HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-05-24 - Orange Coast Pilot(}HA N ( ·' ( ( I\) N 1 '{ ( ·' l IF I I H ~--I A . •, ( f-~. : ·..,
NB creek shows decline in DDT
But new tests of minnows show there's
still a problem with pollution in water
covered unusually hi&h levels of the
banned pesticide DDT and other
toxic chemicals in tests of red sh inner
minnows taken last year. Both sets of
minnows were taken about 'h mile
upstream from Upper Newport Bay
in the creek that flows lrvine from
Orange County's foothills.
Water boatd officials were sur-
prised by the DDT findfoP. because it
1s illegal to use the pesticide.
The most recent tests showed the
level of DDT is neatly half of its
earlier rcadinas. when it was
measured at more than nine times the
level set by the National Academy of
SClences for healthy fish.
On Wednesday, Anderson backed
away from earlier atatemenu that \ht
tests revealed evidence of the recent
use of DDT.
level tet by the academy of ICience ia
lhe earlier tests. did aot appear at all
in the most recent tests, Andenoo said.
By JERRY HIRSCH
Ol .. Dllllr ..........
Pollution in San D1ego Creek and
Ncwpon Bay doesn't look as bad as
first thought but is still senous,
aecording to new tests of minnows
just completed by the state Regional
Water Quality Board.
"The samples we took in April
NEWSLINE
Coast
There's a robot on the
payroll In the Ocean View
School District./ A3
Newport-Mesa school
trustees have shelved a
plan for day-care centers
In schools./ A3
California
Character actor John
Marley, whose movie
credits included 'The
Godfather,· Is dead at 76 .
/A4
The state parole board
has been urged to refuse
the parole of multiple
killer Juan Corona./ A4
Nation
Republicans are calling
the Carter briefing
papers Investigation a
bungled affair./ A7
World
Five El Salvador national
guardsmen have been
found guilty in slaying of 4
churchwomen./ A7
Features
A barter system based on
a new kind of credit card
Is gaining adherents
among Orange County
business people./81
Sports
The Detroit Tigers
matched an American
League record with their
16th consecutive road
victory, 4-2 over the
AnQels./C4.
The Phoenix Suns forced
a sixth game in their NBA
playoff series with the
Lakers, winning 126-121
at the Forum./C4.
Orange Coast College
baseball player Jeff Gar-
dner has been selected
the South Coast Con-
ference player of the year.
/CS.
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·::::::::::::::::::::::;
Entertainmen t
Cliffhangers by " Dallas"
and "Falcon Crest"
propelled CBS back Into
the Nielsen ratings lead.
/8 3
Business
An Irvine company has
unveiled the first com-
mercial system to test
computer keyboards./C1
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
INDE'X
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Callfornla News
Classlfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Living
Mutual Fund•
National Newt
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sport•
Stock Mark•t•
Summer Living
Television
Theatert
Weather
World News
'
B2
B4
A3
C1-3
A4
CB-10
84
C10
C6
C9
B2
B1-2
C1
A4
A10 A3
C6-7
C4-6
C3
01-8
B2
82-3
A2
A4
show a large decrease in pestkides but
we are still waitinJ for more results
that we should get in August from the
Department offish and Game." said
James Anderson. the exrcutive of-
ficer of the water board's Santa Ana
region.
At an Apnl press conference.
Anderson said the board had dis-
Dentist
testifies
in own
defense
Protopappas'
testimony will
continue today
By JEFF ADLER
OtlMDeltf,...118'1
Almost 14 months after his amst
for the second-degree murder of three
dental patients, Costa Mesa dentist
Tony Protopappas took the witness
stand Wednesday and began telling
his side of the story for the first time.
The 38-year-old dentist. the first
witness to be called by the defense,
appeared tentative as he began his
testimony, but quickly gained his
composure. turning to face jurors,
sometimes smiling. He spoke in calm,
measured tones.
As he was led through what seemed
to be well-rehearsed testimony by
defense attorney Roben Tuller.
Protopappas stepped down from the
witness stand several ttmcs to draw
charts or diagrams for the jury,
(Pleue .ee DltNTIST / A2)
DDT. banned in 1972, is harmful
to wildlife. weakening fish and caus-
ing birds to lay brittle, thin-shelled
eggs. It causes nervous and respir-
atory disorders when consumed in
lal"Kt Quantities bv humans.
"The results show that the problem
1s not getting worse but it is still bad,"
said Philip Mauer, a member of the
water board and the Newpon Beach
City Council.
.. We have met three of the four
facton established. If you come up
with all four facton you can be pretty
sure you have fresh DDT," Anderson
said.
It is not unusual to find ODE and
other DDT by-products in the en-vironment.
The insecticide Toxaphcne. whjcb
showed up.;u more than 30 times the
Dentist Tony Protopappu, testifylna a t hla
murder trial Wednesday, uea a c6art to
Dlll9r ............ _, ....... u.-
de.crlbe the dra&• he ued for anesthesia dmin& nqery.
Cockroaches issue in election race
Kids at NB's Ensign
School take th eir
poli tics seriously
By JERRY HIRSCH
01 IM Dlil9r Not IWI
Cockroaches arc not 1he major
issues of most politicaJ campaigns.
You probably won't hear President
Rea~n or any of the Democratic
prcs1denuaJ candidates take a fiery
stand against the nasty insects. But
they sure are a burning issue for the
students seeking office at Ensian
Intermediate School in Newpon
Beach.
Heidi has more of a law and order
dnfi to her campaign.
"There 1s a lot of ditching and
things going on here that should be
more strictly punished. We should get
the {>COPlc who are ditching class and
punish them by ha ving them clean
the school up." Heidi says.
"But they already have to do that,"
counters Hilary Benedict, whose plat-
form calls for repainting the school to
cover up that "icky" brown.
"The problem 1s that no one
enforces it," responds Heidi.
Danny Houck is the only boy
runninJ for president and he hopes to
sweep into office on a wave of male
votes. Danny figures the girls will
split their votes among the female
candidates.
But Danny admits there may be a
scnous Oaw in his strategy.
"The boys who like the girls are
going to vote for girls," Danny
explains.
However. he hopes to score points
(Pleaee .ee VOTE / A2)
But PCB. a carcin0tt.nic industrial
cbemacat used as an clectncal ia-
auJator, inc:reued slightJy to .66 perts
per million from .S6 parts per_ million.
The acadtmy's standard ts .SO.
DDT by-products and PCB are
amona the toxic chemicals found in
recent tests of muuels in Upper
Newport Bay and N(wport Harbor.
(PleueeeeDDT/A2)
Was BB
slaying
suspect
drunk?
Witness admits
no one saw Deluca
under influence
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dmly,.. ....
A key defense witness in the
murder trial of Gabriel Deluca ad-
mitted Wednesday there is no con-
clusive proof the I 8-year-old suspect
had been drinkinJ the day be alleacd-
1 y killed ma.ii cam er Ida Jean Hu.ton.
The defense has built its case
around the presumP.tion that Deluca
had smoked manjuana and con-
sumed such a large amount of tequila
that he suffered an alcholic blackout
before the brutal Jan. 3 killing.
"There was nobody thett to ~
him drunk." agreed Dr. Martha
Rogers, a Fullcnon pyscbologist.
dunng quesuoning in the eighth day
of the first-degree murder trial.
EarHcr, Rogers had testified that
Deluca drank nine stralght shots of
tequila and then attacked Haxton in a
fit of"blind rage." She said the dark-
haircd youth recalls nothing of the
attack.
Haxton. an attractive 30-ycar-old
postal carrier. was murdered as she
delivered mail to Dcluca·s Meredith
Gardens home, an uppcr<lass sec-
tion of Huntington Beach. The
woman was struck with a baseball bat
and stabbed with a buck knife.
The woman's body was found later
the same day slumped in the back scat
of her light green ma.ii car which was
parked at a Costa Mesa church about
a mile from Dcluca's home.
Rogers has testified that Deluca 1s
mentally ill and could not have
premcdiated the murder, wbfob the
defcnSt contends the youth com-
mitted in a state of "unconSCtous-
ness."
The prosecution. however. ques-
tioned the diagnosis by asserting
Deluca may have learned bow to "act
crazy" while confined lo a Long
Beach mental hospitaJ for eight
months in 1982.
Tryrng to d1scrcd1t Rogers· testi-
mony, prosecutor Bryan Brown re-
vealed that Deluca is a suspect in a
Huntmgton Beach assault case that
took pla~ about a month prior to
Haxton's murder.
These kids take their campaigns
seriously here, appoinung friends as
campaign managers and plastering
the school with campaign posters.
And if you look closely on Dover
Drive. you will see a hand-painted
"Molly 0. For Ensign President"
poster pinned to a fence between the
Ouorescent green and orange. pro-
fessionally printed signs of state
Assembly and judicial candidates.
''There arc cockroaches in the
locker rooms and I was sitting down
at my desk 1n a class whco some
crawly thing crccpcd across it. It was
terrible. we need to call the ex-
temunator." says a diminutive Molly
o·Neil. one of four Ensign 12-ycar-
olds seeking the school's student body
presidency.
Death penalty 'honest' punishment
There is a definite clean govern-
ment thread to Molly's campaign.
"The bathrooms need to be cleaned
up and the boys arc complain mg that
their bathrooms don't have stalls or
mirrors." says Molly dunng an infor-
mal debate on the school's front lawn.
Heidi Gibson. who has pasted gold
stars representing her campaign on
her face and f nends as well as her
posters. isn't going to let Molly get all
of the clean government vote.
"We need to clean this place up a
little bit -it is sort of messy, .. Heidi
says.
Grieving Mesa widower seeks swift justice
but 'feefs sorry for accuse<!._youth. 16
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of tM 0.-, .........
While Ello) Telles was making the
first of what will undoubtedl} be a
long string of court appearances
Wednesday. a relati ve packed the 16-
year-old boy's things into cardboard
boxes and emptied his room at the Ira
Bakers' Cedar Place house.
Clothes. Telles' cle<"tric guitar,
typewriter and the posters of rock
stars that adorned his walls were
packed up from the Costa Mesa home
where Eugenia Flores Balcer was
murdered last \\eekend
The bo) and another I (M~ar-old.
charged with first-degr(.'{' murder in
the death of the 60-\ear-old "oman
who had bcfncndcd Telle,, ""111
remain 1n custod\ al ll'..i!\I until
another heanng takes plan· a 1udge
ruled.
Telles and Kun 81oun~k1 arrested
Sunday night m connection with the
death of Mrs. Baker. appeart.'d before
Juvenile Court Comm1ss1oner Gale
Hickman Wcdncsda)' afternoon. The
pair arc being held in Orange Count\
Juvenile Hall pending a ~1a' ~O
hearing to determine \\ hethcr the~
will be tned as adults in the cnme
Poh~ suspect Tclks. \\ho 11,cd
with the Bakers. and 81e1Un'ik1. a
neighborhood friend ol Telles.
murdered Mrs. Baker last Fnda~ and
buried her in a back)ard planter
Fnends and relat1,es found her 1n the
shallow grave unda~ afternoon after
she was reported missing fnda~
On Wcdncsda' Mr<; Baler'~ hus-
band. Ira . 62. Sat quietly \\-Ith his
elderly mother while Telle-;· pos-
sessions were collected. 10 be p1clcd
up by Telles' aunt
A small. while candk burned
slowly IJ\ a cuslard dish near Baker's
favonte chair. in memon of the
\\-Oman T ellcs 1s accused of murder-
ing.
.. I sure will miss Eugenia," Baker
said .\ tall. gaunt man of few words,
Baker ~1d that despite the "tcmblc
shocl '' ofh1s wtfe's death. he bears no
an1mos11 ' toward the troubkd teen-
ager he took into his home and tried
10 help
"I fttl ~om for him. No one had
the t1mr to lind out what kmd of
pe~n he \\as. but mentally tbne wa
"ometh1ng wrong with him," he said.
Thrre 1s no doubt m bis mind.
howc,er. that Telles murdettd his
wife. he said.
The bo} allegedly confessed as
much to him and even said be had
(Pleue Me 'DTATB/ A2)
Airline tickets let the flier beware
When the carrier files for bankruptcy.
the customer's out of luck -and money
University High School surf club
coach Nick Misserv11le never paid
attentjon to the profits and losses of
a1rhncs before. But af\er Pacific East
Air went bankrupt lcav1n1
Misserville wtlh $2,384 in worthless
tickets for a surf club tnp to Hawa11.
h<' will be more sclcctJvc 1n choosma
an a1rhne.
Misserville is one of a arowina
numtxr ofpaucngcrs findinaout fint
hand that competition 1n a de·
regulated 11rlinc industry holds the
n~k' of a wonhless ticket H well a~
the benefit of Oytng cheapl)
Two Cahfom1a-bascd a1rhnes. Pa-
cific East and Pac1fic faprcss. have
filed for bankruptc) this year. leaving
thousands of passcnaers with useless
ticketl, or wo~. stranded at d1stant
11rpons.
This was to be the fif\h ttmc
Mi 41erv11lc has token \Urf club ~tu
dtnt from lr"-me to Hawa11
"Thr kids who arc going on the tr1p
all work hard for their grades and
work hard at pan-ume JObs 10 cam
enough monev so thev C'an 1u>." said
M1sscrv1llc
M1sscrv1lle always tnrs to find the
lowest air fare bccau~ h<' kno"~ the
students arc scraping 10 come up with
the monc). On pa.st tnps. M1sscn1lk
and his students have nown United
i\1rhncs and World A1rhnC1. but lh1
year Pacific Ea.st 1r had thr lowest
pn~ Stat It $2q8 for a round-1np to
the islands.
M1sscrv11lc roll«ted the money
from the 'tudcnts nd bouaht e'J}lt
Pacific Ea~t Air round-tnp 111.kcts 1n
Marth Hr thouaht the Junr tnp was a
sure th1na
But 1n e rly May Pacific East air
cnnC'cled 1t-; 011hts and fil~ for
Chapter 11 b.inkruptcy Thr a1rhnr
\ll1d 1t plunnrd to rc\umc OtJht\ th1'i
JERRY
HIRSCH
NEWS PERSPECTIVE
wttk but would not honor 1t~ old
tickets U. Bankruptcv JUd&c John
A )'er hu ~in« blockt'd the ca mer'
plan to rtsume n1ahts and ordcrt'd the
airline to cca~ all opcrnuon'
M1'i\t'n ilk found that none uf the
other 11rhncs would honor the
UC'kets. He booked et&ht new tickets
on United -"1rhncs for $418 each -
S 120 more than the Pacific East
tickets,
The students art 1om1 to i>e> Ute
extra S 120 and and Mi$$Cntlle is
aoina to PIY the rest ou1 of hts
personal sav1np
"I thought that wouk1 be \.be
honorable thins to do. The ltids -.
'<> hard for their mone):' he CX·
pWMCi
Mmcrv1lle m1Jht gt"t SOl'M of lbc
Sl ,3 4 back -..hen the MnVUpte) •
evcntu~ll)' sctlled,
Acrord1n1 to Linda hJc, dtr't'<>
tor or ron umtt aff11n for °'' (o",,fft
(P1eue ... Ta.AV&L/ Al)
Miller slayer gets life term
ly JEPP ADLER ................
A Santa Ana man convicted an the
1913 Com Mesa robbtty and
•t.ruaulation·llayiq of former Or· anee County Supervisor Edison Mill·
er'• 26-year-old son was aeotenced
Wednetday to a life prison term
without the possibility of parole.
In tentencina 26-year-old Richard
James Wetherell to the maximum
tenn, Oranfe County Superior Court
Ju4,e David Carter noted that the
defendant had not taken any actions
to save the life of Patrick Scott Miller.
26, wbo was found hoetied and lying
in a pool of his own blood.
"Tbi1 murder was vicious.
prolonaed and penonal. which
means you had to sec and feel the
death blows you inflicted." said
Carter durina the brief sentencing
hearing.
Anderson said the pollution 1~ not
sever<' enough to be a public health
hazard but it has set off a count' "'Ide
search for the sources. ·
The state has done spot chel ~' ot
local produce and has found no
evidence of DDT. Similar spo1 check!I
of growers by the count> Agncullural
Commissioner's office also found
nothing unusual.
·:we have had no progress 1dent ·
1fying the sources," Anderson said
.. You allowed the victim. who was
fiptina to sustain his own life. to lie
in his own blood for hours without
medical aucntion whale you callously
ransacked the house and took prop-
erty and furniture." he said.
Cartt"r added that th ere wa no
cv1denct Wetherell ever considered
anonymously telephonana police or
paramedics in an effon to save
Miller's life. "Instead. you did the
opposite.'' he told the defendant.
A six-man. six-woman jury on
March 8 found Wetherell guilty of
robbery and murder during the
comm1ss1on of a roblx'ry. a special
ciicumstancc that quahfiedthe defen-
dant for the life without parole
sentence, following a month-long
tnal.
The prosccuuon offered eviden~
indicating Wetherell and co-defen-
dant Arthur George Goldner Jr ..
··"-e han·n·1 found an)thing that
looks like a smoking gun ."
The decrease in DDT levels may
point to a single incident 1n \!.h1 ch the
pcs11c1de \I.as used
"It ma~ be that the source was a
one-time use and 11 did not show up in
1he same leq~ls becau~ these fish
ha'e not been around that long."
.\nderson said.
.\closed landfill near the creek sue
v. here the fish sam pies were taken
whose tcparate tnal on the charae is
scheduled to beain next week. met
Miller in a bar near his Hanover Ori~ home m Costa Mesa on June
28.1983.
The three returned to Miller's
home after the bar closed and con·
llnued to drink until Wetherell and
Goldner auacked Miller, savagely
beating and kicking him, accordina to
Prosecutor Pat Geary.
After tripping the home of numer·
ous household items and loadma
them in Miller's pickup truck. either
Weth<'rcll or Goldner strangled Mill·
er. the prosecution contended.
Miller was found by his girlfnend
the next morning hogued and lying in
a pool of his own blood.
The defense admitted Wetherell
was involved in the beating. but
argued that Miller. who sold cocaine
and marijuana for a living. pulled a
shotgun on th e two men
ma) Ix' a i.oun:e of some of the
chemicals bul would not be the source
of the DDT. at·cording to Anderson.
The landtill was closed more than
20}earsagoandan) DDT deposits in
would have broken down b't now. he
said ·
The \!oater board plans to rnke soil
samples from the landfill once mone}'
from the board's 1984-85 budget 1s
available m Jul}. Anderson said.
DEATH FOR TEEN IN SLAYING? ...
From Al
planned the murder, Baker said
Although police said the cnme oc-
curred during an argument betwct'n
Mrs. Baker and Telles, Baker said his
wife had S 100 on her at the ume she
was killed and suspects tha1 roblx-1)
may have been a motivating factor
"Money has a lot to do w11h
everything that's wrong,.. he said
The boy acted normally Fnda}' night
and Saturday, when Baker walked up
and down Cedar Place asking ne1sh·
bors if they had seen his wife. missing
since Fnday afternoon.
"The only susp1c1ous thing wa s that
his feet wer<' dirty.'' Baker said. "He
would ordinanly have clean feet. but I
didn't think anything of it -m) fce1
got dirty too when I was that age ..
Baker. who neighbors said spent
much of his time cult1vat1ng an
elaborate flower ~rden. said the
"most honest" punishment for Telles
would be thr" death penaltv
"h 's the kindest thing. rcall>." he
said. "lfhe went to pnson for 30 or 40
years. his mother v.ould wntc: him
letters and keep hopmg and pining tor
ham. and he'd lead a wretched.
homble hfe. But 1f the}' ga"e him the
death penalty. his mother "'ould be
able to go on with her life.
"It's JUSt like with Eugenia. you
kno}'. )Ou get o'er theS<' things ...
He and Mrs Baker mamed on
March 4. 1977. after the) met 1n
~ewport Beach. Born in Me,1co. she
v.orked for a Newpon Beach fam1I}'
as a housekeeper for :W }cars.
M~. Baker had ne ver been mamed
before and had no children. Baker
said
1-uneral sen ices for Mrs. Baker are
scheduled at Harbor Lawn-M ount
Ohve Monual} at 11 a.m. Saturday.
STUDENT'S VIEWS •••
homAI
get the lrnprealon that ~hlng
•• b9d In the tdM>Olt Md aft the
atud«ltl ere Irr 9ll)Onalble.
"W• had modem cour• abOut
coms>Ut••· It wu. ,.. good, up to d•te
and I really lear1*f a lot," 8he uJd.
The stucMnts alto are concerMd
about a wfder range of 118Ue8.
"I thtnk there lhould be more
}obi for people. We have to pay
when they are unempk>yed. That
tsn!.J fair but If they had Jobs It
w~n't coet u much," Mid
Motty.
Danny Mys he can understand
paying benefits for S*>Ple who
can't work but there 19 a problem
when the goverment give. aJd to
people who could get Jobe.
Another 1tudent can di date,
Hetdl Glb90n, thinks cteantng up
the envtorruMnt would create
extra Jobi 9lld MtYe the communi-
ty' but lhe la not .,,.. how tM
government COUid afford ~
for thOM extra jobt.
And International problem•
puzzle the 1tudent1 juat u they
puz:tle adultt.
"I don't understand hOw we are
lnvOfved wtth all thOM other coun-
tries. we are trying to hefp our
friends but that Ju•t wtnda up
causing probtema ft....,,., .. lhe
Mid.
"We need WOf'1d peace," Mid
Suzie Kramp, 12, WhO ta running for
student body vk:e prMldent. "We
are an worried about nuclear war
becaute we could be bleated away
any MCOnd, even on our way to
school.''
TRAVEL CHANCES UP IN THE AIR ...
From Al
Aeronautics Board. there are some
basic steps M1sserv11le and other air
travelers can take to protect them-
selves from such disasters.
"The very best wa y to protect
yourself is to purchase your ticket
with a credit card. If for some reason
the carrier goes under and you have
not used your ticket you have a
dispute with the credit card com pan>
and they may be stuck with the bill.''
Oaschle said.
According to federal Farr Credit
Bilhng Act. consumers do not have to
pay for goods and services the)
purchased with a cred11 card but did
not rece1 ve.
"We have found that consumers
who were unable to use their tickets
were able to get a refund or avoid
paying by following the procedures of
their ind1 v1dual credit card com-
pany," Daschle said.
According to Suz) Lev.is of F1m
Interstate Bank. the standard
procedure 1s notifying the credit card
company 1n writing that the sen ice
was not received. A credit 1s thl·n
made to the consumer's account
Daschle also suggests that lOn·
sumers book their tickets th rough a
knowledgeable travel agent who can
tell them about the difference in the
service and financial strength of the
airlines
Travel agents. however present
Just Call
642-6086
Deity Pilot
Dell•ety
It Quranteed
~~ ,,,,.., H you oo
'IOI ,_,.. you PefM' b1 ~J01>m ~#be!Ore 1p"'
encl I'°"' copy ..,,. ti..
.--to
another set of problems. To book
tickets. the agents use computenzed
reservation systems 0 " ned and oper-
ated by airlines.
The two largest com puter systems
are run bv United Airlines and
American Airlines The CA B has
found evidence of bias 1n the system
that favors the airlines that owns the
reservations S)Stem. Daschle said.
The CAB 1s cons1den ng a nev. set of
rules that would force American and
l n1ted to eliminate am burlHn bias
in their re sen at1on S) siems. Dasch le
said.
.\nd tr:Hel agents ha'c a hard time
keeping up"' 1th the co nstantl y chang-
ing arra) of air fares for customers
looking for the cheapest 1ickets.
Daschle believes consumers
should read the business sections of
ne"'spapcr~ and look for airline
ad' en1~1ng 1fthe} want to keep up on
the financial condition of the a1rhnes
and d the' "'ant to know v.ho has the
least e\pe.ns1,e rates.
Thi\ 1s cspec1all) important nov.
1ha1 'oluntaf) programs that guaran-
1ecd a passenger a flight on another
airline 1f he purchased a t1ckc1
through a 1ravel agent ha'l' fallen
apart. Daschle explained
"When rnnsumers go ou1 and
make a maJor purcha\(' thr) should
du '>Omt' research It doesn 't matter
v.hl'thcr 11 1s a d1shv.a\her or an
a1rhne ticket." Daschle said.
Daschlc said her agenc) rece1 .. ed
an unusual!) high number of com-
plaints about Pacific East Air pnor to
the a1rhne's bankruptcy.
Only last month the state atlorncy
general's office filed suit against
Pacific East Air charging that the
airline sold more tickets than there
were seats a'a1lable and then either
denied or dela)ed refunds to cus-
tomers v. ho did not get seats.
nlll Ocwber. consumers can
wntc or call the C'AB and find ou1
ho"" man} rnmplaants have been filed
against an airline
C on'iumcrs ma> have more trouble
getting 1nformat1on about airlines
after 0l'totx·r The Airline Deregula-
tion ..\ct of 1978 whi ch opened the
rndustr) up tornmpet1t1on also called
for the d1'imantllng of the CA B 10
1984
Funding tor 1hc agency runs out
Sep1 JI and no prov1s1on has been
made to hand 1t' v.atchdog func11ons
to another agl·nq. Daschlc said.
But eq•n "'llhout the (..\A
monitoring 1h1n$.s. Daschle believes
the industn "'tll eventually se ttle
down
"I oclie\C tht• a1rhnes will beromc
finannall> •.tronger but with de·
regula110n lhl'rr "'111 be some winners
and losers v.h1lc things arc soning
out.'' Dasthk \a1d
What do you like about tbe Oally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the
number at left and your meuage will be re<'orded. trans<'rlbff and delivered
to lhe appropriate editor.
The same 24-bour answering suvlct-may bt used to record letters to the
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters c•olumn must Include thl'lr
namt and telephone numbtr for verification. No rlrrulatlon <'alls, please.
Tell us what's oa your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Circulation 71"'42-4333
ClaHlfled advertlelng 7141'42-5"71
All other department• M2-4121
MAIN OFFICE
))0 W'"t Be. St t ,--.11 V,..... CA M•,• •oo·-e • ••.(II) '·~·· v-c.• emti
COC'r•IQN '1183 Or•"Ot r.o•ttt ~"°""""II ~y NI>
._ Jto<,.. llUt•••t.,,,, '4-•or.,1 _" .. oo e<l'te<•.W
.......,,. ............ , "" •IC><Clduc:llld .. l"<lul ~ ... ,,.. .,,.."'°" (II copyoOf'I llW,,.. !l•i.,,a.,. !Ind $unelllr tt
'°" do ""' ·~ "°" 'Ofl'I 0., 1 • ,., cai Dor'ot9
•O I m lf'ld "°"' ~ _.. oe....,tO
CtrcutkM\
T1lep.'loM1
Chuy Oowallby
Edit<>< and Assistant
10 the Publtsher
ftoeemary Churchman
Controllf'lr
~ ,.. l""''llO" P'I_, •I ec.1a M ... C .... om.
f \lPft ••• '°°' "'1"41'.:1 (. ·-l>y 4'11•.. " 1 r. ".C''"l'\ly
CJ\' _, M 5tO """''""'
~ °',.,.eoum,
Ar-.......
lt~F.CMUO
Pro<JuCll()(l
M•~
Donald L. Wllll•m•
C11cu<•llll'1
M•OllQ4K
'
VOL. n, NO. 145
f • I
Low clouds and hazy sunshine
Coutal II .. ., ...
,. 47
10 .. ....
13 .. .. u ., 70
12 41 '° 12 1• M 11 42
70 63 H 70 n .,
... 411 16 H
N •I . ~
12 " 1' 61 a 62
13 <tO .. 72
11 46
" 12 11 ea
--.......... llOM. UI Olll -0.-...
Extended
Temperatures
411>9ny
Albuq<l9tque
Am911110
Meh<WllQ9 ._ ... .,..,,,. Tides
.. .. 15 II '°' 11 79 !It
78 as 77 52
64 66 79 51 II 17 ., 68
10 •8 71 $9 n s2
M 70
It M St ...... T.._. II 74
" " ..,. "911• City 17 .. ., 54 .... ArtlOfllo ., 74
II 10 hnOlefo 11 M
14 II 8MI freMMCO 17 llt
N tr a.n ~.P.A II 72
102 72 St 81• ... .,.. M 40
., 53 Seeltle " 42
108 11 8111.-..oon 13 " 71 4& Slov•,... 71 12
11 63 Sc>ok-to 37
82 •• $yr-111 4.$
18 5t TCIC*l• to II 11 IS T_. IOI M
M M T...... II ff
13 .. WMl*1GIOll II 61 ., ., Wldllla 78 51 '° u ~ 11 111 111 &2 W*'*'8fon.o. 12 ao
All•nhc Cny
Aull in
B11t1m01•
e1111ng1
81tm1ng111m
8•1m.,c:-
8n1M
Ht Le
llO 60
93 u 13 65 eJ H
90 45 u 111
81 59
92 73 19 52
.. 45 u &3 77 53
60 411
86 57
llO 70
78 41
80 SI
88 47
12 'SI
7$ ..
12 $1
SURF REPORT
TOOA'I' Sec:ono IOw 12 131> m O 1 Seooncl 11;gn & 37 1> m • 3
fAIOA'I'
FIUl IOW I 1• am I & Finl Ngh & &O a m J 8 LOCAT'IOtll
801100
810Wl\1v1119
8ulfll0
8uf1tnglOO VI
C1.tl>9<
Sec;ond •-12 41 p m o 9 Hunllnglon 9Mctl
Second h'IJll t 20 p m • 9 A!Yef Jetty. Hewpof1
Sun wt• tOd•y •t 7 !>4 pm . ,_ 40\h Street. Newpor1
Fncs.r at s 45 a m -1911 9'1• 11 22nd StrMt, Hewciott
1 Sii 1> m 8111C1o9 w.og.
Moon Mii at 2 25 pm 10011. ·-~~C.::: Cl\9<1 .. 100.S C
Cl\11-00.W V
Cll•IOll•NC
F'rldlty •I 3 09 a m -.... llQWI II Wei•.__... •• ''°pm _,..,.,..
' CONTINUED STORIES
VOTE .•.
From Al
at Friday's campaign assembly by
suggesting the elimination of the
Silent Sustained Reading Penod -a
30-minute span after lunch when all
the students must sit quietly and read
o book.
"It rs bonng. People say they are
rushed at lunch. The lines are long so
once they get their lunch the have to
hurl) up and eat it.'' Danny says.
Two of the three vice pres1dent1al
candidates. Suzie Kramp. 12. and
Jennifer Carlson. 13. arecampa1gn1ng
for morr school fundra1sers. ··we need fundra1S<'rs so 1hat we
<.an ha'c some field trips:· said
Jennifer.
urn: has a better v.a~ tu ~pend the
mone}
Danny Houck
MollyO'Nell
"The f undraiscrs help pay for art
and cooking supplies and they should
ha ve more. I am in foods and we have
to US<' powdered milk and fake cheese
because the school doesn't have
enough money to buy the real things, ..
sa)s Suzie.
The third candidate. Danya Hall.
was knocked off the campaign trail
with an untimely case of the chicken
pox.
Vottng 1s scheduled for Friday after
the speeches arc made and Ensign
Princi pal Paul Twedt expects nearly
all of the 410 ehg1ble students to vote.
··11 1s a pretty controlled environ-
ment here and we don't give them the
opponun11y to forget to vote.'' says
Twedt.
Heidi Glbeon
Hilary Benedict
Ka ' ,_,
1-S
1-3
l..J
1-2
I
1-3 s ... Offcllon Sou"-1
DENTIST •••
From Al
including a sketch of a large molar.
Protopappas told the Orange
County Superior Court jury about
office procedures, the types of drugs
he used to anesthetize patients and
recounted what happened the day he
treated Kim Andreassen, a seriously
ill 23-year-old HuntinJ?on Beach
patient who died at the chnic Sept. 30.
1982.
His testimony, scheduled to con-
tinue today. is expected to focus on
the deaths of the two other patienu he
is accused of killing.. 13-year-old
Patncaa Craven and 31 -year-old
Cathi) n Jones. Then. Deputy D1s-
tnc1 Attorney James Cloninger will
begin what almost undoubtedly will
be an extensive cross~xaminauon of
the defendant.
Before Protopappas was called as a
witness. Tuller told jurors in an
opening statement that the three
womens' deaths were a "tragedy," but
were due to "circumstances beyond
the control of and unknown to Dr.
Protopappas."
Tuller said the proS«ution had
engaged 1n a ··collusive scheme" to
develop a ··common denominator"
in the case against Protopappas by
altering death certificates and refiling
all three the same day.
Turning to the three deaths. Tuller
said Andreassen ingested a ~rescrip
tion drug without the dentist s knowl·
edge and contrary to his instructions.
That contributed to her death, he
said.
If Craven's life was endangered, it
was endangered not by Protopappas,
but by Or. Marietta Badea, the dentist
who completed the majority of the
dental work on the 13-year-otd.
Tuller said. He pointed out thal
Badca had been granted immunity by
the district attorney's office from any
criminal liability in the c.ase.
"She didn't follow his (Protopap-
pas') instructions," he told the jury.
The attorney added Cra ven was
discharged by another dentist who
also was aranted immunity from
prosecution. "Maybe she was dis-
charged too soon. But due to the
discharge ... and the failure of the
family to remove (Jauze) packs, to
put it simply{ she choked to death,"
Tuller said o the airl's death.
Jones' death was caused by "the
meN! shock and trauma" of the dent.al
procedures to be perfonned, Tuller
said. "It was too much for her to take
. .. She went as quickly as if l walked
over and turned off the lip ts in the
courtroom." he told the jury.
CROWN AND THE BEACH
Sur f's up. Sun's out. And there
you are soaking up the rays. In
your very own blue canvas beach
chair with aluminium frame. It's
our most popular chair! Come
check out all our chairs, beach
towels ... rafts ... coolers ...
umbrellas ... A great graduation
gift or Father's Day present,
Crown
Hardware
Corona dtl Mar
(1 Rloc·k• "'o
of ''-rArthur
1I07 t, <o•tl It .-,
7 I lt673 2800
WestcUtf
l'l'1h 11 lr\'fnt'
1024 lrvinf A't
71\'642·1131
Getting You Ready for Summer
All Stores Open Memorial Day 9-5
Harl>or View
\rroM from
Re&rr'1 Cardena
1614 n Ml.11 I Or.
71416-42·1133
A.uM111 Hllla Lofaa ~
lmpcrlal Hwy.
al 91 frwy.
5620 Santa Aoa
C."yon Rd
1141998·$282
lMAh" opplo1Ctr.
2154 lkJIOower
81vd.
'7141841 ·$~·
8 u l l[ T I N B f) !~ R ~J ~----_ ____..__
Benefit run, pancake
breakfastco111bined
· You can either sit down and eat pancakes or aet up
and run at a benefit event ror lnaervaJ House. a shelter for
victims of domestic vio&ence, June 2.
R.unnen will meet at the Hundnsson Beach Pier at 8
a.m. while the breakfast will be served at Lake Park 12th
and t..akt Strtell. Hunli~on Beach, from 9 to 11:30 a.m.
Breakfast tickets are S2.~ and include a chance to
win a Cabbaae Patch J(jd doll or a Trivial Pursujf p me.
Call Joyce Mcfadden at 531-8512 for further information.
Glaucoma clime aaaoaiaced
A free ataucoma clinic will be co-sponlOfed June 19
by . Pacifica Community Hospital and the Southern
California Societ)'. to Prevent Blindness.
The clinic will be held adjacent to the hospital in the
comm unit~ room of lbe Wycliffe Garden Apanments at
18765 Aonda St. in Huntiqton Beach. The hours will be
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and from I p.m. to 2 9.m.
Glaucoma is a prosreuive disease in which incrused
eye pressure crushes the nerves of siaht. It usually strik.n
people 3S years of aac and older.
Pearl .emJnar at Orange Coa•t
A three-hour semb\ar illustratina how ocean and
frcshwaterpearlsarecuJturedandarown will be presented
June I at Oranae Coast Colleac in Costa Mesa. The seminar, titled "The Pearl -Queen of Gems."
will be offered at 7 p.m. in the OCC Forum. Gemologist
Elaine Smitha wiU be the speakCT and admiuion is SS.
Further information may be obtained bycalling432-S880.
• Key Clubben to wu.ll can
Key Club members from Irvine Hi&h School will ~ca fund-raisin, car wash Saturday at the Northwood
Union station at rvine Boulevard and Yale Loop in
Irvine.
The cost will be $3 fqr cars and SS for vans, with
discounts offe~ for IHS students. teachers and parents.
The club is committed to suppon the OXFAM project.
which aids Third World nations.
PWP dance planned In Irvine
The Costa Mesa, Ncwpon-lrvine and South Coast
chapters of Parents Without Panncrs will host a dance
Friday night at the Turtle Rock Community . Park
clubhouse in Irvine.
Music by The Other Band will be featured and
ref rcshmcnts will be served. All sin&lcs arc invited to the
event, which is $3 for PWP mcm6ers and $5 for non-
members. Call 546-5788 or 549-1135 for directions.
HB High J 959 clau to reWJlte
The Huntin1ton Beach Hi&h School class of 1959 will
hold its 25-year rcunionJuly 21 at the Huntington Beach
Inn. 21112 Pacific Coast Highway.
Graduates are urged to contact the high school or call
Judy Rathbum Bowman at 962-3003.
Irvine teen• .et I or •W'im day
Irvine teen-agers interested in a day of swimming and
snorkeling on an excursion to the Channel Islands should
register at Northwood Community Park.
The June 3 event w11l lcavc from the park. 453 I Bryan
Ave. at 7 a.m.
Streu work•.llop .et at college
A three-hour stress management workshop will be
held at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa June 2 under
the direction of lecturer Dennis Niedbala.
The session will run from 9 a.m. 10 noon in Room 111
of OCC's Counseling and Admissions Building. The
regis1ration fee is SI 0, ands more information may be
obtained by calling the college al 432-5880.
Science center fund-raUer •et
A crowd of 200 is expected to gather June 3 for the
lockofT celebration and fund-raiser to benefit the
Exploratory Leamina Center in Santa Ana.
The celebration, to be htld at the site at 3101 W.
Harvard at Fairview, will lake place from 4 to 7 p.m. and
feature a Texas-style barbcquc and dancing to a coun1ry-
westcm band.
The Exploratory Leaming Center, which recently
merged with the Experience Center, will offer hands-on
experience to schoolchildren and visitors in the areas of
history. science. honicuhure and natural environment.
Exhib11s from the Experience Center will form the nucleus
of the future ELC.
The prOJCCI is located on 11 . acres by the h1stonc
Kellogg and Maag houses, and wilJ eventually include a
SClcncc center and a multipurpose barn and horticulture
center.
Thursday, May 24
• 7 p.m., Mua Coa1olldaled Water DJ1trict, Board of
Directors, 1965 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa.
PoucE LoG
Juat a little off the top
Hea'rily·pruned eucalyptu• trea, looking
like the victim• of 1tant hedae cllppen,
l
•urround an empty field on Traboco Road
at Yale Avenae In Irvine. Tbe ol'1Ulge treee
In tbe field bave been remcrt'ed tO •·~ way for a new de•elopment.
Child-care f acillties win, .Jose in area
New port-Mesa board of trustees shelves plans
fo r day-care facilities at various schools
By UREN E. KLEIN
Of .. ~ .... ·'-" Members ol the Newpon-Mesa
Board of Education shelved plans to
set up day-care centers in school
facilities around the d1stnct. saying
they do not ha ve the funding or staff
10 carry out the program.
Last month, the board com-
missioned a $250 st udy on the need
for child care in the distnct. The stud)
predicted some J 4, 780 children 1 n
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
could require child care either during
the day or after school by 1985.
Bui. board members said, the
prospect of state funding for the day-
care centers is uncertain and the
project would require more funds
than the dis1nct could provide.
"The ind1ca11ons (of1he stud) done
by the Child Care Consull1n& Group
of Anaheim) were that the needs were
so great that we couldn't fund tt," said
Rod MacMtlhan. one of the board
members. "lnd1ca11ons from the state
are that they aren't willing to fund it.
So until we gel funher encourage-
ment from the private sector or until
the state comes up and says (i t) will
fund such projects, we put (the day-
c:are centers) on the back burner."
There arc six bills pending in
Sacramento that might provide fund-
ing to local administrative bodies for
setting up child-care centers.
"We don't feel certain enough (of
state funding) to go ahead and make a
commitment," MacMillian said.
There arc restrictions in the bills also
which would determine how much
staffing districts would have to
provide for each ccn1er.
MacMillian said the issue is "prob-
ably dead" for next year because,
even if one of the bills pauses throuah
the ~sla1urc. it would not be
approved br. Gov. George Dcu-
kmejian until August -too late to
pul a program in motion for the
school year.
Child-care ~ntcrs. he said. arc
"probably almost the equivalent of
setting up another arm of education
-when you get into it, it's a big. big
project."
That project 1s being undertaken by
the Fountain Valley School District.
which will set up a day-arc center al
Moiola Elementary School beginning
in September.
Meanwhile, MacMilliao said. so-
called "Arnett" committees will be
holding public hearings in the Adams
and Eastbluff school areas so rcs1-
• dents will be able to comment on how
those school sites should be used.
Both schools will be closed at the end
of th ts school year.
Robot joins teaching staff
in Fountain Valley school
By PHIL SN EID ERM AN
Of IN 09lly ...... tt..i
A new type of tcarhcr will JOln the
staff of Vista Vic" Ekmcnlary School
in Fountain Valle) next fal l.
The new teacher will speak with a
bi1 of an accent. The 1ns1ruc1or won't
take a lur1ch break. won't call in sick
with the flu and won't be concerned
about a paycheck. Then again the
new teacher may suffer from 1ha1
rundown feeling -"hen battcnes
arc low
This new 1nstruct1onal helper WJll
be an RB5X robot that's being
purchased w11h a S3.000 allocation
from the Ocean View School D1s-
tnct"s computer committee
Robert Sorcn~cn of Advanced
Computer Produ<:ls 1n Santa Ana .
who is selling the robot to Vista Vista.
said the electronic de' ice. "h1ch
resembles the metallic R202 of"Star
Wars," is becoming a popular teach-
ing tool.
He said 1he robot can be pro-
,1?,rammed to ask questions 10 st u-
dents. who respond by prcssi ng one of
the robot"s eight bumpers. He said 1he
students can also learn to program the
unit to move along a specific path.
Sorensen said the robot 1s capable
of uttering up 10 500 sounds. which
can be assembled to form speech. He
said he has demonstrated the robot at
numerous schools . Even
kindergarten students are unfraid of
1t. he said.
Thl' new robc.ll will fit in with a
succes)tul computer educa uon pro-
gram alrcad) under way al Vista
Vie". \atd Ocean View
spokeswoman Gayle Wa yne. who 1s a
member of the d1stnc1 s computer
committee.
She said the committee has al-
located about S 190.000 for computer
ed ucation dunng the past two years
and 1s handing out another $65.000
for the coming year.
Wa)ne said Ocean Vie" officials
chose not to launch cxactl> the same
computer education program at each
of the di strict's 23 schools. lnstead,
each school makes a specific request
to the computer committee
She said funds arc then allocated
according 10 the qualit) of the
proposal, its educational apphcat1ons
and whether the school has trained
faculty members to proper!~ use the
computer equipment.
A.s a res ult. all Ocean Vie" schools
now have computers but the t) pe and
quantity of equ1pmen1 va~ among
the Siies.
"The price of computers has drop-
ped dramat1call). so that we're no"
getting twi ce as man) computer
systems for the same amount ol
money we spent the first time
around." Wayne said.
She also no1ed parent and student
groups have ra ised thousands of
dollars fo r the purchase of add11tonal
equipment beyond the dtstnct com-
mittee's allocauons.
Irvine City Council recommends
$100. 000 program coordinator
By ANDREA ADE~ °' .. °""' .......... For parents frustrated with \be shortaae of liceliled
chtld-<:arc fac1ltttcs 1n lrvme, city officials have mowd
one step clostr to hclpina underwrite a solutio.o.
The Cny Council recommended $100,000 be ~
mjtted for child care in next year's propoled baactea.
$85,000 of which is to 10 for the salary and operatiJis
expenses of a coordinator. Tbc rest is co aid the 1"1-
school distnc1's own chi.Id-care propam this awnmer.
The new coordinator's job will entail Pt.betinl tbe
requests of those interested in offctina or needing child
care. includma the school district and businesses, andt.bcn
stan mapptn~ out a plan to meet demands.
"We beheve the coordinator is the best way to ao at
this ttme." Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido Aid. The
coordinator "can match the world of practicalities with
the wortd of realities."
Gaido and Councilman David Sills made ~
rccom mendation following find in as of a city report whkb
showed Irvine has an acute shortage of licensed day-care
centers and homes fore ht ldren. To meet only 60 ~nt of
the c1ty·s present needs would take 31 more day-care
centers and 187 more da)'<att homes. the rcpon said.
Twice that many more will be needed in only ftve
)'ears1fthe lrvincCo.'sscheduled buildingpaceconunues.
the n:1>0rts said.
Ma)'or Larry Agran asked the coordtnatordedirccted
to rcaum to the council with a spcclfic timeline to bcain
mee11na 1ho~ demands.
The Cit) subs1d) for child ca~ 1s an outarowth of a
two-) ear. $30.000 study presented 1n March 10 determine
lrvtne's needs fo r child care.
Jn those 24 months, the stud) found only two new
da)-carc centers and 27 new day-Olre homes bad opened
and recommended a comprehensive strategy to slart
closing the gap tn demand.
Key to deltvering what was envisioned as a city-wide
child care system 1s a non-profit organization that would
serve as a c.at.alyst. The rcpon's suggestions included a
$85,000 consultant's fee to start tbe non-profit grouP. and
gi ving developers' incenai vcs 10 plan child~ facilities
within res1den11al and commcrc1al projects.
Geologist Darryl M ill er j oins
Irvine Ranch water board
Geologist Darr)'I Miller has been appointed to fill an
une,p1rcd term 9n the lrvtnc Ranch Water District board
of directors
\111ler. marke11ng manager for the Earth Tccbnoloey
Corp of Long Beach. succeeds Ra y QwgJcy who ~
M 1 \ler holds dcgrccs from Bn&ham Young Univen:ity
and L'C L.\"s Graduate School o(Management. He hves
"llh h1\ \\tfe Jeanne and two children in Irvine's
!'<onh .... m>d community.
Becau\~ Miller's term expires on Nov 29, he W111
ha' e to stand for re-election dunng 1he general election on
Sm 6
Trio captured in Laguna
with $80,000 in cocaine
Newport Beach
A Newpon Beach man reponed the
theft of a diamond nng 'alued at
$2.000 and eanngs \\Orth S500 from
his home on k)~il Dn'e • • • A Ncwpon Beach "oman left her
purse on her wash ing machine 1n her
open garage on Rub~ .\' enune
Wednesday morning When she loo k-
ed for her purse later 1n the da' she
found 11 had been stolen
• • •
A th1el apparent I) pncd an l Ir\·
tnc1t' bo' at an offict com pk\ 11n ""' 1
W 19th St. Wednesda' and 'hut 1111
the electnctt) before ht' \mJc.hcJ a
windo"' at the La Ltnd.1 \It" hn, .tna
l\.1cat Market LO'i!. "a" S~I n lJ\h • • • ..\ lod.ed garage "a' pm·J 111'l·n on
repaned Fntf"\ was made throuah a
lex J..ed rear ~ mdo". The loss tn·
duded $500 in cash. a camera and
len~ worth S500 and Jewelry v..orth
15.000 • • • .\ re')1dent of the 15300 block of
CHllden \\ ~t treet reponed earl>
toda' that her gold 1977 Chevrolet
\lnn.tt' Carlo had been stolen from
her carpon The lou "as cst1m11ed at
~' .. mo
Nineteen ounces of cocaine with an
esumatcd street value ofSS0,000 was
seized in Laguna Beach and three
suspects were arrested for conspiracy
and possession of narcotics for sale."
Laguna Beach police investiptors
arrested Donald Joseph Mundo, 37
al his residence in the 1100 block of
North Coast Hi&hway Monday after
undercover officers allcacdly ar-
ranged to buy 18 ounces of cocaine for
$30,000. Th~ cocaine has a strttt
Irrine
Vandals ransacked the club house
of the Groves Mobile Home Park
sometime before 2 a.m. today. doina
more than $2.500 wonh of damqt.
· Furniture was ovcnumed and ripped
and the contents of a flrc extinau1shcr
sprayed throuahout the bu1ldjng at
5200 Irvine Blvd. • • • Tlucvcs who brOkt a wtndow of the
• l~anc Schwinn bike $hop were ap-
• • parently scartd ofT by pohcc and an
alarm. Only a drawer containina the
store receiqu was moved. but notbfoa
was taken in the 11 :30 p.m. bttak·in. • • • A SSOO 11r compressor was stolen
from a new but vacant business In the
17800 block of Mitchell sometime
over tht wecktnd. •••• A UOO Blaupunkt radio wu stolen
Wtdncsda)' from a cu left behind the A1~tt Inn bet noon and I
value of substan11all) more. officers
said
Laguna Beach Sgt. Alex J1m1ne1
said Mundo was arrested after the
transaction allcgcdl> was made He
was la1er freed on S 15,000 bail
pendina a hearing.
Later, undercover agents reponcd
they made a deal to sell some of the
cocaine to Patrick Robert Ebert. 39. a
resident of the Trcalurc Island
Mobtle Home Park in South Laauna.
p.m. Thieves pried open a window to ae1 in • • • AS 1,600 radio wa!!I npped out of .i
Mercedes parked m the 17700 block
of Cowan between 7 am and 10;30
a.m. A wing windo" wa pncd 10 ptn
entry • • • A 39-year-old Orange man wa
arttSted for susp1c1on oflcwd conduct
Wednesday momma after poltC'c
rtoe1ved rcpons 1bou1 a nude man
seated in a car near Vi ta Verde
School. Ronald Walter Ham1hon wa~
taken lntocustod) on Tamarac!.. Way
about l l 1.m. and was booked at
county Jail. Police U) Hamilton
al~ady ll seNina a Jiii sentence on
-.ttkendt for a sitnilar crime
LapnaBeach
A basket full of ~n1cs \\ll'> ~pon~ stolen in a residential bur-AJ.ary in the 2400 block of Tempi~
according to J1m1nez Ebert was
accompanied toa meeting with pohcc
agents on Tue\da~ at Mundo·s resi -
dence b} a companion. Patnc1a Lou
KcrslaJ..e. J4. also of Treasure Isla nd.
Both were charged" 1th conspiracy 10
sell narco11cs They were freed on
S 15.000 bail each. A search of
Mundo's residence alleged ly turned
up an add1 t1onal ounce of the drug.
Police said th e total st reel value of the
"h1ih QU8hty" drug IS S~.000.
t-ltlls Oml" Wcdncway afternoon. • • •
l hr los~ "still undetermined from
a rc~1(knt1al hurilar. tn the 1600
hie.xi.. of ~uth C NS\t H1ghwa )
"'edne.,<ly al\cmoon • • •
A \\allct was rtpont"d ml\stng in a
res1dent1al hurglan 1n tht" 100 blocl
of C ltfl' l)mc al I i 26 p ni Wcdne\·
di\ • • •
Bul"Jlan \u~pects ~rt reported m
a rc 1dencc: 1n 1hc 300 block of Holly
Street 'hortl\ after m1dn1aht Wedncs-
da}. and in the 1200 block or
GlennC'yrc ~trttt at ' 28 a.m. Al 4 08
a m . an 1ntrudC'r was fn&htened out
of a hou~ by a res1dcn1 who was
av.nkcndcd 1n 1hc 300 block of Anita
\trtt\ No lo'\\ wu rcponC'd in an) of
1hc 1n<:1dc:nt.. Police ha' c no
Su J)\"\:l'
• • • A Ncwpon Beach woman reported
the the1' of1wo hubcaps' alued at $50
each from her purse in the Ralph's
supermarket parking lot on Sa n
Miguel Wcdnesda).
CoetaMeu
Abou1 2S ps pump nonln. ,.1llued
at S7.SOO, were stolen from th ree gas
~tat1ons somc11me Wedn<'sda) mom-
'"'· Thieves apparent!) SCHrt'd the noulc with a win: cutting de' ice
The Mobil Statton. '(X)I Bn IOI . I .
faxon station. 3003 Ne"pon Blvd .
and the ThriOy p!i> s1:u1on. 7"'Q "'
Baker t.. were htl. • • • ... bedroom Wlndo" WI\ fo~
open 11 a home on the 900 blocl of
Oak Street and a 1ereo "alucd et S:?OO
was stolen. • • • Wh1~ tbt re ident slept WednC\•
day momma. 1 1h1ef opened 1
window on the 2900 bloc~ of Pcmba
Drive and used a pool u11ht)' pole to
fish ncms out of 1hc famtl) room l\
punc was pulled out of the home and
SlS was stolen • • • An lBM IC\.lnc lll wo\ "olcn
from the N Source Corp., 31 SR
Rcdhtll Ave , uC1da) afternoon
The offi ce d()Qr w unlocked and the
rc<:ept1onm~s dC'\k w ,. un111endc-J
The lo\\ \\~' S<>OO
the 3000 block of Cool11j[tc \H·nuc
Tucsda' and S 1.010 "onh 111 1wv.t•r
tools \\as "olcn • • • Thte,es pnro o~n a garage J1101
and an tntcnor door al a honw l•n lhl"
2200 blocl. of Pac1lil \\cnue
Wcdnesda) and a T\ '><'t 'tcretl
1ewclry. a lawnmower nnd tool~ "crt"
stolen The loss was phm·d at SI Son
Fountain Valley
SomC'one used a largr 'ict uf \\ 11 t'
cuuers to cut gas nonlt"\ at D1&a'
service station. Q800 "'arnc:r .\' e
The 1h1cvcs look the 'apo1 r~"'o' en
nonle' valued at S 770 ~nd 01u\C
S2SO 1n damaae to thc ho'iC's • • • Buralars unlocktd an up-.1.air') '41n·
dow 1n l~ 11000 hind. of \crbc'na
Court and stole • 1elevl\IOn 'let nna
and credit canh valued 11 SI 000 • • • A v.om~n \hopper put ~' rn
canon of c1prc1t<" 'aluN 11 $!\4 ma
b1a c•nvH purw and walkc-d '"'" from the Vcndomr hquorc s1ort 111
165 I Brookhu~t ~t ..,llhout paHna
for them • • • \ shopper stole three hotll~ ol
coloane 'alued al S47 91 lrom Zoch·,
Quality Ot oun1 Ocp:snment tore
16111 Harbor Blvd
Ho.ntincton Bea.ch
.\ home on thl" ~no hlod. of
Mcmph1\ \' t:'nul' \\"a\ hur.ilun1"1
and ran\3~ ~cd \\'l·Jni:,Ja, a '"'''Jent .
• • • .\ rc .. 1dent ot the 8600 block of
l arthnm Dm e reponed Tunday
that .. he surpnsed a youna buf1lar u>
her garagt" The intruder fled wilb a
table ~\\ wonh S 150. she told. poltClC. • • • \omt"onl" broke into the trunk of a
I 1182 Datsun 200SX ~rk.ed on lbc
6500 blt'X'J.. of Warner-Avco~ aicl
~tole: a computer. the owneT oft ht car
rcponed "'ednrsda\ The compu~r
..... " worth So.000 • • • .\ "oman wns ln"Hled Wednesdl)
e'cninti on susp1c1on of sbopbftlq1t
the Gcmco ~tort, 72 12 Edinarr A "C
Rcco' crtJ \\Crt hardware i'tcms
"0rthS1~ • • • .\ ~ h1te 1980 OMC ,.an was
rcponed stolen Wcd.nnda_y from a
H)n\truction '>ttc at Bet.ch BouJrvard
and tlanta venue. The loss was
estimated at SS.000. • • • .\ female JU'-tnile was arTe$led
Wednesda" 1ftcmool'I II the T11JC1
\tort. 9M8l .\dam .\1t·e. Recovcrtd
wctt c01mct1~ worth l19.4l. • • • Someone took propeny Wednn-
da) from a blur 1919 O.uu.n 2
par\cd 1n an all~ on the 200 of
6th trttl The \ lDcludcd I S
PUIY and wal~t cont.11runa S1 ll in
cumnq. and a portable Pttto rtb
Sl o • •
I
I
I
Where's the Clio?
Clara Peller has it
By IM·MMdatM Prest
NEWYORK-Whero'atbeaward? tt•awithl2-y~
old Oara Peller, winner oftbe 1984 Clio Award for belt ~male performance in a TV commercial. Tbc commercial
for Wendy's hambwaer chain, in which Peller srowls,
"Where's the bcerr. was honored u the year·s funn1nt
durioa ceremonies Wednesday ni&ht at Radio City Music
Hall. Ei&ht·five television commercia.ls from around the
world were cited at the 2Sth annual Clio ceremony.
PNtal pay termed llf61J
W ASHlNGTON -Commentina on contract talks
with Postal Service employees. Postmuter General
William F. Bol&er says postal wor~era are paid more than
people who perform similar work in private industry ... We
are aoina to have to come to &ri~ with the reality that postal wqe levels hceed those paid for comparable work
m the private sector," Bolger told the National Press Club
on Wednesday.
DatlY tied to cui.
BOSTON -Infant deaths among poor,
ere<tomioanttr black families in Boston's inner city
skyrocketed' in 1982 t>ecause of a recession and federaJ
spending cuts m primary health care. says a Harvard
researcher ... The combination of a severe recession and
the cuts in funding for primary care services along wnh an
18 P.Crcent decline in the Aid for Families with Dependent
Children caseload m Boston all contributed to this
increase in infant mortality," Professor Penny Feldman of
the Harvard School of Pubhc Health said Wednesday.
M1sslles to Saudis?
WASHI NGTON -The Reagan administration.
cager to stop Iranian attacks on Persian Gulf 011 shipments
without direct U.S. 1ntcrvenuon. 1s reviving a plan to serid
Sti nger anti-aircaft missiles to Saudi Arabia. The
Pentagon asked Congress for permission to send 1,200 of
the weapons to Saudi Arabia and l ,613 to Jordan earlier
this year, but the proposal was withdrawn m March after
Israel recoiled at the poss1b1hty ofSungers in the hands of
us Jordanian neighbors.
Civil rlgbta blll pushed
WASH INGTON -Proponents of legislation to
clarify laws banning d1scrim1nation by fedcrallr.-funded
institutions say the Reagan administration shows dis-
regard for women, minorities and the handicapped by
opposing the measure. The bill. which has been approved
unammousJy by two House committees. is expected to
win swift congr sionaJ approval.
Corona parole opposed
SACRAMENTO-The Judiciary Committee of the
state Senate has voted to ask the state Board of Pnson
Terms to deny parole to convicted mass murderer Juan
Corona. The resolution by Sen. John Doohttlc, R-C1trus
Heights, went to the floor Wednesday on a 7-0 vote.
Doolittle issued a statement sayin~ "It shakes solid
cituens in their boots that our cnm1nal Justice system,
even as flawed as 1t is. would consider paroling a cnminal
of Corona's notonety."
T1ny temblor up north
MENLO PARK -A small earthquake was fell b} a
handful of people on the San Francisco peninsula earl}'
this momin1t but caused no damage or inJunes. according
to a deputy in the Sa n Mateo County Sheriffs Office. The
University of California Seismographic Stati on 1n
Berkeley confirmed that a quake wnh a preliminary
measurement of 2. 7 on the Richter Scale h11 at I a.m.
Thursday morning.
