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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-19 - Orange Coast Pilot, ~
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HIGHIO LOW84
1111 ',I I/I• 11 'l\ll l 't I'll\ I
F~:A:approves quieter jet flight
Newport residents now fear increase
in takeoffs from John Wayne Airport
By .JERRY HIRSCB
Of ...............
A Federal Aviation" Adminis-
tration ruling paved the way for
quieter jet fliahts out of John Wayne
Airpon Monday. But the ruling is
I
NEWSLINE
Coast
An lrvlne backyard scien-
tist takes her lab on the
road./A3
The Veterans of Foreign
Wars are after Tom Hay-
den again, seeking his
ouster from s1ate As-
sembly J A4
:·:·:·:·>:·:·:-:·=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
Nation
Housing starts dip, per-
sonal Income climbs
slightly In economic re-
port./ AS
Florida killer gets last
minute stay In his execu-
tion./ AS
World
Special prosecutor hints
Soviets had a hand In
assassination try on Pope
John Paul II./ A5
Iranian, Iraqi troops
massing for expected
huge battle./ A5
lllnd a: Body
Early attention to the
calcium In their diet can
help women counteract
thinning bones./81
-Think of breast self-
examination as "a llfe-
savlng behavioral habit"
to fight cancer ./81
Sports
Three champions were
crowned at the U.S.
Olympic track and field
trials, Including Edwin
Moses In the hurdles./C1
The playoff for the U.S.
Open golf title was vir-
tually decided on the sec-
ond hole by winner Fuzzy
Zoeller./C1
Rod Carew and Reggie
Jackson of the Angels are
among the leaders In the
American League All-
Star ballotlng./C2
Entertainment
Mike Farrellwlll be seen
as President John F. Ken-
nedy In a one-man show
forPBS./83
Business
Business terms such as
"belly-up" and "Keogh"
are now official words In
thedlctlonary. /85.
INDEX
Erma Bombed<
Bridge
Buttetln Board
ButlneN
California Newt
Classified
Comlcl
Crossword
Death Notlcel
Horoacoc>e
Ann Land«•
Mind end 8odY
Mutual Fund•
Nattonal NeM
Oplnlon paparazzi
Polloe Log
Pubfle Notlea
Spot1t
T.-.vtlk>n
Theattn
w .. °* Wortd Newt
,
82
EM
A3
85
A4
04-e
EM ce
C3
C5
A2
81-2
85
A4
A8
81
A3
C3
C1-4
83
83
A2
A4
mixed news for the Newport Beach
residents who live underneath the
flight path because it also could allow
for more flights. ·
The FAA ruled properly equipped
McDonnell Douglas MD-80s, ror-
Asylum
denied
.0 to Mesa
Poles " -'/"!'..-:-..:-__ ,,.,,, •ll. ..-.. '-",.,. ,. ...,~ ~, .... ,.
Mother, girl, 9 ,
fear for lives If
forced to return
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of ... o.llJ,... ...
Sunday was to have been a momen-
tous occasion for Maria Solrulslca and
her 9-ycar-old daughter Dorothy.
For the devoutly Caiholic moibcr,
the occasion of Dorothy's first Holy
Communion would mean a major
holiday and joyous celebration.
But Dorothy's religious milestone
was marred Saturday when a letter
from the U.S. Department of Justice
came for Maria notifyina the Costa
Mesa woman that she and her
daughter had been denied political
asylum in the United States and
would have to return to their native
(Pleue eee POLl8B/ A2)
Hello,
yellow
brick
road
lo their black caps and gowns, they
marched across the LeBard Stadium
field like industrious ants on their
way to a picnic basket. But in this
case, the~ was a diploma, a piece
of paper mdicatina they had attended
enough classes and passed enough
tests to qualify for an associate in arts
degree.
These were the graduates of Orange
Coast College, but they were not
alone. Throughout the county this
month, thousands of high school and
college students have been donning
similar costumes and ma.king the
same sort of treks for the same sort of
documents.
Graduation ceremonies arc one of
those milestone moments most
PHIL
S1£1DEllll
N tW \ PtU \P ILll~I
people never forget You may not
remember what you ate for dinner
last Thursday but araduation day
memories are most likdy inscribed
on your mental blackboard.
What I remember about my hi&h
school graduation is the weather.
Raindrops make the funni~t sound
when they're plunhnaoft'tbe top of a
morwbOard haL
My collqe graduation memories
also concern graduation beadwea.r.
We journalism studenll were ~u·
atina dwina Mi economic rcuuion.
Despite our fancy diplomu. we bad
little hd linina up neMWrilin&Jobl.
So some ofus plotted to ute mawna
tape to IOd1 the lettm U-N-&M-P-t,.
0-Y-E-Oooour~
But of coune we cb.ickcDcd out.
ifbe eta of OUtrllfeOU& oadent
proteslS had puled. and we \.ck~
the nerve to disrupt 1uch • IOltmn
Clel'emony.
Mort tteentl1 l fOund m~lf on the otbei' side o the action, 11mna in
the tands at ~BUd Stadium. Mtch-
(PI ....... OllAD8/A9)
merly called DC9 Super 80s. can cut
back eOJUle power at an altitude of soo feet mstead of 1,000 feet, allowina
the plane to reduce enaine noise
during takeoff. It was standard
proccdµre at John Wayne Airpon
until the FAA ruled the practice was
unsafe in 1979.
The new FAA ~lation allows the
twin-en=et to cut back ~wcr if it
is equi with a speaally pro-
pamlhed Oiabt pidanae aystem that
pushes one enaioe to fuU power if
there is a problem with the otbeT
eopne.
Most of the commercial jet fu&hts
out of the airport use MD-80s.
Officials at AirCal and PSA sasd they
AR considetjJla equippma their
planes with the safety system. •
.. Each airlioe has to apply to the
~AA before they can make the
adj11st1nent.'' said McDonnelJ DouPas spokesman Don Hanson.
HantOn •YI the earlitt P<>wef' cu~ can reduce not1e by a
.. ~ble" three to six decibel per n~t.
'The tood news is that each fii&bt
will make a little less noise. The bad
.news is tbat it be used as an excuse to
add a lot more fli&bu and that w1U be more noise in the aurepte ... said
8arlma Ucb~ spokeswoman far
the Ai~n Wortina Group. I co.Ji.
tioo of N.ewpGr1 Btach ~
ailodahOM flabti.na expanpoa 11 tbe airpon..
Supervisor Tbomu Riley, .tloee
Fifth Di~ includes both the W·
por:t aDd Ncwpon Beadl. laid be ....
plQJcd with the f AA fUli!ta ud
added it has somt extra bendits. (~_.gol&ID./M)
Nayyjet
crashes
on isle ·
Crash on cataltna
lls_nilQ r:.k 3u.!ltbre
From staff ... wire r-.-U
The pilot of a U.S. Navy F-11 jet
was killed when his filllter cnsbed m
a ruacd area of Santa Catalina lslud
Monday isnitin& a »acre brush fire.
authorities said today.
Before the crash. the FA-11 Hot'Det
from Lemoore Naval Air Station. 40
miles south of Fresno in the Su
Joaquin Valley, was involved in
airctaft carrier landing practice OD
urunbabited San Oemente hlaDd, 2S
miles south of Catalina. Dennis
McGrath, a Lemoore spokesman.
said.
...........................
llarl&Sokvlaka. daUChter Dorotllywltll badaewsfromlamlpatlaaoftld•a
McGrath couldn't say if the popu-
lar island IUOl1 is within the normal flif.bt pattern used durina practice mmi.ons. Monday n.iabt was overcast
with vuibility about 1,200 ~ be
said. •
Monday's was the tCCood cnsb m
as ~Y. · wt:eks in vol~ mWhapa . tl1 miliWY planes • a« 5-D
Ocmenie. Last week. ':a?oro P* ~from . . .
San te~M&fms,.70:;.
The A-4 Hawk is still minina at
sea and mvestipton arc not •)'tQI
wh) the aiJaaft bad to be ditched
J'oday, Los AZl9dcs ~= l.n:lpc:icC« Ted U non said _
dousi.Qa the blaze at the aae
northwest of A vaJon oontinDed the
(PJeuewCR•SB/A.2J
Mesa toUghens
its legal position
on theater noise
Measuring system_
changed in new
·urgency ordinance·
By liRBN E. nEIN
Of ... O.., .......
Costa Mesa armed itself Monda)
night with a "tougher enforcement
tool" to oombat noise from the
Pacific Amphitheatre.
The City Council adopted an
urgency ordinance, which took effect
immediately, changing the manner 1n
which sound ts measured under the
city's noise ordinance and upped the
maximum fine for violators to
$1,000, according to Tom \\ood.
Costa Mesa's City auorne)
Making the ctty's noasc measure-
ment method conform Yr'lth the
county's makes for a .. more efTect1H
way of detectm& sound and detcrmm-. illJ whether or not thett's a HOl-
anon." Wood said
The htghcr maximum fine wt.II also
serve as a stronger dete~nt. \\ood
added.
He recommended the council
adopt the urgency ordinance Monda)
so the city could oont1nue its monttor-
ing and enforcement of noise levels
on concert ni&hts at the amphitheater
Tbc l8,~seat oonttrt fac1hty, on
the Oraoic County F11rgrqunds
across Fairview Road from tht Col-
lege Park tract. bas drawn numerous
citizen copiplaints about noise and
traffic dun its first season and the
begmning of its scoond sea.son th.is
spnog..
In late April, the city filed a thrce-
oou nt misdemeanor noise complaint
ag11nst the owners of the
amphitheater for a.UtpJy violating
the oounty•s noise ordinance.
wood said that three years aao. a
dispute between the city and the
fairgroundsresultcd in an qrccment
that noise from activities on the
fairgrounds would not violate county
not~ levels.
But Thursday, when the city's
(Pleue eee IDSA/ A2)
Mailed pot
sparks arrest
off amily trio
o\ Dana Point woman and Her two
chaldrcn, all emplo)ecs of a Mission
VieJO dental office, were arrested
Monda} after the) alleacdly acocpted
a mailed pack.age trom Jamaica
contam104 about $5.000 worth of
man.Juan&.
Oranae County Shcriff's U. Rieb·
ard Olson said the anats were made
at 11 :20 a.m. at the Mission Viejo
F1m1ly ·Dental Office, 28722
Ma11uentc Parkway.
J11led on suspicion of couspiracy to
1mpon manjuana were MafPrct L
(Pleue ... POT/ A2)
...
Body of Laguna·man
found in auto trunk
Oniano polJoc contiDUt to ~ Del Rio said Lawrence was tut !CeD
clucsuHhcmurdcrofal..agunaBeach by two friends at his l.Quna mu. whose bettered and bl~y borne on W~y. Jiis triendl ·
body was found in the trun1: of hi car knew of an appointment he bad an
in a ~ lot at Ontario In r-Montclair, OC&J'Onwio, and bcc:am
national Alrpon Saturday. · concerned hen La~ did t
..........................
Polt« idJC!1)' ltt Lawrentt. 42. return. They conUIC1ed bi &iflfriend,
of 1 lll La Mar1da trttt. had -..ho also bad not sccn tiim. A fourth
app&ttDll)' reciei,-~ tevcral \Cft pany later ~ to l..awrcnce'1
blows to lbe be,ad but the pcafi friend that bis \Chide in the
caux of death not n C$tab-airpon pari:.ina lo C.._lllaoAi6vaflntMapr111• .._joJatVC 1"lDe
and•tloacere ..... ltshed. Lawre • fri ~ blm
Ontario i>Oli~ inv~ t' tor Ton) (Pl-... ... LAOUllAfd) I
QUIETER-BUT MORE-FLIGHTS ...
PrilimAl
1tu tbit cut *IC power at 500 feet are at a bet&tt &"'1c for pilots to 1ee tbe_.eou nd beneath them, accoi'dina
to Riley.
... Upect th.It will pve ut a hiaber
d"Pft of comDltance of plaDa ~
off down the bay than we~ ,etilila
tod.av. I am l'lina to be walehiJ:ll for Iba~,, Riley said..
R1lcy. who lives in Newpon Beach,
bas tried to ~c pilots to Oy down c.M
middle of Newpon Bay rather than
ova-raideotial areas.
1'tiC naliq i litely IO tel off
another benle over bow noite is
measured by airport official•
On ooo acale. the Community
Noi1e EquivalaJt Level. a noir
reduetiob or1hlft decibeb ~ fliaht
shows an overall 50 pen:eot dccreUc
in noise.
But OU the s• Event Noise
EQuivalent Level tc:ale, the aame
ttcluction shows 1 much smaller
decttaae in noitc, aaid Keo Dell.no,
the Newpon Bacb city official wbo
mom ors airport mancn.
Tbe CNEL IC&le wu developed
about 20 years aao based on testa at ~ airporu where aifl')ltnes wm-
taki~ off about every~ minu
Delino ma. h me.a.sum a noise
contour -tbe amowu of noise an
airport creates over lonaer periods of
time.
1 he SENEL scale measures the
noise ieoerated by a siniJe plane tatina off from an airport.
POLISH IMMIGRANTS DENIED
P'romAl
Poland by July 13. Pohsh underJround movement, "Due to my political views, which
They have until July 6 to make Sokulska said. arc conlraf)' to the prevailina Com·
arranaements for their return, accord-"Once be was beat up very badly in mu.Dist rca.ame in Poland, and my
1n.1 to the letter from the Los Anacles a demonstration. They use clubs continuous anti-Communist ac-
office of the Immigration and Natu-there," she said. She last beard from tivities in the United States. J will no
rali.z.atioo Service. him in September, when be sent doubt be subject to interrogation and
But Sokulsk.a fears that her life Dorothy a birthday card. So far, imprisonment," she wrote in a letter
would be endangered jf -she returned because of his undcriround activity, to the INS this sprinf. She said she bas
to Po~~ both beca~ of b~r be bas been baned from leaving participated in widely publicized
husband s anvolycm~nl in the ~t1-Poland, she said. anti-Communist demonstrations in
government Sohdanty labor. uruon Solculska was aranled a work the United States and held Pomost
and ~use of her o~ anb-Com-permit when she applied for asylum meetings in her home. ~~s~•pnvolvf.!":nt ~t!Ji a tfn~~ here and she aot a temporary j<?b for Maria Sierotwinska-Rewicka a
omos ere m e ru 18 . months ~ a stude?t .assistant Huntington Beach resident ~nd
States cannir for pataents at Fai.rv1cw State p li · · h Sokul ka In her small Costa Mesa apartment H "ta1 · Co ta M o . sh 1mm1Jl1lnt w o ~ct. s . r. f ospa in s esa. wbtle working at Faarvaew sa1d
Mot;'daY, ~lculska talkc_d 1Ca.rfully o Since that job ended two months Solculska would be "in much cbnger" her 1mpendt0J deportallon. ago Sokulska has taken up house-· f d p I d The attractJve, 42-year-<>ld blonde cleaning for two local families. The a. she. returnc: to. o an .
and her 9-year-old dauahtcr have pay is minimal, she says, but by ~aero.twmska-ReW1ck.a saad she was
struggled to make ends meet over the working hard she can make enough to unpnsoncd for seven mon~s ~
past two and a balf ycan. &et by and su rt Dorothy, who cause s~e was~ member of Solidarity
Hazy sunshine along the Coa~t
Tides
..... .., . .,
a~a.m t:zta.m
4·11p.m.
•:ttpm
lun .-. 1odtr et 1:01 pm .• r-. WedMedeylll5:42a.m etldMtt..-i
ML117p.m ""-' ..... 1t:19 a.In.,,... llt
1NJ a.m. w...,,.._, Ind .... llilMI 11 t2. t4 pm
Tempe
,., ' •• . ..
" n 14 • N n .. .. t2 •
71 .. 12 17
n " u .. .....
.. 71 tan
t1 • n,.. • t1 • ta .. .. .. • n ta .. . .. .. 74 IO II 11 II ,., a
~:
IO M 11 ..
11 •
-·-
"l camil_mieff~ she said attends Pomon.a~ementary sCbool. and a JOUn~ahst on an undersround ~~~;; .. ~~~~~· :~?ifi!~ .. L--.
and my family to help me. But I never to elected officials, had ~tions~ull . . ttr· . -~~· .i--~-~--~~·:;~•lltiWill~l~J ·ttr._r1g~~gro·--~
asked for any other help. I SUP&>C?,rted of employment sent to the immiara-at:tbitect tnspector in Poland, ts ~ .l .l .l ~l'.l''O· myself and I never took welfare. . tion agency and even bad a aroup of frightened. and confused by the pros--
The. apartmc~t, _decorated With Polish immipants livina in the area pect of be1na forced to return to her
portratts of Solidarity leader Lech sign a petitaon asking that she be homeland. as mom charged 1· n HB cr1· me· Walesa and Pope John Paul II, a Pole, allowed to stay. "l don't have any home now in .,.
is s~ but comforta.blc. Miniatur:c But all her efforts apparently have Poland," she said. She bas no family
Amencan ~nd Polish flags sat been to no avail. except her hus~d and an 87-ycar-
propped up ID a bronze mug an one John Belluardo director of coo-old father, who as unable to help her.
comer and lace cloths cover the gressonal public drairs for the INS In any case, Solrulska said she does
tables. . Western region, inclu~ Cahfornia, nol have enough money to afford
. "I have manf. many good Polis~ Arizona, Nevada. Hawai1 and Guam. plane fa.re back to Poland.
friends here. am happy here, said all requests for asylum are Belluardo said Sokulska bas the
Sokulslca said. She and her daughter. considered individually. right to appeal her deportation order
then 6, came to Costa ~esa m ~fiscal year 1983, he said, 20 and to get a heanng on her case. If she
October I 981 from Olsztyn, Ul north-applications for asylum were filed by docs not appeal and does not leave
em Polan~, to visjt So~ulsk.a's aunt Polish nationals in the Western the ~untry by the July 13 deadline,
and cousm, who emigrated from region. Also during that period, 23 be said, the INS would ma.Ice an effort
Poland s~ortJy after World War 11.. requests were granted out of the to find her ,and jail be~. .
Then, an December 1981, marttal agency's back.Jog and 24 were denied. Dorothy s long-awaited first tnp to
law was declared in Poland. Solculsk.a he said. summer camp was to come later this
applied for ~litical asylum in. the "In (Sokulska's) cue, political month at~ Polish church camp in the
United States an January 198?. Smee asylum was denied because the judge San Gabnel mountains east of Los
then, the So~ulsk.as . have ~ved as didn't feel the evidence was enough to Angeles. . .
lcmporary resident abens whale their substantiate her claim (that her life But 1f the deportation order ts
request for political asylum was would be endangered 1f she was applied, Dorothy and her mother wdl
cons1dcred. forced to return to Poland),'' be making the dreaded trip back to
Her husband, Jan Soltulsk.i ~bis last Bclluardo said. Poland before camp is over.
name takes the masculine "1" end-But Sokulska says the threat of "l like it here," Dorothy said.
mg). as a member of the Solidarity danger to her and Dorothy m Poland "This is our home, we want to
labor union and has been active in the is very real. stay," her mother added.
GRADS START LIFE'S JOURNEY .•.
Jl'romAl
mg the latest Orange Coast College
graduates enjoy their moment of
educataonal glory.
Graduations tend to be dry, pom-
pous events. Attired in their
academic regalia. the srudents arc
often stiff and straight-faced as they
proceed carefully to their scats.
inevitably, some school officials
wiU remand the graduates that the
event is referred to as a commence-
ment, mcanin$ the belinnin& ofonc's
most produetlve ycan, rather than
the end of one's educational career.
And inevitably some speakers will
insist the graduating students are at a
cnt1cal threshold, at the doorway to
tomorrow with America's greatest
dreams rid.in$ atop their rugged
shoulders. It's JUSt the sort of rhetoric
guaranteed to bore a modem student
whose dfrcctaon m life 1s more likely
to be guided by the latest Boy Georse
recording.
With these reservations 10 mmd,
the Orange Coast College commence-
ment was a rather pleasant surprise.
The first signal that this would be a
less stuffy affair came with a view of
the students' apparel peekina out
below the traditional black gowns.
You could spot an interesting assort-
ment of slacks, blue jeans. dresses,
fan cy shoes and sneakers.
Any pretentiousness in the air was
punctured when excited family mem-
bers called out from the stands, and
the marching graduates smiled and
wa ved back. One graduate strode
hand-in-hand with a little girl who
appeared to be her daughter. Al the
end of the procession were two
wheelchairs carrying students who
obviously did not let disabilities
stand in the way of a coUcae educa-
tion.
Coast Community College District
Just Call
642-6086
D~~t
11 QuerttntMd
~ '''°9'1 " '°" Oo "°' ........ '°"' ~ l1'Y , 6JOpm calb9for• 7pm
lflCI '°"' onoy .... i. ~
Trustee George Rodda Jr. led the
asscmbla&c in a well-amplified, rather
courageous rendition of the National
Anthem, considerin4 that the band
failed to give him a patch note to help
him start on key. Moments later, the
quiet invocation was disrupted by a
noisy helicopter passing over the
stadium.
Commencement speaker David
Emmes, co-founder of South Coast
Repertory, reminisced about coming
to OCC more than 20 years ago after
an undistin&WJhed high school ca-
reer. At the collqt, be bad the chance
to perform the title role in "Hamlet."
He al.lo directed a coU• production,
setting the staat for bas subsequent
career u a sua:euful director.
OuUtand.in& Citizen award winner
Robert L Humphreys also looked
back on bis education at OCC.
Humphreys wd be enrolled m the
co~ shortly after a stint in the
Marine Corps. He d1scovcrcd he had
just moved from one military base to
another, for OCC was built on
property that previously had been the
Santa Ana Anny Alf Base.
OCC President Bernard Luskin
reflected on the 500,000 students who
have attended the Costa Mesa college
since it was established in 1947. He
pointed out that the youngest gradu-
ate m the current class was 19, while
the oldest was 73.
Luskin then slipped anto some
traditional commencement rhetonc,
telling the vaduates, "You arc a
beacon for the future of the college
and the future of America. You arc
our shining liaht."
Then with a grin, he ~u~ed from a
country song: "You can t be a beacon
if your light don't shine."
Finally, the araduates' names were
read. and each stepped up to a
platform to reoeive congratulations
from college officials. At this point,
any 1eose of decorum vanished.
Like fans rushing the field after a cbam~~oship football game, family
mem left the bleachers for a key
vantage point on the grass. In band,
they held snapshot cameras, instant-
developing cameras and even video
cameras to capture for eternity a
graduate's moment of academic tri-
umph.
Those who remained in the stands
became roo~ sections, cbeerina
wildly when thCU' loved ones' names
were read. There were common
American surnames and ethnic ones.
There was even an indication of bow
eager Oranac County's Indochinese
immiaranu are for education: the
araduation list included more
Nguycns than Smiths.
If there was one universal emotion
among those at the commencement,
it was pride. The graduatea appeared
proud to have earned their dcarces,
and the family memben in the
audience seemed equally proud. The
graduates may soon di1COver that
opportunities to Celebrate one'•
achievements come all too rarely in
the 9-to-5 working world.
When the ceremony concluded, the
college band saluted the graduatea not
with a solemn hymn but with a
rousi" version of 0 New York., New
York.,' a fitting end to the event.
The OCC speakers didn't say it to
the araduatcs, so perhaps I should: ~is commencement is only a bcain-
ning, so be prepared to pass throuah
this threshold to the future. And
remember, tomorrow is the fint day
of the rest of your life.
Or someth1na like that.
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ORANG£ COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. lchwartz Ill
Publisher
Clrculatlon 1WM2..._
c~ 9dnttlelng 1141142....,..
Alt other depertrMnta 142-4121
MAJNOfftCI
3lOWt94a.,ll ,COIUYeM CA .. _, fldclr-lclll 1M0. ec.. .._ CA t,t2t
.. IV<CMI, ltlO ~, " '°" 00 "°' teoeMI ~ ~°'7 em ,cal~•
t 0 • "' end 'fOAlf C'OP'1 ... ........ 9d
Chazy Dow...,, ftOMmary Churchmen
Edl10f and Assistant Controtlef
Clrct.tletlon
Telep."tonM
to the Pubfilhef
..... o..,,..c-wv ~ ...... l .. pheftP.C.W
PrOdUction
M 'llGll'
l ..... ,. ... ---VOL. T1, ftC). 172 •
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A youna mother was to be ar-
raigned on attempted murdercharses
today while her 10-month-<>ld baby
clings to life after beina stabbed in the
back during a family arswnent in
Huntington Beach OD su:::&· Jeri Shepard, 311 of eim, iJ
suspected of plUJllllll a daacr into
her infant dauahtcr's back CJuri111 a
arau.mcot with the child's father. She
is beiDf held on $2SO,OOO bail.
The infant -Christine Shepard -
is in serious condition at Fountain
Valley Commuru~ Hospital.
Huntington police, meanwhile, a.re
still searcb.i.n& for Jobn Bobkiewicz.,
the child'• !S-~-<>ld father who
rcpor1edly ran off after the 6:30 p.m .
Father's 0.y incident near the inter-
teetioo of Adami Avenue and Hunt-
i.naton St.reel
Polioo said they want the fath«for
questionina but have not said
whether be faces criminal cbaraet.
Accotdina to reporu, Shepard and
Bobtiewicz aot into the altm:atioo
after spendiq a day at the beach. Tbe
couple bad aone to the residential
intenectioo to meet a friend, police
said.
At one point, the father appereotly
pabbcd the child to leave whlk
Shepard pulled a five-inch dasler
from her purse, police said.
Tbe woman first slashed a tire of 1
pickup truck the family bad been
traveling in and then turned ·the
dager on Bobkiewicz. The blade,
however, cauaht the child in the beck.
Police said tbe violence wu wit-
nCSled by several oolook.cn, some
who helped comb the nei&hborhood
when police were unsuccessful iJl find.in& the father.
Petitioner faces perjury charge
By ANDREA ADELSON
Of .. .,.., ..........
A professional petition circulator
from Irvine was trying to retain an
attorney today to defend himself
ap.int four counts of perjury stem-
ming from a failed January refer-
endum drive over an Irvine hospital
Keith W. Goodman wu charged
Friday with persuadina membc.n of
his family and a friend to commit
perjury by aayina they had cireulated
pebtions when they_ bad not, De~~
District Attorney Kenneth 0. ·
said in a J>~ 11atcmenL
"I did circulate petitions." said
Goodman'• brother Kenneth wbo
was reached at the Ooodmans' home
in Irvine. "But I didn't ~ any
petitions that I didn't circulate.
Kenneth Goodman said bis
brother, who was cba.rpd in the
felony complaint, was unavailable for
comment and was ~ to find an
attorney to represent him.
The cbarJes n:sulted from an
investiption tqun by the District
Attorney'• office in March after the
county rqiJuar of vottn found that
more than one third of the '4,5S2
sianatures on petitions submitted to
the Irvine city clerk on Jan. 12 were
found invalid. At least 3,800 valid
lipatures were needed.
No cbarJes were filed qainst the
three Goodman relatives or the
friend, Olin said.
The Committee for 1 Safe Hospital
Site, chaired by former Irvine mayor
Gaby Pryor, had soupt a referendum
vote to aak voten their preference
over a decision laJt December to
locate the Irvine Medical C.COt.er near
Sand Canyon and Barranca Roedl.
-4'"111-~-------------
POT ARRESTS IN MISSION VIEJO •••
Prom Al
DieriDJer, SO, of Dana Point, man-aacr of the dental office; her dauabter
Donna L Eubank, 29, of Costa Mesa,
a dental technician.; and Dierinacr's
son Danny E. DouaJu, 27, of Lona
Beach, a dental lab trainee.
\ Olson said customs aaenu in
Aorida ma.kin& a routine check found
stra~p~and about tw~of man.Juana m a pack.qe to
Dr. and Mrs. J: A. Oieriqer at the
Mission Viejo office.
Olson said inveatiptora arranaccS
with postal official.a to bave the packaJe rcwrapped and delivered
Monday to thedinw otlke. Oeputia
CRASH KILLS NA VY ~ILOT •••
P rom Al
pilot died in the fiery crash.
A team of Navy fnvestipton wu
en route to the sc:ieoe, McGrath said.
The pilof s name wu not immedi-
ately released. The Los A.qeles
County coroner's office was called in
to m:over the body, said spokesman
Bill Gold.
The twin-tailed $22 million Navy
plane, equipoed with an eject.ion
system, vamshed fi;om radar ~na
at 10:54 p.m. as at was pracucana
"touch and io" simulated carrier
approaches. McGrath IA.id. The F-18 wu from the Wildcats fiabter
squadron.
Similar dry-land simulated carrier landiJlcl by Marine pilou cauted ao
uproar m Irvine lut week. when three
jets and a fourth fixed win& craft
alleaedly buzzed a crowd of pi<r
nickcn.
McGrath said detail• of the train·
ina miasion, which can be conducted
oo a carrier or on an airstrip, were not
immediately known. "Normally lbcy
MESA NOISE LAW •••
P'romAl
criminal complaint apinst Ned·
West, Inc., the ownert of tbe
ampbitheaier, wu conlidcml in
Harbor Municipe) Court. Judie
Selim FrankliD Nied the city could
not enforce c:ou.nty laWL
Wood laid the revised city ofd.i.
nanoc would make it IX*ible for the
city to enforce iu ttandanla.
Tbe next ampbitbeeier ~
(eaiurina the 8elcb ~ ll ICbed-
uled for lwy 29. .
we.re waitina outlide and an under-
cover officer WI.I in the reception area
to watch the packqe beina received.
Tbe sberifra ·spokeaman said
Marpret Dicrin&er, whose husbend
ia the dentist worlriq at the office,
liped for the l*"ae.
don't fly alone." be said.
Los Anaelet County firefiabter Rod
Wuhin&too said racue crews 1'Cl'C
told to ••atay dear because there miabt
be live ammo aboard.••
He said 6reflabten, wbo bad to
bike into the rullCd area near Whitea
Landin& on the sout.beut portion o( ~. ialan~1 were "buically just blby snttna" me fire early today. No
ltJ'UctW'CI were threatened, another
fJ.teflahter said.
MCOralb said he f'Ouod it "bard to
believe" that fli:cfiabten were or-
dered away from the plane, becaUle
they are U'lined to deal witb tbc
pouible pmenee of S91otiva..
Won! of the c:rub came at 1 J :30
p.m. Monday. Lot ~ Co.a.nty
fire Capt. Lee Ouata&oG II.id.
•
Orange CO.t DAILY PILOT/Tueld9y, JuM 8, :196' * .U
County scouts plan
tributes for Fluor
She makes science come alive
lndunriahst J, Robert F\uor will be honored
WcdnHday at the th1J'd annual StaT'land tnpes Scout
Salute luncheon 11 the Anaheim Hilton and Towers, 777
Convtnllon Way. Anaheim
Auor, chief executive officer of the f1uor Corp., is an
aawe member of the Orange County Council of the Boy
Scouts of America and has helped raise hundreds of
thouunds of dollan over the!ast few years.
The meetina will be bel at 11 :45 a.m. and funber
Jnfonnation may be obtained by callina the scout service
center It 5'46-4990.
~e property aact1011 set
An a&Ktion of surplus property from the Marine
Corps bue at C.amp Pendleton will be held Wednesday
momina in Buildrna 2241 at the military facility.
Amona the 275 items to be offered will be wall
locken. copiers, clothina and individual equipment,
ohotoaraph1c components, hardware, ten.ts, desks,
rumnure and multJfuel cnaines. Call (619) 725-4331 for
further details.
Slagle. daJJce coarse •lated ·
A cou~ in contemporary danoc for singles will be
offered startina Wednesday at the Villa Valencia Hotel
clubhoutc in Laauna Hills by Saddleback College North
Community Services.
Instructor Denise Corwin will teach various dance
styles at the eight-session course. The cost is $40 and
infonnation is available at the community services office,
SS9-1313.
·Propaganda dl.cu .. lon set • . Mon Stein, author and investigative reporter, will
·discuss how propaganda and prejudice influence the
relationahips between the superpowers at Wednesday's meeting of the Physicians for Social Responsibility.
-The program is seheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the Harbor
Reform Temple/St. Mark's~sb enan = 2100 ~.U....~«-~WllO~ s~ ·,.u&.l· ~ -1n10fih~t10fi. '1"·.?!"~""'l•"a.1.-., • · ... _ · -~ " ... ·
Clllld care talk pl1UJ11ed
Linda Farnell, executive director of Child Care
Advocates of America. will speak at Wednesday's meeting
of the National Orpnization for Women's South Coast
chapter.
The meeting will be held at 8 p.m. in the El Toro
Library and will be open to the public. Child care and
refreshments will be provided.
.Free CPR COIU9e8 offered
· · Free courses in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
Jane Hoffman and 80D Juon conduct a •tatic electricity ezperlme:nt
)<=
ByllEIDIM01lB.llL~--:------""-~°' ... _..,... ....
She ri.sa u t'arly u l a.m. and wotb lladily UftUI
laLC in the cvcruna.
Ker home, clunered with I.Cit tubes. funoelt and
mqnifyina '1 . rarmblct 1 1C1Cntific labota&of)',
Jane HOtrm~. science r.eacbc:r, dOcSn't believe in te~tboo . Sbe teacl>cscbildret1 the fun wwld of tcic~ by usina ftm·hand experimen
Hoffman's biaCkyard ICieotist Prosram b.u beta
oondU('l.Cd tbrouabout OraQlt County for aJmo.t fi~
yean.
A fonner fashion deSi&nn' anjj public relations
reprexntativc, she proudJy admits 1li,at science became
pan of her life when ha 12-)ear-old ton Juo
cooductlD& cxpcrim.enu at home.
She decided that the absUactn of iatbodk tcicoc:ie
could be rcmoyed by demoDJll'alioos of bdbblina Alb ~Ju.en tn a tnt tube or tbe. x:imtific pouibilitiCs 6iddrn
lD a COit hal'l&Cf. .
'"I have npcnmcntcd and raean:hed 1 lot oo my
own." m:al1ed Hoffinap. "You learn a lot from kMts
becalljC you learn from the c~pcriments that turn I.ban
~~ .
In the put. Hoffman wu constantly on the move
from clas room to classroom. scatina up temporary labs u
far away u Cypress or La PalmL
This summer newly trained teachers will help cur tbt
workload but Hoffman plans to attend some da.s
because she .. wouldn't miss it for the world. ..
Sinoc Hoffman b.as published t.bt book ~
Bac:kvard Scientist, .. her f.ame has spiud far be)·ond tbe
world of classrooms.
She has been featured on various television sboWs
such as A.M. America and on KNBC and K.HJ T. V. newa.
"I have received letters from all over the U.S.." she
said. "Parents, administrators and even people iD tbe ·
medical field like this concept ofteachina It is ampcwwu
because 1t iS oot offered in 5Cbools."
Parents and childreo alike cqj~-* ~
classroom atmosphere of 16 studena-per cLa.ss.
Up to oow.,Koff~n bas .:icnti6cally opened~
-u~~ .-
Io the future. Hoffman hopes to establish a
continuous tc1ehina program wath several school districts..
.. I would like to consult more schools, .. she explained. " •
.. but it's not easy because I am oot a hired teacher for the
various districts. ..
Will be offered, beginning Wednesday, at the South Coast
Medical Center in South Laguna.
The sessions are scheduled for Wednesday, June 27.
·July 11 and 18, and Aug. 8 and I 5. To reserve a space or
·obtain further information, call 499-1311 or 495-5191 ,
·ext. 2718.
Streu taJJr pJaJJJJed at G WC
Coast residents delegates
for Hart at Dem convention
Those interested in classes and rqistratioo ill(~
matioo should phone the Cny of Costa Mesa Dcpanmen&
of Leisures Services at 64S-8551 , the City of Irvine
Comm unity Services Department at 660-3639, the Cicy of
San Juan Capistrano Recreation Depanmentat 493-59l I,
the C.afistrano Bay Parks and Recreation District at
49M2 1, the Fountain Valley RecreationaJ Services
Department a.t 839-8611, the Saddleback Jr. ColJe.t,e
North Campus Community Services Department at
559-1313, or by contacting Hoffman. al P.O . Box 16966,
Irvine, 92713.
More of the same
under Coast skies The phooenumberis(213)49S-9333
•••
How to deal with stress in the 1980s will be discussed
by ~~ worker Jerry Soucy at a two-pan lecture series,
beainrung Wednesday, at Golden West College in
Huntington Beach.
The provam will be held on consecutive Wednesdays
at 6:30 p.m. m Room 21 4 of the administration building
and the fee is $19. Call 891-3991 for further information.
Several Orang_c Coast residents
were named as v~ Hart delegates
from Calif omia and will be attending
the Democratic National Convention
in San Francisco July 16. The del-
egates were named in addition to the
19 of2 I delegates Hart won in Orange
County in the California Primary
earlier this month.
Fountain Valley Mile Square Park, 9
a.m. Saturday. The rally and voter
registration drive will include a
campaip march and a videotaped
message from President Ronald Re-
agan. For more information, call
547-8006.
The Costa Mesa Republican As-
sembly will honor state Sen. John
Sc)'lJlOur, whOIC 35th district in-
cludes much of Costa Mesa. at a July 7
reception. For more information.
contact Jim Emerson at 957-1314 .
Co~ will be the ballmar1t Wednctda)' u
mornina low douds once apin pve way to b&ZYSUftS.h;nc
for most of Southern C.aliform.a.. the Nat.tooaJ Weather
Service wd. • • • Mary Lou Brophy, the Seal Beach . Paralegal• meet m IrriJJe
The new delegates are Stuart Karl
of Newport Beach. Bernie Schneider
of Laguna Beach, Roland Mora of
Mission Viejo. Chris Townsend of
Laguna Niguel, AJan Woo of Santa
Ana and Helen Canales of Santa Ana
Democrat runnin& .,amst Re-
publican Rep. Dan Luniren for the
42Jld Con&JUSionaJ District winch
includes parts of Huntin&_ton Beach.
Seal Beach and Long Bea.ch, bas
opened a new campaign headquarters
at 2208 La~wood Blvd .. Long Beach.
• • •
Oran.at County blgb.s ~ ex~ to be m lbe
UJl9C'1'-70s to low~ The Paraleaa.J Section of the Oranaie County Bar ~ Auociation wilfhold its monthly membership meeting
Wednesday at 7:30 am. at the Jolly Roger, 1727 Oyer
Road, Irvine.
Attorney Marc J . Winthrop will speak on bankruptcy
• Jaw and procedure at the breakfast meeting. The cost is
. $3.25 and reservations may be obtained by calling
731 -1715.
Woodrow Wilcox. a bmer ~
publican. was appointed campaign.
news and publicity director for lbe
Ora.nse County bnlnch of lbe Ameri-
can lndcpendmt Party. For more
infonnation, call 547-2291 .
Al t.be cm.st. weak sunshine aad b.irJas oar 70 arc
titdy. Tbe valleys oould warm up lO the atid..SO. lO low
90s. Ntfht aod morniq low clouds are forecast. The
mounwns will be cloaked by pek:by late nisb1 ud early momina foe; bi&hs should raclJ the mid-70s tO micf..BOs.
. ·B1ectronlC9 term• •lmpllfled
Laguna Beach resident David
Stein, the leader of Hart's Orange
County delegation was named to the
Democratic National Committee. • • • The Orange County Republican Youth hurt in cycle crash
Mostly clear sJaes are praiicted for the mountains,
with southerly afternoon and evening winds up lO 25 mph
in the Owens Valley and up to JO mph in the western
desert valleys.
Highs will range from the low-90s to 104 10 tht>
northern deserts and I 04 to 110 tn the southern deserts. "Electronics in Plain English" is the subject of a
seminar today and Wednesday at the Marriott Hotel in
Irvine.
Party plans a "Reagan Round-up" at
Sponsored by the American Electronics Association,
the seminar focufCS on the fundamentals of electronics
technology. Funher information may be obtained by
calling Gcorgyne Purcell at ( 415) 857-9300. Correction
A Garden Grove teen-ager ndi ng as
a passenger on her brother's motor-
cycle was seriously injured over the
weekend when the vehicle crashed m
Huntin,ton Beach. police said.
Hunungton Beach Officer John
Berens said Robcn Browning. 22,
also of Garden Grove, was dn vtng h1s
1982 Yamaha motorcycle cast on
Pacific Coast Highway near Lake
Street at 4 a.m. Saturday, Wlth his J 7-
year-old Sister, Rene. as a passenger.
The motorcycle struck the center
divider. veered out of control and
crashed. a witness told pohcc.
The girt remained in serious con·
diuon with bead injuries today at
Fount.am Valky Community Hospi-
tal. Berens said. Her brother received
minor injuries on his face and arms.
Fish Fry nets $70,000
With the final totals tallied and the fish fry dinncn
finally figured, the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lion's
Oub has determined It made about S 170.000 on thls
month's Ftsh Fry and Camtval.
Tuesday, June 19
An article in Saturday's edition of
the Daily Pilot about four boys
re~rtedly distributing sexually ex-
plicit material about a school staff
member incorrectly said all four were
apprehended by campus security
guards. Actuall~1 only two of the boys
were cal!fht wbiJc allegedly distribut-
ing the fliers. The other two students
were accused of being involved in the
incident but were not on the campus
at the time, said Edison Prinetpal
Jack Kennedy.
New squadron leader at El Toro This year's totals equaled or slight)) surpassed last
year's take, accord.to~ to Lion Club member Steve Pemn.
When all the bills arc settled up. Perrin said. be
estimates the club will net morr than$ 70.000. which 1t will
donate to vanous Costa Mesa chanties..
• 7:30 p.m .• Mesa Couolldated Water Dt1trlct,
Citizens Advtsory Committee, 1965 Placentia Ave., Costa
Mesa.
-• 7:30 p.m ., lrvl.De Uaifled Scbool Dl1trtet, Board of
Trustees. Lakeside Middle School, 3 Lemongrass, Irvine.
PoucE Loe
Lt. Col. Cary Kelly will assume
leadership of the stauon operations
and maintenance squadron dunng a
change of command ceremony at the
Marine Corps Air Station at El Toro.
Lt. Col. Kobcn L. Spooner. who
has commanded the squadron since
October 1982, will be reassigned.
Kelly. a Tustin resident, graduated
from Stanford University.
• • •
The annual tish fry includes a parade. carnival,
beauty contest and. of course. a fish fr)
• • • ~:Huntington ban~ robbed;
::.bandit escapes with $500
A resident of the 16600 block of
Sams Street reported Monda) 1hat
someone stoic his black I 982 Datsun
280ZX. parked in the strcct. The loss
was estimated at $1 7.000. • • • Someone stoic four hubcaps from a
while and blue 1967 Mustang parked
on the 19100 block of Huntington
Strct't. The loss was csuma1ed at
$200.
Coetalleu
An unlocked bedroom Wlodow at a
home on the JOO block of East 18th
Street provided entry to lb1cvcs who
stoic S l ,891 worth of valuabl~
Loose ~.JCwdl') and a nfle wcrr
among the 1trms stolen • • • Two ~wntcn and a microwave
A Newport Beach man rcponed the
theft of a Video cassette recorder and a
radio with a combined value ofS605
Mondal from her home m the 1800
block of West 17th StrttL • • • ~ Newport Beach man reported the
theft ofS3. 900 of items from bis home
Monday, mclud.ina Jewelry, a stereo
and a telcvtsion from bis home 10 tbt
800 block of Amigos. Tbt man found
his homt bad been broken tnto whale
bt was out of town on vacallon.
A man with a coat over h1sann who
indicated he had a gun under the
· pnncnt robbed a Huntington Beach
bank Monda)' morning. pohcc said
. today.
.:Jnlile
An equipn*nt malfunction in an
• underaround cable caused the disru~
• tion of power to 2S Edison customen ln the area of White and McCabe near tbe San Dieao Freeway today. Power wu restored by 2:30 a.m. • • • A man who left a briefcatc on top of
his car parked in the Rcaastry Hotel
• lot Rlumed about 8 p.m. Monday to
find n missin.a. ....
. A TV and VCR of undetcmined
· . value were stolen in a brcak·in at a
home on Butternut, discoveRd about
• 9 p.m. Monday. • • • Four peo9le were anated on
-1u1pldon of buralalY aftc:r a sbon
pursuit end.ins in Sant.a Ana Monday
" ·about 6 p.m. Two womea and two
• ·men. ranaina in qe ftom JO to 20,
• weR liken into custody near Rower
' treet and propeny stolen from t~
.. homes in Irvine ~vt'ftd from tbrir
abandoned vehicle. -. . ..
A man who u.id be had a. sun
• ro~ Security Pac16c Nauonal
Bank of about Sl,700 Monday about
, l :JO p.m. The: odit banded a teller a
The holdup occurred at I 0:30 a.m.
at the Bank of Amcnca office. I 5672
Springdale St.
The robber handed a note to a
teller. Later, he Ocd on foot with
note asking for money but never
showed a weapon. He escaped on
foot. • • • Beer keas worth $536 were stolen
reponed stolen Monday from Happy
Daze bar, 17929 Mac Arthur Blvd. • • • Three recereational vehicles at
Travel Land Way were appattnUy
buralarized over the wttkend at
Thomlfs;on RV Center. • • • Business macb1nes wonh S 1.400 were stolen from Navco Security at
1660 Aston St. Thieves ttmoved lbt
video from the surveillance earner... • • • Three 18Ms worth Sl,600 ~
takco from an office at 2'6S C..mpus Ori"e. Entry may ba\'e been made
thn>uab elcct.r0nically controlled
doon..
Bmattnaton Beach
A resJdcni or the 6400 block of
Warner A venue reponed Monday
that someon broke into bis )'eUow
l 971 Volvo st.a ti on., n .. rkcd 10 a
carport. The loss LDcludcd hcci>skin
CJOvm worth SlS, b le
worth sio .• mUT'Ot' wonh Sl '
about $500. Hun1mgton ~ach pohc('
said.
The robber "'as described as a
Caucasian man in his earl)' 20s wuh
curly hair and very tan skin
jumper ca.bes worth $IS. a cassette ~~er' worth $300 and speakers worth
• • • Over the weekend. someone broke
into a house on the 1700 block of
California Avenue, entering thro"'lb
a bedroom window. The loM in-
cluded five suns worth about SI ,SOO. ••• A resident of the 6300 block of
Larchv.ood Drive reponed Monday
that sbmeone stole a battery from a
blue 1966 Ford Musta.na parted tn
front of the bomc. The loss was
esumatcd at $43. • • • Someone stale 17 mcn•s Members
Only jackeU &om the Harris and
Frank toR at HunUQSton Cuuer.
