HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-11 - Orange Coast Pilot•
r CllllllRill
Breath sample rµle aids cops
Supreme Court reverses California decision
on suspected drunken driver's evidence
The results of a brH.th tat may atitl
be used in court cases even if the
breath sample' is destroycd.'the high
court ruled. The court saKi police
have no constitutional duty to
From staff ud wire re119rt1 .
In a victory for police and pros--
ecutors, the U.S .. Supre~c Court
ruled today that law enforcement
aaencies have no duty to preserve
breath samples taken· during the
Coast
Laguna's historic 'hang-
ing gate' ls up again after
being held 'hostage'. I A3
eatlfomla -..
Gasoline prtees are tllk-·-
Ing a dive In California,
despite Gull crisis./ A5
Nation
At least three die as
Northeast swelters In re-
cord hell! wave./ A4
Hart's walking a ihln line
as national Democratic
convention nears./ A4
World
Arab nations agree to
reimburse for damages
to Gull oil tankers./ A5
A Soviet citizen has been
jailed for allegedly spying
for the CIA./ A4
Features
The Balboa Pavlllon Is
annts of drunken drivina suspecu. preserve breath samples taken from
J1ie high court ruling rtverses a people arrested on -suspicion of
•Califom iaappcalscourtdocisiontha-df'Unken driving.
forced Police 10 preserve the breath The case centers on a relatively new
samplei•so that a suspected drunken .method ihat permits breath samples .
driver could have the results checked. to be preserved for as lona.u JS days, . ., . . ... .
getting older -and bet-....
l--".....,·snowll,;:siited~l6inrith:jiei§=--1-1:._--;~---:...0.._, Natloniir~ts ero
torlc PlllC:'JS.191
Hikers, blcycll1ts and
equeatrlane are hitting
thetr.alls~1$mlle8-~l-1---
worth In Orange C,Ounty
-this summer./91
College presld9nts give
low marks to lecture
not.,..taklng aervlces./112
ScancUnavlan dancers
according to a 5P0k.csman IOr-the
Oransr: • Co1,1nty Public Defender's
offtet.
Criminal attorney Robert :Van Hoy
of Santa Ana satd the high ooun
ruling is a blow to the defense in
drunken drivina cues. He said
p~ing brrith sami)tcs it neither
complicated nor expensive ..
.. If the machine mQcs an error,
there is simply no Qyoffindin, that ..
Sports Two memben of the Vua J11Dlor Follt
New~ort Christian Hlgh's DanceenoembleofLoe Anlfel.,.•wi"li: Into -:.'.!'.!!',~':-__j.-t141ollla-_.t--tlte-7tlraD.naaJ See,adlneylen Davi Cllray says farewel Feadftl, beld Saturday at the Soath Cout
to high school stardom Plua vw.,e. Swedlah, Norwectan and
when he pitches In his Danlah follt dancen dre1aed In tradldonal
final game Tuesday./C1
coetumes twirled a.round a nower--co•ered
Maypole daring the afternoon to the
aoimda oLnadYe follt banda. Tbe Scan-
d.lnaTla.n fe.tiT&l be«an u a way to accent
the European abope In the Village and bu
e•olYed. lnto an educational ezperl.ence.
Burt Hooton a.nd the
Dodgers hand the Atlanta
Braves their third defeat
lnarow./C2
Cal State Fullerton wins
the College World Serles
with pitching. /C4
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Entertainment
The kings of comedy and
drama, Nell Simon and
Arthur Miller, will be rep-
resented in new pro-
ductions of old works this
week./83
Laguna electio~ petition
embroi~ed in legal fight
City clerk blockln citizens' petition drive,
sa.ys notice appeared In 'wrong newspaper'
By DAVID BISHOP
Omit',... C:.o ••••,..:I
The La&una Beach city clerk won't
honor a ~cg.al notice announcinJ a
petition dnvc calling for electton
consolidation because she says the
notice appeared in the wrona news-
paper.
tion. Paul Christiansen. one of live
association officen who signed the
r.ublished notice, insists the notice is
egal and said the aroup plans to
collect sign·aturcs on tbe petitions
despite the clerk's decision.
measure proposing the ronsolldation
ofthecitycouncil. clerk and tttasurcr
elections. now held in April. with thr
November Orange County election
ballot in even numbered yea11 b(ogin-
ning in 1986. The petition also
demands tha1 the question be placed
on the ballot this No\'emhcr.
Ci1y Ocrk Verna Rollinger saidshr '
informed Christiansen o n Thursday
that the Daily Pilot has not been
dcsighated by the ci1y -"ad-
judicated'. -to publish legal notices .
out now, ... said Van Hoy.
"When a perwn submits to .a
breath test, ~ sefnp&e 11 auto,mati-
cally dcWoycd. .. Van Hoy said. "But
there is technoJocy that would
PRKO'.e the sample and it's no pat
burden .on poija to use this 1Ceh--
nology."
·ln an'dTort to abide by th'e appeals
court decision. pol~ ofl".cen in most
Californ~ counties and cities have
be<o ..SYllioa drunlial .... ...,.
$Usp«l.S th.at a brada umplc: coulf
not be preserved b&tl 'IUI blood OI
urine: umples could bt tlored ror
future testina,.
.. Poli~ offtom hive j..a ....
1<16111 '""""" thal " ....,. -.. retest1 then they tho¥ld have a l:lload
or unne ttst, .. said BiU S.. ...
adviser to the Hunti.....,_ ~
Poli<r Department. ..
Carter fraud
suit settled
But county lawmen ma soon tnves te
Irvine businessman's securities activities
By JERRY lllllSCB
01a.D119Jo .......
The Securities and Exchange Com-
mission has reached & wttlemcnt in
iu fraud suit against Irvine busi-
nessmen Thomas D. Carter. who the
SEC accused of sellin& unregistered
securities for a firm that never
existed.
SIO million and S60 llliDioD from
invcston.
.. It is kind of diftic:uh. to p111
together an exact 6aurc because tM:re were so many di&rent entities in-
volved through wbidl the money
came in,,. Casterline said.
lbrou&bout the lawsuit and tbe
iov~plioa Caner and bis lawycn
have refused to comment on the cue.
Carter bas invoked the U.S. eon..
stitution's Fifth Amend:e:meot and
has refused to testify at teYeral
(1'1-.-CAllTSll/d)
Meanwhile, a. year-long Oranae
County Sheriffs Department in-
vestiption into Caner's allqed
fraudulent activities continues.
Sheriffs spokesman Lt. Richard
Olson said charaes may be filed soon.
· Carter's attorney, Stephen Wilson, =~ ::: ~":;"'~ ~ Coca1· ne· declined to talk about the case saying f:ll. "the co~nt ~~-~peaks for
Under the settlement, Carter. who=--s...,uspe· ct maintained bom.. in Ncwpon
Beach, Lake Forest and Lake: Ar-
rowhead, agreed not to en.gage in anfi g • tty ·fraudulent activities and ,pot to sc Ul .
unregislette1 securities. ln return, the
SEC agreed to drop its lawsuit.
according to David Casterline. an By STEVE MARBLE SEC attorney.
No determination of1uilt ot inno-Ola.Oilllr ........
ccnoe was made in the qrcement. A 24-ycar-old ~Coast mao·
Juda< Rnben1<.cllcher nflhe U.S. has pleaded gu;1cy 10 laundcrina
District Court in Los Anae\es still bas mil~s ~f dollan in profits for a
yjcw pnd apprc"• •M NMolowwm
If •-•--• loc:al la r; heve lhan.two\Onsof no 1QK;1-.. or w O'hon:c--.L.~ ..t-..... 10 Sou•L..::::.... i"\:;;;1!.r_._ia. mcot qencies step 10. Carter woukS we::-.. ~.H~UUI•
be m,.,.._ooue busin<H V<ntwes Micbocl Kaplan. wbn has li$lOd .
once ~is -kruptey prol••d;,1p . addtesles in both N~ llc•d11nd
filed in December, are (:Ompictcd. San Juan Ca~tnmo. ~ntcted the
The SEC filed suit in No¥ftbt0bci...--~,..,. tlry-ptea'""Friday. according to 1he-
aUcainc Caner sold itlvestmcnlS in a Assistant U.S. Attorney Jobn Kuray.
-medical factorina .. busiocss· that IC.lipbnand2lotberswere11TeStcd
never existed. Casterline said oo 1ut month when federal dnc -.mu
evidence of medical factoring turned broke up what they belieYt' WU
up durin1 a search and an audit of Orange County's WJest d.ru& riat-
records at Carter's Irvine ofrtce. Four persons, including the an~
Carter offered investors returns as kin&J>in of the smuggling rina. are still
high as 40 percent on their invest-at larJt.
ments in the business, which -The drug rin,g, al~ to have-
purpon.cd to buy mcdicaJ insurance direct ties to Colombia. smu"1ed
claims at a discount from docton and more than two tons of cocaine tnto
hospil.aJs and file the claims at their Southern California in the past year,
full value for a profiL FBI a,enu.saKI.
Sheriffs investigaton and the SEC In exchange for Kaplan's guilty
have estimated Caner raised between (Pleue Me COD/A2)
Football's
Henderson
sentence9
Former Dallas Cowboys linebacker
Thomas "Hollywood" Hendenon
was sentenced today lofouryeanaod
eight months in prison for sexually
assaulting two teen-qc girls, one a
paraplqic.
Henden.on. who had been living in
Laguna Beach. wa.s scnknced by
Su pen or Court J udgc Ernest L. Kelly
in Long Beach for 1ttakina tbe two
girisand lhcn tl)'inJ, to bribe them not
to testify against him.
Buelne..
Meanwhile. the president of the
Laguna Beach Taxpayers Associa-
The notice. published in the Daily
Pilot on May 31, signifies the inten1 of
the Taxpaycn Association to collect
signatures in suppon of a ballot (Pleue-LAGUNA/A2) Verna Rollinger
H~nderson, who claimed his prob-
lems stemmed from drug and alcohol
(Pleue oee 'HOLL TIVOOD'/All)
The Newport Beach-
based National Educa-
tion Corporatlon1las
begun construction of a
$6 million "super
school." /BS.
.. L !
Profe~sor burned up over
brush fire-fighting policy
Stamp! out early blazes 'postpones' loss;
he favors Mexico's 'let It burn' system
At k:ast $1.S billion has been spent
since officials stan.ed fiahtinf brush
Orts In Southern Cafifomta and
geo&rapher Richard Minnich claims
firemen mi&bt as well have let the
money bum alon& with the hiah weeds and brittle ch1paml for all the
·a<>odill done.
"lns1itution1lizcd chaos .. i~ how
Minnieh views the efforts 01 firc-
~tpten who cxhau.st themselvei bit~
thn1 the blues that whip and race
through the d111 hillsid<s ind ca·
nyona. -•
Minnich. a UC Riverside
prof~r~ stamp;n1 out brush
fir<1 l n the .. rry ...,. and k..inna
charred acreqe to a minimum lttU·
ally does more harm than a<>od. , ... w. "°"'~ r ....... PoltPonc them," says Minnich. '41f'ho claims
I . -
Soutbtm California is vulncrab&e 10
devastatina_fim as la~ as 250.CO>
acres. or 400 square miics.
Minnich reached his conclusion
after comparina fire 1etivity lo
Southern California to brush ftm in
nonhcm Baja California. whett 1'0
fire control t1',ists. His findinas aJ>-
pcar in a rcc:cn.t issue of Scie
mq&zibC.
ALthou&h northern ~a has nearly
twi« as many bru h fires 11 Southtl"A
Califomia, tM fires art relativt-ly
smalt c:omp1:rcd to bl1m in Orlnae.
son Diqo 1nd Los AnecJcs countt<>.
the-oltcf d1oco......i.
Southorthebonltr.themcJianflrc
size over tht past 10 ytars hat bttn
4.lXX> llCl'C$. In Southern hfomia.
n's m.,..tban 10.000. Dun!IJ that
pan. the la 1 nonhcm Baja fire
•
STEVE
wu 20,000 acres compattd to l0.000
l<f<Shcrc.
The ceocraphrr u9:Cd Slltllite
photQlfl.Dhs in his rncarch of the two
areas.. which arc similar in ize.
~talion and climate.'
Minntdl ays that in Baja. wbett
cbaptrral fires rqc unch«lccd. .hill-
lidcs hive become a mosaic of ok1
and new arowlh. Althouat> firM spr:ina up ltcqutntly •. the natur&I
n\>bonl of new srowth keep them
ftom •....,.din• •,..t d1stantU. the: ~---''?.!0.--.,, •--kn-...,e;lln•~---....co;. ......,._ ..... , 1••--r~r~BTING/ill --... ~.... -.-,_ ,_
I I
I ,/
•
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I
LAGUNA PETITION BLOCKED .•• ·
From 1
for lquna Beach and that sbc would
not a~pt the notice unle it w ~
republished in one of two weekl)'
new papen with ofTlCt'S 10 Laauna
ch. ··nat may be tNc, howe~cr 1he
Pilot has an adJud1cat1on number
with the County of OranJc and hu
run lepl adven1semcnts for the City
of Laguna Beach before," 5ald Olazy
Oowaliby. editor and assistant to the
pubhsher of the Daily Pilot
"The city clerk seems to be operat-
ing in a way 1hat seems to be
beneficial to her at tbis time,"
Dowaliby said. "If it was OK before,
why isn't it now?"
Christiansen finished third among
seven candidates in an election for
two City Courlcil ~ats in Apnl. He
was elected president of the Tax-
payers Association, a 3 7-year-old
organization, a fe'>' weeks later.
Dorothy J. "Sunny" Rhodes, hsted
in the notice as secretary for the
Taxpayers o~nization. was defeated
by Rollinger ma bid to be dected city
clerk in the elecuon.
The qut-St1on ofcon~olidating elec-
tions was an issue once before. In
uau t 1983. rcptest'ntative of lhe
Tupaym A sociation presen~d
evidence to City Council that co"'°
solidation w.ould sa,·c the city money
and ~nerate ircat.cr "Oter tnteresc However, t"Ouncal mt'mbcn reje\..'tcd
the proposal, partially b1Sed on a
report ·prepared by Rollinaer
empbasi21na the ~ of local contr0I
over the election P'OCHS thal would
result from the proposal As c1 ty clcrl.
Rollinger is in charae of conductina
local elections. .
"That wa not a recommen-
dation," Rollinaersaid.. .. but from my
commenu 1 think you can safely
conclude that I'm not wild abour the
idea of consolidat1on."
Christiansen charvs that Rolhnger
is "violatin1 the spmt, 1f not the letter
of the law" by denyana the Taxpayers
the right to petition the voters.
Roflin_ger says she is backed up in
her opinion by City Attorney PhilipJ.
Kohn or tbe firm of Rutan and
Tucker; a.;>d by city election consult-
ants Martin and Chapman of
Lakewood. ·
RolltnJer also doubts there is
enouah lime to get the petttion on the
COKE SUSPECT PLEA •..
From Al
plea. the government agreed to drop
charges of conspiracy to distribute
C'O<'ainc. The 24-year-eld, who will be
~ntenced Sept. IO. faces a maximum
fi ve-year pnson sentence.
Kaplan is free .on S75,000 ball.
It was alleged that Kaplan was
employed b) Huntington Beach resi-
dent Alan Mobley, 24. to launder
profits from cocaine sales. FBI agents
said Kaplan would pay ind1v1duals to
let him use their savings accounts to
s1ore drug profits.
Drug agents alleged that Kaplan
also hid the cocaine profits by
purchasing a series of bank checks for
cash and later making deposits in
accounts set up by Mobley. The
purchased bank checks would be
under S 10.000 to avoid federal re-
porting requirements. investigators
said
Moble). a Fullerton High School
graduate. alleged!)' was the top d1s-
tnbutor for the drug nng and had a
band of trusted accomplices who
would sell cocaine and collect drug
debts for him, the FBI said.
Investigators ~llege Mobley had
gravitated to the top of the cocaine
ring by marrying the daughter of a
Colombian national who smuggled
drugs into the United States.
Heribcno Machado-V cl a sq ucz.
Mobley's father-in-law, is one of the
four subjects still wanted m the drug
case. Agents believe the 50-ycar-old
man and two of his sons arc in
Colombia.
The fourth fugitive, Octavio
Grisalcs, 43, of New Jersey, also is
thought to be in South America, FBI
agents said.
O ne of the defendants in the huge
coca.inc case, Ronald Ting of Corona
del Mar, remains in critic.al condition
at Fountain Valley Community Hos-
pital. Ting, 25, was shot dunng his
arrest and is paralyzed from the neck
down. according to officials.
The trial date for the defendants is
set for Aug. 28.
'HOLLYWOOD' •••
From Al
abuse. pleaded no contest to the
charges in Apnl.
>\ 16-year-i>ld girl. a paraplegic
t0nfined toa wheelchair. had testified
that Henderson threatened her with a
gun in his apartment. She said he
forced her to perform oral sex and
that ~e.f&ndled ·her l-~CMo-Old.com-.
pan ion.
The girl~ t0ld police Henderson
met them to a liquor store Nov. 2 and
then took them to his apartment.
I le later had a friend meet the girls
in Laguna Beach ~ve thcmSSOO
to either lea"e the state or change
their test1mo n). prosecutors said.
Henderson was treated earlier this
year at Starting Point, a Costa Mesa
dru~ and alcohol treatment center.
While there. he reported to police that
someone bad stolen a championship
nng from his room.
Henderson played for Dallas from
1975 to 1979 and later moved to the
San FfanffiCo ers; tlie rrmm~~
Oilers and the Miami Dolphins.
Henderson. in a series of articles he
wrote for the Daily Pilot, blamed his
faU from football and other problems
on cocaine and alcohol. He a)so said
he hoped-his expenenct would be a
deterrent to other people who use
drugs and alcohol.
November ballot, especially if the
Taxpayers must ~publish the nota~
in another newspaper, as she says
they mu t.
"h woutd ~80od afthe Daily Pilot
were adjudicated because sometimes
the werkly newspapers don't allow u•
to set omclhin~ published in tame,"
Rollin,er id. 'The Pilot J'm sure
would meet all the ~uirement {for
a<ljudication in Laguna Qeach) but
thev never applied' that I a.m aware
of.''
Rollinaer said that as Iona as she
has been clerk (she was elected to her
third four-year tenn in April) be
never authonzcd a legal notice for
publication tn the Daily PiloL "But
I'm not the only one who authorizes
them. etther.'' she said.
Dowahby said that in the past the
newspaper has coopemted with the
city by rushing into publication legal
advertising on shon notice at the
request of the city manager.
"They ought to check their own
records," she said.
Assuming a ~t1t1on 1s valid. there
is a 20-da)' waiting period before the
association may start collcctingsigna-
turcs. according to state election
procedures governing initiative peti-
tions, RolJinger said. Then the peti-
tioners have a 180-day period in
which to collect siJnatures· from I 5
percent or the registered voters. In
Laguna Beach. that is about 1,800
signatures. The clerk may take up to
30 days to verify the signatures before ·
placing it on the neu available regular
agenda or the City Council. Council
members may decide to immediately
adopt the proposed measure or elect
to place it on the next ballot.
Rollinacr said the decision to place
the measure on the November, 1984
ballot must be made by Aug. 10 to
meet the county's ballot deadline. If
she accepted the Daily Pilot notice
she said the schedule could be met but
that it would give the petitioners only
30 days to collect the required
number of valid siJ!?atures.
Christiansen said his goaJ as to
collect the signatures in three weeks.
Christiansen said the petitions
already have been printed and his
workers arc ready to beg.in collecting
signatures.
.-"According toouFattornc.y. thecily
must show cause why we shouldn't be
allowed to proceed." be said. "The
bait is in their court."
CARTER •••
From Al
bankNptcy hearings dunntt which
investors planned to ssk him what
happened to the money.
The bankruptc).' court found debts
of1lboot S30 -milliQ!Hl'mf enet!t'-ef ·
about SI 0 million.
Investors fear much of the money
was used to finance Carter's attempt
to produce a feature-length animated
cartoon based on Mark Twain's
Huckleberry Finn characters and to
develop a casino and amusement
park complex in Las Vegas.
FIREFIGHTING POLICY UNDER FIRE •••
Tides
TUE90AV 331am ·t•1
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te LA
" 10 84 M =ru 17 IO
81 Ill 16 7a 12 72
114 71
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15 <13
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17 15 ti 71
0.UOll
Oulull'I EP-.o Iv_ ...
Fan.nu
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Htlena
Honolulll Holilton llldlenlOOll JllQkeon,Me
Jec:l<JIOO .....
~ l<.IMat Clly
LMV....-.
little floe.It
to . ,
M <12 .. It
93 7' es ... 65 ... n 11 12 ,, .. ... " ..
" 71
81 •• 87 74
12 12
" 13 ~ 85
13 llJ Ill 11
12 115 .. 11
" •
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LOUlll ti 71
lllbbocl " .. =:-...., ,, " M ,.
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-..Plan. 72 .. O!illftOme Cuy u • o..W\11 Ta ...
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Sall 1.Mtt City " ...
IM!Ant-ti '11
8wl DitOO 12 t1
.... , 'lllCleCO 18 112
Sen.JWn,1111.R. .. 16
8181tMetlll 71 ..
Stelllt 117 50 Silt:=• .. ..
Skill• ... 15 0 Se>e*etMt .. <15 sy,--. .. 10 Topelta 92 ..
T-.. 72 TUIN II 11
WM!longJon 85 ., .. Sun Mtt 100.V at I 04 pm . -Tue.day ti 5 41 a.m ltld M11119Mi •• I OS pm
Moon ,._11127 pm, ... T--
deytl4 Ola.m lnd,.._~lt4 411
am Wedlleeday
u " 14 74 ., 14
to .. IO '4
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SuRF REPORT
--~
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711 Ill
l«D
1·2 1-2
1·2
1·2
1·2 1
• 1-2
Swell dlrflCtlOll eoutllwMI
II-vine preparing for 'war'
after Marines buzz picn~c
Councilman pushes El :roro fnvesttgation ;
planes swep t low over groundbreaking rites
By ANDREA ADELSON be scot to base officials today, be said.
0ttNDWtJ11111oC•t.n "I've never seen anything like it. I
--... -d ==-· · f ~ ... .,. ill<t _ go~L~J_it was intentional but it was
• 11 ... ecu.en1.ng . ro~r o u ....... J" way abnormaT''lJraayiaid:-fighters 1s sllll nnging 10 the ears of ex-• . . Marine David Sills. Brady, ~veral. other .c1~y officials . . . and prominent mdustnahst Arnold The tr:vmeC1tyCou~c1l ~cmbe~._a Beckman and Irvine Co. President
former i~fantryman, is asking milt· Tom Nielsen were among 500 pic-
tary offi~ials a~ the ~I Tor~ Manne nickers gathered at the undeveloped Corp~ Atr Stati~n to invest1gale w!ty comer for the official groundbreaking
Jet ~alots making practice earner ceremony of the 177-bed Irvine
laodangs over the wecker:id apparent-Medical Center.
ly "buzz~" a group of picnicke_rs. Many people ducked their beadS:
Three JCts, ~me with its afierbu!'"er children covered tpeir ears and many
glowing, deviated· from prescnbed complained of ringing in their ears for
practice. runs when they skimmed up to 10 minutes afterward, Brad
'POW'Cr -trues and-swoeped..-fow -o~r-sam------
Sand <;anyo"! and Old B~rranca G~nnery Sgt. Peg Cauley. a base
Roads tn Irvine bef~re pulhng up spokeswoman. said the flights were
over the coastal foothtl!s about 2:30 part of a three-hour practice for about
p.m. Saturday. accord1n1 to three a dozen planes and helicopters.
p1cnic-1ocrs... . including seven F-18s. from the El
"What they were doing was outsrdc-Toro-and Tustin squadrons.
the realm of anything we've ever seen "Acoording to flight opuations.
before," Assistant City Manager Paul they wcrcoverthc nonnal fleet carrier
Brady ~id thi.s. mof!lins.. A letter landing pattern and at the n~nnal
requesting a m1htary mqu1ry was to altitude" of 600 feet, Cauley said.
She said the F-18s fly low in groups
of three with their landing gear down
when making touch-and..go landings
on the El Toro runway. The aareed-to
practice path is a loop from tlte base,
over Sand Canyon. around Lion
Country Safari and back to El Toro.
"T think the time has come to
seriously discuss their conducting
war games elsewhere," said Sills,
adding that moving training missions
to uninhabited areas would not
threaten the "military mission."
"If something bad gone wrona.
they could have dum~ ri&bt into
those people." said .Sills, who also
attended the ceremony.
The councilman pointed out mat
Irvine's development plans cater to
·11tary flight patterns ~ .puuiog.. _
.industry rather than homes under the
path of noisy jets.
.. All our plannina bas carefully
followed as to wtµu their practice
patterns arc and here they don't
follow them." he said.
Added IMC President David
Baker: "It was probably some week-
end wamor. But there wasn't any way
to miss us."
~:~7p:e!says. Reinhold. "lt'suptoMotherNature. forupto30years.Butasthe~shgct Three held a· fter mugg1· ng Hot, rolltng infernos dnven by You can just about bank on that." older and the thickets denser. the
bone-dry Santa Ana winds will even Reinhold. though, says county chaparral is like gasoline. •
sputter and bum themselves out firefighters arc bound -as well as "It's one-of the-most e~ ... lo .... s'":-av ... e--.e---F~v'-1::; • t l l~ •ng-1 -4-M~~~~·,~~un~ecncicbb.;a~p~aH'rrf1!altf,-:--"tlFr~alc1~r:n::d="'tte30ntii1fiuaviTt1i~ifiruU!s~n~11rrnirre~nf~ma"l!~s~7rr~vie~;-'S'~~ II~ ~:t~ ~~r~1~~~i~1~~1;R~~1~ In 110 s pi a par ix: e -a:-
.. Wat's we·ve done in Southern steering fires around populated areas so hot that there is no possible way of
Callfom1a, though. as to spend a great and sparing homes from advancing even getting close to it.'•
deal of money preparing ourselves for flames. Controlled bums, or "prescribed
a holocaust." insists Minnich. "That's still our top priority," the bums" as firemen now prefer to label
"There's no way around it." fire captain notes. them, are close to being a scienc-e, says
By beating back brush fires in the When a raging bNsh fire splits and the fire captain. It can take up to two
early sta~es. Minnich claims fire-heads in two directions. Reinhold years to plan an intentional fire.
fighters 1n Orange County have says firefighters will make a de-Weather stations m'ust be set up in
retarded nature's wa) of forming fire liberate decision to battle the flames targeted atcas, humidity measured,
brcal..s Pa ns of the county arc "so out churning toward homes while letting winds calculated.
of "hac1..·· that a major fire 1s just a the second fire take its toll in And even when all is ac-
matter of time. he adds unpopulated wildlands. compltshed. county firefighters arc
"1odJe">ka Canyon is one of Orange "That's why you'll generally see only permitted a few number of days
( ount) 'c; rugged areas that is "out of firemen clustered around the areas each year for burning by the Atr
'>'hack." fire authorities admit. where there arc hemes:· says Re-Quality Management District. This
Having been hit with sizable fires inhold. year, the county fire department has
onl> four times since 1900. the Minnich. though, is skeptical of been allocated only 10 days for
Three suspects were arrested aflcr a
23-ycar-old Fountain Valley Com-
munity HospiU\J operating room
technician was struck in the face and
robbed while walking to his car in the
hospital parking lot, police said
today.
Detectives said the daytime rob-
bery occurred after the v1c11m ap-
parently had stuck his wallet that
contained $30 m cash between the
scats of his auto. ,
A suspect, identified as James A.
Abraham. 23, of Anaheim, allegedly
was taking the wallet from the
unlocked auto when observed by the
victim. A scuffie ensued and the
hospital worker was punched in the
face. The injury required several
stitches in the nght eyebrow.
Fountain Valley Detective Steve
Isaacs said three suspects were ap-
prehended when Anaheim police
~topped their car Friday night. several
hours after the incident.
Abraham. identified as the driver
of the car, allegedly admitted the
strong armed robbery, Isaacs said.
The other occupants in the I 974
Plymouth Duster, were listed as
Donald S. Jepson, 24, Westminster
and Curtis C. Frankie, Anaheim.
They also were booked into Oranic
County Jail on suspicion of armed
robbery. They denied participating in
the hospital parking lot incident.
accordi na to lsaae!.
chaparral in Modjeska is like conventional fire 1ighting. burning.
gasoline. firefighters $3y. "A person with a house in the Minnich in his push to fight fire
When a brush fire is swept out of middle of the chaparral feels good with fire, suggests that controlled
control. there 1s nothing fireman can when he sees a red truck go by, he burning be stepped up. He calculates
do to stop Its progress, Minnich says. doesn't realize what a sham it is," it would take 5,000 acres of annually
No injuries in plane mishap
"'oucouldbnnginthewholcU.S. charges Minnich. who is critical of burning for 40 years before Oranic Ahardlandingbyasmallplancued The plane skidded abQut 100 yards .\rm~ and 1t still wouldn't do any zoning laws that permit building in County deveto~d a chaparral pat-up the main runway of John Wayne down the runway before t"Oming to a
good" the geographer contends. chaparral thickets. tern such as Baja's. Airport for an hour and a half Sunday stop. .
"You wouldn't have an) impact until For two decades. county firemen ··The other alternative is to let morning, delayrng several com-McLaughlin had taken the plane
Mother Nature damn well lets you have worked to duplicate what nature nature take ats course. There are some mercial flights. into the air for a shon Oiaht after
have an impact." permits in Mexico by annually con-fires where action just shouldn't be No one was injured in the accident, washing the aircraft.
Altho ugh his ideas sound radical. ducting controlled bums. The effort taken," Minnich proposes. ·•You which occurred as Newport Beach Emergency crews drained about 90
Orange County Fire Capt. Mark nds hillsides of decades-old growth could get a real nice 10.000 or 15,000-resident William McLaughli n was gallons of fuel from the plane before
Rt inhold says Minnich 1s nght -up and makes room for juvenile plants to acre bum going. landing his Cessna Skymaster. towing it off the N nway to the
to a pomt take root. "What we suffer from is an old The plane's landing gear failed to airp0rt's nonh tie-down area.
"When a fire reaches a certain level. Minnich says the chaparral wttl act theory that fire 1s not natural in our lock, causing the wheels to buckle. Three incominacom mercial flights
they're isn't much you can do," says as a retardant or a natural fire break ecosystem. And that's just non~nse." 1_-p_;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:;:;;;;;;;;;,;;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii
Just Call
642-6086
Wbat do you like aboa& Ute Dally Pllo&? Wbat don't yoa lie? Call tile
aamber at left aad yoar messa1e wlll be recorded, traatcrtbed ud delivered
to die appToprlate edJtos;:. .
Tbe 1ame H·bour antwerlng 1ervlce may be H eel to record let1era to tbe
t dltor on any topic. Co1&rtbatora Co oar Letters column mHt lnclade Uaelr
namt aad telepbo-ne aamber for veriflcatloa. No clrcalatlon call•, please.
Tell a t wbat'• oa yoar mlnd. • •
were temporarily dlvened to Ontario
Airpon. They were allowed to fly into
Orange County when the Nnway was
cleared.
And four commercial fliahts had to
s1tat theirptesdurina the delay while
the runway was cleared of debris.
The Federal Aviation Admina.
tration plans to investigate why the
landing gear failed.
Meet
D•llY Pilot
Def Ivery
ORANGE COAST
Dally Pilat
carcua.teon 1141142-4331
Claeeffled 8dwerttet.91 Twta~M71
All OltW ...,.rrienta ~
Balloon Paym.ent Dile?
Tired of ·Renting? ·~
Your house too stnall?
Need to move? e Experts
la Ouat•nteed
Mnnc>at Jr!Oly " yOU 00 11(11 ,_. ytM µeper D)'
& 30 p "' ~ Dtl\)lt 7 pm
lltwJ YOU< copy ... 0.
--td
9t1Uf<Mt "'° Sunday "
yOU 00 "04 ·~ '°"' t~ ti)' 1 • "' C4I lltb-e
•O a ,,, *"" ..-.. cuov _... be ~ .
Ctrcua.tlon
Tefep:toftee
~ 0r.,.c:-.,
"'-to..a:»
l ....... H9"" ......
H. L. khw•rtz HI
Publisher
ChuJ Dow•llbf
Editor and AISl1tant
to the Publisher
ii •
MAIN Of1llCI
330 W.. le)' I . c-. .... CA
.... llOdr-lo11 IMO COllt .,._ CA l2t2t
Sem•nara to au 1 vou to.AM If you own a home -or wish you did • come to the
7PM • o •ty 100 ••hiblcora trom Faire and find eveNthiM you need to know aboUt !tit Rtll Wit lndualry Will ' , Ill "'~
bt Undef 006 roof lo ~ELP homebuying and financingl)Ozens of lenders and related
•
services in one place let you comparison·shop without ~re.
Free loan prequalifying tells you exactly how much you can afford
to spend on.a home. (You'll be surprised at how much you're worth!)
3 DAYS ONtY OONl MISS IT
Tlcketa 1v1llable It Tlcbtron
Real Est• Fen·
I
• ,
Resistration be&ins tonight for the cijht·wttk
summer.scsston at pr.nae Coast Collcae in Costa M
. Reaastrauon runs throuah Thundal by 1ppo1otment
1n the Admissions Office, in the college s Couoselina and
AdmJ1sions Building. For appointment information, call •32-~772. ,
Walk-in rqistration will ~ conducted Thursday
from 1-7 p.m., Friday from 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m and June
18.·2 l , from 8 a.m.· ~_p.m. Schedules arc avaitabJe in the OCC Admiuions Office.
Growth 11emlnar set toalgbt
A seminar on petsonal growth and development will
be presented toniaht at the Anaheim Conven1ion Center.
Jl!n Rohn, president nof an Orange County corpor·
ation that produces seminars, books, cassettes and
videotapes, will be the speaker. The seminar is open to the
public at a fee of $50 for single admission and $7S per
couple.
Stop-smoklng clinic opens
The American Cancer Society will hold a "Stop
Smoking Oinic" in Newport Beach beg.inning tonight.
Classes will be held Monday and Thursday 7 p.m. to
9 p.m. through June 25 at Hoag Memorial Hospital. A $10
donation is requested for 1he sessions. For mo~
information call 752-8600.
Relaratlon seminar slated
"Leaming to Relax with PMS," an introduction to
self-hypnosis and provessive relaxation. will be presented
by psychologist Martine Robards Tuesday from 7-9 p.m.
at. the Human Equation Center. 1550 South Coast
Highway in Laguna Beach. .
' The registration fee is $10. Call 497-7408 for more
information, or write to the center for a free PMS (p~
menstrual syndrome) brochure and diagnostic checklist.
I
Civic Auoclatton to meet
Ralph Hudson. chief of recreational facihties and
design of Orange County, is scheduled to speak at
Tuesday's mectinJ o~the Costa Mesa Civic Association.
The meeting begins at 7 a.m. in the Columbia Room
of the Columbia Savings Bank at Harbor Boulevard'and
Wilson Street.
Ba•lneu women convene
The Newport Beach chapter of 1he Amencan Business
Women's Association meefs the second Tuesday night of
every month at the Registry Hotel in Newport Beach at 7
p.m.
Dinner reservations can be obtained by calling
642-7259.
Red CrOtlS mee~g planned
The annual meeting of the Orange County chapter of
the American Red Cross is scheduled to be held
Wednesday at 5 p.m . in the Anaheim Room of the Blood
Center, 600 Parle Center Drive, Sant.a Ana.
The public is invited to attend the meeting, ·where
awards will be presented, the board of directors will be
announced and bighliJ)lts of the past year will be
discussed. For information, call 835-5381.
An ei~1-weck session of intermediate ballroom
dancing will be given Tuesda)t throu&h July 31 at the
Irvine Senior Center, 3 Sandburg Way. rot St 5 per pcrsog.
International folk dance classes start Thursday lt the
Senior Center with fitness classes beginning Monday at
Northwood Community Park.
Further information on the classes can be obtai ncd by
callina Kathleen Lem at 660-3889.
Mea chamber meetlng slated
The June meeting of the Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commerce Board of Directors will be held Thursday at
noon at the Holiday Inn, 3 131 Bristol SL, in Costa Mesa.
The cost for lunch is $8. Reservations should be made
by calling 979-0536 by Wednesday.
Monday, June 11
• 7:30 p.m., lrviae Transportation Comm111ioa.
Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine.
• 6:30 p.m., Cotta Mesa Planning Comml11ioa.
Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
• 7:30 p.m., I.qua Beac• Arts Commission., City
Hall Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave.
• 9 a.m .. Oruce County Transportation Commission
. Hall of Administration. 10 Civic Center Plaza. Santa
Ana.
• 1:30 p.m., Oruce Couty P lauing Commlnlon.,
Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
PoucE Loe
J
1220s message to traveler returned 1
to downtown Intersection after dispute
8)' DA VlD BISHOP
o.llJ ..... C.1 I J *4A
A $mall piece of Laguna Beach
history, removed and held "h0$t e "
is ~ow b3ck. mtact 1n its ori11naJ · ~tttna.
A whit~. wooden, w10gina pte
that has carried an inspjrational
message to travelers ance the 1920s
was ~uietly returned last week to us
familiar place above the corner of
Park Avenue and Fore t Avenue. the
busiest downtown intersection in
Laguna Beach.
Old timers in Laguna sat -up and
took notice when the gate's new
owners l<!<>k it down in 1982 during
cons1rucoon to conven the former
Parlc-Foresr Pharmacy to several
small fast-food outlets.
"You wouldn't believe'how many
pcoplecarne in to say the) mi d it. ..
aid Bobbie · Ghozland, .. ho
purchased the buildina and bqan Ult
ttnovation with her hu band m 1982.
"We ured everyone that at was
never OUJ intention to grt rid of the
pte, .. she said.
But wbeo the shops in the building
opened for bu incss last year, ~veral
Lagunans noticed the pte was still
m1 1na. VirginJa W1nemgcr, Lillian
Starr. Mickey Hanna, Ben Blount and
other members of the city's ~aut1·
fication Council, an arm of the
Chamber of Commerce, contacted
Ghozland for an explanatJon.
G hozland J old them the gate had
been taken 6y the contractor who
worked on the buildina,. He was
"holding it b0$la~" because of a
mahor dispute ov~r payment,
Ghozland said.
Dishn0 to leav e p ost-
in HB school distric t
Duane Dishno will leave his job as
ass1stan1 superintendent in the Hunt-
ington Beach City (elementary)
School Districl July I and become
supcriotcodcn1 of the El Monte City
School District. •
D1shno has been employed nine
years in the local district, first as a
principal and then as director of
special education. He became assis-
tent superintendent for educational
services in 1982.
D1shno has been instrumental in
1mplemenhng major curriculum re-
v1s1ons • .iQ computer education and
for the-e1ttended-<lay kindergarten
program a1 distric1 schools.
The El Monte School Dmnct has
19 schools and 9,000 pupils. The
Huntington Beach City School Dis-
tnct is operating I 0 schools with
about 5,600 pupils.
...
.. Apparent!~ th~)'
na1i :· mount id
ecordin& to W1nc1ngcr. the•pte
oriainally hunt over Carl Hofer"s ice
ettam 'hop at Fo t Avcn~ and G~ncyre tttct 1n 1926. Not Ion
af\erward 11 was moved to 1 currcot
site. wtltch at the time was tbt R.an~n
dry &oOd• 110tt. Photos from the
1920s how the pte hangm1 at the
Park· Forest site.
Painted on the ete is a saying of
unknown origin: 'Thi1 .pte haJ\JS
well/and hindtrs none/ref mh end
r«l/and 1ravcl on."
Lillian tarr bcpn a search for it.
contacted the ~ontractor, nd finally
found the pie sitting in a local
painter's shop. he wouldn'l sa}
where. ·
··1 wen1 down there every day for
about a mon1h," Starr wd, ''tryina to
get that pte back.... fin&Uy, she
negotiated its rekasc
Ghozland downplayed 1he contr'lc-
tor's dispute.
"It was just an is uc of when the
~ork was actually done and wbcli the
last payment ,would be made." she ·
S~lld. •
.. We lcne"" the building was signtfi-
cant when we bought It," 'd
Ghozland. a Laguna rnident for a
year. But. apparently. not how s1&nifi·
cant
.. After a while all \\.C wanted 10 do
was to get the thin& up. Evcrybod)'.
was so 4pset ... we had City C-0unc1l
mcmbels coming in about 1L •• .. •
The gate was huna unc;uemonious-
ly last week b) the one of ber
employees. Ghozland said.
Mort formal plans for a celebratio11
of the gate's return arc in the wo~
Starr sa1d.
''Wh at ar e you planning to do t~is summer?''
Vicki Sarratla
j unior
"1"'oa11T111J--v.Jtey-HIJI
ScMol
"Earnin1 money, going
to the beach, seeing fri ends,
taking a vacation."
Greg Spicer
senior
Estancia Wgb Scllool
.. Play a lot of tennis and
get ready to JO to Cal Poly
San Luis Obispo next year.
.Coaching a baseball team
for Harbor Area Baseball.
rm also planning to work.
but I really don't know."
Larry Conway
sen.lor
OHla. Valley mi'li
Sdool
"Working. going 10 the
beach. havina fun."
Becky George
Junior
Estancia High School
"Playi ng sonball. going
to the beach and having
relatives visit from back
east."
•
'ltillcta BtO~OGt-
MG010g to Mexico. pany-
10a, gomg to the beach a lot
and work mg. ..
Jay Claang
sopbomore
Estancia High School
"Go to the beach. go see
some movies. go over m)
school matenals and get
ready for upper eta~. I'm
going to rcla:\'. and enJO'
myself."
Neal Eliot Weismu
juloT
Foetal•
Sdaool
.. WortC1ng. I also plan on
coing backpacking and
spcndLnf umc with all my
fnends.'
Lisa Bobl
sellior
Fountain Valley Higb
Scbool
"Going 10 cosmetolog)
schoo1.··
Grove man held
in hostage case
By tM Anoda~ Presa
Members of a Spcaal Wtal)Ons and Tacua team
am:sted a Garden Grove man af\.cT be aJJ~y claimed he
was holding bis wife bostagt and pve officen -the
tmprcs.sion .. th.at he had harmed her. pohc:c said.
The woman was not hartne4, but bet husband, l..any
Purdue. •l. was booked for iovC$1..lp bon o( false
imprisonment and failure to OOJDply With a Lawflal oC'der.
He was bctn& held in lieu of SS0.000 bond. Jhe three-hour Sunday standoff bcpn wbn I
daugf\tcr of Purdue's ran from their home so aall pnljq:
sa e~ sevCiil suns m the house and bcr falhcr
was holchog her motber ~.
Beauchamp said Purdur k.ept hans>na up bu
tc&cphone when pobtt called.. and then nood brld)y m the
doo.nny of his house.
••ttc ~Ute·~ that he aha(fy11:arined his
wife. ... BCauclwnp S&ld. .. He said be didn't lcnow if sbe was
stlll brcathiQS."
SWAT officers anbbecf Purdue as be ran from his
house toward bJS packup truck. The wife. •hOle namewas
not released. was ullhanned. '
Beauchamp said be bad no1 lcamcd whaa 11-.ed
the incidcnL
Special trash pickup
~.at-Costa Mcsa-tfll.Sb ~~ug.p-'19~f~bw~I• ~lterlrn:-----
such as sofas. manresscs. rcfn~tors and water heaters.
wtll begJn June 18 and contJnue for 01ne weeks, ctty
officials said
The Cll} Council authonzed the speoal residential
clean up program at a recent mecung to-help atizens
dispose of bulky items at no extra charge on a one-timc-
only basis.
Oreo Disposal Inc .. the city's trash contractor. will be
hand-dehvenng nouccs to residents one week 10 advance
of the p1ckup schedule. Special bulky items should be kept
separate from regular trash. but plaa:d in the same
locauon as the regular trash cans.
Trtt limbs. concrete. dirt. car bodies and asphalt will
not be picked up under this program. A service chatge wtU
be levied for any return tnps to residences.
Residents who are not 'iCrvtccd by Oreo must make
arrangements for a special· pickup lime. For further
information on the program. call 646-4617
Valley ice cream truck hit
for cool $175 by gunman
S400. siit fi<1hang poles worth S350. a
chain saw worth S300. tools -.-.orth
S500 and a fishing tackle bo~ worth sso. • • • Four -;1ecl-~poke hubcaps we~
stolen from a bron7e 1977 Cadlllac
Se\ 1lle parled earl)' toda} on the
18100blockofBeach Boulevard. The
loss was estimated at $500.
condoman1um O\Cr 1hc "eelcnd on
the 1300 block of Arrow Lane The
loss included Jewle~ worth S1.SOO
and s1l'er ingots worth SJ.000 • • • Someone stoic four v.ire-spo~e
\\.httls O\er the wC"Clend from a 1971
Cadillac limousine parled on the
18 700 blocl of Racquet The loss was
e t1mated at S 1.000
Parkwa\ and Ea<1t Yale Loop. Poli~
found a sa-.ed off baseball bat in the
\OUth's l 3r
• • • •
A home'Owncr on Puerto came out
to stt two teen-agers trying to steal
beer from his garage on Saturday
night The' fled o'er a back ._..-all • • • Old World Liquor reponcd the
A aunman stuck what looked like a
.357-calibcr Maa.num pistol through
an open door of the T ropical Ice
Cream delivery truck in Foun\lin
VaJlcy and escaped with S 175 in cold
cash.
Police said the incident occurred
Coeta lleu
An emplo~ of lhc U-Totcm
market. 1178 Sunflower Ave., al· l~Jy took the day's receipts last
Fnday and disa~rcd. The store
manaacr told pobcc the receipts were
not deposited. The loss was pla~ at
$1,130. • • •
Saturday niaht ice cream truck dnvcr
Scott E. Toolcer of Anaheim Hills was
countina the day's proceeds behind
the Thrifty Gas station at 18520
Brookhu.tst St.
T ookcr allegedly left the door open
while countina the money and the
home on the 3400 block of
Timberlake and two radios. valued at
$500, were stolen Friday. • • • Thieves apparently made entry
throuah a lc1tch1n window at a home
on the 600 block of Brookview fnday and stoic some Sl l SO wonh of
jewelry.
