HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-12 - Orange Coast PilotJ
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HIGH 75 c•1n11
l U[ SOA Y JlJNf , ;> 1•.rn.1
Newport workers claim sex bia
Petitioners claim female employees paid ler, the vice p~ident of the Newport
Beach City Employees Association.
personnel director, said the city tw
acknowledD'Xt I.he 1'.C9&Jm was made
but he refused to d1$CUss mnagc-
ment's stand.
''If the city docs the study. we arc.
sure they will find that dtsparitjes
eusL We are not askioa them to do
this just for fun," uid Butler.
Prior to federal lqimuoa prohibit·
in& sex di5Crimjnauon 1a employ-
ment. employers coirunoAly ICIR·
gated emplo)ces into male jobs and
female JObs. Tht wqes for tbe
women ·s 1obs considerably
10,.er than the ~ for male
-employees; accord1J11 to a rq>qn by
less than men for similar positions --Butler, a 10.year city employee,
pmented the petition to the City
Council at its Monday ni&ht meeting.
By JERRY mRSCH
Of .. o.llr .........
About a quarter of Newport
Beach's 600 full-time employets have
signed a petition asking the City
Council to conduct a wage -dis-
Coast
Fountain Valley's blue
dot project Is virtually
completed./ A3
No easy solution for
Sunflower Intersection In
Costa Mesa./ A3
California
Vicki Morgan bludgeon
murder trial gets under
way./ AS
Nation
Tornadoes, floods con-
tinue to wreak havoc on
nation's n:iJdsectjon./ A4
U.S. missile Intercepts a
dummy ABM for first
tlme./M
World
A family of American
mlssionarles drown In
flash flood .I A4
Mlnd&Body
Theacuscope,anew
device to keep tissues in
tune, Is popular with ath-
letes./81
Sports
Ex-Ocean View High and
Orange Coast College_
pitcher Jack Reinholtz
and his Cal State Full-
erton teammates return
as champs./C1
South, North coaches put
finishing touches on their
teams as Orange County
All-Star basketball game
nears./C2
Former Los Angeles
sportscaster Gii Stratton
Is running a radio station
-In a remote section of
the Island of Hawaii. /C2
Entertainment
Look for more topical
themes In made-for-TV
movies this year after the
success of such shows as
"The Day After."/83
Business
Westlands stockholders
OK merger with a Can-
adian firm.I Al.
INDEX
Erma Boml'>eek
Brklge
Bulletin Board
Bual~
Callfomta News
ClulHted
CrotlWOf'd
Death Not~
Horoacope
Ann Landerl
Mind and Body
Mut.,.i Fund•
Nation., Newt
Opinion
PaparUzl
PotSoe Log
PubllcNottc.I
Sport a
Stock Mariteta
T~tk>n
T'Mat ..
WMthet
Wortd Newt
~ .
82
A8
A3
C3--4
A4
CM
C8
84
C7
82
B1T2
C4
A4
A7
81
A3
84,C8
C1•2 cs
83
83
A2
A4
crimination study similar to one just
completed in Irvine.
At issue i1 a comparable worth
study employees requested during
salary n~ottations in April, said
Deputy City Clerk Irene Butler !Jut-
Two women-IDjared
.. Management rejected the idea
and we are not 1urt the council knows
that we want the study\ T~at is the
reason we are J)resentins lhe peti-
tion," Buller said.
Lorenzo Mota, the Ne'YJ)Ort Beach
Two Coeta lleA women were -:;=r· lqlared lloaday
wbeia t1aelr car emMbed Into aa ill pole oa Placeatla
AYeDae)lat-llOrtlld Setawc:l• llllla 8cllool la Coeta llrs •
Tbe drlYer, llar1uet Dll1. 58. ma1 baft colla.,.ei4 at tile
••1 can't talk about what goes on in
negotiations with you," Mota said.
The study would judge whether
peoP.le who bold different jobs with
similar levels of difficulty and re-
sponsibility get paid similar wages,
Butler expltined. . .
Irvine Mayor Larry Agrcn asked
hi city to conduct a similar study and
is reque1tan1 lbe Irvine City Council
set uide about SJ 00,000 for salary
adjustments. His ~ucst is.scheduled
to be debated at (omgbt's Irvine Caty
Council mcetinc. ·
lbe City or Ir\ int. "
• Ahhoujh jobs are no Jo~ for-
(Pleue eee OWPORT/A2)
Ocean monitoring . tests criticized ---
as costly. difficult
BJ Ute Auodated Pren ·
The Environmental Protection
Aacncy may vant Oranse and Los
Anceles counties waivcn lO· dump scwase that has uodc~ne ans
stnngent treatment than required by
federal law into the ocean. officials
say.
But sanitation ofl1ctals --m-
two counti~ complained Mooday
that additional oc::can monitoring
tc$ts requited in murn for tbc
waivers will be costly and difficult to
pctfonn.
The EPA and the CalifonUa ~
gio~ Wattt Quality Control Board
held a JOint hearina Friday in Rivn-sidc to cons.idicT the c:ounties• tt-'
quests.
EPA. and control board offitiilS
said they have tcntively decided to
grant Oranae County a waiver from
Newport, Laguna applaud
approval of fireworks bill
Assembly ·strongly approves legislation
returning power to local governments
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of .. 0.-, .........
The state Assembly's over-
whelming approval of lcgJslation
returning power to local governments
to prohibit the sale or use offireworks
was seen as good news to local coastal
cities who worry about the fire hazard
offireworks in crowded beach neigh-
borhoods.
Newport Beach and Laguna Beach
city officials welcomed the measure.
which was approved Monday in a
66-2 vote.
Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa.
Irvine and Fountain Valley allow the
sale and use of safe and sane
fLreworks.
But at least 83 of California's 41 S
cities restricted or banned fireworks
before an appellate court i11 San Jose
ruled four months aJO that those
ordinances were invalid because the
state bad not given cities or counties
authority to ~trict fireworks.
"Our ban on all fireworks bas been
in effect for at least 30 yean and we
have been enforcina it anyway," said
Robctt Wynn, Newport Beach city
manager.
The coun's ovenurning of the ban
received a similar reaction in Laguna
Beach.
"We were going to enforce our ban
even if someone was going to take us
to court. It is too darn dangerous here
with all of our brush and our bills.''
said Ken Frank. Laguna Beach city
manager.
The city has banned the sale of
fireworlu for many years but until
1982, Laguna Beach allowed people
to shoot off fireworks on JWy 4 on the
beach.
"What we had was a war zone. It
was rcally~mething. In response to
citizen complaints we banned the use
of fireworks at any time. Instead we
have a ~ublic fireworks display on the
beach,' Frank said.
The Assembly vote sent the bill
back to the state Senate, which had
aeproved an earlier draft by 3S. l . The
bill contains Uf$ency provisio~s
which would allow it to take effect lh1s
founh of July if igncd by Gov.
Georae Ocukmejian before then .
.. The vote is a step in the right
direction to foster home rule." be
added. -·
Wynn said the Balboa and West
Newport communities are particu-
larly in need of the ban bccausic mo t
of the structures in those areas arc
made of wood. have wood shingle
roofs and arc build closic together.
The buildmgs arc near the beaches
and could be set on fire by tray
fireworks.
"lfa fire got in th~arca it ~uJd
be very bard to fi&ht.. •• Wynn said.
Huntingtoµ EVening High:
the 'second· chance' school
Brian Deny. t 8, wa an outstandina
basket bell ~t as a sophomore at
Ocean V~ Hia,h ~hool who tran
fctr'ed to Huntenaton ~h Hiah
hool wbcn he lost his tartina
~nion u a junior.
But he said he realized too late that
he made the switch to the new tchool
for .. ,he 'WTODI RUOn•." He fdl far
behind in h' tehool Work arid at
1ntcrc t in be ctbell ancl became
dcptc:QCd. \ff~ w a psychiatrist aad
wa hosptc.ah1.cd for a cou.Pk of
v.uk . Brian i ull rt«ivtnacoun I·
•
I --~-
• • • vcntccn-yttr-<>ld
mour was a top..notch stud~t at
FountaiD Valley Hi&h school v.ho e~c:el\ea as a member of the school's
~bldour ~l\&ina arou.p. But he
encountered a tot-of stress hen her
mottief and fllhct' wtrc stttina a
divoroc. Her mother later became ill
arid htt fathtr died of l ukcmia. t
nqkcted c arid hC1' chances at
.,aduation wett nearly NiMd. he
too'' rtee1vanac»Un ling. sh id. • • •
Beth v I, alw 17. bad a bab}
Ar-(Pl ...... 8SCOIO>/ A2)
~ ................ ...-.
Showdmeln~
JUUU LoDPecker, 5, of~ waJta to be placed u,nonc tJae ci.ar.ctv. Ui a lift recreation of an oft&lDal oU
08 can ... bJ Jane Sllw. catitle& .. mei'a14 8;l: .. oa Wor~Prw tntMoDdat_at_tllePaC~tot _ -•• ID~ &eacll.llee nory. Pai A2 •.
d
I
A2**e>ranoe Coat DAILY PflOTITuesday, June 1a, 198•
:Olympic fa~~ tieketed smoothly
B1 'ne AlledalH Pre:a as computer problem " re rct0lved
and 1he fm1 u of anx1oui buyt"rJ
: Lines me &boner and operations di.s1ipa1ed.
•lmOO\hcf 11 Olym~ t1cke1 co\lnters Despite thro of ~le and
· WPORT SEX BIAS ••• tolaAl ..
Jn&lly ~led by SC • JO tfl•
:jb11onally held by women are stiJJ
:mostty filled by women and m -
:<iitiona) male jobs arc still moslly
fiUed by men. And the women a.re
'p&id 1~ even if their JObs have the
•,ame difficulcy as traditional male ~obs. the repon says.
:. In Newport Beach for ex.ample, ...
secret.an are Pl d lcs than matnten-
an~ workers e"len thouah tbe jobs
require the same rcspons1b1hty. •
Altbouah the m~ority of the em·
plO)'C't'S who i&ned the Newpon
pernion ~female. Butkr sajd she
believes me of the male emplo~ee
-such clerks -would benefit
from lbe st y.
nN' tn a romputer > tem 1ha1
couldn't pin to tid;ei for
M>me event more than· 20,000
11ckcts v."crt Id Thuf'Way and
Fnda), the tirs•da)sofwalk·up 1ide1 ks. ·d pokcsman te\ie Monte11
of the Los nacles Olympic 0 mt·
ins Committee.
. Mond y thin~ went smoother.
Tic cl were available for nine of 16
event : basketball, boxma. hockey,
modrm pentathlon, SO<:etr. track and
field, _water polo, wcia,htliftina and
wrcstl1na..
However, problems conttnucd
with access codes forcanocin~ eques-
trian, team handbaH, rowing and
shootina events..
.. We expect that the others (five
events) will be restored by the end of
the Wttk." Mon11c1 said. •
~SEWAGE DUMPING PERMIT WEIGHED •. ·hoaiAl
• Pnmaf) treatment removes solids
and lOJttc matenals from sewage;
sccondar) treatment further punfies
by removing orµn1c substanttS.
: A dectSton bn the wa1 ver is ex-
:a>cctcd in about f wo months. he said.
:,. "If the waiver 1s not granted. ;-e
would be obliged to put an additional
:$100 mil hon into capital expenses"
!or secondary treatment equipment.
Jdgar said Monday.
The equipment would boost the
ounty•s cost from about $300,000 to
1.5 million every year. while the cost
: f the additJonaJ monitorinJ tests
ould only be about $1.S milhon. he
••ud.
While the county 1s committed to
)ro vidang the resources for the ad-.
!\
•
ditional monilorina. ··we question
whether some of the requirements are
possible,'' Edpr said.
:·Some of the procedures have
never been done and we don't think
they can be done. A lot of data they're
ltfngaoesn .. tbttowa sclemiftcbest
for doina it." he said.
But lhc EPA feels strongly that 1he
monitonng data is needed· "to de•
termine what impact, if any, a lesser
amount of treatment is going to have"
on the water around the point of
discharge and on the marine life,··
said, Patricia Eklund, chief of the
EPA•s waiver review team.
The federal standard requires the
removal of 85 percent of sohds.
Orange County officials said 1he
county's current plan complies with
the state conuol board's ocean plan,
which requires 75 percent removal.
Federal law requires agencies to
aradually work toward meeting the ~5
percent standard. But 11 allows the
EPA to grant varianttS if a state also
ISJ'Ctt" -
The counues would !»«quired to
monitor the chemistry of the water.
the effects of the discharge on marine
organisms in and on the water.and the
solids that are removed from the
sewage. Ekfund said.
Dr. Rimmon Fay. a biologist .with
Pacific Biomarine Laboratories Inc ..
argued against the variance.
"If waste were good for the ocean,
the fisherman would be comins in
here saying, 'Give us more -this is
great.' ..
MARINES QENY 'BUZZING' CROWD ••• . JToilaAl
WlA lHtR
-- --
Cooler skies and low ,clouds
Tides
'""' IOw :=.:riow·
TOOAY
23tpm
157pm
.... Qrend~ .. 17 Ofeat , ...
74 52 Henlord
.. 12 ~ 10 J7 ~ 17 7 4 HeulilOn
., .. ltldlel~
83 17 -**-......
72 .. Jec:Qon .. nM ~ • u KantM ettr • ao l•V-oM 14 71 Uttle AOClc
: ~ :::.:r'
IO 7 4 U1b11cic* 15 It~ 11 Ill .._,, haclll
.. 70
fl 11 91
$3 ..
15 ..
'3 as
12 16 • t2
12 n
IO 17
12
13
.. .. .... n .. u 11 .. . u 71 .. . u .. .. ..
" 10 ~ .. 101 , • u .. N II 11 .. N •t3 IO II 71 ..
74 .. ..... 11 ,.
10 72 ., ..
t2 71 72 13
87 u .. ,.
• 41 • 11
IO •
74 17 70 .,
11 ..
12 10 .. ..
.. 72 17 75
.. 70
.... 71
Temps " 12 15 67
.. 72
72 12 -to $1 I: SU RF REPORT
.. LA IO 63
t2 55 17 ..
15 51 .. 19
74 3$ h~~-----=-
.. " 92 75
.. 73
12 71
11 50
I~
2·3 2·3 w 1.3
1
1-3 SMll dlnlCtlon· eout"-t
DNCTIOM ,.., ,.,, ,.,, ,.,,
poor poor
llllr
Living pictures previewed
at Pageant of the Masters
World's press attracted to Laguna event;
Festival of Arts opens to the public July 7
8,y DAVID BISHOP Road Festival grounds, from the
M!r'1WC..11,.1 •n1 Sigma photo agency in Paris to a
. . J.apane$C-publishinJ' b:ome-10 the M~nday mgh t was stnc~l y for the-crew from Ripley's Believe h Or Not.
media at uauna Beach s famous The pageant premieres for the
Pageant of the Masters. and the P.UblicJuly7andrunsnia,htlythroua,h
world's pre~s showed .up in force to Aug. 26 in conjunction with the S2nd
get a preview of this year•s pro-annual Festival of the Arts, wttich is
duction. held on the arounds adjacent 10 the
Hundreds of write~ photogra-Irvine Bowl at 650 Laauna Canyon
phers and television crcwsjoslJed and Road.
jockeyed for proper angles as the The festival features an11ts,
renowned SI-year-old pageant un-sculptors and artisans who display
Vtiled its newest human recreations and sell their wprk. Special enten.ain-
of ~works of att on stage in the meot as well as proerams for children
organization 1s its volunteers, accord·
ing to a spokesman.
A roster of 500 volunteers from
around Orange County participates
in the nightly P.roducuon of the
pageant on two different casts and as
backstage support.
This year's pageant is payin&
special tribute to the 1984 Summer
Olympics by recreatfog one of the
three offical Olympics com-
memorative gold pieces.
James Peed, the U .S. Bureau of the
Mint engraver who conceived the
design of the $10 coin, was flown here
from Washington. D.C., especially to
be on hand for the work's unveilina.
Irvine Bowl. arc featured on the grounds regularly. """'-.-:.o.: o .t an -dilTCrcnt . news f'tsti•_ad"!f opuawd n11 non
organizations from all over the world profit orpn121t1on aovcmed by a
converged on the Laguna_ Can_y9n board of directors, but the he~ofthe-
Not only lhe mediaiikes the event.
though, more than 300,000 people
visit the festival grounds each sum-
mer and die f'qeant of·tho M15'e0<-
has been sold out for every per-
formance for the past 24 years.
SECOND CHANCE SCHOOL •.•
From Al
when she was 14. She attended
Westminster High at two different
times. Edison High. Huntington
Beach High and the School-a~ed
Mother's Program. She was getting
Jost in the shuffle and her chances for
academic success appeared almost
nil. • • • But Brian. Debbie and &th dug
deep and overcame their obstacles
with a lot of grit and hard work-and
some help.
Wednesday evening they'll be
dressed in royal blue gowns and
graduation caps and will receive their
high school diplomas like so many
other students. 9tlt their route was
different.
All three transferred to Huntington
Beach Evening High School. They
gi ve the campus that doesn't have a
band or a football team or a
cheerleader the credit for their
academic salvation.
They're allowed t<' work at their
own pace and cag hold outside JObs.
School starts at 3 p.m. and ends a1 9
p.m. And all credit their success to
small classrooms and teachers who
'perform more like coaches and tutors
and who, the youngsters say. genu-
inely care for them.
always been intimjdated by govern-
ment classes because she heard
friends say how hard they are.
She said her teacher. Jackie Garcia,
gave her a choice of textbooks but
Beth .still dt<l badly on tests. Garcia
had Beth go through all the material
again. Ultimatelr. Beth said she
passed the district s proficiency test in
JOvemment with flying colors. And
in doin$ so she also developed an
interest in governmental affairs.
Beth. who said she plans to attend a
couple of classes at Orange Coast this
summer to test the academic waters.
said her desire to show her dad that
she could do it helped inspire her to
get her diploma.
"I admire this young lady, School
Administrator Ferren Christensen
said. "She encountered a tremendous
challenge at the age of 14. Now look at
her, she's a very responsible young
adult. She's a better citizen for
hanging in !here and tackling her
challenge.··
Brian Berry. who transferred 10
Huntington High to play basketball
but realized he left all has friends
behind at Ocean View. came to
Evening High twomonths ago and
has made up lots of ground. eamina
A's and B's.
But he said he encountered gJoomy
times when he realized he switched
schools for the wrong reasons and lost
a lot of sclf~teem.
But the 6-foot-1-inch athlete said
he prospered by learning at his own
pace. He, now plans to attend Golden
West College and then Cal State
Fullerton.
''Bnan hasd1s~&
the staff in a remarkable way. And I
don't think we've heard the last of
him in athletics." Christensen said.
Debbie Armout has made up nearl~ 50 credits since coming to
Evening High in January. She also
worksregularly as a waitress at Coco's
Restaurant.
.. , gol burned out with school and
from all the pressure.
"But the teachers here (Evening
H1~h) arc wonderful. I couldn't
believe 11. That have time to give 10
me. They care. And Mr. C.
(Chnstcnsen) has been a great en-
couragemen1.
"He made me feel I can succeed.
"Nobody in my family has ever not
graduated. I've planned my life and I
plan to graduate at 17. Ifs imponant
for me to succeed ."
Christensen said he has no doubts
1hat she will.
"She has the mtelligence and
background to do whatever she wants
1odo," he said. "She'll be successful at
whatever she decides." Beth Vogel. the girl who anended
three different high schools plus the
School.aged Molhers Proaram. said
Evenina High teachers "don't butt
into your business. Ther don't press-
ure you. they help you:
A petite and pretty blonde w11h
' braces on her teeth, Beth said she's
"I was ashamed, .. he said. "A lot of
my friends were going to college and I
wasn't going anywhere."
The three -Brian. Beth and
Debbie-will graduate with about 44
of their classmates in the open field
behind the campus they share with
Wintersburg High School. 17200
Golden West A venue. Ceremonies
start al 5:30 p.m.
Just Call
642-6086
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>'°" • '* ,_ "°"' CC"'1 .,. ' • "' ......... I 0 a I!\ 111'4 ,,... OlliPt' ... .,.....,.,
Caroue.tton
T1lepttonee
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPilat
H. L. 8chwerta lU
Pubtlshef
Cl\aly CJowehy
Editor and Assistant
to the Publisher
ltephen '. Cerao PrOduction Manage.
Clrculetlon 1t4/M2....,.
Claeeafted edvertJelng 714/M2·5'71
AH othef ctepertmen .. ea..-1
MAIN Offtel
lJO Vfall .... fl Colla .._. CA
Wit lddr-lo.a llWIO Cotle ..._ CA tn1i
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Ill l~H.-f L,. __________ ...;, ____________________________________________________ __. ............. .._ ____ ...
Huiitingten-Beach students
sue district OiVer expulsion
Cite loss of scholarships as. trustees
continue prom-cocaine incident probe
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ... o.lly ,... .....
Two of nine students facmg ex-
pulsion from Huntington Beach High
School because they allegedly had
cocaine in their possession at the
school's junior-senior prom have
filed suit against school district
officials.
The two senior class students -
Thomas Wnght and Matthew Kass
-say if they are not allowed to
graduate with their classmates Thurs-
day they will lose college scholar-
ships.
Man sought
in Balboa
Island rape
Newport Beach police are hunting
for a man who beat and raped a 27-
year-old woman late Sunday as she
walked from her boyfriend's Balboa
Island apanment to her car.
The woman, a Costa Mesa resident,
said the attacker ~ut his hands around
her throat and said, "I really like your
dress," according to Newport Beach
police.
The rapist, pol ice said, punched the
woman in the lower back and threw
her down on the-front scat of her car,
parked on Coral Street. The assailant
threatened to kill the woman if she
looked at his face, police reported.
The woman described her attacker
as bcina sharply dressed and havina.a son, deep voice. She said he wa in his
late 30s or early 40s. Police sajd the
attack took place at about 10:30 p.m .
June on Coast:
Cool and cloudy
They also claim they that a recent
5cbeohtiSliia p0ticy ordcrfng STU-
dents to submit to random searches as
a condition of attending school
activities violates their constitutional
rights.
The students also had souabt a
temporary restrainina order blockina
Monday nia,hfs expulsion hearings
before school board members. Bua
Superior Coun Judae Robert Polis
denied the motfon on grounds that
the request was premature in preced-
ing action by trustees. accordina to
coun sources.
School trustees. meanwhile, met
behind closed doors and heard testi-
mony from three students and their
parents until midnight Monday.
They held similar hearinas on five
other students previously and are
expected to announce their action at
tonight's regularly scheduled board
meeting. The ninth suspended stu·
dent has requested a delay in hear-
ings.
Superintendent Jake Abbott had
taken a stand 1hat aUqed ~ or
possession of cocaine is a "blatant
violation" of school reauJauons and
that officials have to send out a
message that it won't be tolerated.
Switnrner
collapses,
dies in sun
A West Covipa man wu pulJed
from the surf near the Balbol Pier on
Monday afternoon af\er apparently
suffcrina a hcan attack and perhaps
drownina.
Leroy Pctenon, 65, was swimmina
abou1 1 SO yards from the ahorc about
3:30 p.m. Monday when be threw his
arms up in the air and shouted to his
companion, lnarjcj Dittmar, who wu suuna on thC tiaeh.
Petenon then fell face forward tnto
Trustees in the past have pretty
well followed Abbott's previous rec·
ommendations for expulsion.
School officials said today that the
material found in two limousines in
two sc:parate-incid?fitnl the May 11
junior-senior prom at lbe Lona Beach
Elks Oub bas been tested out by a
criminaHst for the Huntington Beach
Police Deparunent. He testified in
hearings that the substance is cocaine,
sources say.
Officials also disclosed that stu-
dents were warned not to take alcohol
and drugs to class functions. They
also were warned, the official said,
that they would possibly be subject to
searches.
The separate but identical suiu
filed Monday in Superior Court allege
that neither Kass or Wright possessed
drugs and if there were illegal drugs in
the limousine, they were ~ssessed by
another party in the vehicle.
The two students arc asking for
undetermined amounts of money in
the suit against the five trustees and
Superintent Abbon and Principal
Ann Chlebicki.
The pair claim they can't calculate
the value of &heir education.
diplomas, scholarships that already
have been granted and eductional
op port uni ties.
HB bank robber
sought by cops
Police are scarchina for a man who
robbed a Huntillj1on Beach bank
Monday of about S800.
The holdup occurred at 11 :23 a.m.
at theOolden StateSanwa Bank, 6100
Warner Ave. ,
Police said a man handed 1 teller a
notesayinahc bad aaun, then pointed
to the cash drawer. The man then Otd
the bank w1th the money.
The robber wu dcscri bed u 1
CaucaSJan man, qt 26 to 32. about 6
fftt tall. wetahina about 230 poundlt
Wlth lia,ht brown curly hair • ~.-...~-
Cool. cloudy mommas and eve-the water. Dittmar screamed for help
ninas .-ith hazy afternoon un1hinc and • Mlrb) un blither. Vcntan Correction· wilf pttvail throuJh Wednesday as VaJcnuno, 1•am out and puUed
~uthem C1Ji fom11 ~ules into the Peterson to the ahorc. ...:.---------
typical June ~eat~cr paucm. -------'Paramedics ~ summonta and Hiahs Wednesday will reach 68 10 Peterson was taken to HOii Mcm· An article in June S's Dally Pilot
75 dctr«i after O\Crniaht low of SS orW HMPiW in Ncwpon Btach, inc:omctly identified two s1\Mkftt
to 6S for mo t inland and coastal where he was pronoun<ed dead winocri at Edison Hiih Sch00l'1 · • l n.. ""·d ....... ............ Golden Key w1rd1 prosram. areal. ltcord1n& to lhc Nauona rdCnon ,.. IU11~red a.-.' attack Stnior Michele An•uatvniak wat
Weather rv1cc. 1 l yean earlier and docaon 11 Hoq f .... 1 " K ·
Moun tam arcu will rcmatn fair but spttulated he hed another hean the winner 0 &he GOiden C)' in
C'OOkr Wtdnc~au. with the late n1•ht ati.ck while w1mm1H Monda", home economics and junlot Al"a
1 .,, ·• 1 <Jones wu the top winner •n and Hrly morn ma foa hnl(nn\alona pohcc said. a~mie competition. The Dady .
the lo~ r coa tal lo . n autopiy 11 pcnd1na. Pilo\ rqms tht tnor.
I '
-BUL L£ TIN B OARO
CM History society
will hanor Luskin
A Prekntation on O:lc excavation of Joto Sepul~tda·a
dobe on the Rancho San Joaquin wtll be prcsenttd al W~nc!day•s metuna of the Costa Mesa Historical Society. • • .
The society also will present its 1eholanrup and honor Dr. Bernard Luslun, who has res1aned has post u pt'Clident
of Orange C~t Collete effective this 1ummer.
. The ~~una beJJn• at 7:30 p.m. in the bistoric:al
society bwldina at Plumer and Anaheim streets in Costa Mesa. Call 631·S918 for infonnation.
Folk daacen plan beaclJ party
The Lqun.a Folkdanoers will be hoslinJ a beach pen~
at the Main Beach basketball courts tn Laguna Beach
Wednesday.
. A P.icnic on the beach will precede the dancina which
will beg.in at 7 p.m. The publicJs invited. For information
call 494-3302 or S4J.S928.
Natamfe to addreu women
FV's blue dots
installation
nearly complete
Reflectors help
city's firefighters
locate hydrants
The Woman'sClubbepn aeetinadona·
dons from local busineucs. RtVice dubl
aod individuals to pay for about l ,800 blue
dots. The reflecton were priced at SI.SO
each.
The first donation was $300 from the Foun~n Valley Community Hospital
Fountain Valley's blue (tot ptOJCCl. in <;Juild. Lammers than bepn seelµQI dona·
which blue reflectors are installed on local uon from other ICl"VlCe orpnizatiom and
strccta to aid firefi&httn, is vinuaUy busineucs. In additt~~l individuals were
completed. a&ked to donate thro"'" nolices enclosed
The reflecton, generally placed in the in city water bills.
center of a street. alcn fimighters to the Also, blue dot donations were sugesied
location of bydranu and help them get a at performances of .. Women in
quick start in fi&htin& 1 fire. ~tory;• 1 theaterprctentation
The Fountain Valley. proJect was di.rtcted by Lammers.
Supervisor Bruce Nesta.Me will speak at Wednes-proposed in late 1982 l>y. Diddy Lammers. last week, a ceremony was conducted to
day's regular meeting of the Balboa Bav Republican president of the Fountain Valley Woman's mark the installation of <>!le oflbe last blue
Women, Federated, at the Irvine Coast c1ountry Club ~ubth. Lam~.ers hdad.seen .the blue re~ectorsd dolt on Santa Cathenne Street near
t 600 E'.-coasl fflghW!y, Newpan,&ach. • m o er cities unna • motor tnp an Lammen' home. She said more than
The meeting is scheduled for 11 a.m '1td-. --~.N~ionlram..tbc city council $3,200 was raised to purchase the reflec;
wishing to attend should call 64()..8588 or 644-0147 r to launch a!" "Adopt a Blue Dot .. program-tots.. Installation was done by local fire.
reservations or information. locally. fiahters.
Sculptor sets museum talk
The clay sculptures of artist Jens Morrison will be the
s1,1bject of a noon-hour gallery talk at the Laguna Beach
Museum. of An Wednesday. Comphmentary tea and
coffee will be served at noon. The discussion beg.ins at 12:15.
The event is the fLrst in a series of talks entitled "An
Sandwiched ln" to be held at the museum each
Wednesday. Admission is free and open to the public. Call
494-6531 for more information.
HU1Jtington newcomen meet· ..
The Huntington Beach Newcomers Club will hold a
coffee for all newcomers to the area Wednesday at 9:30
a.m.
Those mteretang m learning more about the club's
activities should call 864-7886 for additional information.
Rabies clinic set Jn· Irvine • J
Deluca murder trialJurx
continues iJ.eliberatiOns
Jurors asked to decide the fate of accused
killer Gabriel Deluca bepn a second day of
deliberations today in the first-degree
murder trial being held in Westminster.
Deluca. 18, is charJed with fatally
beating and stabbing mail carrier lda Jean
Haxton on Jan. 3. The 30-year-old mother
of two was delivering mail in Dcluca's
Huntington Beach neighborbood\vhen she
was attacked.
Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brown
has asked jurors to find Deluca Juilty of
first-degree murder. Brown claims the
teen..ager intended to rape Haxton, whose
body was found in the backseat ofber mail
car which bad been abandoned at a church
parking lot 10 Costa Mesa.
John Dolan and Judith Sanders. De·
luc:a•a defense team, have admitted their
client killed Haxton but have asked jurors
to find the hi&h school dropout innocent of
theclwaes. ·
The attorneys argue Deluca was un-
conscious dunna the sava,e attack and
probably suffereG an alcoholic blackout
after reportedly sulPi.na larsc quantities of
tequila. .
Deluca, they say, is mentally ill and bas a
history of drug and alcohol problems.
Juro~ pven pases of tramcripts and
medil ·cal records to review, could find
De uca auilty but on lesser cba.r&es. A neighborhood, low-cost anti-rabies vaccination
clinic has been scheduled for Wednesday evening at the
lrvme Animal Care Facility, 15129 Sand Canyon Road,
Irvine, by the Southern California Veterinary Medical
Association.
Inoculations will be given from 7 to 8:30 ~.m. and the
cost is '$3 per dog. Licenses also will be avBJlable at the
clinic. Further information is available at 634-7287.
eM man-wants-end-to corner's-earn ge
Moms of twins to Jnstall
The Orange Coast Mothers off wins Oub will hold its
installation dinner Wednesday evening at the Barclay Inn
in Santa Ana.
The cost of the dinner is $8.95 and husbands are
mvitcd. For further information, call Julie Antongiorgi at
969·1157.
By µREN E. KLEIN
Of .. 09llr .... ...,,
Jim Willems woke up last wcdc to find a smashed
motorcycle in his driveway and an injured driver lying on
his lawn. .
. lt was the same old story, the S7·year--old Willems the car hh two parked can on his son's Strec'L
said.. ln the~ last Tbunday, the lllOlOJc,dt WU bit
His Costa Mesa home, percbcd precariously on buy by a 1nack and knodtcd about 300 yards dowa Sun8owcr
Sunflower Avenue, has become a refute spot fOI' bu.man to land in Willem's Costa Mesa driv~. Another c:amaae from the traffic IKXidems tbat be ays occur accident. which occurred last year. resulted m 1 Sl,000
almost monthly near the 1'herieC:tion of Sullflower and cost to Willems when. a clrunketl driver plowed into bis
Greenville Streel. st.ore.
Willems. owner of Maranatba Villq.e, a Sunflower Despite the known d.an&a'I of~ meet.. bo~u. AvenueChristianrecordandsjf\sto~.b.asbcentryin for Willems~ run in1o a ma wall in . dJorts to -------'"'!!+--------------l~~~~12~yean~~tomaef111~so~mme~tht'6'1done~1i\·itiuUbcA1.D1i:mu.s.l~i4-..$u~~!P'tt~~~--~----:--.-J.~-:----~~-:-~ ~ nt of his home ud .. Pa.rt oft.he probknus that the sttect is ..... OD the --R~awP.-ato1>111fee4~effNI-_._~.
A reception to honor George Fowler.. wh~rin.s
after 1 5 ~rs as the Director of Recreation and Social
Services m Laguna Beach, will be held this afternoon.
The program is scheduled for the Community Center,
384 Legion St .. from-4 to 7 p.m. The public is invited.
Fathers group plaJJ• meet11J6•
United Fathers of America has scheduled three
meetings in Santa Ana during June at 402 W. Fourth St.
Topics for the 7:30 p.m. sessions will be child support
Thursday, visitation June 21 and a review June 28. For
further information, call 542·5624.
Consultant to speak In Mesa
Eileen Padberg of Nelson Padberg Consulting will
speak Wednesday at rpost·prtmary eleclion analysis
hosted by the Republican Associates of Orange County.
The meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the Costa
Mesa Holiday Inn. For more information call Argyle
Nelson at 640-9141.
Tuesday, June 12
09llr .... ,...._, ............. • 6:30 p.m., lrvtae City Coanctl, Council Chambers.
17200 Jamboree Blvd., Irvine.
• 7:30 p.m.1 Newport·Meaa Board of EdKatioa.
Harper Commumty Center, 425 E. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
Jim WWema NJ• accidenta occar alm09t
montbly at th.ta iDtenecdon of GreenYille
Street and Sunfiower AYenue.
f
Captured burglar attacks
apartment manager in BB
A Huntington Beach apartment
manager was stabbed and beaten with
a crowbar late Monday while at·
tempting to hold a burglar for Police
officers.
Eu1ene Herrick Harley, 50, told
Police be captured the burg)arcomina
out of a tenant's apartment at the
19822 Brook.burst St. complex and
C09taMM&
A ps station attendant, workina at
a station on 2360 Newpon Blvd., was
held at bay by ~ man .holdina an
icepick Monday maht while SI 00 was
stolen from the station's till. Politt
said two men drove up to the stauon
abOut 9:30 p.m. and approached the
atteodant. Qnc pulled out the i~ick
and threatened the clerk while the
other entered the office and took the
money. The loss was SI 00. • • • • Th' front window of a Pacific
Stereo •tore, 2330 Harbor Blvd.,
&ma.shed Sunday v.ith 11hdc hammer
and SS,000 worth of stereo equip-
ment was tolcn. -• • • White the vicum was asleep Fnday
hit room at the Ha'Pcnw Inn. 227~
Hart>or Blvd., wu bu1"111ri.zCd and
Sl.0 in casb •'t nolen ~Iona _,th
ISO pomoan.pbtc mqwnes and a
Timex •'Itch. Lo v. ~ at
was trying to detain the crook when
he resisted.
Police said the bur&lar hit Harley
on the bead and in the face with a
crowbar and then stabbed him once
in the chest with a shon·bladed knife.
The burglar. who dropped a coin
collection be had reportedly liken
from the apartment. escaped.
an aucuon at the Lido Jewelry store,
l 926 Harbor Blvd., Sunday told
police her purse was stolen. The
woman said sbe was sattin& in the
store for about an hour dwina the
auction with her purse over her
shoulder. When she aot up, she said,
he noticed her purst was aonc. The
toss was placed at S 146. • • • Som@nc apptttntly tned to steal
the towel dia~ser from the men's
room at the Mesa V ercie Shell Station,
3tll HatborBlvd., lutSurtda)' niaht.
The station owner told pollC'C tbc
reauoom door wa pncd open and the
dispenser ~pparently hid been
~rtially pned off the wall. No lo
wureponed. • • • :Thieves appa_renUy tried to pry
open \ht~ door at TeWankJe
hoot, 3224 Califonua t., over tbe
llend. The would-be buf'llan were
unsuc:ceuful and thm wu no Iota
~.· • • • Sl6S. • • • • A SlSO TV t "'I tolcn ftom 1
A Lajuna Hill woman anendana locked office at the O.il Pllot. 330
T
, ___ ....
I
Harley, who said he was alerted to
the burglar by one of his tenan1" was
treated at Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hospital foUowina the 8:~5
p.m. incident and released later in the
evening.
The buraJar·tumed..assailant was
described as beina in his 40s and
sponina a short beard.
W. Bay St.1 sometime early Fnday
morning. Tttievcs apparcnUy ulCd a
key to enter the office between 2:30
and 6 a.m .• when the buildina's press
area was open for workers.
lniDe
The buraJar whose tradcmarlc i
makina lria.naular breaks in window Struck three homes Monday, stcalina
S230 in jewelry from a home oo
Weepinp'OOd and S 1,865 in video
equipment from 1 house on Rushina
Wind. ~ bwliat tried to pin entry
into a second home on Wccpif\IWOOd
abOUt 9: lO p..m • b\it the hOmeownn
.. apparently sic:arcd tiuii off but did.n't
t a c~ to tee the culprit. . . . . '
A 14-)'tat~ boy •'I.I am:tttd on
suspicion of bU.f&lu'Y Monday in
coao«ti a with I bttUAD lbat
omam:d over the wtdend. Tbc
yo~er, a na.na y. was booktd 11
JUvtftl\t ball • • • Mort than Sl.000 an \tCT'C'O <"quip.
mcnt wa1 tolcn from a prqt on ..
business. botde1-or Com Mesa and Sarti.. AD.a and Ritbc:r side
But the problem bas steadily gotten worse. wants to take responsibility ... be said.
"When 1 first went to buy the property, I did a t.raftic Actually. the two-city split OClCW'S aboul balf .. way
count and there were about 25 cars thaLlmuld P9$S .by dOwn tile center of the ~ accordin& ao-Cosu Mesa's
(Sunflower Avenue) an hour.•· Willems said. ASsmant Cit) M~ AlJan Roedet.
No-,huaid.,someonetryiQSIOturo&OiDGreea 0. C<*m Meas lick, impqwemeat O(~
ontoSu.n.Oowerorvice versa bas to wait iW 25 cars to IO by bdweeft 8t.1it S~ aDd !be GrembiOok hbnint tna.
before matina the tum. wba'e the ..ew Bear Screes mall Will M bUiJ&. is
New housin,s devdopment. lbc illClaSl.DI appea] of foi1.hCXiruni, Roeder aid. ..
the South Coast Plaza Mall and the pend.in& devef0pmmt "1bat will include wjdcnaaa and riaht-tum pocbu, ..
ofthecommerciaJ Home Ranch pro)Ccion Fairview Road be said. But be added that the pomon oft.be AJ'eCI that is
have aJJ combined to make the two-lane street hopelessly most daniierous bas already been widened to ca.,.Cty oo
inadequate, he said. the Costa "Mesa side.
.. All of the SJ'Owth on Bristol bas caused I really O!l theSantaAna_side, ~city·sa~ is to make
unbearable situation," Willems said. street improvements an OODJunctlOn with development.
About six months aao. when the telephone company accord.in& to David Grosse, director' of Santa Ana's
instaUed some phone service boxes in front ofbis home. be transportation servioes..
called the compahy's safety inspector out and showed her At Sunflower and Ram Street, which alians on the
the potential hazards of phone company trucks parking on Costa Mesa side with Fuschia Street. 1 bousina
Sunflower to service the bons. · develoement is under construction and the improvement
..While she was b~. we came within inches ofhav1na of that intersection is ongoina. Grosse said.
an accident The next thing I knew they moved the boxes. 8\It for lbe rest o e street. there arc n<Hievclopmen
They must have spent tens of thousands of dollars to move projects RCnding. he said.. and hence no improvemenu are
that equipment because of the hazard," Willems said. scheduled.
• lbe street is hazardous not only because of the A five-year transponallon stud). which would allow
intersections and curves, but because of the speed.1ng cars Costa Mesa. Irvine, Santa Ana and Ncwpon Beach to
that travel it and because tl\erc are no crosswalks on the combme forces and fundina to oope with heavy
street, be claims. development pressures, is bt'ing considered for approval
.. There are three schools ri&ht in this vicmity that now, Grosse said.
must have close to 3,000 kids enrolled," Willems said. But until, and unless, that is approved. the future of
.. There's all this heavy traffic and no control." Willem's crusade on Sunflower Avenue does not look
His son, who lives in the Wimbledon Village tract bright.
across Sunflower from Mara.naJ,ha Villaac. had a car roll W1Uem 's one-man crusade isn't over thouah. be says.
into his neighborhood and ur. onto bis driveway after an With both bas bomeand his business on the traffic-plagued
accident about a month ago. n the process. Willems wd. street, he says be can't afford to gave up the fi&ht.
Dorchester over the weekend. There
was no indication of forced entry. • • • Two other weekend break-ins and
Jewelry thefts were reported Monday,
occurring in the 4000 block of lrvme
Boulevard and on Recodo. Police
estimated the combined value of
losses at Sl.600.
P'OllDtalD Vallfff
A 1 ~)'ear-old Newpon Beach rnan
who was arrested on suspicion of
shoplifting at Alben.son·s Super·
market told a security officer he "did
it on a dare." • • • A wouJd-bc thief pried opened 1
lock on 1 1982 Toyota camper m the
10000 block of Ambcrwood Circle
and attempted to steal a CB radao but
was friabtcncd oft' by the vehicle's
alarm that sounded off.
'Newport Beacll
A NcVwport Beach v.oman reported
the theft of$4,000 in sterling 11lvtr·
watt from her home an tbe lJOO blon
of Ocean. • • • A Newpon ~ch man reported the
thd\ of an auto.stereo v-.lued .atS4 76
from bis car parted at the Pu\
Newport pan:ment.s Monda . • • • A Newport Belch woman reponed
the theft ofa ear tem> val~ at SSOO
from her BMW parked at 130 I Do~
Monday. ..... . .. The Cotd'IW'Cll &nkcr Co.. 4000
MacArthur. ~ned tht theft of
$4,836 in computtt equ.ipmcnt dut'-ina me ~ftkcnd . ••• A S.nta Ana man rtportcd the theft or an a\lto 11Cft'O \'alued at s 1.000
from tu Mercedes pt.ftcd at 1 l
Oo\c Monda)' . • • • f\ c"'P.?" b man ~rttd
'
the theft of her purse from her cv
parked an the 2000 block of 5c'v11le
Monda:-
Laiun• Beach
A woman became combative with
police and was transported to Orange
Count)' Jail Tuesday night after she
was arTtSted for allegedl> dnvtng
under the influence of alcohol on
Laguna Canyon Road. Trud) Rosa
Wbitephalhps. 44. was released on
$1,500 bail ....
A man weanng hght-oolorcd
clothana Oed on foot from a house fn
the 300 bloc~ of Jasrn10e Street
Tuesday nt&ht after the oocupant
surprised ham inside. A search of the
area by pohcc produced no suspeas. ••• An attempted buraJlll) m the 600
block of Glen~ Street wu
thwaned Tuesday night wbeo the
oc:cu~t of the house discovtted 1
man 1ns1dc The suspect. ~btd •~
whtte. 30 to 35 )Ul"S old. Wlth dirt)
dark hair and \\carin& a dark blue
shin. fled on fool
~ ... ~ mink and snakcstcin vm •'Orth
Sl.000 wu re~ncd tolct1 at lSSO
South Coast Htatiway Monday mom-
1ng.
811.11.tl.apm Beacll
n cmplo}tt of ibc Jae -1n-the-.
Box TC$taurant at l 9 22 Brookhunt
. i:tPOned Wt\' today mat two tm1· en stole bis bfac and red hwtnn
bicycle and fled south on Beach
Boulc'vd The I wa.s timaltd at
S300.
J_ _______ =
rrd
estJmated at $2,800. \_ • • • Someone used bolt cutters to bn:ak
into a soap macbme at a com launc1r')
at 9915 Yorktown A vc. The loss
included $20 in coins. • • • Breakina a window to enter, some-
one buralarized a home Monday on
the 7700 block of Sycamore Street
The loss included a color televlSion
set worth S450. • • • Someone burglanzed a home Tues-
day on the 18800 block of C'.arolyn
Lane. The loss included $200 an cash
that had been lcept in a bedroom chest
ofmwers. • • • A rcstdent of the 7500 block of
Danton Circle reported Monday that
a blue 1984 Yamaha moped q,s
stolen from has locked praae. The
lo was cstunatcd 11 SSOO. • • • Smashing a side window to cater,
someone bur&larized a home T~ da~ on the 911l0 block ofGcttyabura
Drive. Tbe lo mcludcd SlCRO and
tekvi on equipment rtb more
than Sl.000. . • • •
A ruadent of the 21600 bloCk or
8rookhW'$t tn:t't told oolitt aome-
one stole four hubcaps Crom his blue
1965 Ford Mustana. The wat
estimated at S400 • • • •
The owner of a 19 0.t.IUa
mtebed truck told ~ be .....
dOd\I roofiaa ' rk OD tbC 16100
block or Paruidc lane when bb
Vehicl 1tolen. Tbc loll
estimated at S6.000 • • •
Or9ng9 Coat OAIL:V PILOT/Tuesday. June 12, 1984
ister kills
2 in Midwest
•1 tM A•edaled Prt0
Euitmers aot • bncf break today from a btat vc 'mat lbal daimtd at lea t 10 lives. while thunderstonn ~~the Midwe5t wuh a flurry of tomadotS and heav>
nuDS that wrttked homes and cauSC(i fWb flOOd ana.
Two ~pie were killed lhon.ly af\ct midn1ght in
South Dakota when a twi tcr np~ a path five miles lona
nd thrft..fourths of a mile wide j ust east of Sioux Fall~
.. In Nebraska. several tornadoes late Monday touchcd
down near St... Llbrory, desttoyinJ scverat buildinp,
derailina five ~1lroad cars, and lcavini the town Wlthout 1M)wer.
-
Missile scores
k b 11 , e Pioneer stlll beep:& . S Y U ~-e_y; signals back to E .
• WASHINGTON (AP) -A senior Army reseaKb '
official on Mond yclaimtd a .. m~orbrcakthrouah" when BJ <it A1nciaae.1 Pra1
an expenmentaJ Atm) mi 'ile aoered an intentional dir«t w ASHINQTON -Four billion miles ft'om Earth.
hit ap.inst an oncom1ni dummy ballistic mi_ ilr warhead the unmanned spacecraft Pioneer I 0 is still aendina ba
O\Cr the m1d-P t 1fk S\lnday. sipal5 who5'lP()wer ts reduced by the vu& e"papa of "W~."'ally tried to hit a bullet with a bu.llet and 1t space toa few1housand·trillionth.s of a wan. One year aao,
worked, said Amoretta Hocber, deputy WJstant sec-the spaoccraft launched in Man:h 1972 became the fint
retary of the Army for re~rch and devel~p~ent. . man·r;nade object t~ travel beyond tbe IC?~r t.ys~m. The
In the Sunday cxpenment, Army officials said the National Aeronauucs and Space Adm1nistrauon took
interceptor was fired from Meck lsland in the Kwajalcin note of Wednesday's anntversary, sayin1 Pioneer IO's
group and met the onCOf!ti"I dummy warhead several chief discovery may be that the rn.agneuc field associated
hundred miles away, closing at a speed of 20,000 feet a with the sun shields even the farthest reaches or the tolar
second. s~tem from most cosmic ray particles. -Up to S inches of rain prompted flood warnings this
omomina aJon1 the Bia Siou~ River and its tributaries in
'"""""',,,___.. utbeastcm Sou.th Da.kotL • The southern two-th\rds of Mmnnota and two dozen ~unties in central and northeast Nebraska were covered
ya Oood watch.
..The shattenog collision of the two speeding bodies
demohshed the tar&et." the Pentagon statement said
h1 claimina that "this was a major breakthrough, ..
Hoeber said that ··we never bcfott have gone with intent ..
to detect a simulated attacking missile with infra-red
sensors, maneuvering the mterceptor into position and
rammiflg the target head-on.
Moon .eek• llllJt term
• , : . • l •
Two dozen tomadon touched down Monday m
cbraska, Kansas, Iowa and South Dakota. Thundcr-
tonns packing winds gusU111to90 mph and hail as big as
baseballs raked parts of Nebraska.
The Nor\heast today 'ot a·temporary respite from
fivedaysofoppressive heat m them1dand upper90s from
Virsinta to New England. But forecasters said the mercury ·u climb back into that nnae Thursday. ·
In Baltimore on Monda)', the mercury bit lOOdcgrecs
t 2 p..m., shattering a mark for the date that was set an
1911. Boston reached a re<:ord 98; New York Cit)',
uhmgton. D.C., and Richmond., Va .• hit 97: and
tlantac City and Newark, NJ .. saw 96.
Marks were also set in Brid&eport, Conn., and
,.,..,......
Tracy. Mo. man cling• to alg~ poet after
Platte RiYer oYerran lta banlt•.
Allentown, Pa., where the highs were 93, and m Worcester,
Mass., which reached 91.
Four heat-related deaths were reported Monday and
three on Sunday in New York City. said Dr. Elliott Gross.
the city's chief med1cal eAammer. In Philadelphia, one
person died of heat stroke and 1wo of hype~h.enni~ -
high body temperature :_ on Monday, authonttes said.
The interceptor carried aloft a device described as
shaped something like the frame of an umbrella.
According to the official description, the "ribs" of
that umbrella opened seconds before impact. The ribs
were "studded with weights to make impact lethal to an
ICBM warhead," the statement said.
Destruction of the dummy warhead', fired aboard a
Minuteman intercontinental baJlistic missile from Van-
denberg Air Force Base, Calif., was confirmed both by
radar and optical sensors at Kwajalein and by specially
instrumented planes, the statement said.
According to Brig. Gen. Eugene Fox, the intercept
occurred welt over 100 miles above the earth's surfac.c.
.
-t-·---------~~-~ PfCKYOUR RATES
PICK YOUR TERMS
PACK YOUR BAGS
? .
. '
' ' ' ' ' • ' ' \
' ~ \ : I
][ A free night 1 at the
Hilton10r people who
want to earn more
Open _}'!>Ur ITA, and be sure to enter
Home FeaeraJ"s tmUttd .!fenn -
Account Sweepstakes.
HILTON from their money. You may
be packing
}OUr bags for
Imagine soaking up aJI the sun, fun
and peace of mind at lhe Palm Springs
Hilton • • • the vacation
Or taking in the romance and
ad,enture of colorful San Francisco
Princess Cruises of your life to
lhe Caribbean. Mexican Rhiera or even
Pans, France. All 1n aJJ. you'll have your pick of 11
different Hilton Hotels lhroughou1 lhe state Two lucky winners and !heir guests
~iJJ set sail for reM and relaxation on a
Princess Crui~ 10 the exotic Caribbean or
Mexican Riviera
To get your free night 1 at the Hilton.
simply open }Our Home Federal Insured
Term Account with $5.000 or more before
July l"''th , 198-.f If you win, you and your guest will
stay in Princess Cruise Lines' outside
bedded rooms for rwo. And will enjoy the
sumptuous cuisine and on-board activities
of lhe wortd·s Cinest sailing reson
It's the perfect way to vacation for less
while your money earns more -thanks to
Home Federal's traditionaUy higher interest
and dailj• compou1uling.
