HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-06-29 - Orange Coast PilotClllfElmll
0 RA NG E C 0 UN T Y C A LI f 0 fH~ I A . •, , t ~o,j •
:Newport. cOps end wage dispu
Police officers win 5 ercent increase
after taking complai t to City Council
By STEVE MARBLE ct that gives officers a S percent pay
0t ... .,..,.,... ew . • h e and more cash for attending
An angry contract dispute bet n SC
Newpon Beach police and cit an-The
aiement ended late Thu when this week fficers took their
both sides a~ on a new ne-year argument to the city council and
Coast
Camp Pendleton brass
says no torch relay
through base unless
Marines run lt./A3
La unaB~a~clrtl'•s~C~i f'A~~
California
President Reagan wants
to deliver a longer speech
than allowed at LA Olym-
pic Games opening cer-
emonies./ AS
Nation
Rev. Jesse Jackson dis-
appointed Reagan won't
meet with him after Cuba
trip./ AS
World
A bearded Japanese man
turned 119 years old
today -the oldest man
In the world./ A4
People
The oldest member of the
Orange County Board of
Education Is honored on
his re11rement./ A7
The Jim Dun bars have
spent$8,000onthelr 17-
day vacation to the Olym-
pics and they haven't
even left home yet./ A7
Sports
Costa Mesa's John Mof-
fet qualifies for the Olym-
pics in his second event
-the 200 breaststroke
-at the U.S. swimming
trials./81
U.S. Olympic water polo
coach Monte Nitzkowski
made the difficult de-
cision of cutting the final
two players from the
squad./81
Entertainment
Now you can have your
Fourth of July symphony
with fireworks without
going to the Hollywood
Bowl.IWHkender
Fountain Valley's Fiesta
starts six days of family
fun with dancing tonight.
/WHkender
Baalneu
Former Mesa planning
commissioner forms
architectural support
flrm./85.
INDEX
Artwork
captures
Olympic
··ptytr=r --5 .. ...., __ _
Foret n painters
converge In HB
for big display
~--
By SUSAN McCALLUM
Of Ille 0.-, ...........
The anist stood before the painted
canvas. looking at his creation of
abstract images of horses running
through a flowing sea of violets and
browns. He said the animals were
crying out for freedom -the freedom
to do what they want, unencumbered
by any obstacles.
Bill Andersen said the impulse
behind his anwork was the spirit of
the Olympic games.
"We took at upon ourselves to
create an Olympic spirit in the arts,"
Andersen said.
The .. we" he discussed includes
himself and IS other anists, six from
the United States and nine from
Meir.ico. who have gathered to create
anworks evocative of their hQme-
lands and oft he collective spirit of the
summer games.
They worked all last week at the
Huntington Beach Central library.
preparing their pieces for display
there throughout July. A reception
honoring the artists is scheduled
tontP.it at the library.
Eight of the nine foreign artists
came to Huntington Beach from the
Museum of Modem Art in Guadala-
jara. Thursday many of them con-
verged on the hbrary to work on final
details. ,
A canvas depicting many different
colored. abstract silhouettes of
human figures. all flowing together. is
what Ignacio Aldapa worked on for
this Olympic tribute.
"It is the spirit of togetherness. of
different roles of human beings
coming to a convergent point of the
Olympics. transcending differences
for unity." Aldapa said.
Pepin Hernandez-Laos, who
created a three-dimensional "uni-
verse" out of paper on canvas. said
.. arts and spons arc ways of trans-
cending other human experiences.
like economics and politics. ··1r athletes don't have big crowds.
they still compete. If anists don't
have big crowds, that doesn't stop
them either." Hernandez-Laos said.
"The value of artists is in the working
together."
Attention from people in Orange
(Pleue .ee ARTWORK/ A2)
You'll find the
beat •uto bur• elong
:the Or•ng• COMt In
tod8J'• Auto Piiot
-PegeC1
complained that c1ty nqollatol"5 were
not barpinina an good faith.
The han1up in the stalled talks was ho~ r:nuch money police would be
pa1d for earning college dcgrccs.
Police spokesman Tom Little said
Newpon had fallen far behind the
amounts paid to officers 1n othcr-
Orangc Countycitics for educational
advancement.
·The 2()().membcr police assoc1a-
tion had been wotkillf without a
contrac1 this wefk after ns prior pact
expired l8$t Sunday. AJtho':'Jh the
two sides broke off talks earlier this
month. a strike was never considered.
Linlc said. ·
Little said the dispute wa~ settled
Thursday ID I last~tch balpin.
session with city managermnt. He
praised the city for its response to his
association's concerns.
l(naclo Alda.,. po.a In fiOat ofbla .. The llaA A9cendlnC."
.. The city made some coocnsiona.
gave a lot of f:Ound. They were very
cooperative,' said Little.
The cootract. which lacks formal
a~oval from council members. wiU
cost the city about s..60.000. accord-
ing to-City Manqer Robert Wynn.
That fraure 1s added to, 1.M S 1.2
million the city already has spent on
contracts wtth other employee
groups. •
Chilling picture emerges
of Irvine day care center
By ANDREA ADEUON oc .. Dllllp,.......,
Whale alleec<i child molester Larry
R. Shipp remained behind bars an
Orange County Jail Fnday. pohce
and nci&hbors painted a chillina
picture o1'the day care f~cility he ran
an his Irvine home. ~
A former emptoyec is growing
tearful since tht 1n~sttpt1on began
and the home closed down. accord• ng
to Set. Dick Bowman.
And a neighbor says the h1pp
home was guarded by a sur"-etllanct
camera for lhc last rear and parents
made 10...;I outside when p1ck;r\& up
their children.
Because the alkged abuse occurre<.l
underthe threat offortt. Shipp's wife.
Dixie. has been taken out of her home
on Flagstar Cu'Cle and 1s ""'"I at an
und1se:loscd location.
i\sked if ex~mployccs of Dl:ue·s
Day Care. the county-hcensed home
opcrakd b> the Shipps sinct 1981.
v.ere working under s1m1lar fearful
conditions. Dov.man srud .. ~don't
know until~ talk to mo~ of them."
One woman who had v.orked at the
home for sc"eraJ months apparent!~
wrote to polict about alleged abuse at
t~ bomt. attordmg to a published
report. Bowman sa.ad NanC) Johnson
IS lf'OWIO& more fearful SJnce h1pp's
arTCSt. but he refused to comment
(P&.ue eee CJDLLDfG/ A2)
Auto Piiot C1 -10
Bridge C6
BUlletln Board A3
Bul4neM 85
c.tlfornla Newa A4
CtUllfted C6-9
Comics 84
Cfonword ca
DMth Notlc:ee ce
Gardening A9
.,._.., Youf'Mlf A8
Kathy JOnes ready
for new challenge
in lofty post at UCI
Ailm
· Ai£LSH
P £0Pl£ IN TH[ NEWS
Horoecope C9
AML.anden A8
Mutual Funds 85
Nettona1 N9wl A4
Opink>n A10
PIP_Wuzl A8
POibLog A3
Put>Mc Notic. a1.e. ce apon1 e1:.3
Stock Marketa Be
T.e..ilk>n A9 n.tera Mkend«
W•ther A2 WOltd ,___..._ _____ A4
/_
Kathy Jones' eyes parkle as he
de nbcs ··a &if\" just bcsto~ on
her.
... had rtbe&JWd very carcrully
whit I'd ~y. whether 1t was y or
no," Jo..e slid. But when the
selection was lnadC. and Jonea was
named UC IO'ine's third femal
assist.ant vice rhanc:ellor aflcr a
nationwide search, ··1 was h·
l "sht said
"h's absolutely tht mo t tnt rnt•
ina j'Ob that lft)'OM' can have.'' said
J<>AesfintW• ttttnt tfttttV~w an htt
i~th-floor offict ovtrlOoluna the
coastal footbiJI It is just steps from
the cam~· scat of po~r. the
chancellor's offttt.
She comes there fn>Cn the post of
direct_..,,. information ud publi-
cations • UGI -one ~e nevn
cnvisiotled Mrtitlf tvJfUlina.
Elctpe for hlvina • knKk ror
thinas any, she had no dear \liiion or
v.hat she mi&ht bttOmt as an undcr-
if1tduatc. So JOMI ~t out to absorb
C\/Cry, cxpcnencc and cvtry cuhurc
he coukl. ·
Whilt "udy1ns1t StantOnl Un1wr-
1ty he hved fOi •year 1n Gtttnan
and f rutt at the unhtr$1ty' O\ltr-
seas caml)\lS. After paduauon. he
tauibt art and tcience to the chlldren
of diplomats and Ammcan bu i-
nessmen at Caito Amcncan. a ~
ondary school in Ea)pt. bcelmc
convcrunt 1n Frtnch and Italian and
learned rudiment.at)' rabit.
.. That broad cdutation hat tened
me ftll" 1d J l' ·, ducf
SPC)ki v. man. •ho tn the '"1 vear
fielded qu t1on from the na on.al
media and an w red triV\a u ti the
ptacc to rt-tum n tdtn ftftt.on --1~--(Pleue ... UCI/ A2)
I I I .
Judge
nixes
suit
Mesa homeowners
shocked, an cred,
vow further action
BJ LUlEN E. nEIN ; °'............. ~ A lawsuit filed by a Costa. Mesa!
citizens aroup over an CDVU'ODJDental-;
review of the Pacific Ampbi~
was dismissed by a jud9e 1n Ora.:;
County Superior Court Tbunday. ~
The dismissal of the suit apinst me:;
state's 32nd District Apicul~
A.ssoaation .and the NedertaDder~
West Corp. was described u shocm..;
and d.ual)pOintina by the nearly sec:
Costa Mesa raidellts who turned OU.::
for what they t.boGiht WU \0 be ~
hearing orderi.n& the am~i~~
·-operatol"f to-: l.'Olllply With ~i~.,:--· -
noise ordinanc::n durinia coocms. ~ Altom~ fOT the C~
Ciuzcns of Co5ta Mesa. a ~
owners' assoaation of anMlnd ··~
~----1
2 Iielp
NB tot
cheat
death
c
By STEVE MARBLE ·: • Of .. .,..,....... • • A Ncwpon Beach fire ca,ptatD and at
patrol offlCCf arc being credited wit!t
savtna the life of an S-month-01d ~
who toppled into a swimming pool all'.
her family's Dover Shores boml.
Thursday afternoon. ~
Renee Childs, brought back to lif(
after she'd stopped brcathtng., is it(
guarded but 5tablc condition today at
Western Medical Center in Santa~
where she was airlifted after the near!
tra&edy. •
ihe toddler bad stopped muthinf
and turned deep blue when Officef.
Steve MartinC'Z"arrived at the 1016
Dover Dnve residence at 4:45 p.m . .:
pohcc s:ud. Martinez started cardio--
pulmonary resuscitation on the c:tlikL
Less than 1 minute l.atcr. a fire.
en11ne amved at the house and Capt.!
8111 Bennett staned breath mg 10to the::
ch1ld's mouth and took over the CPR~
treatment.
Bennett continued the life-savini
measurn until a paramedic waa<>I(·
pulled up at the residence. BcforC:
placma tht gnl in the emergency
vehicle. color had started to return t<>
her face. police said. •
Bennett continued breathing fo(
the toddler until she was wheeled int<(
the e~rgency room at Hoaa Mem>
onal Hopsp1tal in Newport Beach.•
When her conditmn V."U deemed tc>
be table.. she wu taken by hclicoptd
to the Santa Ana boq>1tal.
•
• r-
,i W£ATH£R
=-----_-=c_ ---
OISE LAWSUIT.THROWN OUT •••
Prom Al > Fair skies for the weekend
milies-most of whom live in the
Coli.t&e Parle and Mesa dcl Mar
neiahborhoods a<Uaoen1 to the amphil.heater. apparently also wett
urprilCd that Judac Judith Ryan
KiCe"ptcd the position of the attorneys
IOr Nedcrlandcr-West and the state.
Since the case was dismissed, an
i~unct on on noise violations also
WIS di missed.
"We were thrown out o( court,"
aid Russell Millar, president of the
•Concerned Citizens' JN>Up. "Every·
one was very disappom\Cd."
He said the homeowners will meet
•.aoon to detennine whether or not
:they will go ahead with an appeal
! urged by Attorney Richard Spix.
The lawsuit, which haricd that the
state failed to order Ufficicnt en-
vironmental studies for the
amphitheater. was filed in January.
The ciu.zens' ifOup's counsel. At-
torney Ellen Winterbottom, said the
suit fell under a section of the
California Environmental Quahty
Act that ~u1tts supplemental or
subsequent environmental impact
reports to be done •f major c hanges
~" made on a project.
"We'll have to develop another
stratqy on this, but we're not at the
end of ti\e road," Spix told the
confused residents ouiside the
counroom after the case was thrQwn
out
;l'OLJCE CONTRACT .••
jFrqpiAl
inan earns ~tween about $2.000 and
'2 ,490 a mori\h.
The pa~~ calls fo r a I 0 percent
;boost 1n tlqe amount officers earn for
attending school. The so·called
educational incentive pay is given
-Officers who have earned a college
degree. The higher the degree, the
hiJthcrthe pay.
· W ynn said the increase in educa-
tional pay means that officers with a
master's degree can earn as much as
an extra S 165 a month. A.II Orange
County c1t1es offer police some form
of education pay.
Non·swom personnel in the police
department received a 7.4 percent
pay hike. said city personnel director
Lorenzo Mota. The oon·sworn work
force includes records clerks and
meter maids.
Newport Beach still has not signed
a contract with city firefighters but a
bargaining session 1s scheduled for
Tuesday. Fireman have-complained
that city management has not played
fair with them.
' ~
Winterbottom said she and Spix
decided durina a lunch break, after a confcren~ in Ryan's chambers with
Ncderlander attome)'t Neil Pap1ano
and Deborah Nesset, to foraoamend-
ini their comphtint and seek an
appeal instead.
The summer would be over and the
conccn hall's second season Iona
aonc by the 1jme a continued hearing
could come up in court again,
Winterbottom said. ff a writ appeal·
mg Ryan's decision is filed 10 the Cou~ of Appeals, tbe process could
be speeded up, she said.
M eanwh ile, the Pacific
Amphitheatre's second concert
season is set to start for the sum mer
this weekend. Several residents at the
hearing Thursday said they had
lodged "pise complaints with the
Costa Mesa Police Department dur·
ing the-week while sound resting was
going on at the amphitheater.
But Pap1ano, Nederlander's at·
torney, said no one has proven that
the amphitheater has violated any
noise ordinances. despite residents
and city claims that noise from recent
concerts did stray above county
decibel levels.
Acoustics measurement is an im-
precise science. Papiano said. Even
two experts measuring noise from the
amphitheater, one hired by the Con·
cerned Citizens and one by the city,
do not agree on how the measure·
ments should be taken.
Coutal
~ides
TOOAY 334pm
9:53pm
IATIMOAY
5:220.m
12 50."' 4 24 p.m.
10.38p m.
·Temps
2 4 Albwly tu AlbuQU«que
Amarllto
Anc!10toge f 3 Atlanta
3 e Atlantlc co.,
2 4 AUltlll
SUn Mtl today II 8 08 p m , rlMI
Saturday at 5:45 a m anCI MU oga111 at l:Oap m.
8 5 8altlmot•
Blrmlnghom lli.m.rcil
BolM
9oe1on
&ittlllO
&il'llngton, Vt
CMC*
Moon Mii at 9 11 p m .. ri-Saturdlly
ot 7 10 • m encl so11 ogaln at 10'02 p.m,
----------Cl\et'letton,S C
Extended Cll9tloston,W V
Cllllflolte,N C
~,,.
MOltty eunny de)'9 wltll nigllt ond g::IJ
morning IOw doud• 1111tondlng Into the CleYelol\d
• valleyt morntng llOu,.. HIQl\I ronoino Columble.S c.
ltQmJtll *&els to IOw 7ba lllong. Ille Columbue.Oh
Oiliy!Olt o.n-. ..D.aMotn.t
Detroit
HI Lo Duluth
92 55 EIPMO 15 68 Fllrbllnlel
89 85 Fwgo
72 «> ~· ... 90 70 Q(ancl Aaptda n ee GrMt l'otlt
88 73 Hertf0tO 86 60 .........
91 71 HonolU!U
81 57 "°"'9ton
102 78 lncllonlipolie
• 82 90
93 84
71
90
75
81
90 80
93 " 91
85
94
84
.. 68
77 58
82 58 -94 51 SuRF REPORT
98 78
88 83 87 66 LOCAT10H ea 52 Huntington a..;11
IO 53 Rivet Jell'f, NeWport
85 83 40tll SttMI, Newp«1 79 &4 22nel StrMI, Newpor1
90 87 8elboo Wedg41
85 51 Ulguotl 8Mch
.. 72 .. ,.
61 •• H eo
108 17
ff 10 " " .. 15
82 70 1• 11
11 " ,, 61 ....
10 14
.. 70 ., 87
" et
t2 '° " 1t 113 82 se st 109 80
12 57
IO 81 re s1
81 49
17 81
8b 53
15 M
94 SJ
14 " i7 7t
98 12 to 75
74 St eo 53 97 75
... 47
57 53
90 74
... 58
89 f2 78 51
81 111
tOJ 73
92 87
DUllCTIOH
lltlf
lot< ,..,
HILLING PICTURE OF DAY CARE ... .... -.. --~ 1:MaanUlJt -lowt ln the upper 5o. ond 80e. ~J'i"Wonll -.. fl .s.~ 111 ............ ..
lllr
lllir
lllr ,.,
.. ,-romAl ·
about the contents of her letter. calls from about six parents who had
Mrs. Shipp is not believed to be a placed c hildren at Dixie's Day Care.
crime victim, the sergeant said. "She "They keep saying how strange the
was a victim of everything going on place was." Bowman said, adding
there," Bowman said, although he none have reported incidents of
refused to specify. abuse.
Shipp pleaded not guilty in Harbor One window of the brown stucco
Municipal Court this week to seven home is blocked out. preventing
counts of child molestation which ~nyone from peering in from the
allegedly involved a youngster who quiet cul.de-sac near Heritage Park.
was not a client of his day care facility. ..One or two .. parents told police
The Shipps have three children they were asked to wait outside when
who are currently staying in the retrieving their children. he said.
Albert Sitton Horne for abused and State law requires operators to
-~doned children. allow representatives of the licensing
He was being held in lieu of authority inside, but does not specify
$I S0,000 bail. Police had initially that parents are permitted inside.
asked during a hearing that bail be,,._ "Thafs one of .the things we tell
increased from $50,000 to $250,000 parents is an early warning signal that
to try to ensure that Shipp remained something may be wrong or there is
io custody. Capt Jim Blaylock said. potential problems, if the operator
, Since the all~t1ons surfaced. 1sn·t open with them." said Glenn
Bowman said oohce have received Gibbons, supervisor of the county
ARTWORK ...
From Al
County, 11' not "big crowds." 1s what
some of the artists said the workshop
lacks.
··one of the frustrations 1s Hunt-
ington Beach seems to be a place that
has not recognized they're a maturing
city and they need to be ready for the
arts." Edith Palomb1, who helped
organize the project. said. -1cs been a
reaJ struggle to make the officials and
people aware of the importance of
this exchange."
Palombi. a Huntmgton Beach resi-
dent, worked on her watercolor.
which depicts vanous scenes along
the California coast, from the Golden
Gate Bridge to the mountains of Big
Sur and south.
"I c.an remember all the places.
They just come to me as I paint," she
said. "I don't even know how it will
end up looking. It will be a surprise to
me. too.··
Images of California 1s also the
subject expressed by Miguel Aldana.
the founder and director of the
Guadalajara museum. He said his
work ... CaJifom1a: Land of Water on
Fire." is about "the colorful and
friendly and very warm land that is
California."
"The workshop is somethini new
and different,'• he said. "It 1s the
freedom to do something more spon·
taneous and free."
Marcos Huerta. who create-Ci on a
three.dimensional image of a man
and a dog. echoed Aldana's feelings.
"Since this is a workshop, we are
trying to do something experimen-
tal, .. he said.
A mural by Raul Anguiano. who
Andersen described as "the last ofthe
Mexican school which included
Diego Rivera,·• showed a large eagle.
painted in the Aztec style, and a
feathered serpent looking over a
primitive Mexican artist. Above the
heads of the beasts are the Olympic
rings.
UCI CHANCELLOR'S AIDE •••
From Al
tag on a trapped sea lion. (Try the
Scripps Institute.)
Words and design came naturally
to the daughter of a woman who now
designs jewelry and a man who was a
promouon director for Times Mirror.
"Each piece became more interest-
ing. but at times l wasn•t so sure." said
the 42-ycar-0ld mother of two, who
grew up in Laguna Beach and Ro lling
Hills.
She concluded that being without a
direction early in life wasn't so bad.
"There are other ways to get here that
are not so directed at the time:· Jones
said.
Beneath a wall of poster an and
· above her desk is the framed cover of
~a· recent Time magazine. Pasted over
the face of Shirley Macla1nc. 111 top
hat and tails with her left leg extended
'1 n a JOyf ul kick. is an inked likeness of
Jones. "Getting Her Kicks ar UCI" 1s
the caption.
She came to UCI in 1968 as a
graphic artist in the publications
office and later as publications di rec·
I.Or.
After a brief stint as a freelancer.
'working for the Scripps Institute and
the Leakey Foundation. Jones re-
turned to the ucr post in 1980.
With the appointment of John
Miltner. a new vice chancellor in
charic of advancement, UCl's
internal quest to be known as the
"Johns Hopkins of the West" began.
It "'as Mlltner who suggested
merging commu nica t ions
respons1 b1htics into o ne JOb.
"This 1s really a complex place. It's
not the pyramid hierarchy" of a
corporation. Jo nes said. "DecJS1on·
making power is in the hands of a lot
of people.··
Stay1niabrcast of an ever-evolving
~ampus with four schools isn't easy
One of the few umes she felt cut off
was dunna la t year•s coouovcr5y
over an Irvin hospital. wntl one
' 810~ vyit\& fer a spot of campus land. ·~That reOcned 1 tieMr diffcmK'c of
opinion. and 1t was ttftecied n hO~
'nfOnnauon p to tht praa," she
1d. when the un1venely *-' caupt 1 en tbe Mtrm1.-..J>e1weea compeUa& an~ttSl "I don·1 see that a 1hc
comn;ion 1tuat1on ...
Jones l>ees UCl, o ne of the nation's
top research institutions, as an un·
tapped resource better known on the
East Coast than among 11s own
neighbors.
"UCI 1sveryambitious. There's no
sense of complacency anywhere; not a
dean or faculty member will say so."
she said.
One of her jobs is to find new
opportun1t1es where the staffs of the
1nforma11on and publication offices
can intercede and boost UCl. such as
through public service annoucements
on video tapes a nd campus support
groups.
"My Job 1s as a catalyst. to make
sure we're all doing 11:· she said.
Aside from work, the adventures of
her 6 and 9-year-old daughters sive
Jones the excuse to vent an arttst1c
bent.
She recentl) helped one" girl design
a costume for a production of
Shakespeare's K.ing Lear. "We put
together a thrift store formal with a
piece of jewelry that was quite
extreme and a cape. She was quite
wonderful lookin~. althou$1:1 she
could barely move, 'Jones said.
She, the girls and her husband.
Michael. a systems analyst-"therc·s
got to be somebody orderly" -live
amid a menagerie oear her girlhood
home in Laguna. Two rabbits. some
mongrel fish. a cat and dog. a hamster
and an elderly. sHghtly grumpy tor·
101se share spact with the human
inhabitants.
As an adult. "people think you arr
crazy 1f you can continue to play.
Children are a Jood eitcusc to keep
playing,·· she said.
Last year they vacationed at a dude
ranch an Moose. Wyo. This year. the
Joneses plan co JO ampmg.
&tween family and 'NOrk, Jones
said she (inds Httle time for her own
artis11t interests ... We blvt a room
wbett all th<* th1np lhc.
.. , have a drram for a ibldio whh
natural liaht in''* of OM~ you
lfP o~tt the VICC'UUm clcaner." IM
Aid With I laup. ~~.Wheal~~·
e&'ll of 1urpient1ne, think 11 ..metb
.:aWNL W1xA ~ oae.·· •---...--. 1nuhn1 tm: empha 1 ... , tbrnk 11
amcllt ondeiful ••
l
day care licens1nf unit Consumer
education materia handed out by the
county does recommend parents
request to sec the areas used for day
care. he said.
No one was ever allowed inside the
·house. according on one neighbor.
who asked not to be identified. About
a year ago. one mother forced to wait
at the curb for 30 minutes. resorted to
borrowing his pho ne to call the Shipp
home. the neighbor said.
"We always thought it was kind of
stran~e they never let the parents in, ..
he said.
For the last year. the Shipp front
door had been monitored by a
survciUaoce camera, which the neigh·
bor said had been confiscated by
police. Police could not be reached
immediately today to confirm the
seizure.
Two other neighbors said today
they regularly saw Shipp leaving and
com ing back from work. but that Mrs.
Shipp and her children were rarely
outside the ho use.
A 16-ycar.ald girl who lives three
doors awar fro m the Shipps said she
used to cal on the house when selling
items such as ornaments for an Irvine
High band fund-raiser.
"She always looked like she wanted
to buy something. But then she would
go back to see if her husband wanted
som ething,·· the teen-ager said. Mrs.
Shipp always said "maybe next
ume," the girl recalled.
The teen·ager also recalled that one
of the Shipps' children used to play
baseball with the neighborhood
youth. but quit coming outside some
months ago. She didn't know why.
Meanwhile police have so far been
unsuccessful in reopening investiga·
tions into two sex abuse incidents that
allegedly occurred at Dixie's Day
Care in the past two years. Bowman
said police haven't been able to
contact the mother of the 3-year.ald
girl who came to authonties in
November and believe there is still
insufficient evidence to prove to the
earlier allegation made in 1982 by the
parent of a 4-ycaf-0ld girl.
.
Mom guilty of drug murder
A young Costa Mesa mother has
been convicted of second.degree
murder in the brutal stabbing death
last year of Dalene Girton. a
purported drug user who allegedly got
cau~t up in a fight over poor.quality
coca me.
Teresa Ahlers. 23, was convicted
late Thursday in Superior ..Court.
Jurors deliberated less than two days
before reaching a verdict in the three--
week trial.
Ahlers. the mother of three. will be
sentenced in August
Ahlers claimed she stabbed Girton,
33, in self.defense. Under question·
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Dellvery
la QuarantMd
MoncMy.fndly II you 00 "°' flOYe )'OU< ,,..,.. by 5.30 p m cal bef0t• 7 1>.m end your COC>Y ... l>e
~
Salulda~ and SunOrly II you do not ,_ )'OU<
ing. however, she claimed to recall
little of the Nov. 6 incident at the
Aloha Palms Trailer Park in Costa
Mesa.
Girton was stabbed 21 times as she
stood in a roadway oft he trailer court.
At least one person c laimed to have
witnessed the Jate·niil_it attack.
Ahlers has been in custody. at
Orange County Jail since her arrest
three days after the slaying. She is
bei-ng held on $250.000 bail.
Fountain Valley Fiesta starts tonight
The second annual Fountain VaJ.
Icy Fiesta begins tonight, offering
ca mi vaJ rides, food booths, chili and
rib cookoJTs, a benefit run, a beauty
pageant, a breakdance competition
and niusicaJ entertainment.
A full schedule of Fiesta events is
included in today's Pilot Weekender
section.
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*NOW THRU JULY 31st*
VOL. n, NO. 112
AM LI.NG ' s
I
Newport None and Garden Center
(Setwten M•cArthur and Jamboree)
•FREE•
Local Delivery • °"" Mon. thni a.t. 1:304:30, Svnday t :OG-6 30 (C._. """ 499') ~eilt OOMt hlQhWey • ~ bMch, C81tforn4a • (7144) M•-9510
•
I '
Bu ur 1 IN B o~R u
Art exhibit opening
tonight in Irvine
A special reception will be held toni&ht bealnninau 7
p.m. at the Irvine Fine An Center in lierita~ Park to
celebrate the opcnina of a new exhibit.
T.he show1na. called "Some of Our Best: An Ecleciic Scl~t1~~. of Contem~rary Paintina. by. ~nae County
Artists, is one of a scnes of curated, 1nvttat1onal exhibits
sponsc;>rcd by the Oranae County Ans Alliance. Light refreshments will be served. ,
Poet9 plan lundral•er~
The Laauna Poets will hold their annual dinner
Saturday to. raise funds for the non-profit orpnization·s
Poetry Festival featurina Berkeley poet Carolyn Kizer in
September at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
The dinner will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Man.a Mitrov1ch, 555 Apte St. in Laguna Beach
Donation is $8. For information call 494-8375 o; ..494-9550.
Irvine councU ceremony .et
Irvine City Council members-elect David Sills. Sally
Anne Miller and Dave Baker will take the oath of office at
5:30 p.m. Tuesday in a special ceremony at council
chambers. 17200 Jamboree Road, in Irvine.
Fe.tlval bu• trip. oflerf!d
Bus traps to the Laguna Ans Festival and Pageant of
the Masters arc being offered by the Costa Mesa Leisure
Scrvic~s Department on July 8 and 22.
SCatin• for the page.ant. featuring live models posing
in the pa1nttngs of the masters. is in the main terrace of the
Winged beachcomber• _
Two willete u1ae o~er ownenhlp of a piece of beach In ~boa.
· Laguna Bowl. Cost is $26.50. Bus leaves from the Balearic·
GMnm\tn\\'f fft\CTM 6''6~.m. ~nd ~at l \~30\'.m. •-11!11~!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~[!!1!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~!!~!!!!~~!!~~1!'!~~ For mformation and reservations, caJt 754--5300.
Paper-makl.ng clau slated ·LB council winners raised mostmone~
Producing hand-made paperthe traditional way is the
focus of a class to be taught by Suzanne Scheidecker this
summer at the Irvine Fine Arts Center beginning July I I.
RegJstrauon 1s under way for the six week course to be
offered on Wednesdays at 7 p.m., and wiJI include
demonstrations on pulps, dyes. moldina, embedding and
embossing techniques. The class fee is $30.
Nell Fitzpatrick lead
in election fundratsf n
with 24,831 in coffers
Candidate Paul Chnsuanscn finished Chnsuanscn that Githens had made the fines of up to SlOO. H~vCT the city dEt\
third. only 118 votes ou1 of the running error. may use dtscretioo to aivina ca.Adiditd\
behmd ColJ1son. Chnst1anscn was also However City Clerk Venui Rollinser chance to submit the proper forms IBe
third in the amount of money raised wt th a said she and the Fair Pohtical P~iocs without penalty ifsufticient ttasOD is~
rep()rted total of S 14.417. However Chns.-Commission, the state acency that savems for beina late. Rollineer Said she bas
tiansen's campaaJn contnbuttons remain elcctwn camJ»l&D financina, are abidina oded tba candida ~ 1>.:.M
The center is located at 4601 Walnut Ave. at Heritage
Park in Irvine.
By DAVID BISHOP embroiJed in a dispute with Wells Fargo bythebank'sstatementtbattbemoneywas :cd!tf:C do :J te ·~
0t111eo.11r,......,. Bank over a mystenous $8.957 donation placed in lbc candidate's aa::ount . by Despi~0h.e :i~~tbat c:andidlds
The more money the candidates raised that turned up in his account as an mistake. Githens and Wells Farao Bank -....A · · ,.._, •••"'-..._ ·
the better they did in Laouna Beach City anonymous contnbution and was later officials have refused i,o commcnL ''"t"''""" r&lSU\&. ..._, act ..... , spent .... .., 10
Pilar Wayne pe.t •pea.ker C ·1 1 · Cf each case but ooc. Fitzpetriclr" ~ ounc1 e ect1ons last Apnl I 0. taken back out of the account by the ban.le Candidate Sinclair Jones firushedfourth gpendina s 1 s,871; Collisoo ll)t'Dt s 13.002~
Pilar Wayne will be the guest speaker when Southern
California Women in Advenising meets July 11 at the
Newpon Marriott Hotel, Ncwpon Beach, with social hour
at 6 p.m .. dinner at 7 p.m. and the speaker at 8 p.m.
Incumbent candidate Neil Fitzpatrick officials who said the deposit was made in votes and fourth in fundraisina. Jones. Cbristian11m spent ss.141; aDd SlftCUltr
topped all six challengers, generating erroneously. Christiansen had already whose campai1n financial statement was Jones spent SS.242. ·
contributions wonh $24,83 I in a success-spent ~pproxim.ate.ly $3.000 of the money. not filed until five days after the June 14 Fitzpatrick's total contribUtiom we1e
fut bid for re-election in which he also Chnsuanscn insists that he checked with deadline, reponed raisin• $6,Sl4.86. swelled by 34 anists who--' to dOdt
received lbe most votes. bank officials on two occasions and was Candidates John Gabnels. Paul Munoz th • f f1 fi~--~~ ·
Topic for the evening will be "How to successfuUy run
a business. write an outstanding cookbook, run a
restaurant and generally succeed in the business and social
world."
Reservations at SI 5 for members and $20 for non-
members may be made by calhng 559-6286.
Council newcomer Manha Collison informed the money was his to spend. He and Rickey Slater were also late filina lheir ~r:;:,~ ~~~t ;:~
finished second in total votes. pining one listed. it <?n his campa\gn state~ent as a returns. However each has since repon.cd when contributed was not nccesarily wMt
of the two available-scats on Ctty Council. contnbutaon from Michael Githens of raisin& less tb.anSSOOwbich exempts them was received at the auction Amon.a the
She also ran second in fundraasing with Loma Terrace 1n Laguna Beach and Wells from filing a full itemized rcpon.. wonswasa ·nun b AnctYWi valulti
donattons totaling S 17.566. Fargo Bank. Bank officals repon.edly told Candidates wbo filc late are subject to at s 1.575, a:1 worJ vilued at S 1 ~ frQ8l
Michael Hallinan. Ray Friesz and Donna
Summer school claBBeB open Marines want to carry torch on base :!u~~·~~r~~~
Commntcc of Oran1t Colll\ty. a politiql Some summer school classt"S remain open in Laguna
Beach dunng the second session of courses offered by
Laguna Ennchment and Resour~ Network beginning
Jul)' 9.
By tbe Associated Press base unless three Manne runners get to run command decision." action coma~ repscscntiua the rilbti 9£
Th d r c p di their pon1on of the rela) on the base. • . . pys and lesbians. : e comm~n er 0 amp en eton In a letter mailed to the Los Angeles Lukeman sdcc1s1on tncludts the ri&htto Cothson recci:Ved. 20 different non-
says he won't allow the Olympic Torch 01) mp1c Orpnizing Committee Thurs-veto the .P~n~ of ~.Y run~ on base mo~ew-y cont~buuons of IOOds and Math. reading. French. Spanish. writing.journalism.
typing and art classes for various student grade levels arc
still available. For information on these or any classes
scheduled for session Ill (July 23-Aug. 3J call 494-2837.
Relay to pass through the Manne Corps day. Maj. Gen. Anthony lukeman said if which ma&bt d1scredJt the md1llr)·. services. many tn the form o( the ute Qf
the Manne runners were forced to run The letaer followed the ditdosurc that vacanon condominiums. which tot.a~
Small buslneu oWDers meet
HB 111an gets
909aysfor
Oly111pic fraud
elsewhere m the state, he would rtfuse 10 the LAOOC bad ass•ancd aboua .20 of the S3. 7.77 and ~ ~ sold at a fundra~
give other runners in the relay permission 200 relay runners an San Diqo County to auction. Collison s ~t cash contnbu-
to cross tht' base. run thetr leas of the relay JO Nonhem tton was a SI .~ donau~n from the Board
"Our letter says our Mannes won't run if California. ·The committee said so mariy of Real ton Pohttcal Action Comnuncc Ul
Women business owners are in vited to attend the July
12 luncheon meeting of 1he Orange County Chapter of the
Nauonal Association of Women Business Owners.
~.hey'rc ~nt up near Oregon," Little said. peoP.le sisned up for the relay in Southern Los Ang~les. . · · They wilt run on Camp Pendleton -the Cahfomiathat some of them would have to Chnsttansen recc1_vcd S l.C>OO each ~
base feels that's onlv right. It was a run in the northern part oftbe sute. a trust aocoun~ in bis name an~ ~m bas own funds, which arc reflected m his tosaJ
The group will meet at Le Premier restaurant. 695
Town Center Dnve, Costa Mesa from 11:30 to 1:30.
Reservation must be made by July 10 by camng the OC-
NAWBO offi ce at 641-1127. The cost is $17.50 for
members with rescrvatton, S 19 for non-members with
reservation; $2 addt1ional al 1he door.
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
A Huntington Beach man convicted of
illegal solicitation of ch~rity funds
purponedly intended for Olynt}>ic athletes
waa sentenced to 90days 1nja1l and a thrce-
ycar probation. The meeting will include a working seminar on
"Markettng and Time Management for the Small
Business Owner" by Carolyn Reister-Roddy. OC·
N .i\ WBO member and co-owner of Leadership Develop-
ment Associates hcadquanercd in Newport Beach.
lnformatton about the association and this meeting is
available by calling the OC-NAWBO office, 641-1127.
Long Beach Superior Court Judge W.H.
Winston Jr. also imposed a S 1,000 fine on
Don Green's company, American Youth
Spons Federation.
A jury found Green and the company
1uilty of one count of unlawful solicitation
of funds for charity and one of solicitation
of funds without a Long Beach city license.
Witnesses had testified that company
representatives had indicated the funds
would be 1'sed to suppon. Olympic athletes.
Friday, June 29 Officials of the United States and Los
An~les Olympic Organizing committees
testified that Green was not sanctioned by
them. No meettng11cbed11led today.
PoucE Loe
Valley man, 29, stabbed
to death in Westminster ..
Pohce arc anvesttptina the st.ab-
bi na death of a 29-year-old Fountain
Valley man found lying face down in
a pool of blood on a residential
Westminster street today.
The victim, Jeffrey William
Hohman. was stabbed several dmcs
Coetalleu
A 30-year-old woman was arrested
on suspicion of hoplif\ina after
security officers at a South Coast
Plaza depan.ment store atlqcdly saw
the woman stuffina men·s clothina
into a baa she was carry1ns. • • •
in the neck. chest and back. The
murder weapon appeared to be a
knife, said police spokesman Roy
Freeman.
Homan, who resided in an apart·
ment complell at 10262 La Hacienda
Ave .• was dead when officen arrived.
an Un.known vehicle collided at
Bristol and Birch streets Thursday.
Minor damaaes were rcponed. • • • The driver of aft unknown car fled
the tcene after coJlidina with a 1978
Ford at Crntal and SOuth Ba)front
Thund&y:-Minor damaacs were rc-
pGned.
They had betn c&lled at 5:44 a.m.
Thui'sday by a resident who saw ahe
vktim lyina in the street.
Freeman said police haven't found
the muroer weapon and have no
suspects Of motives al press time.
esttmatcd $290. • • • An apartment on the 100 block of
45th Strttt was burs!Anted while the
resident was asleep. The buraJar
entered the rcsidence Jhrough the.
unlocked front door and stole suffina
and stCTe<> equipment estimated at
$2.S70. Two I 7-ycar-old youths wert ar-• • • .
rested on suspicion of arand theft Minor damases occui"rcd when a lrftDe
af\ertheya.llqcdlytnedtotakesomc l982GMCanda 1976 Ford collided A hotel patron at the l~iM
stereo cct1:1ipment from a.n outdoor at East Ba)· and Washinaton strt(t Mamon rePoned the theft of a $750
patio at Fuddrucker•s restaurant on Thw'1day. • • • rina ftQm ht.. room Tbursda . No
Adims A venue.. • • I A LOI A•ks man ttponed the fortt WI$ uiod to rjn entrance.
Jewelry wonh more than SJ. 700 t.hd\ or two U..ler Whttts Crom has -9 MC H • le was $tOltn from a residence on West vehide while it wu parkc:d iri a A l 75 A omet was Ito n
20th trttt by burJlan who a~n1-~ Ceattt Park1na IOt. Dl""I· f"urtday afternoon frOm H~~.
Iv pn·cd open a l1din& •1• door to cs were estimated SlOO uttkt DOdtc on Auto tnter vt.
J ~ • • • • A 11etto woitb about S800 was
pm entry A COfll Mesa woman rtponCd the dite0wrtd stokn Tbunda)' from a
theft of a car cover ft'om a 1982 rtcftltional vehicle on Travclland
!lewpe>rt Beacla Volk.__.. parked on the 6009 block Way. POiice att not u~ hen 1l wu
Moderate dam we~ reported ofScaShOtt. O.m.,es ~ tunated taken. when a 1984 hevy and a 1980 Saab S60 • • • colhdcdat MacAnhurBoulevardand · • • • four wheels and lire 'alued at
N ... Pl ct Thuf'lday A bull,lar mitred • Y\op at 26 about SlOOO wert sto~n ovcmi&ht
e"'PO" a • 'l· • ' .._ . ........-,._fubioa:lilUd thi'Oujh 1n untocktd ftOm a BMW left u\ a ~tk•Da ttall on
One dri,'tr ~ tnc tttnct al\ertwo tNidt dOOr and atolt the punie of an Tluckct street On Grttnboro• a
1980 To ota a 19RJ Cht'1mltt •nd emplo)""' Thundl~. O.maan wcrt trttt n r two Ul"t$ •I~ w''°
1
I I I I
taken trom a Volvo. Both sets were
disco' ered at about 7 a.m. • • • Thieves cut locks to a rear pte
behmd Four Day T1~ on tht 1600
block of Armstrona A venue and
made off' "1th 40 truck wheels each
'alued at $72. The theft ott\Jrrcd
bcl'o\ttn Sunday and Tucsda)
Lapn&Beacb
haron Mane Bura.. 34. .-as
chargtd with dn' tr\I under the 1n-
Oucnct of alcohol at t.57 a.m.
Thursda)' an the 200 blocl of Anita
Streu ;he wa rtleascd on $1 .500
bail
roantaln Valley
Someone broke a second story
wmdow m the 9852 block of Peacock
and 5tole clothma, U.S. coins and
antique hand un valued at $1,900. • • • S«un•r personnel at Miner's Out· ~'· 16 IS BrOQ.khurst 't .. said thie\ies tole 14 pa'irs of Le,; pns
valued at $280 by tuffi them in a
large purse or puttina them on
underneath their own clothina. • • • Sur&Jars tole a tctto. fint aid kit.
w,atch and tool box after bfuk101 into
a white 1971 Volkswastn bus 1n the
18000 bl~~ ofEudid Strett.
on Edinaer Avenue. • • •
amount of contributions received.
Of Christiansen·s other donations, tl>e
largest were SJ 7 5 each from Sheridan
O'Mara. an account executive in Dana
Point; and from Merrit O'Mara. Cbris-
ttanscn 's business panncr.
Sinclair Jones· laf'ICS1 conpibutioo was
an $800 non-monetary donauon of graphic
services from Beuy Hillman.
CifY.clcrk Verna RolliflF. received tot.al
contnbutions of $2. 733 1n her suc:c:css.fjJt
reelection bid. Dorothy ""Sunny"' Rhodts,
Rollinacr·s chaltmacr. raised Sl.593 iq,.a
lOStng effort. Her repon indicates that
campaign expenditures in excess of ~t
was raised have left a deficit of$ 1.823.
Fitzpatnck left a campaign balance of
$2,435; Christiansen left a disputed bal·
ancc of $5,641 ; Collison left a balance of
$912; and Jones left a balance of $286.
Susan Morse, unop{>OSC<i in her success-
ful bid for for the city treasurer's post,
rcponed raising less than $500. '
A resident of the 20100 block of
Thursda)' afternoon on susp1cion•of
shophftfog at the Target store. 9882
Adams Ave. Recovered were cwo
tapes wonh S 15. 98.
Harbor Isle reponed Thursday that a
while and blue cus1om-bu1lt Schwinn
cruiser biC')cle was stolen from the
bikeraC'kattheCtt) P1er Thelosswas
csmnatcd at SJOO. • • • A ~1dcnt of tbe 17300 block of
Avalon Lane rcponed Thursda) that
meone broke into her ~ellow 1973
VolkSwaacn. The loss included re-
corded tapes worth $221 • • • resident of the 6200 bloc~ of
Fal.linir--atcr Dnve rcponed Thurs-
da)' lhat. someone 5tok two wu'C
"httl covers from h1 red and gra)
1980 Buick Reul parked tn the A I pha
8c'8 lot at lleach Boulevard and
Uuca Avenue. The loss was est1·
mated at S 140. • • • male 1uvenile wa arrcstcd
••• A rts1dcnt of the 18800 blOC'k of
Smokewood Cirde returned home
Thursday and heard noi~ upstairs.
Someone bad apparently forced o~n
a rear sJidana door to enter [he
1ntruckr apparently jumped ou"( a
second story window and fled With
camera equipment '4'0nh $540. ': • • • A woman was arrested Thursday
afternoon at the Sean Catalot
Surplus S1orc. 904S Adams A vc .. ·pn
suspicion of shopliftina. Rccovorcd
were shoes and cloth1na wonh $20 ••• Someone broke into a black tnd
gray Toyota Cctica parked Thu~y
on the 16100 block of Park idc l...Q'te.
Thr In~~ wa~ cuimatcd at SI ,SOO.'
Trucker stabbed trying
to thwart looters in HB ~
.. .
A• Orange Cout DAIL:V PILOTIFridey, JuM 29, 1984
Nation's economy slows
Indicators show first decline
+-----------~n Index 1n nearly two years
. WASHINGTON (AP) -The government's main
puge of future cronomic ac11v1ty lipped 0.1 percent in
May, the fll'St dC<"line since Auau t 1981, the Commertt
Oepanment reponed today.
The dccbne, not unexpected by economy-watchers,
4napped the longest string of advances for the Compo itc
Index ofwdinalndicatorssmce theendofWorld War II.
It was yet another signal ahe economy is slowing from
Lts ener&et1c expansion earlier in the year.
The index had risen 0. 5 percent in Apnl after
cl!mbina a revised 0.2 percent in March. The dcpanment
b.ad earlier reponed that the index fell in March. but
rcv~M thsu with mnn-r nmf'lrtl" rlAtA
"Commerce ~ta~ Mal olm BaJdrig noted t~
May fi&ul't' was al$o subJ«'t to later rcv1 ion, especially
since flaurtt weft' not yet avadable for two index ..
component that measure chanaes in credit demand and
inventory stockpilina.
He said, however, thu a tonier-term trend was ~omina clear in that the index bad nscn about O.S
percent per month for ~he last ix months after ri ina 0.9
percent per month dunna lhc previous half year.
"Past experience indicates that th1s slowdown is
signalina less vtgorous eccnomic growth durir\8 1hc
second half of this year," he said in a statement distributed
by aides.
Analysts have welcomed indications of a moderate
'Slowdo9ffl in the economy's growth rate a, a good sign
saying such an easing could lessen upward pressure o~
interest rates and inflation.
Widow wants hubby's child
Goes to court to obtain
dead husband's frozen sperm .
CRETEIL. France (AP ) -A. 21-year-old widow who
"ants to be impregnated 1.1.1th her late husband's frozen
S,t>erm has gone to court in an attempt to force a clinic to
return the sperm and .. pro"c that lo"e 1!1 stronger than
death."
Corinne Parpala1~ claims her husband's sperm
belongs to her a nd that the sperm bank bas broken a
contract b" nn1 rrt11rnin2 11 and allowing her to have the
I TOKYO (AP} -ShlgechlyC) .tiwnl. ~ in 6e Guinnell Book of WOt1d ~as ttw Wottd'a idest human Ming. got up at 5:30 thia morning Md ...,..ated his 119th birthday at hit home tn 90UtMm .
tzuml, • former dockwcner who llkee ~ e In the evenlnG u he...,. el"toeh\f, • ~ from qar cane, i. .. hMtthy u 4Mtf', Seid
bumi, deughter-fn..law Of lzuml's nepheW.
~ Alcordt lhc1W that lzuml was born on June 29, pas, tM year the U.S. CMI War ended and thr.a
~ l*<>N J-s>an broke Its feudal leotatlon.
t'• tl;\.wnf U'IU8lfy riMS between 6:30 Lm. Md 6:00 m.. NtaallmpJebreaktut endenfoyaawafk around
prdet'l, ~the laen townthtp on Tokunolhlma ~~hit •tatue In 1982, lzuml amd.
Vllftora from throughout Japen, incfudlng many
ypung women and honeymoonent eeetdng ha t>aeu-
l)O, often call on him at hJs home, M•. lzuml aaJd.
..
. . .
\
I
BANK OF AMERICA HAS
NEVER HADA PACKAGE
UKE THIS BEFORE.
Now you can get a special new .:iuto loan
with all these opuons
No down payment. Bank of Amenca will
give you 100% financing• on amounts of
SIO,CXXl or more for new cars or 198.3-84 used
cars. (Thu. option 1<, alc,o ava1t1blc through
paruc1pating dealer\, !l<I he sure co ask about
Bank of AmenCd JOO'\, hnancmg )
child she says the couple planned.
AlalA Pllf'pelaltdicd of cancer Dec. 25. at a&e 24. two
days af\er h.is marria~e to Mrs. Parpalaix. •
Before the mamage, Parpalaix., from Marseille. had
chemotherapy for cancer of the testicle. Warned the
treatment might make him stenle. he decided with his
future wife to deposit sperm with a sperm bank in the Paris
suburb of Kremhn-Bicetre.
After his death. Mrs. Parpalalx asked to have the
sperm returned. The bank ref used, cuing legal grounds,
and she went to court. The trial opened Wednesday in the
nearby suburb of Creteil and Judge Albert Daucy said it
would continue at a July 11 hearing.
Lawyers for the Center for the Study and Preservation
ot Sperm said dunng the heanng that the bank's sole
obligauon was to return the sperm to the donor. and that
was made impossible by Parpalaix · death. -
Paul Lombard. one of thrtt lawyers for the Parpalaix
tlunily,uk.cdtbecountodecidc"thatad«eased man bas
the right to breathe life into the womb ofhis wife and prove
that love is stronger than death."
The Ministry of Health, under whose authority
France's 18 sperm banks were established, on May 10
declined to rule in the case. saying it would let Mrs.
Parpalaix 1'now its position at a later. unspeclfit'd date.
laW)'ers for the wtdow and Parpala1x' parents argued
the center must honor a "contract of deposit" by returninf
the sperm to the Parpalaix family, the "natural inheritors
of the deceased.
Center lawyer Cathenne Paley-Vincent. arguing
against the "contract of deposit" concept, said there was
no nght of inheritance to the sperm. She also questioned
whether there was ample proof Parpalaix had deposited
the sperm with the intent of having a child with Mrs.
Parpala1x.
There appears to be no French law covering the issues
raised by the case.
Even were the court to rule in favor of the ParpalaJX
family. a cavil code dating to the mid-19th century would
render a child born under the circumstances illegitimate.
According to the law. a child must be born less than 300
days after his father's death to be considered leg1llmate.
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A real wet ride
The Palm Beach County Science Muaeum
and a Sheraton chef Introduced local
journallata to underwater tricycle racm, in
preparation for SeaFeat '84, an underwater
awarenen weekend at the Palm Beach
Gardena Sheraton Reaort next month.
Church facing
suicide lawsuit
LOS ANGELES (AP)-A church and the pastor who
counseled a man before he com mined su1c1de can be sued
because they might have brought about his death by
refctil"fln$ to suicide as a way "the Lord takes home a
disobedient believer.'' an appeals court ruled.
h was possible that Grace Community Church and
the Rev. John F. MacArthur Jr. "followed a policy of
counseling suic1daJ persons th.at, if one was unable to
overcome one's sins. su1c1de was an acceptable and even a
desirable alternative to living," the sraT~Court of Appeal
said Thursday.
The court's 2-1 vote reinstated a civil lawsuit filed by
Maria and Walter J. Nally of Tujunga. whose-son.
Kenneth Mark Nally, 24. killed himself with a shotgun in
his Burbank apartment.
The appeals court said lhe church and r.astor could
have brought about Nally's suicide b)' "de 1bcrately or
reckless!)' increasing (Nally's) intense feelings of guilt."
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NATION
Bar pauon shoots
6 to death in Dallas
8)' U1e Alsoclated Pre11
DALLAS (AP) -A man Oew into a rqe while
dancing and shot his partner at a posh pnvate club earl)
today, then continued a wild shootina spree that killed sh
people and criticaJly wounded a seventh, police said
Abdelkrim Bclachheb was arrested several hours after tht ram~e at lanni's Restaurant, a private nonh Dallu bar
1ccord1na to Dallas Police Lt. Al McAllister ... He wai
dancina with one of the ladies. became enraaed, pulled•
pistol and shot several people, left, went to his car
reloaded, came back and shot some more," said Police Sat
L.A. Lewis. four of the victims were women
GM dabbles Jn computers
DETROIT -General Motors Corp., 1he world's
laracst industrial company, has diversified into the
computer business. ~in& to purchase the computer
company of Texas b1lhona1rc H. Ross Perot for $2.5
billion. GM Chairman Roger 8. Smith announced the
pending acquisition Thursday. saying GM abd Perot's
Electronic Data Systems Corp. would "create the lefJeSt
and most technologically advanced computer services
company in the world."
Farrdhan denles comment
NEW YORK -Black Muslim leader Lou1s
Farrakhan, one of Democratic presidenual hopeful Jesse
Jackson's earliest supporters, maintains that he never
called Judaism a "gutter relision," but acknowledges that
he used the term "dirty religion." Farrakhan. who was
soundly rebuked by the Rev. Jesse Jackson for his
comments. denied in a published rcpon and in two
broadc~st interviews Thursday that his statement m a
Sunday radio broadcast included the word "gutteT."
·TIJey•re-marble mentors
WILDWOOD. N.J. -Knuckling down on the beach
and adjusting for stiff ocean winds, confident Nicole
Stamm and shy Gregg Yakkh held off the fierce
compellllon of two newcomers to become the nation's
"king and queen" mibsters. Nicole, 11 . of Reading, Pa.,
andGrcgg, 14,ofPittsburdt. won the61stannual National
Marbles Tournament on Thursday.
Wlnds fan grass blue
LIVERMORE ~ A grass fire fanned by 30 mph
winds blackened about 5.000 acres before being controlled
early today near the Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory. officials said. The fire started at about 4 p.m.
Thursday on a high-explosive test site belonging to the lab.
which tests nuclear weapons for the U.S. government.
Forest sprayed for plague
FRAZIER PARK -Areas of Los Padres National
Forest are being dusted wnh insecticide in an attack on
Oeas and rodents carrying bubonic plague which caused
the death of man last month. authont1es sa)'. Areas being
dusted include the Chuchu Pate. Mt. P1nos and McGill
campgrounds plus the area around the town of Frazier
Park. 75 miles north of Los Angeles. where Gcor&e
Lacefield contracted bubonic plague from his cat May 3.
He died May 18.
It's Reagan'• fault
LOS ANGELES -President Rcapn shouldn't
panic. but geologists say they've discovered that an
earthquake fault withm three miles of his Santa Barbara
County ranch is capable of producing a major quake. The
fi nding that the Santa Ynez Fault, previously thought to be
inactive, can generate a destructive temblor "is no cause
for panic, but should be given consideration in evaluating
se1sm1c hazards" when building large structures in the
area. geologJst Robert Troutman said Thursday
Smog goals not met
LOS ANGELES -The agency responsible for
cleaning up local skies failed to meet its federally set goals
last year. according to a report issued by the agency and the
Southern California Association of Governments. The
South Coast Air Qtality Management District failed to
meet fedenl goals for reducing emissions of reactive
hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide, two of the major
poll utants that make up ozone. the rcpon said.
Engllsh spoken here
RIVERSIDE -The county health department's
recent ban on use of foreign languages by employees 1s
drawing criticism from groups who say the policy infringes
on free speech rights. "We really feel it is unconscionable
that they not be allowed to speak in Spanish,""said the
Rev. Norman Copeland. co-chairman of the Rainbow
Coalition. which represents several minority, senior
citizen and community groups in Riverside County.
Defection reward offered
TAIPEI. Taiwan-The Defense Ministry said today
its will offer roughly a quarter of a ton of gold to any
mainland Chinese pilot who defects to Taiwan 1n an F-8
Jet fighter. The reward. wonh about $2. 97 million at
current exchange rates. is the hiahest offered by th.e
Nationalist$ to mainland Chinese who defect in military
aircraft matched only by a similar amount for those who
defect in a 8-6 fighter bomber.
Spandau day. numbered
LONDON -Britain has secret plans to tear down
crumblina Spandau Prison in West Berlin within 48 hours
of the death of i1s only prisoner, ail,na Nazi war criminal
Rudolf Heu, British 'newspapers reponed today. The
London Times quoted unnamed military sources in West
Berlin as saytna bulldozers win destroy theprison u aoon
as the four doctors who attend Adolf NWer's fonner
deputy confirm he has died.
Gall arbitration arfed
MANAMA. Bahra.in -S.udi leaders used the
0«:asfon ofa rclJajous feast today to ura.e Iran and Iraq to
submit to arbitration in an effon to cod their 45-month-
old war Iran and Iraq a.re bttom1n1 ''a farm of imported -..e pons from all dittttion ." said Saudi Crown Prince
Abdullah an a statement markina the bqJnnina of the
tbttt-day Ejd al Fur. or the feast of the breakfast.
