soviet·bloc subs to worry about.
To combat them, the Allied anti-
submarine force has a total of 1,045 fixed-Wine aircraft and helicopters, with
an additional 149 in reierve. Theae sub
cbuen carry a knockout punch: nuclear
depth bombs. They can be delivered by
either planes or helicopters.
In addition, the U.S. arsenal includes
an anti-submarine nuclear rocket, called
A.roe, which is fired from surface ships,
and a similar sub-to-sub rocket called
SUbroo. However, the Subroc nuclear
rocket LI technologically obeole9Cent and
will be phued out by 19811.
Thia means, as a Pentagon report
notes. that unless a replacement weapon
is developed for Subroc, U.S . aubmarines
"will have to rely on the shorter-c · conventionally anned MK-48 to ,
whose effective use will require ( em)
to close within the Soviet detection
envelope and within range of existing
Soviet weapons."
THESE NUCLEAR torpedoes and
depth charges, of course. cannot be used
in any limited war. For their use would
surely touch off a nuclear exchange that
could escalate into a holocaust. With this
in mind, the Pentagon m45t also look to
i ts conve ntional anti -submarine
weapons.
But this in turn leads to another
problem, as a Pentagon document points
out: "Because individual kill probability
tends to be low in conventional anti-
submarine warfare. it could take as long
as three months to bring the Soviet
submarine threat under control in the
Atlantic and the Pacific. During thoee
months. if typical estimates are val.id, we
could lose as much as 15 percent of U.S .
and allied reinforcement and resupply
mipping, while the Soviets could loee up
to 70. p;rcent of their submarines.'!
And it seems unlikely that either aide
would put up with such severe kmes
without re90rting to nuclear weapons.
Good intentions don ~t prevent wars
To the Editor:
I suppoee the current nuclear free-z.e
movement is no different from any othe.r
such movement in history: and l do not
doubt for a moment that the leaders of
today's movement are every bit as
aincere in their beliefs and convictions as
were thOlle leaders of similar movements
in past history.
And as for history, who will ever
forget the pathetic spectacle of Neville
Chamberlain returning from Nazi
Gtrmany in the late '30s, waving the
dqcument that Hitler had just signed
renouncing aggression and announcing
to the world that "this docummt means
peace in our time"?
Or who can forget our own Amertean
folk-hero Charles Lindbergh prellChlng
to America all during the Jo. that we
should unilaterally disarm as a way to
convince Hitler of our delire for world
peece?
memories of what a truly .inspirational
man he waa. •
I aiarted attending claaes in his army
barracka in 1962. I waa present at his
retirement when the student body
presented him with • color television. I
was there for the dedication of the BesiJ
MAILBOX
Petenon Gymnasium. But I recall two
Instances with Dr. Petenon more than
theee.
Dr. Peterson used to umpire our student softball games. One day he called
me out on strikes. I vigorously insisted
the pit.ch was low. He said It was not. I
lost. Alter the game he approached me
and admitted the pitch may have been
low: that he was watching the side of the
strike r.one. He told me that even when
there ia doubt one must stick to hia
judgments. The world, be said, has no
place for the wishy-washy, no room for
the mupumper. One must make a
decision and siick by it.
On the day after President Kennedy
WU~ Dr. Petenon called a Special
ttudeftt -.nbly. John Kennedy WU a
hero to ua. We felt he anehow favored
the youna, that hew• on our side. His
ldea1a were clear and important. H1a
death at~1ered ua. We were loat,
confu,ed. The student bpdy wu numb.
There were plana of cancelling ill
~t':!: and social events and even . Dr. Petenon knew how we fell,
for I think he ,tco felt our io.. He told ua
that John Kennedy was not the 90rl of
man who would cancel anything, but
would praa on with the job at hand with
even renewed ~-Take a deep &eeth, bl! said, muster
your CC>Ufale, f.ot' we have the same job
to do now • we did before, only now we ~ do it without John KftuM!dy.
And now we will haw to do lt without
BlllO PNnor...
DAVID A. HUGHES
TO the l*tar.
Th• Orante Couaty Develo=
Plan foe Dom O\iea concaina
CIDl9 that ""' ..-e dw public liable for milllona of .U.n on a perpetually .......,.. ... in .. Mun, above and
blJa•ll the pubbc ca111 of tl 79 million "C-_ ....... Pl••·•-_....to ... Chica, complete wltb J•ttlet and
.. -.. •• lllaJ ao dllrupt natunl awl
disposition along the Huntington Beach
to Newport Beach coastline, that the
beachee downcoast Crom the jetdea will
suffer constant erosion without natural
replenishment of sand. This will
necessitate repetitive dredging of sand
from offshore back onto the beaches, at a
public cost in the millions of dollars.
WE SEE this phl'numcnon in action
today. The Army Corps of Enginee,_ is
now dredging sand back onto Sunset
Beach because of jetties built upcoasi at
Anaheim Bay. The cost -$6.6 million. A
"similar phenomenon ia happening in
Oceanside now where the beaches are'
having to be rebuilt at a oost of several
million dollars because of upcoast
man-made development and disruption
of the natural coastline?
Do we not learn from history? Can we
not learn from current events? The
Orange C.ounty Board of Supervbon is
placing the whole Huntington Beach
coastline in great jeopardy with their
ill-<X>nceived plan for &lsa Chica.
And they are doing il on the backs of
the public.
"What therefore God hath joined
together, let not man put asunder''
Mark 10:9
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD
Clarification
To the Editor:
. Regarding Ref. Jones' rebuttal to my
letter of June 2, want to clarify that my
letter was referring to the "new" Irvine
Company, and in no way waa it meant
to reflect on the "old" Irvine Company.
All thoee aooolades were well de9el"lled
and earned t>Y the "old" Irvine Com.,.ny
-and to let the ncord •tz'ailht. the
Irvine Foundation la not a aublkliary of
TIC.
In our 21 yeara with the Irvine ~• in both lllf'k:Ulture and land
t departments. we were with
both "old" and the "new" Irvtne. I
have many fond memories of the "old"
company. oosm ALLEN
-·
.. . . -
OHAN<.l-COUNl Y l AL!f"OHNIA 25 CENTS
Indecision clouas Banning vote
• ~ STEVE MARBLE on the November ballot or Jutt modlfled by the council, rnpkee Nellon. Both lldel Mid the ~ measure on the Banning Ranch.
._ DellJ,... • ..,. junked. economic 11en1e. 10 tar have been informal. Ftve of the seven councll
awarded more than ~0,000 in
court ooetl In the aroup11 effort to
· Many council member• aatd And the leader of the Wett Nel1on had been brouaht members appear to favor the WW voters In Newport Beach they're waiting for a aiana1 from Newport Leglalatlve Alliance, aboard by the lrvlne Company election route. get the chance to decide the fate developer Hancock "Bill" the' group that apearhNded She 1Ut fall when the firm'• Newport
turn back expanafon plans at
John Wayne Airport. Obeerven
said thfa money oould be easily
directed toward the fight against
the Banning Ranch.
of the 75-acre Banning Ranch Banning, waiting to eee U he's referendum npw th.reatenlna the Center expanaton plan waa Proponents of the project have
development next fall? even interested in fighting for his project, Nid 1he'1 u curious u clouded by a referendum. The pointed to SPON (Stop Polluting
l'or the time, that appeei. to project. the next person about what'• project later wu repealed and Our Newport) as being a likely
be a question that bu no answer. going to ha=. never put to a dtywide vote. group to add muscle to the Several council members
suggested that all of thls sets the
stage for an expensive and
perhap1 bloody election day
showdown next November.
Banning, meanwhile, said he'• Several gom, on behind Mayor Jackie H eather , referendum push.
The Oty Council haa delayed waiting for the council to make • the scene co offer a clue. meanwhile, baa formed a three-
until July a dedaion on whether move and ls undecided whether Bann{ng recently huddled member council committee to SPON, critlcal of the Banning
the building plan ahould be put th e development, greatly with political consultant Robert draft language for a ballot Ranc h pla n, ~ece~!IY was
Reagan raps Reds'
'glObal tyranny'
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -
President Reagan , ignoring a
Soviet challenge to renounce first
use of nuclear weapons, accused
Kremlin leaders today of
compiling a "record of tyranny"
through global aggression and
trying to manipulate the peace
movement in the West.
In a speech before a special
U.N. General Assembly session
o n disarmament , Reagan
portrayed the United States as a
champion of arms control since
World War ll, and challenged the
Soviets t o demonstrate b y
"deeds, not words" that they are
sincere about curbing the arms
race.
GUARDED -Police cordon oU the home at
14952 Sunnycrest Lane, Huntington Beach,
where a young woman and her mother were
DelrNot818ff'hoto
murdered and badly mutilated. A suspect has
been arrested in the slayings, police said.
Reagan accused the Soviets of
violating existing arms control
agreements and the 1925 Geneva
protocol banning use of chemical
weapons.
Legal battle
for Diedrich
about to end
Cops nab suspect
in H _B slayings •
"In the nuclear era, the major
powers bear a special
responsibility to ease these
sources of conflict and refrain
from aggn.mion. '' Reagan aa.ld.
''That ls why we are so deeply
concerned by Soviet conduct.'
The president spoke before the
same forum where Soviet
Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko drew heavy applause
Tuesday with a declaration from
S oviet Preside nt Leo nid
Brezhnev that hfa country will
not use_nuclear weapons first in
any conflict.
The long legal odyssey of
f ormer Orange County
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich.
convtcted of bribery·related
offenses in 1979, will draw to a
close 'Puesday in a San Diego
County courtroom.
Diedrich, 58, is scheduled to
surrender then to begin the
one-to-14·year term In state
prison to which he was sentenced
three years ago. He has remained
free while the judgment was
appealed.
The California Supreme Court
in a ruling May 6 uphe ld
Diedrich's convic tion on one
count of bribery and one count of
conspiracy. A second bribery
count was overturned, however.
