HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-25 - Orange Coast Pilotc111111m• •
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Mt>Nl>A't lllNf ."· 1·1·i• o H A N c , E:. c o u N r '1 l A L 1 f o n N 1 A . ·, 1 • "'~ •
.
Bigger ai_rcr•ft. 'likel~' at JW.
. . .
·sig Boeing 757, 767 jetliners expected
in next five years, staff report indicates
By JERRY HlRSCH
Ol .. 0.-,,... .....
Orange Coun~y supervisors.. ltmed
with a new staff report that says the
~troduction of big_cr Jet aircraft at
.
An 180-mph crash kills a
boater at lrvlne Lake./ A3
We asked c;oast folks
their opinion of the new
Immigration law./ A3
.
John Wayne Airpon is likely, arc set
once agaio to ~tie with the thorny
issue of airport e~pansion.
Althou,gh the report sets no specific
timetable. it says the county sho uld
?!~~~-4
Thousands of gay men
and lesbians parade In
San Francisco./ AS
Nation
Sen. Edward Kennedy
ends silence, endorses
Walter Mondale as
Democratic presidential
nominee:/ A4
First flight for space shut-
tle craft Discovery Is
scuttled moments before
takeoff./ A4
World ~
New NATO chief says
Europe nations need to
reassure U.S. they'll hold
up their end In defense
spending.I A4
An earthquake measur-
ing 5 on the Richter scale
rattles parts of Japan./ A4
The secret to success of
many tc>p business ex-
ecutives might be the
Rover, Fido or Kitty In
their childhood ./111
Sports
Ruth Wysocki of El Toro
shocks favored Mary
Decker In the women's
1,500 meters at the Olym-
pic track and field trials In
Los Angeles.C1
The Angels let a game
literally sllp away against
Kansas City, 3-2, and visit
Texas next./C1
Former National Hockey
League president
Clarence Campbetl dies
at the age of 78./C2
!•X.;t!':,.:-:-:·:~:.:~.:«<.:~:~-:~~~:~~::i
Entertainment
You can see "The Fantas-
ttcks' •at two different
theaters on the Orange
Coast this weekend./83
Sylvla Porter says
bankruptcy Is not always
to best answer to
financial Insolvency ./85.
expect to see aubnes flyi~ ~r Sanua Ana.
Boeina7S7and767aircraftinandout The ~na 757 is a twin ensine
oft.he airpon within five yean. 116-seatplancand the Boeina 761 isa
The supervisors meet TUnday to twin en11nc 21~scat plane·. Both~
discuss a reviied plan for allocatina considerably laracr lhf,n the l SO.scat
Oi&bts at the airport as well as McDonnell Dou&Jas MD-80 -the
teiaativc plans for future srowth. most common commercial aircraft at
Thccounty'sadvisoryauponco~ the airport now. .
mission will tackle the same issues at · News that the county expects to see
a special mectina toni~t at 7 in the the laJJU airplanes c:;une as a urprise
county Hall of Administration. in . to the foe: of airpon expansion;
IU4ay. 1119alon Vlejo'• Ratb WpocJd
Weated Maly Deeker la tile 1,500-meter
.. na. Moriee, Pae• Cl.
..I don't know bow on one band qu1tier aircraft. Pmilc SGA: Ml
they can talk about Smaller, new Airlines rcceatl ...-IJGO P a tecbnolo., aircraft and at the same 0020, IOO-teatt;'Cw a eaM
time wk about 7S7und 76 7s that IJ'C 146 airpJancl tO Ult • --2 .. laraer and noisier ~.. said a.trpOr11 lake SW.A. Ne: p:a11 ._..
Barbli'a Liebman. director of the based AirC.aJ unaunced 111 I Jlf
Airport Work.in& Group, a coalition June its$]()() million-.... ·e•• ol
of Newport Beach bomcoWncr as-12, l~t8oei•737•l00w;I 1
sc>cutions fiabtilla ailJ>OTt cx\iansion. for the •me reasons.
The trend by air1incs UsiQ& tbc Thc\malJcr aim.ft Pladl 8 _. aiJport"-tw betn 10 buy' smaller.-_.,........ ~ ... ..,._,_,
Mesa Freew~y
decision due
within months
displace 219 people
BJ :&.A.RENE. U.EIN °' .............
The!ateoftbe Iona-overdue Route
SS freeway extension, which would
run throuah Costa Mesa's Newport
Boulevard ditcll. is likely to be
decided at the end of this summer by
the California Transportation Com-
mission.
Caltrans will n=commend ail east-
erly route for the freeway's extension
at the commission's mecti.na on
Thursday, accocd.in& to Sid Elichs,
Caltrans branch Chief of project
development 1n 0ranae c.ounz The easterly downtown
route is estimated to cost $96 m lion
and.pass through SS homes and 40
·uc1 prof asks CIA
for files on Lennon
BJ ANDREA ADELSON
OI ............
A UC ltvine professor asked the
CIA for all its dOCWDC'llts on former
BcatJe John 1.cnnon Saturday after a
previoas.ly ICCl'et JllCmO revealed the
.,ency monitored the late rock Star's
anti-Vietnam war activities in 1972.
Acoordina to Jon Weiner, the
heavily censored memo, amona
documents he obtained under the
Freedom of Information A~ shows
the agency asked the FBI to ptber
information on wbetbcr the British
superstar would participate in anti-
Victnam war protests at the 1972
Republican National Convention. 1'be documents were turned over
in mid-May to Wtener, who made
them public Friday and filed the
request the ne~t day .
.. The government bas consistently
claimed that Lennon's activiuc:s were
somehow relevant to nauonal secur-
ity considerations., .. Wiener, 39, said.
.. We maintain that nothina Lennon
did, planned to do or talked about
doing, in an:y way threatened the
national secunty of the United StateS .
.. At most. it threatened the reelec-
tion of President Nuon," be said.
.. But tbcrc's no 1ep1 reason for the
(P1eue .. LBIOK>N/ A2) Jobn Lenaoa
Youths fear death
in nuke holocaust
NEWARK. N.J. (AP) -~bout
half of approiumatel} 5,500 high
school students surve}ed behe' c they
arc b.kely to dte 1n a nuclear holocaust.
while 75 pcn:ent bdteve a nuclear war
is preventable. a state offietal sa}s.
Overall. "It became clear that the~
arc very confused about the issue. '
said Or. Donald 8. Louna. chamnan
of the New JCf'SC) Med1ca1 Schoors
department of preventive mcdmne
.. They don•t know who to beheve.
The Pentaaon will show a gloss)
promotional movte and they'll ~
lieve that. The next speaker will say
that's all wrona. and they'll behevc
that. lbcy'"' respondina to who
spoke last and who is mo t char-
asmatJc," Louria said Sunday.
Half of the tecn-.agers questioned
said they were likely ·or IOIDC'Wbat
likely to pmsh in a nuclear holocaust,
said Louria. adding that girls ~
mo~ pessimistic tbatooys..
.. About •-o ycan l&Q, we bcpD 10
be~ncernqS a~att tbc pm:epllODSof
}<*DI peOpk m i'qard .to ~;arms
ratt and their future." Louria saic1
''What WC were scared of WU &be
po 1bility that youna people~
lose faith in the fututt, and ~t •
would become a non·mdiOrilt '°"
ciety. one in which they do not feel
they can handle tbetr own problems
and make thin.p better." he added.
EM
A3
85
A4
054
EM
C7
C4
Most on Coast working in Orange Co11nty
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AS
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Raidtots of Oralilt C.GMt cities IWim Ind Fowuai.D Vallty;tesidtnu
tend to work in Orinee Couty. but of <>ruee Coat cities rq>e>nCd their ~l numben Of a>Uty Nii· wortpllcc ._.. in the COWlty in fat
dents commute to t;os A~ San p:eaaer numbed than avenac.
· Riverside and SU ~,i= ,,, __ A~t 19 ~t of tht county•s
countta to eam a hvtna. ae.rtY oae m1Dson·mcm r WOft·
Almost 72 pct"Ctftt Of 111 county rorce tOld «nsus taken they com·
re11dents 1nchcatcd thty worbd lin muled out of the county to So to WOrt ~ County. aciordlna to 19IO 6Kb day, a«ordina to the ccn u
~naus data rompdcd by a tatc data.
r EmPk>ymmt Otwlopcnent Oepin· "*'&·. °'*• Coe t (I
mtnt llbOr marttt 1M111t. l.lpM ·1Bcim relidcnl\ tended tu ••••r' With th;t ~on of Hamtanston have toe.I job; lftOft ofttn tban \heir
I I
Jiff
lou:1
Focus ON THE NEY\S
~ in LA. COuot and mort'
D I 120 ~ their Jobt weft
located tD Raven.tdc. o; or
n Bcrnardino countie .
Ei&ht out of 10 Irvin w earners
1so work in Oranat County. 1 td·
I
At**°ranoe Coast DAILY PILOT/Mt>nday, JUM 25, 19tM
Hurricane Chnistina spoils
weeken beach weather
BJ IM A.I odaced t> s
Rain aod wind from Hurricane
Chmtina 5J)C)1lcd an othel'Wl~ fine
beach day Sunday, and less than half a
million people turned out at Sou them
California beaches, hf~rds said.
Rain measured 0.01 of an inch 1n
downtown Los Anaclcs, and National
Weather Service meteor<>lo11st
Dieter Crowley said similar weather
could persist through Tuesday,
thanks to Christina. •
0 1t rained like heck here And at San
Pedro," Kcrmosa Beech lifquard
Kerb ThaCker ~~ cstimatiq the
crowd at only 75,uuu.
''We're a9tnl to still be under the
influence of Christina," Crowley said.
"Ifs sbootina a lot of moisture up our
way."
He said there will rem.a.in ·•a chance
of liabt shower., mainly in the
afternoon and evening hours, mostly
along the foothills, deserts and higher
elevations~· throuaJ> Tuesday.
The rain didn't get u far oonh as
Santa Monica. Zuma or Malibu.
.. It was a nice ~b day," lifeau&rd
Jim Jacobson said at ZumL "We had
a bi& crowd -mOdcratc to heavy"
which he csllmated at 80,000 people
for Malibu and Zuma combined.
"No rain," said Santa Monica
life,uard dispatcher Tom Overmire,
"but we had winds from every
direction, and the ternpcrature went
from 62 to 86 back to 76 all within an
hour .... It was bizarre."
Mesa accident victim dies
A Costa Mesa woman who was
scnously mjured 10 a car accident
earlier this montll died Saturday
rughtat Founuin Valley Community
Hospital, an Ora'r\ie Count> cor-
oner's deputy said.
Margaret Dtll, 58. apparently suf-
fered a heart attack at the wheel on the
afternoon of June 11, JUSt before she
drove her car into a pole on Placenua
A venue JUSt north of Estancia High
School.
She suffered masswe head and
abdominal mjuries in the crash and
had remained in the hospital in
cntical condition since the accident
occurred.
Dill's passenger, her sister Winona
Thery. S7. remained in serious con-
dition at Fountain Valley hospital
today.
The women lived together in Costa
Mesa. Cause of dcath·bas not yet been
determined. the dcpul>'. said. Funeral
arrangements arc pending.
~~ijiiliUl~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MESA FREEWAY ROUTE DECISION •.•
From Al
tions, the Costa Mesa Traffic Com-The original proposed completion meeting and if the commission de· ~~~ · T ,.mo~»':~ ~!~!~;69, by the ·:~~~t, consid~r the ~t~J~uld
Faye of the other alternatives Comm1ss1on, nlh"'~Uglilyft'lr~~'lti-~1on
considered for the freeway extension west of Superior Avenue. If the has 30 to 90 days to make a decision
called for spendmg as much as $167 easterly route is adopted that plan will Flores said. '
million and displacing as many as be scrapped.
1,118 re sidents , Caltrans
spokeswoman Rosa Flores told the
Associated Press.
Elichs said Caltrans officials would
present the route at Thursday's
LENNON CIA FILE SOUGHT ••. From Al .
CIA to be involved m protecting
Nixon from threats to his reclec-
uon .... I don't see why the CIA should
have anything to do with poliucal
protests in this country."
A political researcher, Weiner 1s the
author of "Come To~ether: John
Lennon m His Time; a Random
House book that should be released
today. He said the publishing house
has agreed to a second ed1t1on wtth
inserts about the newly released
documents.
CIA spokeswoman Patti Vol1 de-
clined specific comment on the
documents. but noted that in the
m1d-I 970s'the Senate Select Commit-
tee on Intelligence Aclivities reported
that the CIA had been "involved in
some domestic activities at the behest
of the President."
"It was inappropriate, and from
that came several rules and regu-
lations curtailing the agency's ac-
tivities." she said Friday.
An accompanying affidavit to the
documents, signed by CIA Infor-
mation Review Officer Louis J.
Dube. acknowledged that the agency
obtained infonnation appearing 1n
the documents, all of which have been
censored .
BIGGER JETS SEEN~ ..
From Al
problem for the airport, accord1Dg to
the county staff report. The count}
had planned to allow a1rhnes to trade
one flight of their no1S1er planes for
three flights of the new, quieter
airplanes hke the BAe 146 and the
137-300.
With the count> plann1Dg to ex-
pand the number of average daily
departures early next year to S5 from
its current level of 41 , a three-for.one
tradeout would create a virtual gnd-
lock at the airport, the report says.
That plan~uld have allowed for a
maximumi>f I 6S fligbts per day.
The existing facilities arc not large
enough and the number of flights
should be cut to about 70-or a five-
for-four tradeout.
The staff report says that is a more
realistic number to use while a new
airport tenninal is under construc-
tion·.
The county hopes to have a much
larger terminal completed in about
five years.
Construction on the freeway is
projected for the 1987-88 fiscal year,
Ehbcbs said.
National security justified main-
taining the confidentiality of material
that was blacked out, Dube wrote.
"The affidavit is a. much more
satisfactory explanation of why" only
censored documents were released,
Weiner said. But because it's unclear
whether the CIA is withholding
further information, the history
professor said be filed a request under
the Freedom of Information Act for
all CIA documents related to Lennon.
Lennon's song "Give Peace a
Chance" gave the anti-war move-
ment its anthem. He "is an important
figure to a whole generation and bis
battle with the Nixon administration
1s sort of a forgonon chapter," Weiner
said.
The professor obtained copies of
five documents from FBI files. in-
cluding one that originated with the
CLA. The FBI referred the documents
to the CLA for review before releasing
them.
Weiner is awaiting word this week
on a court ordered explanation from
the FBI on why they too censored
Lennon documents. The FBI sub-
mitted its reasons for withholding
two-thirds of a 281-page file in a brief
to a federal court last week.
His attorneys hope to schedule a
conference with the federal judge and
Justice Department attorneys this
week. Weiner said.
COUNTY EMPLOYMENT SURVEY •••
From Al
About 82 percent ot Costa Mesa's
45.476 wage earners reported they
work m Orange County wtth Costa
Mesa. Newport Beach and Santa Ana
as the employment leaders. More
than 6.500 Costa Mesans report for
work ID Newport Beach each work-
day. according to the census data.
About 7 percent of the city's
residents travel out of the county for
employment. with 801 ventunng to
the city of Los Angeles and I. 900 to
dest1nat1ons elsewhere in sprawling
Los Angeles County <\bout 80
workers commute to San Diego
County, 120 to San Bernardino
Count) and 65 to Riverside County.
Seventy-eight percent of Newport
Beach residents reported their Jobs
were in Orange County compared to
almost 12 percent olrny wage earners
who told census tai..ers they commute
to other counties for their JObs.
Among the 33. 732 wage earners
tallied by census takes. 11.032 re-
ported their JObs are 1n Newport.
3.420 reported working in nearby
Costa Mesa and 2.280 said they were
employed ID Santa Ana.
Ne-... port commuters to the city of
Los Angeles number l,OS7 and more
than 2.000 residents said they dnve
WE'RE LISTENING
Just Call
642-6086
DaUy Piiot
o.tlvery
11 Guaranteed
V JP'dey F Mer It J'Oti 00 ""°' ,..,..,f' 1"41' ~ Oy ~JOI>"' bel0te 71>m
~'>d '°"' OOf)y ... t» -"" C,411,. 09~ enc Sutldlly II
elsewhere to work in Los Angeles
County.
San Diego County draws only 10
Newport residents each workday but
Riverside and San Bernardino coun-
ties arc workday destinations for 261
residents.
Falling below the county median
for in<0unty employment, 68 per-
~nt of Fountain Valley's 27,27S
wage-earning residents said their
workplace is in Orange County. Just
over 23 percent indicated they com·
mute to other counties for employ-
ment.
More than 3,100 Fountain Valley
residents said their jobs are in
Huntington Beach while 2,477 re-
ported working in Santa Ana.
The city of Los Angeles' population
is swelled by J.27S Fountain Valley
residents who commute north each
workday morning and again south
each evening. according to the census
data. More than 4, 700 other Fountain
Valley residents also commute to jobs
in Los Angeles County.
San Diego apparently holds no
attraction for city residents, but both
Riverside and San Bernardino coun-
ties arc works1tes for about I SO
Fountam Valley residents.
Finally, fully 26 ~nt of Hunt-
ington Beach's 87,998 'residents re-
ported they work outside of Orange
County, the highest percentage of any
Orange Coast city. Slightly over 64
percent of Huntington Beach wage·
earners said they are employed in
their home county.
Among county cities, Hunti11J1on
Beach employs I 9,8SS residents
while another S,4S I arc employed in
Santa Ana, S,229 in Costa Mesa and
4.S 12 in Newport Beach, the 1980
census revealed.
More than 4,800 Huntington
Beach residents commute to the city
of Los Angeles each workday joining
11 ,048 workers employed elsewhere
in Los Angeles County. Some 4,887
city residents said they work in Long
Beach. About I SO Huntington Beach
waie earners commute south to San
Diego County, 224 work in Riverside
County and 238 in San Bernardino
County.
Mean travel time to work in
minutes for Orange Coast residents:
Costa Mesa, 19.9; Fountain Valley,
26; Huntington Beach, 27.1; Irvine,
23.4; La&una Beach. 24; Newpon
Beach. 2!; County average, 23.6.
What do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't yoa llke? Call tbe
number at left and your me11a1e wlll be recorded, transcribed and delivered
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The same %4-bour aaswerlng service may be used to record letters to tbe
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name and telephone number for verutcatlon. No circulation calla, pleaae.
Tell DI wbat'• on your mlDd.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
Clrculatlon 7141142..-m
C .... tfted adverttelng 114/142-"11
AU otlMf dep9rtmenU M2...Q21
MAIN OFFICI
l30 w .. 1 a.; ti C:O.C.. .._ CA .. eoor_ IOI! •MO C.. ..._ C.t
'°" "" ~ •«-'°"' (1(1, ti)' •em eel~•
0 • ... rio ytNI Cort -Chair OowallbJ Aoeemery Churc:twnM
.. 9d
Clrevtatton
Tel1p."\onee
Editor and Assistant Controti.r
to the Publisher
Mo9I
0.•"09 c;n.,,..y
A1fl!IO ~
lt9PhenF.Ceruo
l"IQOucll()(I
Mt,..~
VOL. n, HO. 171
•
•
Hot time under coastal skies
Tides
TOOAY 12Mpm
7 25pm 2' 57
TUHOAY
""" low 2 44 Lift 0 2 ~Ir-lotLm 3 $
-I St p m. 2.2 ~hloll 7 "'"' • ' ~ .... ICIOey 91 lot pm , r-T~ al 6 ~ a.m end .... llQMI et IOI pm Moon ... It 6-01 p.m • ,_ ,_
Cl9y al 3 35 • m end '918 ao-in It I 04 p.m
Tempe
~ Aoc:lloreoe Allenla Att1111llc Clly
Auetln
Balllfnor•
lllrlnlngham
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70 " " ea 14 66
69 M ee ee 79 17
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10 es
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80IM IO Bolton 70 e.lfllllo 14 ~ .. Clwtee1on s C 17 Ch.wton.wv M
Cft«lone,N C 71 ~ .,
g;::~~ " ,,
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Oelroll I IO Oululh 75 EJP-14 ,~. 71 Fergo eo F~ ...
Eztended
The Futbreak daJice team •hoW8 Its maff
at the March of Dlmee dance marathon
Sa.Delay ID Coeta Ilea&'• Rea Cultaral
82 Of ... ...
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SuRF REPORT ..
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PO 12
Center. Peter Jonee takee bl.a tam on the
floor u brotben A.Delre and A.atbony
ftlclr'•• await tlaeln.
Whelan gets Mesa conitnunications post
Vincent M. Whelan of San
Oemente bas been appointed to
replace Costa Mesa's retiring OrviUe
Amburgey as director of communica-.
tions for the city of Costa Mesa, City
Manager Fred Sorsabal announced
this week.
Whelan is currently deputy direc-
tor for telecommunications systems
engineering and maintenance for Los
Angeles C.Ounty, SonabaJ said. He
recently retired from the Marine
Corps, where he served as a lieutenant
colonel spccializina in communica-
tions.
Amburgey 1s set to retire July 20,
after l 7 yean as director of com-
munications for the city. He was
named Chamber of C.Ommerce Man
of the Year for 1984 in Costa Mesa.
Whelan will besin bis employment
with the city July 16.
BUCK'S CLOCK
SHOPPE
A FAMILY TRADITION SINCE 1892
17 41 SUPERIOR A VENUE
COST A MESA, CA. 92627
SALES a REPAIRS
ANTIQUE A NEW
HOURS:
MON . .SAT. 9·6
CLOSED SUNDAY
WEDDING CLOCK-~~
Wedding Vows. Dates and Names of Bride and Groom Make
Thia The Perfect Gift For A lifetime Remembrance
Helr1oom Flnlsh Is Polished Brass and Bridal White. Movement Is
-auartz Wltn Glass ome. Cnlmes ln Sequence Every 1 ~ Hour Then
The Full Westminster Melody Prior To Strlkll)g :rhe Hour. •1ea-
Prfce Without Chime '159"
I
B ULLE TIN Bo ARO -CMphotog's
Golden West offering portrait han as kids' dance program o ·'
in Di~ney show Golden West Coll* is ofTenna a College for Kids
Q.roatam street dJncana cla for ages 12 to I~. beiJonin&
Tuesday. •
Conducted by professional dancer and choreographer
Ray Orti1, clams are scheduled TuC$days and Thunday
!n Rec~ 2 I I. The proaram fee is $32 and pre-reqistration
'' required. For additional information. phone 0the Community
Services Office at 891-3991.
Program on elderly at OCC
By U AN McCALLUM
Of .. Olllt,... ....
For the nut 11'.months. the lbara childttn wdl Jive 111
Walt Di ncy World.
nd while it's e'ttr child'• dream to bt' surTounded
by Mickey Mouse. Donald Duck, Cinderella's Casllr.,
dO"z.ens of rid~ and ice crcaO) and popcorn vcndor11 tHC
Ibara kids won't get to sec ny of it They're 1Qin& 10
become one uf the attraction .
A photoaraph of the family and their two golden
A lecture for adult children plannin.a Lhetr life whil retritven. taken by Co ta Mesa photographer Ellen Bak.
meeting the needs oftbc1relderly parents wiU be presented h.a.s been chosen by the Eastman Kodak Company to ~
Tuesdar evenina in Room 111 of the Counseling and nh1b1tcd at the Journey to I magma lion PaVllhon at WA.It
Admissions Building at Orange Coast College in Cost.a Disney World's Epcot C.cnter near Orlando, Fla.
Mesa. Bak. a Ncwpon Beach resident who has had tudios at
Sheila Manoske. director of nursing at a I~ tbeSouthCoastPlausince 1971.satdshefeelshonoredto
convalescent hospital, will conduct the program, Rqi~ be chosen among SO profC$stonal photographcn arounCS
tration is $6 per person or $10 per couple, and further the country to have berwork exhibited at the amusem~t
,....
information may be obtained by claling 432-572S. park.
"Even 1f you 're asked to partiopa1e. you still hav~cUl!~o'..-~~~~~~-11!111----iii-~~-~~-~~-;.-lilliillliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii;ii;;;.;-~~-----~ 1~~~~~::1~~:·::esa;d~::::::te:~:sr::· Came·ra·s aske.d "OrJ·a1·1: nells Auto •.IJow ln Newport
VIP Toys. a luxury afld clotic car dealership, w11l
sponsor an auto show and fashion show at 8 p.m. Tuesday
at Bobby McGee's Restaurant, 3S3 E. Coast H1ghwa}.
Newport Beach.
mounted on an insenbed base to commemorate her 1 1 ~
For more information call Kim Rotvik at 6S0-2902.
Computer worJcs.IJops offered
Wtn.ner'• Cbde to meet
A breakfast meeting of the Winner's Circle Netw0rk-
lng Group is planned for Wednesday at 1 .a.m. in the
Neighborhood Community Center. 184S Park Ave .. in
Costa Mesa.
Bilf Purkins will spcaJc on communications skills at
the breakfast. Pre-registration can be obtained by calling
960-271 S. Tickets arc $7 pre-registered. $8 at. the door.
Meu c.IJ~mber plans mlier
A June mixer, spon.sored by the Costa Mesa Chamber
of Commerce, is set to be held Wednesday at the Costa
Mesa Golf and Country Club, at 1701 Golf Course Drive,
in Costa Mesa.
The event begins at 6 p.m. with complimentary hors
d'ocuvrcs and drawings for prizes.
Handngtoa pler swbn set
The 34th annual Huntington Beach Open "Rough
Water" Pitt Swim will be held Saturday.
Trophies will be awarded for first through third places
in each of the seven divisions for men and women and
boys and girls. Participants can sign up from 8 to 8:30 a.m.
the day of the competition.
Good viewing points should be available at the pier.
sAy members of the Huntington Beach Commun1tl
Services Department which 1s sponsoring the program
alone with the Huntington Beach Swim Club.
B041lce volaateen 8'JU6.1Jt
SoUth Oranac County residents who would like to
become volunteers for the Saddleback Coordinated Home
~ Hospice proaram may now apply at Saddleback
<;ommuna!)' Hospital in Lquna Hills..
Qualified participants for the program will receive
trainina in a 12-$cssion course that will teach them to care
for the terminally ill and their families.Oasses are
scheduled to beiin July 9 and continue six weeks on
Mondays and Thursdays. Up~>n completion of the counc. graduates will receive
a certificate. More information on the program is
available by phoning Nancy Valk, oncology special-
istfbospicc coordinator, at 770-3696 or 770-3697.
Monday, June 25
• 7:30 p.m., lrvtM Trauportation Commission.
Council Clambers., 17200 Jamboree Road, Irvine.
• 6:30 p.m., Cotta Meta PluaiJI& Commlnlon.
Council Chambers, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
• 7:30 r.m., Lapa Bea~ Arb Comm.lsaioa, City
Hall Counci Chambers., SOS Forest Ave.
PoucE Lo e
accomplishment.
Photograph 1n the catcgones of portratture. photo-
journalism. commercial photograph}, industrial pho-
tography and environmental photography will be d1S·
played.
She said she submitted that particular ~nran
because "they wanted something all people could identify
with. and this as a picture of a family outside.·~
"The photo is very exciting and has lots of impact,"
she said. "The sun 1s setting and the air behind the children
is vibrant and nch in color."
Tim Norr
visual merclaandise direc-
tor
Costa Mesa
··Ma~~ the} shuld think
about"' hat West Cu:rman)
has done The\ ha' c a
··guest worker',. program
where (non-resident)
people are certified and
cart) a card That sounds
more humanuanan. There
doesn't S(Cm to be too
much humani1anan1sm in-
vol\lcd."
Margret Aldridge
housewife
Santa Ana
"They ought to be sent
back 10 Mexico II we had
less illegal ahc:ns 1n the
country. there wo uld be
more JObs ··
Robert Rossbacb
filKbt attendant
Santa Alla
.. , think ifs great Ifs
wonderful. Most rountnes
in the \\Orld ha'e ~me
form Of 1denuficauon to
allo\\ c1u2cns in the coun-
tn to \\Ork. This countn
should have Lhe same
thing. If }OU ha'e an LO .
\ou·~ac1t1zenand \Ou can
'-'ork." ·
Art Lampert
civil engineer
Fremont
"The problem 1s out of
hand omcthing has to be
done: S1mpson-Mazzoll 1s
a good beginning. If parts of
ll don't worj( right, 11
should be adjusted later:·
Rodeway Inn scorched
by $10,000 Mesa blaze
An equipment room on the roof of
the Rodcway Inn. 1400 S. Bristol St ..
Costa Mesa. caught fire Sunday
aftemooo and caused $10,000 darn-aae to the motel's structure, according
to city fire officials.
None of the motel guests were
injured, but a fitt captain injured his
back while f.ahtin& the blaze, accord-
ina to Jim llichey, admi.nistrative
Lapa Beach
A nude woman was anested in
Heider Park Sunday afternoon for sakinl a bath in the sink of a public
restroom. She was charaed with bemi
1lndcr the influence of drup and
transponed to Oranac County Jail
after she refused to IJVC her name to
police. • • • Yolanda Patricia Vera. 23, was CbaJ.,ct with ~ under the in.
ftuencc of akobol Sunday fliabt in the
~ block of c.allioPC ucet and
rt1wed OD Sl.SOO beil. • • •
chief of the Oma Mesa Fire Depart·
ment.
The cause of the fire was under
investigation early today. Riche)
said. The equipment room that
caught ft.re also housed the water
heater and forced-air f umacc. he s:ud.
The first alann on the blaze wa
called in about 2:42 p.m . and the fire
was under control by about 3:02 p.m.
old, with sbon dark hair. was either
nude or wcarina a flcsh~lorcd body
suit when be broke into an occupied
residence in the l SOO block of Sou th
Coast Highway early Saturday mom~
ins, The burglary u~ fled when
confronted by the OQ:Upant. No lo
WI ttported. • • • Three men were amsted for lewd
conduct in Heisler Parl'. carlr_; tu~
day morn.ma.: David ltiNC>· RobcrtS.
31. Mario S Sc:belfi1 29. and Robtn
A. Olson. 35, wen: each n:lca d on s 1500 blail. ••• F1vemale and two fcmaleJuvcn1l
The fire was conmne<t rn the equip-
ment room and did not spread to an~
of the motel rooms.
Richey said Fire Capt. Dick Raines
trained his back dunng the firr-
fightina efforts. Ht' was oot ~nou h
injured. Richey said.
Motel guests were evacuated dur-
1na the blaze but allowed to return to
their room after the fire was put out.
h wa transponed to South Coast
Medical Center for treatment of
1njun~ and relea~ on $1 ,500 batl • • • A juvenile "' arrested for dm· •O&
under the innucntt of alcohol and
po ion of a dcadl) \Ii apon at
.\gate ·trcct 3nd utb ('oast Htah·
way early turday momin,. o bail
" set pcndina rel~ to ha parents
toetaile98
A buralarY ~ntd in the 1600 t>t0c pf Suniet ~idae Sunday morn--IQf. rCSu.lacd in t.loss of $1200 in ~lry from 1 locked raid~ .. • • •
were anested in lhe 100 block of
Mountain t..rctt for p0 ion of
atODhol by mmors tordl) 111 tit. u
were relcaiN to the C\l\tOdy of their
Two hom oo the 1000 bl of rua Ro venue wttc burllarizcd
Saturda) night while the ttS1dcnts
lc:pt. lnoncoftbcbural&ri SU•
stolen from a bome "hiJc auns and
J"'Cll) v.-m: kfi behind. In tht na burg.W). SlO 'il$ $10ldt.
Entry appal"\'.ntl) v. made pl)l
•
Sttpbcn a.rt ,..urray, 35, d\arlfd wit.b driv\1\1 under the in-n jarD()t of alcohol at M Yf.\le Street and
SOuth Coast Hi&hway early S.tu~y
momiqaM refcued on Sl.SOO bail. • • • male wtute adul about 2 urs
I
paltnt . • ••
Cindy Lynn Mc~mo~. 2~
arresicd f9r drivina undtt the in-
nuenoc of alcohol aftt-r • \' h1cle
IC.'Cidcnt~t Cardinal and South out
'H1pway early Satu momina.
optn a SCTttn.windo . • • • SC1ttn was n:mo' td from a home
on th~ 600 bl ot Denu~ Ori'c
over th ~ eockcnd and lhic' r&n·
t."tl tht m.idtnct but .app:arcntl}
did not u~c 1fwth1na The midcnt
.
By SM Aaodate.I Pftn
A hydroplane dra& boat driven by a San Bttnardiao
man flipped at more than 180 mph at lrvine Lake Md
ejcctCd its dnver, who died Sunday several boun after tbe
accldcnl
James Hobbs. 41 , was thrown from tbe boat about
11 :40 ~m. ~urin.1_ a ~,.. nan of the-Summer
Champ1onsb1ps orDrag ~t bang. an ~t;nt sanctioood
by the National Drag Boat Racina AssociatiOD.
"He was wearina I helmet when be WIS ejeaed. but he was found unconscious, .. said Rick Plows. senior deputy
of~ Ora.nae County Coroner's office.
Isobel Bonganl
bomemaker
Van Nuys
CUr1es Saltsgaver
actor
Hobbs was trealed at the scenic by a coatnct
ambulance crew and then ta.k:eo by bdic:opW;r '° the
Western Medical Trauma Ccincr in Sama Ana.: Htdir:d of
oeck and chest injuries at S: t 0 p.m., P\owi Aid.
A similar fatality also occ:oncd duri.nammpdltion at
Irvine Lake last year, officials Sl1d. Irvine
··1 haH' m1\.cd c:mouons
on u. I thin\. n hac, a lot of
good thing\. but nothing 1s
perfect 1 can ~ a lot of
good coming out ot 1t. but
on the other hand 1t can ~
..een as a .,tcp bad.ward ··
''This IS a countf) sup-
~ to extend hands to
othCT nalions and people.
But under the present S}S-
tem. our lawsdon·t seem to
be 'Working. The~ nttds to
~ some wa) to work this
problem out.··
-A crowd of more than l 0,000 watched as Hobbs was
racing 1p.1nt Brad Tuttle. the eventual winntt ofSunday's
event. when the accident· occurred. said Bob Brown.
director of publiaty for Irvine Lake..
Tuttle. of Hesperia was timed at 202 mph and Hobbs
was clocked at 183 mph when the ICCidcnt oc:cuned.
.. He lost control of the boat and it just became
&Jrbomc," Brown Sl.ld.
Hobbs, wbp was raa.Q&&hlown-fud bydroi>lant boat.
had ~n drag boat raans fOT mo~ than sa )Ul'S, 8roWft
y~ .
"Th~ sport has always had a number of fatalities. ..
Brown said, adding that the oex1 race an the teries is
schcduJcd for Sepkmbcr.
Four seats vacant
on Laguna panels
The City of Laguna Beach is sedting applicants for
t.hrcc vac.anoes on the Arts Commission and one on tbe
Plannmg Comm1ss1on.
Mel Fucbs Rod Maday
The Plan rung Commission reviews and recommends
action on development. amendments to the General Plan,
zoomg ord10ances and subdivision regulations. Com-
mtssioners, who serve two-year temlS. get paid $'40 per
month.
realt estate agent
Balboa
binl bayer l.Dd seller
Balboa
Arts Comm1ss1oners advise the City Council on all
matters pertaining to art and cultural act:Jvities in the city.
They are appointed for three yean and reoe:ive no
compensation.
.. There are some pans
that arc excellent and some
that arc not too good. I
thank the am nest\ seems to be a good thing ..
"The) should hmll aJI
11lcgal aliens. It's gotten out
of hand." Applicants for either comnussion must obtain a form
from the Cny Oerlt and file it by Thursday.
told pohcc there did not appear to be
any loss • • • Th1tves pntd open a screen on the
600 block of Wh1tne\ Lane and
entered the home through an open
windo\\. About S800 ~orth of camera
equipment and coins were stolen • • • A.:? I -year-0ld C-osu Mesa man 'Was
<;enousl) 1n1urcd S3turda~ ntght
when he was riding his btc)cle and
was hn b} a c.u on .\dams A."enue
1ust cast of Placentia .\venue The
man Da' 1d Padilla. v.as treated at
Fountain Valle) C-ommumt) Hospi-
tal and relcascJ unda' Pohce said
he apparentl) wa ndang m the traffic
lanc:s and changrd la hes in front of a
car
Newport Bea.ch
A NeW1>0rt Beach man rcponcd the
theft oh 1977 Yamaha that had been
parked ii\ frontofh1 residence o n the
2100 block of hcnngto n. Ncwpon
Beach. ut1d1y • • • Later durina the da) Ncwpon
Be.\tb poli(t found the vthidt
parked at .Jf\ me and Dover strttts
. ~pparmtl) tilt thief abandoned tbt
mot ft'Y becauSt he had run out of . .. . ~
.~ twport h man reponcd the
theft of a (&J'J'lrJ'I, a bottle of bisley
&t\d penty b<* after bul)lan had
C'ntci'td his m1dcnce throU&h a ·
~id1 I door on the block of Pl I , luNa1.
FomstaiD Vallf:J
t 2-yc&r-ulJ boy v. cu~ ofT by
'craJ malC':S ih 1 r while nd• h1
b1C)cle U\ tht> 17000 bloc of nta
uzannt trctl One pomtrd a pellet
aun oi him and toll' h1 . kt~~• T •
h1rt that rtad "ll·l" on the front and
Nl
Appointments are scheduled to be made at lbe July 3
City CounC11 meeting.
Someone possibly used a hammer
to smash a window 1n a 1971 Mazda
parked an the I 7000 block of Ward
Street and stole a stereo and speakers
'alued at S800. • • • Bul'l,lars shpped Lhrough a shd1ng
glass door in the 16000 block Ever-
~n Circle \I. h1le the owner was
aslttp 10 a bedroom and stole a $700
Plno$ooic Omm' 1SJon '1deo c.isset-
te recorder. • • • Thie\ es broke into two cars belong-
ing to the same '1cum in the 16000
block of Mt. Hoffman Cirtle and stoic
a stereo. camera. leather portfolio.
t.ape recorder. cassette tapes., money
and a map for a tot.al loss of $2.090 • • • Burglars stole a tool box and lawn
mower valued at Sl.891 from a
ruideoce m the 900 block of New·
frame Cude.