No Van Nuys women were ar-
rtste<s Friday after they allegedly Fou tain Valley
5b0plift.ct $~946 worth of merchan· mcone t~ a .. " ,.. t>pc.
dite from the Soi.tlh Coast Plaza MaH. AM/FM ponable radio after fo~1n1 Oreiscs, suiu and linaerie were . d rtt0vc~ from the womcn•scanner open 1 ..-1n ow ~n asnd enterin "
a security auard from Nordsll'Om•s home in the 16000 block of Evans
Dcpanmena Store allcicdJy saw lht Cin:le. • • •
women concea1in clothing under Buralan cntcttd a aaraic m the
their skirts. Taken into cust<Xty ,,-......... bloei of£1 !Vb0t A.\cnu and
Ora• Count)' Jatl wm LJnn tole a $275 bo ' 2~i~b cruiser
Uw1 36. and Caroline Lewis. 31. bicycle. • • • • • • bout Sl.016 was removed from Someone slipcd into an unockrd
an office 11.Um\!cn.al)' Honda. 2860 aa1 1n the 10000 block of Li Ro
Hai'bbr Blvd .. wt •-eek. o 1gn of lane and stol 1 1 Honda .50
foi'CcC:I entry was dctce1td. E~motart'\'I valued ti 2.5-0.
• • • c •••
A windo 1411 pried open at a Thieve ttole-1cwell'). a TV set and
>
_.._ __ ./._
suspectapprooched wtth the demand.
"Give me your money."
The gunman also took the man's
victJm's W1lllet contain1ngabout$51n
cash bd'ore vaulting over a block wall
fence in a res1denital ne1ahborhood.
tape rccorderd after enterina a resi-
dence in the 10000 block ofGoldtt)e
Avenue throuah a rear shding &Jass
door. • • • A Fountain Valley Hiah hoot
student reported that someone tole
her purse contain ma a pocket c:aku·
lator and wallet from htr locker 1n the
Jirls' om. • • • Bufllal") SlOlc I man's aold Omcaa
ratcb 'alucd at $2.500 after cntcn'
a rn1dcn« 1n lhc 11000 block o
tonccttsS A venue through a sliding
al• door • • • ThtC\'tS forted open a throom
window in the 16000 block of Mt.
t-1etd\erCin:tc and tote a-diamond
engagtmcnt nna valued at $1 ,200.
BantlnCton Beach
mcone took property early Sat-
urda~ from an unl kedp on the
21300 block o nd liar l:ane. The
lo inctudcdSSOOwonhoffooorrom
· a frtt1cr. tv.l) raana b1C)~ln wonh
• • • A\ black 19 4 Jttp J I 0 was reported
'itolen o"cr the weekend from Hunt-
ington AMC' Je-ep. 16751 Beach Blvd.
The loss was estimated a1S14.000. • • • Smashing a windov. 10 enter.
someone burglarized a brown I 980
Honda C1v1c parked unday on the
21900 bloc~ of Seaside Lane. The lo
included 36 tapes v.onh $360 and two
pairs of shon worth $36 • • • .\ man was arTCSted Sunday after-
noon on suspicion of hopbfun.a 11
tbe ponmart store 7433 Edinger
Ave. Recovered were 1ishina lures
wonh SIO. • • • • Someone took property from an
unlocked v.h1te 197 Dod e "--an
parked over the weekend on 1he
17800 block or Ca.rraru.a Lane. The
i nd\tdcd c v.-on.h .and a
riOc worth $100. •'• . A cat buratar entered throuah an
open slidina_~tio door If\ a ""1deOC'C
on tl\C 21600 b of Brookhunl
trttL The lo included a purse
rontaimn S 100 1nJ wdry wonh
S200 • • • mronc \tote hubcap<1 v.onh S .. 00
from a brown 19 l Ford Mu tang.
parted ta.rl) unda> on the 19800
blotk ofna~mont Ulnc. • • • 8rtti.1n.a a . ttar door t rntCT.
someone buraJarhcd and ran e~cd a
.)
• • • .\ v.h1te I 98J To\ota Celica was
buraJ.an7cd over the weekend whale
parked an a dnHv.a> on the 14400
block of Elmhurst Circle. The lo s
included stereo ~u1pment worth
$1 ,000
tmne
.\ S 1.000 in-duh sterro and S 15 1n
ca h ~as discovered stolen from a
Toyota Supra 1h1 morning that was
parked at 3601 Parkv1ew lane. No
fo~ "as used top1n entry A rash of
To\oll slerco thens occurrtd last
.. ~~in the north end of town ••• '\n I 8-)c&r:Old lrv~~ man was
amstcd for assault on a Po afficcr
\bonl> after midnl&bt toda) vohen ht
aot into a wn:stlina match W1th an
officcr tryin1 to deta.io the man 10
Chaparral Park • • • Two JU"cntle~ v.~rt annted tor
~u picion of buraJary unda~ ntaht
tollo-.ina a hreak-m on Kazan trttt
.,.hcrt ca h. II') and camera
equipment v.onh S7SO was talrn. A
13·)'car-o1d Irvine airt and• 16-)ttr·
old t.aauna Hin bo) v.~rt taken tnt<
custo'd) 1t the ,;rt• home. a block
from ~hcrt tht twOl~in occurrtd. • • • A I 7·)ttr d Irvine ho) ~as
hool..cd at ju\cnik hall for u pac1on
of drunl..en dn' "''and po ion of
1dan v. pon unda) mom1
af,cr ~ topped at .\hon
theft Of S~.00() ID Cash Saturday.
Police had no turther dctail.i Ou
morning . . . ..
4'bout SJOO an cash was taken from
a bad. office des.le at The Pa."" an
auto pans store at S408 Walnut ~.
Saturda\ afternoon. The \Ott man.
ager 's ai1en11on ""as divcntd by three
men • • • .\n 1nattent1vc 80.)car-ald man
arodcntl> hit the aq:clc:rator of bis
car and drove 10to his own hoii1IC at
16 n Redwood t Saturday morn~
The man's car hit poruo of bk
garage and rumed yard bu
Lapn&Beach
Polttt l't'pon that meonc broU
mto the Top of The Wortd ~ ud
took all the phones off ~ book
Saturday nwu. No d.amtee or \oill ~• evident out police ate IWlllU .. 1
full repon from hoot official • • • Poltcc arrested a woman for bb:t·
"''the · -.-alk a.nd IOli ·u .. moeey
unda) anemoon It the comet' of
fomt vc. and th C<>1111 H.
way. tellc ri n \'unnen. ~ • 11
ma held on S 1.000 bail. • • • • A man wa IJTt$afd at I North
t Hip 'a)' for PQSteUIOn Of
man.Juana and dlnam>ut dnip for ~le unda)' aftetnoon · ,Bryan
Thoma rdebed on SIS.000 11.
I
•
Hart shuns words like 'fight, conflict' High Court OKs ,
booze breath test .
WASHINGTON (AP)-Gary Han is t.readin&a fine
ltne between an agrnsive punuit of his pres1denual
candidAcy and protcctini his chances to run again in 1988
or to become Waller F. Mondale's vice presidential
running mate.
Francisco July 16.
The Colorado senator araucs that pubhc opinion
polls wlll soon bcg.tn 1how1n_1 him to be a more popular
challenger to Presidef\t Reapn than Mondale. despite
Mondale's bare maJOrily of delcptes.
"I will not c:ontnbute to the dtvis1ons of this party,"
Hart said Sunday. He also prom1~d to uric his r.up170rters
to vote for Mondale if the former vice p1esidcnt wins the
nominttion.
Asked about the likehbood that he would wage a
convenuon fia.ht over the S<><aJled "Utntcd delegates"
committed to Mondale, Hart ~1d: "I am try1na to&ct away
from words like challenge, fight and confHct and aU the
rest."
By tbe At1odated Press
W ASHINOTON -Law enforcement agencie may
use the muhs of alcohol breath te ts as evidence aaa1nst
accused drunken dnvers even when breath samples att
not preserved, the Supreme Court ruJed unanimously
today. Ovenumina a California appeals court rulina, tho
justices said the nation's police officers and pro~utort
have no constitutional duty to "preserve breath samples in
order to introduce breath-analysis tests at trial ...
Hart, sayinJ "a lot can happen over the next five
weeks," 1s hopana that liibtntng wiU strike and that
somehow delegates to the Ocmocrattc National Conven-
tion will swing to him by the time they meet m San
There has been no Slgll of that so far. But at the same
ttme, Han has been saying that he dOC$ not intend to
d1v1de the party and that hj5 fo~most goaJ IS tO defeat
Reagan this fall.
LISTEN and"RELAX
KDCM tD!l.t
FMSIERED
Boy off critical ll•t
/ NEW YORK -A 41h-ycar-old boy has "excellent"
chances of survival after getting a heart transplant in an
operation that required mainifymJ eyealasscs so doctors
•bOUt mlll\ery b .... , the number of could work on the tiny organ, hospital officials say. James
planes at air~•. abOut mlllttry ~ P. Lovette of Denver, known as "J.P.," was in stable
tachments, exercl"''' and oth« mat· condition today and off the critical list followina tera. , · Saturday's 51h-hour operation, said officials at Columbia-
Calllng him a "dangerou•atatecrlml· t Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan.
naJ." P,.vda aatd Pet~ wat
arrested by the t<GB MCtet pot~ •nd Runaway gets ride home
that l•1tema of uplon• equl~t" were lound on hlm.
· It uld Petrutievlch conf9sai"d •·on au
polnts" and "the covrt •teno.d him to
a long term of 1mprtsonment '°' high treason for spytng for the Unlled
States."
SALEM. Mass. -A Massachusetts teen-~ger who Jefi
home under the pretext of smoking a cigarette and wound
up in Alabama 1s back home today after becoming the first
person to take advantage of a bus line's new free-ride
program for runaways. Cynthia Anne Williams, who
turned 18 on Saturday. left home June 2 wtth the hope of / finding a new home and job in California.
Financial
summit
looming
LONDON (AP) -An
international conference to
weigh the success of the
current world monetary
system is likely to be held in
two or three years, say U.S.
officials following the
seven-nauon economic
summit here.
··we're heading toward a
A NEW WAY TO BEGIN BANKING WITH SECURITY PACIFIC.
"monetary conference,''
probably to be held in 1986
or 198 7, said a senior
American official, who
spoke wid' reporters o.o
condition he not be ident·
1fied.
• •\t,. .... -.f~, -"II' I
•
It's Banking the
Electronic Way
The Discount Banking
difference is that you use
an electronic Ready,
Teller® machine for
most of your trans,
actfon~rsomcnTing--·
most people wou Id
prefer to do anyway).
You can make
unlimited with-
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money a nd using our Ready-
ti me is i mporta m to Tellers.
you -and you don't You can also transfer
write a lo t of checks-funds between your
01"LOuntBankingr~ is for you. checking and savings
DiscountBanking i. where we accounts, make payment~
hegin looking forward \Vith you. If o n your loans or credit lines,
you're just ..;tarting out, if you're on.a.--or addt:o...a savinguicrount.
hu<lget, o r you're changing bank· you What's more, you can arrange for
owe it ro yourself to find out about automariccheckingaccountandsaving;
all the advantages OiscountBanking deposits, and automatic lqan payments
g1\'cs you. (another way to. ave money because
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LJ-;e DbrnuntBanking
the \\'ay 1 t wa~ meant ro be
u..,cd and you won't have
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"crv1Ce Lhargcc:;. That can
<1JJ up co c;i...tra mo ney
ft)r you.
All you have to Jo
,..., write nn more than
ten chetk" m your
momhlv :-.tatement peri-
od, make no more than
two depo..,its over the
counter ma monthly
statement period, and
m aintain a minimum
balance of$100 at a ll time!-.·
you'll get a lower rate o n your
Security Pacific loan ).
Many banks charge for
these transactto ns, but with
OiscountBanking they uin
all he free.
Start Discount ..
Banking Instantly
You can open a Discoum-
Banking account at any
of our more than
630 offices. When
you do we'll issue you
a Ready:fcller card
on the spot. You
can use it instantly,
and you tan make
transactions at any
Security Rlcific Ready,
Teller anywhere in
California-24 hours a
day, seven days a week.
The Easiest Way
to Bank
DiscountBanking
lets you save money
and time because
you're using the
Security Pacific
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instead of t he
hank on the inside -
ou r tel !er window ..
When you make
most of your
transactions the
Discount Banking
way, you can look
forward to saving
money.
But if ¥OU exceed the guidelines--
listed above we must char~ your
account the ::.a mc service charges as
a rcgulnr checking account.
Only from
Security Pacific Bank
--
DistountBanking is ava ilable
cxdusivdy at Security ParifiL Bank.
It'... one nf a host of service~ we have
for forward looking people, but it's
the one w here we begin looking for,
ward with you. S top in at any Security
Paci fit Bank offk c and begin
ObtoumBanking-and saving
morn .. )' -right away.
S K
lDOKING FORWARD Willi IDV
l '\u 1 \1' l )tfi., • 111 l .1ltf••r111.1
IT'S WHERE WE BEGIN LOOKING FORWARD WITH YOU
.... ..-..... .. ..
-
'
World financial officials
would use the conference to
look at the current system
of floating exchange rates
and discuss how well it has
been working. the official
said.
A final summit com·
munique, issued Saturday
by the world leaders attend-
ing tht"three-day meeting.
asked finance officials to
continue .. in an urgent and
thorough manner" their
work on ways to improve
the monetary system.
Studies now are under
way on the world monetary
system and are expected to
be finished in the first half
of 1985.
Because of the volatility
experienced 10 financial
markets in recent · years,
French President Francois
Mitterrand has called for a
new conference to revamp
the world monetary sys-
tem.
·Las Vegas
strikers
harass
tourists
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP)
-Striking hotel workers
arc living up to their vow to
continue nightly demon-
strations until a 7J.-day
walkout is settled.
Some 200 demonstrators
chanted slogans and chided
,.tourists entering the Fron-
ucr, Desert Inn and Sands
hQtels Sunday night-. even
though the Desert Inn and
Frontier have settled with
three o( the-four striking
unions.
Stagehands continued
their nego tiations with five
resorts Sunday, and leader
Dennis Kist said there was
httle progl'C'Ss. Talks are
scheduled to continue
Tuesday.
Stagehands have yet to
settle with the MGM
Grand, Tropicana, Fron-
tier. Sands and Desert Inn.
Musicians have not set-
tled with the Sands, and
President Mark Musuli
said he expected more tatl.:s
today.
Picket lines were taken
down at all fl vc hotels last
Wednesday, but Kist bas
said they may be re-
established if no proarcss is
made on a settlement with
the staaehands.
Meanwhile. Culinary
workers and bancnden
bave. noi y l ltled at the
FourQuccna, Sam's Town.,
the Clllfomia Hotel, two
Hohday lnns and the
Manna. Some 3,000 mem-
bcn remain off lbc job at
those ail propcn.iel.
Some 500 pickets tumed
ou1 11 Sam's Town Satur-
d1~ niaht, and Kist uid be
would hold 1 demon-atraoon Monday ni&ht at
the Four Queens.
The bitttr.t co tly slritt
'tqan Apnl l .vhcn 17,000
mcmbr of 1he four union
stru k 24 hotel
•
v I
Orange cqa,1 DAILY PILOT/~,~ jt,
Gas coats take dive
despite Gulf strife
By tH AUOc:lated J>(ffe
LOS ANGELES -Despite the summer incttase in
drivina and hostilities in tbe Persian Gulf, aasolioc p_rjcn
across the nation have dipped this mont.Ji/an fbdustry
oblerver says. Accordi~& to analyst Dan Lundbcr&'s most
rc«nt survey of 18,000 service stationJ, ps prices
dropped .l 8 cents in the last 2 weeks at the retail level and
.64 cents at wholesale. The June avcrqe for au ~of
psolinc, includi111 tuet, is S 1.20, compared to S 1.2 l in
May. he IA.id.
Tom Bradley tor VP?
~OS ANGELES. -May~r Tom Biadley will be
considered as a possible runnlng mate for Democratic
presidential hopeful Walter Mondale, a top Mondale
campaian aide says. "There hUn't been a list (of
candidates) yet," said Mickey Kantor, Mondale's Cali-
fornia ~lite campaign chairman. "But l have to say tbe
mayor is one o(the finest public servants in this country.
Cen.amly, he will be one of those persons considen=d."
Pancout trial begilJ•
LOS ANGELES -N~rly a year after Marvin
Pancoast .)"alked into a police station and said he "just
killed somebody," his auomcy1 hope to prove him
innocent of murdering longtime Alfred Bloomingdale
mistress Vicki Morgan. Opening arguments in Pancoast's
trial were to begin today in Van Nuys Superior Court.
Pancoast, 34, a former duplicatina machine operator at
the·William Morris talent agency, pleaded innQCeot and
innocent by reason of insanity to bludgeoning Miss
Morgan to death with a baseball bat in the early morning
hoursofJuly..7,1983: -,,.
Time oa their JJaada
MANAMA, Bahra1n(AP)-ThCPenaanGulfu\rab
011 miru1ten have aarOed ,U1 dlar IWIOnl lboUld re~
all oil h1pmen11 lost due IO anacb aa lbe lru-ll"llQ war,•
Blhram otf tcial id IOday. aad die two taat
tToiil qreed not to nlie one anotbtt's aVilians. .
Bahrain's indu5'1Y nun111a, You.sad'. Ahmect
Shira 1. uid that the 'o1l aunillef'S of &he ~·nation Oulf Coo~ration Council liittd that dr Oll cxporu mu
continue flowiq moo\hlt aDd compctit.ivcly to ,.Ot1d
markets., "without any pncc charian or any discoun
b«auK of h1&)1 insurance ~miums."
Bccauae of that, be said the oil ministm c:oncluded 1
mceuni on Sunday after aatttina lo .. replace Ill ~ipmeats whene~er a lanker ll hit ... in order to avoid
bia;h insurance." ·
The plan must be approved by the heads of state of the
plf nations, but Arab diplomatic sources said approval is
expected because the ministtts went to the meeun~ arrried
w1lb instructions from their iovcmmenu. ·
Hijacker
kin seek .
report .
'8lister-Jng.heat · · .on death ·
b k }\ T rth t TEL A VJV, Israel (AP) a es 1 ~o eas -Parents of two Palesll·
By ·die A1aoclated Presa
nian guerrillas beaten to
death after they hijacked an
Israeli bus two months ago
have demanded access to a Fortified with air conditionen and ice water, people secret military report into
in 4he stcall).i~ Northeast sweated through the fifth day of their son$' deaths, their
1 rccont·brcakmg heat wave today which has caused three lawyer said Sunday.
deaths, buckled highways and sent over I million people
scurrying to beaches. 'the lawyer, Felicia
In the nation's tornado-~ mid-section. mean-Langer, told The As-
while, violent thunderstorms packing 7~mph winds and sociated Press in a tele-
sevctal twisters dumped up to S inches of rain overnight phone interview that the
on parts oflhe Texas Panhandle and Oklahoma. father of a third hijacker
Hugh Crowther, a meteorologist with the National who was shot and killed
Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City, Mo., said when Israeli troops
today that the Northeast could expect a brief respite from stormed the bus is demand·
the blistering heat as a band of thunderstorms moves east ing to see the report be·
from the Great Lakes tonight. cause he claims his son's
"I can't say how long it will provide relief," Crowther body was mutilated. said. ''Maybe a day or so ...
.. A fairly strong thunderstonn system will produce She said that Subhi
... Fast Closing!
· Flexible Terrils!
Affordable Rates!
•
LONDON -Two protesters scaled scaffolding on
the sides of the Bia Ben clock tower today, climbed mto
hammocks suspended 180 feet above ground and unfurled
a banner saying "Time to Stop Nuclear Testing." They
reportedly took a week's supply of nuts, raisins and water.
and vowed to remain on the London landmark until they
get a reply to a letter sent Prime Minister Marprct
Thatcher calling for a nuclear test ban.
severe weather over the same areas of Texas and Barakeb claimed be f'e'-
Oklaboma later today," Crowther said. ceived the body "with its
The storms, whteh dropped golf.ball-sized bail on eyes &OU&ed out and several
Poftl/ll ••••••m re'lrVlrt out parts of eastern eo1oracto, caused no injuries or major teeth mwina. .. r-r-damage, he said. Mrs. 1..aqer said the
. NEW YORK-An Italian prosecutor-huooncluded Tbrou~ut the Nonhcast onSunday, there-was a run parents of cousiAs Subhi
Our Rexi>le tams .ct affordaible raees nYb it use for you
to ~ify. We help you move in IOOfter, too .•. by doling yoor mn faster!~ your home the Gr&t Amerian w~. Sblrt
today. Phone for dNils •anent Rites:
that the Bulprian secret service recruited Mehmet J()i on air conditioners and ice as mo~ than 1 million people Abu Jumaa and Majdi Abu
Agca to shoot Pope John Paul Il, in hopes that the pontiff's braved miles.long traffic jams and hcat·buclded highways Jumaa~pealed to the ls.-
death would fraSJDcnt lbe inde~ndent labor movement to ~ch crowded seasho~. raeli · Cour\ Sunday .to in Poland, accord.in.a to.a. pubhshed._reporLA.scctCL7& _ Tb~ ~orth~ut wasn l aJ.one.,._bowe~,.....u-.S0,000 order efense Minister
page report: by ltalian State Prosecutor An. tonio Albano, · peop e Jam~ed Belle Isle Park near pctrc;>1t ~escape a Moshe Arens to release the
which seeks the indic\ments of three 8ulgarians and six ~nd stra.iaht day of 90-degree beat m Michigan. . complete report to them.
Turks, concludes that the assassination attempt was Three h.cat·~lated deaths were reponcd Sunday m .....---------~
arran&ed by members of Turkish mob and neo-Nazi N~wYorkCttyasemergencysquads~mbledtokcepup
groups as well as by Bulgarian agents, The New York with thousands of calls fro"!' people sickened when the
Times ~ported Sunday. . mercury reached a rccord·tymg 95 degrees. .
Italian commanl•t dead
In Boston, where lhe mercury also htt 95, the
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority imposed l~mph speed limits on trolley lines due to beat-warped
rails.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
ftrtlleltsttlY•lle
lt2l-IUI.
CISTl IUl -541-lU.
.__~Valley <Z1§} ~~773.--=-::;6;..__ __
Laguna Beach (714) 494-7541.
ROME (AP) -Enrico Berlingucr, who carved a There was a run on ice -blocks, cubes and crushed
popular and moderate image for the West's Laracst -at O'Neill Ice and Oil Co. in Boston as customen lined l,..!!i!!mi!~~~~~==:!L-~========================:::!._-=-
Communist Party and led it to the verge of po~w~er!..:·~.,....._-l>lO,.,. 14ef-40-PMlldl.--------·-_. ------------------. ta916J.~wfferecta'mo eandwcnt .. Dar.s like this make it all worthwhile," said John
into a coma while making a political s~h in Padua on O'Neill. 'Because no matter bow Sood a businessman I
Thunday. Dr. Francesco Valerio, medical director of the am, if it ain't bot, people won't come." ·
hospital in Padua, said Berlingucr died there today Beaches were packed from Cape May, NJ., to Cape
without repinina consciousness. Italian President SMdro Cod, Mass.. as water tempera tu.res in the low 60s lured
Pertini. a Socialist, visited Berlinauer's room early today. people from their homes.
:
, ,
•
Just call the
Gas Company.
Your furnace pilot
light is costing you
money. And wasting
valuable energy.
As a matter of fact,
turning yol.lr furnace pilot off for the
summer could save you a cool $16~
We'll be glad to come out and turn
your pilot off. We'll also give your gas
appliances and gas system a safety
check and show you how to safely turn
your furnace pilot on agam in the fall .
So give your furnace pilot a
summer vacation. It's a bright idea for
saving energy ~ and money. · Q
900TH5AN CAUfOANIA gQS COMW4Y
' . ' I /'
n
l
I {
8hours
only!
diamond
sale
We 've added $250,000
worth of diamonds to our
regular stock and put
this selection on sale!
Sa>te on dazzftn we ry In -our Fine Jewelry Department. plus
a special one day only collection.
You'll save on pendants. bracelets,
earrings, cocktail r ings, bridal Mts
and men's rings. Choose solitaires,
d iamond clusters or diamonds with
other precious stones. All are in
14kt. gold settJngs. Our Diamond
Counselor will be in our Fine
Jewelry Department to help you.
Reg. 115.00 to 6000.00,
sale 68.99 to 3599.99
Mervyn'• Diamond Certificate Is luu.d
with Nch purchaM. At any time, the
amount of th• certified aelllng pr~ (or the
total amount of ~ymen1S made on the
price) may be applied toward the purchaM
of a more expensive diamond, providing
the return Is made with the Olamond
c.rtlflcate and the diamond is In the orl·
glnal mounting not marred or darNlged. •
All returned diamonds are aubjeet to
Y9nficatlon by our jeweler.
So.,,. 1ttu1trat1on1 may be enlarged to snow detail Stylel may vary by store .
Tuesctay only
~12
· Huntington Beach
Wednesday only
June 13
Fullerton store
12 noon to 8 p.m.
Tuea., June 12: Huntington Beach, 9811 Adams Ave. at Brookhurst St.
Wed., June 13: Futlerton;Yorba Linda Blvd. at Sapphire Rd . .... •
\.
d
Back to the
draw.ing board
for Prop.A
Pfoposition A 1s little more than a fading memory today.
The S?.OSt-mortcms have been written. Prop. A activ1sts and
contnbutors have wrung the color out of their hand and the
anti-Prop. A faction has basked in a victory glow warmer than
the summer sun on Laguna Beach.
And freeway congesuon is as real a problem as it was a week
ago. . .
Analysts, some with an axe to grind, have blamed the defeat
of the additional one-percent sales ta-x on Orange County's
inherent antHax attitude. Certainly, there's a grain of truth
there. This entire nation is anti-tax; it was, after all, founded
during a tax revolt. But to throw up our hands and blame
conservative attitudes toward taxation for the defeat of Prop. A
is to condemn ourselves to permanently clo&ged highways. It is
to discourage those who must use our: roads from workine or
doing business here. ll 1s to denrO.range County the bnght
economic futurc; that will surely come to pass -if only our
leaders plan for i l.
Prop. A was defeated in part because people don't want to
pay higher taxes, but it was also defeated because it was a half-
baked idea that ge nerated mistrust among the voters.
Despite the fact that it took six years to cook it up, the plan
was fraught w11h imperfections. It included an incomplete
proposal fo r a hght rail system that would have been better left
out until 1l was finished. It targeted its tax hike for a specific
length of ume -15 years -without a cap at a specific financial
~oal. It billed It self as a comprehensive transp0rtation plan, but
11 mentioned not a word about the most controversial
transponauon issue in the county: the airport. Neither did it ~ve
realisttc consideration to improved commuter rail facilities
connecting the county to Los Angeles and San Diego.
And. perhaps worst of all. it tended to take credit for major
projects that will be completed by the state. The San Diego and
Santa Ana freeways will be widened, every informed voter in the
county knows that. So hyping Prop. A as a remedy for an ailment
tha.t had already been treated gave people the idea that
somebody was lying to them.
Those who believe-as we do-that something like Prop.
A is necessary and inevitable, should learn valuable lessons from
this defeat and find new approaches to solving our traffic
problems.
Perhaps Prop. A should go back to the drawing board, where
it might be scaled down and simplified. Perhaps, instead of
donatin~ almost $2 million for public relations. affl uent and
influenual Prop. A backers will stan a transportation
improvement trust fund to demonstrate their sincere commit-
-mentto the count} and fo un~ erwntecons ruc tion projecls.
And perhaps pro-Prop. A folks will spend less time next
time trying to avoid the criticism that new highway construction
in the south count} will benefit developers there. There is
nothing wrong with government aiding development. if that
development is beneficial to the community and if that
development will be discouraged -even hampered -if
government fail s to take an active role.
Orange Count) will accept a plan that is economically and
environmentally sound and is clearly and fairly presented. A
better Prop. A deserves another chance.
LETTERS
Plenty of support
for housing reforni
To the Edi tor·
The re'iponse to m\ letter (Dail)
Pilot Ma}-2) was astonishi ng and
certain!> grat1f)ing
Thanl you fo rm er and present
Council pe rson!> of Ne" port Beach.
fnends and neighbor<, from the Pen-
insula and Corona del ~ar area. real
estate personnel from the 1mmed1ate
and surrounding beach areas. and
e' eryone who telephoned and sai d
"Thant.. you fo rwnung that letter."
Two points dominated the abovc-
men11oned rec;ponc;cs; (I ) the penm-
sula area has no representation (One
person asked "What happened lO
taxation without representation? I
thou~t we won that war'". (2) the
e'<ISllng Housing Code 1s not being
enforced and must be enforced and
updated to meet livable safety and
health standards.
Thank you.again. for yoursuppon.
I no longer feel I am a lonely voi ce
crying into the night.
Question: What can we do? E V.
WEHRLY
Newport Beach
A dangerous crossing
To the l:d1tor
.\t W. 19th and Meyer streets in
Costa M l'\3 1c; a McDonald's Res-
1auran1 On the other side of the 19th
Street 1s a c;cnwr house Bethel Towers
where man) lt'nants frequently eat at
McDonald's or next door at Taco
Bell's The) uc;c th1c; crossing.
.\nd 11 happens again and agai n all
cars goi ng both d1rcLt10ns stop hu t
never the cars m both d1rect1ons using
the lan e close to the curb. They do not
e\en lower their speed. Common
sense should tell those drivers that
there must be a reason for the other
cars stopping.
It 1s downnght dangerous to cross
19th Street usmg the crosswalk!
A SCARED SENIOR
Costa Mesa
Sober note of thanks
To the Editor.
I am wntmg this letter lo thank the
man) c1t11cns of the C'1t> of Hunt·
mgton Beach. the members ot
Mothers Against Drunk Dnvmg
(M.A.D.D.). and the media for their
support of the recent Drunk Driving
Grant that went hefon~ the Hunt-
ington Beach City ( ounc1I on May 29. 1984
Smee I authored the grant. I had a
personal interest m the approval. but.
even more important will be the
reduction of the ca rnage on our city
streets caused by the dnnk1ng dnver
that this program 1s c~p('ctcd to
produce What upsc1' me the most 1s
that no one see ms to care that we
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
slaughter over 50,000 people a year
on our highways in this nation. We
·onl) ·kill~ 57,000 persons in the 10
years of the Vietnam Conflict and
whaf an uproar that caU$Cd!
Too often we. in public service,
forget to thank the pubhc for their
support. I dsdn't want to foraet this
time, so, again, thanks to all who
helped in lhe passage of this program
and a special thanks to the five
members of the .Huntanaton Beach
City Council who voted in favor of
thLS grant.
BRUCE C. KELLY
Huounaton Beach Potter DcpL
H. L. Schwartz UI
PublllfWor
Chazy Dowallby £"''°' ~ AMB1an1
IO IM Pub1111\411
Pub'o910NI """'Y Mr"''""' 1"' •1 J:IO .,..,._. 0..y f>• Cot••~ A1dr.,.coo•~• I> All• 1~ Coll•• '-'l'U C. A lj, ll.?f1
Frank ZJnf
AtaOCttla fdol"'
Tom Tait
City E:<!itor
.1
··1r1werethemanlnchargeoftheschooldl tr/ct .• l'dhandcuffthe
tudents to thefenceat the start oflunch Pf!rlod and release them after
lunch wa over. ''
•
)
BILL RARVEY .,..-. cola.mnl•t
Pat
BuclWWI
Aliens
will be
' election • • issue
America's too
soft to enforce
tough standards
Parents are respo~sible
when kids break rules
A prediction: By the fall, illegal
immigration will become a polarizing
is_sucinJhe.pres.idential campaign,
fun her sundenng the Democratic
coalition.
Depending upon your source, there
are today between three million a.nd
12 million illegal aliens in the United
States. Biglaborc-0ntends they area
pennanent source of cheap labor,
depressing the wage levels of U.S.
workers. Civil rights leaders say they
take Jobs from black Americans. RecentJy, the parents of a boy
injured io an auto accident filed a
lawsuit for $4.1 million. The b9Y was
pretty seriously injured. The ~rents
have my sympathy for the injuries
sustained by their son. but not for
their lawsuit.
. BILL
HARVEY The parents of another teenager
involved are suin.a. for..$100.000. In
this case, the child was less severely
injured. suffering a broken nose and driver's insurance company?
five cuts. The child was absent from One of Che attorneys for the
school for two weeks after the plaintiff has been quoted as saying
accident. Again, the parents and the "We're not ccnain his insurance
child have my sympathy for lhe coverage 11 sufficient lo cover the
injuries suffered. but not for their claims." Because of this, the attorneys
lawsuit. involved have apparently decided to
y b bl d bo l th make the Irvine School District ou pro a y rca a u e · respons ble
accident. fl occu.rrcd on February 18. Let's \ak~ a look at who's really
1984. A small p1ckl;IP truck, severely responsible.
overloaded. and dnven by an lrvme Eight of the 10 students were off-
. ~hoot d1stnct student went out of campus illegal_h'. ls.tbe school district comrol~truck·tM~u~ · responsi6fe~ There are 2.4m u en IO teenagers m the truck at the time ~f an the eighth and ninth grades. These
the accident. They were on their students are required to stay on
lunch hour, but only two of the 10 campus during the lunch hour. On
were authonzed to be off-campus. h d I ·gh fth 1 fl the The driver was cited bv the police for t is ay. at cast e1 to em e
k fi < campus. ma ing an .unsa e turning movement If I were the man in charge of the
and excessive speed. school district, the only way that I
Now we get to the meat of the would accept total responsibility for
subJect . In the event that these suits students staying on campus would be
do go to court. and awards are made if I were given a fence 4,972 feet long
m the amounts demanded. who do (2 feet per student) and 2,486 pairs of
you suppose is going to have to pay? handcuffs. I'd handcuff the students
Who is the responsible party? The 16-to the fence at the start oflunch period
year-old driver? His parents? The and release them after lunch was over.
L.M. Bovo
In my opinion, the people who are Liberals bewail their"cxploitation''
totaly responsible for this are the ,by businessmen and farmers. Con-
parcnts of the children involved. the scrvatives proclaim, "We must get
people who arc supposed to teach control ofourborders," and~
these ehildrcn to obe_y the rules. cannot reward-wholesale law break-The schools are there to teach our k f children to read, to communicate, to tng with any blan et grant o amn"CS-
create, t~ ~~rk with other people. The ty,Somecandoris in order. ~pons1b1h~y to-for la~k of a better The burninaj:;s.ue bcrc.has__aJmost phrase -go along -wrth-the pro--· · · al -· gram" rests solely with us as parents nothing_todow1th~nom1cs, most
Wh h Id h be ·d· everythmgtodowathraceand Y s ou. l ~ parents pai ethnicity. lfBritish subjects, fleeing a bcca~se their children broke the depression, were pouring into this
rule.s. Ifl went out and robbc~ a bank country through Canada, there would
duf!ng my lunch ho.ur and as s.hot -be few alanns. The central objection
dunng the course of my law-breaking. to the present flood ofiUegals is they
should I be abl~elo .sue th.,e police are not English-speaking, white
department for srrooung me. Should people from Western Europe; they are
my. parents be allowed .to sue the Span ·sh-s ....... ";ngbrown and black pohce as well, because n's the rt-1 ~ . . . sponsibility of the police to see that I people fro"'! Mexico. Latin Amenca
don't rob banks dunng lunch? and the Canbbean ..
ludicrous. By w~ose d~finit!?n are ~bese
-Nope Wtr.rrntrtnrl""'SC'C ~ Me--__pcJ?P.le CXQIOl.!_C~~·CtWlf..Y.JlOI -
people who smell the chance to make . tneirown. they. a ea n on~d
big bucks. Go for four million and fnendsand fa.m1ly and possessions.
settle for one. entered penniless a country where
Back to the original qucstom of th~y do ~otspcak the language,
who'll pay if these awards are made. ~bJurcd 1l~ welfare state an~ tak~n
Don't you know by now? The school JObs~learungoffices. washmgd1shes.
district, of course. And. where does p1ckmglettuce: App~hended, they
the school district get its money? employ all ~eingenu1ty they possess
From taxes, of course. And, where do to avoid bem~sent home.
taxes come from? Where t.he libera ~same ma I,
You and me friends you and me . dead-endJob, these illegals seethe . • ' lowest rung on a ladder they and their
Colomalit Bill Haney live• I.a children can climb straight up
HoatlJJgtoa Bucb. tbrouJh the clouds into the closest thing in this world to a Promised
Land.
Supplycreatesdemand. That is •
true oflabor. During the last J 0 years,
Gamblers need foot to stand on
while iUcpl immigration has ftooded
this country, the United States,
despite two recessions, has created 27
million jobs; Europe has lost two
million. In the last 18 months
R~nomics has created almost six
milhonjobs:and unemployment has
fallen so rapidly-from near 11
Do the Nevada gambling casinos
give out free sandals to women who
show up in high heels? If not, why
not? It has been proved a woman in
high heels typically can play the slot
machines for only two hours th1ny
minutes while a woman in flats can
play for four hours.
After age 40. sir. you can expect to
start gelling shorter. By about a
quaner of an inch every decade.
Q. When was the last time the bow
and arrow was the pnmary weapon of
a maJor battle force?
A. In the late 1500s when Spanish
archers of the Annada attacked
I 0.000 English soldiers with guns.
That did it. In world class combat, the
bow and arrow was all done.
Wouldn't do in this welcome age of
equality to make too much of the
differences between men and women.
but it's still a fact that far more men
than women run stoplights while far
more women than men switch lanes
without stgnahng.
Q. What's the mantal status of
actress Bette Davis?
A. Widowed once, divorced thnce.
When asked if she expected to marry
again, she said no, she was too set in
her self-interests.
Bullfrogs croak with their mouths
closed.
percent to 1.S percent-econom1sts
arccryingout, "Cooloffthere-
covery."ltis myth tocontend that in
a dynamic society such as ours, there
areonly"X" numberofjobs, and if an
illegal takes one, an American citizen
loses one.
L.M. Boyd
colomol1I.
Given time, these people will
prosper. The Cubans who fled
11 • 1yodlcated Havana in 1960 now run Miami. The
children of the Vietnamese rc;:fugees
Iranian loss in Persian Gulf
could launch World War III
and boat people arc now in colleges
and universities. Ten percent oftbe
incoming freshman class at Harvard
is Asian-American, though only 1.5
percent of the U.S. population traces
1tsorigin to the Far East.
What Americans are being asked to
decide, with the Simpson-Mazzoli
bill now headed for the House floor. 1s
whether the United States of the 21st
Century will remain a white nation. Secret scenario
details conflict
between powers
WASHINGTON-~ret Pen-
tagon planning documents raist the
specter of a confrontation in the
Persian Oulfbctwcen the'l.Jnited
States and the Soviet Union. This 1s
the son offlash point that could ignite
the nuclear powder keg.
Let me hastily explain that most
strategists don't bclievethirwiU
happen. They don't really expect the
Iran-Iraq war to spread to the super-
powers. They think sanity wiJI some-
how prevail, and we will mudsilc
throuah the Persian GulfcristS
without Armaaeddon.
Ooeotthesccrtl Pcntagondocu·
men ts, cx.amined by my associate
Donald Goldberg. cmphas1LC1 that
tt\c sccnano is "not a prcchction of
future events, not a auide for the
employment off on:es." ll is merely a
bypotheocaJ "war" that ''portray
~cmycapab1h11csas indicated by
c~rrent intcU1acncetitJmates."
Herc 1s the secret sccnano, which
beains 6S days before open combat bt'tw~n the United Sta.le and the
Soviet Umon. In the lanauqcofthe
Kenano, th.at would be "Minu 6S,"
coun1ingdown to "0-day::
M1nus6S. The lran1ancconomy1
in ruins. and the volatile Iranian
people nse up against Khomeini and
has mullahs. causing "dissolution of
central authonty 1n lran."
Mm us 62: "Soviet forces in Trans.
caucasus. north of Caucasus and
Turkastan begm selective mobiliza-
tion." The Uni ted States responds by
moving its "forward-deployed carrier
and amph1b1ous force" into better
position.
Minus 3 7· The Kremlin "reaf-
finns" its 1921 friendship treaty with
Iran and continues "preparations for
~ invasion." Tbe United States deploys
additional A WACS planeund naval
forces.
Minus 23: U.S. intelllaence reports
upto IOSovietdiv1sionsconductina
"trainina operations'~ on the Iranian
border. President Reapn calla up
I 00,000 reserve troops and put a U.S.
forces around the world on low· level,
OEFCON 3alert. Suppliesbc&jn
movina toward the Perslln Oulf.
M.Jnus l6:TheSovlct Union an·
nounde "1t is prepared to unilaierally
invoke" the 1921 trcat)', which per·
mit.sSovici trool)' to move into Iran.
U.S. mtelha.cncc deaccu a m'1or
1ncreaseoftrafficon Soviet l'IJJroads
10 the provinces bordcrina I tan. .
Reapn "declares intent to do what·
evtrn(CC$S&J")' to protect U.S. vita.I
mtcrc t "Theworldwtd alcn i
c;calated to DEFCON 7 and mihtary
• prcpara11onurc 1ntcn afied.
Minus 12: U.S. 1ntelliacnce "dc-
1crmincs thata Sov1et inva ion of
Jac1
AllEISOI
Given tbesonnessoftbc U.S.
society, the best guess is that Ameri-
cans will decide by not deciding.
Already. the Democratic pTCsidential
hopefuls arc backing away from
immigration "rcfrom," for fear of
offending Hispanic organizations.
Conservatives, too, seeing the
tremendous impetus given thesena·
l tori al campaign of Texas Con·
Iran is imminent" and "pantal aressman Kent Hance-in his
mobilization" begins in the United outspoken opposition to any amnesty
States. -arcbeginninJtobackaway.
Minus 6: "Soviet forces depan For the truth 1s, Americans arc not
assc~bly areas and move ~owar~ really hard enough or touah enough to
Iranian border."The lrantan m1htary decide what isncccssarytopotieeand
•appeals for international help, and protect their own fronttcrs.
lhe UnitedStatcs"bcains to deploy Any uccessful l.D. prop;1m, for
forces into Iran." uample.1hatdenie1jobsto 11lepls!
[).day: Soviet air attacks ''throu&h· and dcpnves them of the benefits 01
out fran"pavcthcwayfora massive the welfare tatc,is.oingtoimpose
invuion by 24 Russian divmoos. t1Tmcndous bard hip, indeed suffer· "U.S.andSov1cta1rforccsen~in t1'.'4?uponmiUioosofwomenand
combat over Iran." US. intellilt'.n~ children. Arc we prepared to do that?
dctccts .. hcightenedCuban readi· Anyamnestypntec:lw1ll li11 lcavt
ness"and the Unit«! tate1 "warns m1lhon~ofiU~ls insidcthiscoun·
Cuba." try. Docs the U,S. have the stomach
Plus 2: "U.S. determines Wa~w 10 pro\•idcthc pqliccwith the
Pact ~rataons have rcachca lc~-vc...,l _ _,1u1hority toapprehend, 11'TC$t1nd
thar fndfoatcan attack 1shkcly .. on truck to the Mexican border-and
Western Europe. Wash•nstonC'all dumpovertheothCT'side-five
for"formal NATOmob1hz:a1ion ." million men, women andch11dttn
Plus6: NATOmobilim,1.nd the whott&tttt tcrimcwa.s that they
United States rush in "full.seal also wanttd to be Amcrican ? We
reinforctmcnt1.'' \ h llJtt.
J•d AahnM ,, • 1yiltlkflld
c.IU11t111. •
'Patriff llH',,._011 ••> .. "lea'-'
tfll .. allt..
.
Vaca.tion
a vocation:
hit· trails
Hikers, bikers, equestrians
use 150-mile county network
By CORY BLAKE
Deir ..... C«r••• .......
'
Hikers and bikers of all ages can stay physically fit and
enjoy a variety of outdoor activilies when they take
advantage of Orange County's network of hiking and
bilcina trails.
Presently there is an intricate network of more than •
l so miles ofhikina and riding t@ils linking regional, local The Balboa Pavilion off era boa tin&, flab!q and dtntaa to tourlata and reel den ta toda7 macb tbe ume u lt did la 2908~·~ _,......._
and national parks as well
as recreational beach areas.
Pavilion has gr eatest vaTu e
in person~l Newport histories
According to Eric
Jessen, chief of progam
planning and special pro-
jects for the county's En-
vironmental Manage!llent
Agency, Orange County's
park system is the largest in
California, except for the
state system.itself. He and
his staff are responsible for
open space and rec-,BY MICHALENE BUSICO
reational planning. Oftheo.llJ,......,
The carefully designed The Balboa Pavilion, the grand Newport Bay
recreational trail system in structure that frequently pops up in local advertisements,
Orange County allows easy watercolors, checks and memories went national last access at many urban and week.
park locations through the It was nominated to be the 9S9tb California structure
countr. Use of alf trail in the National Register of Historic Places, the highest
facilities is free, but resi-level ofhistoric recognitioµ in the country.
dents driving to some park Architect John Loomis, who directed the two-year
• locations may be charged a listing effort, said the building looks much thcsame today
small parking fee. However.~rdict loversoftbc4ut.doors as when it was built in 1905 as a combination terminus for
can hike or bike to the trails free of charge. the Pacific Electric Red Car Line (a sort of trolley between
The county's hiking trail system also was built to i:nect Los Angeles and the peninsula), bath house and canoe the needs of weekend horsema .. a~d devot~.equestnans. rental facility. __ Th~ Orange. Coun!)' Ho~man s Assoc.!_atlon recently . -t.inda Br:rnnon, spokcsmanlor the current owners,
esui:nated there are between N.000 ano 2s;oocT rec-the Balboa Pavilion Co., said the listing will insure that the
rcauonal horses stabled ~ere: structure is never tom down or radically remodeled and Altho~gh the county s b1keways ~rav~rs:e many <?f ~he that the public always has access to it. sa~e ~rue and recreational areas as its h1king and ndmg Loomis said the Pavilion merited the list less on its t~1ls, bilceways arc at least five feet from sue~ footpaths. value as an example ofVictorian waterfront architecture, B1kewa~s arc for commuters irs well as rccr~t1<?nal n~s. than in its local h1stoncal significance.