7777 EdiQ&tt A \'C., an cmploytt
reported Monday. The I
tim tcd at S 92. • • • A prqic on the 17800 blodc of La
Costa buraLariz.ed over the :tt -
end, a rcaidcnt ttpOttCd M day. The
I included mu.sical i.mplitkn
wonhS892. • • • Tua and -htels *Orth S300 wt~ rt~ okn ~ooday from Ma) Ttre Servi«. 8971 Warner A
• • • Someone forced open a rear door 10
bur&Janzc a home earl) Monda~ on
the lJJOO block of Velardo Dnve. The
loss included $25 to $40 in cotns. ••• A resident of the 6000 block of
Briarcliff Dnvc reponed Monday
that someone had stolen h.1s son's
b1cyclc from in front of the house. The
loss was estimated at SI 00. • • • Someone stoic an o~ 1978
Mustana with a white top from the
18900 block of Aonda Street, a
motonst reponcd unday. The loss
was csumated at SJ.000 • • • Four hubcasn ~ stoic fTom a
)tllow 1963 Poncbt' pal\cd unda)
outsldt' a rntauratu at Brookhunt
trcc1 and Adams Avenue. The loss
was estimated at SJOO. ••• Someone stoic a white and red 196 7
V n van earl Sunday from
the 200 t of 19\b Uttt. The
Wl.S estJm&lod It $2.000. ••• A ~year~ld man .,. arrested
turda) It the Al~n·1 lO~ It
Ada:msA~uutand 8rookhum trcet
afttt be aUc:atdly stole !Om beer and
hid in an aiilc while drinkana it. • • • mco" broke mto a wht&e
Toyota Celica parked turday in a
carpon on the 6200 block of Ed1ngn
4.vtnut. The k>s.s included s\ereo
equipment "onb S 00.
oven were stolen from ~ Robert P
Redwtu and Co. accounung office at
145 Fischer -'vc. over the weekend
Thieves ap~ntJy pned the front
door of the office open and stoic
$5. 700 worth of aoods. • • • WhC)('vcr burglannd the C.D I
Corp. 's offices at 3303 Harbor Blvd.
used a kc) to pin entry to the
building over the weekend. ~n
$18.7SO computer and pnntcr were
stolen. • • • The president ofWSM Enterpnscs.
at I 525 MacArthur. chased a thief out
into the pan1na lot Monday nl&l\t
and strugled Wlth ham O\'er a bundle
of rompan)' chcds.. a ched.-wnung
madune and a couple of bncfcasn
vaJued at $240. The comp&n)' pl'CSl-
dent. who was workina lite. rc-
co"ered the merchandise but the thief
escaped. • • • man t.ayina 10 a motel at 2274
Newpoa 81\'<l told pol lM ICTttn
had bttn . pried off bis v.1odow unda~ niJht and SSlO •'&S lalt'tl
from bis room •hilt he v.-as asleep
Newport Beach
ewport Beach doctor ~ported
the thd\ of a ta kle box cont.ain1
about S 1,000 •n medical u pita
from ha on Balboa ov
Monday. e doctor kept ~ su~
plin to ti' t' on boa' tnP' so th•' he
would be cqui~ for a medial
emtrsency at tea
LaCuna Beach
A vehicle WU bundanzed an an
underground parking fot m the 1100
block of South Coast Highway Mon-
da) afternoon. The owner reported
the loss at S 180. • • • Someone broke throlllh the roof of
Thurston School. 2100 Patk A venue.
and took S500 in cash. The break~an
was reponed to police at 8:01 Lm.
Monday
Protopappas,
trial delayed
A• Oreng• Cout DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, Jun• 19, 1984
Reagan scores victories
in two key Senate issues
Attempts to ban U.S. troops,
quash CIA funds. voted_d_o_w_n __
W ASHlNGTON (AP) -Efforts to ban the use of
U.S. oomb t troops 1n two Central American nations
failed in the Scnatt early today folio win& defeat of a move
to hm1t sharply CIA aid for 1uerrillas fighting the
N1carqua11 aovcmment.
As the Senate worked into the small houn,
proponent of the two mea urcs arJUcd that America was
beadina for another Vietnam in CentnaJ America while
en ties declared it was no time to shrink from a fiaht.
"My whole ~enenation haa had it" with the idea of Ameri~s rcplactng native troops in.guerrilla wars, ~n.
-----------.... -------·Joseph 81den. D-Dcl.. declared, while Armed Services Committee Chairman John Tower, R-Tex., warned that
Photos 'prove'
Sakharov lives
"Vietnam was lost under the Capitol dome."
Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Orc. said the United States is
"being drawn in deeper, inch by loch, day by day," toward
a Vietnam-style involvement. Sen. John East, R-N.C.,
however, uraed the Senate to resist any wcakemng of
Central America pohcy.
HAMBURG W o.r (AP) A We'lt "Where will we draw the hne?" East said. • Mt many -The attempt to limit CIA aid to "Contra" rebels German~ publltMd photographa t~ of ScMtt d...adent Andrei Sakharov and:hta ~and fightmg Nicaragua's Sandimsta government died on a
., ........ .
New Mlu California, Donna Grace Cherry
clenche. fi•t followtna demon•tradon.
..... 1A M jou al'~ ..__. t ..... ....,..., 58-38 vote. The chances of approval had looked good -..v& otcow m .. , Omi••ww ,,. .... -~urea to pnwe enough to bnng Vice President George Bush to the Capitol
thloouple'8.atve. to uphold President R~pn's position against the Miss ca11·fcorn1·a HOW9YW, then WU nothing appatef)t In the measure by casting tbe.decidmg vote in case of a tic on the
•
Reagan seeks hike
in tax exeniptlons ·
t
By tbe Attoclated Prat
WASHINGTON -President Reagan is likely ~b
propose an increase in the S l ,000 penonal exemption Ul
the federal income tu either this year or in 198S. the
Washinston Post has reported. The newspaper quotc9
unidenufied White House officials as saying the euot
amount of the in~sed ellcmption has yet to bt
determined. !Jut the officials said the exemption would be
on top of "indexing" that startina next year will allow
taxpayers to offset inflation in figuring their personal
exemptions.
Grenada lnvaslon prallled ·
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. - A new Pentagon rcpo(l
praises most of the military action in the U.S. invasion of
Grenada last year, a newspaper reported today. The report
praised "combat initiatives" taken by members of the
7Sth Rangers, who parachuted onto the Point Sallntis
airfield under heavy fire to pave the way for the main 82n.S
Airborne Division invasion force, the Fayetteville
Observer said.
phOtoe to prove they were tak9fl recentty. • Senate floor.
Md Zeltung, • m ... c:trculatlon dally, eaJd It Earlier. the Senate killed 63-31 Monday the move to e T ren t p rotes ted AMA pushes alr bags obt91nied the photographs on Sunday ftom Vietor prohibit the use of U.S. combat troops in Nicaragua or El V 1 .I. 1
LoUllatahote&lnZurleh. SWftnrland. LoutalsaSovlet Salvador unJcss they were need to rescue Amcncan CHICAGO -The American Medical Association, ~ who 18 often uaed by the KremUn to leak citizens. which in 1970 endorsed passive-restraint systems in
ltOfW to the Weet. ft wu Louis who ftrtt dlactOMd Neither of the two decisions, which came as the SANTA CRUZ (AP) -Three chanting, fist-waving automobiles as way to reduce highway fatalities, is
Moloow'a ~on to bOycott the Olym~ca Gama In Senate ploughed through a $291 billion spending bill, was men climbed onto the stage and 600 demonstrators considering a new resolution u~ng a federal law to LOI ~ final. In the House, majority Democrats have won chanted outsidct to protest the Miss California Pageant, as require air bags in all new cars and light trucks. The AMA ls
Sakharov, a nuefear phyalclst and Nobel Peace approval of similar measures, and the differences will be a 24-year-old professionaJ opera singer was crowned the legislative committee heard testimony on the prol>Olal
Pf111 ..,,_.., w-. exited to Gorky, 8 Soviet city ironed out by a House-Senate confere11ce committee. contest winner. Monday. It was to make its recommendations today fo the
doeed to forelgnera, In 1980 tor crttlcizlng the Sovtet . . . . . The men shouted, "Men resist sexism," as a bouquet organization's decision-making House of Delegates.
goyetnment. · . In the House, Ma,ionty Leader Jim Wnght, 0-Te~.. of red roses was presented to Donmi Grace Cherry of West •
One photograph, purportedly taken Jun6 15 In • ~d chances we~ g~ fo~ passage of .the controversial Los Angeles on Monday night, mome01s after she was SJamese twln• serua rated
petk 1n ·~ thowa SMharov standing tn .,nllght ~imp~n-Mazolh 1.mmagi:atto~ rcfoi:m bip tha~ be~e an named the winner at the Civic Auditorium. r-'
wtth a~ Coat df'IC)tld ove/ his arm The NCOnd issu~.m Dcmocrattc presidenttal p~mllr!es th1s year. . The men, who were hustled away by security guards, PHILADELPHIA -Doctors arc "quite pleased .. phot~ ahOW9 Saktterov'a Wtfe v*'8 Bonner After ~e Hous;c: has ~orked. tts wtll, what remains were not charged, according to police Sgt. James Walker. with the progress of 4-month-old Siamese twins who were
ltencln bellde a car wtth a bus 6n 'tn. bade_ ound• probably wiU pass, W.riJht said as ~c lawmakers Cherry, who won a $6,000 scholarsrup, fur coat. separated in a complex 18-hpur operation at t~ n-:::!.-L-·""' .~ t!f one> ~gr • pn:parcd. to take up a p~oyiston that would give legal status Jewelry and other prizes, became California's entry in the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, a spokeswoman said -~ .._. .. _,,~t~~~t ~~10n~~~q\.'@fi~J'l~O ~ ~~J l · · · today. mil Lou and Oaire Elizabeth T~~IO!,j~in¢~ ... M ~-;l')t&:_""'Af~<' --. • ' . . -~ . ..~'"~~ ~ao(j6W~" .:.;'ffi'prbu~~ c n --c . . .· ~~MM•Wll~,J.i>_~~ ... ~--~~..:-v-~ ~~--!, at from the photograph, Sakharov Wr:Jabt said the ~ed a~nestr p~V1S100 was the said when asked to comment about the protests. ut sta le co iflon: ·as expected after the delicate
llPPMl'I to be ,!"Inner than before, walks bent over last ma,or. fight rcmammg m the unmigrabon debate that "They don't understand this is women ·s lib_ in just operation, spokeswoman Laura Dawson said. • but without aid. has occupied the House for more than a week. a classier way."
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•
Banned books returned
RACINE, Wis. -Despite complaints that a high
school history book had "funny pictures" of Republicans
and that a borne economics text approved of premari~l
sex, the school board has voted to restore five textbooks.it
banned last week.
Dlscoverysetforlauncb
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. -Space shuttle Dis-
covery and its six-member crew arc ready for launch J u_ne
25 on the ship's maiden voyage around the Earth, NASA
announced. The nation's second woman astronaut will
take part in the mission of Discovery. America's third
reusable space plane, the space agency said.
Celebrities 1riD ln voting
SACRAMENTO -As Elizabeth Taylor and Bun
Lancaster watched, a legislative commincc voted to curb
the commercial use of the images of deceased cclcbnttes
The bill by state Sen. William Campbell. R-Hacicnda
Hc1~ts, won a 7-1 vote Monday of the Assembly
Judiciary Committee, sending it to the floor. But before
the vote, the comminec struqied nearly two hours with
objections raised by the Amencan Civil Liberties Union
and the ABC teltvision network, finally adopting
amendments to exclude political, news, public affairs and
historic re-creations.
Welgbtllfter flgbta flrlng
.SANLUIS OBISPO-A weightlifter who says giving
up iron-pumping would "betray my beliefs" is suing
United Airlines to get bis flight attendant's job back~er
the carrier twice fired him for being overweight. ·
Tudyman carries 178 pounds on his nearly 5-foot-8 c
-I 5 pounds more than United's weight limit for t
height, company officials say.
VFW 11eek• Hayden ouster
REDDING -The California Veterans of ForeiJn
Wars Association is again calling for the ouster from office
of Assemblyman Tom Hayden, 0-Santa Mooica. At the
VFW's ann.ual meeting in Redding, the 400 delegates vot~ unantmousJy Monday for ~ ot;tster resolution by
Edwin Myers of Fresno, the organization's chairman for
legislation.
Gypsies mourn Klng
~ ALLEJO -Hundi:Ms of gypsies, from as far away
as Chtcago and Kansas Cuy, flocked to pay their respects
to S~lcy Costell~. 67, the so-<:alled King of the San Pablo
Gypstes, who dted last Wednesday. In a traditional
ceremony, in which gypsies believe the dead should be
surrounded by what they loved in life, Costello was buried
in a tan suit wi~ a wcstefO-style string tic and his favorite
Stetson near bas bead. Cigars, Coca-Cota fresh fruit and a
fishina rod were placed near the casket.
Strife •hod:• Queen EllubetlJ
LONDON -Queen Elizabeth U is reponed to have
been shocked br bloody battles between striking miners
and police dunna Britain's violent coal strike which
entered its lOOth day today. "The queen bas been ~hocked
by the clashes ... An an formed source told me last night she
had !lOt ~n ~ concerned about events in Britain since
the nots an vanous pans of the country in 1981," political
correspondent James Wightman wrote in the Daily Telegraph. .
Lebanon army revamped
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Syrian Vice President Abdul-
Halim Khaddam has mediated an agreement among
Lebanon's Moslem and Christian le.aders to restructure
the army so it can curb waning militias, aovemment so!!~' said t~y. ~yria'a ~elp was requested when Prime
Manmer l'laahid Karami's seven-week-old coalition
aovemment, which includes some of Lebanon'• principal wa~lords, was unable to quiet the fiahtina in and around
BeltUL
lraJJlan• .eek uylam
NICE. France -A comrna.oc:iceR:d Iranian navy
plane landed here today on the lat.ett atop in a fivo-day od>:~Y and four of the ei&J?t people aboud asked for
poHucat asylum. French officials II.id they were reluctant
to arant the requ~t but ~ to Wk lO the piJot lAd the
three otbttl scckina uyfum after they refuled to lea"e France and Wilted off the plane.
0111Jdlll--. Bali mllr•
N~ DELHI, India -Prime Mini1ttr lridin
Gandhi ts oOCnna to reopen t.alu with Sikb Wlderl 10
d11euu their anevaooca wblle her army continues so root
ouuuipcctod Silk terrorist• in Punjab at.ate. lkh demands
for ~tcr polttical and tehlJOUS autonomy has C*laia1N Into violence that cautcd 400 deaths in the put four
months and culminated an • June 4 army atuidt on thr
ikhs' holic t hnnci, the Golden Temple in Amnuar.
, _,,._.. _____ -r.---"1''
( Onnge COllll OAJLV PILOTIJ~. M9e 11, 1114
Housing Off,
ncome'sup
Construction permits also
decline. but just sltghtly
I By &M A.tHdated Preti
Housina sta:ns declined 10.S percent last month, losi~ about half the around they had pined in April, and ,eenntt1 for new construction also dropped, but only
lliJhtly, the Commerce Depanmeot reponed today.
1 lo a separate report, the depanment said Americans'
lpersonaJ income rose 0.6 percent in May, the same as in
April while spendina slowed a bit.
On the surface. the moderate &ncomc gain -to ah
annual rate of $2.98 trillion -seemed to provide little
evidence either for or apinst the arowina consensus that
the economic recovery is slackenina in the April-June quarter.
The nation's use of its factories, mines and utilities
.edged up only 0.2 percen• points to 81 . 7 percent in
May, the Federal Reserve wd Monday, signaling to some
economists that the expansion is slowing.
But the red ink an \he broadest measure of U.S.
foreign trade continued to grow at a brisk pace in the first
quarter, climbing to a record S 19.4 billion, the Commerce
Fence1traddlln1
MANAMA, Batara a
(AP) -Hwadtedl Of
lboulancb of lruia.D and I~i IO&di~ we moviaa
inco I.he swampy • .aoulbern lraq_ border an:a iJI ~
lnllOD for I ~ bank,
both 90vernmeAU say. ··1ndicatiom in Bilbdad
abow the (lraaian) · of-
fensive is imminent, with
the lnqis bracina to crush
it. .. the Gulf News Al/t'OCf
Radio
host
slain
Department said in a separate report Monday.
Tberateoffactoryusein Maywasactuallydownfrom DENVER (AP) -Alan
-1le & 1.9 percent oripnally reported for April. But the April Bera. a combative but
.A prote.ter la manea•ered
aroand a fence by two ofDeen 4....m.. demomtratlon at tbe
A YCO l7•telu Dl.Yialon plant in
Wllmln,ion, ..... Two dosea
demonetrJtore. protee,t191
plant'• manufacta.re of naclear
miMlle puta. were aneeted.. •
figure was revised in Monday's report to 81 .S percent, popular radio t.alt show
JCCOuntina for the 0.2 perccntaae point May increase. s · • t b k d 1 t host who liked .. to stick it
, The Federal Reserve said last Friday that industrial ov1e s ac e p 0 to the audience," died of production rose0.2 percent in May, the smallest gain since multiple pnsbot wouods
rNovember. However, that report was greeted by k• 11 p e 98 l? after beans ambushed .~nomi•ts asa healthy sian that the economy waulowin, to I ope ID 1 outside his downtown con-
to a sustainable recovery pace, not as a signal that a more e dt~yiru. ·um. officials said serious decline was loom1ng.
The trade deficit shattered the s 17.2 billion shortfall Prosecutor cites Bulgarians vulsions in Poland" caused Denver ~c District set only three months earlier. And Commerce Secretary by the rise of Solidary, the Attom w· · Buckley
MaJcohp Baldfiie said more bad news la~ ahead, though I ti t i d now-outlawed union that said po~ce found 10 .4S. he applauded .. an encoura&ing" increase in U.S. com-as assass na on mas erm n S was the first independent caliber shell~ next to
panics' exports. ,. ROME (AP) _ A state the attack. But at the time labor movement in the Bera's body after the sboot-
prosecutor said today be is · of. his 1981 trial, pros--SOviet bloc. The pope had ins at about tOi>.n'I:. Mon-
convinocd that Butprians, ecutors did not know how &iven bis support lo Soli-da · ~~tp)~~~BWJlf98,-~~ ~ ... er~ . ~ ~, ashftfr~~o
1981 assassination attempt If convicted on the new SCSled that the ~ .. So~t . his compact car, pol.ice p J b p 111 Union might have bad a said. on ope 0 n au · charge, Agca could be hand in the plot apfost the Berg was one of several
"Tbat's•'-acooclusionof sentenced to a concurrent alth ...... b . radi
UHi. prison term ranoing from 3 pope, o...., e COD· araumentat.ave O pcr-my investigation," said e--firmed that his report does sooalities featured. on a
ia laliaia reparted Mc;o.
dly.
lran'1 M11e radio Mid .. thoutandl o( zea1ou·~
l¥Cre conv~-. mu &bt
tracai ~ orBMra:: ~ for w Iran bM beeta
expected to launch a ~
human-wave UMult. Iran reportedly haa
• massed an esumated
'400,000 troops and revol-~ ~= lO the ~-o~r. ~ tbe
aovcmment report Mon-
aay indicated that
thOUIUds more volunteers
were pourina into front----.. . . -. -. .
IN MINUTES
BE GOLDEN BROWN
SOUTII CQ\ST FIT &FIRM
3500 8. BRISTOL• M5 llOS
Suite 200 -'A ma. Not1h of South Coe9t Piia
Coat a.... Building
Antonio Albano in an in-to 12 years, Albano said. not s~cally mention ~ent of CBS' .. 60
tcrview with The As-Albano said bis tep<?rt .~an~yr_:So~v~1e~t ~co~nn~ect~i~o~n·:___~Min~u~ti~es.~·-· _____ j.Jilr:m:::-=i1C11*m::ii1e11c.:m::1icmc::x:m:1ir:1!1=-:im::micm:m:ii~~ sociated Press. The 47-was covered by judicial
AM AMJtUT DCM Mn#ACTION OUA/UllT&
fL
year-old prosecutor bas secrecy and that copies
turned in a 78-pqc report have been given only to the
to Judge Ilario Manella, investigating judge and de-
who bas beaded the state f ense lawyers.
inquiry into the May 13, Albano said his report
1981 shooting by Turkish stated .. there was a specific
terrorist Mebmet Ali Acea. interest in killing the pon-
Albano confirmed that tiff -the social con-
be recommended to
Martella that three Bul-
prians and four Turks be
tried in connection with the
attack, which seriously
wounded the Polish-born
pof:~dition, he disclosed
for the first time that he
also asked that Agaa be
tried on a new charge -
illepl importation &om
Switzerland of a pistol be
used to shoot the pope in St.
Peter's Square.
Acea was tried by a
Rome court and aentenocd
to life imprisonment for
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--'-
1 The US
Olympic coins
commemorate
the hrst time 1n hall a
century that the Sum-
mer Games are being
held on American soil
2 This 1st e t1rst time in history
that the u S M int has issued
Olympic commemorative coins
3 Th e ten dollar gold Olympic coin 1s
the first gold coin minted in the Unrted
States 1n some 50 years q All profits from the sale of the corns will
go toward the Olympic effor1 for training
expenses the ever·ns1ng costs of send·
tng our team to the Olympic Games and the
staging of the Games 1n Los Angeles 1n 1984
5 These are coins of the realm which
as legal tender will be highly prized by
collectors
6 The coins are works of art The 1983 s1I·
ver dollar coin was designed by Ehza·
beth Jones chief engraver at the Mint
The front of the coin shows a dramatic
depiction of the classic Greek d scus thrower
The 1984 silver dollar coin was designed by
Robert Graham. a Los Angeles sculptor
The front of the coin bears a representation
of tl)e Gateway to the Olympic Coliseum
The 1984 gold ten dollar coin was designed
by John Mercanti a member of the US Mint
engrav1nq staff developed from a concept
createci by James Peed an artist at the Mrnt
The co11 saptures the penetrating S<..ene
of n)e Olympic Torch bedrers 1n delicate
sharp deta1r
7 The 1984 Olympic commemorative
coins are handsomely packaged and
protected There could be no greater
thoughtfulness tor special gifts than an Olym·
pie commemorative coin They are a memen·
to ot a great event and will become a
possession of lasting value Most importantly
they may serve as an 1nsp1rat1on not every-
one can be an Olympic champion but with
suft1c1ent opportun1t1es we can all achieve our
personal goars .
8 The cost 1s mm1-
mal For only $32
youcant:x,JyaUS
proot commemorative sij.
ver coin that W\n help our
US Olympic team compete 1n
the Games
9 These magrnf1cent coins are
.. proof" quality, the highest grade a com. SpeciaUy prepared dfes
and planchets used in high-pressure multip!e
striking produce a brilliant. m1rror-l1ke held
with contrasting satin relief in bold. sharp
detail The result· a gem-like 001n of extraordi-
nary beauty lo All sales will include an Olympic con-
tnbut1on ot $50 for each gold coin and
$10 for each silver com sold
11 Each set includes an official message
of vahdatton signed by the Director of
the Mint descnbrng all you might wrsh
to know about your prized acqu1S1t1on
12 It rs easy to buy the coms While you
are thinking about the Oly~pics. and
how you are helping those young gift-
ed athletes by giving the coins to oth-
ers-REWARD YOURSELF with a set of your
own -you deserve 1t1
Corns can be purchased through your local
post office and at part1c1pat1ng banks and
corn dealers across the country
Or. write to
U.S Mrnt . Olympic Corn
Program. PO Box 6766
San Francisco. CA
94101
'SUPPORT THE llOME 1IAM { ~ • "l·~~~ ,
I
THINGS
TODO No matter
what you're
doing, your
hometown
n~aper
The
...
..
Malntenance reqWres
freeway lane closure
To the Editor; arc sometimes at a standsttll, I can
T1tis ts in response to the letter from assu~ you that this 1s not the case.
TbomasO'Keefe(Daily Pilot, May 3) Maintenance crews arc always
cooccm1ng our maintenance work on anxious to complete their work as fast
Southern California freeways. as possible so they can reduce the
Caltrans maintenance crews arc amount of time they arc exposed to
charged with the resJ?Onsib1bty of hiah speed traffic an" so lanes can be
caring for the many mtles of freeway reopened 10 motorists.
within the state. They attempt to It is extrememly important that
accomplish th.is challenging task in maintcnani:e crews perform the the most efficient and safest manner possible. necessary repaving and repair tasks
During the last 1 o years a total of34 on our freeway as needed and that we
Caltrans maintenance workers have attempt to maintam the freeways as
sacrificed their lives in the lane of duty well as possible.
as they were performing work to As is true with automobiles and
ensure that the h1&hways were safe for many other things. without regular
the motoring pu61ic. Because of the maintenance, freeways will soon de-
1mmincnt dangers whlch these teriorate. It would be an mexcusable
workers must constantly face while waste of our Wt\)ayers money to
working close to high speed traffic, allow tbcir capital investment in our
they are trained to make safety the freeways to be wasted by a lack of
most important part of their daily proper maintenance. Regular main-
routine. Highway workers must tenancc work can protect the tax-
G.d! lis °"1y .... ..,.,._, ...
~~
"The value of af/rst}obmu t not be measured by salary earned. but
rather by experience gained. • •
RATIIOPfD DONOVAN
U .8. Secretary of Labor
THOUS
ELIAS
L.A.
won't
4eport
vagrants
Police crackdown
spawned rumor of
interment camps
Six weeks before the Games begin.
...
protect themselves at all times. For papers investmenL
this rcaso~. it 1s necessary for them to We a~~e if ~~u _v:.:_re mco~. , .... :. -·-:-.~wWeS~dTas P.la~g~~-= ~~~We can assure yff~ we~~-· ·-....c""'~~
·1 the Los Angeles Olympic rumor mill
is already going full blast. That's .
1 _ _ probabJy ~nt:v.i~!s).p ~Y.~ll~!!t ~----\ -'1~-:::Z:-~---... ~~ ..... 41[£. ·-"""'"
hundredsofthousandsofvisitorund
television viewers in the hundreds of cones and signs at speetfic intervals so always attempt to complete closures
that approachmg motorists will have in the shortest time possible and to
sufficient advance warning. notify motorists by means of a
It is department policy to scheduJe teletype system wtuch provides traf-
lane closures for maintenance work fie reports to commercial radio sta-
• between the hours of 9 a.m . and 3 tions.
p.m. to avoid peak hour commute If you have any further q uestions.
umes. please give us a call.
While it may appear to the uo-WT. MALONE
trained eye that maintenance tasks Departm~nt of Transportation
Keep Balboa Island clean
To the Editor. ..
Balboa Island -of the people. by
the people. for the people!
True to their 78-year tustof),
Balboa Islanders have pitched in to
ready the Island for the summer. St.art
out by noticing the work of:
An Eagle Scout -on the Bay side
of the wall. freshly parnted street
names that direct sailors and emerg-
enc} equipment.
Then enjoy the contributions of the
Balboa Island Improvement Associa-
tion -new bricked-in planters
around the Marine A venue trees,
eliminating forever the dangerous
holes and dirty. weedy sand. the
flower planters and dnnking foun-
tains that are beautiful and workrn&.
respectivelJ..
Feel uplifted by the Balboa Island
Business Associauon that unfurled
new flags to dress the bndge for the
summer.
The City of Newport Beach got into
the action. too -a newly remodeled
bndge to the Little Island. complete
wtth ramps for strollers and wheel-
chairs: cross street names done in
reflecting stencils at all the alleys;
bright red No Bicycling symbols on
the Bay Front sidewalks; new con-
crete alleys replacing the 50..ycar old
potholed embarassments; and the
tractors that have gone out on the
street-end beaches to push up sand.
thus clearing channels and crcaung
dry beach.
Even the gas company chose the
late spring to check out and replace
many old meters.
What is needed now is for "the
people'' to help take care of the place.
This includes using the trash con-
tainers and keeping food off the
sidewalks. especially in the Marine
A venue where. so far, there is no
method to k.ocp them clean any other
way (costs are grear and there is no
place to carry off the dirty water
except into the Bay-unacceptable!)
An} solutioos ... er. ideas, wiU be
welcomed by the Island Association
members for considerauon.)
GAIL VINCE SMITH
Balboa Island
Vitamin keeps fleas away
To the Editor.
The hot weather. wb1cb bnngeth
our dreaded pest THE FLEA. 1s upon
us and I wtsh to share with all of you a
trul) monumental bit of news con-
cerning this trying ume.
There is a way to prevent these
monstrous little beasties from
noshing on you and your pets. Both of
)OU must take V1tam1n
B-1 . Thi.amine. It's as simple as that!
I kid you not. I have been tak.J ng 1 t and
gn1Dg 1t to my two cats ever SIDCC I
read about at ID Prevention magazine
about 4 months ago. Vo1la' The} do
not...rcpeat NOT ... have a s1Dgle flea
and as a result I do not have a SIDgle
red bump on the old bod.
It's a m iracle! h 's more. It really
works. Thiamine is evidently the stuff
that's 1n Brewer's yeast and we've all
heard what great things that docs. But
1ust 1mag.mc. No more flea baths for
ye olde cats. No more bug bombs. No
more having the house sprayed. etc .
etc. c1c Just blessed relief.
Now you must be patient Start
toda) It wall take about 3 or 4
months. You may get results sooner,
but I won't guarantee It. I started out
with one 50 milligram tablet each for
m y cats and o ne 100 mg for myself. l
dissolve the cats's tablets ID hot water
and m1x it with tbeir food once a day.
If 50 milligrams docsn 't do ll, try I 00.
h won't hurt them. The worst that
wtll happen if it's too much is that
they will throw it up. So then you go
back to 50. For dogs you can use
more. Small dogs can take 200
mill1grams and large dogs can usually
handle about 600 to 700 or 750.
I have checked all this out with m y
vet. so I am not practicmg m~cme
without a license. I shall forever be
grateful to the person who wrote the
letter to Prevention Magazine and I
trust that if you follow my advice you
will also feel that warm glow of
gratttude. No. no. No statues tn the
park fri ends. Just the thought of no
one scratching thro uah the summer
will be reward e nou&h for me.
MARY JANE WOOD
Laguna Beach
SEARCHLIGHT millions.
But as usual with rumors, most are
Anti-missile missiles an OC
controversy two decades ago
untrue. Yet even with those that are
false, some small kernel o f reality may
have gotten them started.
That's apparently the case with
w .. n 1s probably the most vicious
rumor of all tbdsc surrounding the
Games, one which implied the U.S.
government had learned nothing
since it interned Japancse-Amencan
citizens during World War II. I'm afraid mo~t of you arc not old
enough to remember the part that our
Orange Coast area played in the
development of an effective anti-
missile m issile.
At Redstone Arsenal (in the
Southeast of the U.S.) there was an
amazing development. A group of
American scientists, working in coor-
dination with former German rocket
expert Werner von Braun. had de-
vised a rocket guidance system wh.ich
made 1t possible to intercept an
incoming enemy m1ss1le.
That. as at turned out. was the least
difficult part of the task. A bigger
question was ··How do you destroy
the enemy missile after your intercept
1t?''
The prOJCCtcd method was to bum
n up by a burst of flame from your
own "warhead... Fairly easy if you
intercept it within the earth's at-
mosphere where there is sufficien1
oxygen to support conflagration but
impossible above the earth's at-
mos~here. The idea of igniting at
within the atmosphere caused a
hystencal wnngang of hands on. the
part of the public, and politJcos m
Congress. of course, refused m oney
for further development o r manufac-
ture.
There was. however. some hope. Jn
comma nd at the arsenal was a
remarkably sk.Jllful and patient man.
Maj.Gen. August Schomberg. He
realized that the money already s~nt
would be wasted ifthe "media" didn't
or couldn't understand the true value
of perfecting the anti-missile missile.
So he calmed the mercurial von
Braun and then undertook the task of
explaining matters.
I got acquainted with Gen.
Schomberg and liked him and his
ideas. It was apparent he was a fine
honorable man and I did what I could
to help him get some underst.andtng.
l had first become acquainted with
the general through the Defense
Orientat1on Conference Association.
He liked the Pilot because. he said.
our stone5 were "lucid."
He wrote me and I wrote him.
Then, to my surprise he liked us so
much he decided to pay us a visit. Not
only us. but some of the educational
institutions of California -specifi-
cally Cal Tech. UCLA and UC
Berkeley
I notified the then commanding
general of the Marine Corps 10 El
Toro of his com1Dg.
WALTER
BURROUGHS
General Schomberg held a scnes of
press conferences and the result wa~
wtde-spread newspa~r and radio
coverage of the feas1bility of inter-
cepting and destroying an 1ncom1ng
nuclear missile.
Then a most unhappy crisis oc-
curred. The general had a heart
a ttack. Normally. even for a major
general, the service would just clap
him into the nearest Army hospital
a ndlcavehim there. But the Secretary
of Defense regarded the general so
highly that he directed be be nown to
the Mayo Oinic in Rochester. Mann.
which had a reputation of cunng
heart problems.
Gen. Schomberg had amved in an
old Army plane with no air to
maintain constant pressure. The pilot
of the plane persuaded the doctors he
couJd make a low level tlifht by a
longer route. Just how long tt was or
how circuitous 1 was never told but I
do know the general got there and
survived.
Congress, of course, cut off funds
but Geo. Schomberg continued to
L.M. Bovo
teach the advantages of the anti-
missile missile and he worked on
various methods of improving it -
once as deputy to Lt. General Jack
Hinrichs, ChiefofOrdnance and later
as Commander of the Army Indus-
trial College.
But for 20 years we have heard little
about an anti-missile. Then, one
morning I saw a colored diagram of a
new anti-missile missile in a local
newspaper.
This new version operates not by
"burning up" the intruder but by
using a huge solid. like a massive
block of wood, to knock the visitor off
cou~ and destroy it -like a
collision of a truck with a bus.
I'm not impressed by the propa-
ganda mill that screams for an
"agreement" with Russia. Sure, that
would be nice, but I'd much prefer an
effecti ve anti-missile shield.
To this day. the former Chief of
O rdnance Lt. General Hinrichs and I
mourn the passing of the man with
the answers. And we shudder at the
dumbness of the politicos who want
to rely solely on a meeting between
Soviet President Chernenko and
President Reagan to agree that the
communists won't attack.
I'll be ~)' to have such an
"agrcement'"but even more rd like to
have an anti-missile fence to intercept
their bloody attack weapons.
Walt~r BolT'Oflp• I• tte Pilot'•
lo1111dm1 pablhber.
The rumor claimed that federal and
local officials planned to sweep the
streets of Los Angeles in late July.
trucking vagrants, bomeless al-
coholics, teenage runaways, street
gang members and other street people
to a camp in the Arizona desert.
This story is flatly untrue. Most of
the $50 million federal Olympic
appropriation has already been spent
and a thorou&h check reveals there
arc no plans (or any mass deporta-
tions from Los Angeles, as there were
from Moscow in I 980.
But there is enough of a kernel of
reality to have gotten the story
started. And once started, it spread
like wildfire, rcachins Washington,
D.C.: Cincinnati, Ohio; Colorado
Springs, Colo.: and Moscow, where
the Tass wire service reported it as
truth.
The rumor was apparently sparked
by an informal proposal put forward
by one city councilman for a camp in
Azusa. The aim would have been to
make Los Angeles "look good for the
Olympics, .. but the notion was quick-
ly killed. The rumor acquired new
momentum fromaseriesof~licc
raids on a tiny park in the Skid Row
area of Los Angeles, the only open
spaccavailablctohundrcdsof~l-
icts who languish in rundown bu1ld-
ings and streets a few blocks east of
the glitzy new hotels and shops that
Olympic visitors wiU enjoy.
In one naid, plainclothes police who
didn't bother to display badges but
did brandiah pistols stood all occu-
pants of the park against a wall to
search them. In another, all persons
This killer thinks ahead
in the park were simply flushed out by
bull-horn bearing officcn in uniform.
Charity workers who witnessed
these incidents reported that at van-
ous tftnes, individual officers re-
marked that they were .. practicing for
the Olympics" and that "We'll be
doina this every day bet ween now and
the Olympics because we want you
pcopleoqt ofbere."
Q Where'd we get the phrase" .. ID
cold blood"?
A. From legal lingo of old. Meant
premeditated . S<> brought harsher
punishment than the ··hot blood"
crimes of passion.
Q. You say the pelican breathes
through its mouth'' Why?
A. No nostnls.
Q. What's a "Dutch wife"?
A. !\ stuffed bolster filled with
kapok. Colonists on the old planta-
11ons of the South Pacific slept
astraddle of such round pillows to
beat the heat. The\> absorbed the
perspirauon of the tropics.
The claim that President Ronald
Reagan changed the pronunciation of
his name from ··REE-gun" to .. RAY-
gun" at Nancy Reagan's request is
bunk, according to an old-timer from
Des Moines. Iowa. Says he d istinctly
remembers Reagan's sportscasts on
radio there where Mr. R.'s own
pronunciation of his name then was
even as it is now -"RAY ..gun ...
From such loose comments sprina
much Jaraer fears.
But in secret testimony before a
U.S. Senate subcommittee, Los An·
geles PoUocChiefDaryl Gates swo~
that his department has no plans to
"purify" the city during the Games.
"We will maintain our usual level of
sccuntyandscrvice .. be said.
L.M. Boyd I• • 1yadlc•t~d And sources who have attended
columJJ/11. every bi&h-lcvel Olympic Security
plannina session smcc February say
Axing the minimum wage best bet for jobless teens
the notion was never even discussed
there.
Yet the plans outlined by a deputy
poliocchiefin charge of the down-
town aru provide oncclucas to why
police officers mi&ht indutac in loose.
rumor-swtina bravado. More lmportanf than salary with first job
ls the valua _e experience ained by novice
ByRAVMONDJ.DONOVAN
u.a. ._...., • l.alber
Your firs1 JOb may ~ the most
important one you ever h ve. If you
don't leam good work habi a. ~sptet
for your supervisors and th import-
ance of bemg on time and cetint
deadlines, your whole wor career
may be affected -1f you have one
But many youna people ne\'er &et
that first JOb They never have the
opportunity to learn the ~lf-<hs
C1pline. the ab1ht1-tO produce, and the
tnterpcf'IOnal ~Ills eS$CnUal to $UC•
C(SS almost anywhe~ m the world of
~Ork
ORANG( COAST
Daily Pilat
The importance of entry-level JObs
cannot be underestimated. The value
of a first job must not be measured by
salary earned. but rather by ex-
perienoc gamed.
Unfortunately. the record shows
that Amenca has not been able to
provide JOb'I for many of its teen-
agers. Employers sampl) canno1 af-
ford to pay the minimum waae -
$3.35 an hour -for 1nexpencnccd
youth. Unwitungly. the aovemment
has pnccd youth'I out of the employ-
ment marlm, and th( result 1~ an
almot.t 20 percent overall youth
unemployment rate. with the rate for
H. L. 8chw1rt1 Ill
Publ!VWtr
Chair Dowallbr
frJ•tOf Ind Attn11n1
IO IM"utll"
J"wOIN ... -• .Mt IJ4 -, ... , Al Jll 'hAI fla, t';t " ~ ,.,,.,,_ CO<•"''°"'ll!nl.• 10 lk. , • •• ~ c" 9:HIXI
,ranfll Zlnl
AUOCMlll r 1 I
font T•t C.1, [ I
j
black ~ccn-a_gers at 50 percent an som..!
Amencan c1t1es.
Certamly for young people it 1s
better to have a JOb paying less than
$3.35 than not to have a job at all. Too
many young people arc wasting their
lime betng unemployed when they
should be learnang skills and all the
other thmgs that go with having a JOb.
To break thu economic
stranglehold. President Reaaan has
proposed to Conarcss the Youth
Employment Opportunity Wage Act
of 1984
Under the program, employc~
would be allowed to pay youths 19
and under waaes of S2.SO an hour -
about 7S percent of the current
m1n1mum wage -from May I to
~ptember 30. We e,umate this wall
create 400.000 new jobs for Amen ca·,
tetn·aacrs
Thesummcrt1mc youth opponun1-
ty wage would provide employcn
with an 1nc:cnt1ve to create the JObs
that our youna to desperately need.
At the me umc. safquardt have
been 1ndudcd to a urt thll lhete
new JO~ Villl not be created al the
c~pen.c ofthotc atrndy hokfin&JObl.
The propoul 1nclude1 PKlfic
ptotcctaon for current w en Urn·
ploycn will not be alla*-rd ro ~u~
11\e w c rate for )Outh1 cmplo i:d
./ '
and payment of back wages.
The concept of a summer youth
opportunity waie bas been whole-
hcanedJy endorsed by a variety of
groups such as the National Con-
ference of Black. Mayon; Oi>-
~rtuniucs Industrialization Centers
(OIC). a premier trainina organiza •
tion for d isadvantqcd /outh; the
National Association o Minonty
Conuactoni tt\e National Federation
of tndepenaent Busineucs; and the
Printina lndu1trics of America.
Tl\cse oraani11tion1 realbc, u do all Americans. that youth unemploy ..
mcnt is dearly_ a crillcal problem for
our society. The looser youths 10
without cntcrina the JOb market, the
tess hkely they are to establish
productive careen. Funhcnnore,
these lcnathy pcnod1 of unemploy-
ment create the potential for a
dan1crou1 li1Htylc.
Inevitably, tuClcty paya tht pn~
for nqlttuna ti youna.. Yet em.
ploycra can hardly be blamed for no1 cmt na'.k>bt they canaoc afford.
The ummcn m youth opportuni·
ty 'Hite 1 an lmric>Nnt piece of
lt&t lallon thll ahouMS he pe<d. h wm prov de Amcnca• uncrnplo)'td
tt.en.qtn with JObi, w11h hope and Ith pponunla for the utu~. U 11
1n In\' tmtnt n menc-a.
"OurinathcOlympicperiod. we
will obviously have to tiabten our
belts in the hotel area.·· said Lou
Ritter. "We will have smaller beats.
WewilldocverythingwclqaUyan
toshow(strcet people}lhat th1s1s oot
the place for them to be durina the
Olympics..''
In lhon. whethcrforcosmctic pu~orforrcasonsofsccurity,
police will try to keep street people :
out of some areas they now commoft-':
ly frtquent. :
That'senouahofa temd ofttality •
tottan IM rumor mm annd1na. •
Othcrrumorswilla.lsoautdy •
surficc, and they arc also hkely to
sound at least u plausible as this one.
Thcyw11l lnvolvc money, with claims
that the orpnizt~· baitds are in~
till. And t~orpnu.erure well peid.
but therc•snoevidcnceofan)'th•na 1mPf'.'9PCr. Rumon will also anvolvo
ICCUrity, With ttpe>nJOftenorist
ancidenta cominaan result of rout1ne
pOlice re.-n ao routine crime. For liw ...,.,on aDd *vilioa vieMnllille. the a.on oflhe deoortluon Nmorh t:kar; Don.,
bffieve lftJ ttpon untal 1t'1 been
cheeked OUltl'VftY eoft(tivable wey. .,.,... ...... ,, ......... .
.....,,., I 'rt•dl# ......
r ·.
~-~E L P YOURSELF
-""~~--=-=---~~=----=-----=-- -
Teen-agers
visit 'work'
• • 1n su·mmer
Challenge of findingjob ----------could turn into a memoir
m•odle .nner
outer ear ear aar
•
Education's best
cancer protection
Early detection saves lives.
Reach to Recovery comforts
churches. ~mples.clubs. hospitiband healthtaJn..
The soaJ of the BSE presentation is to tum the
euminatlon intoa life..gvinabchavioraJ habit. .. The
simple procedure should be pan onife, l~c brUsh.ina your:
By JENNY C. YOUNG tecth orputtin1onascatbeh.,"' Lieberman.said.
._..... • 111e Dlllr,... The bcusts arc a very se~ual 11\d emotionil &IQ for •
Fay L1cbcnnan ofN~pon Beach 1s an optimistic. women and many are afraid they could not rope with
M y psycho!-compass1onatcandenc~t1cvolunteerforthcAmencan 6ndingaprobtem. Thisfcarisawoman'sworsunemy. •
ogist husband says ti CanccrS<x:1et)'. She 1S a hvingcxample ofa recovered •
he has nothing in L • t brcastcancerv1ct1m. saidL1ebcrmanwhocontenduhaiwithamonthlyBSE.a·
common with his 1 s en Q1 r She1sgnuefulforherhfeandeagertohelpwomcn womancan-stayontopofthesituation"andtbecbanca I •11DA children. ..They .,I, bccomercspons1blcfortheirhealthbyencouragingthem ofascnousproblemarcminimittd. Lin are," he says ... "far to takeadvanta&eofpubhc educ.ation programstoreducc The ACS estimates that 115.()()()Americanwomtn
Al ... .,, more privileged." v1· bl r~ ti· on s theirfearofbrcastcanccr. willdevclopbrcastcancerthJsyear.and 37.000ofthem wu. He does not .I,. GI. Recalling 1961 when she was treated for breast will die.
•••••••••••• reminisce about the cancer. Lieberman said ... Jn those days. there was no talk This high number of deaths can be reduced tJlrouah
"good old days" and NEW YORK (AP)_ Some hearing-impaired people about breast cancer. and women didn't even think of earlydetecuon and treatment. There is a 90perceot
bcfiv1e-rpedile walbk.s to sch~I each !"Oming. Those days could understand others better and learn to speak more ebxaminang their breasts! People ~re. not educated about survival rate if the disease is found and treated early. bUt .-:::
ona t~ is parents generallon. Instead. .. he talks clearly by using devices now being developed that ~st can~er. and suppon agencies hke the ACS were not 1 SO t .__ "fth .__ _ .... about wortong by age 13 la . h .b . • h i.:-• discussed • on 1 a penxn C1M1nce I e cancer iwas~n;_,.
J! ... 11.. ~· . ~ i.; .. h.. trans te p1tc to~· rauons on t e siuu, ~!lpertS say: I 1975 h be· . he intsout that women toda are fonunaae. .~...T,.¥\Ln_..,__~ ~ . .o.v ...... ,....ack..~ "'¥ ..... ~Jbe,,{lcyWel.~~PQrW>~...;.·~~Jj~Jp • ~~;a.!t'~.JfiYOIYed)JlJ)lcl\CS~chJ.Q_~ ; .. . ,.._ . ~ ~,..... . AfUl\IV\) ~:~CU\J~ m'~ll".,vt)•ltsf•i:di~~~\) --~--.:x~teeff~·. ',~... . • ....... ;_,. •1t:...;...;....c.•M•~~~-""'~
recalls, carry&g furniture was not deemed an appropriate rank.tin oT San Francisco State U Diversity said at the breast cancer and surgery with no recurrences for more g.ivc women opuons not av ad.able several years a,o.
job for a growing, col~cge-bound boy, and the .car~r aenual meeting o~ the American Association for the than-0neyear.Theyaretrainedt<?visithospitalroomsor Womencantakepan inde_asionsrcprdmgtheirhCalth
ended when tus father discovered how he was earning his Advancement of Science. · homesofrettnt mastectomy patients. · by keep1ngcurrcntoo free information andeducatiOftal
paycheck. . . The dev:i<:es, mos.t of w~ch are s~ill in ~be ~h They ~ve the patients practical advice. helpful hints programsabout breast canoer .
. He, l~ke many youn~ readers ~ck then, was inspired s1:11e, turn different pi~ches m speech into ~bratl<?ns on and. most 1mpo~ntJy, moral suppon and hope. The Lieberman. who becamca volUJttcerbecause she was
to pick himself up by his proverbial bootstraps and to diffetent parts of the ~kin. R~h~rs are sull looking for breast cancer v1ct1m feels an immediate affinity wt th the thankful for her own rfi -in rfi 1 overcome any obstacle. the best e.lace:s t~ deµ Yer the ~1brattons so the person can volunteer s1 nee they both bave had the same experience. . 1 e, says, . ~save one 1 C.