Lebanoa uland.toU 15
B~IRUT. Ltbanon-RC1Cue operations ended at a
mall 11l1nd ofTthc north Lebanon coest. and police said
today that Israeli air and stt a1t.1di.s oo a susptttcd
gucmlla base the~ left 1S pt0plc dead. 23-ounded and 11
mi inaand pmumcddrowned. Tbcpohcorepondidnot
say w hether the cuualty toll 1ndlidtd an Israeli pnsoner
and thrtt aucmlluuardt &hit a radical Palestini.to tacuon
(lam\Cd wert 1tltd in the I rach ra ds on Palm I land late
Wtdnnda~.
:Jackson's sorry Reagan won 'tsee him . .
Says U.S. must grab
opportunity to end
stHfe with Cuba -------
WASHINGTON (AP) -4>roclaimin&
that America "must seize this moment
without the cynicism of the past,"The Rev.
Jesse :Jac:IUOn uid toa&y t\e 1 C:lisappomted
President Reapn will not meet with him to
discuss his tnp that brought •8 Amencan
and Cuban pnsoners home from Cuba.
Jackson and the freed men 1ot a tumultuous welcome at Dulles Airport in
suburban Virginia in the early momina
hours a Jackson wrapped up hi five-day
Caribbean swina.
3rd Anniversary Sale
20% off a~I leotards/ftghts
20-50% off selected
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Stcirts June 30
.,,Store Hourt Monday-FfidcrV 10 am to 9 pm
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South Coast Plaza VIiiage
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?M/432-1156
Later. J kson briefed the Con&J'.'S ·on I
Slack Caucus and, u~uently. State
Dcpanment offic1al on his tnp.
But the Democratic presidential hopeful
responded to a quC$tion that be wa~.
inckcd, dtsappointed not to be able to talk
directl)' to Reagan or even Secertary of
State ~rgc Shultz about the trip that
included a lona meeting with Cuban President rtdel Castro.
• "Well, I am (disappointed). J think it
would be important for the president to
bear and to seize this initiative," Jackson
told reporters after the meeting with the
caucus ... It would bC well for the secretary
of state to do so. Neither of them has ever
met Castro.
"They only talk at him and talk about
him. Leaden have a moral obhption to
(ace each other face-to-face." he wd.
....
applauded II he am vcd and Yt'U peeled II
the diploma1i cn1rance by the depart·
. ment's chief of protocol. Selwa Roosevelt. Wh~ost of the rt'turnen praised
Jacklon's miwon, one Cuban turned the
tables on the Ocmocratic ~deGtial
candidate by ridiculin& hii »•d to k
improved U.S -Cuban relations.
"To '° to Cuba to join in a moral
offcns1ve with (President) Fidel Castro ... i&.
a moral offense," uid AndrcS Va,,as
Gomez. the lone non-prisoner amona .&he
aroup. •
V arias. "'ho had spent 20 years m pritoa
followed by house arrest in Cuba. thanked
JJCkson for his efforts but said, .. , cannOI
be here and aUow that you miaht believe
that Fidel Castro is a human beina ... and
tat we are here on account of his kindness.··
A$ the scene unfolded at the terminal
buildinaat nearby Dulles Airpon. Jackson
stoOd impassively behind Varps whik the.
Cuban spoke. Later, lack.son sa.id .... ha-Ye a
dtffercnt view but tbai's what makes
Assertlnf. that there is a "sense of
emergency in Central America and the
Caribbean, Jackson said 1t is time for the
United States to rcopen~latio 1th Cuba and to work directly ith the lliffcaraguan-"S<tvemmem f; lCC. • Afnerica Amenca... -b--~~===:;;:;:;::::::::::::;=:::.::=::::.:...:.~:.:..--.:::--1 He said Vargas• remarks reflected the • "We must seize this moment without the
cynicism of the past," he said.
Jackson arrived 15 minutes late for his
meeting at the State Department with
Undersecretary of State Michael
Armacost. A crowd of about 35 onlookers
bitterness accumulated over two decades
imprisonment. One freed Cuban prisoner,
Daniel Conde Freire. said of his newfound
frttdom: "h's something I have wanted for
so long. to come to the United States and get away from that small hellhole."
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Obese inniate
suing prison
Claims f aclltttes Inadequate
;for a 585-pounder In wheelchaf r
LEXINGTON Ky. (AP) - A SSS.pound inmato
who says be hasn't bathed sinoe February 1s suina prison
officials because he ·11 ·•never ao home alive" unless he acts
an air-conditioned room, better bathroom facilities, his
own television and housekeeping assistance.
A $30 million lawsoit filed by Oscar Nichols, who
used to weigh 7SO ~unds. contends he's a victim of cruel
and unusual punishment because the Federal Correc-
tional Institution is &._eared to thin people.
Nichols, 48, of Perryville, Mo .. is servina a I 5-ycar
term for federal fittanns violat'°ns.
"There should be other alternatives to putting me
through this hell. I'm §Omg to have to get some relief. or I'll
• «ver ao home ahvc. · Nichols said. ''Tbe IS months that
• ·vc put in here have been like a I 5-year sentence."
Nichols 1s seek1~ $5 mllhon damages from each of
,. 'JU defendants. including the director of the U.S. BurtilU of
Prisons; a Le:ungton wardtn and four prison employees.
Pnson officials declined comment, but filed a ·
.response to the SUit last week aslong that U.S. Magistrate
James Cook d1sm1ss It or rule in their favor. They say
1chols could solve his own problems by losina weight.
.. Plaintiff has refused to do so, staung that he has not
been sentenced to diet and has no desire to do so unless he
ts provided with the dtet of his choice: fncd fish and fned
chicken da1I )' ... said Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred A. Stine.
Nichols admits he's not interested in dieting.
"I've been more interested in maintamii:tg m)' health
instead of trying to lose weight," he ex.plained.
N1cholssa1d he has a histolf ofback and leg problems
and can walk only short distances. so he spends most ofh1s
lime in a wheelchair, which 1s barely visible ~neath him.
'Tm stuffed in here," he said. "I need a chair about 6
, inches wider, but then I won't ~able· to fit through the
·"'doorways around here."
UWtr .....
Oecar Nichol• aaya It'• cruel and u.nuual punlahment to keep him, in federal prbon
His lawsuit alleges that the beds bathrooms
cafcte!'ia. clothinJ. f umit'!re and medical c~rc offered by
the pnson are all inadequate, although he said things have
improved slightly since he went to court in March.
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,.
Brother don~tes his kid~e3
··to sister, dies after surgery
SAN BERNARDINO
(AP) -An Enalishman
who traveled 6,000 miles to
donate a kidney to his sister
wa worried only that the O!Jln would work for her.
Ha sister survived , but ho
died a week afier the trans ..
plant.
"He came over to give
bis life to his sister, and he
did,•• said Robert Sanchez.
of Rialto.
SanchC'Z's son is married
to the eldest daugbter of the
kidney recipient, Frances
Mitcheson, • 1. of San
Bernardino. -:\..
Douglas Lawe. 49, o'f
Bedford. Enaland. died late
W e dnesday at San
Bernardino County Medi-
cal Center, where the
kidney transplant oper-
ation was performed last
Thursday.
"( loved him so much,"
Sanchez said. "(n the two
weeks he was here he was so
lovable ... so beautiful." H o s pi ta I d i rector ~-~-_;_.....:.....;... __ _..:;...::;::~;,____.._...:;;;1 u~
donatln• hl• klcloey ln an Opel
adon that coat bJm hi.a llfe.
Charles Jervis said Thurs-
day that Lowe's death at
8:48 p.m. Wednesday came
as a shock to hospital staff.
Doaa Lowe vl•lt• •later . Francee Matcbeeon prior to
"He was scheduled to be
dischaf'ied today or tomor-
row," Jervis said.
An autopsy Thursday re-
vealed that Lowe died of a
broken blood vessel ~n the
tuna that caused him to
bleed to death internally,
with the kidney removal a
~ondary cause. county
Each wa y: adults S9.25;
children 2-11, l'.90
children under 2. S.50
(213) 77$-6111•514-3833
Oro"918 Co. (71., 527·7111
And on Tlcketron outlets
Coroner Brian McCormick
said.
"Any surgical procedure
involves some risk,"
McCormick said. "It
should not be construed
that there was any malprac-
tice in the surgery."
McCormick called the
case an "unfortunate story,
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RESERVE YOUM TODAY! CAU. 141-1114
but a humanitarian story in
a lot of ways. A brother
pve his life for his sis~r.
and in doing so. brings the
community t°'ether both
in Bedford, England, and in
San Bernardino."
He said he's hcadjng a
drive to raise money for
Lowe's family "to make
sure the deceased will be
transported back to his
homeland with dignity and
respect."
Dr. Edward Dainko. the
surgeon who performed the
operation, was in surgery
Thursday and could not
immediately return a
phone call to his office. h
secretary said. .
M eanwhi le, M ·
Matcheson. who had ~<
told of her brother's deat
was in good conditio
"having a normal course
terms of her transplant
Jervis said.
The day before the ope
ation. Lowe had said. "l'
not nervous at all.
"My wife felt the san
way as I did," he said. "'\\
love Frances and this
what she needs. The on
thing I'm concerned abo
is that the kidney works f
her."
FCC won't hush
TV commercial1
WASHINGTON (AP) -Are you angered by 101
television commercials? If so, the Federal Communic
tions Commission has a commercial message for you: U
the Mute button on your remote control.
Over the objections of Commissioner James
Quello. the FCC voted 4-to-I Wcdnesda)' to clo~ out
five-year inquiry into loud commercials without propc
ma new regulations.
The agency said it couldn't efTe1:t1vel ) enforce rul
banninJ loud commercials "because loudness 1s ve
subJcctive and vanes from listener to listener."
"This makes me so mad and we never do anyth1
about It," countered Quello. "(Loud commercials) ha
really 1mtatcd me for so long. I'm goma to dissent."
"There arc all kinds of things that are 1mtants in o
hfc." responded FCC Chairman Mark S. Fowler. "It m
annoy some of us, but what 1s the role of this agency?"
"I think the issue is whether there are no
government solutions ... and I think the answer to that
yes," added Commissioner Dennis R. Patnck.
The non-government solutions cited by Patnck a1
the FCC's staff included the growing use of TV remo1
control units that feature a Mute button, and t
availability of stereo equipment that can be attached tc
TV ~t to maintain an even sound level.
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Olympic event:
·Paying. fOr · visit
0.-,,... ...... _,Lee,.,_
A.E . ..Pat" Arnold and bl8 wife C&thertne cut cake at
recepdon bonortq bl8 retirement from edacadon ~·
OC education
pioneer retires
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Ot--..o.IJ,... ....
Family's ftgurtng
to spend $10.000
for i 7-day trtp
LOSANGELES(AP)-Fourycan
aao. Jim and Nancy Dunbar staned
reservina space in airplanes. hotels
and restaurants. Alona with their 14-
year-old dauah~r. they would be
spendina their 1984 vacation at the
Olympic Games in Los Anaeles.
Now, with the openin& ceremonies
a month away, the Dunbars are ready
for their Olympic dream vacation -
at a niJbtmarisb price ofSI0,000.
'"i've spellT about SS,000 and
haven't even left home yet." said
Dunbar, 44, an international corpor-
ate attorney who believes Los Aoaeles
~)'acquire a reputation for IOuain&
VlSJlOR.
There is no way to know bow
representative the cost of the Dun·
bars' 17-day cross-country excunion
miaht be amona the 6SO,OOO visitors
expected for the Games. But that
influx of sports fans and sun-seekers
is expected to pump SI billion into •
the Los Anaeles area economy.
To view their first Olympics, the
Dunbars ~ to pay:
-Sl ,SOO for roundtrip air tickets,
even considerina bar&ain fares.
-$3,200 in Olympic tickets,
includina $900 paues for all nine
days of track and field.
-S 130 a day for a standard room
in a downtown hotel.
-$4SO a week for a midsize rental
car.
-About S l 00 a day for food.
Tentatively planned sidetrips 10
Laauna Beach and San Dieao could
send the tab hi&bcr. .. .......
A.E. "Pat" Arnold, a 40-ycar member of the Orange County Board of
Education, retired Thursday. He is 83.
Yet, even at those prices, Dunbar
considers bis family fortunate.
"We lucked out." he said. "Our
hotel is 2'/J miles from the Coliseum.
walkina distance. Some people arc
stayina in San Dieao and driving 240 miles a day."
Jim and N~ DallU Jot at tlMlr local Y1EA
Colambla, 8 .C. to let bl •epe f• •10,000 ~tt.a.
The first lay(non~ucator) board member in California, Arnold bepn
hisadministrauvecarecrin I 933asa member of the Cypress Elementary
School District.
From budaet hearings to plantinaarass on the school playaro\lnd with
his own hands, Arnold is credited with sin~e-handedly changing a defeatist
attitude toward Cypress schools into a posJtive one.
He was elec~ed to the county board of education in 1956. After 12
consecutive two-year terms, he was elected president emeritus in 1980.
Arnold is the foun.der and president of the Gcmco Scholanhip
Federation for approximately 12,400 schools. The program, which
originated in Oranae County, is now implemented nationwide.
Fred Koch. deputy county superintendent of schools. said "as an
orphan~hc was interested in anything that was good for Ir.ids."
He served on the Orange County Planning Commission for I 0 years,
the Cypress City Council for four yean, the Cypress Park Board for 13 yean,
on the Juvenile Justice Commission for seven years, and on the Cypress
Volunteer Fire Department for SO years. He was also a member of the
Orange County Grand Jury and the federal arandjury.
Koch said medical complications during the past months were one
cause of the retirement.
A reception was held in his honor Thursday.
A Cypress public school and park have been named after Arnold, who
lives with his wife. Catherine, in Cypress. His dauahter, Patty Hoyt, lives an
Costa Mesa.
Some arc makina plans to see the
Olympics without all of the biah side
costs.
Barry McCormack, a bar manqcr
from the Bronx. N.Y., and thttc
others in his travelina party expect to
pay $8,000 fortheirthree-week. cross.-
country trip. None of it will be spent
on hotels-they arc rentina 1 camper
for S 700 a week.
JJut McCormack is unhappy about
havina to pay S-iO a niaht for a
campsite for their eight-day stay in
Los Anaelcs. That rate 1s about
double what he plans to pay at most
stops, with some costina no more
than $2 to $3 a niaht, he said.
For Dunbar, the hardest part was
findina a place to stay in a city that
attracted 43 million v1sitors in 1983.
After almost two years of plannina.
Dunbar was still without botel IC· commodations in April wbeft be t1ew
to London on business. •
While there, be noticed a news-
paper advertisement with tbe number
of a Los Anscles hotel that claimed n
had rooms 1v11lable.
Back home, he telephoned tbe
Hotel rtJUeroa and was told that a1J
rooms had Iona been taken.
"After pesterin& the manaecr for
four days in a row, be finally Jet me
have a room for S 130, which I thouabt was a fair price," said Dunber. wb.OK
wife, a runnina enthusiast, sat the
idea of an Olympic vacation from a
racina compenion fou:r years qo.
Tickets for the closina c::eranon.ies
Aua. 12 came from another im-
probable source.
"Because I practice international
corporate law, I bad some contacts in
the aovernmenl of Holland. They came up with the tlckets."' be said.
Sport fund-raisers look
ahead to smooth sailing
Mlf ........... _,..., ......
"Wish work could be carried on like this every
day," said Carol Blud.ard referring to the Chariot
Champions' first annual meeting aboard the "Kelpie".
The newly organized supporters for the Junior
Wheelchair Sports Camp discussed a Sept. I 0 fund-
ra1scr as they sailed along on the Oassis 82-foot staysail
schooner. Blanchard is ways and means chairman for cc.
Thirty-seven (including honorary chairwomen
Nora Jorsen1en and Emma Jue RUey) were along on
the trip which took them near the Riu Carlton, setting
forthe benefit:
Matches with wheelchair players and celebrities,
tennis pros and Americans vs. "ustralians. plus a
reception hosted by Stein· Brief Group and dinner
(beina planned ~Y Wllllam Ball,.,enertl manq,~ of the
RC) are scheduled.
UniversityOubwas the awarding of the Milt Vallens
award to Jim Bull, who was track and field coach for
almost 20 years.
Outaoina president Bob Sc:Uetder presented the
award to Bush and later accepted an award ofbis own -
a plaque in appttciatJon for his two terms frQm ,,,_
ancomina president Brwce Crawford.
The OC club contributes to scholarsbtps and seven
of the rec1p1ents were present at thedannertodiscuss
their educational plans-LJllM Fruk. Terrie Goldate,
Laarte Maret. Wll.Uam Sen.. Karo PereU, Celeste
Clary and Foq 1lllq-Hu Ttea.
Four past presidents. Wrley Lawler, Tom
'hradler, DoD Solomoa and Let M ..... attcndcd the
annual event. Others there included Jee Conlon,
incomina prestdent of the UClA Alumni Association.
A1a1H Wttt, Let BardeJ, Jeni Carrtqi.and Muray
Altermu.
Tbelr planninJ also included • lel'Vin& three niahts at a populf.r
priJM rib restaurant. ~ ·· dtt
specialty cosu about S20. Callin& it ••an unusual f"YIW'TVlihliP
for us.•· Duntm said, "Y~eptO want to see the Olympics t.dly 10 ~
thOIC prices.
.. But I dri..nk it will be worth it. How
many times in yoUT life does
chance come ~? 11·1 a specjlJ time ...
Many businesse1 lboupt ~
and boosted their' rata for ik
Olympic period.
Visi\Ors rentina a comJ)ICt car frcib
Hertz at Los Anldes lnternatical
Allport will pey S3S.90 I day in Jui)',
up &om the current S.1.99 price. A
luxury car, currently offered at 1
special $39 rate, soan to SIS0.90 for
the Olympics.
Hotel prices will averqie $100 a
ni&ht, up from the $65 norm.
Carol Bfucbard and Ward Cb••berlla, GDderwridq
cbalrman, dl8c11M Cbartot Cbamplona' t.Dd·ra1Hr.
lnvitauons will be in the mail in Auaust. Wan
CUmberU.. underwrili04cbairman, extended an
invitation to th.e pcsu to JOin Stela-Brtef and Al
Coteattao (ECCO Printina) in bccomina unllerwriten
The club's ncxtcalcndarcdevcnt tsAua. 26at the
Thrasher home.
Paparazzi is edited by Style Editor Vid.t Dtan.
Viet photo
winner gets
citizenship :
or sponson and pauons.
BrluGelcer,JuniorWbcelchairTennisdirectot.
told about the two summer~ to be held in Denver
and the one which conchldes y al Chapman Colleae.
Business completed, the aailon lunched on a
Harbor Grill of Dua Point~ of croisaant.
aandwiches filled with bay ahrim~ 1n an herb
mayonnaitt, Vermicellis &eda wath more shrimp. Ctuit
compote inpbriel aau.ceand ~c. (Grill~
l•andW .... 11.k:bwerea toterVeupthe
lunch.)
The °Kelpie .. (owned by Att0rney Jim DMntt.
who was alona for the floetina buainesa telSion) was
donated fOr the occuion counny of the A ventun
SailinaOub.
It WU learned OD tbe trip thatju.st I f'ew yan 110
• the clubwu pri~ to have in na prapam asw
sailor and paraplclic, lnl Parb.uecutive direttorof
the National F<Miaadatioa ofWbedcbair Tennis.
• • • • • The UCLA Oubmemben bad the opponuruty 10
lcam the inside tcOOp oo the •14 footbiall ICUOD
SatWday when ••••......_ ollmiivecooi'dinatorfor · lhclnuns.~~:~annuahcbolarihipdinner. _.._ Dli• .. ...,... u 9ialb.~•Mf of -=--~~=· Anolhe!',IUaNiahtOftheeventhe\d iii the UC lrvan.c iictW waltlij l&lla"':W o,,-af~
. ' //
1 I
,
r.
Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. June 29. 1984
~osmetic surgery ~igbt not be enough lift
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I am S2 yqnold.wu
wiCSowed last year A
andwanttoctt.nae II my life. I need aome
sound advice. I .... DEIS Because I have LAI atw.ys been. SUD·
worshipper, mysk.in
is badly wrinkled and ltookoldertban my years. My ears
protrude at ri&ht anaJcs from my head and I've never been
a ble to wear my hair the way 1 wan led. .
I am seriouslycons1dennsa face-bft and an operation
that will flatten my ears back. Am 1 crazy to 10 tbrouJh this
at mJa't;? Also, about bow much will it cos~ Is it painful?
ls l\ erous?Will my health insurance policy at work
coverthesuraical bills and hospitalization?Tbanks for
yourguidanoc. -ANONYMOUS IN V ALLEJO
·-HELP YOURSELF
>
DEAR VALLEJO: Fini, ••'l e~t plutk HflW>'
co eMqe yoer We. It may itff YM a la...._.tellH lffM of
well_~. bet JM wW 1ttO be yoa.
1'Mear-plula1 ~.,.ud fatt-UJt "4alre mtJor
••l'ltf'Y wllU~ laaot • ...,eroe1,., aJ~oa11a uy Hf'lleal
ptoc.dan canin wt~ It eertal.D rl1k1.
,,..,.. 11 aome dlaeomlort, bat. srat deal deoead• oa
t.M l.Dd.lvidu1'1 euelMN of p0a. Some people 1efier a lot,
odatn VW1 little.
Fa~Uftl (ucllldla& ear 1ar1ery) tu ru uywlaere
from n,t" to Ut,fft depeadbt1 oa ~e Hr1eoa yoa •
select. Jasara.ac. computes coatlder ~ '1beHty won"
ud wW not pay for tt.
U yoe are a na-won~pper I mut wan yoe Cbat lt
after• face-Uft. yoe coatbaae to woralalp tile aaa, yoa wtll
bave dlrow• oat yoar Q\OH)'. Wltlala. year YOI wm looll
euctly u YH did before ~e 1u1ery. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband and I are both
44 We have been married for IS vears and have four
children.
A few months aao Bill and I wenl back to bjs old
hometown for a high school reunion. He called up 1 airl he
bad gone with when they were ceen.qers. Within the
followingsiJr. wcek.shcuwbereiaht time and decided to
move out of the house. She moved out on her husband
also. They believe God bu reuoi1cd them and arc at this
moment livina toaether.
This woman ts being very mcc to my children. rryina
to win them over. lam furious. Do you think my husband
bas lost his mind? We never had any trouble like this
before. Should I Jive him a divorce? (He hasn't asked for
one1)'!~·> Please advise. -GOING NUTS IN MlDDL&
TOwN,N.Y. '
DEAR MIDDLETOWN: Seek oat a competeet
coeaaelor wldl wlloai JM cu d11e1111 tile detailt of you
blurre problem, ... uload yoar user.
Stace Lotlaarlo bsa•t Hked for a dlvorc.. do aodlla1.
He may repl.D'11 aulty u d damp t~e dolly. Good lack .
•
Chest pain is-not always heart pain
DE AR DR .------------STEIN CR OH N :
own illness by someone etse·s symptoms that resemble DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Like many mothers of
ours. Mr. M. hyperactive children. T can't &et myself to agree with the
We're all different -
at reast my fnend and p
L arc. A few months ETEI a~o he came down
wtth a severe attack STEllCIOHI of chest pain. Within
an hour he was in the••••••••••••• hospital where a
diagnosis ofhean attack was made. After two.weeks in the
DEAR MR. M.: I think the important lesson to be doctor who wants to prescribe medicines for my boy. I've
learned from the expcnences you relate 1s that no type of ttcard that there are some doctors who believe that large
chest pain should be treated lightJy. Immediate investiga-doses of vitamins are 1he answer. Shall I try tbem? Mrs. R.
tion is important -whether or not it turns out to be a heart DEAR MRS. R.: There are some researchers who say
attack. Many of my "heart attack" patients have that hyperactive children arc vi1amin-Oeficient. But othcn
fortuna.tely turned out to be suffering from esophageal don't agree. For peaoc of mind. you might try them. But. I
spasm instead. In. most instances, when treated by drugs sugest, not too long. If your child doesn't improve, why
and diet, the symptoms disappeared. . !lQlagrtC with your son's doctor who may suggest ritalin or
ere ii ' i.n J.llC JA~ Morris 'Traude, oi&e( drugs which are so helpful? bOIQi~work-hH~ quite well. No angina or anything like thaL . .. -....... ~ "'trn1versity -sctmol..I ::......,. • • •
Medicine: .. Chest pain is an alarming symptom '2\:t'Tis .' .
Now, for my problem. A few weeks ago I also had
severe pain in my chest. Remembering my friend's
predicament, I also entered the hospital immediately. But
guess what? It wasn't a heart attack. The docto n say my
trouble was some excess contractions of my esophagus. the
tube leading into my stomach. After talcing medicine for
tHe spasm, I've had no more pain.
taken seriously. ~~th patients and physicians. It may ' DEAR DR. ~E~CROHN: ~fore-taking drugs for
indicate severe )ife. Olrcatening cardiac disease. However, my pressure-:-which ts not too high at present. ~uppose_J
after full invesugation, including cardiac stress testing and begin by cutung down on salt? I'm also overweight. Is it
coronary angiography, a considerable number of patients worth a U"Y1 Mrs. H . .
were found to have no cardiac abnormalities. Of 58 DEAR MRS. 8 .: Most doctors will agree to~ low salt
patients with chest pain, the esophagus was implicated as in~e in patie~ts whose pressure isn't very high. And ~f
the source of pain in 20 patients. you ~ ov'?rwe1ght, cut d~~ on fats. too. However, ~f
What I've been saying is what you always say in your
column: We're all different. We shouldn't try to judge our
Yes, Mr. M ., I'll repeat it again and again: Where theres no.1mprov~~ent Wlthm weeks, better rely on anti·
illness is concerned we're all different. hypertensive medicines.
WJlalley-Johnaon Haymond-Green
Callie Jane Johnson be· The Newport Harbor CWiii.iiiii~===:~;.::21
came the bride of Alan Rich-Lutheran Church was the JI
a1'd Whalley during cer-setting for a late afternoon
emonies conducted June 2 an wedding ceremon) on June
the Newport Center Untted 16 hnlong Peggy Ellen Green
Methodist Church. Corona and Con Owen Haymond.
del Mar. both of Newport Beach. A
The bnde. daughter of reception followed an the Pa-
Mr. and Mrs. James R. John· ctfic Club.
son of Corona del Mar. wore A graduate of Corona del
her mother's noor-length Mar High School. the bride
wedding gown fashioned of attended the University of
white lace Denver Her father 1s Freder-
Her anendants were her 1ck Grant Green of San Jose.
s1s1ers Melissa Johnson and and her mother and step-
Jenn1fer Cox. and Kaue father arc Mr. and Mrs. Rob-
Anderson. Robin Humphries ert H. Grant of Ne"Wport
and Ellen Kiss Weatherall. Beach.
.\1tend1ng the bride-Her husband 1s the son of
groom. son of Mr and Mrs. Fran~ Owen Havmond Jr of
Richard Whaite} of Phoenix. Hunuogton Beach and 1he
was his brolher, Wilham late Mrs. Mignon Haymond
Whalley. Charles Scheuch. Came Whalley He 1s a graduate of Glendale Peggy Haymond
Mark Ma}s. David Hopkins. Joseph Suarez and Arthur High School and UCLA where he was president of Phi
Tassinnello. Kappa Sigma. A member of the Cabaret Chapter of the
A reception for 27 S guests fol lowed an Big Canyon O range County Perform mg Ans Center, the bndegroom 1s
Country Club. After honeymoon mg an lxtapa, Mexico. the employed by Thyssen Steel in Long Beach.
newlyweds are at home tn lrvme. The bnde 1s employed by The bnde wore a gown by llalian designer Sposabella.
Commcept Inc. m Orange. Walle) is emplo}ed b) ITT accented by rose but sleeves, scalloped hem and lily of the
81T•e•Jeco-•m•m•u•n•1•ca•t•1o•n•s•. --.ilil---------lllfl "alley motif. Her bouquel was fashioned of white h Iii es with pink accents. DIST ANT CASH
Quality old watcnes. scrap
gold jeWelry.
v.n AGI TIMI
In eo.1 Cenyon
llM I. CUil IWT ., U .
........ 414-1212
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, INC.
fer tllt l est ff Yw Utt
1122 UllOI ILYI.
COSTA I UA -541·1 m
Oregon Pharmacist's
Wrinkle Cream
Great Success
By RICHARD MORRELL
Feature Wflter
(Special). Remember when I wrote about the
exciting ne1.1. ebS Wrinkle Cream d1o;covered by
an Oregon Pharmacist and ho"' I de.,cnbed
how successful it might become?
W ell , not only have all 'ales records been
broken in department store~ across the country,
but already women arc coming in and telephon-
ing and writing to report excning resulls with eb5
Cream .
' Matron of honor was the bnde's sister. Sandra
Morgan of Huntington Beach. Bridesmaids included
another sister, Nancy Jones of Huntington Beach. and
Deborah McLain. Mary Pat Earl and Bea Loeffler. all of
Newport Beach.
Best man was the bridegroom's brother. Terry
Haymond of Corona del Mar. and F,roomsmen were Terry
MAKl 'IG COSMETIC' HISTORY!
Crowds are flocl\ing into departmenl stores across the counlry
Pharmacist Heldlond 1s pictured at>Ove showing his el'.>5
Wnnkle Cream
njlur;il I 1Prn!!cn '-·ollal!cn JnJ lipopnllc1n'
(natural 0 11\ of the \~in).~ w11h Vitamin<. F and
B5. A and D, and 01her a1<.h in Pharmacist
Heldtond'~ wonderlul, pene1ra1ing ha'e which
,, grc.i,clc" and lea\e~ the '>kin \Ofl and 'elvety
Jnd \Olln~cr-lookmtz.
If yov are worried about your ~kin appearing
to be aging too fast, hurry and find '>Orne ebS
Wrinkle Cream 1f you can . One jar la'itc-. for
man} months and 1s guaranteed. How can you
Brennan of Lake Forest. Dennis Bean of Corona del Mar,
Michael Dixon of Huntington Beach. and Randy Welty,
Laguna Beach.
Following a honeymoon 1n Hawaii. the couple will
reside in Newport Beach.
Phillips-Kamler
Robert Nathan Phillips ------
and Jill Suzanne Kamler were
mamed in a garden wedding
ceremony at the Novato
ranch of the bride's aunt.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Kamler
of San Rafael. and the bnde·
groom's parents arc Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin B. Phillips of
Newport Beach.
.\ttending as maid of
honor was Lmle1gh Plager.
and bridesmaids were Jill
Thuma. Nancy Marantz, Col-
leen Madden and Elizabeth
Ph~lhps. sister of the bride-
groom
Best man was Hugh
Maguire. and ushers were
Richard and Gregory Phil·
lips, the bridegroom's
brothers. and Michael, Jeffrey Jill Pbilllp1
and Peter Kamler. the bride's brothers.
The bride is a graduate of UC Berkeley, where she
affiliated with Delta Gamma Sorority. She is working
towards her master's degree 10 architecture at UC
Berkeley.
Her husband 1s a graduate of Newport Harbor High
School and UC Berkeley. where he affiliated with Zeta Psi
Fraternity. He now attends the University of San
Francisco Law School.
Following a honeymoon to Cozumel. Mexico. the
newlyweds will reside in Berkeley.
Schwartz-Suber
Ban Suber of Palm Spnngs became the bride of Paul
Schwartz of Newport Beach during June 3 ceremonies in
T emple Bat Yahm.
The bride is the daughter of Gordon Suber of Palm
Spnngs and Laune Suber of Malibu. She chose a white
floor-length f Own with lace sleeves and a seed pearl
trimmed bodice.
Maid of honor was her sister, Cari Suber. and matron
ofhonorwas Ruth Heide.a cousin. Servingasbridesmaids
were Debby Briggs, Elizabeth Mills and Katherine
Semones. and Jodi Kram was the junior bridesmaid.
The bridegroom is the son of Molly Schwartz of
Miami, Fla. His best man was Ace Thayer, and ushers were
Bill Dupuie. Maurice Lavoie. Jim Balasis. Ronald Suber
and Jay Blumenthal.
After a receptio n for 200 guests at the Newportcr
Resort. the newlyweds left on a wedding trip to Europe.
They will live in Costa Mesa. The bridearoom is owner of
Cove Motoring in Newport Beach.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every no~and then you
will allow someone the luxury of unloadan1 a pet peeve.
How about mine?
When l answer the phone and the ~non the other
end atatts yakkin& away without identifyina him or herself
and I can't place the voice. I do 1 slow bum. Surely this has
happened to you. How do you deal with tbete clods?-
ALSO FROM IOWA
DEARJOWA:l 1tmplyau.·•w.oa.w.1••JftM
penoa a. offnde4 t Qpre IM or Pe au• for It. • • • • Parenti, whatshouldyoudoifyo'f"reen~r11 •• .
h• vi111 sexual relations? Ann Land~tl new book.lei, Hilb SchoolSex•nd How to Dul Wirh l t-A GuidoforT«n&
and Thcirl'arent.s, "$iveno-noll#tue•dviceon bow to
handle this delicate situation. Foreacb boot/et, "nd SO
cents plUI a lolJI, 1umoed, !df-addres$«1 envelope to Ann
Landen. P.O. Bo~ l 1995, Chica6o, m. 6061 l.
Hello, Dolly
Gibb brothera llorrla (left) and Robln:!i
DollyPartonakl8eonABC'•••QoodMo •
America.•• The Glbbe won a Broadcut II c
lnduatry awrd for their .oni ••1a1anda In the
Stream." recorded by Parton and Kenny
Roten. wblcb WU the moet-played 80DC OD
the air lut year.
Hungarian film
hits oppression
BUDAPEST. Hungary (AP) -A young arust 1s
arrested by Soviet secret police and 1s never heard fro.m
again. His daughter struggles against her Communist
upbringing. longing for a vague freedom she's never
known.
Those arc new twists to what has become a favorite
theme for this country's flourishing film industry, and
writer.director Marta Meszaros lifted them from her own
experience to ,nake Hungary's most successful movie of
the year.
Her .. Diary for My Children ... like several other
recent hits, deals with the once-taboo subject of S1aJinist
repression in the late ·30s and the postwar years. The film
won a special Grand Prix award at the Cannes Film
Festival and took the G rand Prix at the Hunganan Film
Festival.
··1 wanted to do it long ago, IS or so years ago, as my
first or second film," Meszaros said in an interview. "It
would have been difficult to get it accepted, and I wasn't
too keen on it either."
It's now 16 years and 14 movies since Marta
Meszaros directed her first feature. The industry.
prospering under one of the most liberal Soviet bloc
governments, bas entered a period of "now-it<:ao·be-
told" about the purges of the late '40s and early '50s.
At a recent screening, about 250 moviegoers filled a
small downtown theater. They tittered when the film
made old-line Communist offietals look ridiculous. Some
winced at its depictions of midniabt arrests.
One of the first Hunprian flims to deal with the era
was "Angi Vera" -intemationallr acclaimed in the late
1970s. "The Witness" also won criucaJ praise at home and
abroad during the same period. Both are favorites of
Meszaros.
"Diary" deals with a young girl's reluctance to accept
party privileges and discipline. It is heavily auto.
biographical.
Meszaros was 2 years old when her family emiarated
to the Soviet Union 10 1936. Her father, Laszlo, a noted
sculptor. was arrested in a purge two yean later and was
never heard from again. She presumes he died in a prison
camp.
Like the heroine of "Diary," Meszaros was brought
back to Hungary after World War ll and reared by foster
parents. Also like her heroine, she witnessed a new round
of Stalinist terror -this time in her native country -
before the dictator's death in J 9S3.
Cosm et ic history '" being made by a hard·
working pharmacist. His dream since Pharmacy
School ha\ reo;ultcd in a cream which cosmeti-
cians and cus1omer'> are prai..,i ng very highly.
Report'> now in of how facial lines arc being
smoothed man) ha"e said they arc so pleased
that not only doe\ ebS Wrinkle Cream aid
frown.fines. eye-lineo;, throat-lines, and facial
lines. but they a re ~o pleased that eb5 is 5 cream
m I Jar that 1s they need no other cream. for
cbS ..., a wrinkle cream . a night cream, a
moisturizer, an eye-cream, and a m a keup base
all in one.
go wrong? ·
Note eb5 Wrinkle Cream la available in llmlted
quantity In Costa Mesa at May Company. Go In or
Phone 898-2521 (Westminster Mall) or 546-9321
(Sooth Coast Plaza) while supply lasts.
RAH. •DIAllm. DI ........ ftA89 I
PMTY PAVOB • CSN1DPll!CU
All I can tell you is this . cb5 appears to be
the natural way to help agmg skin. It contains
Dr. Robert Helllland A1111ar111 In PePSon
at the May company
SATURDAY
JUNE 30
SATURDAY
JUNE 30
Westminster Mall
10:00 A.M. -12:00 P.M.
South Coast Plaza
2:00 P .M. • 4:00 P .M.
Come meet Or. Htldfond and learn about his eacitin1 cre1m. You wl be 1blt to tty.,. foihttf
and clsco•• why women CGntilue to praise fornUI tbS. ==--~
I
I I
AND •UCB. •UCB 110t1at
EVDYTlllNG TO llAD YOUll PA.aTY
A euaE·l'IU WINNDI
•
~ MllWWW AWMlntM'
I
A~Cs of sex spelled out ___
Network publishes Its guidelines, sponsorlna"""'""'""lh bia111nua1oonten1 would bun 1~,:-:oo:n,, their imqr. One prOll'lm apumtd by some ldvtrultfl says •Dynasty• paSSeS the test WU the titillatioa ••Lace," which WU the top-rated lllOall.8Ml
ministries last teUOD • By FRED ROTHENBERG . . In recent y~. ABC has been criticized by ~Y TV 1==Q • cnttcs for tttattna sex, for the most pen. in fanciful and •-NEW Y(?RK-A~. Uic ne1work that features the exploitive ways. .._.CMCI
..,, .......... .....,
luatful texploits of Ale.1us Carrinaton on .. Dynasty" and ABC i1 the network of ··ne Lo"c ~·· .. The *~t'l1171tl.O.liW·
the sexual hijinb of Jack Tripper on ··Three's Company " Lo n-""t" d th •'-.. • ...... • oi.. ~ '*--~ hat pub. liahed 1uidelines for it6 ... 0..,.,• ••xual conten't. vt -an e soap opera ....,.... ve ua --. ...._ ..,. .ii .... ... Afternoon," but all &bat kwC r'atet)' crx.eDds IO ~ __, _
Accord1na to theae standards, .. Dynasty," among others. adult relationships of mutual NII*' md appnciation _.._
passes the test. . that 10 beyond aood looU. I u:a AU three maJor networks have subjective rules for . . . . . --••,... sexual Clfutent, but Alan Wurtzel. ABC's vice president of ~e kind of canaa. _topbjlliCated reJatioriahip
stanc:lardt and practice1i said this was the ~first time a embodied~ Capt Frank Funllo ud JoYCC Daven,on on T8
network had tried to publicly codify and expWn the value NBC's "Hill Street ~1ues·· batdly ~u ~ ABC• :--.:....,_ ,
judaments and auJ~lines used in editin& Prosrtms. schedule, where the m1.19r.elcmen~ of~~ tecms ._.
The booklet. ·~xuali!y. Television and Broadcast to be how well couples fit into their swi1niiliDs swu.: (See **~ -. : 7 .u ht 11 Sta~da~ ... was wnttcn by o; .. Melvin s. Heller, a Temple .. Love Boat," "Han to Hart" and .. Mau HOUICQll. ") n. rxtCiw w , ... ,_
Uruvei:s1ty prof~sor of psychiatry 1;nd an ABC consult-. ABC's TV-movie division doa somdima tlCkJe ..,._._,.....
ant. ~t 11 beans distnbuted to advertl$US and the sencral serious, sensitive subjects. such u incest in "Somcthin& _,._
publ!f· . . . About Amelia." But 11 churns out many more oft'erinp or •-
We felt at would t?e useful. for. them to understand the bed-hopping ( .. Lace .. "Malibu") . Ud e_rostitution •-what~ into our de.c\ston~mtkina-m progi amnnng wit!\' \'My Mothers Secret Life, ..... Sins of I& Past"') variety-..... -~-!!E,L. •a :
sexl:J&l1ty. themes.:· wd Jeff Tolvin, ABC's director of ABCs pamphlet describes the ner.ork's strineent __ ....
business 1nformauon. rules qaJnst on.air lovemak.ina and nudity: -,,....
Some advertisers have ex~ concern that -.·--=---"While sexual intercourse can be an Otymptc event _..._.._
for loven, it is neither a private athletic contest nor ••••• ~
spectator sport which lends itself to televised UOU •...w.
prcliminanes, playoffs or the climax ofa Super Bowl.... =--=ITlWT
Network telev1sion rcooanizcs that sexual intertoune is UMODHBmON
not for family exhibition ... ..,.
"What about lovemaking?" the booklet continues. •• "Troubll In Thi Olln" (1954>
"Networks, like most of their viewers. ate all for ~~~
lovemak.ina. affection and romance. That includes YIM
depictina the passionate ardor . and tender sensuous
embraceS and kisses ofhuman love.It includes the sounds
of music; but not the sounds of sexual intercourse, bodies
in rhythmic undulation, or head shots which auempa io
mlect Ill Academy A-..d ditnn."
There's nothina wrona with 1.11 entertainmerlt
medium injecting some wicked fun or fantasy into its
.se~ual story lines, but it seems there also should be some warm, realistic portrayals to balance the Co1lintes a.od
Trippen. ·
Last season, ABC had only-one series, '"Two
Marri8'CS" (about neighboring families in Iowa) that
epitomized bri&ht. sensitive and virtuous family role
models. ABC pitted that midseason show apin.st
"Dallas," and it was quickly canceled.
A R:Cent preview of ABC's new fall series indicates no
cban&e of direction. Its one realistic serieS, "Call to Glory"
(about an Air Force pilot and his family in the 1960s), is so
uncbaracteristic of ABC that the network feels it must introdu~ it in the summer-after a bia Olympic build-up
and apmst reruns.
One plot line from the pilot episode of ABC's Top soapen "Glitter,.. a teries about a magazine searchina for
Erika Slesak and Larry e~an flub glamorous stori4?1> says as much about ABC's philosophy __.~ mllea after _.nnl~ ---cl .about TV sex as its 3S.paie pamphlet on sexual standards: n--· 1 • -·--· -.."'r &D Two "Glitter" reponen try to set a story on ID aaina. actrw awarcla ID daytime eYialon. Slaak hospitalized madam who turns out to be the mother or a
nan iD .. One Life to LIYe"' &Del Brygman U.S. senator, whose fiance appean to be one of tlie appean on .. Aa tbe Worlcl Ta.ma."' madam's priz.e hoolcen.
High technOlogy tool reduces work
Ilea• bagging ,. •• ,
By EARL ARONSON The Tap-for-Cord feature (TFC) automatically
"'....., . . furnishes fresh nylon cord by tappina the cuttina head oD
Green Machines are available at quality pidaa aad Don't Penic ·We Can Help·
hardware shops. DIAZINON SPRAY 1 Ot. Three beads make 1t easier than one -or two bands the lfOUnd. even while the machine is running.
-to tend your prden and bome landscape today. The power blower attachment will be appreciated by
A new hiah tccbnOlOIY tool bas three heads -th h ..1:.1a. _.,,... b r. nd · •• · tifi interchangeable units -for one liabtwei&bt. ponablc ~ w o ~e ,........, ~ ~ ore iou in an ~~ c
machine that helps reduce tedious, back-breaking band:. poll to be wuversally d:isJ~~· It blo~ pass cli~~·
work. The Green Machine Expand-It in seconds can be leaves.andotber~ndebnuntorelanvelyneatpilcs or
ban ed fr tn. t · b sh t•· -.. easy pick-up and disposal~ ·C a om a.s na-nmmer, ru <U "'r "'"""·pruner ThecombineCSwe~tofthcpowerheadandbloweris to a weeder-c uluvator or a power blower. . . . Each component consists of a tool head and shaft that less than 13 pounds. e blower wdl also help ttdy up
matches the shaft of the system's one-horsepower gasoline porches, aara&~ and. wo~ops. .
engine. A coupler quickly connects or disconnects the The machine will facilitate both. spnng and autumn
components. cleanup. I.t features blade and debns auards and other
The Tap-for-Cord slrina-trimmer accepts circular safety de~oes. .
metal blades for cuttiDJ heavy weeds, brush and small tree . If you re on a bud&et, you can buy the tool plus a a111ale
limbs. The reciprocat1n1 blades of the weeder-cultivator urut. and lat.er add the other compolMilts.
di& into the soil at 2,000 cycles per minute. allowing air, Except for oilina. little maintenance is requiied.
water and fertilizer to penetrate. Its compact size make it ~~the psoline ~after each uae can !ldP lenatben
ideal for flower and veaetable beds and hard-to-reach engine life. After cmptyma the tank, the eD11De should be
areas. run until it stops to clear the line.
Fighting insects, d _isease
.Pick sprays, equipment
to meet specific needs
By liTBRYN WILLIAMS c...-...,
~ ....... ......, ........ c...-
No matter how well nurtured your plants are, some
insect, disease or weed is bound to come along and try to
spoil it all. Even the best prdeners will be faced with the
need to spray.
Fortunately, there is a wide variety of remedjcs
available to solve just about any problem you may have.
An increa.sina number of ready-to-use sprays are now
on the market Available in aerosol or pump sprayers, they
require no mixina or measuring.
The more eq>nomicaJ method is to use a conoenttate
GnRDEN CHE CKLI ST
and mix your own. Equipment ranaes from hand-held to
hose-cod to tank type sprayers.
Hand-held spraycn ate tine for small jobs, such as
controllina insects oD indoor plants or spot-spraying
weeds. Laraer jobs, like aprayina several bushes or an
entire lawn, are more easily handled by either a hose-end or
a tank-type sJ)rayer.
Any of these sprayers is easy to use. The imponant
thina to remember 11 to measure carefully. If the
concentration is too strona you could dama&e the plants
you ate spraying; too weak and the spray wilf not work as
well u it should.
Sprays will remain effective lonaerif you add ordinary
vinepr in an amount equal to the amount of concentrate
called for on the label. For example, if you arc supposed to
use 2 teaspoons of concentrate per pllon of water, you
would use 2 teaspoons of concentrate and 2 teaspoons of
vinepr per pl.Ion.
Another trick is to add 2 or 3 drops ofliquid dish soap
to tb~solulion~ this makes it spread more thorouahly and
stick better (especially to wu.y-coated insects like tcale).
Be sure the plants you are sprayioa have been wa~
recently. In most ca9CI 1t is belt to spray in the cool pan of
. . . . . . the day. Do notspray on a windy day or ifit looks like rain. • Impuon -thJS as the most lDlportant JOb ~unna . Apply spray to the entire plant. coat.ina both sides of the
the n~llt IC~ mon~s. Water deeply and thorouahly an !he leaves. Repeat applications may be necessary at v.ukly mom.mp 1f poSSlble. Ocnerous use of mulches like . 1 redwood bark will help •·tain the moisture around your mterva 1· , . . . .
plants and keep the weed arowth to a minimum. W~o you.are finished. discas:d any retna.lD1Q& ~ once mixed. 1t IOICS iu efrectivtnetl. Store un
• feed our veaetable crop periodically with a mild concentrate and ready-to-u~ spra)I in a cool, datt spot
bl1a ccd re~li%er. You'U be rewarded with biger and safely out of the reach ofch1ldttD for up to.two ycan.
n · Rin• 01.tt the sprayu thoroulblY. fWllllDI deen water ~r harvests. tbioiilb all part Properly~cleUed. a spn~ will tut
• Lots of insects att at their peak durina ttie bot indefinjtely and can be \lied for ~Y ~ (tbe ooty ~=wea=ther. Keep an eye o~t fo~ aphid5' pi~er mites.. n on: oncie you ute a sprayer wn.h a Wed killer, u.tett
cutworms. caterpillan. white n1C$, ants, W'W1" and or only for tbia purpoee).
coune the snails and aluas. pC'aJll:'I ibouJd not be a ftiabtenina prospect. It is
C.:ii!Ji:ne· &akes very little tiate. alid can produce vet)' •Spnlceupyourblack:berryvtnesnow~Cutoft'theold sa · oryTa\alts. JfiftleCU, di~ or weeds invedt
canest.batborefiuitthisyearandlooselytwtncnewpowth your prden, don't lit beck Md watch t.bcm: put your
onto tbc trellis. sprayer to Wort and saYe ~ pluul
• Now is an excelleot time to plant almoat anythina
&om contaiaen or flau. Juat docft ~the Daanu dry out before ot after ~llftl. A lime vttam1n J. l MD Mlp tbc
plaa1 o~e1come the trao~t.ia.aabock.
• JtYoi\ave a brcrWn IPOI ift )'OW' lawn ~ied bf IOW-dyi~ modw in the~ you have lawn moth
..,.. _ 1 ,_~Med U> elimintte wldt tpny. Conwh
ycMar aunayman.
• Fo111u it srecn ~ m • sheded ftOWer' bed, roct
llnkn or ra19'd bed, paint baby tears. •
f
Officers installed
Violeta ID .. ••er By ---.. cow~ F
· In summer, mate sure your African Yioleu have · •CHA.__. 4,ooo-.. l
enouab humidity. Set their clay pots on top of ID inch or so EJCceflent for Outdoor controf of fleas,
ofpebblesinatrayorsaucer. Waterthetrayorsaucertothe cutworms, sowbugs, enta & beetJes. top of the pebbles and evaporation will create a humid ..... __... ....... _________ _
environment. · u a Bftl 'ERITE 1 L
For summer, African violets prefer sun fi1teftd """'WU n
through a window screen or fiabt net curtain. If they have DAISIES OFF
lush dark sreen foliqe but no blooms they may need more
li&hL
GardenbOob
The Oarden Boot, by John Brookes. Oown Put>-
lisbers, New York. N.Y. ($22.50). 1bis beautifully-
illustrated book by a prominent landscape ctesiper'
includes prdens o( many types, illdudi.oa roof, beloolly,
patio and window boxes. He alto adviles about plant~
liabtin&. climate and site. ••0arc1ens can be appreciated oD so many different
levels," says Brookes, .. from a desi&:n point, horticultural
siandpoint, and ID entirely emotional standpoint ..
The Treasury of HouJCplants, by Bob Herwia and Maraot Schubert. MacMillian Publisbi.na. New Yort.
N.Y. {S l4.9S). These plant eiperu advite about ca and carioa for more than l,000 houseplants. Easy-to-
the book alto provides decoratiQs ideas aucmellled by 33
color photos and 100 dtawiap.
HIPPY JULY 4th WE WILL IE CLllD
LLOYD•s
garden shop
llPITIEIS
Excellent 8Uf'nfMf' cotor .... pot.
" Reg. $1'·
llW Jlo
Colorful assorted
&election. Green
leaf or red leaf.
51A'' pot.
Reg. $1.98.
IOW '1"
Oecolllhie ........ eic
beftlllldM
-~ ~ .........
Md••ooww
muld'I.
' .
~nti-Semite. or
not, Mondale
needs J8.ckson
Won't repudiate-
Jackson and risk ·
losing the election
WASHINGTON -Israel knows
no peace: and "sbe will never have
~Y peace because there can be no
peace structured OD UlJUSLICC, lying
and deceit and using the name of God
to shield your gutter rcbgion under
His holy and fi&bteous name."
Yes, that is the auLhenttc voice of
Louis Farrakhan. Minister to the
Black Muslims. confidant and ally of
Jesse Jackson.
"The p~nce of a state caJled
Israel is an outlaw act," the Mmster
Tailed &om-the-fulpit ~y last. in.
a programmed provocation to Ameri-
can Jewry; "if you aid and abet
someone in a criminal conspiracy,
you are pan of that criminal con-
spiracy. So, America, England and
the nations are criminals in the sight
of Almighty God." Need we ask
Minister Farra.khan. bow Almighty
God -and his chjldren -should
deal with such nations? The Fire Next
Time.
On the way to meet Castro and
consummate his lat.est diplomatic
"success," Rev. Jack.son said of his
Jricnd's sermon. "I don't understand
-what be said ... I don't understand the
:OOntext of it I feet no obligation to ~respond to it."
• Anticipating no sat1sfacl1on from
-Jackson, Henry Sicgman of the
·American Jewish Congress, raised
• .. the real issue ... whether ... Walter
:Mondale will finally screw up enough
·courage to publicly break with Jesse
:Jackson unless Jackson repudiates.
clearly and unequivocally, the politi-
cal support of his racist and anti-
Scmitic friend."
But. we already have the answer to
that question, Mr. Sicgman.
For five months, Jackson has
refused to repudiate Farrakhan. For
five months, Mondale has refused to
repudiate Jackson. And, for the same
five month$, the Democratic Party
and the ljbetal press have rcfmod to
force Mondale to make the break with
Jackson.
Why? Quite sample. Jackson, no
matter his anti-Scmiusm, is in-
dispensable to dcfcatmg Ronald Re-
agan; and we have it on the testimony
of Gary Han that the defeat of Reagan
is "the moral imperative" of our time.
Perhaps Siegman might gaze at the
demographics Mondale as staring at
today.
PAT
Bucllliu
The Jewish community is less than
three percent of the U.S. population.
a.nd dwindling; its vote is likely to go
2-1 at best for Mondale. The black
population, however, is 12 percent of
the U.S. total and its vote could well
fo 19-1 against Reagan. Get the point.
f Mondale should come down bard
on Jack.son the way he and his friends
came down on Ji.ai Wat~ it could
queei afl'Jcban(lt Moft'dl1ebis of ever
becoming President of the Unated
States.
ln the current issue of Commen-
tary, Irving Kristol discusses .the
puzzling behavior of American
Jewry, as the sand shifts beneath its
feet. "lt is not so much that Jews do
not sec what is going on," Kristo!
writes, "they just do not believe it
when they sec it."
What is going on, very much in the
open now, is the introduction into
Amencan politics of an anu-Amen-
can, Third World ideology-throua,b
the candidacy of Jackson. There is
good reason why the world's leading
anti-Semites and anti-Americans go
out of their way to advance the
political fortunes of Jackson, why
Yassir Arafat embraces him as a
brother, why the Arab League funnels
hundreds of thousands of dollars into
bis Olicago organization, why Syria's
Assad boosts his prcsuge by deliver-
ing up an Amcncan pilot, why Castro
carves four dozen emaciated pris-
oners out of his vast herd and delivers
them up. gratis, to Jackson. Because
they are all revolutionary soul
brothers in the same great cause -
freeing mankind from the oppressive
weight of the racist, militarist.
neocolonialist. imperialist power
structure of Western capitalism
whose vilest excrescences arc the
Republic of South A fnca and the state
of Israel.
"We have agreed to do cvcrytbmg
within our power to sec that Ronald
Reagan does not have a second term
in the White House." said Hart
Wednesday wt th Mondale smiling at
bis side.
Everything. Mr. Sicgrnan.
Patrlct B•cboao 11 • 1yadl~ted
colam.l1t
~ )
~tco, the rtchgetrtcherand the poore/therstarveor wadeacros
the Rio Grande. ·'
L.M. Sovo .
Help thy
neighbor
or else
be jailed
Soviet law is curious. too. So mu<:h
did the autberltics want to promote a love-thy~eighbot attitude they made
it mandalory forcitiuns there to help
othen in distress. The intent was
kindly. But the law wasn't. Those who
fail to ~e~p people in distress can be
sent to Jail
Shonly after the doctor sets the
medical clegree, said doctor start.I
receiving uninvited mail. It swells
into a deluge. And goes oa for a
lifetime. If you want to write a letter a
doctor may read, you'd better write it
an longhand and mark it "Penonal."
You bad a tail once. Presumably.
Demos have little chance
of winning in California
Between the fourth and ei&bth week
of your embryonic developmenL But
it disappeared. Do you mass it?
Q. Who was the first man ever to
show up on the cover of McCall's
magazine?
A. John Travolta won that distinc-
tion.
"There as no way we're going to
ianorc a 47~1ectoral vote state.
especially one we have a chance to
win," says Duane Garrett, national
co-ehairman of the Walter Mondale
campaign.
"California is the ideal state for us.
future-oriented and not afraid to do
something out of the ordinary that it
hasn't done before." says John Emer-
son, who headed Gary Hart's primary
campaign here.
But Ronald Rea&an has never lost
lO California, wbic6 is one reason the
brave pre<0nvcntion talk from
Democrats sounds a bit like wh1sthng
past the graveyard, white Reagan's
top strategists sit back looking for all
the world hke cats who have snacked
on canary.
While Democrats vow they'll make
California ajor battlegr: d in
the fall if only to n time nd
money Reagan can spend clsewhc .
Stuart Spencer says ''California looks
pretty safe for us."
Spencer. who managed three
previous Rcafl!I campailfls, 11 the
president's chJcf poht1cal consultant
thas year. He concedes that Rcapn
this year might lose some states he
carried in 1980 -New York and
Ohio arc two.
But on California. he echoes Lyn
Nofziger. another longtime Reagan
operative: "If we don't carry Cali-
fornia, we might as well forget it."