More charges leveled
LO ANGELES-Nearl) 100 add111onal charges of
child molestation ha ve been filed against the 76-year-old
founder of a preschool and six former teachers, and th e
number of alleged v1ct1ms has risen to 42. And for the first
time. 1t was specificall y alleged that the defendants used
"force or fear" in a consp1raq to molest the children at the
Virg1n1a McMartin Pre-School in Manhattan Beach.
Actor Marley dead at 76
LOS .i\NGELES -John ___ ___,,...,..,...."=""
Marie}'. a veteran character actor
who attained prominence late 1n his
career in such film s as "Love Story,"
"The Godfather" and "Faces." died
Tuesday folloWUlg heart SUfJCT)'. He
was 76 Marley's first acting Jobs
were on Broadway and in a 1941
ellpcnmental film , ''The Native
Land ." His other film credits in-
cluded "I Want to Live," "W.C
Fields and Mc." "Hooper··
''Threshold" and "Tnbute." MARLEY
Forest, brush fires feared
SAN FRANCI CO -Warm winds haYe left
Northern California brush and 11mber vulnerable to forest
fires, according to state and federal firefighters who ~Y the
fire season has am ved at lea~t a month ahead of schedule.
"Earth, wild grasses. brush and trees, which usually are
water-soaked unul some time 1n late June, arc alread) so
dry that a carelcssl) di scarded match or cigarette. or C\ en
a spark from a car's ellhaust. can touch off a fire." said
John McKel vey. U.S. Fore'it Service regional fire
coordinator.
Irish security beefed up
DUBLIN. Ireland -Police officials arc planning the
biggest \ecunty operation in Irish history to protect
President Reagan during his June 1-4 v1s1t to Ireland.
~veral groups have vowed to demonstra1e against US
foreign and nuclear weapons policy dunng the v1s1t. and
an antHcrrons1 task force 1s monitoring potentrnl
troublemakers.
U.S. pollcy analled
MOS('O'W -President Konstantin U. C'hemenko.
ma sharp aHad on Amencan pol1c1es 1n the Pacific and
Far East, says 1he United States 1s tryin-to tum Japan into
an "unsinkable aircraft earner." Speaking Wednesday at a
banquet to honor North Korean leader Kim II Sung.
Chernenko also called for reunifying North and South
Korea. the official Soviet news aacncy Tass reported.
Aqulno 'tried to nee'
MA NILA. Philippines -A mcm~r of the panel
invcst1gat1ng the Benigno Aquino assassination said today
an un1denufied witness has testified that the opposition
leader was shot as he tried to free himself from the VUP of
soldiers. Confronted with the claim at a hcanna today, one
of Aquino·~ military escorts acknowledied that he and
another escort were l)olding Aquino by both arms to load
ham into a police van, but he denied that Aquino struuJcd.
Plant bla•t kill• alne
BBFVSTEAD. Eniland -Cmeracnc> crews ~archtd today for v1ct1ms buned under tons of concrete
and a.irders by an cxplOSJon in an underiround chamber of
a water pump1n1 plant. Pohce confirmed nine deaths and
predicted m0tt bochc5 would M found The explosion
Wednesd1y blutedo crater 50 feet Wide at the Abbtystead
plant. It occurred H a aroup of counc1lmcn from 1hc
nca.tb) Hllqc of 1 M1chael'c; on Wyre ~ere hcina •hown
around the plant
OPEN JIENOalAL DAY t-•
Doa'I •i11 tlae ret11ra of
SHORTY a CHEAP CHICKEN
to tlaese stores oa
S1t11rd1y, May Z&tla
LA MIRADA 9:30 to 12
DIAMOND BAR 2 to 4:40
SAllOU 2 BP MAGNA FORCE
PORTABLE All COMPRESSOR
2 97?o!A200-22
seoan CLUJ am • ' =
Sanborn'• big twin cylinder compreuor
with a 22 gal. tank and a paint delivery of
7.6 SCFM at 40 PSI.
AICOR 48" PREMIUM QUALITY
L OAI LEVEL
23!?
A big st•p up from your ba.ic level. You
just might pan thi• one on to your
descendanta, and qive them a chance to oet
it straight.
SMOOTH BOX
BRIGHT NAILS
29~.
8d or 16d, those are the choicu, folks. (I'm
not saying my wife•a nails are too lono. but
ahe can scratch her back without lifting an
arm.)
clNGLAZED RED QUARRY
_, \ TILE PA VOS
( 6"x6" 19 :A.
Slap aome of theH pavers down anywhere
you'd like to add aome interest. They make
a nice border for the apa or the l'OM
qarden.
DUIWITE DEL -RAY
FOLDING SAID CHAIRS
LOW BACK 6 99
#5720
lU -BACK 9 88
•5750
HI-BACK/ 1988 LAY nAT •5778
These foldinq beach chain com• in a Blaze
pattern. The Ha.on ia here for grilling
yourself on the beach. ao do it in style.
llTEI llFLATABLES
SUNTAllEI LOUNGE
~~~679
•58894
18 pocket, 13 gauge vinyl pool floater.
76"a29". Lbnlted Ou•ntJtl ..
3 ring pool with •pout that adjuat• from
jet to spray. 60"•16". Ll.rnlt.d OuantJtl ..
DURALITE FOLDllG ALUMllUJI
TllLD
28x48 1577
... '24x60 2377 ' ~ -.,._
--'11' 3377 . I 30z72
36z72 3777
SUIBDI BUUEll
lUSTll DUA!
GAS BAllECUE
YOUR NET COST
AFTER REBATE 7888
Seven -year warranty and a bio $10 rebate
to boot. Pick up mail -in certificate.
FEICE SUPPLIES
GOTHIC CEDAR
PICKET FENCING
9/ 16"a4" BOARD
3 FT.
6FT.
TRUE TEMPER
POST HOLE DIGGER
10~3~X
TRALLFA S~ CU. FT.
CONTRACTOl{S
WHEELBARROW
3988
Pro model wh .. ler with hardwood handl ...
16" pneumatic tire, heavy duty l99a and
bracff and 17 gauge M&ml ... st .. l tray.
AMFAC GARDEN
PEUY'S 4" COLOR
49:,.,
Got aome qood on" like Marigolda,
Petunias and lota more. GJ'Ow thetn in
containers or turn them lOOM in the
garden.
POOL DOCTOR
LEAF SllMMEI
2!!
The Pool Doctor preKribu this skimmer if
your pool hu come down with a bug ( or
leaves).
DISPOSABLE FLOATllG
CBLOlllATOR
10!!
Works for 3 to 6 w .. ka.
SIMPLE GIED
1!~
A bJoclevra.dabl., non-tome formula that
c:lean.e all kinda of stuff, from lMthv to
carpet. to enqin• to the kitchen aink.
~. -
DEVILLE SZ"
CllLlll PAI 5511
You wouldn•t upeot a ~ 3 .peed
fan with wood bl.ad• at thla price. Poll.tNcl
Br .... or Anttcru• Br.-finiah. light kit not
lnalucl.d.
•
9~
n u upon uis. < Th• eookout ...-0 barbeou• wi.
h re for a G .. price • l-'tor. A-pp-ros.
Ute-A-Matic ~for Solninv "
in. qrill. (Th.a Mu.MU"' for 0'-
1 J. Paul~. OhicS.n 1n l
showil'\9 ° b __ '-it you buy i Art"· You ~ '
\ . '. • • ' . .
OUTDOOR GUSS CJ
6' WIDE GIEEI
DUIALAWI ·
l!~T.
12''
TE
I • The Green Temptation (don't tempt me
with a S year warranty, the other one do
(What do you •lfJ)eCt at 8 am, War and J
ARB
GREENBRIAR SHOWN
• ~
__________________ .;__ ________ __
;:2_~;~: . ,;-
·-----
UMllEl.LAS
DURALITE 6 FT.
BEACH UMBRELLA
11~
STAPO CLAMP-ON
2~!'
seoan CLUJ LD -YU "'
The 8 ft. umbrella ia an 8 rib, multi·
colored •had.er with lu own .tnyl bag with
shoulder .trap.
ELWOOD & FT. PICllC TABLE
I IEICB IET
, 2 21 3988
SHORTY CLUB LURT + CLIS
Kiln dried Western White Wood with a
redwood stain, un.._tnbled. National'a got
ju.st a.bout ..,.rythln9 for your outdoor
9et -t09ethen.
ADIOI ALL PROTICTAIT
40Z. ·8
8 oz. 1 •7
160Z. 3 3 a
32 oz. 4 ,,,.,
99~eoz.
I l
J
J
}:
0 c
a
y
~
t
DYii
ULVAlll D 12"
IOOF TUIBllE
WITB JACI 99
u.at
th
~841·
18 at th• You'll UM the A /C 1 ... if you
in.stall one of th ... turbinu.
( Not pictured: "Chicken
DHC:ending A Staircue" by
Pollo Picauo; "Mona Chicken"
,r
4odel'1\
t. )
by Leonardo Da Poltri. )
PACIFIC PATIO KITS
WIDE CUEN
MPTl TIOI
•77
'Lii. FT.
. 97.:FT. ~1
1 H' El.: OUI 10xl2 l lT AT 97• ,~:v:, .. /:r:z:t:!ex. ·=··~~ 'SQ. FT. IS OILY 116.40 .
I
) com ..
esn't.
>eace?)
lattlc., 4"a4" posts, hardwa.N and hwtructiol\.9. Kita from
8al0 to 16.24, aiae deUnninM nUl'nber of pan.. You come up
100% rough dougl .. fiJ' includin9 2".6" grab b.arn.. 2"a3" j
l!::wi:t=h=t=h=• =·lab=. =lnfta==lla=t=io=n=o=f =lai::=ta=i.a=a.,=ai~la=b=l.=. =====~
• • •
:OW STORAGE BUILDINGS
GREENBRIAR FERNWOOD
6'xS' 10'x9 ' 10'x9' 10'xl4'
'888 12888 179'8 259'8
Prefabricated and prefiniahed parts mean eaay .... mbly.
These sheds are built to last, with hot dipped
\
ILACI I DECID
DllLL llT SllAIP .... a--n
28~!
seoan CLUI CUIO • L .
If your high apeed or carbon bits ha" bit
the dust. put new life into 'em with thi.a.
Doe• the job on 1/1" to ¥1" bits.
PIEPASTEDIN-STOCI
WALLPAPD
1/3 OFF
OUR LOW REGULAR RETAIL
Our Home Decor people• would be glad to
show you the Mlection. Take a look, you
could save a big chunk of change.
G.E. 3-WAY
SOFT WRITE
LIGHT BULB
galvanized frame parts, roof ridge beama, midwall
brae•• and overlapping panela. Nominal sizes. ' -I~
•' ---------------. . • •
SODA
' ' I
PLUMB llGSTER'S HA TCHET
~...._14!!2
No home ahould be without one. (Okay. so
I don't know what it is. Just don't tell my
bou, or there goe• my bonus.)
1 33 6
l GEllE 113 HP SCREW DRIVE
GARAGE DOOR OPENER
PAI
Good deal on 6 paka of your favorite
bubbly. Choice of Coke, Diet Coke,
Caffeine Fr .. Diet Coke, Sprite or
Diet Sprite. (la a aoda jerk a \
' WITH FREE TRANSMITTER I (~~ 12777
\
~ ·~-800
f iz.zician? )
-
SIGN UP TODAY!
oin the thousands of good folks
ust like you who are saving a
undle with the special prices that
nly SHORTY & CHEAP CHICKEN
!LUB members receive. Find out
bout all the good stuff that will be
oura when you join. Detaila at all
J ational Lumber stores. ·
Good name in garage door openers, and if
you buy now you also qet an Ertra
Transmitter FREE.
NORMAL INSTALLATION 5800
OF OUR UNIT
HOLMES-HALLY IESIDENTW
OV,EIBEAD. JAMI
HARDWARE
SINGLE DOOR 4297
HARDWARE 11501-P
DOUBLE DOOR
HARDWARE 62!!.p
You get the beaic fram•, ~p. acc111ory
kit and how-to'•. For doore 8'10" to 7'4"
hi9h.
That's the price. You'll want to put a few
of the•• 50-100-150 watt bulbs in the cart.
(No, no, not under the bricks. )
. J
Another great battery deal from your
friend• at National Lumber. Stock up
while the price is down.
TURTLE WAI
SUPER HARD SHELL
CAR WAX
180Z. 199
LIQUID IT. 123
140Z. 239
PASTE IT -222
MINUTE WAI
SALE PRICE 333
18 OZ. IT-15
LESS TURTLE'S I 00
MAIL. IN REBATE •
YOUI 1n COIT ma IDAft 2 33
ChOOM your Turtle. 'f\ley're all fine
ahinen.
GOOP .
BAIDCLIAID
391~0~
Wh•n you'" done your dirty work. take a
ecool) of Goop In hand and oet th• plnkla
all nlc. and ol .. n .
CLIDDDIPID
WALL P&llT
-~ ThNe variatlone on a theme: White, Off
White or Antique White. Good value on a
flat lat.a paint, if you'i-. into white w.U..
ACTIOI ''IQUAIE POCDTI"
LEATID APIOI
19!!421
SBOIH CLUJ COOS COB
Room for all the toola of 1our trade. with
its 10 pocketa, tApe holder. hammer holder
and other goodi ... Components are
removable.
DUIO SUPEI CLUE
52~CUll SUP-1
Bonda all kinda of materiala real
quick. Put that china collectoJ''•
plat• back t09ether before th• wife qeta
home and .. ,,. your hide.
STEILllC 3x5
DIDICAI rue llT
666
You get Old Glory and all the hardware.
Join General Shorty McArmchair and
C. Chicken. Cheap of Staff, in a snappy
aalute.
MURRAY MEI'S 01 LADla'
MOITEIEY CIUISEI
YOUR CHOICE
6988,5020
OR •5013
Get rolling, California style. Flam Blue
beach bikH have cantilever frame, comfy
aaddle, foam qrip handlebar and
whitewall•. Sold unassembled.
MVP FOOT rum
' 2~!ze .
Shell out the bi9 money for the ei.ctric
kind. or let your 1999 do the work with '
this. ( Last time I ... 199• like youn ~
were on ChMp Cl'\lcken. )
~ Tl · 3 RESIN CUii
16 OZ. LIQUID OR
12 OZ. PASTE 2••
20 OZ. INSTANT 27'J
RE8JN GLAZE SPRAY
Old can. new can and middle-aQ9Cl can·
will all get a 9ood finlah with thi.a stuff.
Diaol ... old waa. 1 .. ,... a rM:ln qlaae.
SIELL FllE l ICI
IOW/40 WT. •oto• 00. 74 ~.
Work.a in the hMt, in the cold, all per
'roW\d to kMp the cv hummin9 al0ft9.
Rem.mber to chanp it ~1,.
..
M Orange Coat DAIL v PILOT/Thurlday. May 2'4. 1M<l
Iraq claims bullseye on two 'big' ships
By TM Ataoclated Prest
Iraq said its warplanes today attacked and hil two
naval t.aract southeut oflran's Khara Island oil terminal
an the Persian Gulf. I than 24 hours after Iraq's
pre tdent vowed to t11hten his blockade of the port'. .
The official Iraqi news agency quoted a m1htary
sp<>kc man in Buhdad as saying two "big" vessels were
"aocurattly and elfcct1vely hat," but did not identify the
stricken ships. . Salvage company sources in Manama, Bahrain, said
the~ hid not received any distttU ianaJs an the aulf
rqJOn. The Iraqi military spoketman wa quoted as sa~ina
the attaek was "a further affirmation of Iraq's determ1na·
tion to tiahten the blockade" which it has imposed around
Khars.
On Wednesday, Iraqi Pre idcnt Saddam Hussein
vowed that "the days are near when we wiU possess
weapons capable of demolishina Khara Island itselr' aod
not JUst ships loadina at the oil terminal. about 12S miles
southeast of Iraq.
Synan Vioc Pttsidtnt Abdul-Halim Kbaddam was in
Tehran today, meanwh1le, to discuu lhe 44-monlh-old
war with Iranian fortian Minister Ah Akb&r Vclaylli. .. We invesdpttd methods for prcvcntina the
cucierbation of thetc developments in the rqion. in order
to prevent the expansion of the war. Our poutions were
identical m this respect." Kbaddam said before leavina
Tehran. Radio Tehran saJd Khaddam restated Syria's support
for Iran, but offered no details on the reported peace
proposals.
Auto sales on the climb
By 1'1le A11oclated Pre11
Boosted by the annual surge o( tax
returns, the government posted a surplus in
April, the Treasury Dcpanmcnt said, but
on Wall Street it was another down day as
stock prices fell for the fifth straight
session.
AmOnJ the Bia Three automakers, sales
in the middle I 0 days of May were up 27.6
percent over last year at General Motors
Corp .. 20 percent at Ford Motor Co. and
I 0.1 percent at Chrysler Corp. •
ORANGE COUllTY RELAXES From Detroit. meanwhile. there was
more indication that the auto industry 1s on
the rebound. U.S. automakers said their
mid-May auto sales were up 21.8 percent
from a rear ago for the best showing for the
penod m s11t years.
American Motors Corp. s sales were
down 23.3 percent and Volkswagen of
Amenca lnc.'s sales dcchned 22.4 percent.
"What's happening here is that the
lower-income car buyer 1s coming back to
the new-car market now that the economic
recovery has reached an advanced stage.''
said Scott Merlis, an automouve industl")
analyst at Shcarson-Amencan Express in
New York.
J
WITH
KDCM 103.1 The Apnl tax rush brought $80.2 billion
into the federal coffers. the Treasul")
Depanment said in a re~rt released
Wednesday. The repon said federal ex-
penses totaled $68. 7 b11l1on in Apnl for a
surplus for the month of S 11 .5 billion.
"The sales of some of the compacts and
subcompacts have been picking up strong-
ly," Merlis said. an indication that average
buyers have been JOtning their more
affiu ent neighbors at the showroom
FMSTERED
Fol lo"' the Cro\Nds to Strouds
WHITE SALE SAYINGS
AND MORE EVERYDAY
Save 1 7% to 52% off the regular prices of other leading stores on a gigantic
c ollection of brand name and designer linens and everything for bed, bath and tabletop.
/,
./ '
-
.. T ............ .,,. ~
# •••• * ......
SAVE 38% TO 42%
SPRINGMAID PRESCOTT
SHEET SETS
Twin 14.44 Compare at 25 00
Save an add1t1onal 15°0 off our alr eady
discounted prices on this geometnc pattern of
deep red, navy blue and a touch of green on an
ecru ground On Tranquility a Dlend of 80°0
Kodel· Polyester and 20°0 cotton 160 thread
count sheet Each set includes 1 flat 1 fitted
sheet and 2 pillow cases (except Twin. 1 pillow
case) Sale prices 1n effect through May 29
1984 Comp at Strouds
Full Set 38 00 23.79
Queen Set 48 00 29.74
King Set 60 00 36.54
Mat ching comforters also ava1laDle r
SAVE %
Queen end King S heet Sets. 26.99 to 34.99
Compare at 54 00 to 70 00 Choose from many florals
and geometrics from Springma1d
SAVE 50°/o TO 65°/o
Sprlngmald Comforters, all sizes 34.99 Compare at
70 00 to 100 00 Large assortment of selected prints
SAVE 66% TO 73%
Feather and Down Bed Pillows. STD 9.99 Compare
at 36 00 All cotton covers Other sizes 13.49 to 16.49
Compare at 36 00 to 46 00
SAVE 1/2
Embellished Towels by Avantl. Bath 9.99 Compare
at 20 00 Satin and lace embroidered towels 1n a large
assortment of colors Hand 7.99, Wash 3.74 Compare
at 16 00 and 7 50 ·•
SAVE 35% to 43%
Popula rity Towels. Bo1h S.99 Compare 01 10.50 Solid
color I 00% COiion lull toop !Prry 1n ossor1ed colors Hand
and wash ovo1loble
Lucite Both AccHsories. 4. 99 10 9 . 99 Compore or
AP .. ;t Ill
A cloud of white bata Olla air u U .8. Pfa•al
Academy •racll'celebrate at Annapolla.
Military grads
get diplomas
By Tbe A11oclated Pre11
Knstine Holdcried was treated as just another
student at the U.S. Naval Academy's graduation
ceremonies, but it was "the best day of my life" for the fint
woman to graduate at the top of a military academy class.
Today could be even better for the 21-year-old ensign
from Woodbine, Md. She had an invitation to see
President Reapn and was hoping to malce the White
House visit before leaving tonight for West Germany.
Diplomas were conferred Wednesday on 1,004
graduates at Annapolis. Md.
And at West Point, N.Y .• Vice President George Bush
told members of the U.S. Miljtary Academy's Class of
1984 that they were entering an Army in which ··morale is
higher now than it's been in years."
Speaking before 942 graduates and 25.000 visitors,
Bush said the Army had become the .. best-fed, best-
clothed and best-equipped m the world."
West Point's 186th graduating class entered four
years ago with 1,468 students, of whom 942 finished to be
commissioned as second Heutenants. Among the gradu-
ates were 83 women. the most since the academy began
accepting women in 1976 .
Bush said that while the administration has made
"in cessant effons to curb the arms race and reduce global
tensions," a Soviet arms buildup could not go un-
challenged.
··w e ca n't cancel the 8-1 Bomber if we want to
negotiate over the Soviet Backfire ... We don't cancel the
MX 1fwe're going to talk about SS-18s." Bush said.
At a news conference before the ceremonies, Bush
was asked 1f the class of 1984 would ever be in combat.
"If they do their job right, they won't be in combat If
we do our JOb n&ht in supponing them. they won't be in
combat," he said.
Candy heiress
declared dead
CHICAGO (~Pl -A
ruling declaring 'an1shed
ca nd> heiress Helen
Vorhees Brach legall y dead
has opened the wax to
settling her S30 milhon
estate. including $50.000
willed to th e chauffeur who
claims he was the last
person to S« her ali ve.
Police ha ve found no
trace of Mrs. Brach, widow
of candy company owner
Frank V. Brach. after her
depanure from a Minne-
sota clinic on Feb. 17. 1977
-the date on which her
death was fixed Wednes-
day b) Cook County As-
sociate C1rcu1t Judge
Henry Budzinski .
That date had been
proposed by Mrs. Brach's
brother. retjred railroad
worker George Vorhees.
The ruling means Vorhees
stands to collect $300.000
in interest on a $500,000
trust fund left to him by his
65-year-old sister.
I 0 00 to 20 00 Assorred colors a .... a able " soap dish ~----------
Most of the estate will go
to the Helen Brach Foun-
dation. an animal welfare
organization. Mrs. Brach
was fond of dogs and had
two of her pets entombed
with her parents and hus-
band.
Attorneys for the estate,
seeking to reduce taxes. had
sou&ht to have the heiress
dccfarcd dead as of Febru-
ary 1984. Illinois law re-
quires that a person be
missing for seven years
before the declaration 1s
made.
1001hbrush holdf"rs rissue box and bas~ et 0
SAVE 1h --
"Ombre" Both Rugs. 21 / 34 8 .99 (, "lpore or 18 00
Oval rug w11h onrenlr•c core '!S of · '>IJrs Many colors 10
choose from 01hPr S•zes S.49 10 14.99 Compare 01
SAVE 17% to 31%
VERA TECH FLOWER
TABLECLOTHS
'J? 1 70 8 . 99 Compare at 13 00
A !J' qtit lre~h geometric pattern ol bold red
olue and yf'l1ow s1r1pes accented with tiny spnng
I OWP.' s cl r" .vl11te flannel backed vinyl
5? x 5~
60 x 85 ov
70 HO
Comp at Strouds
9 00 7.49
20 00 14.99
20 00 14.99
M-i'' t11nq 1;101ti n.iµl(1ns and vinyl placemats 1.99
ed < 1 ''1DiHf· at 2 so ea
Huntington Beach 16672 Beach Blvd.
Between Edinger and Warner in Ma rshalls Shopping Ctr, 842-411 2
11 00 to 30 00
SAVE 1/2 & MORE
Kitchen Acceaaorles .. 99 to 1.59 Compare at 2 SO 10
4 00 Choose from solid and print kitchen towels mitts.
Pol holders and dishcloths
SAVE 55%
Placemat and Napkin S.ts 2.99 Compare or 6 7 5
Ou1hed Plocemols w 11h ma1ch1no °'lop~ ns n 16 solid colors
SAVE 44% TO 53°/o
4 Free Napkins when you purchase an
Elegance Tablecloth by Bardw1I In
sizes 52 x 70 60 x 84 OB ov. 60 x 102
08 OV or 60 x 120 6 fashion colors to
choose from 12~ te 24.99 Comp~re
at 28 00 to 45 oo
SAV INGS
SERVICE
SELECTIO N
SATISFACTION
24321 Ave. de la Carlota, Laiuna Hills
In Oakbrook Villa~e. South of Laguna Hills Mall, 855·9995
Downty · H11nt1111to11 luc• • l1111111 Hills · l1 Jolla · Lakewood · Lu Ve11s • Menlo Park · M01tcl11r • 1torthrid1t
Pu1d111.1 • Puente Hiiis • l inrsldt · St11d10 C1tr Sunnyw1le · Torr111c1 · W l~1 An tits
MONDA'( FRIDAY 10·9, SATURDAY I 0 6, SUNDAY 10 6
WESTllARK
llmtlPEED
LOWRA1E
REAL ESTATE
LOANS
UptoS300.000Graduated
Payment Ad1ustaDle Rate
MO<tgage !GPARM) 'APR
10 25 APR sub1ect to
edfustment after consum·
mat ion
(714) 972-4630
MOH-FRJ to 8 p.m.
A full service mortgage
banking organization.
Depend on Westmark
tor the most com pelt-·
live rates and fast (36-
hour approval) loan
turnaround Westmark
Mortgage processes.
underwrites and lunds
Its own IOans
HA.l COOP£AATION
WITH ~()fHG.AGE BfO<ERS
WESTMARK
MORTGAGE
COOPORATION
2101 E Fouf1ti St , Sun 118
Santa AM. CA 92705
The third wife of the
president of the E.J. Brach
and Sons Candy Co .. Mrs.
Brach lived quietly on her
seven-acre estate in
suburban Glenview after
her husband's death in
1970.
In his ruling, Budzmsk1
said he "totally dis-
counted" statements by
chauffeur and one-time
suspect Jack Matlick. an
employee of 18 years to
whom Mrs. Brach left a
$50,000 trust fund.
Matlick testified at a
recent heanng that he pick·
ed Mrs. Brach up at O'Hare
International A1rpon on
Feb. 17. 1977. the day she
had a checkup at the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester. Minn.
Four days later. Matlick
said, he drove her to the
airpon and left her at a
terminal for a trip to Fon
Lauderdale. Fla.
Police theonzed Mrs.
Brach never intended to
take the tnf. They found
no record o any ttckets in
her name to Fort
Lauderdale or anywhere
else.
Budzmsk1 said Matlick's
test1mon)' was "con-
tradicted m every aspect,"
includina h11 claim that
Mrs Brach went out to
dinner between Feb 17 and
20 wi&h people he could not
identify.
"With all the notoriety
wt th her disappearance. it'•
impossible that no ono
came forward and said they aaw her ... or they WCtt with
her," Bud1insk1 said.
Matlick also said he and
Mrs. Brach were alone an
her home dunna the four-.
day span. but other Wll·
ne 4 tt4t1fied di~.rentl •
..
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
$24.99-$79.99. Orig. S40-SJ15. Famous Ca1ifom1a dts1gner
crushed s1/lt drtSJrng: T-shirts, skirts and tunicldrtsses. {168)
$16.99. Orig. S26. Cotton ltnll, short·sleevtdpoloshms. (185)
$17.99. Orig. $27. Cotton 1nterlodtknit T-shirts. manysryh {I)
$23.99. Orig. SJ6. Cotton campshirts m varied plaids. (185)
$19.99. Orig. $2 9. Cotton twill cuffed wallt shores. (185)
$29.99. Orig. S45. Belted. double·pleattw1ll pants by Richard
Evans. (9)
$29. 99. ~Orig. S48. Pltated front, cotton twill pants. (185)
$45.99-$108.99. Ong. S62·S146. Evan·Ptcone sprmg
coordinates. (147)
$23.99-$45.99 each. Orig. SJ2·S62 each. Famous New York
designer strtped, cotton ltntt 2·pc. dmsmg: matching badt·buttoned
T-shirt and 2·pocltet skirt. (J)
S 11.99. Orig. S24. Cotton knit T-shirts wuh dro~d shoulders
and n~ slttwS m aJSOrttd colors. (89}
S 16. 99. Orig. S16. Triplt·pleated, elamc-waut cuffed shorts. (89)
$13.99. Ortg. S21. Assortmento/cottonkmtstnped T-shirts. (116)
$19.99. Grea t buy. Cnnkled cotton short·slttvtd blouses. (4)
$24. 99. Orig. SJ8. Group of pants by Ja zut and Koret4 in
assorted fabrics, styles and colors. (7)
$24.99. Orig. SJ7. Famous maker spill slmts, vaned colors. (7)
$11.99. Orig. S19·S21. Ourownkmt T-shirts, many styles,
colors. (116}
S 13.99-$37.99. Orig. S22·S5 8. While Stae sportswear:
T-shirts m m7ptsorsolids, andsa1ldo1hshorcs,pantsand1aclttts. (160)
$ 15. 99-$24. 99. Orig. Sl 5·SJ8. Famous maker playwear: knu
polo shirts and tlamc·wa1st pants. (140)
FASHION ACCESSORIES
$ 15. 99. Orig. S14. Handy. carry-all dutches zn alligator,
lizard, ostrich or ttl·ttxturtd leathn (111)
$12.99. Ong. S10. Soft vmylfoldowrdutch wtth wm purse,
zip pouch, sections for CTtdit cards. bills. (11 I}
$10.99. Reg. Sl6·S18. l17Cla1borntsashesandpull·through
btlrs in ltather or fabrics. str1pts or solids. (10)
$8.99. Orig. S/5. Slim wh1psnakt~lts, manycolors. (10)
WOMEN'S SHOES
$29. 99. Orig. S48. 9 West tndltntrip ltather pumps. (17)
$46.99-$49.99.-Great bu.>t Ama/fi leather sandals, many
styles. (17'}
$49. 99. Grr11t buy. Our OU/71 Italian imports, wm.ien leather
sandals. (6)
$49.99. Grtat buy. 0Mrtxclusiw Bruno Mt/11 WOVt"1 slmg m
tri<olor rombos. (4 7)
$59.99. Grt'1t buy. ]WR urappy ltather sandals m soft mfor
combtndt1<ms. (64)
JWRJR'S
$22.99. Ong. SJ4. Cotton pnnt shms, hy)•g. (179)
$27. ~9. Orig. $41. Jags lone r1dercntto11 p.mt>, assorml color>
(179)
SJ4. 99. Orig. $51. Calvm /\ll'ln R U?J!.ed ~ar short ,/r(•i.'t'd
cotton shim. (154)
S27. 99. Orig. $41. L'('h1te cropped c<>llon pums, by Ciltm
Klem. (154)
KIDS FASHIONS
BOYS 8·20
$9.99. Ung. S15. ]WR so/id.colnror smped knu sh1r11 (22)
$13.99. Orig. S/9. F.imous make1 short 1lec"'..('d k111t }lwrti,
m.i11; colors. (21)
$9. 99. Orig. SJ 5. Shorts in aJsorted styles . .md colors (11)
S 11.99-$ 13.99. Gn!at buy. Levi~ corduroy jeoWS, s/1111 or
regulolr, 8· 14; 26·30 W.J/St. (J 9)
$9. 99. Orig. S l l ·S J.1. le'/. 1 '$* Olymp1cStops m .morted styles,
colon. (J'l)
GIRLS 7.14 .
$13.99. Orig Sn. Rnmpers in lmght stripes or pl111d!.. (45)
$7.99-$9.99. Orig.SI Z·S 16. Crop tops or shorts, many colors. (45)
S 11.99-S 18.99. ReR. SJ 1·S26. Swimwear m assorted styles,
colors. (45)
GIRLS 4·6X
S 1J.99. Orix-S IH. f.imnus m.ika w tto11 !>hort·alls. (49}
$14. 99. Onl{. S2J. Srn·t·ri·pr111t kr111 clrr<scs lry lzt1it Topsy. (49)
$7.99-$13.99. Ong. Sil $21 /,mlt)u~ 111.iker playwear. (49}
$ 15. 99. Orig. $24. lhmrtmc111 of k111t nm1pen lry L1ttle Topry. (49)
BOYS4·7
$7.99. OriJl.. Sil /\Kt.R ''''"' slcnni Hr1pt·d km11h1rt<. (J2)
$4.99. Orig SH. ~elewrm of wlulcolor ~}1111 1' (I!)
TODDLl:.R"> 1-4
$11.99. Orig. SIR. \11111/n >!K'' w1thtnm (II.I)
$4.99-$5.99. Ong Sii Sf() \cn.t11-pr1111 kr11t '"f'· nwn
colors. (I JJ)
INl ANTS/LAYETrr
$6. 99-$20. 99. Onx S 11 511 A >Sortmnll 11/ p/.i,-ue.ir, ma11y
styles. (53)
$8. 99-S 12. 99. Orr~. S 14·S20 \11ns111ts "'.irnmed styles,
colors. (53)
KIDS LINGERIE/BASICS
S 1.69-$2.09. Rt-g. S2.J5·S1.H5. Girls' 7 14 ><><k1 by LcRm,
.morttd colors and fi~rs. (120)
$2.39-SJ. 99. Rt7< SJ 25·S5 50. &rys' 4.J .wd H 10 ILR01
<()('In (110)
GIRLS' ACCESSORIES
SJ. 99. Ong. S7. Tott bagnn 1umrttd sty/t!und wlur> (.14)
$9. 99. Or1R. S 15. ~,,, tht &Rlt "pl1dh trry. (5 7)
MEN'S STORE
S 146-$199. Orig. S /95·$175. Famo"s molker suus. .usorttd
styles, mlors,Jabrm. (J5r ·
S89. Ong. S 12 5. .Va't,')' blol/trS m ~a,..ro11T1d weights. f95r
$38.99-$59.99. Orig. S52.50-S85. Col/mum oftroustTS m
assorted f12brics, style> .md coloN. (1 J9r
S 17. 99. Reg. S25. Fwrnous·dts1gntr, fitttd long·slttW p1nsm~d
dms shirts. (20)
S 17.99. Ong. S24. Wime-colla'ff!d dms shirts m vaned solui
shades. (10)
$12.99. Orig. Sil 50-Sl9 50. Famous dts1gner stlkt1ts.(156)
$6. 99. Ong. S 11 Wool kn It tin by Roost tr, assorrtd colors.
{1 56)
S 19. 99. Ong. S.10. f.zmous·logo cotton ltn1t shirts. (11)
S 19.99. Great"''» £1..zmc ruck w1/doth pants. (123)
$29. 99 each. f.imous A meric..zn dmgner sport.st«ar: twill
double·pleat pants, .i1td cotton shirrs m vaned srylts (36)
S 17. 99. Great bu) Colnrful madras plaid shms. {107)
S 14.99. Ong. S20 l..z}oer loole T-shirts m summery color
combos. (9'J)
$12.99. Orig. SlO V,,:cJ11 />r1efs m solui shades. (118)
$9.99. Ong. S J.J Cord1ml'\ shom m pull-on and elast1c·back
styles. Assorted f"br1n (12.1)
$15.99. Ong. Sl! 5() ]IX'R '4:ers11clurshort·slttt1edsportshms.
(107)
S 15. 99. (,rr.it Inn A 1s11r1me111 of)IX'R. ptqut knit ten ms shirts.
(21)
$19.99. Orix S!Y lrmg1lt•c··•cdsmpcdr11gbysh1rts{llO)
$21.99. (11'l'.Jl l•11\ !-.ml""' Ji•Hgner sportshirts, plaids or
stnpes. (/()")
\n1111n.i/.J~,,..., • 1"11 •.1'1u•J•t1•1 ""'1 .,,,.,.J,"''''''"
HOME STORE
$4.99-$6.99. Rn, Sf> SJ/ He.it resist.int Rl-'"~-''l. /mm ~mt
Cob.im· mug •t'l" cit"\( rt />r1t.. / ,tt1, dt>St>rt pl.Jtt '4'1~ anJ w/"d
l1tn.ds. (!8)
$24. 99 St't. ('"'.i t i•1• pt <11tl<'ry wh 111rlud<' '/\ H.un lc"
•U"f'I kn1t.~1 in ,, /..1nl 4 ,,,,./ f>I,, .. k ft.l)
$69. 99 each. Rt·x, SI I<>,( J 10 f,1rht.,.....v.Jrt* Prnwtarum
C'!tttnc ci.meruln, (1....,·p.m' .i11.I 111//et. urns. (1} I)
$8. 99 any siu. Rtg SI! S ! 5 Smooth 1110-tbnoud pnrale flat or
fitttd shttts"' m.un d1 ''!<''' Tt..w, full, queen .md ltrng uz~. AIJO
·' .1..ztlable s:.iric.i.ml 11• A'"'i: 1.J><"'· rr-g SI] S 16 pr., wit' $8. 99 pr. (JO)
$9. 99 any siu . If p('l /n t 5 ! 'T $50 ,·hsorttd irrey,ul.ff Jn.illl'(!SS
p.Js. {87)
S ll. 99 any size. Ori~ $ 15 SSS fe..ztl>trld<mm pt!IO'f.C's In
.'\ortbcm ttoJtl'>f.'r4 m 1t.mJ.mi. quet'tl or king nus (87}
$59 twin. ct. pc. Rex S/4'191.JC'.i pc 1mm<>n> lttplmig
Htd1um Firm molttn H 11r J,.l\ 1prt11R '4/~o olt.a1l.,/1/t /1411 m.Attm1
m boxsprm~. 't'R S / 99 Y S r.1 pt .. wle S 119.
Ql4ttn Jpc !('(, "'8 $4YY 9S 't't, 'tUlt sm.
Am& J.pc. j('f, ~ Sfl19 YS '<"/, vlt S42'. {lS)
Qu«n •nd kmR Sil~ •old .1s "'t< onh
I• r /m coP'n of..,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,...,. """"''" M fl '" C:.tt'll•ollf'o IJirr1 .'I I.
R·obt"""''" M')() ll '11' \1 Im 1 .. rm-.. 1 -4 w.·101
Robinson~ Mtmorul Day &.I~ nuiJ Mond.) M.iy 18 II" rry "'for "'11 lf't'llOH.$; ""'" q".1nttt tn Aw linmtd. 11ruJ .JI urns A rt bj«t 10 prior "'l~.
No nut/ or pixmt o"1m. pit~~.
SPECIAL SHOPPING HOURS: THURSDAY 10.9, FRIDAY t().9,
SATURDAY 1().6, SUNDAY 11-6 ANO MONDAY, MEMORIAL DAY 10.6
.. •
ARE YOU A 90-LB.
WEAKLINCl
DO YOU HAVf
COTT AGE CHWE THIGHSf
or SADOU IAGSf
• Nutritional Counaellng
MecA,...... •• * · Weight LON, Gain & Control
---'..-."""..._......,. • Reduce lnchee I • Exercise Technique '*
• Stress Management ·
-------• •MEDICALLY SUPERVISED
401 'WY .,; "ASK A80UT OVA 8AT18,ACTt~ _____ .... CJUAAANTl!E"
3500 S. BRISTOL SUITE 200
Coaet 1M11 llilldtng
. .
Co"'panY
r Colton Plano os• of all one• a yea I hou•• to d\•P d "'er· th• war• damage open• • o11e11\on1, turns, f\oor
trade. \n1, r: • used, rent ~~n1trument1,
chand\se n~ sorts of mus\:a ampl\f\ers,
samples, a \ano rol s, ·guitars,
sh••' mu•!:lsc~Uaneous ':::::~al prices.
speakers, of \tems, all at,, S IS"
thousand• I t It•"'' sold KAURR1' All parking o •10 AM
DOORS OPEN • •
GRAND
PIANOS
NEW
BANJOS
$50:
.... I 11Ml"lt ,,
VIOLIN I a ,.,,
S6Q~
EVERYTHING
MUST GO!
ALL UNITS CLIARL Y SALi PRICID POR THIS
ONCI A YIAR SALll ALL PARKING LOT
ITIMS USID. LIMITID QUANTITllSI
OVER 6000 ITEMSI
FIRST COME FIRST SERVE
lftlTt
PIANOS
4$ ·~ SW.~
•\ 1\
PIANOS
uil O 1U\tl
SPEAKERS
1mo
''"d'S OltGANS
UUO COHSOU
PIANOS
,.,:'~399 ,.. 5777'! ---+----Mii HU
GUITARS
s20
0 VER
6000 ITEMS
All O• 1111
ANTIQUE SLOT
MACHINE S
SAY~ '!
LO .. IY
MODEL l-10 '795
MODEL SCT '3881
MODEL 0500 14119
MODEL 0350 '4418
MODEL D575 '5218
MODELC500 '8199
THOMA8 281 '1911
CONN 290 '881
CONN 464 '981
SCHAFU I SOllS
5 YR. WARRANTY
PARTS & LABOR
MODEL 2405 '1211
MODEL S-530 '14M
MODEL 2705 '1113
MODEL 3535 '2111
MODEL3905 W
KAWAIDX80 ...
KAWAI DX90 '1111
HA-OI•
MODELL112 ..
MODEL9212 ..
MODEL 8014N '1•
l!lllN•NT P258 '21•
VAMAHA870 ..
ORANG& COUNTY AREA
NEWPORT FWY. EXIT DYER RD. IN
SANTAANA
.,.., ,... ,......., "'-' ......
Commerce are, f~ left, Dorothy Palen~
Jadle CarlMD, Mart Reuland, Jim Vlllert
and etabt-year-old J'ade Caleaorr.
Five honored f
by NH chambem
Winnen of the Silver Anchor Awards for outstanding
community service from the woman's auxiliary of thq
Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce 1ncludc4
Dorothy Palen, Judie Carlson, Mary Reuland, Jim ViUen
and Jade Calqory. ,,
Palen won the award after 30 dedicated yean 11 H
employee in the finance department of the City of
Newport Beach.
Carlson won the award for her involvement iq
scoutina, the PT A, St. Andrews Church and PRIDE, Ii
community drua abuse prevention orpnization. 1•
Reuland was awarded the Silver Anchor for volunteet
work at the Children's Hospital, the Braille Institute and
Hoaa Memorial Hospital.
Villm was award the Silver Anchor for his active
involvement with the SS2 Oub at Hoag Memorial
Hospital and for service on the Orange County Sheriff!
AdYltory Committee.
Category, 8, is the )'Ounaest award winner. He bas had
IS operations for spinal problems, accordina to the
chamber, but still competes in his wheelchair in I 0-K runs
and sets an excellent example for schoolmates and adult~
alike, according to auxiliary.
NB resident guest
cantor in Tustin
Newport Beach resident Gloria Lenhoff will be the
guest cantor for the Sabbath eve services of the B' nai Israel
Congregation in Tustin this Friday.
Lenhoff. who is mentally disabled, has served as a
guest cantor at a number of local conaregations. A cantor
leads the congregation in chanting the Hebrew prayers and
songs at a Jewish service.
In place of the Rabbi's sermon. Lenhoff will sing'e
medley of songs about Jerusalem. £
Lenhoff received her early singing training in Israel
and continues her studies with Barbara Hasty of UC
Irvine. Lenhoff also sings with Hi Hopes, a musical
ensemble of young developmentally disabled musiciaifs
and singers. t She is the dau~tcr of Professor Howard Lenhoff. a
UC Irvine biochemist, and Sylvia Lenhoff, the director tlf
the office of relations with schools and colleges at Uf'
Irvine.
B'nai Israel Congregation is at 65S B Street in Tusua.
Services. start at 8 p.m. For more information, call
730-9693. (
School deadline Friday
(
Registration forms for summer school in Laguna
Beach must be turned in by Friday to insure a seat fl
classes.
The district will offer basic skills for students iO
grades 7-11 and academic core courses for students ill
grades 8-11 this summer on the high school campus. Theft
arc no fees.
Registration materials arc available in the district
attendance office at the high school or at Thurstob
Intermediate School. For more information call 494-8S40.
Student schedules will be mailed the week of June 1 ~-
FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO A
B.A., M.A., or PH .D., fro m the
Uni versity for Humanistic Studies, call
DR. WM. PARKER & STAFF AT
645-0971
AFTER THE M.A. + 3000 HRS. OF TRAINING ·
ONE MAY SIT FOR THE MFCC EXAM, CLASSES
HELO IN COSTA MESA.
RE DUCE TODAY'S HIGH COST '
OF DYING
CR EMATION-BURIAL AT SEA,
MOUNTAINS AND DESERT ~
Today, the averaae funeral coeta S2,600.00.
The Neptune Society offers almple and di(ni!ied •
cremation with burial at HI, mountain• or dnert.
Social Security and Ve~rana Death Benefit.a may •
cover moet ot our comple~ Hrvice co.ta. We are •
the 11!,Jett cremation tociety in the nation with 19 Cullf. hoenaed officea to aerve you. Our Hrvice ia
1vailablt to alt. IC you need immedia~ tervioe, or
with mtmberahlp lnf ormation, pleue call or wri~
to: (
(714)8 4 8 •7431 (a4•ellU) • ,
------------------------~-N•-------------
Adclr-~-----------c11, ____________ _
Mall to:
THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY
•'74 E. 17tb Street
Co1ta MHa. CA 82621
DP st H&PTUNI omc N T10N'WtDI
'
'
)
•
aJntew employee. honored
ckl DeCamp. left. and Clecll Or~
amonc l S orUlDa1 employ .. of
Falnlew State Ba.pftal bonored d~
employee appreciation day lut week. Tile
recOcntdon and th•nlr:a &l•en to employ ..
wu pUt of an oniom. celebration· of Falrllew•1 25th annf•eraary 8ll•er
Jabllee. Volmateen and Paln'lew reel·
data were al8o bonored with •peclal
putl• lut week.
L ·B has half off unds
for fireworks show
Laauna Beach's drive to keep the
Fourth of July from being a dud is
halfway home.
The city's July 4 fireworks fund,
with a goaJ of$6,000, is halffull with a
week remaining before the deadline.
An ad hoc coalitjon of community
leaders organized earlier this month ~ nlise money for the annual public
fireworks display on Main Beach
after the city ssaid it could no longer
afford it.
The City of Laguna Beach sponsor-
ed the fireworks display the past two
~can as an alternative to the use of
~~reworks by private individuals -~I.I in the city due to the danger of
accidental fire.
However, the fireworks display was
deleted from this .Year's budaet due to
heavy expenses incurred from law-
suits and repairs relating to city
landslides.
Laguna Beach mayor Dan Kenney
said he also supports raising funds for
the fireworks because of the "com-
munity feelins" created by the event.
Kenney said the unusually dry
condition of wild brushlands m the
city constitutes an extreme fire haz-
ard this season.
Major donors to the fireworks fund
so far include the Exchange Club,
$SOO; the Laguna Bank, $200: Village
Laguna, $200; North Laauna Com·
munity As.sociation, $200: and Gen-
eral Telephone, $200.
The fireworks show must be or·
de red from the supplier on June I , so
May 30 is the deadline for fund-
raising, Kenney said. Donations are
tax-deductible and can be left at City
Hall, SOS Forest Ave .• in City Oerk
Verna Rollinger's office.
Coast students
earn degrees
from Claremont
Several Orange Coast students
were amona the l 9S graduates who
received bachelor of arts dqrees at
the 37th annual Commencement at
Oaremont Mc Kenna College on May
13 ..
From the class of 1984, five
graduated sum ma cum laude, I 0
graduated magna cum laude and 42
graduated cum laude. There were 60
women among the graduates.
Among the graduates were: Robert
Martin Jenness. aradualed cum
laude, Capistrano Beach: Laura Lee
Barrington. Corona del Mar;
Kathleen A. Garrett, Dana Point;
Jerome Jacques Haia, Fountain Val-
ley; Dennis Timothy l\tarchand.
graduated cum laude, Huntington
Beach; Reid Richard Miles, gradu-
ated cum laude. of Miujon Viejo.
lllcbelle Kramer
Niguel teen in
Unlted Pageant
Michelle Kramer of Laguna Niguel
has been selected as a state finalist in
the 1984 Miss United Teen-ager
Paacant.
The pageant. to be held June 20 at
Chapman College in Orange, is based
on scholastic and civic achievement.
beauty, poise and personality. Con-
testants arc between 14 and I 8 years
old.
Kramer. a 16-year-old junior at
Dana Hills High School. enjoys
skiing. dancing and swimming.
M
starts Friday, 9:30 a.m.
m.any limited q ~ant ities ... not all sizes may-be available
1n each groupi ng ... colors and styles limited to stock
on hand, so shop early for best selection!
...
in our
Huntington Beach store
women's sportswear
NOW
18 JUNIOR TOPS ..................... 1.M
58 JUNIOR TANK TOPS . . . • . • . • • • • • • • • 1.M
70 MISSES' BLOUSES •••.••.••••••••. 3.M
12 MISSES' COTTON SWEATERS •.•... 3.M
102 JUNJOR S. SLV. TEES .............. 3.M
47 MISSES' SWEA TEA VESTS. . • • • . . • • 3.M
JUNIOR TOPS
COTTON/POLYESTER, 3 98
ASSORTED STYLES . . . . . . . . . •
53 JUNIOR ACTIVE COOADINA TES . . . • 4.M
141 JUNIOR TOPS. • . . . • • • . . . . . . • . • • • . . 4.M
34 MISSES' SKIRTS • . • . . . . . . . . • . • . • . . l .M
71 LARGE SIZE BLOUSES .....••••••• l .M
54 MISSES' CROP PANTS •••••••.••••• l .M
99 JUNIOR SWIMSUITS ....•••...•...• 9.M
99 MISSES' COORDINATES .......•••. l .M
83 MISSES' TOPS . . . . • • • • • . . • . . . . . • • . 1.M
178 JUNIOR ACTIVE COORDINATES .... 8.M
buys for glrls
NOW
453 KNEE HI'S •••••••••••••.••••••••••• lie
35 GIRLS' PANTS, 4-14 •••••..••••••••• 1 ..
51 UNICORN CLUB• SHIRTS, 7-1' •••••• 2.11
83 SHORT SETS, 7-14 • • . . . . . . . . . • • • • • ..... • •
57 SWIMWEAR, 7-14 ••••....••.••.•••• '-9 ..
31 SWIMWEAR, 7-14 .................. I.II : : •
buys for boys
241 ACRYLIC/COTTON FLEECE TOPS ••• 1M ~ :
21 BIO llOY8' NYLON JACKETS ••...••• I.II • •
51 POlVEITEA/COTTON DENIM JEANS •• a.II •
23 POL VESTER/COTTON JEANS •••••••• 4..11 •
buys for men
******************************** ~ ~~::g: ~:ri~N 'swEAnAs·:::::: :::
51 FASHION COLOR DRESS SOCt<S .••• lie
45 SNOW GOOSE LINT BRUSHES •••••. 1M
43 MUSCLE TEES ..•...•.••.•••••.•••• 2.11
87 YOUNG MEN'S LAYERED SHIRTS ••.. 2.11 _
52 S. SLY. COTTON KNIT SHIRTS .••••• 3.•
91 HOODED MUSCLE TEES •••••••••••• 3M
Harbor Lawv Memorial Park
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO
ATTEND THE 30th
ANNUAL MEMORIAL DAY
SERVICES
I MONDAY, MAY 28th , 1984 11 :00 AM
DEDICATION OF
''MEMORIAL TREES''
SPEAKER
OF THE DAY
NAVY LT. JAMES G. PATTERSON, JR .
Chaplain
Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro
THERE WILL BE A ROLL CALL OF VETERANS
WHO HAVE ANSWERED THE LAST CALL
AND WHOSE COLORS WILL BE PLACED
· IN THE AVENUE OF THE FLAGS .
*
* 201 JUNIOR BRITTANIA• TOPS .••...•.. 8.M
183 JUNIOR ACTIVE COORDINATES • • • . 9.M
28 LARGE SIZE COTTON SWEATERS •. 9.M * 1H MISSES' COORDINATES ...•.•.•••. 9.M * 97 JUMPSUIT S ......•.••...••....... : 9.M
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * :
* *
dresses and suits
NOW
80 MATERNITY TOPS .•........••..... 4.M
M JUNIOR DRESSES ................. 9.M
43 MISSES' DRESSES •..•.....•...... 9.M
49 HALF-SIZE DRESSES .......•..•••. 9.M
85 LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS .•........ 19.M
87 WOMEN'S SUITS ................. 39.98
91 MISSES' SUITS .. .. .. • . .. . . . .. .. . 59.98
women's accessories
NOW
73 FASHION BELT S ................... tic
123 SOCKS ••••••••••..••••••...•...... 9lc
71 SHOES (ACCESS. DEPT.) ...•....... 98c
87 LEOTARDS ....................... 1.98
25 PLASTIC LETTER HOLDERS •....... 1.18
43 HANDBAGS ....................... 1.98
llngerle, loungewear
NOW
31 BAAS ....•••.....•••......•...... 1.98
18 BIKINIS .. • .. . . . • .. • • . .. .. .. • . . .. . 2.98
19 PAJAMAS ........................ 2.98
H SHOAT COORDINATES • • . . . . • • . . . . 2.98
18 SLEEP TEES . • • • • . • • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 2.98
21 BAAS . • • . . • • • • • • . • . • • • • • . • . . . . . . . 3.98
33 SHORT COORDINATES • • . • • . . . . . . . 3.18
35 SHORT COORDINATE S .•.••......• 4.M
39 SHOAT GOWNS .•••.••••..•••••... 4.M
41 LONG COORDINATES •.•••...•...• 5.M
D COORDINATES •.••.••••..••••.... 5.81
70 LONG GOWNS • . • • • • • • . • . . . . • . . . . . 5.18
11 DUSTERS •••• •• • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . . . 5.M
80 LONG COORDINA T£8 . . . . . . . . . . . • 17 .M
27 HOSTEll GOWNS ............... 10.M
37 LONG LOUNGERS . . • • • • • . . . . . . . . . 13.M
Infants and toddlers
51 L SLY. O. P.• TEES ................ 5.M
44 STRIPED SHIRTS ..•.••.•••••.•..••• 5.M
88 S. SLY. COT./POLY KNIT SHIRTS •.•• 5 ••
54 FARA ... JEANS ...••.....•••••.•••• 5.M
71 L. SLY. HOODED HOBIE• TEE SHIRTS .7.M
59 YOUNG MEN'S ACTIVE PANTS ..•••• 7.M
shoes for the famlly
NOW
51 WOMENS' PLASTIC PUMPS .•.•..••. 1 ..
23 GIRLS' LEATHER CASUALS ••••••••• a.M
27 WOMENS' SUEDE SADDLE SHOES •• a.•
49 WOMENS' L.A. GEAR-CASUALS .•.. S ..
88 BOYS' HOBIE• TENNIS SHOES ....... ..
21 BOYS' KANGAROOS· TENNIS SHOES .&.II
15 WOMEN'S CASUALS ................ ..
35 WOMENS' SBICCA• SANDALS •••.•• t.•
29 WOMENS' FAMOLAREe CASUALS •• 15 ..
for your home
NOW
59 POLY /COTTON PERCALE SHEETS •. 1 ••
47 KITCHEN CURTAINS ...•••.•...•••• 1 ..
21 SHOWER CURTAINS •.••••.•..••••• 2.•
31 POLY/COTTON PERCALE SHEETf' •• 5 ..
15 COMFORTER COVERS •••.......•••• 7.M
63 BODY TOWELS .................... l .M
15 BEDSPREADS .................... 21.11
10 COMFORTERS ..........•.......•• 21.M
housewares
NOW
53 MICROWAVE POPCORN POPPERS ••• 1.•
119 CERAMIC MOLDS ...••••••.•••..••• 2.11
57 MUG SETS, 4-PC ........••••.••.••• I.II
21 HURRICANE LAMPS ••••••••••.••.•• 3...
33 RECIPE BOXES .................... s.• n TEAKETTLES .................. ' ... s.•
23 WOKS ...•....•......•.....•..••• 14.•
Jewelry buys
NOW .
300 COLORED BEADS .•...••••••. , ••••• lie
200 EARRINGS .•••••••.....•••••.••••• lie
NOW
11 RETURN OF THE JEl>f4t
ACCEISORt£1 •••••••••••.•.•••••• lie
14 aAR8E• F AIHIONI •••••••••••••••• 1.AI
AlO Orenoeeo.t DAILY PtLOTIThureday. M-.y24, 18M I ,
L.M . Bovo
Aspirin
cost?
$1.14
• apiece
Q. When was the last time in. t.he
United States that the authonltes
conducted a mass execution of crimi-
nals?
A.. In August of 1945. Seven young
German submariners. prisoners of
wa r at Fon Leavenwonh. Kans ..
killed an eighth German POW. They
called him a traitor and said he'd
given sec ret informauon to·their U.S.
captors. President Han) Truman
signed the death order. The) were
hanged.
Up before the Maryland legislators
1s a proposal to license bi rdwatchers.
What will happen there if you're
caught watching birds without a
license?
A check of the records 1n hospitals
shows aspirin administered therein
costs the pauents an average ofS 1.14
per tablet.
How the Peul women of Mah keep
their earlobes intact I do not know.
Their carry their valuables 1n earri ngs
about the size of purses.
Q. Wh) 1s a SI 0 btll called a
sawbuck?
A. Such bills used to have an X
instead of a 10 on them. You know
how the legs of a sawhorse. some-
times called a sawbuck, are shaped
like X's. T hat was the origi nal
allusion.
Q. Why 1s one attome) or another
sometimes referred to as a jakeleg
lawyer? . A. Jake was another name for
moonshine. And Ja keleg was a son of
paralysis suffered by some imbibers
who hired la wyers to go after the
moonshiners. Then as now. most
cases invol'-'ed a threat and then an
out-of-coun !>Cttlement.
You knm' those customized vans·!
A.bou t half the 400 American com-
panie~ that do that son of custom-
izing are w1th1n 25 miles of El kh an .
Ind.
Men "ore wigs of wool. Muggers
yanked th e "1gs foNard so their
victims couldn't see. This. long ago in
England. It's where we got our phrase
.. pull the wool over hi s eyes.
Here's another day in Amcnca. so
1t is, and another 2.800 teenagers are
getting pregnant.
Over the gate of a hog farm in
Nebraska hangs this sign: We Will
Sell No c;wine Before Its Time
L.M. Boyd is a syndicated eolomaist.
Any flrst-tlme visitor Is bound to be Impressed first by Alaska's beauty
and second by the fact that Jta occupancy by man has not made It any
better lookJng.
AKDY R001'BY
colamnwt
· Supervisors can't
solve airport woes
To the Editor
J would like to second Dr. Jan 0 .
beaches. These people, too, are sub-
jected to noise, soot, and potential
danger from falling debris and falling
airplanes. The beaches belong to all
the people, not just those in Orange
County or Newport Beach. Any
increase in the number offliahts from
John Wayne increases the danger to
thousands ofbeach-$oers.
Unlimited expansion, as now pro-
jected, could destroy this recreation
area. There are many places where an
airport can be built, but there is a
limited amount of public swimming
beach. And. while I 00,000 people can
frolic on our beaches on a given day,
only a fraction of that number fly in
and out of John Wayne Airpon.
Warm, sunny beaches are the hall-
mark of Southern California. To risk
destroying a significant portion of
them by air pollution 1s uncons-
cionable.
