HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-21 - Orange Coast PilotI
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HIGH81 LOWIS
ltflHl'>lll\1 <11Nt .'1 l'lt\l
Marine flap could. cost million
Irvine's Sills fears deve lopmerlt d ispute secs that asa possibility if the Marine
Corps steps upeffons to halt plans for
Irvine Center. the 480-acre, SI billion
development planned at lhc con~
fl uence of the San Diego and Santa
might Jeopardize funds to city from Irvine Co. . '
By ANDREA ADELSON
Ot ... °"9r .........
An Irvi ne councilman said
Wednesday he is concerned that a SI
million per year payment to the city
by the Irvine ~o. may be in jeopardy'
Coaat
Sewer lees will be climb-
ing In Laguna Beach./ A3
A mother suspected of
stabbing her baby laces
assault charges./ A3
because or an escalating controversy
with the Marine Corps over develop..
mcnt near the El Toro base.
City Councilman David Sills _said
, "if we preclude development from '
Irvine Center. wt may be throwing a
million bucks c>ut th~ wi_n.dow." Sill
Ana freeways. · ·
· -Lt. Col. Bobbie Weinberaer.
spokeswoman for the Marine Corps
Air Station in El Toro. said .. I think .f
can put that quickly to ~t." .
.. The dtal wt entered into. wt are
~. >-:i,\1ll •. ~
Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley met with Walter
Mondale today to discuss
'VP post.I A4
Nation
Much discussed Immi-
gration bill squeaks
through House In
216-211 vote./A4
Senate approves $219
billion defense budget
lauded by Reagan./ M
World
Soviet spokesman says
joint arms talks highly
unlikely at this time./ A4
Living
Whatever happened to
the joyful state of chlld-
hood? /B2
American women could
take lessons In love from
their European and Asian
slsters./82
Sports
Orange County All-Star
football game has filled
'the void caused by the
cancellation of the Shrine
game./C1 ·
Area baseball standouts
Bob Grandstaff and Jack
Reinholtz sign pro-
lesslonal_ contracts./C2
Olympic shooting trials
offer an alternative to the
"major" events at the
Games./C3
Entertainment
Cable TV shows are offer-
ing viewers a "grown-up
alternative" to network
programs./83
want to see the Jacksons
on tour this summer? Get
your $120tothepost
olflce./84
Bua in ea
AirCal claims Its $300
million purchase gives It
quieter jet1tlor John
wayne.191
INDEX
lll•nner mysteries aolved .
Row to eat popoYea• la one of the leeeona tbat Anfela
Cbrlatle, Temelli 11-and Valerie llabe learn at the
Torch " dream
maybe
doused
. HB woman, 70,
given route 600
miles from home
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. ..,"-''"'"
Patt Tambolleo, a 7~ycar-old
Huntington Beach grandmother,
raised $3,000 to fulfill her dream of
carrying a li&hted torch through her
city as pan of the croSS<Ountry
Olympic relay.
But she received the distressing
news this week that she's been
assigned to carry the torch more than
600 miles from her home in the tiny
Northcm California town of Adin.
Tambollco said she couldn't even
find Ad.in on a map until a newspaper
reporter told her where to look.
.. , still don't undentand it." she
said early today.
··1 went shop to shop and got the
contributions.
.. From the beginning. I said I
wanted to run in the Huntington
Beach area. I'm an Orange County
Patt Tambolleo
volunteer. So why should they make
me run so far away? It's too far. and
I'm under a doctor's care."
Participants in the cross--c:ountry
relay each had to raise $3,000 to
benefi t a yout h group. Tambollco•s
money is earmarked for the Boys and
Girls Oub of Huntin~on Valley.
Each torch carrier ts assiancd one
kilometer (.62 mile) to run in the
cross-country re lay that will end in
the Los Angeles Memorial Colliscum.
Lindsay Chancy. deputy press sec-
retary for the Los Angeles Olympic
Organizing Committee. said con-
tributions for torch kilometers started
arriving in August, and fint~hoicc
locations were given to those who
sent in money early.
"Locations in all of Southern
California were in pretty high d~
(PI ....... TORCH/A2)
OCC names interim prez
not in any way chanaina,"
Weinberter said. "We still feel the
way wt felt yeanap>: if you pw dense
·~pulations so cloic to a jet facility.
1t's'fl difficult probkm ...
Im.inc and the Newpon Beach-
bascd ~vclopment firm siped an
avecment in October. assurina the
city of SI million annually begi'nnih&
in 1983 unti the devek>pment joetf
starts aenera11ng an eQual amount in
t111: revenue. .
As part of the ntsotiationt. the
lrviM Co. q.reed to shrink I.he briaht
or .hotels planntd in the trianale as a
cOnctuion to the Marine COfl>S., Tom
Ntebcn, the Irvine Co.'s pret1dmt,
said.
Maj. Gen. Richan! M . Cooke,
commot'.ndin& general of air station.
said in a kltcr thb week to city
ofticials that -we arc diS1pPoin~ to
Church
blasts
_city's
c .
. Carnival periled
as pastor protests
conditions by HB
•
Academy for Etiquette for the J'OGDCer oet offend by
lfelman·llattu In lfewport -..h. See -"J' on Paee Bl.
Onofre
pulls plug
on power
FNm staff aad wire rep.rtl
lbc San Onofre nuclear power
planl was idled today after the plant's
only opera ring reactor was shut down
because of a coolant leak that may
have rcsuhed in radioactive gases
escaping into the atmosphere. a
spokesman said
Wednesday's shutdown allowed
technicians to inspect the coolin&
sr.tem of the l .l~mcgawatt Unit 2
e cctric generator. said Dave Barron
ofSouthem California Edison Co.
It is expected to remain off-line for
three to four weeks. he said. which
means the plant won't be generating
electricity because the other two units
arc also shut down.
Barron said the shutdown was
voluntary and there was littic danger
to the public or employees at the
costal plant about five m i~ from San
Oemcntc.
The system had leaked for weeks.
but was steadily monitored. ··The limit (for leakag allowed by
the Nuclear RegulatOf)' Commission)
··is 720 gallons per day:· Barron said.
"We reached 300 gallons per day. So
we were still within what's allow-
able."
Thi leak is in the coolant system
that runs 1hrough Unit 2·s nuclear
reactor and two steam gencnton.
Radioactive coolant was flowing 1n10
water used to generate steam. Barron
. said.
While some radioactive steam may
have bttn vented into the air. Barron
said it was within allowable hmits. ·
The l:tnit 2 reactor bq.an rom-
mercial operation in August 1983. ~t
was operating at full capaci ty when 11
was shut down.
Unit l is off-line for thrtt v.ttls
more to repair icaky Yalves 1n the
coolant pumps..
Unit I. wh ich has not operated
since February 1982. 1s being up-lf'aded to better withstand earth-
quakes.
Thank• for the help
lrTlne lndutrlallat J . Robert Fluor .-in. a lllltC Ina
llarloo Knott after recel'riDC the~ -t A-6-
the ORD&e Coaaty Comlcll of the Boy -el •= 1rkia
Wecln-J' ula:ht at the Anah-Bil-. .._ -
bonored for lite fud·rat.tnc actl...tti• • t.1'·lf el, -.... .
.... '
Erm• Bombeck
Btldge
Bulletin Board
Bull,,...
Colltoml1Newl
Cluollled com1c1
Cr-d OHthNotlcel
HOf'09CoP9
82
85
A3
86-7
A•
C6-8
85 ce
C4 C7
tl2
Pay cut plan mak~ng AirCal skies unfriendly
,t.nn Lander•
Living
Mututl Funds
NltlonllNewl
Opinion
P-1111 -Log
Publlc:No-
~Mlll<ot•
Tllo\'lslon
Thlltl<I
Wllth<f
~-
81-2
87
A4 AB
81
A3
C4-6
C1-3
Bl
13
113-4
A2
M
Workers balk at roposed two-tier scale:
airline says It's necessary for survival
Airline e1ecutives claim it is u
equitable way 10 ave moacy ia era or
cutthroet competition -llbor j ust
Cllla it C\llltu'oal.
They arc araulnaovcr ~two-tier
pay -tlllt ... -.. incr<1>-•llllY commott in Ille airlint •ttdustty. ~ aac1 ..,... ai-indlldina United. American and Piedmont
have .oopted the two-tier systt.m
where ntwly hired .............
paid as much u JO Pllftllia• leM than ••airline's veteru mpka)ws
The controvtny hM "9Ched into
the DnnF Coast. the home of mon y
airline e11:ecutives and employees.
with the Newpon B<och-buc<I Air-
CaJ fiabtina iu wortcn over a
propoaal 10 create a two-tier pay
1)'1\em, also known as a &-scale Pl.1
S)'ltt.m.
While: ~atioris are continuiA&,
the airlines JOO fliaht attendants
'Yottd 10 reject the propo11I and to
authorite a strike lut month. The flilht at1codanu• old contract api.ttd
April I.
Afttr te.vcral yan ?flouts AirC'al
•
JEllY
H11SCH
Focus ON THE NEWS
is havin& wha1 toots to be a ft'C'Of'd ~· ~ company camcd an
5'2'.000 fint qusrtcr profit durina •
tnditionatty Mow ptriod for a1rhnes
ud bu been t>Rakina iu own puxnarr trafftC ttCOl'd durinc the
sPrina months. ,
Althouah th< coonom~ is probably
the areatcst factor in A1cCal's Nm-
around, bdt-tifbtenit11 measures b)I ~· indudina subs,..tial layolli •n lat< 19 2 and • 10 pc"1<1\t
~-cut&lldli<en in <orly 1913 ha"",contributod
~tty to the airline•s ~very.
Empio,.a 11Y the.1' ha>'< pmi
~-. 8u_1 the airline wan to
polit1on itJtlf fbr continued comptti-
bOft and the inevitable downtum in
the economy. Tbat why .. ICt'Ol'dib&
10 manaecme-nt. it is P'llbina the tw<>-
1ierpwy1ystcm in thecumnt n>undof
conltlCt \II
ndet-irC•l's plan. n.,ht anend·
1
ants who now atart 1t SlO u how
wou.k1 st.art at S I 0.
While both fipm sound bke eood
-. Ille Oia}\I 1t1entlonts poitlt Ot01
they only IOI paid for tliaht boun -
the time tlle Jlllt!< 11 "" Ille -anti in the au. They ~ thol lk
ratio ofloldi"I tiJM t0 ICWOI ..,.._
time is about 2Yt-to-I . ~ dlle nisht attendonll IOI paid lw •
....... of 1~ houn • -· ....,,
IClually"""' -·JOO. AirCal ........ ka .. Altt• w (Pl .. _ • ..., .... , ....
'---__,,... I ,, -·---..,...---------___ .,....._ 1--~-•
CHURCH PROTESTSCARNIV AL CURBS •••
ProaAl
For 18 ~ears lhc church, ith a
membenhap ofabout 3,000 f1milte •
hes held• i I 1~ "ndl a'
16400 pri~dale Sl.
This fall s scheduled three-day
e-vcnt that features carnival rides.
11mcs and booths for food and bttr
and wine was expected to anract
about 20,000 ~p~. Officials ho~ to raise ~rbaps as much as SS0.000 for
the cbureh ' charitable causes that
include money for food and doth Ina
for the indietnt. finanCt.11 assistance
to poorer parishes and money to help
~tudents pay tuition to parochial
schools. •
But residents complained that thear
nei&hborhood near the church and in
the proum1ty of Marina Hieb School
ha& been overwhelmed by traffic and
litter. They asked officials to put
some curbs on the act1v1~.
The Caty's Planning Comm1ss1on
ruled Wcsfnesday that the church can
so ahead with the cam a val but that 11
mu t be abide by 2S condtdiuons.
toftlt 'Of wtuch dOn't Sil wtil with
Mons1anor Duffy and members of the
parish.
The oty, amol'\I other thinas.
wants the church to .,ree in wri tina to
drop two Masses, hnc up 10 10 off.
duty officers to l<eep lrlffic under
control, maintain baJTicades at resi-
dentJal streets and to make an-
nouncements over the church's pub-
lic address system on where to park
dunnt.the festival.
Duffy claims the demands are
dictatorial. He wd the church. even
though it was the memben' idea 10
drop the Masses to preserve parking
space$, wouJdn•t agree to do so in
wnttng.
"We will not lgrtt to do that."
Duffy sa1d. "Ma)'bc nc"t 11mc 1hey
(officials) will want to cancel mort
Masses.
MARINE DISPUTE COSTLY •••
From Al
••°f'M'sc an: limits on our frtt-
doms." he aaid. "We don't have the area• American frtdtoms that wt
\<d to have any more."
Church officials also have to tct
promises in wriliJll from w ntarb)'
Redeemer Lutheran Church that
fMuval visitors can park on their lot
But &:I Giardina, a ccrchairman of
the festival, said the city's demand 1s
"an insult."
"We (the two churches) arc both
honorable and wt made an agree-
ment."
Plannina Commissioner Tom Li vcn&ood said the city took the steps
to ensure safety. He satd there art not
adequate parkmg places and v1sito11
block fire hydrants and dnveways
with their cars while overflowina mto
res1dcnti.al neighborhoods.
"Thechurcb has 10 understand that
we're acting to insurt pubhc safety."
he said. •
said. The ln1ne Co. "1s already statement to mean thot the Mannes
building the on-ramps." . intend to oppose development on the base's pnmary runway are Ute
Roben Shelton. senior vice pres•· planned over the next 25 years within focus of a controversy between the
dcn1 of the Irvine Co. said. ··we think the so-called Golden Triangle, south city oflrvinc and Marines. after three
perhaps too much as being made of of the Marine base. jets and a fixed wing craft two weeks
the general's passing reference to Nielsen said in an interview earlier 8$0 allegedly "buzzed" a crowd of
Irvine Center." this week that Marine training picnickers at the site of a 177-bcd
Shelton said the development missions actually cross the trial.l4!e hospital in cast Irvine.
agreement Wlll remain ant.act. proposed for the Irvine Center, wbale Gen. Cooke has said that on June 9 ~· 9e oo.k~ is on v~catio~and was mib\afY ma~. sho~ ~he jets fly a al! aircra~ were flying ~n accordance
:. -~-.~~ J ~. • -,.7"'~~1,,J'n . , ~-~ .... ~mcnt. basc"splftsm\'ff M'ai~-~ct~ t. ~~~< .. ~ ~ . ~:.:
Jack Michalski said today. ~pile ~e ap~nt ove ~ ts 0 Y occurred.
Lt. Col. Weinberger saad safety military ~ft. 11 shoutdn t have The city last week asked the
concerns over encroaching develop-an impact on d~velo~t plans 10 Defense Department to move prao-
mcnt as not "atmang at the Irvine Co.. lrvme Center. Nielsen saad. tice missions from El Toro. Sills said
but aJI commercaaJ ventures." Added Irvine Co. spokesman Jerry Lhere has been no response so far from
The furor over Irvine Center may Collins. .. the area under the pattern military officials in W~hington. D.C.
be a bat premature. No bualdingplans has low density." Ai&hts from the I Toro station
have yet been submitted, Assistant Despite Nielsen's comments, Sills and the Marine heli opter station in
City Manager Paul Brady saad. "We said in private convenAtions with Tustin total I 3S,OOO a year, a number
had anuc1pated that as early as 1978 Irvine Co. officials be beard ell· that has increased steadily in recent
we would have seen some com· p~ons of concern over Gen. years because of an expansion in
merc1al act1v11y," he wd. Cooke's statement. existing uainini programs, aocordin&
Sills said h,.. int~rpfft,..,. r""~ .. ·~ Orv-li1nrl ntrrit"r lstndina practices to a base spokesman.
TORCH DREAM MAY BE DOiJSED ••.
From Al
mand," Chancy said.
Tambolleo's money came tn near
the spnng deadline, when all Orange
County kilometers had already been
assigned. he said.
Chancy said there are "a handful of
people" tn her s11ua11on. wt th runnmg
assignments far from their homes. He
said there 1s little hkehhood Tam·
bolleo's kilometer an Ad1n can be
chan&cd.
"They're pretty well locked tn."
Chancy saad. "If we chanac her
locauon 1t involves pulltn& someone
else from the Los Angeles are.a up
there. It's not fair to the people wh o
sent tn their money early··
The torch program does not
provide funds for transportation. and
Tambolleo. who lives on Social
Secunty, said she can't afford to
travel to Adin. "And I wouldn't know what to do
when I got there.'' she Sltid. " t's
ndiculous the way they've put me on
the spot."
Tambolleo has been pursumg her
Olympic torch dream since last
November. She practiced runnmg
and exercised at a local heaJth club.
She said she was active tn athletics
dunng her yo uth. and she cnv1s1oned
the torch run as a wa} to provide a
memorable moment for her five
grandchildren.
She said a 12-year-old grandson in
Oklahoma has rcccntly i.ken itp
running. mspired by has vand-
mothcr·s example.
But Tambolleo has faced d1f·
ficultaes in fulfilling her dream. In
January, she suffered a mild heart
attack. She entered a cardiac rchabili·
uuion program at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital and now insists
hrr hlood pressure is "better than it's
ever been." She says she practices
Jogging or brisk walking regularly at
the beach.
Collecting the $3,000 in donations
by going shop to shop wasn·t easy
c11hcr. About 500 separate donors
were involved. she said.
.. At some places. they asked me to
come back two or three times." she
said ··eut I was persistent and finally
1he) dnbbled out a few dollars. But
most of 1hc people were sym-
paLhct1c ...
Tambolteo said the last few dollars
were donated by an area resident who
asked to rcmam anonymous.
If she chooses not to run 1n Adin.
Tambolleo may be able to get a refund
of the $3,000.
"I don't want the money back," she
insisted. "I want to carry the torch. I
worked too hard to lose 1t."
AIRCAL WORKERS RAP PAY PLAN ..•
From Al
ants a minimum of 58 flight hours a
month. That 1s low for the industry.
The average guaranteed number of
flight hours at most a1rlmes 1s closer
to 75.
Air<:al light attendants sec man-
agement's proposal to create the two-
t1erpay system asa way to "divide and
conquer," said Carla Barrow. a fll&ht
attendant who has been with A1rCal
smce 1969. (
Pilots at Au<.. al aJso see the two-tier
system as a threat and passed a
resolution last week staling their
ob1ect1on to any AirCal employees'
union acceptina the revised pay
program.
The airline isn't com menting on
the labor controversy.
"We are an negot1at1ons with the
flight attendants nght now and we
don't comment on anythmg that as in
negotiations. We believe that things
arc progrcssin& and that the talks
1oing very well. .. said AirCal spokes-
man Bill Bell.
Ban'ow claims the airline will
redutt the number of workin& houn
for vrteran flight attendants to the SS.
hour minimum an the contract. The
aarhne wall use cheaper. newly hired
worker~ to fill an the slack thus
depriving the older fl1aht attendants
of the monthly income they were
acrustomed to rece1v1na.
Barrow noted that income already
Just Call
642-6086
has been reduced 10 percent through
the wage cut and ano~ 8 percent by
inflation since the wage freeze.
"We have already made a lot of
concessions and we aren't asking for
any of it back. Not even a wage
increase," Barrow said.
And with the increasing number of
8-scale employees joining the airhne.
the influence of the older A-scale
employees m contract ncgot1~t1ons
will decrease.
"When there are cnou~ people on
the 8-scalc to run the a1rhne the A-
scale employees will be eliminated.
The m8jority of the 8-scale em·
ployees arc not going to fight for the
older employees." Barrow said.
"It 1s real clear what the intention
of management is. In two years there
won't be an A-scale." Barrow added.
John Pmcavage. an airline industry
analyst with Paine Webber Jackson&.
Curtis Inc. agrees that two-tier pay
systems create tension but he says the
airlines have httle choice.
"It is an industry trend. There 1s no
question that it will help the industry
by reducing labor costs." Pincavage
said.
··11 wall make negot1a11ons more
difficult than tn the past but the 8-
scalc as a lot more preferable than
taking someone who has been making
$100.000 a year and gJv1na them
$50.000." he said.
The concept will create d1 v1s1on in
the labor unions but Pincavage says it
will take a different form than Barrow
forsces.
"It is more likely that the new set of
workers will want to get up to the old
workers' wages and will put pressures
on union negotiators to do that,"
P1ncavage said.
"But anytime you split the union
membership you have a better chance
of doing what management wants."
Ptncavagc added.
Although flight attendants at other
airlines have accepted a similar two-
ucred pay system, Barrow says there
arc enough differences in the AirCal
system to make it particulary hard on
employees.
The Ameri(;fn Airlines system
guarantees veteran flight attendants a
minimum of75 hours a month so the
threat of replacing old employees
hours with new employee hours is not
as great.
Amencan also starts its 8-scalc
employees at $14.50 an hour com-
pared to AirCal's proposed $10.
Un11ed Airlines· two-lier pay sys-
tem starts new workers at lower rates
but reaches eventual parity after five
years.
Although flight attcndcnts don't
ltkc the concept. they are saying
privately that such safeguards as
more mimmum hours. higher start·
ing salancs and eventual parity make
the idea more palatable.
Wb1t do you llke about tbe Dally Piiot? What don't you llkeT Call tbe
number at left and your me1111e wlll be recorded, tran1crlbed and dellver'td
to Ute appropriate tdJtor.
The 11me U ·fto.r aa1werln1 service may be used to record teuera to tbe
editor on H Y toptc. Contrlb•tor1 to our Leuen colama m11t l.ncl1de tbelr
n1me aad telepboH n1mber for verification. No tlrc1latiOD cilia. ple11e.
Tell 11 wlaa&'t on yotr ml1d.
ORANGE COAST Clrculatloft 714/M2..aa3
Cluetned ~ 714/M2-a1'1
All otMr .,., •• .., .. Ma..a21 DlilyPilat
H. L khwarta In
Pubbaher
MAIN OFF'tCI
Cheiy Dow.-., .........,, ChurdvMft
Eottor and ~ant ContrOllet
.C~
T111...,._..
Moll! C)~COwmy
Al-....
uo.-"'9"' .....
-. -.
to the Publilher
...... ,.c ...
Pt~flOfl
~
I
-·-
VOL 17, NO. 174
,_ /
1
Hot spell looming along Coast
8p.m. EDT, Fftdly, June 22
YO
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Slaying suspect' s attorneyS ·
push for change in trial site
By J ERRY HIRSCH
Of .. 0.-, Net .....
Pre-trial hearings have started in
the bQ.moscxual killings trial of.
Randy Kraft and botti sides are
gearing up for what could be one of
the longest trials in 1he history of
Orar>gc County if the case is tried
here.
Lawyers for Kraft. a Long Beach
computer pr(>grammer suspected of
killing 16 young men in Orange
County over an I I -year period.
presented testimony Wednesday that
they hope will convince Orange
County Supenor Court Judge James
K. Turner to transfer the case to
anoJher county.
Body identified
.\ Laguna &ach man whose bat·
tercd a nd bloody body was found in
the trunx of has automobile at
Ontario lntemauonal Airport died
from multiple gunshot wounds to the
head. the San Bernardino County
coroner's office said.
Meanwhile, investigators revealed
Wednesday that Jerry Lee Lawrence,
42, bad a record of narcotics viol·
at ions and may be linked to a car theft
and an armed robbery.
Douglas Otto. one of two lawyers
defending Kraft, said he planned to
introduce the formal change of venue
motion Monday.
_Wednesday, Ono called in two
special witnesses to help build the
case that the trial should be moved.
The first witness, Cal State Long
Beach criminal justice professor
Laurie Poore, was contracted by the
defense to do a publicity analysis of
235 newspaper clippings on the case.
She found that Kraft's name had
appeared more than 2.000 times and
was listed in 135 different headlines.
"Not only was the public being
educated about the facts of the case
but they were involved tn at. At a press
contCrtnce Orange County ShcnfT
Brad Gates asked for public help an
identifying the victims." said Poore.
who received her Ph.D at UC Irvine.
The newspaper stories, collected
from May 1983 to May 1984, "often
would include something that would
show the darker side of Mr. Kraft.
They portrayed.him as a romputer
programmer during the daytime. a
gay barfly at night and a killer in
between," Poore testified.
"Seemingly ordinary things were
com mented on by the press -bis
clothing, the way he talked to his
lawyers." Poore said.
During the first part of Poore's two
hours of testimony. Deputy District
Attorney Wilham Bedsworth ob-
JCCtcd to many of the questions Otto
was asktng Poore claiming the ques-
tions were asking Poore to make
"1rrelcvent subjective judgments" on
the chppangs.
Crash injures 2 motorists
Two women were injured about
7:30 a.m. today wben their cars
collided on the Santa Ana River
bridge at Adams Avenue. between
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa.
The westbound lanes oft he heavily
traveled roadway were closed for
about 45 minutes after the accident.
Jane Freeman. 35, of Huntington
Beach. was driving her Volkswagen
bug eastbound when she apparently
struck the center divider and jumped
over it. colliding with a westbound
car driven by Mary MacKenzie, 56 , of
Costa Mesa.
Both were hstcd in good condition
this morning at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital. Cause of the
accident 1s still under investigation by
the California Highway Patrol.
CULTURED PEARL CHALLENGE
GUESS THE NUMBER OF PEARLS IN THE GLASS IN OUR FRONT WINDOW
VISIT THE ST ORE
DURING OUR
30o/o
OFF
SPECIAL
AND TAKE OUR
CHALLENGE
... *" .. .......... ,..l.ty
Acwa• ......
Lli1 lleaf
•ONEENTRY
PER P ERSON
• NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY
• CLOSEST GUESS
WI NS CULTURED
PEARL NstKLACE
ON J UNE 28th
CHARLES H. BA RR
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I •
OtMge CoMt DAil:¥ KOT~ • ._ 11, 1IM
BULLE TI N BonRo
Senator W.ils on set
for honors in Mesa
U.S. Sen. Pete Wilson will receive the National
Kumanitanan Award from tht National Jewish HOll)i•
tal/National A1lbma Center Friday at lhe Westin South
Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mell.
A reception at 7 p.m. will prttede the dinner propam
at 8 e.m. Further information may be obtained by callina
476-0808.
DJet lecture at GoldetJ Weet
"Appetite Control: F.at Your .Way to Slimness" is the
topic of a lecture to be aiven tonight at Golden West
College in Huntinaton Beach by hypnotherapist Melody
Criner.
The pr<>&ram, which carries a fee ofS23, is scheduled
for 7:30 in Room 223 of the colleac administration
butldma. Call 891 -3991 for further information.
Sale to ald M arch of Dlmee
A combination garage saJe and bake sale will be held
Friday to benefit the Oranae County chapter of the March
of Dimes at the Oranae DcHaven Guest Home, 2619
Orange A vc .. Costa Mesa.
Craft items arc being donated by several senior
centers in the area for the event, scheduled from 10 a.m. to 3p.m.
Seminar set on relatlo~•lllJM
A communications workshop on "making rela-
tionships really work" wiU be offered Friday in the Faculty
House at Oranae Coast College in Costa Mesa.
Steven Winer, an author specializing in relationshlp
communication, will conduct lhe seminar from 7 to l l
p.m. The fee is $1 0 and information is available at
432-5880.
Ba• offered for Angel• 1ame
""~-~~~-~; n .y
at 5 p.m. from Northwood Cc:;mmunity Park in Irvine.
The cost is S 7. SO and registration can be made at the
park, on Bryan A venue.
Sewer costs soar in Laguna
tentative approval for
16.7 million bud et
By DAVID BISHOP
Of ... ..., ........
Sewer feet will to up lapin th.is year in
una BeKh and are e~pected to ao even
tt in the next couple of years.
ty council memben appc:oved an 8
percent increase for residenttal and com-
mercial customers as pan of the city's S 16. 7
million budatt for l 98._8S, and heard City
Manqer K.en Frank predict that sewer feet
will increue 30 percent next year and 1 S
percent the year after that
The 1ewer increase is "absolutely essen-
tial" at this time, Frank aaid.
"ln short. ... our annual expenditures will
exceed annual revenue and our (sewer)
fund balance WJll be rapidly depleted.••
Frank said. He blamed.the increases OQ the
high cost of transponina waste material to
the rqionat treatment plant at Aliso Creek
and the cost of secondary waste treatment
which is .. enCl'JY intensive."
frank said the city pays S.668,000 a year
in sewer plant bond costs each year related
to construction of the Aliso Wat.er Manage-
ment Aaency plant now being used, and
that the city's total annual sewer service bill
was nearly S2.S million in I 984-8S.
Until this year lhe city treated its own
tewqe in a t aao the trett &om the
Fcsti\lal o Arts arounds on ~na
Canyon Ro.jj. That plant, which 11 now beins ckmolithcd, uuted the ICWllC only
once be(bre 1t wa pumped out to ea Tbo
new retiooal plant lrali lht was tWJoe
before pum~na it to the ocean.
Residtntial te~er recs wilJ IP up from
Sl2.50 en month fora sin~ family home
to Sil.SO• month beiinnint this July l.
Commcrcial 1CXOunu will receive a ai.iniJar
8 etreent increase.
Sewer fees have nscn steadily since 1973
when the rate was S2.7S per month for a
sinaJc family. In the past lhtee yean the !ea
have gone up nine percent. 10 percent a.ad
61 percent, respectively. Ptt>jected fees for
198S.86 are Sf7.5S, and will be S20.l8 in
1986-87, Frank said.
In other budaet man.en TucJday, the
five-member council was dead.locked P2
in the absence of Robert Genuy on 1
,l)roposed salary increase for the cil)' clerk
and on a new contract with Rutao and
1:ucker. lhc &epl firm lhAt rcprctents t.be
Cllf . .
Council members Martha Collilo'n and
Dan Kenney voted 1n favor of a seven
percent increuc for the city clerk, but wcrt
opl>Osed by Neil Fitzpatrick wbo favored a
five percent increase, and Bobbie Minkin
who favored a 12 percent increate.
Council mcmben w~ also ~tnly split
on the amount or 111 increase in the fees
charged by Rutan and Tucker for wort
done in excess of the prol)Oled monthly
CIJUl cookolf meef1D6 tonlglJt
A meeting for cooks plannina to compete in the
Fountain Valley Fiesta's chili and ribcookoffs wiU be held
tonight at 7:30 p.m. at Peret's Restaurant, 17171
Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley.
Fountain Valley residents will be payio& b.icbcr water
bills tqinnina io Sept.ember a a result or a 1 O perccot rate
iDClale approved by the a~ CouaciJ
Wa Osborne.. the city I PQblic worb diredot, aid
a ou.ntai.o Valley homeowner now pmys about
SI per moo1h for water. Tbe lO percmt inc:rcMe will Credentials and aprons will be provided at this
meeting. The fiesta runs June 29 through July 4 at Mile
Square Park.
add S l .13 to the monthly chartt-(Local residents receave ·
waa.er bills ODCle every two mootbs..)
. Osborne told the COUDci1 Tuesday Di&bt lbat ciwtcs
for k>c:aJ 1'C11 waser and impor1ed w.m-~ ri1iQ1. alona.
with the eDCf1Y costs for pum~ al wdb.. He said I 7
pa'C)Cllt iocrcue would meet the rillol opaatina COllS a1M1
bond ~uimnents. He recommeodal an add.i:ticmal l
V1deo wo,-k•IJop at OCC
Orange Coast College will offer a two-day animation
workshop on slide shows and video programs Friday and
Saturday in the college's television studio. on the fourth
floor of the Norman E. Watson Library.
~t incrcuc to becio rnakins nee 1 improve.meD
m the local water 1ys1em.
Telecommunications consultant Raymond G. Otis
will lead the programJ. which will be held from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. and carries a ) 70 registration fee. Further infor-
mation may be obtained by calling OCC at 432-5880. Ontherocb
Tbe 10 pen:enl rate i.DaaX Wllll llpproved by a )..2
vote, with Couocilmen Marvin A*t, Fred Voe and
James NeaJ io favor. Couaa1 members Ben N"ldlen and
Barbara Brown oppmed.
Nadteo aid ~be coWd not support a 10 pcrceat
iocteuc after• year io wbic:b tbc water department ended Cralse benefits care center Ba.ntt.acton Beach Ttalton Jeb Brewer, 7,
and ll1ity OU., 9 , bake in tbe RD atop
rock.a at Belaler Park in LaCa.na Beach,
U1> with a $200.000 surplus. .
A twilight harbor cruise will be conducted Friday to
benefit the Adult Day Health Care Center in San
Oementc. •
The event will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. from the Dana
Point Harbor. Tickets arc available at S 12.50 each and
reservations may be made by calling 498-76 71 or
643-2273.
.Mom•, bables formln6 clw
A new"mommyand me" infantenricbmentclass, for
babies one to 15 months old and their mothers, will stan
Friday at Shir Ha-Ma'alot Harbor Reform Temple, 2100-
A Mar Vis~ Newport Beach.
Grand JUry wants task·force
to crack down on truancy
By STEVE MARBLE °' .. ..., ........
Discussion topics will include health, nutrition,
safety, speech and laDJUagc, motor development and
Jewish holidays and schooling. Rqistration is $30 and
further information may be obtained by calling the temple
at 644-7203.
The Orange County' Grand Jury
bas asked county educators to de-
velop a task force aimed at cracking
down on student truancy and con-
sider the use of ~tar police sweeps
to corral youths duelling school.
communication that oocurs between
the juvenile justice system and the
public school systems," the Grand
Jury said io a report issued Tuesday.
Beyond the effects tnaancy has on
the individual students, the Grand
Jury noted that school districts Jose
hundreds of thousands of dollars
because schools receive most of their
money based on attendance.
SI.id they bad diffiadty even Fl.tin&
data from police depanmc.ats aad
school district OD tnaaots or dropout&.
ln one f'our·year S1re1.cb., mote tbaa 3,SOO students repor1edly were ")oil ..
because the Oraqe Cou.nty"Dlts:mt-
ment of £.ducatioo did not tl"lm the
.students after they apparently drop.
pcd out of school
..Little is beina done to implement corrective measures. .. the jury stated.
Thursday, June 21
School truancy has become a
serious, costly problem in Orange
County and little is being done to
correct it, the Grand Jury said.
In its study, jury membcn visited
various juvenile facilities, outreach
centers and schools includina the
Fountain Valley and Newport-Mesa
school districts.
A Los Angclew.rea school district
lost more than $700,()()()..a-year ~
cause or students skippina khool
before developina an ultra-touah
truancy policy, the jury report noted.
The Gta.nd Jury recommended
county educators develop a met.bod
of tractina students who drop out of
tcbool T6e repon noted that some
students are &nested and placed in
JUVCnile ball but school officials afe
seldom told why the students are
rnissiq.
• 6 p.m., Lapaa Bead Sealor Cltheu Committee,
Community Center, Legion and Catalina Streets.
• 7 p.m., Lapu Bead Ualfle4 ScMoJ Dilbict
Board., district board room, SSO Blumont Street.
• 7:30 p.m., IJ'vtae Plauba1 Commhsioa, Council
Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine.
• 7:30 p.m., ~ Beac.b Cable TV Committee,
Community Center, Legion and Catalina Streets.
• 7:30 p.m., Foutain Valley Sdool Dlttrtct Board of
Trustffl. 172100akSt., Fountain Valley.
The jury, a citizen's panel that
monitors government, said there are
few cooperative efforts made between
school district officials. police officers
and lhe judicial system in Orange
County.
Regular nei&hborhood police
sweeps for truants should be con-
sidered., the Grand Jury said.
Jury members noted that
authorities in ln&)ewood conduct
truancy sweeps on a daily basis. Of
the 26 cities 10 Oranae County, jury
members said only five conduct
periodic sweeps.
School officials share a seme of
frustration that the juvenile justice
system does not care about truant
students unless they commit a crime
while ditcbina school the jury con-
cluded. "There appears to be little formal In studying the issue, jury members
PoucE Loe
~Laguna motorist killed
in Irvine freeway crash
A Laguna Beach man died from
massive head injuries early today
after he lost control of bis car on the
San Dicao Freeway in Irvine and
plowed into a disabled lumber truck
parked off the roadway, authorities
reported.
Grqory Choy, 34, died at Mission
Community Hospital in Mission
Inln•
Juveniles apparently anned with
firecraclcen exploded a mailbox on
Rain Tree shortly after midn.iabt
Wednesday. • • • • Three l 7·year-old seniors &om
SELF .chool -ere annttd for au1pi-
cion of buralary Wednctday. Police
• tracked them down after lhey uJtd ~ stolen credit cards to make pW'Chucs
• at service stations. J>olloe aaid they
rccovcm1 abOut $4,000 won.b of
propeny from the boys' homes taken
1n 10 car buralarict, ono residential
bruk-in and a bul'J)ary at Wood· bridle Hilb beainnina 1n March.
• • • • Two sJ)Clktrs and hquor wonb
aboul $400 wa11tolcn from 1 home an
the 4000 block of Vale tRet. dunna a
daytime btcak·1n that occum:d
Wednesday. • • • An IBM computer 1~tcm ~ith
about SS,000 was 1tolcn from Mta0-
mcdla Con\tOI ovtmi&ht Tuaday
·-t .
Viejo where he was flown by belicop.
ter followina the I :SO a.m. accident
near the freeway•s Sand Canyon Road
offramp, acx:ordina to the California
Hi&J\way Patrol.
Choy's 1982 Honda Aocord struck
the parked truck with such force that
the top of his auto was sheared off,
after thieves smashed lhc front door
window.
l'fewport BeaGh
Tbievct took twodoon from a Jeep
Renepde parked on the l SOO block of
.Placentia A venue. Tbe owner put the
loss at S 118. • • • Twenty Aneels ticteu were taken
from a desk top at the Clm~ Drive
headquanen or the M1llionatm
Club. A dub offida.l said the tickcu to
Friaay D.iabt's b&JJ pmc arc -onb
aboUt$1..0. • • • A handmade carpet from
YOIOSlavia wu lllcn ftom an un-
IOcied praac on the l 00 block or
Onyz S~t on BalbOe lsl&Dd. Tbe
carpet is valued It $S00. • • • A ihioftook a ftashliiht.1~ of
1taeo equipment. a tear lhift knob
a.nd a lather caK ooaiainina lhree
daru ftom a 1978 T oyoca Pickup
parbd on the SOO block of Seaward
trappina the Laguna Beach man
in.side, CHP Officer Rick Stevens
said.
The crushed Honda was then
clipped by a passina car and pushed
back into the middle of the freeway,
Stevens said. Tbe driver of the
paSiina car did not stop, be said.
Road. The truck was unlocked.. police
said. ••• Ei&ht ca5'Cttc ta~ and a gear shift
k.oob were taken fi'o1Ti an uolockcd
Datsun 280Z puled OD the 400 block
of HcliotrOpe A venue. Tbe thief alto took the auto's reaist.ratioa papen.
P-tal.D ValleJ
A movie patron said tomeone stoic
ha' wUlc1 coat.aini1'& SI an aasb and
$ l 0 lD DUICCllaneoUs tteml from her punc lhl.t lbe bad put down to tbc
Side of her at the Family 1"win
Theater, 17161 Broolburst St • • • A Coat.a Mesa man WU a.riaud
after bl a.Uctedlr ~t two aevca-
ouncc bOttJa of For Hair Only
bampoo ia hit p.nu and walked
outiide Hushn Market. 9092 Oar·
fitld Ave., witbout ~Yln& for it • • • BwPr'a broke 1 alidina alUI door
\0 I reUdtocc iD tM 16000 bl()ck of
icrn trect and tocik SI 0 ia cash aod
S9010 jewelry after ransaclonaa suest
room. • • • Thieves broke into a 1983 Toyota
Cel ica parked 1n a dnveway in the
20000 block of Margan ta .\venue and
stoic audio visual equipment valued
at $700.
LaCuDa Beac h
A rcs1dent in the 400 block of
Shadow Lane rcponed Wednesday
afternoon that a bUJllar entered the
residence and stole tus pants contain-in& keys and cash. • • • Police responded to a report of a
woman ~ for police in the
800 block of Part A ~nuc at noon
Wcdnctday and found a woman with
a aunshot wound to the head. Tbe
county coroner determined 1t to be a
suicide. • • • A JUVCnilc WU apptthcnded for
possession or alcohol m the 400 blodl
of OifT Ori\ie Wednelday aftemooo
and tbe man be with. John MOICS
Smith, 39, was cited f« cootn"butjna
to the dclioquency of a mllM>f. 1lle
youth, from Loi AnsJa. WU bdd
awaitina custody by ms parents ud
Smtth related. • • • Two mn wut a&Od by police for
said thieves left lhc pipe behind after
tbe bw&WY. • • • Eiaht mink coats. valued at more
than lS,200, were stolen from a mini-
van parted in the May Co parkif\8 lot
al South Coast Plaza Wednesday. The
coats were bctng transponed by an
employee ofH.D. Keyes Entcrprues,
Inc., of Los Angeles The employee
~ the coats m the back of tbe van
while be went in lhe store for about
fi~ minutes to retmve some mo~
coats. ~ves smashed a w10dow on
the van and pulled the ooats out throuab the open wmdow wh1k he
wugone. • • • A ICey was apparently used to enter
the Dr. Phone co~y. 2915 Red
Hill Ave.. some umc last week.
Thieves stoic a video casscm """
corder and an answer phone. valued
atS4l9. • • • A COst.a Mesa man •hom pobce
dacnbcd as a professional shopht\cr
was analed a\ South Coast Plaza
Mall Tuesday after be alJqcdly
wa1kcd out of the Bullock's deoen·
men& SlOR c:anyiQ&S t 25 worth of'bcd
Roben Catt l.abhart, )I, WU
bOoted into the Coaa Mesa Police ~t Jail cm n of
bWJlary. wault and battery at Sleepy H
Baich at\tt a &ebt ~ tadcd witb Bw•"..-. 811~
bolh subjocu pU01111 C9Ch other" Someo6c Uteci a Q'OWber to
uDdercitnen' anat la WcdocldaY opn a rear door iD the of
afternoon. ve Lattin Sedler aDCl Lalo's Pizza. l S94 t Edwaids ,
Pete BesiCb · ci'8d by ~ ud pOtice ddcovtred Wcdnaday. The
re&cucd. Nt1thcr 1mous1y ,.,. • 1oa iacJuded seoo in rood
JUred. Won.b SIOO aDd t eq~
n.--... .._ mat S400. ~ ...
A alass front door at ... r At-Enaaina thri>uah a lOCUd front liOCia~ Inc., lJOl Ha.rWr Bl~ was ~tC>mCOney 00 ~ !f:b
lft\MbOd with I oieCe Of pipe TUiclda)' Tbt 1-... ij)dodcd •UV\• oiabt and an 1&M Mcmocy Wri""· ...,.. • , • ..vuvUl
valued aa l .000 auaed lh: a
rar window to buralarize ·a home on
the 19900 block of Carmania lane a
resident reported Wednesday. The
loss included an $80 exercise bicycle • • • A man rq>Orted Wednesday that
his brown I Ckpeed Lqrco bicycle
was stolen from ouuick the Drua-
arama store 1t Golden w~ ~t
and Warner Avenue. the Jou was
cst1rmted at $200. • • • Entering thro~ an unlocked front
door, someone burala.rized a home on
the 1 3100 block ol' CroWll Ci.rde, a
resident rcponed Wedne9day. Tbt'
loss rncluded SSS rn cub Ind soc.b
worth $5. • • • Someone bu.rglarizcd a bome on
the 8800 block of l:anark Cin:::le by
ent.erina lhrouab an open rear win-
dow, a resident ttpancd Wed.ocsday.
The lo included $20 lll cha
stored 1n a water bottle. • • • A bur&br broke out a bide door
window to enter a borne Wcdncsdl
on the S400 block or Meadow
Dnve. The loa included jeftlr)
worth SSOO and SI SO in cash. • • •
A 197S Dall\ID pictvp ud a I 9
bWJUDd)' OunarO were buf11anzc<i
early Wednaday • ~on
MOO block of EdiQICJ A VCDUC. TiliC 1oa. t.atimaud at MOO. iDcl'*"'S ~ cqui t 6'om the two ~
• • •
PUBLIC I G
Coac.ra.lq
CJt;y _o_f Ne~rt Beach
1984 DRA.rl' BOUS~G LBMENT
Notice ia here~ given that the City
Council of the City of Newport Beach
will hold a public hearing on General
Plan Amendment No. 83-2(b) This
amendment it an amendment to the
Housing Element of the eWPQ?t Beach
General Plan ao as to updat.e the Com-
munity Housing Market Analyais and
HousinJ Need.a Aasessment Sections on
the baa11 of more "1ecent data and revise
the conatrainta to Housing Delivery and
Housing PTOJ?&m Sections in response
implementation progress made since
November of 1982. Thia amendment is
being made pursuant to Government
Code Section 65680 et seq. Also re-
quested is the acceptance of' an en-
vironmental document.
ImmigratiOn bill in Hause
squeaks through 216-211
Copies of the Housing Element and
Negative Declaration are available for
public review and inspection at the
Planning Department, City of Newport
Beach, 3300 Newport Boulevard, New-
port Beach, California, 92663-3884 (7 14)
640-2261 .
Notice is hereby further given that
said public hearing will be held on the
5th day of June 1984, at the hour of :30
p.m. in the Council Chambers of the
Newport Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport
persons interested may appear and be
heard thereon.
W ASHINCTON (AP) -Eo-
oou.ntgtd by a o.ear vinOt'). Hispanic
lcadm say they will kttp ~'Ofkioa to
bU ammip'at.ion lqislauoo that bas
puxd both thr Houte and Stnate.
The bill's ..,mon.: bowt'Vl:r.~pre
dtct lbcy will ~ad and tend
PrcQdeot R~ a bill he waU sian.
Rep. FASward Roybal, 0-Calif .• Wd
he was elated by lhc nano• 2 I &.211
vote &n the House on Wednesdly.
Liberal Rep. Don FASwards. 0-C&lif:,
wbo a.b.am Roytiel'1 fce1.in, lhe bill
will lead to crt.mmioation ~inst
HisJ)&tlica said: .. ™ bell pm • not over ...
Tbe bill still fac:a teYcral hwdln
-major di must be ironed
out ia Order io reCoociJc the House
·Senate OK '.s defense
spen~tng package
Clodn111K from upper Ith art \Ian Do. Santa Ana: Donald Lu. H.nllngaon Beach: SMllt')' Sandusky. Loi At.mllo.;
Lamia Gal>al. AQ!ht'lm: and Todd l.llfin . Laauna HlllA.
Thl' Irvine Compam ~aJuteli the five winm•r!I of 1b second Annual Orange Count) Leadership Awards Prov.1m-
a Counl\ "1de rnmpelltJon to remgruzt' high ~hool seniors for their leadership qualities
The 198i ~mne~ are \an Do. \alJt\ tl1fth ~ilool. Santa Ana . Donald Lu. fluntmgton Beach High ~:hool.
Hunung1on fk-ath . SheUe~ ~andu~k). Lo~ Alamllo!I High School, Lo~ Alamlto~. Lamia G<1bal, Magnolia High S<:hool.
Anaheim. iind Todd Utfln , Laguna ttlll~ lfigh S<.hool, Laguna Hills
The Out~tanding Student Leader~-~le<.U'd from an estlmatt'd .~0.000 high sc:hool scnlor~-havc.> disllnguisht'd
them~h·'l'' in lt>ader~hlp rolt.~ in 11ehool and rnmmunJ-
t}. audt·mu .. ad11evemrnt, rnmmumc..:auon~ ~k1U .. and
work expt'nt'nu· Tht Irvine Compin) 1~ proud to pre-
~nt e:u:h w11h a s .moo M·holarsh1p
Tht winner' were ~lerted from IS sem1·finaJJ ts
followinl( 1ntervlt>w~ h) a blue-ribbon panel of Orange
County dvK . husint.·)~ and government leadt·~ Each
~·ftnal1't n.•te1ved a S 1,()()() ~d1olarstup
Tht· Irvine Compan) ex~nd.\ us locere nm
gratulauon~ to ~ ouutandJnR high sc:hool ~mo"
and t•rx-our~ them to <:ontinue lhetr lt.'2dershJp roles
a.' tht·y llkt' their place In ~ouety Their achieve.
merm-lndlvtduaUy and LOllf\.1.ively-reOt.'t.1 the
d\'maml< and future of Orange County
\\r 'aluw tht.'M" Oul\tandJng cudent l.tider
. •
IRVINE
,..
t
PonHr (), . ConpalfllU
Jame. loo.evt11
OWraan.~lp
A-1t4' Pf'OF&m
"It ""' rrroplzlll1 and
tnt'fJll rotf "I ilp 1rtoo1
·nion 11._, 11<1111m1Jf
Oltlttt'f'fWnl ond hi~
qi/A/II lff ~ ond roM
Mllnlh Xft't'~ />fYHn/stl 11/ /Ulllf'f'
4'rt /('f' /ti Ul(ftft •
Thomu H. Nlflwn
Prald«nl,
Tlw lrvlnt C01Qfa.ny
. '11-t t'Urt abuul lh'wlltlf'
ttJ#1"h'i /11hlrr W ltt **'"me"' o/ tb fhltltt«ll Is
11 prrJ!tfir,, o/ /tllfltJn'(JtJ' '1 fM(·
rt """ stmt1~ ·•
j
New Junior Miss
a cool cucumber
By&MAnodaldPr
MOBILE. A.ta. -Bl~cd. fttekJo.(aoed Am~
Kvanli. of Willmar, M1110., hed no tclrt .after ~
chOKD the 1984 America•• Junior Mi -• utJ abe laid wasbesteajo~ with calmnen "I'm a vcrycaJm pt'f'IO~.
J don't att upset vet'/ easily. If you &et uplCt. you cant
enjoy what•• bappcrung." Judscs pk1'e,d the Minnetota
Jun1orMitsoontettant from 1m<?n15l hash tch09I ~i~n
from the SO &taltl, Puerto Rico ond the Dittne1 ~f
Columbia. She said she planned to use her ~bolanh1p
wiJuunp to attend SL Olaf Colleac where 1be well take the
pro.med curriculum.
MedlUa la Mlaml
MIAMI -Aviculturc offic111ls. UY,ln• they con1Jdcr
the findina off our Mediterranean fruit flie11n a downtown
oran,ge tree "an 1nfestauon." ordered a quaranum: on fi:uJt
and vetttables and announced that peltlCJdc IPf'8YLD.I would bqln tOO.y. Statc1Mpectors set up an 81-square·
mile quarantine Wednesday after the Medf11es -four
adults, thrtt mate end one unmated female -were found
in a trap dunng a rouune mon11onng program.
EUIJead• to get letter
PORT HURON. Mich -Soon you won't ht able to
tell the athletes from the good ~tudcnts in the Port Huron Hiah School system. school officials say. Studcnu who
perform well 1n the classroom nrxt year wall ~m a letter
that can be sewn on a sweater or Jacket, JUSt hkc lhe one
student-athletes earn. under th<' progra~ recently ap-
proved. by the Port Huron Area School D1stnct Board of
Education.