The high court also affirmed
co-defendan t L e Roy Rose's
conviction on a simple conspiracy
count.
Diedrich and R ose were
charged in a 1977 Orange County
Grand Jury indictment w ith
conspiring to commit bribery in
connectio n with county
government approval for
development pl.ans for Anaheim
Hills.
At the time, Diedrich cast a
vote in favor of releasing about
2,200 acres of the north county
property from agricultural
preeerve status. That designation
precluded development.
Rose was a former Orange
County architect and a political
ally of Diedrich, whose power as
a aupervisor earned him the
moniker Super D.
NATION
By PHU.. SNEIDERMAN
()("the Deir Not .....
Police have arrested a man
sus~ in the g:riSfy slayings of
.a young woman and her mother
whose mutilated bodies were
discover e d Wednesday in a
Huntington Beach home.
Huntington Beach police Lt.
"Merle Schneblin said officers also
have found three young children
missing from the Sunnycrest
Lane home, describing t he
youngsters as alive and safe.
Hearing set
on school
• pay ra~ses
A public hearing will be held
Tuesday regarding an initial 9
percent salary increase proposal
by the union representing 800
classified employees in the
Newport Mesa Unified School
Di.9trict.
The Californ ia School
Employees Association offered its
initial bargaining proposal June
8. The district is expected to
present its proposal July 13.
About 30 cla81ified employees
(non-teachers) have been laid
off. The 9 percent salary proposal
would increase a custodian's
salary from $1,166 to $1,249 and
an efementary school secretary's
salary from $1,405 to $1,583 per
month.
Nixon doesn't look back
Ten yeart af. ter the Watergate scandal that
destroyed h1a pretddency. R1chard Nixon says he never
looks back. Page M .
Diet prevenlB. cancer l'
A ICientific poel has found a pomlble link
between hJ&h·fat cileta and cancer. It adviles eating
more frulta, ~ and whole cereal.a to lower the
rilk. PaeeB4.
TELEVISION
He declined to release the
name of the murder suspect on
advice of the Orange Count-y
District Attorney's office.
He also declined to reveal
where the murder suspect was
arrested or where he was being
detained today.
Schneblin did say police
h.a v e n ' t m a d e a f i n a 1
identification of the murder
victims because of the condition
of their bodies.
"The bodies we re so badly
muWated that we'll have to go
thr oug h dental r ecord s and
f i ngerpr in t s to m a k e the
While Reagan did not address
that issue in bis speech, a senior
administration official shrugged
off the importance of the SOViet
pledge, saying the United States
cou ld not base its military
planning simply on a declaration
from M08COw.
In his syeech, Reagan cited a
U.S. arms control record that
began in 1946 with a proposal to
identification,'' he said. ff } d
But authorities did confirm aSS e Ue
that the Sunnycrest Lane home • •
was known to be the residence of h J
a 21-year·old nurse named over SC 00 S
Shirley Harbular Dayco: her
mother, Amelia Harbular, 65, ·
and the nurse's three children,
ages 7, 5 and 1.
Schneblin said these were the
children who were found safe
early today.
Mrs. Dayco was known to be
separated from her hus band,
Rene Dayco.
After the grisly diacovery was
made Wednesday, officers began
searching for Dayco.
A female relative conta~ted
police Wednesday because she
had been unable to ~ Mrs.
'Dayco by telephone and because
the nurse had not come to work
as scheduled. She was employed
at St. Joseph Hospital ln Orange.
COUNTY
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown
says huge cuts are likely for local
government unle ss the
Republicans stop insisting on
raising school funding without a
tax increase.
But Democrat Brown's
Republican oounterpart says
Brown is threatening to cut local
government jp order to force the
Republicans 'into supporting tax
increases.
Gold, silver off
NEW YORK (AP) -Gold and
silver f e ll sharply again in
trading today. Gold dropped
$8.80 to $307.70 an ounce, and
silver was off 35 centl to $5.13.
Will GOP blow it asain?
Considering the brouhaha boillng over in the 43rd
Conarealonal Diatrict, can it be pouible that a
Democrat wW aUp throush the Reeu~ beckbtting
and get elected? c.outing column. Page Bl.
STATE
H~hes scholarship ~yed
A pair of Howard HUlbel tam want to eet up an
avtadon ICholanhiJ> in hJi name at a Loi Anee1-
aeroapace aolJate. Pap A '1.
Medlly Jn H•w•ll'I
Touriltl ~ to Ci1lfomia tram Hawaii uy
faOI nhortadanl lboUt bnallM fruH pGlllbly lldlll "with &he,.... midO,. ~.Cl .
• '
./
turn control of nuclear weapons
and atomic energy over to an
international authority, and
continue with his recent plan for
reducing U .S . and Soviet
stockpiles of nuclear warheads.
R ecalling the words of
P resident Eisenhower, Reagan
said, "We are for peace, first, last
and always ... "
Whlle committing the. United
States to work for real anns
control measures, Reagan said,
"We need more than mere words,
more-than empty promises,
before we can proceed."
In pe rhaps his harshest
indictment of Soviet behavior,
Reascan said the Soviet Union
since World War Il had amassed
a "record o f tyranny" by
dominating Eastern Europe and
erecting the Berlin Wall, takin@
over Czechoslovakia, Hungary
and Afghanistan and
o r chestrating the military
crackdown in Poland.
Finances probed
Securities f irnt
loses $4 ntillion
Comark., a Newport Be a'ch
securities and com modi ties
broker-dealer that announced
plans earlie r this w eek to
liquidate its operations. showed a
$4 mi JI io n loss last year ,
authorities said today.
Geraldine D . Green ,
commissioner for the California
Department of Corporations said
the Newport Beach firm's loaes
for the fiscal year ending
December 1981 could be even
higher.
The California Department of
Corporations began investigating
the company's financial condition
and record keeping practices last
week after Comark requested an
exte nsion in filing a 1981
financial statement.
Ms. Green said that four
department employees are at the
Newport Beach pffice today.
Comark blamed the delay in
filing the financial statements on
a switch from a manual record
keeping t o a computerized
system.
"U you don't have adequate
b ook s and r ecords you 're
basically out. of businea," said
Ms. Green. "The problem we're
having is reconstructing who. has
paid and who hasn't."
Co mark is a limit ed
partnership with two general
partners and approximately 165
limited partners.
Ms. Green said that it appears
that many bank records were
mixed up and completely lost
when the company attempted to
computerize its system.
County rescinds
• • airport expansion
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL
MtheO..,Nota...,
Complying with a recent court
o r der, Orange County
supervisors have rescinded a
February, 1981, resolution
approving a $10 0 million
expansion program at John
Wayne Airport.
The board's action Wednesday
"was considered a legal formality
since implementation of the plan
was blocked by an order issued in
January by OraQge County
Superior Court Judge Bruce
Sumrter.
However, it was not until two
weeks a go that Sumner, in
INDEX
issuing the final judgment in the
case, ordered supervisors to
rescind the 1981 action.
While the county is free to
appeal Sumner's ruling -an
action that is expected -no
major physical changes at the
airport can take place, nor can
the limit of 41 jet departures per
day be increased.
Sumner struck down the
master plan following a trial in
which attorneys representing
Newport Beach and the group
Stop Polluting our Newport
(SPON) co nte nded that
environmental analysis of the
(See AIRPORT, Pase AZ)
At Your Service A4 Ann Landers B2
Erma Bombeck B2 Movlea Dl·2·
Buslnees Cl0-11 Mutual Funds ClO
Cavalcade B2 Public Noticel 02,3,4
CJ.amlfled 04-8 Sports Cl_.
Comb B8 Stock MarkeU cu
era.word -B6 Televillon C5
Death Notioel 85 That.en Dl-2
Ed1'°'1al AlO·ll Weather A2
Erlter1alnmerlt Dl-2 World News A3
H«oloope B2
SPORTS
stories
AIRPORT EXPANSION • • •
lmpact1 of the propoud
expanalon waa inadequate.
Board chairman Bruce
Ne.tande wondered aloud at
Wedneeday'1 dllcualon whether
reaol11lon of the mHter plan
resolution would affect tw.o
airport-related stud.Ml called for
in the 1981 master J)lan package.
One 1tudy h 1eared to
d eveloplns a specific plan to i regulate future growth and land
use in Santa Ana Hetahta, the jet
I noiae--irnpacted community eouth 1 of the airport, the other toward l finding a site for a new re~onal
Jet airport in or near Oranae County.
<.;ounty <.;oun1el Adrian
Kuyper 1&ld In a memo releued
later ln the day that both 1tudiee
may proceed.
The Santa Ana Helghta study
had been halted foHowin1
Sumner's January ruling.
Acootding to Kuyper'• ruling,
the heighta atudy may proceed eo
long as it does not incorporate
conclusions contained in the
master plan and a· related
document, the Airport Nol.e
Control and Land Use Compati~ility plan.
·Beirut Airport
hit by shelling
By Tbe A11oclatecl Prell damaging three parked airliners.
It said Israeli forces east of Beirut
also came under a barrage of the
rockets and Israeli gonboats
back.
Beirut airport came under
heavy s helling today and Israeli
armored columns 'moved against
Yasser Arafat's guerrillas east of
Lebanon's capital.
The f i ghting came amid
reliable reports that the Palestine
Liberation Organization offered
to discuss with the Lebanese
government ''a new form <U
Palestinian presence in
Lebanon."
But Salim Salam, the
managing director of Lebanon's
Middle l!:ast Airlines, told
reporters that Israeli gunboats
shelled the airport and• "two
Boeing-720s belonging to MEA
were wrecked and the airline's
bllilding sustained several direct
hits."
I# Wlrepholo
STACKED ARMS -British marines pile up rifles handed
over by Argentine soldiers, lining up in background, outside
Port Stanley following the Argentine surrender.
The PLO leadership denied
reports it was prepared to lay
down its arms, but engaged in a
flurry of secre t diplomatic
activity involving U .S .
presidential envoy Philip C.