Alaska's primitive beauty
marred by manmade mess
Vandersloofs motion for the city of
Newport Beach to secede from Or-
ange County. It is obvious that the
Orange County board of supervisors
have neither the inclination nor the
fortitute to face the long-term prob-
lem of the ~·s air transponation
needs. Everyone who has studied the
situation agrees that John Wayne
Airport can never meet the demands
of the future. Numerous studies have
been made at the taxpayer's expense
to find a suitable alternative site, but
their recommendations have always
been ignored by the supervisors. For
political reasons the members of this
august body refuse to face the real
issue of finding and developing an
airport for the future. Instead, each is
determined to keep the air and noise
pollution out of his or her own
district. Therefore, they sec as their
only alternative the allocation of
funds for the expansion of John
Wayne Airport as a "temporary"
solution to the problem, and leave the
tough decision to some future board.
A common rationalization used by
proponents of the present airpon is
that it belongs to all of Orange
County, not just Newport Beach. The
assumption apparently being that we
who reside under the flight pattern.
being in the minority, should quietly
accept our fate . If that be the case.
what about the people who use our
public beaches? On a recent Saturday
we had 100.000 visitors to Newpon
Selfish. shon-sighted thinking, not
only on the part of supervisors, but
business people and passengers who
gain more than they lose from the
present airpon site, is to be expected.
It is unrealistic to expect the Orange
County board of supervisors to solve
the airpon conflict to the satisfaction
of Ncwpon Beach. They have a
vested interest in doing quite the
opposite. Newpon Beach will have to
find its own solution. If that solution
means forming a new county, let's
break out the petitions and get
staned. ANCHORAGE, Alaska -It was a
dall}p. gray, cold 34 degrees as we left
the house in Connecticut for the
airpon at 6:45 a.m. I
When we got off the plane fn
Alaska, eight hours later. we had
gained four hours, and at 3:30 in the
afternoon. it was a beautiful, bright
and sunny 67 degrees.
That wasn't what I wanted or
expected from my first trip to Alaska.
What I wanted was what we all expect
from our glorious 49th state. We want
snow up to here. glaciers. mukluks.
dog sleds and Eskimos nibbling on
blubber 1n their igloos. If there were
any Eslo mos on the road in from the
a1rpon . they were all nibbling pies in
th e Piua Hut.
I don't know why 1t is we're all so
surprised at what we find when we
travel. No amount of reading guide
books or v1ewrn g picturesque movies
about a place prepares us.
.\s I write. I'm looking out the
'"indow of my room on the 16th floor
of the Captain Cook Hotel. It is
owned b~ the good guy in the Nixon
adm101stration. Walter Hickel.
This flat basin in which Anchorage
s11s. 1s ringed with dramatic, snow-
capped mountains. You could watch
them all day as the sun. the clouds. the
ram, the fog. change the appearance
of their unchanging beauty.
La st even in~ we ate at a restaurant
whose adven1sement in the yellow
pages said ... For casual dining over-
looking Cook Inlet."
We had no major complaint with
the food. but our table did not
overlook Cook Inlet. lt overlooked a
ANDY
ROONEY
miserable parking lot. Cook Inlet was
barely visible in the distance through
some trees. A view of the inlet there
was no treat, planted as its banks were
with oil storage tanks.
This is typical of Alaska with all its
raw beauty and muscular capitalism.
Any first-time visitor is bound to be
impressed first by Alaska's beauty
and second by the fact that its
occupancy by man has not made 11
any better looking.
The state has the highest per capita
mcome of any of the 50 and because
of the oil bonanza. the government
th.is year declared a bonus ofS387 for
every citi zen. It would appear to an
out sider that there are better things
the $Overnment might have done
with its money. For one thing, it could
have !tired an architect for citizens
who are planning to build. It doesn't
seem as though $387 is what Alaska's
ci tizens need most.
I hesitate to disappoint the friends
I've made here or embarrass The
Anchorage Times, which runs thi s
column, but Anchorage is an un-
necessarily unattracti ve city.
It has sprawled out over all the land
available to it and. in so doing, has
managed to make a mess of a huge
area. In land mass, it is the second
largest city in the United States
although it has a population that
ranks somewhere around 50th. (The
state and city are growing so fast, they
can't count themselves. By the time
they've finished the count. the popu-
lation has increased by 25 percent
again.)
Alaska is a more genuine frontier
than I had imagined. even in this city
where more than half its residents
live.
There are splotches of half-built
houses everywhere in and around
Anchorage and many of them appear
to have been half-built for years.
Anchorage makes a good case for the
high-rise buildings that limit man's
encroachment on nature.
The best thing about Alaska,
maybe better than its scenery, is its
pe<>ple. They are relentlessly friendly.
They want you to love them and their
Slate.
"How do you like Alaska?" they
ask with an almost pathetic in-
sistence. It is as if they needed
reinforcement for their own decision
to be here.
The people in Alaska are. nonethe-
less. the real Americans. They have
chosen to come. Not many are in
Alaska through any unfonunate cir-
cumstance of birth or inenia. They're
here because they like it.
It would be nice if. before it's too
late. they took some steps in the
direction of making their settlements
as attractive as themselves and thei r
surroundings.
Aady Rooney
columalst.
is a syndicated
ROBERT T. LEWIS. Ph.D.
Newpon Beach
E:rchange student needs home
To the Editor:
Doubtless 16-year-old Ramiro
Alvarez of Guayaquil, Colombia has
heard of the justifiably famous re1'u-
tation of Caltfomians for hospitality.
So he will be even more perplexed
when he gets word that he will not be
able to come to California next fall as
scheduled to live with a U.S. famil y
and attend high school for the '84-'8 5
school year in exchange for a U.S.
student to his home and country. The
family which a~eed to host him has
changed its mind. Ramiro's famil y
will honor their commitment to host
a U.S. student.
It is hoped, through your cooper-
ation in publishing th is letter, a
California family will volunteer to
host Ramiro. not only to uphold the
state's reputation. but because they
would actually enjoy doing so and
would mutually benefit from the
experience.
California families willing to host
an "A" average junior with hobbies
including basketball, volleyball, soc-
cer, running, skatin~ and swimming
will be interested tn knowing that
Ramiro's father is a civil engineer and
his mother a housewife. There are
three other children in the family.
Ramiro has fair English.
Hosting families provide a bed (he
can share a room). three meals a day
and transportatfon to school and
church. He has his own money for
personal things and is full y insured.
He will be a member of the family,
share in the tasks and is deductible for
tax purposes.
If interested. please call the West-
ern Office of International Fellow-
ship collect at 602 284-1413 or write
P.O. Box 1212, Sedona. AZ 86336.
l.F.I. has both boys and girls from
other countries who would like to
come to the U.S.
WM. R.SMITH
Western Director
International Fellowship Inc.
Look at employment bright slde
To the Editor
Expert: De Lorean 'mysterytape' phony
Unadjusted or actual civilian em-
ployment rose by 691 .000 in Febru-
ary. but 809,000 in March and by
858.000 in April. This does not
include the Armed Forces. Employ-
ment of I 03,628,000 was at the rate of
92.4 percent with a record 355.000
more people working than ever before
1n our history.
I would hope you could find some
way to mention this. The former
publisher of the old Daily News,
whose name I seldom spell correctly,
Manchester Boddy, wrote, "Never
underestimate the intelligence of the
publtc, never u\'c1c~u111atc their
knowledge." Most newspapers use
Lbc adjusted employment figures and
stress unemployment instead of em-
ployment. Businessmen and the pub-
lic have not been informed that every
one of the last three months has
shown a substantial increase in em-
ployment and certainly few realize
that employment is now greater than
ever before in history.
This may be in-spite of or 1t may be
because of government policies. But
it does seem that the public should
have this information.
W.\SHI NGTON -The cel-
ebrated ·•mystery tape,""' htch was to
be the key to automaker Jnhn Z. Dl·
Lorean's defense against cocaine
dealtngcharges. has been pronounced
a fraud by an FBI speech C'\pert
Federal prosecutors are prepared to
use the expen's conclu\1ons 1f the
defense tries to introdun· the tape as
ev idence at hi s tnal 1n Lo~ ..\ngele-;.
The implication 1s that De Lorean
helped lo fa ke the exculpa tor~ tap..'.
This my'itenous aud1u tape sup-
posed!) recorded a telcphont• con-
ve rsation hetwecn De Lorean and
FBI informant James T Hoffman It
was released last No"t'mher h' porn
publisher Larr) Fh nt In the
purponed conH·rsat1un. ··Hoffman ..
threatens to harm De Lorean'<, 5-
year-old da ughter 1f he tries lo back
out of the mull1-mtlhon-dollar co-
1..aine deal that FHI unJ erco\l·r Up..'r-
att ves had set up
My assonatc'\ l on~ ( apalc10 and
Indy Badh.,.,.ar had obtained J m p) ol
the ta pe before Fl ynt did. They were
trying to have 1t authenucated or
debunked "'hen Flvnt released hi s
copy. The e"Xpert'> we consulted
cooduded tbat one \.01ce o n the tape.·
was De Lorean's and the other mign t
be Hoffman's. But the tape was
v1nually unintclltg1blc. and the over-
powenng background no1~ made
sc1ent1 fi c voice analysis 1mposs1ble.
J turned the tape O\ er to th.: F-BI
laborator;. whose expens could not
1dcnt1 fy the voices The) alc;o could
not determine whether the t11pc had
been faked
But on Jan 30, Murra y S. Miron.
professor of psycholtngu1~11cs at Syr-
acuse Universit y and a longtime FBI
consultant went much further He
reported to Los Angeles U.S. At-
torney Jamee; Walsh that the tape was
phony.
Based on a non-cknrontc com-
sxinson of the mystery tapes and
known samples of Dr I ~)rcan-ltoff
man conv('rsat1ons. Miron con-
cluded: "I find nu ('v1dcnrc 1n any of
the u~tc; of this record1na which
m1aht lead me to ac{cpt It for what 11
purports to have ht't'n " Instead.
Miron found "ample('\ 1den<:c which
support\ th<' conclu~1on that 11 t'i
JACK
ANDERSON
nothing more' than a rather
amateurish and tendentious fraud."
Miron stated flatl y that "the dis-
puted tape recording is not a record-
ing of the voice of James Hoffman."
He explained that "its content 1s
l'nt1reh inconsistent with the pattern.
speech· habits and style of the other
co nversations kn own to have oc-
curred between Hoffma n and De
Lorean."
The professor was struck by the
co ntrast between Hoffman's friendly.
low-ke y manner on the authentic
tapes and the voice on the mystery
tape, which he said was "quite
aggressive and seemed to be almost
Mafi oso."
Miron wrote to Walsh that "the
•;tyle and mannensms of the individ-
ual purpon ing to be Hoffman differ
quile dramatically from those of
Hoff man." He noted that the known
Hoffman spoke to De Lorean .. in a
non-aggressive. be nevolent style,"
while the mystery tape voice "em-
pl oys an arrogant. aloof style."
And while Miron was sausfied that
one voice on the tape was indeed De
Lorean's. he noted that "the content
of the convcrsat1 onal turns of the
individual speaking with De Lorean
(was) unresponsive and independent
of De Lorcan's remarks."
This anomaly led Miron to a
devastating conclusion: ''It is as if the
person playing the role of Hoffman
had rehearsed a set of comments
which were anifit ially interpolated
into what bepn as a continuous
monol<>lue originally spoken by De
Lorean. The speech cadences of
"Hoffman" on the mystery ta~.
Miron wrote. "ate consistent Wlth
those to be expected from one who
ha~ rthear>cd or 1s readina from a
scnpt ··
footnote· Miron did 1not tr)' to
determine whether the mystery tape
had been spliced. One of the ex pens I
consulted subjected the tape to a
battery of sophisticated el ectronic
tests and could find no evidence of
splicing.
U NDER THE DOME: Sen. Alan
Simpson. R-Wyo .. takes a lot of heat
from his colleagues for his frequently
controversial positions on issues of
the day. But he remains wryly
cheerful in the expectation of criti-
cism. In a "Dear Colleague" letter
seeking suppon tor a proposed
bailout of a rural electricity fund.
Simpson began with this extended
metaphor:
"Having been previously toasted
lightly on the legislative fi res of
1mmigrat1on reform. nuclear regu-
lation and chairing of the Veterans
Affairs Committee. 1 don't know why
I should choose to tie myself to the
stake for one last fry -but hear me
out on this one .... "
J•clc ,.ndersoa Is • syndicated
columnist.
_, ..........
Automaker John De Lorean and wl.fe Crlatlna Ferrare lea •e
Federal Court ln Loe Anlele. after recent .euton. ,
ALBERT ZORASTER
San Clemente
Bill would help police officers
To the Editor:
Recently. the United States re-
cognized National Police Week.. a
time to honor those men and women
who daily risk their lives to protect us
from violent crime.
Th e Congress should show its
gratitude to these officers by passing
the Law Enforcement Officers
Protectton Act. This legislation.
sponsored by Senator Daniel Patrick
Moynihan and Congressman Mario
Biaggi (a 23-ycar veteran of the New
York City Poltce Department wh o
was wounded 10 times in the line of
duty.) would ban the manufacture
and sale of cop-killer bullets -
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
ammuniti on designed to penetrate
the bulletproof vests wo rn by police.
The bill would also require a man-
datory jail sentence for using cop-
killer bullets in a crime.
Handgun Control has joined· the
nation's police in urging Congress to
pass this common-sense measure.
We urge cittzens across America to
rnntact their legislators during Police
Week and ask them to support the
l"Op-killer bullet ban. lt''l time the
Congress stood up to the mi sguided
'lRA.
H. l . 8chW8rtZ tu
Pu~
Chazr Dow•llbJ
f dltor Ind APISllnl
10 lhe Publ!Jher
Fr•nk ZJnt
AllOC!alt Edttor
Tom T•ll
City Edltoi
Business folks learn
how to take it in trade;
LONE DRIVERS
MUST BE WARY
OF 'HELPERS'
NEW YORK (AP)-A car pulls up alongside and its occupant signals
the lonedriverovertothesideofthc road, indicating there's a problem with
the car. Emerging to investigate. the driver becomes the victim ofa mugging,
robbery or worse.
Ifyou'redrivingat night. there are precautions you should take, advise
experts at the Carter Automotive Division of ACF lndustries. who'offer these
suggestions to drivers, especially women.
Don't stop without fir.it checking. Is your car steering afhormally, arc
there unusual smells, strange noises from the engine or beneath the car.
smoke visible around the hood or from the rear view mirror1 Car
manufacturers have equipped dashboards with built-in warning signals to let
you know when your car is in trouble. If you have no clear indication that
something is wrong, ignore the passerby. Wave your thanks and drive
cautiously to the nearest service station.
lfyoudostr.. keep car doors and windows locked. In the city, steer your
car into a well-Ii tedarca. In the country. try to get to an intenection or well-
trafficked part o the road. Should the motonst stop. only lower the window
far enough to ask him to phone forhelp. lfhc wants to help, he'll do it. If not,
you have him safely locked out.
Equip your car with a highway emergen~ kit, including a flashlight.
flares and heavy-duty jumper cables. Depending on where you live, you may
want to add a few items to cope with weather conditions. A shovel and some
old rags take up little trunk space and can be a blessing if you're stuck in mud
or a snowdrift.
Barter system
based on credit
gaining in OC
By ANDREA DA VIS
Delly Net Coo111111rMMht
Henny ("Take my wife, please")
Youngman should have joined a
bartering club. While he probably
wouldn't have traded his wife, he
w<?uld have met people tr~ding every-
thing else -from trailers to at-
torney's fees.
Orange County businessmen have
discovered a way to improve their
cash flow. Instead of paying cash, they
barter for items, -with a twist. They
use a unique credit card.
The many items ·and services
available to businessmen who choose
to barter were in ready evidence at a
recent open house hosted by Trade
American Card (TAC) of Orange, one
of 200 bartering organizations in the
country.
TAC members and potential mem-
• bers flipped throu$h brochures
advertising limousine services,
chiropractors, jewelers, printers and
lingerie.
And they are not alone. The barter
Fine and Dandy
induJtry estimates that Americans
trade more than $350 million of
goods and services annually.
Today's barterers use a new
method. Rather than trading one-on-
one, such as a limousine for the day in
trade for a gold necklace, the traders
earn credits oo their TAC card. ltiat
way. the limousine owner can use 'blc
credit.s for other options if un-
interested in jewelry.
Bartering may have been a way of
life for the farmers and peddlars of
yore. but TAC is aimed at business
people instead. A $300 membership
fee pays the way intuthis 12-year-old
organization, but the barter card is
different from most credit cards in
that credits must be earned before
they are traded for other items.
Once the credits are obtained,
things snowball, says Doug Anthony,
owner of Western Printery in
Anaheim. You use TAC and barter-
ing more often, he says.
Anthony barters for typesetters and
office supplies, and will renovate his
new warehouse by barter - a project
that could have cost as much as
$10,000 through a regular contract.
About 10 percent of his clients are
members of TAC.
''The whole key to the trade
industry is your own ability to sell or
trade," Anthony says. And those who
PHJ~4 FOR ~OUR
1HOUGHT 5 I MARION .
manufact\.ltc \heir own aoocls or
services arc QlOre likely to be in a 1ood
position to trade, he says, because
they have more profit markup to
nqotiate.
"Why should I put cash out?" asks
Lee Fnedrich of Money Mailer in
Huntington Beach. 0 1 get business
where I wouldn't before. I have credit
instead of cash out of my pocket."
Friedrich shows a direct mail
brochure he printed for another
member that offers TAC credit for a
10 percent down payment on a trailer.
Friedrich earns credits from the direct
mail business and his Big Oak Ranch.
a frontier town in San Diego.
Traders are more likely to "buy"
because "they can't sec the cash go out
of their pocket," says TAC member
Phylis Morisene, CCH>wner of Teddy
Bcarlesque, a lingerie shop. Moriset-
te's fiancc went to the doctor with her
trade credits. She also used trade for a
photo session ofber business and for
her business cards.
But nobody wants all trade cus-
tomers.
"l still have employees I must pay,"
Anthony says. But trade can loosen
up merchandise that isn't moving or
fill up a partially empty restaurant or
magazine ad ~e.
"Diamond •Jim Facey, gemologist
and owner of Diamond Jim Jewelers
in Oranae, uses b&rler to inctt.t1e his
business.:
"Whenever I ask for cu1tmer1 in
trade, J get action, .. be says. And while
about I 0 percent of bjs cuslOlnerl utt.
trade, they tell other potential cus-
~omers -"a ricochet effect." ht calls
It.
While some· complain that they
can't spend their credits, Facey bas oo
trouble. When he needs somethit\a. ~
Ile calls TAC and asks for three
members who perform that service.
Many members, he says, ask or
just one member, and when lbev can't ..
reach that one, they P,ve up. "You've
got to be persistent,' be says. •
"You can have St million of
diamonds in your hand. but unless "
someone knows, it doesn't do you any
good."
Bartering bas come a Iona way from
trading scalps for rifles or chickens for
a blanket. The TAC showroom for
rpembcrs' shopPin& &litten like
pirates' booty, wtth S250,000 wonb ..
of bartered jewelry, works of an and
electronic equipmenL
Today's barter is not totally cub-
lcss, however. lo addition · to a
membership fee, each time the
barterer trades in crediu, he or she
pays sales tax and S to 10 percent of
the transaction -in cash.
By Kathy Brooks
Prevention is the best insurance against an actual car breakdown that
could invite criminal attack, say the Carter experts. A once-a-year tuneup is
a must.
Check your gas supply before you drive. Don't take a chanc.e on a near-
empty tank.
Time to teach boss about hi-tech
Women who frequently travel alone at night should consider purchasing
an emergency CB radio.
Take care and bealen when stopped at an intersection. If the window is
open or the door unlocked and you are lost in thought. you could be
NEW YORK (AP) -Today's
secretaries may take on the role of
educating their bosses about the use
of electronic office equipment. ac-
cording to a Yale University sociol-
ogist.
victimized. ~ Try to parkas close totheentran e of a building as possible and only
patronize garages that are well lightedland have 24-hour attendants.
Always check a car carefully before getting in to avoid being surprised by
someone hiding in the back.
If you are dri vi n~ alone and suspect you are being followed or if you are
forced ofTthe road or an to the curb, use your horn to attract attention. If you
do go offthe road, throw the car in reverse and try to zigzag away from the
other car and continue until you reach a more populated area.
Since secretaries work closely with
word processors. electronic mail and
personal computers, they are most
likely to learn it first, says Dr.
Rosabeth Moss Kanter. reporting on
a Honeywell survey of managers and
secretaries. Know where your car's emergency signals are located and how to tum
them on. If you'recaught in a crisis. immediately hit the switch-usually
marked "Hazard" -that converts a car's tum signals into four-way flashers.
The "higher status" bosses may
face a threatening situation because
Summer styles a hot topic
Fund-raiser draws crowd
to show at the Marriott
The opportunity to see warm-weather fashions by
Nordstrom. South Coast Plaza, amid pleasant company
drew a crowd of 265 businesswomen to the Newport Beach
Marriott Hotel last week.
The turnout delighted Mickey Jeacock. reservations
chairman for the Irvine Charter Chapter of the American
Business Women's Association. "We were very pleased
wi.th the event." she said, calling it a well-attended fund-
ra1ser. Proceeds go toward the scholarships the group
grants to women who want to further business careers.
Models for the fashion show. coordinated by Boule
Spera, were Carol Altman, Lyu Ford, Nancy Fortaa•r,
Carole Hedrick, Jeacock, Julie Larte, Marji McNatt,
Carolyn Goode, Adele Moote, Barbara North, Sally 1
TabeH, Allee WUUam1, Irene Wood, Jaclde Wyatt, John
Luther and Cloyce Martin.
Event chairman Anita Flemlnl was assisted by
Marilyn Cooley, Lucille Hitz, Dlaae alter, Jan Dodson,
Williams, Takaeau, Loretta Tarner, Wyatt, Kathie
Chrt1ten1en, Larle, Mary Jane Malek-Sadlgb and Bertrice
Bartholomew.
• • • You can count on the volunteers of the Assistance
League of Newport Beach to do everything with style.
including their annual meeting.
Held to wrap up business and to install new officers,
the meeting also featured fashions of the type worn in Los
Angeles to the Olympics of 1932 and the latest things to
wear to the coming Games.
-Marton ftcllnt atcepted the gavel from Dorothy
Relale, outgoing president of the group, now in its 44th
year. Others installed at the event held at the Balboa Bay
Club included Barbara Doata, first vice president and
liaison to auxiliaries; Carol Riiey, second vice president in
charge of the thrift shop; Claert Harris, third vioe president
in charge of the dental programs; Sann Rusell. fourth
vice president, child day care; Marte-France Lefebre. fifth
vice president, membership; Jeu Forney, sixth vice
president, special events; Jean Bouer, seventh v1oe
president, propenies.
Also installed were Jou ADdertoD, recording sec-
retary; Jldy KlHI&. corresponding secretary; Lee Gormley
; treasurer; Evvie Swe.aen.., assistant treasurer; Pew
Smith, treasurer for dental programs; Gluy Slqer.
treasurer, day care; Lla4a Mayeda. onhodontics chair-
man; Fruca TltomH, regional council representative:
Dorothy &Idle, regional council alternate.
Chari men ofauxiliaries arc Au Marte Alford, Junior
Auxiliary· Mary Gius, las Rcinas: and Alleea Selrader.
Virginia Castle. Other officers for the I 984-l 98S year are:
Jaae Boyd, sustaining n:prcscntat1vc; Junette Evant,
Aujstecns coordinator.
Some 28& baalneeawomen chipped In for the
allow. lnclad.lnC. from left, Dolone ..,_.,wn-Today's Paparazzi ,..,s wntten b> Daily P)/ot St't'lc tnc1 ROll&Dne LeS.,e and Do1lD& Dwaileebe. Editor Melinda Huddleston. •
...
.. lower status" secretaries will be
superior in knowledge. she explains.
"This situation is temporary and will
change when the new knowledge
becomes stabilized or widespread."
she says.
Safety lesaona
CHICAGO (AP) -Young chil-
dren should be taught the dangers
associated with streets as soon as they
are allowed to go outdoo rs. warns the
National Safety Council.
"Parents should be aware that they
are role models for their children's
traffic safety behavior." Janice
Sutkus. the council's child pedestrian
specialist. points out. "Parents can
help prevent accidents by making
sure their children receive real-life
traffic training at home and in day-
care or nursery schools."
Parents should emphasize the most
basic safety lessons. such as that
streets are for cars and sidewalks are
for walkers. she adds.
Here come the brides
NEW YORK (A P)-The nation's
brides (or their parents) will spend an
estimated S 17.5 billion this year on
Delly .... ,......."'"-'~
£1\)oY'ln& the parade of fub.lona are. above.
llartlyn Cooley and Anita FlemJnc (event
cbalnnan), and, below. Mickey Jeacock and
Diane Baker.
formal weddings, for everything from
flowers to furniture to photography,
according to a recent study of con-
sumer anitudes.
The figure is nearly I 5 percent
more than was spent in 1980, accord-
ing to the survey conducted by the
Whirlpool Corp.
And next to friends and relatives,
the study concluded. most Americans ·
think of the Yellow Pages as their
single most important source of·
where-to-find-it information, with
their thousand-plus listings of goods
and services related to weddings.
-, ...
OfMQe Coat DAILY PILOT/'Thu'9day, MllY 24, 1984
'l!andli:a.g big problems too tough for whiners
Business card unnecessary
There's a reason it 1s best to call and another number 1s hsted on the back.
why homemaking Sometimes, there is a high school graduation picture that
has never been taken bears no resem blance to the owner of the card.
seriously as· a pro-ERMA ~ The problem. the way I understand it. is that business
fession. r f . cards are like o versexed coat hangers and rubber bands
It has nothing to t '.:..._ ~ stored on doorkno bs. Left in a drawer or a suit pocket.
do with pride, per· BOIBECll ...---business cards multiply faster than the name cards left over
formance, goals or from graduation announcements. Everyone is too cheap to
respect. We never ••••••••••••• throw them away. made it big because A housewife in W1ch1ta, Kans .. got sick of everybody
we don't ha ve business cards. We may be the last of the else flipping out those lmle suc kers with an authontative
professionals who don't. air and instructions to '"call if you need something," so she
I've answered doors where Willy Loman was standing had her own cards printed up. At the top of it was her
30-Id h · · 11. slogan, "Every Mother Is a Working Mother," and there in the hot sun in a year-o t ree-picce suit se mg underneath she listed herself as Lynn G roner, Home-
vegetable sheers, talcum powder. firewood and storm maker, Licensed. In the lower lefthand corner were her
doors from a pick-up truck and the moment be reached in address and phone number and in the right hand her
his pocket and said, "'Here's my card." he turned into Lee promise, "Years of experience turning out quality
lacocca. products ...
Somehow rhe business card gave him a snoutful of She said the reason a lot of housewives don't have
respectability. business cards is a small card 31/1 by 2 inches isn't room
I've been given a lot of business cards in my time. enough to list all of our services.
They are pressed into my hand at parties, tucked inside Lynn may be right. On the other hand, I like to think
programs, and left in my message box at hotels. They all we're a group too exclusive to go public and too sman to
have something in common. They are always edited. The advertise for more work.
formal name is crossed out and "Bubba" or "Giggles" is If you want something pressed . flushed, cooked.
written in. The business address is always wrong and has waxed, warmed over, bleached. delivered, hemmed, or
the change inked in over it and the phone number is picked up, you know where to find mt', Sweetie. I'm in the
different. Also. there are instructions as to the time of day book!
l
Coloring Cont~st
ItS A Horse Of A Different Color
Onmge County Fairgrounds • Costa Mesa • July 6-15
WI NNERS! One winner in each age group will be chosen . Each winner will t eceive
4 tickets to tht-Orange County Faier. Winning pictures will be posted in the Fine
Arts ex hi~it at the fairgrounds.
NAME
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AODRESS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
PHONE
~~~~~~~~~~~~-
ACE CRO UP 0 3-5 yn . 0 6-8 yn . 0 9-11 yrs.
Rl l f.S & RE<,l'I '\ TIO~S:
I 1\11 rntrir• mu1t br romplrtrd b' rt rhild in a~t' •roup1 li1tt'd.
2 Srnd rntrlra to Coloring Contt'1t, P 0 . Box 1560. Coste Mt'u. CA 92620
3 .\II rntri,.• mu111 h .. n•<' .. l"td by Juo .. 15th.
another one-chewing tobacco.
My husband feels very piousabout bavin•siven up smok~ but oow he is almost never without a chunk of
tobacco in bis mouth. He claims it is harmless. but I can 'l
believe a person cao soak his gums and teeth in that awful
stuff niaht and day without doinasomedamaee to his
system.
tvt4eaee tlaat tobacco, ID uy form, la bad aewa ud uyoae
wlto Waka dlfferatly It kNdlaf fllmaelf. • • DEA.It ANN LANDERS: I read that surseons should
be careful what they say in the operating room because
p.tients wbo are a~thetited may be able to hear them.
I canattest to this because when J was operated on for
a ruptured appendix, I heard a suraeoo say "My Ood, he's
in terrible shape." When I came to. I thouaht I was goina to
die. Please, Ann. warn those folks in the operating room to
be careful what they say. -FLORIDA
J admil l have stronafeelinpaaainstchewingtobaooo
because it looks so unappetitina. I can't stand to talk to a
person who has tobacco JUice'runnina out of the comers of
his mouth and spits every fcw,minutes. When the stuff
spattcn I becom<1nauscated. What do the docton say about this? Is there any
evidence that chewing tobacco produces undesirable sjde
efTccts?-TURNEOSTOMACH IN THE CAROLINAS
DEAR FLORIDA: You did-ID a moat effective
mauer-ud I tlluk you. • • •
DEAR TURNED: TM IDcldeDff of tonpe, pm ud
moatll cancer ts m19 fll&Mr amoq tllote wlto c'"' tobacco tlwa daNe wbo cloa't. Guttitla la anotller boa as
for chewers of the brown 1t•ff. Th•r~ h1 '"'"'f•table
Do you feel awkward, self-conscious-lonely?
We/cometotheclub. There's hclpforyouinAnnunders'
boolcJet, "The Key to Popularity." Send 50cenrs with your
request and a long. stamped, self-addt'e$st:d envelope to
Ann Landers. P.O. Box I 1995, Chicaso, Ill. 6061 I.
l u.c:-
POUCEWOMAH IUCKAOGEAB
• MACNBl. I LEHAE.R
NEWIHOUA
I MENCANOOYEANMENT
CllNEWS
AKNEWSQ
i!NICNEWS {!)~AHDYKE
* * "The Toy" ( 1982) Richard Pryor,
Joie Gteuon.
(O)MOVE
U lh "lost And Found" (1979)
~·Glenda Joeon.
**~ "Rodty 111" (1982) Sylvelter
Stlllone, Ctr! Welthen.
-U>-1 =Of CULTURE
(llTAXI
I WHEEL Of FORTUNE
THATGR.
(%)MOVE ** "O'Hn's Wife" (1982) Edward
AMwtl, Mlriette Hartley.
-7:00-
NICNEWS l caaNEWS
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
AKNEWSQ
I FNITMY l8t.AHO
Wt&l. Of FORTUNE
• BU8IE8S REPORT CIDMOTOAWEEK Cl) p Jl MAGAZINE
11:1 emATANIENT TONIGHT -~CC)M£T10N
* * * "I Aim At The S1ers" (1960) Curt Jurgens, Victoria Shew.
-7:15-
-7:30-
1 2 ON THE TOWN al FAMILY FEUD
'.\IZI~
IA (,
111 ' /\ (,
IP
111
.x
~=-lHUYl
I EY!ONLA.
FNIE. 0 PEOP\.E'S COURT Wl.D, Wl.D WOALO OF
ANIW.8
I LAST CHANCE GAMOE TIC TAC DOUGH
H80 OOMltO ATTMCTlOHS
-•:OO-• Cl) MAGNUM, P.L IL OllME A lflfAK
• * • "The le>ngelt Day'' (Pert 2 of
2) ( 1962) John Wayne, Rober!
Mitchum. eawow:
"Invitation To Hel" (Premiere) Rob-
ert Urlc:h, Suurl lucd.
IE'Wl.D
*** "Llwmln" (1971) Burt l.Ml-caiN•. Robert Ryw1.
• llW(N) Of MAHl(N)
• OOWIJTEA atOICt.E8
'ft ~'The Young Uone" ( 1958)
Mlt1on Btlfldo, Mon190fT*Y Clift.
®WOW:
.. 'h ''The Rickie Of Thi Sends"
(1980) MlchMI Yori!, Simon MICCor·
klnda6e. cm wow:
t * * "She W0te A Yellow Ribbon"
( 1949) John Wayne, John Ager. (l)WOW: *** "W~"J1983) Matthew Btodertdl, Dlbney Coleman.
(I)MOYIE
***~ "Thi Front" (1978) Woody
Alen. Zero Moetel.
-9:30-88 FMA. Y TU G TIC TAC DOUGH (f)UMIOAT
I BmRTANIBfT TONIGHT
SNEAK..WWS
-t:oo-
11=8MON
NEWS
llBVGNFf!N YYll'BM
=IECC THF.ATRE
-t:IO-• 8 M DUCK FN:rO«Y
(!)MOYIE • * * "Thunclertxllt And Uglltfoot"
( 197 4) Qlnt e.twood. Jeff Bridgel. G Pl£T'E1' GUNN
(I)MOYIE ** "Flrat lOY9" (1977) Susan Dey,
WilM1 Katt.
-to:OG-Jl:rlHERFF Nll)M
I Hl.l. m&T M.UES
eNEWS 20120
lHEIAlfT LMNGWl.D
lllMJElh'I
IOWUNG
A TOMT TO tBllY IAUCE
EUR't"nM:I: 8WE!T DRfAM8
6AIJ..AGHBt MEL.ON CNZf
-10'JG-
• INDEP8l)BfJ' NEWS
-11:00-
1• ~·Cl) a a NEWS
ROWAN l MART1H'S LAlJQH..4N u·A·s·H
HAWAIFM.o e FAU. Nil) Al8E OF REOINAlD
PBNt G DOC VAN DYKE
i A88AUl TB> NUTS
HIO OOIM() ATTMCTlOHS
BEST OF BIZAME Q
-11:06-
(Q)MOYIE * * "Babe" (1981) Bobbi Jacitaon,
Samantha Foll.
-11:30-
• Cl) TRAPPER JOHN. M.D.
'Twtl Some'
I ht> Speclalor
c1lwa\c, .i HuAA1ns
l,l\'untt•' Grav c.ilt
with bl.id. calf trim
II ' IU ~
----~~~ SHOES ------
99 Fashion Island. Newport Beach 759-9551
YourTCrm: oneyear
Your Yield1
: 11.60%
Your Rate2
: 10.98%
ItS as simple as that.
Put more money in your pocket with a high 11.60% yteJd
guaranteed on Home Federal's one-year lnsured Tenn Account.1
And be sure to ask about our other rates and tenns ...
from 32 d2ys to ten years.
Then sit back and relax while your money earns more,
thanks to Home f'ederaJ's traditionally higher Interest and dill/)'
compounding.
Bank with the strength of ttorjle Federal. Call our rate line
now for up-to-the-minute rate infonnadon, l-800-S22-l531.
Then all Home Federal's Hodlne, toll-frtt, J-800-862..0539 lo
open your Insured Tenn Account. ~!ED;
lt's as simple as that. Piil
M~ 'Ir pt1ndplJ and tnttmt
rtl!Wn on ~I for
~ ~ ·~.,~~
lforltltum lor «tl1y
wiNrtwal
HOMEFEDEML
C'Ht:nc. THE \El LOW p G ·s fOR I HE OHi E ~~RE.\'1 ,. )\:
QIT°"9GKT 8Al'UAMY NGHT
0 MIJHEWIVEWPOINT
iiefMCHOF ... NOtE IUNKf.R'8 PLACE
LA TBIGH'T NIEJlft:,A 100a..ua
MOYIE
••• "An Americlfl Werewolf In 1.ondon" (198t) David Naqtton,
~-· ·~"Th• Sedue11on" (1982) Morgan
F lifc:hild, MiQt\MI SWrtt.ln.
:J)MOYIE ** "Hey. Good lootln' .. (1982)
~ed. Dirte1ed by R8lptl Blkshl.
:%>MOYIE
• ·~ ··They Shll Haw Mullc" I 1939) Joel~ Wiil• Btennan.
-12::00-
P.~~ Man" (t963) Lee
Alrnk*. Allfl Bat•,
(!) 11&91)8lf NEWS e 1llCKE OF THE flOHT eHAARVo
-12:1!-
31)UOYIE
• "Wet Rainbow" ( 1976) Hlfl"f
Aeems. Georgina SpeMn .
-12:30-
• al LATE flOHT Wl1lf DAVI>
L.ETTERMAH e lWIJQtfT ZONE
(f) ROWAN l MAATIN'S LAUGK-*
• COIEDY TONIOKT
-12:40-
8 (J) UOYIE *** "A Shining Seuon" (1979) Timothy Bottoms, Allyn Ann Mcllfle.
-1:00-
9 MOYIE * *'" "Tai-Gunner Joe" (19771 Ptter Boyte, Patricia Neal. el.A. tOOAY
(!)MOYIE **'la "Out Welt With The Hwdyl"
( 1938) Mlctley Rooney, lewll Stone .
eMOVE *** "Home Before Dwtt" (1958)
Jelr1 Simmonl, Rhonda FlemlnQ.
GOENE800TI
(l)MOVE **'"' "Rodty 111" (19821 Sylvest•
Stallone, Cll1 Weetherl
-1:10-
~MOW **"' "Young Doctors In l~" I 1982) Mlchael McKean. Seen Young.
-1:15-
(I) aNEMA9COAE
-1::20-
®MOYE
• • "Brainstorm" (1983) Natalie
Wood, Ctvistophlf Wiiken.
-1:30-1 ::JETH F1ELD
***~ ''The Anderson Tapes"
( 1971) Seen Connery, Oyen Cannon .
• AU. IN THE FMa Y
QI ROWAN l MAAT1N'S LAUGK-*
(O)MOYIE *** ''The Hurricane" (1937) Dof'o-ei>:· Jon Hall. ** "O'Hare's Wife" (1982) Edwlrd
Mrtfl. Mariette Hartley.
-2:00-
• Cl) Cl8 NEWS NIGKTWATQ4 •aNEWS
-2:30-eMOYE ***~"The Eflect Of Gamma Rlyl On Man-ln-Tht-Moon Marlgoldt"
(1973) Joenne Woodward, Nell Potta.
-2:46-
~MOYIE • * "Young Lady Chatteriey" ( 1977)
Hlf'lee Meeride, Peter Ratrey.
~~bye, Emmanuelle" ( 1977)
SyMa Krtttel, Umbet1o Onlnl.
-S:00-1 =NIJTHE MAN * * "FU1·Walklng" (1981) Jamee
Woods, T1m Mcintire.
-a:10-
(B)MOYIE * * '" "The Riddle Of The Sanda" (1980) Mloheel Yori!. Simon MICCor·
klndale.
-S:30-
~FAITH2D !)=-we.av. w.o.
**~ "Lott And Found" (1979)
George Segal, Glenda Joeon
-4.-00-
• uow • "Clrollna Moon" (19401 Gene
Aulty.
Cl) TOP O' M MOANM
4:20-
-
tM\MG8
1'0 DO 0-\ t\1tlf ~ =?.°·~.=--
. ;i(tf P'•n'
-• read th• _ ....... ,..__,
-_s:~1 --
. '\
CBS regains ratings crOwn U..,._.TSllY,*C. ,. ...... .,.ill
'Dallas,• 'Falcon Crest' finales bolster 4. Tie·Movie-''Tbe Rttum of 1m -u .
Mamas Welby, M.D.," ABC, 19.S or •TalDI-Ma.UM network, alo wtth third-place •Mtss USA' 16.3 milhon. ~:::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::=.==:J.!!!m!!!l!lm!!!!!!!!i=:=:===i 6. Miniseries.-"The Myslk War-
LOS ANGELES (AP)-CBS, aft.er
losiflJ to ABC for four straiaht week.a,
redaamed the top spot in the Nielsen rad~ as "Dallas" and "Falcon
Cmt ' sprang their summer clif·
fha~-ers and captured the top two
posttJOOS.
The narrow win for the week ended
May 20 was the fint weekly victory
for CBS since it look the season
ratings title in March.
bavea role. -The ABC miniseries "The Mylo
tic Warrior .. won a major victory -
In fact. it mi&ht be called an upset -
over the NBC miniseries "Tbe Flnt
Olympics, Athens 1896" on Sunday.
The opening chapter of the two-pan
"The Mystic Warrior," a story about
tbe Plains Indians at the time of the
cominaofthe white man. was in sixth
place.
rior," Part I, ABC, 19.3 or 16.1
milUon. •
7. "Three's Company," ABC, 19.2
or 16.0 million.
8. "Country Music Awards," NBC
18.5 or 1 S.S million. '
. 9. "The Fall Ouy," ABC, 16.7 or
13.9 miUlon. •
9. Tie-"Hill Street Blues," NBC *
16.7 or 13.9 million. '
* PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *
Bargain Matinees!
MOlibAY Tlllll IATUltOAY
All '-ilf-ltflft 1:11 PM
(h.,,._I bl Hehl Y091 Cl"'O .,, .. ._
CBS' "Dallas" and "Falcon Crest,"
both of which left viewers in suspense
until the fall, finished one-two for the
week.
-NBCs "Hill Slreel Blues," a
virtualstranger to the Top 10 this past
year, was tied for ninth place (with
ABCs .. The Fall Guy") as tt ended for
the season with the separation of
Frank and Joyce. Its rise was helped
by the fact that rival CBS's "Knots
Landin&" bas had ils cliffhanger and
aone into reruns.
11 . "60 Minutes," CBS, 16.S or
13.8 million.
12. ..Trapper John. M.O.,'' CBS
16.4 or 13. 7 million.
13. "Remin&lonSteele," NBC. 16.2
or 13.5 million.
W'ltl::r1
........ (Pl)
.......
nt .,.. •• ! : I [)II '
tM coon -.-a.a-" s-..c• 111.,_ st,., ..
--0 1 .... 1\1 UM ._ '""" 1 '° ,.. Sll·Slll
....... ,. .
-Tlln , •••• It ti
ABC was only a lenth of a ratings
poinl behind in second place and
NBC was third. The Top 10 was fairly
evenly split amona the networks. CBS
look lhe first three places ( .. Miss USA
Beauty Paaeant" was third) and
didn't win anolher spot in the iop I 0.
There were three other noteworthy
even ts for the week:
-Robert Young's return to his role
as Dr. Marcus Welby was fourth (lied
with NBC's "The A-Team") in the
ratings. The movie, "The Relum of
Marcus Welby. M.D.," was a pilot for
an ABC series in which Young would
Herc are the 20 top shows of the
week:
1. "Dallas," CBS, a raling of 26.0 or
21 . 7 million households.
2. "falcon Crest,'' CBS, 23. 7 or
19.8 million.
3. "Miss USA Beauly Pageant,"
CBS. 20.4 or 17.0 million.
4. "The A-Team." NBC. 19.S or
16.3 million.
13. "Alice," CBS, 16.2 or 13.S
million.
I 5. "Ca&ncy &.. Lacey." CBS, I S.9
or 13.3 million.
16. "family Tics," NBC, 1 S.3 or
12.8 million.
17. "Riptide." NBC. 15.2 or 12.7
m1lhon.
17. "Oh Madeline,'' ABC. I 5.2 or
12. 7 million.
19. "Cheers." NBC, 15.1 or 12.6
million.
20. "The JefTersons." CBS. 14. 9 or
12.4 million.
ADV ANCll TICKllTI l'fllllDl•
for INDIANA JONt'.S ANO THE
TIEMl'Lll 01' DOOM
..... , ....... }
1:.-:-.=.I
LUXURY THEATRES
~-t2:t0 2 :10 4 :10 1:10
I : tO 0 1
Tftlll YOUI flWOllTI
MOVIES NOMI
WllM YOU ftOW I
AT 12:05 2:40 5:20 1 :00
&. t0:40
Tllfll'tl 0, 000111.
PG C: ·~.!~~A
NOW PLAYING--. I : It I;) ij (fJ1If,i@.f§6) 639 8770/ "rr~~) ~~~ 70MM FIRESTARTER l!l ~rrl\VJ Plu• Tiie I r\J~Vw Man Wllo
COCl•Mt&A i,--
lO-.,·lh 5o.."" o.; 'fli'l&.1• 'K!tt U .I '*'°' ~1"' 111• ~1AOO .......... ". .....-..u. ... , .. ,.. ... . ...•......
....... u-.... 1t 1W.... ,.,..._Ull_ " ...
IMUU lllll.11 .. , ... ~ , _,""' IN> ,..~., ...... -. ... -.
, ••••• , •• , ............. Yll .... _, ... .....
.,._,..,.~ ...
~~)J' ......... ,. , .......... . ......... ,.,.. ... 1, ...
•Wl~TlIO•~~--·n.i
llt• •1' ._.-., ... . , ..... , ... . ........................
_,.~ -,_ ... _..v.. ..... c.-
.-.olfO -· ....._..... .... .... u. .......... , ..... ,. •••tt• ••
Aho Sllyt round (R)
AllO Sllowln1
H ot Dot (R)
l'lu' Pork y'• II
(R )
t('U. tr.Cr"U.t LOHd •I"'-"~"@ wom•n (R)
s:~~· .,, t:: .,,,..J/es
Im
Wltll
Au Inn
All Oddl
(R )
-~ AllO Sllowlnt
-l"OOtlOOH .... Ill!! (l'Q)
•NUWTMIT• tlACM lO•I'.,., ,...-..,..,..~ ... ~ .... t.-i• Ve• l a•t••J a • 11•
,._....'---11 ...
* Orin -Ina Open 7:JO WHkt ndl I 1:00 WHknltllh *
Ch•ld rf'n Under 12 F RE£ Unlf'u Notec1
•llkSM)llWUO ,.,.. • .,.. ,_. '" ... ~"'°-,._ .. ., ... , ... , ... , •. ._.
,....._~ ... ,,...., .,..,._,,,1.,,,,m--r,.._..,..,...._.._,__.....
* ~ • F 4 rn • ~ a.:>
~
• >< a.:>
•
~ . ' f
•fin 1k s~n 11vl not
h11h 1n price. reaeon·
able cott: claHifMd
advert lain«
If adventure has a name, it must be Indiana Jones.
JI~
HARR"")t, i~ ...
<NDWJA J()'JiS .wn 'Hi ·wrH ~ O )'''
kAll t.AP51-1AW·AMMl11'\JRJ·RDllW; '>(!Hd''<lllf SIQM l.f H l •• \t,
G£0P.Gf LUCAS FR.AN!< MAR\Hiltt l ~ATHL!ft, ~£11.11·<1
l()HN 'MLLIAMS 'MLLAAO HUYO t. c:.tOlilA 11.ATZ Gf C:t ULA: ft
RO&RT WATTS STEVEN Sl'l~lBfR1, • •
NOW PLAYINQI
TICKITI fOR TODA Y'I IHOWI OM IALI WHIM 901 OFFICE OPENI
.,,... =
tO 11A.M , 124151'M, 311,
1·00 •• JO, '1 00 , ... eox OFACI Ol'l"9. JO A M
edwa1 ds NEWPORT .. -:-~ :,· .. :::'!.~·::... &44 0 /60 ·-· ................. .
I'~ A.M , ti NeOn, I.ID, I 001 , JO 10 00 & ""~ 12: 11 A.ail. ltOll ~ Ol'tN t-00 A.M
t"41w.•·" \t1rTH I I IA\! 1"1 A.lA
•• ""' •• . .,, .,,..,. t.AC ')711
CO\IA Ml\A .'4{1 { -----
t.IO A M t 1 t Notft. :t JO, I 00,
1 ~.1.!0"00 • fll!l-M<* 11·1' AM
-()flJU ~Na HO A.M
P.dwards .,.,, ,111" ,,, ,11 "4A11
," .. .' .. , ',: ..... 495 6120 ... ' . . .... ...
I 00 A M , I UO A.M • 2'«1. 4 30.l. 7<CIO.
I JO • FRI ·SU.. MIONIOHT IOlC Off'ICf OP£NS I 00 A M
! A GUN A tm l S MAI l CI Nl MA'.\
··. .. . '~ 768-66 11 ... ..,. . .
t'.IO A M 11 NOOft. UO, S«I
1 )0, 10 00. 'RI -MOH 11.11 AM eox M'1Cl ONHS • oo A.M
edwards CI NEMA WEST
•H'M M,... 891 3935 .. ,,,........ ..
t:M AM f 1t "-'t, 1-30, 1.00.
1 ~..1,.,!0 00 & fN .MOtf 1 :t 11 A.M
-OfflCl Ol'IHI t 00 A M
ed wards HUNTINGTON ... ·:.·.::·:"" 848-0388
th.I .. ,, ... ,\, ...... ..._.,
"-.,.,..
~ ...
•"-' =
-.mm•~ CJ , .. '9,,, ,. ..,. (N)
IHU-.10~ ._ ...... , m -l.a.UUM. ... WI ''WWW A {fi}
1110 , ••• '~ UtlHI
''tCIUJI• nl STCIF' {PC)
IU I ?~ .... t~ Ht II ~
"Hiii Riiiiir <1>
tel 1.6, lt50 ~'(PS}
IUl,41,UI
"nl IMTWL" (PS)
12 4S. l 20. HS I ~ 11 10
SPECIAL IENOAGEMENT
.._DISMDlll tm\.lOf .... (N)
lo-OOUT srt•o
IOOO AM ll lO.lOO.Sl0.100 IOlHM
I? tt ? tt. 4 .. ut. • ., 10-4
"fEUllll" (I}
u tt uuau5.11•
"tttMat~1
"Sll1ml CMllUS" <rC)
I? JO 2.JO, 4 lO. 6 JO.
I JO. lUO
. ... nl .... (I)
It JO, l:tO. S:J8. .. ltll
'1DCOll Ill M tlllCll" (I)
1;00, S:ll 10:06
"TI£ BIG-QtU .. (R)
l-JS.UO * PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES *
"f'llllS QIPOS" (I)
l\US "lllH HT" (I)
l{IJiiiJ:o:O'J _,: __ t !(NOTT
NOW PU• .. Cll'fl SCUI>
''f•maTB" (a)
l\US
"JATlilCUI>" (a)
SP€CIAL ENGAGEMENT
"llJIMA JOIE All> M
1lMPU C. DOOM" (K)
l\US MIMI( All) HATES" (PS)
.!ttamu.
''fWDS QIPOS" (I)
l\US "tlafT Sftfl" (I)
"SlmDI CNIUS" {PS)
PlUS ''foonoosr <"l>
• ...., .. (PS)
l\US "ll>T OOQ. •• n1 ..,... (I)..
..... nl mAIJ(" (I)
l\US
"fOIES" (I)
. ...,.. nl $TOI£' {Ps)
l\US _ .._... IT Cll llr (a) llliiB ..... ,.-~-·-1
s-o..p...,c-..-oi•-
1 ....-ntaa "' WIJ9 • tllZll" CNl 2. ''ICDIM" (f"li)
3. "CCllM M l•AllMI'' \•1
(. AufO<...,,_ ISMHOl .. )
:~
w:i ... , .... -... coo-H---..._..--,.,-•
ur.,.,_ ••
--~ac..-11) 1SI •IM n o lUS
TOMI COflB STlMll llX s .. ,.,...., ..,.u•r•1 ...... 1S1 •I.. ...,...,, 11~ tll
-.... u -tWii
SMIDLLMCI ._. ~ u 1.... _..,
(11 .... Sii·~ ..... u ....
lMlllA llUS IMU • ..., stPU : u1.,• ._ 11118 ..... __ ..,
... r-.n I! t Oll 7'1-Mll 11~ 1•us ..... ,,,
1GCDll • 111 ..r ca> lMillNA Ml.LS ,_ t IWI m.o -Ul lSOI
MlSA
lill l lt SI 1., It ----· st• SlAIS "9'\JS" 4") 1111 O ..... I WU•_.. RI .. AA
646 ~l~ 1100 61\ IOlS 76Mf1J IUl ttl. 43'.1• tll
MA C Ta "f19IJl GDUtr .... -· ,., l AGUNA 8£ ACH -,,, 4141 .._ ,..., •tt us SOUTH COAST -.i•-.c'""KMA--..;...C_l_ll ______ m _____ ~=.. ~I=
u.am 111 nmr CPtJ 4911111 .._.. • _. .,
111 H S 1----------"d=
la,!•~"='~""""------SOUTH COAST ... -. .. --"' Hlt9.I"'
till CCOll
i:..w ....
....... fl
.,, 1111
mt. v.un --, ...
llt·ISOO
ffk vAiltY --, ...
IJt.1511
WE STMINSTER
!! ~::.!:.: • 111 _,.. "" CIDM WEST • nm.,. snxo .JO '-.. .. liwt llS 94' -.__,.lll
nv ~-WU•-INl U l #I Vi JO MAU IQ.I'( mao H I 1'3~ !!IC!, U!. ,~ t,. u '•• 1• __ _,_lll CKMA "UT DllJl'maG C-,.,IUIU • _..., t• Ml _.,. llmJI ..,_
OS'1lt IOJUlOS•1•1too '-.., ----f't)
VIJO MAU --mo-n1 HY.I lto HS,. tlS ,. t., It Ill 189U. _. fC) t-••· t•u fl0l l30S• CIOM WlST .__-Kl •~mo 1 • 11• =:, If::: :.fj.
VIJO MAU aun llDf OIO m 3'JS ~ ";.::, "tll .... IPCl ""'tifii;.;,r.;.,;.;;..Wl:.......,..Sl--4 1.a--...,--SlUCO-·~ '120 ,. ·~ -.._.., •• ~ --111J9\.[Clf-... t•• -nl3'JS 1011.t.»s•1»1••
WOOOlnMi( IOlm ICDfOllC HUNTINGTON Bf ACH
I f#C...., IOI) t~ ._.,_ vn ·-....... ...... .,... ..... '" &alMT-Jl'W • -=
SSJ ·06SS ..... " -.._ aD & WOOOlltl>Gl ..... -• Cit ...... t.JO Ac .....
.............. _.Cl) .... om 2•soe 1JD 10-00
I .. w... IUITii:TON OIUT STllCO 551·06SS ... 1""'1 BO BO .. ,.. ;< -10kf1 ltllro.I
WOOOIRIDGE ' c.. ·111-. f't>
....... ...... -.1U11 CMa.O" "'' iimljjilau.om 1 na ~ , 111 , .1
I ol C-. m 0655 .,. """' , io. too • t • a
WOOOIRl>Cr WESTBROOK -.a ICmll"' ............. .,.... Ill~-!?Cl ... -.. I -uo INS I "ti;.., •• ._., UM "'RI~ (fl)
551 0655 ... l,.,rl IS t IS SJ0.«(11 ~ . 1111
woooeltlDGl . ._..,. ""' W£STllllOOK ~...-IN> .. _,., SUI 'IS 11 lO
...., ,.. '4S I lO 10 ~ ... ...,,, ,_, ~ IU --IP"J ' • HO UOI l lS
MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND
SALE
50% -75% OFF
#29 FASHION ISLAND 644-2652
(Open All Days)
#27 Town & Country, Orange 543-1760
(Open Fri., & Sat., Closed Mon.)
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED
Local . county. state, nationql and international
ev ents come to your doorstep ll•IJ p·1at in the bright , light and lively I I
_ ....
.. Orenge CoMt DAil. y Ptl.Ol ,,...,,., M9Y 24, 11M
G~RFIELD
( TMINK ( MAVf. A WAY
OUT Of TMIS P1£i
( l KNOW l 'M TOO FAT
'\ FOi\ A CA1' •..
THE
F~MILl'
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE
by Gus Arriola
..
by Jim Davis
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"Don't tell me
it's going to
rain!"
"I won't
tell yov,
Ooddv ."
"Good! rvt bffn WANTING 1 word with you."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Will you please tell me when you are going
to feed him!"
'900:\ Ml'LLl:\S
SOCIAL FLING . . R _;;..~~~~~---.~-
WE 1 RE f fi?OM i~E
NE"/GHBd?HOOD
IMPROVEMENT
,A~OC t.AT/ON .
PEA:\l'TS
~Elf ~ANAOER ~ LET ·s
Sf E EM TRY TO MIT
ONE OVE~ THE FENCE
NOW ~ f 'M REAoY "
TUMBLEWEEDS
; .
' l
YeH ?
,AND YOU
NEED SOME
H,ANDY
HINTS ?
HI, OOl.L! I ~MTOF'IJS CIJN'lrJG-1HE
CAKE Al 01.JK W'f:V'Pll\kS'F{~C~M'ION!
I ., ~
..
•••
II ·~ ...
J
. ,.
l ~
u
by Charles M. Schulz
DO YOU i~tNK WE CAN
GET TME BAL. BACK
AND LEAVE HER ON THE
OTMER SIDE OF iME FENCE 1
by Tom K. Ryan
BRIO tl
TOO MANY FINES £8
Hoth vulnerable. bOuth deal1.
NORTH
•U
~87!
OA8U
•.\JI07
WEST EAST
+Ql08U +J95
"K tu "toe• o JS o QJOU
•U •KU
SOUTH
+AK•
"AQJ
0 K72
• Q9S•
The bidding:
Soa~ Weat Nerti. Eaat
l • Pau I 0 Pa11
2 NT Pa11 3 NT P111
Pa11 Pua
Opening ll'ad: Six or •
To most bridge player~.
SHOE
BRABBLE
Black wood 11 an ac.,.aaking
convention. f ew realize that
Easley Blac kwoo d, t hr
oririnator of the convention
is not only Oeah and blood,
but lht writer of seve ral fine
books on the gamf'. Thill u
ample Is from his "Winning
Bridge with Blackwood."
Three no trump is a
straightforward contra<'l to
reach. S()uth's jump rebid
show1 19 20 points and
North. with his balanced
hand, has no reason to look
ror any other pla ce lo play
the hand.
Wtst leads the lourth·best
of his longest and strongest
suit, and basi<' teC'hnaqut is to
hold up one round even
though you ha ve a double
stopper. East cont inues wit~
a spade. wo'n by the king
Since West is the danger
FOR BE1TER OR FOR WORSE
~E ~LF HOUR 1b Go -
L0E f\P\E SLA5411NG-I
o:t(PRICES.~
~1"4G r:JJ%0FF-
DoN1"M1SS T~
SAf'GF\11"4~ !
Ft:\K\' ft'l!\KERBEA!\
~E srot.E OUR
~KX>l. rctX:K 2:-
DR. SM OCK
l.00 K, :!. 'M. Nor Aeotrr 10 M A K e P...NY
OFF -f'HES-CUFF
OIP...GNOSIS Hf:Rf:, PAL, ...
r1Jt.7J
h11u
I~
ROSE IS ROSE ----
Fl~ EAT AIL 'T(XJR
TWINKI~. THEN '10.J
~HA~~ ~!
JUDGE PARKER
WAIT...
THATS ~ WAAT' I
~ ...
,
CUIUS
Go111
hand. you 1llould att.uk •
entry lint. The only way for
Weal to p in the lead i1 with
the king of hearts. ao It mishl
tetm that you should crou to
lhe table with the a~ or
diamonds and take tht heart
finesse. If it IOlfs and WHl
continues with a spade. you
can Lak• the club fintaM with
impunity and in due courst'
you will come lO nine trick•
-two 1pades. two htaru .
two diamonds and three
clubs.
Howtver. when ht wins
the ki ng of ht'arlll. Wtsl can
shift the attack to diamonds.
and they tan ddt>al the con
tract as tht' cards he Ob
viously declarer can't ust the
ace of clubs as an entry to the
board for the heart finesse.
because West might hav e the
king of clubs.
; WHEW~ TuAT S tT I
WE DIO IT. WE SOU>
Ne:ARL..)' THE~
~!
o ..