After all, if Horatio Alger's "Ragged Dick" the shoe most eas~y dis.tmawsh one p1tch from another. Sttinga vibrant woman who has survived breast ha\ledone somethinafor~umaruty. .
shine boy could do it., so could they. • The idea is to aupplemen~ wha~ver the J>C!SC>n . can cancer surgery &ives the patient hope for recovery and a Sh.e pins a worthwhile, useful and ongou'I
Hard work, decency, generosity, and industry, along bear ~d understan~ throuJb lip-reading, Franldi~ said. return to normal life. educat.Jon through ACS research and volunteer P"> '"'
with a little bit of luck were offered as the sure-fire Wih ~n~:elt~Like ~eviceth wobd benea.th clothin~ the After being a Reach to Rec-0very visitor for several grams. She meets people, Like herself, who have positive : •
formula for success. =c~~ ~~f S: f~~x~a le omr: in spots·b,.tlc', a years. Lieberman became pan of the original SW AC attitudes and arc motivated by their own experiences :
But even the fictional "Ragged Dick" a~d my ~ore from ooe end of the belt 10 the otfer: ~tit': b:k . n~ (Safeguard Women Against Canccr)co~m~ttee that with canoer. i
C<?ntemporary ~usband needed ~o find t~ear first JO~. as the sound rises and fall&. The rising inflection of a ~bal trains volunteers to be breast self-examtna~on (BSE) f or free 1nformauon about breast cancer. BSEand .
Like them, ~1lhons of teen-agers in the Uruted Sta~ will program speakers. She has been SWAC chairperson for Reach to Rcrovery. oontact theOran,eCounty unit of
compete ~his summer for not a whole lot of available (Pl ea.e eee VIBRATION/B2) three years and presents programs at schools, colleges. the Amencan Cancer Society at 752-8600. opponun1ty. '
Imagination. originality, initiation and creativity are
still essential for a successful job search.
The very same qualities necessary to look for and to
find summer work. arc qualities we all want to nourish in
our children. There can be biger payoffs than their
paychecks if you brainstorm with them about potential
opportunity and help them to develop job-finding skills.
Psychological studies repon that ltids who work at
labors outside of school during the academic year arc
most likely to get into trouble. But don't let that
di900urage you from encouraging them.
Summer employment for teen-agers is healthy.
It's no secret that tecn·aacrs become more respon-
sible about money when they arc spending their 0 own."
By working this summer, they can learn to budget their
own income.
They can learn to respect money as nothing more
than a tool with specific value and limitations.
They can learn about the reality of payroll
deductions. They can have the opponunity to visit safely into the
adult world of finance and relish in the good feeling of
taking care of themselves ... even if independence is still
mostly an illusion.
Our kids need to accumulate their own memoirs for
reminiscing ... and first jobs are good material.
Dr. Alpzi is a psycholosist and marriage counselor
in Corona de/ Mar. Address any questions to Linda
Algazi, Ph.D .• c/o Daily Pilot. P.O. BoJC 1560, Costa Mesa
92626.
WOMEN: BEWARE OF THIN BONES
A frequently oc-------------curring disease of the
clder1y is a form of
bone loss termed ~ B
teoporosis or thin-1£111111 ningofthe bone.
This disease is c
so common that it is ASSIDJ
almost universal inl•••••••••••I the elderly but it
develops slowly over many years. You can do much to
prevent its development if you besin at an early qe.
The formation and reabsorption of bone is a
continuous process thio.out life. Under most circum-
stances the rate of formallon is coupled with the rate of
reabsorption and is equal. The mass of the skeleton is
usually greatest at about aae 30 and beJins to decline after
age 40, when the rate of bone reabsorption is not matched
by new bone formation.
At any age a woman has li&hter bones than a man of
the same size and weight. That iact coupled with a greater
rate ofloss when the bone loss begins makes women mprc
vulnerable to osteoporosis.
After yean of bone lon. fractures can occur with
minor inJUt')' or no inJury at all. The ~ of
osteoporosis can best be apprcc:iaiid when it tS recopiized
that one of every four wol'Mtl over 60 bas &.cturcs ·of
oomprcssioo of the spinal vertebral bodies. ln addition.
about 700,000 ttip fractures occur in women over age 4S
each year.
The cause of osteoporosis is not known and there may
not be a sin&le cause. The conditJon can be ISIOOlted wath
a numbcrof ditcaK processes or ii can occur as an isolated
phenomenon called primary osteoporosis.
What can be done to help preveni the tbinnina of
bone?
Since osteoporosis is a slow process occwrioa over
many years, people 11 greatest risks must plan ahead to
retard its development. The majority of patients with
osteoporosis arc post-menopausal women.
Women who receive estrogen therapy at the time of
menopause have a five-fold d~ in vertebral
compression fractures later in life. Because estrogen bas
undesirable side effects and risks it must be taken under
the supervision of a phySJcian.
Calcium and vitamin D supplements art also used to
slow lbe rate in wb.icb boDe is to.t. Adults Mlolld -diliit proper fOoda IO \heir~ daily~ o{C81ci99
does not diminish Afta' 40 many pcopk do DIDt .....,..
calcium as wbeD they were }'OQJlllel'. Tbiey wd 10
oonswne ~for \be same bendit.
Calcium is mainly available from milk aod otber
dairy products and Jmlll VClltUblcs such U broccoli.
cabbue and water cress. Often the diet alone does DOt pro....de eOC>Utb caJciwn for older woman and a c:alciaan
suppltmaal must be &ak:cn.
ln addition 10 ~ theraPf. calciwn aad Yitamia
O supplemen~ ~ eurc:ia u ao estmtial pan of
maintaioina st:mlSth of: chc: bone. Gn:atc:r amounts of
exercise will help not only 1n prevention otbooe Ioli bu1
also i:n maintainenance of heart and luoa fuoctioD.
Remember" the pl of treatment ofostcoporosis is the
prevention of bone Joa and fractures later m life. E.arly
awareness of its potential development is euential and
steps taken early in the process are most effective.
Dr. Brennan Cassidy practices family and emet'JCDCY
medicine m Cosra Mesa
Funds for MS are going • • • going .. .-up
Spirited auction crowd
raises $80. 000 for
more medical research
By ANN CONWAY
0.-,,.. c .......... .
What doa mink teddy bear. an Yves St.
Laurent shinwaist and a redwood spa
have in common?
Answer. Z. Mabei Allred.
At the Orange County Multiple
Sclerosis Society's recent fund-raising
auction, Allred outbid the 3QO..strong
crowd to pay $600 to cuddJe the teddy.
her son gave $700 for the designer silk (a
gift for her) and she donated the spa -
another $3,000 for MS bid by Mr. ud
Mn. Sam Stoae.
.... ................... ........
The breathtakina $80,000 gross from
the premjere (and most likely annual)
event held at the Anaheim Stadium Club.
had its bqinninas only lut January when
Allred joined forces with MS board
members Clal.re McNalr and Bette
Belda.
Claire llcPfalr la all am.Us a t tile $80,000 that aa.ctioneen Ed
Arnold , left. and Robert GaQ"enheim 1enerated for 118 treatment.
MS was loolcin& for another money-hottest items in the evening's live aucuon
malcer and the .. dynamic trio" had -chili for 50 catered anywhett by
already experienced put suoocss with Charlie's Chili of Costa Mcu.
auctions for Western Medic.al -a Another lively item on the auction
Tustin-based hospital. .. We can attribute agenda was a ~t for two to Seattle
our MS auction's succie (in so shon a aboard AitCal wtth Georp and JllQ
time) to our previous experience," said Arona to see an Anacl-Manncr baseball
Allred. "but most imponantly to the pme (Ar&Yros owns the Manners) Dr.
extreme hard work of the boerd and u4 Mn. 'Wllllam RaHy J>Ul up S 1,000
staff." for this sportina chantt of a lifetime.
LA. Rams owner Gevata Jl'naden Tbe la.rteSt return from a s.inaJe auction
and DocSaer JUdl MeMaJ ~re honorvy 1tcm -a f'ulJ lcnatb mink c:oat -V.'U
co-cbairpenon1 of the even\. FrontJcre S5.900bid b)' Mr.u4 Mn. 8-Blrtdller.
didn't show bccaute of a European MS auctionttn (a Wk requirina the
commitment., but Monday came and eaticnC'C of Job, the \ioatt of John
awarded bi1jeney to an ecstatic~ Barrymore and the sal man hip of Cal
WriPt wbo $42' bid won the shin, an Worthlfll\Oo on this intcd nl&bt) wett
autoenpbcd bet and ball and p.me MS chairman of the board M Al"MW
tickc (who. a1oAa with McNair, chaired tbc Alo~wilh tbeir$3,000spa. tbeSton event) and lteltert G..,...m, Lru tee.
bid U2S for the chance to ICC aty li&hll A cocktail rettption and silent auction
from aboard the Oood~car blimp. 'the preceded the formal ·t-down dinner
Larry Berti 001 and Harold wbicll included veal Oscar, pommn au•
Muckcnlhaknpaid upwardof$l00cacb Anna and Amaretto mou .
RICJaard Hau mao ud Da.td ... _.. ... .., for Cabbqe Patch don and the Mait Amon• tho cnjoyina the niaht for M lauMUedan.,ennttlnareepoMIMlltlea. WW.tc:..6a'S67~bid narcdoneofthc . were Mn. Aady Oe'1M. E'lllM t.ecas,
I
Dr. Joel McNair and Messrs. and Mmes.
Warra FU, Ricbr4 HH1mu, James
Heaweo4, Juk ltelly and Brd
McCroOey.
Handling undcrwritana
rcsponsibilltacs for the auction were
IUdar4 Baumu and DaYW R.edtn-
btldkt.
Acquisition committee membcn were
UC1 Alley (whose husband.,... pvc a
pontaneous $1 ,000 at the end of the
auction) TflT1 ~ E4I A...a.. Je
&eUy, Bat tei... Jtd &eU1 and the
boald of: trustees. On the production committte wcrt
Bene Belka, I. MUeJ ~ Paala FeNmu. La•a.. Uae:r and
Velase.n ta a Hu.ntinaton Har-
bour-based uppon aroup.
Hardwortina M taff mcmbcn WCTC
hlUM Tdfdu.. cxccuthc dircC'tor and
J ..... U.S. project coordinator.
MS' nc:'1 fund-rat~r t the Ricbud P.
Hausman lnvitational GolfToul"lltment
~t for July lat tht lrvtM Coast Cou.ntf)
C1ub in N""'pon Beach .
I
Ja2 0~ Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, June 19. 1984
Incest babies fight odds
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
mother died when I was ~ry youni. l
had 10 overwhelming need to bt close
to someone. When my father bqan to
aet sexually intimate with me I
lhouaht it was bas way of showing
affccuon. I .\li<U '° ~r to have bis
approval, 1 dad everyth1n.a he sug-
gested and never told a soul. The
sexual abuse went on until I was m my
late teens. I then met a won~erf ul
youna man whom I later mamed.
l rcali.zed when I feU an love that my
father had takenadvantageofmeand
the temble thing that had been going
on for so many years was not my fault.
It 1sstrange how most sexually abused
children beheve the} are to blame
The reason I am wnung is because
so little has been said about children
born of incestuous acts. When I was
15 my father got me pregnant. I went
to a home for unwed mothers and
gave up the baby for adopllon. (The
record states, "Father of child 1s not
known."')
I sav. che bab} almo~t 1mmed1alel}
after he was born. He looked perfect I):
health} and nonnal in every way I
had always thought children born of
incestuous relat1omh1ps were de·
formed or mental!\ retarded. I have
ne\ er <;ecn 1h1s q"uesuon raised in
your col umn or anywhere else. Wall
you discuss 1t. please? -No Name,
No Citv
•• luDERS
DEAR NO NAME: My con1altul
11 Dr. EJeu NlptlD&aJe, adjunct
profeuor of pediatric• at
Geor1e&own Ul.Jv~nlty Medical
Sdtool. (Dr. NtpliapJe 11 aJao an
uput ID geaeUct.)
Dr. Nlgbtl.DgaJe pointed oat tllal all
baman1 II.ave two IHH for every
cllarac&erutJc (eye color, laalr color,
boae structure, bel1.ltt, etc.) -one
from eac• parent. If a 1eaetic defect
exilts, the closer the relatlonslllp
between the parents of tile child, the
greater tbe probablllty tbat tbe child
will llllaerlt tl1e defut. A cbJld wbo
gets a "doable dose" of a defective
gene will sorely be ln trouble.
Approximately 10 to 70 percent of
cllildrea born of lnceatuoas rela-
Uon1b.lps (father-claut)lter, mother-
100 , brotber-1later, bfood llae aunt-
nepbew and u cle-Diece) wlll be
normal (Note: Stepfatben are oot
genetically related and therefore do
not pre1ent tbJa risk.) Tbe oddJ aoud
..... favorable. uatU OM IMk• a&
tlie11> from 1'e other ea4 of lite
MIHCOpe. Approximately SO co 4t ~
ptrcut •f th c~ldra bora of lacett
will be ABNORMAL. All femaltt wlao
become preput bl' a blood rcla""-
Uo9ld eouldtr "ete pttee11tl&H cattf9Uy.
'DEAR ANN LANDERS: Couple
No. I were best friends with Couple
No. 2 for many years. Couple No. l
introduced us to Couple No. 2. We
hked Couple No. 2 immediately and
they liked us. Now we sec a lot of
Couple No. 2 and very httJe of Couple
No. I.
Couple No. I are mad at us for
.. stealing'' their fnends to wbom they
introduced us. Do Cou~le No. I have
a legitimate complaint. I feel a lillle
bit guilty but my husband says I have
no reason to. -Wife In Couple No. 3.
DEAR WIFE: Not ID my opinion.
KnowlDg a couple flnt doea not
coa1tU11te ownenbip.
How much do you know about pot.
cocaine. LSD, spttd, PCP. uppers
and downers. glue and heroin? Art" all
these drugs d3ngerous? Get Ann
Landers' new booklet. "The Low-
down on Dope ... For each booklet
ordered, send $2.00 plus a long. self:
addressed envelope (37 cents posr-
age) to Ann Landers, P.O. BoA 11995,
Chicago. l/linois 6061 /.
Pou.laen-&ecenti'om
A June 9 wcddan& 1t1 _ ...
the F1'1t Christian Church
in ota Ana united in
marriage Sally I!.
Seaerstrom and Howard L.
Poulson. Dr. Nonnan W.
Conner conaucted the cer-
emony assisted by the
brother-in-law of the bode,
Rev. Steven L Perry of
M1ss1on Lutheran Church
m Laguna Niguel.
The bride is the daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
T. Segerstrom of Santa
Ana. Sbe is a graduate of
Santa Ana High School and
Azusa Pacific University
She 1s a member of P.E.0.
Sisterhood Chapter JJ.
Santa Ana.
The bridegroom 1s the
son of Walter B. Poulsen of . ...o ng Beach and Ja~uelyn R.
Poulsen of Santa Ana. A graduate of Foothill High School,
he r~e1ved a B.A. from Cal Stale Fullerton and 1s a
founding member of the Epsilon Nu chapter of Sigma Pi
Fraternity.
A reception fo llowing the ceremony was held an the
Wes1in South Coast Pla78 Hotel. After a weddrng trip to
Hawai i. the couple wall make their home m Tustin.
Gilmore-Meagher
John Stetson Gilmore and Riva Meagher exchanged
wedding vows in a quiet ceremony in Three Arch Bay.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert 8. Gilmore of
Three Arch Bay and as a descendant of John B. Stetson, a
San Francisco rioncer. He attended Flintridge
Preparatory Schoo in La Canada and Lewis and Clark
College in Oregon.
Has bride is the daughter of Minna Krate of New York
and Nathaniel Krate of Flonda.
The newlyweds will reside tn Laguna Niguel
~·~,-~b~.~-.>J-,·~ .... · ~. ~ -u~e:-~,..:,__ • R • ~ ~ v ;::)usan t:'iizabeth o e
Crime ha~----------------------oome 110 eophlaU-
cated In this oounuy
tMt you ,...,ly haw
to oo eorne to keep
MMd of the crtml-
Ml rNnd.
Tftnty years
ERMA
Bo11Ec1
~wetyOMdrop-.................. .. ped thek' key ln the
fMllbox. The rattonaJe wa that a maUbox wa U.S.
~nmswt property and a stranger could get Into men
troubte stMHng your key than he could robbing yow
houM.
For a whlht, we hid keys under the doormat or the
mllkbox. but that was before eomeone state all the
doorneate end the mUJ<box•.
Why, I can remember wh«I afl we locked was the car.
Now you hew to lock your ga tank, tape de<* and attach
~ batteiry end tranamlnk>n to an alarm ayetem or It
o.n be ltr1pped down for part.a feet• than you can statt ••
motor wftMut. key.
I can twndle ell of that. The thing I cannot deal with ti
the T-«*t criminal. This new breed lndudes members of
my own tMttty who lllp tn trom nowhere and strip down
my=ator in 30 eeconda ftat, ... vlng no flngerprint.. no 9'llidenoe and no teg&I recourM.
My oo.band and I haven't aeen an Ice cube In 20
.,...,.... Trays? Oh, sure, but not one alngle. stinking cube.
Tonight,
,,
The unw QOM wtth toe~. We have .QeKon boxee Of ~ ftavor Y«f can lmegtne In the treezer, bu1 take oft
the Ilda and they're empty.
A cold pork ohot> left unattended hes a ehetf life of
poutbfy liX ~. top&. A pfeoe of leftover pie wlfJ be
iffted.befote the door t. alk1wed to cJoM.
One ~ht one of the T ...nlrt bandits couldn't~ for
dinner. 8y tN time he took.~ thlnga With him, ..
COUidn't efther.
When the retrtgerator wu new. there w.re ltttte
plutlc ace 111 Oi1el tlke a butter dtth end 8n egg holder.
TMy're gone now. too. My theory ll thMJtOmeOM ate
"'*"· Naturally, I've tried to oomba.t theM thefb by trying
to think u they do. Somettmee It work1. I wu able to
hang onto a beg of Halloween candy by putting tt under a
dlah towel on the countertop. No one fN« dtaturba that!
Occatlonalty, t wtll dreea up a i.ttover u eomethlng
elle IO that It wttl ...n unattractive and no1 worth
ltealfng. Uk• the other night. t put a mound of cooonut on
top of a cotd cNdcen ~ wtlleh I waa UYlng to put wtth
rice. (My kld9 were al too my to cheW coconut.)
1 operled up the r~tor. The T-eNtt phantom
had struck again. My hutband said. "I've got a su9')eet
whoM bntath ametls like chicken and coconut. V ou want
to pre19 c:Nrgee?''
"How long would he get?" I asked.
"Probably three years l.n our coatody."
It was too big a price to pay for Juatlce.
of Corona del Mar and
Robert Harrison Boolh Jr.
of Durham, N. C. ex-
changed wedding vows in
Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church in a May 19 cer-
emony.
The bride, daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. John F"orte of
Corona del Mar. wore a gown . fashioned of white
lace basque with pale pink
undercast, leg of mutton
sleeves and a chapel tram.
Her illusion veil was
capped by a wreath.
Maid of honor was
Tress Gardarian and Susan
Booth, sister of the groom,
Donna Ruffner, cousi n of the bride, Nancy Frankltn .__ ________ ___,
and Jan Porush were bndesmaads. Melissa and Robert Lee
Pike were junior attendants.
The bridegroom as the son of Mr and Mrs. Robert
Hamson Booth of Durham. His father served as best man
and Daniel Shackelford. John Barclay. Daniel Long and
Jonathan Nicholas Forte were ushers.
After greeung 175 guests at a reception at Cano's in
Newport Beach. the couple left for a wed ding trip to the
mountains of North Carolina. They plan to make their
home tn Alexandna. Va. She 1s employed by Sen. John
East's Washington D.C. office and he is on the staff of Sen.
Jesse Helms.
Bnabu.ry-Kulm
St. AnC:Srew1 Presby-
tenan Church in Newport
Beach was the scttina for
the May 26 wedding of
Linda Catol Kuhn ofNew-
pon Beach and Ma.rtfo
Alcx.andcr Ensb\Jry of •
ramento.
The bnde, dauahter of
Dr. and Mrs Paul M. Kuhn
of Newport Beach wore 11
Victorian style gown of
peau de soie and reem ·
bi:oidered lac.e with bodice
and puff sleeves trimmed in
seed. pearls, endina in u
chapel train. Her sheer
illusion veil was held by a
wreath of silk flowers and
pearls. Her sisters, Kathy
and Susan Kuhn both were
maids of honor and Mary
Barnes, Terri Miller. Clunies Holt, Nancy Cur and Kam
Martens were bndesmafds. ,
The Qridegroom is the son of Mrs. Richard Ensbury of '
Sacramento and the late Richard Ensbury. His best man
was Greg Horliss and Douglas Ensbu11; brother of the
bridegroom and Jeff Kuhn, brother of the bride were head
ushers assisted by John Gustafson, John Mavradakis.
Francis Gyermek. Michael Geller and Byron J. Violett. •
The couple greeted 280 guests at a dinner reception at
the Balboa Bay Club following the c.eremony and left for a '
wedding trip to Hawaii. They wtl l make their home m
Marina dcl Rey. The new Mrs. Ensbury ill an attorney l\t
Allen, Matkins, Leck. Gamble and Mallory of Los Angeles '
and Newport Beach and he is vice-president m charge of
leasing at Key Centers. lnc. of Woodland Hills.
Abbott-Niesen
A nuptia1 Mass in St.
Bonaventure Catholic
Church in Huntington
Beach united Donna Ellen
Niesen and Russell Alan
~~~~~~~-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
C. Niesen of Huntington
Beach. She wore a white
gown with an AJencon lace
bodice with a plunging V-
sbaped back and long lace
sleeves and a silk Prelude
satin skirt falling from a
princess waistline. Her
chapel len~ veil was
crowned wtth a wreath
headpiece. Her sister, '
Catherine Niesen was maid
of honor and Jill Abbott,
. ..
Jenifer Carr. Linda Harvev ........ ----.,..-----~ Karen King and Jeanne Motimoto were bridesmaids.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J.
Abbott of Huntington Beach. His cousin Aindt Andersen
was best man and ushers were Mike Baggetta, Kevin
Hirayama, Phil Lanouette, Don Lavalle and Dennis Toy:·
Their wedding r«ept.Jon al the Huntington Harbolir ~
Bay and Racquet Club and was attended by 225 guests.
After a wedding tnp to Jamaica. the couple plan to live in
Huntington Beach. The new Mrs. Abbott is employed at
McDonnell Douglas Corp. and Abbott 1s wuh McMaster-
Carr.
Lane-Phillips
Ka y Phillips and Mark ....---------.•
James Lane of Costa Mesa
exchanged wedding vows
in the home of Karel Tydon
Adams, the bridegroom's
mother on June 2.
The bride, daughter of
David and Ann Phillips,
wore a white gown with a
lace yoke and puffed three-
quarter sleeves. The full nteet the Mackenzies.
They lie,
Hypnosis
class set
for actors ENGAGEMENTS
Davb-Nlchola
------skirt, trimmed with a lace
ruffle swept into a three
foot train. Lynn Joy Luft
they cheat, they deceive.
Other than that,
they're nice people.
• l I
"Mackenzie"
Tonight at 9:00 pm on C hannel 23 of G roup W Cable
A professional workshop
to tram actors in uses of
hypnosis in performance
will be held Sunday in
I rvme.
Dr. K. Franklin Fowler. a
professorofdirectingat UC
In me. will lead part1c1-
pan1s in hypnotic exercises
m characterization. aud1-
t1on and perfonnance con-
fidence (easing .. stage
fnght" and other blocks)
and creative improvisa-
tion.
t-urther 10format1on
may be obtained by calling
856-6462 orwnting to sem-
inar coordinator Mane
Anne Masuda. I 46B
School of Fine Arts, UC
Irvane92717.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
ftr tllt lest ti Ynr Uft
1922 UUOI llrD.
COSTA IHU -541·1156
Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Davis Sr. of Newport Beach
have ann ounced the engagement of their daughter, Poppy
Lee. to James Nichols of Long Beach.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Newport Harbor High
School and the Vocational Nursing School of Anaheim.
The future bridegroom 1s the soo of Wah Nichols of
Orange and Shari Nichols of Long Beach. He is a graduate
of Long Beach Polytechnic High School.
A November wedding an the Community Church
Congregational. Corona del Mar. is planned.
Ouellette-Hanley
An Aug. 4 wedding is planned by Susan Ouellette of
Costa Mesa and Craig B. Hanley of Virginia Beach, Va.
The bride-elect, daughterofluc11le Reed and Thomas
Ouelleuc. is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and
Orange Coast College. Her fiancc 1s the son of Mr. and Mrs.
William L Hanley Jr. ofV 1rginaa Beach. He 1s a graduate of
Frank W. Cox Hi~ School and anended OCC.
The couple wall exchange vows an St. John the Baptist
Church in Costa Mesa.
INITANTCAIH
Quallly old watches, scrap
gold, jewelry,
Y•TAGITI•
In lloel Cwlyoltl
H• L OMIT IWY., U .
W-4..s.t "4-1212
'Busters,'
'Gremlins'
start big
SPRING CREST
HOLLYWOOD (A P) -
"Ghostbusters" and
"Gremlins" scared "In-
diana Jones" and "Star
Trek Ill" out of the head of
the line at theater box
offices last weekend.
_j_
"Something Special for Every Room in Your Home"
~K~ .. ,.two C-•T ,,,.,,.,,..
TM Ultlma,. '1t Cwfom Window "-'tltt
WHY?
I Un1lo10t Huund1!Wl f'ltMI!> l oµ 111 Oollom
'} 01•tor.11t1111 All Wnon f-'o h•:<.
J 1 n Yt•,Jr I t.trt1W111t• W,,rt;mly
1 W.• •,,., .• i.11111• '" W111d1•w T11•alr1u•111 ~
•
j
SALE
DRAPERY FABRICS
• 5,000 SamplH to ChooM From
• Prlnta, Antique SaUna, Sheers,
Open-w .. ve Cuementa
CUSTOM BEDSPREADS
• Select from Anr Sample In the Store
30-50% off
• Veroeol • Vertical 8llnd1
Louvre I Graber
OIM 300 Cho/(;#
T~ Solar EMrv/ ShlKHI
•Mini 8Hnd1 Woven Woode
PettMnl tlllot9 • c .... trend L~olOr & Ball
OVfK 100 Coh>rl TN ,,,_., A"*11atfWI
..,,.,. •• _.,.~-· ia ruaiMM A....-
SPRfNO CR•ST
DllA .. RY C ... Tll ..
SU CLEIEITE WESTllllSTEI IDINIT IUCll
411-1333 112-4141
f
CISTI ICU
~·Herbof~• 1*'4 Newport 11\td
111-2111
Co lumbia 's
"Ghostbusters," featuring
Dan Aykroyd and Bill
Murray, ~ossed S 13.6 m1lhon on its first weekend
1n release. "Gremlins/ the
Warner Bros. tale or cute
but nasty httle creatures,
did S 12.5 million worth of
business
Here arc tht top scv~n
grossing films last week·
end, with producer,
number of weeks in release!
weekend aro and ~ota
aross.
I. "Ghostbusters" Col·
umbia, first week, S 13.6
million.
2. "Grernbns•• Warner
Bros., first week. $12.S
million.
3. "Indiana Jones" Para·
mount, three weeks. $1 2
million, $88. 7 mil hon.
4. ·•star Trek Ill" Para·
mount, two weeks. $9.6
m1lhon. $34.8 million
5. "Beat trcct .. Onon,
first week. SS 2 mlllJon,
SS.2 miUion.
6 "Tht Natural" Tn·
t.Jr1 five weeks, S2.4
million, $30.1 miJJion.
7 .. Romancina the
Stone" fol, 11 v.ttks, S '·' million. $.5~.8 million.
I
was maid ofhonorand Kim
Phillips, sister of the bnde
and the bridevoom 's sister,
Melode Mane Lane, were
bridesmaids.
The bridegroom is also the son of Harold Earl Lane ...._ ________ _,
of Pomona who served as
hi s son's best man. Usbers were M. Craig Hudson. the
bridegroom's ste~brotherand Randall Phillips, brother of
the bride.
After a reception also at the Adams residence, the
couple left on a wedding trip to Lake Tahoe. They will
make their home in Garden Grove where he is employed
in the construction industry.
Carle.-Bolla.nd
JoAnne Holland of Santa Ana Heights and Gregory
Carles of Costa Mesa were united in marriage in St. Johg
the Baptist Church in Costa Mesa in a June 9 oeremony.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 1.
Holland wore a gown of tissue taffeta aoc:ented with
pearled silk Venise lace. Fashioned with a sweetheart
neckline and puff sleeves, the gown flowed from a drop~
waist into a full skirt. Her chapel len&lh veil was caught up
by a wreath of silk flowers. A childhood friend, Lo~
Randel was maid of honor and Katy Nesselroad and Mari~ Mena were bridesmaids.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donal ·
Carles. His brother, Don Carles was best man and ush~'
were Henry Wong and Tom Holland.
The couple depaned for a trip to Maui, HawaH after'~
wedding rcoeption at the Halecrest Club attended by I .SO
guests. They plan lo make their home in Costa Mesa when:.
she works for the J.M. Peters Co. of Newport Beach and
Carles is employed by Gypsum Enterprises.
Upbam-Lampltln
St. Catherine of Siena Church in Laguna Beach was-
the setting for the wedding vow exchange of Patricia Jean:
Lumpkin and Jonathan Conroy Upham of Leucadia on:
May 26.
The bride, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Lee R. Lumpkin
of Albany, N. Y. wore a traditional white gown with a lace
bodice and long sleeves embroidered with pearls. Her
finacrtip vell fell from a bandeau of fabric flowers. Sharon
Voss was maid of honor and Julie Lumpkin. Megan Fryer,
Julie White, Leslie Adam, Barbara Juliano and Be~
Moore were bridal attendants. •
The bridegroom is the son of David W. Upbam o'
Newpon Beach and Mrs. Richard N. Billiogs of Lapna
Beach. David W. Upham Jr. was best man and
Christopher Upham, Robert Young, Raymond Davi~
Jack Healy, Tunothy N. Hanson and Kris Kay wen;
u~e~ • The couple &reeled 27 S auests at a reception foUowini
the ~mon~ at Swanson Park in Emerald Bay and left rod
a wcddina tnp to Mexico. They wdl make their home id
Leucadia where be is C()-()wncr of "The Clay Factory''
wbicb produces hand-made ceramic wart. •: • I
VIBRATION •••
f'romBl
question ma.Ices a cbaractcnsuc: move at the end of the sentence.
Mrs. Franklin said th' brain can combine tblt
stnsauon, the si&bt of the hpsand wbate\'tt sound can bC
heard into an understandable combination. inct each
sound in Entlish i ml4e up of'Cii.fftitnt fttqu.cncies, \ht
clue to the pllch can help comP!_Chen,ion areatl)I. she aaad.
.. You can't hp;read tht dafTc~ncc between ·mah• ani!
'bah.'" she said ".But you can feel the ditTcrtn<'C."
With lr.inir'lo hcatin&·jmpaattd pcopk mn 1tam tllc
v1bra1ion pattem auociattd \\ath speech, he td, Her
work shows lht v1bl'ltion.s can also hclp1n spctth train
by 11vin1 \lUdtftlS reed t k llboUt tht'tr Own Vi)IC: I ."
,.
Mike Farrell:
Fromniedic
to president
By TOM JORY
Fan club horse of different color
By SCOTT McCARTNEY
illl1111l1t1,..,.. .....
DALI.AS-Singcn have fan clubs. Athletes have fan
clubs. Saturday mornina cartoon heros have fan clubs.
And now a tallcin& bone bas a fan club.
Ed."
You remember the hone. of course. the famous .. Mr.
The aoun::c of this unusual fan club course is a 2S-
year-0ld self-proclaimed .. Edhead" who publisheS a
newsletter for the l, l 00 members of his Mr. Ed Fan Oub.
Janvs Burnett bopea to revive the dead talking horse
by returnina theonce-popuJar .. Mr. Ed .. television show to 1• airwaves. Mr. Ed. the hone, died in 1979 at the age of
33 ... Mr. Ed. .. the tv show, which also starnd Alan
Young. expired in 196S after a run of five seasons.
Burnett runs his carnpaian to syndicate the show from
his tiny apartment in the Dallas suburb of Cedar
Hill.Although he had never actU.lly watched the show, be
founded the club in 1974 -by accident.
"I decided I needed the ultimate fake return address.
So I used the 'Mr. Ed Fan O ub' because I thought it would
be completely absurd for Mr. Ed to have a fan club,"
Burnett said.
"Then in 1979 I decided to make a T-shirt with the
return address on it and people stopped me on the street
and said they wanted to join," he said.
Most of his l,100 members, includin' Young. who
played Wilbur Post, Mr. Ed's owner, have joined in the last
year. Word of the club is spreading, Burnett says.
"Most people just love Mr. Ed. That's all there is to
it," he said."Ri&ht now, Mr. Ed is not very heavily
syndicated. He's actually shown in more foreign countries
than in U.S. cities.
"I have no idea why th.at is. But it presents an
interesting cballenae for me."
·' Burnett works at part-time odd 'obs and ho
~•"'°"-'-•t .......... .......,_......._c.,. ..... .. ___
,,,,..,. ................. ---... .. __ .__
make it big someday as a promoter. He's worked with rock
musicians on concerts, handhng some publicity, and
believes the Mr. Ed Fan Club may lead to bigger career
endeavors.
"He's something that was once very popular,"
Burnett said of the white talk.Jn' horse, who liked bowling.
driving a milk truck and snCC'Zmg "Wilburrrrr!''
"I have a chance to promote ham and bring the show
back." be said. "I think I've really tapped into something
unusual."
Burnett said the fan club .. ,s a pan-time Job and a full -
tirne debt"
The club has held 1wo Mr. Ed parties an DaJJas, where
"Edheads" gather to watch videotapes of the black~nd
wbite show.
"I had never seen 'Mr. Ed' in my life until 10 months
ago when an 'Edhead' in California sent me a videotape for
a pany," Burnett said. "It was great. He's everything I
thought he would be."
With a straiptt face, Burnett says the club wants to
create a city dedicated to Mr. Ed, and he wants to call it
''Edto ia."
... Gremlins' Is not to be missed~
-NEWSWEEK, David Ans.n
GREMLINS
AIWOI '39-1770 av. SSl-0555
SYUrY STAOOM OR 1H EDWARDS WOOOBRl>CC
• mA H0-4021
LIA MOYICS'
• COSTA .:SA '31-3501
EDWARDS HARBOfl ~
•COSTA .:SA 751-4114
EDWARDS TOWN CCNTER
n TORO 511-SllO
EDWARDS SAOOlEBACK
lllml'TON IOCH ua.om
EDWARDS Ht.WTINGTON
• LA HUU (213) Hl·Oill
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MISSOf VD> 49S-6220
COWAROS MISSION VUO MAl.l
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WDlWISlD ftl-3693
PAClflC HWY 39 OIUt
• WESlWISTD 191·3'35
EDWARDS CH:MA WCST
•DOLBY ITEREO
ADVANCE TICKETS e1111l1ble for
STAR TREK Ill : The SNrch For S~. GREMLINS & INDIANA
JONES & The Temole of Doom
ttC •t t C ffll t t•I 9Cl~9'MCl'lvl.., .. r....,.,
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HAPP\' &tRTMPAV, QARFIE.LP! I GO'f ~A RoeeER CMICKEN.
TM(V'f\£ t.01S Of FON.' --
WE 'LL 5EE
AOOUT TMAf
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"HOT!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Tell your dog to give me back my
ticket book!"
PE,\ NUTS
AS ~E51DENT OF THE
LOlAL CACTUS CLUB, IT 15
MV PLEASURE TO WELCOME
YOV TO OUR VERV FIRST
6ET·ACQUAINTED DANCE ...
TUMBLEWEEDS
No .. LORD P
H,AS PLANNED
A P~cAS,ANT
EVENING IN
FRoNT OF THE
IVSET.
·~ Meef q&Jlef l'l!tre S~IFFOF ~ FAl'JQ 'T!AAS.
~ ... WHA1'S
Nf!WIN'6E:
FANG-?
I
f
i
f • .
by Gus Arrtola
by Jim Davis
CMICKtN, YOO ANV l
AA£ OOIN6 fO MAVE
SOME. OOOP TIM('?>
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
\I !
"It ain't caviar."
Hank Ketcham
t ._
/
'l OOT lHE EGGS SCRAMBlEO ... NDN tQ\f .._;
001 GET iHE S11£/.LS OUT OF 'EM~·
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
iHA"rs Nor
P,ART OF
IH~ PLAN ...
by Charles M. Schulz
1 WANT TO TMANK YOU
ALL FOR COMING ... IT'S
BEEN NICE 6ETTIN6
ACQUAINTED ..
by Tom K. Ryan
Bothy~ South deli.
NOITB
+AIU
"''HUI OU •• WEST EAST
• IOU'I t QUS
"A ~I o IJ108 o 10 •no •1Q1ou
SOUTH
t i
~QlOU4
OAQU
•AU
Tbe bidding:
8"dt Wttt N .... Eut
1 ~ PU1 l • Pue
2 O P ... 4 ~ Pue
5 + Pau 8 ~ Pat1
p.,. Obie PUI Pa1t
Pua
BRABBLE
i~ !>~ NT ~i MIGMt'
Bl~ 81(, E\IE.NT, {).0~
PIM?_..~-
Openln1 lead~ 'ftn of •.
Beware of lOOM doublet. If
1our action point. 'he way
for dedvtr to make hit COD·
tract, tbe 1w11>1 lt enormou•.
Thia deal wu played after
an evenlnr of rreat featMty
-food waa abundant and
wine nowed frffly. A• a
rHult, both North and South
Hemed to thJnk they pot·
aened an ace more than they
actually held. which aeeount.
for the final contract. West's
double wu equally incom-
prehensible, but there wu
nothing lhe matter with
South's handling or the COD·
tract.
After Weat led the 10 of
spades. declarer carefully in·
spected dummy. Had there
been no double. he would
FUNK l' WINKERBEAN
DR.SMOCK
1urel1 have ,one down-the
Mnilble w17 to pla7 the con-
ltaet would bavt betn to 1ur-
render a trump trick and
then rely on the diamond
fine ....
The double, however, drew
a roadmap for declarer.
Unleu We1t held botb miu·
inf trumps. in which ate
theN wu nothing that could
be done to 11ve the hand. he
1urely bad the king of
diamonds and wu expecting
to collect a diamond trick in
addition to the ace of trumps.
He waa soon proved wrong.
Declarer won the king ot
spades, cuhed the ace of
spades for a club discard, and
ruffed a spade. After ruffing
a club on the board, and d
my'• wt 1pade In tu
South wu ready to
minLater the cOtlp dt grac
He exited with a tru1
Weal captured hia partn1
klnJ perfotef, and wu fa•
with a Hobton'1 choice.
diamond lead would be i
declarer'• major ttnace;
club would allow him
discard dummy'• diamc
loser while ruffing ln hanc
A• the cards lie. the c
tract should have be
defeated. At trick ooe, W1
should have led the ace
heart.I Now he can exit ,.
ly and sit back and wait
score his king of diamor
for the settinr trick.
by Jeff MacNel
I YOU'D AAVE TVMOL.D iUE PANCAKE BREAKf,\ST
AT A NUPJST COL.ON'(.
by Kevin Faga1
fOO eAO fRU ~Hl-{H R
'WA&INC, \'NT
Ari Ol.~MP\C.
e.vf.Ni, ~o.
by Tom Batiul
J.Yif (ft.( UXJC ! I HAD 10
5tbl UP '11'1'£ BE!a41ME D#J 1JE(.) (A£RE ~1JE
cu.M>IC. 'OOAL!l FOR 1AE / ~ euu...CJ 5#1) t«X.
by George Lemod
OKAY;
l..AC'lf:S ... SO WHICH OF YOO
IS 1"'H6 ONe Wl"f'H
A e>AC' eACK ~
llOSE IS BOSE
Hall's~
mw,J1•?
... ,,
/
by Pat Brad)
Wiii ! I ~VU.T *"A HIGH-FM. Sita. 'TM~ SWEDl5ft ~ !
~.SIT OO'l4N, CAR\.A1 I'M GOlNG
10 MPEAT ~MISS ~r-ce.
WHAT YOU "TOLO ME LAST NtGH'TI
IF l 00 NOT STATe V0U ACCURATELV,~T~•
I
••
J
It
I
I
1·
'
I
Ofltlgt Coat DAILY PfL:OT lf...-day. June 111. 1914 -
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANQ
Will highflying crapslloot
pu!your assets bellyup?
Financial terms
In cluded in new
Webster's Dictionary
• Bankcard. Just aboul everyone uses at least one bankcard. These are
credit cards iuucd by a bank. Trade-
name examples include the familiar
Visa and MasterCard.
•Beta. From 1981, a noun that is a
measure of a stock's or a eortfolio's If you are about to go .. belly-up .. as volatility, expressed numencally. Put
SYLVIA
-Poma
a result of r,our carefree use of your another way, beta is the ratio of a
"bankcard, • excns1ve buying of stock's price performance to the
"hi&hflicrs" and investments in too general market's price performance. capitaJ than oflabor. It is related, in a many "crapshoots," at least try to sell A high-risk stock has a high beta; a sense, to ...
some of your cndan,ered assets for low-risk stock has a low beta. • Labor-intensive. This has the
"fair market value' and hope to •Belly-up. Used as a verb, it means opposite meaning of capital-in-
protcct your "Keogh Plan.•• to go bankrupt, and has bad a lot of tensive. It reflects high labor costs per
The six tenns in quotation marks use in the past few years. This vivid unit of output, especially requinng
in the above paragraph are what phrase, derived from the belly-up greater expenditure on labor than on
makes this elementary advice about floating position of a dead fish, has capital.
your personal finances newsworthy. been around since 1939. • Crapshoot. It's hard to believe
Each is a term with an economic • Bottom-line. An adjective mean-that the earliest written citations for
definition that rccentl,Y has been ing "concerned only with cost or crapshoot as an economic term dated
incorporated in Websters Ninth New profits." It is not to be confused with back only to 1971. But so it is. It
Collegiate Dictionary. This means means an extremely risky business
Webster's editorial staff is satisfied • Bottom line. This is a noun with venture.
that the words have entered our multiple means. Among them: the • Fair markel value. This term's
spoken and written language. cssen~ point, or ~e Pr:Jmaty or written usage dates back to 1926. and
Many of the I ;000 new words in the ~ost unportant .considcrauon. Also. is now so commonplace that it is
latest Websters come from the ucan mean the bneatthe bottom ofa widely understood. It means a price at
h of economics, business and financial report that reveals the net which both buyCJ:S and sellers ~ . ~ .. ; .~Xl. ~'"'~!!~J»{<)~j~~-~~ ... ~_;.y~:~:;:~~· .,~~ 6t~~. uu• "\lK'""TII ~~t. ----· ......-m-Jhnier A stock that trades at mavens have agreed onJ>'. rccc~t y • Capita!-intensive. An adjectival manyt1mesiucamingsandinhercnt-~at they h~ve eno~gh wntten cit.a-p~sc. da~& back. to l 9S9. It means ly carries a high degree of risk.
-uons to mcnt includm~ them. havtng a high capital cost for each • Keogh Plan. A relative newcomer
How current are you. Read on and unit of output.. cs~ally requiring dating back to 1974 that receives
find out. greater expenditure in the form of special publicity around tax-paying -.---------1m111------•"•--------ume. Keogh Plans are individual ~ retirement accounts for the sclf-· :wyle Lab to distribute
··LSI software products
"
employcd, named for Rep. Eugene J.
Keogh, a former Democratic con-
gressman from New York.
• Striking price. This obscure noun
comes from investors' vocabularies
and means an agreed-upon price at
which an option contract can be
LSI Logic Corp. of Milpitas has
appointed the electronics marketing
group ofWyle laboratories in Irvine
a franchised distributor for its CMOS
gate array and work.station software
products.
12 Wyle stocking locations in the cxei'ciscd.
wcstcm United States. • Workfare. A term that is part of
The announcement was made
jointly in Santa Clara by William
o·Mcara, vice prcs~dent-world mar-
keting for LSI Logic, and James R.
Bolton. group vice president and
director of marketing for Wyle.
Under the agreement. the CMOS
gate arrays will be iniually distributed
from Wyle's Santa Oara facility, the
world·s largest electronic distribution
·operation. The work.station software
products will be distributed from all
LSI Logic is a recognized leader in
the development of high-speed
CMOS gate arrays and work.station
software products. The agreement
with Wyle complements the LSI
Logic design center philosophy by
increasing the number of customer
service locations.
Wyle uiboratories 1s one of the
nation's leading marketers of tugh-
tcchnology electronic components
and systems. The company is also a
major supplier of research. engjnecr-
ing and testing services to the aero-
space.-Oef ensc and ener&Y industries.
NEW YORK (AP) -The followlng llst 11j shows the Over-the-counter stocks end warrents thet heve oone up 1 ~ tht most end doin the most besed on 1 .. percent of ctlellile or Monctev. 15 No securities tredlng below S2 or 1000 1; &heres ere Included. .._ .. _ J ~et end percentege Cna not1 ere I',.
d •r•IKtl belWNn lht e>rtVIOUJ dos Oil ~ b Price end tOdev's last bid price. ~[3,f Chg Pct.
l d~ .j~ J: H: '11
:: ~ ilCNw~ llwt Jf~ /'' 8g :~
6 ~~lel l'h 1Ye UP .j 1 7 ICNtwk :~ ~ Up .7 2 8 P~A .,. I/• Up 1 1 3 9B't'tfC I 61h )4 UP 1 . 4 10 Ttchln s 91/• t Up 1 . 5
ChG =l -'h
-'h -3
the daily language of politics and
social services. It refers to a wcJfare
program in which recipients are
required to perform usually public
servi~ work.
• Zero-based. A term that dates
back to 1970 and was given a real
workout when Jimmy Cuter was
president. It means having each item
m a budget justified on the basis of
cost or need.
The vocabulary of economics has
entered our daily language with a
bang. Webster's experts already have
a long and growing list of candidates
for their next edition. Send along your
own favorites.
AIN un Pouls VeFst Andros ~L:il~~1
nrEn
'f!Tc Kretos Hvttk un
I\'arLv
~ • ~::L
Medlltal Modulln
-'fl -1
-'h -l,6
-3,4 -•1. -1
- 1'/• -~ -,,.,
-'.4 -1 ,,.,
v. ,,,.