B11DtiqtoD Beach
A W\)man reponcd Sunday that her
gold I 982 Mazda was tolen from a
parkina lot on the 6500 block of WamcT A venue. The loss was esh-
mated at S6.SOO . • • • A resident of the 6400 od.: of
WamerAvenuereponcd undaythit
someone stole a urfboatd from her
front Porch. Thel "-ascsumatedat
$280.
.\ man was anuted Sunday aftes'~
noon at the T~ store, 9882 Adams
Ave., on suspiaon of sbopliftina. A
S 70 tennis racquc1 was l"CClOvcrecf. • • • A resident of the 1100 block of
Walnut Avenue reported Sunday tbat
someone 5tole bcr navy ~ue Schwinn
bicycle from an oeen Pf'llC· TM Lou
was csnmated at $200. ••• A male j uvcrule was anuted Sua·
day at the Tarwet store. 9882 Ada.ms
Ave . on su$J)icion of shopW\jna.
Rero"emi ~ a BB sun and
headphones wonb SS I.
lni.De
I
OrMge Coaat DAIL v PILOT /Monday, June 25, 19U
. Shuttle scuttled .
due to e~~putel.!
CAPE CAN~VE.RAL Aa. (AP) -NASA scrubbed th.as momina's debut
lauoch of the pa~ shuttle Discover; af\cr
a blck·UP computer "huJ\I up" just half-
an·bour before schedule<t liftoff. The
problem te$Cmbled one whLch grounded
the first shuttle for two days tn 1981.
A six-person crew was lona-since aboard
• Discovery wbeo lhedelly was announced.
. Their blastoff had been scheduled for 5:43
· a.m. PDT.
NASA technicians immediately moved
to replace the "suit~-sizc" computer
and while the launch was not rescheduled.
cn&incers hoped to find a fix that would
allow the 12th shuttle liftoff to take place
Tuesd.av morning.
But even if the W&P:Out is succc-ssfut.
weather rould intervene and the huttle
forcatsier said he was "pe im1st1c" about
conditions Tuesday. .
The backup computer, manufactured
and maint.a.ined by IBM, would take over
tlifbt controls 1f all four of the sh.uttle's
pnmary computers failed.
"We have a serious hardware problem,"
shuttle operation director Thomas
Utsman toltl rcPorters Rather than at-
tempt to fix the emtnt machine. Utsman
said a replacement would be cannibalized
from sister ship Challenger. which is beina
readied nearby for a November flight
Discover) bnngs to three the NASA shuttle
fleet.
NATO leader claims
allies pulling weight
BRUSSELS. Belgium lcm. to create a greater I don't thin~ the defense of
(AP) -Lord Camngton. European 1dent1t)' 1n de-Europe 1s credible because
the fonner Bnttsh foreign fense while at the same of the imbalance there
secretary, took ovet as sec-time not detaching the would be in nuclear power
rciary-general of NATO United States," Carrington on each side," he said. Dearly .resting
today. He said his most told a Bnttsh radio inter-Camngton. 65, succeeds J~:e Melendez of Philadel-urgent task 1s to reassure viewer in London toda)' Joseph Luns of the Nether-
the United States that its before departing for his lands. who retired last Fri-P takes a break from ac-
European allies are pulling new office m Brussels. day after almost 13 years in tivltiea of the Teddy Bear Rally
their wei l. "lf·you detach the Unit-the North Atlantic Treaty a t Philadelphia Zoo. She'•
ahown h ere. leaning back
agalnat her uncomp"lalnlna
bear named Cbrla, waiti.nC the
reaulta of lntenae Jud.Cini·
"I this 1s the prob-ed States f_rom the all1~nce. 0 -nizanon lead~rship . ... ~~ -c"':·~--~.,, --..~ .-.-,....~ ~~aIJ;l~.._..Al~ o.,.1·me .y:e~te u. p -·s.~:,;:'';:~~i~ ..i11.C.__.. ··~nr,tnee
. .
I'".I.· .~ ..L .. :u, W1be of Norway. dean of
to 1 ~0 .ne,~,...e· nt ;1~~g~::rF;ri~~:~~ Salvador's Duarte ~ .1:1. -'-· ~ c:~~!ri~~dd~J~~~h~~~
man of NATO's military
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Committee.
Carrington r~signed
from the Briush govern-
ment when the conflict
with Argentina began m
Apnl 1982, because of cnti-
c1sm that he failed to fore-
Stt the Argentine invasion
of the Falkland Islands. He
PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) -The
Rev. Jesse L. Jackson is heading for El
Salvador and a meeting with Prtsident Jose
Napoleon Duarte to relay a cease-fire
overture from leftist guerrillas.
the purpose of destabilizing governments
in the region and fueling the militarization
of the isthmus ....
.. We should stop the spy flights fropi
Howard Air Force Base that violate
Nicaragua's air space and sovereignty. We
should not be abusing the U.S. Anny's
School of the Americas as a training camp
in counter-insurgency and jungle warf~
for the troops of the governments of
Honduras and El Salvador. We must never
make the Southern Command head-
quaners a launching pad for direct U.S.
military intervention in Central Ameri-
cas." he said.
was 65 on June 6.
NATO was fonned in
1949. Carrington is the
sixth secretary-general
since it was given a per-
manent secretariat in 1952.
The Democratic presidential candidate
was stopping in San Salvador for the
Duane meeting before pushin~ on with the
next leg of his fivc-<iay tnp to Latin
America, a visit to Cuba and a meeting
Tuesday with President Fidel Castro.
Before leaving Panama, Jackson issued a
su1tementcallingon the United States to be
more responsible m operating its bases
there and said tbcv should not be used .. for
Kennedy endorses Mondale
NORT H OAKS, Mann. (A P) -Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy endorsed Walter F. Mondale's bid for the 1984
De mocratic presidential nomination toda), shonly after
Mondale aides said the fonncr vice president will meet
chief nval Gary Han on Tuesday.
"Now 1s the lime for us to stop debating ourselves,"
Kenned)' said dunng an appearance with Mondale in the
rotunda of the state Capitol building.
"This 1s the best speech )OU'\e ever given."
responded Mondale.
Kennedy's endorsement was a critical step m
Mondale's effon s to unify the pany behind his cand1daq
and the meeting in New York City with Han, arranged
during a telephone conversation between the two
candidates Sunday night, could be another.
Hart told the National Press Club last week that he
intended to press forwJrd with his presidential candidacy
despite Mondale's delegate majonty going into the
convention.
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"l have a real and abiding respect for the other
candidates who have competed for our party's nomnina-
tion,'' Kennedy said today as he stood beside Mondale.
"Gary Hart is my friend and colleague in the Senate and be
has nm a creative and valid campaign.
"Jes~ Jackson has opened a new horizon of hope for
mil hons of our fellow Amencans. But we have bad our full
and open debate wtthm the Democratic Party -and now
1s the lime for us to stop debattng ourselves and to stan
dcbaung Ronald Reagan."
Kennedy added: "There arc no profound issues that
divide us."
Until now, Kennedy had remained studiously neutral
m the contest for the nomination.
As Mondale and Kennedy linked up in Minnesota,
Jackson was in Central America p~paring for a meeting
later today with El Salvador President Jose Napoleon
Duarte and Hart was in Washington preparing for a trip to
New England and his meeting with Mondale .
Mcanwtule, the Democratic Pany's Rules Commit-
tee was convening in Washington with Han still saying he
had not decided whether to challenge some of the Mondale
delegates he has labeled "tainted" because they were
chosen with the help of money from political action
committees.
Maxine Isaacs, press secretary to Mondale, said that
Mondale invited Kennedy about l 0 days ago "to come out
here and talk about the convention and the general
election campaign."
She said "we assume he (Kennedy) will play a major
role" at the convention.
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S~ultz talks tough
on Soviet terro r f&
By lite A•soclated Prest
W ASHlNOTON -Secretary of State Geol'J(' P,
Shulu Aid Sunday ruaht that pre-emptive aci1on1 by
Western democracies may be necessary to ~unter tht
Soviet Union and other nations that he claimed bav~
banded toaetbcr in an international "Lcasue of Terror.
Shulu aid be does not believe that a "purely _pasStvo
def cnsc" provides enouah of a deterrent to terrons~ and
the st.ates that sponsor it. Shultz's ~marks were delivered
to a conferenoe on terrorism sponsored by the Jonat~11n .
Institute, a private rcsurch aroup. While not det.aUmj
specific ways of prcventina terrorist acts. t~~ ~t.ary
said "We will need to stttn;then our capabihnes Ill the tarea~ of intelligence and quick reaction." J
~ey sald recovering
BOOTHBAY HARBOR, Maine -Actor Jamei
Caaney is · ng from a heart at tac" he suffered cighJ
days ago ile vacationing here and wlll probably ~
released fr m the hospital later this week, has agent said
Sunday. gney is responding well to treatment al St1
Andrews ospitaJ.
ClvU rlghtll vlgll IJeld
· MERIDIAN, Mass. -About 60 pcoplep1hercd here
Sunday to pay tribute to three ctv1l n~ts ~orke~ who
were murdered during a black voter-rcgi~~ra11on drive id
Mississippi in the summer of 1964. Famihcs, fnends and
civil rights activists gathered by the grave of James
Chaney a Mississippi native. He and two New Yorkers, And~w' Goodman and Michael Schwemcr. came to
Neshoba County 20 years ago to help register black voters.
Goodman and Schwerner were white.
Berg r1te11 bring laughter
DENVER -Friends..of slain talk-show host Alan
Berg brought laughter to a mcrnoritl service Sunday with
anecdotes about the acid-tongued radio perfonner, while
police watched the crowd of rou&hly 700 people for clues
to who murdered him. "He lived in the laser lane. He
would have loved this. He would have been out the~ with
a hot dog stand, selling Bera T-shirts, Berg do Us," said
Peter Boyles, a Denver talk-show host who was one of
Bera's best friends. The crowd at Temple Emanuel, which
had been in tean moments earlier, bunt into laughter.
Qade •JJda Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO -A moderate eanbqualce
centered in Alameda County shook the Bay Arca at 3: 13
a.m. today, waking some {>COplc but causing no injuries or
damage. Max Veal, morning controller for the state office
of emergency services, said the quake measured 4.0 on the
Richter Seate, making it large enough to cause moderate
damage. However, the Alameda County Sheriffs Office
reported no injuries or damage from the temblor.
Director talb rocky
HOLLYWOOD -Contract talks "arc not aoing
smoothly" and could result in a crippling strike against the
television networks and movie studios, and perhaps affect
televising of the Olympic Games, the chief nC§ouator for
the Directors Guild of America warned. • I did not
anticipate reponing to you that negotiations arc not goina
smoothly, but unless the employen cbanic their
barpining Position, our efforts may end in failu~."
negotiating chairman Franklin Shaffner said Sunday in a
locally televised report to DGA members.
Staal•l•u fJre bloc.t• road
SAN.AND.Rf.AS -Aarus. brush and oak tree fire
between Angels Camp and Copperopolis in Stanislaus
County was bloc.Irina the road home Sunday for ma.ny fans
of a Jazz festival in ~Is Camp. The California
Department of Forestry w d the fire. on both sides of
California Highway 4, bad covered about 2,SOO acres. The
jazz festival had been drawing about 15,000 people a day
over the wcekeod, many of whom would prefer beading
cast toward Stockton and the San Francisco Bay area via
Highway 4, which bas been closed for fire-fighting
purposes.
Llbyan dJpJomat freed
BEIRUT, Lebanon -Shiite Moslem militiamen
stormed a kidnapf>t'.n' hideout in west Beirut today and
freed a Libyan diplomat who was abducted Saturdar.
state-run BeLrUt radio reported. Shiite leader Nabih Berri s
Amal militia distributed a statement to the radio and other
Beirut media sayinJ its tighten freed diplomat
Mohammed Moa.htab1 unhanned after a gun battle, then
drove him to the Syrian-<:ontrolJed town of Chtaura. nine
miles from the Synan border.
Taipei ml.De toJJ 47
TAIPEI. Taiwan -The death toll in a coal mine
explollon near Taipei rose to 47 today, the biahest in
Taiwan's mining history. Officials said the bodies of ei&ht
more miners trapped deep in the H.aishan coal mine we~
recovered from under piles of coal and debris, and one
mUier rescued after the explosion last Wedne!day died in
a hospital.
Scott181J coal mmen return
LONDON-Police made more than 40arrests today
au Scottish coal mine where pickets confronted miners
who decided abandon Britain s l S-weck-old ooal 11rike
and return to work. The Scottish coalfield was aolidJy
behind the suike until last Wednesday, when a number of
minen ~turned to work at Bilston Glen near Edinburah,
uyina they were financially desperate.They produced the
flnt coal in Scotland since the walkout on March 12. , ,
Qade .rattle. W"e.t Japaa
TOKYO -A moderate eanhquake shook western
Japan this momina. disruptina h~·speed rail acrvice but
causina no m.Jor dafNIC. Japen '•Central Metcoroloaic.al A&Cncy laid. The QUlle rqistemt 5 Ort the Richterac:a.le
and was centered on \M border between Hiroshima and
Shimane prefectures, lbc agency said. The temblor
di rupted traffic on lheShinkanten '1bullet uain" for tbm:
boura. acx:ordina to a J1pen National Railways spoke •
man.
~protestJJMcelaJ
PARIS-At leut 8S0.000pcoplc marched peactfull
throuab Pari to proc.eat a biU that Would iDMUC ltatt:
control over tbe nation's private Khools.. Orpn1un said
l.S million pc<>ple took P'f1 in the fo'lr marc:hcJ on
unday, which st.ant"a from the nonh, :wett.10uth and 1
of Pans and ron\trttd on the P11cc ck la 8&$tillc, whcrt
lh y dtsptned
Two men ln ctrac Ouh ble •mllee darlDC SF parade.
Assembly_ cuts
·asked by Brown
Speaker says layoffs
might be avoided
in 30 % budget cut
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Facina suona
pr.tssW'C to comply with the Gann in·
1tiauve, Assembly Speaker Willie Brown is
askin1 Gov. Georgt DeukmeJlan co veco
$21.2 million from the Assembly· a opcnt·
• io& budget. •
ln a letter to Deukmejian, the DemC>!
cratic leader of the Assembly asked
Dcukmcjian to make the 30 percent cut
mandated in Proposnion 24 to improve the
"political atmosphere" of the Capitol.
.. It has been and remains not only m)
posJtion. bUt that of the anomey general
• and other respected legal scholan that
• Proposition 24 iranconstitutionil in all its
pans," Brown wrote. .
"However. 1t ap~n that the political
atmosphere surrounding the budg(t reduc-
tion aspcc:t only serves to obscure the
leaitimate constuutionat challenae to the
measure itself," be said.
thtrd$ votes on mOlt Pf'()«dural mattcn. a
cba!'F that would give the Republican
minority a p0wcrfu1 check on BrOwn·s o~tion of~ Assembly.
Democratic ladtrs of the Senate also
bavt' prom1ted to comply wtth the 30
perctnt cut m lbeir sha~ of tht Lqis;
lauarf1 operatir\t budeet. But the Senate
did pot name a peciflc dollar amount or
formally rtiQuest a veto. .
Between them. the Senate and Assembly
mus1 cut spendina by $37 million to
compty with tbe most common 'inter··
pr:cuttion of the initiative.
The Leaislaturc's S 13 l million operatioa
budJiet -SS6.8 million for the Senate and
$74] million for the Assembly-is a.rt of
the overall $31 billion 1984--85 RDt to
peuimc;jian a week a10 for bis Urie-item
vetoes and 1~turc this week.
Although Brown asked Deukmejian to
veto the 30 pc:tcent specified byOann from
his ~t. be listed onJy priorities for
rcdutjna expenditures, rather than an
item·by-item list of specific cuts.
WJulc most oftbc Assembly's budget is
spent on salaries of l,185 consult.ants..
attorneys, secretaries, rcsearcbe-rs, field
aides and other employees, Brown said
layoffs of staff would be a last resort, and
probably can be avoided entirely. This bikergang
clean-cut type
In a telephone interview, Brown said he
will also propose changes in Assembly
rules, which were the principal target of the
initiative . by Paul Gann. Although he
would not discuss details, be hinted 1.hat
the new rules woul<Uomply at least in pan
with the voters· intent in approving the
Gann initiative.
In addition to slashing the
However, his proposed spendmg cuts
would cancel all pay raises for legislative
employees, including cost-of-living raises
now pending for au other state employees,
reducicsome fulltimcjobs to pa.mime, and TULARE (AP)-From a distance, the IJ"OUP loOts
c t saJari ~ur~ tO!D'de. ~&:::~------·E:;;;;;i ... lifli!llllillljflf
By die Auoda&ed Pttta
The f 5th anniversary of the riots that
ignited the gay rights movement drew
thousands of men and women to the
streets, from leathcr<lad lesbians who led
San Francisco's parade to marchers who
laid a .wreath at the .. closed doon" of a
cathedral in New York.
In pan.des and rallies across the country
Sunday, lesbians and homosexual men
celebrated .. PY pride" and protested what
they said was continued discrimination
agaiflst them.
New York City's parade drew 20,000
marcben, who demonstrated at the seat of
the city's Roman Catholic Church before
heading lo the site of the now-defunct
Stonewall Inn in Greenwich VilJage, where
a police raid on June 18, l 969, sparked
three days of nots -the .. Stonewall
Rebellion" the parades commemorate.
In San Francisco, a squadron of 200
"Dykes on Bikes" wore leather pants,
tattoos and roses on their motorcycle
handlebars to lead 75,000 to 90,000 people
in the 13th annual Gay-Lesbian Freedom
Day parade.
Parades also brought out thousands in
Chicago, Denver, Minneapolis. Scanle, St.
Louis, Columbus, Ohio, Des Moines, Iowa
and Hartford. COnn.
Waves of marchers in New York's 15th
Gay Pride parade chanted "Shame!" as
they paused at St. Patrick's Cathedral to
protest Archbishop John J. O'Connor's
refusal to sign a pledge that the church will
not discriminate on the basis of sexual
preference.
. • ............ -
Whale-watching bad for behemoth~?
Some believe feeding,
matin isruj)ted -
by ga wk ing spectators
"The humpback whales in this area are on the affect boats have on the whales. In one
respondmg pos1t1vel) to the boats." said proposal. videotapes or a whale's behavior
Wilham Watkms. a sc1ent1st at the Woods Hole while left alone and when a motor vessel passes
Oceanographic Institution. would be compattd.
"It seems the\ will seek the boats out. It The National Manne F1shencs Service
doesn't seem to · be d1sturbmg to them:· plans to finan~ a stud) or the the impact of
PROVlNClr.fOWN. Mass. (AP) -As the
whalc-watchmg ·industr) booms. with
thousands of spectators taking to sea in
excursion boats off New England each year. a
controvcny has spouted over whether all the
attention is banning the mighty mammals.
Watkms was quoted as saying m toda) 's C'ape fishmg gear on manne mammals. the com pell·
Cod Times. uon between fisherme1' and the animals for
Scott Kraus. a research associate at food and the impact of "csscl traffic and oil and Boston's New England Aquanum. said whales . arc believed to respond to boats out ofcunosll) gas pollution. said spokesman John Gibson.
Some believe the seaborne gawkers in their
excursion boats disrupt the whales' feeding and
mating, while others claim tbc giant creatures
enjoy their new-found popularity and seem to
be reproducing faster than ever.
and will tum their attention to the boats only , Morello advocates stricter regulation of
after feeding. whaJe-watching excursions. He worries that
. Although Kraus 5aid 11 1s good to be competition berween whale-watching com-
concemcd ... any claims that the whale watching panics forces the boats to chase whales.
vessels are affecting the habits arc based on ... observation without any substantial facts "We. as hurrtans. arc supposed to be t.aJong
behind them." care of these whaJes. Possibly. we are causing "We have no idea what we arc doing to the
mental st.ate of these animals," said Steven
Morello, assistant director oflhc West Quoddy
Marine Research Station m Lubec, Maine.
More than 75,000 people paid for day them harm. Instead of getting nght on top of the
excursions from Provincetown last year. A whales. maybe we should back off a bit,"
"We maybe should start using our heads a
httle," added Morello. who served as a
naturalist aboard a Provincetown whale watch-
ing fleet for 41h years.
number of other ports. including Gloucester Morello said.
and Boston, offer wbalc-vtcwiog tnps off the Watkins has seen whales flee boats that
Atlantic Coast. approach at high speed or keep motors running.
Mayo has submitted proposals to the .. It's possible for people to do It wrong, .. he said.
NationaJ Manne Fishencs Service for a study "It depends which boat you're on."
Cancer cases
maydouble ·
byyear2030
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -By theJear 2030, the
number of annual cane.er cases in the oiled States is
expected to double, partly because Americans will be
livina longer into more canccr·prone years, a new study
says. ·
Another factor 1n the rise in cancer cases will be the
increase in the number of old Americans as the "baby
boom" generation ages.
The study shows the nation's public health agencies
should begin planning now for dealing with more cancer.
said Dr. Dwi&ht T. Jancnch. who conducted the study at
the state Health Department.
The research also sugcsts cancer may become an
even larger drain on the economy than public health
officials have realized.
By 2030 the number of annual cancer cases wi II reach
I .S million, double the current level of750,000, according
to the study published Thursday in The Journal of the
National Cancer Institute .
.. The bi& message that th1~ paper communicates 1s
that two factors arc drivina the cancer rate, the first is the
~ incrcasing longevity in the U.S. population ... the other
factor, which is a very imf>?rtant factor, is the aging of the
'baby boom' aenerauon: Jancrich said today.
• The projected rise does not include ircater risk from
cancer-causina substances, or take into account the
possible etfccu of potential medical advances in curing or
trcatina the disease, Jancrich said.
The study, conducted from 1983 to mid-1984 and
based on census data, arsues that a major cause in the projectedjumeincancer~seswill~ theaainaofthe po t
World War 11 •t>aby boOm" atneratlon. In additton, since
a lower pcrcen,ll,.IC of Asricnr:an.s have died ~f heart di~sc
, -still the natJoa 's lcadina ktller-a~~ vanous lnfections
in recent dec:adei, more people arc lmna lo~r and thus
bccomioa cancer tarJetSt Janerich said. ••'fhOte people now are bcainnina to act into their~
an AF when cancer becomes more of a factor, and that
bUlte ii\ the population will mcreuc the number of cancer
cases·• a it -.es. Janerich said.
C'umntly, 6.3 new cancer cases occur for cad1 1,000
men and women between 20 and 64, the doctor said,
makma it the 1«0nd most prolific killer of Americans
each year. . . .1 Thc.PQtcntial fot inmated costs, Janene~ saul, w1 l
come in a time when there ti a laracr portion of the po~lation with canetr compared to a smaller portion
payint for medical care.
I Government aaencies mu t bqjn S)' tcmatic plan•
n1n1 to fott"C&St what health officials will have to dw whb
in the future, Jancnc-h id.
...
I
I. I J }J
' LISTEN and RELAX
KDCM taa.t
FM SI BED
SACRIFICE
MUST SELLI
\
'
I
I
approach, their luxury motorcy~ helmets and c:lcaD<Ut
nders become visible. . -
The I ~ember aroup ts a touring club that takes
excursions of about l 00 miles several times a year and
bolds fund-r&Jscrs for the Cnppled Olildren's Society~
"I can't believe I'm 47 years old andgeninao.n one of
tbcsc th1np." admits Ltz Norton.
Members of lbc 11-year-Old dub~ in IF from
their early 20s to late 70s.. but most are middle-aged; said
President Royce Gholson.
..My boss tlunks I'm crazy," said Manlyn Cantrdl,
Who ndes with ber husban~ True ... lt's something we can
do together."
Vice President Tom Baker said the club, which also
draws members frOm Fresno and Kinp Counties. was
..one of the best thin& I ever joined.."
About 90 percent of the members drive Hondas,
many of which a.re equipped filth windshields, stereos,
padded scats. saddlebags and~ hitches to pull tent trailers. .
Some members wear matchins hiwnd-ber shirts and
vests deconled with badges and pms deootin& past trip&.
.
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fountain Valley (714) 963-m6
Laguna Beach (714) 494-7541
Because of research,
dlabetlcs can llve ...
To the Editor;
I am respondina to Mary Pearson's
letter (Daily Pilot, June 20) concern·
ing Senate Bill 883,' prohibiting the
use of f>ound animals in laboratory
experiments.
. While I certainly do not condone
the needless suffering of animals, I
would like to use Mary P~non 'sown
example to illustrate what labiexperi-
ments with animals can sometimes
do. Her statement: .. They have been
using animals since 1920 to find a
cure for diabetes and they have-n't
found a cure yet." is true -but it
neglects to state what has been done.
In 1921 , Dr. Frederick Banting and
Charles H. Best of Toronto isolated a
pancreatic extract of insulin ma form
that controlled diabetes in dogs.
Successful use of insulin in treating
human diabetics followed. Almost
overnight the lot of the diabetic was
chan'ed from a sentence of almost
certun death to the ca~bility of
living a long and healthy hfe.
· Today1here are about six million
diagnosed diabetics in the United
States and another four to fi vc! million
who are undiagnosed.. Fifteen per
cent of the diagnosed six million are
insulin dependent. They cannot live
without the honnone isolated in that
experiment.
They haven't found a cure yet. but
certainly those people-my children
among them -survive because of a
dog in a laboratory.
ANNE L. SPINN
Newport Beach
Hats off to Bill Harvey
"
·'For what we term ·common sense· takes uaonlyfo the borders of ~
nature. and what wealreaqy know(or thin we know) remalnsfar Jess
than what we still have olearn." .
amBAllllJ8
colamnlAt
l ~11 bet
ya. thi n k
• I J·t'Seas~
to qu1t.
Confessions
as told by a
reformed smoker
I have just gone through many.
manydaysofsheerunadulterated
To the Editor: '· board meeting or showed any interest torture. Some time back. I put my ~~~~,2~~-=.a~~~~~ .-,; la~ions .I •·--~ii~~-~~~·c::rf:~· ~~r-~-~~~~ ~,~t_~~~~~~c .
. ~~·~~u~~are~~~ ~~~ ~ -----------------------------~-~-------·-~~~ingin~n~ta~
. .
. .
. . .. .
... :: ,.
·: •• •• :·
..
• ' I
Irvan~ School D1stn~t for tnJunes It is sad that parents and their ov _ little unbidden whimpers passing my
sustained by students in a lunch hour 1 .11 . . erh H 1 • ttl · 11 k lips, J'venotlitanothercigar. I'm
By no stretch of the imagination as th1~ to attempt to wm a huge . ne. ve not a a c1gartn a ong car accident. eager .awyersw1 useaSltll;at1onsuc ow 1 e we rea y now fi l' h d ' · I
can the school district be responsible financial settlement. And even.worse. · . time, at least not physically. I have,
for this accident. These students students get the message that 1f rules however, dreamed of, conjured up,
knowingly diso~yed campus rules are broken, the responsibility must So many letters and calls, from all somebody asks me, then I do not 'lusted after. coveted and wished for a
and left the school grounds. belong to someone else parts of the country, have asked that I know·wbat it is.") cigar. At least for the first several
I wonder if the parents of these ROBERT E. FREEMAN explain a recent "Things I Found ... " Who would have dreamed, in past days. ·
students have ever attended a school Costa Mesa paragraph that 1 cannot do so indi-SIDll(Y ages, that what had always been called As a matterofabsolute fact, for the
Thanks for clearing that up . .
To the Editor:
Jon Andor of Newport Beach
missed your whole point in my
opinion. You were saying the kids
were the ones that made the mistake
-and it's not the school district who
should be sued -but instead the
parents should be re~nsible for the
costs incurred by their children on
their .. trip''off campu& dunng school
hours. Right? Rag.ht!
JACKIE DANCY
Corona del Mar
Traffic solution's at hand
To the Editor:
If Supervisor Riley's figures are
correct, then the solution to our
traffic problem is at hand. Supervisor
Riley states that Orange Conty will
receive $511 .2 million this year
through the State Transportation
Improvement Program. Mr. Riley
also states that it will take $205
million to catch up on road repairs in
Orange County. Thus. gjven half of a
lobbying effort by Orange County, it
is clear that money is available to fix
our existing roads from existing tax
revenues.
You see, it's all a matter of
priorities. Mr. Riley thinks that it i's
more important to build the San
Joaquin Hills Transportation Cor-
ridor than it is to fix our existing
roads. I submit that his priorities are
reversed, and that we should fix our
existing roads first. We should first
widen freeways, build more efficient
interchanges. build new over-
crossings and off ramps, and con-
struct sound walls where appropriate,
before we embark on expensive new
freeways, which will only add insult
to injury 10 our existing transpor-
tation system. After our existing
roads and freeways are improved and
repaired, then we may find that we
don't need these expensive new
freeways after all.
One thing is certain. The people of
Orange County do not want any new
transpon.ation taxes. In fact, we don't
need any new transportation taxes.
What we do need are transportation
officials and elected representatives
who will ~rder their priorities and
who will use our existing taxes more
wisely.
JAN. D. VANDERSLOOT, MD
Newport Beach
Reag a n's d one a l o t -all bad
To the Editor:
I heard someone on television refer
to Caner's "Do Nothing" presidency.
What. pray tell has Pres. Reagan
done? Increased the national debt
faster than any president in history.
Put millions of people who wanted to
work on unemployment and welfare.
and escalated the Cold War. ·This is
progress? And then he proudly an-
nounced that the economy was
almost back where it was when he
took offic.e. Better he should do
nothing!
VIRGINIA FRANCIS
Laguna Niguel
Enjoys •special environment'
To the Editor.
I am pleased with the new land-
scaping on Newport Boulevard -a
continuation of the planting done on
Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa.
When the two cities add to the
beauty of the cities. we who live here
and those who visit here enjoy more,
our special environment.
JERREL T. RICHARDS
Newport Beach
vidually, and must reply to them n .. matter" and .. substance" was really firstseveraldaysittookalloftheself
through the column. energy. or that the atom (which in control that I could muster to merely
The perplexing.paragraph read: .. If HURIS Greek means "indivisible") was actu-refrain from muagin_g the nearest
an auto completes one lap of.e race at aJly a whirling little universe of its smoker for his nicotme, be it cigar,
an average speed of 30 miles an hour, own, with protons and electrons in pipe, cigarette or even snuff. Desper-
there is no way it can complete two constant motion? Or that an "in-atemenarenotproud. At any rate.
laps at an ~verage speed of 60 miles an to accomplish this. divisible" unit could be smashed, there are many people walking the
hour. . . . (If interested, you will find the releasing incredible energy'? face of the city, smoking their various
Suppose, to simplify the example, mathematical proof in the book Likewise, it has been only a century concoctions ofberbage, who have
that•one lap is 30 miles. It would take Science Brain-Twisters, Paradoxes since we recognized that Euclid's absolutely no idea ofhow close they
an hour to traverse at 30 mph; no and Fallacies, by Christopher P. geometry was only one of several cametoasevereeipsodeofhit-and-
matter how fast the car goes during Jargocki (Scribners. 1976 ). possible kinds. useful for earthly run-molestation. They probably
the second lap -even 1,000 miles an measurements. but misleading for never even noticed the drooling.
hour -it cannot complete the two I purposely included this teaser in cosmic distances: not a structure in beardedmaowhoseemedtobe
laps at an average speed of 60 mph. the column as a follow-up to some nature, but a limitation in our human mesmerized by the smoke wreathmg
because it has used up a ll its time pieces I had written earlier about our senses. their heads. the man with the glassy
during the first lap. poor understanding of concepts like For what we term "common se"~·· stare who fo llowed behind, leaping
When the probl~ was first "time" and .. space," and especially takes us only to the borders of natu"le. into the air. anemting to sniff at the
proposed to me (by a mischievous our idea of .. infi nity." We suppose we and what we already know (or think smoke trails following them.
son). I thought the second lap could know what these things mean. but we know) remains far Jess than what I, somehow. managed to restrain
be traveled at 90 mph, wh1ch would they are what scientists call "counter-we still have to learn. Most of us can myself.
make the .. average speed" for two intuitive" -that is, they defy our scarcely figure out an auto's rate of Ann is very proud of me. I had been
laps 60 mph. but he quickl y demon-normal intuitions. ~peed around a track. smoking.on andoff,(orabout four
strated that 10 be a gross error. As I (As St. Augustine said some 1,500 years,andforthatertunttimeshe'd
said originally. the auto would have years ago: .. If nobody asks me what Sidney Harris Js a 1yadJe.tted been sendinJlinlesubtle hints to me
10 travel at an infinite speed in order 'time' is. then I know what it is: but if coluaud1t. about smoking. She'sonc of those
people who has never smoked. She
thinks it's easy to quit. She thinks that
all you have to do 1s not put tl;)em an
yourmouih. ~
Cocktail chatter's exhausting
She bad my name put on the heart
association mailing list. She bid my
matches. I bought a Bic.
She hid my Bic. She Qncecame into
the living room wearing a clothes pm
on bernosc(springtype). As time
wore on, she became a little less
subtle. Once she crawled across the
living room floor, threw open the
front door and fell through it. gasping
chokingand wheezing! I was, nat-
urally, quite concerned ... What's
WRONG!"
Do you enjoy parties? If not. why
not? Those who don't much care for
conversational get-togethers might
justify the attitude by quoting that
statesman Dag Hammarskjold: "To
be sociable -to talk merely because
convention forbids silence, to rub
against o ne another in order to create
the illusion of intimacy and contact ...
exhausting, naturally, like any im-
proper use of our spiritual resources."
German . gunfire smashed the
plastic windshield of a Spitfire plane
during World War II. Fragments cut
into the pilot's eyes. But an examin-
ing doctor realized those fragments
did little damage. This inspired the
idea of implanting plastic lenses in
human eyes. The first such successful
operation was performed in Novem-
ber of 1949 -about the year you were
born. if you're age 35 .
Q. You said Felix Powell. the man
who wrote .. Pack Up Your Troubles
in Your Old Kit Bag" killed himself at
age 42. He wasn't the only composer
of optimistic melodies to do so. was
he?
A. No, sir. Sammy Gallup, who
wrote "There Must Be a Way" and
many more songs, likewise com-
mitted su icide.
Q. Doesn't Alaska have four time
zones?
A. Not anymore. In November of
1983 it chanJed to two, Alaska time
and Bering ttme, one and two hours
earlier than Pacific time.
Q. Thal public television program
called .. Nova" -what's the title
mean?
A. ''New" in Latin.
Miami University in Florida gives
cash bonuses for top grades. I'm told .
That seems strange, does it not?
The word "monkey" comes from a
set of Italian syllables meaning "old
woman:·
Q. The word .. news" was coined
from the points of the compass. right?
In effect. More specifically. some
ear'ly U.S. newspapers ran drawing.~
of the &lobe in their mastheads, and
those drawing.s carried the N, E, W
and S designations, to indicate their
reports came from all directions.
Memo to Michael Jackson: "Beat
·it" was one of the three most popular
slang phrases of 1912, according to
Life magazine's library. The other
two were "It's a cinch" and "What do
you know about thatT'
Heading for California? Leave your
gerbil home. Unless you want to
experiment on it in a laboratory.
California law says no pet gerbils.
When IOQSC in desert country, they
devastate crops.
A relatively recent law of Boston
specifically permits musicians to
se~nade in the streets there anytime.
Can you disprove the claim that the
word "horseradish" started out as
"harsh ·radish"?
"Oh, nothing dear." A long, level.
eloquent stare at my smoldering
cigar.
Then there was the time at that very
nice, very expensive restaurant. We
had just finished a truly superb meal.
I reached into my pocket and got a
cigar and my Bic. Just as I lit my Bic
and applied itto the end of m y cigar, ,
Ann screamed at the top of her lungs.
"No, No! Not THAT!! ANYTHING
.but that!!" and ran-Out of the place,
knocking oYer a busboy and a table on
the way.
She also caused me to burn off my
entire left eyebrow. It hasn't grown
back properly to this day. It was her
tum to buy. too!
It is not easy to quitsmoking. I
remember a friend, named George.
L.M. Boyd I• • •Y•dlc•ted whoquit. Therewasnothin.gthat
col111Dol•t. George loved better than to go home
Prostitutes are Bangkok's biggest draw
after a hard day at the office and sit
down~ with a martini in one hand and
a cigarette in the other, and j ust relax.
He described the process to me about
a week after he quit .
.. I go home at night and sit down,
and I have a martini in this band. and
WASHIN.GTON -Bangkok's
native name. Krung Thep, means
"city of angels ... But the tragic truth is
that the capital of Thailand is now a
city of fallen angels. It has most of the
country's 400.000 to 700,000 prosti-
tutes.
On a recent tnp lo Thalland. my
associate Dale Van Atta learned the
scope of the Thai vice problem even
before he got there. In Tokyo, he was
told that more than a million
Japan~ men each year take off on
IJ'OUPJUnkets to Taipei. Seoul. Mani-
la and especially Ban&Jcok.. The main
attraction in theSt formerly Japanese-
occupied cities is prostitutes.
The "buy-girl tours" infunate
JapanCK and Thai women's groups.
In Tole.yo. for example, the Women's
Chnstian Temperance Union pickets
Japan Air Lines and distributes
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat-
pamphlets deploring what the women
call "sex imperialism ...
Thai women are organlllng to fight
for the ri~ts of women 1n the rcd-
li~t distncts. Dunng my associate's
visit to Bangkok. the Thai govern-
ment sponsored a seminar on the
prostitution problem. One group,
Frien<h of Women, announced a
campaign to .. free women slaves."
In fact, the prostitutes themselves
have formed their own orpniz.ation.
Thailand Ni&ht Girls' Rights Protec-
tion Group.