Trail users can enJ~Y manx. <?f the picnic, fishmg, Indeed, the Pavilion has found its way into the nat1:1~ study and camping fac1ht1cs alonJ th_e r~~t~. personal histories of many Newport residents. lndJVJd~ls and gr~ups ~n plan short daytime act1v1ttes Mary Burton was IO the first time she saw the
or overnight camping tnps. . . Pavilion m 1913. She rode the Red Car from Pasadena
The popular, 24--milc long_ Santa Ana. River Ti:a1t with her mother and brotherto look at beach front
-ifthc b<>yscoutd doirso could"Jbe.
She also recalled her group of childhood friends
watching many silent films be1n1 shot in the bay a.rca-
including "Cleopatra" wilh Theda Bera andJulius.Caesar,
with an unknown cowardly Julius.
.. They were filming a scene on horseback and wild
horses carried Julius Caesar away. He was scared to death
and cryin&and we were disgusted. We thought it was
terribly out of character for Juli us Caesar to cry," she wd
still gnnning.
Evenings, they would watch the Pavilion fireworks
from the quarterdeck ofa neighbor's bousc.
When she got a bit older, Burton would sneak outat
night with her brother and row across the bay to danoe at th
Pavilion. They called it "doing the nickel shimmy," smoe
that was what 1t cost (the price could have been higher, but
her parents never did find out).
She remembers seeing the notorious Balboa ~uty
Contest in which slcirnJ>ilY clad bathing beauties would
co~lhc '2.0s..__ _ - -
"We thought they were put up and stuffy," she said.
"We were young."
like Burton, Ted finstcr's first stop in Newport was
at the RedCarterminusasacbild. Now 61 , he remembers
the crowds oflhe '30s and ·40s the besL
"It wasa mad bouse There werelidullovathc. -,....---1~
place-they put 20 to 30 in a house," he said.
Growu1g up, he rememben clam4itginaand .. belly
slidina" on them udflats. Then lb~ were beard-srowina
and costume contests durin& Pirate Days and lighted Ooau
pulled by boats through the bay durin& the Tournament of
Lights, be said.
His father owned the Green Dragon. a cafe near the
Rendezvous Ballroom and the concession stand in the
Pavilion durina the Depression.
After a bnef stint in 1949 as a pin boy in the newly-
built Pavilion bowling alley. he wor~ for several ycan
••jerking sodas" at a drugslore on the comer of Main Street
and Balboa Boulevard.
"lrcmemberwhenJaschaHeifctzbad&bouseontbe
peninsula." Finstersaid. ,.H~camein one n.Wltand said
toakid, 'Haveyoueverhadacbocolatesoda1'Tbekid
said no and he bo~t him his first one ...
AfeUow~"JllayeddrumsiDStanKenton's
ore6cSui" at tlie Reooczvous. w na wortcS=---~.-.;
famousBalboaShuftlewasthecurrentcrazc.
·--Mlline Mc.Alpine, 60, can still see the dapper youna
men in tbcir••wbites" andnary,-blue Balboa YacbtOub
blazers tca-Oaocingat the Pavilion with young IOciety
~lleePAVU.lOflf(IO.)
a_ppeals to hikers, cyclists and nders. It begins at Pacific propert in Newport. _,. ___ _ ~~H~w~inHunt1~~~~"~~~~-.. ~t~tN~rtM~it~-c==~=~===~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~ SafHa.Ana RMr ilttd txtcn~pasl orbi an<fFeatherIY fish canneries and saloons-not what she had m mind for !:_tJ!On~I parks where 1t connects with tralls extending into her children," Burton recalled.
R1vers1de County. . . . Buther mother did find the peaceful, empty bluffs of
. Anolh.er much use_d path is the Ahso ~reek T~1l for CoronadelMarsuitable,andsoon thcfamilywas
hikers or bikers traversing Pasco dt Valencia and going to spending its summers at the beach house where Burton
Cook's Comer near Live Oak Canyon Road. resides today
Hikers and horsc~en inte~ted in a ric_h ~rue view "We ca~e down the day school lei out and went back
of some of the county s vegetation and wildlife should thedav itstarted again and thought it was heaven on
consider a trip on the Bell Canyon Trail. It extends three Earth ~.she said.
miles within .Ronald W. Caspers RegJonal Park from the A favorite pastime for boys was to dive off the the
(Pleue Me TRAILS/82) Pavilion into the bay. Burton said she tried it once herself
o.11J Nae...._ lly LM ht'M
Michael and Carol Gilano, left, and Renee Segerstrom welcomed Sol Laykin.
Newest Angels prefer
tiaras instead of halos
Baubles bedaZzle ben efactors
at Laykin et Cle s howcase
By ANN CONWAY
Ollr .... C.11111 .....
"lsn 't this heavenly?" the Ansel said.
Indeed. And in more ways than one.
For their opening at South Coast Plaza, precious
jewelry purveyor Lay kin et Cie at 1. Magnin displayed
an inventoryofbaubles. bangles and beads so perfect
and breathtaking one was sure they had been borrowed
from the paved pathways of paradise.
And the bonorcdaucstswerenothingless than
celestial-membersand friend oITheAniclsofthc
Ans, the newly formed suppon &J"OUP for the Orange
County Performing Arts Center.
"We showcase estate jewelry from all overtbe
world," said Lay\in manager 1\Jta Trowbf'Nr of the
collection which had the Anaels reaJly fluttenna tht1r winas-a diamond an~ =ccklacc ofMary
..._f.r4'1,1di1mond t tlOT'albroocbofMerte
Obero•'•, some of Jou Cra~o~·~ acclaimed ~n ~
pieces-even a ttara from Bntaan s Roy'al Family (all
were for sale and some were pu~hasedl.
1 The aJittcrin1 evcnina was fill~ ~th.whispered
conversation about the Anaels(an anvatat1on--0nly
mcmbtrshipnottocxcecd IOOwithaS I S,OOOin1tiation
fee and annual dues ofS2,SOO) and mannerly psps at
Laykin' maanificcntcollcction-pcciallythe
world's tare t blue topaz (more than 400 carau) wom
by 1t owner Em OlldooflosAngclcund
Hou ton.
Confiding that the gem was so he.av) (and valuable)
she only wears it fourtimesa year, she said, "My
husband SJ. and I bought it because we love unusual
pieces."
Gaidoalsoshared that berfavontejewelry ttem ~
South Sc.a pearls-her recommendation foran initial
jewelry investment for a novice collector.
Angel Carol Gllano (with husband Mlcbtl)
admiucd that large pearls were her favorite. She wears
them on herearsasstudsand around herneck-
pendant style. Carol's favorite Laykin offering wasa
diamond and pearlrinafeatured an the estate showcase.
Other Angel attending were Flou Scllamac:Mr
with husband Ed, Dona O'Bryu with Fruk. P at
Ryplukl with Alu, Lori WarmlqtM with Rebert, Ju
Lu4(president)with BW,l\eueSeaentrom
(treasurer)~th Hemry -manqinapannerofC.J.
Sqentrom and Sons. owners ofSouth Coast Plaz.a -
Onles Rtlland Bal'Mra Bowle With Alualtftr.
Alsoenjoyina the feast for the senses \Je'hich
iodudcdmusicb BellBaMa.Oomananaemenuby
Mila l\Uffl;lll and caterina (Chan don champagne and
daanty bites of cav1ar-.and sourcream-~lkd cnda\le,
salmon twirled around beans of palm.Jumbo-Jumbo
-ahrimpand pinachstnadel)byPeulqtoawcrcPew
arid IMCec*, ElatM and BUl Ri4fMW, a ...
S.p ralrt• (Henry's mother) S.I LAJtiit-ownC'f and
foundttofLaykinet 1e,J .. yand O.Tallarke-
prcsident of Lay kin. SUn9 and Jle Beew11•-:-
neral m•ftllCI' ofSOuth Coast Plal.a. z. .. J ue and
upemsorTom N leyandMHraEuu-Pl~
marketing director
Bow beautiful are 435 ca.rata? Bob and Lori WarmJ.neton
were amoq tboee who adm.lred Effle Galdo•a blue top&&.
A tout to eacce. of Layktn et Cie at L Macntn la aade by
Beary &ecentrom. rtCllt. and P'rank and Donna O'Bryan.
Sister
strides
to ame
HONOLULU (AP) -Sister
Madonna Buder secs nothing iin·
usual about a 53-year-<>ld Roman
Catholic nun competing in the lron-
man Tnathlon .
.. , believe God puts seeds of
potcntJal 1n us. and they're waiting to
be opened," she said. "Once we
discover our talent or gjft, it 1s ~ur
rc:spons1b1hty to carry it to perfect'fon
for the Creator's credit.
'There are so many faoets to God
so wh.,. should we limit ourselves? We
put s0 man)" skids on ourselves and
allow others to put skids on us."
BudCT. who works with troubled
young women. came to Hawaii Wt
December to work on her auto--
biograph)'. ··Miracles and Mara-
thons."
"I chose Hawa11 to get away from
the d1stracuons," she said with a
lau~ he rrccntl) returned to tbe
Religious of the Good Sbepba'd, io
Spokane. Wash . but plans to be back
on the island for the lronman nCM
October
In the Honolulu Marathon her
time of 3 hours. 34 minutes. 10
seconds was best in her ace aroup. She
has run 19 marathons. tndUdins
Boston tWlCC. and has a personal best
of 3:2S 16.
Her first ~ultra" SO.k.tlom~ter nan
and I 100-malc b1C}'Cle nKlChelj>e4 ~
train and d1sc1phnt. she s11d. for tbie
I ronman, which consists of a 2.4-,mile
ocean swtm, a 112-mile bicycle nice
and a full 26.2-mtlc marathon.
Throuah plcd&n, her Iron.man
effon wtTI benefit ~ cba.ritiei -
Mult1pk Sdero1 the Ahlerican [)ij;
betcs AS50Clatton and the American
Luna tat1on.
First exposed to runnina in a TV
movac. "See How She Run ;• BUder
said. ~what appealed to me wu tbC
symbohsm. lt touched me when a
bystander otTcrcd the nanner a to~
It li e Veroruca-offi n her I
to the bloodied Christ."
A hon t1m later, atthc ursinaoh
fncnd. he took a half·msl ~unt on
an Ottaon beach and ran her fmt race
fhc wee later.
.. 'cry dal leadina up to the race
a Way o the ro . But fin11h QI
that l ·aule nan &)onou ~ n qs
h~e a \.U'IUtion... c ·id.
.. You nm a lot about )OUriaf
O\rou runna t m .. n I\ U\C ffne tuned~ Clod a &h'Cn u ••
• .#
Cout DAILY RILOT/Monday, Jun 11, 198'4
·Classroom note seT.vice receives lo.w marks
DEAR REAO.-----------ERS The Chronicle
of Hi&her Education
reported that the
Unive~Jty of Colo-
rado board of rqents
has voted to allow
professional note-
tn It e rs to sell
AIN
IMDEIS
classroom not~~. a••••••••····~ the discretion of individual instructors. The board acted
after several students at the university's Boulder campus
set ur a commercial note-ta.king service.
was disturbed by what appeared to be the triumph of
crass commerc1alizatton over personal iniliam e. I wrote
to the heads of several highly respected institutions of
learning for their opinions. Herc are ex~rpts from the
responses.
The Re>. T heodore Hesburgh. president of Notre
Dame Uni\ ers1t)" "Professional note-taJUng 1s pan of the
PAVILION ...
From Bl
lathes" hen she \\-a5 I 0.
8) her teen~. the Depression had ushered out the
dcgant tea-dance~ and the Pav1hon was the site of man)
marathon dances
.. I wa!tn't 'el) 1mpressed(b) themaralhoners),"she
~td. ··t thml the) got mone~ for lasttng the longest. ..
.\s far a!. tt!t structural h1stol). the 28 wooden posts
theft l>Upponed the building were replaced b) eight
concrete p1hng~ \\hen the Pavilion started to sink into the
ba)' Ln 196~. Loomis \atd.
In that \car. the ex tenor was restored including the
closing off o'fthc second floor balcony to enlarge the
ballroom The )Car after, the trademark lights that accent
the V 1rtonan rooflmc were added.
The rc:.toratton of the in tenor was begun b) Phtl
T 01er, president of th~ BatbQa P11v1hon Co., in 1969. The
'-' orl i nduded th? addition of the sweeping oak staircase
that lea<isupto the ballroom and thepenod-st~pouter
~a loon Loom1~ sard 11 "as unusual for such an old waterfront
bu1ld1ng to ha\e sun'' ed wood rot. termites and lire.
.. I'd attnbute 11s survival to luck. tire spnnklersand
the constant use If something 1s used and profitable. it is
maintained. II not. the) tend to let 11 go into a state of
benign neglect." he said.
But Linda Brannon added another reason for its
sun.1val and hstmg in the Nauonal Register.
.. Ifs ba!.1call)' his (Phil Tozcr's) first love and he
"anted lo insure that 1t be p~rved."'
curttnt nuttine and lad. of standards that dilutes higher
edueauon to the point of1d1ocy. Waif)' tcrlin Conner
pre id nl of tanford, said to an 1ncom1ng class. ·rrau you
want i a de$rtt from this place, gave us. four years' tuition d .,.e'U &Jve you the degree nght now. If you want n
~uc~tion. ~ttck around and do some work.' That says it
all!"
A. Bartlett G 1amctt1, prc$1dent of Yale: .. If the news
report 1s accurate, we have another instance of education
construed &'Ii a consumer item. Education is not somethma
to be bought or sold like a toaster or a municipal bond."
G . Armour Craig, acting president of Arnhem: "Your
chppjng about paid note-takers at Boulder stopped me
dead m my tracks. I am astounded that any suoh act of
piracy sho uld be legalized and cannot conceive of the
grounds upon which any college teacher could acquiesce in
such a practice."
From Derek Bok. president of Harvard: .. Without
knowing more of the facts. I would have thought that the
Deltr Not ...... ., CMrtle...,.,
The PaYillon'• ahlmmering outline appeara
almoet u a conatellation on aome nlgbta.
Coloring Contest
proper course would be to ban profe 1onal not~t.aluna. 1t
1s concc1vablc that there arc special cons1dcrauons not
mentioned in the bnefartide. Havmaoften been criticized
by triuer·happy people wbo did not know all the facts, I would not wish to pass judament on this situatJon... _
Donald Kennedy, president. Stanford University:
"Any student who wants to can find the relatjvely easy
f'04d to an underv?duatc education; and it•s the student
who loses. I wish the faculty bad decided to ban
professional notc--taltin~ I believe it is a matter for the
faculty and not a 1<>vemang board to decide, so I wouldn't
blame the regents."
William G. Bowen, president, Princeton: "Note· c.akina is an indis{)C~sable part of the e;tpcrience of
attend1na lectures. ltstenina to the professor, rcadina and
thillkina about the material and the course. A student who
uses notes taken by someone else (and sold commercially) miases an essential part of his or her education."
Hanna Holb4[0 Gray, president of the University of
Penntman-GOrdon
Lt. Russell Sylvanus
Penniman IV. son of Joan
Irvine Sm 1th of Emerald Bay,
was united 1n marriage with
Carol Lawson Gordon in a
May 26 m1htary ceremony at
Our Lady Queen of Angels
Catholic Church in Newport
Beach.
The bride, daughter of ..
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lee
Gordon of Hacienda Heights,
wore a traditional peau d'ange
lace '°wn ·~signed bJ.
Bianchi. A bouffant silk veal
was caught to a double row of
pcau d'ange lace on her cus-
tom headpiece.
Her maid of honor was
Susan Gordon, and Margaret
Elmore, Elizabeth Penniman,
Byna Sipos, Mary Swiderslti Carol Pemlimu
and Deborah Swinden were bridesmaids.
The bridegroom is also the son of Russell Penruman
Ill. His best man was James Swindcn and ushers were
Morton Smith, Bruce Penniman and Jonno Wells. Six
Nary sword bearers were also in attendance to fonn the
trad1tional Arch of Sabers after the ceremony.
The couple left on a wedding trip to Hawaii after a
cocktail reception at the Corona del Mar home of Mrs.
Thurmond Clarke, grandmother of the bridegroom. and
dinner at Shennan Gardens in Corona del Mar.
The bride is a graduate of USC with an MA from
Boston College. She is a member of Pi Beta Phi, Los
Angeles Spinsters and Junior League of Newport Beach.
The bridegroom is a graduate of the U.S. Naval
Academy aod a member of th~ l..os-Angeles Baehelors. He
is a Navy F-14 pilot stationed at Miramar and Lhe couple
will make their home in San Diego.
Foater-Sanford
The Hacienda Wedding C hapcJ in Santa Ana was the
setting for the May 5 ceremony linking Jill Marie Sanford
and Steven Foster, both of Fountain Valley.
The bnde is the daughter of Barbara Sanford of Costa
Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. Don Sanford of El Toro. She wore
a tiered fuU·~J!gthJalln gown with peach colored ribbon
and accessones.
Her attendants were Karen Sadon. maid of honor, and
-kAfl~ hridc's ~SlU,, a:Ad Chris F-osttT. "tt1t
bndegroom·s sister, were bridesmaids.
The bndegroom 1s the son of Mr. and M~. Richard
Foster of San Juan Capistrano. Mike Ricker was best man.
and ushers wert Tim Glenn, the bride's brother-in-law,
and Jim Sanford. the bride's brother.
A reception for 9 5 guests followed 1 n the gardens oft he
wedding cha~I. After a honeymoon in Las Vegas, th!
newlyweds will live in Huntington Beach.
The bride is a medical assistant for T. E. Angelovic.
M.D. The bridegroom is an assistant superintendent for
Foster-Walters Constructton.
Cb1ca~o: ·•Althouah 1 am reluctant to comment without
k.nowina aJI the facts, I bare your OUlJ'llC. Note·t.ak1na &S
an e scntial p rt of the education process. It cannot be
bought••
Evelyn E. Handler. president, Brandeis; •·one of t~e
most lmJ>Qrtant aspec:1 of the lcam1111 process &J
interprcttn1 what you ICC, hear and understand in the
classroom. Amass1na unsynthesized material collected by
others is of very little benefit."
Terry Sanford, president, Duke: "We. wo~ld not
permit a profcs~or to low~r the standards of dus. un1vers1ty
without severe rntervent1on. At !>uke, professional note·
taking would be totally unacceptable."
John W. Chandler. president of Williams Collqe:
"The purchase of notes produced by profcssion!ll not~
takers is a travestr on the true nature of education and
suJSCStS that acquuina an education is no different fr~m
shopping in a supcnnarkeL I com.mend you for exposinf
this practice and qucstionina what it means. Good luck.'
Herrick-Kopp
The PaJm Desert Com-
munity Presbytcnan C hurch
was the scttina for the May 20
wedding of Sheri Lynn Kopp
and William James Hcrric;k,
both of Palm Springs.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony F.
Kopp of Newport Beach. She
wore a gown of silk organza in
a traditional silhoutte
fashioned with a jeweled
necklioe and sleeves detailed
wittH silk organza ruffle. The
ruffled llemllne swept into a
chapel lenglh. train.
J411y Kopp was maid of
honor and ~thy Kopp, Lisa
Aeitz, Tracy Wolff and Pam
Tourangeau were
bridesmaids.
The bridegroom, son of Sllert Herrick
James Herrick of Calimesa and Mrs. Alex Napier of Yucca
Valley, h.ad as his best man Gary Kurtz, and John Booth,
Ken MaJloy and Gary Jeandron served as ushers.
A reception for 200 guests was held at the Vintage
Club in Indian Wells following the ceremony and the
couple left on a weddill$ trip to Hawaii. They plan to make
their home in Palm Spnngs where the new Mrs. Herrick, a
former TV newscaster for J<,.ESQ in Palm Springs, is
emplofed by the Jones Agency and Herrick works for the
C1ty o Palm Springs.
Covlncton-Duarte
~ren Rene Duarte of Laguna Niguel and William
Timothy Covington of Newport Beach were married June
2 in the Community Presbyterian Ctnrrch in Laguna
Beach.
The bride. daughter of Donald A. Duarte of Newport
Beach and Barbara Ottaway Dua.rte of Lasuoa Niguel, is
the granddaughter of the late Mr. William Whiting
Ottaway. publisher of the ~Coast News tn Laguna
Beach from 1948 to 196 7 .)'fer-great-grandfather Elmer J.
Ottaway was publisher of the Port Huron Times Herald.
Her bndal gown. worn by her mother and sister, was a
Catrill empire design of softly draped candlelight $atin with
a portrait neckline outlined tn alen.con lace. Her full skirt.
ap(;>liqued with alencon lace. extended into ;i (loor-length
tram. She carried a cascade of gardenias and white
r058)ifcfi"Wtm~1VY·. ---
Her sister Dana Terese Chnstakcs was matron of
honor and her daughttr Deana Ann was the flower girL
Bndal attendants were Janet Lundgren. Gretchen Novas
and Anne Gardner.
The bridegroom, son of Dorothy Covington of Costa
Mesa and the late Mr. Jack Covington, was attended by
Kenn Rima as best man, and his brother, Robert
Covington. Pat Murphy and Dave Bufe as ushers.
After a reception for 125 guests at the John Wayne
Tennis Club in Ne~rt etach, the couple left on a
honeymoon to Hawaii. They will live on Lido Isle. T he
bridegroom is a physiotherapist with the National
II.;:::=========-=========~ Institute of Cardiovascular Technology in Newport Beach.
l J_
ltS A Horse Of A Different Color
Orange County Rdrgrounds • CostaMesa • July 6-15
WINNERS! One winner in each age group will be chosen. Each winner will receive
4 tickets to the Orange County Fair. Winning picture wi11 be posted in the Fine
Arts exhibit ot the fairgrounds.
N•ME
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ADDRESS
PHO E
~~~~~~~~~~~~
AGE GROlP 0 3·5 yr . 0 6-8 yr~. 0 9·11 yre.
Rt l.t~ & RF.<;t I ATJO"i.
I All f'ntrit'11 mu•I bf' 1·omplt'tf'ti by• r h1ld an e~c ~roup1 li1tf'd.
2 ';tnd tnlriH tn <.olnrin~ Contt•I. f>.O. Bo, 1560, Co•I• ftU. CA 92626
.l . -'\II f'ntrlf'• mu1t bf' rfrf'i\•f'd hv Jun.-15th.
'
Early Bird Dinner
Specials s6. 95
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
TRAILS BUSY .••
From Bl
San Juan Creek Trail to the
_JLJu:~~r-p:arr bounclary.
Within pcrs Park is an
Audubon Society bird
sanctuary. Complete Dinner with choice of
soup or salad and dessert
()'t THE PENINSULA
BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA
Orange County's ex·
tensive trail network bas
trails that are Iona for
extended excursions and
there ~ others desianed
for shorter strolls.
Richard Sherry, an en·
vironmental open space
planner for the county,
said. .. Most trails are flat
and can be used by every·
one1 but some trails in the
wtldemess areas arc prob-
YourTerm: oneyear
Your Yield1:12. I 0 %
YourRate2:1 l.42%
kS as simple as that.
Put more money In your pocket with a high l 2.10% yield
guaranteed on Home FedcraJ's one-year Insured Tenn Account 1
And be sure to ~k about our other ntes and terms ...
from 32 days to ten ye2J'S.
Then sit back and relax while youc money earn.~ more,
thanks &o llome Feder.d's cradJtionaJJy hlaher Interest and dally
comf>Olmdlng. ~"
Bank With tht Strength of Home Federal. call our t21t lint
now for up-t<>-thc-mlnutc rate informadOn, 1-800-522-1531.
1ben call Home Fedml's Hotline, toll.fret, J-800-862-0,39 to
open )'O\lr lnsuttd Term Account. ~ tSE
It's IS simple IS tlw. all
~Vh. ...
I
a}!y__suited to physically
conditioned oulaoor
enthusiasts."
The same is true for
bikeways. according to Ken
Smith. a transportation
manager of the EMA.
Both Smith and Sherry
advise that officials within
parks and recreational
areas be contacted before
starting longer tours to
-check eltisting conditions
along trails.
Maps are available at
varimss locations and an
extensive bike trail map of
all existing facilities is
available for $1.15 at the
Public Information Office
in the County Adminis·
tration Offices, in Room
103 or at Lhe Public Works
Cashier in Room 219 at the
EMA.
•STANT CASH
au.llty old walchee, KnP
gold, jewelry.
Y91TAGlllMI
ln9oet~
IM L ll&IT IWT'L l:i! __ ....... .....nl
Wlltch for Kids
RaTT INSlMMC(
~ Non-smoker fl Rates ..
131-7740
.. , Otd ... .,.. .. ""' ---.c..
No matter
what you're
doing. your
hometown
newspaper
The llllflll
·--rita In.
·.
IT ONIGHT'S TV
-__ --~ =------
-e:oo-• • • • lm11a11on Of Lilt' 8 Q NEWS Llnl TurMJ, JOM G1vW1 CHIPS PEOf\n c.ouRT I ~ WOAU. m P£1'8'GUNN IJ/L.080 tt >MCME
OAfAT£1T AMlRiCAN H!AO • * * ' A M1dwnmtr N1gl\t'1 Stl m THAf.E'8COMPAHY Comedy (1982) Woody Allen. Mii a> 8UCK AOOEA8 Fetrow
fD MACNEIL/ l.EHAEA \ Hl NOT NlCESSAAll Y TH£ NEWS NfW8HOllR Zt*ME a!> POW£RHOU8l t t "Nest Of Vtl*'•" I 1979) Ornello C88 NEWS Mull, Senti Berger a NBC NEWS 10:00 CD OQCVAHDYKE - . -IHl ~ 8 Cl) CAGNEY l I.ACEY
* t • ·;>. Boy Nam~ Ch1r1i. • • ~ Brown" ( 1969) Animated. fj f: COi ~ 20ee CD THEIOIJ>ONES
<SI MOVlt Of} MOVE
t * '-' "Roclly Ill" ( 1982) Sytvester t *'A "Roclly 111" (19821 SJtmtet
Stalk>M, car1 Weathers Stlllone, Cart W11t11«s
-•:30---mAUCE «l)~NEwt
Ci> FACES Of CULTURE lTJ wt<# It CN:INNATI
Cl) NEWS -t t:00-8 WHEE. Of FORTUNE fJ Ga()) g at HEWS m THAT OIRl -&A~Y NIGHT 1t 1MOV1£ -tt "Improper Channels" (1981) I~·~~ MARTIN'S LAUO~IN
Alan Arkin Manetta Hartley 41) 90UO GOU> HITS
-7:00-fD FALL NtD A88E Of AEOIHALD fJ C8S NEWS PSRN II NBC NEWS Ci) FAOflTUNE 8 HAPPY DAYS MlAIN CD 01C1< VAH DYKE 0 BIONIC WOMAN fCl MOVIE i :.a COMPANY .. "Angel Of H.EA.T (1982) Man-
• WHEE.~ tyn Chambers.
fl) 8U8MSS AEPORT Ol INTIMACY FILE
-11:30-Ci) JM COOPER'S ORAHGE fJ (I) HART TO HART
COUNTY()) a a BEST Of CAASOH P.M. MAGAZINE G &!::AICNEWS IB LOVE COHHECTIOH IJ.llJ m MOVIE I" SEAACH ...
t* "Hands Of Orlac (19611 Mel e SANFMHCISCO
Ftrrer: Deny C11retl ,Al'\ LA TD111U1r Aut:alr.A lOI MOVIE ..., ,...._., ..._"-'.._.
..,..,_ .... National Lampoon's Ctau fD100CWI
Reunion" . ( 1982) Gemt Graham. Cl)) flOHTE008 BROTHERS 218T AHNIYER8AAY Mlc:hael Let net. ( S1 MOVIE 'f.~arOUsef" (1956) Gordon U "Sitting Ducks" (1980) Michael
MacRae, $1\Kley Jones Emil, Zach Norman. (f)M<ME
-7:30-.. ''Hey, Good looltln' .. (1982) : ~I:,~~ Animated. Directed by Ralph Baltsti.
-11:45-e LAVEJINE I SHIAl.EY & ( H l THE DEAD1. Y GAME COMPAHY m WOP IN CINCINNATI -12:00-
41) PEOPLE'S COURT D TWUOHT ZONE
&l) WILD, WILD WORLD Of fJ EYE ON HOU YWOOO
A11MALS 0 MOYE
Ci) THE PRIZEWINNERS ••*"The Wing! Of Eagles" (1957)
CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara rto FRAGGLE!:-i ~NEWS
8 (J) SCARECROW ANO MAS. ** "The Blazing Forest" (1952) K..a John Payne. Susan Morrow
~~ANO 118 LA'ff-=-wmtDAVIO e MOYIE LETTBWAH • * * * "Forty-Second Street" 9 OENEAUTiff ( 1933) Ruby Keeter, 01c11 Powell. a L.A. TODAY a JOW\'8-Wl.O --_C!lBQWAU1WITltf.SJ.AUGH
(!) NATIONAL LAMPOON'S HOT • ntCl<E Of THE NIGHT
FlASHES 41) LOVE. AMERICAN STYl.E m MRS. AMEJICA PAGEANT &l> flGHTTllE: VAlf/EfY
41) MOVIE (0) MOVIE
•• "Death Moon" (1978) Robef1 •••..; "Beach Gifts" (19821 Oeb<a
Foxworth. Barbara Trentham Blee. Val Kline.
fJl) moNTUNE _ ,2:40-
Ci) THE SHAKESPEARE PLAYS fJ ())COLUMBO
CC l MOVIE ! C MOYIE
** "Ooct0< OetrOlt" 11983) Oen • *'" "lfolltes'"(19801 Roger Moore. Akroyd. Donna Otxon. James Mason
'H) DOU YIN CONCERT -1:00-
: S l FAERIE TALE ™EA TAE 8 CHl.DMN aE1wE&N LlF'E ANO
-8:30-DEAnt • 0 TIC TAC DOUGH -r;-
~~ (I) THE PROTECTORS
Ol TOM JONES e MOYIE
-t:OO-t-t~ ''Only A SCream Away" ( 197 41 8 CJ) ONE DAY ATA TM Hayley Mills, D8Yld W1tbeclt
0 ca MOYIE m GENE SCOTT
•tr•..; "Angel Ousted" (1981) Jean ($)MOYIE
Stapleton. John Putcil _ ._...,._Jetytt-And Hyde: logetfler D MOYIE ~ga;n·· (1982) Mltil Blrifleld. Bess • • * "McCabe And Mrs. Miiie<" Armstrong.
( 1971) W1tren Beatty. Julie Christle. ( ll BfAUN AlEXAHOEAPl.ATZ
0 HEWS -1:30-~ &i). MOVIE Q HEAL TH FIELD
••••..; "My Dinner With Andre" G HOUYWOOOCUJ8EUP
(1981) Wallace Shawn. Andre Grego. (!)~OAIY'THDTA£
ry. . a AOWAH.& MAATlf8 LAUGH-It
®l ENTERTAINMENT TONtGHT -1:40-m DRAGNET (.fi) MOYIE
t 01 MOVIE tr* "Grease 2" ( 19821 Maxwell
• • "Chanel Solltlke" ( 1981) Marie-Caulfield. Michelle Pfeiffer
Franc&Pisie<, Rutger Hauer -2:00-J~ ~i:natlOMI 'lef\'el"'._J..li4U~.8~~~~HtciKT~m;I[ U QINEWS Tatum O'Neal. Anthony Hoplons. Cf) STARS WITH DAVID
-t.15-STEl9EAO
< ZJ CHARLES CHAMPLIN T ALK8 •AU It THE FAMILY
wmt @ MOVIE
-t.30-IJ ()) NEWHART
Cf) MOYIE
***t,\ "Summertime" (1955)
Katharine Hepburn, Rossano &IZll. (?)MOVIE
"THE SUMMER'S MOST ORIGINAL PICTURE."
, ... E. Q, ..... ,. l '
GtEMLiNS ~
IPGI •l'Al'"f"W"O.v;-':~>0~~ 0
~ NOW SHOWING!-----....
£11 &39·1710 llYllE 551-H55
SYUFY STADIUM OR-IN EDWARDS WOODBRIDGE
• llU 990·4021 • LA MDU (211) ltl-H33
UA MOVIES 4 AMC FASHION SQUARf
•COSTA MESA 131-3501 llSSIOI VIEJO 415·1221
Hooked
John Plltch playa a teen-ager turned violent
by PCP and Jean Stapleton la hla concerned
mother ln the TV movie .. Angel Dusted ..
tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4.
* t t hThe Aulles" ( t978J Michael
Palin Neil Innes:
-2:25-
¢!MOYIE
••*'"'"Manhattan" (19791 Woody
Allen. Diane Keaton
-2:30-
~= • "The Oevonsvllle Terror" ( 1981)
Suzanna Love. Robe<t Walker
-3:00-
(!l CHICO NtD THE MAH
-3:30-
(f) FNTH20
Cl) MARCUS WELBY, M.D:
IZ)MOYIE
*** "The Captain's Paradise"
Greenwich
Village
is not a
member
·anhi
clergy.
t 1953) Alec Guinness, Yv()Me De
Carlo.
HlM(ME
** "Get Crazy" (1983) Malcolm
McOowetl.
-4:00-l!J TOP O' THE MOANIHO
O MOYIE
**"Chanel Sol1t11re" (1981) Mane-
France Plsier, Rutger HIUef.
S LONE 8T AA BAR & GRILL
-•:CMS-ClMOVIE
t * "Doctor Detroit" 119831 Dan
Altroyd, Donna Dixon. -•:30-(l) DE MlJflfl£rS
.. ~ ..,..c-... y ....................... .,. •• -WP."'-~ ft ....
,, ...... , .. ::;: .. v: .. ::. ."": .. : :
P<il't"--"". ...:: •
NOW PLAYING
70MM
SIX-TRACK (Xl(oourrlTTUllD)" PRESENTATION
COITUlfM I.A IMWl4 lllWl'Olll llUCll -(OWMIOI fOW!'C....""' ,.Kf~ l1"9.t*l4 '°"°'~._'tlrP0'1 ..... , "l~ ~1014 w-1.000 ... ol'IO ll)'lSs..l
ADVANCE TICKETS ava1l1bl1 for
STAR TREK. The Search For Spock
GREMLINS & TEMPLE OF DOOM
T1CJ<iit. t.4.57W'..,_
t1C •t T Cl flf 'l"S.
..C..lilOllllG .,._ ""' ue .,..,.,.....,
(MA )11.J--...U»
LUXURY THEATRES
1st 2 Matinee Showings Only $2.75 Unless Noted EOWA~OS HARBOR TWIN EDWARDS MISSION VIEJO MALL
• COSTA IESA 751-4114 • OUICE IJt.2553 , s •3tu3,1.1J.t16163~ 2553/~~. J
EDWARDS TOWN CENTER SYUFY CINEOOME
El TOIO 511·SllO IESTlllSTH ltl·llt3
EDWARDS SAOOLEBACK PACIFIC HWY 39 OR-IN
IUITllGTOI IUCll 141·13U • llSTlllSTU 111·3135
EDWARDS HUNTINGTON EDWARDS CINEMA WEST
• DOLIY STEREO
* FOR FUnt EXCITEmEOTI V1s1tOur... *
8E1,~..:sl1BfJSJERS Gt£MLINS ii
-lft ?OMM -ll!IJ 12:30 S:OO 5:30 1:00 10:30 12:41,,oo5:15 7:4$ 10110 No .... /NoBlfllllr\,.._
At U :OS 2:40 5 :20
1100. IO:•O
12:102:10
4:101:10
·-·--mml:IOIO:tl
C EENS •t: ll:IO U tOO 2:00 2 :JO 4 :30 l :Ol> 7:00 7 :)0
t :H A 10:00 No ..... /No ..........
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C•ft•tet (PG,
Orange COett DAILY Pil;Ot IMond•y, Jone 1 J. :tlM
l ~~ERMISSIO~~-_
·'Barefoot,'
NC"tl Simon and
rthur ~filler. 1he
quantcssen1ial vii*
ages of' comedy and T
tragedy tn contem-01 PQra~t theater, make
1heir presence felt TITUS · along the Oranar
Coas1 this week as ••••••••••Iii• 1wo more summer
Jtrodu~tions ao on the board~ .
In both cases. 1t will be With a play wriuen early in
theirrespectivccarcers-Sunon's ··&moot in the P~"
opening Fnday at Saddleback College. and Miller's .. .\
View From the Bridge," bowing in the same night at the
Costa Mesa Ovic Playhouse.
"Barefoot" launches 'the seven1h season of the
addle back Company Thca1er at the M iss1on Viejo college
under the directioo of Brian Donoghue, who founded the
summer stock troupe. David Mears and Deborah Pearl
head the cast as the newlyweds. with Rora Burke, Saul
Seidman. Richard Lawrence and David Manin complet-
ing the company.
The ~omedy, wtll be presented Tucsdats through
Saturdfys at &. p.m. with Sµnday matinees at 3 p.m.
1hrough JuJy I in the main Saddleback theater. CaU
831-4656 for ticket information. r
In Costa Mesa. the Civic Playhouse will be mount~
ilS ~cond production in its o~w quancrs. the ~ca
Community Center at 66 1 Hamilton St. Resident du«tor
Pall Tambellini is staging "View From 1he Bndgc." which
features Tony Grande. Stephanie O'Bryan. Cheryl Ross
and Jack Willenbacher.
Others in the cas1 are John t<. Anderson. Randy
S1cvens. Leonard Rosow. Robin Mcfaul and Ken Suton.
Performances will be given Fridays and_Saturdafs at8:30 .---=-----,.,-----------~~-----
tnrough July 7. wi1h additional information.av.illable at
650-5169 weekdays-from 10 a.m. to 4 p.nw .
Wrapping things up this weekend will be "Damn
Yankees" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and 1he third
annual Brite Light"!-Variety Show at the Wes1minstef'
Community Theater. -
..Damn Yankees" resumes Tuesday and runs through
Saturday at 8 p.m .. with a cl~ing ma1inec at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday. in the Moulton. 606 Lag_una Canyon Road.
Laguna Beach. Reservations 494-0743.
The variety show will be presented twice more.
Friday and Sa1urday at 8:30, at the Westminster theater.
7272 Maple St. Call 995-4113 for ticket information.
Con1inuing on stage are 11 other local productions.
including:
-"AJ1gel1 Fall" on the main stage and "Men's
Singles" on the Second Stage of SQuth Coast Repertory,
655 Town Center Drive. Costa Mesa. BOlh shows run
COSTAMUA
E 0w1ros Bns10I
>4()-7W
COSTA lllHA • u MAIM eOIWlll ld.v1ros Cinema Center AMC Fasnon Sawrr Cr1'00ml
97').A, 4, 691..()633 634 2553 WlSIWIDI
UAYlll
tmOS46 El TOllO lA MIMOA OMMIE ~-;s,s.oo~~-;g'fg,'1f?I S -~°"tt;IL;}\~.!.""
* PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *
Bargain Matinees!
MOllDAY Tllnl SATURDAY
All l'wf••-IS llf-5:11 NII
lh S,.. £......,..ul Hthl
l&il6t;.t9t)-
LA M!!!AOA AI AOSltAA!I$ ....... .-s. TmPU• ..... C'CI
In 70 MM Oottlr Stereo. SPICial Enc~
1130. 3 oo. 5.30. aoo. 10 30
sncr (PC) In 70 ... Dolby Stereo
811pin Pr1et (Mon S.I) !of 1st 2 silo'" omy
1200. 2 30 511!>. 7 36 1000
··m UTIUl" (PC)
12 4i 32Q5 S~ 8j~ 1110
"IOUllClllC TIE STOil" (l'C)
12 30. 3 00 S.30. 8 00. 10 30
"llUlll'" (PC)
12 30. Z 25. 4-20. 6 lS. 8 IS. 10 IS
''POUCl ACAKIY'' (I)
3 00. 705, 11 10
"fOOTlOOSl" (PC)
12 so. 4.55. 9 ()()
••JUM.r.;.14 l"~J ~ ((..,Tfll
FACUUY at C ANOtEWOQO .._ .... nMl ff_.. (PC)
111 70 ... Delly StfflD .... [~ 12-30. 3 00 5 30 I 00. Ill.JO £nJ.S!t Lltr Sba• lZ 45
"STM l"IEI It IOICI ftl INCi" (PC)
In 70 MM Dolby Ster111
8irc1111 Pnu t lllon Sat) lof I SI 2 Shows only
1100. 730. s ~. 1 35. 10 00
Fn!Sal la1t"""' 1130
"CllUIS" (PC)
12 30. ZS!> 5 20 H5
1010
~Clm..llS" (PC)
l OS. 3 30. S.SS 8 20 10 45
"IUT STlllr (P'C)
1n Dolby Simo
12 30. 2 40. 4·SO J 00 9 10. 11 JS
* PACIFIC DRIVE ·IN THEATRES *
lllSFOS"' (K)
•PU.IS ..,. .,... .. (I)
1-1~=".:0 CJ llP.tl
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631 3!>01 600 a ls 10~ 7U.'611 ~-"~ 11t !UO
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me VALL(Y 'lflllllJ• 111 Jl.at ......
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THE
FUllLl'
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
~~ A~
AU.1"AT ~TAK~ ~A e<;>.Mf
CWL'{ (»E
C06MIC. ~ ~'TJ.'/
Q,JR al~' . .
~~
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davis
l PON'1' KNOW WMAT YOU'RE
'TALKING AeOCJf
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
-
"Look! It's raining up!" "Gee, It'• nice here In the shade."
MARMADUKE by Brad AndersQn DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham
~. ---\ "I was sure I had enough lamb chops
to go around!"
\ -NAw .. l OONT OWN HIM. HE OWNS ME ! '
MOON MULLINS
PUNCM LUNCJ-4 ... ~E'ATYoLJRVE~Glt:S, ~ ~')b--IHEY1Li. MAKE ~
~-~ You STRO~.
PEANUTS
! TIJM•LEWEEDS
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
HEY 8RUNo .' STEP
O<JTSID~-· I GOT A
SCORE 'TO S'ETTL.E
WITH---you ..
~e~ ... HoW1D FROM
you GET ~,AT/N' 71/AT.~' VE<5ET,A8LES ... ~~
1/ ~,io
w~o·s 601N6 TO TAKE
°™E LOOSE-LEAF BINDER
OFF YOUR MEAD WMEN
IT 6ETS TAN6LEO
IN YOOR MM~?
by Charles M. Schulz
WMEN WE MAVE 'IOU
TE5T5, WMO'S NEVIi
601M610 6NE 6AVE ME
yOl) ALL TME ANV
ANSWERS ? ANSWlltSJ
by Tom K. Ryan
/ I
J
. . BRIOG[
- --. '
I AN8WEU TO lllDGE QUU
Q.1-Nelther vulnerable, u
South you bold:
•.Ult7 1;113 OK1t tlUOt5
The blddlnr hu proceeded:
8twtl Welt N ... Eu&
l t Pue I• Pue
Z • Pue 3 • P ..
7
What action do you Lake?
A. -There u. thote who will
arrue that South bu a
minimum openJnr bid and,
therefore, ahould pus. But
that doe1n't take Into ac·
eount tllat aJI hb valuea are
prime and that be hu useful
intermedlates. Since acea
and klnp IJ'e undervalued in
the point count system, we
would go to pme IJnheaita·
tingly.
Q.Z-Both vulnerable, aa
Sout~ you hold:
•QM <::'K985 0 10963 •AS
The bidding hu proceeded:
N~ Eut 8Mt• Welt
l • Pua Z • PaN
Pue Obie 7
What action do you take?
A.-You have at mueh as the
law wilJ allow I.or yourslmple
raise, and yfur defensive
values are excellent. You
must 1.dvise partner th1.t you
have a maximum raile. ud
the way to do so is to' re-
double . Unless your ·op-
SHOE
DR.tBBLE
poneaLI havt a club fit. ther
could be In bir trouble.
Q.a-A1 South, vulnerable.
you hold:
•8 e:> AJM1 O AlQ8 •klot
The bidding has proettded:
8-*' W..C Nri Eu&
I <:' l• Pue I•
' What action do you take?
A.-Partner doea not nte to
have mvch, but your hand la
too 1Lrong to alJow the op-
ponents to buy the band at
the tw~lev~l.Slnee you have
support for all tbe other
suits, you 1hou1d double. Aa
partner hu not r•t bid, thia
double ii for takeout.
Q.4-Both vulnerable, u
South you hold:
•11092 0-AMU •AQ7!
The bidding has proceeded:
Ea.at 8Mdl Wett Nwdt
I 0 p.., Pua l C:>
Pua l NT Pua Z <:::'
P ... 1
What action do you take?
A.-Bear in miAd that part·
ner. who bu made only a
baJ&ncing overWJ, could be
quite weak. Certainly. be
hu, with his rebid. 1bown
littJ,, more than a long,
~ J06 \~ 10 \&MIP ~
IN10 ~f.l l!E. f't~ NlD
1o.xM\ Nf.'1ER EA!£ UPll
~R, ~oo·~ 1'~
FOR BE1TEK OR FOR WORSE
e.L.11.Ree:TH, 'PJ
Cf\NIGO CXll"·
SI~ WlllUJf f\
SWERtfR·YaJ~
NOf WaL VET !
Cw us
Con1
probably brokto, ht.art auit.
When faced with a mlttit, pt
out of the aueUon u quickly
u you can -you may aJ.
rtady bt one round t.oo late!
Q.5-As South, vulnerablt,
you hold:
•lt85 <.?AST OAlotQ •t
The biddln1 ha1 proceeded:
WteC Nri Eatt 8"tJi
, ... , .... DWt
&AM!• p.,.'
What action do you Lake?
A.-While partner'• action ii
preemptive. it loob u ii
your hancb fit well. AJso,
there ia ho guarantee that
you can defeat any pme con·
tract the opp0nenLI might
undertake. AIJ tbinp con·
sidered, we IUBfetl you coo·
tlnue the preempt by raiainr
to three spades. That eould
euily prevent the opponents
from finding their heart fit,
or the proper level of a club
contract.