Habib and Lebanese President
Elias Sarkis.
Mesa phone
center closing
Argentin'e leader
loses coHJrnand?
The Tel Aviv command said
Palestinian guerrillas bombarded
Israeli troops around tl_le airport,
Pacific Telephone will cloee its
Bell PhoneCenter at 250 Ogle St.
in Costa Mesa June 30, it has
been announced.
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(AP) -The independent
Argentine news agency DYN
said today that President Gen.
Leopoldo F. Galtieri was relieved
of his command of the Argentine
army. Customers wanting to order
new phone service can use the
PhoneCenter at 3033 Bristol St.,
NB man guilty
of theft rap
A Newport Beach man has
been convicted of attempting to
sell land owned by actor Fred
MacMurray in Riverside County
by forging the actor's signature
on a land deed.
.swte A, Costa Mesa. Beginning
July 1 the center will be open ·
from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
through Thursday and from 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday.
The Ogle Street residential
business office will remain open
for Pacific Telephone customers
wanting to pay bills or conduct
other business.
There was no immediate
confirmation from the joint
chiefs of staff. DYN said Galtieri
was being replaced by Gen.
Christino Nicolaides as army
commander in chief.
There was no word on
whether he was also being
relieved of the presidency he has
held for six months. Galtieri
shared power in the ruling
military junta with the chiefs of
the navy and air force. He has
been president since Dec. 22 and
commander in chief of the army
since December 1979.
Deputy District Attorney
David Pomeroy said defendant
Bobby Joe Yarbrough could be
sent to state prison for up to six
years and four months when he
returns for sentencing
proceedings in Santa Ana July
23.
Yarbrough was convicted by
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Donald A. McCartin on
grand theft and con spiracy
charges earlier this week
followiJlg a November jury trial.
For more informatlon call
972-78ll.
Evidence readied
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Police investigating a burglary
ring that allegedly involved at
least 10 Hollywood Division
police officers say they plan to
present evidence to the district
attorney soon.
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher accused the Argentine
government today o f
''indifference" to the state of
Argentine prisoners in the
Falk.land Islands, many of them
suffering from exposure,
malnutrition, trench foot and
Drizzling day
Coastal
p ertlal clearing In tM lrtlend
., ... thlt eflemoon. ~ ot
meHurebl• drizzle 10 p«cent
toctey. low cloudl tonlghl 111d
Frldey with partial •ll•rnoon
cteering. O..nlght low9 54 to 82'
High• Fr l d•y 84 to 72
Temperetur• In tti. Hunt~on New1>0ft ., .. renge trom e IOw of
5:0 to • high ot 811. Elaewhere, from Point
Conc•pllon to the Mexlc•n
border end out eo milee: Ugh1
v1rlebl• wind• thl• afternoon.
bec:Omlng _, to IOU111.-t 10
to 18 knoll thl • ev•nlng SouthwMt IWell of 2 to 3 feet
Low clouds eod local log lhrOUOh
tonight.
U.S. Summary
At leU1 wx tornedoee twc:tled
down In South Florida today.
llnoclllng out plate--gt-wlndowa and toppling ,,_ and renoee.
bu1 oeutlng no ln)urlea. ofllcMll•
Mid.
apokum•n Jeck Sullivan. In
nHrby Surlalda, pollce said a
lance enclrclln9 • beech
conllrucilon Ille wu blown Into
Cotllt\1 Avenue by• tornado.
California
TM Nlllonal W•th« S4Wvlc:e
1ay1 South•rn Calllornla'a
~r1l1tent morning cloudlne11
could proeluce aprtnklel Fridey, but lnebll mot1 .,... ehould get
hazy IUnthine aometlme b«or•
IUf!Mt.
laolated thu~ COUid
hit mountains, "-fl and the
OwMs Velley and temperatur•
wlM be cooler
Frld1·f1 hight 1re pre<llC1•d
from 70 In Loa AngelH to a
mulmum 711 1t the b•echu, ~ 78 and 88 In mounteina.
trom 92 to 102 In the high ~
end ~ 98 and 108 In lo'#
~ ..
Boeters from Paint COnceptlon
to the Mexlcen botder cen expect
tight, varleble wtndl tonight Ind
•arty Frld1y. b•comlng wHI·
1outhwut at 10 to 18 knot• during the afternoon with a
aoulhWMI awell running 2 to 3 , .... The tropical dlaturbanoe whlctl
cauMd tti. 1torm1 aleo tOf'Oed the
evacu1tlon1 of hundr•d• of
people In c•ntrel and weet•rn
Cuba )Ult two w•eke after a rr f
hurrlc•n• hit th• .. m • .,... i empera ures
causing 23 dNlhl.
Ela•where, • w1v• of
Alti.ny Albuque
AIMfllto
AlheY!lle
thunder8torm1 !*=king 80 mph
wtndl. hall and tomedoee ewec>t
Hit through th• mld-At11ntlc
Ital• WedneedllY n!Oht. ~a • beby In Weal VlrlJinla. CliP*tng Mlboeta off the Virginia COM! Atlent•
wld ~a Matt,,.~ In Atlentc Cly
North CerOllna. Austin
Nearly th• •nllr~ etate ol • Bliltl~•
Florlda wu put und•r either ::':rlgtlm
tornado or thunde ratorm Blemltdl ·~ .. of Dede wld lln!WWd Bolla
· oounti. -• told to ~ tor eo.ton etrong guety wlnda. 1tr•et BrownlYtle
f'Oodlng wld llgfltnlno todly ftj ~
tonlQM. -~-v·°"
Ttw9I """* doUdl llol'll .. ~-8C AillntlC coelt _. reported ~ ""-•v• tile Broward County 111erlff'1 Ctww1etn WV
HI Lo l"cp n 59 .~s
89 86
S2 81
... 15 .01 89 f7 .02
72 85 .02 t2 71 ae ee 1n 75 66 1.38 ... .
75 63 .18
... 58
a5 ea .ea
94 75 f7 63 .01
• 58 .03
1• ... 18 eo n 17 ........
Fronts: Cold~ Wann ,.. Ocduded wor Stationary••
88 68 .23 73 50 21
82 45
10 eo .11
81 5S .89
91 70 .10
70 511 .52 as ee
811 57 .56
77 54
78 58
... 51
85 44
115 85
78 53
77 48
73 63 .03 as as .10
75 54 .20 87 72
111 78
17 49
80 70 2.88
96 73 .07
75 58
101 75
80 82
73 58 .31 80 82 79 71
... 79 21
58 45 83 ...
7S 11 .01 sa ee 1.21
S7 88 .88 11 73 .13
No. Platt•
0111• City
Omlh• Orlando ~la
Plttaburgh
Piiand, Me
Ptl1nd, Ore
ProvlcMnoe
Raleigh
R«lo
Richmond
Salt Lak•
Sen Antonio S..ttle
Shrev990'1 SIOux ~elll
St Lout.
St P-Twnpa
St Ste Mette
Spok-
Syrec:uM
Topil(1
Smog
78 55
80 58
78 511
91 73 .18
86 et 1.31
105 85
75 25 .29
78 60 .22
85 58
81 81 .12
90 69 .14
112 eo .11
90 73 ee 54
112 88 80 58
83 ee
78 58 .89 n 59 .o5
89 74 .45 eo 35 sa eo
75 58 .•
77 57
The Air Qvallty Manag91Mnl
Olstr~ Pf'edict• untlMltflful llir
quellty for -*tM people lodey
In ~1 --°' the 8outtl co.I Mr Baeln, with OOod elf qll9llty
foreceet for the CSeMna. ooeat.i
Ind mountein ~.
Wh•re to oall (toll frff) tor
lalllt "not lnfomletlon: office tlll1 morning. aftcl th• Natlon.i WNtMr S«VIOe _.d
~ .oot..ci .......... the
Fort La.uderd•I• Euoullve
~ Alldlo Mid~ 1,400 ~Pl• and 1,000 oattl• were ~ ffOll'I PllW Oii "'° In wa1t1tn Oulla H • tHUll of,
raoocltno trom • ttoploal cleC>ratalOfl over the ,..,...,...,
Y11aatan Panlna111a .,., tll•
lllf ·11PDRT
OrtnQe councy: (IOO) 44&4128
Lo• Ano•IH County: (100)
242-4022 ~ and 8111 lemetdlno oounllel; (IOO) H7-4710
~....,.Of.,,. .......
M 8' ......-MCI 0.-...
~ 0.-ty _,..,. MN ....................... --.:: .... ...... .==en
AOMD lpteode o.ntr, (800) ' t•l .....
disease in frigid winter
temperatures.
She told the House of
Commons that Britain has not
procured a cease-fire in the
South Atlantic and noted:
Girl Scouts
offer classes
in boating
Classes in rowing, canoeing
and sailing for beginnin,g and
intermediate boaters who are at
le• 10 years old and can swim
are being offered in Newport
Beach and Dana Point by the
Girl Scout Council of Orange
County.
Separate classes for children
and adults are available Monday
through Friday, day and
evenings. beginning June 21 at
the Newport Dunes in Newport
Beach and Dana Harbor in Dana
Point.
The courses consist of 15 hours
of instruction and cost $25, plus a
$1 insurance fee for non-Scouts,
said a program spokesman.
For further information, call
979-7900, or write to Boating,
Girl Scout Council of Orange
County, 1620 Adams Ave., Costa
Mesa 92626.
By JEJl'F ADLER or .... ~ ,... ..
• ID .
Republican Bill McColl 1:leared
the way for Carlabad Mayor Ron
Packard's November wrlte-ln
campaign ch allenge to 43rd
Conareaalon al District GOP
nominee Johnnie Crean when he
announced We(lnesday night he
waa d.ropplng ha own bia aa a
wrtte-ln candidate.
Following a meeting that
lasted more than an hour,
McC.oll, who finiahed thlrd in the
18..candidate GOP field. said he
was withdrawing from the race
a n d threw his support to
Packard, the second-place
finlaher who lost to Crean by 100
votes.