So no matter what the Democrats
may say or do. don't expect to sec
THOUS
EUAS
much of the president here this fall,
except for occasional rest stops at his
mountajntop ranch near Santa
Barbara. From Spencer comes this
summary of what to expect from the
Reagan campaign:
"Running agamst Jimmy Carter
will be a big part of at." Spencer and
the rest of Reagan's strategists have
believed all through the confused
Democratic primary season that
Mondale would be the Democratic
nominee, if only because Democratic
delegate-selection rules clearly
favored him.
.. lfhe's the candidate, we will never
let the people forget he was Carter's
vice president. He may try to distance
himself from Carter. but a few years
ago, he and Carter both liked to talk
about how intimately involved he
was in every ma.ior decision. We
don't intend to let the people forget
that."
So one theme of a Reagan-Mondale
race would be this question from the
Rcaganites: .. Would Mondale be as
bad as Carter?"
The Reagan camp is also ready in
the unlikely event Gary Hart should
be its opponent.,
"If he's the man. we'U stress
e.x~encc and leadership," Spencer
said. "The question will be •Are you
ready to tum the country over to an
untested new facer''
What's more, Spencer said, "I don't
think we could ASS up a few digs at
his name change and the problem
with confusion over bis age. And
whoever they pick, we might weU we
some taped footage of Mondale and
Hart criticizina each other."
But whoeveT Democrats pick two
weeks from now, it's obVJous the
basic thrust of the Reagan campaign
wiU be the same theme voiced on S2
million worth of commercials that
aired in May.
Those ads claimed things are better
today than they were four years ago,
at the same time they slreQed
Reagan's ~rsonality.
"Even if people disagree with his
policies,"· said Spencer, "most of
them Hke him personally. Our polling
shows that the cJoeer pcopte feel his
hands are to the du'ottlc, tbe happiet
they~.··
Spencer is convinced Californians
will vote heavily to keep Reapn's
bands in control, as they have so often
in the past, despite any brave talk
from Democrats. And the chances arc
he's right ..
ftomu Ella 11 • Suta MMlca·
bue4 cfi...UI ••tale la.a.
Q. What ailment is it that makes
people involuntarily pinch and bite
everything in reach?
A. Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. It's
aeoeti~ BlaJned on a n:Uuing
cmzymc. Those who suffer same
sometimes bite off their own lips and
fingers.
Q. Is it true some potatoes have futl
A. In a manner of speakjna. ComeU
researchers are arowin& pot.a toes with
a sort of hair on them. Hope is the
hairy skin will trap underground
bup.
The husband and wife aot into such
a fierce argument they swore they'd
never even ~ buried in the same
town. The wife died in 187 I, the
husband 17 years later. In Vermont,
tbj1 was. Today, their ~ves are side
by side, but the city lirrut line dividing
Marlboro and Newfane runs precisely
between the two headstones.
Horses. Ioele their teas to sleep
1tandin& up. Birds lock their claws to
sleep on a perch. What other animals
tock up for the ni&bt like th.at?
Auctioneers who sell fine paintings
say seven out of l 0 sell for less than
$300.
lo Thailand, elephants at age 3 start
si.x years oflogina school.
Can't stem illegal tide without reform in Mexico
Twenty-six percent of the voters
tell pollsters they'll be more likely to
vote democratic in November 1f a
woman is on the ticket.
Am told the stagehands at New
York City's Carnegie Hall average
about $90,000 a year, countina over-
time. As long as peasants remain in poverty,
they will continue crossing U.S. border
WASHINGTON -The am migra-
tion bill now worlong ats way through
Congress is intended, among other
things, to stem the flood of illegal
aliens who have been pounng across
. the Mexican border virtually un-
:chccked.
• But it could all be a futile effort if
something isn •t done to cure Mexico's
•internal economic troubles. It's the
desperate povcny of Mexico's
peasants that impels them to seek
•menial JObs in the United ,States,
living the shadowy existence of illegal
aliens in daily fear of discovery and
deportation.
As long as life for Mexico's poor ts
without hope, they wall continue to
cross the border. Nothing shon of a
1.933-mile Berlin Wall will stop
them.
In fact, my associate Dale Van Atta
has learned that the Pentagon as
. considering a plan only slightly less
drastic. A Defense Intelligence Agen-
cy s~udy is actually tryinJ to de-
'tcnmnc bow many U.S. Anny
divisions would be required to scat off
the porous Mexican border.
It's not clear that eve.n the Army
could accomplish this formidable
task. What 1s abundantly clear is that
the 2,300-member border patrol -
with fewer than 300 on duty at any
given t1me-doesn't stand a chance.
The border patrol concentrates its
meager manpower at such .. easy"
crossings as Laredo and El Paso.
Te.xas; Douglas. Ariz.: and Chula
Vasta, counting on the life-threaten-
ing rigors of the rugged mountains
and scorctun& dcscns at other points
to discourage illcgaJ immigrants. Not
surprisingly, the border patrol has
caught only a small percentage of the
uncounted millions who have crossed
the border in recent years.
A significant ingredient in the
Mexican peasants' desperation is
their frustration over the way they
have been around down by the
pri.vilqcd few. In Mexico. the nch act
richer and the poor either st.arVe or
wade across the Rio Grande. A few years ago. when Mexico·s
huge oil reserves were discovered, at
seemed as if the country's economic
troubles were at last over. But the
J1c1
AIDEISOI
wealthy I 0 percent and their hirelings
an the dominant political party
skimmed off billions and left nothing
to trickle down to the 40 percent of the
population that lives in abject pover-
ty. Mexico is now saddled with more
than $80 billion in foreign debts.
indicative of the frustration and
despair is the outpouring of sratcful
tcncrs I've received in ttSponse to my
recent reports on the misuse of
Mcxico·s wealth bl government of-
ficials at every lcve .
It is "about time to take off the
masks of the criminal traitors and
show to the entire world who is
responsible for our backwardness and
misery," one Mexican wrote. "(They)
steal in a cynical and outrageoUJ way
and ... there arc no tnals aia10st these
thieves (or) jail terms. Never will we
be able to pay back what has been
'borrowed' by this den of thieves.. and
the people will keep on deeper and
deeper in their misery."
U.S. intellifcnce sources agree with
this deprcssmg prediction. As a
confidential State Department report
warned, "Serious efforts to narrow
the gap between Mexico's privilcpd
and Mexico's poor would produce
friction and resistance on the part of
those with the most to lose" -that is,
the ruling party elite and their
cronies.
Ironically, President Miguel de ta
Madrid's efforts to institute a strict
austerity program (though without
alt~ the unfair distribution of
wealth) will only encourage the flow
of illegal immiarant.s into this coun-
try. This could have serious implica-
tions for U.S. society.
"One docs not have to subscribe to
a Goths-and-Vandals theory on the
downfall of civilizations to accept
that the wave of Mexican immisrants
is damagina," another State Depart·
mcnt report observes. And when hard
times and unemployment hit U.S.
workers, it warns, the growing senti-
ment against illegal aliens could
become "overwhelm in&-"
WATCH ON THE WHITE
HOUSE: When President R~n
si&ned a wilderness bill m:endy, Sen.
Robert Staffoni, R-Vt., was banished
to the rear of the crowd of di&nitaries.
well out of camera range -even
though he is a leading advocate of
wilderness set-asides. Reason: The ni&ht before, Stafford had voted for
an amendment that would have
banned use of troops in Central
America without congressional ap-.
pro val.
-Gate-crashers note: Last week
Michael Deaver sent a memo to the
White House staff reminding them
that it was time to tum in last year's
laJ)CI J>ins, which provide quick
idcntjfication of insiders on presiden-
tial trips. The new model sports the
JOI~ presidential seal on an orange
~und.
-Merrie Spaeth, new director of
White House media relation~ bas
discovered she has some rence-
mendin& to do with the demanding
members of the Fourth Estate. It
seems that a fonner bureaucrat in the
office had a habit of discourqjna
applications for the coveted Whjte
House press pau by dela~ t.acucs
that included -psp! -fatlure to
return rcportcn' phone calls.
J•<* ~ ,, •. ·~""'
Police statisticians say only one
rapist in every 600 reported rape cases
is caught and convicted.
When New Jersey wanted to fill the
job of state e.xccutioncr, SO applicants
turned up.
A small spot in the brain dea1J with a~'1dirtywords,if1ny. Patients
Wlth Tourette's Syndrome short·
circuit back to that spot. Cause is
chemical DNp can control it But
it's pretty weird, that affliction.
~le who suffer from same un-
ciably and uncontrollably spew
orth streams of obscenities at the
most unlikely moments. Few attend
church.
Those who've made a game of
tabulatina the fictional eiploits or
The Lone Ranacrrepon that he in his
lcnathy radio and television ca.recr
only bad to ute 12,684 ailvcrbulleu to
brina 21, 734 cuJpriu to justice.
frO&S don't drink water. They
absorb it.
eolan.ml t.M. Boy',,.·~,., f!W.....,,,
. ~
Unhappy Saddleback faculty needs topowup
To the Editor:
For some time now, I have been
readiDJ articles, editorials and other
items an the papers on the d11COntcnt
of Saddleback's "faculty.. wath
Chancellor Steven and his adm101 ..
tration. I am a businessman and a
wpeyer in the community. Many of
my clients. co11eaaues, friends and
family are also residents and tax·
payers in the distnct. We have been
silent up to now. sin<ie we felt thi was
--~~--------.,.----------------~------------------· ane~ratcdin-bouseisue.poss.. lbty blown out of P_ro~on by the ORANGE COAST
llilJPilat CharOoweQbJ
Cdltor end~·
lo the Pu
Pr8MZJnt
~te(OllOI
T'omTeff
Clly f dltOI
prcaa. Now -e feel u lJ lime that we
have a vowe as Wpt)iCTl.
J fttl comptlkd to write to you
after sccina the latest plan for a recall
cl tion. Now these facully not only
que uon ltie abahty of thtlr chtCf
a41mini trator. but th.Cy dare 10 ques-
tion Che lrust«"t' j udacmcnt and
'abili ty. We the loeal c:on'-tllurngo
clrctCd tllrm. We do not qu 11on
them. Wedo not question chancellor
tcvens. When you work an private
industry or own your own business,
you learn bow and when to take
direction for the~ of the "whole"
in order to beneffi the parts.
Quesuons and comments:
1. How many of lbcte faculty
mcmben would be so outspoken. so
insultiq. if they didn't have the
protection of .. tenure"?
2 How many of lbac f11Cul1y have
'*Cf \lllOl'k~ in private industoi, done a aood job, climbed the laddtr and
ot1e day ajvcn 24"bour noticr. to clear
out lbar dclk and lave -without
C"\len a tcnsable explanation?
Many total rntdent$. hke n\)'IClf.
hokl ,.a <katta. I have 1¥0Red f'ot oth~n.J.tl.avc my owa businesc. But dcattCs do not a.avr lictNC for any
1uarantee1.
lfl have to won I t\our1 I day-
fivc. '' or en dayi a k -an
order to aurvive and suCc:eed, r dO it.
The diatri<:t IS filled wi\h taxpayers
who do. Why is thjs elitist lf'OUP of
faculty difternt1 Why is it unheard of
to wort five da)'1 a~ for ,aatary
far abOvc the avcrqe Oranac County
resident?
4. I mute to believe this radical
lfOUP II tnaly reptelCOLIU\le of the cnlin: fa<:ulty. If they are1 whttc do
they have tame to thin1t of their
studtnu and their claua" s.-non lhe faculty rea1iJe ihc)' ,are naini~sauon Of \M .c:oncee? Sintt don ll tM doOui no
lon,er ftow 10 radily. If dwy con·
tinue dowa th11 S]llth do abe)' i'9lix
they win nain their ftwal llllvn7
6. I hive known Mfd.~
dcdka.ed aftlU'UC10f'I an many illtllftje
nonL 1 hlYe alto knon inst~
'WhO are havina 1 •• PllJJ .. ~ our
moMY· OM of. my ~ IC'Qua nt·
'
Nllrdlll"lbn
..... ,..,. 112.
Moffetjus.t miss
but qualifies for 200 breast
Alio -II Willa ~ • oe, "W ._. -OeorJie J:liCMD, WM ~ a recOnt ill die ....... ~ DOt O!llY made the 1Canl. ~.he .... teVeO-~-old Americ:ao record ia the event. :Md • be s,1 e1a1 ..... o.o, POet oae oL tbe llvorita b a tOkt meCMI at :me lM a rlrr . Gama.
INDIANArc>US-Costa Meu·s lobn Moffet ns ... wasthin.kiJlloffinishina 1or2rnordbaa .... •
denied-~ly-in his at&emP! for a~ in the men· ~" aid Di('aiio. of Deaver ... Au.be swt. • -•--'11
breaststrOte Thunctay, bUt bit runner-up finish qualifiod nervous... · ·
for a berth in the ICCOnd event 011 the U.S. otympic · DiCar1o and John MykDnen, oL Placentia. e.rnei
swimmiDJ team. • · Olympic 1Cam berths with time& of 3 mi.au~ SI.OJ
Moft"et. who set a wOrld record in the 100-meter lecondl aDCf 3:51.44, respectivdy.
breas\stroke on Monday, finished only two-buodredtbs of Both swam f'uierthan the .,revious American mart~
a second behind surprise winner Richard Schroeder of 3:Sl.S6 tet m Auaust 1977 by Brian Goodell, ._ 197'
Santa Ba.rblta in the 200 breaststroke at tht U.S. Olympic Olympic champion in the .-00 and l,SOO freesty1es. ,
S . here. • DiCarlo led early in ~ rece but WU pe*Cl by: MiQ
Sch er, the last of the ei&bt qualifien in the event O'Brien of Mission Viejo._ with less than tYtO llpa 10 to ia
earlier, in an outside lane in the final and sneaked tbeeiabt-laprace. ButDiCarlo,ot the lead~ widi leli
past Moffet · fi meters to win the event in 2: 17.64. than SO me1cn to ~=-le O'Brien faded to tb.ird. .2l
Steve Lun ui of Jonesboro, Ga., who alto was seconds behind My who at 17 is the You.iwest male
under his previous world standard in the I 00, was sixth in swimmer 10 mate the 1984 Olympic team.
the 200 in 2: 19.09. He is the American record-bolder at "I saw o·Brien's oraqee at SO meters and told m~
2: I S.38. ·ob no, t.beTc be is. -DiCarlO said .... relied on my lcict in
"I was just out-touched. that's all." said Moffet, a thelastSO.Iotbcmornias(wbenbewas.1311oWertlwltbe
product ofNewpon Harbor ffi&b ... , th=~ enouab record), I didn't k.ict in the last SO or I think I could )ave• ~-....-.w.-.-..isthatlq Tlllat'adie anad...._.. . . .
1mponant thin~~ Tbc world ~ ~ l:G..32. Y11dla•.:=~
His perenrual rival, Lundquist. fin~ed a ~int-Salnikov of the Soviet Union., will not be at tbc Otympic8 ina ~ixth in the event. despitt a quick time and Wied to because of the Soviet-led boycott. 1
qualify. ..It would have been an ex.citi.t'nce at the Olyaipic8
~e DtCarlo of Denftl' reacta jubilant·
ly to the 8COreboud lndlcattna he bad
.,. c' 1
broken tbe American record In the 400-
meter freestyle at the U.S. OIJlllplc trlala.
"Steve bas to be disappoi1ncd, but Schroeder swam an to meet him," DiCarto said of the Soviet cbamJJioD,. '"I exce~t race, .. u.id Moffet. .. I saw (Sc~~ oot of the faced him in the World OwnpionsbjP! in Ecuador two
comer of my eye but jtlst cou)dn •t bold him But I was years aao and be won the .-00 and l ,XJQ while I finished pleased with my time.'' sixth ...
It's t~e toughest game of all--n urn hers ·
Jamie Beqaon
For Nitzkowski,
it was just like
cutting his son
There were 13 winners Wednesday
-but it's verv difficult to classify the twowhodidn~tas "losers", although
they may be feeling that way follow-ina theday of truth when U.S.
Olympicwatcrpolocoacb Monte
Nitzkowski came to grips with mak-
ing bis final cuts bef orc ta.kin& bis
team nonh to Cuesta where training
oontinues for the XXlllrd Olympiad.
For the record, the team includes
aoalies Craia Wilson and Chris Dorst.
drivers Gary Figueroa, Kevin
Robertson, Doug Burke, Joe Vargas
and Tim Shaw, defenders Peter
Campbell, Dtew McDonald, John
Simao and Jon Svendsen and Terry
Sc.boederandJodyCampbcUattwo
me ten..
Bumped because of the numbers
game are two Newport Harbor High
products-Jamie Bergeson. a 2J:.
year-old Stanford star, and Georae
Newland. a 26-year-old wbo played
under bis dad, Ted, at UC Irvine.
These final cuts aren't quite like the
basketball trials where Bobby Knight
made his final decisions after a few
weeks camp, became this group ofl S
had virtually lived together for nearly
six months.
National team membcn in water
polo arc all veterans and tberc•s no
oonsolation prize. such as a fat
professional contract.
~n has been a member of the
national team for the past four years.
Newland the past three yean.
"This one hurt, .. said Nitzkowski.
"This is family~.1t•s not~ first time I've selected an ympic team (the
1972 squad won bronze medal at
Munich), but tbi one killed me.
.. Youcanoniybavc 13onan
Olympic team, butinmyeyesall ISof
ounareOlympians. Tbere'sbeen
such a closeness within the squad and
it'sthetouabcstthinlrveeverd<>M.
lt'slikecuttiOJ,yourown son ...
N itzkowsk:I is hopeful that all J S
wiU continue through the train.in&
SPOR TS COLUMNIST
session at Cuesta as the US puts oo
the final touches to justify its No. l
tttdina in the t 2-nation f"tdd at
~inc University in Malibu.
besinninaAua. l.
It was, of ooune. pan of the pmc.
Four years qo Bwke and Jody •
Campbell were victimsOf the sy11tm
when the 1980 team wascbolcn.
Frankly, when youtiet to such
numbenasNo.10,~No. Jl
and No. J3, theR's pr-111y not an
iota of differmce between the talenL
.. ln my heart, .. rationalized
Nitz.towski, .. J knew that if all tbiop
were equal and there was a tie, I '
oouJdn ., pull the wiQ1 out from
(PleueMeTOUGBaT/112)
Brewers grounded
by John, Angels
Veteran snaps
a three-game
losing streak
MILWAUKEE (AP) -More bits
do not always mean more runs when
Tommy John is on the mound.
The Milwaukee Brewers reached
the soft-throwinJ lefthander for l 0
bits Thursday rught, but the Angels
took a 7-3 victory. c.
"I bad a bunch of ground balls.••
said John, who ended a three-pine
losinastreak to improve to 4-6. "Even
the base hits were ground balls, which
is~."
"When 1 do that, even though I
pve up 10 hits, tbe ball can be one
way or another and still be fielded. I
was pleased, .. he said.
John left the pme with stiffness in
bis back after Jiving up a single to Jim
Gantner leading off the Brewers'
seventh innina.
"My back is sore. but it'll be OK,··
John said. ''I thou&ht I pitched
extremely well when r had the bases
loaded. But I sure bear down more
not to aet in those situations."
Milwaukee was trailing 4-l when it
filled the bases in the fourth on
consecutive singles by Bobby Clark,
Jim Sundbcra and Charlie Moore.
f.d Romero then hit a arounder to
short to drive in one run, and Gantner
followed with a single to riabt to
knock in another bascrunner.
But the Brewen' rally ended with
Robin Yount hitting into an inning-
endina double play. Yount and
Brewers Manaaer Rene Lacbemann
argued the call at first.
"I know I was safe," Yount said.
"At the time it was a bi& play. We
would have had runners at fint and
third."
"But that's part of the pme. You
can't look back at that play for not
winning the aame," he said.
John.got all the suppon he needed
in the top half of the founh on two-
run bomen off Milwaukee's Boo
Gibson, 0-2, by Reggie Jackson and
Jerry Narron.
Doug DeCinces opened the innin&
with a walk, which was followed by
Jackson's 12th homer of the season.
,, ..... [° "I would call it a distance swi~··
Jackson said. "Right now, I say I m
swinain& the bat pretty aood. not
great."
AJalela J~ !'(anon (34) aad Bobb{ llrlcla .... ezclaa _ _..,.. .. e laJCJl n .. after Jlfanon • two-
nm laomer ~ llllwukee pltdler Bob
GO.On ln tlae foutla ••••., TliandaJ .
Navratilova breezes but Evert struggles
It takes S hriver 50 minutes Smist of Czechoslovakia 7-S, 7-6, 6-2 and Tim to No. 16
Tim Mayone 6-4. 6-3, M .
t t Id' Be 1i mi A threeo-timc Wimbledon cbam~n Uoyd outlasted 0 Op erS C S IlJa Il fdk>w American Betsy Naecbm 6-~ ~ 6-2 in a match
t.b&t oriaioallY was to be played on Thursday but was
WlMBLEDObl, ~~ -Ddtndiftt Chun· dda~,;8~~n.fellow American Camille Beltjamin
pion Manina Navratilova to another victory in 6-0, 6-l; Jorda defeated Briiain's Julie Salmon M , 6-3;
the Wimbledon tennis cbampionshipt today, while Chris MaieeVI dowDcd &uth Aftica's Yvonne vamaat M , !:en~~~ to rach the third round of t.be M~ and ~ topp&cd MarUla Skubcnb of Cacbollo-
Navrati va whipped Iva !Ndarova of ~ vak.ia 6-3, 6-3. , vakia 6-2, 6-2. adviant'ine to tbe fourth round a1oM With Sbri ver dispoecd of Bmjalftin, a 8akenfietd biah ~-=---. 6 th J :tan. N 7 ICbOol •udent who rcacbed t6e 1emifinals oftbe Frend\ 4 ~~ft'!~~:CS NY;: 1/=~-Open earlier this month, in just ~ minua. On the few &ttbeftweretwobil~_in ~womea"I ..... OCCMiou ~in jourileyed near tbc net. Shriver
• oo t.be ~ cowu oft.be ~ Lan Teuit ind ~.::=:~icd at the ~i ot t.be tCcOiHI ~-~ Sa)'ttl of Aultrilia UPect America 1 Uta boldi .. her OWD ICf'Vice twicle fcir 1-2.~t the l.utbetVillc,
Bonder, lbe No. t t teed. 6-4. 6-2. and AAne Hobbl of Md.. rilbt·bandcr, a ecmiftnalisl lilae in l 91 l, riPl)Cld
Britain ouMecS No. t6 c.rtins a..tt of Cu.dL thrOUlb the not f<>ut tames to walk away an~ win •
In the men'I = AUIUalian Matt EdlDOlldloa . ""l wnt into today'1 matcb diffbatly," Sbriver aid.
i ~ ..... ..ilia.Su _.........___... .., alittlemorcncnOU1Glntbeotbcrdaywbeeltook eliminated a ntb-www 11m1.. ndltromut<OJ1-IDa tbinp too .._tly. But it w a difttcftt ...ch. _ dlt marallM>1utconckond match. 6-7. 7-6. (>..( 6-7, U. stays beck (Pueno lt.te0' ) FerundcZ ·
In men's thii'dorouDd ma~ No. S Jimmy .A.rill :-ny a..,.. c:oun -s--:· tOODild South Africa's Du1e Vi.er~ 6-4, 7.5 M: and ""9U •-..-~-tlie-Owlikloa twtns bOtlt )Mt -Tom to No. 1) Tomas~-~--('fliiij._:-.w1ard9·• ;· ,.
;
·, .,
Area quintet
earn All-CIF
·I
J,
I , ,.
I
I•
-~ COMt DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 21, 198'
Cloud of dust
Cardinal• catcher Glenn Brummer appllee
the tag to Saa Dleto bue-~er Tony
Norwegian runner
shatters Decker's
5,000-nieter niark
From AP dJ1patcbes
OSLO, Norway -Ingrid Kristiansen m
of Norway set a 5.000-meter world record
for women Thursday with a time of 14
minutes. 58.89 seconds at the Bislett Games.
Mary Decker of the United States set the previous
world mark of 15:08.26 ID 1982. Earlier this year. South
Africa's Zola Budd was clocked in 15:01 .83.
.. rd really hoped for a time around 1 S miou Les flat.
A time of 15: I 0 or slower would bavc been very
disappointing." said Kristiansen. winner of the London
marathon.
.. But I was dead tired during the last two laps. Then
I was just pushed on by the cheers of the crowd," she
said.
Kristiansen is entered in the women's marathon at
the Los Angeles Olympics along with Grete Waitz. also
of Norway.
Waitz did not run Thursday.
Price la right at Canadian Open
Nick Price holed out from the fairway n for an eagJe-2 as the highlight of hJS 5-
undcr-par 67 that staked him to a two-
strokc lead Thursday 10 the wind-blown
first round of the Canadian Ooen Golf Tournament in
Oakville, Ontario. Rlcbard Zokol, from Vancouver.
British Columbia, and seeking to become the first
Canadian to win this title in 30 years, and Larry Rlllker
shared sccon~ place at 69. Lee Trevtao, 44, a three-time
winner of this title, Gary Hallber1 and veteran Claarlea
CecMly were at 70, 2-under par ... Former Masters titlist
Bob Goalby shot a par 70 to nose out a pack of amateurs
in the first round of the U.S. Senior Open Clwn-
pionship at the tough Oak Hill Country Cub in
Rochester, N.Y. Dale Morey, a 65-year-old amateur,
fired a 71 to stand alone one stroke back, followed by
amateurs Dean Sbeeti and Larry EalG9 and
professional Mike Fetc'1ck, all at 3-over 73 ... lo the
c.alifomia State Amateur Championship at Pebble
Beach, medalist Daffy Waldorf of Tarzana ov-
erwhelmed two opponents to move into the
quarterfinal round. Waldorf. 21 , a senior at UCLA.
defeated college teammate Gree Scartmu, of Beverly
Hills, 6 and 4 10 the morning round, then elimmated
Lee Davt1, of Newport Beach. 8 and 6 in the afternoon.
coflege warned to •get serious'
CHICAGO -Notre Dame Athletic Eil Director Gene Corrigan warned other 4 • t
college officials Thursday that disaster •
awaits if they do not act quickly to work out
a television arrangement for the coming football
season.
.. We were pla}tng games before." Corrigan said.
"It's now on top of us. We have to get serious and be
honest with each other. We better be in hoc when "-C
walk out of here."
Corrigan sounded his wammg 10 bncf remarks
shortly before the official opening of the first-ever
legislative meetings of the National Collegiate AtJct1c
Associations top football-p layin$ members. The meet-
ing was to have dealt with lcgislat1on for the next NCAA
convention. But television became practically the
single issue when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on
Wednesday that the NCAA 's control of football
television nghts was unconstitutional.
The rufing also voided two-year contracts w11h
A.BC. CBS and ESPN worth more than S 150 mtlhon to
~ schools. saying aJI schools and confcren~s arc
rrcc lo sell telev1s1on rights as they choose.
Gwynn Thunclay niCbt in Padrea' 7-S
victory at St. Louie.
Tbornton
·Flanagan wins pitcher's duel
Gary Rooicke doubled home two -runs in the ninth 1n01ng to break a scoreless
pitcher's duel as Mlke Flanagan and the
Baltimore Onolcs defeated Tom Seaver
and the Chicago White Sox. 2-0. Thursday night. The
Orioles finished with four hits off Seaver wl1ilc the
White Sox managed JUSI two. both off Flanagan, who
pitched eight innmgs. Each team had only one hit
through seven in nings ... Elsewhere around the AL
Thursday, Damaso Garcia singled home the go-ahead
run during a three-run outburst that snapped a sixth-
10ning tic as Toronto broke a five-game losing streak
with a 9-6 tnumph over Oakland. With the score ued
5-5 . Rance Malllnlkt led offthc sixth with a single. Back
Martinet walked and Alfredo GrifflD laid down a
sacrifice 10 advance the runners. Garcia's bloop smgl c
put Toronto in front ... Andre Thornton and Carmen
Castillo hit two-run home runs and rookie Joe Carter
stuggcd a homer on his first swing in Cleveland
Stadium. to give the Indians a 7-2 victory and a split of
their doubleheader with Texas. In the first game. Buddy
Bell drove in two runs and scored twice and Dave
Sclamldt pitched five 10n10gs of two-hit rehcf as the
Rangers blew a five-run lead before rcboundmg for a
I 0-6 victory over Cleveland ... Owlgbt Evans capped
h1tt1ng for the cycle b> blasting a three-run homer on
reliever EdwlD Nunez's first pnch w11h two outs 1n the
11th inning. lifting Boston to a 9-6 victory over Seattle.
Garvey, Wiggins pace Padres
Steve Garvey !lmackcd three hits. •
scored thrtt runs and Alaa Wiggin• added
three hits to a 15-hit attack as San Diego
downed St. Louis. 7-3. Thursday night.
Left-bander Mark Tbarmood, 5-3, went 61/3 innings
before nccdinJ. relief help from LGi.1 Del.eon and Goose
Gos111e to natl down the victory, the fifth for San Diego
in six games ... In other National League games, KeviD
Bus' two-run double off reliever Al Bollud in the
ninth inning rallied Houston, which scored six runs in
the final two innings, to a 7-6
victory over Philadelphia. Enos
CabeU opened the ninth with a
single to center and stoic second.
PbJI Garner walked and both
runners advanced on a sacrifice
bunt by Jou Craz. Bass then
doubled to left . . . Craig
McMartry rapped out three hits.
including an RBI triple. and
scored once while pitching Atlan-
ta to a 5-3 victory over the New
Wtalna York Mets. Alex TrevlDo hit his
first home run of the season to snap a 1-1 tic 10 the fifth
innin~ and help hand his former teammates their third
straight loss. The game was delayed twice by rain ...
Steve NJco1la, who had homered earlier in the game.
stung his fonner Pittsburgh teammates with a game-
wiMing double in the bottom of the 11th inning to lead
San Francisco to a 4-3 victory over the Pirates.
Nicosia's towenng shot scored Joel Younplood, who
reached first on a fielder's choice after a single by Dasty
Buer off loser Don RoblDsoa, 0-3. Gary Lavelle. 3-3.
earned the victory w11h one-hit pitching 10 over two
innings.
Wiggins passes Sax in voting
NEW YORK -Alan Wii$ins of the • San Diego Padres. whose maJOr league
cxpenence was primarily in the outfield
before this season. climbed from fourth
place to the top this week among second basemen in the
National League All-Star balloting.
Wigg.ins. however. holds an edge of only 50.143
votes over last week's leader. Steve Sax of the Lns
Angeles Dodgers. 1n the figures released Thursday by
the commissioner's office.
Clark has
knee surgery
TOUGHEST GAME. • •
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
R1ghtfieldcr Jack Clark of the San
Francisco Giants underwent
an.hroscopac suraery on has riaht
knee Thursday 10 San Diego and
the club said he'd be out for two to
five weeks.
Clark, a National Leaaue All-
Star cand1date who was h1n101
.320 before be1n1 pla~ on the
IS-day disabled fist Wednesday.
said he hoped to be back in acuon
sbonly aft.er tbc July 10 All-Star
pmc-at Candlestick Pa.rk.
I
Prom Bl
someone who was boycotted 10 '80.
•&ch kid bad somethina to offer
and we looked at all of our combina-
tions and kept a lot of st.aust1cs."
When the Games arrive there will
be a lot of stones about the wmnc.-n-
and lo~rs. but even the lattcrisone·
upon Bcrstson and Newland.
becau5' tbo~ that don't win will ha~t
com pct~
If\.• wa)' ifs hke American record
holder StcphU.le H.ijhtowcr. the
•fouMimec:hampaoo who was founh
in the finals of the 100.mctcrhurdJes
at the traek and field trial ruently.
Hcrtimcwa1 IJ. IJ, 1hcsamcas
No landNo. ,butajud e'sdccmon
puts her on the sidelines.
Whclh rit'strack and field or
w1ucrpolo.1he-compeu11on as so /
d~p
'
I
N1ukowsk1'sst.aning lineup
fi urH this way:
Thcdriversare Robertson and
Burke. with Fiaucroa at the spnnt.
Peter Campbell and McDonald will
be on defense and at two meters, it'll
be shared by Schroeder and Jody
Campbtll.
Siman and vend sen bic:k up on
defcnscWlth Varpsand haw the
S«Ondarydnvers. Wilson and Dorst
will hareplte rcsponStbilitic
U oiled tatcs watct polo en ten
w1lh1 lot ofad"antqea, for on~.
with the sccdin,a. the home waters and
crowd. and w1 th sometbinJ else -the
1mputofBcrscsonand Newland. two
who ucrifiecd e"et')'thinaju t to be a
partAfil.
\VMlt 1f alJ O\'ef. 1f n thin tl .
1hc) dCKrveto be thmwn m the pool.
I
§isters share limelight
Satkts. Mocketts
are making their
presence known
player on lt\e boys team for two ycan. She recently lost in the finals of the
Sou!Mm Califomiajun1orcham-
paonsh1pu1 Mcsa Verdcandhaia
busy summer schedule ihead of her.
Aner p~1.n1 in a couple of H11111 .. ,
TheOranacCoas1arealsblessed
wi1h somcout,tandina talent in
women'sj~nioraolf. Kim Saiki of
-Mesa Vel\ttC.ountryClubanda
araduate ' ar)ofOccan View
Hi&h in 1n1ton Beach, is the
det"tndinana 'onaljuniorctwnpion.
Sou thorn C.alifomia event.a> she will JO to Monterey to play in the suite
JUniortoumamenti11July. Then it
will be the Junior World tounwnen1
In Saa Die&Oand after tbai; on to
PbtladelP-hiL She will play tn die
Womens Trans National Open there
belinn•na July 20. , fn Auaust lhc will ao to Bothell,
Wash. ( 15 males from Seattle) to play
in theJumor National tournament.
Tb is 1s her fifth year 1n the nationals
and last time out. she ~chcd the
quarterfinals before losina in the
competition for players 17-and-
Gui f
Ma1k O'Meara.a.,.ctuaae of
Mission ViijOHi&hufdaTeliOmtof
t.aauna Naauel, isltavif'lbisbclt ~
on the POA tour. The-former Na·
tion&I Amateur Champion ii l ltb on
this year's money hlC wi\ll a whop-
pin, S 191.317 ineami~ hislliahta
evc-r, and theetasoo isn tat the
halfway mark yet. Durina \hat time
he has posted a total of 218 birdiea..
Kim has a)' unacr sister, Laur&.
wboiscomina Jonaquitcwelland
will be a fresbrmn at Ocean View tliis
fall. Down at Irvine Coast Country
Oub, the Mocken sisters have
likewise been very prominent in
junlorgolfcirclesforseveral years.
Older .sister Nancy, after playinpt
NewportHarborHighastheNo. l
player-Ontheboy•leam for several
years, wasamemberofthe UCLA
women ·s aolf team, for the past three
campaiJns. Thissummcrshe is
playangon a mini-tour and hopes to
seek an LPGA players card soon.
under. . Fuzz)' Zoeller.a formcrJ)ltliciP1nt
1n the Crosby Southern at Irvine
Coast Count~ Oub, won this yea(, a
U.S. Open and fseurrently 20th on
the money list with St S4,•22 while
another alumnus of the Crosby So.,
Chip Beck. is 28th with S 132,469.
There arc a several others who have
played at Jrv10e Coast in the past
among the leaders on the money list
includinJDr. OiJMorpn in fourth
Undoubtedly. Laura Saiki will also
be playing in most of these events
al thouah she iueveral years younacr
than-Cathy. h should be"quitca .
so mm er for both of these youna
ladies.
* * * Mesa VerdeCountryClubwdl bo$t .
the Southern Califomll PGA pro-
amatcurcbampionshipand also the
club _P.rofcssional championship
qualifying on Monday, AU.g. 20.
Yo\JnaersisterCathy,now 16, will
be a junior at Ncwpon Harbor in the
fallandhasalreadybeentheNo.1
Embarraued Oleon honored
NEW YORK -'Pole vauher :l~ m OJson. wbotef&IJ1ntD 1 1'Qilr ..
uaclOand field «cam~ mitjar surpnse at
the Olympic Trials, received an award for
achievement in amateur sports Thursday. aJthouah be
said he had considered not showing up because of bis
embarrassment.
~ thought J would be facing an empty room," said
Olson after being presented with the Tanqueray Award,
which bad been voted to him before the Trials which
ended Sunday.
He said be overcame his
reluctance to appear at the awards
luncheon because of the realiza-
tion that "l was being honored for my past achievements."
Olson was the first to vault
over 19 feet indoors when he
cleared 19-01/• at a 1983 meet in
Toronto, and he has been oon-
sisistenly among the top indoor
vaulters. 01~ "I sat on the plane comina UP.
here from Texas and I was depressed. Then, I decided 1f
the people who gave me the award were good to do it. I
would not give up. I would get my body in shape. and
after the Olympics. I will compete ID Europe.
"Maybe I can get some revenge. if you want to call
111hat. and beat some of those who arc in the Olympics.
And. maybe I'll be able to com~te against Seriey
Bu bk.a." the Soviet vaulter who will not be at the Los
Angeles Games.
Olson traced his failure at the Trials to foot injuries
which hampered his training. "I tore ligaments in one
foot and was on crutches for about two weeks. then I
injured my Achilles in my other foot. And, that's what
really hampered me for three or four months.
Olympic team tops NBA squad
PROVIDENCE. R.l. -Chris Mulhn. m shooting bnlliantly from the outside.
score_d all 16 of his po10ts in the third
quarter Thursday night to spark the U.S.
Olympic team to a 128-106 exhibition victory over a
group of National Basketball Associauon players.
The Olympians. who had won their other tune-up
contest aga10st Indiana University alumni, have six
more games with NBA players to prep for the Summer
Olympics in Los Angeles next month.
The pros bad cut a 60-50 halftime deficit to 66-61
before MuUin, a junior from St John's. went to work.
He bit a 16-footer from the left side. Wa yman
Tisdale of Oklahoma followed with two free throwsand
Mullin sank another jumper from the left to boost the
lead to 72-61 witb 6:53 left in the third period.
Owens' ban formally removed
LOS ANGELES -The late Jesse • Owens, who had been perfunctorily
suspended by the Amateur Athletic Union
shortly after be won four iotd medals at the
1936 Olympics in Bertin. has had that blotch removed
from his name.
Joe Henson, current p~ideot of the AAU, said
Thursday-from Washington, D.C., that the suspension
banned Owens from competing as an amateur in the
United States. but that it had no practical effect since
Owens did not intend to compete anymore.
Owens, who died four years ago, drew the
suspension when he abandoned a benefit exhibition
tour in Eurppe following the Games.
Hcnsoh said the AAU. which bas been supplanted
by The Athletics Conaress as the govemina body of
track and field in the United States. had been unaware
of Owens' suspension until il was discovered by
researchers for a movie on the athlete's life.
place with $266,247.
TELEVISION
I 0: l S a.m. -BASEBALL: Braves at Mets, Channel 4.
12:30 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Michigan Panthen
at LA faprcss, Channel 7. 1 p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon, Channel 4.
2 p.m. -SOCCER: Olimpia vs. lndependiente,
Channel 34.
3 p.m. -OLYMPIC SPECIAL: Women in sports,
Channel 2. 3:30p.m.-BOXING:BarryM~uian(l8-l , 16KOs)
vs. Paul Dcvorcc (21-1 , 11 KOs). featherweiahts, Channel
2 .
3:30 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Van Scoy 500 (tape),
Channel 4.
4 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: Motorspons lntcrna-
tionaJ, interview with Indy SOO wioner R.ick Mears.
Channel S6. •
S:30 p.m. -8A.8£BALL: Angels at Milwaukee.
Channel S.
5:30 p.m. -OLYMPIC TRIALS: Hiabliahts include
women's bask.etball, archery, ca.noeina. kayak.ins. road
cycling and rhythmic l)'mnastics.
RADIO
12:30 p.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Micttip.n at LA
Express. Kl.AC (S70). 5:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at Milwaukee.
KMPC(710).
7 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago at Dodgers, KABC
(790).
SUJJUT
TELEVISION
9:30 a.m. -EXHIBmON BAS&ETBAU:.NBA All-
Stars vs. U.S. Olympic team, Channel 7.
11:30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Anaels at Milwaukee.
Channel 5.
11 :30 a.m. -PRO FOOTBALL: Arizona at Houston,
Channel 7.
I p.m. -BOXING: Thomas Hearns vs. Roberto
Duran (tape). Channel 2.
I :30 p.m. -TENNIS: Wimbledon, Channel 4.
3:30 p.m. -MOTOR SPORTS: U.S. Grand Prix
(tape). Channel 4.
RADIO
11:30 -BASEBALL: -Angels at Milwaukee.
KMPC (7 10).
2 p.m. -BASEBALL: Chicago at Dodgers, KABC
(790).
SHRIVER. • • From Bl
In this year's Wimbledon, defendina champion John
McEnroe's behavior is being watched as closely as his
game. He received passing grades io both Thursday u be
defeated fellow American Rodney Harmon and moved in
the third round of the men's singles.
McEnroe. the man the British press has called "Super
Brat." politely questioned only two calls en route to bis 6-1,
6-3, 7-5 victory, and avoided a series of upsets whose
victims included No. 4 sccd Mats Wilander ofSweden and
the fifth woman seed, American Zina Garrison.
McEnroe. cxplainina his tbitd-set problems with
Harmon. said: "I felt I was in control, but for some reason
I stopped retumina. I could have been a little touaher. and
he might have got lucky or something."
Cycles in action tonight
Toni&ht's speedway motorcycle actton at tbe Oranae
County fairgrounds is matched qa.inst a concen at the
neighborina Pacific Amphitheatre for the first time this
season.
But speedway officials insist they have come up with a
no-hassle _plan to alleviate any parking problems, The
Newport Boulevard pte will be reserved exclusively for
speedway fans.
Mcanwh1lc. national champion Kelly Moran wdl be
amona tbe nders competi114 tonis}lt at 8. Moran.)U.St beCk
from Europe, waU be UP. •wst several rqulan. ancludint
Alan Christian and Mike Faria.
Gatts open at 6:30. Patt.ill& arid .JJl'Oll'U'I ~ tree.
Admission 11 S6 for adulb aed Sl b ~. ~12.
Children fivt and under aft admined tee.
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Olympic Games hiatory
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40 U SU DOUBL.H· SanclDtrft, ClllCuo, 20, AM r~ Oiel Arr-. Arltlt and could bC blrid liar
3' J7 4tl Ja,, Fr111co1141, MonlrHI, 19, &emu.I, MSH't • ll'•ECITYL• ~--· .... Wldllt ...... T""'1 tennso{ruleJ=: ...... ~~ ~ : !~ ""~· 11: OC•rt•. MonlrMI, ,., ,.,., A.._ ,.., ......_ ~ ~ 141M'911 • ._ ........_ announced ._
3 2 HubOerd, Alltflle, 1', Oliver, S.n l'ren• 1. Peut N9ulMnn <Austria), l.IU; 2 1. WI em Sn)<lt'I (U.l l, ut•. t. nm. '!117 !. ·!~S2 ,5;-'1 ctscTo.;.l!tES •--_1,_.._._~ AnlWlln PetletlOf (Greece), n.1.. 3 McU.. CU.S ), 4 C).4, ). Jofllt ~..... 11 •XACTA tHl ... 111.a ntnaoncr f)oWie KUbft. ~ "" -~ " ,.._ '. _,,Ufl, '"" .........,11, 10; eflteltllos C:llot..,,_. CG~). n t (Auslr ... ), 4A7,• sac.GMO aACa. MO vwea.. Tto..-.... 1..-.. -n I'. 31 40 .437 6\l'J S.ndber9, Cll!Qoo, 10, crui. Houlton, I; ..... .,. •tiftlcf• (Mrih) ... ... ,.. I JllC • ~ ~ '°' a
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Beltlmore 42 l3 S60 12 lrtel, 14; JDtvli, ClllCAttO, 13; _........, (Austrlel.4.390. IS~). 4~2 ~-~. ~ ftullr: Tiie ._ 0.. nent &Detitibili\y ~)'C(I WiM>
lotion 36 31 416 "°"' ~ 11 1-19J6. MS • Tu ll"len • ._ ·~ c:oaVidedoforplcadpailty,toa ~ VOl'k » 39 CSI 19'"' STOL~N 9ASES: s.trmlti, ~1.. ._ ....... 1. IWJITtv •OM ~,,.,, •-n.J, 2.. TI-... ... -···-10 ·"'· ... =.-.. a ..... :_ ._, MllweukH •• 37 ..,.__:"'\ .-. • I Henrv Tevtw (U.$.), ~I; 2 Frank .. _ ·-,,...,.""' UK; llMMuuuuuu uir C 3J 41 446 20'i'J ; ... ._tri~, Sen OltoO, ,.., ,.tdus, Clncln· e.ur-lrt (Austr'IU.), 5;&4.2; l Otto TIUVOtlll V~ (hoeft). •:JO.A, 1 T'l90 AAC Vlf'dl, • , .. ,........ • •• -.._...._ -'•
ltvlllend JO 41 423 n 111111• :u, Dernier, Ctllceoo, 2t, lttlM\, ScNff (Autlrle), 5M.O. ~ .. .,_(U.S.), 02.J lt..-V F1VM1 CCwclDDl 17M •• Ml c:ontr~ ~~-.,-ya'&
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Texaa 10-", ,..._~ ..... 6·7 ti I 1 "u. P..._.. ..... I I 2 76 ., I M./lrn .... IA&alr'.O.I, • ll.J, 2 T_.. ..... H.it tlw•l lM -uolJcd SU~. and ....&... ' ~.... Ila • -• ..-, ..... 11 ...... n •• • • .. • I ~ .. Hodlnofl (~). S:24 •• 2 Twvoelll Yemenielul u ..... 1 •'2U 1 ,... Eaw ...... ... ,,.. ""'"" ,.-
Toronto 9, 0.~lelld 6 ltve.n, HcKdlOll, 7-2, UJ; MeHtr, Atr.nta, ~John Htlfltld CGr•t Brftelft), S:2S.I. 3 .JoM K9fW'e8 (Au&lrtllJ 4'21A ' ltOdr. ,:::-: T Heell =-'• COftYlcied Of or ~DI pilty 1Q Boston t , Stettlt' (11 lnnlnoo .-1, 2.S.; Lie, MontrMI, 11-4, 2'1 HtrOld Hardwick tAuurallel~ uu ' ' .._ • _._,. -•~-~10 , ... :...: ----,,,_ hlllrnore 2, Clllceoo o STRIKEOOTS: v...,,.... ~ "'4, n... TirnE 11.15. '"' uu"' rQ.11.\GU "" .....----T....,., ..,.,.. "t1ll 'G'oodtn, .._ vor11, m: · 1tv..,, ,,.., .......,. ' ' Oonetd ~ <u.s), uu. t. ~ ftACL JM ww• of a conttOHca su~. "'*" (ROt'llenlctl •·71 •• Mdw•ukM HousJon, ••• Soto, Clndnnell. n. A~. I Norman ltou (U..S ). S!26.t, 2 Lu41v FreM ~ (EMI ,~>. 410; 3 '°"' iu.ty Cllftlt) ,. SOI ,... Kuhn OUlhncd lM rWcs In. ~ IHN1 •·•1. In> DM9en. U1 Anduler, Stt..oub, 13 LenMr (U.S.), 5;30. 3 ~ .. Vtrnol AIM W0041 (Av$1~ • 4.IS..I. Mv ll...., Girt(..,,.,) s.AO .sM I Al• • =
Minnesota (Smltttson 1-7 encl Wlllltm' SAVES· 54.ltter, SILOUls, 11. twaencl. IC-al S:2U. 1'61, Mn1A Ol'f Tr.-Or Nolfli"9 t"-"O \ U1 10 C Ub OV.'nrn and tn-YU1 In
M l •• o.1ro11 <Morr" 12·3 eno w11coa PNledeloftlt, 17, LISrnllll, Chlceoo, IS, 1. MlcllMI eurton <U.S >. •'ffO. 2 •'*' AIM raced ""°""" au.ow. u llOM he uf'ICld pport for the M'fl
1·51, 2 GolMOt, Seit Di.oo. 13, Orosco, ..._ lt'M, ,.em Hutten (C.l\ld9), • 111. l ~ MoSG1111 ,,_..,St l«e«t, ••te0 Finl, c:.... co.. abuse ____ ..,. writ&eo by a com. 11 TuH (Siewert C·l l e t Cltvetencl Vor11, 13. l JonMv Wtfumulllf IU .. U , S'04.2, 2 (FrMC111), 4 tu Fnt CtwitcnLlmlt .. ~ (r-..-·• (81vteven 6·31, lnl At'tlt loro (Sweden), S:OS4, l Andrew lf72...... nm.-l1k ltC 0 QWnen and playen icpitileO-
O.klenc1 I Burri• .. ,, el T«onlo (SlieO Cheriton (Auslrelle), 5'°'·6 1 &Tedford COCNIW (Austrekl, 4:oo.27, U llXACTA (4· 101 Mid m 10 tat1Ve1 and ratified b)' both lidts..
1·2), (nl lflll, Amswam 2 SleYtn Gtftltr IU.S.I. 011.94, 7. Tom ~ tlACa. UI _.._ .. Whi.li lb~ new drua ~
S..llle ( Vande8ero 4 71 ., Soslon I Alberto ZOl'lllt CAr9e11tlne), 5:016, 2 Mc9rwn (US.). 4'02 '4 <•felt DeMonl. Sem.nl Warrior (Adeir) IJAO IM u• . fi I ...__ ... ~· .t.... • l<Mdl •·SI. In) Andrew Cheriton IAu1trellel, S'°3 .. , l Arne U.S., •:au.. d•squejlfled Dee.tu-. of ...... Liles Etsv Seee (Hen) ,.. .... Sign 1cant y Ulu..K:U> WC Slt\labOIU
Belllmo<e (Merllner 1·31 •' c n1<:eoo Borg <Swedtnl, s:ou. medleelionl Dlej Talent <P•uline> tuo in wh.icb ""'"vcrs will be niutlcd to (Dolson 9·•1. In) lf76. ~ AllO r.citd t..... llovel a.net, Klt..t· r-,. ··-• t.ha •
New York (Nlekro 10'3) et KenHI Cllv 1932. 1.M ~ I B I GooCletl (US ) J:Sl t') J T1m tort Joe, Two Nolft, ROOlll Smlltl, .. s.irt &Dmeil}• It lS VJYU ••• 1 tenOU~
(Blee!\ l ·Sl, (n) 1 Clarence "Buller'' Crellll (U.S.). sn. (~ es".1 3 52..54 3 . V~I· if it Tony, tnltn Ee•v Jtt, New 9o1G ltultr. categonn Of drug C&$C$, wbictl the
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Oakland at Toronto , .. , ~ SlXTH llACI l50 SUbject tO tenOU$ discliptiO&ry
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Texas., c 1evt1er1d, (nl Merli eomonc11011 (Aua1rec1e1 def Hen· uio IJeoenf, •.AS~; l. Shoto Mt111no 3:S3.2•. s Iver s1u1to1111n <Sovi.t Union), g:, 5;:;.;,"f:v..'.';"''cleYI 1'0 >• He added that procedur
Mlnnesot• •lru~lrol~.lfi1'-"irA:~~~~·~';f7<~~ncblrom l~J/;J~·,i-A·Z, (Jepen), 4:41.1 . l..53.95 Abo reeect T..W. Doll. 8Clt ll~ CSt.abJishcd In the program and
..... ,..,.. •' ~-~ M;-, TI;.~-'"'~· __ ,..,. ;:;:-'t ~~~'I~ -o~--.,--. t .. -.~~1n1. J IN N_,.._.,.~ •• -..... !_~"Y'0-........ ·6 ... c~.i.~::l. w;o.,cu~aa..~Lfo~:a"IL.._-::J
N•tlonel L .. 90e Jlmmv ArlM IU.S.I def. Danie Veuer 1 • S. Leub ~ \.-...,. • .,:.,.G ...... ~---· ~...-, -~~ ~ """"
WIST DIVIStOH <Soutl't Afrlce), 3·•. •·•. 7·S, Tomes Smid 1. Weller Breca (Germenvl, 1 16.1, 2 1 Allen SllCll !U..S.lM;06.•, z. 11tober1 "" _,,,.._ ability 10 ctfeajveJy de&) with W L ~cl Ga (Ctechoslovekle) Clef. Tom GuM!son IU S ), G9or9 Hoffman CGermeny), n 1 .. 3. G9org Cowel CU.S.I; 3 G«lr9ft Ve-.V SIEWtn'M ltACW. lst vwe .,_ -kt-c ••
Sen Dleoo .. 2t 603 7·S. 7-6, .. ,, Tim Mtvolle (Us ) def Tim ZecMrles (Germenv), n.I. IF,_), 1'1».t • .,,,.. (Gerc:le) 9• .... ..... -... UV ... ......_
Allenle 4? J5 .54S 4 Gutllkt«i CU.SJ, 6·4, 6'-3, ,.. 1-. ~ 1tS2, ....._, ~= ~~) 6A ;: ~ 40 31 S13 ··~ C~~ ~d·~)~ Betav l. Arno BleOrsleltr (Germenvl, 1:2.U. 2 I Y0$1\1nobu Ovektwe IU.S.), l:OS.4; J. AISO raced' MW Linc C'J:NlleQ.e C#V Hou$ton 36 40 •74 9Vt LucM9 Dem (OtM\trk), 1:2U; 3 Hen>erl Gllber1 Bozon (Fr1111Ce), 1~. 3 Jeca JIAI ._,,. Sim9ldly '.»t ....,_ win.'
Clndnnell l S •• ..1 IO'i'J =:=n1ov~u.s.,J:s,H~.-6., .. ~-2.8·~ro'lnev• Hernneoe IGr•t Britain), 1:27 0 Taylor (U.S I. 1:06 4 Sllor1 F.ncv ·lt~et. ~ L..et1l •
Sen Frenclico 11 4S -· 16 _. ... ..... 191• .-.............. 1-.. .. • ....__ .,. "" -(Credlollo¥8kle), .-2, 6·2, Pam Shriver ., __.. ·-· nzw 1 HN • ........ ..-
Clllceoo ""'~· N-York
l!AST DtVlSK>N (U.S.) def Ctmllle BenWnln (US ), H . ,.2. l Herry He0ner CU.SJ, 1:21.2, 2 Ot1o 1 Devid Tllelle (Auslr ... ), 1'02.2, 2 II II.JC.ACTA 14·21 Mid tlti.. ..
41 33 SS. Kell'tV Jorden IU.S.J def Julie Siimon Fehr CGermenvl. 1:22.4; 3. Paul Ktnntr JOfln Mondlton (Austrelle), l~U. 3 Frank IEICMfTM tuca. )SCI vwcb 41 33 SS.C 18rlllen), 6-•. 6·3, Manuele Meletve (8ul· (Gtrmenvl. l2t.O McKinntv (US.). I~ S Pri9m .... (Lec:llevl 17a 7 40 7M
31 32 so ' gerle) def YVOMt Vermeek ISoull't .... .,.,,_.. lMt. ·-A~ur• AcaKd (C,.....,I 4.20 l.AO Monlr .. 1
SI. Louh
PlllM>urllft
36 37 '9l 4'1':1 Alrlcel, •·4, 6-4, Ban>ere Poller IU S I def I Warren P-KHIONI (U.S.), I ls.2, 2 I David T...... (AIAtr.U.l. 1:01.9, 1. 8uoe1ou Milar (8ard) 5..29
3' 40 474 6 Merolte Skullenke CC1.mo$10vtkle), •·I, lttv K-ls (U.S.), 1:16.2, 3 GererdBHtr Frtnll McKIMev CU.SJ, 1112 1, 3 lt0Cltr1 Allo recied: Siient Cel, Cut N RMlll, ..._
lO 44 40S 11 6·3; Elizebtll't Sever' (AintreJle) def Liw (e.llJlum), 1'19 0. 8-11 CU.S.), 1:02.J Rldl, A&emrlot SUnlrliM, Tiny T't'M, Yukon
Tllun4ittY's kerH Bonder (U.S.), 6·4, 6·1. 1924, fOartt 1Mt. Mtxlce Qty Remlller, CW Wlllu Kit
Cl'tlceoo s. Dtd9w'I 3 ' Werren p-KeU>l'te IU.S.). I 13.2, 2 1. Rottnd Melllles (EeSI Germenv). Sl.7, Time: 17.12. =::n \~~~' THURSDAY'S HSULTS p(~~n,11 lu17.s ... 1. 1·1s .•• l. Karoly Berthe 2 Cl'tll'IH Hlckcox (U.S ), 1:eo.2. 3 RonelO 12 P'IClt SIX (7-4 .......... ) Hid
Sen oi-.. 7, St Louis 2 MM'I S.C.. fttlMd ,..... """-rv ' : ' Milts IU.S.), 1:00.S. 121,lOl..40 wlll't -w""*'9 I~ lflw ...... Jotvl McEnroe (U.S.) def. ltoctnev Her-1-hof'Mt) Tot.i ~ llOOI! .... --71 Sen Frenclsco 4, PlllsbufOh 3 ( 11 In· mon (U.S.), .. 1, ..,.3, 7·S; Pet Cash (Ainlret-.... Amslw9m 1972, ~ . • _,......~
nlnclil le) def. Mii• Wllender (SW9den), .-1. 6-4, 1. George Kolle (U.S.), 1:01.2; 2 Weller I. Roland Mtlllles (Etsl G«meny), ......,... •ACL l10 v--.