Q..t-Eut·West vulnerable,
11 South you hold:
• .uru <::185 o JM5 •ts
Tbe bidding has proceeded:
Nd Eu& 8..tli W..t
1 • Pua l • Pue
2 • Pua Pw Z O
<XA.,., ClOl 1'u.. oo rr !
l&lf.'1.-L ~1W 10tN)R~ ~Ml~ AT "00 ~Pl\
0111
SllAllF
, ... ,_ 1
What action do you tab?
A. -So far you bavt 1bowll
ooly a moderate hand wit~
eome toJeranee for cluba.
NoDetheleu, you do poue11
excellent defenalve plu11e1.
Double. Tbil 11 eooperaUve.
Partner 1houldn't alt unltu
be allO ht•· food defenaive
vaJuea. And It the diatribu·
Uon ii unklnd, your double
will not be cawuophlc -
two diamonds doubled and
made l• atlJI short or pme.
&a .. , ....... ,.......
te 4Hltle tHtltlt? Let c......_.a......,,..w ,... .. , ....... ....
.. DOlJIJ.ES ,_ , ..... ..
...... &abHt. , •• ee,y ••
We DOlJILF.8 .....iet. ee8ll
H.15 c. ~0..W..,"
care el &Ml •w.,.,., P.O.
lea lSt. Nenr ... , N.J.
07&41. Mab cMa. ,.,.we
C.New ...... nb.
by Jeff MacNeUy
by Lynn Johnston
by Tom Batluk FUNKl' WINK.ERBEAN
w1 •• 1., witla~l•e
()JE OF iHE N'ORE.. ~
WINE& 1M& ~~ 15
GREEN ~K .
GREEN rroNK CAN BE.
SERVED WrTM AL.M05f
A~HING ...
DR.SMOCK
I
I
I
JI
JI J!
4-11
by George Lemont
N0 ... 1-... l 'M TIED UP,
SAMI JUST CAL.LEO
TO CHECK ON YOUI
I ••
CREDIT LINE
--- - -
HB man promoted
by Vons grocery
Huntington Beach residenl Georae Stuley has been promoted to
auistant meat buyer at Vou G~ Store. In his new capacity, Stanley will be
responsible for purcahsina pork. chicken, lamb and smoked meats for Vons•
173 markets. He will also help purchase the meats Vons will purchase for the
Olympia this summer. Stanley brin~ 24 years of experience with Vons to his
new post. He previously served as meat distribution manager. • • • Roulcl D. 8'ro11t of Laauna Hills has been appointed rqionaJ vice
prC1ldcnt of Ml11lo11 Viejo Natlou.I Buk. In his new post, he will supervise
both of the bank's branch offices. Shrout is a member of the San Juan
Capistrano and Saddlebaclc Regional Chambers Q(Commerce. • • • lrvine-bascd Doell Networks, hie. has formed a marketing division under
direction of James MoaJlello, vice president of marketing for lbe developer
and manufacturer of high-speed concentrator switches for data commui'uca-
tion networks. Also announced were the appointments of: C.P. Slt.Hltar,
director of product marketing; Jose_. Ba .. DCla, director of saJes adminis.-
tration; RJcbrd Huey, manager of product planning; P~ Joll{meel, network
consultant; Maaoa Couer, Western regional sales manager. lAIT)' DaBroc,
Southwest regional sales manager; and Jolm Rusell, Midwest regional sales
manager. • • • ADdrew J. WarDer has been appointed senior vice president at Pacific
M•tul Realty of Newport Beach. Warner will be resonsible for client services
and marketing for the series of closed-end pooled real estate investmept funds
and separate accounts PMR is managing for major corporate and public
pension plans. Warner was previously associiated with Atlandc-RJcbfleld Co.
m _Lo~Angelcs, managing.th.cir real estate and-\1'.CRtUff.capiiaJ portfolio. • • • The public relations and advertising agency of Portmm Commatca-
tioaa has moved to larger offices in the Woodbrld1e Plua Office B.UdJ.DC in
Irvine, located at 4482 Baranca Parkway, Suite 230. The firm specializes in real
estate, financial services, health services. computer sciences and community
service organizations. Its clients include fte lrvtae Co., lrville Medical Ceater,
the Oru1e•ood Home, and the city of lrvtae.
• • •• Ponderou Homes has netted 500 sales with a tot.al dollar volume of
$43,406,000 dunng the first quaner of 1984. Said James S. Dalley, president
and chief cxecuti ve officer ... in 1983, when we achieved the highest revenue m
our company's 13-ycar history, we sold l, 174 units. This first-quarter total of
500 units -almost half the volume for all of 1983 -furthcT reinforces
Ponderosa's position as a major factor in the Claifomia homebuilding market .. :-:-;/'--..... -----
Occasion to celebrate "
It wu heel Coz'• 50th birthday and ample
occulon for celebration at tbe Bmales
Corporation In Coeta Ila&. Emale:a em-
ployees, who tradltlo:nally oatdo tbem-
eel.a for Coz, Emal.ex'• president. threw
Golden
Nugget !
Awards! .
given .;
Several lrt2 dcvelopt"n an4
architects ha ~·c reoei \led 8wudl' {If:
ac:ellcnc:e at the annual praentatioe
of Gold Nuact Awards;tbt boilditlil
industry•s t"CCO$Jlition o( the hefted'
Western Amcncan bu.ildiq daiP
and land USC.
The Aliso Creek Brandl of Jbe Fl.tit
I nterstak Bank in Lqu.n.a Niauitl
received the .. grand award .. for;I>est
commercial building ,of las t.bari
so.~ teauarc feet. The builf :L was deaped by ~ ud te
Architects. loc. and W8$ buil1 by AJ.
Padelford and Son, loc.
The Gold Nuget Grand Award
means the winner was judaed ihC beii
project io one of 31 calelPlies. An
award of merit rtt-0pius the top five
or fewer projects m each ca~.
This year, 6S8 entries from Alaska.
Arizona.. Cahfornia. Colorado, Hawaii. Idaho, Montana. Nevada.
New Mexico, 0rtaoo.. Texas, Utah.
Washinaton and Wyoriiina competed
for the awards.
The Bay ~te Plaza in New-
pon Beach received an award o( merit
for best commercial build.in&~
SOJOOO and l~.~-tqu.a!'C feet. The
plaz.a WU designed by Strock
An:hitccts, loc. and was built by Bay
Development and Cadillac of Fair-
view. Calif.
-1wo ·0nmae Ccut ~ ~
ocived awards of mcnt for best
reb.abilitated commercial or indus-
trial project. Ruby's Diner in Balboa
and S. Woodard It Associates Offica
10 Cos1a Mesa shared the bonon.
alo~ with lhrcc. other merU. award
wmoen. Ruby's Diner was desl&DCd
by Thirtieth Street Archiu:cts. lnc.
and was built by Hi Lite De~
ment Co. The offices were des~
by Stewart Woodard &: Associates
and were built by Pulliam ProperticS,
lnc. a com~..J.850. ,.~ tn the 8'dd~"'-=1 C...O"--........ ._~----------~·:...:··~,~~--------~~~....,r~c1'Tl1...,.,,.......~a~nw--,..;u;n~1U1r--~~~~
Newport Beach firm·
gets credit agreement
National Corporate Finance. Inc.,
an investment banking conoem, has
succcs.sfully negotiated a $I ,560,000
intermediate term credit facility for
Transatlantic Traders. Inc.
Transatlantic Traders, Inc., of
Newport Beach and London, Eng-
land is a privately owned inter-
national holding company. Their
· est.ate, air cargo,
thorou&hbrcd horses, export" -lm-
port, financial services. hotel and
hotel management.
Great Western Bank of Phoenix.
Az.. provided the commitment for
the credit agreement.
According to Steven R. Rabago.
president and' chief executive officer
of National Corporate Fin.anoe, Inc.,
.. Transatlantic bas a unique borrow-
ing challenge, in that its business
openations arc located in several of
the United States and in Ensland. ••
"We were able to nqotate the
credit facility because~ were deahna
with a competent management team
and Great Western had confidence in
their abilit to perform.''
a Corporate Finance, Inc. 1s
an investment bankin& firm that
specializes in arranging tinanC1Df and
financial reorganizations for middle
market companies. Nationars special
area of expertlSC IS ID anal)'llng.
structuring and negotiating debt with
the middle mark.ct lender.
'Super school' started
The Newport Beach-based Na-
tional Education Corporation, which
runs vocational and technical train-
ing schools, recently began construc-
tion of a $6 million"supcr school" in
Anaheim.
When completed, the 40.000
square foot center will be able to
accommodate more than 2,000 stu-
dents with such courses as l'omputer·
assisted draftina. electronics. health
services and sccretanal tra1n1ng.
Major developers of the school.
scheduled for an October 1984 com-
pletion, arc Chase Sanderson and J.
Ray Construction Co. of Irvine and
Gilbert AJa and Associates.
Architects Inc., a Laguna Niguel firm.
Groundbreaking ceremonies were
held at the site. Ball Road extt of the
Ora~ Frccwa}'. Ma~ Q
Walokelc Tarayao, AJA. lnc. was
booorcd fot the design and construc-
uon of the J:crpson J"CSldenoe 10
L.aaum Beach. The oompa.oy re--
oeivcd a.o award of merit for best
custom home.
Crystal Cay in Lquna Hei&hts rueivoehrt.....,.of. meri& forjf,at
aff'ordablc auacbed bousCna dcvdop-
meoL It was designed by Berbd
Qroup Architects and was built by
Shea Homes..
Two of the five award of merit
winnen for best re$idential site plan
oflcss than 25 acres were given to area
planners. Baf!idge in Newpon Beach
and Woodbnd&c Lake Shore in Irvine
were recognized. Bayridgc was de-
signed by Richardson Nagy Martin
and baill by J .M. Pctcf'S Com•ny. In~.
W oodbrid&C Lake Shore was do-
signed and planned by Backen, Ar-
naoni & Ross.. Inc. and built by Irvine
Pacific ~velopment Company.
An award of ment for best sin&le
funtly dctatched home was &iven to
Beacon Htll Pomte of Laguna Niguel
The home was designed by A.ran\
Basscnian AlA &. Associates, Inc..
built by J.M. Peters Company and
planned by Hunsaker and Associates.
Tb(. Golden N~t awards is the
largest regional dCSlgn competition m
the United States. with 14 states
parttci pa ting.
Gold Nugget winners were chosen
March 23 and the awards weft
presented June 1 at the 26th annual
Pacific Coast Builders Conference
Builders' Conference in San Frao-
asco
BUTTER FIELD
"800" BANKING --.. -.. , __
10.95%.
10.25%.
~~ Compounoed ()eoly
Local, cotinty. state, nationql and international
ev~ts come to your-eworstep ---. .._.
in the bright. light and lively .... , n•1
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..
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I
On
the
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Dov. JoNES AvERAG£S . ~ . . '
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NYSE LEADER S
W nil SI
shows the New ork tOdc xcti.noe stocks end warranta that have gone UP the most 1111d oown tl'le l'n0$t ~Md on . percent of chal19e re9ardlen of volume for Moncav. No securities trading bel0¥1 S2 are fnd-
-ude<I. Net and percentage cnangn are llhe difference belwMn • the prevlOCJs doS ng price and Mondav's 7 p,m
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WHAT AM EX DID
NEW YORK (AP) Jun, l1
TOda1y_ Advanced n Declined ~ Y~f.til=, t64 m::: •
AM EX LE ADERS
1·4. f} rt t?
tl' t, l.s
NEW YORK (AP)-Sale$, 4 p.m. Pf'lee and net chan~e of tne ten most active American Stock Excha"98 luues. trading · natlonallv at more than S1. Blount A GulfCan6o Wangle 8 Alles Van$
-.,.
-~ _.,..
NASDAQ S UM MARY
Go Lo Quo TE s
I METAL S Quons
That's an apt descrigtion of both busine;:..;.ss::::-.;a::::=.;n:..;:..d==--~---...__:~
bustness people along the Orange Coast. Tok ep track of
where compa~tes are going and which people are helping
them ge~ there.just watch 'Credit Line' -ev ry day In the
aus1nesssecttonoryourn w lilly Plat .
, j
i
.L-L_
-·-·------...'
' ..., ....
l)odg1N continue
lobe rude hoe ..
to Atlen18; IMy
wltJ, 3-LC2.
What can Ae do fo:tan en.eoz,
B1 HUGH SILER .............. .,.., ..... Championship, Cillay has to figure
out what he can do for an encore.
..It's up to David now -to tet
some goals and become a l.Jttle bu
more serious about baseball. He
enyoys hfe and loves going to the
beach, but he needs to be a httle btt
As the saying aoes, all good things
must come to an end. For Newport
Christian Hi&b pitcher David Cillay,
Tuesday night's Orange County AJl-
Stilr game will add the final chapter to
a storybook career. · more motivated and concentrate on a
' serious aoal in life,.. Conqueror
As a four-year narter for the Coach Gary Stuart ys.
DavidCUlay
• Conquerors, Cillay has enjoyed a .. David really came mto his own
career that most playep ~ould be this year. He bas always had the God-
happy dreaming about, Jet alone given talent., but this year he worked
accomplishinf. After throwing three with ex-Angel Clyde Wright on his
n?-hitters dunng the year and leading concentration and his control and
has team to the CIF Small Schools really put everything together;· notes
· bakeFs ·f4i:id
inspiration
Jabbar provides it
by giving Boston
one big headac~e
people to pray for rain" in Boston,
remembering the stifling 97-<itfrce
heat in Boston Garden Friday night
when the Celtics won 121-103 and
took a 3-2 lead in the series.
The heat which has been baking
Boston since Thursday is expected to
break tonight and temperatures in the
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Los An-mid-80s are forecast for Tuesday.
gelcs Coach Pat Riley never had any The Boston arena relics on ceiling ·
doubt that Kareem Abdul-Jabbar fans instead of air conditioning.
would play. While Abdul-Jabbar, the league's Abdul-Jabb~r .. suff~n~g from oldest player, led the way, the lakers
another cxquciauna m1gi;aanc head--got a big-don 1fo.m.Jookie Byron
ache, was li~ted as qucsuonable for Scott, at 23, their youngest player. t~e ga~c sa.x of the NBA ~h8!11-Scott provided some spark off the
p1onsh1p Scnes Sunday after missing bench after the Lakers were trailing
the J?re-pme wannup and a team 84-73 with five minutes left in the
meetmg. third quarter. His outside shootin~ a
But he ~as there .when the .game couple of key steals .and two assists ~n. ~nog 30 points. nine m the seemed to ignne Los Angeles. which
closing mmu.tes, as ~e Lakers made then went on to outscore the Celtics
up an I I ·po.mt deficit and beat the 36-21 in the final period.
Bos.to.n Celtics. 119-108 to force a Scott. a rookie acquired from the d~1d1ng seventh. game Tuesday San Diego Clippers in the con-
night. tro~ial trade . mvolving Norm
"I had no doubt that he would N1xon,hadspentmostofthesericson
play," said Rtley. ''If two trucks ran the bench but Riley said he called on -~~~cl ~~l lh"CJ'SJf~-bjmjn this mstancc bccauS( he is the
was an msp1rataon. team~st o B~strooter~
Abdul-Jabbar 5aid the headache Abdul-Jabbar said Scott had played
cleared an hour before the game. T~e the "game ofttis life."
37-year-oldccnterscored 31 poantsan So it is back to Boston where the
the series opener after overcoming Celti~ have won twice in three final
another mianaine. series games there. :·r~ going to try to order anoth~~ Riley, worrying about the heat
r
Stuart.
Although everythina sttmed to &II
into pl1ct for C1llay this )'eat. the
beginning of the season began on a
dismal note.
"At lhe start of the Rason, every-
one was tellin& me how good a year l
was going to have, but when the first
game came around 1 aot bombed. 1
pve up something like nine runs in
the four annings that I pitched After
that eme I juSJ started relaxing
more, • CiUay says,
Before the season bqan. CilJay had
a few goaJs in mind. •·1 wanted to 'Mn
ClFand tryandgctmycontrol. O>de
really helped me smooth out my
delivery,'' he admits.
With those goals accomplished.
CiJJay is ready to moye on to bigger
mtgr.une for K.arcenLOn T ucsda there . said j.hat the takers' medical
said Riley. ' staff ~s going to figure out what the
He also said he had "hared S.000 ' (Pleue eee LAKERS/CS)
It wu alao bot at tbe flora.m u ·uangy
Cedric llazwell of eo.ton la re.tra.lnecf'by
~
' and better lhin~. lake the ~
Count) Nocth.SOulh All-Star pine
T~y night at Glover fleld 1ia
Anaheim.
Schedultd to patch at least OM
inning for Jack Hodz.es' South ~uad •
Cillay relics ba icalfy~on his fastball
(consistently clocked at 84 mph) and
a a.ood cu~e. The 6-S, tlS.pound
Ciftay.·sces no reason to do anything
different from wbat he bas done all
year. • .
• 'Tm just ~nna go out and try and
keep t~ ball low. We'"'e 101 a real &Ood team, and they're aJI a bunch of
really.nice iu>~·· -----Ahbou~ not as well known for his
scholastic acltlevements (2.2 GPA),
Cillay will probably refine his study
habits as well as bis baseball talents at
McNamara st·' 1 tliinking B.bOut Chicago
I
Angel manager upset about blown lead,
but-Zahn @ases the pain with a shutout
KANSAS C ITY (AP) -Despite a
two-game sweep of Kansas City that
gave the Angels a 6-3 road trip
Mana1er John McNamara still had
his mmd on the one that got away in
Chicago.
Geoff Zahn's complete-game, six-
hit shutout of the Royals by a 2-0
score Sunday couldn't remove the
bitter taste of t:riday's loss.
"We had a good road trip, bU1 the
thing that puts a real cloud over it is
that ball game in Chicago,"
McNamara said of the game in which
the Angels blew a 7-0 lead and lost
11 -7 to J.he White Sox.
"Ifs a hard one to swallow when
r,ou blow that lcind of lead," he said.
'You eventually can forget about it,
but not right away."
If anything can help McNamara
forget, it's Zahn's pitching. Zahn, 7-3,
missed two starts with a groin injury,
but came back to defeat Chicago June
S before blanking the Royals for his
16th career shutout.
"I've been fortunate in that it
wasn't 100 percent when I came
back," said Zahn, sporting icepacks
on his knee, groin and shoulder.
"I've got to keep working on the
endurance," he said. "I'm having a
pretty good year ifl can stay healthy."
-i<AMa:S City never really ihrea co-
ed. althou~ Willie Wils0n slapped a
two-out tnple in the third inning and
Ha\ McRae lifted long fly balls to both
left and right field besides doubling to
open the ninth.
"They hit some balls today that
stayed in the park," Zahn said.
"McRae could easily have had two
homers and the double, but the wtnd
kept them in. I was fortunate to get
out of innings when I had to."
Zahn has given up only one earned
run ID his last 26 innings.
"He pitched hts game;· Royals
th a rd baseman George Brett said." He
mixes a fastball with a changeup. He's
the kind of guy who gets the most out
of what he bas.
"It seemed like we were always JWtngi°Jc at bis pitch instead ofours. ·:_
Brett a ded. "It seemed like it (the
count) would be 2-0or 3-0. and you'd
think, 'I've got him,' but he would
come in and make you hit his pitch."
Zahn outdueled Royals rookie
Mark Gubicza, 3-S. Gubicza scat-
tered five hits over eight innings
before he was lifted for Dan
Quisenberry in the ninth.
Mike Brown drove in the game
winner with a sinsJe m the fourth
inning. Doug DcCmces had walked
and moved to third ·on Reggie
Jackson's single.
The AnJels scored ID the sixth
when DeCmccs reached second after
Royals second baseman Frank White
lost a battle with bright sunshine and
dropped a pop-up in shallow ri&bt for ·
nvo-base error. Brian Downing
singled OcCmccs home.
Besides Wilson's tnple, the Royals
wasted lead-off singles by Brett in the
fourth inning and by Darryl Motley in
the sevtnth.
McRae doublcd leading off the
mnth. but Zahn retired Motley,
White and Steve Balboni on ground
balls to end the game.
The Angels have today off and will
then open a 12-gamc homcstand
against the same teams they fa~ on
this road tnp. namel) Ch1Qg<>,
Oeveland and Kansas C'it) as well as
Texas.
'
ElEt~a ~ • • • • nn1ngs
again?
Marathon game
ts·ag~~ign
for South stars
Lendl no longer
a 'choke artist'
BILLBOARD
TONIGHT
It'snotparforthe course
He finally wins
a Grand Slam
tennis tourney
--.
---
PARIS (AP) -Ivan Lendt, the
consumate ''money playeri" had just
brok~n into the select circ e of those
men and women who had won a
Grand Slam tennis tournament
And the stony-nerved, stecly<yed
Czechoslovakian was in what for him
passed a an expansive mood after
beating John McEnroe. 3-6, 2-6, ~.
1-S, 7-S in the final of the men's
in&les at the French Open. ''h's great," he said. "I'll finally be
able to answer $0me different ques-
tions."
The question that had been haunt·
ana the 24-ycar-old LcndJ, among th
top thrtt pla)'ers in the world for the
ast four yean, was wh) he had ~n
nable to Wln a Grand Slam tour-
"ament He even bt'came known a methana of a "choke ar11st" ----=--nner-up at last )Car's u lflhan to
weden's Mat Wilandcr, runner.up
t thC last two U Opens, both to
immy Connors. and runner-up here
n 198 I to llJOm BOra of wcden.
I
But when moncv. rather than
-tile. ""a on the line, Lcndl' . hot
re too In 1982, he ~on a lRll~
SCI n tt<'Ord $2.02 .6 0.
But there wa\ a peculiar pnl'e to be
paid for going for the big money. and
Lend! himself admitted that he
burned himself 01.1t a bit and was in
less than top form when the big
tournaments rolled around.
But this year he acknowlcd&ed that
his tatus as one of the world's best
players would not be assured until he
wononeofthebigevents. He cut back
his scheduJc and came into this
tournament fresher than usual.
McEnroe wa uperb in tak.ang the
first two sets. But he tired under
Lcndl's relentless hard-stroking
game. Lcndl's legs were still stron& at
the end, and that was the difference.
"We were both a httle tired," Lcndl
said. "But I aucss John was a little
more tired ... M1)be I'm io a little
better shape than I was last year "
Lcndl's victory meant Amcttcan .
men will have to wait until 1985 to try
to break a Jinx on tbe slow. red clay It
Roland Garro tadium. o U ..
man l\a won h re 'net l9SS. when
Tony Trabcn ucc fully defended
has utle. .
McEnroe. ratcU the best player m
the world. by th computm. wa
cletrty disappointed by the defeat.
0 l'm a httJe down no u 1
ttietii&bt 1 bid a chance to win it ... he
cxpl11Md.
McEnrot had foruken the dOut>l~
competition to concentrat on his \In~. The French ()pm nd \he
u tralian pen a.re the onl t
Grand Slam titl mi ana rom
McEnroe· trophy ca •
Irrelevant Week-
fc>umey requires
fun, skill, luck
When 1tcomcstozan)'anucson the
golf course. you 'II ha~ to look a Iona
way to find anyttung more. ndiculous
than a Paul Salata promotaon.
S..lata,soler.romoter, instigator
and backer of mlcvant Weck. has
outlined rules for play m lhe Com-
modore's Irrelevant Wede golf tour-
nament to be staged at lrvmeCoast
CountryCtubonMond1y,June25 If
you have never played in one of th
affairs. take a look at the rulesofpla)
for each hole asset up b) Salata and
hi committee. But first, lhesencral
layout.
The tou mamcnt will follow a
scrambles fonnat. four ot five-
mcmbtr team att formed with th
lo t handicappcriu the IJ'OUP
re ponsiblef"or~cepcn& re. To
fi&\lrcucore. th t m mu~tcomp1.1tt 2S~ntofwtot.alofallhandica
in thcgroupandd~uct this from the
total score. Now for the Mt ofunu ual
tbi lht wtll face'ate.ch
h le:
o. t-tnecu~i anthcmiddkof
the up&lo tween the first and
odti "on thc~n
No. 2....,.o&mi~bhnd from m t
hot Po'lllOn Fourd1ffi rent p.nntt
placed on th srttn '"a\ iii I ahanmcnt,onh'o!' of\\h1d'I h an
ctuat up to putttnto.
No. 3-A par-5 WllJ be left as 1t ts.
.. ,th exception that the pm wiJI be
placed m the left m1dscct1on of the
areenapprox1mately two fttt from
lhefnnge.
No. 4-Thepm 1scut on the
utrcme far left edge of the green (by
the lake) This hole 1sdcs1gnated
closcstto the pen bole wt th a pecial
prize.
No. S-Alongpar ..... The pin isa
foot ortwo from the back fringe of the
green. •
No. 6-The hole 1s tough enough as
1t 1sand ... ,u not require an) pccial
treatment.
No. J-The hardest vccn on the
course. hkcwase no special treatment.
No. 8-A met par-3 Wlll give
golfers a break byplacin.aat least four
otthcpin with cups on lhcarccnat
vanou locatto.ns and they may 9dect
the ball ~hach is clOle$l to any of the
pmsand procttd to putt ouL
No. 9-A touah par .. i dcsi natcd
pla>~rhole. i.e., thcqubr~mblc
format 1 dt~bandcdon th hole. and
the team mu t l«t OM maa to hit
thtdrhe,dcstgnatc1pla) rtoh1t the
~nd hot.onetoh1ttheth1rd hot
andanothertoplaythefl unh bot. 1f
n~f)·~ ~nd they ko under rotttion
unfiltMoallanliolt"(!out. nlyone
balli u~. o. t~Pri.te I tdrivc.
o. 11-Pilic fOr shOmit dn
No. 12-par-4 he* Whk'b n. the ~ted tliiver hole.• e • 111 rW.tt·
haDc1N tolfm~t tecolf'with a kft-ndcCI du Ud ''let\ era Tht Willbc~and pla~OUl 1n
tht u m nMr ()01'()!"1e rumOl"O
How111
lbJDY
Gou
Orange Cout OAILY PtLOTIMonday, Juno 11, 1984
Scal~rs finding
business is slow
thanks to ~oycott,
Piom AP dlspatc•ea
LOS ANGELES The Soviet-led
boycott of lM Olympics i provio& a
disaster to ~outd-bc scalpers but a boon to
sports fans who dtdn 't buy their tickets earlier.
"We're gettma inundated with telephone calls
from speculators who want to sell tickets." said Larry
Gold, owner of Ticket Time. one of Los Angel~' llJIC't
ticket a1enc1e5. "People arc panicking about their
investment."
Gold said demand is likely to increase as the
Games approach, "but ngbt now the market is verysof\
fo r the margJnal and prefimmary events."
He predicted that ··a Jot of scats" will be a v;lilable
I for the track and field prchmmanes and some fo.r sold-
out fi nals.
So far. nmc spom arc sold out: swimmini,
gymnasucs. d1 vtng, synchronized swimming, tennis.
C) chng. fe ncuig. Judo a nd volleyball.
"With the Soviet bloc competing, 1t wo uld have
been a scalper's paradise," said Dion Rich, a Sao Diego
ticket broker "No~ it's a bonanza fot the last-minute
bu}er "
Rich said the Soviet boycott "has definitely bad a
beanng" on a dechne 1n black-market prices.
"It's worse than l thought it would be," he said.
"There's going to be a lot of tickets to be had."
Agencies that earlier this year asked more than
$1.000 for uckets to opening and closing ceremonies
and S500 for a seat at the basketball finals -five times
face value -are now selling only on consignment, Rich
said.
Scott Simpson rode a string of four n
consccuu ve birdies to a 6-under-par 65 and
an eas). five-shot tnumpb in sweltering
heat Sunday at the Westchester Classic golf
tournament in Harrison. N.Y .. Simpson, who has a
reputauon of playmg his best on the more difficult
courses. scored the second vi ctory ofh1s six-year PGA
Tour career with a 269 total, 15 strokes under par on the
hilly, 6.68-yard Westchester Country O ubcoursc in the
New York suburbs. The victory, claimed from the
deepest rough the touring pros have encountered this
· season. was worth $90,000 from the total purse of
$500,000. It mcreased Simpson's earnings for the
-sea~n to $146,903 and stamped him as a-for«-to-be
considered in next week's U.S. Open championship at
nearby Winged Foot ... Patty SbeebaD recovered
from her first over-par round in nine weeks to shoot a 2-
under-par 70 and win the Kids' Classic. Sheehan posted
a 72-hole score of 65-72-74-70-281, a toumament-
record 7-under par for the S52,500 first prize in the
tournament at the While Manor Country Club course
in suburban Philadelphia. Sheehan edged Amy Alcott,
one of the tour's seven milhona1res. by two strokes.
Alcott pasted a 73-68-69-73-283.
-T~en back lD buelneu .. atn
The Ottroi\Tiatrs hoo~ out o r their •
At wn~ whb 1 doublth er swcei> of
iahimOl'C SUnday that e.1tendcd their
An1trican Lt~e Ea t lead to scvm games.
IJ.rtl GlblcMI and Alu Tramm U drove in four runs api~ and Le• WWtaker fell one hort of the major l~e rtt<>r'd by scoring five run$_, the Ti ers won the
first pmc, 10-.4. Du Petry hurled 1 three--bittcr and
ffo1'ard JoUlo• drove in two Nns to pace the 8-0 ~nd-pme victory for the Tigers, Who had lost nmc of
their previous l 6 gamci. before
Sunday. The Ti$Cndoubled their
J'h-pme AL East le-ad in Just four
days by winning three of four
from the Orioles whJle the sec-
ond-plaoe Toronto Blue Jays lost
three straight to the New York
Yankees ... In pthcr American
le.ague action, Oscar Gamble and
Do• Mattlqly each stnasbed two-
run homers. with Gamble's blast
into the upper deck in rifbt field
Trammell at YankeeStadiumsnappmga 3-3
ue in the sixth mning. as New York downed Toronto.
S-3 and compJcted a thiu-game sweep of the Blue Jays
. . . Carmen Ca1tillo homered and Ben Blylevu
pil!=hed 2 2-3 scorcl~ss inninas in h~ first reguJar-season
rchcfappcaranoe since 1972 as Cleveland beat Seattle,
3-1 in the first game of a doubleheader. Ken Pbelpt slu~ a solo ho me run to break a 3-3 tie in the eightlw
inn mg as the Mariners snapped a stX·game losing streak
with a 4-3 victory in the the second game . . . Rick
Miller'• pinch-hit tnple drove in Btu Backner with the
tie-breaking run with two out in the eighth inning.
lifting Boston to a 5-4 victory over Milwaukee ... Tom
Bruau1ky'1 three-run homer in the first inning and a
sevco-run eruption in the fourth earned rookie Ed
Bodie and Minnesota to a 12-5 triumph over the
Chicago White Sox . . . Larry Parri1b blasted two
home runs and Pete O'Brien added a solo shot, leading
T exu IQ a 3-1 victory over Oakland behind Charlie
8Hp'1 seven-hitter.
NewJerseygalnswlldcard
Cartlloo each scored a pair of touchdowns 4 •
A•tros loae bat8, not •ame
T he Houston Attro • who lost m°"t of· a thrir bats in an ovemipt buratNY. IOt a
three-run homer from JOH Cru an the fi111
innio&a nd breezed to a 7-4 victory over the
San Francisco Giants Sunday to bi&l\liaht National
l..eque baseball tion. "I was lucky. M y bat was
found." Slid Cruz. Burslars hauled off most of lhe
Astros' bat , &loves and shoes in an ovcrni&ht raid on
the visiton • clubhouse at Candlesucl P&rlt. But the
culpnts dropped some of the loot on the way ouL Vern
R9-.e, l-4. WIS the st.aron& pttcb-.._ t; er backed by the borrowed-bat
' barrage. The· naht-hander, who
had a 7-1 lead after five inntnas.
yielded 10 hits ;n seven innings.
Dave Sm.UJ1 worked the final two
inninas • . . Elsewhere in the
National League, nan-scorina
sin&Jes by Tlm Raiaet and Jim
Wolalford in the first inning
started the Montreal Expos on
their way to a 3-2 victory over
CnLa New York., ending · the Mets'
wino an& streak at six pmes. . . Lee Lacr'• insidc-the-
park home run highli&hted a seven-run 2th inning as
Pittsburgh defeated Philadelphia 12~ lo snap a su -
game losing. struk. . . . JoaqulD ADd•Ju hit flyne
Saaclber1 with a patch with the bases loaded and two
outs in the ei&hth inning \o force in the pme's first run
and Leon D11rllam stole home in \he ninth to give the
Chicago Cubs a 2--0 victory over St. Louis . . . Gralg
Nettles hat two home runs and drove to four runs to
help rally San Diego Padres to a 7-5 triumph over
Cinci nnati.
Three straight for blind golfer
MOUNT KJSCO, N.Y. -Patrick W.
Browne of New Orleans shot a I 0 I to
capture the Ken Venturi Guiding Eres
Classic for blind golfers Sunday, bis tbtrd
consecutive victory. .~ ·
n
Alth9ugh Browne. considered by many to be the ~at~t blind JOlfer to play the 1µ1me, had the highest
winning score to the seven-year htstory of the event, the
~xtrcme weather conditlons11ad somcthtng te-00 with
It.
Bencltel Walku •nd MHFlee--til
for New Jersey as the Generals nailed down
a wild card playoff berth Sunday with a
31-21 victory OYCTthe New Orleans Breakers in United
States Football League action. Walker scored on a 1-
-yard run and a 44-yard option pa.ss from Rod Pegues
while Carthon gained 71 yards rushing and tallied on a
pair of I -yard runs. The Generals took the second-half
kickoff and drove 79 yards. with Carthon going over
from the I to make 1t 24-10 . . . Houston quarterback
Jim Kelly set three Amehcan professional football
records and split end Richard Jolmloa set another as the
11 -5 Gamblers rolled to a 38-13 victory over the
Chicago Blitz at the ~trodome. Kelly, who threw for
fourtouchdowns Sunday. set records for the most y.rnls
gained in a season with 4,825, the most 30()..yard games
witR_ nine and the most touchdown passes to a season
~tlf40. Johnson caught fi ve passes for 58 yards and ~ the game with I 03. receptions for...the..season
"The .extreme beat and speed of the greens of the
Mount Kisco Country Club had us alJ putting high
numbers on the board," Browne said of the regulation
course.
. . . In Birmingham. Leon Perry scored four touch-
d ownhs the Stallions overcame a slow start to break a
14-14 halfi1me tie en route to a 42-21 triumph over the
Washinfton Federals. 2-14. The Federals had moved ·
o ut to a 4-0 lead early in the second quarter on a.2-yard
run by Curtis Bledsoe and a 14-yard pass from MJlle
Hollen1ee to Joey Wallen. The Stallions scored•early in
the second half as Cliff Stoadl found Joey Joaes for a
67-yard pass to set up Perry's second touchdown, a 2-
yard plunge.
Class A titl·e
to Tomahawk
LONG BEACH -John Arens' Frers-51 Tomahawk
from Balboa Yacht Club salvaged a Class A first place in
Long Beach Yacht Club's Race Week for International
Offshore Ruic yachts despite a third-place finish in
Sunday's fourth and final race.
In the lower rated classes, three yachts posted four
straight wins. Wayne Willenberg's Nelson-Marek-41
Revenge from Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club posted four
straight wins in Class D to repeat her victory in the recent
Whitney Series.
Impact, a new Andrews-39, co-skippered by owners
Earl Dexter and Ron Melville. Balboa Yacht Club. posted
four bulkts.. in Class E, 9nd Crackerjack. A Nclson-
arelC-36 sailed by Mike Busch and Mike Neal, san Diego -
Yacht Club. had four straight wins m Class F.
Final results:
CLASS A -I TomeheWlt <Frers-Sl) John Ar-. Belboe YC, ,...,
POlnts, '2 8 roolle Ann (Nelson-Marlk-'9) u rrv .._rvev, Cabfltlo Beech vc.
6>4, 3 Chlekmete (P9terson-SS) Montt Llvlneslon, Del Rev YC, 924.
CLASS 8 -1 EcllPM (Nelson-Marell-'3), 8.nn.Sdl-<:roueh, S.n
Olf'vo vc. sv.. 2 ROiier C~s• (C1-le-4'), Gollson Svndlcllte, LBYC. I~.
J Br•vur• (Fren-4'1 lrvlne Loubl, SI Frencls YC, ll'\4.
CLASS c-I Rtllance (Nllson·Martll-41), Denni. Conner-I<. Gerrity,
S.n Ole9o YC, 61.'a, 2 Scef'let O'Her• (~·'31 M.J. Wlngele, St. FYC.
Ho, 3 lls ouv (Plterson·'31 Lewis 8-fv, B•lboe YC, 9\i
CLASS 0 - 1 Rev41n111 (Netson·Marek-411. W•vne Wlllenberg,
CabrlllO Bffdl VC, J, 2. Love Machine V (Peterson-40), Jlldt Buleflah-BIN
Peterson, Cellfornle vc , IJ, J Geronimo (C1-le-42J, Ricnerd Comoton,
!>enl• Barbllre vc, 17.
CLASS E -I. lmPect (Andr1w1-lt), Earl Dexter-Ron Melville, 8elboe
YC. 3, 'l. APOOM (Pelerson·39), Miil •nd Mertv VOl>ll, LBYC, 14; l .
Momentum ICl!oett-40). Peler Tong, LBYC, 14.
CLASS F -1. Crtdlll'i.ck (Netson-Mertk-3'). Mike 8usch-Mlk•
The golfers follow all the rules of golf and use
spotters to aid them tn delermining distance and line.
Dodgers say they'll sign Vall
LOS ANGELES-Veteran free-agent •
Mike Vail will be signed to a one-year
contract by. the Los Angeles Dodgers. the
club announced Sunday.
. Vail! 32, who was released by the Montreal Expos
earher this season, has a .281 career average in eight big-
league seasons witb six teams.
Still one class
up fgr. gra·bs
Flytng Dutchman trtcils
now down to the final day
By ALMON LOCK.ABBY
Oellrfllet ............
L.ONG BEACH -Jonathon McKecindC&rl Buchan
widened their lead in the Olympic yachting trial1 for the
Ayinf Dutch rvan Class Sunday but they are far from beina
out o wood• as far as sewing up a berth on the Olympic
team.
The final banle was due today with McKee havina 10
finish ahead of Gary Knape ofSyouet. N .Y. or finish not
more than three places behind.
McKee finished second in Sunday's ninth rac:ie of the
I 0-raoe series and Knapp finished third. By throwina out
their worst two ra~ McKee went into the final race today
with 14 7 penalty poaots to 20. I for Knapp, a difference of
5.4 points.
lfMcKeewon the final race, he would act the Olympic •
nod by.a safe margin. But if Knapp should win the~.
McKee would have to finish no lower than third. Each
skipper has three wins in the nine rate$ so far.
McKee is throwtna out two f.hird-9lace finishes.
Knapp is throwina out a ninth and a sixth-place finish but
is having to bold onto two two third place finishes (l 1.4
points). • Michael Loeb of New Haven. Conn. dropped out of
contention after he was disqualified in Saturday's raoe
which he won.
Winner of Sunday's raoe was Scon Youna of Dallas.
but be is saddled with 31 .0 penalty points and is in third
place in the standinp.
If McKee and Buchan win, it willmean there arc two
Bucbans in the Olympic yachtin~ games. Carl Buchan is
tbeson.DfBill who won thcOlymp1cbertb in tbeStarOass.
Winner of the ninth race in theTomadoOasswasJeff
Alter of Laguna Beach but the victory was meaningless.
Randy Smyth of Huntington Beach had already cemented
an Olympic benh in that class with an unprecedented
perfect .score. -- -
Following today's final race for the Tornado and
Flying Dutchman classes, the Olympic trials for the
W mdilidcr Class will get under way Tuesday for a 1 <Hlay
run. the Wind&lider. a single-banded sailboard. was
admiued to the Olympic yachting venue for the first tiine
this year.
Flying Dutchman (runtb race) -I. Scott Youna.
Dallas; 2. Jonathon MQKcc, Seattle; 3. Gary Knapp,
Syosset, N.Y.; 4. Micbae, Loeb. New Haven. Co!'l:i 5.
Bruce Burton. Marine City, Mich.; 6. Kelson Elam, uauas;
7. Dennis Stoll, Harlingen, Tex.; 8. John Irvine,
Jamestown, Ohio; 9. Ben Dawson, Columbia, Md. (Only
nine boats swted.)
Flying Dutchman standings (best 7 of 9) -l . McKee,
14. 7; 2. Knapp, 20. I; 3. Young. 31.0; 4. Loeb, 41.4; 5.
Burton, 58.4; 6. Elam, 65.0; 7. Shawn SuUivan, Waterbury,
Conn., 82.8; 8. Stoll, 94.7; 9. lrvine, 96. 7; 10. Bill Deucblcr,
Fairfax, Va .. 101.0.
Tomadotninth race)--1 :-JeffA-lter;-l;aguna Beach; 2 .
Lome Sherry. Mt. Clemens, Mich.; 3. David Mcfaull,
Honolulu; 4. Kent Blasic, Bryn Mawr, Pa; 5. Hobie Alter
Jr .. Capistrano Beach; 6. Slc.ip Elliott, Newport Beach; 7.
Henry Bossett, Mt. Pleasant Beach, N.J.: 8. Michael
Zutcck. Kemah, Tex.; 9. AJcx Martinez, Irvine; 10. Qiff
Hauser. Pacific Palisades.
Tornado standings (best 7 of 9) -1. Randy Smyth,
Huntington Beach. 0.0; 2. Mc Faull, 34. l; 3. Jeff Alter, 59.8;
4. Hobie Alter Jr., 61.4; 5. Blasic, 64.0; 6. Zuteck, 69.7; 7.
Elliott. 81. 7; 8. Bossctt, 84.4; 9. Martinez, 87.4; 10. Henry
Bussard. Santa Rosa, 104.7.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~N~ff~~S~O~Y~C~,l~;2~.T~l!~~,~~~-(~N~et~son-Mertk-~B~~~lle~~~M~~ ,.;. YC; 3. Shlnk•nsen (Klllere·ll), Meurlce Brellfleld, CYC, 13
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G()OD TO 6-23-84 (P) -----------
---~
-
Balboa ,YC
has busy
weekend · J>odCen' R .J . Reynolds ecorea in flfth
tnntna Sunday aa Atlanta catcher Ala
TreTino la too late wltb tbe a,.
DodCen beld on for S-2 win.
Balboa Yacht Club was
host to 18 boats compeling
in the Laser II nation~I
championship Saturday
and Sunday.
Hooton a surprise finisher
Scfieduled to start
Tuesday, he stops
Braves in relief
The winner was Ron
Rosenberg of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club. Runner-up
was Mike Sterman, Cah-
fomia Yacht Club: third
was Flurry Norman.
Southern Yacht Club, New
Orleans; and fourth was
Paul Noring. Huntington LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe
Harbor Yacht Club. Atlanta Braves came to Los Anfeles
h was a busy weekend with a ry>ar, on the heels of an eaght.-
both inside the bay and on pme winning streak. and they made
the ocean course as BYC at nine in a row with a blowout victory
also stJ&Cd its June On.e-in the Ol'eJ>inapme oflhc series. But
design Regatta. Three they left \11th a whimper after fallina.
classes turned out for the J.l. Sunday, their third strai&ht loss
ocean courses and three for lo the Dodarrs.
in idc cour1C1. Trophy "for: u ~ come ~k and btat
winnen: them three tn a row as IU.lly JO~
liTCHELu-22 -1 sn.. 0on th.ina.;especiallyllkrm.tfirstaamc." :::C..~::'K~vto,,! ·~~--.At:?' An11~1eslh "!~~I .Tohm
1111111 vc. i c1oet £ncouni.... Jerw ~·~ rca ani c ~ rout Ult e
ScNal. NHYC opener.
SANTANA-20 -1 ~ M1u11e Joe To-lhe A•'an•• ma a Harrv ftet11son, NHYC, 7 Go: . •• , "".' ""· wt n ,er• MkhN itGCJtoff, ~ vc· 1 wd. Jt sao1.n1 to be thts_way all year.
OIM•• Ar ... Wll!Ml'd-Sm41t1, '-«-Nii and tuck back and forth .. Ol'9do YC ' ' MUCUltY -1. Tom arac11ev. . ut Ken L&ndtcaux, wbo slugrd c.,,,_ IMdl vc. 2. "4ntlll &.Yllfllt. 1'111 fifth home run of the son ud
cevc. i 0on WM!lfl.si ,.,encJ, vc. his third in 11 many pmes said if the ev~'.D0-14 -I. itowieno Lotwften. Ooclitn~n kttpttd0tc. lhey'tl be in
LASH -1. Win Lon.war. the cf river' Kat. NH~iof C _ I SllM n Minton uwc IOt beat bed lbat fin& aamc,"
ecvc; t, c11n1 G'*'•· ecvc. l. said the Dodacn' ocntcrficldcr. ··aut
Mlttt khfo-. ecvc when th game i d ost. we're com:
-I.-~-
----
~ and that's because we've been untilthe final three games of the four-
tn a tot of close emes and we know game scricsl havina dropped out of
how to handle it. first place to the National Lea&ue
With Sunday's win, the Dodsers West Division and in one aame fast
have won 16-of-25 one-run decisions, week. committina six errors.
the Braves only 9-of· l S. .., don't think we proved u much
Los Angeles used six pitchcn to the Braves as we did ourselves,••
Sunday to subdue the Braves, inclu.d· Hooton Slid of the Dodaerl' im-ina Burt Hooton, who had been told proved play.
he was aoina to start on Tuesday "Maybe we bad relaxed a little biL"
nif.!?t. Pena knocked in the Docteen' first ·t wasn•t a stancr 24 hours and N.n offlGserCrait McMunry. S-7, in
already I'm back in the bullpen," the leCOnd innina. Llndmiw: bome-
jokcd Hooton. rtd to lead oft'.lhe founh and. after
But the veteran riaht-hander Jerry Royster sin&led home a ND in
earned his third save of the year, the Braves• fifth.. 9ret Brock
leavina the tyi~ run aboard in the top' , produced what devdoptd u the
of the ninth uuunt; deCisive run in the bottom of Uio fif\b.