Crean, a 33-year-old travel-
trailer tycoon from San Juan
Capistrano, Packard and
Democrat Roy "Pat" Archer, an
F.acondido college professor, will
square off ln the November
general election.
"I felt at this time it was best
to endorse him (Packard) and let
him carry the ball," said McColl,
an ex-professional football
player. ''I felt Ron and I both
shared the same objective and
the same views, but we had
different strategies on how to
accomplish jt."
McColl also acknowledged that
one reason that persuaded him to
step aside in favor of Packard
was the groundswell of support
Packard bas received in the days
following the hotly contested
primary election.
· "It was apparent Ron did have
the support. it was apparent he
had the momentum," McColl
commented.
Packard, who claJ..ml to have
the 1upport of all 16 of the other
GOP candidates who eought the
Republican nomination, sald
McColl'• decl1lon waa the
••gentlemanly" thing to do.
"1 perauaded him that If we
were both going alter the u.me
money It would hurt ua, if we
were both going after the same
votes lt would hurt and that one
of us needed a clear s h ot .''
Packard l&ld of the Wedne9day
meetmg.
He aald tbat not only did
McColl pledge his "unqualified
support," but also conttlbuted
$100 to Packard's write-in
campaign effort.
When asked to comment about
the lastest development in the
topsy-turvy race, Crean laid, "I
think Ron Packard will
recognize It's not ln the national
interest to run.
"President Reagan needs
Republicans In Congreea and a
Republican versus a 1Republlcan
is not in the national interest
when there is a chance of a
Democrat going to Con¥;Jesa fJom
the 43rcf district, ' Crean
continued.
Turning his attention to Crean,
Packard said he is "convinced
people do not want to elect Crean
or Archer."
He said he hopes to raise
$500.000 fol' a campaign that in
order to succeed must educate
voters on how to file a write-in
ballot. .,,,
Unclaimed boats
set for auction
An auction of unclaimed
boats, canoes and a single
Catamaran will be held
Saturday at the Newport
Beach city yard. In all. 44
items will be offered.
Purchases are made on an
as-is basis with no guarantee
•Jody Becker,~a C.or:Qna del
Mar High School senior, baa
been named the Newport
Harbor Republican Women's
Assembly Intern.
Miss ·Becker will intern for
five weeks this summer in
Newport Beach Assem-
blywoman M_arian· Berge-
son's office. She was awarded
a $500 check by the women's
of physical condi tion .
Payments must be made in
cash or by local check and all
purchases must be removed at "
the conclusion of the auction.
The city yard is located at
5 92 Superior Ave. The
auction begins at 9 a.m.
assembly.
This is the first year of the
intern program. Miss Becker,
who will attend University of
Michigan next fall, is assistant
editor of her school newspaper, editor of the
campus literary magazine and
winner of the Newport
Harbor Soroptimist Youth
Citizenship Award.
Sailcloth Is !Yot
Just For Sails •••
It also makes a great casual pant, because It Is dura-
ble, lightweight, and comfortable. Perfect for the
active man, or as Storekeeper Mlchael Bueche sug·
gests, for the man who just wants to re la".
Available ln 10 colors.
father's day ••.
Sunday,
June
20th.
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J Pomona Ele mentary &hool
~students in Colt.a. Mesa daerve a
>·ttrong community salute after
having been selected among the
'top 24 elem e ntary schools ln
tcalifornia tha t are r ece iving
'special federal aid. ' Pomona school has more than
ca 50 percent minority student
body. Yet on performance, the
·.campus r a nke d i n the 25th
rp e r centile s tate w id e on the
iCalifornia Assessment Program
<test that me a s ures language,
t reading and math s kills for
·students in the third, sixth and
<12th grades.
r
The Costa Mesa school has
been getting aid in the form of
, Federal Title 1 funds which are
White the campua ranklna la
1till below the diatrlctwfde
averaae. Pomona School atudent
ICOret In lanaUl&e, Nldina and
math increueCl markedly.
Pomona School Ptlncipal
Rosemarie Bodrogi aaJd the ia now
worried, however, that expected
reduetiona tn federal fundl could
hamper the future of the fledcJ.inl
programs that have proved to
effective.
This la the grave shortcomlng
of federally funded programa.
Washington get• eomething of
value like this under way and
then abruptly decides to chob off
the needed fed.ral aid to corttinue
the good work.
'I granted to schools with a high The at!iial pr~aram1 at
concentration of students from _ Pomona Sc worked.. _of coune,
1 families of m od est financial because of the dedication and
means. The idea is to use .the s k i 1 1 s o f t e a c h e r s a n d
money to strengthen student work administrators as well a the hard
i n l a n g u a g e , r e a d i n g a n d work by the students them1elves.
mathematics skills. It would be a real tragedy to aee I Fed eral e xpe nditures were this kind of ~ 1oet in future
!well inv~ted a t Pomona School. school years.
: The campus used the'$100,000 Federal official• would be
nted annually during the last well advised to examine Pomona
years to establish a reading • School's record and aee what has
librar y media center and been accomplished -and what
rtive discipline and bilingual will be lo8t -if future funding ia
frograms. cut off.
' ~
'(;ove plans challenged
The state Departme nt of
arks a nd Recreation and the
alifornia L egisl a ture have
tched up the handling of Crystal
ove's cottages a nd the y've
tched it badly .
~• · This condition seems quite
clear after state functionaries at
long last unveiled future plans for
:
1
the 45 cottages that are included
within Crystal Cove State Park,
:be tween Cor ona d el Mar and
Laguna Beach.
By way of background, it
should be noted that there is a
legis la tive ma ndate that the
Crystal Cove shoreline be opened
for public u se a nd that the
c o t t ages b e p r eserve d a s a
historical reminder of early-day
California beach communities.
We h ave n o quarrel with
these objectives. Crystal Cove may
indeed be one of the last examples
of early shoreline villages.
The state plan, however, sees
fit to evict all the present cottage
tenants for the purpose of turning
the buildings over to overnight
renters or for use as hostels for
bikers or hikers.
People with expe r ience in
beach renting might well wonder
how long these historic cottages
will remain upright under these
proposed kinds of uses.
Additionally, just down the
beach at El Morro. s tate officials
saw fit to jlran t m obile h ome
dwellers 20-year extenaion1 on
their beachfront leases.
This may be fine. But atate
reasoning fQr removal of Cr)1ital
Cove cottage dwell.en wu that it
is necessary in order to 818ure
public access to the beach.
You are left to wonder how
the bluf ftop cottage dwell.en block
access to the beach whlle the
mobile home dwellers on the 1and
at El Morro do not.
The plain fact is that the
disparity defies logic.
If state officials have thoughts
that overnight ueera will pre1erve
the little cottages better than the
present rentera, those state
officials better have a re-think.
Again, if state officials have
determined that private use of the
cottages is incompatible with a
public beach, does it become any
less incompatible for the cottages
to be used privately by hikers,
bikers or school groups?
AB it now standS, the present
Crystal Cove cottage dwellers are
taking their case to court where it
would seem they might have a
very good case' for retaining their
rental rights for a similar period of
time as the mobile home
leaseifolders at El Morro.
It is tragjc, however, that the
~ue cannot be settled by the
state, wi\h uniform application at
both ends of the beaclt, and thus
bypass e verybody getting
ensnarled in a court action.
Basil Peterson's gift
Men of vision are rare and
their passing should be noted,
even by those who didn't know
the m . They leave important
legacies. :.
Such a man was Basil H.
Peterson, founding president of
Orange Coast College, who died
last week in Northern California
at the age of 74.
Dr. Peterson retired 18 yean
ago and left the area, so a lot of
folks wtu> live here now never had
the opportunity to know him.
On the occasion of Dr.
Peterson'• retirement, Walter
Burroughs, the former publiaher
of the Oaily Pilot, wrote: -
"I am sure hundreds and
•
hundreds of penom Md the same
sinking heart when Pete
announced he·would be forced to
retire beca~ of his health. He
has been ecc, and OCC has been
him, fof so lona. it seems
impossible to .eparate tt. two.
"His ,ltt to our canmwaity
has been a· si-t j\&nfot ~. an
institution that hM tramcended all
previoUI notiorw of wt.at a )d\lot'
college lhould or dK&ld do IGr ltl
diatrlct, Ua titilen1 ·anti lt1
studenta. ' ·
"All ol la owe hfm a dtep debt of gratiWcle for thJa «ift. It I
That Mimi up Basil Petencn11
legacy pretty well.
Opinions expresHd In the ss>«e •bove •r• thole of tht Detty Ptl .. 1 <>Mr vlew1 ....
Pressed on this page ere those of their authors •ftd 1rtl1b. ,_...., eomment ti l•wlt·
Id. Address The D•llV Piiot, P.O. Box 15.o, Cost• Mew, CA '2616. f'ftoM (714)
642•4321. • I
ORANGE COAST
llllJPllat
...
•,
\
J'DIEl"IER !f!~~ 1'()1 Tik)5E ~1
~OF~
CARDS 50 TIE lR.5.
~ FIND ME JN MY
MOOT COUNTY ......
-Sov·e1-subs-a prime threat
WASHING TON -Aside from the
pomibWty of a muaive Argentine alt
strike, the Britiah had three '6wild cardl''
to worry about in the Falkla.od la1ands
7 the enemy submarines Salta, San
Luis and Santiago del &tero.
The Salta and the San Luis, built
elght years ago in West Germany, are
=with the same deadly n,ertiah
that are also armed with nuclear
weaporut. They are considered to be the
prime underaee threat to the United
Stat.es.