TecltV's Gamet .,_2, ..... ; Andf'n Gomu (Eeueclor) def. Lauter (U.S I. 1.10.0; l. Paul Wvell IU S.I, 56.51, 1. MlcnHt Stemm !US.), 57.70; 1 8obbv Oii Oii (Gwdal 6.41 uo JA
Chlceoo !Sutclltte 2·0) er ~ Sttohen Shew (Britain), 7·6, 7_., .. 2; 8111 1:11.09 Jo1'tn Murottv (U.S l, 51.35 Come Weld! Mt Flv (Harmon) UO UO
(Her\lllstr 2·31, In) SctnlOtl (U.S.) def. StteNr P9t'klu ClsrHI), 1931. Lei A,... 1'7•. ~ Ardlie Alrll (L.tc:key) UO
Montrnl (Lte ll·CI •I Clnclnnell (Price .... 2. 6·3, 6-3; VIies G.,.uleltls (U.S.) def. 1. Ml'9ll Klvoka,q (Jaoen), l:Ot_., 2. 1. JONI Heller (U.5.), SS49; 2. Pe14H Alic> rtOld: SC.ts ~. Grecloul
3·4), (nl Belen Teroczv (HU!lffryl, 6·3, 7·S, 4·6. Jotl'tlo Irle CJeoen), 1:09.t;t 3. !Cantero Roc:c:e (U.S.), 5'..34, 3 lt0141nc! Mttll'tft !tee>, '-" Klltr. Clelltl« Lucky Wiii Atlante (Bldl'oslen •·S) al New Yont 6-4. Kewetw (Jeoenl, 1:10.0. (East Germtnvl. S7 22 T1mr. 46.06.
ILVnc:l't 7·3), (n) w.,,_., Sec.eM .... SIMlel 1'36,...... ltlO, M9law 12 llXACTA (6'-2) Hid Sis.JO.
Houston (l(neooer 7·7) ., PnlledetOl'tle Virginie Wede (Brll•lnl def Zina GtrTlson 1. AOOlf Kiefer (U.S.), 1:05.9; 2. Altieri I. Bengt Baron (Sweclelt), 56.33, 2. VlklOI' Altend9nor. •.91o.
CCtrtton S·4), (n) (U.S.), 3-., •·4, 7-S, Hane {Mnclllkove Vtndewellhe (U.S.), 1:07.7, 3. Mesail Kuznttsov (Soviet Union). 5'.9', l. Vledlmlr HlflllW_.. ~
SI. Louis (Horton 3·1) II Sen Dleoo (Ctec:hoslovekle) def Ctterln. LlndQul•I Kl'lotlewt (JtNn), 1:111.4. Doloov (SOvlel Union), S7.Q TNURSDAY'S 1t•SUL.TS
(Show 1·41. lnl (Sweden), 7·S, 6·3. (41111 • .,_.,., ... -M -) PlllM>urOh (Tuoor •·SI al Sen Francisco Fan ll.ACL 6\0j tut--.
(Robinson 3·tJ. (nl c..ntne <Mceerran) UI la 111
SetuNllY'I G-. SfNI HMli1 (V.-U.uela) UO 4a Ollctoo a1 l>Mlen. (n) Lon Hint.le 31·0 -7' Collttrr en19 (°""'91 1lO
PlllUJur9'1 •I Sen Frenclsco Allen Miier 40-~7' Abo r-.ced: c:..ndy's v-.1-. 9loftda MonlrHl el ClnclMtll, In) OtvtOorln 3'1;-0-19 ~. °"'"9111tv. 8ed ... Luc¥. M ~ston II Pl'tlledetonle, (nl •·K..,rv Shor1 • ._.,, Arie, Wm..._
Allenle el Ntw York, lnl ltelMI A»rcon 39-10_. Time. 1:17 tJS..
SI Louis er Sen Dleoo, In) Norman Jerv1' »-c>-40 saCIC*O ~ 6 tur--..
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Anelts 7, Brewen 3
CALIFOAMIA MIL.WAUKaE
Pettis d
Ctrew 311
Lvnn rf
OtCnc:t lll
RtJksn dl't
Downlnolf
Grlcl'l2b
Narron c
SCl'tOflld u
Mlrllbl Mrflbl • o o o Romero lll 3 O O 1 • o I o RHowet on 1 o o o
S O O 0 GenlM 2b S 0 2 I
2 2 l O Yount u • l 1 o
S 2 2 2 Coocier 111 4 0 2 1 2100 Smmnsdtt 3000
4122 OolMt" 4010
4 I 2 3 RClerk d 4 I I 0
4000 Sundbr9C 4120
CMoort rt 3 0 ' 0 James Ol'I 1 0 0 0 >4 7 I 7 Tflab M l 10 l SC-by .....
CalJtem&e 000 •JO ooo-7
MtwtVlrM 001 200 000-l
Game Wlnnlno 1t81 -R•Jtduon (61.
DP-<:ellfornl• I, MllweullM I.
LOB-Cetttornle I, Miiwaukee I.
2&-<:ool>tl'. DeClllCfl. HR-lte.JectllOll
112), Herron (21 SB-Pellls (311
c..... Jol'tn W,4·6
COl'btll S,4
Mtwellt!M
I~ H ll llll 88 SO
6
3
10 3 3 1 0
0 0 0 0 3
&Gibson L,0-2 4 2·3 S ' 6 S l
Lerorl(o l 1·3 3 I 1 3 1
Wells 2·3 O O O O 1
Jofln e>lleheel 10 I Delle< In lhe 711'1
H8p...-ftomefo (llv Jot>nl T-2.41
A-119'I
NA TIOHAL LEAGUE
CUbs S, Ded9lrs 3
CHtCAGO Lin ANGllL.H
• ebrllbl MHllbl
Oemltr d S 0 0 0 Sex 2b S 0 0 0
Sndbr9 2b S I 2 1 &Russet cf 4 1 0
Mtlltlws If 3 2 2 O Lendrx " 2 ' I l
Morlnd 111 s o 2 o Guerrer 311 4 1 1 o
JDtvls c 3 1 O O Mersl'tl 111 4 0 2 O
Ctv 311 4 1 I 1 YHlltr c 3 1 I 0
Johnsln rf • o 1 O SCloscle c 1 O O 0 Collorf o O 0 O MldnOOrf 3 O 1 1
Bow• u 3 o o o Stubbl rt 1 O o O
Trout 0 3 0 0 0 AndeMI SS • 0 2 1
Stoddard o 1 0 0 0 APtN P 2 0 0 0
Ztcl'trv o 0 O 0 0 VallOl'I l 0 0 0
Hoolono O 0 0 O
RRnlds Ol't 1 0 0 0
M S I 2 T.rab lS l IO J
Sceo"e bv ....... C'*"9 000 104 ooo-s Les.,....... 000 lOO 000-l
Game WIMlllll RBI -None E-Ctv, Melll'lews, Mersl'lllN
DP-<:l'ttc.OO I L09-Chlce90 I , LOS An·
Min I HR-S.ndbtr9 (Ill ~ H ll lit ea SO
CMca9I Trour W.1·3
Stoddard S.l
• 1·3 10 3 l 3 •
2 2·3 0 0 0 0 4
L.•.,..,
APene L.1·4 S S l l1 3 ZtdVY 000 0
HoolOll 3 30001
APene e>llCMCS 10 4 t>etters In lhe 6rn
WP-APenll 2, ZKllrv, Trout
Pe-JDevls T-24' A-37,65'
U.S. SWlrnrnine '"-is , ........... ,
CAI ,IMb)
MEN
GI lrft - 1 Ge«oe DIC•rlo le>.llverl.
3.Sl.03 (Amtrleen record, ~tvlous rKOl'o
3:S 1.56 bv Brian Goodell), 2 Jol'tn MvklleMf'I
(~tie), l:Sl.44
200 tir..st -1 Rldlard Sdlf'oeoer
IS.nle Barllerel, 2:17.64, 2. JOfwl MoHel
!Costa Mewl. 2'17.6'. ~ ..
100 flv -1. Jenn. JOl'tMon (Senta Row),
S9.0I; 2. Merv T ~ (Loulsvlllt), suo.
100 brHsl -1. Trecv Ceullllns (Ntsl't·
ville), 1:11.23; 2. Suwn Repp (Eden Prairie ,
Minn.), 1:11.39
USFL
(, ..... ,
WEfn•N CON,E.l!NCE ~ W L. T fl'ct. ,, ~A
v·L.A l!JlllnU x·Arltone
Denver
0.klllnd
10 1 o 55' lll Jn
10 I 0 S.56 S02 214
9 t 0 500 35' 413
7 11 0 .lit 242 34
Central
v-HouslOn 13 S 0 112 •11 GI x • MldllOen 10 I 0 S.56 400 3t2 Seit Antonio 7 11 0 .319 JOt 32S
Ok.llllOme 6 '2 0 .333 2S1 '59 OlleeDO S 13 0 271 340 4U
EUTllllN CONl'llllEMCE
v·Pl'tltedetPhle
x·Ntw.Jersev PlllSbur91't
Washington
AIMlk
16 2 0
14 4 0
3 15 0
3 lS 0
5elllMt'n
v·81rmlnol'lllm 14 4 0
x·T1me>1 Bev I• 4 O
New Or!Mns I 9 0
Memol'tls 7 1 I 0
Jec:tuonvllle • 12 0
•·C11nct!ed Playoff btrlh
v·dlncMd dlvl•loll lllle
.119 c7t ns
771 '30 412
167 25' 379
"7 270 491
ne
771
.471
319 .333
S39 31' .... 341
331 37S
320 4SS
327 455
USFL lllllvwffl
DIVlSM>N ~L.AYO,l'S
St--Y'• °""" MldllOen •I LA Eonu. 12 30 p m •
CllenMI 1 New JerMV el Pt\lledtlPtlle
S4MmY'• ~ Te,,._ 8av et 81nnln9Nm
Arizona el Houston. 11:30 • m • Channel
CONl'E9'11MCI CHAIW'tONSH~ se,_.v, .My 1
Mk:t\lotn·L.A 1...-.U winner vs Ari·
ione·HouslOll winner
~ ...... 1
,._.. Jtrs•r Pflnaotlol'tlt winner v'
Tempe hv·Blrmintnem winner
USl"L. Qw; .........
S..Y, N1¥ IS
(et T.,..., "8.)
Etsltrn Conterenal dwlmolon v• West·
ern Confw ence Clllmt>lon
I '
CAIMClien Ooen
(et oentlm, ~· Nick Prlcl 33-~1
3S-J4.-69 34-3~9
32·3t-70
33·J7-70
l3·lt-11
36-JS.-71
3S-l6-71
:U-37-71
3'·35'-71
lS-36-71
34·37-71
JS-l7-n
l6·l6-12
3S·37-72 31-n -n
lS-37-n
lS-37-72
ls-37-12
ll·3s--n
35-Jt-73
3'-37-73
34·3'-n 36·31-73
3S·3t-73
37·36-73 37-36-n
36·37-73
37·36-73
33·40-73
JS·lt-73
37·»-73
37-36-n
34·3'-73
37·37-7•
lt-lS--74
l6·Jt-7•
37·37-74
31-36-74
33·41-7•
3S·J9-74
31·36-7•
l6·3t-7C
36·31-74
36·Jt-7• 37·37-7•
34·40-74
34·4C>-7C
37·37-74
37·31-75
3'·J9-7S
31·37-7S
lt·37-7S
37·31-7S
31·3t-7S
31·37-7S
l6·J9-7S
3S·4C>-7S
36·J9-7S
Lerrv lttnk~
Ricl't«d ZollOI
C l\erles COOdV
Garv Hellber9
Howard Twillv
J C.SnellCI
Morris Helelsllv
Bruce Llt11ke
Jotv Slnoeler
Curr Bvrum CterenceRow
.Jerrv Anderson
Joflnny Miiiar
Anc!V 8Hn
Garv Marlowe aoo Bovd
JOMAdms
Gavin Leven'on
Peul Atlno«
Bred Faxon
Den Pohl
Tommy Vei.nr~
Den Forsmen
Lerrv Zlelller
Tim Norris
L-ro ThOmC>son
Jedt Nicttleu' Corev Pevln
Gr"Normen
Dennv Tello!
Keith Ftr9US
Wevnt Levi Jim Simons
Merit Ptell
TllomtsGrey ~Stuen
8«t CrtnJ/\ew Garv l(rueger
Bobby Wadkins
Mike Putnem
Ron Streck
Merk McHultv
ltev Srewarl
Rek>h Landrum
TomP\Kltt<
Forrest Fttler
Kennv Knox
Tom L.ttmen
BUI Kreiter!
Grier Jones
Mtrti Lva
Diii Dou91an
Ed Sr1"d
Tom Wtlslloe>f
Jim Tl'lorot
8 111 Brillon
Pel McGowan
Ronnie 81et k
Garv P1nns
Jim Ntlforo
LOl'tn Rotlerls
Pet Llnclsev
Jim Cotbtr1
Peler OoSltrl!U1S
Mike McCullou91't
Btrrv J.etkel
Vic tor R 19ele<IO
Mec o ·GrllC!v
Jof\!l~r
Wltlle Wood Jao Ferenz
Hal Sulton
Hick Feldo
Oen Hellclorson
Jim Dent Seree ThlVltrge
ltOO Nuekoll•
JOdleMudd AlldV Notlh
SColt Hocl't
Mika Peck
Tonv Siiis
MlktSmltn
Jllff Mltdltll FrtnkF~
.-.vne$.....,trt
• llfllho Walt! lin4 Jedi S.edllft
Dllvehrr Tom IN
Jetntta.lr e-Oemv Mllo¥1C
J..,,~ ..... 0.vld O'Kal\'
I.ell GrlftWT\ ... ~
K•Klllw
lfftlUNw K_..~
YtlNMrtK--. ...
w~
0,.,.., Mcett• ..... o.m-tt ~ ....... °'"" ........ 1.._.C.,_h '°"",......,. ~., ...
-~ l\MwO...
K tft F\llGll 0. HlfNlllfl
Gftft¥oMw
N1'10alllefl9f wowv 81e<k_,,.
31·31·7S
l7·ll--7S
36·39-7S 34·41-7S
l6·J9-7S
36·3'-75
37·»-75
37·»-7S
37·»-7S
l6·39--7S
J4·41-7S
37·39--7•
•-»-76
31·»-16
ll·Jt-7•
31·»-7• 37->9-76
31·39-76 34·42-76
'7·3'-76
U ·lt--76 31·~1' ~76 )1-3'-7'
31-39-7'
~76 u-o-n ,..,._n »...._n
l6-~i-n
•>t-77 :Jl"«>-77 ,._._n ......,, »-._n •»-n .. ._n
is-a-n ,. »...._,, »-41-n ... ,....11
•~t-11 ,, ... 17 X>....,_.n
J6·4l-17
04-17 ..,._,,
»-4......n ...... ,. ,.
~,._,.
• 11 " »-0-1' . " . ._,.
"
AdemAdems 41·3'-tO ~-....._ ......_,, (H'Wtv) 10A S.• Ut Ed FIOtl l7·o-«I "' _ __.. .... .......,
Vence Hu'-...._ W1'rine G4*l (Olvwftl A.II.. J.1t _
IC. C Lleo Jt..41--40 Etwnel ll-(5'119e) Ue
Lvn Lott • ..._... Abo ""'*'' Dublnn91. o.i·s t-...
Gr" ()boll ·---0.Tinere, 0. Oedwe, 1tJWr of ....,.,, Mldl Soll .,_...... Lunw't im.t. Vari ll•IM. Oft "'8 It~ DelocK lf-~1 HudMWI. WI n Glen's Doll
Mike Govt lt u-t l rime 1 11 4 S..
Jim Rutledge .u-tl 12 DAILY DCM•L.11 C7JJ _.<Cl U1.1t
Mer11 Wltbt 31-o--11 T1taD •ACS. 6 fur'IOniP'L Gr .. Powers •..........a E~ ,.._ rHwtv) IOM 1 .. UO
e·Tlld .... se .a-O-C HOCMe Fury (Plnc;ty) UO JA
e·Mtrll Oleole5'11 .0-42-«l ~icM $lelrdWd (Ve1111L\11119) 2.M
Toml'l'ly Aet'on Jl.........C Abo read: .Am.-IJ • ...,_, Will, 5-ld
Jim 8ooro1 •2---., end see.
Dou91es L.Cuver lt-u-tl Time: 1:10
S.IOJl'tl Hl9e'111 •·45 $S 11.XACTA (6-31 illeld WO.IO.
R~ Pl'tlMIPS 37·....-.J ~TM llACa. S'h ~
811 Sender 41·41-«J Ametinll C°"Ne (Ylntl) IUO 7.20 UO
BJll Bevintllon •-u-«i Foreotten Hero (Hewlev) IAI • 40
Tom L•~e 31·4'-14 Te.llelot (TOl'o) s..• Merli CelcevecchJe Cl·4)--t4 Abo r8C*S: Erin's Gtorv, Sut9er. Diaco
•·Ward SroytMr • .......,.. Dwtw. Evts!W Tvrent, Mr lkllclr\J9tfte.
•·Dave Deverell '3·47-tO Ucltown Dude, Pu9nedtv, Poo's Def'b\I, -•me•eur PommerCS
U.S. ~<>pen
(It llecMstotr, NY.)
BOii GoeM>v
DeltMorev
Deen Sfteett
L•rrv Eaton
Mike Fetel'tk:k
JimF..,r1t
A,.nold Petmer
M flter Barlltr
L IOI* He«ltr I
Orville Moo4tv c l'tuck Jones Gey Br_..,
81• Jotln•lon Paul Thomes
Dou9 Ford wrv Barber
AJMenoert Pet.,. Thomson
80llSlone
HUien Coller
K vlt 8 urton Dick Serie
Cl'tuck SC."v Don Wnelen
Joe Mont.co
Bebe LlchtrdU•
erncemooe•
JOl'tn ltldd
Pele Hes~
Paul Hernev
KetNtOle
Ken Mesi
Mille Ktllv
PursleP1llh
Geor9e Revnold' Rod Funi.elh
Ken Town•
Bitlv CHotf'
BOii Hott
How.-Jonnson
F~Hee•
Fordoe Pllll
Auole Navarro
Don8eromen
8111 Hvnomen
Cheri .. s.ttoro
.James Halloetcl
Jim Unrufl
Cherin Owenl
G-oe K•"'"' Jr ROlend Slettord
8110eden
Cl't.eriea ""°'"" Je<ll FIKlt Joe Jiment1
3S-3S-70 35-36--71
3S-Jt-73
31-lS--73
3'-37-n
.»-Jt-7•
Jt-36--74 JS-3'-74
3'-31-74
.c>-J.t-7•
39·l6--7S
31·37-75
l7·3t-7S
.O-lS--7S
31·3t-75
ll·37-7S
l7·3t-7S
41·3'-75
C1·~7S
3'·3'-7S
l7·3t-7S 37·3t-7S
31·31-7S .0-36--76
31-Jt-76
31-Jt-76
31-31--76 lt-»-n ••-36--n 40-37-n
31-39-n lt-»-n
~·-11 n~n
39-31--77 lt-Jt-n
«>-37-71
lt-lt-77 lt-,,._n
lt·>t-77
lt-39--71
•1·37-71
41·37-71
•1·37-71
•»-71 40-3t-71
lt-3'-71
37·41-71
39·39-71
«2-31-1'
40·3'-7'
l7~7' ,,...,_,,
40·3'-7' 36--0-7'
Tlmr. 1 :OS 11 S.
15 IEXACTA (1·1) Nici '21S.OO
'1FTM llACL 7 furlong$,
Teldv CMcCeminl M>IO UO UO
Merine Mil CONvem l 3..20 2.20
Time lo llult (Gvciel 2..AO
AllO rec.d: La Femme Natural. HMteM ~. '"'-ntatlon MIUY, lnlnoulnll lk*I,
Pr"1'w'Y Ad. ~ of Dll'tl.Nss. Skier
8onnit.
Tlmt. 1.24
'5 IEXACTA (l·SI ""° sn.so
SIXTH •Aca.. I 1116 min
Cotd .... (Mc.<.ar1'on) uo s. ..
Vie y .... (SAbllel 15..40 "' 9• TN Wei of Swel <Toro>
AAlo '9C8d. Sc*! Or1111
Etne Commlllld. Mettlisl.
4.00
TN Auditor
Cool Couoer.
ltwnblln' Soon
Tlmt U3 4/S
SllVIEtn'M llACll. ' I 16 mile& on tur1 ~ (Olf'tsy) uo 3 IO 3.20
Dlsdelrn (Nvtll) 3 40 uo
AU House (Torol uo
Abo ~· FHrsomt Fouriome.
l(lle-. ltvwson. Mor-. AC1loll. Due Le
Due.
Time: 1'41 3/S
15 IEXACTA 13·11 NICI US.llO
11 ll'tCK SlX ()-6-1·1-l·JI oelo
Mt.tlUO wllll two winning tldlets !WI
l'IOr'MS). S2 Plc:tl Sb COftMNlion oelel
11,Al4IO wilfl 69 winning ticttet• (flYe
ttonal
Et$HTM •ACIL 6 '""'°"°' c_.,. lGar'de> 360 160 2.,
Relslne Run ( ... .....,, 3 21 UO
PwU PrtftC'e (P'ftcevl HO A1SO rec.t-Unr .. t ZMI ~119hlv Bur
Hke, Patnck McFlo ~Time l:OI 411 u •XACTA ( 1·•> De.cl nc so
.......,... •Aa. One mollt
Ce'°""' norol 1• 20 '20 3 60 GdOlrl F.:lencl (VelenlU81el UO J IO
Sr.ten Sov (~vi 2 .0
Abo rtceel PreMr'veltve M>etilV
CMS.er ~ Quevte. M1S1.,. C!"Ht Win·
~Town
Time 1.36 2 S '5 UCACTA 12-41 oe;o 1 173 SO
Attencltnn 1J,16S.
New Orleans
skipper win
NHYCeven
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY ................
Youth sailors from thro~out mt
U.S. Thursday wound up a teVeaj
race regatta in the Umted Sta"'
Yacht Racing Union Youth ~
pionsh.ip and the top sk.ippcn in etd)
class are eyeing lbc lntema.tionil
Yacht Raang Union Youth ~
pionship in San Diqo in August. •
Newpon Harbor Yacht Oub ...._
host to I.be USYRU event. oood~
ing races over Olympic cou:ncs off'lbl
Santa Ana River jetty. Three claSlci
were involved in the rqan.a -tbt
double-banded L.ucr n.. ~ .......
handed l.ue1 and \he w~ sailboard.. • John Lovell and c:rewmu ·
-Charbo.D.ae ~w Or\ea
dominaiect tbe Luer n aa. .,"
clobmates Christian Qambd iD(l
St<>tt)' Charbonnet fi.ni.shi.q a doit
second. Joe Logan and }\'1lliaJJ1
Bonelli. Mia.mi. Fla., finisbcihhird..,.
Soutbctn C.1.lifonua sailors tcttJed
for I.be fourtb and fifth posJllons with
Ron Rosmbcrs aod his brol.ber ~ AJ.amj10s Bay YKbt a~ futishin& fourtb, and Mike StUJ'llW>-
San Adkr. c.alifornia YadU 0
fifth.
Two SoutbJ.anders finis.bed amo~
the first 6 ve in IM si.naJe-banded
Laser Class. Miu Scntovicb of
Alamitos Bay was tbU'd a.od John
Pinclcney, Bahia Corintlu.an Yacht
Oub, was fourth. The winner was
Marte Eldred, Mia.mt. and second •'1
Sam Kerner, Honolulu. Fifth was
Alex Cutler. Madison. Wis.
It was a close contests in t.bt
Wind.surfer Oass wil.b Michael
Gebhardt of FL Walton Beach, Fla.
outscoring Kevin Funscb, St.
Petersburg. Aa. by OM poinL Third
was Alison Rowe, Rumson. NJ.;
fourth was David King, Miami, and
fifth was Clark Beck. Newport
Harbor Yacht Oub.
ALL-CIF . • • From Bl
the CIF playofffs..
Schoonover batted .514 on the
season, wbjle Douty recorded a 9-2
record on the mound. includina a
1.20 ERA.
Damato. one of tbTt"C 1union to be
honored on the squad, was a thilli
team ptek after leading Edison to ~
Sunset League champ1onsb1p. He was
chosen as a ut1.bty player because of
his quaht)' versatiht).
As a batter be averaged .358, whik
o n the mound he fashioned a <).:I
record with a I. I 0 ERA.
Gm-an Brown ofMattt Oct earned
a S«ond team berth at first base after
h1tung .563 for the Monarchs. wbilt
Pat Dubar was n.amed to the th.1.rtS
team as a pitcher wnh a 7-2 rccont
and an 0.92 ERA.
..
I /
\
WE.LL, WE.LL,W£Ll. I SE£ YOO 'R£
f Alt HG MV f00£J. OPIE. NOW ~1' ARE WE. <JUING TO PO
Wt1M YOO?
THE
FAMIL\'
CIRCIJS
by Bil Keane
"Echos ore like tolkin' to yourself in a mirror."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"I don't need you to run bases for me."
MOO~ "U LLl~S
PEA~UTS
/~» (~
•> ··2··· .,ti -.
'~.I,
TUMBLEWEEDS
j
W~Y DOES S~E 1-lAVE
TC BE 50 DIFFERENT ?
·'
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
,
816 GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
I
"Whtn you get back from the O.K. Corral, be aurt
and wipe your fett btfort you come In."
DE~~IS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham ~ \....
BRIOGl
A NINE TOO MANY
Norlh•South vulnerable.
E11l d als.
NORTH
•QH ou
0 QJ JOSS
•Q&4
WEST EAST
•A& +lOh2
c:> HU <:> 1080 o tu oed
t KU! • J 107
SOUTH
• KJO
l:?AKQJ
OAK
+Ats
The bidding: ,
Eut Sou~ Weat North
Pa" 2 t P ... Z ¢
Pa.. 3 NT Pua 4 NT
Pue Pa .. Pa11
Opening lead. Two of •
In the semifinals of the
trials to select the U.S.
representatives for the 1984
SHOE
World Team Olymplad, tht
eventual w1nnert, a t.eam ltd
by Malcolm Brachman of
Oallu. met • aroup trom the
San Francltco area. Thi• wu
one or their early ttlumphs.
The San f'ranci.eo team
arrived at a contract of four
no trump after South re
jected a slam lnvltatlQn.
West led hi• fourth·bttt club,
de~larer played low fro111
dummy and captured E11t'1
10 with the ace. He tllhtd
the ace-king of diamond• and
led the jack or 1pade1.
West won the ace and con
tinued with a low club, and
now declar~r·1 nioe or clubs
came to haunt him. The Rule
of Restricted Choice states
that, if East held bQtb the
jack and 10 of clubs, he could
have played either card.
When he plays one, he tends
to deny possession of the
other. Also. declarer was
--~-----
CHAILES
Go1EM
aafe no matter which card he
played J~m dummy If Weit
hid atarted with a !Ive-card
1ult.
After some thoufht, Stuth
played low from the table.
Eul won the 10 of clubs and
returned the suit and the
defense had netted four
trick• -three clubs and a
spade. Note that without the
nine clubt declarer would
have had no option but t.o
take the winning position in
clubs.
At the other table, the
Brachman team reached six
no trump. Had a club been
ltd, declarer would have had
only ont play from t-he board
-the queen . However, 1t is
usually not sound policy
1gainst a slam to lead from a
king up to the strong hand , so
West chose a heart. That
0111
SllUIF
rave detlal'fr all lhe lid
needed to unblock
diamond• and f'l «I du
with the 1pade quun lO
12 Ltlcka. The Brad
team rained 17 Internal
Maleh Point• on the dee
l•bbtr hl41• r
,~ .... , ~ ..... trr
die fnr-dteJ mt.Ip fer
D• tt..1 btw ~
dH't? Chrltt Ger
"fHr·DHI 8rl41t," c.ec' , .. tti. ,., .....
t.actk• tf ~,. fut ~ u..,..a lM&Pl""W..
H,. fer ue..U., niW
Far .a eepJ. Ne4 Jl.71
"'G•re• Fnr-Deal," ur
tM1 1ew;p.per. P.O.
259, NonrNCI, N.J. 07
Make tbedll payable
New1paperbeek1.
by Jeff Macr r ~,COME C»J, SKY'~~ I .._..-1UE LA~T TWO
iJ.tlNKCf CAMPA5A... w~~T?I , SUMM~S I ~r FO~ ME..
tA NI~ VACATfON. r~· ArCAMPl£JWNE!~. ~~ ..___ ----
_. );--' ~OU CALL~ :: -
~ .-~~.-~.r.~.~-'"--~-) ~:.Yf:CA~?~.~ ~=·~J ~/.4-~ ~-· ._ -{~~ .. --& ~~ '<f '·~??ii~~ I~ U?iW 1 I , ' -~/ .~~· b. -, ~ "ll 9 !). ..... , ·-· -,., J.1<0'•:;
DRARBl.F.
' . ~
~ -..
~~. l Rf.AU..'{ Wlf IAAi
S~U..! tt~ . rf'!> O'JE.R
'f~f. f~t\C.f.(\
t'UR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE
$1\NO .J' ~GM! J
PUI '{~ ARMS OOU1'.J
~p ~A1CHtNG ~
FU~K l' Wl~KERBEA~
I
I u
11 1!
AN~ING 1CAN0010
HElP '/OJ IN Th~?
by Lynn Johm
YE&-MP\VE YOO GOT""
F\t-t{fri1NG IN A Sf~
J~\?' SIZE 12?
by Tom Ba
by Ferd & Tom Johnson D_R_. _s._~_o_c_K ______________ ~----~--bv_G_eo_r..;;;;g_e_L_em
WMAT KIND OF A WORLD
WOULD TMIS BE IF WE
WERE ALL ALIKE~ -7
., I -1 --
by Charles M. Schulz
WE D ALL ~AVE !
GOOD BACKMAND5 ~ ~
&
f .
't
• ~
J
by Tom K. Ryan
f I
,
BLANCHE'S
HEALTH SPA
.., YOU'LL LOSE 20
POUNDS IN 4
WEEKS OR we
GU.ARANIEE YO~
Y'OUR F.Ai" e>ACK .
...
I
i.. ... --... .,;, ,,_. ....
HOSt: IS ROSE
j \
I I
')
SHe At..SO
OWNS 1"He PASIRY SHOP
RIGH"f" AROUNP
1"He CORNeR ·'
I •
--
It! bt
tb•
nmy
take
man
oul
I.
.~ . ... .. ,. , .. •••• wOI
a-9
I ae-
tai. .,.,
I te . ., ... ua.
lell)
Arch,itects' support firm
opens in Newport Beach.
Architectural Resources Co. wtll provide
spectftcattons wrtttng, computer services
Arthitectural Resources Co. -an
architccu' supj)2rt firm established to
provide 1pectfication writina $Cr·
vices, usTst t.'itn computer appli·
cations, and offer other technical
consultation to Southern California
architects -h.as been formed by
David E. Lorenzini, CSL
Makin& the announcement after
phasina out the Newport Beach firm
of Harrison/Lorenzini Architects,
Lorenzini said that Architectural
Resources offers seven specification
writin&·related services, complete
project manuals, technical specifi.
cattons only, outline specifications.
specification updating, edit-only ser-
vices, overload assistance and prod-
uct research.
..
The fmn is in Suite 101, 3
--... "i , _lr"Wn~~ll\NU~.,,. .. ~ ...... :.. .. v ;.1--r--'":': . ~ ......... ~ ~~J ....•
gar
.ton
:luk
ont
:Jy
nu>
Lorenzini said Architectural Re-
sources offers speed, accuracy, and
convenience, plus two other benefits:
"Our specifications are easier for a
contractor to use since we assist the
architect in coordinating the specs
with the drawings. Our spedficattons
aJso serve as a form of cost control
since they are written to establish a
Mobile-home site rezoned
f Or manufactured housing
Saddleback Meadows, planned
oriainally as OranJe County's tint
mobile home subdivision with indi-
vidually-0wned lots, has been up-
graded to a manufactured housing
project by action of the Oran&e
County Board of Supervisors.
Owner Grafton Worthinaton said
the 708-unit subdivision can now be
developed with a better-quality home
while maintaining the county's re-
quirement for two-third~ of the units
to be affordable.
Saddleback Meadows 1s located on
El Toro Road near Live Oak Canyon.
Worthington is in the process of
marketing the project to potential
builden and 1t 1s expected to be under
construction before the end of the
year.
County supervisors unammously
approved the rezoning after Super-
visor Bruce Nestande said the quality
of manufactured housina has been
Scmhawk extends stocks date
' I
tremendously improved in recent
years and that the zonina upgrade
from mobile home would be ap-
propriate.
The approved zone change to allow
manufactuted housing is consistent
wt th recent redefinition in state law of
mobile home restrictions. While at
apphes only to the Sittdleback
Meadows project in Orange County,
it is similar to across-the-board
changes in both San Diego and
Ri verside counties.
Worthinjlon said the project can
still q_ualify for monpge revenue
bond financma under provisions of a
federal borne loan prosrarn currendy
being considered by Congress for
renewal.
The hillside property offers views
and rclallvely low density of the own-
your-0wn parcels. Lot sizes range
from 3,000 to 6,000 square feet , with
an average of 4,347 square feet .
I
'
ft
COMPLETe NEW YORK STOCK DettAJIM
I
Medta Systems
· signs agreement
on maifitenance
Annual Yield Daily Rate
You set the term· 32-180 days.
181 days will get you
12.65°10 ll.75 %
Annual Ylt'ld Daily Rate
'lt'U <;('t the term 181-304 days.
36.5 days will get you
12.93°1012.00%
~J
Anno.ii Yield Daily Rate
\/Vith our Mini Jumbo account. you
can set your O\Nfl term, from 32 days to
one year.
$20,00Cr minimum depositt
Interest compounded daily. .
Account insured up to $100,000 by t~
the FSLIC.
Come Stt Huntington ~ about a
high inter!St ~ini Jumbo account today.
Now you know wit)' you_r neighbor banks at
CD SAVINGS~~
'
J ,
;
I
~ ' I
t!
•• , On ·'
the
'
u<I °' ~ vcoPl vnAm
GG ~ ,1!.st U'·+ ~ Sn1 ~ I• ~ ~ji..+ • ~:, 1
• 1~ H 11....:: ~=
"''"' s •• AL wlO 2 • AL wlA 26 13-16+ 1-1•
'"'' of I~ t + •
Air pf( I ·~-• "" pf8 1 ig
.,,G F I .30 lj • 1 -I • HIUll 1 t• 21 1 'I
lKOCI n I :m 6 •
cnhn ll 1
..-•
•IOll 1 , , B""+ .
Cl<erd l 11 t 1' •+ ~ ,,:~.· :1:t ~ ~ 34" t 1~ -"' i.<;Al ,._ It ~ 34 tt I ~""-t .:
IQ•n 10 11 '9 l '•-•
mrvA SO lt"-+ ~ ~R'cf~ 130 l ~ .~ ~
mPDl 1.... 6 IS'-•,, mhrt s uo a 291,.t ~
Ml> pf 41 rl 4 i.. m1>of SO r 4 _,,..
mp of 92 .fl 1 .-"" ftE}C 17t!, 7-IH 1-32
::f'ieps i; 7\'T ir•+ • n~dl I 14 lffo 19 • nM:n PIS r I SS' •-1 • ""~' 11 ,~ NSTR 360 13 361 14 -._
"" wd 1'9 1•''-+ '• nitre •2 ~ 16 '>+ •. n1tx 1 20 1 I t9••+ '•
QUlfu. 1.60 12 H _ ...
Qmio. ~ 1"" ciutmk ij >w-la
QtGs ' 6 ~ '• + • rbetnftl Oe 14 .. + ....
smrk ll CM 14 S '"+ ~ lmrk Pl2 IO • I ~.
UHC IOt> It ~ H + • ,1r1ne 64 20 -• 111v1 .as t 1,+ ,,. venP I 011 SO ~ ve n pt I tO S 8 + 1 :r.: l JJ , 2•~ ~~ .~ xc1v u1, nou,....... • uon 3.c! •ent 40'•+ 'a -F-F -FMC 180 9 61J74'._+l1
FMC Pl 7.a S 60 +I F •llrJ!e S6 t9 ?9'11 FebClr U 13 Ir:-• Fee~ ll I Felrclld IO 9 .. I •+ i., Fe1rc pf 360 3 JS•->
F eirfg, l• 9 I~ IP.+ '• F1m 1 s 16 19 7 71 > + ' F1r¥1 .. 1 7 l9'a+ 1-
FevOQ s 20 lS 6S 9~ • Feoen 77 'lOI 6 •+ " FecilCo I 6' 9 174 37'-+ •
FdE•P s U t~ 3''•+ "-FoMQll I 60 10 7 3• + • FPdNM 16 II 3J I 17\lt FtdPS 140 14 J7>,..+ •
FFdSgntS 80 717 l .. ~~ n' 1-• • tdO I 7 •0 + ' Ferro l 20 I 2 • ~~'~,. J 7 4Jrl lt •+ , F;n~1> pfStl~ 2• ~+ 1-
FnS&er SO l'• FlrHtn 90 9 176 11 • Ft Attn s 8' 6 68 19 > + 1
FIAll 1>fS ·a d ~-\o FBllSysl s ;u •+ i., F81lFle I ti •+I">
F8osln ra 1 I >+ •
FslCl11c 1 S ~ >..+ 1-
Fl Ta l>fS SO. 4*~+ Fl,To 1 17 16
Fl h pf to. 2 47 + Fl ily ~ 161 !I'll. Ftntsle 7 3' S 1203 31,,.+ • Finis! 111137 6 11 , FIMln 7• U 201 91,'t-t
FNSIB 2 64 6 n JS.l., + e
Flll>1 3 7 fl -• F s1Pe Pl262 1 FIUnRI 1 .. 17 I 7 •\.+ a.
FtV18k to 1 ff ij'l+ • FWi11< s 1 20 S 1 -'>
F111<11b 165 t I '•+ " FllllFd I 1 "'°+ "-FllFlt!G UO 6 S.lo.0-1'•
FltetEn s 6 xttt 11' .-'• FltmM 11 13' 26''>t I FltxlV 116 S21 H '• ... Flex! pf 1.61 5 II 'O
F. llGtSf 20 l' SS 2• • + • ~:t't' .1' 1 1' li'' ~ : F=ialSL l 76 1 ·-" Flll>ro 2.CM 7 1 • FleSlt .0 43 U~ a. ~I:~ .S2 u t i*~+ ... Fluor '° 11•• ,,.,,._ " FooteC 220 11 18u~ +1 FordM sl~ 3 6106 + • FIOeer 1 27 I •-'• FtHowd 1. u x 103 ~~ ,
Fosrwt> U 9 1~ ll ~ Fo1tSlP 61 16 7>.. Foxbn> \CM u lO o-•
FMOG n.97e ' • t:i,.+ • Frp1Mc 60t> 1l 26 1 11 + o Frlotrn .. 1• ,, 13 >+ 7 F ruehf 40 tO I 30' 1-"" Frullf Ill 2 S 26 l'UQue 34 6 I 2Sl\
• / I
, •
I
I
FRIDAY'S CLOSING PRICES
Dow Jo.Ncs AvERAGES
W HA T NYSE DID
NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 29
Tod~
~ti u
NYSE LEAD ERS
NEW YORK <AP} -Saia, Frktev Pl'.lce •nd net cha~ of lhe 15 most aelive New York Stock Exehenge luues, trading n.·
llQnpllv at more tl'lan ft 1 1 EDS 3, ,1 •I ~ ifl Am. T & T 0 2 I l1'1• ~
Con1k;ros 1~2. 'I ~V. 1 1~ Burrohs 1'.~i. 1 • ....,. IBM t,1 7, 1 1'" ,_., AmTT ofA ,7 J -t ..... Exx.on • • ~ .., E.1eoreu s 1 • 2 l,., h reyl'lound 14, ~ ~ ankAmer , 1 l-11 -.. ffi invest n.i n.. L Intl Htrv 7d , 6~ -'I• Gtn Molon 722. 6S~ + ~ LTV Coro 7\•, l 1 H... -114 MerllLYn 706,l 2~ + "'2 ··J!j!imr•fJ!lli
NEW YORK CAP> -The toltowlno llsl shOws 11\e New York Stock E xenange stocks and warranrs that have oone us: the most •nd down the most IN~ on ~c•nt of cttange ·reoardleu of volume for Friday. • No seturllles trading below S2 are Incl· ·1,1ded. Net and oercentage changes are lht difference between the orevloos clos na orlce and Friday's J .f.tm. orlce.
N•me L;J Chsi
j Ronson 31« + li Pl•'lbov En 1111'3 + 111. ylManvlllt 111~ + ~ • Mol'lWk Oat 1311• i 1 I t Rsc 21 H'J ~ w.~ryPrlde 3'-7 "•· J GATX Co 291..; 2 I HorlzonCo ~ 11'3
9 WJrnrCom 2i l'h • 10 RPC Eng n 19 11.
11 BrOOkF•sh n 2 ~ 1~
12 ~a.wind s I ~ 13 aQ\Jlnta I Joi
1• onev Co ij''• IV. 1; aymf rk 1.-, 1.o'I
1 enGwth wl 1ia '"J 1 gent SOya \ 11'1 1\
II ulclr.Rell II~ + 1
9 AC>Pld Mag II~ l ~ 20 I( Prop 19 1
21 M~+UA wt •>._ ''• 22 SoumrkCo 71;, '.$t1
23 LIL Co ptQ lf V. ~ 2 An como ~ 11\ 2~ Gt~stHoso 1 '"' ~
Name l A<)am M illis 2 Arki. 3 viMesl•McPI •Pe.body S Tex•~!nlt 6 11'11 Harv 7 Gear'htnd I ValeroEnr
9 ~1ev£1 otA 10 Ilia> ad pfA 11 nPw U Oor 12 us Home 13 AnchHock 1• Coasta1Co lS LIL Co pfW 16 OhEd 1.IOof t7 W11Alr Un 11 Wlllm5Ef 19 AmlT pfA
20 Glffr8Hlll
H
LIL o pfV LIL o pfU Orangeco AIMoona s s CecoCo s
DOWNS Lui Cl'lo 13l• -1r1> 19.>.. -ll,. 3 • ·~-~ 2~. -•
f,., -~
2 .,.. -111 , 1. -,
~J.4 -2'• ~7~·,,= l~
.>.. -• - 1 •
-Ji • 1~ -~ I ,
119
3 -'• JOJ .. -1'1• II • -,. 11\" -~ , ., _ ~
1 "· -...,
31
1• -'"' 16V. -~
WHAT AMEX DID
AMEX LEADERS
UoPctl1·1 Uo 1 . Uo . Uo , Up . Uo .
Uo 7.i Up 7. Up 7.
UP 6.
Uo 6,~
8: t:I 8: 16: Uo . UP . Up . Uo .6 Up S.6
UP H Uo S.3
UP i ·l Uo .O Uo .0
~Pel 91 8.1 17 u
H u •• ii
ti' •• ••
I fJ
Prev day m J~ 9 ~
NEW YORK (AP) -Sain, Friday e>rlc.e
•nd net dlanoe of the 10 most Ktlve Amerlc.en Stock Exchange luues, tr•d ng n•llon•llY at more than n . Dat•Prod '66. 16,,. + ~
ComclAll111n s ll'· 171/• Wa~LabB ~41. 21'1• a:~~m: 1~: 2 s-~ +
1
-ii 'ftE comm 1 • 1s I ~ TexasAlrCo I . 711'1 ~ Wuthfrd , 6~ 11\ HOrnHJr s 16-~ ForeitL•b s , 1~ -
0 A -est active over-·tii.•counter st s s led bY NASO.
N•me VOii I~. Asked ChQ. Codecd 930, 1:11 21-32 +3·32
Tandon ;· 6 ,_ 7 + •1• Appf.C , 261/• 2~ + 1 MCI s 7112 7~ -'Al T 1tndem 33 ,000 23\l'e 231/• + 1
AGrfftw 31 ZIV. 291r'I + ~ Tetv d 3 2 Sato -Vt Pull*rn 31 ij~ J S-16 +1-16 Prl'-Co s • 111 39 + ~ C•IFed , ~ 12~ -'At
GoLo Qu o1Es
M ET~L s Quo r£ s
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where compante aregotngand which people are helptr1g
them get there,just watch 'Credit Line· -very day in th
Business s c ton of your new Illy Pilat ·
I \I I ' 1 I .1 I
Classified
>.
The Ulti111ate
Experience
Experience the excitement of finding just what you're
looking for-in classified. It's the ultimate!
..
DailyPilai
phone 642-5678
people read
classified
I f
·.
~a == .. --I· -·-"-... ~Ill
ACTmOUI.,._ ..
U.STAW
The ~ pel'90nl .. doing
~-NATURAL ARTS, 3432 Via
g:r1~201 , N9wpor1 BMch,
Thomas E. 88nk•, 1025 Cortez
Aw., Laguna 8Mch. Calf 92151
W111i8rn J. Tl'e'ltt81c*, M No. La
Send-. So. Laeuna. Cllr. 92177 ThcmalE. .,..
Thia statement .. fled with the
County a.tt of <>renge County on
.A-.20. 1914 ,.,.,
Publllhe<S Onnge Co.t Daily
PWot June 2t • .My l. 13, 20. 191' ,,....
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ll011Ca Qf ~ U&.I MOftCa cw~ MU CC>f'V ot Docvment ,.__, on MOTU CW ,_.Tin MLI MOTICI Oii ftUITlrl IAU NOTICE 0, DEATB 01
T.&.llD.-T.& ........ ;M\il, ttM•No 1225-4511Mnot u.t• ,....,t4/AftOM L ...... 11...,...,0A.MOWll'I FR .. 0 -•oElU~ at 'tOUMl•llPAULT._A WTMl'MOWTO VGUMl ......... T._.A T .... "'411. be9noomoandwlttH11~. T.a. .... ,.._, T.a.-.~ r. rnD
-OP ,_, DATe'Al9M .wan..-. wo • 1'9UITMTm 11m1tt. _., cON u wu LIAM I!. COH!,.Lv UNIT cooe H """'COOi a FRED PREDIUCC;' ~ •'1119.T ._...'YOU TAU~~ TOUAim•..,MLT~A ~YOU TMa MnDt TO u~MV11191 County"9oofder.~~ty. Uf'ltAIOAllf\.l8ERVICEHl.u T.O.M"vtCICOMPAMY OF PETITION TO'""""",
TtOle 0 MM'ICT You. -Gf1'UIT,M1W~ ..,,,_, ¥O&M ..at'aU fT lllOftOTAQ9C~noN Cellfl)l'Tlle llllC)Olnted Trvet• \ll'!der the ~~tedTruet .. wndtirthe ISTER E TATB 0 rf•11&y. 9CIU AT A _,,.,.,... llAY•eoLDAllWlJCiMl.• ~lledTNIMllunderthe .._,_ f~ dliail'.rlbed dM Of tn"1 f ct.c:rlbed deed of INtt _. ... , ••
aAl.&. • YOU -Ml T.-.... en, YOU-., M llJOIUMAnoN OtJ t 4-0~ died of tn.t 90RTAMT NOTIC8 'llLL SELL AT P08LIC AUCTIOH WILL 8 LAT PUILIC A~ .iu-• ... ,.,.. • .,... Mlwm OP "&!l ... AT A w nc MATUM Off..,. lltl!OCUO. WILL LAT PUBLIC AUOTIOH lrYOU!i' PAOP£ATY 19 IN f'O 'o TO Ttlf KtOHUT 9100P f'OR TO THI HIOHUT 81DOEA fOR To all MU1. bmefk::latilt ...oc.a ... AeAMT ,... • YOU -Ml UkA· .. ~YOU, YOU 9'0Ul.D TO Ttl[ KIGHEST BIOOfA F°" CL.OSI.JAi eECAUSE YOU AM 8f· CA.SH ANO/OR THE CA.SHIERS OR CA.SH ANO/OR THE CASHIENI Ofl cttdtton and conun1•n
YOU 8HCMU COlllTM:T A ~ MA OP 1MllMW. n. COMTACf Ii. I.A~ CA8t1 A.1110/0A TH CASHIERS OR HIND 1H YOUR PAYMlHTS. IT MAY RTlf'tt!O CHECKS $PECND IN CEATl'11!D OHECK8 SPECIF1£0 IN crtdi Of FRED rBEDl:R ~ ,.,..... •• 1~ YOU, On 718184 at 't:OO AM C RTIFtfOCHECt<8 8PEClflEO IN 81! IOU) WllHOUT ANY COU!n' CIVIL COOi l!CTtON 2924h (pey-CIVIL COOE SECTION 2924h (pay· JC Kt.onS AK A FR E ~
... TAH-atiAW~~ A YOU....,.,,.. coetTACT A ..... '8UNKIST SUMC! COMPANY .. CIVIL cooe SECTION'"'" (pey--Acmotf. tnd you Ma'/ h•V9 tM able .. tM time Of .. In tawful ebi. at the time o.t .. "' tewfUI ....OIC"l"\RICKS and __.:
CAl"°""'lA "'"'"'""'""TIOH .,._ tM CIUly eppolni.ct TNltlM uncw .,_ •t the time o1 _.. In lillWf\ll tevei rlaflt to bftno '/"411.ccount lft money of the United 81.1 ... I .. ~ of the lMlted Stat•) Ill 1: RJ>...., r-~·
duty llCIPCMntiect 1""""' unow .,_ NOtU IS HIADY ONUt tMI -"° ~to Deed oe Tl'Ult A9-IY'OM'I ot u.. United hMll 1111 eooct a£W no by P4IYlnO ell Of~ right, U11e end lntete9t ~ to right, 111i. end Int.,... ~ to who may be othetwl9 ~ dwal~-~ .O!..~ the ,... ~ ........ tn ttw oorded on 12130ft1 • Ooc:untnt 11Qfll. tttte end lnttr•t COi\~ to .,... M7£:E'' plU.I permitted llflCI now t"'6d by" Under Mid Deed end now t*d by tt uncw Mk' Deed in·.-~ ln &he wOl t.nd/o WILL SEU AT .-..--. A,..,.,,,~ c..tnty ot Onnil. ,_.. 04 C.. No 34'8$ 8oo1r 14m ~ 1"4 t end Nld by tt ~ tMd Deed cotta U1*1M1 within ttn. T.,.. In the Pfops\y ~ ot Trual In the proP9f1Y ~ -·-
TO TH HIOHE3T 8IOO!J' '°" fOml9. !(no--..... '*ind Of OMc6el AecaW .. ._ omce of of'Trwt In tM ptOpef1y hWllnafl• l'llO«IUll tM aw tNe nottoe Of bed· ~bed. •ta\.t:
CASH OI --b1tl .., ...,.. OrM. ~ ....... Celfotftla the Aecord9r .. ()r9n119 County. ,,..,,.bed. o.t• • reciontecS. Thia tmoufll UlUSTOR: STEVEN w. AITOH TAU9TOA. 1.EOHARO J HAMIL· A ptUtlon has been rue. 292411oltMCM~el11gM. andCllleellbect•..._ Ctiltfomla '°*"*by 91LLY JOE TRUSTOA:JA.CK A 80ANSTEIN teSl.02US•ofJuMI, 1N4 end BfNUICIA.RY' UNION FEOf.AAL TONJA •• DAWN ALYSON PFAF" JkRRY LOUIS FR&D
.. and ....... t con~ '° end PAACEL t; UNt No. .. Ch)I Of t>Y£A a VELMA OnA. HU$8AND BEN~FlCtA.RY 8.fCURITY SAY· wlll ~ 11'1111 yOUt accoonl ~ "'VINGI A.NO LOAN A.SSOCIA· O!NE~IOIARY. SEAFIRST COA-EbyRlCKS •. DIAN. E K
now held by It und9r' .. Deed°' ~ lllect\;. ~end .. AND WIF!. LAUMEN I(. OY[A A tN08 A.NO LOAN ASSOCIATION ~QUl'Nnt Y~nottlaY'eto TIOH -PORATION. SEAFIAST MORT-°'
Tn.iec lntheptoper1yh1Nh1"9r0.-ecttled h th.~ ,_.. ~L! WOMAN WIU SELL AT RECOAOEO Oeoember 1, 1112 pay tM tnll,. u pottloft Of AEOOAOt!O M•Y 14. 1H1 U OAGE Ot' CALIFORNIA DIVISION GOODMAN Jn tho Superlo
ICl'IMd recotd9d on October • 1ne. In PU8UC AUCTl()ft :ro THE HtOH--!Mtr. No. 12.-420801 of ~ '/(NI~ • .wn \houO'I full pey-tnatr. No. ,.,.us In BQOk 14057 REeOR0£0 hptember a. 1Ni c.ourt of Qninp Cow\ty ,.
TRUSTOR. STEPHfN A. COl8Y eooa 11137 .... S14 °' or-.. EST 8IOOEA '°"CA.SH, (peyet>l9 AecofcSa In the ofb of the .. menl ... ~.~you'""" Ptl09 201 of Otftc:NI ~In the .. """ No 12-313'11 of Ofllat4lt io·•t'n~hat JEBRi A.NO PAMELA A. COlBY. tlulbend ~ of...., County. •t time Of .... lft IMM~ of the ooro.r oe arang. CO...-.ty; pey the ~ .teted al>OYe. ottloe °' .. Aecold9r °' Ofenge "9cord9 In the orftce of ... .. "'ms· ERl,....,a • -"' _.,. PAACEL t~ /WI unclMd9d one Unlc.d St-) et the 80llth front Aid deed of lfUl1 dW:nbell MMr .,,.._ lftOf'lthl from the da.. County: cordtif of Orange Collnty. ~ a
BENEFICIARY; AOHAT L • .rgt!tywthlrd(t/13)..,..,_.••Ten· «ltt~totheOninatCountyOtd toUowtna~: of nt00rdatlcSrl of thlt documel'lt Aid deed ol \Nit 4*cr'lbell the Mid dMcl oftnist de901b91 the DIANE K. GOODMAN b
CUHIFf ANO MARY OUHIFf, flu.-Ml In COrnmontn ... Ille In--In ~ Jt t w. 8enle An• Lot u of TrllC!t No. 10452 ... per (.tllctt a.-of t900fdatlofl IPf*l"I tolloWlng ptOf*fy• fOllOWlng ap--sn~ • -nonal ~
bllnd ~ wife end to tM ~ ""'-of Lot 1 of ~d. Cit) of Bente Ana, 81.-rnep recorded In boolf 4t01 Pao-~); uma. the ot)llQ•tlOn Ming PA.AC~l 1: \/nit 1 M. In the Cl1y Of 1.ot 11 of T rect No. 33t3, In the . .,_ -
Mcorded October 1, 1t1t -Trect ........ per Mlap lled In'°'* Of Cllllfomla .. rtQN. 00. and 42, 43 end .... of MllOellneout '~ upon permit.a • lonoef' IMM. Oouftty Of Ofano-. Stl1• 01 City of Colt• Mela. County OI Of· reaen&ative to admlnlater '
1n11r No 12t7 In be>c* ~ Pl89 374, PtlOl9 3t to ~. ~ of 'lnt.-.t oonwyecS '°and now t"'6d .. ..,., 1n the Offtce Olf the County period, you~ only the l9Qllll right Cellf«nla. • llhown end dellr'9d on anoe. Stat• of ce11iom.. .. per ~te of FRED 11\EDER
:MS ot Offic:lal Aecotde In the ofb M~ ..,.._ *** o1 b'/ It under Deed of Trwt ~ ttw Rilc«del' ot Uld County to 1tap 1M ~ by ~ "* Olf1eln condominium c>llln ,.. ~ recotd9d In 9ook 112, Pag19 l C KS A K A R Et
of the Recor«* Of Orange Cculty, ._,County,• IUCfl Wm II dlftt*' Pf°'*1Y 9'uated In ~ County. A•ervlng thWelrom all oll. fU, the entire amount cMf'naoded by eotded APfll 21. 1978 In be>c* 37 10 41 ll'dultve, ~ CKS und tho In
Mid Geed of tNlll deecrlbell !M frOt.. In IM Mtde entltled "~" Clllitofnle ~ U. lend t,_. and ot"-r hydrOC9tt>on ~"1erqe. yovr creclltor. 12..,.., Paoe tt5. Of official~. mapt, In 1M omc:. of the County FRED RI ( er
iow1ng propwty. of the oacwatJon of CcNenllnta. In: tn11wa1t an.ct gaot"-rrnal reaourow To nnd Ol.lt the a.mount .,ou mutt In the OfftCit of the County Reco<dtif Reoorcler of .. Id County. !JIQ9f>tlng dependent Adminlstradon o
Lot 17 of Tract No. 27'13. • per Cof\dttlonl and Reatricttorul ,.. 8eloa a ponton of L.ot t ot TrllC!f beiOW • dt!C>tl'l of ftve hundfed (500) ~. ~ to .,,.,. for payment '° of M.ld County. ttter•from an oN, g • mlnerala and mrtatel Act). The ~don i.
mtlP recorded In Boo11 139, P9Qe9 COfded Of\ Octobet 26, 1178, In No. t0}12 per m.ap fMed In be>c* twt under Mid land ~ the 1top the foteclotUre Ol If your Pf~ PA.RC.fl 2'. An undlvl<led 1/80 other hYclrooet1)0nl, b9low a dt!pth h-•-'''"" in n.... N • 42 tllru 461 lncfl . .-lw of M.la-8ootc ttt37, ~ 408 Of ommai •ta. PtOe 1, 2 llnd 3 OI M• rtgM of .m909 witry erty 11 1n forectoau,.. for any otn. 1111.-..t 1n end 10 Lot 2 of Tn1c;t No. of 600 fwt, wlttlout the right of aur-.et for ...... ... .....,."" o. ' ~Mep1.ln thaofftc90fthe AecordaotUldcounty(the "O.O. cellaneoUaMtS)a.lntheotbott• YOUAAEINOE.FAULTUNDERA reuon, contact Feoa-al Nallonal t0137.•.thownon•rnepreGOtded ,_ .nlfy ... r.....-,ecS In lnllrv-at 700 Civic Center Dr.