The mobilization against vice was
catalyted by a tragic incident on a
resort island m southern Thailand,
where fi vc young prostitutes dtcd 1 n a
hot.el fire. Reports that the 11rb were
chained to beds were denied by local
official,, but they did acknowledJe
that the women had been locked tn
H. l . SchWlltl Ill
Publisher
Chaar OowaHbJ
6dlior ~AIMlant-
10 tl'wt Publlther
Frank Zlnf
Attoell'9 fdrtOI
Tom Tait
City F.dllOf
'
their rooms to prevent escapt. cratic Congressional Campaign Com-NOTH INO in 1hishand .... "Then
More than half the women who mittee. hc'dwhimperquietl)'tohi~selfand
wind up in the cribs of Bangkok come "Mr. Coelho was desirous of mak-roll into a fetal ball ....
from the hill tribes of Cfiiang Mai J inganarrangementforamutual 'non-l'vehadalotofsupportftommy
province in nonhwestern Thailand. ACI aaression pact' in a certain state," the friends. On the other hand, some of
Many are sold by their poverty· minutes disclosed. "Coelho offered to my friends arc the reason that I
stricken parents for as little as $50. a ... DEISOI withhold Democratic support from smokedaslongasldid.lhaveafata l
And many are lured into prostitution Ill two Democratic chaltengcn in the cbaracterflaw, If someone tells me
by Thai officials, who provide them state"-iftheOOPwould"wilhhold thatlcan'tdosomething,l'Umove ~~ tic1~ti~a~nro~ a~r~i:~~ If witnesses fail to answer three :~rcn~~~rt from a Republican r.~v~~~~~=~~eWl~Ii~~t l a m.
materialize. summonses to testify, for example. The unidentified c:ballenger is run-oonsmok.cn who have informed me
The Bangkok Post recently pub-the case may be dismissed and the nioa apinst a freshman Democrat. that l was realt1 stupid to smoke, and
ljshed an all-too-familiar story of a complainina police officer in-whom the Democrats sorely want to besides. I was botherin& tbcm.
young girl who was sold by her father vestipted for failure to produce the keep in Conarrcss. Oh; yeah?
for $44. She was put to work in a witnesses. ..... Vander J141 is too cautiously An~y,itlookslikel'maoln.to
brothel run by a h1B11-rankmg police BACK.ROOM DEAL: Pohtictl calculatina to mrur liberal favor. He make.it. TbeinterViJ between pains is
official's wife. who hvcd next door in wheclina and death,, i1 Walhinston•s told bis fclJow Republicans that such bccom1n1 lonaer and lo•r.1'hc
a luit urious home. f1vorite spon. The secret minutes of an amn&cmcnt would "fly in the face crampurealmostaonc an<t my hair
A visitor to her barttd. locked an execu11vc session of the National • of a tong at.abllshed committee iuranina to arow back. Everywhere.
room saw that the girt was ick .• and Republican Conarcss1onat om mu-tradiuon of takina on any and all that is. oc:q>t on the 1op of my head.
bousht her freedom for a larie sum. tee reveal how the pmc is sometimes DemOC'f'l.tic incumbents. ... Es.-Don't wony. tho~. rm notao1na to
The benefactor made sure the girl got played. pCCially in tl\is instance where the ticoneofthost hoiicr-than-thou
proper hospital treatment, then paid The chairman. Rep. Quy Vander (committee) stron&Jy misted in the nonsmoket1whocan'tnaftdtoK"ta
her fare back home. Her father beat Ja,t, R~Mich .. has an air of beina tttru1tment ofth1$ caod1datc." ~rsonenjo)·inaaaood imokt. lfyou
her up and sold her" to another preoccupied with annoying mancrs. A.C'COrdma to the minutes, Vandt'r wanuosmoke.that'tyourprivileae.
procurer. Hecalkd a mccbna on April 24 to aet Jagt wai "stronaJy 1dv15t'd (lo} avoid Why,justtheothefdiy, I ... ·~ust me
Thouah-locaJ police ~omrption is a_.tdvice m his GOP colleqLatt 1.n kmd of amn ment with Dem~ a mmute ... You! Hey, you!! Yeah.
scn ous problem, That law cnfotec· about a curious, confidential' crats ' -YOU!Ydu'ftflndl)uni11'oottblt--...--m~nt officials say the a lmost proposal. Footnote: Si>Okesmcn for Coelho dainn clprtt\C before you bum a bolt
0 1ckenSJan duration of the legal Accordin,g to the m inus an and the ReP..,blican commmer de· inmy,!t~Na11y.filthyhabit!
proce s is the arcntcst deterrent to unnamed Republican House mcm-clined to i<kntify the sta\C in qucsuon Now.as I waua~tna; .•
prosecutton. It takes about a year to her had been _approached by Rep or 01h~•• ttabonitt.
bnng a vice operator to j u ucc. and Ton)' Coclho. D-C1tif .. the normally Jed ,u~,..... .,. ...... 1hc~ .ire many pitfalls long 1hc way. combativt ch11rman of 1hc Dem~ aflr 21n;
,
I
I
j
I
Childhood
pets: Sign_
of success?_:1
Executives say-Fido, Kitty
taught them responsibility
CHICAGO (AP}-A secret to the"sutccssofmany
top business execuuves might be the Rover. Fido or K.Jtty
an their childhood. according to a survey by a group that
promotes responsible pet ownership.
A poll of Fortune 500 chief executive officers
determined that 94 percent of the respondents had had a
dog, cat or both as a child, accordina to the Pets Arc
Wonderful Council, a nonprofit orgal'Nzation based here.
That compares with figures indicating that about 53
percent of U.S. households inelude a dog or cat, the group
said.
One respondent to the survey wrote that his
chi~~~ ,dog tauS!'! E,jp _··~~~ Jov , ~e~~~ ...
-,-r ~ ~J:Jtl'.fttel:: ....-. · ~-,... · ~"tin"l 1magine growing up without hill\."
·~
-
Rrv1Ew
Another said bis dogs "arc members of the tarnity,"
while a third quipped that .. my Molly is my second
sweetheart."
Those responding did so anonymously, said council
spokeswoman Jeanne Neylon.
Artists give a fresh meaning
to legends and la ndscapes
Most of the 74 executives who replted said they had
learned rcsponsib1tity from their childhood pets. she said. By SUSAN MONAHAN
"That was No. l ," Neylon said. "Empathy was a big o.1t1Neteorru,,,...,
one: they learned how to .share. A lot of people learned When what is loosely referred to as "the West" is
about companionship. When they'd get home, they could broken down into its separate states, more differences
talk to their pets. than similarities may be apparent at first. Misty, steep
"Some of them said pets arc better than kids: they San Francisco, to give one example, is separated by more
don't talk back. And when they felt lonely, llaey alvtayt had than miles from flat, hot Dallas and seems to many a a pet to talk to." t Dogs were the most popular childhood pet, followed country apan from Los Angeles.
by cats and then horses, she said. And 75 percent of~ Though the contrasts can be startling, there arc some
executives said their families still have pets. ,~ uniting influences as well. Both elements have been
About 44. 7 million U.S. households have pets. captured in "The Second Western States Exhibition and Sli~tJy more than 40 percent of households have dogs, Corcoran 38th Biennial of Ameri~n Painting" at the while about 27 percent have cats. There a.re 50.2 million 1 ,... Bea h M f th .... 2 and dcgs and 46.3 million cats in the United States, Neylon --.una c uscum 0 Art rou~ Aug. l ·
said. Like ihe West itself, the exhibit is massive, both m
The council works with 3.000 antmal shelters and scale and scope. (Because of its size -there arc 106
1,800 animal hospitals nationwide. sponsoring education paintings -the Long Beach Museum of Art is also
about animals as well as programs that provide pet visits exhibiting a segment of the work.)
for nursing home residents. Th h · · t Neylon said a study a few years ago reported that e c aractensttcs, egends and even the cliches of
people who have pets are viewed by others as being better Anzona, California, Colorado. Hawaii, Montana. New
educated. better looking. friendlier and more generous Mexko. Oregon, Texas, Utah and Washmgton have been
than those without. re-interpreted by 30 contemporary artists. This re-
Neylon said she had dogs and cats as a child. and has v1sionism allows many of the artists to give a fresh
a cat and a kitten now. meaning to what might have been hackneyed themes.
"Someday I'll be taking oven he world." she quipped. Certainly Ed Blackbum 'Y1bjcct matter IS the
PAPARAZZI
.. ..
ultimate banality; the Texas artist t}as paintedJro~·st11ls
ofold Westerns in .. Heart of the Rockies" and .. Target".
But the gray. deliberately blurred painrin8J arc almost
brnp m their exaggerated nostalgia for an -01d West ..
that may never have existed outside o(thc moVJes.
Ho.wever, there seems to be no tntcntion to reJect
either the past or the present. On the contrary, these
artists seem to thoroughly know and enjoy their regions.
Like Blackbum, Theodore J. Waddell, a Montana
native, takes an image from the old cowboy culture and
gives it an added dimeµsion. His .portraits of cattle
("Angus # 21 ","Angus # 24" and .. Angus # 28") depict
animals who arc more brooding than bovine. The anist's
heavy brush strokes have given them permanence and
dignity.
Nor has the American Indian culture been over-
looked. Jaune Quick-T~See Smith, who was born on the
Flathead Reservation in Montana. bas built the design on
her "Okanogan Series" of panels to represent a totem
pole. "Built" is the appropnate word. because while the)
arc in fact paintmgs, some of the symbols have been
painted on patcl)es of fabnc and form a structure as well
as a design.
Washington artist Alden Mason's "Fat Jade" also
shows a strong Indian influence. Both the pattern and the
nubby texture of the paint bnna to mind a coarse. colorful
Indian blanket.
An emphasis on the tactile is typical of much of the
work m the exh1b1t. In the work of Southern California
artist Peter Alexander. 1t takes the form of landscapes
~ ............ .., .... ...,,..
This insistence on the sensual may be related to the
prcoc:cupation with nature wbJch ts shared by most of thie.
artists. •
· Texas artist Vernon Fisher has the Three Stooll:S~ .
presiding over the <iewuction of the world in .. Laws~
Na.turc". The written story on the canvas (tu.s t.radeimilt) ··
explains that mad scientlSt.S who defied these laws are)ii>
blame. :;·--
. The traditionally garbed Japanese in Masdii
Teraoka!s .. Wikiwik:i .. may be fi&bting the inroads new'
technology is making on old values. (T eraoka was bom in
Japan, now lives in Hawaii.) Their chances of winnin&
that battle seem as remote as their chances of swim~
against the angry smf in which the artist b.as placed the$;
Nature is Less obvious m the paintinp of laddie
John Dtll. The paintinas on exhll>it, all named
··untitled". arc nonrepresentational But Dill. wbio li'Vb
in Venice, Calif., can evoke a landscape with his ouuiat.
brush-strokes. bis ingenious use oflight and dark. ·
In contrast. Californian Micbacl McMillen po~
a cunously stauc outdoors, a brood in& tableau. in .. l~
Landscape... ::=
The common ground explored by t.bc artisu bas Uc;e
made for monotony OT blandne55. Instead.. it ~
provic:kd a context m wmcb the work of the individcial
also becomes pan of a lar&er picture. :~:
Wbo'a leadin&? It doan't aeem to matter to Plannera: Andrea DeSimone and Kiraten Boward, front: Stepb.anle AmberKln&aa.rdmo•eswtththemualcpro'ridedbyabandof&a.-r
Kellie Newcombe, left. or Laura Booth. Scheck, Aabley Corkett, Chrlaty Peebles and Garth Tamblyn. High fradaateta at Enaifn Intermediate School party. .
.I
.
Junior gala planners start off well
Move over gala and benefit planners. .. another
generation is warming up.
Eleven Ensign Intermediate School grads arc on the
social scene with experience under their belts ...
Back in November(theyalrcady know planning
starts early), the group of eighth graders discussed the
possibility ofhold1nga party followi.nggraduation from
their Newport Beach school.
Parents ofCMi.atlaa Beti. ADclrea Slmoae, Klnto
Howard, Portia Nfaro, Ckrlaty Peebles, AsJaley Cortett.
Ja1oa Gu, Jeff Jacebl, Amy Patrltt, StepUale Scllileck
and Garda Tamblya sat in on the plannina. But, it wa
cleat from the very start, that it would be the students
DucJ 8l~e. Anutula Arnold, Deana Suilael• and K.bD OW paue for a drink ..
I
doing all of the work. (Parents would act only as
advisors).
One oft he students was a" h1z at math, so she
headed up the budget/finance committee ... one \\-1th
artistictalentsdes~ed them' 1tauon, whileothenwere
assigned to dccorauon, food and cleanup.
The committee also sent letters to the parents of the
I 25 who attended the bash at South Coast Comm unit)'
Church hall m Irvine recently assutin:a that no alcohol or <1N&s would be served or tolerated, chaperons would be
on the premises and evef)one would be bused to and
from from Manner's School (no tndtvidualcan
allo~.)
"The party worked out beautifully,·· said Nacy
1'alMlya(mothcrofGarth). "There were no problems
and every~ had a great tJ me. These kids arc a spcClal
poup. Most of them will btentcrinaHarborHtab th1 fall." .
One of the planners. Ja ... G,..dcclarcd the event
a great ucc.us. "h was rc&ll)" fun.'EvCr')body liked the
mu ic (a uoup of Harbor Hi&h &rads) and we did a lot of
··soshlna"". -
Parents were do1na their own" ing" out on the
deck.in& while the students ere cclebratingaraduatio
inside. But, the kids did come outSlde fur the
-•"ftillRltrmcnu ... tM:> ate f'cttor n'1wi bd( 1 orem
each 6 feet Iona) and dran bottles of pop.
Parent oft he plann~rs art Pataod l.a1 Beue •
Temand ~aac.ftetl, TUDandJlULlM.a1, T.H.and
AM GU. Mart and Claeeyl Ho IN, Mlke and LbNla
Jae*, Loel1 Nlan, 8W and CaNllite Pa&tk •
P let,E4andUnu andEdand AKY
Tamblya.
t '
...
' > .. . ...
.·
<>ranoe Coast OAIL.Y PlLOTIMonday, June 25, 1984
DEAR DR .
STEINCROBN: For
years I kept com-
platnm' of md1ges-P£TEI tion. l d get heart-
burn and acid taste in s ~~e cr:,~ut:s~:111~ TEllCIOHI
afkr a heavy meal. It •••••••••••• was worse after l got .
mto bed. l got to the point where I was afraid to eat because . r-0 become bloated and uncomfortable.
· .• , ·•· My doctor suggested X-rays because he suspected an
• -<ilccr. But there was no ulcer evident on the X-ray films.
>~--ihat didn't help because I st~ll suffered the pam. gas and
-(4ther symptoms. l took ant.aods ever) few hours. but they
didn't help. . · H d d x At last 1 went to a stomach spec1ahst. e or ere. ·
rays again. This time the doctor discovered I had an hiatus
hernia. He put me on small meals and had me elevate the
head of my bed. I've been feeling better but still get
uncomfortable.
What bothers me most 1s when friends say, ··~orget 1!.
Ifs only an hiatus hernia!'" It"s a common cond1t1on, 1sn t
1t? Mr. N. b
DEAR MR. N.: Fnends often make matters w<?rse )'
undercst1maung the importance of a patie~t's 11lnes~;
There was a ume when hiatus hernia was a respected
•. <liseasc But numerous articles dunng the past few years
;.; descnbcd hiatus hernia as unimportant.
• So many who had the cond1tton ne'er compla1med of
any 1nd1gestion or real discomfort. But 1t is import.ant.
Sometimes so severe that 1t m1m1cs a heart attack. Often
it's confused wtth ulcer or gall bladder trouble.
Although tt's often symptomless, 1t"s evident 1t can
cause discomfort when }OU realize that a ponion of the
stomach has slipped up throu~ a ~~kness m th.~
diaphragm. Symptomless ~r.n~t, at s nol onl) a hernia.
FOR MRS. W.: There may a way for you to receive
estrogens to prevent osteoporosis and still not run added
risk of getting cancer of the uterus. Ask your d<?Ctor ~o
consider what Bc:rt J . Davidson. M.D . has wntten 10
Connecticut Medicine (384): .
"The risk of both postmenopausal osteoporosis and
endometrial carcinoma can be decrl?8sed by ~strogen
replacement therapy m combmauon wath progesun~. T~e
combination therapy appears to be at least .as effective 1.n
preventing postmenopausal osteoporosis. There 1s
evidence that pr~estins alone have a bcnefioal effect on
bone metabolism. ' • • • . h . DEAR DR. STEINCRORN: I have been troubled wit
·:r-excess growth of hair on my face and chest. ~·vc h.eard that
· tak.tog the pill may help. I am 22. an unmamcd. l ve never
t.aj(en the pill before. ShalJ I try 11? MISS "f.
DEAR ~ T .. : Better taJk n over wath your doctor
.. • . -.
. ..
..
Put a few words to work for you
'" the Daily Pilot
642-5678
Not everyone can take the pill. B1;1t if you c.an, ~d your
doctor agrees. 1t may help your h1rsut1usm; try 1t. It has
helped man} women in your ue range. •• l
DEAR DR. STEINCROBN: I have a friend who bas
"ballooned" m weight to about 350 pounds in the past five
years. He has tned ordinary diets. but they haven't helped.
Now he wants to fast for a few weeks to take of some
weight. Do you believe in fasting for this purpose? MRS. 0 .
DEAR MRS. 0 .: Ordmarily, the answer should be NO.
But there arc exceptions. Espccia.lly if the weight bas
already produced senous problems m th~ heart. or
elsewhere. Tell him not to attempt a st.arvauon regime
without the st net supcrv1s1on of his doctor.
Chances are the doctor will treat him m the hospital
for the first week or so. It's import.ant that he take
supplemental vitamins and mmerals. • • • DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: What does AJDS stand
for? What are ns symptoms? MRS. S. .
DEAR MRS. S.: AIDS is acquired if!1mune .defic1e!1CY
syndrome. Patient's lose their natural 1mm.umty against
disease. Therefore, they suffer many rare diseases. Early
sysmptoms vary: fever, swollen glands. weight loss. night
sweats, diarrhea. cough and fatigue
ToNIGHT'S TV
~ -----------
-7:00-
8 C8SNEW8
8teCNEW8
8 TAXI Q BIONIC WOMAN
CJ) NEWS
• ntf&'S COWNN I WHf£l Of FORTUNE
8U8INES8 REPORT
... OOOP£R'8 ORANGE
COUNTY
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE 8 UM COMECTIOH
GUOYIE
"Surrender" (1950) Vera Allston
(Q)UOYIE **'.; "Ditty Ouc*'1 Movtt. Fanta-
tlc ll&lnd" ( 1983) ~. VoloM
by Mel Bllnc
-7:IO-
• 2 ON THE TOWN
I 8 FMa.Y FEUD
frlALMNG · 1 WkRP If CINCINNATI 'PEOfU'S COURT
WIJ>, Wl.O WORLD Of
AHlilAL8 ID lME PA1ZEW1NNERS
()) T1C TAC DOUOH
Ouallty Old watcnes, 11er1p
gold, jewelry,
VIMTAGln•
-L-00-8 (I) SCAAECAOW AHO MRS. KING . a a 1VS B1.00P£RS AND
PRACTICAL JOKES
8UOYIE * * •.; "Death Scrum'' I 19751 Raul
Julll. Luae Arnaz. Ci1 JOKER'S WlD
Cf) TWIJBHT ZONE m BfTERTAINM9fT TONIGHT
Cl)UOYIE * • •~ "Splendor In The Grau"
(1961) Nat• Wood. Warren Beatty.
8D ntE PEOPLE VS. DAN WHfTE ~= PERR>AMAHCE8 ***"'The Towenng Inferno" (1974)
Ste¥e Mc:Oueen. PIUI NewrMn. CID STANDING ROOM OHl. Y
(l)MOYIE • * ''Snoopy Come Home" ( 1972)
Arimlted.
(%)MOYIE **** "My Ffjr Lldy" (1964) Rex
Harrilon. Mdr~ Hepburn.
-8:30-Q T1C TAC DOUOH
(})CANNON
• P JI. MAGAZINE
CO) ENBUSH BEAT
-t.o0-8 (I) YAU.EV Of THE DOUB
'1111'
DaMOVIE * * "Alge Of Angell" (P*1 2 of 2)
( 1983) Jaclyn Smith. Ken Howard.
DMOYIE *** "Shill" (1971) Richard
Roundtree. Moses GuM .
(IJ HEW8
mMERVGAlmN
8i) CAN AHYBOOY HEAR ME?
®l ENTERTAIMHT TONIGHT eDAAGNET (Q)UOYIE * * * "Last Ting() In P1rla" (1973)
Mltlon Brando, Maria Schneider.
-9'.30-
(J) MOVIE *** "The Countty Glt1" (1954)
Bing Crost>y, Gr1et Kelly
tm GAOWING UP GAY 9 PEOfU'S COURT 1:QUNN * * "M~Age Crazy" (1980) f.M.
M•~BruceOem
**.... "Night Shift" 11912) Henry
Wlnl!ler. MIChMI Ke9ton.
-10:0C>-• ••NEWS
SWEATERS • PANTS • BERMUDAS
SKIRTS * SWEA TS • ACCESSORIES
WOMEN. PAE-TEENS & GIRLS
TOCK UP FOR SUMMER AND BACK TO SCHOO
Doors Open Tuesday At 10.00 am
....
Mlddleton-Rehard
Mr. and M rs. William Middleton of Irvine have
announced the engagement of their daughter, Lynda, to
JeffRehard of Downey. He is the son of Beverly Rehard of
Downey and Joseph Leland Rehard of Reno.
J
Arm In arm In arm
Jamee Coburn ellloya the company of Lisa Hartman (left) and
Catherine Blea ln .. Jacqueline SUMon•a Valley of the Dolle
1981, .. a ftye-boar mlnllerlea to be rebra.dcut tom,ht at 9 uad
Tueeclay at 8 OD CBS, Channel 2 •
'Scarecrow' star left his
heart in San Francisco
By JERRY BUCK
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - A funny thing
happened to actor Mel Stcwan on the way
from New York to Los Angeles: he stopped
off in the San Francisco Bay area and
stayed. .
"I had a fear of Los Angeles," ad.nutted
Stewart, who stars as Billy Melrose in CBS'
"Scarecrow and Mrs. King."
"So I was fortunate enoup when l came
out from New York to be added to The
Committee (a San Francisco-based im·
provisational troupe), and that stopped me
an San Francisco. We worked in L.A. but I
saw no reason to move here. There didn't teem to be that much work, esp_ccially for
blacks, Fonunatcly, people did seem to seek me out."
Stewart lived m San.Fnnciaco for tcven
years before he movod acrou the bay to
BcrkcJey in 1977. He founded bis own
communi!)' theater, BANTIJ (Black An·
ists Now Tbrouah Unity) and aJso lluaht
actina at San Franc1JCO State Univenit)'..
"Moved work.i~ with the students,' be said. "butt couldn t stand all the tcademic
trapp1nas -all the pepn wort and all tbe
meetings." .
Now be devotes mOSt of h is tune to
movtCS and television. When he's ~rk.ina on ... Scarecrow•• ht commut weekly t0
lkrkdcy.
Prior 10 ··sa~ ... hi was aJtO a
~ular in .. Roll Out."~ tbc ROcb'' lad
':!-Tabitha" aDd WU a lmll.ft&UW U
GtOtlle Jcfl'enon• brotbtr on .. All in the Family.'' <Wbtn •·nc Jefl'mons" waa .spun ofT as a Jeries be did not ,oin the ne-.
&how.)
"l JOI my job on • ttm>w' btcaute my
11cn1 u pt<>plc to death." he .aid,
lauah1 "Sht ketPS mcnuon1n~ my
name. At 'Scarecrow they went lhrough a
hst of black actors and finally called me in.
I went in prepared and made a mess of it.
"'I let mysclfbccome objective and when rou do that it destroys your concentration.
gave myself acting lessons out loud and I
guess 1t must have impressed people
because I got the role."
As Billy Melrose, Stcwan 11 an official in
the intelhgencc ageocy (unnamed, but CIA
seems to fit) where Scarecrow (Bruce
Boxleitncr) and Mrs. Kina (Kate Jackson) arc undercover operatives. It wu Billy's
idea to pair up the expericn~ qent and
the naiv~ housewife.
"Billy I a conseTVativei" explained S~wart. .. While everyooe el1e i• losioa
their head he remains calm. He bua way of
comina up with ltt'a)'t for Mn. K.i~ ~come
to the aid of Scarecrow. l IOC't ol briaa her
into the picture. But be bu 10 son of
pretend he't touih."
Sometimes Billy ICU out of the o~ Into the action, and on ooe such occasion
Stewart aave everyone 1 SW"priar. uwe wtre1n a wareboutc'dmia. tM bid
YJ. .. be rQ1led. "Nobody be'W I was fn'10 martial ans." ht &ct; StcWVt bu ~ Uldofor 14 yeanand bolds three
•·1nn1ICl'OIS the floof and IOftleODe lbot
at me and I did uumi, wbicb 11 a tOll. ~v~ lookld 111ne. My bit~ oft' and
I tried IO IVlb n. The dlriie1or ~t I was
bun. INot loOked at me lake I really was lbol"
Stewart was. of count, unhun ind had
merdy pnfOnncd a furidamenw move m
the ~&al martial an.
.. Akidb i really a mind thlna." he said.
"lt'a a philosophy that by 1111ttmcn1 YoU
can find ~nciliatton; ln other martial
aru rou have a clash." ,
')
'Fan_tastic!cs 'opens at; two theaters
It's been qutte a __ -..; ____ ._ ___ ~~
few years since ''The
Fantasucks" was
produced alona the
Oranae Coast -but
our local theater
aroups arc making
up for lost time this
Toi
l11us
summer. ••••••••••••• Last weekend,
the San Oemente Community Theater completed its
production of the Tom Jones-Harvey Schmidt musical,
and now two more versions arc opening on the same night
this weekend. They're co mma from the well-established
Saddleback Company Theater and the brand-new South
C.O.st Musical Theater.
The Saddlcback group, m its seventh year of semi-
professional summer stock. opens its "Fantasticks" in the
Studio Theater on the Mission Viejo campus for a five-
weck engaacment. The South Coast players, in the midst
of their first season, wlll be pcrfonmna the show at Irvine's
University H1ah School theater for th~ v.'CCken<fs.
Patnck J. Fenn~ll is directmf Saddleback's "Fantas-
ticks," which stars Rick Allan as E Gallo and Omo Palazzi
and Jill DcFreitas as the young lovers. Performances will
be aiven Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 3 p.m. until July 29 with reservati ons available
at 83 t-4656.
The South Coast producuon. under the d1rect1o n of
Daniel Trevino, features Steve Sloan, Constance Cairo
and Dale Tracy in the leading roles, with Eric Levi ton.
Rick Kleber, Mark Rydzynski, Andy White and Michelle
Dahlin completina the cast. The show will be performed
Fridays at 8, Saturdays at 2:30 and 8 and Sundays at 2:~0
in the University High theater. Campus at Culver an
.,
Irvine. wttb ticket ordc"' ~1na taken at ~306. Retl. I u5tm {838· I S40).
Four other productions will be corning to an end Comptruna the local theater picture arc "A v
alona the coast th1• weekend. l hey are: From tl Br'41e" at the CO$ta Mesa Ci vi Pla)houtt. 661
-"Mea'.Sln1l •"on theSccondStagcofSouth Coast Hamilton St.. Costa Mesa (6SO,S269); "Mra. GAllboat'
Repcno[, 6SS Town Center Dri"e, Costa Mesa 8011" ai the Huntinston &ach Pla)house, Maio trttt at (9S7-403 . Tucsday tl\rouah aturdayat8:30,Sunda) 18, Yorttown Avenue, Huntil)gton ~ach (832·1'40.S), and
with wet end matinets at 3 p.m. ·~ M"Mtrap" 1n the Patto Theater at Golden West
-
11Day1 of Wt.De ud Roses" at the Newpon Theater Collqt in Huntmiton Beach (895-8378). All run Fndays ArtsC~nter, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach (631..0288). and turdayut 8:JO throuah July 7.
closing ~rformanccs Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. r-..-.----.,...~~~...,..,..."-!'-_..------.-1411 -· Lavnder FoWea" at Sebasuan's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (492-9950)
Wednesday through Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at J and 1 p.m.
-"Barefoet ta tile Park" on the main stage of
SaddJeback College an Mission VaeJO (831-4656). Tuesday
through Saturday at 8 p.m .. Sunday at 3 p.m.
ihrec dinner theater producttons continue their
enaaJements. all playing nightly e~cept Mondays at
varying curtain times through Aug. 19. These are "Tiie
Bttt Llt1lt WboreboHt In Teu1" at the Harlcqwn Dinner
Theater. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. Santa Ana (979-SSi 1):
"Fiddler oa Uae Roof" at the Grand Dlnner Theater. 7
Freedman Way. Anaheim (772-7710) and "Tbt Mask
Man" at the Curtain Call Dinner Theater. 690 El Camano
COSf4MESA
EdwatdS CiMma C«lt« 9'19~1'1
rrfCilliS
Edwlrm~k
581·5880
f'OUNTAIN V~
Edwards FounUin YaJlly
939-1500
ORANGE
StlC1lum Ome-ln SllM'nO
=~CJnerni 1534 2SS3
SANTAANA
Edwlt'ds 8rlstol
540-1""'
~~~·~tor~~~~l_i~-~YJn~-·~-~----. --~~F~·~.
his first role: the Rolling Stone mapzine ~<r
·l
I
publisher plays a Rolling Stone editor .in "P~rfect!" .
John Travoltaand Jamie Lec Cun1sstarm the movie,
which grew out of a Rolling Stone anicle called "Loolang
for Mr. Goodbody." It was wntten by Aaron Latham.
whose earlier magazine story became "Urban Cowboy."
Latham collaborated on the scnpts for both movie with
James Bridges.
Wenner was cast after a screen test with Travoha . He
said, "They first approached me about three or four
months agos and I said, 'No.· But as it got closer they kept
asking and I finally thought, •well, nothing to lose.' "
ti;!:\. CIJt--1 ·~· ............... ,.EJI
AIWOe 639·8770
STADIUM DR·IN
.. 99G-4021
UA MOVIES 4
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PAOFIC BUENA PK DR·IN
COSTA MESA 546-3102
EDWARDS CINEMA
COSTA IEA 540·0594
UA SOUTH COAST
ltVK 55 1-0655
EDWARDS WOODBRIDGE
LA&tlM BEACH 497-1711
EDWARDS SOUTH COAST LAGUNA
fllSSION VU> 830-6991
EDWARDS VIEJO TWIN
~637·0340
AMC ORANGE MALL
~ 634-3911
UA CITY CENTER
W£Slt9CSTOt • UA WESTMINSTER TWIN 895-5333
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(P'O) N O P'llues
12:10 1:~ 5:H 1:00 tO•JO ... h9MSIN• 8artalft "'Id•
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t2;25 2:404dS 1:25 9:50
1"1111 f<lulld1nu (R)
Poma~ '~ .. (!;
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Blame It In lltlo
(lit)
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MONDAY Tllol IATU"DAY FACUlTYotCANOl~
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Ch s,.c. 1.,..._u a Hehl DOCll" (PC) In 70MM Dolby Stereo
12 30. 3 00. 5 JO. 8 00. 10.30
br11m PllClt (Mon-Sal)
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12 JO. 2 55. 5 20, 7 45, 1015
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12 30. 3 00, s JO, 8 00. 10 30
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12 30. 3.05. 5·40. 8 20. 11 00
For rnt Two Shows& 'ifii Mi I M f~J!!>
..... l'tn (llle.&ll fer fftl f•...., Olly
115 l.ll. s.-.1.JQ. IHI
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12 30. 2 55. S.20, NS. 10 10
Fn/Sat Litt Show 12.30
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GARFtELP. l TMtHK '-OO'RE
100 MfAN TO OPIE
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"Seven years I've spent learning to tie my shoelaces
and NOW they give us Velcro."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"It all started wtth a little game of
'fetch the ball ....
MOON MULLINS
HIDE" ANt> SEEK ...
o~-~ ...
IT LOOKS 1..IK~ ~ ...
PEANUTS
!~®
~
by Jim Davis
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP)
]£_:-''~ )\
-111 hate Mondays."
DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham
·~ ,~-~· -
-·25
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
of.f ... So
IT f'S ...
by Charles M. Schulz\.
by Tom K. Ryan
J,
0 • Z:=@S£:'.:!g: ••«•••
BRIDCf
Q.l -Ea.at. W ttt vulnerable.
aa South you hold:
., .. Oii OAl51 •a1a
-Partner open• the blddlng
with three heart.I and the
oext hand pauea. What ac·
tion do you take?
A.-We know you do not
have the value• tor any bid,
but you aJIO do not have
much defente. The oppo-
nent.a almott surely cao make
a pme, so you ahould raise
to four heart.a. ll the op-
ponent.a' atrength is almost
evenly divided. you might
even sf.ell the hand undou-
bled -both East and West
might give you credit (or
aome of the atrength that his
partner holds.
Cwus
Go1£1
AN8WE TO WEEILY 11100£ QUll
hand. By pa11ini at your fint
turn. you announced to ihe
world \hat you could have a
complete buat Ia fact, you
have Hct"llent 1upport for
partner'• firat-bid suit aPd a
key honor in hl.t aecond ault.
The leaat you can do ll jump
to four spades.
QA -Neither vulnerable, aa
South you hold:
•• c:>J87'31 0141 t851
Tilt biddinc hat proceeded:
WHt Nri Eut s.-.
INT OW. PUI 1
What actJon do you take?
A.-We don't ltnow what
your partner la up to, but
Q.S-As South, vlllnerablt, neither do you. Certainly, be yo~ld: cfoe1n't want you to bid -all
•"4 !;? AKQMZ o TS +ts doublea of no trump opening
The biddinr bu proceeded: bide are buiully (or
openlnr bfd-lndHd, ha.
your suit been a major w
would bavt 1urat1ttd tha
you open tht blddinr. No.-
your flt with partrwr'• 1w
rnakea your band rfeb In play
Inf trkka. With atoppen h
two of the unbid auJt.a and 1
panJaJ •topper In tbe tltfrd
we •uneat you Jurnp t<
three no lr\lmp.
N-~L r_..... s •L W--' penaJtJes. Pass and see what
vn.m ~ "11a -Q.8-Both vulJlerabJe, 11 J " p 1 M p happens. Parlntt probably
v AM v ... South you L-1 .. :· 1 NT P ? hu a long, strong auit he can -.. •"J•H• !;?_. .. , OW'•• tJ• Wha · d ~1 set up with an entry or two in ~ ..,,, n-"°" • t acuon o you taa11: Part .... r 0,...... • L-biddi...r Th. · ood · the side suits. .... ,.¥.... •m: m A.-is 11 • I tune to with one apade. What do you throw the point-count book respond?
out of the window. Also, A.-Your hand is not quite
forget about the desirability strong enourh for a jump to
Q.Z-Both vulne rable, as or playinr in an eight-card Q.5-As South. vulnerable . three spadea, but it hu too
South you hold: major fit. You have a bal· you hold: many hlgh cards and lacks
•JIM! <:?QS 0 8452 +9&4 anced hand that rates to pr~ +JM l;?KJO OK6 +KQT&c! the distributinal features for
The bidding haa proceeded: duce six tricks for partner. The bidding has proceeded: four spades. All you can do la No~ Eut Seutla Wt1t Bid three no trump. Your s .. ~ Wttt Nertl Eut make a temporary bid of two
1 + Pua Pua Z • hand should play 11 well at Pue Pue J + Pa11 diamonds t-0 see what devel·
S <;> Pua 1 no trump as at heart.a. and ? ops. Naturally, you will aup-
What act ion do you take? your chances for nine tricks What do you bid now? port spades at your next
... w~e~~~-~-""'.&-JMt!lbetterlhan~~~T .>--:t. ow.b:t~~=,toan tur •. . ~~ 4,...__. _f_~~"Jftf~~t;.: :Fr -...~ ........ ;~~...,.),,.· .._._. ·-· •·>tt~li~· ..... ~&l~-~:Ui~ll~
SHOE
BRABBLE
OAO,\JQ.)l..O ~ U~ t>
(J)tli, 10 OUC2 !Ki~
~0AU.&AA\E.
iOt-l\C,~i 1
FOB BE1TER OB FOR WORSE
SO ·MI~ TCWYOO
Al HE DION1" UKe.
Mc~NG,DIO HE .
(JOHN . WE 'VE. 6e£N
lHROOGM ALL ltilS{!
WHYARe
YOU At.,,WAY S
O N S"flt.,,"fS,
C'R. ~FtAPY
~
l ·U
ft\AN~i AA~ f1NAU.~
COME ro It~ ~~!
f~'i'~f. ~iART1Ne, ME.
Sf.~ I~~ ~tZE.
t'M 1'00 vAL.U\S\£.10 et
L.Atl(,01~~1~&
ON1~
efNG~ ~
fl ·1S
by Jeff MacNelly
by Lynn Johnston
fm-iNCWON ···
MletiAa. FIGHB HIS ~Bftl1te8.
by Tom Batluk
I v;riEAr rr, 8ekr
rr! 3J6T eeAT "·'13
I
't. WOUC..P 1"Ml,....K
A PAI f't Of# ,.AN6-PROO,_ eoo-rs
WOU&..c=> ee 1.-eSS
CONSPICOOOS
J
• -
~
t
t
..