In additiol), the S oviets have 285
attack submarines carrying conventional
weapons, and can count on four each
Q
-J.~c.-•• -,-111_1_1 -~~
the Britlah u.ed to llilk the
Argentine crut.er General BeJ.crano. The
Santiago del nrtero, though a relative
antique built by the United States before
1946, has a range of 12,000 miles
between refuellnp and con.atituted a
major threat to the British inv-1on fleet. from the Poles and Bulgarians. Thus the
U.S. and NATO forces have a totaJ of 364
THE aalTISB OONCEAN owr the Soviet-bloc subs to worry about.
Argentine subs wu shared, though with To combat them , the Allied anti-
a certain detachment, by U.S. mllitary submarine force has a total of 1,045
official•. The Pentagon baa apenl fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, with
millions trying to make au.re the United an additional 149 in re.erve. These sub
State11 bu IUfftdent and 90phisticated chuera carry a knockou't punch: nuclear
anti-aubmartne warfare weapons to depth bombs. They can be delivered by
protect our fleet from Soviet undenea either planes or helicopters.
marauders. • In addition, the U.S. arsenal includes
The full nature of the ·~bmarlne an ant1-subm8rine nuclear rocket, called
threat ii de~ in a 9et"ies ot leCftt and Aaroc, which is fired from surface ships,
top-9eCT'et Ptntaaon ancLCIA documenta and a similar sub-to-sub rocket called
shown to my a.odate Dale Van Atta. Subroc. However, the Subroc nuclear
The Pentagon estimates that the rocket Is technologically obsolescent and
Soviet Navy now hu 71 nuclear-will be phased out by 1989.
powered submarines of varioua types This means. as a P entagon • report
notes, that unless a replacement weapon
is developed Jor Subroc, U.S. subJ')'larines
"will have to rely on the shorter-ran.ge.
con ventionally armed MK-48 torpedo,
whose effective use will require (them)
lo close within the Soviet d e tection
envelope and within range of existing
Soviet weapons."
THESE NUCLEAR torpedoes and
depth charges, of course, cannot be used
in any limited war. For their use would
surely touch off a nuclear exchange that
could escalate m to a holocaust. With this
in mind, the Pentagon must also look to
its con ven tiona l a n ti -submari ne
weapons.
But this in turn leads to another
problem, as a Pentagon document points
out: ''Because individuat kill probability
tends to be low in conventional anti-
submarine warfare, it could take as long
as three months to bring the Soviet
submarine threat under control in the
Atlantic and the Pacific. During those
months, if typical estimates are valid, we
could lose as much as 15 percent of tJ.S .
and allied reinforcement and resupply
shipping, while the Soviets could loee up
to 70 percent of their submarines."
And it seems unlikely that either side
would put up with such severe losses
without resorting to nuclear weapons.
Good intentions don't prevent wars
To the Editor:
I suppose the current nuclear freeze
movement is no different from any other
such movement in history: and I do not
doubt for a moment that the leaders of
today's moveme nt a re every bit as
sincere in their beliefs and convictions as
were those leaders of similar movements
in past history.
And as for hist.pry, who will ever
forget the pathetic spectacle of Neville
Chamberlain re turning from Nazi
Germany in the late '30s, waving the'
document that Hitler had just signed
renouncing a~n and announcing
to the world that "this document means
peace in our time"?
Or who can forget our own America.n
folk-hero Charles Lindbergh pttaehing
to America all during the 30s that we
should unilaterally disarm aa a way to
convince Hitler of our desire for world
peace?
PEARL HARBOR changed all of that
kil)d of Ivory Tower thinking on the
morning of December 7. UM 1 at the
initial COit of 2,000 American sailors'
Uves. The final cost of that war that
could have been prevented was 50
million lives. The momina aft« Pearl
Harbor, everyone ln-ihe free world woke
up simultaneously io the realir.ation thaJ
what Winston Churchill had been
preaching for a decade was corre«; that
a strong defeme is and always t)aa been
the only deterrent that can prevent wars
with aagreesive nations -not pieces of
paper, not1 ballot proposition&, not the
good intentions of all the
well-tntentiQned people in the world.
Aegressive "t>ulliea, whether they be
iftc:livtduala or nati.onl llJCh •the Sovtet
Union, respect oaly one th1aC and that ill
fOW9I' or the threat of t¥t poww.
Fortunately for um, U.... -. tbDe for ut ahel-P.rl Harbol' to NlluOd our
pathetic dee-that hid bwl aDowed
t.O deterionte to Nell a +41aOU1 8'ate
of unpre~ 1be momlnC aftm' • meak auack in the nudem' .,. will not
be nearly ., fOl'IMDI of W. who
ref\m .., face r.lif, ..a .. UYlde ... "1th .. lllwtDdblll ....
No w.r ln hiltof'J hil ewr bffn
....... let alone~·--':S:-" nat&oa that perc.IWcf t&a " ndal
ldvwwy ....... ---.. I:'*' fClr war than tuelf. Th• ~ .. "' ~ \hJa and..,.... ....
I ,. It ., ~. true...., .•. ,, -•
•nturln ap: "lf 1ou ....,..~~ ~for,....'1 8!.ltltlllllllll .. lhe ........ ._..al )l.tilaq .... , ........ ......... ,,...... -~= n~ WM ...... llMIWj .. lllil
•llMwll." IOOllllY Nae ,_.,,,,..,,,,,, II
memories of what a truly inspirational
man he was.
I started attendiJl8 clases in his army
barracks in 1962. I was present al his
r e tirement whe n the s tudent bod y
preeented him with a color television. I
waa there for the dedication of the Basil
MAILBOX
Peterson Gymnasium, But I recall two
instances with Dr. P eterson more than•
these.
Dr. P eterson u sed to umpire our
student 1<>ftball games. One day he called
me out on strikes. I vigorously insisted
the pit.ch was low. He said it was not. I
l08t. After the game he, approached me
and admitted the pitch may have been
low; that he was watching the side of the
strike zone. He told me that even when
there is doubt one must stick to his
judgmenta. The world, he said, has no
place for the wishy-washy, no room for
the mugwumper. One must make a
decision and stick by it.
On the day after President Kennedy
was ahot, Dr. Petenon called a ·~
student ..-mbly. John Kennedy waa a
hero to ua. We felt he 10mehow favored
the you.J'll. that he was on our aide. His
ideala were clear and important. His
death slaRgered us. We . were lost,
confused. The student body waa numb.
There were• plans of cancelling all
aporls and social eve nts and ev en
claaees. Dr. Peterson knew how we felt,
for I think he too felt our loss. He told us
that John Kennedy was not the aort of
man who would cancel anythina, but
would prftl on with the job at hanCi with
even renewed vlaor.
Take a deep &-e.th, he said, must.er
your~. for we have the same job
to do now • we did before, only now we
m~ do it without John Kennedy.
And now we will have to do it without
a.tl Petenon.
DAVID A. HUGHFS
Hidden COll'8
To the lditor:
The Or= County Develo= Plan tot' Chb cani.lna
eaat1 \ha\ may IMM the p.tbUo liable for
IQllllona of dollan on a perpe\ually
..,.UM ...... '8 dl9 futllre. abow and ._,_.. -..~ e11111 al 11'71 nwan
pl'O_Jlat9d b1 ... plan . 'rhe.pi1qan1dw..,....10.m
Ch&ca, eomplel• wlth Je&Uu and ...... ,, .. , • ....,... Ml\nl .....
disp0sition along the Huntington Beach
to Newport Beach coastline, that the
be~hes downcoast from the jetties will
suffer constant erosion without natural
reple n ishme n t of sand. This will
necessitate repetitive dredging of sand
from offshore back onto the beaches, al a
public cost in the millions of dollars.
WE SEE this 1>h<•numt'non in a<:t1on
today. The Army Corps of Engineers is
now dredging sand back onto Sunset
Beach because of jetties built upcoast at
Anaheim Bay. The cost -$6.6 million. A '
similar phenom1.mon is happening in
Oceanside now where the beaches are
having to be rebuilt at a cost of several
million d olla rs because of upcoast
man-made development and disruption
of the natural coastline?
Do we not learn from history? Can we
not learn from current even ts? The
Orange County Board of Supervisors is
placing the whole Huntington Beach
coastline in great jeopardy with their
ill-oonceived plan for &Isa-Chica.
And they are doing it on the backs of
the public.
"What the re fore God hath joined
together, let not man put asunder"
Mark 10:9
J AN D VANDERSLOOT MD
Clarification
To the Editor:
Retarding Ref. J ones' rebuttal to my
letter of June 2, want to cl'arify that my
letter was referring to the "new" Irvine
Company, and in no way was it meant
to reflect on the "old" Irvine Company. ·
All tlloee accolades were well deserved
and earned by the "old'J Irvine Company
-and to set the record straight, the
Irvine Founation ls not • subsidiary of nc.
In our 21 years with the Irvine
Company. ln both agriculture and land
development departments, we were with
both the ''old" and the "new" Irvine. I
have many fond memories of the "old"
company. 808B1E ALLEN
't ti I I' !' '.• '
;Inde cisi on clo U ~s 1lannjng
IY STEVE MARBLE Ol'IMDelf"'9e ....
WW voien In Newport BNch
pt the chance to decide the fate
of the 7Hicre Bann.Uw Ranch
development next fall?
For the time, that •PJ>MN to
be a queetictl that hu no aNWer.
. The Oty Council hu delayed
until J~)' a dedaion on whether
the bui.lding plan should be put
on the November ball<>' or juat
;mkeci. .
.t ~any council rnemben .. td
ll>eY're waiti.na f« a IUnal from
developer Hancock "Bill" Bannina, wa1Una to IM lf he'•
even interetted ln ftchUna for h.11
project.
Bannlna, meanwhile, laid he'•
waiting for the cou.ncll to make a
move and la undedded whether
the development, areatly
modified by the council. rnair.t
ecorlOINclenle.
And the 1-der Of the Welt
Newport Le1talatlve Alliance,
the lfOUP that 1pearhMded the
referendum now t.hreatenlne the
project. laid ahe'• u cwioul ..
the next peraon about what'•
aot04ltoha3 Several on behind
the IC'eDe o~ clue.