~
l,4 'I• '.4 'l'l 11. .,.
it:l 11i 11.1
lij
I
High tenalonjob APa ct I
11artJ Comoy, eenior reeearch technician at Allled Corp. '1
labe lD llorria Townahlp, N.J ., uee a tenalonometer to
monitor an ezperlment that tests tbe pbyalcal propei dee of
nylon cord destined for truck tires. Nylon ftlament la flnt
•trencthened with chemical add:ltlns and then palled OTer
&odet wbeela, lhown here, to prcnide a4dltlonal ~
6y tenalon-1.w:adaced molecalar allpm.ent and beat cv.rt.D.c·
Point4 wins
processing
guide award
Poin1 4 Data C0f1)0ration ofltvine
has n:cciwd the A watd For Eacd-
lcncc from &he Society for Tecboic:al
Communication. for Point 4's IYI*'
word procasiac UICr auide.
The Society for T'"cebnic:al Com-
municatiM is the W)leSt society of 111
kind dedic:au:d to techDical c:oaa-
munication, with brancbc$ and mem-
bers worldwide.
While the sua:esdul word pro-cessin& system will still be suppporled
by Point4, it will nowbeinCOfl)OnllCld
int Point 4's newly rcleucd EJeo..
tronic Offace Sysiem, with 5Udl added
benefits as electroruc mail aod dcc-
tronic calender.
Point 4 Dau Corporation maikt1s
its family of muJti-uter busioaa
computen and IOftware t.b.rouab (tit..
tributors. systemS houses and value-
addcd racllen worldwide.
Architect
~--1~1fi1W18ij~
The Oru8t County Olaptcr of the
Society of Architectural Adm.ini1o-
trators will meet at the OCCAlA
office Thursday &om 11 :30 a.m. '° I p.m.
Greg Pitcher, Gregory Pitcher
Architects. will discuss the import-
ance of members• roles in an archi1eC>
tun.1 office.
Tbc "brina--your-own-luncb"' ~
sran? is open to all SllPPOn penonnel
tn the A/E fields. A $I donatiM
towards bcvCl"IJCS is suggested.
For infonnanon phone Betsy N"d-
lcss at 549-2207.
D yes. I want to lock in your current high yields on a 6 month
Investor Account right now.
•
lllllf11t• ..... ~.'11l1' ... ,. "'ll~b
•
I
s!
6 MONTH .TERM
12.00°10
Current Yield *
l.llC\IN leath
Montr~..,
La&"M N• ... SM J1an p trtn0
c•~,·~1 .. c11 .. a~•
M EMllEtt
11.38°10
Current Rate .
For more infonnation or to open )'OUr
tolt.f ree Financ~I Line now: (800) 272
Great mer· n offi "tod.l .
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rd
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On
the
·-I
, •
TUESDArs CLOSING PRICES
Dow JoNcs AvER AGES
WH AT NYSE 0 10
NYSE LEAO[R S
NEW YORK (AP> -S.les, Tue~IY price 1nd ntl ch•l19• of the l5 mo•t •cd ve New Virk Stock Exeha lss~. tre no
l'l•tlon ly •• more lhJ . ~~ + 'It A~r & T n 2,?1 / 1 .... ~ IBM 1, • ~ 'I. ~!~":~1 n l, ~· -" Avon PrOd l't + "-
Reoublk: Sii If• -"" ~rsRoet> lr'l + ~ Ml~ler l't -YI ~~Inc +Ya ~~~ m: "i H ~8Lvn Hi ft
UP s AND DowN s
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YOR~ (AP) Jun 19
Advenced Oedlned ¥~ New hlOhS New lowt
Tl ~
AMEX LEADERS
NASDAQ SUMMARY
GoLo Qu orEs
ME T~Ls QuoH s
•I
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
wherecompaniesaregotngandwhichpeopl areh Iptng
them get ther .jus t watch 'CreditI.;fne' -everyaay In tfie
Business section of your n w llily Pllet
'
-=-:::w
..,, .... '*TUESDAY, JUNE 19, 198-4
....... frienda
bldftn81t•r.ew.U
~••.IMIMI ceNlllOnJ In Kentucky. C2.
No outside chance
Despite difficult lane, Moses
cruises to victory in hurdles ToJl11b.t'• mchedale
4p.m.-Men'e 110hurda..eemfftn818
4:25 p.m.-WOf'Mn'a 400 hurdle eernfflnilll
4:55 p.m.-Men'a 400 eemfftn8le
5:20 p.m.-Women'• 400 ftnm
5:3$ p.m.-Women'a 800 ftnals
5:40 p.m.-Men'• IOng )limp ftnms
5:50 p.m.-Men'a 800 fln•
6:05 p.m.-Men'a 110 hurdle flnelt
e: 15 p.m. -women·· JawiMn flnm
8:25 p.m .-Men'a ateeplechaM (1st round)
7:30 p.m.-Men'• 10,000 ftnela
Gree P'CM1ter (~t) keeps bead down u be
leape ftDa1 bDiClle and heada for flnJab In
., .......
the 110 b!Cb ba.rdlea. P'oeter ran fastest
time In the world tbla year at 13 .19 .
MAMARONECK. N.Y. !AP) -
The playoff for the United States
Open Golf Championship lasted
lhreic bou.rs, 15 minutet Monday.
But it was over in 23 minutes.
F~ Zoeller made himself the
beneficwy of a three-stroke swin& on
the SC()()nd bole at w~ Foot.
•P.Plicd unrelenting pressure to sin..g-
gling Greg Norman and scored a
rccord-b~ eight-shot triumph
in the Amcncan national cham-
pionship.
.. , didn't want to leave any doors
unlocked," Fuzzy said. He had a five-
sbot lead at the turn and J1Cver let up.
ZocUer, a hapsry-go-lucky son who
frequently whistles while be works,
subdued the tough old course in the
nonhcm suburbs of New York with a
3-undcr-par 67 against Norman's
playoff round of 75.
On a course that is considered
possibly the toughest that is played in
the Open. Zoeller shot the best score
ever recorded in a playoff for the
American championship.
"I beat it." be said. "Maybe
tomorrow I go out and it cats my
lunch. But for five days I beat Winged FooL"
He also beat Norman by the largest
margin ever recorded in an 18-holc
Open playoff, and by the largest
margin of any 18-bole playoff in any
of aolf s recognized four major cham-
pionships, which includes the Mas-
., ...... ,&I
P'a.uy Zoeller celebrate. after atnkln• the flna1 putt and
om dally becomJ.ni the new U.S . Open champion Monday.
Soviets
plan·ning
own meet
w AR.SA w. Poland (AP) -Of-
ficials from So~ bloc c:ouatria
• boycottiDg the Lo& AnedeS Olympia
bavc set the dates for a aeries of lpOl1I
come: followinc tbe doK ol the Gilnei. a Polilb ...
official wuquoU:d Monday as sayins.
Bosiis1n.. R Jba, deputy cbainnu
of the General Comnnnee for ~
cal Culture and Sports. Wd in an
interview with a Warsaw ~
that "oone of the cvenu will coincide
with the dates of the Olympic
Games."
'1'bese events must have an open
character. so they have to be open for
athletes of aJI countries,.'' Ryoa was
quoted as saying iD an interVleW with
Zycie Warszawy (Warsaw Life) .
He said the decision to stqe the
competitions was reached last Tb~
day and Friday at a two-day mcetiq
ofsports authorities from Soviet bloc
countries in East Germany.
Ryba said the competition in
Poland would begin with equestrian
events on Aug. 17. five days after the
conclUSJon of the Los Anaeles Olym-
pics.
Events also will be held in other
boycotting countries. with the swim-
ming competition held in Moscow
bcca.usc of the "p;:at virtues of the
SWtmming pools' i.n the Soviet capi-
tal, be said.
Ryba did not give the schedule for
the competition in other countries
and did not say bow many countries
would take part.
The competition in Poland will end
ScpL 30. he said.
Angels Suffer slow death from ex-teammate .Steele
earns tie
for lead
Tanan a gets the job done wit h finesse,
pinpoin t control in postin g 6 -2 triumph
By RICHARD DUNN
D.-,NeeC.11 ' , ....
The At\ltls came up again~t a
pitchins machine Monday ni&bt..
althougb it was more like a dancer
tiptocina his way throuah the lineup.
Texas southpaw Frank Tanana, an
~x-Anael who compiled 102 wins
podgers try
Reds next
CJNClNNATl -Hopina to put
the embanusment of a four-pme
aweepat the bands ofHous~n behin~
them. the ~ conunu~ ~cir
road trip qamst Western Divts1on
foes with the opener of a tbree-pme
aeries apinst the Cincinnati Reds.
Toniaht•s 4:30 contest, as well as Wednesday'~ and .Th~nday's ~cs
qa.inst Ciricinn.au. wtU be televttcd
on Channel I t. ~ Tbe Dodacn have slil>Pcd recentJy,
; as the lost weekend in the Atuodome
'marked the fint time ever they bad
: lost a four-same seriet to Houston.
: Before that. the Dodlcrs dropp:d
two of th.rec at home fo ~n Francisco
10 clOIC out 1 recent . b9mesu~
However they're still W1th1n •tnkina
d11tance of Sao Dieao. which Acids
Atlanta by l YJ pmcs and the Dodatn
by•~ fid : Toni&ht'1 pitchina Pfbblb1cs u'!
Fernando Valenzuela (~7) thrull an
stopper•• role for the Dodaen.
:rhe Reds counter Wlth Joe Price
(2"'4)1
while With the club, easily disposed of
bis fonner teammates, 6-2 in front of
21,817 fans at Anaheim Stadium and
a national television audience.
lJr rccordina bis eighth win of the
season, Tanana (8-6) allowed five hits
through eight inninas, and held the
Angels to just one run before reliever
Dave Schmidt mopped up and allow-
ed the Angels their second run 1n the
ninth inning.
"He was sizzled-be was gassed at
the end,•· Ranger Manager Doug
Rader said. "He .... _. ,one above and
beyond."
year-old veteran. Now he nibbles at
the comen. chaqes speeds -going
from slow to slo~r -and simply
beats bis opponent WJth locallon and
intelligence.
"l lcnow what m y strenaths arc and
I know what my weaknesses arc." be
said. "If I mix 'cm uf and keep the
ball OD the lfOUnd, rt be all right ..
Lcague-hi&h 269 batten tn 1975. In
fact. his fastball bas been clocked
below the maJor quc averaae: it's in
the lugb 70's and low 80's.
"Torugbt. I think~ was wa) up to
80 (mph) agam." Rader said.
Tanana once unleashed fire and
broke off one of the better curves i.n
the American Lequc as 1 member of
the A.ls.
But umcs have changed for the 30-
Tanana doesn't have the good
fastball be once had -the one that
hclocd him s\rik.c out an Amencan
Tanana's fastball was said to be
around 80 m1ks per hour in his last
start Wcdncsda) nt&ht at Arltnaton
Stadium when he blanked the Twms.
3-0 -bis 27th hfcttme shutout.
(Pleue eee T A1'ANA/C2)
Houston gets its dream pick
Rock ets pick Olajuwon first :
Portland goes for Sam Bowie
NEW YORK (AP) -The Houston Rockets took
Ateem 0 Tbe Dream" ~uwon with the fint pick in the
NatJon.al Basketbell Astociation dra.ft today in the hopes
that he and Ralph Sa.rilpiOD wall become the best
ftVntooun duo m bukettiall bistof'y. ·
Tbe 7-0 O~uwon. a Nlltrian -bo ~ook \be
Unjvenity of Houston to the NCAA Final Four 1n each of
bi three seasons witb the G'~ i1 tM fourth
underclaMman in the last si.l yc:an to bt selec1cd No. 1.
The Rockets finished last ill tbc NBA's W tcm
ConferclK:IC last aea.on delpi~ the prcttnce of tbc 7-4
Sampson. the No. I pick a rear aao after he was • thf'C'C'o
1imccolksiatcPla)'a'oftbeYeautVirsinia.SamPIOft
NBA Roo\ieoftbe Y~in 198)...k
08-iuwon led the natton in field.pl ICCUIU'y,
reboundtna and blocked shots for the Co thi pa • season.
H join \Ol> pidcs Earvin .. M~'c.. J nson of
M1chtaan State and LOs Anaetes.. Mark ·m of DtPaut
and Dalla and Jama Wonhy 9fNonh rolina and l o
AQ&!Clel u undCrcluUnen wbO picked first it1 the
draft. Johnson No. t in 1979. Aauint in 19 1 and
I
Wonhy tn 1982.
Immediately after bis sdcctlon. Ol~uwon came to the
draft podium at the Madison Square Garden's Felt Forum
and was presented a Rockets' urufonn WJth the number~
and bis last name on 1t by Houston owner Charlie Thomas.
The fitst SIX picks in tbc draft went to form. then three
of the next four selections were pan1s..
Portland, which was fined $2j(),000 by NBA
Comm\SSloncr David Stern for indirect illcpl contact
with Ol~uwon and GcoflClown's Patnck Ewina. made
Kentucky's Sa~ 9oMe lbc KCOnd pick. Bo~1 a 7-foot
center like 01.liuwon, t out t'NC> tCUOns witn 1 rum
fr1Cture of tus left shin. but returned to \be Wildca ii\
19 l-84. He avcrqcd 1 O.S points and 9.2 rebounds to bdp ,....,
Kentucky reach the Final Four. The Trail Blattn.. w lost
1 COtD fltp .wtth the Rockets ~n May 23 to dc~~inc !he
fint pie 1n the draft.. espeaally liked Bowie I ...... R ...
ability. He is expected to fOrm a revamped Ponland front
bne W1tb veterans Mychal Th ud Kiki Van.
di wtlbc. just Kquircd from Dcn~cr. . ·
Ptutadclpht with its SttOnd of tbrtt firsH·ound
pack toot 6-3 auaro lc:On ood of Cal talc FuUrnon.
another likely Olympian Wood. pnijcc:tcd 1 an BA
point &uard.. also ~a top collealal4 tc0ttt last n
with 2.-.0 points per pmc.
Tht Ou Bulls. pi • na third, tcd I ucuon •
Col P1avcr of the Y'*T, Michatl Jordan of onh
Carohna ~~~~~~!!!!!~
\ \
I
Claiborne 'family'
bids final farewell
to chamRion Swale
Detroit knuckles ~der. 2-1
Kltutldcballer n.u N~klo pitched a
thrtt-hil ball bef ~Jeuina la\t-ou1 relief help and WUlle olP' had a double,
in&le and scored two nins as the New York
Yankees edged Detroit, 2· l, Monday ni&ht 1n American LeaJue action. The vktory was the I 0th of the season
ap1ns( three losses for Nickro. a 4$-ycar-old rilht·
hander who stnick out 1x and walked four before IH•
Rijo aot the last out for his second save ... In other AL
action, Davey LoJH became the first Oakland player in
From AP d11p1k'Mt
LEXINGTON, Ky. -The people .,..
who foaled. raised and broke Swale buned ~
htm an sHen~ Monday, bidding fareweU to ,
the colt who pve them lots to brq about with
Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes victories.
nearly four yea.rs to hit an inside-
the-park home run' and Dave
KlDpnaa sluged his J 8th homer
of the season as the A's swept to a
I 0-2 victory over Kansas City ...
Rlc.llard Dotaoa won his ninth
pme with a six-hitter and Harold
BaiDet drove in four runs as
Chic.ago stopped Seattle, 8-4.
Baines' two-run triple and Roa
1UttJe'1 two-run double staked
SwaJc, who collapsed and died Sunday after a
gallop at Belmont. was only the third Claiborne horse to
be buncd in entirety in the shady cemetery berund the
farm office.
The whole bodies of Nasrullah and Princequillo
arc also in the uoy graveyard, but only the head. bean
and hooves of the others-including Bold Ruler, Hoist
the Aag and Buckpasser -arc there. .__ __ _, Ootson, 9-3, to a 4-0 first-inning
lead and he cruised from there ... "Each man 1n his own mind said bis farewell.
Everybody was standmg there. It was very slmple and
very quick." said John Sosby, general manager of the
famed breeding fann 1n nearby Paris. "If anyone had
said anything.. I probably would have been called on to
do it.
The only scheduled National League game -St Louis
at Montreal -was postponed bec~usc of rain and no
makeup date was announced.
Houston rallies for USFL wh;l
"And 1f I'd tncd. I probably would have staned
crymg," Sosby said. Houston quanerback Jim Kell)'. de-s No outsiders were there, be said. "just the
Claiborne family .. That includes Claiborne president
Seth Hancock. his mother Waddell, sisters Clay and
DeJI and brother A.B. Hancock Ill. as well as about 45
full-time members of the staff.
spite throwing four interceptions and being c II•
sacked th ree times. rallied the Gamblers
with a 30-yard touchdown pass to Ricky
Suders with I: 15 to play for a 29-26 United Stat~s
Football League victory over the San Antonto
GunslinJers Monday night. Housto~. 12-5. extended
its winntng streak to six games and chnched. the home-
field advantage throughout the upcoming league
playoffs . . . In the other USFL game M.on~ay.
quanerback Bobby Hebert returned lo the M1ch1gan
hneup and fired four touchdown passes as the
defending champion Pan1hers downed the Ok.Jahoma
Qtiote of the day
WM 8--2, he'd beat SOUthem C... Outlaws. 34-24. to stagger into the playoffs.
<;arew1 J!.ettle ~IJ-~tar lead~1~:Jit•Rth&a_._,~_._ ... ~ :.;r ·;~~~r .... ·. -~--~~~~ .... ,... ,
--·NEW YORK -Baltimore's Ed<f:ic • CHINO_ Ernest Vande Zandc of •
Murray. who leads the maJOr leagues 10 Colorado Spnngs. Colo., broke 599of600 ....
runs batted tn with 54. has narrowed the targets Monday to take the lead after two
pp at firs1 base and the outfield race LS. days in the Enghsh Match event in
10tens1fying tn the ballotmg for the Amencan I:easue Olympic qualifying 10 the U.S. International Shooting
team that Wiil play tn 1he All-Star Game July 10 m San Championships.
Francisco. . Vandc Zande boosted his two-da) total to 1.196 in But all po5111on leaders remam the sa~e .10 ~e this competition that is sho1 with .22 caltber rifles from second rcpon. released Monday by the commissioner s the prone position. office.
The leaders include Rod Carew of the Angels at
first base. Cal R1pkcn Jr. of Balumore at shortstop,
George Brett of Kansas City at third base and
outfielders Dave Winfield of the New York Yank~s
and Reggie Jackson of the Angels. . .
C'arew, bidding for his 15th consecuuve startt~g
selection, held a lead of !07.000 votes over Murray m
the first AL report. But the bard-hitting Murray has cut
the marg.in to slightly more than 71,000 m the latest
balloting with a total of 37 3.04 I to Carew's 444.434.
Seven cut from U.S. baseball
LOUISVILLE. Ky. -The U.S .•
Olympic baseball team cut five pitchers ... ~.· and two catchers from 1ts roster on
Monda}'. leaving 24 players on the team
that Will tour the country before the summer Olympics
an Los Angeles, said Coach Rod Dedeaux.
Dedeaux. of the University ofSothern California,
said the seven were placed on a reserve hst. and could be
recalled 1f a team member was inJurcd or otherwise
could not play with the team.
Cut after a weeldong workout JD Louisville were
pitchers Mike Loynd, of Florida State: Kevin Renz of
Sam Houston State; Mike Christ of Jacksonville
University; Norm Charlton of Rjce; and Mel Stot-
tlemyre Jr. of the Untverstty of Nevada Las Vegas and
catchers 8111 McG uire of Nebraska and B.J. SurhofT of
North Carolina.
Lakers divide playoff spoils
INGLEWOOD -The Los Angeles m
Lakers. who lost to the Boston Celtics.in _the
recent National Basketball Association
championship series, have voted to divide
their playoff earnings into 17 full shares worth $24,500
each. i1 was announced Monday.
Even Calvin Garrett, sidelined since March by a
knee injury, was voted a full share by his teammates.
TeleYlalon. radio
T£LEVIStOM
11:15 a.m. -IOCCD: FFMCe vs. YugOllavla tn Europeen Ohampk)nlhtp quarterftnaJ, Charmef 34.
•:30 p.m. -aAM8AU.: Dodger• at Cincin-
nati. Channel 1 , .
RADIO
•:30 p.m . -aAUM& a • Dodgers et Clnclr~
natf, KABC (790). •
7:30 p.m. -MIE9ALL~ Texas at Angels,
KMPC(710). •
WEDNESDAY'S TELSVllfON
11: 15 e.m. -aocceR: West Germany w.
Spain If\ European Champfon8hlp qullterflnal,
Channel a...
TANANA BEATS EX-TEAMMATES. • • From C l
Tanana suffered ann problems
earlier 10 his career With the An~els.
He developed an mflamed tncep
tendon 1n 1977 after p1tch10g 14
successive complete games. and re-
ceived help from Keith KJevtn, a Las
Vegas physical therapist. and re-
bounded to win 18 tn 1978.
before the dust could settle and
Tanana could make his first!.1tch.
But that's all he nccde . as he
walked three. struck out five and
served up 11 ground-ball outs before
tiring on I 32 pitches.
Alllltl ten• FrlOtv'• 5:20 ldledultd sltrl aoalnst
Kansas Cllv Ml been dllneed IO 7:>0 ... TM
Aneell are •·3 on tnls current hOmaland
Metnwllllt, THH l'llS won tight of lls !Ml 11
He later hun his ann again m 1979,
but responded With a couple of big
wins at the end of the year to help the
Angels Win the West
"I'd like to have gotten 1t (the
shutout),•· he said, ''but we had a s1x-
run lead and I had a few aches and
pams-so I thought I'd let somebod)
get another inning of work."
Angel Pltdlar Deft .... rn.ot hit ""' ~ranee ''nee Jutv 17, 1911, Monday aflar comlno off tlle dl5atllecl bt. "II felt 900d btlne
beck ou1 11\ef't,'' AeM said after ht workecl the
nlnln lnnlno ano Mt lht R•noen down on llv'M
ltlY flv btHI "I lul l Wini to lllank lht Anoetl for
belno so pa1len1 wllll me " Did lie feel • Dlltt loo
mucll adrenallnt wH 9C>lne tlv'OUllft lllm In
pr-rlno tor 1111 flnt outing? "I ltloueM ebOo.i t
Wtltn I WH warming UP, Incl I !Old myself ..... ,
I wasn't ~no to overthrow. Bui I hid 1 IOI of ft
ladrtntllnt) I've dont II and pltd19d ""' WIV II
mv ui., and 1 orooablv alwavs wll." ... Rlll9W
Man111« Deue ...,, I~ on tne
Amwlcan LHllUI Wt1I 11111 "'' lust one Item (tht AnotlO •bovt ..500: "Thi wav I IOOll •I ft, al
lht ctvt>l In lhe West art so 1trone, tlltv're
l<.nocklno teell olher oft." ... Proo.bit Pllchlno
rnelcllup for the rtmelndlf' o4 the T111H wltl 1>111 Dave , .... ,, (3·1) eoelnst Ran R"'*"dl
ll·SI tonllllll and CM.-. Hllltfl 1•·61 vs. 0....
Zalwl (l ·l ) In IM !Intl• Weclntadev ' .. II WH 10
vters •IKI Mondtv ll'ltt • vouno &otton rookie
oulflttOtr lmi>ltnlect his name In the mind'• of
btMbtll lan1 around lht counlrv wlln a
memor1t>lt 11eme. FM Lvnn 1IUOffd '"'" nome runs, a triple end • 1lno1t to account tor 10
11111 .. tht Jttd sox defettld Dttrofl at Tlw
Stadium. IS· I
So now. 1he 6-3 left-hander is
forced to pitch -and simply get b)'
with what he's got. And he's done JU St
that.
"The only time he runs into
problems is when he doesn't bounce
back well from his last start." Rader
explained.
* "The slow stuff sets up the slower
stuff." Tanana said after Monday's
wm. 'Tm putting the ball where I
what lo put 11 -and I'm changing
speeds."
The Rangers jumped on Angel
starter Tommy John early, and
scored four tames 10 the first inning
ANGIEL MOTIES -Tne United Stalt1 Otvm·
Pie btMbllll Item, wlnMf' of 111 llrlt two
tXhfl>lllon Hmtl, Wiii mMI a Item o4 colleolelt
All-Stars cotefltd t>v NCAA Cl\emplon C1I Stale
Fullerton Coacll A1191e Gan"lde al Anelltlm
Stadium on Mond1v, July 23. Tht oeme wlH
tither precede or follow ,.,. r eaular telleduled
Amerlcen LHgue 11•me between lhe Angell and
Seattle tnet tvtnlno, dtPlndlno on nallonal '*"'''°" commllm11111 . Quiel<. rtmlndlf' for ...... .., ... .,,-=====a ............. -
HUNTINGTON VALLEY SCHWINN
NEW MANAGEMENT SALE
GREAT GIFT IDEAS
r·----·-··········-···········1
: FREE Zefal Pump & Rack wrth each I
• bicycle sold S20 value w ith coupon •
: only. valid thru 6-30-84. I ·
I I , 10% OFF on all Bicycle clothing & 1 I shoes with this coupon Vahd thru :
I 6-30-84 I
L--··•••••••••••••••••••••••··'
Raleigh Rebate Sale
$20 REBA TE -Tamarack, reg. $292.95
$10 REBATE -Grand prix, reg. $389.95
See the new Schwinn Mountain bicycles -
as low as S 199.95
-We now carry Tandems
-We repair all makes & models
Tune-up Special S39. 95
Includes cwo nt>w trres & tubes
Huntington Valley Schwinn
8966 Warner Ave.
Fountain Vall~y
848 · f 22 I -545-0377
d r"i
U.S. TRACK. • • From C l
an Amcncan. Valene Bnsco-Hooks won the other
semifinal 1n SO. 70.
Oran~e Coast College star James Phillips, competing
in the JUntor decathlon competition, was in eighth place
after the first four events. then was forced to withdraw
before the 800-meter run. He suffered a rccurrina ankle
injury and was taken ofTthe field on a stretcher, later saying
he wouldn't compete any more. The second day's events
are betng run today
In the men's 800-meter semis. 1980 te.am member
Don Paige won one race in I :46.85 with Stanley Redwine
wmmng the other in I :46.32.
Tom Petranoff (278-8) and Steve Roller (272-4) were
the other ~ualsfiers in the javelin with Jeanette Bolden the
third qualifier 1n the women's 100. Diane Williams was
fourth and makes the team as a relay runner pendjna the
coaches' decision .
A number of finals are on tap this evening.. stanina
with the women's 400 at S:20 and including the women's
800, the long Jump. the men's 800. the men's 110 hi&h
hurdles. the womcn'sjavehn and the men's 10,000-metu
run. The finals of the Junior decathlon will also take place
today
Black Wi dow w ins duel
Bahia fonnth1an Yacht Club's Duel In the Sun
Slturday fc~tured match races for seven classes or boats.
The W1noers:
CAT AMAi.ANS -I lltCI< W<Gow, JoM S.v .... LOl'9 h9dl YC, 2.
line"' Som, I ll Fonvthl, ICYC
Ti.Al) WINO$· .. -I ~onotf'. .-u..co1 , ICYC. 2. ll..mdt, Kenny Kum, Dene Point YC
j()V(i. L·ll -SANTANA )0 JO -I MICMtMs, Joa G'9111'111elt,
Soutll SMl't YC, 2 l't1Uv1l, Ptl ~II, UYC
CAP0·7' -I avtltt. Olcll lro•n, ICYC, ! W'9dlltu, Ac; Keehne,
0-Point vc.
J 1• -Ol.ot1·30 -ltldlanl, Dkk Geor ... UYC, f ,.._.., Din
"tMUCI. C.IM~treno l•v 'fC
SA.N JUAN >0 -MAWKllAltM 21 -'· $~" H..,..,, lud Oewnbero, lelllol YC, 2 S4ull't, Ltlt l(err, IYC
OOWN AU )I -I Gfeld!ln N, NIO •ost IC'fC. t SwMt
C1rol11M C111rlt\ Htll ICYC
t ... __
ltUNI' S.mu.t, ~. 46, OWVM, s.n OfMo, 41; ~., (l'UCHO, 44, ~ S.11 DINO, .... Dwmam. Clliaeo,
'11ltalnft.Mol\lreel441; ktvnldt, PhllMll• llfWa, ..
all Durham, Chk:Mo, IO; Catler,
Motllf"MI, IO 0.vlt, ~..! O , lcnmktt, ~. •11 Cleftl, Sen l"Bl\Cl\CO, tt.
HITS GwYM, kn ~. "; kmutl, UI ~ ~··· '4; "•mlrt /.tlen11, 101 ~Y'1-aasuui. _ MAJ0A L•AOUI STANUINGS -~lldtl«9. Chltaeo, IO, l'rtncOM, Nlotn· CUN tf n-.-....,,.,,..,... ....... ) ~ a..-.. tt'MI, 1•. f'•ST aaca. ito vercta OOUll.1!$: Fr.ncOM Monlrttt, "; Euv J.lilll !Ctrde>H) '40 • 20 •• WllT OtVtPC* ~ 01 ~ •• Cl\lc. .. , 11, Certtr, Montrul, Comln 1.uctiv (Pllk111tonl 7.00 ~.40 .......
Clll'*° Mlnntaola
SHllll
0.kllnd
ICaflMS Cllv
Te11at
w "' 5>1 1.6; HWMrCI. Alllnte. 1•. S•""'*· Plll!Ntl-V•n Hernotn (Z.uftll) SM
, ~ .An ' PNa, u. Alto reced: 0on La '•m.. TH on Two, ~, _, .m , s.r:!:~l!~"i!:'~· tnnaw:;•:· l~i .i.cstc11e11. Mo"/;u, K'"::.ik""C'1t!:e1 Thi » J6 .471 41,\ G .......... • ... o•~ '1 • .... J.~ SI L. °"•, .i Coedl, '°"'!.F •• • . )I 3' AQ S -.. ~ .. _,, .....,, • ............. , · 1111 t , .-: Time: 11..,.,
27 H QS 6Y, Mc:lttvnolds, s.n Olffo, S. IJ •XACTA (1-3) peld ..a.60.
2' M A> 7 HOME "UNS1 Murlltlv, Atlanta, IS; llCOND RAC&. 3'41 varch
Sdlmldt, Ph~ta, l•; OC.rt,r, Mon· Chicks Chllcl (.-uJa) t.40 500 HO
0.lroll
TorO'llO
l11tlmor•
llollon
NtwY«tl MnwaukM
Cltvt.Cel'ICI
IAlT OCVISIC* lrNI, l>, DIKl\em, Ctllctoo, 1'1 MenN11. tchv LadV (l'rvdeV) 6.00 S.40
47 17 7:M ~ U. Elfneotbl (Lewltl 15.10
•I -tt ,451 5~ STC>t.EN IASES: Wleell\I, Sen oi..o. AIM rtcld: l•bV t.acv, ~M COOi,
'1 2t Ml 11 '3, St~. "'11"'"""'11, H; i.tdu1, Clncln· Flckla Soul. IClt Golden Kev, Lafkt
JI l.1 ... 111• natl, 2'; Oernler, Ctllca90, 25: "•IMa, ,-rtdtle, Cttwr Menv, Shi K19fY. n J5 '53 MOfllt'MI, ti Time· 1111. 2' l7 Al> 10~ PITCHINO (6 dlclsloft6): LVnch, New nc•D RAC .. 350 yards.
2'3 ,. ~77 tt\fa Yen, 7·1. t6ot, P9rH, Allenl•, 7·1, .. 57, Tt!! Ana H11f (lard) $.00 '100 2.40
MeMaY"• klw'M SOto, Clndnnell, 7-1, 2 51, Mahltr, Atitnte, Potv ltock (Hll'll J 60 2 IO
THH ........ 2 S•t, 1.11; Ltl, MonlrNI, IM. 2'2 Suite Cr•arncMtw (Crlffef) HO
New Yn 2, Detroit I ST"IKEOUU; v~ • .,.,......, "' AllO rtacJ· ltdUlno Clllc*. EHV .-. .. ~IUOOll.__ .. ~0.~,:::.: Cltv 2 Goodtn. Ntw Yont, "•.-van, H111111on, ••. """""'·Summer Wlttch, on Mv , .. ...,,... ..,., ,. • .., ... ~ Soto, Clnctnnetl, 13; Car11on, Pl'll~lt. II•
T.-Y'1 __,. 7' Time· 17 IO. Tt!IH (Stewart ,.,, •1 .... s.vi;s SYltar, SL Lout.. "· Holland, llOUllTH RACE. 3SO varcn (.-omaftlc.it l ·S), In) Ptllladtlohlt, U, Gon1oe, Sen Di..o, 13, Hardt~ {Dtml>) •540 lf40 t.IO
N-York (Guldrv 5·4) II 0.lfO'I (~Irv Orosco. New Y0tll, 13; Smlltl, Cll!Qoo. 11 Q\ermltlt Native (9erd) • 10.20 uo
10·3), In) Ju1t1 Uttle Sono (Harmon> UO MllWaukM (HUI •·SI ., Toronto (Sii«> Alto rececl: Rich N Duslv, "oek"
M 9> •• 1<1n1!_,.,, ("'-vis •• 31 at lotlon (Oled• Doctor, Dynamic Dvna. Ex.orutlv, Shine "~ -SUMl\lne, ,.,.. In 1913, Marv ,.,.. Krl11hl41. 6·51, In> Time: 11.02. Clevtltnd 181vteven 4•3) al MlnMtOll U aXACTA (1·3) Nld 11tUO.
(SdwOf1'1 0-11. lnl f lf'TH RAC•. 350 varda.
CllluOO (8utnl 2-7) •• S..lllt (8Nttle Sneaky Trouble (CrMOW) S.20 3.00 uo
S-71. In) ISUCIU erother (Lewis) 4.IO :uo Kan"' Cllv ltlltct< 6·5) •• 0.kllnd Tht Cltlm Jumoer (LKkevl 5.00
(CodlroO 1·2), In) Alto rac::ed: Aluktn, Asurtclllc, Non !:r:!u!:~f!.0oem.. <.''~;;:. N.Y.1 ~:R~::.:-~d~~.' Scat Anoel. Nnr
Kan111 Cllv •I 0.kltnd x·Fuuy loelltr, st•,000 71·'6·69·70 U IXACTA l•·S) N ld $33.90. Ntw Vork •• Delroll, <n> "6~90Norman,147,000 70-61-69·69 SAXTH RAC._ 350 vard1.
B•lllmort 11 eoston, (n) 211 "ldl Get RIC-(Udt1y) 11.10 uo 3.IO
Cltv.tand al Mlnne101a. (n) Curlis Strange, '36,000 '9·70·74_.. Ttlt Glen Rut>v {H,ert) •,20 l ,00
Chlcevo •I SHiii•, (nl m Glau Cl,.,, <Crtff«) '-40
N ...__. LAll9Ue · Jotinnv Miier, $22,33S 74·61·70-70 AllO raced: Ouldlunem, Rlcll DrHm,
·--Jim Ttiorpa, S22,335 61·71-70•73 TtlrtH &*~ Pllael ~~I, WHT DfVlSION .. ~ ...:.--.t.li'9dtMr '(1 w L ~ i.a Halt l~~JJU» -. ~ 'T\.. ..,. ' ~ l<l-. ..., ,../
31 6 ...Afl~-;• a'..<t Y4 ~4~ ,.,. .. ~ 'l 1 ~. 'T1Wf'N'TM aACI. 3So vatel$. -.;i-iii-~..,i, ,:--;.~. t(!'.l~~S:t<:\SJ '' lW' ,.,. ~. S1•.1'lJ n -n -n -'1 countrv Pistol (Mltehelll n.20 sto .. oo
3$ ll .SIS •'h Mart. O'Maer1, $11,217 71-7•·71-•f &lulw ISIUts teroe>UJ 11.20 7.40
Houlton 30 3S ~2 I -Kid Chroma (MV11S) 2.IO Clndnnetl 30 37 ...... ' FrectCOUDlft, 112,122 '9·71-7•-n Al$0 l"ICM: Roman EmiWt, G"'1Clme•
Sen Francisco 24 3' .311 13 Lee Trnlno, I lt ltt 71-n -69·74 8o!Kk, Eisv um, NIGht Mood, Swlfttbo,
PnltaOtlPlll•
New York
Chlcaoo
•AST OfvtMON Jl7 Slrtlt Toudl 3' 27 .571 Andv hen, It ,If I 70· 71-15• 11 Time: 17. '1.
34 26 .S.7 Yt Jev Hus, "'"I 73-73-70-71 .., •XACTA {2•11 H id '347.40.
34 2f ..S«I 2 Tlm~ •• , .. " n -11·61·1' •tGHTH •AC•. -~•l'dl. SI Loul1
Monlrtel
PfltJDurllh
J3 Jt m s L.annv Wadkins, .,..,1 n -11-n-n 1.1 Mo«t Olldl tMltdlell> uo .. 40 uo
32 l3 m s Tom wa110n, lf,tfl n -n -1•1• 0.1 Aw1V Quldl <Pauline> ..oo . uo
24 31 .111 11~ • Mac:htnlcal Doi <Creaeerl • uo MeMaY"• sc.-e IMO AOkl, s1,m n -10-n-1• Ano rac.cl: en.rows Env Jet, Llse1
SI LOUii al MonlrMI. POd. rain Linnie Clements,"·'" 6'·76-72·71 CandV, Midget Power, Euv CtPf'lca, Em-
TedaY"S Go-. M.aB McCumbet, 11,m 71-73-11-n eralcl FMlur1, 8tcltroses, Llllbw Doi. Oed9erl 1ve11n1ue11 '·7l at Cincinnati Tom Punt•, s1,m 73-n ·n -11 Timt: 20..22.
<Price 2·•>. In> .._. SUtton, S7,1'ff n -n-1•-10 12 ,.ICK sax <•-1-•-1-2-n i>eld
St Louil ID•vltv 0-ll al MofllrHI Jtf "'·"1.00 wlln one winning ltckel (sl• <Rooer• S-Sl Chip hc:ll, M,57S n ·74·71 ·12 nones>. u Pie* Six comoi.11on 11eld 1522.40
Pf\111de1Plllt (Koo.men 6·'1 11 New D1vld Grahlm, $6,S75 71·72·10-76 with n winning llcktls (five l'IOl'MI).
Vork ILYncll 7-l), <n> GQ Moreen, U.515 10-1•-n-n TaNTH RACE. '70 nrch. Clllcaoo (Sutcliffe 0-01 11 Pfllr.but'Oll Jadl Nldllaus, '6,575 71·71·70-77 Swlu Sink• <Zut.tt> S.20
tTudof 4·3). (n) 2'0 Think Six (FtorHI 2.60 2.20 3.20 J,40
S.40
N1Shvllle
N1shll1"t
Sen FranclKO (Oavl1 3·') et Alltlll1 81.Colauon, U,717 n -75·71-72 Stems True (L-ls)
(McMurtrv S-71. lnl Joe Haoer, s5,717 7•-n-71-73 Also recld: Miio Known, Sen DlfllO CShow 7·•> ti Hou1ton (Knee,. P1lw Oosllf'tlult, U,717 73·11·71·7S N-s. Ctltmplon Al Play,
per 6·6), (n) SCott SlmPSOn, U .717 72·75·7•·69 Slltdow, Blcenlennl.I ear. W.._.v's Games Mlkt Mlven, SS,717 70·13·70-77 Time: .._.5•
Oed9erl II Cincinnati (nl 1'1 '2 a XACTA 1•·5) Nld S17AO San Francisco el Atla nta Jim Albu$, $$,O:JI '. 77·69·7•·71 Allande.-:.~ 5,lf .. $1 Louis al MonlrMI, (n) Seve 8alltsllf'OI, SS,131 69·73·7•·75 PnlladtloNI ., New York, (II) Hubert GrMn, 15,031 61·7S-n ·76
c111c.eoo al Pllltburllh. (nl JoMMahaffev,sS,031 72·7•·77·6'
San DleQO 11 Houston, (nJ Jn
AMERICAN LEAGUE Georoe &Uf'ns, M,S73 Milt Donalcl, M,513
72·74·74·12
6'·71·7•-n
74·71·15·72
7l· 72-7'· 71
A•netn •• An9lts 2 Garv Koen, M,513
TEXAS CALIP:O.NIA Tony Slls, M,573
StmPlt cf
Ward If ea.tt lt> Stein 3t>
LAPnn rt 08rleft ID
A8nllr di\
Fotn dll
YOll C Tolleln 21>
Wltkr~n u
atlrllllil
• 0 0 0
4 2 'l I
l 1 I 0
, 0 0 0 s 'l 'l I
3 0 0 0 I I I 2
2 0 l 0
• 0 2 I
3 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
Pttllt cf
Wlltono Pll
8tnklu1 If MCl!k'onrt
DeCnc:slO
Dwnno cm RJcksn 11>
Ctr-Pll
C:.rlch 2tJ
&oonec
Narron Pll
Scnoflld u
JttJk1n Pll
1S 6 f S T~
kar• bV '"'*'91
... ,,. ...
• 0 I 0 I 0 I I
• I 0 0 l 0 I 0
• 0 l l
3000 JOOO
I 0 0 0
4 I 2 0
3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0
3 0 1 0 •
l 0 0 0 JS 21 2
Texu .. I 100 llO-6
CllHlmle 010 Ill t ll-2
G1me Wlnnlno Jt81 -LAParrllh 161.
E-AtM, O.Clncet, Wllll•non.
OP-<1Ulornla I L08-TtXH I, C.lffornlt
f. 2e-eee11. LAPal'rl-'!. HR-Ward ISi.
SF-A8tnnltler I,.
I
H aea Ba SO T ....
Tenana w.•-• Sd'lmldl
CllHlnM
Jonn L,3·6 K1ulmen
Al ..
'
s
2
12·3 1 s
SM 2 1
I 0 0
WP-John 2
A-21.tl7
IS K -T inane
ISenkM11
Carew Narron arown
WI"°"" Lynn
0.Clncft
Grlcll
PlcclOIO
konlen
Re. Jldlson
Downlno
Pelll• Schoflelcl Ro. J1cllaon
Boone T...a
Aneel •vw•en
8ATT1NG
Al a H Ha
130 20 45 4 .,, 2s se 3 se • 11 1 ., s lt 2
135 IS 3' 3
203 32 SS f
n6 3S 60 e
111 11 2f •
"'112 0
• 0 I 0
20t 2' .. 10
211 23 so ' 192 33 43 2
1'3 21 3' J
" s 13 0 lfS 16 3' 0
DQ 117 S6S S1
,.ITCHING
I 3 s 0 0 2
3 0
2 •
0 0 0 T-2A3.
... ,.ct. 20 .,..
21 .)02
3 .m 10 ....
" .211 27 .271
J3 .1•S ll .'61
•. 2'1
0 250
34 .231
3' .m
17 .224
l• .202 •. 1'7
11 .Ifs
164 .2S2
IP H II SO W-L a1tA
!(Ison S S 2 S 0-0 0.00
AaM I 0 0 0 0-0 0.00 s.ncnea l~ 31 12 n s-1 1.n
Ztnn esrh 10 17 22 1·3 UO
ForKtl 1"11 I• 3 10 1-1 UO
Corbell 30'h t7 11 14 t-o U7 K1ulmen 31'-'l 26 11 10 1-2 3.1'
JOhn ,. 100 27 25 3·• us
Wiii 102'.ll 105 41 13 S·7 (.)I ltomcnlc:k I~ 102 31 Q l ·S 01
CIH'llt I 14 3 • 0-0 W
$1tton 43 65 11 t• 2·2 UI LllCortt 2~ 30 12 13 1·2 US
Swen S I 0 2 0-1 IUO °'"'" 11 " • s 0-1 uo T..... s~ 6D JM m M-J I uie
S.vtt S.ndle~ 7, Corbett J, l(aufrNn I. KllOtl l
MAJOfl LEAGUE LEADalltS
Amef'tUn L-.U.
8A TTINO ( 150 11 balsl· Wlrlfleld, New
Yori< .. >41, Mattlne!V, New 'Lodi, .Uf.
G8ell, Toronto, .Jn, Ul>thlw, Tonnto, .3'7,
Enote, Mklnetot1. .3 "· ltl.l~S. OWEv1nt, lotlon, a, Trammell,
Detroft, n . MoMOv. Toronto, ,.; ltlok.en,
ltlllmort, O; ltHanOttton, 0.ki.nd, 64,
Wnllekw, Detroit, 64.
Rll: EMurrlV, ISalllmort, 54; l(lnelman,
OUlanCI, S'l, .-1ce, loston. 51; uParrl1n,
TIJIH, •• ADavla, S..lltt, .,.
HITS: Garcle, Toronto. N; Trammtlt, Oetroll, 121 Mattin,tv, New Yortl, IO,
Yount, Mnwt UllM. n, Whll•ker, Detroit, n DOulLES~ Ttuflt, Mlnnnola, 17; G8tll,
Toronto, "' Otrdt, Toronto, "' I.AP· arrl.,.., Tt111a, 1'; M9111nolv, Ntw Yri, 1';
Trammell Detroit, 16.
TRIPLES ~ Toronto. '' OWtn. ... ,,,., 11 COlll~s. Toronto, •1 Uot.l\lw,
Toronlo, 61 ltl.aw, Chlc:l9o, S.
HOME "UN$: f(lflemtfl, o.ktenct, II;
Armu, '°''°"' 141 Kl111t, cn1c.... u. ADavl1, S..lllt, 11; .. vtor. Ntw Yori(, l>;
l.MllfrJ v, Wlf'nore, lJ; 9'i.Mn, ltlll· '"°"• 12. IT~IN IAMS -~. OMIMd, 11, Qwcte, Tortnto, H; l'letlll, C .....
12 ai.tt11r, c~. n, Collftt, Toronto.
11.
ll'f"TCHIHG " mclttoMI. LMI, Taranto.