Jac~n• promo reject~
Na.ke plant rattles, roll•
SAN LUIS OBISPO -The Diablo Canyon nuclear
power plant. which has been cnticiz.ed for its earthquake
safety, was jiu.led by a moderate temblor from. an offshore
fault system-but no damage occutTCd, a SP<;>kcswoman
said. The earthquaJce1 mcasunng 4.0 on the Richter scale,
occurred 11 12:28 p.m. Wednesday and was centettd 20
miles south-southwest of here 1n the Hosgn earthquake
fault system, said geophys1c1st Robert Cockerham of the
U.S. Geological Survey m Menlo Park.
Actress dead at 101
LOS ANGELES -Estelle
Winwood. the diminutive Bnush
actress who appeared m such films
"Camelot" and "Murder by Death."
died Wednesday of heart failure at
age IOI. Ms. Winwood's film and
stage career spanned more than a
half of a century in England and the
United States and included such
films as .. Darby O'Gill and the Lillie
People" in 1959 and Mel Brooks'
comedy, "The Producers" Wlth Zero
Mostel in 1968. On telev1s1on, shr OOD
was seen in "Alfred Hitchcock Pr~nts," "The Donna
Reed Show," "The FBI." and "Perry Mason." She aJso
portrayed daffy old laides in "Batman."
Bradley meets wltlJ Mondale
NORTH OAKS, Minn. -The Veep Parade steps off
today when Mayor Tom Bradley of Los Angeles becomes
the tint potential running mate to be interviewed by the
Democratic nominee-in-waiting, Walter F. Mondale.
Bradley was scheduled to sit down with Mondale in the
morning at the former vice president's home in a private
enclave about I 0 miles from downtown St. Paul.
C.ble car celebration
SAN FRANCISCO -Cable car fever -from
chimpanzees in evening clothes to a sourdougb4nd-
salami cable car -seized the City by The Bay as it
prepared a lavish welcome back for its renowned transit
system, derailed 20 months ago for a $60 million
renovation. The four-day celebration means balloons,
bands and hullabaloo to nval Mardi Gras, bea.inning with
Mayor Dianne Feinstein snipping a l-foot-widc inaugural
ribbon at noon today.
Actor IJeld I or cocalne
LOS ANGELES -Actor Dan
Haggerty, television's Grizzly
Adams. has been arrested after
allegedly selling cocaine to an
Undercover narcotics officer, police
said. Haggerty, 41, was arrested at
his Beverly Hills home on June 13,
the first actor "of import" to be
arrested by the year-old entena.in-
ment unit of the Police Depart-
ment's narcotics division, LL Dan -~~~~~Cooke said Wednesday. Hauerty
RAOOEJ\TY was freed on SS,000 bail shortly after
the a.nest and is to be arra1&ned Fnday in Municipal Court
on cbaJ'aesof selling 18 grams of cocaine with an estimated
street value of $2, 160.
Soviet doabm •ammft pouJbJe
MOSCOW -The Kremlin's chief spokesman said
today there is no chance for 1 U .S.-Soviet summit until the
Unite4 States changes its policies. At a news conference Leonid Zamyatin said, "We are serious about summits
and we consider those kind of meetings as very imporunt.
M far u the United States' position as concerned, we do
not see any cbanac except statements to the effect that the
United States wishes to have a summit meetiq." be said. • .
Slkli weapon• from .PaAUtaa
NEW DELHI, India -Wt.apont used by Sikh
exmmists bated at the Golden Temple io Amritsat were
amuaJed from Pakistan with the aid of 1 former lndjan
army atneral, the United New1 of India S"eJ)Oned today.
Quotina unidentified official IOUJ'CC$, the qeoc:y said
intcrropoon of Sikh mihtanta anuted dunna the anny
invasion of the shrine ha revealed that arms were
am"'l&led across two main points on India's border with
Pak.lnan. •
Innfan• .remain m France
NI France-Four Iranian military men who fled
tran in 1 navy plane last week Rekina potiucal uyluns lcft
this resort city underbeavy politecscort forhouteanat th
Bordclull. Police IOuttt id the four were taken 10
Bordeau\ lite Wtdncsday and would stay there until
another country qtteS to atcept them.
Wheaties picks
a marathoner
SAN DIEGO (AP) -George Murray is expected to
have a shelf life of three months, and that is a major
victory in the eyes of the editor ofa maprine de.voted to
disabled people.
Jackson asks Demo platform 'summit'
W ASHJNOTON (AP) -uppe>nm of Wahn-F.
Mondale and ~n. Gm Hart are 1endi~ 1 com~misc
Democratic platform draft to the full 114-mrmbei Platform Committee with their bleuiaas. but tht Rev.
Jene Jackson is Clllina for a .. summit" amona the \luee
rivals to dilCU" the documenL Jackson. who didn't ,ct neatly u many of his ideas
into t.M platform draft the other two, Aid the three
Candida.tel sbou&d I~ "'IY..O Of tbf't!J laY)'" t,~UJC] disru.nana pany wun for ;.he tau campq:n.
So far. neither Han nor Mondak hai llJOed to a
three.way mcctana. allbo\llh .upponcrs of both say the
idea is intnauioa.
A l S-mcmber P&Dtl dominated by Mondale dclcp
Follow the Crowd$ lo Strouds
~urray, 36, ofSt. Petersburg. Aa., twice winner of the
-.-~ .. sae-m.ft-" ~ .... -... _ _____. ~~ ··-~· ~· -~ < _..-.{ ~-t. .. ·1 L-........ ..J..J--Ii from amona 6,400 athletes nationwide to appear this
month on boxes of Wheaties' cereal.
,~.~~~-~•!Aao o
"There will be 3 million boxes printed and he's
ex~ to have a shelflife of three months. We did it! ..
said Cyndi Jones, editor and publisher of Mainstream.
************** * ..corra MEU WW. ffltt *
Off _The Reg~lar Prices Of qtherLeading Stores
, * • IPRI• ClUUICE • * * • NURSERY SALE • * .
• Funll R11 .. • :
frldoy, June 22nd, t~e gates ot Cosio Me~ FFA Nursery ,..,,__
will be open to o two day d eoronce sole. Everytfiing in ~
stock ot least 20% off the olreody low price. We're *
located ot Cosio Meso High School, directly across from *
OCC tennis courts on Fairview Rood. * * Large Selection * * • -4" Impatiens • 15 Gol. Ficus *
....._ • Begon1os • Impatiens Baskets ~ •Marigolds • 8egont0 Boskel1 * ~ • lobel10 • Fuchsia hanging * * baskets * * * MUCH, MUCH MORE * *
i• Sale Fri. & Sat., J~n• 22 & 23 *
Fri. lsOO 4s00 PM *
Sat. 9s00-2s00 PM • ***************
IN MINUTES
BE GOLDEN BROWN
GRAND OPENING SPECIAL
..... llllfl,,.,,,.
SOUTH COAST FIT&.FIRM
3500 S. BRISTOL • 545-8803
Suite 200 -'A mlle North of South Coast Ptua
Cou1 Bank Bulldlng ..
ASK ABOUT OUR SA T1SFACT10N GUARANTEE
Ham & ~iss Brots
Great on the grill!
You'll !OW OUf p1ump, juq brol·
wufll alulled wllll smoked lleln
and 1wt11 clleeM. fheYre fillly
ooohd; ju.I llMI
endeet SerYt
w1tll OUt .... .,.,.
1111nnono
S....-Hoe
~
fliG r7 fttl.$
FASHiON
ISLAND .... ,.... ..... ...... ,.
WESTCL:IFF
PLAZA ,.,. ....... ...., ........
642.00971
-z .. __
29.99 & 34.99
SPRINGMAID QUEEN AND
KING SHEET SETS
SAVE 34% to 48% Compare at 46.00
to 64.00. Choose from an exciting
assortment of four patterns. "Starfire"
as pictured Is a soft pastel stripe or you
can choose our popular bold geometric
"Carlton". Florals are favorites with our
contemporary "flower Pots" or our tra-
ditional "Cachet". All of Springmaid's
Tranquility are easy care, no-iron. 80o/o
Kodel• polyester, 20% cotton. 160
threads per square inch. Set includes 1
flat , 1 fitted sheet and 2 pillowcases.
SAVE Wk to 54°/o
BURLINGTON POPPY BREEZE
SHEET SETS
14.99 Twin Compare at 30.00. Save on
this contemporary Vera print. Lively
orange, pink and red poppies on a crisp
\ white ground. On a 160 thread blend of
70% polyester and 3e% cotton. Each
\ set indodes 1 ftat, 1 fitted sheet and 2
pillowcases (except twin -1 pillowcase).
Also available 1s Vera's Sunshine Stripe
in bright or natural colors .
Comp. at Strouds
44.00 24.99
58.00 29.99
72.00 34.99
SAVE 1/2
"DAN RIVER'' SHEET SETS
16.99 Twin Comp. at 35.00. Asst. percale prints.
Ottler sizes 26.99 to 39.99 Comp. 55.00 to 80.00.
29.99 -1-
WATERBED SHEET SETS
SAVE 1/2 Comp. at 60.00. Queen & King SlZes,
coordinated and matched sets in asst. sty1es.
-SAVE 1/2 .
"NORTH STAR" MATTRESS PADS
8.99 Twin Compare at 20.00 if pertect. Polyester
felt ·pad wrth fitted comers. Other sizes 10.99 to
15.99 Compare at~.00 to 36.00.
SAVE 56°/o to 63°/o
QUALLOFIL BED PILLOWS
10.99 Std. Compare at 25.00. Filled by Pillowtex
with Dupont Dacron potyester made to feel like
down. Hypoallergenic. Machine wash. Queen
12.99, King 14.99 Compare at 30.00 and 40.00.
4.99
BEACH TOWELS
SAVE 112 Compare at 10.00. Full terry loop
towels in. bright summer patterns.
SAVE 35°/o to 50°/o
POPULARITY TOWELS
4.99 Bath Compare at 10.00. 100% cotton full
terry loop m 10 asst. colors. Also, hand 3.99,
wash 2.29 Compare at 7.00 and 3.50.
5.99
TUBMATS
SAVE 1/2 Comp. at 12.00 If perf. Asst. colors .
SAVE 1/2
''FOUR SEASONS" SHAG RUGS
10.99 21x36 Comp. at 23.00. Large color asst.
Other sizes 7.99 to 17.99 Comp. 16.00 to 38.00.
SAVE 51% -66%
l\CHANTlll Y" TABLECLOTHS
16.99 All sizes loce l~ Burnout in o White Floral
Pattef'n, 6 sizes ovo1lable. C ompare at 35.00-50.00.
2.99
PLACEMAT AND NAPKIN SETS
SAVE 55% Compare at 6. 75. Quilted placemats
with matching napkins in asst. colors
SAVINGS
SERVICE
SELECTION
SATl5'ACTION
U.ymy • Monogramming • Gift Certificates• Brtct.t Aeglatry • Cuatom Bedding
WHITE SALE SAVINGS AND MORE EVERY DAY!
HHtilltt1 I• 11172 Im 8"". · . 24321 Ave. de II Caritta, lag .. His
1ttw1• E ..... 1 .. 11 .. 1~•1 ~···Ctr. 142-4112 . II W.1 .. 'Ille S.... cf lwl •Ill 5•15 MONOAY·FAIOAY l0.9. 0..MJ · h1t1qtt1 lt1e~ • l1&A1 Ws · l• Mlli • h~ .. M · l11•11 · ltllt hrk • ... kla• · .......
SA TUROA Y 10·6, hs.a,._ • ''11nt1 Hills • ltttn• • Santa a• St .... City • S..yw.tt • lwr11ct • W. ln A111efts SUNOA Y 10-6
\
AS Orange CoMt OAtl y PllOT/ThUredllY. June 21, 1884
OCFa,i:feature.s big name
entertainmentJuly6to10
From Jan and Dean
A Wide variety of enter-Entertainers present two
wnmcnt talent has been shows a day; at 7 p.m. and 9
recruited to perform dur-p.m.. in the Arlington
inatbe Oranae County Tbeateron the fairgrounds.·
Fair's I Cktay run this sum-The only exception so far is mer at the Oranae County on Senior Citizens' Day,
Fairarounds ind Expo-when entertainment will
sition Center in Costa run from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Mesa. All rfonnances
eluded in the price of
admission. The fair line.
up, thus far, includes:
•July 6-America •
•July 7 -Paul Revere
and t.be Raiders •
•July 8-Jan and Dean
•July 9 -Donny and
Marie Osmond
•July 10 -Les Brown
and bis Band of Renown-
Scnior Citizens' Day
•July 11 -The Right-
Orcmge County Musk
Refreshing and Relaxing
KDCM IDB.I
FMSIERED
COUI Brothen
•July 12-Andy Gibb
•July t 3 -Johnny
Riven
•July 14 -Exile
•July 15 -Rob Hanna
(Salute to Rod Stewart) and
kain: A Tribute to the
Beatles
Along with musical
entertainment at the Ar-
lington Theater, the fair·
will also brina a pro-
f essional rodeo, speedway
motorcycle races, a Super-man museum and a giant.
inflatable King Kona to the
OranJe Coast.
The rodeo will perform
July 14andJuly IS in the
grandstand area, where the
speedway races will be held
July 6 and July 13. Speed-
way tickets are $6, which
includes admission to the
fair. The rodeo is included
in the price of admission.
Tickets to the Superman
museum, which will be
open during the fair's entire
run, are SI. 50 for adults,
and 75 cents for children.
The Orange County Fair
1s scheduled to run July 6
through July IS. Ad-
mission is for $4 adults and
S 1 for children 6 through
12. Parlc.ing is SI .
ARob1
-
Cold cone connolueura
Meet three lee cream aperta, from left
Jared Wall, 5 , Whitney Wooda, 4, both of
La.Cana Beach, and JuoD Franklin, 4. The
trio are from tbe lloDteuorl e-achool OD
Cypreu Street ID Laauna Beach and they're
talrtni adn.ntaae ora midweek field trip to
take ID .ome of the local flavor ID down-
town 1.-a1;ionIJ1•
SUMMER SALE AND CLEARANCE
SAVE ·3.3°/o-50°/o
ON ESPADRILLES FROM OUR TOP DESIGNER COLLECTIONS.
FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY.
Ong. S25 -S55. Sale $14.99-$24.99. It 's an all·st.ar sale ... a summer shoe lover's dream!
Among the biggest names: l+rry Ellis. Polo by -Ralph L.wrrn. Evan-Picone. Liz Claiborne.
fdcques Cohen. Ums.i. Merana. From the purest French espadnlles to the updated, soph1st1ci.1ced
wrs1 ons ... the vanety 1s 1usc as tremendous as the savings, nght m:ru;! But please hu~ in while
the selemon is pnmt. Remember, this sale ends Sunda), June 24. Selewon t.•anes by store. Catch
all the great names at Ing savings in Robinson's Shoe Salon, 47/l OJ/161.
,
...
.
A ROBINSON·s CHARGE? 1T·s EASY!
THE Ql11CKEST WAY JU T PERSONALLY PRESENT YOUR VISA, MASTERCARD. DINER'S f CLUB, CARTE BLANCHE. OR AMERICAN EXPRFSS CARD AND J.D TO ONf 0 · OUR
SALESPERSONS AND WE'LL OPEN AN ACCOUNT YOU ~ CAN U E IMMfOIATFLY (SUBJECT TO CRFDlT APPRDVAL).
THE FA If <;T WAY. PHONF uc; TOI f.-FREE t-800--422-4241 F M 7 A.M. 10 P.M. AND OUR GrFRATOR Will TAKF. muR APPL! ~JC INI RMATIO
l l
' I I I .J i
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT~. JuM 21, 1114 WI
ir i!Orce loeals in exercise
Several local Air Force personnel panicipatcd io
Jobal Shield ·a... an cxercisina involvina U.S. Air Force. Jr Force Reserve, Air National Guard, Navy and Marine
orps units and clements of the Canadian forcH. They
eluded:
-Maj. Jou Ekwall; son of Guy and Jenny EtwaJI of
inc, a safety chief with the 22nd Air Refuelina
uadron at March Air Force Base, Calif.
-First Lt. La.,.• Edward1, dauahtcr of retired Air
orce Maj. Robert and Dorthy Kecbrotte of Huntinaton
h, a missile combat crew commander wath the 308th
tratqic Missile WiQJ at Uttlc Rock Air Force Base, Ark.
-Staff sat. Steve L. Re)'JIOld1, son of Pauline A.
nyder of Laauna Beach, an inventory manaaement
upervisor witfi the 22nd Air Refuelina Wina at March Air
orce Base.
-S_1t. Mlcbel N. Gatkrie, whose wife is the former
eresa Gualtieri of El Toro, a crew chief with the 305th Air
efuelina Wina at Grissom Air Force Base, Ind.
-Airman I st Oass Scott M. nomSOD.. son of Donald
homson of Costa Mesa and A. C. Thomson of
untington Beach, a security specialist Wllh the 9th
trategic ReconnaisSance Wing at Beale Air Force Base.
hf.
-Airman 1st Class Cbrlt M. Gro1u, son of Dennis
nd Janet Gropn of Fountain Valley, a fire protection
ialist with the 22nd Civil Engincerina SQuadron at
arch Air Force Base. • • • Michael S. Steele, son of Patncia L. Noble of
untington Beach. has been promoted to the rank of chief
arrant officer in the Army. He is a systems analyst with
e Army Military Personnel Center in Alexandria. Va. • • • PFC JollD 8. Joyce, son of Charles and Jean Joyce of
osta Mesa, has complewtcd basic training at Fon
ackson, S.C. Joyce is a 1980 graduate of Newport
ristian High School in Ncwoort Beach. • • • Airman Paala J. Cole, daughter of Pauline C. Kina of
Fountain Valley •• has graduated from the Air Force
munitions maintenance course at I.:owry Air Force BaK.
Colo. Cole. a 1982 araduatc of Lo Ami&os Hilb Sch0ol 1n
Fou.nwa Valley, will serve with the ~ Consolidated
Aircraft Maintenance SQuadron in A v1100. Italy.
• • • Army PFC Tlaom11 C. Slaelmaa, son of Norman and
Cynth1a Shelman of Seal Beach, bas completed basic
traininJ at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. He is a 1983 araduatc
of Cal State Lona Beach.
• • • Ainnan Kim A. Bracbtock, dauahter of Mr. and Mrs.
8. Bradstock of fountaio Valley, has araduatcd from the
Air Force frci&ht traffic specialist course at Sheppard >.ir
Force Base, iexas. Bradstock, a 1981 paduatc of Los
Ami&os Hi&h School in Fountain Valley, will serve with
the 379th Transportation SQuadron at Wunsmith Air
Force Base. Mich.
Rob
OeFair
features
artisans
Va.nous ani ns and
craftsmen will demonstrate
a varieiy of hobby and craft
techniques to v1snors of the
Oranae County Fair in
Costa Mesa.Jul>' 6 through
July ts.
Costa Mesa residents
Rachael Mallery and
Joanie Goss will feature the
an of pottery mabn& and
Harry Myers, also of Costa
Mesa, will demonstrate
leather toolina techniques.
Irene Bruner, Fountain
ValJey. will feature ribbon
roses and Judy CoUans,
Fountain Valle)'.. will
create dried and silk Ooral
arranaements.
Many craft items will~
for sale to the public.
The crafts buildina hours
for the fair are noon to
10:30 p.m .. Monday
through Fnday. and I 0
a.m. to 10:30 p.m .. Satur-
day and Sunday.
Hours of the fair are
noon to midniJhl on week-
days. and 10 a.m. to mid-
night on weekends.
General admiSSJon is $4,
SI for children aget 6
through 12 and free for
younpters S and younger.
Admission includes co-~~!~.
WOOL CARPETING Q-AND-A
DISCOVERED DOWN UNDER,
THE LUXURY BREMWORTH WOOLS OF -NEW ZEALAND
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL DECEMBER, 1984,}
Q: \~nJ t.:ool?
A: lt .1 11.it11rJ/ q11al1qes ttm"m 11murp • .med.
Of pm11.ir;. 1mport.i11C'C' 1s us resi/1mu-1ts
.ibil1t' to )prmg b.itlt to Its origm.il
buO)'.Jl/Ct r...cn -'ftcr being cru<hcd Ir. J
SOOpmmcl .1n11om or trr.uicd 011 I') . .m
mt1rt Lutle Le.i~ue. ~ rrn/1m<y is
111/wrtm 111 the fiber (h.ive vo11 ever seen J
fl.11 shet.>pf), +1s u the :.o/mm, d1m1bd1ty. fin.·
rrt.mi.mry, 11nd e.i$y clt.i'3·up.
Q: ~ ,t..." Zt.1l11rUI • II
A: All I tS not tht samt. Many shttp product
.1 ;;,;oo/ w /int you "rt pr0ud to ~•r 11. but
11 'f 1ust 1101 tough tnougb for • lu>.,.ry
cArptt. Shtt>p that proJuct thu lon8_tT.
<t10rtR<'I' uwl su1111blt for (iJtptts jfouruh m
Stw Zt11/.md rt pzm tond111om ...tPl'
1dt"I the w.1r round. Gen<'l1c1<t5 h.ne
1mprm.'<'c{ on " good thmg, Ol!.llmg rlJ<'
superior Dry,d.1/e brrcd rl1.it Rrtr ... ~ .m e..·w
longer, ;,. h1ter, morf' mil1t•11t :. ·of>/ This
Dr;.sd.i!t '!400/ H found 111 t "'"' Brem;,. nnh
c.1rpet, <.Jn.fully blended .111d [JJ!.J11ced :.a/.
Otl¥r CYO<< bn.'t'tb for f'<'Tft'Ct fC\fltrl.'S .J11J qu.1/lt),
Q: ls D'f'1•"1.1lt u:ool n•+1//) >uperior?
A: Comt• ~for y<>1me/f Ylm 'II find tlhlt
the t•:ool fibrr u holltr"'; liltt a tm)' stttl
spm1g, m.Jltmg 1t fleublr "'"" .,b/e to bounce
b.iclt. And, b«11use tbt ~'001 LS I"'~ t..h11e, a
produrtJ lmghter. morT mirur.il roloN uk'3
d)'td Wool 11.w1r.Jl1) .ibsor/)) d.W1 more
rtttd1/y th.in m.mmadt filxn, .md 11s It agt':\.
tbt colors dt•:twn .i.ml .mumt .i br11uriful
patm.1. juJt '1,:tSN.i/11t the .i.ntU/lft wool
C.11'/>flS 11nd t.1pNmn ~u h.w sttn. (11m
W) " lot for wool's dur.1b1/1t1, too.)
Q: £-cpl.m1 ·rht Brt·muwrh urptr Gr.,,lmt.
uhrl.
A: £tch c•rpu c,;rm this l11bt·l 10 htlp )O"
'""°~ riv P"'~r uy/t .md i«1 bt. F1ru,
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1 ~ I ·1 I
•
ams1dcr th< tr.J/jic p.ittt·nr• I'· '°'" home
.J11d the uu> t:.uh mom rn 11 ~t • Tl1u 1 ch~de
tk l'-lck oft~ <.lrpt·t to '<'t 11 :: "l<'t'I• yorn
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Gr.idmg Wl1<'1 doesn ., tell Wll, 011' r\pt·rt
c" rptt s.1 I espt'''>M ' ••. :ii I
Q: f'm wlJ. w·i/f .Wll ltHt,1/1 It I': »I) !x,mtf
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mct..11/ to Robm"m 's ~t+1nd.111I• u·, '// nt"n
d1.~pofC of )'()Mr c11rmu carptrm,:.. 11 u <;.1sb.
Q: Will )""' u ro bl// md
*A: So piiymtnt v;1/I bt d11t ·until ·
Dtttm~ 19 4, on all al"N rug, <<lrpttm'-'
/MrmtNJT .md "'"ttms pu'l'(hzx, <>/ $1()() or
morr on 'JO#' Robimon ·~ ch.rgt (•ubi«t
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R.g;.6J
.1
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/t/)f,1llfd •
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m 1.11/,"'(f
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,,, I pa r<'/ color c ho1cts S89 9' squ•tt
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'\ t> U>· TO )
'Al)
:no~ 1;-..:h '' n ~
R
U.S. should
grant amnesty
to LEGAL alien
As the legislative branch of the government tried to figure
out how to keep millions of illegal aliens out of the United States
and whether to grant residency status to millions more, an
agency of the executive branch was busily kicking one legal alien
out of the country. •
The nation that prides itself on being the defender of
democracy around the world is forcing Maria Sokulska -and
her nine-year-old daughter, Dorothy -to return to their native
Pol.and where they will live under a repressive, communist
regime.
It seems not to matter that Mrs. Solrulska is a properly
registered alien who works regularly, has enrolled her dau$bter
in school and has never ta.ken a penny of welfare. She ts an
accepted member of the commum-ty in Costa Mesa. She pays
rent, she attends the neighborhood Catholic church, she buys
food and clothing at local stores and she is a walkin'1 promotion
for the kind of America that inspired slogans like ' Land of the
-.?:.:::-F~~~.of ,t~~.J!?-~~,AQO~~~~ ~ o~ tS-1 ur~~ Wi~iftffingfanfs"\v~re wel&meo ior
the contributions they could make. _
Back in Poland, opportunity will be slim for Maria
Solrulska. An active supporter of the outlawed labor organiza-
tion Solidarity and the wife of a member of the Polish free labor
underground, she fears harsh recriminations, perhaps even
imprisonment, for her politics.
L.M. Bovo
• tJf Brezhnez. Andropov and Co. would order the murder, In broad
dayltg!Jt. of the most-famous son of the Polish natJon, the Supreme
PonUffoftheRoman Catholic church, Malnst whatpollUcal. rdlgtous.
or cultural leader would they not strike'?·
PA TRICK BUCllAJfAllf
ooJamnlld
Demos:
Caught
ln a time
warp
Party seems to be
unaware of the
conservative mood
By CAL THOMAS
In the hit Broadway musical,
"Annie," Daddy Warbucks. the
epitome of big deal Republicanism in
the 1930s, invites President Roosevelt
to dinner at his Fifth A venue man-
sion in New York. Warbucks is
shocked wbcn Roosevelt accepts. He
turns to his secret.arY and says. 4'te7 ,Ait._~~;. .... A.llJ 1"r'l.-~ ocrau..,eat~~~~-~ · '\> ·,,..
The line is a surefire laugh-getter.
The question deserves to be asked in a
m ore serious way less than a month
before the Democratic National Coo-
Why would a nation that has adopted Solidarity as a symbol
of freedom in an unfree society, that has equated its leader, Lech
Walesa, with Patrick Henry, reject a request for asylum from a
Polish citizen who has put down roots here? Why would a nation
that publicly abhors repression decree that this woman and her
child may not live freely?
Military was grounds for divorce
vention opens in San Francisco.
What in the world do Democrats cat?
O r, what have they been sniffing,
snortinJ or taking that has allowed
the m8jority party to be hijacked by
its far left wing?
At a time when the country is
moving to the right, when patriotism
is back in vogue and American fiqs
arc again waving proudly from flag
poles and'hot serving as patches on
the scats of Levi's, the Democratic
Party is not only marching to a
different drummer, it is playing a
different tune.
Because the Immigration and Naturalization Service is not
convinced Maria Sokul ska 's life will be in danger if she returns to
Poland, a ~overnment spokesman says.
If this nation stands for anything, that argument is
irrelevant. If this nation can issue a blanket amnesty to illegaJ
aliens in residence here before 1982 - a position President
Reagan rightly supports-it can certainl y allow a hard-working,
freedom-l oving woman like Maria Sokulska the right to build a
future for herself and her daughter in the U nited States.
That, above all else, is what this country is about.
Dunng the Civil War, 1f the
husband went into the military, the
wife could get a divorce for that
reason alone.
The University of Connecticut is a
long way from dogsled country, true,
but its sports teams are nicknamed
''Huskies,'' nonetheless. Not "Yukon
Huskies." but "U Conn Huslues."
Did I mention that n's the parents
of the groom who pay for the wedding
in Thailand?
In wide circulation now 1s one
recipe for Pineapple Divine cake
which includes a cup and a half of
chopped earthworms. Earth worms
are 60 percent protein. Should be
nutritious. Try it and let me know
how you like it.
Q. What's "lox"?
A. The Russian word for salmon.
The foregoing brings to mind the
small report that a bagel has to be
made by hand. Can't be done by
machine. Is that right?
Q. Arc there any people on earth
who stilJ don't know how to make
fuc?
A. A few. On the Andaman Islands,
natives never let their fires bum out.
Some pygmies along the Congo buy
fire from the neighboring Bantu
tribes. Believe the 'tasadays in the
Philippines have learned the old fire
trick in the last few years.
The Egyptians used pitch to em-
balm. The word "mummr.:· in fact,
comes from the Arabic 'mumiya''
meaning pitch.
Arafat maneuvering for return to power
. .
At a time when the country is
mterested in balancing the federal
budget, improving our defense
capabiJities, growing bored with the
so-called gay rights movement and
talking of commitment and bonding
instead of free love and onc-ni&ht
stands, the Democratic leadersliip
seems caught in a time warp. Will
someone please remind Democratic
National Chairman Charles Manatt
and Walter Mondale that this is 1984
and not 1964 or 1968 or 1972?
The Democratic leadership should
go o n a bank robbing binge and claim
diminished capacity. No j udge in lhe
country would convict them. Just
show the judge the Dcmocrauc plat-
form and the verdict would be.
"They're crazy! Cuc d1sm1ssed."
WASHINGTON -Yasir Arafat,
the wil} Palesun1an leader. has more
li ves than a cat. Last year, he was
lucky to escape from Lebanon one
jump ahead o f a Synan-supponed
assault force that was gunning for
him. Now he as maneuvering to
regain the leadership of the Palestine
Liberation Organization. with the
support of none other than the
Syrians.
That's nght, Arafat not only 1s
trying to mgrauate himself Wlth his
mortal enemy. Synan President
Hafez Assad, but he may actually get
away with it. He has the backing of
Syria's bankroller, Saudi Arabia, and
arms supplier, the Soviet Union.
Arafat was defeated and djs-
crcdited when he escaped from Syrian
clutches in Lebanon. He spent the
next several months wandering m the
political wilderness, seeking refuge in
one Arab country after another.
JACK
ANDERSON
Owing the Israeli bombardment of
Beirut two years ago. I spent a couple
of hours with Arafat in his bunker
Face to face, he was impressive, even
magnetic. But there was a tenseness
about him, a wariness of eye, a sense
ofbeleaguerment.
The Israelis backed him into a
comer, and he negotiated his way out.
The Syrians backed him into a comer,
and again he got out. Assad tncd to
replace rum with Abuh Musah as
PLO chieftain. Intelligence sources
tell me Assad still detests Arafat
per}Onally and d istrusts him poht1-
calfy. Ye t a reconc1hation 1s possible.
even probable.
For despite his repeated humih-
a11ons. Arafat still retains the loyalty
of the Palestinian masses. The same
cannot be said for Musah. So in the
cause of Palestinian unity, Arafat has
sought to make up with Assad.
Arafat has enlisted the intercession
of the Soviet Union. Saudi Arabia
and Egypt So far, Assad has
withstood the pressure. But a rec·
oncihation. based on the hard re-
alities of Arab politics if not mutual
trust. miS}lt be worked out.
For his part, Arafat is reported
ready to kowtow to Assad in return
for a gesture of Syrian support, such
as a public reception in Damascus as
an acknowledged Palestinian leader.
Intelligence analysts emphasize that
any deal would have to be on Synan
terms. Assad would msist on retain-
ing ultimate control over Arafat, or at
least veto power over his m1ht.ary and
diplomatic moves.
As one intelligence analyst
summed it up succinctly for my
associate Lucette Lagnado. Arafat
would have to become Assad's
"puppy dog." But Arafat is capable of
doing whatever is necessary to assure
his survival, and Assad appreciates
the clout Arafat still has with the
Pales tinian people and international
leaders.
GARRISON UPDATE: In past
columns. I have charged that the
Garrison Diversion Onit. which
would irrigate a handful of North
Dakota farms along the Canadian
border, is more than a billion-dollar
boondoggle. It could also be an
environmental disaster, upsettin~ the
delicate ecology of Canadian n vers
Will the West simply do nothing
about pope's attempted murder?
U.S. should expel Bulgarian diplomats
for country's role in assassination plot
What contempt they must have for
us
From the summanzcd report oft he
Italian st.ate prosecutor. the at-
tempted murder of Jo hn Paul II an St
Peter's Square was a work of hired
assassins. aided and abetted (J quote)
"by organs and ans11tut1ons of the
Bulgarian state ..
"It as easy to 'iCe what really
happened," the summary reads. "In
some secret place where every secret
is wrapped 1n another secret. some
pohticaf figure of great power took
note of this grave situation. and
mindful of the vital needs of the
Eastern Bloc, dCClded 1 t was necessary
10 kJJJ Pope Wo1tyla."
The "~ve situation" was the
Polish cnsis; the "secret place" was
the Kremlin. the "poht1cal figure of
great power" was, almost surely, Yun
Andropov, the veteran commandant
of the KG B
But the final decision to send an
assassin to murder the holy father an
the heart of the Eternal City was not
the work of a s10gJe Kremlin
ORANGE COAST
l1ilyPilat
\ ~I
subaltern. No. this was almost surcl)
a politburo hat. signed off o n b> the
defense minister Dm1tn Ust1no'
and Foreign Minister Andrei
Gromyko. General Secretary Leonid
Brezhnev and his Stalinist cro ny. th e
current chief o f st.ate of thl' USSR.
Ko nstantin Chernenko
The "Evil Empire," President Re-
agan called It V1sualmng these m('n
'ieatcd about a table discussing who
would be assigned to assassinate the
pope an St. Peter's Square. can an} one
come up with a bett('r phrase?
Mind-~ing is truly the precise
term to dccnbe this moral o~naty.
If Brczhnez. Andropov and \o
would order the murder. in broad
daylight, of Lhe most-famous son of
the Polish nation. the Supreme Pon-
tiff of the Roman Catholic church
apinst what political. religious o;
cultural leader would they not strike?
Even Hitler at the pinnacle of his
power 10 1940, one suspttts, would
have recoiled ... hearin4 the explosion
at orderina Mussolini to send Black
Sh1tts to 1un down Pius XU 1n t
Peter's Square
H. L. lchwam Ill
PWlllt•
Chuy0ow91H>y
OI and AaliSt_,..t
ro IN Puoiehet
''-*ZJnJ AllloCMt £ctitnr
TomTeft
()ity (dil
1
.._ __________ _..___ ....iL..L. ---
In Clam· Sterling's remarkable
piece. displayed front and center by
the New York Times, the pros-
ecutor's report was quoted directly,
on the mot1\-e for the crime:
"The Bulganan Secret Service had
a specific political interest in k1lhng
John Paul JI The imposing me of
Solidant) an Poland in the summer of
1980 and consequent social con-
vulsions constituted a most accute
cnsis for Eastern Europe. This was
perceived as a mortal danger to their
political cohesion and m ilitary
strategy A.nd since Po land's ideal-
ogical collapse -was mostl) due to the
perferv1d religaou faith of the popu-
lation. sustained and helped, above
all. by the first Polish P?l>C in history,
the Polish rebellion might be greatly
weakened and fragmented "by this
pol)('s 'physical ehminat1on.'"
~at does the West intend to do
ab8ut 11? The answer will likely be -
Nothing. Indeed. 1t was probably tn
confident foreknowlcd;e that the
West would confine its moral outrage
to horrified back stair wl\1spcn thit
embolden~ the conspiracy in the
Kremlin to stnke the pope an th~ fiM
place. Ap1n, what contempt they
must have for us?
The same week Stcrlifll' pubiatiJcd
her startlina rcpon. official WasbLn&·
ton was bedev1hna tbe prctidta1 oa
why he cannot seem to~· alona with
Chcmcntco. Hcttwith.asampi!qdel-
tton from Pre 1dcn1 Rcapn • Th..,..
day pn:ss conf~ ~r. " ,.,...,
pccc:hH th1 )car about 1ht So\Ytt
you have held out an olive bra-~\o
them. but 11 w same unw you usually (ither dtnou~ thear l)'IU'!n
or their· uon. Wouad 1t be better, 1n
an attempt to act th11 d11l~':JC started aaam. w~1hcr 11 thc umm1t or k
PAT
BuclWWI
in Geneva, if you simply held out the
olive branch without also taking a
shot at them?"
And when we "get this dialogue
started again," rest assured. Reagan
wilJ be publicly instructed not to bnna
up that unfortunate business about
the pope ... or the KAL air massacre,
or Solidarit)'. or the terrorbombina in
the Par\jshar Valley. Well, what can
wc do?
For openers, the U nited States
miaht C()mmend publicly the tenacity
and couraac of the Italian aovem-
mcnt, and Judie Ilario Martella, the
state prosecutor. and lead the West-
em nations in a conoened move to
upell evtt)' ~ulprian diplomat from
every NA TO capital. For yean. the B~l&:arianahav~aotcen •~Yr liter:atJy widi murder, With 1.au110Ea d•lll·
deilts, wilh poisoned-ti um-
brcllal, amuqlana drUal an weapons
in diplomauc pouches and col·
t.abontiDI with Western 1mori1u
Hkt the Red Brita«. Pat\ar we mUll k.ttl) open the
liaa o communicauon to the
Kftmhn: nothina rcguuu. howe~tt. m to play d1pJomanc hos 10 lhcir tngr;rmco.
I
wtth "alien" tish from the Missouri
River. •
North Dakota's pork-barrel poli-
ticians have hired a press agent to
aJlay the Canadians' fears. They arc
also paying $20,000 a year to the
North Dakota Water Users Associa-
tion, a private group that lobbies for
the project in Congress. Of course,
Congress doles out the federal funds
that keep the boondoggle alive.
Expenditure of pubhc funds for a
private lobbying effort, incident.ally,
appears to violate the state's constitu-
tion. State funds have also been used
to send former governors to Washing-
ton, and to pay a Washington-based
lobbyist to bustle Congress for the
Garrison funds.
The public relations firm North
Dakota hired has tried to mislead the
Canadian public. For example, o ne
press release gave the clear im-
pression that no construction wouJd
proceed until a U .S.-Canadian agree-
ment was reached.
Not so, North Dakota's lawyer
wrote in a memo. "The United States
is not obligated" to secure Canadian
approval. he wrote, and should be
"extremely careful to avoid making
even an implication'' that tl}is is so.
Meanwhile, Interior Dcpanrnent
sources tell me that concerns they
expressed over Garrison's water
quality were not passed on to Can-
adian officials. In short, both the
federal and state governments arc
conspiring to hoodwink the Canadian
people and its representatives.
J•d Aadrrsoa I• • 1yadlcated
col uud1t
LETTERS
Has the Democratic leadersllip
forgotten that politics, hke love.
comes in all colors? Has the leadtr-
ship fo'lotten about its substantial
(one might argue majority) con-
servative membership? Conservative
voices were notably absent from the
platform committee heanngs in
Washington.
Twenty years ago this summer,
Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater said
that extremism in defense of liberty
was no vice. Democratic charges tbat
Goldwater was an extremist and
would blow up the world starting
with Vietnam, were good e'nough to
get Lyndon Johnson elected presi-
dent. Of course, Johnson only blew
up Vietnam. Now the shoe has sh1t\td
from the extreme right foot to the
extreme left. The far left has taken
over the majority party which, is in
danger ofbecom~ng a minority party.
From the promise of "a chicken .an
every pot," the Democrats have
~ovcd to "a P~?mise to every special
interest group. The country as simp-
ly not going to buy it.
~nnie holds out the promise of a
bnghtcr future when she sings "The
sun'll come out tomorrow. t>e't your
bottom.~ollar that tomorrow. there'll
be sun. If the Democrats fail to read
the COf!SCrvative mood of the coun11y
lhey wtll not only have no sunshine in
their tomorrow. they might not have
m,ucb of a tomorrow. In fact, there
wdl be a bard knock life.
c.J Tbom•• 11 • •YDdlc•lff col•mJJJ1t.
Time to make new plans
la wake of Prop. A defeat
To the' Editor: v~iera smell scam and reject Prop..
" Now that lbc votina public bu tent osition A. And they're capable of
a clear al&Jlll to whomever can listen almost any trick, you know like
. -named that ifs unwilhna to w ~"' the leaislature to allow only • iuelf to brina new freeways to the m~ont.Y. vote to ,levy a tu (Just for doorsteps of land tpeculaton• pro-Propo11hon A. mand you) rather u.an
ject.cd houtina ttacU -pttbapl we the statuatory two thirds That way
can all come t(>eet.h"er. We know now they fllUrod it would be eaiier to PISS
votcn did not and do not acx:cpl the Oet it?. (One miabt add thit if
t.beaiJ that new freeways mean im-Proposition A bad been cleanted of
proved traffic coaditions. They do the PoitOn of new freeways. it m~t
believe traffic profeaaionals who ttll have bad a Ch&oce. But then the laDd
!JS • that they mm::uc traffic by ~peculaton wouldn't have been m>nlina more can. And they did anieresaed. would they?) ~e ~ C.0Wlty liaftic of· We all make mfs~ cbailc-
6dali wbo said lb.at too. . teristic oftbt human condition So, could M now tum OUI po_!atacal bow. But OQCC one ieet it,; man ~_!! ~for the~ _p1btic j.lod1 to conect the mistake. so _,
TUt ii. 1111 oui Uaftuace wi&h .. the .,.a of &he pmo c~m .. eu-.~
llwmDctt to bah new~ runs of , not Only hive the nib~ tb
tbae 1ame devdootn WM aurdy •. o!,ProoOation A. woa'tpveup?J1ieylal'Vetoomucbat fbU. SboWctn't we ill tik
1..U. State ud federal .•~ppon bu .sbould we beha~ as if~ *-cly bl9uft to be .e.lJOtt'd -aa peopk n't poken? tfllW'A~ Polian forT-their new TOM ALEXANDER
(R'lt'Mys lbould horror ol borror1 tbc l..quna Beach
I
I
SIR MIX .
CONCRETE MIX
l~!s.
OMll 5 PC.
DEAUVILLE FAN
PVC SU 21·9·•
~~ 49••.998-80-48
Four vanilla frame chain with rainbow
stripe pad. and a 42" vanilla fihervlau top
table. Umbrella eztra.
MATCHING 7 POSITION 7&aa PADDED PVC CHAISE y-•3514
TWO GALLOI PALMS
•SAGO
•PYGMYDATE
•BOTTLE
YOUR CHOICE
SHORTY CLUB LUL • RYS 777
Good-8iud palm tr.u for the home or
office. ( I thought maybe the Pygmy Date
waa a night on the town with Shorty.)
AIJISTIONG PLASTIC IMPULSE
~ ~ SPllllJ.EI BEAD ;)-297
tLTG-231C
Okay, wher. are we now?
COLO RITE
GARDEI ROSE
1/z" IOOf1 Vim 2-PLY 5/a" TllE COID IEllFOICED .
t--------------Wh.at'll it be, Fncl? The buic bargain water r-~-----~-----...... -1
ST bearer, or the tiN cord rein.forc.d hoee that AILn l" I 25 FT. won'tbuntunder~andcoUaupu POWEILOCI D euy .. a eleeping python? your p.rden
POWD IETUU 'TAPE wait. your ct.daion.
. ,.,t.Uiib
7 !~ r--::...iii!! IBLD
CODEI ...... SHORTY CLUB ~RR YS
25 feet ie plenty for most home and ehop
\lM8. Got an easy to ...ad l" wide blade. Clip
it .onto your belt and get to work.
LATO REDWOOD STAii
I!!
Give the patio furniture or
fence a good co.t of thie etuff. u .. it on
redwood or to give the look of redwood to _, . ' h ood ... 1ot er w .
· MUllAY 3 BP 20'' '~~j CUT SIDE DISCIAIGE
~ W•OWD ~ough!!I~;.
decent mower for a hunclncl bucka? Checa
out thia one with Brigge and Stratton
engine and fbed "A" loop handle. .
FOIEllOST BOJIESTEAD
FUUITUIE COLLECTIOI
ONE SHELF 3x3
ONE SHELF 4x3
1WOSHELF4x4
98~·
117••
13788
White or ~ fbUah, with f\a.lly
...the1'Slripped moring ~t. adjuftaltle
shel,,.. and eolar mesh. Displays and
protectu plant..
•
VAUCD DAVY DUTY
24 01. FllllD'I ··u••• -~-
I I!!..
We haven't forvotten you carpenten. (I saw
this act..-cm TV who wu eo d\lft\b,-eh.
thought Mount Ru.ah.more waa a natural
phenomenon. )
OLDllAJI 7"
llASODY ILADE
Attention. Mr. and Mn.
John Doe of Anytown.
U.SA Gen. Shorty
Mc:Armchair wanta
YOU to join the
SHORTY & CHEAP
CIDCKEN CLUB right now, an.a
start -ring big buck&. March into
your nila.i'Mt National ~ ind
fiNI out about all tl\e adft.l\tagaW
ClUh Memherahip. Tluat'a an onierl
llDICO llDOOI 01 OUTDOOR
LIGBT COlftOU
-~ IOLC-5C ILL-12C
The indoor •ariety will turn tahle lampe
on auto.matically at duak and off at dawn.
The outdoon type doee the same for
floocllighta.
oTmcw cuss CAIPETllC
6 M'. GREEN DURALA1JN
Oh yeah, sprinkler heade. Arm.strong'• a ~~ii.If
name that's known and loved by lawna r.
ICEBOX 29~~
CREDEN7A 63~7~ 169
l?OOMA
Sold in bulls to .... you 80me caeh. Who
neecle fancy packaging on MW bladee.
anyway? Not thie kid.
l~rr. acroa America. Good stuff.
MURRAY BAJA lllE
CLEAIAICE
Limited quantitiff, no Rain Checka. Bikes
sold unaaembled.
BAJA 1000 10 -SPEED
MOUNTAIN BIKE
119~6
28" Chrome finish bike with fully lugpd
frame, modified Baja handlebar and heayY
duty one piece crank.
BAJA 5000 10-SPEED
MOUNTAIN BIKE
139~2
Aho 26", with Blue finish. Fully lugged
frame, bullmooee type handlebar and
heaY)' duty on/off road tine.
VALVOLlll MOTOI OU.
M 1 :.iwr. 69~. u-wi 76c -u -~JJ l~/40WT. QT.
When JOU can get a quality motor oil at
tu.. prioee, it paye to atoc:la up.
CHINA
HUTCH 87~~
Oak finieh goocli .. that would look fine in
your homestead. Aaembly'• a enap.
AJAI DUWD SLIDES
89~1655
Right, you caught u. with
our drawer alid• down. Slide on down to
National Lumber and nab a pair.
EVDEADY DDCllD IATTDllS
AA OR AAA
'IWINPAK 97c
C OR D 'IWIN PAK 12• OR9VOLT
SINGLE PAK .
Th.a answer to the old
.. battan.. not included" routine.
1 -~---./--.. ..,.....~------·-
PUIOLATOl PIODUCTS
MOST PCV VALVES
11!
MOST AMERICAN
CARSXSVOIL
FILTERS
I~
XSV AIR FILTERS
2~
BABY TURBO
PR01'f(>
BABY TORNADO ·
YOURCHOICE a•u.
12 M'. GREEN
TEMPI'A'MON
5!!.rr.
The Green Temptation ( ie that a bribe?)
hu a S ,.ar waJTanty. The other one, I
dun.no. I queu you put it out ther. an.cl ...
what happens.
48'' WINDSONG 2a••
52" DEVILLE sa••
Woocl bladed fana for th• price of
plutic stuff. The Wind80ng ha. a
Brown finiah. the D9rille a Pollahecl
..._or Antique.._~ ancl
t.oth are light kit ( wtN)
adaptahl.. ;Limited quantiti-.
DlNct from a two-hour ~eoementln
-..i., Clcnmtown Ri...-4M it'• the
cl~c duo of SHORTY & CHEAP
CHICKEN, appNrlno S.tu..rcley.
JW\e 23rd at th .. sto19:
IL TOIO t:31 te II . ,
1a1T•T01 ••n a .. w
...
-
GET READY!
. .
THE BR·OADWAY'S SUMMER .SALE
BEGINS FRIDAY AT 10:00 A .. M ..
WIN ONE OF THREE WEEK LONG ADVENTURES FOR .TWO TO CANADA.
REGISTER FRIDAY THROUGH SUNDAY. DETAILS AND ENTRY B·LANKS ARE AVAILABtE
IN THE WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES AND HOUSEWARES DEPARTMENTS,
~.~'1JM~ii1Nfi~-1.W~~ltlliM'f~~
famous emblem. Polos, tops, sweaters,
shorts, bermudas, skirts and pants. Orig.
26.00 to 44.00 ............... 18.99 to 28.99
30% off: Cotton T's, shorts, skirts, pants
and campshirts from a famous woman
designer. Orig. 30.00 to 42.00 .19.99 to 28.99
1/3 off: Our exclusive rayon challis two·
piece. Reg. 24.00 to 33.00 .... 16.99 to 21.99
30% off: Chaus three-in-one cotton madras
plaid skirt. Orig. 38.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.99
25% to~ off: Clio silk T-shirt and our
own madras skirt. Reg. 24.00 to 30.00
......................... 17M and 19.19
30% off: Silk campshirt and Counterparts
cotton/polyester twill pants. Reg. 30.00 to
36.00 . . . . . ................. 20.99 to 24.99
1/3 off: Gloria Vanderbilt campshirt and
shorts. Orig. 26.00 and 30.00 18.99 end 19.99
1/3 off: Gloria Vanderbilt button-shoulder
cotton T-shirt. Orig. 26.00 . . . . 11.99
1/3 off: Cherokee's cotton crop pants in
solids or stripes. Orig. 30.00 .. . . . . . . . .19.99
1/3 off: Gloria Vanderbilt top and skirt. Orig.
26.00 to 34.00 . . . . . . . . . . . 18.99 to 19.99
25% off: Sasson military short in cotton
twill. Orig. 22.00 15.99
Spedel pwchae: Dolman sleeve top and
straight leg pant in color-spliced cotton
gauze . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21.99
MODERATE DRESSES
1/3 off: Select group of summer dresses.
Orig. 54.00 to 78.00 .......... 34.99 to 49.99
SpecW purchaH: Surplice wrap, print
georgette dresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59.99
JUNfORS
1/3 off: Santa Cruz separates in sunny solids,
plaids and stripes for summer. Orig. 16.00 to
35.00 ........................ to 22.99
1/3 off: Active separates from Sassafras:
tanks, shorts, campshirts, crop pants. Orig.