And lhe Insured Term Account lel'I
you pick )'Our o~n rates and pi ck )Our own
terms -from 3l da)'S to JO )ears So you
have the flexibility to decide th e periods for
which you'd like to invest.
T UI A Three olher winners
..,. ~ and !heir guests will be
jetting TWA roundtrip to aJI the glamour
and fun of Paris. France ·
OHlclal Rules -
No Purchase Necessary
1 To enter handpnnl your name
address zip code and day and
n1ghnrme phone on the offiC1al en·
try form or a plain 3" x s· card and
bnng to any Home Federal branch
office or mail to
Home Federals Insured Term
Account Sweepstakes
c o Public Relattons Dept
707 Broadway, Surte 1200
San Diego. CA 92101
2 Enter as often as you wrsh but
each entry must be brought 1n or
matted separately All entnes must
be received by July 27 1984
3. Wlftntn Wiii IM ltltCttd In a
randOfl *1wtng '"""among all
tntlin mallH all4 rtetlvtd from
•ti brl~n. Grand prlzt Witt·
tttfl (2) Wiii rtetlvt I CtVlst fOf
lwt to Utt MlllcaA AMtfa II CM
Carlllbean. Cruise 1ccommod1· allowed. T1111, If any, are tilt
Ilona lnclud1 outaldt btddtd rt1pon1lblllty of tilt lndMdual
rooma. Alrt1r1 to departure point wlnntra. Wlnnera may lie aued
11 not Included. Grand Pritt trtp to 111cut1 tn affidavit o1 tllglllll· must llt taken by Dtctmlltr 3f. tty tncl rtl111t.
1914. First ,rtu wlnnm (3) wlll 4 Sweepslakes opened to resr·
rtetlvt 1 rouftcttrlp ntgltt foi 2 to dents of Calrfornra who are 18
Parta. Prlu conalsts solely of years or older. except employees
coach clan um and don not and lhetr famthes of Home Federal
lnclud1 accommodations upon Savings and Loan Assocratton.
arrival. First pr1n trtp1 must bt Pnncess Cruises. Trans World AJr·
compltttd llttwtta Octolltr 1 ltnes. Don Jagoda Assoc .. their
and Dtctmlttr 18, 1984. Second agents. affihales. subsidiaries and
prtz1 wlnn1r1 (1,000) wlll 11clt advert1srng agencies Thrs offer
rtctlvt 1 Pltm Canfln 01rm1nt void wherever prohibrled and sub-
119. Dr1wln1 wtll be coftdocttd lect to all federal state and.local •Y Ntllon11 Jtf9ln1 ln111tat1 aws wltola dtclstOftl 1r1 tint Ol'I all 5. For a llat of m•j• wlMtn,
manm r11ao111 to tftl1 rwttp· ltM a stam,.d n f·addttutd atam. All prtt11 wtll M awanl· ""'°" to: H 1nd wlnntn notlfit4 lty mall. Holftt Fdtr11'1 fTA
Oftly one prl11 to 1 faml!y or , ... ,.._ .. Wtnm ltlt
•nllold. Pnn1 '" '""'"".. P.O. la 1111
"""' IN "° u•ltttldloM .,. lrouet. NY 11ns
0 Tomnct \1H IW1 0 ~ f1"'0 OI~
0 '~ f~tn.a 96l HI 0 •~ood ('t \~H 0 l clOdl.lnd lllJI U\ 1.1!1
OMM;IC()l!ID
8ol IGol~N ~19\4 0 RriM•~ M.KAI'
lhur C>79 i,t,oo 0 ful Mn 9'H lllll [J II n-
t1~1n 8tadl W• ft~ll 0 HunllnJPOl:I Btlth
Ntwland 96'i 6'.c11 o ln11lf' m W11 o ~
ru 11111' no 71 I 0 lliglirua 'i ud 1')~
0 Nt"<l-pon twacft'<WO If•" J San Ju~n .-....----.--.~--. ...................
•
And for 1,000 olher winners we have
l'ierre ardirr6anneot Bags to pack up and
take with you whenever and Wherever
you wish.
CaJJ Home Federal's toU-free number
for more information, 1-800-862-0539.
Or stop by any Home Federal office.
To enter the Insured Tenn Account
Sweepstakes, come to any Home
Federal office. Or mail this
entry blank.
'The frtt nlllfu at die lhllon Ill conllngmt oo a ~ con.'«1111\T
n1Jth1 '4111 <>nt of 1lhich "'ill bt a frtt nljlht ~ tt-rr
'turftnur'-" for tar!) 1l!lhdra1lal ~ ~
HOME FEDE.fW_
r-------------------lnsured Term Account Sweepstakes
Entry Blank .
Name
Address
City State
Daytime Phone (
Nighttime Phone (
Malito
HOME FEDERAL
cio Public Relations Department
707 Broadway, Suite 1200
San Diego. CA 92101
Zip
)
~-------------------
-· I
NEW YORK -The Rev. Sun M~na Moon is
willing to leave the United States temporarily rather than
serve an l 8-month sentence for his 1982 ~ conviction,
his new lawyer says. Moon had been scheduled to enter
prison June 18, but succeeded in .having the sentence
postponed until July 20 while attorney Michael. J.
McAllister seeks a reduced sentence or some altemattve
form of punishment.
PlttsbarglJ ln tlJe dark
PITTSBURGH (AP) -fi~e hiah-voltaae c~rc~its
feeding downtown P1ttsburxb faded Monday •. bnngJng
business to a halt in half or the area and leavma many
office buildings without light or air conditioning-in 86-
degree weather. Most restaurants, banksand shops shooed
out their customers and locked the doors. One of the few
businesses to stay open was McDonald's, which served
only cookies and orange drink in· the darkened restaurant.
Ml•l•lppl ally river
V ACHERJE, La. -The Coast Guard sent cleanup
crews after a tanker ripped hol~ in three ba~, spi~ing
fuel oil that spread at least 12 miles down th~ Miss1ssipp1
River. authorities said. A total of four barges 10 the convey
-carrying more than I 09,000 barrels-were deliberately
grounded on the riverbank 1lfter the accident Monday
night, said Coast Guard Petty Officer Keith Spangler.
Worker survlvet1 cave-In
SMYRNA, Ga. -A cold beer was the fint request of
a 21-year-old construction work.er wbo was buried under
tons of dirt for nearly four hours before rescuers
uncovered his head, witnesses said ... Hurry upandaet me
out of here. I want a Budweiser," Chuck Jones told Cobb
Coun!}' firefighten as they uncovered bis head Monday
after digging through more than 4 feet of dirt.
LAX panhandling lnjanctlon
LOS ANGELES -The city's bid for an iajunction
prohibiting interest groups -including the International
Society of Krishna Consciousness -from seeking
donauoos and banding out. lilCQlture at Los An,eles
International Airpon was sent to a state coutt by a federal
judge Monday. The city Board of Airport Commissioners
sougi\I. the in)unction to stop<lCtivities-tbat did not fall
with.in the guidelines of conducting airport business .
LOS ANGELES -Southern California wu jiaJed
by two minor earth ucmors I SO miles apart Monday but
there were no reports of damage or injury. authorities said.
The larger ope, at 5:27 p.m., was centered on the ~t 25
miles north of Ventura and measured 4.2 on the Richter
scale. A smaller quake, ~stering 3.9, occurred at 3:21
p.m.-and was centered 20 miles northeast ofBig Bear Lake.
Budget deadlme Friday
SACRAMENTO -Republican Gov. George Dcu-
kmejian met with legislative leaden Monday, seeking a
$31 billion state budget compromise by the constitutional
deadline of Friday. The state constitution says the
Legislature must send the governor a budget by June l S for
the fiscal year that begins July 1. However, that deadline
had been met only once, and nothing happens if it is not.
Sf:leatol
LOS ANGELES - A federal court jury in a civil
lawsuit found that controversial cult deprogrammer Ted
Patrick violated a Church of Scientology member's civil
rights by abducting her in J 979. The church member,
Paula Dain, 29, wu awarded $7,000 in damages Monday.
Two dle bJ LA gun battle
LOS ANGELES -An "unknown third party" was
being sought after two men were shot to death at a Sun
Valley apartment building and a 4-year-old girl was
wounded by a stray bullet. ~lice said. Efran Barvosa, 29,
and Jose Fernandez, 30, died at the scene Monday from
gunshot woun(ls to tbe upper torso, Detective Gary
Sampson said.
Pope mlm Swntserland
ZURICH, Switzerland -Pope John Paul TI arrived
today to start a six-day visit to Switzerland. the ftnt major
pastoral mission to the Alpine nation since 1418. The
pope. on hi•. 22nd joume~ abroad durina his (our-and-a-
half year reign, amved at 8:45 a.m. aboard a special fli&ht
at Zurich's Kloten airport.
lfl1Nloaary l•mUy drown•
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic -A
panel tntck carryina an American missionary family
became cauaht in a rain-swollen river, and all n.iM pec>J>le anside drowned, police said. The dead included five
child~l?a&eS oryouo.,er. The U.S. E~ba~yidentified the
U.S. cittzens as Marvin Robert, 30; h11 wife, Muney. 27;
their three children -Priscilla. 3; Marl&. 2. and Dustin.
five months; and Le~Roben. 33. wb0te rdatlon1hip to
the other family m91"'ben was not immtdiately known.
Embauy officials could not provide the hometown• of the
Americans.
SJkll matbJlet1 pat down
NEW DELHI India -The army bu cniSbcd
mutinia by at least 2.ooo Sik.b IOldien_ killina 46 daei1cn
•ho were outrqCd by the JOVemtntnt aaault on tbtir
Oolden Temple shrine. mili~ IOurcet said today. Sill muti~iet have been reponed an cutem. nortbcm aod
wesiemlndiasincetheannyusaultedtbeOoklenTcmplc
in Amri~ on June S.
CorOmanl•t leaden meet
MOSCOW -SOviet President Kon1tantio
Chernenko and Communist leaders from Eastern Euf09C,
C\lb&. Vietnam. and Monaolia opened their frnt
economic summit in l~ yeari today. Soviet medsa
rtponcd Cuban 1eadct radel Cutro WU the only Council
for Mutual f'.col\omic Allistance le8der milaiq from the
Kn:mjin summit, and no e•~ WM'Siven for his ·~·The counal known u Comecoe it echeduled to mttt t~Ulh Thund.iy. The summit. the 'rirst since 197 l,
wu delayed for al least thftJC )'Clln bY wt\lt weR 11id to be
1ntefnal diffcrtrKa over Oil pnces. tnde tt14tions wt th the
WH1 and a.nency rcfbrm. •
•
•
Princely poae . .
High Court OKs Mirancla ezc.a .....
Decision seen as vlctoey
for law enforcement
WASHING TON (AP) -Tbe Supreme
Coun. in a decisioa that lim1ts the n,bts of
criminal ~ ruled aoday that ~ice need
not warn the aCcUled of bis ri&hts Whtft
"prompted by a concern for die public safety ...
By a 6-3 vote, the coun uid New Y Ott
prot«Utorl may introduce u evidence a SUD
seized by poJice before they told tbe ~ be
had a r:iabt to remain silent and .as entitled to
be repc:etented by a lawyer.
J\lltict Wifliaql ff. Rehnquist, in hts
opinion for the cou~ ecknowledetd that
today's rut.ins crea1e1 an ~ to the
procedural ureauard or the so-c:allod .. M~
da .. wami~ Wbic:b JNUires pOlicie to aJen a
MiSpcct ofh1J rishu. '°\-
"Thia case praeats a sawation where
concern for public tafety must be puamown tc
edbettnce to the literaJ laoauqe o( lhe
~ylactic ndeunnunciatld" 111 the Mitandl
decision, Rehnquist Mid. .
" Today'ac:ucmm Crom the 1980arrat of
8rijamin Quarles in tbe Queen• County aia of New yon. City OD Sept. I, 1980.
On that day, a woman approaChcd police
officen Frank Kraft and SafSCarrina as I.bey
Ytere drivioa their petrol car. She told them &be
had been raped at ~Dp()inl aJid pve them a
detailed deacription of her asailant.
The police sp0ned Quarles in a nearby
. Vicki Morgan deatb note
displayed: Py Pancoast?
~~---!lm!lmliiiiiiiii .........
LOS ANGELES {AP)-Tbe day before -1 love Vicki as a sister. She helped me
Vicki Morgan was murdered, a diSUJughl more than anybody, ..
Britain •a Prince Charles and
wife. Diana, poM with their 90D,
Prince Wlllt•m. wbo celebrates
bl.a aecond birthday Jane 21. d11linC a fboto ...ton ha tbe -&ardena o Kemlqton Palace.
Marvin Pancoast professed to love her .. as uncy, who with a friend was hetpina
asister"andrevealedanotehesaldsbowcd Morpn pack for a move from a Nonh
that she didn't want to live, Miss Morpn's HoUywood condominium Morpn could
mother said. no loOFf aff'ord, sajd Pancoast confided to
Connie Laney told a Van Nuys Superior her he was seeing a psychiatrist and
Court jury Monday that although Pancoast attendina Alcoholics Anonymous meet-
had adnuned that day to being a homosex-inp.
Iran ·mourns 44 deaths
as civilian attacks cease
ual, he clung closely to Morpn. He was, however, unaware of her plans to split with She said Pancoast became upset when he realized Morgan bad reoonciled with him and hoped Miss Morpn and her son Gordon Basichis, a boyfriend and writer
wouldmovewithhimintoacondominium who was helpin• Mo,_n to Mite a boOk
he had ~nted in Burbank, Laney said. ·-·-· Laney was the· first witness called by about her years with Bloomingdale, the
Deputy District Attorney Stanley M. fc;>under of Diner's Oub ..
By Tile Anoclated Press markets in spite of Iraqi
and Iranian attacks on Per-
sian Gulf shipping.
Rafsanjani djdn 't direct-Weisberg at Pancoast's trial for the murder Laney said that while Morpn and
ly confirm that lran bad ofMorpn, the self-avowed mistress of the Basichis were out loolcing at the Burbank
attacked the ship, but be late multimillionaire Alfred Bloom-condominium Pancoast bad rented, Pao-
implied it "ln any case, the ingdale. She was beaten to death with a coast showed her a suicide note Morp.n
ship bas been bit and we baseball bat July 7 1983. had written on a memo pad.
usually don'tannounce de-Laney said that on July 6 she asked .. Af\cf' he sh~ me the note, I said,
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
11.affl II I fl lltflm
SOUTH CQ\ST FIT&FIRM
3500 8. BRISTOL • 541 1113
Sult• 200 -~ "* NCW1h at SoUlb COlllt Pima eo.ta..e.~ A• AMJUT OCM &A TlllFAC tJJUA/fAllT&
Iran declared a day of
moumina today . for 44
people reported lcilled and
250 wounded in the
southern town of Dczful.
Both Iran and Iraq said
they would ~frain from
further attacks on civilians.
The speak.er of Iran's
Parliament on Monday rc-
JCC::ted any peace nego-
tiations with President
Saddam Hussein oflraq. In
speec~ he said Iraq's Arab
supporten expect their
sh1ps to be safe ip the
Persian Gulf as tong as Iraq
continues to attack oil
tankers bound for Iran.
tails in such cases," he was Pancoast why she was so conc:emed about 'What's the bi& deal, Marvin?' and be said
quoted as sayin&-"The her daughters future plans and he n:flied: •vou can tell she doesn't want to live ....
Iraqis bit (ships) there, ~===============~~~__:--~__:_:...:.:...:...:..:..::....~...:..::...::..:..:.:...:..._.:..._~:....:.~.,,....JIJlc-=mic-=K:1icm:J1CE1!!;:K:~r:::m:::m::.1:m=-::i11:11cm:m::1m::m•
others do too." The qreement proposed
by U.N. Secretary-Oenerat
Javier Perez de Cuellar
took effect at 4 a.m. today
(I I p.m. Monday PDT). It
was the first time during the
4S-month-otd war that Iran
bad accepted mediation.
Rescue workers searched
through the rubble of 720
shops and houJCS in Dezful
that were blasted b¥ lraqi
missiles, Tehran Radio
said today. The death total
rose to 44.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOl,.STERY, INC.
ftr •test ti Y• lll
1122-.... CISTl lfSI -sq.1151
HU.TON AT Tttt: ~ r~Sl'GOODCQllW'A."IY ~~rl But a high-ranking Ira-
nian official said it
wouldrn 11ffect"the Islamic
republic's determination to
carry out its war with Iraq
on the battlefield. Foreian ministers of the
six-nation Gulf Coordi-
nation Council -Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait. the United
Arab Emirates..!.. Bahrain,
Qatar and uman -
planned to meet in Taif,
Saudi Arabia, today to di~
CUSS ways tOllssure1l.,teady
supply of oil for world
"Our policy is that all
ships must pass safely, or
those who are in some way
a partner in the war and
provide help (to Iraq)
should not expect to have
se<:urity," Iran's official
Islamic Republic News
Agency quoted Hasbemi
Rafsanjani as saying.
Kuwait blamed Iran for a
missile attack Sunday on
the Kuwaiti tanker Kazima
in the southern reaches of
the gulf. It was the 42nd
ship damaged in the past
four months, according to
shipping sources in
Bahrain.
~::'.... L!1~· .... i~i.:~.'--llt--·U_LI ~~ ....... _. --~~~~--~~----~--~~----~--~~~~--~------~~~~~~
'84
FRIDAY, JUNE 15
YOUNG SINGLES DANCE
Meet
he Experts
If you own a home • or wish you did -come to the
Faire and find everything you need to know about
homebuying and financing. Dozens of lenders and related
l ~inars to 8SSISt you IOAM
7PM • Datly 100 exhlbltcws from
the Real Estate industry witt
be under one roof IO HELP
YOU• 3 days only. be services in one place-Jet ~-shop without ~~11f'A
Free loan prequalifying tens you exactly how much you can afford
to spend on a home. (You'll be surprised at now much you're worth!)
3 DAYS ONLY DONT MISS IT!
Tickets available at Tlcketron Real Estate Faft• lnCIUSU
SURPRISE YOUR DAD WITH A
TRS-80 ® POCKET COMPUTER!
' J
SHARE THE MEMOJUES
OF TWO PAST OLYMPIANS
AT ROBINSON-S NEWPORT
Mttt JOJO STARBUCK of JMm fipre
rluting fa.mt, memM-of t.M USA
Olympic 'le4m in 1968 and 1971 and
National Pain Figure Sltating Chtzmpum
ftom 1970.1971. Also BRUCE FURNISS, ~t:::1'~~
a USA doubk gold meJ.al unnnc m
swimming at ~ 1976 Summa GanJa ·
learn 11bout UNir pnsonal tnuning and
motiwt1on programs, thm join an opm
dlSCii.sion about tlNir ~M'Kes. -1U.1:.u' :--1
follow this wrth an Actiw SpqrtsT.«ar
Fashwn Shmtmg-smcr yo1i1'll uwnt co
loolt )'ONT pnsonal btst dunng ~ 1984
Olympics. Al~ ftom 1·4 p.m. SllLMrcJa,.
juM 16 at NEWPORT. Admissum IS
/rtt-bnng your fnmds.
COME STUDY, THEN TOUR
THE LA BREA TAR PITS
At our snninar you'll furn about tht
ont m11/1on prJ1utonc fossils excavated
from tht tar pits, tht choicrrt of whu:h
art housed in tht Gtorge C Pagt
Mus.tum. Comt to Robinson's
WESTMINSTER, S1i1nday, /1i1nt 24, 1-1
p.m. and« our gutst. nm plan to )Otn
us for a bus tour of tht Pagt M~m
11nd Stt tht discownts finihand; t.M
faol1ry is sit"41ttd nght on tht •ctUAI
Sitt. Our bus luws from · ·
WESTMINSTER, Wedntsday, j"nt 27 at
11 a.m., rrturm at 2 p.m. ~ c.JI tht
Wtstminsttr tx«utiw S«rttAry for bus
tour ~taons..
JOIN US FOR AN
ARMCHAIR TOUR OF THE
SOUTH COAST BOTANIC GARDEN
Wt '// haw a sluk show and spmal plant
colltcttons ftom the famous landfill
garrlm. one of the fint of llS kind m tht
u:orld. Eighty ~ acrts of coral tYttS,
snm·tropzcal plants and rp«racuLir
gro1mdrowr rhnvt m rht topsoil 0'1Jer
Jv1 million tons of rrfMSt-a c!.ssic
tump/t of U.nd rte'lamatton tb.t draT.CS
horttcultunsts ftom the world OWT.
, Beromt an apn-r yourst/f dunng our
~mmars •t 1\/EWPORT, W«lnt'Sd4)>
/1me /J and MISSION \11£)Q
1"ursda)\ Ju~ U, f.l p.m. tach day.
Bnng your /rimds. tUimusion u ~·
TRACE THE AUTOMOBILE
CULTURE AND SEE
HOW IT HAS AFFECTED
YOUR LIFE
Dunng our in·storr semuwr, wt'U
surwy the ch.mgmg image of~ c•r
•nd how It h.s mJ..ptd Olir pWysica/
•nd mmtA/ Ltndsc·~· 'Ii 'II JUicwss tht
C1'rmtt fusn.m of Conttmporary Art
txl'Jtbit, Automobilt •""' Cult•rr which
1nclu.dts JUmtings. 'satlptMrn, posurs .nd
photOf"llpln ftom /'JOO to tht pmmt.
)om NS Sit1mLiy. Jun~ JO •t
r£W1'0RT. 1·1 p..m. 'o cb.rrt fi r
iadmwio'I
I
OrlnQ49 Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, JuM 12, i"4
Laguna's grads pick up
~bundle at awards fete
La.auna Bc•ch HiAI\ School p-tduatm& Jones, a S l.000 Sawdust Fe uval scbolat· ~niors walked off with mo~ than ship~ David Bl ckbum. Michele Nelson
$1 SO,OOOinawards and 1ebolarships1t the· Will Anderson and Sue Godfre), a Sl.000
nu I honors convocation held June 6. Ebcll Club scholars_hJp each; and Michele
'•: Valedictorian David Blaclcbum and . Nelson won the $2,000 Ken Beyer scholar-
• lutatoriu David Pemick led the Class of shi_p.
·"1984 in the Prooc1sion eettmony held in SJ)CC'ial achievement awards went to
Irvine Bowl. Pemick and Blackbum each 't>oua Price, and to Mlt(i Fallou and Robin
_com9ilcd grade point avcnaes m excess of Yates for out tandina admmJStrative a •
:f.O b)' acJiievina perfect arades in their sistance.
<qular courses plus advanced college For'\y-five studentS received scholar-
l\o!'ors work. wd school counselor Jan ships totaling$24,300in value, which were
1"ntsen. sponsored by tbe Fes\lval of Arts.
•. Blackbum will attef!d Stanford Umver-Fritscn, who has been coordinating the
-Qty next fa)~ and Ptfll!Ck, wh~ al~ won. 1 Honors Convocation for the past 16 years, i 1,000 Nauonal Ment Scholanhip, wtll said the class of '84 was "the best one yet " .tttend Harvard. ·
AmongothttwinnerswereSueGodfrey, "They looked terrific, they had the best
They're fair-bound
Dr: ¥gand new
acting director
Or. Robert Arpnd hat
been appoin~ actioa di·
rector or Emcracncy Ser·
vices at Costa Mm Medi·
cal Center Hospital, ad·
ministrators announccd.
Arpnd Will bead the unit
recently contracted out to
the Medicus Medical
Group. a Sao Francisco-
bascd association of pri-
mary care specialisu who
ICt\'c a variety of hospitals
and clinics.
He bas had a private
practJCC in internal mcdi·
cine and has been an at·
tendina a>hysician at the 800.bed Madison General
Hospital in Wisconsin and
Tahoe Forest Hospital in--.r--
who received the $6,000 Camron Black-attendance, and the support from the
burn Memorial scholarship; Anja Reich, community was outstanding," Fritsen
the $2500 Beck Business Admmstration said. ..So many different aroups and
.\ward; Jeff Caverly won the S 1,000 South orpnizations lent suppon, not only the big
Coast Medical Center Auxiliary scholar-ones but many smaller ones who d on't act
ship: Lisa Lightner. the $1,000 Kiwanis as much recognition. We appreciate them
··H. Lc-e Bunon" scholarship; Megan all."
Kim Jone., 17, of Co.ta Mesa,
will be taktnl her l, 150-pound
cl'Oe8bred •teer 'Yoanaerton, 4
Truckee, Calif. to the July 6-15 Oranai:e Coant)' •
Fair in Coeta 11.a for lhejuD.lor ·
ll•e.tock •how • • .
Get in the swim at OCC
Several swimming classes. ranging from
courses for babies to some for intermediate
swimmers, will be offered by Orange Coast
College this summer.
Classes for toddlers (3-year-olds), 9on-
swimmers, beginning swimmers, ad-
111""'1111111-· vanced beginhtrs'and intermediates will be
offered. A "Mommy and Me" program for
children between the ages of I and 3 will
also be held. LISTEN and RELAX
KDCM tD!l.t
FMSIERED
The first session is June 18-28. The
second will be July 2-1 2. The third is
scheduled for July 16-26. And the fourth
will run July 30-Aug. 9. Classes will meet
Monday through Thursday.
Other classes o,_ the agenda include
stroke analysis and junior life saving.
Reg1strat1on fee is $20 per student
session. Registration is being conducted in
the Costa Mesa campus' Community
Servcice office-; in the Student Center
Buildina.
For more infonnation on the classes, call
432-5880.
Eisenhower scholars
Heidi Maley of University High
School in Irvine and Edith Helman of
San Clemente High School were
recently awarded [984 Dwight D.
Eisenhower Scholarships.
Both were ~ven Sl,000 to continue
their educations from the fund.
sponsored by the Republican Youth
Associates and the Republican Party
of Orange County.
A-NEW PM ---T9NEEP
HUMANA HOSPITAL, HUNTINGTON BEACH
April U . .
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Bruinsma, Huntm.ton Beach, gul.
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Harris, Huntington Beach, gJl'I
April SO . .
Pamela Briggs and Will Fowler, Hunttngton Beach, girl
Mr. and Mrs. Daryll Hayer, Hunting~on Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Gary D. Wagner, Hunttngton Beach, boy
May5
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey G . McGowan, Huntington Beach,
girl
May I
Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Bryant, Huntington Beach, twin
girls 1
Mays .
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Griffith, Huntinaton Beach, twm
boys
Mr. and Mrs. Brent H. French, Huntington Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Gary T. Johnson, Huntington Beach, girl
Mayt
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Winkelman, Huntinaton Beach, girl
May 10
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Reagan. Fountain Valley, boy
May 11
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Strotman, Huntington Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Atanacio Luna, Huntinaton Beach, girl
May 17
Deidre Cox and Jerry L. Stokes, Huntington Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Waldemar Rojek, Huntington Beach, boy
Maytl
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Rossow, Huntington Beach, girl
May!!
Mr. and Mrs.....&oben..S. SWllz. Huntington Beach, boy
MayH
Andrea and W. M. H ilger, Huntington Beach, boy
~~A~T ~~-Th::~~~~
(JH~RGE'5 iN (JHE~'/{ Linda and Kyle Butterwi~~;-;1una Beach, girl
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Tackabcrry, Huntinaton Beach, boy
Marilyn and John McNulty, Newport Beach. boy
SOUTH COAST MEDICAL CENTER
-~--~~----~~~--~~~--~----~~~--~~----~~--~---~-------=--------y Marci and Calos Rosan, Laauna Niguel, boy
INTRODUCING
THE SERVICE CHARGE REBATE
FROM BANK OF AMERICA.
Along with other recent changes to our
checking accounts, Bank of America
offers yo u a new way to help control your
monthly checking account service charges.
We call it the Service Charge Rebate.
The Service Charge Rebate gives you
more control over how much you pay
each month for checking. Most customers
can reduce their checking service charges
by $1.00 a month. And Bank of America
is the only major bank in California that
offers you a Service Charge Rebate.
HOW THE SERV ICE CHARGE
REBATE WORKS.
To earn the Service Charge Rebate, all you
have to do is sign up fo r either Timesaver
Spacesaver111 service jour check safekeep-
ing service) or Instant Cash jour credit
card overdraft protection service). Then
simply make use of the wide variety of
efficient electronic services at Bank of
America. Examples of our electronic serv-
ices are VERSATELLER® automated tell-
ers, HomeBanking service, direct deposit
and automatic payment. By making use of
these services, most customers can earn
$1.00 toward the monthly service charge
un their checking accounts.
HOW TO SAVE EVEN MORE.
In addition to the Service Charge Rebate,
there's another way to control your check-
ing service charges. If you have a checking
·11ccount in which you pay for each transac-
. • tion, you' 11 also save by using our electronic
~services because electronic transactions
.;ue less expensive for you than a check or
·f,aper transaction.
HOW TO ELIMINATE
• CHECKING SERVICE CHARGES. .
··~Jo matter what kind of checking account
you have, there's a way to eliminate
monthly checking service charges alto-
gether. All you have to do is maintain the
. required average daily balance for the
~onthly statement period. Or, with most
of our checking plans, you can combine
the balance in your checking account with
the balance in a Bank of America savings
account or most Time Deposit accounts to
eliminate your service charges. And if
you're 62 years or older, you can get check-
ing free of monthly charges plus free checks
through our Service 62~
MORE CHECKING PLANS. •
MORE CHECKING CONVENIENCE.
Bank of America offers you a wide variety
of checking plans and features. Whether
you write two checks a month, or two
hundred, we have a plan to fit your needs.
And we offer these plans in more place
than any other bank, in more branches
up and down the state. Add a VERSATEL~
card, and you have the additional conven·
iencc of nearly 1,000 VERSATELLERATMs
in California and every PLUS SYSTEM*•
ATM location across the country.
To select the checking plan and fea-
tures that are right for you, stop in your
nearby Bank of America branch and talk
to one of our Customer Service Reprcsen·
tatives. You' 11 quickly
see that when it
comes to check1 ng,
it pays to come to
Bank of America.
Bank of America lac
•
Leslie and Kirk Baldridge, f rvine, boy
May 15
Linda and Gary Altergott, La1una Niguel, boy
Cynthia and Brian Carmel, Laguna Niguel, boy
... May17
Karen and R. Joshua Lcuthaus, Laguna Niguel, girl
May 11
Valerie and Jerome Garbarini, Laguna Beach, boy
May!!
Debi and Claude Bouchard, Laguna Niguel, girl
May ZS
Tricia and Mark Mourick. Laguna Niguel, boy
May SO
Michelle and Robert Markas, Corona del Mar
SAN CLEMENTE GENERAL HOSPITAL
May7
Toni and William DcBilzan, Irvine, boy
May 10
Julie and Craig Barrett, Laguna Niguel, boy
May it
Mary .and George Muldrew, Laguna Niguel, girl
May 10
Darlene Kay K.mdstrand, Laguna Niauel. ltirl
WESTERN MEDICAL CEN'tER,-SANTA ANA
Mayl
Patricia and Michael Tenerclli, Irvine, &irl
May4
Patricia Sauceda, Costa Mesa, girl
Maya
Kathy and Joe Lltwak, Irvine, girl
Mayt
Mary Jensen and Fumio Otsu, Irvine, girl
May 10
Ann Trompke, Huntington Beach, boy
MayU
Velma and David Sprigs, Irvine, boy
MayU
Marcia and Jack Gutman, Irvine, girl
K.athlecn and Thomas Allen, Irvine, girl
Deborah and Henri Laborde, Huntington Beach, boy
MayZl
K.athleen and Ben Antell, Costa Mesa, &irl
Maytt
Judy and Patrick McFadden, Irvine, 1irl
MayU
Trang Tvyetvu and Minh Q. Pham, Costa Mesa, &irl
Mayll
Cynthia and Samuel Sandoval, Irvine, boy
HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
April 11
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wifli~ms, Newport Beach, boy
April It
Mr. and Mn. Wendell Souza, Fountain Valley, boy
Afrll ••
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wri&ht, Huntinston Beach, boy
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Freeman, Irvine, boy
Mayl
Mr. and Mn. J. A. Sward Sr., Irvine, airl
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hardin, Huntinaton Beach, airl
Mr. and Mn. Carl Oominello, Huntinaton Bt.ach, &irl
Meyl
Mr. and Mrs. James Marchetta., Irvine, 1Jrl
Mr. and Mn. laRuc Walkup. Hunt.inaton Beach. ~>'
Mr. and Mr1. Rodemk Scott, Hununat~n Beach, &art
Mr. and Mn. Jeffrey Wadswo~. Hunttnaton ~b. ~Y
Mr. and Mn. Robert Caner·Rc1cher. Newpon Bcach, airl MaJI
Mr. and Mn. Kenneth McKay, lrviD~ 11rl ... ,,
Mr. and Mn. Oecqe Troaal, Huntina1on Beach. boy
fllaJll .
Mr. and Mn. Devtd Ullman, NrwP,On Belch. boy
Mr ud Mrs. Kelly McChart, Huntu•11on Belich. bOy . ...,u
Mr. and Mn. Oresory ~~nc.11rl
Mr. aftd Mn. David~ Mesa.. boy
Mr. and Mn. Roben Duri~ ilNewport 8cech, boy
Mr. and Mn. O.n~l Holfmln. Costa M l.Jrl
Mr. and Mn. Oanen K°Qu~ IWcb, sitt
Mr. and Mn. HowaH Orifftft M "rt
•
•
••
''Noneofthewomen being mentioned for vJce pretdilentl•audl•M
mmAD
Fem-Dem VP S [ • tJ ' I ' f ' I •• r. I_ tt l . '
, -candidates
not tjualified
WASHINGTON-Shh!Don'tsay
a word. There's a conspiracy of
silence in this town,.a little scc;ret that
W asbington in its arrogance thinks it can keep from the rest oftheoountry.
It's this: None of the women being
mentioned for vice president is
qualified. ·
Do not whisper this to anybody.
-lnstead, talkabout.Oeraldine Ferrar<>
(0-N.Y.), Lindy Boggs(D-La.),
Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) and San
Francisco Mayor Diane Feinstein as
if they were politicians of the first
rank-national figures with more
than just a smidacn of foreign policy
experience. The fact is that they arc not~!"B of the sort -just capable
pobt1c1ans who would not be men-
tioned fortbe.natiolltll ticket ifthcy
were not women.
Hardly any of that ever gets spoken.
Instead, m the rush to get a woman on
the Democratic tic.ketalmost any
woman who has eveJLb.eld office ts
being talked about as if she were a
virtual Disraeli. Her virtues arc
trumpeted, her experience exag-
gerated and the political conse-
quences ofber being on the ticket -
talcingadvantagcofthegcndergap-
exalted. What's almost never men-
tioned, though, is the little matter of
qualifications.
After an, we arc not talking here of a
local television news show -one
man, one woman and o~norily of --mtrenex. cmtillOrigofthevice
presidency-which in a heartbeat
could mean the presidency. A vice
presidentshould be qualified to
assume the presidency on a moment's
notice. She or be ought to be someone
whose foreign policy experience is
something more than minimal. And
she or he ought to have a fair idea of
the difference between the ST ART
and the SALT talks.
R1c11110
·.COHEI
o(spit is itself not worth a warm
bucket of spit. Vice presidems lilce
Walter f. Mondale and George Bush
have dignified the office; assassina-
tions have elevated it. The names of
obscure vice presidents or vice presi-
dential candidates lilce Winia'm Mill-
er don't make a case for the unim-
portance of the office. They tell us
mstead how far we have come.
Women'sorganizations, which '
have been pushing for a woman on
the ticket, want to hear none of these
arguments. Their goal is the defeat of
Ronald Reagan and their assumption
is thata woman on the Democratic
ticket will bea political Pied Piper,
pulling to the polls 33 million eligjble,
but unregistered, female voters.
~ut this isjus~ an updated variation
oft1cket-balanc1ng. If tickets arc
balanced by geography or ideology,
why not also by sex'! No reason -as
long as experience and competence
arc kept in mind. Balancing a ticket
on the basis of sex is no worse than
doing it for other reasons. but it is no
benereitber.
¥ --
Conservatives will carry
California in November
Llttle
.min~s
' r.ulnlng
college
OCC trustees'.
performance is
far below par
The rexi for today is• QUOl.lllJ · ~
from Benjamin DUraeli -~ &rf1>f
lkaconmeld. It says: "Little ib.i.iiu
affect lirtle minds.·• ·r-
1 well rcmembettbe belinnina of~
Orange Coast Coll*. A fellow :
alumnus of the University of Cali-C
fomia, Basil Petenon, was the found,
i ng president.
Gann initiative's Pete was a tall man who bad been a
had been drawn by the courts after basketball player. An accident broke
then-Gov. Reagan and Democrats in bis bKk, so he walked stooped over. easy Victory =~uldn'tagreconreap-But.,moreimportant.,hewasamanof
d Which suggests that Californians J--•• vision. in iCateS Strength reallydovotemorcforindividuals _... Withthedeelarationoftheairbue
than party labels. E as surplus by the federal aovernmen~
Liberal Dcmocratsdominated the · Butnomatterbowtheyvotewben LIAS Petesa..vanopportunitytofiUa.,at
headlines for weeks before last week's pcrsoiiilities arc on the line, Cali--iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiilliii~-neM. . .a.j\anior COilete for &be uca.be---.-...,
But the Democrats are almost California primary election, but one fomians almost invariably vote con-called .. The Oran&e Coat.••
bereft of qualified women candidates. key result indicates conservatives will servative when the ballot mvolves Result was Orao8C Coast~
If anything, they can be found on the most likely carry this state in Novem-only a non-partisan issue. Since tbatsuooess. Gann bu bad which bas sinQC won national dis.unc-
Republican side-0f the aisle. The . ber, when it really counts. This trend's genesis is usually thn:c others, bis government spend· tion for excellence amon&alljunior •
GOP has one Supreme Courtjusiice, That result: The easy victory of traoed back only u far u 1978, when i~ limits in 1979, the crime victim's coUqcs.
two senators, two Cabinet officers Paul Gann'santi-1..qislature in-the Proposition 13 property tax cuts ·~bill of riabts" in 1982 and this year's hie was followed by another put
and one U .N..Ambassador -the itiative, designed to reduce majority won with a 65 pm:ent majority. But it lasbin• of the teaWators. · mind-Norman Watson.You may fonnidabl~JeanKirkpatrick,anom-party powcrandcutthela··--'--' actuallygoesbackmuchfarther. Jarvtsalsobasqualificdtwoo• .. -havercadaboutbimina ... Leuerto
inal Democrat but a functioning wu._-.... Fully 20 yearsaao, voters over. ' m-c.u,._ his oarrowly-defea•..,. i; the Editor .. published bytbc Daily
Republican. None of'. the women budget. whelmingly approved Proposition QO;;-&u'"'1uts in l 98()_.andh • :S.ve Pilot.last week. Hiab1 ~
Democrats being mentioned for the In an election with virtually no 14, which aimed to roU back early fair 13" proposition on this November's every bitdetcrved. y · 'd h h other non·""'r1isan litmus-test issues, h · la n • · · f ... • Since 1960,thccountryhaslostone vtcepres1 en~ asanyw ere near _.... ousmg wsandallowrealestate balloL ~ecogrubono tnesemcn sworth he fio · · · thcvoteooProposition2•demon-b 1.... dla dl rds L.--• ued... th -.a. --~--ll)[C:5'0QCIU.b.yassassjnationand ---~;;..;;r..--re~t =...· =:l:.:.t..e;:;:X,:.c;:.:,:n:::;en::,:ce:;:.:... -ro~rsan n 0 to practice Addtntboses u.s>lnCILI uOWDtO etrusteeswuO aoo~~~res~~oo.lnboth --~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~;~~ • .. s~~~· 2~· ~5~r~~~-~~
cases, vice presidents had to take It would be wonderful if the next impulse remains in California. And tion they pleased. True, that measure ositton bannina pnvate ownenbipef Eumple: Georae RoddaJ r. Just tbJs
over. In both cases, they were quali-vice president we~ a woman-that can only be&ood news for Ronald was thrown out by thecourts •.. but the b.andauns and the repeated Ile> week is rcceivin& the AssOciation or
fied to do so-even though they had wonderful for women and wonderful Reagan, who won his third straight voters have never reversed their publican.· ballot initiatives on reap-CommunityColleae Trustees A'ftlliO
originally been chosen for blatantly for the country as a whole. There is Republican pruidential primary positjon. portiollmmt. _ --for .. Trusteeofthe Y car."
political reasons. Lyndon Johnson, something to be sald for role m-odels, -here. £ven when the modem i4itiative Tbe DC't result is this reality: When i•m bound to say that the year
the Texan, was the quintessential even if they are tokens. But it would Between elections, it's easy to lose movemen1,ot roUi.nain me early mey•re dlWuled in Sacrament« ;1 is they're aalJcin&about is I 982-83. oot
ticket-balancer: Gerald ford was be traaic if tbe woman chosen were sight of the votcn' fundamental 1970s, almost aJJ liberal-inspired oomervatives-not libenls-wbo 83-84. No. For wbeo lhe evaluation of,
Richard Nixon 'samiable ace in the not qualified. In the vice presidency, conservatism. AftcraU. at the same initiatives were soundly defeated. now fed they can reliably~ _ trustees for tbec:uirenr )al' is
hole. a pardon-granter if there ever and es~ally in the presidency, a time they're consistently approving The Proposition 20 Coatal Initiative popularaupport. oompietcd. the trulCCeS b'Ora.o.ae wasone. mistakcisamistakcnomattcrwhat measureslikcGann'slatesteffort, ofl972andthePolitica1Reform Andtbat'sarealitysuretowarm CoulandiuafflliatedcolJeeesarc
for these reasons, the vice presi-
dency is not the historic container of
disparaginaquotes that it used to be.
John NanceGamer'scrackabout the
office not being worth a warm bucket
the sex of the office holder. History, Califomiansconsistcntlr, return to Initiative of 1974 arc exceptions that the heart ofRonakl Reapn. who bound to IClOre near the bottom of t.bc ~ft.er all, is an equal opportunity office the nation's most liberal sct.oL ...stand out because their victories were needs.his home state more.than any list. Any liS1. ·
Judge. . conaressmenandstatelegislators. sounusuaJ. othermordertoassurehinuelfof Herciswberetbetextfottoday
This seeming anomaly is due partly But starting with Gann, Howard four more yea.rs in Wasb.insto.o. comes in.
Rlcbud Cotu u • •ya4.lcate4
collUIUU1t.
to gerrymandered district lines drawn Jarvis and their Proposition 13, the Never in my experience have I seen
byandforDemocrats.Butitwualso initiativehasbecnalmosttheex· n.imuEUu.Wa&ua.MMlca-agovemingboardoffivepersonsof
true in the 1970s, when district llnes elusive property of the ri&ht. tiuetl Nlwm""t • •ta.~.u.Jn. whom four have such minitcuJe minds.
As United States 'tilts' toward-Iraq,
Commerce Department deals with Iran
Not only arc their actions ridicu-
lous, but their conduct, except when
they put on their Look-what-nice-
161n..we-arc a~ 68.s been rude;
boorish and stupid.
Pete is dead, but Norman Watson
is still alive. How he survives the
unfounded, hateful charges to which ,
this group has subjected him, I do not ,
know. There is no moti vc, apparent-'
ly, but to humiliate him .
Iranians are buying spare parts
with t h e U .S. government's approval
WASHINGTON -While Iran
and Iraq battle over a parched piece of
desert, the United States is making
plans to defend the Penian Gulf, and
the Soviet Union is massing troops
near the Iranian border .. The world
nervously awaits the day of confron-
tation.
for four years, the Iran-Iraq con-
flict wore acrimoniously on. without
either side 'crossing the invisible
tripwire. Then the Iraqis attacked oil
tankers in Iranian waters; the Ira-
nians retaliated against tankers
elsewhere in the Persian Gulf; the
Reaaan administration quietly chose
sides and ordered a pro-Iraqi .. tilt":
and the Soviets bc&an making menac-
ina_ moves along tfie Iranian border.
Cables have now aone out from the
State Department to U.S. allies
around the world, urgjn& them to stop
shippina '1lilitary supplies to Iran.
But the messaae apparently hasn't
reached the Commerce Department
only eiaht blocks across town.
The department is staffed with
people whose main purpose in life is
to promote trade -the tilt toward Iraq. the minacious Soviets and the
Ayatollah Khomeini notwithstand-
il\I. So the Commerce Department
has blithely continued approvina
sales to Iran.
St*tJy soeakina. only non·mili·
tary Item• nave been licensed for
shipment. } But the Iranians have
·.become adept at transformina
plowshares into swords. They hive
neatly adapted U.S. equJpmcnt to
ORANGE COAST ........
military use.
Sources with access to lists of the
approved exports told my associate
Lucette lagnado that they include
such critical items as spare parts for
American-made Boeing 707s. The
planes are remnants of happier days
when America and Iran were bosom
allies. Without replacement parts,
most of the planes would be
grounded.
As late as I 982, some sales were
made directly to the Iranian air force
and navy. But for appearances· sake,
the spare parts lately have gone to the
lraruan national airline. Of course,
the 707s are being used as military
transports.
MALIGNED MOTHERS: I wrote
a Mother's Day column last month
defendillJ mothers who would rather
raise their children than spend eight
hours a day in an office. The media
has been portraying these women as if
they arc deprived or, worse. unfit for a
career.
As a typical example, I cited a CBS
News report which implied that child
rearing isn't chic and that home.
making is a throwt.ck to less en·
lightened tames. UnhapP.ily, my
column has had oo percepuble effect
on the television networks.; ABC
News is the latest to malian mothers
at home.
l have bccn,euina an earful on this
subject from my daughter, Chen
Loveless. who is also the mother of
five of my arandchildren. As an
unpeid volunteer. she hdpcd form a
tt.L.IOttw.rta• ~ ""**' c-,o.....,
EdilGt 8tllS ~
IOIN~
PnMZIN
AMOClelt Editor
T .... T ...
Oty [Oitof
I
mother's anti-<icfam5·on league
called "Mothers at Ho " .
They hold no rese ent for
mothers who prefer office jobs; they
understand that many women must
work to put food on the table; they
believe women should receive equal
pay for e_qual work. But these mothers
also beheve that . millions of in-
telligent, competent women are stay-
ing home, not bcc~use they're un-
qualified for careers but because they
find it more challenging to raise
children.
So I was dismayed that ABC News
scarcetx mentioned the largest
women s profession of all -home-
makers -in a series on "Women in
the '80s." But my dau&hter Cheri is
more articulate on this subject than I
JACK
AIDEISOI
am. Herc's what she wrote to ABC:
"I know you could not have
covered every alternative available to
women in a PJ'Olfam that totaled less
than one hour of air time; however ~use the ~tic implied a represenaa:
~1ve ~mphng of women, it was
ansulllng to hear motherhood dis-
cussed only in passing and mostly by
those who are not yet mothers.
.. Whether or not it was intended, it
clearly gave the message that mother-
ing is no longer an option that sman
women arc choosing. In fact, it gave
the impression that no one is doing it
at all anymore unless they arc
working it tnto their career plans
"I am more and more coming to
realize that women in general
(whether in the marketplace or at
home) do not identify with the
various stereotypes presented by the
media.•·
Footnote: If you agree or disagree
with this viewpoint., please don•t
write to me. Address your comments
to Mothers at Home. P.O. Boit 2361 ,
Fairfax, Va. 22031.
Jad AJldttsoD 11 • •J'9dlcaid
cot.maht.
Colombia: Agem in an ocean
of.emerald mining countries
What commodities leap to mind
wbeo you think of Sou.th America's
Colombia? Yes. Juan, coffee. certain·
ty. A"nd marijuana and cocaine. if you
read the ptpers. But did you re-
member emeralds? That country
tums out 90 l)C1Unt or the world's
emeralds.
What's your definition of .. a lady"?
An Amcncan writer named till.an
Day had an opinion on thi 5aid ihc:
A lady is one who ne~r shows hict
underwear by A«icknt.
tudents of the mind contend any
aatcment t>Y a xhiiophmuc would
sound petfc:ictly Donna!, if at were
introduced witb tho Phfue, "I dreamt
that. •• "
SHtt tu:1an estimate that
l,U$,000pieopkus the UnitedSLI
went to motel ·I t nlaht.
-. '
Q. l know •'boonies" short for
.. boondocks" was broucht beck by
the U.S. Marines ftom the Pb.ilip-
fiACs where tbc Taa name wts
'bu.ndok" mcanina mountain. But
where did we aet "toolies" which
likewise means out ih the sticks'?
A. "Tu.tes.•• rewritC$ our LanautfC
man. From the panisb for cen&1n bulNshes that srow down atona the border.
Q. Have tbett eVtt been any
SOC'leties without the in titution of
mllri11t?
A. NO: sir. not a one. That•s alt0
tnte of the common cold. •
. M~~.!cshe )'OU"I man'WhO t:a.k.n his airt to the nearest c:odtta1l lou~ teat• her on a stooi. anet
fficki"I bi thumb her way, says to the
buteft<kr, "Fill 'er up. .. Sir, do )'OU
commit lh t0r1 of. crau per.
fonna.ntt? If so. knock st off. ldvba
D
our Love and War man. Speak softlv
to her and quote that great Grcci: Eun{>idcs. who sajd, "Where there is
no wine. the.re is no love." lncidental-1Y. you ·~·e Maid •bout "Euripides ...
That's what the tailor laid to the
fellow who brousht in tom trousers.
Around tidal t.sins near Eastport.
Ma.iDC.; the fishermen can stake their
neu in the sand at low tide, wait for
?he b• tJdc to come and ao. then pull
an thor c:aldtes at the next low tide
While they tand in hortC-drawn
wqon
:To be u qwck u a wi~ it has 10
haPPen. ~ttly. in th~thsof a ICCOnd.
I was told late last week that the
Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce
past presidents' group is ~tinaa '
letter" to the govemina boa.rd of all.
tbrcc colleges.
Pfui
A lettertoagroupwhoscactscan be\
countenanced only if they are fools! A
letter pleading with the four not to be
foolish!
One mo~ example of the effect of
"little'minds."
lftheCosta Mesa Chamberwanu
to do somcth ing effective, it should
close ranks with its co unterparts in
Newpon Beach and Huntinaton
Beach.
They should rcoognize that you
can•tget 10$ic from littlemindsand
stan an acuon to throw them out.
We need the colleges that Dr.
Peterson and Dr. Watson brought to
such a pinnacle of achievement.
We don't need so many little
minds.
THE '
FAMIL't'
CIRCUS
"Know what's good about sign language? You can
talk with yoor mouth full."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
--.. ~\
"Barbara Woodhouse, where are you?"
BIG GEORGE
:'\ JL h\. ---~~---
by Gus Arriola
g
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
-.J~ --
!J
~J
"All that dog can do la talk, talk, talk.''
DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham
' II ~
A LmLE LEAININO
Both vulnerable. South dtalJ. could vary, depend1n1 on
NORTH contmunlutloa betw en
• A 54 ded1rtr'1 hand and dummy.
o l Q J 8 This uample i1 typical.
0 Q J • Z Aft.-r South opened with a + tO• demand bid, North C'OfHClly
WEST EAST aet the suit immediately
• V.W • J 7e3t rather than bid one of h11
<::> 10184 <::> U four card ault.s. South launch·
. O 785) OK 1098 ed fnto Blackwood and boldly ·
• t8 7 3% + J e went to a rrand slam 11 aoon
SOUTH u he t1t&bllshed that his
'• K Q IOU partner beld an ace and a
<::> A 5 3 king. He cliose to play the
o A 1uit slam in cue be needed a + A K Q S dub rurr for his 13th trick.
The bidding: West led a club. Declarer
Snl .. Weat Nerdi Eut won in hand and laid down
2 • Pa11 3 • Pu1 the king of lrumps. When
4 NT Pua 5 0 Pa11 West fa iled to follow.
5 NT Pau 6 O Pau declarer had no way to pick
7 • PUI p_... p.., up the jack of trumps, IO he
Opening lead: Nine or +. ended up down one.