1-1, t1t1 c.u., o.kllnd, 6 •1, 140,
i.u.ctiMfl, Tw.nto: 6•1, J.ll, Cltler, lol•
loft, S·I, .ID, OI, ~a--. J.,1,
\.11. ST9'tKIOUTI· WM, .,_. D , Morrll,
o.ff<eil, 7_!i N'-,.1. New Yon, 7'; l.aal,
TOl'OlllO, TJ, Sii ... T"9111o, n
lAVU Qut.,.. .. ry, K~ (try, 16: C~ Otltanel. 14, 9'Defll~la, 121 Sf91111rY. ..... ", , • Mii• ,,II.AM, "· H«nendet. 0.trt!t, 11.
lfJ Jim Cotbtr1, M,060
SI.Vt Hll'I, W,060
P1t McGow1n, M,060
David ()grin, M,060
D.A Wtlbr1ne, M"°'°
2"
11-n-n ·n n -13-n-1s
1•-12-n -10 7•-72-74-73
76-71-73·73
PtlmlP &lackmtr. S3 .ln 1 •-1 1-11-71 ~ a.n. sun 11-1Hs-13
1-ttlc:hard Fetw n -1•-n -1s
Ma11t H•Ytt. sun n -1•-1s-13 a.rrv Jaert•. ll.Jn 1s-n-13·1•
Steve Llebtlr, sun 11-1s-n -1s
Ger; Pltver, S.3.373 1•-n -n-1'
Jtdl Renner. 13.373 n -11-n-n
1·J1V Sloe! '9-n -71-75
(-rneltur, x-:-won In 1'·llolt Pi1voff
Mondevl'
U.S. ~ .,,...._ .. "11111
(It QllM)
MONDAY'$ a HULTS Men's ........ Matdl P1•111MtV
(C)vt " ......... 1.•> I. e. Vanda Zandl, Colorldo Stlrlnlls 1, IH t Dan Durlllll, St. Paul, Mlnn 1, lfS
). A.Ian Knowtts, 0.1 I, If•
Mall's Alt ,..... P1•1Mllf'Y
(OWtef• ........ IMOI
1. Arnold Vltanlo, Olltocluln, Ore I, 730
2. Allin ~. Frtdlrldtlburo 1,11•
3. Jerry Doblon, Wlllurton, Olda. 1.701 MIR'•,.,, ........... ...,
(CMtfa ........ 1..-1 . 1. Gian DW!t, Fort hnnlne, 01 1,761
2. John Rott, Plttlbul'Sh l,752
3. Rod Flti-atndO!Oh, Ptlrn Bev, Flt. 1750
Wtmlll'• AltT ~ P1 •tllltll'V
(Ollt " ......... ,,.,
1. Lori Kamler, San Fr enc:ftcO l, l If
2. c. G<anem-una. E. L.onemHclOw 1.11• 3. lltubY Fox, Parlltr, Ariz. 1,11•
• .,.,.... AJr llllt "'tllmMIH'V
(OVtlfl ....... 1,•)
t Pit 5'11.WOln. ttMlno• 1.1~
2. Marv SdlwelltM, t.enclcl1ter I, 1'3
3. K..-.n Hoclte. Ltxlneton, Kv. I, 1'2
USflL
WUTaJtN CON, ••• NCll ,..__
W L T Pct. fltt ,.A
1010.-mm
f e 0 .ln .-1 V •
' ' 0 .'71 33' -1 10 0 A12 2'35 JW
CtMrlll
y•HOWlon 12 S 0 .106 •t
Mlctlletn ' ' 0 S2t -Oktellome • 11 • ,.., "' Sal\ Mtonlo 6 11 0 ..)D 116
ChU.lo • 12 o .n. m
IAtTl •N CONPUIMCI .... 1' l •
l3 • I
1 •• ' 2 11 0 ......
._. __ ,, ........
·"' IS1 aa ,I ll Ito 475 ., .. lrmll......, I• ) I .124 m M lt"T.,.,_ .. ,, 1) 4 0 1.-•1 DI
NewOrtaenl I t I 01 DI US
~ 1 10 ' 412 211 •11 ~· S ll I * Jl1 t$J •'dllleflld ~ Mr1tl
v-dlnetleCI dfv1slon 1111e -.-........ Micl\IMn ,., Ok~ l•
Houlhlft If. Ian Anto!llo N ~ .....
~et JldleonV9t
Olllillf!CI .. °"'"' ......... ._
LA 1.,... t i ArltClllt ......-. ...... '"""..., .. ~ ~··c~ ..... °"""" ., w..,,., ..... . .... ....,, .. ,.,. ....... , ..
Ok..,_,,. 11 Jell Mtol!le --~ ....... /Mmllfll• 1t ~IOll
IND ••WU. W Aie*
r
w.-.-.
TUNGSllAM OW
(at......_.,Hw.rt)
U111tM s ... 1 • ...., 2
UnlllCI Stain l 3 1 J-7
ltatv 0 I O 1-2
Unl:ld Stain tcOrinlJ: SNw 2, ..
Camobell l, VareH I, IMr9elon I,
Sdwoedlr I, 8ut"kt I.
MeMIV'• OtMr ScWM
Holland f, Y llOO\llVlt f
soviet Union 11, Cuba 7
Hu,,..,v 7. WHI o.m.nv 7
TMaY's ~ WHI Glf'mtny Y'-United SlalH
Cube VI. Holland
Soviet Union VL llllV
YUOC>tla'llll VI. Hunoerv
TOUaHAMENT STANOtMGS
Teem W LT ~ OA
USSR • 0 0 5' 3f
United Sl1ln S 1 0 •1 U
Wt1I Glf'mtnv 3 I 2 SO '4
llalv 2 3 I .. SI
Yugollavla ~ l I SO ..
Hunoer; I 3 2 4' S'2
Cubl 0 3 J ... SS Holland 0 s I • J7
U.S. OtmlPk trKlr "11111
<•t i.el ...... )
~ ..
{,....)
Ja,,.._I Duncan Atwood, S.tttt,
J06.-7; 2. Tom Petranoff, Norllvldea, 211·1,
1 SteYe RolW, $111 Bruno, m-•; • Tom
JadWtn1 f'.'""°• 2"· 11; S. Curt lt1ntford, Mot-. t..Pt, Wall\., W.-•; 6. Juon lender,
Petllurna. UN>i 7. 8otl 1toeov, s.nta
..,... ZQ• 10· '· Mark Andlnon, Dlernond ..,., 2-50-6; '· I«> •oeutt. WllllH Vallty, Wash., 2'2-t; 10. M*• .. ,,...,,, w .. 1 Covina, 2••· 11. John
Amtbrte, Sc>rlne Lall• Htlotlta, N.J., 211•1.
• ....,..._1, &ctwln MoMS, L.aeuna Hiit•, '7.76: 2. DIM'( Harrl1, Perr!S ••• n : J.
Tranel Mewkln1, Oavton, onio. •.29; .._
Al'IClrl Ptlllllos, Sell JOM, 4U2; S. 0.vtcl
P1trldl, Centrallt. IM.. ··"I " ••rt Wll· .. m •• Vt llelo W•v • .,.20; 1. TortV ltltlltlO,
Alllntt , .,.27; •· a.rnle Hollow1v, vrc:-torvllle, 51 OI.
WOMmN {,....)
1-1. Ev•vn Ashfofd, itOMVlle, 11.11; t Allct Brown, Altldenl, 11.20; i . ~I• loldln, Comoton. 11.24; ._Olene Wiiiame,
CfllQoo, 11_,.; S. ltancty Givens, AmltVVllle,
N.Y .• lUS; • JKlllt Wtlftlnston, Houlton,
11.5', 7 Metia 'fNIQ;tr, SI. l..oula, 11.64; I.
Wwwtv Ver-. Tranton, H.J .• I 1.17.
)
OrMgt COiet DA LY PILOT IT..-.,, .:kN 11, 1114 C9
MUC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTlC( M UC NOTICl Pl8JC llOTlCE , ___ _
l -llH S NOTlCSOll,..,.,...ul.I T·... 'OTICE or DEATH OJI' 1Mn'm•111= ...
N01'1CE 0 DEATH OF LOu-.._..,.... NOTaOllTMMTD'llM.I MM9eTAftmN'f I JE N E ...--..Jiii• -
JENNlE D. wn.DER AND vou=i.":v~UM*IA ~~~o iJ...-:.owent ~ 11 doing:..~:'!&! E. JJ~ T -o:=r
OP PETmON TO ADMIN· oaDOllTMMTDATft, ...... , MONaf W OWNal llLLI JO'S OMV t1MC ... ltl £LY. A&A JEANNE ,.. ca•MW
ISTER E TATE o. '· ... wuaa YOU YAU AC· YOUAM•DVAUL.TUINDIRA ~Dr M8Nim CAttto2 KIELY,il.A JEAN UO.Y ~-... .r:wJn.-.llllllllf ..
A·lU5'0 ='rf.:r.:c'~~:: =:~~=-: ~';~no,Mt08budlOr .. ANDOf:P ETJTJON TOAO. ~AT~i!·
To all h~ t.noffdarl-. UC •• YOU ... Ml IJlllU. MOl'ICT Y• P'l•OUH'f.,, -ThlllJUlfniii\eoondunedlly.ln M"'1STER EST.tTE NO. 0 TH€ ......, .....
creditors and contlnaent ttATIOMOllTMIMATUMO'-tMI MAY lllOt.OATA~UU. I~ A·lUlll CAltt~OA:n.C .. I
cre-dltora Ol JENNIE D: ~ c~~~TA ~~~; ::~"....,' AM IU\.MATIOM 111111 Jo Smith To all h~ ti, nf:'f...,.,..._._. 0£~. CICll -•
WILDER and ...,___.. who --.... ..,..,_ -,.--·., HA,Ullt t 0,. TMI TM t uimeintwaa ..,,...~ -.JI d CMLCODIMC1'10et ...... ..-• --....... , ~.,... AOANtaT YOU, ~IJ' a.i. ct O.lflOe COU1Wy .,. crCQ•LON an c:oruan~nl ..-• w lillw ., _.. "' -... may~ othtJ"WUC lnt.en!ltfd IOUTHLANO COMPANY, A YOU 9"CMA.D COWTACT A LAW· Mey 2•. 1.... cndilot• of !JJGENIA ~ .. ~ ----
in lh~ Will and/or estate: CAUfOANIA COAPOAATON .. YD. Mr ......... 1W A.II. PubMMd n.-co..i ~ JEANNE KJELY and ~r-r1gM, ............... ..,.. •
A ~utlon has ~ filed =::::::ec.~:: ~GMMY MHlWMT co.. Piiot June 6, 12.1TH 1"4 IOtll who mlY be :i;:=~ ~·==
by LOREN HOLT ln the Su· and punut1nt to !M ~of .... IMC., A C ... mlt .......... • T..tl in~ ln Ow wUl and/ dUDlllild
pertor Court of Or•n1e oontain.d 1n Mid Deed of Trwt • ...,. "'' at:lM T,_.. _., _. .,._..,. -.~ ea ifAUIJOR ICU•NHH Q
County r que1tln1 ihat WILL 6EU. AT PUIUC AUCTION .-.u .. t .. OliM ~ T,... ..... ,.~ IWllK A pcuuon bM been filed OUPOCtl81fi'Qlf\. .ANNA L
LOREN HOLTbeappotnt.ed ~~~~=~~n.~J'2n =.'!. ':.':'~i!:'•:: fl!M:YllllOUe....... b_y_ WA 1. TE R A . ~~AMENCANPP.
asper.analttprelt'ntative'° t•wfulmoNYottneunltedS1at"°' 11791,,... Ml1; 11 ~ NAMllTA.,....., STRINGFELLOW i.n the T'9TOMDITUIMION
administer the es\.ate of by • caahlw'• c:heC:k Cltewn on • .,. "'tN ..,._ ".._. c..J The tOllow\l10 per90n9 •• dOll"Q Su~nor Court of Oran~ AEOON>m ...,_,,... 21. tta
JENNIE D WILDER (under :.,or et':.r-'~~: :=:: ::~! ~~~ ~era PIZZA. 110•& a . County request1n1 that ~: C:4J:!'.,°' ::': i.h~ lndependt'nl Adminla· r.o.11 ~ and totn alQCle-TOM TAKATA I MAI AKO ~· Fountain Valley. CA. W A L T E R A . OCl'W of Oflilwt~
traLlon of ~ta\8 Act). The tlon, dotnlollecl In the atai. of C-. TAKATA. ...._. .,.. ... • t2 OI STRINGFELLOW be ap-lll6d d_, oftt14t ._ ... _..__ ..
.,..tition ta eet for hea'"'"''" in loml•l .. t'lghtttttundlnt.,•tcon-lc*tt ..._...Will uu. AT "'9--.!lc~-2!"1~Y-lnc:o "c2A6~~!i11m-pom•.... ---~• -t followena. r-•uoe ~ 10 and now l\fld by It under Lie AUCTION .TO HIQHSIT .. """" ....... q T...... • ........, ICU ~---... lot SS of TrtlC'I No G2t. In ..
Dept No. 3 at 700 Civtc MidDeedofTnntfnthepropeny Mtt,ORCUH~•tlMt .. Th•bull'*911~ucteot>y• reentatlve'°adininisiert ~of0r-., .. •o1C111-
C.enterDr .. West,Sj.ntaAna. hefelnef\erdelc:nbed .... .,......,....,., .. UllllllM oorpcnt!on estate of EUGENIA Jl'.AN ~-~-.,,..,,.,..., I Jul nn..o TAUSTOA QEAAlO l Wll.KS ltaMt) 8t h ..... ...,_ .. Frink Garib41'j, "'~ -"'a--. ...... =10 _.. U di CA 9270 on y 11, locn at ANO BETIE WflKS HUSBAHO ..... 1 1111 T-.,.. CMMf'J Th .. atatement wa filed wfth '"-NE KIEL y (under the mdr-_.,.. -· •
9:30 A M . AHO WIFE . ....... Or-... CaM• ........... County Cleftt of O.ange County on pendenl .Ad.mlnistriauon of ~ • ~~Or·
IF YOU OBJ»=I' to Ult' BENEF:CIAAY: BEVERLY HILLS ........ .....,.... ...... ,-to ind Mey 21. 194' neat1 Eat.ates Act). The pelllion is ~Ol! A~tN OUAULT UNDl!J' A
grhanuld·og.othf the petitlon ,'YthO" ~~NGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIA· =-~~~-== Put>llSNd Orenge eo.1 Dally sietforhearlneu:,_~t No. 3 ~U:~l.~~~~
s OU ea t'1" appear at e ~ded Fet>fu&ry 23, 1983 .. u6d C.-ty ~ ...... IC ... PilOt Jun. 5 12 19 28. 1* al 700 CJVlC '-Cnl« Dr .• PAOT'ECT YOUA ~-IT
heanngandstateyouob,ec-instr no 83.oaoetOofOffidllf:\a.. .a: T·7 West. Santa Ana. CA 92701 MAYll LOATAPUel.ICIM.E.
ncmnoua eu.•.. ACn'TlOUIJIU-11
NAlllS ITA'Tu.NT NAllll 8TAftmNT The fOllQwlng l)lnonl ate d0lf'10 Tl\e IOitowlng pet.on la doing e>u11neea u e>u11ne11 ..
IEST BUSINHS PHONE.8, 2226 GAANO PAI)( MAAINE., 8'1 hel
Soul Huron A~ . 8&nt1 An•. ~A St . Cotta M .... CA. 92e27
9210. Thon\el John Chanlier, 6'1 Seat
KarlMth Aoy 6nettet, 3213 ldano St . ca.ta Maa CA. 12121 Pila. eo.t1 M..a CA t212e Thia bu9ln9a IHOndueted by. an S1evan ~ii Shatter, 3213 ldll'lo lndl111duat
Pl.ct, C°'I& Maa. CA.. 92a2G TJ\Qn\M Jonn CNanller
Thi• bvllneaa 11 conducted b)' a Thi• etatem.nt wu flied with tile general partnerthlp County Clertl or o.anoa County on
St•vtn N Sb.if.If M9Y30 tt8'
TNa et1tetnenl -fltad with tM '1'71U
County C1erl( ot Orange County on Publletled Orange CON! Dally
May 31, 196' Piiot June 12. 19, 28. July 3. 1118•
'247172 T·20 Pul>lltMd Orange Coe1t Delly
PllOI June 12, 19. 20. July 3. 19:.~, ---P\B.--l-C_NO_TIC_[ __ _
'ICTITIOUI auaMlt Pl&.IC NOTIC( NA• ITATl..,n
, Tri. following pertcn la doing
ICTITIOUI 8USINlll bullneu ..
NAMI ITAft•NT R. & B CONSTRUCTION. •827
The lotlowlng pereon I• dOlng Con lend Drive. Corona del Mlt. CA
bUllneM u 92825
ULTIMATE GRAFI)(, 1280 SE William Roftel, •&27 Cortland Or.,
Wall'IUI. #38, Tu•Un. CA 926&0 Corona d.i Mir. CA 92825
Gabflel Begin, 1280 S E Walnut, This buelneat 11 conducted by en
no3&. Tu•lln. CA 926&0 lndlllldull
Thi• buetnen I• eonduct9d by an w Rottel
lndlvidull. Thlt •tllement WU filed wl1h Ille
G1brtat Begin County Clerk ol Orenge County on
Thi• 11a1emen1 WH filed with the May 30, 11&•
County Clerk or Or1nge County on FM70M
May 30. 198' Publlahad Orenge Cout Dally
1M10U Piiot June 12. 19, 26. July 3. 1H•
Publlthed Orano• Coett Dally T·l&
PllOt June 12, 19 28. July 3, 1984
T-19
lions or file wntten objec-eorde In IM offlc. of the recorder of "AAC&L t: n.t ,_... .. LeU'I flt8..IC NOTICE on July 6, 1984 9:30 A. M. 1, YOU HELO AN DJl'lAHATIOH fltlll.IC NOTICE tion.s with the court before Ora~nty. Slit• of CM!ornl1; ofTtadMo.S'1'1,COuntJofOr-... IF YOU OBJECT to the OF THE NATUAl OF THI:
FICTITIOUS BUllNlll the hearing. Your appear-~no pr~~" deec:flbel the :!::: ~~ "::: ::-..;: '~~~:.=• granting of l~ petluon. you ~~~~~J~YOU P\lll.IC NOTICE NUii I TAftMINT ance may be m person or by Lot •8. end thlt pottlon of Lot.,. c..._.• ....._ "' tN OMoe .. The lolow•no ~ •• dotno should eat.her appear al the 1 .... 1 vie Tortno. IMN. CA
FICTITIOUa •UllNEH The 1o1tow1no P8f10tl• are dolno your attorney. of Tract 1237. In the City of Newpor1 tM CounlJ llteoaw19at of..., eoun-bu•neu u ht'anng and state you objec-m1s
NAME ITAftMINT t>us1neu u IF YOU ARE A CREDI-Beach.auhownorumeprecorded ty,~ =-:•.:.,,. ltt tM WICKER RAnAN OISCOUNT. uons or flit' wnuen objec-"{tt • .._. .odr.-« OClll'lllftCll'
The fotlowtno peraon 11 d04no 20:~~~~ c!i~!T °'~!T1~~,!: TOR or a conungent creditor ~1=:.:0::.-ic-a::~t:== ~! ~ JtM of Mid Let 71, ~~~g: Edtnget · Fountlln veMey. CA uons with the court before ~~~~ .:':: bu·~":~'H':~· SYSTEMS ,33 CA. 92715 ' of the deceased, you must Ille county recorder of Or1nge dl•t•nt "°'"' II ... , ... '1 Vincent s. Petareon. 2&515 the hean.na Y<Nr appear-com91a1..,..orcor,..,,_. ... Tile ~
D hll C d·' •• CA ·92,.25 1nno111Uve C1rcut1•. Inc .. K•n•u. file your claim with the County, Clll1ornll. mtnut .. 41 NCOftda wt 1-.. Montell. M19810n Viejo. CA 9201 ance may be 1n ~or by l>tf~ unoar Mid O..S of • • O<Onl ...... r. " S101RIChlandA~.KlnMSClty, · th Oeac:r~ufolloWa faat"-the-t~eot· Eunice M Pe1ert0n. 28S15 T"'91 b'(re..Gftof •.,,....•• Brent Skeen. •33 Dahfll. Corona Kansu 66106 court or present tt to. ~per-Pere91 no 1, 15 lhown on• mlP ..., ef NW LM n , ttwince ,..,.,_ • Mont•. MIUIOn VietO CA 92991 your attorney ..,,. "' the ~ ......,
det M11. CA 92826 Ttill t>uatneu 1a conducted by-• sonal represent~uve ap-llled 1n bOOll 1~ P999 3-4 of Parcel ..,.... u ,...,,.... 20 MOaftda Ttu. bu-11 conducted by IF YOU ARE A CREDI-ttweby ._..~ • ..,.,.... _.,
Thi• bueiness 1• conducted by an corporetton pomled by the court within MIP•. In the olflc:e of the county .... ,.,..., Witt! the _.... Vincent s Peteraon TOR 01' a contingent creditof' ~ad •o the U1ICM¥"9*' • _.. indl~:~•I Rlcherd K. T~uone ·~ ,k>uunPJUhs.(mm th~-'1!~ p( .~~--ot Orange County, Clll· ... t_., ltne of u6d lot 71, • .._. Tl\lt •lltement wu filed wt1h 1~ of the deceued. you must teri O.CW&Uon at Dell-* and 0.. ~.~,.-;::::_~;::... er!ttmitrt>~~ ~ ~-:~~--'::-; ·--~,. ._ _!'1~' NW peln~ Counly,Clertt ~ .. ~:=County on file your ~Laun With the :~·==:nc:-.:
• clunty 1,;lerlc of Orange Counly on May 30. 1984 provided in Section 700 of mon deslgnatton~,..;eJ pr.,p. 'lltend-to~• .-~ -, ··~~ ~ ) ... Mftwmi.:1111111..,il!l.t•!'I' ..... ~~~
May 30 1984 '2470l7 the Probate Code of Call· arty 11eretn1bo11• dflCllbed I• ...._ 12 ,...,..,....... ...... Pubtlshad Orange COUt sona r nlll?Vl'~I.~ fl
FM10IS Publlahed Or•noe COU1 Daffy f · Th · f filin purponad:oo.:5090.AnuOIWa .... t 10.00 tMt; ~ aovt9' • Pllot1'une5 12 19 2819M ted b ... _ ·.L:-. P\.ibll•hed Oreng• Coett Dally Piiot June 12, 19, 26. July 3. 1984 orrua. . e ume c;>r g NewPort Beadl. CA. t2e&O ..,.... 47 """""" • eeoOftCla .' • • T .9 poU1 y UIC court W\i.uui
Pilot June 12. 19, 28. July3, 19&• T-16 claims will not expire p rior TM und«algned Tru•tM '*at>y w"9 1.a.IO feat to tM MUtft.. four months from the date of be~'*'-' 11. t9G •
T·11 totourmonthsfromthedate dl9Clelm1 Ill llat>Ulty for any lnc:ot· ...-.YltneofMldLMJ'lt..._ flUlJC NOTICE first issuance of lenen as lrwt1 No SS-0711J30f0flalll,.
---DI-.,,-'C_Mn_T-lCE___ P\lll.IC NOTICE of the hearing noticed abo~. ractnau In uld lttMt 9ddrw °' IOUttl SO ..,.._ 12 .....,... 20 provided tn SectlOn 700 of oorcta In h ofb of a. "91: I • ruuu nu YOU MAY EXAMINE other common dellgNuon. aec.-......... h ..-.. f1ClTT10U8 ..,_.. .__ D-.L.. ,...~-f ,..._,. of °'M08 ~
'ICTITIOUI BUltNHI NAME I TATDllNT
The . following PfilO~ '' doing t>uslneu H
TIEN· THINH TAILORING I FAB·
RICS, 9727 Boin Av . W•tmln•ter
CA 92883
Hoeno Huu Vu. 8831 Chapm•n
Av . G11den Grove. CA 926'41
This bullneu 11 conducted by: an
indlvldual
Hoang Huu Vu
Thi• atllament WU lllad with the
County Cte<k or Or•noe County on Mey 22, 198•
FMMtt
Publl•h«I Or1noe Cout Delly
Pilot June 5. 12. 19, 26 19&4
T·lO
P\Bl.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI 8UllNlll
NAME ITAft•NT
The lollowlno perton• ere doing bullneu u
FOUR WINDS. LIMITED. FOUR WINDS. APARTMENTS, 1&552
MacArthur Blvd. • •.-o. Irvine. CA 92715
Oav•d K L•mb. 18552 MacArthur
Blvd ••.-O ll'lllne, CA 92715
John Mln•r. 18552 MacArthur
Blvd ••.-O. Irvine. CA 92715 Mehrd•d Rauekh. 18552
MKArthur Blvd ·••O. Irvine. CA
92715
Thi• t>uelneas 11 con<luciad by a
limited pertnenhlp
Jonn Mln•r Thi• ttllement w .. hied w11n the
County Cieri\ of Or1nge County on June 11 , 1~ FM,._
Pubhlhad Orenge Cou1 Dally
Pilot June 19, 26. July 3. 10. 1H4
T-33
Pl&.IC NOTICE
FlCTITIOUI 9UllNHI
NA• ITATIMENT
The fo11ow1no peraon• are doing
bu•lness u : FEEDBACK COMMUNICA·
TIONS, 14601 Shinkle Cit .. Hunl·
1noton 8"eh, CA 92&U
Ty B Hlttenbetger, 201' 1 S
Spruce. Sanll Ana. CA. 92707 Berry D. Pulliam. 14601 Shinkle
Cir . Huntington Beach, CA. 92&8&
Thlt butlneas I• cOnducted by a
general pemerthlp
Ty Hlttenbetger
Thia •tatament WU filed with Ille
County Clerk of Orano• County on
June 8, 1984 FM7131
Publltned Or11199 Coat Diiiy
Pllol June 19. 2e. July 3, 10, 198'
T~
Ml.IC NOTIC(
,ICTITIOUI IUl•ll
NA• ITAft•NT
The fo11ow1no l*'90l1 11 dolno
butlna .. u
P.C.B ASSEMBLY CO . 34•• w .. 1 Herverd, Santi Ana, CA
9271>' Donald R. JoHphM>n. 1097
Satvld0< St.. Coate Men. CA
92826 Thi• bualneU 11 condueted by· en
ndlvldu11.
Donald R JOMC>Non
Thi• el1tement WU hied with Iha
County Cwk ol Orange County on
June 11, 19M
f2'17W7 .
P\.ibll1'*2 Orange Cout Delly
Piiot June 19. 26. July 3. 10. 11&• T-35
Ml.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI BUllNEll
NA• ITAftMINT
The foltowtno per.on •• do.no
t>uaine&I u WESTCO RESTAURANT SER·
VICES. 17•5 N Grand Ave . S1n11
Ana. CA 92701 Steven Jon Horton. 3" Flower
St .. 8rN. CA 92821 Thlt buaineU I• eondueted by 111
lndl~ Steven Jon Hor1on Thi• •tatamenl wN lltad with tM
County Clerk of Or111ga County on
June8. 198• ,.,.7111
Publllihed Orange eoa.1 Dall'J
Piiot June 19. H . July 3. 10, 111' T-32
ACTITIOUI 8UltNlll NAMa ITAT!MINT
The following persona are doing
buslneu u
INTERNATIONAL PAN AMER\.
C.\N TRAVEL ASSOC . 10283
Clreulo de Juarez, Fountain Vllley,
CA. 9270& Carman B Morano, 10283
Clrculo de Juarez. Foun11ln Valley,
CA. 92708
Ma Jun Brentley, 102&3 Clrculo
de Juaraz, Foun111n Valley CA.
92708
Thi• buslneat I• conducted by: 1 generlf pertne<ahlp.
Carmen B M0<eno Thia •l•tement WU flied with ,,,.
County Clerk of Orange County on
May 30. 1984
'M'Jml Published Or•noe Coaet Dally Piiot June 12. 111, 26, July 3, 198' T-25
P\B.IC NOTICE
The benefldery under Mid Dead ... ,_., 1M ta u6d LG4 71 to • MAm IT ATDRNf t~ ~ 1uu.att' ~ O '-'A.LI· Said .. .. be tNde. M
the file kept by the court. If of Trvst, by ruaon of 1 br.-c:h or point which beer• aouth H TM follOWing I*'°" Is doing fomia. The time {or filing wftl'IOUt ~or Wll'T1flf1,
you are interested in the es-default In the 01>1109tton• aecur9d ..,_ ,:,.:i-;:::.:.:r, ~e:·~~o~~~~~·:.~ ~laims will not expitt prior ~~.:oi.~~ 9:
tate. you may se~~ upon the =~ ~.r::~~*:,;: :*'..:n.11r19: ...._ • s Laguna. CA t2e77 to four months from the date pey "'* ,.,.._11119 ...,... ._ °'
executor or administrator. or tan Dac1.,.11on of o.tlUll llfld o. ..,.._ '1 ~ 41 _. John 611d •• H•t>olcl. 29231 of the hnnng nouced above. tna llCM(•l aec.nd b'( 9lid o.d Of
upon the attorney for the ex· mend t0< Sale. lr'<I written notice of eeet 12UO feat to tM ttw point of vi. S1r1 Sebut11n. ~ NtgUel YOU MAY EXAMINE TN9t, Wfttl ~ • "' 9lid "*
ecutor or administratot. and breech and of e1ee11on '0 cw lN bee......._ CA 12en the fU kt' t by the court. U PfOllldad. ed~ " Mf, _,., . . uncler910ned to NII nld ptoperty to ,AlltCl"l 2: A ~•ctuelw. Thlt buaineu '' cor\ducied by an e . P . tn. terms of .id O..S a4 ~...., file with the court with nllsfy Mid ot>llg9tl0n•. and mer. ••a..-t tor toed 9ftd llttlltJ lndlvldull you att interested m the ts-c:twgea. mnd • ..,._ of 11'8
proof of service, a writtt'n lftw the underSIOMd cauMd uld l*fPOM*-ttte ••nie: John E Halbold tat.e, you may serve upon the T,,,.._lndofttlatt'*80'99ladby
,_,uest staling that you de· notice of bfeech·and of alac:tion to ....., .. et • potnt lft the ThlS tt•ternent wu filed with tna executor or adnunistratar oc Mid Dead of Tl\IM. ·-~ beR«:orded Mwch& 19M .. lnltr aouthaaat•ri) .... °'Mid Lot 11, County Ctar1l of Orange County on • Slkt ...... be ...... Oft:T.....,, ~re s~ nonce of the ill-no. 84-098139 o1 ..id Officlel Aa--~ "'°"" • ..,.._ a M9Y 31. 19&4 upon th~ atlOl"ney foe the ex· Ju1lt 10, 1914 ... 2'.30 PJl'I. • .,.
mg of an mventory and ap-cord• ,......,._ • ..-. &.e 1tu0 nc11a ecutor or administrator. and CNlpnw\ AV9rlU8 emranoe '° "'*
praisement of est.ale asaets or s.ia aa1e wtll be maoa. but fMt ..._ tM "'°*' ~ c.· P\.ibll9hed Orange Cout Delly file w1th the court with CMe c.iw 9uldlng. 300 e.t
of the petitions or acrounts wlth0u1 co\18nant or werranty, ••· ner of ..W,2LAt"*~--=-== Piiot June 12. 19. 26. July 3. 1~2 proof of service. a wntten CMcwMnAt -.. ~· :;.n~ -.oJL . ed . .:.~• 1200 pr_. or lmpUed, rag.,dlng t11ta • ..,_ .._ tha ..a-.,,. ...... _.. menuon m ~uon poa ... ek>n or ancumbfancea. to ..... M.M ._. ,_.... """ "'* request llallng t you Ull:'-c:aon of ,..._ ... '°'811
and 1200.5 of the Cali!orrua lllisfy IN prindpll be&ance ol the MUltlW•....., ..... ..WLAt7tto P\B.IC NOllC[ sire speo.al notice of the fil-9"'0UntClll "'*ur\Plld...,_of ..
Probate Code. note(•) or other oblig9tton MCU(ed tM b•ll~=• of•......,.. ana ingot an mven.tory and ap-OOllold.loin~ b'flleallO-.• •
C r a W f 0 r d S ,,. 0 t t by uld Daad of Tru•1, with lntereet concwe llltl'"*tafty ~ • FICT1T)OU8 9UllliEll . f acrt6ed diMd of tNll .,_, _.,, rt1d
• " • and ottier tum• u prO\llded therein, ,.._ of 2l.AIO feat 9"d • caftit81 ..,.. ITAT'lmKT pr~t ~ estate .-eu °" eoall • ...,. ... and ~ •
McDaniel ptu• ldvltlOM. 11 eny. under the .,... of 44 ,..,... a-~ M Tile tolk>wlng per.an 1a dOW'i9 of the petlllalS or .cciounts $75.277. ts ..
601 Broadway, Second Floor '*'"" tl'lefeo1 •nd 1n1., .. 1 on aic:t1 11canda; ...._ _...,, .._. buelinea.. menl:ioned r.n Secuon 1200 The.._. ... ~--..... -.....,. • ~--ta M _, a CA "~01 ldvanc::... Ind plus ,... c:t\lllgea ..... cuna, • ....,_ .. ,... .... LEATHER OVCKS INK. 6'7 and l200 5 of oL.-r.1.•ornia ..clmetlaonwtlk:tlttiaapm*"fleildlt
.:>tlU OwC ' ' ' Ind aitpen ... ol lhe Tn.ist'• and of to tM ba9hllr19 .. • ....... CWW ~St .. Costa Mw. CA. 92127 . u-.: ~ COtnPUMd rM!r tl9 obtlilnad by..._ (tl3) tsl-1555 the trust• cr•t«I by Mid Dead of COftCfte ..,... .. ,...., Mwtfttl • Mk:MI RonllcS a.er 6of7 Plum. Proba.t.e Code. tftQ (71•l ts7-09M ot C21'l
FICTITIOUIBUltNlll Published Orange Coast Truat.TN .. t1m1tedamountotn'd , .... of41.AOtaet:Mlla.-.. St .C~taMeaa.CA.92«27 THELIN, MARRIN, 827....-u._,._...,._...._
NAME ITATE•NT Daily Pilot June 18. 19. 25. obltgatlon, lncludtng but not limited .,.._of_..,_........ Thlabu111MMl.aconduet«lby' an JOHNSON• BUDGES o...ct:June tt. ,..,. t>u:~o1:-1no peraon ta dolf'10 1984 ~t=.:-"'~ ~ ~':'c; ~~~"~~~j ~ ~ .._ 313 S. Gruit An. Sae. HM !.0.!W~~Nft'
THE JOURNEY COMPANY. 4201 M -34 ~oftn.Tnm•.•ttha tlma ............, ...... Mid.,.... a rw: .. ...,,,..,., weatlladwtth t"8 Los h&ela. CA.....,. .., c....,, ~. , . IW11
Hiiaria W9Y. Newport Beach CA -----------of lnl1111 pubftea11on of u• Notloa 19 .. ..._ "tU.14 ............ County Ctetlt or Orange County on (tl3) lll·H • s.cr...y
92663 DIDllC 11nllCE se18.~ :w. -"''*" " • ..,..... c--Mey 31 t9M PubhsMd ~ Coast Ona CilY ll'ilCI w.. Oftn0a. CA. Thomas E Piluru. 4201 Hll1tl• ____ r~-.---""-----Slid .... wlU be Mid on July 10. ca.a~ M¥lnil • ,.._ ncna · Pilo J ., 3 9 92W Way.NewponBeach.CA 92863 FICT1T10Ul8U ... ll 19&4 0 am 1tthaCMpn\WI All9 of25.00taat8Ma4*'\ral ........ Pubkshed Qfange Cout Detty Daily t WM! i .... l. 1. (714)13$.1211
ThlsbuSIMUlsc:ondueled by en NAMI ITATE•NT entrence to tM CMc: Center Bldg., 44 ..... M......_. UCI~ P*>t-""'-12 19. 26 ~ 3 1914 1984 P\aiw.d Orlngll CmM o.ly
1ndMduel Tri. following perwn II doing 300 E Chapman A"'8 . Orange. CA ~ -tl11•t1rt, ...... ..W T-21 TW-15 Pliot JuN 1128JutyS.1 ....
Thomas E Plluru t>uslnna u Ind Wiii be conducted by lnterst•I• ~. • •-.oa of 1t.Jli '9et: T ... 1
This t111ement WIS flied with the JACK'S ICE CREAM. 2\e7'A Truat Daad S«vloa. Inc wtloM Id· .................... cww .....
County Clerk of Orenge County on Miner St . Colll Mesa. CA. 92927 dreN end teleph()ne numb« Ira 10 ...,.._ 1t ,...,.._ 20 -* May31.19&4 Romuald Henrytc W~I 505N.Tuttln Ave .. Sutta 234.Sanl• •••• 110.2• , ••• t• tt.•
FM11M 21a7·~ Mi,_ St .. Costa~. CA: Ana. Callfornl1 92705, (71') _..._ • .,.., ..._ ol...., LAt 1't; Publlstied Or"lnge Coul Dally 92e27 ~1-3201,UIQentforMldTrust• thence -n1 • ..,.._ 47
Pilot June 12 ti. 26. July 3. 198' conduetad b Oal• June 12. 1..., ,...... 41 -* ........ T-23 ThlS t>u5ineae 1' y 111 SOUTHLAND COMPANY A CALI· fMt .. tM poMf II ballfll ... lndMdull ' tftef.tr -Romulfd Henryk WUielewakl FOANIA CORPORATION Ea~ °"' airtJ -·-·
~~~~~~~~~~~-
-----------Thlt t11tement WH flied with the u II.id Tr\191.. u-.tn tnchldad ..... ,__, 1 fltlll.IC NOTICE County Clerk of Orenge County on By 1n1w•t•t• Trutt Dead Servloa. eboW duc111b•IL WARD IC.attn Ann Snuth of West-HoUywood, Ca. wMtt he
June 13. 19~ .,...,.1-~·s= a.tteny. Vloe Prealdanl ,:.;;... ~~1 = c.-DOUGLAS R WARD. 77 minster. M1Chael A.. Robert "'-orked for many )'MI'S flCTITlOUI 8UltNlll
N .. ITATIMINT
Tlle rOllowlng per.on I• dotng
butlnesa"
.---Pu _.......,Or ,.. __ ......... -..1 leild~,_.,....._of years old. born m lnd1an J .• Randall S . Day. all of befott retmne to N~ Pub111hed Or•""'" Cout Delly bltw-.. enge ..,.,,.., ~, .._, T f Ok.Lah J N Be h th n-....L. H ....... b tus Piiot June 19, 26,'j"uiy 3• tO, 198• June 19. 28. July 3. 198' ., Gf8Nid9 •r. Coete ...... err1tory o oma une ewport ac : mo er. ~-... e LI IW'Vlv""' y
!XECUTIVE YACHT CHARTERS.
33821 Chula Vitia, Dane Point, CA.
92629
, 1·3& T-42 CMltornlA. Md °"* 15, 1906. was married to Madehne Jowdy of Texas. son Jerry ~ericks: • ~ -=11:':11 ..,, .. the Ethel Brown November 24. brolh~n John. Frank. Al· daughter Kathy Goodman
,.... ~ du .., ..._ 1a 1927 m Oklahoma City. bert Jowdy, all of Texas. of Arcata; a grancbon An·
~toba:"70nNdlW117, Oklahoma. 'n>ey moved to and Wilham o f Saudi drew Goodman of Arcata Ml.IC NOTICE George MICllMI S91llpe<>n. 33&21
Chul1 Vitti . Dane Point. CA 92829
Thi• buSlneu Is cOnduclad by lfl
lndlVldulf Not~~TIC1., ~Y "'118n ~1 the F1CN!!!l0"9IT"~~· C~ ~"*" die--Costa Mesa. California Arabta.. Sisters, Vera Aboudth Aho a suter Helen Puc-
..... w· -• .,5_,., . .,,.. August 1928 and ha~ re and Virmn12 PantU90 bo cerelli of New York. A t the Board of Trutt"' of tile Hunllnglon The following peraon1 .,. dolno ct.tma MIJ bbllHJ tor "'' lncor· • 0 ,..-Mike Sampaon
This st1tement was lllad wtth the
County Cle<k of Orange County on
June 13, 19&•
Beech Union High School Dl•trlct bullneu u : rec~ of tM m..c 9ddreM Md sided there since He passed of Tu.as. Mary Ann Willis request of tbt' ~
will rac:eive Mated bids for supply· BARRO'S PIZZA. 2180 D Hart>of. OU-comMOft ~.If"''· away June 2. 1984 at Hoag of Germany Reatauon of lhere was no &er'VK"eS. Fam-
ing SCIENCE CLASSROOM Cost• M ... CA 92e27 ahown.... Hospital leaving wtfe Ethel the Rosary and Mass of the a.lyrequest in~ of flowen..
'2411G
Publllhe<I Orange Cout Delly
Piiot June 19. 26, July 3, 10. 198' T-37
FURNITUREmeeUng0<aqulftothe F6MG1rlt>9ylnc .25221M91Tl· I.id ....... be ...... IMlt Ward . Ro and Resurrection will be held donatiOfll ~ made lO tPeelficllllon• on Ille In tfle office ol ~th Cir . El Toro. CA 92630 wlt9'oUI ~ w warrenty, ••· • two sons.. Y seld Ol•trlcl "fhl• t>uslneu 1, conducted by: 1 ptaaa cw tmpfted, Nf91dtrll lltta, Don Ward, both of Newport Monday 7.30 PM at Our American Cancer Society.
Bid• lh•ll b9 clelrly marked SCI· corporation poueH'Oft, 0t ~*'°"'In-Beach SlX grandchildren. Lady of Mount Carmel WENDELL
ENCE CLASSROOM FURNITURE Frri Gwlbay. Praaldent ctudlftg .. ~Tc:-...,-:.: Cathy. Van Vechtm of C!'urch. Newport Beach THUMMEL B. WENDELL
Bid •571 addraued to: Allyn E. Thlt •lltement WU filed with the ~ .. _....-.... ,._ ........ -...... .. r--'-bad. r .•·forrua· ·. ,..._e Final 1ntennenl .... r'Vlces DIDI 'C NOTICE Row'-Y. PurcMaklg Men11Q8' ·Hunt· County Ciani ol Orenge County on ,._ --.,, --~n• ~ ~•• ...., (Capt). of Laguna Beach, ruuu 1no1on Be.ch Union High School Mey 21 19&4 True&. topeJ""" rwnalnlfto pnno. Viera of Costa Mesa. Dee will be held Tuesd&y J~ Calif. Passed away June l2.
ACTITIOUI au1•11 District. 102S1 YOfklown Ar-· . ~ =':ro.= ::.:-~-:-= Ward of Costa Mesa. Mollie. 19, 1984 at lO:OOAM at Good 1984. Long time resident of
NAMI ITAftMINT Huntl~ton Beach. CA 924' and Publlahed Orange Coat Delly 000.00 Wilt! .....,_, ..__ Meme and Gilbert Ward of Shepherd Services under 1 ~ ... ·-~ n--h and .......... ..........
The l""'lowl"" person• lie dolno raeelllad et O< bet0<e 2:00 Pm .• Piiot June 5 12 19 26 198' M .,.......,. h ..a. f BALZ. ~ .... -~~ ......... ~, busi~ ••. .... WEDNESDAY. JUNE 2!;,. 1~11' ~ • . . • T~ "°"' No\lambaf~-.... i.~) Costa esa, twoEgreat a .. v..... tBEe Ru.aGrecERlloOnsN Os MITH of Laguna Beach Laons
REJUVENATION WITH FLAIR. whleh time and p4.ec. ....... ... .,. lftllWm -PfO'™ :;:; ;;,;.--of d au g h le rs. r tn an Cl b and s Ca herlne
8281 Klamath 0r1ve. W•tm1n1ter, pub11CtyopenedandrMdlnBldg c. ptue coata70_..!"'~t. " Vechun of Carlsbad, Cali. • TUTHILL MORTUARY u ' t. t CA. 92&83 Rm 381. ~ wnn m,__ and J 11 V 646 9371 ' Church. Reured from the Tom W 1n1nd. &281 Kl91Tl•th Or.. Eacll bid lhall remain yllld 10< • Pdll.JC NOTICE TM baMflc'*'Y Yftdaf u6d Deed fomia acque ne lt'ra • Uruted States Air Foiu in
Wastmln""· CA 928&3 period of 60 deyt •It• tile dale of Tn.111t ,_......,_ aaac.uMd end of Costa Mesa He was past 1951• ~"" m both the
T w lfland apecillad for IN receipt of bid•. flCTmOUI 8UIMll ......... to tM ........... • president and a member of FARLEY World-W .ar -"" n and t""-om 11._.. ....... 1..... The Board of Trust ... thll1 be NAm ITATIMDfT wrltMn Declarlltklft .. ~ 9"d ALBERT W FARLEY ~ Thia •t•tement wu _, ... 1,, ,,. tfle 90le judge of lhe quality of TM foltowtng per.an 19 doing DeMMd '*' .... 9"d • """"' Costa Mesa N ewporl · Korean Confbct Mass of
County Clef1I ot Orenge County on equipment ottered and r....-vea the bU1inna u Notto. of DatMlltt 0Md Elacdon to Harbor Lions Club fOt' 38 passed awa) June 17. 1984 Chnsuan Bunal will be held
June8. 1984 ,,..,._ rtgM1oreJect1nyOfallbldaandto a T. E SANDWICH DELI. 2300 ...._Tha~cawedtMd years a member of Ella Surv1ve-d by daughters Wed. 8 AM at the Saint
P bllthed Oreng• COH1 Dally ••Ive eny 1rreou1ar1ty tllenlin Harbor •30. Co.fl M.... CA ~to!'_ Def,_!!"~ ~~-'°ty Oub. of Newport Harbor Chris Hopper. Marjorie Cath--Ch··-... ' --·-ft u ,,,., 3 lO lt•• Signed Allyn E Aowley 9282e .... -........ -"' ,,_ --· Cam ._U. Al n. J ~ .. ,,.. un:I1 ....,..,._ Piiot June 19, 26. J .... , . . " 1 Purchasing M1n9gef K• lCUatl Nguyan. 11'8, Cot· .,._. tM,.... Pf°'*"' la lioeet.d. and the Santa Ana Golf and PUllC' ta VIXOn, oy Beech with mtttmient foJ.
1 __________ T-3_ Publllhed Orange Coat Deity Piiot lender. Fountlln Vlllay. CA 927o& Date:,,_. a, 1... Country Club Serv>eeS bv Mitchell and Carolyn Whitt.