... aot my throwin1 in and I sat He scOrtd RJ. Reynokb f'rom third
down. really. out of frustration \»: on an infield out.
cause I really didn't hive a thine,." The ~raves loaded the buts in the
&aid Hooton. "Then they told me lo mth and eiat\th inninp., yet failed lO
eet ready to pitcb the nlnlh and I was ICOre.
urpriscd. 1 probably houldn't have "'We've been doina that all year,
been because there was nobOdy else leavina lots of 1uys on bait even with
left." our kel JUYI up thett, .. aameated
For the Dodacrr.. Ulrttt Alrjan.dro TOl'ft. Therr's nOthina you cu do
Pco'1,7.2,1ot tltc wm. But he needed about it but II~ frUIUlti.n&. Tlioee
rcliefbclp from Orel Hirsh&Kr, rookie lbJftll ttaouJdn t h1ppen -thej do
Rieb Roctu; makina h11 flnt appear-but tl\cy lhouldn'1 ...
ance of tho season, Pit Z.1ehry and The Braves. trailina fim Dllce San
Carlo Di11 before fintlly aeufoa Dtcto by, I Vi pmes in the W• mtet
around to Hooton. the l>iclrcs in a nationaJly-ecteviled
Tht Oodec llad not pla cd wcU game toni ht,
•
Celtica' Robert Parrish (left) &oea alrbome to throw crou-
court p&M while La.ken' Ka.rt Rambla atve. cbue.
.
LAKER S. • • Prom Cl .,
pla)tts could do to nuajmize its
effects on the players. iocludioa
Jiving them nutrients. -
.. wo•rt '°"~to ao blCk there. Play
with alt those championship bannera
hanging down. and see .-ho's w
better team," Riley said. smilina.
Boston Coach K.C. Jo~ whose
Celtics let the La.ken off the book
with the founh~uarter letdown, said
he expects the seventh pme .. to be a
bana·up, knockdown pme."
"Both teams will be primed and
ready and we are both playoff
veterans," he said.
"This is a typical l..akers-Celucs
·series. It has been aoioa on for ycan. ••
He should hope it's typical, since
the Celtics bold a 7-0 cd&e over the ~ers in past NBA championship sen es.
Larry Bird led the Celtics' scorina
in the sixth game with 28 points. and
alsc;> had 14' rebounds and eight
assists.
Gerald Henderson added 22 points
and Denn11 Johnson 20, but down the
stretch, both were missing the outside
shots they'd been able to make earlier
in thcpme.
Michael Cooper had 23 points for
Los Anacles, Earvin ''Magic" John-
son 21, and James Worthy 20.
Maaic Johnson also had I 0 assists
to gjvc him 80 for the six pmcs,
bettering the old NBA title series ·
mark(forany numberofgamcs)of73
set by Walt Frazier o£thc New York
Knicks in 1970.
The Lakers, who trailed almost the
entire game, outscored .the C.cltics
10-3 in the last 4:17 of the third
quarter to trim the difference to
87-83, then reeled off an 8--0 string to
start the final period, making ltYr-87.
The game was tied 93-93 with 6:41
remaining, but Scott sank a three--
point basket and the Lakers began to
pull away. AbduWahbar, gjvcna little
more room inside since the Celtic
defenders had to start picking up
Scott on the perimeter. then scored
five straight points.
Riley, asked what inspired rum to
use a smaller Lineup -including
Scott -for awhile after the I...a.ken
fell so far behind in the third quarter,
grinned and replied; "It's called
groping ... quiet desperation."
Kareem Abdal Jabbar of the Laken la
blocked oat u Robert Paniab (left) 'and
Nothing offensive about Titans '-win
CS Fu llerton unveils a secret weapon--
to win Series -it· s. called pitching
OMAHA. Neb. (AP) -Th.-great JOb and he was the guy I had a lot
climate of the College World Series of concern about all week.
changed drastically Sunday night. "He was the type of pitcher who
The main attraction, for a change, could give us a lot of trouble and be
was pitching. sure did. If it hadn't been for his
·--~ -~ief.. lef\.handc.r ...Eddie_ i>clzcr injury, he could have gone nine
· allowed two first-inning infler<f -1nntngr.'"~--• -
singles, then didn't allow another hit Delzer suffered a severe leg cramp
through seven inninas as Cal State while warming up for the e1ghth
· Fullerton won the NCAA baseball inning. Garrido said the muscles just
. championship, defeating defending wouldn't ~pond to treatment and he
champion and fourth-ranked Texas brought in Wright, who registered his
J.-1. 22nd save of the season.
· Entering Sunday's play. each game Cat State Fullerton picked up its
in the Series had an average of 15 runs first run in the second inning when
scored, a tournament record. Delzer John Bryant was hit by a pitch. stole
and reliever Scott Wright changed second and scored on a single to
that. center by Kirk Bates.
"Offense, offense, offense, then the The Titans. 66-20. added two runs
game turns out defensive," Fullerton in the fourth when Bob Caffrey led off
Coach Augie Garrido sa id. wilhasingleandscoredonatriplcto
"Baseball's a funny game. We go in right center by Bryant. who came
with a starter who never starts and we home with the final run of the game
win. I feel a lot older." on a sacrifice fly by George
"I'm so glad we won." Delzer. 8-2, Sarkissian.
said. "I was throwing strikes and The Longhorns managed just other
every thing went well." three other baserunners against
Things went well enough for the Delzer before the 5-8 senior lcft-
third-rank.ed Titans to win their hander left the game. Wright gave up
second championship. They won the a pinch-hit double with one out to
Series in 1979. Doug Hodo, then retired the next five
Texas Coach OiffGustafson said 1t Longhorns to wrap up the cham-
was only fitting that the cham-pionship and add to his single-season
pionship came down to the two teams NCAA save record.
with the best pitching. The Titans' John Fishel also
"It was a great battle," Gustafson entered the record book when he
said. "Fullcnon did a better job of singled in the seventh inning. It was
pitching tonight. He (Delzer) did a his I 3th hit of the Series.
Cal State Fullerton pitcher Edclle Delzer
(left) la coneoled by friend Rick Van-
derbook after Deber broke l.nto tean u
Al'Mi ;t II
be l(rln'ed that bl.a father, who wu maraerect two year. aco. coald not be ln
the etanda to watch b.bD beat Tena.
Express will gladly take this one
Outla ws h ave more offense but t hey
can 't fi nd t h e end zone in 17-1 0 loss
. TULSA (AP) -The Oklahoma
Outlaws offense did a lot more
moving around than the Los Angeles
Express in thtir United States Foot-
ball League game. but not into the end
zone.
The Outlaws had 283 yards total
offense compared to Los Angeles'
223. and Oklahoma rookie Rick
Johnson -starting in place of
injured Doug Willi,ms -had a
better day statistically than Steve
Young. the Express' celebrated rookie
from Brigham Young.
But. hampered by a costly spccaal-
tcam breakdown, three interceptions
and penalized I I times for 82 yards,
the Outlaws lost to Los Angeles
Sunday. 17-10.
It was the eighth straight loss for
Oklahoma. 6-10, and took. them out
of post-season playoff contention.
Los Angeles got its fift.h straight wm.
and took over sole possession of first
place in the USFL's Pacific Division
with a 9-7 record.
The Express' first score came when
Duane G unn returned a Case
dc8ru1jn punt 77' yards for a touch-
down early in the first ,quarter. Los
An~elcs made it I 0--0 with 18 seconds
left m the period when Tony Zendejas
booted a 45-yard field aoat
After an intcccption of a Johnson
pass, Kevin Mack bulled over from
the I-yard line to push the Express'
lead to 17-0in thcsecondquiner,and
Oklahoma could manqc only a 39--
yard field goal by Efren Herrell as
tame expired. making 1t 17-3 at the
half.
The Outlaws pulled to within a
touchdown in the third quarter, when
Ernest Anderson went five yards up
the middle for a score. Anderson's
run came after Rodney McMilhan
intercepted a pass by Young and
returned it to the Express 21.
Anderson's sconng run marked the
first Oklahoma touchdown in the
Outlaws' last 11 quarters.
Near the end of the third quarter,
Johnson and Lonnie Turner com-
bined on a 40-yard completion to the
LA 25. later, Johnson passed for l 0
yards to Al W1lhams for an apparent
first down at the 13. but offensive
taetle Jim Lamb was called for a
holding penah}.
A Skelly Stadium crov.d of 22.017
watched the Outlaws pla:y the final
home game of their expansion
sea.son.
"We're glad to win and get out of
here." said Express Coach John Had I.
"Evet)11me )OU pla)' (Outlaws
Coach) Woody (W1denhofcr). you're
in for some trouble."
··we ran the ball a lot more than we
threw;· Hadl said. "We didn't have
the ball VCf) much the first half. Give
Oklahoma credit -they stopped u
EXTRA. • • Prom Cl
pionship tliisseiSoiL
And he'll have plenty to~
H~ along with assistants Tom
DeK.raii of Fountain Valley and OU
OeLeon of El Toro, have cbOIC'D
Capistrano va11cy·s ace burler BiU
Dodd to stan on tbe mound. Also ready to throw will be one o( Hodces. own _pttc:ber, Lee Plemel,
Ocean View's Dean Douty and New-
port Cirist.i.an's David Cillay.
Dodd was I~ l on the fltaSOll while
Plemel was 12-1 for Lacuna Hilb · . . a ---
Ncwpon Christian to the OF Small
Schools Ownpionship, •
~na the South hitters are Foun:
tarn Valley -0r+stop Gary
Scboonovcr. Baron first buemaa
Ray LJam.a:s. Edison catcher Paul
Ellison. Universiry shortstop Jaso4
Gentile and HunbQSton 8eacb first
baseman Pat Gordon. •
Seua M·S'tws
~ ............ ,..,_. .. uemes, F-'.itl V....,
l~lrldt GcrdDn, Hul!ftrwtoll leedl
2'8-Tem MllOM. .._ GrMde
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»-Olril Oe«lrow, Fooftlll
OF~s,_ Kir1tNJ~ MeJW Del
OF-J4/lf Ostlome, La Quinta
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C-AllM Romen, U..-Hlh
C~E~.Edhon
P-ttOIM* ~· Santa Am ~onotl , Los Amilos
P.-Jlm .. -. La Quinta
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P-Jlm OeYIM, Seti Clemente
~· Dodd, c.ob1rano Velcv P-OMn OoulY. oc..n View
P--f>al Duber. M91er De;
P--Lee Plemel, ~ Hiii
...... Al·Stan
1&-«uben Gonnlet. e-Pw'k ss-eri.n Beel$, Sanon
Ss-Mall l!lellran, c.nvon
SS-Stew Momaiano. Ora'*
ss-Ed Evans. Wntern Je-eoo CanldY. Sl.wlnv Hlh
38-«elll'I Kaub. Los Alamll0$
3&-4hin Krleoef. vaienci.
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OF-<Oree Decker, Kalella
OF-Rev Hernandei. Buena Pw1<.
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C-Paut Oa!Y, Mnnoll•
C-Pat Lonoo. Loera
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p......-<;"" Oram, E~anu
P-Scol Sisk. Sonar• ~ut't ~, ... E~MH
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12-1
allowed to tee up another ball and
attempt to hit the float1~C'll'cle. lfa
player hits the circle he will be
allowed to deduct a stroke from the
team score.
No. 18-A good par-5 and is
designated the longest putL The cup
will be the size of a small grapefruit
and the golf er sinking the lonacst putt
will Wln a special pnzc.
Fun, skill, luck, irrelevancy. That's.
thew&)' Salata describes bis specially
sct-u p course for the zanie t tou_r-
namcnt of the year.
Biggs,. Breland, three others step closer to Olympi~s
FORT WORTH, Teus (AP) -
Super heavywttaht Tyrell Biags.. 147-
Pounder Mark Breland and th~
other voorld champions took 1mpon-
ant steps toward the Olymp1cs un-day by winnina U .. Ol)'mp1c Boxing
Tnil titles.
Other world d\ampions wann1na
wtT'C Pernell Whitaker of Norfolk,
Va.. 132; frank Tat of Detroit, l ~6.
and Ricky Womack of Detroit, 178.
Those five and the ven other
Tnals champions now must set
throuah a Box"°ff apinst a •• rthy
opponent" at Las Vcps July 6 or July
7.
Bigs. who weighed 21 Pound
u hi cxccll nt letljab. a sood hon
1
r\aht and movement to score a S-0
dccu1on over Payne, 230. It was
Bigs' fifth dcc1s1on VJctory apmst
the hard-hmina Payne in five mcet-
i"f~tand boxed bu way to a S-0
victory o"er David Gutierrez of San
Dieao for the 147-pound cham-
pionship and ·~"I W&SJUst DOl up
for It today."
But lmland ea ily IOOftd his I 03.rd
vi tOt)'. 71 by knockout. apmst 1
i"'tc lo The 6-l'h champion
scored often with hts left jab apinst
the ner. lunaina Gutienez.: He
al knocked down Outien'n 'Wlth 1 lcf\-~t in the fint round and rock:cd
him with veral punc to the bead ..
ID the third.
Whitaker had trouble with lanky
Joe Bcllac of Marysville. Wash., but
closed With a baa third round for a 4-1
deas1on at 132 pounds.
Whitaker. who outpo1ntcd Deline
three times 1n 1982. scored well with
riahtja hoo andcountcrpunchcs·
to the head in the third.
Tate -.as utrtmcly eftetti"e to the
body in winning a S-0 ~ision o"er
Ron ESStu for the I S6-pound cham-
pion tnp. He afso Jibbed and
countCt'Cd ~II aptn t the t\'C
n . the 191• National lden
Glov champion ~ PQ'Wtr..pun~hina Womac bt-
ptnc tht-17 -pound champion on a
-
S-0 decuion over 25-yea.r-old Bennie
Heard of A usta. Ga .• who finished ste0nd to omack m the
Amateurs last year.
Womad.. coutdn•t lnoc HdJ
down, but he shook op Heard on
several occ.asion especially in the
thud round. '
Henry Tillman of Los A~lei aot
up from a first-round knoctdown and
won lhe 201·pounCS utle on a S.O
dtt ion over Miehafl T> a t 1·
)ear-old bt.asttr from PtuladClph1a.
T n put .Biai down with two ri&hts to the bodY" in the f mt round,
He al landed some bcav head
pun 1ndarouplcofh1fd nght to
the bod') .
I
'
. --
I DAILY ptLOT/Monday, Jun 11, t&M
..
RUNS. W1119lns, San Oreoo 41
Gwvnn s.,, Dleoo 40. Samultl Pnlla-
~la 40. MallNwS, ClllCafO. 39,
Ourlwtm, Chl<:aoo ll, lta.nes Mon-
lrffl, 38
RBI Carter Montreal. 47, Ourhem.
~n.cago, 45. Scnmidt Pn•ladelotua 42
Davis. Chlcato. 40; Clark San Fran
ciKO, 39 HITS Gwvnn, San Dlffo. 77, MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
Arnerie.an LHeue
WEST DIVISION
W L ~ct. GB
Aft911S
Chla;o
Minnnota
Kans11 Citv
Seallle
Oakland
TtllOS
Detroit
T01"on10
Baltimore
Boston
NewYOO.
Mllwau"ff
Cleveland
31 21 S33
29 29 soo
21 31 475
26 29 473
2t 33 459
26 33 4-tl
24 3S 401
EAST DIVIStoN
43 14
36 21
33 26
29 n
2S 31
24 32
21 34
154
632
SS9
509 ....
.429
312
SuncYv's 5c«'H
A"'9h 2 Kansas Clh 0
ClevelM\O 3, Sullle 1. Isl game
Seattle 4. Clevet.nd 3. ?nd game
New YOI"" S, Toronto 3
Detroll 10, Balllmore 4 hi game
Detroit I. Baltimore 0. 2nd game
Boston S, Mllwauku •
MIMHOla 12 Crucago s
Texu 3. Oeklalld 1
Tadav's G&mn
2 3,
3, ', 5''> ,,,,
7
11
14
1712
18''1
21
Oetro11 !Rozema 1-6) at Toronto ILHI.
6-0), lnl
New Yon• RilO 1-6) at Boston (Hu~•
I 4) nJ
Ball1mon IMcGreoo< 1-41 at Mol-
wauk" ISullOll 3· 51. In)
Oakland (McCartv 3-41 al Texas
!Mai.on 2 41 lnl
Onlv games i.cn.duled
TueMMV'S Games
Chlcaoo at AA911s. (nJ
Oerro1t al Toronto, (nJ
New Yorll al Boston, lnl
Ballimore al Milwaukee, (n)
Minna.ore al Teos. lnl
Kansas Citv at Seattle, I nl
Clevetano al Oakland, (n)
Nati~f LNVUe
WESTERN OIVIStoN
W L Pct ,GB
San D1eoo 34 23 S96
A llante 34 26 .567 l 'I) °""'' 34 27 .557 2 Clnc1nna11 28 32 .467 7112
Houston 2• 34 '14 10...,
S.n Francisco 19 37 339 1"1'>
Cnica;o
Ph11adelOll1a
Nt.., Yori<
SI LOUIS
Montreal
P1t1sourgl\
EAST DIV1StoN
32 24
31 2S
19 24
30 30 n 30 n 33
Sundav'S 5corts
Oodee<l 3 Atlanta 2
S1l
S54
547
soo
413
400
1,
4 s 9,
Moo>WMI Jo. Illa• .:to.< 2 _
P111Sbul'llh 12. Philadl!'onia 6 12 inninQi -
Ch•cago 2 ~t Louis O
S.n D•evo 1 C1nctn0aJ1 S
Houston 1 San Francisco •
Todav's Games
San Frenc:•lCO ILaskev l-6l al
Ood9trl IHOMfCUll 7-2) lnl
Montreal IGulhcllsor> 7-5) al Cl11CBllO
i R~m:nel 3-21
P11tsbur11h 1Rnooen 4-4) at New York
IGooaen 4-3), lnl
St Louis IC011 2·7l al Phllaeltlohla
IBvsirom 7-21. (n)
Clnc:lnnalt !Solo 1 1) 111 Houston !Mad-
den 1 1). (nJ
Allenle !Falcone 4-Sl al San Diego
!Thurmond 3-3), (n)
TueMMV'S Games
San Francisco al Ood9en. (n)
Montreal al Chicago
P1lhburQh 111 New Yori., (n)
SI Louis al Pl\lla<ll!lohla, (n)
Cincinnati al Houston. (n)
Atlanta at S.n 01e90 In)
Samuel, Pnllade!Phla, 76, Francona,
Montreal 13, Sandberg Chicago, 11
Ramirez, Atlanta, 61
DOUBLES Francona, Monlrtal, 19,
GCarler, Montrul, IS, S.n<1oerg, Chl·
cago IS, Cev, Chicago 13, Wiison,
Pnllade1phla, 13, Hut>t>erd, Atlanta, 13,
Ollvef', San Franclsc;o, 13
TRIPLES Samuel, Phllaelelohla .•.
Sandoerg, Chlc;ago, 6, Cruz Houston, S,
Gwvnn. San Oleoo, s. McGH, Stlouis,
5
HOME RUNS. Murohv, Atlanta , 14,
Schmidt, Ptllladelohla, 13, GCarttr,
Monlraal. 12, Durham, Chluoo., 11,
Clark, San Francisco, 11. Mar&nal, o.cteen. 11. MCRevnolds, San Otego,
11
STOLEN BASES Samuel, Phllaeltl
Ohta, 30; Wl11<1lns, S.n Dlt90, 29 Redus,
Cincinnati, 21. Dernier. ChlcaQO, 24,
Raine\, Monlrtal, 19
PITCHING (6 oeclslons) Solo, Cin-
cinna ti, 7-1, 2 SI Lvncn, Ntw YOl"k,
6-1 2.94, Ptrtr, Atlanta, 6-1. 4.01, LH.
Montrea l, ·10-2, 2.30, f"eNI, Oecleen.
7-L J.09; H-yeu1t, Oedeen, 7-L I.II
STRIKEOUTS VllMn&lleA, 0ed9en,
'1. Gooden. New Yorll, 17. Rvan,
Houston, IS, Soto, Cincinnati, 75,
Carlton, Pn1la°""'la, 70
SAVES SI.Iller, SI Louis. 1', Holland,
PnlladelOlll•. 13, Goua11e, San Ole9o.
12, Smith, Chicago 11, OroKo, New
Yorll, 11
AMERICAN LEAGUE "noel' 4 Rov•l1 o
CALIFORNIA KANSAS CITY
abrbbl abrhlM
Wilfong 2b ' 0 1 0 WllM>n cf 4 0 1 0
Carew lb 3 o o o woavrs II 4 o O o
L vnn d 4 0 0 0 Bretl 3b 4 0 1 O
OeCncs3b 3 2 1 O MCRaedh 3 o lo
ReJksn dh 3 o 1 O Motley rt 4 O I O
OownllllLll. ~ 0 2. 1 Whlla 2b ' 0 I 0
Peltls d O O O O Ball>onl lb 3 o o O
MCBron rl ' 0 1 1 SlaU{lhl c 3 0 1 0 Benlqur If O O O O Cncotn n 2 0 O O
BOOM c 4 0 0 0 Roberts Ph I 0 0 0
Sclloflld u 3 0 0 0 UWU\tn U 0 0 0 0
T.tab 12 2 6 2 T9'11ts n o 6 o
Scafe bY '"'*t9S 000 101 000-2
000 000 000-0
Ga me Winning RBI -MCBrown (21
E-Whlle. OP-Calif0<nla I, Kansas
CilV 1 LOB-<alifornla 6. Kansas C1tv 1
2&-0eeinctt, S141ugnt McRae
38-Wi~on
c.tlter1'la Zann W,7-3
KanusCltv
IP
9
Gublc:t• L~i • Qulsnorv 1
T-2.22 A-31,490
H R ER BB SO
6. 0
5 I 2 0
0 3
1 3 s o-ir ir
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Dod9en J, B,.•v•' 2
ATLANTA LOS ANGELES
•b r h bl ab r h bl
AHall rf S O 2 O RRenlds rt 4 1 1 O
Trevino c 4 O 1 0 Bellor 2b 4 O I 0
Perrv If 3 0 1 0 Brock lb 4 0 0 1
Muronv ct 3 O O O Mershll 11 4 O o O
Chmbls lb 3 O O O Landrx cl 7 I 1 1
Wal'°n oh 1 O 0 0 Mtdn<IO rl I O 1 0
Forster o O 0 0 0 Guerrer lb 4 1 2 O
RRmrz.u 4 2 2 O Sciosc.Ja c 2 O I 0
Johnson lb 4 0 1 0 Andtsn n 3 0 0 0
Rovsler 20 3 0 1 1 APtna o 1 0 0 1
Jrgnsn Oii 0 O O 1 Hershlsr o 0 O O 0
McMrtrv p 1 0 0 0 Ro<les o 1 0 0 0
Haroer Oii I 0 I 0 Zachry 1> 0 0 0 O
Ca mo o 0 0 0 0 COiet o O O O 0
Hubt>rd 1b 2 O 1 0 Hooton o 0 0 0 0 MAJO~ .. s:e:.-...t•e ... A,....0"1Ei:-R~s---"x..,ota1,,...s 34 2 10 2 Totats lO l 7 l sc-11v~ merlan League AtMta ooo 010 001 -2
BATTING (130 al balsl Enote LH"""""' 010 110 oox- 3
M1nnew1e 346, TrammeM Detroit, Game Wlnnln<;1 RBI -APena l 1)
3'6 Wlnfoeld New York 346, Bell, E-Guerrero OP-Atlanta 1. Los .t.n
Toronto 340 Kemo New York, 331 oe1e1 1. LOB-Atlanle I . Los An<;1etes 1
RUNS Trammell, Oelrotl, 4' 2B-AHall HR-Lan<lrtau11 (SI SB-
Mosebv Toronto 43 R11>keo, Balli-RRamlrtz Cl l SF-J0<Qtrllsen
more 43. Evaiis Boston, 42. Wllilaker,
Detro<! 42
RBI Murrav Baltimore 52 Davis
Seame, ~ Rice Boston '6 KlnQman,
0.klalld. "· L~. Oetro11 39
HITS Trammell, Delro11 79; Garcia ,
Toronto. 76, Bell, Toron10 10, Ma111no-
1v. New YOl"ll, 69. Wh1t1111er. Oe1ro1t 69;
Youn1, Miiwaukee 69
DOUBLES Trammell, Delroot, 16,
Cowens Seallle. l4, Btll, Toronlo. 14,
Kearnev, Seallle, 14, Malllnolv. New
York, 14, Teufel, Minnesota, 1'
TRIPLES Mosebv, Toron10, 9.
Owtn, Seellle, 7, Collins, Toronto, S,
L1w, Chicago, S; Uoshaw, TMonto, 5
HOME RUNS Davis, Seallle, lA,
Arma., Boston, 14, Kingman, Oakland,
14 Kiiiie, Chicago, 13, Murrav, Balti-
more, 12, Rloken, Baltimore, 12.
STOLEN BASES Henderson, Oak-
land 2S. Garcla, Toronto, 24, Buller,
Cleveland 19, Pettis, AA911s. 11.
Bernazard, Cleveland lS Moseov.
TMonto, IS
PITCHING 16 dte111onsl Leal Tor-
on10 6 0, 2 75. RLJaci.son Toronto
6-1 319 Morris, Oetro11 11-2, 203,
Cau<lill. Oakland S 1 2 70. SancM1,
A1191h, S-1, 1.8'2
STRIKEOUTS Morn s Oelre><t 73,
Sl•eb TMonto 61 wm. Anetls, 65
Nlellro New York 63, Guidry New
York, 61
SAVES Oulsenoerrv Kani.as Cttv.
IS Ca udill. Oeklt nd 12 Stanley Bos-
1on 11 Ftnoers Milwaukee 10, Davis
MIMtsOla 10
Natl~I Leavu•
B.11 TTING 1130 al Del\) Francona ,
Montreal 361, Gwvnn, San DI~. 3SI,
Wash1no1on . .llllanla 340, Cebe41, Hous-
ton 331 Ourhem Ch1ca110. 330
IP H R Elt BB SO
A .. nta
McMurlrv L 5-7 5
Ca mo 1
Forslef' 1
LnA,,....s
s
0
2
3
0
0
3
0
0
3
1
0
1
0
APen• w 7-7 s 2-3 6 I 4
Hef'shlitt 0 0 0 0 1 0
ROdu 2 2 0 0 0 I
Zachrv O 0 0 0 O O
C011z 1-3 1 1 1 O O
Hoolon S,3 I 0 0 0 0 0
Hef'shlsar Pllcl'led lo 1 oarrer 1n ine 61h,
Zachrv ollclle<I 10 1 baller in lhe 81h.
CDl11 pitched lo 2 ballers In lht 9th
WP-<amp T-2·54 A-41, 182
Colle9e WOf1d S.r~
<at Omall1, Nltl.I 7"---.
Sundav's Cham9ionshio Game
Cal Slate Fuller1on 3. Toes I
Deep se• fi1hln9
DAVEY'S LOCKER (NtwNrt
BMdll -19' englers S9 t>arracu<la SS
t>on1lo 6 vellowtall, 21 rock fl•h. 2
helibul, 34 c:allco ban, 163 sand bau, 19
m.cktrel, 2 sllHC>Shead. 1 white fish
NEWPOtlT LANDING (Newpert
BMdll -17 anQters 22 cellco t>au, 6
barracuda
-----
SCOREBOARD
H .. vwood P•rk
StlNOAY'S RE SUL TS
136ltl et 67-dlv tlloreutil\Ol'ed "'"11119)
l"NHT RACE. 1 118 mllH
Cnlvav IPlnc:avl S.60 3 60 l 40
BacklOll I Sibille I S 80 3 40
Nevada Sage (Black) 4 00
Also ractd; Ea<1ie's Beak, Sllnglnotv.
Preservative, Avandaro, Sol<ller of FOf°·
tune
Time 1'52
SECOND RACE. One mlll!
Red Slrte! Miss \OMJ 9 60 S 40 3 20
Lord's LHlle (Plncav) 6 80 4 00
Comprehend (Guerra ) 3 60
Also raced· Trust Ma. Fashlori
Knowle<IOe. Encar1J11da, Teco Teco,
Madam Solendour, Curls In Whirls
Time 1:39 3/S.
U DAILY DOUBLE 12-61 oalel
129.00
THIRD RACE. S ful'IOn\n..
C·PremlerShlP IOlvsl 2 60 2 40 2 10
C-Cmmemrat• (MCrn) 2 60 2 40 2 10
Gemini Drnme< !Valenzuela) 2 20
C-couoted en1rv
Also raced· Flf1V Silt Ina Row,
Unreal Zeal, Palridl McF1Q. Covotero
Tlmt. S7 l/S.
$S EXACT A ( 1-3) oald 120.so
f'OU.TH RACE. 6 furlOnOs
Cl>Pld Dancer (Plncavl S.80 3.60 '2 80
Jellsco (!>lbtlle) SOO 300
Timlin !Mc:Carron> 2 40
Also raced Don's Co'oo. Acramar,
Allack. Arctic Ace. Unfair Comoelillon.
Soottorel, Yarnallton Nallve
Time 111 lt5
'5 EXACTA (6-4) p111d S7000
FIFTH RACE. 1 1116 m11eS
Quantum LHP (MCn) 12 80 6 ?0 3 80 6~ (Oet.houssvel 710 3.80
Roval C11ollve <Pincav) 3 00
Al•o rac;td· Mou-Fernl-Tycnl, Gar-
lbl, Vela rs. Overolv. Mr Reactor
Time· 1 41 11 S
SS EXACT A (3-2) oaod S167 00
SIXTH RllCE. 1 furlongs;
E11olost ve Passer (Hlv)
69 60 18.80 10.00
Excess Prolil IOelallOuuvel 3 20 2 60
u.S Stffl• (McCarronl 4.10
Also raced Calet>onoa. Gleam Ma-
chine, WIS/\ lhad• Million, Star Mlt-
lef'ial, Amazln<;1 Soort, Mt. Llvef'more,
Ftvlnll Irishman AbedneQO. ltk:tl
WalM>n
Time 1.21 3 S '5 EXACTA (8-21 oaod ~.00
SEVENTH RACE. I 1 18 mites
Sc:ruoulfi (P1ncavl 4 40 2 80 2 40
Lion C11v (0elah0ussve> 920 soo
Handsome One I Valenzuela I 3 20
Also raced Rossi GOid. Ounoealh
GrHnwood Siar Near
Time 146 3 S
'5 EX.llCTA lt>-1 oa1d SllBO
~tc ~Ot lrl-~l-Ul l!t1!,l S 18 161 20 w1tt1 10 winning lockets ls111
honnl S? P•c~ S•• cons04atoon oa•<I
S294 40 wolh 617 wonnino locl\els (t1ve
hOr~S)
EIGHTH RACE. 1 I I mile\
Desert Wine (Olnvsl 10 40 3 20 2 60
lnttrco <Plocavl 2 40 2 20
Sari's Dreamer (Meza) 4 60
Also raced Ancestral Play Feik>w,
Vioorous Vigors, Craellus, F°i111111no F11
Time. 147 31S
sS EX.llCTA 12·3) paiel st.I 00
NINTH RACE. 1 I 8 miles on turf
Btsl Look (Poncav) 6.40 3 20 2 40
MaioT Henry (SJb1lle) 3.40 2 40
Good as Diamonds CMC'Carronl 2 60
Al'° rectd Oanceoel, Alplno, Flylno
Gene. Porl Darwin, Fllrallen Vic torv
Lea, Gas War
Time 147 3 S '5 EXACTA 13-ll Pllid SS9 SO
Attendance 31,S34
NBA ptayoff$
CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(lltsl af \,fVft'I)
Today's Game
L•lrers 119 Bosron 109 1Seroes lied
3 3)
Tueldav's Game
Lalrers 111 Bollon (CMMeJ 1 al 6
pm)
Lakers 119, Celtics 108
Bird
MllJIW!ll
Perish
Henderson
D Johnson
Mc Hate
AlnQe
Buckner
Kite
Team Ret>
Totals
Ramb1s
Worlhv
Abclul-JbOr
Coooer
E Jonnson
McAooo
McGee
Naltr
Wiikes
XOll
THm Rl'b
Totals
BOSTON
19 Iva '"'• 8 11 12 13
3 7 " 8 6 13 4 6
10 17 2 1
8 20 3 •
l 9 0 0
I 6 2 1
0 I 0 0
0 0 0 0
r 1pfph
14 8 .. ,.
3 3 2 12
10 2 5 16 s s s 22
3 6 1 20
3 0 5 " 2 1 2 •
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
12
39 14 29 JS S3 2S 24 IOI
LOS ANGELES
19 fvaflfla 4 9 0 0
9 11 7 2
" 16 1 6 9 IS S S
10 18 I 2
0 2 0 0
0 1 0 0
I 2 1 2
1 4 0 0 s 10 0 0
r •pfllh
• 1 s •
1 3 4 20
10 s s 30
6 • 2 23
6 10 3 21
• 0 2 0
0 0 3 0
0 0 l 4
l 2 1 1
7 2 2 11
11
S3 lOS 12 17 SS 31 21 119
S<0rt b11 Ollart.n
••sten l3 32 22 21-IOI
L.s A"916et 2' 30 24 36-11'
Three Point 110011-D Johnson. Scoll
Tactlnlcals-Blrd Nater A-17 SOS
West<hes'-" O.ulc
(It Harrhon. N.Y.I
269
!.<:011 Simoson. s90,000 V4
David Graham, '37.333
Mark O'Mtara, S37.333
Jav Haas, '37.333 vs
Chip Beck, U0,000
V6
Garv McCord, s 17,37S
Tom Kite, '17,37S
V1
Frtd Couoln. SIS,000
Mlkt Sulllvan, SIS,000
VI
0 A Welbrlno, $ 11.SOO
Loren Rober ls, s 11,SOO
Gll Morgan, Sll,500
Allen Miiie<. Sll.SOO
Cal PHI•. 111.soo
V9
Peter Jacobsen It 750
Mark LYt, 18,750
2'0
Save Bal'-Sleros. S7 .750
Don PooleY. 17.?SO
CraiQ Stadler 17 ,250
Curl &vrum s7.2SO
:111
Joey Sindelar, SS,400
Mille Donald SS.400
Tom Jent.Ins, sS,400
Jim Deni SS,400
111
Curlis Slrange, Sl.116
R°"'° Maltbie, '3,116
Wevne Ltvl, '3,116
Jim Colbert, '3.116
Garv Plavar. '3,116
Willie Wood, '3,116 m
George C•dl, 12,96S
Howrd Twtty, S2,96S
Mac O'Grdv. S2,96S
Ed Flor, 12,965
Georoe Brns, S2,96S
2S4
lfobbv ffnl, 12 ,J~
Tim Slmosn, s2,354
Bot> Shean, S2,3So4
Merk Pftl, 12,35-4
Mike Rd, 52,354
215
Brad Brvnl, Sl,150
AndV Nrln SI.ISO
G lbOV G llbr I, SI.ISO
Mlk Smlh, Sl,ISO
Steve Lieblr, s 1.eso -Charles Codv, Sl,337
BarTv Jatdtl, Sl,337
J c Sne<I. ".331
Richard Zokt, Sl,337
Mike McCuttovn, l I 337
J•m Nelfrd s 1.337
Bot> MrPhv SI . 337
111
ChlChl RO<lrlOUl SI 170
"Ron !IT'C1< .. '1~4--
218
Bill Brilln. I 1 13S
Larrv M11 I 1 13S
Tim Nrn SI 13S
Merk W1eb, s 1 US
2"
W1111v ArmstrnQ S1, 1JO
290
Jim Kan. SI. 100
2'1
Lennie Ctemnls, 11,095 Ru Celdwll, s 1.09S
2'2
Bruce Douolu, s 1,065
Leonard Thmosn, S1,06S
293
John COii. Sl.OSO
Gavin Levensn, Sl,050
Bruce Flelshr, Sl,050
2'4
Mike Gov H010
Tommy Naklm, Sl,010
Mark McNllv. Sl,010
2'S
JTl'lf~
Peter Oosterhs, s9'S
29'
Jtff Tllomsn, 5970
66 61-70-6S
68-11-69-66
69-61-70·67
67-61-61-71
63 69-70-73
68-7? 67·69
70-66-61-72
67-69-73-68
69-70-70·68
67-71-71-69
68-69 70-71
71-66-71-70
70-70-61-70
11 61-69-70
n -11-61-61
11 10-66-n
13-61-11-61
72-66-73-'9
61-71-71-69
61 61-74-71
10-11-11-69
69·71 11-70
67 70-71-73
11-69-66-JS
·11-10-11-10
10· 12-10-70
65-11-75·71
61-11-12-n
67-61-73-74
68·74-69-71
70-69-73-71
70-13-69-71
71-71-11-10
65-73-12-73
74-67-68·74
7044-70-10
67-73-74-70
71-69-69 1S
12-69-61-75
73-61-75-61
72-71-69-13
69-n -11-12
n -73-61-73
n -11-n-10
70-13-65· 77
11-69-n-14
14-10-10-n
n -n -10-12
11-n-11-12
10-11-n-n
n-10-n-11
61-JS-72-71
11-11-70-JS
l3"10·1J-7l
7•-69-73·17
10-11-1s-n
11-71-7S-71
10-1•-15·69
70-73-75-71 •
10-12-75-13
70-73-70-75
n-10-1s-14
74-68-73·77
71-73-76-72
72-72-74-75
73-69-76-75
n -n -1s-14
71 -70-71-7S
73-70-77-74
76-61-79-71
-n-n-1
'9-7S-I0-71
11-n-19-14
LPGA tourn.ment
(at MalVtm, Pa I
111
Pa11v Snethen SS2 SOO
113
Amy AICOll '31 S00
284
Nancv Lo11t1 121,000
Connie Ch1Mem1. S?l,000 -Jull lnk•l•r. St•.431
Donna H Whitt S14,•31
217
Pal Bradltv. S9,041
J ane Gtddu, S9,042
Behv Kln<;1, 19,042
211
Dtbble Mltssev, S6,4SS
Sue FOQltman, $6,45S
Kalhv Baker. S6,4SS
219
Robin Walton. U,9'3
Laure C~t, 54,943
Sharon Sarrell. M. 943
Beckv Pearson, 54,943
2tO
Pennv Putz, Sl,519
Kathv Whitworth S3519
Chrl\ Johnson, '3.519
Marla Flours-Oii. '3,519
Det>b•• Aullin, S3 .. Sl9
Patti Rmo, '3.519
Vicki Feroon '3 519 ,,,
Amv Benz 12 726
Catnv Marino, 12 726
Dawn Coe.17 n6
Bern SOiomon S7 776 m
KalhV Hile 12 267
Doi Germain 12,262
.t.vako Oli.a moio.12,767
Anne-Marie Palli, S2,267
Pam Glelztn, U ,262
JoAnne Carner, U,262
Ju<lv Clark '2,267
6S-12-14-10
73 61-69·73
71-76-71-66
70-71-71-72
73-71-69-73
71 12-69·74
73-73-72-69
72 74-71-70
7S-69-73-70
7S-72-72-69
74-71-71-72
69-74-71-74
7S 72-73-69
12 11-15-11
61-12-76-13
72-72-71-74
. 67 79-74· 70
73·74-72-71
72-73-74·71
12 72-7S-7 I
16·13-"-n
71 74-71-73
75-67-74-74
71 76-74-69
14-12-75-10
11-12-1s-n
76-73-67-7S
,. 72-75-'9
75-72-75-70
77-70-74-71
75-71-75-71
73-'9-71-72
70-75-73-74
73-70-H -7•
1'3
AllCt Rl!zman, J I .113 73-74-71-61
Bonnie Lauer, s 1.113 74-75-12-72
Jane Locto., s I.Ml 72-74-75-72
Lauri Peterson, 11.~ 75-75-70-73
Charltl Mntonvv, Sl.113 74-7S-71-73
Juov Enis, s 1.Nl n-12-16-13
294
Hollis Stacv, Sl,6" 1 74-76-75-69
Muffn Sc>ncr-Dvtn, I 1,641 70-71-76-70
Jo Ann Wuha"'· Sl,'41 73-71-71-72
Cvnll'lla flog J 1,641 73-71-76-74
Jal'MI cr•tter. s 1,641 71-75-70-71 tts
Lvnn Stronev. Sl,$24 78-71-76-70
Dile EQOl!ting, S1 .S24 7Ml ·76·7l
2H
Det>orah S..lnner, Sl,'39 75-73-71-70
Sue Ertl, 11,439 78-72•74-72
Rosie Jones, Sl,439 7S-7S-71-7S
Allct Miller, S 1,439 73-70-77-76
Sandra Hevnlt, Sl,439 70-73-75-71
2'7
Noreen Frltl, 11,363 1S-7S·13-14
Sandra Palmer, 11.363 73-75-7A-7S m
CarOle Cha rbonnr, s 1,304 74-7S-76-73
Clnav Hill, s 1,304 75-75-74-74
Marv Heitman, 5<1,304 76-73-75-74
Therese Hession. S1 ,304 72-76·75-7S
Allison Flnnev, s 1,304 11-n-11-11 m
SilVla Berlot.cc;ln, Sl,2S7 77-7'1-76-74
Catherine Panton, Sl,257 13-74-76-76
Beverlv Kless, s 1,257 74-74-73-71
lOO
Barb ThOmas, s 1,237 74-73-71-75
Kelhv Posllewelt, Sl,237 7S-7S-74-76
Lvnn Adams, 11.237 15-13-15-n
l02
Tern Luc:lllluru, sl,220 16-74-15-n
Laurie Rlnk.,.. s 1.220 n-11-1•-n
J06
Kvle O'Brien, S 1,209 79-70-79-71
307
Merv Dwvtr, Sl,202 n-73-t l-76
USFL
WESTERN CONFERENCE
P•clfk w L T Pct. PP'
LA EXIM't11 9 1 0 563 304
Arizona I I 0 soo 431
Denver 8 a 0 soo 319
Oakland 7 9 0 431 216
Cemr.t
v-Houston 11 s 0 .611 5S2
Michigan a • 0 .soo 346
Oi<lallOma 6 10 0 .. 37S 227
SanAnlon•o s 10 0 333 239
Cll•ca;o s 11 0 313 323
EASTERN CONFERENCE
A .. ntk
v-P1111<11oh1a IS 1 0 931 431
11-New Jrsv 12 4 0 .JSO )17
P1ttsburoh 3 12 0 200 24S
Washington 2 " 0 125 2•2
s.utMm
11-Brmn<;1hm 13 3 0 .113 506
x.: T lJI0&..8ay Ii' ·-7'0 UD
New Orleans a • 0 soo 314
Mtmonis 1 9 0 431 297
Jaeksorwi111! 4 12 0 250 2t1
11-cllnclll!d Plavott t>erltl
v-clincneo division !Ille
SUndaY'I Sc-
LA Express 17, OklallOma 10
Birmingham 42, WashlnQlon 21
New Jersev 31, New Ortean• '21
Houston 31, Chlcaoo 13
TodaY'l Game
San Antonio at Plllsburgh, (n)
Friday's Gamti
Oakland 111 LA Exorns
Washington at PhlladelOlll•
a~~ .. 1 New Orlons
Arlzoni""aTO!lavo-·-SaturdlY's Games
Denver al New Jef'stv
Blrmtnghem at ~Olli•
Tamoa Bev at P1ttsburoh
Mefldall. JUM 11
Oli.la llom1 al Michigan
S.ii Antonio at Houston
EXPf'ft$ 17, OvWiWI iv-
Sc-bv Qua"'"
,.A
319
274
379
30$
371
341
402 m
410
201
M
311
'"
279 ,.'IT -
355
313
436
LA E~s 10 1 0 0-17
~Mina 0 l 1 0-10
FntP~
LA-Gunn 77 ounl return IZene1t1u
1dck), 2 18
LA-FG 2endelH 4S, 14 •2
~ondPeried
LA-Maek 1 run lZendelas kick), 13 43
Ollla-FG Herrera J9, lS-00
Tlllrd P«lod
Ol<la-An<lerson S run (Herrera klclt.J,
S .. 59
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING-Los 4Meles. Grav IS-66,
Mack 13-'9, YounQ 4-10, Nelson 9-19.
Hersey 1-0. OlllallOma. E Anderson
11-42, Samote 3-9, Harris 1-8. R Johnson
2-1.
PASSING-Los AngtlH, YounQ
1-17-2-69, Seurer 0-1-0-0. Oldahome, R.
Johnson 22-3S-3-216.
RECEIVING-LO\ Angeles, Htrlev
2-33, Stierrod '?-18,Long 1-11 OklahOma,
E Anderson 9-51, A Wiiiiam• s-59,
Samole 3-13, Turner 2-61
MISSED FIELD GOALs.-None
A-22,017
Frenc:ft ()pefl
(at hml
MEN'S SINGLES FINAL
Ivan Lend! \Czechosl<>vakla ) Clef
John McEnroe lU S.), 3-6, 2-6. 6-4, 7-5,
1-S.
WOMEN'S DOU9LES P'INAL
Marline Navratilova -Pam Shriver
(U.S.) def Hana Mandllkova <Cracho-
S10vakla)·Claudl1 Kohde (W9'1 Gar-•
manvl. S-7. 6-3. 6-2
CAMEL LIGHTS
\.
.
It's a whole new world.
_Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .
. ,
9 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine
av. per cigarene by FTC method.
otvmPIC tenclnt
The u.s 0Wmo1c FenclOll foll .t .. m
alttr Sundn'1 Unlltd Slales FIOCloo
Association Ctwime>lonshtos. (The wom.n'.s loll 1 .. m wll be ~
IOdav and lhe mens' sabre end -teams wlM t>e Mlecitd laltr In the·
Wtelc)
Merl's ~el
Mlclwllf McCahev, Ntw York
Mark Smith, Atlanta
Peltr Lewison, New York
Greoorv Masst1tas, Ann Ar1>0<,
Mich
Mlc.llatl Marx, Portland, Qre ,
Box Inv
OL YMrtC TltlALS
(II ~~ Warth, Tex)
106 -Pau4 Gontales (Los Anoelesl
Cite. Jose Ros.rto (Jenn Cltv. N.J..l.
s-o
112 -Sltva McCrOl"v (Oelroll) dtc.