The way to handle a par
tacular suit combination South knew enough to
S HOE
BRABBLE
WA~ lJP, ~! l1ME ro
!>1'~~ 1~\~\N{, f~ 1"f.
fbt..£.lA1 Ol'4MP\l~!
c'Mo.l,~. ~
A~O ~1 'EM~ ~E.·~
... ~~~ii
~IN( i~I~~
Cu1us
Go1E1
makt the comet play bad
thtrt betn only one entry to
the table. Then. playlns the
kln1 of trumps befort uost·
inf lo the 1ct would allow
him to pick up the tult If it
1pOt 4 1-that bre1k is more
likely than 5-0.
A• tht cards lie, however,
declarer has a heart enlry t8'
the board as well as the ace
or 1pade1. Now correct
Lffhnique In tht trump suit it
to cross to the ace a• trick
two. If both defenders rollow,
declarer continues with a
trump to the king. U trump•
are 3-2. declarer can claim; if
Weal shows out, Jieclarer can
get back to dummy with a
high heart to tale a fineue
for the jack of trumps.
On the actual hand. West
shows out on the fll'Sl spade.
Def larer wln1 and taket a
trump fine , then crotlfl
back to the board in b aru to
t.ake a tee0nd trump finHM.
Now his grand 1lam 11
a sured.
Raitt.er ltrlcl1• clat.1 ' tUffPMt die CMla&l'J ... die,..,........,.,.,..,
Dt tMJ U.w ---,.. lllH'tf CfaarlH Gtrt•'•
.. , •• ,.0 .. 1 ,,, .. ,... ""'
t.ecla JH lM etn ... aM
t.ctk• •• &WI falt·,.e.d K-
t.IN .... t.Mt ,....w.. die
curt for aHtNIJ,q ,..._"·
Fer a t•PJ• eeiacl Sl.75 te
"G•e•·Feur Deal," tan tf
0!1 aew.,.per, P.O. a ..
!59, N•wtod, N.J. 076'8.
Make thtka payable te
New1pape..-O.
by Jeff MacNelly
&:JrToWORK
ON Ml( TIMING ...
b Kevin Faoan
1AA1'~ 'fK~ ~R!f, °"OI.
1~~F'f~~
~~~ A~O Q.U~~
•
FUNKl' WINKERBEAN
WJaaiag wJ .. ::tJae
f6 C.:OU 8E{,f N 10 E.D0CATE
CXXJRSEU: OJ~ -WISE ...
QOU'U. FIND -rnAI t.,.t)(.) NO
~ fftl1¥£ 1lE Ml~iAKE.& OFA~CE!
by Tom Batluk
<.OO'U. KNOW I ~ EXAMPLE I
iHA'f1ME ~ ~.I~ 1ME
Deal?OON ~~OOE.5
OOT"WER 10 ~L !
MOON MULLl:\S DR.SMOCK by Ferd & Tom Johnson by George Lemont
r--~~~~~~~---~~~~
DEEP SUrf.JECT ...
yoo NEVER Wf.AR
PEANUTS
I YES, SIR. IF YOO RE THE,
SCMOOl PS'r'CMOL0615T, IM
SUPPOSED lO SEE VOU .. l'M
lME DOM8 KID !AMO FAILED ...
YOU HAD TROUBLE WITH
SCHOOL TOO UJUE~ ~ WEf{E
'(OON61 NO, I DON'T MIND
MEARING ABOUT IT...
LET'S HAVE.A L.OOK
ATYQJf{~.
by Charles M. Schulz
I
DELIVERY ROOM
ANO
NOW, we.'u...
MAKe. A
se-r oF
,-He KIP'S FOO"l-
PRIN"IS f
ROSE IS ROSE
Sta, IT''S
~. eur ...
AeeeY OION'T S0UN0
LIKE t-ERSELF1 010 ~TMINKSO"
KeeF' IN
MINO, HIS PAReN-rs
ARe WINe MA Ke.RS , c:>ocroR.'
z
l
j
I
I
9
) DELIVERY ROOM
6·1l
by Pat Brady
ft~ WfWH910 T1d A~MTH/
cuscope aims to keep tissues tuned
ow do pain-sufferers spell relief?
--e-c-t-r-o-acutherapy
The EJectro-Acuscopc 1s about the
· of a stereo receiver and, at first
ance,just as ordinary lookina. But a oser anspcction reveals two pcn-
pcd probes and the low-volt.a&C
lcctrical cumnts that flQw throu&h ~m can provide relief from J)ain and
sttess. .
Dr. Calvin B. Ross, a Huntington
Beach chiropractor, used the anal<>aY
of an out--0f-tune piano to explain
how the acuscopc works:
.. If we have an area that is in pain,
it's not in tune witn surrounding
tissues. The machine is designed to
pick up abnonnal tissue frequencies
and make them work nonnally."
His recently purchased a~uscopc
doc n't diqnose the ailment, he
added, but it does monitor the hssue
and adjusts itself as it treats the
injury ... It's not constanUy in the
same mode because the body is
always chanJing."
Ross' descnption bnngs to ·mind a
similar theory used to explain·
acupuncture. But usina the acuscopc
doesn't involve special traintng -
Ross said he mastered it in a few
hou.,_ and there are•no needles
involved.
NeW drug strengthens
heart's b~ating power
BOSTON (AP) - A drug used for 20 years to treat
Parkinson's disease appears to be more effective and have
fewer side effects t.han digitalis in treating congestive "heart
failure. rcsearchen claim in a new study.
An estimated 4 million Americans suffer congestive
heart failure, which occurs when the heart does not pump
stro~y enoulh, causin4 blood to back up in the veins.
Swelhng rcsufts, and victims may suffer shortness of
breath when fluid collects in their lungs.
The drug levodopa strengthened the pumping power
of failing beans by 30 percent, doctors said in a repon in
~N~Joomal~Med~~-.
such research because levodopa's patent has expired, so
even with increased use it would not be highly profitable
for drua firms.
"Consequently, it's yery difficult to get funding from
the industry to try to mount a major trial to see its
effecti\leness in heart failure," Rajfer said. ..We're
struggling with how we will accomplish that."
Other new digitalis medicines also are being tested.
including one called milrinone that has not yet been
approved for general use.
Based on initial testing, Dr. Sol I. Rajfer of the
University of Chi?JO said be believes levodopa could --•
someday replace di11talis. Mlilii ..
The probe eaD be apphed ealber to
acupuncture points or to the pa10ful area itself, in which case the practi·
cioncr w1ll .. track" the pain in a IS-to
JO.minute sesston.
While Ross emphasized that
chiropractic is still his primary treat-
ment, he has seen some acuscop1c
patients improve dramatically.
··1 treated a professional bowler for
a shoulder injury. After six manuteS
on the machine he was able lo touch
bi~ back." he said. ·
Ross listed back pain. hcadacesand
arthntic pain as ailments that re-
spond to the acuscope which relieves
discomfort and speeds healing.
.. No instrument does any hcalina, ..
be saJd, "but we can help the body
heal itself ... it helps the tissues bring
in nutrients better and get rid of
wastes more efficiently ...
Dr. Richard S. Fields, an
anesthesiologist who pf1tCUces io a
pain-control clinic in Orange. said
that while be is not convinced of the
healing eowen of elcctroacutherapy.
"it certainly rclieve~n on a more
than temporary basis."
Patients suffering from .. low-back
paan, pain from malignancies and just
plain pain that no one understands"
come to his clinic after they have
exhausted all other possibilities. And
elcctroacutherapy has helped some
get relief when nothing else worked.
··vou can accept the old Chinese
theories of enerJtY flow," Fields said.
Dr. LeroJ Perry
j
"But I don't think anybody can
explafo exactly why it works.
However, it is a paihless therapy-
thc patient probably won't feel any-
thing during a treatment except the
light touch of the probe-and Fields
is confident that it won't harm
anyone.
Before his patients arc given a pain
treaunent. &bey bave a l.>manutc
.. eJecir~" IClllOG. When Ille
mach sac is io this~ ... ,~
I Vtf'Y pirofouad rdaQtioG IUI caiases most peOp6e IO rall asleep ...
Fields ex.plained tbal peOpk ia paiD
arc usually appt'.ebclllivc ud 1aate u
well. and that .some 0910 ii tbe rauh
of an induced muscle spasm. Tbc
rela.Uuon ~vidcd bye~ "
he 1aid, ··tends lo bn:ak that~ up ...
Or. LeRoy Per:f'y Jr., I chi~
'orthopcdi t at the International
Sporwncdicine hiStilute io Le» AD-seles. said that the llel'JICOPC .. ,. noca
miracle machine, but as ph~
therapy ioes. it docs have ill ~ ...
Perry, who WU team doctor a
Antigua at the 19760lympi.csa.Dd rot
the U.S. bobsled team at tht 1980
Winter Games., said that the oumbef'
of athletes and their array of injuries
helps him to evaluate the benefits of:
different tbcraoies.
He rates the ~ 11 Jess effective than IC'UpUDC'lure Ud &aY"-~,~
that it is most beneficial when med as
an adJunct lo other therapies.. How-
ever, be credits ~
with ~Ill some athlctel bKk on
their feet in record time.
••When it comes to tra~ it's at
least 50 percent better than aay ot.btt
form of physical therapy," be said.
Immediate sprains and strains re-
spond especially well. .. but rve also
used the acuscope for chronic ~
Jems with good results."
"It certainly is more potent than digitalis," Rajfe said
in an interview ... We believe it's going to have fewer side B f.,, -..4-I. .&'4-J -ts effec~~~i~·~n~~~~~~·~thetoxicfoxgloveplant-8DA OD·.g.ro wr L.l.i 8..1 a-er 1UDe even
has been the mainstay in treating heart failure for two
centuries. Despite its widespread use, the drug doesn't -,
always work and the dosage needed to relieve symptoms Co m men c e -------------arc exciting. What's missing arc role models and •Reflect on the ideas of Bill Mc:QUo!d.. minista ofS&.:
may be close to the amount that causes poisoning. ment and MarriaJe. prescriptions for what to do once the courtship is over. Mark Presbyterian Olurch,wbo raniads as that ... family
Some of the l 0 hean patients getting levodopa They're both exciting It's still mostly rumor that bein& married can also be is supporu:d by the commuity wtnch IUITOQuds it. If a
suffered upset stomachs, a side effect the researchers were new begin n 1 ngs fun. f_aplily system ts~ cnoup to ~vc input from .,:>Gd
able to control by carefully regulatin~ the dosages. which are often Marriages become stagnant and boring when they arc friends and sipirtCaDt Olbcrs. tbete ii m cbance for
.. These were patients who on digitalis and diuretics thought of as end-dedicated to non-cl\aQF. Just like ~le, relationships boredom to become an isue ...
were still doing poorly," Raj fer said. "Some of them were mgs. either continue to srow or begin to die. You've IOl a •Thmk in terms of wbat YOU caa do'° IMkc your
bedridden and shon of breath with minimal activity." In sptte of how fighting chance if you think of marriqe as a continuing maniaF mon: eJlcitiQ&.. It'& IOO easy to poiat lO ycaar •
But all of the patients in the test group have been able many um es we've process and not just as one ~nent state of being. spouse~ the caute of all~ ~ .
to resume nonnal lives after receiving levodopa, he said. been told otherwise •••••••••••-To keep~ in your mamaae or to re-sparkle a do-•Give )our panncr IQOd l'ealOft '° pve ~wt.a yve .. Most of them walk a mile now without any by honored graduation speakers. comn.u:ncement docs sparkled relationship: ttuly need.. •
problem," Rajfer said ... A couple of them are back to work represent the last time a class ·officially convenes. The •Consider that laughter; warm fcelinp and play-•Remember that Y<N c:an•t cbanee youupoutt You
full time." dictionary definition"aside, it feels like the. last hurtah or fulncss arc like mo in the bank. can only be a c:beCrteadcr. What's W1'0lll& 'With your....,._
Since levodopa already is on the market, doctors can final party. •~u.J!POS.. nd our lau t tbcr repcacnts his/_bcr opportunity_'_f()f pcrtoGal p~ !Qt.bean failu,._ifttrey wish. lbjfer~ -l!aelierot pal'ties somenow aJs'o signuy ec"'""r:ll'nd,....,o""'f_t_Oda.,..y, lhe resu Ung happy cc IJ?P warm cs~ . ~I _ p •.. dCrputlhC ~ 0 ho~ever,That they will wait for additional testina betore somethinJ ... albeit m the guise of celebrating a be banked and will accumulate mtCTCSt. hvma \Ollt1htr&D pospec:11vt Sc:bcdulinstnnc for fun and
they routinely use it for this condition. forthcomtnJ m,arria&c as a new bcginblng. •lmqmc-that when things get touab. as they always laugbUr needs to move to bi&b prionty.
Rajfer said be would like to conduct an expcnment There. 1s, for sure. hfe after co~rnencement ... and must, WJthdtlwals will be automatically made from your
with larae niunben of petients to check levodopa's long-after mamagc. laughter-warm fuzzy aa:ounL
term usefulness and side effects. The media ceaches about romance. Everyone knows •Expect yourrelation~~wn committed uolil
But he said it bas been difficult to obtain funding for that courtship and confliclio the punuit of love in&eresl such bme as your account as
Once upon a year
'princess ' reigns
PULSE RATE ZONE
EASY TO MEASURE
HB woman figures
it's more fu n to count
friends than candles
By ANN CONWAY
.,., .... c. ... , ••Pl
I
Cut
RotHEllEIG ·
•First. calculate your ..,adjusted
maximum heart rate: Men. 205 minus 1/2
age equals age..adJustcd maximum heart
rate; women. 220 minus age equals qe-
adjusted maximum heart rate.
•Now take SS percent of that oumbeno
determine the median pulse rate to
maintain during aerobic acuvity. Your
training heart rate range will be I 0 beats
below to 10 beats above that figure. (This
formula may not apply if you arc t.akina
medicatton. espcc1ally agents used to
control cert.a an types of bean disease and
ht&h blood pressure.)
Here's a sample calculat1on: The age-'
adjusted maximum hean rate for a 33-
year--0ld woman 1s 187 (220 minus 33).
Her median pulse rate to maintain durina e~erdse is 159 ( 187 multiplied b) 0.85).
Her tnunmg heart rate range. then, is
between I 50 and I 70.
lf you exercise wnhm your training
hean rate range for 20manutcsat least four
times a week. or for 30 minutes at least
three times a we-ck. yo u'll maintain a good
level of aerobic fitness..
Dr. Caf) 'RorhcnbetJ, • Huntintton
&acb chiropracror. is host of "Bae
Talk." • W«kl} health show on ·C•bk
Oann~/ JO at 7 p.m. Tuesdays.
•
W8shnorm&l ·andrri.ff :rightoutof your hair
Medicated shampoos needed
for heavy scaling, psoriasis
On the arand scare, dlndruff as a minor prob1cm.
Alm0$tcveryonc' 1ot it, but nobodywho'saot it wouldn't
prefer to give it the brush-off.
the'r newborns by scent alone.
He a ked a aroup of mothers to choose between two
prments -one wom by their child. one by a different
baby. After a whiff, 80 percent confidently picked their
own.
The inolhers had pent up to 41 hours with their
newborns. But even c~esattan mo the~ who avcrag d two
hours with their infants, scortd H well .
h 's not just nurtery mells. Po(tcr al o found duldttn
can sniff out clothina worn by brothers and 1stcrs;
mothers of youngstcn 3 to 8 can d1~tingui h their own
from outsiders: and both parents can detcel each of their
own childritn by smell.
Why docs the nose know so much about the family?
I From mice to monkey smell keeps animal families
toacther, attracuoa bab1c to their own mothers and vice
vcru. Similarly, early humans may have evolved the
abilny to 1dcnt1fy bab1c1 by mcll. 1 usdul skill at m&ht or
in a dark cave. Unique smcllprint m1&ht also have helpfd
prehistoric mothers identify and bond with their childrtn.
Amerlcu Htaltla Ma1atlDe Servlce
Dandruff -medicaJly known as scurf -consists of
clumps of epidermal cells cast off from the scalp. Reautar
shampooing usually washes most of them away, but heavy
scaling may require stron~r measures -in particular,
medicated shampoos '11(\tainina selenium sulfide ot zinc
pyrithione. ~
Readers straighten o.ut twiSted tongue
Even if your itches arc really psoriasis or seborrhcic DEARANN
dermatitis, there's sllll httk need to worry, says Dr, James LANDERS: You re.-
Leyden of the University of Pennsylvania. The same allyputyourfootina
shampoos that fight dandruff fight those scaling disorders cow {>ile this lime,
too. ~d~d
"What people have to understand," Lcy~n advises, Where did you A111
luDEIS "is that dandruff and scborrhcic dermatitis can be act the idea
controlled but they can't be cured. They' rt looking for Louisville is pro-
something to make dandruff go away and stay away, and nounced "Loo-i-
that won't happen." . vul"? Acfording.l<? . . .
But what if you're shampooing more and still not V{ebstcr s 7th ~lllon It !S}..u~-v1I, founded ~n May 1780.
flakina less? The problem could be a form of eczema, says ~amed for Lo~1s XVI, kina of France. who a1d~d our cause
Leyden. "In the same way that hand eczema is ma<k worse • an thercvolut1on. And we resent being called hacks. -A
b> havmg your hands in soapy dishwater, shampooing the KENTUCKY COLONEL
sc"8lp wath detergents can aqravatc the scaJina of scalp DEARKEN:CowplJe,IDdeecl!lbaveateppedlDtoa
eczema. In that case, what s needed as not stronser pa1hlre fall of GeatajU.ucelved more tllu %,000 letten
medicated shampoos but a mild shampoo that contaJns fromUma,0'10,u_d1everaJfromLlma,Pen. They are
Tween-20... all mad at me. ne "autborlty" wllo aeot tllat cockeyed Uat The no.e kno1" lta own said Ge city ID Oil.lo ia pronouced Lee·mllh. I aboald bave
Here's one scent perfumers can't compete with: the
sweet smell of your own baby. It sends tingles ofjo:$.wn
a parent's spine.
It also sends a tingle of recognition and may be vita m
form mg the family bon<t. Dr. Richard Porter ofValMierbilt
University m Nashville found that mothers can identify
known better. rve been tllere. J bave ftlenda tbere. Tiie
name of tl•e dty lo Ohio 11 prooouced Ly-mub, same aa tbe
beu. The city ID Peru 11 Lff.mala. I bave allena1ed read era
on two contlneota! And tbat'a not the half of it! Read on.
• • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Who on earth is that fool
who told you the correct pronunciation of Missouri is
Mizz-oo-ra? It must ha ve been some down from Kansas
City. The intelli&ent rtsidcnts of St. Louis say M 1zz-oo-rce.
~y didn't you phone someone at the Poat-Dispatch?-
AMAZED IN MO.
DEAR ANN: While you areeducatmg folks. tell them
the capital of Ohio is Co-Lum bus, NOT O um-bus. In
Massachusetts it's Wooster, not Wor-cester. The sauce is
Woos-tisheer. Also, the river between Texas and Mexico is
Ree-o Grand, but the college in Ohio is Rye-o-Orand. In
New Jersey it's New-erk, not Nerk. Al\d I wish New
Yorkers would quit saymg Lawn-Oy..-nd. It's Long
Island. -THE EAR IN POUGHKEEPSIE( PRO-
NOUNCED PQ..KJP-SEE)
DEAR EAR: Tile flasco went beyond names of cities.
Get a load of tbla: ••• DEAR ANN LANDERS: Pronunciation is often a
matter of region. But what I simply cannot abide is when
supposcdllcducated Americans pronounce NUCLEAR
as NUCU AR. (Even President Eisenho~erdid it!)
Another word that gets knocked around is REAL TOR. It is
pronounced exactly as it looks. Almost eve one wants to
say REALATOR. Thanks for helping cate the pubhc.
They sure need it.-ORE.
many people put us tn the same bu with Eaypt. Actually,
we are like the 1yrup: Ka1r-oh, not ky-roh. Thank you. -
NO MUMMIES HERE
DEAR ANN: You were right aboutthe stale bema
pronounced Ark-an-saw, but arc you aware that the river is
Ark-ansas?-OLD-Tl MER
DEAR 0. T .: I am NOW. Tbukl for tlle tip. • • • DEAR ANN: 1 am managing editor of a mapzine
called "Trains." We have found that advising people on
the pronunciation of cities can bea Pandora's box.
Example: San Jose in California is San-Ho-say~ But in
Illinois. It's San Jozc (rhymes with hose). Berlin in
Germfny is Burr-LYNN. b~m WisconS1n it's BURR-
lynn. -M.E.
So, dear readers, tllll 11 t•e laat time I'm 1otaa to 1tlck
my llead lJlto that cement mixer. People C&D proa"ttee
tbelr cities, riven, and mountain• any way tbey pleaH.
They'll never bear a peep oat of cne -unlfft of coarse
someone ref era to Clllca10 as SllY·1'own. . . . . ,
Planning11 wtdd.f!J#'! What's ri~t? Whit's wro111?
DEAR ANN: Please help reside s of Cairo, fll. So ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~'.
Ann Landers '"New Bnde'sGuide 'will relieve your
anxiety. To rece1 ve a copy, send S2 plus a /on& self.
addressed, sramped en vela~ (3 7 cents posuge) to Ann
Landers, P.O. Box I 1995, Chica1<J, ll1. 6061 /.
I lease OI' Reliable
so I can relax about repairs
"The longer I keep this trusty
AT&T phone, the smarter I tbink it
is to lease."
Low monthly cost
"For all the great serv.ice it
gives me, I just pay a little bit every
month. And leasing gives me
choices. Suppose I redecorated the
kitchen and wanted a different
color or model. I can swap 01'
Reliable for another color or
up~ade to the por,uJar Trimline or
Pnncess'!t phones.'
Repairs at no extra charge
"But I think 1'11 keep this one.
It's taken its share of tumbles and
has come up ringing every time.
But that's what's so great about a
lease. If it ever needed repair,
AT&T takes care of it at no extra
charge. All I do is call their toll-free
number or take it to one of their
Phone Centers."
Leasing means relaxlng
"The last thing I want to worry
about are my telephones. So I'm
sticking with AT&T quality and I'm
sticking with my leased phones.
That way I can relax!"
AT&T Conaumer S.les a Service
Call thi toll -fr •t> number 24 hours a day.
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• ATl&T
YOU tO thtt office tn YOUf area. • lh 1111'h h 11 fit•I• m•r~ "' ~ h I I " -------------------.J 0111114 \T"1l'onflllh1t!'1l1~l1'11·"hl'
Anaheim
Anaheim Plaza
co.ta Me• Irvine .. OrMge
500 N. Euchd St. Suite 109
I
3033 S. Bnstot St Suite A •
East Anaheim ·
2236 E:. Lincoln Ne.
14805 Jenrey Road Su!te F
Mleak>n Viefo
24000 Ahc11 Parkway SP 34
Town & country m S. Main St. Sune 11
Tipping the scales
in favor of standards
Do you re-
member where
you were and
what you were
doing the day you
climbed onto a
bathroom scale
and it weighed
you at what you
wanted to weigh?
E111
BOIBECI
Most ofus.do.Jl's hard t<>
describe the exhilaration of
that moment when you
look down through your
feet and find a number that
looks like a golf score
instead of a bowling score.
And who among us can·
not recall the disappoint-
ment when, minutes later.
we step on another scale
and realize that if that
ENGAGEMENTS
figure. is true. we should be
an SS-foot redwood.
Oh, sure, a nation can
put a man on the moon, but
they can't come up with a
standardized scale. If men
and women in space
weren't weightless. we·d
have had one 30 years ago.
Frankly, I'm sadc of the
emofionaJ yo-yo I ex-
per;ence with each and
O'Donoihue-AWone
Julie Ann O'Donoghue of Visalia and Milton Scott
Alli one of Newport Beach are planning to marry July 7 in
Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, Newport Beach.
The bride~lect is the daughter of Mr. arid Mrs. Philip
O'Donoghue of Visalia and her fiance's parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Milton Allione of Newport Beach.
The betrothed couple arc graduates of Cal State
Fullerton. o ·Donoghuc also is a graduate of Mt. Whitney
High School: Allione is a Newport Harbor High School
alumnus.
Grtfftth-Mackenbach
Sheryl Coberly Griffith of Pasadena and· John
Stevenson Griffith Jr. of Corona del Mar have announced
the engagement of their daughter, Susan Dorsey Griffith.
to David Dietrich Mackenbach. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frederick William Mackenbach of Palos Verdes Estates.
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Westridgc High
School, Pasadena. and USC, where her fiance also
graduated. He is an alumnus of Palos Verdes High School.
An Oct. 27 wedding is being planned 1n the First
CQ.ngregational Church, Los Angeles.
•*****************•
! BEAs1* :
: ICESKATINGAT:
: ICE CAPADES !
• learn to Ice Skate *
• h:e ~l.aung L~'°"' a1 an kt Jt
• <. apadt) C hale1 are a -.ell lt-
every scale I chmb upon.
One moment, I'm rnanic;
the next, depressive.
The scalet in doctor's
offices are the worst. 1 have
never been on one in my
life that didn't add eiaht
pounds or so to the weiaht I
know I am. They are rqu-
lated before they leave the
manufacturer in the doc-
tor's favor to fit his stan-
dard prtscription to "lose a
few pounds and you'll feel
better."
I once tested these scalei
to sec if I could effect any
change. I removed my
shoes. skirt, handbq. ear-
rings and a large wad of
chewing gum from my
mouth. That little sucker
didn't.budge 10 mud> aun
ounce. Now you explain
that!
I went right home from
the office only to discover I
had lost eight pounds by
riding 30 blocks in my car.
Does that tell you some-
thing?
I think if we really want
to get a scale that is univer-
sal. we should shop a bit.
It's too important to trust
to the aovemment. Look
what it did to the weiahts
and measures standards on
meat scalet where thumbs
arc going for $2.SO a pound.
Frankly, I lean toward a
scale in a home I visited in
Florida belonaina to one
Shirle_y Stitzer. It nestled in
a pillow on the floor of her
guest bathroom. Years had
rusted the bottom out of it
and mildew had created
beads of condensation in-
side the dial, mak.ina it
virtually impossible to read
the numbers. On the table
beside the scale were a ~ir
of dark prescription
glasses.
There wasn't a person
who used the bathroom
who did not emerae with a
smile on their lips and a
song in their hearts.
I should like to propose
thrt Shirley Stilzer's acale
be named the official
Olympic scale and be dis-
tributed throuahout the
world.
Someone has to set the
tandards. Why not
Shirley? • 1mr>ro\eme01 iiroeram 1ha1 it-
• .:omb1ne' fun. fitnc\\ and 1hc Jt lii======----iiiiiiii
1hrill of iierformmg for fomil\ •ITAlll CAM -tr and friend' Jt-Ouellty Old watc:hel. tcr"P
ii r,----------------:-1 Jt Ookf.~.
• : $5.00 OFF : * ¥"!,'!~TIMI
.. : Ice S .. etl•l leHOfH : Jt-IM I. 11111 IWf'L~....;.-ft : for a.11•,.er• : Jt-....... • -.au
.M I PfHf'nl coupon lot diW'oun1 I Jt-l~!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!~~~~!!!l!lm!:~
~ I 8 2 Eqlir'ft MY l. I... I
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.. 2701 H1.rbor 81~d. Jt-
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ir PUBLICICESKATINGEVERVOAV. Jt:
Vl OR MASTUCARO ACCEntD ···~···············
Local, county,"'state, nationql
and international events come
to your doorstep in the bright,
light and lively
DIET
CEmR.
18 HEREI
... , __
I
IL=' ..v .....
Jm:tCAkJ "-A~
IMAT COlnoNTATIONI: cmioN> DelATD Cl)MOVll
H 1.t 'Katt 8llat AM The Tidier
TIPt Kid ' (11711 !uianne PIMheet
Dol!Merdh 1::-r
... "Thteeholcl . (19e1) Oonlld
Suthnnd, Jeff Goldblotn CZl lBllf~TZ
-8:30-
(.1) MOYll!
• • "~Ill Mt Deadly'' ( 1955) ~
...... Albert Oekktr
ePmRGUNN
-~ l~mw
HARJTOHART ntllAINT
IWI! FACE TO FACE
LMNGWILD IOICING
AllAULTfD NUT8 OOMOVIE
.. ''The .Sting ti" (1983) Jaettje
Gleeson, Mac DIVIS
IBIJN~n
-10'JO-!:--'NEWI ** "Force-FM" (1981) Joe lftls,
Pim Huntington
tO>MOVIE **'" "Artfo•" (1982) Clint East· wood, Friddle Jolies
-11:00-
• DD Cl) t1I ~NEWS
I IAlUN>AY NIGftT
AOWAN & MAATWS LAIJGH.IN
M*A*l 'H
80UO GOl.D H0'1
LAITSONG
IQ VAN DYKE
MOVIE
t t "OoctOf OetrOll" ( 1983) Diii
~.Donna Dixon.
MOVIE
•• "Wiitz Across Texas" (1983) AMI~ Ttrry Jastrow:
-11:ao-I ~ • 9 NJC NlW8 tlOtm.JNE
High filer l ltlfMCHQI_
11Mfl!Wl8
m&TIOllAHRW09CO e LATBIOHT AMSICA (l)..,.....P.L
87a0Cl.UI . -,._h __ .
ITANOltQ ROOM OHL Y
-12:00-
Stephanie Ztmballat jolne a camtnl u an
aerial a.rtlat to flnd oat wbo'• •botaatq tbe
•how OD .. Rem m.ton Steele .. tonlibt at 10 on NBC, Channel 4.
8 llMGNlM. P.l -12:40-1 ffl~ MCClOUO
MOVE . MOVIE
t i t t "The Stereh" (19q) Mont· tt•.; "The Belt llltlt Whol'ehoutt In Texas" ( 1982) Burt Reynolds, Dolly ~ Clift, Aline MacMlhon. Perton ·
0 ~ NlW8 -12:46-
• t ~s" ( 1951) John ~i ~IOllll lampoon's Clas
Peyne. Rhonda F'llmlng Aullon" (1982) Gerrit GrlNm
(C) MOVIE -12: 10-Mlehlel Lerner
** * "The Verdict' ( 1982) Paul • -1:00-
Newmln. Chlrlone Rlrnpling ~ ~ Hallletds And Tiie
-12:30-Mceoyt" f 1975) Jldl Paltnce, SlM -2:15-
( H ON LOCA110N
Success of ·na Afler.· ·Amelia'
pror-ipts shows on topical Issues •1 J&Rav aua "'' ........... LOS ANGELES-NetwOlk tclevlsaon p(Olrammm
are plannina more topecal moVln of the IOr't that have not
only ~nt blJ ratinp but have abo prompted
unpretiedented vaewer enthu1iasm.
fonhcom1na TV movies, for example, Wilt explore
the kinds of ig~s Vlt:Wert are readina abou~ in daily
newspapert: pohce pyina, teen.qt au1cidc. wife abute, aainaand AIDS .
The huae audiencet for such contemporary films as
ABCs .. The 0ax After .. (n~lear anack) and ·~met,hina
About Amelia (fathcr-dauahtcr incest) and NBCs
··Adam" (kidnapped and mauina children) have prompt-ed the networts to order m<>R such films.
The intensity of vlewer response to the more
contemporary prosrammina surprised the nctwOfb.
Not since .. Roou .. has any television ~m had
the outpourina of public ldponse inspired by "The Day
After:• Anti-nuclear activists orpnized Vltwina groups
and demonstrations; and the reaction TCaebed from
Washinston to Moscow. · •
· :rhc reverberations caused by ··Somethina About
Amell&.'.' .and "Adam" are still beina felt.
After "Amelia," child-abi.tse hollincs received a
record numberofca.Jtsand numerous reports poured in to
law enforcement qencies. At least three bills were
introduced in the California Legislature dCalin& with child
abuse and incest.
&remendom ~ ..t ~ • : • 1 prObltm," ~ 5lcW WIUle. Nr1 vm aw• ,-...
motion ptct&ant. .. n. .• 1 llrrik ~ w,.· ....
WI)' respc>ntable lor thM ftlftt. ad H'I a loiad r-. IO make film.1 lite dw. ..
White idlid. ... driat dlii _.,,... wllida ....
.always beta KCUHd olMi• llhid. .... .-... lw
controVeiiial IUterial. Every Wiie we Clo h we'• a au_. prob&em1 for our lalel clepUunCQL We• _ _... fDf
easy material. puUcuWty in daemova-1 dtink mc1.-...
has bca pOlitive.lor 1bt imaee oldie lluee M1WOrb. I
thank the ldweniten c;M19b1 &o Mad up widl •more ...
.. In our internal ditcUMioat lbcre ii 411 aiarrnra 10
find that RCAI ~that may break pound." Mid 8nam
Sall.In, ABC'• vice prtlident for molioa pictures b
telcvaaion.
Network otr.ciaJs do not bdievt, bbWevcr, daal
controversy automatically rneam ra&i$
.. We bad a iot of ooncem1 ancf queltions about
whether 'Amelia' and 'The 0.y Aftet' were. ,ouw :tO do ~· Sallan •id. -we never envisioned Lbaa tiDd of s~e were au otOud of'The O.y After' and we were
aoina to stand by it. but not>ody ex~ lhe conlJ'OV°'1
to acneratc quite lbat ratinJ. Sometimes Lbe far Of
coatrQ\ersy will hinder.a <pr'OJCC't's dcvelopmeQL lt:S 90I
somC'lhiAa ~c automatically seek: ..
Halford Fain:rukl,aprofeilorofps~at UCl.A
who peciabus in the m .. med.i.&. aaicC. ·•Tbae mo~
appeal, if you will, to the dart side oflhepcndnality. ~
express motives that iDdividu.als mi&bt be ttluewtl IO
express themselves. So in that~ lhe MO\'iet providr
a vicarious satisfaction of taboO wishes or taboo motiws."
But Fairchild said t.hne also s:nilbt be a simPlcr
explanation fonheirappeal. "People are inll~ by the
heavy ad\'crtitement of these movies iDd the novdty
function." he satd.
Sance the oria,mal telecast of" Adam, .. durina wbach
the names and pictures of SS missinachildttn were shown,
14 of the children have been located. After a repeat
• showina April 30. in wtiich more faces were shown, at least fiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii eiaht more c~ildm. have been found, NBC slid.
This season has also brou&ht movies about drunken
drivers (CBS' "License to Kill"), problelns of Vietnam
veteriru (CBS' "Memorial Day''), unemployment (ABC's
"Heart of Steel"). the loss of a mother (CBS' ..,.wo Kinds
of Love .. ), police and media abuse (CBS' "The Lost Honor
of Kathryn Beck"), voyeurism (ABCs "Through Naked
Eyes") and the question of when seduction becomes rape (ABC's "When She Says No").
··A movie like •Adam' allows us to use the
D QI LATE NIOHT:.:.:...::WITH~:.:DA::.:.VID~_.,..FOfn-rest_. __
U11!!NIM e MOVE **'~ "OranQo" (1957) Jef1 CtlM-**~"The Forest Rlngln" (19'2' dllr.JoaMtDN
8 MOVE ~----r:~----Jml!~---=~;..._..=o::~;:_J.1!
Frtd~~.Suun~ ~~, ..... ,!W)Jofwl~ *'" "Mlglt Woman" (1944) E*Yn
Ank•S. l4il Coller.
-2:21-ROWAN & MARTWS lAllC*MN IOn, Jo9w\I ~ l n=r~~ ~=IOOTT ¢I MCME • * * . ._ ..... flulder•• ( 1913) Roy
~. M*°lm MJ::DcML "8HTTM:VMETY -••• "Liit Tanoo In Paris" (1973)
ClllTAMEM ._ -VUI
EOWWS llristai £WarOI ~ (dlillnll Y1110 Twin
S.-74" c;...,a 561-0865 mall
CGITAMEM •LAMMM eGMlllf
(Ownl °"""' C.. MIC faslllOn Soultt Cinedollle
97Ml41 •1.Ql.13 634-255.3
a TIRO LA~ ORMll EdWlnls SldlMldt SRO Glllway S Slalllum OnYt In se1.s111> sn.1e11 639-eno .. -----
WUIWIHI
P1C11c: 116.Wiy 311
an.in
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UAMal
83-0546
tD Priill
"THE SUMMER'S MOST ORIGINAL PICTURE.''
~ 11111
Gt EM LINS
A flMAlllUI Pl:Tlll
............... Ul(l.11\.t _ .. ...,.._
NOW PLAYING
SIX·TWOC CDICIU'f nm!I PRESENTAllON
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12 30. NO. 4 SO. 7.00. tlO. 1 l·lS * P.clflC DRIVE -IN THEATRES
I
l AGUNA BEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Wl STMINS THI
Grads from
L.B. High
~a.di H6Qh 8dlool tM4 eandldet .. 99' orecJuatation ...
lll'ldll Judith Albert, Oouglal
Mct<ecknle Allton, Mlehaal
Anc*aon, Wllllam Anc;terton IV, E~ll ._trtcieA,,..., T~
~Arndt. Th.,... JWMe a.a, lfmllny Ann aaley, Soon
Ettc 8111ey, Kelley C.lhaflne
Bektwln, SteYe Baldwln, 1'homM Ahofl9 a...n.... Ellen ~ ..,..
Mt. Metil John Bttnetl, KlmtlettY
AM Bbder, Oevld WMllam et.ck·
bum, (.....,.., Todd Blanton,
Mswlne eooen. Oevld L.ewnlnCe Bowman. feel Even 8fandt. M-
dree Lynn er-., Brenda Mane
Brlnderton, Ellz1beth Merion B<oc:ltrnen, Civl9tlan W. Brown.
Oevld John Brown II, Meri! Allell 8Nouer. Chrlllopher Oavld
BNce. Jeftereon p ~. OMtl
Butterwonri. Simon Beclc•tt Cantl!ly, JOfln Kevin Culbler,
Jeffrey Clark Ceverly, M•ry
Ka"*"'-Ct\annele, Edwwd B
ONtcnoce. Shina Rutfl Ohnet.
Scott P Clark, Shaylel'le Mwle
Cc*ho Ind Mich... Edwerd
Cohee Aleo Kathleen Conroy, Sunn
Allee C~hlon. Scott Louis Crum.
Anne Marte Cummlnos. G~ Todd Cl.lmmlngs, Krtslen Debbi
Derlene EileM Oehl, Kethy M1r1e
Davit, Peul Anthony Del Pizzo,
NIM Del Sesto. Chrtttlan Alfred OeVllO, Erik Pete< Olcf<ereon.
Scott MldlMI ~ieh. Nicole Erin Dlgglnt. Ml1 Meile OISlndro.
AllllOn Lynn 00111. LOf'l Lyno
Oumovlch. Chritl09fler Shawn
Eady, Br•ndon Bedlet Eley. Merk
Eth111 Ettlott, Chrt•topher William
Elton. Juliet Lynn Empflngham.
Krltten Anne Engstrom. Chriltlne
c Evaoaon. Louis A FellOU.
MerOlle ()ominiqUe fellou, Kerry
Ann Alerll'lo, Juon L..-ence
Ane, Mlctieel Ch.,let Flore, LOfl
Elizabeth Flynn, Mlchlel Patrle*
Rynn. ThomU Gery Flynn and
Kevtn Lorin Fo6ey
Aleo ~(lie Ming Fong, Oeboleh
Merle Ford. Scott Thomu For·
tune, Kryatl Ann Fr'-. Bem.,d
Oouglu Froet, Shelly Ann Ger·
m<>fi· Armen T. Gaac>&rlel'l. MlchMll
Gardner Gerboll, Enke Lynn
Gtiant. Erika Glntt>erg. John O.vld
Glenn. Ula A.nn Goberman.
Cerolyn 84'9 Godfl'ey, Kathryn
Marie Golden. Heather Edith
GOldtteln, Sharon Ann Gnttin.
Cristina Anne Hlll'l'lllton, Marie
EJiteb91h Hemmegren, Elitabeth Mehn«lh HammOurl, Chnttlne
Eliz.I.beth Heneltne, Jeffrey Allen
Henten. MettMw Bleir Hanson. Eric Petrick Hevereon. Jaaon Lee
Hewtcln1. Rochelll Suzanne H!QGt.
Kimberly Attlton Hiiiei. Andr-
Crelg Hobbs. Alcherd Bredtord Holden Lawrence Veughen
Hollend and Bernd Kurt
Hotz"-laer Alto Bretl Whftn.y House, &Ike
Lee Hou-. Ping Hu. SundM I
JIMnt, L.ee Bennett J8kot>e.
Laut• Jeremleh, Jennlf., Tracy
Jerome. Ct\flttopher Wlldrlck
Jonu, ~an H811 Jon., Th.CS·
dlut Wlndfllid Janee v. Krlttl Ann Jordan, Danlelle Eve Jotephton.
Gregory Stec>Mn l<alaltky, Lita
Merle Kllplhemmer Robbin Beth
~. Hl1IC')' Lou Kvwatt, Jtx· 01111 Ira Katl. Matthew Mem
Kee., 8ooll David Kelly, Jultln
Jecqu" K .. lelyn, Jent E.
Kt.lhauer. Kent Paul Kluetw,
Nancy Koen, Llaa Anna Kolberg.
Mtc:ftelte ~ Kttimet, (Vin'·
L'Hoor, Nonnan Wf11"'1 Lawton,
SMrlnon Diane L.....,.on, LI•
........ Ugtlln«, Oenlae Mery-Anne
Lltlolek. C1tnenne ~nl.,Qton
Lono. M.. LOC)el. Ctlri.tt.an
Campbell Mdln. Oatren Soon
Medrtgal, ~ MlhoMy.
Harwy R Marco. Ute SUI
MerQll, Anoucllkl Oa.~ ~. Seen er.ti Manin, Arny H .. lctay
Maxwell, Mery M MchdcMn,
Mlc:hella ~n McGowan. Mellnda Lee . ...... SNlwn Cherie
~lot\ael end L-.rw Anne MlkJoa
Aleo~ Miiier. Tlffence
M Mine., GeraldO ~.Joelle
Anne Morrow, Jon Eric Murphy. Sandi Lyn Murphy, Pet.,
ChrlttopMr -...urr1y, Michele
R«'4M Nelton. Daniel Boughey
Noterl. Ktmbetl)' ~ Norictl.
Casey John O'CallaQhan, John
Peul O'Conl10f. Scott Owen on.
dero, Charin Oonlld O'NMI. Dewn Sharl Ofr, Afan ONn Own-
lngt, Met1nes. L.ee PKk, Wifflam
Chat* Pedgham. Erk: MlctlMI
Pepe (Stout), CMSlopher RusseU
Paquallno, Keren Mtltlan PMrM.
JOfln a....nai Perella. Amy M. Perelll-Mlnettl, Robin Beth Perley.
John Dlvtd Pemlck, Wede ~
tlen Petry. Hellher PetltjMn, Anthony ,__ Pnilllp9, Richard
Oevereu• Phltllpa. Tet11•
Plal<OW9kl, Devon ~ Pldll.\P,
Laure Lynne Pitter. Semath• Ann
PO'#W"I, OOUglu Alan Prlce, U..
MICN!le Probet, Alberto Timothy
Rabeng. Peullnl l.. fWnlrm, Anje
Relc:tl, Annemwle fWoe'. Heidi Lynn Rlgot, Kelly Ann Ripley,
Jo1hu• -Strider Rltley, Eric
Bernerd Rorlpaugh, M11t hew
Keith Rota Ind Mlchelle Lltbelh
Roa
Alto Stephen Roc>er1 Roy (Hiett).
Kerl Allyn Sanctllt. Erle Mlchael VonGrub Schentz. L .. 11e Ann
Sctlillef. SIChl Schwenkopl, Amy
Beth Schwantteln. Jeffrey FOf·
~Scott, ~· JelnM Scott, &nan d1vld Skelton, Enk1
Margrett Smith. Shawne Lynn
St-ltt, Kan Nett SwlnlOn,
Gregor Chrlstlen Syt>en. Merilee
Ann Tapley, Eric W TenEyctl, Eliza
Tepper, Nlchola Tepper, Peter
Sheldon Thompton, Courtoey Lyn
Trevlt, Sheune Lynn Trectway.
Dominic X•vlor Trevino,
Merguerfl• Mary Trevino, Jill
Tnmble, Sere Vlctorl• Turner
Sean Stuert Upton. Heidi Sue
VenRall..i-Pete Simon Vetter.
Judah Nonnen V1nogrlld. Greta
Key Wegner. Deidre Dunton
Wallace, Eltubeth LOUIN Waller.
Shirtyn Kay Weenlg. Or-I. Wei(
and Christine T. Weldon.
Mergeret Churchill Well•.
ll'IOmas Robert Weith, Streptienie
Jane Andrei Wetty, TetTlt!Ce
RuSM1 Whatley. Amy G~
Whltegon. Ketnerln• Krlaten
Wiicoxen. Robin Loulte Yet•. Brigitte Kety Yen. t<aren Mwie
Z•. Phllf9 OOUglu Zehner Ind
TlmOthy Jeeon Ziegler
Winters burg
elass of-1984
Wlntersc>urg Htgh School 1984
gtlldu.Wta-U foffowr
Arnold Aculll. Andr-Anun·
clallon. N.aml Archunde. Ron
Bernee. Scott Bullen. t<eth'-1
Bectlr*t. Aaron Bennett. Jeff
Bett>owlf. Knalen Blacktlone,
Tom Btetle, Kelly Boughton
Jemee Brown. M.,lanne Ceman.
Mike Ceeatio. Dee Dee Cheva.
Kethy Coggins. Marie Cotner. Oen
Creney. Ray Cruz. JOM9h OeFellt·
ta. Sundey Oouglat, Eltzabetn
Ourend. Vlctorie Eutwood. Tine
EJger. T.,.,...,, Elliot, Joe Eiits
Brien Fltttlmmona, Stertlng Fogg,
Sera Gau, Or-Qeu, Linde
Gold, Annette Gomez. Jell
Go<umba. Luwen Griffin, OeslrM
Hadley Andr-Hall, Tim Hen·
derton. Robert Hiii nm Hot~
Mk:t\lel Hough. JQMPh H°'*lnt.
Seen Hudeon. John Johnson.
Krlaten Keifer-.
J.,,_ Krietemeyer. Scott Lam-
born, Cheri•• LeldelmelJer.
Chrt.tlne Lightner. Steve Loeoya.
Mark Ludwig, Stephen Lytlnger,
Troy Mecchi1, Aldl.,d Meadows.
Jeff Mey«. Shelly Ml»er. Prue
MoraMI Cynthie Nemeth, Nine
Never•. Jeanne Nyrop. Berber•
Pttter90fl. Kelly Pltcitelll, Usa
Quinn. Vernon Raggfn1, Mike Rob-
erson, Evelyn Santos, Laurie
Schilling. Brendon Shofletd.
SlevenSmlth M1keStettter.Joycie
Stohr. JOfln Svllloa. Mk:helle
Swallow, Suaan Szlvell, Kurt Tllro.
Oenn11 Thorpe , Kenneth
Towgood. Denlte Toyodl. Nlc:tl
Trujillo. Frenk Urao. Tim
Velenruela. Sendra V1<gu. Ro-
bert.• Voteodehl. Steven Waddell.
09nlel Wallis. Peter Werth. Kur1
Wllhll• . .i.nn1tw Wood. Shewn
Ztigmond
Roller coasters
a scream to her
ATLANTA (AP)
Betsy Abrams thinks roller
coasters area scream -but
instead of terrified. she's
t.antahzed.
On Tues.day. to celebrate
the tOOth birthday of the
rollicking nde tn Amenca.
she'll be laking her l,OOOth
tnp aboard the Mind
Bender at Six Flags Over
Georgia.
M s. Abrams. a 27-year-
old meteorologist. spends
four days a week at the
amusement park -she has
a season pass -and ndes
the Mind Bender a s man)'
as 22 times tn a visit.
Her passion for t~e
s tomac h -wrcnchers is
"somewhere in between an
o bsession and a hobb)."
she said.
''When the park closes
for the wtnter al the end of
November. I go into
coaster wtthdrawal." she
said. "I had a rough month
o f December las t year."
It's unlikely LaMarcus
A. Thompson env tStoned
su ch addictions when he
built the first comm ercial
coaster at C'onc) Island.
NY. in 1884 But it"s
almo!>l certatn that his rela·
tively tame. 6-mph
Sw1thbac k G ra vi t y
Pleasure Rarlwa) wouldn't
have satisfied M s Abrams'
era' mg for thnll~.
"M) goal 1s to nde 50
timei. in one day th1!i sum-
mer:· ~he uid.
-------------------
.