PtalC NOTICE June 12. 19, ~9&• r.28 inJi:!~alnns,. conducted by· an ~O:Z~ITMENT CO~ lhe Ne-ptune Society. Satur"-10 grandchtld~n. and sev· ~ol';';-: at M~~;1M ~
Ke>CuanNguyen •MldTrue... day.June9.1984.ashesover e ra! great-grandc hildren. MORTUARY . Laguna ~~:A~=· Ml.IC NOTICE Thia •1atemenl wu flied with '"-1111 TOWftand Coune, M., autte 1 M'a MemonaJ Sl(>rvlce5 will Also survived by sister Beach Ln ch.arae of~
The totlowlno l*ac>n• are dolno ITAftmNT °" County Clerk of Orenge Counly on ,_, Offtoa Bo• 1GI be h eld June 24. 1984 at 10 Erma Qwll~n. and brother ments 494-9415
butlnen u AltANC>OMllNT Of' ua Of' June 1 1984 F247l01 Or~*-AM at Lhe Neljhborhood Tilford Farley VlSltaOon r~;;;;:::;::;;:::;::::=:~
MERIDIAN PACIFIC COMPANY F'ICTmOU• __, ..... MA• Published Orenge Coatt Delly ~~ a.n L.• Vofl A.Rhltant lee· Communnv Cen\er CtlV of Tuesday 12PM-8PM June
10112 Birchwood, HunUngton Thetoltowlngparaonahawa.ban-Pilot June 5, 12. 19 2e, 1~ ,.._,, • Costa Mesa. 1845 Park .A\'· 19, 1984 ServlCeS Wednes-
9Meh, CA 926'6 doned the UN ot the Fk:tllloua lkdl-T ·2 f'WtlaMd n--... CM t D II d 2PM J 20 1984 P Scott Leo Abarta. 1&892 w .. t. neu Nern.: THE LITTLE GAZEBO. -·-..... • • , enue. Cosia Mesa In heu of ay . une . ·-
wood. Huntington BHeh, CA 1733 WHtcllff Drive, ..... Po,, "'9ot .hlM 11• .. ~ s..,.. r.a flowers. donauons ma' be Clfl(' View Memonal Chapel
926'7 BMc:h. CA 92663 made to Orang Countv E~ F4ll1Uly request m l1t-u of
CherlH Leo Ab•rta. 10182 The F1etiltou1 ~ Narna r• rtalC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE n -nk. 1001 N Tusun Av· flowers. donauons may be BirchwOOd. Huntington a.acn. CA. tarred 10 lboWI WM fhd In Or-noa ---goo "--·-Seni 928'8 County on S.t0-82 F'ICT1TIOU8 llU ... 11 IMtlM enue. Sant.a Ana. C A 92705 sent' tb The ~ 'or
JoMl)hlne LN Aberta. 101&2 ALE NO. F-119755 NAMS ITATl.•NT FICTmOOI aua•H ---Cltiums o{ COC'Ol\8 del Mar
Blrchwood. HunUnoton Beach. CA Petrtcll LIMM Giimore, S377 The folfO'Mng per.ona wt dOlnO NAMI ITATE•NT TONJES o r Chddrens H05p1tal of Or·
92948 summer"t ewct., Co.ta Mela, CA bU.tineat aa. The follOwinG panon " dotf'10 ORMAN LYLE TON JES. a.ng• Paafac y1~ Mem·
Tr111 bu9lneat II condUCted t>y. • 9262e 8AAROS PIZZA. 7SM Eellflger. ~.. ~ ~7 of Fountain Vall•y. ---• Park dtrecuno, 3500 generll 1*1'*"'1P Nic:tl John Aono, S377 Sum-Hvnlinoton 8Md\, CA. 12647 0 . C. COMPOSIT~ 105 E 18th Calf n......i J 17 100_. u.... ·-e Sc:oU Leo Abarta merMI Ctrcta, Costa Mela, CA F & M Garlblly Inc. ff221 Mam-Streat. Cotti Mela. CA 92e27 I ~ une · iro-. Pacific Vaev. Dnve. New
Thi• •lalemen1 wu flled with the 12828 moth Cir , El TOfo. CA. 92130 OOfothy M etettt. 1302 LlllMide Surv1Yed by hts wife Carol. pan &ech, Ca 644-2700
Coun7 Clark of Or1nge County on Tttte t>uaineal WN c:ondUCled by• Tttl• bUlllneA ,. condU(lael by • Ln • Hufll~ton 1eect1 CA 92948 a d au i ht er Kathe r 1 n • --
June 1, 1oa. V41M'alpar1narahlp ~tton Thlabualnaaata~by'" Lorf'nl.lnt, sons Jeffrey. PENN l'M1'1a Patrtda Unnae ~ lltenlt Clanbay, Pr...oant ~ Publlllhad Oranoe co.at Deity Thll •tatement wu lllael wttn IN Thlt tt•*"8nt wu Ned ,.;tt1 tN Ootot"Y M Qa'1l 0.vtd and Chns Tonr. •WILLIAM B PENN. t'81·
Piiot June 19. 2e. JU1y 3. 10. 1914 County Ciani of Ortinge County on County o.ttc oc OJange County on ThlS st111ema111 wa Ned wltll IN Sl.Slt'r Ardyth Rmg. and a dt!nl of Woodland Hills,
HAR80lll L.Ad-ill'T. OLMI
Mof'tuwy • C.~'91'Y
Crematory
182S Glslef Ave
Co•t• M.a ~0-55~
"°" M0"4Ell IEU•OADWAY
MORTUAU
,10 ~ct.way
Cott~
6'2-ttSO
T-H May ff. 1N4 May 21, 10M County Cleftt of Or-. County on brother Loren TOOJ!!S. Mr Calif PUiied away Junr 17,
----------..L----------1 Put>llthael °'~ eoa.t OellJ ,__ Mey 1'-1M4 ,,_ Tonp was a membec' of t.M 1984 Survt'll'fd by hu wtf~
Pllol JllM 5• 12• 19· H , 1914 T-1 ~~. ~?,H. C:: ~ Not~. ='t ,~ 1="' NC t.A (NatJONl Q)n. Betav. ch1tdnm Ro&abnd
I Al TZ al"~"°" W ITH & TUTik.L
W£STCL"' CHAHL
•1~ E l11h S•
Co11a Mn.a
T·$ 27M-t4 U'W(\Or MaMgmlflll As· smettr. L8'trr Penn. lra
oc1at1on). Amf'rt<'•n • Pf'nn, Rita Vorfer and
J...e.aion, VTW. and K.lJ\I of Sharon C«chak: 9 van<'·
FICnnoul .,..... Glory LutMran Chuf'('h ctuldren and brother Jadt
,....8,4 ,.-.n Frl<'nds may call at ~ Pmchanaky. ServK9 will
The ~ par.-i te OOlr'O Mortuary W•dnuday ~ Mld 1'Uaday Jww 19,
~ • Noon-8 PM Funttal ~ 19 4. 1 MM> AM at the
OAAHGfi COAST WINOOW Thurtd•~ llAM at Uarbor Lawn Mcmor1al CLIANINO IEAVtC£. 3!0 t89t Or-n ~ A'flt. u. 21. ~ Waver y urch. W1\h an· Chap!I. Wllh intiament .,..
CA tat70 terrnent to= at Fair· w. immec:Ua\ely follow· ~ O Allln ~ w.t· haven M orlal Park ll\I ~rrices und the ~~~~~.. hannon· . O\&.,_l Oi.rect.ton of 11.arbor l.awo·
lndMduel d.ir"l.'C"tonJ.. 137 . Ma~ Aw.. Mount Ohve torlu.ary, . ~°'::".:.,~ "*' .,. Ora.np. 997-1234 ~().~ •
Co.dY can of ORtwt Countr on -DAY FRED IU ~ f. 1.... E J . DAY. a l of FRID Jn.m.1a..-tv""~'
...,._a Auul •• , -. ,..,.,, N•wport Bu h. PUHd Sunday Junt 10, l
411'1 c..,. °""'* away Jun.-I~. 1 A 'I. 100'1. A ...,........._CA._ ~rv1' bv her h ~t of pan ~u ~ 3 1~ Ch.vies Ii: Day. Jr.~t'htktrfh C. Di of \hr
t-H c y Jr. m. IA-ol. ot ~ rlllt"Uft .
1'
C.•6 t.17,
/
ln•ex•
Diiiy Piiat
•
C4 Orange Coast DAILY PILOTITuMday, June 19, 1&84
NI.IC f«>TIC[ y: ilti
NOTICa OP TMl9tt 1AU Tl• 1..aU_.,SI
'IOU ..... CK'AUlf UtlDP A ono ()fl TMllT DATID 11101111
UNU .. YOU TAO ACnc»t TO "'°net Ye>4;M IMC#£M I y. IT MAYM l.X.OATA~ULL
IP YOU Ml'.EO AN llCP\..utATION Of THI NATU~I Of THI
~notHQI AOAIMIT YOU,
YOU IHOUU> CONTACT A UW-
YI! ...
On 0711 llt-4 ti 0100 PM CEN
TRAL CAPITAl CORPOAATION at
111• duly appointed Tt1.1tt .. under end pwsuant lo O..CS or Trutt r•
COfded Ofl 0~/ 14/8' u Oocurnenl
No 17CI07 Book 14057 P-o-530 of
Official ~d• tn tlW office of the
Recorder or Orange County, Call-
lorn•• executed by MA)(INE L
LARSON, AN UNMARRIEO
WOMAN WILL SELL AT PU8LIC
AUCTION TO THE lilGHEST 810-
0ER FOR CASH, (payable •I time or
sale In l1wful mooeyt ol the Uniled
Siiia) 1t THE NORTH FRONT EN-
TRANCE TO THE COUNTY
COURTHOUSE 700 CIVIC CENTER
DRIVE WEST. SANTA ANA CA 111
right. lltle 1nd lnle<ett conveyed to
.snd now held by 11 unclet said Deed
al Trusl 1n the pr0()8fty Situated tn
'JB•d County CallfOlnla dHCrlt>tng
the land theretn
PARCEL 1 Lot 18 OI Tract No
9565 on trle Coonty ol Orang•
State ot C1utorn1a • i>e• map re-
corded in book 40 t pages 6 10 9
mctus1ve ol Mt"41tlaneous Map9 1n
tne Olhce ol tne Count~ Recorder ol
said County
EXCEPT 111 m1~ra1s Otl gas pet
roleum other hydrocarbon
sut>stances and all underground
water in or under or wnlch may 0.
produced lrom said land wn1ch
unde<'hes a plane p31 allel to and S50
leet below the pr859fll sur1ace of
said land tor the purpose ol pros
pf'Cttng tor tne explorauon de
velopment prOductton extraction
ar•d 1a1<1ng 01 said minerals, Oii gas
petroleum otner hydrocubon
~ubstances and water lrom Hid
land oy means ot mines welts. def
11cks anOlor other equipment lrom
surtace toca11on1 on adjolnmo or
fle•gnt>o<ong tand or tytng outside ot
uod lano 11 t>eong understood that
tne owner ol such m1~a11. Oii gas
J~~ .... ----.. o!t. ·su~tanee~ .~•.'l~·~fi ~
abOve shall have no right to 90184'
ue><>n ttoe surface thereof •b<>Ye said
plane parallel to and 550 feet below
·the present surface ol tne said land
lor any purpose whatlOever. as re-
'8rved tn the Deed recorded June
27 1978 on book 12733 page 2~
O'f1c1al Records
PARCEL 2 An excluSI .... ease-
menl tor Sldeyard purposes over
lnat portton OI LOI 19 or Tract No
9565 on ll'le County ol Orange,
S1ate ol Cal1lorn1e as per map re-
coided on book 40 1 pages 6 to 9
mctus1ve ot Miscellaneous Maps, 1n
the Office or the County Recorder or
said County descrobed In para-
grapns 6 (Al ol the Supplemental
Oeclarahon recorded 1n • book
12155 page 1905 of Olfic1a1 Re-
cords ol Orange County Cal1forn1a
as shown on E.tt111011 ~c .. attached
1t1ere10
PARCEL 3 Non-exctuMve ease-
ments tor access ingress. egress
maintenance repair dr11naoe. en-
croacnment support and lor other
purposes. all as described tn the
Restatement and Agreement ot Re
s1roctoons and Reservation ol Ease-
ments recordeo m Book 11894
page 121 Olltcoat Records. the Dec-
lara11on ol Covenants Condtllons
and Res111cttons recorded m book
11963 page 889 Olhc••I Records
and thf! Supp1emer11a1 Oec1arat100
recorded 1n book 12155 page 1905
Olltcoal Records
The street adOress and other
common des1gna1ton ol any of the
real prooerty descnbed at>o11e 1s
purported 10 t>e TAX PARCEL
:837-142 35 278t5 Higuera
Mission V1e10. CA 92691
The undersigned Trustee d1s-
cla1ms any hat>oltty for 1ny incorrect
ness of Ille street address 1nd otllet
common deS1gna11on ti any Shown
hereon •
Said sate will t>e made bul
wttnout covenant or warranty e•
press or omphed regarding ttlle
possession or encumbrances In-
cluding lees charges and expenses
of the Tru5tee and ot the trusts
created by said Deed ot Trust to
pay Ille remaining proncopal sums ot
the no1ecs1 secured by satd Deed ol
Trust to w11 S44 700 00 w•lll
interest tnereon from 08/01183 ,,
17 00•1. per 1nnum as provided 1n
seod no1ecs1 plus all oosts charges
and any and all advances $342 tO
w1tll interest 11'\ereon
The beneltcoery under Hid Deed
ol Trust neretotore e•ecuted and
deltvered to lhe undeta1gned • wit·
ten Oectara11on of Def1ult and De-
mand 10< Sale and a wrttten Nott0e
ol Oelault and Electton to Sell The
undersigned cause<l nod Notice ol
Oeleull and Election to Sell to be
recorded tn the county wflete the
real property os localed
Date 06108184
CENTRAL CAPITAL CORPOR-
ATION
BY Beverly D TaylO( Asst Sec-
retary
Central Capotel Corp
Po eo~ 85511
San Otego CA 92138
t619l 237-Sl60
Put>hshe<l Orange Couf Deily Pilot
June 19 26 July 3 198•
T-30
Pt&.IC NOTICE
K·11fn
ORANGE COUNTY
HAABOA J UDICIAL DllTillCT
4801 JemborM Blvd. Ste. 101
Newport a .. c:h, C A t19eO
P ain11ll UNITED GRACE
CHURCH 11 corpQratoon arid
<;OMITE INC a corpdretoon
Defendant DA GfNf BROWN
ING INDIVIDUALLY ANO DOES I )(
•nclusove
C.ase No 637•2
SUMMON I
NOTICE! You have !>Mn au.ct.
The court may declcte 9111tnat )'OU
without yovr being heard unte ..
yov rffpond within lO day•. AHd
1"41 Information below.
11 fOU wtsh lo Meir the advoce ol
an eltorney 1n this matter you
'hould do $0 promptly ~o that your
wrotten rl!'SpOnM' ti •riv may be
hied on tome
,,, VISOIUlled Ila 51d0 deman
d11de El trlbuma. lede CS.Cldlr eon•
Ira Ud. atn 1~a • menoe que
Ud r .. poncU «Mfttro 0. ao din
LH ta tnfonn.cloft q~ algue
II yov wlafl to ..... !tie ectvic. of
an attorney In 011• malt9f, '°"
ahould do N Pf0fft9tty 10 t"-1 fOUt
written reeponM, If any. mtr M
flled on llme
II Uated dMM aollcltM 91 ~
MJo deun~ettftte-·
to, d eberta hac arlo tn·
m.dlAtt-te, de Mta INIM'a. 8U
,..,,_ .. -"' .. al hay 116guna. ~ -,...." ... tlempo. 1-TO THI bl"NDANT; A ctwtt
comptatflt hM bMft ft1ed by lfte
s*ntlft ao,Mnet ,-. If rou wfell to ~ thle IMreuft. '°" ~ wtttitn ao dayit .,,., 11\11 14>!nmonl
11 MNecl on you, hit with thll cour1
1 Wfltten r .. pon .. to ttwt comp1a1n1
Unlesa you do, your d«ault will be
ent~ed on apsHicatton of the platn
hft tnd thl1 court ma'( ent• •
1\ldgttmenf 911atn1t you for Irle rellet
d«nanded 1n lhe c:omptalnt, wfllc:h
GOUid '"ult In g•r11lthment of
wages 11111ng or mQMY Of proper1y
0< other rfl4i.f req1J9tf!'d 1n the com
plaint
Dated F•b 10 19(14 J PtTERSON, Ci.tk
By LORI KNIGHT. ~ty
l&ITfR '· WKAU.IY 1U1 W. 08f1leine lf\00, a.ro-.. CA. tan
(211) .......
#)\if)l!llhed Ofenge COHI 0141y Piiot
Mat 29 .kin• 5 12 IG tt14 2133 14 ----~---·
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TH E 0 ILY PILOT
CLA.'. IFIED Of.Fl<:E 110 HS
T t4lt>phone Sef\ frt·:
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8 :00 \.M.-5::i0 P.\1.
Businr ... ~ Counlt-r·
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CA ~CE L L\ T IO'.\ &
CORR ECT IO~ . :
Cann•ll at wn-. and 1·orrt•d11111-. 111a'
he madt> on -.anw d1·adli111·-. a-. tthm t'
P lt'a e ask for a t·ann·llu t ion
number "'h rn 1·u nct·ll in~ \t>tH act .~~n.,~-)tjiE~R~ROR : ·i ~·~~..,~'
I errors im.mediate .. . f'fi'~,....1)~~n.Y
P ILOT assumei, liabilil~ for the· fir"'
inforre<'l insertion onh.
L CLASSIFIED 642-5678
lnan fer Salt BHlff 111 1&11
Y llatral lOOZ Gtanal
LllO ISLE 101 Yi1 Lt41 S.1~
lOOZ
p
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Prestigious Bayfront Villa. 6Br, 7 1Jz Ba,
pool, spa. large boat docks, $4,850,000.
Channing deco Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45'
lot. pier & slip. $1 ,100.000
214 Yia ttt.aca o,. 1-1
Beautiful 3 Br. 2 Ba. playroom, fireplace.
be~m ~ilmgs. Xlnt financing. $420.000
UJSllE HIVE UlFHIT COllO
Jetty & Bay view. newly decorated Mai
Kai. 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio $695.000
llYllE THRACE
1133 t1l1t11 Ttrrac1 0,1 1-1
Panoramic bay & ocean view 4 Br. 4 Ba.
patio. pool home Fee pnce $775,000
'flllSIU HIE OCUlfltOIT
Ocean & Jetty views, marine room. 4 Br.
3 Ba. 3700 sq. ft , car parkmg $1 .285.000
UYSllE PUCE UffHIT
Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br. 2 Ba up.
2 Br. 2 Ba down, 2 boat spaces. $1.350,000
UllU IUCI llLLSllE
Panoramic ocean & city view, 5 Br 3 Ba,
spacious entertaming home. $1 .100,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
]JI Boy,,cJ .. Or.v• NB 67S 6161
-------------------
YOUR AD IN THIS
SECTION IS
REACHING
108,777 HOUSEHOLDS
261,064 READERS
COMPARE*
OUR CLASSIFIED RATES
DaHy 108 777 25"'
Pilot C1rcu:ahon "'
Santa Ana
Re(ister
Newport
Enslen
The
Pennysaver
49,000
Circulatton
52,000
Ctrculahon
80,000
C11culatton
per thou~nd
63c
per tllou~nd
soc
per thou~and
49c
per lhouund
Rates Based On 3 Lines -7 Times
• Bued On Com~llng
Ge: 759-9100 ---_1l--'.J ~I ' '" • • .. '' " t •
CHI CLASSIC
PERFECT LOOlTIH
Rtducttl to Ult,000
' Bdrms 3 baths includes
m<Jster su11a an<J large
tam1ly room and o ll-
s1reet parking for up to 7
Cilr s Only 4 doors from
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
USTSIDE
Well located Costa Mesa
pool home with 3 Bdrm 2
Ba and brand new solar
system This propert}' 1s
now vacant an<J lhe
owner is 9e11tng a bot ner-
vous Full price 1s only
$155 000 751-3191
C::SEL€CT
..... PROPERTIES
FIVE NEW UNITS
$382,000
SPller w•ll sell or exchange
EicellPnt upside po1en
t•al All units air con-
ditioned 1 bedrooms 2 '
batro su•table tor owner
occup;;ncy Four
'>P3Ctou-; '2 beClroom 2
oath .ncome u1111s
546 2313
THE REAL
ESTATERS
THE REAL
ESTATERS
GOING, COING
NEARLY GONE
<;11<1rp 4 Bdrm 2 btlfll
Co~•a Me'la home tn
mo1rP " on<J•l1on Large
corner 101 101 poss.Ole AV RA•E CDI TRIPLEX dCCPSS tncluCles wet bar n
& 1..011ered patio See this Near beach Ow ner's
More for Your Money penthouse has 2 Bdrms.
1tome at ort~ $115 950' den O t hers always
646-7 t 7 i rented always clean
Orov~ by $368 000 THE REAL
ESTATERS 1 11iwHJt it t1c ~rs
Re.Jltors 675-6000
l•YESTORS 3 Br 2 Ba condo only Move a mountain of
$95 ooo 12 50% 85_ merchandise w1lh c1 ass1-
'lumable 1tnanc1ng Fan-lied 642-5678
1as11c rental great write-
olt amenities galore• 2 Pl11no
pool!>. spa clubllouse
SPCurtty park-setting. ONf of tun•f
walk to So Coast Plaza
and new music center
Lo1r. Jacoos 644-6200
"ltl t ....
o II
More tamlliel ere getting
the Cfamplng "bug" this
year If you have a
cempef that'a not getting
uMd. NII It now with •
Classified Ad
For Classir~ Ad
ACTION
CalJ
A DAILY "LO'T
AD.VIM>I
'42·5471
let U1 Help Y 11
Sell Y 011r Propertrl
The Ody Pilot offers you this euct size ad
on N "PictUfe Pi ct" weekends fOf just
S2S pet day. °' 2 days for S45.
Mllit 1 picbst. Of we'I photocraph it for
,. It • ~ thlrce.
Cll ......
642-5678
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7
8
( • Attention I E " L u c I ~~ Businesses I I' I I
A Fl ctltloua Susl neaa Name
Statement flled wllh th• County
Clerk Is valid for five year1 efter
wh i ch t i me cont i nu i ng
bua l ne11e1 muat reflle
Publlc.atlon It nece1 ary only If
lh•r• ere ch•no•• Cell th•
l•g•I Oepertment •• the DAIL v
PILOT for lnfor m•tlon •nd
neca ... ry forn41.
MM321
J.
I WH1SO I ~__,,,.._,_ .... _ __. Altlll .. ,,.,.,, .,.., o1-a11119 1· r I I ; !My,..,., MCI lftortl, •,}l'>M.,I - ----· e11ov«1In(fell/\111 re "I c I
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642-5678
FURNISHED or
UNFURNISHED.
HEALTH
CLUBS. T£NNIS
SWIMMING plu\
much more' Sorry
no pets Model\
~d
Ap•r1mtnts
Newport Bud\ So.
1700 16th Strttl
(•t Oovtr)
642-Slll
..
plu9 lhe IRYINE MIRROR
lt1d the HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER awry W.One&clay at no a it tr a thatga!
CALL TOOAYU ...... , .......
Your Dally Piiot
•S...vtce OlrectOfy
ReprfffHllal~
142·4121 tll. IH
·n1 , ...... ,, 3112 ltl .......
Or c-t DAllY PILOTIT ........ Juno 11, 1114
r
............ ..............
:~·~·r,· "~· ~
Won't lu1. Dr•tleMfy r• TOPS$$ ANSWERING SERVICE BOOKKEEPER FIC Nwpc CNtcl CW• In yoU/ftotne. GENERAL.OfFK:ECL.EAK Hol;t sttt CHEERS 1i8
.duced S.&Oltt. Bel llland F~ pr.t. Models and T~ operalOf. Vari-ecn BldfMel(s perMWI ., Femitylhomey enWon-FuM-tlfM. M...f. ,.,,...., Gtend OpiwW1g 1127. tuJ . t ·2liL/llAIA~ll!. ~ • · ~ f ~ c. . . • ~"l/ltl!A't--M~-. . . ~:::'.".=1 II w_..,;~,·---~-• ~ .. ~ "' • -c:MIU ..... ~ I #' -;oo:=====-""-.l iii=iimif'"'il~~~l.,.'.:Be~-~~· ~~~=~-1 plus phon••· Salary FrlM IMtur-esln• cal Mar~ Hot91 ltaAl1 Hll B1kE SA~o. O.C. Appt Seti•• !-9 siootwtt open, Send rftl.ttM to s1ena.'an. 7 ~ GENERAL omce ... ,.. - -$121< + Inv 993-2231 . Jlm,P.O.Bo112990,New-' ...-NEWPORT PIER 11re11 992 50..a . guar. ... comm. Good por1 Beactl Ca 12tle0 Co~• CHEERS HI cept tor smell ... dcin &1111 11 In
l ••llllllllllilllllliiiiiiiiillil llOte Of of11c9. lmm94, -phOne YOlce. Will train. ' . lunch, I llnlekf t c.i Npt. Typing, tlling -possession. 673..6640 Newpor1 Devek>pel" nw11 No Mlling. Call anytime! lllllHPll 842~™• . phone -.ry t m9dlm EnO~ .:-=:
W-•-d J zo C I I par1ner with S400 000 7S1-2382 pfl 16-25 l'lt$ per wtr. •KMk>n and proftt IMr-Ing, r;u9" ay, •De ••aerc I c:Qh Of credll Hoe . ARCH. DRAns PERSON ~ Bueti ... tirtn.'. ~· FfT Of PIT Int ptan. 1 girt ore ~....,. ~~o~ ARIF.S (Mar.21-Apr.19): Temporary delay will work in your lnl1l1 ztll to~ 1oea1 pro;ect. wllilnt 9'dtls only. '°' Must ha.,. In_ office all shif11 84-2 .,.'"'°, PCM 175-0040. l:~na B••Ch. Ma favor. Check source material, bring references up-to-date. Major wish 16040 Harbor. F.O. _845-6648 sp•c::• pl•nnlnQ firm. e11per. Reta req d. c.I ..., GENERAL M~u"ougti 411...,..11
will come true. You'll get story behind story and have access to .. e'll:tra 1240 1q rt. women! 11 unlquebualneu 261-6040 71•-•76-1976 COUNTER HELP w.,,ted. lnleN9'1nQ opporWntty to EOE ·
information." Scorpio. Taurus persons play paramount roles. Aoeflt 541 • .5032 Y°" Will entoY Window lllTI .. SILIS ea.ta Mw ...._ c1ot-.,hooeMWtt tor,..
TAURUS (Apr.20.May 20): Get ideas on paper, submit format or CANNERY VILLAGE Security Prod'• 979-4e24 ASSl.rll SALA;( PitJS. OutQ06no Mt-1713 01' 511-2924 tlonallr·known pro-Hot• ....
p1an sorely needed by professional superiors. Romance is highlighted, 1140 sq tt . $800/mo, IM. AW1Y 1 AM. MacGregor a enthusluUc·...._ per-DECORATE INTERIORS fflalon.i wtdt ftrm. 1WI 11111-aa.
you'll travel, you'll make changes and you could meet exciting Avail July 1. A9k f01' P•t• laftltatal ~~ts, 1631 Placantia. son/store model with co1or1oestgn. PIT. to ~..::::, ~ AIMI
individual who sparks creativity. Vir&o figures prominent11. S4&-e646 « 842-5200 ·ua 4111 · · tuNon n• ~ tor 11wt. w• train. 77s-&447 ~-2fl How9 Ful & P.., ..,,... kw.
GEMINI (May 12-June 20): You'll get ··permission' from one Shop1St0<8Q9/0ttcspece Baby9itt• neeOecl '°' 2 our ••clUllW women '• DECORATING /ART ~imll Mon~ ~~ =.o~
associated with zoning, basic rules, regulations. Quarters can be 300tqtl«mol'•,reu. motM/wll beg August. d•••oner boutique. SALESC.eeroppty,wll s...··~ ..._ •· Laguna 9ellCfl Maota
ex...,.nded, remolding can get underway. Be diplomatic in dcalina with C Mes.I C-2 54&-7249 S3000 rNnlmum, no llmH. call Kristy •I l5o-3027 F!tlme. Must be respon.-trein. 49~9754 pei'-lic:e of any klnd ,. ~EOE · ' ~· -1~~~-~-=-~lsJLYER S2500 mini ••btat rallable. Pl•••• _._ °'*.,,. .. '*'9• ~=~=====,,-family member. Money question will be resolved, there will be no need •COM dlx 11 .. dt•.AC, .mpl : ~· 8'>Ply In per-an: ALEXIA, lllJftl1/P/1ime .~.--iMlon ••c.ilent 1£-.:p'd tlou..cl••"•r-•. ' d ' ~, •-$225 2855 E no llmil, call G. lfvln. ...... ,,..,. '"'"'A , AA...... ....... , 10r 1spute. ..., .. • "'" · · (7t4) 851-5955 or (SOOJ -·r .,_, "· ..._ ""'"' DeliWirtvoew'1terstobua-•••llB ~ In • Must: he"9 own car. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Shake off tendency to be gullible. Coast Hwy. 875-8900 432 -7505 7AM 10 8PM • .... ..,.,.. Caring old9 1nOMOulll to ,,....· 1ri Org . .co. St swol111 'c-• omc. at-t.Mw. Muat M ~
Stress factual information, refuse to &ive up something of value for Ilise. lt•lal1 ff2S weekde)'S. IAi&t..t&, ceM cw• tor my wel-beha....ct tion wagon prO\lided, moephera OMMng OHL'f o.y. onlJ. Cel Connell
mere whispered promise. Mcans~rotcct self in clinches, especially Rat1rfldcoup1ewlMtf-con-~ I.et tr•=:-!'""• 1•~yrotddaughterMTW uoel. drMna red .. Ml wlthPf'~Filll'.,... 950-4111.0 __ · If I• ..... 24 \ ~· a.... 1n my CdM homa. trMl.Appn.!tncs.yM-t~t'°" pM9M cal • a those of emotionaJ variety. Pisces 1gurcs prominently. • 1a1neo 27 fl air-strum • '" •ThlUf;;n, G75-5lZ9 F $4.50fw 155-3&.13 Kekll, '(7141 7$21"4!I085 -
LEO (July 23-Aug.22): Focus on responsibility, intensified wanl lutl·tlrM IPec9 nMr Liw AHte 1111.IM 1l 1lttl 1 Mt Ownonslfatota.~I• trom tA.M-3PM. Mon 8'Q CMron borne. N.8.
relationshir.,' chance to ""cash in" on specia1 talents. Be aware of Orange Coast CollaQe '°' Prime Financial Servloea '".....,.,fer Hsy C&SllEI your .,.._ f'it~ c. ttwu Frl. ~ u-'.:0: :0.,~ M
contracts, egal rights, basic values. You'll be dealing with persons overnight stays 2-3x per 557-3512 ..._ Ful """-· lndda wll:ndB. nee. 14..50/lY !»41<0111. •-------
associated with Jarv~ O"'""nization, tvoecibly with law enforcement week. No hoott-ups ~~· • lo Goocl pey. Growth GIRL F~Y ,flWI ote Hou••k••P•t nve-Jn, -.,.. ·-r--Will contldef any ........,.. t1t1~n, II.ta.••"• canons. Apply ii'I person. D~NTAl: ~ .. perlen.ced. $5.C)Otl'll'.~sHB,.... mMur• tern.. in 9000 agencies. bllity . Call collect T.D 1 4011 ._hi-rt•-..a-.." Metro CW W..ti 2950 highly motil/Med RD.A. taninL .._.,,._cs health...ebletodrM vtRGQ (Au.,.23-Sept.22): Define terms. finish what you stan, 1213)373·19~ • .. _ ...-· _....... ' Hart>orBhtd.eo.tiiMeu fott..,,.,oriantedH.8.ol· Cel&42-43t4. ...i.,....o4ts-e111.'
realize that sclccuvit)'. is of paramount importance. Means choose the Aaaiucmnli 3112 W~N~i6J.8*.:i:: Beauty . ;:d ~7::*'· c.11 Dr.
txst -don't sacnfict quality for quantity. Accent on spcciaJ SPiAtTOXC REXDINGS No cr.Olt ..... no penalty. HAIRSTYLIST All wu o1 peope, me _liiiifii:-.;iiiiiii,-1 appearances, publicity, avoidance of conflicts of interest. AO'l6Ge In Ail Mattars 1 Denison Mw 873-7311 &. MANICURIST clauitifd ~ to ... al atM.11-1
LIBRA (Sept.2J.Oct.22): Stress individuality, independence. COunsellng. 1815 So. El 8albo8Penn.e7S-t4'
7
IOrtsofttliftOB..M2-56
71
· Interested in teem ~,.iij~:::nf-,i==~~=~~= ability to get job done by using your own techniques. You make Camino Real. San Clem. 8111 W1at.. Siii A'\f,\fllV ted Pllfton. 3 days to Slllll"'!R'I
favorable impression on peers. associates, co-workers and employer. Llc 'd. 492-7296 •IMIDPll* 51wt, will uc:i 10 4 da)'L Si £•ti
Promotion maybe on honzon. Member of opposite sex wants romance •Splrili* P1)'Ctlk. Ad· •RE.Al ESTATE• ~~~ed-=of· Ullum_,. a
andlctsyouknowit. vilOf & Cvd RNdel'* tor real ••tat• Cle·· OPENINGS Feat grOWing (KouM-1~ •• ~.=1•=•1••·-:----SCORPlO (Oct.23-Nov.21): Emotions dominate logic. Some. of Past, Pfnenl 1 futur•. \'elopetlhome buUOer. to Mflll ~ s.'W::e) lode· eo.t.11.,... Ar-. MM to
your "'inner fccling.s" arc on target. Be aware. alen and perceptive 675--2495 01' 631'8964 hand .. payat>+es and r• Q UR Cross c:ownlr,. caw. lie :tf,~:::*R~m&~ 12 Noon. (2131 '31-3177
enoug.h to .separate fa!=1 fro~ fa~tasy. Focus ?n s~lation, plcuure. ..... I r.... 3114 ::.:.·=· =-'.!rt.:~ FOR ::: Cl~ • ~'*;" PEOPLE need oNy aipplyl 8nop danlfted-ow •IOI'•
children, strong relat1onsh1p ~th one who 1s physically attracted to 1160 REWARD for Hime-knowl9dg• or generet Yacht-. 163 1 ~11e. * 551-1243 * ,,..,.dcleiaa. 642~5178
you layancatlostlnEastbkJff. ledger good typing and TEMPORARY I ~eo.~·~•_':'M~-~=-~~~=====;ii;i;iiii 'SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dcc.21): Highlight versatility, travel. Long brnllan hair. bhHi 1G-11.Ystdll1,ptusbeW9ll 'Earn up SlOOO/mo. Sell
communication, ability to put ideas across i~ !llanner that pleases even eyes Seaipolnt 780-0809 Ofganl!ed. Real ••t•I• n•tionally known proct-
thc "opposition." Many of your ~l quaht1es su.rae to f~refront -FOUND Adorable ~ ~-:n::_:q;! HELP POOL ucts lor •PPI call
individuals previously indifferent will now express interest 1n !hat you Chlf'lual'IUa m1... brown cation. Send ,...,.,... to: 14M547
--tam'.'" Vic. ·-cc:1M area. do. say and-ihinlt;. --.. ... .. . . 497 7 24 THE 0. HILL COMPANY ELECTRONIC TECH.. Southern cafltomle dalty new5-
CAPRICORN (Dc<:.22-Jan.19)o Study Sagittarius message for11iiii_ii,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ATTN,EDBRIGGS $4 52/Hr -112/lor paper needs experlenoed desk
valuable hint. Be nexiblCt keep options open, be ready to bc&in I• One upper Newport Pia• • • Know ar'9k>Q dlQ!lal TTL ood I and
rebuilding program. Your talents will be appreciated, your .services will fOIJND ADS Nwpt Beach. CA 92660 tape I dtlk arr... trouble ~ne wt!ttpng sk:~~ SOme
be sought and many of 'f:ur views will be vindicated. *Ul.11* Applic~tions ~ccepted Monday =:' .!'.~S:~ ::.'!:. ·-
AQUARIUS (Jan.2 Feb.18):Youreceivtwritten~o~cccon~-·RE FREE y~ ~am-IC cosrooeny thro ugh Fric:Lly OMEGA, P.O. Bo• 485, Comfeatupetre ,;:'":at~ryso =u=~
ing paymenu. collections. f!ocus also O!l crcab~1ty, vanety. n • · • (tune 18, 19, 20. 21 & 22) Sunse1 Beach, CA 90742
complimenurcceivcd from membenofoppos1tc se51~1fic_ouldfibeon Cal·. ~!:Ci~ ;t_thin co! From l :30 PM to 4:30 PM ONLY eflts. EOE Aepty ad #400, CIO the way, it is likely to be perfumt or cologne. ttanus 11urcs mtsslOfls). cash dally Secretary Orange CO.St Qajty Plk>t, P.O.
prominently. . . . 142 Hll 8'f'Bilable. 4-5 Hour work me SECIETllY Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA. PISCES (Feb.19-Mar.20): You'll be asked for op1n1on rcgard1na: • day. Medk:al •l'ICI Dental • 92626.
design decoration color. Lunar cycle high, you·n make valuable \~~~~~~~~~I Deneflts. Oper1'no 3 new Cilsonte 1s a maJOf suppltel' ol automobile Hefldquertars ottloeol TM1';::::;~~~===:::::i=======~
contacis and some'ofyour ideas. will~ transfo~ed i~~o profita~le IFouncl: Dog. Blk tern PoO-~::rO:~~~·i::;:::. air condibont-n for Nt5SAN (DATSUN). We : ~ =fo:I~
enterprises. Taurus. Libra, Scorpio natives figure 1n exciting scenano. 01a, blind .ye, 1urn0f on u.ats. we·w m.oe 11. let will need fndividuals 10 work on a tern-., EJ.ecutrte54o'etary 10 I ' 1•11 P1•111• Jaw. Call O.C Anlmal ua llhoW you hOwf Ask tor porary basis for an 1ndef1r11te penod ol time the Presidel'IL Posltton
Sa-er l talali tt Office lt1ta11 zt14 Shelter 548--3087 Mr. Ed. 556-1000 The assigrmeots involve ert:he1" hght hand requlr•• ou111anding
••• lall 2tOI llaatt IHI b -e..ia-Found: Wl'llta dOQ with 1.0. ltoHlll ,., .... Olert -~-..."'-~~on°"' ~., Shift R""""· shorthand anCI typing -::,;;;;.,.,.,,,,.,,,,;-.0 1,....;;--..-,....,....-'."~" I H -Newport B.acfl Anlmal For • growtng Orenge Co. G»'C'." •..,.1 .,_...,, ~ ...,.. ~..,-skills. Prolllciency on BXLBOX ISLAND N B. step• 1o bMCh. M· NewpOrt1~t~ '!'!'.... , ~·~-~"'~·~ ... ~~"'-so=,..,= 1 Food MFG. 1 ,..r ••· rements ndude good •n:endance. abHity to work processor• cMlftrdt• 2Brtum.Slaepa80<mor9. non smkr, ra.p a nNt. Mrvloe 14/_....._... i;-speak English. availability fOf poss.1ble 0\'£'1'· plus Loitely office with LAY I UT ARTIST :S3001wk. 875-2910. $280 no utlls. 873-0390 or 873·t700 evn. LOST 31,.\ mo Oki Ger. perlenoe, oOOd Denaftta, time ard must be ............... lly a1* to W()f\. congenlal atmoSPhef• ~=======-! Shep puppy blk/bm lost (714) S4G-1671 .,...,_ plus a11ceuen1 benetil
E/slde C.M. lludlo, avall. NPT ICH lg rmlba, YU, Ulll mt.111111 FBINiewlFair 675-.21153 from•~ JXJSlllOn ttwoughou1 an 8 pacilag9 lncluOing medi-
1115. Nr beactl I shops. ten/spalgym /poolletc. llWFllT II.YI 11 llT LOST 10 m•Mi a-rm•n U•HllTMTM hour stVfl cal anCI dental 1n--.nce :P'f't yard, PfkO. 1700/mo. Nlcal $375/mo. qulat New SIOg, can hand .. 2_3 .. .._ .. 1 d. D*flt brWn. Red lllllTllT •net profit sharing Appty Orange County daily newspaper bas
:tnci. utlls. 842-2045 n0t1/lkr 631-0377 people per office, 1575-;;:;;: Right aye t\u a toD1rect0tOfMrttgtor ~1e•nts whom we"''~ to 1nterv1~\ in peraon from 9etTI to an opening for a quick la.yout artist.
lftWPOr1 Beech deluxe, PARK NEWPORT me. bf, 5&75. Sec . ..-v. avall. cataract. REWARD ln,,..tment Flfm In N. 8. will be contacted at a la l£'1' date bv our 4pm at· Candidate must be able io WOf'k well
-19Cel beech. sips a. P'f't p'lf ba-tennl9·1P8·pool Open 9.5 M-F 642-3998 842-7259 Supervisory and Personnel ~rtment. CALSONIC INC.. JOLL V ROGER INC with sales people and meet daily dead-31ar. w/d. 1750/wk. PP grn ball 840-1489 N IMQ coordlnlltlng 9 Hollrwl !MM CA 1704 2 Giiiette A¥e 1_.,_ ··==';;''.'.'~-88'~9:.U-=::-ITWirNCO.ni~;on;;;I ftWFHTIUll Lott:Setofkayion respon91billliee·T9qUirea ' ' • 1rv1ne lines. Basic know_...,. of ca.men ~ 1 MIF. N.B.,... ocwn w 1680 sq tt ground noor OfBngt cord on BalbOB stron;derlealand (714)250--0331 ready art, t~Yina, and the capability f1!:~,:~.~~~ s:~ hm. BR, be, a.n. gv unit In anrectlve, well Penlnaula 873-asa& ·~~~· bacilg~~ .... ".!:>.::,. DltfC1lONS: Take l·'l ro Lake fOJest E•1t I ... ~~~~~~~~ 10 mark up' ~you-ts for --'uction a $850548-6784/261 ·2123 maintained, modern LOST·-.,.-. .,. .,,..,...,Pfal . .....-,_ .. , tum '~--• on Lake Fore!.t left at Muirl.a~ I· FILI CLRI .--:glass wee, elagant turn-In I.Me .... ......,..... Cheek 553--0940 ,._..., must. Additional projects may include lture aM atras, gardener, Rmmt wanted, lo lhr :lbr tHdg. q t ~~ )ured 8/14. Santiago Or !;;iiiiiii'iiiii;i;iiiiiiiiil and Right at MarcOl"ll to Holland An Equal Part time Mon-Fri 4 hrs "-__...... and--•--~.-~ d 11 2b•du-WICdM.$400 Ho.o Hospital . ....._..... 142-6878 no.--.-,...; Employ L~11:..... Oyen. ua-.:uurea.mas:-~pra-1rg ............. rf/tf · ave .....,... parklng. A/C, garages .... ..,.,.... ...... ty er f"w• " prday rtolble. BOOKS ~ate June to early Sapt. mo. Tlm&75·4299 tvmtg avall. Vicky MS-4800 OfbRew=~.,~.~, .. ,..=,~ooo=~ .. =m..,.="°" ld•ert1S11' , 1 ON l APE. 729 F•acl. entation visual&. 1-2 yean ~
. 851-3073 Rmtetoll'lr28t1b8aplnf &45-3323dyS. Matt .... 'Sweetie'...Jean n' • :::1:A• ·SONIC INC. Costa Mau 5-41-5525 -newspaperpreferrecl.Sendnswne
OCEANFRONT • Weekly bch In Npt. N·•mkr, S40-74300f641-1707 1 •I I l'¥t. Nm too 't!250. NleelY !Urn. 1ar99 S245Jmo + 12 uUI. Frink OCA!rportarea,0H1pl9C9,I---------nSSIS an fl ~BR. Call 673-4743 646-9841 ...... •fl 8 l25-, 163 sq t, lot• Of SCR·M-LETS to;iiiiiii!ii!iiii!lii!ii!iiii!iiii!tli!!i!i!'!!!!!!!!!!![ll•iNeeded lrntnacl. part time ORA ~CE COAST DA IL y PILOT ;;;:;.,:::,:c::::...c.:....: __ ll;r.;;;;;;i-1;:-.w;;;;;; .. ..-1Hit!lilll prtlng. lantton.I & all utlls n W• ha .... .,., entry ltvel CIRCLE I 1a11m f'lelp doing floral .-r-.-
... I ._ ltata 1 181 =:1::; :J13,~ h. •NSWERS poaltiOn ,,..allable tor a ~19g Must M ..... ~:~s P .O . Box 1560 • lnlall ... , Englneetfwril•. 41 , look· . • n d•p•ndlbl• P•fSOn c own " ,.... ___ M .... CA "2626 • tof ql.llet bclr &75-6376 .... tor Ell!•--.-1.11 • cDM. 4 et. 2 be. fU11y IUrn =.nmeni wtt~._; MUIYllW Huatle·Uncle ~:'"V:.:' ~= beth btwm .. -6 pm Attention.: Ua Smtth
hml. TV. phoM, 1?8Uo1 2 )"Hl'ty, on BalbOa PllfVI, LAl•lllll Showy-l.Mtly and spedal -~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~==· )$110 beac::h. A'f'a1I June-Catt JBIMt 873-3348 1, 100 Sq. n. upstllln. 412: CLOTHES di.Illa Pf'O-
Oct. seoo .... toy + dep. N. eou1 Hwy. 11eoo. Att• .......,., ..... o1 Jeets. Good 'Y9lnQ •1111 ~
,_.,.r,..•llons raq'd . Offin L9i&fl Hit mo. 642-3"8 WWW'lg dlr'\Y )Mn• and :i.~ta.""Z'dve=: NOW · .,,..,., '"' w.1•w &, A.a. on1ce. --..... :,-::..,·.~~·= .. PO<'"""'· .... .. Kl>S-EARN GREAT TRIPS All> f'RIZESI
....... .. $1.30 aq tt. •50 sq ft appro11. hetp It," he rn!Jt1.-ed, "I sume ot c.11: HIRING • 2111 Agan! 541 -5032 S4001mo. 1005 8rioeo. ren out of CLOTHE$." Mtilltld9 "'-*ert
.JUrt $300/up ttpts dfapm a/Cli~C~.M~.~S~50-8533~i:-:::f~hil0Ult~~~;;~·~t~fl ._.., .... ~ apt to ltlar• w/ma.. 17301SNch,11un1lngton P.O. IOli t$90
l300 + \It utltB DP Nice Bueti M2·H34 .. -.... ---Coat• Mlila. Call. t2UI CASHIERS ,,._2A0-3t57aft5M·F · a:••,,.. ~ wtctewottcta1-e111 {714l"2"-432:fex 302 1850/MONTH tor ... ot 4 ,.~-,_ • AA v trmm1aMIFr.poreetlYB oftlca suit• or 2+t iot llWPllTMld .....,,...,,,_.., .... eges
eireloh1. non tirflkt 9ht lrg contetence rm. F0t mMt-
•bd flM LIO· Boh. OOMl'I mum expoeure 'J04ll B9i '* Approa, 540 aq tt 'Ni 1rnmeo OOCNP.1350 & out ront ctntrflfly 10c11ed '* 2 tte p\ll. ob"4th
$300. 417...aaS IU•l off Newp«t 8Nd 1n f8CeP' ..... tM1PS>tYnn.
Ateyou0\'a'401ooklngfof C.M. fP..1501 •114)9cenltoN .•.. • ap~pluahPlelOelO WAlKEA&LEEA.I . AtNittlCCNt
M? 1350 ~ utlll., CAT APPf'O• l50 aq fl con;: '* U?S.00 per month
O.K. f45-14*1 ----·· I• 1111 CfM"laU•n f9'fl ••ntM. cMlra.17&SOr.,.Ave,l~~~~~~~~~I P,of/n-.tllrto.._.~nr CM. SIQO, Cell hllYI ~ Y1C 8c:ft In I.al• U2tlmo 044-2270 ot IM~tt•1 lltl _
Ind ut.._ 494-"3H1 Approa 100 •ft• rt . ,....,, ,,....., "° 19' « IMl
Jl1F :tit to ...,., tit to ~ wtth cteM & monthia ,.,., no ~
'ftnt HIOUpla. Yu, cteck, Chair• !'It 17th a~ dtipoe6t I00-1'00 llf. --•a->• stOOCal __ .. ,. -- -bb. '...._ CMocl --6t§K IPAC[ anr-9k1*1 .... 'Viet ~ f'NI of ,,"mor. A••ll .,...Jrwttmtorientedf'll. wnftd._.Of.....,..1)01
. now.~2"4420 omoe. PU frtinklln l*t ~ UncGIPI,, t ~
Ha• J9'I ,._, today'I 7ll-0414. ,_. Ul!O ~ Aft? tt not, ti1 clau1ilid do rout ,_,.,. --"II ._ .._. door •to-door sell Ing WAHT ACT10N?
........ In tOIM'll 14a ..... 7t, C Dad Adt 141.-71
•
.., ......