County Recor<* of M6d County tvallon"). and .,,., ame11dme11t1 or oounty NiCOnW Of lflld county (the OE.ED OF TRUST DA TEO 11/tl/12. '=f1G9 A.&aoc:t9tlon by Flrtt N• In b001C 42', PllQel '8 10 50 In-ments ol r«:Ofd West, San\a Ana, CA 9270
Except thereftom onH1aff of al anneutlonstttereto "Pl'ol'Cf")o.crtbed U lolowc UHl.ESS YOU TAK! ACTION TO \ 8aM Of Nor11'1 County, Ser· dullW, ~ !'MPI. In the YOU AAE IN DEFAULT UNDER A • J 1 18 1984 t 9 30 AM Olt gu. petrol9um, of MY ott• EXCEPTING THEREFROM al oll, PARCEL t : An •xcluatve PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT Y1cfn9 Aoet\t. 330 Vlata Way, Offlc9 of the County l\ecofdet of DEED OF TRUST DATED 1123112. on Uy ' 1 :
llydrocatbon tubltanc., by what· Oii rights, mlneral1, mlneral rights, tubtaaul'lold In__. In Unit 34. u MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. Oceet11lcJ•. CA t205e (e 19) Mid County, togttttier With .it Im· UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO (F YOU OBJECT to \hi
.,,. nlll'M known, below. dt!ptf'I of natur•I ou rlghtt. and other •flown on that a•rlaln Con-" YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION 43t-e100 pl'O~el\11 thereon, HClepllng PAOTECT YOUA PROPERTY. IT grand.ng o! the petition, ym
S00 feet meMOrad Yertlcalt'/ from ttyclrocart>on1 by WhallOeVW name dornlnlUm Plan recorded In boolf OF THE NATUAE OF THE If you halle 1111 quet1ION. you thef•from condominium unlta 97 MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. should either appear at tht
Ille aurfaoa of the Ofound, but known that may be wl1hln °' ~ 14038, P109 "2 of Offlolail Recotde PROCEEDtNQ AGAINST YOU. YOU lhOu6d cont.a a l&W)* Ot lhe gov-UVOUOh 15e lneluelve, loc•t9d IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANA. TION l....o.a..1 ..... and s\aLe you ob..,.. wttnout IN rigtit of lfltry ~MY IM~ of land~ 0.-ln~C>moeoftMCountyRecotder SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. atnment~wtllc:tlfNIY 1\9 .... ln-lhec'9Qfl OF THE NATURE OF THE ,.......... ,--
portion of the surf9CI of the gtound. acribed log9th9r wttf'I u. perpetuel of ukj County: and 25'7 t SPINDLEWOOO. LAGUNA tuted "°"' toen/ Ex~ therefrom all oil. oil PROCEEDING AGAINST "OU. YOU tions or ft.le written objec
at:>ove 1 dePth of 500 '-'· as ,.. right of drilling. mining. uplot1ng PARCEL 2: An undMclacl 9089 NIOUEl. CALIFORNIA Aamemb«. YOU MAY LOSE lighta, mlnerala, mtner9' rlghta. SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER. tiona with the court bMon
Mrved 1n deed r9COrO.O Augu91 t, llnd operating 1Mr9for end stating percent aub6eueho6d Int.,... In tM "(If• street addfel9 or common LEGAL RIGHTS '" YOU 00 NOT n•turat gu rlgM1 •nd othar 3169 Madeira Avenu.. Coet• the he .. ..i ..... Your ap.-.ar t960 In 800k 535' P9119 26 Otric:lel In and removing the Mine from Mid Project Property, uc.pttng .,_. dMlgnatlon of Prof*1Y fl lhown TAKE P~OMPT ACTION. h)tdfocart>on 91.!bet&neee be6oW • Mesa. Callf0tnla -... --
Aeoorcl1. land"" any ottier land. lncludlng the from, the undMded lnlar.t In the above. no warr.,,ty Is given u to Ila NOTICI °' M,AUl.T ~tfl of 500 '-'under ttie p9TOlll of "(II • 1tr•t ectdl'MI or common ance may be in peT90n or b~
MAY BE ALSO KNOWN AS: 30&4 rig.hi •o whlpltoelt or dlrectlonalfy Project Property, ••C9f)tlna .,.... oompletenMa or c:otT9Clneas)." The AND l~C110N TO uu lllnd hefflne.boV'I d..crlbed wltttout deslonatlon of property la ahown your attorney.
Java Road. Costa M .... CA. 9262e drlH and mine from i.nd• other than fl"om Iha undMded lntat-1 In tti. benef\ciary under alltd OMd of UNDIEI' 1>1.m cw TIW9T the rtoht of Mfece entry, u ,.. above. no watrMty Is given u to ltt 1F YOU ARE A CREDI
"Ill a atr .. t addf ... 0t common thoM Mre1nabove de9cfibed, o11 or ProfeCt Prbperty llj)pet'1ainlng to all Tl'U9t, by r..-on of a br..ai or de-NOTICE IS HEREBY. GIVEN ..ved In the deed from Q\11111 Run · ~teMN or correcu.t)" The TOR or a continaent credJtol dellgnatlon IS lhOwn above. no gu ....... tunnelS and 11\afta, tnto. other Condornlnlum In 1119 Projec1; f9Ul1 In Iha obligations ll9Qll9d TH.AT San Diego FOtedoaure Set-Northwood •• lltnlted panmerahlp. beneficiary under said Dead of --e
wananty II given u to Its c:omplet• through °' acroM the 9Utleurtac:e of and tn.e«>y, nw.cotora ...:ut9d llnd vlce9, Inc.,• corporation, la preeent· rec«ded October 10, t971 In book Trust. by r..aon of a breadl °' de-of the deceued, you m~
,_.or corrllCt,_.I " the land' ~ , PARCEL 3· An undMdlld .9080 dellYer9d to the un09rs91ed a wrtt-1y the Truet• under a dMd of trust 12175. page tlM, " Of'llclal ,_... fault In the oblf99tlona ~ file your claim with the \~~~.,.--·~· 't v=~ ·.:;su& . ,.._.--. QI -.~P..n-.
default In tti. obligation. MCU"9cl walla. tunnele and llhatt• under end ract 10212 u ahown by Map on t>rMCti-"' of election to CM* the man. u Truator, to eecura obff. inent or Pirklng · al• t.n-~a Ion or"l>efiUii 0.-S<inlJ ~ •s't. ther•by. heretof~ ex90Utad and t>enMth or beyond the 9Xtet1of fti. In boolf 482, pege. 1, 2-"' 3 of u~ to ... Mid proper1y to gMlona In fayor of Rrat National purpoeee OV« ltlat pof'tlon of Loi 2 mend tor Sela. and Wfltt.n notlo. of pointed by the court withir
c:lellVWed to the~ a wnt· 11rntt1 tner.ol, llnd to redfll, tetun--Mlao9lel*>UI M_,., M amanded Mtlafy aakt=. •.dona. and tner. ~of Nontt County llnd ..ionect or Mid Tract No 10t37 Metlowrlon brMdl and of -.ctlOn to~ tti. four mon•L-from •L-...a-ie o: tctn O.CWallon of Oefautt and 0.-"91. 9QU!p, fMlntaln. replllr, ~ by A.Wbtlon of amended L.o4 UM after the Uf'·--led caned Mid Of record to Fedentl Natlonal ~on-&hiblt "A" to the o.ciantlon Of undetllgnecl to ... Mid proper1y to u.p '-'l'C .....
mand '°' S., and wntten notice of llnd opera19 sr., llJdl .... or mir. edjustment Aeoorded Oeoembef notlc9 ot brMCtl and of .tectlOn to g4IQ9 Alllodallon e....naaty. ,.. R9atncuon. tot the Sprtnos Coo-•tltty Nld obt1CJ90ons, and tiler• first issuance of letters 81
t>rMCl't and ot .i.ctlon lo c:al'89 the wtthol.lt, no.ever tti. right to drtl, 11. tt79 ln boolf 13'29, PllQ9 1929 be recorded ~ 3. 1913 u in.tr. corclecl October 5, 1913, ,.,.. domlnlutn, 1eoo.ded APr1I ~1. 1978 aflw the uo0er9lgned cauMd UICS provided in Section 700 O! ~to Mii said property to mine, store. expto,.., llnd opw• Of Oftlclat Recorda, Recotdl of Or· No. 83 188904 ot Ofnclal Recotds In cordad October 24, 1983 H In be>c* t2644. PtOe 820. of Offtaal notice of breech and of -.ctlon to the Probate Code of Cali·
.. 111fy Mid obllgatlons. and tttar. through the aurfeo. or 1he upper enge County, Clllfomta. u ooo-theolfloeoftheAeoordetofOrenge Fiie/Page No. 205825, 220020 of Aecofd•.lnthe0ff!C90fth9County berecc>fdedMardl 1, 1984utnatr. 10....,., .. The time for 1m .. ~
all• Ille undersigned cauMd Mid 500 leet of the subeur19ce of the \l9)'9d by that owtaln Document en-County; Oftlclal Aecorda In the olftce of the Recorder of Mid County (herein· No. 8'-087791 of Offlclal Aecorcl1 In • ....... • u.o.a:"
notice of bretoeti and of election to i.M 11« .. nat>ove de9ctlbed u ,... ~Iii.ct ''Condominium lAMe'. dated Said ..ie wlll .,. made. but Recotdel' of Alv«slde County, Caff. attw referred to u "Oeetatatlon" u the office of the Recofder of Of91nge claims will not expire pnos
be Aeoorded March 111. 1984 u ..,._, In the deed from The lrvlne Oeoember 23, ttat, executed by without c:ownant or waminty, a-fomla. deactl~ i.nd therein u · Carport Spta t54) Mid HH7atll County; to four months from the d.at«
Instr No. 84-t t 1889 of said Otlldal Company, a corpcntlon. reoord9d C.F.1(. AaaociaMa.. Clllforn&. <Mn-pl'W or ~. r-.ger'ding UO• property anc:umb«ed .. ...., YW· .. f\.lrtt)er defined and deKr1bed In Said .... Wiii be made but f th h . ticed ~
Recotda. Aprtl 10. 1976, In Bootl 12'27. pege wal Paru..Np M ~ llnd pa••ealon. °' .ocumbranoaa, 10 11ng Wrf. RIYerslde. CA 90255, Arild99 Hand Ill of the Dadaratlon. ~or~~.Of .:::ri· t~..: 0 YOeUeanngMAYno"""' ... ~ITTJW
Said tale will be mede, but 7$5 of Offldal AaQOfdt.. Uureen I(. O)'er, • llnal9 WOfMn ~the remaining pt1ndpel tur11 of Tn.mt Deed de9ctlbell prop911y u PARC£1.4:A. non~__. .,._ ... ..,.~ ·-.--.. ·-~.muu
without covenant or wwr9nty, u -ALSO EXCEPTING THEREFROM ,and Bitty Joe O)'er and Velma 0.,.. ttle note(•) MCUred by Mid deed of Lott 25 of Tr.ct 7232-t but lhOUld ment for UM llnd ctnjoyment of the po•n•lon. °' encumt>ranCM, to the file kept by the court. lJ ~ Of lmplfled, r.gardlng UU., the aublurfac. wetef 11ghta, bu1 tiu.btind end Wife, u teMM, A9-Trust, with lnt91'•t at trl Mid note be de9c:flbed u Lot 20 or TrKt oommon area dellgnated In Ille pay 1he r9malnlng prlnciplll tum Of you are interested tn the ell•
Po•Mltlon, or encumbran099, to wtthoul the right of autface entry• corded c:onc:urrentty Mreiwtth "Of· provided, 9dvanoM, If any, under T232· t u P« map r«Ot'ded In Oec111atlofl. uld ciuemenl being the note(a) MC:Uf'ed by Mid deed Of .L.. pay the remalf\lng prlnclpal tum ol raMMlcl In the deed from TM tNlne ftclal Recotds Of ~ange County, the twma of Mid OMd of trust. t... Booll 89. pagee 17 -20 ot fMIP9, further defined 9nd delerlbed In Trust wttfl lnt91'•t as In Mid note tale, you may JerVe upon '-'•
the note(•) aecurad by Mid Dead of Company, a corporation. 1ecoided c.llfotnta; EXCEPTING THERE-charQIM. and ••l*l9M of the Record• o1 Mid County. Mid obit-A.ttlc:l99 II and Ill of the Declaration pre>Yld.d. 9dvanc:.. If any. under executor or admi:nistratot, OI
Trust, with lnterMt .. In Mid not• Aprll to. 1978. In Book tat27, ~ FROM tM undMdad lnter9at In the Tn.11tee and ol the truats created by gallon• lndudlng Ofl9 not• tor the YOU A.AE IN OEFAUL T UNOEA A the t9"Tll ot nlcl Deed of INSt, ..... upon the attorney for the ex·
prcMded, 9dvan099. If any, under 755 o1 Of'llclal Recotda. Protect lmc>rowme11ta apper1.inlng Mid Deed of T ruat. tum of '98.900.00 DEED OF TAUS T DA TED 05/t>7 /8 1 cnargn. and eiq>en... ol the ecutor or administrator an(
the twma of l9td Dead of Tt\dt, PAACEL 3: e...m.nt(a) • a1Ct1 to .. other Condomlnlunw In tM Said Nie w111 be Mid on: Friday, Th•f the beMl\clal Interest undet UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO Tn.111 .. and of the tn.1st1 cr .. tad by (i1 'th th 'wi•'-
,._, ctwgea and expeneee Of the ..-n«tt(I) la/are pettlcular1y MC Projact. and EXCEPTING THEAE· Juty 20, 198', al 230 p.m .• , the Mid deed of trust and the obllo-PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY, IT Mid Deed of Trvet. e Wl e court Y i
Trust .. Ind of the INll.Ci'Mtad by forth "' the Artlc:M .ntltl9cl "bN-FROM Unltl 1 through 70 ..... Chapman Avenue ctnlrance to Iha gattona MCUred thereby are pr ... MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SA.LE Said .... will be held on: Frldr(, proof of service, a writtet:
Mid Dead of Trust ments" of the Oedaratlon under tM forth In the Condomlnlum Plan. Civic Centllf Building, 300 Eut .ntly held by the undat91gned; That IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION July &. 1994. at 2:30 p.m. •t the requNl stating that you de-
SWd ... wltl be held on July 20. NC11on '-ding(•) In auch Mtde PAACEL 4: Eaaementl which.,.. Chapman Aw .• Orange, CA. • br'MCtl of. and default In, the obll~ OF THE NATURE OF THE Ctlapman A~ entrance to the _._ s-'·l no.._ o·( •L-fil. t984 91 11:00 AM at the 1711'1 .ntltt.d aa follow9· "Utlllt•", .. s.t. pettlcular'ly Mt fortf'I In the Arttd9 At the time of the lnltl .. publl· gallons tor which Mid dMd of lrust PAOCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU Civic: Cent• Bulldlng. 300 EMt ou"" ~ .....,.;; v.:
Slr ... .ntranc9 to Stan-Shaw Cor· tlem9nt". and "Encra.c:tirn-nt", .ntltled "&MrMnta•• Of Iha Oeder-cation of ""' notice, the tot.. .. MCUt1ty h~ occ:urred In lhal pay-SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYEA Ch9Prnan AW. Oranoe. CA. ing of an inventory and ap-~atk>n, t570 Eut 17th Su.t, and "Common Ar• EU9mlflt" alion of eo-wita. Condition. and amount of the unpeld batano9 Of the merit fies oot bewl made ol. TM 15' Streemwood, 1rv1ne. Call· At ttle time of the lnltlal publl-praiament of estate aeets or
Senta Ana. CA 9270 t and wttt be aold .i publlca auction Aee1rictlont for the Prot-ct undar obllgaUon ..cured by the above de-monthly lnatallmctnt of prlnofe* and lomla cation of tilts notice, the totlll of the ...-.tions or llCCOUnU
TM tot9f amount of the unc>eld oo ttie ffont 11epe •t the Coeta M..a ttle Section Headlnga In IUCh wtlcl9 .crlbecl deed of trust •nd eatlmatad ln1waat due November 1, 1913 and "(If a street 9ddreu or common amount of the unpaid blllanoa ~the --
b91anc:. of the obligation aecured Clty Halt. 77 Flllr om.. Coeta Meaa. ctntttled "Support, s.tti.m.nt llnd co.ta. expen ... .,,d adv9n0ta 11 sut>Mquent 1n1taltment1 clue thef• deSlgnatlon of propwty 11 attown obligation aecufed by the above de-mentioned in Section 1200
by said property 10 ~ sold, California. on July 23rd 19&4, at Enoorachment' and "Excfullw Ae-$305,996.03-afttlf; PLUS a tat• charge u Mt above. no warranty 11 given at to It• acrlbed clMd of truat and Mtlmated 1200.5 of the California
together with lntllfMI. late ctiargee, 10 00 a.m .. to the ~t blddef for ltrlcted Common AfM Eaement". The total lnclebtedneet being an lorth In said not• completenMS or corn1c:tneN) .. The costs, expenMa, and adv9nCM la Probate c.ode.
and Mtlm9ted c:oata open..., and caen In lawful currency of the Unit.cf PARCEL 5. A non .. 11ciualv9 e..... estimate on wfllctl the e>peNng bid II That by reason tlleteof, the beMflclary under Mid OMd of S 163 058 59 HUR_.._ REMER •·
9dv.ncM.. u of the date hereof Is StatM ment tor UM and .njoyment of the oomputed may be obtained by cllll-~ pr9Mnt beneftci9'Y TNS1. by r.uon of• br.cti or ci. T~ total lndeOtedMA being an "11 "• •
$49,230.16. TM..,.. will be macs. without CommonAfMmc>repett~•t 1ng (4151945-64tl the clay befor• undClf Mid dMd of trust, ha9 ••· fault In the obllgatlonl MCUJ9cl estlmateonWf\ICtl theopeningbidll DIVINCENZO Date. June 19. 198-4 covenant, or warranty reoarcllng forth In the Artlcle 9ntltled "Right• the Nie. .c:utad and clellvefed to Mid ltlereby. n..iotor. •X9CUted and comc>u\ed ma., be obt86ned by cal-Mt Newpen Cft&er Drive,
STAN-SHAW CORPORATION 11119. Po9-8ion. or 90C:Umbt'anoM, ol Enjoyment" Of the Oeetatatlon of Dated: June 19, 19M Trustee a written Deetatatlon Of Oa-deflvered \o 1he uoc'9191gned a Wflt· Ing (415) Ms-64 ta ti. day befor• # 1'
.. Mid TNStM, 10 ut11ty the obligation aecured by CoV9f't911tS, Condition• and Aeatric-SECURITY SAVINGS MORTGAGE l•ull and [)9mand for Sale,*"' fl• tctn Oed•t•tlon of Oetwlt and 0.-Iha ....
1510 Eaat Seven1.-,th StrMt anc1 under the p-qt Sate con-Ilona fOf the PfojKt under the s.c. COAPOAA TION ~ad with aalcl T"4tea Mid mand for s.i.. and written notlo. ot Dated: June 5. 1984 Newpon Bea~. CA. Hitt
Santa Ana. C"-92701 fwrad In the OMd of Tniet uecutad tlon Heedlnga In aUctl A.rtld9 entl· u aald Trullee, deed of truet and all documetltt brMCh and of .-c:tlon to~ Iha T O. SERVICE COMPANY '15M711 (714)~2-58t1 byJotlnG.Alnaldo,aM.n.dMan tied "Mem**-' right of Enjoy· ByT.O.SE8VlCECOMPANY.agent evld.nclng obllgallona aecurecl under1lgrledtoNl4Ni0propettyto uMldTrvat... Published Oranae Cou1
8y L)'M Brunner. Melttat't -S.C-a hie aote and .-para•~ rnenr, ·~ or UM" and 8y c.tny L.odlhart, Ao1a1atant S.C· ,,_...,,,and.Na 9'9c\ecl end cloe9 •tllfy Mid obtlgaUons, and th«• e,!. .. ~ Kreo1. AaM!Ml Sec-Daily PUot June 28, 29, Julu fetary u Trustor, to ~ Honie "WlllverofU.." Mary Mreby-.cltoeauMthetruatpr~ •ftef ~ ~1*1Md laid ~, J Publi.hed Orange Cout Deity Pllot Mortgage Trust Dead SerWle C«· TM lu.1 ~ and otw 1990 N. California BM!. Walnut 9fty to be .o4d to utllify Iha obit-notlea ot breecfl and of election 10 1990 N California Blvd . Walnut 3, 1984
June 29, Ju.ly 6. 13. 1.98'1 F-55 poratlon. 1 Calttomla Corporation, common ~nation. II .ny. of Iha Craelc. CA 94596-3787 gallons eecured ther•by. b9 recorded March 6. 198' u lnt1r Cn1ek. CA 94596-3787
as Tn.11t•. for Iha t>enent aod .. real property cleecrtbed above 11 -4tS.944·9015 Dated Mrt 21. 198' No. 84--004090of0fficial Reoord1ln 415-944-9015
curtly of Amwtc:.n Home Mortgeige purportad to b9. 3823·0 Bear Publilhed Ofanr. Coast Dally F9d8ftl National Mortgag9 AllOCI•· the office of the Aeoorcler of Orange Publllhad Orange Co.st O.ity
THF-82
fltBLIC *)TIC£ Corporation, a Callfomla Corpor-SlrMt •~. Santa Ana. CA 92704 Piiot June 29. July • 13. 19M uon • County; Pltot June t5, 22. 29. 198-4
NOTI<;l Of TRUSTEl'I IAU •tlon, as benefidary, dated Dec The underalQned Trustee dis-F-68 by' Aral Nallonal Barill of North Said l9le wlli be made, but F·20 •-----------
T.S. No. ae1~ 24th, 1980, and recorded on 0.-claim• MY Habllfty for any Incorrect-County, Satvlclng Agent wttttout covenarit or warranly, ••· NOTICE OF DEA TB OF
IMPORTAHT NOTICE TO oember 26, 1980 In Booll t3889, ,,... of tr'leatreet lddr-and other "8JC f«JTICE by Nel M-. Alalllant Vlea Pr..._ press or lmpllad. f9garcllng tltl9 f"lB.IC NOT1CE M AR G U ER I T E N •
PftOPPfTY Ow.Jt Page 1688, as Instrument Nurnt>er common d9eignatlon, If any, lhown NOTICE INVIT1MO ..,. dent pcuenk>n. or encumbrM<*. to ~ANGE COUNTY p O y N T E R A g A
YOU ARE If DI.FAULT~ A 42049 of Offle'al Records of the ll«aln .., ITDI NO at Publllhed Orange CoMt o.uy Piiot pey the remaining prlnc1P91 .um of SUf'EllUOR COURT MARG UERJTE NELDOR.A
0££D cw ?RUIT. DATED .._. 3. County of Orange. State of Call-If the 11,.... addrea or other NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN that June 15, 22, 29, July 6, 19&4 F-.38 the not9(a) MC:Urecl by Mid deed of 700 CMc Cet'll9t Dr. w .. t
1•1, U~ll YOU TAKI ACTION loml•. common d991Qnatlon of 1he prop-TNll, With lnlatest M in aald note Santa An.a, CA. tl70t POYNTER AND OF PETI-
TO PftOTECT YOUR PltOflElt'TY Notlo9 of Default and Election to erty II not lndicatad he<eon dlrec:-sealed proposals will be received by fltll.IC NOTICE provlclecl, adVancM. If any, undef TION TO ADMINISTER
IT MAY 9E SOU> AT A ~ Sall the dMctlbed ,.., property tlons to the property may b. ob-the Clty of Calta M .... to Wit: Tl'le thet9ml1ofuld Oeecloftn.19t, r.... Plalntltt· JESUS PONCE ESTATE NO. At•••tl IALl. F YOU NEED AN IXP\.A-under ll'le Deed of Trust '#U ,.. talned trom the beneficiary r-.in City Counc:ll, P.0 Box 1200, eo.ta NOTICE TO CMDIT~I cnargu, and •ltpWlMI of the Defendant A.DIN AUGUST .,.
NATIOM CW THE NATUM CW THI corclecl u Instrument Numb9r nemecl pural91'11 to a wrlttctn r• M .... Callfomla 92628-1200• on or (DMl6on I of tM TrultM and of the tNS11 c:r .. i.d by HAMLIN and DOES I through C, To all heirs, benef.ic:larles,
"OCHDIHQ AQAINIT YOU. 14· 119930 on March 22 t984 of QUee1 aubmlttad lo Mid l>enenciar}' before the hour of 111.lO a.m on Commem.I Code) Mid 09ed of Tn,19t. lnduslve creditors and continaent
YOU 8"04A.o CONT ACT A LAW· OMc:I .. ~ ot th9 CoontY of within t«'I d9ya from the flm publi· Friday. J~3• f1~·:.:.;: be:.': (a) A bulk tran1f9I' 11 .w to be Said ..i.wt11 be held on: Tu.drf, c ... No :~:OHi credit.on of MARGUERITE YER Orange, State of California. cation Of 11'111 notlea. reepoNI 0 'co...,. ......... '&nee made_ July 24, ttM. at 2:30 p.m. • •t the ... _
NOTICE 15 HEAEBY GIVEN ih9t The Mia wtfl be conducted by: BENEFICIARY: American Sa~ ll\ler hfl bid to the "7 ...,_ .. 1 (bl TM ntm9 and l>lnl,,... ad• Ch~ Avenue .ntranoa to the NOTICE! You ........, .._.. wM. N . P 0 Y NT ER AK A
the ,.., property tltu•tad In the A.MEAICAN HOME MORTGAGE and Loan A.a.oclallon 222 N. El by tile Pl'CIP« announced time. Blda dre11 of th• trantl•ror 11· Civic Center Building, 300 Eu1 The ~r1 m•'l d9dcl9 ...-.C JOU MARGUERITE NELOORA.
County of Orange, State of Ca.II-TRUST DEED SERVICE COAPOR-Ooflldo, Stockton, CA. 95ro2. ::::..,:-f"~~ ~or~ = MOUL TON LANES. INC., 1714 Bar· CNpman 11 ...... Orange. CA. wlttMlut rour betfl8 ............. POYNTER and h
forni., known N 227 Mttfofd om.. ATIOH. A CA.UFOAHIA CORPOR-Phon9: (209) 948-1116 t"-ea~er 81·,....act~bM on Fnct-rone1 Lane, Fullerton. CA. 92833 Al the time of the lnltlal puCI-JOU rMpOnd .ttNa • .,.. .._.. penona W O
Cor Caltfomlaandde-ATI0Hwt'loeeeddt99111:8MS.• S.id Mia wlll be made. but·-.... -,. TMnarne9ndbu.,,,...~catlOn of thlia notice. tM total.,_~...... maybeotherwiaein~ ona clef..... St -Sutt 2e3 eo.t .. __ c-. wtthOut ~Of wtrTlflly ... July 13• lH-4 In '"'-COi.ineii Of the tran ..... fl• AMERICAN amountoftM~~ofthe ti you ..... to ... the~ of in the will uvJ/or state: acrlbecl as followl r • • • • -' Chambers Chy Hall 77 Flllt D'1W an attor,_. In t.tta. matt• )'OU • A SUBLEASEHOLO ESTA.TE IN tOfnla 92626. Piion• Number: pt.a or lrnf)lled. reg1rdlng title, ~ta MMe Callf~I• for tt'19 AECAEATION CENTERS, INC., obltgeUOflMCUtedbyU.aboveO.-·-r • A~tion baa been filed
ANO TO THE FOLLOWING AEAL 7 t4-5-46-1fl02 A TTENTIOH: ANE posMatlon, or ctnoumbranoea, In· .. ·-•-tng of• A"'" DY MIXED CON.-2135 Butano Drlw, Suite 214. Po.i 9Cf1bed deed of 1ruat end estlmat9d st'IOllkt do 90 promptly 90 tMt yovr b E E. PO~ PROPERTY: CAHILL oludlng '-· d'largea and •llP9f\MI '"' '" .. ' ..,.. Offlc:e Box 80729. Saorwn.nto. CA. coats, ••pen .... and advan099 11 WTttten r.-pon ... If any, mey be 'Y • n 1. &:61' in
Lot 168, of TrKt No. 3357, 1n the Principal and lnt•r .. t due: of the Truat• and ot the tru111 C~fttona1 Mia of the __..._ 95880 $16, 121.02. '"-:~tad 1\9 lidO dem.,.. the Superior Court of Or-Cl of ... ___.... 8Mct'I $3-4,038.32 cr•tad by Nici OMd of Trust, to ....-w AU other bull,_. narnee and ad· TM total lncMt>tad,..... being an .. ..,.,.. County ,._,uesri ..... that ty ......... .,.... ' • 11 '*' ~ eo.ta. ~ 9n0 AdYanoM pay the remaining prlnclpel llJml of cation. may be obtllined at the Of· dreaaes UMd by lhe tran.1eror eetlmat• on wt'lic:t'I the opening bid fl dade. El li1buma; l9de d9ctdtr oe1t---e~ · -., -• ~~~:::~of due(~JdmatetY)S6 224 33 the not9(s)MOUted by said Dead of floe of the Pwc:f'lalMng Agent •t n wtthlnttne~lutput eol., • comput9d may be obtained by call· traUd. 9lft M1dl1nd9a IWIOl ql'9 JUDE E. POYNTER be ap-
TOTAL M02f!Oa5 ' . Trull to wtt· S5e 2C272 with F91r Drive. Coate M..a., CalffomlL knowntothetrMIMr .. are:LAHA· Ing (714) 937-09&8 or (213) Ud. IMPlftCM daftU. d9 ..... pointed as pencmal nip-~County Aec:ofclat of.., Coun-DATED· .iuM 25. 198-4 lntwest tt1ereo:n fr~ 11i o1183 @ IMds lt'lould be r91urned to the ··-CIENOA OE LOS BOLEROS, 23535 627-4865 the dr( befor• the..... '"--: !.':'=:-... ::.:=-of resen\atlve to adminllter the
and will be 90ld 11 1 public auction AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE 15.750% per annum u provided In tentlon of IM City Ctertc, within Mid Mou"on Pancwa.,. Laguna t-11111. CA Datad: June 13, 1984 _ •'"--,_ ........_ ---, -. estate of MARGUERITE N.
00 the front steps at the Coeta M..a TRUST OE.ED SERVICE lald note( a) plus all oott1, Chargea time limit. In 1 Maled envelope, 92653 • SUPEAIOA mLE SEAVICE, INC. -· -·-, '" ,,_ ........ ,_
CORPORATION a C .. ltomla oor· and any and alt advancet S 1,334.22 Identified on the ootelde with the (cl The location •nd oen-a1 d• u nlcl Trust•, ahauld do 90 promptr, eo "'*' JOW P 0 Y N T E R A K A g~f~:~~~~~~~1~t!t ~~ poratlon · With lnteJ•I. Bid Item Number and lhe ~Ing acrlptton otthe property to be lrctns-By T.O. SERVICE COMPANY. agent written reaponM, " _,, m-r be MARGUERITE NELOORA
a.m. to the higMlt bidder fOf cut'I 8y Dennis B Sc:hmuckClf. ,_... The beneficiary under said Deed o~~ bid ltlClll ·-•fy MCf'I and ferrad .... 8y Sandr• M. Armenta. ~ ::~._ ----.. --POYNTER (under ~ lnde-lawf\11 f ,.,. Unltad oroentmtton Truet.. of Tnnt tter.tofore ~ecutad and ...._.. All bowtlng equtprnenl and other A.alstant S«:fetary --..... .-_ .... __ ...... _,_,_._lion ~ In currency o STATE OF CALIFOANIA) dellYerad to the undac91gtled • Wfll. ~Item .. 99t lortf'I In the 199ci· 9QU!pment uMcl In the oper-atlon o1 One Chy 8IYd WMt, Orano-. CA Mio de un 9boflldo.., .... .,..._ penucnt numuuava ua SI~= Nie wllt be made wtthou1 COUNTY Of ORANGE) SS lctn o.ctaratlon of defllUlt llnd 0.-flcatlnl. Arf'f and all Hoeptlonl lo that certain bowling c.ntar k,_, 92&68 to• d • b • r I• ti• c., I e t" • Estates Ad). The petition la
oovenant or warranf'I regarding On JI.IN 27, ttM, before me, the mand for Sale, and a wrttten Notlo9 '':9,~t:;;a ~~~ = u La Hacl9ncla O. Loa Boleroa, (714) 836-8268 mecflat.,...,,te, • •'-"**"' • 1et foe hearing ln Dept. No. 3
1 le po....ion br underlloned. a Notwy Public: In arid ot Default end Etectlon 10 Sell. TM 1 • n • re 23535 Moultoo Parkway, Laguna Publlahecl Orange Coast Dally ,...,...ta ~~ "«I ...... at 700 Ovic Center Dr :~ ntltf'f the obii:.~Mc:Uf'-:':,: tor eald County and Stat• per. undersigned c:auMd aald Notice of forth any Item In the apeclflcetlona Hl(lldtl. CTheA . ...,~ ...... the date on or Piiot June 22, 29, July 6. t984 F-39 puede1-TO~N11•1-ND~~. r ~ W-t, Santa .a.--CA 9270·1• and under the Power of SeMt con-tonally •PP••r•d D•nnie B. Oelault and Etec:tton to &Ill to be :;'1 begfl>und• for rejKtlon of the ..,_ ,,.. ,,.. Mrs ,....,. --... ""-.
tened lrt the Dead of Truat Pec:utad Sc:t'lmlJd(ar, R9organ1Zatlon Trust• recorded In the county wtlere lhe Eadl bid ahall Mt forth the full after wfllcl'l tf'le bultt traNfer la to be "8.IC NOTICE ~~· "-.,._ .. ._. '-' ~ on July 18, 1984 at 9:30 A.M. , ..... G ........ ,...,. ted fOf Amar1can Honie Mortg11ge TNtt rMI property 11 tocatad QOnaummated at•. On°' •flar Jut., ,.._..... al Jw. ",_WW. -1F YOU oo'l"llY"'T' to •L-by .,,,..,n ,......_,,,, • marr man Deed SerWie Corporation • C.. Oat• 06/07/6-4 name. and ~ of all per-17, 198', 91 SHCROEDEA 6 DAVIS ~ i.wautt. J9U l'IMl9t, °"'~' Yl'C ;'n!'~~~:=~~~ fomla Corpor•tlon. pe~aonally 113271 '°"1 and panlea lntweeted In Ille INC . 2 t5 W Fr&Mlln St., Montarrt. ....!;:1:.. of wltNn JO d•YI aflw this aummon1 granting of the petition, you
T t OMd Service Corpor known to me (Of pl'cwad to me on SUNKIST SEAVICE COMPANY, propoaal_ "the bid .. by. oorpor-CA 93940 ...... ltrot*fr •• It Mrved on you. tlle with this COUl't should either appear at the =· .ru~allfornl• Corporation . .; the ba.la of Ntlttactory evlderlcel a corpof'atton atlon, ltate the namea of the Of· (•) Claim• mrt be mecs with the "1Y•te..,. •written r9ap1>nM to 1"9 complaint. hearlna and atate you objec-
Tru.stee, fOf the benefit and aec:urlty to be the perte>n wt'loN name Is By· DA.ALENE BENDER. Tru11.. llcera who can sign an agreement Merow holdw· JOHN 0 LAUGH-No. A· 111279 Unteu you do. your dafU1 will be · (iJ wri ob-._
of ArMrlcan Home Mongage Cor· aub1el1bed to the within in.trument Sate Officef on behalf °' the corporation and TON, eso . 2'15 W. Franklin St . In the superior Court 01 t"9 Stat• .,,tered on appffcetJon of the~ tlON or: e t1en ,..,...-
porauon. • Callfor,,.. Corporation, and acknowledged tMf he ••· P.O Dr•-o wf'letll« more then one otticar must Po Box 3080. Monterey, CA of CeJltom.a, for the County of Of. tiff, and lhts coun may entar a \.ions Wlth the court before
as Beneflc•ary. datad June 3. 1981. ecutecl ltle urna Stockton CA 95201 • II the b4d Is by• pettnerahlp or 839-40 ange juc:IQ9ment agalnat you'°' the retW the hearing. Your a_ppear-
and record.cl on JuM 9. t98 1 In WITNESS m.,. har'ld and otrlcl.. PubNeheci Orange CoMt o.oy Piiot a Joint ventur•. •tat• then.,,,.. end (II Th41 IU1 dal• for tlling cl•1m1 la In tf'le M•tt91' of the Eatat• ol demanded In lhe complelflt wt'ltch ince may be Ul .__... or by ,...,.. Mal June t5. 22 2t t98' eddresMI of all genw9' pannera July 16 198' ICE L"URA SHEAFEY D ooutd re.ult In garni.nm.n1 Of ..---· = ~~~P;r,o,!7o:J:.",: AM Slocum CahHI ' ' F·22 and lolnt venturers H the bidder II a (gl Thi• bulk tranafal' 11 aubjact 10 ~ " • •· wages, takl:? of~ Of PfOf*'tY your attorney.
COfdl of the County of Orange. PublllMcl Of9ng9 Coast Delly Piiot lllDt •c unna aole pr()p(ietorlhlp or ariother .ntlty Section 8106 of Iha Commw-Ql9' Notlcie la hereby g1,,.,, lhll the Of other r9lle r9e1uated In the corn-IF YOU ARE A CREDl-
s'ate Of C.11,omla June 29 ,.,.., 6 t3 1994 F-74 n~u nu tfla1 doet bullneal undar a flctltloua CC>CM. ................._.. ..... 11 ....... 1 1 P 1 at•.... ptatnt TOR or a oont'i'""ent ~•tor 'v-7 ' ' name. the bid lhall be In the rMI Datad· June 22. '984 u • ._...,,,_,.., _, 1 rv · • Dated. March 29, t982 -'6 ~
Nottee of Default and El9ction to PlllJC N0T1C( aTATUIENT Of' WITMDAAWAL ntm9 of the bldclat with a clealg-AME A IC AN A EC RE AT I 0 N to the hlg,,_t and belll bidder. aub-LEE A BAA.NCH, Cletk of the deceateci, you must ~~.:":'tie~~ ;:!, s::-:: ~~~ natloo following lt'IOwlng "OBA (the CENTEAS. INC ~:f. c::n::n:~i: ~ ~nd ~ 8~ KELLE A. Deputy (ile your claim With the
COfded u Instrument Numbef' 1 .. ~"~!:18~ wll be Mid by ACTITIOUa ...... ...._ ~.loulno ~., • .r·.:. ~.:.-~ 8y G. GervaiM 0•1111 Ill. V·P lagal J~984. a1 the offloa ol JULIAN S .I I AAAOfC Pn.A.tTIJt court OT present it t.o \he pa'· ,,. ..,... -Planning Com· .. ..._ '"'' ""'• ·-·-.,_ .,. TrMstw.. ,..... l701 ~· et.d.. I• ?WI al tJ M-119931. on M9rd'I 22. 199-4. ot mlSlion 11 the City Hal. 77 Fllir 1 The following peraon hu UMd unNial tl'ler• 1s •current~ Published Or.,.,,. Coaat Dal!V Piiot EA • 901 DoY9f .,.,..,., Sult• 200, L• A.ngeilM, CA. IOO'O aon repreten\a ve ap-
Otrlclal ~Of'clt of the County ot Drlw Coeta ......_ c.llfomla •t wtthdrewn n a general partner from tratloo with the Orange County Jle.. June 29 ttM.,.... Newport a..cn. C&lltornla 92880, 4'1·aM pointed by the oourt Wlt.hln 0r-... &lat• of Caltfornla. 6.30 P M or u '°°" ea ~ble the pannerahlp operating under the corder 1n caa. Of oorporattona, In-• F·78 County ot Orange, St•t• Of Cell· Publlthed Orange Coest Oelty Pteot lour months from the date of
The uii wtll be conducted by: tflar•ft.; on Monday July 9 1984 11Gt1ttou1 buelneaa name of PHONE clUcle the narnee of the Prealdent, fltalC fl)TIC( lornla. llt right, tJti. end lnt...t of June 21 July IS t3 20 1_.
AMT .. USERTICDEEOAN HSOEMRVEICMEOC~~C::.E Regarding the foftowtng ' -CITY at 848 S Brookhurat, s.cr.twy. TrMauref, and Manaig« aak1 '9o1•!l_"' the time Of death ' ' ' ' MJ flnt illuance of letten M
" "" .,.. cetlona: Anaheim. CA. 9280-4 The City Councll of the Clty of 11\aJCATlOH MOTICa end .. .,,. .,..t, t.ttle and inw..c provided ln Section 700 of
... TION. A CALIFORNIA CORPQR. 1. An Ordlnen09 of the City Coull-TM flc:tltlous bualneu name Coeta M..a r...,._. the right to CW •GATIW DICUAATION tt\at the._ ot lflld Mc: 1111 IS M9 ..a.JC ll01lC[ the Probl\O Code of Call• ~TlON ~ ~csc: II..: 8C!: di of tt'l9 Ctty of eo.ta ........ Poa1 atatament for the part.nerltllp w•s reject llff'f or all blda Tfle Coata MeH Planning = ~.,;:c: : .::..: ~ CGUn 0tJ fomJa. 1be time for filinC
tor=· 92':26, 'p~~ N~ber Olfloe Box 1iOO, A9Qufatlng ~ llledonMarct'l l4• 1983 lntheCout1-OA.TEO.Junet7, 1914 OMtiOn hU pr-.pai9d • HegelNe tothetofaaldOec1 I IS,9tthetln'le C~COUMTY cJalb will not ex""-......_
714·548-1802 ATTENTIOH: ANE ..,,.._In JW91dentlaf.,.... end tyofOf9nQ9 A\.ENO F20M2C Pubhhed0r9ng&CoNIDtl'/PWot Oeclentlon adcJ,.....ng POM!ble oldleath.ltlllndtoaltheOlf1alnt'NI Of!~ t •"-~ ... "::.:-
CAHILL ptO'lldlng tor enfOI091ilMt theNOf Full Name and A~_. of '?: June 2t, 1994 F·80 Emlfronmental I""** tOf "'9 tot-~ lft~ted In the Senta AM. ln1"eM1tiatof'TI.A.ppt1oetlOnof to our monw .. ~\he \Ml'4
Prlnalpat •nd Interest due· EnwOM*'ltal ~IOn' Ex· Peteon Wllhdr.wtng 9Met.fl PlllJC fl)TlC( lowff'8 project. C<ltlnty Of Orange. State Of eel-Mn OeD Pwnll't For Change ~ of the heutng nodced above.
S204.62e.ol _,,,,..___ ...... -......_ .. ~ 14 ..... ~cA.3=~aho Pt ' eo.t• o.·>1101111~ ,_....., ~ torMa. pen1CU1at1y dMc;irlbed .. '°"" NlllM YOU MAY EXAMlNE Coett, ~end Actwnoa9 '· ._..,.,. ..,._. __ ......_... "" t1ti.-....t Kann.th ll Stianw MOTtCI Ot' tor John .--.. a '°' ._...,.,., tow..~· ... ~,._, \he file kept b the U
du9 (~oxlrnatelY>. $77.057.11 '°' eo.ta Mw ~i..-it ~ Or COMt Daly 11\aJC IA.La Herbelt 9ulder'I, euttlolW "°"" Lot t 1 If\ tiloc:a "8" of "'* r>on., OMD TO MOW CM.m y COW"t.. ~oT•L ·~• u.eaa tt ~ POii Ofb ao. 1200. 5 -,,,.,.,. .. ...~ ........ ~ ....... ---..t -for AlcNtd and c.ott ~. --end -Addition to the ~ Metta oa. Pentft. e11o you ~ lntcrc:st..i In the a-' " -Colla M-. to ~ ,,.._.., Pieot .JuM 1 , cl, 2't, JVlly ... 1914 ,_,... .. ·--7 ....... u-.,,. -to'"'--,__·,.__. .......... _...._ __ ....,.... ,,.., ... _ •·•-•L~ OATEt> June25. tN4 ..... ..--·7 F~ und9n6gned ........ pUtllo a»--_,,... ..... .._....__ .... Town of..,,.. An•, -per ltleP ""°"" -...,... 0. ,,.,.,..,.., ----·you mayaerveupon Y.JIW
A.MEAICA.N HOME MORTGA.0£ ~at .,:15;J::s21 ~ tlon put9Uant to wtlOn 21700 • 0.J>ala~• "'*"'tor WI. unit ,,.,.,. r.oordld ~ 8ooet t4, paoa tlan« w llled. '*"'°" ~ the executor or admlnJatnt.cr or
TRUST ouo SEAVICE Streat ''°"' C2 ~ 8uelr'IW Ohaot• to of the tMW'IW end pro-~ _f'otect. ~......!' 11 of Mleolltelieout A9cotda 'ot LO. CWk . Of ''* Court tot M orow upon the att---. (or the~-OOAPOAA.TIOH. a c.tttomta Cor· · ....._ COde of It'll 8t• of ~ --v-'7"'• ..,l'fe In M ,_ -.-... ~County, Callfom6a, • more .. -.... P911Uonef• .,... tl'OM ·---1
pM•tton Dtltrle1) to POC ( = PmllC ll>llCE tomta u. folowlne rttllCtlllllW tnvlr•nl'Nnt•I O.t.etmlneUon: eo11wi1011fyknown..: 115Ealt PIN M;,e'"Oa. ~ to ...,.. o.. ecutar or lic:bnin.l8tn1«, and
9y Oenn1a 8. Jld'Wnlle*ar. ~ rwt eomm.~ and to ITAW CW per80n9t ~to wtt.: ....... DlcW9t!On ~ ltrwt. ... ~ ttnta:. tile wtth U. court wilh ~TN&Me POC~.c:~.=: MAlllDCI WfOlf .. Ot' !1*Hurry&pwilt1n '°'·~ lntonNIJorl ..... Tenn1 °' ...... ~ ...... IT•OAO(AtO"'*tel ...... proof ol ~ a written ~!}.2'CA.ff...~.!'. ~.:....and,_ A--. !n-AC1TT10UI __ ..... O*'-Staton ..... •1tt0 ~~=rig.,..,,.,. ... ~oftMUnltid~onCIOft. ........ 11 In the ilbOZI ...... requeat ata11 ... that-·. 'VV""•• ot:·..,......._;)U wonm&M• Dattliiinll.ib\!Ell Thefolol*IOpanone......... OonGraMmlfl.-~t31 (714).7M-~of ... Of,_,.. C.-llMI ,,....., ..,._ belot9• eo.t M -• 1-
0n.June2'7, 1"'4,betot9me, the a. T.nlatNa Tr.at M4lip T-122tO donecltftlfuteottt'le~9uel· Thill .... w4ll be b'/ ~~ ~Or-.OIMllll DlllY Plot ~~ 11r.-.'90Ul'td t .ts A.,lllt. on .My te, '*In ... ar. apedaJ notice of the fil..
undera6gned •• Hol9'y Pl.lbllc In and fOt John ~Mita '°' ~ ,,... Nern•. KITTY'S LOV!LY blddlna on the t.Ctf'I d-v of .MY; et N'le at. 1.... f -92 by Mo.1tege Of TNlll o...r °" ... COUl1rOol'n of°""'""*'' No ••• at Inc ot an lnwntory and •P": ~°!,~., ~'!,':': &=~ H*"* ~ eudlOtllld tQent OIFfS. 23632 El Toto Ms. 4, ti t 1-oo l .M °" tne .,..,._ .-. MUC MJTIC[ :.=rt=: ~b.':.i':..T!: ~~::....CMG~ pns.mm1 .... _ -~·~ -'-or ·-..... tc>r AtcMrd llflCI CM06e ~. Toro Calf t2S30 Mid ~ • aior..s llflCI ~~ bid. end ._ --. r 9'lf wtiy .. o wftl _ .. -...-er IOCOUDtl =.:n~~":"~ !2.!=:~'t':O::.~ ~=== ~o:=.1;~,1=::.•=.ift... l!Olorof'ler9tobe=and ~tofd'*"Of~nemalhNCI mentiClned tn SCUart l200 Deed s.rvtoa Corponldon. • Calo pera6 to'°"" '"'°'9 In oonjunctk>ft ~on Oct. t . tllO ()tY of Hun~ leedl, COUfttr of .. be ,...... et "" ......., ~· not be fianted and 1200 ti o( the CalifOmia
fornla eorporaUOfl per90ndJ wttf'I a"°""" ocndomlntum PfOttc;t. mt NO.Ft•700t ~'!!!:, ~ -~.;...,. ~ loe S\ Wt'1 time ..... th9 lnl publf-IT• Uf'fklA OA0£Ae0 "'9t • Prc;be'-Code ~ ao me tot ll)toved eo me on ......... .. ...... ,. __ ....... _"' ........ AM 0 ....,. ...,._ ..... T ..... _......,.v ·--·-...... .,,.,. , ... --OMIOn .,..,, aflid ~ det• of ~ ~.t'*t or1tet to lhOW c.. Cla 8 O I •' • T L .,_.. °' ... Wectotr ...,..,.,.) 1oC9....,.,......,. -·r-• .,..,,. en ,..,..._ ' ........ _ "'' oro..., tn. .._ ~ mull be ,.._,. .... ~In,,... Dilly Plot. a~ ..., n •
:' ._ the per.on -.... ,.... .. A2 Zone. £/Mrol"""'1c.i ~ St• 4• e Toro. Cellf tat30 _. c.11 n P9Mf '°' • ._ °' o..s 1t11e 20th~ of~,... Pel* of 911*111 oltculM*' ~ BUMPllllEYS
.......,10.,_...,,11...,..,... llOn ~Dlc:W"'6oft TIMl~ ... conductedb'I• ~ A.JpurcNled__.... W ..... fl JULtA"'I U.Tt "'°'_,.~.~--•Ill Dt'ftf Or #H .,... .cane 'U1•• .,_,.. •· .::."::a~..:""o: 00:.:':0bMra :cs..;;.~·~::-.: .. "::~ ... ~°"9 ..-. ~ ::~=--~ .,..., :::r~-:;.~c:;;:.,::: Ne•m"~CA.HM.J ~ ... ..,... 164-624&orOllletlueoflloeOf.,_ TNl•~ .. ,....wttttthe neu --......... c ... --....... 711 wt rwr '*"Md offtolel fthwWnO ~. Aooflil 1'00, c:,:"lc.....of~~on loOMC•MloOnlnffle_.,.Of~ TI'llllt......,.wfllt,...N ..._......;;..,_..,, ... _ .__........ _.,.
.... ,_....,. Coat ...._... Oii-.. _ tt14 "*'' C*WMI IMOtOtO INS otli-CcMltr '*""Of no-.. COUf\tY on OAN.IHE 0. I.. Di* Juna I. 10M PUbalthrd Otanp COIM Af'ie....,,CaNI 11 ,.., ..,,_, • ---~· M-rU.1N-4 --......... ~or---ofal!llO.O.. FAAHKDOMlNiet1ltfl D11Uy.J>OotJune ·21 29 July ~.~':'9r3C:OlllyPtlot =.Of ... CoMloat,flllot ~J.~~l:z. Junelt 3,~~IWtPlol ~Or ... COll9I OelfJ ~Orane9C-.C)9tt,.=t ·~~~""°' 511894 ' ' '/W'I ' -. ' ,_JS .Junt 21 tN4 ,.,. .... • ' , ..... ""'"' If ,,,,,,. ,... N JwN "· "· H•• rlUM. 11.:n.ill, .... ,... THF-11
I
l l...J _ __._
1984 JEEP GRAND \XIAGONEER
See Page 2
WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
ON ALL CHEVROLET CARS & TRUCKS! -
HIGHEST QUALITY SALES & SERVICE!
THE HARD TO GET UNITS ARE IN STOCK NOW!
IT IS OUR POLICY NOT TO ''MARK UP'' PRICES ON ANY CARS.
OUR PRICES REFLECT ONLY EQUIPMENT AND SERVICES PROVIDED WITH THE VEHICLE.
'84 CORVETTES
Ready For
IMMIDIAIE
DELIVERY
F•ST •RVICE I PIRTI
CHEVROLET -PORICllE
A• I VIUIWAGEI
IN THE U.S.A.
DEMO SALE
DISCOUNTED
446 EAST COAST HWY.
NIWPOIT llACH .
673.0900
I
S-10 BLAZERS
Ready For
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
• _/
J
i
Los Angetee -Jeep vehlcte saJe8 Much of the sucoess for Jeep
~ tor the month of May In the four · vehicle sates I~ credited to the new
western sta1es broke an all.-tlme generat!on of down-sized Jeep ve-
record, American Motors has an-hlcles Introduced last September.
nounced. In addition to the record-breaking
'-' According to Biii Caroll, Los An-success of the Jeep vehlcles, Amerl-
.Qetes AMC zone manager, Jeep can Motors also recorded Increased
• vehlcie sales In May Increased 27 4 sales for the American produced
t ~rcent compared to the same month Renault Alliance and Encore hatch-
Ir) 1983. For the first five months of back. Total American Motors, Renault
• 19M, Jeep vehicle saJes Increased and Jeep vehlcle sales for May
170 peroent. Increased 73 percent.
•
..
W ago~eer has 'big·car' look, feel
SOUTHFIELD, Ml -Ota-·
cernlng motorists who de-
mand a "big car" look and,...,
coupled with big engine
response and the eecurtty ot
four-wheel-drive, may find
what they want In the 1984
J~ Grand Wagoneer.
The Grand Wagoneer (for-
mer!y the Wagoneer Limited) la
the largest 4·door wagon avaJI·
able In the 4WD Industry.
"When we decided to de-
velop our aJl-new XJ serlee of
compact Wagoneera and
Cherokees, we never forgot
those buyers who want a full·
size vehlcle," said John W.
Mowrey. American Motors'
vice president of product plan-
ning and program manage-
ment.
"The 1984 Grand Wagoneer
combines all the features as-
sociated with a luxury vehicle
-classic styling, roominess
and performance," he aald,
adding that "The popularity of
atandard on Grand Wagoneer,
but for those who want ad-
dition al Power AMC'• 5.9 llter,
360 CID V-8 engine will be
av&Jlable u an option. Both
Wiii be offered In combination
with an automatic trans-
mission on!y.
For the lravef or recreation-
minded motorist who wants
the superior towing capabUlty
usually associated with a full·
size vehlcle, Grand Wagoneer
will offer two separate pack-
ages -an optlonal medium-
duty tow package with a 3,500-
pound capacity and the stan-
dard. 5,000-pound heavy-duty
package.
Styling refinements to the
Grand Wagoneer Include a
redesign of the woodgrain trim
on the rear quarter panels, as
well as new, sleek, one-piece
talllamps.
metalllc clearcoat paint· fin·
llhee -garnet, allver, cin-
namon, chelJtnut brown and
champagne.
Garnet, aUver, cinnamon
and champ~ne metallics are
entirety new color1 for 1984, as
lt the Nordic green paint In a
standard flnlah. Other Jeep
cc>tora wtll be white, beige,
claaslc blactQ and deep night
blue.
Power steering, J)9wer dlac
brakes, leather ... ta and air
conditioning heed a llst of
etandard Items that make the
Grand Wagoneer the
benchmark of 4WD conve-
nience and luxury.
corporates an surfacct 4WO
capablllfy and permits a drMM
to change back and forth frC>t!l
two-wheel·drlve to four-wheel·
drive with the elmpte flip of •
switch. dnly Jeep and AMO
Eagles offer tt)l~yatem, whlctl lncorporat~a full-time -4WO
allowing the vehicle to remalri
In 4WD regardteal of weather
or road condltlone. ~
Aside from the Grand
Wagoneer and the new down
elzed Jeep Cherokee and
Wagoneer modete, the com-
plete 19S..-Jeep and AMC four-
wheel·drlve model lineup In·
cludes Jeep CJ-7 and
Scrambler.
AMC's newly-designed, 2.5·
llter, 150 CID -4-cyllnder
powers the open·bodtea Jeep
CJ-7 and the Jeep Scramt>ter
pickup, along with Jeep'a new
llneup of 1984 Cherokee and
Wagoneer SportWagons.
~-;:============================================~~----i theGrandWagoneershowsno signs of waning."
As a result of the new $30
mllllon paint facllltles Installed
this year at AMC' a Jeep Corp.
manufacturing complex at Tol-
edo, Ohio, the Grand
Wagoneer will be available for
the first time In five standard
Addltlon61 standard Items
Include power door locks,
power windows, alx-way power
seats, crulae control, dual elee-
trlc remote controf outside
mirrors, Halogen fog lamps, tilt
steering wheel, full-size con-
ventional spare tire, rear
defroster, quartz etectronlc
dlgltal clock, styled aluminum
wheels, roof rack, tinted glass,
electronically-tuned AM/FM
stereo and tape combinations.