Blurock nominated
Planner of the Year
WWJam E. Bloroell of Tiie Blarecll Partffraatlp, ArHlteeta ud Plauers
of Newport Beach has been nominated as Planner of the Year by the Southwest
Reaion of the ~ of Edaeadeul Padll&y Pa.luen/ laterutloul. ~
award recognizes excepuonal talent and service in cducauonal faaJit1es
plannina and desip. Blurock, a Fellow in the Amerlcu ludtwce of Ardltee&s
as a foundioa member of the Oran~ County chapter of AlA and a formc;
member of the orpnization's Oes1p Commission and its board of directon an ·
Washmaton. O.C. He has served as an author. lecturer and consultant for
' various educational orpnizahons and school districts. iocluding Stufor4
UaJvenl&f's school planning lab and community planning center. He has also
been 1rch1tcctural consultant for the Ford Foa.adattoa and the U.S. Office or
Healtla, Education ud Welf1re. • • • Costa Mesa rcsidcot J. C.rmJclaael (MJke) Calder has been promoted to
the post of assistant vice presidtnt/national title officer 1n the nauonal
accounts department of First American Title lnnruce Co. Calder started
wit~ the company at its office m Castle Rock, Colo., in 1981 , moving to the
~ll~nal hea~quarters m Santa Ana m 1983. First American is the Jhtrd largest
utlc insurer an the nation. • • • Vblcent N. Marafblo, eaecwdve vice preaideat ud ~ef Oauclal ud
a~l.Dbtratlve officer o( Loclllaeed Corp., has been elected to the board of
directors of Dataprodacta Corp. of Woodland Hi Us. Marafino also serves on
the board of directors of Tiie Flo.rocarboD Co. in Laguna Niguel and is a
trustees at Harvey Madd Collete in Oaremont. • • • Allen B. Ury of~osta Mesa has been named public relations director for
Clmeo Advertlsblg in Newport Beach, an in-house marketing subsidiary of
Bam;tn TalviDC Rare coin IDvettmeata and Henltberser Fhwlclal Services.
In has ~cw P<?S~. _Ury will supervise all publicity, promotion and collateral
markctmg acuv1 lies. U ry was formerly an account manager with Gloria ZJper
Is Aaaodatet public relations consultants of Newport Beach. • • • _Tom Fox, founder of Foxware System Corp. of lrvine, was elected
president. of the IDtenatloaal Alpu Micro Dealers Auodatioa for 1984.
Foxw~ as one of more than 300 authorized Alpha Micro deaJcrs worldwide
and dest~s. manufactures and markets a family of microcosnputer systems
and associated equipment. • • • Land plan ncr Gary P. CiDtl has established a new firm . CbaU fr Asaociatet,
1n Costa Mesa. Cmt1 as a founder of TM Plallnbag Cuter of Newport Beach.
where be was serving as president when he decided to form his own company. • • • Klag Advertising fr Pabllc Relatiou of Newport Beach as expanding
outside Cahfom1a. by opening an office an the Phocntx area. Babette J .
Douldsoa heads the new office. The firm specializes an res1denual and
commercial real estate marketing and other consumer and tC<.'hnical accounts. . , .
Olli Blanton bas been promoted to senior account executive at Coclaraae
OaH.1 lJvlllptoa fr Co. lac. Blanton has worked as an account exccuuvc at
CCL ror mort than a year. In her new post. she will be responsible for three
diV1sioos of CooperVisloD and the Martin La&ffr Hospital account. • • • Jamet A. Claroaley, v1<% president of d!velopmcnt for T1co Bell, IDc. of
Irvine has been elected to the bOard of directors of the IDtenaatioul
AsaoeiltiOD of Corporate Real Estate Executives. Chronley's four-year term
representing Southern California and Arizona will end in 1987. • • • Melaale May has been appointed vice president and assistant to the
chairman of IAlnH Tecuology of Los Angeles. a producer of adult and
retirement communities. The firm recently opened its newest community.
Lels•re VtJla1e Ocean Hilla, in Oceanside, and is develping 11 commumtics
across the country. • • • Los Angeles-based ExentJve COldlcralt D hmousme scrvi<% has
expanded to Orange County where it will maintain a fleet of 30 Presidential
stretch Cadillac and Uncoln limousines. The firm will have more than 200
limousines on band durina the 1984 SummcrOlvmpics to keep clients moV1ng.
J I
Top computer prize
CIE 8yatema, Inc., of JniDe WOD the
Computer Dealer .... ulDe '"Dealer Sap-
port Pro&ram"' award foT oatata.adlni
dealer npport la tbe m.lcrocompater mar-
ketplace la 1983. Pictured ar.e, from left,
Da.td SbadoYita. Computer De.ier edJ·
tor /&MOctate pabl.lalaer. Al Keraek, cm
819tema cUreetor of prodact mar~;
and Pat Venesla Jr., Compater o.Jer
pabllaber.
Bankruptcy's no panacea:
It'sasolutionoflast resort
Bankruptcy has been the hottest
news m the headlines during many
weeks in the past few months.
Undeveloped and underdeveloped
counmesopenly threaten bankruptcy
1f the repayment schedules on their
massive debts aren't made more
perm1ss1ve or ~flexible .. by us. their
developed creditor nations and
banks. Corporations declare
bankruptcy to avoid liabiljty and
nuisance acuons while maintaining
ad<:quate resources to resume ac-
tiviues in a more pleasant environ-
ment.
Close to 300.000 personal
bankruptcy petitions were filed in
1983 alone. a towering total that.
while modestly below l 982's figure.
testifies to the widespread acceptance
of bankruptcy as a last-ditch remedy
for crushing debt.
Filing for bankruptcy does offer
individuals a fresh stan -but even in
today's comparatively tolerant at-.
mospherc. at 1s the alternative of last
•
resort. While you cannot be fired
from your JOb. for tnstance.
bankruptcy conunues to carry a
stigma and 1t sticks on your credit
rtCord for 10 years. Qunng this span.
you wall find it extrtmely difficult
indeed to get any new loans.. credit
cards. mongagcs.. the like
Situations do arise ~hen
bankruptcy mt&ht seem a lotical
choice. but on doscr analysis. this 1s
not so-especially at times of radicaJ
changes m your personal circum-
stances.
··1 believe there 1s a time when
people should file for bankruptcy,"
says Luther Gatling. president of
Budget and Credit CounseHng Ser-
vices, a non-profit corporation
licensed by the New York State
Bankin4 Department. "Many people
arc so ill-informed that they th.ink
bankruptcy 1s a panacea. but that is
not true for most of the population.·•
About I 0 percent of the clients his
agency sees eventually file for
banlruptcy. That's a fraction of those .
planning to file when they go to the
service and a percentage 10 line with
reports from other credit counseling
agencies. Gathna reveals.
"The key is not to pamc:· Gatling
emphasizes. "Don't run out and file
for bankruptcy if your bills get too
high. If you have too many creditors,
a credit counselor can consolidate
your debts and arrange for you to
make one repayment a month instead
ofa dozen."
ln the above situation. Gatlng
explains. a credit counselor contacts
all your creditors. collcct1on agencies
UPs AND Do"N s
Snu
Ptm1
and any lawycn, and worts out an
anangcmcnt whereby you. the debt-
or. know every month exactly bow
much you will repay by wnuna just
one check. You give up juaJina bills.
you coordinate and consolldat~ lbem:
then you pay.
"'Our philosophy is that if you can't
repay your debts in three yean, that's
when to consjder bankruptcy,·· Gatl-
ing observes.
Th.at three ycan 1s not an arbi uary
length oftimc. This as the span (three
years) that dcbton who file Chapter
13 of the Bankruptcy Act have to
repay their debts. ln fact. Chapter 13
provides a "rehabilitation .. alterna-
tive to filing for bankruptcy (Chapter
9), althouab it still JOCS throu&b
Bankruptcy Court. Under Chapter
13. a person with a steady mcome
presents a payment plan to bishcr
creditors. When the court approvc-s
the plan. it appoints a truslC'C to
collect your monthly payment. Debt-
ors arc allowed three -and some.
ti mes five-years to repay, and often
the total is less than what you owt.
Also under Chapter 13, debtors can
keep assets -an important consider-
ation -and it can be used every sax
years.
E~otlc
Coffees
boost
sales
SAN FRANOSCO(AP.)~
can co«ee consumpUOn hai betll dectiniq for 20 years. but there IS &
heap of bustnas brewi~ in the
aourmm• oolfee end of the industry.
Jndustey spokesmen aid the C'IOt>c
beans have &iven new via« to the
cotTcc business. "Over the last 1ive yeai:1 our
gourmet business has inaasCd ~
fold.·· s&)"S San Fl"l.DNco imponer
Bob Km&. president of ttie Pacific
Coast Cofrce Association.
Specuhy coffees now account t&
40 percent of alt cn:cn coffee im·
ported by K.ina's mily-oWDed
Harold L k.ing ~ Co.
ma&e tbal Americans drink an Iva'•
• 1.&S CUP' of coffee per diy. a~ low in four decades of swiaical
~?.pare is a 42 permit drop &om~ ..
1962. when Americans were coasum-• ina 3.12 cups a day.
But tbcre bas been reneMd 1A1er'elt in specialty, or gourmet. coffee IDd f
the whole beans I.bat mUe jt. I !
Donald Scboenbolt. found.int;
cbaimwl of New York's Specialy·
Coffee AID::iation of America,
crcdiu San Francisco for the ~rc
blrtb .. of the whole-bean coffee indus-
try.
.. A hundred years"°' tbe only way
coffee wu told was in the bean," he
said. .. But~ ground ooffee ca.mt
in. the wtiolc bean bns:inen died ouL
1bcn in the mid..60s a number~
specialty shop$ sprana up m Saa ff'IDCISCO td1iQ& coffee the oad-.
fashiooed way a.nd t.tUs t.beo aorad to
New Yark.. up and dowD the East
Coast and ultimatdy to moll urtJan.-.
cmtcn around the country... ~ •
Printronix
to acquire
Anadex Inc. ' l • l
•
Pnnt.roni1 lnc.. in Irvine. manufaC· !
rurer Qf computer JiM printers, has •
siped an qreement in principle 10 ..
acqui~ An.adex Inc .• a pnvateJy-beJd •
CaJifomia-bued company enpacd :
in the design, manufacture and saJc of :
9Cf'iaJ matrix computer printers, lA ...
cxcb.anae for $8 million of Printron~ :
common stock. ..
TM acqui5iuon as subject to the •
exccuuon of a definitive ~l. :.
approval by the boards of directors of ~
both companies and the shareboldcn
of Anadex., and certain o\Mr con-
ditions and approvals. The P9l'lics arc •
contemplating the completion of the ~
transaction in late August : .
Pnntronu's common stock is :
traded on the NASDAQ Nation.al •
Market System. Printrorux des!Jns. :-
manufactures and markets medium :
and low speed matrix im~ ~ ...
printers designed for ~ wtth mini-
computer systems and m1cro.,
computers, such as multi-won..·
station office systems and othet' small
computer systems.
NEW YORK CAPI -The followlne list IY ~n r• + ~ UP ~· lf}_SV "'1 l shows the Over-Iha-Counter R~ ~ 7·1! UP
,t. 1!
entn ~
1:1
stock• encl warnnts Fri' Mve DOM ue> a I '• + 1 UP ~ the most •nd do:'ir, 1 mo&t based on Trltn pf ~ 7 Uo ~ perc~I of rldllv. 14 N:ti;e s '• + •'~ UP "'1 NL No MCUrf~ Ing betow 12 °' 1000 IS C r un 6 + ''IUP N~dP :: ~t shllrn ere lnduded.
Ii
lntr8 un 2~ :t ~ UP 5 i . Net and peiunt-,r. ~ are the ~~ .j" ~ UP ' ~
difftf"enc::e bet~ r~io:tc clOslng + ~,,. UC> i~ \04 bid prl~ end Fr daV'S tu or e ~ du ;i t Up
...
n
~wt ~ UP t: i t. ...., 1
"" a 1 '1 Uo 14 1 rn~n "" Name La••,.. "!"' .. ~, • + 1 Uo lp 1 '" ~•b wt ~n ") + l • UP l • t ~s ~
L Cb4 '°" h UP 1 + 1 • UP ~. .,.,,
01nn .,:: 11~ tl: . Wincisrl • + • UP 1 l 1 "'1 .,.
n8nwt r • ~: DOWNS ....,
~ ~ UP U Name Lar· _c~., Pel ~otfn~t '"' k>c~n 4\• -.. UP 1.4 1 ~rrfYS g: lU \14
NHI n $ li •'~ UP .g 1 ~V HI '• -,,, • y~co• -1
Cu't r 3 ~ Uo . rllund --II) s talo2 -~
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t
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On
the
• , •
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Dov. JoN f s AvERAGES
WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Jun" ;· ·~
NYSE LEAOlR S
UPs nNo OowN s
tt 4, t
WHA T AME X Oio
NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 25 Pn
5 T1 l
A~ux LEADER S
NASDAQ SUMMARY
Go Lo QuoTf s
That's an apt description of botn business and
business people along the Orange Goast. ~o keep track of
where companl s are goiA~rand which people are helping ~
them get there .just watch Credit Line· -ev r..y Clay ln th
Businesssectlonofyournew lllly p
'
. ,
•••
--
• tA -,n
'• -I ·s
..., ...
TOMlnglortllee
thelellllcn&e
torAngelfM8
lnch11p111a..C2.
..,,... ...... ~ ...........
Dwl&ht Stonee goee o•er to oet an American record In the high jump with a leap of 7-8 at the Olympic Team trla1a Snnday.
Stones finished? Hardly!
He sets American
mark in high jump
witha7-8leap
By ROGER CARLSON °' .... .., ........
LOS ANGELES -With 31.462
looking on, it didn't figure that
Dwight Stones would pass up a
chance to takt-a bow or two before
such a crowd -and before he was
through he deserved every one he
took as he turned in a devastating
pcrfonnance in the high jump Sun-
day, capped by an American record
leapof7-8.
Stones came through wilh his
prediction in May that he would not
only win the right to enter as the
United Siatcs' No. I highjumper,'lbut
that he would do it in American
record style.
"I had a lot of friends and family in
the stands," said the smiling Irvine
resident, ··and I wanted them to enjoy
the meet, not agonize as I missed in
the u.rly rounds or used poor tech-
nique."
Then= wasn't much chance of that
as Stones, now a four·timeOlympian,
cleared 7-(}lh, 7.3, 7-4'h, 1.s¥4 and 7.7
without a miss, then after missing
o nce at 7·8, went over to claim a
personal best for the first time in eiaht
years. The bar wobbled, but stayed
put at the U.S. Olympic Team track
and field trials at the Coliseum.
He tried at 7.91/4, but missed all
three attempts.
.. I already had everything." ex·
plained Stones. "I won, I already had
an American record and my cousin
(Doug Nordquist) made the team,
too."
It was a brilliant efTon for the 30-
year--old Stones. who has heard and
read about how he has become .. over
the bill."
··rm serving notice that Dwight
Stonci isn't lying down for anybody,"
said Stones, as he began his own
brandof psyche(for himself as well as
the opposition)..
.. This is a new breath of life," he
continued ... My mark establishes ~e
as a legitimate contender to medaJ 1n
the Olympics. I don't think I'm
finished. I've paid a lot of dues, ~ne
through a lot of adversity after doing
some dumb things.
"But I paid my dues and I belong on
this team. 1 want to be a pan of this
electricity because we arc going to
clean up-I want to be there and I am
there."
Stones had predicted five wteks
ago that this competition would find
third place determined by misses aJ
1.s¥ •. that second place would be 7.7
and the winner would&<> 1·8. He was
right on all counts.
"But it's not the people I thouJbt,"
admitted Stones., although 1t is
presumed he had himself penciled in
at 7·8.
As for Sunday's display, he said: .. I
wanted them (tho othcr/·umpcrt) to
look at my face because was telling
them 'Jou g~ys arc ~ing for the other
two Olympic spots.
Milton Goode. who was third at
1.Sl/4. confinned what most figured.
.. Everybody felt in their minds they
he (Stones) would be on the Olympic
team."
Nordquist SC"t a personal rcooni
when he cleared 7.511 •• then apin at
7.7 and Stones celebrated Wltb bis
cousin.
··watchin& Dwi&htjump bdpsaive
me a mental im• of bow I should
jump," said Nbrdquist.
'
............. ..,_. __ --a_,. la -1.eao.
THERIOT'S BID
IN 1,500 DENIED
Wysocki stuns
Decker again
El Toro runner
pulls 1,500-meter
upset at[rtals
Fol" the uniaitia~ Kle:insawr,
c.ld...U and w,_i,; ""' -and the same pet'100. The fine was ber
given name, the ICCODd &om her first ....m... and w,_i,; (h ... ..,
Tom) ber name fortbe put_pr and•
half. The Wysoc:kis live in fJ Toro
and u.in vodcr Cooch Vince O'Boylc
•t UC Irvine.
"
..,,...,.....,..._..u,.
Brian Theriot flnlahed
ae.enth In 1,600 Sanday.
By ROGER CARI.SON
Of .... Dl9f .... •a.tr LOS ANGELES -For Jim
Spivey, who "u~t" Steve Scott, and
third place finisher Sydney Maree,
the door to the 1984 Olympic Games
has been opened.
For Brian Theriot, the onc:·time
Newpon Harbor High sprinter, who
went on to compete in the 400 at
UCLA, his bold bid to slip into the
Olympic Games in the metric mile is
over.
Theriot, despite running the sec·
ond best l.SOO of his life (3:39.2S).
finished seventh in a field of 12
Sunday at the U.S. Olympic Team
trials before 31 ,462 at the Coliseum.
"I gave it a so, but they got me on
the tum," said Theriot, who had
maintained his position in third place
for most of the race before a sudden
surge by the pack dropped him to
ninth.
Theriot rallied to seventh at the bell
lap. but he was unable to pick up an.y
Angels let one
slip away, 3-2
Jackson's error
in ninth inning
proves isastrous
they were held to just four hits oo the
combined efTons of Bud Black and
Din Quisenbcny.
The Angels take a 22· 12 road
record into today's game in Tex.as for
the slart of 1 14-pme u;ip, hopina to
act back on the winnioa track.
By RJCllAJU> DUNN "Our pitchina's been sustaining ..,,..cw, a o s us,., Ansel Manqer John McNamara
One of the few things Ron Jackson 111d after the Ansel• received another
could anuP was the fact that Sunday fine perfOrmanc:e Sunday, this time
afternoon's pme wu just that ,.-from rookie right-h1ndec Ron
another pme. Too much else hid Romanick. "It's difficvlt to Jet a
already slipped Lhrouah his finacrs. pitching performance like that and
The pme was over and Jacbon not win."
had committed two erron. Tbe McNamara, thouah. isn't op--
second onekd to the Royals' winning timisticjust becaute the Angels have
run· in their )..2 victory over tbe a~ road record. An1<l~ u Kansas City took the ·1 don~ .... where "" play~· he
rubber pme oflhe three-same teries. said, "'whether it'1 in Texu or DCRo
"It wa1 jus\ one of t.hoac pmel Wejusl need 10 hit I.he ball."
where thinp don't ao r\ah.t," Jack.ton Aad the Ansls need some clutch
said "It's hard to explain. It cal'.I ltittina. u we11. They aqu.andtred
ihapPen, to anybody."' cbaoces to lAllY more ru.n1 m ~two ·
' So. th• Aneel•' Beach Towel Doy, lnnl ... they did ma-to...,...
whiclt attllCled 36~, turned into 1 All<r tho Royal> had 11kt11 1 2-0
•flop u lhe RoYlh ' ed sand in \be lead. wilb one ND comirw on Steve 0hol11" -. Ka-Cit)'"• lat• rally Bllboni'1 cislttlt homer ofthe-i'!'ined the..,....,. chanm of uppina · In the fourth lllnina. die A ..... pared
heir k'tld m.-Aneicau teaauc: 'Cbedtftdlto2·111r~
Wctt to 21\ p-. fifth when they put ........ I pair of
They Anee1• have now k>tt-tia. of tinalel and• do\obk. _
theirlalt tevcn l:IJRI.. 1kl11U11 hokt a But they left ru.nnenoa tecond and
1 'h-pme marsin over Minnesota. third wilb one: out, wbm 119ck fbrccd
Pan of the ,..,.. for the Aneell' Bob Boone to hit badt to die bolt and
tailspin is lack of hlttinJ. Sunday, (Pl--AltOllUl/C2J
1._;_ _____ '
•
more ground. A relatively slow S9.68
first 400, which developed into a very
quick 2:56.S2 at the bell. was too
much for Theriot to adjust to and
when the marbles were on· the line in
the last 300 meters. what he had left
could do no more than rvaintain his
position. . Theriot placed his hopes on beating
Chuck Aragon (who finish~ fourth
in 3:37.07), but it was Sp1ve_y who
surprised the field ... , underestimated
Spivey," admitted Theriot;. "I really
did go after the wrong one.
Once Therio1 found himself LO
meters off the pace there w~re simpl_y
too many bodies ahead ofh1m and bis
Olympic dreams remained just that.
"ljustcouldn't get back. They ~nt
from that slow first lap to a 2:S6.
which is incredible. I was questioning
myself when I .should go. but l
didn't." It was an all or nothing situation for
Theriot. but the 2f>..year--old track
(Pleue..., TllERIOT/C2J
ChrlaBoward
By BOWARD L RANDY .......... ...., ....
LOS ANGEt.ES -You remember
Ruth Kleinsasser, of coune. Or
perhaps you knew her as Ruth
Caldwell when she last defcatN Mary
Decker in a foot ratt in 1978.
Well, if you didn't know her then,
the entire world knows ber now as
Ruth Wysocki. winner of the U.S.
Olympic Track and Field Trials
I ,Sf».meter run in a spine-tinglina
finish Sunday night at the Los
Angeles Memorial Coliseum before
31 .462.
Wysocki. already qualified for the
U.S. Olympic team in the 800-meter
run. oulduelcd famed Mary Decker
down the stretch to win the 1.500 in
I :00.18 in a classic finisti. a personal
best and an Olympic Trials record.
"I don't have a lot of experience in
ruru>in& the l,SOO." Wysocki said
after herspcctaculu victory. ~o me,
winnina this r.ce means operung up
some new doors.
"'Now 111 just have to act bKk. to
;wort and sec how far we can &<>· I will
run both races in tbeOlympicGames.
1 have a lot of confidence in me 800
and now I think I have the confideooe
in the l,SOO, too."
In age group oompetition. sbc ran
qa.inst Decker and c:acb won races. In
1978. as Ruth Caldwctl, she dcfeat<>d
bccker in the AAU &80 fuWL
Wysocki was also national AAU
clwnpioa in the &80 in 1976.
Turning to her victory over [)reeker
Sunday niaht in the Coliseum. sbe
("-oee 'tl'YSOCKl/C2l
HB's Griffin ·
earns berth
in the discus
Howard
CIF-SS
Co-MVP
Newpon Christian High's Chris
Dodgers' big bats
come at right time
Howard, a 6-4-, 25.S.pound senior (AP) -The \\-<ttkend display of
with 10 letters in three spons for the Dodger hitting po"''ercame atJUSt the
By HOWARD L. HANDY Conquerors (football, ba¥.ctball and riaht time. KCOrding 10 Los Angeles ....,.. • .._D911f,... baseball). has been chosen as Co--Manager Tom Lasorda.
LOS ANGELES-Loma Grif· MVP of the All.cJFSoutbem Section The DOOaiers hit four home runs in
fin of Huntington Beach pined small schools basebalfteam by the their S.-2 victory over the Braves
htr second spot on the U.S. sckction committee of the First Sunda~. completina a thrcc-.game Ol~~ic team with a thircl·place lntentate Bank. swcq> 10 which they slammed seven
finlSh 1n the di5Cus throw Sunday homen and a total of 2S run!/. against •-th Los An•eles Howard, a rc._..t select.ion on the ... lnouoon at e • .,_ Atlanta pitching. Memorial Coliseum before a re· squad. batted .391 in lead.in& the They·u try to keep it goina tonight
cord 31.462 fans.. Conquerors 10 the CIF cbam· when the National Leacut West·
It was a day of upsets on the pionship, and as a pitcher, be re-leadin& San Dicao Padres visit
track for Mary Decker and Steve corded a ~I record with 103 Dodeer" Stadium (Channel 7 at S:20)
Scott.hothfin1.shingsecondinthe strikeouts and an 0.98 ERA in 64 forlbt~ofathree1amcscriel.
t ,500-metcr finals for men and inninas. "We bit Jnlly well the la.st pme in
women. Others bonomt from Coach Gary Cincinnati and it just continued
for Griffin, a native of Mon· Stuart's championship squad were here." Lasorda said of the pio-.tt
Lana who now calls Huntinaton pitcherDavidCillayandin6clder Jeff display, "'I'm very. very happy that it
8eacb her home and trains in that MoLSke, aS Newport Christian and came when it did. ..
city third place wu satisfactory ru.nnerup Crossroads Hilb domi· The Dodaen came to At\anLI on
as she heaved the platter 18&.2 natedtbcaek<:tioaswiththreeapicce. Frickyhavircwonthcfinal~ofa
behind Leslie Dcni2 (202 .. 7) aDd Crossroads' Matt Sk.lambpra th~ teries with Cincinnati
Laura Ot:Snoo ~19().1~ She also shares the MVP honon with Howanl iblloWU11 l!<V<R1lme losina stttlk.
won the womens shot put lriall afterpitcbinahiswaytoa 14--1 record, AfterbcatinatheBraves.10.2, IM
earlier in the meet. with 1 I.OS ERA. ·-• s.• .~ "-'-murned home "The pmsun:·s bttn on all of -~ -......_..,. · ~ .. Griffin, lhe 1980 lOP quali· -..c. _. IC:llll* SundayradJ;omect the =w who
fier i1' the diteus ta.id. "1 rally ~l":; =.... a...ti. -:. ~: arc3·1\ \eadirc a ........ ~·~~u!n~ : •·-n't ~-able to throw \he C#-Or<'t ......... w1 u c ..., .Mt •· pmes -~ ua ,..... ~1 c.-on .....,.., ......,, OrhlWI .w1 1ir. pmes up on Los Anetlts.·
Mike Manball. who contributed
one of the Dod&cr home runs Sunday,
said he liked AtlanLa·-Fulton County
Stadium ... I think it's a nice place to
hit. No question about il ..
And the sweep was somethina the
Dodgers desperately needed,
Marshall said. "We oerta.in.ly had to
snap ou1 of it sometime. and this was
the right time:·
Wimbledon:
Lewis rolls
WIMBLEDON, Encland (AP)
-ChrisLcwi~lut-'lruaner·
up to John McEnroe. WM oem ol
thefintwinncn-rat*-of the 1984 All-E p o4 .......
Cham1"oat1Hpo.
The 27---old New z..
laaderddOalOdRolutl-of
Swiu.ertand 6-l, 6-2. 6-2 ill Im
first.round malCh on oae oi 1llo
outside c:owu. ·
d.itcUI until this weelt becautt of ~ ........._ T.,.. 0111MW1 .-1r. ..I _, .13:*tified kl~1L~ lhrec llijinjuriti.Onm~throwt.lwtn~tt-:-~=11;~··:"'z'~-·~•:•:• .. :":°""~-~~1:J:~t~·-;·~--~ll\ll~n~l;~be<~~ca~u~1e~' ..... ~··?,"'·~°""~°';r.-tomyannr1\bq_lo~ 1111 Mw\.....,..,Mlw,,,..., · ~ ~1
'm still 90ina to ve 10 Wort on ~ ""'"" OWi ,.., .H. l'N "· fiour --in .r....-......... and that11 tha 1 ~ °"81T.,lttt..... ' ,..I,....... _.,, ... ., IV'lf -..,-..
Asthetovmamc11ti.aia
buy suotllioc. anodler .,ty
• ~=ltetlwi•MI' .. N-'8~ I! -0.-, -....... u ..
l'lal>in oldie UnilOd -6-~
7.$, 74 in •. -of -
-u\1111 -.. ...... -·· Westolftr'M~
.. ~-wet no wiftd today. It ~~~~°""' ~t ~ ~~ some pretty ~ eam& ttiniAJ, .. --•1 ..1.__....1 N II I c__,.., ..,.., o........ .-" lalOfda said. "'"Yeah, 1~m worried wu ~ 1 ~. onna >'· .........,. .........,, enw-a M.-1 tr. about tM In: 1~ W'Olriccl about
(P111w.-O..,.,,,.fCSl ~ ........ c..1~ ,...,.,.., theBra~thePadn::s,tbeA trosand ~c...,,...,.._,~ w.-11t. t.heMe11." ..._...,.. ........ ....... _..... Ir
in Brisu>I.
•
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\
•Tortilla Wars'
the latest craze
at Angels' games
FrcND AP clltpet.cllet
· A new fad. the Tonilla Wars of Ill Anaheun Stadium, has baseball.game
ush tearina their hair out as the flat com circlesOu~t>yrowdyfansrain from the cheap scats like so many Fnsbccs.
It happens during the traditional sevcnth·1nnin1
stretch of the Anfels' home game , when the announcer says it's time to s1na "Take Me Out To the Ball Game ...
\,hat's the cue for fans in the $2.50 seats high up in the
stadium to leap to their feet al'ld
t_>eain to ing torullas back and
forth.
they all are."
"It mostly happens on week-
ends and other nights when the~
arc big crowds." said usher Dana
Woods. "We e1cct the ones who
bnng the most tonlllas. but they
j ust keep coming back."
"One gr-0up started it dunng
a game in May," she sa1d. ''Theo
the next ni&ht another group
brought tortillas. We know who
Last Fnday n1Jht, the tortilla-tossing became so
boisterous that pohce escorted nearly 20 of the worst
offenders out to the stadium park mg lot.
Pohce Sgt. Bill Donoghue said the tortilla battles
were "not a significant problem,.. but that police
d1scouraae throwing of anything in the stadium.
He said toniUa tossing was "not nearly as strange
as something else we've seen out at the stadium this
year. For a while, some guy would sit up there and eat
big moths."
Kite, Palmer post ~y wins
Tom Kite shot a front-running 5-n
under-par 67 and scored a relatively easy
five-stroke victory Sunday in the Atlanta
GolfClasstc. For Kite, so often a challenger
and so infrcnquently a Wlllncr, the victory in the humid
weather marked the fulfillment of a major goal: it was
the first ttme m 13 years as a touring pro he had won
more than once in a season. Kite took the Doral Open in
Miami three months ago ... Arnold Palmer played
virtually error-free golf for 15 holes. then weathered
some late problems to hold off Australian Peter
Tlaom10D by three strokes with a l 2·undcr·par total of
276 in the Senior PGA Tournament Players Cham-
pionship 1n Cleveland ... Laurie RIDJi:er, the youngest
of a Stuart. Fla. professional golfing family, won her
first LPGA tour event, capturing the S3J. 7 50 first prize
in the Boston Five Classic at wmdy Radisson-Femcroft
Country Club
Stars' USFL streak snapped
Brian Sipe and Herschel Walker m
combined on a 50-~ard pass pla) in the c ID •
fourth quarter Sunda} to le.ad the Ne"
Jersey Generals to a I 6-10 'actot) over the
Ph1ladelph1a Stars on Sunday. snapping the Stars' 14-
game wmningstreak on the final United States Football
League weekend of the season . . . Elsewhere in the
USFLSunday, quarterback Jimmy Jordan came ofTthe
bench to rally Tampa Ba) and Walton Carter blocked a
conversion attempt in the final quarter to give the
Bandits a I 7-I 6 v1ctof) over Birmingham ... Mike
Hobeosee tossed touchdown passes of 4 I yards to Mike
Harris and 8 yards to Joey Walters as Washington
closed out its two-year h1stof'\ with a rare victory.
downing New Orleans. 20-17.
''ExecuServlce"®
Leasing
At Your Office or Home
CARS • TRUCKS -EQUIPMENT
LeaseBy~
Blyleven two-hlta Marine~
• Vttcran ri1ht·hander Ben Blyle.vu Ill
threw a two-hitttr and set a major-ltaauc
record for putouts by a pitcher an a P,mc as
Cleveland blanked Seattle, S-0, an the
Ammcan Lcarue Sunda>. Blr lcven struck out five and
walked one and also had su putouts in the pme.
brcakinJ \he m-1or-leaaue record offive held by many
.• EJscwhere in the AL. Rickey lltodenoa•a twcrout,
two-ruo homer off reliever Dave Tolllk P.Ve Oaldand a 4-2 victorv over Texas an a pme in whach Joe Moren
became the all-time leading home
run batter amona second
basemen. Morgan smacked a solo
home run with two outs in the
first inning. lt was bis fifth of the
year and 26Sth career homer as a
second baseman, moving ham
ahead of Rocen Horaaby into the
top spot on the all-time list ...
Jack Morrb allowed one hit
throuah the fint sax innings for hts
1 OOth career victory and La.nee
BIJlnen Parrin and J\ap"rt Jones
home~ to lead Detroit to a 7-1 va~ry over
Mal\Vauktt . Tim Teufel cracked a three-run. lh~ade
the-p:nk home run with one out in the ninth 1nnina.
raHy1n1 Minne~t.a past Chicago. 3-2 ... Toay Armas
belted a two-run homer with one out in the bottom of
the 10th tnnin&. giving Boston a 5-3 victory over
Toronto. The Red Sox had ralhed to tie the game wuh
two outs 1n the ninth when pinch hitter Reid Nlcbola
banged a three-run double high ofTthe wall m left-center
. The New Yorlc-Baltimorc game was postponed
because of rain with no makeup date 1mmed1ately
announced.
Wallach powers Expos to win
Dolphins' Overstreet killed
WINONA. Texas -David Over-[il
street. who ftgured promincntl) in the 4 •,
M1am1 Dolphins plans for next season. was •
killed Sunda) "hen his car careened off a
highway into gasoline pumps at a sen ice stauon and
c.>.ploded.
Telefl8lon. racllo
TaaVIMON
5~20 p.m.-MmALL.: San Diego at
Oodgers. Channel 7.
RADIO
6:20 p.m. -8AH8AU.: San Diego at OodGer•. KA8C (790).
5:30 p,m. -•A•aALl; Angel8 at Texu.
KMPC(710).
Ex-NHL c h ief Campbell dies
MONTREAL (AP) -soldier in World War 11,
Clarence Campbell. presi-Campbell was president of
dent of the National the NHL from 1946 to
Hockey League for 32 1977.
years. died early Sunday in Campbell's 32-year
Montreal General Hosp1· reign. the longest m pro-
tal. a spokesman for the fessional sports, was the
ho s pital rep o rted culmination of a career
Campbell was 78. which saw him nse from
800-432-1000
Campbell had been ad-referee in a su-tcam league
matted to the hospital to president of an 18-
about a week ago with heart member. cross-country 714-760-1000 trouble. conglomerate.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A~~~~~e~r2a~n~d~d~tt~o~ra~ ~~~th1~p~-
'!!! dent in the league's history,
WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE A
MEMBER OF THE
#1
succeeding Frank Calder
(1917-1943) and Mervyn
"R ed" Dutton
( 1943-1946). He stepped
down in 1977 when he was
succeeded by John A.
Ziegler .
' o.llr .... ,._....., ............
Ruth Wyaockt (139) begin• to pua Mary Decker (337) .
WYSOCKI NI:PS DECKER •••
THERIOT •••
Prom C l
Cant tic 11n't iady to cub 1n bi• cbips
becautc of tbe set~
"You know," be rat oftaliied. .. 1
was tryina to t.ate t0met.hina away
and they were &.ryi na &o bold on to it.
'I wouldn't have snide i1 even if I
had run my fasteat.,.
It was obviou ly_ a touab field and
Theriot knew it. • All day 1 had betn
thinkina of ways to uplain away
why," he said.
FinishinJ seventh is a Iona way
from a aoaJ OfWlthin the top tbn:ic to
qualify for the Olympic Games, bu1
there wercn 't any tears as Theriot
surveyed the wrecka&e.
.. Now, I'm a manal\ertttreerounds
o( the I ,~00 in three days, .. Theriot
said. ''I plan to continue in&o 1988
(the XXIVth Olympiad is at Seoul,
Korea). I'll keep runnina. in the 800,
• t ,500, S.000 and maybe even the
3,000 meter steeplechase.
''Tomorrow I think 111 run 10 miles_
and do some long road workout and
some h&ht lifting."
For 9nan Theriot, this round is
over. 'But he's not ready to call it a
day.
Spivey. meanwhile, ...u not com-
pletely rmpressed with hiJ victory
over Soon. because as he noit:d:
"Scott is tntinina for the Games.
"I was compelina for today. I
would or.>t be surprised if he kicb my
rear end in the Olympic Oamea.
"l'm sure Steve was surprised, but I
JUSt wanted to make the Olympic
team."
"Whatever I told rou about being
aa1d· "I got to spread all of my rac.es was that was beside me do~n the confident yesterday; said Scott, "for.
this :.Veek over more days than Mary. stretch," Decker said. "l expected get it. For ~be last 24 houn I've been
Mary didn't have as much time as I Kim (Gallagher) to be there. I kn~w I U~t as a uc~.
did. I'm gJad its all over. 1 was hoping can run much faster than 1 ran tont~t 1 went wtth 200 meten left past
only for a personal record, maybe in a 1.500-rrieter rac_e. l~ve n~ver m Sydney (Maree) and Chuck (Araaoo) .
From Cl
.,,q&~t;J'O!li J l ~e~brcJ1~ -~n. Sj.x umcs ~five"-J was hal~~ Jwtneatre.ich ~~ ~-.-·~~ "" • -racc~)'m~ou bave~:·t~~
"At the 200-meter mark I got my the 14th(Ju1y)~odccide.(Shewonthe (Tom) Byers, but saw Spivey ao by
second wtnd and I really felt good. I 3,000-metcr race Saturday)." me." •
was a btt tired and sore and down the
stretch 1 P.lanned to stay back in the
pack until 600 to go. I moved up
beside Mary on the backstretch (on
the final lap) and wtth 150 to go
expected Kim (Gallagher) to fly by
me.
"When we went around the turn
into the home stretch. I told myself,
'Hey, let's go for broke.' I pulled up
even with Mary and got in front but
expected any second to see her go by.
I drove hard for the finish and there
was the tape. My reaction was: 'Ob
my, what have I done.' But right to the
bitter end I thought she was going to
have that something extra and go by
me again. She's done 1t so many
times."
"I was surprised when I saw who·it
GRIFFIN ON TEAM. • • From C l
perform wnhout a crowd at all-
comers meets and thtngs like that.
The crowd today really proved to
.be a plus."