Clerks
. ........... . {19
.? ,,.-,
lnten11ss1dllytrom 11:00
a.m.-12 noon 81 1390
Norlh Plldllo Coeal Hwy.,
Uguria -(on PCH a ~)
Cll (714) •tt-9233 lor """'lllfo.
/·
................ .... ann..
11112'1!1 .......
517 •.-
c.ta lillN,Ca
(714) 131-MOt
I.al
I I
--(714) 548-7058
l j '/ /
..
-
Coat DAILY PILOT/Tu ay. June 10, 1984
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS '
1 Famed 111ohn
6 Located
11 Waget'
14 French GI
1 ~ Correspond
16 Yel&neme
17 Youths
19 Driving
hazard
20 Music
5ymbol
21 Dregs
22 Auto type
24 Courage ·
26 Painful
27 Get back
30 Invented
32 Separately
33 Melody
34 Statute
3 7 M1ma1ure
38 Coagulates
39 Possessive
40 Orama part 1
4 1 School group
42 -Carlo
43 Burning
45 Flew
46 Deed
48 Gt\/'Els help
49 Kinds
50 Curves
2 3
49
56
60
63
4
52 P I volcano
56 Triply prel
57 Lack of
PREVIOUS
PUZZL SOLVED
congrully
60 Bus abbr
61 Oslo nauves
62 -up '~
63 Bread type
~ Cupld11y
65 Keys
DOWN
1 Spread
2 Bustle
3 Disturbance
4 Story with
a moral
5 Owing
6 Aspect of a
personality 27 Pro -
7 Molding 28 Imposing
8 Samovars 29 Woman
9 Snare singer
10 Way down 30 Picked
11 Contusing 31 Cereal
12 Aun away 33 Mollusk
13 Jungle beas1 35 In fronl of
18 Manna unit pref
23 -Touch of 36 Cigarette st
Venus 38 Social group
25 Oult routine 39 Ogres
26 Coats with 4 1 Sealing
a metal 42 Halfway
5 7 8 9
44 Healthy
45 Prudent
46 In motion
47 Banal
48 Fell pity
50 "God"s
Lillie -
5 1 -Bowl
53 Indigo shrub
54 Skin disease
55 Table parts
58 And not
59 Diamond
stat
12 13
_a._1 .. r _w_u_,_ .. __ s_100_ Btlt Wutt4 5100 Btlt W1at .. 5100
;lel.,.1&..iiili!.;:;:gs.M-._.....o1l""IM~ ltlt Wu... 1....,,.• ___ ...._.._1_1U_1tt_Ua_•_H_1_1 ___ 1 ~iiiiiiiml.._. ..... __ ... 1;.;0~l.;t1 &1 .... lue.W bm, 1!i1t!!4
IRIPT/MI. lfflll S r•tlJl'Y Cocker pup•, AKC. bul1 n% OFF memb•,•hlp C.mPtf ehell, IO bed mini Jb.U IHI :.;P•::;-.;;M;;:;U __ ..__ .... ~
Mottvat!Nt, ruponelbl• nPllT/UOOTillllT m let wllhot1 1125 ~='~1?:1.fi:T· f0< ft\IC\ Blue ttlm, ll new 80 RX7, df g!')', nu tlr ... ~iiiiiiiiiii
lndlv A curete Publlshtng Compeny anrl, •t•r•o oan .. 11 ~11, l (5~wpm), tlffd•0 J!!JMd uv. ~· Dobiepupt, r • AKC. reg, Eucelyptu.1 fjrewood. 11 Ol loaded M900 979.2050
ptlOMt var~ dut1" aon ..,.,.. t~P·.-¥ -ch•mpfon IJn.aa. eht•P PleaH caJI -.,....---:=-;;;.;.;,.e.;~= N W1>Qrl Bdl .,.., Call PltHant phone de-633·3397 aft 5 wknd• 8'1·2250 a.11 oner Honae ~11Pf ... 111n1 cond Ktr ltaa 1149 CetolfM 8<45 2251 meanor C111 752-S.74 _ -Sl75 obO 831·8984 -----· ~--OOLDfN RETRIEVERS, 7 For 1mmed 11te· Chatter ii I / 1978 MBZ 4'50 6L. 2 topa,
HOIPTlllHST ltn, lta. lfft1lltat wka, AKC. rn .... $276 (Gold Cara) mernt>er1111p, "tttllJ' ti •llo • S 19,500.
Newport Bffch lnvHt• FT/PT •11••· wknd• a Cell 840-0295 Magic Ill nd 8<45-M84 lcetlert IOll 642-8931 "*" Firm ,..qvlNa fu4t 0 ,._.,_,d Nfft ~ PUPPIES! $20 ind aholl GRAVITT Machine Vtf· fff mf 12G mtflt 'l'O. 21QS1.....auto, ale. 2
llme Receptlonlet 2 •nee & hendwrltlno Gotden ret milt dltflngt lalln• New $450, l.lkt 2i00 M, S2'40. 8<45°-7814 top1, 981< ml, S15,750.
Month ustgnm.,,t. Pub-Apply lo pe11on. 25~ Mom• 882·2793 New S250 769-1208 . 631·02~7 11c Aet1t1on1 lmege, N1wpor1 lvd. C M _ ' _ '79 Honda dtrtb1ke 250CC --
poaru.,. lllltude, confi-~lllPPtft IM -RhodHlll\... Rldgeb1cll Jotu\ W~ T.nn!LCWb 1todlrmp S5S<L7~1--119 :SO~~TD SWgn6000oodbO
dent.poised1ndwetr1kff· Va.&n• PU~Px•· 7wke old Mbrshp 1850 873~571 Po AUTO BODY v -cond, CUI 1~;.E 0
led In ttt. 111 ot deellno Part time Mon-Fr i 6-'46-2 14 ---•"-' UPI 846-52""'
1 N 7 30AM-1PM S. p/hr · -On Fiie C111b 2rjwtS116 & aeootert: COior match, -with P~PI • 1 on BOOKS ON TAPES 729 SO CALIF DOG TRAINING Wall Unlt wood, e<>ic72'' boely & p1ln1 8f2·9693 '82 380SE. Sll119r/Bk, llhr, rpok..!' 65 w"p~e exper ff er ad. Coate ...... In home obedience train-lie MW. $360 675-4130 .. t I 10:40" 19M ml, mini to30eded PP Y '··· · 548-55253 1ng. Reu rates 15V. Oft ... fr .... rMI $29.900 831·63
TMlCOfP 563-0940 ---this montlll 963'3388 -s~~· 8.!~.y ~~i&r'~~ QMC '184. 38' 351. 146 oil Merceda 280SL ., 1 2 ..... u tis RECEPTIOllST •-e· 1010 78&-2•19 fuel tentc, 200 water. lfg tops. automatic. AIC, 180GClf.Hlt~d.muei · STUDEITS ,.. lf!H -~ -eleetr frig, color TV, CB, lmmac cond. S17,000, Ful~~1~;5~!ys 2 5, ... .,, 1 wtmlrror llllaieal la1t. 2H A/C. 8''°' kw generator. evesl]14l 494-0471 sell. s255o obo lnYHll $150/$190 Pedal Sew BC RI h M kl 6171 M.any 11tru Knltty 1ow --662-1130ett4PM RESERVATIOllST SIMMEl .1111 HWU Mach S85 648-6308 aft 4 S7So o~. G~~gR~ f:ect V: rabbit _:111r "WARNING!" itffi ltfct HI
for excluslv. privet• m~IC W• ha~ openings for A Ar11tt S350 557-5637 tu re y ho~: ~50 :o-Privately Mtuno yoor car '80 Sliver shadow. iOW mi .
club Poltte phone man-~ys 6 girl• Id be~ DRUM SET, all hardware. 673-3885 772· l80; can be hazardous to your xlnt eond .• MUST SELL ner and outgotng per· ·1 years 0 w Ag -s325_ 080 875_8828 -·--__ wealthtHou&eoflmports p P deys/818 9111-9140
sonallty a must Com-~venings &. Sa:~rdiy~ All sizes A to Buy Refrfg. Trtlltra\ offers highest value for eve/213 '472-2177
put er Input e11per help-arn money• r PS Anderson Appl 8-41 West Organ Hammond T400 w/ Tiate 102_.. your pampered -ful Call 675-0900 btwn bonuses Call 19th St C t.,4 8<4&-5638 Leshe/Rhythm, 11lnt cond 'I Mercedes SILVER SHADOW l9&9
tOAM -7PM Mr Rountree Dbidrletr1g 23c\.I ti 1375 -~1~ obo 714 979-2627 •72 CAVAltER TANOEM Ask fer Ptttr/Ray Sa~oon Sando"::~
Reslauranl 141·1011 Wsht/dryr S135u Swv1 SEVILLE· CLASSIC Efec-AXEL. 28 f1 long, fully DIAL2t31714MEACEDES Beige teat.,,!-_0080e&'
LUNCH SERVERS Mon.-Frl 10•m-3pm d .. •k A"r S85 . 641-3001 trlc Guitar wl case. amp, contained, exit cono HOUSE OF IMPORTS Inc driven datty .... "'' S4600 Ready to nve In • -1~" -tl ~s E'l<per. only Apply 2-4PM F 1250 W h ,· S200. David 646-5'400 s.46-848t p t I 9155 ~H._•"'""".,...~~~~·~ Bob Burns 37 Fashion SlllEI JOU ng s r dryer ---... , • I 177 s .. b 99. pwr 1tMf'1ng. tstand Newporl Beach STUDENTS S t45 ea Chest Irv S 175 Yamaha guitar Ma)or tire ·94Paiim1no Pony sleeps 74 504 Wgn. green, redl-aulo Iran. eeu, 60K ml OshwrS100 64&-5&48 safeS150ea962-75l9 8 UMd3wk1S600below als $2000 firm Sieve 527500bo 54,.421111
llETlll S•lES $7 85 pey ra1e FIT with -------.,.. v • ma1or company Need I IUY •PPLl•ICES PiHff/0!· HI 6221 regular 6«·!379 642-6080 or 6•6-13 t 1 PIT FIT Person for Giii • • -9 -S "ara flll7 Store ,.94•8218 car Openings in ell LES 957-8133 Starr Con• Plano Plays Aalff Waat.. 020 Poncb 9157 .;.11;;•-..-.--~--·-arees Right applican1s t $850 w k SABARU
SALES easy make must be 18 ._ qutcl< to KenmoredryerS50 ~6~-~223.hm5~67~~ ICAS•TlllYI "66 912 Porsche New "77 4dr.4X4.A/C $300-500• per week learn. U S citizens Call west.er $25 5'46--0318 tor vehicle 551-8285 pa1nt1orig tanQ91lne ctr s 1975 111t111 646-6413
Cash bonuses daily AMI 1-.tPM only WaSher & Dryer. l!lnt cond TV1 ll•it, $5000/obO 964-2629 -91 9
for Steve or Chuck Mission V1e10 495-3315 s100 ea 953-6607 lttreo 1232 WE llY lHO PORSCHE TUIA Ttyota
53•-1460 Hunl Beach 964-2890 25'" Manevox cOlor TV. CLEll CARS Sliver with black Interior Pi;8~1"t .. e9rce...,.1.""2!""d"!'r·. '!' ... ~p!"!d,..,"'!.~J'r,
SALES/HUIWUE The Crow·s N"t Yacht Frtt to Yoa 6022 Console Cab xlnt cond AID TllUCIS Loaded -Best In Orange exit $3900 obO Must
Full IJme pos111on in retell brolle< need• weekend • FREE Adorable k11ten1 BsJ olr 964-0673 Co unty el $26.750 sell 751""303
hardware store See Pit recepl • Ille type To good homes BNYttful 25 · RCA XL 100 (704ZPO) VtllilWIJta--9173
Steve H W Wright Co 673-8511 5'48-8071 ,,, price. full wrnty Open lllYllE llHRT ctlTEll ·65 vw Ffanel Ven. runs
126Rochester,CM THE SAIL-LOFT BAA & Freetogdhomecute baby Sun TVJohnt&.46-1788 714-380-0330 good $600. OBO
SALES MANAGER GRILL above the Jolly ICllttlf'ls, Shlh-Tzu doO 2 INtl CLarter/ '83 9Z8S platin metallic 5'48-2559
Women·s Illness center, Roger tin Leguna1~~h 18 yrs 648-0290 5'48-120'4 lea't • 7010 w/bll< leather int 17k ml .66 Bun nu rblt """"ii)(i(i"
salary & comm Call tor accep •ng •PP ca ona Asking $36K showroom Runs" xii, look~" greet •no• Wed-F.rl from "2-5 p m .; ~"5 r""d (805)322 7508
'-: ; l ~~M -JOJ• tt . -~!!: Y~t . -""'-'.-• -$1400/bo 962-0607
Part & full time for BAR ~~;~rr. Chair, xln't ~-=:-S3s0 Wknds or ~y:-'t>lacove · 6~~-·.·~itt~~fi-~ ... ~~~J.~~~~ijijiji;R~M
retail store 675-6567 BARTENDER Cock tall Tbll. lncld Lane CalU Islands. Barefoot COME IN OR CALL FOR alarm. digital emlfm ftQ· af
BAR BACKS Tbls. Lamps 964-0673 Challers of the Carib-FIHAPPUJUL casa. pin striped, '72 VW BUS gOOd cond .
SALISPEllSll COCKT All WAITRESS Beauttlul lar,.,. framed mlr-5bean haveC come to Connler-Oellllo IMMAC $19.'499. PI P. Dy 100K ml $2200 Dey/213 Involves sales & rentals of HOSTESSES ..-ou1hern alll. (7141 CNmOLn 558-3944. eve 497-3726 539-8490 E/6'42-7261 I I ror from Cannell & Chat-642 8339 sot water & dr nking TABLE WAITING fin $110 675--0141 -18211 BEACH BLVD L 121 '73 CA•1 PER WESTFLIA water Car necessary. BUS BOYS '11 PtrlO•t m Salary -. commission SEA FOOD KITCH SUPVR Dining Tbl w18 chrs. $850 llYSSH 1111n ICM HUNTINGTON BEACH 5 o hler, fully optlonet sharp. reel cemp"X
Reyne Water Systems BROILER MEN OBO 675-4130 New 48' Custom Motor 14l·IOl1; IU-3331 equlp'd 35 K ml. ~~"2·-o10x7915°~,~~~t88S22837
7 141250-1811 OYSTER BAR STAFF Yacht Avell. for Harbor, (8'41075) A Beauty at ,_ ... .,_ C I llY flHrTlllE Day or Forever Crutsee. Wt WAIT YOlll $32 900 ______ _,__ SALES PERSON. retall an-ontact John Geyer , 400 S Cocktail voyages from . '82 Vanegon Westphelte. lique store Includes South Coast Highway. LE 957-8133 5400 650•7099 _CLUI ISEI Cllll lllYllE llPORT CEITH pert cond. stereo &
week.er.ids Salary plus I Laguna Beach, Ca. 92851 King waterbed w/book See Ronald Dace 714-380-0330 alarm 675-2279
commission 957-3989 T.Y. IEPUT11flT shelves. stOfege. S450 a..11, Gtatral 7011 THEODORE incl nigh1111nd, melt. OWENS Ught heavy welgh1
SALES P /T • FIT S&USPfllOI, Fill heat, linen 673-5244 single racino shell, pe11
Retail-& pubhc relations TIME llHS TO IE exp helpful Student OK ' l111t1ot1.rtr'1 Salt cond S 1800. 494-5'469
ROBINS
FORD
646-8891or675-7383 ::,~:=:i $11.11 Ptwtr lo1t1 701
Sales Rt,1/W•tltsalt PlllfEllllEI. APPLY II Save S<W. & more on new 101F!'1g d1ngy6 hp EVlnrude, _______ _
Hol new beach cover-ups 1op quehty bed sets. ell S950 obo 673-3•60 Yau
2060 HAR80~ 8lVO
COSTA M E SA t.>41-0010
from Hawaii Liberal PEISll. IERl lllM& fullyguar Not 2ndsor re-12 ti Power Boat. motofil'!'.W'P.P"'P'"~..--T ... _,""
commission for pros llUIWUE, 2111 builts Twin set. just traller $900 673-5235 Black. cpl & panellng
Conlact RARE FORM llARllll ILYI., COSTA $69 95 All sl.zes avail $2000 II 642 3295
Vtlbw11ta 1173
HAID·
!O·
PIBD
lllEldDU'I
JOll U.S.A. TODAY
(71416-46-9464 Free delivery 53'4-5080 14" Glaapa;-wt trtr & 65hp __ rm __ -__ ,est C11trtl o,1r1ttr IHA Mere S850 s.4_5-7506 Aatos laport...i MUAIH &OWi SNIP - -MUST SELL THIS WKNO --
THE DAIL y PILOT is now K;~~8?f;' o::c;adnts :,~~; Xlnt POSlllon for exper Waitresses CHEERS. HB SOFA. 2 pcs. Org velour 18 ft Duffield Elect11c Bey
SOUTH
COUITY
VOLISWllEI
"WEWILLIOT
IE lllEISILI"
Adult Camer Team Earn
$400 mo or more
ONLY 5 DAY WEEK
55.t-7338 8am-5pm
JOLLY ROSER
Laguna Beach
accepting appllcahons
WAITRESS/WAITER
(lull time exper I
HOSTESSES
11ndus1nous-attrac11ve1
1 FRY COOK
(full llme ntghts)
Apply Jolly R09er •OO
South Coasl Hwy
Laguna Beach
KNITTERS
Wanted hand-knitters. lit
or p11 Call 786-279.t
LANDSCAPE GARDENER
Exper Engltsh speaking
drivers lie amb111ous,
clean cut. 645-'4635
UHL SECRnARTY nee<le<S for temporary full
11me worlc In Huntington
Beach law firm Musi be
experienced Call Christa
al 8•7-6041
l E G A L
SEC TY /RECEPTIONIST
t Years exper Good spell-
ing ablllly Type 70 WPM
Word processing helpful
Salary commensurate
w exper Non-smoker
953-20, 1
MAIL HOUSE HHS:
CUSTOMER SVS REP
wlgood communtcatton
skills for adverttstng
accnt
accepting applications s900.s t tOOimo lnler-sales person in busy Lunctl & breakfast, full or Clean. almosl new S 125 Boat A· I cond. Asking IMW 9112
tor District Managers lo view by appt only bridal store C M I par1-11me Students 0 K Bst ofr takes 951-2551 $8500 646-9726 eves ·f4 3.0 CSi European
supervise newspaper 646-74" 1 859-5559 · · 546-1821 847"4394 On sz sofa couch Great 32"UNIFLITE 'SpontiSher". Sport Cell alter 5pm
carriers Must have van LLOYDS NURSERY Secrelary WANTED E11pupholsterer cond Brown plaid lwtn 270 hp only 400hrs $7900 OBO 675-7588
wagon or pick-up Good • I minimum 3 yrs o -hercolon $125. Lge table Sleeps 6 Newport shp 77 BMW 5301. 4 •pd
salary mileage allow-PET SHOP-repllle whole-*Escrtw Storttary* per1ence .t9'4-77.t0 lamp. occ tbl, dee s:K_.1ntegot1able owner sunroof atr. casselle ance company benefits !>ale r 10 o k 1 n g 1 or Immediate opening In --pillows 552-9759 6~0 42 and bonus opportunity t>nerget1c flt worker Irvine area for lndivldual WAREHOUSE manager __ __ 10.000 M1 reblt motor
Apply '" person at Daily Previous repllle or pet with goOCI clerical skills a Toots sales Co has re-Sofa. loveseat. chr & ot-42'CAL 78 twn dst. radar, $7000. Rudi. 892-"722
Pilot Circulallon OHice shop exp pref d Ask tor musl Will lram varied qulrernent tor a were-toman wl beaul oak lnm 2 VHF. AIP. 7' r KW gen, 81 3201 xcept clean 811 330 Wesl Bay Costa Jenntler 835-7.t 18 responsit>ihlies Good house mgr lra1nee appll-Brown tones looks great frzzr much more MUST lac opls • xtras S 12 500
Mesa Monday thru Fri PETS LOVERS NEEDED benef11s Salary open cant will be responsible Paid $695 will sell for : fall L9S t -P9 t.-o de~ Ye•s 650--0610 or 642-8SH
day No phone calls Vaca loon pet care '" 26 l -6222 for shipping and rece1v-$350 921-1419 E 0 E peoples homes 1~ your Ing. inventory control. 1n-S 1-1 --h-. & 213/<172-2177 C HllT PROILEI!
* MASSAH * No exPef•ence Xlnt salary
546-5•31
MA wl'l<·ray permll or CRT
lo work wknds & relief
work for summer va-
cations Call 631-3999
MODELS llEEDED
662--0675
MOYERS
Looking for Physical work
Need to stay m shape 2<1
yrs or older clean cut
polite & couneous Call
S1erv1ng Actors Movmg
" SECllETAIY side sates and some tool 0 a. oveaeai. c a1r area can earn you h19h repair Shipping exp and tootresl Earlhtone col-·77 Re4nell 8 meter-rein· We carry leases OAC
income No overmght E~~~~:~~ ~~,::i~: 1~~~ good mechanteal abthly ors exit cond Will sell forced bollom (new) IEW llW 311i
stay For 1ntorma11on poshng GOO<! telephone required Call 645_8582 $275 921-1'419 Twin eng & ouldrs comp 5 s,11, air, lllrt•f
send legal size sell ad-d tor appt Sofa. Navy/rust. exit cond reworlled-ell new w1r1ng, * 1211.11 * dressed stamped presenlaflon req ball & ells $23.000.
envelope 10 Pampered Pleasanl working en-Jolts W11tetl/ sev1s7/5w"'nJdo8d51.1-97~000-1d3a'4ys8 $16.000 flnan avail OAC . tax60mo CEL
Pe1s & Plants Inc 1616 vironment Nwpt Bch "-t• 5107 " " Owner 975-0412 BMW residual of $8275 et
Victory Blvd Su11e 201. John 540-1111 .,., .... c so11ciOli<tbl.aeats4,exll ·821111 AQUA SPORT 60mos $300capreduc
Glendale Ca 91201 SECRn••y CHILD CARE. loving mom cond $150 760-1348 evs 1st mo pay plus sec dep "" will p1cl\-up & deliver your wknds 851-9400 wkdys with 70 HP Evlnrude Bay plus lie to start Phone sales Madd benefit
shell F 11. pll Exp nol
necessary 4/hr & up
754-19.t 1
PHOTO LAB COUNTER
PERSON Exper pref
Pan time Snapshot 1 Hr
Pho10 call M ll<e
646-2.t24
Fl•AIAClll PUlllll child Call 964-2467 Cruise & Ocean Fish •11•1Au1 p•"IFIC Seely tor Financial Plan-White Prov Bdrm furn Incl Shore mooring posllbte • n --
nlng Oepar1ment.-N B Cats SSOS desk, 8 drwr drssr. 2 lhell $8500 Obo 673·•354 LWlll CllHIATlll
Investment Firm Typing -Hlmelayen kittens. • bkcase w/2 drs Creme ·84 ZOCliac. 18hp. trlr llll 4 222 Oral t 501 velve1 sec1 12' w/o1tmn ~ ·• I min word prooesllno lovable ball of fur Seat Pt. Beaut cond .. _ ... lter-$2500 645-2850 exper Shthnd req Cell 12 wk CFA ...., Shots ....., Shelby Cheek s. r...,.. renean col table, 2 end Boat traller 1T American
TMI corp 553-0940 Metes 5150 648-8132 Ibis. lllle nu Make otter $600. Work 971-9988
Persian Klnena S 125 & on all or par1 640-149'4 Home 673-5541 ~~
co ~5-30_650· 1310 Pill& RESTHUIT sEcRnARY s 115 Ad11 s25 5•6-9965 ~z --PACIFICA ·~
Non-smkr. HB office, Real "=a 5510 Jewelry • 14 -77. exit cond s250.000 Estate development ... ~..., _____ ....,...., 26 Cts of assorted uncut '476-1192
Selet--Servlce-Leulng
S,.olelittq i1
llrt,tll .... ,." •1&11T HllTOR Summer help 18 & over
AND 673-1366
RELIEF CURI Plantscape Co 1nt,-ex1 Som~ expr helpful. but ma1nt. Planl exp req.own
not nee Rtghl attitude trans 751-227 1
important Apply in per--son 9-4pm Rodewey Inn PRIVATE POST OFFICE
1680 Supet"lor CM PIT accurale lyp1ng OC
PACllllCUH
Matl order company Will
tram Apply in person
t 8<180 Band11ter Cir (CO•
ElllS) F V 963-9881
airport area 549-2287
REAL ESTATE
ADllllSTUTIYE
&SSISTAIT
Grubb & Ellis reS1den11al
960-6591 AIC WS natural E.MERALDS. Only
Male/lamale, blacks end $601! 6'40·8688 PHTIIEll W&ITll E11cellent Selectlon of New SECRETUY/RECEPT.
Newport Center home
based bullder needs per-
son w/grea1 personality
tor front office Phones.
1yp1ng, errands. general
office duties Fun worl<ing
environment. excellent
b~nefits Salary com-
yellows. $250 8<16-4955 40 Ft Viking, diesel, and Carefully prepared Rotex Pr";', Piaget Poto loaded. lk new, N.8 slip. Used BMW"s always In
You ~n't make It to ttt.
big game next week?
Don"t let your Uctlete go
to waste-buy • llttle ad.
Lots of sport• fans read
classified 642-5678
Must see $300 ~~2!_! $537 mo plus equity Stoct<
llli1cellaa"a1 6211 96'4-7222 or 673-1074 131-3111
30" x 90". 3 copper SOiar INtl Sail 7014 208 W tat, Senta Ana
panels, need glass. Any 12 11 hallboet. Must sell. CloMdSunday
offer 83 t-2825 $500/bst o1r. 875-6-'405
mensurale w/~1lls Akins --===----=---=~--,: 18.Bayhner, cuddy LARGE SELECTION OF
cabin $4500 obo 774-5002 NEW & USED BMW'S! Development Co
644·6690
PART TIME
CASHIER/PHONES
Fashion Island 720 0255
brokerage division. New 1-----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:. port Beach is seeking a
d~yt/772-0348 eves. Liil IUC• llW VOLUME SALES
C&Plll SO '1111' SERVICE & LEASING
PART TllE TO START
SECRETARY
SENIOR
All eQUIP w/lnbd, 9 ... 11.. 3670 N Cherry Ave
suited for Npt Bch/Dene LONG BEACH
Pt (213)598-9-441 d1y1 (No Chtlfry exit-"'06)
SECRET ARY Typing. lite
bookkeeping
MACHINE OPER Folder
burster inserter labeler
Con1ac1 Pac1f1c Ad Mall
t6582 Burke Lane
Huntington Bch
842-•993
Publisher needs u11h1y per-
son 10 help with orders.
AIR Shipping and If tal-
ented ed11in9 2 yrs
1>.(pt'r & 50 wpm re-
quired $6 hr bonuses
9 5 llMTh1Fr Corona det
Mar 675-0638 Jim
cano1date tor lhe position
ot adm1n1stra11ve ass1s-
1ant The ideal person will
have a real estate license
and 3-5 years expenence
in e11her selling real es-
iale and/or office man-
agemenl Excellent ben
ef1ts including medical &
denial insurance Salary
com mensurate
wiexpenence For a con-
f1oent1al 1n1erv1ew cell
Bruce Barsamian at
64<1-7020 or wn tP to
Grubb & Elhs 2123 San
Joaquin Hills Ad. NB
Emkay Developement
Company a Momson-
Knudsen Company has
1mmed1ate opentng 1n
lhe1r Newport Beach of-
fice for Senior Secretary
with computer 1mput a•·
perteoce lo work directly
w11h construction project
manager end sub con-
tractors Micky Porttlf'
71.t-833-8680 or send re-
sume to PO Box 2390.
Newport Beech, CA
92660
or (213)547-3997 eves. ll 14) 111-1110
-SosTON WHALER Tred•lnsWelcome ...Tll'Gf
outrage 18. $16,000 Peter OPEN SEVEN DAYS • UD DIMES maintenance
llAHYMH
Permanent po~111on to
maln1a1n office complex
111 Orange Counly l•liiii••iiiiiiilll s I 4 4 0 0 p y r PART-TIME Vaned hours
17 t 41 556-02 7 8 btwn 10 •ncludf' early AM
2 4 30 Mon Fri weekends Musi have oe-
Ca 92660
MANAGER FOR YACHT penoable veh1CIP (small
CLUB Dana Po1n1 Loe truck •an s1a11on
Prev•ous man-.of'ment wagon! lo assist news-
e1tperience prf'ferred paper dealf'r on Irvine
Weekl'nd dul•es i 1200 ar11a Must tw depen-If you know wtlet you went EOE mo Resumes to Mike dable Con1ac1 Greg to edverllse but don·11 ________ _
Horne 12133 Edgeworlh. j Hyde Monday lhru F11day know how to HY It lel u1
Whittler 90604
1
between 9 30 and 10 JO help Well-written ciassl-
a m onty 6•2-4321 fled eds wlll put you In
•a•acr• • IOUCh with the right •-1;n peo~ 11-42-5678 Too many mouths to teed?
The futHI draw In the
We1t. . e Deify Piiot
Cl•llfted Ad. Cd Today
8-42-5e'78 R11 .. 1den1 1n 12 urn• apt
comple1t renl dlscounte<S
• salary no e~p n~
ces~ary 960-8656
Find a home for your cnt-
1 er s 1n ctaulfled
642-5678 ~aily Pilat · · · · · ··.,
-aily Pilai · ·---·--·-···-··-·=
PART TIME
\1 o tor Hou1e Avnil hie
~e"' porl Bear.h ore a, th~
hour~ p.-r day. Eorn opprox.
600 pf"r month. Ca U I 1 :00
lo •J:OO P\1. \ k for Dnaff"
f.mt.ley.
CIRCULATION DEPT.
642·4321 EOE
O RANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
llO W ftAY Sf •COSTA MCSA CA Oli11•
j
ROllL SILES
COORDllll TOR
I
A
LINE
WANT ADS
IMPORT ANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
&HI yoc1r lt«n• for $50 or las In
our farnou1 DIME~A·LINES put>-
IW»IKJ each Saturd•y In the Dally
Piiot
DIMES·A·LINE ad1 mutt N
~"'mall or brln(J them Into
the Dally Pilot olfl(:». Be *',.. to
tnclcx» your phtHHt numw or ad·
d,... In your ad, h•v. • price on
each Item & no •bbrtvf•tlon1.
\
Sol'ry, no "°'""""'*' .i., ~
,.,_, prodvo., plantt or •nlmm
.,. act»pl•b#.
I
(619)'434-3530. ·-----·" ABllJV•D
COLUMBIA 28 equipped Dltlia 9117 - - -
for ll11e aboard w/NB allp ·71 OATS UN 240Z
(714) 675-6457 Ownr 68K ml. MUST SEE
DRASTICALLY REDUCED S3150 832-3787
1972 25" Albin Motor-'73 2'40Z Loaded & Clean
sailor, auto pilot. RDF. MUST SEE $3800 090
VHF New tails and can-494-2723
vaa Clean Asking
$17 .950 Dealer
873-7895
LASER 13' w~&
Tra11ef S800 67S..3156
Lido 14. ready to sail,
$1000 8 ft SabOt, race,
rigged $375 962-8068
Luderl' UI l'ully found With
32"offlhor• dbl mooring s 14,000(213) 592-4905
Sabot. fully rlgQod, good
learnlng bolt 050
e.42-9282
lliriat h•l1:._ '1011
d...,..tronFc1 b;)ifirinder
$350 Obo 813-3480.
~. 9125 175 Civic. good tranap
S950 obo 545·7867
wknds/9em Wkdyt af1 5
'78 Cvcc wagon. '4-cyl~
spd, orig '48K ml good
tire•. cleen. runs e11ceU
S1875tob0 631·8964
'80 Honda Accord LX
Hetchbeck. orglnel
owner, auto trans, power
•tHrlng, 11r. •mlfm
ster90 31k ml S5000
546--4266
:a2HONOA CIVIC, air,
ttereo. 291< ml. exit cond
$6500 080 780·9140
..... 1117
3 t.ruckloada or new VW'8
IN here -Rabbl'I.
<m'S, Olo'l9l'Uble'1,
Jet1&'1. OlJ'S. Sclrocoo'a,
Quan~um '1. 8peclal
Woltaburt 11ltton '•· and
mortl U&llJ " •l• Pact.ory SUcUrl
SRIS'roL Kt IDlHOD
ll 8AWfA ANA
Mt-OllO
"PAMILY SINCE '83"
Volume Sales.~
AndLeaslno
18711 Beaoh Blvd
Huntlnoton Beach
(114) 142-2000
WE CARE
l1wl lset1
Bill YATE S
VW -PORSCHE
'' • I I
837-4800 49 3-4S I I
Vtln l'IS
·68 U2 2..ooor. runa oreett
S850 675-7729
Aat11, Deantic
1307
'77 Skyhawk. 1 OWY* S
spd trans, air. PS/PB,
alloy wtlla. Mint cond.
Muat see, to ml. $2950,
642-1005 wkdys aft 4pm.
wknds anytime.
Cuillac
172 oevu1e wnite tecten..
56K ml • (rellree) best
otter 640--0888
NABERS
CADILLAC
LARGEST SELECTION
of let• moelel. low mlteaee
Cedlllece In Southern
Celllomlal S.. us today!
&40-1810
2600 Hllbor BIVd
COSTA MESA
Qt'fleltt 313
·63 CORVAIA MONZA,
In family llnce '63
$950 s.48-2335
'65 NOVA orig. paint. x.lnt
cond $800 642-5504
"73 Mallbu rvn1 good, 0<lg
owner $500 8'40~802
078 cem..ro Mint COnd
lnloul, 83Kml AIC 1mlfm
CUI $3000 983.-3878
C OHHEll
CHEVRO LET
"\."""'I j 1 • • t
r' ] \ \I I
S4t>-I 200
l
·as Must Xlnt lntr/bOdy,
See 10 appreciate.
$3000/bO PIP 775-6-'441
'78'Grenede Ghia, well
maintained S2500/ofter.
875 -ts.45
lllTllU
·at 1t1Ck Mutteng. 47K ml,
ater1flc at $3900. Muet
.... 873-211$
TIH '>lJAY JU~H 1~ 1'JM
Second tragedy with military plane ---in two weeks tgnttes 30-acre brush fire
From 1taff ucl wire reports
The pilot of a U.S. Navy F-18 jet
was killed when his fighter crashed in
a rugged area of Santa Catalina Island
Monday igniting a 30-acre brush fire, •
NEWSLINE
-~
Coast
An Irvine backyard scien-
tist takes her lab on the
road./A3
Callfomla
authorities said today.
Before the crash, the FA-18 Hornet
from Lemoore Naval Air Station, 40
miles south of Fresno in the San.
Joaquin Valley, was involved in
aircraft carrier landjna practice on
Asylum
denied
to Mesa
Poles New Miss California has
compan1 ~n stage -
three anU-~xJst ,
protesters./ M
~~~~g=~;:. 1*~f e~a~;±fi~«>~r~l!!liv~~e~s~.o.~ii:-.f~-~~ .. ~~~'a-
Wars are after Tom Hay-
den again, seeking his forced to return
ouster from state As-
sembly./ A4
Nation
Housing starts dip, per-
sonal Income cttmbs
slightly In economic re-
port./ AS
Florida k!ller gets last
minute stay in his execu-
tion./ AS
World
Special prosecutor hints
Soviets had a hand In
assassination try on Pope
John Paul II./ AS
Iranian, Iraqi troops
massing for expected
huge battle./ A5
llind&Body
Early attention to the
calcium In their diet can
help women counteract
thinning bones./81
Think of breast self-
examination as "a life-
saving behavioral habit"
to fight cancer ./81
:::::::::~::::::!-:::::;::::t::::::::::::::~:.:.:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
Sports
Three champions were
crowned at the U.S.
Olympic track and field
trlals, Including Edwin
Moses In the hurdles./C1
The playoff for the U.S.
Open golf tltle was vir-
tually decided on the sec-
ond hole by winner Fuzzy
Zoeller./C1
Rod Carew and Reggie
Jackson of the Angels are
among the leaders In the
American League All-
Star ballottng./C2
Entertainment
Mike Farrell will be seen
as President John F. Ken-
nedy In a one-man show
forPBS./83
Bualneu
Business terms such as
.. belly-up" and "Keogh"
are now official words In
the dictionary. /85.
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bf1dge
8'.tlletln Board
Buatnea
Cellfornla N9wl
CtMelfled
Comlea
Crouword
Death Notlcel
HorOICX>Pe
Ann Lander8
Mind and Body
Mutual Fundt
Netlonal NeWt
Opinion
Paperuzt
Poflce Log
Publle NotlcM =lion ThMt«I
W•ttw
Wortd Newt
82
64
A3
85
A4 c..e
64
C8
C3
C5
A2
81·2
85
A4
Ae
81
A3
C3 c1.,.
83
83
A.2
A.4
By KAREN E. l..LEJN
Of .. °""'"""' ....
Sunday was to have been a momen-
tous occasion for Maria SolcuJska and
her 9-ycar-<>ld daughter, Dorothy.
For the devoutly Catholic mother,
the oocasion of Dorothy's first Holy
Communion would mean a major
holiday and joyous celebration.
But Dorothy's religious milestone
was marred Saturday when a letter
from the U.S. Department of Justice
came for Maria notifying the Costa
Mesa woman that she and her
daughter bad been denied political
asylum in the United States and
wouJd have to return to their native
(Pleue eee POLISH/ A2)
Hello,
yellow
brick
road
lo their black caps and gowns, they
marched across the LeBard Stadium
field like industrious ants on their
way to a picnic ba.skeL But in this
case, the pme was a diploma. a piece
of paper indicating they bad attended
enough classes and passed enough
tests to qualify for an associate in ans
degree.
These were the graduates of Orange
Coast College, but they were not
alone. Tbrouahout the county this
month, thousands of hi&h school and
college students have been donning
similar costumes and making the
same sort of treks for the same sort of
documents.
Graduation ceremonies ~ one of
those milestone moments most
PHIL
SIEIDEllAI
NEWS P ERSPlCTIVf
people never foraet. You may not
remember what you ate for dinner
last Thursday but araduation day
memories ~ most likely inscribed
· on your mental blackboard.
What l remember at>out my hi&h
school ara<fuatioo is the weather.
Raindrops make the funniest sound
when they're J)lunkina off the top of a
monarbo&rd baL
My coUqe p'iduation memories
&ho concern .,aduatioo beadwear.
We journaliim students were p<lu·
at1na durina an economic recessioru
Despite our fancy diplomat. we bad
little hick linina up ne'Mwritinajob&.
So some ofut plotted to UJt ma.skin&
tape to apell the lcliera U~-£.M..P·l.r
0-Y-E·D on our mOIUrboudl. BUt of counc we cbickened out.
Tbe eta Of OUtftlleOut atudtnt
procests had puled. ud we a.eked
tbe neoe to disnapt such • IOlcmn
oercmooy.
Mort rectntl1 I f'ound m~lf on
the other aide o the ecitwn. 11tt1na an
the tand1 at u~ UKlium. watch·
(Pleue ... QllAD8/ AIJ
.1
--
uninhabited San-Qemente Island, 2S
miles south of Catalina, Dennis
McGrath, a Lemoore-spokesman, said.
McGrath couldn't say if the popu-
lar island resort is within the normal
fliJht pattern used durina practice
missions. Monday njgbt was overcast
with visibility about 1,200 feet, he
said.
Monday's was the secopd crash in . .
as m:!~ weeks involviOJ milhapa with · · taty planes trainq off San
Clemente. last week, an EJ Toro pilot
safely ejected &om a jet train1na over
San Clemente lsla.Dd, near San Die,o.
The A_. Sky Hawk is still missi.,_ at
aea and investipton ~ not saying
why ~ aircraft had to be ditched.
Today, Los ADseles County Fire lhs~orTcd Unon said fattfi&hters
dousma the blaze at the ens& site
m1m11n111
northwnc of A valOn ooafinned the sys&cm. Vanished from radar ICI m 1 • pilotdiedintbefierycnsh. at IO:S4 p.m. as it was~
A team Of Navy 1nvestipton was .. toi'ach and ., .. simulaied c.rilr
en route to I.be scene, McGratb said. apProKbes.. McGrath Mid. Tbe F·ll
The pilot's name was not immedi-was from the W11dam filbter' ately released. The Los Aqeles squadron.
County coroner's offK:e was called in Similar dry-land simulated c::anw
to recover the body, said spokesman landinp by'Marine pilots caueed u
Bill Gold. . u~ in Irvine last week. whee.._
The twin-tailed $22 million Navy . jets and a fou.nh fixed .... ad
plane, equipped with an ejection (PleUe eee ca.Aa8/ AS) .
........ , ...........
Irvine
petition
drive
faulted
Circulator faces
perjury ch es in
hospital campai n .
By ANDllEA ADELSON °' .............
A professional ~ ciroilator
from Irvine was uyinc to retain an
attorney today to ddend b1mtdf
apint four counts of perjury st.em-
mina from a failed January refer-
endum drive over an Irvine hospital.
Keith W. Goodman WU dwpd
Friday with persuading memben of'
his family and a friend to commit perjury by sayiq they bad circulated
petitions 'Nben they bad not, Deputy
District Attorney Kamctb 0 . , ODD
said ID a prepared S1alemellt.
Ilaria 8ok111ab, daa&Jater Dorotllywttla ........ from JamlCradall """dak.
-1 did clrcuWe petitions... said
Goodman's brother ~ wbo
was rcac.bcd at the Qoodmans' home
in lrvine ... But I didn't~ any
petitions that I didn '\ arculate.
Kenneth Goodman said bis
brother, who was clwpd in lhc
felony complaint, was unavailable for
comment and wu lr)'ina to find an
attorney to n:prcscnt him.
Tbe charp resulted from an
invC$tlption bqun by tbc District
Atton:tey•s office in March after the
county ttei5t:rar of voters found that
more than one third of the 4,552
sipatures on petitions ubrruttcd to
~MePSIU'ION/A2)
FV ·school board
choice blocked
Residents· petition
seeks special election
for trustee vacancy
By PHIL SNEIDER.MAN °' .............
Fountain Valley School Distnct
residents.. who want to fill a school
board vac::ancy throuah a special
election, blocked the appointment of
a local clCflYIDan to the scat by
submittina more thin 600 signatures
Monday to the Orange County Board
of Education. If the Orange County Registrar of
Voters determines there arc at least
4SS valid ••ures. a special school
board election will be conducted
Nov.6.
~ntauon of the signatures
Monday nulh6cd the school board's
appointment of Rabbi Stephen Eins-
tein. E1n tern was appointed last
month after the resignation of
Trustee James Wocst. who is moving
to Pueno Rico for a business assign-
ment.
State law provides 30 days for
residents who prefer an election over
an a,ppointment to colJect signatures
from l.S pcroent of the distnct's
registered voters who cast ballots 1 n
the most recent school board e1ecuon.
School distnct spokeswoman
O>eryl Norton said countr officials
have 30 days to check the ~tures.
If they~ dctemuncd to be vahd. a eeaa1 election will be set. costing the
distnct an estimated SS,000. UnuJ
that time. the scat wall remain vacant
Dunna the past month, appointee
E1nstctn bas been deslgnated a
provisional member of the board,
with no voting powers. Because the
signatures were submitted, be is no
longer a provisional board member.
Norton said. Emstein bas said he will run for the
school district seat if a special election
IS c:alJed.
Another prospective candidate is
James Knapp, who narrowly mlSSCd
election to the school board last
November. KnapP was active in the
Slgnatwc campaign aimed al forciaa
the pecial election. Also supponina
the sprecial election were Trustee
(Pl--eee PV BOARD/A2)
Mailed pot
sparks arrest
of family trio
A Dana Point woman and her two
children, all employees of a Mission
Viejo dental office, were arrested
Monday after they allcaedly aocqned
a mailed pacJcaac from Jamaica
contain1na about SS,000 worth of
man1uana.
Orange County Sberifrs Lt. Ricb-
ard Olson said the arrests were made
at 11:20 a.m. at the M ·on Viejo
Family Dental Office, 28722
M~cntc Pa.rtcway. Jailed on suspicion of conspiracy to
import mariJuana ~re Marprct L
l);erinacr, 50, of Dua PoinL man-
(PleMe ... POT /A2)
Quieter jets for Newport
1
Orange CoMt OAtt.~Y PILOT/Tueed~. June"'· 1984
POT ARRESTS IN MISSION VIEJO •••
Pram Al
oflbe"1Cntaromcc; hcrd&D&bter iilCUie JewraPP'd and delivmd
Oon.oa 1-Eubut, 29, oCCosta Mn:a, Motldaytolhedintaloffioe. Dcputif:s
a dental \tlthniaan; and OieriQ1er'1 were wa.itins o utiidc and an undefl.
son Duny E. ~ 27, of ooM._2mm inthcreccP:tiooarea Beach, dental lab tmoce;'...;_.:..-;.;_.~-",~o qtcb the P.!*• tieana n:.cc1ved.
Olson said customs 11Cnt.s tn The sberifrs spokesman said
Florida makinaa routinecbeck found Marp.ret DieriJlaer1 whose husbe.nd .11ra~ PUflC:lu.d about rwo.pou.ndl of it--t.be dentist womn1 at the oroce, maf\)uana an a l*ble addtcacd to li411ed for the ~kage. About five
Dr. IJld Mn. J: A. Oicrinaet at the mtnuteslater, officen entered the
Mission Viejo office. office aod found Mrs. Diennger and
Olson said invesuaators ananpd her children in a back room with the
with postal offietala to have the opened packqe.
The iienllst in another room
with 1 patient and was not amstcd,
Olson said.
The three suspecu·IJ"C 11theduled·
for arrai.inmeru on the drut chaflt'l
Wednesday in South Oran~ County
Mwticipal Court, Olson saud .
lnvcsuptors said the Dieringcrs
recently visited Jamaica to attend a
dental convention.
POLISH IMMIGRANTS DENIED ASYLUM .•.
homAl
Poland by July 13. Polish u.nderaround movement,
They have until JuJy 6 to make Sokulska said.
arrangements for their return, accord· "Once he was beat up very badly in
inJ to the letter from lhe Los Angeles a demonstration. They use clubs
offlCIC of the Immigration and J'lf atu-there," she said. She last heard from
ralizatton Service. him in September, when ht sent
But Sokolska fcan that her life Dorothy a birthday card. So far.
would be endanacred if·she returned because of bis underground activity,
to Poland1 both because of her be bas been ~rred from leaving
husband's tnvolvement in the anti-Poland, she said.
government Solidarity labor union Sokulska was granted a work
and because of her own anti-Com-permit when she applied for asylum
munist involvement with a group here and she got a temporary JOb for
called "Pomost" here in the United 18 months as a student assistal\t
States caring for patienu at Fairview State In her small Costa Mesa apartment Hospital in Costa Mesa.