17.00 to 28.00 . . . . . . . . . . .... 10.19 to 17.99
Spedel pwchaae: Career skirts, jackets,
shorts and tops by Chibaro in mauve or navy
stripes ...................... 21.• to 39.99
25% off: St. Michel tops and Sasson shons
Orig. 18.00 to 20.00 . . . . . . . . . 12.99 to 14.99
1/3 off: Back to Back tanks and Palmetto's
track shorts. Orig. 7.00 to 15.00 .3.99 to 9.99
$pedal pwchae: Easy-care Jody shirt-
dresses in plaids or solids ............. 39.99
40% off: Union Bay pants, campshirts and
knit tops. Orig. 13.00 to 32.00 .. 8.99 to 18.99
INTIMATE APPAREL
30% off: Ours alone, rainbow striped Tammy
robes. Orig. 36.00 to 40.00 .... 24.99 to 26.99
33% off: Vanity Fair tricot p.j.'s, waltz gown
and coat. Orig. 15.00 to 21 .00 .. 9.99 to 13.99
25% off: Appliqued lace teddy from Blush, in
assorted colors. Reg. 20.00 . . . 14.99
33% off: Summer gowns and robes by
Gilligan & O'Malley. Orig. 38.00 to 54.00
. . . . ...... 24.99 to 35.99
26% to 40% off: All Pam bikinis, briefs,
hipsters. Reg . 3.50 each .. 8115.00 or 12/24.00
20% to 25% off: Henson Kickernick tailored
nylon brief 1n white or bisque. Reg. 5.00
each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 3/12.00
33% off: Olga• Bodysilk gown with stretch
lace bodice. Soft pastels. Orig. 40.00 .. 25.99
25% off: St. Eve solid tanks. Reg. 8.00 .. 5.99
Spedal purchaH: St. Eve sporty boxer
short . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 ...
~ off: Subtracrr panty girdle.
Orig. 13.50 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 8.99
20% to J0% off: Warner's Real McCoy con-
tour bra and lily of Franca "Classic Lillies"
bra. Orig. 12.00 to 13.50 ...... 7.11llnd1.19
20% to 3" off: Bali Something Smooth
regular and French·cut briefs. Reg. 5.00 to
5.50 each .......................... 3/12.00
20% to ~ off: Maidenform Delectables bra
and bikini. Orig. 6.50 to 14.00 . 4• to I.II
20% to ~ off: Maidenform Delectables
camisole and half sJip.
Reg. 14.50 to 15.00 . . . . . .. l.M to 11M
20% off: Kayser formal length "Clip·lt" half
slip. Reg. 13.00 ................... I .II
lpecW pwchaH: "Clip-It" full slip from
t<..ayaer •......•. ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12.11
Sped., pwchM•: Gilligan & O'Malley satin
robes, short and long styles . . a .• to 32.•
23% off: Lily of France rose lace tricot ted·
dy. Orig. 34.00 .................... 21M
(
JUNE 22 THROUGH JUNE 24, 1984.
Selection may vary by store. Limited quantities in some cases. Sorry, no-mail or phone orders .
.:;.; . . o~ ~'p r co ~alriatesin ___ .
polyester/cotton chino. Petite sizes 4 to 14.
Orig. 22.00 to 32.00 .......... 13.99 to 19.99
25% off: Petite Dimensions cropped pant in
solids or stripes. Petite sizes 4 to 14. Orig.
22.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.99
1/3 off: Personal petites basic polyester
blazer, dirndl skirt or pant. Petite sizes 4 to
14. Orig. 34.00 to 70.00 ...... 21 .99 to 45.99
Special purchase: Updated summer split
skirts, capris and tops for petites . 15.99
Special purchase: Blouses in assorted styles
and colors for large sizes 38 to 44 . . 14.99
Special pwchaae: Gauze warm-up sets for
~ea .. pUrChee•: Nike~ Electra white on
white active jogging shoes ............ 19.99
Spec18I purchne: Our own comfy tie
moccasin ........................... 21.99
28% off: Our own colorful mesh espadrille,
in canvas. Orig. 21 .0() ................ 14.99
41% off: Caressa's cane vamp, open toe
"Godiva" pump. Orig. 68.00 .......... 39.99
Special purchase: Our own snake sling 39.19
Spedal purchase: Our own open toe dressy
pump .... : .......................... 39.99
YOUNG MEN'S ANO BOYS
-large sizes 38 to 44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29.00 25% to 21% off: West Coast Ways cotton
sheeting shorts and Le Tigre striped tops.
Orig. 12.00 to 18.00 . . . . . . . . .. 8.19 to 12.99
1/3 off: Summery West Coast Ways bar
stripe shirts for young men. Reg. 15.00 .. 9.99
25% off: Zeppelin cotton drill fashion jeans
for young men. Orig. 22.00 . . . . . ..... 15.99
20% to 25% off: Active summer tops and
pants from Sweats Bi Ebe. Orig. 15.00 to
L
ACCESSORIES
30% off: Rose quartz and amethyst
necklaces, bracelets and drop earrings. Orig .
20.00 to 94.00 . . 13.99-to 64.99
Special value: Neutrogena soaps. Box of
four imperial bath bars. 5.5 oz. each,
12.40 value . . . 9.00
Special purchase: Trina's Regent Park floral
print travel accessories ........ 4.50 to 18.60
60% off: Two-way vanity mirrors, round and
oval. Reg . 6.00 to 12.00 ..... 2.99 to 5.99
1/3 off! B.H. Smith classic leather handbags.
Orig. 18.99 to 40.00 .. . ... 11.99 to 25.99
Special purchase: Tailored leather Ganson
handbags . . . . . . . . 39.99
1/3 to 1/2 off: Buxton and Princess Gardner
small leather goods.
Orig. 12.00 to 33.00 . , . . . . 7.99 to 15.99
Special purchase: Shimmering cubic zirconia
rings, earrings and pendants 6.99 to 12.99
44% off: Beveled Tropic-Cal sunglasses.
Orig. 9.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4.99
Special purchase: Summer leotards from
Carushka and Cathy George . 22.99 and 23.99
50% off TrifariYI faux coral and pearl jewelry.
Reg. 10.00 to 55.00 . . . . . ... 4.99 to 27.49
25% off: Sport socks for women. Reg . 3.00
to 4.50 . . .................... 1.99 to 2.99
37% off! Tortoise frame nappa leather
cosmetic cases. Orig. 8.00 ............ 4.99
25% off: All our Coops-a-Daisy jewelry.
Orig. 3.00 to 12.50 .. . ....... 2.25 to 9.37
20% off: Three of our best selling DIM
hosiery styles. Reg . 3.00 to 4.00 . 2.40 to 3.20
40% off: Bel Air hosiery, basic and fa shion
colors. Reg. 1.50 to 6.95 . . 9Cr to 4.17
Special value: Get two pair of plastic thongs
for the price of one! ................. 2/8.00
Special purchase: Roomy nylon handbags
by Jordache. . . . . . . . . . . . . 19.99
Special purchase: Embossed vinyl handbags
from Valerie Barad, assorted colors . 12.99
25% off: Phillippe linen and leather hand-
bags. Orig. 56.00 to 60.00 .41 .99 to 44.99
60% off: Our own private label earrings:
drops, dangles, sparkling metals.
Ong. 5 00 to 14.00 . . . .2.49 to 8.99
WEST COAST KIDS
2o% to 33% off: Tops, swimwear and shorts
from our top makers, for boys 4 to 7. Orig.
4.99 to 12.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.99 to 7.99
30% off: Casual summer twill pants for boys
4 to 7. Reg. 13.00 .. .. . . . . .. 8.89
Speciel putdWM: West Coast Kid shorts for
boys 4 to 7.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 8.99
25% to 33% off: Shorts and knit tops in
pastela and brights for girls 4 to 14. Orig.
6.00 to 14.00 ................. 3.81 to 7.99
33% off: Bright sundresses for girls 4 to 14.
Orig. 14.00 to 38.00 . . . . . . . 1.n to 24.91
33% off: Splashy swimwear from the most
Popular makers, for girls 4 to 14. Orig. 12.00
to 28.00 . . . . . . . . . 7.81to17.11
33% off: lzod shorts and knit tops for girls 7
to 14. Orig. 13.00 to 27.00 . . .7.11to17.•
JOCM. off: Esprit nautical and pastel sport·
swear for girts 1 to 14.
Orig. 10.00 to 3200 •.••....... I .II to 21.11
8'lecW ~•i Aasoned baby shawls 4.11 ~ purchm1: Toddler boYf and girls
shorts •.•....•.•.••.••..•• , .• 3.41•.nct 4•
21% to 33'Wt off: Assortment of Health·Tex
fashion epomweer and dr"'" for infantt,
toddlers, gltlt 4 to 14 •
25.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10.91 to 19.99
25% off! Young men's Zeppelin dress slacks
·in five colors. Orig. 22.00 . . ......... 18.99
26% off: Young men's polyester/cotton duck
pants, four colors. Orig. 24.00 ......... 11.99
25% off: Young men's blazers. Entire st ock.
Orig . 90.00 to 95.00 . . . . .... 18.99
33% off: Young men's striped short-sleeve
shirts. Reg. 15.00 . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 9.99
33% to 50% off: All young men's Modz
mesh tops, polyester/cotton. Orig . 10.00 to
15.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4.91 to 9.99
21% to 26% off: Boys' 8 to 20 Campus Le
Tigre shon-sleeve shirts. Ong. 13.00 to
15.00 ..... . ........ 9.99 to 10.99
25% off: All boys' 8 to 20 NRG knit tops.
Orig. 16.00 . . . . . . . . . . .. 11.99
20% off: Boys' 8 to 20 Jay Jay cotton cord
shorts. Orig. 10.00 .................... 7.19
25% off: Boys' 8 to 20 swimwear.
MEN 'S
22% off: Arrow Dover short sleeve shirts.
Reg. 18.00 . . . . . . . . . ................ 13.99
28% off: French designer ties.
Reg. 18.50 ........................... 8.99
29% to 42% off: Designer dress shirts.
Orig. 24.00 to 29.50 . . . . . . . . ........ 18.19
33% off! American designer silk ties.
Reg. 15.00 . . ....................... 9.19
30% off: Arrow full cut or fitted short sleeve
shirts. Orig. 19.00 and 21 .00 . 12.19 llftd 14.99
24% to 25% off: Arrow Brigade dress shirts.
Orig. 17.00 to 20.00 .......... 12.19 to 14.99
32% to 37% off: Designer dress shirts.
Orig. 25.00 to 29.50 . . . . . . . ......... 18.99
20% off: Lightweight robes. Orig. 25.00 19.99
28% off: Diplomat wraps. Reg . 18.00 · .. 12.91
Spedal purchase: designer p.j. 's ... 19.99
Special purchase: Don Loper leather goods
for men .... . . . . . . . . . . ....... 1.99
30% off: All men's sunglasses.
Reg . 12.00 to 21 .00 .... . .... 8.40 to 14.70
30% off: All Centura socks. Reg. 3.00 to
3.50 . . . . 2.09 to 2.39
Spedal purchase: Designer belts . . ... 12.99
30% to 33% off: Linen-weave and print
polyester ties. Reg . 11 .50 to 12.00 ...... 7.99
24% off: Freeman oxford. Reg. 46.00 .. 34.19
26% to 60% off: Designer sportshirts, pants,
• vests, sweaters. jackets.
Orig. 28.50 to 78.00 . . . .... 14.81 to 31.11
25% off: Levi's' for Men jeans.
Reg . 24.00 . . . . . . . . . . ..... 17.99
23% to 37% off! Casual slacks.
Reg . 26.00 to 32.00 .................. 11.19
33% off: Puritan Sportair golf shirts.
Reg . 15.00 . . .................. l.M
26% off! Sasson sportshirts. Orig. 20.00 ,4.•
31% off: Arrow sportshirts. Orig. 16.00 .10.11
32% off: Robert Bruce sweaters.
Orig. 25.00 •.....................•... 11.11
33% off: Assorted swimwear. Reg. 12.00 to
22.00 . .. . ............. 7.M to,. ..
32'Et to ~ off: Assorted knit shirts.
Orig . 19.00 to 30.00 .......... 12.11 to 11.M
32% off: Sportsphere walk short.
Orig. 16.00 . . .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . ••.• 10•
33% off: Recess plaid walk shorts.
Orig. 18.00 . . . . . . . ...•• 11.•
35% off: SPortsphere campShirts.
Ortg. 20 .00 ...•....••..•.••.••... ,. .... 12M
33% to IOIMt Off: Spreng outerwear.
Orig. 30.00 to 39.9l; ....••.•..... 11.11
42% off: French dj4igner knit 1him.
Aeg. 26.00 .... ~ ..• ; •..•••• & • • • • • 4 14-111
THE BROADWAY
I\ \OIJTHfllN (Al lf()f/".J ·'
--'-~
30.00 off:· Panasonic oscillating standing fan '
with 16" blades, orig. 99.99 ........... a.II
6.00 off: Panasonic 12" oscillating desk fan,
orig. 29.99 .......................... 24.99
5.00 off! Panasonic 16" oscillating desk fan,
39.99 .................. ' ............ 34.18
SILVER. GLAS SWARE. MIKASA CHINA
25% off: the ticketed price of our entire
stock of silverplated holloware. 3 days only.
22.00 off: Longchamps full lead crystal stem·
ware and barware. reg. S for 42.00 ..... I few
19.19 or 3.34 MCh
50% off: Mikasa 5-pc. place settings in Silk
Flowers, Charisma Gray or Gabriele patterns,
reg. 39.95-44.95 ................ 19.91-22.41
HOUSEWARES
Spedel purchaM: Washington Forge 20-pc.
"Vail" flatware set, stainless/wood ..... 11.99
30.01 off: Lifetime 50-pc. stainress flatware
set with bonus hostess set, reg. 80.00 .. 49.99
36.01 off: Reed & Barton Rebcraft 50-pc.
stainless flatware set with bonus hostess set,
reg. 80.00 ........................... 44.99
Spedal purchase: 50-pc. hollow handled
stainless flatware set with bonus
hostess set .......................... 69.99
30.01 off: Washington Forge 20-pc. stainless
flatware set, reg . 80.00 ............... 49.99
FURNITURE ANO ROO M ACCENTS
301.00 off: White wicker 4-pc. seating
group, orig. 650.00 .................. 341.00
351.00 off: Traditional sofa with multi·
stripe covering, orig. 850.00 .......... 411.00
Matching loveseat, orig. 800.00 ....... 441.00
Queen sleeper, orig. 950.00 .......... 819.00
101.00 off: White wicker dining group,
orig. 400.00 ........................ 211.00
441.00 off: Contemporary super queen
convertible sofa, orig. 1140.00 ........ 119.00
With innerspring mattress,
orig. 1240.00 ....................... 711.00
151.00 off: Matching chair,
orig. 650.00 ........................ 499.00 '
LAMPS ANO CLOCKS
I0.00 off: Our exclusive French design
ceramic lamp, orig. 150.00 ............ 8 .M
160.00 off: Mirrored grandson clock,
orig. 250.00 . . . . ... -..•.•... ' ....... •.oo
REFRIGERATOR S
1-.00 off: General Electric 19.7 cu. ft.
refrigerator, orig. 749.00, now 699.00 with
60.00 G.E. rebate less 50.00 rebate from
Southern California Edison .............. 00
130.00 off: Whirlpool 18 cu. ft. refrigerator,
orig. 649.00, now 619.00 less 100.00 rebate
from Southern California Edison ....•. 111.00
170.00 off: Frigidaire 16 cu. ft. refrigerator,
orig. 519.00, now 529.00 less 100.00 reb8te
frOm Southam California Edison ...•••• GI.II
IUGGAGE
...... 11•• 111: 5-plece iuw. collection
in heavy duty vlnyt with !either trim
...•....••. ' ..... ,. .............. 111.11
1P11tn' ...-..n: Full graln leathtr
(
Tab1emanners a mouthful
Kids learn proper
way to eat foodS-
such as lobster
By JERRY BJRSCB
Of .............
Jt wu 1oin1 to be AnJtla Christie's b~ niahL The Hunhnaton Beach
H1&h School student was aoina to
dinner at the chic Newport Beach
restaurant The Ritz prior to berprom.
The evenina quickly turned to
di11Ster as Angela stared at the lobster
she had ordered, unable to ft1ure out
: bow to eat it.
"I thouaht I liked lobster, but when
they brought it I couldn't eat it. It bad
its shell on it and I couldn't pick it out..
I couldn't eat it with my bands,"
rec:alla Ange~ who dido 't 10 on
another date with the boy.
An older and wiser Angela, 16, isn't
aoing to let herself be caught in the
same situation. She ia one of 13
students enrolled in the Academy of
Etiquette at the Neiman-Marcus de-
~-~~
that prom, but now I think I can
handle it," says An&ela.
Parents are payinaS28S per child to
put their kids throup a six-session
mannen course deaianed to teach the
difference between American and
Continental styles of eat.ins rather
than the Amencan and Continental
styles of food ~ts.
"The main th1na with mannen is. to
learn not to offend someone," ex-.
plains Deborah Hattoy, who, alona
with Lynda Peatritto, founded the
academy.
Chad Sabin doeen't want to make a ml•lre u Ile --.m Scott BeDdenoll uut ._.. ..._ pnct1ce tlaeli r:=• • tM-
lnatnactor Deborah Battoy at a ftlltaaruat table. · 90ap and Mlad cJaolcee ollered by tllelr waltnm ~
"We want to teach them everythina
includina how to complain to the
waiter, bow lo tilt t&e soup bowl, bow
to seat ladies and how to bold a watcT
goblet properly," Hattoy says.
.. /r. lot of teen-asers: are uncom-
fortable on dates and at fancy dinners.
We want them to be able to enjoy the
meal without wondering which fork
should they use or what to do with
their napkin," adds Pcstritto.
The class meets once a week at the
Zodiac restaurant in the fashionable
department store and includes door-
to-door chauffeured transportation
from the students' homes.
The participants are banded menus
and they order a meal. Pestritto and
Hattoy hover over them, showina the
students bow to cut their meat
properly, what to do if they spill and,
of coune, makina sure no femal~ sits
down at the table without the aid of a
(Pl_.. Me TABLS/82)
Fine and Dandy
DEBBIE I GIVE If\£
1l4A'f USELESS LUCK.'t CM~.
I PAPARAZZI
-~--~--------
By Katy Brooks
.
The more the inerrier at Club Royaler,
Jeffnjy Broker and Sftlle Yoancer chat
aboanl tile Greek TJaOOA wit.Ile Tom Hooper,
lf&DCJ lntDe uad IUclaael JU.ma.,. readJ' for
cnal8e tlYeD to 8oJ 8coat YOl11Dteen.
,
Scout volunteers go cruising,
youth house drive gets rolling
"We expected 125, but 200came," said host
Aatllony "Vu" F. Vuodiscussing Oub Royale's recent
party held at Shark Island Yacht Oub ... It turned out
OK and everyone bad a fi.let during the sit-down
dinner."
There was no shortage of entertainment. either ...
during the cock1ail hour Spanish guitarist Joel Valdivia
accompanied by IJ1a on the flute was loudly applauded
and magician P'11 O'Brien kept the all-singles group
amazed with his tricks as he moved from table to table.
Ayby Night disc jockeys bad toes tappinawith
music of the• 40s, '50s and '60s and gave guests a chance
to try out some of the dance steps executed by Forrest
and Ediedurin,anexhibition.
CUll Steveu ofNewport Beach. a vocalist with
Louis Prima at one time, was there along with Gloria
Nord (she once pcrfonned her skating routines for the
royal family in Engl.and) and Confrey P'1111ps,jazz
pianist at the Newportcr.
Othen there were CeCe Alldenoa, Pllylll1 StetD,
Jlm Harrt1u, Au Lewl1.Sylvla WlD1toa, Barbara
Sllvermu and GI.Day Zalta. • • • Voluntcen in the sustaining membership enrol-
lment campaign forOCCouncil Boy Scouts of America
had quite a treat.
Spyros Papepor1e donated the use ofhis l OS-foot
Greek Tycoon for a three-hour harbor cruise. Admiral
Yachts arranged the late afternoon outinaand
Papaaeorae of Lona Beach was at the Sea Soouu Base
I
...................
Wiiiiam Keeler. rlCht. preeenta plaqae to
Da'rid Stein for bb npport ofY.8.P.
(where guests boarded) having fun as be showed offhis
picture as a youth in Grctte -wcanna his scouting
uniform.
Jeffrey Broler(he's wttb Buchalter, Nemer,
Chrystie and Younaer law firm) who beaded up tbe
campaign was aboard. So was Evelle Y .... er (former
state attorney acneral and the Youoeerof tbe above law
firm), T9m Terwtllinr (he donated and poured the wine
for the cruisers). the bave Ree.ta and TM Sdlaefen.
I -
Also cruising and enjoyina the elaborate hon
d'ouevres were BW'l'Ucker, Mr .... Mn.PnM c-aer, the Dwa,.a Slm~Mlcbel ~. T-
Beoper (be 's the financial director for the council) and
the Deu.ll Sub. • • • A t~story house in Laguna Beach will provide a
home-like setting for troubled younpten who oome to
the Y .S.P. Shelter. Plans for a four-year', S.00,000
capital fund campaian to finance the purcbacof thc ·
new site were told at a luncheon hosted bY Dani S&ela.
Supervisor Tom ROeJ, Manie FIHl'tlWandJamee
Roelevelt at The Ritz.
Among those an attendance were Emma Ja.e
Riley, MUJ Ronevelt, Wllllam ~eelel' Jr. (Y .S.P.
board president), Jolelle and Tem heates, Pa.t&nM,
Jeu IAlcu,LeeO.rmelJ,R1•m llaA.eD.Lewn
Sam.plea with daughter ....... and Jiilie EftaNa
(boardVP).
Also LIMa Dtetl,JeAllM 111.ls.S....,.....
Eleanor Bu1,UHa Mel-. ....... J•Sa•mea,Pa.i
Beckley. ArMW Slader, executive director, Jiilie
Poue«a. shelter director and AMJ lllller.
Three months aao Riley 1ais1ed in leCU.rina•
$25.000 matching fund arant throusb the supervisors
revenue-sharing funds and the community responded.
At the luncheon, Nera and Clautel a.ter initiated
the cap1tal campaian (lo pay off rcmaiq 1DOf1111e and
operaung funds) by plcdginaa $20,000doUtion ...
matclung funds contnbutors in attendance were My
Upbm Bllltlap,Mar1MColU...andJuMeT11•11
(Nolan Real Estate, 1.aguoa Beach), Mal1M aDCUUMS
Newtirk. Newport 8eacb. Bane1 SleU9 (MitiliO&l
Viqo Co.) and Parter&~ ( Fint American Title
Insurance). -i ~
..
.. Ot11nge Cout DAILV PILOT!Thur9day. JuM 21. 186'
Reader says most American women 'dead in bed'
man feel virile, strona and se"Y· 1 have concluded that most American women have a
very unhealthy attitude towards sex. Thia subject ahould
be mandatory for au hiah school junion and senion. -
No Chauvinist. Ju t Honest .
ecSic cards, lcttcn, flowers, tlonationt and so on. I think
you are all wet. ...
•• l.uDUS
Most American women are bung up about their
bodies. They are aftatd if they appear to be enJoyina sex
and ~have ma way that is remotely aaarc ive, lhey will
be (lOOSidered whores. All this IOCS back to the mad-
Victorian era when sex was considered a duty -sometruna to be tolerated. Women learned this twmed
attitude from their mothers, who got it from THEIR
mot.hen. (A tons line of cold tomatoes.)
AU the deeply butied anxielie$ t:0me into pla)' -
uneasiness about breast size, fear of nudaty (lights out),
terror of setting p~ant even though there is protection,
the idea that no talkina is allowed (back in Sunday school)
and the desire to get it over with as soon as po ible (like a nu shot).
DEAR HONEST: WUt JM uy ma1 M•• •me
valldJty. aldloeO I eu't Ima,._ wt.ere J• are rualat
lato dleM m'41·Vlcteriaa •m11e1a.
I do aot aaree &bt ~ ldlool pit AMld be ta.Pt uw ta be respoa11ve ta bed. fteJ DO Med to bow,
llowe\ler ...... lleepfrem~"eput•lllif~
"tdl VD. Tlaaak1 for a letter &bt 11..,.. i. Jar a few coffee
Why do you c.on ider folks "inexcusably vul&at JUSt
because they 1tnd a printed card? They hayc JUlt I~~ a
loved one and aren't up to think.ina about social amenata
When we send ftowcrs or a c.ontribution to a family in •
sorrow. our pufl)Ole is to comfort them. T ~expect a ~d·
wntten thank-you note is the pme as seek.ins recosnataon
for a good deed. -Hoppins Mad In BirmipJham
DEAA 811\M: &.., M'J: .... 1•• ......... my
Ctlpt. .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am at a loss to undentand
why you aod "Bemused in Bethesda" ate so incensed
about the manner in which arief-stricken people ack.nowl·
advlee. A prtatecl tanl Witi a ew pereoul ....... •• H .......... ,.,, .. , .... _., ....... ,.°" ... ~ ...... t
deal of time or nerp. It certalaly den llO& compere wt ..
tilt time (DOt to meadom mo.ey) expeaded by daote •H
wroae comclolace letters u• Ifft nowen.
What happened to Ch11dhood?
.......... .,"-.......
Lynda Peatrttto prealdea u atadenta learn the Oner polnta of menu-read.lnf.
TABLE MANNERS A MOUTHFUL •••
stores in Los Angeles and Las Vegas.
The academy also plans a special Newport Beach
course for business executives.
"A lot of junior executives need to have that comfort
zone we~ trying to give the students here. We will teach ~--------------------------..---------------------------. them bow to host a formal dinner party in the home, the right manners for the business lunch and bow to conduct
~TnA® ~ _l_Af-ft Open to the Public
FACTORY SURPLYS ~ • ~ ~ OUTLET • \?I: Cl • . • ~ "" •
-----
-<\t'g into SullJ"1
C'J~ SALE ~~
with specially reduced prices on discontinued or
slightly irregular fashions: .,."'""'"''··
Bras
Slips
Panties
• Sleepwear
Robes
Fabrics & Trims
Sale
Wednesday June 20
thru June 27
IAl<ll S11lllT SQUAii
7 "3 UICll SlUIT
COSTA MESA o..-w·•-(714) 957-1214
ll Ofll HOUllS
~ ,,, , .. -.. ......... ............. __..,...
ow stcnwtdl deannC8 sale Is now In progra
comelntoc11y ... uveonal owfamousllbell In
,..,. trland dOtNnl, IPOl l:IW••· fUI •lill*lll. ...,. and taclll , ......
Here are Just a ff!# examotes Of the many Grat values vou wtll find ttw'Oughout our stores.
VET A'S SUMMER SALE
l /3 to 1 /2 off
Robes, loungewear, lingerie,
bras, panty girdles, etc.
21 Thurs. 10-8
22 Fri. 10-6
Veta's
INTNATE APPAREL, INC.
1038 /RV/NE AVENUE
NEWPORT BEACH. CA i2MJO
10-6
642-1197 ''Unmistakably Feminine''
• Sulla by Hmt Schldlner & .._.., Chltstl9n Dior,
Pierre C ........ Bia .. mid more. Two and three piece
suits 1n all wool and polyester and wool blends. Sohcis. stripes and
plaids. No charge fOf normal alterations.
Reg 250.00·495.00 199.90-389.90
• Sportcollt9 lndude tt.t Sclulfflaer a ...._All woo1
and polyester and wool blends. Solids and patterns. No charge fOf
normal alterations.
Reg.150.00-250.00 124.90-199.90
• Dress Slacks Include ..... Sclulffw a.....,
s.nsabelt, Jarm-and others. Select from all wool and
polyester and wool blends 1n belt loop and famous eastlClzed
waistband styling
Reg 42 50-62 50 34..90-52.90
• Long Sleeve nre .. Sl*ta. lnclud1ng our most famous
makers
Reg to 31 00 18.90
• Designer SHk Nectcw ... Beautiful pnnts
Reg to 25 00 10.90
• ..., "Elite'' Dress Shoes. Oasoc shp-on 1n soft. supp6e
calfskin
Reg 145 00 99.90
• F8m0Ua MMer lhort Sleeve Knit lhlrt&.100%cotton
and cotton/ polyester blends 1n solids and stripes Including Hathaway
Bill Blass. Racquet Oub and Four Winds
Reg to 30 00 18.90
• Ca .... Pants. Many styles 1nduding elasti: waiSt and belt loop.
Reg 32 50 22.90
• Active Wllll lhorta.. Outstanding collecbon.
Reg 20.00 14.90
.. --------·-----·NEWPORT FASHION ISLAND UM ~•••w11•QWwe
VIia • '1 I U 11C.c4 ,. ...................
.
. silverwoods
-
'
themselves at an office cocktail party," Pestritto says.
Pestritto and Hattoy, both single parents, decided to
open the academy after spending last summer at a Cape
Cod hotel owned by Hattoy's grandmother, where they
offered a free manners class to children of vacationers.
"It was met with such success that we decided to try it ·
as a business," Pestrino explains.
But even proper manners can't always overcome
young tastes. When Pestrino asked, "A.re you auys ready
for your spinach and Brussels sproutsr' the universal
response was a loud groan.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
fw tM lat tf Y• Lit.
ltU UlltlllVI.
COSTA •SA -54a.UH
llllT AllT CASH
Ouelity old watc:hel. ICflC>
gold. jewelry .
V911'AGI TUii
In eo.t C.nyon
IM I . Ol&IT IWY., U.
W.u.t QWIU
"FAST
RESULT"
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
For Result
Service Call
642-5671
ht. J22
IO DAY
CULTURED
PEARL
SPECIAL
•STRANDS
•CLASPS
• SHORTNERS
• FANCY NECKLACES
•PENDANTS
•BRACELETS
•EARR INGS
•RINGS
•PINS -~
\
30% OFF
SALE ENDS JUNE 28th
Ac•a•s4 ... • I"' ...
17th & lmne, w .. tdlfl ,.._,
Newpert le•ch 6424110
J. .
I
-2:00-1 ~NlWS NIQHTWATat
** "The ~· Tomb" (1942) i~ Dlcll Foren. •
**~ "Enigma" (1982) Manin &*"~· FOllfY. •
* * u "Brlgldoon" ( 1954) Gent Kelly, Cyd Chartue.
-~ (B)MOYIE
**IA "Rodly Ml" (1982) S~
Stllorie, Clf1 WtlthltL
-2:30-
Don tm ewava
Juon Bemant Crl&ht) wuu lla!'Y Andenon
not to dlara.pt the .. acbaalYe fnltemlty" of
Juctaee to wblcb they belona on .. Nlabt Court ..
to~t at 9 :30 on NBC, Cliannel 4:
'9-rownup TV' o
New rograms on Show.time, HBO
deaJ with homosexuality. prisons
BJ P'RED ROTHENBERG
•l#T......._..,._
LO ANGELES-Bydesiarundnettmty.peycable
1s breaking new ground in lhe a.ru of two staples of
commcretal network 1elcvision: situation comedjcs and dramatic series.
"Brothers." bta,innin,on ShowtimeJuly 13, is about
three adult siblinas. one o whom j5 hom0texual.
''Muimurn Security," startina Sunday n1j,bt on
Home Box Office, focuSC"S on mu~s. rapi u and other
• pnson felons, none of whom use G·rated tan&
Neither senes is "Little House 01> the Prairie,"
undcrsconna the notion that if pay.able tcrVlCCS are
aoang to supplement movies with onginal series. .these
shows mu i be dcc1dcdJy different from nct"-Ork fare.
Otherwise. HBO and Sbowtime subscribers mi&bt
question payina for products they can act elsewhere Tor f~. •
Peter Chemin, Sbowtime's vice president for origj naJ
proarammmg. said he wanted "Brothers .. to be "con-
troven1al," the kmd of show that becomes popular b)
word of mouth hke "The Mary Tyler Moott Show" and
"AJJ m the Family."
The script for "Brothers" was onpnally com-
mm1oned by NBC when the movie "la Cage.aux foJJes"
was popular several years ago.
Greg Antonacci, the show's supervisina producer,
said the network wanted to do something about
homosexuals, .. but then when it was finisbed'they said,
'Hey. there are p y people in there!: ..
Showtame has scheduled seven episodes, and An-
tonacci said the p y character probably will be shown
datina men.
ntJl\ Wrdnetdar'• ~ ......,.,v." "We"m
an idtltUJY *"RIO tU11D19 lleJail "Wd11ve to~ rilil."' aid Do11,.,llll1Nlko
HBO·s onpnal fihmJiVllioe ... If yoaclall._ ...
QD't bit bomc nans. But the cau:t. 11 tbAt nObody...,.. up b ..,,..,
because of 1 ""Sak.harOv," .. Tender J1 die Nilllll!.
.. Muamum un1y."
Evrn IO, HBO viewen lhoUld OOPMW ""Ma'!ll
Security" 1 prusrammina bonua. f!!O¥ided ~~}'!' ~· the profaouy IDd the Jb:ifiadioe ol ~ SW>day's premiere ~ II a 1DOY11!11r JrillY, .... mctunes humorou. portrayal of pri_,. .~ill._....
and its dead end lo the provam•11Wk rality ud ,...,,.,. humor,
••Mttarnwn S«urity'~ raembks a .. Hill ,SUeet .._. ..
btban(j bars. It evco bu T riaided Silva (Pill a.ler ~
Martinez in .. Hill tied") u a ptle. COlftJIHUCMf
prisoner.
With .. pay~ becom~ more dariQlo will the
commercial ~twort censors tet loQter1
Harvey Shephard, CBS' senior vice praideat b .
prosramm1os. said there's bcc1l no cba.allt pa tbe
net-...ort•$ 1tandards and pract.1cn. But all )'OU haw to dO
is watch TV to know that a sndiial evolution hU occ:UrteCt
in what audjences wiU now tolerate.
As Ylewers find more nudity. coatr0,·enial 1.suaaad
profanjty on cable, at•s litcly they'll more easily l«ltp( lhd
same lhinas on commercial TV. ODe Miami station, fOI
example, recendy ran uncut the R-rated .. Deer Hunier-•
with hardly any objections. •
And it wasn 't too tong ago that rv·1 married coupkt
had to have separate beds. This tealOO. John Ritw will
hve with bas girlfriend on ABC's "Tbtec·s A Crowd... ;
One character on CBS• new 111COm. ..Cba'1el i Ow:fe·" perhaps summed it up best:
The children know everyt.hiJlll. Charles
cable TV."
Three years ago. NBC would not confirm whether 1•;;;miiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij. Tony Randall's character on "Love. Sidney .. was gay. A
~I!~~~·~ ·qyear lat~. N~ ~d he was _a n.on-~~~om~x':'t.
8MOYIE ** ''The MwnmY• Gholl" (19'43) Lon QlliMy, John Ctrrdw.
-a:ao-
(!) FAITH2D e llWQJS WB.BY, M.O.
-3.10-
®MOYIE
*** ''The Hunter" (1979) SIM ~. Ell Wlllc:tl.
-d-i~OOCTOA * * * "Whlltlng In The Olttt" ( 1941} Red Sklfton, AM Ruther1ord.
(])MOYIE
··~ "Alt Elephent Cllled Slowly'' (1170) 811 TrMn, Virginie Mct<en-
na.
FOUNTMf VALLEY
EdWVdl FOuntlln V'l
839 1500
'OiWd
stadium Dr1w In
839.fl170
"A
IUITElftUI 1111_,. .... •rn Ir rrr
Pay-able ts concerned over its rati1)p decline last
season. Some subscnbers bad seen most of ~y'2ble's basic mov1e inventory and were not satisfied with the new
releases each month, particularly since the same films
could be rented cheaply on video cassettes.
As more video cassette rccordcn are bouabt. the pay-
cable services are moving toward greater prosram vancty,
stakma out areas that will distinguish them from the
commercial networks and from each other.
"If homes arc going 10 buy only one service, the
decision will be made on which one has what viewen want
and can't get anywhere else," said David Poltrack, CBS'
vice president for research.
That's why HBO has sports, rock concerts ud
original movies and why Showtime bas comedy specials
and is developing its fint miniseries., f . Scott Fitt&tra)d·s
"Tender Is the NWtt." starring Peter Strauss.
......... 1
Ui\ ll)Vl.S 4
• COITl IEA Ul·Ml
ElMNIDS ltARBOll lYM
• COlll llSA 151~1 ..
lDWMDS TOWI CDfTJ.I .
0. ""° Sll-S. EDWMDS SMXlcuat •••••m ....... UJWMDS HUNTICT<*
·u-<nJ> •1an •FA»DSO'JM[
-E049S.cm
[DWMD$ --VU) tMl.l ·--ZISJ SYUfY (X&OI£
IUIWI& 81-lffl
l'OC *"· 1.1 Da• •mwa•t·-a.ms CIEM tl(Sl "We want to do tbinp that other people won't
touch." said HBO President Michael Fuchs. referring to ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!OOl!!!!in~aill111ial!ac!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~
Don't tell
anyone.
OVANC6.:.tmKETS ev11l1bi. for
STAR TREKlll: The SMrctl For T1CX~ "'4S'7SA.
Spodt, GREMLINS & INOIANA • • c • • • c • • • • • •
JONES a The Temoi. of Doom --·-oo:~=;:--'
LUXURY THEATRES
ht 2 Matintt Showings Only $2.75 UnltsS Noted
•3tit4•X•iutl6J~ 2Ss1 /~~ ) * FOR FOOi EXCITEmEntl V1SrtOur... * ARCAOEofGAMES• :' .. · .. :::
8B\AIB'181iBRS Gw£MUNS 0
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'
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O fiW.,lnt O••n 7l l0 WMllen•t / l rOO Weetl.-llllh
Ct1tliJ•f'n U1~1 U F Rl l Un! 'Noltt1
•
111m• T1I n..-CNJ
12 30. loo s 30 a oo. 10-30
...... A(PC)
12 lO. 2 ~ 420 6 lS 8 IS 10 IS
'ftUCl IWm" (I}
l00,70S.1110 .,..n.eesr (PC)
12 SO, H S 9 00
...... (PC)
1-0S. l 30. S'S.S UO. 10 ts
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• Dllllr S:tweo 12 30 lCO. 4·SO 100 9 10. II 15
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EVERY THURSDAY
2 ADULTS : .; PRICE OF 1
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aa.rWJ••a.:u 1111-. cn•MO•l'l-M9~-cr JT1
All OPEN 7:15 Start Dusk . ....... ...... , .........
=f--"""_,___,....._"""""
~--------~-L~~-..:!___!_~~~~--~~~~~..:.....--~~----~~--~--.::.....:..---.;~~~-=----------------------------..-.
" f
0ninoe ~ OAILY PILOT/Thurlday, June 21, 1984
Basketball hel~s CBS
bounce into top spot
lOS ANGELES (AP) -CBS. paced by
&be tumultuous final pme of the NBA
playoffs between Los Anacles and Boston
and by seven of its regular series, won
undisputed ftnt place in Nielsen ratin for
the week ended June 17.
The network, which has been alone in
first only one other lime since the rquJar season ended in April, tied the previous
NEWPORT BUCH SANTA AHA
10 •' tuca OOllll BIUSTOl ... Oil & !OP( ..... .
"' ....... !PS) 11 1~ ..... ....
1 ~ •oo t !O oa ~o 7444 • • '"°' OOl I• """Bll"""IS"""T""Ol.,...---
DOUIY SIUlO
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644 0160 I~ ti~ ' ' JO ~~..,,.;0..,,.,1,..,,u_• __ -:"'WIO-::-ll'GI=-:-, =.=-=-.
llOO BlllSTOl -· ,.1110 cm._.,. &.. _.. ..
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1UI TU .. XMCll
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5 a a
U.S. movies ,
Czech-mated
by Canadian
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• •
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TBE
FUILl'
CIRCUS
"Whoever cuts the gross is boss
of the family."
MAIUIADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Marmaduke aJways has open house when
It rains."
. . .
3'1HN MULLINS
TME MfETIN6 OF OUR
LOCAL cACTUS CLU8
WILL COME TO Cl.DER ...
WE WILL NOW ~EAR
lME TREASURER'S ~
/
J'&.l HM~ MAM ANO £6&5,
AHi> NH Ff\aEHP, 61'"1TCH,
Will M#IE A eowt. Of RU88£R &AN~
BIGGEOJIGE by Vrll Parteh (VIPl
'
"You sure don't get much for 1 buck nowadays."
TOO llUCI t1I A_. RM
Eut.Wttt vulnerable. So.nh
dnk.
NO&TI
•llUU OU
0 1'4 ...
WEST EAST
•t •V.W 0 11eu. o tuu
OTU OAQlH
•JtH1S •IOI
SOOTH
•AQ1014!
O AQ
Otll
•AQ
The biddinr:
S..~ Weet Nwtll Elli
I• P .. 4 • r .. , .. , ..
Openin1 lead: Jack or+.
Don't let an apparently
~,~ t4E Polf.C.AT
°'-iMf\C~ ~VE. ~lT A ~~.
1'~ Cl.'4W'IC. 'fOQC'4 ~T
M~
wy Mad lwl you 11&.o a faJM
·-" ltalrity. EYtl .... fH17 laJM1 MMI cu naa
-. a •• lie ol la.I tatde or
..... c1"1rit.atJoa.
Sou~ ~ o..ua,t1
&boot elaa .. u, Ida O'ltr
Mi pu'\W't ;u_, .. pM.
Howevtr, M ... wilt to
cUtmau tltoM tltoupw-
Norlll'• douW. J-amp ti.owed
pd dlstributioeal ltatww
but liatt.d ~ ... ta.
Wetl ltd t• ,itct of clube
and tlae eoetnel looked eo ·
np1e ~' cledmr re1uec1 iavolwt&arily. Ht capWnd
tbe kint ol Clube wiU tllt .
aee, cubed the ace of apadea
.•nd the1 ra.n tbe · nine of
diamonds. F.ut won tbe ~n
aDd ahifted to a t.eart.
It wu time for dedater to
try hia leCOnd fineae. Tiie
DR. SMOC" by Ferd & Tom Johnson 6-ll
WE DONT AAVE Ml
-· !KMEY .. WE'VE NEVER
HAD MY MOHEV AMP
WE'RE NEVER 60NNA
AA~ AH'f MON EV !
G ~~
I
1 ALWA'(S HATE TME
~EASURER'S REPORT ..
•
I
i~mr::: orp.::
acr;J. 1 i
j 1
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--~.._...._~--G--~----~--
HOW .. HOW LONG 0 10 'tQU
lltE#MAN lN TME OFFICES
WI"°™ MR [)Rl\16" AFTER
~i.-. L.9T, <:Ml.A?
.,
;
by Tom Bat~
~·
~·
:{ ..
·~ ... . . .. .. . ..
·:
by George Lemont:
He's NOW IN1"0 MIS
•PA1.H .. ANKA, 8A1" 'Yt:X>R
HeAR1" OU1""' ~AS&!!
~ .. . . . .. -:
by Pat Brady .
•
. • • ..
3 3 3 a as:
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE LISTINGS 88
Donald L. WUllams has been J?romotcd to vice president of manufactunng
at AST Research Inc. of In 1 ne. W 1 IJ iams. formerly director of manufacuturin,,
is now in charge of all manufactunng departments at the company. His
promotion 1s the re~ult of an internal restructuring w1than the company, a
supphocr of I BM P<. /XT enhancements for business use. Williams. who
joined AST in I Q8 '\, ha., more than 20 years of e>.penence in the electronics
industry. • • • <. O\ta ~ksa res1dl·nt'\ Jerry J. Kerby and Florence "Mickey" Alier ha' e
bee promoted h) California First Bank. Ke-rb}. manager of the company's
Westmi nster office ha., Ileen named a 'Ke president. He Joined the bank as a
com men ral loan ollirer 1n 1981 and was named ass1stan1 'ice president and
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of1MO.ty"9Cllell
The battle over who is flying the
quietest airplane took a new twist this
week with AirCal's announcement it
1 spending $300 m1~lion to acquire 12
nc"" ~enerauon Boeing 737-300 jets.
Wilham L}on. chairman of the
Newpon Beach-based Au('al. made
the announcement after personally
piloting a prototype of the new plane
from Boeing's Seattk headquaners to
John Wa~ ne ~1rpon.
"It is thf quietest commercial JCt
aircraft in the world aod that 1s wh}'
we wanted 11 at Orantte Count}' and
the other noise sens111ve airports we
service ... said Lyon, an Air Force
reserve general. A Boeing test pilot sat
wtth Lyon 1n the plane's cockpit as he
landed the craft and taxied up to the
A1rCal te!11'1nal at the a1rpon. t t' d 0 ck Sehl h B "We spent a lot of ume evaluaung The .\1rC'al announcement came ra ion. sai 1 e · a oe1ng . ~"'~"'44r"r-;'"'-~~l{~~.-;:'.~ ~I~-> <;:1 ~~~--,-·.., .... l:f~*-~·-~~e.~~~•>~-4 ~~~~~4~.n~VI~ ·•rm.~t._ ...... ,..._ •. · :-· ..... ' ~-.,,. __ . .,.~11>Ditto-'~"J'lr'fiffe~{Hrcft~"' ... .,...41ay~1n1 -~~d~lif"1>~~..,.,.~ \~;~~
manager ol the ~l''>tmin-;ter office later that )Car Alger has been chsoen Imes. put its newly purchased Bnti.sh. won't be able to tell the di erence," BAe~46 1n . terms of ':oi~. fuel
manaaer of the bank°\< osta Mesa ollil'e She has ""orked for California First Aer~space BAe-I 46 Jets into dail} he said. effic1enc}' and passenger comfort."
since 1969 and ""as an operations onic:er before her promotion. She is a service. . Both planes. however. are likely to Lyon said.
member ol the l\mencan Business Women's .\ssoc1atlon and the Costa Mesa Both the PSA and. the Au~ al Jets be quieter than the McDonnell AirCal decided not to buy the
Chamber ol Commerce. must go through a senes of noise tests Douglas MD-80 -the most common M D-80 because the Boeing plane 1s
• • • before they can start scheduled scr-commerical jet flying out of John smaller. quieter and mort fuel effi-Patrick. O'Healy of the Daum Corp. has been named manager of the vice in Orange County. wa ... ne Airport. cient, he said.
com pan} 's Orangt'. ( uunl\ offi ce. assuming d1re<:11on of the Newport Beach-When PSA announ"""d its $300 / .... . AirCal plans to replace its aging Another reason A.1rCal chose the based branch. O'Hcah wmes from the firm's South Bay office. where he held m1lhon purchase of 29 of the Bnt~sh fleet of 16 older versJOn Boeing 737s Boeing plane because the atrhne can
the pos111on of sales manager He has twice been among the company's top 10 100-~t. four-engine Jets, the ~rime and seven MD-80s with the new save money in maintenance costs by salesmen and was Rook1 l' of the Year his first \rar with the firm in 1980. sad t la was th q t t • • • . • 1 s n.ew P ne. e uie es Boeing planes. It 1s the single largest flying a fleet of airplanes made by the
Comprebensive Care Corp. of Newport Beach has promoted two vice commercial J~t avai~able. . airplane order in the ea rner's 17 year same manufacturer.
presidents and fi, e d1ret·tors to meet the gro"' ing demands of the company. AirC'al belt.eves llS twin engine. history. The A1rCal purchase was met with
announced B. Ltt Karns, l'hairman and president. Dr. Richard Santoni has I ~seat Bocmg. 73?-300s are the The first of the ne"' planes should praise by Orange County Supervisors
been prmoted to e\et ut1' e vice prl'.s1dent. ""1th rc.!.pons1b1ht) for human quietest commencal J~ts. go into service earl} next yea r and Wlll attending the AirCal announcement.
resources. personnel management -and the company's three newest The argument won t be settled .for replace the airlines MD-80s. Lyon "This points the way to tfte fact that
ventures. SmokcFndl'r'i stop-smoking clinics. Com pCare Canada and several months when. the . Boemg said. we can be good neighbors to the
RehabCare Corp. He ""as formerly vice president of human resources. Dr. Pl.ane completes Its cert~fication ~e~ts In addition to being quieter than tts people of Newport Beach. AirCal is
Edward (are ls has b-·en promoted from 'ice president of communications to with the Federal Aviation Adman is-older planes. the 73 7-300 will save the setting the pace for others to follow."
execume '11.:e president. with respons1b1lit) for the firm·s advertising and airline about 25 percent in fuel costs. said Harriet Weider.· the board's
pubhc relauons efforts. as well as lcg1slat1ve affairs and the non-profit Lvon said. chairwoman.
Carelnstltute and ( omp( are Puhhc:at1ons. Two ne" \ICC presidents of
operations are David Comenan, responsible for Midwest and Rocky
Mountain oprrauonc;, and Stephen Arterburn, responsible for Western
operations Tht'. ne"" '•l'e president ol rnmmunicat1onft 1s Christian Jorgen1cn,
UC Irvine given
digital plotter : MEETINGS
~~ --
William Lyon
formerly director of communications. Heading tbe Eastern service a rea of Utt
taaman resources division is newly named vice president Mary Lee Potter,
with ne" V1Ce President \tephen Toth heading the We~tern area. • • • Michael J. Ramirei ha<:. Joined Southwestern Bancorp lac. of \,..aguna Hills
as manager of atroun11ng Ram1rc1 prcv1ousl> worked for AVCO Flna.ocial
Services of'Newpon Bcalh a'i accuunt1ng manage1 South\.\oeStern 1s the parent
compa11y tor Savers Thrist & Loan Association and Savers Funding, both of
Laguna Hills
UC lnine's c1v1l engmeenn~ de-
partment will ha'e its own d1g1tal
plotter thanks to Calcomp. an
Anaheim-based firm that donated the
S 17. 700 item this week.
Tenant relations lecture set
• • • Costa Mc<,a-based \\-armington Homes has named Janice B. Glose
assistant \lt'l' prn1de111 ol linance ( rluse. a Newport Beach resident. comes to
Warmington from Union Bank, whl·re llhl' was assistant ,·ice president in the
real estatt'. loan department. Al ~armrngton. she "ill be responsible for
seucnng cons1ruc11on loans for res1dcn11al and com mercial projects and
obta1n1ng mortgage loan financing for all rec;1dent1al developments. She will
also be responis1ble for ll>mmun1cat1ng "11h JOIO 't'.nture partners
Our _._ money mar11el
acc•nl
won't tie up your money.
\nrn1.il ) 1t·kl
No term. Not .1 C. D Unlimited
withdrawals Dnily compounding.
T h.1t.., the Huntington Investment Fund
.ll(llUnt from Huntington Savings.
II.., the high interest account that's
highly flexibll', too. And it 's fully
1n..,u red up tn $100.000 bv the FSLIC.
~o come c,ee us today about a
I iuntmgton Investment Fund account.
J\nd start earning high money market
intrr<.>sl without tying up your money.
No"A you kno\.\-why your nei~hbor banks at
(IJ HUNTINGTON
SAVINGS :=t.ON
•N.,. l oonl••n \•II" llunch I 111111 •• Lt"'"' ''"'"'"'"\Ali.~ 1;1~ I! I"'°'' I ~~M ( .,,,., 9,.,,. h I~ II•., h lli•d 1 luh eyt .,, Hr,. h
.. 714 fM IJ
M••flOllK• WitlWfA<• II nlft.l"'~"'h 711 M :llef.(I
"flh.al.i'1f•IAl1-1•"1wS2 tA"d"~"'"~ •
............ 1 .... ""'"""-... i,.11 .. 1.~ .......
The equipment will be used in
research and for a new computer
graphics class offered b} the un1ver-s1t~. Digital plotters translate com-
puter data into hard copy for a
number of applications including
business graphs. maps. diagrams and
architectural drawings
A luncheon and cecemon} to mark
the donation was to be held at the
University Club.