Carol Lewis, sister of the trials'
top athlete Carl, won the women's
long Jump competition with a
leap of 22-7114. Doug Padilla was
the winner in the final event on
the eight-day program. the men's
5.000-meter run, with a time of
13:26.34. Steve Lacy was second
in 13:27.72 and Don Clary third
in 13:28.62.
Eric Schermerhorn of WOOd-
bridae High in Irvine. had a time
of l:Sl.78" but could m•naae no
better than sixth in lhcjunior 800-
meter run.
Two Mission Viejo youths
finished seoond and third in the
junior shot put. Greg Aitkcnbead
had a mark of 53-81/• and 'Brian
Blutreich hit S2-61/1.
Crowd records were set three
times for individual days during
the trials with Sunday's p thering
the largest in Trials history. For
the eight days of competition. the
total was 143,826, another Trials
record.
ANGELS FALL, 3-2.
Fro m C l • •
got Gal) Pettts swinging at stnke
three.
When the Angels tied 11 2-2 w11h a
run 1n the seventh inning. the) had a
lead-0tTtnplc b} Bnan Downing.
The} ma} have scored. but the~
also 101 a break. Reggie Jackson, the
hitter following Downing. squaned
one to shortstop ll.L. Washington
and Downing was caught between
third and home. After momentarily
hesitating, Washington threw to third
baseman George Brett. but his tag
missed Downing sliding back.
Royals' Manager Dick Howser
vehemently argued the call, but to no
avail, as he was ejected for the second
straight ball game, this time by third-
base umpire Joe Brinkman. To say
the least. Howser was a ltnle upset
after the game.
Bobby Gnch brought in Downing
with a ground out to shortstop, but
not before Howser had bis final say.
"l don't like to get thrown out of
ball games. They (the umpires) can
call me a (bleep) mana,er. but don't
tell me where we arc m the stand-
ings," Howser shouted. "When B.rctt
says he tagged him -when Washing-
ton says he tagged htm -and they're
(the Angels) whole (bleeping) bench as
down there laughing -then he
(bleeping) tagged him."
Incidentally. the replay did show
that Brett missed the tag. And. as far
as Brinkman's concerned. it doesn't
matter to Howser.
"That was a classic. In 23 years, I've
never seen anything ltke it," Howser
continued, ranting and raving.
.. When I saw his (Bnnkman) first
game at Fort Myers against the
Yankees. he was scared then and he's
scared now -and he's got (bleeping)
umpmng schools all over the coun-tf) ...
But Jackson's miscue off the bat of
Jorge Ona in the ninth led to the
Royals' decisive run. spoiling a
pitching duel between Romanick and
Black.
Butch Davis· grounder caused a
forc.e at second, then Balboni de-
livered again - a smgJe moving
Davis to third. Dane lorg lifted a
sacrifice fly to Fred Lynn in right
scoring Davis, which should have
been the third out.
* ANGEL NOTES -Probable ollcnlne metcll· u~ tor the Arl9els' 111rH·oame Mrlft In Ttus
t>eQlnnlno 1Qf1lof\I Pits Geeff lafln (1·4) a111ln1t
DllW Stlw.,'t (4-1), who bffl lht Anoefs In
Anallelm Stacllum , .. , Tuesdav, 4·2, on 1 nve-
IUll«" ll'lrOUDl'I 11-'l lnnlnos Tunctev. Jim Sllit9ft 12·2) facts CMl"lle H-... (7-61. Ind Mllrt Wiit
16·7), the Amerlcen Ltaoue's slrllttoul IHdet'
wlln 17, wllt face Mllra Ml-(S·4) In Ille finale
Wldneldev The A""411s "''" head tor Mii·
w1ullH tor four HITIH, Toronto tor '"'" and Boston tor four before the AN·S•ar Drffk
"Wt lllOullnt II could bl 1 Deel' roed lrlp, but In
lht eno 1 1111n1t w1 oalntd • oeme." s.ald l(MMs
C11v rlor11 fllkler P'at SNf1dan. wno "-cl '~"
nils In SUndav's oame '"Wt knew wt Md lo beat
Ille ln m on IOP W1'¥I bMf'I "'"119 tood
ollc111no Wt !Ysl "'"'' 10 kMI> oul ball oolno now " With wins Saturdav and Sundev, Ille
Rov11s were 3·3 on 11'9 roecs trio end climbed out
of IM cellar In ..... American LffOUI WtSI ••
DMI QullafMrnl, wt1o11 19 s.aves Is IOPs In Ille
Amtrlcan Leaoue. nas entered 1 oeme In 24
11ve sll~llons end Is 2·2 wllll 1 no-decision In
lht non-saves Deue Dee.._. was 1 busv
man 11 illlrd baw Sund1v 1fl1rnoon, m1klno
IMff dlvlno ''IN"· lwo of lllem for OUIS 1(1ns.as Cllv lafl flekler Darrvt ~ !'lad lo bl
removtd In lhe shllh Inning due lo sor-ss In hit
rloht rib cage
Caulkins aims
for8 events
INDlANAPOLJS (AP) -Ei&ht gold medals in eiaht
Olympic events ts a dream that 'tracy Caullcins hopes to
stan tumirtf into reality beginnina loday at the U.S.
Olympic Swimm mg Trials.
Jn seven years. Caul~ns. 21, has aocomplished
eve~hin& there is for a wor1d<lass swimmer except
pan1cipate in an Olympic Oames. RANKED TENNIS CLUB
IN CALIFORNIA FOR ONLY A superb paint job ... only $320!
She made the Olympic Team in 1980 in four
individual events. but the U.S.-led boycott prevented her
from ioina to the Moscow Games. This year the Soviet-led
boycott. which will remove the powerful Eatt German
women from the IWimmina events, m ay help bet realize
her ambition
? •
IF YOU CAN APPRECIATE A QUALITY ATMOSPHERE
WITH UNPARALLELED SERVICES AND FACILITIES,
PHONE OR COME IN TODAY!
THIS OFFER EXPIRES JULY 1, 1984
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Eltt11im ti'en sndwlu • eltar t9p "'"' lilte the txpen.ti111 iml'!ns.
TJJe El.t911n~ point job is tin 1iWU1~in9 114/.u "' f.JBO-blU lfyo"
brin9 in t""hl t4Upon bthnP JO# 9tt 4n 1i1lllifloruil $60 of!1
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off th« ttf.Ul.ir low $380 pric..
LU,.iu' tiwu •ff"·°"',..,,.,, I",_,,., fall. I
(',000 TO 7·7.84 (P) • ------------
-I
"I'd like to be in ~t events th,is time, six individual
events and two relays. ' Caulk.in s said Sunday at a pre-
TriaJs press conference. "I'm 1oin1 to do the best l can."
At the Trials, which run throuab Satu~y. she will
swim the 400 and 200-meter individual medley, the tOO
aod 200 backatrok.c and the 100 and 200 breuut.roke.
Ca wk.ins alJO hopes to quah fy for the 400 medley relay and 400 f'ittstvle rtlay.
Three other events will be bcld tOday -t.be 100
freestyle for women and the 100 btcutstto& aOd 200
frttStyle for mco.
Ncwpon Harbor Hiah product John Moffet duel
Steve Lundquist and othen in lbc 100 breast.
Caulkins' (int event will be today 1n lbt 400
individual medley. with 'l'nal1 for lbc 200 lweuuttoke,
100 blcutrok.e.. 100 bfeuutrotc; 200 individual medley
and 200 batkstroke followini oa ·~ dllya. 1llt top ewo flnilhcn madt~"1tt ID kl tbt t:pks.-
.. , don't think u·s too heavy a bUldee.: U...lliid.
"I th nit the imponant thtna Would be to 1* c.e eW'lll at
a time and not think tOO far ahead."
CiulkJns has t 60 American rtconls an hit career.
with at ltast one an Cl(h of the five Stroke ditciplines -fittSt~1e. hedcstfokc. b1tast troke. butt.ttfly tnd nwcllty.
, '
.. .
MAJOtt L•AGU• STA
A.mericM U.tue
..
._._ Jack'°" m !l 11 11 36
lllettlt 211 ... .. 1 17
Schofllld 210 13 .0 3 1S '°°"' l07 16 3' 0 17 Ito. JKkaon 7' s 14 o s
T..... Ma JM ff$ 62 111
HATtoHAL LEAGU• ~ 5, Braves 2
LOS &MOIL.al ATLANTA
~llST DfV1SM>lll • r a_. .er a _. w L I'd. oa S.11 2t> l I 0 0 W"'9111 rt • 0 0 0
37 3S .Sl• SllA* rt S I I 1 ~ o O o o I
35 36 Af'3 llh Undr"ll cf 3 0 2 0 Perrv P11 0 0 0 0
M l6 46 1 Mldndocf 1 0 0 0 Ot>entn"ltl 5 O O 0
3' 31 •n 3 Guetrw31> • 111 1utmnu •so 1 o
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32 .0 .444 S 8rodl 11> 3 1 2 1 Komn1k H 4 o 2 1
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2t .. .410 22\'J SC.. " ---.. .-... ,2!2 .'11 22...., Les An9llel JIO OO'l IOO-S
-.. --AIMA .... ooo-2 Kanaas City 3, .,..... 2 Game Winning R81 -SIUbl>I (3).
Detroit 7, Mllwautl .. 1 E--S.11. OP-Atlanta I. LO&-l.cn Art-
ltotton S, Toronto 3 (10 IMlno•> Nia 7, At16nta 10. 2&-MurPllv, Trevino
........ YOttl ., a."imor., POCI., rain HR-Stubbs (5), Guerrt'o (6), Marlllell ='~ 2 C13l, l roek (9). SI-SH <17>, RRamlrai
,.,,._..,.. eu1 ~1!>~~ ). SF-+4ul>berd.
• ,...,. ,J ~-' ....... ~--iSi~ . · ... ~ ...
..,..... (lehn t-•> er Taus (Siewart Af"llnl w,...~ 7 , 2 2 •·•>, (n) ' 1 T«onio <A11unc1er s-:u and Lael 1-1> ~i:=-u 2 1 o o
•I MIHnuk .. (Gft>toft 0-1 •lid Cocanow« McMurtrv L 5·• 5 1-3 ' s • 2 s-•>. 2, (1-n) • ..
8oaton (love! Ml ., ... "Im«• (lod-~ 1,2·3 0 0 0 I
dldlef' 9'-5), (II) """"'e 1 0 0 1 Detroll (ftetrv 10-3) al New York Pent olld* to I bllfl• In the Ith
(Stllnev 1-1), (II) WP-M<.Munrv. T-2:57. A-'3,•75
S..1119 l ... ttle •·7) al Chieffo (81K111
2-1), (II)
o.tllend (K"'*'81' 5·2) a1 KMMl Cllv (Oul>la• J-7), (11)
~V'aOWMI .,..._at Taus, (n)
OUlencl at Kanaaa Cltv, 2, (1·11>
Mlftnesota at Clit¥elanCI, (11)
lolton at lattlmore, <n>
T0tonlo at Mllwault•, (11) Detroit al New York, In)
S..lllt at Chicago, (n)
NatleMILNtue
WllT Dtvt$10N
W L ftd. Ga
" 21 .5'4 ,, l3 .5'2 3Va
,, " .$27 4\.'I J3 JI .'6S f J3 40 .UJ 10
Sen FrandKO H '3 .m IS
IAIT DtVIStOM
J7 2t .5'1
3' 31 .S57
• )I .S51 '1'2
3S JS SOO ' 3'31An6
21 " 406 lO'h . SuMIV's SC... ~ S, Atlanta 2
Moftlr•I 5, New York l
Ptllladetllhla 4, Pllllbureti 2
Sell OleOO I, Cincinnati 3
Chieffo 5, St. Louis 0
HoUlton I , sen Frencbc:o 3
T .. V'I OWMI
sen 0!890 (Lollar 6·Sl at ~
(Hone\IQltt 7·3), (lwl)
Pittl0ur9fl (OeUcln >·•> at Chica90 lltatnev Hl
Houston (LeCou 1·0 ano Ma<lden 2·2)
11 Attetita (larW .. 6 end Mahler 5-2), 2.
(1•11)
1*w York lOerd119 7·3> at P9111ede1Phla
(Hucnoft 7·•>. (n)
Montl'MI (Roetrl l·SI al SI. Louil (AncfUIW 11-6), (II)
Clnclnnell (ltulMll 3-1) at San Fran· tlKO (Lelkey 4-6), (n) "'-*"• 0..... San OleOO at DMW"a. Cn> Plllltlul'tlfl at Ch!Qeo, 2
New VOttl at Phlledelotlla, (n)
Houston ar Atlanta, (n)
Montr•I at SI. Louis, (n)
Clftctnnetl at sen Frencbeo. 111>
AMmlllCAH L•AGU• ll..,.,. J, A"9lb 2
KANSAS CITY CAUflOltNIA .. ,._. .. ,._.
Wilson cf • 0 0 I ... 1111 cf • 0 0 0 Stlertcfnrt •030 ~ .. 4 000
lraflJb •O IO Lvnnrt 2000
Ort•dtl 4000 Oeella• 4 000 Mottev If 3 0 2 0 Oownlno • • 1 2 0
WO.vii rt f 1 O O lleJkan dtl • 1 o o
lelbonl lD ' 1 2 1 Grlctl ~ ' 0 1 l Sleutflt c l 0 0 0 IUdun lb 3 0 1 I
Dtorollfl 0011 loonec 3000 WllllMC I 0 0 0
l lanclfl 111 • 1 1 0
UWshtn " 2 0 0 0
11 a • a ,..... n a • 2
tc..iw .......
Kaftlel Cltv -111 111-J ~ •110 ltt-2
Game Wlnnlno Rll -D. lort (I).
E-RoJec:kaon 2, Romanldl.
DP-C1llfornl1 I. LOa-tcanMs CllY S,
CaMfornl• 5. 29-llancalene, RoJacklOll.
3&-0ownlno. HR-e.rMnl (I).
S8-4teJeekaon _l•>L Shlrl«*I 1121.
S..-OWashlnetn. S....-.gl«o.
IP H•l•HSO
flMNICftY
8IKll W,l •S I ' 2 2 2 3 QulWIOrV S, If I 0 0 0 0 l
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WP-Romanick T-2'17. A-36,2n.
A'*" avw.991
aATTINO
Aa • H Mil
134 20 •7 ' 193 25 SI 3
71 6 20 2
•1 ' " 1 ,,. 1S 31 3
214 l3 S7 '
" • 12 0 2'4 • '3 10
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20 351 21 .301
10 212
l .27' "m 25 ..2'6
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HllYWMd hrtr
SUNDAY'S •ISUL T1 (.469 If '1••V .. IU-&M ..,..,._) 'IUT llAC8. One mile.
Cowmel (Pedroia) 1..0 U O J.40 Swish'• Wind (Farnande1) lo.10 UO
DQ-Proucl Dulle (OrH•I 5.20
DO-Tlnllhed MCOncl, Ol1<1ualltled
Ind oleced lt\lrd.
AIM> rec:ed: Lono Live !tie Klno,
Eartv Settler, lnartlculate, Too Enter·
talnar. HletlDr-. Mlllral Man.
Time: l:JI 3/ s.
SICOND llAC8. 1 II 16 m11t1
Sll's llvt Orm IShllrl 36.40 lS..O t '° Hatamoto !Castaneda) 1' IO UO
W-ICM (Toro) 4 IO
AllO r.c:.o· Vldorv LM , P•ndllcuv,
Sonic Soeed, Bunnell, Candele~o.
Nolan, "'°" In. Stat>ltheo. 81Kled Treasure.
Tlme: 1:45
12 OAJL Y DOUel.a (2·6) N ICI
i 111.00.
TH•O llACI. One milt on rurt
Ullle'1 ~ (Torol 22 40 f..20 5 20 Win• TH ltl' (Mela) uo .. 40
Auntie lkttv IMcCarronl '-20
Also fKed• Stlelblana, Tolel Woman,
Sorlno L-. Marelle Tim.. 1:36 1/S.
SS IXACTA 13·7) NICI &231.00
,OUltTM llAC8. '"" lurtones. Trovlat1 (Pierce> 6.20 JM 4.20
a·Tallull IMcCarron> 3.IO '-20 a·E1ee1ullvt Arla (Shmkr) 3.IO 4.20
a-<ouoled antrv.
Also r.C:.O: Jallaco, C. GaOlt, For Hlmsetf, Conwvat11m, Grlml>an, It· cause lt'a True, Garcon De L'tau. YarnaUton Native.
Time: 1:17 3/5.
SS 8XACTA (2•1) N ici Uot.50.
""" ltACI. One milt EPrdr Al Nrte CHM '1..20 26.IO 7.00
AIPlno < Garelll > 25 .O 7 ·'° E11ceu Prom l.Dllehoulsaval uo
Also racecl; T• Tu tw, Qu•o
Olntro, Knltflt s.nno. Jatmood The
S,_, Llmellone Louie, GOiden E
Time: I :37 115.
IS l.XACTA (2·7) N ici 11,7'1.50.
llXTH •ACI. 6 furtann..
Ptrca Jwnas llk:k> 20..0 lOIO •.20 M'(ll(I (C«daro) 1.IO UO
Water Crv1tata (Toro) 2 . .0
Also rec.d: Caslll Star, OrNm
F•thar, Poceuet, WalkOIOa, Reel and
1tue EHie, Cllortlta ~. Miu De· "*''· Love's Venture. Tlmr. I: lO JI 5.
IS IXACTA (1-7) Nici Pff.50
YVINTH llAC8. 1\-9 mllea on IUfi.
HOid The Hula (McCll) 1'.40 3.IO 3.00
Hot Prll!Cftl (LIPllam) 6.20 4.60
Colella (Maia> 1.20
AllO f'llC9d: Semailra, Lido lilt,
Dominant LM, Olvmolc eronza, lrlsh
O'lrltn.
Tltne: I: .. 2/5.
IS IXACTA (1-2) oald lSt.50
U P'tCK SIX (6-3·2·2·1·1) oald
174,657.20 with lour winning tickers (five
horWI). Carrvovtr POOi; MSO.mAI.
llGMTM ltACI. lllo mlla. OtMrt Wine (Ofhly) 4...0 UO UO
John Henrv IMcCarron> 3 . .0 l.00
$arl's OrMmer (JMH ) • 20
Also r~ Video Kid, Fanev Wine•.
Atlcestr11. Sir Session, Load the Can·
nons, ~ Fellow
Time: 2'00 1/S.
IS IXACTA 15·4) Nici 136.SO
NtNTH llACL I 111• mllft on tllff C~tv S..I (Plncavl 'IO 3 00 2M lat LOOk (Hawley) '-00 3 00
CNaf' On lllecll) 4 00
Also r.cM: C-ton, L.orcl Protec· t«, TacOfno, 9ledl MtrilatMr. Emergency Fund
Time: 1·41 3/5.
IS 8XACTA (0•-'l .. Id ..0..S0
AlttndaftCe: Q,312,
SCOREBOARD
' Olympic Games history
A ..... aa ..
Track and field medalists
..
TomKJte,m.-
214
[)oft "°*". M3 ,200 175
T1m sir.,,....,, Ul.200
Milt Oor191d. tD.200
'111 ~ Weidklnl, t IJ,560 Jay Hau, SlJ,5'0
llff, ..... 2 Glenn CUMlnoham (Us l. ,. ..... l Lultl Mlkt~. l \J.WO
I Edwin Fleek (Australia), 4!33.2. 2 8ac:c.ll (11•"'1. 3 '9 2 Jim Colbert. "3•560
.• kotl SlmotOfl, 113.560 Arthur llaU (U.S.), 4:34.0 (nt.), 3. All>ln IMI, L.-... m
LMlnlnlaux I France), 4~.0 ( .. 1.) I Henrv Eriksson (Sweden), UU, 2. Gree Nonnen, '10,000 n .,... .....
lfOO, ftef1I Lennart Strand ISwe<Mnl, 3 SO 4, 3 Wiiiem Joe lnmen, 110,000 6,...._71·70 I Charles 8-11 (Great Britain), Slllllhul• !Holland), J 50.4 Tommy Valilnllllt, 110,000 70-Q-72·73
.. 116.2, 2. Henri 0etooe (France), •!06.6; l. 1'52, ......,., , 219
John lrav (U.S..), •:07.2. I JoMf h l'lhel (Lunml>04KO), l:.U 1; 2, OU S.0. II.a
I,.., St. Leuh Robert McMllltn (U S ), J:AU, 3 W.fWll CIVdl Reeo, 11,000
l. Jama UOhtl>OdY IU.S.), 4:0SA. 2 Luev (Germany), >·•U. -
Wllllarn Frank Vern« (U.S.> ... ·ou. 3. 1ff6,M•-OeflPoN.16,000
Lllc:rf Heer" (U.S..), l\.t. 1 Ron Delany (lrelend), 3:AIU; 1 Ro Ceadw91, l6,000
Ua old ..,..__e!J(G' ~l~lt'-·~, ~~.. "'~.J NA1~1!'8!i~~.m-~· ...r ..,,,...,., ,.. ... _, • ....... lHO. •tmt llUd1erd z.oa~~
3.Norman H~ (GrMI lrllalnl, 4:04.0 1 Herb Etlloll IAintrellel, 3~. 2. PIVlle Sl9Wert, M-
1912, ~ Mldle4 Jar; <Fr-.e), 1:1•; J 11"'-11 Wl
1. Arnold JedllOll {Great ltllaln), l.5U, Ro1aavo1Vvl (Hungary), ~.2. AdMI Adlml. S:l.71J
2 AMI Klvlat (U.S.), )'J", l Norman lM4, T.r,e Tom...,..,13,713 Tal>tr (US.), )'.56,f. I Petti' Snell (...,_ l.Mllnd), J;Jt I, 2. GelneArd*, 13,713
1ne. ~ JoMf Odlo1n IC1acho&tovallla), l::3U. l LMrt ~.13,7U
1. Altlert Hll (Gr•r &rltatnl. •:OU; 2 Jonn Davin INew t•lend), UU. Deva lerr, 13,113
P911Nlo laker (GrNI erttaln), d2.4, l lHO. MtJC1c1t a. LAnnv W..lft&, 0 ,713 -UWF'911C8 Shlatds (U.S.), •:Ol.1. I Klcldloee Kalno (Kenva ), l:34.f, 2 Jim Stmonl, 12.a2
l'14, hrtl Jamn Ryun (U.S.), 3:37.1, l. Bodo Tum-••K,..,.,..,12A02
1. PNYO Nurmi (Finland), 3-53 •• 2. mlw (Gernleny). ~ 0. Tom Siil, GA02
Wiiheim Sc:Nrw (Swlrterltncll. 3:ll.O, l . 1971, NMlldl U arttton, SUCllt
Henry Stallerd (GrHI Britain), l:.56..6. I Pellka v ... ie (Flftland), 3:36.J; 2. c.tvlft ....... S2A02
·-AIM1w-Klotrl09t Kelno IKenve>. 3:3'.I; ). ROclnev Al'f/IY llwl. S2A02
I. Harrv ~ !Flnlend)."l:SU; 2. Jules Of1eon (New ZM!endl, ):J?.S. Clll Ct11 •oct11u1. S2Aa == (F<:.;::.>;:Jil.I· 3· Elno 1. Jofln we~:~=~landl, l:Jt.17, 2. Mike Gove. 12.060 1D lvo van Demme (h191um), 3:JU7, 3. NW1I Haves. S2MO
1922, LAI...... '"-IM·Heln1 W'41mann IWnl Gwmanv), Mw11 lf'ooal.12MO 1. Lultl 8eccall lltalY), 3:51.2; 2. John 3:3U3. • Cornn (GrMI lrllaln), l:SU; 3. PhlN 1 ... Melc.w ,,..,.. Flhw, fl.-
Edwards (Canada), 3!52.1. 1. Seba1tlan Coe CGrMI 8rll1lnl, l:ll.4; Curt 9yn.,m, '1AIO Im, leftlll 2. Juroan Streu!> CE••• Gt'rnanv>. >.JU; 1 "*' lrvMf. 11,ao
1. John Lovatock (New Zealand), J:'7.I, Steven Ovett <Greer 8 r1talnl, 3:.Jf.O. lltonnlt 81edt, S1,6IO
U.S. ~ tradl tr1af1
(af LaA..-.1 , ........... ,
MaN
l,~1 Jim SP! ....... Wooddalt. Ill .
U6 .. '3, 2. Sieve Scott, Scottsdale, ArlL,
3:36 76, 3 Svdnev Mer ... ll-t.
Pa., ):37.02, 4 Oludt ArNOfl. LM
Lunas, N.M., 3:17 07, 5. Tirn Haaar.
Manonlol• Fata, Wlsc.. l..37 71 6 Dul>
Mvara. Portlan<I, Ore , l..37 "· 1 Brian Thtrlot, Newoort a..cti, Uf.25. I.
~ Volltv, a.Moart. ll., 3:.39'7, f
Mertt FrlrtM. Hemet, ):«UCJ, 10. Kevin
J~. New-1 News, Va., l:<IJ.'1,
11. Adam 011eon, <M'nl>rlcloe. Mus-.
3:4'.N; 12 Ton\ 8vtf'1, Temcie, Arll . J:SO. lS.
5.IOC>-1 0out '"-dlRa, Sen LMndrO,
ll!H.3'; 2. Steve Lacv. Medlson, w11.,
13:».n ; 3 Don cterv. EuoeneJ. Ora.,
ll:2U2; '· lruek alc:ktorcl, Denton, Melnt, 13-.33.71; 5. Ctlrla Fo11,
MatflnMluro, w. V1., 13:J6..N; 6. Sltve
PlaMntla, MlnnetOOl!a, 13:31.ll; 7. I red Erlltatael, Au1tln, THa1, l :'1.21; I
Crate Vlfvln, Letlenon, II., 13'•Ul; ' Steve OrtlJ, Los Angetn, l3:4S.21; 10.
Jon Slnc:telr. Fort COiiins, Coto., 13:'6.71; 11. DaMY Henderson, Wtleaton, Ill.,
13~1 IS; 12 Vince Oraddv, Nor1'I Tar·
rvt-"· N.Y., l'-C.60.
HJ-1. Dwlehl sr-. In.IN, 7·•
(American ,_.d, old racOfd, 7·7'\lt, l>Y
Tvttt PMcock, 1"31, 2. 0ouo Nor· doulst, lrM, 7·7, l Miiion Goode,
Oeltlalld, 1·~. '-Leo Wllllema, ~
de, Incl.. 7 • ~. 5. Joe Raelan, Seer a·
mento, 7-~. 6. Jake JacoOv, lolle. ldetlo, ,.,.,..; 7 Otnnla Lewis, Y~ll.
Mid\., 7·•11'>, I Jamff 8arrlneau, Pen·
secole, Fie., 7·•11'J, t (tie) Tvtte
PMcoc:k, Urtlena, Ill, encl J-
Hooton, Storn. Conn .• 7·l . II Lee
lalkln, Glafldale, 7-l, 12. Ian Lucero. u .. crucn, N.M., 7·3. 13, Dt4 Devis ,
LOI Anoalft, 7-1 II'!.
WOMSN
OT-I. l.ellla Deniz, Grldllv. Ariz .• 202·1, 2. LMKa DeSnoo. Fremont,
lto-7, 3. Loma Griffin, Corvallla, Mont.,
1•·2, '-Carol C.clv. Los Alamos,
N.M., 117·2; S. Pia leeovO, lrockton,
Mau., 17'·f; '· Lvnn Anderson, Min· llMllOllt. In· 11; 7. Gala Z..JlhlrOOOUllls,
Los Altos, 1n-J; a. Julla Han1an,
Sl>ollana, Wash .• 176·2; '· Pet1nv N-. Nortl'I Adema, Mlcll., tn-7; 10. Ramona
Petti, Montatltllo, 171-1; 11. Quenna
, .. ....,. Pasco. Walh.. 170-S; 12
Natalie KHlawahla. Tempe, 161·11
1.~1. lluth Wvaockl, El Toro.
4.-00.11; 2. Marv Oec:lltr~Euoene. Ore .• 4100.0, l. Diana Rkhbure . Trov, NY .
•-0..07, '-Mluv Kane. Knonllle, Tann.,
•:OU7, S. Sue Adeltaon. Clartlston.
Mlcfl , 411"1, 6 Darlene ltcktord,
C•mOrlcloe. Mau.. 4-Cl7 '2, 7 Lo4.llse
Romo, Torr~. 4~ 2', I Christina
Gr"°'8fl, seeltonll, Mau , '-"' '3, f Kim ~, Santa Monica. •. ll"
10 ll191na J~. LOI Anoelll. 4;:22 '7
11 Jll Hawortl'I, lowle, Md., •:2U7 12
Lee Artlooast. Ctlar1olle. N.C.. os.n
l..J-1 Ct nll Lewll, Wllllftetloro,
N.J , 21-7'•• 2 Jadllt ~. Eaat SI Loul,, 21-10, 3. Aneala Thadltr. St
Louis, 21·6'"• 4. ~ Allderaon. Cll1· caoo. 21·2'111, s. Donna T"°"'81. Fort
Wortfl, Tl llH . 20-1~. 6. Kathy McMllen, llMford, N C., 20-f1.-., 7
W1MY 8'own, Stanford. !0-S\4. l
Jenet Y•rbrOUllfl, oov11, 20-3i., f
Gwel\ Loud, Loa A,,....,, 20-214, 10. Sai>'lna w1111am1. hllnowtr, lf-1~.
11 Carle s.toan, Abilene, Taxes, lf-N. 12 ~ Smltll, Houston,
lf·ft,j,
S.000 (ellhll>ltlon >-1 JUl!t 8'own,
San OleOO. 15-.Jt 50, 2 lktrv wines.
9' aoenton. F le , I S:>t n . 3. S11111Y
S,_,.,, Galnelvllle, Fa.. lS:otO '7, 4
Monica Joyce, Weiand, 15 42.ID, 5. Uaa
Mtr11n, A.alralta. IS.'3 21, 6 Katie
llM'IM4, MedllOll, Wis 15.AS..OI, 7
CarOI UrlJh·McLatcftit . liouaton,
S:'1.21, I Nan Doell, Iowa Cltv,
15:0 ... 9 Martv Coollwt, EYMne,
Ora .• 16.:0Ul. 10 Mer9aret G..-. Eutene. Ore., 1..0UI
US~L
WIST8•N CON~llllNC• . ~et*
., .•. .,....
•·Arizona
Oeflver
Oelllenct
W L T
10 • 0 10 • 0
' ' 0 7 11 0
CMtnl
~ ~,
55' l1I SS6 502
500 l5' .. 2'2
v·Houslon 12 S 0 7°' 511 Jn
x·Mlcll!Mn 10 I D 5.56 400 Jl2 Sen Antonio 1 11 O 3" 309 325
OklahOma ' 12 o m u 1 "' Chicago 5 13 O 171 340 466
•ASTlllN CCHW•UNC•
y·Pfllta
•·N wsev
P11111>uron
Walhlnoton
AllMllk
" 2 0
" ' 0 l IS 0
3 15 0
~
v·l rrnnoflm 14 ' 0 m S3f ll·Trno e v " 4 o m .,.
N-Or1Hns I f 0 '71 331
Memohl• 7 10 0 •12 317
Jecllsonvllle 6 12 o l33 l'l7
•--cllndle<I olaYOlf l>ertll
v·dlnchecl division lllle
SuMl'f'• Sceres Tamoe 8av 17, 8lrm1not1am 1'
Mlttltoan 20, Chlcaoo 17 Walhlnoton 20, New Or1Hn1 17
New JarMv 16, PtllladelPllla 10
Sen Antonio 23, Oklahoma O
TeNIM'sa.-
Memonla al Houston
IMO •IGULAll WASON
o,.. lljNt radnl
WMMa• C"~SHPS
fat ntM LAii•>
316 3'7
375
411
455
81own lue4 h'l'dr-1 I red Tuttle
l HelPe'la), 197 61 mol'I
Blown aldloflcll hvdr-1 90I>
Fu!Otlem (LAI Mif"Mde) 17' 71
&town fuel let-I Mo ChurUvnan
IPtacantlal. IS3..2S
llown aldloflol flat-I L• 011ttbM
IA!tlanv Ort I 1'3 77
&town NI h'lcll'-1 I Jorden !Santa Paule), 1" 14
&town oas flat-1 Don Erms.l\ar
1•1vtnlcle1 1'3 07 l town NI lat-I M.111 FtUermtn
IHemell mot
Ian er.Mhew, 11.MO
Peter Ooster'flull. 11,ao
(at Cll••llll> 176
Arnold Petmer. $36,000 m
Petw ThOmton. m.ooo
•1 Mllltr &artier, S 1t ,000 m Don Januarv. llS.500 ..
81t1v c._-. s11.02s
Jim Ferr ... i 11.02s 111
lloO Funwlh. S7,700 Ctwtrtn Sifford, S7, 700
Dan Slkn. 17, 700 -Bin c o111na " 200 .,
Mille F etchlcll, 15.400
Howle Jolln$.On, ss.a
8ol> TCIPI ss.a
2"
Ga'ontr Oldlln$ll, M.lll
Jedi Flee'. S4,ll3
lob Slone M,lll
2'1
PW Herntv, '3.1'2 Art Slrvettrone. 1:1.762
2'2
Jtlrrv 8arl>fl'. ~.190 Ro«lerto OeV'leMt. 13 ISi
e • JGM$t0n, u .1so
90I> llOSOUre. U . ISO
71...,..7~ ,.......,,..,. , ........ ,.
71.72 ... ,.
,..,.72.72 ,,........13
7 .. 75-72-77 , .. ,,...,..,.
n-12-n -11 ,,.,...n..,
75-7 ... 75-75
n ·7Mt-7S , .. 72·72-11 11-n-n ... 1
n -.....u-ff
... 73..,.71
72-71-'7·71
70-69-7>-71
n -n ... n 7o-n·6'-n
61·75-70-74 71·72·69-75
7t·6'-7l·73
7l·73·72'-70
70-7'-66-n
7S·6'·70-7S n -10-1•-n
71-79 .... 7. 73
7'·75·71-70 n -n -11-15
73·7'·73·71 n -1s-n-11
1•·n·1•·10 n -1s-n-n n -rs-n-n 6'·15-14·1•
CAMEL FILTERS
, ' r
I .1.l
,
It~ a whole new world.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your 1iealth.
' I
o... .........
~~Wiii( ...... .... ,-............ n...., .... . ..,.,,., • ~ 1 ....... .J-redl
""'-• mecMre&. DAVllM LOCXllll ( ........ ... , -w .,...,... 11 Wrecudla,
1• Mftlte, a r..o ""'-1 ...,., a cab ..... ., ......... )CJ
mtdler'el, 20 ~ 1 It I I I lfteM. 1 .,. cad. ,,.. .... __.
~ Grunion mev lie tellen rt
,..,. .,,.;.,; 1111 ..... llucMb, IMd .... °' tr11M ~ A Callo Ille flsllliW ~ " ~ for enYOM 1' and .... The ICNdul9:
Jvl¥ 1 -lJ~ II.IT\. to w a..m.
Jutv 2 -12:21 Lm IO 2::21 a..m.
MY l -1:23 a.m. IO 123 a..m.
)4;f 1' -1~ a.m. -lt:lS a.m.
J\l/ly 15 -11.11 '-'"· to 1: 11 a.m.
Jvt¥ 1t -11M •-"'· to 1:.U a.m.
""" 17 -12::25 e.m till t25 a.m. ,..., • - l l:U IU'll. to t:Z2 a.m.
MY Jl -12:1S a.m. to 2:15 a.m. Aue I -117 a..m. to >:17 a.m.
Aue. 2 -Ul a..m. le 4:D a..m.
w.-................
USIULL
~u...e
MINHESOT A TWINS-ttecallH
Andre Oavkl. outfleldW, from ToleclO If
Iha 11\ternerlontl Laewa s..r Mlll.t
Hert. oulfleld9r, to T oledlo
flOOTaAU
UNtWS......, ..... U..
PtTTSa u•GH MAULER.s.-F!Nd
E•lt Ra~. '""'"'" coedl, Joe HMnl'f Frenk Lau1er11ur, Oldl
~ lrvce OeH•-· JM HlltdlW. 111C1 1111 Mee~. aublant coecfla.
j
. ,. . ..
~--Brazil's NOTICI fM'tllltQ II>• '1CTITIOUI euu.aa ~nnout ..,._.. teOntl Ww'tnMCI eiDI
HotiOt II~ O~ that Ille NMim lfATllllllJfT NMm ITATIMINT NOTICJ 19 HEMBY OIV[H tl\al Goard of frue1.. of the eo-1 TM fOllOWlnQ ~ It dolnO The fol'°'",. l*90l'I II 4o!Og .....ci P'OOON!t tor lumlehlnt .. ·Lorie Star
~parkles
Piquet
wins
Community Cohoe Oiwtcl ot Of· b\lllM.N u ~ u labor. mat.,...._ ~ • .,.,...