S1111F
Tbe eoluUon to dt!elattr'•
dilemma ii to lead lhe qut•c•n
of hearLt from hand at lrkk
three. Wetl wins lhe ~in~.
but he can do dtclattr no
harm. C>ed:irtr wint any
rtturn and lo ta the club
finene to t;ast. bul hf hus
nint trick• rtgardlt'H of
what tht dtftndtrs do.
HanyMM.•ru .... 18·
l• clHltlt trHltle? Let
Charita G..-.a Mlp 1" filld '"' ••1 d1r"1la tt.e 9'a&t ef DOUBLES fer ,.u.1c.M1
a-4 ftr &aktMl. Fer a -.1 •f
Ilia DOUBLES Melle&. NM
11.85 .. °11•••·o..Met."
ear• ef tW. 11ew.,.,. P.O.
Bos 259, Nerw..ct, N.J.
07648. Make elileeke nbl•
to New1paperbeell1.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
t'U. ~" ! 'ft.M l~ 60NNA
et. t.. 1006~ ~T !
by Tom Batiuk
~ ~~ Flf51' CLUE.~
by Pat Brady
00/JlHAT~ rrr:t.
f-l™ER I
by Harold Lt Dou
-
·' -
111-~----------, Area flrDl unvella keyibOard te.t •yetena
Highly profe"ional but cheap
PlllDIE Pllmll
I WILLDIYElllll
(714) 548-1710
Fully Insured & bonded
. TOLL FREE OUTSIDE 213 AREA 1 ·800-572-3980
WINE FUTURES EXCHANGE
6151 W Century Blvd • Suite 412 Los Angeles. CA 90045 (213) 410-2500
Daily Pilat
642 -5678
Introducing our new Premium-Rate Insured
Moneymarl<et Accounl Compounded daily!
Now, all deposits over $20,000 can earn special, higher ~y market rates at
Great American. Wrth FSLIC safety and no transaction restrictaons.
1rs a great new way to pick up extra interest-c nded dail -~een
investments or escrows, or by consolidating your savings at Great American.
Open your Premiu~ate Account today. ·
bl I lft• '"' ....... ..: (I< tflj(I ( 10"' ltlt b~nt(
More Than 120 Offi es Serving Califomi.1 Ovn SS Biiiion In Auets
The fim commercial ayatem far
testina keyboen:l1 and data entry
devices wu recently unveiled at the
A TE Show.Silicon Valley· by CR
TechnolOI)' Inc. of Irvine.
ruren pl.ad order1 for the KT-'960
durina the lhow.
The sys1em pn>videt ~
motion WMlet conttoUied force,
checkl all~~ and~
1nte..,hy. The ay11rm tiJnul1a; providet a full ,... of caas. i The le)'boen:l tett 1y1tcm, KT-960,
performs full functional and
djaanoatlc tall of membrane key-
boards as well as full-travel key-
boards. The syslel)'l was very
enthusiastically ~eifed by the in-
dustry.
Two miyor keyboard manufac-
The recent &rowth in the penonal
computer and data entry tmninaJ
marteta bas caUIC!d the older tech·
niqun o( manual teitiftl of keyboards
to bocome a limiti111 Ca.Cior i)t
keyboard production. Tbe KT-960 eHminaies thit r09dblock u the fint
commercial. universally ft.LnctionaJ,
automatjc ~c te11.er for all
types of kcyswtle~ and kcyboan:ts.
1na meuurina and tali~ of conUICl misll.Dte and debou:nce nme.
The symm's dectronic a.nalyai.s
capabiiues provide siaoificant •
d111Dostic information on the drive
electronics of the keyboerd. The
KT -960 is priced from S 19,SOO.
NEW YOlltK (APJ -The fOllowlng 1111 j! 'how' rhe Ov~-1 ht · Coun rer .. •tocka and warranls t t twtve gone up 5
11141 most and ~ moat baaed on 11 i>ercent of Chante tdnesday. No ucurfllff tr~ Ing below 12 Of 1000 sh~rn are Included. ti and Percentage ctieno.s are lhe
di •r•tiC• between the Pf'tVIOUJ Clos no l>ld Price and toda~laat bid prfce.
i l!N~r;-i· ~1. c~ u. tc'f 9.2 J' ti ~h l H-'l Up . ... >.It ~ UP s
I or~ s I/• Up ch om ;\io 'h UP J nd un >.It 1 HP .4
lnJ o '~ ·~ p ·1 ~•me
)chi.on 3 3-16 S-16 p l . i CS 0 rnTI 51h Ill Up l . V ml l~ T wt 4Yt ~ UP 1 . ~orm11 lntrmgn 41/• :tt Up . 4 tel
1 Uscafe 3Yt "• UP t.7 s ~L s
Loo for a rate on
a home e loan?
Our int rest rate is now
Costa Mesa: 370 E. 17th St.. 645-8700 • Huntington Beach
16075 Golden West St.. 847 -7771 •Mission Vie10: 24395
Alicia Parkway.Alicia Town Plaza, 770-2651
.14%
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATF
If you've thought about _
taking out a home equity loan,
now is the right time to act.
Because right now we're otter-
ing home equity loans at just
14.14% • annual percentage
rate. With a home equity loan,
you can cash in on the finan-
cial value of your best
investment-your
home. And at rates like
these, you can afford
to enjoy some of
your profits.
So if you've been
waiting to add an extra
room, make that investment,
or finance your child's educa-
tion. you don't have to wait any
longer. A home equity loan
from Commercial Credit is an
affordable way to make a smart
investment pay off. Right now.
(52)
~ALCR..EOIT RNANC.IAL~
"Conrrol 0..... C~
·~•rl•i 'l""'"'I '"' ·•""""" \lOlll•t•w "'°'" ll<tt•"'"" ~-$1 'WlO •Ni '" ~ .. f'.trn '""""' _\.., •m-• It••"""' r.tr'\• \•,, tntf'ff"ll l<lf f' .. h~ thf>t>.tl-f'f.tll\.,....,..," '"""'f'' J>"n(lfl;ll .tnd 1ntf''"I 1~NUocf d.t1I\
•..m.t•n "'' fff'l>h"' '"' ·-~-"'c '"""" tn4l lw wl\,..110 ln.t\\Mu'l'I ~l.tnc .. ''"''" ln•f'•~t '""·~I Ir\ 11\Mlt • d••~
~ Call the Financial line for the office nearest L.:J you or to open your account: (800) 272-9000 •
}
............
) -
• !' CS Onlnge CoMt DAILY PILOT /ThUf'8day, May 24, 1984
It's not every day an investment opportunity
comes along that's so important it rates a personal
call from a professional Investment Officer.
But right now, phones are ringi ng to announce
a truly innovative CD investment. One that's so
simple and flexible, it lets you call the shots.
It's the Money Matrix Account from American
Savings and Loan Association, the nation's largest,
with more than $27 billon in assets.
It gives tcx:la y's smart new investors the freedom
to determine!' the size of their investment, between
$500 and $500,000. And to decide the term of the C D,
from 32 days to five years.
The more you deposit, and the longer your
term, the higher your yield. And your Nbney Matrix
rate is guaranteed until maturity.
IT TAKES II
( '
()
' But why wait for your phone to ring? Call or visit
any of our 122 conveniently located American Savings
offices. Or call o ur toll-free Rate H otline at (800)
22 7-85 71, ext. 634, any weekday between Barn and 8pm.
AMERICAN SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
A SERVICE CF FINANOAL CORPORATION CF AMERICA
,
I ..
On
the
-
, •
WHAT AM£X DID
NEW VORK (AP) Mav 2•
Toda1y
Adva nced " Declined •
¥nchanoed I
oral i»u•1 "j New highs
New IOWS
AMEX LEA DERS ..... . ~'
NEW VORK (AP) -Most active OVtf• -the-counter 1tocks suoofieel bv NASO
Name Volui Bid Asked Chll MCI s 3.S16. 71~ I -~ Harn w l 976, 3 'J 3l4
ADPleC 7S. 30 • ~ -~
1n1rmon S67 500 • • llJ + ~ Convgl .-A.1,200 13~ I , -~
$tratus '66 000 10 • I ,., -1 • Tandem u ( 200 19~ I 7't -·~ r1nP WI .. 3 • '1 -,. ~"lhv .1~~}20 4•1. • S-6 + 1-16 Zlvad lo:.j& 10 , 1 ~
I ME TALS Qu oTES
NEW Y()Al( IAft\ -SOOI ~ _.. ..,_
Odey c..-"""Jt c.nt~. po.IN vs ~e...., 13 H _. .. per ~ NY Com.• 11P01 -111-.... LAM 2 ,. _.,.. • pounf
Doc ~·~-... ~ ~ n.. · M H! I MMaM w-. _,.__Ill ~·l\~a ........ N Y ...... M ~ "lndr • .,._,_,°""'~~I 8""'•1tlti_.,..., __ NY C-IC*-11
;'-CIW.O ......., . ..,,,, oo.a» oo ,_ n io IWll. ,.....,.,. "**-• WSoo.Al&IO .,.._ ~ nt
-.NY
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. Tok ep track of
where companies are going and wh tch p ople are helping
them get there.just watch 'CreditLine'-ev ryda tnth
Business section of your n w DlilJ Pilat
..
J
1
-
~CcMliie DAILY PILOT~. May24, 1914
Newport Chrl•tl•n 1-4'1~-==> nine teen bla teet
In CIF pl•yotfe
on Frld•J· CS.
VIiieneuve ruled
out of Sund•J'•
Indy 500 beceuM
of concunlon. CS.
Track stars
bid for state
SoCal regionals set
Friday, Satur ay
at Cerritos College
NORWALK -The bcginnin& of
the rainbow is Friday night when the
CJF Southern track and field re-
gionals at Cerritos College sets under
way for eight boys and eight girls, in
addition to a girls relay team from the
Orange Coast area.
The field will be cut to four for
Saturday's finals.
Friday's first field event begins at I ,
with the first running event at 5:40.
Saturday's finals finds the field events
beginning at 3:30, followed by the
first running event at 6.
Four qualifie rs in each event will
move on to the state finals a week
later at the Los Angeles Coliseum io a
one-<iay shot.
says he'll be putting most o f bis
emphasis on the 800.
Anderson also qualified in two
events -the 1,600 and 3,200 with
times of 4: 13.27 and 9:20.06, and
although he'IJ cocnpcte in both
events., it's the 1,600 where be figures
to make his move.
Weaj is the state leader in the
discus with his best of I 90-3V•, and
qualified for the regionals with a
winnina effort of 186-6. He's also
entered in the shot put, but it's the
discus where be is the threat to go the
distance.
Also making the cut were Edison
j unior Eric Wheclwri&ht. who had a
personal best of6-61/• tnthe high jump
at the 4-A finals; Newport Harbor
pole vaulter Fritz Howser, a j unior
who won the 4-A crown with a 14-6
effort; and University High's Steve
Jen, comingaroundoflate with a 47-3
leap in the 3-A triple jump finals.
Ocean View ~h '• Debbie Orr will be &otnc for a ehot at
the etate finala 1n the hlCh jump and triple jamp when ahe
o..r ......... _, ........ ....,
competee in the SoCal track and field re&lonala at Cerrltoe
Colle&e thla weekend. Prellma are Friday, final• Saturday.
Favored to move on to the state
meet arc Woodbridge H igh's Eric
Schermerhorn, Corona del Mar's
Dave Anderson. Marina Hi~'s Chip
Rish and Fountain Valley s Tambi
Wenj.
Schermerhorn qualified for the
regionals in the 400 and 800 with
clockings of 47.09 and I :Sl.69. but
Among the girls entered arc
Irvine's Laura Chapel (800). Edison·s
Nicole Ritcbot and Tammy Snyders
( 1,600), Ocean View's Debbie Orr
(high Jump and triple jump), Foun-
tain Valley's Cheryl Henderson (long
jump), Irvine's Elaina Oden (shot
put), Woodbridge's Jaime Kirven
(triple jump) and Laguna Beach·s
Shiryn Weenig (discus).
Tigers equal record and fans love eVery second of it
Detroit feels right at home in Anaheim
after winning 16th straight on the road
dustry workers who migrated to
California when the industry hit
bottom.
They cheered when Lance Parrish
hammered a Frank LaCorte pitch
over the left-field fence to snap a 2-2
tie and give the Tigers a 4-2 lead in the
seventh inning .
ByCURTSEEDEN
Ot IN OellJ "'°' Ii.fl
didn't feel hke they' were 1n enem)
temtory.
B> day, they're normal people.
They look hke you and me. B> night
-when the Tigers are 1n town -
the) 're rag.mg Detroit fans.
.. I don't know 1f they live here and
JUSt come out of the woodwork or
what." said Tiger center fielder Chet
Lemon. but we sure have a 101 of
support here."
They cheered when Detroit reliever
W1lhe Hernandez struck out Bnan
Downing. Reggie Jackson and Rob
Wilfong in the ninth inning to put the
Tigers in the record book. Whtie the Tigers equaled an Amen-
can League record Wednesday night
b> winning their 16th straight road
game. a 4-2 victor) o"er the Angels at
Anaheim Stadium. the) certainly
Indeed . 11 seemed as 1f half of the
41 .205 fans who ~ere on hand to
watch the Tigers equal the American
League record for consecuuve road
wins were one-time automobile in-
.. I was in the record book for a
while." Tiger Manager Spark)
Anderson proudly said after the
game. "We had a 29-inning game
·suns were suppose to lose
----But somebody forgot to tell
the players; Game 6 Friday
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Something funny happened
to the Los Angeles Lakers on their way to Boston and
Sunday's Na11onal Basketball Assoc1at1on championship
senes opener against the Celtics.
The Phoenix Suns, given up for dead in the Western
Conference final. played a suburb game Wednesday night
to ambush the Lakers 126-121 and tnm Los Angeles' lead
10 the best-of-seven scnes to 3-2.
The Lakers still can keep the date Sunday in Boston.
but they must wm Fnday night in Phoenix. ~here the Suns
already have dealt them one defeat in the senes. A seventh
Suns-Lakers game. 1f necessary. would be back at the
Forum on Sunday af\ernoon
"There was no tomorrow for us ... said the Suns'
Walter Davis. who pumped in 27 points and had JO assists
m Wednesday's upset. .. We had a JOb to do and we just
went out and did it."
Los Angeles Coach Pat Rile~ did not seem part1cularl)
d1sheanened b)' the loss, ...aying. "I still feel very confident
about this thing. Our team has been down this road before.
I feel good about our ability to get the Job done. whether it's
in Phoenix on Friday or here on Sunday."
The Lakers' Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. who scored 28
points, said. ··we think we can win on Fnday. we put the
burden on oursel"es. now we have to go out and do the
JOb."
The Suns never trailed, but they did have to stave ofT
a rally by the Lakers 1n the waning moments of the contest.
Los Angeles. which went into the final period down
100-87. came roanng back to pull to within 120-119 on
James Worthy's layup wnh 53 seconds re maining.
Davis then hit a Jumper. Bob McAdoo sank one ofh1s
own for Los Angeles. then Maunce Lucas -firing with
one second left on the shot clock -made a 20-footer 10
give the Suns a 124-12 1 pad. McAdoo's three-point
attempt missed. and the Suns' Kyle Macy made a pair of
free throws to finish the scoring.
"We·,c got some momentum $Olng home," said
Davis. "This was a real confidence builder for us."
MaC). who had 20 points and 12 assists. said. "We're
not out of the hole yet. but we have them on o ur court
now." .
All fi ve Phocn1>. starters scored 20 points or more.
La!T) Nance had 25. Maunce Lucas 23 and James
Edwards 20 for theSuns. who hit 60. 7 percent of their floor
shots to the Lakers' 53. I percent. Nance also had a game-
h1gh 13 rebounds.
Magic Johnson had 26 points and 13 assists for the
Lakers. who had won all seven of their previous playoff
games at home this year. Reserves James Worthy and Bob
McAdoo added 23 points and 19 points for Los Angeles.
Birates Fernando's arm, bat
Bominate too much for Phillies ~ i . ~ .,, .. 'G "'d& D Dodgers win 1-0 ll "as the most strikeouts b~ a ~9 ' • Dodgers· pitcher since and~ Kouta' as Valenzuela fanned 16 Ph11l1es 1n 1966
Valcn1uela. who 'itrucl.. out 12 strikes out 15 swinging and three on called third
stnke6. said. "My screwball was
breaking line and the Phillies helped
me a lot. swinging at those pitches. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Fernan·
do ValcnTUela 1ook 1h1ngs into h1~
own hands with both his arm and ht\
bat.
"I felt very strong. M) speed on the
(Pleaae aee FERNANDO/C5)
once at St. Petersburg but that
Pawtucket team took me nght out of
there."
Anderson's back and tonight he
might not have to share the record
with the 1912 Washington Senators.
"We've got a lot of fans here and in
Texas. In fact. I would say in Texas
it's a bigger ~oup:· Anderson con-
tinued. "I think a lot of people are
sensing nght now that they're seeing a
real good team. They're staning to
catch on."
One person who did not catch on
Wednesday night was Angel starter
Tommy John, who in I 0 appearances
1h1s season had worked into the
seventh inning.
But John was rocky from the st.an
and he stayed rocky un~i was
replaced in the sixth by La ort .
"Usually, Yoilfiaure y • t it
together as the game goes on, but not
tonight," admitted John who walked
live, hit a batter and gave up eight hits
in five innings.
'You want to know what m) best
play was tonight." John asked. "My
best play was a pickoff at third
(catcher Bob Boone nailed Rusty
Kuntz in the founh inning) and a
player tnpping over second base (Rod
Allen fell down rounding second and
was out at third on a relay throw from
0.., ........... "' ...... I( ...
Matt Jonee O.Urea to be on the mound for Ocean View
Friday ln the CIF 4-A playoff• a&aln•t &oath Torrance.
Wilfong in the fifth).
"You can bet I'll be out there
tomorrow trying to figure out why -
if mr pitching coach will still talk to
me.' John added.
Detroit, now 34-5, actually
snapped a bad streak -yes. they have
one -Wednesday night. The Tigers
were 0-3 in games in which they were
tied entering the seventh inning.
They had a 2-0 lead after two on a
single .by Larry Herndon. double by
Lemon and RS.I singles by Allen and
Many Castillo.
Doug DeCinccs got the Angels even
in the fourth with a homer with Fred
(Pleue eee TIGER8/C5)
OVfaces
hit-happy
Spartans
South Torrance High's Spartans
invade Ocean View High Friday
afternoon in the CrF 4-A baseball
quarterfinals-and if there is a bright
spot -at least on the surface. it
doesn't appear the Seahawks will be
faced with dueling against a pitching
pbenom.
At least, from reports out of the Bay
Lcaaue. where the Span.ans put
t<>aether a 13-0-1 record. and in their
two CIF playoff games, South Tor-
rance has accented on one area:
hitting.
In two CIF playoff games thus far,
the Span.ans have scored 18 runs on
27 hits, which should give Ocean
View High Coach Ken Moats a few
more gray hairs.
"Just about every game in the Bay
League was 13-11," was how one
reporter summed up that lea,ue.
South Torrance will bring 1ts array
of hitters to Ocean View High Friday
(3: IS) and getting the nod to start on
the mound for Moats' nine is Dean
Douty. as the Scahawks remain true
in their philosophy, at least in the
playoffs. starting the 6-3 right-hander
and Jiving him 3-4 innings. then
bringing in right-hander Matt Jones.
with Douty still available to return
because of today's liberal substitution
rules in prep baseball .
Wielding the biggest stick for South
Torrance has ~n Bay League MVP
Chris Donnels, a 6-0 senior shortstop
who bit .S l 0 in league and 1s 6 for 8 in
the playoffs. including three triples.
The Spattans used ri~t-hander
Larry Johnson for the distance in
their 9-6 victory over No. 2 secdeH
Camarillo. and figure to start ri&ht-
hander Matt Kirmer Friday.
Valenzuela struc k out 15 Wcdne\-
day night as he stopped the Philad<.'1-
ph1a Phil hes' winning streak at I 0
games with a 1-0 victory for the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
He also drove in the winning run in
the fifth inning. With a runner at third
and one out. Valenzuela hit a broken
bat grounder to shortstop. M11'e
Scioscia. who had doubled and
reached third on a wild pitch. came
home with the game's only run
Olympicsailingtrials tighteningup
Valenzuela. who lost his last three
stans in games that saw the Dodger~
score a total of three runs, boosted his
record 10 4-5
He beat Steve Carlton (2-3) in a
classic p1tch1ng duel.
Ironically. last week Carlton beat
Valenzuela. h1tt1ng a bases-loaded
home run to break open a game that
ended up 7-2 for Ph1ladelph1a.
Valenzuela's 15 stnkeouts were a
maJOr league high for the season. and
a personal career h1&h for the Los
A.ngcles kfi-handcr. Mono Soto of
C1ncinnat1 had 13 apmst 1 louston
May 2.
Final two races to decide
yachting team selections
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY
0.., ............. .,..,
LONG BEACH -The Ol)mp1c tnals for
the Sohn& and Star clas~s tumcd mto a whole
new ballgame. a dogfight. or whatever chchc you
prefer. Wednesday.
trong 18-20 knot wester!) winds tightened
up the standings 1n both classes and lcf\ the final
choices for the Olympic yacbtma team up for
grabs 1n the final two races. The only th ma sav1na
the leaders after the eighth race Wednesday were
throwout races.
8111 Buchan of Bellevue. WHh. apparently
did not care for the strong wind~. After wmnina
two straight in the sof\ ~tuff. he dropped to nmth
in Wcdnc~af \race 1n the tar Class. •
Paul Cayard of San Bruno. on the other
hand, showed .be 1s accustomed to the breezy
aoina and won the race, putting him 6/IOth of a
. point bebind Buchan after the two had thrown
out their worst two races.
The Solina Oass stand.mas also tightened up
as Dave Perry won the eighth race to edie within
1.6 points of the leader, Robbie Hames of
Coronado, who finished ei&hth. Haines 1
accustomed to the h&ht airs off San D1cao and
Perry apparently hkcs the stronaer winds off
Connecticut.
Perry's move up in the stand•f\l.S was 11dcd
by his protest-apmst Ed Baird ofSt. Petenburaan
the seventh race on Tuesday. Baird's ch~
quahficat1on dropped him to fourth In the
standtn15 and Perry moved up one sp0t.
The sclecuon to the Olympic yachuna team
now hinacs on who beats whom in the final two
races and who ha the best throwoutJ.
I lames as haniana onto the lead 1n the Solina n,m by v1nur of throWln& out a d1,qualincat1on ' .
and a mnth·place finish. Perry is discardina 12th
and seventh-place finishes ..
ln the Star Class the final results appear to
binae on a match race between Buchan and
Cayard in the finaJ twO races. John Dane Ill of
Etcttawpe.. Miss. is omc points bcruod Cayard.
So11ftt (...,..tfl recel -1 Deve P9r'f'Y. ~.COM, 2
JoM K0&)9Ckl, Nova,., Caat , J Deve Cl.W'tl•. ~.
A.Vu • • Ed a.tr.I, $t Pel9r'°"'9, Ae , $ t M Alleft, Stwlnt "'"· MSM.7 6. 0.¥t ~.~.Ill. 7, 8ucldv Melth. llftde,
WIK.: • • ..... Helne!I, coron.oo. '· ~ Sli.tftl, •n SI ~ Min : IO Jeff MMr .... 1 TltlUr'Of\ 'Solnt •lendlnta (!Mtt l-«41 -I Helnn, JU, 2 Perrt,
M 1 J C41t'tll, 40.7. 4. lalr•. •7.1; L Oleolft, M ~' 6. Sli.lft4, St.A 7 ~ 11 O. I Dofl '°'*'· Wlildmoel, ,..._ eu.Oi 9 Koalwdll, "'·,. ~.-1. se. fellfttll tlC.9) -l P•UI C..¥9N, ~ lrullo; 1 JONI
OtlM Ill, 8Kel•wM. Ml i. Ai91l ~·· Ml Arlliwtoll, NJ• 4, A,,._ MeMAlrt, ~. HJ , 5 JOfWI ~..i.no. OWN Hll, •u .. • Mtf'tl ~.kn ~ 7 ...,.., 5'1f'e1Ut Ill, L..-IMecl\, I Autle Oler, Mleml, Ae • t t ll
~11, l*Wf, Wall\, \G. Si.van .__.......,, LOM ~
"" ••llMIN• !bell •-~·II -t. tvcNn. ti• 2 C•YllN., '9 OJ J Dent, JI O, • ~I. Jf I; L RIYftOld&, d .1. 6. .....
Wrlltit, ~,.,_,II, 5$.1, 1 /lllieNIM~, •U~ I Oita, '5 \; t
WaMjlf .... J ti~~~ "-f I
'
Canadian driver
Villeneuve niled
out of Indy 500
llo)'ala' 91..,11; oatdaela Barna Gardner p
.., Ba.ell held aucaeo to .u bi1t Ill Wedneday niaht ud KaJlAU City ICored -
an uncai'ned Nn few a I~ victofy over the Nine Pirates, six Rus ers c--a.. Aon., Ga'll1 W• ·~aa.er.o. 11'.Cwl IF-JeflGMlw ~C.. IF~Wont'=.,c.n..
P,.
Wbiic SolL and Bttti ....._ who thttw a -~----~--.;.....;----........ -,..._..._-.. _ th~hit1Cf. Black •truck out nint and did DOI Wille: a earn honors; Mayne i I. F'Nm AP '11p1tdle9
INOIANAPOLIS -WheeUna and II dealina for lhe final 1tanina 1pot in
Sunday's S2.S million Indianapolis SOO-
mile race bcun Wedne$day after Canada's Jacques
Villeneuve, woo 1uffe~ a concussion in a cruh durint
practice last week, was ruled medically unfit to drive by
Speedway medical director Henry Bock.
Althouah Villeneuve will not be in the race, bit
team still has the oplion or namina another driver for iu
already.qualified car, withdrawina the entry or sellint
the car to another team, U.S. Auto Club steward An
Meyers said.
Villeneuve. 28 and the defendina Can-Am cham-
pion, was one of six Indy rookies who qualified for the
race. He was hospitalized for two days after crashing his
backup car last Thursday.
"After consulting W1th the neurosurgeon, a
decis1on was made that he is not fit to drive in the S()().
mile race thjs year," Bock said.
The doctor said Villeneuve will have further
examinations, but that the decision by the Speedway
medical staff to keep him out of the 33-car lineup was
final.
"It seems ltke he has intermittent disorientation,"
Bock said. "h's nothing that would bother a man
walling on the street, but put that man in a race car, it's
totally different."
Freano State off probation
The Pacific Coast Athletic Association Ill
has removed the general probationary
status of Fresno State University's athletic
department. It was announced Wedne~ •
day.
The move to drop the probation, which included
sanctions against both Fresno State's footbaU and
basketball programs, was unanimously supported by
the PCAA's Council at its meeting in Las Cruces, N.M.,
last week.
Fresno State has been serving the probation
imposed by the conference and the NCAA for
infractions of NCAA ~ruiting and extra benefit rules
committed by its football and basketball programs.
The school's conference probationary status was
removed as of last week's meeting and the NCAA 's
probation is scheduled to be concluded on June I.
Briton ahead ln decathlon
LOS ANGELES---. Daley Thompson m of Great Britain totaled 4.331 points
Wednesda)' to talce the first-day lead in an
intemauonal decathlon meet at UCLA's
Drake Stadium.
Thompson. former world record-holder in the
event. ran the 100 meters in 10.S4 seconds; long-
jumped 2S-0¥•: put the shot S l-41h: high-jumped 6-I 1'2,
and ran the 400 meters in 48.17 seconds.
Thompson has a lifetime best of 8. 743 points. The
world record 1s 8,790 by Jurgen Hingscn of West
Germany. Hingscn set the record June S. 1983.
In second place entering today's final five events
was Dave Steen of Canada with 4.139 points, followed
by Jeff Montpas wi~h 4,011 points, Danny Jackson ~th
3. 90 I points. and Simon Poelman of New Zealand with
3, 761 points.
Keenan new Flyers coach?
ph1a Ayers scheduled a news conference '
PHILADELPHIA -The Philadel-~
today, at which they were expected to name
University of Toronto hockey coach Mike
Keenan as their new coach.
Bob Clarke. the Flyers new general manager.
interviewed the 34-year-old Keenan last week at the
Montreal Cup tournament in Kitchener, Ontario. and
again Wednesday at a stte that was not disclosed.
Clarke has said he was very impressed with
Keenan.
The only other serious candidate for the job was
Ted Sator. lhe B-year-old Flyers assistant coach. Sator,
who worked with Keenan at a summer hockey school. is
expected to remain as assistant to Keenan.
Keenan led the American Hockey League's
Rochester Americans, the minor-league affiliate of the
Buffalo Sabres, to the 1983 Calder Cup. Sabres General
Manager Scotty Bowman strongly recommended
Keenan to the Flyers.
Celtics brush aside Milwaukee
BOSTON -Larry Bird led a balanced m
attack with 21 points as the Boston Celtics,
gunning for their I Sth National Basketball
Association title. moved into the final
round of the playoffs Wednesday night with a 115-108
victory over the Milwaukee Bucks.
The Celtics led most of the way in the fifth game as
they wrapped up the Eastern Conferenc.e final series.
4-1.
The Celtics. unbeaten an nine playoff games at
home. roared back from a 3S-34 deficit after the first
quarter to grab a 62-S2 halftime lead. The Bucks cu.t the
margin to 70--63 before Boston took command wtth a
Oashy I 3-posnl burst that gave 1t a 83-63 bulge with S:24
left in the third quaner.
"EWPOllT HAlllOll
SHlf.Jy'ARD
bener in winnina the swiftly pla~l!tthina duel ... In
other American Leaaue l*O\CI Y .... drove m two runt with a bloop sinale u &°itJm0tt capulized on
nine wa1U ao ed&e ~nd, 9-S, dtsph.t thrtt A's
bornen, iacludinabev• • ....... ·.13th orlht year ... J• aue, and relievers 'Im•)&., and Daals Lamp
combined on an eip1-biuer and 0..1e Bell clouted tu• f'ounh homer run of the seaaon to lead Toronto to a
4-1 victory over Minnetoll ... Teua' Prak T .....
JC1tiered six hit&. S.W1 Bell homered and Pete
O'Brtee knocked in three runs to lif\ the Rangers to a 6-1
viciory over Milwaukee. Tanana, 5-4, has three
coml)lete sames in a row and has allowed only two
earned runs in the lut 27 inni np ... Oeveland jumped
on Boston relievers S&eve CrawfM'd and Belt SIUJey for
three runs on a walk and four consecutive singles for a
S-4 victory, snappin..1 the Red Sox' three-pme winning
streak ... Rookie left-bander Deul1 Rasm111e11 fired a
two-rutter and struck out I 0 throu&h eight innings as the
New York Yankees blanked Seattle. 3-0. Making his
American League debut, RasmuJSCn walked three and
gave up one-out doubles to Dave·Rndenoa in the fifth
and seventh inninp. On both occasions, Rasmussen
retired the next two batters.
Trout reel• in win for Chicago
Steve TTout and Lee Smltl combined •
on a five-hitter and Garry Mattlilew1 belted
a solo homer Wednesday to lead the
National l.aJue East leading ChicaJo
Cubs to a l-1 victory over Atlanta. The tnumph was the
fourth straight for the Cubs as Trout, S-2. hmited the
Braves to three hits. He walked five and struck out fi ve
before leaving for a pinch-hitter in the seventh ...
Elsewhere in the National league, Harry Spilman
belted a three-run homer to cap a four-run upnsing in
the fint inning and Bob hepper
scattered nine bits, leading Hous-
ton to a 4-0 victory over St.
Louis.Knepper, 4-S, walked two
and struck out seven en route to
his second shutout of the season .
.. KevlD McReynold1 belted a solo
home run with two outs in the top
of the 11th mning to give San
Diego a 2-1 victory over Mon-
treal. Following a 41-minute rain
delay, Montreal reliever Andy
McGaffipa, l-3, retired the first
1wo San Diego batters but McReynolds bit a 3-0 pitch
over the center-field fence for his eighth homer of the
season ... Lee Ma11IUJ'1 home run and BUI Madlock'•
two-run single keyed a six-run Pittsburgh fifth inning as
the Pirates ended a three-game losing streak by
defeating Cincinnati, 7-2 . . . Rain caused post-
ponement of the game between San Francisco and New
York.
Penguin• won't fire coach
PenJuins President Paul Martha has ,
PITTSBU RGH -Pittsburgh ~
denied a published repon the National
Hockey leaJue team is ready to oust coach
Lou Angotti.
The Pittsburgh Press reponed Wednesday that the
Penguins are likely to replace Angotti with either Bob
&rry, former coach of the Los Angeles Kings and
Montreal Canadiens. or Gene Ubriaco.
Ubriaco was the coach last season of the Balumore
SkJpjacks. the Penguins' Amencan Hockey Leagu~
farm club. A year ago, the Penguins promoted Angotu
from coach of the SkipJacks to the Pens when former
coach Eddie Johnston was appointed general manager.
The Penguins managed just a I 6-S8-6 record
during the 1983-84 season under Angotti. makmg them
the NH L's worst-record team forthe second season an a
row.
Baseball drug agreement OK'd
NEW YORK -Major league baseball •
players have overwhelmingly ratified a
tentative agreement to regulate drug de-
pendency, Donald Fehr, acting executive
director of the players association announced Wednes-
day.
But a lack of unity has put off a ratification vote by
the 26 clubs owners. which originally was scheduled for
today at Chicago.
At the heart of the tentauve agreement negotiated
by a committee represcnung both the plalers and the
owners would be a three-man panel o expens to
determine 1f a player has a chemical dependency
problem.
The panel could becalle<f on by a club 1f a player the
team feels has problem does not voluntanly seek help.
Cribbs returns to Stallions
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. -Joe Cribbs. [i]
star running back for the Birmingham c II•
Stallions. returned to the United States
Football league team Wednesday, ending
a mid-season walkout in a contract dispute.
Stallions Coach Rollie Dotsch said Cribbs would
be in uniform against the New Orleans Breakers in a
televised game this Sunday but it wasn't known how
much playing time he would see.
Tei..telon,radlo
Area softball teams still
alive in the C'IF 4-A play-
offs will be on the road
when competition resumes
Friday.
SHIPYARD HAUL OUT RATES
Among the 3 o'clock
quarterfinal matchups will
be Sunset League cham-
pion Manna (24-S) v1s1tm&
Northern Laaue victor
R1Jhetu (17-l-l); unset
runner-up Fountain Valle)'
( l 5-10) at sccond-sc~cd
Garckn Grove (27-1 ); and
Anaclus k104pin Mater Oc1 (I~!) play1na at third·
Sttdcd Kenned) (23-3). CLEAN It PAINT BOTTOM
f8.SO Per Foot Labor Only
STEAM CLEANING f45.00.br.
YARD LABOR f40,00 Per Hour -HAUL OUTS TO 75' -75 TONS/Manne Scale
223·21ST STREET NEWPORT BEACH, CA HM3 (714) 67S.2SSO
,.
In the small school\
cla i(K'ataon, top.seeded
Ne'Nl><>n C'hnsttan (I~ I)
hu drawn a home as~11n·
mcnt against Pasadena
Poly ( 16-7).
Marina has been home
for 1t first two pmc$..
beahna Lo, Amiaos. :?·I.
and clobberina Rolhn~
Hill~ 18..0
oranae Cou1 Collqe sophomore Mcoad bacmu
Jeff Gardner bu been aelected \be Soulb Coal Con·
fettnce'i beaeball playet of the year few 1914.
Oardnt'r was tbe unanimous choice of coefereDcc
coachea al thrir annual meedq.. Meanw1aile O<.."Ca Mike
IF-Ke¥ia !law, w ..
IF-Pam Cuan.i,...., ,....._
IF-Joba v.,..... suaa Am
OF-JclOucia. ~ COii&
OF-Paul niben. Saila AtW I t.
Mayne wu tabbed u eoach of the year.
Gardner played a ~or role in
OCC'' drive IO the South Cout pen-
nant. The Pirate team captain hjt .431 in
conference play and &ed the circuit in
runs acorcd with 42 and did not commit
a sin&)e error in the 28 conference
gamci.
The 5-10. 160-pound product.or
Esancia Hi&h was a first-team all·
conference dioice last season also.
OF-Millie Seaae, ~ • OF-dtoe ltoblee, Mi.'fin Aaionio
OF~ Boo1ay, CenilOI DH-Phil wooa.ey, suaa Aoa
Util-Kun Bcamaderfer, FUUenOG
SZ()ON'D 1'BAll
P-Stevc Meodaa, 0,.. COMl
P-Dion Beck. Cerritos
P-Steve Cha\'tt. Fullerton
C-Saeve Lotti. Fullerton
18-Ron Ewan, Cerrito1
.... ID. • SD. •
lo: • so. .
H t1 •• .lll
Orange Cout led the conference
with nin~ playcrJ named to the '8" ll=r=r----squad, includina six first-team selec-
lions. The fir5Mcam choices included Gardner, left·
handed pitcher Jeff Osterode, catcher Damon Berrytull,
first baseman Kevin Reimer, and outfielders Jef Oarci.a
and Mike Senne. Alt six are sophomores.
If-Larry Cratstnberi. Oranae Cout
IF--Kr1th Lock.han. Mt. San Antonio
IF-Vioce Sb1nholster, Santa Aft&
OF-Scon Willnnaon, Sant.1 Ana
OF-Ro11 Morello, Ookkn West
OF-Bobby Oould, Fullerton
So.
So.
Fr.
So. Fr.
fr.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
So.
So.
So.
So .
Fr. So.
So.
.341 .)10 •• .297
.367
.271 .162 Second-place Golden West had six players named to
the team -three on the first team and three on the second.
OF-Tom Chavez, Cypress
OF-Ocron Curran, Sana Ana
OH-Fred Tutlk, Orar\ae Coa5l
OH-David AppleioUer, Golden West
Util-Brad Sechower, Golden West
. l4t •
.)51
.322
.}50
Rustlers named to the first unit were pitcher Mike
Schooler. infielder Kevin Elster and catcher Shane Flores.
FIRST TEAM
Poi. Player, ac:lllool
P-JefTOsterode. Orange Coast
P-Mike Schooler, Golden West
P-Jim Halley, Santa Ana
C -Damon Berrvhill. Golden West
Year
So.
So.
So.
So.
A•&· 8-2
7·2
s.1
.306
HONORABLE MENTION
Joe Kwolek (Oranae Coast): IUn William' (Cerritoa~
Roaer Zotneck (Mt. San Antonio); Amin David (F~
enon); Mike Walker (Fullerton); Pat Flynn (Santa Au);
Steve Beer (Sant.a Ana).
Player of Y car: Jeff Gardner (dran,c Cout)
Coach of Year: Mike Mayne <Oranae Coast)
Cuba withdraws;
Walkouts total 9
Vanguards
slgn three
Southern California Coll$
basketball coach Bill Reynolds ba
announced t.M sipiQI of"three'~
muruty coll• uansfen. most notabl~. ~ Lucu, an All..sou.h
Coast Conference forward &om f u.IJ,.
erton ColJqe.
Samaranch meets
with Communist
leaders today
PRAGUE, Cuchoslov~kia (AP)
-Communist leaders of the Olym-
pic boycott met in closed session with
IOC President Juan Antonio
Samar;rnch as h~ and other Olympic
officials sought to turn back the wave
of walkouts from the Los Angeles
Games. ,
Eleven countries were represented
at the session loday, held in a hiJh·
sccunty hotel reserved for visiting
communast party officials and other
dignitaries.
Nine of the countnes -the Soviet
Union. East Germany. Czechoslo-
vakia, Hungary, Bulgana, Vietnam,
Mongolia. Poland and Cuba -had
pulled out of the Games by the ume
the meeting began. Cuba's an-
nouncement came Wednesda)'.
The others here. North Korea and
Romania. had not announced their
plans. There were Sl$l'S of v~wi~
pressure on Romania to JOin its
Warsaw pact allies in the walkout
Officials from that country had
earli er gi ven assurances that their
athletes would compete in Los An-
geles.
But Romanian ambassador Comet
Panzaru. asked Wednesday about bis
country's intentions, said ··we don't
know yeL.. The deadline for an-
nouncing participation is June 2.
Monique Berlioux, director of the
IOC, also would say only, "I don't
know." when asked what the IOC
officials hoped to accomplish here.
She and Samaranch met with Los
Angtles orpnizers and communist
sports officials in Lausanne, Switzer-
land, last week in a vain attempt to
resolve the complaints of the Soviet
bloc.
The boycotters claim the Reagan
administration twisted the Games
into an anti-communist show and
profess fcan for their athletes' safety.
Mario Vasq_ucz Rana, chairman of
the International Federation of
Olympic Committees, amved from a
tour of eastern European countries
and told reponen Wednesday he
doubted the walkouts would st.age
their own version of the Olympia.
Also signing to play for the Vao-
guards arc Randy McAlli11a, a ~3
fmward from Shasta Coile.-. and
Larry Wilkson, a 6-0 auard ftom
Cbemeketa CC out of Safem. Ore.
Lucas, who may play center for sec, avera&ed 13.8 points per same
for the Hornets. The ~ 7 star wu a
first-team AU-South Coast Coo-
ference selection.
McAllister played at Hun~
Bcacb High and avcf'aFd 14.4 points
per game while at Shasta.
Wilson averaged l 3.1 points per
game.
"We feel real good about these
young men." noted Reynolds. ""They
should really help us ouL ••
Reynolds has two returners from
this )'-cat's squad -guard ShetWln
Durham and forward Neal Andersoo
-back for the 1984-SS campaign.
'Fox Night' set at Fairgrounds
Speedway motorcycle racing's an-
nual "Fox Night" is scheduled for
Friday at Orange County Fair-
grounds, with all females admitted
free of charge, regardless of age and
without any special ticket.
In addition to the special ad-
mission offer, national champion
Kelly Moran will be going for bis third
straight scratch main event win, with
competition coming from Brad
Oxley. the winner or Jast week's two
consolation races.
A special match race bas been
scheduled between these two in
addition to the regular format.
Also, such riders as Alan Christian,
Mike Faria, Dubb Ferrell and others
will be riding.
Gates open at 6:30 and the first race
is scheduled to begin at 8.
For further information. phone
492-9933.
TIGERS TIE RECORD. • • FromC4
Lynn aboard.
But Parrish blasted a LaCorte pitch
over the left-field fen~ to put the
Tigers into position to break the
Senators' record, and at wall be up to
Jack Morris to put the Dctont road
show into mouon tonight.
Dan Petry, an El Dorado High grad
who knows what it's hke to ha' ea fc">'
fans in the stands when the Tigers
come to Anaheim, 'ot the Victory
with seven strong innings.
"Last night I could sense the
crowd." Petry said. "I could see 1t
when Whatalcer came to the plate and
the people were yelling 'Lou.' It's kind
of nice to have the fans ...
Petry, now 8-1 . said he tned not to
think of the record.
"It cros~ my mind before the
game and last night. but when )ou·re
out thert you have more on ~our
mind than what happened in IQ I~ ··
the hard-thro">' mg right-hander said
Actual!)'. 1t seems hke the Tiger;
haven't lost smce 19 1 ! and
Anderson. for one. thmks his team
can do more than Just etch 1ts name an
the ~Ord book.
"If this club continues to pla) ~ell.
it's fOing to change thmgs around. I
don t know if it's going to tum a
nation around but more people are
happier about somethmg hkc this
than who's 1oing to run for Presi-
dent." the Tiger skipper added.
ANO•L NO,..S: Tiie Anoe!\ annovnceo lhev
~ ''°'*' veteran Pltcl'lef Cre!e S••n after
wetctllno !he former,,,... rlol'tf·Mndlr throw for
Ille tnlrd time S•en. WflO t..a • llfetlme 59-71
record ano l n ERA. wlll be In uniform afld
a vallllt>le for 1on1tt11 ·1 flnM wf ltl tn. T1"n N
Ille Angels a<e ~to pre-vent the TIOIO from
oelnlno their r-d-breaklno 17tri roed vlctorv.
,,...., mev riave to dO ll wltno.,t ~uled 1ler1er
G.-ZMll The AnollS ennounced ""-' Z.IWI t..a
s.ufferecl • t.llonl muscle 1trell'I In 1111 rlotlt lll'Oln
wrine Pffcrilno In N-Yortl &all ..-elld. ~ -1111ec1 as extr..,,..v ~lful for 1oni.in•1 oame.
Shoul<I lal'ln min IN Gell, Am Sla1IM ~ llar1
tono!ll'll'l 7·JO contest To melle room for
Swa,,, IN A~ lll8C9CI Jefwt CVl1ll on Ille JO-
oav d•"9Dle0 1111 retro.dive to ,,,.v 11 . Aneel
l/lof'hlOO Dia ~ tutfel'ed a CUI tour1fl
tlno« on 1111 riont llel'd wnen ,.,. was 1111 bv • llllell
bv r:>etrv In 1,,. 111111 Inning X·r•vt wre ~!Ive ano Schofteto•1 condition lor 1onl0ht'1 eeme •H
Q~stl<H\a!M
FERNANDO •••
FromC4
fastball \\aS bener than e\<CT. I nad
trouble controlhng 1t -that's wh> I
"'alkcd SI\. Most of the walks came on
the nsan g fastball.··
.\~ for the rest of the Dodgers not
c;conng rum for ham. he said: .. You
ha' e to go to the mound with the idea
that \OU haH' to win and can'\ think
of ho" mam runs the te-1m wt.II score for )'OU •• •
Of has broken bat &rounder,
Vaknzuda commented. "l hol)e I
break I 00 bats. As Ions as I &tt 100
RBI that will be fine."
Valenzut la retired Glenn Wilson
on a pop to short and Len Matus:iek
on a Ov ball to end the game.
Golden West faces Sacramento
In a rerat of ll't year's howdown. Golden West
Colle,e an cramento Ctt)' Colleae will meet this
weekend for the state community college softball
champion hip -and Lhe Rustlers arc hoping for a rcpc:at
o fla t year' outcome.
DunHilp 11 ..... , .... , ............ -"""· ... on 1dcnna she b.as
tir'Clcss freshman ·tchcr Ka~n Carlson set 10 ao in all
three pmes 1f n
Carlson tcmcd our butout 1n pitching lhe Rultlen
to Lhe Sou them Cahfoma champion hip last -tttC"Od. In
the p~ she lowettd hcrcamcd run avenae to0.l4and
improver her ttoord this season •o 21-1 . Tht Ru lien took the two-out--Of·three 1trics from the
Panthers a year q o thinks to a scventh·inn1na home run ~y Donna McElrea an the third pme. And. as a tt ult.
Golden Wt ' cap1uttd it' fourth state utle m the last fht
years
Bq1nn1na Saturday in Rockhn. they'll try to m*" 11
five out of su. when the two trams squart. off for pmC1 at
noon and '.\ pm A Lh1rd pme W111 be played Sund•). 1f
nettsssary.
.. I can Stt th1 wncs be1na a duplicate of tut year's ~lite pmes,'' )' Golden West Coach Jan Oun1ap
"We've ~n a lot ot 1-0 pmr th11 ~ar nd I cnn't ttt ll
tlcing any dtfftrcnt th1~ weekend "
Golden WC$t bn 1 l4-S-1 rttord into the SCne1..
while Sictamento ('(' lS l 1-7.
Tbe Panthcn counter Wlth pttcher tcphan~ Pri~
who wdl bnnaa 29-6 record and a 0.60 ERA into t.M acnes.
The Sacramento hituoa attack lS ~ Cbmita
Roa.trs (.48S), Diana. l..uU. (.41 0) and Dd>bie clJOO
( 378).
lncontra,t. Ciokkn Wt'\' hnootbad to~lyon ak>tof
hming -only umtl) bl~ h1~ -10 10 atona vnlh
(arl'JOn '\ p111.~hma.
Launt Hnller (.W6). Vo na Romlli C )) and Lori
h chettl"T ( '17) ha\t' P9Ctd the Ru •I« attack th1 o. t
OfMge Coat DAILY PILOTIThunday. May 24. 19&4
MAJOtt L.•AGUI STANDINGI
AmtrkMI Lee.U.
W•JT DIVlllOH W L .. <1. 01 .,.....
Mlnne,o•a
ClllcallO
S..lllt
O.kla11e1
IC.•nM• Cllv
Tt .. a
O.lroU
T0tonto
eanlmott
MltwauaM
lost on H..,. Vork
Cl•vtleno
n 21 SJ) ,. ti 411
70 23 ... s
20 23 .. ~
19 2• .. ,
•• 2) 410
1' 26 :Ml
aAST DIVISION
)4 s
27 14
13 It It 70 ,, 24
11 1l •• n Wtdl'IHCLIV'• Seen• O.rrolt 4, A,..., 2
9elllmore 9, Oeklend 5
Toronto • Mln,,.so1e 1
Cl•Y•l•nd s. aoalon 4
Tues 6. Mllwauk" I a<ana" City I, Chicago 0
New 'l"Ork 3, SH lllt 0
TOdllv'• G•mes
2 ,..., ,.,.,
3''t
.~.
'
I n
IS
t7
17 ') 17 ')
DttroH IMorrls I 11 •' .,,..., (laM
S )) If')
&a111mort IOav' • 01 al Oel\lenO
!Ii.< ue11er I· II Ml•wau~ff •CalOwtll • J) •' Thi\ Slpwerl 7 61 tnl
Ntw Yori>. I Nlt~ro • 11 ti S.etltt
Lenu11on 2·ll nl
flrldlv's G•me•
8au•mort •• A,..., '"' C1tve1e nd a• Toron•o 111 Kanu\ C•lv e• 80$10" (ri•
C'>•t•llO •' TtXH ,,,, M11waukH a1 M1Mno1e 111
Ofl •ro11 111 SHltle 1n)
Npw Vork al 0 111>.lanel 1'
National LHQUt
WEST DIVISION
w L
Ooel9et\ JS XI
Jl• arta 21 19
Sar D PVO n 20
C1nc1r""' 11 11
HOu\10"' 18 24
Son F', a"tt \r.v s H
EAST DIVISION
C '>'CaQ<> 2• 1 S
p,,11aat•u•"e n 17
New Vo.-10 17
Mn,,,rea 21 11
~I l ou•\ 71 73
Plll,Our11n U 1)
Wt<lntso.v·a ScMts
D~s I P1'1ladeion111 0
Hou\lon 4 SI Lou s 0
c~.cooo l At1en1a 1
Pct
SS6 S?S
S2• soo
•?'I
l1S
61S
SIS
S•I soo
•17
)18
Gii
I >
I' 1 . s •
1 J
I >
J
• J
s ' 9
Sa" Franc·tco •' New vor• PPd re • Ser O l!QO 2 Mon1fPa I 11 nnino'
P "IDurgl' 1 C."< ""•' 7 Tedlv's Gemes
O"-t Pe11e • 1 •' p., aoe•o'>•a
~e"'''O"" 1-11 ~n .111'~"1• Pt•tt J II or>d Faicont 1 • •'
C "'•<aoo 1 lh,,,ev 2 J 0 10 S•nderwn • I 1 1 S11~ Franc u o Ln~•~ I 41 •' Ntw
fu•> 1C.ooat n J )1
(1N onnal Procf 7 7 •' P1ll\bu•11n
IMCW111,om\ 1 31
FrtOaV'l Gamel
00<!9t'l 01 Npw 10•• n
(•f"IC1nnat1 "'' C"·C$Vf
Ser F•a"< \CO ot MO"llrfll "'
~' Lou·• .~ P.' 8 N e ',... S•" 0 ego a• p., ·~·r~ • •I
P t1\0vrg t' •' t10u\'0" ~
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tloers 4, A"914l 2
OETAOIT CALIFORNIA
•b r" bl ab r n bi
Ku"'ll rl 1 0 I 0 Pplt 'Cl ) 0 0 0
KG O\oro rt 1 0 0 0 C artw 10 • 0 0 0
Tr emm•n ~ O 2 0 lvnr-rl 4 I l 0
C.erotv lb ~ I I 0 Qp("'C\ )D • I 1 1
L NPar$1 , S I 2 1 O~w"1ng II • 0 (J 0
Ht rnoon II S I IO ReJi.1nO'> ) 0 0 0
LPmon Cl 2 I 7 0 w lono 11> 4 0 0 0
Allen d~ I 0 t 1 8oon• c J 0 I O
DEvn\ d~ 1 (I 0 0 Scriol,10 \\ I 0 1 0
MCa1• lb J 0 2 8er1ur u1 I 0 I 0
wn,1a••lb 1000 P•cco•on 0000
8•0•"\ 2b I 0 0 0
Bero~., o 7 O u O
Tote11 l4 • 11 4 T•t•h ) I 2 S 1
SCOf't DV lnnlne\
0,,,.041 020 ooo 100-•
C ahfOntlt 000 100 000 -1
C.omf W• ,,., 11 Re Par• \I 41
l 0 8 Op••o•• 1u < • •or roe S
7B T•om"'P L• "0' )8 Scnol1P•a HR Of'( ntt\ 8 L NParr.v
~ 8rou• en\ IP H R ER 88 SO
Oetroll
Ppl!, Vol I 1 1 ~ 7
Hpr• a 01 ') 1 2 C 0
Cahtornit
JO" l e( <Ylf l 0 2
H8P Sc11oel1e•o ov Pttr•
~p11n1 T-231 A-41 705
' ' 0 0
1 ~
7 0 Al pn lbv
~1 1JiliUkfi
trown
DeClnce• cv-14t114illf•
l'UttOfl
Wllfont
LvM
Orlen
konlctn
Downing
Pttl~ IOont
Scl\oilatct It•. Jedi.on Pkxlolo
Ito. J.cllaon T.._
Al'lllll •Wf'lllU
IATTINe
Al • H Ka • 0 2 0
IS) 27 ... •
13' 11 Jt 3
SI 6 It 1 >7 7 10 I ,. 7 21 ,
149 23 ,, ) '° 14 2t 4 • 0 1 0
IM 17 3* 7
1... 22 » 1
137 10 JO 0 13) 12 29 ,
15S 22 » 7 n 4 • o JO , 3 0
llal ~
1 500 nm 17 .,
• 216
2 270
11 Mt
7 U2
11 .250
0 uo
2• 247
12 .231
10 .227
• 211
24 213 I .192 , .100
11' .M7 1474 114 M4 41
.. rTCHlftG
I.. H ... SO W•LlllA
S.nc11e1 251 • 15 6 I) 4· l 2 1) For KT\ 1•')) 14 3 10 1-1 J 10
Z.hn 601) ff 14 IS S·3 2.24 JOl\n 74 11 21 19 3·J 2 4l
Corbell 12 10 • S 0·0 > 00
Wiii •7\'> .. 31 SO 4·• 4 12 lt~nlca '3 t4 n 2• S•3 u.J
Ka utm.n IS II • 1 0·1 S 40 C11rlls I 14 3 4 0·~ S 6J
LaCorlt 16;v, 17 10 ' 0·2 S.t4 S1a1on %1 'l'i 3• 10 7 1-1 6 7S
8rown II 16 9 S 0-1 t 00
Total\ l'Oll> 410 l Jt 167 ZJ. 21 J.1' $evt•· S.nentJ •. K1vtmen, Cortltl1.
NATIONAL L.EAGUE
D~ 1, Ph•tet 0
LOS ANGIL.SS .. HILAOIL .. HIA
Su. 21>' S•uooa lo
8••10r n
Guerrer Jo
MIO~orf
Miller 11
Lanorx II
RRn101 ct SclOSCl8 C
v11en111 o
eltr II bl
• 0 , 0
l 0 0 0
4 0 I 0
J 0 0 0
4 0 I 0
2 0 0 0
I 0 0 0
4 0 I 0
4 I I 0
) 0 0 1
Mtrhbl
Semuel ?I> 4 0 0 0
Mad001 ct 3 0 I 0
scnmdl 3o 1 o o o
Lerceno rf 2 o O O
GWll.on II 4 0 0 0
Maluk It> 4 O 1 O
Vlr1111 c 3 0 0 0
0.JHUS U 2 0 0 0
Cerllon o 2 O I O
Wcknfa ol'I I O O O
Ca mpbel o 0 0 0 0 TO'lals 31 I 6 1 Tetals 'l1 0 ) 0
Scere bv I~ ,
Los.,,...., 000 010 000-1
........ Oflle 000 000 000-0
G1me Wlnn1n11 R81 -Velenruele 111
E-ScnmlOI OP-Lot Anoetet '· Phil• 0.IPhll 1 L08-Los •"9tlel 7. Pnfledel·
ori11 6 ?8-Sc•oscle S8-S1muet 1251
S-S1ut>O$
I,. H lit •••• so
Les Aneelft
Va1tnz11 W,•·S 9
PfllledelptUe
Cerllon L.2·3 I
C1mooe11 I
WP-Vel•nzue4•
A-71.'64
0
' 0 0 Carlton
0 • 1S
? 0 0 0 T-2·17
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
American L.Nwe
8A TTINO (90 .. O.la). R Lew, Chlcaoo,
366. G1rt1tv, Oelroll. 35'. Enoi., Minne·
sole, 347, 8'11, Toronto, 34S, Murrav
S.llfmore, 342. Trammell, Ottrolt, .:Ml.
RUNS ltl~en 8elllmor•, 3S. Tremmtll.
Ottroll 3S, W'111eker, Otlroll, 30, Deel•
nc:ft, Alle9h, 2'. 8u11ar, Ctevtlend, 21.
R81 Murr•v. 8elllmore. '1. l(ln9men.
Oea.aeno 3' Lemon. Detroit, 32. Oe11ls
SH lllt JI, ""'· lloalon, )I HITS Garcia . Toronto. 61, Trammell. Detroit, SJ, Murrav, 8eltlmort , SI, Bell,
Toronto, SI, Rloaen, 8elllmore. SI, Wnl1
ell.er. Dtlroll, St
00U8LES 8111, Toronto, 12, 0.Clnces,
Aneet•. II. Garcia, TorOt!lo, 11, S .,.. Ilea
wl1n 10
TRIPLES R Lew Cnlca90, S, MoMOv,
Toronto,•. Owen. S.elllt, •. I are lied wlll't
)
HOME RUNS a<onomen 0.lo.leno. 13,
Riot..,,. 8 elllmort 11. Devis S.ellle. 10
Murrev 8ell1mort 9, 4 •rt Ilea wfth I
STOLEN 8ASES GerCla Toronto X>
8ullu Clevela nd 17 8trnezero C1Pvel1no 14, Pettis, A11e9h, 14, Hen·
wson. Oa11.1er>O 13
PITCHING IS Clec•1•on1) Wllcoa. De· lro11 6-0 J Ill Morro\ Oe1ro11 I · I 2 t9
Peirv Oetroil 7· I. 2 I I, CauOlll, Oell.leno
S l J 90 R L Jtc1<1on, Toronto, S 1, I S7
Sllt b, Toron10 S I 2 ll
STRIKEOUTS 81vleven Cleve1eno SI
Shtt> Toronto SI Win, Aneeta, so
!om11nso11 M1nnuo10 49, Morr•\, Oe1ro11
" SAVES Qu1H n1>errv Kenses C•lv II
F1f'Ofr\ M1lweu"ff 8 Lamo. Toronlo I
sia"lt'v Bo\lon I • arr "•0 w••~ 1
National L .. CJU•
BAT TING 190 •• 0.1\ Franco .... MOf'
•rea )JI c,., .. ,,,," San 011110 )SJ RtOv\
C•nc nnet lJ9 C er-Sar> Frenc1sco 3J8
8rer11v St " Frenc1\CO 337
RUNS W1gg1n\ Sen Diego, 33 R11nH
Monrrea1 J 1 Semuet Phllede1on1a 30 Meltntw\ Ch>Ce110 29 Scllm1dl Pnllade
Ol'llO 29
RBI Carter MonlrHI 37, Schm101
P1111adeloh1a 33 Cieri.. Sen Fre11c1sco. 31
Ourri1m C111cauo JI 0 1vll . Cnlceuo 30
HITS Gwvnn Sen 0 1190. SS. Frencono
Mol\lrea 54, Ra•net Monlrtal SJ. S.muel
Phofadelon•a SJ SancJoeru (h1c:aoo. SO
DOUBLES Francone Monlreal. 13
CPv Cri1c1go II Carter Monireel II
Sar-doero Ch•ceoo 11 Oevls San Fren
P\8.IC NOTICE
cJKO, l01 TrlompMlf!, Pllltbwrvll, 10. s.-,
DMlen. '°' Tlltl ttl IS. $41""*, ttnllactattlflla, ••
.. ~I Chlcaeo. s. ~. St Loul•, 4, I tr• ttec1 with J.