Presley
reports
higher
earnings
The Presley Companies
of Irvine reponed afler-tax
earnings of $4.855.000. or
80 cents a share. on rev-
enues of $50.377.000 for
the first quarter ended
Apnl 30.
This compares with
after-tu earnings of
$2.062.000. or 34 cents a
share, on revenues of
$31.447.000 for the similar
period one year ago. Aver-
age shares outstanding for
the quarter were 6.076.214
versus 6.029.426 one year
ago. Prior-year per-share
figures have been restated
to reflect the 50 percent
stock dividend (accounted
for as a 3-for-2 split) paid
Jul} 15
Randall E. Presky. chair-
man and chief executive
officer. told the share-
holders at the annual meet-
ing held today· First.quar-
ter results were better than
anticipated. reflecting the
strength of house sales, as
well as an unusually large
number of custom lot sales.
Revenues rose 60 percent
in the quaner, and net
eammas increased 135 per-
cent.
We expect the second
quaner to also produce
h1ah revenues with an ex-
ceptionally luge number of
custom lot sales. hhough
intcre t rates have been
nsina more than antici-
pated for tbc la t two
months. we bavt con-
u n ued to writt a rusonablc
number of new sal con·
tracts for delivery tn the
ond nd thttd quancrs
of the yur.
me low1n1 an hou
sales 1 normal dunna lhe
ummer months. but with
the numbtt of sak1 con·
traca tha& •c ha c at the
pr~nt time, we ~ouJd
hl\:C ioodsccond and third
~uantt On blllancc. wt
an1tc1patc thal fitcal 1985
will be Pn-OlhCf uuc: ful
\r r fi r the company.
•
A free. public scminarc;.on ten-
ant/landlord relations "111 be held
Tuesday b} tht> NewportHarbor·
Costa Mesa Board of Realtors.
fhc seminar -the sixth in the
local board's year-long communtt}
outreach senes -will be held at 7
p.m. at the board' audttonum. 401
N Newport Blvd. m Newport Beach.
Title of the workshop 1s "Tenants
and Landlords and their Rela-
t1onsh1ps and the Cost Availability of
Rentals Now and in the Future ...
Panelists will talk about lease and
rental agreements. habitability ~nd
repair of premises, pnvacy and right
to enter. renters' personal property,
payment of renl, notices of termin-
ation of tenancy. the eviction process
and the supply of rental housing
stock. • • • Lawrence W. Taggart, com-
m1ss1oner for the Dcpanment of
Savings and Loan, will be the featured
speaker June 28 at the Orange County
Savings and Loan League's monthly
dinner meeting.
The meeting will be held at 6 p.m.
at the Saddleback Inn's Trabuco
Room. 1660 E. First St .. Santa Ana.
Installation of the league's new slated
of officers -headed b}' incoming
president Jack Clark -will also take
place.
Cost for the dinner is S 14. For
reservations. caJI 770-6441 before
Monda}'. • • • The local chapter of the Technical
Communication Society will host a
region-wide luncheon Saturday atthe
Velvet Turtle Restaurant in El Toro.
The non-profit organization dedi-
cated to the advancement of the
theof) and practice of technical
communicauon in all media.
Reservations are advised and can
be mailed to STC. P.O. Box 16535.
Irvine. 92714. • • • Orange Coast College will hold a
seminar on how consultants can
efTect1vely develop new clients and
build their own marketing program
June 30. 9 a.m. to I p.m.
The seminar will focus on building
relationships, developing listening
skills. creating a referral newtwork
and effective follow-up mechanisms.
Nicholus Prukop, corporate ac-
count executive for an Orange Coun-
ty financial institution. will be guest
lecturer. R~stration fee 1s $30. Applicants
may register now m OCC's Com-
munity Services Office, Student
Center Building, Monday to Friday, 9
a.m. to 7 p.m .. or Saturday, 8 a.m. to
noon. For additional information,
phone 432-5880. • • • Orange Coast College wdl be con-
ducting a three-hour seminar for
thqse who w;\nt to supplement their
present income by staning a consult-
1 ng bus1 ness. Saturday 9 a. m. to noon.
Lecture topics will include. how to
get staned, applicable laws, workmg
from your house. costs, how to
market your skills. determining what
is needed, and analyzing your com-
petition.
Lecturer Jeffrey Figler 1s an instruc-
tor at San Diego State University's
Colleae of Business Administration.
The seminar wtll be held in OCC's
Counseling and Admissions Build-
ing, Room I 14. Registra t1on fo~ 1~
SIS
Tickets arc on salt> 1n the QC(
Ticket Office. Monday through Frt·
day. 9 a."'. to 7 p.m .. and Saturda}
from 8 a.m. to noon • • • Women m Management Orange
Count} Chapter will define
premenstrual syndrome (pms) at 6
p.m. June 28 at the Hungry Tiger.
1168 S. State College, Anaheim. •
Topics discussed will be PM
treatment and its social impact.
Charge for non-members 1s S 14.
For further information. phone
Barbara Ardinger at 636-1702. • • • The Real Estate Securities and
Syndication Institute (RESSI) will
conduct an educational seminar from
8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m .. June 28. at the
Newport Beach Sheraton, 4545
MacAnhur Blvd.
Topics of the seminar wilt include
computers -a syndicator's best
friend. structunng synd1cat1 ons and
the current state of tax reform.
Guest speakers include: Belden
Brown, vice president of markeung.
Rancho Consultants. Inc.: Wilfred
Cooper. president, Shelter Resourcts.
Jim Ewart, tax partner and western
region real estate coordinates.
Coopers & Lylbrand, Michael Kea,
vice-president of syndication.
Shearson/Amcrican Express Mor'l-
gage Corp.: Daniel K.ierman, vice·
chairman. Butterfield Equiues Corp.
Daniel Sanham. pnnc1pal, Tb~
Nelson and Sanham Co.; Randall
Sanders. president. August Securities·
Jay Tomlinson. president. Ress1 Tn:
County Chapter.
Chance remark helped start
Orange Coast phone service
II took only a chance remark by a
tl'.nant a year ago to lead Jerry E.
ChaSt• and Phi hp Tulepan out of the
real estate business -and into the
burgeoning field of long-distance
telephone service.
The pair have cteated and
launched Westcom Datatcl. Inc., a
business they claim can save cus-
tomers up to SO percent on AT & T
chargt and up to 25 percent ovtr
alternate earners.
Tht-impetus for the pair of en-
trepreneurs came about when a
ttnant in one of their office buildinis
bid them farewell. uplainina that he
was ioma to JOm a fnend m the
telecommunicauons bUsine . The
plan -whtch he ~redicied would
make them miU1ona1n:s -was to rt· II Ion distance telephone service by
bartenn1 for othtr &ood and ser~
VIC\"\,
The con"'P' cmcJ hke a SoOd
one. and Chase and Tutcpan bcpn to
do 110mc r search on their own,
But the more the~ looked into the
idea, the ltS$)lPptahna it bee.amt.
"We m de eontacts wuh airlines
and hotels. locical pan.ners in a baner
bu,in but the ad the)' weren't
interested:· '.l ulcput related. "The
nature or their work ~uiml top·
quahh hn '· wh1 h 1hr' fth re nn1
available trom the emerging new
earners."
The search for quality led Chase
and Tulcpan to Pacific Bell and
AT&T. where the panics worked out
a cooperative avccment.
"We pve the Bell team our
propQsal. and they suggested we make
the CENTREX the hean of our
system," siid Chase. ..Pacific Bell
propQsed we JOintly desiJn and
JOintly use a new, sophisticated
model." That way, customcn would
have a direct access to stat~f-the·an
switcht°' eqwpmcnt in Belt's central
office w1thout punching a pccial
Kccss number or addina any special
equipment.~ BaJrd and Winsor Associates
Financial Planners in Newport Beach
cnaanccrcd a rnvale pla('Cmcnt of
venture capita to launch Wcstc:om,
whach taned up bu ioc in March in
Irvine, Laauna Hills and pans of
Co ta Mesa Ind NcwPort Beach. a .well as nta na. Tustan and El
Toro In the f\uu~. the panncn plan
10 uparid to counttc up and down
the .stale.
By hanna the CENTREX. WC1t·
com customcf'.\ can dial d1rtttly to a~acodcs714,21 and818 Torcarh
OtMr llOMS of tM C'OUOll} -or lh
orhJ -W 1rom put tQRtth r ~hat
Chase calls a "top quality" network
using AT&T WAT hnes. fore1g~
exchange lines., and other avallable
lanes. "We buy at volume rates, so we
are able 10 save our cu tomers moner,
and still tum a profit for ourselvc!>, •
he said.
Health clubs
take members
from closed spa
J, •
Newport firm aids i n preventing
he added. Consumer kit available A.eoent tests of ctchina
l}'ltCms on approximately
150-000 vehidct by auto-
srcatly reduced a is the mobile clubs, rental ~th.iers incentive to steal it cies. inawaoce corn~
in the 6nt place. a..od police ~ta in
In do-it-yourself form
• SCcurity Etch Inter·
national orN~ Beach
has introduced its Vehicle
Etchioa Security System-• consumer kit designed to
prevent auto theft and fa·
cilitate the recovery of
tolen property.
Now available for the ftrlt lime in do-it-yourself
lonn, Vehicle Etcbin& Se-
curity System kits have all Jbt materials needed to
~n.ently etch the 17-
ditit Vehicle Identification
Number (VIN) on six car
indowa. 'rhc etching, one-
quaner inch hi&h and two-
and-a·half inches lonJ. ~oes not detract from ttle ~chicle's appearance and
tak~ less than 30 minutes
to apply.
Statistics show the im-
probability of a thief steal-
tng an etched vehicle be-
cause considerable time,
effon and upensc is
needed to alter its identity.
As a result, the car can-
not be sold "whole" or
turned around in a "chop
shop" without removina or
replacing the windows.
Either way, the mark.et
value of the etched car is
The Veba.cle fJ.china ~ variomreaionaOft.hc Unit-
cunty System allo aids ""«1 Stattt have indjca\ed
directly in recoverio1 thatetdlinamayrcCfuce the
stolen cars and ~bend· ·auto-theft rate by IS much
in• car thieves. The VIN ~ IS 98 percent
umque to. every car a~ " Security Etch Inter-
the adennty of a veb1c.le. national is currently 10 Law enforoement aaenc1es ti · 'lh --• utilize the National Cnme nea~ ahons W1 !C~ .....
Information Center ~or auto ISIOCla~n•
(Nclc) 'd 'f and 10surance compena · · to · 1 enti l: for distribution oftbe Ve-~~°n~~t~r:~c':. ~is hicle E~ina Security Srt-
which are instantly avail-tet,n; K;iU. To en_courqe
able throu&h a nationwide ut.1hz.at1<?n of the kit.. some
computer fink-up. COJ1}P1D1es -:-such as the
.. Until now. auto theft UnJ.~ Services Auto M-
has been addressed by SOCtatton (~SAA) -are
cost I y m e ch a n -already offenna I~ percent · I~ I · d off an insured s com-tca e ectronac eterre!'ts prehensive premjum sue as alann or lock.in& ·
devices," says Jim Hopn, The kit includes a
president of Security Etch $1 ,()()()..&uarantec from Se-
lntemational. "Now simp. curity ~tcb lntemationaJ
ly by permanently elebing whjcb states that if a car
the VI~ on each car win-etched with a Security Etch
Nrmanent etc=of the 17-dlalt Veh1cle ldeadfl· cation 1'a.mber on each car wtndOw pre.enta car
Wnm from kly or cheaply aJtertnc the lde:atity 61
State t axable sales hit record high dow, thieves and auto-theft International Kit is stolen
rings are faced with an and not recovered .-and
economic deterrent: the the policy owner is reim-
yalue '?r the stolen vehicle bursed by the insurance
11 s'ignµicantly reduced, as company -Security Etch
replacing the windows can Internallooal will pay the SACRAMENTO (AP) increase over the same Nevtns said that was ··the the 1982 leveL0
cost up to SS,000 or more," policy owner S 1,000· -. California's taxable period in 1982, the state strongest annual arowt.h The increase in trans-. up 26.1 perceel for tJie
I
t
sales hit a record hiah of Board of Equalizatton re· siQce 1979, registering a 7.9 actions was led by retail $4.l
. S47.4billi~n~~l&sl---~-Lr~--:; ~~· -~~··-:7 7,..,~ r ... .):t~Ul"!ltCM ·"J. 9fLt~!!'!!S;a~~~ --i:rlf.9illflll~..-::;-:'~M1§Ui: ,. ~.. . :-~--~ ~tidtls}Ca"fm a6l~t ... ·~JZ.~lJUJ10«, ~ltks , weft
h --'°'7°Wonteit &ruiUal p-owtb" O.S percenL consunt value." personal servsce shops; charial t.lileqaancr.
in four years, officials re-Board Chairman Rieb---Nevins said the 1983 18.3 percent to $1.9 billioa.; SerVicit .aa~ reported
, port. ard Nevins said taxable sales surae was aided by manufacturers, collltn» $3.~ billion io tnll* · 1iv. t 11% ~: 1:~ The late-year su.rge, led transactions fer all of J 983 .. the rate of inflation tion oontractonand wbol&-transactiomt an inaale ol fA t :~ 8,, -~ by sales of new cars. totaled $169.4 billion, an (which) was at the lowest salen, 12.8 pen'leftUoSl3.S ~-llwl
2
_
83
Y.i_ ~~
,_,. · ,, · durable goods and housing. increase ofSl4.9 billioqor level in 20 years, averaPn& billion. WAil . billioa .__ U1
DOWNS reflected a 14.4 percent 9.6 oercent over 1982. askimpy 1.6 peroentabove Newcanalasbowcd the pte>line were~:
ufl. c~ Pct
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1!141 GarJ n Gf\"'t 81\·d
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Dow JoN ES AvERAGES
Due to late transmission
t oday's listing wilt not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 21
Adv1nctd ~tc~n•d rl( no.c:t
Ole UUH New hlOh' New lows
Tod~6
• 2 l 7• u
NYSE LEADER S
'
..
NEW YORK (AP> -S•lts. TrwrsMv rice end n I cha o of fhe 15 most act" ~•w York !1oc1< W'11cnan11e luu•'• tr•d rio
SuprOll wd 1. • l " + SVt
nallonelly ., more, •hm }1. .,./,
Pe1ro1.ri• '·m·
1
1,\ ,4 j\~' T& T n l: ; I Sh -2•4. •
Sear$R<>eb t, • , .. I ~ MerllLvn 11.•, 6, ~ ~ Avon Prod • , 1
Metromeds I,~~· ~ ,7 ~torola s 1
1
•1 • ,_., ~
st Kodak , , ~ ""
s1bl Tr • 6,1 ff'.. ~ endv l. v• ~~tors t.'1; ~~ "" ·
Lockhed , Uo. hit + ~
UPs AND OowN s
NEW YORK (AP> Jun, 21
Toda) ~ 15
AMEX LEADERS
c•.p .,.I
I
··i •• ••
:1:
:J :t
NEW YORK (APl -Sale,, Thursday price Jnd net cna ooe of the 10 most •~IJve A~r1e1n Stock Exchange tisu.s, tre<Slno na onallv et more then Sl, . Tl Comm s s.49, 133.4 + v. WengLabB 415, 21~ + 'ti OomePtrt 187 .• 2~ Gram;r 142, 2•1t.r -1-~ Horn er s 134. 16~ -+-'A
Nat ~tent 'ia· 16~ .... r: 91~:~' M: J~ i ~ l<ev~harm s 1~4. l~ f If\
~J!f11m£• rn YORK (Alj! Mo" l ',. :m ·ltie·counter stock$ sUJ)pllecf v NA o ~ame Votul Bl~ A,1 PE Cho: ~t~' l·m: 2s~·/4 2J" _ ~
lntel,J • ~'h ll"' 12 ri~:rv; ~ 1 1/4 ~ ~""c~it~ l·m~ l'a f· -l~ •ndon , ~ • t _ ~ I , 1 ~ l dfvft, • . ~ -Vt
GoLo Qu oTES
METALS Quor£s
That· s an apt desc ription of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep tracl< of
where companies are goin~and which people are helping
them get there ,jus t watch Credit Line· -every day tn tti
Business section of your new lllJ Plllt
•
...,.
~~::::> RilnhOltz ..... With~
Pedre contrect
---------------!-~--.... ~----~~--1111111 __ _. __ .._ ____ ~--"--~.._for~G-rendelmllll!l••--"-·c.~ __ _. .... __ .... __ ._. .. .-.
Pam Higgins:
l~he' s learning
about teaching
~ormer LPGA star
to bring talents
to lrvtne Coast CC
she pocketed $39,937 in 17 tour
even ta includina her S 1 S,000 fint-
place prize. By comparison, Nancy
Loi>". winner of this year's Uniden
Invitational at Mesa Verde CC in
Costa Mesa took home S.S,000 for
the win.
1 This doesn't bother Hiains. By BOWARD I,.. BANDY ''The money was worth more when
.._.. ..... o.lr.... I was on the tour. lo 1969, my first
If your sbon game or menw y~ I could play ind pay el'penses
approach to the situation on a golf for ~200 a week. Now ll costs more
coune needs improvement, you are than Sl,000.
in luclc these days. Her plans for teaching are pnmar-
Pam HiJ&ins has forsaken her ily on the shon PJtle and the mental
native Ohio to teach during the approach.
summer months at Irvine Coast 'I specialize in the sbon aame
Country Club in Newport Beach. because that was the stro~t part of
Higgjos, a three-time winner on the my 09m game on tour,~ H1.pns says.
LPGA circuit during her playing "Otipping, putting and playing out of
days, has given up the tour in favor of the sand.
teachina the pme she loves. "Those are the thinp a lot of peoP.le
"I met Woody Smith (ICCC Presi-have the most trouble with. I also like
dent) when I played in a pro-am to give people a different mental
tournament at Irvine Coast 12 ~ approach, a different picture th.an
ago," she recalls. "I shot a 6~ the they see on the course for themselves.
~':I~;.,,f..ee.i~lovc ~~"·~~~~~-
"I teach at Palm Springs Municipal im~rtanL
Golf Course from October through ' For instance, if you have a second
May and will be here at Irvine Coast shot on a par-4 hole and can't reach
from June throuab Septembet'. Last the arecn. are you thinkina about the
summer I was in Sand~~J. Ohio but third shot? I try to help set up that shot
felt I should si in \...aJllornia if I so you are in a better posiuon for the
could find the ri t place. third one and ~t behind a trap or
"So I called oody early this year other impediment.
and we made an arrangement for me "All good putters have very similar
to teach here this summer. I feel it is a basics and have consistency. I work
great break for me." with the player's natwalneu and let
As for her playing in any more them keep their own stroke. I miaht
LPGA events as concerned, she says change the motion, however. I have
to forget il worked with Dave Pelz on putting.
"rm definitely not going to play in He is called the Professor of Putting
any mQre toumamenu on the tour~" and teaches all of the top pros. both
she says. "You can stick a fork in me. men and women. I like to teach a rm done. Playing the tour takes a playertocatcbtheballontheupswing.
tremendous amount of dedication when putting.
and sclf-centemess. You have to be "Your mental approach to the
selfish-very selfish. Your entire life game is 90 percent of your success on
revolves around the game of golf." the course."
Her victories on the tour came in Higins is a pmbler at heart.
1971 (Llncoln-Mercury Open); 1977 "I have a couple of brotben, one
(American Cancer Society Cassie); older and the other younger, and we
and 1980 (Lady Micbelob). Her were very competitive as youngsters.
bigest money year was in 1980 when (Pleue eee LPGA/CS)
DlllW .......... "' .... ...,..
Former LPQA •tar Pam H~ will mpend put of tllla
nm.mer teachlnc at lrrine Coantry eta.ti.
l=Ieagh subdue~_,
hurting Angel
Food poisoning,
dancing knuckler
too much, 3-2
BJ IUCILUlD DUNN
..., .... C 1 I
It was as ifJhe ~s were~
OD the wall waitiq to P't their ~nunity to dance with the preuy
The pretty girl. however, . was
Charlie Housh. as be literally used his
knuckJeball to dance ri&bt past the
AftFls Wednesday ni&bt. Althouah be needed a little help
from l..any Parrish in the ninth i~ who broke up a 2-2 bl.II pme
with bis 12th homer of the year over
the ri&bt«nter field fence, Housh
bumbfed the Anads with a four-hitter
IS Texas completed a ~e
sweep with a J..2 win before 2'1,21 S
fans at Anaheim Stadium.
But.it waso't as if the Anecls .De\'er
' ""11-GeoffZ.ifui (M}
win his ninth. Now, after l~ their
fourth st.rai&bt, they not only tiave to
worry about fiabtingoffpesty Minne-
sota for first place, they've eot
problems in the trainen' room.
After Don Aase threw sharp
enough Monday night, the Anlds'
injury bu& appean to have stnack
apin.
Juan Beniquez (.3S I), who su1fen:d
a pulled ri&ht bamstri:oa in the eiahth
inni.ng of"T1=1 same. says it's sore and be be out a week or
perhaps more.
The An.gels' rep1ar lineup is butt-
ing, too. Beniquez was hitti.na at a
.S38 (21-Sl) dip in bis last 13 home
· eentcats and .480 (I 2-2S) in bis last
six games before his injury.
The A.o&ets. already wit.bout the
services of Fred Lynn (lower Mick
spasms). have Rod ~ (.301),
their only other .300 hittcT, out with a
pinched nerve in his ncc:k.. ~ -
like Lynn -is on a day-to-day basis.
On Wednesda:y niabt tbinp Sot
wonc. Both third bueman Doug
DcCinces and catcher Bob ·Boone
came down with food poiJoni.na,. I
DeCinca. lhouab. did mue an appearance IS a 'Ciefemive 1ep.w.
ment at third bue in thieeilll* ..._
for Ron Jacbon.. and banDd ill die
ninth -m•kiQI dae 6ul OUI wia a
pounder to sbor1Mop.
Meanwhile, tbe ~ liiild Pir-
risb bad a J>rofitable ililbt. • Te:ua made it DJ.Ge out of tbe lat 1 l iD nwee&:'; tbe ADFls at A•hdm fOr tbe time ever. The R.msn. are
only five pmes out of fint. ltarrisb
estabtisbed a Texas record with hia
1 ~th ~ RBl111DC with his
mnth-umi.na homer. •
Ke has dri'1ell iD t8 rum Clmilll
that meat and bu 34 RBI in bil ._
26pmes..
..lt~s a pretty tOcKl streak far 8llC
penoeally," be aid. -i-. ~
been falJiDa my way. Gvys i.a~ been Fttinc to ICCIODd and thinl for me llid
toai&bt I aot l\ldcy with a bome nm. .. r doa't th.Ulf we tboa•t of ~ thae suys wbeD we came in," be added, .. but we knew this is tbe
team we bad to beat to Ft b-=k in this
(Pleae-BOOOll~)
County All-Star football game fills the void
Moffet's
big days
::upcoming
"BJ ROGER CARLSON
CMllleO.-, ........
He's ranked second in the world in
the 100.meter breaststroke and
within the top five in the world in the 200 breaststroke, but Newpon
· Harbor High product John Moffet is
taking nothing for granted as be
prepe.re:s for next week's U.S. Olym-
pic Team trials at Indianapolis.
••At the trials people come out of
1he woodwork," says the 19-year--Old
'Moffet, who leaves for Indianapolis
Friday morning for what is the most
impe>rtant meet of bis life -since if
you don't act it done here., there won't
be a meet to swim at in Auaust
His m~or competition in both
events comes from Steve Lundquist.,
1 who enten with the home waten
ldvantqe, but Moffet says he'll not
•• ,et him.elf too worked UP. over
Lundquist becau.e of the poaibilities
&om other areas.
Tbe top two in each event qualify
for the United States Olympic team.
.. Third ,ets you nothiQa." uys Mof-
fet
Tbe Lundquist-Moffet confronta-
tion that fipm to materialize in the
flnalsforbothevents(Mon<iay it's the
100. ThW'lday it•1 the 200), isn't
a.nytbina new. ~·ve aone ...Wt
e.cb other .everaJ uma, and Mo&t
hu bis abaR of victories-bUt u be
admits. "I've rarely tat him in the
100 and never at the ead of the tea10D
wt.en it's on the line."
The em.,a.uis oo Moftiet's Pftl>'-
111tion bis been oo an all.erourad
buii, with IDOlt of hit coocentration
built on "encuc. refinina. •• ·~ lUt moatb I've been comina
doW1' in yaJ'dlF" continues M~
wbobu ~dodriaasof 1:03.t$ anct 2: 17. 4 ihi• ,ar.
He's tee0nd to Lundquist in the
• lOObY 10meeiabt--0ne bWMINdthl of
1 ~ whife his 200 time com-
parll to a world best of 2: 14.58.
~-... rST/CS)
No Shrine game, thanks to a motocross,
but OC stars still have a July 6 contest
The recent demise of the 1984
Shrine AU-Star Football Game in
Pasadena, canceled because the turf
at the Rose Bowl was torn up by
motorcycles. doesn't leave much of a
void forOranac Coast area stan.
Among those who were scheduled
to play in the Pasadena Classic were
Fountain Valley's Mike Newton and
Brett Stevens, Marina's Mike
Crowley, Edison'sAndySinclairand
Huntington Beach's Danny Thomp-
son, the latter~daingly allowed to
compete by UCLA, because of
classroom commitments.
Well, Newton, Stevens and
Crowley are involved in the July 6
Orange County Game at Orange
Coast College, so the impact isn't too
deep.
RocE1
C11LS01
SPORTS CO LU MNIST
Sinclair and Thoml)l()n won't be
picked up for the Oranic County
Game, according to the South
tlaat neat tble nea1q at tbe U.S. Olym-
pic Trlala at tbe eou.eam.
coach i na st.a.tr: beatUst SlDcJa.ir bas
another commitment and UCLA can
now rest easy about TbomplOn.
Practice for the South bepn
Wednesday at Costa Mei:& Hiab and
before the first pop there have bceo
ICveral personnel chaDfCl-with
Edison 'sJeffHipp replacina Mater
Dei'sAl Polaatdefensiveendand run.nina baek; Fountain valley's
Brian Belcberentcrinaat strong side
linebackerafterGrq Ait.kenhcad of
Mission Viejo, then La Quinta's Tom
Stockard., fell by the wayside.
Capistrano Valley's O>.ris McOurc
has bea:I added ... tictO' Wltb tbe
loaofO>romdd.Mar'sa-etr ... -Huabest wbo sutrered a nee* iJUury iD
u autoutjuty, and El Modena
lineman cbrt.SaoaimandSanta .
Ana cenierSteve Graves bave beeD
added to the South lineup.
The South allO picted upuotbe.r
coach-former Santa Ana ffilb
Coach Tom Meiss. wbo will bdp with
the defensive line.
South Coach Mike Giddinphu
scheduled tb.Rie-bounessions beain-
lllD&&t 4:30daily, with a Saturday
morning session added.
(P1eue eee ALL-8TAa/C2)
Can Lewis match
Jesse Owens feat?
LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -Carl
Lewis, perfonni~ and dressi04 like
someone out of this world, cont10ues
his earthly punuit of mak:in& the
United States Olympic track and field
team in four events today.
Lewis hopes to equal the ac;
complisbment of the late Jesse Owens.. who won gold medals in the
1936 Games in the I ()().meter and
20<knder dashes. the 400-meter
relay and the Jona jump.
He already bas earned three berths
on the U.S. team. By winning the 100-
meterdash in the U.S. Olympic Trials
last Sunday, he made the team in that
event as wclJ as in the 400 relay.
TuesdalO:~t be won the longjum\>. His tests come dunng today s
semifinals (4 p.m.) and final (6:4S
p.m.) of the 200. when the Trials
resume following Wednesday's off-
day.
Lewis already bas performed some
superhuman effons on the track. with
a promue of more to come.
For example, in the 200, be owns
the fastest time ever at sea level. 19. 7S
eeconds, and in Tuesday's scoood-
round beats in the Tnals. when be
needed only to finish m the top four in
bis beat to advance to the semifinals.
he blazed to a 19.84 victory. the
fourth-fastest clockina ever.
"He planned to run the tum bard
and stay relaxed in the atraicbtaway,"
said Joe Ooualas, bead of the Santa
Monica Traci Oub, the team for
which Lewis oompetcs."He said be
expected to nm 20 flat. He was
surprised that be ran that fast. He said
1t wasn't a difficult race for him."
Later. after oomina out drcsaed in a
blaclc..and-bri&ht--0ranee warm up suit
that pvc him a distinctly S&>idcnnan
look. lewis showed be was human in
the longjump.
First, be sailed a~ 28 feet, 7
inches, equaling his founJt.best eft'ort
ever-a distance that would staDd up
for his 35th consecutive victory in the
event.
Then. be took one more jump, but
miwtepped on his approecb and
virtually ran through tbC pit. Sinoe
there was no foul, the jwnp was
measured at 18-914, by far the wont of
any competitor in the field and
pcrbaos the wom of his career since
biab sCbool.
So be wound up winnina with the
lonpt and sbonest jwnp1 of the
competition, and with an averqe
(2)..1~ bis two jump1 that would
have him last in the l 2·man
field.
.. That's three down." be aid after
(Pleue -L&Wl9/C2)
Reds' Russell leaves his mark on.Dodgers' current skid
CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
Reds pitcMr' Jeff Rut1ell ian't yet
ready for a bicycle race, but his recent
pcMta}iftl bu him in shape to IO the
distance ..in ..
RUJlell broke I penoGa1 ftve-tame toline streak wit.b 1 six-hit com~
111DC Wedne.day 1lilbt -bit Int of
the ICUOD -to pitcb the lledl to a ~l ~ over lhe wmpina Loi An8dei~ · .;\t the ~on of Redl Ma....-
Vem lllpp..lhe riaht_..., bal bttn
do~ extra ~ wort to mcrcuc
bit stamina. Afkr a ~ tan
Wednada}'. be rolled to hLS first
victory since May I l.
. ~·1 felt rally tr0na." said Russell.
U."'Vemputmeona~ike m . and it'• Wort out really
..l'bieft wu a lot of · fto ttt out
oft.bat nintb iwna and ttt my fint
complete pme. 1 wan~ to prove to
Vern that 1 c:Ould ~the distaftee.''
RUllCU alJo proved he's a pretty
fair hit1et. linina a ·oak to ~n1Cf to
boa 10 tbe ~e.ad ND tn lbe
four\b UuUoc. !fut.it bis pitduna
in the wo·nd ~ that started tbe Dodecn o.n tbe to their tcvcntb
suaial_tt kJl1.
LOI A•la loaded the buts Tf'ith
none out i.o the tee0nd on three ttaiaht . But RusxUaot Terry
Wbiilickt to bit into a double pla to
KlOtC juu one run, thcll anac out
O.ve Aftdcinon to end the threat.
"We were a hit away from really
put · bun to bim. but bt tot out
I
of it," · d the Dodaa's' Mike
Manball. •Kc tccmcd to ,et atroQFr
after that''
The R tied it on ROI\ Oestcr'a
RBI sinalo in tbe bottom of the llic:ODd. and R&mtll IW •mdcNd the ooty otbtt Loe A nm in
third with • beJ t ICOftd
Nick ·a doubk ticcUbe pme ~ in the fourth llPinst starter
Alejandro 'Ptna. 7-3. and Ruildl inaJcd home • Dave Pafta
I
!Q " < z:e 4 J 0 0 a a a s a 33533 22£2322 33322 2 a 2 5 5 5 c
CS Onnge Cout DAILY PILOT/Thureday, June 21, 1"4
Newport youngster:s headed for Hong Kong
Lincoln Intermediate School track team
plans cultural exchange tnp tn July
Atracktnmmadcupofstudtnts
from Lincoln lntmnediate School in
Newpon Beach 9iill represent the
United States in an international
trick meet to be held this aummerin
national SPo111 Eltcbanp (lSE), the
mcetoJPnizcr.
in ttona Kona. Over the last seven
yean, lSE bu ~rpniud similar
prosrams lhro\&lbout Alia and
Europe for bilh tcbool and collett-
le"\'el athletet~ut t.be Hona Kona nen1 ~ntsihefit'll meet ao be
held for Jwllor-bilb • DUUciputs. Tbe UDClOln eeam Will be COKbed
by OOui Voldi .. WhOahio"*bet
lhetr:hool'sreaulartnck team wbicb
bu just com~ its competitive
won the overall combined boys and
Jitls track and field cbampioash.ip for
1otermedi.ate 1ebools in the Newport-
Mcsa Unified School District. ,
Tbe ic:am a.oin& to Hona Kona will
include botba vanity u.Ua com~
Of atbkta &om me district c:Mm-PioMIUP 1eUl. plus •iu.nlor varsaty equd ODmprited of athleta 1t&ain1na
meet qualification standards. RUNNIN G
dona to either Onaocial otin·kind
1upp0rt;
HonaKong. .
The Linooln team will c~mpete
apinst comparable aae athletes from
Hona Kona. Macao, and the Peoples
Republic ofOUna. aocordina to Jack:
lSE it an affiliate oITbe Athleuc
Conarus which is tbe national aov-
emina body in the United States for
track and field.
Robinson said that the Lincoln
team will be the younaest aroup of
American track and field athletes to
ever partlci,pa tc in ao international
sports and cultural exch&n&e propam
IOO. -· ... Wehavealonahistoryofcommit·
.. We know that we may have
trouble mat.china eome oftbe top prls. weexpccttobecompctitivein
the team standin,aa."
Robinson, a representative of Inter-
. 76ers considered
trading Erving
to LA Clippers
From AP dlspatcbes
PHILADELPHIA -The Philadel-m
bia 76ers discussed trading perennial All-~tar forward Julius Erving to the Los
Angeles Clippers but never seriously considered the
L.A. offer, according to Coach Billy Cunningham.
"There were talks, but they are the one who called
us concerning that. and the bottom line is that we said,
'No," Cunningham said.
General Manager Pat Williams said the Oippen
wanted the 34-ycar-old Ervina.
who -does not have a Jl<Htadc
clause ID his contract, and Phila-
dc~p~'? N._o. }PM"' No,.ll.~ .m~~~~
Tuesday m·exchanie for 23-year-
old power forward Terry Cum-
mings.
"What they wanted from us
was ju.st too much," said Wil-
liams, who denied the Sixers were
offered $1 .5 million in cash in the
deaJ.
Howver, sources tn the former San Diego franchise
told the Philadelphia Inquirer that a deal was so close
the OJppen notified the league office in New York to
expect a transaction before the pre4raft deadline.
National Basketball Association spokesman Brian
Mcintyre refused Wednesday to say whether the league
bad been contacted about the trade.
Cunningham, who agreed the offer was too one-
sided, said the Sixers would not have accepted even a
modified offer without obtaining Erving's approval.
Williams said ErvlDg adamantly refused to leave
Ph1ladelph1a.
Quote of the day ·
Honrc1 C1111, Mked hoW ,_ t1tt ._. the
Edmonton~wor.the8w.yCupov.theN9w York~ ''tt'a the .-ne M wMt NMltt 8Utler
uk2 to Sca1ett O'Hare!'
Suspended pair plan to appeal
NEW YORK-Pitcher Mano Soto of Iii
the Cincmnall Reds and outfielder
Oaudell Washington of the Atlanta
Braves. suspended and fined by National
League President Chub Feeney Wednesday. have
appealed the punishments and will continue to play
pending a hearing.
Soto was suspended for five days and WashinJtOn
for three days for their part in a brawl Saturday mght.
Cincinnati won the brawl-marred pme 2-1.
Soto was purusbed for fighung and throwina a
baseball into a pile of players during a fight that
developed after Washington was knocked down by a
pitch. Washington, who hurled his bat at Soto, was
fined and suspended for pushing an umpire to the
ground and starting a fight.
ft was the second suspension this season for Soto,
who was given a five-day sentence by Feeney following
an incident in a game against the Chicago Cubs May 27.
Feeney also set a $5,050 fine for Soto, according to
the Reds. The Braves said Washington's fine was
$1 ,000.
meat totnckand flClduan
C'lltrac:unicularactivity at our / SiChoOI. .. Vokti~ laid.
Re lddcd that LiQCQln had just
Hurrying back .
DNier SteTe 8u di~ back to flnt
bue on attempted pickoff play while
Kingman cracb hi• 14th alam.
Dave &Dpnu walloped bis third Iii
grand slam and major league-leading 19th
homer of the sea.son Wednesday to pace
Oakland to an 8-l romp over Kansas City.
K.mgman, who leads all active players with 14 career
grand slams, tied Joe DlMauio for 30th on the all-time
home run list at 361 with his towering 400-foot blast
into the left-«ntCP field scats on the first pitch from
Mark Gabicu in the first inning ... In other American
League games Wednesday, Jlm Gubler singled in a
run an the ninth inning to give
Milwaukee a 5-4 victory over
Toronto. It was the second con-
secutive n1Dth -mning victory for
the Brewers over the Blue Jays ...
Mike Yot1111 le.eyed a four-run
seventh inning with a two-out,
three-run double and Baltimore
went on to a 4-1 victory over
Boston after the Red Sox' Dennis
"Oil Cu" Boyd flirted with a no-
bitter for six mnings. Cal RtpkeD
Jr. broke up the bid in tbc seventh
inning when he lined an 0.2 pitch off the wall near the
379-foot mark in left<enter ... Kut BrW slammed a
triple and two doubles and Gary Gaettl hammered a
pair of doubles and drove in tbrcc runs as Minnesota
beat Oeveland, 8-2 ... Howard Jobloa bit a three-run
homer with two outs in the bottom oftbc 11th inning,
giving Detroit a 9-6 victory over the New Yofk Y ankecs
... Consecutive seventh-inning doubles by Joel Skbaaer
and Jllllo Cn1 snapped a 2-2 tie and LaMarr Hoyt
scattered eight bits in 81r'1 innings as Chicago beat
Seattle, 5-4.
ti met and nwb for what may tum
out to be Olinae all-tw &earns, .. said
Voldina. .. However, wehaveacel-
nt~ud bytakinaa larteand di vemfiectpoup ofbotfr boya and
Potentialcorporateorindivid\llJ
sponsorsarebeina1e>uaht to contact
the team boosten at 644-7420 to
Clnclnnatt ftnt buem•n Dan Drlwen
awalta throw Wedneeday.
Green'• blut gives Card• win
David Green slammed a two-run Iii
homer with two outs in the ninth inning as
St. Louis, behind the four-hit pitching of
Joaqala ADdaJar, defeated Montreal, 2-0,
Wednesday rught in National league action. Andujar,
11-6, struck out five and walked two in tossing his
league-leading ninth complete game and fourth shutout
... Elsewhere in the NL, Lea Barker pitched seven
strong innings and Atlanta scored five times in the s~th
inning with the help of wildness by San Franetsco
pitchers to beat the Giants, 6-5.
Barker, 6-6, left the game after
giving up the sixth Giants' hit. a
lcadoff homer in the eighth by
JollDDJe LeMuter. He struck. out
J 0 and walked four in bis seven-
plus innings of work . . . Jose
DeLeoa held Chicago hitless for
5'f> innings before settling for a
three-hitter as PittsbWJb, with
the help of a key run-scoring
double by Dale Berra. beat the
reen Cubs 5-1 . Deleon, 4-4. flirting
with a no-hitter for the fifth time in less than a year, Bob
Denaler touched him for the Cubs' first bit. a tw<>-0ut
single in the sixth ... Darryl Strawberry hit a three-run
homer and Mookle WUIOD a two-run shot as the New
Yoric Mets registered a 7-4 victory over Philadelphia to
move within a half-game of the East Division-leading
Phillies ... Triples by Sao Dicao pitcher Tim Lollar and
Toay Gwyn and two errors by Houston b.igb.~tcd a
three-run sixth inning that gave the Padres a 6-2 VJctory
over the Astros. Lollar, 6-5, lasted six innings before
Dave Dravecky finished up to record bis seventh save.
White'• judplent que.tloned
McKINNEY. Texas -Quarterback Ell
Oaony White of the Dallas Cowboys had c II• bis judgment on the highway questioned
Wednesday bx a prosecutor in the National
Football League player's misdemeanor assault trial.
White satf a~e slapped a hiah school football player,
Jon Michael k of Plano, in self-defense after the 17·
year-old played a dangerous pme of soecdina. up ~~
slowing down on a rural road and almost forced White 1
van into a head-on collision at 80 mph. Clark claims It was White
who tried to run him off the road
before punching him in the nose.
White, who faces a }'cat in
prison and a $2,000 fine if
convicted, said be tried to pus
Clark's C.amaro but that the car
kept accelerating. lcavina the vao
contai~ tbc quarterback and
three of hitthildrtt-in the lane of
oncomina traffic.
"You~~ 1 l ~ -----• .,. . •' ~..! ~---~ ___ ...,, -
could have slowed down and fallen in line behind the
Camaro or you could have pulled off the road," Collin
County prosecutor Randall Blake said to White durina
cross-examination.
White, 32, responded that there was no indication
Clark wouldn't have continued to slow down with him
and that there was no safe place to stop on the side of the
road. .
Duran announce. retirement
PANAMA CITY-Roberto Du.ran. ml whose .. Hands of Stone" carried him to
three world boxina championships, an-
nounced Wednesday be is retiring from the
rina after being defeated last week by Tommy Hearns.
"I don't think about box.in& anymore. I am
thin.king now about bavinafun, good clean fun," Dwan
told a news conference at the Panama City airport after
a flight from Miami, Aa.
Hearns stopped Duran in the second round of their
World Boxing Council super welterweight title bout lut
Friday night in Las Vegas.. In his 17 yean as a
P.rofessional in the rina, Duran -who is knicknamed
Manos de Piedra" or "Hands of Stone" -won 76 of
82 fiJbts. He was successively lightweight. welterweiabt
and 1unior middlewciaht champion.
Stewart, Benaley win bertba
CHINO -Randy Stewart of Kirby, fil Ad., avcraaed just under S83 ofa possible .,
600 targeU and Todd Bcnslex of Fon
Benning, Ga., avcraicd 5n to win Olym-
pic benhs in the Runnina Game Target competition
Wednesday in the U.S. International Sbootina Cham·
pionsbips.
In other events, Ed Etzel of Morgantown., Pa.1 took
an early lead in the smallbore rifle competition with an
1, I 72 score. Etzel won the Enalisb Match competition
Tuesday, firing a perfect 600 score.
Gloria Parmentier of Columbus, Ga., fini-.bed six
points behind Etzel with a l, l 66 score.
MOFFET. • • From Cl
owned by Canadian Victor Davis.
which was set Wednesday.
Steele grabs top spgt Titan success begins at top .·
in WIDilllider tt!Us with the individual. To do the best emotion of sadness. This was a clOIO Assuming Moffet meets the
challenge in Indianapolis, as he is
favored to do. Davis and Lundquist
figure to be his chief opposition at the
Games, along with Bntain's Adnan
Moorehouse.
first, however. comes the Tnals
and Moffet says: ''I'll Just do the best I
can. On paper. yeah. Lundquist 1s the
one to beat. But, Doug Soltis has gone'
2: 18 in the 200 and you never know.
people make the big drops."
Moffet declines to state any time
proJCCt1ons and despite the 1mpon-
ance of the meet, won't be getting too
worked up either.
"I go off alone before I swim." he
says. "but on the whole, I like to talk
to people And. it helps relax me.
There's no reason to sit and stew and
get ttght over things."
At 6-llh. 186 pounds, Moffet's
physical annbutes includes an ex-
panded chest of 461/J inches. And, he
says, "I'm swimming better now than
I ever have."
ALL-STAR. • •
From Cl
* * * Another AU-Star football pme is
on the schedule-one of the best·
kept secrets ID Southern California
prep sports-the AU.Star 8-man
football game at Chadwick Hiah 1n
Palos Verdes, July 7 at S p.m.
With the emeraence of Newport
Christian •• ctr small Schools title.
the South wtll be coached by the
Conquerors· Oary Stuart. and will
include wade recerver Marie Fredct-
1ckson, defensive end Chris Howard
( 6-4, 2SO) and quartctback Randy
Stuart. the coach ·s son.
Abo playint_forthc South will be
Bloom1Q&too Cbri rian's Crail Pit-
man. a 6-2. 2 J ().pound runnina back.
I
· Fullerton Coach possiblejobofmectin1theindividuat ieam,we'vehadalotofpenonahtuff
needs of the student. That bas always 10 on.
HOUGH. • • From Cl
thing.''
P~aps, there was some luck for
Houah, as well. He struck out sevnt
and walked three, one intentionally,
which isn't bad for a knuckleballer.
"It was ~uite a stran1c pme,"
Hou&h said. 'Geoff was great toni&ht
and r thouabt WC were in trouble after
I pve up t'he second run.
"But we Sol luc~. then Larry htt
the ball oat of bcrc.' • ~L *"SI -o..etll 11e*t 1111 *ir· ..,,. ftWllM llreH ............ z.-
"'"...,. only .... ~ '"' ,....,,. piw. ,...., ,.,.,.) w.«illd1y, ... "" ftOw ........
only ...., ..,,.. runt In "" ... , 4 lnnlnet 19.M). Hit ._ .. EltA It UI, M101!1 lfle ....,.
......... end 1111 .._,,. WIM ll "'°' Ol'I the Al!Mll'
•
L
Garrido has built been the most imponant &oal to "When it was over, I Wll very
reach." happy for the playen and OOICbea, ~ pOWerf U} program Fullerton won its second national fans a~d myself. 11:1erc WU a feeq
championship ~tty by defeatina of e~bon. That didn:t happen thi
Texas. 3-1 1n the title pme. The fint time. Tb~ second tllnc, there WU
cbampioMbip came five yean after a lot more enjoyment." From AP cllspatdlet
Ten consecutive trips to the NCAA
regional tournament. four appear-
ances in the CollCJC World Series, and
two NCAA Division t national cham-
pionships -tbat•s a decade of
baseball for C.a1 State Fullenon under
the watchful eye of Coach Auaie
Garrido.
"We still operate off the same
principle as we did in the beainnin& ••
said Garrido. "Bein& in close contact
Bob Grandstaff, a fonner football
and baseball at.ar at Marina Kiah who
went on to buebaU honors at Golden
West CoUcae and Arizona State
Uruvenity, has si&ncd a profcaional
pact witb the San OiqQ Pldrct
of'l&niz.ation and IW left for Reno
where be'U tieain in Qua A competi·
ti on.
And, former Ocean View Hi_,, star
Jack Reinholtz followed suit, 11anina
with tbc Seattk orpnizauon on
Wednesday.
Or&ndstafT, a 2().year-old thild
butma.n. MSCbOteft by the Padttt tn
the fint round of the ICC'Ondary phatc.
The 1&ate'• player of the year in his
sophomore lealOn at Golden Wat
Colltat, Grandltafl' became a hittint
force for the Sun Devils at Arizona
Stale. leaduia the scam in b*ttint
averqt until the Anal wet"kl of the
the Titans• first NCAA crown. A key for Garrido and bis sWr -
.. A lot of thinp bad.ao~e on in. the pitchin~ ~ve Snow, assistant
five years in between.•• said Gamdo. ~ch . Smith and. vol~n~
"A lot of th inf.' cbanacd for the better awstant Bill Huabcs - m wuuuna
at the school. • the ~~d national cbampi~&S
For the 12-year Fullcnon coach, was brinama the best playen po111ble
the second title brouaht mixed emo-lO Fullerton.
tions. To recruit, thestaff~lO"tell"~.
"Before the last pme with Texas, I PJ'Olfalll to the potential player.
felt sad . . . like a parent seeina bis The succ:ess the propam bu ea.
child peckina up to ao out the door," joyed is an attraction to prospcctivd
said Ganido. "I really did feel the players. • :
o, ......
ICUOft..
lttitlbolu., who helpied lad Cal
Sta.Ii Fulkr'ton to the Division I
World Series cb&mS)ionship rocently. ii ICheduled to rtpOrt lhi1 weekend to
the Maiintn' Butte, Mont. RoOkic
li:iaue *'"· Reinbol~ 'tlho DIAY'd two yean for Coeth Mike Mayne's Ora.Dee Cout Cotieee Pirates, WU
leleCted in the 17th round of the latna major lcalUe draft..
LEWIS •••
l'IGitiCl
• ..
winnina the Iona jwnp Tuactay· ~.will face• IU9GI fidd in th.ii
afternoon's 200 temifin&la and final. Still . . arc wodd cbampioia. CaJJ:='th.~CAA cbampioo k.irt
Baptilte., lona Jwnp nuuaer-up ,l..ln'Y. ~9.W~% ~.c: = Jama 8\atler. fr,, Olym~
Dwayne Evans, 1913 PU~
Games champion Elliott ~. ~
Roy Manin Jr., uematioDll 17-~
old from Roe>1evelt Hilb SchoOI ii
DalW.
The pret'OCIOUI Mania alJo ru I
dmlinaaeconckOund beat.~
10.21, the eecond-&stat~.~-JCbool &net world jWliot pedOnner .. au time.
ln addition to the 200, \here .,.
three ftnall today-in the pole vault.
the -omcu•a <400-mee in1ermedilec
hunltel and the mea·1 ~ duh •
. ~ ... :-t..---
Well shoot, there are oflier Olympic events
0 ympic shooting trials off er preview
of competition wntch is close to home
With lhcoperunaoflhe 1984
ummcrOlympicsjuata (ewwecb away, there has been a lot of pms ~bou~ the major evenu and qualify-1na trials for Olympic berths.
Unfonunately, for many readers, it
seemsllkethesameold1bm1 Cliyin
and day out, with picturea of thinly-
clad runnmand otheroompetiton
ttyinatobeattheaeoondhandofa
stopwatch or beat a tape measure-ment.
Thereareothercveotsin \he Ol~n;tpics thatarecqualtycom-
pet1t1ve, and perhaps. for those who
enjoytheveatoutdoon, moreen-
JOyable to watch and •PPreciate. Tbe
Olympicsbootingevenuaretobe
staged at nearby El Prado Recreation
.\rea.,justacrosstheOranaeCounty
FoR THE RECOR D
~ • • ' . . "
MAJOR LBAGUE STANDINGS
Amef1can L•9111
WIST DMSIOM W L ,.ct. Ge
)6 33 .522
tine. and wall anra(t more than 700
hooters from all over the world.
Tbac sbootet1 will compete in a
variety of different types of marks-
manship ran~"Jo from small bore free rineahRe po · o 31. 40 lb.o~
ruonlnaboa.rtartetpme •n"t?othsJow and fit-:t modes· and iottrnauonal
trap and skeet shootina at clay taraeta
from theirmostacuteanales. Air-J':'~'l shotguns, specialty piaiplsand
high y tuned taraet rifles wiU be .
employed in the tbeseevcnu.
Eventbouahsomecountrieshave
pulled out of'ihe Olympics, and the
competition in some events is 001 as
tough. the top marbmen in the world
wiUbeshootJngfortheaold wben the
teamsanive in lattJuJy.
Competition begins on Sunday.