A power-operated moon roof
Is optional.
The Grand Wagoneer has
Jeep's Selec-Trac system as
standard equipment. It In-
The In-line 4.2 llter, 258 CID,
6-cyllnder AMC engine wlll be
available as an option. Trana-
missions include a 4-speed
manual as standard, with a 5-
speed manual overdrive or a 3-
speed automatic as options.
An automatic transmission,
coupled with part-time 4WD, la
optlonaJly avallable with the 6-
cyllnder engine only:
• r
I
An ln-llne4.2 llter, 258 CID 6-
cyllnder AMC engine will be
Banlt of America announces a new aut0 loan with a
set of options we've never had before.
No down paym.ent. 10096 financmg* on amounts of
SlO,CXXl or more for new cars or 1983-8-1 used cars.
(Bank of America lCXl% financing 1s also available
th.rough part1c1paung dealers.)
No payment due for 60 days. Use your car for up to
two months before your first payment is due.
Lower monthly payments. You can !.ave on mterest
by haVl.llg your payments made automatically from
your checking or savings account.
Extended terms. Now you can get extended terms
when you choose our variable rate loans.
Offer good only through July 24th. We've got the money,
so don't delay. Apply now1 Call 18001 227-7788 weekdays
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. (Saturdays
until S p.m.), for more infor-
mat1on, or stop by your
nearest b:-anch
The Grand w.,oneer (formerly the w.,oneer Llmltecl) la the lariat Tddcle ID the four-wheel-drl•e lndutry.
Crcdu quahhcauons must ~ m~1
BAN ff
ONTHE ...
LEADER ln•ex•pen•alve•
·11n tk sP4t0' 1111) not high
1n price. reasonable
classified .._ .._.
advert1smo -J ~
-0'-~~·-IJ.l Bank of America _ ... __ . __ Classified Advertising
6:42-5678
* * THE MOST * *
D D
CO LU Ml
INTHE
WORLD!
1t·a strength la In the reautta it com-
ma nda. Somewhere, someone h••
aomethlnt to Hit, buy, rent, i..ae Of of·
fer, elthef loca41y or the othef tide of the
world!
At faat H a phone call, re1u1t1 hap-
pen. Our Clau lfied Pages, with the help
of our ptOfeulonal tMphone ad ,.....
aentatiws. get rnulta fOf those who ad-
119rtlM H -II at thoM Who 8"8 looillng.
CLASSIFIED •••
READ FOR PROFIT· USE FOR RESULTS
Daily ·Pilat
642-5678
I I I • I / __ 'J_._
•
Pending classic car auction
will be Harrah'~ largest ever
A full-color catalog that describes the 335
classic cars to be auctioned Sept. 29 and 30 by the
Harrah's Automobile CoUectfon wUI be available to
the public In July.
The catalog contains color photographs and
descriptions of each car, a map that describes how
to get to the collection, and Information on the
conditions of sale and auction registration fees.
Catalog copies are free by writing to Vehicle
Auction, Harrah's, P.O. Box 10, Reno, Nevada
89504.
The event, conducted with no reae,.Ve by
auctioneer Dean Kruse, Is expected to draw more
than 7 ,000 people from around the world. It will be
the biggest auction In the collection's 22-year
history.
Bidders must submit a letter of guarantee from
their bank and a $30 non·refundable bidder's fee
prior to the auction.
The auction's field of cars Includes a 1927
Bugatti Roadster, a 1937 Cord Convertible Coupe,
a 1932 Rolls--Royce Salamanca, a 1932 Stutz Super
Bearcat, five Auburns, seven Ouesenbergs, eight
Lincolns, nine Cadillacs, 10 Pierce-Arrows, and 39
Fords dating from 1907 to 1975.
This event Is the first of a series of auctions
which will divest Harrah's of the famous collection.
However, 300 of the au1omoblles have been
pledged to The Wiiiiam F. Harrah Automobile
Foundation, with 100 already donated. The Foun-
dation Is working to raise $10 mllllon toward the
construction of a museum for the cars In Reno. The
remainder of the collectlon will be sold or auctioned
over the nex1 few years.
' Harrah'• will pat thla 1922 llerad• Tarja Florio Racer a p for aactfoiHD tlae fall.
Your small car's cooling system
needs special care in the summer
• OwMra of new9r, em.,._ car. who ..
preparing thetr cars' cooing ty9tema fOr ammer
driving lhoutd "bOne up" on the eubject before
proc.edlng, aaya Car Care Council. T.._ ~ produoe up to 2C);~cent more
heat than did their bigger, ..... ~lng pred9-o
c111cn. In eome cw. tMy haft alUmlnUm he9da
Md/or bfOCka lnlte9d of hM\W CMt Iron,
requtrtng new anttfre11a COOiant mtxtur9 com·
patlble with thele metals.
The counctt recommends a eeaonat ftulh and
refill of anttfreue/cootant to retain the ty1tem•e
maximum ~ and to prolong the ltte of the
radiator and other part1.
High under-the-hood temperaturea ..,.
aoctatad with the new cars cau• rubber compo-
nents to deteriorate more q= than on ..,,..,
modita. Therefore a careful of Ill hOMe for
rotting, cracking or leeks lt ...,tlal. (Caution: Do
not chect< hOMS when the ~ne la hOt. A weak
hOM COUid fall, reteUing ecatd flutd.)
• Whether or not he car la equ pped With • belt· ,
drN9n rada.tor fan, all bett9 lh0Utd be lnlpeieted u
s-t of the cooN~ eyatem Checkup.
Not onty the condition of the bett but allO the
tenek>n la ci1Ucat Too looae a belt wtll eHp,
pennmtng malfunctlon of the drtwn componem1
(.n.mator, aJr conditioner com~. fan, PQWW ...,..ig Md otherl).
Al8o, a 1Hpptng bett gett hot, thu1 acc1l•atlng
weer arid deterioration of the belt.
Ltt. •x~ancy of belts and hotel, Hice mo1t
compe>nentt, v.,.. from car to c.-, drlwr to drtwr.
Moet btitta are replecect only when they .. at/or
,....,. failure, tiCCOrdlng to tM englneer9 of
Autdmcittve CooHng S~ lnltttute, with pOMr\·
tlatly •loua damage to the car. For thl• reeeon,
reoommeriOid ~t Int.val for prwtM
mlllnteMnee ll'lbout tour year1.
lnctude thct radiator preuure ~ In your
lnepeCtlon. RemOw ft (When the engine ta cool) and
check the..., for breetce or cracka. whk:t\ WOUfd
Indicate the need for replacement •
I I • ' ___ ,_ J
I
. • Belt · Prices • Great Selection
• Co11V:enlent Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales. Peoplel
' 2600 Harbor Boulevard, <::osta Mesa
I . • I
~-----------'--·-----·___._ __ .....;,__~------------
f / ,,
OVER 30 NEW '84 FIRENZAS
DISCOUNTED THIS WEEKENDI
SUPER SAVINGS ON
2-DR's, 4-DR's, STA. WlliOllS
BERTONE
AN INCREDIBLE DRIVING
EXPERIENCE FOR THE
DEMANDING MOTOR
ENTHUSIAST
1981 CUTLASS SUPRI•
V-6, tllt wheel, cruise control, atrereo. Lie. # 1CTP635.
'5995 ,..__,_ .......
V-6. Sierra Club Cab. Power steering, auto tape player. 7500 miles. Lie.
#3828253.
J
_L j I
; I
r I
NEW
1984
.
With color coordinated mirrors, radial w/w tires, rocker
panel mouldings, power steering and brakes, radio, de-
luxe wheel covers.and trim rings, carpeting, air condition-
ing, deluxe steering wheel and much more.
/_ -1 il
Stk. #3485.(312984)
A CLASSIC NEW SPORTS
CONVERTIBLE BY THE
DESIGNER OF FERRARI
AND JAGUAR
; .
142-11
u su-
.
of HUNTl·NGTON BEACH
17555 BEACH BLVD, H.B. SALE HOURS DAILY 9 AM TIL 10 PM
GIANT H.OLID·IY SILE .
THRU JULY 4th
ONE CITY BLOCK OF NEW AND USED. CARS O.N SAl:E
1984 .SUBARU STATIO"WIGOI
,.
#464865
1984 SUBARU COUPE
$6788*
#320377
I Ill FOllD E-210 VIII COIYEISIOI
Maas. rear bed, bay windows, custom paint. plushy $ 6 9 8 8 * interior (2372)
1111 cam VII COIYERSIOll
V·8, auto trans, factory air, map, cruise control, low ,7 9 8 8•
milale, l1ke new, bay wmdows, bed, custom black pamt,
many van conversions. (233-4)
1111 IUDI FOi TUDOR
AutomatlC, tudo, (943PVY) '1688*
1110 c1m C-20 VII COIVERSIOI
V-8, auto trans, factory air, maas, cruise control, dark sa 98 8* blue, rear bed. pfush interior. (2353)
1171NISCIE124
•4 cyl, 4 speed, factory air, am/fm stereo cassette. rallye s5 9 8 8* .
wheels. runroof, 1et black, aold wheets (075WGC)
1111 CIDIWC SEID D1VIW ~
Brou&ham. All the toys, beautiful baby blue w/dark blue s4 9 8 8*
velour 1ntert0r. (WM121)
1111 PLYIOUTH VOURE STITIOl~llOll
V·8, automatlC trans. power steenn&. power brakes, ' 1 6 8 8* super clean (521REL)
1111 FORD RllCHERO
Automatic trans, factory air. power steermg, power $ 2 6 8 8*
brakes. super clean (1J88064)
1112 YW Qllml Tllll CllPE
4 cyt. 5,spd. factory afr, power steeri11. power brllles, • 7 9 8 8 * power windows, dtitJI, rllyt wMels, low -.. SUptf' •
clan, jet bllCk finish (2AKJ154) .
1.984 SUBARU HATCHBACK 1984 SUBARU SEDll 5spd
FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED # 116273
*
SPECIAL PURCHASE!
DISTRIBUTOR DIMOS
'" SUBARU GL SEDAll
Automatic, AM/FM stereo, tilt wheel, Bridgestone Radial
tires. special paint.
• 4SIX OTHERS TO CHOOSJ FROM
11llSUllRUTUDGR .
4 cyl, 4 spd, super clean, Great Gas Saver (351YHT) '1888*
1181 NllTllC T-1000 SEDll
4 cyl, 4 spd, super clean, one owner (10Gf459) .$2688*
1180 HOIDl PRELUDE COUPE
4 cyl, 5 spd, factory an, power brakes, am/fm cassette. $6 9 8 8* hke new, super clean, Burcundy Finish ( lAOl 711)
1 Ill llZDI &LC TUDOR
4 cyl, 4 spd. am/tm super clean, Great Gas Saver
(335VNM)
1180 SUBARU IL BRIT 414 w/SHELL
$3688* 4 cyl, am/fm, low miles, super clean (104ZMO)
•
1111 CHEVROLET IOIZI COUPE
4 cyl, 4 spd, power steennc. power brakes, am/f m, low s 14 8 8* miles, super clean (2ARW035)
1180 llZDI 121 COUPE
4 cyl, 5 spd, am/fm, Runs Great (700ZVA) '3388*
1113 SUllll IL IUT 414
4 cyl, 4 spd, power brlkes, am/fm cassette. rallye $6 9 8 8* wheels, T·Toc>1 16,000 Oricinal Mites (1AG8427)
1111 MME llPLlllT STITill WAHi .
6 cyl; 1utombc trans, power stetri~ po•lf brlMS; • ·
am/fm wire wtteets, tmted atass:, vmyl 1ntlft0r, bit Wheel, •4 1 8 8* crum control, super ctan. l111t Flm4ly Sc>eaat •
(6111127)
-tu -le. -doc.
$&788*
#231741
1984SIBIRI
414 ST&TillW&UI
$7388*
#«9658
1171 DITSll PICllP w/SIELL
NEEDS PAM/RUNS GREAT (168385) '1288
1118 DODIE UI CllllEI 414
Autop Trans, factoy air. power stetrlfll, power brakes, s4 9 8 8 super clean. Off road wheels & bres (2487)
1913 PLYIOm REUllT SEllll
4 cyl, automabc trans. factory air. power steennc power $ 6 9 8 brakes. wuper clean. one owner, dart brown (1EWX662)
1181 YWVllllOI
4 cyl, automabc trans, am/fm cassette, rallye wheels, s 7 9 8
low mileage. super clean (lCQf030)
1110 CHEVROLET IOITE CARLO
Automatic trans. factory air. power steenna. power s4 9 8 8. brakes. am/fm. low mlleace. super clean (26797)
1171 YW RllllT TUDOR IUT81UTIC
4 cyl. automatic trans. factory 11r. am/fm cassette. hke $ 3 3 8 8 ... new ( 835 YflW)
1111 llC ~TOI PICIUP
6 cyl, factory air. power steenna. power brakes
(1£PP533 )
11llllW2112
4 cyl 4 spd, factory air. power brakes. am/fm cassette. s5 9 8 a«· sunroof, low mlleace. super clean. Maroon fm!Sh •
(W375)
1113 llllE 414 PICllP
V-8, 4 si>d. power st~ power brat ~ome
Wheel's. BC Tires (2f45926)
WE NEED YOUR TRADE -PAID OR NOT
EXCELLENT FINANCING, CREDIT ASSISTANCE AVAILABLE
~ .
OR YOUR CRED~T UNION I
•/ I I I j I
Or-nge Cout DAILY PllQT/FrJ<Say, June 29, 198-t -, u.. "!l!C ll)TIC(
Mnnoue ..... j MCON>ID tnlll4 NOTICI. w ....... -i -*»1108' 0# TRUIT8'1 Mu ftC1"10Ue ......
...... ITA ... DT INSTRUM!NTHO.M-141'312 ~-,··••D--.......... ~ .... ION~ ~IT•wrn.n ""-n,. 1MG•111 ~ ii ~ VIWtilZOI • ... U'T1U'99 ~T llO, I T.I. .... IM1M TN fa1ow1r1t P1'9Qn 11 dCltl1Q
-----""'9TBUUI (Al<>HO ~ AYWNUI l lM'TCOOCK ~-ftOYAL IX""8I DETIJUNQ. MO. 11 I•... FROM ""HNTH ITAHT T.IL .. va CO..MY IUE'I llASON'I, 10111 ~ C--. °'·• C-. ...._II MOnCI 0# DIPAULT NOATHIALY TO TH CITY =eppolntedTN9tMllftdlttN •...wood WPf, ltenion, Celt, -· tatft AND ILICTIN TO .U. IOUHOAAY) -~ deed of tNlt 10110
..,::n1am1" OecHQe Chapman, U9IDD DllD CW TMll'T HOTICI 19 HUtHf QIV£H that WILL 8 LL AT PUii.iC AUCTION lu• Lana Luelg, 10H7 c-... Dr •• co.ta ~I' ...aRTMT N011Cll Or'1Mond1y,Jvftitl11"4,9ttht~ TO THE HIOHUT 11ooeA.,OA •...wooo Wfff, Stanton. Clllt.
1 C. t.Mft . II 11111 YOUA PAOHlnY IS IN '°"f. of 7 30 ... M, n the Counoll CASH ANO/OR TH CA8HllM OR to110
T1lie bu9IMae .. ooncklc1led b<t: en CLOSUA IECAUSI YOU AAI ... ONmbln Of tM CltY Hall of the City CEATI"!O CH!Ol<I IN.Clf~O IN TNI buM*9 .. oondUCted by. an ,~ , HIND IN YOUA 'AYMe,Hll, lfMAY ot ~ 9ledl too.9ed tt 3300 CIVIL C~ HCTION IN• (Pllf" 1 lndMOull 9lfl ~ . 81 IOU) WITHOUT ANY COUAT N•wport lou11v1rd, H•wpott llM at 1hl time Of .. In ~ 8ua i... u.g =l'NI llallf'Nrlt -.. fled 1hl ~CtlOH, lil'ld ~ ~ tie¥t thl liMcft, OcM1tr ot Orange, ttate ot motWr1 Of lt'9 ~ et.•> II TNt .....,,_., ne lied with 1M Cliwtc oe Orange CounCv on ..._ rlaM to twtng 'tO'W ~t In ~ .,_ Qtr Councl .. flOld tiQtlt. lttle end lnt...C ~ to County a.ti ot <>r-. ~ on
,,.., ,..,. ....,.,, gooc1 .tandlnO by~ a1 ot ~ • publo ,_,..for tM ~ ot ~now t*d by tt "'* ~.o..d Julw 1. 1114 nnm
• ~ ~ CoaM o..ty PM1 d&lla PIW"'lftil Plul permitted ~ ·-....., t,._ pvMo of T"* tn !hi~ herell....., Pu~ ~ eoeat Delly -..... · .. _ -...... 1'" 20 ,....... coat• 9'td .,..,,._ wtthln .tfWW neoeelltt, fiMtttl ........... 0t """ .. 11M1cr1bed· ........ ~ 1• ...,, ...... 1 1-· ,__ -... _, "'' ' Uo montht trom -u;;"dine tf'llt notlc9 Of r9QU1r•'tn. remOv.t-;f'• Olfolt· TAUSTOA: OAAY WILLIAM .......,, ....... "• ... • ~, • Tu
·' . .. _ default Wll '900f0ed. TNt emount 1.-d wne, and MIOClatect att\IC· AHOfASON n.ia.IC fllT1C£ 11 a14,815.40, •of 08/11/"4, 9l1d ~.andtheuno.t~Ollndlnat*· BENEFICIARYALVAAAOO. AUS "81.JC M)TIC[
ACTITIOUI ....._ wlll lncreeM untH your MlCOUnt b9-!Ion of wlt91 and f IOf IUPPIY· .t MC Ct.ELLAN
• --ITA Tlt-'n comtll curt.nt Yow may not tlaY9 to lnO .i.ctrtc, OOIM'IUnlcatlOn. or elrril-AECOROEO M1y 3, 191211 IMtr ACtmoul .u ..... -" e>tY tN eintlte unpWd portion of IW0t~tecfMrWlc9ln1hl.,.. No.82•1811CMOfOfflolelAlcl«daln MAmlTAT'lmJfT ~ tollowt4io C*tON .. dolrlO YfNf ~t. ewtl theuQ11 f\lll ~ °' "'-)'ttt~-~hlofflclotthe~derof0J*'Q9 Til9 f~ Pl'IOft* .,. dolr'O
"' CA-• ~ • •t.-. FO .. WOMEN INl'lt ._ dl9manded, .,_,. )'Oii l'llUlt ~ """"91 County; ~ M .---...... " Pl.{ ........ emount et8ted liboV9 _, -• A ............ Of ltvtl ~ ... UMC M<>Ona, 1eet1 AIDM-ANO a.tf.N, 4M -. I --~ ----1""---,...... ....... -·-----,..,,_ • .., __.-,,_ ... _ ,...,., ,,. ""'" , .. _,. (Al.OHO IUPI"'°" AVEHUI 'OllcMtna P'oOiWtY' ~ •• 8Mch. CA. 12M1 of recotdallOn ti thie dOC:utMnt l'"OM l'IFTHNTH STRUT AFfltC1'8 1 4/1ott\'t lmltWt In K. Hunttngtgn e..ch, c.llf. t2t49 ~ MOIM, 21161 Wwllfl1 °'· (WnlCtt CS.ti of r.cordltlon eppMt9 HO,.THl!fltt. V TO THI! CITY end to thl lolloWtna ptoperty. Lf.M Chritltln• Pet.,&. 4242
H, S . L.tauna. CA. Htn hereon). un1e11 thl ~tlon being BOUHOA .. Y) The &at 50.00 r..i ot tN Wiit Pter.on Or.. Huntl~on IMdl,
GIOr'li J Moel&. 21161 W-"'1 f019CllOled upon perm~• 1 lonQef Til9 t«rttory Pl"oe>oeed to bl in. 310.00 t..t ofthe South 484.00 feet callf. t284t Or 18, a. LAQuna, CA. t2t77 ~. you hew only the l9gel r!Gtlt olU<*l In Und4wgtOl.lnd UtJMti. I*-of Lot 48 of FAIRVIEW FARMS, In Thlt bu**' II conduotld by: I
Garr.« c. w.-.. 1015 Oro. to II~ the forec:loture by peyfng ttlc1 No. 9 lncludae 8Uplriot AwrM tN ~ Of eo.t• MIN, County of lltnlted pattnlf'tl'I'->
L..aaune 8Mch, CA. 92951 thl entlf• wnount demlndld by from 16th Stl'Mt ~ to thl 0rlnQ9, St1t1 of Calltomla. •par ~ ,,.__. " ........ wt .. Thia bualMN II oonducted by. • your creditor City bounctll)'. m., r9COtded In 9oo1c a. Paoe 71, , ,_ etatem.nt WM _, t .. thl
generW pennarlhlp. To !Ind out lhl ltnOUn\ you mutt Few f\lrthlr lnformatlOn, ,....,.IOI MllclllMeoul M9')1, In thl oftloa Of County ~ of 0rltlQI County on
Frink MOIM pay or to wrange fOf ~t to 11 ~ rNldl to lhl m., = lhl County~-of .Jd Coun-June 1, ,.,... ~
Thie ttatement w• hied wtth thl •toP thl !Of~. Ot 11 'tO'lf ptop-thl bOunOatlle Of thl P' ty Publllhed On1nQ9 Cout Dally
County Ci.t1c of Orange County on erty 11 In fcnclolurl for siy otnw UndetgrOUftd Utlllt ... o.tnct No, I YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T UHOER A Piiot June 15, 22, 29, J4itit 8, 1814
Jww 20, 1814 ~ r.aton. oontlCt: dellgnatect u City ot Newpot1 D£ED OF TRUST DATED 4/30182. F2t D0MALD L 8UODIJMAUll AMEAICAN SAVINGS ANO Belch Or1wtng AIW-6480-L.. detect UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO
htt9 D. -~ ler.et LOAN ASSOCIATION April II, 1M4, 1eopyOfwtliCh11 on PROTECT YOUR PROPEATY, IT PU8UC M)TIC(
Laaunl IMch, CA...., 15725 E. Whittler Blvd., WNttllr, ffll In tN ottio. of thl City Clefil MAY BE SOLO AT A PUBLIC SALE. Publlatled Orange COlll Deity Piiot Cl.llfornla toe07 (714)773-7125. located In the City Hell. IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION ~~:A~u
June 29, July 8. 13, 20. 188<1 Bt-~805-4-75(E) Notice tt furthlr gM1n tlllt thl OF THE NATURE OF THE ----------'F--7~91 11 °9ou hew any qu.etlon9, you totW 111.lmated C09t of und«· PROCEEDING AQAINST YOU, YOU Thi folloWfng per.on II doing P\llt.IC NOTIC£ lhould contect 1 l•W't9" °' thl gov-grounding utlllt ... In the ptopoled SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER buSl.-e II: -----------1 ernment IQlnCY wtllch may have In-dlltttct .. '250,IOO: that thl City 771 Contr•.. 81r .. t, Cotti C & E. OFFICE FURNITURE,
f1CTITIOUI IU .... 11 tured·yout kNln Counc:ll pr~ to dtrlct-the ll· M-. CL ::: ~II AY9., Cocf1 ..._.,
NAMI ITAT'flilllfT A9'1*'11ber. YOU MAY LOSE penctttu,. Of W .500 Of fllndl a. "(If I ltrllt lddrlll or common Palrleia McMahln. 18422 M1111 The fol!Owing per.one are doing LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU DO NOT rilled from lhl Southlm Cltl1oml1 d4111gn1tlon of ptoperty II ltlOWn bullllell ... TAKE PAOMPT ACTION Edi.on Compeny and llloclted to 1boYe. no warranty 11 glYen .. to It• Ln .. Huntington BMc:n. Ciut. 928<17
IMAGINATION GRAPHICS, 2780 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: thl City for underground.Ing utllltlll completenMa or eorrectnen)," The Thll bullnlll II conducted by. an
South H1tb0f Blvd , Suite A, S.nt1 Th•t SUNKIST SERVICE COM· und411' thl Rul9 In California Publle blnlflclaly under Mid Deed of I~=! McMWwln An•. CA 92704 PANY, II now duly eppolnt9d Utllltlel CommlMlon c... No. 620t TNlt, by rMIOn of I brllCti or a. Thi• 1tat"'*1t WU,..., with thl
Wiiiiam Jonlthln Dunlap, 214 Truet• undel' 1 Died of Trwt dated for under~ In front of,..._ feun In thl Obllgatlonl llCUtWd
Knox Piece. Colt• M..a. CA t2e27 01121n111t1CU1ed by W. Sl*don dlntltll pr~.,.....,, Flft9ln1tt thel"Wy, Mr.tofate executed and Coun~ Cllf1I of °'*'09 County on
RoOlrt Vllentlne. 8053 Camp Purlnglon. I m«rlld man, & WllUem St.reet end Dene Aoed; that thl dlhwed 10 Ole underllgnld. writ· """' ' 1* P'Ml'l9
Ctiatfee Rold. Ven1urL CA 93001 E Purington. I ~man .. Hughll Alrondt Cornpeny Plapc>W tll'I O.OW.tlon of DlflUtt and 0.-P\lbftltled OrltlQI Cout Diiiy
Thl1 bua1nW 11 conducted by-a TN1tor, to MC:Ure tlone In to~ $'91, 100 to under1'J'ound mend for S..., ~written noUca of Piiot ~ 15, 22, 29, July 8. 1~4 ...... pr.s ... etllp.-1111« of AMENCAH ~ l vt11tm In front of 1U pioperty; Ifill ~ ancfOf 9lecOon to-.-the
Wiiiiam J Dunlap ~ ~AN Ass 0 c I AT I 0 N .. the ~ Counoll pr~ to •ll· 41nd•••gold to ... Mid Oroperty to
Thll et1tement wu filed wttti thl 811'1eftdery. AaoolOed on Ot1121n pend W .200 .t City fundl to .. tllty Mid obll09tlon1, and i-.
County Clenl of Orenge County on 11 dooumll'lt no. 22109 book 12334 underground utlllt ... In tront Of IU after the underelgned c:autld Nld fl1CTmOUI ., ... .,
.,lune 13, 11184 FMa7 PIOI 14D8 of Offtc:tll Recorda In tN Corpor1tl0n Yatd ptOplf1y; Ind that notice of brMCtl and of MctlOn to NAm ITAT'llmNT
Pub119hed Orenge Cout Dllf't office Of thl ~-of Orange lhlrl wttl be no C09t to llfY ot thl bl recof'ded March 14, 1M4 M Thi following f*90l\I .,1 doing
Piiot June 29 JUiy e. 13 20 1M4 COunty. Cliltfomla, lnc:ludlnQ 1 not• owrwsofrllldll'ltlalprapertyailong in.tr. No. 14-1070'7 of omci.i .. bul!IMll la:
• • • • F-eO for the eum of St2,000.00. T'Mt tM tM wterty 11c1e of SUpertor cw to C«d1 In tn. offlcl of thl ''•confer MASCO. 11762 MICArthur SI•
Nit.IC NOTIC£ ~-==-'~_,~ =.:;:;.:~A~= of="":~ bl made, but 21~=c%:.omottw ~
thereby en pr111ntty held by thl thl propoled undlrgroundlng. wtthoUt ~t or W9n"lnty, •· n--,. ................ 197•" M~• ..... -FtCTITIOUl IUl*EU ~·That• br9ldl of, and Any l*'90ft In.._,., In or own-pr111 Of ~. regardlftg tftll -~-·"'·-· "' _,.,..,.
NAlft ITAT'EME.NT MflUlt In, thl obllgetlon for wtl6ctl Ing pr°'*1)' abutting lhl propoled po111•IM, or ll'ICUITlbrlnOll. to ~l:~ir:.~., by. I
Thi followlng pereooa 1te doing Nld Deed of Trull II NOUrlty hu Underground Utlll1i. Ola1tlct No. 9 pay thl Almllnlng prlnclp9! 1Um of corporetlon
bullneee u : occ:ured In that the peyment hall not m1y ftte With the City Clertc pttor to thl notl(1) eeeur.ci by Mid died of Bob s p Mldll'I
PENNIES & PEt-ICE, It 128 been INde of: Fllluf'e to ma611 the thl time ft.xed for thl hlertng, writ· Tru.t, with lntwllt u In llld note Thie .::t~~ wu nl.cs with thl
Mlgl'I04l1 St . Suite 203B. Hunt-C>e/01/83 peyment of princlp1I tll'I prot .. t1 or ob}letlonl to the provtded, edvanclll.. tt 111y, under County o..11 of Orange County on
tngton Belen. CA 1128<18 and/or Inter• Ind Ill eubMQuent .xtll'lt of thl ptOpOled dllt.rlc:t or to the term1 of Nld Deed of ltult, fwl. Junes. 1984 ,M?UI
Jem.. 01vld Cope 9187 Nadine p1ym1nt1, together with lite tn. pr()pOled wort Of lmprO\lemll'lt ctlargee. Ind ••Plf'IMI of the IWMr L Not. 1-.,
River Clrole. Fountain Vllley, CA dllfgel. lmpoundl, Impound CS.-Vwbll prot•• to the IXtent of lhl Truet•and of tnattustl er.led by 191 ~"'If .......... 1120 92708 pollt1, If any, und9r the lermt of propo1ed dl1trtc1 or to th1 lllkt Died of Trwt.
Jennifer Suun Cope. 8187 Nld note or Died ot Trull and Ill pr()pOled wort! or ~t SlldllllWllblhlldon Mondey, ~··~= Diiiy ~-:'~. =e Clrcll. Fountlln V9'-~--:=:'*~t~ :y =w: ~led 11 Nld pubffc ~1~~ 2:.,:;:: g: Piiot JUM 15, 22, 21. -Mt e. 1~1 Mlchael Anthony Erlckeon, 18577 l1te ch1tget or other IUIT\I PIYlbM WANDA E. ANDERSEN CMc Center Bulldtng, 300 EMt •----------.-...
Santa Crui Circle, Fountain V1J11y. Under thl terme of Mid Note Of !City Cllrtt or the City of Nnpot1 Ct\epman Ave., Ol'111'1G9. C.. PCB.IC NOTIC(
C1. 92708 Died of Tru1t. Belen At tN time of lhl 11'111111publ~1-----------
SuNn K1y Erletceoo, 18527 Santa Thll by reuon thlrlof, fhl pr ... ieellfornla eatlOn of thll notice, thl totel
Cruz Clrele, Founteln Vllley, Ca. ent bll'leflclery under Midi Deed of iPubbtled Orenge Cout Delly Piiot emount of thl unpeld b*n01 of thl
'8CTmOUI .,... ..
NAm ITATnmNT 92708 TNlt, h• IXICU1ed Ind del!wred iJune 28. 29, HIM obffgatlOn llCWed by the aboW IM-Thi fotloWtng Slet'IOfl II Oolng
butirl9ll IS: ThlS bulln111 t1 conducted by 1 to Nld Trust•. I wrlltll'I Oeclw· THSA-102 ICf1bed died of INSI end •!mated
generll pertnerthlp 1tlon of Dlfaull and Demand for DI-IC NOTICE eo1t1. ~. end .,...1oe1 II ECLECTIC, 18128 Megnoltl St
Suite 203B, Huntington BMeh.
Clllf. t2e4e
&nan Key EflcttlOtl . Sale. Ind hlS depoelted with Mid ... ..__ Se.eeo.OO
Thie 1tatement wu flied with the Tru1t•. IUCh Died of Truet Ind .it Thi 10111 lndebtedMll bllnQ .,,
County Clll"tc of OJ•noe County on tlll doculNl'ltl IYld9"Clng thl obll-F~~.:A ~=· estimate on wtllch thl ~bid II June 25, 1984 F>4I011 gatlont eecured thlreby. and l'lal comput9d may be obtllned by Cllll·
Shlffllr John. D84 t lnnebruek
Or., Huntington BMch, C1llf. 82848
Thie bulll'llll 11 conducted by: 1n
lndtvldUal
Publllhed Orange Coat Diiiy dlclated and dOll hereby decllf• The followlng peraon 11 doing Ing (714) 1137-0988 or (213)
Piiot June 29, July&. t3, 20. 1884 all IUml MCI.Ired thereby lmmedl· t>uslneu 11 U'1...ae5 ttie day befofl thl NII. F~I •Illy due and peyabtl Ind hU TOOL CITY, t0582 Wlltmlneter, Oiled: June 20. 1814
-----------eilcted and doee hereby e11c1 to Garden Grove, Call!. 92843 T 0 SERVICE COMPANY,
Shlltwf-John
P\BJC fl>TICE
ACTTTIOUI IU ... 11
NA• ITA1"Dll8ff The followlnO peraon1 are doing
bullneN ..
INNERVISIONS, 17~ 1 Sky Pertc
Circle. Suite J, lrvlne. CA. 92714
C1therlne Gey McAuley, 13323
New11nd. G1tden Grow. CA 112844
Cathy McAuley
Thl1 llltemenl w11 flied with Iha
County Clll"1l of Orenge County on
May 10, 1884 ,....
Publllhld Orange Coul o.lly
Pllol June e. 15, 22, 29, 1884
F-tt
DEATH NOTICES
CIUM Iha trull property to be IOI<! Sam Tffllf. 120 Old Ranch Rd . •Mid Truetee
to Mll1ty Iha obllglllOnl MCI.Ired S..t BNch, Calif 90740 9y Betty Jo McDaniel, Au11tent th«etly Thll bullneu II conducted by It\ Secft1ery
DATE 08111184 lndlvldull One City Blvd .. w .. t. OJenge, CA.
AMERICAN SAVINGS ANO SllTI TMMr 92816 LOAN ASSOCIATION Thia 1t1tement WU flied wtth lhl (714)83M281
By Vlrgll'lll M Sllctler, County Clerk ol Orange County on Publl9hed Orenge Coat Delly
Aut. Vice Prnldent June 21. 1984 ,Mint Piiot June 29, July 8, 13, 1"'4
By Roblr1 c Malllltd, 'Publllhed Oflnge Cout Diiiy F-459
Thie ltat"'*1t W11 flied with thl
County Clll"tl of Orange County on
June 1, 1884 n.-,_
Publl9hed Orange Colsl Diiiy
PllOt June t5. 22. 29. Julye. 1984
f25
PWLIC NOTICE
'ICTITtOUI 9U ... U
NAM! IT ATir•NT Alll1t1nt Secretery Pllol June 29, July 8, 13, 20. 1984
Publllhed Orange Co111 Diiiy Piiot F71 Plll.IC NOTtCE Thi foltowlng '*'°" II doing -----------buslnleeu June 22. 29. Juty 7 13. 1984 m-1c NOTICE ~~~~~~~~-F-_51 ~~~r..-.~~~~~~ FICTITIOUa MJIMU JAMES MORELAND COMPANY. FtCTITIOUI ___ 11 NAm ITAT'lmNT 3001 Elgin PllOI. Cringe. Calif
--The lollowlng per.one ere doing 82ee9 NA• ITATl•NT bullnlll 11: JllMI LNter Morll1nd, 334
FICTTTIOUI ~II Thi followlng P«1IO" 11 doing TROWBRIDGE EQUITY GROUP, P!Mcf .. t Ortw, L.agun1 BMC:t\,
NAMl ITATir•NT bulll'IMI u : FUND 8, 2025 Newport Blvd .. Coeta Calif. t2e51
The tolloWfng per90n1 1re doing CJC SOFTWARE & SERVICES, M ... , Cillf. 92627 Thia bulllllll 11 conducted by: 1n
bullneu ai· 881 W111 18th Street. Coe11 Mell, Trowt>r!Oge Equity Group. Inc .• lndMdUll
B & M POWER SWEEPING, e 11 Calif. 92827 Callfoml&. 2025 Nwpor1 Blvd.. Jatnll L Morlland Piulltlno, Apt F. Goat• Miii. CA. Cerolyn J C111ldy, 10748 CoetAI Mell. Clllf. 92927 Tilll tlltlmll'lt wu flied with the
8282e c...ina Aw . South Giii. Calif. Thia bullnlll .. conducted by: I County Clerk of Or1n91 County on
P\llt.IC NOTtCE
Merll n Roy Sl1gford. 811 90280 llmlted pertner1Np June 1, 198<1 ""1m MULIK PaularlnO. Apt. F, Coetl Miia. CA. Thll bulll'IMI 11 conducted by In Eugene A. Trowbr1dQe, Jr .. Prell-PubKthed Orange Collt Delly
ANNA J MULIK, a resident 92628 lnclMdull dint PllOt June 15. 22. 2t. Juty e, 1114
of Balbo a Penninsula. ~ Eltzlt>.ih S119ford, 811 Cllolyn J. Casaldy Thlt ltltlmll'lt w11 tll9d wl1h thl F27 Piullflno, Apt. F, Cotti Miia, CA Thi• 1t1t"'*1t wu ftled with thl County Clerk of 0r-County on Passed away June 27. in 112628 County Clerk of Orange County on JUM ;3, 1tM -....-,..112 ____ "8.JC_...._...._NO--.TICE....._·.._ __
Newport Beach. Ca. She i.s Thi• bulln.t II conducted by. Jul'll 29, Julye. 13. 20. 198<1 ~ Publlhed °'~ Colet Delly '8CTITIOU8 IU9INlll
survived by her daughter hu~r::~ ~:~d Publllhed Orange COllt Dllf't Piiot June 22, 29, uly e. 13, 1814 NAm ITATDmfT
Joan M. Jacobs and sister Thi• llltlmll'll WU nled with thl Piiot June 29. Julye. 13. 20. 11184 F45 Thi foltoWtng Plt"IOf\I .,.. doing
Hele~1:iey~tt~~ =11~ of OJlf'IOI County on F72 ___ Ml.JC ___ .,_TlCE_· ----1 ~ :: PAOOUCTIONS, 840 port ,,_,.. P\ll.IC NOTICE '8CTmOUI IUIMU c.nter St.
been a long time resident of PubUlhed Orenge Cout Diily NAm ITAT'llmNT 4, Cotti M..a. Callf. 92827 Balboa Pen smoe 1929. She Piiot June 29, Julye. 13. 20. tttl<t FICTmOUI ...,..... The followlng pet"IOl'll en doing MIMl'I 0 . and Allton D. M)o9r1,
Was Ve'"" ..,.tive in the Ebell F.M MAim ITATI....,. buliMM •: 840 Center St. •,;..... ---m-.,.-IC_NO_TICE __ __. ____ bu~~~lluowl.· ng P«1I0"1 .,.. doing NATIONAL SATELLITE DIS· 4. Cotta M111, Clllf. 92827 Club of Newport Beach, al8o rUUL ... _ TRIBUTION CENTERS, 708 N. VII-Thi• bu.ine .. 11 Conducted by an
the White Shrine and F.ast-DAD'S AUTO DETAIL, 824 E 81h i.y Sult• 0 Anaheim Cellf 9210t lndlvldUll em Star of Newport Beach. 'ICTITIOUI IU ... 11 St.. S1nt1 An1. CllH 92701 l~tercont!Mntll p;ocJuci, Cat-Marvin 0 Myen
She was an extensive world NA• ITATIMUIT Chuctl Cummlf'lol, 25181 Mllll, poreUon. Nevlda. 285 Wiit Horth Thll 1t1t"'*1t wu flied with thl The foltowlng PlrlOnl lfl doing El Toro, Clllf 112e3o Temple Suite County Cllrll of OJ1n91 Countv on
traveler and will be sadly bullneee u; Kevin M""-. 824 E. 8th St . 300 s-.. • ... City Ut .... ••103 M-te 1814 -.. MACARTHUR HOTELS LIMITED "--ta •ne,""""c-•141 "2701 ' ... .__. ' -·.... -· . ,.._, mi..ed by all. Crypt side aer-,,_,, " -· " Thlt ~ II conducted by. 1 Publllhed Orange Colet Dlll't vices will be held Monday PARTNERSHIP (A CALIFOANIA Thie bullneae II conducted by. • corpor1tlon Piiot June 15, 22, 29. Julye, 1884 LIMITED PARTNERSHIP) O.B.A. generll Plftnerlhlp Cltl Reynold•. OlrlClor F50
July 2, 1984 at Pacific View .. HOTEL MERIOIEN • NEWPORT Chuck eum-i..-a T'l..ll tit t ..._... with .._ -----------.
Memorial Park. Newport BEACH", 4500 MICArthur Blvd.. Thll 1te1.,,,;.;;;t":' .. flied with the '" 1 amen Wll ,._, ,,,. P\ll.JC NOTICE Newport Bach. Call!. 02880 County Cl«k of Or1nge County on Couni Clef1c of Orenge County on ______ _...._... __ _
Beach. Ca. Friends may call H111 and Haynie Corpor•tlon (a June 20. 1984 ~ J une 3, 11184 F'Ml171 PlCTmOUI .u ... u
at the Mortuary Sunday C1t1forn11 Corpor1t1on), 85 t Publl9hld Ori~ Collt Delly PH';;':~~2• ~~ ~ 1:fY MAMI ITATDINT
July l, from lOAM to 9PM. Burtwey ROid. Suite 218, 8ur1-Piiot Ju~""' J•"" 13 20 1"•• .... , F42 Thi folloWfng per.one ar1 dctng lngeme, Calif 1140t0 .... """· v" · ' · ..... bulll'llll u . In lieu of flowers. family re-MAZ Hotels Cori>orltton N v (I Ft7 l't8.JC SATELLITE DISTRIBUTION
quest donatJons be made to N9thlrt1nd1 Antlllel Corporetlon), P\B..IC NOTICE NOTICE CENTERS. roe N. Vlltey Sult• Q ,
The Harbor Area Adu1t Day e10 N9Wport Center Or . Newport '8CTITIOUI .,..... Anahllrn, Clllf. 92801
Care Cent.er, 661 West Ham-BMch, Clllf. 92880 ~TITIOUI .u ... 11 NAm ITATirmNT lnt«contlnenlal Product• Cat·
llton, Costa Mesa. 92627 Pa· Oonw1yne Benechct. Vice PrMI-NA• ITA~NT The followlng per.on 11 doing !)Ortton, Nevld1, 285 W• North
dent Thi following Plf"90l'll 111 doing bvlln111 11: T.mpl9 Sult•
cific View Mortuary, Di rec-Thie atllement wu filed with thl bullneu u : RARE FORM, 4827 A Rlv.t Ave.. 300, Slit LMl1 City, Utah M 103
tors. 644-2700 County Clerk ol Orange County on WILBAR. 1041 t<r1em1r Piece. Newport BMctl, Calif 92te3 Thia bulMlll It eondUC11d by 1 -------------i June 25 1984 Anaheim. CA 0280e D1vld St9Wart Prtce, 4827 A. ~~ ,.._ -,.,._. Gene Barrow. 23311 Port LerMdc RIYlr Aw .. N9'#port Belen. Celtt. Cltl '-7,.....,., .,.._,or ~ ..... Publtlh9d Orange Cou1 Dally Place. Nftport BMC:t\, CA 92te0 92M3 • Thll ateternent ... tll9d with the
HAft80A LA WN·MT. OUW Pllo1 June 29. July 8. 13, 20, 1814 Wiii Wlltclnaon, 120 v .. Orvl9to, Thie bulinea II conducted by. an County Clerk ~ Otang9 County on
• ' Mortuary• Cemetery 1 _________ ......,fl ..... 3 Nnpot1 Belch, CA. 92M3 lndNtdu91 Jun1t3,1114 lll'Ml1t1
Crematory P\llt.IC NOTICE Thll bullnlll 11 conducted by.• St.-rt PrlCI Publlltlld Or1n91 Colet Dally 1625 Gis ler Ave ___ .........,....;;....; ______ general ~nerlhlp. Thie 1t1tement wu filed w11h the Piiot JUM 22, 29. Juty e, 13, 1114
Costa Mesa ,ICTITIOUl llUIMll ~,:·.tit.::,, Wll flied with lhl County ci.nc of Orange County on F44
0 555 MAiie ITATir•NT ,...__ June i3. 1914 f'MI* ~ llllft'l'll'tr 5-4 • 4 The folloWfng pereone ere doing County Clenl of Oranoe ......... ty on Publllhlcl OJ1n91 Cou1 Diiiy ---~---""--' ~---
bullnlla.. June 28• 1118<1 ,....,. Pilot Juf'I 22. 29, Jvty e . 13, 1814 '8Cnnou9 .,... ..
Ptl .. CE aAOTH! .. I
Hll 19'0AOWAY
MO .. TUAAY
1 10 Broad1..ay
Costa t..Aesa
642-9150
BALTZ 8EHGt'40 ..
SMITH & TUTHILL
WESTCLIFF CHAPEL
427 E 1711"1 SI
Costa Me,a
646 q37 1
PACIFIC VIEW
Ml~IAL PAf'K
Cemetat)' • Mor1uary
Cnal)tl • Cre ma1ory
3500 P.C1f1C V1t-w Or1"e
N pott Beach
84'·1700
McCO,.MIC[ll[ MO,.TUAAY
' 7H Uo:.in~ Canyon Rd l•Q~ 'But~. Ca i26S 1 o ... u 15
CAMELOT BUILDERS, 1548 0 Publl9hld OJenge C0Mt o.lly F47 NAm tTA,_..,-AOlm9 8IYd , ea.ta Meu, Cellf Piiot June 29, July 8, 13. 20, 198<1 The f~ per'lon It doing
92828 F.f3 Ml.JC M'.)TIC( bu11MM a.:
J1m11 H P~ to81 Carn1tlon •-IC 11t1nH" MOAaAH NOGIHG 190 V1f...i.H• Or . W11tmln1ter. Cll4f ~ ""'~ Ftennout..,..... Pl ' .--Pllllllp Jottnlon, 408 7tl'I 81 • Hunt· MAim IT AW ' Colta Mw. c..t. 92121 ~on .,._..,..., Clllf 'ICTJTIOUI 9U.... Thi 1o11owtng pereon II doing ~Pt~---~ Morpn, 190 Vlt-_., NAMI ITATllmNT ~ 11· •-.. ......,.. Meea. Cellf. 92121
hit bullMll II conducted by·* Thi following P9fl0n II doing PACKAOiNG SPEOIALTIU CO .. •-~~ltconduetedby.en gen«ll pertn«ah!p bu--• u: 7 er. ClrcM Cat dll ...... ..,_ J.,,,.. H. Pope L. E. T SERVICES, 311 ...... CalH t2ta ' ona Mw, L A. Morgan
TNI 1taternent ... meet With thl 0r1w ~ e. Colt• ......_ o.t o4ill a..!r., 7 ~ ~ Cat· TN. tt41Wfnent ... ftl9d with the counrc, Clertc of Cringe Cowtty on 12621 one ., ..., • Clllf t2e.2S Oourlt't Cl9r'k of Or-. County on
June • 1814 ~ Lyndia Todoroff, 311 MeM 0rNie TIM~ ie'condueted by: 91'1 June f3, 1114 -,.....
Pu °' Co.I Delly aun. e. Colt• Mell. Celt. m lndfl:tlitual ~ Orange cw. ~
Pttot ~. Jul'tanr ti. 20. 11M ~ bulilnell II~ by: In CJal 8elerl PllOt .luftil~, .My I. 11, ~814
F85 L. TOdOtott ,,,.. etMlfnll'lt WM fled wtlh the ,._
---P\ll.IC---..,-TIC( __ ......, .. 1 TNI etlt9ment W11 fMad Witt! tN ='la~ of Ofanoa ca::~ •-~ ~.
Cowlty Clerk ot <>ninge ~ on ~ Orange °°"' o.llV •---'"""""'--""-'~--ACtmOUI .._.. ~ta. OJ Cotltl4 ,.,_ 'Moe June 2t. It, Mt I, 13, 1114 PIC'n'TIOUl WM
tum 8TA'l"DmWY Piiot .. _ ...... ~ 1• 20 1~ -'1f Mm ITAR-IT ' Til9 ~ Pll'aon9 _.. doing _,. ••• .,.Jlit/ I. ~. ' .,... •-I.I' -TIC( TN flllowtt'I P*'*lft II ~ ~-· ,.. r~nu ~-NATIONAL IHVHTIOATtONAL rtaJC Jl)TJC( Ptennou9 ....... J f .. 0 H IM 0 ~A M I 1. y
REVIEW IOAAO. lulte 20t 11751 ... ~ ---IT•m.pn, CHU•O,f'AOTIC CINTIA
9roollflur's* St .. Wiit~. CA PICTITIOUI MllU•M The folDwtr'l pereoM .. ~ J•ronll'fto ftl•H I 11 2117 i
t2tt3 NAmtTATErT tMW1W1a: .---~.~~CA Thomae 'V . KMle)'. 32 landttOM. The t ....... ~ ~ c10tnQ H1W ~OHi UNl.IMIT£D t2tl1 . ~ CAK .... ~7~t._ I03 I ,.~ buelnlM •: 11.lCTAQHIC HL£ 1275 PomoNAw. Cotta~ cA "°"" L. Aotl. o.c ., 141 _,. .......... ........,, · .,.._,. COMMUHICATION l~U. '2ta1 P9llllrtno Aft l2S7 C.O... Mw.
ft9n, °*'dofa. CA 11740 2tU Mita. wee 110. O!Wlfa, CA 1'NI ~ le c.ih1lld 11f: CA. llUt Thia bl.llllneM .. conductad by: In f2Mt • lnclMchMll ~ • .,J '* ..,._ -~ bV; Nt
'""°°'p019tld WOda.tlOn ~ 1lila ...__II~~ Wlnle K. Nf/lt 071 ........ 11•••flf
"'-' I Pl'1'*9NP Corpoietton Avti, Coet• ...... CA llV7 .., I.. ,_., 0 c ~~Mley fled with the Olen~. P1111idMt TNI ...,.,..,. w ._ .. "'9 TNI •a1s..,11 .. lled wltft IN
County Cllf1I ot C::. County on lllll ......,. .... fled .tth tn. CounlY ce.ti ot 0r-. ~ °" ~ a.rti of Or-. c...,. on .June 25 1..... _ Countr on ot <>r.,. COuttty on Mer 21. ,.... ,_. .-.; Jt. ,..
• r~Mey24,1M4 ,_,. ~Or J. ~. .....
PublllNd Orange COMt ~ "'*'*' 0r-.. COlll ~ No ?i °* PllJ ' ~-··'* °'""' c... Dair Piiot June 29. jut, I. ts 20, 1"4, ~ PIOt JuM 1, 11, tt;H , ,.... .NM a. 11 • tt; ttt. _::, Piiot JWN a , °""'I; 11. 20, 1114 . .... " ...... ,,..
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THE DAIL\' PILOT DEADLI 'E
u•:AOLl"tE
11 :30 a.m.
1:30 p.m
'1:30 p.m .
1:30 p.m
1:30 p.m.
3;()() p.m.
:S;OO p.m.
CLA lfl£0 OFFI £ KO R Pl' 81.1C:ATIO
\lond•' "'•'· Ttltphon~ Service:
Mond•)·friday
8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M.
8u1tnn• Counter:
Monday-Friday
8:00 A.M.·5:30 P.M .
Tu••d•' \Ion. ~tdn.-•dl\ u ...
lhu"d•' · \\rd.
f'rid•~ lhitn.
"'a1urda' fddl\
~itnrl•~ Fri.
CANCELLATION a
CORRECTION I
('.anrfllallooa and t'Orrtt•1lon1 m1y
IH made on &10\e dtadlin ... •• abo"i"·
PltHt aalt for 1 rent'tllatlon
rtumbfr whtn unullln~ rour 'Id.
ERRORS:
htelt your 1d d1ily and rtport
C'n-ora immedlattl)'. Tht DAILY
PILOT aHumtt llablllty for tht fint
lnrorreet ln•ertlon only.
CLASSIFIED 642-5678
........ Salt .............. -................. 111_. __ ......... la1t
...,tew .. .......,al __ __.1111....,. ..... al 1112 ltatral t•I
IALlllllLI
Like new dupltlx top qu•ll·
ty COMtructlon 3 Bdrm
unit up 2 Bdrm do.ft. TM
b91t location onlY a '" atepa to the bMCh bu1
11111 quiet and out of ttte
tnfffc. ,1111 price
$455,000. 751~191
C::SElECT -P PROPER:YIES
MlllTMlllT
Beeu11ful 8omtMtMt 3
Bdtm 3 be wfUI ~
In muter IUlt• and lky-
ltght owr the tub. Quality
fNtur• abOund In thll popular model. Bultt In
1980 with a touc:tl of SM
FrancllCO. FuU Pflce only
S158,000. 751~181
C:SElECT
..... PAOPER1'5
Diii& llYE l1IAL One of ttie b91t .,... of
CdM. 3 Br 2~ Ba ftxar
with load• of po1entl.i.
Atlltlng pr1ce ssoa.ooo.
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
•••1111&111• Well loc. 2br 2ba. dbl gar,
ck>M to Balboe cntr, blk
to bay. 2 blk• from oceen.
priced right $240.000 •••• MUIAllT-
2bf 2ba. form din rm, View
oc.wt & Cat.ilna, OM of
.. lllAT lllllllLE ¥
IT 10.lllt.
Townhofne near beach
wtth commuRlty pool and spa ...... ,. ···~ .., ... ..... ,,
Vwy qui.t yet centrlltrild ioe.i.. 2 1at09 meat« bldr~. 2'A bathe. bric* ~. laundry ....
end2-cat~~ ... , ........
Ul-1111 " 111·1111
few w/lrg patio & cMc:k, 1 :m-.mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil MCUrlty enlry S27DJ..~· II MlchHI R.E. '7a..e890
OlllAPPUL
Ad0tablll Curwd drive. 3
bdrm. epack>ua. eunny
eolonfal with hu99 pool, tun yard. Bani( repo, now
vacant, Old CdM lo-
eatlon. 1425,000. .......... .....
Magrilfloent vtew •tate
c:uttom 5 Br .• fWnlfy rm. &
5 Bath. new poot. epa. on .,,, ecre • all !'9f\lrbl9Nd •
lmmed mow In, trtlCM or
INN option ok. 197&,000
f0t lllnt ftnanelng. R & H
lnv.tmentt 751·5ND
llUIMTll.._ •-nUTD 111,lll
GrHt locatlonl Near
bMeh, lhopplng center
and 1chool1. M•ny
Mletlltlel lnctude com·
munlty pool. tenn11,
buhtbell, clubhowM,
~ I picnic lllM. Call
SALLY SHIPLEY or
JOYCE OA80LT.
GE ;c..,r) vino
•llllRl.at 111111111.-0ut.t location W11h Otrden
View. Llelht and My 3 Br.
MMtw bedroom rttr..i.
3 Ba''"'=:" IMnO room • Witt bar
and formal dining room.
Aak for Loll Egan.
1
lllllllWI Mt-lat
un-mam $549,000. Pl1me IOO, ex•
Clut. equtttri.n comm, 4
bdrm, 3'~ ba. ltV. otn ' '*'""""• trpto. i c.r gar, on 111ere IMdeceped ttr· rain. Cell owner tot eppt.
720-MCIO 7$94282
L81•1-l•LIT ~ remodeled 2
l10f'f homl. Greet out• dOot M'lg .... wtth
aunny 'petto end root tu~--8paclou1 a bdnn fll'nlly hOfftt wtttl
I
I
fotfNI *""' + fllmly room. Live ln IUxwy end
tft~ .. .,_ ilOIWIMi otfeiM Oft lido ,.,.,
"'6.000. 131aMOO
..
It
Ull llU
Prestigious Bayfront Villa, 6 Br. 7~ Ba,
pool, spa, large boat docks, $4.850,000.
Charmlng Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45' lot,
courtyard & 1rg deck, pier & alip.
$1,100,000 .
Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace,
beam ceilinga. Xlnt financing. $420,000.
un.•mumMT_..
Jetty & Bay vlew, newly decorated Mai
Kai, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio. $695,000.
PIWaA -llUIAllT Ocean & Jetty viewa, marine room. 4 Br,
3 Ba, 3700 aq. ft., car parking. $1,285,000.
UTltll PUii UYPlllT
Spect.acular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up,
2 Br, 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1,350,000. .... ..... _
Panoramic OC8D & city view, 5 Br 3 Ba.
apidoua en~ home. 1100,000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
I. I' f I ', ' f • • ,,
Lit U1 Helt Y ••
Sell v-,,.,.,,,,
The Olly Plot offtn ·,.., thll nact size id
• u 11Pku• Paa•" ••• t• just $25 per day, • 2 .,. .. $45.
WMlllt a pkUt, • we1 photo1nipti It fO i
JOU at a ........ dwft. ..........
Cll Cle11111M
642-5678
•r::....=-:..:. ~
"" .. ,_ ,_ .,.i. -··
1~i 1 i'i 1 1 •I
H 1 T H N
11 I' I I
I
· WE 'RE MOVING
TlllRIY
.1111 Ill
1401 lut ..... ..,
(Hit ft &atheJ't) I
~tilJ/vl{m,
~~ * ()/J-8494
J407 L c.t ...,., ca
RIVER ROCI
HOIES
J
/ (
'
• •
I
J
I
a,.. ........ .....n
.
l· (
~.
DAlY
Pl OT
SERVICE·
DllECTORY
pk.19 tt-4 IAVINE MIRROR
and the HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER~ WICSMlday It no U1ra c:t\ergel
CALL TOOAYll
&11 .. L.