Bannina rec:ently huddled
with pollUcal OONUltant Robert
Nellon. .. lidee ilid the ta1ka
10 S haw belll IDfonna), Nel1on bad been brou1bl
abcmd bY the lrYtne CGIDP9'\Y
lMt fall WMn the flnn'• Newport
Center expan1lon plan wH
douded by a referendum. '!be
projllct later Wll repealed and
never put to a dtywide vote,
Mayor Jackie Heather,
meawhile, hill formed a three-
member council committee to
draft lan1ua~e for a ballot
meuure on the·BannSna Ranch.
Five of the aeven council
members appear to favor the
election route.
Proponents of tbe project have
pointed to SPON (StOp Polluttna
Our Newport) u bein~r a Wtely
1roup to add muacfe to the
referendum push.
SPON, critical of the Ban.nlna
Ranch plan, ~ece~!!Y was
awarded more than ~.000 in
court cmta ln the ,roup 1 effort to
turn back ex.,.1',.ion plaM at
John WaYM Airport. Oblerven
laid th.la money could be eMO.y
dJnct.ed toward the fight apinlt
the Bann1nc Ranch.
Several council membera Na-ted that all of this aetl the
1ta1e for an expen1ive and
perhap1 bloody election day
1howdown next November.
j
Reagan raps Reds'
_:global t:Yraniiy'
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -
Prniden t Reagan, Ignoring a
Soviet challenge to renounce first
u.ae of nuclear weapons, aocuaed
Kremlln leaders today of
oompll1nc a ·~ of tyranny" through global aggression and
trying to manipulate the peace
movement in the West.
In a speech befatt a spedal
U.N. General Aalembly aelSlon
on disarmamen t, Reagan
portrayed the United States as a
champion of anm control since
World War II, and challenged the
Sovletl to demonatrate by
"deeds. not worda" that they are
alncere about cw-bing the arms
race.
GUARDED -Police cordon off the home at
14952 Silnnycrest Lane, Huntington Beach,
where a young woman and her mother were
~ .............
murdered and badly m utilated. A suspect has
been arrested 1n the slayings, police said.
RMpn aocuaed the SoYleta of
violating existing • anna control alreementa and the 1925 Geneva
protocol banning u.ae of chemical
weapons.
Legal battle
f ~r Die drich
·about to end
Cops nab suspect
ill ·n _B slayi~gs
"In the nuclear era, the major
powers b"ar a 1pe.clal
re1pon1ibillty to eate these
80W'Clll of conflict and refrain
from aar-ion.'' Reapn ....
'-niat ill why we are eo dee,plY
coocemed ~t conduct. The . t lpOlre before the
same forum w h ere Soviet
Foreign Mlnllter Andrei
Gromyko drew heavy applaute
Tuaday with a declaration from
Soviet P resident Leonid
Breshnev that his country will
not wie nuclea{ weapons first ln
any oonfllct.
The long tegal odyssey of
former Orange County
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich,
convicted of bribery-related
ofienaes in 1979, will draw to a
cloee Tuesday in a San Diego
County courtroom.
Diedrich, 58, is scheduled to
surrender then to begin the
one-to-14-year term in state
pri8on to which he was sentenced
three years ago. He has remained
free while the judgment was
appealed.
The California Supreme Court
in a ruling May 6 upheld
Diedrich's conviction on one
count of bribery and one count of
conspiracy. A second bribery
count was overturned, however.
The high court also affirmed
co-defendant LeRoy Rose's
conviction on a simple conspiracy·
count.
Die drich and Rose were
charged in a 1977 Orange County
Grand Jury indictment with
oonapirlng to commit bribery ln
connection with county
government approval for
development plans for Anaheim
Hilla.
At the time, Diedrich cast a
vote ln favor ttf releasing about
2,200 acres of the north county
property from agricultµral
preeerve status. That designation
precluded development.
Rose was a former Orange
County architect and a political
ally of Diedrich, whose power u
a 1upervisor. earned him the
moniker Super D.
NATION
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. Deir ....... Pqllce have arrested a rnan
suspected ln the grialy alayings of
a young woman and her mother
whose mutilated bod.lea were
discovered Wednesday in a
Huntington Beach home.
Huntington Beach police Lt.
'Merle Schneblin said officers also
have found three young children
missing from the Sunnycreat
Lane home, describing the
youngsters as alive and safe.
H e a r ing set
on school
• pay raise s
A public hearing will be held
Tuesday regarding an lnltial 9
percent salary i.ncreue propoeal
by the union repreeenting 800
clasaified employees in the
Newport Mesa Unified School
District.
The California School
Employeet Aseociation offered its
initial bargaining propoeal June
8. The district 11 expected to
present lta propoul July 13.
About 30 deeRfted ems*>Yeea
(non-teachen) have been laid
off. The 9 percent .alary propoeal
would increase a cu1todian's
salary from $1,156 to $1,249 ar,d
an efenentary IChool ~· salary from $1,405 to $1,583 per
month.
Nixon doea 't loolc baclc
Ten yean after tbe Wateraate tcandal that •
demoyed hi8 _..dmcy, Richard Nbcm aya he never lookJ &.ck. .,... AB.
Diet ~revents cancerf
A ldenUftc panel hM found a polllble link
between hJP-fat din and mncer. It advi8M eating
more frultm, peerw and whole c:wreU to lowel' the
rilk. I>;,. JN. •
Tl t c VISION
He declined to release the
name of the murder suspect on
advice of the Orange County
District Attorney's office. •
He auo declined to reveal
where the murder suspect WM
arrested or where he was being
detained today.
Schneblin did say folice
haven 't made a inal
Identification of the murder
victims because of the condition ·
of their bodies.
"The bodies were so badly
mutilated that we'll have to go
through dental records and
fingerprints to make the
identification," he said.
But authorities did confirm
that the Sunnycrest Lane home
was known to be the residence of
a 27-year-old n urse named
Shirley Harbular Dayco; her
mother, Amelia Harbular, 6~,
and the nune'a three children.
... 7, 5 and 1.
Schneblin said these were the
children who were found safe
early today.
Mrs. Dayco was known to be
separated from her husband,
Rene Dayco.
After the grisly diacovery wu
made Wedne9da~ officen began
aeerching for Dayco.
A female relative contacted
police Wednetday becaU8e 1he
had been unable to reach Mn.
'Dayco by telepl;M:Jne and beoaute
the nune bad not oome to work
aa acheduled. She waa employed
at St. Joeeph HOJlpital in ~·
COUNTY
While Reaon did not add.reta
that l8sue in his speech, a 9ellior
administration official shrugged
off the importance of the Soviet
ploo,e, saying the United States
could not bate its military
planning simply on a declaration
from Moecow.
In his s_peech. Reagan cited a
U.S. arms control record that
began in 1946 with a proposal to
Hassle due
over schools
SAC.RAMENTO (AP) -
Allembly Speaker Willie Brown
tayt huge cut.a are likely for local
gov e r nmen t unless the
Republicans 1top in1isttng on
~ achool funding without a
tax lncreae.
But Democrat Brown'•
Bepubllcan counterpart says Brown la threatening to cut local
peniinent in order to force the
Republlcaftl into aupporti.n4J 1ax
i.ncft!HU
Gold, silver off
· NEW YORK (AP) -Gold and
allver fell aharply again in
tradin1 today. Gold dropped
$8.80 to $307. 70 an ounce, and
.Over waa ol1 35 cents to $5.13.
Will GOP blow it •B•in P
c.omldmnl the brouhaha hnlHnc CMll' 1n die 43rd
Con...Uonal Dtatrict, can lt be DOlelble that a
Deu•m t wll1 ~~the~ blddltUna and pt e) I c1ild1 column. 81 ~
tum oon~l of nuclear'weepons
and atomic energy over to an
international authority, and
continue with his recent plan for
reducing U .S . and Soviet
stockpiles of nuclear warheads.
Recalling the w ords of
President Eisenhower, Reagan
said, "We are for peace, first, last
and always ... "
While committing the United
States lo work for real arms
control meeaurea, Reagan said,
"We need more than mere words,
more than empty promises,
before we can proceed."
In perhaps his harabeat
indictment of Soviet behavior, Reann said the Soviet Union amce World War II had amused
a "record of tyranny" by
dominating !:astern Europe and
erecting the Berlin wan. ta.kins
over Czechoslovakia, Hungary
and Afghanistan and
or'cheatrating the military
-crackdown in Poland. ·
Flnanees probed
Securities firm
loses $4 million
Comark, a Newport Beach
secu rlUea and commodities
broket-dealer that announced
pl•!'.• earlier this we.ek to
llqUidate its operations, ahowed a
$4 million loss last year,
authorities said today.
Geraldine D . Green,
commiaioner for the California
Department of Corporatiom said
the Newport Beach firm's tomes
for the fi1cal year ending
December 1981 oould be even
higher.
The California Department of
Corporations began investigating
the company's financial condition
and record keeping practices last
week after Coman requested an
extension in filing a 1981
financial statement.
Ms. Green said that four
department ~ployees are at the
Newport Beach oWCe '°:~ Comark blamed the y in fil1nc the financill R&tementa on
a switch fl'om a manual record
keeping to a computer(,zed
aystem.
"If you don't have adequate
book • and records you're
heaicalJy out of business," said
Ma. Green. "'lbe problem we're
having la reoonatructing who has
paid and who hasn't."
Comark la a limite d
partnership with two general
partners and approximately 165
Umlted partners. -Ma. Green said that it appears
that many bank records were
mixed up and completely lost
when the company attempted to
comp(Jtertz.e it.a system.
County rescinds
• • airport expansion
By FREDERI~ SCBOEMEBL Of .. Dllr .........
Complying with a recent court
order , Orange County
supervisors have rescinded a
February, 1981, re1olution
approving a $100 million
expansion program at John
Wayne Airport.