~tl COilins (La Porte, Ttll.), 3-2.
119 -RotMK1 sn1nnon <Edmonds,
Wasll.) Cite Jtssa B-vldel <Corous
Christi. Tex ), 5-0
12S -Andrew MirWI« (Mllw•ulile.
Ore ) Cltf Bernard Grn, dl\Quelfflca-
lkHl.
132 -Pernell Whllalltf' (Norfolk.
Va.) Cite Jot 8'411c (Marvsvllle,
Wasll.), 4-1
139 -Tim Rabon !Broussard. La.)
Cite John Meekins (New Yorlll, S-0.
147 -Martt er•na ·ci.c.. David
Gutierrez <San Olasiol. S--0
1S6 -Frank Tait (0.lroll) dee. ROl'I
Euell, S-0 165 -Vlroll Hill (Wiiiiston, N.0 .)
Cite. Michael Nunn (DaveoOOl"t, Iowa).
4-1
171 -Rlckv Wom.ck (Detroit) Cite.
Bennie HHrd (A11111.1s11, Ga.). ~O
201 -Henry Tiiiman (Los ~sl
dtc Mlchatl TvM>n (PnllaeltloNal, s-o.
Sui* heavvweloht -Tvretl Bi911$
dee. Craig Pavne (Livonia, Mich.I, S-0.
BoXlnv trilllt ""'"-The oalrtn<;1s tor lht Otvmolc Boll -oft
10 be held tither .1Ulv 6 Of" Ju4v 7 In Las
VtQH
Nolt 8ox -ott winners must lace
Olvmolc trial wtnoers (txceor tor woet'
lle4vvwe1Qht and 132 oound division). II
Trl•I Chemolon wins, he Is on lhe
Olvmolc ltam, II he 10sts lhtrt wll be
another llgnt to determine wllO mallts
the Olvmotc Item .
SVper llHVVWeltflt
Tvr~ BIOGS vs Cra lQ Pavne 1l1,._.
Ptmell Whltaktr vs Joe .Stlinc
106 f'wnds Jose Rosano vs Isreal Acosta,
winner lac:t1 PaUI Gonralft
~~~a'irna;o'iirice;--
wlnner laces Sltvt MCC.rorv
llf"-* Jesse Beoavlts, Floyd Favors or
Todd Hickman. wlnnef laces Robert
Shannon ·
115 POUftds
Bernard Grav vs tf,tdrlck Tavtor,
winner laces Andr-'Mlnllter
147 Peunds
David Gutlerrtr vs. Louis Howard,
winner tactsMark Breland
15' .-.unds
Ron Euell vs. Dennis Millon, winner.
laces Frank Tale
1'S~~
MICllHI Hunn ¥t W-. Boulware,
winner faces Vlr11U Hiii
171 "eunds
Btnnlt HHrd vs. Evander Holvfleld.
winner fact• Rick Womaek
201 "euftdl Michael Tvson vs. Olla n Aleunoer,
winner tacts Htnrv Tlllman
.... ~'
Weekend trarmctlons
... 8ASE9ALL
Amel"kan LM9UB
CLEVELAND INDIANS-Sloned
Corv 511Ydtf'. lnfleldef-
0 E TR OIT TIGER5-Purc;t1utd tht
contracl of Sid Mt>noe. oUcner. from
Ille San Oleoo Padr9'.
KANSAS CITY
ROY ALS-PurcheMtd Ille contract of
~· Jones, ollcller. OoUontd Danny
Jackson, Pitcher, lo Omaha of Ille
American A1soclatlon. Signed Darin
Grimes, shorlltoo, alld asslooed him to
Eull-of Ille NOl"ll'twHI Lell9Uf.
NatllMI leatW
ATLANTA BRAVES-Ral!'ltfaltd
Rldt Came>, Pitcher. ~tlooed Jeff
Dedmon. ollcller 10 Richmond of the
lntlf'naltonal Laaoue. socc•R
Maler lndNr 5eccw LM9U9 PHOENIX PRIDE-<ul Damlr
Suttvskl, torwarel
---
I
aµ .,
__ ..._ . .,...,...__ -......
Auto sales, housing and
employment-t·he
.. segments of our -economy
on which so much of
GlassHied depends---are
looking better than they
have in a long time.
We're feeling good about
that and the opportunity
it give$ us to offer you a
bigger, better-than-ever
classified section. If you
haven't read classified
lately, come enjoy a
browse through our
columns. You'll see why
we're feeling good about
classified.
642-5678
IAl Tl IEKG~"Oh
I MllTH t TUTH1ll,
WESTCllFf CHAPR
•17 £ 1711\ SI
Costa M•n
6•6·9371
PACIAC VIEW
ME~ALPAM
Cemetef"y • M0ttuary
Chapel • C'emalaty
JSOO Pacific View 0f'lote
Newport Beach
6'•·2700
McCORMICK MORTUARY
1795.Lag:Jna Canyon Rd
Leguna Be .. c~ Ca 926S 1
,9 ... 9, 15
c
rl
.... ,.
1---
l
MOC MOTIC£
\ MO~I CW TIIUal'ft'a aAL.9 ........ , .. ,..,..,UlfTHICW
UMITCOOll C
AMM PlNAHCIAl CWOA-
ATIOM
• ~ llPl)Oillted Tna unctw ~ lollowlng d.-olbed o.d ~
ttvat WILL l!LL AT PU I.IC AUC-
TION TO TH« t'OOH!ST 8100£A
'0A CASH ANDI OA THI! CASHIERS OR ClRTlflt!O
CHECKS SPECIFIED IN CIVI\,
COO! SECTION 2t24h (~ at
tN tllM "' ... In lllwNI ~ of t"9 ~lltd Stat•) 1111 rignt, title end
1nt.,..t con~ to and now Mid
by 11 undef "Id o..cs or Tn.at In l"9
property l'lereltlatt• deec:tlb.i TRUST OR ERNEST L
LINTHICUM, JUNE L LINTHICUM
BENEFICIARY· FIR.ST FED!.AAL
SAVINGS BANK OF CALIFORNIA
rec:MOed -t9"'1bet 7, 1"3 u
Instr No &3-3t2845 of Otnd&I ~
COf'dS In tN otllc. of the Recor~
of OratlQe County; Mid deed of t~t
delcrlbel the lollowlng P<°'*"Y
P.,eel 1 Un11 ..i in IN CltY ol
tMwpon Bueti, County or Ofange,
Stata ol Calilornla, u shown end deteflt>ed 1n the condominium plan
recOfded on February 21, 197t In
Book 1304 t. Pagea 15341 to 1599
1rn;lus1ve. ol olfielal recordt. In the olf1ct of County Rec0<del' or tald
Counly
Parcel 2 An unci.vtded one ~
ly·Mvenlh ( 1 '271h) 111191'"1. U a
lttnant 1n common in the IM lnter•1
•n an<J to the common ., .. ol Lots 4
,;11d 6 ol Tr.ct !18S8. In Ille City of
Ni>wport Beach. County of Ofanoe.
State of Coflfornta, as per map hied
1ri BOOk 436 Pages 1 10 1 1nc1u11ve,
m1sce11aneous maps. 1n the off~ o
tnP County Aecord41r lo said Cou
1~ •S ~uch term 1s defined In I an cle enlllled Def1ntt1on1" of t
De<-tara1100 ol Covenants Con-
d111005 and Ae.s111c11ons dncnbed
tr Sub,e<:t lo o.tow (the · Declat-
a11on I E•cepl lherelrom all oO. oO rights,
rn1nt1r&l'l. mineral righl1. natural ga 11ghls and other hycl1oeerbons by
whdtsoever name known that may
bf' w1th1n or undel' the pe1cel of i.sld
n"re1naoove described together w•th lhe perpelual 1igt1t ol drilling
m1n1ng axptor1ng ,.nd opwtllng
ml"t'efor and storing In and remov-
ing the same from Mid .. nd or an
other land. 1nclucllng the right t
wh1pstock or dl1ect1onally drlll and
mine from lands other than th ht<relnabove descrlti.<l, Oji or gu
wells lunnels encl 1hal11 Into,
through 01 across Ille aubaurfac:e o
lhe land heretnabove detc<lbed and to oouom soch whlpstooked or
directionally drilled ..its, tunnel
an<J sl\alts und8f and ~lh or
t>eyond Ille exttftOf hmtts tiler
And to re<Jrlll. retunnet. equip, maln-
1111n repalr.C!eepen and operate any
such wells or mines, without. hOw·
ever. the rfght to d11U. mine. st0<e,
11xplore and operate through t
surtace ot the upper 500 Itel ol tile
subsurface ol the land hefaln•bo
dascnbed as 1elef'Yed by deed re-
co•rted 1n booll 13S32 page 898, of
olt1 •al records Parcel 3 Easement as SUCfl ease-
ment is partlCUllrly Ml forth In the
ar11cte entitled ··easements" of the
deelara11on under the MCtion he"ad-
1ngs 1n such article enlllled as fol-
lows Rights and Outoes Utilities
Ut1hlles and Cable Television' .
Support Se111emen1 and En-
croachment Ingress Eg1eA, and
Racraet1ona1 AtghlS . and 'Ex·
ctusi~ Aest11c1eo Common Area
Easement
Parcel 4 Easements as wen
Hsements are p1rncu1ar1y set lorth
in the ar11cle entitled "Easements'
or the declarahon ol covenants.
condll1ons and rHtrtcttons In "sub-
JPCt to fthe Muter Dedra110n")
un<le< the sechon ht!adlng(s) 1n S4Jdl
arllcie 'entitled as loll~ Ownefs
R•ghls and Ovl~ Uhhlles and arore "T~on--·~ 1 •no
Set11emen1 and Encroachment ·
Community Facilities Easement"
arid Drainage over Community Fa-
c1ilttes
YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A
DEED OF TRUST DATED 8129183 UNLESS-YOU TAKE ACTION TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT
MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU
SHOULl>.CONTACT A LAWYER
11 St Tropez. Newport Be&ch,
CA 92662
(II a strael address or common
designation ol property IS shown
above no warranty is given u 10 111
c:omplf'teness or correctness)· Tile
bi>net1C1ary under said Deed ol
Trust t>y reason ol a breech Of de-
faull 1n tlM! 01>Ugat1on1 ~rad
I her et>y here1Qll;ua_...ax.8Qlied-11!'1df-'11elivered 10 the unOtfslgned a writ-
ten Declaration of Default and De-
mand for Sale. and wrlllen notice of
breac.h and ol elacllon to cause the
undersigned to sell said property to
satisfy said obttgatlOns. and 1ti.e-
at1er ttie undersigned c.uMCI Yid
nottce of breach and ot elecilOn to
bt' recorded March 20 1984 as 1ns1r No 84-115381 ol Official R&-
cords m lhe ollice of Ille Recorder
C>I Orange County.
Said sale will be made, but
w11tiout covenant or warrenty, ex·
IJ'f!SS or 1mphed. regarding title
po~session or encumbrances. lo
i:iay the rema1mng principal sum of
the notets) secured by tald deed of
1 rus1 w•th mle<est u tn said note
prov1<Jed advanc.t. If any. unc:ter
the terms ot said Deed of Tru1t.
ff't's cnarges and eKpen!lel of the
Trustee and ot the trusts created t>y
Said Deed OI Tru81
Mon<lay. July 2. 1984. at 2·30
11 m at the Chapman Aveooe en-
trance 10 the Civic Center Bu1ldlng.
JOO East Chapman AV9 Orange
CA
At the ttme ot the 1n1t1aJ pubh·
talion ol th11. not1C41, the total emuunt ol the unpaid t>alance of the
oohgauon sec:ureo by the atx>ve de-
sc"bed deed of 1ru11 and estimated
costs. e•pensea. and advances 11
$245 459 94 The total 1ndet>ted·
nfl!ss ~no an estimate on which Ille
Opt>ntng bid 11 computed may be
obtained by calling (7 14) 937--0966
or (2 t3) 627 4865 lhe day belOfe
the Mtle
Date June • t984 SEASIDE FINAN CIAL CORPOR-
ATION u sa10 Trustee,
By TD SERVICE COMPANY, agent
By Clncty SchoonoV9r, Aulatant
Sec1etary
One C1ly Blvd WMt Orange, CA
92668 !7 14} 83S-8288
PuOllaned Ofaoge Coast Oatly Piiot
Ju11fl! 11 18. 25. tll84
P\8.IC l«>TICf
FtCTITtOUI 9UaMll
NAMI ITATl•NT
The lollow1ng C*'IOnt a<e doing
bU11lnessu
Interval Chino 1n11 .. 1ore. Lid .
!8!1!12 MlllCArthUt' BMS .. Ste 440.
llVIM Ca 92715
Oevtd t< Lamb 19552 M.c:Arthur
Blvd Ste "40, Irvine, Ca 112715
John Min•. 18552 MKAl1hur
RIYd Ste "40. I~. Ca 112715
Mehrdad AUHkh 18552 MM:Art~ Glvd, $te ....0, lrvlM. Ca
!1"7t5
AH AH i. 1H52 MKAr1hur Blvd.
Ste •40. lrvlne. Ca 112715
Thtt buslNM It conducted "Y 8
mt tad pet tner9'llp
JOHN MINAR
f ~ ltlleme.'lt .,.. llled "'"" 1M
County ci.r• of <>reno-County on
Mey ~1 1984 P>M11
P111>11Sl'llCI Ofet1g9 Coat Oady
Plln1 May 28, ~ 4, 11, tt. tM4
2822--84
6
4·
2
•
5
6
7
8 . .
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
·y
c
L
s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
THE D IL PILOT
CLAS IFIED OFFICE HO
Telephone en fr~:
MondarFrid&}
8:00 .\.M.-5 :30 P.M.
Bu iness Counter:
Monda) -Friday
8:00 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
DEADl.INES
l>E \UU'\E
\lonfiu, "at. I l ::m u.m.
l'uc•-.rlu~ \11111 Lm p.m.
\\ t·cl n c·-.cta' 'I u , .... a::m p.11 ..
fhur-.cta' \\ f'fl. t::m p.m.
Frilfa, Thur ... l::UI p .111.
"lal unlil\ I ricta' :i:OO p.ru .
"uncfa, f' rt :Mm p .111.
CA ~CEL LATIO!\ &
CO RRECTIONS:
- ------ ---------
642-5678
ln1n ltr Salt 1 .... 1e1 lalt c .. ettrJ Lita In'" Uafaraltb~ IH1t1 VanratiW Atutefth, Oaf.
...,lt_,at......,.1al __ _...lM.......,I C.ta... Int C'Dtt . IUI reaatala lt?z:rt 1t1e• Hit Cetta ... 1714 • ________ ,,..,._~iiiiiii..__ .......... ,2c.,,,.tery Lota. L y Vt;; y II .• 23 .. ' E aide deluxe 28r 1~ ea llUI Hiii Ten. S.Ct. Pael& View. I ~ • • VERSAILLE k.lx 1br·=· iWf'lhM No peii te50 --
COLDW<?U
BAN~eR O
3BA 28A Big yard, be&Ulf.· NB • 1700/obo ~..()488 46r. 3Bi. CGti. 2 fpq, :-u;:.w· guard. e50 2548 Or1nge &42:2520
Mty IMldllCaf*I. A·2 lot. Pac;. View. 2 oemetery loll pool, JtlC. Owner amilou.. 9
GAEA T flntne. By Owner. SS00 M 080 846-8378 Open Houae Sun 1·4 -W-a-lk-lo-o.ach--:-.-.,,-ten~nl~I. Large 1 8t 1 Ba. E/54&-~811 O/t51--0l40 1U12 Santa Alberta pools. 3 8dr. 38•+ oen 382Vlctorl1btwnNewpof1 ...tr / -"ff..0079 s 1295 e.40-8208 egt & H a r b or • n e w
---Extra ntoa dUplex on eut a....... llSO Ex-...i... .. bd 2 • • · carpel/drapea/palnt. side 28r end 1000 aq ft __!!!!!i'll ec a., .. ~ rm ba S.•5 8514523 Olltl In& each + extra dble gar199 NmiG;&oni prime pool hme gourmet kit lu Jua Car. 2271 --·------..t 111,000 on• cu1-c:1-w. Owner will offloe bldg. S U00.000. gar/ahop kid/pet S825 barlil'O 2er Condo, pOOI. lll W
(Jorg$ous com« lot 0n finance. ~ Hort• Biii Grund)' Rltr 676-.9181 &3Ml90 Be. ti Alty lee greenbelt CfM to ahopt Walk to.SC Pluarplc. e/c,
cul-de-sac at, huge manl-zons RNlty &42-7404 { p .., IHI, ltac• 1240 S575. Agt 4H·4980 securlly, W/D, pvt club, cured yard with rm fOf act•t t•f w/tennlt ctt, pools, Jae, pool Light & airy decor In Fanlaatlc Ea•ttlde 3Br IPU ... ._. •.. 2Br. 18& duplex, gar, w/d laat1 Aaa taunat, gym, 1 Br. etu..-
loYety paper• a fabrics 3 h~~lek frptclo .,,,2 ca5r000gar, 10 It •-•• ...... ,100' K hkup ChHd O.K No pets 36( 1'/\& condo nw S.C. dlo. SeQO/mo. 87M0e7
BR, 1 1 co .... .., pet · .1• • · un • $575/mo 557-2392 '· Pc, gu •P· Devin RE 1M2·&3&a 12 unlls S725K . Plaza. patio, pool, ~. MESA PINES 2850 H.na
pllancea. A pleasure 10 00 -possess 0 1• unitt 1850K Harbor living In 2 8t ~II gar .• S700 mo. &44--0<M9 BEAUTIFUL Bech '475
own P L • m; 1 N Tom LH Bkr 6<42-1803 level w/ptush d•lgn gar OMP 2 1 Bdrm $575 144-IOIO 4Br, fixer $138,000. Low . . under $800 . 53f-8190 ADULT C LEX. atry PAVT patio pool apw
IPT llTI 1220 000
Enlertaln«'I def~I with
pool, spa. family room
and wet.bar. This 3 Br 2
Ba remodeled home Is e
real bargain AllUme lrg
loan.
*>wn. Agl 5-49-7739 Com"'ll Bldg '3•9.000, No Beat Rlty lee condo, lmmac. 2Sbr, TOP a1ee, qui.t, no pelt
Laguna with 4 resld 1'..;ba. pool. So. .A. 549-2447 llOLllEI UITSlll units Ocean vtew 11.w.: Muc:b desired 3 bdfm2 ba $575, 540-0374
3 Br 2 B• apa. Open House Assumable llnan. Owner S700's dwahr dbl gar Wntlliaattr Utllll VIEW Sun t-5. 234 Aochesler. 837-8030 toed 4 kid/pet ca111.,.....,....,...,..,. ____ 1 Brw/tol1,encltdgarege,
Greg Astle Agl 831--4838 539-6190 a..1 Riiy '" Pr .. 11Qrou1 3 Br 2 b• balcony. tndry. bhlnsvno
lnALITI
01111 Ltffl
LMUH llYOSI ~ g suntet vu exec w/prvt pool dbl gar/atlop pets. S750. 855-0685
Start great Investment 3Br 2,ltba Ml s19p, to kldt/peta yrd "95 info SPMC
p1ogram easily with 9•;. oc.an S2000 9e3-2788 539-6190 Best Rlty fee dowri and blended Newer 2 Bdr, w/w cpt
Interest rate of t 1% fixed Ouallty • Iese 2 Bdrm 4 C1d1alaia•1 drapes. DIW, w/garage,
BeautJlul 2 Bdrm, 2'~ ba
townnome w/11\yllght,
CM11t·t·lla1ion .. and .. 11rrc·c·tio11-. m u' Traditional patio. hlghty upgraded
Re I thru-out.
on balenee wtlen you tam time w/mom'• kltch UaJuaf1la.. 2410 no pe11. $520. 831-5553
buy. Super E'slde lo-d•d'• gar & price $475 2 BR Irvine condo. month· Pool/frplc, pyl petlo,
cat Ion o up 1 ex a I 539-6190 Besl Rlty lee to-month -sm. whUe Clshwahr, E'aldtl x-lge 18'
St•9,500. Agt 546-2831 lmat ~ pre>per4yremalnaonmar-$535 2Br sa10 557-2841 h'" nrndc· 011 -.am.-rlc·1trllan .. ~ ah ~Uu\ .-. a ty 1111Tllll 1WI Prt,trfy IHa,t•tlf 28r 6/Tr condo by atream ~;~.;.~Douglas Ward, Pvt 18r, lrplc, pool, patio, Plc-u-.t> al'>k for a c·anC't>lla ti on 631-7370 Wlllill Exper lnanagement co . Aelrlg. no pets. awlm, gar No pets 399 W. Bay.
numbrr "ht>n 1·a11c·c·llinf' ~our aJ. !~~~~~~~~ 111-Mll ter Wt.. tpeciallzes In Orange & tennis $825, 675-9229 Ttnlatattl S535 850-6352 TSLS:a~ ~;~603 2 to 4 Bdrm Valaraia•.. 2SZS Sharp 2 Bedroom garden ERROR : • lnimt 1044
Cht><'k ~ou r ad dail~ and report GORGEOUS.
error!! immediatt-1). The U.\11.' SUISETS
PILOT assumeb liabilit~ for l)w (in.t ts Whal you get In this 3
im·orred insertion onh. bdrm, 2'A ba Plan o 10
S800 -$1300 i•a•i llW Ir IDOi apl. no5dp!},50t. S500. TRl-PLEX Costa M .... 10 """ .. .,..,..,
yrs old, $205,000. ~ 28r 2'~Ba, d/w, w/d hk·
M5-M73 bef. •pm t~ up, gar, frplc, $850 Sm 1Br, au.ch gar, yd. 1
Why M1t-exe>1ore benefit• aisor H.B_se2-11ae1eeo-11e3 ~B.~ J;1~4ef<>5
of exchanging. Lois. ealty A,art11eat1 Faraid.. WEOFFERACHOICE
CLASSIFIED 642-5678 ILIOnOUISIC !;:~~~~.u: ----lllll!!!!~-----111111!1--•-•-Chee<ful, charm person-wmableloan '315,000
Doheny Rlty, 7$4.1712 Wanl a M6ectlon of great
Ltt1 fer It 14 .. ,86-11 72 1 llVing?Wecanon.t-.ny-
-
l_H_Hl __ lll_lil_e ___ llta9" ltr Salt llied, metk:UloUaly main-~
lalrled. 2 Bdrms, den, 2 ' ~ ltaeral 1001 Geaeral IOOZ ba1hs. •5' 1ot and 1u1t • alsor I
tlllp to the beach. ealt y l
lalMI thing from a aml apt 10 • llllfllES I 1. • 'lllNt •Br hM. 11 lootllng In CM Lot tor ule ~onad A· 1 .... .... NB HB think of UI first f()(
(agrlcuttural), 6300 aq ft 3860 Mlehel~'~rtv• BOPLex . 3Br. 28a that c~ of Ideal 11v1ng
Liii iil.i Ulllij l ()UI' Ii ~fl
Opn 1-5 101 Via Lido sOud Realtcn,675-606<> 786-1172
localed off Mesa °' be-$1000/mo. Starte Sept. TSL MGMT 642-1803
tween Santa Ana & lrvlne lrvlne Call eves (818)446-5788 NB REALTY 875-1&42
•Btvll ~ .. s'!3,000 °' $60.000 WOODBRIDGE 2br 2b• , But. ltacL 7 .. .... " Condo for lse on grnbelt bartla.... 1r11Ue4 • •
, ______ _
Prestigious Bayfront Villa, 6Br. 7'h aa. ·--,.-E-S_TI_l_ll_l_I_
pool. Jg boat docks, $4,850.000. l&YOIEIT
w/cerport. Xlnt toe nr lllM 2 BR E\ Ba Condo, Traditional perll. twy, pool, tennle, Ptaia1ala 2107 Jae/pool. clubhouse, etc $735. days 880-8900 carport S595. + dep.
2 H YJa l9'_tt1 _ "'1-1
Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace,
beam ceilings. Xlnt financing. $420,000.
3860 Michelson Drive Realty e119'1 831-830'4 BaohelOf' 1 block to bMctl, (213)59&-1498 In Newport Arr elegant lrvlne 3 bloctts from downtown
home secluded In one of -----,:-----631-7370 Woodbridge Park Vlela S385mo Incl ut. 631-2•9• 2 BR, 2 Ba, encl.gar, lfldr Newport's flneat neigh-Houae for Sale, lr11lne 2Bt 2ba condo, avan ---• rm, l600. mo. Ro pet•.
bortloods Large oomef' area. 4br 21hba, pool, O f C lmmed $800. 752-2209 A,art•tal1, . 8• 1-~71
lot with circular driveway. 1acunl. tennis courts al 1 tlaly L It L 2.. ---------
l&YstR •m IAYJlllT OMll
1 B 0 • ~ 1525 !1aa IC• " "--aa ••I •u 2?U •S.75/up. 1 Br. turn. Eacellent f1oof plan In-ava table. Y wner "" ~... pool 18992 Florld
eludes muter aulte with $135.000 786-9048 150.600~2661 lot 1973 2 rm, den, 1'1t Ba. fplc 1 Bdrm u..,_ rear. st....... 842-2~:·. 8•2-3172 a.
f I di I & Close 10 beach & town ,.,.._.. v•• Jetty & Bay view. newly decorated Ma1
Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba. 40' pallo. $695,000.
alrlum. orma n ng l!!prt ltacla lOH W Highland AYe. San AYall Jul" 1. $850/mo frig, deck. no pals, S876. family room l11an Welts _ Bernardino Remodeled ' S« 7809
buill home tor only 11200 PEl•Om commerc111 bldg •97-35281673-3696 --· -------
$585-$785/mo. 2 & 3
Bdrm. encl. gar.
wshr/dryr hookup, yrd,
patio Newport Beach
Realty Dys &41-1803.J.
eves gso-461•
llYllE THUCI $285,000. 6<46--7171 Wl1h part of monthly lease 71•·889-33 19 2 Br t'n Ba ASH 11lew 2 Bdrm, 1 ba. pool, decil,
gOlng toward the down -1 l ---S 1o00/mo 8S 1-892°8 bltns.2 peraont, no pet•
11H let ... aTerraoe "91-J
Panoramic bay & ocean view. 4 Br. 4 Ba.
patio, pool home. Fee price $775,000
THE REAL
ESTATERS
eata 1 Lse S715 mo 850-0473 pyml when you lease op----------BEAUTIFUL 3b1 2'.ltba. ---------tlon this 3 bdrm. 2'h balh • 10" of ext1as & 11lew •08'.lt Acacia 3BR 2ba
residence wllh m i ni a..... Faraula•• $1400/mo 6<43-2289att 5 Upstairs unit, quiet area Near beadl, 2Br. 1'h ba
STE'S To ••19 ocean vtewf Only a few can 673_7942 Twnhse. 8U1n1, frptc, encl
.,. block• to lhe beach! New 3 story, Alla V1s1a _g~r w/-aprv~ ~-$151,110 759-1501 area 3 68..1-.Ba. GMen Roomy·Oeklll'9 t 9r?1tl 1695-Call 536-0921
KlllllCf'IE ifiiiifillT·-Beach h0me 00 9'atb0a ~=~=~~~=lt!~:!~j"li!!!an-z~~!!ml! -~refo0 2700 Sq ft w/Mstr 11Ultedp~ 21cat -N-ew--con-d'""o.---,t0f-_,--1or-1-A--an & J etty Vl·ews. man·ne room, 4 Br, Penlnsuta.onlyonebtoctt eautl ully 1 .mo. pit sec ga1age. sun ec . ncl. U f n f ..-al ......... t/alr
'-A'l: lurnla .. ed w/custom 499-5563 Of 921-2508 washet/drye<. $1000/lae n ur · or.._. r ,,... • 3 Ba 3700 f k.i $ 10 ocean. CAiie, clean and " d .. -... m•-0 ,.~ts • ...._ , sq. t., car par ·ng. 1,285,000. airy 2 bedroom. 2 car at· deco1 Yeara lse com-L1 IH Billi 2250 Agent 64•-7211 c~;;d~entr~ 'tpk,;g"."'1
·--.. •Air •aYflllT ~~~1~arage Call now S1~~g~:!i~. Jcud1~w~1i 3 l . 2 Ba, bltlns. fplc. 2 C11ta Ntta 2724 block from shoppl013 and
_, .. _ ,..~ -Banke< 6•4-9060 a.sk for car gar. gardener Cou--·1!'!B!'"r'"!1•ea-'lSll"!'l7'51~mo--health care faclllttes
2Br,2Badown,2boatSJ)IK'eS.$1,350,000.y: ;·• 2~~.~!nnbleau8 .. a·r~ Aefsrequlred.6<42-0138 Newly redecoreled QUIET2BEOROOM
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up, If llll~llllf~'l~"·~6~~.i-11• Pal or Hme· 786-9293 pies, no pets. $750/mo 28t 1·~~ $600/mo The Delma Corp 842-7724
----~-_i!_ ""'""''""' .,......... " ""' IHSH lahraish' llli l Vi j 2••7 dshwst, ale, gas/wtr pd 1'Abath. S625/mo Walk to .. ew 4'~ Bdrm. 5 Ba. 2 ltatral 2202 II H at I ..., bale, carport. pool beacil 960-8856
WUTll10Al Y lrptc, •700 sq ft Priced **PRIME Al\EA** GOf'geous la Mancha Hr elevator. 979-1911 all
For 2 Bdrm 2 Ba mobile be Io w mark• I at S525 bltn appls gar lrlcd Condo. w/d, frig, dbl gar. 11AM ·CASA GRANAD.4 SUWlll
! ·I I R" "', d • D",. ~-R 6 7 ~ 6 I ~. 1 home on 16'4x 100 fenced S•98,000. Open House vrd 4 the klda/pelt 1850 Agt •96-5980 1 Br, 1 Ba. pool. gar VIWIE
.......... hll11•
11·~v. flnancing, 4 Br. 2
ba, l1g yard. Ownr to
carry 2nd, 10% down s 117,000 5'48-07•2
10111, 101111
IUILYIOIE
Sharp • Bdrm, 2 bath
Costa Mesa home In
move In condl11on Large
CO<ner 101 lor possible RV access Includes wet bar
& covered patio See this
"Mo1e for Your Money"
home al only $115,9501 646--7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS -· (') . :I --I» ::;-~ -·
::;; "' • (D' en CD Q. 't> <» I» :J Q. ->C < en ~ -· ~~ • c;;· :::J -·o 'a :::J -<O '3
<O' CD J
:J ::s -0 .., o· • ~ en ..,
(0
~ -· 0 < :J I» CD CJ' ii •
101 Full awnlngs, aJ1 con-Sun/Mon 840-6015 John ,
dir d " t 539-8190 8el1 Rlty tee 1.....,.rl ltac• 2269 $525/mo 137 Lexington
H •-ione · ea pump, BIG CANYON :..:.!: C.M 559-093g Linda Yll --II caiport. fruit tiees. 5mi 21 Rue Foun1alnebleau HOUSES-PL EXES-LOW llll I lmlL1 Call after Sunday
N-1 & 2 Bdrm luxury
apts In 1• plans. 1 Bdrm,
2 Bdrm and TownhOmel
+ pools. tennis, waf•·
falls. pooda. Gu paid.
From San Diego Frwy
drlYe North on e.ach to
.w •irw lo mator ahopplng. RENT! A .. HB CM NB "" s81 500 Call .. 11ce $498.000 Lowest priced r • · Chectc this MOUrlly poor Magnificent View estate McCaltum " Veraalllel, ocean/bay YU, Call 543-2498 lee hme w/opl 10 buy ssoo·s. 1Br & 2& Apt pool, leun-
custom 5 Br .. family rm & 4 8t 5 Ba. Oen, 2 tr pie, E.alde Colla Mesa 2 Br * *llM 1IO* * gz~:rom a.24/mo
5 Bath, new pool, spa, on game rm. Open Sun by unit w/gar & yatd S850. Ideal 2 ltry 3 Bl' 3 be time ~ acte -•11-1'9fufblshed ----~z\. 720-9~00 __ lmmed move In, trade or lll•Mr~ Wlltef bf~ frplc dbl gar prime 1 BR. refflg, range/ovn. Mcfaddeft111ltt-Weeron "3~. mo. $300 sec. McFadden lo S..wlnd 1ea1e opt1on ott. S975.ooo 1111 LIT IOJ111' ltttah ar .. St too s3g--e190
for xlnt financing. R & H ~==~~~=~with good 3 BR home. "MUIUl.n llSTILnFEE S.e--0341 art. 1:30 p.m. Village. (71 •)893-5198
lnYeSlments 751-5989 WllllAllll $199,500. PllPlllUElm 2BR ,...; ba. tower duplex.
Delightful 3 Bdrm In popu-llWNIT IOI CHM yMrly or summer, 30 tt
1275/mo loci utll, bachelOf Walk 10 beach. Bech,
unit 1br w/pvt entr. kite. orptaldrp, 1tove, frig.
ba. 810 Towne. C M. S•OO/mo, ulllt Incl. UT'SlllEllUL
1241,IOO
Owner may exchange 3 Br
2Ba, !amity room Harbor
View Homes home for
unlls in Orange County.
Great family area 10 ll11e
tn Of' tea941 Assumable
loan of S 195,000 at
10'1'.ARM ASlc lor Bettina
Laughlin
lar area of Irvine Highly 3BR 3ba t 12•.750 114/11M111 boet dock avail 819
~.'~al alr,3caly~~~al ~t ltJ lcOar• lltr. CtNal ••l •ar UU 223-7159. Sat/Sun 714 ....... ,,.... """" ••• 1121 850-6189 2 Bdrm, 1 be Eattatde, xtra big 1 Bl'_ a.851 H ..
Ing, 3 patios, parquet -· 2 Bdrm + den, 11h Ba. R-11---------fresh & clean. No pet.a. washer/dry! No lull Call
f1001 and It has been FRONT ROW NWPl BAY cottage, 'h blk to ooean, 2Br 2ba condo. 2 car gar, 269-C E. 18th Piece. 5•3-2•98 IH
beautifully maintained. 3 BR 2 ,..; Ba lge 2 car garage $1200/mo n58r50Hoao1 ~~·53N2~ pets S500/mo. 6<44-0•52 I rt ltacL 2719 Priced rlghl at $182,500 .. ~.c~o. Iott of tile. lease. Agt 6«-7211 mo._,,-mF. • 751-3191 ........ 1 2Br, 1'~ Ba, townhou S2•9,000 8-4•·7007 OLD CdM LEASE. 2BR 3000 aq It WestcilH hm $535/mo. No pets. 681 S , exdutlve Newport sp SELECT M "'-'I S239K f H v 2ba condo, pool, IP•· •Br. •t>a. pool/apa, den. Vletorla 6<42-7404 Tower condo, deluxe 28r ust -" · $1250 mo. A11all 711184 tam rm . dine rm Triple 2ba on bay w/ooeMi vi.. PROPERTIES Homes. C.rmel mdl Top 675-6000 gar $2000/mo 786-0873 28r. 1 Ba No pel & run sec. Laue°'
6'45-7655 after 5pm 536-•837
tocatlon. 851-8787 $550/mo. 2082 Wallace, mo-lo-mo 873-3504 111111 ELLIS Ctroaa ••I ••r IOZ ICUIFllO 1441000 Olde CdM Cape Cod 28t • Br. 3 Ba, neat beach, C.M . 559-0939 Linda. -------
1 ..... ·1020 1111 IOWI II HA--/Duplev. n..a.. 'dal"' 2Ba. trptc lrg backyrd, 2 lennlt/pool. No pelt, Call after Sun 9-5 1 BR 1 ba Deluxe amen.
1
-"''"" ... ...,.,.... ,, car g.,.0., wshr/dryr, Older prel'd. $1200/mo Beaut rec rm. evall. fOf' .EW"•TOlll·NOL Large• BR, own•'• unit. 2"'6.5109Sea9hore.ownr 11150. M0-7782 850-81•5167~886 2BR apl. Garage, Ind pvt pertlee, otymplc a12;e n Approx. 1800 '""/tt + a /agl 545-2847 6<45-9721 hkup, $&00/mo 111/laat + ...,.,... wt & ....-..._,,..,t rm -... C t Nna BIG CANYON: LG 2Br, __,1 ... "" •~"' ..... 80 ..,......., WV'f"-vv • Owner Is 11ery motivated to 1BR Income unll Will Super a harp custom 11 I 2Ba "DoYef" S t65o/mo ...., .....,., ,....,..... encl pncg gar, MCUr1ty &
Mii and wUI conlider ex-conslde< a trade -wtlat twnhome. 2Br 2ba, den, 11206/mo, 3 Br. 2114 ba hM OwiBrk 759-0708 2 Bl' Eutalde Duplex, YU of Hbr Cati now, avlltl.
ct1a013e '°'home In Long do you have? Musi be overl'g Big Canyon golf w/backyard, w/d hkup. carpet drapea paint, AL June 15 213/278--0211
Beach area A really sold Bruce Blomgren, courM. A.cl to $299,000 185 Mesa Drive ILIFFI mo... UTILS PO. Child & pet ok. atk IOf Valerie
pleasan2t. 101ally• coordl· Bkr 831-67 73 w1term1 By owner Tll 11111' 142-1101 3 Br + den, 3 Ba. Poot $695/mo 780-8882 '300/mo, bllCh unit 8Cfoa
nated bdrm 9 den + Open Sat t-5 at 3• Sea Min vi... lg gar. Bit-Int I .. _.. OOd 1~ ... 1on lamlly rm. residence. Ap-2 FOi 1 Island (FOf'd & Jamboree) 1 Br E.alde C.M . Ind. re-Beamed ~I. wallpaper 2BR. walk In ct0Mt1. rom """• g ..,...,
pealing e11t9fior & IO• 2 Beautlfully highly up-662-1673 grlg & tlove. RV area. Pvt patio, frplo, St.WO baths + pool. Townhou Must .... 1218 Balbe>e
pool & decll a1ea Easy to graded 3 bdrm 2 ba units. --------S525 759-0268 (8 t8)798-950• •zte. lmmed. octupancy. TIL 11111' 142· 1111
see $239,500 lnoludes Too many amenities to TllE IHI 1~'4 3 Br 1 Ba ended nar---. H .. RBOR VIEW 3 br/2 ba, S Simo, 851-0•2• $750/mo. 28t i ~duplex Ille land fist Buy 1 and get 1 free L•a11 • --" •~001 1 B 1B s .... big pallo. crpta, drttP91, tam rm, nu pnt/drpt, ... mo. r a. m lowe< unit. 2 car end ger.
W.IUIWll A real oppo<tunlly only Best valua In Harbor fncd Xlnt area & lhatp Qrdnr $1295 64•·'4205 cottage. 011 road, quiet. blk to t>Mch. 202 David.
S385·000 Open Sun 2-5• RI d g • A 11 um ab I• S680 + MC No pett --2072 Newport Blvd. TIL MIT M2· 1tl1 '•st 1141114 II 759-9•91 tor Info Agl $165,000 loan. Alma.I 5'49-5442, 770-5629 H V Homes SomerMt mc11. TIL MIT 142-1111 y,--ua...
11111
_ ._......__
2 Units lhal Include 3 bdrm 30•118 11 lot zoned R2, 2.000 tq ft of comfort and 5 Bdrm. I mm a c ,._, ..... -
Cape Cod home with re-10,. 1 Ba axlsllng hM k.lxury In lhll ldaal lo-3 Br 28& widen, 2 car gar. S 1 7 5 o I mo . A g t 1 S575/mo. 2 Br 2 Ba. frptc. SJOO _ S 1100
modeled kitchen, lire-Prin only s 182.500 callon One Y"I home &1850wa'mt~· 'c°f:ud~!~ 673-7781, 760-1397 enc1 .. _P1 fg1~ !~bt~°""'· nea 63t-•980 Agent place. hardwood lloors 3 768_9318 warranty proveded. .. •rv ............... year old rental unll hat 2 J59-t501 Drive by 820 Knowell LUil ILIFF 10 Center St. Cozy 2Br tba, trplc, bMm
bdrms .. 2 patios 4 car lhen can 751-~16 • Bdrm, 3 ba Condo. Pvt TSL lllT 141-1111 ~Inga. a-r. NWpt Hghta.
garage. Both unl11 fvrri & * * 38t 2ea W•t CM QOOd pallo Aaoc. pool. Walk No peta. S875. &45-1182
rented Reduced 10 ASSUME 6(J/ .,. ... tit & lut re(iutred to a hopping S 1250 S850/mo, loY'9ly 2 Br 2 DUPLEX Nwpt laland
S365,000 631-1400 IO No pett. 1750,mo loci p/mo Avail. approx townhouH, Ir pie, all w/docit .,_ 2 bf, H~ ba.
WATt H~HO~T
HOMI !) '-·
REAL ESTATE
' 111·1400
....... 7 8/15 M•-0350 blllna. Oya 8•2-1803, ._ This t>eautlfvl DupleK won garU11Jner. IM&-62• ~ &42~221 $975. mo/'/f'ty. 850-2145
archltectural award, only $400'• 2 8t flat w/mod LOVELY 3 BR, 2 be. lge Tll _., or (213)476-1124
3 yrs 01d, with most apja or a Br 2 t>a '600'1 :::11yn':"'y:,'~blt!:· Penlnluta Pl. 1ar • .,.uo.
tab11lou1 financing In -•-• ... •-" clean & rte<ly 4 t1m sc•:r.' Ing , ,3 .. 01 0• a.75/mo, 2 Br, 1 be apt. "440/mo, ytty. Weter pd • y"rs.Call now for furthef ' • ...,....,. ....-53M 190 8"t Rlty fM · ~ m Upper unit, CIOM to all, Mlcl(le ~111
Information. Broker 102 tt ~' tMkwood lnol • gardening & IP• lndry rm. 2272 M •---&•5·8202 anytime ketcl't •loffahafe fftOOl'>o BIMI)' yrd ~ kid/pet 3 Br mailnlenance. TIL ~ '42· llll ..... * * Ing Ltw lfloet ~ AW Chef"• bl1n. cttoa Eatt· W&TllJIMT ..U iioiioioii~-.... ~---..-mlltloNI M-Yectrt tide locale $700'• I ---1111..._ lYllllLIMW 2 raoms. kltdlen Pft'i., u_, 539-ftto Beet Alty,.. ·---• .... lhU•1· $250/mo ... Aefa. '::~=' S~\l4llA-~t~s· ::::
-...,cu••~-----
••---·°' .... ,_ .... ~ _.,, '-
low .. ,., ... ·---_.
v114'MWIV' Selu5'4M192 1er. trig, renge, ~. 631·11MCo.i.Mw
2 homes on 1 cornet lot weee 1.11-.,, Pool hOme 99/mo. W/C OCEANFRONT location· pOOI, carport No "'8· E'ltde C.M. 2&1\ I...,. ..... S19k ll'ICOfM eduoed • -.... ~ pet• 'enced y.,.d no 48A. A«!t Yf!Y. 1120 w. M9Slmo .,., , .... v...-
s239tl 71M ... ·7'..2 ..... IO Welte to lhopt, beeetl. Bal. lutl.IM3-24M,.. • Oc:ffnfront. 1120 w. 931w.11th St ~aa ltlea. u.. of kf1CNrt. eco · .. ..-....., pier, ..,.~,...,, 38t/2bl Octtnfl'ont. 8n.4743 eao-eo11
-.211 B1t1s.-ms ~.=.2:::t1;:~..t.tcto w. .. -MY~;.,~'~=
llftll _.. fencd4kldp9'~M1to S.SSOO A~ MOOG; l/17,N25.:1547234 CdM,lt'lrtGetOf•71wa ~~:k:m~i~!'/ 8: 1M Fuque 36J ;ia;I BM• ""Y,.. AoU 1•• E .. tald• 5 er, 1 le l7Ma6/Jtmn~'113
apacloua remodelad Ne'wPOO~ ~ P!1!: Sharl) ti~ 28' 1a. Plltatlml11LDll MIS/mo ~'7 Edfln.
1
Aoon..1 ·"",..~~
Cape Cod chtnnet 1n .,, S3$00 v...... "'" pr-enct.d 911' CtPt• & df9'*' 13500/mo a.utlfut ~ 131· 1765 Ill 1-. -.. ••~t location A rere '37 ·'°° 131-4M' °' fncd pello w/d rm no tom~ Wllnd etectric llOI. .,.,_2MO
oH•r.i•• 1315,000 s.. 495-1337 f:!•· 1MOtno + MC ~--3 adfma. QOUnMt UITl9I • to Nwpl 11n,
et 611 er~a. .,_;t brlnd ,,.., l4 44 ut• iMMd ~d'llCI<. llehtn. f«mll dining l1al I.... frg N!Mlr ...... -./pvt
Catt rcw CS.tall• toeded w/upgl'9d.. In 541.-~2. 11 room, df", famlly room, 2 1 Bdtm loft, COUftllry M1• bith 1310illft0. M~a 144-1111 adult pk, CM. ta7,too. O.u t DB 1paa, 11\d beautiful tint. NOp.ta.1IOl19t8t. 'r::"."l'"'~~--mnn
28r 1be pet OK 117.900 NdkOilf vteW. Pitti.llY UH/mo ....... M2 °' r.Jn .... ll fl
ltAI t r ~ t,
A'i'>Ul 11\l f C,
W•d Mublle HOINll Vl9W am: I& tr;;) furnlthed OI unfuinWled. 645<4SQ
901.....0 Of &U-110t 1700 Wahf/Dfyr, fng, 0 0" n. ~ G 0dItia11. oar. Aot .. ~ 6444200 ..... ..,,La.