__ Mlie mna:
11A'f9111n °' Wt'TMDMWA&. . nmnoua ...... MOflCI IMVmNG ..,. • NOTICE or DEATH OP lc.tt17t llROll ,Mnml... ' , ~ tTATIMmfT HOTICI IS HlflUY OIVl.M ltlel • n 1.& P. llA ..--AND ~ C°'*1'Y ONMTINQ UNDH n,. ~,,.,..,.. .. dOliio :11M11G PfOOOMll lot Jwf'lllNnO .. -..-n in..-~ .IUIMCtAL DllTNCT
ncm110W ..,._., ~ ~.a ..,,, IMI•• ~·· ,,.,..,. OP' Pl!T1T10N 'IO ADMIN· ., .a.Ma .. ~..., 111
1 Th• 10110.,!Wo .,.,,°" "" tNTflllNATIONAl ttAN AM£F11o ~st!On 91'«1 ~ otti9 •ecamaa ISflUl EST TE NO. ........,._.,cA.-~....., ... ~'*"*"~ CAN TRAVIL ASSOC., 10213 u ~ be ~ fol REHO· AllHH PlahHIU: UMltEO QRACE Oie~~oC*•tlngundef lfle Ctreulo de JUMW P:ouriltlft Valley, VATIOH or Mf8A Vf"OI! PA~ To-""" In,.......__,,_, __ , CHUACH, I oorporaUon •n flctltlou1 -bu1lneH n1me ol CA t2TOI 1791 IAMA" OAIVf, C09T ~ au-'' ua1111 ICl&n 80MIT INC . I corporation s u A M A c 8 O O K • C1rrn•n a. Moreno, 10283 MEI.' CALIF~A. -411 be ,. credl&ol"I and contln&enl Def9ftdanl' OR O(N BROWN·
1(£ PIHGJ&fCAETARIAt HAVICE ClrCUIO de Juatu. F~llin Vdly. 09illeef by tMOtyol Cott• Meeeat credhor• of t.U .. lA P. ING. INOMDUALLYA"l<>OO 81-X. ll 2130 ClbOla Awn\.19. Cotta CA 92Tot the Offtcll ot Iha CttY c.tl, 71 ,.., n ... urn_, __ _. ho lndullve
....... CA t2t2e Ml .Je9ll etanti.y, 10213 CWOUIO Ortw. CoJ(a ~. c.llfomla. \Aftlll nn.IYI~ &nU p4!nOlll w c .. No 131'2
The 11c1111ou1 tx.•nett neme o. Julf-. r::ount9#\ Va!i.y, CA, the h(Mlf oC n.oo a.m . June tJ, may be othtttwt.. lntet9ted lu.IOHI
... 19'Nl't f(W Iha Plf1'*11hlp w.. 92701 '"'· It wtllCll llMI th*y will be ln the will And/or esta~: NOTICll Yeu .... beef\ .......
fli.d on s.ptambw 1. 1913 In the Trilt bWIM6I la conducted by: • °"'*' P'ib41ott and read ~ In A ti haa bee flltd TM ciouri INt diectda ..... ,..,
County ol Orange Fili NO Olf.*11 pet'tnenitllp ""' ~ Chembet't 8"*9 peU on n ==•~ ~ ~ rn•2•e ~ e. Moreno prQOCIMi9 ..,.. beer tne 1me or ttie by RAUL RAMIREZ ln the ti; ,.._... -_, ... ._
FUii N..-ne and Addteaa ot tn. TN• 111t~t.,.. 111ed .-th o. WOf'ft end ti. name of tne bid~ but Su~rlor C.oUrt ot Oran1 If ~~o ~th. ............... of Pet.on Wlthchwlng H .... w. Mac County Cler1I of 0r.,. c:;ounty on no ot'*' dla1~ Mattia. Any County ~untln1 th•t ,~ ... --·-
Lun, 2730 Clbole Aveinue. CO.ta May 30, 19.,. bid recelv.ct '"" the ICMduted RAUL !Z ··be •P· an auom.y In thlt Miner, VoU M .... CA. HIH na.e ctotlng ume •~ t1'e receipt ot blda tfloUld do to promptly to that your
llQllild: H.itte w MllC L.Mn P\lblllNO or.no-coeat Deity 1t1ao11 ba reNJMd to the~ un-pointed as ~raon•I rep· written raponae, it any, IMY be
Pul>tilMd erenge eo-1 Delly Pttot .iww 12. tt H, JVfY 3, 1M4 openeo It lhell " 1t1e • ,. reemtatJv• to tdmtnLSttr \he macs on time
Piiot May 22. 21. June 5. 12, 1914 T 46 ~y of the btdder to ... thlt ea tat e 0 f t; l Lt A p AmotUtted he ""° ~ 27~ ~ hit bid II rl!Oli\led In PtC>P* um.. d1cle El lrtbuma . ._.__..,OM-PllllC fl)TIC( -A Mt ot ptw, "*'11Cat!OM, end RA.MIRE"L (und« \ht ~-trw Ud. elft eudllncll •!MMe.,_
other contrlet documenta mey be ~nden\ Adm nisl.rat.ion of Ud. r • .,,,. dentl'O • ao cAea. Pdl.IC NOTICE 'tcmtOUe.,...n obt.ineottU.OtflceoftheDapart· E&ta~ Act). The petition t. LMtatn~.-...-.
f1CTITIOU9 9UIMU ..... ., .. ,......,. ,,,.,,, of l.AllalP ~. 77 Falf l for h aring ln Dept. No. 3 ",."""to ........... ., NA.tu ITAftMfNT The f~ peraone "*doing Ortw, Co111..._., c:airtoml&. upofl M ettCWMJ In tt.a. !NttW, reu
T f--....,, It doi"" bullnellat rtc1tl)f of e l'IOMlfundable fM of ll 700 Civic ~nter Dr., 8'**'do .. p.ompt1J .. et.1JOW bull'::..~""" penon ... AD\IANC.EO TEST avTeMS. S15,00. If blddefl ~ cManl end West, Santa Ana. CA 92701 Wfttteft ~. " a111. ,..., be
ORANGE COAST WINOOW 20c 8 ~!rUI~ c.ntet 0'1w, lrvlne. apeclflcltlonl be Malted. the ell~ on June 27. 1984 at 9:30 A.M. ftted., ~.!!..."'!-...... ___ _. ...... ~ .. .......... CLEANING SERVICE, 350 Eatt Or-A ,... 1" wlll be 118.00 per Ml. _..... h .,. --....,....,... ..... ... lflGllh0<peA~ Unll 2S, ~tie, 1nnova.uve c1rcu111, inc .• ~. &c:ti bid et1e11 be ll'l4lde on t1'e IF YOU OB.1""""'' to t e eeto de"" lillogMo.., .... aeun-
CA 92870 5101 Rlctllend Avienue, K.lnlMClty, Pr09QUI form and 1n the mannet grantlna o( th pcU"on. you to, ••8t•rle haHrl• In·
Nathlnlel o Allen. 5403 W•· Kansu 61 le>e prewlded In the contnict docu-should either appear al the med!MlfMftt•, •..ta ""'*'a. ....
ridge Roed. Aoehelm. CA 921<>7 Thlt l)Uajneae 18 c:onduCl.ed by • menta. end lhell be ICCOmpenied ~ta MCtfta. 8' "-r ... llMt
Thlt butlneu 11 conducted by an cotl>Of•11on bY •certified or cuhler'a cnac:ts. or • hearing f.nd st.ate you. objec· ~ .., ,...aatreda • tt.mpo.
lndlvldual Rldlerd K Tanone bid bOnd fOI' l'Ot .... thin 10% or lions or file written objec-1·TO Tt4t QVl.NDA.NT: A cMI
Nathaniel D Allen Thi• 1111ement was Iii.ct with tl'Mt the emou11t of the bid, fNICM PIY• lions with 'the! <'OW1. before complelnl hie been med bt the
Thlt statement wu tiled with the Covnty Clerk or Of•noe County on .tit. to lne City of Cott• M .... No the hearin". Your ap--ar· patntttf egelnet ,ou. "rou wlell to County Clerk or Orenge County on M1y 30. 1984 .... _7 Pt090UI lt1M be c:onMcWed Uf'6MI • ,..-dafend tMI leweutt, '°" 111..t, 1n•~ ,._,_ ~~ .... Mid\ ca.hler'I 8llCl" rT\aY in per90n Or by WfUltn '° dayt lf11r thlt IUmi'TIOM June 1· ...,.. ~-1 D"blllhed n...""""' coe.t t'\a llu -·--.,, I ~...... f .. wllh lhlt court .. _,_ .. ., ~-..... .,..., Clheok, ~.or bidder'• l>Ond. your attorney. • ---on y00, • "°'"' a Aaeoct••"· Inc. P1lol June 12, 19. 21. July 3. 1984 The Contrac1or ahall. In IM per. lF YOU ARE A CREDI-• written responte to the complaint
4570 cem:C::Dflve T·t& form.nee of the wotk and 1m9r~ TOR in ..__...1 Unless you do, your derault wlll be
C _,. ment.a. conform lo the LabOt Code or a cont gent "'n:u tor enter9d on eppllcatton of tM plaln-Newpon • A.__, llllt\T1C£ f th d-···-_. l .. h' Pubhlhed Orenge Cout Dllty PUBLIC nu of t~ State ot Callfomta Ind othlf o e ~~. you mus tin, end t .s ooun may enter •
Pilot June 12. 19. 26. July 3. 19&4 llWI of Iha St11• of c.alfomla ~ file your clalm with the judgemef' egainst you for the rltief T-28 FICTmOUS 9U ... ll C:.-tnemo, wtt.h the ~Ion I h demended In the oomplalnl. wtllcfl 1-----------NAM! ITATl....-r onty of~ vartetlOM .. may be court or present 1 '° t e pel'-could resul1 In garnlahment of '18.tc NOTICE The lolloW'lng per90n1 .,. doing rlq\llred undw the apec1e1 atatut• sonal representative ap-wages. t•klnQ of moMy or property 1-----------t>utlneu u : purauant to wntc.ri l)t"OCMdlf'IOI pointed by the cou.rl within 0< other re11er requeated In the oom-F~~:A =• ec::=.~112:~roH.,bor, :::::.,:: =:..,:: C f~urmonthsCrom\hedateof pi.J~~9d Fet>. 10~ 1eu.
The tollowmg perlOOS _,.doing F & M Genbey lnC .. 25221 Mam-Ph>ftlfoi• of the UbOr . fint issuance of -J PETERSON. Clenl
busin.s.. moth Cir . El Toro. CA 92830 Pr...-.nce lo lebOf ehftll be gtwn provided. Section 700 of By: LORI KNIGHT, Deputy
BE.ST BUSINESS PHONES. 2225 Thlt bUtlnesa Is conducted by: I only In the mtMW ptovtded by lew. the Probate Code of Call-aian" '· WHA.U.a"V
Sout Huron Ave , S1n1a An1, CA. corpotlllon Nobldlhaltbeconald«edun .... fornia. The time for filing !'!~acwc~~7 Cf, 92704 Frank G1rlbay, Pt"Mtdant It la mllde on a blaM fofl'/I fUmlaNd ---"--Kenneth Roy Sh•'*· 3213 IOlhO Thie stat.,,,.,t wu filed with the Dy the City of eo.t. Mete and 11 .lma will not expire prior (%13).,......
Piece, Cott• Mesa. CA 92828 County Clerk or Ofenge County on rneci. In llOOOl"denc;.e with th• to four months from the date P\iblfthed OrlflQI Coat Deity Pltot
Steven ~1 Sh1ttw. 32t3 ldlho Mey 21. 198-4 prcMalona of the propoui r•r• o f the hearing noticed above. Mey 29. June 5, 12. 19. 19&4
Pl-. Cott• M .... CA 92826 ~ manta. "OU .. ,. y EXAMCNE 2133-&oa This bu.tneu 11 conducted by. • Publlthed Orenge Cout Dally ~ t>4d<ler MUii be llc:ienled and I'. mn
general partnertnlp. Piiot June 5, 12, t9, 28. 1984 e1ao ~fled .. r.quncs by iew. the file kept by the cour\. 1f f't8.IC NOTICE
Steven N. Sh•'* T .e The City Counctl of Iha City °'o you are interested in the es-FICTmou• 8UllHEll
TNI statement wu filed with the .. -.11" llllt\TIC[ Cotta Maea ~ the rtcah• t tate, you may 1erve upon the N"'..-IT"'-..... NT County C.k ol Orenoe County on ... ~ nu reject llY'f "' .. bldt. n1s -.. • ~
M1y 31, '™ EILEEN P. PHINNEY executor or admi trator. or The lottowlng pertOn .. doing
na112 STATDllMT °' City C'9ttl of 1"41 City of Coat .. MeM upon the altorney for the ex-t>usmeu u :
Published Orange Coeat OWiy ,::=: :U"'Z.:a~~ Published oranve Coat Dally Piiot ecutor or administrator. and THE PET s To P . 2 a 7 5 2
Pilot June 12. 19, 28. JUI'; 3, 19t~.. The lolloWlng peraone heVe ~ June 6. 12. t9M wr-12 file with the court with ~:rr~~~ Pkwy.. M11$1on VlelO.
-----------donedtnevteofU.RcOOouaBull-P\ll.IC NOTIC(. proof of serv\(;'e, a written Sharon Lucu O.Bufgh, 948 S
111m1 'C fl)TIC[ naea Na!M' THE LITTLE GAZEBO. ,_,uest staling that you de-Peregrine Plac.. Anehelm, CA n111u 1733 w .. tclltt ~Ive. Newpot1 p DEATH OF · -., 92806
P:ICTmOOI 9UIM:ll Beech, CA 92663 NOTICE 0 sire special notice of the fil-This t>u1lne1s It condUCt.CS by: an
NAME ITATE:lmfT trie Flctltloul Bualneaa Neme ,.. E U G E NI A J EA N NE ing of an inventory and aJ>-individual
The follOwlng '*'°" It doing terred to •bo119 wu med In Orange JUEL Y AKA E. JEANNE praiaement of estate assets or Shalon Lucu O.Burgh
bullneat u: JOHN HARBOLD. AS. ~J ~ 5f~~55 KIELY, AKA JEANNE of the petitions or accounts Thi• tl•temanl wu filed with the
SOCIA TES. s.tMS to.PO. Bo• 743· Petrlda Unnae Gllmor9. 3317 JUEL Y, AKA JEAN KIELY menuoned in Section 1200 ~yn~.<;f~ o1 Orange Covnty on
s Jc:'~:!8~~. 29231 SummarMt Circle. Coat• Mete. CA. AND OF PETITION TO A.D-and 1200.5 of the Califorrua F~
vie Sen Sebutlen, Legun• Niguel. 92.~: ~ Florio, 3377 Sum-MINISTER ESTATE NO Probate Code. Publtthed Orenge COIS1 Dally
CA. 92677 mertet Circle. eo.11 ....... CA. A·lt3518 Wells & Barber Piiot M•y 22. 29. June 5, 1~7~~
1nJ1:S!:s1neu 11 conducted by an 92828 To all heirs, beneficiaries. 1540 WU11llre Blvd.
Jotin E HarbOld lh11but4nesawucondueted bya creditors and contingent Lot Anlelet, CA. 90017
Tn111tetement was tiled with me general partnership creditors of EUGENIA (%13) ~ 3-7491 "-· Patricia Lltlnae Gilmore .. County Clerk 01 Orange ..,.,.,nly on Thlt a111emen1 wu flied with the JEANNE KIELY a nd per Published Orange Coast
Ml.IC NOTICE
FICT"10UI 9UllN£89
NAME ITAT&MENT
May 31 · 1984 FWt• ~ty Cllrtc of or.,. County on sans who may be otherwise Daily Pilo t June~. 6, 12. 1984
Published Or"anve eo.t Delly 17, 1984 interested In the will and/or TW-14
P1tot June 12, 19, 28, July 3, t984 bllshed Ofange Comt Deily estate:
The rottowtng peraona ere doing
buSlnMI at
BARRO'S PIZZA, 7Sa8 Edinger.
__________ T_·22_ PllOt June 5, 12, 19, 28, 1914 T ~ A petition has been filed
P\RIC ljOTt• b y W A L T E R A PUeUe NOnce
Pl8lJC NOTICE Hunllngton Beech. CA 9264 7
F & M Garibay Inc .. 25221 Mam-
moth Clr. El T0<0. CA 92830
FICTITIOUI .Us.NEii PlB.IC NOTIC£ STRINGFELLOW in the crTY Of' ,OUNTA*
NAME ITAT£MENT flCTmOU8 IM.I..... 'Superior Court of Orange VALUY THME YEAll
Thl9 buslMSS 11 conducted by. •
COf pot lllOf'I
The tollowlng persons ere OOlng NAME ITAn.N'T County requesting that c~
business as Iha ~ ~ la.-4CMnf W ·A L T E R • A In oon"•ncuon with Housl'l and
Fr-Gertbay, Pretldel'll
Tn11 s111ement was tlled with 1he
County Clefk of Orenge County on
Mey 21, 1984 f'AMtl v TREE aff~APRlSES. butinea as. STRINGFELLOW be ·-291 t Croddy Wty, Sent• Ana. CA .. TIEN·THINH TAllORINQ & FAB· ap-Community Development lock ,...,.
9270'4 RICS. 9727'Bol .. Av. W•tmlnat•. pointed as personal rep-Gr1nt fund• from the federal gov-
2.... admini.s h .,nment. the lollowtno ls-the City ot Publlsned OranQa Coast Dalty PllOt June 5. 12. 19. 28. 1984 Fidel Guz.men. 20701 Aquatic CA 9 ...._, reRntaUve to ter t e Fountain vesiey·a thr ... yeet eom-
Ll'l. Huntington BNch. CA 92846 Hoeng Hw Vu, 8131 Cheprnen aiate of EUGENIA JEAN. mun1tw Dewl-----1 Pf~em for T-5
Wtltlam S Mc:C~ 14652 0¥11 Av .. Glrdian G~ CA 9*1 • .......... ~.
Road. lrvtna, CA 92714 Thlt bualnell I• conducted by: an NE KIELY (under the lnde-1h1 period from July • 19M, PlllUC NOTICE ..... d t Ad ·-•-t U .-f throughJune30, 1987,endthellnll This bullMU Is conduct.CS -1• • lndlvldu•I pen en nu .... ra on ° ataterMnt ol Community Develop-NOTICI! Of' TRUITEl'I IALE
generel pertnerahlp. Hoeng Huu Vu Estates Act). The petition is ment ot>'-'I~ LOM No. '"~" Bill McClure This 1111ement wu flied with the f h · De N 3 ,........ ThlS •••temef'lt WU hied with the County Cieri! ot Orange County on set or eanng an pl. o. ~ YEAR COMMUNITY DI!-T.a. No., . .,..
County Clerk of Ofange Covnty on Mey 2~. t984 at 700 Civic Center Dr .• V!LC>nlPIT Pft009'Afll UNIT COOi f
Mey 25, 1984 'MM1' West.. Santa Ana, CA 92701 Hontng "9Mt!llltatton T .0. SOVICI COMPANY f:Ma21 Published Ofange Coast Detty The City wlH continue to offer tow· II duly appointed lruat .. under tne
Pubfisnecl Or1nge Cout Dally Piiot June 5. t2, 19, 26 19M on July 6, 1984 9:30 A .M . Inter"' loen1 •nd p811lll ret>etea foflowlng deecr1bed deed of truet
Pltot June 5, 12. 19. 26. t984 T·10 lF YOU OBJECT to the 10< llngle-fltl\lly retlabltlletton. In WILL SELL Al PUBLIC AUCTION
T .3 granting of the petition., you llddltlon. the PtoOf"lm hU been.,.. TO THE HIGHEST 8100£R FOR
-----------..-... pandad.ao..lbalt•akwua.lo MCl'I of CASH AH~ THECASHIERS-OR Pt&JC NOTICE Pdl.IC NOTICt should either appear at ui.~ the C1ty'1 mob1te hOfne pat'kt mey CERTIFIED CHECKS SPECWIEO IN
hearing and state you objec· pertlclpete CIVIL CODE SECTION 2924'1 <PeY·
lions or file written objec-The nre prevention progrem. able at Iha time of tele In lft<\,I
lions with the coW1. before which 11 1dmlnl1tred under th41 cat-money of the United Stal•) 111
FICTITIOUI •USMEll FICTITtoUI 9USINEU
NAMe ITAT£MENT NAME ITAftMmfr
The toltowlng per-ton Is doing The following per90nl .,. doing
t>ullness as butlneu 11:
ULTIMATE GRAFIX. 1280 SE. PALM DE'SERT PROPERTIES,
Walnut, •38, Tustin, CA. 92680 18552 MICArthur Blvd. Suite 440,
Gebrlet Begin, 1280 S.E. Walnut, Irvine, CA 92715
oo38. Tustin, CA. 92680 David K Lamb, 18562 MICMhUf
Thlt bu91neu It conducted by. 1n Blvd. Suit.I 440, lrvtne, CA 92715
lndlvlduel ' John Miner. 18552 MacArthU< Get>rlel Begin Blvd. Suite 440. lrvtne, CA 92715
Thlt ttetement was flied wtlh the Mehrdad R1111kh, 18652
County C1ertc ot Orange County on MICArthUr Btvd. Suite 440. lfvtne. CA 92716
'21t70l3• All Ruzl, 18652 MacArthur Blvd,
Publlthed Orenge Cout Dally Suitt 4•0, Irvine, CA 92715
P1101 June 12. t9. 26. Juty 3. t984 Th11 buslrleaa la conduct.ed by· a
May 30. 1984
T· t9 limited pertnership Jottn Minar Thlt llllemel'lt WU flied with the
County Cieri! or Or1nge Covnty on
May 22, 1984
'18.JC NOTICE
the h .. .,,.-1..... Your appear-egory of Houtlng Rehebllttatlon; la right, lltle end lnt•aat ~ to
..... ""& eleo being expand«S. Automatic and now held by It under Aki Deed
ance may~ in penon or by dt11ert wnl be pr~ tor ..-Mor' °' Trvtt 1n the prQP41'\Y lwelnatler
your at'°rney. dtlz.en• and .l\andtceoped pet90M cseecrlbed: IF YOU ARE A CREDI-In llddltlon to emoke ~~C>r9. TRUSTOR. JOHN R SNYDER, f1ulty wire detectors, Ind fire 1xlt JUNE SNYDER TOR or a contingent creditor doort Whlcll we currently oflered BENEFICIARY· DERALD QUINCE
of the deceased. you must ltoJI' .... QIN' Ctub ,_... WIMMER. MOSES GONZALES
file your claim with the Facllltlel we lo be provided lo RECORDED April 4, 1980 • lnatr Fountain Valley youth in~ No 8ttllnBooll t3563paige818of court or pre9ent it to the per· tlon with the Huntington VIiie)' Offlcltl Rec:Ofdt 1n the offtoe of the
sonal representative ap-Boyt' end G.1111' Club. A high P«· Recorder of Ofenge County;
pointed by the court within oenlege of theM youth 1111 from aald deed of truat deterlbes the
f .... _ f he da f low·lnc:ome flmitlee lonowtng· our monu .. rom t te 0 Orllftl9 Cowtty Felir HoueMe Loi 5 of TrlCt No. 435'4. 11 I*
first issuance .of letters u COUftCI map recorded 1n Booll 204. Pao-
provided ln Section 700 of The City will continue to contrect 32 and 33 °' M**llMOUI Mapa. In
the Probate Code of Cali-with thl• 0<genlut1on In order 10 tne Offloe of the Covnty Recorder °' proviOe felr houtlng ~ to laid County.
FICTITIOUI 9UllNHI
NAME ITAT£11ENT
fornia. The time for filing Fountain V•lley resident• YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNDER A
'241110 claims will not expire prior How"'8 eo. .. "-ductlon DEED Of TRUST DATED Merc:h 21.
Publlthed Oranve Coast Ollly to four months from the date The City II wcnlng with ~ 1980 UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION
, DE ATH Nor 1cls
--=--~ -
KRUMWIEDE
ERALU ftAY
KRUMWIEDE puled away
Jul'\• 10, U)84 U\ Newport
&:ach. and w• • 1ona time
Costa M.~u retlden t .
a.loved husband of He.aen
K.nunwled of COl1a Me11;
fath r of Dav d Krumwfedl
of Stockton, C.Utornla and
Da.rttl Abts of CoiJta Mesa:
aon-ln·l•w of Winifred
Wilden of Rk'4MUe, Iowa;
brother of Ken Krumwiede
of Davenport, lOW*. Waltu
Krumwled of Truman.
Minnesota , L.eland
Krumwiede of Hibbing,
Minnesota, Gaylene 0 ... 1> ma r of Santa ~ Ht'ta)\tl
and Shirley Hovick of
Armstrong. Iowa. alao
sWVlved by two grand·
children. Services will bo
held Wednetd.ay. June 15,
1984 at 1 PM at Christ
Lutheran Church in c.o.ta
Mesa. Pu tor Lothar V.
Tornow officiating. Inter-
~nt Pacific View M«rm-
orlaJ Park The family re·
quests memorial contrlbu·
tions be made to Chr1a1
Lutheran Church, Good
Shepherd Lutheran Home
or the American Cancer So-
ciety. Pierce Brothers Be.U
Broadway Mortuary. Dlr«-
tors. 642-9150
WARD
DOUGLAS R. WARD, 77
years old, born in Indian
Temtory of Oklahoma June
JS, 1906. was married to
Ethel Brown November 24.
1927 in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma. 'ntey moved '°
Costa Mesa, California
August 1928 and have re-
sided there aince. He pueed
away June 2, 1984 at Haq
Hospital. leaving wife Ethel
Ward. lWO sons. Roy and
Don Ward, both of Newport
Beach; six grandchildren,
Cathy Van Vecbtln of
Carlsbad. Cahfomia; Corrie
Viera of Costa Mesa, Dee
Ward of Calta Mesa. Mollie,
Merrie and Gilbert Ward of
C.OSta Mesa; two great avand
daughters, Erin V•n
Vechtin of Carlsbad, Cali-
fornia and Jacqueline Viera
of Costa Mesa .. He wu put
president and a member of
Costa Meaa Newport
Harbor Lions Club for 38
years, a member of Elka
Club of Newport Harbor
and the Santa Ana Golf and
Country Club. Services by
the Neptune Society. Satur·
day. June 9, 1984, ashes over
sea. Memorial services will
be held June 24, 1984 at 10
AM at the Neighborhood
CommuNl-y-Center-. Qty of-
Costa Mesa. 1845 Park Av·
enue, C.O.ta Mesa. In lleu of
Oowen. donationa may be
made to Orange County Eye
Bank, 1001 N. Tustin Av·
enue. Santa Ana, CA 92705
MILLARD
The foilowfng person t. doing
~ ..
'MfSHER' SYSTEMS, 433
Dahll1. Corona del Mer. CA. 92826
Brem Skean. 433 Dehll1, Coron•
de! Mer, CA 92825
P"ol June S, 12, 19. 26 1984 _ _. bo velopera wt1o are lnteraated In con-TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT
T-11 of the hearing nou~. ~e. llructlng rentlf Off()(· .... houllng MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE.
-----------· YOU MAY EXAMINE unit• tor low-Income femlllea incl IF YOU NEED AN EXPL.ANATION
MARY GLADYS MILL-
ARD, age 79, paaed away
Monday, June 4, 1984, born
in New York . She was a 35
year reeide1)t of Newport
Beach and Huntin1ton
Beach. She is IW'Ytwd by
her daughten Shirley Anne
Maxwell of Norwalk and
Yvonne Arlene Callaway of
Costa Mesa; • 1later,
Dotothy Ormsby of New
Jersey; grandson.a, Pace
Eugene Pringle of Long
Beach and Phillip Arthur
Pringle ot Sacramento. Dion
Timothy Maxwell of Nor-
walk and Devin Annand
Maxwell of Virifnia, Peter
Charles Callaway of Costa
Mesa and William Charles
Callaway n of Redondo
Be.ach; three grea\ annd·
children , Jason Michael
Pringle and Sabrina Marie
Pringle of Long Beach and
Melissa.Renee Pringle of
Sacramento. Burial ii at sea.
lhll busll\8U Is conducted by an
•nd1vlduaf. Brent Skean
Thll alelement WU flled with the
Covnty Clerk of Onange Covnty on
P\ll.JC NOTICE the file kept by the rou.rt. If eldefly pereont In 0<der to euppi.. OF THE NATURE OF THE
You are interested In the es-ment thllr lffortl. the City wilt .... PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU
rlCTrT'IOUS eu..... IQcal• thaee ecqultltlon fund• to SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER NAMI! STATDIEWT late. you may serve upon the wrttedown thecoet Of land of I pro-31IO Chemlll De Fer. Cotll
The loltowlng penon ls dOlng executor or administrator, or jact. llMM, CA. 92828
busl,.,... 11· upon the at'°mey for the ex-"*lie a.me. "(II• ttrMt •ddreu °'common THE JOURNEY COMPANY, 4201 ecutor or admirustrator, and Fund1 will be uled -to provtde I dastgnillon of property It tnown
Hllerll W1y. Newport 8Nctt, CA file wt th t'-e ....... ·-wi· .... verlety of wvlca for low end mo6-•bove. no warrenty la g1wn u to 111 '2410IS 92&e3 n """"" • "'' er1111ncome d tl%ena. completeneu or corractneae)." The
Published Orenge Cout Deity TtM>mu E. PllurN. 4201 HMetla proof of aervice. a written FlNAL ITATDMINT °' COM-baneflclary under """ Deed of
Mey 30. 1984
P1to1 June t2. t9. 28. July 3, 1964 Wey, Newport Beactl. CA. 92813 ,_.,uest statino that you de-MUNITY DFIEL.OP....-T aa.c. TrUlt, by r.uon of a brwtl or~
T · 17 Thi• bustnett It conducted by· en · -., -"O t TIVll fault 1n 1ne obllgatlona MCUl'ed -----------1 Individual. sire special notice ot the il-c11egory 1 Houatng Conwv1-thereby, heratofor• ••acutect and MLIC NOTICE Thomu E. Plluras ing of an Inventory and &J>" lion del!Vered to the undefliOMd 1 wtlt·
Tt111 1111ement wu flied with the praisernent of estate u.eta or Goel; To eneble F~taln V1lley tan Oeclartllon °' Default enct o.-
FICTITIOUI IUSMll County Clefk ol Orenge County on of ..the petitions or accounts realdenlt 10 llYI In a deeenl. ..... mend for Sale. encs Wfltten ~of N.AMK ITATUIENT Mey 31, 1984 and unnery enwonmen1 brJllcll and of electlon lo ceute1he
The following perwn 11 doing '2411M mentioned in Section 1200 Ob)ectlYI: Continue lmpletMnla-undertlgned 1o Mil utd prot>«\Y 10
bu11nea u Publlthed Ortinge Coul o.lly and 1200.5 of the California lion of• Home Aehebllltlllon Pr~ utlsty Hid obtlgtllone. and tt••
B T E SANDWICH DELI. 2300 Piiot Ju,,. 12.. 19. 26. Juty 3. tta.4 Probate Code. grim IOf tlng .... famlly r~.. 1tler the undefaigned C9Uled aalCI
Harbor •30. Cost• Mn•, CA T ·23 TB EL Ra I wait .. mobile"°"* notQ of breed! end of IMctlon lo 92826 IN, MA N. category 2'. Houttng Proctuctlon be recorded F9bNa1y 11, 1934 ..
HA .. aORLAwa.MT.OUVW
Mortuery • CetMt..-y
Crematory
1625 G1s1er Ave.
Costa Me.sa
SA0-5554
PIERCE aROTHIRI
HLl 8AOADWAY
MOR1'UARY
110 Broad•ay
Costa Mesa
6"42·9t50
Ke Xuan Nguyen. 1 t4a1 Cof. P\BJC NOTICE JOHNSON 6 BUDGES Goal To Improve houllng 09-tnttr No 84-470302 of Offida1 ~ DlllD•te W\TIC[ ienoer Fount.in Valley. CA 9270I FICTmOUl llUltN!ll 33S S. Grud Ave. Ste. UH unit ... for IOw Ind moclerete cord• In the~ of th41 Aec:ol'det
rUUl. nu Thit bu1ineM 1t conducted t>y· an ___..... Lo •· I CA H07l realdlntt. of Or•"""" Covntv:. -----------1ndlvldual NAMI ITA,......,, I ""'ft ti, · Objeetllle. To 111111 In Iha to.-SaldMi. wlil be mllde, bUt Pla.IC NOTICE
IAl rt 8EHGt:ttO"
'MITH I TUTHILL
WUtCllff CHA'EL
•'17 E 17th St
Cost• Mesa FICTlTIOUI 9U81Nlll FICTmoul 9UlfNHI Ke Xuan HOu~ The followlng P«'90n Is doing ( U 3) • l ·HH qutlillon of land fOf the conatrucillon wlthOUt covenant "' -renty, ••·
The r:::,,:T~~ doing The t:t::.,r~~": doing c!~~y'~'~an:~r...'!: bu=O~RtX MARINE. 141 8eal Published 0rangt ~ Of IOW and MOdarate Income riou. P'9at or lmpled, rtQWdlng tttle .... _...___as. 1>u11neas •• ... _ 1 , ... ~ s1Th0ft\Uco.11 Mita. CA. t2827 Daily Pllot JW'M! 12. 13, 19, 1ng unit• 3 .._. G ...... -..b po•n!lon, or ~tlfeno.. to ..,.,..._ ICE •~" ...,, .... .,... ..... .,....., 1n~u TW a. C.tegoty VV7• MCI ... ....., pey the~ prtnclplt tum of LEATHER DUCKS INK. 847 BILLIE JO'S OMV SERV . -· FMnt1 Jolln Chantler, --IPo<9 • l.i ,IClllU.. the note(t) MCUfad by llld cleecS of
Plum« St. Cotti M .... CA 92827 GU~ Or . Anllhelm, CA t 2I02 Publtlhed Orwnge Colt! Oally St . CO.ta Mela, CA 92'27 ·-1e llftTIM' Goll: lo eMenca oCIPOf1Unl11• Tru1t. with lntw•t .. In l8ld note Mldlel Roneld BMW. 847 Plum« BUiie Jo Smith, 849 Gllbuc* Of .. Piiot Junes 12 19 28. 1914 Tl\lt bUtlMla lecondUCtecl by. an ..._ ""'""' f()( '°'*and modetat• lnc:ome youtll If ,,.,,._
St , CO.II M8M, CA 92627 An1helm. CA 92802 ' ' ' M lndlvtdUN iiOfiCI iMriN6 Mi In the .,.. • r:= :'~Of~~-
Thit ~ II conducted by ll'l Thia butlnetS Is OOl'lductecl by. In ThOmU John Chantler NOta .. ~ .,.., that IN Object~ To PtcMde. faclfl1y '°' ~ and ~... of the ll'ldMdull lndlvldull This at1tement WM flied With the Boerd Of T,,,._ of lM ""'1t!nQ'on ~In !tie.,.. TN9t!M end of U. tNltl ctMted ~
Mike R Bat!• 8lllle Jo Smtih .,._,,. Mnnl't County o..11 of Of11'"199 County on 9eedl Union Hlgtl 8clhool OlaWtct C.legoty •· ,el< Houalnt k · Mid Deed Of Truat.
fhla 1t.i.,,.,,I ..., riled with the Thlt 11e1emen1 wu Iii.ct wfth Che ~ ""nw. M1y 30. ttM wlll r~ ...-S bide tor ~ vtoea SlllCI .... will be llald on· Wednta-
County CWk of Ofange County on Covnty Clerk Of Orange County on ltATl-..T Of Publllhed Orange co.a~ In~ SCllNCI CLA88A00M Qoet: To lnlureequelfl<MlnQ. dey, June 20, tM-4, at UO p.m. at
May 31, 1984 -·-May 21, 1"4 P"Mn1 ~~~~ .. U'! .. ~ Pllot.luM 12•11, f&.. JuJwJ, ttM. F MITUAlmeetlnQor ... toU. pot'tunltlee for II! ~11of1hl Iha~ Avettue entr.,_ 10 ,._. ..... .. ...... ,_ • ...._ _ -, tpedftcatton9 on Na In tne omoe ot communtty ,,,. CMc canw lk.tldlnO.. 300 r..
Pubtllhed Of~ CoMt OWiy P\i~ Orenge eo.t Delly The folQWlll'lg penont 11r4..,.,,.. T ·20 l#d !Mtl'IOI Publtahed Or9n91 eo.t Dall)' Piiot C1'apmen Av.. 0r-. CA.
PllotJune 12, 19 2iJ Juty3. 1914 PliotJuneS, 12. t9.2t 1814 T-8 donedthlu.of1"9~8utl-IPda~';,:JmatUc!8Ct-June 12, 1M4 Al lhl ttme'ot IM Wu.I~
T-2 t 1 Neme· LOW( H!NOV .,._.,. llllt\ftH' E.NCE AJRNITUAE T-27 CdOtl of ltlla ftOtlOI the ...... ------------1------------1~~0EZ.3soOOW..tCo.tHlgho ~ nv•NL 8ld un edOr'IUld to:~ L ~tortnevnpaldb .. MCUf ..
"8JC fl>TICE rtaJC ll>TICE wty, .._pon 9Mcfl CA 92MO ~nnou• 1U 111 ... Aowtey. ""'~~:Mum>-oblfOellon aecvred by tht abcwa •
The FkJtltioua ...,,_.Name,.. ...-8TAT'llml1' ~!:. ~1 Ycntown Alt:ilooAQ ll'WCTniOUI ..,..... ecr!Oed deed°' vuar anct ..... n11111 PlCT"10U9 IU ... U K·U.. *red to 1b0ve wae tied In Ofenge The fo!!9wt!11_ psaona .. ~ • ...__...... ,.,.. ... ,........ .. • .--·T-T Q)eta. ~ Mtd ad1 • -'9 MAm•TAnmMT ncnnoualU ... 11 eountyonJ~ t1,1MO • l:>Utlnell• _.., ....... ---·· .. ~ s22120n
The follOWtnG penont ere doif1Q NAMI ITAft.....-T "L.! NO F130e02 Wl()(EA AAnAH OtaCOUMT, r~ el or bafcwe 2'00 It m., The ~ J*IOt' la dOinO The total lndebtedneal....,,. an
mllMN u The to!loWlng penon la dolftO Toni C. ~. 30\1 Cfoycten t170$ dingllf. P:ountaln v...,, CA W!DHEIOAY. JVNI 27· ttM, tt l>ulff'laM 11 ea11meteonwtllcllttl4l°"'*'81iitla
IARRO'S PIZZA. 17048 s bullMN .. a.y. CO.ta MMe. CA 92eff 92109 Wll4ctl tltM and place bide will be A & a COHSTAUCTION, 4•21 ~may be ObteiMd "--
Megnolfa. Founlaln V•Jl•y. CA 0 c COMPOSITION, 106[ 11th Heidi Hendy, 324 Cetlllln• N.-. Vincent G. Peterton. 2es1e ~~oc>eNdendt'MOln91dg.C, =rcs&>rM.CoroNdillllMet.CA. lnQ (714) Uf·OHI Of C11J)
11210t Sl,..C. Coell Mella. CA 92821 POf1 a.et!, CA t2MO Mon .... MttlllOfl \lletO. CA ... , e--. 1 ...... ahell '*'*" . .-.. ._ e w--.._...._. ~"-,....,., ... _,. ~ 127·41110. CS.,..._ H .-; p: a M G*1beY Inc:, 25221 Mini• Oototft1 M Oerk tl02 i....-te l<aMltth P Lowe, ~102 Blf"c:fl. l!.unic. M. Pelerton. H&11 ..,_,,,;;;'to cSeyt -.fte;u: ;.._ _,, ,_ • ..,, '"''"' ......,,_.., -.. O.tecl M.-, 11, 11M
moth Clrcit. El f«o. CA '2830 l.J\., Hun11ngton Beacri. CA. t2Mt Santa AN.CA Mont , M~ Veeto. CA 11t11 ..,.___._otblOI ec.~ ... ~·.?~-T..D.KftVJCf.C~NIJ..---..1 ma tMlnaet 11 ~Dy.• ThftbuJIMNlaoonduetedby.an ThtbullnMIWUGOOduCUdllya .,,,., bU.,_ 11 ~ed '1 The eo.'11 of ·r;;r ... lhell oe tnd~~7-.. -.,,.,. ••laid T~ . ~l~b-. Pr_..,t I~~~~ M Cltt1t "er::' .r="'lp Vinoenf ~~.,P9t.-.onl .... ._... wtth Iha the _toeil . (ludOt , o4 the qwtllty of W. AofM ~~I J tN,~ ••-IM•lel"' ..
-, ..._... ..... 1\ 11\a t fled Wlt1'1 U'9 l'ltl .. a ~ w ,...., ~ ofterlld end~ t1'e Thll atetelMnt .... flied wlttl lfte -' ............. -CA Thia.._._,.,,, wM ,,_, ..., TM ttal~ W9I Tmt tt•ttmenl wu Mad ~th Ille County a.tl M Orange ~y on ....,.. to..---0t .. b'Oa end'° "--~ ..-.... of Of-Coun"' -Ont City llvd -__ ,.... Ccllunty oettt of Of.,.~ on CMty ~ OI Ofange CountY on County Cllf1t ot or.,.. Couftry on M n ,,.... ...... ...,.... -·~ .,_,,., ........ -..... ,, .... tHM
May tt, t~ ,....., M11 11. 1"4 May 19, 1N4 ey ' ,...ti WIMI Mr~ Mat • 1* (7"1 U ..... ~ P1o1bfl1Md Otano-eo.i OeltJ P\lblllhed or.,.. c... OeltV =" ~ IJ\lblithed ow"1il'I eoe:-= ~ °'.,. c-.. l>.ellJ "'-~ <>r.noe Co..e Oeify, P\I~ OrlnQ_e Coul Deify Piiot M-... 22. 29, June !I 12, 1tM Pil04 J1.1"9 I. t2, tf, 2t 1M4 Putll!ehld °'*'""eo.. Oelr ""°' Piiot .J\nt 12 tt, tt: .My11,,,.. P\lnt M.Vft JIN.11 11 ~
f'MOt June I, 12. 18, H , 19'M T 1 Pllc» Mey 29. J\11119 5 12, '~1:-'M tM'3-l4 T .. June t2, ti. tU. T•ll l •11
I
/. I I
646 937'
PACl"C VlfW
MIMORfAl PARK
C~tery • Me>ttuary
Cf'\ltt)tf • Cr•malory
3SOO Ptc1flc View Ot1ff!
N wporr Beach
6•• 2700
MCCO~MICK "9~TUARY
t79S ltgune Can~ Rd
L•guna Bueti. Ca t:l'IS t
~-.=;=>·•.,,.9.~~·941.S.~·~--
c
In.
..
'
T•rlutnlen'a ...,.,.., ..
NCA.Awmted
coech out. C2.
outh fig_u~~s to have its hands full
. . "' . .
t can they survive North's intensity?
OllJNet ....
uth Coach Mark Thornton isn't
who is favored in Saturday
t's Orange County All-Star
ketball game, but he hopes it•s not
Rebels.
I don't lcnow who decides that
d of thing, but you can bet they
North) will come out that much
nger i( the)" re the underiiOIS, ..
s the Capistrano Valley High
ch.
Actually, the North, which is being
bed by Tom Gregory of Savanna
is ·title
inally
ealized
einholtz, Titans
ack from Omaha
· Ith college crown
y CURT SEEDEN .. .,..,,... ....
It started when he was playtng
onnie Mack baseball.
Jack Reinholtz found himself
itching for the clear cut favorite to
capture the Connie Mack World
ries. His team blitzed every oppo-
ent until the finals when an un-
heralded underdog sent them back to
Huntington Beach a game shy of their
goal.
Then there was Orange Coast
College. Reinholtz went I 5-4 over a
two-year span, helping the Pirates
advance to the state tournament. And
·each time, the Ocean 'View High
graduate came home empty-handed.
But on Sunday.,,Reinboltz returned
to Orange-Count,... champion.
"All these years I've been to these
thin45 but never won one," Reinholtz
admitted after rctumina with hi.l.Cal
State Fullerton teammates who cap-
turec:t the ColJeae World Series with a
3-1 victory over Texas in Sunday's
championship_pme. ·
Reinholtz didDTt pitcli in the cnamr·
p1onship game, but he certainly bad a
(Pleue Me TITA1'8/C2)
Hi~ this season, has won the last two
All.Star con tests and wi II be after No.
3 beginning at 8 at Orange Coast
College.
Thornton speculates the South
may have the cdae because of its size,
but he also points out that his star
center, Jeff Arnold of El Toro, is
suffering from both pink eye and a
bad ankle.
.. IfJeff can't make it, I would have
to go with (San aemente's) Dean
GarTCtt or (fountain VaUey's) Rolf
Jacobs," Thornton says. ··Rolf would
have to go in and pl~y more of 1he
months I-ater: It's
ow.n to one g~me
Hey: We're going
o win t h is one
or Red Auerbach
BOSTON (AP) -The Bosto_n
ltjcs have played 104 games this
n. The Los Angeles Lakcn have
layed 102. None of that counts
,ymorc.
The National Basketball Associa-
. on season that began more than
ven months aao in mid-fall ends
oniJht (Channel 2 at 6) in a latc-
ring heat wave with the only game
at matters.
.. One game. We play aU "/ear to get
here." says Los Angeles Michael
Cooper ... So throw the ball up and
let's go for it. ..
Boston, which never bas lost a
seventh pme of a championship
series in six appearaoc:es, is host for
the winner-take-all finale against Los
Angeles, which never h"s won a
seventh pme of a championship
series in four attempts.
some Celtics didn't think there'd
even be a seventh pme.
.. We reallr felt we could finish it
today," said Boston's Larry Bird after
the Laken stayed alive by winning
Sunday's sixth pme, 119--108, in Los
Angeles to even the series, 3-3.
"l thouabt I'd be playina blacltjack
Seaver to face
Witt tonight
The An&els leave tbe friendly
confines of enemy bell parks and
lonely hotels to open a t 2-p.me
bomestand toniaht with the Cb1· c-ao White Sox peyina a vtsit to
Anaheim Stadium.
The Anttls. 22-12 on the ro.d
but 10..16athome, wilhcndrifht·
hander Mite Win (s-6) apm t
veteran Tom Seav~ (S""') tonilht
at 7:30 in the opener of a three-
pme .enes. .
With four ri>ld trips unckr thCtr
beh • the A•l• bave returned
home with foW' beaet'·lhu-..SOO records. includina a 6-l dl'ort on
their"'°" rucnt 1ret. Chi~ 11 two pma bebtrid
the diviaioa·leadina Ante• tnttt·
ina 1oni1tn'1 pmc.
tonight in Vegas, .. Celtics' forward
Cedric Maxwell said after the loss. "I
had all the arTangements made."
The Lakers spoiled those plans.
Tonight, they'll try to become only
the fifth team to win an NBA
championship serie1 after trailing 3-2
and only the second finalist to knock
off Boston, which is 14-1 in title
rounds, iocludina 7-0 against the
Lakers.
.. EvcrythinB is there to. be h.~d,"
said Laker Coach Pat Riley. We
have a chance to do something that no
one else has done -win a world
dhampionship in Boston.
"We're goina to win this one for
Red Auerbach " Riley said of the
Celtic preside~d general manager.
Throughout t?M senes, Los Angeles
has relied on missed Celtic shots and
its own defensive rebounds to fuel its
devast.atina fastbreak. Boston has
done wcU when it bas shot accurately
from outside and dominated the
offensive boards.
The Celtics, who had the NBA 's
best regular-season record, have been
nearly unbeatable at home. They are
44-9 this season, includina 11-1 in the
playoffs, on the famed parquet floor
beneath the NBA record of 14
championship banners. They are 2-1
hen: in this final series.
However, nine of the last 11 NBA
crowns have been won on. the road,
includin& the I 980 title by the Lakers
over-Philadelphia and the 1981
championship by the Celtics over
Houston.
LOSANGELES(AP)-Winsbave
betn difficult to come by for lhe San
Franciteo Giants this a.eason, so
Manqicr Frank Robinson can be
Cllcuted for beiftl IOJMWbat 0\ICf·
cnthUliutic in detcribina his team's
latest victory. . •
.. Tbja ia probably the be t all·
around time •·vc played all year,"
Robinson iaid after the Giants raUicd
for an M lriom.Ph over. the Los
AGldCI DOditft MODCliy nijht.
"Tfiis is lhe t~ of p&ay M ha~ been looki~ for. This i1 ~'type of pme
on whtch you can buakt 'a winnu'I
streak." .
The Giants came mto Dod&tt
tidium wtth the poorat ~ ln
}
center PoS1t1on1 but that's no _problem
because he did that at Fountain Valley.•• •
Thornton has now put bis Rebels
lhrou4'J seven of I 0 practice sessions.
watcb1n1 the likes of Estancia•s Jon
Johnston and Jim Curtis. Mater Oei
sensation Matt Beeuwsaert and team-
mate Chris Jacksoh, Ocean View's
Steve Moser, Wcstminster'sJefJ'East-
in, La Quinta•s Mark Moses, his own
BurJ Call and Mark Otta. alona with
Jacobs and GarTCtt.
.. Burt (Call) had a real aood
scrimmage against Saddleback (Col·
lcgc). he had eight assists and be bas
some very big people to throw the ball
to, .. Thornton says.
''A surprise will be Garren,•• insisu
Thornton, who should know con-
. JM!Olle
sidcring his CouJatS arc 1n the same
leaaue with San Clemente.•• He hasn't
aotten a lot of ink this year because
they dido 't 10 to CIF. But he's a aood
E>la)'et aad we sure cuuldn't 1top h'im ...
Garrett &Cored 24 points qainst
Capintano Valley the fil"lt time \he
two teams met and 23 the second
time. HcavcrlFd 22.3 on the season.
Tbe South C'.OKh ha n 't decided on
a startina five.
''The kids are working bard;'
Thornton says. "And our offente,
well. I might have semen too serious
with it; I hope we have enoup time to
learn itaU:
Jnd~ defense seems to take a
back seat as it does in most AU-Star
games. The North scored a 1~99
victory last year.
Thornton expects the Nonh to
employ an offmsc oot unlike the one
Greaory usecs at Savanna en route to
an IS.. 7 ftCQrd this 5CUC>n. ·:1 was scoutinaone oflbe seams 111
my Jeacuc that happeiaeel IO be
pla)'tD& .,aans& Savan~ ... J'bornaon
ttealls. "'They were runnU. • ~
post -the me th•na I rua. ~ ~
very weU aroomed m lhrir olfeW.
Tom•, a good cOllCh."
The South will have its baadl full
with Sonora·s Eric Samwhon,
Savanna's Keith Walaftabe ud Or-
ange's Sohn Escobedo, &11)()111 Olhen,
5o Thornton is makina 1bc mOM ofhss
opportunity to coach an lhe alHW
·game. . -r probably won't have tbC oP-
ponunity to do this apin. I'm
handlinamy l0practice$likewtwant
to win this pmc," be says. We're
...,ort.io1 bard."
'~""~~ .. F~............_~~"~~~~l~ • ..,__tall lJr-dtw~~ ~
. .
for the North
But there's also
the running game
to worry <:ibout
Savanna High basketball coach
Tom Grqory is wondering what
Mark Thornton has m store for bis
North· squad when the t'*o teams
square off Saturday night in the
Orange County All-Star basketball
game. .
... He·s (Thornton) ma touab spot,"
notes Gregory of the South coach.
"He normally coaches a runni~ club
but be's got all of those big kids. I
don't know ifhc's s<>ina to start a large
lineup and jam it down our throats or
if he's goina With the unaner lineul>
and try to run .,mt us.··
from his own Sannna squad who
averaged 16.S points per pme this
past season, and Sonora's Eric
Samuelson, who averaged 19 points
per pme. Both arc t'*o-year AU-CIF
first-team selections.
··1 thjnk we have some very aood
quabty playcn. but if we don't play
hardwe'~ definitely eoing to have a
problem;· Gregory predicts. .. We arc
out-manned. ..
Amons the Nonh ·s otber -wcapou
are S-11 ~David Lamb.also aut
of Savanna. who has earned firs:t,:
team all-lequc honors three )Ul'S ii
a row, and Brea Cua.rd Ron Blair, a 6-l
standout who averaacct I S.S points
per p.me and was a leCOOd-leam AIJ..
OF 2-A se&ciction.
··What really scares ~.is t.bc:ir hei&bt. .. admits Oreaory Of the Re-
bels .... know Arnold and Gll'ml are
quali(\t players, and~ JllCObs
as paa to bun us inside: Billl \be
m&lft pcnoa -we're PJlil IO '-¥e IO
stop i' tMatc.r Dci's Matt)
Bccuswaen.
Gregory's Savanna squad and
Thornton's Capistrano Valley 1a.ID
both advanced to the ClF playoffs by ru.nniD& \heir' <>ppQDCDts into sub-
mission. '!Sut Gresory has to be
wondcrina bow 'uys like 6-7 Rolf _,.__._,...,..:oi<.:bsbs~ .. ....; 0011 Fountain Vall • 6-10 Jeff
Am of El Toro &na -
Tbe 6-6 Beeuswaert. tbc OF 4-A Pia~ or the Year. aVCfllll'd 19.6 pomfs per pme
...................... .:......
Garrett are aoina to fit in.
Saturday ni&bt at ~ <:oast
College, O::Fnry ~ to Ke a ~~:i==c::a~ snap a ~ Jolina ttrcat ilt die
amnaJ a.IHiar a&ir.
Grqory guided Sa'-a.n.na to an t 8-7
record and into the leCOnd {Ound of ~ OF 2-A Playoffs.. Bui Eric
Samudton and Sooon endcld S.V..
na'• ._,., ~~2 hCM). rrit~uy~Oi a ,a..
Sam---Oft ....... lllilome.
==~~wttla. Tttaa ........ after wt World 8ertee title.
He1J try to COUDIO' w.idt liC'Va'al
sharp shootcri OD bil NOrtb unit.
most notably auanf KtiU. Watanabe
S.biid8y ftilli•".sec:lia9 ...... ..
lbe Or-. Q>unttlirts ...... ....
at .S:JO.
Pat Riley
the n~on. ~cl overcame a 4-3 Los
An&eles lead 10the1opofthe ninth by
scorin& five nins to match thc11
bigcst run total for a single innina all
seuon. .
Cb1h O.vi upplicd the cnllcat
blow. a tw<>-run sjft&k with the ba
loedcd that kn()(.'kcd in the tyina arid
1o-41hcad nan
The Gaa"t went on to send t I
batttn to t.he plate ~inst loser Rick
Hone) uu. 1~3i iDd lOi Anacla
relic' crJ Carlos Dial and Pat Zachry.
Otspttc the w1n, only tbe Giants'
20th 1n S7 pmes tbis )'car, rumon
~ ltd lhlt Robinton may be. on
his way out · the a Ftaacisco
manqcr.
McKe-e-;-11µcllan qualify
They're headed for Olympics
after tense three-way battle
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY .,.., ..............