HOMI ltUNS kM\IClt, Phllaelelol\la, 12; °""*"• Ctilceto. 9; 0.111. k n Frenclsco, t, Miii/iiiy, Atlanll, t i 4 ere tlH Wlfn1~_
STOL.EN IASES: Wlo.IM, S.n O'"°
26, S~. Pnlta0tll!illl1, JS, Rtdua Clncln·
nell, 19; Ml~. Cincinnati, 13, lteln.a,
Montreal, 13.
PITCHING ($ Ote:ltlont) Soto. Ctncln•
natl, 7•1, UI; HIM'tCVft, ~ 6•1, 1.17
1 Lvnch, New Vork, 4·1, 3MJ Ofo.co, ... w
Vorll, 4· l, Ut, k'*'aon• Chic.too, 4• I,
J.M
STltlt<IOVU; VtMNIMM Detlliln, 7J,
Rven, Hcxaton, 72, Soto, ~lncinnall. ''· Gooden. N-Vork, $f; C~ndtlerl1, ttll
"O\lfOf't, M.
SA\llS GouaH. S•n Dlevo, 10,
Holland, Ptllladetonla , 10. Siltier. SI LOI.Ila, t, Smllll, Clllc.tC>O. I, N~, ONMn.
7
Hltfl WIOCll
Cl" 4•A OUAllT•ll ... NAU t"nav, l:U p.11\.)
4·A
Noire Dame et llllhoP Am.I
Mllllk•n er ltowlend
Moovtr el Sen Goroonlo
Soulll Torrence et Ocffn View
>·• LomPOC •' e 1 Dorado G1hr 81 Senl• An1
Cenvon er Sonora
ltamone et Paramount ,.A
Cenvon <Sa u11ual el Arlt••• Hewtl'tOrne el Norco
Aoote \lellev er Le11u11e Hilla
Rut>ldoux e l S.1111vt
l ·A
Cham1nao1 el Temo•• C•lv
AIUMI ., Atasc.ciaro
L.a Caned• el 8eldw1n Perk
Merv Star et Sen Manno
Small Schooh
Crouroeds •I Fllntrldll•
Wtt>b a t 8uckl•v
Rosemond el ltlo Hondo Prto
Oren11e Lulh .. ,, vs NtwPOr1 Chrhtl•n
11 Sovll'tern Cellfornle Colle!M
USFL
WESTERN CONFEltENCI!
Denver
Arizona
LA l ltwfll
Oakla nd
Pacific W L T P<1. ,... ,.A
1 6 0 S3t 7'3 307
6 7 0 462 331 20I
6 ' 0 462 21' 211
• 9 0 JOI 162 2"
Central
Housion I S 0 61 S 424 ll 1
Michigan 1 6 0 531 297 273
Ollla nom• 6 7 O 462 203 354
!>en Anlon•o S I O 315 201 2•3 Cn1ce11<> • 9 0 30I 279 JS I
EASTERN CONFERliNCE
Pnll11011on1e
New Jersev
Pllllt>uruh
Wuh1n111on
Atlantl< 12 1 0
10 ) 0
2 11 0
2 11 0
Soulhem
91) 363 IS2
7'9 321 217
IS.. 2 \J 212
154 19• JS?
8 lrmon11nem
Tempe 8ev
NtwOrle1ns
Meml>l'lls
Jac•1onv1l1t
t I 2 0 146 387 206
10 l 0 769 JS7 2S3 • s 0 615 261 213
S t 0 l&S 22? )OJ
• 9 o lOI ,., rn
Frldav'• Gamet
T amoa llev •' Mtmon1s Hou\lon 11 J1c• sonv1hp
Denver el Sen Anlon•o
S.lllrdev't Gemes
Ari1one v' LA Eaorns 01 LA Co• \ful'r·
IS om l Oe•lend 01 0 1o.1a,,oma
Sundev's G•m• 8 orm1ng,,om al Nt .. Orlten\
wun1no1on a1 Pltl\Ou•IJl'I
P"'''•dtlo11111 •• M1cn1gan
M«teMv's Game
New Jt r"v et (l'l>etoo
Boxing
let Santa Monie.•>
L111Mwe111M' -Tony 8all ezar (Le
Putnltl KOO Luoe Rocna IMO•CO Cilv) ••
I 20 of t1>e secono rouno ot $Clla0uttd 10
rounder Weller S•ms !North HOllywOOd
KOO Fll1 ltemlrtl ILOI Anotlt') •n \IXlh
rouno of 1ene<1u1eo lO·rounoer
PlB.IC NOTICE
L. .. Alemlfel
W•DNISOAY'S llHULTS
, ... "' fi·llllf\t ..,.,......,. MelllfteJ
, .. ST tlACa. >50 n rd1.
Ml9"tv Pollcv ICttHM) 5.00 l .40 , to
lurra ••m~ (PllkenlO'I) 4 to 3 00
Ima F1t1 h i <Tr .. t urtl UO
Alt o r~c.ct: Good Tlllef Sco1t11 Plunder
•ockel, $cal• Clabber, Jtd•dlell, DoctOf'
""'-", V 11 Lou Tl.mt· 11.tt n IXACTA <•·» oakl '30 00
S•CONO •At&. 350 v1rdt
o...i-1 Olvloend IMvltal .. 00 11 ... ..oo
Laftff Full Houw (Lacilevl J 20 2 60 Tiny Nl(Olt (Cr .. W ) 7 40
AltO rK*I; Tia A OrM l'r'I, $1\lrla It• °""'· I Cllt GolcMn Kev, Wiid Shakin ltot~. Mlat Jun Jun NI, ltolo Runner. 91ua
Dlamol\4 Fiend
Time 11. lt. U IXACTA (~·21 H id 113180
TH ... O •Ac&. 3SO ve •CI•
LOrCI Lark (CrH11er) 3 .0 ).00 2.60
New Dt1l11n (Laek•v> 6.40 3.to
l,lnlO'ls (8roolltl S 10
Atto raced. Mv Mv Venktt. Mia Amor
River Wllcll, Go On Joan Time 1771
flOUllTH ltACll. 3SO Yards
8ef1H S'11flty (Ptknln) 70 60 10 40 S .0
Miu Mlllhlv ~v (Werd) a to •to
Love On Trlat (Leckevl I 40
Also raced Vick Veek. Jostonlne Cool.
Ho ltome Jon, Shes Ne1ura11v Fest Time·
IOC>te ltlcl'IGlfl, Frankie APOllO, Tr111v V11tr>·
line
Time. 1'22
~ •XACTA 110·•1 oe10 1110 •0
""'TH llACI. 400 v1rds
Delh For Dlemono' (Pllo.n) 3.10 2 60 2 10
OI> Mv F .. lurtll• ISummerow I • 00 2 20
L• Moon Chick (Mllc llelll 7.20
Al10 recad snesoersonalllv, Jeh Lt11en<1
l(lplv, Oullhl To P1u. SwHI Lt11end
Time 20.42
'3 •XACTA 13·7) oak! UOJO
$1XTH ltACI. 3~ Ytrda Sh•ke Em She (Pllktnlonl 3 20 2 80 2 to
Mt Romenne (Peuhnel 9 to 6 00
LeClvt>vll Victory ICHCIO) s 40
Also raced FIH h Dancer Mollhet
Rlchtl, 8ullt rflv 8Klo.v Flv HumblrO Flv Llmlls 8est To Htv 111 Oa< 8r1n1an1
cneroe Time 11 19
saVINTH llACI. )~ verCI\
Plvolln11 lttbtC (Herl! II 40 I I 00 '00
Jtwtl Twlsler ( Frydevl 9 00 u o
PeredlH Maid I Cardoza I • 00
Allo rectd 8 lnerv1 Honev, Jonnv Go
Raclno. Nice To 8t, Arc En Clel. Minn
Flrat. L• Porrero Chlcll.lt MelfaH Jon
Time. II IS
'3 IXACT A ()·9) oe10 \ISO )0
EIGHTH ltACli. 3~ verds
Amale• ltoca11 (P11a.en1onl 6 00 3 60 , to
Game Doll (Wiison! 6 20 • 20 Eesv Lt1on Mar1e 1 Trtu u t l IO
AISO rectd LOOl\ln r or p,. DullV
9unnv L• G1es1 S• ea~ 0 Llll'>lnlno Milo l(lu
'Time 17 9S
17 PICK SIX !1·10J-S-l·ll Deld H . 163 60 will\ tnree winnlno llClo.tll (ai ..
horsttl S2 P1c11 Sia conso1e11on Paid 1110 00
wnri 179 wlnn1no llcllets lllve no~"')
NINTH RACE. UO vards
F1rt Me Firll !Gerclel 9 40 ~ 10 J 40
A1ure Cnellenoe (Hermon I S 60 S 00
Mr Commuter lPeullneJ 100
Also reced FllllW FIOvd Rtml>Oltro
Cameo John. EHv OrH m1no litusn Ot
11varv. Mevtlt Perr Che lino Tl•• Ore90n
Time 2'236
'1 IXACTA 110·11 Pl•O S4J 60 Aller>Oenct • 116
Holvwood Partr
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
(2111 el '1·0tv lttonu~ed meetl"9) FIRS'T RACE. 7 lurlono\
Me1or B•ll !81eckl S 80 3 40 J 00
Jom Mor> IP1ncavl 360 JOO
Neutron I Ort•ler ) 4 00
Also rect<I Kha11oon. Co1ume1 Eeg1t·1
8H1>.. Grenoble, Rl.e '11 F1v Oei..er
Time l n 415
SECOND llACI. 6 lurio119s
N••tt ' Sllrioer I He .. leY I • 20 ) 60 J 00
Cresc1nc1e 10reriouuavtl 160 6IO
Lt l ' Gt• Ract<I IM•r• s 10
Also r•c•O Vovac1ov11v 8ed 8ao Lucv
810-8om1>1,.,., LorO I LHS•t Comma<>
Otar Lac• C1m1101t All Ar••
T mt I 11
S1 DAILV OOUllLE CS 9) O••d t1l?O
THIRD ltACli. 6 1 lurlor>gs
Mark'\ Heir ISit>lllt l Sl lO S1rl'1 Oellg'>I !Pincev)
W1r on Ten\ <McCarron1
lhO JIO
HO 2 •O
3 00
Also receo Sier Mo1eria1 Hall int
Ee11le, OlsllnctiY•lv Don Go1oen E
Time 1 16 J S
U EXACTA 14 II oe o ll?4 00
FOURTH ltACE 1 1 16 n"l1IH
M1sceredo COfleoe t 1.0 •.0 l60 Caeuv Monlt !Fe11 '40 UO
PlB.IC NOTICE
J111J lor Cnwlle lO.rtlal
Time: 1: .... al IXACTA t>•l l Hid 1141.JO, """ ••e•. 1 111r10nt•
l40
Of\ t~ irtv (Mcetrronl J 60 UO UG
Ooldv'\ C~ <C\11\dl UO UO
LllnlJ Uve the Kine (08fd•l 7~
Alto ,.,.o """"v Fox. El"IWl'lef IC.I V, L.IDe/IOll, Ntw Tttrllorv. to.ton Ma91C.
Winnen Town
Time l'ft 3/S al IXACTA (N I otld U4 00
IUCTH llAC8. 6 hnlono1
Helllt Wint (McC1rr011) UO
SPl'lnt l ld I011v1rt•I
tmltetlon fllrlnceM I01rcla )
Tim.. 1:10 3/S
uo 240
t60 240 S.00
" IXAC'TA If·•> oald tt7 so
HVINTH ltACI. I 111' mlles on tllrt.
At1bev (Toro> t .o UO uo
1 .. 1 LOOll (ttl"'1v) 11 20 7,60
D1nce11e1 (H1wlevl 12 20
AJao rKed SwlO Ma•Hoe. D1lbV, Good
•• Dl•mon<I•. Atolno, Merk In Ille Skv,
Oeblano. llkl't Wei.on
Time 1.41 l /S
U •XACTA (9·101 H id SISSOO
n ,.teK SIJt lt-4+t+t> oelO
136,l lS 70 wltl't llVH wlnnlno lldleh h h1
l'tOfM\) u Pick SI• cons.oterlon N ld "4UO
wlln 171 wlMlllO ll<ktl• (llv• l'tOr .. t)
llOHTH llACI. One mlle
I'm Presll11lous (McCrn) I 80 S 60 4 40
Fencv Wln11• (Garcia) It 70 a.70
Fried• Fram• 181eckl • 60
Also raced FllOm.na Galea, 81ms
GOiden Eaolt. '''"' 0 '8rltf\, Pro 0< Con, A11lle1td Ledv
Tim. 1 36 4 1~
IS IXACTA IS 1) oa10 J.47000
NINTH RAC•. I I 1' miles on turl
Ltc.c1a (Toro> S 70 2 to 2 60
t<.ervn·1 Lerll ISl'loemell•rl 460 360
Momoo 1 Ptl IDtloedlllO) S 70
AIM> r1cea V11e1 Force M•ra••
Gu1terr•an1e Heno H•Oh
Time I 42 3/S
U IXACTA (3·71 oald U.00
A111ne1eni:• lt,371
~ • • . "
Wom.n't aoftbel
HIGH SCHOOi. .. LA YOflFS
C"'•·AOva~t ("rldev, l!U p.m.)
Ntwbvrv Pera. •• Lt Quin ta
Mlrtne el RIOllelll Miter Del •I Kennedy
"euntelll Ve .. v •I Ger~ Gron
cu• l·A Ot.i•~h
Wl'tlllltr C1vlstle11 at Mare11atna
SI 8onevtnlure •• Sen Merino
Elsinore et Connolly
Roserv al ltlo ~ ..
Cl .. Smal Sc:llMIS Ot.ia~
Pasadena Polv •• NewO«f Chrlsften Aoote el Seri Jacinto
Aouint\ el WOOOCrt\I Chr1,11en
M.aricooe et Vltwoolnt
Al·Sunset LH-
""" TNm WOY Merllnt1 !Wttlmlnalt r/ Ott>b•t
OeJonn tW1aa mln11er1. Jec:~•t Mendez
1wei1m1nsler) C'>er•• Monroe IOcH n
View) Jane Oe rllng IOcH n Vitwl. Jacll.lt
0 11t.1ev IOcu n View>. Lori Croust
1Mar1ne1 Julie 8riogemen IM1r1na l, Jullt
LerHn (Merine ) Terese Puc'>eltkl (Foun·
teln VallttYI, Dene Remo1 IFoun1aln Val
1ev). LH Vounu (Fountain VelltVI, Juli•
Ceroe111er (Edison) Otne 8ektr !Edison) *end TNm Cnr·•lv Larsen CMtnnel l(rl1 Albert
Hun11no1on Buen> Jul e Scruov• \Hunt· •"O'on 8techl Oeoo•t O•C:kt•son IFOUl>teln va1i.v Jll e.iaamv 1Merona1 l(lm Maritn
Wts'"''"'''') Tr,,. VelChOl IOc••" v1ew 1 Ii.rt$ Keg• Wt1tm1ns1er l Roovn
Stu111 1 Hu!'11no1on 8teci'>I S•eof'lenre
llow>ell •Founla•n Vei tvl Cnr1\lv Alverez
Foun•e1n Valltv I Ott>OIP Prontr
Eo11on1 Kor Genoron IECllson)
Mo\I vatuet>lt p11cner J..,119 Ler\en
Merine I
Co·mo11 velueblt olovers Lt• Young
IF ounte ,.., Vallev l •nd C hero\ Monroe
10cten V•ewl
Al·Mllltl Cout LH9U• llllrst THm
Stat • 8•'t' IM U•On V e•OI S.ndv
Berro" San C f""f "'lf J 1 80IVC '
L.eQJre 8e1cn Otoo.t D••k• IM•n •on
V t10I Root•'• F ort•tr Det>a H1nO
Arltnt H•'"•"Ofl Woodt>rtelotl Su,en
Leenv WOOdt>••Olltl 01wn Robt<I\ Laguna Hlll l Koren Sc"<>Or>Ovtr IWOOCI ·
onc!Ot• Sar>ora Stnoonovtr CWOOdt>nda.I
S«ond TNm
Julit A11ntw !Sen Cltmtnltl Jtnnv
Aller(! IWOOdt>riOQtl Treenne Cllr>ton
ILogu11e HUil) G1nnv L•1htr !Oe n• Hiii\)
Chr•\llnt Mectrer>ko CLegune 1111").
1<.r1s11ne MrEw1n IMlu oon Vle10J. Krlu v
ScnroecSer IM1u 10n V1t1ol KtH Tl'IOmet
<Dana H1illl L1H Trippi IWOOdbridc;>t l
~ tllV Wet>Sler !CaDo Velltv)
H-•bM MenMft Laguna 8eacl'-Jt MY E1111lanoer Oo<'ll
HarllO•" Sare Turrwr
>-(_·
M•A•.,....
CONPl••MCI '*AU ( ...... ,._,
Wll'flllN CON,llt•NC• ............ k#e
Pnottll• 126, Ulltn 121 (Lot A,....._
le•d• .., ... J•tl ,.,.r.· 0...... Lellen 11 Ptloln • ..,...,,,GM'M
Pnoenla al &.Ill.,. (If neceuarv)
••n••N c;ON,.a•tNel ...... .,..sc-
•oalon llS, Mllw1\lllM lot (tollon win•
&Mlaa, 4·1)
~nt 1216, ullwt 121
f"H08N&X ..... ,, ...
Luc.a f 12 S •
Nanct 11 14 3 6
Edward• 10 17 O l
Davit 12 1' ) • ~v • 17 4 4
Adema ) 7 2 2
Foster O O O O
We•loNl1 0 0 0 0
Plllman I , I 2
A SColl 0 I 0 0
Teem lttbounds
Totels S.. '9 II 2S
LOS ANGILU
r 1111ff'b
• 7 4 13
ll 0 $ 25
72S:IO I 10 I 27
412420
S I 3 I
0 0 0 0 0 2 , 0
3 1 2 )
0 0 1 0 • 42 36 27 126 .. ,_,.ftlt r ,,_,..
c-r 3 11 2 2 7 • 4 •
ltamo1, 2 l I 2 4 O 0 S
Jet>Oer I I It • f 1 6 3 2t
E JOhn.on II 16 4 4 4 13 S 1•
McGH S 10 0 0 I 0 3 10
Worthv II II I ' 1 2 , 13
9 SCOll I 1 0 0 3 2 ) 2
McAdOO I 12 l 6 I 0 • 19
Wiik" 0 2 0 0 I 0 I 0
TH m Reoo"nds 10
Totel• s2 9t 11 29 '2 31 2~ m
SC-llY Ovar1Wt Pnoanl x 33 JI 19
Loa An11t1es 31 30 26
Three Point ooatt-None
cal-EdwerOt A-16,141,
0..., ... ftthine
NIWf"OllT LANDING (N•w"rl
... ell) -31 •neten. 2 vellowlall. ) wnllt
'" beat, 17 .end ban, 4' calico ban. I
t>onllo, I .,_Pattead, 100 IT\Kktrtl
DAV•Y'S LOCK•lt (NtwMt' ... di)
-tO tnoll<a. St celk:o ban, 7 berrecuda.
ISS bonito, M Miid beat, I vtllowtall, 4 rod!
11,11, •s m.ckertl, 2 wl'tlt• ... oau
..
WednetdlV't tntnwcfton'
IAHIALL
A~LMell• e onON ltED SOX-SIGrttcH'9ui SJlfa.o
•M 9red ~. PllCl'lers, end ltavmoncl
HenMn, outti.tder CLEVELAND INOIANs-f'laced lltfl
91Vltven, p11cr., on lhe lS·O•Y dlwbltd
!lat CelleCI uo Sltve Comer. ollc""', lrom
M•IM of '"" ln1er~lron•I L••C>Vt TEXAS ltANGEltS-Sl11ned Jotv
McL•U91'tlin, DllC'1tr. lo • one·vHr minor
ieeuu• contrlC1 w11n Ollla~ Cllv of l'tt
Amerlee n Anoclallon
Natleftel LMtlUI
HOUSTON ASTltOS-lt .. cllveled Joe
Samolto. ollctttr. ano O.nnv Wellln11. out·
ttetci.r, lrom the dlH~ed llal C»1loneo
Mlk• Meelden, ollcllar, end Tim Totman.
ou1flet0tr 10 Tuscon of 1na Pacific Coeal
L .. llut NEW VOltK METS-Stoned K•vln
Et11ar. •horlstoo, ano aul91'1ed n>m lo Llllle
Faus of tne N•w Vork·Penn L••eut Sle neo
8 rvan1 ltotltrtson ano Scoll Lllllt out·
t1e<dera. and Brien Givens, oilc.llr a"<I
eu1gn.o lhtm to K•noa Port oi the Ao·
011acn1en L••9ut ST LOUIS CARDINALS-PurcNIMCI 1'1t
contr.ct of Ga rv ltelstcn, outfltldtr·flrll
oa1ernen, from Loulsvillt ol the Am¥1cen
""ocletlon C»lloneo Tom Nieto. celchtr
10 Loulavlllt FOOTIALL
NetleMI , ..... LfftlUI GREEN 9AV PACl(E~S-Announctd
,,,. r.,lonallon of Henk 8111'°"911. oetenilve
coordlnelor, to become ,,.,. rteao eoecn of
Int Pl11st1vron M.aultn Named Dlcll MoO
ieltwslll lMf•nalv• llne coedl, de1en1IYt
coorCllnalor Named Herb Petarre, soec:lel
, .. ,.,.,, coach, 11neti.cker co.en
Nil.IC NOTICE PlB.IC NOT1C£
FICTTTIOUI •UllNH• 'ICTITIOUI ._,...... FICTITIOUI 9UltNHI 'lCTITIOUI eullNHI '1CTmoul .,..... '1CTn'llOU8 .......
NAMI ITATEMINT ~ ITAnMINT NAIH ITAnMINT NAME ITATIMENT NAMI ITATW•NT HAim ITATDmNT
•
BAKER
F:UGENIA FLORIN BAKER
beloved wife of Ira Baker o f
Cost.a Mesa Services will tx·
Tiie lollowtng P«tOn• •'• doing Th41 IOllowlng pereon 11 Oolng The lollowfng pereon1 are doing Tiit lotlowtng pereon 11 dOlng The followlng P«'80nl .,. doing The followtng P«eOn 11 doing
<:hanty Harbo r Lawn-bull""9 a1. builn ... •• bu1lneas 11· bualntaa ae· bultlneaa ... buelneM •:
Mount Olive Mo rtuary, DI-J J M IMPORT/EXPORT, 501 AID OF ALL TRADES. 2138 SUNSHINE • J ANITORIAL & PIANO RENTAL SERVICE. 8800 CAMPBELL. REDHILL. 27811 La RATTI INDUSTRIES. IN w 17th
rc'C'tors AYtnld8 Lorenzo. NewP<>l'1 BMctl, Thurln, C01t1 MMe. CA 92827 BUILDING MAINTENANCE, 822 H1mllton Ave .. H11nllnglon Beach. Paz Road, Legun• N'Guel, CA. St .. Coet• ~ CA 92t29
Ca 926e0 Melody MN Clevel1nd. 2138 Hamilton 1110, Coste MMa, CA Calll 92648 ln877 Pttylllt Vwonlce Aaltl, 10237 CUNNlNGHAM I Jerry Bl•lll•kl. 501 AYe nld• Thurln. Coal• MN&. CA 92827 92827 EOward L Whitting Jr 789 I Blrteher Pac:tlle II. 27611 La Pu Cardinal Ave .. Fountain vaa.y. CA
Saturday May 26. 1984 a l 11 MU R REL JANE CUN. Lorenzo. N.wport Beach. Ca 92&80 Tiii• butmeu l• condue1ad by 1n Walter E.. Taff, 822 Hamllton • 10. Slllne Drive Hun11ng1on Beech Road, Laoun• Nlguet CA 92977 82709
AM at the Harbor Lawn , M•rell Llpowskl. 310 C 5tl'l St lndMdual Coatl M .... CA 92827 'C"allf 92647 Rot>«t M Campl*I. 2 Mono Thlt butlllMI la conduc1ed by.,,
Memo rial Chapel. I 625 NINGHAM . born August 7, Huntington BMctl. Ca 92548 Melody ci.ve11nd Kelhl Jo Schwob. 170 MeKntoM Thi• bulinea tacoodueted by I ll Bay. Coront 691 Mlt, CA 92125 lndM<tual
<•t'ller A ve. Costa Mesa In 1904. passed away on May Thia buelMN 11 condUCled by • Tll111tatement wu flied Wltll 1"41 •7. Laguna Beacll. CA 92~1 lnd>vtdual Thie bulioeee 11 conducted by 1 Pl'lytllt Veronica~"' 20 1984 a long tune rest-oene<•I ~rtnertl'tlp County Cle<lt of Orange County on Tiits bulinen 11 condUCled by a Edward L Whitting. Jr gen.rel pannetthlp Thia statement wee flied wtth the
ht•U o f flowers please make ' ' Sh J.,-ry BlatlllMI April 24 1984 general partner-.1p Thi• ata1emen1 wq flied wllh t"-Robert M Cempbell County Cl«tl of Orenge County on
do11.H1ons to your Cavonlt> t.lc'nl o f Coro na del Mar e Thi• etatement wq llled wllll th• F24UM Will., E Taff County Cle<ll o l Orange County on nit. 1tatemtnt wu filed with the Apr11 19, 1914
HARBOR LAW-.·MT OLIVE
Mo• tvar; · C l!'l"f'l81f•ry
Crfll,...a1ory
·i,, '>(;<.er A,,.
ta •Aesa
PIERCE BROTHERS
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
'. q, ,11 ... j
( '1 I •.)1 .j
f 4 .
BA T/OfHGt~O,,.
f,M TH & TUTHILi
W( s rc.urr CHAPfl
I I '1
PAC.If I(,; VIFW
MF: MORI Al PARK . '• . ...
•t I •
I I ' • I ~ ... .... ....
WcC0Fh41C • MOAI VAR Y
"(l~ '· "II! •au .. "''"'• •
IS 1Jurv1vt>d by a twin sister County Clerll ot Orange County on Publll hed Or1nge Coat Dally I Thi• at1tement wH llled wllll lh• May 16. 198• County Ctent Of OrtnQe County on f1MS711
Pl'arl Collms o f Ark.an.tas April 24. 1984 Piiot Mey 3. 10. 17, 24, 1984 County Clerk of Orange County on F2At121 "prll t9, 1914 Publlatled Orange COMt o...y I C K t '2'Mn7 2347-84 May 3. 1984 Publlltled Orange COHI Dally l'M40l2 Piiot May 10, 17, 24, 31, 1964
tty. ansas; w~ sons, Publl1he<1 Or•ng• CoHt Dally F2410f7 Piiot M1y 24. 31. June 7 14, 1984 voat a COOtC 248344
F.:ugene F1oyd Cunrungham Piiot May 3, 10, 17. 2'4. 1984 nunLIC MnTfCE Publlal'led Orange Cout Dally 2749·'4 19'00 'IHGNW DrtYe, lvfte 100
of Fall brook. California and 2349-84 nm nu I Piiot May 10, 17, 24. 31, 1984 ..... Offtoe ha 11177 Pt8.JC NOTICE
Gerald Wayne Cunningham PllltC NOTICE FICTITIOUI •UllNHI 1 2484-84 P\llllC NOTIC[ lmne, CA. t2'711 '1CTmoul au .....
uf Avalon . Catalina and a NA• ITAnMINT P\8.JC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUI •UllNHI Pl:~t'~ 1~~4.c1~: Deity NAiii ITATIMSNT
daughwr. Carol Jane Manni NOTICI 'The 1o11owing ~ 11 dOlng I NAMI ITATIMINT 2383-84 The foUowlng ~ I• doing
CHEVRON u S.A INC l'IU an tppU· 'bulln•aa •• K 11• The 10llowtng !)«IOn 11 doing butlneN at;
of El T o ro 13 grandch tldren ca tion tor an amendment to 111 ... BLUE CORAL POOL AND SPA FlCnnOul IUllHHI bull"-N u f'\BUC NOTICE SAF-WAV SECURITY SYSTEMS,
and 12 great grandc hildren lallng Permll E-83-21 pending ,SERVICE 7 Tllunder Trell, lrvlne NA• ITATIMINT PROFESSIONAL REVITALIZA 4630 Cempua Or .. Newport 8Mot\.
Memo rial services were before the C•lllornla Coutal Com-Ce 9271• The followlng persona ire Ootng TION PROGRAM 7035 FlCTITIOUl IW ... 11 Cet" 92&30
ht>ld at Pacific View Mem-mlaalon to 1n1t.i1 •protective det>rl• Tnomaa Holtern1n, 7 Tllunoe< bullneet aa 13, Santa Irene. Buen• Peril. NAMI ITATl•NT Glen R. Cruzen, 59'45 Se1t* Cl .
fence •round eal1t1ng conductou Trell. lrvlne C1 92714 SUR WOOD PROOUC'TS 929 Calll 90620 Th IOll......., ........ Anaheim C•l11 92807 cmal Park 11 pert of It• cl•n-up oPer•tOln1 of Thi• bi.fainest" eond11etect by an Street, Co11a M ... · CA Robin Rldi.y, 7035
1
bvll:.U ;.~·ng S*ION are .,.,.ng Thia ~alMM la conducted by. t n WlLSON--laland Esther loc:etad 1•,; mUM ott lndlYldu11 92 8 13. Santa lrene. Buen• P•rk. Calif LIBERTY 001/ERNMENT SE· lndlvtck.lal
lhOl'e lrom Seal Beach. CA F11rtller Thomet Holleman ro-Sp1, Inc . C1lllornl1. 3741 90620 CURITIES ANO THE LIBERTY Glen R. CNun
MARY B WILSON passed Information may be oblalnect lro m Tn111111emcmt wu filed wctl't the E egrmph Ro1d. Plru. CA 930'40 Thia bulinee111condUC1ed by en GROUP. 2381 C•mP\I• Drive. Sult• Thia 11atement wu meet with th41
away M ay 22 1984 in the Coeetal Commlaalon 11 831 County Cle rk of Or1no• C011nty on Tllll bullneu 11 conducted by· 1 lndlvld11e1 201, Irvine, C•lll 92714 County Ci.<11 of Or•nge COllnty on
Tu'ltin Beloved ' m o ther of Howard Str .. 1, 4th Floor, 8111 Fran· ~prll 24 1984 corpor111on Robin Ridley FMG Pirtn«I 2381 Campua Mey 18, 1914
. cl1co . CA 94 105. telephon e F~ I Robert C Klngaley. Preek:ltnl Thla ttatement wla lli.d with the Drive, Sutt• 201. l~vlne. Calli 92714 ,_* J ti ml' s P W t1 son Of (4 15>543-8555 Put>llthed Orange Co1t1 Dally Thi• 11e1emen1 w11 filed wUll lhe County Cle<k 01 Or.no• COllnty on liberty Partn.a. Inc . ClllfOfntl Publl•hed Orano-Cout Delly
Sm1thcreek . M 1ch 1gan,PublllhedOr~eCo•tt Oe11y P1101P1101 M1y310 17,2~ 1984 Coun1yCterll of 0 •111Qe Coun1yon May 11.t9'4 ~ corporiuon, 2381 Campui Drive. Pllo1 Mey24,31,June7.14,1"4
(.;puff(t' D W ilson o ( May 18 t9. 20 1, 22. 23 24, 1984 2385-84 May 1. 1984 Publlll'led Or1not Coaat o.tty Suite 201. lrvtne, c.ut 92714 ·~--------•i..,1,.ff=-11 29&9-'4 '~ 7 "I T ,. Tr11tw1111cJ Ohio. Walter E 1---------------Ptm.IC NOTICE Publllhed Ora,.,.. eo ... Detty Piiot May 24, 31, June 1•. 1. 4 hll bulln.h II condllCted by • Pt8.JC NOT1CE
Wilson o ( Dayton . Ohio and P\8.IC NOTICE Piiot Miy 10. 17 24~31 1984 2748-14 llm~to~arc''*HOI~. Pr~•.._.., 1---...;....; ......... _..._ ..... __ _
M C• A I f San FICTITIOUI •UllN•H DlmtfC wntrrt " ..,_, .. ._ _.,..., 'tCT'rnOU9 ..,._ .. arv p ey 0 ta '1CTIT10UI .u..... NIIMI ITATIM9NT 2489~'4 f'UUL "" tw. Thll 11a1ement WU tla.d wl1h t"-NAllll ITAT'lmMT
Ana. also survived by 13 NAMI ITATEIHNT Tiie 1o1tow1ng '*'°" 11 dOlng Pta.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUI aut .... H County Clerk of Ora.no-County on TM ~ peireon 11 doing
Rrnndc-h1l.dren and 11 great Tl'le tOllowlng P«90fl .. dOlng bualn..... NAMa ITATWMINT May l6, l984 bu.llMM ...
cl .1 I Id M b butlMM u WARNER BOAT S ALES SOUTH, ,ICTTTtOUI au11..-u Th 1 "°""' 1 d<>l I 'MIOll P~CIFIC T!CHNIOAL ll!AVIO!. 8,ran c ' ren ' e m e r KUMIKO'S H~IR FASHIONS . 2211 Newporl Blvd . Cotll M•H, HAMii ITATIMINT buli:...0 .. ng 1)4trl0n • . ng !!"' w. ~I ... 2776 ~ Vtfde Of (Mt P.I03.
( hurt'h of C hrist, Cost.a 20059 Se nta Ana Ave .. S•nl• Ana, CA 92827 The lollowlng peraon 11 doing NEWPORT BEACH EST ATES, _, NeWPotf Centet Dr., Coatl M .. a. CA. t2t29
MPAA, Cost.a Mesa G range CA 92707 Thom11 E. OI' El•nor H Frank. bullneet u : 1509 El0t1 Pl N-port Be8Cll 900 o.te l!ctw.rd Qllbeft. 2716 MeM #fll2 Vl!dt.atlon Thunday Terullo Sato, 432 N Vlrgll Av· 23021 c.c.i1a, MlaalOn l/lelO. CA <11 HOWAROROSEEOUITIE8 (2) Calll 92eeo ' ' NewPotf-..oh,C•.-vwct.Df !Mt,·203.0oetaMeM •
I 9 PM d f tn~. Lot AngetM, CA 90004 92991 ELAINE SHELDON. 920 Elevtnlh Franc:ieeca Lorra ine Yirnell 1609 Publllhed Orenge Coul 04llfy CA. 92$29
from ~ un u an U· Thi• butlneee la eondUGt.0 by an Thia bu-le condueted by an St • Huntington e..cn. CA 92648 Elon p1 NewP<>l'1 a..c11 Calll Plfo1 M1y 24. 31. June 7, 1'. 1tM Tiiie butlMle 11 oonduea.d I>): an
neral s<-r viCC'11 Thursday lndlvldu•I tndMd1181 Pl'llllp s SIMmOM, 920 E~th 92eeo · 275144 lndMduel
May 24. 1984 #t 7 30 PM. Teruko Sato Thomae I! 'rMll 81 , H11ntlngton 8Mctl. CA 92o.8 Thi• t>vllnea 1, conduotad by an 0...1. Qlltlet1
both at Plf'rtt 8roth<-rt Bell I Thi• 1tatetl*'lt ••• flied ..,,,., the Thi• 11a1~t wM Ill.cs with 1tie Thia butln.M 1a condliettd by 111 lndlv!Oual PlBUC M)TIC( Thie ....,_,t wM flled wtltl the
M M County Cll<rt! of OrtnQe County on County Clerk 01 Otano-Coun1y on lndtvlduel Fr~ Yatnell County ~ of ~ County on
Brood way ortuary, r Mey 3 1984 "Pf'"~ 1984 PflH"' 8 Simmon• 'Thlt ,,.,_...,,, w11 filed wtlh lhe '1CTrnOUe .,..... -...., s. 1"4 __
Paul Thom.A.~. Church of f'MIOM !'....a Tille ett1emen1 wu filed wltll the County ci.tk bt Orangti County on l MAMI ITATl*NT ,.._
Chrllt offlcauna lnt~rment Publllhed Or~ Cou1 Deity Publlalled Oraoge Co.11 Otll'f County Cleflt. of Oranoe County 0t1 Mty t8 1ea4 ,, ... 100 Tl'I• 'olloWlncl Pl't90nl •• ddng "'b!llNO Orenot C<*t Deify
Wuhing\o n CourthOUlf' Pltot May 10, 17, 2 • a1. 1914 Pilot May 3, 10. 17 24 1914 May 2 1984 Publllhed Ortnge Coast Di tty bullneee ea: Plot M~ 10, 17, 24, a1 1114
C.'f'mC'tt>ry • Washi ngton 2471-14 2343-84 ~ Piiot Mey 24 31 June 7 14 1984 PELICAN/RUTTEA ,AATNIA· t4ff-!4
I Courthouse. O hio Pie~ "'8.JC NOTICE Pl&.IC NOTICE Pu~~~.?;~~,~ .. o.tly • 2752·•4 9~1P19201.w .. nerA"'9.2A.a.t\t1 "8JC M>ntE
I Brothers Bell Broadway P'lCTmou• 8U ... ll 2 475-<f.4 PtllJC r«>TICE An• c.llf 92705 ...cnnoue .,... ..
M DI t NA• 11'ATW•NT flCTITIOUI •UllNIH lllllM ·c MftTll'lt Pencan PtoP«t .... Inc. a Clll· ....... ITAnMINT () r t u. r v • r ,. (' () r. • NAMI IT A TIMINT ..&. ' r~ ""' "'~ ,ICTITIOUI IUltNlll IOfni. COfPofltlon, 1t20 I . w..,.,., -
li42 !H~O • ' bu1':.::-'ng waon• .,.. dOlng The loltowlng S-IOnt .,. OQtnQ ,IC'TITIOUI .,....... NAMl ITATIMINT JA. IMta An•. c.m 92708 ~ ~ pet1IOO .. ~
IRUNO PUBLIC RELATIONS. bUllneat u NAMI ITATWMINT The followtng '*"°" " Oofng J I! T Aunet, a~"*'•.. (a)HIGHPOINTl(tl'JHIOH lllOIHTt
151 A AocMtttr Cotti Meea CA 8URl<HAAT !L!CTRtC 2532 T ...-....... buelneal u hll aole Ind_.. •• prGC*'fY, t41 l~TtWIA" (c)HIGH (111()4NTf.
92827 •kW Lane. eo.ta M .. CA 92827 bulJ~-;-"'V S*90n 11 Ooino I fllODERT OTTKe ASSOOATH . Via uoo loud. ~ lelld'I. OAU'OANIA Cd)DAIHIN' DRAW·
Teri Lyn Sa~ Br11no. 15t A Chtltt00f*Aln9Nlr1.2532Alder ZIPP SOfTWARf. 1171 Boe 10000uallStrM1 ~lt•1to,New-Calif t2M3 llM, 1001-IW•t 17fh8t,eo.t1 R~ter Coeta ...... CA e2e21 L8M eo.te M ... CA 92t27 Vt611 Clf eo.1a ...... Clllf 12t2t port 8Mctl. CA 92680 .... ~""." ~:: w.. t2t27
~:' • r. ii.I\ .ti I ,il11n.: 1 hC' Oranl.!1.'
l 11,1 ... 1 .\11t111·n .., Ir\ •• , .11 1 1n.1dtt l'<•'ll'r
"' ir1101 m.1111111 .11111 .uh 1< 1 f111rnd onh
111 1111' f>.11 h f 11'111 . Daily Pilat
Ch1nee J8ITIM Stvno Jr 1$1 A St..,.,, Mltc"-11 Bu!'lce 178 Del El'lek o9'1"1d Kano 1171 eo. Vi.ti Rot>en C Ottl!e mt ,.,la. ... ..-............ a-... a..f. 12706 L«retM AN! M0t00t. 33 "-'·
Roc119e1tr. Coet• Mesa. CA t2627 Mlt A ... eo.te M"8 CA 92827 I Cit Coetl Mell.. cam ·~ Ntwp()('t 8MCtl CA 92'MO "';....'!'::.. . ..::..:.::. ~~--• N ""· ~ c.llf. 12714 Thi• bvtlMll II condue19d by a Thlt b\Jljneet II cond~td by • Thla bualneet la 00f10ueted by an Thtt l>utlneu II conduct.a by Ill\ ' .... ------.,, ' lNe bullMM .. oonducied by:.,,
o-n-11 pert'*""'P 119M'•I partner~lp lndMduat lndMou.1 QIMF9' ~ ~
Te<t eruno I st....,, M Butu !rletl 0 Kancs "°t>ert c Ot11t• Jof\11 C. ,_,.,, "'•"den1 L0t1*'"9 ~ Motcot
fhlt statement ••1 ru.o with tl'le Tn11 a1a1emet11 wu filed wtlh 111e Tiii• •tatemeni wu flled .,..th the I Thl11t1tem«1t •N f\'9CI 11Jlth the .. ~:l~C::.lllldOcNn9' •: Tiltl ltlt41f!W11 wee fled...,_ u.
County Clerk of Orange County on/ County Clerk 01 0111ng41 County on County CWk 01 Orenge County on County C1eA OI Dfenoe County on """'" Count; Clettt of Oreno-County on
Mav a. '"" 4pr11 n 1HA Apr 30 ,114 1
~" t 1"4 M•r 1 1N4 ,.... May 1t ...... '1l>UOl2 "4'1t2 . "44114 ,,..., o.lfy fl'Ml101
Pvbll"'90 Ortn91 ~1 0.lfl( Pub111ne<1 Or~ Coelt Darty Pliblllhed 0tll'IQ9 Coa.a1 Oalty PublllNd Ofanot eo .. t OlllV fl'Ub~ a.... ~ llM PubllaMcl Orenge Coll\ Delly
PUot Mly 10 17.24 31 1914 PO('lt Mey 3 tO t7.24 191• ttllOIM6y 24.31 June7 14, tl'4 Piiot May 10.17.24131, 1"4 PtlotMayU,at.JuM . in ..... Pllot May24 31,JUN 7.14,1tl4
,.,..... 2)44·14 2747... ,.... 27u.M
11 ueninnri1 1~1~ 1: 11 nua;;mmm m'1!nn;;u mummnmmmemmmnti!~ E ~im1m1 111 1 ~·r ~: rm 1:u m11:mn;mmmm:unumm;:~r:1;:i!!i ge;1r.
• -__ .... a ,-;a Jll'l --M --·• T ·~ ................ ··------------.--• • --------~-----------------------------------·C::H ijiP§U· iijf--. ---------·--------... _ --.
. 5~iJI • 1..-M -~1111 :r•iJIJlll"I~ 'ii s:. 'j·-11111~ I Ii~ lJsi .. ; I !fJ 11-r'•1~~111!•1i1-1i ~ff~ "SL i'f AJ'.al "I 1~pt ·~ ~:sllli'~!~~f·lflg;.i• ·-..,!ti•15'-it? .. jL&~&''"o'""'lf''' .. -a.--, .. l A !ll f 11f1 I l !rSLr 1!~l1,!~nJil i fff1 i l i! lf r 11([,!1 ~if1 ftlllt;lrfrli11! i l!tiftff 11~1!1 r~i -j§.,Si;~tl~l,~t•~~Jflf~:.~~ltl~~ }. STI"flt~!F'JI rE~1Qg~I _.Inf_ :;II'
........ ~~-....... ~ ... -~--.. -. .. _. ...... IL._ ..... ft~_.. ....................... _ ... ,. ..... ~ ....... -......... ,... ..... ,//fllllf,. ... ...,,,,~.._ ...... -. ................... a:: ~ A~-~ -AAK44WA--.A::J.-.--•• -______ ____. ----,_ ____ -----·--------.... ----
=~i i i r~~J l~l!~!!!i~f tl~iillil~~,-i!l~ilf !tl!lil~f i 1!;~!~1 l!~I; i1~!! ii~ 11l1I~;liiii!i1ill 1 ~~ i 1,-r'!!D.J i11~l!;I!iriJf !!~iiiliJ~!i!llllf l!tl!l~l~! iil;iil!il II~!; i1
;1't;1 I ~ 1111:~11~!,
E j ~ f l;Js! sltill 1111 ~iJll~~sl•g f1slfs1~¥~lit~iif~ J ~!~~~i5f: ~it~I i fl!~~ i s&flzggili i J ~ -·B,s! still irrJ ~rJllSL~sl•~ f,1slfs12¥Jllt2i1fl J g~;~~l~> SLsi19f I J1 ~ ~· lsalf.1 I 4
-----------------------------------------· -------------------------------------------------
ii 1;1 1· ,i!' -,illl!lli~!U i~11 i 1i 1
11 Pti mliHUUH!HiliUWH~U!ilHH~il1 i ir ; 1n;1u1
11 ifi1
11Hl!linlf P1sU1tiin~!m11n1 11t:ti:1ttt :m~mii1~! U~~;;R;i!t~mi~ f 1' !ii!fi! n1
1
1;1,1
1i!11i11 ..
i! i ft -f -~fQ§Elliil ! i ~i :!111;1 -h~'-ih t!! H!j:~ o:~~,•: .. rio. i ~ ~ ' I" . ~~~ 11 ~ . lSo!t( (~~· 15 ~~J f11J ! 11.i1ilf~!1§ ~~=~~~~fi f ~ -l1:~s .... ~~1 j,~sSL i ... i js-j ~i tY " pt r ,q t Ji !i ! ~d ~:~2~;:JJ J E lil ~ 1:& in ~irllhlH .. fH1 fM ~~? r¥~hh~i1 It l ~ ~i b.-! • till im dJh ..... in lholf oMJUt..iM J;·g~~r;;~~!: 1 f~i ~;;~~I~ hmfo 5 i Ida ~ [.-lf11vfflr · .. ··
~ r •n1m1~1H;~,i~ !:1nn1 a ~ i! 'Ji!li~~n ff in!! U !IlrimHU 1:iriln~m1r a i I f
1 ii!!! HP1Ui1 Ui~fJ ii!~~ilii!~B, .. il!Uif !iUI !ii J;!;:1:1-m11iiHi1iH !! !iP11il1Hr1!f1'f!;111:n1
1 ;i;;•f-·1··i1~
! i ttfr I!. lJ1jl~""11 IJ~-lH2 rJ ifl~izfl ~o il~~i f :l ; let 1l' 15•' 11 ~i' llit t I_ !fi~i 1~1 1~1 sll~Jt1 !l'l~Jti l!~~'I isll'R~,!l~ff fJs flr~il 111 I~,, ir '' 1fs '' ~ 11 fll ~U.1 f. • 1,.
-----------. --_...._ -.... ----------···---.. -------__________ ____.. ___ ----------------------------------------------------------.--.... ~ --......... --· .......... _ _..._~---~---... --...
-~i ;I ~I iJ!~ i;:~; JI 1r1 I ;i u~ P1!. !~ m I N ! n·~=1111i~ U!ii~i 111m11 ~i!f!Pnm:u1i1!;(1ili I n·~,! f!ii!;iin:~ ~u '~Pli! i!;r;r11P,s!iJp;n u: !!ii!1·;;;nif d1i'=i IH~i~1ii!!"111~u:-1~'f1'i1'1ii·i1··!11 • ! ii • r ~ ~ H ~ , j• I: ~ ~ sf Jo I.~; llo.h S o !o. U-J 0. "i !l ,t o If 0. • 1iJ !J f ! • f ~ IL 0. df JSs 6 So ! 1 ;1 a ii '• • I · I &c , d" ! i?; -. !Iv h J i'd g; , v:H ! ~ l 1~111.h uf.J ui,,i,,ahln narthr ~ ! l v~! h,h!, !H1 !h lnff h 1!dtts11d!f!;,, us nr!11hnh J,,U, _ J, 1b, rU : rM1l1 ' r ,-r . 111
N -' l-1 !ii"'s;"' iHi~~~~HHq!?> 1~~hU~!i~;t;.~uG~?i M~l ~1 ~;i~§1 ~isE a !rm!11JI': 1;1r:1i•l 111'!f1·11e"'!! i:·~~r·r1s'11Jl1''if 1,•1 i1,J1!l';i~l1~H.1'"'1l lf'~':t1.-11:iu· arm 1:na•' t:J ~ !! E;!S i ! !llf~lf •5 83i"!. ... 1'5-~'Qig.g.~:tsi>s 1:~ .. ~;s• ... > ~~= :& ~ P 11 P If SL • ~.I II !i • J f at sirs 8 ,.~·II I I> ;:1 -a fJ 1-. -9 ' ... · ;~I' ~ hl!~\!tHlhi•~ hU~uUHi~u ~~5"HiH;i:s~8J!~g:~~~Jti l~ J ~~=~ ; l ~ :,:hbl 1~,h!, !lh !11 .. n Ur ,!,m!t1,UJJ,, Ui1n1!11hnh JJ.llrJ,J!f, r1L 1M1l11-~;1 ., . •"-·
---.. ----.• -----------------------.. ---__ ...,. -••---.-. .. ..-......&•---a -a.._,~---• --_.. ______ _._. •• _,. ...... _ _._..._ awwa_. .... '!1111 •e.._..D_.. •n••a_,,=t~ .. •r••ft•••:llGW't..~O• .. ••n4•ftalt••irti• ........ -•••
!-j uu1::~1ttim1~ !,;1:m; a I lj fl m,· :u ii!lrl~1·,.ua1:Piii1s :~~l!i~lii'·,m; a 1 I -. ! l!t !!!li1'1ii! ,~;~llU!it.1'il,!i!!11 ,~1,i,11ii1;!1'~GU~t,l~!:_i·' ·1't',.!l,Hli!HU1i=,~1,lfiilj,'JHUl1,•HH•
i i "'" I! mm .. u l IHr i l ~ in ih drl I n .. ,,b fss m rhl.I m i l ' ' .Id~ :t ~(' mll f •• I '~' .. . ... ,,i: , " 11n ... n m tile. tld!fl -~ ..
THE DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS
Telephone Service:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A .M.-5:30 P.M.
Bu1ineas Counter:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A .M.-5 :30 P.M.
DEADLl~ES
Pl 'UUCATIO' OEADU'.'E
\lond a~ ~at. 11 ::JO a .m .
Tut·~da~ \Ion. l ::iO p.nl.
\\ t>dnt>~ctu~ Tut>:..· '::JO p.m.
Thur~da~ \\'t'd . l ::iO p.rn .
Frida~ Thuri,. '::JO p.m.
"at urdn ~ Frida~ :\:00 JJ.rn .
:-iunda~ Fri. :HU> p.m.
CA~CEL LATIO'.\ &
· CORRECTIO~S:
Ctu11·t·llutioni. and 1·nrrt·c·tioni, ma~'
1112 ....... 1"4 10"""'
v.a. LIM ..-iiiiiiiiiiiii----i IPlllLIH · ;: :'.: 721K
TwoiptlOkMuntta,..ahl "I I I IYm ... ,...,, o In hr'ltONM. 1 TomLee,lkr.9'2·1IOS
ldrm1'411.lndoeecfl•-:' = •=,C: bdrm,2'itN,fwnrmwtltl ...,_..,. =-=~=~ 11M Potnt le tM ... mi""'*'~ .. ~~ Pt10e0f~--
On"IYl1ot....,. ,.,.,. 11'ewortdt~tromlhat I ....... ,. ' With two 2 ldrm 1 tdl ~ w...., ·-· -trwv w otty .,. With 1 ;OOO. · un1te. KtlOhene Mll't.,..,
GE ,.,,., 11lc '' 1
• ---wm•11• BMutl 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath
home plue 1 ldrm 1 ea
lnlew unit pft.lt 2 Bdrm, 2
Ba rental. ln CdM. South of Hwy. naet proptrtyt
Only 1425,0000
UllllllOOI: tl()~l:I
Aeatt~, 17MOOQ
1ar99 empty bNcM• .s:I%n tttnOdMCI. Oroee enn\1111
bedconlng, exoept latur· ,. IO. r
1
•
1
, Income t1UOO. Aeklng deye & 9'indaYt. 1116,000. w.·,.~~~ =--'1: Mr.d := · alty _T_r_a_di_t-io_nal_"'
Mltamar Ave. Comptetlty 788 1 Real reoonetructtd with a -172 ty
quellty touch on • OOfMt es 1-7870 IOt location atecle from
the OCMn l bey. TNt 3 er 2~ Ba home with 1i.
brary hu tt all. a muter S880 Mlohe4eon Dr1ve .... " •lllT
bdrm Milt• With "' own 1Mnt bper. m~ oo~
tmlng room and poroh, •AB am, IPtOI..,.. In Or. Otv. high celling• NP ohano-San DltQO Ct)' .. ta
Ing room
1
w/mlrrored ~ 4 '· l~ MNOMNT: 9'2·1803
wardrobH, 1tparatt 1150,000, ~-~ .bf1_2 ~ ... illl JIMit
bath w/~ tllt lhowet l t1N.OOO. ~ ...... .-. 1 1 .. 11 Jaouzzl tub. all tht belt ..... , ,.
quallty, all •ltotrlo,l!!D.rlt!:J=t dClbMTMXBl:ib'1ih plum~ng. heating 'Y9-mobllt home on &Jg lter
teme are n.w. Tht P'IOt pett Of monwy IMlt Lalea. 117,IOO or trlde
II right at '315,000. gol~ towerd tht down f« boat ore«. 876-tHi ~-::t,o:,::: == =th~~"::~ ht .. CfUty
ht' madt· 011 "amt' dt·u<tlin t>~ ai. ulJOH'. -------• wumablt with Home rHldtnct wlih mini Pr~ · 1111 :~~?:~.,:~: =·=~~'" 2rnt:c&tl&Mon., Plt>a t,t' a~k for a c·anct-llation
numbe r ~ht'n c·ant·t•llin(t ~our ad.
ERRORS:
Check your ad dail~ and report
errors immediately. The DAILY
PILOT assumes liability for the first
incorrect insertion onh.
CLASSIFIED 642-5678
IH111 T.r Salt lts111 111 lilt
______ ...._ ______ __
ltatral 1011 ltural 1002
Ullll YllW lllLLI SHl,000
LEASE/OPTION -charming New
England style townhome. 2/Br/2112
Ba & den. community tennis, pool &
spa. Priced below market.
WllAIUU .
DIC & BANK REPOS:
Cu1tom home•. office
bulldlngt. $500,000 to $3
Mllllon. Call Jerry
(714) 759-1083
let U1 Hel~ Y ••
Sell Yo•r Propertrl
The Daly Plot offers you thb euct sizt td
on u "Pictwe Pace'' weekends for just
$2S per day, Of 2 days fOf S45.
.._. 1 pleb.re, or we'I photorraph It for
,. .. ,....,cNrft.
e. Cll11lfle4
642-5678
DOING BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME?
If you hive Ju1t Hied your new
Flctlou1 Bu1ln•H Nim• and have
not yet 1ubmltted It for publl-
catlon, pl•••• don't forget th1t
th• llmlt1tlon la 30 day1 from date
of flllng. The DAILY PILOT wlll
publlth your atatement for
$40.00. Our olrcutatlon lncludff
the entire Orang• Coa1t 1re11
and legal notice• appear In all
edition•. In order to 1ubmlt your
at1tement for publlcatton Mnd
1pproprl1t• copy end • check to
THE DAILY PILOT, P.O. 8ox 1MO.
We'll do the reat. For lnform1tlon
1bout legit 1dYertlalng pfe1M
call 842-4321.
0 ....... -.0-....... ol ....
'°"' 1<••"'4llff --· " io... IO for,,. fa•• • "'Pie -d• I 0 0 B w R y
I 12 I I I' I
I OUSEE ,,
1 I 1· I' I . I
.... ....
• ~ llkM tne ~IM I ARLVO I'
I I I I' I ~ ,,.,._,~ bttll Oofl'l Ny"* ..
· 7 Qrowlltd hi. Oecl "YOll 11~'1
I
H HEP Y N "'111eenm.i11y -,
11 I I I' I o ,..., . .._ .... (~"'~. ~ • ~. f 1~.. ... •i.. ........ -" ..._...._ ...... ...__._ ..... ~ , •• ,.,,... ,,.,.. -..... J ......
-Ullll t2300 I* montl'I. Don't ecre ce'*9 locetlon. I
_...,. • --·-Wiit too Iona • mitt 90Uth Of Sun Cl1y. 1 r...,.. .. , .._,... Mel FUoht .. ,ivttton .. At-bit from twy 21! on
11 ... 14 It UTt-1110!!. 100 E . ..,~ BIYd. paved road'. Aeklng s Bdrmt. 3 batha. lnoludel h 11M1H '80,000. ,or fUrthtr Info muter tultt and lerQe wrttt P.O. Bo• 542, 8un
famlly room and off-Ctty, CA 92381
etreet g::ino tor up to 1 C11tU LI LI llU -..... 118
:;'· entr't,!.dO:-~'::: lulllUfY in &a: COU: C . W'rsi:oroi. 2 Y'9
Btectl. NOW on the mar-3Br Sba time. A-2 IOt. 1 Rue. Fontalnbltliu, &Jg otd. Wtt bat. land-
k•t at onty 1479,000. tsHK. ~254 Cenyon, OOMf\ & hltbof ~. '28, tQUlty,
144-1111 MllWl/PITllllT vtew 4~ ldrm, e ea. 2 101,t" -~* io.n.
Jttmlne CrMk 2bf 2k frple, 4700 eq "· Prtoed trade towerd NB oondo.