STOLEN BASES RHenclef'son, Oe.klelld, 2'; G11rcle, Toronto, 25, ~ ...,...., U1
9u111f, Cle'telencl, 22, Colllfta, Toronto, 11.
PITCHING (6 declsloMI: LoP91, Detroit,
6-0, US; Lea.I, TorOlllO, 7-1, 2.79; C.udlll, Oaki.nd, 6-1, 2.50; RU.ckson, Toronto,
6-1, 3.0IJ Claar, eo"°"· s-1. UI; SMcMa. Anlillt.S-1, IA
STlllKEC>WiS: Witt. ...._.. Iii Morrl•,
Detroft, 1•; ~ro, New YOt'll, 7'; Slltb, Toronto, 7'; i..e.i. Toronto, 73.
SAVES: Qul~rv. KanMa Cllv, 17,
C.udlM, O.klellcl, 14; lffrnancle1, Detroit,
12; RO.vi•. Mlnnftote, 12; Slal'lley, BostOll,
12. A..-
Mlnnesota Ollcaoo
S..tlle
OekJand Texas
KemaaCltv
33 3' :m 2 2 ,......., LM9U9 l3 34 .m
33 37 .471 3\l'J BATTING (150 •I bafl). Gwv1111. Sen
32 37 M4 4 Di.ea, :J.17; FrllnQ)ll9, MolllrMI, .346,
31 31 ."'9 5 Wahlnoton, Altwlta, ~1; 8renly, S.11
21 36 .G 5\l'J FrallClsco, .325; RRemlrei, Atlanl•, .323.
•AST DfV1SION RUNS: Gwvnn, Sen Olevo, .. ; Mal·
Detroit '9 17 .742 -thews, Clllcaoo, .. ; SWnual, ~la,
JUI) 29 II 9 Lm. with I.ht men ·s Cree
pistol..t.Osho men'upon pistol-30
bots, and mt'D'nnd wome11'1 in~r
oauonal trap-7SWatts. At 1 p.m. the
ponpi tol·lO-shotdudcompetition ispanDCJCS.
Thmlreatillamp)c tic etuvail·
able foralhbootinacvcntuubc 1914
Olympicsudtbcreisalsopltntyof
park.il'll and aood seats.
For tb0te who want to sec some of
the unique types of shooti~ ltt.t will
be takjOJ place during the OlymptCS, ~trip tbta week to the ranae at El
Prado Park miaht be in order.
Currently, American lhoottrs from au over the U.S. a.re tryina to quahfy
for the U.S. Olympic team in com·
petition held daily at the aa. facility.
The competit100 will run throuab
th1sSaturdayevenioa. wb.cn the final
team members will be selected ba5cd on their scores during the past two
weeks.
J•
.N11£c
SP ORTS Co LuM,.1sr
The abootina evesus that are It.ill m
propeu represent more than half of
the different typel or&booti04 pmes
that take pl.aoe at the lotemabonaJ
Champi9nships ~by the
NRA Theadmisaionandptrti~al
• thesetrialsisfreeand thtte iJenouJh
sbootina iaki~ place to keep the
whole family interested.
Competiton who have already
made tbeOlympicsbootingteam for
the U.S. include Don N>:ford ofl.a
Ciaccntaand EnckMuijunaio fJie
Olympic Games history
Track and field medallata
MIEN'S SMI MIETallU
1912. ~ii ltU, U 1• I 1 M
1. JOheflM$ l(Olafvnelnen (F~). I. Vi.dlrnlr Kutt (ScMal Union). 13;.lU,
TorOlllO 41 24 .631 ,..., 46; WIOol11s, Sen Dleoo, '5; Ralnn. Mott-
11 ' ~·.,-~·~'.;j• ~ ... l·~."Qll~~Ulf'"'~t~:PN~f.w..?. ~ ~-.-ort.... 2' 37 20 ~~.--,;.,: Scmilcit~ ...
14:36.6; 2. Jean 8ouln (FrMCal. 14:36.7, 3 2 Gordon Pirie (Greet "11aln), '3-. .SU; 3.
Georoe Hutson (Gf'Mt llr1telrtl, I~~ Derek ~-(~I 8"»~~,../<
~ "' . .r ~ >-' • •n> ~ • • ; I. M;;r.y· Heltllrt (New 1-lelldl •
Paavo Nurmi (Flnlendl, IS.:00.0; 3. Er• ll:Al-4; 2. H-GrOOOh'.lll (£Ht G«many), MllwaukM 21 37 20"'1 JDavlt, Olb9o. 47; J0tr1l, S".11 Francbco,
Clrleland 24 3f t3.,., 43. W..._...Y'a Sc:iaNa HITS: GWVM, San DJeoo, '3; Samuel,
Teus 3, ....... 2 Ptllledlllltile, •: RRamlret, Altenle, U ;
Clllcaoo 5, S..ttle 4 Sendt>erv. Olb9o. 12; ~. Pftt'°"9fl, ~ 5, Toronto 4 1'-~-It Oelllalld 1, Kanua City I oot.19LES: FrMCOnll, -.-1trM1, ;
Detro11 '·New Vorti '(13 lnnl1191) Sandbero, CNcaoo. 11; Gc.rter, Molltreel, a.nin--. 4. eo.ton 1 1'; H~d. Allema. 1•; Semual, Ptllledel-
MIMasota I, OevNnd 2 !Ihle, 16. TMIY'a o.n.,. HOME RUNS: ~fifty, Attanta, 15;
Ortt4alld (Heaton 4.,) at MIMftOte Sdlmldt, Pl\Uedelcltlle, 15; GCerter, Mon· (8utdler S-4) ,, .. ,, tl; Dumern, Chlcaoo, 12; MwtMI,
~11. Mheuk.. (SullOll 3·7) et Detroit STOLEN BASES: WloolM, Sell Dleoo, (Bereneuer 4•4), (n) _ .. _..._.....,,_ -•edul Clndn
New Yortt (Howell 2·4) at 8ettlmore 33; S.tm.WI, ~-....... ..,; " • • (McGreeot" 1·5!, (Ill natl, 30; Demler, Olb9o. 2'; llalnn,
Twonto (Leal 7-1 I et ISoaton (Hurst ~;.'t'HI~~ 16 dedslonll: PPerez, Allen·
0-f). In) ''*Y'• Gemes ta, 7·1, 4.57; SOio, Cll\Clnn.11, 7·1, 2.SI;
K8MU CllY al "'-'• (Ill /#Mttter, Allenla, S-1, I.II, Lea, Mofllreel,
MllwltullM at Detroit, (nl 11-3, 2.'2; Lvndl, New Vorlt-, 7-2, 2.11,
Toronto at &olton, (n) Rve11, Houston, 7·2., 1.13.
STRIKEOUTS: V~, ~ New YOt'll •I e.ltlmore, (111 1011 Gooden, New Yort., 9'; ltven, Houlton,
Chlcaoo •I Minnesota, (11) f4; Soto, ClnclMall, 13; Ber1lw, Alle11la, 7', Cle\'Wnd al S..tlle, (II) Carlton, ~Ill. 7'.
TnH .. 0.llland, (n) SAVES: SUller, SILouta. 1•. HolallCI,
....... Lea..,.
W•ST DfVIWN
W L ,.ct. GB
Sen Diego 3t 2• '°° Altent1 3t 2' .S74 I..., ~ JS 3S SOO ,...,
Clndnn4ill 32 37 464 f
Hovtton 30 37 441 10
5-11 Frtndaco 24 41 .369 IS
a AST DfVISIOM PN~i. 37 21 S6f New VOfil lS '11 .5'5 ...,
Chieffo l5 30 .531 2
$1. Loua ~ 35 m 5
MontrM1 33 l4 .m s
Plttltlwen 25 3t .Jtl 11.,, W.._.Y'a~
Clnclnn.11 4, ~ 2
AllMta '· s.n FranclKO s SI. Louis 2, MofltrMI 0
New York 7, PtllledltPnla 4
Plllaburotl S, Clllcaoo I
S.11 Olevo 6, Houston 2
T .. Y'a GMwl Dedelrs (Honevcull 7·31 al ClnclMetl (Solo Ml, (II)
PMadelpNe (Hudton 7·4) at New Yori!
(Terrel HI
Clllclieo (Ralnev S-5! at PlltsburOll (Rllodan 4-5), (nl
S.n Frenclteo (L.asllav 3·61 at Allanla (Mahler S-1), (II)
s.n oi.eo <WNtaon 7-31 " 1-ioustOll (Nletlro 5·7!, (n) , ........ o-
~ al Atlanta, (n)
SI. Loull at Clllcffo
Ptllledelcltlla el Plll'lbunlfl, (II)
5-11 Di.ea al ClnClnnall, (nl
MontrMI al New York, 1111
San Franebco •I Houston, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
It ....... ~ AMiii 2
S.'"'*'d aw 311
WWdlf
LAPnhrf
A&nslrdtl
08rlen lb
YotfC
Tollean 2b
Anderlll aa
Steln 2b T .....
CAUISOtltNtA
altrtllllll
l I 0 1 Pelll1d
4 0 1 0 W1llone 2b
4 o o o MCeron rf
' 1 2 1 ReJll111 dl'I 4 0 I 0 Downl119 If
4 1 1 0 Grich lb
2 0 0 0 R.Jdl111 3CI Joo o O.Cnalb
1 O o o Narr011 c
0 0 0 0 Scllloflld " 1' 3 S 2 T .... ~IW ......
MHlllllll
4 1 1 0
J 0 0 0
4 I 1 0
3 0 1 1 ) 0 0 1
' 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
JO 2 4 2
Tuai 1• 000 011-J
CeMwftlll 100 •• --2 Gerne WIMlllV R81 -LAP•rrllfl (7).
E-ftoJtcllson, Wllfono 3, Anderson.
DP--C.llfornlll 3. L09-TeXH 3, Cellfor11'8 s. n-<>8rlell, ReJecllaon, Grlctl.
HR-i.APerrlall <11). 58-Peltla (2S), Ra-
Jacllson (31. S.-Vo1t. SF-Samc>le, Down· '"'· " ..... so Tex ..
Hough W,1·• c:..... ' 4 2 2 ) 7
ZaM L.1·4 9 S 3 1 2 0 WP-Houon T-1.st. A-27,:m.
NATtONAL L•AGUE
ltedl 4, Oed8erl 2
LOS ANG.LIS ONOftNAT1
altrlllllll •rtilllll
3 1 1 0 Redus II 3 0 0 0 4000 Mllnerd 40 10
) 0 1 0 DrleUn lb 4 0 0 0
4 1 1 0 Parker rf 4 2 2 1
• 0 2 0 Cnccicn aa 4 0 0 0
4010 Guldtnc 3100
3 o o o Esetav 30 3 1 2 I
3 0 0 0 Krehdl >ti I 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 Geater 2b 2 0 2 I
1 0 0 0 JRuiMll P 3 0 I 1
0 0 0 0
11 t•t T ..... 11 •• 4
~IW---IMMlilM 111 .. --f Cllftc:lllMI 111 .. Olx-4
o.rne Wlnnlne 1ta1 -Jllh11M1 (1).
E-ftRavnoldl. DP-Clnc.IMeill t.
Loe-l.ot AllOIM 4. C1nc1Matl 6.
29-Eaatkv. Hlt~r1ler (S). S&-S.• 1
; (!6). ... " It.,. .. so
LeaMellla
AflieM L,N 7 1 J J l ' z.ectwy 1 11101 CINdlliMll JftiuelW,3~1 9 • t 2 t S 9t1t-Jll""9L T-1:21 A-1',1'1
MA.JOA L•A•u• L•AOaltl ~ ........ a ... rnNG n• e1 •ta>: WWWd.. .... Yett!, l$2' Mett.._,, New Yen, .Ma;
C) ... , T.,_,.., .»1; UOU.W, Tonnto. m .
I ,...., Mila-•, .m.
ltUM. 0-.~. aoatofl, ID:~.
T8"0l!lto, a; llUIUn, W iiii••• • T~· !NI..,.,,...,, ............ O.llM, '1.
H t: aMurrav, M•11011e, a K.,..,,._,,
QekllM IUm, ....... S.S. Ulll!wrttll; T .... , it; AO.'tlt. S.ltte, 47
tilTS kda, TW9ftte, 111 T~.
De!Nlt, IS; Metttl* ..... y~ 14; v.-. MlwM•, ai wwi... New Yen, .,
DOUtLIS1 T9UIJI. Mlfw •ate, 11; OW· T.,..,.., 111 ~. TH8'. 11, 1 wt ~''i.uHs. k""9meft. ~ "' A,,,_, IMlon, 17: IUI ... , a..... 16,; AO.wte. S.ttta, ,., llMuttav, leltlnW'e1 ,.
~. 1S; Gouege, 5-11 Oleeo. ll,
LeSmlth, Clllcaoo. 13; Orosco, New VOfil,
13.
Aft9ll ."'"" BATTING
Aa II H lfll 9enl<iuel 114 20 ,, 4
Carew 1'3 25 SI 3
Bl'own 71 ' 20 2 NerrOll 6 I 4 11 I WVfoflo 139 IS 31 3
LYM 203 32 5.5 f
Plcdolo 4' I 12 0 DeClricft 231 JS 60 I
Grich "' 17 30 4 Sconleri 4 0 I 0
Re. ~IOI\ 215 30 SO 11
Downing 224 24 52 '
Petits 200 3' "' 2 ~ 1" 21 3f 3 a-191 16 31 0 Ro. Jecllson 69 S 13 O
T.,._ DOIS 2'1 574 5' M'CHINO
... ll"d.
20 .351 21 .301
10 .212 ) .719 ,, .273
2' .271
4 2'1
33 .260
I) 2S2
0 .250
3' .m 31 .m
17 .220
14 ·'" 11 .1'2 ' ... J6I .Mt
P H H SO W·L•llA KISOll 5 5 2 5 CHI 0.00
AJIH I 0 0 0 0-0 0.00
Sanchez ~ 3' 13 23 S-1 U3 Zalln H YJ IS 19 n 1•4 1.11
Fond! 1611.> 14 3 10 1-1 UO
Corbett 30'.!J 27 11 I• 2-0 2.37 Kaufmen 31'/l 26 11 20 1-2 3.16
John .4 100 27 25 3·4 3 45
W1" 1021/l 105 • 13 S-7 01 Romenlc:ll I~ 110 35 4' 1·6 447
Cunis I 14 3 4 0-0 S.'3
S.lon 43 •S 11 14 2·2 6.21
L.aCorte 2~ 30 12 13 1-2 US
Swa11 S I 0 2 0-1 IUO
Ott1en 11 16 9 5 0-I f .00
Teteb 61J"l ut 211 .. J6..J3 UI
S.vn: SancMz 7, Cortlell 3, Kaufman I, l(lson 1
OIVmPlc .,,.... "1als
(et CNM) a...-. Game T.,.... l'INll
(OUt ............ ,
I. R•nclY Stewert, Kirov, Arlt. 1.14t
2. Todd 8ensleV, Fort 941Mlng 1,731 3. Mike Enel1sn, Color•dO scwinos 1,729 -----T.._ ,., .. ,Nf'v (OUtefe ........ If•>
1. Brien &allard, Fort 9ennlne I"
2. Rk:Nrd Cflordelh, Plel11sboro, N.J. l4l
3. (lie) W•ltv Zoee>et, Jlldlaon, Ml. 142
01111 Cerllste, Forl 8eM1no 1'2
Terrv Howard, s.n Antonio 142
AIOW ~.Fort hnnlne 142
...... ,.,.. ~-.. t.llMerY (OUtefe .......... ,
I Allyft Jot!Mon, Fremont 1, 116
2. John McfUllV, Fort hnnlne 1, 112
3. RoMllo Arrendondo, Fort 8-lne. 1, 180
MM'I Alt """' ... •1.....-V 1 Oerlu1 Yount, Alberta, Can 1,133
2. Arnold Vltat11o, CMocauln. Ora. 1,730
3. Doti Nvvord. LaCretee11•• 1.m
MM'• ................... ..
(Olltef• ...... 1.•> 1. Ed Ettel, Motvaniown. P•. 1.1n
2. GWle Pennenllet", Columelua. Ga. I, I"
3 (lie) U ... rd, llldlan4NIOlls 1,1~
Glen Dubis, Fort 8-1"9 1,1~
USll'L
RSTUN coee .. anMC9
P.-c
W L T
10 7 0
' • 0 I t 0
1 to • c..w
•·Hol&IOft 12 5 • 106 511 m
Mldlleall ' I O .J2t • MS °"........ ' " 0 .3$J U1 06 s.n.AntoM ' i1 • .w • m CNc.wo I lJ I .2N m Mt
IAITW•N coetflDIMCa A-.-••"tP , la l'lk ...... ...., .. 10 "'4'1 M U 4 I ."5 •14 Cl ~ w ...... J •• • ·"' H1 U> t \S I .UI nl US ........ r~14 lt •m
a•T.,._ le\' U ' I XI •1
..... Ol'tlaM I t I C1 l »1
~ 7 10 I 4l2 Jl1 Jtldt..... t It • ,,.. ,.,
-~~-.. ·~ .iMMln ""' .............
""....,,... •• Jeck .....
Olla. ..... °""""" ...............
LA ..... a4Attnne
/
"' J.11 m •• 4S.1
..
~ '
lbClunan <Sweden). 1S:1U 13:4U, 3 Kallmlen Zlrmv (Poi9ftd),
1914, ,._,,. 13:44.I
I Paevo N\JnTll (Flnielldl, 14f.ll.2; 2. Vllho ''V ... ' IUIOl9 (Flnllndl. 14:3U; l.
EdYlll Wide (Sweden), IS:ill.I.
Ina.._ .........
I. V111o "VIie" llltola (Fli'lllalld). 14:31.0;
2. PMvo Nurmi (FlrNnd), 1 .. .A0.0; l. Edvlll W1dl (Sweden), l~U.
lfn,La .........
1. Leurl l.Atltlnen (FWand), 1.,..30.0; 2. Relpll HI• (U.S..1. 1«:30.0; 3. Lauri vin.n.n
(FINandl, 14!44.0.
1"6.a.1111 I. Gunner Hodo.wt (Finlafld), 14:22.2; 2.
L.ew1 Lal'lllnen (Fl/Mnd), 1~; 3. Henry Jonason (Sweden), ldU.
lMI. ........
1. Geslon ltelll <8elolurn>. 14:17.6, 2.
Eml Zlltociett CCnchoslo¥ekla), 14:11.1, l.
W1llen'I S#liltlull (Holland), 14:24.1..
1952.~
I. Emil Z..tloell (Cz.edlollovakle>.
14M.6; 2. A.in Mimou1 O'Kadla (F,..,_1.
14m.4; 3. Herbert Sdlede CWnl Germanvl, 14~
1"4, T...,.
1. ltoMrt Sdlul (U.SJ, UA.1; 2. Herald
Nor1IOth (Weal Germenvl. ll.AU, l WI·
Dem D.mnMr (U.S.1, l>At.1.
1-.~c.v
1. Mollen!ed Gemmoudl (Tl#llll81,
14:0U; 2. H. KIPdlote Kelno (K.,.,a l. 1~. 3. Nett.a Temu (Kenve>. 14~
1f72. MiMldl
I. L..-M ~ (Fllllandl, '3:2LC; 2.
Mdlemad Gemmoudl (TIAl!tlel. 13:27A; 3.
IM SlewW1 (Gf°Mt atllelll), 13:27..6.
1'76.~
1. LMtie Viren (Flllland), 13:24.76; 2. Oka ~ ,.... ZaalellCll. 13:25. 16; 3. io..·...._ Hildenbrand (West Germeonvl. ·~
"'9.M9.aw
1. Mlnits Ylfter (Ertliople). 13:21.0, 2. ~ HvarnOUI (Tenzanle), 13!2U; 3.
Kew1o MMNnlle (F1ntendl, IJ:22.0
MaWS tt• M&TallS 1'12.~
1 Jonennes KoletlmeU-( F llllend I.
)1:20.I, 2. Loub T-.nima (U.S.), 32:0U. 3
Albl11 St_.oos (Fllllandl. 32::21.1. .............
I P .. vo Nurmi (Finland). ll4S.I, 2
JOMPtl Gulllemot (Fl"ence), 31:'7.2 3
James Wiiton (GfMI 8r1taln), 31:50.1
1914,~
1 VllNI "VIiie" Rlto&a (Flnlalld), ».23.2, t EdYln Wide (Sw90elt). lO:S5.l; 3 Eero
Sero (FIMand), 31:'3.0.
.,., A.mdltdlam
I. Paevo Nurmi (Flntendl. lO:IU; 2.
Vllho "VIiie'' ltllole (Flnlandl, 30: lf.4; l.
Edvlll Wide (SW9dlnl, 31"°°'4.
Int.Lei~ I. JellYI• Kusodmkl (Polend), JO:lU; 2. vo1rnec1 ,.., • .._, CFlnlendl, 30:11'1 l.
L.aurl Vlrte11en CFlnlalld), 30-..U.O.
1'36, ....
1. llmerl S.lmlnen (Flnland), l0:15.4, 2.
Arvo A.-ota (Flfllandl. l0:15.6; l. VOlmllrl llO·Hollo ( Fllllalld), 30:20.2.
1'41. LAMml
1. Emll Zatociett (Cnc"ouovallll. 2':9.6, 2. Aleln MJmoun O'K.ecna (France).
JO-.A1.4, 3. e.rtA Atller1uon (Sweden I.
:ICtSU..
1952.~
I Emil ZlllOMk ICa~I.
19-11.0, 2 Alein Mltnoun O'ltec:tla (Frencel.
19-..JU, 3. ~ Anufriey (Soviet
UlllOlll. 2':21..1
1'56,1101 -I Vledlmlr Kuts (Sovi.t Union), JIAS..6.
1 Joi.Ml Kovacs (Hul\MrY), 21.S2 '· l Alen
Law,.._ ("Ullrallel, 21:53.6. ..........
I. Pvotr 8*1,.ov (~ U9'1onl,
11:3'2.l. 2 Hena Gnldoh:ttl (Eut ~)
11:37.0; l. Oavld Pow9" (AUJtrelle I. 2':31.2.
1tM. Tt*W
I. Wlllam Mill (U.S ), 21:2U, 2.
Mofler'ned Gemmoudl (Tunbiel, 11:20. 3. ltMeld Clanl• ( ... ~,,. ... ,, ll:2U.
l-Mmc9atf I. Nllft.il Temu (Kenve), 2':27.4, 2.
Memo Wotde (EINoolaJ. 2'9:21.0; 3.
Mohamed GlltTllTIOUCll !Tulllsle>, 2".J.U.
1'72, ........
1. La1M Viren (F~I. 27:31..4; 2. Emlel PuttemaM (e.tgJum). 27:.3U, 3.
Mlnlta Ylfter <Etllloolal, 27.41 0
.,, .. MeMr'9el
1. Laue Viren (Flnlancll, 27;40.JI, 2.
Clll'tol ScMM LOPft (f'ortu9al), 27:45 17, J
8rende11 Fostw (GrMt Brlt•lll), 27.S4.92.
1flO. Meeaw
I Mlnlt1 Vlfler (E~I. 21~21; 2.
KMrto Maeftfnlul (Flnleftd), 17:40, )
Mohammed Kecslr IE"'loola}, '114'.1.
Heh•eed Pan nDMasoAv•s •ESULTS 1.-.., '7-41av lleln••.,. ,,....,
FllST lllAC8. 1 furtonos
Sa .. W..t (~) 7 40 3.20 2.60
MNor e• (~I 2.IO UO
StlMd Letter (Guef'f a I 4.20
AallO rec.cl. Pre 8oot<, Oacontrol, Ne-v.ca S... Eruc>IM
Time: 1:%3 21 s.
SKCOMD UCC. 1 111• m~
Enouetl Rooe (HewieYI 7 60 4 40 l.20
EHcutlve Abltltv (Piere.I ?UO 14.•
J111I for CNrlle (Drexler) 7.111
Alao rec:ect Pusoort Plloto, Don Sen
Marcos, Sirocco Sends, Llll'd ~. Time
tor Mutk . Prince lto«>ert, HaPC>Y ~
ellOll, Tevet Tov.
Time: 1~ 4.15.
U DAILY DOUaLE (7·91 1>ekl S27 60
TH•D lllACll. ' lurlonos Glle,_111 (C.aatan.del lO 60 10 40 7.40
D.W ., Dram (Toro) s 20 4 00
Twrn to'1 .-.uu <Black) f.20 Amo raced: Rlllno YukOfl. Comma11' Dear, AA lmPreulve, Lace Camltole Cha
Somtlflla. Let'• Gel •.cecs e" Gone
MIUIUIPOI Girl. F1nt L.P
Tlme· I 10 315.
IS •XACTA 11·61 peid '53050
FOUllTH lllAal. ''-' tunongs S«ino Bid (Gwtta) t 40 • 20 l .20
Melnse'a River <Garcllll '00 2 80
Act! ~ (~VI •~00
AIM reced C.sile Cat. Strono Curref'l
TretaWN'!r ..... Sllanl Cal, Lal\' lt!Qoe
Tandoone, FlrtiM S..ton. Stunruno Sc.rt
Time. I 11 SIS.
IS •XACTA 14-11 P8ld 5'UO
Ptfl'TH UC•. 6 tunonos
8liPI (Toro) 10 40 s 20 3.20
CUPld Oancar (Plnalvl S 00 2 80
Sari'• Oellehl !VallN'*'I 180 AIM r.cad Artificer, War on Tallft
Timi: I lO
IS •XACTA (6-5) Mid 1116.0ll
SPCTH aAa.' ~
l(llaldGn (~) 7 IO UO 3 00
JeklfWck (....-W&) 6.40 uo
C8ftCl\o !ft Court (He~> UO Alto reciect: Eh .,_,,_, Sotlo. Tait·
~. wtltl LlbWtv, Jam Man, ewt.f. Qwlt'• I.ad
T'lnw: MO JIS.
U IXACTA ( .... )Mid stiCUo.
M'VtlfTH UC.. I 1116 ~ on l\lr1 a-OOldeft Ell (Hwtvl S.• > • 2 60
MlftWnia <McCarron1 a oo 2 • Gtillat_,.. (~) •OO
.... ,... Wal Fore. """'""'· ~ Haw Haw, Marra, Dwlc9 nn. 141 11$.
IS SXACTA tt-Sl ~ ~
p ...:x IDl Ct-+4 ...... 11 Mid
... .,... .. ...... ~· (•I'• twwl. 0 flttk sta COi ..... ,._ MIO ""a ,.. WI ,.._ ~ (IM,.,_,
.-...n. a..ca. 7 """"*-~ ...._. c,_.,, ue ia '" .,,..kafl ~ ~ , 1• t• ~T-(~I • UO
..... ,.... ......... 'II -. Mlcile ,..._ OIAIC..,...,,.,,
121 11$.
U aJU.CTA (1-S) MW ma
...,.... 9'ACS. One "*
LliaCllln .... (HI! ... ) --11 • ..... irnt .... <Garcta> t..• ue
C....-V(i' .. I •• ~,.. . ...,.~.~" 0.... ~,... ll:Alfla ... ....,.....,. .....
"""' lR l l 1$ KhCfA C ... I _... '111 a At~tt-
pistol: Wanda J 1tll and Cloria
Panntntitt1n nclinanlk;a.od
Man Orytcaod Micbiel ThOm
nintcmatiooallkttt.Manyoftbe
teams wtll be made upo(manben of
the armed forces, but bOth N)1'_)rd
and TbomPIOft are ciVllia
* * * AnotbCt'tvn1t that iJiowclbC of
1nteres1 to lhootmaod bunains ~nth usiastJ is also t.akina p_tace this'
~end. Thetecood annwO Westcm
HuntinaandSponsShowiJbeitja
held at the I.Ona Beach Conventio
CenterthrOugb unday. TheabOWll
oneof tbe larsat bununa aM SUD·
related show1 on the WCS1 Coast
0n display will be all the la tat LO sum. newammun.ilionand related
equipment., plus bowty scminan on
bow to hunt anchhooL how boun
begin at 3 p.m. on weckdayund noon
OD Wttkench,
Otvmdc ....... ldlitcMe
TOMJGHT
4 o.m ~·a 200 me!er$. Hmlflneb..
' PJTl.-Mell's hlgtl Mn!>. dealtdofl
4:10 P.tn -Men's POie vaylf, flnal
t:lS o.m.-W-..'1 400-me._. hurdlft.
~ 4:45 P.m.-M•n 400 nw1an flnel
S P.m.-f.Wn's 5,000 rneteo !Int r'llUlld
6:JO PJTl.-M«!'s 200 met9t"S. flnel.
6.43 P.m.-Men's 400 meten. oac:.ttllon
7:2'11 P.m.-Women's 3.000 meters. i.emt·
flnM. I p.m_~·s 3.000 me1ers st..,._
d'lese.~
RllOAY
t-.31 a.m -Men's 110-,,..... r.ure11e1.
dealMon.
10:1S a.m.-Men'a ea.. deeatMon..
10:40 e.m. WOl'Tlalt'S lot-meter l'>urdles,
lir$1 round.
11::20 LIT\.-WO.t•t'S 1119'1 lumo. -Iffy· Ing
Noon .v.tn•• POii YNI, dacallllon
' P.m.-WGn*l's 200 meten, .-nffin11!1
4·1S p.m.--Mefl't 1,500 meters flr\I
round.
S:2S P.m.-Women'• 1,500 meters. -"'· fl~
XS5 P.tn.-W-'I 200 meters, flnel.
6:15 P.11\.-Meft'I $,000 rM!tn Mfnf•
fl net.
6:40 p_m.-Mefl's 1..500 meters dec•lhlon
final went
o..-tlsl*'9 teEWPOllT LANDING , .... _,
9-dl) -l5.,..,.... 20 YellOWI• S7 ..no
bau, 3 "-•"-cl
DAMA WHAA" -203 a~s 7'1 ba~
I Wracuda, 14 llelnlto. 2 lla!IDul, 2 wlfloW· ,.. '3_medl.,... 3 ~. • SC\llPln
_..,....,.., nH1 dllku
aA.RaAU. Alt•"-........ CL.EVEUNO INOIANS Piec.o S ......
F.,.,-. Pltcftaf, on ttw 15-dav dlMl*ld Its!
Celllld ue ltov $mllll, llltchal'. fnlm Malftt
f/A "" llllW'Nti.nal L.-.ua OAK.LAND A._.s.nt Chris Codlrel
.,_,., tO TacorN ol ..... Peclftc: Cout
~ C.... ue Cl.rt Yo.lfle .. lcNr lr'erft T...,.
POOTaAU. ................ ~
GlllEN a.v .. ACtc£11s-A.,.... t0 ...,. ......... _,, ...... _ Cllll'I·
heh --...... c;.,,..., ~ ...
I
LPGA. • • P'rcm.C1
We used to play for quart.en. Wbea
you only have SO ~nts in yow pocket
and are playina fora dollar, you beru:r
be able to coocentra.ac.
... feel that playing for drinb, a
ctmner or even a dollar mates ~ concentration much pea.ta ...
Hiai~ alona wit.h aDOtbC'r form.er
LPGA star, Betty Burfriod1, will~
a clinic at Irvine Coat CC on Friday.
J unc 29 at ~ p.m. She bopc:s to meet
tbe members of the d ub in oenon and
give them a few point.en at that ~-
Her goal is to learn more about
~ _ ..... "t C'OJO) 11 very much auu 11 ll ~¥Cr boring, .. Higim says. .. Eaeh b1DC
you solve another puzilc and there is
a new myster) every day. Tbc more I
t.cach, the more 1 know about the
pme. 11 u a tcanuna procdliol' ~
too. and I learn something from every
studcnL Tbett's.atways another way
to look at each problem and I hope I
never quit learniQg."
She lS t.bc only l..PGA pl.ayer lO
complete• marathon run and sbe ctid
11 tn Orange in J 979 when she WU
recupet'2.t\D& from t.c:ndonitis in her
clbowandhad taken timeotrfrom the
tour. Sbe~a timeof~ours.
13 minutes but says she will never do
it ~n. "'To run one muathoo you
don t have to be auy. To run more
than one. well . . . ,..
SM wants to live her own life now
that she u free of the tour.
··1 want to read. wn~ lcttcrs.p to
the beach and shop v.·ben I feel like 1L
l want to do the things that normal
people do. I'm ccnainJy not
interested in travelina any more at
this time. ..
Appointments can be set up
through the lrvtnc Coast C.Ountry
Oub pro shop by pbonina 644-9680.
NHYC hosts
top sailors,
18andunder
Newport Harbor Yacht Oub Wlll
~ host to the United States Yacht
Racing Union's Youth Cham-
p1onsh1p regatta starting saturday
and continuing through Friday. June
29. The event dnws top sailors 18 or
un<kr from throughout the U.S.
On the weekend calendar NHYC
will send ocean raaQJ yachts off on
the suth and seventh races of the
.\hmanson Scnes Saturday and Sun-
day.
Lido Isle Yacht Oub wtll be host to
small boats compcung over instde-
thc--ba) courses m the club's June
Regatta.
Huntinaton Harbour Yacht Oub
wtll taae the second race of 1ts Bois.a
Otlca Scncs on Saturday
Olympic hopefuls in the Wmd-
glider sailboard cl.us will be winding
up lhetr Ula.ls Fri<tay. saihna out of
ScaJ Bcacb Yacht Clu~ Lona Beach.
In other Southern C.alifom1a
Y acbtina Assoctation areas:
S...MmiK.a ...
f(,lfll ..__ Yacfll 0U0 -Summer 0..-...._ ..... t.. ...,,... .., ,,.,. r.a
(SMot\), ~ •• ...,_teed! Yad>t OU.-0..... ......
te ....,_ laaidll r-. Cb Ser-. '-31, S.""*v, ~v. 0.. aft' Yed!t Quo -~ T,....,_. n.ce
( ..... $9r'-No A}, s.tvay
s.M1 0.t Cerlft!llilefl Yedl4 a. -lAlllllll ............ !WOW .............. ,.,.~ s.a... tw I .. Yedll Ola -kT ....._, ""-.,,....lllalll.., ~·· MtwdlY • .. , Yec:N °'* -~ '*1t1cl Own...,..._.~ •• ~. ~ '"' y °'* -u.. .. "" ..,..,..., .. ._...,, ,_......
.S. 0-. YtCH C....-~Ova .... "" . OC..•ide Yedll 0.-0.. ........... l.~ ....... s.o-..,....~aa-~ ~9ai·.~ Y8d!ia.-~.._.. ( ...... , .... , .... ......... .............. ~-.,...... '9ftl9..,... a.a-~ ..... Na ........... ...
I
I
r Or~ Coat DAILY PILOT/Thureday, June 21, 1N•
fteTmOUI __, ......
NAMI ITATllUNT
'1CTITIOUI •UIUCll '1CTrTIOUI IU ..... 11 NAMI ITATIMINT
'1Crtnoul8U8Mta N._ STA'TUmNT
The IOllowlllg pettoM Wt doing
butlneuu
SCOTISOAL! INVf8TMfNT AS-
SOCIATES, W!STCLlfF INVEST-
MENT ASSOCIA T!S, SALT LAKE
CITY LIMITED tu, SALT LAKE CITY
LIMIT!O IV, 8AU LAKl CITY LIM·
IT!D V, SALT LAKE CITY LIMITf.D
VI, SALT LAKI! CITVUMIT£0 VII,
REAL TY INV!STMENT Al·
90CIATIS XX. "!ALTY INVEST·
MENT AsaoctATU XXI, Al!ALTY
INVESTMENT ASSOCIATH XXll
4425 Jamb«• Roed. Newport Geectl, Calif. t2MO
l.or'11 Corporation, Cellfomla.
4425 Jambcne Roe.ct. Newport BMcn, Calif. 92000
Ttll1 butlneh 1-c:onOUC1eel by. a
C:Ofl)Of atfon
tTATDmn' °' NOTICE OF DEATH OF OF NOTICa °" T11fUITD'I tAU
A•AHDar-NTOllUMOf' ERNEST D SAi.MO AND PETER C. REID AIA '·~~..-re~~-:._.~ OP' PETITION TO ADMIN· P£1'ER CHARLES RE.ID YOU AM IN ocnULT UNDO A
donect1r.w. 1"'9FICUlloYllw'-: I TER ESTATE NO. ANDOFPETJTIONTOAD
0
-~::_.~~0:JJ:A'r"n:.
,,... ,...,,... TRI~ "'~ TAU u.... Al UMt MINJSTER ESTA TE N . fO "'10TICT YOW' PWOHIUY I ~~~·Clrele. coaaa To all he.Ira. ~nefidaft-. AlUH! "MAY N IOU> AT A PUMJC
TheF1Ct111oot ~ ...,._,.. credlton and contf~ent To all hetn ben~fld.a.tttt, 1.A&.1. • vou ... DAN IOU·
'-*to_..,. WM fl9d In~ crecllt.on of ERNEST D. recUto d tln nt NAnoN °"THI NATUM °' n.I County on May 11, 1113 '1LI! NO. o ... , .. 0 .u and .........,_., who c rt an con gen\ l'lllOCll.OINQ AOAINeT YOU, n 1ee,1 ~ H ..--~ crtdJtort of PETER C. REID vou aHOUU> c<*TACT A LAW·
Anthony JQftn "°"'°· 450 eam-may be otherwtR interested AKA PETER CHARLES VP.
bftclOt Cllc:tt. o.tt MeM. CA In the wW uv:J/ot estate: REID .,,d peonons who rn11y On June 28, 1914. ti • 30 AM.
02$27 A Utl i.. •• .......__ f ,__, •~ h i~ ·-"" • Default 8ervtc::. ComPtnY. IN: .. • JOtln William IYtlna. 1071 8udt· ' peu1 on .... ~· ln:.u .,.. ot rw._ interes~ m C&1110f'nl• corporation u dlAy ap. lnOban'I Cit~ NftPOt1 IMCh, CA by BETH WILLIAMSln the the wtU and/or estate. po1ntedTtwttMu.nderll'ldPllfwMt
t2eeo SuperiOr Court of On.nae A pt\itlon hu been filed 10 Deed of Trwt NOOl'dtd ~try
TN01stlneteW11oondUC1ed bV• County requeaiina that by IUCliARD F. LUCKEY ~f~l~~:·:rh!=6:.2t:! U-::.~ ::J;::'lr> 8ETH Wll..1.J.AMS bo ap. ln the Superior Court o,f Or-county A41Gord« of Orano-County,
Thi followtng l*'90n• .,. doing
t>ualneee u :
NAMm ITAft•NT The lollowlng pet'IOfl 11 doing
Tiie loltoWlno l*IOnt ate doing bullMll U .
bullneae as: DELLA INTERIORS. 2111 Ste
Jame. F t<.,n, Vice Preeioent
Thi• ata1ttn«11 wta Ni.cl whh Ille
C<>unty Clerk of Orenge County on
May 25, 1984 ~t
Thi• ltttement WU llltld with the pointed as pertOnal ttp-anae County n!qUC!IUng that Sitt• of Ctllfornl• EHOUt.0
County Cl«k of Orange County on raentative to adrnlnllter the RICHARD F LUCKZY be QEOROE A. MOLINA en<t MART J I. 1H4 0 . MOLINA. WILL SELL AT PUI u;e i.tilMd Otano-COUt o.11'( Ht&tt of ERNEST . appolnted as pel'IOnal rep· AUCTION TO HIGHEST 81 Pffo~ June 1•. 21. 2• . .My 5. ..... SALMON (IJ.ndcr th~~-~ntative to administer the FOR CASH lP•Y•bl9 at t Of MIQAN'S ltREFERREO
TICKETS. 14200 Culvw Of Ste O.
Irvine, Cellf 127 14
81...ACK SHEEP BISTRO, THE, 200, lull~.. Cenl~ Or , !Nine,
690 Capital St , Cofta M-. Calif. CA 9'715
12827 Suzann 8 Burke, 16 6rookllone,
Publlahed Orange Cout Otlly
Pllot June 14, 21. 28. July 5, 19&-4 T-+4 pendent Admin.lltrauon of f!ltate oC PETER C. REIO 1n lawful moner, of tM tied ---.. ---.,.-..,,.-nl'r----.-. Estates Ac\). The petition lJ • v... PETER CHARLES StatM) 11 the ront enttanot to LAIUfle Hodgea, 903 Agate St .
Anahelm,Callf·02804
Megan Hodgea. 903 Agata St.
Anaheim. c.llf 1280<&
Thofnaa Frat1klln Harrl90n. 890 lrvlne, CA 02714
Ce911tl St . Coate Mesa Cahl Thi• butllMll 11 conducted by an ~2827 1ndlvl0ual
Maribeth S..ton, 2784 0.hkoeh Suiann 8 Bul'tl•
Ave Anaheim. c.llf 1280e Thll Jta1ement wee flied ""''h the
Ml.JC NOTICE
FteTmOUI au ... 11
NA.Ml ITATIMCHT
~ nu 1""' ~ Sulla 2t1 C2ncf FIOOf). 25200 fut I.a set for hearing ln Dept. No. 3 REID (under the lndepen-Paz Roed. Laguna Hiiia, Ctlltornlt,
ITATnmNT °' at 700 Civic Center Dr dent Administration of F.a-aJt right. title and lf'lt.,Mt com...-ct ~!!~...,." °" ~ ... C!!,. West, Santa Ana, CA 9270i tates Act). The petlllon is 9et to anCS now Mid by It under Mid ~'''"""• --Jul 6 190.0 9 30 AM f De N 3 Dead ol Tru1t In the Pfopert)' lttu· Thia butlMM It conctucted Dy a
oen«ll pet1Mrlhlp
UiurleHOOOM T~ atatement WN n1ec1 'Mth the
County Clettt Of Orange County on
June 3, 11&4 f'Jt1111
Publlatled er.nge Coeat Dally
Thia busmeu 1s conducted by a County Clerk of Orange County on
g«ieral partner#llP May 15 Ila. FMMM
Thomas F Harrtton Publllhed Orange Cout Dally
The following pet'90nl are dOlng
stneuu
TMIOllowtng~tiewaban-on y . O"I at : . or hearing In pt o at ated In Mid County an0 State o.
dOMd ,,,_'*of tri. Flctlttoue lk*-IF YOU OBJECT to the 700 Civic Center Or • West. scribed ... C:P:r~L~~~) S8~~~ granting .of the pet.It.ion, you Santa Ana. CA 92701 on July Tllat Pof11on ot Lot 109. TtllGI No.
Thil 1ta1ement was flied with IM Pilot June 7 14 21 28 1834
:OUnty Clerlt or Orange County on TH·3
RHOTHRIFT ASSOCIATES, 840
-port Centat Or • Ste SCIO, New-BRITE CARPET CL£ANlRS. 511 should either appear at the 11 1984 at 9 30 AM JOO. In the City of Coet• Meea ..
W«ldy Ln . Coeta .... CA. 12$27 hearing and state you objec-iF YOU OBJECT to the rr = ;r;c:r~~:· =
Piiot June 14 21. 21 July 5 198-4
TH40
flt&.IC NOTtcE
June 4, 1984 n.t7'4$ P\8.IC NOTICE
t Beadl. CA 92660, Attn LOUii
Huskins Publllhect Orange•cout Dally
PllOt Jun6 1•. 21 28 July 5, 1984 -----------RhOvate Assoclata. • Caltfornla
FICTITIOUI IUltNEll tm1ted partnerlhlp, 415 21 .. Str .. t, TH22 NAMI ITATEIUNT ante Monica, CA ~2 Pl&JC NOTICE Tile follOWlng per1on 11 doing Thia bu11ness Is conducted Dy· a
Ftennou1 IUllN211 buSlnea .. imtted partnetshlp.
NAMI ITATIMINT FICTITIOUS 8UllNlll ADMIRAL YACHTS OF NEW-Theodore H F\llodes. Pr..ident
Th• following peraon II doing NAME STATEMENT PORT BEACH 3424 VI• Opor1o This 11a1ement was flied with lhe
bu1lne11 H The tollowlng persona are doing Suite 202. Newport Beach, CA ounty Clerk of Orange County on
J & H REALTY & INVESTMENTS, bualneee a 126$3 ay 30 1Q84 Fa.1062
~96 Via O. Agua. San Juan PARSEC. 3107 Trinity Ori,,., Stephan Joseph 6ernat. 500 oula A. Huallln1 •
Caplatrano. Calll 92675 Coata Mesa. Calif. 92626 Cagney Lane Newpor1 Beech, CA rall a Menella
Juanita P Hogan. 33596 Via De Bruce Krochman. 3107 Trinity 112683 · ultalOO, 1IOOAv..,ueofttlel..,.
Agua, San Jutn Cap11trano, Call! Oflva, Costa Mesa. Call!. 92626 Thi• bullneu 11 conduoted by· an Loa Angele•, CA. to017
92875 Rick E.dgmon. 23892 Wlndrnlll. indlYlduat Published Ofange Coal! Dally
Thi• bullnHt 11 conducted by: an Laguna Niguel C•llf 92877 Stephen JONPh Bernat llot June 7, 14. 21, 28. 1984
Individual .1911 Gomberg, 8434 Rochell81. Thia 1t•tamen1 ...... filed with the i-----------'T.;.H;..·.-13
Juanita p Hogan Cucamonga. Call! 91730 County Clerk ol Orange County on Ml.IC NOTICE
Thlt 11atemant WH Iliad with lhe Jon Singer, 26322 Via Logrono May 23, 198" F2'4115S 1------------
County Clerk of Orange County on Mltslon Viejo. Calif. 90249 Publl1hed Orange Co&1t Dally FICTITIOUi 8UllNEll
May 23, 11&4 fMelm Thia buslnM1 ls condue1ed by on Piiot June 7 14, 21, 28, 1984 NAME ITATE•NT
Publllhed Orange Cout Detty unlncotl)Ofaled as1ociat1on Other __________ TH_-_7 Tile l<Mlowlng peraona are doing
The FlcthlOua 8uaklele Ntnle re-lions or file written objec-arant•na of the petit.lon, you record• of Orange County. 0.-terred to at>oYt wat flied In Orange · with th L.-f •· ~-o t-" County on Aug 4. 1111 Fill NO. uons e court UIC ore should eh.her appear at the sc.rlbed as vnO'#I
F187717 the he .. ..1..... Your appear-he,.,.,na and state you obM>r-Beginning •t the moll f.uterty ...... "6 -~-o r-come< of Mid Lot 100. runnlnt Rot>ett O. BeletachmJu. 501 a.nee may be in pet90n or by uons or file written ob,ec-then~ Nortt1_t.,1y atono 1ri. Wencl~ Ln · Coeta M .... CA. 02921 your attorney tions wt th the court before Norttlffstenyllneof &aid Lot f02 00
Shln.y A Bel.nc:hmltt, 591 IF YOU ARE A CREDI th h y . leet; thence SouthWMterly parallel Wsnd'; Ln , Coett Meu, CA. 12927 . -e earmg. our appear #Ith the Southeuterty Hne of Nld
Thl•bullMMwtac:ondue1edby TORoracontingentcreditor ancemaybempersonorbylot. 12000 fHt, thtnce
an R=~Oa1~1~ wife) of the deceueci, you must your attorney South .. tt.,ly parallel with the
Thia l1ttement wu fll«I wtth tM file your claim with the IF YOU ARE A CREDI-Nort~teffy tine of utd Lot,
Counly. Clen( of Or-Count" on court or present it to the per-TOR or a contingent creditor 102·00 feet to the Southeuterly line
M -·..-' of said Lot, thence Northealterly 9Y 25, 1984 sonal representative ap· of the deceased. you must 120.00 teat to the point of ti.gin·
Publllhed Or•• CO.at Dally inted b h · ·th· fil l · h L. Piiot JuM t-4, 21• 28. July 5, 1984 po Y t e court Wl in e your c aun wit tue nlng.
TH--34 four months from the date of court or present it to the per-The street addreu and othet ____ ...... ______ ,._ f 1 . :;ommon dnjgnatlon, II any, ot the
uuu issuance o etters u sonal representative ap· real propert~ dncrlbed •boY• It P\8.IC NOTICE provided in Section 700 of pointed by the court within purported to be: 2315 Orange.
r:tentiOul ~H the Probate Code of Cali· four months from the date of Co91• Mna, Calllornl•
NAMI tTATl-..T fomia. The time for filing first issuance of letters as The undefalgned Tru•t .. di!"-·
The loll~ng '*"°"It doing claims will not e~_pri,gr. ro~·Jf.k-'r 'f9. A ~ ·?:•
bullneMu. ....-~ ----~,~ _.,,. "1¥0ea"\e 'CO<ie Ot CaJj. oommondeslgnatlan,lfany,~
. Co. • MeM, . 1282 of the ~a.ring no~ above. fomia. The time for f~g rs:; l8le wlll be !Md.. but
PllOI June 14, 21. 28."111¥ 5, 1au.. than • partneranip P\Bl.IC NOTICE "Ju11neu u . •
--, • • TM J ".· r~~~t'~' ~~--· ..Al~~-.-.:-~l""l'T--l~:""'r'":'!! .1~ 1~~v9~ ·-s~ ·.o:_:.::~:-_....,.'·~'·M-~n-\:W.a;'t(o-ftfr•:g..e&i~l-;~~™ibirJi~!' .-~~~;iMi l't&.IC NOTICE June 5. 1983 FM74a5 NAMf ITAnMPT 110. Newport BMch. CA. 12eeo
Publllhed Ora"""' Cout Dally The loltowlng Patt0n1 are doing ONY $yatern1, Inc., C&llfomla. ~~~~~~er' F-ederal, YOU MAY EXAMINE clauns will not expire pnor #lthoul covenant or wWTVtty, -.
FICTITIOUI IUllMll
NAMl ITATIWNT The following per90n It doing
t>ullneu u
JOM ENTERPRISES. 824 I Wam-
et A ....