LONG BEACH -The team of Jonathon McKee and
Carl Buchan from Seattle won a berth on the U.S. Olympic
yachting team Monday Ul a close three-way battle in the
Flying Dutchman class that went down to the final few
seconds.
The selection of McKee and Buchan makes lb( sixth
team to be selected to the Olympic Games. Randy Smyth
and Jay Glaser wo~ the Tornado tri~s with a perfect score
of0.0 points and didn't bother to sail the fi~ two races.
Others on the team arc Steve BenJamJO and Chns Steinfeld,~terBay, N.Y. in the470_class;Jobn Bertrand,
Anaheim Hills, in the Finn class: 8111 Buchan, Bcllevue.
Wash. in the Star class; Robbie Haines, San Diego, in the
Soling class. .
The final phase of the trials started toda~ wtth the
Windalider sailboards engagmi ma 10-race scnes .
The final race of the Flying Dutchman aass provided
the most excitement of any of the trials. Gomg mto the
final race McKee led Gary Knapp ofSyossctt, N.Y. by 5.4
penalty points., which meant that he would have 10 beat
Knapp in the final race or finish no fanber back lb.an one
boat.
Knapp got the st.art and kept McKee covered
throughout most of the race. but was hoping that another
boat would finish between them -which would have
given Knapp the victory.
It almost happened on the final weather leg when
Srott Young of Dallas cauaht up wtth both Knapp and
McKee and enp&ed them both m a funous tackang duel.
But instead of bccomina a spotlcr. Young _caught a
windshtftjust before the finash and crossed the hnc ~cad
of both Knapp and McKee. The wm meant nothing to
Youna as he was buned back in third place with 31.0
penalty points.
Monday's resuJts:
Ft)'.ing Dutchman (10th race) -I. Scott Young.
Dallas; 2. Gary Knapp, Syosset, N. Y.: 3. Jonathon McKee.
Seattle; 4. Bruce Burton. Ma.nnc City. Mk h; 5. Michael
Loeb. New Haven. Conn.; 6. John lrvinc. Jamestown.,
Oluo; 7. Shawn Sullivan. Waterbury. Conn.; 8. Dennis
S1oll, Harlingen, Tu.; 9. B1U Dcuchler, Fairfax, Va. 10.
Ben Dawson_ Columbia, Md.
Aying Dutchman final standi~ (best 8of10 )-I.
McKee, 20. 4; 2. Knapp, 23. l; 3. Young. 31.0: ~· Loeb, S 1.4;
5. Burton. 66.4; 6. Kelson Elam, Dalla~ 7. Sulla van, 95.8; 8.
Irvine, 108.4; 9. Stoll, 116.0; 10, Dcuchler, 116.0.
Tornado(lOtbracc)-t.JefTAlter, Laguna ~2.
Lorne Sherry, ML ~mens. Mtcb.; 3. Paul Bussard, Santa
Rosa; 4. Kent Blasle, Bryn Mawr. Pa..; 5. Michael Zuteck.
Kemah. Tex.; 6. 01ff Hauser. Pacific Palisades; 7. A.lex
Martinez. Lrvine: 8. Skip Elhott. N~11 Beach; 9.
Andrew Erst.athiou, ~on: I 0. Hot>ie Alter Jr .•
Capistrano Beach.
Tornado final standings (best 8 of 10) -I. Randy
Sm)'tb. Huntington Beach. 0.0: 2. David McFa~.
Honolulu. 44.1; 3. Jeff Alter. 59.8; 4. Blasae, 72.0: 5. Hobie
Alter Jr ... 77.4; 6. Zuteck, 79. 7: 7. EIJ1ott. 95. 7; 8. Martinez,
100.4: 9. Henry Bossen. Mt. Pleasant Beach. NJ. 103.4;
10. Bussard, 110.4.
All-Stars meet tonight
The 17th ed1tton of the Orange County AU.Star
baseball iamc unv:ctls tontaht (7:30) at Glov~
Stadium 10 Anaheun wtth Coach Jack Hodges
South squad sendina Ball Dodd to the mound for
openers.
Dodd. who was l 0-1 for Capistrano Valley th1
season wd be one of SC\icral p1tchel"$ expected to face
the potent North lineup. Others expected to sec
mound duty include 1:-afuna Hills· Lee Plemel ( t 2-1)
and Newport CttristJan s DaVld Cillay (I 0-2).
HOO,CS. bead coach at Laguna Hills, also bouts
a hoeup with some wallop mcludJna catcher Allan
Roman who hit .455 for the Hav.-founta.ln Valley
sbortstQp Gary Schoono"er (,514) and Huntinaton ·
Beach first baseman Patnck Gordon (.495). 1
"Wbo i it that is sayina that?"
Robln n said ._hen asked about the
rumon. ··And.you know~bat rum~
are, an~y. lu t ·one person talk.in&
to somebody else.
"But you·,c &ot a team that's
trua.li~and pcoptcdrop little hinu
around.·Theonly"'•> I can '4 I about
it is that it's JUSt that. a rumor."
The ~rs O\ercame the Gwns'
early 3-0 lead when Grca Brock
~a ~wo-run homer in the fourth
innina. bis 1evcnth, and Pedro Guer-
rero and M ikc Marshall in&lcd home
n.ins in the ixth.
Bill La key, 2-6, cm~ as lJ_\C
winnifl&. ~td~r It was tu mt win
nocMay6.
Former Ood&tr Ou ty Ba er, -.ho
h I~ launtb the Glanu· winni
rally in the ninth with a pin<'h ·tut
· <kscribed Laskey "our hard·
Jue t Mr. We JU t ha"en•t bttn aenin im any uppon:·
That's tM wa 1\ tood cntcrina the
ninth.
Pinch hitters Bob 8rcnly and Balcer
optncd tt\c inni with inalc . John·
nic Wtastcr. h ditr)ut at~<>
run horner. achanctd the runncn
with a S1CT1fice. 8U1 H ncycutt hcsi·
ta.led fi rt throwt too la to 1h1rd
and the loaded Wl\h
nobody out
Div n:-placcd.Jfonc)cuu at that
' lad p~ Up lh ~l\ I~
I
Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Tunday. June 12, 1984
Gil Stratton now
behind the scene
at Hawaii station
ro. AP dllpa Ill' K.E.Al.AKEKUA, Hawaii-GtlStrat·
ton bas len his Soulhcm C'alifomia
sport un.a career tv·n and tun 1 radio stauon on tile wc5t \l! of the Island of Hawaii.
trauon, beard r many years on L.Os An&elts
radio and television stations. took over radfo Stallons
KKON-KOAS-FM in mid-May. Kea1akclc.ua 1s near
the west Hawaii mon ofKailua~Kona.
for vcaB Stratton was a television voict-of the
---Rams. He als0 was play-by-play
an.nounotr for the University of
Nevada-Los Veus football team.
He hosted-'1t>odier Duaout"
receding the Los Anacles
er telecasts.
n Los Angeles, Stratton
wo~ for KTTV. KNXT (now
KCBS). and KNX Radio. He won
a cluster of awards for his sports
reportina including two Emmys
and several Golden Mikes.
Stnttoo Stratton's sportscasting
l'Jaen top Blue Ja19 again
Lii w.ltiker'• r~o-run homer 1111 napi>N 1 )..3 tic in the founh inninJ and
powered the DelJ'OI\ ..,..n to a .S.4 victory
Monday n1Jhl over Toronto The triumph
pvc tht T&&er1 an tiaht·pmc lead o"cr second-place
Toronto in the Amttkan Lcgue East, and extended the
Blue Jays' los1n,a.1tttak to five pmes. their toniest of
the season. Davt a.1ema. mak1n1just his founh stan
of the M>n, allowed thrtt runs on four hits in his five
inrunas to improve hi record to 2..0. Willie Her"DUdea
. the founh Detroit pitcher,· J&"e up a run-sconna single to Lleycl
Mo1eby in the seventh that pulled
Toronto wi\hin 5-•t but hung on
to P<> t his 10th save ...
Elsewhere in the American
~aauc. ~w. N1c1to11_ capped a
••it·run mnth 1nn1oa Wlth a thrce-run pinch homer, liftina Boston
to a 9-6 victory over the New
York Yankees . . . Seen
McGrqor scattered ~vcn bus
W1a.ltal.-• and Job LoweastelD drove an
one run and scored another11cad1ng Baltimo~ to a 3-1
victory over lumping Mllwau](ce. McGregor, 8-4,
walked two and struck out five in completing his sixth
pmc in 15 starts. The Brewen have lost four strat&ht
pmes and nine of their last l I. . . . Pete O'Brlu
smacked a two-run homer in the sixth innina to give
Texas a comeback 6-3 victory over Oak.land.
spanned more than a quarter-of-a-century. He covered •
the whole spectrum of sports including footbaJJ. Garve 'a etreak. ends at 1 7
hoclcy. soccer. golf, auto racing and horse raci.n&,
including the Kentucky Derby. He covered the t 960 Bobb1 Browa•a two-out single in the
Olympic games an Rome for the CBS network. ninth inning drove in Kevla McReyaold1
Stratton also appeared m several Broadway shows, from second to cap a two-run rally as San
movies a~d telev1s1on sen~s as an a~tor. H~.work~ .in Diego d.cfeat~ ~tlan~. S-4 Monday and
such movies as "Stalag 17, "The Wald One and' Girl extend ns wmning streak to four games. With San
Craz~. ·· Diego trailina 4-3, Grala Nettles opened the ninth with , . . On tele v1s1on. he poqrayed qt4ie ~anr~o~~. a~! ~ff reae Falcoa.~'r?p.,»S,Jfl>l~~.~SL~~i:' un'athleuc son an th~"~T}lai'~My~~-Kc also 8 iia. ~3."·Wf•Jl1Wt;l'll(!AllVM~~~ 't1. appear~ in 4'-General li~pita('t• .. ..,.ra)l>er )ohn," Bedrosian struck' out Ste\'e Garvey, whose hitting' ·
•,
"Baretta," "Quincy" and''Scxtette" with Mac West. streak coded at 17 games, and got Terry Ktm1edy on a
groundout to second, with Quote of the clay Salazar taking scoond on the play.
.. McRcynolds singled to tic the
Concepcion would OK trade
CINCINNATI -Unharpy with 1111 Manaaer Vern Ra p's habit o shuffling
hneups, shortstop ~ave Concepcion said it
might be best 1f the Cincinnati Reds trade
him instead of playing him at other positions.
Rapp has used Concepcion primarily at third base
and first base an recent weeks, angering the five-time
Gold Glove shortstop who has started at bis usual
position only twice an the last 20 days.
Concepcion became upset Sunday when Rapp left
him out of the hneup in the Reds' 7-5 loss to the Padres
an San Otego. and told reporten he would welcome a
trade.
Rice named player of the week
NEW YORK -Jim Rice of the
Boston Red Sox has been named the
.\mencan League's June 4-10 player of the
week
RlCC. -. ho went 1-.ilot-2.6. wilh-mreehome-ntna and
three dou bles. "as the unanimous choice for the award.
Race drove 1n 13 runs during the week and bit 11 •
fo r-1 7 "1th runners an scoring position.
Neuheisel sparb San Anto.nlo
PITTSBURGH -Former UCLA Ell
standout Rick Neuheisel threw a pair of f II•
touchdown passes to Jerry Gordon to lead
the San Antonio Ounslinicrs to a 2 I -3 win
over the Pmsburgh Maulers Monday night in a United
States Football League game.
Walter Holman, running for Pittsburgh in place of
IOJUred Hc1sman Trophy winner Mike Rozier, pined
123 yards as the Maulers, 4-12, lost for the 10th time in
their last I I games.
The Ou nslingcrs, 6-10 after a 1-6 start in their fint
USFL season. went ahead to stay on the first series of
the game
Mark Ru sh took a reverse handoff on the openin~
ki ckoff and returned the ball 55 yards to the Maulers
45-yard lane
San Antonio scored six plays later on Marcus
Bonner's I -yard touchdown dive to take the lead 7..0.
game, then stole second to set up
Brown's game-winning hit ...
Elsewhere. Tim Wallacb led off
tbc ninth inning by cracking bis
ninth home run of the season on
the first pitch from I.ff Smida to
lead Montreal to a 2-1 victory
over the Chicago Cubs . . .
Dwl11tt Gooclp and Jeste Orosco O&neJ combined on a seven-hitter, and
Bible Brooks and Keith Heraudei homered to lead the
New York Mets to a 3-1 victory over Pittsburgh •..
Darrell Porter'• two-run double highlighted a four-run
third inninJ as St. Louis beat Philadelphia, 6-4 . . . Bill
Doru sinjled home Plt!I Garner from second base with
the winnmg run in the bottom of the 14th inning,
leading Houston to a 3-2 victory over Cincinnati.
Anteaters sign JC prospect
David Tru11ell, a pitcher from· Sacra-• mcnto City College, has signea a national
Jetter of intent to play baseball at UC Irvine
next season. The 5-10 right-hander was 7-1
this past season with a 1.5 I ERA and six com~letc
games . . . Kansas City thircfl>ascman Ge0r1e Bren.
who has missed more than half the season because of a
wrist inJury, is the leading votc~tter overall for the
American League AU-Star s~ in the fint wcek.ly
report on voting released Monday . . . Mark Weix· ~l of thtil -ista was~ thC" winfttt
Monday of Sunday's All-Terrain vehicle race at the
Mears Gan4 Rumble off-road cvcnL Results were held
up by o~c1als pendin~ the out~me of a protest by
another nder, who claimed Weixeldorfer used illegal
wheels in the race. Wcixcldorfcr, riding a factory Honda
A TC. won the 250 ccchampienshis><KHhc basimlh1rd
and first place finishes in the two heats.
TITANS. • • From Cl
hand -or arm -in the Titans' trek
to Omaha.
A 6-2 left-hander, Reinholtz went
13-2 on the season and pitched the
Titans to a 6-1 victory over Arizona
State in the Series on Friday. His two
losses this season came against Ari·
zona (his opponent tossed a no-hitter)
and icxas. the team Fullerton had to
beat in Sunday's championship
game.
"This is the biggest thrill. Winning
1t all. I feel good because I was a part of
at," Reinholtz admitted Monday
night. "When you finish your college
career on this kind of note, you have
to ~ happy about it."
The Huntington Beach resident,
whose brother Eric is a sophomore
pitcher at Orange Coast. said his next
step is to sign a pro contract with the
Seattle Mariners who drafted him a
f cw weeks ago.
"l want to play pro ball," he said, "I
just haven't had a chance to talk to them."
He had a good excuse.
Tark~nian 's lawyer rips NCAA
LAS VEGAS (AP) -The NCAA "ianored every
precept of due process" when they sol!Aht a two-year
suspension of University of Nevada-Las Yeps basketball
coach Jerry Tarkan1an an l 9TI, his attomcy cbarstd
Monday. -The NCAA enabhshea a tcmblc p~cnt of tryina
the case ind then brinJins him in to defend himself," Sam
Lionel said as 1 he feud between colJesiatc spons' •ovem1n1
body 1nd the feisty coach movtd to• state d1stnct court.
Lionel 111d th NCAA 1nv~tt,pt1ve procedures were
so vague t~at T rkanian could .n!>t ad~ua,tcly defend
himstlf apmll charsr of rectu1t1n& violauons lod&ed
in t the La Vtaa' school in 1977.
• The tnal will re-establish whether the coach was aiven
due process in the suspension order.
Lionel said he would also introduce testimony that
NCAA invesuptors vowed they would drive Tarbnian
out of colleac basketball.
NCAA attorney Jim M~ o! Kans.as Ctty
defended the a soc1ation'1 invntipllVc pr~ur and
s.11d Tarkantan was aivct1 a fair hcarin&.
Mclarney said UNL V was a«uscd in l 977 of 10
violauons da1in1 back to 1971 . Many of tire alle&Cd
v1olat1ons occurrtd bcfott Tarkanian came to UNL V
from Lona Beach State an 1973. The university wa
e\'encually cited for 38 violation -
Mclarney. an an o~n1ng statcntcnt, said Tarkanian
had plenty of opp0rtunaty to d fend himsclr.
The NCAA placed UNLV's basketball proaram on
1>_robltion for two yean and ordered the school to suspend
Tarkanian for 1hat period of tim~. Tartanian obtained a
prrmanent mjuncuon prcvcnuns the 1ehool from
uspcndina him, and the u ha 1 ngu1 hed an legal limbo
, until it was roivcd earlier tb.11 )Cat.
·•uNt V had tonier hearinas1 delibct11t1ons and
ion 1han any other S'thOOI 1n NCAA hi &ory ...
Md.arnc) said .
Lionel charard n<> trtn~ript1 w-rre kept of any
( l
I
MAJOR LBAGUlt STANDtHGS
AMeriun LMtw
AMII\
ClllcHO
Mlnnetot1
K1n1 .. c1tv
Sea111e
Oll\lend
Teu1
Ottrolt
Toronto
l1ltlmore
1011on
N....,YOl'lt.
Mllw•""" CltY•nd
WIST DtVlllON
W L ~ 01
32 21 .w 2t 2' .500 2
ft Jl •75 JY, ,. tt ... ,, 3 ....
n » .•st ·~ 2• 3• ."33 ' 25 35 417 1
IAST DtvlSfON 44 14 .1St
3' 22 .m •
J4 ,. 567 " '° 2t .m 1• u 32 .Uf ,,.,..
2• 33 m 1•1.'a
21 ,,. m 21\'t
MeNIV'• kerti
9o11on t. Ntw York •
Detroit S, Toronto 4
l•llll'llON l , MllweUllff 1
T•u• •· o.111enc1 3 Ontv Nmn ICtMdvl9d
T•V'a GelMt
CllleAlllO (S..Y« S-41 at Me1U IWlll 5·6), (n)
Oetroll IMwrf1 11-21 •I Toronto (Clancv •·•>. (n) N•w Yonc (Rumuuen 1•11 at 8ost0fl !Ci.mtn• 2· 1l. In)
S.llfmore CO.via 6·21 at Mllw•Uk" <McOJre H l. lnl Mlnne1ota <Smlth110n 7-61 et Tax.,
(Darwin 4·3). (n) •
Ken1a1 Cltv (Lett>randt 2·01 at S.attlt (/11\oMe 2·4), In>
Clevtlar!CI (Sutcliffe 3·5) et Olkl•nd (Conrov IM), (n)
Wednt'4MY'• Gamet
Chlcaoo at Aneell
Cleveland •• Oeltland
O.lroll 11 Toronto, tnl New Yortl et lo~Jon, (n)
-~''.j\~l.'1!a~1t~~~ *--1
• Kennr City at S..tttt, (n)
NatteNt L•9"
WIST DtVIMON
W L ~ft. 01
san Oleoo 35 23 .603
Atlanta l4 'l1 .557 21i') ~ ,. 21 .541 3
Clnclnnetl 21 33 .45' l\IJ
Holnton 2S l4 .424 lO'fa
kn FranclKo 20 37 .J51 14\'t
Cl\IQoo
Hew York
PhlladltPl\la
SI Louis
Mof)lr .. 1
Plltlburen
•AST DIVIMON
l2 25 561
JO 24 SS6 II')
ll 26 .§.t4 I
31 JO SOI l
29 JO •'2 • n l4 m '\l'J ~Y'lkwfl San Franclt<lo I, Dedeiws •
Moftlrffl 2, Cfllcaoo 1
Hew Yori! 3, Plll•Durth 1
St. Loul• 6, Pttllaoetohle 4
San Oleoo s. Allenl1 • Hou•ton 3, Cincinnati 2. 14 Inning' T.-y'1G1mn
S.n Frenclsco (l(rukow 3-6) et Oed9er'I
(Hertlllt« 2·2 or Hooton 0-11. (n)
MontrNI (LN 10-2) ., Chlcaoo
(Edlenlev 0·2)
Plll1t1ureh (McWllll1m• 2·•> 11 New Yori\ (Leary 2·21, (n)
St. LOUii (Horton 1·0) •• Phfl1delphl1
(K.Gron 2· I), (n)
Cincinnati (8er1t1vl 3·61 et Houston
(Nltkro •·71. (nl Ati.nt1 (Perea 6·1) 11 San 019110 (ShOw 7·•>, In>
W ..... Y'• Gamet
Sin Fr1ncl1c:o 11 ~
MonlrHI II Cnlce~
PlllabYl'gh 11 New York, (nJ
SI Lo.II' 11 ~. '"') Clnclnnetl al Hou1ton. In>
Onlv 111me1 IChedui.c!
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Giants I, Ood9ws 4
SAN ffltANC1SCO LOS ANO•Ll!S
lltrfltll abrfltll ~•M.lr u • 2 7 2 lfevnld\ rf ' l l O
CDevl.cf S 2 3 2 lallor 2b l O O O
Ollver lb • o O o Guerrer lO • 2 2 1 ca.rk rf • 1 2 0 8rocit lb • 1 1 2
Leonard N 3 0 0 1 Men111• If • 0 1 1 Ynell!d lO 5 0 2 3 L1ndrx ct 4 0 0 0
Nlc0tl1 c: 5 0 I 0 Sc:lostl1 c: 3 0 1 0 Wdmnltl l 0 0 0 Ruuell H ). O O O
lrentv Ptl 1 1 1 0 Honevclt p l O O O Minion P o o o o
LHllevP l 1 I 0
8akll' ph I 0 I 0
MuHlm 2D I I 0 0
T9tala Jt au 1 T...,,
kere by '""""" Sin "'•ncbc• 003 000 oos-I LM A~I 000 202 oot-4
Game WIMlne Rll -CDaVI\ (11.
E-Honevcutt, lallor, MlraNIH. OP-
Lo• .,,...._ 1. LOB-San Francisco 10, Lo'
AnMIM 2. ti Scloscta. HR-lAMl1ter (2),
8r0Ck 17). s-&ellor, t.tMa1ter
SF-l.eonerd
I~ H R •R H SO
SM ''11ftdKe Laallav W,2·• I • 4 4 0 3 Minton I 00000 .........
Honeycutt L,7-3 I 10 6 5 2 0
CDIH 1-3 1 1 1 0 0
lKMY 2-l 2 1 I 2 0 .._.,.cull Pltc:MG to 3 ballera In tin.
T-2.42 • ._..,,OS7
MAJOR L•AGUE LEAD•llS
AIMf'ken LM~
BATTING (130 11 bell) Trammeu,
Oetroll, .:Ml. Engle, Mlnne1ota, .346; Win·
fleld, N-YOftt, .m. &el. TOf'onto . .331,
Kemo. N ..... York, .331
RUNS· Trtmmett. O.troll, 0 ; Evam,
Boston, 42, Moaet>v, Toronto, Q ; RIPll.an,
• laltlmore. Q ; Whlle«er. O.trolt, .u. Rll: Mvrr1v. laltlmore, 52, Rice, 801·
ton, 41; Oavb, S..1111, '6; Kingman, Oak·
land, U ; Lemon, Detroit, 40.
HITS: Tremmtll, O.trolt, II; Garcia,
Toronto, 71; a.ti, Toronto, 71; RIPll.lfl,
laltlmor1. 70; Wtllt1k1r, Detroit, 70.
DOUBLES: Trtmmtll, Delroll, t•; Cow·
en1, s..11111. 14; ee11, Toronto, 1•; Kaarnev, s .. 111e, 14; Mllllntlv. N•w York, 14;
Taultl, Minnesota, 14.
TRIPLES: Mottby, Toronlo, f; Owen,
S.attle, 7; COlllns, Toronto, 5; Law, cn1-
c•oo. 5; Uothlw, Toronto, S.
HOME RUNS: Devis, S..llle, 14;
Arma1, loilon, 14, Klntm1n, Otkland, 14;
Kittle. Chk•eo. 11; Murrev. l11tlmore, 12; Rlott~. l1lllmore, 12
STOLEN BASES Hendlf'10ft, Oaka.nc:I, 25; G'arcla, TOfonto, 24, Butler, Cleveland,
1'; ~ AN111, 11, e.rnerard,
Clevtland, 15. Mosabv, Toronto. IS,
Tollffon, Texa1, IS.
PITCHING <• de<l1lon1) Leal, TOfonto. •-t. 3.07, Jacllson, TOf'onlo, 6·1. l 1',
Morris, O.lrolt, 11·2, 2 03, C1UdlH, Oak·
lend, S· 1. 2.70, Sendlea. Antlh. J.1, 1.'2.
STRIKEOUTS Morrl1, Oatl'Oll, n; Sllab,
TorOlllO, ... WM ......... 6.S; Lffl, Toronto, '°'• Nlellro, New York, 6l.
SAVES Qu!Mnberrv. K•me• City, IS. c1uc1rn, o.111anc1. 121 StenleY, Botton, 11,
Flnoen, MllWIUkM, 101 HMnendt.z, 0.-lrolt, 10, 01111s. MiMtaota, 10.
Nattenal LMeue
IATTiNG (130 ti bal1)-Gwvnn, S.n
Dleeo, .:161, Frenoone, MontrNl, JS.,
Welhlntton, Atlanta, '40; CMell, ~ouston,
329; O\H'hlm, Clllcaoo, J2t
RUNS. W1Hln1, Sin Diego, '2. Gwvnn.
san Dleoo. 41; s.muet. Pfll~Pl'll1, 41; MlllMwt, Chtc:eeo, Jt1 Ourhlm, Chtcaeo.
JI; R1lne1, MonlrNI, M.
"II: C.rllf Monlreet, '1· Dutnem. Chlceeo, 451 Schmidt. Phhadetphle, 41;.
Otvl1, Chlcaeo, 40, Clark, San Frencl~. 3'; MUf'Of'ty, Allenle, Jt.
HITS• Gwvnn, S.n DlaOO, 7'1 Samuel,
Pt\111daiPflla, 71, Frencona, Monlr .. t, n;
Sanclbert, Cnlc-.o, 71, ltamlr1t, Ata.n11, "· OOYILl!S P:raACOM, Montreel. ,.,
Clrt9", MonlrNI, IS, S.ncltlert. Cnboo,
15, S 1r1 lleel Wlltl 13 TRIPt.ES Samuel, fltnllacNIOhll, 11 Cruz. ~llon, 6; lelldbert, OllaHlo, 6, GwyM,
,.,. 0.0, S, ~l St,_LOUlt. t
• HOM8 RUNS: MUl'lln'f, Atlenle. '4; setwnldl, ll'tl~. ll, C.r•. MontrHI, 1!1 DutNll'rl, ~. 1'; Clet'k, San
,renclKo, 11 MenMI, ~ t).;
Mc"fYnolch· ,.,, °'"°· 11. ITO\.•N IA.di. $amuti, fltllledeletl .. ,
JO, WtW!tll, lln 0199t, 2'1 Radin, Cine.In·
~ti, 2t O.flllir. '"""°· 14, RI""· Montr .. 1, 20
ftlT,HtNO It ell< tlO!ltl s.to, Cindi!•
natl, J.l, t SJ, Lyndl, New Yorll, •·I, 2.94;
hf•t. Anent•, t ·I. • 01, Lee, Mtin1,..i, IM, UO. ,.., .,....,_ M. Ut.
Sl"IHOUT$ GOMlll. NeW Yer~ f), v•••~ o.. .... n ••"'• Mwtton, IS, IOt'e, .-;lndMetl, "I C.rllcM, f'NltOll• tNI,,.
SA \'E.1 lwlltf, Jt Leull, U,'Hoilancl, Phlla~ IJ, OM ..... left Oieto, 12.
0rM(O, New Yor\, 1t Stnllll, Cl!iCAtlO, 11
I
------==--~~~~--= --
Olympic Games history
Track and field medallsta
MIN'S OICATH..ON
lfM, St. LMilt
l. Thom•• Kiely (l,..lelMI), •,OJt, 2,
Adtm Ounn IU.S ), U07; , ThOl'nH Tru11t11n Mere (U.S.>, Ul:t.
1'12.~ 1, JIMet Tllof"M (U.S 11 l,•12, 2 HutO
Wlealander ISwtlden), 1,1241 3. ChlrlH
Lombtrt (SW_,,), 7,414
mo.~ 1. Heloe LOYl9nd (N-IY), 6,IO.Ji 2.
lrutus H1rnUlon CU.S ), 6,771, J e.rm
Ohtton (lwto.nl. ueo.
,,,.. h$
1. Hll'llO OS.II CU S.), 7,711, 2, E"*'· son Norton cu s >, 7,351, J Aluanoer
Klumbefe tE11on111, 1.m
1'11.Alnt....,..
I,• PHVO Yrloll ("'"'-"cl), 1.0», 2
Akfllel JaNlntn (Flnllncl), 7,'32; l John
Kennttll Oofltrty IU S ), 7,7'07
lfJi,L•~ ~. Jemes hl.IKtl cu.s ), 1462, 2. Ak""
Jarvinen (Flnllnd). fm, J WOlrael EWlt
CGermenvl, 9031
1"6,..,.
I. Glenn Morris IU.S ), 7.900; 2. Robert Clark (U.S ), 7-'01; J. Jlldl Partier (U.S),
7,275.
1'41. ~
1. Robert Melhl., (US.), 7, 13'; 1 ltl!IC9
Heinrich (France), 6,'74; l. Flovd Simmons
(U.S.> .... SO.
lfH. H•llMI
1. Robert Mllhlat CU.5 ), 7,117; 2. MlllOll
Los Alam"-t
MONDAY'S ltlSULTS
(Mii f/f '2·ftltlllt ~ meeftllel
'"ST uca. 350 vard• I Got 5-lrll (Cr .. ear) S.40 300 300
OH-Sold Chlclla Gal (L-11) I 00 UO
OK-Sunny H Warmer !Crdz) l 60 4 20
AlsO raced Mattlea Man, Miss Mbttev Lender, Wald\ Moon R ... Roval Cowelrl,
MU Chic, Swwt L.aOend. nm.: 17.'3.
U •XACTA (S-11 Hid S1UO, IS•4) Hid
557.00.
sacoND ••c•. 350 vard" Mlrc:u• Beoonla (Paullnel UO UO 2.20 Little Pod (8ard) 4 00 J.00
Jonnny Twl111 (CerdOH) JOO
Alto raced: Grano VltHse, Go "" Go, SPlc:v Grev, Ell•• Fut Fiiia, Davi Profit,
D1Mrt SIHOer, Chkarl Countv. Tl~: 11.21.
THIAD •• , •. 350 vard1.
Touoh Guvs (Pauline> 4.20 3.00 2.40
Lantvs Polley CH1r1l S.00 3.60
SWHI Mffl (Mltc:htll) UO
Also raced: Oeshlno TOf'o, Hav You
Guv1. Ol1ITIOl\O o.tb«'I, PrlYala Pen1Jon,
Mv F1lr FHlur•. A World Apert,
Time: 17.fS.
ffOUllTH ltACa. 350 Ytrdl Rab• • Note ~·mon) 21.AO IUO uo
eoon 1oone <G1rc:111 7.60 uo OlcSlt Dolt (lroollil 7.40
Alto rec:ed· Euv 5'1ol, ~' RaQUelt,
Sllovon, 84 ~T_...v. TI~ to Soerkle, Oh Iha Rise, S.murer warrlor
Time 17.'1.
U IXACTA (4·21 Plld S251 70
~ll"TH ltACtl. JSO Ylrdl
Galtlnt (Mltdlell) IUO 13 00 f.40
A Rael HOlleV (Hermon> 12.40 10 '° ~' c1e1er ccr .. eer> no
Alto r8CM. SOttlY Into ,summer. Ch!Qfo Bue. Tl~lo1trHk, Ju•• He1v~. Ima
TrlPlol Jet, 4!Wn Moon Dance. Vlroln 1.a. Time; 17.f7.
SJ IXACTA (4·10) Plld 1271.50.
SIXTH ltAC•. 400 n rds.
Olene• Otcar (TrH1ure) 7 20 '-00 J,60
81 Auured (Herl) UO UO
Tuxlt Too (Mltc:MMI uo
Alto raced: Lone Hiiier, Too Moo• Gey,
Extortion, R1dar Ahead, A C.ndv Man.
TI~: 1'.'2.
HV•NTH ltAC•. 3SO verdl. Jonnnv Chlrw (Ward) 19.10 f .40 6.20
Smoltln Sunset <Tra .. ure) '-60 2.60
Selllne <Harl) 3.40 Also raced: Go Mel Go, Kid cnrome, Al•
HOii, Jhlad I Aini, Sllllnt Sier Jet, GVP Clllcll, TH Javi Pl1n.
Time: 17.H.
SJ •XACTA (J·S) Nici 517).40.
•IOHTH uc•. 400 vardL
D•IM OrNrn (Ca rdoza) UO UO UO
8uffVI Glrl (C,.aear) UO 4.00
Chasm Queen CWerd) S.60
Alto rllCllCf: No Polley Umll, R amblln
Nymph, FlnelY Tuned, Crll'll\Oft Nunett,
Humbird.
Time: lUO.
J2 ~I( SUl (7 Of 1·•·•·3•3•3) Hid
5154.00 wllh 26 wlMlne lldl•ll cnva llorses), C1rryoyer ooo1 512,:liM tS
NINTH ltAC&. 400 varcn
Rahroed W1tdl (Harli 17.40 6.40 J 40 Rici\ Kl• (Ruiz) uo uo
Fa.rntno Cour1 Clufelll 4.40
AllO raced: Fi ney Son Concaot, Andv
Bull, COHii i Rocket, Tip Your Hll, Vel
Lou, Orv P1tc:ll, Plunder lloc:k.i
Time: 20.20.
$2 •XACTA <•·71 Nici U3,40
A11enc1ance: s.m.
Grand ~• trac1r
Flnel lllndl1'191 In IM 1"4 USA·Mobll
Outdoor Track •llO Field Or~ Prh1, with
P01nt1 end montv wlnnlntt:
M8N 1,,..1. Jim Sptwv, Altitetlc• Wtat. 10
154.000>. 2 Rota Donoonue. ec11cs ... ' (53,000); 3 Tim Mldlar, Wlteon.aln Unllad,
• (11,000)
HJ-l Jlrnmv Howerd, Plclflc Coe11
Club. 1, 2·:1 (U ,000). 2. T~a Peacodl,
PUl'NI and Enw•latr. 16 (13.0001; > wome • ,.,,.,, adldla, m'I (11,000).
SP-I. lrlan Oldfleld, CNQ90 Trecti
CIU*>, 2• (U,000); ' Autll WOIA, II.id Llftll Traci! Ametka, 1' (13,000), J, ft\l .. a
Letlmlnn, edldes, 13 111,000)
WOM9N
IOOH>+-1. lanlla llltzeeratd·lf-n,
adld11, 23 (U,000), ' St~ H>tntowtr, 8Ud Utlfll Trac.II Al'IWICe. 20 tll,00011 J
Cllldv Yeung, ~ and l!ner.irar, lt (ll.000). •
HJ-1. Kelrtne JoMton, Nlllt lf
(16,000); 2. Joni HunlleY, Peclfle, Cotti
Ch.II>, I. (t.3.000): J l.OUIM ltllltr, .. acHtc
C0ti1t C:luO, 1• Cll,000).
oe.. .. .......
DAY•Y"I LOCl(H ( ......... ._., -112 .,,..,., ,,. Nrfet\M, ,. INN!lle ••
ve..,_.,tall, J rec" lftfl.. 114 cllll(la ..... M
Mind ""· 160 l'P\Kllertl N•Wf'OAT LANDU.. (Newll«t
leecl!) -IS.,,...,, I .-Wttl, 46 alQ oeu, • Mnd ia.M, • medlerel
c1m11«1tt1 1u.s.1. U75; '· "'°"'d 11mn'°111 (U.S.), t,711.
,.,.,~
1. Miiton Cam~ CU S ), 7,'37; 2 Rattr
JoM1on (US), 7,Sl7; 3. Vaullv Kuinv.,MV
(S0Yltt Union), 7,~
lfft, .lfM
I. Rater JO!lntofl (U.S.), 1,m. 2. Vent Ch~n-Kw•M (Talw111>. 1..334. 3 vaultv
Ku1nvettov (SOvlel Union). 7 AOt
·1Polnts baMd on 1962 Tlltllftl
1964, T•Y• 1. Willi Holdorl (West G.,m4lf'IY), 1M1,
1 Rein Aun ($oYlet Union), 7,Ml; J
H1n1·Joadllm Walde (W .. t Genneny), 1.• IHI, Meldce CltV I. Wllltarn TOOIMV 11,1 S.), I, 1'3, 2.
Hana·Joedllm W•!<le IW." Germ4111Y'), I , 111, ) Kun l~ln cwe11 Germenv),
1,064
1'72, Mun6dl 1 Nlke>lal AYllOV ($oYlel Union), l 1•S.; 2.
L9onld LltvlntllkO (5olllef Union), l ,CMS; 3.
Rv111rd K1lu1 (Pol1ndl. 7,911
1'76, MelltrMI I Bruce Jeoner (U.S.), l ,'31; 2. GuldO
Kratldlmer (Wftt Germany), 1.ltT. 3
Nikolai AvlloY (Soviet UnlOn), l ,37S.
IM,~
1. Fr1nc11 "OaleV'' Tllof'nllt0n <E.,t
Germanv>. 1,49'; 2. Yuri KutNnlto ($ovltl
Union), l ,332; 3 5erfff Zt\ellnov CSovlll
Union). 1,311.
USfL
WUTmltN COH,.•1t•NC•
hdlk w L T I'd. .. " LA •ureu ' 7 0 .563 JIM "11zona I I 0 500 '31
Denver I • 0 .•m Olk land 1 ' 0 '31 ,..
Canlral
v·HOUllOfl 11 s 0 "' SS2
Mk:fllo1n • • 0 ·.soo ,...
Oklahoml 6 10 0 .375 m San Anlonlo 6 10 0 375 260
ClllCloo s 11 0 .313 m
•ASTERN CON,•1t•NC•
Atlantlc
v. Pttla.delPtll• ts I 0 ,. .,.
•·NewJan•v 12 • 0 .750 .,
PlllU>urth J IJ 0 111 241
Wuhlnglon 2 14 0 .lU ,.2
Seu1Mnt
•·81rmlnehlm 13 3 0 .113 S06 •·T•mo• l•v 12 4 0 .750 460
HewOrlMn• I • 0 .500 Jl4
Merllllhl\ 1 ' 0 .4'1 2'7
Jecilsonvllle • 12 0 .250 211
•·c:llnchtcl Pllvoff berth v·d lnclled division lltle
~,,,. kilr9
Sin Antonio 21, Pltt&Ourotl l
ffr1d9Y'•~
OHl9nlt If LA •unu Wesntneton 11 Phla.deloha.
Jacllsonvllle 11 New Orlnni Artzone 11 Cflkaoo
S.fllnllY'• °""" Oenvlf' al N...., Jersev 81rmlnehlm al Memoflf1
TamN eay at PltttOurtf\
~y,J-. Jt
OIUehomt •• Mld\klen
Sin Antonio 11 Hou&ton
u.s Olvmpk ...,,.. ..... trlllll
(II c.lllM) MONDAY'S 1t•SULTS ,,.. ftlstll
(OUt "' .......... ,
~A
31,
274 m 305
m 341
402 296 410
201
2'S
JU ...
21• Jl2
lSS ., ..,.
1. 01rlu1 Youne. Wlnt1rburn, Ala. 5'3
2. Don Nvtord, La CrffCtf'lta 562
3. Erk: luttune, Fort Benning, G1. SSI
•• Ewene Rou.~UOUI SW
S. Steve Reiter, Dally City. CalH. SS3
6. Ben Amonette, Nlrto, w. Va. 552
7. Jlmmv Mc.C.ov. Fort lennlnt. G1. SSI K1rl-otto WHlpf\llln RIVlfalde SSl
f Ken Swenson, llrmlfttflern. Ale. 5'f
10 Mike WOOCICOCll. Fort lennlno, Ce. s.
NBA davtifh
CH~SH• S•RllS , ... , .. MVell)
T""""a Game
Lalran al Boston <CheMtl 2 11 6) (Slf'llt llad, 3·3)
QuMft'a Club teumev
<••~•......->
MM1'1 flnt "euftll SIMlet Dannie Vluar (SOutll Afrka> def.Ill
Seamon (U.S.), 6·3, 6·•; Rtmtan t<rllMan
(Inda.) def. Stefan Edtlert (Swecleft), 6-7,
7•6, 6·3; Guv Forfft IFrence) de_f, Cllt" Lewl1 (New lHland), 7·6. 7·5; P•UI
McNel'l'IM CAuatralla) def. lrlan Ootttrled
IU SJ, 4-6, t-•. 6·.I, Tim Mlvolla (U.S.) Clef
Joao SoerH llrarn), •·•, 7·5; Scot101vfa
CU.S.I def. Jofln FrawleY (A1atratla), 6-2,
7-5, Johll Fltlllef'lld (Australia) Clef. JOhn
Aleundlf' (Aintrelle), 7-6, 6'-3; tnan
Teecher (US.) def. ~ !kw-Ilk (U.S.),
6•4, S-7. IM
"
CREDIT LINE
Weiss named h.onorary
Orange County eitizen
....>
Saperyt.tor Tom RUey has named Ma"faue Wel11 of Los Anaeles an bonorarycltLU~ of Ora~ge .County ·~ recopution of her years of community
and social sery1ces. Wea~s 1~ i pnnc1pal of DIXCO. developers of residential
and commercial propen1cs in Sou the~ California. She is president of Ora nae County-hue~ Y.S.P:, IDc. (youth scrv1oes pr<>J11lm,) a non-profit orpnization
that deals with famtly problems. Weiss is also active in the Oru1e Co•aty
bulldlDI lodu1try Allodatloa,. where she serves on the board of directors. ln
1977, she received the President's Award from the Ho111D1 Satet qd
M1rketLD1 CollDcU of Oru1e Couty.
' Th 0 • • • . c ranfe ~oun.ty Board of Supervisors· has presented the California
trucking Assoc~t10~ with an hono~ry pr~tao:iati~n for ill "Impaired Driver
Alen Proaram, ~h1ch attempts to. nd Cahforma hi&hways of drunken drivers.
On hand to recctve the proclamation from board Chairman Barrlen Wieder
was~·· Otterkamp. president of Otterbmp Tretlq in Oranae and 4th vice
president of the CTA. • • • Newport Beach resident Kate Baxter has joined Juten A11octate1. lac. as
traffic manager. In her new post, Baxter will work with client services and the
firm's creative department for monitor and control the Oow of work through
production. Her first task is audit and analyze the company's existina systems
and develop an agency procedure handbook. Baxter previously worked for
Batteaberg, FUlbrdt aad Wrl&llt in San Jose. • • • Toay Merola bas· been selected Northeast Representative for the
CallfonJa Avocado Commbaioa, based in lrvine. Merola comes to the CAC
from a job as sales manager for Fall'Ckster Tomot.o Co. in New York. In bis
new post, Merola will work with produce buyen. merchandisers and food
service industry executivies in the New Enatand states and west to Chicago, as
welJ as avocado users in catem Canada. · • • • Seabor1 Development Co. of Huntington Beach has sold two parcels of
improved land in Huntinaton Beach's Ceatral Pan Ba11Det1 Ceater, repons
the Newport Beach office ofBHlDe11 Properties Brollcrqe Co. The plots were
bought by Warren Lortie of Huntington Beach, who plans to build 12,000
squartc feet on the sites. . • • • llritd Sebrtng is the new controller of Seca.rtty Federal SaviD.11 ud Lou
A1aoclatloa'• Garden Grove office. She i& a former employee oithc Puifk:
MatuJ 1D1araace Co. ofNewpon Beach. • • • BoMed Medical Maa.tact•rt.1. Ltd.. has reponed a first-quarter loss of
$286,255, or 14 cents a share. The finn develops, produces anCl markets
medical instruments that measure and monitor the conditions of the heart and
circulatory system without invasive procedures. Company President A. llelley
Atldn1oa attributes the loss-which compares to a loss ofSt,670 in the same
period last year -to increased spending for research and development and
higher administrative and sellina costs. . . •· .. Huntinaton Beach raidcnt Scott A. SJ1tla~ bas been appointed senior
vice t>resident in char:ae of Baa.k of America'• C.alifomia Corporate Banking
Administration, Kisuna was formerly vice preisdent and head of ~onal
corporate bankina in the b&nk's Oranae County-Los Anades reajon. Kistin,s.
who has spent 14 years in the benkil\I t;>usineu, will be hued in Los Anseles as
the statewide head for corporate bal\kina.
• • •• Fountain Valley resident Lu.Jee It. Mills, a cenified public accountant,
has been promoted from supervisor to manqer in the tu department of Fes
& Co.'1 Newpon Beach office. Also promoted was Oranae resident Wauer M.
JUI, who will serve as a manqcr in the business advisory services department.
Fox &. Co. is a nationwide accountina firm. • • • Teri Bruo PuUc Reladou has been selected to handle marketill.Ji public
relations and advcrtisina activities for Bame• latert.n, Ltd. or Lquna
Niauel. Brunowillactasaccountcxecutive,ass1stedbyeai.taYou1of'DHip
.U.let, Lquna Beach. Ham~ton Interiors provides interior desian services to
real estate developers tbroU&bout Southern California. • • • Dave lleltll has joined Clock Coutnacttoa C.. oflrvine as chief estimator
and senior project manager. Keith brinas ei&ht ycan of experience to bis new
post with Clock Construction. which s~alizes in cost-efficient construction
of commercial, industrial, retai~ hiah tccbonloay .and research and
development facilities in Southern ulifornia. ... • • • Mtady D1vld1on ofLaauna Niguel is the director of conference services for
Tbe Rlt1Carlton, a 17.5-acrereson hotel under construction in Laauna Ni~cl.
In her new post, Davidson wilJ be responsible for coordinatina all pthenngs
and transportation for aroups visitina the resort. She was formerly with the
SUverado Coanrty Cl•b uct Ret0rt In Napa. Tile Rit1-Carlt.oa l1 tlatell to opea
tbJ1 1Dmmer. • • • Mictaael Barron, chairman of the board and chief executive oflioer of
Irvine-based MJcroventve, lDc. was a recent auest on Esec11dve PreWea,
airing on KDOC. Channel 56. Microventure develops microcomputer
software packages for use in the real estate trades. It is currently developing a
financial services software library.
• • • Wl1dom Import SaJet Co •• lac., of lrvinc has been appointed marketing
and sales representative for Hadepolll Brewtq Co.'1 Christian Moertein Beer
in 11 Western states. Christian Moerlein is Hudepobl'1 selected beer, and the
first American beer to pass 'Reinheitsaebot, 7 Germany's strict beer purity law. • • • Dick Ra1aeU, president of RHaeU ud Aaaodaae. of Corona del Mar, will
presented a sales seminar at Vacation Village Hotel in San Dieao Thursday .
The seminar, "Basic and Advanced Procedures for SelJina New Homes in
1984." is hosted by the Salea and Muketina Council of the Bl.llct1a11Ddutry
A11oclatlon. • • • Plau Balldera, lac., bas moved its corporate headquarters from Granada
Hills to 3187-A Airway Avenue in Costa Mesa. Tbe firm, a wholly owned
subsidiary of C&Ufof11.l• Federal Savta11 ud Lou AuodatlM. has projects
under way in Santa Maria, Rancho Cucamonga, Otan,ae, Carlsbad, and Long
Beach. The company recently completed the first phase of a town home villll&C
in Phoenix, Ariz.
' ..
1'
~ OoMl OAU.:V ~0Tnu11lflf ........
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCKYICll LllnltGI C.-
Short Story fuhlona
Gaarn Rebollar. teneral ma nae er of the
Great American Stiort Story, abcnn one the
oatflta offered ln her newly-opened
apeclalty atore featmtnc fubiona propor-
tioned for the career woman &-foot-3 and
under. _The •tore. In the l'fewport Center
P'aablon lalaJld ab~ center. featarea-&
bl-annual lnYltadcilial iale llmlted to lta own cutomer U.t. The atore la lcoated near
Ballocb Wllabire &Dd 18 put of a $31
mlWon facelift of the lnfne Co.-owned
center in l'fewport Bach.
Why vacation in Venice
if museums bore you?
Don't, if you're planning a hikina
trip in the mountains for your
summer vacation this year, go to
Switzerland. Try Colorad~-0r Ver-
mont instead. Balance the amount of
time you'll lose travelinJ to Swiucr-
land, the lanauq.e bamen. the cur-
rency exchanaes, all the rest. ap.inst
the beauty of your own country's
mountains. and the risks you ta.kc on
needlessly will eme~.
Don't be lured into an exotic
vacation in the next few months just
so you can impress your friends when
yol{ aet home. If plleries and mu-
seums bore you stiff, why ao to
crowded Aorence or Venicc1
Do, ifyou•re now seriOusJy puttina
tosetber your Iona-awaited summer
holiday with your family and friends,
avoid risks involved in any trip away
from home and certainly minimize
the obstacles that can be anticipated.
.. There are risks in vacation de-
cisions, just as in any consumer
buyina decision," Dr. John Hunt.
bead of the tourism provam at Geo~ Washinatoo University in
Washm,to_f?t D.C., told my research
associate, wen Hermanson.
.. One way to reduce these risks and
assure that vacations meet expecta-
tions is to aC9.uire information and
plan carefuJly, • be added. Millions of
dollars are misspent by millions of
Americans because of the common
belief that you must travel a Iona
distance or stay in an elegant reson "if
you're to have a real vacation." Yet,
studies by psychologists and other
scholars indicate that vacations de-
signed to meet ~our own -and your
family's -particular interests are the
ones you enjoy the most.
The almost incredible varlet)' of
special events, both here and abroad,
can dazzle you into sticking to the
predictable and, thus, missing the
most imponant joys of new ex-
periences.
A significant suuestion Hunt
makes 1s to avoid the sense of
boredom that often sets in after the
first week of vacation by breaking up
your trip into two or three segments,
or by scheduling some special event
for the middle of your vacation.
As you plan this summer's mp.
consider these JUidelines to help
prevent disappointment and unex-
pected consequences that will spoil
the entire period:
• Weigh at least four vanables as
you plot your trip: trJnsportation.
accommodations, recreation and rt'·
luation.
• Oo you want to drive, fly, take the
train or bus to wherever you are
1oioi? How much can you enjoy the ti~ in tan sit?
•Once you arrive, do you pt"Cfer to
'Stay in 1 hotel with room service and
meal plans, or will a motel suftl~
you want to rent a cottqe and,"'Uio,
does it really have to be in a prime
location? How do you feel about
cookina on a vacation?
• What recreational facilities do
you consider essential: a pool, the
beach, boats and water spons, tennis
courts, golf! (Or will museums.
~r cultu.ral cvmu suit you bet·
•Once you have this alJ sorted out, pthcr as much information as you
can about the destinations. transpor-
tation and accommodations you
have in mind. Most of this material is
free.
•Shop around bef~ou write any
checks or sisn any 't-card slips.
Look for the best buys in this hi&hly
competitive industry at this. the peak
of the competition.
• To obtain information, cont.act
the tourism offioe of the state or
locality that attracts you. Most states
have toll-free numbers for their
Snm
P111t1
tourist offices. The names differ
widely for these divisions, bur if you
call the toll-free o~tor (800)
S 5 5-1212 and ask for the tourism
dep&n:ment 10 the state•s capital, you
should ~ 11* to find out •'ha•
depanmenr exists to help you. If
you're 90ina abroad, consuJc travd auidebooks and travel .,:nu for
advice.
("Sylvia Portet"J New Money Book
for the 80s." J ,328 PllCS of dowo-to-
carth advice on personal mooey
management, is now available
through her column. Send S9.9S plus S l for mailina and band.lina to
"Sylvia Porter's New Money Book
for the 80s, .. in care of this newspaper,
«00 Johnson Drive. Fairway. Kan.
66205. Ma.kc checks payable to Uni-
versal Press Syndicate.)
Irvine firm to off er
Compucorp software
W~rd processor manufacturer Compucorp has
authonzed Custom Software Inc. of Irvine to offer a
selection of application software packages to Com-
pucorps' national network of dealers.
CSI has alrcad)' introduced more than two dozen
prevjously unavailable packqcs to users ofz Com-pucorp family of word procnsors.