M09 CCunty, californla, •Ill recml\l9 ITOAM Dt:Vfl..OPM NT. tit Vlt SULTAN'S TA LE, t878 Hftpc>rt Pof'tetlon ianC1 Mt1 O(hef tadltlel _..., bide up to but M llfflr ttttl\ Quito. ~ lklllCtl. Celif t2tA3 BM! . COii• ...... c-111. 2627 • may be reQINed tcw MOOI·
Tu.dlly, 10'00 I"' • .Jufy 10, 1... Wlllialft JOMPl'I 8tOIM 1 tt VII ~ Q ~. 312 Dehlia FICATION °' TMfflC SIONAl.t
at Vie~ ~1t OI Qulto,Htwpor19Neh.Ctlll 12M3 Pt.ct,Coron.drllMw,calf.tMH ON WEST 11TH STAEl'T AT
Mid OOleOe dlltrle1 lOCMld •t 1a70 Th,. tMtnaee II oonduc'ltd tly. en fhlt bUSIMll 11 cond\IC1ad W. M POMONA AVENUE AHO WUT
AdlMt Al4nUI, eo.ta cell-k\d1\lldual 11\dMdUlll flTH ST E'T AT PV.OUlnA AV• torf\le at WfliOtl tlfN Mid bidf w\11 be Wiiiiam J Storm Oll\Olf O im.-£NU!. wtit be re0tl¥td by the City ot
OETRolT (AP) _ Siz· pu~1y ~end rMC.t for Thia t111emen1 wee tiled wtth the Thie atttement ... ~ wmn t11e Coet• M..a at the OfflCe Of the City PAINT ANO SINO 'AL-L 1914 C-•AtY Cl-'11 QI Or-COUf\I" on "~·-1y Clel'k of Or-Coun"' on C""·'" 71 •·•r n.1.-"~1a ........... din1hot Nclsoq Piquet of COMMUNITY 81!RVICf!S ,,:,;·;· 1914 -.. -• """'"11 -..-., -... r ............ .,.,. -· ' BROCHURE: COASTLINf COM· ' ........_ ... June t . 1tM Calllomi41, Ul\tll the hour Of t1'00 Braiil dashed away to h11 tTY eo roe r-.. ,.,_, a"'·· .ivtt 10. 1~. et wfltct'I t1me s:econd straif!>t VlC\Of'Y, MUN u. PublW\ed Otange Coul ~ flUbtlftld Otenoe Coul Deity ll'tay will be °'**' P\lblldy and
Urv9ve"n• 1 -Id r,al--s••... All btda.,.. to be In accordanc:ie Piiot June 25 Juty 2. 9, 1e.\1914 Ptlo1June2S • .>t;tf2. t , 11. ,.... rHd aloud in th• Councll
I H ... .. • Ii --_.. with IM Bid Documenll wtlldl .,. .... , M4t Chatnbef'I S..ied ptopoutl lhall
B ON cruti and the incredible now In t1te and mar be MGUred 1n .,.., the uti. or 1t1e WOf1I and IN
1 ALM LOCKABEY attrition of Sunday's [)c. tMolfloeofthtOWectorof Purchb" nttne ot the bidder but no och«
-., ,.....,... ...._ troit Grand Pm. '"\!::!,=:.~=" w11t1 h "8JC NOTICE Pt.IUC *>TICE ~ hint matlle. Alty bid ,..
Lone Star, a Nelson-Marek-SS owned and kippered Piques.. 1 ~o.uml'world bid a cut11er'1 o~. oartm.o ...CTITIOU99UtaHIH rtetmou1 MllMH tim. to<'!:,=.= ;:r:
by Bruce Bcajamin of Southwestern Yacht Club, was tht charnpion, drove his =0 ~t>=·:,~dC::-~: t he ,::::,.,:'~W.:.' ao1"' The f:::;:'~Malf: dOlnl returned to the bidder u~.11 winner of tht Daily Pilot Perpetual Trophy in Balboa backup BMW-powered mun1ty Colleot Dtetrlct 8oard of bulillMI u · bullMN .. ; 111at1 be the IOle r~91bOity ot ti. YacbtOub's l..ol'll Poinund Return race,. ftature of the 'Brabham race car to a Trust ... In tnMl'IOUnt not leN lhet M 101 u M WA Ae . uooc T ~ T INSURANCE AGENCY. blddertO ... lhal bldlarecelYed
66 Scrit'j, Saturda)'. and Sunday. 0 .837-second tnumph over flveperoen1 1S~)ofthe1Utn bid u a ~:-'e':J'~f"'d •Suite 1169, ltVIM MOO Wwn« Avenue 11171, Hunt~ In :'~'Z. end 8'*ftlcetlona
The Dady Pllot Trophy is awarded to the Inter-tbcTyrrellofrookieManio ~~~===.:ir:: P~ M~•. 1eo5 Sherington "i::~~' ~:'.! •. oeoo ineybeoballnedatthtOffleeotti.
n.auonaJ Off: bore Rule with the ~t comb10ed com:ctcd Bn.tndle of EnaJand. wne II ewarded 10 tum. In the ewnt Ptace Apt Y309. Newport a..ct1 W•mtW A~ • 11e. H""tinoton City £ngtneer. n Felr Ottve. to.ta r. •'--Lo S ' -.. . t.a]-..a Celli 82t63 a ••• h C f 8 &.-7 M.... Cel1tomle, upon nonrefun. umcsioru~tworaces. ne tarSCOITttl'l"UtJmesto ~ Brundle,traitinaby m orc olfailurelo ~terlnto aud\ccntract, Thi.bullnehll COfldUC1edby ~ --. ab 1 d•ble payment of 110.00. An 41d· S houn., 33 minutes and S8 seconds. . th 23 d h he the Pf'ooeedl Of the cnec11 will be lndlvlduat 'Thia t>ulinau •• GC>nduc:ted by' an dillonal e~ 01 12.00 rnuet be
The Lo~Point aod Retu.m races of the 66 Series weTC an IC()C)O s w en tortelted. or In the c ... of • bOnd. Paul Maleck• 1~1~= TMAka Included It na.nc:tled by mall Plant.
b. _ __. . N H--'-.-y b a b' Ah pa5$Cd the Lotus o f ltahan Iha Ml sum th«aol Wiii be 1ortetted ""'' ....... '"""0"' 11\d Ofhtf """lrlCt com lu1'V wu ewport 111uur ac t u s manson Elio de AnJehs to take over 10 said cotteo-dlltrlc:t. Thi• 1111emen1 wa1 filed With tilt Thi• at•••~'••• 111ec1 wtttl the ~"*''' may tltO be .~
Series for l OR yachts and the Dickson Series for the second eight laKs from the No b~ may wlttldraw ht• bid ~~=~ ~=-: ot Ofange County on ~tl1~~:. 01 Orange County on at the Offtce of the City~ot,the
Perfonnance Handicap Racina Acet (PHRF). end, ch•ro,cd a er the de-for, • l*'IOd tor i1on1 v-11wc•s1 days -·-4• ._,. City or Costa Meae. u1 fSa ..,._ . N Lo p _ • a tar the date " or the opening .-& .. •• • .. _ E bid lhall b9 the Res ts o tu1uoy s race, ewpon to ng oint: f;endina world champio n. tl'lereol Pvbl•lhed Or1nge Coast Dall) Pub~ Orange eou1 o111y ach . "' °" IOR OVERALL-I . Doller, W1Jham Stanley, Balboa The Board of Trust ... r9"'Wa Piiot June ~5 July 2 9. 16. 198-4 Piiot JUM 25 July 2. 9 16. 1~ Propc>MI le<m. sheets t througtl
YC; 2. Lone Star, Bruce Benjamin. Southwestern YC, '3. The youngster. in only his Iha prM~ ot reiecttng any #\d a11 M•7 ---=--------M'3-1 :!r;ov~ed ~~ C::~
Free Ente3risc, D ick Ettinger. Ne~rt Harbor YC ; 4. seventh Grand Pnx, closed btd1 or to waive any lrregu1ar1tlee or by• oert1fled or euhlef'• cl'tedt or•
,..._:r. . Id, Fred o·c BY s N I Ora t the mll'Jln to 4.4 sec.onds 1nlorm1lltlea In any bid or In the PmllC NOTICE Pl81.IC NOTICE bid bond for not .... than 10% Of '-Auorrua 0 onner. : · a u, Y on-..,;th one lap rema1n1· ng, but bidding I .._ .. ,d ..... Gran t. NHYC. -· . h n: Open July 10, 1994 . 10 oo am flCTITIOUI IW..,.11 1"' amount 0 t .... "' · m-P~-
CLASS A -I . Dnll .. r·, 2. Lo ne Star, 3. C hubasco.· Don co uldn't quite catc nquet. Signed CORRELL.AN J THOMP-F•;m~o~:a::• NAME •T•nMINT •ble to the City ot Coat• M... o "' d · · ry conservative SON The foltowlno pefaOl1 •• dOlng pr~l thaJt beconlldered vnteu Haskell, NHYC. nvina ve • Exec vie. c nanc.11<>< ll'te following person Is doino bu11ne11 u .ccompanled by llJCh celhlet'•
CLASS B-1. Free EntCerpnse. 2.Nalu: 3. Quick silver. ly ~~ t~~~~dthtnk 1 could Bu11nea Atairs buc!=~CIA GROUNDS MAIN· c~~~:NsYr~: ~'\!!s~ en:,ki:::be~~nteu
HermScbowe, Voya~ersY . h beat htm'" said the Coast Commun1ty ColleoeD11tr1ct TENANCE 23t5S Park[)( Santi onadet••ar c .... 1 .... 6.... 1t 11madeOt1ablanttlormfumlll\ed
CLASS C -1. '-•1rom1a G o ld·. 2 ... ,._JOr M ocean. a ve Published Or•noe Cout bel1y Piiot Ana ca111 92707 ... .,, ""' ~" c ot eoa Mesa nc:1 1 4J II IY14 h 8 ndle "I think he June 25 Ju"' 2. 198-4 Margarel J o h naton. 2 3 by the fty ta • • Bruce Fcttel, Capistrano Bay Y C ; 3. 811 Apple, J o hanson-appy ru · ., M·f>O Winton L Jordan, 23l5 S Park 8Nchcomt>er, corona del Mar. mad• in accordance with th•
William. BYC was playing with me." Of . Santi Ana. Calif 92707 Calif 92625 provlllonl of the PropoMI require-s, · This bu11ness 11 condUC1~ by an manta
PHRF OVERALL-I. Tobogan. Paul Queyrel. Piquet. who won last Pl&.IC NOTICE 1ndlv1dual inJi~:~_:llneu la conducted by: e.n The contractor anefl comply with
VYC; 2. Contention, Gordon Graham , South S hore YC; 3. week s C anadian Grand Winton L Jordan Margaret Johnllon the provtllon1 ol Section 1f10 to E Ticket, Gary C handler. SSYC; 4. Rascal, Leslie Hixson. Prix, led every lap for the LEGAi. NOTICE This ttatement was filed wjth the Th111111emen1 wu llled wilh the 17llO. lnctualve. of the Cellfomla VYC second straight week He NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Co~mty Clerk of Oranoe County O<I County Clerk 01 Orane>e County on Labor Code; the prevaltlng rate and
· . · the follOwlng 1tem1 of found or June t6. 19M June 1. liM ec.le of -..agee •t•bllltled by the
CLASS A-1. Toboggan: 2. Rascal; 3. Pele. Jim finally o vercame his De-Nved Pf'openy have bMr'I held by neea11 • PM7711 etty of Costa M ... (available at ti.
1
Emmi, Bahia Corinthian YC. troit Jinx, which saw him t1?9 POiice Department of the etty of Pubhslled Orange Cout Oally Publllhed Orange Cou1 oaity office of the City Clertt). and lhall ·~ _,..,..Cl.A~~~t~ tin· 2. E Ticket~ 3. Nugje Too. miss the 1nauauraJ race CO.taM ... toraperiodinexe911ot PilotJune25·Jutv 2·9· 16· 1~,2 P1to1June 18,26,Ju1y 2.e. 1964 ~~~.!.~:;'~C:.eln
• :: ·~~~..( . ~~·"O_~·~j -L;"-·-~~~~r.°:-,_r.. j ~ ~ r~ . .-,..,.....,.,.,,.. fi~~I . i~~ft.~~~~~·~~~~M™~--~18~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Pussycat John Szalay, VYC; 3. Cat's Paw, Rohen Hench, and rain on anoth er, th en Schwinn Scram~. Girl'• Green __ ___:...:..::.:;;.;:~;...;..;.;;;.;;..___ reject all bid•.
BYC d rop out of the lead in the Hufty 81cycla. ~. Blue Murrey 1 PICTITIOUI •UllNEll PICTITIOUI IW&Mll EILEEN P. PHINNEY
. . apd 81cycte, Boys Maroon 3 lpd NAM! ITATINeNT NAM! ITATUllNT City Clerk 1983 race w1th a flat tJ.re. Blc:ycle eum for Two. Boy'• Bleck Tile fOllowlno petson 11 d<>lno The fOllowtno peraons are clolno Publtlhed Orange Cout Dally Piiot.
Carita wins opener
in Reverse Argosy
Cari~. ~ppcred by BiJJ Meier, CabriUo Beacb Yacht
Club, was the Class A w10oer in tbe first leg of the Reverse
~ Argosy race co-sponsored by Ballla Corinthian Yacht Club
o f Newport Beach and Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, Los
Angeles.
After the 18-mile race from LA Harbor to Newpon
Beach o n Saturday, the fleet had a ni&ht of revelry at BCYC
before starting the race back to CBYC on S unday.
Results of Saturday's race:
PHRF-A -l. Carita, Bill Meier, CBYC; 2. Intrepid,
Hal Pudcwa, C BYC: 3. Restless, Bob Young. CBYC ; 4 .
Fast Lane. Tom Shadden. Long Beach YC; 5. Wow, Ted
Zellmer, Seal Beac h YC.
PHRF-8 -Alias Ace of Cups, Bruce Gohson.
Alamitos Bay YC; 2. Malola, Stephen Washburn. LBYC;
3. Banana Republic. Dell Hutchinson. BCYC; 4. Sunshine,
Dennis Humphrey, CBYC; 5. Big Bad Wolf. James
DcWolfe. BCYC.
0 Hufty 1 apd 8icycle. Boy's Orange buS1neu u bull,_ 81. June 25 and July 2, 19M
nly SIX cars were run-Murray 10 spd 8lc;ycle, 8oy'1 White CALIFORNIA CREATIVE PUBLI· RE/MAX OF NEWPORT BEACH.
oing at the end of the 63-to apd Motobecane 8icycla. Gin'• CATIONS. 14252 Culver °'·· Suite 2:M E. 17th St .. Sult• t 17. Costa
lap, 160-mile race on the Red to IPd <Anturton 81eye1e. A-t59. lrv1ne. Caht 92714 Mesa. ca111 92627 -----------
tight, demanding 2.5-mile Bof• Brown Schwinn 1 apd. C1rol J Little. 306 Onyx. Balboa RE/MAX of Costa MeN. lmne. ___ NM.JC ___ NO ....... TJCE ___ _
Cl.rcu1't throunh the Streets Blpdlcycle. Brown' Boyl'ns.!_~ BB~e·.~'.m' 31 Island, C1111 92662 N-pon Beach, Inc • A Cailtomla &'' . ..,....,., ~,-.,.,., This buslneu 11 conducted by an Corpotillon, 2:M E. 17th St., Sutt. HOTICI TO CONTRACTORI of downtown Detroit. and Hub Caps. individual 117, Costa Mesa, Callt 92627 CALUNO FOR H>I
That's the worst attrition in NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that Carol J little Thll business 11 conducted by• • Fountain Valley School Oiltrlc:'I
G d Pri · · r II no owner appears and provet hit This 1111ement wu llled with the uon 17210 Oak Str"t. F V . CA a ran x SIDCCJUSt iour owneranip ol the property within County Clerk of Ora-County on corpora 92708 fi . hcd the 1966 I 11 . .,,-Craig W. S.tley. Preaident P.O 8o11 •510, F V c• "272• cars DIS Mven (7) ~ olk>wlng Ille pub • June 19 19M This statement WU tlled with the " " • "
Monte Carlo Grand Pnx. cauon of this Notice. the lllle tl'tefe-f24151t County Clerk 01 Orange County on PrOjeCt ldent. N11ne: Bid No
The majority of the 26 to shalt vest In tt. Roder If there be Publlstled Oriange Coast Dally June 5 t98-4 66-01, Repair of Orlv9Way0 Bu1
S ...... crs ('.ell victim LO the ~.?'" ~~~ 2_!ty ~~ty• ~--alt ·~ Pnot June 25 July 2. 9, 16, 198-4 • F247ltl i..r-, Var10U1 toc:atlone
...., .. II ......... --........ .,.,..... • ... """ M.-0 Published Orange Cou1 Dally Plans on ftle and place ot Bid
CoDCf'Clt barriers or tire IOld at public: auction at a time and PllOt June 18. 25. July 2, 9, 1964 receipt. Purctiulno Department al
walls lining the 20-tum g~~~g:~u:'Q"f:',. PmllC NOTICE M30 ·~:!,<'J~ for receipt ol bid•
course, gearbox o r over-R.E NETH July 2. 1964. 2·00 P.M
heating problems. CHIEF OF POLICE FICTITIOUS austHE.11 P\RIC NOTIC[ For the Governing Board
Pubhsned Orange Cout Oa1ly Pilot. NAME ITATEMENT Jean MUfph)', Purchasing Agent
Followrng third-place de June 25. 19&4 The ro11ow1no P8f100 ls domg K-llttS AoP<oved Pamela Ra, Olrector.
Angelis were Italian driver M-37 business .._ NOTICE OF DEATH OF Business~
Teo Fabi. the o ther ___ 1111_11tt_IC_NO_T_ICE----I M~~~T:~~,~~~t~~,~~t:~~ JENNIE D. WILDER AND Publlshed Or= Cout oe11y Piiot
Brabham dri ver. who ..-~ Hunt1noton 8each. c.111 926M OF PETITION TO ADMIN-June 16' 25 9 • M·3e
scored has first Formula FICTITIOUl•USIHHI MarkGerard Green.J16 161ns1 JSTE R ESTATE NO .-----------
0 n e P o 1 n ts e v er .. NAME STATEMENT Hunhnoton ee.ch. c .. 11 9268• A-tzano nun•ic NOTICE The toltowlng persons are doing Th11 business Is conducted by an ..-~
Frenchman Alain Prost. bu11neH as 1nd1v1dua1 To all he irs. bene fic1anes. ---------------
the current world cham-K & B LEASING co . 1308 Fo.1C Mark G Green lred1tors and conttngent Fl~l~:Ai::=•
PHRF..C -I. Southe rn Comfort.
ABYC; 2. Echpse. Steve Stance, Scat
Play mate, N orm Hemngton. C BYC.
pionship point leader. in a Of Fullerton Celll 92635 This st11emeot was r11e<1 with tne cre ditors of JENNIE D . rne 10ltowtno petsons .,, doing
Tom Newton. McLaren, and Williams Fu~:~d fa11~'/~51309 Fox °'. ~~;'{9 c~;4 of Orange co~mty on WIL DER and perso~ who buSll\eSs ••
Beach Y C: 3. driver Jacques Laffite o f C1rbtde consu1t1no Corpor111on F2rt1S11 ma v be olhe rwtSe interested BALBOA ISLAND DEPT OF
Youth races
on line Tuesday
More than 100 small sailboats in three classes Will be
swamung ov~r Newport Harbor starting Tuesday when
Newport Harbor Yacht Oub plays bost to the United
States Yacht Racing Union's Youth Championship.
The line-up calls for 65 Lasers. 26 Laser Us and 25
Windsurfer sailboards. The La.scr II is a tw~man 17-foot
sloop. The Laser is a single-handed 16-foot dinghy.
The eight-race series will also be a qualifier for the
International Youth Championships to be sailed. at ~n
Diego following the O lympics. It) the ~.J.S. cba~p1onsh1p
,kippers must be 19 o r underand in the mtcmatJonat event
con testants must be 18 or under.
USYRU medals will be awarded to the first five
finishers in eac h class. Perpetual troph1cs to be awarded
are the Minton D . Sc-0tt Memonal for the win rung d ouble-
handed team. and the Robert L. Johnstone Ill trophy to
the winning single-handed ski pper.
Lido Isle winners
N ineteen boats m three classes turned out Sunday for
Lid o Isle Yacht C lub's June Regatta sailed on courses
inside the bay. Trophy winners:
LI00.14-I. Chad Twichell. LIYC;2. Roy Woolsey,
LIYC.
LASER -I Lewis Rowe, BYC
SABOT A -I Anne Pem1ck . Bahia Corinthian Y C.
SABOT B & ( -I. Vincent Palladino . LIYC: 2.
Fabian Rousset. LIYC.
=Moore-24 is sharp
Paul Sharp's re-24 was the winner of the second
race of Bahia Connth1an Yac ht Club's Summer Sun Scnes
Saturday .
Runner-up wa s Mtsch1ef. Caro lyn Nelson Hardy, and
third was Stress Breaker. Jack and Bruce Larson. all of
BCY C.
Wimbledon officials
ready to~ crack down
LONDON (AP) -The umpires at Wi~blcdon a~
being instructed 1oday to enforce the profcu1onal tcnn11
code of conduct, whoever the offenders might be. sajd R.E.
Hadtn&twn the c hairman of the All-EnJl&nd Oub.
.. My hc&d 1s o n the block,·· S&Jd Had.in&Jwn, rcvea.11~
that be bas had a flood of letters of pr~ept at players
bebaVJor after John McEnroe and Junmy C~nnofl
insuJted officials over disputed line calls at the Queens
Club in London I 0 days ago .
.. We would be very sorry If it became neces~ 10
disqualify anyone but.. as with a rccaJctlJ"a!'l ~tu.Id. 1f yo~
don't take action •hen u 1s nccasary, you re 10 trouble,
Kadinaham added. A6out.150 of the &cad1na men's pla)en belonaana to
the Auodatton of Tennis Professionals were remanded
Suoday about the code of oonduct when Hedin£ham
' t.a.lk.ed to them at a London hottl. McEnroe and Connon~ not at the mce and so
id not liCii ttii ,(:Mirman •Y 'tii tiopei c nror .,1n
not blciw hit lOO dVri1'1 Wtmbkdoo •
.Aabd 1etci fof his COll\r'Mfttt, McEftrot". t~
illln••dr•pioe •& Wtm~ and the NO. l lftd..
IOlcl a ~ "I don't know What he taid and t don't care."
,
France. Laffite was one lap A Cehtom1a Corporation t308 Fox Pubhsned Oranoe Coast Da11y in the w ill a nd/or estate. RECREATION. 223'• Sapphire
I)( Fullerton Caltl 92635 Pilot June 25 July 2 g 16 1984 f led Balboa Island. Calif 92862 down. r n11 bulineH11 conductea by a M4 5 A peuuon h as been t Pam Scnutterlc:k. 223•; Sap-
E gl h N · I M o-rat partnersnlp by LOREN HOLT m the Su-pnire. Belbo1 Island. Calif, 92862
n IS man ige an· Howard c Kaylor pNtor Court of Orange Arthur o Barry. 5!>3 Promontory sell, starting from the sec-Th1& statement was llled wnh the C h Of East. Newport Beec:h. Calll
ond row in a Lotus, ignited County Clefk 01 Orenge County on Pl&.IC NOTICE o unty reques ung t at 92660
the accident as the field June 7. 1984 F247723 NOTICE INVfTING BIOi LOREN HOLT be appointed ~~~~ condUC1ed by •
accelerated forthe first tum Notice 11 l'tefeby given th•t the as personal representauve to Pam Scl\ullerlcit
Of the race. Publistled Orange Coast Of!ty Board ot Trustees of the Coast administer the estate of Thll stllement w81 tiled with the
Piiot June 18 25 July 2 9 19~28 Community COiiege District ol Of· JENNIE D . WILDER (under County Clerll. ot Oranoe County on
Mansell tned to squeeze ange County, California, wlll receive the Independent Adminis-June 18. t9&.-
betwcen t'.ront-row staners m11tttC NOTICE sea*! bids up to but no tater than f !:'-A ) Th 11 ruut. Tuesday. 11 00 • m .. July 10. 1964 tratto n o "-">tates ct . e
Piquet. the pole-sitter. and at the Purchasing Department of petition is set for hearing in FICmlOUI aUllNHI Prost. NAME STATEMENT said coneoe dlstrk:t 1oc1ted at 1370 Dept No. 3 at 700 Civk-
Adams Avenue. Coste M..., Call-,.._ Dr W San Ana
Pl&.IC NOTICE
MOTICI OF IALE
In aocordanoe With tl'te provision•
of 1ec11on1 307 1 and 3072 of the
CMI COde ol tlle State ol Celilornl•.
ll'te IOllowlng lllled vel'tlcle wlll be
IOld 1t Publk: Auction at 10:00 a.m
July 5, 199• at 818 E. Walnut St,.
Senti Ana, CA One 199 1 TOY OT A SO. ( 1983) Cal Lie:. 18HD 938 VIN
•JT2TE7tD28010345&
Ben Warner'• Gat~ Inc: 6 18 E Walnut St
Santi Ana. Ce 927011enl'tolder
Publlahed Orange Coast Dally PjlOt
June 25. t994
M-38
P\B.IC NOTICE
FlCTITIOUI aUllNHI
NAME ITA TUIENT
The following petlOl'I Is doing
bus1neea u SAMSON DECOR. 2237 Maple,
Costa Mesa. Calll 92627
Mary Theresa Samson. 2237
Maple. Costa Mela, Callf 92627
Tn1s bulinet• ts conducted by an
lndlvidval
Mary Samaon
Th11 statement was filed with tl'te
County Cieri! ol Orange County on
June 7 1984
F2'7722
Publl1nec:I Orange Cout Dally
Pilot J une 18. 25. July 2. 9. 1984
M27
Tile lollowlng P«ton 11 dolno lornll II whk:h time sakl bids will be ~nt.er .. est, ta • bu~=ef.swEEPINO SERVICE publlc;ly opened and read tor CA 92701 o n July 11. 1984 at
21372 Broo61hurst St PURCHASE OF CUSTODIAL 9:30 A .M
722. Hunllnnton Beach, Cel11 PAPER SUPPL y IF YOU OBJECT to the · ·• AH b1d1 are to be In acc«dance 92&.-6 with the Bid Documents whk:h are grant.mg of the petition, you
V.ctor Manuel Levadi. 2i372 now In Ille and may be MWred In should either appear at the Brootlhurst St 722, Huntington BeaGh, Callf the ott~ ot the Director of Purcllu-hearmg and st.ate you objec·
Ing of 141d college district · Cil · ••-ob'-' 926.-6 Each bidder mu11 aubm1t With ht1 uons or e wn • ...,.n ~-
Thi• business Is condUC1ed by· en bid 8 c•ahler's c:heQ, certified tions with the court before
lndMduel ehecti "' bidder's bond made ~y-the hearing. Your appear-V1etor M L.evada •ble to the order of the Cout Com-be b ThlS statement wu filed with the munlty College OlstrlCt Board of ance may m pe1"IOl'l or y
County Cle<k 01 Orange County on Trustees '" an lmOUnt not leM tn.t your a ttorney.
June 7 · l98-4 five --cent (5%1 ot the sum bid u a IF YOU ARE A CREDI-FM771t ..-·
p blisned Of•"""' Coast D8lly ~uarenlM tNlt the bidder wlM enter TOR or a conttngent ~tor u · ··-into lhe propoMd Contrac:1 11 the h d ased Piiot June 18 25. July 2, 9, 19M 4 same ls ewirded 10 l'tlm. In the event of t e ece . you must
M2 oflailure to enter into such c:ontr.ct. file your claim with the
-----------the prooeed1 or tl'te check wm be court or present il to the per-
-__ .... ML;..;..;~IC;.._NO..;_Tl...,C .... E ___ forfeited, or In the case of• bond, sonal re pre sentative ap-
the luH sum tl'te<eof will be lorlelted to said college district pointed by the court Wlthin
NOTICE OF PUeUC I ALE No bidder may withdraw hit bid four months from the date of
On Jvly 5. 198-4 •I 1 00 Pm · it 1or a l*lod for lorty·flve(•5) days first issuance of letters as
Liberty Net10111I BWtk located 11 el1er the dll• set for the cpenlno provr·ded Ul Section 700 of One Pacific Plaza. 7777 Center Av· th9'90f
enue, Huntington S..C:h, California The Board ol Trust"' reMNeS the Probate Code of Cali-
926•7, Llberly National Bank. the the prlvtlege ol rejec;tl"O any anc:t 111 forrua. The time for filing
nolder or 25,650 sherN o1 stock In bids or to w1lve any lrregulatltlea or claims will not expU'e prior
Orange Bancorp, wlll Mii •• public lnlormalltles In any bid or 1n the to four months from the da•-euctk>n to th• highest bidder tor bidding """
c11n. ~yeble at the time of the .. 1e. Open July 10 t994 • 11 oo am of the heartng nouced above.
without warranty of tltle, In ac-lgned CORRELLAN J THOMP-YOU MA y EXAMINE cordaoce With Sec:uon 9fl04 of the SON
Uniform Commercial Code ot Cati-Exec: vice Chenoeflor the file kept b y the court. U
tornla. the ner..nafter deac:ribed Bullnesa Alalra you a re mterested m the es-
co111te<at, in order to pay the in-Coe11 Community Col~trict t.ate. you may serve upon the
debledneu evidenced by the prom-ubllll\ed Or•n"'"' Coast Pilot adm' · 11sory note dlted Mt y 15. 198• ••· une 25. July 2,"19&.-executor or 1m1trator, or
1-------------11J1•uted In tavor ol Liberty National M·S l upon the attorney for the ex-
ank. and to pay •" expenMI ecu tor or administrator, and
HAAaOA LAWN-MT. OLIY£
Monuary • Cemetery
Crematory
t625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
S40 -SSS•
P1EACE aAOTHE"I
HLL BROADWAY
MOATUAAY
1 tO Broadv.ay
Costa Mesa
6•2·9 150
BALTZ 8E"G~~Oh
&MITH I TUTHILL
WESTCUH CHAPEL ,,. E 17th SI
C.ost• Me\.l
646 ClJ 71
PACIF1C VIEW
MEMOAIAl PAAK
Cem•tery • Mor1uar~
ChaP4'1 • Cr•m•torv
J~ P1c1f1C v .... Or·~
Nf"wPOrt Beac 11
6'4 170(•
c
The collateral con1lst1 of the IOI· Ctle with the court wtth lowing stocir. in Orange Ban<:Ofp
Cert1hcate No No of Sher" P\B.IC NOTtCE proof of servtce, a written
529 •so request staling that you de~
5&5 595 FICTITIOUI llUI..... Sire special notice of the fil. eoo 750 NAME ITATEMIMT 990 3.660 The tollowtno !*tom era doing mg of an inventory and ap-
99 l t .ooo buS1nes• 81 praisement of estate assets or
992 1,000 RE/MAX OF COSTA MESA. 2~ of the peUllont or accounts
993 1.000 E 17th Street. Suite 111. Cottt mentioned 1n Section l200 994 t,000 Me18, Calll 92627
995 1.000 RE/MAX 01 Costa MeN. IMne. and 1200.5 of the California
996 1.000 Newport 8each, Inc: . ,_ Calltorn11 Probote Code
997 1.000 Corporaoon. 234 E 17th St. Sutt• Craw ford , Scott,
999 1.000 111. Costa Mesa. Caltl 92627 M cDaolel 1000 t,000 Thie bulll*I it oonducled by •
1001 1.000 COfporation Ht Broadway, Second Floor
1002 1.000 Craig w Battey. Pr-'Oenl Suta Moai(!at C A. to'91
1003 1.000 Thi• etattment wu flied •Ith the (!13> Ul·HH :gg: = !::l ~= Of Orange County on PubllJhed 0renr Coast
1311 UM PM71M Datly POot June l • 19, 25.
1312 135 Pvblllhed °'1119' eoe.1 Dally 1084
101• 1.tte PllOt June 11. 25 . .1u1y 2. e 1~.2 M·34 1599 1,1as _ ..
DATED June 19th, 1984
fPPORT. KASEfF' & MlfttotAN
FMll14
Published Oranoe Cout Dally
Piiot June 25. July 2. 9, 16. 198-4
PdlJC NOTICE
IUNJIOtt COURT OFC~
M ..
COUNTY CW ORANGI
In the Matter ot I.he
APPiication ot CHARl.ESJOSEPtiJACKS~
for Ct\lnge of Name
No. A 123591
OROEA TO SHOW CAUSE
FOR CHANGE OF NAME
CHARLES JOSEPH JACKSON
Ilea flied a pethlon in thla court tor
an 0<d« allowing petltloMr to
chanoe hla/her name from
CHARLES JOSEPH JACKSON to CHARLES JOSEPH BROWN •
IT IS HEREBY OROEReo thel ell
peraon1 lnt« .. led In Iha nuitter
ator ... ld ~ before Ihle court
in 0e9attmen1 No. 3 at 700 CMc:
Center Drive West, Santa Ana. Call·
fornll, on July 23, 1914, .i 9: 16
o"ci<><* AM , and then and ttlere
9'lOW cause. II any they have • why
said petition lor Gl'tange ol name
should not be granted
IT IS FURTHl!R ordered that •
copy ol 1hla order to 9'lOW UiUM be
pubHthed In Ille Orange Coast Dally
Pltot I MWIC>apef of general
c1rculat1on. publllMd In this county
11 leUI once a w-. lor four eon-
MGUOW weill prior 10 Iha dty of
.. Id helflng
Dated June 14, 19M
FRANK OOMliNICHINI
Judge of the
Supetlor Cour1
Publilhaa Orange Coast Delly Piiot
June 11. 26, July 2 9 198-4
MUC NOTICE
N011CI "'TRUITB'W U&.I ~ ....... 1.....,~ 1.a. .... c.-r1
UlllTCOM C MAW,_....,.~ C~
Anott • dlll'/ ....... T,...... ..,_,
IN fOllOt#lnG o..rltled &teed Of
tnnt wn.&.:11t1.L AT ltU8UC AUC. T~ ro n.e HIOHUT tlDOl"
'01' CAI" AND/0" TH CAIHll!!AS Oft Cl .. Tl,110
CHECKS SP!ClfllO IN CIVIL
COO€ 81CTI~ H2'h (p..,.. at
IN time of ... In leWM ""°""11 Of
tN Unlttd ...... , ....... tkle *"' lnt.-t con~ to Ind now ~
by 11 uno.t iilld oe.ct of T Nit In the ~ heleNIW o.cr-.d
TAUS TOA : uuua T l.
LINTHICUM. JUN L. 1.INTHICuM
8ENEFICIAAY flAST "O!ML
SAVING$ BANK Of' C~lfOAMA reoor~ eePtemb« 1, 1"3 • tnltr. No. 83..,02145 of Olticlel ,.... cores. In the~ of u. Fau def
Of O,M09County;MiddeedOf1'*
oeectlbM tM foffowinG ptopertyl
Pwc:.I 1 Unit 41, In dW City O' ~a.en. County Of Or .....
State of Cellfot'M. • ellOwn ~
dffCl'tMd In the conoominlUm plan
r.corded on Fet>tuaty 21, 1118 In
800lC 100•1. P-a-1a3e 10 11n
1nc1U1IY9. or ottlcial t*lC>tdt, In the
ortice of County~-ol Mid
County
Paroel 2· An unc:llvtdtd one twen-
ty·MWf\11\ (11271h) lnt.-t. ...
teMnt 1o common In~ ... 1n1.-
1n MO to the eommon.,.. or Lott•
end 6 of Tract 9851, In the Ctty of
NewpOrt 8eaeft. COVnty of QrMo.,
St1te of Ceutomla. et '* rnao ftfed
In 8ooll •se. PlOM t to 7 lnclUal'le, ml~•MOU• mape, In the offle9 Of
me County A««der to Mid coun-
ty •• such term ii deflntd In the
ar11e1e entitled · Definitions" ot the
Dectatatlon of Covenan1a. Con-
ditions. anc:I IWt~lonl dMCtiOed
in "Subjeci To" below (the "oec&AI·
atloo") Except ti.etrom ti! olt, oil rlattt•.
mlMt'ats. mlnen11 rlgtlte. natutal D ..
r101111 and other hydrocarbon• by what~ nam4 known that mey
be within "' und., the pwClll of lend Mreln&bOW deaeribed, together
with the perpetU91 r10f'll "' cfrillltlg, mlntog. exploring and ()pereilng 11•-'"' and llO<lnO In and ~ lrotn Mid ~ Of .ny
4
~ ~~~~ ~ ' lr.Ja ~ci-,..;u;o;; r.elnal>OYe cs.ortbed. oll or get
wells. tunnels and ah•ft• lhto.
through or acrou the tublurf.aa of
the land ,...,..nabowe deec:rlbed and
to bottom 8UCtt ~ or
dlraGliOMlty drl!Md ..... tunneta
and shaft• under end benMtfl or
b4tyond the ext.not llmltl IMNOI
and to redrlll, retunntl. equip. main-
tain. repalr,deepen and operate eny
IUdl wells or mlnel. wllhoUt, hOW-
lvef. the rtght to drill, mine. tlOfe,
a1tplore and opetate through ti.
surface of the upper 900 ._. of the
sublurlaoe of Iha land twtlnabOw
deacflbed, .. r...,..., by deed ,...
COfded In bo011 13$U. Paot IN. ot
official 1'9COrdl
Paroel 3: EaMment U a.cf\ .... ment 11 partlcularty Mt lorUI In the
article entftled "..-mantt" of the
declatlllOn und., Iha aaotlon hied•
•nos In such art lcte en\ltled • fol·
tows. ''Righi. and Dullea: UtMJtlea
Utllltlel and Ceble Tete¥1tlon".
"Suppo<1. S.nlem«it and En-
croachment". "tngr ... Egr ... and
Recreation.I Rights", and "Ex·
clutlw Reslfieted Common A,..
Easement"
Peroel • EaNment1 U IUCt'I easement• are parttc:ularly Ml fonh
en the ertlc:le entitled "Eaaeme!'ttl"
of the declaration of ~.
conditions and r•trtc1lonl In "aub-
, ject to:" (tl'te "Muter OectaratlOn")
und« the MCllOn heedlng(a) In NCtl
artlele enUtled u fonows: "Owners'
Righi. and OutiM, U1JlltlM and
Cable Teie'Mlon". "Suppor1 and
S.tti.tnent". and "Enctoechmant". "Community Facilltlea Euemef\I"
end "l)(aln~ over Community Fa-
cilities''. YOU ARE IN OEFAUl T UND£R A
DEEO OF TRUST DATED l /2t/U
UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTIOH TO
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. IT
MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE.