153, Huntington e..cti. Calif
12547
Jamee F Mullowney, Sr 824 1
WI/net Ave
153, Huntington BMch Calif
92647
Thlt bullnM9 11 conducted by an
lndMdual
Jamee F Muttowney, Sr
Thi• 11at9!Tlenl WU flied ""Ith th•
County Clerk of Orange County on
June 11, 1184
FW174
Publlaneo Orange Cout Dally
Piiot June 21 , 28, July 5. 12. 1184
TH53
flt&.IC NOTICE
FICTITKWI IUltHIH
NAMI' ITA TIMINT
The IOllowing peraona are doing
butlneu H
(1)H ARB OR PACIFI C
'2)HARBOR·PACIFIC (3)HARBOR
PACIFIC EOUITIES (4)HARBOR-
• PACIFIC EQUITIES S)HARBOR-
PACIFtC EQUITIES INC 4101
WPtetfy Piece
108 N-P<>f1 Beecn Calif 12ee<l
H1rt>or-Pac1t1<: Equlttet. Inc. Cah-
rom1a. 4101 w .. 19'1)' Pi.ca Sutt• 108, N9WP0'1 a.ac:n Calif 12eeo
Thia buJinMS 11 conduCl«I by •
:orpe>ratlon
C E Jeneen. Vice Prnlo.nt
Th11 11ataman1 ••• ftleO wtth the
County Clerk of Orange County on
June 5. 1184
1'2A7411
Publllhed Orange Cout Dally
Piiot June 14. 21. 28. July 5 1184
TH23
flt&.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI IUllNHI
NAME ITAnMINT
The fotlowlng peraon1 are dotng
1>Y11nen u
THE POnERY PLACE, 31738
Rancho VleJO Roed, San Juan
C.pl1trano, Call! 12875
Kllhlaen Jeen Francia, 447 Ham-
ilton. Coeta M .... Call! 12827
Vincent Mich ... Sheehan. 447
Hamll1on, Coeta M .... Calif 12827
Th11 bualneu It conducted by a
limited partne<lhlp
Kath'-1 Francia
Thi• 11atemant -Ille<! wtth tM County Clartt of Orange County on
June 4 1984
F2474.211 Publllhed Orange Cout Dally
Piiot June 14, 21 28. July 5. 1184
TH27
DEATH NOTICES
CLARK
WILLIAM BOUCHER
CLARK. N ewport Beach
June 23. 1912-June 15, 1984
Survived by his wife
Priscilla. son and daughter
in-law Kit and Paultne
Clark. Memorial services
w1U be held Wednesday
June 27. 1984 at 3 .30 PM at
St James Episcopal Church,
Newport Beach
HAA•O" LAWN-MT OllVI
Monuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
5-40-5554
..aa"CE IAOTHEAI
HLL IAOADWAV
MOATU~Y
110 Broadwa)
Costa Mtsa
842-9150
BAL T2 9EHGt.t40h
SMITH I TUTHILl
WUTCLIFF CHAPEL
..,.~ f 17th SI
Cos1a Meu
6•6 937 I
PACIJ'tC \ll!W
MIMOl'IAL PA"K
Cemel.,y • Mortu1ry
Cnt~I • Crema1or't'
3500 Pac11tc v • ....,, Ori"•
Ne-POrt Be.en
&4• noo
c
"•-bu•fnflS as 31131 MacArthur Boulevwd, Sutt•
Piiot June 14. 21 28. July 5 1984 G S L ENTERPRIZE. 431 WMt· 110, Newport a..cn. CA. 92eeo
Thia~ la conductect by:.,.. the file kept by the court. If to four months from the date preu or 1rnp11ec1. regarding uoe.
lndlvld\Jal · you are interested in the es-of the hearing nouced above. posaeAIOn. or encumbfanett 10 __________ T_H_30_ '1'1fnlter Ave NawPor1 e.acn. CA This buslneu 11 conclucted by· a
il2863 corporation
Oevtd SWWWI late, you may aerve u.pon the YOU MAY EXAMINE P•Y the remaining principal tum of Thia stat-t wu llled wtt" 1..... lhe note(•) MCUred by Miid 0.0 of Pta.IC f«>TICE
FICTITIOUI IUSINEll
NAME IT A TEMEHT
The following person ts dOlng
busln.u u
PB'S EQUIPMENT SALES &
LEASING 3857 Blreh Str"t Suite
180. N-pon Beeon, Calif 92660
F Peul Bunker 1716
Madagatcar. Coate Mesa. Calif
12828
Thia busineu Is conducted by an lndlvlduat
F Paul Bunker
Tllll 1tatement wae ltled.wilh the
County Clerk of Orange County on
May 25. 1184 . F141a4
Publlatted Orange Cou1 Deity
Pllol June 14. 21. 28. July 5. 1984
TH-31
MLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI BUllNHI
NAME ITATDIENT Tile lottowing Pl<~ 11 doing
business as
FAT 80Y S BARB Q 11430 Warn-
er Ave Fountain Valley ·ca111
92708
Karen Elsie Cnr111ansen 21286
Oraan1pray Lane. Hunllnglon
S..Ch. Caul 112846
Thia bu11neu •S conduc1ed by an
1ndlv1duat
Karen Etsie Christensen
This Slatemenl was llled w1tll lhe
County Clerk ol Orange Counly on
June 6 1984 F2475M
Published Oranoe CoaSt Dally
Piiot June 14 21 28. July 5. 1984
TH24
MLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI BUllNEH
NAME 8TA TEMENT
The lollowtng P9f$On ts doing
bu11neu ...
PLA VLANO ARCADE, 703
Edgewater. Balboa, Call! 92861
Alan Anthony Sandoval. 264 7
We1tm1n1tar Pl , Cost• M81&. CaJll
12627
This bu11neu 111 conducted by an 1ndlv1dua1
Alan A Sandoval
o-Lachenmyer, 43 1 w .. ,. David Naes.I. Prelk1ent
1Tlln11w Av• Nawpor1 a..cn. CA Thi• 11a1emen1 WU flied wtlh the il2683 County Clertt of Orange County on
Scott G LactlenrnY9f 431 Wnl· May 30, 1984 f3'7M1
m1n1tar Ava Newp()r1 BMcm. CA llafTJ H. •-n
92863 113 N. ~ Drtw, IMtt Flo«
Thia buain ... it conducted by· a le""1 HIU.. CA. 90210
;1ener•l partnersntp Publllhed Oranoe Coeat 0a11y
Gene LacnenmY9f Piiot June 7, 14, 21 , 28. 1184
Th11 11aternen1 was fifed with the TH-,.
County Clerk ol Orange County on BllDtlC NOTICE
May 23. 1984 FMISM 1----'"-UU\.-------
PIJbtlaned Orange Co&1t Dally
Pttot June 7. 14, 21. 28. 1984 FICTITIOU8 8UllNEH
NAME STATEMENT __________ T_H_~ The following peraon1 are doing
i lnesa u :
MUNSON PRIZIO DEVELOPERS, MLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUI IU8'Nlll 17711 Mitchell North, Irvine. CA.
NAMf ITATEMENT 12714
The fOllowlng per.on 11 doing Laurance N Munaon. 2 South En-
builnHs H clno. SOU1h Laguna. CA. 92677
J WM ENGINEERING 211()() Eut David P Prizio. t781 Ta<ry Lynn
:::oHI Hwy Su11e 200B, Corona del Lane, Santa Ana, CA 92705
Mar. CA 92825 Thts bu11ness 11 conducted by a
John Wtlllam Mahler 1691 MeN general pannerstitp
Or Coate Mesa. CA 92622 Laurance N Munson
Thi• business 11 conducted by an Tn1s statement ...... hied w11n Iha
ndividuat County Clerk of Orange County on
John Mahler May 24 1984 F2Aeet3
Thia 1tatemen1 wH hied w11n lhe Published Orange Coalt Oatly
:::ounty Cle<k ol Orange County on Pllol June 7 14. 21. 28 1984
May 23. 1984 F14U50 TH-21
Pubhltled Orange Cou1 OaJly
P1101 June 7 14 21 28 1964
TH-9
Pt.81.IC NOTICE
P\IJLIC f«>TICE
FICTITIOUS BUl!Nell
NAME STATE•NT The lol10w1ng person1 are doing
FIC TITIOUI IUSINEIS business H
NAME ITATEMENT HUNDLEY INDUSTRIES INTER-
TP'le lolfowlng pe<son IS dOlng NATIONAL. 3' 1 N Tullln, Sulle c .
business as Orange, CA 92867
COSTA MESA CLEANERS & tnternauonal Acqu1sltton, Corp
LAUNDERERS. 2228 Newport Blvd Cahlorn1a, 350 Bedford RO , Or-
Sulle 2 Cosia M .... CA 92627 ange. CA 92668
Stephen Y Oh. 22222 Anthony Douglas F Hundley, 9641 Harriet
Or . Et Toro CA 92830 Lo .. Anlhalm. CA 92804
Aulll S Oh 22222 Anthony Or . El Th11 buatneu la conducted by •
Toro CA 92630 general partner'ltllp.
This buslne11 is conducted by an Douglas F Hundley
ndlvldual Thia si..tement wu fll«I with 1he
Stephen y Oh County Clerk ol Orange Coun1y on
Th11 statement wu toed with the May 23 1984 ~
County Clark of Orange Coun1y on Published Orange Cout Dally
May 11 1984 f2'5711 Ptto1 June 7, 14, 21 , 28, 1984
Publllhecl Orange Coaat Dally TH-4
Pilot Jun• 7 14. 21, 28, lie.
TH-2 Pl8.IC M>TICE
Th11 llalemanl WU filed wfth the
County Clenl of Orenge County on
June 4 2984 '247'11
PubllShed Orange Coast Dally Pl&.IC NOTICE FICTlTIOUI 9UllNEH Pllol June 14 21 28 July 5 1984 ___ F_IC_TTT_IOU--.-.-U-llN£--.-.--NAMl ITATE•NT
__________ T_H...;2;.;.8 NAMe ITATEMINT The fOllowlng penons era doing
DllDtlC NOTICE The IOllOWing l)e'IOn 11 dOlng busina1 U '"~ bu1lneu u L W UNLIMITED, 50 Tarooco.
FICTITIOUI IUllNHS (A) SWEET DREAMS ICE CREAM 8011 606. trvtne. CA 92714
NAME ITATEMENT ~CANOY (Bl SWEET DREAMS ICE Vlncen1 L Abbalcia, 50 Tatocco
Tha following persons era d~ng CREAM & DESSERTS 31815 Soll 806. lrvlne, CA. 112714
bUSlneta H :::amino Capl1trano, San Ju•n Emery E. Moore. 2t0 Chicago,
HAIR &. NAIL EXPRESS 17455 Cap1t1rano. CA 92675 !Huntington Beaoh, CA 92648
Beach Blvd . Huntington 8eectt. ( 11 Watter E~ 121 Autumn Thi. buSlnen Is conducted by •
Calif 926-47 Stamey 31506 111 South Lagun1 general pertnerah1p
Heade or Naifs tnc California CA 92677 Vincent L Abbucla
174~5 Beach BIY<l Huntington Th11 business•• conduc1ect by an Thll 11atament was flied wl1h the
Beach Calif 92647 1ndMdual County Clerk of Or&nQI County on
Judyth Chambers, Presldanl Walter, Stamey Autumn Stamey May 23. 1954
Thia statement wu Ille<! wtlh the Thi• statement wu tiled with the FMe552
County Clark ol Orange County on County Clerk ot Orange County on Publllhed Oranoe Coast Detty June 13, 1984 F241175 May 10. 1984 F24963e Piiot June 7. 14. 21, 28, 19S.
Published Orange Cout Deity Published Orange Coast Dally TH-8
Piiot June 21, 28 July 5, 12. 1984 Piiot June 7 14. 21 28 1984
TH54 TH· 1 1~~~-~~-~-....:..:..:.....;. PtJJLIC NOTICE PU8UC NOTICE FICTITIOUI IUllNHI
Pl&.IC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 9UllNf8S FICTITIOUl IUllNE81 NAME ITATEMINT
NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT The lollow1ng person I• doing" bullMSI U The lolfoWing person II d0tng The lot1ow1ng person 11 doing bl) RECREATION INVESTMENT business •• bu11n ... as KITTY S LOVELY GIFTS 23532 SOUTH COAST MERCEDES C (2) PROMOTIONS ANO
El Te<o Ad Su11e 2952 R dol c c . SURVEYS co . 310 Fernando SI . 4 El Toro ca11r 92630 •n pri 0't' Mna •111 Sulla 403. B•IOO•. CA .. 926&1
8o Y 2"•"tG Hll 12628 R1cnerd O•mralh , 115 ng eon LM ......., reen I Cartos L Masin. 2601 West Aur· EdQ9Watet Balboa, CA 92861
El Toro Catol 92630 ora Sant• Ana Ca111 92706 fhls buStness "conducled by an
Th11 business •s conducted by an Tn1s bus•nau •5 conducted by an Individual nd1111dua1 1nd1v1dull
Bong Yeon Lee C•rlos L Masini R Oarnrath .
Th11 stalemenl was hied with the This '111emant wa~ 1 8<I with the C Thi~ 'b~t~1Q;11 h~ with the
County C'-'k of Orange County on County Clerk of Orangfl County on M~~~ 1:;,4 ° enge ounty on
June 6 1984 ,247He June 4 1984 f>f74"7 Y fMIA7
Pubhsf'lecl Or•nge Coe11 Oa11y Pubt1shed Orangt> Coul Oatly Orange Cou1 Dally
P1lo1 June 14 21 28 July 5. 1984 P1101 June 14 21 28 Juty 5. 198-4 14, 21. 28. 1984
TH25 TH29 TH-5
FREE HEARING TESTS
County a.rt";.' Orange CountY;; executor or adminiatraior, or the fUe kept by the court. If Trust, with intw .. t tnereon, ...
.Juoe 1s. 1M4 ""171 upon the attorney for the ex-you are lnterested in the es-provided In said note(•). advanc:.,
Pubbhed ~ Cout Deity ecut.or or adminiatrator, and tale, you may serve upon the l any, un<tw the t8fl'M of MIO Deed
Puot June 21. 28, .r~ 5, 12. 19&-4 file with the court With executor or admirustrator, or ~!:·~f ft:S·T,:~_re and~ ~,:
__________ TH_5_2 proof of .ervioe, a written upon the attorney for the ex-truat• created by uJO Deed of
"8JC fl)l'ICE ;equest stating that you de-ecutor or administrator, and Truat.
ftC11110Ut .,... ..
N~ITATWMKNT
The folloWtng l*'90I\ It doing
bUIJneN .. :
( 1)PYRAMIO CONSUL TINO
(2>THE UTILE WIZARDS UNIVER-
SAL PANTEOHICOS, (3)WHITE
UNICORN PAOOUCTS, 202 11th
St.
7, Huntington BMctl, Calif. 12&48
Jc>Nph Milton Munkeby, 202 11th
St
7, Huntington &Moh. Cellf. t2S48
Tht. butlneu la condue1ed by: an lndMdual
JOMPh Munket>y
Ttlll atatement wa flied With the
County Clerk ol Orange County on
June 13, 19a. 'Ml110
Put>llahed Orenge Cotll Dally
P1101 June 21 28 • .Mr 5. 12, 198-4
TH51
sire special notice of the fil-file with the court with The 101&1 amount of the unpaid . . balance of the obligation aecured Ing of an inventory and ap-proof of service, a written by the prOl*tY to be told an0
pra.isement of estate URta or request stating that you de-rauonabl• utlmated cos11. a.x•
of the petitions or accounta sire specw notice of the fil-pen ... and advanoea at the time of
mentioned in Section 1200 ina of an lnventory and ap-the lnltlal publloatlon of lhe Nollet . -..., olSalelaS10,997.41 and 1200.5 of the California prai.sement of estate assets or The benellcl&ry undat aald Deed
Probate Code. of the petitions or accounts of Tru11 heretofore executed and
• D0 ~Ceall 1J. ~LapePlr S mentioned In Sectio':' 12~ ?ea1:;::',!~~ :t"~'*.,!, ~ "4 1" e u.:: aca, te. and 1200.5 of the CaJ1fonua mend f0< sate. ana a Mittan Notice
310 Probate Code. of Default anO Election to Sell Thi
Lapna HUl1, CA. tH53 Reid, Babba1e & CoU under1lgned uu..o uld Notloa of
85t·8451 3800 Or&Dae Street Default and Election 10 Sell to be
Published Oran ,.,___ p O B 1300 recorded in. t.he county where the ge '-'Ullllt • • ox r..i property 11 located.
Daily Pilot J~ 14, 15, 21. Rlvenlde, CA. 9%502 Date: June 4, 1984
1984 THF-46 '82-1771 DEFAULT SERVICE COMPANY,
·-----------· Published Orange C.oast ~<;.1d Trustee flta.IC NOTICE Dally Pilot June 14, 15, 21. 25200 Eut La Paz Road, •217
ftCTTTIOUl IUl•tl 1984 THF-45 Laguna Hiiis. CA. 92653
NAME ITATEMIHT 11i t855-6650
The follow!"" -....... dol P\Bl.IC NOTICE By Jaoei M App President ·-. ....-~·•er• ng Publl_ .. __. Ora"""' Coast 0•11" Pilot bu11ne11 as ..,._, .... 1 '1CltTIOUI _,...... TRANSAM POOL ANO SPA, NOTICI TO CMDfT°"I June 7 14. 21, 1984
NAMa ITATDllNT l 228 M Pl Cot1 C Of 1UUC -n.ANl'E" TH-17 The followlng l*'IOOI we dOlng 126.27 eyet .. a M..... A lSecl 8101-e107 UC C)
bulineu u Nlerloli M Saller 2""• M Notice ,. tlat•Dy given to the Ml.IC NOTICE VAN KLEEFF & WILLIAMS, \51 I . • £4>.. eyet creditor• ol KEITH VAN HOESEN,
E 211fSI A.pl 2. CO.It Mela, callf. Pl .. Costa Mela. CA 92627 INC Transferors. whOM chief ex-llOS4
92827 Thi• bulinesa 11 eonducied by-•n 9Cu1tva addreu Is 5192 w .. t-1ndlvldual Aerotrede Inc CallfornCt, 151 E Nlcholla M. Satter mk'lll« Ave , City of Wt11mlnst•
NOTICE Of TIWITIE'I IA1.I
T.I . No. M-110
Apt 2, Cotta MM&. C.111. 12827 Tl\lt statemenl wu hied will\ the County of Orange, State of Call-
Thl1 buslneN •• 6oncklcted by • County Clenl of Orange County on Ion~• 1hat a bulk tran1lar 11 about
YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UNOER A
OEEO OF TRUST, OATEOJuly 12J~!
1979. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTIUl'I
TO PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT
MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATIOH
OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU
SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER.
corporat!On .IOCUXXXXJOI '*'91• to be made to EL JAOUEL. INC. Jonn W. ven Ki.et!, PrMldent Tran1ferM wtl<>M home addr ... 11 Thia 11atemen1wd111«1 wtth lhe Publllhed Orange Cout Delly 4 Statbural Court, City of N9wpor1
County'Cl«tc of Ortrige County on Piiot June 2 t, 28· JW)-5, 12· l084 Beach, County of Orange, Stale of June 13. 1N4 ,.,..,. 1 __________ TH_·~82 CalllOfnla
Pub~ Orange Coat Dally P\8.IC NOTICE TM prOf>Wty to be tranaterred 11
Piiot June 21, 28, July 5, 12. 1084 de9crlbed In general u : All 11ock In __________ T_H ... 4.-1 NOTICa Of lr.Oe, llxturM, equipment and good On July 13th, 1984, at 9: 15 a.m.,
ORANGE COAST TITCE COM·
PANY. a California Corpe>ratlon, aa
duly appointed TrullM uncfat and
purauant to Deed of Trull recorded
July 18th. 1979, u tn11. No. 2332t,
In book 13233. pege 434, of Ottldal
Recot<t1 In the of11oa ol the County
Recorder of Orenge. Slate of Cef.
lornla. Executed by EdWln C. BIMt
and Cynthia c. Blake WILL SELL AT
PUBLIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST
BIOOE.R FOR CASH OR CMECK AS
DESCRIBED BElOW (l)e)'9bi. at
llme of Nie In lawful ITIOM)' of 1M
United Stat•> a1 the rront entranoe
lo the Old Orange County
CounhouM. loeated on Santa Ant
Blvd .. between Sycamore St. l
Btot0'#9y, Santa Ana, Callfomta all
right. title. anO tnt.,.,t conwey.o to
and now held by It undtr Nlct Deed
of T rual In Ille l)(Oparty sllwted In
said County and State deecribed .-:
P\8.IC M>TICE
FtCTmOU9 ., .....
MAMI ITATl•NT
The tonowtno peraona .,. doing t>ullnen u ·
SANVISTA DEVELOPMENT
FUND f , 1, L 0 ., 17891 Mltchell North,
lrvfne, Calif 92714
Bteton Conttrucrtton Inc., Cell-
fornla Corl)Ofatlon, 111t1 Mltchel
Norlh. IMne, Calif. 82714
Sanvlata Development Co ..
17691 Ml1chell North. Irvine, C&lll.
12714
Thia bullneta la oondUctect by a
llmlled pertnerlhlp
Oerwllt Fergu90n, C6fi>«•t• S.C-ralary
Th" 1flt9ment WU med wtlh the
County Cleftt of Orange County on
June 13, 1N4 ,_1•
Pubtllhed Orange Cout Detty
Piiot June 21, 28, July 5, 12, 11a.
TH55
Mt.IC NOTICE
rtCTmoul MlaMll
: NA• ITA,.._.,.,
The followlng pereon la doing
butlnMl&a' •
AUSTAALASIA EXPORT, 1te7
Braemar Way. Newport Beach,
Calif 92660
Tamela Sue Elcllam. 1887
BrMmar Way, Newport Beach,
Call!. 02860
Tht1 bulfneN 11 Condueled by en
tndlvldual
Tamei. Ek11am
Tn11 afatemant wu flied with IM
County Olene of Orange County on
June 13. 1184 'M111
PubllaMd Orano-Coul o8ity
Pilot June 21. 21. Juty 5112, 19&-4
TH66
INVITING ..,, will of that CM¥ron Ou anO Servtce
Notlct la llereby glY9n that the Station bullneu known u "NEW-
Board of E<tuc.llon of the IMne Uni-PORT CHEVRON STATION" and
fled Sclhool Diltrlet of <>range Coun-ioo.ted at 3531 Newpor1 Blvd .. City
ty Cellfornla, wtN reoelYe eeeled bide of Newport Beech, County of Or·
up to 10:00 A.M. Tlllnclay, .M'9 ange. Stat. of callfornlt.
28th, 1084, at wtilc:tl ume Nici ~ The bulk trtntfet wlN be conaum-Ml be put>lldy opened and reed tor mateo on or aft., the 10th day ol
TYPEWRITER SERVICE FOR July, 1984 at 10 00 A.M. at ACTION
MAINTENANCE ANO REPAIR AT ESCROW, INC ATIN: Marilyn
VARIOUS LOCATIONS. Std con-Watmoteland. wtioM tdd,_. 11
dl11ona and in.truc:tlona and bl<I 540 N. Tua11n Ave., Sulla 101. Santa
rorma may be obbllned at the omc. A,,., California 92705
of Flacal SuPPQrt SeMcta. 2941 That the lat date for mtng claiml
Al10fl A~. IMM, CeltfOJNa, In the aacwow referred to heteln II
(phone (714) 863-1044, Ext. 25.) July t. 1M4.
The Olttrlct ~the right to So ttt u la known to the Trana-~ any or all 8kta or 10 waMl any ftt ... all bullneae ~ and ad-
lrregutarltlee or lnfonnall1i.t In any dt ..... Wed by IM Trenet.ror for
8lOa or Jn the bl<ldlng. the Pt8' thr .. yeara are SAME
trvlne Unlfled School Olslrlet Ttlla bulk tranafer I• aubj.ct to
A. Stanley Coray Calllorn11 Uniform Commercial
AuttlC>ftzed Agent Code Becilon 6100
Publlahed Orange Cout Otlty Pilot Dated. June 11, 1984
June 14, 21, 1014 T-43 George E Llec.r. Secretary
Tran1far ..
Publllhed Oranoe Cout Dally Piiot P\8.IC NOTICE
K·1t1'0I
ffCTIT10Ut IU .... 11
NA• ITATl•NT
June 21, t984
Loi 2 of trect 3380. In the City of
Costa Mesa. as per map recorded In
Book 133. Pagae 34 lo 31, Ml9-
eetlaneou1 mape, Jn the office of the
County Rec0<de< of said County.
TH·47 The llreet a<tdr .. of IM reel
The totlowlng pefaon1 trt doing
bullnetl u :
LASTING ENDEARMENTS, 1710
Pomona Avenue, Suite C-4. Cotta
M .... CA.92826
Alanar Corslof'atlon, CallfOfnla,
t670 PllC«llla, CorCH1a del Mar.
CA. 12625
Tiile bullneu fl conOucted by: a
corporation
David F. Mor~. Seoratery
Thia ltatement wM med with the
County Clen( of Orange County on
May 24, 198-4 ,__,,
Dmcl, ........ hq.
Voe,eMn. -.non, KhaflNlft & O.C·
:;: 9-th Qnnd ..... '"",,..,
-----------properly d .. crtbed above I• Pta.IC NOTICE purported 10 be: 2918 Java Ro.cf. Costa Mesa. ~ COUNTY The undwslgMO dleclalm1 etrt HA~ MUNtClf'Al COURT Uablllty fOf any lnoon'ect'*9 of the
..o1 Jambot .. INvd. street addre11 ano other common • .o. 9o• 2110 designation, 11 any anown herein.
Newpor1 -..Cfl, CA. .... 1M7 Said Mle wilt be mede, bUt
Plalnlltf CITY NATIONAL BANK . .-tlthout covenenl or warranty, .ic·
• national banking ltlOClatlon press or Implied. regar<tlng lltlt.
0 • f • n d a n 1 T H 0 M A S poSMSllon, or enc:umbrancee, to
TUNSTALL: KENNETH DEROY and pay tM remaining princlpel 1Um of
ROGEA R CANNON lhe note(1J MClUred by aalO Deed of
CUt No 49385 Tru1t. with lnt•"t ther9on, tit
lutiMIONI provided In Hid note(•). ..tvancea,
NOTICRI Y.v f\aya bean 1ued. 1f any. un<ter the tan'M of uld Deed n.. OCMll't me, deckte .... net JCM1 of 1'ruS1. f.... cnargea anO h •
•hMvt ""' betftt "-rd unleta per\MS of the Truat .. Md of tM
fCMI l'"POftd wttt1Jn IO deJ1. AMd ll'\llta CtMled Dy Mid Deed of ltM tn~ Wow. Tru11.
111111-.,. MnnM" Loe ...... CA.. IOOP1·1• r~,. ""'""' PublllhM Orange Coeat Delly
II you wltf'I to Mek the ldYIOe of The total amount of the unptlld
.,, attorney lo tl\11 matt•. you balanc:9 of the obligation ~
thoulO do eo J)fomplly eo that your by the prapeny 10 be told and
Nrlt1en rM90f'IM. JI any, may be rN10n•ble ea1lmated coet•, ••· ftleel on lime penMS and tdveno. ti tM rime ot
NOTICE JHVITWQ ..,. Piiot May 31. June.,, 14, 21. 1984
........ 111..... 218$-64
NollOI It hereby Qf¥tn IMt tM •-II' MnTIC£
Boatd ot E<tucttlOn of tM !MM IJnl.. ---'"-·~ ---"-""------fled SdlOol Ofltrtc1 of Orange Couft,. fteTIT10U8 ..,... ..
ty, CMomta. wtn reoelYe Mated NANI ITATIMINT • bld1upto 2 00 P.M .. Thurlday. July lM followtng l*tOf'I 11 doing 15, 1984, at wtilctl lime Mid bldt wttl butlntu ea:
be publloly OI**' and Ned fOr !D'S O!TAIL, 9025 W"'* A"-,
CAFETl!RIA EQUIPMENT FO" Flounlaln Valley, CA. 12701
VARIOUS OISTAICT LOCATIONS. [duatdO L09U, 12181 Maypole
BIO condition. 9ocf ~lone Ind or .. Garden Grove. CA. t2MO bl<I forrnt may be ~ al tM Thlt buelneta It condllC1ed by: en
omce of f'lecal SuPPQrt a.rwtoea. lndMdu.i.
21M 1 Ahon Avenu._ Wine, Cel-fch.tatOo lOC*
fornta. (Pflone: 7141113-t044, at Thlt statement w11 ft9ed with tri.
AVllOtU1t.O ht llOO «Mmtn• lh• lnlttal pubHcatlon of tM Notlc»
dllde Et trlbuma. *M dectdlr ~ of Sale Is S.9.845. 15
Ir• Ud. alft ·~ • menoe qw TM t>enettclery under Nl(t OMld
Ud. '"'** Mfttto de ao ctt.. 01 Trust hel'etofOf'e executed and
t..a le~ CIW ... ue. delivered to tM un~ t wrll· " r• wWI to ...er tM afttc. of ten Oec11ra11on 01 oetault and O..
M ...,,_, ltt tfllt mettw, ,_ manCS !or Sale, eno •written Nollot
-...... do• promptlJ eo tNt row of O.t•u1t and Election 10 Sell. Tiit
IW""9ft r•111--. " "''• mar be undttalgned c:euMd Mid Notice of
fled Oft ttMt. · Default and El90tlon to Sell to be It Utttd .... NMotw et OM-recottled In IM c:ounty ""*-tM .... de tlft Ml 1..., en .... eeun-r.t property la IOctited
le, ••lt•tla hao erlo lfl· Datt: June 15, t9M
BEACH CITIES -Free electronk
bearing test.A will be given on Thurs-
day, Friday and Saturday, June 21,
22, 23 from 9AM to 6PM at Beach
Citiu Hearing Aida, 20932
Brookhunt (et Atlanta), Ste. #20.1,
Huntington Beach, CA.
test at leut once a year. If .there i11 a
hearin., problem, a Cree electronic
hearina tett may reveal that newly
developed method.a of correction
will help, even (or thoee who he~
been told in the put that tt buri:ni
aid would not help them.
25) COUnty Cl«ll. of Orwioe County on IMne UnlftecUkf'OOI ~ May 22. 19&-4
............ de .. t. tMMra, IU Orange COMt Title Compen~
IUI Utta ewtta. al NJ ......... 4MO R T111lln Aw., 8eint1 Ana.
,_...,,,....,_.a tleMN. Ct 927t1
A hearing aid 1peciafo1t will ~
available to givt thete free tat.A at.
the Huntinaton ProfMaionaJ Plaza.
The tnt. have been arranaed for
anyone who 1u.pe<:U they are IQtir\(
their hearing. Sueh penona sener
ally .. Y they can hear but cannot
understand converution T•tinc
with the lltat eJ.ctronic equipment
will incUc:ate wMther it can be help·
ed electronically.
F.~o , ptel&Jly thoee over 60,
lh<>Wd bavo an alectton•c bearin1
For thoee wishing the free t.t. but
w1nt. to avoid waitins, 11' 1ppoint.·
ment. for a 1pecific day and Ume
m$)' be arranged by phoning (714)
964·7906.
The1e tree hearin1 t.elt.I are aivan
for the purpCIM of making 1electio11i1
llnd adaptetiom of electonic hMf. ma inatnuntnta.
Available (or impection on the tell
dayt will be th.t NU EAR AJl·fn -
The·Ear bearina wbkh is •~1
d•iptd for nerv• d rn-.
PleaH call ah•ad tor &J> appolD&meat to avoid waltl
A.. ltenltf Corey ,....,
Authottlld Aotnt P\lbllaMcl Orange Co..t Olly
PllbltaMd Oral'IOe C4*t Deity Plot Pilot ~ st "'-., . 14, 2 '· 1114 Aine n 21. 19'4 2Mt"4 TtH1
I
t •TO TMI l»lnNDAWT1 l d¥I (714)558-2838 =I". ,_ ........ '9 "'9 By Mactellne aayr. ........ ,... If ,... wt.II .. Pubbhed Orenot c:o.t DallJ ~ *9 ......._ ,_ lllWC. P410t .NM 21. 21. Juty s. tt84 ._ • o..,.. tnet thla tummont IH:M
• ~ on )'OU, lltt wilt! ltlls COIJft
I •ttt.n r91POnM to tM ciomo&a6nt
Unleel you do. ~ default Wiii bt :'ff~°"~~'':,:-'~ ,._... ITAf ... IH
fUdOamen• lgllntt you '°'the,..., '!-f~ l*tOnl .. **"
oemanded ln tr.. ~ wtiiCh bu ... -could ,_,.It 111 ;ernlth'Nnt of THE FOU COMPAHY, 1111
..... teklnQ of~ Of P<~ ~~"'""'· Cotti
'::':-........ ,..qwtted In tM cam. LanMar Inc, a Olllltom. Corpof•
DeNd Oc1 U 1N1 eteon, 1711 I' t.ttlla A~
J l'ET~. ~ Coeta Meta. Cell 91621
llr: IUIAN MOtfA. o.uty _ Thll ~ la conct\IC\ed t!J. IAlml , Ma.'OUUC.O corporation IMUAA PAVI lmN ~ w Cool\. P~t "'1 ...... llW.; ~ ,..... Ttl I tatenwtl ... rited "4111 tf'lt ......, ._,CA. •tt Countr C.ti. of 0r.,. ~IY .,, flu~ Or1tn0t eo..1 oa11'V Poot JU!le •• • 1 "' .......,
M'le?, u lt.21. tll4 TlM'O ~1:= .. ~ly II. t~'
lM
J,
NOTICI C» lWMTU'I IAU T ........ .,.
NO TIC I
YOU AM -DVAUl T U1mU A DHD Of TNWr, DATIO A..-
11. 1tn ....... YOU TAJCI AC-TtOM TO '9tOnCT YCMM ~
IRTV, fT llAY .. 80LD AT A,.._
UC IA~ • YOU MllD AN IX· '9.MCA f10M Of TNI NATUM OP
THI Pf'OCDDIMCI AQAIMT YOU,
YOU utOUL.D CCNfTACT A LAW· VP.
On .NM 21, 1tl4. at UO A M
Def11Utt Setvloe Company. Inc , a California COf'pOfallon .. duly .,,.
pointed Trust .. under and SKnuent to Deed Of Truet recorded lepttm-'* 20, 111711, N Intl No. 23131, In book 1S311, ~ S.4, of Otftclel
Rec'.Ofdt In the otnoe of the County Recotdet ot Orange Cou11ty Stat•
of ~ b~t9d by LOR· RAINE A. ELLINGER. an unmarri.ct woman )NILL SELL AT PUBLIC
AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIDDER
FOR CASH(~ a1 time Of ....
In l9WNI money of the llnttl!(l Stat•) at the front entranc. 10
Suite 217 (2nd"°°'>· 25200 EMt l.a Paz Aoed, lJlguna HIHa, Ce11fom1a.
all right, tltle and Int~ COf'l\1eyed
to and now held by It under Mid
Deed of Truet In the e>copeny altu-
ated In Mid County Ind State t»
ecrlbed ...
L01 II. Block 2e of Traci No. 112.
In the Ctty of~ 8Moh. eotm-
ty of Orange. State of C.Ufomla. a.
pet ~ recorded In Book 23,
J:>egea 5 and 8, Mlac:ellaneoue Mmpe, In the office of the County
Recorder Of M id County
EXCEPT thefefrom all Oii, g .. ,
mlnerall and othef hydroeatbona.
beloW • depth of 500.. feet, wltllOut
the right of 1Urface entry, u , ..
Htwd In ln1trument1 of 1'9COrd.
The ltrMt addr... and other
common dMlgnatlon, If any, Of the
rM! pre>peny deterlbed above I•
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
purl)Ort9d to ~. 435 Canal Street, D Newpott Buch. California
The undefllQned TruatM di•·
elalma any lleblffty for any Incorrect· neu of the atrMt lddreu ll'ld othef
common deelgnatlon, II any. lhown A tieteln.
-Said ule wtH ~ mede, but
wtthOUt C<Nenant °' warranty, ex· n > r..:-".;.... -"T. / ,--,.,.. "" _ _,,,."(,,,JJr 'f./7
pay the rM,aln~ Pf'lndpel au~ of
the noteC•I eecured by Mid Deed of
fruit, with Inter.et thereon, •
prOYtded In llld not.Cl), edYWlole,
.. II any, under the twme of Mid Deed
of Truat, r.., d\wgea and ex·
pen ... of the Tru11M and of the
trulll CtMted by Mid Deed of
Trutt
The total amount of the unpeld
t>.iance of the obligation aacuted
by Iha pr<>pet1y to ~ IOld end
reuonlble •dmeted eoetl, ex·
per\Me and advancea II the time of the Initial publlcatlon of the Notice
of Sale la 1218,857.17
The beneficiary under Mid Deed
'of Truat heretofore axec:ut~ and
dellYered to the underllgned •writ· ten Oectwatlon of Default and 0.-
mand fOf 8ale1and1 wrttten Notloe
of Oef9Utt ana e.tectlon to Sell. The
un<lert6gned cau.-Mid Notloe of Oef8Ult and Etectton to Sell to ~
recorded. In the county where the
rlll property It located.
Date: June 6, 11184
DEFAULT SERVICE COMPANY,
INC.
25200 EMt Le Pu~. Suite 217
UQunl Hlllt. CA. t2t53
714185S-M50
By JAMI M App. Prealdent
Publi.hed Orange Coeat Delly Piiot
June 7, 14 21, 11184
TH-18
P\&JC NOTICE
T~ NOTIC( CW TMllTH'I IAU
T.I . •C111•
On July 11. 11184 at 10:00 a.m
ShMr1on1Amarlcan ExPf .. Tn.ilt
DMd ~. I~. • Tnm•. °'
Suc:ceuor Truttae or Subttl1uled
TruttM. of that C*'taln DMd Of
Trust executed by STEPHEN J.
MULLER AND DIANE M. MULLER,
Hutband and wife. and recorded
07128178 u ln1trument no 3208&,
In boot! 12773, Pf09 321 Offlclel
Record• of Orange County, Call-
lornla. and purtutnl to that <*1aln
Notice of Default and Elecilon to
W thereunder recorded 02/22/84 u Instrument no. 84-0730&8 Of Of.
llclll Reoordt of Mid County. WIH
under and pur.uant to Nld DMd of
Trust Mii It Public euctton tor c:Mh,
i.wtut money of the United Stat• of
America, 11 the North front en-
tranoe to the County CourthouM,
700 CMc: Center Drive WMt, Santi
Ana. CellfOfnla all that right tltle and
1nterMt con~ to and now he4d
by II under Mid DMd of Truat In the
property situated In said County
Ind State O..Crlbed •
PARCEL 1· Lot 14 Tract 3102, In
the City ot Colla Meal. County of
Orange, State of CallfOfnla .. per
map recorded In Book t 20 Pegee 3
and '1 of Ml9oellll*)U:t Mape In the
Office of the County R«»tder of
said County. EXCEPT therefrom an oll, gu.
mlnerala and ottier h)'Oroc:ari>on subtt~ tying beloW • depth Of
500 feet from the turface of Mid
property. but wtttl no right Of IUf· lace entry, u reearved In dMd re-
corded and raaerwd In dMdl of
record.
PARCEL 2: An aaaement for In-
gr.... agr... and pubtlc utllltlM •lonO the South 10 l•t of Lota 1 to
10 lnclullve and the NOfth 10 feet of
Lot1 11 to 20 lnetutlve. Tract 3102,
In the City of Cotta M ... , County of
Ofenge, State of Callfornta u pet
map recorded In Book 120 PllQM 3
ind 4 of MlacellaneOus Map1 In the
Office of the County R«order of
Miid County.
EXCEPT that Portion lnclUded
tlrithln Parcel 1 above deecnbed
The atreet add,... °' other com-
mon ~nation of Mid l)foperty
718 Jamee StrMt. Cott• Meaa.
Call10fnla 112828 Name and 1ddr111 of th•
~ at wtloM requee1 the sate .. betng conducted Federal
National MQ(tgage Aatodatlon c/o
Sheatton/ American Expreea Mort· aaoe Corp . t201 e HIQhland Ave .•
Sitt eem.tdlno. CA 112404
Direction• to the above property m~ M obtained by r41qUeetlng
lame In writing from the beneficiary
Nlthln 10 dayt from the first publl·
cation of thl• notice
Said u1e will be made Without
eoYenant of warranty, aicpreM or
1ml)lled, 11 to lltte. po1u111on "'
ancumbrancee to .. tlaty the \lnpald
b~ due on the not• MC\Ked by
Hid Deed of Tru1t to wit: t 113,aee 15, p4ua the foltowlna •tt-
mated coat1, expetltee anc1 No
,,.,,_ at the time ot the lnltlel pub-
11c:et1on of thlt Notice of Sele: Eattmated tru1t .. ·1 ,... end
r:otte In the amount of $2,W 11
lllu9 lntateet at the 11 7~ '* M1"1m on the ~ pMalpal bel-ance from 0$/011'3 to aale, p1ue
My ~ the beneftdary IMY ~ euttlortled or.~ed to pey If
tiny,'*" Wf'/ eccrued .... c:twoa o!\11 attorney ..... If l!'Y· YtN .,.1n o.f_,rt unCtet a deed Of
trust d 1.ct ~'Y e. 1111. unMll rou
tall• ec11ort to l)fOtect fQlf PfQP-erty, It mey be ao6d ., • pubic ...
If )'OU. need en ....,a.lion of tN '*'" Of the proceedlnQ ~,au. you atMIUtd. contact a lnyer.
OAT!~ M.y21, 1tM ~A"*1C9n ~ TMC 09ild~lnc . .. ,,,,.,..
~ A. 1rOwn. AtaietM1 Vice ,,,.......,
~/~~T'l'IC
09lld ...... tnc
1to 1 Hlghtend ...
Sen 19mafdlno, CA 12*
L_1' t411M-71f1 Ind ..... 1'1t1 UI ~1113n P\llllllNcl °'9noe ea.at Delt; Plot
Nie 7, 14, 11, lttA • TH·1
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CLA
THE DAILY PILOT
lflED Of:FICE HOUR
Telephone Service: . \
Monday-Friday
8:00 A.M .-5:30 P.M.
Bui.iness Counter:
~onday -Frida)'
8:00 A.~1 .-5:30 P .M.
DEADLINE
Pl'BUt:~ TIO:\ Dt: \DLl~E
\londa' ~nt . 11 ::io a.m.
Tut·Mh•' \1011. i.:m p.m. "t>rll1t>~tht\ 'I Uf''-&::\O p.m.
Thurs ci1n \\ t-d . l ::JO p m.
Frida~ Thur-.. l::\o p .m.
~aturda~ Frida' :~:00 p.m.
~unda' Fri. :3:00 p.m.
Lml&llU 11,0ll,111
This "lovely home on an exclaive
residential island is a dream location
w/pier & slip for 2 lg boata, 4 Br's,
each w /own bath, recreation room
plus family room, formal dining & 3
fireplaces!
1.91 asu
Prestigious Bayfront Villa, 6Br, 7~ Ba,
pool. spa. large boat docks, $4,850,000.
Charming deco Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45 '
lot, pier & slip. $1,100,000.
Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace,
beam ceilings. Xlnt financing. $420,000.
UYJlll MIO UYFlllT Miii
Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai
Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. $695,000.
llYlll TDUll
Panoramic bay & ocean view, 4 Br, 4 Ba.
patio, pool home. Fee price $775,000.
PDllllU -llWlflllT Ocean & Jetty views, marine' room, 4 Br,
3 Ba, 3700 aq. ~ .• car parking. $1,285,000.
UYllll PUii UYFlllT
Spectacular bayfront dpl:X. 2 Br, 2 Ba up,
2 Br, 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1 ,350,000.
UUU IDOi llLLllH
Panoramic ocean & city view, 5 Br 3 Ba,
spacious entertaining home. $1,100,000.
let U1 Help Y ••
Se.II Y 11r Preptttrl
The Daly Plot often you this u1ct slzt ICI
on cu "Pich.re Pie•" weekends for )ult
$25 I* day, or 2 days for $45.
.._. 1 pictw•. or we'I photovaph it for
,. ........ chlf&•·
Oii CluatflM .
642-5678
-==· s~~d\lltA-~~trs· -----...... ~ OAT I ..W.lt -----
·~=...::...: _c;. ~
..... IO 9-lo-""'I> .. -lb
I H A R l S Y
· I I' I' I I
I LEOOY I I I r I I
J
t I PU14MS I:
' I 11 I I ~
1/;Macnab -Irvine
THE REAL
ESTATERS
WlTOI Tll MLRll
On the 7th grMn In Big
Canyon, Newport BMch.
Perfect tor executlv. hv·
1ng & entertaining •600
9<1 11 of pertec:tlon Laro-
rooms gourmet kitchen
An A 1-home. Dorothy
Hardca1tte
I
642-5678
...
,IRI IUWPORl
lPlRlMUlS
Newport Budl No.
880 lrviM Awntlf
(~t 16th)
6•5-Uo.t
-----~--
206 44(1'1 St~t. 2 bdrm, 2
ba, frplc, encl gar, patio
$750. mo. (213)831-297'1
BIG CANYON twnhM full
golf c:outM vu. lmmacu, 2Br. 28a. sndck, wet bar
fplc, 2 car oar No pets
$1200/mo &44-2• 16
Cle Or.,. Coat DAILY Pll0T/Thuf8dey, June 21, 1984
IW ••Jlat ltntH -can . .U.t llttlat !iil!t hetlrtJ llalat =--==iiiiiiiiiiiiiil·--------~1muP~ s;;v biY CXAt in "'I ttome Wti™ wllg ~ vXCXfldNA81U CXMi. 11UF11L1 PlllT9L l leftictl ..
$217 d AOOtTtOH'I , Dl!SION Cont ~ten~ oc 1~ 10 I~,.. Ptltwl·llml a.en. low rite, promp4 ~ We Take CW• Of Yow •A-1--* tntl~t. It•-' Local,., Lo r•pal,..urp•llt)q·
~.
1 per ay Uc :Ji~ 4~ t e ,lnc.U)·t~2 LOUl•.C.M S4MOel ~.newtswn. 161-3411 youCOurt7H-1t38CdM ::~~.:t::·,r'" ~~~e:x~ ~9114' (11-4---11 =~~~~·
Tl\&t'IALLJ::P9Y'°' AoomAddltlOM.f9mOdel IMt •L Cuumtn '"'iean~•Tr .. Trmmlng ' Uc T·1tl,o411 730o13~ PAINTERNEEOSWORKI 3 ..,_ CS.VS tr• •t't 6 design w .w . ltlual Verd Malnt.•H8i.lllng :UXf:i WX ibNfXN. ........ tnt/Ext. cetllngt, ,.rtn oeb. a..fi!I
"' Conalructlol\. 83l..31eo U'l• llftll MIKE e~ FAST·HO BURN OR PEEL' • ·-I _;:............. (21) )'fl eocp . wortt guer. ~=~~=~i'Mniii' DAR.y -------We ctean YOUf hUH .,,d ,.. ltmTT .... ..-r. EMC MU$CU TONING-PROF LA APE SERV .... ---·· Davi• Pelnllng N448n .... , .....
place v~ at your allp AemodelfAtpe1rt: c:ommt GardintriQ. RiilOf\ibli I Loee lnci-..NO 6wM1 Bon<l9d. 20 Yrt In .,.._ COJr:g; profeaaor comtt AIR lte#415232*54&-41213 Ablian Celt todayt 848-07'2 and r..id UC'd. bonded, eccommodatlng. 8 yn -Ouk* WllOl'lt LON A~ T MeWeeney 845--512"4 to your home Eva QUALITY PAINTING. F • PILOT xrrtlM mri;a #ilGhta to ------lne FOf .. l 552·9142 Free •t. TIM 846·5133 Call 752.0}2"4 for ..... ,. 564-fl82, "499'-2779 PRICES FREE EST OuaUty Roofing: Sr. cl
C 9NkJtffJ'H c _... Cati John, 831-20~ dlle. Refl. Uc. •S4al'f7.
SER C atallna from John CUSTOM REMODLING LANDSCAPE & LEAN-I i Masn; K Funk• 84~193 · VI £ Waynt1 Airport, 4 fllghl• PROF BKK /AOCNTG We Coat Leaa And Do The UP S Vra expe\ Ir• .. t. nit lt1• !I PU.ti RICHARD HUTCHISON • '-t
M day lt'a not •x-Computer Mod. tw Fr.. Belt (714) 241-1-418 Deve 7&0-9077 ROiiN'e c(EXJJINd Bflek, ock. Conc'-'1. •I PAINTING. 25 yHrt. REPAIR Spedallt14200 I NDfCTORY pensive! Only S30 aa CounMI Meg 842-70-47 LANDSCAPE SERVICE SERVICE: a tl'loroughly Stucco Low coat. Ke. u-RICHARD SINOR'8 Cuatom WOflc. We Love tess Free •1. 301r• ~ Ull\ ::! P ~:;'.P :•c':' C1.Wut llUlm °'rt all Tr• tnm. Lawn Malnt. etc. clean nouM 5"40-0857 pert wortt. 831-1161 Bob Newport Cutt om PelnUng ,,_.ectton. "3-091 t 770-2725 anytlml Wt/A ~·.~AVHUINNT!l~ATAOONR Muleo l Nev 75&-1020' I -:i5ftvwltt flPING• free ... Juan 5-48-9448 HONEST Reflabte wom4ln Custom Brld<-Stone 16yraofh~ycuttomere. .... ... ---..J-, .· ..... •ru ,,. ~ *New eablneta. cabinet Alt Tex1ur .. & Acouttlc -Btock-Concret .. Stucco Uc. 280644 875-0383 -W •••n&a _
B!ACHCw ..... ~!!R.werrt ,,.1.__ fKlng bare " lonnic:a Free .. , Kavin 673-1503 Shrubs/Tree Trim Compt ~s ~32~r h~ R•1'• Free •t. 5"41>-9-492 RAINBOW P"tNTtul'> EXP«t allCOVercl~ •• !~-Tutortna cant ™ .... ._...., ... .-. coontertoPI 541>-57•7 gMdenlng competitive " ~ 1tallatlon ~. .,. ..... t-HandTcap Readln. C:~'M~~I !tpair * l(tTC>iEN CABINET co lltetdcal prlOeS Chuck 842-2813 Uk•. CLEANER HOUSE? •••ii• .... s~'l ~Ef: ~~ ant ~mt. 581-85'0 Math, laf\g: 841~ !
,___ • F, .. £11 1~. Ftn. • PUltll EllCTllO Bu•= Expert1H/Supplle11L10 •--Jct·= P~ttt1ra='"y ••• All•MLlll latMIArta&Hf....,1 JacQuellneS48·0651 _.... CdM HouH Painter _ ~-~Seniff ·, • Your D ly Pi.ot Prompt, court.OU. ..,.. THE BEST &34•3424 Ouallty worlo.. fr .. •t E'Xperl rs t5 yruxp SunM1 C.O.St Qeenlng REPAIR:SER~ODEL Handyman Paint/fix: * ... PllTl'I * d p;=;L Servk;90irectory YlOe Fectcxy !rained C~~r atry 4255l3 968-74ol Gen_ malnl ei.etlcal. L--r;:· ...._ __ , -.--,. Bobby·MOblle Spedalllt anything. 840-8259 By TA5'6-5182 or ocieaang&
i.w-ui11ve tec:MIClana 5-49-3077 - -Elec ici-S25/h bid plumb Craig 536-•118 us..,..ua ......,.,ng .. p • •305170/rafs 846-8002 • All buslneN, IChOOI pw-._,._. Carpentry SeMce tr en. r or ltOUMI ofca Exs;"d Free EJ(TERIOR TOP QUALITY fl /= al pr0Jecr1 851-1041 Ml...fH 1 tit, JOI Rep11r-Remod-Addlttons ptaM60
1
3°L d!,~ ~°".,',,,MAier AMERICAN HANDYMAN esttmat ... 7St·9031 • • work f()( ~r S Fr .. Mt aster son .
rs .. tc 5-48-4980 •44 ° ........ 1~ Carpentry Windows. p 1~·.::a1 <>-· --,-m•t Ref'• Dale 6-46-5837 tb's P~INd . A'ROBIN TYPG SVC+ -ELECTRICIAN Paint. fences etc v.. ro .......,.., .,... ,,ieea <>< • ~81 Patch98 & Textures. WP' all Corresc>, Prlf)I, ,t Anta1tical REMODEL Rec>•" Raid Lie 233 t06 Smallllge Jesus 11 Lord. 8-47-2367 Profeaional l*)pte Refa ITUYIH Oil.LEH FOR BETTER WORK Int/Ext. frM •t. 8-45-8258 student proJct. 842-33~1 Comm 111 phuea 18 yrt avail Anna, 751>-1936 or --.,.,...11 LOWER PRICES Cellb__11 tn area L1c/bond9dlln1·d tob9 rec>atrs 546-5203 Repairs, Patntlng, Drywall, Chris. 55t-M34 •••~••• ,,._ ' Call Jeck 83M793 EsoOisfTE Xccoustic Palombo Const 968-358"4 RESID/COMM'L/IND etc Free estimates Ouallty hOUHCl••nlng Stodranoe, ~Co. Ortgtnal __. Pl1a~i•1 Wia•tw Cltuiat • .