195911, attum• P•Y· below market 1t 714-717·702t men11<11.18%~>P9Y t,~,-=·.:.:0,8": U:WuW Hit both. Buyer & ....., ... , ...... PllllUllllJ ino ooett. l'Oteed to weik. *II IWID* * Wiii 1111 * ... -Xlnt oond/rvOf deoof'd. We....,.., hOutaa. oondo'I I on thll 2100 tq/ft, ont "' bor RldQt Condo UMd .,..F OMfl ftow level eucutlv• gem Avel lmed 840·7409Aot u mdl, 3"br 2~ba den. unit.. Ntgettve
located In pr .. t1glou1 ._. ... ldnt Joe. btwn tennle ct l OK, torecloeu,... OK. .. bo RIA..a Prl t ..,.,.,... Your ptlee, our termt. "" r _.... r va e 1 Twin Lektt Clrctt pOOI, 90% "'*" av.fl. 730-1003 cu~ for PMOt and 4 Br. Nft Bedf«d 9.175% vr/11t yr no MG· .. --.------
quiet at the TOP Of the . Open Sat/Sun 1.5 3002 et MW1Y deoOrlted. a.tall
WORLOI Ftntutlc VIEWI 644-5'33 65S-tOOf « "7eo-tl23 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-------
E.xoelltnt aeeumeble 1oen I r t • • of *300~-759-1601 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiii •BY OWNER Bey v19W 3 ti HI 11 a I t YllW lllL Ilana Bf 2 aa 2 etry. 3 cer, matr ...
l g,...? oelghbort ere juat dn. Ceny 111 9% Int to ~ ~ ;::'~;:: quel. Prln onty 813-7Sf9111@ .---~--.-..... 1---.1 .. l ... f ...
w thl• neat epllt l9Y9I A;U;""l Br,
home. LMger A-1 iot. • Bayfront + Dock 1ux•. "'°"''°"" term. tow Cout Hwy, 2 maattr Sec, pvt beeefl. 240-7537
eult•. large high bMmad 2 Ir~ bdrmt + dtn, 21A =· .... , IHI llvlng room. Unu1u11 blth1, IPA. prof. lend-.I .. llAA quality for $350,000. te:eped ye.rd, 3 car gar. mo: 2 lty Back Bey. ,_. 1525.000. 844-4895 4bt. 3ba. 3300 a/f, 3 car
Owner may e11ch~ 3 Br .. _ Pll Tiil gar. pool, Jee:, v. ac. Poat. ei::· ':'~OO:ome ~ See tht plan•'°' 2 eondoe ...... LIWllT.... unrum. or opt. 9'2-1:tee
unite In Orange County. IOOn to etart at 312-31'4 2331 VISTA HUERTA ExeoutM COndO on =· GrMt family .,.. to live Jatmlnt: 2200 eq ft In 2 BR 1 ba. Balcony dHIQner, oompltt•
In or !MM. Anumable HCtl. Walk to Big 8Mch 111_. rum. I 1H5mo 813-0&
loan of 1195,000 at f~=·· g~~n~:s~ THE P-OP!'RTYMART ...... hhlfllhW 1CW•ARM. $249,500. Ask .... Call 640-9019 "--aJ ...,. fOf Bettin• Ltughlln. •--·· ..... .... V4 uma de/ c.Alm CHEAP CONDO: In N9w-------~--111111 ELLIS CA,,J.~ ~---port BMctl. 11uoo. c.i1 14'-1111 .. v "-1M'7l~ti Aalph, Agt. e7M500
6'1/1-8~9~ ..........
llWNIT/lerw PHI .. , I . Cot1t Hwy .. CdM 3 Fl~::· =~:
Owner It very motivated to IC.At .... tilt Freeh pak,t. POOi. A r..i ... , and wtll oonlkler ax-.,.. 1 bargain at 1124 760 Im· =,,,.':.~In= ... ...... medllte po1111i1on.'
pleaeant. totally coordi. ~. =t '=: ltJl•l•tlltlltr,
nattd 2 bedroom+ dtn 1 129,500. Ownr/Agt 141-llH
+ family rm. ratldenoe. 545-2850 _ ... lllK Appea!Fo: exterior and .,.,.._ 1arge and dectt .,... 11111.m ITUU H.V.Homea sa1..e111 bkr
EMY to .... UH.000 In-GotQtOYt 2 Br 2 Ba oondo Lu• tdft condo Ocn~rt>r
clud. tht land (FEE). ,,.., 8.C. ptga, pool, epa vu, 2Br, 2ba. ct«,, tam rm
&31-1400 and oarg:rt. A11umt by own. 12%. VIiia Bal*
WATt.RFRON'T 10.50% anclng. Onf'/ '319,000 &31-1317 t70.000. Try NOOO dWn, 1,,.....--...,.._-.....,,,,......,-HOMLS a.c. ~11 Of aaoo total. Super •harp Cuetom
REAL ESTATE Won't lut. Call Patrick Townhome. 2 Br 2~ ba. 111·1400 Tenott 7ec>..e702 w/dtn. Ovet1oolctng Big
-------• Canyon Golf COUrlt. "--duoed to '2tt,000 + .IT' .... , term.. 8Y Owner. Open
_. Sat 1·5. 34 9et lal~ . .lllT •ID NB (Ford/Jambort•l
Sharp 4 Bdrm. 2 bath UITllll IUITT 8e2· 1873 ';,~':In :111~'.T.r~ W~har~. "C~htrto Ullll Lii llPLll
comer lot tor poeelble AV 1hopplng & traMJ>or.-Walk to ehopt, beech. B•I.
accatt. lndudel w.t bar tatlon. L.gt 140' deep lot pltr, ferrylr•t•. 38f/2ba
& covwtd patio. See thl• wlfn.ilt tr ... & room to M, 218 Bal Bl 873-2943
"More fOf your Monty'' ~1 .. ,.1~10NLY 1137,500. llata LI fUI home at only I 116,Mot ..... <1\1
.,..e-1111 NIO: S er. h¥ L. large
THE REAL
ESTATERS
yard, cul dt tac. Mklng
$81,000. $12,500 down.
557-21&3
inillli1t11 1"8
Sunny a~= Bdrm 3 NIDfi mJ Ba 2 level with 1 grtat 3 bdrm. 1~ be houM In
location and ueumablt llUlll P••& oood oond. "u 11". 5631
Pvt bMct\ hertl Yrty 2 Br
hou•• kld1/pet 1750
53M190 BEST Atty ...
etieuWL HD W Old eBM SB,
28a. lrg, lmmec. Avail
e11. 11~60/mo 731-3805
telilllll mt
2 IS£ IUx rm. eome
w/own pvt jac, kit
equlped w111ow. micro
wavt, trt•h oomp, dthwMt & dlepoul, frplc In llv rm. Comptu h ..
MC oattt, pool l jac.
From 1900/mo 54W309
3 Br 1 8a tncltd garage. b6g patio, C1pt1, drapee,
fncd. Xlnt atM l tharp
Meo + NC. No P9l1. 648-5442, 770-5129
3 Bf 2 Ba, b6Q famlty rm.
trplc. D/W, lrg yard tl50.
Pate 751-3191. Bkr
llD'tlDTllLI 1 Bdrm IUltt deal all utllt
free othert avall. 539..e190 BEST Rlty ...
li00•1 3 8f 2 ltory 2 Ba nr
So Co Plza dbl gar kid•
ok, avall Jun• 1.
53M190 BEST Alty ...
Brand new 2 8f 2 .. CUI-
tom condo w 18th St. n~
ml bMcl'I, gar. 1795.
81trta Mgmt 8" 1-1324
loan. lncludtt all tht IUI -Abrati.m. lnherttanot tu ooodi.t lncludlng crackl· A·1 condition. Welt main-appralaal 195.000. Call rno flraplaoe wall to wall talntd and hu been up-I Jamlt ~. Admlf\lt..
oarptt and b.t of all a graded. 4 bedroomt. 2 trator CTA, 8"2-4815. Cute !Uttldt 2 er. 1 B•
price thet II •"«dabM bathe. Hear •hopping. Ptt ok, ho0kup1 M75 + a121500 151.3191 · 1choo11 and frMWay. •Mlt..... 1111 M75 MO .• Jon 541-2497
• · 1127,500. &::Ui &:nd new UxU Cl: SELECT Ull IULn loedtd w/upgrad" In .... PROPERTIES ltl·llM adult pk, CM. 121,800.
m 28' 1bl, emall
yard.I. oar. frig. t715 111,
lut a MO. 54Wt5f twe Ward MobUt Homae IPllTAlllJI 991_..HO OI 9'5-1808 H'ouet wtpoof ~'* 3 Br 2 Ba many dtNX lltra
upper MOO't kkU ptta 531M190 BEST Atty f9a
llTI YllW IM Ill UllTD llTll LM•-.U
Located In Newport Herring Bone brick. trench 172 bMUtlfUI VI.. Wttt
BMQh, tt111 3 Bf 4 a. dOOB, lot• of wood a Homt 20xeo• comer lot
home 11 the uttlmatt In wallpaper, rtplc + much Highly uPQradtd 2BR Nlot 2 Br, new carpet,
lu•ury end 1ophl1t1-more, 3 Br. 2 ea. homt. 28• IOt llV/dtnlng7kltch ptlnt, •m baok yrd,
cation. FabUlou• 0«»an l Only l128.500.780-8M2 .,..,;, IJoh1 Interior .... t '800/mo. l&0-178" ::~0~ ~.'fi:v laat. ltld IAI buy in orang• co. PENTAIDOE COVE
cr1fteman1hlp 'through• IUl IUR 125,000. Young adult1 2 8r 2 ea epllt ltvtt, frplo,
out. Prlot lnctudte ltnd. welcome. Aot &40-5937 pool. IP&. 2 car oar w1tt1
HH,000. lttphanlt '4 Br. 3 bl.~ ltv rm. Anu1t lJU OP«*· N75. Al-HOO
OrOdy. ~200 ram/din rm, lrg befg, g:;r 11 -;;r. Undtr NOO rtnt1 thll ftat
t189.000. 8eil at 814 ~'*. F ~ flnt 2 Ir Chlld pet 1
]!/:Macnab -Irv int 20th St. 5*1111 wn. ~U &3M1to BEST ...
NEW L.AAGI! CU8TOM. 80' low •
31r, Ha.Cath. Ctll• ..... Ill I ..... 110
lno/,am rm. 2 mt. Beaoh. tflt,000. 548-213() agt
lut. IU'9U IAI ~ti!f.LM!:
t Pf'CIP'• '°' • +4 ... waterfrOM hm. lelllgai.
wat«tront oondo a It a~ .. 11' dlliP .... bollt
doctc. ~ ape rm + • dptx In co.ta MtN, , unit
10 Bf 21A .. & a 1r 111A a. + 3 car enc1tct oar In pert lOc &. oond. ,..... ~aft tPM 1111 '40-tl07
Of C&rol f40..M21 Agt.
URlllLI
Private, eecurity pted community.
72 ft. on the bay, w/pier and float
for tarp boat. Weil l&r\c1taped
courtyard w/fountain & ape. Maa·
nUicent 3BR, 3ba home. Fully
equipped aourmet kitchen. For
leue yearly at $4000 per mo. or 3
aummer monlhl at $5000 per mo.
CALL 831-7300
DalebOut .
Bay&Beach
Real Estate·
ITIDm ITIW&il ., .....
· Callfornla'a ~
S1udent Mown. l~.CALT 1388981neurld
••1714)141-t101••
..... lahrabW ..... .......... ...... .......... Amt••ll, .... .... .... tab.. Wutl!J! !'.'!"'!';'!'Eh;.iiiii!!~
USITHI
DAILY PILOT ·..-•st RISULY-
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
fo'or ~esult
Scr~1ce Call c 642-1671
bl.JU
!-ta... UM t'rTU '-' 1141 ••1111 ... , IMJ ltwlfd.... ... ..... a.. ff4i Pvt entrance a Ba. IW. 1111 ...... ltM ii
lherp hOu. M 2Br 18a Height ~50Xf0" ¥' H•wporU~tuplt-.i d66bYWWWf: rn *'400/up 8edl 1 Br 1300/mo. At BHch. M/Ftolhr2Br 1baa.lboe 2000 2000 & 4000 eq ft Wl•l'fllWB ,__, 90r bulJ llhop. encledgerorptt&~ 851~8 mo. om 2 Br 2 .. bil Ok M6I wide moble Home, oou-pool,~ 1"92·Rorid.: e73-4538, 754-1581 llland ~. 1350/mo ytty, • 3975 Birch, NB. .And-runnlnQ 7.AM-10:00 .... be Mt "'• tll
fnod s>:~d rm no 53M190 8Ut... pit Of *'Clle. 8f'MI pet 142·2134 142-3172 Room In Wood--. Irv ulll Incl. Call Gerry 1.50 ICI ft. A9t 541~2 PM• dey, r .-• .-. "' .. ~a..,. OW'\ pet•. ......,.,.., + MC. OK. t12007mo. t67.o221 ' home ""...._,. • 875-9"4 or 873-2827 Pr_,t tNI Id end ,.. 1 11 Muet at.end cndlt check. "NIGUEL SHORES" tlfttport Terr. 3 8r 8 la. fiiilmol 8achelor Dream ·Reap women 225 Ai>c>rox3000eqft. fnCiidinO ceiYaa two m•1 •for toot. H Newport 546-6442. 170.5829 Quiett ,.,,tall, 3Br, den, prof deo, petfo ..., .. nu NEWPOM' PtEA .,.., 1 Pldl EZ move In term•. mo. 551-8$20.,. 4pm. No move In CO.I•. F/Shr 300 fl omc.. 3 pl'\W, the P'ioe of ON r llvd, C.M • ..,...,
apa.Wall<tobtedl&rec cpU7ff+eec7n.f311 Ir, Ito. ocean v19:1 141-t20t'-Room,lhrbeth,women35 okle hM In Coat.a Mw 1005 Brloao, C.M. · ~ &~
,natala canter. Pvt guarded 11111 P'tetl9..1.uf!.O S*•· Av & up Newport 8eectl w/30lah fem. I haw~. 11500/mo. fM.4.7281 lalll WNn• pert1t mmt be ...-.
!all!t UM = ~ v=, lmmec 3 At' r~ .!.c. an::=. .. 'mo~Me40 z 11.1111 .... S205.. 145-25t0 ~~&<>= + utll. 142-8058 lnduetrtal/Comm'I = 111 .. "Hll 18 ~' 3 ,n.. -4046
I 3 Br 'Tl:: m . a:oo;. Aleo have °"*' Alt; • deoor frp6C get xtr.-....-I ... ···-Room wtth pvt entrence, non-tmkr, * for rent, 1000 a.f.. PaUITll BA8Y9ITTEA ........ '"1 atld s**' cpta. '"""' 131..(M.4() . ........ ~· ba, refrlg, non-tmkr or tum 2 Br, 2 ba Promon-Mau. 1400/month. .._ • hOfM 8;80-5;~ M•f.
111
'+ dee> t1H'i:;;· llDlM Delahtful OOMf'I t>r..-.. non-ctrtnker. 648-2807 tory Pomt apt. 1450/mo 21a1n54435 ., ... 1a .....,,.. wam1n. Lori <>we
N4-lt11 . . OCW\ ~from thle big 2 ........ halanJa Dft ~atld ~ all SEA & SUN LODGE + ~ utlta. 973-7907 &auuetwtl tal ?62·1222. .... •W1t7 Br ct...ic frplc Check thle ltyllfl 5 rm two new plueh carpet• l 1 Prof M/F lhr 3000 tq ft DI BAMER STYUsr luL ..... 1141 ' seoo· ..,. ltory 2 .. frptcu1ppte.. . drapee. dlilwMhtl'I, MW l05 wtl/up. COior TV exec home In HB .. SPIRifOll WN881111/llllLI •W--=i:oau:.:tta gar •roo•a -d•t•ll• 2Brf"la.balltb9)-vfaw, oven/range, Iota ot 3029 w .CoutHwy,Npt cloMtobMchMOOturn AdVloe In All M9tter9 a Outcel0NLYl3M11t -:"~.r:=-.. -..... 53M190 IUT Atty fee .,,._ ~ tro llv· ctoeeta. ~ gwege, s L.agune nr b<:h emptycS or unfum "84605 CountelnQ. 1815 So. e · _,
Nothln f11nCV 1 8r w/frille ·~ ...... 1111
111
_ 11\g/dlnl:Tc; w/covered ~ tome pt1vate non emkr tufty tum utll Pd · Camino Aeall. San ca.m. MALE 50 ..U alf9ee ~-•• -,._,.,.....,..-. ------= ~1~~ + soor.crn w•CIM hm:. 28R 28A ec:;-_,ouard :f:ao~ l~a~:·~ .. ~ 2'==:2 ... 12so + • 4934490 ~ -:a~r:'+ z: Uc'd. 412-1211 :::ng~ tr!:=: • •nw
*llM111* •Br •baj poo11..,., den, aat•. poo4. Jae. pvt bMch '213/'*-3071 2211• It ........... BM CM. 146-1934 aft 5 SCR•u·LETS etc. write PO Box 20e1, .......
fem rm, din rm. trlplt 11500 mo. t75-M07 • Amt• wntld a..ut So ""' c.p6atrano a.di t2t2t Hun=~i~rm gw.S2000/mo.7M-Oa73 WANTED: HAMOR VIEW Small \br =.,1!""..m llM331.53M501 ua•1111• Laguna hm.·Pvt entr & ANSWERS •••Ulfl .... _
2 Ba. $7?5. Fenced ywd 3 Br + FR. tum or untum. HOMES aree for 1MM or ~·~e1l)7'°"642I lllTll 111 1 pvt b<:h/IQ rm.45-68t4 ... 1'M ......
& O-IQ9. Kida & pett eummerorytty. Av9116-1. option. Femlly. 54M4IOI ...... IMd fttl 8-nketlredprof lhr 2 Br Byword-SUlde 4320 Cempua Dl'M Ut9 11rM191"*' ......
welcom•. H3-07'55 330WetnutAgtl40-l20I Weatdlff3Br.28a.fonnal ~MIU ftU 11At1Pleom;;I kffc&n: W~enfv•·~5c:!tt:· apt M/F, pr..e, Bluffa. V~RY~ 190,Hwpt8ctl.66i-22t0 11rAllor...,-.
Agent, no'-· BAYFAONT CONDO: DR, Ilg kitchen, pool l m VI:. 1 biCd to ette wat ber tg'belcOMy hNtld pc)oi & etepe to 144-5519 att 5. John "Nobo.dy llkH ma " , ..... .tow ren1 & ooeen doee LMge 2 bed. + den on tpa. S2200m0 lncldl QW· beeeh. 1bd 1be, efftc. apt w/~ ooeen vu. QCWI. Kttc:h't avail. Stir 2br 1ba ~ eatbol eobbed the 12-yw-o°ld l•llwa Ill. . 411' D1·19
modett 2 Br crptd decor l Id 0 P • n 1n•u 1 • · defw & pool MN!oe. Dey "60/mo. ll&-4005 f.4 Pvt entr., Profw6oNll or 945 N Coat Hwy, Pen S300 + utll Avail now b<at. "Don't tey that," wc;ao; LCUf'iG Pr0d1e
lcldllam pe.t ok 1515 PenthouM unit w/VU n1..a171Eve642-521t ll::A:... i4H atudentonty.1725 +utll. LagunaBwti.•9...,4294 115'A28thSt.SatSun growled hit did. "You Too41ngllnYentOtyl1500 ~ 53M190 BEST Alty tee ll800/mo. NO peta WESTCLIFF'B ~ .,.... .,_.. 497-2154 ev/\Mcnd, dyl heven't bMn ~et b R. Sc:hltllng 714 t7M82A AM19tant poettlona now
,,.,-.....,....-__,,..,,.......,..,,..-..,...-SECURITY BLDG. Condo di..nlty 4 Br4 Bapool 1 £. 1 L'. i886Jmo. 957-8181 Mk for Judy l 1111 "I__. Straight M, n/amkr, 25-3-4, EVERYBODY .. y open. • .._. belc'd,.,... Hr OI town 3Br 28a 4 fem w/Bar VIEW. Comm. "' • S500 depottt ---""-_..,., to ehr dlx Elllde C.M. · laftltwt tno progr8m, cw,~ hm wlmod kit & Q#IQ9 pool. 11095/rno Y98flY. ~.NnJ very count~ very all utlla lncld. 142-3099 Wkly rentall now avail. 2br, 2ba apt w/prof. M. •Splrttual RMdef & A~ ~tiel till carNr minded need
kid• *860 other• ..,.at. WATERFRONT HOM£S A all ng.::1,1 ~a. IOW YllW $119/Wk & up. Color TV, 1290/mo. Alctt e31-e741 vtaor. AdVloe In alt ltfie apply. Aobett & T~.
53M190 BEST Alty fee Rl TRS. 831-1.00 ~ali r,r:,~mo. c.ft 1,! garden apt, etOYt & nly 10 mlnut" from phonel In room. matter•: loYe, mlill'llaa, C'. ~ ihOft 146-711?
VACANT 2 Br. tncct /::,· BMU11fUI 3Br 2b•. pool & 87S.7544 lge, ~~· $430. Laguna. your own privet• 2274 ~«~vd.C.M. ltatal1 Wut.. ltlt bualnW, NB. 631 •138-., ~'5•840 or~ .al WI p II
::iz;t:-'.:t'ie53 · ~·~~~~'f0 Laa.bl Uil ~poo1.$4401rno. =• ~t"°:c1= 1.,.,..... Bil F;=t:':t0!~~ E!a'fT ti'! ll!Mi•t.u 4114 w~~~'°'=
LL: ...... Beauttful u.cutlve home XBOCT COUPLd 2 atTy or ~· 631" 1179 acenf PCICH~ oceen 2aldeBr ........... n .__._... CD M •re• W or II Identity. Vic. :nt ~ 1 --•-_.... time. Mon. 1tlN l1lwL ....... ...., 4 B 2,.4 Ba 1 T ' condo, lmmac. 2br, 0 · ...... MW --957-0171 ff2-147 · .,....._."..,_ Calhlik0,.7\4....,..\. ell[ 08 MEdlA&Nd r Faahlon' 111~ 9:;'-i 1'i~ba pool 8o 8 A 2 Br 2 .. condo micro-widen, xtra large private 24 Hr. car.. Lowty llcenM
4 Prime~ a.w-w .... 11a...ooea
IAVINE L(ASES ~l1l50/mo. ~ 1575,'~)74 . . . wave, frple, 2 balcOnys, :-: .£ell2=:3~: home. (714) 979-<54M Mn~~prr,3~=== 657-3512 .... , ... _ ~ _ Ir-.. I I nr watemll & atrMm, "' 1.... s s fnl 1111'\ ADS ";)•• . I :::-1 Big Canyon 2 Br 2 Ba ~-I... ... garage wl open•r no Clar• to.... ......... w/get 700-900 by June uunu J.. I Prof. EJCp, Noni-'*'· a ~or townhome, 11850/Mo. VahrabW 1411 petl. tl75. 545-3115 I .... , Hit .... IHI 15. bl1 ref'•· 7M-1810 ' • I ... 2e1-20208n)'ltme ealty I 759-o7oe Owrv/Bkr Rentlo tlon wOOdiak• ftrr1 2 i:t ,. Cflarmera nr Mother/Infant need 1br & ARE FREE WXAftb: People™ Booldleaplng & omoe exp.
BLUFFS 3 BR/21.t IA 1br :th 0...,,. deck 2~!8:9~ ... '=9:·1~ S~ront hlghrfM. water, f\.illy fum, ldMJ v• ba In hNlttly whoteaome pvt TD ta $10,000 up. new ~y/_,,.. of.
F I
.. _ ... _,
1
.. , ·Id _._1 • _,_· -· •Xclullve ~Tower cation hmea. 2Br 2ba, envlrontMnt. Pref so. Cal.• No credtt """·no penalty. ftce wfll _.up own-. 786-1172 am.rm, CY .... uc ... v •. ..,c, ry, .. -wv. _....., Openl575131-3871 condo.o.luxe2bf,2ba. alp• 8 aveU June 9-30. Orange Co. non amkr. Oenl.onAaeOc81S.7311 tem'ot etkwl M,;'50
June 1. I 1850. 144-2807 1tream1, eec. avt lmmect. * 3., 2a. nr 8C Ptia SA w/ocet/1 ~ l tull MC. 3Br 2be, atp1 8 avail June Contaci O.M.W .. p.o. box wpm S::. AN .,.._
BLUFFS CONDO. 3br, 1t75tmo. l3l-t4eO carport ttg patio pool ape Dock avail. 873-35<M 16-30. Call 873·2~ for 8573, Newport BMc:tl, ca IU-1111 ltl,'t..... SIM Call Mitton I00/321-7ot5
2ba. newly decor•ted. T...U.1t1 t715, no pell, 7&2·5822 BACHELOR ON OCEAN.-detaJJa on wt! to wt! rntla 92458-1573 ;ROU'Mll...,. to manage Bric*' ,__.
3880Mlcheleon0rtve 1 1200 mo.144-44t2 VafualaW 1111 i375/mo, kldd._ OK, EZ FRTONT. l~early Elllde C.M. atudlo, avail. NEED IMMEO: 2 BR APT Found: M & F amall btlt & =..,5 ::-r &private MW'-= ttane. 9ncJmi:
1Mne C~ Cod 3Br 2ba. huge dap t•rM. Cell Wiima ...... AQI 84 8/15. Nr bMCh & ahope. Yrty, W. Nwpl/Penlnaula wtll doge. Vic. Pl809ntla. Room & :.d cani. ~t?S-3175
yard, quiet cul-de-MO, IUll n •... tM1-t20I '-Large 2 Br~ Pvt yard, Prkf.. S7001rno. area. 850-3823 C.M. 84e-2929 ul •ee-1825 • aome Olal'I _ 111111 Ill ..... lhutt.,., flower box•. 2Br 2~Ba. d/w, w/d hk-3 Br 1 Br COtt .,,__. P.wntu11 NOO/mo. yny. Incl. utlla. 14 •2045 IL I F nd or to .....-home ary. ~club --·~ 2 Bdrm l den, 2-hthl. brand new remodel. up, gar, frptc, tl5() · · •· ,.._,. "?20-lffl -111n ti ou _..... M4n'lclub, ._.._, ... r Avail. now. Heat & c!Mn. •1.oc>/mo. 242• 8*ra H.B. ff2·17at/9I0-1193 aide C.M. ltl5/mo. 2825 llUlflllTI ltat Hll coal black tiny KITTEN, llllSITI UllnllU M-F 7:30-3 PM 752-7903
Nwby pool. 11125/rno. Vi.ta. Dys 873-1315 Elden~ 8. 831-1755 LEASE •1500: 2 mnt• UYflms grHn eyH. \lie F.V. CABINET MAKEJ\ .a...t 940-5580 . &,utanta hl'8ilW bra 2 bathe MCUrity S 10 x 20 for 11orage only 9e8.-7oe3 Gefw offtce. ~ ...,, · HARBOR VIEW 3 br/2 ba, 3 br, 2 ba"" SC Ptua 87&-7570 M/873...eff UMMER RENTALS Ea1ttlde. Coate MaH. lmput. Tennlt ctub -Hun1 Growing wood WOtlllnQ Turtleroctc: clMn 2br/2ba. fem rm, nu pnt/drpe, Spa, carport. S750/mo. CALL TODAY $75/mo. M2...e 10 Found: White dog wttn l.D. BHCll Mon-Fri 8-5. thOP l'IM Im.med.~
den. Aval1. June 18. No Grdnr. $1295.144-4295 lllMI 545-7131, 545-5323 • 0111 It al Hit Newport Beech Anlmal S1000Jmo. Call s .. ty at '°' ~ ~.
peta .• 1200.133-1795 LIDOISLEBAYFRONT ldad 1111 POOL frplc prv1 patio ·.· ., ct . at I Sl'lelter.M43e58 8.41-9822 :;:..~WC::..'":.NP
Univ Park exec hme 2Br lowly 9 Br pool/ape iaR dahwlhr X-tg 1 Br on · · 1817 w .. tdiff Of. N.e. LARGE REWARD Loat ·850-311?
2ba on rMnbett 1,.;,mec -ecuiar vi.wt Y..t.t t•e' "·-~ bMch1 With petJo. e.atalde 1535 557·2141 s 1.30 1q ft. pelr of wedding ring• ·-·-;un m QI . ..,..... "' · .. ..,.,, -to 6-1. Fv/l/rt Agent 5•1-5032 wrapped In tape vie of --• lll••B cond 11050. 875-5393 875-7873 tum. *860 mo. 875-7141 LMge 1 Br. Apt. c:tpta, INN RT BEACH Penln oceanfront hm•. Marguerite & E cO..t lm19etment, banking t1rm dr IUI -========±=======;:::;::;;:;::!:;:=~===~§;;~~~ drpa, pool, landaceped Agr .. tplacetolfveontht Jn/Ju/Aug, remod cut-'330/up crpta drapes ale Hwy May 11 19&. looklf'Q for •harp, OrangeCounty.,.. pool .,. MOO/mo. No Upper Bay. Private tom 3 Br. S5000/rno. 17301 Beech. Huntlng1on 840.i85e ' er5-3aeo upel'd admln aut ta1-234S
peta. 84&-3818 aft 3:30 clubhou•H & health Kay P. 720-HM 8each. M2·2~ w11ot1 of lnlt .. tlve, atrong -1-1-.... ---.-.-----
apa 8 tennla oourta, 7 Ba boe d II r LOS1" blk 8mo Lab/M VIC typ tkllla and Wlephone -•-llMI NW pootS, c10M to butlneet, Sum!Mf Rental•. 2 & 3 I ltlan ' ame o • of Sante Anal 15th C.M tech. Background In In.-Ear1y A.M. detlWry fof LA.
SYDNEY
Condo etyte w/cathedrel OC Airport, FHhlon ~1y'' l3000 ,to _!1~ ~1;2~~94,'!5e~s.:37~P · 5-23.842-5518eeo-3814 veetmenta • + s.iery ~~~-to *500 "'°'
HOROSCOPE
celling, 1 Br w/lott, laland convenient lhopa -·, n "" t.... c comm with exper Mr1 """''8
-arM. ~ garege, balcony. on light. beach. prime W.-1 atlll Exec. Secretarlal Service Loat Bol.. Nee & WarrM Kovac ee<>-e68r · 97~9251 E.O.E.
laundtY. bltlna. no peta, evall. Call today for beet needed to iocate In ex· 2 tml ~It• non deecrl~t --------
0 .750. &55-0H6 SPMC. Sing._ 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-Mleetlon. acullve aulta OC Alrpor1 dogt. Spot & Peppy · Aide. l\ouaek~. com-....... MARR · · manta & TownhOUHI N.B. ReaJty 875--16-42 area 6 mos iree rent Not pretty but 1 l<>Y9them penlon, llve In. 11gn1 L.A. BeMd Corp. needs .···········-Quiet E.alde 2 Br 2 Ba from see<>. (Atk about f ...i ' 549_1•80 . REWARD 8-46-74'46 n~Hkeeplng. NB on experdrtwrfofM.B...,.. twnhM w/mpectoue pvt tumlehed apu complete Minn L 1 l d water. Heep care for~ eucuttve. Irregular tin.
patio. Pool, cerpor1, no wtth TV llnent& utenllla ... tab UO'l EXECUTIVE SUITE ~~~1r-::d ' ~:; ly lady M$ patient. Own (213) 278-M 10 1-lpm
Friday May n p. t.. • e 5 0 I m 0 . may b9 rented for ehof1 1 B t ca m Newport Cntr S550/S775 ment ring w/2 dlamondt room, bath. TV. M
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19): Breakthrough ach ieved. You reap 142..oH5, l3M2M term or long«). On Jam-~ :.e . ..;;,: In July: 6'0·547o at Racquetball Otr. Ftn ~~ ~"~ "t,~= 1 llftl'1,_
rewards based on past efforts. Emphasis on m oney and love, creativity, STUNNING lfg 2 Br 2 Ba bor .. Rd. 81 San J09quln $700 wk In Augu11 . Viv. 5119. 536-9787 · & -WT••••"
added recognition ability to be at right place at correct time Accent on garden apt, pool 9585· Hiii• Rd.~ .. 1100 975-313•. 2131928•1M• ht11tht lifft• L~: Min. SUiiy Terrier, &ISWDlll 111,_ c ...... 1s ........_ (12 • . • . . . · 110 W 11th .,.. Newport Center full i•-ou..,. * ...,,.,..,_. • " chansma, penonahty and physical attraction. 4 Br home. pvt beech. 9efVlce 71418.44-6800 ans. to Miu Mk1Gt1. 11 Taking app "'atton• fOf & 7 mo) lootctng for
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)· You gain added recognition you'll Upper 2 br, 2 ba. frple, bit YOU DESERVE IT 1900/wtl or S3000tmo. or 673·1700 evea yrs Old. litvertblacktred· ~~lnded 11 opera~ metur• woman who II
have access to srv-rlal data scc~ario will feature .. 1amour m'ystery Int. Avail. 411 • ...e Hamil-Gated vtllege. pure luxury. 49...,6289. Laguna Bch dl1n tan, on Balboe I•· Im ete po tlon • fun. energetic & under-. . ""'-• . . &' ' • • • ton Av. aeoo. 631-4402 2 Br 2'h Ba elegant ltvlng Ir • 0 ll,,.rt land. PIHM return, the 11 ~lent Nl•ry + mulllp4e It • n d In Cl , 0 h •Ip mt~gucand ro~ance. Look beyond the 1mm.ed1ate. ~rcetvc P,Otent1al. daya; 846-1212 evea 8 1onty 831_5439 · IDOi IEn&LI Best bldg 'on Btrch. From '°loved. Rewerd. bOnu• progr•"'· ca11 a-. w/ctitldren & very Itta
realize people will be drawn to you and audience will grow wider. Yapp Avail now. Wkly. Balbo• 30011600 1q fl 1ve11a1>1e. 675-3343. 840-.9060 Mon.-Frl. 250-0355 tiOUMt<eeptng 6 i.undty
GEMINl (May21-June 20):Loveconqucnall!You'llgettoheart Ww~o=~H~ICE Newpof1Rlty875-8170 IUclttllfJllMlll L09t Ten puppy• mos Anawertng ServQ 1-. 2 d)'• •..-.Avail tOf'
of matters, romance will flourish, many of your fondest hopes, wishes 1 an ; We can off«grMt Spacious ~ingle. one COM 4 Br 2 b• fully rum NtchOlu. 20th/Pomona' phone operator. varlou• travel on oeculon
will be realized .. Fi!lancial status als~ is clcyated . Stress independence, •=from• aml apt~; & two bedroom apts time. TV, 'ptio~. patio. 2 ~~1~~~~~~::C· :~~~ Rew~rf. ~1,..189 1M11. 362 Third Street ~1= ~~Co.::
couraae of con v1cu ons. Leo. Aquanus natives play key roles. 4Br hae. If looldng In CM blk• to t>Mch. Avell Ju,,.. s 1501450 Call 631.0141 LOSli white ahrt haired 1Ull• c. Lag Beech. Mesa 82$2e or phone
CANCER(June 21-July 22): Trust first impressions, be sensitive to NB HI thll\k ofutfltatfOf' Oct. S800 weekly • d~. fem CAT named Collon APT MANAGER COUPLE 751-Sase fof ~
needs off amity members other loved ones. Gourmet dinina is fine but that choloe of ldMI llvlng RH•rvallont req d · Leguna. Prof otc 1Uit•. Vic Harbor Ridge N.B With e31perlerloe tor '. d" . bl M " . ' TSL MGMT 142·1eo3 873-83•9 windows Forest Av 2 pvt REWARD 780-1977 beautiful 50 unit garden Cleenmg P«IOft, It/hf t , r~"!ember you d.o have mmo~ 1Jest.1v.c pro cm .. ~erauon wtll pay N 8 REALTY us-1142 orca• lg• recep1.+ ba. · apt. CM Salery + bonld must hew '*· SuaMI
dividend s! Capncom . Aquanus individuals play stgnificant roles. -•. -- -6751/f. •110 •di 225 ft 901. REWARD. Loet me orange • apt No pet1 M2,..907 964-4~
LEO (July 23-Au\. 22): Demands arc made upon your time as THE VICTORIAN 2 Br 11.t. i..t1 957 .... 79 both s 1 pr tt. 494·1•74 1 ~. 7 toe cat. orange. weekdays g..4 ---.. ----•• ---
1 · · '11 be ked "'" i.. I 8a wtth ger 1590 crpt• n,. t . ...... eves. behind LAHS erea tv ..,._ popu anty 1ncrease.s. ou . as to spe~ ~o ma ... e persona drapea. 6ttlna. tncio atd 1.. *httatlYt S.ltet* "Sy" 775-l48l · ASSEMBLERS APPLY Gen ott. muat type 50wpm
appearances and this could involve t ravel. Restnct1ons are removed, wtttl patio ..tw pd Yee7 tau .. 1 MO FREE RENT 7•m MacGregor Yacht•. Newp<>f1 W•tern Corp
you'll have areater freedom of thouJht, action, mobility. Gemini plays Vlctone eM.-..120 1:&PM IUit DOI w tanO<t term ieu.. tuM ili•il 1w11u... 1111 1631 Ptaoentla. C.M 71~851.0511 ·
key role. ---· HEALTH F a;rn lhr 26r/2t%6e terv 1Ul1 ... ae1 OoYer Or
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22): Don't be satisfied with superficial •llU• ta.I.Ill CLUBS. TENNIS lrvlne twnhM: pool. Jee. Suite 14. N.8. 631-3451 Newapeper
answers. Focus on legal ri&hts, permissions and ways of obtainina 1 ' 2 It. apta. poof, IPI. SWIMMING. plus tennla. 13'5 • U1lll. •1ian1
, reward for efforts. Bed specific, read fi~e p~nt. state nee~ in
1
m
1
aturc ~~1~bel. No peta. much more' Sorry. ASAPRoeemery957·"88 ltatala 1111 KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZESI
manner. You arc uc to eme-rge v1ctonous -emot1o na y and m Mamt 754-00ll 01 nope~ Modtl~ Fem to* ntoe 2 Br condo 1 lal ,_ .....
financially. t42·1dl>3 open daily 9 to 6 w/pool, CM. 8!0-9287 .I. .... ..
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Ask plcnly of que1tionsconcemina lepl d ...... '245 • 12 ulll. 2300 1q n. cpt. ale. lde8I ri~ts, pemuas1ons. Emphasis on pubhc relations, possible penner· Ina ,.. ftll /l) _ J~.1,;.,. Fum. room wlba. pvt tim. ~~ ~=ng ea:,,~
ships, cl~sh of ideas. marital ~tatus. ~em~r of opposic;e sex Md Ni ~~ 13~· ::~~tJult. ICI fl groa. · ·
l communicates needsJ deserves scnous consideration and affection. OnlV 10 rntnut• from Ap1rtmtnts . llPt lltJ tll..alll
SCORPlO (Oct. .t3-Nov. 2 1 ): Domestic adjustment occurs, health L.eguM. 'f04ll own~· HOVSEMATES
improves. individual you .. adore" will return compliment. Accenl on oce9n vt.w from Dine Newport Buell So. WILL~~~~ YOUI ••trdll
1 cooperat ion, moderation, possible purchase of items wbicb briahten Pomt'• rnoet MCtuded 1700 16th Street "Gain comtort8ble ,..,,, & ltatal1 1111
surrot.andina.s. You'll overcome sh yness in dramatic fashion. ~H~b o:' 2": (at Dover) tne n1ce Maill"G of nnc11ng 18818 Harb& FV
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Affairs of heart dominate. w/oen W. wae pr1¥M9 642·5113 a new fnend"I 12•01C1 n
Emotions rule l<>sic. Children a~rt of scenario -chanp, travel, .,.b c.-tl0-e331 01 Newport Btadl No. NEWPORT• TUSTIN "gent iw
1
·5032
variety, charisma will alto be bi Jijhted. Stick to your own style. ~ bf 2..aaa Stint• 880 lrvint Avenut 132-4134 lt'Me .,.., 1200 tq n.
refuse to be Cljolcd or intimidat • Pisces plays sipificant role. ca.a to..... <•I 16th) LM"ge LllQIUM houM. ~ 1550tmo. amall office.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Law is on your side, you have IUt...... ft41 645-1104' nyon&oowi~.3Br, Tom
851
-
8128
riaht to proteet your own internu. Do aomcthina about improvlna -~ ~L, ci::•12~1mo Newport Blvd Coat•
security removina gfety hazards from homcbbe. You'll be 1tronter Ill.. •--· .... · Mau 1500 aqt tt · ' fi · 11 ,....__ -A h C • fi • Yll ...... .... iMoe L--hOuae ca-1150/mo AHlonomlct em~uonally, !ranc11 y. ~cer al.M.I a not er apncom aaure 1n I• Liia ICti en: pvt=;;;: nyon, oo;.; .,_. 3 81. eorp e1w100 M*•
c"otinJ scenano. ._ 1 & 1 Mm ~ 1'9, poof. MWi ltM 2 be. 2 '**-$3.50/mo • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20..Feb. 18): What had been 1 lon&-tllndina •"' 14pllnl.1 ldtm. nonamkrtSIO. , 1nc1ut.._ 497.12•1 ~:1~A~es':f pro~lcm wit! be rcsolve<;t. Relative c~uld play key roJe •. You'll fin~h 2 '*"'.,_,Town.~ fiit1n *''*"""'"'rm M/Fnon-erntcr.2 * 2 eo.91 Hwy t1M800
ptOJect. you U consider Journey. you II ~ive potcntW. Shon tnp ~~~ -::. w/P¥' .,. to .-it to l\On-Ir 2 a. Prom P\, '21& 11
could be necessary to complete m1uion. Anes plays key role. , a.n °'9ao ,.,..y '"*'· ~lnQ Mn ts+. + 12 utll. cart 646-4721 Puca (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): New policy provides flnandal pin. =Horth on.,.._ to CM 54f.1~7 aft a:30 wrtt, 11,._111• r• Int.all n•
(714) 548-7058
Acccnt on money and how it sets that Ml. Focw on peymenta, Mclf~ and WeM on Prl'ta,. _..,,enc., btth Mtl' "" 2bf 1tie twe iiS& iii wl1ml OL I&
collccuons, locat1on of lost artklt. Mtmbef of opposite sex is lincierc, McFlddtrl w 9-tMncl ...-, na for 11uc1en1: W•t.ioe c.w . ..-oo ~ ptr 3 P'I ... Aandol'Pfl hel~ u obla.in nttdcd ma•cnal, aach an aeninf"lO hean of mitten. V111e9t (714)193-6181 mtcro, Nifl1o l40-7m ..c Mileti CM5--tK2 81 CM S441-tas3 _l]~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~!l!!!lll
' •
l
ClO
... ~ .... •·•-...... .. ...... I .. If ...... 'e"'lf. --...., · mwx+Wii Plltl tlll 11ti COOK:lic-•·•·twft-..... ~ ..... pst ~off.,.....,,.,., 7iNittil'XWfi ::J:',.. ~= NEWflOATKAOH ...... +,d9)'9'w. Uled ........ 1111001tOO, ........ .,..1'1t '°" .... ~•1blit(--dr'Oor1 IFYOU: ~Ont NMpl9CI Al .... Mio~ ........ &Nit ~W..... ..... ....1423 ::..·,~·.~~·.!i.i.:o.·~ ·:::~ .. o...a..;:.~ =-:"'c.~ ... ~=-=~~· ..... ,..LF' ~llhWI•• ttAM •.=;;:;::*9 -M/•/IM111f1 r1 w..,,.,11111cin.r.DOOC1 EID 9'!!!..u1-1111
Offlo9. • AiPPY"' """°""""' '° ITllllTI oonaazao ....... 141' WM'iruar,..-..1o1-="'!niiiY--I:-~~~--~~~-~'~"'~ -{lllll&Ln) ......... ._., 151)19 ~~-eo.,..::: =-~~~~ ..... W9li iii, mo i09 mkt, ~-· ~ Wllll-+i MIZ3000:whtte,l*le
--•,.. -· " .. ...-~,. a ~ .......... "'· 2 -. ,.. - -.-.... ...'*·',....... -·-ILUll ""· """"·""' ""· m1n1 ~.!'.99 .w. ~ ~ :=:;:::t;e:.i cmr ~ ,,. 111tA, Oft In H.I. an 111 S'9IOW K01oW we he\oe ..,.... 1or LtillM Mii MA01c 18LAND Gold •• -. _;;,10•_ ...... .,.". P':l -·--ie...5540. •Ne• a HOT ..._ imlwy. w.-e ._....-....,_ bo)'I & gifts '*"•• -Charter member•hlp _ ~=-r, •Wou6d..,. . ............... ._ /Ill_.,~ 12·,·~•wonttno m~ • '300/oC>o,•tlllH blu • ..,. ntw Int. .
. ---•::::.· ··-· -............ Lim• -· .............. Gold Ciid -............ ,... FUii !me Mlltn 1. ,.....-Olltt4-_. -.C..M.-· • .... -" .... '~ ... ~ ..... -. !etn rnon.i. trtps I "TH\JRI, YM,IPM 1110 ObO. Cell Ai '83 310 L on't, Ub0e...,..17s..&4CM __ ,...... -"'·---.~~I ~Cell S..edunderAl'ldqufa 7t,·121·7'20 during
l lllJD.... llllTIL lllllqn: 11~1.,,, 5 ~--MOTEL OOOkt.PltiMe~at: Mr.AounlNI bualnWhouft r1•J~~::::1~~·,11~.,~~
Prime lurger. CM. Ex· N.:W~ur~,::; -~~: P~'*'• ~~'-o:r= 2~=br .. ow~. Mon,,,.1~--!Yt!atllll£•••! MINK STOLi! Tounnallne WlllY 692-1573
cper, ,.qulred. Apply In -Cefl 1444:"4 SANO HOTEL,. &...lltuM Need Maid• main· • • -·~" C\3::1 ~ col~.1 nMds rellnlng. ~ _.anat7IKIW.17U1St. ' llaadl.•M-MID ~ "lOE taln•nc., ~t d••fl lllTlllAIJ by,., 25 ~ .._. w::rmcel175 ... 2·2"4t USEDCAN&TAUCK8 DENTAL HYOifiiiT fOt .J40 136-7117 COMEINOACALLFOR •-------•I l.9'1Urta 9W11....... 1111..... . =·-A«A'f ~.:l WH~f.:a1~:;:;~/ F~~-°=-~ 91T1W · NEIMAN lar 8ciant, fmAffUll.11 prac11oe, T'*' ....... Ful dlafDt tot &&.n.,Moft. ' F\lllltim9. Call 49$-0212.· 'noh: lnduetrial bonorglnlz:er, 3' TOOTS SHOAE'a/artl•t COnnltf·DeUIO Dell'tWY ••Ptnded dut!"' ,,ot ...... drive, AU'e Nq·d. NANNV ..med: artt. or CAFE MOZAAT. SJC. httptl.M, l:':-3017: 1 • '" 00 tra~. 136. proof retall 17700+ _ .. n . ' IEEl IOIEY 1 .-..cao ....... .,._ .... "'"'" 11..i. ,....,._,.,__ • ""'"°"· ,..."" °"'""· ,_.,....,, ,.,~b"ZHatvo. WOR LARGEST
W• Mft ~ tor 50 •' ,17-3813 .._.. ... !\de ' & I. lnqlMt 752..0700 Aallwt: "'•n•• ULll f /T Mlac.ll•neou• bUHdlng Newpor1 IMch Tennl• HUNTINGTON BEACH MERCEDES BENZ
peopMi t wotti ox 11111'11. · -•I I I WAITEA/ESS, BUS Newport Bead'I AMI &-mat.,~•. )ec:uzzt tub, Ctub Member9Np. 8780 DEALER
10 d9)'I o~~· Ex!Mfltrteed ~. &· -9'1018 ... ,... HELP I HOSTIESS tate 0..•topmenl nrm 85().1711 W'oCltOll t350 tn1ntfer fM. 141 .. l J 141 1111 '&4 MEACED£S BENZ
........_ dlfec:tOl'W In the ~ dUtlee tor = PIT I ~ In, :s ~. Lodi.Ing ror 2,.,,. ttme/P*'f wenled. Cfll 752.5200 Ma opening: tot enthlle-r ' .... 5'5--2388 .. •llT-Exie ...... SeMctlOn Eil';o, MlMlon Viejo, ornoe woric. 3 -...... CiOok. C.M. .... time ...... ~. tor our betWMtl 11em-6pm IMtle motMi*1 lncffvlO.. '" .. .. _.. I JIM SLEMONS
San .Nen ~•lrano & weiek.Nanay. .. $o"7llO. '#IOfMl'lpr.t.432.aD1' •o;:::.;..:~'· llTll.ULll '*for IMpf'oie c:en-&ite klttana, I :C. Old C::.,W~~-:V,: ~=~ 13010:PJ:ATSNplBcti
San Cletnenta .,....... ...---. _ Hou•••lf• or ~tlrH * 1'11 1.IK * Cahletl..._ al Newport v...ina. • nr. Pll' day Ire• lo g~<I home. Mpot1 lo ~on. M... 133-9300
wor11: your av1H•bl9 <l•y-llOT.,..._, •.•rw• w/t11p or• OeQraeln s.w. i•• RR T-tNtt 11or., W1I trW.. eon"00
1__."' ~-~~.·, ... ~ 1541-3167 July 13. 1276. IN-5NO
llgtlt hour•. Men or or Domestic i.wM. 'or _,.,. --FT/PT ........ --· ~ •-TOP $$$ PAID • wit Sh -f'IMicled IO · ' ' II•'• Roi~, boltom ''""· -.,... • h u,., ~P " ._ '""' •-" OW1Y l lll• •-out ...... cw a ,..... - -"" -.,...._. .... ·-·a •tallonw~orllghl wotkln t•IMCtdNlw" weoe.eon.-aMgood •••--~ 1 med openl ,.....,._.,..... .. _,_ •-$1 .5'1..2971 ForP~ 1rucir.1ara~.P*a-port 9Md'I flit.°"'°'-cllfz.en ettllc•I prel. ALL SHIFTS ~ For 11ma11 ~M10W.P04,N'l: ....... .:.1--•t..t. mllKllllZ ant outdoor wwor11.. V.,ld Must ~ MClll•nt b'P-Ptiew wrtte OMW. P.O. convateecenl f'IOelPlllli In or call 14~11 we NII work• Of fine art: Pure Br«t Allty Kitt..,., Ul5U
<11tver'1 lloenM requfred Ing & ~...... 80• 1573, Newport L-oun& 9Ncfl, ExoM!enl . Dall, v...,.i.y, etc. 10 hi tO'•I 54-()185 autt ..... Gl6'&1. vrm: Top ~ Prloet Pakl
& the •blltty 10 undet-75,..pm ~· Wonl Pf°"' Bead'I, C• 12656-1673 lncenttve pro(tf'etn. llTll. llLlll quallllecl ln'tMton. AV«· radltut MB amps, & eccea. e.t• H~FI ,__.. ltlH ... ,..., /law
11an<1 lnatructlot'll given. ceulng upar. htfPful, w/..,.,.,. or phone I •f.4-8071 Perfumery In Fashion 9Qt Income 150,000 • SL5200. :S lape <ledll ......... , 1 IOZS DIAL2t3nt•MEAC'B>eS
For lmmedl•t• aulgn--•--. p•--t .. W In NB needs PfT year. II you 're ••· 1' aofai ~t;::llOW& 673-1797 INve,,.... I HOUSE Of IMPORTS, Inc
men!• lollowlng • lhort Contact l.fdll, .,._..,_,.. lllllllUR ..... -·· p FfT ...... P.,llOfl. No perlenoed, your money whit• seoo. 760-0178 Ofll r==~. I '78 CXN XU 2&6 ..... <. lllt tr1lnlng aealon. 1pply -~ In Order Dept. No up, Apply In peraon lo arts exper. ~e11ary, but problema ere OYef. (Wiii Armolfeil200,Knt:zbed, M Ual••I AUNSGOOO •
8:30em. 10:301m or ed 1 1 , nee. Company Wiii train. Mgr, Mlltk>n Vlt~ Im-preterrecl LOOklng for tr•in rtgtll lndlvldua11.) <l••k. •••h•r. dryer, ~~nl IUI 850-4513 'fl 611§. Im. :xn 1:30pm d•lly. nee<I ~ *' 0 ,. Flapi<I •dvancem.n1 .-1<1 portl, 28701 M&r;l*ll• peop49 ~HVIQ to IMrn. Contact 911M Manager melnlalned brown met 21211 l arc11rft1 pair/Ur•-._ ,,..,. xlnl k'ICOtM It QUdfted. Ptlwy, Mtulon Viejo. Rhonda 780-9093 or Training Dlrec:lor al r.tfige. 573-6571 S cr-edenz• :~:;..: .,.f-Trub HU !Mth, 115,lioo. 581· 1173
•-"-# llO good drl'tfnO r«Xltd. For lnlervle'W cad Mr.,.,,.. p•mT/Tlll ·'1~7-7501 BEAUTIFUL yettow cu.. our high back cll•lr '76 Ford PICC Qp, One T tlll
-11• 1938 Newpor1 ltvd, C.M. drew1· 812-5"3 · Altl UUlllDI !om tove•••t. good Worth S2500, Mii I~ ownet, radio & hNl1t,1,,..,...";;,:C-;:i:::::"liiililf nlon Viejo M2..uto ' · 4-9 hOur9 dally, life In-tlbOa lifend Ph•rmacy -UL.11 con<I., $400. 912·5380 l8150/obo. 5'5-l ll6 5',000 orig. mH•. 8581''7'f!$f0L: dMn. 11888
fNMr AveryPkwyJ FL~·lll ' '";;li1ow.UTD :O-:!.~;::.e= ~1"9.:-tie1~'. torMADOBenefl!Show ettlld'1ftberg1Wrm ~ ~ ~ w.18ths1.eo.1aw... Rebtteng,ntWtlrealbrtt•
EXP ER D. ~opening, PertltllM. Pauiertno •t hand & cornput• know!· 873-1850 Mr. Elwood Cp~,=~~-Y~ ..,!n1~: ~ P9f1 cond paid HI au 842-1138 Tod 549-3&611~628 ~,~E=L~IY=E~l~Y~PE=1"'1"'0"'1" ~-~~,,., 8'Wto4,c .M.2•1-1n2 =:-=::-;:. ~.~: s.... No•~~· ~~Ing i19o. c..i ;:J~~=sl., K::;: Vw Mil !tlbwatn tit!
Part/tll'M. Good driving 111111..... LH&L SllUlllY Air..-....... 5a7-.6M2 • M•••. -I -~--bed, angl, spinet. 1700/obo. Xlnt. 'd CHM VXN ii&i 'lmr.,;;t; r:sA eno I reoord. Call!. llcenN r• II .,.,.,.lewHrmMaklngltt~ -· _.. 11PllTPlrt1'191 j~'::tt.1100.~ Justtuned.97Ml2fl 846-1"8 tranamtuaon
2
•• ,
1
-
31
..-.C
qutt-ed. &42--0821 Liie bkk~ ~I. & getlon 1ecreUiry wl1h INIT/tm The ,ITAIT=ml. nm.. Mon. Tl'M'a.. I Frt muat be '81 Ford Econolne 150. -
typing F T. PMaMnt 2~ C<f. ~· Mmt -=a I °' ~tut & aocur-~ ....!._1Mper.._IOltlsJ; e::-"'ped~ °"~ ale, xtnl oond. MU91 Ml l'·e"'r'""'vw='-,c~o~m~po=-,-uv~on::.
Oemon•lr•1or1 Wanted working oond~ In engl· tie..env to dO some COi'· Excellent opportuntty In • CtrculetlOn current-at•. will be trlllned on --·~-~20", • -5700 gd cond 548-0204 lrnmed. '6500 obo Scott I 1800/obo. 675-5405 or .mm.. neetl otto, ..-y open. .... ... lew. Good ben-........ --'-Ing *"""" ly ..... poallk)na avlollable IBM~ wrtt .... AWY -...... . •RA•···, .... ,,... ,, .. ,., C1ll lor -wt-761-1151. efll•. S•l•ry com-ronmant ~ ~ In~ ...... M • 1nl)ilf"Kln: PENNYSAVEA D/95 -5725 f!&U-4502 Gulbranaen. mt11'1oaany,lr-::o1==------'---l ,'°"'~;,=,=-c===--== IHI I ULS D•lt Kw• & AMoc. "**"'ate w/-.per. c.tl 8Mctl Omo. la IOoklng 11e6c1 rtpl'"...,.tttlve WTI 1eeo Aeoenll• A.,.. Gorgeoua 4 pc llv rm Ml. stldo. 673-17117 lNve btlt9ft, '70 8'JI w/ltove I IHI.
& tum M lllW PDlll Barbin 833-3622 lor mat.... ~t>ta .,, f\ourty wao-+ gen-Coat• MeN brown tonea Ma bMU1 m••••ee Cludn IMS '*" pelnt, runa t;•t.
TQfl LN cr-nic.11 llU AppJlcanu r.qulred lo "*" ... lndl'll<luatl lo do Int.... :-:~mai.~ Tl'lilt/~ '#OO<l 1rim. Paict 1750, NII Plano fW!tata from s 12 '31 Pontt:C BUii. e:p: I 1750 obo. 87~2
lm!Mdl•1• Q9el'llng1 tor know bM6c ~. turf PIT es•• ~ tflMphone woric on formation call 957.2391 Bu LW.--omo. .. rpon $350. tM-1338 mo. FREE i..ona & 1"«'11. Orta _eng. good conc:1 lo '7t au.. rvnsgood, amltm
10 1ri•rp •ntriu1l••llc cert & opet91kwl ol gar-' no •.~.~ ry. ~.ofa:!:ttklnail~~ ••I. 1204.' S'J ' I Ill--• Call tor detalll. tfl0.1155 m['$80C)(i. 1173-73311 ' C&M. EO. SIOO. fl7S-2Ui
people 18 & older to denlng ~. Mull .............. --""' ., .. , min. req. 50 wpm, r-•-72 ~--8Mtte .,,..,oof demonstr1te •~prod· ha'l9 fn1Mriurn ·2 ,,_. LIVE IH: Mature. 5 days vo1o9 a ft'IUllt. Hugh: SALES/RETAIL tran1crlptlon ••P· & LES 967-1133 Wunttnr 8e>IMt Pleno '81 CORVAIR: new paint, ~ • ~IOl'OU10ftawnbu• lan<lecapt IMlnllNl'IC9 ....-.uo.-. $penllh 5'S-ane &.per ... F/TtoPfTCM =~~om=·· LIKE NEW. 2 CdiftPilt9 ~·~7171 ~0oo"::n:.~·~5 ::.:~~m~:Y:o"='
neaMt & aummer r• •xper\encie end/Of AA spMklng OK 551-8320 Brkltl Shop 546-8214 553-t133 btwn 1-5PM Twtn Beel•. HMdb09rda. ~~·~I ·~; tort•. No exp. needed. DeorM lo hOttD.11\Ut•. ••--PART TIME Vlltted ttoufl •••RSI etc. $100 IMCtl. &4tr8127 - 1, 21 (u mpg. 11500. 982-1724 '75 Cnvt. Top oond, WIQ Trans.llodglng provided. 613-22119»-f 8:30-4 l'l'•MI .-wa • ' ~ W•llr ... /walltr w•nted, ••" e la .. llR rbtl runt grMI $4500. Earn $300 lfllMk + bon-fun Job aupervlalng teen-lo Include Hrly A.M. Weneedyou!Calltor appl: no up.-nee. Apply In lovely Cf9denll, marble 171. xtnl cond. 8'4-71122 ••Ill er! M-ix 213/Mfl.8271 '
uw . FOf lnlo: M1 . Shon ...._... 909"' on fund ral .. ng PfO-weekencll. Mull have <le-R.C. Mrl(lg 840-3275 peraon Mon-Sun •fl 3PM top Inlaid WOOCI. Rocking Waltat Hao-'! 2 tftru I & 4
953-8247 (1G-6pm) B•lboa area.87~1•57 -tor non-protlt or-pen<l•ble vehk:M farnall at 3033 s . er111o1 #0, enair·· b1$i;M Jampa fool AUi 1117 '78 Dui-, good cond. -:========":========;I genlz.atlot'I. Afternoon & truck, v•n. 1l•llon ANOWICH MAKER tor CM.!!57-3081 IM>ak~ fl.4~ll04I~• Woods, e.g. 873-17117 1 i~.-,..,~.-..,,,,,,,.-,,,,,..1 anlrt.f2000 . .. rly evening. 5 <l•y wagon) to ual11 news-Dell. Mon-FM , 8:30-2:30. · leave m••'O't '711 5000S, mint Con<I. 760-1612or144-5909
-
. S•l•rv + com-pep9I' d...... In ltvlne COlll• MeM.. &42·5297 I •• , 'l'H91111&1 Matching eof• & IOYtaael. " o:tt: r·~ ..... :;~'~·~ .. ~·~':!· ... ~·~·~·~ l'iiRAe:iii'fcciN\i-.;hiti ., M st be -._ 15-eltll oond S300, Round , ..... , 1.... t i 2 '81 RABBIT CONV. wM•. mlaalon. Must hive lerge •rM. u · IUlllTllEIS PIT, Orthopedic Oftloe. din tbl llO. Round leek ttrtl 1231 I blmd( Int. Ilk• '*"• low
car tx van 833-0383 <lab!•. Contact Greg S1111 Clement• 493-0S34 ,._ 3' " lood!J, ''"' ml. 17400. 973-8Me · HydeMondeytllruFrlda:y per.tordl'"aperywo11i;rm cot! tbl 115. 1~1 NJohrl'sW....nou..S&le '71 733, .... lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I betWMn 1:30 and 10:30 Colla M ... 850-2800 )1" Wu t.. SliS belgecrpt. ult oon<l '50. 50 1>eeu1 25" RCA XL 100 c ond .. • u 1 o . bl u '81 Rabbtl Conv, .mt. ttr. lll'ID •.m. only· 142-'321 Nurselcomp•nlon, dsy fl4&.5MI aft 5 & •nctsi <llgllal Mtl, hl1Wf bue, w I p a Io m In o In I , BleupunKt 2001, ap1 1t1,
Daily Pilat
GRAPHIC ARTIST
Orange County daily newspaper is
seeking a quick layout artist with
knowledge· o( typesetting repro-
duction. reproduction, camera rt.<ady
art. M usl be able to get long well
with sales reps and 1nterperet their
ideas in layouts. Add1 t:onal prospects
may include flyers. brochures, maps
and sales present1on visuals. 3 years
experience -newspaper preferable.