The growing list of software now includes a um~rof
International Micro Systems business and p essional
packqes. includina the financial software scnes. office
management for rntdical. dental and la~ pracucn.
wholesale distribution. manufactunng m' ~ntor) control.
church management and school admm1strat1on
Custom Software makes more apphcallon packqes
available each month.
Custom Software. one of Southern Cal1forn11's
laraest and longest established software consult1na firms.
specializes in custom computer solutions to business
problems. In addition to providing software for Com-
pucorp computers. CSI performs ongmal programmmi.
packqe modification. and software conversion for
busmt'S~ usina mini and macro computers.
Bank
merger
voted
Westlands OKs
Telefile Corp ~
·net income .. : • at $·70,019 ..
' ? T~lefile Computer Corl>. in lrviD'c ·
reported an unaudited litcal l 9M
second-quarter net income of
S 70,0J9, 2 oeou per ~ on total
l'CW'Dua ofS2, n1 ,606 lor the tbreO-
moodl period endiJll M8rdl ~ 'I 914.
Tb.CMwb IJle eutrenl repor---Jftll att down b) 65.2 peroemt ..
the first quarter nei iDcome q(
$201,437, 7 oems per abate. on
sli&btly lower revenues ofS2.450,Sl6,
they remain quite &vonbJe com-
pared with a net loss of S 12.824
reported on revenues of $2.394,862
for the second quarter last year.
Year-to-date net income for the fint six months of fiscal 1984 wu
S27 I ,4S6, 9 oenu per share, on total
revenues ofSS1222,142-more thaD
double the net ~me ors 12l.16 7.
D yes. I want to lock in your current high yields on a 6 month
lnvestOr "Account right now.
., s.
-
6MONTHTERM
M Mal" -• J
12.000/o 11.38°10 FSIJC
SMlp .........
• Current Yield* Current Rate . • .
·t~~-~1' h i>tM!dOl'l ll\il\ll!tUlftdc'p'"ih>tS\ •nd h4ftftl'"l-<tl\t\U.al'l'llil"d~ M 11'w>tvfh•ftl ••tr .. ftt. II C\ ~ IMuil •.a1f'
tlwo \Vfl'ft\I flit' k I .0 <' "t">I\ ~ ..
l • ""' ~ • ~11 fl .t ttmr "'" • tthd• ~•"" ~ puoo to m61wr "" ~ '" oub\t.tnnll ~· ft! In
For men nfom\ltion or to open your .c ount, c4'U the
toll-flft Firw ' line now: ( '272·9000. Or -
GrNt Amtricin offi tom .
,
~Cbut OAJLY PIL.OTfluteday, June 12, 1
'Accountant goes to bat with baseball's Sutton .
tcher Don Sutton, Jim Rfskas form
rles of successful county enterprises
What happen to a profes ional ~ lh&cie a the umc for retirement !1draws neat? What happens to a 23-
)year-old paduatt of UCLA who has a ,~bnnd new MBA in ac:countina and
• ~finance. but nodcfinuejobprospccts? ~ If they're fonunate, they find other.
Bick in 1976, when pitcher Don
utton "-'IS addina to the rccord
bich was to make b1m lhe wan-
ingest pitcher in Dodger history, he
'WU ltso doing something about his
financial future. He purchased a
$mall escrow company in Laguna
}tills and began to seek out ways to
make the new firm a.row.
, Jim Riskas was JUSt returning from
a fivt--month tnp around the world. a
'ft he bad promised himself after the
ngors of ~duate and postgraduate
tudy. Htnn_g himself oul as a typ1sl.
Riskas started to look for a wa) to
• make has career an business grow.
Throu.gtt a mutual fnend. Sutton
met Risk.as and. an the las1 week of
1976, he hired the young man as a
NEW YORK !AP} -Tht following llsl shows the Over -I he-counter $lodls •nd warrants that have gone UP
IM ~~.do~ ttie most based on cen ~noe Mondav. . • t -· __ ,.t/J I --1<~ s are 1~. \~: ~ ~ .. ~.~~ ~I •nd percent cttanvn are the between he pr vlou dOslng g d pr-re: and todav's last bfd prfce.
Name
l ~t:>~d un
odnl wt dScrw ~owond 6 stgutt
,1 evlln SonomVI Laurel
u~s Lui ChO Pct 1~ + 11• Up i9] J t .\i Up l'
'• '• Up 1· 14 ~ UP 1 . ,,_ I 11• Up 1 • 'n 3 Up . '~ ~ Up ·' '~ .\i UP 9., 3 If• Uo 9.1
consuJtanl on a proJtct-by-prOJCCt
basi .
The escrow company purchased b)
Sunon rapidly ~come Jewel
Entcrpri an equipmenl lea 1n1
ind propeny nanaaemcnt firm . One
of 1heir fiBt endeavor& was leasina
soft frolen yoaurt equipment, a
resoundina sueteSS.
Rt kas became a ulancd employtt
duMa t 977 and by 1980, he wa
pttS1dcnl and co-<>wner of SunCor
International. The Laaun• Hill?
based firm ~n a period of vigorous
growth resulting today in a network of
companies wboll) or partially owned
bySuttCor.
Besides SuuCor. these companie
include Jewel Enterprises. National
Equity Group (mortaaae company).
The Smllh/Rho<tes Company
(domestic life and disab1hty), Trian
Insurance, Ltd., J&.P Financial Ser-
vices. Inc.' (real estate exchange).
Professional Benefits Administrator,
Inc. (pension administration). The
NEW VORK (AP) mn:;F Ji: ~:z ;~ ij~ m: ~ 'NASDAQ ~lllotll s lne S'l'I 11• l j • 'j GnDeva
!':l:!ftl ~ ~ 1L1> ~~ ?I .. ...:::J iJ , ~ g~~t'
merll.9' me11.en es of• ~ 7 'll 7 • ,.,, ft~ GrevAd ~ "°'~ ~~:; ~ 1JU j;: 1 '& s !,~ I 1 .. GG".,~-,....,....ue> merll.dOwn « wTom ~'t • • n r ~ ""'" c omm·lu lon for uftell 6 ''• unit •;. Hactson Monlln St~·ll urnUPS ,., ur•ron • 4111 H1mOll
llill 4.. A L NL Fn 11'1 111 etVn s 16"-11 [~: I" 2' 2 ,, PT 1 "'• ~ conLI> 241• its~ 1rtfN ' AFAPrOI ~.,.0•1, 11Wlr ' lO ''> IPas 10'• Kllll I l{VM~o ;-/T~ anrad ~ ; 8 t3 1* ACldln s 9''ll Swt 1 1 "iOOY"° Acultay 16 4 ~ , '" 1 ' 1 "" EleNUCI • • ll9 H«IJRS AdlsnW 22 , , IW'm~ 19 19 , E IModl 14 14'4 !~ lnl ~"~°'~ 1'[~ 1 ._ =b,., 1~.~ '*·· Emcr11-" 1 lJ ,, ~ .. " Allcoln S ~ lrtM;;o ., J , EllQConv 31>.. l2 111191 ' ~ma!F .. •n ' 2 .~ ,''ruSG11 J 'n 13>.io Enlhv l\o l'lt ~rcEnr ,.. -.... '• lt Enrwtitl 16'"1 11141 ntorPh AG,_! it''• ?6'" 11Ut II 41 • 2•~ Eq!Ofl 71' 7~ ~IG1 ~~~ f4~ tt,._ llOw~o 1J~ 11 ' ~~ ~!: i~' w.S:O AQ.Hsr • 4 • wTle 14 14 • FIEmo 37\. ll'" -~ko A~1le 7~ 7~ OioGH 1-l6 • r W f ''"' 6' Al'!ISA 11 • I~ omCIH S6 S7'<a .-1 n n ....., -
AMAG mlShr 13 • ~\,, Fllcko ' lS\.o l6 Kamen s
1171ott 'ii"" ...WTl'I ~., ,, FllNFI .,.,.. '31• ~ev ~ 21~-:a -Mi • Fluroco 10 • 10'"' ,),_ Ae>ldMI ?t•i. , , Of'dlS ' " ForeslO 16 2•~ nt 'Arden 9>~ 10 ort SI \ '• 33'> f rnl!CP 12'> 14 atoo!G AtlGsLI 21'• B,,, ~ro\Jr 103' 10'1 f rel\llEI 17 171, naoeV Attltn ?l\.t ullFec l • 11' frHSG 31'• )I•, retos Av~ 19'• 1a0\ ' 1~ ll~ Fremnt lJlli 13•.-, Kulekt -l:1r.c 3:~ .... S..r U F J? 6 ll·16 FullHB ~ l0'9 ~n
Schieftr AJtncy (markctina and
advertisina>. unon Communica·
tions Group (radio bmadcast pro-
du«ion and' )'ndication), and lntc·
crated Prof 1onal Services (con ult-
ants to doctors and demi ts for the
Stttin& up and martc1ina of a prac-liC't).
"Vtrtical intqration ttthntQues
allow us to provide clicnt5 with an
effective netv.orlt financial 1ervice in
ordtr to meet every business and
personal need." Ri kas claim • "And
lhiscoon!ination ofStt\ ace rttuhsin ~ific:antly reduced cost to tht
client."
Ri w attnbutcs much of Sut·
tCor's sucoc s. however, to the indi·
vadual t.a1fonn1 of programs. This
"pay-as--you~o appro4ch 1s de-
Sl&Jtcd to meet the requirements of
lhosc who are lookmg for a cenain
type of fi~ancial C~P,Crttsc, while at the same umc providing the means to
expand diversify as lhe occasi$)n
demands.
"Ceruunly SuttCor is here to make
availablo a broad ranJe of financial
service.·• conunues Rt skas. "But we
are committed to satisfym~ the in-
vestor who is looking for assistance in
.
ach1cvina a very pcc1fac &D&I." Min-
ium invc lmenl 1 a al 125,000.
"Unlike taric •consult1n1 firms
which m1int11n sale& n:lauonshi~
w1lh a tew 1n unincc and mvellmcnt
entities, we have product• to pu h,"
Rt~bs assert ,
"Our prosram att structured in
order that we only make money with
the client rathtr than off the client. ..
Mu1uAl FuNo s
At 31, Sutt or'1 presidcnV~
owncr~nu the profileofa pcr50n
aiven an opponunity, who then blulty
upon and_ mu1maud the btnefiu
mhettnl in the opportunity. All in all,
an exccellent recommendation for
the headofacompanychartettd 1odo
just lhat for its chents.
Don unon, now pitchina for the Milwauk~rewers, enjoys the time
he sp:nd at Sutt r offiOCJ dunn.a
the Wtn\Cf. The din:clion of the
company'• powth rt"0ects his in·
nucncr Yet he leaves the day-to-day
openu1ons of SuttCor to be mana&e<t
byRiW,.
.. , have been fonunate to find
people of the caliber of Jim Risk.ls.''
says unon .
... . How to tell our newsavitlgs accounts
from your sa · s accOt111t •
. • . ..
·=· .... :-: ....
...... .. .. .. .. . . ..
" •
.j :
Ii • • • • • • . , •
Tiered Money Market Savings
Account: rate up to 9.003
yield up to 9.3813.
If you want n saving~ acco unr rh;it rc:illy r;-itc".
open nrw of nur tiered money mCtrkct "'wing"
ncco unt-. All it take" i-.. n $2.500 minimum J cpn-..1t
Like nny -..<1 v1ng-.. account. you can m,tke der ('"'h
nr wHhdrnwal~ nnyt1me you cho0se. Bot unlike
other -..;wi ng" accounts. ynu 'II get higher m:irkct 1ntt'r~
e"c r,1tt'" tor a hiidw r ,,1\·i ng~ haltrncc Mamrain
;in nve~r;-igc J fl ily hal.ince between $2. 500 00 .ind
~JIJ,9l)9 99 ,ind you ·11 e;-i rn H 84'\, mtcrc"t per nnnum
'fi2Ll.(\1() to $49,999 99 e;-irn, ~.94'\, intc re't pt•r
annum ~50.000.00 or more enrn-.. 9 ~H I '\, interest pt•r
.rnnu m AvL·rngc dti il y h;ibnLc-.. under $2.5(lL1 OL
"oil e.1rn ti ') 2 5'',, 1ntcre-..r rn re
We'll even give you check writing rrivilcgc" t'f
up tu 3 checks per month .
\\'here cl-..e can -¥.Q_u find n -..;l\'mgo., accu unt
rh.H offer' rht~ type of flexihility and high mnrket r:m.~
in terest ? Pmhnhly not where yuu 'n· ":1' mg nnw
An 8 5'\, race 'lielc1 8. 84",, an 111tall-v An H 6'',, rac"'
-v11..·hlf, ri o .. r,, armua/l-y An 9()\1",, w ee yidcl~ l) 'HI'\, annu ·
alh /nk">.c:'it '-ompuwrwn I\ ''m/,lc mrac:'r Lctl1.:ulmc:cl
<m ·Ll Jo~ or 366 cfoy ha ''~ crncl l1c:cl1CL·J mcmrhly Rate:'
an. '"h/1..'d w /1erwd1 c cha!1Rc
• I
Passbook Money Market Savings
Account: rate 9.503,"yield 9.9253.
For rhosl' of vn u keeping $10 .000 or more tn
.l ~ ')'\, rn".;;book ilC((lUl1l. JU~t for the convenience
p( n pa-..-..hnok. \\'l'.\'L' got a hetrcr idt.>il Ot•pm.ir that
monl'y in a P:-to fic Frdcr:ll Ptl-..-..buok Mom.~ Market
:l\ mg-.. Account and yo u·ll earn 9925l\, inrcrc..,t
r c r Ct nnum. Th.u '-.. rract1cally Jouhle what you 're
making now. r •
Yl ,u '11 ).?CC a pa-..shook that workh just like your
t)ki unl' O ne rhar Ice... you wichdraw or dt.:po~it mom.·y
anvtimt' vou like \Virh all the ~afety and ~cur1ry
of a rn~~hook . If your balance ever drop!'! below
$10.000 0 \ you 'll l>till earn a 5 2 S"o intcrc~t rate
But at fl 9 50°11 r;itc in tc:ld of 5 51•,,, it doe~n't
l:ilY for a -..cnou.., ..,aver to hnve anything but our
Pa..,-.,hook Money Market nvin_gs Account.
/nrttre~t com/mra rron i< $tnt/Jle mt4:rc.~c calculated
on a Joe:; or ~66 da'I ha 1~ and l.~cdm:d monchl'I. Rate'
url! ,uh11!d w fx>rioJi.: c.hanR,l1. -
PACIFIC FEDERAL
S/1VIN ;sAND LOANASSOClAT
CH1 Hl [f D 18
ii'
I I
Monthly Money Market Savings
Account: rate 10.53, yield 10.53.
There's a big difference between our monthly
money market savings account and other monthly
accounrs. Our current 10.5% per annum interest rate .
Ir·~ a high rnte you'd expect to find only on
lon,ger term 6 or 12 month nccounts. But with Pacific
Fedcrnl's momhly tlccount, you can earn these mar·
kct rnrcs for a little as ~O days, just by maintaining
n $2 , 500.00 minimum balance durinJ,? that time.
Of cour~. if you want your money to continue
to grow, you can automnricnJly renew the account
m the prevailing high marker rate each time your
~O,dny ce rtificnre mature ·
o don't waste any time collecting high intere. t
pen a Monthly Mnnt·y Mnrket ;win~ A~count
nt Pncific Federal nnd smrr cnrning Ion~ term mt~
on your m n term"'
The mccn:st L<Jmfmrwion i simpl.: intl."re r c«tkulcucd
on d 365 or 366 day bthi~ anJ c.TeJited monthl'I. Rm~
cm: ~Hbjcct to fx71oaic (hcHlJ.!<! Cc"/ )'Our /oc:til brandi
or J .. fll\1-PACIFIC/or l1trrc:nt rate:~. ~di:ral f1.!K1tlmion
n'C/ttire d uh.\tcUHia mtcn:'t /h!nalty for c1.1r/ v1irh,lm\t'Ul
•
7
;..
'
....
"
9 .9. ft1 w
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(,JJ ~ 0 fl) ,...
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0 • 1 ::::s . ..-. I\'\ '--"-, ...... n · ,., :S c .n ""1'"0
0 "' (/) = r+ ~ r;t-IS» 011,c. '< ~ .... ='. '" o -c:; n~ VJ c:~OQ~n ~rse.::t:i
::s ::r :::s "l ~
(D -·00.10 -~ Q ~ -s ~ g
{'P ::3 ~~ c. c. ::S i ~ ~ ~~J c:r r--:rrlo s-r;'i ~; . ,:r "' ; .CT.
I.
' ~ ..... j. c:. . 1(D • ~ (/} 0 ..,,_
"'C 0' :::s <·n-~,~ -~ ~~" rJJ ~ """' "1·.~. "(D-o~ c. . ..,J Pi> ::r ,,... 0.
'< " iil -_.. (") o.~~i rt-..... , ..., 0 :r(JQ ~·
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I J.·111 f I tf sa!izl §~ ~ ... -~a~ cL . I ... ..i-,r.. I~ I 11 ·sr . ~
I I i ... 1· . .f Jt6rgi ---~ . I_ ~~ri¥' 9.~ .... '·. ··-=-~~ . . . 'pi~~-mr? I I -I •• .... .. • • • • • • • • • •• 94 ~.·· 1~ ·~1!11 ·· 11 11 I•.°'. ===~-1 I r.~in$~~7~f. il'd8iiD~l 1' ~,~~~~;·.r· 1'1 #~1·1111·1·,ri ... 11t111111111I~I1'111111 Ho~,.,, • 1 .. 1.:. ~ .. I.~... . I ~II • t< c l ·11~·, -1:f -J:f _ 111I1 1 1 1 1.1 I I ,.,. 1 . . _ • -:::1'6 • ,
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• . • ·1, 5 l . t IZ: • ... ... :1' .f•:, '1 a.1 { !P,. ~· ! fj;~.mn.;;.~1 1 ~~. i ... : !· 11: . ,:f ·ti •. ,,1 I ± • . .u1+u 10~, +++1 _ .,. ,1~1 '' . 1 . • ., ::; . • ,, ~;$'~-. , '$'1~ $" m . -.· -. 941!, .... 1 • ·) ~
I. • "' _,.J •", ~~ _ r • -tlJ. i . I. t. 1 • r:_ ../" " I .. _
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I
~ couwrw 1ltl •T•TI OI CAJ..MIONU Pott 1ltl COUNTY OP OIUJtQI
&i.t of, ILILUETH LYNCH,
eh ELIZA8ETH 0 LYNCH. 1
ELIZABETH OEATAUDE l YHCH,
0.CllUd
CAH NO. A1•11t
NOTICa OI' INnNTM* TO 111.L
MAl. ""°""TY AT P'NVATI .....
NOUC. II Mraby ~ lhll, IUb-i.ct to confltmatton by the ~ entltl9d Superior Court. on JuM 21.
10..,., at 10 a.m., or thenMlft• within
Che ll~ atklwtld by law, JACK W
l YNCH. u admtnlttrator wl1h the
wlll anexad Of the 1111te or El.IZA· BeTH LYNCloi, deCMNd. wlll ~at
private Nie to tti. hlghelt Ind belt
fltBLIC NOTICE net bidder on tri. term• and oon-
----------dftton• hatalnaftaf maintlon'ld Ill '11Ct1TIOUI .U .... 11 rlQhl, title and lnt11'911 ol ELIZA·
NAM1 tfATl•NT 8lTH LYNCH, deCMMd. at the
The following peraona era e1o1ng ttma ol h4lr CS..tll and all right, title
oualMH u · and lnteir .. t thlt the .. tale hu ~
FOUNTAIN VALLEY FLOAlllT, =~ ';',,. ~~ :::=.~.::
'1977 Qarftlld Avan~. Fountain VU-rHI pr~~ In the Coun"' ley, CA 92708 .,
Kuuku lntamatlonal. Inc , 890 S. ot Orange. t•t• of California, de-
Beacft Blvd .t212, Anaheim, CA ICflbad U followa;
9280'4 Tract •ee. Blodt c. Lot a. tc11aon
II I ...... .... Square u lhown on mep r.corded Thlt bu MU I conduct...,.,, a In 8oott 18, p ...... 48 of ~•UIC corpor1tlon ....-Putin Shal ~t MIPS, Orange County, Callfomi&.
Thll 1tatWnent wu lllad wttll the PA9'Clt. MO. 111 ...... 11
County Ctatt of Orange County on I•~= t:~ 8~ ~t_::
M1y 10 11184 f'Mll1t Santa Ana, California .
... _.It a a----'·t .... _ The .... II eubject 10 c:unent
6
4
2
•
-r --... ..... , ... ......_ .. ft, cond1t1~ -le 457q C.mfH'I Drtn lute. t '-·--· 1• ........ ·-•' -Newpor11Mcft. cA. ._ tloN, right., rlghta of way. Ind >
Publllhed Orenge Cout Diiiy a11ament1 ol record1, any-
Pt101M1y22 29 June5 12, 1984 ancumbranQMot...cordtobe .. U.
2ee7.a.. lied out of the pt.irch.._. prtci
5
6
7 a
The property 11 to be IOld on en
"U II" bul$, IXC9j)t lor tltle.
Ml.IC NOTICE Bid• or olfer1 era Invited lor thl1
property and mull be In writing Ind ITAT~MaNT op: wlN be recetwo at the office of
AIAHDONMINT op: Ull op: TIMOTHY J. BLIED. attorney for the
FICTtTIOUI •UllNEll NAMI 1dmlnl1tretor, 11 Columbia Saving1
The following pareon1 h•ve •b•n-Bulldlng, 17911 Von Karmen, Suitt
doned the uM oltM Flctltloui Bual-t 30. trvlne, California. tel.
nea1 N1me 1.F ASSOCIATES, IN-71-4-883-18-44. (2787 Brt1tol, Sutte
TERIOR PLANNERS , OU 100, Costa M .... Callfornta, tel
• a ~~ i'w'~~"*~~~~~--~~ ,15,
Bullneu Name referred to abov9 ~court or ad
wH llled In Or1nga Couniy on June to TIMOTHY J, BLIEO per90nalty, at
1 1983 FILE NO F217504 any time 11111' flrwt pt.ibllcatlon of
Toni c Menou.. 3015 Croyden thll novttc:. end beforernake Ille
Bey, Colll M .... CA 92828 ..... R1Ch1rd Johna, 4853 Llncoln The property will be IOld on the
a-201, M1nn1 Oa4 Rey, CA 902tt followlng 11m11: CUii or part c:ull
Thl1 bu•lllMI wu conducted by• and part cradtt. IM terma ol Md\ gan«al partn«lhlp credit to be acceptable to tM
Toni Mendez unelerwlgned and to lM Sup«tor
Th11 111tement wu tiled with the Court, 10% of tM amount bid to
County Cleric of 011nge County on ICCOmP&nY the olfw by oettltlad
Mey 9, 1984 ctwldl, and the ballllCa to be p.id at
Publllhed Otenge Cout Diiiy c1oM of aeorow aftw connrmatton
Pilot Ml)' 22. 29, June 5. 12. 11114 of aate by the Superior Coutt
2tlM-8-4 Tu ... ren11. operating and main·
tenance axpenMI, and pramlum1
NU.IC NOTICE
'1CT1TIOUI IWllNHI
NAMe ITATIMaNT
The fotlowlng per90n1 lrt doing
bullneu H .
CREATIVE CONSTRUCTION
SERVICE. dba "SUNSET POOLS",
8 Mclaren, Suite A. lrvlM. Ca
9271-4
Tommy L,. OMn. 3912 River Ave.
N-por1 BMch. Ct 921183
Jim Engel. 8 McLeren. lrvlM . Ca
9271-4
Thi• bullnesa 11 conducted by •
general partn.rlhlp.
Tommy L Owen
Thll ltlltment WU Iii.cl wtth the
County Clerk of Orange County on
May 101 198A ,.,...,.
Publlthed Otenge Cout Dally
Piiot Mey 22 29. Ju,,. 5. 12. 198A
21184-14
NU.IC NOTICE
P:ICmlOUI •UllNIH
NA .. IT A TIMINT
The foltowfng pettOn II dOlng
buSinell •••
SUPER CHICKEN. ELITE FER·
RARI SERVICE. 1731 SuJ*lor Ave .•
'Coate M .... CA 112827
AntOlllo Luciano c ... 11n1. 1850 1P107. 18th St , Newport a..cn.
CA 1121183
Thia bulln ... 11 conducted by 1n
lt"ldlvtdual.
Antonio Luciano Cuellnl
Thi• ltetem.nt wH tlled with the
Oounty Clerk of Orange County on
Mey 1-4, 198-4 ,Mll20
Publllhed Or1ng• CoHI Delly
Piiot Mey 22. 29. June 5, 12. 198-4
2710-8-4
P\8.IC NOTICE
FICmlOUI 8UllHIH
NAM9 ITATallllNT
The followtng per'IOn 19 doing
~linetlu
STRUGGLING ACTORS MOVING
CO • -435 Cena! St .. Newpon BMch.
CA 921183
MlchMI Alan CltM. '435 canal
St Newport S.actl, CA 921183
Thia bullllMI 11 conducted by 111
lndlvldull
Mld\MIA CatM
Thia ltlltment w" Iii.cl with the Coonly ei.rtt of Orange County on
M1y 15, 1984 ,,....2
Publllhed Orange CoHt Dally
Piiot May 22. 29. June 5, 12, 19'4
2711-8-4
f'ta.IC NOTJCE
"CTITIOUI ltultNHI NAMI ITATIMaNT
Ttle followlng persona 1ra doing
bu11nau u ·
(Al COAST CLEANERS (8) COA·
ONA DEL MAR CLEANERS, 3200 E
Pktflc Coa1t Highway. Coroo1 d-4
Mtr, CA 92825
Gregory Seen Kearna. 2520 23rd
StrMt. ~ BMch. CA 92860
R1ym011d N~ 3720 C•mpu1
Drive. Newport BMch, CA 92tl60
Thl9 tiualneM It conduciad by: a
general P-''*INP Grag<>fj'&Mn Keeml
This 1tatement WU flied with tM
County Cleric of Orange County on
M1y 11, 198<1 nuno
Publllhad Ot1nge CoM1 Dally
Piiot May 22. 29 June 5. 12, 11184
2706-SA
P\aJC NOTICE
P:ICTmOUl•U ..... 11
NAMI ITATl•NT The followlng perlOn II doing
bUllneelU:
INFRARED ASSOCIATES. 28'4t
N. ForMt Ava.. Senta Ana, CA.
92706
Oonlld Del Endert, 25-48 N For-
"' Ave , Santa Ane, CA. 02709
Thll butlMU 11 oonductad by an
Individual
Donald 0.. End«I Tht. 1ta1.men1 wu llled With t,,_
County Cl«lc at Orano-County on
May 11, 1H-4 PW7ll
PublilMd Orange COMt Daily PllOt May 22. at. June 5, 12, 1IM 2707.f.4
MUC NOTICE
on lnturanc:e a<:0a9table to t
pt.irct'laMf lhtll be prorated u of
the d1ta of r9COrdlng ol con-
veyance Examination of title, re-
cording of conveyance, tren1fer
taxM. 1nd any title lnauranc:e pollcy
lh11l be at the expenM of tile
purctt..., or purchalerw
The undersigned rnervat the
right to rejactany and 111 bid• prior
to entry of an order confirming tile .....
DATED; JUf\417, 198-4· •
GALLIVAN, SCHMIESING & BllED
TIMOTHY J. BLIED
At10f"Myt for Admlnl1trator JACK W LYNCH
TIMOTHY J. IUID, Hq.
GALLIVAN. SCHMIESING & BLIED
2787 BrlltOI. Suite 100
Colt1 M .... CA 92828 Publllhed aranr Coast Dally Piiot. June 11.
12 1 • 198A •
M-15
P\BJC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
WILLEMINA CATHERINE
FORD, AKA WILLEMINA
CATHE RINE AKA
CECELIA FORD, AKA
WILLEMINA C. FORD,
AKA MINA FORD AND OF
PETITION TO ADMJNIS..
TER ESTATE NO. Al %3341
To all heirs, beneficiaries,
creditors and contingent
creditors of WILLEMINA
CATHERINE FORD. AKA
WILLEMINA
CATHERINE, CECELIA
FORD, AKA WILLEMINA
C. FORD, AKA MINA
FORD and persons who may
be otherwile interest.ed in
the will and/or estate:
A petition bas been filed
by ELINOR ADRIENNE
NILES in the Superior Courtt of Orange County re-
questing that ELINO
ADRIENNE NILFS be a
pointed as penonal re
resentative to adm.iniater th~
estate of WILLEMlNA
CATHERINE FORD. AKA
WILLEMINA
CA THERINE. CECELIA
FORD. AKA WILLEMINA
C. FORD. MINA FORD
(under the Independent Ad-
ministration of F.atates Act).
The petition is set for hear-
ing in Dept. No. 3 at 700
Civic Center Dr.. West,
Santa Ana, CA 92701 on
June 20. 1984 at 9:30 A.M.
IF YOU OBJECT to lhel
granting of the petition, yo~
shouJd either appear at th
hearing and state you ob}e'C
\Jons or file wntten ob}t!C-
tiona with the court before
the hearing. Your appear-
a~ may be in person or by
your attorney.
IF YOU ARE A CREDI
TOR or a oontingent cred.ito
of the deceased. you mus
file your claim with th
coun or present it to the per
sonal representative ap
pointed by the court withi
four months from the date o
fint issuance of letters
provided in Section 700 of
the Probate Code of Cali-
fornia. The time for f
claims will not expire prior
to four months from the date
of the hearing noticed above
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file ttJ>t by the court. U
you are lnt.e-rested in the es-
tate, you may 1erve upon \hf
executor or ~'Crator, or
upon the attorney for the ex
ea. t6t or iM1minlatrator.
file with the court w1
proof of let'Vk'e. a writ
ttqU•t atatln& that you
lire a.pedal notice of the m
inc of an Inventory and a
prailement of estate aaetl
of th petitions or aa.-oun
menllon«i In S«tlon l
and 1200.6 of the Caillo
Probate Coe».
BnM.."t R. Borad, E~.
P.O. 801 ?4
AnoW, CA. HU3
Pubbshf'Cl Oraltl Cou
Dally Pilo t June 6, 1, 13, 19
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M~TD1
Dtl'lOYMDfT
Help W1111Wld "Jot. Wanled
.UCHAfl>tSE
An1oq.-
Apploa,,...
A\l('\lont
Sidi MAll#nala
C-rM. f.qulpmet C
Ccmpu'"' ,.,.... IO You
rumnwrr c;., ... S.lft
H-hold Coodo
Jt'W•lr\ MM no,......,.
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Mla Wat1Mld
M.-:al INV\lfl'leftta
Olla P"lomnu,.. •
!quoprnt<11
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W"~IO~
BOATS
,_ it.no ••I Pow•r
S.11
S...,..d SIU M1nrw Eqwp
M11n1~
Shp1&~
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Suppl'"-'INl.Nn.lon S.1li-tdl
TRANSPORTATION
Aln:r•h ~ CAm.,.n
Mow 81U.
• MOlal'ey'ci.t!koo<tn
MOl« Homft Rv ·a
Tra1a.n Tra.,..1
Tra1i.n Uuu1y
AUTOMOTIVE
Au1o i.-nc
A111o~..,,.
Au IOI W1111..i
Spot11 A.-. llodll
4 W.-1 Dnwe ,.,.....
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AUTOS ll'ORTtD
All•~
AIMii
A...Un BMW
Citrotf\ O.toun o.i..or.. ...
,HTatl
""' Honda
t.uru J.,....,
Je,_.,
l..ambof(h1n1
l.Anf!• LAI ..
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M-111 M~Bm1
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1211,000 .........
Ull,000 1111 WtttlaJ
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IN NEWPORTCCNTlR
6449060
Daily Pilat
642-5678
IAYllH •m U"UIT .....
Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai
Kai. 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. $69~.ooo.
11'111 TllUll
11Hhllfe1Ttn1M
Panoramic bay & ocean view. 4 Br, 4 Ba,
patio, pool home. F~ price •77~,000.
PDUIUMI~
Ocean & Jetty views, marine room. 4 Br,
3 Ba. 3700 sq. ft., car parktns. $1,28~.ooo.
IAYllM PUii UYPlllT
Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up,
2 Br, 2 Ba down, 2 boaupaces:-$1,3&0,000.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
I 1 I t1 ) • I· I . " -~ ' . ;
H. 0 p y [ I ,· 1 • I' I I .
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1/: Macnab · lmne
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642-5678
I
$~.17 per day
That• ALI. YoU pay for Unee, 30daye
In lht DAlY
Pl OT
SERVICE
DIEC TORY
pk.i• lht IAVINf MIRROR and lht HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER eYery
Wec:tneldey It noutractwget
CALL TODAVll
Ul .. Llll
YCNr Deity PllOl ~Directory Aepeeentauw
IU-41111d. HI .
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Daily Pilat · · · · · · · · · · · .. · · · ·.,
PART TllE r
~totor Route Available
Newport Beach area, three
hours ~r day. Earn approx.
600 ~r month. CaU 11:00
to 4:00 PM. A k for Bruce
Em le).
CIRCULATION DEPT.
642-4321 IDE
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
)JO w eu ST • COSTA MESA CA .,.~.
" ....... itrit•••t tiiti•\.J•t•
. . .
~''
r ' -~~ --------
ca °'8noo CONI DAILY PtlOTIT....i.y, June 12, 1118•
...... ····-··-·-.....
4 °'1 .... S.-11 P.M.
Thut•·lu" SUAF &
IANO HOTtl. ......... =--t.iar'-o ..... ........, .... '°
lrvlne Dry Cl•aner1
count• ~. Hr9 & dvs very. No eaper nee:. M
lhru F 9-3, CaH Jan
552-t322 --· Perm I dsly C<IM 3 girl of.
lice, Good phone &
typirlg. KnowledQa ol So. Cant-.,. ... or re.i ea1ate
helptul.,*87!.-2774 •·••rt Needs summer n.Jp, part
& lull time. Cashiers. use.. stock & food dept
Apply al Per.annal 0 1-
llCI, 2200 H.,l>Or 8/\td,
CM. M&-7701
oa SIM It r oat SIM ltl Ill Btlr Wut 1111 lt11 W1111t4 11 .. Anll•!Nt HU -... h 711 Atl!t. !eer1!4 Allll, ,,.......
wtnll l'All•IW •RUOHOOI. TtAC••• Ul-UIB ·--,~-~1g~il~cw~•~·.,.~..,~~1~ ... ~~1rn~F~G~-~~w~11:ln:::::l~l~l~IFY~olt~!!!t~~H~~~ll;l;J 2 ~~ ... In IMI'• &1111..... TOCO-teechMl11melrW\lt fdNtlOr~&llu-STUOEtffs--wNnlOt$1H&90-1W -..1450 ...... 71JM
11..tlna dllelt. No exper. F(T P{T -hew vel6d Pf~ICl'IOOt 711·1414 ~ YOU!" cMnc9 10 17 86 P9Y ,.,. FIT wt:tn ..___ lo! -
,nee. ComPMY Wll ttlllft. ctrl\olrw **"-. ~ In wtlctyf116-ft17-'.ndl rnell.eJ111t1incoM9.,Jln• rn9lor company HMd .,_ ~ --T~Kh~ •2', ~AOE8EL£CTIOf\I OF
M\.c haw Cir. JOnt w... pw'90A. f.am to 12 nOon. Pt-ornlMflt . • 1reve4 d~ Wkd)'•llurte-h ~r. c•r. Opet"inQI In Ill Pil)tll '"2 c;;n I = lil\O ... ~ Nf:W I USED 8MW'81 I _:::;::,::.=c:,..;..;,;.._-,-
oome II ~-FOf OM11PJtY Plritlno m 9QllftCY l\ll90t full tlmt 9&.ld"• SW $46..Wf ........ "'9f'lt ~ •• Old, """ Very he •boefd•b... Lm ..... at>P'· cd Mr. Watkin&, MW Al\IMlm Hilton · a. 19ent. Apply ASAP. SITIT/lfO-. lllU9' be 11+, ~ 10 146-7080 ~ dcef. 11u .ooo VOl.UM!.SAl.£8 Ma~ T '111*1. '" ConVWttlon t44-GHO. au. or CarOI. '4"'111 Pl)'CMe./Aec:. T.... *"'· u .a . dt... c.. &te dog. l0¥9bte, frilncf.. MOOtlM*. .... 1~ 1 HRY!Ce .. LEASING * UllAll * W1y, AAaMlm. P/TIME: S.t ~. Rental l)ftOM, W.W ~lif ~~= 4'5-33 ll ~· NMdl hofN. 09Y' •ft SN fUy' OMolr 21'3" Sf70 N. cn.t)' Avt,
No DI* liluc* XlntNll#y Parl• TlrM Ptrmanenl Apt cMc:k 0Ul/llt1 ciun-•Ills helpful. 517-3380 Hunt "4-tltO 7'9-HOO exll,. 310 hrl, ;.,/trlr~ LONG l!ACH
5-46-5431 11111111 Ing Musi l'l•ve blk1 . ..-1or M1tll. Lib,Jyr...,,,ChMlf>llMI, ccww,alllllttu.121,000. (Ne.C~ll(ll·.001 °'""' ,,,_,... SOTllYllEOln ,,_, -nme .,.,., 0yt _, 10>. 1114) Hl·llll llOlUl fltlT WFICE &mllllll F/11-. -··-. -. TUOftl..flUOHll • yatd. Tlf-0332 e ..... "1-1592 1r.o.:.int Wtileoml PIT'""'· Faml!y Pf.ct.. -u1-·· ...... -·---·-1m-• .... ··---'-=====,,,=-1===~~~=~1 OPENSEVENOAYS 14e4aSI "' .,..... II""' ESTATE Gen'lotcdutlM. 'WwPort ...... "'" ..... em..,....7·• SHEJ\RY'S POOOi.£8 '13 llyttner 1t' 2", hard· e11per. ~' Newport 899Ch rnllr'ketlnQ ~ Center. clM f40."'40 ment In CM, Benefltl. For Poodle tr• to DOOd f'IOme, top, ulecl only 8 hrl, lllce --------·I
MEDICAi( office MCrty firm Is now u.pand6ng SALISllEITALS lntooall5"~77 54&-2'41 n•w. t 2 000, TOP --------1 •llP«· For Chlroprectlc and needs +ntllllgeni. llSTAIT l .... E llOlnUUEI TMma.rk911nQ a--1 1203.IOtmo. 87&.1511
one In s..i Beach, dayt ~IC peo9ll lO do •TYPISTS 'TELEPHONE appolntment•;;•;,:~·;,::u:;..,• .. _
9Ylt'1 I S11 . A.M, Musi lnl•r••llng l•l•pl'lon• LIOIUltl Aa:tltl lllJ •RECEPTIONISTS .. net\ o.c. Airport ...... 11275. ts;; 5115 anlq Olk ltlt1, I I
h•ve 11..nowleQge In Ins. WOl'k on behl.ll ot N•· ,,,, •••• ,,.,,.. •CRT-DATAENTRY Pro/ office .... '*1 wn..11'1ertop5.48-7827 1:,;;,~,.~.~-~.~ .. ~c~.~.~_ .... .,.,,,;;.,.;;;,.•,11~-!!' bllllng, Bkkpg, P.T .. UonaJ Compenl-. Salary CLERKS Phones, p:2bfd, 1lplog_ plu•11lntbonU1.l'orlnt_er-lll-1HO • tlmelndlvlduat110Ml ap. 7 ti yeljow 1 90\'a r10lytl eall. Trallar.
1213 VllW call u. ... h B!Mmer Work now. Top Ply. O.C. polnlrMnt• tor .cooun1 Jo 1 ·Good __ .... ,__ $1300/obo. 78t-171KJ'
Offtce c..!.. ~~ leVftl 5-45-5T79 '"""' , Real E11a1e area. VICTOR ~=-w:c.i;r~·::J 95'00';'at)..olft c..,,.,.,,..,., * ll'IMI.. 'S1~~ng
po•ltlon av•ll wl taat Par1Tlml,pV1:poa1offlol. TEMPORARYSERV.CES on ciOffd sales. Call 7'1ole/5 11oveat•t , Sellbol1t--28'1Q 40' !or Elife '
growing co. Must bl Typing • must, lie• hr1. TR'CT SALE•S •341 BJrcti, "105, N.B. Marc •t 47l-4000 blu/brlck pl•ld S300. ~er. Avalon P.te1nc brlght,or~eclw/good Nwpt Airport loc . n 556-8520 telephoM Tred.Orti:wooddlntmtbl Charters.&42·6&15 Celt 8ped9I
olc •111s. l51· 1l 15 5-49-2217 secret try Appointment Mtter PIT. &. 5 chi's 1150. 13J-1050 IHtl 191)'
8Rl8'11l1 111 !DIHGIR
Ill SAllTA AllA
Ml·DllO ~pA.liJLY SIJKll '!53p
"""
•• ~ M5·8202 llt.ktlptr M•hKI PIJfSOrl 10 Ml Bl9Cfic neuglh)'dl queen 1~' 6 1u 1flf '5MW Brffk·ewatTrlp
-..epp11forconau111ng lot'•bedS100.&44-5709 iu 15-40.Jembor .. RoedNB PITlml trainee. YP9 "°PART-TIME, V1n.d houn IECIPTlllllT WOttl PrtOllllf llrm. Can work out ol n-.... ..... -•·• F··" 111 "'par w/18 hp Ad!9C1nlt0Fuhlon '1·.&1 Rabbi! Conwwt, lllr, wpm& lOkeybylOUCfll to Jnctudl ••rty AM E S f home or OUt otc. Hourly..._._, ._. . ...,. rebllM«c. New paint, ttt latend/Newpof'ICllnlflf am/Im c111, c.le1n .
""31. $3.35 hr. 5-48--5623 weeltends. Must,,..,,. (t.,: IEIEUL "''" 110. •er• .,, wage. 759·14•9 •« 4PM stn. $175 536-3240 tr1f. 11900, &46-3328 ..... ......... •8.000 Ml. 17995. 060
ask for Dorothy. pendable vehka (small Nl::r,m ~:" .,,~~ •• ,.,1111111 I m ...... E 21 ' MINI Dey CrulMr ol57. D 8"0-"89 ...,.,.,
tri.ick , v1n, station pit opening tor I ttiarp. •!Or Real Estate owner In LES 957-8133 Roadn.tnnerlrlr,'""11mln1 lllU 1117 ®
wagon) 10 ualll news-vivllclou• pet son in a Newport Beach Sffll.1 HLEPlllE llllYtof cond 11tru, ,,,......, In Mtt ·h 280i iinU' owner, air, ~-OPEllll IEW paper dealer In lrvtne baaut otc Pte1sant slatting of a new office. II you enfOy people Md LOVESEAT FREE It you w1ler, beal olfr 979--0231 ol •IPd, 72. carW. $3700 . -.-atea. Musi be depen-phOM voice, typing (ol5 Salary commensurat1 telephone lalk It.la job II purehue chlnl cabinet , 080 Btll 175-02•2 ·~ ~ IR110$ dabl•. Con1ac1 Greg w p m I , g 0 0 d wt th 111 per I• n c e . !or youl Allr.Cllve voice lor·S650. ~·9050 llarilt!lf-lt. 7011 : U GON II.
Need Managers, Inter-HydeMonclaythruFrlday speu1or•mme1, uuno. 833-9870 and open mlod neceaa-I fathl , Salt 15 hp •j;;;;:;i oott>oar'd 79 OATS N WA • a
viewer's, Supervisors, Re-between .9~~ 110:30 sor1ing mell, gen or-SECIET,llY (EIEC ) ary. )(Int 1al1ry and HI .,,•,••1• 1980'. 50 hrs uM. w/tsnk :Z. =~e'..~~ Hkl
c•pl!onl11a, Models, ganlz•llon & polished • bonu1 programs. Cftll 8·• • • $850 548-1().43 8am-•pm En1et1.iners. Telephone cHenl contact skms re-OfficeolthePresldent Mon·Frl.(714)250-0355 Save50%&more onnew Fit 1122
Operators ancl Dance lrl-nl 11111 ••••H quiied Hrs 1-5. Oepen-Corp tieadquar1ers 101 T top cttJallty bed sell all lliJI I Deck1 ?OU~ a1ruc1or1 F II or pat1 --blU $5 RE. H1Y8Slmenl firm ltu elephona Work. tult N 2od ·-'78 Spyder 57K ml, drit lime N.o "••Po,;e··e ns. serv. e1CP91'. prel./wlll di IY • mu11. P8' an lllnl career oPPIY In an AdV«lillng COl\M.lltanl 10 Y ouar. ot •or r• 9 fool beam, main chin-red AM/FM •lll'ec> cue .... ll•ln ff depodbl !1811. hrs. hour to slert wlu,Yiew In exiremety last-paced en· work p/llme ...,./Wkncl, bull!•. Twin Ht, juat nel, side tie. S2501mo. 132•50• 551 -4&8I '
lllE lolEIU'I
=!~r:~:~~~lt~ Eves/wknd1. 760-8305 ~I~~~-6s7.ot.L~ ~a~t!! vlronment, with dl't&ralty nice Tu1lln olc. relaxed rr!9!,1~ ~ =1· 675-3063 'I , 2000 S der Con LfUl SEOIETAIT the hours lrom 2p.m. to Phone sales. Madd benefit Court House otf Jam-& challenge Must pos-atmoahete. ' • Boel sllp Newport Bueti 1:.. PY ~· !, : for Huntington e..cn Law 8p.m. FRED AST AIRE shell Fii p/I Ell.p not b 0 re e F 0 r 8 pp 1 sess top notCn SH, typing II SALES Orflllte king-size noatlon 3ol' or 18sa. $8 pr '1. ' ~ -:'~mp~1~2:50
rlrm. Mutt also rtave e11-DANCE STUOIOS neceS,..,Y. o11hr g up. !71ol)851-1000. & otganl.za1lon1I lkllls. *Ill.I! OllO"" waterbecl & headbOerd 8"2_,.808 •
SOUTH
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YILllW&IEI
"WEWIUIOT
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---~~IB~ dlapl•y 2727 Newport Blvd., Suite 75-4-ll•l Non/smoker. Send re-54'" 1 w/matchln r.oll-top .
: 84 ",... ----• ;._,..µarr NilWJKSr1 • ' ' ~~-~ ... r.~~:!!:E::::~:;*~~~~~~'!i1~f~~CIU' ~J.Q;.. Ml1 6 UJ!: . -And Leasing
11711 s.act1 Blvd . PERSON Expe<. ""ef. Pl-T ee••h. CA Harb()( In Iron! ol new em/Im, air~ ..... ""'' .., llrm. ypln~. llllng and ..... •--I I s II "'° ... ••-UUl SECIETllTY time. Snapshol 1 Hr •• h K•"" Shurs pr,.,,., rH 9Ul'an · • -uuu --.. P some 1rr1n • .... us! ave Stunning brUI glass col boats, low proflle pawer I•.=~-~~-~~ needed lor temporary lull I ==~=~----1 hot o . c 111 MI k e own car Starting salary please. C•H Ms Kelllf 730-7002 tbl g din Mil Cotton boats 10 36 .. 873-1391 IO Hond1 Accord lX
Huntington EIMCh
1ime WOOi In Huntington lllEI Im. ~6-2•2• $1000/mo. 95s.3822 SRI AIY THE SAIL LOFT BAR & aofa/IOvtl, Oak: wall unit, ask tor Ken Nelson. H1tohb1ck , or9ln•I
Beech llw llrm. Mus1 be 3 Positions BYall. Sant• Plasllcs GRILL above the Jolly cot tbl aet, sof• sect'!! owner, auto trwi1, power
(714) 142·2000
&lg wanted! Good cond.