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLAHATIOH OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU. YOU
SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER
11 St. Tropez, NewpOft Belett.
CA 92682
"(If a 1ttM1 tldd,.... 0t common
designation Of Pf~ II lhowrl
abo-4. no warranty II 9fliW' • to "' comptet.,.. or oorrectneaa)." The
beneflClary under ... Deed of TNfii by r..aon of a tnMfl or ..._
fault In the ~ MCIKed
thereby, "--tofore ....,._, Met
dellwred to the un0ar•1ned • wnt·
ten Oeclaratlon of ~ Md 0.
mand tor s.ie. Md wrttten notice ol
breech and of elec11on to ... the ~ 10 ... Mid properiy 10
aattsty Mid ~tllgationl. and tfler• •ft• the underligned ca*CI Mid
notice of bteect'I and "' tMctlOn 10 be recOf'ded Metcfl 20, 1914 M
lnatr. No. 94-115381 of Oftlclal,....
COfdl In IN oftlce of tM Aecordef
ot Orange County:
Said Nie wilt be mede, tlut
wltl'IOut COYenant or warranty. 911· Pl' .. or Implied, regetdlnQ thle
pe>1M1"°4"I. or ~ to
pay Iha rernainlnO pMc:lpel IUnl ot
the note(•) MCUftd by Mid deed of
Truat. With ln1••t M In Mid note
p!'Ovtded. ed\tanoee, " sry, wndlf
the terma of Nkt Deed Of TNlt.
..... ct\MgM Ind~ •of tM
Tnnt• Md of the tn.1tta cir•t.O by
Mid Deed of Tnnt.
Monday, Jviy 2, 1914, II 2:30
p m at the Chapman A_,ue en-
trance to the CMc Cent• Bulldlng,
300 E.u1 ~ A"9 .. Or.,.,
CA
Al the time of the lnltlal P\lbl-catlOn or this notice, the totll
amount or the unpaid~ of IN
Ot>llOallOfl MCUf.0 by t"9 &boW 0.-ec.'i&ed deed OI tl'Ull and eetlmettd
COtta. eitpeneee. end~ II
12•5.•$9,94 TM toUll lndebt.O· '*' belno en •tlmat• °" wNch the
OC*\11\g bid II comovted may be
obt.ined by C:-.:s7 (71•) 907.c>He
Of (213) 827 the cs.y bef«• ,,. .....
Date-June •. t914
SEASIDE FINANCIAL COAPOA·
ATION u aald Trutt ... av T.O. Sl!AVICI! COMPANY, aoant
8y Cindy SctloOnoYef, Alliltllnt a.cntery
Of'9 City IMS w .... Orenge. CA..
929411 • ~211
Orange C09M -"°' June 11. 11. 2S.. , ... .....
·· Pacifi~
Travel
School
6l0 E: 1'7ch Sc .. $•..Ul\u,
c.. 9J70t ----
O~ANGE COUNTY'S ONLY Plt/V ATE
ACCREDfTED TRAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL
Amertcen Alrttne Sabt• ~'). T rllnlng
MORNING. AFTERNOON. EVENING Ct.ASSES
Cell (714) 543-9495
CANCELLATIO~ &
CORRECTIO~S :
Cann·llationi, and l'Orrt·1·tio11~ ma~
t,., marlt> on !'>a mt' d 1•adlint>!> a!'> aho' ...
Plt>a~t' a!>k for a 1·anc·t>llation
number wh t'n 1·ann·llin~ ~·our ad.
ERRORS:
# CAllEI m:
m1111CT• BUCH
A Private Sctiool
ErAP-haslzlng Ac_ademics
Carden Curriculum
Pre-School -Grade Eight
Open the year around
6:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M.
-..1441
721 Utica, Huntington Beach
Edith Hanlon, Director
Beautilul 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace,
beam ceilings. Xlnt financing. $420,000.
llYW llM lltnm W
Jetty & Bay view, newly decorated Mai
Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. $695,000.
Che<'k your ad dail~ and report •Ym m••
T 0 IL \. Panonuruc bay & ocean view, 4 Br, 4 Ba, errors immt>diatel~-. he A patio, pool home. Fee price $775,000.
PllOT a ssumes liabilil y for th.-first
incorrect insertion onh. N•la.A -MUlflllT
CLASSIFIED 642-5678 Ocean & Jetty views, marine room, 4 Br,
_____ 1!11!11 ... .-----•I 3 Ba, 3700 aq. ft., car parking. $1,285,000.
Realtors, 675-eooo
•UYIUI
LIE 1111& Liii
12% ft.ced Interest. 30 year-loan. 3 Bdrm hofne with
19-.ctou. family room and
Mpef1t• IMng room In
quiet ioc.tloo, Wal~ to
lhopplng center & Fectco.
$ 13&.~. Siiiy Shlpaey
GE 'S.'~' l'
f c L 0 F l R I
I I I I' J (
/
THE ~EAL
ESTATE RS
\
11WEITillllS
. IAYCIEIT
...
WATl flfRONT
HOMI~ a.c.
REAL ESTATE
911-1400
'
L
••
lllRK IHWOQIP
lPUPIOE•T ~
-3
S.aatr Hll ' It OfJict ltatal1 Hit luiana ltl1 Wut.. llM .... W ,.. SIM I I W ... ltlt ...... llM
....... 1906 .... ,. 2tol DESK SPACE, attr aifport l1at1l1 2tll -• =•:1•r..:.::•:==-..-;:.:.:::;: Lot -peraon, temafH
______ .....,...,.I Lfi)t' concto oYef'looklng area lnvstmt oriented RE NEWPORT PIER .,.. OUlllU DELI S*'&On wanted fOt Mlllal•U pref'd. Summe r aun,
/;, ~~lo, avail L~ Nlg ~~Pvt suite. gar offlc. Paul p~n. b~ SIOf9 or on FuH ~me, ·~ CM'•~. -' HMd ~ pofftn·s~~c~~~~~!ll~f\l
!;;\ •'i. ~ ... -5611 o 2 ~ pany. tlona. AP01Y ~· I I I 8314 22
Incl utlls &c2-2045 MALE ______ llWPllT IUOI Ct-ercial fOf Heavy equlpmtlnt for In P9f'90f'. Metro ·e.; at 225 E 17th St, CM c =~ Hrv c e-exp 1--------
,__, t9 .nare 1680 aq tt ground flOOf I tab Ull Gold Min.. c.rtlfled o. Wuh 2950 Hwt>ot 8IVd pr Of wtn train 1111. ........
Newport B .. ch deluxe. 3Br Stepa to beh. Avail unit In attrectl ..... well ta po1lt1. Wiii Mii llrat Costa MeM • ~~5--h~: right petlOI'\ 646-7310 CUSTOMERSVS REP
faoet ~d s'1501lps/ 8 Pvt 711S300/mo831-4568 maintained. modern 16040 Harbor. F.V. 100,000 ounoee at 1150 """1-1••1 HOUSEKEEPER, muat w:commun._.._
gar w · wk PP M/F lhr Big beaut ~k bldg. In quiet area nMt 1240 aq tt. behind apot Of Wiii r~y '" "" ead & It E llatl ....... ....._ __ ...,., 731-6689 bay condo. pool, Ju . ten-Hoag Hoapltal. Assigned Agent 541·5032 directly In gold Of good UllU r wr • ng ' 1119 '"' ...,...,,i.tng
PENNINSULA· nla 1330 Nancy &cS-5123 partclng. AIC, garagea Stiop/Stor.,.../Offc apace fl.Inda. Over 21 yra, full time. lllTIL IYllfm! = = :r· te::r'd wt3 llOCnt. LIDO ISLE avail. Vicky &c5--4800 or Up to 300 ;q-,,, , .. ,. Char1-(714) e73-S020 Wiii treln IM5-0032 Mra lntar .. ted In IMm orillf'I· · us .;ed°.fri SECRETARY: T'yplng, llte ~ i:. = P~~P::'t!le b~~hr~c:on: 645-3323 dya. C Mesa C-2 548·7249 MtrlfllH, ~~~l~:~~n Camp. ~ Produce ~~.~d 3
to d~a;.c'. ~7~p/~:--~:M . r MACH~tt,,e=.'J04d.r.
Agt 675-6161 551-3225 F N~WP~ C~T:R • CdM d1ll aul1•. AC, am~ f .D.'i tlll ~rnertt for a SHARP •lfflll Quality oriented IMne ol· HOUSEWlll:E/PERSONAL burt1er, lnaert•, ...,...,.,
Summer Rentals. 2 & 3 ProfaulonaJ male to share ~~50~775 e1J.s.1oul1• prkg, from 1226. 2855 I I WWWI follo'#lngT:::.~~: L.A. Corp. reqytr .. mature floe. MM973 anytime ASSISTANTS/DOG SIT· eon,=:=:=all·
Bdrma, S300 to S 1000 lovely 2 story northwda Cout Hwy. 675-e800 • .. ' '..s dr!Wf for Newport .,.. lllTIL/llTll &11111 TER Woman uaciu _.. ~ Hunttngton Bch ..
weakly On & oN lhe Irv pool hma $400 Incl OCAlrportarea..off~. Sttrllf HU lltftt1110t.IH. • Q..IO Executive. Irregular R.D.A preferred. AM'a ~~~~= 942-4"3
beaeh. Prime weeks still utlla. share ba 867-7252 225-1183 aq I. IOta of . S~ln 1at&2nd ::=· "'I houra. MlnlmYm 2 YMf'I only. 7:30 to noon. hOid-i~ ~Beech · · avail. Call today for belt prtcng, fanltor1all all utllS Extra large 1tor1ge 9P90M TO'a Since 1949 driving .. cn.uffaur or CM IN B er u . Ca II light. 0~7.:.a *8ning' Mlec:Uon. Roommate to ltlar• apart. Incl From S 1 per sq n. In aecura bldg nr Nwpt Robt. Sattler NH/CM f etffh lfmllar ••P«tano.. 759--0812 Uk fot Lori ahopplng "~ cor~ Rllm&wi
NB RMlty 675-1642 J:'~ 1: ~M·7;~~:c:n Mo-to-Mo. 557-7010 pier 24 Hr aocMI, avail RE BrOkw 8d RM/fora e ..... /a...n. (213) 937-1503. 1·5pm If...... r~. care fOt 2
Rm to rent. M/F, 3Br 1ba IOUI YllW ~~~'. 47&-oe88 M·F &c2·2171 5"5--0e11 fll....... Child Cat9 In your home. 96 ~N, x~t':.nta doga, etc. 5 daya, 40/tlr
Vacatit a hM Nr B~ Bay, prlv. UllUWOI WANTED-apace that 11 wp~N~Eoo~:.~:i~P • ............. .,. Famlly/homey environ-madlctll dental pen-' wtc, 1"'9-out, Uva-In whel"l--------lntala 2907 $280 ~ utll 645-2365. 1. tOO Sq. ft. upatalra. 412 dry. ci..n & can' be lock· No edtt! S10, lty. ..,. ............ ment. CM/NB 894-3854 lneurm. Send reewM owner ttave ta. Good I'll•
2 ad + a;; Bayfront. I bk Sgl Mom WI daughter 14 mN. Cout Hwy. s 1600. ed. Garage OK. IM4-4022 o.n:OO ... ~~r:.;; 11 .............. ....,, stou: PP.arkr 1'0 rSuperNl•Of..:. p1.-.o r5t :':r c!r. ~~ =~ outh Orano• County
to beach. boat dock needs same to snr/look 0 6'2•3998 ·-,, 311" /Clerk . -p ..... wrtt. to Ad ~~~~~~~~10:. $450/wtcly Sun.et Bch tor hm In COM area; or Office & Reception avaJI. ftllaHactata • ltlr Wut.. SIM WtwlH rew•• th Beach, CA 92e83 201, Dally Piiot P.O. knowledgubl• In
840-8208 Agenl. fem non-smkr to shr 4 5 O a q ft approx. SPIRITUAL READINGS *ULll 11111111* lllHttW fM4"8tt MIYIU 111111 BOX 1HO, Costa Meu Cunadata batch. Send
COM Bayport 2Bd 2b• $400/mo 1005 Brlo.o. Advlee In All Mattera & Oty aftenoe ·e.c wftlt 1 ... ,.....,, Jypl'St seo 10 1100 a day. o.nv.. 92e2e reaum•. Credit Unton COM._. Br. 2 ba. f\Jlly furn apt 6'0·7035 day CM 650-6533 CounMllng 1815 So El .. _~pie chbll·~ I ..-Ing amalt peckage.. Cell HSKPR/COOK. f-'0"" Trauurer, 31872 Coa1
hme TV. phone. 1>9tlo 2 720·0276 eves Patricia Camino Real. San Clem. """""1u SP'J n:_'-n ....,., ...., IHM RObert 534-2090 ..... •• ,,,_,,South • .......... Ca. blkl 10 bNch Avail Jun. Orange County Airport Llc'd 492•7296 w . ..,,7.,,pie commit· tUtlelt katfth 40. expar llve-ln w/Jdnt ~'iln ..._......
Oct S800 weekly -csap Share 2br Irv condo. PoOI. area new office bldg. cor-tee. Steve Crockett C~~1,';a~~N ELECTRONIC TECH. r9fl onty. Non-emokar.
Reaervatlons re fl d Jac. lrplc S.20 Cameron/ ner Bristol & Redhill from 5S.-7881/541-5453 , ... ~II well II I a r•""d"' ~rowing menu· 111111112/lar pr91 driv.r. Formal N.B.Jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
673-8349 0 /660·8866 N/553--0168 400 sq tt to 3350 sq tt SCRAM-LETS •-ti. a-••t/llO'Y ---...-1..a IH-_. ., I< .. ft ....... dWt·' TTL hm. Salary <JP«\, Lyn ...... --s 99 NET Wiii bulld to ----.-, lecturer o elec1ro-opta now --..... "'' ., 9 7 9. 8 3 O O or • v • 1 -~-~-Deluxe furn 28dr townhM Spectacular panoramic suit tenant Bkr co-op 1 per.on omc:e. Orglntu-............... ,., and la1« product•. haa tape & dlatc drlw. trouble e.c5.1981 HE DAILY P1LOT la now
utll pd Pool. spa, ale. view. all amenities, Prom-lllll t lll llll ANSWERS tlonal. word pro-.. llfflt4..a4w.Na an opportunity available lhoot to loweat compo---------~ting applleatlona m 1 c r o 9 6 3. 6 O 6 9 ontory Point 673-4209 IYIS • ceasing/typing & lite In our Marketing & Sa,.. nent level. Send re.ume HSKPR·llve-ln. fem w/2 for Olatt1ct Managen to
S 1300/mo • dep Summer F Kid Sitter shr Frolic. Ovule bkpg akllla nee. N-Smkaf. Jltne ua• ,...., Oepar1ment for• SHARP OMEGA. P.O. Box 485. glrla, own rm w/TV, pool, aupervlH newapapar
home on Bal Bay wtOad. PllHTIH OPO. IPAOE Kodak. Lactic Salary negotiable. Mall tr lf"1 II"'"' Clerk Typlat with the fol· SunMt BMch, CA 90742 apa. N.B. Orvr Lie. carrier.. Muat hew van,
IHtlll tt Rais Lv msg 673-1797 FALL OUT raume:o C & S. Box 712, ~twtH l tl0-1 hlO lowing quallflcatlona· Eacrow S100/wtc. 840~87 wagon Of r.:-up. Good
IL•r• "'tOI W/lem to there 2Br ant In IEWNllT GEITll Marina lieutenant com-L~una Bch. Callf. s2es2 ... IWM•r·frt·~· ••TWI HUSBAND & WIFE TEAM. aalary, m IHge allow-• • .... plalnad to • cadet that h,. Ad AUi t ••l·IO .,. tnlll to otter good product to anoa. oompeny be!Wftt• 2br 261 a.pl frpl. dafiwah. N B $250/mo .. 'It utll • Approx ~O 1q tt rtfle wu 10 dirty he could mlnll1ratl.... 1 ( PIMU GAL ' .. Hit llOllW Orange County auppllerL and bonua ~Y·
pool/spa reap & neat 646-0839 eves * 2 lge pvt otca with see llttl• green men In the A dltticult & rew.rdlng pos,-PLIAIL) •tattlltllt:.cH• I •1111 Commlaalon only High ~ In peraon at a.Ny
S275 .,., ut &c6-1132 Office ••••• 11 2 14 recept are• & supply rm barrel Calmly the cadet ltlon With • , .. , growing o•••••lt ....... Nnport Beech Company Mining po ... ,.... can 330 ~. = '* ad1acent to NB took the rllla and barked, high tech Company ltWltlrf •• Making Intelligent per-Joni, 673-5401 ... ,
2Br apt to share w/mal• 1300/up Cfpts drapes ale Athletic Club 0"Lu•tTI'! green man. FALL N 1· 1000 ••l•lt1/1.....a. ftllq aonabta Individual wno Meaa. Mondsy ttwu Fr1-S300 ... 'It utlls OP Nice 17301 Beach Huntington • $575 00 per month Corpor111·on aLllh can take charr· Salary International StMI Build-tt.y. No phot'9 cella. area 2•0-3157 aft 5 M·F Beaeh 842·2834 aa Ing Manufacturer eward-E.O.E.
•
Jiil 1110 •Spiritual Paychlc, Ad· ·-11111UTIYI •wuu .......... .,. open. 47Ml52 Ing c:IMlerahlp In .., .... ______ _
Areyouov«401ookfnglor 580 Sq tt 14'1t by 40. -· visor & Card RHd•'* -• PERSONNEL DEPT. #12 ~....1 al Exp'd ftOfal ~ner. Pit able areu aoon. <lr9at r liiiiiii/iiii"°-a gorgeoua plulh plaoe 10 Harbor-Baker Center Put, preaent & future. AllllTAIT 18235 Mt. Baldy Circle ...,. ''"" IC 2·3 d aya/wHk. Call profit potential In an ex-•P'W / ...
live? 1350 'h utlla, CAT acroas from Fedco Cm 675-2495 or 631-891M to Director of Mrktg for Fountain V•ll9Y. Ca. 92708 •It.We weft ltltftrr tM&-0093 pending lnduatry. Fot ap-Ired to WW. ...,_ O.K 645-7'80 avail now $625 Agt Prime area office apaoea lnveetment Firm In N. B. pllcalton call We~ tr=. paickllQlno ma·
Ba 619-726-9685 avail. •t S135-ai.65 sq Ltat A fH.. 3004 Sunarvl_...and EnuaJOppoltunlty W• Wiii reward the tuc· PL•llT (303)75 ... "200."'~t. ""'" o .. I ry. Mutt have lboa Pen. 1 block from ft Include all aervlces. ...-· • -·' .., E ~ ful ndld h ...,. ""' """' " beach. Female, yearly Conference room avall. Blk Cocker-mix puppy coordinating m.,..,,... °"' ca •t• wit • Needed lmmed. part time lltrong lllactrtcel bedt·
S275 mo 675-e916 Approx 850 lq tt. Com-Flexible tarma. 3355 Via found In the WMtc:llN responalblllt,_. raqulr• S..Uty competitive aalatY and an help doing ftOtal arrange-JUITOIS around. Up to t 10./hr
plalely furnished desks & Lido. Sta 206. 873-4156. area of NB &c6-643• lhonhand, HAIRSTYLIST excellent benafli. peck· manta. Muat haw dftvera PLUS oar llltow. PLUS Female ahare Laguna chairs 17830range Ave. 11rong~and &aJ9oneed MANICURIST ege, u well u •con--lie. & own vehicle. RESIO. CLEANING. c ompan y b•n ·
Beachhmew/vlew,1300, CM $600 Call Betty ·m-nma• FOUN01blkLAB,4moa, admln.baclil~round.Non Balboa Penn.675-1457 genial. non.-emoklng •t· tl75-&37e ... for Elin-WORKING SUPER· eftta.Contaot Mr. R ..
111 & laat 497-6007 644 2270 Of 645 9161 ••1195 on McFadden & Newland am<>k call Shelby m09phere -... .. b"--" • VISOR. Mon thN Fr1 ..... ...,. (71"\&••--•..t . . t MO FREE RENT 557--4131/IM2--4•8A C::;:, 553-0940 a..uty Ouallfled . candldatH ....,.,. ,...,., ...., pm dayt. 1 180 to '220 per """""• ""~•.,,...__
Flnon amkr. to ltlr 2br Wll llEO. llml Wllhon t..-m ...... full llllmLllT pi.u. Mild reeume °' flL&Jllm PAY wk. Minimum 1 yr upr. ~ Alm'f c M tvrn. *P1w/F27 yra. llWPlllT ILYI IT UY 5u7.e":~9.!.:ae~~,0r ~In .,...on between PAIT/llm W .. auper.1tc>t or OW!\ ofb. full ttme, Hft..
S300+ dep 5so..2o73 New Bldg, cen handle 2·3 FOUND •os •dverti511' • llllllllST 7:~11·30AM. Monday-0 11 I ~. ci.n cut l port BMch. ~ant
F/atir 3br 2ba wtaame people par office. $575-Won't lut. Ora1t1ca11y r• " " • 1••1n•.,. Friday · (NO PHONE !::rt~n ~~ ~1e~ bOndable, mutt tpMk rnuet M¥e A.H.« C.M.A.
Balboa laland S260 utll $675 Sec. MN. avail. duced S.60/ft, Bal Island ARE FREE Ass15' tant .. ... • CALLS: PLEASE) TIMES Ctroulatlon 0.-ftuent engtlah. N.I. In•-and 1 'I' .... lft o.e. Of
pdyrlyavl7/1 646-•336 Open9·5M-F &c2-3998 752-28A10f873-537' ln~r=: t!:P~~ ... ,.,. partmentlnoutdOOtto ::.e:cr l Wed PM. OYN.}(lntpey&benefl1a.
door n-p•..-•• ._.. 4tt-5741 an. a p.m.
C cation. Medical Ina. avail. ·-· ...-• --iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill1ii~MiU.Mti;7;&i"i..-all', We have an entry level Continuing education Otr,.ratltl program. QuarantHd .,. ..... /•a• -
poeltlon •vallabta f0t • program. Muat work full hourly wage pfUt com-.1111 I.LL TllAf ·4!=:111 ..... Hl·Hll dependable peraon time. 642-811M PERSONNEL DEPT. ,12 mlaalon. Koura; 4PM to Cafr'9r ..... , lntereated In advef11alng. 18235 Mt. Baldy Cltcle 9 p M. Tr a In Ing I 1 Adutt TMm. Earn To VP of m.tof btotteraga --~•:t.JMIHI SYDNEY
0MARR
Job will Include clerk llWM II.Ill Fountain Valkty.CA 92708 provided. Po1entlal to S400 mo. °' more. firm. Stoker age exp
duties and apac:lal pro-Prev. bllllng exper, typing urn $300. plua per weak. I ONLY 5 DAV WEEK ~·_....but ..... Hnotll. =·· Found tame parakMt ,,.., feet•. Good typing akllta & proof rMd=equtred Equal Opportunity For an Interview, cell: _,.,.. ....... -=~~5~rungton ~r,ta~u:~v.=':: f()( fltlme 1n aml Employer 957-2381ext.1204 S54-733Shm-5pm Hr. 7:~i~
opportunity. Send r.. oftoe Jn arden Grove GENERAL OFACE exp,..
••••••••••••• Found. Whit• dog with 1.0. auma °'call. ecroa from ~Shop-Cocktall waltr.., pit Mon· cept f0t amall angr otc In --.-U-,-..._----.....
Taesda", Jllllt H Newport BeaGh Animal Melinde Thecitaty ping Cntr/750-7 5. Tuaa daya. Experlenoed Npt. Typing, filing ana ..._.. Lootdng tor Ptlyatcel wor1I
, Shetter. 644 3656 '""'-....... ri•-.a Bookkeeper ualatant full 962-5541 phone aa1ery t medical Laguna leldt Need to tt8Y " llhapa. 24 ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19): You make discoveries, make trips, p l 3012 , .. ~' "" ti Pactfl vi.w M vacation and profit al\ar ~rno IOOl!cettona· otder clelt'I
rcceivccallsandmessagcs-statusquo1sshakenandyouarealtveand -;";';'8;1;;'iiiiiiiiii;;;;; Cost:~:.~~1~262e o~i Par~ Nawp-:;t A""'~··~ Ing plan. 1 girl of~ WAIT"ES81WAfTER . ~:', ooWteoua. ~~
kicking. Persons who previously were indifferent will now be cager for • (714) 642--4321 ext. 302 Beech ~4-2700 8;;:ny·a'f::auranf"5~ 9r5..004o. <"a~~~=·) Starving Acton Moving
your o pinions and semces. Leo. Aquarius nauvcs figure prominently. CIRCUS Alk f()( Pat Macy Aveni do Pico San < llllUL 1ff101 (lnduetriout-.ttractlw) Co. a.5:30• U0-1310
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Plan for profit 1s practically handed IOllUS Appt. S.tt.,. s-e llOO/M BOOKKEEPER Newport Clement•. 492·2382 Typing. order entry. good 1 FRY COOK lllnw w .....
you on silver platter You'll learn how to earn more. you'll locate items guar. + comm Good Beach Real Estate lnveat· Giii with figure• for local (fult tlrM nlgMa) PIT Food p19p derka.
that had been Jost. missing or stolen. Tumng, mtu1uon are on target -111 I Ullll ILYI phone vote.. Wiii train. ment company_., full· ecreen printing company. Apply Jolfy Rooet. 400 1231 N PCH ~ 8ch
recent purchase of lu:rnr) Item or an object increases in value. flWI• .,_ No lelllng. Cail anytime! charge bookkeeper/Jr To run kitchen of new ap. Call Bettye, 540-2&50 South Co Ht Hwy, --•• • iiiiiil-
GEMINI (M ., 20 L fi ,.,. 751-2382 accountant . hp'd gettlhouMlnHuntlngton L.agunaBMctl IRUl-a} -I -June ): unar cycle high. be con tdent. take 11M111 w1comput...u.c:tacoount-&each. Muat b• ex-lllllAL lff• EXpattafioe Pfefel•ed 96
chance on your own ab1ht1es and be wtlhng to pioneer a pro1ect. Focus 11 l&UI 10,. ATTENOENT-room & kit Ing aya\ema preferred. perlencad. 675-3158 PIT Entry LaYel Wor1clng w t .... K~'!!~~ flt bed I NF. ~Ion
on travel. clash of ideas. contacts 1hat stimulate creauvc process. •r · prlv. In exchange tor oc-Send retuma to P.O. Into FIT poaltlon. Typing, an.., ................. training PfOWted medl-
Sagntarius and another Gemini play significant roles. caslonal Mlp. 645-2357 BOX 8708-125. Newpon OlllTll PtnH/f... cleflcal dutlea, 8:~ to °' p/t. C.il 7u-2794 eat & derltal ~
CANCER (June 21 -J UI} 22): Details of puzzle unravel; pieces fall COUPLES SWING PARTY h.ch, C• 92658-1708. '11une Art·A~Falr 3pm. Ktllty 751-1308 L E G A L ~ P.•rlt• Su~lot.
into place and answers are found by looking behind scenes. Focus also Wide World 821-e111 Automotive 1111.IDPD < 14)24()..3029 Hotel SECTYIRECEPTIONl9T 1445 Supetlor, Npt. acn.
on hospitals. clubs. institutions -you'll be given access to research _c_on_ven_t_ton __ . L_•_s_v_ao_a_•_ 10 .!!?'~ ~~ de-PIT, 18-25 hra par wk. UTA llllJ IPIUTll lWI lllTllllU \~::i::-~~ =: ...
material and provided with confidential data. ESOOITS/lllELI par1ment. Must be Oood Newport Beach law firm. Eaperlenoe raquir.ct. CPA Hall Wetd proc.Mlng helpful. Cert. Nur•• AldH·CC
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Populanty surges upwards -offers are Ootcall ONLY 835-9199 with number• Applicant Mutt have law offlct firm rlMI o.c. altport. Full & Part time. s.rv1ca Salary commenaurat• Conv. Hoep. 3:30-7;30.
received. talents arc recognized. social acuvities increase and romance muat be • hwd worker •icpar. Reta req'd. Cell 752"'°274 and full bat poettona. w/expw. Non..motler. 14:30. S-11:30. 1 t-7am
IS fatured. Lunar pos1t1on accents powers of persuasion. ab1hty to Wtn REWARD for Information and be able to type. 5 714--476-1976 . DECORATE INTERIORS SURF a SANO HOTEL. 853-2011 PIT FIT . ...., COtta
fncnds and fiulfill asp1rat1ons V1roo, c: ....... ttanus ._ .... ons play key roles. leading to arraat and daya/wHk. Exoellant lllTlllf •H •a Color/dnJgn. PIT. to L:iu;:eo S.ach. Marla. LEG SECTY·PIT f« ado Meee F~~c.a
• 11 o.Xl6' -·" conviction 01 • blond !ring• t>eneflta and work· SALARY-PlUS~O<>tng 11111. Wlh tram. 775-5447 4 EOE pl'actlttoner. Min 1 yr•· Mon-R1 ~. 549' 1 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Focus on domcsuc adjustment, career. ~~redJu':~m~,=~ ing oondltlona. Salary & enthu.iaatlc ...... per. ~II. M1JM t.e mt ofliCi Hla
amb1uons. ab1ht> to win your way throujh diplomacy. Surpnse gift 1s 1 ...... Hiii commenaurat• with ••· aon/atore model with
1
•1 ,.1 ~ , proofr19dlnn & ... nMded FIT VDhc>ne
acts boost and funding will be made available. dalil br van. Wanted for polntment. Aak f« Tina. our ax~ women't "-'"-to: 2212 °""°"' min, 90me ecattno. ben-
on the way, you'll find ways of beautifying home and prden. Career =·t>t;";.': dJ.,:••. perlenoe. can for ap-fuhlon flair needed for 11 y I 114& exs>. :...,Y. perlONllty, 44 wpm
L18RA (Sept. 23-0ct 22): What seems far away is actually closer auto van d a 111m1 uaiUUM.u. daalgner boutique. ti. E. lnflne, C.12111 ..... 146-4111.
than miaht be imagined. Accccnt on communication, travel. education 7141643•8211 Alan Coat• M... :r~~;.~~~11:.9 ':::: I •1 Pilat :~to~k,n~ah8~b~~~i~~~JP~!c~~~rra~~!~iJ:schu,~erc d~~~~~':~~~ of Fem•,_ ~~~ooet• and e~:i~~.~R P~lma:: =:::,~L:,A. UJ I UT IRTIST . II J .................. ·· .... .
SCORPI (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You learn secrets. mystcnes arc Etcorta. (2l3) e&e-191M C.M. IM2·2238 CARPENTER'S HEJPER
solved, aura of aJamour and mtnaue dominates tcenano. By diging TOP NEWPORT HARBOR .: •
dttp, you locate missma amcte and you learn more about h.idden tt:.n\Ai ... pret. Model• and Have 1011 rM d tod•f • SHIPYARD. Salary open PART T'IE
resources It is possible for you to strike it rich! EM10rt• (213)8M-1964 CIUllfi.d Ada? If not, ExPtf. on1y AP9tY In per· Orange C.ounty dally newspaper hM I
SAGITTAJUUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21): Break from past procedures laliana O,r. 4 14 you•,. ~ the *' eon. 223 21•' St. Nft-an open1na for a quick layout al1ill
1nd1cated-acccnt on partncnh1p. pubhaty.contratts. marital status. IPllliLifm blf'OelN"' '°""' port a.ct'I Candidate -mwt be able to wock wen •·
You·n be provided o ffer which n:qu1res review. Tcnns are .. muddled." ,... ... IT lllT wlth aa1ee peo~ J'*1t daily dad· .
Reahzc this. consult expeBt who understands lepJ tecbn1calitics. Contact• lnflutntlala 11--. n -t-= ~ caibera .: CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. ~9): New opponunit1es art present -...,.-~ "'
know 11. refuse to be disoou ... fitd bv what appears to be a setback. Ketp phone room " •vallable DEPT l"Mdy art. typlb:lna, the capability
I · h h 1 ..a d I "" I · ~~Inf!!'"'• '!~''.!!.vlod•Y ' to -.... k up lavou•· ~~ ~ """"-a r'C'$O ut1ons con~nung H 1 • '""•'1 ins mcdtCI ""'cn11 appoint· "'''"' "' .. ..,., ... -.. -.. ..., w .LUI" r~-·
mcn1s. focus also on employment, people who rely upon you and pc11. Juty/Augutt, dut to tht Southern Camornfa dally newt-mun Addidanal pl'Ojlctll may lnclude
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Emotions dominate IOJJc -focus .... iy compteuon of over paper needl experienced desk flyers, bC"OchW'elt ma~ and _. ax-·
on compulsiveness. romance and pan1on Drama is featured. you'll be ~:i=::n-c~~~ peraon with good layout and mtatlan vlluaJa, 1-2 yean ~
alen. awatt. alive and rc-c1p1cnt of unusual aift C ancer, Capncom and wtwe 1n South«n Callf h'8dllne wrltrng lkllfl. Some ..,.. newspaper preferred. Send r.un.
another Aquarian play key roles. Follow through on 1nit11I L.elrn mQ(t abOut your featu re wrtt•JVI alto ,_,ulred. to: 1m~ions. ProtOKt.llCMllomtO tor ~,. ~ -------------~ ~~----' l'Feo. 19-Marth 20) You'll have more workana room. • flat ,., •• 111 "' COmpeflt V9 aalary and ben· ORA
you'IJ bt aivtti areattr latitude. views Will be v1nd1cattd and you"ll be '"""·~lflO .. ~ •flt.I. EOE Reply ad '"°°· CIO
mottaccureuresult. Focuul~oncommun1cat1on.1ccelcra1cdsoctal :o:: the:;' Otangt Cout-.t>ally PtlOt, P.O.
1ctavuy and aratcr awarcnt of "body imaat .. Sq.ittanan fiJurts Furtl* into c:.ii •tay Box 1580, Coata M... CA.
promin ntly C71•> 63f.2032 Mon.Fri 92828.
I
Motor Route A•allabl
ewpon BeMll area, liaree
houn per a.;. Ean approx.
l600 ~r month. eau 11 tOO
to 4200 PM. A1k for Bna
£1111tey.
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUULE
ACROSS
14
Mtr,.,,, ...... ...,
...
BRm'l'OL AT IDDfOIR
1M SA1fTA ANA
Ml·OllO
PAMILY SINC! '&3.
1
I
i
. . . . .
I . . . .
..
:J
Ulti111._tc Experience
Experience the excitement of finding just what you're
looking for-in classified. It's .the ult~~e!
• II
Clas.sit ied
SANT A"_~;. •
ANA 0~
.~<f'
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
Ml E. least hJ., ............
lll-OllO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 COMMONWEAL TH
VOLKSWAGEN
"Family Since '53
FOUNTAIN
-' VALLEY
WARNER O\EGO
·~
. ~· a: < r
EDINGER
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Service, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts.
Compebtlve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
2MO ..,._, IW., lnta •11
U1 .. 11trMl-l211
SOUTH COUNTY
YOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 BMch Blvd., Huntington BeKh
(714) 142-2000
Brlatol et Edinger In S•nta An• @ 548-cmG
0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA • RAY FLADEBOE
VOLKSWAGEN
~-·----#JIJate" ....... •., lnllt
In The lrvlne Auto Center
#11 We l11ter •., lnt1t
In TheliVtne Auto Center
• 830-7800
Complete Sales, Service & Leasing
•
U0-7300
Or~ Co11ntys "'-tst Volbwllfll Dtlltr
Comp/lte SMts. ~~"' & LNS1nt
IRVINE
LAGUNA
HILLS
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET
H211arMrlh4.,0estaltu
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales• Service• Leasing
541-1211 S,.aal Pw Ult 541-1411
MONDAY-FRIDAY 1:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
8 STADIUM PONTIAC
/·
W•',.. New -We 're Dea/Ing
Across from the Be A on KateHa just West
of the (57) Or1n1t freeway
Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises
714/315-1111
9 BILL YATES
l
MISSION
VIEJO
SAN
JUAN
CAPISTRANO
0 BAUER MOTORS
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Comptete AutomotNe Need•
SALE$ • SERVlCE • I.EASING F1ne s.lectton of Qullllty ,Uled Vettk:tel
#1 BUICK DEALER IN <>AA.NOE COUNTY
2121 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 171-2500
0 RAY FLADEBOE
/
l
..
I~
igg~r aircraft 'l~kely'at JW
Big Boeing 757 , ·767 Jet liners expected
in next five years , staff report indicates
~ By JERRY BIRSCB John W~yne Airi>on is likely. are set oe-..._.,,......, . once apm to wrestle with the thorny
.Oranae County supervisors, armed issue of airport expansion.
with a new staff report that says the . Although the report set.s no specific
introductio!" of biaef jet aircraft ~t ~metable.-it ays-the count)t ahou.ld
Coast
An 180-mph crash kills a
boater at Irvine Lake./ A3
We asked coast folks
their opinion of the Rew
Immigration law .J A3
Nation
Sen. Edward Kennedy
ends sllence. endorses
Walt~ Mondale as
Democratic presldenttal
nominee.JM
First flight for space shut-
tle craft Discovery Is
scuttled moments before
takeoff.JM
World
New NATO chief says
Europe nations need to
reassure U.S. they'll hold
up thefr end In defense
spending./ M ·
An earthquake measur-
ing 5 on the Richter scale
rattles parts of Japan./ M
Legends are given new
dlmen~lon In "Second
Western States Exhi-
bition" at Laguna Beach
Museum of Art.JB1
The.~ret to success of
many top business ex-
ecutives might be the
Rover. Fido or Kitty In
their chlldhood.JB1
Sports
Ruth Wysocki of El Toro
shocks favored Mary
Decker In the women's
1,500 meters at the Olym-
pic track and field trials In
Los Angeles.C1
The Angels let a game
literally slip away against
Kansas City, 3-2. and visit
Texas next./C1
Former National Hockey
League president
Clarence Campbell dies
at the age of 78.JC2
:<<•:«<«<-:< .. "««~«~::.