Send resume or lt<tte r of qualif1·
catio n to:
THE DAIL'( PILOT 11 no. -1111nuw.1LE11 work In your home, local On sotabed, 1150. OU new..iwarrllnly, ·~price 114,500/ob0.145-3187 l8500obo S36-el21 .....
1ccep1lng 1ppllcat1on1 PASTE UP & ProducllOn Full !Ima <lepartment•I rel. own 1ren1. 545-9380 1bta/chtl, $200. BMut. Fr9t del!wry. IMfl-1781 '711BMW320!: Xlnl ~. '82 Rabbit eon....n. xtnl
ror 0111r1c1 Menaoer• 10 Artl•t: 1rn•ll publllhlng role Good typing 6 1..._ C SSIS eota MCt.l oek wmll unit hltl lftnal 7111 ale, snrt, emltm .,.,., cond, lo ml. 19800,
supervt1e new•P•P•r compeny In Colt• MIU pnoM sldllt· enthualullc 111 con .. 1eiHe Mt, chlrta :.&..: cw, OflQ. owner. 178001 875-2172, 4119-3583 carlier1. Mu11 h•.,. .,.,,, will lrede offiQe apace lor •llllucle. s91f mo11't•ttl<I, eiu; RU::J.,, P::lli&tl i50. cabtl 5 Pc oekt BA Ml, 101 lr:Cl;Q; &Oe1 w/Ni I otr. 5Sfl...b353/857-I 15-4
waQon or pick-up. Good part llrM help. 241-9221 ................ 1 _...,.,lty 1, C"~-SlO. 873.Uflfl $400. All ir:ln1. 543-2241 acceu.1175, 11117-MOQ I IL II i---• .. -.,......, '82 528E: aulO. cat phone. .. •ry. m ••ge • O•· Pll c•• MUii~ touglll Apply In peraon $offd WOOd (~) dining II' 15" ftberglUI dingy, lul Whlt•lb•I••· Concord anoe, cDmPllllY benefits wltri relume 10 complet• Hlmalay•n Klltena: lov•bl9 $425 tnd t>Onul opportunity. A.ns. MrV. ••P· pr-4. m ........ lca!lon: Mr. FuentH. ball of tur. $elilpolnt. CFA 111 w/8 ctw1 95, cotton canvu. oers. •tc. 111teo, Cenlr• whMI•.
App()' In peraon •1 Dally 1r•ln. 3-11PM , M·F. AH ROBERT BEIN, WILLIAM reg, 8 '#II.I. Maiet $200. pr! COUCl'I $225, gcl cond, ODO. 536-7187 Plrellll. trip calcullllor,
Pilol Clrcul•Uon Ofllca. • II 111 I w •• k. n d I . FROST & ASSOCIATES Fem .... 1250. 646-8132 bl! olr taken 751-4221 •••• mu. Ilk• "9'#. AMUl'N IMMI
330 West B•y, COlll Fashion. Ill. 780°™5 1401 Quall 51., Nwpl Bch lilac SlamMe Kitten•. 8 1&1 ... Lift Sliding wta 973-0987 bUy. 559-&442'fl.44.a325
Meta. Moo<lay lllf\I Frt-"I -"'TH · 3 2MO -dsy. No phone c•ll•. ..,.~ noan•T (WO.) _.,, 1751 ... 87 . Ptwr hltl tilt
E.O.E. H1:,: =O ~~ ~ ot11ceofttiePresklen1 PERSIAN Kltlen•. Qultlty, lallM 1111.d l l M 111 BOSTON WAXLER
152.1..00 ••1 2490 corp. t1eedqu•rtM• ror ped. 1200· 538-1892 GIGXNTK! 3 FXM SXLE wflr•l1tr 11500. 11151 lldfOllllT R.E. ln'tMlmenl nrm ha PERSIAN KITTENS Wa've gel evetythlng. SOUTH COAST, good
For be•ullful Nawporl gener•I offlca lln •Int career oppty in an $150 & 1200. S46-t985 Sat/Sun/Mon aU d•Y-cond. $4500. 5'8-9559 l,..a~
..•oh S•lon. M 1·3880 Ill Flll&T l /F extremely lut·p.ced en-~ 'SIO corner 127 Ru"" lor.,.M OllmllT. lfFIOE Ylronment. wtth dlver .. 1y I ~ .,,. 18' Sunuty 1978, 115 H.P.
Manicurist wanted po•· Loc•led In L,.un• Ni-.ut1. & ch•llef'lge. Mull pos-3 Cab pupi)i;,J.rNt ctn•• 4el L r l l H Jorin1on, ralurbi1h1d Exotllenl SelectlOnol New
lllon openlnQ tor the "' MSS top notch SH lyplng / °" "4750. Wm trade !or Lido =~ od Send resume to: Joyce · breeding llnn w • 6Q01 Topllide, ~ 14 + cun 87~ 1se , . • :' ptepar-Jesslc• N•lt CUnic In Wiltlams, T•ylor Wood· & org.nlt.atlonal 111:111•. paper•. AKC 1200 MCh. ttwu Sun. Fum, , . , , , , ••tw•Y9 1n
P .O Box 1560 Newport Beach, •lnl pay, row Homa. 1600 Dove Non/smoker. Send ,.... • 1114)t74-1758 bOokl, hOUMhold fternt 20' Outtlel<I elet. 'fui)'tmt, ' Stock 2131257-8288 c•ll Lor• sume to: TMI, fl Upper S1DOOO ••1-•111 Costa N esa. CA 92626 St •225· Npl Bcti, Ce:. Newport PW.a, Newport AKC Gold•n Re1rlever Mnk co.al, corr..-ctAP" !':'1a.ey87~=-' .. • lm l1IDIA'I
SOUTH cou1n
¥11.llWIOEI
"WI WILL llT .........
Votume S.., Senb
Attention: Melinda Thackery Shop 11 home. 11·1 easy 92660 BeKh, CA 92MO, 111n: pupa, '200. 145-8711 board, king a ~ ••~~-~~~=~~ --{,O:O:O:O:O:O:O:,;;oo==:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~wi~<h~o~tu~•~lled~~ .. ~2~-~56~7~8'._I PH0NESALES:3HRSPM K.,ln Snur.on. No call1, Alts ken Mal•mul• much more .20071 40' T,..._ twin dlMel, 2
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ALROS5
"'"Jwoiy
F•ac.!ur"d
'' Giet>n .ri , i ..
it .. lh1nr1•"" i:..ir1
mp n,.~··
,·n (.r~m"
lc1•m•·••t-.
. 4 Qp,.,,., ""'(l•·
, •1 I l1r•)V!"ll'
pq>i
l'J r •"tl l'.l·l""
• t '-,.,p;·rlrt ,,,
•[.o/'"•" ,,,,,
!h L.1'11.;UUfl•
-.u!!•'
• M 11 ttl
JB r> , '" '''
'I'(''' 1 ,.,,,.
.:Q l !'I·•·• I
'j(\ c. ... ',
'1 T '"' A11 ,.
"' , 1' • rl 1 r " ,
!,, µ ••
I.''/• '·•" ....
1 .\I ,:1 .. 1! it 1•!
'•'· I~ t 1
t.>1, '"''I'·'"
f 1-1 .... ,,,
' .... "' . ' <I \ .i,,'
! • o! " /, ''' ••. r, , ., '
,. ,. f ',.
'" .; ,, . "
'J •• ,,,
I' I J , •••• J
" .. , '·' +·· ''
-'H""'t"·d!I
• t. l.IJll' .,11
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL VEO
• ~ ,. "'' ''1'~ "
; <:.; ,.,,d,t:
' P ,.,.,,L·t·"
,( , ,, l n ,,.,.,
I V.> l'l• (1
, r .,..., ..
' T '"L •
,,_J~ ..
1' B' ,,, . 1 •t ,r. ~·1 1, •
!.'L~•1!t'>•I
JJ Ernt ~+'lh'>r1
,Jo• ', 1 ' f , 1t'I
1 '" ...
', 1 . .,, t••l t••<I
. ="''"" · .,.,
' ~ 5.,:11_ • t>O
"' .-~ ·•" '
·" d . '"
5c. St ''"•· 1~
Gru1 P•Y If you're M)' plNM. Slt>enan Huatcy 112 breed Tet'llUM IMne Tt Cd~ llatlon•, complal•ly l7::i~T,~;;;:~~~I
good, other amen!UM. SECRETARY: PARTfTIME pu......i........ Xtri1 wlcNklrwi, 2127, M . 673-MOI equipped. OWner t\eli 2 1" ! SELECTION OF 4117·5414 __.J boat.I. Muel ... It ao.t al I~~~~~=~=~ 1x1n1 typing I lhorthend, io very g<I hom•1. celta ... ......!!!! fl5f W. leth St. Costa NIW & USED BMW'S!
QA/QC ¥9l'Y exp: r91.lrM ftexlble twa. poMlbry ~ $351•. 145-1826 ah 5 s:R Water iQI ;oa;::fiii Mw M2~1131 I 111111 ...
ok. On-cell lnsp. In your lo tull tll'M. Newport Cock.It CM4'9 I wlla. Buff $.S-.l40. Toota 1145. Frt: ao.t ...... 17 ft , Amert-UMESALES
...... Reaume: lnlettek. 8MCt\ 875-3551 colOI' AKC. ·~a~ Sat ..... 281 E. 11th SI.' ''"·'·--971·1911 vtCEI LEASING ~~ •. ·~~~·Rolling S~ ~ tta~::; p9Q9Ml100. II r ... illA t wotk.f?U6'1 home o:o~~ve.
"AIJTT MTllL ~pl. Bch·ln~ of-Cocker Sp*'1~ f.up1, f~ '11J4 ...... till flf4 (flo.Ctierryexll-"05)
Frt 7 'Vl.A _ _...,_ No flo9 ... to 18 Pit hr AKC, bWll:. Buff W aholl 1 -ifi ,,. ... boll t=) ..... ,. Mon.· . :....,.. • ..._.,,, ~242UkforNell , l200.1164-2to'4 a.t9 JuneiP,Ki.M -~Wetc:ome
experience nece1ury. LL••• Apao •dor•ble MM JM"IM Rlv'tt: Clrda, Xlnl oon<I. SEVEN DAYS
Appty In peraon: 729 llllnUT/nNT '300/otr 5*-0445 Brookhural,G&rfleld 1175--5405 orl7M787 ::=:=======I F•rMI, C.M. 6'8-5525 . Devon Wood F•-lkletc ·--=====~-1Goo<1 job. Typing 50 wpm. so CALIF DOG TRAINING . -.· 17' Thlltle Day S•llOt
lffklng hard-working I ~===~===-I Ing. Reu. r•I•. lS% on S:tlSUn t5. TV~ 11..0, ~· 11511
187~B~
H~~Beacll (714) MZ·IOOO
WEClRE ..
Bill YATES
VW.PORSCHE
r '"' '• '''
Pv1 c~~:T~~ .,.. no ~':;1en~~ Eich. In home obed6enoe lrMt-l u L .... ( if ti ~19'.v!:'•tt ~l200 . ~--
peraon 10 l'lendle buiy r• SECURITY OFFICERS lhil month1 963-3388 din NI, welghta, blkM. 1980 22' Rmnger Out· IMW
-uon ""'· ,.__ $4 110/hr P1t1 SS3S ...... -" -.. .,,, 3 """· Muot s.o. ..... le du't1e1. Good typtng • • & tl'IOM. 11792 luCle Ln, 17499. PP &41-91'8 l a tM, I
req'<I. Worl( '#Mk WKI-Dall II 1ttf Myna Birds wlwrough1 w.,,.,, & HiMand Hood S..f\lrl: V." #2536, I---'-------
a 31.4300 •fl 3.4s 11
Sun. Call Monie. Iron cage 1500, Mexican 7 f 21'-35' boe1 a_....__
873-7730orfl73·77311 •5lmmecl.openlno-red hM<I perrot & CtlQ9 lrflll 1144 s1M:f0:.e.t2·6911 · ~-.nJ---no luck Ul7
181 Grand §por1, run•
great, look• good. 1775 llalPTlllllT
HWPlllTUWFlll
8:30-4:30. Type 50 wpm.
Wiii train u <locl<•I clerk.
Nice a1m09Pntl'•. Good
benflllt1. C•ll C•rotyn
Btl'ger. M0-1560.
Reoep!lot'I ... !or busy NB
AO/PR tQtr'!CY. Must be
good typlil. 850-1860
HomtllllT PIT, lpm-5pm tor l)uly
Newpor1 Beach D•·
'l9ioper Lii• typing.
C•N Pit 1175-02911
lllOhl mlT 0 RTH000NTtC OFFICE
Futllllme emotoYment.
Or Humpriri.9 407·2'64
I EOEn./lll'Y
• Full/part-lime $300.M0-6391 V'fWT-..,....
Gigantic: Sale: Fumltute, SANTANA·20. Fun race Speciall•t•
OUR EMPLOYEES •r• tht liAaifi;li;lt~l;";;;iiiiiiiiiiiiH;;l;I; I Pktur99, plants, ciothlng wllr1r, Xlnt cond 15800 16'0Jambor .. Read NB moll lmportanl part ot -I more. 1"481 Slel'ra 01~500 E/84'-5'08 AdJaotnl to Fuhlon our comp•ny. Luna. Turtleroek llll•nd/NewporlCenter
c 111u11ooayt *T=~~* Ltt8u lintl l lll IUPI I Dltb till 141 1444
(7 14)G33-1915 Gre•t Mlectlon of Amerl-HCJ?IE §XfEFSaturd.y &t ... 111"91 Dlh•I 1117
DYNAMIC PROTECTION c•n & futopMn anllquea 10AM-3PM. 31172 Doral For INN 40' 491-<M 13 PM '11 11Tlft 141Z
SERVICES ~=.!~!:::."'=: Piece. 49&-l3l9 Nwpot1 Herbot, pvt IHp SHARP! Only 2 owners
obO. 875-4253
Cl4Ulac Hit
'11M11111/ ... Good oon<I. $48-30'43
..
"
.lta.& ...... llf room HI•, dre11ar1, l~lllC· lfli wantedlornew40'power 11nca n•w. $4260.
chests, vanll ... , Mii of -us WWWECOR. boel. 964-4800 anytime 132·3717 FT/PT, 9'tel, wknd1 & ~
gr1veyer<I. Neel •weer-Ch&lrl, OOCUIOflel l•btaa. GARAGE SALE: Sal. 8-4. Pier •P•C• tor Ky1k , '81 290ZXOL, lmmac:. wt'll. LARGEST SELECTION
•nca a ll1ndwrlllng. booltcun, I .. cmrt• I 5 pc king bdrm Mt, 4 pc Sabol. Wlndtur1.,, •le. INlher, 38K ml, beal of lat•model,lowmlleaQe
Apply In peraon: 251Kl 100'1 ot small decoralor Henredon queen bdrm Balboe laland 873-5'29 Oii•. PP. '112·9982 Cadlllecli lnSovthem
NABERS
CADILLAC
NewportBlvd,C.M. ltetn•. 1111 Ml, unique bunll bed, SLIPWANTED . ., = ...... y c.lltoml•l S..uatod•yt Ullf M tablea, ctialfl, iampa, di.. New90f1 H11rbor .,. .. , new _....., · ou 1140 1110 snn&l PDllll 111111 I 19 h••. pol•, dr1perte1, 40• power boat. nu.bend c.d no '"'~ Mheck •
to taka order• In Martel-C&IH. lie. 1231 1111.111. b001P & polH, & wti. no c:hlklren, pelt tlOOO otxl. s.5 ·52 aeoo Harbor Bfvd.
Ing Oep1. No ••P· nee. IEWllOTlll muctl more. 2012 San· 89S-1510orat5-22fl8 Flat 1123 COSTAMESA :;::~ow1:1:,a1~~='. LIU.Tm 1•· 1549•54•11 ..," 11 lft Hll 71 "' SPki« m . 5fuft=,.=1r..,.,=--"""•tt"l"9
Xlnt income If qu1ttt1ec1. S1ew.,1 Rolh A,,,lqUMI N~. ;."'a -=:::1':::: sJSn Paramont 21". t=J:~ ~1·1~ ml, '73l;Wp0fi, "'"' Qf'Mt.
For ~ 5:3Mr. 0.. 1821l!uotldAv. v•r b rae• gla1a, C•mPtgnolo •qulp!.'11 1 . .::::.::------.,.... t•2~ .. d 11c~. 8•76. borne: • · Fountain Valley b•1ket1, 1p'p111nce•. ••II oon<l '550 &42-1W4 .... 1119 14 ... _
IUIJPtl UlllTUT For dlrecllona or lntor· 11nen1. You name 111 Sal Lter 11'• 1111 'b ~:srn. 22k ml. Ptr4 IJll
tor busy u1on. Must be mauon, cell TrWI or Bob 8AM, alley betllnd IVC. fl&OO Pert QOnd ic.~==~~~~~ lleenMd NB 83 1·1390 e1 Larry Morgan An· &47 Sa.ntt An• Ave. Honda Xpra TI ~/OSO.,, •lull)',~ 720..os2$' '77 PINTO, 2 <Ir, arn/fm,
· tlq~: 568-ttOl. Our......... 20001'.'11;~41W'711 1~ 1un• .. 11. 1700 obo. Sharp, lnt.,•ted In YoUth Wl'IOIMele warehOUM le llJll :0 '• IC,"f dr M<lan xtnt 1191-877!
education Ind making 1111t OC*I deity at 1816 ..... 1112 •Nllijlfllf.-, .. i ' l.i*"°· new llrw.1,~-----m~
money! 7&8·1717 Judy Toronto, Coe!• Mw. I!! o7 d ""' ... it •·;~·;... II jft JJnl. 86300 080. ·~ tJll __ __ ...._.. sq Y •. ,.....,, ----1 548-1787 '71CiPrl, 1 owne1,
D .1 ,.11 A -a'IOCla<loetpt,goodcon<I. D,l.250 Sr I p .... -. II J I DI ....... ··········· .... ~.I:!~. :142.21•2
1
TH":o-.~LEA ..... =~====--owUi:i •. P. 2ilft
: ; fm on 109, x<Ond wtll hjftbi JI ,J Ywnahe 1970 IOCC En-172 &Cit. &tm cn&f it::
· : deltvwrl226. 8'6-1391 ~ RlnO•. ~" duto, rune good. 1171 1lon w ~-1...::::c~:.c:cc.:...,=~-1 carat surrounded by t25CC needt woric mile gn. ...,,... OfMI. PART TIME ~ LJ"'~133 ~8~1:'°'ot! =7:'~,, .. L!!60
• =::~~ . K-J: ~ ledlet ~ ctrtl pe•r ......... Ph ..... ,1 -"'-· -.. dtomond '""°""""' "' lltllf -... -· '~ ~1oror Roule A'·ailable .· .. rnonct 50,9 1 dliernonch 111 ,,, so&O 1 'I l ·=~=~---~.~ •• 1 .. ,,. I n.-... ,'irwporl Beach area. lhree : Kenmore ll••"Y du1y Obo.760-2111 '78 Amb••••dor S3t1. 111911 't7P0ni.Ver1 .. -1& · Wuher & -.ct Dfyer made by SUNeyot. ,54 I R ,.., .-v
h d E: ' "' '4M112 '-' l4K win QOOd.,. CIDtnO -bod -0 ._ ""°' ....... QUr&pt'r a y. Orn a pprox. : -50Ml.Jom ~otrlngw/1.1lct bath,2 ;.oofalo,i .IKW ao11n lmmk 4'lc IN l2IOO
600 h Ca u 11 00 : Kat'lm0t9wttlr& cttyr, exn. PM"~ dlemoncl & O'Jl*'lltOt. red! I i.dW. BARGAINtt 720-02H p«"rmont . _ : . 1100 _ ... ...,... two .11 tapered II•· ••-pod.-•.... ,..,. utt na.. .,.... ---,...,. 13 F1E.-o Showroom
le> 4:00 PM . AJk for Bruce· : MtYtao w..,_ i bctnc :.o=·1or i.1:r.' com-=a.-:!°M!::'inryW:: '1ftn.&.llT ~~-v~;.:'
Em!ll<"}. · KZ~1~::nS:· 116. =:~ J:~ ..:t.l:· l!.:.15£!.,. ~-.,• .. • .... 7 ,loo. 11 l•DIMI
CIRCU LATION DEPT.
642 -4321 F.OE
ORANGE COAST OAILY PILOT
~ 10 w U.1.V 51 •COST A Mls.A CA 91616 ......... , ......... 11•""
"
\.~·7~3-~ .... ~~Con~dll~"°'~-IN'Et;;=fi;~.-... ,.,;c.;;;<: ......---..&~ V°"'""'9s.liM.SwW:le NEIMAN 81 r Scene, hM"'O"T"o"o"H"'OM""E"'W"A"'N"fE"°D' I And '-Port dlthw-Allher, bu1Char TOOTS 8HOAE'll•rtltl Prlvtt9 l>W"t peya c.tn 11711a..ohlMI.
bloek top, Kenmore'• proof rettll 17700+ 714n 11•1350 · H~t~llMch
-· ••• '"" w .. '""~·:::··~" ::·-~"~'"::;.,~'~l::-:--------1 (714) 142-1000 "'"'187• mne 545-71151 1Aot!X PAE§IOENf, b11111 11 yOU'r• no1 ari~ping Aetnot i1so ci'lil1 _. flnlth, 2 •1r• Mngth•, c1as.i11ec:1. you m•y t>t
1178 WPN/dryr 8136 M Sl700 ~ti!.,., .. on.. paying 100 much
C>thwtt 1100 &4f...H.U E....,.175-1137 842°5878
Alwa y• a •••• In
clu•lfle<l·remd Iha td•
twf")' day. 8'2-6871
-.
I TADIUM
PONTIAC
714-315·" 19 ~""·"•'•'" .....
------~ --~--------------------------------.-
2 -Summer Living/An Adwrttaklg Supplement to the DAJLY PILOT/Thursday, May 24, 19M
IT DOESN'T COST AN ARM OR
A LEG TO LOSE
YOUR TUMMY
AND THIGHS
AT
DIET CENTER
19531 lead lhd.
H11ti1gt11 leac~
980-7806
SPRING INTO SUMMER AT ANNETIE'S PLACE
WITH CLOTHES FOR CASUAL CALIFORNIA LIVING .
,. I
M rh 1 o to 6
RABBIT RABBIT RABBIT, DESIGNS
17,4) 67l-6669
l4l2 VIA 0 PORTO BLOG. 6
NEWP O RT BEAC H C A . 9266l
F 11 & Sat 1 0 to 9 Sun. 10 to 6
,
Shopp-ng for club?
Here's a local list
ByCURTSEEDEN
Of ... 0.-, ........
If you 're tired of awakening at 5 a.m.
to get down fo that one decent tennis
court at the local high school, you may
want to look into joining a tennis club
-and you won't.have to look far.
There are plenty of clubs scattered
about the Orange Coast area, offering
everything from single memberships
to family deals and even corporate
members.hips.
Here's a list of area cl"bs:
COSTAMaA
Palisades Teult a•: Cost is
S 1,000 for a life membership, $300
annual membership. Dues are $50 per
month. O ub is open to A or open class
players only. Five couns, no lights.
Membership is by invitation only.
Mesa Verde Coutry Clab: Cost is
$3.000 plus $55 a month dues for
fam ilies. lnaddition, there'sa$30food
and bevera$e fee per family. Ten
couns. six lighted. O ub is limited to
200 tennis families.
NEWPORT BEACH
Balboa Bay Clab Racquet Clo: Cost
is $ I0,000 for a lifetime family
membership, $4, 750 plus $95 monthly
dues for a regular membership; $6,500
plus $95 monthly dues for a corporate
membership. There arc 24 courts, 17
lighted.
Red Ticket
Special!!
Pealatala Polllt Racqet Cllllt: Cost is
S 1,000 initiation (non-refundable and
non-transferable). Dues are $60 per
family or $48 single. Two courts,
unlighted. Membership is limited to
I 00. There is a waiting list
Jou Wayne Teals Clab: One-time
fee is $600 for an associate member-
ship (non-transferable). Call club for
regular me111bership fee which is
transferable. Dues arc $98 for a couple
or $70 single. Corporate membership
is $900 (two people}. Th~ arc 16
courts. aU lighted.
Marriott Teuit Chab: No initiation
fee. Dues arc $45 for singles, $70 for
married .couples. Eight courts. all
lighted. Membership is limited to 170.
There is a waiting list.
Newport Beada Teult Clo: Cost is
S l ,200 initiation (sin$le and family).
Dues are $80 for singles, $94 fo r
families. Associate membership is
$250 with $53 dues. Junior executive
memberships (ages 18-29) arc $1 75
with prorated dues. Th~ are 19
courts, 13 lightcd. Membership limit is
760.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Seacliff Teul1 Clab: Cost is $1 00
annually with $57 dues for families.
(Pleue eee TEIOUSfPace 5)
If it's not
tun it won't work out!
WORK OUT IN OUR SADDLEBACK AND ORANGE
CENTERS. ALSO IN LAGUNA BEACH
l
* No Membership Fees * Drop-In Basis * High Calorie-Burning
Dynamic Body-Firming Workout
For the next two weeks, May 28-June 8, buy
up to 20 tickets for '40. Good for the next
three months.
~ ~ .... rJ.
Call /low For Classes Near You!
(114} 964-4616
. . '
I
I
--_ ..
summer Living/An AdvertJalng Supplement to the DAILY PllOT!ThurlcMy, Mey 24, 1884 -3
Exercise, patience
are key needs for
successful dieting
Heatlth experts say
too many people
expect instant fitness
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
.,.., .... C:.1 ... 1 1
If you thought about how you·d feel
if you gained I 0 pounds in two and a
half mopths, you wouJdn't be sur-
prised if it took you two and half
months to lose l 0 pounds.
But losing just a pound a week, said
Susan Nourse of the Body Works
exercise studio in Costa Mesa. sounds
painstakingly slow to most. expccially
those checking out the new swimsuit
styles this summer.
"Most people arc looking for instant
fitness." Nourse said. They aren't
dedicated enough to hang in there past
an idiot as the new member of an
aerobics class in which everyone else
seems to know what they're doing.
Men especially feel this way. Nourse
says they tell her "this is about the
hardest thing I've ever done.••.
Overweight exercisers may feel
some repidation too ... Bite the bullet,"
Nourse says. After that initial embar-
Health
·Enhancement
Programs
YOUTH
PROGRAMS
rassment. you'll start feeling so much
better about yourself that theeffon will
be worth it.
[)jetiog without exercise isn't likely
to be successful, Nourse feels. For one
thing, it can cause the dieter to lose
muscle instead of fat.
Teenagers often concentrate com-
pletely on diet -to their own
detriment. On top of that, nagging
moms can exasccrbate the situation by
secretly gloating over a plump daugh-
ter who sets off the parental figure
perfectly. Fonnom who are, Nourse
warns that teens often rebel 1f goaded
too much. They're likely to sneak into
the closet with a bag of pretzels. Nourse
knew of one girl who te a box of cake
mix in frustration.
As far as adequate nutrition is
concerned, a dieter's best bet is to
consume 60 percent of his or her
calories in complex carbohydrates like
fresh vegetables and grains, with a
limited quantity of fruit added. says
Roben Bums of the Magic Movement
exercise studio in Costa Mesa. These
foods arc like timed release energy
suppliers, he adds whose low calorie
count makes it difficult to overeat.
(Pleue Me EXERCISE/Pe
ZS% OFF
WELLNESS
MEMBERSHIP
FAMILY AND
FITNESS CENTER
MEMBERSHIP
thru May 3 1st
ADULT
PROGRAMS
•FITNESS
•AEROBICS
• HANDBAU/RACOUETBAll
• WEIGHT TRAINING
• LAP SWIMMING & LESSONS * SENIOR CITIZEN FITNESS
PROGRAM
THE "Y" IS EASY TO FIND
• MOM & ME SWIM LESSONS
• INFANT /PRE SCHOOL MOVE·
MENT EDUCATION
• PROGRESSIVE SWIM LESSONS
• GYMNASTICS
•SPORT SKIW
t -• ....... ~If..-..... t ...__, .._,_ ,.. •I
Lorraine Kenila of Newport
Beach doe8 80JDe •tretcblnC in
.,.., ......... .., ....... u.-
an aercl8e cl-.. at The Body
Worb ln Newport Beach.
'HONE~ED.
PEOPLE ARE MORE INCLINED 10
TAKE SOME THAN LEAVE SOME.
TRY OUR HIT-Of-11t£-PARTY TRAYS. ANAHEIM T~ V1ll.aJ..-., Cient .. , '~~~' e ..... ~hul'\I
'"'&II Rd 1•17141 t.J.-..24f>l
Reme mber your las1 party-how much CORONA DELMAR-"'m' t .... " H ... , • • 171.a11>7'<11•10 tim e and trouble 1t was to prepare all the EL TORO ~11 r,,.. .. , ..,.,,,, '""h !4N•1 R ... m .. n.1
foodf and .maCke11it loondk jusdt nghber! O~f· I ~lj~,;_t~~6~i·/;c'.; '71~~1~~,!~ lihJ ,.,
now orget n. a us a or er a aut1 u <iarfl('kl ~" ,., R11lfh''" 111.a1 """'"'"'" Honey Baked .. party tray. You can stil iz.et ORANGE 1•111 N u-.trn '"' 11. .. 1 .. 111o' • • 1•• """' "NNt rh~ compliments without all the f uSsT , .. • ~ ''"'" •~• • '"''""" '" l "~" •' , ..... • .... •~"~' • •""" tU'll't.fH'lt.\tU l"U.\MM\ I Hd"•tttl' 'ttMrttHntl\
°"'4NUl '4.,_lUMU",. tttlA.._.,, t'\&tt<\\ltt ._.,,,,,,..," •"'' t~t
II SANDWICH TRAYS ~-~~~~·.:·~~~~·rt.;,~,f~~~,\!~\ ~~~ :"•,•,·.4~•':~ .... ": ,~\'~,~
•CHEESE TRAYS
•MEATTRAYS
\\Ii.._,. I\ "l\lto\t'" -.t\tl \~t \IH ,,.,, '4•1111fWl\'IHtttl'
ONE TASll: IS AU rr TAKES!
l"P'l'nilhl < l<tll-4 ti,..,.., K.tl."d Ihm lnr
.......... t •
'
4 -SummtW Uvl"'An AdWlftJstns Surg=rent to the DAILY PllOT/Thuraday, May 24, 19M
Golf courses on the Orange Coast
ByCURTSEEDEN
OflMO.., ..........
Orange County may continue to
grow. but all of that building has not
infringed on the many golf courses in
the area.
There are still many courses -both
public and private -in the Orange
Coast area. both nine and 18 ho les.
Some have lights as well.
Here's a rundown of what's avail-
able:
Big Canyon Coutry Cl•b, Big Ca-
n yon Drive, Newport Beach. Phone
644-5404. Private club for members
and guests only. Fees: $25. Cart $15.
Pro is Bob Prange.
Casta del Sol Goll Coarse, 27601
Casta del Sol Drive, Mission Viejo.
Phone: 581-9700. Public course.
Green fees: $7 weekdays ($4 after 3
p.m.): $9 weekends ($5 after 3 p.m.).
Can s $11 . Oub pro is Randy Rich-
ardson.
El Toro Mea's Golf A1IOCiatioD, El
Toro Marine Memorial, MCAS El
Toro. Phone: 651-2577. Green fees:
For officers. $6 weekdays, $7 week-
ends· for staff COs. $5.SO weekdays
and S6.50 weekends; for serieants and
below. $2.50 weekdays and $4.50
weekends; and retired all ranks, $6.SO
weekdays, $7.50 weekends. Can $9.
Pro is Wally Bradley.
HutiastoD Seacliff Goll Clalt, 3000
Palm Ave., Huntington Beach. Phone:
536-7575. Public course. Green fees:
$8.50 weekdays. $12.50 weekends.
Can $12. Pro is Doug Booth.
lrvlDe Cout Coutry Clab, 1600
East Coast Highway, Newport Beach.
Phone: 644-9550. Private club. Green
fees: $25 weekdays, $30 weekends.
Cart $15. Pro is Ted Olver.
Preppie style's out; Color's in Meadowlark Mea'1 Goll Clab, 16 782
Graham St., Huntington Beach.
Phone: 846-1364. Green fees: $8
weekdays ($5 for seniors), $1 2 week-
ends. Fees lower after 3 p.m .. Can $1 2.
Pro is Monti Blodgett. Bag that alligator shin BifT. the
preppie look is out -at least the fake,
trendy kind.
Said Vicki Vultee, manager of the
Newport Ski Co .. said .. There are a lot
of people in this area who wore preppie
clothes before and are still wearing
them now ... but as far as a trend. it's
out."
Also o n Vultee's list of finished fads
are tight-fitting clothes. big lo~os
emblazoned accross the fronts of shirts
(and backs of pants), earth tones. and
plastic anything.
.. They've all been way overdone. I
think they're way past and old now,"
NSC buyer Nancy Anderson agreed.
So what's the latest rage?
•Color. Whether it's clear. bright
pastels o r vivid primaries. 1984 is a
vintage year for color.
Vultee said that big. slouchy t-shins
and skinny tank tops arc an inexpen-
sive and fashionable way to add color
to your wardrobe. So are sashes and
belts, and all can be picked up for about
$1 0.
As far as color combinations are
concerned . be adventurous: Mixes of
intense pinks and reds, oranges and
greens. or any "hot" color with black or
white are big this season.
•Fuller silhouettes. "The clothes
are fuller now, but they still accent
some pan of the body." Vultee said.
"People have worked too hard in their
aerobics classes to hide in big. boxy
ba ."
rull tops on gathered skin s, roomy
dresses belted or hanging free. big
shins over narrow skins or tapered
pants are just a few possibilities.
************************************* « •
~ BEAsM~ ~
• • • • • ICE SKATING AT :
' . • • • • • • « .. • • • tr
« • • • ... • « «
tr • «
« « « .. • • r;----------------:1
: : $5.000FF i
• 1 le• Sl&etl•1 i.. .. o•• 1
.. I ftKBe•l•aeH I I I It I P'"'""' roupon for d1~ ounl I
It I B 1 hplte. JuM 14, 19'-t I • '.!----------------~
• ICE CAPADES :
Learn to Ice Skate
kc Sl-.a1 ing Les\om al an k c
(. apades C halet are a \elf
1mprovcmen1 program 1 hat
1.:omb1nc' fun. fi1n c1.,1i and the
thrill ot rcrforming for fam ll~
a11d tnend1.,
.. • • • • • • • .. • • • ..
ENROLL NOW• ..
a.§ cfu*tes
MESA VERDE CENTER
2701 HARBOR BL VD.
Costa Mesa, Ca.
(714) 979-8880
.. • • .. ..
• • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • PUBLIC.. I E ~KATIN G EVERYDAY •
• VISA OR MA TERCARD ACCEPTED it ·'---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-. Natural Fibers. The easy tailonng
of the new look works best with natural
fabrics like cotton. linen and silk.
•Fun. casual styles. "There's a
casual look that's unique to Newport
Beach." Anderson said. •tf s neat.
clean and fresh."
And it's everywhere. Dressing up in
Southern Cahfomia often means
dressing down, but in style. Casual,
spony clothes are worn for even
elegant evenings out.
So for these somewhat stereotypical
regional reasons, j umpsuits, rompers,
cropped pants, minis, and safari styles
are favorites.
•Lower-heeled shoes. The newest,
nearly flat-heeled shoes perfectly com-
pliment a smart, casual look. Vultce
said. Especially popular are strappy
(Pleue .ee PREPPIE/PS)
Located at
Mesa Verde Co1111try Clab, 3000
Oub House Road, Costa Mesa. Phone:
549-0377. Private club. Green fees:
S 15 weekdays, $25 weekends. Can $6.
Pro is An Schillintt.
Mlle Squre Park Men's Cl•b, I 040 I
Warner Ave .• Fountain ValJcy. Phone:
545-3726. Public course. Green fees:
$8.50 weekdays, $12.50 weekends.
Carts $13. Pro is Jimmy Caspio.
Newport Beacll Mea's Goll Clab,
3100 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach.
Phone: 751-4653. Green fees: $3.50 for
nine holes, $5.50 for 18 holes week-
days; $4 for nine holes and $6.50 for 18
holes on weekends. Fees lower after 6
p.m. (Course is lighted). Pro is John
Leonard.
JOHN WAYNE TENNIS CLU
1171 Jamboree Rd., Newport Beach 840-8214
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
FOR ALL YOUR TENNIS NEEDS
FEATURING:
adldaiw·
. . '
------
Summer Uvtng/ An Advertltlng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT /Thutedey, May 2.-. 1984 -6
PREPPIE STYLE'S OUT •.•
1TomPace4
sandals and '50s style "slummers."
•Striking swimwear. "Stripes,
solids and graphics -there are no
flowers this year,•• said Melanie Ott,
manager of Bea Dyke Swimwear in
Costa Mesa. ''If someone wants an
Hawaiian print. I have very liule to
show them.··
Ott said she sells equal am ounts of
one-and two-piece suits, though the
one-pieces arc a bit more stylish.
Mesh inserts. wet-suit looks with
zippers, animal prints, high-cut legs
and tank suits are some of the most
popular one-piec.e styles.
Bandeau tops are big in the two-
piccc suits -which, incidentally.
aren't getting any smaller this year.
"They got pretty bad last year. How
much smaller can you gor· Ott asked.
Men's suits are comparatively mod-
est, Anderson said. Pocketed, elastic
waist trunks and mid-calf styles are the
main se11ers.
"Men buy speedoes for layering
only," Anderson said. "They buy a
speedo and a trunk at the same time."
•Chunky accessories. Big geometric
earrings, heavy natural bead and shell
necklaces, inexpe nsive bangle
bracelets, colorful, floppy-brimmed
hats and trim sun visors are the new
finishing touches, according to
Anderson and Ott.
TENNIS MEMBERSmP COS'rS ••.
PromJ»a&e2
Singles membership is $50 annually
with $40 monthly dues. Nine courts,
seven lighted. Membership is limited
to 25 per court.
IRVINE
Racq.et Clllb of J.rvi.De: Cost is $350
to $750 per year. Dues are $62 for
singles. $89 for families. Call club for
additional information on member-
ships. There are 27 courts (three clay,
three artificial grass), 21 lighted.
Weightroom, pool, clubhouse. aero-
bics available.
$49 dues ($58 joint dues. $63 family
dues). Annual membership is $200
with same dues structure. There are 12
couru, all lighted. Membership is
limited to 360.
Los Caballeros Racqaet ud Sports
Clab: Memberships sold on resale basis
only. Contact club for additional
information. Dues are $56 for families
and $45 for singles. There are 32
couns. all lighted.
LAGUNA NIGUEL
Lagana Nlpel Tennis Club: Cost is
$200 for annual membership with $60
dues and $250 for family membership
with $75 dues. There are 16 courts. all
lighted, racquetball, health spa.
Now Introducing
1 ·
THE LEGENDt\RY
BICYCLES OF FRAf\KE
r·· 1c7« ,,, ''
IPICIALS
MIT~ $595.00 ............... '12911
CUST=·=~OO ............ flM '231"
Ol.Y~. ~;,..95 •........... flM '21411
Good tflrougll Mer 21. , ....
MAY SPECIALS
n.. UP SPICIAl
.... $25.00 .......... -·11•
Good""'"'-1, , ....
2 NIW TalS..., ,.._,.......,.
.... $35.00 .......... .,. •24•
I '
12h114" or arx1i." ~
Good """"'-1. , ....
~ \
······~ .. --···--· ··-
Its A Horse Of A Different Color
Orange c.oumy fttirgrounds • CostaMesa • .hiy6-15
GO FOR THE GOLD AT
.Spa(l)Lady
WE ARE CELEBRATING THE OLYMPICS WITH A
2 FOR 1 SPECIAL
TWO 2 year Memberships for the Price of One for you and a
friend OR Double your Membership Time and get 4 Years!
Thi -Finltt In Fecititiet I Setvlcel Exctuslvely for Lldiet.
• Aerobics • l~lrlpool
• llod1r1 Eurcise Eq1ip.e1t • Sa1u
• lldlYidalizld lutrtetia1 • Private Sllow1rs l 0rtssi11 Boot~
• llltritioul 61ida1ce • life Cycles
1 WEEK
ONLY
ju at •Ptus
Registration
Fee
•437 •*
per year
per person
with this AO
*''ma .... ,,..-... -·--IWU$ll ,.,,,,. ... ........ ...4-.. C-
-
•
I I 2 "
6 -Summer Ltvtng/ An Advertising Supplement to the DAIL V Pll
v 10 DOWI O.A.C.
"" El.ctrlt: .,.,,
v Autonut#e
EXERCISE, DIETING TIPS •••
PromPaCeS
Concentrated carboyhydrates (those
wliich arc high in sugar), are like
throwing tissue paper in the fire. You
get a lot of sparks but no long term
energy source.
But no long term energy source.
Skipping a meal, Bums adds, isa bad
idea. h teaches the body to store
1 ~ucose which is later converted to fat.
mcreasing the percentage of fat in the
person's body at the expense of their
lean mass. '
For exercise outside of aerobic
classes with music. Bums finds walk-
ing bard to beat. Whereas jogging and
weightlifting can be boring. walking
creates a feeling of serenity. Besides,
it's less hard on the body than
pounding the pavement. .. Our evol-
utionary cycle designed us for walk-
ing," he said.
Charlene Kiel. a registered dietician
at Hoag Hospital in Ncwpon Beach,
stresses gradualism in dietary and
exercise goals more than any other
factor. 0 We're only human," she
commented. Most people aicn •t suc-
cessful at following up on plans to cut
out fattening foods cold turkey. In
every diet plan she supervises, Kiel
recommends staging in good habits
and phasing out poor ones. It takes a
lifetime to build up food habits. We
can't expect change overnight.
Bums agrees. He says another
problem with a diet that is too severe is
that the body's resting metabolic rate is
then reduced, causing it to bum
calories more slowly.
For a woman weighing 130 pounds
with 30 percent body fat. (a typical
percentage for tbc average nooex-
erciscr off the street), Bums says that
consuming 1, 100 calories a day should
make a loss of one pound a week
possible, If the woman walks three to
four times a week for 30 minutes, with
20 out of the 30 at a brisk pace, she
should lose a pound and a half a week.
A very good rule to go by in deciding
how many calories one needs. is to find
out what the body's resting metabolic
rate is and consume the number of
calories burned in the day at this rate.
A diet or exercise expert can often tell a
person about what his or her rate is by
simply doing a pinch test for body fat,
and knowing the persons age.
At parties and restaurants. Kiel
sugcsts hunting out the fruit and
vegetable dishes while steering clear of
h~ fat content foods. She finds diet
dnnks, in moderation, good
substitutes for high SUIP.f sodas.
Nourse disagrees with this. "rm a
purist." she says. Because diet drinks
cause the body to retain water, and
because they're often ,consumed along
with bi&b caloric items, they don't help
much. If a person is really watching it.
Nourse sugests club soda. Still. she
believes in the psychological value of
relaxing a dietary regimen once a week.
If you're already really in charge of
your diet, blowing it occasionally
won't set you off course, shcy says.
Food diaries arc helpful for many
people, Kiel feels. Just by forcing
themselves to write down what they
eat, many people cut down.
NEWPORT SKI CO.
IS
NOW OPEN FOR SUMMER
We have the best selection
of sailboards and summer
clothing in Newport a .each
There's plenty of
a ction in summer
fashion. It's all here
.~ a nd waiting a t
Newport Ski Co.
Come Help Us
Celebrate This Summerl
2 700 W . Coast Highway, Newport Beach (714J 631-3280
NEWPORT 1 •SKI•·
COM PA~ .. ~
{ .
~
FR EE ESTIMATES
1114 1 675-1179
Summer Uvfng/An Adverttalng Supplement to the DAILY PtLOT!Thut8day, M-.y 2 ... 1984 -7 ,
'
DON'T ·PAINn
Tex-Cote your home.
Vinyl or Mtmlnum 9idtng, reroof
with 9lcoa ~ ced8'
thake INnglee.
To find out more & for a free eetimate cal:
Angel'• Conatructlon -.e7ll
BENNETT-RICE l 7T -T
'I llllTllCTllll 11. ~r,~ _
General contracting, architectural design & oon-
s1nlction. New, remodel, repair & modernize your
home or c.ommercial Bldgs., with a new addition
completely designed & built by us.
CALL FOR YOUR FREE ESTIMATE
552-9142
PAllTllli-WALLPAPERllli
Commercial • Residential • Industrial
Apartments • Condos
SERVING ALL OF ORANGE COUNTY
Cos'-Mesa • Laguna Beach • Santa Ala
Tustin • lni1e • Mission Viejo
Uc #388076
A • • I -~ VALUE TO YOUR HO ME
FllONTIEll llOOFING
Free estimates. Repairs & reroofing,
•peclalizing in rec.overing decks and
balconies.
LBR #272798
Call (714) 897-6268
INTERIORS
Ill dale f alpne1_1 .-.s.1.0
INTERIOR DEsa•n l.S.l.O
2112 E. CoMt Hwy • COfona def Mar, CA 92625
(714)640.e612• C7M) 7524071
When Your
Barbecue
Goes To Pieces ...
~S!I Pick up the parts
at Saddleback
Patiq and Pireside
Your barbecue parts
Headquarters.
We carry a complete UM of HARPCO rq>lacnncm paru for all nujm
branch of lmtl«ues. includ1n1t:
•TIJRCO
-cHA.RBROIL
-cBA.RMGLOW
•STllUCTO
•FlllEMAGIC
•ARXLA
•DUCANE
•JACUZZI
•PIU'IO KITCHEN
•AND OTHERS
Don't 1hrow out your broltm barbecue, kt'" ht'lp you fix ii'
PATIO a. RRESIDE
u•n m nwo -........n TWo ....._ ~··• ato-6664 (Nnl 10 Ill fvrftttll:tt "'IM Twin l'alt> 1'1,.,.1
:(
--..
8 -Summer Living/ An Advertising Supplement to the DAIL y' PILOT /Thursday, May 24, 1984
Available for:
DISCOUNT SUNROOF
ONLY '795 INSTALLED
INSTALLED BY SPECIAL FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES!
• Hard Tops SPECIAL PURCHASE/
We asked the factory in Detroit for a special price to make this offering possible . American Sunroof Corporation is the
world 's largest designers and manufacturers of original equipment sunroofs (OEM) and has made these packages available • Sedans for a limited time only.
All electrical and mechanical parts are first quality and meet the automobile manufacturers' specifications for original St f W equipment installed at the factory. • a IOn agOnS Only the· glass insert panels have minor surface or visual imperfections which make them unsuitable for normal OEM Jactory
installation. These ··imperfections··. however. are very difficult to detect and do not detract from either the beauty or the • King Cab Pickups function of the installation. ------------------------------------------------·
• Domestics
• Imports
Catalina Sunroof Co.
24 70 Newport Boulevard
COSTA MESA. CA. 92626
Please install an ASC Sunroof in rrry -------cat. y.., ~
Name---------------~ Street _______________ _
City~~~~~~~~~-
Phone( ___ -------------
Validated1 ____________ _
Phone(714)642-4040
for an appointment.
I understand that this ASC Sunroof medlanism is of OEM First
Quality. The Glass Panel ONLY may hjlve minor visible
impeffections wtlich make this offer po\ssible, but the entire
mechanism and the panel are oovered by our regular 12 months -
12.000 mile warranty! You may select you own choice of the glass
panels available.
Offer good until June 30. 1984.
I _
...
..
HIGH 72 1:11m11m•
TtlUlhUl\Y Ml\'! .'l 1·11i l
No proof killer suspect was druak
of the first-degree murder trial. and stabbed with a buck knife.
over bodies found ln Deluca's bedroom Earlier, Rogers had testified that
Deluca drank nine stratghl shots of
tequila and then attacked Haxton in a
fit of"blind rage." She said the dark-
baired youth recalls nothing of the
attack.
The woman's body was found later
the same day slumped in the back seat
of her light green mail car which was
parked at a Costa Mesa church about
a mile from Deluca's home.
tioned the diagn<>1is by asseniq
Deluca may have learned bow to "act
crazy" while confined to a Lona
Beach mentaJ hospital for eiaht
months in 1982.
the penon who pabbed her by lbe
shouJden and &hen chated her down a sa.ren on a December~
By STEVE MARBLE
CM-.D.itr ..... aWt
A key defense witness in the
murder trial of Gabriel Deluca ad-
mitted Wednesday there is no con-
clusive proof the 18-year-old suspect
n drinkin~ the day he alleged-
ed mail camer Ida Jean Haxton.
defense h.as built its case
NEWSLINE
Coast
There's a robot on the
payroll In the Ocean View
School District./ A3
Newport-Mesa school
trustees have shelved a
plan for day-care centers
In schools./ A3
California
Character actor John
Marley, whose movie
credits included 'The
Godfather,' is dead at 76.
/A4
The state parole board
has been urged to refuse
the parole of multiple
killer Juan Corona./ A4
Nation
Republicans are calling
the Carter briefing
papers investigation a
bungled affair .I A 7
World
Five El Salvador national
guardsmen have been
found guilty in slaying of 4
churchwomen./ A7
Features
A barter system based on
a new kind of credit card
is gaining adherent s
among Orange County
business people./81
Sports
The Detroit Tigers
matched an American
League record with their
16th consecutive road
victory, 4-2 over the
AnQels./C4.
The Phoenix Suns forced
a sixth game in their NBA
playoff series with the
Lakers, winning 126-121
at the Forum./C4.
Orange Coast College
baseball player Jeff Gar-
dner has been selected
the South Coast Con-
ference player of the year.
/CS.
Entertainment
Cliffhangers by "Dallas"
and "Falcon Crest"
propelled CBS back into
the Nielsen ratings lead.
/83
Business
An Irvine company has
unveiled the first com-
mercial system to test
computer keyboards./C1
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Callfornla News
Claulfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Living
Mutual Funds
National News
Opinion
POiice Log
Publlc Notices
Sport a
Stock Marketa
Summer Living
Tel9"11lon
Theater.
Weather
World Newa
B2
B4
A3
C1-3
A4
C8-10
84
C10
C6
C9
82
81-2
C1
A4
A10
A3
C6·7
C4·6
C3
01-8
82
82-3
A.2 ....
around the prcsumP.tion that Deluca
had smoked manjuana and con-
sumed such a large amount of tequila
that he suffered an alcholic blackout
before the brutal Jan. 3 killing.
"There was nobody there to see
him drunk," agreed Dr. Martha
Rogers, a Fullerton pyschologist,
during qu.estioning in the eighth day
Dentist
testifies
in own
defense
Protopappas'
testimony will
continue today
By JEFF ADLER
OftMDllllJNotalall
Almost 14 months after his arrest
for the second-degree murder of three
dental patients, Costa Mesa dentist
Tony Protopappas took the witness
stand Wednesday and began telling
his side of the story for the first time.
The 38-ycar-old dentist, the first
witness to be called by the defense,
appeared tentative as he began his
testimony, but 9uickly gained his
composure, turning to face jurors,
sometimes smiling. He spoke in calm.
measured tones.
As he was Jed through what seemed
to be well-rehearsed testimony by
defense attorney Robert Tuller.
Protopappas stepped down from the
witness stand several times to draw
charts or diagrams for the jury,
(Pleue aee DENTIST/ A2)
Haxton, an attractive 30-year-old
postal carrier. was murdered as she
delivered majl to Dcluca's Meredith
Gardens home, an upper-class sec-
tion of Huntington Beach. The
woman was struck with a baseball bat
Rogers has testified that Deluca is
mentally ill and could not have
premed1ated the murder. which the
defense contends the youth com-
mitted in a state of .. unconscious-
ness."
The prosecution, however, qucs-
Trying to diseftdh Rasers' testi-
mony, prosecutor Bryan Brown re-
vealed that Deluca is a suspect in a
Huntington Beach assault case that
took place about a month prior lO
Haxton's murder.
Patricia Wiley. an Edison High
School student, identified Deluca as
Dentiat Tony Protopappu, teatifytna at hta
murder trial Wedneaday, Uae8 a c6art to
D.ilr .... ,....., .... Mtu.M
deacribe the dru&• he ued for aneetheala
durlnC •uraery.
Cockroaches issue in election race
Kids at NB' s Ensign
School take their
politics seriously
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of tlw D.ilr ..........
Cockroaches are not the major
issues of most political campaigns.
You probably won't hear President Rea~n or any of the Democratic
presidential candidates take a fiery
stand against the nasty insects. But
they sure are a burning issue for the
students seeking office at Ensign
Intermediate School in Newport
Beach.
Heidi has more of a law a nd order
drift to her campaign.
"There is a lot of ditching and
things going on here that should be
more strictly punished. We should get
the people who are d itching class and
punish them by having them clean
the school up," Heidi says.
"But they already have to do that,"
counters Htlary Benedict, whose plat-
fonn caJls for repainting the school to
cover up that "icky" brown.
"The problem is that no one
enforces it," responds Heidi.
Danny Houck is the only boy
runnin~ for president and he hopes to
sweep mto office on a wave of male
votes. Danny figures the girls will
split their votes among the female
candidates.
But Danny admits there may be a
serious flaw m his strategy.
"The boys who like the girls are
going to vote for girls," Danny
explains.
However, he hopes to score points
(Pleue aee VOTE/ A2)
9r4'1MYt••CM .. ...., ........
Students Md t~abftthe
bJame for "*'Y of the problema
wfth the p\lbffc ~ ayst..,, eccotdl~ llx ~Ive SW. dent · at~•~
ate Schoof IO-NillfJPOi't 8MCh. ·•E\!ef'Y k4d COUid go into our
accelerated aa.e.. tt ju9t take8
their tln'* and the1r dort. M*'Y of
the klde have-bad attttudea, •• Mid
HJlaly a.nedtct. 12. •• , thlnk the educetton eyetem ..
pretty QOOd. The teachers teed\
the .tuft and It ta up to the klda to
leam· It. Nkl Jennifer Celtton, 1S.
Moety O'Neil, 12, agrees that the
Wiley, 16, aleoidentifiod Deluca ..
the person she saw swine tbn>Ulb i
window ofber home five days ear\iei.
The hiab IChool student said bCf
family's townbome ·was buralarized
the same day but tM onf y iiem
missfoa wasa picture of her dteued in
a cbeerleadiqg outfit.
Earlier in the murder trial. Brown
(PleaM ... NO PJtOOr I A2) •
DDT's
decline
seen
in NB
But samples show
there's still
pesticide problem
By JERRY BIRSCB
CM.._Dlllf .......
Pollution in San Diego Creek and
Newport Bay doesn't look as bad as
first thought but is still serious,
aca>rding to new tests of minnows
just completed by the state Regional
Water Quality Board.
.. The samples we took in April
show a large dccrcasc in pesticides but
we are still waitin~ for more results
that we should get in August from the
Department of Fish and Game,·· said
James Anderson, the executive of-
ficer of the water board's Santa Ana
region.
At an April press confe~ncc.
Anderson said the board had dis.-
covered unusually high levels of the
banned pesticide DDT and other
toxic chemicals in \CSU of red shinner
minnows taken last year. Both scu of
minnows were taken about 1h mile
upstream from Up_pcr Newport Bay
in the creek that flows Irvine from
Orange County's foothills.
DDT. banned in 1972, is harmful
to wildlife. weakening fish and caus-
ing birds to lay brittle, th.in-shelled
eggs. It causes nervous and respir-
(Pleue eee DDT/A2)
Man nabbed
in hammer
attack in HB
A Huntington Beach man who
answered a knock at his front door
early this morning was seriously
injured when his visitor pulled out a
hammer and struck him in the bead
~veral times, police wd.
Ronald Mathern, 21. was arrested
at his Long Beach home following the
1:30 a.m. attack in Huntington.
Mathern is being held on suspicion of
attempted murdC(.
Richard Hermes. 48, told police he
(Pleue eee HAIOOtR/ A2)
These kids take their campaigns
seriously here, appointing friends as
campaign managers and plastering
the school with campaign posters.
And if you look closely on Dover
Drive, you will see a hand-painted
"Molly 0 . For Ensign President"
poster pinned to a fence between the
fluorescent green and orange. pro-
fessionally printed signs of state
Assembly and judicial candidates.
"There are cockroaches in the
locker rooms and I was sitting down
at my desk in a class when some
crawly thing creeped across it. It was
terrible. we need to call the ex-
terminator." says a diminutive Molly
O'Neil. one of four Ensign 12-year-
olds seeking the school's student body
presidency.
r l Death penalty 'honest' punishment
There is a definite clean govern-
ment thread to Molly's campaign.
"The bathrooms need to be cleaned
up and the boys are complaining that
their bathrooms don't have stalls or
mirrors," says Molly during an infor-
mal debate on the school's front lawn.
Heidi Gibson, who has pasted gold
stars representing her campaign on
her face and friends as well as her
posters, isn't going to let Molly get all
of the clean government vote.
"We need to clean this place up a
little bit - it is sort of messy.'' Heidi
says.
Grieving Mesa widower seeks s wift justice
but 'feels sorry' for accuse~youth. 16
By KAREN E . KLEIN
ot IM DllllJ Not ateft
Whtie Elloy Telles was mat..1ng the
first of what w11l undoubted!) be a
long string of coun appearances
Wednesday. a relative packed the 16-
year·old boy's things into cardboard
boxes and emptied his room at the Ira
Bakers' Cedar Place house.
Clothes, Telles' electric guitar.
typewriter and the posters of rock
stars that adorned his walls "'ere
packed up from the Costa Mesa home
where Eugenia Flores Baker was
murdered last weekcnd.
The bov and another I (Hear-old.
charged with first-degree m·urder in
the death of the 60-vear·old woman
who had befriended Telles. Will
remain in custod\ at least until
another hearing takes place. a Judge
ruled.