Can mek• peyments °""' 3 10 • monthl. Good
etlldlt rft 13 1-ICMt
bperienced. Call Chrfsla Ana Otflce. No 1xper. I "I I t9n restaur.nt FIUIACl.AL PUlllll Roger In Lagunl Beech 11 O&k tbl/ol chrl S200 Oak M•cu• Chwlnel. boet lo 11•1rlng, air, am/tm
•1 &47-«>41 nee. Training provided. IC •• ,.,. w a l ter 1 W•I1re 11 · Seccy !or Financial Plan-ac,...arr.tlng appUceUons bdrm '400. 54'3-2241 36'. $150 up, Wlr & pwr. atereo. 8 111. ml. $5000 Xlnl Income. For appt. 11Pll fe 1• HoatlH011ut. AP~ In ~ d6par1-N. B. Invest-w;d° .. F fr --2..5 5-42-966e 5"45-42el LIUL llOITUT ctJJ Mr. Albers, 662-58-43 Im med openings on person at DI Prego s Ital-ment Arm Typing. min 1 -~· lol~ • p.m. TAN IOI• gd CCH1d. Sl50
Newport/Koll Cent«. 3 I-=======-graveyard lhl'1 for tr•ln-Ian Restaurant. 2267 501 word processlnQ or I no poe-6'6-2231or996--9265 Wanted •5"-50' lltp or l1u• Yrs •llPIJI'. In family Jew PAINTERS WANTED 1 tecllon Fairview Rd, CM. e11,.._,. Shthnd r ...... C.U f11ons.: mooring, located Nwpt 1117 WE CARE
lnlht4 req. Sal"-"' ::e:;::abte. e11per. Own traoap. eu or exper. n ,..,.,. ...., BAR SUPERVSR Young persons BR sel: Harbor atH. 673-T895
-7 Iv m-o 751-9103 molding machine oper-RETAIL, Aaalst Mgr & Shelby Ct\oel!., TMI Corp. BARTENDER Sears, 8&d w/slor drwrs, 1--=~~---~1 Good employee rlt1. ators.GOOd hand C)e•U1rl-sa1ea paslllona aveH. Ellt1 553-0940 BAR BACKS dr.._, d.U/boo« lhlfa. WANTED: SUp lo HU
c.11 851-12:M lor Inlet· UIU. MIN Mutfel .. , on a ty lmport1nt. Wor11. 7'/o pay & adv oppty. Apply In Secretary full !Ima lo COCKTAIL WAITRESS $240/0bO. 551-4899 Kim Brl1tol Freeport • t .
vt.w. Tull•!, •long C•me a hrs, paid tor 8 hrs.Xlnt person 1t Joels, SC assist Speaker run tils HOSTESSES 551-1021. LNve mw BILL YATES
l'W -PORSCHE Lff•nM"ft/Slfl• ltstr spider •nd rNd In the paid maJor medlcat ban-Plaza. T"9 Ctty Mall , Ill . TABLE WAITING Gir11t lalff Soi'l ..... I 7m
FIT IJIT. Hrs rlell. $3.50-D•Uy Piiot Classified ~s pl:,.;:.ot~I a:•rlng Weslmlnster MaM. :~ o& ~!ieci'~~~: BUS BOYS •H ""I J <' ' ~ ' '
S...50 l'lr. Starling immed. ~:er~ Mt!:o~~ erlh:" progr!.~ p:: I.I. F/T1 LYI PIT casual •tmosphefll. N.B. SEA F~L~l~c;E~vPVR ltwt1rt ltac• ltlt ~::~1:!:;:,umper
Gall ~ 6-42-~.00~-lor 19.95. You can Mii English speaking. Apply !or 3-11 shift, small SNF In & Costa Mesa 650-1170 OYSTER BAR STAFF w:;;;,ory;, becl1, arl-Ii In ii(2
837-4800 4Cl1-45 I 1
A•lft, hantlc
anQ8
1 YM A · · · your luffel and 1011 ol at· Laguna Beach. •9•-8075 SEClnUY/l(Rn Conlact Jotin Giver. •OO tlque furn., ecx:esaorLes . .,!!CJC;;r~o,;,~~.,,,~,,;;;,;,;=
B.AN KING/S & L oth•r lhLngs through CllCO SALEMAKER. No e11p nee, for small office Typing, fll-Soulh Co111 Highway, S11. 8am. 1218 DltYOl'I Ln. 1~n 10-spd boy's blue, AllC nos TEWI D•llf Piiot Cla1alll•d 265 Briggs AYe. Coata cultlng/sewlng UI-Ing 1nd phone 1klll1 Lr.gun18Mch,Ca.92tl51 J I 12l4 extt.'89.142-9333
Fuller1on S & L h•• ,_•_•_•_· C_oJ_l_,._2_·56_7~8__ . Mesa merkollus Salemaker. req'd, Atneu oriented tWt!!f C 1014
lmmed. opeolngsJor.IWI 1
1
_ ·-·, ,., A . 675-1823 co. fmmed opening lor T=~~.an ~!1 '::.: *b1AU6NbS, Auble1,••Jt!L
tlme Teller at Fountain a1 y I DI .................. ·· .. , 3 "'' _ ... _ .1.~.,,. oom-resp lndivldUll. Call °"' 11 261-1861 Emlrllda, Sapphire•. 8ft ~. cleen, !ti•'. Valley otllce. Must type .... 751-2822 lor appl. · Opals. All al whotesa• boot l57!t:-M8-8T12 eve 30 .,,.,,_ 0~1 ,,._.,.. Tll&YEL &IEIT ,,_._ ,.._., .. '""'· Meter llllu 1011 '11 llYHll
lor appoinlmenl. E.O.E : RETAIL SALES . ml1alon/xlras. •97-5•67 t~E~~~,Y/:!.~ffT~d Prominent N.B. lraYel NE 1MAN Bar Scena, ; Moonrool, windows, &
1107 lalck
lli.t W1rt1r/l.Mtr1r . S&LES CLEll/IECEPT agency Type 50wpm, agency needs tult llme TOOTS SHORE'1/aru11 7 8 Pu ch m 0 P•d • Mils· All electrlel S3600
City of Founl•ln V•lley has : Fasl growing consumfll' answM phones, greel agent. Apply ASAP proof retall S7700 -t-SlOO/obo. 751·•751 Must sell, PP 8"2-7500
Summer Openings 1vaU-COORDlllTOR · e1ec1ron1c1 co seek• clients. May consider Mol-0360. Sue ot CarOI. OFFER. Eves 675-9837 •1t1rcyciH/ · 1 ~~(l~1~4~)~14:.::Z~·~2~00~0mrl;Cliiiim~· ~H;:;,::::::::".,,,,~t~lff:,;r
able within the Garage, bright h•rd wotk1no 1001-Sharp 1rainee. 650-1860 ..,,..IT/IEOn Miictllu"•' 1211 lcNltn 1011 Ii .... , 1141 '62 c;a convert, nu p;t;1, Parks. Medians, & Water Or Co t dail · Yklual IO work pit In sales 11r1 ''iii"iir;;,...,..,,...,.,..,;;ol S Dlvlt+on1. For lnlor. & IP• ange un y y newspaper IS de p' & p I I 0 n SerV1Ce station attendent, 80~ WPM. Basic olllce 530 used bricks. S.30 . pc, '81 Suzuld 450SX, Ilk• nu, P82 Mud. ea 5193. alt, ru,_"'52~"1'.' 2200/obo.
plicatlon contacl person-seeking fast paced, flexible achiever 5 w 1 1 c l'I b 0 • , d evenings PIT. Apply In aklll•. Oepend1ble, gd tske alt Pwr driven. reel llelmets e11tru l1200obo wht• im/fm clean
ne1 office. 10200 Slater. to coordinate display sales activity. RespanslbUlues wm Incl person 18502 Beach Bl, working conditions. New· mower $25. 53&-3768 Ken 535-2743 662-5e90 se900. oeo. c93-IT71 · io.,~7~E~ld~07,~,~.~.-. ~1.-m~I. 963-8321 .E.~F Musthaveexceptiona.1organiz.ationa.1 order da1k , fll lng , Hunt Bch.968-6505 por1.6•6-5015Lauree AMV(AYPRODUCTS MOPED PEUGEOT lootr.1 ~ = L ~145 loaded . orig ownr, kill Du · · I d kin d .1 switchboard, cu11omer SILK SCREENER . e11 -TYPIST/SEC. ttipe 1ran-3S-50% off. llnal monlh. oreal. runt beller $250. llCJ' CU $4400/obo.SolS-9981 s s. ties inc U e trac g al Y Arviee. runn1no errands perienced. &43-25ol7 scripllon, wd proc lraln-Ask tor Bob 979-7819 673-03900 2 ( .uto. c, 2 '!3 FleelwOOd Brougham
UUIEI sales, answ ering busy phones for &~1yp1ng Good comm S"--,,1_1"_ ~-ri Ing. FIT. SA .. Ed-topa 98K ml 115 750 D'Ei-.ance .em 1111 ......,, -JHEOAILYPILOTl1now 'd saJ laff dina . ll1amus1 Shoukltype .... -..a ........... ,...,_,. lnger /Newporl Fw)' BattLlAboWer.wtllcbait-nevrTICO AUTOBOOY;Vespe 63-0257 • • . -.• -··
accepting appl1ca11on1 outsi e es 5 ' coor lln8 :t -55 wpm Reli•ble cians, inSlallefs and up-558--3333 Maxine used $350 Tom 5.a---6810 & !tCOOlerl: color m11ch.1,.,,..,1=-....-==-..oco l lealhef. 17,715() mt '::6 ror 01s1r1e1 Manaoers to theatre advertising. Some typing, fil-tr ansportallon req holslerers. Needed lor Oelu•e Wsterbecl. pMtoed bOdy & palnl. &42-9693 '71 280 SEL, white. bk.Ml ownr. 118,000. 110-1T
sup•rvlae newsp•p1r ing required. Newspaper or agency Non/1111k1 n•ed ont hmouslne manfltciurers. vm111&1Y llSPJTAI. lealhlr Int. Vwy dean. &O TOPLESS
earners. Must nave van. experience a+. Send resume or letter •pply. For 1pp1 cau 536-1210 Kennal •ttendant moms. =a S:90. Ad~S: •t1r Staff 1121 ale, pl•. plb. Good llr•.
• wegon or J>lt*-up. Good of qualifications to: M•dellne al s.ta-568!1. IOfrMI wk.nds, rv beactl & IP9Cllil 11c:K; ~a362' ' 1)6 Wlnnab•oo, 28*' J.4900 firm. ·' 17~ '66 C~ERTIBLE
• Nlaty, mlteage allow· . SALES-HARDWARE SJUDEITS bu1Hne. Non-amkr. Small . CIUI A BuNlhouM, Well '77 3000. Mini cond. S2000080.M2-7500 ' w.c., comP#t)' benefits Orange Coast Daily Pilot . FuH time poslUon In rall.ll apt on preml.... Wiii o.k, aolMf wood, mu11 malnt. S19,500. Consider Wl'ltte/brown lntr. &wt.1 ---=~=~--
and bonus oPf)Ortunlty. Ad #968 · hardw•re slore. See In Tiii lrlln ll abtl & wllllng 10 Mfl 195. Elec lawn mower pen lr..:11. 770-7730 112,ooo. 780-tl2M NABERS ~~~~ah~:~ Costa Mesa. CA 92626 : Sllve. H.W. Wright Com-s•••E• JmllWU learn. 642•38'0for appl. 18 .. 1"5· 55&-l""'8 A•N ltnicH/ 'IO 300 TO waoon. mini
330 West Bay, Costa Attention: Lisa Smith · P•ny. 126 Roctlester. We have openfllgs for YllEllnAILIALEI Double 2 wtnctows & alld· Putt f015 cond. blklt•n. Daya C10Jll1 C Mesa. Monday thru Fri-• ; Cosia Mese bO)'s & girts between Must haYe .. 1e1 and some lnQ grasl door atove 834-4050, ..., .. 720-9999 n ft
day. No phone calls ORANGE CO AST OAIL 'f PILOT '. SALES & model• needed 12-16 years old working vl11eo exper. Neat wlxln1 hood, good va1u8 1250. (iR Pinto runabOUt dOOfa. 1 "~~=~~---1 LARGEST SELECTION
E.O.E. JJO w OAY51 •COSIA MESA CA 9:1626 · p/tlme lor llngerleshopin evenings & Saturdays. peoplelkllla.C.llfor ln-Mary38()-.872• gdS150Tom541·8810 '11 300D. 1 ownr, ollltemodel,loWmUeagt 1~~~~~~~~.;;;;,;;,;;,;;,·~.,~·~·~"~"~u~·~-·~0~·~·0~·~"~·~·~·~0~''~·~·~·,;;,;;,;,r.f ~c~-~M~-~M~"~"~ .. ~~,~~l~•""':·r Earn mo0n~,y· trips & terview. Scott. 831-7187 GRAVITY Machine: Ver-sn~On top box, uMd :.1:!:i~tJ!sl~nc1n11 ~!!:5~5::~~1 • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · a11per. pref. 5•a-M•4 Donuses. ... WANTED: Baby•l ttlng 1anne. New-S.50, Llk•i.,::83:7~0:·=-~~'":~::;;."";; l'u;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;sc-,;;->I
SALES-SEC TllllEE Mr. Rountree jobs by responsible 1.4 yr New 1250. T5Q.-1206 A•tM WutN 1120 MerCledel 2IOSL 'T1. 2 &•0· 1860
TODA Y'S CROSSWORD PUZZI E
ACROSS 55 Twice
1 Ship part 56 Deleata
5 Fool 6 1 A!Man nYer
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
10 My dear· 1r 62 Rioted
1• A Gardner 6-4 Mineral suH ;~~~ 15 Peace delty 65 Of !he mlnd
15 Ambler or 66 Greek Island:
Sevareld Yar
17 Handy device 67 Winged
19 Talk wildly 68 Hebrew
20 Jupiter . e.g leader
21 Mound stat 69 Freshman
22 Signs
23 Main impact DOWN
25 Garden plol
26 Pelvic bones
30 -English
31 "-Fables"
34 Insect stage
36 Ducks
38 Taro product
39 Ruined state
42 Bronze -
43 Madrid
museum
4ol Small pies
•5 Remove NaCl
47 Facial lealure
<49 -chair
50 Singleton
S 1 Air race
tower
53 Retained
1 Seaweed
2 Qt an epoch
3 Italian isle
4 Spanish c11y
5 Nightclub
6Coach -
Parsegh1an
7 Pride, lust.
anger. etc
8 Inactive
9 lmmunizers
10 High abOdes
11 Divas· IDfte
12 Curllng learn
13 Drama parts
18 Lee IOltower
24 Excessive
25 Be111ege
26 Homer's epic
27 Bulky
28 Vaci11a11ng
29 Kin Of Blvd
31 Enlfrety
32 Fence parts
33 Timid one
35 Fruit
37 Sore as
40 -L1nkletter
4 1 Highland
neg a Ii Ye
46 Diana's
in-law
48 Capabilities
51 Instrument
52 Indicate OK
53 Two quart8fs
54 Mun11tons
maker -
SkOda
SS Top edge
57 The Mounoes
58 Jib
59 Root piece
60 Haughty one
63 Observe
14a.10U o•d gtrl. 63 l-9059 Magic lst•nd Gold mem--tops. 1utomat1c, AIC. 2600 H.,bor BNd. ~~d~~~~~.=~~di~ Mon.-Frl.10am-.3pm berlhlp. Must Mii. 1750 IUllTIUYI lmmac. concl. S17,000, COSTAMESA
vldual lo track construe-c'~':'o'l~R Obo. 615-7525 forvetlldl.551-1215 1¥ee (7l4)•1M..o..7t C"'11l1t 1313
lion le•ds, gooCI phones Tell everyone In lown what Work lmmecl. Top Pey NE IMAN Bar Seen•. WE llY SeMtr\g Y0vt Mercedel?
& lyplllg, Npt Penln ol-you' ye got 10 sell. CaMNow 556-1520 TOOTS SHORE's/1rtl•t ... R•••••s TopPurctl ... Ptioe '88 CAMARO Nnl very rice. Resume to: P 0 Box Advertise In ctassllled. prool ret•ll I 7700 + ~ VAft In AIN OOOd S800 obo 5-48-0973
2789. Npl Bch. 92663 6-42-5678. J1M WutH SllS OFfER Eves 875-91537 Ill TllGll Seller /V:::' PIM
Southern California daily needs ex-
perienced desk person with good
layout and headline writing skills.
Some feature writing also required.
Competitive salary and benefits. EOE
Reply ad #400, CID Orange Coast
Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, CA. 92626. ==:::;; --~
DIMES
A-
LINE
WANT AD'S
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
Sell your Item• f or $50 or less In
our f•moua DIMES-A·LINES putJ.
llahed each Safurday In the Dally
Piiot.
REFINED Pf.ctbl m . s1en1ey d1• gar dr opnr. c... Biii McCoy
llY•·ln, toc•t refs . You dllu.Mmbte. $100. 111·1111
631-65901111. 11• 497-6005orl75-1551 JIMSLEMONS
Cati SHS IMPORTS
BUUulJ 1':lfy \IP•""' r•co nr501y 1301Clv .. St ........
.,,,.,, .. ' ..... l ,,., "" " I Ill; " "WlRlllll" H~::::;y~n klU1n1, a TRY IT! Pr!YalefyMlllngywr~ WI llf ~be hull'doul IO)'OUf ~~~:.~A'~~':!: TAOll ... USED CARS' TRUCKS WMl!hl HOUM of Import•
Mala S200. 646-8132 l•llJ , ..... , COME IN OR CALL FOR ol'ferl;Nghtilt valuefOI'
St.AMESE KITTENS: 8 l•11P.& ~m~~ ...... c:~ed Wk•. $75 ... 5oll-0127 o ... larla, '-ff•ltt• OllYllUT ht hr,...,, ....
hts SSli ha•,,.,..... t8211BEACHBLYD. otAL213/71•MEACEt:IES r.£" ™· wui per9on llwl.,142•ff41 HUNTINGTONBEACH HOUSEOFIMPORTS,lnc '72 CHEVY SUBURBAN,
who wa• glvln dog 14l-IOl11 u .. aa11 ·····"•'' 1147 ~o~~::.!2800
Mandy at Balboa Bay TENT: Swap meet/party WIWU'Tfm 183 COttila, d1g. :pdom1r,
Club, 1')f )'I'• ago ple•H 10x 15, silver peak•d OWi ISEI •••t A/C, dig. AMfFM ceaa. con1actJoe875-1588 ' vr;/lldeS, 2 drlSI ims. -Snrf,allpwr.Cr'UIM.Mlnt
Poodle Pups. T !cup. Toy & wgla, hvydllt)' POIM. New See Aooekt D-ae cond. 2e.K Ml, 11.IOO.
Min. 1250 & up. 5-48-28•8 $350, Used 1 flme. $250. Nan <41M-5118
SOCALIFDOQ TRAINING 759·l20e Ptntltt 119!
COMMELL
CHEVAOlET
'-...I( +r<• I~
• ,._ I \ 'I r •
17;,i:"T.•~.~~5~·~ uc':1:i .p1~J~~~ '82 eoup: 1800§ '*"' eng, •,= ... =.======i9i•'i1i1 ••• 1••-01.. tr-, tuap, upftol, HOOO • tl'l1month!in>.>-3388 "" Bobl42-&1155"4$-1251 "·"""===--..-==
54~ 1200
B.r... Ssit• w11er sott...-end "'--70 Maveridt. Gd lrens.
" placa .creen 14$-<4589 T--~ IUI '82 Coupe 1IOOS '*"' eng, $650/obo, Call 131-5711 PXLOM1HO Mire, 15.3 ._.. trw, .usp, uptM:ll H800 'l _
Hnd• 12yra. Traln1d Ollie• rarai .... 1 'ff TOQOTX P.O. camp;;. Bob 142.at 15 5454251 2 rtlll• ...
renv1wea1 s5so eJ1.515a:a1 1 !n!tmnt 1221 ,~01'cr;:1~~;-· ·1;111.'1~~· ~r,· ~::':: ~~~=~1:;:1: dr.
ltl • 8 ~6i."'l'IM!'newi3&. V &Ua llhelp1kln1, comp , .. well malnl, gd cond 81U/o0ki Mecew. ~,; & Shvp F911 copl9I' '300. hi _... ~ 113,000 171-2142 S2500 080.175-1545 quf11 1750 Gotlln Btolher typewrlt«1 ,_.. '75 mn; 116 311
Cock1too, vtiry 111.e-~ 1~50: P.....,, ~ cc/SUcll., 1lr, tinted. ftJtta 1111 Ll8ftl8 1313
110011• S3oo wi cag•. ~'..,;: 7~:r:12 S20001t>Ht ot1.-. (7141 •trm: am1tm cw. 'd &n1inen1:il Marc Iii,
1•7-17ol6 · ' 150-41741't tMINl19· mlch tkw, )'tlllten. new uaual opt1, 15,000 mt
IBM S11ec1r1c $125. "'--n bf'e«•.&1200790-9271, ct•ltlc 1u11ury. 12850. M;:~.~:,~~r.'a~llk• 8"8-7549 eves a:u:. ..., '75 COROLLA 2.0000 T10-7130
A~I HI~ Roll top dM w/ctv, file ·A Ford F1oo P/u ··--Good •l'l•P• 11195. ........ IJn a•Ctl cab. 12000 value, $1500. • ---OWMr-J:M ! 17th, CM t 2 ft Seers coior4 , Klfl 535-2783 682·5e90 lldl, Chevy 3H vrtlTurbo 64&-3 t20 79 OUt ..... AiC, PIS, .. it! • •oo. Custom Int. 11800 llectrle, 1'own., 81,000 =::.:i:d.~~~tn PialMj°'9u1 fUI 5"'M661/5"4~7T17 ·7~9 T0)'01.,:.eo.,,.""'-1 mtnue ml, ... 100. M:s.M&S embkmFll 5'111 I;;; Aa•~i.,..... 1111 .,.. tor "'1•· ·12 Oto. CUtt• .. ___ USED Rel'rlQ'I i1Q04400 G ...__._., _ Mlria •t M:~I ~ --·-
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DJMES·A·LINE ldl mutt be
pr~ld ao m•ll or bring tfHlm Into
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Include your phCHM number or •d-
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tith St. C.M. 8"8-&5311 Uprlgl'lt Planof"9cl Oak, •18 3fti tint....-_,.o = ·~~""11•-•:...•, 1 ' < >11ibfdfi'Oiiii'~""IFO: l;'~op~C01~-~ .. ~ .... ~~7~..,....~~''.I . _. ... , -· . .... ' _... OF\ANGECQUNTY'i ) DbicWNftlg 23oufii375. trw, ~~1 _1&K mt.~~ ~111 fl Wthr/dryr 113& M, SWVI W•lnul Sl.,Ung Bib)' $9900, ~ ;,:;ill!! 0tct. IOl:lllOM6.-
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M9 ecceptable. I
DEADLINE:
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2 -Dads 'N Gtada/An Adwert181ng ~t to the DAILY PtLOT/TUeedlly, June 12, 1984'
Golde:Q west COilege holdS commencement
Summer 1983·graduates at Golden West €allege
Terry F. Whlle, W81ler W WW-. Ann K. Biia. Jo9w'9 M. Ebertz, YcNel
R. Eapena. ,..... A. oar.d\. Ann ... Only. Don8ld ~· .-..
RonJorden.~ KNlOWlkl, 1(.-.n E. LMnl*tn, Cr111ltne8. ~ "*' J. a.t.llen. Jenll K. ..... E:dw9f'd K. Newton. Gngory A. ~
Mlche9I A. Ponw. Mery Sc::lerTa. o.nn. ... v .. "--'. ,..,.. A. v-.
t.8c:tllile C. Aultin. Ida L HQ ~s ,._,,, si.ry A. <*an. AM M. Alfwo,
a.ID. Benge....,,,. M. CNpeno, ......a£ .......... '*'-L Lwt\
~ 8. M9o'I. Gw8'd C. AMd. Jfllf P. Sdt, Timlti TN~
Newport~ 8Nft H. DIMle.
..._..,.., .... l<MtnM.ean.nl. Aobel18 . .._, KM!tU.l.W,U.A.
McUlln, tWl'yM. .... t...orw F ...... Sonia ND; 'I 7 , Jall "1Ddglr'I,
.._., C. s...n, ferry EVIL
Coastline Community College graduates announced
~ 10 DOWI 0.A.C . ..... Ei.cfric .,.,,
...-A.,,_.lic
GIVE DAD THE
COMFORT.OF
TOURNAMENT
~~---~~-9'7NfrK------1-~~
BY ARROW
"-
MOie thM the usuaJ knit -Arrow ha
created -wy-cave wy__. blend of
80% cotton, 40% pol)-.. nwy .. both
lttewelght and durable. Av.lable In 80ld8
and spectrum of ... --.
11eoo to •1ao:o
. Al9o~:
GIYe hlm a plllr of the most
comfortable c..1111 1'1 cb ..
wttl war ww. 11•111 """
lhln9d Wit. Lii• llaht -coal Md~
ByFllrllh Md Lord Jillf.
'2400 to '33"
CAEDrr CARDS.: VISA -MIC -AMER. EXPRE88 -CAATE IUNCff • O.W
HOUltS t:••• a. ... ....,.
1,389 to gradµate frorri 006 Thursday
A total of 1,389 students are candidates for ~A. c.r--. ~A. Kwr. JoNillW'I R KeM, c.rta L ..._ D. ,_.,...._A.,.
pSuation at Orange Coast eou.·s 36th co~ =-c ~...'t. J~ ~"*1:· '-:: :.!t.. '=: ~ J::~"n~;!: me~ -• .....,. u. aw.ta . ...,._ . l(ely. tMty F. ~. ...,.., ......, M. ~ ~'?t~ ~ . 41M;~l1'!¥ftil!rlfl ~--· . ~~. ~· ':". ~'L·~~~Y'f._.,~~~~IS~l!l...-W'}ll!l!l!laA....._,t.wL~ •
.. ~ · M9rtlnH Oii?" -VlrglnlaR K.lle*Oouglea8 Aob--Ofthe 1,389 candidates, 883 are June --.1ua•-341 ................. ..:.. ...___ '· L ,.._.. · ·-........._.._ • --....... pie.__. .... ....:_ ..... ....., ....-• .....---..,...,... ertL~.a.....G.Kwdllr, .__ ... _..,_ com ~ u~ requirements in January, and l6S 0regoryo.Cocraft.Suzan1<.Coe. M.nin A. Kuehn. vu-a.un ~. ~ ...._ fl ....,._
comi>letedrcquircmentsinthesummerofl983. l!ncfJ.Conerd,K.tC.eon.. ~J.L.aP9la1??,.wrye.a.... tnafl, ~ L---. T~ J. Members of Orange Coast eo19·s faculi9 arid .... w. Coe*. Aoeenwte L o.wlla L.angdll6e. Robert F L.ar-a-. ....., R. ~
administration. in full academfo ~ will lead the ~~ ~ c..,:: ':: ~'=~~~ :.:-:. ~ .....,._ ~
procession of candidates onto the field. Music during the CurtAa. u.n T •. Deno. o._ J. Tuong 0uoc: Le, ~ e. lAWln. Smlltl.,... J. SMb; Ir .. Sohllml,
ceremony will be provided by the OCC Varsity Band. ~ ~~ ~o:= D11r1e J. Lewie. Mn E. Lll*,M8rtc t<sen R So•-•· a.no Soello.
Dr. Norman E. Watson, cbanceUor of the Coast S:,,o Dr9u TMIT 0ue.....; ~°'~~o.=-g::,:-=:--,..C:::-:=:
Community College District, will praent OCC's annual .J.. °'""'* ~. -My.Anti 1lll Thu T Lu. ~ l,. l.yone, Andr.e J. a.um.~ A. s.p;.:
Outstanding Citizen A ward. Graduates will be presented Doune. Ngtw. O. OuonQ._Dllnle? c. M~ J. Lyone. ~ H. Mao-n.n.. Jofln o. SWM-. lMcl M.
by Dr. Bernard J. Luskin, president of Oranse Coast =·J ~~~~ =.:_·=-.:·:~~~ 8':' ,._ 81._, T..,.. J.M.
College. Con.rad Nordquist, president of the Board of L Blennen. Oougl.i M. Eliott. Menton. A9cca M. ~ s-.. ~ tt &r.MI, t....-Trustces, will accept the class of l 984. Mary L ~. OWllna F. °'*Y' L Menon. w-.n G. Met-rence w. ~ Toni R. SVgll.
Commencement speaker will be former occ F...,do, 09bonh F.,.., Et?c M. u... &In w. Maxwll. ~ v. Mary L ~ Teri E. ~ stu~t. I?r· DavidEmmcs, co-founder and producing ~™ ~ =-}'··.:=:..~·=: ~~~ =..0·~
artJSbc director of South Coast Repertory. Emmes Ann,OiermidJ.R.-ylll,Pallak. Mc:H9111y.R1tnrongT.MM,Gery SWlnlon..,.._E.TMQiltdln.lf.
Graduated from OCC in 1960, and later received his B.A. ~L =:::-~ ~· ~~· Fr9M A. ....,. ~ ~1'-T F«t c
andand h~.A.Ph.degreesD . from San Francisco State University. ...,., awt1toph. o Fox. c':i Uno.~~.=::.-~ ~Tran. V'°'O ~:
JS . lD theatre and film from the University of ~. Cynttll9 F'*1d? W.Mcnndo.?<lmDer1yK.Morgan. GAip M. Trieu. Tho H Trteu, Mary
Southern c.alifomia. ~ J. Galttliclr. Darliee L A.t1tiur J. Mcwrow. Jon K. Mut.ta. e. Urben. Oc¥-M. Uy, Mlc:hMf L
Emmes has received numerous critical awards for ~wwi.mo.o:;.~:· = AwtteJ.~R . ...,., ~l· ~F-.=!:
P!oductions that be has directed during SCR's 18-year ~ F. ·~: Acee ..: ~~N8ilrnleh. J~A. HerddM.V.,,Gordon.~L
hlSlory. South Coast Repertory is the four largest Grernme • .-A.Gr*1Zllla.CuftB. Nde. JeMette M. *"·Karen K. Vergo.
professionaJ resident theatre in California. arav...,.,.,... s . ~. AttOt9w Ne!lon, Anh T. ~. Cong CN TN Vu "'-'9 M. Vu. Hun1I M ~mes .was inducted into OCCs Alumni Hall of ~ ~ °'T.9'~ ~WCn.~--~: ~ ~ ~~ ~
Fame 10 Apnl. KMNene K. Hardieon Edw9rd s. ~ ..., T. ~. Tho H. M. ---.. Lelle A. Wleir.
Special
Gifts
For The
Special
Graduate
Hardnwl. Ril::Nrd A. H8"loW Jf •• Nguyen. Tlu: ~. Tien ... °"9D'Y s. WIRtN, EllDlbeeh s. ~.OoMldM.e.ttw,ScottC. Tf11CY L Harnetiaal, Dllnle1 J. Nguyen. Dennis C. Nor· w..m., Jemee N. ~
Baron. Debra 8eeuchemp, ~ Hen1e; l..cnttll E twril, Vldtl L dmom,DolwwC. Nordab'em Terry !(iMberty A. WW-.. .KIWI L ~Matthew M. a.n.ctl,.1 _ ........ a..tA.17-)aad. Uftde-E; -t=--tNo;b;N1•1n1;0-PP'mlM!lrt!dlldr-(()~'Cu~1,.u'fi.,:---"11W .. lilmiiii.t srwt J ..... , ..... ...,,_.._~-i:::--a.t~ ......... a.n-a L Hlc:hy, Robert E. Oeaaa1ek:h, Gr.-A. AllldDtpll Wlftder-. OoMld S.
U.. Jlldl E. ~. Aer'9 J. ~ E ... Scott W. Hbcon 01aen. Olla.._. oe..t Vhk, WlndhMl, ..... S.Wright.TJKY
Blhan. Mlc:hHI Bjornstad, ~ O.C Ho, Anita L H<*c· Devld Ortiz. Gerard LC.°"'*""" L ~ ChrtlCI It Yokoml, Jula
Jonathan D. BledUe, PMrtclc. W. ~. Mouton. OWr91 R Ofwlll. A119t Y~ ~ J. ~. Qwtedn
Bl*. 07gil Z. daom. c...dece J ~ C. Hot*. 1<atN1en M. OZdere, P9aaY 8. Palo....,..., L E ~
Blum. Vickie L Boler, V.... HoeHo•. Donne Lee Holand, Pll1~•il, Olli¥! A. Pw'9 Msy It FOUNTAIN VAU.Ft: Robert P.
Boeton Jemee L lk*Mlll 111, .,.,.,... J. Holeft, La.rte E. Holl P9Ws. Donna J. PWy,Duc: T. Andanon,CwotLBecca.~
Jeenne L ~ 8Mi19 T. One17a M. Howland, ~ L. P?wn, Nga M. PMn, JudMtl A. A. Blilll', c.rta ..... CNr"9 L
Br9idor, BfWI A. Brown :.-c ~ Vk*ie L Hunl, ~ ~ 1<117ta R. Pllronm'l,~ a-.tt. o.?d L a.a. MlicNll9 T.
S. Brown, CINon R. Brown. .... H .... Dort L ~ L ~ Atdtttltfry J. PaM>, ......... .._. B. an.., S.U.
Butctt. Lon S. Cwl, Al9lt D Ftaec:MacaA. Jo1Won. Joeilla 0. ~T.au.n,a.i.rtyM.~ LBrown,a...tJ.BnMn.~
Cedlola, ....,_ A. c.ln, Todd L Jotwwton-&NlklMo. J\*9 M. Vlr'°*'1 P .• Rllp6ril. Jemee A. ....,.,_, 8i'9d J • ._ ~ M. cam.on. Anthonr E. Cemp, Jotlneol\ R. --w ~~A.C...., ....
DADS & GRADS
KC'S Hallmark Shop
2 300 H~rbor Blvd.
For over60 yean we've been a tnditioa with aoutilenl California
Dada and Grad.. Provicliag clu1k clollaiq tJaat au.rvivesud lrau-
ceods the yean. Costa Mesa
Hours:
MON-FRI 10-9
SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5
979-1882 GOD UNDERSTANDS
E-1379/B
Gin him a gift lite'd cbooa.e h.Uuelf ... from hill fa•orite men's
a tore.
•ar..w..1-...~~(714)644.a!64
..
4 -Dads 'N Grads/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 12, 1984 ..
UC Irvine ·commencement June 16 ·
UfthM ... # ef C........ IMf'9 • Ja.,,._ J. eonatont, &w M.
....... ~ Boyc::e. Mlct\MI A. Brown, JeM..
COSTA MESA: Kun 0 . Adama, M•le BunNy, Chin-Wen CMng,
Gloftrnw Aponte. Debor• A. G1or11 J. ~. Sandra M.
Babol. Jemee E. e.119y. Stephen Crene, Luz s. DI' PortllO, Kristle
W. e.ru.tt, EdWwd Z. Bal. M.Ourtllm, ~ J. Onnnt!o,
Blfron S. 8'1ckmen, WllllMI E. K~ E. Elmer,,,.,,_ P. Ftlldet· ~M ~· MlchMI te. Ju.n G. Glltcla. 8-blra L. ,..,,,_,_.,..~ ~:t=--...~-~M~::2'-a. Hou Mall ~~Thenls F 'cWte.. 0... R. Thomlll i Ju!Yfalll, Ctq-Wel
C..tlbno, Ger•d F. Ch8lrner'I. .C.W, Darcy L Chlmbera, ~ W. Peul ~. Klhm, Jlnhwen KJm,
Clari!. 01Yid 0 Coe, AlllnJ. Cohn, Joeepfl J. l(IUg Jf., Huong L LA.
Donne L Colemen. Oeef1 C. Mldlall W. L,i,, ~ C ~
Oilton. Shine A DebMf. oberdl, LIOnlll E. ~o. Thornm
Chnstlne C de la Cruz. Robert A. J. Mlttln, Antjl L MMtM, VlnMM
Omytryll, Phlll V. Do Thlnhmy T. M. Me8f1de, Eurtko It MtyWl'IOto,
Do. Terri L Ouncln. John A. Andt-B. Morg1n, St•ve
Eco11omio11, Scott J. Eru. Jeenet-Morihlrd, ~ H Murat1,
te A Exner, Kl'tln R Annel. Mldlall F. Ml.wtlugh, Khilm B.
Stephen J Forbltl\. Mery L. Fore-Nguyw'I, KllNO Qaurt. Delltd S.
mlt'I, Jonn J Glac:llonl, Debor• Pltll•. Dianne s. flMnn.. jJnh T.
M GlealOO. 'PNn, Mary C. Rededd, c.r..n S.
Anurag Goel, Lon L Greeley. ~.Yoong It Roh, Mone
Lill K Herrington. Thomas E. M. Slklbe.
Heyes, Rldllld E. Heryfcwd, Ind-Cindi Self&. UU J. Sttler,
ley S Hoo, C'*1ll C. .ie.n, JeftNY It Slwy, AnMtte M.
K1thi--. A. JohMOO, Sabrin• c. Stlnley, ThlrOWlh Tren, Denni.&
Lly, Virginie A. Lee, Oanh H. T. Trutn. ~ T. Teo, Ven Hong
Luu, John K R Maher, Gtegoty J. Vo. Liie M. Wat9on, Tt8cy L.
Mantra. "91Neen Mc:Clrtney, w ...... ~ G. ~
Ll#t'lllCI P ~ .k .. John Robert It WynM, JO C. Yin,
L MCintyre, Mlrielll Miiera. P1-M1111on M. 'nu, Lidia A. Zita.
tricia M Merjlnlan, Merllyn L. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Rite
Mltcilell. Either Motzkowlcz. Arlldjlwl, OonelCt c. Alttu', P•
Stacey L Murren, Cll J Myers, trtc1a A. &My, Oeborlfl 0. Brollin.
Metti B ~tld. u.. P. ........ a.nton T. BNton. Pedroc.ntlo,
Ooni J. ~. Thu B. Nguyen, M#ge Ctl!Mg, Hong <:not, Jemee
Laverne L Ostatloudt, Khoe x. E. Glettt, Jorden Y. eon.t, fT"ri
Pham, Vlnh a Phem. A.. Comella. .._. M. CosUllgtl,
Leonerd I Popk:ll, IMbele R. Jennifer A Courtole. Br9nden L.
Poston, LI Verne J . Price. lrw E. o.Ma. NMUe L. OM.ligultine.
ReecSe. ~ L Redon. Step-N1ccU1 P. ~. S19Wen C.
hen M. Roeoff, Be\lel1y A.. SlnO-Down, Sepetw &hr~ Step-
IMI, Robert E. Slnget, Ann M. hen A. &ptJa. Robert L Eut>Mk1.
Slocum. Ellz.abeth A. St. John, Eric Mld'8et E. Fe6nhoti, Tewnny L.
T Sun, Brien It T9lgWl!ld. &mo-~ M~.
ne R. Thomel. Rldty 0 Tigert, ' CC1een A.F«d. ThomM E.
Phuc 0 . Tr8n, Tlkalr.o Ued&. L.lndl FrMdl, M6et1M1 P. Glbel, Lynn B.
T Url!evlch, Keren A. Van Hook. Glblpy, Antonie Z. Gom9m. Male
Brian K. Werridl, Arlene A. WlM, 0 . Glwnbeum, Siiia A .. Gflfftn,
FOUNTAIN VALLEY· Matainltl G11ber1o 0.U.VW. Jr., Aida F.
Ablb. Gabnel Ab91&. L01'9111 B. ~ Ettk 0 . HIMnen, Cr8lg
Alkire, Stanley S Atlli, SUMn M Y. ~.Anthony W. Herjo,
Barton, Kenneth M. Blainkll'llln, Scoct E. Hwtl•, Leenne Hst, 1111'1
A.. Hiit, Jiiiie A.. Hll, M-11 T. Htzon.. DouglU R. Filhs, U P. Fong,
CtvlttJne K. Juleo#lcz, 0.111<1 B. Soott E. Fl'MCll. MtctMille JIA •
Johnlon. Donn T. Johnlon, Unda Frenat, Thomes J. Fr9l'ICI, Mlctleel S. Jof'9I. Donlld M. Kerce, S. Frw*, K.MhY A. Oalla'Oo. NMCY
I SenQdo Kim,~ S. Kine, Ann F. Gerl, ~ L. a.rtlch, Jon E.
N. l<lthcwt, Seda A. l<IMa, Glenn, Ai.In J. GoNc::hkel. Mertl
MlchMI J. l..IChenoe, Stacie A. E. Gold, SteYen W. Gotdlteln,
LM, l..aur9n A. Loll, BernllOette E. WllllM't F. Golloway, Adrien J.
Lucier. A • ~~&·~::
Greg M 119on,•'Q'"f.4.,.:~~." uida S.
Miiier, V\rQnt J. Mlren:hl. lOf1 J . Gudka. Olllne M. Gutaeon. Todd
Mltdlell, Adrienne M. Miura, J. Hailnea, Aoger1 P Hall, Vlnclnt
Klmberty A. Montgomery, ~ J . Hen,
L. Myridl, CMatopher E. Ne19on, AnltlofW L HllntOtl, Brenda L
DeYld A.. Nofflng, Mo J Nwtlnen, Hlll1llre, Cynthia Ham.. Vlrglnle A.
Carll 0 O~rt. Larry S. HIN'le, Vanau M. Hawt. Marco
O'Cllltaighlln, Hall C*U1y, Mlchell A. Hegyi, Nannette J. Heller, RU
S. O'IMty, ~ A. Otto. Julie A. M. Hermano, Cuttll L. Heye. lON1 ~. John A. Perry, Stephen R. Hk:*otl, DeWS N. H•, St..,.. E..
L ~ Anthony L Patroc, Hien Hll. Jemee A. Hoeltun. Timothy P.
V. PhM, Kathleen L Pic*ett, Hottsford, l<el A. Horton, lei
Eugenie M. Randall, Kelly S. Ring-~. Mary F. H<Ma,
•· GrlQOl'Y 8. HuQMa, PIUI R.
Bonnie L Roea. Mark A. 8-yed. Hutmnga. Eric J. Hunt. Aledndet
Ste11et1 P. Schwll'U.. Saeed lngermen, Wai It .Ip, RID! i.-
SNnbal, Edmond C. Shi. M*M1 ......, Carolyn E. Jac:llton., Qyit-
0. SmM. Heranl Soew.,.to, '9 A. Jac*9Clft, Thomel w. JKOtll.
DouglU V. 8'**ard Jr. Janet E. Kathie L. Jenni, Henry 8. John-
Spifa, Werttty L Stlt-. John A. Ald«, Gel JoflM. sir--. w-...n L. s-.no.. Diie s.,,_. J . Jo11Un. .JMn«te c.
V. S~. KatNme T. Talb, JUstua, Donna l<adev, L1y ~.
Oenti 'V. Tnin. AM Van Cott. ftr1d E. Kahen, Mohllrnld Kebell. MlcMle N. Vet! RIJ, Marget91 F. Constance E. Keienan. Ctw1ltlne
Vogel, GNQOfY A.. w•, Torun A. M ..,_,,,..., M.___ o .,..._. Wlllltl, Owrtl S. Wong. Mittan R. . "__._., ,..._ . ~·
WOOidridge. M9c A. Wynne. Roff Hetl O. l(Jm, Helen J. Kim, HeleM
A.. ZUI. Kim,~ Kim, Kyong S, Kim.
IFMNE: Stantey w-. Abe II, Mdleel e. ~on,Apft s. Koch,
LMgrOudl M. Al>olhoda. ~ RObel1 A. OllNMw, Henrique
S. Altall, Zubedl A*n. HoeliM S. Kou, Karen M. Krlmlic:h, Saep-Allpour.~ Aahlnt, Roee-hel1ie M. Kr.-i:De, ~ C m.n. 0. Alan, MoNmld B. KronWd, Unda G. Kr~. oewt ~. Shc*ouh Aneari, Mery-R. LMlpher9. Eugenie M, Lina,
Jene ANton, Temerou Asrat, JeetlneA. t..IQloua.SylvilS. lJIW,
\llYec:e L A Thcley, T.-rWIOI S. Valerie J. Lawrence, Becky J. l.Ae,
A Tldn8on, Hsi.a. L. 8anka, flch.. 8-::*y Y. Lee, Jene J. Lee. Sq 8.
ltd .W."ean..t. GNg-~ -e.rron, Lee. •
Karil Berry, Hablbolllfl aen.gw. So Y. Lee. ~ S. Lee. Trilt!
Dini, F8'Nld Batwdoust· T..... IAMn. MofGM N. LMM. Curtl9 A.
Judfth A. a.M, Ellen L Belingar, L..smnl, cn.o L Liang, Ct*lg-
Lan M. e.nn.tt. Aidwd K. Jono I.II, Key A. • ~. ~ S.g, Key L 1M1i1r, Chulil'I LA.I, Khoe T. Luu, Trinh .
omr.i o. e.w.. Ctwtat.OP'* Luu. Joeaph E. Maloy, a.njlmll'I
G. EyN, Rk:l\wd M. Farlday, Jeri Mllndeltleum, Joanne M. Man-
A.Fender, Mlcli•el J. Fero. nine>, Virginia A. MINOn, M•·
Anteater honor graduates
•• , ; : , • ~ t
Unlnretty of Celltom&e n1M
Hoftor ........ lndud9:
Summl CUlll Leude· Arl!ldy
Mlk, Mii Huong Nguyoen, Minhtrl
Khec NouY*I. OeiOf'll Ann
O'Bflen. Anthony Sag6embenl Jr ,
FrllnC89Ca JOMPhitie Sawey1,
Tuenkhal KlfTI Tl'll'TI, Alexandre
V...,._ Chll'lllworth, Wllll1m
B<y.n Gtenner • .J«frey Mldlall
HlltWy. Tabitha May Hain, Eric
Wlll'lelm John9on. Gregory Ke'M
Jonea, Phllllp Scott Key, Amy H.
Klein, Jay Eugene larlon. Judith
Ann Mllll, Larry Robin Rapp,
Clare H1mllton Rhlnel1nder.
Aetlcty Raymond Rola, U.. Lynn
~. Dougaae Keyee Self,
Vlctorie Yvonne~ Oevld
Jaon Slmttln, Trilhl Lynn Smltte,
Peul Herold Thli, Mwy Jacqueline
vari.y, Don Drue w ... Shlf'l..Zhl Weng lt'ld St""9fl OoNld Wl-
Mwns.
Cwn l..ude: OelW Kim Biik·
arl&n. Kllthlewi AleundlflOn
For comp;t.,fe ad copy and art services
advertisers all along the Orange Coast
rely on ailyPillt
Dreams come true for Dads & Grads
neuhaus chocolates from Belgium.
25% off
Pre-selected boxes only. Month of June. While stock l•sts.
neuhaus chocolate shoppe~
South Co.1st Pl•z• ~
~;,J Jnd IW.1,tt•r(,11d Ac tt•pf<'d. Wto ,hfp .,,,. ... ht•rC' 1n tlH-U.~.A.
(714) 919•1667
..
.
Dads 'N Grads/ An Advertiilng Suppliment to the DAILY PILOT /Tueect.y, UtN 12, 1184 -5
Dad of the '80s
<Jaes almost half
.~~O!Icl'.lffilJTiff€ii.11ii1-
Gadgets for his
new role make good
Father"s Day gifts
With today's changing lifestyles, in
addition to mowing the lawn and
cleaning out the garage, the Dad of the
'80s faces a new responsibility-
mending.
According to a rcccn t survey con-
ducted by the Singer Co., 47 percent of
the family mending isn't done by Mom
anymore! The truth is, more and more
men arc fending with mending for
themselves.
While traditional Father's Day gifts
-ashirt,jacket,pajamas-maysuite
Dad fine. w..hathappens when ascam on
that new jacket splits? Too often, Dad
lets itsit ina pile and waitsfor04magic"
to fix that seam.
Unlikely as it may seem, 0 magic" can
happen! Stitch-Me-Quick hem and
scam tacker does on-the-spot emerg-
ency repairs in seconds us mg real
thread Stitph-M~ick is one of four
compact,'pbrtable products, The Easy
Menders clothing care appliances. de-
signed specifically for previous non-
menders ...
Each gadget performs a specific
mending task: Match-A-Patch hole and
tear mender makes virtually in visible
repairs on most fabrics, Button Magic
button sewer reattaches 2, 3 or 4-hole
buttons in seconds with real thread and
Tiny Tailor mending machine hems,
seams and ~tches wiilia.durable lode nitcn.--
Mending may not be anyone's idea of
fun, (in fact, the Singer survey revealed
that mending is less popular tlymtaking
out thegarbage and washing dishes and
only slightly preferred to washing
windows and cleaning the bathroom)
but doing it quickly is clearly preferabfe
tofacing(orevendiscarding!)a pileot
clothing in need of repair and these
appliances can even malce it fun!
.
MESA VERDE CENTER RAS
IT ALL FOR FATHER'S DAY
WHEN THINKING OF DAD,
THINK OF MESA VERDE CENTER
PIECEMAKERS
&41 -3112
BANK OF AMERJCA
759-4476
ALBERTSON'S MARKET
751--4270
HAMBURGER HAMLET
546-7392
ICE CAPA.OES CHALET
979-UaO
MUSJC MARKET
548-0038
EDWARDS CINEMA CENTER "MESA VERDE TRAVEL
979-4141 556-6311
UPPER CUTS HAIRCUTTING
850-1189
PHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFFREY MAMSELLE BEAUTY SUPPLY BILBO BAGGINS
545-1718
SPA LADY
540-9822
WHEELAND
751""'82
54M7M 662-2875
MIONE'S RESTAURANT
97M735
DOLPHIN HAIR FASHIONS
S40-0eOO
SWENSEN'S tcE CREAM 556-41937
WITH A DINING
EXPERIENCE
OR Glf;T.-
GIFT
IDEAS
FOR
YOUR
FAVORITE
GRADUATE
TOO!
j
l
/' -
-
f
----..______ -. ---. ----: -
6-Oa<ts 'N Grada/An Advertising Suppkwnent to the DAILY PILOTfTueeday, June 12. 1984
OCCGRADUATES •••
PromPa&e3
HUNTINGTON BEACH: Suan-ne E. AderM. Vlc:tQt P. ~ SNron A. Anderlon, w.nenne
Andenon, Mat'9 Ane P. ~.
Julie A. Arc:NmMult Durbin,
RoMmflr)' M At9trong, Jenet L
Amds. Y\IOMe R. 811119y, Heney P.
Baille, Kerl O. Blml. KtinMlfl C
Bell, EllDDettl L. Bennet1, JennHer'
L Blcldey, Jule A Bini, EdytM E.
Bbc:hoft, John W. Btodg9t1, 0... o. Bott, Sharon N. Bou Stewn D. :::-~~' ,. .... ~~~
WllliMI E. BroeeMU Sr, T-.. M.
Brown. Caiptlce G. 8uccola. OuWl
Mlntl Bui, l(lmbeney A. Bultman
Melinda M &Kris. Gllll M Bulhey,
AUOn R. Calhoon,
•
I
EV911 B. Campbell Cathy L
Carpenter, Robert W Chambera.
C&rOI M. Chartrand. Teresa M.
C"-"92. Shu-Hui Chfen. Kathleen L Christillnson, Christine M.
Clauten, l(fmberly D Collter.
Karen eonw.y, Jim L Cordell,
Wiiiiam M Cowper. Donald E
Craft Jr., Laura J. Crain. Anne M.
Crownurst, Crtlig B Cuthbert,
Ru•I J . C zach, Jot•Ph
D'Amb<oslo. Sanh H Deng,
Cynthia A ~. Jeenne L Devil,
Mary F DeChlrtco. Paul M. Defeo.
Sl'lerry L Deindoerler. O.t V. Diep,
Bn>e:e L Douglas, ~ F
Douglas. Lori L. Blett. Michelle M
Erwin, Carla J. E.11lam~. Deborah
L Fiddler. Elizabeth I Fltz.lim. mons. Aoben B.FlemlnQ Jr .• Melo-
arne A Frank, Oevkt N. tredericll.
. Jeanette L. Galvan, Gnbert R
Garcia. Mlctlael J. Garrity, Alex N
Garulut. Karen J. G9ustad, Suun
K. Geers. Richard W BetvlnQ,
Antoinette B Gennusa, Leslie
Georgeeon, Florence Gerardo,
And,_ Gii, Oevkt D Gottstetn,
Anthony F. Grayaon. Dennis S
GrMn, Jentter L Greeri, Juliette A.
Greylhock, Parnete J Griemen. MwtcR.Gr~
Peul G. Grybow, Audy E. Gun-awan. John E. Harding, Anthony
Har"JO, Tltanl Harrla. J>8tride L
Hashmi, LOf1 L ~Robert V.
Hemlley, SuNl1 M. HermanNn,
WHETHER
IT'S FOR
DADS
OR
GRADS
WE'VE
GOT IT!
,,,. ,,.....,. ,,, ,,
OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK
'.' :. ' . .. ' ... . :. .. .. ' . * .
4 .. 1 4
I ~ l_ '-1 • \ J. -'-t "')I••,
' What ii
I
means
fdr your
'~~f!J.J£·-~
"c!osmfwd"
~~
classffled ads
642-5671
19J ... 17th.
Come In Md ottOOee "°"' • wide ~ gift packagee filled
with Hickory Farms llWard-wtnnlng meet. ch1111, sweets And more.
" Ded ... OUI of town, •'I tiledly INp your, gift 11l1ctlofi.
:1e -SOUTH COAST PWI
· Ormute Coast ldglJ .Claool
.oadtuites' names "1U be ·
pabHsla~ bi the DAILY PILOT
For Dads and Grads ...
Quiksitver-
A Sense of Style
A. Echo beoch 1runk B. ST Cool) boardshOf1
C Bongos longboardef D. Nylon 1runk
~~~
56 FASHION ISlAND ·NEWPORT BEACH· (714) 644 -5070
· L · L · A · G ·
ANOTHER WAY OF .SAYING
''HAPPY FATHERS DAY''
Saturday, June 16 -Big Band Concert on the Green 12-3PM
Sunday, June 17 -Cobra Car Show, 11AM-4PM (Over
80 wonderful cars to look at and dream about) .
• South Coast Plaza
Village
located at Sunflower & Bear Streets
Santa Ana, CA 92704 • (714) 241 -1700
Adjacent to South Coast Rlaza
...
• •
'
UCIGRADS •••
hOlllPqe8 rf
CCC GRADUATES •••
FromPaae2'
Lanon, ~a L L.Mnoeton. Kelty
Mwtlncz. Mar)one A. Ried, An-
toiMtte R.. Roberta. Oouglu H.
Roeen, J\lli9 A. Ryan, Gloria
SceberTM, Doneld Sc:ohoenmehl.
Westminster: Dorothy E. Ablee.
Teddy V. Ander'Mn. Latrlea F.
Anderlon, J~ L Batbet, St•
M. Flor--Lopcz. Alloe F. GolO-
blatt, R4lMell A. Haltauka, C.lhy
Sa\'e mone~ shopping values ad·
\'Crliscd an the
.
Adaltgrads
atH.B.H.S.
The ~ --~ .,. CM-:=-.. '°'~-=:~ inoton 8eedl
LAnot9 Abenoj8. M*Y A. Alen.
Lori Mloft Andwaon, Sonia· M ..-,, ~ ...,..., Tina A. Wren. Oterwl PIUt INppua, Et-,.,,_ Blec:llbUm, ~
81encNrd. Bii Joe aa.nkenMlp.
Mldleel A. Bllilta, Timottly Edwerd
Bloelty, Deborah J. !Mtce. Patricia
Ann Butter, 8Mr'I Pltftdt c.hlll.
JMalca CNet•. ~ Cowtlng,
Alll9on er.M. Ellzabetll Anne
CrenlhllW, Patrick J. ~
Matti A. OicldMOIT, ~ 0 .
Dracier. Heidi Marie Elbel, Jotin 0 ,
Eldrldge. Cyntllla M. Faria,
MldlMI P. Fergu.on, S~ Ferrie.