Monday, Sokulska talked fearfully of Since that job ended two months
her impcndiDJ deportation. ago, Solrulska bas taken up house-
The attractive, 42·ycar-old blonde cleaning for two local families. The
and her 9-ycar-old dauahter have pay is minimal, she says, but by
struggled to make ends meet over the workina bard she can make enough to
past two and a half years. get by and support Dorothy, who
... ~.j.1 ~ .. s .,,.,_.~ . the u .
"Due to my political V1CWS, which
arc contrary to ~he prevailing Com·
mun1st l"Cglme m Poland, and my
continuous anti-Communist ac-
llvtties in the United StateS, I will no
doubt be subject to intem>gation and
imprisonment," she wrote in a letter
to the rNS this sp~ She said she has
participated in widely publicized
anti-Communist demonstrations in
the United States and held Pomost
meetin~ in her home.
Maria Sierotwinslca-Rewiclca, a
Huntington Beach resident and
Polish immipant who met Sokulska
while working at Fairview, said
Sokulska would be "in much danger"
if she returned to Poland.
Sierotwinska-Rewicka said she was
imprisoned for seven months be-
cause she was a member of Solidarity
and a journalist on an undervound
newspaper in Krakow. Poland .
i W EATH ER
---------
Hazy sunshine along the Coast
Coutal
Tides
TODAY 11-.!low 4'°8Llll. ,.~ ..
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CMttotte,N 0 .
Eztended ~ g:.i~
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~
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8*1M'°'*' ... '*'° ... Frwiclloo .......... ... == ...._ ..--TGPIM Tll090ft Tae
w~ ~ wa..18"9 ~.De.
em 14
14 1.3
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71 .. JO ..
"~ cam~e b m~~ attends Pomona Elementary ~hool.
-ooftt.RR /wwu • ..,.... ·~==::.::=l!lfiiiil~ii~~:!~i'.!~~--~lf#:· '--~~~-Mt~~~ and my family to help me. But I never to elected officials, bad verifica~ bu· ding · projecr--<te91 e ''
asked for any other help. I supported of employment sent to the immiara· arcbitectual inspector in Poland, is
myself and I never took. welfare." . tion aacncy and even had a J.l'OUP of frightened and confused by the pros.-
The apartme~t. ~ecorated with Polish immipants living in the area pect of being forced lO return to her
aoi5ean~atttgii ~~
portraits of Solidarity leader Lech sign a petitJon ask.int that she be homeland.
Walesa and Pope John Paul II, a Pole, allowed to stay "I don't have any home now in
is small but comfortable. Miniature But all her efforts apparently have Poland," she said. She has no family
Amencan and Polish flags sit been to no avail. except her husband and an 87-ycar-
propped up in a bronze mug in one John Belluardo, director of con· old father. who is unable to help her.
corner and lace cloths cover the gressonal public affairs for the INS In any case, Sokulska said she docs t.a~lcs. . Western region, ioclu~ California, not have enough money to afford
. I have manf, many good Polis?, Arizona, Nevada, Hawaii and Guam, plane fare back to Poland.
fnends he~. am happy here, said all requests for asylum are BeUuardo said Solrulslca ha.s the
Sokulslca said. She and her daugbt~r, considered individually. right to appeaJ her deportation order
then 6, came to Cost.a ~csa m During fiscal year l 983, b e said 20 and to get a bearing on her case. If she
October 198 1 fro~. Olsztyn, m north-applications for asylum were filed by does not appeal and does not leave
em Polan~. to v1s1t So~ulska's aunt Polish nationals io the Western the country by the July 13 deadline,
and cousm, wbo emigrated from region. Also during that period, 23 be said, the INS would make an effon
Poland s~ortly after World War II.. requests were granted out of the to find her and jail her.
Theo. 10 December 1981, martial agency's back.log and 24 were denied Dorothy's long-.awaited first trip to
law was declared in Poland. Sokulska he said ' summer camp was to come later this ap~hcd for pc;>liticaJ asylum in. the "In · (Solrulska's) case, political month at a Polish church camp in the
United States ID January 198f. Smc,c asylum was denied because the judge San Gabriel mountains east of Los
then. the So~ulskas .have ~vcd a:s didn'tfeeltheevidencewasenoughto Angeles.
temporary reside~t aliens while their substantiate her claim (that her life But if the deportation order is
request for pohttcal asylum was would be endangered if she was applied., Dorothy and her mother wilJ
considered. forced to return to Poland) " be making the dreaded trip back to
Her husband. Jan Sokulski (his last Bclluardo said. ' Poland before camp is over.
name takes the masculine "1" end-But SokuJslca says the threat of "I like it here," Dorothy said.
mg), is a member of the ~li~ty danger to her and Dorothy in Poland "This is our home, we want to
labor union and has been active 10 the is very real. stay." her mother added.
•
GRADS START LIFE'S JOURNEY ••.
From Al ·
1ng the latest Orange Coast College
graduates enjoy their moment of
educational glory.
Graduations tend to be dry, pom-
pous events. Attired in their
academic rcplia, the students arc
often stiff and straight-faced as they
proceed carefully to lheir seau.
Inevitably, some 1ehool officials
wlll remind the graduates that the
event is referred to as a commence-
ment, meanm' the beginning of one's
most product.lve years, rather than
the end of one's educational career.
And inevitably some speaken will
insist the graduating students are at a
cntical th..rcsbold, at the doorway to
tomorrow with America's greatest
dreams ri~ atop their rugged
shoulders. It's Just the sort of rhetoric
guaranteed to bore a modern student
whoK direction in life is more likely
to be g~1ded by the latest Boy George
recording.
With th~ reservations m mind,
the Orange Coast College commence-
ment was a rather pleasant surprise.
The ftrst signal that this wouJd be a
less stuffy affair came with a view of
the students' apparel peeking out
below the traditional black gowns.
You could spot an interesting assort-
ment of slacks, blue jeans, dresses.
fancy shoes and sncalccrs.
Any pretentiousness in the air was
punctured when excited family mem-
bers called out from the stands, and
the marchmg graduates smiled and
waved back. One graduate strode
hand-in-hand with a little girl who
appeared to be her daughter. At the
end of the procession were two
wheelchairs carrying students who
obviously did not let disabilities
stand in the way of a college educa-
tion.
Coast C'ommun1ty College District
Just Call ·
642-6086
Trustee George Rodda Jr. led the
assemblage in a well-amplified, ralher
courageous rendition oftbe National
Anthem, consideri.J14 that lhe band
f~ed to give him a pitch note to help
him start on key. Moments later, the
quiet invocation was disrupted by a
noisy helicopter passing over the
stadium.
Commencement speaker David
Emmes.. c;o..founder of South Coast
Repertory, reminisced about coming
to OCC more than 20 yean ago afteT
an undistinguished high school ca-
reer. At the college, he had the chance
to perform the title role in "HarnleL"
He also directed a coll~ production,
setting the staae for his subsequent
career as a successful director.
Outstandin& Citiz.en award winner
Robert L Humphreys also looked
back on bis education at OCC.
Humphreys said he enrolled in the
college shortly after a stint in the
Marine Corps. He discovered he had
just moved from one military base to
another, for OCC was built on
propcny that previously bad been the
Santa Ana Army Air Base.
OCC President Bernard Lusk.in
reflected on the 500,000 students who
have attended the Costa Mesa college
since i( was established in 1947. He
pointed out that the youngest gradu-
ate in the current class was 19, while
the oldest was 73.
Luslcin lhen slipped into some
traditional commencement rhetoric.
telling the graduates, "You arc a
beacon for the future of the college
and the future of America. You a.re
our shining ligbL"
Theo with a grin, be ~uoted from a
country sona: "You cant be a beacon
if your light don't shine."
Finally, the graduates' names were
read. and each stepped up to a
platform to recci ve congratulations
from college officials. At this point.
any sense of decorum vanished.
Like fans rushing the field after a
championship football game, family
members left the bleachers for a key
vantage point on the grass. In band.
they held snapshot cameras, instant-
developing cameras and even video
cameras to capture for eternity a
graduate's moment of academic tri-
umph.
Those who remained in the stands
became rooting sections. cheerina
wildly when their loved ones' names
were read. There were common
American surnames and ethnic ones.
The.re was even an indication of how
cager Ora.nae County's Indochinese
immiaranu are for education: the
graduation list included more
Nguyens than Smiths.
If there was one universal emotion
among those at the commencement.
it was pride. The graduates appeared
proud to have earned their degrees,
and the family members in the
audience seemed equally proud. The
graduates may soon d iscover that
opportunities to celebrate one's
achievements come all too rarely in
the 9-to-S working world.
When the ceremony concluded, the
college band saluted the graduates not
with a solemn hymn but with a
rousit?J version of "New York., New
York,• a fitting end to the event.
The OCC speakers didn't say it to
lhe graduates, so perhaps I should:
Tb.is commencement is only a begin-
ning, so be prepared to pass through
th.is threshold lo the future. And
remember, tomorrow is the first day
of the rest of your life.
Or something like that.
What do yoa like aboat tbe Dally Pllo&T Wlaaa don't you like? Call tbe
number a& left 11d yoar me1Hge wlll be recorded, &ru1cribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
Tile same U ·lloar 1111werlng service may be used to record letters to tbe
editor on uy topic. Contributors to oar Letter• coh1ma mus& Include tbelr
name and teleplaoae number for verlficaUon. No clrculallon calls, please.
Tell ua wllat's on your ml.ad.
OellJ PUot o.ttvery
ORANGE COAST Clrculetlon 114/M2-4m
It QuarentMd
~, f11CMr " .,ou do
-heYt ~ P'llll' by ~ JO O m cal bt"Orll 1 p m
9"CI YQI' COJ'Y ... be _.,
s.·~dly end tur>dlry "
.,OU do no! ,_ '°"' COC)'f by T • m • c;el o.tore
10 1 m end "°"" OOC1Y _. 1111~..i
Clrcua.ttoft
TelepMMI
·~
•
Daily Pilat
H. L. 8chwertz HI
Publisher
•
Chazy Dowelbf ~ CfMcfNMn
EdttOf Ind Asslstan1 Con1rollef
to the Publisher
Claetfted edvertlalng 714/IU .. Mn
AH other __.men.ta la-4321
MAIN Off'ICE
330 Wtlll llr &l eo.t. W.... CA Ml'~ 9c. 1580 ~ ..... CA t"2e
~ 1'9l or.,. c.... ~ ~ "'° -llO<-. ......_ ldllorW NI llf ~ ,..... ~ ""r Oii rtO!OCM;ed ~ .,...., Pl' ,,_."...,,....OM.-
VOL. n , NO. t1'2
(
I
as mom charged in HB crime
A young mother was to be &r·
raigned on attempted murder charges
today while her I ()..month-old baby
clings to life after being stabbed in the
back during a family araument in
Huntington Beach on Sunday.
Jeri Shepard, 31, of Ariahcim, is
suspected of plunging a t5:r into
her infant daughter's back · a
argument with the child's father. be
is beinf held on S2SO,OOO bail.
The mfant -Christine Shepard -
is in serious condition at Fountain
Valley Communi~ Hospital
Huntington pohce, meanwhile, arc
still tea.rChin& for John Bobkiewicz.
the child's l"S-year-old father who
reportedly ran off after the 6:30 p.m .
Fathers Day incident near the inter-
section of Adams Avenue and Hunt-
ington Street.
Police said they want the father for
questioning but have not &aid
whether be faces criminal charges.
A900rdina to reports. Shepard and
Bobkiewicz got into the altercation
after spend.i.Qa a day at the beach. The
couple had gone to the residential
intersection to meet a friend, police
said.
At one point, the falher apparently
grabbed the child to leave while
Shepard pulled a five-inch dager
from her purse,J>Olicc said.
The woman first slashed a tire of a
piclruv truck the family bad been
traveling in and-then turned the
dager on Bobkiewicz. The blade,
however, caught the child in the back.
Police sai<f the violence was wit-
nessed by several onlookers, some
who helped comb the oeiabborbood
when police were unsuccessful in
finding the father.
-n.immq1en--------------
Qu1ETEa-euT MORE-FLIGHTS •••
From Al
FAA before they can make the
adjustment1" said McDonnell
DouaJ.as spoxesman Don Hanson.
Hanson says the earlier power
cutback can reduce noise by a
"~rceptible" three to six decibels per
01f.1.!t. 'The good news is that each flight
will make a little less noise. The bad
news is that it be used as an excuse to
add a lot more fli&bts and that will be
more noise in ~e ...,.ie, .. said
Barbara Liebman, spokeswoman for
the Airpon Workina Oroup, a coali-
tion of Newport Beach homeowners
a.ssociationsfightinaexpanuooattbe
a.Upon.
Supervisor Tbomu Riley, whose
Fifth District includes both the air-
port and Newport Beach. said be was
CRASH KILLS NA VY PILOT ••.
From Al
allegedly buzzed a crowd of pic-
nickers.
McGrath said details of the train-
ing mission, which can be conducted
on a carrier or on an aintri p, were not
immediately known. .. Normally they
don't fly alone," he said.
Los Angeles County firefighter Rod
Washington said rescue crews were
told to "stay clear bccautc thCTe miaht
be live ammo aboard."
He said firefiabten, who had to
hike into the rugcd area near Whites
Landin& oo the aoutheut portion of
the island, were "buically just beby
sitting" the fire early today. No
structures were tbsatencd, another firefi&h ter said.
pleased with the FAA ru1.ina and
added it has some extra benefits.
Jeu that cut back 1>9wer at SOO feet
arc at a better angle for pilots to see
the v.ound beneath them, aocordina
to Riley.
"I expect that will pve us a biaher
degree of compliance of planes tat:µig
off down the bay than we are cetuna
today," Riley said.
McGrath said he found it "hard to
believe" that firefiahten were or-
dered away from the plane, becaui;e
they are trained to deal with the
possible presence of explosives.
Word of the crash came at I 1:30
p.m. Monday, Los AnacJet County
fire Capt. Lee Gustafson said.
FVBORED APPOINTEE BLOCKED •••
From Al
Carol Moh.an, former Trustee Wocst
and several teachers.
Knapp releued a statement Mon·
day1 respoodina to criticism directed
at tne campaicn in letters written to
local newspapers. Backers of the
apecial election have been accused of
promotina divisive feelings in lhe
Fountain Valley District in the wake
of a recaJI elect1on and bitter debates
over school closures and the estat>-
lishment of middle 1ehool1.
..There WU DO desire to cauee an
uproar or to brina about another
major division in the diJtrict,"
Knapp la.id in his written statement.
"No cha.r&ea or accuaatJons were
made by the petition circulators and,
most importantly, no attempt wu
made to denipate the capabihties or
the moral cbaraeter of the provisional
ap1>0intee.
"Voten were simply uked if they
desired to elect their fifth member of
the board, rather than allowina the
appointment"
Knapp also disputed charaet that
the local tea(hers union wu behind
the si&nature drive. He said only three
of 40 petition circulators were
teachers and that each is also a parent
with children enrolled in diJtrict
1ebools.
PETITION PERJURY CHARGED •••
From Al
the Irvine c1ty clerk on Jan. 12 were
found invalid. At least 3,800 valid
si&natures were needed.
No cbatges were 6.Jed against the
three Goodman relatives or the
friend. Chin said..
The Committee for a Safe Hospital
Site, cha.ired by former Irvine mayor
Gaby Pryor, had sou&bt a referendum
vote to ask voters their preference
over a decision last December to
locate the Irvine Medical Center near
Sand ~nyon and 8&tT1nca Road.a in
cast Irvine.
According to ditclosure reporu, the
Committee for a Safe H~pitaJ pajd
bait the campa.ian •s $4,000 (X)I\ to
Ooodman. Xeonetb Goodman
ooukln ~say how Iona b.iJ brother bad
been in busiDetL
Pryot; cooc.ct.ed today In West
CoVlm, said .. rm aorry that'• hap-
pened. Jt's a shame. But I don't see
how it would have affected the outc0mc." She said tho wu unaware
of the investi&ation.
Tbecommfttee, primarily financed
by a UC Irvine Collele of Medicine
alumni lfOUp, contended the aite WU
unsuitable became it is too ne.,r jet
noise a.nd too near paths of jeu
depattina from the Marine C()Cl)l-Ait
Station in El Toro. A Marine COf'l)I
aencral is now asking t.be lite be n> examined.
Pryor led a now-defunct oommunJ-
ty aroupallied with thedeu ofUCI'a
medical ICbool to build a 1elchina and raearch hOIJ)itaJ 00 campus,
proposed by Chat.t•onb·bued He<b West.
HealthWett officials bad ft!O-
ommeDded OoodmU io Pryor lbe ~-The hOlpitaJ ftnn ..,.e.tly
peid Goodman to coUec:t "IDahnl
ror their utl! nearly a year.., in ftli1t1
for • Certificate of 1MiecJ. a •ce
rep.lated li«ndna prooedim.
HealtbWe&t lol& in ll9e IS.:J'IU oompetitioo to build u lnint .,..
taJ to a ooatitioD of civil: and bua'MU
leaden t.cbd by HOii Mcmcwial
Presbyterian of N"'1M>ft 8e1Cb Ind
the Irvine Co.
Constnaction beDD °" the J 77. bed. 164 million a.crnty about IO days-
I
I
__ ....,_ ____ ~----~---_ _.
TUI SOA 'V .IUNl 1-. l'IH-1
• ' 1.n eras·
NEW SLINE
-~~--
Coaat
An Irvine backyard scien-
tist takes her lab on the
road./A3
California
New Miss Callfornla has
company on stage -
three anti-sexist
protesters./ M
Nation
Housing starts dip, per-
sonal Income climbs
slightly In economic re-
port./ AS
Florida klller gets last
minute stay In his execu-
tion./ AS
World
Special prosecutor hints
Soviets had a hand In
assassination try on Pope
John Paul II./ AS
Iranian, lraql troops
massing for expected
huge battle./ Al
Mlnd&Body
Early attention to the
calcium In their diet can
help women counteract
thinning bones./81
Think of breast self-
examination as "a life-
saving behavioral habit''
to fight cancer ./81
Sporta
Three champions were
crowned at the U.S.
Olympic track and fleld
trials, Including Edwin
Moses In the hurdles./C1
The playoff for the U.S.
Open golf title was vir-
tually decided on the sec-
ond hole by winner Fuzzy
Zoeller./C1
Rod Carew and Reggie
Jackson of the Angels are
among the leaders In the
American League All-
Star ballotlng./C2
Entertainment
Mike Farrell will be seen
as President John F. Ken-
nedy In a one-man show
forPBS./83
Bualneu
Business terms such as
"belly-up" and "Keogh"
are now official words In
the dictionary. /85.
INDEX
Erma Bombeck 82
Bridge 84
Bultetln Board A3
Bu~neea 85
Callfomla News A4
Clullfted C4.e
Cornlea 84
CrONWOrd C6
OMth Not'°9e C3
Horoecope C5
Ann Lander8 A2
Mind and Body 81-2
Mutual FUndl 85
NatlOnal Nftl A4
Optn.ton A8
Paperuzf 81
Poffce Log , A3
Pubffc Notte.I C3
8portt C1-4
T~ 83
Theat.,. . ~
WMther "" Worid Nftl A4
'l
/
Asylum
denied
to Mesa
Poles
BJ LU\EN E. KLEIN
Of ... ..., ........
· Sunday was to ha vc been a momen-
tous occasion for Maria Solrulsk.a and
her 9-year~ld daughter, Dorothy.
For the devoutly Catholic mother,
the occasion of Dorothy's first Holy
Communion would mean a major
holiday and joyous celebration.
But Dorothy's religious milestone
was marred Saturday when a letter
from the U.S. Department of Justice
came for Maria notifying the Costa
Mesa woman that she and her
daughter bad been denied political
asylum in the United States and
would have to return to their native
Poland by July 13.
They have until July 6 to make
arrangements for their return, acoord-
ini to the letter from the Los Angeles
office of the lmmigration and Natu-
ralization Service.
But Solrulsk:a fears that her life
would be endangered if she returned
to Poland. both because of her
husband's involvement in the anti-
government Solidarity labor union
and because of her own anti.Com-
munist involvement with a sroup
called "Pomost" here in the Unjted
(Pleue Me POLISH/ A2)
Hello,
yellow
brick
road
lo their black caps and gowns, they
marched across the LeBard Stadium
field like industrious ants on their
way to a picnic bask.et. But in this
case, the priz.e was a diploma, a piece
of paper mdicating they bad attended
enough classes and passed enough
tests to qualify for an associate in arts
degree.
These were the graduates of Orange
Coast College, but they were not
alone. Throughout the county this
month, thousands of high school and
college students have been donning
similar costumes and mak..ina the
same son oftreks for the same sort of
documents.
Graduation ceremonies are one of
those milestone moments most
PHIL
SIEIDEllAI ~
NEWS P ERSPf CTIVE
people never foraet. You may not
remember what you ate for dinntt
last Thursday but sraduation day
memories arc most likely inscribed
on your mental blackboard.
What I remember about my hiab
school sracf uation is the weather.
Raindrops make the funniest sound
when they're plunkfoa off the top of a
mortarboard bat
My college .,aduation memones
also coooern arac:tuation hcadwear.
We journalism students ftrt aradu-
atina durina an economic recession.
Despite our fancy diplomas.. we bad
little luck tiruna up ncwswptinajo_ .
So some of us plotted to u1e masting
tape to soc1l the letters U-N-&M-P-1.,
O-Y-E-0 on our mortarboard
But of oounc we cb1ckcried out.
The era of outrqtOUJ tudcnt
protests bad peuect. and lacktd
\he nerve to disrupt ch a lcmn
CCt"Cmony.
More recently I found mytclf on
the other side ohhc action. sattma in
the uands at U81rd Si.di um. watch-
. (Pl-... ... OllAD8/AI)
I
,
ft111 mr111
.............................
ccident second ·
involving rrult~
plane in 2 weeks
From staff ad wire~
The pilot of a U.S. Navy F-18 jel
died when bis fighter crubcd ill a
ruacd area of Santa Cawina Island ~ting a 30-~ brush fire, ~
Olbters said this momina.
Shortly before the Monday Dillat
crash. an F-18 from Lemocn NaVal
Air Sta~o l!liles IOUth o
pea.red from a Navy radar sCfee.a oo
San Oemente lsland.. 2S miles IOUtb
of Catalina, Chief Petty Offic:¢r Ju
Williamson said
Dennis McGrath, a spokesmaa for
Lemoore Naval Air Station, would
not immediately coufirm that 1l wu
the same jet that crashed..
Monday's was the seicxmd crub iJl
as many wccb invoJvi.na misbalJI .
with military planes train.ina off
coastal islands. LUt week. an El Toro
pilot safety ejected from a bomber trainina over San Clemente Island,
near San Diego. The $2 million plane
is still missing at sea and inveltipton
arc not saying why the craft bad to be
ditched..
Today, Los Angeles Coun!rFire Inspector Ted Urton said fU'C ten
dousing the blaze at the eras site
northwest of Avalon confirmed the
J>!iot died in the fiery crash. The
identity of the pilot was bein&
Marla Sonuka, daqhter Dorothy with bad Dewtt frOm J.auntcratloa oftldala,
'
(Pleaaeee Cit ASB/ A2)
I
Quieter takeoffs,
• but more of them,
from OC Airport ..
FAA rullng comes
as mixed blessing
for NB homeowners
BJ JERRY BIBSCB
Of ... Dllr .......
A Federal A vtauon Adm in 1s-
t.ration ruling paved the WI) for
quieter jet flights out of John Wayne
Airport Monday. But the ruling as
mixed news for the Newport Beach
residents who live underneath the
flight path because 1t also could allow
for more flights.
The FAA ruled properly equ1pixd
McDonnell Douglas MD-aOs.. for-
merly called OC-9 Super 80s. can cut
back enJine power at an alutude of
SOO feet instead of 1,000 feet. aJlowmg
the plane to reduce engJne noise
during takeoff. It was standard
procedure at John Wayne A1rpon
until the FAA ruled the praco~ was
unsafe in 1979.
The new FAA regulation allows the
twin-engine ~t to cut back power 1f 1t
is cquiped Wlth a spcaaJly prosramcd
tli&ht guidanc:c system that push.cs
one engine to full power 1f there 1s a
problem with the other enaine
Most of the commcmal Jt't f1!£hts
out of the a1rpon use MD-~Os.
OfficiaJs at AlrCal and PSA 111d they
Mailed pot
sparks arrest
of family trio
A Dana Poant woman and bet' 1-..0
ctukircn, all employees of a M-on
VicjO dental office, were &rrc$ttd
Monday after they allCICdly ~
a Dlaikd pack.IF Ciom Jamnca
containina a.bout SS,000 v.wtb of maruuana. Oraqe County heriff's Lt Racb-
ard Oboo sud the anu 'Cr'C made
at 11 :20 Lm. at the Mi o Vaqo
Family ~ntal Office. 28722
M~te Parkway Jadedoasu ·oaofcon to
impon mari.Juana '*'Cre Margartt L
Oicrinaief, '°· or Dana p mt. man-
., of the dental off~ her dauahter
(Pleue ... POT/ A.2)
,/
arc conS1denng cquiping their planes
with the safety system .
.. Each airltne bas to apply to thr
FAA before they can make the
adjustment." said McDonnell ,
Douglas spokesman Don Hanton.
Hanson says the earlier power
cutback can reduce noase by a
..~rccptible" three to su decibels per
fl~t. . 'The good_news is tha_t each flight
will make a httle less noise. The bad
(Pleue eee QUIBT&ll/A2)
Mesa gets
to~gh new
theater
noise law
By llAJlEN E. n.EIN
Of .. ...,,... ....
Costa Mesa armed itself Monday
mght with a "touaber enf~mcnt
tool" to combat noise from the
Pacific Amphitbc-atre.
The City Council adopted an
urgency ordinance, which took effect
immediately, chanlin& the manner iD
which sound is measured under \he
city's noise ordinance and upped the
maximum fine for violaton to
Sl,000, according to Tom WOOd,
Costa Mesa's city attorney.
Makina the aty•s noi1e meuure-
ment method conform witb the
county's makes for a .. tnOR dl'ec:tive
way of detect.ma sound uCt determi• in, whether or not tbete·a a vioa-
auon." Wood said.
The hllbtt mu..imwn fine Will
ICJ"\'C IS a Stroql:r de&cmnt., Wood
added.
He recommended council
adopt tbt W&Cftcy ordiD&n('C Monday
so the city could contJnuc its monitor·
1 and cnforument of Doi.IC levds
on coacm niahtut tbeam~thcater. lK ll,C>OCHitat Q)DCCn &ality, oa
the Orantc CO\lnty faiflr'C>WMla across Fatrvtew lloect from ihf ·Cal.
Park traet, hU drawn Dwneree&
c1tircn oom?!inll aboUt noite m lPl•••--..&1•
QUIETER-BUT MORE-F~IGHTS ••• Prom Al
nev.:s ts that It be u~ a~ an excuse to
add a lot more Ot&bts and that will be
more noise m tlie aggrqate," sa1d
Barbara Llchman1 s1><>kcswoman for
the Aill>Ort Work1aa Oro'U), a coali-
uon of Newpon Beach homeowners
asSOC'latioos fightmg cxp3nSJon at 1he
airport. • -
Supcrnsor Thomas ·Riley, whose
F1f\h District mcludes both the air-
port and Newport Beach. said be was
pleased with the FAA ruling and
added it has some extra benefits.
Jets that cut back power at 500 feet
are at a better anJle for pilots to sec
the v.ound beneath them. according
to Riley.
.. I expect that will give us a higher
dW"" of com pl la.ace of planes takma
off down the bay than we are fCttma
todar,. I am aoin1 to be watching for
that.• Riley said.
Riley, who lives m Newport Beach,
has tried to get pilots to fly down the
middle of Newport &y rather than
over rcs1dcntial areas
Tbc ruling 1s likely to set off
another battJe over how no1~ 1s
measured by airport officials.
On one scale, the Community
Noise Equivalent Level, a no1~
reduction of th~ decibels ~r flight
shows an overall SO percent decrease
m noise.
But on the S1n&k Event Noise
Equivalent Level scale. lhe same
reduction show~ a much n1aller
dccrc;ue tn no1~. said Ken ~lino.
the Newport Beach city oflktnl who
monitors airport matters. The d1f'fcrencc 1 due to the for-
mulas used b) the n<>tse 'ICale to
figure noist le-vels
The ( NEL ~le was developed
about 20 yea" based on tests at large
lll]>()ns where airplane$ were taking
off about every three min1,1tes. DcliM
said. lt measures a noise contour -
the amount of noise an airport Create
over lontlcr penoos of t1mc.
The SENEL scale measures the
noise generated by a single plane
tak.mg o ff from an airport .
POLISH IMMIGRANTS DENIED ASYLUM .••
From Al
tates Poland, she said t1v1t1e~ in the United States. I will no
In her small Costa Mesa apanment Sokulska was granted a work doubt be ~ubJCCt to interrogatton and
Monday. Sokulska talked fearfully of pennit when she apphed for asylum 1mpnsonment." she wrote in a letter
her 1mpendin~ deportation. here and she got a temporary job for to the INS th1~ spnns. She said she has
The auractive. 42-year-old blonde 18 months as a student assistant part1c1pated in widely publu:ized
and her 9-}'car-old daughter have carine for pauents at Fairview State anll-Commumst demonstrations in
struggled to make ends meet over the Hospital in Costa Mesa. the United States and held Pomost
past two and a half years. Since that JOb ended two months meeting!> in her home.
.. I came by myself," she said ago. Sokulslut has taken up house-Maria Sierotwmslca-Rew1cka. a
um1dly. in broken English. "I started cleaning for two locaJ familtes. The Huntington Beach resident and
from zero here, w11h only m y friends pa}' is minimal, she says. but by Polish imm1~rant who met Sokulska
and my family to help me. But I never worki9g hard she can make enough to while working at Fairview, said
asked for any other help. I supponed get by and suppon Dorothy. who Sokulska would be "in much danger"
m)·selfand I never took welfare." attends Pomona Elementary School. if she returned to Po land.
The apartment, decorated with Since she bas been in the United Sicrotwinska-Rew1cka said she was
portraits of Solidanty leader Lech States.SokulskahasappcaJedforhelp imprisoned for seven months be·
\\alesa and Pope John Paul 11. a Pole, to elected officials, had venficat1ons cause she was a member ofSolidanty
1s smaU but comfortable. Miniature of employm ent sent to the imm1gra-and a journalist on an underground
.\mencan and Polish flags sit tion agency and even had a group of newspa~r in Krakow. Porand.
~-a~~~~~~~~~~t1t~~~~~
tables. '• :iro.;;d~ stay. architectual inspector in Poland, is
··1 have many. many good Polish But all her effons apparently have frightened and confused bv the pros-
tncnds here. I am happy here." been to no avail. pect of being forced to return to her
okulska said. She and her daughter. John Belluardo, director of con-homeland.
then 6. atme to Costa Mesa m grcssonal pubhc affairs for lhe INS "I don't have any home no~ in
October t 981 from Olsztyn, m north· Western region. 1nclud1n~ Cahfornia. Poland," she said. She bas no family
em Poland. to visit Sokulska's aunt Arizona. Nevada. Hawaii and Guam. eitcept her husband and an 87-year-
and cousin. who emigrated from said all requests for asylum are old father. who 1s unable t6 help her.
Poland shortly after World War II. considered md1V1dually. Jn any case. okulska said she does
Then, in December 1981, martial Dunng fiscal year 1983. be said. 20 not have enough money to afford
law was declared m Poland. Sokulska applica11ons for asylum were filed by plane fare back 10 Poland.
applied for political asylum JO the Pohsb nationals 1n the Western Belluardo said Sokulska has the
United States in Janual) 1982. Smee region. Also dunng that pcrioo. 23 nght to appeal her deponauon order
then, the Sokulskas have lived as requests were granted out of the and to get a hearing on her case. If she
temporarv resident aliens while their agency's back.log and 24 were denied. does not appeal and does not leave
request tor political asylum was he said. the country by the July 13 deadline.
considered "In (Sokulska's) case. poli11cal he said. the INS would make an effort
Her husband, Jan Sokulsk1 (his last asylum was denied because the judge to find her and Jail her.
name takes the mascultne "i" end-didn't f~I the evidence was enough to Dorothy's long-awaited first tnp to
ing). 1s a member of the Sohdant) substanuate her claim (that her life summer camp was to come later this
labor umon and has been acuve m the would be endangered if she was montb at a Pohsh church camp 10 the
Polish underground movement. forced to return to Poland)." San Gabncl mountains cast of Los
Sokulska said Belluardo said. Angeles.
"Once he was beat up very badl) 1n But Sokulska says the threat of But 1f the deportation order 1s
a demonstration. They use clubs danger to her and Dorothy in Poland applied. Dorothy and her mother will
there," she said She last heard from 1s \Cry real. be making the dreaded tnp back to
h111,1 in September. when he sent .. Due tom) poh11cal views. vrhich Poland before camp 1s over
Doroth} a b1nhda} card. So fur. arc contrary to the prevailing Com-"I like 1t here." Dorothy said
because of his underground acttnt). mumst regime in Poland. and my "This 1s our home. we want to
he has been barred from leaving conunuous anti-Communist ac-sta}." her mother added.
GRADS START LIFE'S JOURNEY .•.
From Al
mg the latest Orange Coast College
graduates enJOY their moment of
educauonal glory
Graduations tend to be dry, pom-
pous events. Attired in their
academic regalia. the students are
often suff and straight-faced as the>
proceed careful!) to their scats.
Inevitably. some school officials
will remind the graduates that lhe
event is referred to as a commence-
ment. meamn$ the begmrung of one's
most productive years. rather than
the end of one's educational career.
And inevitably some speakers will
insist the graduating students arc at a
cnticaJ threshold. at the doorway to
tomorrow wtth Amenca's greatest
dreams ndms atop their rugged
shoulders. It's JU St the sort of rhetonc
guaranteed to bore a modem student
whose direction in life 1s more likely
to be guided by the latest Boy George
recording.
With these reservauons m mind.
the Orange Coast College commence-
ment was a rather pleasant surpnsc
The first stgnal that this would be a
less stuffy affair came Wlth a view of
the students' apparel peeking out
below the traditional black gowns
You could spot an interesting assor1-
ment of slacks, blue Jeans. dresses.
fancy shoes and sneakers
Any pretentiousness m the air was
punctured when c:itc1ted family mem-
be~ called out from the stands. and
the marching graduates smiled and
waved back. One graduate strode
hand-in-hand with a little girl who
appeared to be her daughter. At the
end of the procession were two
wheelchairs calT}1ng students who
obv1oush did not let d1sab1hues
stand in ·the wa) of a collese educa-
t10n.
Coast Community College District
Just Call
642-6086
OellJ Piiot
Dellvery
t1 Ouerenteed
Trustee George RO<ida Jr led the
assemblage in a well-amplified. rather
courageous rend1t1on of the National
Anthem, cons1denn~ that the band
failed to give him a pitch note to help
him stan on key. Moments later. the
quiet invocation was disrupted by a
noisy helicopter passing over the
stadium.
Commencement speaker David
Emmcs. co-founder of South Coast
Repertory, reminisced about coming
to OCC more than 20 years ago after
an undistinguished high school ca-
reer. At lhe college, he had the chance
to perform the utlc role in "Hamlet."
He also directed a coll~ proouct1on,
setting the stage for his subsequent
career as a successful director.
Outstanding Citizen award winner
Robert L. Humphreys also looked
back on his education at OCC.
Humphreys said he enrolled in the
college shortly after a stint in the
Marine Corps. He discovered he had
JUst moved from one m1hlary base to
another. for OCC was built on
property that previously had been the
Santa Ana Army Air Base.
OCC' President Bernard Luskin
reflected on the 500.000 students who
have attended the Costa Mesa college
since 1t was established in 194 7 He
pointed out that the youngest gradu-
ate in the current class was 19. while
the oldest was 73
Luskin then slipped into some
traditional commencement rhetonc.
telling the graduates, "You arc a
beacon for the future of the college
and the future of Amenca. You arc
our shining hght. ..
Then wtlh a gnn. he quoted from a
country song: "You can't be a beacon
1f your light don't shine."
Finally, the gradua tes' names were
read, and each stepped up 10 a
platform to reccl\ e congratulations
from college officials. Al this point.
any sense of decorum vanished.
Like fans rushing the field after a
championship football game, family
members left the bleachers for a key
vantage point on the grass. In hand.
they held snapshot cameras, instant-
developin~ cameras and even video
cameras to capture for eternity a
graduate's moment of academic tn-
umpb.
Those who remained in the stands
became rooting secuons, cheering
wildly when their IO\ed ones' names
were read. There were common
American surnames and ethnic ones.
There was even ao indication of how
cager Oran~ County's Indochinese
immigran1Sare for education: the
graduation list included more
Nguyens than Smiths.
If there was one universal emotion
among those at the commencement,
It was pride. The graduates appeared
proud to have earned their degr~s.
and the family members in the
audience seemed equally proud. The
graduates may soon discover that
opportunities to celebrate one's
a<:hievements come all too rarely in
the 9-to-5 working world.
When lheceremonyconcluded. the
college band saluted the graduates not
with a solemn hymn but with a
rousing version of "New York. New
York." a fitting end to the event.
The OCC speakers didn't say 11 to
the graduates. so perhaps I should·
:.his commencement is only a begm-
1lmg, so be prepared to pass through
this threshold to the future. And
remember, tomorrow 1s the first da)
of the rest of your life.
Or something like that
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Tell us wbat'1 on yoar mind. I
ORANGE COAST Clrcufatlon 714/142-4333
ClaHlfled advet11tlng 714/M2-5e1t
All other department• "'2""'321
,.
Hazy sunshin~ along the Coast
Coaatal
··~·~FRONTI 'q ~ W11m-Coto.....,.. Tides
l.~ t2 n
Mempl\4jl " '7
MIM118-tl t2 71
Mllw ...... 15 ..
...,,....., Peul 79 ..
~ ., 11 =r .. .. n • NOnOlll,Va .. n
Otllahoma City ., ..
()l'ntM u • OrlllndO .. fl
Pllm lptinga 106 n
PllllN1'PN• 111 ..
Pll04ni• 104 It
P111-:r,11 .. ..
Ponl .llM ... eo
POl1Ml\d,Or 75 54
llYCWICltinOe .. .. =fty t2 70
11 56
Aano es 41
sa«_,to .. $1
91 LOUle 92 13
Sl~•T-17 76
Safi Liit• Ctl)' ta 54
ShOwt•I R .... Fur11 .. Snow OccluOed"IFY Slat-!~ TOOAY
SanAMonlo H 74
8111' Dtago 74 ee
&1 4 ota m
800pm 3 9 Allluqu.tq"4t I 7 8 I Fl-allalt 79 J 0 A"*°lllo et 12 Of8N Aepjdt 80
41
63
bin f tancltlco .. SIS!' 79 45
Andlot~ II 54 Hwttord 7 I AllMI• ti 13 Helena 17
85 S..llle " 48 •• Sllr 92 11 WU*WaOAY 203am 11211am
4 51 p Ill
451 pm
4 0 AllMI~ Oly 74 89 Hono1111U 81
O 1 Au.iin U 72 Houeton It
73 n SIOU• 1111 eo M
Sl>C*-11 ..
4 I laftlmof• .. .. lnd!lllllCIOW t2
4 1 8wmongham ~2 09 J.cklOn.Mt 94
70 9-,r-u ee
ee Tooele• et ..
9,...,.,c;11 75 se '**-.....,. 90 73 Tuc:aon 100 78
TulN 111 72 Sun ..,, tocW;o ac a 07 p m • ,_ BcNM 82 IH ,,..._ se
Wec!Mtd9)' 11 S ~?I m Ind MIS 80"" 8oet0f1 72 88 1(-City 1141
49 •1 W""*'Vtllfl 112 71
118 07 p m Bu"•lo 12 114 Lu veo-10 l
Moon M1t 11 11 19 a m rlHe 11 Cuper 84 45 lltlle Roel< M
78 Wldllta •1 72
74 WllllM Barte 72 ..
12 45. m W9<lnaed1~ 11\<l Ml• ~Ill Ch•r14111on.S c 115 78 .Loa Arl1>91M '° 11 l2 14 p m Cna11Mton,W v 93 72
&4 Wllmlllgfon,Oe 70 ..
----------Chll'1011•.N C 81 St Cll9yel'IM 7 3 48 Chicago as s1
ClnCIMllll 93 114
C...,.11>0 M 65
Extended SURF REPOR T
M~I end motn<ng IOw clou<JI ,_ lhe
COUI e>lancltf\CI 11110 IM •alieya Outing
Iha Ille NQl•I thr0U9n m•O·mo<ning
hOu,_ Hlghl ,_ 70 II lhe ~
r11ngirlg to ao. In lh• •11 .. r• LOW11 55 l o
65
Columb<a.S C II 72 COlum~.Oll 13 95 ConcofdNH M M
Dlllu-fl WO<lh 96 74 Dl~on 90 65 o.n.... 81 52 ----------0.. M~,_ 17 82
0~111~1 " 13 Oululh 71 49
El Puo 80 114
Temps
HI Le f ..,,,.,.., 77 541
70 97 ,..,go 77 lie
Crash injures two
am
1-3
1·3 1-3
1·2
1-2
1·2
2
S ..... dltectlon IOUU-1
DIMCTIC*
'* , .... I• 1• lair poor
poor
Reecue worken free two peqple after a
Toyota Supra driven by Don Wilcox, 65, of
Carl•bad plunged over an embankment on
the 90uthbound San Diego Freeway .near
Beach Boulevard ln Huntington Beach.
Wllcoz wu reported In fair condition
today at Fountain Valley Community
Hoepltal. A pauenger in the car, whoee
name could not l>e lmmed.lately de-
termined, al-.o wu taken to the hoepltal.
POT ARRESTS IN MISSION VIEJO ••.
From Al
Donna L Eubank. 29. of Costa Mesa.
a dental technician; and D1ennger's
son Dann}' E. Douglas. 27. of Long
Beach, a dental lab trainee
Olson said customs agents in
Florida making a routine check found
straw purses and about two pounds of
manJuana 1n a package addressed to
Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Dieringer
Olson said mvesugators arranged
with postal officials to have the
package rcWTappcd and delivered
M onday to the dental office. Deputies
were waning outside and an under-
cover officer was in the reception area
to watch the ~ckage being received.
The shentrs spokesman said
Margaret Dieringer, whose husband
1s lhe deoust work:lng at the office,
signed for the pack.age. About five
minuteslatcr, officers entered the
office and found Mrs. Dieringer and
her children in a back room with the
opened pack.age.
The dentist was in another room
with a patient and was not arrested..
Olson said.
MESA TOUGHENS NOISE LAW ...
From Al
traffic dunng its first season and the spnng.
beginning of its second season th1\ In late Apnl. the rny filed a three-
TRANSIT BUDGET •••
From Al
plannlng less expensive rapid tran-
sit systems, Including the possi-
bility of a raised bus lane on county
freeways, according to OCTD
spokeswoman Joanne Curran.
One new employee will be hired
to help with the vastly reduced
rapid transit planning efforts.
The budget. approved unani-
mously. calls for S 73.2 mllllon to be
spent on OCTD operations and
$9.4 mllllon on capital Improve-
ments. The operations ependlng
reflects a 6 percent Increase over
last year'• budget. Capital Im-
provements are down about 14
percent.
Bus fares are unchanged In the
budget. Travelers wlll continue
paying 75 cents per ride during
rush hours and 80 cent• the rest of
the time. There has not been a tare
hJkealnce 1981.
The budget afso projecta that
bus rlderahlp wlll surpau this
year's record figure of 33.9 mllllon
bus riders.
CRASH KILLS NA VY PILOT •••
From Al
count misdemeanor noise complaint
against the own ers o f the
amphitheater for allt:iedly violating
the county's noise ordinance.
Wood said lhat thrtt years ago, a
dispute between the city and the
fairgroundsresultcd in an agreement
that noise from activities on the
fairgrounds would not violate county
noise levels
But Thursday, when the city's
criminal rompla.int aaainst Ned--
West, Inc., the ownef'1 of the
amphitheater, was considered in
Harbor Municipal Coun. Judge
Selim Franklin ruled the city could
not enfortt county laws.
Wood sa1d the revised city ordi-
nance would ma.kc it possible for the
city to enforce its standard
The next amphitheater concen,
featunna the Beach Boys, is scbed·
uled for July 29.
"'"' ~1 f•o()ly 11 you J<,
'l<l• ~... Y<NI IMll* .,.,
S lfl r ,.. call De">-• 7 1> ,..
4<\C fOtl Cl'C y Ila rvtt .. ,,,,en
Daily Pilat MAIN OFFIC!
330 Wt1$1 S.-, SI Coall Mllta CA
Mao IO<)r 8.11 168() Coell Mau CA !1'616
withheld tinttl his family could he
notified
)pokcwoman 51id.
McGrath Aid details of the train·
ina m1sSt.on. which can be conducted
on a umer or on an ait1trip, were not
immediately known. McGrath &a.id it
abo was not known 1r the plane was
armed.
fhe blaze aid not threaten any
structure • fircfiahtcr E.dward OU
said.
ah,<Jay aNI "...atr "
you d<l l10f •tc-)'(11.0 c W)' 111 1 • m t• batort •O • m a'1d ,,,.,, C~J ,..
119~
Ctrcufatlon
Telep.WM9
H. L. Schw•rtz an
Publisher
ChHJ DowallbJ
Editor and Assistant
to the Publisher
Aoeemary Churchm•
Controller
~· IM3 Orangt C4letll ~ c-.., No
·--~··-ldl'IOfWI "'811 .. ,,. ~....u ,.., -r ~ -.pt~t(! """"'°"' _,...,., Nf
..._ OI '~""" -
VOL. 17, NO. 172
1 he twio·tailtd Navy plane van-
1,hcd at 11 : 15 p.m. a u wa pract1c1n
"touch and jO" carrier approJche ,
McGrath ~:ud The F-18 wu from
'itnkc r iahter Squadron 131.
Sunilar dry.land im\!latcd ~rrier
landings by Marine pilot caused an uproar 1n Irvine la t "'"ttk. ~hen three ;cu and 1 tounh Ii cd wttk <'ran
atlcged.h buncd a CfO"''d or JllC'>o
nicken:r1lot• trom the Marine Com
Air Station 1n ·I Toro don't u
( atalina tnr 1nun1na. • twi .. c
-------==-r
Los Anicte County firefi&hter Rod
Washin"on qid rescue crews were
told to "stay clear beau there maaJlt
be live ammo abo&fd."
He said f'irtftahtcrs, wbo lad to ~llke into the d area near Whitts
Landini on the tout bast J)'Onion of
the 1sJana. we~ ••t>asically 1u1t by
inin " th~ fire early tilda •
The McDonnell Do"l)a Jct it
equipped ..,ith an ejection system,
McGrath said.
McGrath said he found it "hard to
believe" that fircfiahtcn were or-
dered away from the plane, bcca'*
the) arc trained to deal with the
po~ iblc presence ofc~plo ives.
Word of the era h came at 11 :JO
p m! Monday. Los An.atl · County
fire Capt. l.te Gusurson 1d ,
1ttfightcr and Coa l Guatd
rl"K'uc \lnllt wm sent to the tocnc.
' '