Entertainment
You can see "The Fantas-
tlcks" at two different
theaters on the Orange
Coast this weekend./83
Baaineu
'Sylvia Porter says
bankruptcy Is not always
to beat answer to
flnanclal lnaolvency ./85.
ex~ lO ICC airlm~ Ori;na Weer Santa Ana. ..I doft't oow bow on one band
Boeint?S7and ?6?aircraftinandout ' The Boe1n1 1S7 is a twin ename they can talk about unaUcr. new
of the lllJ)Of1 !'lthin five years. 186-teat plane and the 8Qeinl767 is a tecfuloloSY aircraft and at \he same
. The su~sors meet Tueiday. to twin eflllne 216-teat pltne. Both are timetalkabbut 7S7sand 7~7sthatare ~scuu a revtlCd .Plan for al.loCanna considerably 1arJer than the l SO-teat Jaraer Ud noisier aiiplaaes," •id fliab~ at the IU"J)Or1 as well as McDonnell OouaW MD-80 -the 8arba1a Lichmaii. director of the
tentauve pla~s for ~tu.re fl'Owth. most common commercial aircraft at A!rP<>rt Wortina Group, a coalition ~~tyudvtsory~rtcom-the airport now. of NewpOit Beach homeowner u-
m1wo.n Will ~kle th~ same lSI~ at News that the county expects to sec sociations fi&bti.oa ~ txpansion.
a special meeuna toru~~ at 7_m ~ ~larlerauplanescameasasurpri.se The ucnd ·bY ,airlines us.ina tM
county Hall of Adttumstrauon m to the. foes of airpon exDUsioo.---aitpon has · been to buy amauer.
Mystery veils
'resignation'.
of HB principal
BJ ROBEBT BARXER ................
Ten days aao. Marina Hilb School
Principal Dr. Paul Beraer-summoned
bis S1aff' of about 170 teachen to the
scbooJ cafeteria OD the last day Of
IChool and announced bis retirement
The announcement came as a
bombsbeU, teacher repre1entatives
said. And it was pnn!ina, too
because they said they believed
Berger. who was hdd in biab esteem, was being forced OUl
He told the teachers be was liven a
list of options by Supt. Jake Abbott,
and the most attrac:tive was re~
ment that will take effect Sept. 7.
Bcraer called them off.
Instead of diminisbjne tbe coe-
troveny a~ to be beari• • Parent.sof'Marina students are..._.._
eniDf to shoW up in force .. tmool
distnct beadquuten Tuc.:lay ..._
Hun · n Beach Union Hilla Sch~'s boetd Oftnlllecl~
slated to appoint Jeannine Luc:as, ..
associate princi,pel at Huntialloe
Beach Hiab School and "* "' Assisunt Soperintent Larry l..ucu. 1o
replace Beraer.
Parent representatives uy they
hope thcy1J ~ officials IO chanae their minds and retain Bers:r.
It's been learned that eaiats beld a
stormy hearin& with SUpl;· Abbott
Thursday at the tcbooL
And PeaY Busher, ;;::;.o1ae ~... /AS)
UCI prof .asks CIA
for files on Lennon
BJ ANDREA ADELSON ..............
A UC lmnc profcilor asked the
CIA ball ill docwQmt1·00 fonntt
lmde John Lamon Saturday after a
preriously tecft1 memo revealed lhe
-.ency monitored the Jar.e rock .U.s
anti-Vietnam war activities in 1972. Accordi.na to Jon Weiner, the
heavily censored memo. amona
documents be obtained under the
-Freedom 41' lnformatioo Act, ahoWI
the IFDCY asked the fBJ to plber
information on whether the British
superstar would participate in anti-
Vietnam war protests at the 1972
Republican National Convention.
The documents were turned over
in mid-May to Wiener. who madt
them public Friday and filed the
~uest the next day.
"The government bu consistently
claimed that Lennon'sactivitics were
somehow relevant to national secur-
ity considerations, .. Wiener. 39, said.
.. We maintain that nothi.na Lennon
did, planned to do or talked about
doin&, in any way threatened the
national secunty of the U nited States.
"At most. it threatened the reelec-
tion of President Nixon. .. be said.
••But there's no lepl reason for the
(Pleue eee Llt1'll01'/ A2) Jobn Lennon
Youths fear death
in nuke holocaust
NEWARK. NJ. (AP) -About
half of approximately 5.500 hl&h
school students surveyed believe they
are likely to die in a nuclear holocaust. while 75~nt bcbevc a nuclear wa r
is preventable. a stale offiaal says.
Overall. .. It became clear that the}
are very confused about the issue:·
said Dr. Donald B. Louna, ctwnnan
of the New Jersey Medical School's
department ofprevenbve medJCtnc
.. They don't know who to bcheve.
The Pentaaon will show a &lossy
promotional movie and they'll be-
lieve that. The next speaker will say
that's all wrona. and they'll bcbeve
that. They're rcspondina to who
spoke last and who is most char-
1smanc," Louria said Sunday.
HaJf of the tcieJHIC1"5 questioned
said they were likely or t0mewbat
I tkely to perish in a nuclear boJocaust,
said Louna, addina that sitls ~
more pessimistic that boys.
··~bout two years llO. • bepn to
be concerned about the peiuptioas of youna people in rep.rd ·to tbe arms
race and tbc&r future," Louria said.
''What we 'Were scared of wu tbe
possibility that~ people would
lose faith in the f\iturc; and dlat we
would become a nOcHDdiorill • Clcty, one 1n whic.b tbey do not fed
they can handle tbeit owa problc m and make thiop beuer, .. be added,. S4
A3
85
A4
CM
M '
C7
C-4
Most on Coast working in Orange Co~nfy
81-2
82 oe
82
85 'M
·Al
81
A3
C-4 CN ae
82
83
A2
A4
counterpu'tl io OttiCT coUlal com-
munities. Mort tbu 12 percent of the
1 o.236 waee earners the (ltnsas bu-
reau counted 1n t.aauna Wd they
worked an the county. Only 7 . ..,
pen:enl said tbtir workplace was out
of tbe county.
Besides thole Lacuna resideD who Watt in the An Colony. abOUt
1,000 IJllNMM ha Ye jobs in Newpo1t
ee.ch, ~ to the census fia-
JEFF •••
Focus ON THE NH\S
wa. eltcwbere in LA. C'o-..nt and more
AmOQI l.Aauna residents who~ \haA a 120 rtpontd the&r jObs ~ =l W) wortcd cltcWhcte than locate:d in llivtnide. n Di or
County. 100 worked in Los _ San Bernardino counli
Ante 1"6 wof\ed 1n tona Beach. '£i&bt out of 10 Irvine• earncn ~ . wd t~y ~re employed alsio work in~ County. aot'ord· ..
I
A Costa Me11 woman who was
seriously injured ln a Car accident
earlier this month died Saturday
ni&bt 11 Fountain Valley Community
H?_l:filal. an Oranac County cor-
oner 1 deputy uid.
Marpret Dill, ~I. apparonOy •'If·
fercd a heart attack 11 lhe wbeeloo the
afternoon of June 11 ,jusl before &he drove her ear into a po1con PlaoenU.
Avenue just north ot..&tancia Heh
School,
She suffeted massive he.ad and abdominal il\lurict in the crash arul
bad remained in the hospital in
critical condition since the accident
C>CC\lmXI.
Dill'• puseftlM', her sister Winona
Thtry. S7~ remained in ttriou.s con-dition at fountain VaJley hospital
today.
The women lived toacthcr in Cos IA Mesa. C.uae of death hat noc yet been
dctennincd.. lhc dcputY. said. Funeral
&rTan&emcnts an: pcndlna.
Christina brings loµsy weather
By die ANoc&a~ Preu
Rain and wind from Hurricane
Christina ~ed. ·an otherwiae fine beach day Swiday, andlc:ls thaiilitlf a
million people turned out at Southern
California beaches, lifeguards said.
Rain meas~ O.Ol of an i~h in
downtown Los Angeles. and Nauonal
Wc:athcr Service mctcorolo&ist
CONTINUED STORIES
Dieter Crowley said similar weather
coulcJ pctsill ttirough Tuesday,
thanks lo Christina.
_ ... Jt rained like heck here and at San
Pedro,·· Hermosa Beach lifeiuard
Herb Thacker said, estimating the
crowd at only 7S,000.
· "We'n: gomg to still be under the
influence of Christina, .. trowley said.
"It's shooting a lot of moisture up our
BERGER RESIGNATION ..•
From Al
way."
He said there will remain "a chance
of light showers. mainly in the
afternoon and evenina hours, m&.tly
alona the foothills.,, deserts and higher
elevations" throuih Tuesday.
The rain didn't get as far nonh as
Santa Monica. Zuma or Malibu.
''It was a nice beach day," lifeguard
Jim Jacobson said at Zuma.
Marina School Site Council which except to aay he believes that the School Site Council President
makes recommendations to the prin-newspaper is not a proper forurri for Busher said about 750 8xl l·inch
ci pal, said members of the audience the controversy. Observers say, how-Oien have been prepared fordistribu-
o( about 75 people bec.ame quite ever, thit he could probably call off tion in the neighborhoods of in the
hostile when Abbott declined to the protests if he wished. He would west Huntinaton Beach, reportin1
elaborate. acknowledged today only that his that there's a controveny surround-,~bbott has said he present~ n:tircment will become effective in ing the "sudden removal" and an-
Berger a list or options earlier in the September. noucning that students. parenu and
year and the decision to -retiR: was '.' 5 . . te~chers arc hopbina tothencouraae his
Berger's alone. But Abbott asserted Trustee hem Baum said today reinstatement "Ll e .
the issue involved a ~~..n...n~ m~_thaJ Be er ha , . '"""'-.. w: s;--~ , ":·~!C;""'1"!l~e ~ci~~~J:!::"ey ni~t's ~ ~ecti~~ t~ retire.~· s~~0:id~e .. 4~~gv~ bi~1a~~
tion of returning to Marina, clear the air or innuendoes and WC don't know why they're kicking
rumors concerning the personnel him out He's a nice, kind man who·
1. I
I
j
'
I ~
.
I
~,
Berger has declined to comment shift. runs a good school."
LENNON CIA FILE SOUGHT •••
From Al •'
CIA to be involved in protcctin&
Nixon from thn:ats to his reel~
tio n .... I don't sec why the CIA should
have anything to do with political
protests 1n this country,"
A Political researcher, Weiner is the
author of "Come T"'ther: John
Lennon in His Time,' a Random
House book that should be released
today. He said the publishing house
has agreed to a second edition with
inserts about the newly released
documents.
CIA spokeswoman Patti Volz de-
clined specific comment on the
documents. but noted that in the
mid-1970s the Senate Select Commit-
tee on Intelligence Activities reported
that thr CIA had been "involved in
some domestic1tctivities at the behest
of thr President.··
"It was inappropriate, and from
that came several rules and regu-
lations curtailing the agency's ac-
tivities." she said Friday.
An accompanying affidavit to thr
documents, signed by CIA Infor-
mation Review Officer Louis J.
Dube, ack.nowledgccl that the agency
obtained infonnation appearing in
the documents. all of which have been
censored.
BIGGER JETS SEEN .••
From Al
problem for the airport, according to
the counly staff report. The county
had planned to allow airlines to trade
one flight of their noisier plailes for
three llights or the new. quieter
airplanes like the BAe 146 and the
7J7.JOO.
With the county planning to ex-
pand the number of average daily
departures early next year to SS rrom
its current level or 41 . a three-for-one
tradcout would create a virtual grid-
lock at lhe airport, the report says.
That plan would have allowed fOr a
maximum of 165 flights per day.
The cxistina facilities arc not large
enoua.h and the number of fliahts
shoufd be cut to about 70 -or a tive-
ror-four tradeoul.
The staff report says that is a more
realistic number to use while a nc;w
airpon terminal is under constrUc-
tion.
The county hopes to have a much
larger terminal completed in about
five years.
Nation.ii security justified main~
tainina the confidentiality of material
that was blacked out, Dube wrote.
"The affidavit is a· much more
satisfactory explanation of why" only
censored documents were released,
Weiner said. But because it's unclear
whether the CIA is withholding
further information. the history
professor said he filed a rcques1 under
the Freedom of Information Act for
all CIA documents rt lated to Lennon.
Lennon's song "Give Peace a
Chance" gave the anti-war m.ove-
ment its anthem. He "is an important
figure to a whole generation and his
battle with the Ni.xon administration
is sort of a forgot ton chapter," Weiner
said.
The professor obtained copies of
fi ve documents from FBI files, in-
cluding one that originated with the
C IA. The FBI referrtd the documents
10 the CIA ror rrview before rel~sing
them.
Weiner is awaiting word this week
on a coun ordered explanation from
the FBI on why they too censored
Lennon documents. The FBI su~
milted its reasons· for withholding
two-thirds ofa 281-page file in a brief
to a federal coun last week.
His attorneys hope to schedule a
conrerenc.c with the federal judge and
Justice Department attorneys this
week. Weiner said.
COUNTY EMPLOYMENT SURVEY •••
From Al
About 82 percent of Costa Mesa's
45.476 wage earners reported they
work in Orange County with Costa
Mesa, Newport Beach and Santa Ana
as the employment leaders. More
than 6,500 Costa Mcsans n:port for
work in Newport Beach each work-
day. according to the census data.
About 7 percent of the city's
residents travel out of the county for
employment. with 80 1 venturing to
the city of Los Angeles and 1.900 to
destinations elsewhere i'n sprawling
Los Angeles County. About 80
workers commute to San Diego
County, 120 to San Bernardino
County and 65 to Riverside County.
Sevent y-eight percent of Ne~rt
Beach residents reported their Jobs
were in Orange County compared to
almost 12 percent of city wage earners
who told census takers they commute
to other counties for their jobs.
Among the 33.7 32 wage earners
tallied by census takes. 11.032 re·
ported their jobs are in Newport.
3.420 reported work.tng in nearby
Costa Mesa and 2.280 said they were
employed in Santa Ana.
Newpon commuters to the city of
Los Angel~ number 1.057 and more
than 2,000 residents said they drive
elsewhere to work in Los Angeles
County.
San Diego County draws only 10
Newport residents each workday but
Riverside and San Bernardino coun-
ties are workday destinations for 261
residents.
Falling below the county median
for in-county employment. 68 per-
cent of Fountain Valley's 27,275
wage~ming residents said their
workplace is in Orange County. Just
over 23 percent 1ndicatccl they com-
mute to other counties for employ-
ment.
More than 3.100 Fountain Valley
residents said their ~obs arc in
Huntington Beach whale 2,477 rc-
poned working in Santa Ana.
The city of Los Angeles' population
is swelled by 1.275 Fountain Valley
residents who commute north each
workday morning and again south
each evening. according to the census
data. Mon: than 4, 700other Fountain
Valley residents also commute to jobs
in Los Angeles County,
San Diego apparently holds no
attraction for city residents. but both
Rivetside and San Bernardino coun-
ties are worksites ror about 150
Fountain Valley residents.
Finally, fully 26 percent of Hunt-
ington Beach's 87,998 residents rc-
pon.ed they work outside of Orange
County, the highest percentage of any
Orange Coast city. Sli&htly over 64
percent of Huntington Beach wage-
eamen sai~they arc employed in
their home county.
Among county cities, Huntington
Beach employs 19,855 n:sidents
while another S,4S I arc employed in
Santa -Ana, S,229 in Costa Mesa and
4,512 in Newport Beach, the 1980
census revealed.
More than 4,800 Huntington
Beach residents commute to the city
or Los Angeles each workday joinin1
11 ,048 worken employed elsewhere
in Los Angeles County. Some 4,887
city residents said they work in Long
Beach. About 150 Huntington Beach
wqe earnen commute south to San ·
Diego County, 224 work in Rivenide
Co~nty and 238 in San Bernardino
County.
Mean travel time to work in
minutes for Orange Coast residents:
Costa Mesa. 19.9: Fountain Valley,
26; Huntington Beach, 27.l ; Irvine,
23.~ Laauna Beach, 24: Newport
Beach, 2!"; County average, 23.6.
Just Call
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Tell us w•at's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
CllNJDow_,
Editor and Asttstan1
to the Publtsher -"=""-=="---------
,..,....,.earuo .. _ --L-~ -
• 11 L ,
Clrcu .. tkHI 714/M2~ c ... 11n.c1 edvert111ng 11•1Ma-a11
AH other depwtment1 l42~1
MAIN OFFICE
330 Well &.J SI CO.I• .,_ C4
---&po IMO Cau• ..... CA ·~
j . •
•
WlA IHlk '
Hot time under coastal skies
Tides
TOO.r.Y ll:Mp,m
7:1$ p.m
Temps
Gimme a break
.. u '° H ,. .. .. ..
" " .. .. " .. " " " .. ,, $6
" " 17 17 ,,__ .. .. .. .. " " .. " .. .. " .. .. " .. .. " 71 ,., .... .. "
..... _ " .. -· " .. -.. .. = " ,.
" " ~ ... $ H " .. -·· " " -" ,. -" .. ..._..., " " L•V~ " " t:rN~r -" .. .. " ,,_ .. .. -.. .. --" " --.. "
SuRF REPORT --------,_, ,, ,,
' • ... •4 SMI direction:..,.,_.
" ..
" " .. " ..
" " "' "' " " • • • " .. .. .. ...
" .. .. u
" .. ..
" .. " • :
"
.. ..
" " " : n • .. g
• .. t .. .. " ..
" " .. .,
i: ..
" ..
" ..
" .. "
---":: , .. -.. .. ...
The J'utbreak dance~ ohowa lta atuff
at the llarch of Dim.,. dance marathon
Sanday In Coota M-•o Rea Cultunl
Center. -Joneo talleo hla tarn on the
ftoor u brothen Andre ud Anthony
Jlllclrl•• awaJt'thelro.
Whelan gets Mesa communications post
Vincent M. Whelan of San
Oemente has been appointed to
replace Costa Mesa's retiring Orville
Amburgey as director of communica-
tions for the city of Costa Mesa. City
Manager Fred Sorsabal announced
this week.
Whelan is currently deputy direc-
tor for telecor{lmunications systems
engineering and maintenance for Los
Angeles County, Sorsabal said. He
recently retired from the Marine
Corps, where he sen"edasa lieutenant
colonel specializing in communica-
tions. ,
Amburiey is set 10 retire July 20.
after 17 years as director of com-
munications for the city. He was
named C hamber of Commerce Man
of the Year for 1984 in Costa Mesa.
Whelan will be&in his employment
withthecityJuly 16.
BUCK'S CLOCK
SHOPPE
A FAMILY TRADITION SINCE 1892
17 41 Sl:JPEAIOA AVENUE
COSTA MESA, CA. 92627
SALES A REPAIRS
ANTIQUE A NEW
HOURS:
MON .-SAT. 9·6
CLOSED SUNDAY
,
WEDDING CLOCK
Wedding Vows, Dates and Names of Bride and Groom Make
This The.Perfect Gift.For A Lifetime Remembrance.
Heirloom Finish Is Polished Brass and Bridal White. Movement Is
-ammzWifnGlass Dome. Chlr'nes In SiK'l ncecvery11<-~
The Full Westminster Melody Prior To Striking The Hour.
Price Without Chime •
, -•
'189"'
'15~
I I
l
/
J
I
Bi
~at
•
Coaat ·
An 180-mph crash kills a
boater at lrvlne Lake./ A3
We asked coast folks
their opinion of the new
Immigration law./ A3
California
-:· b~·ffi;m
and lesbians parade In
San Francisco./ A5
Nation
Sen. Edward Kennedy
ends silence, endorses
Walter Mondale as
Democratic presldentlal
nomlnee./M
First flight for space shut-
tle craft Discovery Is
scuttled moments before
takeoff./ A4
World
New NATO chief says
Europe nations need to
reassure U.S. they'll hold
up their end In defense
spending./ M
An earthquake measur-
ing 5 on the Richter scale
rattles parts of Japan./ M
~·are given new
dimension In "Second
Western States Exhi-
bition" at Laguna Beach
Museum of Art./81
The secret to success of
many top business ex-
ecutives might be the
Rover, Fido or Kitty In
their chlldhood./81
Sports
Ruth Wysocki of El Toro
shocks favored Mary
Decker In the women's
1,500 meters at the Olym-
pic track and field trials In
Los Angeles.C1
The Angels let a game
llteralty slip away against
Kansas City, 3-2, and visit
Texas next./C1
Former National Hockey
League president
Clarence Campbell dies
at the age of 78./C2
Entertainment
You can see "The Fantas-
tlcks" at two different
theaters on the Orange
Coast this weekend./83
Bualneu
Sylvia Porter says
bankruptcy Is not always
to best answer to
flnanclal Insolvency ./85.
INDEX
Bridge 84
Bult.tin Board A3
Bualneu 85
Cal"ornla News A4
Cluelfled CM
Comics 84
CrOMWOt'd C7
DMth Notlcel C4
F•turM 81·2
Heep Youtiielf 82
Horoec:cJi)e ce
Ann Landera 82
Mutual Funds 85
NatlOnlll N9wl A4
Opinion Al
Pl!plll'uzl 81
Pohce Log A3
PUbMc Notlcee C4
8~• C1~ 8toac MinC-et""°',--~---'-'.-
TtleYttlk>n 82
Theatett 83
W•ther A2
WortdNeW9 A4
-. er a1rcra
n .· ne-
'
e 1r. ort
Big Boeing 757, 767 jetliners expected
in next five years. staff report indicates
BJ JERRY B1RSCB ...............
. Oran&r Coun_ty supcrvison, armed ~th a new staff repon that says the
1nt.roductioo of biger jct aircraft 1t
John Wayne Airport is likely, are set ~nee~ to wrestle ~th the thorny issue of airpon n:pans1on.
Altbouab the repon sets no specific
J,imetablc, it says the county &bouJd
a~.:~.~o · ..
() ~lrim·fi~
1be supervitors meet ~ay to
dixuss • reviJcd plan for allocauna fliahts 1t the airpon as weU as
tentative plans for future SfOWth. \
The county's advisory auport com-
mission will tackle the same issues at
a special mcctiq to~t at 7 in the
county HaU of Admmistration in
Marina school
turmoil grows
Parents to storm
board meeting over
prlncipal's ouster
BJ aollEllT BABKD __ ..., .......
Ten days"°' Marina Hilb School Principal Dr. ·Paul Bcrter summoned
his saair of about 170 ~ to the
c:UNria oo me 1ua day or tdllool m&t
aonouDced d.t bis TCtlmnmt, ett:c-
tive July 1. .,.
T'be •eoo1tce1ne1u was a bom~
~ leedaer re .. aentalives said.
And 1t was p•nli"" too, became they
felt Berier. wbO appmendy was hdd
in biab esteem, was beina forced out,
they said.
When be &MOunc:ed be was liven a
list of options and I.be most attractive
one was retirement, the teac:hen
planned a demonstration that after-
noon for their boss at district bead-
quanen.. BcrJct' called them off. But instead
of diminishina, the controversy a~
pean to be beatina up. ~ts of
Marina students are tbrcateruna to
show up in force at school district
~ua.rtcn Tuesday when the
HuntingtOn Beach Union Hi&h .
School District trustees are slated to
appoint Jeannine Lucas, an associate
pn:ncipal at Huntington Beach Hi&h School and wife of Assistant Super-
intendent Larry Lucas, to replace
Berger.
Parent rcpse1entativcs say they
hope thcy'U ~ officials to
change their minds and ~tain Bcraer.
It's been learned that parents befd a
Youths fear d,eath
in nuke holocaust
NEW ARK.. NJ. (AP) -About
half of approiumatcl) 5.SOO ht&h
school students surveyed believe the)
are likely to die 10 a nuclear holocausL
while 75 percent believe a nuclear war
is preventable, a state official says.
Overall, "h became clear that th~
are very confused about the assue. ·
said Dr. Donald B. Louna. ctwnnan
of the New Jersey McdK:al School's
department of prevcntwc mcdJane.
"They don't know who to believe.
1be Pentagon will show a &lo y
promotional moVlc and they'll be-
lieve that. The next spcncr wdl say
that's all wrona. and they'll bchcvc
that. They're rcspondina to who
spoke last and who is most char·
1smauc.-Louria said Sunday.
Half of the tccn-agen questioned
wd they were likely or somewhat
ltkcly to perish in a nuclear holocaust.
said Louria, addina that airls were
more pessimistic that boys.
.. About two yean aao, we bepn to
be concerned about the pcr~onsof youna people in reprd t~e arms
ra~ and their futv~." Louria said. ,
'"What WC ~ scared of was the
possibility that youna people would
lose fl.itb in the future, and that WC
would become a aon-mdiorist IO-
ciety. one in which they do not feel
they can handle their own problems
and ma.kc thinp better," he added.
Most on Coast working in Orange County
Relidents of 0raQIC Coat citi
tend to work in Ora• County, bUt
sipifk:ut nwnben Of conty Nii·
dents commute to LoS Aneela. San ~ Rivenide and Su Bemardino
countiet to earn a livins. • '1.2....!percenl «all COU.Dt)'
residents indicated thb WOftred in
Oranae Coun~. a«otdina to 1990 census data COlni)i)Cd by a S\ate
Employment DcvtlOP"'ft\t ntpan.
rMnt labor martet analyst.
With the ~ccption of Huntiftl'on
Beecbaod f<Mlntain Valley. rnidcnts
of Ora,.e Coest clues liponed thtir
wo.tplece was in the couty in far
paw numbcn tban ·~ About t 9 pcrcnt of the county's
~ OM millio•Mnembef Wort· foict.'..Mid cen1y1 11tm...tbty COlll•
muted out of tht county to ao to WOik
eech day. accord1na to the ctnsus
deta.
Amon& . Oranac Cont nun.
l..:ilUna !kith midcnts iended to ha~ focal Jobi mo~ of\cn than thear
cou.n\efp&IU io other coastal ()Qin·
muniti Mo~ than 82 pctttnt of the
10.136 WlllC c.amcrs the census bu· re.au cou.nled an 1..quna sa.id they
worked in the county. Only . 1.'1
ptfttOt said thtit WO~ WU out
of the county.
Bnides t Lquna ~
who 'WOtk an the An CoJoD)'. about
I .000 Laaunari have jobl in Newport
BeaCb •• 'aCCOldioa 10 the fia· urcs Amona Laauna midcn MU> rea eoncd they rkcd elsc~hei'C than
Oranae County, lOO rkcd in
.4naelci 146 rked in Lona IJeaCh, ~ ad they welt employ«!
JEFF
Alt.£1
Focus ON THl NEVt s
dteWberc in LA. County and mort
than a 120 ~paned their jobs were
toca\td in Rh'Cnidc. San Dic., or
San Bernardino counties
Ei&ht out of lO Irvine wqe earners
also work in Ora Count • accord-
lQI lO the. <USUS tncu.. aad I•
percent ttportcd ~ ia aome
other county.
Among Oranee County atiel.
a1m 4,000 lrvioe raidcata ..W
they worked lD Santa Ana. 3.600 iD
Newport Beacb and l,500 ..
Anaheim.
CtOIC to 950 lmnc raidm11 co.-
mute to the city of Loi ~ ._ • • ~ <>wr ~ 9l'C ,_,__
ployed eltcWhefe in Lo6 ~
Cou.nt> About 100 lrvanc t'ftidml
work an n DitlO Cou.aty. l .50 in
Riva'lade Cou~ 94 havejobl an
San Bernardino ty.
~ ... coa-wt ........ 11u•
M ~ Coat DAIL v PILOT /Monday, June 25, 1984
Costa Mesa accident victim .
succumbs in Valley hospital
A Colta Mesa woman who afternoon o Ju c 11.ju t before She
droYe bet: car into a pole on Placentia
A venue ju t north of Estancia Hi&h School, I
·ouily injured in a car ao.:1dtnl
ewtier lhis month d1ed Saturday
niabt at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital, an Oranae County cor-
ooers deputy said. She suffered mauivc he.ad and
abdominal snjuncs an the crash and Maraarct Dill. 58, apparently suf-bad remained in the hospital in
fered a beartauack atthc wheel on the critical condttioo since the accidenl
CON TINUED STORIES
oc:t'urrcd.
Dill'•lJJ9 naer. her si11er Winona
Thcry, 57, mnained in serious con-
dition at Fountain Valley ho pital
today
The women lived t<>setber in Costa
Mesa. Cause of death bas not yet been
determined, the deputY. said. Funeral
arranaements are pendina.
BIGGER JETS SEEN AT JWA •••
From Al
The treod by airlines usma the
airport has been to buy smaller.
quieter aircraft. Pacific Southwest
Airlines recently spent $300 million
on 20, I 00.seat British aerospace BAe
146 airplanes to use at noise sensti ve
airpons like JW A. Newport Beach-
bascd AirCal announced recently
June its $300 million aoqwsition of
12, 140-seat Boeing 737-300airplaocs
for the same reasons.
The smaller aircraft present a new
problem for the airport, according to
From Al
and refused to acknowledge if the
veteran educator was given the op-
tion of returning to Marina.
Berger bas declined to return
several phone calls. Observers say,
however, that be could probably call
off the protests~fhe wished.
the county staff report. The county
had planned to allow atrlines to trade
one flight of their noisier planes for
three flights of the new, quieter
airplanes hke the BAe 146 and the
737-300.
With the county planning to ex-
pand the number of average daily
deJ>¥turcs earlf next year to 55 from
its current leve of 41 , a three-for-one
tradcout would create a virtual grid-
lock at the airport, the report says.
That plan would have allowed for a
In add1t1on, Busher said about 750
fliers have been prepared for distribu-
tion in the neighborhoods of west
Huntington Beach, reportib' that
there's a controversy surrounding the
.. sudden removal" and announcing
that students, parents and teachers
maximum of 165 flights per day.
The existing facilities are not larac
enou&h and the number of fli&hts
shoufd be cut to about 70-or a five-
for-four tradcout.
The staff report says that is a more
realistic number to use while a new
airport terminal is under construc-
tion.
The county hopes to ruive a much
larger terminal completed in about
five years.
are hoping to encourage his reinstate-
ment by the board of trustees.
"We know he docsn'f want to
retire," she said. "We love him and
we don't know why they're kicking
him out. He's a nice, kind man who
runs a good school."
COUNTY EMPLOYMENT SURVEY •••
From Al
About 82 percent of Costa Mesa's
45,476 wage earners reported they
work in Orange County with Costa
Mesa, Newport Beach and Santa Ana
as the employment leaders. More
than 6.500 Costa Mesans report for
work in Newport Beach each work-
day. according to the census data.
About 1 percent of the city's
residents travel out of the county for
employment. with 80 I venturing to
the city of Los Angeles and 1,900 to
destinations elsewhere m sprawlmg
Los Angeles County. About 80
workers commute to San Diego
County. 120 to San Bernardino
County and 65 to Riverside County.
Seventy-eight percent of New~rt
Beach residents reported thetr JObs
wett m Orange County compared to
almost 12 percent of city wage earners
who told census takers they commute
to other counues for their JObs.
Among the 33.732 wage earners
tallied by census takes. 11 ,032 re-
ported their jobs are m Newpon.
3,420 reported working in nearby
Costa Mesa and 2,280 said they were
employed in Santa Ana.
Newport commuters to the city of
Los Angeles number 1,057 and more
than 2.000 residents said they drive
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Dettnry
taGuerenteed
MoncMy ,""9y " ~ 00 no4 ,,.,.. yo.. ~ by
5 30 p m cal t>ttor• 1 p m
Mid yQllf COCI¥ ..... be
OllN«4'd
elsewhere to work in Los Angeles
County.
San Diego County draws only I 0
Newport residents each workday but
Riverside and San Bernardino coun-
ties are workday destinations for 261
residents.
Falling below the county median
for in-county employment. 68 per-
cent of Fountain Valley's 27,275
wage-earning residents said their
workplace 1s in Orange County. Just
over 23 percent indicated they com-
mute to other counties for employ-
ment.
More than 3.100 Fountain Valley
residents said their jobs are in
Huntington Beach whale 2.477 re-
ported working m Santa Ana.
The city of Los Angeles' population
is swelled by 1.275 Fountam Valley
residents who commute nonh each
workday mommg and again south
each evening. according to the census
data. More than 4, 700 other Fountam
Valley residents also commute to jobs
m Los Angeles County.
San Diego apparently holds no
attraction for city residents, but both
Riverside and San Bernardino coun-
ties are worksites for about I 50
Fountarn Valley residents.
Finally, fully 26 percent of Hunt-
ingtOn Beach's 87,998 residents re-
ported they work outside of Orange
County, the highest percentage of any
Orange Coast city. Slightly over 64
percent of Huntington Beach wage-
earners said they arc employed in
their home county.
Among county cities, Huntington
Beach employs 19,855 residents
while another 5,451 are employed in
Santa Ana, 5,229 in Costa Mesa and
4,512 in Newport Beach, the 1980
census revealed.
More than 4,800 Huntinaton
Beach residents commute to the city
of Los Angeles each workday joinina
11.048 workers employed elsewhere
in Los Anacles <'.;Qunty. Some 4,887
city residents said they work in Lona
Beach. About 150 HuntiflllOD Beach
wage earners commute south to San
Dicao County, 224 work in Riverside
County and 238 in San Bernardino
County.
Mean travel time to work in
minutes for Orange Coast residents:
Costa Mesa, 19.9; Fountain Valley,
26; Huntiflllon Beach, 27.l: Irvine,
23.4: Laauna Beach. 24: Newpon
Beach. 23; County average. 23.6.
Wbal do you like aboal tbe Dally Piiot'! Wkat don't yoo like? Call tile
number at left and your menage will be reeorded, transcribed and dellvere-
to the approprla~ editor.
The same U-bour answering service may be ased to record letters to tbe
editor on any topic. Contr:ibutors to oar Letter1 cohunn ma1t Include tlltelr
name and telepbone aumber for verification. No clrculatlon calls, pleue.
Tell as wla1t'1 on yoar mJH.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. 8chw•rt1 HJ
Pubhsher
S-.doty-~.
you 00 no4 ·-'f(All c~ 1>y 1 • m • c.11 before
10 • I!\ -"(Oil OOfl'f ..
be ..... ed
Chny Dow8'fbJ Roeenuiry ChwcMt.en
~
T•pOtcM ... ... <>r-.e--t• "'-......
l .... ,...... .....
•
I
Ed1t0< and A tant Controtler
10 the P.ublisher
~L.Wlftl:JM
Circwtion
M~
I
VOL. 17 • NO. 171 .
t
Hot time under coastal skies ............ 71 .. ~ .. ti Newon.. 11 11 NllwYont 71 11 Nottoll,Va .. 71 ~City ,., .. Oi""'9 .. ..
OlltMdo ., 71 .....,.,.... .,. • PMnacw-. to7 .. ~ '°' n ::=. ... ., 12 11 11 Jlontend.Or. IO .. ,,~-. • .. =:r IO .. ., II 8e«'i1Nnto .. .,
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••f9l)Ol1 .. 70
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"°"°4lllU 17 74 Tuite .. a ~· 13 77 WMt\lfioton I) 70 ~ 11 .. Wldll1a II a JeoklOl'l,Ma. 83 71 Wlli•Barrw 70 a J-*-¥1h .. f4
JUMe\I :1 65 K-Clty 11 laaVegM " 75 UutiaAodt 12 .. t:=-.. 87 15 5t
Metrlj)IW .. M Mleml e-:.i '3 77
M41wM.• IO 11
Tides 80IM IO ta l!lollOll 70 H
TOOAY llu"llo 14 54 ._,.,lo• 12 51pm II CNP« ... 41
~hl!JI' 1 25 p"' 57 cn.wton,S O 17 71 ClllrtM1on, w v 15 st
1'\llllOAY Cherlotte.NC 71 1$
First low, H4•m 02 ~ ., " =c~" 1108 .,,. u Chicago 71 55
1.31 pm 22 Cln«;lnnaU 81 55 Saeofld~ 7 57pm 8 I c~ 71 " Sun Ml• 100.y •t e 08 p m . ,_ Columtlle,S C 17 87
n-clay at 5 "3 • m end lllte lgaln at Coll.mt>ua. on 81 54
IOlp.rn ~d.NH .. H
Moon'91aet501 pm.,tl9MT-DlllM-Ft Worth " 72
di\' a1 a·as Lm Ind-. llllWI 11 e 04 Dllyton 71 55
pm Oenv.r 17 51 Dee~ ... a Del.roll '° 54 ~h 75 45
TemP. EIPuo ... 70 F8ben111 71 57 '""° IO 80 Raoltalf 84 57 I SURF REPORT
~-~-
Albfony Al~ue
Amw1llO EZtended Andlol'llOI A'*'t.I AllartllcClly A~
Gimme a break
Tbe l'utbnak dance team aboww It.a eta.ff
at tbe lla.rcb of Dlmee dance marathon
Sanday In Coata lleea•a ~!!i Calta.nl
Center. Peter Jonee takee bl.a tarn on tbe
ftoor u brotben Andre ancl Antbony
!flclrlee a1'a.lt tbeln.
Whelan gets Mesa coillinunications post
Vincent M. Whelan of San
Oemcnte has been a{>pointed to
replace Costa Mesa's retiring Orville
Amburgey as director of communica-
tions for the city of Costa Mesa, City
Manager Fred Sorsabal announced
this week.
Whelan is currently deputy direc-
tor for telecommunications systems after 17 years as dtrcctor of com-
cnginecrina and maintenance for Los munication.s for the city. He was
Angeles County, Sonabal said. He named Chamber of Commcrcc Man
recently retired from the Marine of the Year for 1984 in Costa Mesa.
Corps, where he served asa lieutenant
colonel spccializina in communica-
tion!. Whelan will bqin bis employment
Amburaey 11 set to retire July 20, with the city July 16.
BUCK'S CLOCK
SHOPPE
A FAMILY TRADITION SINCE 1892
1741 SUPERIOR AVENUE
COSTA MESA, CA. 92627
SALES a REPAIRS
ANTIQUE a NEW
HOURS:
MON -SAT. 9-6
CLOSED SUNDAY
WEDDING CLOCK
Wedding Vows. Dates and Names of Bride and Groom Make
Zfhls The Perfect Gift For A l:lfetlme Remembrance.
Heirloom Finish is Polished Brass and Bridal White. Movement Is
-euartz With Glass Dome. Cnimes in Sequence Every 1/4 Hour Then
The Full Westminster Melody Prior To Striking The Hour. •189'°
Price Without Chime '159'°