~eldo A. Garcia. Bryan
ThomU Giii, IAtlcla Gon:ulMil,
Jamee C. Hwgreevea, P9nny Ann
Harrie, Toralf A. Haukabo,
Kathleen Anne Howell. Karwn Sue
Hftng, LIM llom, cnrtatlne 8.
Kelly, OonM ~. Sherry 1..-ng,
Jullatte Llpecomb. Jon
MKGr9g0t, F.,lpe Mayorga,
&.an E. MceollOugf!. Pamm
Mlc:Nla Mcintyre. "'* Ann
MNde and &Mn Ann Mendoz&.
Aleo Jill Erlea Miier. StllC'; Arttte
Miter. Jo Ann Mlncly, Mike
Mllchell, Marla Eleonara
Mo 11atecher, Karwn AM MurpNe,
Jamee ~ N9wton, ConrMI C.
P9dlla. BatMre Sue Payton, Jen..
niter A. Peerce, l<lmberty Marie
Pwr. Gabf1et ,.,.., L.aKla Per-nae, JoMllfte .,._., Oebotllh
Lynn Pigott, Oer1IM POie, Mldleel
J. Preaeon, Matthew S. Reynolda,
Denlel o. Reynoeo, ~ L.
Roundy, Todd 8. Royston, Teri Lyn
--~~ ... Ptnllmtn A._~ Scott R. Schwertt, O.Yld T. Shan-
die, Carol Anne Singer, .Xwy A.
Sola, Jamee L. Sow911. Alma St.
Clair, Cheater C. Statllng, Andrea
SuUlvan, Todd Yo.Ill Talteda,
UIUrl 1>. ~. -rim Thliilen,
TreYOr Thompeon, Ha Ngoc Tren,
Herbert P Valker, Anthony Ver-~ Robert Wlttkamm and Col-
IMn Young. ••• , .............. 0.---.
NOW· ·Tl IERE'S 50 G -'.l.-:.1u-.~~~
YOUR SHOPPING AT •
BRISTOL TOWN & COUNTRY:
Restaurants & Foods
Barclay Inn
Bristol Meats
The French Cro~sant
Gin Ling Restaurant
Ham's Country Cookery
Jasper's Bar & Grill
Numero Uno Pizza
Swenson's Ice Cream
Health Services
Dr. Wes Kohtz -Opticran
Osteopathic Physician's
Weight Control
South Coast Chiropractic
Tony's Nutrition Center
Weight Watchers
Beauty Services
Bontrevage Hair
Class Act 'N Nails
Donna Bella Hair
Hair Surgeons
Shear Metro Hair Arts
W inter Beauty Supply
••
Home Accessories
Bed\, Bath
Design House
Closets R Us
Elegante Lighting
Great Eastern Enterprises
Clothing & Jewelry
Arcapah Jewelers
Fredericks of Hollywood
Gemstone Collector
Jaclyn's Bridal
Newport Fashions
Ruby's Boutique
Uniform Place
Gifts & Hobbles
Book Vault
Country lane
Fame Hallmark
Hennessey & Ingalls Books
Holubar Mountaineering
Hum-Ml Imports
Sheet Music + Music House
Video Depot
Wortd's Largest Pet Store
Yarns & Crafts Unlimited
llDISfOL :}&country
If YOU.RE LOOKING FOR THa UNUSUAL
IN Gln"S, GOOD RISTAURANTS FOR A
LIGHT SNACK TO A BPUTIPUL MIAL
SOMrntlNG FOR YOUR HOMI OR SV•N
POR YOURS•ur .... w• HAVI! so SHOPS AND BUSIN•ss•s
JUST A BLOCK AWAY PROM THI MAD·
DINING CROWDS WITH ACRIS 01'
HASSU PRll PARKING.
SHOPPING CENTER
31G0-3118 I . IRllTOL IT. IANT A ANA
RILAX AND SHOP •RISTOL TOWN AND
COUNTRY SHOPPING C•NTIR. JUST ONI
•LOCK NORTH OP SOUTH COAST PLAZA.
~ ..
Services
Accent Cleaners
Anthony Schools
Callfomfa Home Realtors
Home Savings & loan
Jim's Shoe Service
Nautilus Travel
Olan Mills Photography
Quick Quick Copy & Print
Coming Soon:
Manhattan Saving & loan
N
i
···••v.. _ .. __ _
Ci
cc
By·
Of•
1
~~
coc
•
ClllllllDI
. --
lUESOAV JUNt 12 1~8-l O f<ANGE COUN IV ·_A~d'/r1NIA . • ~ r.
BB students s~e .over _expul
Cite los s of scholarships as trustees
continue prom-cocaine incident probe
graduate with their classmatea Thurs.-
day they will lose college scbolar-
sh1p$.
They also claim they that a ruent
school district policy oroetjna stu-
dents to submit to random searches as
a cond1tion of attendins school
act1vittes violates their constitutional
rights.
Monday ni&ht's expulsion hearinas~ hdd samilar hear:inp on five
before tchoot boerd members. But Other students previously arid we
Superior Coun :Juctat Robert Pol' expected to announc% their ICUOD at
denied the motion on srounds that tonight's regularly ICbedulcd bOard
the request was ~ture in preced-meetina.o The ninth suspended stu-
ina act.ion by trustees, accordina to dent has requested a delay tn hear-By ROBERT BARKER °' ... ..,,... .....
T~o of nine St!Jdents facing ex-pulsion from Hunungton Beach Hi&h
School because they allesealy had
cocaine in their poS5CSsion at the
Coast
Fountain Valley's blue
dot project Is virtually
completed./ AS
No easy solution fot
Sunflower Intersection In
Costa Mesa./ A3
California
Vicki Morgan bludgeon
murder trial gets under
way./ AS
Nation
Tornadoes, floods con-
tinue to wreak havoc on
nation's midsection./ A4
U.S. missile Intercepts a
dummy ~BM forflrst
tlme./M
World
A family of Amerldan
missionaries drown In
flash flood./ A4
tran, Iraq vow to end
attacks on civilians Is
taking effect./ AS
Mlnd&Body
Theacuscope,anew
device to keep tissues In
tune, Is popular with ath-
letes./81 -
Sporta
Ex-Ocean View High and
Orange Coast College
pitcher Jack Reinholtz
and his Cal State Full-
erton teammates return
aschampa./C1
South, North coaches put
finishing touches on their
teams as Orange County
All-Star basketball game
nears./C2 .
Former Los Angeles
sportscaster Gii Stratton
Is running a radio station
-In a remote section of
the Island of Hawaii. /C2
Entertainment
Look for more topical
themes In made-for-"Pl
movies this year after the
success of such shows as
.. The Day After." /83
Westlanda stockholders
OK merger with a Can-
adian firm./ Al.
Etm• Bombeck
Bridge
auu.tln Board
8ullnMI c.ttfomla NeWI
QeMlfted
Croeeword
OMtf'I NoUc.
HQfoecope
Annlandeta
Mind and Body
Mutuel Funds
National News
~ Paparaal
Pottcelog
Pubt6o Not!Cel
Sport• Stock Marketa T_....on
Thea ... w .. ther
Wcw"9 Newt '
92
A8
A3
~
A4
~ ca
EM
C7
82
81·2 c.
A4
A7"'
8 1
A3
M .Ce
C1·2
C5
83
83
A2
A4
school's junior-senior prom have
filed suit apinst school district
officials.
The two senior clas studed~ -
Tbom9 Wri&ht and Matthew Kass -5f9 if they are "ot allowed to
·The students illso bad sought a
temporary restraining order block.ins
Two women Jn.hired ,
Two Costa lieu women were .eriou:!f In.Jared Monday
wben their car pn••bed into an electrt pofe on Placentia
Aftllae_Jut north of ltatancla BICb Scbool ln Costa lleea.
Tbe drlYer.11aJ1aret Dill, 58, may ba.e collapeed at tbe
cburt sources. • inp.
• School trustees, meanwhile, met · Superintendent Jake Abbott had
behind closed doors and heard testi-taken a stand tltat al~ use or
mony from three students and their possession of cocaine is a .. blatant
. parents unttl midni&ht Monday. violation" of school regulations and
wheel dae to a Rf..sare or lieut attaekj!Mt bif0re 8M diowe
f1l1I speed Into tbe pole. puamedb .aw. Botb OW Ud-laer
pe~er. w1.aona· Tbery. 57, were U9ted I.a ertdcal
coDCU on today at Poantafn Valley (".ommanlty lloilpltal.
Newport, Laguna applaud
approval of fireworks bill
Assembly strongly approves legislation
returning power to loca l governments
By JERRY BJRSCB °' ... ..,Nit .... The 5late Assembly's over-
whelming approval of legislation
returning power to local aovemments
to prohibit the sale or use offireworks
was seen as good news to local coastal
cities who worry about the fire hazard
Qf fireworks in crowded beach neigh-
borhoods.
Newport Beach and Laguna Beach
city officials welcomed the measure,
which was approved Monday in a
66-2 vote.
Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa,
Irvine and Fountain Valley allow the
sale and use of safe and sane
fireworks.
But at least 83 of California's 415
cities restricted or banned fireworks
before an appellate court in San Jose
ruled four months ~o that those
ordinances were invalid because the
state had not given cities or counties
authority to restrict fireworks.
"Our ban on all fireworks bas been
in effect for at least 30 years and we
have been enforcing it anyway," said
.
Robert Wynn. Newport Beach city
manager.
The court's overturning of the ban
received a similar reaction in Laguna
Beach.
"We were gotng to enforce our ban
even 1f someone was going ro take us
to court. It is too dam dangerous here
with all of our brush and our hills.,"
said Ken Frank, Laguna Beach city
manager. The city has banned the sale of
fireworks for many years but until
1982, Laauna Beach allowed people
to shoot off fireworks on July 4 on the
beach.
"Wbat we had was a war zone. It
was really somethina. In response to
citizen complaints we banned the use
of fireworks at any time. Instead we
have a rublic fireworks display on the
beach.' Frank said.
The Assembly vote sent the bill
back to the state Senate, which bad
aefrovcd •!'earlier draft by 35-! . The
bat contains tlJlCncy provtS1ons
which would allow at to take effect this
Fourth of July tf stgned by Gov.
Georsc DcukmeJ1an before then. ••The vote is a step in the n&ht
dlrcctlon to foster homt rule." he
added.
Wynn said the Balboa and WC$t
Nc:weon commun1t1es arc parucu-
larty 1n need of the ban because most
of the structures in those areas are
made of wood. have wood shingle
roofs and are build close totether.
The buildinas are near the beaches
and could be set on fire by ruay
firework
.. If a fire aot in those areas 1t would
be v~ lwd to ft&)\t. .. W)'nn satd.
Hµntington ·Ev:ening High:
the 'sec6nd ehanee' school
Brian Berry. 18, wa an out1tand1n1
basketball proa~t as a 10phomore at
Ocean V'te"W H1&h hOol who tran ...
femd to Huntina1on Beech Hjp
Sch<>ol when w lost h11 wt•na ~t10ft as~ j unior.
But he said he ralimt 100 lite that •
he made the switrh to the M"' Khool for .. lht wrona tealOM. .. He ftU ~r
behind in h1 IChOOI work and lost
1otnat 1n bAskctblll and me
depreucd. He saw a p$ychiatrist and in& he ~id. was hospitalized fi r a roupl of • • • wcekll. 8n1ni1 rilht"ccw1nacoun 1-Scvcntttn·)'C&N>k! Debbie Ar-
"'
mour a tos>n tch tudcnt at FountaJn Valley Hi&Jl boot -ho
c celled a member of lhe teh0ol'1
Troubedwr 'Qlina ~P. But
eeciountertd a lot of resa .-M-n bc:r
mother and father were ttiti .. a
divorce. Her mothei later became ill
and ha t.thtt ditd ofkukcmia. She
~ cla and her chlnca et
~ti n ~ neart NU~. he too,-m:caviq coun lhc id. . .....
Bcih V•l, alto 11. bad 1 beby ......... 8800lft>/ d)
I '
• 10
I
BJ IMA ....... Prw
The Eovi.roomemal Pftl4ecliae
Aatoey may put <>ruee ad Loi Anaeaet counties waiven to dllmp sewaec that has uda1oDe 1e11 strinaent treatment thAI) reca:~ fedc:ra1 law ioio the-oc:caa. ·
18liut ~rotation officials. &om the
.two nties comp&aiaed Monday
that additiOoal oceu monitori•
tests required in return for the
waivers will be cosdy aDd diflicult to
rim1nali11 for the Huntinaton Bc&ch
Polace Dcpenment. He 1.a&ified in
• nnuthattho ubttanCleiscocaine,
Urta II)' ••
~ Offi6at1 also di1do1Cd .that llU· )lenll wttc warned not to lake alcohol
pnd druas to clau functioM. They
•lso wtre wamt<l. the official 111d, ~tlat they would Pot ibty be tubJect to ~hes, 1 ·
: The scpente but identical uits
filcdMondayin; prnorCounat~
that neuher Kais or Wiiaht ~
druu end if there wm.lilt11l drup an
the limouane. thcY were~ bj uother P.rty in die vehicle.
The two studenu are uldfta ror undetermined amount• of money in
the 1uit qainst the five tNI~ and
uperiotent Abbott and Princi~l
AnQ Chlebicki.
The pilfr claim theY, can't calculate
the ~aluc or their-education,
diploma • scholarships that already
ha~e been. granltd and edu'11onal
opponuoitic.s.
They claim that school official•
alto are prcventina teachm from
testifyin& in their behalf durina ex·
pulsion hcarinp and that they are
belna deprived of their riaht for
defense and for a fair hearina. ..
iSEWAGEDUMPING PERMIT WEIGHED •• .rromAl
Primary treatment removea sohds
-jnd toxic materials from tew•;
etcondary trea1mcnt further purifies
by rcmov1n1 orunic substancet.
A decision on the waiver iS ex·
ipec:lcrd 1n about two months. he aaid.
··11 the waiver 15 not vanted. we
would be obliged to put an additional
$1 00 million into capiw upenses"
for secondary treatment equipment,
Edgar said Monday.
The equipment would boost the
count)'ts co t from about UOO 000 to
$1 .5 million every year, while the co-t
of .. -4bo 1dduio nal monitorin' tnll ·
would only be about St .S millrQn, be.
u 1d.
Wha le the county is committed to
prov1d1ng the resources for the ad·
dit1ona1 monitorina. ··we question
whether some of the requiremenu are
p0ssible, •• f.dpr said.
"Some of the procedures have
never been done and we don't think
they can be done. A tot of data they're-aslu~ doesn't follow a scientific basis
for do1n1 h.'' he said. ·
But the EPA feels stronaJy that the
monitorina data is needed "to de·
&.ermine what impact, if any, a lesser
amount of treatment is going to have ..
on the water around the point of
discharie and on the marine life/'
said, Patricia EkJund, chief of the
EPA's waive~ review.team. ·
Tho federal standard requires the
removal of SS percent of solids.
Oranse County officials said the
county's current plan complies with
SECOND CHANCE SCHOOL •••
Prom Al
when she was 14. She attended
Westminster Hi&h at two different
tames, Edison High. Huntinaton
Beach Hi~nd the School·~ed
Mother's ram. She was acmna
lost m the shu e and her chances for
academic success appeanld almost
nil • • • But Bnan. Debbie and Beth dug
deep and overcame their obstacles
w1th a lot of pit and hard work-and
<1ome help.
Wednesday evenins they'll be
drc!>St'd an royal blue aowns and
graduation caps and will receive their
high 'ichool diplomas like so many
t>ther students. But their route was
J1ffercnt.
.\II three transf.trred to Huntington
Beach Evcnina Hi&h School. They
g1v(' lhe campus that doesn't have a
band or a football team or a
cheerleader the credit for their
Jcademic salvauo o.
The} 're allowed to work at their
own pace and can hold outside jobs.
"School stan s at 3 p.m. and ends at 9
p m >\nd all credit their sucx:css to
small classrooms and teachen wbo
perform more like coaches and tutors
and who. the youngstttS say, acnu·
mely care fot them.
&-th Voatt. the airl who attended
three J11Terent h'lh schools plus the
Schoot-aaed Mothers Pros.ram. said
Evening Hiah teachers .. Clon't butt
into )Our busineu. Ther don't press-
uft' vou. they help you.•
.\ petite and pretty blonde with
hracn on her teeth, Beth said she's
always been intimidated by govern-
ment classes because she heard
friends say how hard they arc.
She said her teacher, Jackie Garcia,
pve her a choice of textbooks but
Betb still did badly on tests. Garcia
had Beth ao throuah all the material ·
apin. Ultimatel~. Beth said she
passed the-district sproficiency test in
JOVe~ment wi~ flyina colors. And
m do1"4 so she also developed an
interest m aovernmental affairs.
Beth. who said she plans to attend a
couple of classe$ at Orange Coast this
summer to test the academic waters.
said her desire to show her dad that
she could do it helped inspi~ her to
aet her di~loma.
"I admu~ this youna lady, School
Administrator Ferren Christensen
said. "She encountered a tremendous
chaUenge at the aae of 14. Now look at
her. she's a very responsible youna
adult. She's a better citizen for
hanains in there and tackling her
challenae."
Brian Berry. who transferred to
Huntinaton Hi&h to play basketball
but realized he tef\ all his friends
behind at Ocean View .. came to
Evemna Hiah twomonths aao and
has made up lots of around. camina
A'sand B's.
But he said he encountered aJoomy
times when he realized he switched
schools for the wrona reasons and lost
a lot of self-esteem.
"I was ashamed," he said ... A lot of
my friends were aoina to colkse and I
wasn't aoina anywbcre."
the 1tatc.control board's ocean plan,
which requires 75 percent removal.
Federal law requires agencies to
gradually work toward mcetina the SS
percent standard. But it allows the
EPA to arant variances if a state also
agrees.
The counties would be required to
monitor the chemistry of the water,
the effects of the discharge on marine
orpnisms in and on the water and the
solids that arc removed from the
scwaae. Eklund said.
Dr. Rimmon· f.ay .. a biologist with
Pacific Bioma:rinc Laboratorierlnc.,
Malled aaainstlbe \'Ariance.
"If waste were good for the ocean,
the fisherman would be comint in
here saving, •Give us more -tb1s is peat.'~
But the 6-foot· 1-inch athlete said
he prospered by lnmina at bis own
pace. He now plans to attend Golden
West College and then C.al f>tate
Fullerton.
"Brian has distinguished himself to
the staff in a remark.able way. And 1
don•t think we've heard tht last of
rum in athletics, .. Christensen said
Debbie Armour bas made up
nearly SO credits since coming to
Evening Hiah in January. Sbe also
works regularly asa waitress at Coco's
Restaurant.
"I got burned out with school and
from alt the pressure.
"But the teachcri here (Evening
Hi~) arc wonderful. I couldn't
beheve it. That have time to give to
me. They care. And Mr. C.
(Christensen) has been a great en:
couragcment.
"He made me feel I can su<Xleed.
"Nobodr, in my family has ever not
araduated. I've planned my life and I
plan to graduate at 17. It's imponant
for me to suooeed."
Christensen said he has no doubts
that she will.
"She has the inlelliaence and
backaround to do whatever she wants
to do," he said. "She'll be successful at
whatever she decides."
The three -Brian. Beth and
Debbie-will araduate with about 44
of their classmates in the open field
behind the cam~s they share with
Wintersbura Hi.ah School, 17200
Golden West A venue. Ceremonies
start at S:30 p.m.
Just Call
642-6086
Wu• .. ~ 1lll:e •*' dHt DallY Pilot! WU& cloa'l '" Ub! Call th 1amber a& left u41eu maaa~ wtll be recorded, truseribecl ud .Uvere4
to th .,,,..,....k e411Mf. · n. .... tf.Mu auwen., Mrv•ee may be ••ed to ~'4 letten to th
e4ltor • ••t a.,k. C.tr94ten .. ftl Letun ~lama mnl IKJ9dt &Mir
um• U4I -~-••• •Iii.Mi fw verlfJcad ... No ctra'latiw calla. plUM.
O=I
It QuerantMd
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~-'·'" . l!J i lf! fUI 1<fMI c ...
fA ....
T.U u WMt'1•1"' mlM.
ORANGE COAST
llllJPlllt
H. L. lottwerta II
Pubf lther c...., Dew.., ..........,c ............
dltOf ind AMt1nt Conlroffet
to thl Publllhet
-
Wf ATHlR
---~ -~ ---.=--_ ----
Cooler skies and low clouds
Tldu .
fOOAY ~low U lpm J,t l.colld fllOI> 9-157 p m. U
W'IDNHOAY
4111•111. ·I 3
10-49 ··"'· 3 7 3:15p.m. 2 I SecoM Noh t:~ p.m u
tun •• todey •• e-oa p.m .. n.. w~ at 5:,. tam. llnd ••aoMri •t ll05 p.111
Moon tlMa et 7:34 p m • Ml•
w.cin.day •• 4:411 a.m. anc:t ....
~etl:38pm
71 u Sf 47 . , ...
SS 41 .. 74 M 72 .. .. ea 17 es es 82 11 16 '72
t2 "' 112 70
77 .. to 85 17 .. t2 74
13 11
,,.. .... • a ...,.....,., .. .. ....,... ti .. .... on.. • 11
*-Yllftl = • ..-.v. 11
0-..,.,.Qly • • ()Mha a ..
OtWIClo .. .. """~ .. 10 ~ Ill • "'-'Ill tOt n :,":'I' ..... .. .. N .. Po111Md,Of. 71 IM
Pf~ • • =~ tO .. 1• ..
..:0-'0 74 .. • ..
8t l.OIM tt 71 8t~Tampe IO n
WUkeCMy 11 ... Sen AlltonlO t2 71 SMIOteoo 72 a
SM Franclllco 11 6a """'*'·"·"' .. Tl .......... • ...
9Mttl9 • 61
~-,;:. tO • 74 57
Sf*-70 It 8~acu91 ., 41
Te>pMa 12 70
TllCIOn .. n . TUIU ..
WMhlnglO!I t7 71
Wlclllla .. 70
Wllminoton.O.. ... 7t
Tempe , SuRF REPORT
Irvine Bowl.·
.. Le to 53
112 56 17 .. ._..
. "' "' ee • 112 76
CM 73
112 71 11 eo
More than 380 different news
orpnizations from all over the world
converged on the Laguna Canyon
IND
1·3 2-3
2·3 •a -J-3 .,
1-3 .
SWiii dnc:tlon: _,,hwMt
Newport city employees ask
wage discrimination study
Petitioners claim female workers paid
less than men for identical positions
By JERRY HIRSCH presented the petition to the City
Of tM Oellr,... •wt Council at its Monday night meeting.
About a quarter of Newport "Management rejected ~e idea
Beach's 600 full-time employees have and we are not sure the council ~ows
· ed ~~ oc· fh~;.,:._..that we want the study. That 1s the sign . a petition as mg . "'--::rr rhtson we arc presentina tfie peti· C<;>u~cll . to condu~t . a wage ~is-ti on, .. Butler said. cnminauo~ study s1m1lar to one JUSt Lorenzo Mota, the Newport Beach
compl~ted ·~Irvine. personnel director, said lhe city has
At issue 1s a comparable worth acknowledged the 1'e9UCSt was made
study employ~s requested . dun~g but he refused to discuss manaac-
salary n~ot1atJons an Apnl, satd ment's stand.
--I>Jputy <;::1ty Cl~rk Irene Butler But· "I can't talk about what aoes on in
ler, the v_1cc president ofthe ~e~rt negotiations with you," Mota said.
Beach City Employees .Association. The study would jud&e whether
Butler, a 10-year ctty employee, peoP.le wbo hold differeot jobs with
Man sought
in Balboa
Island rape
Newport Beach police arc hunting
for a man who beat and raped a 27.
year-old woman late Sun~ as she
walked from her boyfriend s BaJboa
Island apanment to her car.
The woman. a Costa Mesa resident,
said the attacker ~ut his hands around
her throat and $11d, "I rully like your
dress." accordina to Newport Beach
police.
The ta pi st, police said, punch&l the
woman in the lower back and threw
her down on lhe ftont scat of her car,
parked on Coral Street. The assailant
lhratcned to kill the woman if she
looked at his face. police reported.
The woman described her attarur
as beina sba_rply drc.d and havina a
soft. deep voice. She $1ld he was in his
late 30s or early 40s. Police said the
attaek took place: at a.bow 1Ckl0 p.m.
June on Coast: _
Cool and cloudy
Cool. doud)' mominp and evea
n1np with buy afternoon sunshine
•iU,prevail thro~ Wtdncsday IS
SCMUheril C&lif omaa scttleS into the
typical J ~DC ~\htt pattern. -ltiahs Wtdilesda)' •iU ttaeb 68 to
7S ~after ovcmi&ht ~s of SS
to 6f·u -most inlarid"<aact coutaJ areu. ~-to the Na.liooa.1 Weather Sfrvke. Mountain lt'CU wtU rml.l.in fair bUt
cookr Wtdncsdly. v.itb the lat.c n.i&ht
NS earty mom•nt fbi li"l"'n111 atona
the lower al &lo •
similar levels of difficulty and re-
sponsibility set paid similar wag.cs,
Butler explained.
"lf the city does the study. we arc
sure they will find that disparities
exist. We are not asking them to do
this just for fun;1 said Butler.
Irvine Mayor Larry Aaren asked
his city to conduct a similar study and
is requestina the Irvine City Council
set aside about S l 00,000 for salary
adjustments. His request is tched\llcd
to be debated at toniaht's Irvine City
Council meetina.
Prior to federal legislation pi'Obibit·
ina sex discrimination 1n ~y-
SwilllIDer
collapses,
dies in surf
A West Covina ma.a wu,_pullcd
from tbe surf ntU the Balboa Pier on
Monday afternoon after. aooln:Mly
sufferina • heart atUd and .-pcitiap.
dro · ~tenon. 6S. -u swimmiQI
about l SO yards from the Shott about 3:30 p.m. Monday when ti.C threw has
arms up in the a.it a:nd abc>u.od '° bi
c:ompan.ion. lnpid Dittmar, who wu
.ttiq OD tbC biCeCh.
Peterson theft ftll face forward into
the water. Dinmar tcn:amcd fof hdp
and a nearby n tii\Mf, Vcrd1ny
Vakntino. swam out ud ~
•Peterson to t.be shore.
Para1Mchcs "Wtf'e summoned aad
PtimOn wu Liken to Holl Mcm·
oriiJ Ha.pitil in Ncwpon leldl.
whmhewas~deM.
f>c•monhlld ....... •b&Wt-.ck
13 )urt ~and docton •• HOii
spenalatCd he Md a~ llar1
altK._ •hilt swunm11111 MOftdl • PotiCe aid. " -~-
Q autopay ii pcedi ...
ment, employers commonly segre-
gated employees into male jobs and
female jobs. The wages for the
women's jobs were considerably
lower than the waaes for male
employees, according to a report by
the City oflrvine.
Although jobs arc no lo•r for-
mally segregated by seA, jobs tra-
ditioaallr. held by women are still
mostly filled by women:-and tra·
ditional male jobs arc still mostly
filled by men. And the womep are
paid less even if their jobs have the
same difficulty as traditional male
jobs, the report says.
In Newport Beach for example.
secretaries arc paid less than main ten·
ance workers even thoucb the jobs
require the same level or education
and responsibility, Butler said.
The Irvine studr. found that 70
percent of that city s se<:rctaries and
police clerks were women and that 70
pen:ent of the city's inspectors, enai·
necrs. police officers and manqen
were men. The average salary for
female workers is about $4.rOOO Jess
than the avera_ge salary ror male
Irvine city employees.
Although the majority of the em-
ployees who sianed the Ne~
petition were female, Butler said she
believes some of the male emplo~
-such as clerks -would "'benefit
from the study.
.
BB bank robber.
sought by cope
Police are scarcbiQI for a ma.a who
robbed a Huntiniton Beaeh be.Ilk
Monday of about $800.
The holdup occurred at 11 :23 a.m.
at the Golden State Sanwa Suk. 6100
Warner Ave.
Police said a man banded a &ella' a
note sayina be had •sun, tbeft pointed
to the cash drawer. The man \hen 6Cd
the bank with the money.
The robber wu docribed u a
C.ucasiao man. qe 26 t.0 l~ about 6
feet t.all. 'WCi&hlna about 230 ~· wil.b liabt broWii cuitj hiir.
correction
"'°"··
4
--
() H A N C. I (__ 0 u N T '( f . ~ I • ' ~ ~ :. • • • •
.
over1ex
oar
·re at
Coast
Fountain Valley's blue
dot project is virtually
completed./ A3 .
L No easy solulTon for
Sunflower Intersection In
Costa Mesa./ A3
California
Vicki Morgan bludgeon
murder trial gets under
way./AS
Nation
Tornadoes, floods con-
tinue to wreak havoc on
nation's midsection./ A4
U.S. missile lnterc-wts a
oummy AB for first
tlme./A4
World
A family of American
missionaries d rown In
flash flood./ M
• attacks on clvlllans Is
t_aklng effect./ AS
Mlnd&Body
The acuscope, a new
device to keep tissues In
tune, Is popular with ath-
letes./81
Sports
Ex-Ocean View High and
Orange Coast College
pitcher Jack Reinholtz
and his Cal State Full-
erton teammates return
as champs./C1
South, North coaches put
finishing touches on their
teams as Orange County
All-Star basketball game
nears./C2
Former Los Angeles
sportscaster Gii Stratton
la running a radio station
-In a remote section of
the Island of Hawaii. /C2
Entertainment
Look for more topical
themes In made-for-TV
movies this year after the
success of such shows as
''The Day After.''/83
Baslneu
Westlands stockholders
OK merger with a Can-
adian firm./ Al.
INDEX
. ' . '
Two women Injured
Two Coeta lleea women were 9erioaae!f lDJa.red llcmday wbeD tlaelr car am•abed Into an electrl po(e on Placentia
AYeDae jut aortll of Eetaocla JU&h School ID ea.ta lleM.
Tbe drift!', Martaret DUJ, 58, ~T ban co1lapMCI at tlae
wlleel dae to. eelmre ot beUt attildrjat tiefOre Me droft
fall epeecl Into tlae pole.~ .u.t. llOtla DUI UMIJiel'
i-•~•· Wlaoaa Tlaery; 57, were u.ted ta crltical coadl oa today at Poaatala van,, ('.ommanJty B09plta1.
Newport, Laguna applaud
reversal of fireworks bill
Assembly strongly approves legislation
returning power to local governments
By JERRY HIRSCH °' .. °"" ........ T he state Assembly's over-
wbelmint approvil of lqislation
returnina power to local governments
to prohibit the sale or use of fireworks
was seen as good news to local coastal
cities who worry about the fire hazard
of fireworks in crowded beach neigh-
borhoods.
The measure was approved Mon-
day in a 66-2 vote.
At least 83 of California's 415 cities
restricted or banned fireworks before
an appellate court in San Jose ruled
four months ago that those ordi-
nances were invalid bccavsc the state
had not given cities or counties
authority to restrict fireworks.
"Our ban on all fireworks has been
in effect for at least 30 yean and we
have been enforcing it anyway.." said
Robcn Wynn, Ncwpon Beach ctty
manager.
The coun's ovenurnina of the ban
received a similar reaction in Laauna
Beach. •
.. We were going to enforce our ban
even if someone was goina m take us
to court. It is too darn danaerous here
with all of our brush and our hills, ..
said Ken Frank. Laguna Beach city
manager.
The city bas banned the sale of
fireworks for many ycan but until
1982. Laauna Beach allowed people
tosbootofffireworksonJwy4on the
beach.
.. What we had was a war zone. It
was really somcthina. In response to
citizen complaints we banned the use
of fireworks at any time. ln5tcad we
have a public firc'¥(>rksdisplay on the
beach," Frank said.
The Assembly vote .cnt the biU
back to the state Senate, which bad
•P.proved an earlier draft by JS-~. The
bill conwns urieocy provwons
which wouldallow1t to Jake effect this
Fourth of July if sianed by Gov.
Gcorae Deukmcjian before then.
.. The vote is a step in tbe right
direction to foster home rule." be
added
Wynn said the Balboa and West
Ne_weon communiues are pan.i~
larly 10 need of the ben b«.ause m.ost
of the str\JCturcs in ttiOX areas are
MJ(fe of wood, have wOOd shiri&le
roofs and are build close toeethtt.
The buildinp are near U.C beaches
and could be set on fire by tray
fireworks. '11111111 .. lfa fire aot in those areas it would !l'!~'!IJM9r!,.;...,..:."""-:.:'.;..::._,_,.,~"'"' .... ~_;._:111•~-ll 1 be ve:rY hird to fllht. .. Wynn 1d.
Hun~ington' Evening High_:
the 'second· chance' scfiool
BnanBmy, 18, wuanoumandina
buketbell Pf<.>~ as a soJ)hom0tt~a""t _...,__.,..._,.-"--~ocean View 1'ijh'seti001 Wf'o trans-
fcmd to Huntinaion Beech Hiah
School when be IOlt hit ""''"' pOlitioa u ~juneor.
But he uid he realized 100 late lhlt
he made the 1W1tdl to &he new iChOOl ror .. ,he ~ RUOM." Ht ieu rar
bttund in hit 1ehoof wort and lost
mtetat ill beskctball and beiCame. dt11tt*d· He w a psychiatnit and
wt hospttalized for a couple of
week • Brian it till rcttivinacoun I·
mour was a top-notcb stUdent at
Fountaia Valle Miah ~ 1'o tll~aed as a rMm of Lbc school • .,
Troubedour sina•• ~P! But she ~ncountcrcd a k>t 'of st wbeo bet
mother aDd father were eenina a
d1voror, Her mothef la1er bee.amt Ill
Ud htt father died of amnia. Silt
~ cla and her cbanca at
~uatt0n ~ nearly ruined. M
toO 1 n:icci vi"I cou h she id. • • •
Beth voecl. al 11. bad a hi
... (Pleue ... uoc:>ND/A2)
Trustees continue
hearings on nine
in cocaine case
By ROBERT BAR.DZ .................
Two of nine stuiteft11 f8cilll1es~
pulsion from Hunti~ a..:11 Hilli
School because they t'llca Illy Md
cocame in their ~ at me scboors junior~ prom b9ve
filed 5wt qainlt school dilllict
oftkials.
The two senior ~students -
Thomas Wnpt and MatibeW Kam
-say if they are ·not allowed to
graduate with their dulma1e1 nun.
day they Wlll km collqie ICbolu-
ships.
(Pleue .. 9'11JD&11'1'9/ A2>--~
EPA
mulls
sewage
·n -ea
sewage that tw undcraone lesa
stnnaent trca,meot than rcqu.imt by
lcdna.l law into the ocean, ofticia.ls
say.
But sanitation officials from the
two counties comp\iiad Moeday
that additioD.al ocean monitonna
tests required tn retwn for tbe
wai\cn will be costly and difficult to
perform.
(Pleue eee °" AOS/A2J
I
I
!
t • ' t
~
t OA1l Y PIL.OT/Tunday, June 12. 1984
STUDENT LAWSUIT •••
• : l be students also had sought a
temporary ~tr.uning order block.ing
~onday night's e~pulsion hcan~
before hoot board members. But
upenor Coun Judg Roben Pohs
denied the mouon on grounds that
lht' request was premature in prcced·
1ng action by tru'itees, accordmg to
court sources
School tru~tl'eS, meanwhile, met
behind closed doon. nnd heard testi-
mom f1 om three students and their parent~ until m1dn1ght Monday.
The' held s1m1lar heanngs on fi ve
otht'r '>tudents pre' 1ousl) and aft'
e'~ctuJ to announce their action at
tonight'' rcgularl} )Cheduled board
mel'llng The ninth suspended stu-
dent has requested a delay 1n be r· that they would ~u1bly be subJecl to
10~ ~~~
Su~rintendcnt Jake Abbou had
taken a stand that II ed use or
posse sion ot coca1ne is a "blatant
violation" of school regulations and
that officials have to send out a
message that at woo'l be tol~ra\~.
Trustees in the p.1st have pretty
wrll foltowed Abbott's p~vious re<:·
ommendat1on for e~puls1on.
School officials said today that the
material found in two limousines in
two separate lnc1dcnu at the May 11
Junior-senior prom at the Lona Bc.acb
EJks Oub has been tested out by a
crimmalist for the Huntinaton Beach
Police Depnrtment. He testified in
hean ngs that the substance is cocaine,
sources ~Y·
OffictaJs also disclosed that stu-
dents we re warned not to take alcohol
and drugs to cl aSi functions. they
also were warned, the official said,
The separate but idcnt1 I suits
filed Monday in upenorCourt liege
that neither Kass or Writ.ht possessed
drugs and if there were illepl drugs in
the hmou inc. they were ~ssesscd by
another party in the vehicle.
The two students arc askina for
undetermined amounts, of money in
the suit against the fi vo trustees and Su~rinttnt Abbott and Princtpal
Ann Chleb1ck1.
The pair claim they can't calcu.latc
the value of their cducauon,
diplomas, scholarships that al~dy
have been granted and educttonal
opportunities.
They claim that school officials
also aft' ~reventing teachers from
testifying 10 their behalf dunng ex-
pulsion hearings and that they are
being deprived of their right for
defense and for a fair hearing.
M~INES DENY 'BUZZING' CHARGE ••• ·
l"romAl .
from the Black Knight 8nd Death
Rattlers squadrons, who were tty. mo F .. 18s Whtie tlmulatfng .-rcraft
c.arrier landings at El iToro'• rur;.. -.
u per
J.1rday were conducted tn ac-
x:ordance wtth normat Marine Air
Corpt Station traff'° patterns,·•
Ufd Comfort In a pr&pared state-
ment.
•'Contrary to tome uninformed
usertlont, no Tl\frd Marine Wing
aircraft vlotated establlthed rulet
or endangered toc:;at reeldents.' ·
Comfort •. the wJno commander,
said.
SEW AGE DUMPING PERMIT WEIGHED ••
From Al
l hl' f PA. and the Cahfom1a Re-
gional Water Qual11~ Control Board
held a JOint heanng Fnda} 1n R1.,.cr-
c-,1de 10 consider the -re1mt1es' re-
4Ul'SI\
FP \ and control board officials
!..'.ltd thl') have tenu,el} deuded to
grant <>range ( ount\ a wal\·l'r from
the I 1ff~ Clean Water Act that
required count1ei. to perform com-
p1eu·secondary treatment of St'wage
hefore 1t ,., dumped
Orange Count) l WTentl) performs
partial secondan treatment. said
R1churd Edgar. lha1rman ot the
Orange Count~ ~an1tation D1\tncts
Pnman treatment remo'~ solids
and tox1i ma1enal\ from sewage;
o;econdal) treatment fu rther purifies
b) removing organic subsume!'!>
\ del 1s1on on the wan er I'> ex-
pected 1n about t\.\U months. he !Mltd.
··11 the wa1"er 1s not granted. we
"-OU Id be obliged 10 put an add111onal
$1 00 m1ll1on into capital expenses"
for secondary treatment equipmenl, EPA's waiver review team.
Edgar said Monday. The federal standard requires the
The equipment would boost the removal of 8S percent of solids.
oounty4-cost.!rom.about $100.000 l!l _ Qmng~ CotWt officials said the
$1 .5 million every year. while the cost county's current plan complies with
of the addlt1onal monitorinJ tests the state control board's ocean plan,
would only be about $1 .5 million, he which requires 15 percent removal.
sajd, • Federal law requires agencies to
While the county is committed to graduallyworktowardmeetiogthe85
providing the resources for the ad-percent standard. Bot it allows the
diuorull-monitoring.. '"we -'IUCSLion ERA to erant.nrial)()Cs if a ~tate also
wbctbersome of the requift'mentsare agrees.
possible," Edgar sai". The counties would be required to
"Some of the procedures have monitor the chemistry of the water,
never been done and we don't think the effects of the dischafie on marine
they can be done. A lot of data they're organisms in and on the water and the
asking doesn't follow a scientific basis soUds that arc removed from the
for doing it," he said. sewage, Eklund said.
But the EPA feels strongly that the Dr. Rimmon Fay. a biologist with
monitonng data is needed "to de-Pacific Biomarine laboratories Inc.,
term inc what impact. 1f any. a lesser argued against the vanance.
amount of treatment 1s going to have" "ff waste were good for the ocean,
on the water around the point of the fisherman would be comin$ in
d ischarge and on the marine life." here saying, 'Give us more -this is
said. Patricia Eklund, chief of the great.' "
SECOND CHANCE SCHOOL ••.
From Al
"'hen '\he wa') 14 She attended
Wt"llminster High at two d1 0crent
times. Edison High. Hunungton
Heath High and the School-a$ed
\ifother'.-. Program. he was getting
lo<;t in thl' shuffil' and her chances for
acadenm \UCCess appeared almost
nil • • • Hut Hnan. Debbtl and Beth dug
Jeer ,in<l overc.'.lme heir obstacles
'"lh a lot ofgnt and ha1 1 work -and
'l)ml' help
\.'vcJnec;da~ evening \~ey'll be
drC,,l·tl in ro~al blue go" '"'S and
graJ11 ,111on rape; and will receive their
high 'l h llll diplomas hke so man;
nt h1·r '' udents. But thctr route was
dt0t'll'l11
\II thr 'l· transterrcd to Hunungton
Alalh l \Cntng High School The)
gl\c the 1-'.ampus that doesn't have a
hand or a football team or a
l hrnkatkr the credit for their
a cad rm ll sah a11on
lhl'' re allowed to work at their
o"'n pall .ind can hold outside Jobs.
~chool \tarts at 1 p.m. and ends at 9
p.m '\nd all credit their success to
'mall da\srooms and teachers who
pnfnrm more hke coaches and tutors
.rnd "ho. the )Oung~ters sa;. genu-
rneh rarl' tor them
Beth Vogel. the girl who attended
three <l1fTcrcnt high schools pJus the
School aged Mothers Program. said
EH~ning High teachers "don't butt
into )our business The; do n't press-
ure ,ou. they help you"
•\ Pl'l1te and prett) blonde with
hrau.·<. on her teeth. Bet h said she's
WE'RE LISTENING
alwa;s been int1m1dated by govern-
ment classes because she heard
fn e nds say how hard they are.
She said her teacher. Jackie Garcia,
gave her a choice of textbooks but
Beth still did badly on tests. Garcia
had Beth go through all the material
again. Ultimatclr, Beth said she
passed the distnct s proficiency test in
JOvemment wtth fl ying colors. And
in doin$ so she also developed an
interest tn governmental affairs.
Beth, who said she plans to attend a
couple of classes at Orange Coast this
summer to test the academic waters,
said her desire to show her dad that
she could do it helped inspire her to
get her diploma.
"I admire this young lady, School
Adm inistrator Ferren Christensen
said. "She encountered a tremendous
challenge at the age of 14. Now look at
her. she's a very responsible young
adult She's a better citizen for
hangi ng 1n there and tackling her
challenge··
Bn an Berry, who transferred to
Huntington High to play basketball
but realized he left all his fnends
behind at Ocean View. came to
E\en1ng High twomonths ago and
has made up lots of ground. earning
A'<; and B's.
But he said he encountered gloomy
times when he realized he switched
schools fo r the wrong reasons and lost a lot of self-esteem.
"I was ashamed," be satd. "A lot of
my fnends were going lo college and I
wasn't going anywhere.··
But the 6-foot-1-inch athlete said
he prospered by learning at his own
pace. He now plans to attend Golden
West College and th~Cal State
Fullerton.
"Bnan hasdistjnguished himself to
the staff in a remarkable way. And 1
don't trunk we've heard the last of
him in athletics," Christensen sajd ..
Debbie Armour has made up
nearly SO credits srncc coming lo
Evening High in January. She also
works regularly as a waitress at Coco's
Restaurant.
"I got burned out wtth school and
from all the pressure.
"But the teachers here (Evening
Hi$h) are wonderful, I couldn't
believe it. That have time to give to
me. They care. And Mr. C.
(Christensen) has been a great en-
couragement.
"He made me feel I can succeed.
"Nobody in my family has ever not
graduated. I've planned my life and I
plan to graduate at 17. It's important
for me to succeed."
Christensen said he has no doubts
that she will.
"She has the intelligence and
background to do whatever she wants
to do," he said. "She'll be succcssf ul at
whatever she decides."
The thr~ -Brian, Beth and
Debb1e -will graduate with about 44
of their classmates in the open field
behind the campus they share with
Wintersburg High School, 17200
Golden West Avenue Ceremonies
start at 5:30 p.m.
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Temps ', SuRF REPORT
-----=-~
Living pictures Previewed
at Pageant of t~e Masters
World· s press attracted to Laguna event;
Festival of Arts opens to the public July 7
By DAVID BISHOP
~NlllC.fl••• ..... ,
Monday night was strictly for the
media ar-1..quna Beach's famous
Pageant of the Masters and the
world's press showed up 10 force lo
get a prt'vicw of this year's pro-
duction.
Hundreds of writers, photogra·
phers and television.crews josllcdand
jockeyed for proper an&Jes as the
renowned S l-ycar:.old. pageant un-
veiled its newest human recreations
of veat works of art on stage in the
Irvine Bowl.
More than 380 different news
organizations from an over tbe world
converged on the Laguna Canyon
Road Festival arounds. from the
Sigma photo agency in Paris to a
Japanese publishing house to the
crew from Ripley's Believe lt Or NoL
The pagea11t premieres for the
public July 7 and runs nighlly through
Aua. 26 in conjunction with the Slnd
annual Festival oflhc Ans, wbich is
held on the grounds adjacent to the
lrvinc Bowl at 6SO Laguna Canyon
...Road.
The festival features artists,
sculptors and artisans who display
and sell their work. Special entenain·
ment as well as propams for children
arc featured on the a:rounds reautarty.
The Festi vat is operated as a non-
profit orpniza1ion governed by a
board of directors. but the heart oftbe
orgamzatton as us volunteen, accord·
ing to a spokesman. '
A roster of 500 volunteers from
around Orange County participates
in the nigbt..ly J>!Oductaon of the
pageant on two different casts and u
backstage support.
This year's pageant is peyina
special tribute to -the 1984 Summer
Olympics by rccrcatina one of the
three offical Olympics com-
memorative gold pieces.
James Peed. the U.S. Bureau oft.he
Mint engraver who conceived the
design of the S IOcoin. was flown here
from Washinaton, D.C .. especially to
be on hand for the work's unveiling.
Not only the media likes the event,
though, more than 300,000 people
v1s1t the festival grounds eacb sum-
mer and the Pageant of the Masters
has been sold out for every per-
formance for the past 24 years..
Newport city employees ask
wage discrimination -~tudy
PetitionerSclaim female workers paid
less than men for identical positions
By JERRY HIRSCH
OflM.,.., ..........
About a quarter of Ncwpon
Beach's 600 fu ll-time employees have
signed a petition aYing the City
Council to conduct a wage dis-
crimination study similar to one just
completed in Irvine.
At issue is a comparable wonh
study employees requested during
salary ,,o~otJations an April, said
Deputy City Clerk Irene Butler But-
ler, the vice president of the Newpon
Beach City Employees Association.
Butler, a 10-ycar city employee.
Attacker·
sought in
Balboa rape
Newport Beach police arc hunting
for a man who beat and raped a 27-
year-old woman late Sunday as she
walked from her boyfriend's Balboa
Island apanment to her car.
The woman, a Costa Mesa resident.
said the attacker put bis bands around
her throat and said, "I really like your
dress," according to Newport Beach
police.
The rapist, pohcc said, punched the
woman an the lower back and threw
her down onJ.hc front seat of her car,
parked on Coral Street. The assailant
threatened to kill the woman if she
looked at his ficc, Pohcc rcPorted.
The woman described her attacker
as beina sharply dressed and havina a
soft, deep VOi ct. be Id he WU in his
lat~ 30s or early '40s. Pohcc sa1tJ the
atuick took place at•bout 10:30 p.m.
Coast Feady
for cooler,
eleuay June
presented the petition to the City
Council at iu Monday night meeting.
"Management rejected the idea
and we are not sure the council knows
that we want the study. That is the
reason we att presenting the peti·
tion," Butler said.
Lorenzo Mota, the Newport Beach
personnel djrector. said the city has
acknowledged the ~ucst was made
but he refused to discuss manage-
mcnt' s st.and.
"I can't talk about what goes on in
negotiations with you," Mota said.
The study would judge whether
people who hold different jobs with
similar levels of difficulty and re-
sponsibility get paid similar wages,
Butler explained.
"If the city does the study, we arc
sure they will find that dasparities
exist. We arc not asking them to do
this just for fun," said Butler.
Irvine Mayor Larry Agren asked
his city to conduct a similar study and
is requesting the Irvine City Council
set aside about SI 00,000 for salary
adjustments. His request is scheduled
to be debated at tonight's Irvine City
Council meeting.
Prior to federal leaislation prohibit·
ing sex discrimination in employ-
Swi01rner
collapses,
dies in surf
A We t Covina man was pulled
fro m the urf near lhe Balboa Pier on
Monday afternoon aftcT apparently
sufferina a heart •ttack and pUbaps
drownina. •
Leroy Pctenon. 6S, wu swimming
about I SO yards from lb~ Shore about
3:30 p.m. Monday when he threw his
trm1 up in the air and shouted to his
companion, lnarid Oiumar. who was
sittina on the beach.
Pt-tct100n then fell Iacc forward into
the water. Oium.ar ec:reamed for help
and a nearby fU" bitber. Verdiny
Valentino. swam out and p~
Pctcnon to the !horc.
ParaJMdics were ummoned and
Peterson was taken to Haq Mero·
orial HOJJMtal 11\ Newpon Beaich.
where he wu pronounC:cd dead.
Ptttnon had aurTCt'ed a ban at
I l ycan carlitt and docton at HOii
peculated he had anotbtt htan
attack w)ule sWJmmina Monday.
polia: said
I\ IUIOPfY l1 prndiftl;
ment, employers commonly segre..
gated employees into male JObs and
female jobs. The wages for the
women's jobs were considerably
lower than the wases for male
employc:cs, acoordina to a report by
the City oflrvine.
Althouah jobs an: no lonaer for·
malty segregated by sex, jobs tra-
ditionally held by women are still
mostly filled by women and tra-
ditiooal male jobs are still mostly
filled by men. And the women are
paid less even if their jobs have the
same difficulty as traditional male
jobs, the report says. ·
In Newport Beach for example,
secretaries arc paid less than main ten·
ancc workers even tbouah the jobs
require the same·lcvel or education
and responsibility, Butler said.
The Irvine studr, found that 70
percent of that city 1 ~es and
police clerks were women and that 70
percent of the ci!y•s inspectors, enai·
neers, police offioen and managen
were men. Tbe averaac salary for
female workers is about $4;,000 less
than the avcrace salary tor male
Irvine city employees.
Althouah the majority of the em·
ployces who s"1ted the Ncwpon
petition were female, Butler said ahe
believes some of the male employees
-such u clerks -tVOuld benefit
from the study.
HB bank robber
sought by cope
Police are searchina for a man who
robbed a Huntinaton Beach bank
Monday of about $800.
The holdup occumd at 11 :23 a.m.
at the Golden StateSanwa Bank, 6100
Warner Ave.
PoHce said • man banded a teller a
noteuyinghe had a sun. then pointed
to the cash drawer. The man then fled
the bank with the money.
The robber wu dc«Tibed u a
Caucasian man, aae 26 to 32. about 6
feet ~!rweiah•na about llO pound-.
whb liant brown ~urly hair.
An 111.icle in J\lne s·1 Dilly Pi.lot
anrom:c:tly idel\tified two atudeat
inners at Edit0n Hilb Scbool't
Oolden Key Awanh pr'Olr'allL
Senior Michele A\11\lStyiliak wu
the winMr of lhC GOiden Key in
home ~nomtc:a and 1uaior Aleu
Cones wu the top winner in
academic competition. TM ·~
Pilot"*""' me error .
•