~ 1i1iQ1 ~. er1C1 f<.-p lM hofne Ina bum· .-.-... .............. ...., .... -.., OOfdl lri beli!Of\lt I-Stet 1nO IPll wlnt•. Fiii your '-II: Mar.nab Irv in~ IMM •f'M lrvN Only flr"°'Ood ...CS by IOOI&· SH.100. 0111 .... ,y Ing I" Cllttllled. 1aA11UTIMlwtn11 ........... •1 GttNm. AGt 561.auo M2 ... 7e ~~~~~~--~..1.-~~~~-L..:..:.:.:;;;;;;;..::=..:..;:...;;:;:;;:.;;.;:~=...;::.:.=:;.::.::=::::...::~:__c==========.-.u ~--"===~~ ..... ~::;;;;==;::=======::J.r..=-=======-===~-;....;.....;.;;.;;;.,;.....;,;,...;:.::~.
A I ,_
---
-~~
~Schools I -1nstr11etions
. 642-4321
Lois ext. 309
Pacific
Travel
School
610 £. 11ttl "-· S.ara Ana,
Ca. 91701
ORANGE COUN'fY"S ONLY PlflVATE
ACCREDITED RAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
MOANIHG. AFTEAftOON. EVENING CLASSES
Call (714) 543-9495 ................... .--...... -.
OPHTHALMOLOGY ASSISTANT
TRANNG
I
(Direct Patient Care)
1 yr. training for
certificate
.18-hrs per week paid
Training in
Huntirigton Beach
CALL .. CtDL
848-1215
..
llr
PART TllE
Motor
ewport att•~ t.hft.e
houn per day. Earn appro .
S600 per month. CaU 11 :-00
:-00 PM. k f r Brutt
I
CrRCULATlON DEPT.
642-4321 OOE
~I
ORA 1GE COAST
DAILY PILOT
330 West Bay Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
·----
..
llM ... , Wu... SIM l!j Wu!!f 119 Ctt1 I lllliellUMu 1111 Caa~1 IOH hltil1 l!pr! .. .....,.._=--..-...._.......,.,;;i:i~iii;ii;i;;i]iiJl;~..;; ... c;;;.,.--rPTliiiiilO-N•IS-T.....,-. ._.,_, 11Ul lB .... lllllL an Dtk.1111 WattrOtlO. peddto ift &b()Y;! a;Aii, lka', KtaU --~ ..... ll5'WIU" ~ ••••L ltlttena. 4 wtlt. 1 -w ~·"' I ...... Actun .. bOOt $576 646.:8712 IWt -----------1 ...... -.r SECAETAAY Fron,.. llO«nll .,,.,. nK """*' "" *"-~· ... , HV ~ --Good cond P•cUiglng ptMtt end .,,. for mtg rtP ltm"' IN .. 2 Gtn'lofccMIM Newport "*"lnCM...,... fOt 946-0788 81ka, ooaa 1260. I • l HONDA cvcc • .....,... euo ~I
..,._.t ..... d..,,.ts c M MM ~ ... .-. FfT ANllM "-••·A""'•"o~•'""" 'ntoAA,1.,_..1 ..... 1 _ .... HIM"''"YAHl!lt fP41dall100 241-8302 Cl t> 1ran1,ctt9'l.S5UK> Cai\m..,•~t•cwtr
.....-.. """' .... 1'" •• .,.,,,_. ..,.. --._ • .... ""'....,., -· "'"'" • ·11 Puch moped, oao es1 .. uee 3 &o 4 montha. Oood mtg co lt IOOkll'IO for ~14 • ten1. 91uepolnllwtlll• ~. aOlid wood. muat $l00lob0 751·•75J • tlZ Cf~it rttt 131.,049 oe<Wlo to Wl>fk c;[Qtely Recep ti onl u . up. SECRETARY nybrld, Sholllpapen ttl $95. Elec lawn mower .---.~...;.;.;~..;;...,-....;... __
with woman .,pervit!Or, prtltrrtd fatnlfy Fltnea 1400·1000/mo 1175-275, 55~5045 18" $415 558·1448 t ttJCJdH/ ....., ......... ..__.._ __
Ll•a1 Slllt'•Y e11swa1 'd ' tn••J*'d. Cent• c'M 65t~o1 Nan firm hu opening'°' ''tiMM• oou ... ~2 !1n .. A ...... & ··Id~ kMttlt Mii -an lmmtd QPtn1ng" <*! l0t • fast p~td ..erttarl•l 11 ...... .. ...,... ,..
N pottlKoll Center. 3 intem.w M5-0413 Hllml•IT poeitlon, 1& ~. ht'lllltlMMIM Ing gl d00t. atow 13 Yamaha 256 @ndUlo
ra •~peio In ramlly law l•-------•I Full time, t-SPM lhofthand/apd wtltlng hoOd. goo<I value S260 XII oond Sl195 OBO 1eq .,...... ,,.gollable PAINT RS WANTED The .... 1 Estatera Boou •'1 1 yr tmPIOV· Mary 380-8724 832·7308
Good emplol• benefit• exper. Own Ira,,.,,. Call T•ry 546-n 13 m. n t. c.' I DI• n. PERSiAN Kin ENS. CFA, LUMBER, various-Ilk••: MOPEO PEUGEOTTc>Oi<i
Cati 851912 4 1°' lntw• Iv mag 751-9103 Oln.rT 762-118? Amtfican E~rdt tllvw, Mai. & Fema\6, gdcond,,CoppcrTublng, grNt. runs better $250
'M'N. P&lllHlTTOUIT 1:oalfflOI lllUT&lf ~~o1"1::: '200.&uP s.a.1532 85',640-1ee 873..0090 A~~~~~=~· UI UlllUI NtowpM e.ect'I Reel &-&-10 Hrt p-.wk. Typing. It "°'Piii 5-Cerl*lllon Dita Ill MAGIC ISlANO Gold TICO AUTO BOOY· Vapa I ltUIU'I
67M408 FIT PIT ...... t haV9 valid tat• firm "-an lmmed ~kdttP01 R6plyp 0 ~. 1P~. ""o1 "" llfge'1 alld tab gaa;n Wili l*90n Chert•~ Membe1:h1p & tcootera· color match, SOUTH
.,,_ "' SQ V'ol iJVU moll SUCIOl$sful tmllfl cat• wno Wll ' glVtn dOQ Sac $7....., 855-32..... body & paint 8'42-0893
Ufenarlls/lwla lltfr :=.I=~ ~n e:~ae~~~ ~:rp. Coste M .... Ca. e2e2e . or91nlutions In lhe wworld Man<Sy at B•lbOa Bay NEIMA~ Bar Scene, Tralltra cou1n
FIT PIT Hrs 1'o. SS 50-Century Parking Inc.. bHut olc, PIHHnt MCrttary Slllctlll ~I Wiil llaYt Club, 1~ yre -00 pleue TOOTS SHORE's/artlat "t I024
$4.50 hr Starling lmmed New Anaheim Hilton & phOM voice. typing (45 ltellee,.r t 2 yws tlil)lfllnet WOfk· contact Joe 875-1588 proof retail $7100 THYIJ lllZI
C.11 Mary 842-9980. Or-Tower& 777 Convention w p m ) • " 0 0 d 1119 111 a GillQe l.tbOt•t«y LAG PUPPIES. blld(, M/F OFFER Eves 675-8837 '72 trave1 tr81W t6'''· ilpa un WIU •T
angeCoeltYMCAEOE way.Anah61m •P•lllgrammar, flllng, WM4PNOtlltr 1111ttolOgytnWOM111\1 AKC. papera, thot1, Stanley dhc ~ dr opnr 8, good condition UllmllLI
ANKINGIS 4 l Part Time casNer/phonet. =~ll~tlo~al~ ~:.h:d bee .... ,.,..., :::i~: =SIWI 7wkl, 674-1158 YOAJ dlauMmble. S100 $3,000/obO &42-5082 VolutMSele:S. SeMoe
fllllll Mon-W6d ~ high cli.tit contaict aklUa re-ltOlltfltlllt 1115pecl1011 Olhtl phy$~ SO CALIF DOG TRAINING 497·600~ or 875-1558 A1t• Stnlc11/ And LMSinQ 8R19l'OL AT EDINQg Full.rton S & L has fashlun women• store, quired Hra 1·5 09pen. 1 measu11men1 e11111ta11on In hom6 obedlanc. train-Used hi pll6 (65 oi) yellow Parts tOlS 18711 S..Ch.Blvd.
lmrned openings tor full 720-0255 dat>lllty a must: S5 per •ir .. ~ EaJ::~k~ ... ienca 111 plut u...... 1~ Real. rates. 16% Off carpet. S3.00/per yd UR Pinto runabOUi d00<s Huntington Beach IN 8AN'tA ABA t:~Yr::~e atM~~~~~ Part-Time ~rmanent hour to star1 w/revlew In staffing of a new office. :';i-:;1~11dS:~lldof th monthl 963-3388 --758-0706 gd $150 Tom 548-8810 (714) 142-2000 M8·0110
30 wpm Call 871-4244 DllllllS 3 and 6 mot Loe at 5031 Salary commensurate bluepllnts is required AA Pttt 9935 tl.tl MPAlllLY Bl.NCI '&3" Birch· Ste C, by Harbor w 1th ••per 1 enc:• oegiee Pl•ltfrld Yacht Club Membership Snap-On top boK. used f1111il . ..
for appotntment E 0 E lflfHMIS Court House off J.m-833_9870 81u1;;kt Macaw. gent' & '~ price S 1000 total, Incl a S375. 968.-6505 ·'9 8~8 5 SPd Xlnt cOnd _
LVN forSanClementewt ms1nn bOrt• For appl WeP10¥ldelllnctlltn1 quiet S750 Goflln tranaferfee 850-5-403 A I w ... oz AM/FM llereO wnt/bge '(/}) loss chn1c Pit, pleasant N1rt11por1 Beach mancetlng (714)851-1000 ECRnUY (mO.) ut.ry alld 1>ene111s Cochloo, vtty aflec---I 01 H ci th 1 t 786 0•12o ~
ofc condt19ns 661-1159 firm 1s now expanding Olflc:e of the Prealdent Pltk•ge plus htQh v151b1h tlonete S300 w/cago. OHice Fualtart/ I CllH TOllY I . 0 n · • . 'T· ~
and needs lntelllgent , IECEPTllllST Corp. headquerters for 1YllX•~ceptl0f1'fg1owth 847-1746 . EcaJpaeat &2ZI forvenlele 651_8285 79RX7GS,5spd,newht-~
energetic people to do Front Office, lite typing, R.E. lnV6ttmtnt firm hQ ooportunru.s w11h111 Ille •-i 'OlO _ _ pert eng, x1nt c:ond, xtru. A. 11.l.UIEI interesting telephone will train. Lookl"" '°' en xlnt career oppty in an Alfttr!Cin orgai11u11on FOi -t S•H 8' c:onf tbl, nar new S300 WE IUY --Sae $6500 525-8955 a THE DAILY PILOT is now rte on ~If of Na ... t ~ f ._ft......-en mniedtltt consw111011 From •t•te antique a;c. Sharp Fu copter S300 . -Wht
accepting a""llcauons wo • someone bright and ~~~;r;;;:,, ~;'div;Slfy ''''*stop OV to tomollle OfatOf' desk Circa 1820. Brother typewriter, near CLW OARS • so, Maz~a tR~~ ttr:_e
tor D1stnct Managers to ~~·!1=~18:or~= ~~ 6~r=1~~~:°'"-& challenge ~u•t pos-:!'s~:J:::':, .~ Unique •pace Hv•r. n~ $~50 Persian r~ AID TRUCKS :m'fi~ ca'!!. s7o0o ot>O MIKE lolEIU'I
supervise newspaper view c:all Hugh Bteemer. sess top notc:h SH, typing t1on IOCludui~ s.l"Y $.450 cash. 760-1236 ~~c~s9 7~~8 ~3~-~2° 1 840-2159 or 846-4221 SOUTH ;~~:~so/.1~~~-~~veo:'d 545-5776 Restaurant ~o:!~!~::,uon:.Ocfl~I!. =~l (t~1nc1pa1s only Afllll&CH 11 Almost new ex steOfflc:e ihi'Ce4t1 lta1 9145 COUllTY
salary mileage allow-HSISTllTllAUlll soN~:PTl~a'·. ~r1 Tr·""'"··-· 211n. SHra color TV. rurnllure for sale '76 280§[ auto. ale. 2 YILISW•IEI ance. compan)' benefits PART-TIME Varl6d hours THE CANNERY .... ....,.. -, ..... .,... ..... ":.!..~n... • ...-..nt wortls gd $100. Built-In 714/720-9220 Iopa, "'8K mi, $15,750. a and bonus oppor1unrty 10 include early A M IN NEWPORT BEAC~ Beach CA i2660 tt rTt ..,.,,..,, ._..., "'"" lshwsh S50 536-9634 "'
Apply 1n person at Daily weekends.Musthaved• Food and beverege exp Karin Shuraon No !n~: Alllftcll d r · IBM Se.,ctric S125 631·0257 "WEWILLllT
Piiot Cercuiauon Ott1ce pendable vehlcie (small nee Send resume to please. ..il! .. USED Refrlg's $100-$400 6-46-7549 eves IE lllEllSOLI" 330 West Bay Costa truck. van, station Manager 3010 Lafayette um·· All alias. Also Buy Refrlg. -'7 t 280 SEl, White, blue
Mesa. Monday lhru Fri-wagon) to assist news-Ave. N.B 92663 .. IEOlnUJ uwn. Anderton Appl. IM 1 West Pilao1/0r1aa1 1221 WE .. , leather Int. Very clean, Volume Sa*. Sef"4ce
day No i:pgn~ calls ~~:'< ~:iter~n d~r;:: RETAIL, Assist Mgr & f1Ub0W. ft.1111111 ~ llllll'lflflll Sith St C.M 646-5538 1§62 eabTe, upright USED CARS & TRUCKS ~i&~~~~b. am_~ 187~~d~~
dable contact Greg sales positions avail Exit Secty tor Flnanctal Ptan-
1
°"" Dbldrrefrlg23cuft$375 Beautiful cond $t000 COME INORCALLFOR -HunO"itonBeech
llARlmH
2 Positions avail In mar·
k.etlng dept No exper,
nee. Company will train
Must have car Xlnt In-
come 11 quat1t1ed For
appt call Mr Watkins
662-5842
* MHSlCE* No exper1ene41 Xlnt salary
546·5•31 ---I HICll FROIT IFFIOE
PI T altns Family Pract
expe< req 646-8836
MEDICAL 01t1ce secrty
exper For Ch1roprac11c
ottc 1n Se.I S..Ch. days
eve s & Sal A M Must
have knowledge 1n Ins
b1ll1ng, Bkkpg, P T
Phones Pegbrd. 1yp1no
i21Jl 598-6289
Ott1ce clerk Entry, level
pos111on avall w/fast
growmg co Must be
bngnt organized wlgood
otc s1>.1lls 751-1315
Office"''' P 'Time tra1ne9 f ype •O
wpm & 10 key by touch a
must S3 35 hr 548-5623
ask for Dorothy
OPEllll IEW
STUDIOS
Need Managers. Inter·
• -Vll!~~O'P~rAe
cept on1sts Models.
Entertainers Telephone
Operators anct Dance In-
Hycte Monday thru Friday pay & adv oppty. Apply In nlng depart-N. 8. Invest· t.m!°'a:'ttosootA115-vCotpo111 Wshr/rjryr $135 ea. SWYI OBO. 546-8552 FREE lPPUIUL '7L~1c.!8!:.~:",8C:C~~a:'1~'. 'r71C)i 1•2·2000
between 9;30 and 10:30 peraon at Joela, SC ment Firm Typing. mff\, 11221 Aid Hll A-<leak Chr S85.1M1•3001 CHICKERING 5'8" Baby COf'mler-Oellllo s.5320/ \
am ont .642-4321 ~=~,;,in~~!r~!~Y Mall, ~~~r~~~j 11-CAusAmu Eltl<lrange.-30''GE.whlte. -Grand, 2~ ~· ..atnut, lnlmllET -~w~~~16Jo.t208 . ......;_W_E ........ C.,;.l_R....--.E---'
PASTUP PEISOI SALEMAKER. No exp nee, Snetby Cheek, ™1 Corp. tQ~ oootJ lmCMO'ltf "'"1
h S~5 ~~~~=rrles. K~~~!~~~AB~t-::ND, H1~~i::J:8~ :~gi-i ·11 3000. Mint cond lew I llld
5Dayap/wtc lnciudlngSat cutting/sewing UI· 553.()940 Telematltetlng ltft•-H•OES 1903 Recordo Player. 1.11-IOll IU 1331 White/brown lntr Snrt w 111 train Art or drafting merkollus Salemaker Secretary for amall offloe. TELEPHONE appointment .,..,..._ sac 57000 675--0 105 ~ I • S12,000. 760-6288
bacitground helpful Full 675-1823 accurtte typing & spell· setter. O.C. Alf'port aree. LES 957-s 133 WE WAIT YHll '80 300 TD Wagon, mint BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE company t>eneltls .A.pply •••ES -Ing euenttal. Must have Prof otflce M&ks pat1 Kenmore Washer/E'-Ctrlc LOWREY ORGAN (Genie} CWI ISEI CAii cond blkllan. Oaya
PENNYSAVER, 1660 -valid drlvera lie. Non ttmelndlvlduala toaet ap-Dryer, Heavy Duty Mdls. nrly new S600 obo. alt 3 634-4050. eves 720-9999
Placenlla. Costa Mesa 3 hrs eves. Salary, com-smoker. 960-6591 potntments for eoeount $225 aet. Jon 645-8182 646-4522 or 6-48-1042 See Ronald Dece
_ --mls1lon/Ktras. 497 ·5'467 S..,,•e••n1 full time 10 uec:s. Salary, $4.50-5/nr ---PHOTO LAB COUNTER ..... ... 1 weetcly Id Philco, trostless !rig, eKlt THOMAS ORGAN
PERSON Exper pref Pt· assist Speaker, run his :id closed : :.c::. 'C•all cond S350. 675-8721 evs Lawrence Welk model
ttme Snapshot 1 Hr UUS CLEll/HCEPT busy office. typing, Marc at 476--4000 $1100. 675-0105
p h 0 t 0 ca 11 M 1 k e Fast growing cona.umec phones & varied dutlea. Refrlg 17 Ou n frost free ,.3 I k -• t---e NB .....,, .. _ wht nice $225 650-7452 fOrliaf ""· I 6c. 646-2424 electron cs co see s casu ... • .. ........,..... . . . t--'""'"' _ _
bright hard wor1<1ng lndl-& Costa Mesa 850-1170 Appointment Miter PIT. Whirlpool Gas Dryer, Mark 'S4 JET RI. 550. 2 nrs on
Plasucs vldualto wor1< p/t In sales Secretary need6d for am Mature person to set 11. Solld State Se<l6a. engine Brand new llaolti•• o,erators d e p t & p I t 0 n growing N. B. flnanctal sates appt• tor Con9\jltlng 2'11 yra old xlnt cond S2500. Call 846-9419 Tracks 9035 1 fPll tt l&M s w I t c h b o a r d firm Duties 10 Incl. firm. Can work o(it of $250. 548-24~ TV I ••
lmmed openings on Responsibilities will Incl typl flUng et home or our ofc Hourly J. I II, 116 Ford F2SO. reblt eng,
graveyard shlM lor train· order desk. llltng. =iw ~ heiptu~: wage. 759-&«9aft 4PM Frff tt Yta 2 lltrff 6UZ new tires & brks $1200.
".;;1 Ju.u1 t "' ''' .! r.1 •
837""800 493·4S I I
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20b0 HAA80A allfO.
CO!>TA Ml!>A 642·0010
'81 300D, 1 ownr, pampered. Financing ''V__,,l ____ _._-=1=-=7=
avallabte. 631-5188 1;.;•~n._ ___ .... iioi!9-.
Selling Your Meroed•? 181 bl. mint, ale, em/fm.
Top Purchase Prloe 27,000 ml. muat Mii.
In Area S999S. 551"8090
Seller Asslst6d Plan A•tH Dtat1tic
Available ---' ------Call Biii McCoy 1305 AllC
ees or exper enJeciion switchboard. customer Salary to comm w/exp THE SAIL LOFT BAR & GUARD DOG, Xlnt for hm 23·1 Zenith color T v . Art 759·8043
molding machine oper· &servi~. ru~ er:;;: Celt Candace 673-1890 GRILL at>ow the Jolly or bua. Germ. Shep. p.e_c.an wood ®MQle ·77 TO-Y.OTA p u. Camper. laick
ators Good hand dexterr· ty..,ng. --AOlferln l.llguna Beach Is male. 730 9293~ • -w /doors Magnavox New Trana & Brakes.
Ul-llOO
JIMSLEMONS
IMPORTS
1301 Quall St Npt Bch t3
72 AMC, runs 1206.
642-9049
ty Important Work 7'1• skllla a must. Sh~1f1 t~ SEClnUY /IECEPT accepting appllcallons F lt S pecan wood console $2000 OBO 751-64 17 "WlRlllll&I" 'll llYHIA hrs. paid tor 8 hrs Xlnt 45-55 wpm. e a e for small office. Typing, flt.. W6d-Frl. from 2·5 p.m. Ua art stereo/record/cass play· _ --Moonroof, windows. &
paid ma tor m6dlcal ben· Ir• n •Port at Ion r • q Ing and phone sklll• fOf the following J>O$-$215. o;;k 3x5 antq Ollk er & recorder. Exit cond · 82 Blazer Wagon 4 wtil dr • Privately aetllng your car sea\s • All etectncl S3500
ef1ts plus proltl snaring Non/smkr need only req'd Fitness orlent6d ttlons wttealner top 5'48-7827 s250 each 6«·2 l96 air. auto. 57K m1. $9675. can be hazardous lo your Must sett, pp 6-42-7500
and employee stock own-apply For eppt call co. lmmed opening for BAR SUPERVSR 842-0795, eves 548-8823 wealth! House of Import•
ershlp program Prel8' Madeline at 540-5686 resp Individual. Call BARTENDER 71~e:'.'r'ci='~~lo~ Power 1Ht1 7012 V 9040 otters highest value for Millie 9
EQghsh speaking Appl)' SALES-HARDWARE 751-2822 for appl BAR BACKS 60-0 78 14 ft glasspar w'35 np 1a1 your pampered '82 Cad convert, nu ~Int, 81 Full time position In retail s~c11n••f/IE,.-. COCKTAIL WAITRESS S500 7 1 · Evlnrude Superior cond '75 Econollne l50. 351 Merc6des. runs great S2200/ob0 CllCO " --rt HOSTESSES 1 ·sofe1%·1oveua1. for bay, ski or fishing. cc/Stick, air, tinted. l .. ftrPtter/RIJ t-525-8016 265 Briggs Ave. Costa hardware store. See for Newpor1 Beach ad T~BLE WAITING blu/brlc:k plaid S300. s 1995 Private party $2000/t>est otte< <714> DIAL 2131714 MERCEDES 1·.-
7
-
7
-E-ld_o_r_a_d-o.-1-0-m-I,
Mesa Spantevye. H1W26 WRroctgh~eComste;. agency Type 5owpm, BUS BOYS Trad drk wood din rm tbl 675-7574i6So-6330 650-4674 Iv message HOUSE OF IMPORTS. Inc
answer phones. greet SEAFOODKITCHSUPVR &5 chraS150.631-1050 --~ 9100 . -.-.----.....,....,.., loaded, orig ownr. PRESCHOOL TEACHER Costa Mesa chent1 May consider BROllER MEN 17' Tri-Hull as 11. Xlnt f1Sh· Aalt:==c= MatH~lSkl lf7 $4400/obo 545-9981
To co-teach lull 11me Irvine ALES & m-odels need6d sharp trainee. 650-1860 OYSTER BAR STAFF Black naugahyde queen Ing-bay cruising S 1000 ·83 C di dig SPdomlr
pre-school 786· 7 49• p/Ume lor lingerie shop In Service station attendent. Contact John Geyer, 400 sofa bed $100. 6-44-5709 No mooring 673-8755 Alla lt•H 9105 A/C,ordtga. AMi FM cass
wkdy/786-9997 wkncts C.M Must be reliable. vMIDQA. PJI-~ tn Sou.th .Coast .KIQtmay, er sole bed Fuji-l. . .15 np, ~ .~wr.CfUTse MTnt
rO'l'l1l'11flff:rN!! -rravet eitperl)ntl.54!F-6<i'<' person 18502 Beach Bl, lagunaBeach.Ca 92651 size.$17~~"8240 great bay & dive bOat Forced to sell cond 26K Mi, $8,800
agency needs lull time SAUS.SECTUllH Hunt Sch 963-6505 Travel Agency need• pit lllYFlllnlllE w/lrlr S7500 557-4073 S6700./obo581-4442 Alan494-51t6
&O TOlLESI "~YEfltl'8LE
$20QO OBO. S..2-7500
~~:~~60 A~~Yor ~~r~i endow covering contrac-Sewing Mach Operators delivery person Must be LES 957-8133 198• 12tt FG. boat w/ A .. i 9l 7 JIG 9149 ~~u~011';'~~v~s11~!: Mc ~-~~~ails over 18' 261•1661 LOVESEAT FREE ii you oars S550 6'4M712 eve 113 Audi 5060 Turbo, gOid ' M A onv. xlnt mec ·
tion leads. good phones ---nPIST /IEOPT purchase china cabinet 24 ft Thunderbird. New en-wtbrn lthr Int, assume cond., new restored Int.,
structors Full or pa<t •-•--miiill---• 11me No ei.perience
·NABERS
CADILLAC necessdry Apply in per·
son only and promptly on
the hour~ from 2p m to
Sp m FRED AST AIRE
REIL ESTATE
SALES I REITILS
llST&IT llCIME
l iCHH' lcHts Oily
PllJI .... , Est1t1
llS-1tOO
& typing, Npt Pentn Of· SILK SCREENER, ex-60+WPM. BHIC office for $650. 640-9050 gine, Intermediate & OUI· lease Dys 261-5060. nds paint, •NOr1h $4K...$6K
flee Resume to· po Box perleooed. 843-2547 skllls. dependable, gd drive Great fish/dive eves 559.4190 asking S3300 673-1289 LARGEST SELECTION
of late~. low mlte.ge
Cadillaca In Soulhem
Calilornlal See us today! DANCE STUDIOS '2rr Newport Blvd Suite
2789 Npl Bch. 92663 Skilled automotive electrl-working condlllons New· IH.taehrtr'I Salt boat Many extras $9000 10--91 lZ ·77 Mldgel. 33K ml, mint
Clans, Installers and up-port. 6A6-5015 LIYree $11,tl Call 63l·4378 cond , AM/FM. S2450.
200
Newport Beach. 673-9421
ORDER DEPT. Real Estate
SECRnUIH
•TYPISTS
•RECEPTIONISTS
•CRT-DATA ENTRY
•ClEAKS '
Work now Top Pay 0 C
area 3 Pos111ons 11 .... a1t Santa
Ana Ott.ce No exper
nee Training provided
Xlnl income For appt
call Mr Albers. 662-5843
TRACT SALES VICTOR
TEMPORARY SERVICES
4341 Birch, 11105, N.B
556-8520 645-8202
I TODAY 'S CROSSWORIJPUULE I
AC ~QSS
t C rat isle
t As1;;ir .,urse
1J L'1St or the
Rf'd Hot -
1 P110<.11nQ type
11; Aulo
•ncer -
Varbcuougn
1' USf'
IB Outlaw
.:0 M,J._e musr-
c ;ii sounds
,, t Permit
22 Shorpened
21 BlaCI\ poel
;,-c, Consecrates
27 UK county
30 Most fo.<y
11 Common
place
32 Ape colloq
3 j CIPar
Jb Illness
3 7 Queeo s ship
38 Gainsay
39 AL !Pam .so Un1nterestt>d
.i 1 FragmPnt
l2 Fears
~4 Cowboys
gear
45 Attacks
4i Fool part
48 Amt!nca
49 Good sense
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
50 Gen Bradley ._H~....._..._
54 Manlike ape
57 Marble
58 Discerning
59 Cand)
60 Roi RFD
6 1 Send forth
62 Darlings
63 Crotchety
DOWN
1 Iowa city
2 Conveyance
3 Augur
4 Generosity
5 WWII craft
6 Ski resort
7 Separate
8 lht' sell
9 Coll for help
tO ThrouQh
1 1 P11nc1pa1
thoroughlare
t2 US dramatist
13 Listens
19 Bird sound
2 1 Delt lood
24 WaK maker
25 Reckless
26 Soda flavor
27 Dispute
28 Press
29 Movie tot
structure
30 Draws back
32 NL team
34 Ouechuan
35 Tints
37 Fuel
38 Converse
40 Life
41 Dessert
43 Poured
44 Soak hemp
45At--
puuled
46 Actress -
Bernhardt
47 Intimates
49 Ad type
51 R6man god
52 Rat --
53 Trust
55 Ref's aide
56 Connect
5 7 Louvre wares
r ,
&40-1810 holsterers Needed for TYPIST/SEC, 18P6 tran-Save 50% & more on new '78 Tayana Yacht, 42', ·80 3211 XJnt cond. auto 494-3862, S6l-8629
limousine manfecturers. scriptton, wc:t proc train-top quality bed ,.11, all Ford lehman, twin dsl trans, sunroof, 65K ml, 1-------~~
536-1210 Ing, FIT. S.A .• Ed-fullyguar.Nol2ndaorr• enga, auto pllot, load6d. $9900,838-2340 Porackt 9157 2600Harbor Bllld. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Inger/Newport Fwy built•. Twin tel, Juat Very llv• aboardable, ·ao. 733 1, wtet, clean '62Coupe 16()()8neweng, COSTA MESA
STUDENTS 558-8333 Maxine $88 95. All slles avail. plush decor. S 155.000 Atplna susp, BBS whls, trans. susp. uphol, S8900 nnltt 1 mDUIY MSPIT&L Free dellvery 534-5080 negotiable 840-5191 55,000 ml s 16.500 OBO Bob 6-42-8115 545-8251 •12 CHM s090R8XA.
In THI Kenna.I attendant morns. Ornate klng-slze floatlon ·92 17' Aqua Sport w/70 840-6689 '62 Coupe 1600$ new eng. new engine & tires. $2600 1111111 MS llwn tome wttn<la. nr b6ac:h & waterbed & headboard hp Evmrude. low hrs. xlnl trans. ausp, upf\ol se900 OBO ~8-0950 eves
We have openings for busllne. Non·amkr. Small w/matchlng roll-top fisher. $8500 OBO ~R Bob 6-42-8115 545-8251 -.7-8_C_a_m_ar_o_, -T-bar--,oo-f,
bo"" & glrls between apt on premlMS. Will dreuers S lOOO. Philco 573-4354 ·1 1 y II 91 tT T•""a 62 000 I atr $3875 •-train If able & ~"Ill"" to frost-free refrlg S350 e ow -• · , m . no . · 12-16 year• old working .. , ... '83 Bayltner 19' 2", hard-Low mites 5 spd atereo Newporter 11 &42-0795, evenings & Saturdays learn. 6-42-36-40 for appt. Call 850-0204. top. used only 6 hrs. Ilk• Sales-~Leastng · .. 500• /obo
--------casa, nle6 . .., 1>,,~·~'~ .. ~5'4~~~;;:::::::;::::;;::-Eam money, trtp1 & Pecan wall unit w/drawera new. S2000lr'.~T~O~P+--:-i,ffllell~Jttt--pin:~~~..:...:. _ bonu~: ~~ntree Y1HUlEt&IL.-14US-1 g-~vea. '100 King S203.60lmo 67 E1r.,.u hllYtry '75 811S, blk/blk, etereo. •8~Ag~~~l~~.d~~T~~
Mul1 have Mies and some Bdrm 181• exit cond. <>--Ray. 22 fl Cutty cabin. 1 5 d H If '82 d'---' 141-1011 vldeoeitpeio.Neatw/xlnt Pecan dble dreuer 265hp,Mercl/O,cuatom ExoellentSelectlonolNew Pirelll 1tres, •P · cond. • ....... .,.
Mon.·Frl. 10am-3pm people skllla. Call for In-w/mlrror, armolr, 2 night made fiberglass hard top, and Carefully prepar6d shaepak na, comp re-~5o lo ml, ~'::
tervlew. Sc:ott, 831-7887 cheats, king hMdboatd ship to shore. CHI UsectBMW'salwtysln cond $13,000 771-2142
S875 w/klng box aprlnga, stereo 759,.0479 131s_t3oc1kl 1 ltllJ I t IHI mattr"' & framea $900 ___ ·. ___ __,,,..,,....,....,,
WIH PllOESSll (S3000 value) 644-2196 .... , il 7014 208 w. 1 ... Santa Ana CPT 8100 OPERA.TOR I •• WOf'k lmmed Top Pay Secr1fb Sotlcl Blreh Din-15'n ft. Sol Cat New mut, Closed Sunday
Call Now 556-8520 Set, Huteh, arp..lf Tbl, 4 r~/yet H ll. Trailer. ---------•
chra. SSOO. 545-8792 $1300/obo 786-1780 LARGE SELECTION OF 1-------~~
SALES $SOK to 100K+ HUDHUllTER
The • 1 protee.ional rec:rumng firm In Newpot1
Beach le IMltlng the ucluaive exployment --
Vlcea ol pPerlenced recruiters lor profealonal
placement of accountants (mottly CPA'1), engl·
tlMfl (eiectronlea). banking e•CICUllYel. E.D.P
programmers, 111~ and legal aecretarles.
II you .,. an •XP«tenc.d prof...ion.t (degrM
preferr.d), wllllng IO UM the t~ and !Nin·
taltl the ~ lnduatry 1tandarct1, ptMN call
Ted 8avty or Kevtn ClaJr at
61 :Y:t
Ted Bevly Aasoclate•
Personnel Service
~,,"' ElreciutM s-dt ...,...... .......
3Cl9 San Mlguel Drive, # 160
Newpor1 e.ach, CA 92680
114neo-1313
Orange County daily newspaper is
seeking fast paced, flexible achJever
t.o coordinate display sales activity.
Must have exceptional organiutional
skills. Duties lnclud tracking daily
&ales, answering busy phones for
outside sales staff, coordinating
theatre advert.Wng Some typing, fil-
ing required N~w1papeT or agency
experience a+. Send rftume or l· tter or qualifications to:
Orange Coast Daily P•lot
Ad#~
Costa M I CA 92626
Attention· L Smfth
L
NEW & USED BMW'S!
LllllUOI ...
VOLUME SALES
SERVICE & LEASING
367Qit4 Cherry Ave L~GBEACH
(No. Cherry exll-405)
<114) 111-1110
Trade-Ins Welcome
OPEN SEVEN DAYS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
','\.')(1f,1rl•o1l1 ,
•ll.'..1\\1~..,\
S41>-I 200
Ftn
'70 Mavenc:k. Gd lrant
$650/obo. Call 631-5781
'l2PllTIWU
AOK $1200 673-7815
'78 GRANADA GHIA 4 dr
well matnt. gd cone '2500 oeo. sn-1645
L.lac• • 170 &ntlnentaJ rn; ,. any a nic. car dk mwocw
SS3 75 Newporter I
842-0795. wee &48-et~
••Wit
CM
'
'
111m 1111111
M (I tH, ,, I ll I"" I I I "I l flHANt,f '(J lJr~l't I AltlfJl•t4ll\ "'I'•
---
Sch~ol st~ip-sear.ch case settl .
Ocean View District to weigh policy
after controversy over accused student
during t~ horseplay. When it wa
found sometjmc later, it contained
just SS.
Some of the youths involved
claimed Lcticbia, then 12 years old,
office for a stnp search. No money the seventh arader were violated by
was found. school officials ... who caused her to
Letichia and her mother, Rose· completely disrobe and stand com-
maric, filed a SS00,000 damage claim pletely naked while her clothes were
against Ocnn View School District. mspected."
moved to Seattle, teiiled dleir cid
rights dalDl apinst the dillria.
Neither Pope oor .,,.,_ .... _,
J. Michael Declues Will anaaulKll
terms of the agreement~ die Saile9
.. arc very happy." P,ope laid~· By ROBERT BARKER
Of the Delly ,_.. IWI
Letichia Sease was among a group
of seventh and eighth grade students
during an assembly at Park View
Scbool i~ Huntington Beach on Dee.
Coast
Laguna's historic 'hang-
ing gate' is up again after
being held 'hostage'./ A3
California .
Gasoline prices are tak-
ing a dive in California,
despite Gulf crisis./ AS
Nation
At least three di·e as
Northeast swelters in re-
cord heat wave./ A4
Hart's walking a thin line
as national Democratic
. convention nears./ A4
World
Arab nations agree to
reimburse for damages
to Gulf o!I tankers./ AS
A Soviet citizen has been
jailed for allegedly spying
for the CIA:! A4
Features;-.,.:·.
The Bal vUlon~ -~·
ge ng older -and bet-
ter. It's now listed in the
National Register of His-
toric Places./8t-
Hikers, bicyclists and
equestrians are hlttirtg
-the trails -150 miles
worth In Orange County
-this summer ./81
College presidents give
low marks to lecture
note-taking services./82
l, 1982 when the pupils bepn playing.
around. One boy took a wallet from
another and waved it around in the
air.
The wallet, which the owner said
contained two $5 bills, disappeared
had taken the money. -•
After some dis<;ussion the girl
allegedly challenged Vice Principal
,Eliz.abeth White to search her.
White and another female school
employee took the gin to the nurse's ·
Mrs. Sease claimed previously that Tbecasewasschcduled to go before
Letichia was sin&led out because she Judge U.S. District Judge Laughlin
was one of the few black students in Waters last week in \J.S. District
the school · Court in Los An~les.
'Her lawyer, Blaise PQpc: of Costa But in a last-nunute ~ment, lhc
Mesa. claim~ that the c1vil rights of • Seascs, who have subsequently
Pope also reponed .ahal bodi _.
arc 1n the pr:oceu of IP.' c I N •
contract that woukl ptohabii•CMC
from beina reftlcd. . . '~ ....... ,~
Breath sample
;i:ule ~i_ds cops
on suspected drunken driver's evidence
From staff ud wire reports
In a victory for police and pros-
ecutors., the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled today tl.at law. enforcement
agencies have ·no duty to preserve
breath samples taken during the
arrests of drunken driving suspect.S.
The high court ruling reverses a
California appeals court decision that
forced police to preserve the breath
samples so that a suspected drunken
driver could have thef'CSUlts checked.
or urine test." said Bill Sage, lepl
adviser to the Huntington Beach
Police Department
Sage said he did.n 't believe the
appeals court rulinaJiad ~ulted in a
flood .of drunken -driving cases bein&
overturned.
Van Hoy, though. cautions that
persons who opt to take a breath test
rather than give a blood or urine
sample arc placing themselves in
some jeopardy when they go to court. The results of a breath test may still
be used in coun cases even if the -1JllOIL~...u1~isdestroyed,.ibC~·lb-_11 .......... 1111111 ........ ~~~~~
coun ruled. The court said police
have no constitutional duty to
preserve breath samples taken from
people arrested on suspicion · of
d.runlcen driving.
The case centers on a relatively new
method that permits breath samples
to be preserved for as long as 15 days,
according to a spokesman for the
Orange County Public Defender's
office.
Cocaine
suspect
guilty Criminal attorney Robert Van Hoy
of Santa Ana said the high coun ~llll·~~blow-co ~ dcicn&,j By STEVE MARBLE
drun en driving cases. He saad &•-• ....
preserving breath samples is neither A 24-ycar~ld Orange Coast man
complicated nor expensive.· has pleaded guilty to having
"If the machine makes an error, laundered millions of dollars._in
tbCl:eJs.sitnp\.r-t'o way of finding \ha ~fits for a cocainc...rin&.that..fedeb.l
.....,..,..,:---.!:"t -out now." said Van.Hoy. ··And this rs agents bCiieve smuglcd more than
a tremendously significant pan of the two tons of the drug into Southern
evldeiic:c... <Alifornia.
.. When a _pason -SUbai" :io .. •. M~ Kaplu. Who has liilCd ..._....__..... . breatll test, the ample i' automati-adctrtsses in~ f!le'wpan 8eaCJi and
caJly destroyed. .. V. an Hoy said. .. Bur Sao Juan O.p_tscruo; ealCred the
there is technology thar would guilty plea Fndal'.t ajccordiJllg.to the
preserve the sample and ifs no areat U.S. Attomcy'sofllclein :Los~
burden on police to use this tecb-• Kaplan and 22 others were arrested
nology... la~ month when ~craJ dJ:ua .,mts
Scandinavian dancers Sports Two memben of the Vua Junior Folk coetume. twirled around a Oower-co•erecl
In an effort to abide l?Y the appeals bioke up what they bebeve ~
coun decision, police officers in most Orange ~unty ~t drug ring.
California counties and cities have Four persons, indudma the alleged
been advising drunken driving k:ingpinofthesmuaJingring,arestill
suspects that a breath sample could at large.
not be preserved but th~t blood or In exchange for the gujlly plea, the
urine samples could be stored fOL _g,ov~ment agreed to ~rop charge~ of NewportchrlstlanHI h, DanceenmembleofLoe ele.awlnglnto Maypole daring the afternoon to the
~~~~~~~~~~:-P!~~~~~~uu~Bc:~~~~~-,~illrof-Datb:e .folklMmda. Ttie~~ says arewell Featival, held Saturday at the South Cout cllnaYlan feati'Y&I l>eilan u a way to accent
to high school stardom Plaza Vlliaae. Swedlab, Norwegian and the European aho})9 ln the Village and bu
when he pitches In hJs Danlab folk dancen dreued In traditional evolved Into an educational aperience.
final game Tuesday./C1
Burt Hooton and the
Dodgers hand the Atlanta
raves their third defeat
lnarow./C2 ' Cal State Fullerton wins ·
the College World Serles
with pitching. /C4
Entertainment
The kings of comedy and
drama, Nell Simon and
Arthur Miiier, will be rep-
resented In new pro-
ductions of old works this
week./83
Business
The Newport Beach-
based National Educa-
tion Corporation has
begun construction of a
$6 mllllon "super
school.'' /85~
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business .
California Newt
Cl&lllfled
CrOMWOf'd
OMth Notleel
Feetur•
Horoec»pe
Ann Lander•
MuJual Fund•
National Newt
OpinlOn
P~arazi
Pottc.Log
Pubttc Notlcet
~· Stoek Marketa
T_..,lslon
Theaters
WMthet
Wcwid NeWI
B4
A3
BS
AS
C6-8
C7 cs
8 1-2
C8
82
BS
A4
AS
81
A3
C5-8
C1~
Be
83
83
A2
A5
I
.
Laguna election petition
embroiled in legal fight
City clerk blocking citizens' petition drive.
says notice appeared in ·wrong newspaper'
measure proposing the consolidation
of the city council. clerk and treasurer
elections, now held in April. with the
November Orange County election
ballot in even numbered years begin-
ning in 1986. The petition also
demands that the question be placed
on the ballot this November.
By DAVID BISHOP
Ollllr,... C-1 IP I 1i*1t
The Laguna Beach city clerk won't
honor a l~I notice announcin$ a
petition dnve calling for election
consolidation because she says the
notice appeared in the wrong news-
paper.
Meanwhile, the president of the
Lagu!la Beach Taxpayers Associa-
tion, Paul Christiansen. one of five
association officers who signed the
published notice. insists t.tte notice is
legal and said the group plans to
collect signatures on the petitions
despite lhe clerk's decision.
The notice, published in the Dajly
Pilot on May 31, signifies the.intent of
the Taxpayers Association to collect
sigmnures in support of a ballot
City Clerk Verna Rollinger said she
informed Chnstian~n on Thursday
that the Daily Pilot has not been
designated b} the city -"ad·
judicated'. -to publish legal notices
(Pleue .ee LAGUNA/ A2)
. .
Professor burned up oveI"----
brush fire-fighting policy
Stamping out early blazes 'postpones' loss:
he favors Mexico's 'let ifburn' system
STEVE
Mull£
• At least S l.5 billion has been spent
since officials started f'if.!tin.f brush
fires in Southern California ind
geoara.phcr Richard Minnich claims fi~men mi&hl as well have let the
money bum alona with the hi&h
wttds and brittle chaparral for all tfie
aood it's done.
.. In titutionalized chaos" is how
Minnich views the etrons of tirc.-fi~ters who cxta.ust tMmsclves bat-
thn& the bla1es th•t whip and race
throqh the dry hillside and ca-
nyons.
Minnich, a UC Riverside
erofcuor, says stampina out bru h
fires in the eafty &qes and keqMna
chal'TCd acrcaae to a minimum actu·
ally dotS more harm tl\an IO()d.
"We don't stop fires " P2f_1P9M
them;• sa 1 Mtnnach. who claim
Southern California is vulnerable to
devastating. fires as la~e as 250,000
acres, or 400 square miles.
P ERSPECTl~t Minnich reached his conclusion
after comparina fi~ activity ip
Southern California to brush fires in
northern Baja Catifom1a, where no
fire control cxa ts. Hi findJnas a~ was 20,000 acrcscompattd to 50,000
pear in a rec:ent t ue of Science acres bcrc.
mapzine. The geographer used satclhte
Althouah northern Baj~ has nearly photograp~s an his research of the ~\>t'O
twiceasmanybnlshfircsasSouthcm areas, ~1l1ch are 1m1tar in size.
California, the fires arc relatively vqetahon and chmat .
small compettd to blues an Oral'\&C. I> Minnich that in ~a. where
San Otqo and LO& Anaelcs «>untac , ch2parral fire .-. uochec~ed. b1U·
the ~PhCr di1rovcred. des have t>ctomc a m05a1c of o!d
SOuth of the bonier, the median ft re and n w 1rowtl". Alt ho &h fires
itt over the past 10 years has bttn s~rina up ~ucntly. the natural •.OOO IK'l"C$. In Southern Cahfomia. nbbon of new &19-..th k~p them
ifs mott than 10.000. DunnJ thal from rcadma peat d1 tan the
pao. the taraest nonhcm Bija fitt (Pleue ... Put&PIO&TINO/A.2)
1 . I J
future-testing: con.spuacy tO<llsmbut
"Police officers have j ust been ~nst Kaplan. The 24-year-old, who
telling suspects that if they wan( to wlll be sentenced Sept. 10, faces a
retest. then they should have a blood (Ple&H eee COKE/A2)
VernaRomn,er
r
SEC cites
fraud suit ,
settlement
By JERRY HIRSCH
OllMOllllr ..........