The board's action Wedneaday
was considered a legal formality .mce ~ementation of the plan
was b by an order ialued in
January by Orange Cou nty
Su perior Court Judae Bruce
Sumner.
However, it waa not until two
weeks ago that Sumner, in
INDEX
A4
82
Cl0-11
B2 . DM ' . Bl .
Bl
B5
Al0-11
Dl -2 m
S P O RTS
ia8ulng the final judgment in the
c&1e, ordered supervi1ors to
relCind the 1981 action.
While the county is free to
appeal Sumner'• ruling -an
action that ia expected -DO
major physkal chana-at the
airport can take place, nor can
the limit of 41 jet departures per
da be increued. ~umner 1truck down the
muter plan followiN a trial in
which attorney• representlna
Newport Beach and the group
Stop Pollu ting our Newport
( SPON) con tended tba t
environmental analysis of the
(See ADlPORT, Pap Al)
82
Dl-2
ClO
Dl,3,+
Cl-4 cu a
Dl-2 .u
AS
~Cit:y still needs ro
1 '.:earmark r.oad luads
1 ;, Newport Be a ch cl t y intention bere to handicap the
1 r aovemment should now have a hotel or motel op•raton 9f I .., pretty clear plotu.re on how the Newport a.ch. whi> h8w m.c19
I '• votera feel about lncreued taxee ationa contributionl to the aood of
I of any ldnd. Twice a propoeed the ·entire community.
"lf\Creue in hotel bed taxes hM There WM. howwvw. • ltronl
l l been placed before the votera. feelina that NeWpon ~ IUCh a
1 Twice. the measure hu failed. fine reputation M a tourlat
! The latest failure came on thia dettinaUOD few vlaiton tndMd
h ' · ballot .1 .. n would shun ecoammodatlona hen mont s pnmary vo .... aa • over a 2 percent bed ta•
local ballot measure. Because of differential
, Pr~osHion 13, any tax boost That q~ now appean to
, requires a two-thirds '"yes" vote Cl
f d t. The moasure fell be history. ty aovernment • or a op aon. ~ would be ru-adviMd to pl.Ice a bed
• about 800 votes short. tax measure before the voten
' Newport's proposal was io again.
increase the bed tax from 8 to 8 · City ·offidala, however, atill
' pereent. The Daily Pilot supported face the problem of finding money
,. passage of the increase on both for needed street Improvement
'! occasions it was placed before the projects. ...
city voters. One ~ibllity would be for l Extra money generated the City Council to earmark the 6
, would have been applied to street percent bed tax funds that wOl 1 improvement projects . The come fro1t1 still-unbuilt hotels
rationale here was that out-of-such as the Koll Company project
town guests and visitors would, and the planned hot.el at Newport
through the bed tax, be helping to Dunes.
; support the very public facilities It would also be pmllble to .et
: that they use and enjoy as visitors aside a certain percentaae of all I to Newport Beach. present bed taxea to bl chanheled
I This seems like an equitable into a special ltreet repair fund.
1
1haring of costs for visitors Tb i • 1V o u 1 d at. 1ea1 t
without placing additional demonstrate how much work can
financial burdens on Newport be accompliehed from funds
f Beach taxpayers. within the lirbitation of eldld.ng
C 1 ea r 1 y . t h e re was no bed taxee.
I
i • ;Cove plans challenged
I
I
I I
I
•
[
The s tate Department of
Parks and Recreation and the
California Legislature have
botched up the handling of Crystal
(ceve's cottages a nd they've
botched it badly.
' This condition seems quite
clear afUu' state functionaries at
long laSt unveiled future plans for
the 45 cottages-that are included
wa"'thin Crystal Cove State Park,.
between Corona def Mar and
Laguna Beach.
By way of background, it
should be noted that there is a
legislative mandate that the
Crystal Cove shoreline be opened
for public use and that the
cottages be preserved as a
historical reminder of early-day
Calif()mia beach communities.
We have no quarrel with
these objectives. Crystal Cove may
indeed be one of the last examples
of early shoreline villages.
The state plan, however, sees
fit to evict all the present cottage
tenants for the purpose of turning
the buildings over to overnight
renters or for use as hostels for
bikers or hikers.
People with experience in
beach renting might well wonder
bow long these historic cottages
will remain upright under these
proposed kinds of uses.
Additionally, just down the
beach at El Morro, state officials
saw fit to ~rant mobile home
dwellers 20-year exten1lona on
their beach.front le.uee.
This ·may be fine. But 1tate
reasoning for ,-emoval of Crystal
Cove cottage dwellen WM that it
is necessary in order to auure
public aooess to the beach.
You are left w wonder how
the blufftop cott,aae dwellers block
access to the beach while the
mobile home dwellen on the sand
at El Morro do not.
The plain fact i1 that the
disparity defie9 logic. ...
u stat.e offtda1a ~ thoughts
that overnight uaera will praerve
the little cottages better than the
present renters, tho1e state
officials better .have a ~think.
Again, if state offidala have
determined that private u.e of the
cottages is incom,.tible with a
public beach. does it. become any
less incompatible for the cottages
to be uaed privately by hikers,
bikers or school groups?
As it now stands, the preeent
Crystal Cove cottage dwellers are
taking their cue to court where it
would seem they might have a
very good case for' retaining their
rental rights for a similar period of.
time a·s the mobile home
leaseholders at El Morro.
It is tragic, however, that the
issue cannot be settled by the
staie, with uniform applicatiQD at
both ends of the beach, and thus
bypass everybody getting
ensnarlec;l in a court actkJn..
Basil Peterson's gift
Men of vision are rare and
their passing should be noted,
even by thoee who didn't know
them. They leave important
legacies. ·
Sue}\ a man was Basil H.
Peterson, founding president of
Orange C.oa.st College, who died
last week in Northern California
at the age of 74. ·
Dr. Peterson retired 18 years
ago and left the area, eo a lot of
folks who live here now never had
the opportunity to know him.
On the occasion of D.r.
Peterson•s retlrement, Walter
Burrou.Kha, the former publilber
of the Oaily Pilot, wrote:
"I am sure hundreds and
' hundreds of pe110118 had the w
sinking heart when Pete
announced he would be forced to
retire becaUle of hi.a health. He
has been OCC, and OCC has been
him, for 10 lona. It aeem1
· impe>Mible to aeparat.e the two.
•
''His gift to our community
has been a great junior colletre, an
institution that baa tramcended all
previ oua notlonl of what a Ju.nlor
coV.ege should or could do lor 119
district, lt1 citlaens and 1t1
atudenw.
"All of w owe him a deep
debt of gratitude for t!Ua gift."
That swm up Bull Petenon'1
legaq pretty well.
Opinions exprnHd In the space •bow .,.. those of the O.lty ....... othtf' vtews •Jl·
pressed on this page ere those of their author' •nd ertlstJ. RAdtr commtttt ft lftvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Bo• 1560, Costa -.., CA ..... PhOM 014>
642·4321 .
-
Soviet subs a prime threat
~WASHINGTON _: A8'de from the
pomlbWty of a IDMllw Alpntlne air
9'rik,e, the. ~tilh Md three UWt)d cards" '° worry abOut in the hlldand Jalanda
-tbe enenlf ~ Salta. San Lula and s.nu.., del ~.
The Salta and the ·SM L&Ma, built etaht yean .,o in West Germany, are
equi=wtth the l9Dll8 deedly Tlcerfiah tot--the Brhilh u.ec1 to mu the
Alpntine en.Wier Genenl BeJcrano. The
Santiaao del 1!'.11teto, tbouah • relaUve
antique built by the Unitedl>tata before
1945, haa a range ,of 12,000 mile.
.between refuellnp and conatltuted a
major three~ to the BriUsh inWlion fleet.
THE BRITISH OONCERN wer the
Argentine subs WM abared, thoulh with
a certain detachment, by U.S. military
officials. The Pentagon baa spent
milliona .trytnc to make sure the United
States ha aulfident and IOphiaticated
anti-submarine warfare weapom to
• protect our fleet from Soviet undenee
marauders.
The full nature of the submarine
threat la detailed in a leries of eecret and
top.9eeret Pentaaon and OA documents
shown to my -.:late Dale Van Atta.
The Pentagon eatlmatea that the
Soviet Navy now baa 71 nuclear-
powered aubmarinel of vvioul typel
that a(e alao armed with nuclear ... notes, that unless a replacement weapon
weapons. They are considered to be the is developed for Subroc, U.S. submarines
prime undenea threat to the United "will have to rely on the shorte=-ran. ,
Stat.. conventionally armed MK-48 ,
In addition, the Soviets have 285 whoae effective use will require ( em)
attack submarines carrying conventional to close within the Soviet detection
weapona, and can count on four each 'envelope and within range of existing
G -JBl_l_ll-11-11-. -~
from the Poles and Bulgarians. Thus the
U.S. and NATO forces have a total of364...
Soviet.-bloc subs to worry about .
To combat them, the Allied anti-
submarine force has a total of 1,045
fixed-wl.ng aircraft and helicopters, with
an additional 149 in reserve. These sub
chuen carry a knockout punch: nuclear
depth bombs. They can be delivered by
either planes or helicopters.
In aacUtton, the u .s. arsenal includes
an anti-eubmarine nuclear rocket, called
Allroc, which is fired from surface ships;
and a similar sub-to-sub rocket called
Subtoc. However, the Sub.roe nuclear
rocket ta technologically obeolescent and
will be phased out by 1989. .
This means, u a Pentagon report
Soviet weapons."
THESE NUCLEAR torpedoes and
depth charges, of course, cannot be used
in any limited war. For their UR would
surely toUch off a nuclear exchange that
could escalate into a holocaust. With this
in mind, the Pentagon must also look to
its conventional a n ti-submarine
weapons.
But this In turn leads to another
problem, as a Pentagon document poil}ts
out: :'Because individual kill probability
tends to be low in conventional anti-
submarine warfare, it could take as long
as • three months to . bring the Soviet
submarine threat under control in the
Atlantic and the Pacific. During those
months, if typical estimates are vaijd, we
could lose as much as 15 percent of U.S.
and allied reinforcement and resupply
shipping, while the Soviets could 1oae up
to 70 percent of their submarines."