Reapr__. c 11 r 26 yra Do my own wor1< Gary 645-5277 PTL u en ert. Tneor..., HH Painting, Int/ext •7~ or~ • or ~""'~~~"!"",...~~ Aepe1r-Doors-Aller1tton1 L 27a"~l Al .,~.,,_..126 Thorough. respon11ble lie T12o4-o43 . 641-8427 Quality at loweat rat ... -.-.. -.. -, ... El~f~l~I0-"!'""'!1~1~11~ wAitE Wl!.m> &~ 11 WINDOW WASHING special & fr" nta Aft 6 a ng Areas • alfl Remodel·P•n•t-Patlos IC ~ ~-., Baaliat local ref1 Pat 497-3254 NEWWarehouMStorage Fr .... t Dave 842-•W p_m 8'7-7801 Reaurtac1ng-SeaJcoa11ng w d F c bl t ,._ • i -'" ow-encea-• ne .. r ta •I OUMP JOBS l Ouallty Haeclg $30/wk
1 H n.1•1111111m auALrTY" 831-20~·~ .,.
Marital /le• .. tliat Ind • S&S 63 l-4 199 35yrs ei1p Jerry 54&·4• 13 GomtNtrclat/Relldenllal SMALL MOVING JOBS H 1 e k Per S Iv· In I o u t ITUVlll mlflTS t~~;g~P~:r~,~=i::
aatt "-1-:11-1 Ct•tal CHcrttt Landtcape Maintenance MIKE 646-1391 Exp,1el,ln1 541-5711 IOYlll IOMP&IY Ing Lie. Chris 963-1843
Drains clear from S 15
Repair faucets. dlap, etc.
Anytime M&M 642-9033
You can't make It to 'IW
big game next week?
Don't let your tlelcets go
to waate-buy a little aa
Lots of aports fens read
classtfied. 842·5678
8ulld/Reimod Spec kit, n -eu&a a 11 s . tic Caltfornta'a Ot~lnal bath, ofc, rm add, patio AUTO befXIL AT VOUR brlveway1, sidewalks. ua ty ervice. reaa. . HAUL-MOVE-REMOVE Reliable. honeat. reason-Student Movera. INT /EXT. 20 Veera Exper
Averege Room S29 +
Materla11. 642--0"4"42
Expert Servloe & Repetr
eov/dck1. bay wndw Lie HOME. YOUR CAR LIKE Patios. spa pads l1c'd bonded 20 (i1 In area Furniture. Tra11'1, Tree1 able eicp. local couple. Lie. CAL Tt36898 Insured
«8485 Steve 547·8076 NEW 49-4-5854 Ron 556-0034 McW"ney andacape 963-5-416 NORM Ample refs lt73-7227 ••<71o4)a. t-6101 ••
31 yrs exp. 16 yrs In area.
Lie #409035 964-8919
M/F 3e;t'o share. 2er to
rent NB Duplex Vu, deck
patio. boat s11p o cun 2 URIE WC. Simi btk1 Resp Good Mnae
of h u m o r A v a 11 IEWNIT IL VI AT IAY
now 6"42-4420 New Bldg, can handle 2-3
people per otftce. $575·
$675 Sec serv avail
Open 9-5 M-F 642-3998
Fem non-amkr So Coe11
Plaza erea $342/mo ~
dep 786-55071786-5520
'l.4ature/F non emkr 1hr
beaut furn duplex on Bal
Penn $350 673-0430
M/Colleg• 1tudent1 need•
apt & rmte urgently
Resp meat n-amkr Gary,
collect (619) 318-3239
NPT BCH lg rm/ba, vu.
t en/1pa /gym/ pool/etc
Nlcel $375/mo, quiet
non/skr 831-0377
IEWNRTIUOI
1680. sq tt ground floor
unit In attrktlve, well
malntelned, modern
bldg In quiet erea near
Hoag Hospltel. Assigned
parking AIC, garagH
avall Vicky 6-45-4800 or
645-3323 dys
NEWPORT CENTER
Full Svc Executive Suites
$550-$775 640-S..70
IEWPOH CEITH
*Approx. 540 aq f1 * 2 lge pvt of Cl With recept. area & supply rm
•· adJecent to N B
Athletic Club * $575 00 per month
140-HIO
645-512"4
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
--!!!!~---~-~ ltlt Wut.. 1101 Btlt WulH Siii Btlt Waat.. Siii Btlf Wa•t.. SIOI ltlt Wu... S ti
Bookkeeper aSJiiini #uir DENTAL HVGIENIS'r for GENERAL 8FFICE CLt.NI\ KNITTERS llfi lllftii ·
time. Pectlic View Mem-Lagune Beach gen prac Full-time. M-F. Anaw« Wanted hand-knltten, flt ANO •
.orlel Parle •. Newport Tues/W.,. "494-&538. phones, run 10-key by °'pit. Call 786-279"4 IEIJIF II.Ill ·
I I M ~ ~ ~~ f.r _,_ Wv.-.,,.1~
I II ULll R.D A preferred AM'1 GENERAL OFFICE exp r• Important. AP9IY In I*-.
&1•11. WIST /SEO'Y SALARY P US: OutgOlng only 7:30 to noon o.pt I<>< amall engr ofc In son 9-o4pm. RocMway Inn
1 person ottloe. Orglnlza-& entl'lull81tlc..,.. per-CM /NB area. Call Npt. Typing, nung ana experlenoed Catt Cl'lrtata l680 Su~. CM.
tlonal. word pro-aon/store model with 759-0882 uk for Lori phone aalety t medical 11 8-47-6041 1-•....a f-~
I I'll Ital nMded f vacation and profit 11\ar-1nMI -· ..,.. ce11lng1typ1ng & Ill• u on r <>< lllYDI Ing plan 1 girt ofc L E G A L PIT Food prep, <=*tel
bkpg aklll1 nee N~mke< our exclusive women'a Croas coootry. C&lll. lie 975--00"40.· SECTY /RECEPTIONIST 1231 N. PCH Laguna~
Salary negotlabi.. Mall de11gner boutique. req. Class 1 -not neoeM-1 VHl'I ... ,_, Good apell
resume:oC&S,Box712. F/tlme.Mu1tbereapon-ary. Apply MacGr~ ·-•Hlfflll ......,...... . PAINTER LegunaBch,Callf 92652 1lble/retlabte Pleaae VechlS, 1831 Pleoenlla. ~ tng ablllty.Type 70 WPM. NEWPORT HARBOR •-i1J-•tm apply In per900: ALEXIA, C t M9M Typing, order entry, aood WO<d prooeulng helpful. SHIPYARD. SalwyE -••-2&0 For .. t Av, Lag 8ot1 °' • · with figures for focal Salary commen1urete Exper. only. Apply I per-&llllTUT lllYEll IEEHI ICfeen printing company. w/exper. Non-smoker. aon. 223 211t S rMt.
to Director of Mrktg tor O&llln llAIEll S&O to S100 8 day. Dell\1'91'-Call Betty.. 540-2e60 953-2011 Newport Beech.
lnvestmentFirmlnN B rorhlQhqualltycuegood• Ing small packages. Call GIRL FRIDAY gen ofc Lo ~ peraon. femalu PAAT TIME
Supervisory and manufacture<. Muit have Robert 534-2090 $5.00/hr. Cheer'• HB ree-prel'd. Summer aun. CASHIER/PHONES Ralhty ·Yodel coordinating own tools Ex~ only ta ent Mu1t have car ....__-~-tu 8 .. P-' t nAAti epplA .. -~ood Earn up $1000/mo . .,_,, ur · ""'""'"' n. 1 yra °' Fashion tllend 720-0255 .... umpa -.,.11 • responslblllttea • r9<1ulres -..._ '"''.. ....., Call 8-42--439"4 -•-. lnq t "IP TOYS iliiiiiiillliliililliiliii!llll MESS with HIM strong clerlcal and Corp .. 365 W .. McFad-nattonalty known prod-· .....,..,., e3'1~2;2 Thl1guytknow11 apretty admln background Non den. Santa Ana, (nr ucts for appt cell SSHlllll&IERll -~ PART-TIME. Varied l'!Qu()
tough character 11·1 not smoker P'ef Call Shelby Harbor Blvd.) 848--45-47 STllEDI UIL 1Mll IEEll1 ~~~~~M::.'~::
that he·a mean. but the Cheek . 553-0940 Caring older tndlvldual to ELECTRONIC TECH. ira•I UTU -~.. ,._..dable vel'llcle (tmell mean onM don't MESS -~ CUSTOMER SVS REP """'' with HIM Admlnlstrettve Assist care for my welf..bel'laved SEllll $12/llr Fast growing ( ouH-w/goodeommuntcatlon truck, van, ttatto)'i
__ A difficult & rewarding poa-11 ,.., yr old CdadugMht9:: MTW Know analog dlgltal TTL efeannlng Service) tool<-skills for ad\l'ertltlng wagon) to ass.lat new.
•Splrltual Psychic, Ad-itlon wit~ fast growing n my .. om•. tape & disk drive, trouble tng for people w/cata. We P•P« dealer In lrvt,.
visor & Card Reader* high tech cbmpany 675-5129 shoot to lowest compo-will train! RELIABLE eccnt. area. Must be ~
--------• Past. present & future 141-1000 CARPENTER'S HEIPER nent level Send resume PEOPLE need only appfyl SECR~::~~, tlte dabte. Contact GrtiQ
675-2495 or 831-8964 · --New p 0 AT HARB 0 R OMEGA. P .0 . BoJC. 485, * 551-1243 * MACHINE OPER.: Folder, Hyde Monday thru Frid~ SAYE .... .. r • 004 Appl Setters 5-9 $100/wk SHIPYARD Sala Sunset Beach CA 90742 In ~ 9:30 and 10~
New owner no 1st or last Lnt • ••• guar • comm Good Exper only Appt'ii~=-· Hotel burater. Mrter. labeler. a.m. on7. &42-4321
months rent no security 606' puppy, fem. found tn phone voice Wiii train son 223 2111 St New-1'WI UITEIHll eon11~:i:',:c;. ~all, • I
deposit 500-2500 sll Irvine In the V1Cinlty of Jel-No setting Call anytime• port Beach ' Secretery IEEHI Huntington Bell PASTE-IP PDIN ·
zoned medical dental Irey & Barrenca 552· 7044 751-2382 EXEC. SECIETAIY Full & Part time. Service 8-42--4993 5 deys 1 weetl Incl Sat. Wll1 ~~td v~:~ g,a~:~~~ ;;~ ARCH. DRAFTS PERSON CASlllEI and tull bar postton1 train. Art or draftl!J.
E Lincoln Oranoe June-wtdnt sktlls only for Full tltTle lncld1 wlmds Headquarters otflceof The SURF & SANO HOTEL. IUllTEUICE·llUIU bacilground helpful. F I
lion 91 & 55 twys 714 fQUND ADS space planning firm GOOd pay Growth Com-Jolly Roger Restaurant Laguna Beach Merla. Property and dock malnt.. ~~YS~~·· ~=
998 7120 261-6040 pany 5 1ocatton1 Apply chain has an oP8fllng for 494-8-460 EOE Ute carpentry, peintlng, Placentia Ave, CM
• UfCITIYE lltTH •
1 MO FREE RENT
W/short term lease. lull
!>erv suites 881 Dover Or
Suite 14 NB 631-3651
ARE FREE WEllLIAS ~a~r~~ H~~~ B~~r ~~eEx~~~:n~r::~~ lllSllUPH ~~:S~~1~~p::m91'1:,':i:;~
Apply 7 AM MacGregor Costa Mesa requires outstanding Big Cenyon hOme. NB Refs req. 642-1626 Ptlt Oeltnf .,.,~
Call: Yachts, 1631 Placentia, CASHIER shorthend and typing Refs req 30 hr WMlt. S6 llWIH K~~r. 0:;::~11 :,;
C M Over 21 yr1. lull time skills Profeclency on hr Live-out 640-5119 S20/hour Person to help $900-S 1 tOO/mo. lntef·
Babysitter needed for 2 Wiii train 645-0032 workprocessoradeftnlte Housekeeper llve-ln, runbualness.Mustbeon v._byapptonly •
morns/wk beg August plus lovely office with mature fem. In good 24 hour P'"""· Potential 64&-7« 1 •
Call K11sty at 650·3027 CFhlld 1C1 •,hre tn your ho1 me congenial atmo1phere health. able to drive. equity ln-.-bualneas. LLOYDS NURSERY •• Won't last Drastically re-am y omey env ron-plus excellent benefit rel required 495-6969 duced S 60/lt Bal Island Found D<>o Blk fem poo-Beauty ment CM/NB 894-3854 pacMlge Including medl-675-9697 PET SHOP-reptile whOil"
752·28•1or673-5374 die. bllnd eye. tumor on HAIRSTYLIST cal and dental Insurance Housekeeper.Llvetn.Eng-MANAGER FOR YACHT saler looktng for
J C II 0 C A I I & also need MANICURIST Cooke FIT or PI T and profit sharing. Apply tt1h spkg. Mature, gd CLUB. Dena Point Loe. energetic flt workei l11iae11 aw a n ma Balboa Penn 675· 1457 •II shifts epply 1400 PCH t 673 8235
It.tall 2916 Shelter 548·3087 642•8881 In person from 9am to saery • Previous management Prevloua reptlle Of Ptt
Beauty 4pm at: HOUSEKEEPER Mon or experience preferred. ahoP exp pref'd. Aak !~
NEWPORT PIER area Found Fem Bk lab pupey Hll•SnLIST COOKS W&ITEI JOLLY ROGER INC. Tue. & Fri. fluent Engttlh, Weekend duties. $1200 Jennifer 835--7-418 • :
10 o office lmmed mix, male sable wt coll e. n A 1 .. _t 1 & IC t 17042 Giiiette Ave. drl-own .... ,, non-amkr mo. RMumes to Mike PETS LO"ERS NEEnrft~ • re r fem bk lab puppy, male 1••IOURIST PP y.,.., ween .,pm I ... .... " uwv-posaession 673 6640 brbeuett mut bk mix a Denny's R .. taurant. 529 Irvine 675-9207 Horne. 12\133 Edgeworth, vacation pet care • 1n ,.-_-' ASSIST•MT Avent do Pico San (71-4)250-0331 Whlt11er. 90&0"4 ~ homea In yo(lr \;9••trci1l cocker. tan mix cocker aw Clemente. 492-2382 .......,.,....
leatlll 29ll Npt Bch shelte< 6•4-3656 II 'rtlrtlll" ~~t'!~~~~AM to llAUIO ~::. ~:" fv::n~ f6o2o HarbOr F v FOUND KITTENS. part lew,ert leach COOi Fll4t ctent part-time attar-12 Noon (213) 331-3727 Resident In 12 unit apt. stay. For lnformatfon 1240 sq ti persian whlte/blk/wl'lt. & To run kitchen of new 1pa-noons 2-5 Mon-Fri. Mu1t • cornptex rent dlacounted eend legal me Mtf ab-
5-41-5032 grey 522 1 DovewOOd Dr S1lt1. Pihl get11 hOUM In Huntington have 1 year office exp ~ ulary. no •ltP nee-d re a•• d 1 t • m p eod Agent ----H B 893-6017 Beach Mull be ex-549-9671 EOE M/F/H .1111 I.I.A. TOIAY oeNary. HG-&656. envetope to PamPeHl<s
-------------... •iil•m•iiillliiiiiiiiiiil•IGFOUND silver rtng H"8 Y10lff11. lt4io1I pert.need 675-3t58 --------Adult Carrier Team. Eam Wiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Pet• & Plant1 Inc .. 18t6
bowllng a11ey 6 15 111. lflil. ClllTU Ptnt1/FM4 N--"--' FLll1 _ ___.111. part t'--$400 mo Of more. 11111&10 VIC1<><y Blvd. Suite 291.
962-8517 0 I I ......._. ""'""" nn• THE OALLYPILOT II now Glendale. C.. 91201 •It II II Leguna Art-A-Fair help dOlng ftoral arr.,.,__ ONLY"' DAV WEEK I I Found White dog with I D (7 14) 2o40-3029 ment1. Must haw drl.;;;1 ~ ecceptlng appt cat on1 Phone MIM. Madd bec.*lt
SYDlllEY
OIARR
Newport Beach Animal l~IOltlll tic & own vehtcle. 554-7338 8am-5pm for Olatr1ct Managers to shell. Fl t. pi t. Exp ·not
SllfMter 644 3656 ,rocri•. lu•t IAT& EmY IPEUTH 675-6376 ul< f<>< Ellu-·-------supervlH new1paper neceasary. o4/l'lr & ·up ---• Experi.nc. required. CPA c.amw1. Must have van, 754-19-41
LOST Mon 6 18 E/Bluff WIR full ti••· firm near o .c airport. beth btwm 4-6 pm w1ioon or pk*-up, GOOd 1
shop cntr lad1e1 Pedre 752-027"4 FILL/TIIE ,,, &LY.... Hlary. mileage allow-PRIVATE POST OFRCE
wtdband Gotdtone watch 142-1114 ---Laguna Beach anoe company benefits PIT accurate typing OC
REWARD 64•-7681 aft 5 llLLlll OL(Rl DELI peraon wanted for PUT/THIE WHI 1CC4tPttng appltcatlont: and 'bonua opportunity. airport arM 5"41>-2287.
CM's finest health fOOd Opportunities available WAITRESS/WAITER Apply In pel'son at Delly T Frtday, Jone U LOST Rolly sm F/bm/Wht Prev bllllng el(per, typing store Help <><lented & de-with the LOS ANGELES (lull time exper I Piiot Ctroutatlon Otfloe. IOI. El &Tl ARIES (March 2 1-Apnl 19): You a.re capable now of d.ancmg to Springer Spaniel. Npt & proof reading required pendabte. PIMM apply TIMES Circulation De-HOSTESSES 330 Weet Bay, Costa a.1111U11YE . Blvd/23rd St REWARD for I/time position In 1ml at 225 E 17th St CM partment In ou door to (I d tou t1 actl ) bour own tune Means take ch11rae of destmy. ~m rules before rou 968-6215 or 5~2-3581 ofloe tn Garden Grove . door newapa;.r sales n u~t~Rv'c~OK ve Mesa. Monday thru Fri-&llllTllT r!:t~~~~:!1~~~r;:~~t;~~:~:~':1:1~ ~oov;~~~~f~~~1~s~IT~r~y ;~o~ ~~:~g~etc~~~ev;n onBatboa ~f~~s~n:;J~o~i~5~hop-Par~EL~~~!,~~,IV~~ntal ~~~~a';;ageG~~~:n~:,~ Appl~lu~~/:;'9 ~z~> o400 day. No m . call•. G~::.,:o.e~~~~
p lay key roles. Penlnsuta 673-8586 ----store. Good drtvtng re-mlaaton Hours: 4PM to South Coaat Hwy, --------port ee.ch ts •••ct~' TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Restricuons are temporary and I -3012 BOOKKEEPER Newport cord & Sat '1 req. United 9PM Training Is Leguna Beach IQllOl•'IT c:andld•t•fortr...poafton
necessary Y ou 'll pm through pcnods alone -answer to dilemma Penoaa 1 ~~~~~~aEna~=-~:r~1:: Rent-All 545-0750 provided. Potential to ~ f~t~~':n=~.ti
comes tn a flash. Cvclc htgh c1rcumstanccs will tum 1n ~our t;l\or. COUPLES SWING PARTY charge bookkeeper/Ir IELIYHY/P/TI•t eFarnS3100.plul sper~. Twh•.1f•1.•t.••.1, dDraawlt~tnp111h0•11 Beauttfu'~,!!-~r..._· ...... l'laveereateatate~
R , f; ' p V ; fi W1deWor1d821-6117 E 'd oranntervew.caJI· -.. .,..,...,.., 35 i.. omanc~ IS part o tntnguing sccnano. 1sces. 1rgo persons 1gurc Convenuon. Las Vegas accountant xp Oellvertypewrlter1tobu1I-957-2361 ext. 120"4 Ctasalfled Ad 84 -5878. Following pleaae . and • YNB•XJ*'W~
prominently wtcomputerttedaccount-neues In Oro Co Sta-,..-=-=--.;;-===::::=:::=;.l:;r;;:;::;::::=~·~==::;-983•&076 In either Mlllno reai. ,._
GEMINI CMav ~I -June 20): Lovt' and money are featured -wt~h ESCORTS/MOIELS ~:nds~=~• P~~fer~eg ~~~1 w~~~~g P:c~v~d~1ii EDIT -.-.-A-l _l _Al_I_*__ ~~~=t ig::
comes true powl"r~ o f persuasion arc he14htened. Populant) increa~s Outcalt ONL v 835-9199 BOX 8708-125. Newport train Apprx 3 hra day M-No •Kperienoe. Xlnt aalary eflt1 Including medlcal &
and you could win a contest. Communicate Wlth 1nd1v1dual who is TOPS$S--Beach. ca 92658-1706 F $4 50hr 955-3633 DEn 5-46-5-431 dental in1Ur9"0e Safety
confined to home or hospital Cancer. Capncom natives pla) ke) roles F.-maies pret Model• and llOlllEPH IEIT&L IYllEllST 1 111'1 llm /Ill.II ;,~:.,~.·F~ ra ~
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Communication from profMs1onal Escorts <2131866·1984 PtT 18-25 hrs per w~. interested In team <><ten-Southern California dally news· WllT&IT ttdentlal tnrerview call ~upcnor boosts morale. PrOJCCt started weeks ago bears fruit and )our TOP S$S Newport Beach taw firm ted person 3 days 10 paper needs experienced desk Bruce earaamlen at view~ are v10d1cated. Love as pan of sccnano. burden 1s rcmo\ ed Females pref Models and Must have law ottlce start. w111 i.ad 10 o4 daya person with good layout and r~r~ ofB~!tC:r:'gC:er~ &4"4·7020 or writ• to
doubts. fears and '>usp1c1ons are eradicated. An~. Lt bra pcrsom pla) Escorts (2131866-1984 exper Refs req d Call Ouehty orient.a lrvtne of-pref'd, bUt not r.ci'd . Grubb & EJt11. 2123 o$an
key role~ 1 . 11~ 4014 714-476· 1976 Ilea 646-6673 anytime headllne writing skills. Some Good otc akllla. typing. J:iu1n HUit Rd, N.B .
LEO (July :?3-Aua 22) Get rtftdy fot new start. reahLe that N •11• o;v;;Op; n;ea feature writing also required. Hrt 7:30-•:00 caM Chetyt ea.. 2MO •
t ~ ~ommunacat1on 1~ important ~nd that many people will be fasctnatcd ;:rm:, with s4oo.~ CIRCLE I MARKETS Competitive salary and ben· 857~500 REALESTATESAL'8 ~ · ~y your optn1ons. assen ions. Stress 1nat1at1vc.:. ongrnalrty. confidence casn or cr9dtt fine eflts. EOE Reply ad #400, C /O •lllLS IEElll W• are ioo.tng for a few
wilhnlfless to be an tnnovotor. Another Leo naurcs prommenth 10 develop 1oc11 pro1ect Orange Coast Dally Piiot, P .0 . 662.,oe75 =. peop&e5~1 P91•
VIRGO (Aug.. 23-Scpt. 22)' Check bank statements. be aware of 645-66-46 ' Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA. '· 842" • :
J roourcc of othe~. steer clear of gci.rich..quick schemes. Recent legal w oment a unique bue•n.u 92626. Mlftll u.T /Ml • ..,.
I victory wall prove to be worth morc than onaanally anticipated. Know you wut enjoy Window NOW Loottlna tor Ptl~t.~· Mollvat.ct, r11ponaibie
tl. pmrt accordm~j'.· Omccr, Aquanus persons figures prominently Security Prod's 979-4624 ~lo •tay In~· 24 t n d I" /4 c e u r • t •
Soc I •1 p•1 A. yr• or older, dMn out. epeltlr/typt1t. (55wsSn). RA (Sept. -Oct. 22): 1al acuvity accented -pcrcc1'c lltaty te Leaa
1
I J 111 polite & courteous. Cid! phonea. veri.ct duttee. potential, but pcnntt othcn to take anitiattvc. You win by playmg Stat\llng Actora Moving Newpott 8ch ., ... Call
wa1tin1 p m c, b y maintaini"' low profile. Diversify. emphasize sp1nt Lt1a1 U..•• t!,4!!~000 HIRING Co. 1-5:~. 850-1370 Catoltne 146-2251 :
ofadventurc and humor. Sq.ittarian figures prominently. Prime F~=2·tc.•
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Some of your better quahtic~ come t o Da1·1y Pilat ··· .. ·-·~· " "
forefront -style Wlll be 1mpnntcd. aura of glamour w11l b( present. Mtrtf!tl, CASHIERS LAYOUT ARTIST .. : ·. People will comment favorably on your au ire and you'll be m ore T .D. 1 4021 :.= ••• · confiden~1~f,ocalioa. dash1na. Another Scorpio plays significant role wXNi'fb Peos>te n;;d1ng
SAO ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc 21~ Emotions dominate. S('enano PV1 ro $$S •10.000 up PART JllE '
hJ&bltahts first 1mprcss1ons. 1mpulJJvc actions. cbanae. travel and No credit "'· no pen•"Y Orange C.ou.nty ct.Uy neW1peper hu
romance. Get some thouahas on paper, rcahze )'ou'll pin throuah Deni.on Auoc:_.!:3•73n an oper\l.na fot· 1 quirk layout ardlt.
creauve endeavors. tncluclsna wnuni. Family member has plan (or lltlf Wa... 5100 c.andlct.to muat be able to work well
eam1na more m oney lrsien1 •lllllllPll* with ..ie. ptopJe and meet daily deed·
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19) Focuj oo sccunty. rcs1dencc, •REAL !STATE• I nl di llnel. 8u)c know)todae of camena
domcsucuy, opponunlly to r,ul't'h.uc art mattrial luxul") item, lor rHI eat••• da· lhtlftS M MM ""ady art, l)1Jll , and the c:anablllty
fumatun: at barpJo pncn. You II have m ore l,\·orklna room. )Ou'll fttl ~lhOme bUilder to 114. I Din.., __ ... 1 -
needed. h1pptcr and moT'l' sp1ntuaJly aware. Taurus. Ltbn, Scorpio ha~ payables find r• J•t ZO & 21 to ,,..,." uft •YOU" for prOclUCUon •
perJOoi fa&utt prom1n~tJy. , ~= ~ ~!!; muat. Add lJnnaJ projecta may lnClude
AQUARIUS (Jin. 20-Fcb. 18) hon ltlp ts on •ndA.)OU IJ ~m llnovwtecjge 01 general 1•11 Al It flyera. h , Npi and alel pr'a·
1 ICC'ttt. you'll pm to confidcnttal mformataon. P1toes ledger. DOOd ,~end ntatJon II, 1·2 ~ ~
1nd1vtdual showt way to 1ncrcaw income, also lta.ds 10 rontac't hicb 10·k.y tJi1111. ptui ~ _. 517 W. Wison nmnt•om f t Send r..une
could prodU<lt emot1oruil fulfillment. Relative commun1catn hale in organ•ted RMI eatate Costa u-..
1
Ca • ·~ &. non-amtcr req'd .,...... tnnslt. . . ~ ottic.. tn Q'MI .k>-(714) 631 9609 P {Feb. 19-March 20): You 11 ha"c exc1hn1 conlaet wtth c:auon Send reeutM 10 • 1
Capricorn. Aqu.anu 1ndJvtdu.als Focus Oil income. payment THE 0 HILL COMPANY !Of ORANG£ COAST DAILY PILOT ·: •
collection 1b1htytoloca1e1ntC'klhAthadbttnl<»t,m1 maorstolC'n Al'TN EOBRIGGS uo w I AY Jr •tC)STA M(~ CA .,.,.: =
Ttu1canbcpowtrfutd1y-btfoT'l'tt'soveryou'tltxncherandpcrha OneUwer8 Hewpoic•t'-~' . "" ,,,. A , ......... """''' •tt• ~··• ,1 .-
uramou •• Nwi>t:._:ft~~~~"~·~vvu~~~~~~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!_J..:::::::;;:::!~!!!a!i!!~~============::::::=:~L......:··~·~ .. ~·~1~ •• ~.~·~··~·~·~"~·~·~"~·~·~ .. ~·~·~·::......__;•~·~·~··~·~·'~·~·-
Motor Route A•ailable-:
~wport Beach arH, three
h per day. Earn appro . . :
1600 ~r month. C.U t 1 :00
to 4r00 PM.
Enul
LO
•
-.
Orange County daily newspaper is leekina fut plleed, flnible achiever
to coordinate display ..ies activity. M~ have exceptional organizational
e..~~·.
outside iales ·staff, coordinating th~tre advertising. Some t)'ping, fil-
ing required. Newspape.-or a&'!DC)'
experience a +. Send resume or letter
of qua1ifimtiona to;
Oranae Coat Dally Ptlot
Ad #968
ea.ta Mela, CA 92828
AtteoUian: U.. Smith
ORANGE COAST OAtL Y PILOT
330 W. BAY ST .• COSTA MESA. CA 92626 4'N COU4'l OPPO•TVNITY El11U•lOYE •
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZIE
ACROSS 4 7 Intensities ~
48 "-
1 Thump Autumn"
5 UK loran 49 Carried
system 50 Perfume
10 The Royal base
Canadians, 63 Make seams
e.g. 54 The nearest
14 Mellowing ones
agent 58 Arena se.ts
15 Attitudes of 61 Soviet city
1 P9C)ple 62 Skin
16 Succulent 63 Author Bret
~1 De -: posh 64 Curling team
~8 Tightwad 65 Invites
20 Lea~. e.g. 66 The Witch
22 Hofe maker of -
23 Employed 67 Tulles
24 Communities
26 -o' War DOWN
27 Daydream
30 Man's under-
shirt: Brit
34 Gone
skyward
35 Kind of bed
38 Mr. Whll{ley
37 Grape cttlnk
38 Doubles
40 Drop In
41 FOOd fish
. 42 Jlmaon, e.g.
~3 Proceed
45 Mell toPPer
1 2
1 Ointment
2Chill
3 Ensuing
4 Noblest
5 Xmas month
8 Heating gas
7 Ma.stlcates
8 Anthracite
9 Reptile
10 -powder
11 Wlnglltce
12 EpJatle
13 Sign over
•
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
19 Leg part
21 Mythology
25 Seasons
26 Cathedral
27 Fleet
28 Waste away
29 Ultrt -
30 Tan maker
31 Exit
32 Dame Terry
33 Cultivates
35 Request
39 Saturated
40 Chilean
promontory
1 • t
42 Peculiar
44 Fracture
46 Bears
47 --earth
49 Muttonch<>ps
50 India region
51 Mr Speaker
52 Container
53 -Muslal
55 Border i.ke
56 Exported
57 Game
animals
59 Pronoun
60 The: Ger
t
111111 I Mii 1aawwwxm
XJnt Cond. 11360 000
"
I
~---= c, ....... E ••
..... f • g ,_ -• -
:. t • •
I
I
I .
I
Orange Coat DAILY PILOTIThurtday, June 21, 1884
a & t
Experlenc~ the excitement of finding Just what you're
looking for-In cla·sslfied. It's the uttlmatel
WARNER
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet• Porsche• Audi
48 L least hf., ..... rt .....
111-0IOO
Highest Quallty Sales & Service
0 COllOIWULTH YOLISWllE
........ " Ulll• le ..... laa
Salee • Service • Leasing • Parta
.
0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA
#11 .............. 1n111e
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7800
Complete Sales, Serv/C6 & Les•lng
. ..
J
•
...J ID
:I
(.) < w ID
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
•
()'EGO
~. a: < :I
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint I Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On Lease & Dady Rentats
IOll ._.., lh•., Oelfl ...
M1-1111er ..... 111
0 SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGENnsuzu
11711 Buch Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 141-2000
SALES • L£A81NO • PAATS • SERVICE
0r...,. c.itrs lArll*t ~ o.i. m
" Wll ~ .. "'*1oW 'All$ (l1M1llDfT or£N SAlllbY
0 RAY FLADEBOE
YOtKIWAGl!N
#II Alltt leiter Ir., 1n11i1
In The Irvine Auto Cent•
830-7300
Orll1fl Countp lfnNSI Voarir~ °'1llfr
Complfff ~ Sft'wc. I LllSJfl
I
I
J ... -~--""'--------... -J ~-----J.
• II
Classified
IRVINE
LAGUNA
HILLS
0 CONNELL CHEVROLE nn....,..., ........
Over 23 Yean Serving Orange County
Salel • Service • Leulng 541-1211 · s,u111 Pw u. 541-1411
MONDAY-FRIDAY 1:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNOAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
9 STADIUM PONTIAC
We're Nit!W-we·,. OM/Ing
Across from the BC A on Katela just West
of tht (57) Or•• freeway
Sala • SerYict • Parts • Body Shop on Premises
71.,...1111
I
MISSION v1:"J
g
'8 0
'1ll$$ION
VIEJO
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
0 BAUER MOTORS
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Comolet• Automottwe .....
SALE$ • 8EAV1CE • lEA8tHG F1ne StlectlOn of °'*"Y u..ct v .....
#1 8UtCt< DEALER tN ~COUNTY
2121 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 179-2900
0 RAY FLADEBOE
UlllLI •r llU .. II ...
#1 ........... .,....
In The IMne Auto Cent•
~7GOO
e CREVIER BMW
I•& II • -WICa • t IA.II
"wr.9 ~•Jonlll Attitude Pt•t ... "
9' II' Iii 4 .... • 111 ~=· '12 I 1 I I t 91 ....... ,.,,, ...• _.. .............
1113171 •w.1et•t..••taAne Comer of 1toect.., a. , .... QOl9d ......
I
HIGH88 LOW85
rtlUR50AY JlJNf. 11 l'JIJ.1 ORANGECOUN1V CA.!f(Jf1N1A .t·,t•.·
l\TarlDe flap could cost inillions
Irvine's Sills fears deve lopment di s pute sees that asa possibility if the Marine
Corps steps up efforts 10 halt.Plans for
Irvine Ccn1cr.1hc 480-acre, SI billion
development planned at the con-
fluence of the San Diego and Santa·
Ana freeways.
might jeopardize funds to city from Irvine Co.
By ANDREA ADELSON Ol'-.o.., ........
An Irvine co uncilman said
Wednesday he is concerned that a SI
million per year payment to the city
by the Irvine C'o. may be: in jeopardy
Coast
Sewer fees will be climb-
ing In Laguna Beach./ A3
A mother suspected of
stabbing her baby faces
assault charges./ A3
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
,, ~!Mf.f:!~ .. 1r-r-"' .
Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley met with Walter
Mondale today to discuss
VPpost./A4
·:::::::::·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:
Nation
Much discussed Immi-
gration bill squeaks
through House In
216-211 vote./A4
Senate approves $219
billion defense budget
lauded by Reagan./ A4
World
Soviet spokesman says
joint arms talks highly
unlikely at this time./ A4
Living
Whatever happened to
the joyful state of child-
hood?/82
American women could
take lessons In love from
their European and Asian
slsters./82
:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:O:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:--:-:·:·:·:·:
Sports
Orange County All-Star
football game has filled
the void caused by the
cancellation of the Shrine
game./C1
Area baseball standouts
Bob Grandstaff and Jack
Reinholtz sign pro-
fessional contracts./C2
Olympic shooting trials
offer an alternative to the
"major" events at the
Games./C3
Entertainment
Cable TV shows are offer-
ing viewers a ''grown -up
alternative" to network
programs./83
Want to see the Jacksons
on tour this summer? Get
your $120 to the post
office./B4
Business
AlrCal claims Its $300
mllllon purchase gives it
quieter jets for John
Wayne./86
INDEX
Erma Bombeck 82
because of an escalating controversy
with the Marine Corps over develop-
me nt near 1hc El Toro base.
City Councilman David Si lls said
"if we prtclude dcvelopmcn1 from
Irvine Center. we may bt throwing a
million f>ucks oui tJlc window." Sill
Lt. Col. Bobbie Weinberger.
spokeswoman for the Marine Corps
Air Station in El Toro. said "I ihink I
cao put that qui~kly to rest."
"Th.c deal we entered into. we are .
Manner mysteries solved
How to eat popo•en l• one of the leMOna that Aneela
Cbrlatle, Yemeni Mesa and Valerie Mabe learn at the
Torch
dream
maybe
doused
HB woman, 70,
given route 600
miles from home
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Patt Tambolleo
Ot..,.D91rf,..•wt volunteer. So why should they make
Patt Tambollco. a 70-year-old i:ie run so far awaf. It's t~ far. aod
Huntington Beach grandmother, Im un~~r a d~or s cart.
raised SJ .000 to fulfill her dream of Part1c1pants 1n the .cross-couotry
carrying a lighted torch through her t"relay each had to raise SJ,000 t.o
city as pan of the cross-country '-etocfit .a youth group. Tambolleo s
Olympic relay. m~ney is earmark~ for the Boys and
But she received the distressing Girls Club ofHun~1n~ton "'.alley.
news this week that she's lx-t'n . Each torch ca~er 1s a•tgn~ one
assigned to carry the torch more than k1lom,etcr (.62 mile) t!) ~n 1n t~e
600 miles from her home in the tin y cross-country relay thl:t Wlll ~nd 1n
Northern California town of Ad in . the ~sAngeles Memonal Colhscum.
Tambollco said she couldn't even Li ndsay Chancy, deputy press ~-
find Ad in on a map until a newspaper retary .f~r the Los ~ngeln Q lymp1c
reporter to ld her where to look. ~n.1z.1ng Comm1.ttec, said con-
"I still don't understand it." she tn~u~1on~ for torch ki lometers stan.ed
said early today. amv~ng tn Augu.st. and first-choice
··1 went shop to shop and got the 1ocat.1ons were given 10 those who
contributions. se~.11n m~ney c.arl y.
"From the beginning. I said I ~a~1ons 1n . all of S<:i uthem
wanted to run in the Huntington Cahfom1a were 1n preny high dC"-
Beach area. I'm an Orange Counl} (Pleue .ee 'l'ORCll/,A.2)
OCC Jtames interim prez
Samuel " Art" Martinez, a Coastline Coli.Qe admlnlllrator, has"-
named octlng prooldent of Oronge Coast College In Coot• -. He wlll
-Bematd J. Lutl<ln, wllo It rnoYlng to Wahington, O.C .. In Auguot
to work for a nallonel ~college org<1nlzatton.
Martinel wtll be chief admlnlatrator of CCC untH a -t
•i«lllDi' to l.uekln " hired. The appointment ... announced
Wtc1n11dlly night by COMt community C=-D9trtct tna1111, who
O'Nllll ()rMge co.t. COeath end Gotdln GOI~ M_,,__,_..~theWaatminatw,o.den -Sell
a.ch ..... .,.. 1,.ociete deen of tnetructk>n for Coeattine.
not in any way chan1in1 •· tu revenue.
Wcinbtrser said. ··we still feel the As part of tht negotiations, the way~ felt ycanago; if you put dense Irvine Co. asrecd to shrink the height ·~pulatiops SO close to a jct facility, o( hotels planned in the trianaJc: Ha
it's a difficult problem... concession 10 the MarineCoqis. Tom
lrvint and 1he Newport Beach-Nielsen. the Irvine Co.'s prnidcnt
based development firm siped an sai'd. ,
aJl'f(ment in October. assuring the Maj . Gen, Richard M. Cooke.
city of SI m illion annually beginning commanding gcncral of air station,
in 198S until ·thc dcv~lopmcnt itself . said in a letter this Wttk: 10 city
starts generating an equal amount in officials that ··we arc disa'ppolnted 10 . .
see that The Irvine Co. laml...,.....
mcnt plannins includel couaw:tion
of hotels., molds. and dlDd •Y.ate
centcn Within the usual traftk: !'16
tern of our main land.inc nur9ty.
Sills asked, "whett _. Ibey (Iii<
Marinn) when we did I.he Gi:nrral
Plan in 1974" and broad-brusll plam
for the area were mappetJ ouL -1·d
like' to know What tht" mcana.., lllr !"-____ ,AS)
Church
blast~
city'
·.
Carnival periled
as pastor protests
conditions by HB
( By ROBERT BARKER
~ ...............
--
Huntington 8cac.b city offtcialsare
cncroacl>ina on ~ous fi-iom by
imposing 2S condiuons on a chwcb
festival to bt held in October,
accordin& to the puto< of SL
Bonaventure Catholic Cburcb..
~ .. t-find it unreason.I.bk tbal two or
lhrec pcoplj: (~-critics) can d1cu.te poticics 10 the wbo\e
community," M~ M~
Duffy, the cburdi s pu1o<forthe-
t 9 y~ said Wed"""•Y·
_ .......... .,.'-..,_ "'They (the conditions) are u«crly
... ridiculous.. We probrbty will eitherF , ~ • lOJ.he..CitY--Cou.oci.I for' aa ~ oc---Academ7 for-EtlqadW-for-the yo · •er~~olf-,.,-foqot oboll1 bovin& thecanuvol."
Nelman·llucue In N~wport BaclL 1fee atory on Pale Ill. (Pleue-CllUM:B/A2)
HBmurder
hearing J·
underWfJ-Y .
By STEVE MARBLE I °' .. .,..,. .......
Defense lawyen dtallcngcd a pros-
ecutor Wcdn~_y lo reveal his
conspiracy the9fy that allC&edly links
three peo~le · the bizarrr gunshot
slaying of 1 untington Beach com-
puter en · earlier this year.
The t)ltce -asscrtedly drivert by
love 1 greed -are charged with the
mu rof37-ycar-oldJamcs Hughes.
wh was shot to death in his bed on
J . 10.
Faci ng murder cha'les are Jeanette
Hughes, the victim s 29-year-old
' wilt. Adam Salas Ramirez,. a 42-year-
old former prison in mmate. and
Adam Edward Ramirez, the cx-
inmate's 21-year-old son.
The trio appeared Wednesday in
West Orange County Municipal
Court for a hearing to detennine if
any or all should stand trial for
murder. The hC"aring is expected to
last two weeks.
Deputy District Attorney Jay
Mosely alleged that the three joined
together in a scheme to kill Hughes
and collect the computer engineer's
$500.000 life insura n~ policy.
At the time of the incident, the wife
had blamed the killing on a bufl,lar
who she claimed shot her slttping
husband, stole jewlcl')' and look her
brown 1981 Toyota.
The older Ramirez -°"'·as arrcsted
less than an ho\jr later 1raveling in lhC
missi ng car. Jeanette Hug.hes and
Ramirez' son v.'C'rc aTTt'sk'd 1he fol -
lowing day.
Lawyers representing the trio
claimed Mosely is being permitted to
introduce evidence during a
preliminary hearing witho ut first
detailing the allqed ronspiraC').
· "I'm bc:ing kept in the dark and
your being kept in the dark."'
protested defense attorney Larry
Bruct to Municipal Coun Judge
David Brickner at one point during
\he hcarina.
Bricker. hoftver. oermittcd t.1osc-
(PI--Bii lllUJlDBR/A2)
.I
a_.. .......... .., .............
Thanks for the help
JrTl.ne lnduatrialiat J . Robert Flaor recel•ee a hq from
llarlou Knott after recelYlnl! Ille a-Scout A ward from
the <>ranee Coant)' CoancU of tbe Boy llcoata of America
Wedneeda7 Dlaht at tbe ADallelm BUtDn. Ftaor _.
ltonored for lilo faud-ral&ln• acti..tdee on beltalf of
-llDC·
Bl'idge 85
Bulletin Board A3
Bu~ness 86-7
California News A-4
Claullled C6-8
Pay cut plan making AirCal skies unfriendly
COmle• es
Cfouword ce
Oellh Notk;es. Cl
Horoocope C7
Ann Landers 82
Uvtng 81-2
MU1UOI Funds 117
National Ntwt A~
Opinion A8
Paparazzi 81
Pottcolog A3
Publlc NotlOOI Cl-S
Sportt CHI
Stock Merkotl 88
T-83 ~-· 83-4 WMI'* A2
WO<ld-A4
I
Wor,kers balk at proposed two-tier scale;
airline sa s It's necessa for survival
·-~line clcculives claim it is an ~~table way to save money In era of
cutthroat competition -labor jus1
calls it C\lttbrolt.
They are lf&Uiftl"Ovtt new two-lier
pay 9Ca.les that are becorni~ lncrea ..
in&)y common in I.he airline industry.
LaSJC and small airUna includina
Untied, American and Piedmont
• havt: adoplcd the two-tier ayStcm
where newly h ired employees are
paid as much as 'O percent less lhan
an airline's vctcniu employea. The controversy his ftllehed into
the O...qe Coast. the bome of many
airline executives •nd cmJ>k>Y"CI.
with the Newport 8each-bued Ai,..
CiJ fl&htina its workcn ~ver a propoul to create a tW<H.ttt pay
system. tl$C) k.n0wn as a 8-tate pay
system. ...
White RCJOliations are contlnuina.
the ~rtine 1 JOO ftiaht attendants
voted to ~ the: propoul and to
authonte a ttrikc last month. TM
fliPt attendants' old contract expired
April I. An~ scVttal ynrJ,oflossn AirCal
------··· ·--~ --
JEllY
H11se1
Focus o~ 1Hl NEl'I S
" hlvmo """'' 1oo1<s "' 11< a .-~· 1"hc company earned '" sa21.ooo fim qua.ner profit durina a
1raditionall)' slow period for airlifttS
and bu been break.in& its own
pt;SRl\ltf mffic m:ord durina the
sprina months.
Allhouah lhe cool'°my . probably
the lfel-&nt factor 1n AtrCal's turn-
around. bch·lif.httninc measures by
man•men1 1.ocludift& JUbs.t.antiaJ
lay f& in late 1982 and a 10 pcrtenl
ec:ro.lhe--board wap cut and waae
freeze in early 1983 have conlribuled
lfOl\ly to the 1lrtine's ret()VU)'.
Empi!>)'t'<S soy ~ uw pvm
en~ •. But the al(fine ,..antt to
J)Olit.on itself forco•tinYfd tompe.ti·
tion and the intvt\able dowltturn in
lhf cconomy. That IS why.tccordi'n&
\0 INlftll'IMnt. lt it pu.shU'C lhc 1WC>-
ti«~)'f) 1cminthe urrentroundor
contract ta.lkL
nde:r irCal's plan. n-ati1 attend·
ants who now sian at $20 an hour
woukt•wiatSIO.
·While bo<h flJllrcs OOUnd like IOOd waees. the fliabt attcndanl! ooint out
Ibey only l'1 p fer fli&h• l>oun.-
the time the ~oe is on the n1nway
1nd In 1he atr. They r,..... \bal the
ratio of k»dina t!me to tctuel ftyi,.
ttmc 1• 1bout 2 <>-1 . ~ *
fliaht atiendants ~ paid 6r aa ov~ of 75 ho4ln a -...,
octually """" ·-· 200. · rCal au.an.n1ta i11 ftiaht .......
(PIMM-AD.CAJ,./AS)
I
" I ~~~'~~~!~.:._~~~~~~~~~.::_~~~~~~~~~--''~:......~~~~~~~~·~~~
I
I ~
...
..
CHURCH PROTESTS CARNIVAL CURBS •••
P'n»mAl
For 18 ye n the 1;hurch, with a
mcmberlhtp of about 3,000 fanuhes.
ha\ held a carnival on il~ "°ound at
I t>400 Sprhi dale t.
Thi5 tall sch1:duled three.clay
e'ent that feature m1val rides.
gJme and boolhs for food and betr
and wtnc wb e~pttted to auract
about 20.000 people.
But reMdents complainL-d that their
neighborhood near the church and in
the proximity of~anna High School
has been overwhelmed by traffic and
liuer They asked official~ to pm
some curbs on the act1v1ty.
The Cll)''s Plann1na Comrn1s\100
ruled Wedne da> 1hat the 1'.'hurch c:in
&O aht-d "ith the cam1val but that It
mu t be abide by 2S cond1d1t1on\.
some of which don·1 sit well with
Monsignor Duffy and membt!r\ of the
parish.
The city. among other thing),
wants the church to agree 111 wnung to
drop two Masse!>, hire up to I 0 off·
duty officers to kttp traffic undC"r
control, maintain barricades ut re'>I
dent1al Strt'et!> and to ma~c Ull·
nouncements over the church'!> pull·
he address system on whcrc to park
dunng the fe uval.
Dull} chum' the demand'i art
d11 .. tat0nal He said the church, even
though 11 was thr member~· idea to
drop 1hc Ma11'ie'i to preserve parkma
'iplHl'' wouldn't agree to do so 10
\\ nt111g.
·· 1 hl''>t are limns on our free.
dorm:· he said "We don't have the
great \mencan freedoms that we
U\l'd w ha'e any more."
Planning l omm1ssaoner f om
l 1,l·ngood \aid th~rtl\. look thc \tl'PS
Ill l'n'>ure salC't \.
MARINE DISPUTE COSTLY ...
From Al
,aid I hc I 1'111e to "ts alread)
hulld1ng the on-ramps"
Roht>rt Shelton. '1en1or 'ice prt''>I·
Jent ofthc In me ( o said. "Wc thank
p\.·rhaps too muc.:h I) being made ot
1111: gl.'nrral ., pas<>ing reference to
In inc ll'nll'f ··
'lhdton -..ud the de.,.elopment
.1)!.ll'cmen\ "111 remain intact
< rt•n ( ookc: 1\ on 'ata\1on and "as
11111 1mml·d1atrl) a\.atlable for com·
mt·nt ba!tl' )pokt•sman Master Sgt
I.id, l\11chal!.k1 said toda).
L 1 < ol Wc,mbe rgcr said safet~
, ,11Kcrns OH'r encroaching develop-
mcnl 1s not ··a1m1ng at the Irvine Co ..
l1ul .1ll commerc1al 'entures."