The Securities and Exchange Com-
mission has reached a settlement In
its -fraud suit against Irvine busi-
nessmen Thomas D. c.aner. who the
SEC accused of selling unregistered
securities for a firm tha1 ncvtt
existed.
Meanwhile. a year-long Oranec
Count) ShenfT's Department in-
vestigatton into Caner's alleaed
fraudulent activ1t1es c-ontinues.
(Pleue eee CAR~R/ A2)
I
\
'
1 '
LAGUNA PETITION BLOCKED •••
PromA.l
for l.quna BcAch and that she would not accept the noucc unless n was
republished in one of two wcckl>
new :pape"' w1lh offioei in l..agun1
Beach;
"That may be true, ho'4cvcr the
Pllol ha an adjudicatton number ~lth the County of Orange and has
run legal advertisements for tbe City
of Lquna Beach before,., said Chaz.)
Dowaliby, editor and assmant to the
publisher of the Datly Pilot
"The Ctt) clerk Stems to be operat·
ing in a way lttut seem to bt
bendic1al 10 her nt this t1mc."
Dowaliby said "lf 1t was OK btfore,
why.isn't it now'!"
Christiansen finished third among
seven candidates tn an election for
two Ctty Council scats m Apnl. He
was elected pres1dcnt of the Tax-
payers Association, a 37-year-old
organii.ation, a few weeks later.
Dorothy J ··sunny" Rhodes, listed
m the not10t as secretary for the
Tax1>3yeriorpnizauon. w1 defeated
by Rollinger 1n a bad to~ elffied city
cleric 1n the clecuon.
The question of ronsolidatina cl~
uons wu an i uc onc.'C before. ln
August 1983. represcntat1v~ of the
Taxpayers Assoc1atton presented
evidence to City Council that con-
501idation would ~ve the city money
and ~nera\e at'CltCT VOtCf Interest.
However. counctl mem~~ rtjected
the. proposal, panially based on a
report prepared by Rollinger
cmpha 1zln& the lo s of local control
over the election proces!> that would
result from the proposal. As city clerk,
Rollinger ts in charge of conducting
loal elections.
"That was not a rccommen-
dat1on," Rollinaer ~d. "but from my
comments ( think you can safely
conclude that t'm not wild about the
idea of consolidation."
Chri tiaM(n t'h rics that Rolhnacr as "v1olat1na the pint. if not the u r
of the II \\". by den~ina the Taxpa'e~
the riaht to petition the voters. •
Ronan.er say he is backed up in
herop1moo by City Attorney PbihpJ.
Kohn or the firm of Rutan and
Tucker, and by city election consult-
ants.
RollinJer al o doubt there "
enough ttme to act the petition on the
November ballot, espccu,lly 1f the
Taxpayers must republish the notice
in another newsp~per
"It would be good 1fthc Daily Pilot
were adjudicated because sometimes
the weekly newspapers don't allow us
to get something published in time.''
Rolhngcr said ... The Pilot I'm sure
would meet all the requirements (for
adjudication in Laguna Beach) but
the' never applied that I am aware
of.''
COKE SUSPECT PLEA ...
Rolltnger said that as long as she
has been clerk (she was elected to her
third four-year term in April) she
never authorized a legal notice for
pObhcat1on 1n the Daily Pilot. "But
I'm not the: only one: who authonz.es
them. either.'' she said.
From Al
ma·umum fiv?year prison sentence.
It was alle~hat Kaplan "as
employed b) Hunungton Beach resi-
dent Alan Moblc)', 24. to launder
profits from cocaine sales.
FBI agents said K.aplan would pa)
tnd1v1duals who agreed to let him use
their savings accounts to !>tore drug
profits.
Drug agents alleged that Kaplan
also hid tho cocaine profits by
purchasing a senes of bank checks for
cash and later making deposits an
accounts set up b> Moble}
K.aplan is free on $75.000 bail.
Dowaliby said that in the pas e
newspaper has cooperated with the
city ~Y rushing into publicatioQ legal
advenising o n shon notice at the
request of the city manager.
"They ought to check their own
records.'' she said.
STRIP SEARCH CASE ...
From Al
"\cung as defendanrs in 1he ca~
was the Gibraltar Casualty Com pan)
which insures the district for S50
million.
Let1ch1a Sease's mother prev1ousl>
indicated she would not have in-
1t1ated the action 1f she had only
received an _.,apology from school
officials.
Ocean View Supenntendent Dale
Coogan said today admtn1strators
will be taking a look at a new polt~y
spelling o ut students' nghts now that
the case has been settled. telephone book that would tie the
"My personal feeling 1s that it 1s hands ofofficiaJs in emergencies."
appropnate (to conduct strip search-He said, however, that adminis-
es) when the safety of others could be trators wiU be re-examining policies
involved such as someone carrying a to ensure th.at principals or other
concealed weapon." administrators arc notified before
Coogan said the 1982 stnp search "such severe actions" (strip searches)
dido 't violate district policies because-arc undertaken. He said in the Sease
there wasn't any such specific regu-girl's case, Principal Don Devor
lations. He said if the district spelled didn't know about the search until it
out specific rules and regulations was completed.
covering all possibilities, "we would Coogan also adamantly denied that
havt> a book of rules as thick as a the search had any racial ovenoncs.
CARTE R FRAUD SETTLEMENT ...
From Al •
Shentrs spokesman Lt. Richard
Olson said c harges ma} be filed soon.
Carter's attorney. Stephen Wilson.
confirmed this morning that the
agreement has been reached but
declined to talk about the case saying
onl y. "the consent decree speaks for
Itself. ..
Under the settlement. Caner
agreed not to engage man) fraudulent·
acll\ 111es and not to sell unregistered
secunt1cs. In return the SEC agreed
t0 drop its lawsu11. accordmg to
David Casterline. an SEC attome)'.
Ju_d,..it Robs,r\ Kdlrher..of lh• U:S. ·
D1stnct Coun rn Los '\ngeles sull has
to review and approve the settlement.
If no federal or loca l law enforce·
ment agencies step in. Caner would
be free to continue business ventures
once his bankruptn pr~ed1ngs.
filed m ~mber, are completed.
The SEC ffied suit in November
alleging Carter sold investments in a
"medical factonng" business that
never cxisited. Casterline said no
evidence of medical factoring turned
up dunng a search and an audJt of
records at Carter's Irvine office.
Carter offered investors returns as
high as 40 percent on their mvest-
ments tn the business. which
purponed to buy medical insurance
claims at a discount from doctors and
hospitals and file the claims at their
ruirvarue foraprofit-. ~ -
Shenff s investigators and the SEC
have estimated Caner raised betw~n
S 10 million and $60 million from
tnVCStors
"lt 1s kmd of difficult to put
together an exact figure because there
were so many different enmtes in-
volved through which the money
came in.'' Casterhnc said.
Throughout the lawsuit and the
investigation Can er and his lawyers
ha vc refused to comment on the case.
Caner has invoked the U.S. Con-
st1 tuuon's Fifth Amendment and has
refused to testify at several
bankruptcy hearings durinJ which mvesto~ planned to ask him what
ha ppened oo the money.
The bankruptcy court found debts
of. about $JO mmi~-an4 a6ie'5 ot
about SI 0 million.
lnvestors fear much of the money
was used to finance Carter's attempt
to produce a feature-length animated
cartoon based on Mark Twain's
Huckleberry Finn characters and to
develop a casino and amusement
park complex in Las Vegas.
FIREFIGHTING POLICY UNDER FIRE ••.
From Al
geographer says.
Hot. rolling infernos dnven b)
bone-di"} Santa Ana winds will even
sputter and burn themselves out
when the) h11 )Oung. green chaparral.
Minnich claims.
"Wat's we've done m Southern
California. though, 1s Lo spend a great
deal of monc} prcpanng oursdvt's for
a holocaust.'' insists Minnich.
"There's no way around tt."
By beating back brush fires m the
earl) sta,cs. Minnich claims fire-
fighters m Orange Count) ha .. e
retarded nature's way of forming fire
breaks Pans of the county are "so out
of whack" that a maJOr fire 1s JUSt a
matter of 11me. he adds.
ModJeska Canyon is one of Orange
County's rugged areas that 1s "out of
whack." fire authonues admit
Having been hit ~Ith sit.able fires
only four times since 1900. the
t:haparral m Mod1eska is like
gasoline. firefighters say
When a brush fire 1s swept out of
control. there 1s nothtng fireman can
do to stop its progress. Minnich says.
"You could bring in the whole U .S
.\rm\ and 11 still wouldn't do am
goo<{" the geographer contends.
"You wouldn't ha\.e apy im pact until
Mother Nature damn well lets vou
have an impact."
.\!though his ideas sound radical.
Orange County Fire Capt Mark
Retnhold says Mm~nlch 1s nght -up
to a potnt.
"When a fire reaches a certain level.
thry're isn't much you can do," says
r
Just Call
642-6086
O=t
II GwlflntHd
Mor!Olly· ,..., • ,... ltO
nol ..... 'YO" ~ Dy ~ '° p II\ Cll Detot. 1 P m •nCI yO>Jt OllP't .. be ._.,
Reinhold "Ifs up to Mother Nature.
You can Just about bank on that."
Reinhold. though. says county
firefighters are bound -as well as
paid -to fight brush fires aggrcssive-
1)' and do have success in at least
steering fires around populated areas
and spanng homes from advancing
flames.
"That's still our top pnonty," the
fire captain notes.
When a raging brush fire splits and
heads m two directions, Reinhold
says firefighters will make a de-
liberate decision to battle the flames
churning toward homes while letting
the second fire take its toll in
unpopulated wildlands.
''That's why you'll generally see
firemen cl ustered around the areas
where there are homes.·· says Re-
tnhold.
Minnich. though. is skeptical of
convenuo nal fire fighting.
"A person with a ho use en the
middle of the chaparral feels g<>Qd
when he sees a red truck go by, he
doesn't realize what a sham it is."
charges Minnich. who is critical of
zoning laws that perm11 building tn
chaparral thickets.
For two decades. county firemen
have worked to duplicate what nature
permits tn Mexico by annually con-
ducung controlled bums. The effort
nds hillsides of decades-old growth
and makes room for 1uvemle plants to
take root
Minnich says the chaparral will act
as a retardant or a natural fire break
for up to 30 years. But as the brush get
older and the thickets denser, the
chaparral is like gasoline.
.. It's one of the most explosive
shrubs in the world," says Reinhold.
"When 1t gets out of control, the fire ts
so hot that there is no possible way of
even getting close~ it,"
Controlled bums. or "prescribed
bum s" as firemen now prefer to label
them. arc close to being a science. says
the fire captain. It can take up to two
years to plan an intentional fire.
Weather stations must bt set up m
targeted areas, humidity measured,
winds calculated.
And even when all is ac-
complished. county firefighters arc
only permitted a few number of days
each year for burning by the Air
Quality Management District. This
year. the county fire department has
been allocated only 10 days for
burning.
Minnich in his push to fight lire
with fire. suggests that controlled
burning be stepped up. He calculates
it would take 5,000 acres of annually
burmng for 40 years btforc Orange
County develo~d a chaparral pat·
tern such as BaJa's.
"The other alternative is to let
nature take its course. There are some
fires where action just shouldn't be
taken.'' Mtnnsch proposes. "You
could get a real mcc I 0.000 or 15.000-
acre bum gom&.
"What we suffer from is an old
theory that fire is not natural en our
ecos) <;\cm. And that'sjust nonsense."
Wbat do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe
number at left and your message wlll be rttorded, traa1crlbed and delivered
to the appropriate editor. •
Tbe same !4-bour an1wertn1 service may be used to record letters tot.be
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must Include tbelr
name ud telepbooe number for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell H wbat'1 on yoar mind./
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPilat
H. L. lchwartz Ill
Publisher
Circulation 7141142-4331
Clnalfted MIV9'tlelnt 714/IQ-5171
All other depettrMntt 142-4&21
MAIN OFFICE
:UO w.t1 9eJ St Cmt• ._. C>.
Mel ldd<-lo• t!llO C:0.11 ..._ CA t2t2t
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yOW dO ,,. ....... 'fOI
OCJJl'I' Dy'•"'· Clll.,,. 10 a rn atlCI Y'Jfo' ~ ._.
be~
c~ , ...... ..__ ...
Chazy Dow.-,
Editor and AISlstant
to the Publtther
RCMlemafJ Churchmaft
Controller
Mall
()ta/1(19 to.ll'ly ~ -"--
I A\lllN ,...._ ...... VOL. n, NO. 1M ·
•
I
I W£A1H[R
----~ ---
Fair ski6s after morning clouds
t::,t:•" ,. .. " 11
~' ti ts ti 71
MIMIW lleacl' IA 71
MIOlnd~ " ,~ ........... .. ,,,
Coaatal
... .......... ,, 66
Htelt..i IO ..
Naw0r'"1\t 17 70
New YOl'll .. 14
Noffolll. Va. ti 70
Motttll'tati. 'ti 61
Ot.laNllNI City .., • °"*'9 n " Ortendo ti .. ~~ " ..
f>MAdelpllla .. 12
~~ 105 71
==r~ .. .. .. IS
Pwtland.Or • .,
"'~ ti 71 :=rcity .. 17
90 It .. IO
St •2 "'"° .., .. .. • Aldlmond " • t3 " e.crM*tlo 14 ..
65 48 81 LOIMI N 72 ts 44 StPat•Tempa t1 74
72 37 Salt Lal<• City ti 41
112 51 8att AnlOftiO ,, 71 .. •• 8att Diego 72 17 " && San Frenc:e.c:o 76 52
" 71 fan Juen,P.R .. 75
81 49 81 Sit Mllt'la 71 ... 17 74 s.Mtlt 17 50
12 72 Slit=' " .. " 13 8lOu.a ... 85 47 .. 65 Spa!(-.. 46 13 65 sraeuea 19 70 .. 51 T~e •2 ~ 12 65 fUClfOll lit • It TulM u 71 • .. W"111ngton t5 74
T ides
TV«IOAT
Firal IOw 3 31 am t I Fnthtgh es11m 36 S.Cond' low 2 311 p m 1 9
Second twgll 6 6 7 p rn I I
Sun 19tt I001y II I 04 p m rt9M
TuMdayat541 em anc1 .. 11~e1
I OS pm
MoonrlMtetll27pm.NtaT.-. oey 11 • oe • m ano ,,_ ag~n ., • •9
1 m Waelnaadey 11 SuRF REPORT
am
1·2 1-2
1-2 1·2
1·2
1
1·2
s-oucoon ~"'-'
Irvine p r eparing for 'war'
after Marines buzz pie nic
Councilman pushes El Toro Investigation:
planes swept low over groundbreatttng rites
She said the F-l 8s fly low in groups
of three with i.Peir landing gear down
when makJng touch-and-go landings
on the El Toro runway. The agreed-to
B ANDREA ADELSON be sent to a..-~-offict'aJs today, he sai·d. practice path is a loop from the base, Y UilX; over Sand Canyon, around Lion
O.t11eDM1JNec•1a1t "!'ve n~ver ~o anything lik.e it. I Country Safan and back to El Toro.
The deafening roar of three Jet can t say II~ mient1onaJ b,µJ ti was ~ -• way abnormal," Brady said. ··r think the time has come to
fighters is stilJ n nging in the ears of ex-B d 1 h tli 1 seriously discuss their conducting Manne David Sills. ra y. scvera ot er city o 1cla s and prominent tndustnahst Arnold war games elsewhere," said Sills,
The Irvine City Council member, a Beckman and Irvine Co. President adding that moving training missions
former infantryman, is asking mili-Tom Nielsen were among 500 pie-to uninhabited areas would not
ta.ry officials at the El Toro Marine nickers gathered at the undeveloped threaten the "military mission."
Corps Air Statton to invesugate why. cornerforthe officialgroundbrcaking "If 90methmg had gone wrong.
jct pilots makmg practice camer cerem ony of the 177-bcd Irvine they could have dumped right into
landings over the weekend apparent-Medical Center. those people," said Sills. wno also
ly "buzzed" a group of picnickers. Many people ducked their heads. attended the c.ercmony.
Three jets, one with tts afterburner children covered their ears and many •
glowing, deviated from prcscnbcd complained of ringing in their cars for 1:'hc councilman pointed out that
practice runs when they skimmed up to 1 o minutes afterward, Brady lrv1.nc's development plans cater. to _powcr.~Ad swool>Cd~Uict.' ·--~ ·· · --~11Trary th'gtn pattemrby-irunmg
Sand Canyon and Old Barranca Gunnery Sgt. Peg Cauley a base industry rather thap homes under the
Roads in Irvine bcf~rc pulhng up spokeswoman. said the nights were oath of noisy jets.
over the coastal footh1l\s about 2:30 ~art ofa three-hour,pFaeti"Oe"~orabout "All our planning has carcfuUy
P:m -. Saturday, aecorchns ttr lhrce ~ doz.en planes and hchcopters .• followed as to what their practiet p1~.n1c-goers. . . including seven F-1 Ss .. from the El patterns arc and here they don't
What they wer~ do1n~ was outside Toro and Tustin squadrons. follow them," he said.
the rca~?1 of ~nythm~ we ve ever seen "According to flight operations. Added I MC President Dav1d
before, ~ss1s~nt C1ty ~anager Paul thcy~ereoverthe normal fleet carrier Baker. "It was probably some weck-
Brady ~1d this. moryung.. A letter landing pattern and at the normal end warrior. But there wasn't any way
requesting a m1htary 1nqu1ry was to altitude" of 600 feet, Cauley said. to miss us."
Three held after mugging
in FV hospital parking lot
Three suspects were arrested after a
23-year-old Fo untain Valley Com-
munity Hospital o perating room
techmc1an was struck in the face and
robbtd while walking to his car m the
hospital parking lot, police said
today.
Detectives said the daytime rob-
bery occurred afler the victim ap-
parently had stuck his wallet that
contained $30 in cash between the
seats of his auto.
A suspect identtfied as James A.
Abraham, 23. of Anaheim, allegedly
was taking the wallet from the
unlocked auto when observed by the
vic1im. A scuffle ensued and the
hospital worker was punched m the
face. The injl!1)' required several
stitches in the right eyebrow.
Fountain Valley Detective Steve
Isaacs said three suspects were ap-
prehended when Anaheim police
stopped their car Friday night, several
hours after the tncidcnt.
Abraham. identified as the driver
of the car. allegedly admitted the
strong armed robbery, Isaacs said .
The other occupants m the 1974
Plymouth Duster. were listed as
Donald S. Jepson, 24, Westminster
and Cun as C. Franki~ Anaheim.
They also were booked info Orange
County Jail on suspicion of armed
robbery. They denied participating in
the hospital parking lot incident.
according to Isaacs.
No· injuries in plane mishap
I A hard landing by a small plane tied
up the main runway of John Wayne
A1rpon for an hour and a half Sunday
morning, delaying several com-
mercial flights
No one was injured in the accident,
which occurred as Newport Beach
resident William Mclaughlin was
landmg his Cessna Skymastcr.
The plane's landing gear failed to
lock, causing the wheels to buckle.
The plane skidded about I 00 yards
down the runway before coming to a
stop.
McLaughlin had taken the plane
into the air for a shon flight afler
washtng the aircraft.
Emergency crews drained about 90
gallons of fuel from \he plane before
towing it off the runway to the
airpon 's north tie--down atta.
Three incoming commercial fliahts
were temporarily diverted to Onta.no
Airpon. They were allowed to fl y into
Orange County when the runway was
cleared.
And four commercial flights had to
sit at their gates dwi ng the delay while
the runway was cleared of debris.
The Federal Aviation Adminis-
t.ration plans to 1nvestigate why the
landing acar failed.
-;;m;;;;;~~~--iiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~T:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..
Balloon Pa~ent Due?
Tired of-Renting? Meet
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Need to move?
Seminar• to.,..., you lOAM If you own a h9me. or wish you did . come to the
1PM • o 1y 100 ••htt>lt0ts trom Faire and find everything you need to know about the Real Estate lndu tty ....
Of undtf one r()()f to HELP homebuying 8nd financing. Dozens Of lenders and related
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services in one place let you comparison·shop without pres$ure .
Free loan prequaltfying tells you exactly how much you can afford
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3 DAYS ONLY OONT MISS ITI
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! I
MONDAY JUN(: 1 I 1 •18.1
e
1
Coast
Laguna's historic 'hang-
ing gate' is up again after
being held 'hostage'. I A3
California
Gasollne prices are tak-
ing a dive in California,
despite Gulf arisis./ AS
Nation
At least three die as
Northeast swelters In re-
cord heat wave./ A4
Hart's walking a thin line
as national Democratic
convention nears./ A4
orld-
Arab nations agree to
reimburse for damages
to Gulf oll tankers.I AS
A Soviet citizen has been
jailed for allegedly $pying
for the CIA./ A4
Features
-T<~EMl·bo&Pavtlleno•s
getting older -and bet-
er. It's now listed In the
National Register of~
toric Places./81
Hikers, blcycllsts and
equestrians are hitting
the trails -150 miles
worth In Orange County
-this summer ./81
CoUege presidents give
tow marks to lecture
note-taking servlces./82
Sports
Newport Christian Hlgh's
David Clllay says farewell
to high school stardom
when he-pitches In his
final game Tuesday ./C1
Burt Hooton and the
Dodgers hand the Atlanta
Braves their third defeat
lnarow./C2
Cal State Fullerton wins
the College World Serles
with pttcblng. /C4
Entertainment
The kings of comedy and
drama, Nell Simon and
Arthur Miiier, wlll be rep-
resented In new pro-
ductions of old works this
week./83
Bualneu
The Newport Beach-
based National Educa-
tion Corporation has
begun construction of a
$6 mllllon "super
school.'' /85.
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
eu.eness -
Callfornla News
Clualf~
Croaword
Death Notices
FMturea
Horoscope
Ann Ltndetl
Mutual Funds
Natlonel N"9
Opkilon
Peparaz:zl
Polc8 log
PubllC Notlcea
8por1• .
Stock Marketa
TeMMtlon
Thwt••
WMther
WortdNeWt
B• A3
8 5
A5
C6-8
~~
8 1-2 ca
92
8 5
A4
A8
8 1
A3 cs-e c1..-ee ea
83
A2
A5
f 11111111111
-
OH ANC ,f COUNTY LALl~Ql,N:A . .
rea
\
Court reverses California decision,
says samples don't hav e to be saved
Prom staff ud win reports
In a victory for pohee and pros-
ecutors. the U.S. uprcmc utW't
ruled today that law tnforc.emmt
agencies have no duty to preserve
breath samples taken dwina the
arrests of drunk.co drivina.suspects.
The high court ruling reverses a
California appeals ~urt decision that
forced poli<:c to preserve the breath
samples so that a su pccted drunken
driver could have the rcsuJts double-
cbccked.
The results of a breath test may still
be used in coun cases even if the
breath sample is destroyed. the high
court ruled. The court said police
have no ConstituuonaJ duty to
preserve breath samples taken from
people arrested on suspicion of
drunken driving.
The cue centers on a relatively new
method that permits breath samples
lo be ~ed for as long as l S days,
ording-te-.-spokcsman fur 1hc
Oran~ County Public .Oefeadet'"s
offioc.
Previously, there was no method
for preserving a breath sample.~~~
Jn an effort to abide by the a~
court deciston. police officers in mOll
California counties and. cities haw
been. advisina-drUnken 4riviat
suspects that a breath sample coukt
not be preserved but that blood or
urine samples could be stored for
future tesnng.;
.. Polioe OffteerS have just been
tcllin& suspects that if they want to
retest, then they should have a blood
or urine test.," said Bill Salt. lepl
adviser to the Huntincton Beach
Police Department.
Sage said to the best of his
lcnowlcd&e. ~ appeals court ruling
bad not resulted in a nooo of drunken
driving cases being overturned.
He said the Supreme Court ruling.
clearing police of any rapoosibili ty to
preserve breath tests, wtll give patrol
offteers one less thins to ""OJ"rY about . -mllin1ai~rrr-. ----~~.;,.-.,.-.,.
Strip search
case settled
reaches accord
on $500,000 claim
By ROBERT B.AJlI.Ell °' ..............
Eljn . Whne and anothcr·~"'!fc~mate~....._sch...,..ool ..... ~
emplo)ec took the 1iJ1 to ~ nune's
office for a strip search. o money
· wufou.nd.
Letichia and her motbri', Rose-
.mane, lilod a SS00,000 darnatie claim . Ocean View Sc:bool ·1District. =-~ daimat ~vioUsl_y mat Leticlaia was siJWJcd our became she
was oae of ~-black stlldeaas in
the school
Her lawyer, 8Jai1e ~ c4 0....
U.Jdria-,-Seese was ill a group of
seventh and ei&hth &lade students
durina an assembly at Patk Vi~
Schoof in H untmaton Beach on Dec.
I, J 982 when the pupils beg.an playing
around. One bo too a walk-1Irom ;..,_.i'-T!I~----another and waved 11 around in the
Mesa, cJajmcd that the aviJ r,WbtJ D
the SC\.COffi"gr'adei"wctCViOlatcd by
school offiaa.ls ... .,ho caused her to
complcteJy disrobe and stand com·
plctcly n~ed while her clothes were
inspected. Scandinavian dancers
Two memben of tbe Vau Junior Folk
Dance euemble of Loe Anaele. •wlnC into a pollta at tbe 7th annual ScandJnj'rian
Fe8tlnl, held Saturday at the South Cout
Plua Vtnaae. Swedlab~ Nonrealan and
Dull8hfolk hncera dreued in traditional
co.ta.me. twirled around a Oower-co•ered
Maypole during the--titemoon to the
801lDda of natl.Ye folk bands. The Scan-
dl.na'rian featlnl bei(an u a way to accent
tbe European 8hope ln the VlllaCe and hu
evol'Yed into an educational ezperlence.
Laguna election petition
embroiled in legal fight .
City clerk blocking citizens' petition drive,
sayB noticeappeared in ·wrong newspaper ·
By DAVID BISHOP
OftMDlilr ....
The Laguna Beach cit)' clerk. won't
honor a l~I notice announcm$ a
petition dnve calling for election
consolidation because she says the
notice appeared in the wrong news-
paper.
Meanwhile, the president of the
Laguna Beach Taxpavers Associa·
t1on, Paul Christiansen. one of fi ve
association officers who signed the
published notioe, insists the notice 1s
legal and said the group plans to
collect signatures on the pcuuons
despite the clerk's decision.
The notice. pubhshed in the Datl}
Pilot on Ma) 31, stgnifies the mtent of
the Taxpayers Association to collect
signatures in support of a ballot
measure on the question of con-
solidating the city council. clerk. and
treasurcrclccuons. now held 1n i\pnl.
with the No"ember Orang~ Count)
elecuon ballot m e"en·numbercd
}cars begmning an 1986. The petition
also demands that the question be
placed on the ballot this November.
C it) clerk Verna Rolhnger sa1d she
mformed Chnsuansen Thursda) that
the Dally Pilot 1s not spcc1ficall~
adjudicated to publish legal notices
for the City of Laguna Beach and that
(Pleue eee LAGUNA/ A2)
Professor burned up over
brush fire-fighting policy
Stamping out early blazes ))Ostpones · loss;
he favors Mexico's 'let ft bum· system
At least Sl.5 billion has been pent
since officials tarted fi1ht1nf brusb fircs in Southern Cahfom1a and
acographer Richard Mmnich claims
firemen might as well <have let the
money bum alona with the h1&h
weeds and brittle chaparral for all tflc
a6od it's done.
"lnstitulionali1(ij chao •• i how
Mjnnich vie the efforu of fire-fiptcn who c~bau t them lve5 bat·
thl\I the blues that whip ar\d race thro~h the dry hill id and ca-
n)ons.
Minnich. a UC Riverside pro~ wr. 11~ namp1n1 out bruih
fi(CI in the earl> staacs and k~na
ch'&rrcd 1c1T to a manimum e<tu·
ally d more narm l.ba.n a<>Od-
"Wc don't top fire'\, we po tponc
them:: ~ Mannith. "ho claim
------
Southern California is vulnerable to
dcva tatingfircs as l&fle as 250,000
acres, or 400 square miles.
Mmnich reached hts conclusion
after comparing fire activity in
Southern Cahfomia to brush fires in
northtm BaJa California, where no
fire control exists. His findini a~
pear in a ~nt issue of 1encc
mapzine.
Althou&h northern~· ha nearly
t~icc as many bru~h flrt as u~m
California. the Gl'C1 arc rclalJ\'cly
mall <'ompettd. to b&Ues in Oran e.
n D:i'IO and l.os A natl CP,unues,
the ...., discovered.
SOutfi or lhe border. the m ll n fire
itt over tht pllt l 0 yean ha n
4,000 acm In '-!them C'ahfomta,
it's more than l0.000. OunnJ that
pan, the 11.r&dt nof1hcm fire
....
StEYE
-1a.1l£
PERS PE CTI\[
air.
The wallet, which the owner said
contained two SS balls. disap{>Cllrcd
dunng the horseplay. When n was
found sometime later. It contained
just $5 .
Some of IM veutM -in~ved.
claimed uticbia. then 12 years old.
had taken the monc).
After some dlscuss1on the girl
allegedly challenged Vice Principal
Paul Chrlatian.en
The case was scheduled to go before
Judge U.S. District Judge Laughlin
Waters last week in U.S. District
Court in Los An$Cles.
But before tnal could start, the
Scases, who have subsequently
(Pleue eee STIUP I A2)
Cocaine
suspect
guilty
By STEVE MARBLE
OI -o.llJ ,.._. lt8ll'I
.\ ~4-}ear-0ld Orange Coast man
has pleaded guilty to bavi!'I
laundered m1lhons of dollan in
profits for a cocai ne nng that fcdcral
agents behc' c smuggled more than
t\\.O tons of the drug into Southern
Cahfom1a
M1cha~I "-.aplan. who has listed
addresses in both Newpon Beach and
(Pleue eee COD/ U)
'
-------=------- -I -·-Aa Orange Coa_. DAILY PILOT /Monday. JuM 11, 198A
OC parep.ts claim landloFds
· discriminating against kids ..
t::r 71 .. • 1'1
LMObocll r ,, .. Coastal
By th A toclated af'te11
A'NAltElM r-Jason and Johnny
l>«ll'Ol.I find U:t~rn Ives spendUlt a
lot of tame stahdina on the balcony
overlook:ina the ara y areas and
walk.way, of the Hununaton West
apartment complex
The two boys. 14 and 12 re pcctsve.
ly, would nQnnally be found ridina
the1r bicycles and play1na~carby.
Children at the 286.unit Wamer
A venue complex are not allowed to
play outside after 8 p.m. The grass as
ofT-limrts nt all tames. No ooe younaer
than 18 1s allowed to swim in the pool
without a parent present Secunty
guards are on duty to enforce the
rules.
The landlord says u·s for the
protection of tenants, but some
Huntington West residents call 1t
"child discrimination." .
Families claim they've been hand-
ed citations to stgn when their
children violate the rules. Parents say
they've ~n told that three mfrac·
tions may result in their eviction.
"It's as 1f you're liv1na in a
concentration camp, .. said Nonna
Pedroza, 37, the boys' mother. She
says her family is one of several
fam1hes that plan to move out.
In a 1982 landmark decision, the
Califomta Supreme Court ruted 1hat
children may no lonaer be barred
from rental units under the Unruh
Civil Ra&}lts Act. But rules restricting
youna tenants' activities hive spruna
up.
80 81 58 •2 91 .. t3 71 es .. 66 ..
"'4empN1 11 71
Mlemlhech ... ,,
Mldfftd~ .. 11 ........ • r: MplMIPU ., .......... '° • Hft°'*"9 t1 TO NllwYOt11 .. 1'4 NOf'fOlll, v .. " 1'0
Noni! Plett• 3 ..
Ottlllhom• City .. Omehe " • °'181100 " :: Pllln Sptlnol .. ~ M 72 ~II 1: 11 ==r ... .. .. .. PCWllenO. Or .. fl
~~ " 11 =tty .. 17 M IO
~ a ~
Alctwnond " .. a.or-to ... ..
St LOllll .. 72 ltt ...... TM!OI " 74
LAGUNA PETITION BLOCKED ••. 72 31 lalt Lelle City 81 41 92 SI SenAnlonlo ,, 1f Ml •• Sen OleOo 72 87 811 61 8111 Frlllldlco 78 .. Tides From Al
she would l\Ot accept the notice unles)
1t was re-published an one of two
weekly newspapers that are legally
jdj"ud1cated for Laguna Beach.
"That may be true, however. the
Pilot has an adjudication number
wnh the Count y of Orange and hu
.run legal advcrt1sements for tne Cit>
of Laguna Beach before," said Olaz}
Dowahby, editor and assistant to the
publisher of the Costa Mesa-based
daily newspaper.
"The city cler1c seems to be operat-
ing in a wa} that seems to be
beneficial to her at this ume."
Dowahb> said ... If It was OK before.
""h> isn't 1t now?"
Chnst1ansen finished third among
seven candidates in an unsuccessful
bid 10 wan one of two City Council
cats 1n Apnl's elcct1on. He was
elected president of the Taxpayers
\ssoc1auon, a 3 7-}car-old organiza-
tion, a few weeks later.
Dorothy J. "Sunny" Rhodes. listed
an the notice as sccretarv for the
Taxpayers orµnizauon, was defeated
by R-0lhnger 1n a bid to be elected CH}
clerk in Apnl's city clecuon
The quesuon of consolidating elcc-
uons was an issue once before. ln
A!l&U.St 1983. rcpresentauves of the
Taxpayers Association presented
evidence to CH} Council that con-
solidation would save the cny money
and generate greater voter interest.
. However. council members rejected
lhe propasal. partial!) based on a
report prepared by Rollinger
emphasizing the loss of local control
over the election process that would
result from the propasal. As c1tyclerk.,
Rollinger 1s in charge of conducting
local elections.
"That was not a recommen-
dation." Rolhngersa1d, "but from my
comments I think you can safely
conclude that I'm not wild about the
idea of consolidation."
Chnstianscn charges that Rollinger
1s "violating the spirit, if no,t the letter ·
of the law'' by denying the Taxpayers
their nght to petition the voters.
Rollin~cr says she is backed up 1r.
her opinion by city attorney Phihp J.
Cohn of. the firm or Rutan -ana
Tucker, and by city election consult-
ants Martin and Chapman of
Lakewood.
RollinJer also dout>ts there is
enough ume to get the petition on the
November ballot, especially if the ..
Taxpayers must republish the notice
in another newspaper as she says they
must do.
"h would be good if the Daily Pilot
were adjudicated because sometimes
the weekly newspapers don't allow us
to get something published in time,"
Rollinger said. "The Pilot I'm sure
would meet all the requirements (for
adjudication in Laguna Beach) but
thev never applied that I am aware
of.''
TWaOAY
F1r11 low ,,.,.,,, ·11
t&7•m 311 2 3ep,m 19 ~!Ow $4tcOnc:t high 1,57 p.m 8 8
8uo Mtl loc:l8y II 8 CM P m., ,._
T UIMOly 81 5·4 1 1.m 111<1 1111 li08l" 11
805pm
Moon ,._ 11 e 27 pm •• r ..... 41)' 11 4 08 ..... Ind r1-IQ8!ft It • 411
1 m Wedtwldey
tel 71 8#1 ""*'·" .ll 81 •• SI 8te¥1ti1 87 74 ... 1111 82 72 r.:.w: .. 83 .. 15 841«*-83 85 SyrdM Ml 11 T~• 82 H-T.--ff I Tul• .. .. Wllhlnoton
, SuRF REPORT
llD
1·2
1-2 1'2 • ,.i
1·2
1
1·2 s..-0i<1C110n ~
" 75 ,. ...
87 IO .. • 1$ 41 .. 46 .. 70
82 .. .. 72
86 71
H ,.
COKE SUSPECT PLEA .•.
Rollinger said that as long as she
has been clerk (she was elected to her
third four-year tenn in April) she
never authorized a legal notice for
publication in the Daily Pilot. "But
I'm not the only one who authorizes
them, either," she said.
Three held after mugging
in FV hospital parking lot
...
Three suspects were arrested after a
23-year-old Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital operating room
technician was struck in the face and
robbed while walking to his car in the
hospital parking lot. police said
today.
Abraham, 23, of Anaheim. allegedly
was taking the wallet from the
unlocked auto when observed by the
victim. A scuffle ensued and the
hospit.JI worker was punched to the
face. The injury required several
stitches in the right eyebrow. ·
hours after the incident. From Al
San Juan Capistrano. entered the
guilty plea Friday, according to tM
U.S. Attorney's office in Los Angeles.
Kaplan and 22 olhers were arrested
last month when federal drug agents
broke up what they behcve was
Orange County largest drug ring.
Four persons. includ.ing the alleged
kingpin of the smugghng nng. arc sun
at large
In exchange for the guilty plea. the
government agreed to drop charges of
consp1raq to d1stnbute cocaine
against Kaplan. The 24-ycar-old , who
will be sentenced Sept. I 0. faces a
maximum live-year prison sentence.
It. was alleged that Kaplan was
cmplo)ed by Hunnngton Beach resi-
dent Alan Mobley. 24, to launder
profits from cocaine sales.
FBI agents said Kaplan would pay
individuals who agreed to let him use
their savings accounts to store drug
profits.
Drug agents alleged that Kaplan
also hid the cocaine profits by
purchasing a senes of bank checks for
cash and later makrng depasits in
accounts set up by Mobley.
Kaplan I'> free on $75.000 bail.
Dowaliby said that in the past the
newspaper has cooperated with the
city by rushing into publicauon legal
advertising on shon notice at the
requesrofthe city manager.
"They ought to check their own
records," she said.
Detccti-v~· said the daynme Tob-
bery occurred after the victim ap-
parently had stuck his wallet that
contained $30 in cash between the
seats of his auto.
A suspect. identified as James A.
Fountain Valley Detective Steve
Isaacs said three suspects were ap-
prehended when Anaheim palice
stopped their car Friday night, several
Abraham. identified as the driver
of the car. allegedly admitted the
strong armed robbery, Isaacs said.
The other occupants m the 1974
Plymouth Duster, were listed u
Donald S. Jepson, 24, Westminster
ana Curtis C. Frankie, Anaheim.
They also were booked into Orange
County Jail on suspicion of armed
robbery. They denied participating in
the hospital parking lot mcident,
according to Isaacs.
STRIP SEARCH CASE .•.
Rollinger said the decision 10 place
the measure on the November. 1984
ballot must be made by Aug. 10 to
meet the county's ballot deadline. If
she accepted the Daily Pilot notice
she said the schedule could be met but
that 1t would only give the petitioners
30 days to collect the required
number of valid si~atures. 1 ~ .... ~liiliti-~.;.;;;.,;.-.-.,;..=:~"t:'-~--~~ Cnrtsttatl~n--sald ~tm-goat-ir'to-.. From Al
'Tio\ ea lo ea Ille. settled their Cl" 11
nghts claim against the d1stnct.
Neither Pope nor defense attome)
I Michael Declues will announce
1erms of the agreement but the Seases
·are very happy.·· Pope said today.
Po pe also reported that both sides
are in the process of prepanng a
contract that would proh1b1t the case
---· -----
trom being refiled.
A.cling as defendants in the case
was the Gibraltar Casualty Company,
the pnmary insurer for lhe district.
Lehchia Seasc's mother previously
indicated she would not have in-
itiated the acuon if she had only
received an apalogy from school
officials.
collect the signatures in three weeks.
Chnst1anscn said the petitions
already have been printed and his
workers arc ready to begin collecting
~ignaturcs.
"According to our attorney the city
must show cause why we shouldn't be
aJlowed to proceed." be said. "The
ball is in their coun."
FIREFIGHTING POLICY UNDER FIRE •.•
From Al
geographer says.
Hot. rolling infernos dnven b)
bone-dry Santa Ana winds will even
sputter and bum themselves out
when they hit young. green chaparral.
"v1inmch claims.
"Wat's we've done an Southern
California. though, 1s to spend a great
deal of money preparing ourselves for
a ho locaust." insists M innich
"There's no way around 1t.''
By beating back brush fires an the
earl} sla$e'>. Minnich claims fire·
fighters 1n Orange County have
retarded nature's way of forming fire
hreaks. Part-; ofthe<"ounty are "so out
of whack" that a major fire 1s jUSt a
matter of time. he adds
Mod Jeska Can)on 1s one of Orange
Count) 's rugged areas that is "out of
whack.'" fire authorities admit
Having been hit with sizable fires
only four times since 1900. the
t haparral 1n ModJeska 1s like
gasoline. firefighters say
When a brush fire is swept out of
control, there 1s nothing fireman can
do to stop 11s progress. Minnich says.
''You could bring ~n the whole U .S.
.\rmy and ll still wouldn't do an)'
good... the geographer contends
"You wouldn't have any impact until
Mother Nature damn well lets you
have an impact."
Although his ideas sound radical.
Orange Count)' Fire Capt. Mark
Reinhold says Minnich is n&Jit -up
10 a poant
"When a fire reaches a certain level.
they're isn't much you can do," says
Just Call
642-6086
Oall1 Piiot
Deffyery
II Guaranteed
"'°"°9, 'ro:t.ty M you 00
not ...... yOJI P4lC* Dy 630pm ca10.lort1pm
""" ye.JI OIJf1Y .,. be -.-d
St•11rdey .,.., ...,..., M
Reinhold. "It's up to Mother Nature.
You can Just about bank on that."
Reinhold. though, says county
firefighters arc bound -as well as
paid -to filtht brush fires aggressive-
ly and do have success in at least
stcenog firu around populated areas
and spanng homes from advancing
flames.
"That's strll our top priority," the
fire c~ptain notes.
When a raging brush fire splits and
heads in two directions, Reinbold
says firefighters will make a de-
liberate decision to battle the flames
churning toward homes while letting
the second fire talce lls toll in
unpapulatcd wildlaods.
"That's why you'll generally see
firemen clustered around the areas
where there arc homes," says Re-
m hold.
Minnich, thoulth. is skeptical of
conventional fire 1ighting. •
for up 10 30 years. But as the brush get
older and the thickets denser, the
chaparral is like gasoline.
"It's one of the most explosive
shrubs in the world," says Reinhold.
"When it gets out of control the fire is
so hot that there is no passible way of
even getting close to it."
Controlled bums, or "prescribed
bums" as firemen now prefer to label
them, arc close to beinga science, says
the fire captain. It can take up to two
years to plan an intentional fire.
Weather stations must be set up in
targeted areas, humidity measured,
winds calculated.
And even when all is ac-
complished, county firefighters are
only permitted a few number of days
each year for burning by the Air
Quality Management District. This
year. the county fire department has
been allocated only 10 days for
bum mg.
o.., ........... ~ ....... "--Alrport fire crew uaea crane to remove plane from runway after bard lan4ln1.
No injuries in plane mishap "A person wnh a house in the
middle of the chaparral feels good
when he sees a red truck go by, he
doesn't realize what a sham it is."
charges Minnich, who is critical of
zoning laws that pennit building in
c haparral thickets.
Mannich m his push to fight fire
wnh fire, suggests that controlled
burning be stepped up. He calculates
it would take 5,000 acres of annually
bum mg for 40 years before Orange A hard landing by a small plane tied The plane skidded about I 00 yards were temporarily diverted to Ontario
County develo~d a chaparral pat-up the main runway of John Wayne down the runway before c-0m1ng to a Airpon. They were allowed to Oy into
For two dcaides, county firemen
have worked to duplicate what nature
permits in Mexico by annually con-
ducting controlled bums. The effort
rids hillsides of decades-old growth
and makes room for Juvenile plants to
take root.
tern such as Ba1a's. Airport for an hour and a half Sunday stop. Orange County when the runway wu
"The other alternative is to let morning, delaying several com-Mcl..aughhn had taken the plane cleared.
nature take its course. There are some mercial Oights. into the aar for a short Oight after
fi h · · h Id • be · h · ft And four commercial Oights had to ires w ere action JUSt s ou n t No one was injured in the accident, washma t e a1rcra .
taken," Minnich pro~ses. "You which occurred as Newpart Beach Emeroency crews drained about 90 sitat theirgatesdurinathedelay_while
Id I · 1 o 15 ()()(). ·•r C'. C'. la beC'. the runway was cleared of debns. cou get area nice . or , resident Winiam McLaughhn was gallons o 1uel 1rom the p ne 1ore
acre bum going. landing his Cessna Skymasler. towing it ofT the runway to the The Federal Aviation Admini.So-
Minnich says the chaparral will act
as a retardant or a natural fire break
"What we suffer from 1s an old The plane's landing gear failed to airport's nonh tie-down area. tration plans to investigate why the
theory that fire is not natural in our lock, causing the wheels 10 buckle. Three incoming commercial fliahts landing gear failed.
ecosystem. And that's Just nonsense." 1_1iiiiii~iiim;;;:;;;;~-.;;;;-~~!iiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~Mi;;;;r.;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiillliiiiliiiiliii"-
Wbat do you lib about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tlte
number at left and your mea .. 1e will be recorded, tran1crlbed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
Tbe 11me U-boar u1weriDg aervlce may be used to record letters to the
editor on any topic. Coatrtbatora to nr Letters col•ma mut lnclade lbelr
name ud ttolephone namber for \'erUlcatJon. No clrculatloa call1, please.
Tell 11 wbt'1 oa your mind.
ORANGE .COAST Cltculatlon 714/142~
Daily Pilat Ca..tfled edYeftWne 1141142·971
Al oetMW d1p8'tlnent• la~
MAINOfflCa
a30 w.11 8lry II ~ ...._ CA
MP lddr-80J 1600 Colle U.. CA l2tM
H. L. Schw•rta 111 ~ 1"3 OrMgit COM4 ~ ~ No Publisher -llon. -...ietlOlle edllonel IMl18r OI ~-.,.... .... may Cle .. ~ ......... 1)91• ~of~~ .
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