Your Delly Piiot S«vtoe DlrtotOty ~tttlv9
ICl-G21 ut.aot
ADDITION'S. OESION !Ur'.11.r Wil&; to -.:..an::.-LANDSCAPE & Cl.f!AH. teFTIMMMa@ CARE "iiLlfllllll ::mLwttnG ln-
ANO REMODEL ~ your chl1d In my UilfJm..a• MIST UP. 5 Vrt •KW· ft91 est. We Teh Care Of Your t lellation AeM. Consult·
Uc.,.., 13t·n45 home. Rua. rtlH. Aemodel/Repelrt: COM.;.I .Dave 780-9077 Peta, Plant•. Pti*. Mall • ~··l!.~ ant >.Mlgnmt. 581·8590 =--.,...------
Room Addltlont.. remodel, Mt--4785 a11. 5 end r..id Llc'd, bonded, LANDSCAPE SERVICE HAULING OR MOVING etc. Howatd l4t-3Al& Student~-NORMS WALLCOVERINO f8ttdal
,,, .. ,, •• ' d-6gn, W.W. t at. '"' For •.. 552-1142. Tr• trim, Lawn M.ant. Ito.. Beet Rat•' ..... •t. La9'sc1tla1 I.le. CAI. T1388N Insured F1"3~~7..!01m rofl. •tU1•or~1nC1~"'&1~lll"J."""'™~:r.:::
Conetructton.136-3190 ltnlce CUSTOMREMOOltNG frMest .kw\541-t«t 24tlr.e31-1oe3 PROFU mslcXPiisEAV ••<71,.)641-e101 •• '~...,.. HandTcep. Rudlng.
Ah Ull• llYlll We COl1 L .... And Do The Shrubs.IT,.. Trim CorYlpl .... Can 8onded 20 Yrt In .,.. PM.,lliJ Math, I.Ing 641-nM
W =U. ..... " __ .. S..t. (714) 241-1488 gardening competltlW ELDERLY bXY el ftt T MoWMney MS.-5 t24 ... ....... * ..... , ... * erect teec:her 17 yrt ••Pl' Alrllne IChlduted tllg.htl to • ,,_, your ,.., .,.., ,.. prlcet Chucti 642·2873 .. • • ' co1i...... ..a..-~ -If b'"'""' b1lect Sharon 1 Catallna from John plaae zlnca at your stlp. , Gramnia B.,b • HouM' .._.. pr ... _.. ....,.,,_ By TA 548-5112 1 -"' 3 5,"
Wayne Alr90f1, 4 ftlQhtt Call todeyt Ma-0Tt2 TH lrMI ..... 642-4274 after 5:30 Llat•tlat ~~al~~;. 4~~~:,9 Ev• ' Eflci('°'121 592-4832 ... d•r· It'• not ... == • • Lawn-.tvut>-tr ... 1nat1111 Ina Jt1 a mt Fonnai Omo Lf Pwtn/le,.U • ltnict penatye Onty S30 ... AH TeaM• l Acout11o Tr" trlmmlnO & AemoYea PM Fr• champagne '°' any P tlal Eo18liCDTtMINd. ~ way. P.P. Group rat• fOf ~ /XCCNtd. Ft91 •t. Kevin 813-1 RototlHlng-Lewn malnt. S~RVB~~~ ~Lt .. ~~'~... occation S20hr 845-8084 AICtrAb siRoA's NMt Pa1eMI a Text'"9. . WO<d Pf009AlflU
..... Cherter9 to Ca .• Computet. Mod. r.... Fr.. ,,.. tilt ~!5 "' ~ ........ .._ ... , p 1 t/""-l f t .~.., .. 25a A neea, ~ & Plf• Muk:o & N9V 758-1020 CounMI. M9Q 842-7047 lltttdlal clean houN. 540-0857 IHa~ Newr>Of1 Custom alntlng n ""' ,.. • · -...-v aon11 pro~•· 851-1041
A ct Ca"•" lldla1 PUllll IUITIJO i~ ~:~.~~~~ like a CLEANER ... OUSE? drfcl(, ilock. Concrete. (~~:~rycu:1~ ........ A'ROBIN TYPO SVC+ •-.. a. -QualltyWOf"I( f t 557_.508 ExperUH/SuppllH/Llc. Stucco Low cost. lie, ex· -WP' 111 Corresp, Prtnl, & ~--~ ..... -""!"'~--1*~ cablnett, cabfnet 4255t3 • ~e;4o, Leo Jacquellne548-0e51 perlwork.831-1t818ob RAINBOWPAINTINO H1trn•111-1111 •tudentprOfCt.642-3351 ...... lraAMllMn fedng, bare 4 fonnk:e SunM1 Coat Oleanlng CUtt Brick·SI Oulltty It our pollcy SERVINO H.B .• C.M.. -
Prompt ~ --countert<>P-. 549-5747 Fr• Eatlmetu. Grt Prle99 laa•J111a L tbrul CSMnl . Apia Block-~te-s:::O 850-M4tl JEFF Lie 8G88 CdM. Irv., H.8 F.V .. taalat
vice. FectOty trained C~at17 Rl•~:omm·~~~·r! Cer~Palntng R;>alre ~°""'· ofc:s. E~'d FrM Rel'• Fr .. est. 541-9.412 EXTERIOR-TOP QUAl.ITY Dr•ln• clear from f15 . wAM wiilRD tect'lnlcilnt. S.t-3077 --..-44.,.,.,., ........., 1v. 10 yrs •KP· ell phtMS Incl .. umatn 75 l-9038 -work for your$. Free .. t. R I f te di." etc WINDOW WASHING Carpentry Servloe RES tDICOMM'LllNO mobile hm. eenlOf di• -•••ilt ltat Ref's. Dale &48-5&37 epa r auoe ' • ...,, ·. QUALITY" 831-2029 Alts 1,Wn Repalr-Remocl--'ddlllons 26 Y1• Do my own wortc count •RC953-4293 PTL Pror Hakpng, baby •111e<. ltmct It b Anytime M&M 642"9033
XAfisf E.6T1n. Custom Doors-etc. S4MHO Uc 2J904 t At 646-8128 comp live ln-«it. expef". l@ Hee P1intlng, lnllut. Ex!.*1 ~ & RepaJr It t • .. EJI....,. !Cl&ftafra 15 yrs exp eff"'da...,-.... 1 5711 REPAIR SERV MODEL Oualtty at loweet rat•. 31 yrs exp 18 ""I In area. I I -· wk contemp oll pal:t Doors-Windows-Patloa-,...,. ',._ · · "" .,... -• • • Fr" .... , D1--... 2-4"... Lie .~""""'5 .l.:.~ ..... .,. •s•ta"'ie•1 ........ r• ..... u"'L·.~tf!!'-i't•a""11 ' • Al Addi I Gen mamt. etectlcat, Bobby-Mobile Speclllitt ... ••"" ~ ~v....,.., ....-v .. ,., .... _ " ,,. nu<tes,pottalt1 643 terat1on1-t on• 1'1--•e-'il-plumb Cr•"' 536-4119 Ouallty hou1eclaenlng 63051701 eft 846.-8002 INT/""vr ..,. Y•••• ~-,,_. contractort who perl0tm 35yn exp Jef'ry 546-4-413 ..i ... _ -v 'Thoroufth, respontlble r ..,. • •v -~..... S lnClud
Alfblt tant Cearrttt EES AMERICAN HANDYMAN local res. Pat 417-3254. ..,..! ~~s :.oom2.o4:229 + Prt,.i::!'iat. = ~= m~erlal• ,,,!,'* Pa;f;tng Areu • Repairs 1 Carpentry. Windows. ,. nat · 11 ctl be llcenMd. Unlicensed ,~mT§Tf~~!'m:Jm~ Resurtaclng-Sutcoatlng bflveways, pa1IOS, paths. opped/removed. Clean-Paint, feoces etc. Yes Rellable. honest. reason-*l·1 •l"IM* lllfllLI p•-.-, Gen reparri-carpetlng-contrector• should so Ind • S&S 631-4199 etc No job 100 smell up, new lawns. 751-3476 Jesus Is Lord 8-47-2367 tble •11P. local couple. ' _...,._ · Ample refs. 673-7227 CLEAN & EXPERT lnl/e1tt fr" •1 Loe.I ref tlle-palntlng-clHnlng. stete In their ldV«tltlng Relptayed or new. Cell !Of A te "-'-m -Reas Mickey 53e-o553 Cteen Ups•Tree Trimming Repairs Painting Drywall Over 25 ye&rtexpef"ience lOyrt exp. (714)838-691 t lendscaP.1n9 963-7484 Contractort and con-IC*:ial & tr" •ts. Art a MS..uua( CkiW C --Yard M1ln1 •Haullng 81 ·F ( · V«y thOfough Gd refs Lie T 116 428 730 1353 • .UtMrl. cont~t Mary
p.m. 8-47-7901 XO+o hftXlt lf YOUR lrt MIKE 850-3263 Gary c ;.-:.:;~;i·•esPTL Dependable & axpef"'d -• -PAINTER NEEDS WORKI a .. u., Grondle at 558-4088 wtth tieu/lea ... u., HOME. ,YOUR CAR LIKE christlan mother to care Commerclal/Relldenllal 546-8096 or 652-9522 ST&IYIH Oii.Liil lnl/Ext, celling•. reftn cab. -.. , ...... any quntlonL Contrac-
NEW -494·5854 for 2" 12 yr old. non/skr. Landscape Maintenance So your old Jalopy finally STllllTS •Ytll OI, <28> yrs exp., work'guer. _,.. _..., tor'• Slate LlcenH
u : pee. t, II you're not 1hopplng _:_ot• of TLC 548-8759 Ouellty Service, reu. lie. laali~· conked out and left you Orange Co. OrlQlnal Davis Palnllng 96-4-3837 lk:#'15232 * 548~2 13 Board, 28 Civic: Center
beth, ofc, rm ldd. patio classlfled, you iqy be DAV CARE In my home. bonded 20 yrs In area BUMP JOBS & with a loss of drive? Find Student Movers. lnsurld QUALITY PAINTING, FAIR Quality Roofing: Sr. citizen Plue, Room 690, Senta
cov/dckt. ~ wndw Lie. paying 100 muc h 1•.-, 10 6 yra. Pt/full-time McWeeney Landscape SMALL MOVING JOBS a dependable car in Lie T124--436 641-8-427 PRICES FREE EST. dlK Refs. Lie. •3-488n. Ana. CA 12701. ~5. Steve 547-eG78 642-~78 Louise, C.M 548-ao68 &45-5124 MIKE646-1391 ctasllled 642-~78 NEWWarehouseStOfege Cell John, 631-2050 I< Funke &45-0113
Clerks
CIRCLE K-IAIKETS
NOW HlllNC
OUllUS I IUlll
Interviews dally from 11 :00
a.m.-12 noon at 1390
North Pacific Coast Hwy ..
Laguna Beach (on PCH &
VleJo)
Call (714) 494-9233 for more into.
, ... TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZnE
ACROSS
• 1 Miner's nail
5 Power units
• 9 Cloister VIP
14 Soft drink
15 Bird
• 16 S . American
plaln
-~ 17 Lett a bus
18 Aid
20 Wager
22 --France.
Fr. premier
• 23 Bef0<e pref
24 Wrong pref
25 Encircles
-· 26 Indian area
27 Nol bright
• 28 Wise. sf
31 Valleys
34 -and true
• 35 Self-conceit
36 Skip over
• 37 Dull routine
38 Pleased
39 Edge
• 40 Trims girth
41 Wasteland
• 42 Excitement
43 Spring
~Container
• 45 Customary
2 3
14
17
·-23
4
47 Hombre
48 Witch
51 Set apart
53 -Cross
55 Primitive
weapons
57 Cairo dancer
58 Puerto Rican
city
59 To sheller
60 Keyway
6 1 Drive fast
62 Pattern
63 -d'oeuvr-es
DOWN
1 Rascal
2 Pivotal
3 Similar
4 Frull
5 Lawrence of
6 Lawgiver
7 Arter pref
8 Move on
snow
9 Changed
10 Urbane
11 Orchestra
stand
12 At any time
13 Digits
19 Looked glad
/ '
PREVIOlls
PUZZLE SOLVED
21 Andy's pal
25 Profits
26 Progeny
27 Dress in a
fussy way
29 Miid oath
30 Pea shells
31 Mrs Copper-
field
32 Circled by
33 Large auto
34 Court attatr
37 Collects
38 Hard liquor
I.I
40 Hit hard
41 Crave
44 Hesitated
46 Because
47 Stopover
48 Greeting
49 Protection
50 Insects
51 Reptiles
52 Muddy track
53 Without
others
54 Mixed dish
56 Cured meat
10 11 12 13
Daily Pilat · · · · · · ·· ·
PART TIME
\1otor Rou te Availa ble
Newport B..ach ar ea, three
hours ~r day. Earn approx.
600 per month. Ca U I I :00
to 4:00 PM. A k for Bruce
Emsle)'.
CIRCULATION DE.PT.
642 -4321 FDE
ORANGE COAST DAILY PI LOT
JlO W BAY ST •COSTA MESA CA 9'676
At; t IJ tA It 1 1 tlf'fNt ff t Nlf"i U•t.
Newspaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
tlpWut .. 1100 1.,.1 .... 1 .. 1 .......,..u...,t .. ;;;,,;;;;___..s ....... 1e11 .....
I I
I
I II
L
Satarday, Jue 3t
ARIF.S (March 2 l-April 19): News received which buoys spirits;
scenario hi&hJWtts chanae, travel, variety, speculation and romance.
Green liaht flashes for unique project which will enable you to
showcase talents. Gemini, Virgo, SagJttarius persons play key roles.
TAURUS (ApriJ 20-May 20)! focus on home, security, family
relationships and eotentiaJ for anaeasing income. Accent diplomacy,
realize that you pin by usina "velvet '1ove ... Take stock. be aware of
pro'perty value. obtain professional estimate of prized possessions.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Define tennes, avoid scattering forces,
realize that relative in transit may be sincere but could be confused. Do
your own research. Shake off tendency to be envious of associate or
member of opposite sex. Pisces plays key role.
CANCEll(June21-JuJy 22): Focus on necessities, basiccosu, time
and motion studies. You'll IOC3te what you need, you ·u be rewarded for
past effons. you could also be madly in love. increased income
potenual is haahJi&hted. Capricorn plays outstanding role.
LEO (July 2J..AUJ. 22l: Reach beyond current cxpeclations.. Cycle ~iah. the sky is the limit! You'lff1".llsb assianmcnt. pol>ulafity. will
mause, you'll be at special place at riaht moment. Scenano hiabli&hts
adventures. creauvity, iqtcnsified relationship.
VIaOO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Liaht is sbed on area previously
oblCurcd dark or probibtted. Many now look to rou for lcadenbip. pidance~ Member of opposite sex is 0 enthralled' and wanu you to
know it. Leo;-A.Quarius native play paramount roles.
UBL\ (Sel>L 2.l-Ocl. 22): What a.ppcarcd a !CtblCk act~allr, WO~I
in your t.vor. The delay pve you time for 1 9CCOnd 1W1Dd. Waib comes true tiUneh pays off, loved one benefits and you re ~ 11
mu.It. tuD.r emplWiJ on ft'iends. bc)pes, l"OftlpCle ud '"lcrioul
C O NNHl
. Hf' AOl fl
'>4i'. I ltlll
intea.=-P.o (Oct. 2);.Nov. 21): Define ~s.. make ~.be
aware o( body im.ec. Means keep miol~~ ... diet.
auaition. ~or ub favor, ~ ~UOG. um1e1 you ~ sn:ltilious IOC:ial a&ir. Oemin1, s..ittanus penona ftpn: ~ ...
eead/AornAMJS (Nov. 22.iDec. 21): Good kiMi ~ bWl'!'r11 11-;~~~iliiiiiil
nvet, 11~· ritual values. ability ao commuakMewida **wlioll W.. Md • arc .. ditrwent." OudiaC pllm. 1D1D • 1111 r ~ -rcaJiic di t many Will be relYtillifgpoa ,_,,.,. IM.
·· CAPIUCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): FocUs oa "• --. ~ 111Q1oG. baV-..tioo. •ana1)1ical, dilOtf'D lldi•m.--kellll'JG9
will ~· ror your riP.ts.. ~y \'-=-""""" _,. i...,;IUCICI •ter pictUft. StiC:t IO--.~ I ...... 1
MatJdlUl(J&JO.Feb. ll):~ea·· ..... twia..._Doe'SdDUIYthi~~lriSlilll .,. rluhrr .. ,., ....... ~.joilal .] ........... ...
mrtllil-. Ta._ Ub(ta~---•1 lio.
.... (Feb. l,._Mil'Cll~.~..-... ....... I ---mde~ ca.-. t.lll h;~ ........ rlllilt,_ ..
ailllblr ofbii111 ielf.fttiUt. You11 _.a ~lllClilt"-ro-'b ~ ................. ..., .. " ...... ltiepdtllU"1
I
} 1 I
7 t
J I
'7.t lTD 2 • Willi£ 1• .81 hdJI Dr! f I L. .., ..
Ma-1217-.
., .. iiiiiO 'ftl •• rt ••
Atl, ...... ... .... a 1200. oeo.c tlUI
8EU..tt74311
'
:: ..
~o Or11191 Cout DAILY PILOT/Frldoy, Juno 20, 1814
'84 CITATION II $5966
PAYMENT PLAN s~g\r:.
60 mos $996 74 or t1aoe Down Dlv5 ta• 111; & ooc teM Oelerreo
paymenl pnce 58578 90 APR 14 92 On apprOYe<I cr e<111
(1G1 AH1 1AOET124560) ~0981 )
'84 S-10 PICKUP
$5966
$11 SPER MONTH PAYMENT PLAN TO OWN
60 mos 5996 74 CUl'I or 1rade CSOWn plus tu lie & OOC tee Deterre<I
pyml poce 58586 90 APR 1 4 92 On appt"~ cr edll
(1GCBS17E823221Jl (29421
'76 DOMI ASNll WOii
•
'84 i;:AMARO .
$7566
,_lfll~_ .. ,..... .
60 mot. $912 .25 aith or lrtde dOwn plus ,
PER
MONTH
pym•. Pnce $t1 .016.2t APR 14.92. On pproved crec:l!t.-
{tGtAP972'EL178845) (1877)
'84 CORVETTES
EXCELLENT SELECTION
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
#1 VOLUME TRUCK '
DEALER
WE HAVE THE HARD TO FIND
S-10 BLAZERS • S-10 PICK UPS
VANS • VAN CONVERSIONS
K-BLAZERS • SUBURBANS
FULL SIZE PICKUPS
CREWCABS • DUALLY
EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF 4x4's
'IO CITATION 4DR. '79 VW SClllOCCO
'84 CAVAt:IER WAGON
$6366
~~~~~121 ~~-mol~'.82~ or tract. clO'M'I plUs WI, lie. . IM. ~...j
~price $9188.78.APR 14.92. On anrwov9d crlldM. ttG1AC35P0£J22691t9) (N27)
'84 510 BLAZER
$8866
PAYMENT PLAN s 1 78 PER
MONTH TO OWN
&o mos. 11370 cash or lracM oown 1)11'9 sax. lie & Doc.'"'· Oelen"ed
pr11ytnen1 price s121n 1e APR 14.92. On IPCltOWd credit.
i1GBCSUl89£B2237731 !277tl
'84 CHEVY VAN $7966
-$168PER
PAYMENT PLAN r8'/i.:N
eomos 589t.t2cuhortracMOOWnplu1t•11.lic .ox.tees APR 14 92
Oef8fr8d payr'MO( prb $I 1.627 .28. On IPJ)tOVed Creclll
(1GCCGtSDeE7194033) 12821)
'71 llOYA CN
6 cvl, at, PIS. air $3488 ,P'W. tit.
(781ZUP
VI at
Pl•ol' $2388 (72'0SFV )
5 spel.
c'ess. wh.
(36341W ) $3788 6 CYI, •t, p/s, _ $2688 air, cc. AM/FM
(WVNJ)
'13 MAL CL WAG.
V6, "'·PIS, air, c.c
pell , root rack
( #153025 ) $AVE
'82 DATSUN PU
5 sPd cass. $ 8 sunroof 44 8 <ZE0722ll .
'IO OLDS CUTLASS
• 0,. V6. ot, Pl•, $4988 air, llt, 8 trk, r
wh. vt. 11 ETPl361
'81 CHIV 'hT PICKUP
6 cyl, at, $5988 Pl" AM/FM
(lAl 15551
'11 TOYOTA C•LICA OT La
4 CYI. 5 sPd, PIS, air.
cost. Int. cass wh.
(1EHA7J2) $6488
'13 CAMAH CPI
$7988
1-, ----/. -~ l' J: . '
'79 CH•YS co•DO•A
\18 , at, pis, air, P/W,
ttt, P/seat, lthr. cc. vi,
wh1 cov . (ZALX338l $3988-
'81 MUST. GHIA
6 cyl, al, PIS, air, stereo
shadow kit
(1AHW646l $4488
'80 TOYOTA CORONA
• cyl, s sPd , PIS.
air cass, lw
C48JZUA I $5288
'82 VW YAllAGOll '"'·''""· $AVE c asselle
!1GAN9A6 )
'79 CADILLAC CPI DIYILU
De Ele-;iance. VI, at, p/1, air, $ 988 pw, Pd l. llt cc, cass. p/se•t. 6
wires 11? lop {137WCUI
•
'79 TOYOTA SUP•A
6 cv1. at, p/1, air, pw, tit, cc.
slereo, 2 tone. wheals, wnroor
( #6006(W4) •
' ./
' I --_,
$5488
,
'71 CAP•ICI
AOr. VI, at, p/s, air, $3988 p/w, pell, tit, p/seat, vt
(1131290)
'IO TOYOTA TlllCIL SI
4 CYI, 5 spel, P/S, $4288 air, cess.
(112SLL )
, '13 M•D llA ... I. 111U
4 cvl. at, p/s, 1lr, cass, -$5988 sr wind, cc. whls, c•mpar
shell 12E06911 l
'14 CO•YITTI VI, at, p/1, 11r, pw, pell, tit.
cc c1ss, lfhr, alo. whffl1, 2
tone brn (1Jo.t70Q l $AVE
'12 TOYOTA CILICA
·~;:.'~.•Ir, $7988
(ZRN472l
'13CWH
V6, at, Pl\. air, slerf!'O, Ill wh.
rallv wh, 110MJ64l)
~
' / J_ I I •
'6788
I
'77 ClllY 'h TO• 4x4
VI, 1t, p/s, air, SAVE CISI. •Ir• wind.,
wheels (JA721lSI
'IO DAT. 200SX
4 cvl. 5 •Pd, air, cass $4788 Fllptop
(l7JYTM )
'11 TOYOTA CILIC,A eT
• cvl,
1
'""' $5988 tit, AM/FM
l18WW3771 •
'79 TOYOTA C ... SIDA
6 cvl, at, P/I, air
pW, PCll, tit, am1fm
(162YTQ) $5288
'14 DODel UMCllA ...
VI, at, p/1, elr. PW Pdl,
Ill, tiuckat 11et1, 2 tone.
(1JER7041 SAVE
.... MONT& CA•LO
V6, at, p/1, air, pW
Tit, c•s• wh.
2 tone tOtlZIV)
•
$4988
I
•
t-----------------------~· .............. ________ ~--~~~~~~~~ ;Fourth shows to boom musicall~ .......,.
§ Want to celebrate the Fourth of July in grand
:_ musical style without going to the Hollywood Bowl?
~ Head for the Pacific Amphitheater in Costa Mesa
:E where the Orange County Pacific Symphony will present
it a fireworks extravaganza and concert offamiliarclassics
....... from Bernstein to Sousa to .. Star Wars,., featuring pianist
.
COVER PHOTO: Special ltoliclay edition of
aJDueJDeal put flreworb, 111d a1 ~· bent at Six
Flap Magic Moutala, will be Ht off Wecl:Da4ay lllgllt
for •kit.on at Dtsaeylud ud g.o~·· Berry Fann.
~ Leonard Pcnnario with Gershwin's .. Rhapsody in Blue." will perfonn in a pre«>nccrt program. Tickets will cost -g Gates open for picnics at 5 p.m. and coooen band S7foradultsandSSforchildrenand seniorcitizensat the
~ medleys at 6 p.m. Starting at 7:30, musical director Keith park entrance, 460 I Walnut Ave .. Irvine . . ~~~= ~.~m~uy's ~!_ri:oti~ /.T~..r-,.' Pr~s fro~ th:t;~~ w_i~~:C gs;<1 to prod~frc
reserved seating and SS for lawn space. · symphony orchestras!_ anJf4 open reftiilM ,E This concert marks the first summer appearance by programs for the children of Orange County.
O: the symphony since its Fourth of July performance that .. . .. • • • f
attracted more than 20 000 listeners ur Irvine several Arytcn~ Fest -three ho~rs o . patn~ttc
years ago ' celebrat1on in fireworks and entertainment including
· • • • songs by Pat Boone. all·American antics by the Great
This year that venue -Concert on the Green in American Music Company and the Rams' Cheerleaders
Heritage Park -will be filled Wednesday by the Irvine and gyrations by Van's Break.dancers -will be staged
Symphony Orchestra. Before the pyrotechnic finale, Wednesday at Anaheim Convention CenteL .
Henry Brandon and his concert band will provide Gates will open an hour before the 7 p.m . start of of
patriotic tunes, jazi rhythms and Broadway show tunes the show billed as .. the world's largest outdoor pyro
as well as an old·fasbioned siog·a-long. spectacular ... For infonna1ion about 1ick:ets ($10 and $8
Several muhi·talented Orange County youth groups for reserved scat in&. $5 ceneral admission and $2
: Gooo TASTES
~-~~---"" -----
Truffle food
_as appealing
as ambiance
ByBEVERLYBUSBSMJTB
Dllllr .... Cci. 0 • 1
If ever you travel up Newport Boulevardjust north
of 17th Street, surely the Golden Truffle bascaugbt your
eye, with itsgoldcnawningandcolorful flower boxes.
It looks so appealing. rvebad it on my to.try list
since it opened last December. When good reports began
to trickle in, it became a musL
Forme, luncb,eitheroutsideonafincday,orin the
airy, tile-floored interior, with its wood-topped tables, isa
particulardelighL The day ofour visit. a fresh melon
soup, a stiJJ.life in pastel peach. slightly chunky in texture,
tasted cool, refreshing, delightfully aocented with minL
Poached Salmon witbdi0($8.9S)wassplended-
beautifully cooked and handsomely served. The accom·
panying vqetable was a ratatouille with a different
accent.. featuring cauliflower and mushrooms-d.is-
tincti ve and delicious. ·
In the wann goat cheese salad, circles of the rich,
IN TERMISSION
discount to children undCt l 2 and tenior citizap~ phone
999.g990_ • • •
Backyard barbecuers wantina sarby public fi~
worksdisplays to finish thecveninac:a.DIQSO M9in Beach
Park in Laguna Beach at 9 p.m., The Dunes 9Quatk park
1n Newport Beach at 8 p.m., Huntinaton Bcacb Hifi
School Stadium at 8 p.m .• and the fiesta at Fountain
Valley Recreation Center in Mile Square Park.
•••
~·j--~~~~~:.:
to 10 p.m . Tuesday at Bowers Museum. 2002 N. Main
St., Santa Ana. The Eddie Montana Band will perform
throughout the evening and an instructor will be on hand
to teach "cowboy" dancing.
Admission is $6 for adults and $3 for children and
will include hot dogs, beans and non..akx>holic beverages.
A no.host bar will be a vailable.
The museum also will be open for viewin1 of thr
"George Catlin: America's First Environmentalist"
exhibition and the National Gcographic..film_ .. National
Parks: Promise and Challenge."
I i&htly &rilled cheese contrasted effectively with the crisp
coolness of the greens, which were lightly dressell with a
slightly sweet vinaigrette.
The backdrop for our luncheon, the handsome
display of desserts and several difl'erent salads to carry
homewasalrnostimpossibletoresisl. Wesuocumbedto
the lime tart. which was deeply. z.estily lime-y, and made
mental notes to return f ortake-oat orders of the Greek
chicken salad and the pasta/seatood salad.
MUSICALS AT ANCHOR
The current lunch menu, with prica from SS. 7S for
a la carte salads to SI 0.2S, varies from grilled scalJoJ)I and
avocado salad with spinach and shallots to medallions of
beef in Oloron sauce or shrimp and fettucine with
taJTagon.
After such a delectable luncheon, I was cager to
return to The Golden Truftle for dinner. And al tho~ it
was good. it was not as outstandinaas the lunch.
It did bqioauspiciouaJy, however, with fresh
smoked steelhcat trout ($6). Pink as salmon, presented
with capers, sour cream and fresh dill. it was a happy
choice from an appetizer list which included pat.ea,
ceviche andp-een-lipped New Zaland mussels
provencales.
Thesoupthateveninawasfrcncbonion-notas
rich and cheesy as some, but with an unusual swcetneu
which owner Alan Greeley tells me lteml &om the
natural l\IPl'Of llowlycooked Walla Walla on.iou. Tbc
(PIMM ... OOLDlaf,....18)
'Anything Goes,' operetta Penzance.••
1be latter p1a is the rare abo9inl .-Californian. the
state's official :if ship, oPCDi111 ~ for a brief six·
oerfonnance ensqeme:at near ttiie Cao say Rcs&aurant in
Ncwpon Beach. ·However. tbe propa-lritillll lavor will be ~piced_UP, wit1! tome stale bi"°!f a• lbow, renamed 'The Californaa a.,..._, C.QMI Pia 'I I •
04AnY.tJli ooa"':"f. Cole PaiWa • musical.
aho set= abip. albeit a luxury--~ lbirtics
Marilyn Mapell is ~ _. C:: ~ the production, wb.icb will be pnw ntld ~ 9 on ~unday t~ Sunday~ Jw. ~s will be pven SaturdaY* ud Su8daYI • 7 Uld 9 p.m. and one ~ p.m. abow Thundays ·ucf FridQI at 9 -all ~ by c:ockWb ud diner ...,.. two bours
The Pilarim 0 iadoc:bd at dlie Wll&end olDana Point
Harbor near the C)raJttie County M1ri11e ....... Tickets maybeordeRdby~ 751-l344ar....,HO.
to....-.-Up ~ c:out. Gilbert IDd s• .. -..:-nDM bas ~ S-.tcbed to MOD1eref_ far_.~ ~f Coast
Pitates," Wbkb will -~ Dl;Mlllll Cl 1111 x ad Cory
(1!"'1111w ... ,...1e>
'
.. .. -·
Calendar
• 1.
porary and pop lldectlona
from 4:30-8!30 p.m. and
the"Mlcbael Jordan Trio"
perf'onntng standard, Laun
and contempmary jazz from
8:30p.m.-12:30a.m. 18000
Von Karm•n. Irvine.
TD CRY8T AL CA· 720-0330.
TIDDRAL 9ytlPllOlfY TBS BSAOL&. Rea· ORCD8TtA perfot'IN to-taurant features an iJl new
· ntgbt at 8 p.m. wtth tt'• Jau club Frt.-Mon. wttb Jt4
annuaJ AU-Tchalkovaky ~. But .._ aM con~~.!!'~.~ In-.Joka BOWH from 9 _ .. 4~~f~~ .. p.m.-1 :30··-a.m. ~~-.-and'JWet_:_FantUy~l~f'6~'l;~,?n,~£tit ..
lure Pfano Concerto No l and Moo. 9 p.m.-1 :30 a .m.
In B Flat Minor with 18121 Beach Blvd., Hunt·
Carolyn HO!\a. ptanlat. and lnQtoo~a·y· PHILLIP• the "1'812 overture," com-co..... •
plete with choir and can-and hls tr1o 1n an exclusive
nona. &5 general ad-engagement. FTl.-Sat. 9
mlsa1on. 971-4182. p.m.-1 a.m •• Tues.-Thurs.
Oll&OORY OOL&llAN. 8 :30 p.m.-12:30 a.m .. U-
claaaica.I J(Ult.artat enter-brary t.ounae. The New-
t.aJns In l..a Pal~ ia-porter. I 107 Jamboree
taurant. The Newporter, Road. Newport Beach.
I l07 ,lamboreeRoecf.New-644-1700.
port Beach. Mon.-Sat. 7-11 WATJll&'-WAYD ·playa
p.m. 644-1700. the aaxopbone and aJCK
PI A 1' 18 T ... KS LL y mwMAR la on the key-
LcllAISR appears Tue8 . baud. 9 p.m.-1:30 Lm ..
Sat. . 8 p . m .• m 1 d.. Cafe Udo. 2900 Newport
night. cano· •. 2241 w. ~t~ewport Beach
Coast Hlahway. Newport .._......;. __ nd ... _
Beach. 631•l38 J. _.,,.... ...... -VW n a IUO
TBS 1'1R& CELLAR trto feature claaak:a1 and
Reataurant featlll"C8 clauJ-Laun jazz. Wed.-Sat. 8:30
caJ rccordlfl&S durtna dJn-p.m.-12:30 a.m .. Cope de
Tu -sat r -om 'f Oro. 633 Anton. Costa ~~~ Ne~rte;, ~~7 Ja!:: Mesa. 662-2672.
boree Road. Newport 8RSLLY MOORS a
""--cb 644-1700 TRIO perf onn Jazz vocals.
go:;a. • • Fr1.-8at. 8:30 .m.-12:30
Country a.m .. Noel's~ood. 16281
J>OO..WAB RIDD per·
forms from 8 :30 ti.'!'~ a.m. with \he
Balad previewing from 5-8
p.m. Crazy Hone. 1580
Brook.hollow. Santa Ana.
549-1512.
Jua
TID WRLIAll BUT·
Tl.ZR IDMOlllAL JAZZ
BARD plays a.t the Reuben
E. Lee Wed.·F'r1. lndeflntte-
ly. 151 E. Coast Htahway.
Newport Beach. 675-"5790.
T8S W ATJllS DAUL
QUARTBT features fusion
Jazz wt.th daNk'al. ethnic
and electronic tnfluenca ..
Fl1.-5at. from 8 p.m. cafe
Laguna. 858 s. Cout HJgh-
way. ~ Beac:b. Erids
tomorrow. 497-5404. TBS IRVID llAR•
RIOTT features eight houn
of conUnuous live Jazz each
Friday eventnc t~ the summer with 'The
WhLaard." a ftve-ptflce jazz group. performing contem·
Pactftc Coast Highway.
Suneet Beach. lnddlnlte.
(213) 592-2051.
Pop
not BltACR 801'8 per·
form tonight at 7:30 p.m.
wtth apedalgueatstarsn.e
Baaf»o1•· Pacific
AmphJtheatre. Costa Mesa.
815 raerved. 810 lawn.
634-1300.
RD .JOllJll8011. local vo-
calist. and DAVID
RAI gw)B, ptanlst. leam up
to perform at Chez Dante's
ton.lght and Saturday. 9
p.m.-1:30a.m .. 1701 Cor1n-
th.lan Way. Newport Beach.
955-1332. •IU.llt performs at the
lrvlne Meadow•
Amphitheatre tonight.
740-2000.
MARC&L•a features
dandng to ••-....y ... •• 9
p.m .. 130 E. 17th St .. Costa
Mesa. 646-3666.
TBS DAVID
BaOJDalO QUARTBT,
Golden Sear. 9'06 Pactflc
Golct alba.m. regalan Jeffenon Stanlllp will
perform_,.... from their latat. 0 1'adear
P1arnltare," at 7 :30 &:ta Satarday at Padflc
Ampldtbeater in _.Maa wben: the
Coast Hljlhway. Hunungton
Beach. ~9600.
Dlmee
A ROCK •Jr VIDSOSOll·
llSlt DAJllCS Party la held
In the hlstor1c Cat.aJlna
Island Cutno to~t from 8
p.m.-mldntght. RadJo sta·
tJon "The Mighty 690"
hoeta the party and partJcl·
pants wtll have to find thdr
own transportation to and
from the Island. 84 ad-
mission to the dance. A
"Cruise 'N' Concert" pack-
age which Includes trans-
portation and admtulon to
the dance Is ofJe~ for S 10
lo the ftrat 450 ~·
'"STAR DARC&," a con-
teat and concert offering
pr1zes and cash to• the top
dancers tn break dance. htp-
hop. reggae, locker and
•pedal ca[egor1esof MJcha.el
Jaclalon and Boy George
look·a-Ukcs. wtll be held at
the Disneyland Hotel Grand
Ball Room from 8 p.m .-1
a.m. To enter contact KEZY
radio ataUon at 776-1 I 91 . ••ATS8B" BSLLY
DAJlfCS &1'UllBLS mem-
bers are among the
outstanding Mid-Ea.stem
entertaln.mer)t featured thJs
summer at Saadoun·a.
Wed.-Sat. evenings. 2136
Placentia Ave .. CoSt.a Mesa.
642-0800.
Tbeat.er
'"llAUPOOT Jiii TBS
PARK .. at Saddleback Col·
lcge In Mtsston Viejo. to-
night and Saturday at 8.
SUnday at 3 . 831-4656.
"TD BltST LITTLS
W BOREBOUSS Ill
TZXAS•• at the Ha.rleQuJn
Dtnner PlayhOWle. 3503 S.
Harbor Blvd.. Santa Ana.
ntghUy except Mondays at
varying curtain t1me11
througti Aug. 19. 979-551 I.
"DAYS OF 1JD1S AJlfD
Roes8° at the Newport
Theater ArU Center. 2SO 1
ChfT Drive. Newport Beach.
tonight and Saturday al 8.
631-0288.
•"TBS PARTAS'lm"
at the Studro Theater of
Saddleback College In
Mlsalon Viejo. Tuesdays
through Saturdays at 8 .
Bzcrb Boya will eatertahl at 7:30 ._.,.t
aJM1 Lee lliteDOU will appear at 8 p.lll.
hDctay. Tlcket8 for all 8llowa are $15
reae:a wect uad $10 lawa. Plloae 834-1300.
Sundays at 3 through July
29. 83).-4656.
•"TID PARTASTJCD'•
by the South Coast MuaJcaJ
Theater at University H.tg'h
School theater. Campus al
CuJve:r. lrvtne. F'r1daya at 8 .
Sa.turdays at 2:30 and 8.
Sundays at 2 :30 through
July 15. 640-6306.
.. PmDLSR OJI TBS aoor• at the Grand Dlnner
Theater. 7 F\"eedman Way.
Anahd.m, tonight through
Sunday a.l varying curtalo
limes until Aug. 19.
772-7710. ..LA VICJllDKR FOi l JSS ..
al Sebutlan·a West DlnneT'
Playhouse. 140 Ave.. Pk:o,
San Clemente. ton.IQ:hl and
Saturda19 at 8. Sunaay at l
and 7. 492-9950.
••llSJlr8 8111Q1.S8•• on
the Second Stage cl South
Coast Repertory. 655 Town
Center Drive. Costa Mesa.
toni,ait at 8:30. Saturday at
3 aria 8 :30. Sunday at 3 and 7 :30. 957-4033.
''TBS 110U9&TR.Ar· at
Golden West College PatJo
Theater. HunUngton Beach.
F'rtdays and S.t:urd&ya at
8 :30 through July 7 .
895-8378. ••Ma&. 018BOJll8•
llOY8" al the HunUngton
Beach PlaybOUK. lilaln
Street al Yorktown Aventx.
Hunungton Beach. f'rtdays
and 5aturdaya at 8:30
thl"OUIOl July 7. 832-J 405. •"TD MUSK: MA.Jr• at
the Curtain CaU Dlnner
Theater. 690 El Camino
Real. Tustin, rugbtly ex.cevt
Mondays through Aug, 19
838-1540. -ras TAllDIG or nm
_,,.. by Cabaret Rep-
ertory Theater at Brea
Ctvlc/Cu)tural Center. I
CMc: Center Drive. Brea.
Wednesdays through Satur-
days at 8. Sundays at 5.
779-8591. ··A vmw rao11 nm
•JDGS .. at the ea.ta Mesa
CMc Ptad!:ae. 661 Hamil-
ton SL. Meu. Frldays
and Saturdays at 8:30
through July 1. 650-5269.
.. WSST SID& 8'TOllT'
by the RegJooaJ Repertory
Theater at the FoTUI1l
Theater. 4175 Pa.lrmool
Blvd.. Y art:. Linda. tontght
FV Fiesta warms up with coqkoff s
Six days of family entertainment con<lludiog with a
fireworks display are plalined 11 tbe second Fountain
Valley Fiesta. sponsored by tbe Fountain Valley Chamber
of Commerce.
Festivities J'UJU1ina today throu&b Wednesday, July 4
at the Fountain Valley Recreation Center at Mile Square
Part. Brook.hunt StRCUt Heil A venue, will include a chili
oookoff, a rib oookoff', a blttle of the bands. a S-1 SK benefit
run. a breakdance contest. a beauty pqcant and a
bluqrass competition.
Chamber officials say this year's event will feature a
larler carnival and a lower admission charge: S3 for adults,
SI l'or aces 6 to IS and free for children 5 and you.naer. Ten
food booths are "lanhed, Ilona with a beer tent.
Her9 II a echedute tot the Reeta::
TODAY •
5 to 11 p.m.~ Cemtval, ownee and fOOd boothl open. e p.m.: Bo• Metropolll ~ bMd.
7:15 p.m.: DMoe ...-wtth d'8c Jockey OOn M#lon of
KOCR.
7:30 p.m. Miii FountW. V-""t ~ PagMnt.
I p.m. Dence under the...,.. whh lox. MWopol8 and Don
tarton.
IAnMDAY
10 Lm. to 11 p.m.: Cemlwl t1dea, gamee and food boothl
op.n. Al>PWanoea by Mldl~ Mou9e. KIK-FM NmOte ~
C8lt.
11 Lm.: Grand Opentng cenwnooiea and pr ... 1t8tion Of
Ml8I Fountain V-'-t Reeta.
11 Lm.: RtbCookoff begins.
Noon! Gwald Ray Band performs country rodt. 2:45 p.m.: T,_ Joi dance group.
3 p.m.: Raina Cheerieedera danc:ie and vot* petfomvlnce
3:30 p .. m.: Harmony competition, perfotmencae by the
8Weet A.cMlnea.
~15 p.m.: Rlb Coottoff judging.
5:30 p.m.: Brukdance Competition, no 0081 to.,,..,_
7:30 p.m.: Fant.ey QenQe Theetar. dl1'9Cted by ~I Howell. a p.m.: Hlted Gun, a C: band. AY
10 Lm. to 11 p.m.: camtval rldel, game. and food booths open.
Noon: ChUI Coc*off begins. Cont•ta lnCtuded Mt. Chtli ~
Pepper, Uttle Mia Chm Pepper, Mr. Buna and Uttte Mr. Hot s.uo..
1:30 p.m.: WMd Oats a.id. country and western.
3 p.m.: 8iuegrMI Cdmpetttlon. KIK...fM remote broedout.
4 p.m.: Chill Cookoff llW8rda. Fountain v~ Pollcle
Depet1ment Chlld l.O. ~am.
5 p.m..: n.a.ld Cloggar9.
5:30 p.m..: Peddy w.t.
8:30 p.m.: County Une Clogger$.
7 p.m.: Cottonwood Band, country rodt and pop rum llOM>AY
.. to 11 p.lft.: Cernfvel. 991'* and tood boottle open.
4:30 p.m.: Battle of the a..~ . ..........._
KW1Z...fM remote bf'oedcallt. Ttiptng by~
YUE.IDAY
4 to 11 p.m.: c.rrw.t. gen._ and food booCt'9 OJ*1.
4:30 p.m.: Battle of the a.a Competfttott, wnl-ftNlla ~WlZ·FM rwnot9 ~--T~ by~
WIDNEIDAY
8:45 Lm.: S-15K run to benefit a.yn lnltttut.. Sign up 1n adlai~•••l'lltice•°'on the lnOfMtg of the l\ln. Aun begkw •Mile Square,
Pf'ooeeda lllong dty ........ and s.nta Ana River. '
10 a.m. to 11 p.m.: CarfW*, own-and food booths CJpef'I
Noon! Alco IN. South Am91can Mnd.
2 p.m.: BudlbOwd Oencera. 3 p.m.: &reek~ ftnaleta.
4 p.m.: Aoyel SContlh Country oar.. Sodety.
5 p.m.: F--QenQe TheaW.
I p.m..: KW1Z reclo ~ tlfo.dc•l 8attte of ttta a.nds
ftNla.
9 p.m.: AlftOlb~. . . . . . . .. . .
J . 4
J! ~ -~
I
I ....
~_/ --
'\
b
f '•0~ A O• -~;id.V ltGkl
~A~
~·~ ·~-6311
,., ,,..., lflJI -··' =·· •---h•c•-'l••c•19'1'1W ..... *'
•
............................. _~----
891 -31$1. ea.tea. the Importance of
nutrWoo In aapport of the tnunm>e 'Byatem, and the
MILDI0811tOLUoffers ~ul me of non·tmdc
Sun Worsbtpen Boat Trtpe attematlve thera&!ea ta ~n::nc*en ~t!:" ~~. $=• th-.nt. tbe~mer 1~ mleeton per day. (213) ·~ . 663-7801. a.m.-4 p.m.. Newport TD AJIADDI GUii
Beach. 8rtDI( lunch &lld. ..,. eponeored by Don
drink. 820. 720-1866. Bullock, 1a reatun:d the
~.,..,.~"":"·. • 1 -~~:::~.:-·$i iS,,,.-sv_:t 1 · I...-~ • • •-ova CALIPOaJUA. from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ~
aanAOS... w Friday. adult actmtemn, $2 8gt8
118Un«. 5-1~ 800 W. Katella Ave ..
A •AlllLY na.D a-Anaheim. (213) 430-5112.
cmtalOlf la cifered by
Santa Ana Collq(e. Fea-s
tured la ~ irfth the UD grunJon. ParUdputa learn •
about the behavior of ttd8
flab. 9:30 f..m.-1:.30 a.m. CJ--__.-_-1-----
&l 2 adul • $7 cblld. ~·~--~~~-----667-3385. TBS LOii AJfO&La ~C,.0-~!'f '! PS&· -PIHl.B-AallOWJC-DJ--
allow and auction~ 8fiiUISOn:beetra opens
ral8er hoeted by the Frtende It • third aeaaon at the of South o.et Repertory Hollywood Bowl with
Guilda,startaat5!30-p.m.A = ~ ~
buffet .. featured (n the conduCtor and ptano eolot8t theater'• fountain In Oenbwtn's "Rha--.
courtyard. wtt.b the allent 1-DL.-" ...__ -17."2. auctsoo, live auctioo and "a ... UllUll;. a uo:i J>nlCram ..._, ~bazaar'' cloetng the featuree works bj Berlioz.
ahoW $50 per penon 655 Ravel. and Bartok. 7:30
Town Center Dr., <-ta p.m. (213} 856-5400.
Mee8a. 9S7 2602 A .US OUTDOOR
A tOUftAlll. YAU.SY CORCSaT aama beglna
nDTA. w Friday beUnlL today and features the
TD CAllCSa co•-aoundll of the Huntlngtoo
TllOLllOCl&'IT apomor9. Beedl Concert Band. S-7
cancer convention wttb p.m., Golden We.lit CoUeae
ow:r 40 speakna t.brole Ams>hJtheater. 157 44 Gola-
Monday at the '"*2NecFr en Weet St.. Huntington
Hotel 1be early detecUoa Be8ch. 891-3991.
and Prevention of cancer 8 ~11~11 ~:~~
and other~ die-&RU .. Llt conttnuea
..,,...
Pacilc's AnniTI
~87M860
COITAmA
Edwantsllltslol
540-7444
a TOM
Edwants
Saddleback
581·5880
AUITMIVAWY
...,_IED
Plcilc's
Warner
Oriwe-M 847.3fi91
Edwards Fountain V""1/ 839-1500
IWIE LI--.....
Edwanis ~ Nit; flSNon UA City CNml
SSM811 Squn 891-C£l1 634-3911
11¥111 ..... '--~~~~
Edwlt'ds WooclNidgl N1£ Orange.... 1::.. I Cinema 551.(155 637.(XMO ,,_ _ I
DOUG •..-•w. ''The Rael.D. Calun. •• pafonna Im
count.ry-6ued tunes at
~Lo!!,orse, 1580 • Sent.a A.oa.
549-1512.
LD aJIWWWa with.
Haney Muon. Ronnie
1.a ... HlrOeb1ma and Steps
Abad. perform at 6 p.m..
Plllcl6c ~ $15
reeerYed. $11.50 lawn.
634-1300.
1'lllS OOLmlf SACK B
.JAZZ ••~ye at the .. A.mtrak .. 3-7 p..m..
San Juan Cal*tnmo. DA•l&L ST .
ADVANCE TICKETS• ., th._
GHOSTMJSTE=-GREllLU•. a INDlANA ES ... tt. 'f I C e --T f/fO.O..
lUIUIY THEATRES
l2:H l :M S:H J :M 1e:M .
IZ:Se l:H S•H 7 :4S 10:0S ... ......,... ........ ,..._
-. --~ •• • ... I I •
-""' I • "" • • .-. ~·1a:esa, .. ~A'ftl'l\Jll l :IO 8 :M ID 1"'9.1 U.,.., • 1 O:JO I• 10MM DZ tl:IS ,, .. •:SS 7 :1.S •••• _ ........ ..,,
'IWIECllD'}Bl .. T ..... _,..__
U tM a~•M•H .,,. 11 .. a -s .. 1 -10 .. ~=H • 1e1t1 ' ... i.-'1 •• i....'
~·---.!.~~~ ii1ue1...,._ve.n~t
~t• 0... 7:M ....._..I a:ee ... -...es
CttMr• u ..... 12 FREE Unletl Not•
*
3
.r-Y itJ• Y ,1
....... (PC)
1:05. 3;30, 5:55, &:20, 10:45
... Slm1T (f'C)
12::30, 2".3S. 4:45, 6:55, 9:05, 11:15
* PACIFIC DRIVE -IN THEATRES *
. ..,. •1111&. .. (PC)
. "ftlJC( Kalllr' (I)
. "IDT S1l&T" (PC)
,suna· (PC)
Pl.US .• _.(PC)
t
JACK llllAJllD, 3--7 p.m ..
tndefln.lte. Rusty Pdtcan.
2735 Pad.Ile Coast High·
way. Newport Beach.
642-3431.
-63H770
STADUI DR.W
.......... $&111111
.... 990-4021
UA Movies 4 ....... ..., .... ,.,
COSTA IESA 631-3501
Edwards Hnot Twtn ......,._
.........
a TmO 581·5880
Edwards Saddlebadl
DT .. 11 llc*llM . ._.,_nll IUCH 848-0388
Edwwds IMttilwtoft ......... , ..
.,,. .... (213) 691433 * Fashion Squ.are ...........
... .., 495-6220
Edwards Mission vee;o 1111 u..., .. o.. .... ,.
.... 634-2553
SYUFY CiMdDM
~·u.,.,,
• PMWl'ID • DOUY llWO
IBM518191.J693
Pdic...., 39 Dr~· .. ....... u.,.,
..... 1111191·3935
~ CiMlll West ............
-551.-S ~ ........... ........ ,..Cllillr
g
Calendar
Theater. see P'rlday u.ung.
wmL OP ftlSJfD-
SlllP, for~ over 45.
wUI be meet1rig for brunch
at Spanlcy'• ln Garden
Grove at 11 :30 a .m .
524-3327.
TD 8AIUJllO SDIOLU.
ror non-amoklng alngle9 over 21 . ~ ln Newport
Beach for day ..utng. 10
a.m.-4 p.m. 820. For cur-
rent location call 673-3282.
Etc.
TllS CARC&a COJll-
TllOL 80CIST1', eee Sabar·
day llettng.
TD AJIAB'&JM OOJll
880W, aee Saturday list.log,
ca&ATIVS ADV&Jll-
TUa& CU19-which offers untque travel and rec-~tlon. boeta tte nnt 0pen
Houee today at 2 p.m. tlot-
atr balloona. muJU-lmage adventure.travel ahowa arid
talent 900Uta from the new
lelevi8too abow "Love Con-
n6ctlon" are featured. 1386 ·Legan Ave.. Sutte 1. Coeta
Meea. 545-5888.
A IOO#fAIR VALi.ST naTA. eee Friday bjUqg,
Pop
aoll'a IJll LAOOJllA fea-
tura Davtd ~ on the
ptano. 1464 s. coat HJQJl-
ra y. Laauna BeaCh. 497-4871.., may O<ZSLllAll, emca. guttar player. 9
p.m.-1 a.m .. Blue Beet Cafe. 107 218t Place, Newport
Pier. Newport Beach.
67&-3333.
CDMl9TaY plays Top
40 mus 8:30 p.m.-mkl-
n.t(J'a~t at CJoee Eocounter'a. 2I'O'.p Brook.burst, Hunt-lnlt.9n Beach. Indefinite.
96S--9800.
Btc.
DAV&T'8 LOC&Sa,
located at the Balboa
Pavilion. featurea Monday evening cocktail cruJaes during the aummer.
673-5245. •
TllS CARCaa COll-
'l'llGL80Cl&n. aees.tw, •1-.,AJR VALLST
nsaTAo eee Frtday l.l8t1nc,
Pop
"OUIOO BOIJllOO"
peforma at the Greek
~ tooWit al ~ p.m.
834-1300.
llOJl'S Ill LAOmlA fea-
tura DAVID llAL&IOIL
aee Monday llatlng. · .. A 8WIJllO OOlfX,_J"a&,...T
lllOBT" la featumt ~ Tue8day nJ«,ht al Happy
Due. J 79'.T/ MacArthur
Blvd.. lrvtne. 250-1077.
Dance
••HAPPY BtaTBDAT
U.a.A., •• a dantt and party
hoeted by the Newport/Bat
Yahm Singles ~p. la held
from 8 p.m.-mktnJght at
Temple Bat Yahm In New-
port Beach. The Kartn GaU-
ln&er Quintet provides
mualC f()f'~ Rdrab-
menta and food Will be ecr-
ved. 812 at door. $10 ad·
vance. 984-7851.
''TD mT LITTLS-
W BO a SB OU 8 S IJll
TSJL&a" at the HarlequJn
Dlnner Playhome. Stt l""rl-
-
From "Marona Sport" ... the active look for summer.
A Longs1eeYe pouch ~. ~ cotton. C. "Super Jerw{' 1001' Coflon. In 8 co6ors.
B.. Cotton putt-on pants. D. PM Cotton caps One size fits all
. ·~~~&~~-
56 FASHION ISlAND • NBW0Rr BEACH. (714) 644-5070
• •
\ _..... _ _.__.,,,,, .......... ._. ........... ~--·---·······-...... ··· --·--···-·-· . . . . '
PLUS
PICNICS, FIREWORKS,
MARCllING BANDS
AND FAMILY PRI0:.5
BRING A PICNIC BASKET
\ ANDENJOYTHEHOLIDAY
-•' :::-oNTHELAWN!
/\"'°
• WEDNISDAY. JULY 4 *
July 4 Fireworks Extravaganza:
Pennario Plays Gershwilk All
American favorites from Bernstein to
Sousa, plus Pianist Leonam Pennario
playing Gershwin's Rhapsody In
Blue.
~OPEN AT 5:00
PICNIC PRE-SHOW BAND CONCERT
6:00PU
ORANGE COUNT'f
PACIFIC sna&ONT
7:30PY
FIREWORKS SPEC'IAC'ULAR
IVVEDIATELY FOLLOWING
RESERVED $7.50/LAWN $5.00
--·.-"181.W ---·('n4GI---........ _._____ ··------mL· ... ---~·--· __ ,.. ____ .. __ _
Al P"le'-~ lee...,.. ,. ..... ._. Ho..-...er..: ........
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' .
6
FOUllTMl VAU.IT
EcfwWs FountJln V*t
1139-1500
lfMll(
Edward$ UlwtrSlly
Calendar
Ave., Seal Beech. Free ad· ROIOIDt BR<>W'N and hla Theater. Sec Frfday UaUng. mt~3) 596..f749. trto. see Friday ltsung.
see Friday u!u~· Pop Etc. TOii lletLAIR, ace
BOU.YWOOIJ BOWL'S "TOP8all '8'6," the Wcdncaday ltsUng.
lradlUonaJ Fourth o( July TED • IC&RaY. ece Fr1-TallshJp Olympic Parade of MA•K l881t.1 .. 1c A.ND
Fl.reworks Ptcn.lc Concert day llsUng. Sall saluting the XXJU Sum-TD Ull W 9SC'l10N,
features an all·Amer1can RO!r8 "lJlr LAOURA rca-mer Olymptad. takca place evenJ.nO, lnddlnJtc Old
celebration w1th the Los lures Da'rid Ila!~ see today at Long Beach Harbor. Oa.na l'Otnt cafe. 2.f720 Del
AngeleaPhllbannonlc con-MondayUstJng. Thedaytimc35-m1leparade Prado Dana Point.
dud.edbyNcalStutbcrit. the SllOKST ROBJ1'1801'1 features sail and motor 66l..fi003.