And it seems unlikely that either side
would put up with such aevere losses
without resorting to nuclear weapons.
Good inteniions don't prevent wars I To the Editor. memories of what a truly inspirational disposition along the Huntington Beach
I suppoee the current nuclear freeze man he was. to Newport Beach coastline, that the
movement ta no different from any other I started attenc:Uns clases in his army beaches downcoest from the jetties will
such movement in history; and I do nOt barraclca in 1962. l was present at his suffer constant erosion without 114tural
doubt fQr a moment that the leaden of retirement when the student body r e plenishment of sand . This will
today's movement are e very bit aa presented him with a color television. I necessitate repetitive dredging of sand
sincere in their beliefs and convictions as was there for the dedication of the Basil from offshore back onto the beaches, at a
were those leaders of similar movements public cost in the millions of dollars.
in pa.at history.
And as for history, who will ever
forget the. pathetic spectacle of Neville
Chamberlain returning from Nazi
Germany In the late '30s, wavina tbe-
document that Hitler had just sfgned
renouncing aggreesion and ~
to the world that "thia document means
peace in our time''?
Or who can forget our own American
folk-hero Charles Undbergh pnlllChing
to America all durtna the 30a that we
should unilaterally diaann aa a way to
convince Hitler of ou.r desire for world
peace?
MAILBOX
Petenon GyrruMU4iwn, But I recall two
in1t.ances with or. Peterson more than
theee.
Dr. Peterson used to umpire our student softball games. One day he called
me out on ltrlkes. I vigorously insisted
the pitch was low. He said it was not. I
lo8t. After the game he approached me
and admitted the pitch may have been
low; that he was watching the side of the
strike woe. He told me that even when
then la doubt one must stick to hia
judcmenta. The world, he aaid, has no
place for the wiaby-waahy, no room for
the mugwumper. One must make a
decision and stick by it.
On the day after President Kennedy
was shot, Dr. Pet.enon called a special
student uaembly. John Kennedy was a
hero to ua. We felt he somehow favored
the young, that he waa on our side. His
ldeala were clear and important. His
death staggered us. We were lost,
confu.ed. The student body waa numb.
There were p1'na of cancelling all
~C,C:!; and social events and even . Dr. Petenon knew how we felt,
foe I think he too felt our loss. He told ua
that John Kennedy was not the 10rt of
man who would cancel anything, but
would pre. on with the job at band with
even renewed vi.p.
Take a deep breeth, he said, muster
your c:ounae. for we have the same job
to do nQW • we did t>efore, only now we
m~ do it without John Kennedy.
And now we will have to do it without
Bull Petenon.
DAVID A. HUGHES
Hidden costs
To \be Mtor.
The Oranie County Develo= Plan fot Bolla Oiica contains
CCllt8 that !MY make the public liable f«
IDl1Uou of dollara on a perpetually .......,. ... In the future, above .na a.,.-•~mm of ft79 mOUon ~.,, ..........
'n.. ~ OtmD entrance co Bctlaa
Cblca, complete with Jettle1 and
.......... , say 10 dllnapt natural ..nd
WE SEE this _phenomenon in action
today. The Army Corps of Engineers is
now dredging sand back onto Sunset
Beach because of jetties built upco'8t at
Anaheim Bay. The cost-$6.6 million. A
similar phenomenon is happening in
Oceanside now where the beaches are
having to be rebuijt at a cost of ~eral
million dollars because of upcoast
man-made development and disruption
of the natural coastline?
Do we not learn from history? Can we
not learn from current events? The
Orange County Board of Supervisors is
placing the whole Huntington Beach
coastline in great jeopardy with their
ill-<.'OOC'elved plan for Bolsa Chica.
And they are doing it on the backs of
the public. -
"What therefore God hath joined
together, let not man put asunder"
Marl< 10:9
JAN D. VANDERSLOOT MD
Clarification
To the F.ditor:
Regarding Ref. Jones' rebuttal to my
le,ter of June 2, want to clarify that my
letter was referring to the "new" Irvine
Company, and in no way was it meant.
to reflect on the "old" Irvine Company.
All thoee accolades were well de9erved •
and earned by the "old" Irvine c.ompany
-and to Bet the record straight, the
Irvine Founation la not J8 sublidiary oi
TIC. · 1
In our 21 years with the Irvine
Company, in both agriculture and land
development departments. we were with
both the "old" and the ''new" Irvine. I
have many fond memories of the "old''
company. BOBBIE ALLEN
-··
.
I ..
Oflngl OaMc DAILY PtLOTIThur.ldly. JUN 17, 1tU N
Dow Jones Final
OFF 5.42
CLOSING 711 .47
l.lome building
shows up~wing
B7 Tbe Associated Preti
Actual and planned home buildlng Jumped
unexpectedly last month, the goyemment said. and a
home builders group said that wu •'the ftnt fign" of
recovt?ry. tor one of the nation'• mott depre91ed
industries.
The Commerce Department said Wednesday that
May housing starts roae 22.3 p«cent from the month
before· fo t1ie highest level in a year. It al.lo said
building pennita for future construction roee J0.2·
percent. from the previous month.
The department said housing starta roee to an
annual rate of 1.086 million. That waa the high
since the 1.172 million rate reported in May 1981.
BuiJ.ding under construc tion
Construction has beaun ln Monrovia on the. $3.1
million Huntington Oaks Office Building, aald a
spokesm.an for J. A. Stewart Construction Company,
Weatmi.nster. It will be occupied by Kinetics
Technolo gy International Corporation.
Marketing contract given
The Orange County office of the Charles Dunn
Company bas been retained by the Cypress Land
Company·. Long Beach, to market 10 acres which is
part of the Cypress Center in Cypress.
The property is located just east of Katella
Avenue and Valley View Street.
Gas sllortages eyed
WASHINGTON (AP) -Motorists. already hit
with gasoline price increases of a dime per gallon, will
see prices c~limb even higher and could face shortages
before summer is over, according to a group critical of
the oil industry.
The Citizen-Labor Ene rgy Coalition said
Wednesday it was likely that both gasoline and
heating oil .Prices Will "increase dramatically" in the
next few months.
But the " chief lobbying arm of the oil industry
called that a llegation "economic nonsense" and said il
ignored the fact that even with the recent hikes,
gasoline prio es are still lower than a year ago.
Trade .balance sh ows surplus
WASHLNGTON (AP) -The nation's foreign
trade balance jumped back to a $1 .2 bllllon surplus in
the first quarter of this year after dipping to a deficit
of nearly $1 billion ln the flnal quarter of 1981, the
Commerce Department reported today. Officials are predicting that the balance of
payments -1:he broadest foreign trade measure and
sometimes referred to as the "current account" -will
show a surpltJLS for the year, the third in a row.
STOCKS IN THE SNRIGHT
.,=.: ~o: ~-,,!:t;-,.c;.~ .... --= ~ -,, .. ,"9 n1toc•1tllJ at...,..._ ..
Tn-Inc 1,117,700 ·---v. =eorp 726,100 1114 -... 660,tQl ... -~
.... Bnk 560,300 16'-+ 1¥1 e-s 5Al,9CXJ l714i :.::~ "'""Tl.T 533,tCID SO¥to
Sldl)llOll 421,000 3J'lo -'lj,
NLT~ 176,.al> 2Sl't .. ~
~1<:81 3'0,300 IP9 -11.\ ,,,,, Al,,." :151,600 11~ -14 • llDWOlen1 Jl2,600 ~ -" i.nllU!""' J11,4GD l7Y, -" Alll9 .... ll0,4GI ...... ..:fa Ullr.A 30UOD ,. ...
PN I 304,0CID ~ '"
UPS AND DOWNS
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u.oo. --....... ~ tl'"'V•· '-"·· -··"· -._... ........ -•ror•. M-.11,off l UI • ..... 01• , •••
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AMERICAN LEADERS
Nl!W \'OAK ~I -s. ... ,,_ II'--nol
.,,,.,. ol lhe -"'°'' ................. -~ ~ tred.ng f'ltl0f'\elt1 Al "'Cit• "*" ~llfl>v , m ,9G> ,.~ H Vt
Dlmtf'tr "1 ,SCIO a 14 • V. ~ 11~-•V. -1·1• GellliY(lll " 1 ,6a> .... -.... ' 51Unrk W1C 71,300 2 -l't Bt l..twd ., ,eoo 13'--14 11'&1 .=' ., ,300 • ._ -... M n1 SMOD 1S --.
"'""" llloy 51,.00 ..... • 14 ~· sa.tGO o,
MaALS
NEW YORKJ:> -Spot nonlerroue melel pnc. t . c...-7().72 oenta a pound. U.S.
deatln•tloM.
Lead 25-27 oant• • pound
Dno 3W7 l*llt a pound. ~-T1n U .7082 Mat• Weak compoalta
lb. ~ 76-TT canta a pound, N.Y
..._., $370.00 per llaak. ,......_ 1297.00 troy oz., N,Y
SILVER
H1ndy a H•rman, 15.0115 per troy ounce.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
., TM Auut.ted "'-
Selacted WOf'ld OOIO C>t'-lodav:
Uftdaft: rnomlng tilting: $31UO, oll
13.50.
l ....._ aflarnoon fixing: $309.00. ott
$8.00. ,..,. anwnoon flXlnO: $313.32, ott
12.83. ,~ l'IOlld.y -~ Qloaed.
ZwWh late llxJno: '309.00, °" 14.00 ~~~a.oo 8111..t. a ...,_ ~ _, quot9 .-.oo, Off ... 00. -:i••rt ~ Mtltf quo111 uoe.oo • Off 00. ........ ~ 6filt1 quo9 fllobrtoltad IU.t.41,Clffll. ,
SYMBOLS
+
•
.I