\tatemcn1 to mean 1ha1 the MJ11nl''-
in1end to uppost• dt'' elopmt•nl 011 tlw h11\c\ primal) run""a> are the
planncdo,cr1henc\t~S\car!>"lth111 l11~u' 111 ..1 u1111rU\nS' bcl"een the
the so-t:alled (,oldt'n Tnangk. ~oulh ul\ ol lnineand Mann~.aflerthree
of the Manne base. Jl'I\ Jnd J lhcd wing craft lwo weeks
Niel!>cn said 1n an mterv1ew earlle1 11$0 allege<ll> .. buzzed" a crowd of
this week that Manne training picnickers at the si te of a 177-bed t II h I hospital tn t'ast lrv11~. miss ons actua \ cross t c man$ e Gen. Cooke has said that on June 9 propo~ for the I"\ IOC Center. while ult aircraft \\<ere n\,1.ng 1·n accordance mihtary maps show the Jets fl y a J deeper path and avoid 1t. ""llh published regulations and that no "1olat1on of safe fl)ing practices Despite the apparent overflights by occurred.
military aircraft ... it shouldn't ha ve The city last week asked the
11n impact" on de"elopmcnt plans in Deft•nse Depanment to move prac-
lrvine \enter. N1el~n said. tice missions from El Toro. Sills said
Added Irvine Co. spokesman Jeri) there has been no response so far from
Collins, .. the area under the pattern milttaryoflicialsin Washmgton,D.C.
has low dens1t > " Fli&bts from the El Toro station
Hot spell looming along Coast
Coastal
M )tflor llUMy '"°'1 111et lele "'VI" and mid ml)(nlng low cloucll end locolll
loO Hl;hf In I ... ~ IO ,,_ IO
illlefffl4Nilele ¥~1 '"'*""'141 ltllO 1119 lllOCI to1 fr1C11y LO'*t ~1 11141 mKJ 50t 10
mlO 00t
l'IOlll Polnl C..l09PllOl1 10 i... ......
IOlll Boteler lnO OUI 80 mtlM -Inn«
w11«1 lljlhl 1n<1 v1111ble w•nd1 nlglll .,,a l"Qfnlno hour• l>IN:omlng touth-1
10 _, 10 lo 20 knoll ""h 1 10 3 -1001
wind wtvff 111 .. •ltttnoon and a 10 11
knoll tncs1y 111 ... noon SoulllWfll
,,..II• 1 lo 2 IMI N!Qhl tr.O m0<ntng low
clOudt with motlly 9Unnv 1111<noon1 Ou1..-,.,,,.,, '>m.. cr1h IKM-y
from Po<nt Concepuon 10 S•nl1 Ao11
lllan<J due 10 notlh-1 w1ncla 20 lo 30 -nol• "'''" ou•lt 10 36 knoll
Tl des
TOOA'f
S«orld "'Ol1 S2l•m •• Seconcl to.. t I •9 r,. m 22
FIUOAY
Frnt "'OM • SS1 m 33
F111110w 10 57 1 m 14
!>Kot>d 11-0h SSS om 4 1
Sun Mia IOCl•y al II 07 p m n-
l'uOey 11 ~ Sl 1 m aoci Mii ao1.n •I
108om MOQft Nia •• 1 08 0 m ,,_ II ' 36
8 m Frrdly Ind Mii 'Olln II 2 De p m
Enended
Temps
Alber>y
HI Lo
75 47
lllOUQUClfQU8
Amerl!IO
AncN>r90I Al191118
Allenr" Cr, ,.... .....
8elll"n()tl
S.r"""Ofl•m O•ematck
8cHM Bo11on
llutt.io
Cupei
Cllet ... 1on.S C
C~ ... lon.WV ClllflOtle,N C ~,,.
OllcMlgo
Clnc;tl\l\tll c...,.._
Coklml>le.S C
Colllmbu1.0h
COll®l'd ·"' H Dall-..FI Worlll
0.)'lon o.n-...
O..Morn-Ollroil
Dlilulll
EIPUO
88 80 F 1.>rt>anu
es 64 Faroo
aa 63 "•"" 91 74 O•end RlpidJ
... I~ OrMI , ... Of 72 HwllOfO
85 12 ~~-" 73 .,... ......... 75 12 140U91QI\ 77 4, tnes<enllj)Ol•t
71 !>!I JldltCH' Ml 72 SO JIClllOflYlfle
15 47 J_ ... H 72 Kiii ... C<tv
" es
ao
711
77 u
67
93
" 117
llO 112
85 es
61
78
~Y-o»
U11 .. AcKll
Loe Ar l.OU19 :-.. " hi•• ..... M!*81 PllUI
~ =°'--YOtll
NOl'fOlk, Y • ()lclellOm• CllV
°"""' Offando
Ptim8P<1ne
PhNICNIC>N•
PllOen!X
Pllll=h P0t1 .~
POf"li.nd.Or
ProVi<lenee ::tcny
FWno sec:r ....... 10
SI LOUii
SI Pel• Tamo•
S .. r l ei!• C11y
56 SenAnlonoo
08 Sen OllQO
JI SllllFtanc..c:o St SI Ste Matll
50 s..n ..
48 SN~
55 Sool<•ne
H Syt-
7 4 • T Ol)el<I
N T-
72 Tulla
7 s w '""ngton
51 WlcNle
70 Wlll<-8etre
t2 70
75 •1 11 51-
.. 63 SURF REPORT
111 " 101 70
11 84 LOCATIOM n •, Huntington a-en 98 18 Al-..r J<t\ly, ~
81 81 •Ottl SttMI.~ 14 62 22nd Slr"4, Newport
II f I a.tOOI WIOge
IO 58 lAQuNI 8eedl
13 49 81111 Clemetll• 12 at Wei• temo 87
SIZE
2~
1-3
1·3 l·3 2·' 1·2
1·2
S...it dlrectloo -.r1t1-1
.. Tl
I» 70 7f 16 .. 11
" 11 u 11 .. ..
12 ..
" 11 ... 74 •• ..
ll .. " 11 ., 70 •• 14
ICM .,
81 12
105 74
80 .,
11 50 ea 16
80 55 .. It 92 5e
78 40 71 M
91 78
ti 78
to 85
95 75
14 87 ... 61
74 43 eo ~ II• " 10 411
70 46
78 Ill .. M
85 74
M 6" ., 70 n 52
otMCTIOM Ip
'"' l•lf , ...
llllr
Ill<
181< I he turor OH:r In 1ne Center ma)
bc a bll premature. No building plans
h..iq: ~et been submmed, Assist~t
l 1t~ \.1anit&~ .. Jts.ul.»~ '-"f~ .~ "f~ ... ·-·;~ ~.-,.,:~
·: ~ ,\e-~ould ha'e seen some com-
mercial acll\lt) ... he ~td
_Desp~~ ~1e scp's co~r:_c_n...,..t-_s:.._s_1~1t..,s-·~n1in~d~t•hlllcelPIM~~· ~c~~!!~ ~t!~ion in
rvtne Co.· officials he beard e>.· thal as 1 rea1'ea'-sWcmt1·1n~Mf~Mi.ililllfllfill~Z~
prcssfons of cooccm over Gen )ears because .of an expansion in
I
<;11l<, satd ht' tntt'rprf'l""A rnnl •'c
Cooke's statement. e>.1sung training programs, according
""1-limc1 c-amt"r lirnding pracuces to a base spokesman.
HB MURDER HEARING BEGINS ...
From Al
I} 10 quc!>llon both a roommate
"ho'd been ""'"g at the Hughes·
Lakeside Lane home at the time of the
killing and Detective Bob Cnstte. the
first 1n,est1gat0r 10 arnH' on the
scene after the earl) morning shoot-
ing.
Cnsue testified that Hughes. CO\·
ered partially v.1th a bed sheet. had
been shot once in the left temple. He
said officers fo und a spent bullet
casing in the In 1ng room
The detectn e said "'hen he amH~d.
he did not consider the dead man·.,
"1fe a possible suspect 1n the Lase
even though he could lind no obv1ou'>
signs that a burglary at taken place at
the home.
Cristie also testified that he was
aware an arrest had been made before
he arrived at the Hughes' one-stol)
tract home off Beach Boulevard.
The policeman's testimony was
interrupted conttnuousl) by objec-
uons from the three lawyers rep-
resenting the suspects. One of the
attome}S halted the proceedings to
question Cnst1e·s ab1ht} to tell the
difference bct"een a frec,h and ~p('nt
bullet casing
l he three dt'lendants. alt shackled
to chairs. took notes dunng thc
heanng Jeanette Hughes' parents
and relat1\ c\ sat in the audience.
Follov. ing the heanng, Mosel) said
he intends 10 show that the older
Ramirez and Jeanelle Hughes were
lovers v. ho planned the killing to
collect insurance money.
The )Oung Ramirez alleged!) had
dropped his fat her off at the Hughes'
home bcton.· the ktlhng and was to
rcndl'/\OU'> "Ith Ramirez later 1n thl'
morning. pohtt' <,a1d at the ttme ot the
arre\I<,
TORCH DREAM MAY BE DOUSED ...
From Al
mand."' Chane' said
Tambolleo·s· mone' came 1n near
the spnng deadline. when all Orange
Count' kilometers had a lread., been
ass1gnCd. he said ·
Chane} said there arc .. a handful of
people" in hers1tuatton. wnh running
assignment~ far from their homes He
said there 1s l11tlc ltkel1hood Tam-
bolleo·s k1lomC"ter 1n Adtn can be
changed.
.. They're prett} well locked 1n."
Chane} said. "It we change her
locauon.11 tn\oh.es putting !>omcone
else from the Los 4.ngcles area up
there. It's not fair to.the people "ho
sent lfl their mone~ early "
The torch program does not
pro' tdc funds for transportation. and
Tambollco. "ho lt.,es o n Socia l
Sccunl\. said l>hC' rnn·t afford to
travel to .\dtn.
.. And I \\Ouldn't 1..now what to do
"h1·n I got there:· she ~1d ... ,t',
11dKulou<. the \\a~ the'·, e put me on
thl' spot··
Taml'l<•lko ha'\ hecn purc;uing her
())\ mr1t IC'rt h dream Stnl'l' IJ'lt
"lo' t411hcr She practiced running
and ncrc1c;ed at a local health duh
'ihl' .,,11d c;he "a" iKtl' l' in a1hkt1cc;
dunn~ her \outh. and i.hc en' 1s1oncd
lhl' tord1 run as a \\3\ to pro' 1de a
ml'ntorahk moment for her li•e
grandd11ldrl·n
AIRCAL WORKERS RAP PAY PLAN ...
From Al
ants a minimum of 58 night hours a
month. That 1s low for the indust~.
The average guaranteed number ol
night hours at most airlines IS closer
to 75.
A1rCal night attendants see man-
agement's proposal to create the 1"'0-
t1erpay s)'sttm asa wa) to "di\ 1de and
cooquer," said Carla Barrow. a 01g.ht
attendant who has been with .\1r( al
StnCe 1969
Pilots at ..\1r( al also see the tv.o-uer
S)Stem as a threat and passed a
resolution last week stating 1hc1r
obJeCt1on to an) A1r('al cmplo~ees·
union accepting the rcv1sl'd pa)
program.
The airline 1sn·1 comml·nt1ng on
the labor controversv.
.. We are in nego11att0ns v.ith the
flight attendants nght nu" .ind "c
don't comment on an~th1ng 1h.111\ 111
negouauons. We belle' c th.11 thing'
are progressing and that tht• t.111..c;
going very wen:· !>aid Air( al <,pukr\·
man 8111 Be ll
Barrow da1ms the a1rltne "111
reduce the number of working hourc;
for ' eteran night attendant<, to the Sh·
hour minimum in the contrall The
Jtrltne "111 use cheaper. ne"h hired
\\11rkt'r' to fill 1n 1hc <,lat I.. thus
dcprt\ Ing thl' uldcr night attl•ndant'
nl thl' nwnthl\ income thl'' wt•rc
all u\torned to rcce1 ving
Barro" notcd that incomt' alread)
I WE'RE LIS TENING
lb__
Just Call
642-6086
Delly Piiot
OetlY~
11 Ouerenteed
M •• I Ir ti '°" "° not ,,.._. ,(NI PA!• bf
~ JO C' n r-.•0<e 'P"' ~<'(! YQUO ("(» "'"' ,.,.. a.c...-•'"'1
'"'""' .. ..a s.-. " '1'l" "<it ..... r:iu<
has been reduced I 0 percent through
the waie cut and another 8 percent h~
innauon smce the v.age freeze
"We have alread" made a lot ot
concessions and we ·aren't asking for
any of 1t bac~ Not nen a "age
increase." Barro"" said
And wtth 1he 1ncreasmg number ot
B-scale emplo~ees JOtnmg the a1rltm·.
the influence of the older .\-'>tale
cmplo~ees 1n contrall negm1a1111nc,
"111 decrease.
.. When thcre are enouih people nn
the B-scale to run the airline the \-
scak emplo)ees "111 be eltm1natl'd
The maJonty of the B-scalc em·
plo)ecs are not going to fight for lhl'
older employees," Barrow c;a1d.
.. It 1'i real clear what the in1ent1nn
of management 1s. In two \ears thl'ft'
"'on ·1 be an .\-'icalc :· Barrov. addt•d .
John Pinra' age. an airline indu\lr\
anahst "1th Paine Webber Jad.c,on l..
( un-1., Im agree\ that 1wo-11cr P•l'
'>)C\temHreate tem1on but hl' ''"' 1he
a1rl1ncs ha"e httle choice
.. It 1s an indu<,tr. trend Therl "IHI
q ucstton that 11 "1·11 ht•I p the ind uc;1 r.
h' reducing labor costs." Pin<.3' ,Jill
said
· 1t "111 ma~c m·got1atton" 11\\lll
difficult than in the pa't but tht: fi.
'>rak 1' a lot more prderahk 1h.111
1al..1 ng \umeom· '' h11 ha~ hccn ma I.. in~
$100.000 a )Car and g1\1nti. lhl·m
S'it1.<K><1:· he '>aid
The lt1ntcpt "111 crl·ate UI\ l\mn 1n
1hc labor union\ hut Pinca,age sa}s 11
"111 takl' a d1tkrcnt form than Barro"
forSCt'\
.. I 11s m11n• ltl..cl} that the new set of
"orlt.'f\ \\111 "ant to get up to the old
"orl..er,· v.ages and "'ill put pressures
on unton negotiators to do that."
P1nla' .tgl' \aid
"Hui ·'"' 11me ~ou 'ipht the union
mt·mhcr,h1p )OU ha' ea bettt'rchance
ot d111ng \\hat management want-.:·
P111l ." .tf.!C added.
\lthough night attendant\ at other
,11rltnr' ha\ e accepted a s1m1lar t""o·
t1t'lt'd pa~ S)Stcm. Barro" sa~s there
aa· t'm1ugh differences in the .\1rCal
"'1r111 to make 11 part1culaf) hard on
l' lll plm ces.
T ht'· \merican '\1rltne\ "'stem
guarantees ve teran flight attcnJants a
minimum of 75 houro;a month o;o the
thll·at ol replacing old emplo yees
hour' ''tlh new emplo~cc hour<, 1s not
.1c. grl'.11
\nwnran also '>tart' 11c, B-scalc
l'mploH'ec; at $14 '\(} an hour rom·
pared to .\1r{ ars prop\l\Cd $10
I ntled !\1rltncc,· l'·'11·t1cr pa} S}'i-
tcrn \tarts nev. \\Orl..l''' at lo" er rates
hut reaches cH·ntual pant) after fiH
'car\
\lthough lltgh1 a11endcnt., don·t
ltl..c.: the COnlepl thl'\ Ml' \a) ing
pn' atch 1ha1 \ut h ..akguard!I a\
mort• m1n1mum hour\. higher \tan-
1ng \a lance; and n entual pant' make
thl' idea more pal.itahle
What do )OU llke about tht' fhuly Pllot7 What don't yo u like., Call the
number at ltft and yo ur mesc,aRt' "ill ht> re('ordtd, tran,('rlhed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answt>rlng 'lt'rvlct' ma~ be used to record lt>tters to the
editor on 11ny topic. Contributor<; to our Leners column must Include their
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please.
Tell us what's oo your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. l . Schw•rtl Ill
Publisher
ClrculeUon 714/'42-4333
Cl•Hlfled ec1w ... u11ng 714/'42·5171
All other dep•rtment• 142-4321
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Aoeemaf'J Churchmen
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t-Y Ct M Ml "'°'"""
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lttPf'*I F. C•raio
1'1()('.l;K.ltOn
M11n11~
I
DoNld L. W1Ulam1
C.rcula t ion
Mena~
VOL. n , NO. 174
I
By JERRY HIRSCH
Of IM DallJ "llol Stefl
Pre-trtal hearings ha.,e started in
the homosexual k1lhngs tnal of
Rand) Kraft and both sides are
gt'aring up for what could be one of
the longest tnals in the h1stor) of
Orange Count) 1f 1he case 1s tned
here
La" .. Cr) for Knrft. a Long Beach
computer programmer '>u'lpected of
killing 16 )oung men in Orange
( ount) O\Cr Jn I I ·}ear period.
prcsentl'd ll'\1111100\ \\ ednesda) that
the\ hopt· "'tll lun\lnl·e Orange
< 11unt\ l.\upcrrur < ourt Judge Jame!>
t--1 umer to 1ran\fcr the la'>e to
another count\
DousJao; Otio. one of t"o la"'~ers
defending Kraft. said he planned to
introduce the formal change of' enue
mouon Monda}.
Wl·dnesda'. 0110 callcd in ,, .. o
\p<.'Ctal "ttnC\SC\ IO help build the
c.ase that the tnal '>hould be moved.
The first v.11 nc'i\. < al Slate Long
8C"ach criminal Jus11ce professor
Launc Poore. was contracted b~ the
defense" to do a publtc1t) anal) sis of
2J5 nc~\paperchppings on the case.
She found that Kraft's name had
appeared more than 2.000 times and
was listed 1n 135 different headlines.
.. Not onl) was the public being
educated about the facts of the case
but the) were in vol\ ed m 1 t. At a press
Summ« omctally 9tarted today,
and the weather•• hOt on tta Mete
In more MYI than"One. according
to the Natlonal Weather s.rvtc..
Hight Friday wtN hft tfMI mld--«>s
In Or9nQ8 County~ T~ at•• wUJ
have patetiy lat• n6ght and Nrty
morning low clouda with Iowa
tonight In the mkj..509 to mld..eot.
At the beach .. , highs Witt rile to
conference Orange Count) Shenff
Brad Gates asked for public help 1n
identifyi ng the victims," said Poore,
who received her Ph.D at UC Irvine.
The newspaper stories, collected
from May 1983 to May 1984, "often
would include something that would
show the darker side of Mr. Kraft.
The\ portrayed him as a computer
programmer dunng the daytime. a
ga) barll} at wght and a killer 1n
bct"'een." Poore testified.
··~em1ngl> ordinal) things were
commented on b) the press -h1
clothing. the \\a} he talked to his
lawH·rs:· Poore said.
riunng.1he fi r..t part of Poorc's t~o
hours of test1mon}. Deput) 01,.tnct
\nome\ Wilham Bcdswonh ob·
JCCtcd to man) of the quesuons Otto
v.as asking Poore claiming the ques·
tio ns were asking Poore to make
"irrelevent subjective judgments" on
the clippings.
Bedsworth. however, dropped
many of his objections saying that
because Poore was a crimjnal justice
professor and had little experience
with Journalism. he doubted her
testimony would be very convincing.
Ono's second special witness was
Joie Hubbart, a vice president with
the Field Research Corp .• who con-
ducted a public opinion study of
potential Jurors in Orange County.
The surve). which qucned 402
residents between Feb. 22 and March
13. found that 43 percent of the
people behe"e Kraft was either guilt}
or probabl) guilty.
Crash injures 2 motorists
T"o women \H'rl' •nJured about
1 30 a.m. toda) when their cars
rnll1dcd on the Santa l\na R1 t-er
hridge at Adam!> A venue. between
Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa.
The westbound lanes of the heavily
tra\ eled roadway were closed for
about 45 minutes after the accident.
Jane Freeman. 35. of Huntington
Beach. was dm ing her Volkswagen
,,.,. ao.: ~' lows .,, the
mkJ·SO. tO . i'ntd.toe WM 8QCOm.
PMY late ~t llid ~ mof'Nng
low cloudt and fog.
In tM mountaana. the mercury
wlll hft tM tow-70. to low..eo., wfth
gusty wtndt to 30 ~ In the northern rangM. Lowt t0c\6ght wNI
be In the mfd-408 to mld·&Ot.
D•••rt ar••• will have
bug eastbound when she apparently
struck the center divider and jumped
o"er 1t, colliding with a westbound
cardnvenby Mary MacKenzie, 56. of
Costa Mesa.
Both were listed in good condition
tb1s morning at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital. Cause of the
accident is s\111 under investigation by
the Caltfom1a Highway Patrol.
CULTURED PEARL CHALLENGE
GUE S THE NUMBER OF PEARLS IN THE GLASS IN OUR FRONT WINDOW
VISIT THE STORE
DURING OUR
30o/o
OFF
SPECIAL
AND TAKE OUR
CHALLENGE
M•s:••r of •.me• c;.,. .. Soc:f.ty
Acc,....edGtw1 L._...ory
•
•ONE ENTRY
PER PERSON
• NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY
•CLOSEST GUESS
WINS CULTURED
PEARL NECKLACE
ON JUNE 28th
CHARLES H. BA RR
7-·-
,, .... en-.
Wfttdff pt•• .,..,.,.,. .....
4
I ---
\
'
cou
Coast
Sewer fees will be cllmb-
lng in Laguna Beach./ A3
A mother suspected of
stabbing her baby faces
assault charges./ A3
Califomia
Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley met with WaJ~r ~~-~ VPpost./A4
Nation
~uch discussed Immi-
gration .bill squeaks
through House in
216-211 vote./A4
Senate approves $219
billion defense budget
lauded by Reagan./ A4
World
Soviet spokesman says
Joint arms talks highly
unlikely at this time./ A4
Living
Whatever happened to
the joyful state of chlld-
hood? /82
American women could
take lessons In love from
their European and Asian
slsters./82
Sports
Orange County All-Star
football game has filled
the void caused by the
cancellation of the Shrine
game./C1
Area baseball standouts
Bob Grandstaff and Jack
Reinholtz sign pro-
fessional contracts./C2
Olympic shooting trials
offer an alternative to the
"major" events at the
Games./C3
Entertainment
Cable TV shows are offer-
ing viewers a "grown-up
alternative" to network
programs./83
Want to see the Jacksons
on tour this summer? Get
your $120 to the post
offlce./84
Business
AlrCal claims Its $300
ml Ilion purchase gives It
quieter jets for John
Wayne./81
INDEX
Erma Bombeck 82
Bridge 85
Bulletin Board A3
Bullneas 86-7
Callfornla News A4
Claulfled C&-8
Comics 85
Crosaword C6
Death Notices C4
Horoecope C7
Ann Lander• 82
Uvlng 81-2
MutuaJ Fund• 87
National News A4'
Opinion A8
Pap•azzt 81
Police Log A3
Public Notices C4-5
Sport• C1-3
Stock Marketa 88 T~ 83
ThMtert 83-i
WM th« A2
Wortd NeWI A4'
cost
Manner mysteries solved
Bow to eat-popo•era la one of the leuona that Aqela
Ch.rlatie, Yemeni lleu and Valerie Mabe learn at the
ut
e -I IODS
,. ..., ......... ..,'-......
Academy for Etiqaette for tbe 1'CllllJICel' eet offered b7
Kelman-llarcaa bl l'fewport :se.elL See 8tm7 oa PaCe Bl.
Councilman fears
annual fun loss
from Irvine Co. .
By ANDREA ADELSON
Ol .. Dellr ........
An Irvine councilman aid
Wednesday he isconcemcd thata SI
million per year pa) ment to the City
b) the Irvine Co. ma} be in jeopard)
because of an escalating contro\"CJ'5')
with the Marine<.:orpsOTCr de,dop-
mtnt near the El Toro base.
City Councilman David Sill id
.. tf we preclude dc"elopment from
Irvine C~tcr~ we ma) be throw1n1 a . . ...
Corps steps up ns efforts to halt plans
for lrvme Center. the 480..acrc, SI
biUion development planned at the
confluence of the San 0.qo and
San\a Ana freeways.
Irvine and the Newport Beach-
based <kvclopmcnt firm si~ u _J_
acrccmeot in October after negotiat-
ina for two years. The pact assurn lhc
City OfS 1 million each year until the
devel()pment itself starts seneratang
an equal amount in propcO)·tax
revenue.
As pan of the nc:aoliations. the Irvine Co. agreed to shrink the height
of hotels planned in the tn~ngle as a
concession to the Marine Corps.Tom
Ntelscn, the lrvmc Co.'s president.
said .
MaJ. Gen. Richard M. Cooke.
commanding Jtncral of the Marine
Corps Air St.at1on in El Toro, said io a
(PleMe eee llARIJQt/ A2)
Church· raps 'ridiculous'
restrictions on carnival
City 'encroaching on religious freedom,·
Huntington parish claims, may cancel event
By ROBERT BARKER
OfltleDellr .........
Huntington Beach city officials arc
encroaching on rch~ous freedom by
imposing 25 condittons on 1 church
festival to be held in October,
according to the pastor of SL
Bonaventure Catholic Church.
"I find it unreasonable that two or
three people (nci4hborhood critics)
can dictate policies to the whole
community," Monsignor Michael
Duffy, the church's pastor for the past
Torch
dream
maybe
doused
· By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
OftMO.., .........
Patt Tambollco. a 70-year-old
Huntinjtoo Beach grandmother.
raised SJ.000 to fulfill her dream of
carrying a lighted torch through her
city as pan of the cross-country
Olympic relay. But she received the
distressing news this week that she's
been assigned to carry the torch more
than 600 miles from her borne m the
tiny Northern Cahfom1a town of
Adm.
Tambolleo said she couldn't even
find Adin on a map until a newspaper
reporter told her where to look.
"I still don't unders1-nd it." she
19 years, said Wednesday.
"They (the conditions) arc utterly
ridiculous. We probably will either go
to the City Council for an a~ or
forget about having the carnival."
For 18 years the church, with a
membersrup ofabout 3,000 families.
has held a carnival on its grounds at
16400 Springdale St.
This fall's scheduled three-day
event that features carnival rides,
games and booths for food and beer
and wine was expected to attract
about 20,000 people. Officials hope to
Patt Tambolleo
said early today. "I got it all (the
required S3.000). I went shop to shop
and got the contributions.
"from the beginning. I satd I
wanted to run 1n the Hununaton
Beach area. I'm an Orange County
volunteer. So why should they make
me run so far away? It's too far, and
I'm under a doctor's care."
(Pleue tee TORCH/A2)
raise perhaps as much as S.S0,000 for
the church's charitable causes thlit
include money for food and clothint
for the indigent. financial assistance
to poorer parishes and money to help
students pay tuition to parochial
schools.
But residents complained t/lat their
neighborhood near the church and in
the proxitnity of Marina High School
bas been overwhelmed by traffic and
litter. They asked officials to put
some curbs on the activity.
The city's Planning Commission
ruled Wednesday that the church can
go ahead with the carnival but that it
must be abide by 25 condiditions,
'(Pleue eee CHURCH/ A2)
Love tryst
suspected
in murder
By STEVE MARBLE
Of ... 0-. ........
°'fensc lawyers challen1ed a pros-
ecutor WcdMsday to reveal his
conspiracy theory that allegedly hnlcs
three people in the bizarre gunshot
slaying of a Huntington Beach com-
puter engineer earlier this )Car.
The th~ -a~cdly dnven by
love and greed-arc charged with the
murder of37-year-old James Hughes,
who was shot to death in his bed on
Jan. 10.
Facing murder chaflCS arr Jeanette
Hughes. the victim s 29-year-old
wife, Adam Salas Ramirez. a 42-)cat·
old former prison inmmate. and
dam Edward Ramirez. 1M ex-
1nmatc's 21-ycar-<>ld son.
The trio appeared Wcdnesda)' in
West Orange County Municipal
Court for a hcarina to determine if
~ ... D 111JR.DSll/A2)
Thank• for the help
lrri.De lndaatriallat J. Robert Fluor recel•es a bU.C from
llarlon ltnott after recet.m, the Good Scout Award from
tile <>n..nce County Coancll of the Boy Scoata of America
Wedneeday nlCbt at the Anaheim BlltoA. Flaor wu
lumorecl for bis fa.nd-ral.tna acti.tties on behalf of ecoattnc.
Pay cut plan making AirCal skies unfriendly
Workers balk at proposed two-=Rer scale:
airltne says it's neces~ry for surv_l_va_l __ _
Airtine executives claim ii is an
equitable way to save money in ~of
cutthroat competition -labor just
calls it cutthroat •
Tbcy arc arauina over new two-tier pay scale that arc beoomi"4 increas-
•nalY common in the airline industry.
lafJC and small airhnct includinJ
Unated, Amcncan and Piedmont
have adopted the two-tier system
• whttt nt11tly hiftd employees arc
paid as much as SO perttnt less than
an airline's veteran employee
The controvem ha ttachtd into
the Oranae Coast. the home of many
11rbne executives and employees..
with the Newport Beach>·b&sed Alr-
C'aJ rJ&hbn& Its workers 9ver a
proposal to create a two-ocr pay
sy ~m. also known as a 8-lCale pay
system.
While n~ot11uon arc conunwna.
the airline 300 fliibt aucodants
voted to reject the propoal and to
authonze a trike last month. TbC
flit.ht ancndants' old contract elpired
Apnl I.
After ~cral >ca" of lo A1rC'al
J£1IY
H11sc1
Focus ON THE NEw s
' ha vuw what looks to bt • r'tC'Of"d ~· TM com .. ny earned an S821.000 first quarwr profit durina a
tradiuonally slow period for 1.1rlincs
and bas been breakina its own
passcn&rf' traffic rcwrd duri the
7
A2 Orange Coast DAIL V PllOTIT"ureoay, June 2i. 1984
' CHURCH PROTESTS CARNIVAL CURBS ...
l"romAl
)ome of which don't sn well \\'Ith
Mons1gnorDutT)land members of the
pan sh •
The c11y, among other things,
wunts the church to:sgree m wnhng 10
drop two Masses, hire up to I 0 oil:
dut) olllccrs to keep traffic under
control, ma1nta1n bamcades at res1-
denttal strt.'Cts and to make an-
nouncrments o-..er the church') pub-
lic address ))Stem on where to park
during the tcst1val.
Duff) claims the demands arc
dtl'latonal. He said the church. even
though ll was the membe~· idea to
rtrnr thf' M·1\<;I'~ tn nr .. ~Prvf' n:irl1np
s~ccs, wouldn't agree to do so 1n
wnting.
"We will not agtl'e 10 do that."
Duffy said. "Ma) be next ttme thev
(officiah) '"'ll want to cancel moft.
Massts.
"These arc limit\ on our free-
doms," he s~ud. "We don't have the
great Ament.an freedoms that "-<'
used to have an} more."
Church oflic1als alM> ha\C to get
promises 1n wmmg from the nearb)
Redeemer Lutheran Church that
festival vtsttors can park on their lot.
But Frl <i111rdinn ;1 ''"·"h~1rm:rn of
.
the le'>ltvol. ~nid the city'~ demand ts
"an insult."
··we (th~· two churoht•s) are both
honorahlc nod we made an agree-
ment "
Planning ( omm1h1oner Tom
L1 .. engoo<l !klld the rn~ tool<. lhe ~teps
10 ensure sal"et) He said there are not
adequate parking places and v1s11ors
bloc:lo. fire h)drants and dnveway5
"1th 1he1r rar!. while overflowing into
residential neighborhoods.
.. r he chun.·h has to understand that
we're acting to insure public safety,"
he ~11d
HB MURDER HEARING BEGINS •••
From Al
,[I WEATHER
Hot spell looming along Coast
Coaatal
,.._, eunoy Fnctey ll1W •• "'V"I
and --'*" ... Clolldt .,,. .., 1()9 lligflt "' !lit llUC1* IO -to illt•n*"-1• ·~ W.,INflO lrllO tl>e m<0 IOI Ftiday l OW9 In lite MIO 50a lo
mid llO•
From Point CO!IOePllOn 10 IM Me1. "'"" ao.o., tnd 0\11 IO ml!M 111<*
Wlterl Uglll 11114 vttlal* wtncll NQIU
1no m0<ntng hOUrt becOf'lllng touth-1
10 WMI 10 10 20 ~no11 wllll 1 10 3·1oot
'lrincl w•-ll'llt •natnOOfl Ind 9 10 ,.
knota Frkl•Y 1n1m00fl Sc111111w11
twtlla 1 10 2 IMI NIQIU 11nC1 1tiorn1ng ~
cloud• ..,,., moetly IUflnll •ltttnoon1
Outer waier. Smell 4'4'tlt lld11110<y
from P0111t Conc-c>llOll lo .s.,,11 flOM
111an0 Clue to non11-1 ,.,;n01 20 10 30
knolS '""' o..a11 to 35 knoll
Tides
TODAY
Sec:onel hlQll 5 27 •"' 4. S.Coneltow 11 49 pm 22
fftlOU
Ftrll high 4.&.6 • m ) .)
Flrtl IOW 10 57 • m I 4
S.cono '11gn 5 55 p "' 4 1
Sun eets IOd•y ., e 07 pm ,,_
~rlday at S 52 a m and tett •Q••n 11
IOI pm
Moon Mii al t 09 pm ,._•I 1 311
am r1~and "t~ aga.n at 2 08p m
AIOUQ\HlfQutt
Am.,iHO
Al'1'h<l<aoe Alllntl
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.1n' or all should \land tnal lur
murdt•r The heanng 1s C\J)Clted to
l~l\t t\\l> "-t'el..S.
protested defense anome) Lan) he am,·ed at the Hughe$' one-story
Bruce to Municipal C oun Judge tract home off Beach Boulevard.
Extended
HIOfll 1114 lnOI n.ng IOw cl0ud1 ,_, Ille
COM1 extending 11110 lht IOwer ••I~
during lilt lat .. nlghl and .. tly·rTIOfnlnt
howl 'f'tfmM daye lr'llanel HIQht MAI
70 II tl1e l>Uctlel fClllQlllO IO 90t In
val~ Lowe· 52 to 65
°"'*ton.WV
Cl\tnc>Ue.N C.
Clwt-Cl\IC t90 Clnclnnttl Clewlena
COlumbl•.S C
COlllmt>ua,Ol'I
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OlllM·ftWorth
O.yton
t2 TO u 47
17 ST -
.. e3 SURF REPORT
I )c put}' D1stnct Attornc) fa)
\hl'>d) alleged that the three JOtncd
tog~thcr 1n a scheme to kill Hughe~
.ind lOllect the computer engineer's
1''00,000 hfe insurance pohc)
.\t the time of the incident. the "lk
David Bnckner at one pomt during The policeman's tes11mony was
the hearing. interrupted conunuously by objec-
Bricker. howevt•r. permitted Mose-uons from the three lawyers rep-
1~ to questton both a roommate resenung the suspects. Onr of the
who'd been II\ ing a1 the Hughes' attorneys halted the proceedings to
Lakeside Lane home at the umeofthe question Cristie"s ability to tell the
k1llin$ and Detective Bob Cnstte, the difTertnce between a fresh and spent
Temps
Alb.,,y
HI Lo
7S 41
o.n-0..M-0.Cro<I
Ouklth
EIPuo
,. 51
101 70
9 I 84 LOCATIOM
11 4 1 H\lnt1no1on e..cn 98 78 ANa< Jelly. ,....0«1
81 81 40th6CrMI,~ 84 u 22nd 1>11..i. ~ ee 11 8alllOI w~ IO 68 LflOU111 ISMctl e3 49 San Clemente 92 87 w.,... 1emo er
em
2-4
1·3
1-3
1·3
2-4
1·2 1-2 S ...... Olr.CtlOn _,,_
DIMCTI<* , .. ,
lalr ,. ,.
llllr , ...
lair
hJd blamed the lolling on a burglar
I "ho she cla1 med shot her sleeping
I hu-.band. stole Jewlery and toolc her
bro"n 1981 royota, _.._, • ....._f.L:;fjg•
first mvest1ga1or to amve on the bullet casing. Ke~~atheurl)mOrn1q~oo~ T~thr~~~n~nt~~l~~I~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1ng. -.u~~~, · ~~-.. ~•~;.;;:ciiia•••=•• .p1111i~~h a bed sheet, .ha; and relatives sat 1n 7he audience. ~ r~~ >.:1..!.l'"~~~~c:.,.J!--.. ~ ""'"-~(thin Tn llour latertra veh ng in the
m1,<1tng car Jeanette Hughes and
Ramirez' son were arrested the fol·
I lowing da)
~i~n ~~~~cef~~~~e !e~~~p~~·1%~ heFi~!~:d~,t~es~~~'i~a~~~lyo~e~ Body of Lagunan 1· Aent1• f1· ed
casing in the hv1n$ room. Ramirez and Jeanette Hughes were U.
The detective said when he amved, lovers who planned the killing to Law)ers representing the 1no
da1mcd Mosdy 1s being permitted to
introduce e\ 1dence during a
prellminaf) heanng without first
detailing the alleged comp1raq
"I'm being kept in the dark and
.. our being kept in the dark.''
he did not consider the dead man•s collect rnsurance money.
wife a possible ~uspcct in the case The young Ramire2 allegedl)' had By DAVID BISHOP
even though ht> could find no obvious dropped his father off at the Hughes' Dally Not C«n•• ..,.,
signs that a burglar) at taken place at home before the killing and was to A Laguna Beach man whose bat·
the home. rendenous with Ramirez later an the Cristie also testified that he w •>< mo I d t th t f h tered and blood) body was found in ..., ming. po ice ~at a e ime 0 t e the trunk of his automob1I.. at aware an arrest had been made before arrests .. Ontano lnternattonal .\1rpon died
from multtple gunshot wounds to the
head. the San Bernardino Count)
TORCH DREAM MAY BE DOUSED ... coroner's office sa id:
Meanwhile, investigators revealed
Wednesday that Jerr}' Lee Lawrence.
42, had a record of narcotics v1ol-
at1ons and may be hnked to a car theft
From Al
Part1c1pants in the cro~s-countn
rela) each Jlad to ra1se S3.00U to
hcnefit a )Outh group Tambolleo'!>
mone., 1'1 earmarked for the Bo's and
(,iris C-lub of Huntington valle\
Each \Or<'h earner is assigned one
kilometer (~:! mile) to run in 1he
1..ros<,-countn rela\ that "Ill end in
the Los .\nge.les Memonal < olhseum
.\pparentl). all the Orange ( oum~
kilometers were committed to run·
ncrs \\no returned tne1r monc) earl)>
Tambdlleo's mone) was sent 1n i.\pril.
do~ to the deadline Shc ~as notified
this \\t.>ek. that her torch earning
assignment ~ould be in .\din
when I got there .. she ~ud. "It's
ridiculous the "a" they'"e put me on
the spot ..
Tambolll't1 ha'> hcen pursuing her
OI~ mpte torlh dream since last
O\ember She practtced running
and e'!emsed at a local health club.
~he said she "a' act1\e 1n athletics
during her ~outh. and 'ihe 1.1nv1s1oned
the torch run a<, a "a) 10 provide a
memorable moment for her five
grandchildren
She said a 12-)ear-old grandson 1n
Okla~oma has recent!~ taken up
running. inspired b) his grand-
mother's e.iample.
her blood prc,,ure I'> ··octtcr than it's
ever been .. She sa)s she practices
Jugging or bnsk "alkmg regular!) al
the beath < olkcun~ thl' $3 000 in dona11ons
b) going \hop to shop v.-asn 't eas~
ettht•r .\boul son separate donor\
were 1n,oht•d <,he said.·
·· ..\t somc plaleS. the~ asked me to
lOme balk t\\O or three times ... she
.,aid "But I \\3\ persistent. and finall~
the\ dribbled out a fe,, dollars But
most nf the people were ~'Ill·
pathet1t ..
T Jmtlolko \a1d the last te" dollars
"t·re donatt•d b\ an area club member
"ho asked to remain anon\ mous
and an anned robber).
L.a .... rence was reported m1ss1ng O\
friends June 13 after he failed 10
return lrom an appointment he had in
\.1ontclair. near Ontario. His car "as
later disCO\ered 1n the Ontario air·
pon parking lot and police found the
bod) v.hen the) opened the t1 unk on
~aturda\
Chic( Deput~ C oronor Phil \k\·
CONTINUED STORIES
ander said the decomposed body
made tt "hard to tell" whether there
were other inJunes that contributed
10 the death. He refused to reveal how
many times Lawrence was shot.
"f can't even guess when the death
occurred." Alexander said.
Ontano Detective Tony Del Rio
said Lawrence was last seen ahve by
his friends on that Wednesday.
"Nothing's adding up yet." Del Rio
said. "We're in no way at a dead end,
there are JUSt a large number oflcads
to follow."
Laguna Beach pohce said Wednes-
day that Lawrence was on probation
for narcotics violations at the ttme of
his death.
Crash tnjures 2 motorists
T"o women were injured about
7 JO a m toda) when their cars
collided on the Santa '\na River
bndge at Adams A"cnue, between
Hun11ng1on Beach and Costa Mesa.
The westbound lanes of the hcavil)
tra' eled road\\3\ were closed for
ahout 45 minutes' after the accident.
Jane Frel·man. 35. of Huntington
Beach. "a" drl\ ing her Volkswagen
~
bug eastbound when she apparently
struck the center divider and jumped
over 1t. colliding with a w~tbound
C<trdnven by Mary MacKenzie, 56, of
Costa Mes.a.
Both were hsted tn good condiuon
this morning at Fountain Valley
( ommun1ty Hospital. Cause of the
accident 1s still under in ves11gat1on by
the California Highwa> Patrol.
The tOrlh pro&ram does not
pro .. 1de funds for transpOrtat1on and
Tamholleo. "ho 1t .. es on oc1al
Secunt). said she can't atTord to
travel to Ad1n
But TambollC'o has laced dif-
licult1es in fulfilling her dream. In
Januan. she su ffered a mild heart
attack. She entered a tardiat rchabili·
talion program at Foun1a1n Valley
( ommuntl) Ho\p1 tal and no" insists
11 she choose<, not ~I run 1n .\din
T ambollco ma~ be able to gel a refund
nl the SH)()(}
MARINE FLAP COSTS CITY? ...
"And I wouldn'1 know what to do
"I don't want the monc' hari.. ··<;he
1ns1sted "I ~ant to carry.1hc torch I
'' orked too hard to lose It."
AIRCAL WORKERS RAP PAY PLAN ...
From Al
ants a minimum of 58 flight hours a
month. Thal 1s low for the 1ndJJSll'\
The average guaranteed number of
flight hours at most airlines 1s closer
to 75
Air< al flight attendants see man-
agement's proposal to create the two-
t1erpa) system asa wa) to "d1v1de and
tonqucr:· said Carla Barrow a flight
attendant who has been "-llh .\1rC"al
~1 nt·c I Q61.1
P1lotsa1 .\11'(' al also~e the t~o-tter
!>)'item as a threat and passed a
rc.,olut1on last week \tatmg their
obJecuon to any AtrCal employce'i'
union aC{cptrng the re\ 1sed pa)
program.
The airline isn't commenting on
1he labor controvers).
·We are in negot1a11on-. w11h the
flight attendants nght no" .tnd "'"
don"t comment on an~th1ntz thttt 1\ in
negot1attons We bcl1e\C' that thing'>
are progressin& and 1ha1 the talk.,
going' ef) "'ell." said ~1r< al \p<1l..l'\·
man 8111 Bell
Barro"' cla1 ms the a1rhne "'111
reduce the number of working hour.,
for vetcrJn flight attendant'i to the 58-
hour m1n1mum 1n the contract The
a1rltm· "di u\c cheaper. newh hired
workl.-r' 111 fill in the slac~ thu'>
depm 1ntz the older flight attendan1.-.
of tht: monthl\ income the\ "ere
au u\tomed to rece1' mg
A<1rrc," noted that income alread)
,; WrR£ L1 sTE NING
--
Just Call
642-6086
has been reduced I 0 percent through
the. wage cut and another 8 percent b)
mflauon since the wage freeze.
"We ha .. e alread) made a lot of
concessions and we aren't asking for
any of 11 back. Not even a wage
increase:· Barro\,\ said
'\nd with the increasing number of
B-scale emplovee\JOining the a1rhne.
the influence of the older .\-scale
emplo)ees in contract negot1at1nns
\o\tll dccrea~ ··v.. hen there arc enough people on
the B-scale to run the a1rhne the .\-
scale employees will he eliminated.
The maJonty of the B-scalc em-
plo)ees are not going to fight for the
older employees.'' Ba rrow said.
"It 1s real clear what the mtent1on .
of management ts In two years there
"on't be an .\·scale." Barro"" ad~ed
John Prnca' age. an a1rhne induslf)
anahst "1th Paine V.. ebbcr Jackson &
( un·,., Im agrees tha1 l\\O·t1er pa}
''stem' create tension bul he sa\S the
airlines ha'e hllle choice. ·
"It 1s an industn-trend There 1s no
question that 11 w1il help the mdustn
b) reducing labor costs." Pinca,ag~
said.
"It "Ill make negot1at1ons more
difficult than in the past but the B-
'iCalc 1s a lot morl' preferahle than
laking someone" hu ha~ hcen mal..ing
$100.000 a ) ear and gn ing them
S SU.000. ·· he sa.1d
The comert "'11 aeate d1' 1S1on in
the labor unions bul Pmca"age sa)s 11
"ill take a different form than Barrow
forseec;
··111s more hkel) that the new set of
worker<, \.\.111 want to get up to the old
workers· "age., and will put pressures
on union negotiators to do that,"
Pinca' agc '>aid.
"But an)t1me you 'ipht the union
membt-rsh1p ~ou have a better chance
of doing ''hat management wants "
Pima' age added
\lth(lugh t11ght anendants at other
a1rllnt''> ha"e accepted a similar t~o-
11ered pa) 'i)Stem. Barrow says there
are rnough differences in the ..\1r('al
S)\tem to make tt paniculaf) hard on
emplovees
The •\merican Airlines svstem
guarantee' \eteran flight attendan1s a
minimum of 75 hours a month so the
1hrea1 111 replacing old emplo~ees
hour., w 1th new emplo)'ee hour-; is not
a'i grt'al
.\mcrKan also stans m B-scale
emplo)CCS at S 14.50 an ho11r com·
pared 10 ..\1r<'al's proposed $1 0.
l 'n11ed .\1rhnes· t"-O·t1er pa) 'i)S-
tem stan~ ne"' workers at lower rates
but reat'hes eventual pant) after fi, e
\cars.
\lthough tl1ght attendents don't
hke the toncept. the~ are sa) ing
pn\tHel) that such safeguards as
more minimum hours. higher '\tart-
ing salanes and e'entual pant) mai..e
thl' idea more palatable
Wha1 do you like about the Dail) Pllot7 What don't you like7 c,a11 the
number at left and your messal(e will be recorded, transeribed and dellvtred
to the appropriate editor.
The same U -bour answering 'iervice may be used to record letters to thto
editor on any toplC'. Contributors to our Lenen column must lncludto their
namto and ttolephonto number for vtortfleatlon. No clrcolatlon calls, please.
Tf'll u wbal's on yo ur mlod.
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lfid t " 0-0\ .,, bft ,w..,_. .. ,
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•Ckl """ "'-'°"' ''' u; 1 • '" • oetor• •m _,_~ ..
°" --Clr~ulatlon
Telephonee
•
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schw•rtr Ill
Publisher
Chazy Oowellby
Editor end Aas1stan1
10 the Pubhsh11
ltepfMft '·Cerao PrOOuchon
MM°lllg411
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ContrOller
I , .
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Ctrc\Jlation
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•
MAIN OFFICE
l 11, ,.,,.~ea, S• c """ ~ L"
MAj A lOI• ... a. ' t ~ C:O.tt M4'M CA 9262e
ro'f'r•'O"'I •ll~J a. .. >ge C0oa11 Pu~ C""'Pt"l' HO
~ SIO'~ l\.lflllior. .0-IU''8l ........ 00 li'O\lfll ..
""""' ..... ~ "'IY lie 1$1f00Ul ~ W•l"OUI IPtcial ,,., "'uon Cl ~<>Pl"ogl\I """.,.,
VOL. n, NO. U3
From Al
letter this week that .. .,...e arc d1sap·
pointed to sec that The In inc
< ompan) land de .. elopmcnt plan-
ning include!> construction of hotels.
motels and child da)-Care t.enters
"lthin the usual traffic pattl·rn of our
main landing runwa} "
The Irvine Co "1s al read} building
the on-ramps.'' ills pointed out.
··Where were the) (the Mannes)
when we did the General Plan in
I 974" and broad-brush plans for the
area were mapped out. he asked. 'Td
like to know what this means." Sills
added.
Gen Cooke 1s on vacation and was
not 1mmed1atelv available for com-
ment. base spokesman Master Sgt.
Jack Michalski said today. ~ills said he interpreted Cooke's
statement to mean that the Mannes
intend to oppose development
planned ov~r the nut 25 years within
the s0<alled Golden Triangle, south
of the Manne base.
Nielsen said in an interview earlier
this week that Manne training
missions actuall) cross the tnans!e
proposed for the Irvine Center. while
m1htal) maps show the jets fly a
deeper path and avoid It.
Desptte the apparent overflights b)'
m1litaf) aircraft. "1t shouldn't have
an impact" on development plans.
N 1elscn said.
Added Irvine Co. spokesman Jerry
Collins. "the area under the pattern
has low density."
Despite Nielsen's comments, Siiis
said he had heard in private conversa-
tions wtth Irvine Co. officials that
they "raised their eyebrows" at Gen.
Cooke's recent statement.
Flights from the El Toro stauon
and the Manne helicopter station in
T ustm total 135.000 a year. a number
that has increased steadily in recent
\Cars because of an expansion in
existing training programs, according
to a base spokesman.
J?esptte. pre~bed flight patterns,
residents 1n neigh borhoods throuJll-
out Irvine report military jets flying
where they aren't supposed to be, Sills
said.
Dry-land earner landing practices
on the base's primary runway arc the
focus of a controversy between the
c1ty oflrvine and Marines, after three
jets and a fixed wing craft two weeks
aso allegedly "buzzed" a crowd of
p1c01ckers at the site of a 177-bed
hospital in cast Irvine. •
Gen. Cooke maintains that on June
9 all aircraft were flying in accordance
with published regulations and that
no violation of safe flying pra.cticcs
occurred.
The city last week ask~ the
Depanment of Defense to move
practice m1ss1ons from El Toro. Sills
said there has been no responst so fa r
from military officials in Washing-
ton. D.C. • '
CULTURED PEARL CHALLENGE
GUES.S THE NUMBER OF PEARLS IN T HE GLASS IN OUR FRONT WINDOW
VISIT THE STORE
DURING OUR
30o/o
OFF
SPECIAL
AND TAKE OUR
CHALLENGE
J I l
•ONE ENTRY
PER PERSON
• NO PURCHASE
NECESSARY
• CLOSEST GUESS
WINS CULTURED
PEARL NECKLACE
ON JUNE 28th
CHARLES H. BA RR
17tlt& .....
W8tdffpt ..
.... .,wt ...
. ..