Telles and Kurt B1ezunsk1. arrested
Sunday night 1n connection with the
death of Mrs. Baker. appeared before
Juvenile Court C'ommissioner Gale
Hackman Wednesday afternoon. Thl'
pair are beinR held in Orange County
Juvenile Hall pending a Ma~ 30'
hearing to determine whether the~
will be tncd as adults 1n the cnme.
Police suspect Trites. who ll\·ed
w1th the Bakers. and B1ezunsk1. a
neighborhood fnend o f Telles.
murdered Mrs. Baker last Fndav and
buried her in a back}ard planter
Friends and relatives found her in the
shallow grave Sunda) afternoon after
she was reponed missing Fnda)
On Wednesda'. Mrs Baker's hus-
band. Ira . 62. Sat qu1ctl) with his
elderly mother "'h1lc Telles' pos-
sessions were collecte'd. to be picked
up by Telles' aunt.
A small. while candle burned
slowl)' in a custard dish near Baker's
favonte chair. in memorv of thl'
woman Telles is accused of murder-
ing.
.. I sure will mlSS Eugenia." Bak.er
said <\ tall. gaunt man of few words.
Baker said that despite lhe "terrible
shock"' ofh1s wife's death, he bean no
ammostly toward the troubled teen-
ager he took Jn~o his home and tned
to help. I
"I feel som for him. No one had
the time to find out what kind of
person he was. but mentally there was
somethin~ wrong with him," he said.
There 1s no doubt in his mind,
however. that Telles murdered his
wife. he said.
The' boy allegedly confessed as
much to him and even said be bad
(Pleue eee DEA TB/ A2)
Airline tickets let the flier beware
When thecarrter files for bankruptcy, ---the customer's out of luck -and money
University High School surf club
coach Nick Misscrville never paid
attention to the profits and losses of
airlines before. But after Pacific East
Air went bankrupt leaving
Misservillc with S2,384 in worthless
tickets for a surf club trip to Hawaii,
he will be mo~ stlective in choosina
an airline.
Misservillc 1s one of a growma
numberofpassenaers flndinaout fim
hand that competition in a de.
n:aulated 11rhnc tndu,try holds the
n~1" of a wonhlc\.' ticket a~ well a~
the benefit ofO)'lng cheaply.
Two California-based a1rhnc-s, Pa-
cific East and Pacific Express. have
filed for bankruptcy this year. leaving
thousands of passengers with useless
tickets. or worse, stranded at distant
airpons.
Tius wa~ to be the fiflh time
M1ucrv11le ha~ taken surf club stu-
dents from Irvine to Hawaii.
"The kids who are going on the trip
all work hard for their iradcs and
work hard at pan-ttme JOb\ to earn
enough money so they can RO." ~1d
M 1sserv11le.
Misserville always tnes to find th<'
lowest air fa"' because he knows the
students art scraping to come up with
the money. On past tnps, M1sscrville
and his students have flown llnned
.\irhncs and World 1rlincs. but this
year Pacific East Air had the lowest
priced scat at $298 for a round-trip to
the islands.
Misscrvillc collected the mo ney
from the students and bou.ht eight
Pacific East Air round-tnp l1clcet~ in
Mnrch. He thought the June tnp was a
sure th1na
But 1n early May Pacific East an
C"nncclcd its flights and filed for
Chapter I l b.10kruptc} The 1urhnt'
541d 1t olanne<l to resum<' thghts this
JERRY
HIRSCH
NEWS P ERSPECTIVE
week but would not honor its old
ticket~ lJ .S Bankruptcy Judge John
Ayer ha~ '1nce blocked the camer·i.
plan to rt~ume Otlhtsand ordered the
airline to cease all oorrauons Mi~~n 11lr found that none of the
'
other a1rhncs would honor the
tickets. He booked eight new tickets
on Umted Airlines for $418 each -
S 120 more than the Pacific Eas\
tickets
The students a~ gom1 to pa) the
extra S 120 and and MtS$Cf'Vlllc '' '°'"' to pay the rest out of his Personal savinp.
"1 thought that would be the
honorable th1na to do The lods -work
so hard for th~lf money," he n·
plained.
M1sscrv1lk m\aht set some o( the
$2, 184 back when the bankrupt~ 1s
even tuall) settled.
A<'Cordana to Linda Duch le. direc-
tor of consumer affairs for the Cavil
(Pleue eee TRA ft!./ A2l
•
..
j
,
AS* Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, May 24. ,914
CoN llNUl:' SroR 1ls I
DENTIST OFFERS TESTIMONY •••
Proa;aAl
inrlud1na a sketch of a bu'c upper
molar.
Protopappas told the Orlnac
County Superior ourt Jury about
office procedures, the types of druas
he used to anesthetize patients and
recounted what happened the d8y he
treated Kim Andrassen. a seriously
ill 23-year-Qld Huotin~ton Beach
patient who died at thcchnic Sepl. 30.
1982.
His testimony. scheduled to con·
tinue today. as expected to focus on
the deaths of the two other patients he
• is accused of kilting. 13-year-old
Patncia Craven and 31-ycar-old
Cathryn Jones. Then, Deputy Das·
• tnct Attorney James Cloninger will
begin what almost undoubtedly will
: be an extensive cross-examina11on of
the defendant.
Before Protopappas was called as a
• witness. Tuller told jurors in an
openina statemtnt that the three
womens' deaths were a "trqedy." but
were due to "circumstances beyond
the control of and unknown to Dr.
Protopappas."
The veteran criminal defense law-
)'er said the defense would show
Protopappas never "killed anyone"
ond employed "prudent medical and
dentAJ techniques" in his hi&h-vol-
ume practice.
He characterized the prosecution's
cast agamst his client as a "ghoulish
game of pin the 'tale' on the doctor."
Tuller said the proS«utton hAd
l"ngagcd in a "collusive scheme" to
develop a "common denominator"
in 1he case against Protopappas by
allering death certificates and refiling
all three the same day.
Turning to the three deaths, Tuller
!>aid Andreassen ingested a ~rescrip-
11on drug without the dentists knowl-
edae and contrary to his in1truc1ions.
That contributed to her death, he
uid.
If Craven's life was endanaered. it
was endanaeted not by Protopappes.
but by Dr. Manetta Badea. the den list
who completed the ~ority of the
dental work on the I )-year-old.
TuUer said. He pointed out that
Bade• hAd ~ aranted immunity by
the districl attorney's office from any
criminal liability in the case.
The attorney added Craven was
discharaed by another dentist who
also WIS 1t1nted immunity from
prosecution. "Maybe she was dis-
charae<S too soon. But due to the
discharac ... and the failure of the
family to ~move <aauze) packs. 10
put it simply..: she choked to death."
Tuller said or the girl's death.
~ .............................................. . HAMMER .•. ·. . NO PROOF DELUCA DRUNK •. From Al
From Al
produced a <.:0P> ul "l"ank. an e\pltut
SCA maga11ne. that pohtl' dl'tc<.tl\C\
da1ml·d thl'\ found under a mattrt.'\\
in Dcluta's l:x:droom . Thl' \outh had
glued p1l tures of grade \t h<.;01 girl~ hl'
~ was fond of over the lat'l'~ of thl·
cxphnt pholO\ in the maga11nl'
Bro" n statl·<l
The pro\ccuuon ha<, at1l·mp1rd to
establish that Deluca intended 111 rape
Haxton Witnesses. though. ha' c
testified that there were no signs thl'
mail earner was sexualh a\saultl'd
Under 4ues11on1ng · "'cdne\da'
Rogers said she did not attach
panitular s1gn1fica nce to the sex
magazine but adm111ed that details of
the as!>aul t case could aller her
ll1agnos1s of Deluca
"It could make a difference but I
"uuld have to kn o"' a great deal
more." replied Rogers "But it could
t ham:c m) opinion "
Rogers has described the 18-year-
old as a men tall) troubled youth who
turned to drugs in order to overcome
sh} ness. Deluca. Rogers said. has
d1 fliculty scpara11ng reaht) from fan-
1as} and has little idea "who he 1s."
was awakened by the knocking at his
St.arsh1ne Dnve home and found
Mathern standing at his doorway
when he investigated the noise.
Hermes. who identified the Long
Beach man as a family acquaintance.
told officers that Mathern at first said
he wished to talk. When Hermes told
the man to leave, Mathern allegedly
pulled out the hammer.
"As far as we can tell. the attack was
totally unprovoked," said Sgl. Ed
McErlain today. "The motive is
unknown."
Hermes was rushed to Humana
Hospital Westminster where he is
listed in serious but stable condition.
DEATH FOR TEEN IN SLAYING? •.•
From Al
planned the murder. Baker o;a1d
Although police said the cnml· Ol·
curred dunng an argument bet"l·~·n
Mrs. Baker and Telles. Baker ~td h•'>
wife had SI 00 on her at the tame c,hc
was killed and sus~ts that rohocl')
may have been a mot1,ating factor
"Money has a lot to do w11h
everything that's wrong," he r,a1d
The boy acted normally Fnda) night
and Saturday, when Bake r walked up
and down Cedar Place asking neigh·
bors 1f they had seen his wife. missing
si nce Fnday afternoon.
"The onl) SUSPICIOUS thing\.\ as that
his feet were d1ny." Bakl·r "'11d "He
would ordinanh have clean lcct. but I
didn't think an). thing of 11-m~ feet
got dirt) too when I was that age ..
Baker. who neighbors said spent
much of his time cult1\'at1ng an
elaborate nower garden. said the
"mo\I hone\!" punishment for Tdk~
would be thr death pcnalt\.
"lt'r, the kindest thing. rcall} .. hl·
\aid "II h(' "'Cnt to pmon tor 30 or 40
~care, his mother "oulcJ wnte him
ictters and keep hoping and pining tor
him and he'd lead a wrctchl'd
homble hfc But 1fthe) gave him lhc
dca rh pcnalt>. his mother "ould he
able to go on with her hie
··1t·s Just hkc w11h Eugenia . \OU
kno"' ~ou get over the~ things."
He -and Mrs. Baker mamed on
\farch 4. 1977, after they met in
Ne" port Beach Born m Mexico. she
v.-orktd for a Newport Beach family
as a housekeeper for 20 years.
Mrs. Baker nad never been married
before and had no children, Baker
said.
Funeral services for Mrs. Baker are
scheduled at Harbor Lawn-Mount
Ohve Mortuary at 11 a.m. Saturday.
STUDENT'S VIEWS •••
From Al
get the lmpreeeion th-1 ....,.,..,.18
Is bad In the eohOOll .net II tM
atudentl are lft eeponalbte. ··we had' modem cour• -.out
computer•. It w• QOOd, up to date
and I realty leelned" a lot,•• lhe llld.
The etudenta alto are concerned
about a wider range of ...,..,
•'1 think there ehould be more
fobs for people. We have to pay
When they are unempl()yed. That
Isn't fair but If they had Job• rt
wouldn't cost • mucn," said
Molly.
Danny Mys he can understand
paying ~It• for ~ whO
can't WOf1( but there 19 a prObltm
wMti the goverment 91Yte ajd to
peop4e who could get Jobt.
Another atudent candidate.
Heidi Gibson, think• ctMntno up
TRAVEL CHANCES UP IN THE AIR •..
From Al
i\eronauucs Board, therr arc soml'
basic steps M1 ssen Ille and other air
tra"elers can take 10 protell thcm-
sehes from such disa'itl·rs
"The very best "a> lo protl'tl
yourself is to purcha'c ) our t1l l.ct
with a credit card. If for some reason
the earner goes under and )OU ha\l'
not used )'our ticket you ha\c a
dispute with the credit card com pan~
and the} ma~ be '>luck "1th tht· bill "
Da<>Chle ..aid
.),ccordlnE! lO federal r air ( rcJ11
Billing .\ll lonsumersdo nut ha\e to
pa~ for goods and -.cn1<.rs 1hn
rurdHl'>l'd "'Ith a credit tarJ bur did
11<1t ll'll'I \ <.'
\\l· hJ\l' found th.11 rnnsumrr'>
11.hn 11.l'rt• unabk to u~· thl'tr t1lh't'>
,q·rr ahk lo get a refunJ or avo1J
p.1;1nlt h' following the pron·dure'i ul
thrtr 1ndl\ 1du,1l l red1t tard tOrn·
pJn\ Da'>l hk ... mt
\ll11rd1ng t11 \u" I nqr, uf f-ir'>t
ln1t•r,1,11r li.111~ tht· 'ltandard
pnlln.lurr "n1111h111tt lhc trcd11 t.11<.I
LompJm in "1111ng that thl' <,t•rv1u.· "'.i' not fl'lll\ld \ l rl·d11 I\ tht'n
rnadt 111 lhl· t11n\11mcr·., anuunt
I >a'l hll' Jlc,o \uggct.t\ 1ha1 rnn-
'>Uml·r\ h<>ok their t1ckc1c; through a
kno\.\il'dgcahk traH·I agent who can
tell them ahoul lhl' d1fferent'e in the
<;en1rc and ltn<lm t.11 'ilrcngth of the
airlmc.,
I ra,cl Jj(l'nt' hu\.\~'\l'f PH'\fnt
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Dell very
I• Ouer1nte.d
t.Ji ,,_.,I S•y 1r ;1 k
,.. ! ~\A.~ , ,._, , .. ,... t..,
• J ti" .41 , ..... ' ••
,. f ,,.,..~. • It!) tl"lfl. f•
~· ttA; ft , "'""""' , di ' ......... '
another set ol problems. To book
tickets. the agents use computerized
reservation systems owned and oper-
ated b)' airlines.
The two largest computer systems
are run by United Airlines and
Amencan Airlines. The CAB has
found evidence of bias in the system
that favors the airlines that owns the
rescnat1ons S} stem. Dasch le said.
The CAB IS ('Ons1dcnnga new set or
rules that would force Amcncan and
l 'n1ted to eliminate aO\· buil t-in bias
1 n their resc0 auon \\'items. Dasch le
\a1d.
.\nd traH·I agents ha'e a hard time
keeping up with the rnnstantl y chang-
ing arra) of air fare.., for customers
looking for the rhcapc'>t tickets.
Daschle bcl1c'l''\ consumers
should read the bu'i1ness sections of
new<;papcrs and look for airline
ad\Cn1smg 1f !he} "'ilnt 10 keep up on
the financial rnnd111on of the airlines
and 1fthc~ "ant 10 l.now who has the
least expcn'it\e ratr'>
This 1'\ l'\pct 1all\ important now
that 'oluntar} programc; that guaran-
teed a pas'iengcr a fligh t on another
airline 1 f hl' purl hased a ticket
through a Ira' cl agen1 have fallen
apart. Daschk c1tpla1ned.
"\.\hen rnn,umcrs go out and
malH' i:.t maJor purlha<>e they c;hould
du 'onw rec,l'Jrth It doesn't matter
"'hl'lhl'r 11 I\ .1 d1,hwasher or an
-airline ticket." Dasch le said.
Daschle said her agency received
an unusually high number of com-
plaints about Pacific East Air prior to
the airline·s bankruptcy.
Only last month the state attorney,
general's office filed suit against
Pacific East Air charging that the
airline sold more tickets than there
were scats available and then either
denied or delayed refunds to cus-
tomers who did not get scats.
Until October, consumers can
wntc or call the CAB and find out
how many complaints have been filed
against an airline.
Consumers may have more trouble
getting information about airlines
after October. The Airline Deregula-
tion Act of 1978 which opened the
industry up to competition also called
for the dismantling of the CAB in
1984.
Funding for the agency runs out
Sept. 31 and no provision has been
made to hand tts watchdog functions
to another agency. Daschle said.
But even without the CAB
mon1tonng thtnJS. Daschle bcltcves
the industry wall eventually settle
down.
"I believe the airlines will become
financiall y stronier but with de-
regulation there wall be some winners
and losers while things are sorting
out," Daschle said
\\hat do } ou like about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don 't yoa like? Call tlle
number at left and your message wlll'be recorded, tran1crtbed and dellvuecl
10 th e appropriate editor.
The same %4 ·hour answering service may be used to record letters to lbe
editor on any topic. Contributors to oar Letters column mus• lncludt tbelr
namt' and ltltphone number for verification. No clrcalatloa calla, please.
Tell us what's oa your mind.
ORANt;f COAST
Daily Pilat
H. l. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Clrculatlon 71•1M2"'4m
C ... •lfted edwwtWno 11•1M2-M11
All other deperttMntt M2...Q21
MAIN OFFICI
)JO Wftl .. , 91 Coele ~ CA
Ma4 eddt-!o1 lsecl Co.le~ CA tMH
Co!>r~ '"' Orenot CoM1 ~ ~ No new. t•or'" """•'IOt't 90<!or..i mell9f 0t ..,.._, .. .....,.. ,,....,, mer CJ9 ·-~.-cl ~ 11p9e,.. PfJI
.,_QI C"O'f'~I -
!If y tr ' n • • ,_. •-
•" ti"~ , .,, If .. fl; ._ ...
ClrculaUon
Tet.pho~a
Cheiy Dowallby
F Mnr ar rJ As~1•,1an1
I<> th,. r uh h ... hf>f
Aoeemary Churchman .
Control! r
Ol"(j c-poeteQt CNllCI •• eo.i. "'-Cel'lolNa
11JPS 144 8001 luow111>1cin oy t«•• IA 7S """"""'
,,., ,.,,., .. so ""'"'"""
'
lte~,.CetHO
P•~l·11..t><:" l.A•" ,.,..,
Oonekl L. Wlflfamt
•
c.,, ••afl1Jt
MM111Qf''
VOL. n , HO. 1a
II ..
Coutal t7 ..
1' .,
10 44 ... .. n .. .. N 17 70
72 41 to •2 74 ..
75 ...
10 N t5 10 n 49 ... •• 71 12 .. ... .. ... 12 H --~-'**'•= 1t 61 u 12 ---c..... a 40
Eztended
.. 11 ........ ~ ... OMWM.,..llllllowya.. 71 ... ...... ..,_NOAA u t 01e1 ., ~ u u 71 .. ...... .,Of'll . , .. It Pel .. T.,,..,. .. 7• .. .. lilor'IOlll. v • H 51 UIL.Me (;lty 17 " 75 II Nontl Plan. ., Sot IMAntonlo " 14
lot 78 Oll._Clty ., eo IMO.OO 13 ..
79 M Omehe 74 81 ..,.,,_ 17 51
Tl des
Temperatures
71 16 OtltindO .. 17 Sen NMl,P A .. 72
17 &2 Pllll!I~ 102 12 8t8i.Mar .. ff 40 .. .. Pt!ll~ II !13 ... 111. 51 42
19 67 Ptloenla 108 71 ::.._.-,:. 13 SI
II 11 Pttta~ 71 46 71 u
f7 .. PM ..... 71 53 SCH*-eo 37
70 ~ Pornend.Or 92 44 8yr41CUN 76 45
71 59 p,~ Te $1 '°'*'' IO 11
11 52 ==rclty "-' 71 ~ ,_ 108 .. .. 70 .. 55 TlllU II St
Reno ., .. WMIWngton 81 51
~ ., 51 w~ 1• $1 aaa-•o eo $.l wi.....,,. ,, 51
SIL-76 52 ~.De 12 60
.. L• to 60 ., •2
13 M 83 47
IO 45 12 I I 11 ,..
92 73
7t 52 .. 45
12 53 11 53 .. ~
16 57 to 70
71 47
80 51 .. 47 12 ,.
16 41
12 57
TOOAY s.conci IOw 12 13 pm 0 1
hconcl "'O"' 137 pm • 3 SuRF REPORT
'NOAY
F1n1 low 1' 6014 •.mm 31 511 LOCATIC* Ftulhtg~-89Cond ...,_ 12 48 p m o 9 Hunllnglon a..cti hcond high 7 70 p m 4 9 Al-.1911y, Newport
1 •4 '40th StrMt. N9wpof1 Sun Nia IOClay 81 ~ Pm "-22llCI 81r•I. N9wpof1 Frtoay •t 6 4S • m an<I NI• llOWI al a.Ibo. W"°9'1
1 65 pm ' UO--8Mdl Moon Ml• al 2 ~s p m roday. ,._ 8.,, ci.n--c•
Fno.y •t ) Ot e m end M18 aotW> 81 W.t• *nc> ... 320pm
--fi.Jill@!l-
VOTE ...
From Al
at Friday's campaign assembly by
suggest ing the elimination of the
Silent Sustained Reading Pcnod -a
JO.minute span after lunch when all
the students must sit quietl y and read
a book.
"It is boring. People say they are
rushed at lunch. The Imes arc long so
once th ey get their lunch the have to
hurry up and eat it," Danny says.
Two of the three vice presidenual
candidates. Suzie Kramp, 12, and
JenniferCarlson.13,artcampaignmg
fo r more school fundra1scrs.
"We need fundraascrs so that we
can have some field tnps:· s.atd
Jennifer.
Suzie has a better way to spend the
money.
DannyHoack
Molly O'Neil
"The fundratscrs help pay for art
and cooking supplies and they should
ha ve more. I am an foods and we have
to use powdered milk and fake cheese
because the school doesn't have
enough mone) to buy the real things,"
says Suzie.
The third candidate, Danya Hall,
was knocked off the campaign trail
with an untimely case of the chicken
po.x.
Vottng is scheduled for Friday after
the speeches are made and Ensign
Principal Paul Twedt CllJ>«tS nearly
all of the 41 0 chgable students to vote.
"It 1s a prett} controlled environ-
ment here and we don't ga ve them the
opportun1t) to forget to vote." says
Twedt.
Hilary Benedict
em
1-3
1·3
1·3
1.3
1·2
I
•·3 s ... Oirecuon Soul"-
DDT .••
From Al
atory disorders when consumed 1n
large quantities by humans.
Water board offi cials were sur-
pnscd by lhc DDT find!np because tl
1s illegal to use the pcsttc1dc.
The most recent tests showed the
level of DDT 1s nearly half of its
earlier readings, when it was
measured at more than nine times the
level set by l he National Academy of
Sciences for healthy fish.
"The results show that the problem
1s not getting worse but it is still bad,"
said Ph1hp Mauer, a member of the
water board and the Newport Beach
Caty Council.
On Wednesday. Anderson backed
away from earlier statements that the
tests revealed evidence of the r«enl
use of DDT.
"We have met three of the four
factors established. If you come up
with all four factors you can be preuy
sure you ha ve fresh DDT:' Anderson
said.
It 1s not unusual to find DOE and
other DDT by-products 1n the en-
vi ronment.
The inSt'ct1c1dc Toxaphenc. which
showed up at more than 30 times the
level set b) the academ)' of science in
the earlier tests. dtd not appear at all
in the most recent tests. Anderson
said.
But PCB. a carcinogenic industrial
chemical used as an electric.al in-
sulator. increased slightly to .66 parts
per million from . .56 parts per million.
The academy's standard is . .50.
DDT by-products and PCB are
among the toxic chemicals found in
recent tests of mussels m Upper
Newport Bay and Newport Harbor.
Anderson said the pollution is not
severe enough to be a public hcahh
hazard but it has set off a countywide
search for the sources.
The state has done spot checks of
local produce and has found no
evidence of DDT. Similar spot checks
of growers by the county Agricultural
Commissioner's office also found
nothing unusual.
"W e have had no progress 1dent-
1fying the sources." Anderson said.
"We haven"t found anr.hing that
looks hkc a smoking gun. •
The decrease in DDT levels may
point to a single incident in which the
pes11c1de was used.
"It may be that the source was a
one-ttme use and it did not show up in
the same levels because these fish
have not been around that long,"
Anderson said.
CROWN AND THE BEACH
Surfs up. Sun •s out. And there
you are soaking up the rays. In
your very own blue canvas beach
chair with aluminium frame. It's
our most popular chair! Come
check out all our chairs, beach
towels ... rafts ... coolers ...
umbrellas ... A great graduation
gift or Father's Day present,
Crown
Hardware
Getting You Ready for Summer
All Stores Open Memorial Day 9-5
Corou del Mar
I> 81otli.a o.
w td1lf Uatbor Vt w ~ Bllll Lo., Bue•
ol \11t Ar1hur
3107 [ Coaal Uw ~
7141673·2800
I 71b 11 lr"in~
1024 lnlne Au.
71 .. /642·1135
Arro .. from lmfNrl•l llwy. Lot Aho•
H• ,.,., Gtrdrna al 91 frwJ Shopplo1 C:cr.
1614 1m ~tlau•I Or. 5620 nl• An• 21~ 84-llOo•H
11V642·1133 CanronRd Bhd
714/«>98 5282 7141841·5584
' ..
"
I
I
)
e
ID
NEWSLIN E
Coast
There's a robot on the
payroll Un the Ocean View
School District./ A3
Newport-Mesa school
trustees have shelved a
plan for day-care centers
In schools./ A3 J
:::::~:=:::::::::::::~;::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:::·:·:·:·:::::·:·::
California
Character actor John
Marley, whose movie
credits included 'The
Godfather,' is dead at 76.
/A4
The state parole board
has been urged to refuse '
the parole of multiple
killer Juan Corona./ A4
Nation
Republicans are calling
the Carter briefing
papers investigation a
bungled affair .I A7
·:·:·:·:·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:::.:::.:·:-:::::::.:-:-:-:
World
Five El Salvador national
guardsmen have been
found guilty in slaying of 4
churchwomen./ A7
Features
A barter system based on
a new kind of credit card
is gaining adherents
among Orange County
business people./8 1
.:·:·:=:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:::::::.:=:-::::
Sports
The Detroit Tigers
matched an American
League record with their
16th consecutive road
victory, 4-2 over the
AnQels./C4.
The Phoenix Suns forced
a sixth game in their NBA
playoff series with the
Lakers, winning 126-121
at the Forum./C4.
Orange Coast College
baseball player Jeff Gar-
dner has been selected
the South Coast Con-
ference player of the year.
/CS.
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::.
Entertainment
Cliffhangers by "Dallas"
and "Falcon Crest"
propelled CBS back Into
the Nielsen ratings lead.
/83
.;::.:::::.:::;:::::::::;::::::::·:~:·:::·:· .·:·:::·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Busi n e ss
An Irvine company has
unveiled the first com-
mercial system to test
computer keyboards./C1
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Business
Callfornla News
Classlfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Living
Mutual Funds
NatlonalNews
Opinion
Polloe Log
Public Notices
Sports
Stoek Marketa
Summer living
Tet.vtl4on
ThMter1
WNthef
Wond Newt
82
84
A3
C1·3
A4
C8·10
84
C10 ce
C9
82
81·2
C1
A4
A10
A3
C6-7
C4·6
C3
01-8
82
82·3
A2
A4
o H A N (. F c ' > 1 J r.i 1 y· , :·. , 1 1 , .. ~ N 1 A , ' •• ·
eet
erattac
Dentist
testifies
in own
defense
Protopappas ·
testimony will
continue today
By JEFF ADLER
Of Ille 0.-, ,... .....
I
Almost 14 months after his arrest
for the second-(jegrec murder of three
dental patients, Costa Mesa dentist
Tony Protopappas took the witness
stand Wednesday and began telling
his side of the story for the first time.
The 38-ycar-old dentist, th e first
witness to be called by the defense,
appeared tentative as he began his
tesumony. but quickly gained his
composure. turning to face jurors.
sometimes smiling. He spoke in calm,
measured tones.
As he was led through what seemed
to be well-rehearsed testimony by
defense attorney Robert Tuller.
Protopappas stepped down from the
witness stand several times to draw
charts or diagrams for the jury.
(Pleue .ee DENTIST/ A2)
Dentiat Tony Protopappaa. teatifylna at hla
murder tria.1 Wedneaday, uea a c6art to
~,... ...... .., .............
deacrtbe the ctru&• be uaed for aneatb•la durlni •1lJ'1ery.
Cockroaches issue in election race
Kids at NB's Ensign
School take their ----politics seriously
Hy JERRY HIRSCH
OllM0.-, ..... 1'-"
Cockroaches arc not the major
issues of most political campaigns.
You probably won't hear President
Rca~n or any of the Dcmocrauc
presidential candidates take a fiery
stand against the nasty insects. But
they sure are a burning issue for the
students seeking office at Ensign
Intermediate School in Newport
Beach.
These kids take their ca mpaigns
senously here. appointing friends as
campaign managers and plastering
the school with cam paign posters.
And if you look closely on Dover
Drive, you will see a hand-painted
"Molly 0. For Ensign President"
poster pinned 10 a fence between the
flu orescent green and orange, pro-
fessionally pnnted signs of state
Assembly and Judicial candidates.
Heidi has more of a law and order
drift to her campaign.
"There is a lot of d1tch1ng and
th ings going on here that should be
more strictly punished. Weshould get
the people who are ditching class and
punis h them by having them clean
the school up." Heidi says.
"But they already have to do that."
counters Hilary Benedict. whose plat-
form calls for repa1nt1ng the school 10
cover up that "icky" brown.
"The problem 1s that no one
enforces 1t," responds Heidi.
Danny Houck 1s the only boy
runnini for president and he hopes 10
sweep into office on a wave of male
votes. Danny figures the girls will
spilt their votes among the female
candidates.
But Dannr admit~ there ma} be a
serious flaw m his strategy .
"The boys who hke the girls arc
going to vote for girls," Danny
explains.
However. he~o score points
(Pleue tee VOTE/ A2)
Students give v1ews
about school system
llJJEMVHIUCH Of .. ..,,.. ...
Studenta and teechere ~the
blame for mMy of the problems
wtth the pubttc IChool tyltem,
according to lfx proepecttw ttu-
<*'it leader• at Enllgn lntermedl·
ate Scmool In NewPQf1 Beach.
"Every kld could go Into our
accelerated ct...... It just tak•
their tJrne and their effort. Many of
the ktdt Mw bad attltucte.," eeid
Hiiary Benedict, 12. ·•r think the education aystem II
pretty good. The teachers t..ah
the etuff and It la up to the kJda to
leem tt. Mid Jennifer Carlson, 13.
Moly O'NeU, 12, agreea that the
Victim lis ted in
serious c ondition:
motive unknown .
A Huntin&t<>n Beach man Who
answered a knock at bis front door
early this momina wu terioulty
injured when his visitor pulled out a
hammer and llNCk him in the bead
several times, police said.
Ronald Mathern, 21. WU maied
at his Lona Beach home f'oUowina the
I :30 a.m. attack in Huntincton.
Mathern is beina be.Id on suspicion of
attempted murder.
Richard Hermes, 48. told police be
was awakened by the lcnockina at his
Starsbinc Drive borne and found
Mathern IWldina at bis doorway
when be investip&ed the noise.
Henna, who identified the Lona
Beach man as a family acquainlaDCle,
told officen that Mathern at tint said
be wished to talk.. When Hmnes told
the man to leave, Mathern allesedly
pulled out the hammer.
.. As fat as we can teU, tbe attack was
totally un~ovokcd, .. said 5't-Ed
McErtain today. "The motive is
unknown.··
Hermes was rushed to Humana
Hospi~I Westminster where be is
listed in serious but stable condition.
DDT on
decline
in NB
creek
By JERRY WRSCB
or ... a..r ........
Pollution in San Deigo Creek and
Newport Bay doc1n't look as bad as
first thouaht but is still serious.
acc.ording to new tests of minnows
just completed by the state RCJJonal
Water Quality Board.
"The samples we took an Apnl
show a large decrease in pesticides but
we are still waitin• for more results
that we should get an August from the
Department of Fish and Oamc, .. said
James Anderson. the executive of-
ficer of the water board's Santa Ana
regi on.
At an Apnl press conference.
Anderson said the board bad dis-
covered unusually hi&h levels of the
banned pest1c1de DDT and other
toxic chem1cals in tests of red shinner
minnows taken last year. Both sets of
(Pleue eee DDT/A2)
"There are cockroaches in the
locker rooms and I was sitting down
at my desk in a class when some
crawly thing crecpcd across at. It was
temblc. we need to call the ex-
terminator." says a d1manut1ve Mblly
O'Neil. one of fo ur Ensign 12-year-
olds seeking the schoors student body
presidency.
Death penalty 'honest' punishment
There is a definite clean govern-
ment thread to Molly's campaign.
"The bathrooms need to be cleaned
up and the boys are complaining that
th eir bathrooms don't have stalls or
mirrors." says Molly dunng an infor-
mal debate on the school's front la wn.
Heidi Gibson. who has pasted gold
stars representing her cJmpaign on
her face and f nends as ~I .as her
posters\ asn 't going to let Molly get all
of the c can government vote.
"We need to clean this place up a
httle b11 -1t 1s son of messy." He1d1
say~.
Grieving Mesa widower seeks swift justice
but 'fe~ls sorry· for accused youth. 16
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of lhe o .. y "9ol Ital!
While Elloy Telles was ma~1ng 1hr
first of what will undoubtedh IX' a
long string of court appearance\
Wednesday. a relative packed the 16-
year-old boy'~ things into cardboard
boxes and emptied his room at the Ira
Bakers' Cedar Place house.
Clothes. Telles' electric guitar.
typcwnter and the posters of rod
stars that adorned his wall' \\e~
packed up from the Costa Mc~ home
where Eugenia Flores Baker was
murdered last wcdl·nd
The bo\ and anuthrr I t.-,ear·old.
charged with lir'\t-dcgrel' murder m
the death of the 60-\ear-old woman
"ho had befnendl·d T clles. will
remain in custo<h JI least unul
another heanng 1a~t''> plan·. a JUdge
ruled.
Telles and Kurt B1l·1uns~1 . arre'lted
Sunday night 1n connec11un w11h the
death of Mrs Baker. appc:arcd hefore
Juvenile Court ( omm1s'>1oncr Gale
Hickman Wedne'>da\ afternoon The
pair are ~101held1n Orange County
Juvenile Hall pc:nding a \1 a' '0
hearing to determine "h~thl·r the~
will~ tned as adults 1n the lnmc
Police suspect Telle'>. "h11 ll\ed
with the Bakers. and B1clllns~1 . a
neighborhood friend of l cllc!>.
murdered Mrs Baker la'it f nda' and
buned her 1n a bad' ard planter
Fnends and relau' e'\ found ha in thr
shallow grave Sunda~ afternoon alter
she was reported m1\sing F-nda'
On Wednesda\. M~ Baker'' hus-
band. Ira . tl2. Sat qu1cth "11h his
elderly mother "h1lc Telle,· po<,-
~ssions were collected. Ill h\· rmked
up b)' Telles' aunt
A. small. \lrh1tc candle tmrncd
slowly in a custard d1'>h near Baker's
favonte chair. 1n memon o f the
woman Telles 1s accused of murdcf'.
ing.
.. , sure will miss Eugenia.'' Baker
said. A. tall. gaunt man of few words.
Baker said that despite the "terrible
shock·· of ha s wife's death. he bears no
ammos1t-., toward the troubled teen-
ager he took into his home and tned
to help
.. , feel SOrT) for him No one had
the time to find out what kmd of
pcrwn he was. but mentally there was
w meth1n$ wrong w1th him," he said.
There 1s no doubt 1n his mind.
however. that Telles murdered his
wife. he said
The bo} allcsedly confessed as
much to him and even said he had
(Pleue eee DSA TB/ A2)
Airline tickets let the flier beware
When the carrier files for bankruptcy. ----... the customer's out of luck -and money
Un1 vers1ty High School surf club
coach Nick M1sscrv1llc never paid
nttent1on to the profits and losses of
airlines before. But after Pacific East
Air went bankrup1 leav1n1
Misscrville with $2,384 in wonhle s
11ckets fo r a surf club tnp to Hawau,
he will be mort scltct1ve 1n choo'lina
an a1rhne.
Mmcrvillc 1 one of a a.row1na
numberof passcnacri findina out first
hand 1hat compctit1on an a de·
rcaulnted a1rhnc indu,try hold~ the
m1'!> of a wonhk" ticket as well .n
'
the benefit offlymg chrapl)'
Two Cahfom1a-bascd a1rhnes, Pa
c1fic East and Pacific E><pr« . ha"c
filed for bankruptcy th1!> year. leav1n1
thousands of pa'i!ICngc" with u~I~"
tickets, or worse. stranded at distant
airpons
Thi was to be the fifth umc
Misscrv1lle ha'i taken surf club •uu-
dcnts from lrv1nc to Hawau.
"The k.1ds ~ho art aoin on thr tnp
all work hard for their arade and
wqrk hard at pan time JO~ to eam
enough monc' 110 thcv C'on ito ... "11<1
Mmcr' tile
M1ssen1llc nlwa\\ Ines to find the
lowest air fare hecausc he know'i the
students arc ~raping to rnme up wuh
the monc)' On pa~t tnp'i. M1'istrv1tle
and his student" have flown United
i\irhne!> and World Airhnc!>. but thi
\'tar Pacific East \ar hod the lowe t
pnced scat at s2qg lor a round-tnp 10
the island
Mmcrv1llc colk'(tC'd 1hc money
from the 'itudcnts and bouJhl e1e.h1
P1c1fte b'it '\ar round-tnp ticket in
March He thouaht the June tnp .,.,.,. .. a
\Ure thing
But in carh Ma) Pac10c Eut air
can\'Clcd It\ f111h11, and filed lof < hapttt I I Nnkruptn The :urhn<'
Ill 11 plannl"d to rt'11umc 111 ht' 11'11'
'
JERRY
HIRSCH
NEWS PERSPECTIVE
week but ~uld not honor m old
UC t'U ll .. BankruptC\. JI.Id l" John
~er has ''"« bloclr.C'd 1ht camtr "
plan to ~\umc n11Jm and ordtt'C'd tht'
airline to ~ax all OJX'rlllon'
M1'l~f'\ 1llt' found that nont or the
•
'
other airlines would honor the
tickets. He bookc'CS Ctlht new t1cktts
on United Atrhncs for $41 8 each -S 120 more than the Pacific East
ucket'I.
The studenu art 101111 to pay tbe
e\tt'I S 120 and and Mmnvdlt is
a<>•nt 10 pay the mt out of hu
pc'rsonal savmp
"l thou&ht that w.-ould be tbt
honorabtt ih1n1 to do. Tht kids work w hard for their mon~ ... be ex·
plaint<!
Mt serv1Uc m1aht sec some of the
12.3&4 beck ,.htn lbt banknaptcy i
c~entualf~ tmkd.
Accord1"' to nda 0.scblc. di .
tor of con umcr atra.an for tht Civil
(Pl-..e ... ftA V&L/A2)
'
I
Orlinigil COUt DAILY PILOT/Thureday, May 24, 188-4
'
: DDT DECREASING IN NB CREEK •••
J'romAl
minDOW$ were taken about •;, mile upstrc&m from Upper Newpon Bay.
DDTt banAed in 1972. is harmful
to wildl1fc. weakening fish and caus.
ina birds to lay brittle, thin-shelled eus. It causes nervous and respir-
atory disorders when consumed in
l&f'IC quantities by humans.
Water board officials were sur-
prised by the DDT findinas because it
as illepl te use the pesticide.
Tbt most recent tests showed the
level of DDT is nearly half of its
earlier readings, when it was
measured at more than nine times the
level set by the National Academy of
Scienca for healthy fish.
"The results show that the problem
is not 1cning worse but it is still bad."
said PbiUp Mauer, a member of the
. water board and the Newport Beach
· City Council.
On Wednesday, Anderson backed
. away from earlier swements that the
tests revealed evidence of the recent
useofDDT. ·
"We have met thrce--uf the four
factors established. If you come up
with all four factors }'OU can be pretty
sure you have fresh DDT," Andenon
said. It is not unusual to find DOE and
other DOT by-products in the en·
vironment.
The insccucide Toxaphene, which
showed up at more than 30 times lhc
level set by the actdcmy of science in
the earlier tests. did not appear &t all
in the most recent tests, Anderson
said.
But PCB. a carcinogenic industrial
chemical used as an electrical in-
sulator. increased slightly to .66 parts
per million from .56 parts per million.
The,,academy's standard is .SO.
DDT by-products and PCB are
among the toxic chemicals found in
recent · tests of mussels in Upper
Newport Bay and Newport Harbor.
Anderson said the pollution is not
severe enough to be a public health
hazard but 1t has set off a countyw1dc
search for the sources.
The state has done spot checks of
local produce and has found no
evidence of DDT. Similar spot checks
of arowers by the county Aancultural
Commissioner's offioe afso found
nothing unusual.
''We have had no progress ident·
ifyin.a the sources," Anderson said
"We haven't found anr,thina that
looks like a smoking gun. '
The decrease in DOT levels may
point to a sinaJe incident in which the
pesticide was used.
.. It may be that the source was a
one-time use and it did not show up in
the same levels because these fish
have not been around that long,"
Anderson said.
A closed landfill near the creek site
where the fish samples were taken
may be a source of some of the
chemicals but would not be the sourc.e
of the DDT. according to Anderson.
The landfill was closed more than
20 years ago and any DDT deposits in
would have broken down by now. he
said.
The water board plans to take soil
samples from the landfill once money
from the board's 1984-85 budget is
available in July, Anderson said.
DEATH FOR TEEN IN SLAYING? ...
FromAOl
planned tht' murder. Baker said.
Although pohce said the crime oc-
curred during an argument between
Mrs. Baker and Telles, Bake r said his
wife had SI 00 on her at the time she
VOTE •..
From A l
at Friday's campaign assemb7 by
suggesting the elimination o the
Silent Sustained Reading Penod - a
30-minutc span after lunch when all
the students must sit quietly and read
a book.
"It is boring. People say they are
rushed at lunch. The hoes are long so
once they get their lunch the have to
hurry up and eat it, .. Danny says.
Two of the three vice pres1dent1al
candidates. Suzie Kramp. 12, a·nd
Jennifer Carlson. 13, are campa1gn1ng
for more school fundraisers.
"We need fundraisers so that we
can have some field tnps;· said
Jennifer.
Suzie has a better way to spend the
money.
''The fundraisers .help pay for an
and cooking supplies and they should
have more. I am an foods and we have
to use powdered milk and fake cheese
because the school doesn't have
enough money to buy the real things,"
says Suzie.
The third candidate. Danya Hall.
was knocked off the campaign trail
with an unumely case of the chicken
pox.
Votirfg1s scheduled for Fnda~ a~ter
the speeches are madt' and Ensign
Principal Paul Twedt expects nearly
all of the 41 0 eligible students to vote.
"It is a pretty controlled environ-
ment here and we don't g1 ve them the
opportunity to forget to vote," says
Twedt.
was killed and suspects that robbery
may have been a motivating factor.
"Money has a lot to do with
everything that's wrong," he sai d.
The boy acted normally Friday night
and Saturday, when Baker walked up
and down Cedar Place asking neiih-
bors if they had seen his wi fe. missing
since Friday afternoon.
"The only suspicious th mg was that
bjs feet were dirty," Baker said. "He
would ordinarily have clean feet . but I
didn't think anything of 1t -my feet
got dirty too when J was that age."
Baker. who neighbors said spent
much of his time cultivating a n
elaborate flower ~rden. said the
"most honest" pumshment for Telles
would be the death penalty.
"h's the kindest thing, really." he
said. ··1fhe went to pnson for 30 or40
years, hi s mother would write him
letters and keep hoping and pining for
him, and he 'd lead a wretched,
horrible life. But if they gave him the
death penalty. his mother would be
able to go on with her life.
"It's JUSt like with Eugenia, you
know. you get over these things."
He and Mrs. Baker married on
March 4, 1977. after they met in
Newport Beach. Born in Mexico, she
worked for a Newport Beach family
as a housekeeper for 20 years.
Mrs. Baker had never been married
before and had no children, Baker
said.
Funeral services for Mrs. Baker are
scheduled at Harbor Lawn-Mount
Olive Mortuary at 11 a.m. Saturday.
STUDENT'S VIEWS ••• l'roaAl
oet the tmpreuk>n that~
fa bad ln tM tchOOel ~ ... the atudenta.,. irteeponllble.
''W• had modem ~ about
comput ... It waeoooct. up to~•
and I rMlty teamed" a lot.'' lhe llfd.
The etudenta also er. concerned
about a wider range of IMuea.
.. , think thete shOutd be "'°'. Job• tor peopte. W• nave to pay wt'8n they are unemployed. That
tan't tatr but ff tt\eY had Jobs It
wouldn't cost u much," .. Id
M~~. .
Danny MYI he can understand
paytng t>enefltt for people wtK>
~·t wot1< but there ti a ptOblem
When the gowrment g1we aid to
p.opte who COUid ~ f(>ba.
Another student cendidate,
He6dl Glbeon. thlnka GIMl1tng up
TRAVEL CHANCES UP IN THE AIR ...
From Al
Aeronauucs Board, there are some
basic steps Misserville and other air
travelers can take to protect them·
selves from such disasters.
"The very best way to protect
yourself 1s to purchase your ticket
with a credit card. If for some reason
the carrier goes under and you have
not used your ticket you have a
dispute with the credit card com pan)
and they may be stuck with the bill,"
Daschle said.
According to federal Fair Credit
Billing Act. consumers do not have to
pay for goods and services the)
purchased with a credit card but did
not rece1 ve.
"We have found that consumers
who were unable to use their tickets
were able to get a refund or a void
paying by following the procedures of
their individual credit card com-
pany." Daschlc said.
According to Suzy Lewis ot F1m
Interstate Bank. th~ standard
procedure 1s notifying the credtt card
corr.pany an writing that the sen ice
was not received. A credit 1s then
made to the consumer's account
Daschle also suggests that LOn -
sumers book their uckets through a
knowledgeable travel agent who can
tell them about the difference in thl.'
service and financial strength of the
airlines.
Travel agents. however. present
Just Call
642-6086
DellJ Pilot
O.Uvery
I• Guaranteed
MoNMy f r!CJlly II pOV ~l "°' l\e.,. """" Piii><" .,, '> 10 p m ~ llm!ore 1 p m
fln(j "°"' eOOy ~ Ii. ~eel
another set of problems. To book
tickets, the agents use computerized
reservation systems owned and oper-
ated by airlines.
The two largest computer systems
are run by United Airlines and
A.merican Airlines. The CAB has
found evidence of bias in the system
that favors the airlines that owns the
reservations system, Daschle said.
The CAB is considering a new set of
rules that would fo rce American and
United to ehmmate any built-in bias
in their reservation systems. Dasch le
said.
A.nd travel agents have a hard time
keeping up with the constantly chang-
ing array of air fares for customers
looking for the cheapest tickets.
Daschle believes consumers
should read the business sections of
newspapers and look for airline
advertising 1fthey want to keep up on
the financial condition of the airline~
and 1f they want to know who has the
least expensive rates.
This is especially important no\!.
that voluntary programs that guaran ·
teed a passenger a fl ight on anothrr
airh nt' 1f he purchased a 11ckrt
through a travel agent ha'c fallen
apart, Daschle explained
"When consumers go out and
make a ma1or purchase. the) ~houkl
do some research It doesn't mattn
whether 1t 1s a d1!>hwashcr or an
airline ucket," Daschle said.
Daschle said her agency received
an unusually high number of com-
plaints about Pacific East Air prior to
the airline's bankruptcy.
Only last month the state attorney
general's office filed suit against
Pacific East Air charging that the
airline sold more tickets than there
were seats available and then e11her
denied or delayed refunds to cus-
tomers who did not get seats.
Until October. consumers rnn
wnte or call the CAB and find out
how many complaints have been filed
against an airline.
Consumers may have more trouble
getting informauon about airlines
after October. The Airline Deregula-
tion Act of 1978 which opened the
1ndustf) up to competition also called
for the dismantling of the CAB in
1984.
Funding for the agency runs out
St'pt. JI and no provision has been
made to hand Its wa tchdog functions
to another agency. Daschlc said.
But even without the CA B
monitoring thin~s. Daschle believes
the industry will eventually settle
down.
"I believe the airlines will become
financially stronger but wnh de-
regulation there w11l be some winners
and losers while things arc sorting
out ... Dasch le said.
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you llkt? Call the
number at left and your mesuie will be rl'l'orded, transcribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
The same %1'·hln1r answering service may be uaed to record letters to tbt
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include their
name and telephone number for vnlflcatton. No circulation calls, pluu.
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. l . Schwartr Ill
Publisher
Clrculatton 71'1M2-4333
c1e11mecs edYertl.ano 11•1e.u-N'7t
All other dep8ttment1 M2-43.21
MAIN OFFICE
I)() W9tt '41y $1 COiia ....... CA
"'•" acl<lr... Ro .. 1 YO eo.11 1111... CA 9<'(128
t.<"1'f''9"1 1163 Of_,. Coett ~"9 Compeny No
·-ttor• -.111110•'4 .o.1or.-.... "" or ed'le<1• Tlltnlt ,_.,. tnll)I bf I~ 00UC.0 W1ll\Oul ~ljlj pet
,.,...,,. al aloyftgtit ~ S.•v<~y encl ""'°".,. " "°" CIO "°' ,~ yOUI coo, by 1 • m c .. oe!O<•
'0 • "' 9"° "°"' eopy ... 0.-tcl
Clrculetlon
T•lepMnee
Chazy Doweltby
C:d1tor llnd A!is1stAnt
10 thQ Puo1tsner
Aoe.mery Churchmen
Controller *°"° ~ poat• J)jtld 11 c.o.11 .,..... r .. ~ (\JPS 1u-t00) SUbecl~'°" 1>y c.e11re1 ~ 16 ITIOl'll\ly by -· .. $() ll'ICf)lfVy
llepheft , . CINUO
'11oduc1o0<
MIM80*f
Donald L, Wlltleme
L11cul"1on
Mlll'l•gflt
'·
VOL. n , NO. 141
---
Low, clouds and hazy sunshine
Coaatal
Extended
Temperatures
HI Lo
AlOeny .eo 50
Albuquelciue 113 82
Ametlllo 13 85
AndlOtag• 13 47
AIMvilte 80 45
Altente 82 61
o~ Chlmlgo
ClnQnlwlt ~ OC>Mftlllia.&C ~Oii Coooord,l'I ...
Oellu.Ft WMlll
O.yton o.n ...
OMMO!nM
DetrOll
Oululll ElPMO £~11/)tvMI• Fllltbenlle ,.,00
Flegtltll
Grenet Rapid•
OrNIFaHI
Or-.1110<o,N C
lifl(110td .........
H-ton 1no1.enlll)Ol1e
Jeoll-.MI
JactltonYtfle ,,_
KenauClly
L .. Veg .. UUleAocll
t:.~
Lubbock .
Mempn11
M1em1 O..ct>
Mk:ltnd·Od ... o
Ml .... eukM
Mpfl•SI Paul
NHIWll+e
New0tle9111
Tides
I I 41
87 4.
75 47
70 ... '4 '4 ,, 45
et " 11 to 72 .., '° ea T• M
75 0
70 $1 t6 70
77 ••
.... 45 1& ~
85 4.
1111 ...
112 30
711 51
83 82
03 40
" n 71 45
8$ 82
78 ..
88 48
75 81
106 78
711 511 1a as
77 52
84 66
711 57 81 77
87 6ll
10 48
71 511
11 52
88 70
Nft York
Noflolll.Va
NOllll Plane
Olclalloma Ony
Omaha
Ortencso
Palm Spring.
~ Pno.n11
P1t1•1>urgll
Por11.nd.M•
Porttel\(j.Or Providence a:.'lrc.,y
Ael\o
Rr<:nmond
SICfemento
SI LOUii
8 I 58 $1 Pet .. T er114>a
85 59 San l.all• Chy
e 1 54 San Antonio
81 80 San~ H e 1 San F rancl9Co
88 111 Sen Juan.P A
102 n SI St• Mat1•
81 53 S.1111e 1oe 78 S!Wevt9<1ft
71 45 SIOYI Fall• 1 t 53 Spokane
62 H SyrKuM
7 6 :.6 T oe>el<•
78 53 T-116 SS Tul ..
83 48 Wlllllnglon
81 57 WICNll eo 53 wia. ... a .....
76 52 Wllmlngton.O.
.. ,..
87 88 111 74
73 ..
87 51
N 72
511 40
88 42 as 58
71 82
80 37 78 45
80 61
106 88
81 a9
81 68
78 611
711 81
82 50
Atltn11C Clly 117 511
Austin 112 73
Baltlmote 111 62
8llllnge 88 45 SURF REPORT
TODAY Second IOw 12 13 pm 0 1
S.COl\O h!Qll 6 37 p m 4 3
81•mlng!lem 82 S3
Bllnwck 77 53
Sol .. ee 46 8oeton 85 51
8townsvtlte 90 10 8ullak> 78 47
BurHngton.VI 80 51 c.._ 88 47
Chwleaton,S C 112 "8
cnwi..ton.w v 75 48
Chwioue.NC 82 51
FlllOAY
Flral IO" 1 14 a m 1 5
Flrtl ~ 6 50 am 3 6 LOCATI<>til • S~oncf lo• 12 43 pm 0 9 Huntington S.1e;n
Second lugll 1 20 pm • o R••et Jelly, N9WJ)Oft
Sun Mia 1ooay al 1 54 pm ,.... 401n Street. Newport
Frl(lay 11 5 45 1 m •no HI• again 11 22n<I StrMI "'-PO<l 1 ss p ,., Bllboe Weoge
Moon,.,. 11 2 25 pm 1oday. rl.Mt ~:UC:..:.,-:
Ftl<ley at 3 Oii a m and Mii eg1111 II Wllat 1_,. a.. 3 20pm ~ ....
•m 1·3
1.3
1-3
1·3 1·2
' 1·3
Swe41 Oirecllon Soutn-1
Life, no parole, for slayer
of former supervisor's son
(.
By JEFF ADLER
Of .... 0.-, ~lot ,...,
A Santa Ana man con .,.1ctt'd in tl'le
1983 Costa Mesa robbery and
strangulat1on-slayi n$ of former Or·
ange County Supervisor Edison Mill·
er's 26-year-old son was sentenced
Wednesday to a life pnson term
without the possibility of parole.
In sentencing 26-year-old Richard
James Wetherell to the maximum
term, Oranse County Superior Coun
Judge David Caner no ted that. the
defendant had not taken any actions
to save the life of Patrick Scott Miller.
26. who was found hogtied and h mg
in a pool ofh1s o"'n blood .
"This murder \.\<a!> 'H:1ou'>
prolonged and personal. whl<.'h
means you had to see and feel the
death blows vou inflicted." said
Caner dunng ·the hnef o;entenc1ng
hearing.
· .. You allowed the' 1c11m. who wa-;
lighting to sustain his own life. to iil'
1n his own blood for hours without
medical attention while you callously
ransacked the house and took prop-
erty anti furniture." he said.
Caner added that there was no
evidence Wetherell ever considered
anon~ mousl) telephoning police or
para{tledics 1n an effort to save
Miller's life "Instead. you did the
opposite .. he told the defendant.
A six-man. six-woman jut) on
March 8 found Wetherell guilty of
robber) and murder during the
comm1ss1on of a robbery, a speCJal
circumstance that quahfiedthe defen-
dant for the life without parole
<,entencC' following a month-long
trial.
The proo;~cutton offered evidence
indicating Wetherell and co~efen·
dant Anhur George Goldner Jr ..
whose separate trial on the charges 1s
'cheduled to begin next week. me1
M1llt'r 1n a bar near hi!> Hanover
Drne home 1n (o~ta Me\a on June
18 l 9RJ
I he three returned to Miller's
home after the bar closed and con-
tinued to drink until Wetherell and
Goldner attacked Miller. savagely
beating and kicki ng him. according to
Prosecutor Pat Geary.
After stnpping the home of numer-
ous household items and loading
them 1n Miller's pickup truck. either
Wetht:rell or Goldner strangJed Mill·
er. the prosecution contended.
Miller was found by his girlfnend
the next morning hogtied and lying in
a pool ofh1s own blood. -
The defense admitted Wetherell
was 111,olved 1n the heating. but
argued 1ha1 Miller. who sold cocaine
and man1uana for a livmg, pulled a
shotgun on the two men triggering the
attack.
fhC' '1l't1m·s father was appointed
to the Board ofSuperv1sors 1n 1979 by
then-0ov. Edmund Brown Jr. Buth
"'as defeated 1n his re-election bid b
Bruce Nc<,tande m 1980. Miller ha
sinC(' resumed his private law prac-
tice.
~UfiiijPij~NM~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~-
D E NTI s T OFFERS TESTIMONY ...
Fro m A l
including a sketch of a large upper
molar.
Protopappas told the Orange
County Supenor Court JUry about
office procedures. the types of drugs
he used to anesthetize patients and
recounted what happened the day he
treated Kim Andreassen, a seriously
ill 23-year-old Huntiniton Beach
patient who died at the clinic Sept. JO.
1982.
His 1es11mony. scheduled to con-
unue toda}'. 1s expected to focus on
the deaths of the two other patients he
1~ accused of killing. 13-year-old
Patricia Craven and JI-year-old
Cathryn Jones. Then. Deputy Dis-
tri ct Attorney James Cloninger will
begin what almost undoubtedly will
be an extensive cross-examination of
the defendant.
Before Protopappas was called as a
witness. Tuller told jurors in an
opening statement that the three
womens' deaths were a "tragedy.'' but
were due to "circumstances beyond
the control of and unknown to Dr.
Protopappas ...
The veteran cnminal defense law-
yer said the defense would show
Protopappas never "killed anyone"
and employed "prudent medical and
dental techniques" in his high-vol-
ume practice.
He charactenzed the prosecution's
case against his client as a "ghoulish
game of pin the 'tare· on the doctor."
Tuller said the prosecution had
engaged m a "coll usi ve scheme" to
develop a "common denominator"
111 the case against Protopappas b)
altering death certificates and refiling
all thrcc 1hc same day.
rurnmg to the three deaths. Tul!er
~aid \ndreassen ingested a prescnp·
t1on drug without the dentist's know).
edge and contrary to his mstruct1on!..
1 hat contributed to her death. he
<;a1d
If c rnq·n·~ hit· \vas endangered. 11
wa<, endangered not by Protopappas.
but b\ Dr. Manetta Badea. the denust
who -completed the majority of the
dental work on the 13-year-old.
Tuller said. He pointed out that
Badea had been granted immunity by
the d1stnct attorney's office from any
cnminal liability in the case.
"~he didn't follow his (Protopap-
pa'i') instructions." he told the jury.
rhe attorney added Craven was
discharged by another den~· st who
also "as granted immuni from
prosecution. "Maybe she w dis-
charged too soon. But due to the
discha rge ... and the failure of the
family to remove (gauze) packs, to
put 11 simply. she choked to death."
Tuller said of the girl's death.
Jones· death was caused by "the
mere shock and trauma" of the dental
procedures to be performed. Tuller
said. "It was too much for her to take
. She went as quickly as 1f I walked
ov<'r and turned ofT the lights 1n the
rnunroom," he told the Jury.
CROWN AND T HE BEACH
Surf's up. Sun's out. And there
you are soaking up the rays. In
your very own blue canvas beach
chair with aluminium frame. It's
our mos t popular chair! Come
check out all our chairs, beach
towels ... rafts ... coolers ...
umbrellas ... A great graduation
gift or Father,s Day present,
SALE
$997 ..
~~
Crown
Hardware
Getting You Ready for Summer
All tores Open Memorial Day 9-5
Corona del Mar
6 Bloc:lu Su.
WesteUlf Harbor View Alla.helm Hills Lona Beacb
i\nuu from lmp«'rMIJ Ii-·)" 1.(.1• Ahot
of M•rArthur
3107 t ' C.:oett lh·~
ii t il\73-2800
I 71h at lninr
102•& lf\lnf' AH
71.i ii-12· 1133
Ro1nr'• c.ardrn• al en fr-) Shoppln~' Ir
16"'\anMIJUr-IUr. r.it>?O"a1u1An11 215 U ltUOowrr
i I l 642· II $.1 C'An un Hd Bh d 71 119~8~~282 7141841 -&as.4
I ' 4 --