USCTroja.nMarchln (BaJld .. P!rf~'!' tonl h a~.d -,l!!f.~I nd ~h'i!._;; J .-. ,. .. _ ·c>O ~~,;;...-:. .... i)i.~JJ.tt; ( • _.,... . ·-·~ ~ -:-:'l.i . :Jltlir ..,.,,,,,. r. ......... ~'l:t)J er: an cry special >;m'plHnleattt. 100 Unlvcr-by ousan sor sniarreraaII ~·wx..-,..,, aee rr1-
fit. Sam the Olymflc sal City Plaza. Universal and power crafts. Follow1ng day ll8Uf\lt.
e. 7:30 p.m . (2 3) City, 815 and 813.50. (21 3) Is a nJghttime aer:laJ and DAJlVSYTRAYLO~.see · -54-00. 980-9421. flreworis Independence Saturday l.lst1Jl$(.
PI A 1'I J 8 T . g E L L y "CRAZY DAZB" Is to-Day Salute. Free admJaalon Lell.AJER at cano's see night at Happy Daze. 17927 to all acuvtuea. R01'10S BllOWlt and his
Frtday lJsung. · MacArthur Blvd.. lrvlnc. A POUJlfTAIJf VALLEY trto. see Friday ll8CJng.
250-1077. P1Z8TA.. sec Friday IJsUng. TBB WU.LLUI 8UT-Jau AJDRICA nt8T la pres-TUR IDllOmlAL JAZZ Theater ented at Anaheim Stadium BA.lfD, eee F'rida/i ltatJnh
TOllllcLAIJll,s=rand "T... ••aT LITTL• tonight at 7 p.m. Pat Boone. CODUY BILL , ~tarlal, 8 p .m.-m t. a.. uc.o ""' th L A R see Friday 11 .. u .. « -aoa•aous• JW e " • am S ~'6· e ~ Restaurant. ..., .., • "' Cheerleaders. Bob JanJa ~~ i.;:z~e t::i~n~ft':~ ~;i:;~~~~eqy~ ~~~;. Am~en~ng~~ :.P.:op~...;:-=======---
875-5777. dav listing. Amer1ca.n '"'L display DAVID aALSIOB. ptan. COJfPR&Y PHILLIPS '•rmDl.ltR ON TBlt .. . Isl. perform• from 9 marching ban . and I l :30 and his trio, aec F"r1day ROOF"attheGrandDlnner Latin folklore program arc p.m.· : a .m.. Chez
l._Ung. ~~LAte:;..~!r1daaJayLULauna;, aome of the featured attrac-Dante·a. 1'101 c.ortothtan TD WU.LIAM BUT-,,..,n...,.., PO IB8 6~ Way, Newport Beach.
TLSJl IUllOIUAL JAZZ at Sebasttan'a West Dinner ~~i~:o. 88 and. 90· 95S.1332-.
Jaa
854-8811 BAJIQ). see Frtda~~~lng. Playhouse. Sec Fr1day list· m 1.D11performstonlghl
Cy-"IS c~ ._1660 •--1t'ATR& WA and IN1. Th at 8 p.m. at U\c Greek ..:,:.;,'".:;;:""';.;~·:;;"'-:..;""'":;,;;::;_ ___ ;.:--=~u::•;-::;;:-:;;1 ____ RfCl( 8BBRllA!f. ace Fri-~TB& llU8IC llAlf" at Theatre In Loe Angeles.
day listfng. the Cwta1n Call Dinner U 634-J 300. -----------------......:....__;__-=.._______________ e n::K -p•110W-·--. 1tnger.
guitar. banDonJca. 9 p.m.· l
a.m. Blue Beet Cale. l07
21 at Pl.ace. Ne. port Pttt.
N"1)0rt Beltch. 87~3333. allonY aoaD1ao1'.
• NEWPORT BEACH •
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GllBGORY COLBllAR,
ace Friday listing.
PIAIU8T K&LLY
LeMADta at Ca.no·a. w
Fr1day listing.
aee Wednr:c;-•nc. ftD a • ecc Sat-
urday J.tet.lng..
NOVI PlAYING
POUWTMf WJ.EY CiWiZ
Edwlr'ds Fount*1 Viley Q\Y c:.ntw Cinema
8»-1900 Dt-2113
ii\iiNi UlnaMA EdwardJ University ~Bttstcl
1714) 854-881 I !W0-7444
WESI WTElt ~ Mii 893.Q!J48
Calendar
Daw TAJ. IU.DIWK FamWea "Sun Ribbon" wtndecreen. Park'• ewnmer 9eUOf) rea-Face The Challenges." An Ticket.a, at 89 per penoo. lures dally perfonna.ncea ot
1'8 ft.ACY W&LL8 annUal conference ol the 9hou.ldbepurchuedbyJuly theDonaldDuck50tb8lrth· lllO....,_foryour~ NaUon&l AUtance for the 10. 493-5911. day Parade at 3 and 7 p.m..
pleaaure. 8 :»-11:30 p.m.. Mentally W tnclude8 a pro-A PA•&&llAIUJIO "Fantasy tn the Sky" flre-
"rhe Caltforntan. 16431 gram oflec:turead • i:-:neJ dta-CLAM la Of'fen:d by the work.a at 9 p.m .• and the
Bolea Chica, HunUnaton cuulon. ao workshops lrvfne Fine Alta center. new 3-D mm "Magic
Beach. &2 admtHTon. preeented by leading neu-Producing "hand-made" Journeys.." AapectaJedttlOn
846-1347. roedenUsta. phyaJctanaand paper the tradtuonal way ts of the firework.a allow ts aet
BAI.I aOOll DAJICDfO. reeearchera. Today lhrou.th the focua ol the clue to be for Wedneeday (lndepen-
.-....-8 .m.-~!'~t. pan,~. ~Y~ July8. W -8488". taught If by• Suzanne dence Day). The Glenn klll-·~~~t--1irt . ~~4tot."i.-. . ·~~ t~:;aN:if ~2i\lf:t~ .. m
,. try Club. Graha.ln Street. T 8 & A JI JI 0 A L ts preaen ed, with demon-Sat . at Main'~
HuotJngton ~· C A T A L I JI A D I Z • strat:Jons Including pulps. Gankna. Appeartng Sun.·
. . lltLAlfD/JAZZ JAii· dyes, molding, emoeddtng Thurs. ls WOody Aerman Theater 80.R< ta held Satutda)I and embossing techniques. and the Young Thundering
"TD BUT LITTLlt July21. from noon to 9 p.m: Weds&iou/y 1 ~S~~-O~i· 7-9 Herd. Hours l"'r1. 9 a.m .-Preitented by the New Or· p.m. ee. · m1dntgtit, Sat. 9 a.m.-1
WBO RltBOUSlt IR leanaJazzCJubofSouthcm n....w-'-•ETenta a.m .. ~n.-Thurs. 9 a.m .· 'l'SZAS" at the HarleQutn Caltfomla,departuresarea:t --.--. mkinl@t. Specta.I hoon ln-
Dtnner Playhouse. See Pl1-7:30, 8 :30, and 9 :45 a.m. BRIQ08 CUJIJID.CHIA.11 depen'aeoce Day 8 a.m.·2 dal. la.t.1~ · from the Catalina Terminal AUTOllOTIVlt llU8Jroll. a.m. 999-4565. -~~~t :!'or2: ~! In San Pedro, aod feature 250 E. Baker St.. Costa DISJIETLAJID BOTSL.
Theater. See Frtda~· .eevcn~wtth-danc-Mesa. AnUque cars clrea 11.50 W. Cerritos Ave., .. LAVDDSll ,. tng. mustc. snack ban. 1912-preaent. 9a.m.-5p.m. Anaheim. "PolynealanFan-
a:l .,,..-_., __ '• w-'"""nner coCJrtatl ban. and the trtp to Wed.-SUn. 546-7660. tuy '84," a colorful half • ......... auan ....., UI Catalina. $35 adult ad-DARA WllAU at Dana hour mualcal producUon
Playhouae. See Friday list-m18elon. $25 under 12. Polntffarborotrerahalf--day stagedtnthehotel'amartna. 1~ 982.Sl30. and three-quarter day runs~ Sept. 2. Poly-
the Curta!~Ca:ll llAJrDtnn• !! CORI WWWHM.AaT AltT a port r I a h I n g tr Ip a . oestan ormera p"9ftlt
.... by ~ COunty arti8la 496-5794. dances rom New Zealand, Theater. See Friday llattng. wru be the runerary ol a bua DA vsy•s i.ocm a1eo Samoa. Tahiti and Hawa.11 SlllllJ tour ~from the San offers deep eea ·~ Inn colorful ceremonl*1 ~ • Juao Capistrano Library tnpedaUy. 673-5245. . -tumes. Show-etoppere Iii·
9 &JLl llO 8 1110L&9 July 21 at 9 a.m. and b l911STLAllD. l313 cludetheexotkrttualdance
gathers for a Newport retumtn«a:t 5 p.m. Sponsor· Harbor Blvd.. Anaheim. The ol Pde. goddeM of Ore and
Harbor cndae eveey Thurs· ed by the <>ranee County day tt\Je summer for non-Art.a Alliance, the excursion
smoktng ~ 21 yea.n Is one ol eeveral planned u
nd 7 0 ""'10 nart ol "Art Connect.lone a over. • p.m. Q • ~~ 64&-8148. 84." Parttdpanta wtl1 see
aome of the beat worka
Including the laamu
~:wr=~
• ( • ..,,, J ill • t
"' .• 714-s.49· 1!1 12
111t'f1"11'<)61' ''aitf•a• •:>"'I.ill' -C: ll'" IVll a""""
EDWARDS University Cinemas Have Both
Advanced State of The Art 70 MM Projection
With 6 Track Dolby Surround Stereo Capability,
And 35 MM 4 TraCk Dolby Snrrountl Stereo Capability.
CAMPUS DRIVE WEST OF CULVER
ACROSS FROM UCI -IRVINE
405 FWY.
~~---..... s~4-•• a.1_1 ______________ __
GHOST-
BUSTERS
DILL MURRAY
DAN AYKR0YD
IS)
PRESENTED IN
35 MM 4 TRACK
DOLBY SURROUND
STEREO/
JlleJ ... ~ .,..~ ..... lllMI' ,.. ______ ____
THE MOST POWlRHIL
Lf.ClND Of .\LL I, B:\CK
<Jlf'tintE
DESTROY ER
ll't;j
,.,
. ..
-
' ..
\
'
•
b
·calendar
............... -~~~~~-----Burt Reynolds
Dom De ~ise · O.n Martin· Sammy Davis, Jr. 0
Jamie Farr · Marilu Henner ·Telly Savala
and MKlaine
....!
WARNER BROS.IGOlDEH HAIMST ...-,. Al.BERT S. AlJOO't ,_,__
• HA1. NEI0HAM ,.... "CANNON8ALL RUN tr SUSAN ANTON •CATHERIN£ BACH • JACICIE CHAN
fUCHAAO KIEL · fMHk 5'NATRA .._ s--SNUff GARRETT .._.,.Al CAPPS
~,.._.RAYMOND~ ... AHORt MORGAN ._.,.HAL NEEDHAM a AllERT S RUDO'( a HARVEY MIU£R
...._..,Al.BERT S RUDOY .,_.,..,. HA1. NEEDHAM ~M wuollll l 1!! A CMNONMiJJ
... ,!__G __ "T"llWllT-~---Al-,a:-a-.-IUIT-,-~---~---~.. A*'Mo:~=:-w-=~ . = ~..,. o---.... --~
Pacific Anaheim Or .m
1., ti M~
mu 990-4021
UA Movies 4
...... ...,. .. 0...1.,
COSTA IEA 979-4141
Edwards Cinema Center ............
-.
1·5880
Edwards Saddleback
lllMllllllCtllllM
-854-8811
Edwards Univmrty
C.... Or "'-f• UCI
LA ... 523-1611
SRO Gateway S ur., .. ..., ... •
..
mAm 634·25S3
Cinedofne ....... ,......
Wff A .. 540.7444
Edwarcjs Bristol .............
MJl .. TO 893-0546
UA Wtstnlinster Mii s. .. r.,a1 ... ui
"-·--!..--------
---~
Galleries u
:2 0 -~ .. ~ ............................ ~lll!ml!~ ...................................... ~_
run ooncuJTently through pollahed bronze 9CUlpturea 14925.CoutHJgtlway. 11. orc.ootimJ>Ot"UY Painting.. curator R.lly Jacob bqpn-1 llUSBUllB Sept. 9. One exhibit. spon-by the Bennett Brothen of '•"'una Beach. Palr1cll bye>ra1*Coutltyantsta. ls n1naSaturday A recepOon •
80WSa8 llUaSOll. 90ftd by The lrvtne CO., ta Placerville. Indefinite. ~I. known for hie aleek featurecf u ~ cl ''Art wt.lfbe held hm 7-10 p.m. t:>
2002 N. Main st., Santa titled ''Acttontprectelon: Tuee.-Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. ana aensuoue Playboy II· Conncd1ona 84." Curated 'Throul!JlAug.4.Mon -F'rt. 9
Ana. The exhibition "In The New DlrectJon In New 497-6005. lust.rations. ta currently byHdenSdgd. An opening a.m.-4 p.m .• Mon.·Thuna ......
Full Color" rune throuQJi York, 1955-60." A eecond, BC 8PAC& OALL&llY. showing la works. Wed.· rueptJon Is hdd tontghl 7-10 p.m .• Sat. 9 Lm.-"T1
Aug. 26 u put ol "Art '"'Ibe FlguntUve Mode: Bav 235 Forest Ave .. Lad\•na Sun. 11 a .m.-5 p .m. from 7.9 p.m. Al80 on ~.fit· 497-3309. :!.
Connectlon8 '84." "Rdlec· Area~o 1956-66.'' Beach. "Newapeak-:'-a 494-1902. exhibit ta .. Portfolio," OP Oil.ARO&. a.
UOna: PalnUOll ol Jerry was by the GJey mtxed media exhibit. re.a-G A L s a · 1 A ceramtca by Theresa 2298 N. ~ MatJ. Or-~
Wayne Downe" la an Art • New York Unf· tura the work of 17 na-CAPISTRANO. 31681 N~ Which are eevenJ aqee. '11le Ma.Uno.ta a local •
exhibit featurtna eur-venuy. thtrd. "Art tionallyknownartJatafrom camtoo Ca:ptatrano. San bowla that :Ml~~~ Arf ~ _val by'-~.,
rea.J:llldcworbbytlieQJU Tnnamlalona.''le ooelnL._~~~tq;... h~ ~ · ~=l!::'I ~~1t.~ ic·;;:; .. =1lfWl\ll 1i;&;;J1f ,.._~lfucart8.ue.. • Nieto, ~lzed for hts Glw, .. e8 doUa ~ oa:; local uu.ta from the com-~
. ldncL At.o tnddlnJtely. art by Orange c.ount;' art-Throu61 Aug. 18. Tuee.· powerful Images ol Amen-Yoehlko Teraob ol On· muntty demilnetrate and·
·Hoon Moo."5at. 10 a.m.·5 bU CollectJvely tJtJcd "Art Sat. 11:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. can Indian ng:ures wtth hJs omtchl, Japan. 1be dolle, exbtblt tbetr worb dUJ'lnC -
p.m .• SUD. nooo-5 p.m. Connections '84." Thia 497-1880. style often caued ·abetract ~eamuraJ.aetehu. regular Mall hours. I
972· l 900. exhibit features a reception CALLIGRAPBIC AllTS, expresatontst, ta featured chlldreri, and moriks; &tt 998-3900. •
LAOOllA •&eB llU· for the artJata on Sunday #37 Seacurr Vllla2e Shop-thl"OlUOl July 15. Daily 10 elaborately and autben-MQLa llOOU A.RT
MOii °'AST, 307 cutr from3-5p.m.wtthmusJcby plngCenter.2219Ita!nSt.. a .m.-5p.m.661-178l. ttcally dreued tn tra· OAU.&llY. 12732 Maln
Drive, TwojOtntexhtbttlona-Al Maitland and fr1ende. Huntington Beach. Roger OtJOGSJlfBltOI GAL· dsttooal Japaneee clothing. St .. Garden Gl"Oft ... Draw-
are (~. "Cont~m-Mueewn houre Tues.-Sun. Armstrong's exciting LDT, Chapman College. Th"°""°1 Aug. 22. Mon.-h1g -A Pewonal Vlllton:
pora.ry California ArtSata 11 a.m.·~59-1122. watercolors are featured 333 N. Glueell. Orange. Thur.~ a.m.-~ p.m.. Fri. 9 WOrb by Ora.nae County
21" ~ta the ceramk: aAJlt BALBOA through Wednesday. Mon.· "Orange County Sculpture: Lm.-6 p.m .• Sat. 9 a.m.·3 Art.lsta"taexhlbllcdaapart work Of Jena Mon1eoo PAD. M1.19CUm o1 Photo-Sat. 1-5 p.m. 960-5775. Sou.,:e and Proce.e" ts p.m. 552.-1078. of "Art c.onnectJone '84.
wboee 8cul~ cenuntc graphic Arts. San Diego. A CllRIBTIAR TBOllA8 exhibited as part of .. Art LAG U •A •SA CB ~ Aug. 26. Wed.-
ferme are baaed on ma.JOrexhlblUonofthelate OALLltH, 1001W.17th O>nnecttons '84.-~ 8CllOOLOWAJtT.~ Sat.NOon-.tp.m.636-1232.
archttecture. humor and Aneel Adame, one of the St .• SulteT.CostaMesa.An July30.Mon.-5aL 1-5p.m. Galleries.2222Lag\.l!l8Ca-Oa.&NOB COOJITY
m}'tholo8. Alao 8bown ta world's moet celebrated exhibition of abstract 997-6729. D)!>!l Rd., Laguna Beach. C&RID .-C. WWl&ll-'"the -secopd Weetem photographers, la featured. sculpturalfl0lreafeaturtng IRVDfS rDf& A.RT9 • Poet-Modern Man-flOlldY AltT, 3621 w.
St.alee Exhibition and 38th the exhibct ts a vtrtually the work or Annle Healy. CltJllTltR. 4601 Walnut nerteme;· an exhibit as MacArthur Blvd.. Suite
Corcoran Btennlat of comprehensive retrospect A1ao abstract oU paintings Ave .. Irvine. "Some or our ~ of "Art CoonectJons l 11. Santa Ana. "Objects A~~~··~ or~·~.~ ~~n~.l~~~~=~=~A=o~~==~~==~--84~.·-·~1a~i~Q~~~~~~~~~-•-l_lli_•_oo __ m~.'_·~_th_~~~ e:xhlbtt featwa ~ many of his best known Tues.-5at. 9a.m.-5 p.m .
from artl9Q 1n 10 Dtie portraJte and la.ndscapee. COSTA llSSA AJIT
wboee exJ)loratJon ol varl· taken between 1929 and L&AOUlt members Winnie
oue atyfletlc concern• 1983. Included In the 126 Roth, Yurt Fukuda. and
wtthtn a ~ ~-print ahow. A members' Marge Htdscher dtsplay
.ooo-Jep(rttrdlectt.hemya-recepUon will be held to-their talent.a at Glendale
Oque a( the Okl Weet cou-n t g ht r r om 6 · 8 Fedenll Savings at Faahlon
plCd W1th tJmteery from the p.m.Through Aug. 26. (619) I a I and . a n d CI a y
t.ew Weet. Tuee.-Sun. 239-5262. Campbell's palntll'lga are
11 :30 a.m.·4:30 p .m. dlaplayed at Orange Coast
494-6631. GALL•RJES Savtngs. Adams and Meaa DWPORT BAWa .:,, Verde East. Coet.a Meea.
AltT .,...,._ 8SO San ALLSlfDAL& GAL· Both through July.
Clemente DrtYe.. Newport ~Y.15405.CoastHtgh· 962"6398. Be8cb. Three exhtblttona way. Laguna Beach. HJghly SLA1' OALL&RISS.
'
. .
COSTA EA 979-4141
~ CiMMI Ceater
COSTA llJA 751 ... 184
Edwlrds T OWft c.tter
-854-8811 ~URiwersity ·u.. l&LS 768-'611
..... tlls ...
mMGE 637·0340
-Oratee Mall
.... 634-3911
UA City Center
llJWTB 89S-5333
UA Westnliaster Twin
llSW'IEI 891-3693
hcific ttway 39 Or-tn
BRING YOUR FAMll.f TO CEtEBRA.TE
mE 4111 wrm 11IE GREATFSr
AIJVEN'11JRE OF AU TIMFJ
NOW PLAYING
-70MM
SIX-TRACK (DIDDl.9f &iE c:f PAEseNTA'OON
•WIWWWi&
•wwww ..... £-..tis I Cl& 0-..._
.......
~ ....... c...~
l!!•~ii!i~ii-~-!!i-!!!!!!!!!!11 .,.., -m••• .. .--r
i;Galleries -~ ................................................................ ..
~ Richard Wbk and John produced. eertee olbe9ub-llU8AR 8PllUT09 GAL-
:> Cederquitlt. la featured. ful ~pe patntuwl by LDT, 522 Old Newpon
:_ Through July 27. Wed.-Loa. Mun.ford oo edithtt. Blvd., Newport Beach. An ~S un . Noon-5 p .m . 673-1416. exhfbmon(eatm1J1Cardro-
"O 549-4989. QOOaUll. 374 N. Oout sped:lve al the won al
i: PAJISll TIOD. 1108 E. Htgbway. Laguna Beach. Emmet Gowin and the
""-Katella, #C2, Orange. Watacolon by Vtratrua clbachrome tmagea of ....._ Roger Callen bosta baa ftiwt Huffman, olle by Aileen Naomi WdMman In her Ci opening tonight wtt.b olla. HUlleby and ecufpture by eertea "F1owere." con-
"O walercolora, br-onsea. Skll.andeneenarefeat.ured Unuea ~ July 7 . i ceramJcaculptwe,acrylJca, through. 'AUii: l. 10 a.m.-5 Tuea.-S.L 10 a..m.-5 p.m., ~ and other ari fQfDla lnclud-p.m. daily . .(94 4122 and W~ eventno I tng a tapestry. oo dWplay 8All.,8TOllS GAL-byaDOOlnt.ment. 631-6405. ~, ... ~*· i~~~~;~?~~~-. f; ~. ~~-:'~·a.m.-9'~1mprae1ona rep-Coeta Mesa. The W.,SC
..
l
CL. p.m .. Sun. 12-6 p.m. raentiandrol'tonthepart KlngdomSerlea.whJcbfea-
639-4452. al the 10 artJ8t members to twQ oO paJnt.tngs and
PS 111118 UL A 0 AL-preeent WOl'b rdlect1og waten:olon by Don Har
LSllT, 428 3 lat St.. New-the California scene. drtcka, along with a abow-
port Beach. An lnnovattve Through August with fre-tog ol ceramJc aculpture use ol od pa.std, normally quent addlUOos. Dally 11 arii:I monopctnta by $uaSe
used only foe portrait.a. bu a.m.-5 p.m. 497-6775. Ketcbum, lsahownlhrough
"* * * 11z. Get me in the liiht a ood
and I can laagh aD ova die ••P·
That's why I Hile 'TOP SECRET!'"
-Bogs EIMrt, OWar s...n..
"TOP SECREIT __,_be die,.._.._.
illOVle ever m..te ••• bloln ev•y other comedy••• var om of the wat•."
-MlchMI 0... LA.,_..,
Don't even
whisperjt.
NOWPIAYING
a~ ~s.u1a ct 511---~~ ~1
•PWTll> ll'f lliii ml!_.
•
, __ __,_ __ _ --=-=-., ..
Pldlc'stl-WIY 31 ~·-,,
July 14. Tuea.-S.l. 11
a.m.-5 :30 p.m. 545-ARTS.
VORPAL OALLSaT,
328 o~. 1AgUna
Beach. Andy Wtng. a niJxed
media non-repreaen-
tatlonal expreaatontat
painter. and Grace~.
a cenumc 8C'Ulptcr, feature
one-man exhibition•
throuQ)l July 15. Tuell.-
Sun. fl-6 p.m. 494-9441.
'QC Cowboy'
stars in shows
Jeff PQnon -or-Orange County Cowboy" fa.me-
will perform at 6 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday, July 8 at the Crazy
Hone s.Ioon, I 580 BrookhoUow Drive. Santa Ana.
Admission is SS.
Pearson bas wrinen more than 100 IOftll but bis biaFst hit, ~ County Cowboy," sprang to
~ sevml months ago. and bas been the No. I
R:1Q 90ag on mnay country radio sa.atioos. ln mid-
June it was No. 6 on the Top 30 chart in rqional air play.
On staaie, Peanoo of Hunti.nston Beath bu an easy
rappon with bis audience in a wboaome, fn:ewbec:lina
and e.1cctric performance that auractl SRO audiences. He
also bas opened for Jeny Lee Lewis, B.8. Kina. Rick
Ndson, Bill Medley and Dave Mu0n.
Althoulb Pearson seems like an ovemiabt success, be
bas been performillg OD pritar, fiddle, banjo, ma.ndolio
and harmonica for 1 s yean.
WbitlllaQ Galleries
PRESENTS THE OFFICIAl
1984 OLYMPIC GAMES POSTERS
<Los~ 19114 Olympic GMMs ~
SPECIAL PURCHASE
BUY ONE -GET ONE FREE
LIMITED STOCK AVAii.ABLE
WbltJQaQ Gallule1
354.5 &et COMt Highway• Colona O!l Mar. • (11t) 675-1478 ..
ficks of ~he plays
u'IBS p AllT A8TICK8. •• another version of the
musical. alao opem t.ootght for the South Coast Musical
Theater Int.be Untverstty H.llOl School theater. Campua
at Culver, lrv1nc(640-6306).l>erf ormancea wtU be gJven
Fndaya al 8 p.m., Satwdaya at 2 :30 and 8 and Suridays
a t 2:30 lb~ July 15. -••PllJOLIUl Oft TBS ROOI'. '' a musical about
early~tury Ruaa~ Is o_n et.age at the Grand Dinner
Theater. 7 Freedman _way. Anahdm (772-7710).
Perfonnanoea are gJven ntgbtly except Mondays at
varytng curta.ln Umes through Aug. 19 .
.. LAVUDS& .aa.usa. a revue by female tm-
peraooatton, 1a bet~ praented at Sebasttan's West ~==========::::;;;;===-===wir--------------Otnner Playhouae, ~40 Ave. Pico, San Clemente 1 (492-9950). Pcrfonnanca will be gtven Wedneadays
Utrough Saturdays at 8 p.m .. Sundays at I and 7 p.m .•
through Aug. 2 . .,,, .,,, Vt
••JllS1lr8 9DIOLD. •• a reprtae product.Ion of the
aeaaon opener. wtnd9 up lhJa Wedtend on the Second
Stageof South Oout Repertory, 655 Town Center Dr1ve.
Coel.a Mesa (957-4033). FtnaJ perfonna.nccs are toniQ.ht
al 8:30. Saturday at 3 and 8:30 and Sunday at 3 ancJ 8.
.......... "''A
'"TBS ~lllAP," AOt.ha Christie's murder
mystery. la ~stagied tn tbe'"huo Theater at Golden
West Collqee tn HunttnQton Beach (895--8378). Per-
f()J!1)!U)Cft WtU be given rrtdaya and Saturdays at 8 :30
through July 7.
....... 01 a n1• llOY8. •• a comedy about cr1mJ-
nals. la the Care at tbe Huntington Beach Playhouse.
MaJn Street al Yortrtown Avenue. Hun.t:lnjttoo Beach
(832· I 405). Perfonnancee wtU be idveJi fi'iidays and
Saturdays at 8:30 throug1a July 7 . ,,,r" 'h
•"lllS llU8: llAJI." a mwdca.I ad ln early-
Early Bird Dinner
Specials s/,. 95
Prime Rib ·or Fresh Fish
Complete Dinner w ith choice of
soup or salad and dessert
.l'J
4 to 6 PM
11.,.1 .... !
QW THE ~#l#SVf.A
BALBOA 80 l £. BALBOA
cenrury Iowa. Is on st:age at the Curtain cau Dtnner 1 ~=~~=::::=======~========~ Theater, 690 El camtno Real, 1\astln (838·1540). &.:
Perfonnancea wUl be given nightly except Mondays at
varytng curtain Umea through Aug. 19. v "'
"'IBST•MIWGcaTBSmaw, ··Shakespeare's
comedy eet In early-day Mexico, la cloelng alt the
Cabaret Repertory 'fheaier ln the Brea ClvtC/Cultural
Center, I Clvtc center Ctrcle, Brea (~). FtnaJ
perfonnanc:ee are tonlgbt and Saturday at 8 p.m. and
6arle'\win
Diluter Pl1qltou~
--UMS
seemne Unm llcCIUf'9
....,,., L Klftt•...., ...... -. Dnded ~Richard Veth
Perfomwhcea Tues. thru Sun. Sat & Sun. Brunch
MOS a. Harbor llfwd. ....... Ana 92704 ............... o_. ...... ...._ ....... ~
. clllf otk{,i 'hiniA'J, ..£.,,nch 411J !.b&mrn
CON'11NENTAL SPf.CIAlllES
'Jfu Qli'4n~ Loumi~
(!o,,.pl i.wtLnlat!J c::Jlou J U L&W U 'Bu.fld 4·1 pm
£111.nl"'t 11.l lfu q}taftJ '..Pi.ano, Lu !J(JL.!J
a ouJ ~u.ulay'i
69S Town Center Driw.. COllta Me.
7S1'2820
·--·
4-MOST FOR DINING
Continent.al Cuisine • Daily Lunch and Dinner
Cocktails • Seafood Bar• Sunday Brunch
Entertainment• Dancing •Banquet Facilities
Chauffeured Limousine Service On Request
I °""'"' s...ic. T 0 11 '30 p .M: I
_ ~ Bars Open To 1 :30 Al'\. _
32802 S. Paafic Coast Hwy.
Monardl Bay Plaza
Laguna NIQlld
4~2626 I 496-5773
384 Forest Ave.
l..umperyard fttaza
Laguna Beach
494-9491 I 752-8558
23J llM~
at Ridge R~
Lake Forest Vilage
El Toro 770-3222
JC
24399 Dena Onve
Dana Point Manna
Island Way -West Basir\
Dina Point 661 ·9722
Guest BOii Slips
Daily Bufh!t Festival • I I :00 ~ -3:00 P Ji'..
In The (.lpst.llin e. tllk.-i lounge
-
..
-,
~~~
I I
I
I
•
iMovie reviews
~ ........................................................................ 1!111111 ..
~ TllB BOOJllTY: Rated PG. A fine retelling of the ghoets. Murray's constant wtsccracks are hllartous. § popular story ot English aaJlora who muU=y nst and Sigourney Weaver. whose apartment la haunted • ., their harsh captain after getting a taste of on proves she's more than an lntcUcctuaJ tee lady. The
.,:.. the Island of T~ttl. Antho~ HOpkins and cl Glbeon ulUmate monster that finally attacks New York ls too as areexceUentasWUUa.mB andFlctcherChr1stian.lf funnyto~;aY· vvvv ~ anything. this version. writ n by Robert Bolt, presents OU : Rated PG. These UttJc creatures start u.. a more sympathcttc portraJt of Bltgll. Stunning pho-out cute but eventually tum Into dangerous ml9chlef
...... tography. wtth akJ.Uful direction by Roger Oonald9on. makers who wreak havoc In a small town at ~ .,... "'v • Christmastime. Brtngtnl( the Gremlins to vtvtd Ufc ts an -g POOTL0081t: Rated PO. The dance sequences are amaztng feat In this -SpTetbcrg-produced film. directed ~ fun. but between them you'll have to endure a by Joe Dante {"The Howlfng"). But Dante and
:1t ponderous.predtctableatoryaboutsmall-townmorality screenwriter Chris Columbus have eo much fun wtth I and teen-age frustraUons. Kevin Bacon shines tn the tile Gremlins and wtth tributes to past movtea that the ~ lead role. JOhn Ltthgow makes the most of a thankless human storyllncsare left sadly undeveloped. EntcrtaJn-
'WWl'tAw ...... -·~·~. .Not.Mt, ~wau_JnJbuMJgmettable ...... ~~ . .. ~;-;·~aSfft..a ~~~-=..:._ ,:;.14 ~,.·--~ --~--1 ~ ..... ..... .. • · · "' ·Rated !k'i?r!eC>lM"o u s 'ii lllfCJftfiy· lOWIUP
OB08TBU81'Bll8: Rated PG. A first-rate contem-to "Raiders of the Lost Ark." The rum has tradcmatk
porary comedy wtth supcnor special effects. Bill Lucasrum virtues: thHUtng non-stop acUon. colorful
Murray. Dan Aykroyd and HaroJd Ramis are three settings and state-of-the-art dfccts and stunt work. It
bumbftng parapsychologists trytng to rtd New York of also has the Lucasfllm drawbacks of shallow charac-
Se e Saturday Paper
for
SIJNDA Y BRUNCH GUIDE
LIVE ON STAGE
"Hllllam•r· j .. ~ ...... , .. , D•••••• • c~
World's Most Acclaimed Musical
~ ,. SUI. A*'-' .,,..,. .
STARRING PAUL M ICHAEL
()IRECTEQ BY_ JACK BU~C_H_
llel Gtbeon portl'aJ9
fJetcller Clarlatlan. enemy of the hanb
Captain Blt&b
(AlltbODJ' Bopkl.U).
in thenewmOYleYer-
aloa of the f•moaa
eea drama, .. The
Boa.aty."
Boole by Joseph Stein
Music by Jerry Bock
Lynes by Sheldon Harn1ck
7 FREEDMAN WAY WITH
BURNI
~Wo,,~'s Seafood
~esta"ra"t
GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION
AUTHENTIC CANTONESE DINING
Specializing in the freshest of
seafood dishes prepared by
Hong Kong chefs
LIVE LOBSTER & CRAB
LUNCH: MON-SUN 11:30 -3:00
' DINNER 1 NIGHTS A WEEK FROM 3.-00 PM
HAPPY HOUR 1 DAYS A WEEK
4" 6:30 Pl
2 For 1 W811 Drinks, Beer & Wine
Complimentary Hora 'd Oeuvrea •Banquet FacU111es
1152 AMIS AIL, AT IUCI llll~ MllllCTH ~
. 131-llll
(Thanks to surfers!)
not been
burned. We put
BUt,LFROO"' on once.
f" -·
--
Movie reviews = :&un,emas:= ~m!!.~~~ nonam-na••WC11na•on·
momenta. ~Iv ~-.. -•-·-~•n• RatedPG.AdmlralKJrk(WIWamShatfter1aadtd9~ ~ .......... --.--r.-"o:-"& aklekkka mU8t Ilea.I the .. ....,..~~ nJghtdub -.ene. 11.e 1DOft t ecenee may be too ln a dai1ng mJe8k>n to nrvt.e the lllle Mr. Spock. f~t-~ children. .,.,., body wu feft on the WwtableGenem planet;~ dio TS Rated PG. Robert Redford returns must face a band ol bioodthlnty o...-. Fane ol lhe
ln an~ buebU1 fairy tale that ~era and seneuhould low at. Not qutte-u .-.. '"star "J'ldl o. .. many~_:_~bbenjoy. More jaded~"' .though. Leonard Ntmoy (Spock) dlrecta. .,.,.,
may be .-. -·· _, u.:-ee8'-<:0ll8Cloua myth-making and heavy-handed .ymbollun. A ftlm wttb no·gray areas aWlllO 811D'T: Rated PG. A naive bomewtle
Robert Duftlll. Wiiford Brtmley, Ktm BUtnger and (Goldie Hawn) maturea on an alrCrUl ~line
Glenn C1aeec:04tar~ LeYtriaon (''Diner'") atrecta durtog World War II and haa an affair wtth a co-
POLICS ACADarft If' you enjoyed "Anlm&l · (KwtRuwU). Unfor:tu ~
-< Houee"and" 'a." 'll~~~~~-. ··1
• _..zrr -w-)UC tfll vtn& any theme aablfactortly. · ·=-"'~ to all 80t'ta ol mtaflta. who tum out DlsappotnUng, despite eome charming moments.
to be a lot l>ludder than tbetr no-nonsense lraJnlng Dtrected by JOnathan Demme ("Melvtn and Howard").
officer (G. 91: Balley) auapecta. Lota of crude but funny ""'""' .
gaga. If you're lute nma to more eophletJcated humor TSllM8 or ~ Rated PG. Detn oon'.t bother with Ulla one. Directed by Hugh Wllaoo' Wlf!ger and Shirley Mad.alne glW Oacar-<:alfber
creator ol "WK.RP Jn Ctndnnau." .., v . · performances In this funny and touching rum. which
8IXl'SU CARN•: Rated PG. Molly Ringwald traces a motheT-daughttt rdattonehip over 30 years. stars tn Ude comedy about a teen-ager whose parents Jack Nicholson. aa a paunchy. diunkm utrooaut. la
forget her ~ ~Y-She al80 has a crush on a aJaQ superb. The aerloua twist that occun two-thirds
handllome eenlOr but la puraued by a fast-talking th~ Is manJpulattve. but you"U probably succumb
"Geek." WIMei'-dlrector John ~ttupea, who wrote ton anyway. James Brooks wu the wntet-dltec:tor.
"NaUooal •a.....,·a VacatJan" and "Mr. Mom," ..,..,..,
seems keel_l)y aware ol the awkwardneu and frua-TBl8 18 8PDIAL TAP: Rated R. A clever. very
trauon f~ adnieecent.a. Unfortunately. he al80 gives amusing parody of rock mustc c:loc.umentane.. r~
us Iota ol chc!iiap and olfenatve~"'.., on an aging Brtuah band that face. aoe a'lJllfoltune after
8PL.A8: Rated PG. A tful comedy about a anotheronltsU.S.tour.ComJcactoraehletopbcrGUeet.
New York produee dealer (fom ) who tails for a Michael McKean and Harry Sbeaiu are marwdoua as
beautlfol blood mennald (Daryl Hannah). The mys-~e dlmwttted rock stan. Rob Reiner (The Meathead on
terloue mermaid aprout.e lqpl on land and teams All In the Family") direct.a and la on ecreeo u tbe
EO.OlahfNmabankoltelevtaklneet.aatBloomtngda.les "roclcumentary" director as wen. A caution: much ol
Actor Ron Howard clkeiCQ wttb a eun: hand, establish: the film's humor probably won't appeal to non-rock
Inga strool central lave atory and lettlng SCTV veterans fans . .., ""'.., Jolln Candy and £Ucene Levy handle aome of the best ..,..,..,.., -Excellent...,..,.., -Very good . .,..,. -
loony blta. vv v Good . .., -Not eo good.
ortTtE
Dinners as goOd as
our breakfasts.
~~~~---·~-----Lonqon Broil
Shrimp Fry
International Salad
sauteect FiSh tlnet
Golden
R~rie Chicken
Steak & Shrimp
Seafood Omelette
Nachos
Stuffed Potato Skins
spaghetti & Meatballs
Bacon-Cheesebmyer
Vegetable
& Cheese Delight
Italian Omelette
Stir-friet) Vegetable
Omelette
Seafood Platter
Mushroom Burger
Steak Dinner
Keep your garden in shape by
reading Friday's gardening page . ..., ....
..
..
-
16 _. .... ________ ............ iilii ... iiiiiii .... ________________________ ~ ....
· i GOWEN TRUFFLE DELIGHTS ••• ,_ Proa Nti 2 I . ~
&: · • · l cd--.a · 'tb · ffici __ ., l · ... . .. _...... ·-'-....... tro ... te Liitina in tbe li:idiiia roles: llicbard Ablcl is direCtiAa the • ., dinn'cT$a1adwutUOC yseason UIUatt.rlCtivc,W1 '" e ent.;sina apprecia-awai"'' """OMIACIUK; u'" ediipicalioa ror wtii(:h, tie sayt.; rew inoctifu:ationa are c toppina of shredded cbeesc and crisp.Q>Oked carrots. to come down to m.Y eye level, so I needJl '1 cnne my Deck uii'ed. ~ Mytenderloinofbecfwitbbeaujotaispeppercom tolookupasherea&estbeday'upecial&. · req ~ Barbiry Cout Pirates" Will be aboard the ~ sauce($12)wasthevisua.lhitoftbeeveniq.Asinak Thiuestaurant, wrucbwillsoonexpandnextdoorto Californian for two weekend& only, Friday ~ ~ carvedtomatorosewitbaspriaofwatercresntoodout seat70,asaooufl'OwtbofAlan0teeley'aGoldenTruJ:lle Sunday of next weekend and July ll-lS with dinner
i: against the rich dark sauce. Unfortunately, the meat, cateri~ which he launched ei&ht years l&O· tJeslnnina at S:JO p.m ..
LL whichwasonovelyquality,hadbccncookedfartoolooa. W1thabacqrounducbd'iofrancc,Switzertand,Tbe lhoW ii offered with or without dinner at the
-;:; True,lbadnotspccitiedthatlprcfermybecf~. but withAmbrosiaandtheNewportBcacb Mariott,Greeley ~and ticket inquiriesahould be directed to Kim or ~ neither was I asked. found it n.o problem to cacer cfftcti vdy for 2,000 people But*a at 496-1100, while dinner raervaciona are beina i Myauestselectedancvening'sspccia1of1CUDpiwitb -or20. Wbattroub!edhimwaswbenapanyoffouror taken at 67S-5777. ,
-" garlicandlcmonforherentrce.Sbewauurpriaedtofind sixwaotedtoexperiencehisflair,biutrnsoofoods BACKSTAGE _ So~th Coast Repenory ba.i an· I thattboseplump,tlavorfulb~daddieshadbeen breaded. whichdonotcomefromcansorfreezen. nounced that Oeorae Benwd SbaW's •-•Sairi1 Joan" will ~ "They're so succulent; they don't need that coatina." He found it wasn't {~iblc to cater for such small inaaaurate the Costa Mesa theater'• 20th anniversary
• -she mourned. &.!'d ~~tiq them, I apecd.. Ho~ver, srou~ B.ut in a res~urant, be·coutd meet the ~ands of leUOD ••• John Allison, who dirccied SCR'• production.s C;lf ~ berac:compan)'Ullliquinewasbetteryandfineaqdour spccialchenuandintroducctomorcpeoplehisooncept "Henry IV Put l" and ''AmadeUI." wil.l Jtqe the epic
o.. vegetables, al dente and appealinaJy garnished with offresh foods, cha.nging with ~e aeason.s. . drama, 0~ Sept. 1 J ••••
choppedwalouts. . Greeletadmitsthatru.nrunat.,besetwobuainesles CAUM.&llD -Auditio:S for the comedy ''Tomb Otberentreesontbcreplardinner~enu,~ed. makes fora, prc~~yk:itc~n. · . , With a View" will be held July 16 at 7:30 5j. at &he
,,, •• ,"' .... ~ ,..AliJ.h~oor:u•ld.v•O'~~o(£~Jlt'llhwJld ~. ·J!:~e .. ~~w\Wabou.tbuyigtbebcst-... • :try -,... l!:r:~".:~~1'~~ ~~----"" ~ ~ .... ~.~~ --I..·~ · ~~ ...:_.~XJAj rt.=~~-:::a:: ~ ""-;,._~~~· 1'!--rr~'-~ fettucincand~($14)to oflambwith&}accde thattour.bofromance' whichcanniikeeatinaabia men and six·~ for the comedy ~ e>pena S::.
viande($ l~)or.stuff'cd squid ~~cncaJe(~6.9S): deal." . 7 .... call 892-1694 eveoina for more Wormatio~···· . The wme list, l 2S 1~na.1s rucely vaned, WI~ about THE GOLDEN TRUFFLE,_l 761 Newport BJvd, The L.P. JUperlory Company is c:aatina for nuo~ ......_
40 percent from c.atiforma. more from France. Prices arc Costa Mesa; ~S.98S8. Reservau.ons. Lunch, TUe.-Sat., educational theater the Lilliput Playen., a professional
fair and in some cues, downrigbt bargains. Our 6nt 11 :J0.2;30; dinner, S:30-I 0. (Deli open 11 a.m.-7 p.m.) troupe baled in Tusiin which performs at elementary and
choice was notavailable, but our waiter'upgestion of a junior hiab acbools throupout Southern Cali-
substitute wu excellenL Good T&steuppears twice• month in the forni.a. ... resumes and pictures abould be sent to the
.
7
Service at hmch and dinner was both congenial and Weekender. company at 148 JI Foxcroft. Tustin 92680 before July 7.
American
THE BARN
American Lunch M·F 11-2:30 Oinnef
M·S from 5 PM. Happy Hour M..f 4:30
to 7 PM. Sun. Champagne Buffet
Brunch 10-2:30 Entertainment &
Dancing. Banquet Facflitles. 14982
Redhftl, Tustin 730--0115.
THE ORIGINAL BARN
FARIER STEAKHOUSE
The Of'lglnal. Featuring display broil-
ing. Lunch Mon.·Fri. 11·2. Dinner
nightly Mon.-frl. from 5 pm., Sat. &
Sun. from 4 p,.m. 2001 Harbor Blvd ..
Costa Mesa 642·9777.
HAMBURGER HAMLET
Famous variety of hamburg«s. saloon
stellJIC undwic:he6, ~ bb_que,
0nt0n soup foodue and cherry ~
blef'. Lunch & dinner from 11:30
M·Sa1 .. Sun. 10-10. Special Sunday
Breakfast. Great bar & happy hour.
1545 Adams at Harbor. Costa Mesa
5-46-7392
HARBOR HOUSE CAFE
Established since 1939. Omelettes. 25
varieties. Seroed 24 hoUrs. Sand-
wi<:Ms. 30 varieties. Heated garden
patio. dinnef served S.10 PM. 3-4157
Coast Hwy,· Dana Point (714)
496-9270. Also 16341 Coast Hwy ..
Sunset Beach. (213) 592-5404.
PARADISE CAFE
San Franciscan style. Fresh fish and
pasta. Patio dinlnQ, Lunch M..f 11-3.
Dinner Mon. -Sat. from 5 p.m. Happy
Hr. M-F S. 7 Wed. Ladies nlte 50t well
drinks from 3 p.m. Banquet facilities.
600 Newport Center Or., Faahlon
Island. Newport Beach. 64o\"1237.
POOR RICHARDS
KITCtEN
Breakfast. lunctl. dinner. Patio dining
with ocean view. Mocleat pric:M.
Beer/wine Famed fOf' 9e'018n watfteL
Open dally from 8 AM. 1198 S. Cout
Hwy. In VHlege Faire Mall. Laguna
Beach 497-1667.
Chinese
JADE DRAGON
Sachwan & ~rin Cuisines of
Old Chine. Host Walleoe Lee. Chef Yr
Chen. Elegant dining. Lunch. Dlnnet.
Sat. & Sun. Olm Sum (Chineee Tee
Ceke Brunch) . Banqueta. Beer &
Wine. AM9onable Prloee. 12100
8eectl BtYd., Stanton 898-8933.
ORAN<:;E
COAST
RESTAURANT
• DIRECTORY
Continental
AIRPORTER ....
-II ._,., .. "°°"' --
Continental. Lunch M-F 11:30 -2:30.
Sun. Brunoh 10 -3:00 Olnnet from
5:30 Happy Hour M~F Entertainment
& Oancina 7 nights 1 week. Valet
Pnlng. Banquet Facilities 18700
MacArthur. Irvine 833-2770.
CAFE UDO
Newport's cannery VIiiage jaZZ spot.
Cozy atmosphere. American. Italian
& Continental menu. Lunch M-F
11-3. Dinner nightly S.11. Entertain-
ment nightly 9-1 :30. Sun. Jazz aession
3-7. Ample parking. 2900 Newport
Blvd .. Newport Beach. 675-2968
MARCEL'S Y..., -.:.I. Dancing Wed. thru Sat.
nights to Buzzy Box, 9:00 P.M. to 1:30
A. M.. Top 40' s Piano bar with Wally
Ruth Sun. 6 P.M .. Mon. 8:30 P.M.
Backgammon. Happy hour 4--7 P.M.
Come see our brand new look. SeMng
sandwidles, soups, 1eetood and
crolllants. 130 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. ~6-3666.
RIVIERA
Continental. Chef Richard Bergnef'
slnot 1970. Intimate Dining. Lunch
11:3o-3:00. dinner from 5 PM. Ooeed
Sun. & Holtdays. Banquet rooms.
3333 S. Bristol, Costa Mesa
~3840.
French
llORDEAUX
100 Wines. Sliver AW81d Winner.
Lunc:n. Tue&.-Fri. Olnnet M-S. Cloled
~ & holidays. Off Bristol and
Ra (between Baker and Beat)
then onto St. Clair. 768 St. Clair,
Cost• Mesa 540-3641.
Itali an
MARCELL OS
Family owned. Establshed ~
1973. Past-. VMI. pizza.~
In Clopplno. Beer & Wine •
Salad bet. Lunch Mon. ttw Ff'I. dlnw
7 night.I a week.-Sunday BtUnch 10-3
p.m. 17502 Beech Blltd. at S.ter.
HUntlngton Buch. 842•5506.
Mexican
Ill CASA mJOCAN
RESTAURANT °"'food Is a ~ to MelUcol Ell ~
1972. Open dally from 11 a.m. kW
kJnCt\ & ctnner. Coao• ~ ment Wftd. ttwu Sat. ~ In the
Booo Room. 298 E. 17th St .• Cott• ...... Cd MS-7626.
TORTI.LA FLATS
Awed wtnner y.-after Y99f. Senw
Sonofa atyte eooklna llnce 19'9.
Open ddy 11:30 to 10 PM. Suod9y
brunch 10:30 to 3. ~ hour 4 to e
PM weetcda~. Complimentary
boW-. Centini open tH 2 AM. 1740
S. Coett H'wy., L-oune Beech. •94-6588.
. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ,,. ~
Natural/Healthy
FORTY CARROTS
Oellclous taShion food per Henry
Segef1trom. A great place for dinner .,
days from 11 a.m. Sunday Cham-Brunctt Batween Bulock• and
. So. Coast Plaz.I. lower level.
00 .
PUff1N8
"Naturaly" eooked foods, from peo-
cakel to crepee to steeks. M ac:Mn-
ture In natwal •ting. °'*' Sun. thru Thurs. 8 am to 11 pm. Frf. & Sat. 8 am
to 12 nti light VIM/MC Caual Moc>:
erate Prioel. 30SO E. Coat ~ .. Corene dal .... ~1573.
Seafood & Steak
K.AQ(8E.AM8
HMt1y ~ E.ntr.. & Seefood.
Li.nch 11·3;00. Dinner from 5 PM.
Happy Heu M-'F. Extensive Oyster Bar. Two blocks south of John Wayne
~833-0080.
ntmCAMIDY
F•hnl fre1h local ...tood, aesiern
beef. LUnch, dinner. Sund9y brunch
and c~ brunch. harbor
crui... Entertainment ~tty and Sundey afternoon. LCMlga food gat-
ley. Historic watemont landmatk In
ftlwpoft's cannery Vlliagt. 3010
Lat.yelte. s1s.sn1. .
TAU OF THE WHALE
~ 7 o.yt. BrelikfMt 7 a.m. M-F.
Lunch 11 .... M-F. Dinner 4-11 u..s. Set
& Sun. bNnoh 7 ..... ()yller bet Frl.,
Sat.. Sun. 8anQuet--.. up to 600. Entert.inm.nt 'wed.~ Panoramic
be~vt;· 400 Main St., 8e1boa. 87 .
I
I
HB·Sugt. ~ ~ott resign&
.
Head-hunters recrutt school administrator
for top post in Northern California district
memberi who have been visitina
Hi.antintton Beach the pat1 few days
to Jet a first-hand look at Abbott. Dennis M. McCormac. ~nt
of the Mt. Diablo district. said Abbott
did not apply for the job but had been
sinJled out by a an education .. held-
huntina .. company and ultimately
emcraed as the best of l 00 candidates.
unanimous choice because he tAerted
leadership in inslnK'tion. bad demon·
strated communication ind admini ..
tration skills anit b11 active iDvolve-
schools. ranaina ftom ki~ to
12th aradc.
''This is a tremendous loss to us ...
Huntiftlloa ~h trU*e Brian Lake
id tOday. F:rom our standpoiDt. hc'1
tbe besL BUt our toss is Mt. Diabk>"s
> ByROBEATBARUR
Of ... IW!r,... .....
Jake F. Abbott resigned "~Y as superintendent of the Hunt1 aton
Beach Union Hiah School dist ct to
become supenntendent of the Mt.
California
President Reagan wants
to deliver a longer speech
than allowed at LA Olym-
pic Games opening cer-
emonies./ AS
Nation
Rev. Jesse Jackson dis-
appointed Reagan won't
meet with him after Cuba
trip./ AS
World
A bearded Japanese man
turned 119yearsold
today -the oldest man
In the world .I A4
People
Thaoldest membec..of the
Orange County Board of
Education Is honored on
his retirement./ A7
The Jim Oun bars have
spent $8,000 on their 17 -
day vacation to the Olym-
pics and they haven't
even left home yet./ A7
Sporta
Costa Mesa's John Mof-
fet qualifies for the Olym-
pics In his second event
-the 200 breaststroke
-at the U.S. swimming
trlals./81
U.S. Olympic water polo
coach Monte Nitzkowski
made the difficult de-
cision of cutting the final
two players fromthe
squad./81
Entertainment
Now you can have yi
Fourth of July symp y
with fireworks wltho
going to the Hollywood
Bowt./W .. kender
Fountain Valley's Fiesta
starts six days of family
fun with dancing tonight.
/Weekender
Bualneu
Former Mesa planning
commissioner forms
architectural support
flrm./81.
INDEX
C1-10 ce
A3
85
A4
Cl-9
IM
C8 ce
Al
Al
C9
Al
85
A4
A10
M
A3
• ., ••• Cl
81""3 M
Al
W•endlr A2
M
Diablo Unified School District in
Contra Costa County 1n Nonhem
CaJifomia.
The offer was officially extended to
Ab&ott shortly before 10 a.m. today
by the five Mt. Diablo school board
Foreign painters
converge in HB
for big display
By SVSAN McCALLlJM
Ot .. Dmlr ........
The anist stood before the painted
canvas, looking at bis creation of
abstract images of horses running
through a flowing sea of violets and
browns. He said the animaJs were
crying out for freedom -the freedom
to do what they want. unencumbered
by any obstacles.
Bill Andersen said the impulse
behind his.artwork was the spirit of
the Olympic pines. · ·
"We took it upon ourselves to
create an OJ~pic spirit in the ans."
Andersen sa1d.
The "we" he discussed includes
himself and 15 other artists. six from
the United States and nine from
Mexico, who have gathered to create
artworks evocative of their home-
lands and of the collective spirit of the
summer games.
They worked all last week at the
Huntington Beach Central Library.
preparing lfiefr pieces for display
there throughout July. A reception
honoring the artists is scbedukd
tonight at" the library.
Eight of the nine foreign artists
came to Huntington Beach from the
Museum of Modem An in Guadala-
jara. Thursday many of them con-
verged on the library to work on final
details. 1 A eanvas depicting many different
colored, abstract silhouett~ of
human figures, all flowing together, is
what Ignacio Aldapa worked on for
this Olympic tribute.
"It is the spirit of togetherness, of
different roles of human beinss
coming to a convergent point of the
Olympics, transcending differences
for unity," Aldapa said.
Pepin Hernandez-Laos, who
cruted a three-dimensional "uni-
verse" out of paper on canvas, said
"ans and sports are ways of tran ..
«nding other human experiences,
like ccon6mics and politics.
"If athletes don't have big crowds,
they still compete. If anists don't
have big crowds, that doesn't stop
them either," Hernandez-Laos said.
.. The value of artists is in the work.ins
together."
Attention from people in Oranae
(Pleue eee ARTWORK/ A2)
Other member& of the board said
the SJ.-year-old Abbott was their
ment in lhe community.
.. He's a warm and compt-.ionate
man and be operates a ~II-run
district. .. said OM.
The ML Diablo dist.net, the tenth
laraest in California. has a student
population of 32.000 attendina 40
pin.·•
Lake •id today that he and other
trustees will release Abbott ftom the
thrtt years remainina on his S6S.OOO
(Pleue.., ABBOTT /A2)
Chilling picture emerges
of lrv;ine day care center
You'll find the
.... iluio ~:!r' the Orenge In
toclllr'• Auto PIOt
_,_C1
By ANDREA ADELSON °' ...............
. While alleaed child molester Larry
R. Shipp remained behind bars in
Oralllt County Jail Friday. Irvine
poltee painted a chillinlpictu~ of the
day cart cent~ ht ran 1n his Irvine
home.
Because the al~ abUsc occurred
undtr the threat of fon:e his wife
Dixie ShiC,.ticcn taken out of her
home on Cide in Irvine and
Kathy Jones ready
for new challenge
in lofty post at UCl
is living at an undisclosed Jocauon.
Asked •f cx~mployccs of Dixie's
Day Catt. the count)-1~ home
operated by the Shipps sin« I 1. ~re work.illJ under similar fearful
conditions.. stt. ~k 80Wman said
.. ~ doo'l know until wt talk to m0tt
of them.''
One woman who had worked at the
home four several montbsappa~ntl)
wrote to police about allegtd abuse at
the home. ICC'Of'd1na to a published
~port. Bowman satd Nancy Johnson
is growing more fearful s1nct Sh1pp's
arrcsl but be refused to comment
about the contents of her letter
Mrs. Shipp is not believed to be a
crime victim. the sergeant said .. She ·was a vietim of evel')1h1na 1om1 on
there," Bowman said. ahhouah he
refused to specif}.
Shipp pleaded not au11ty 1n Harbor
Municipal Coun this week to seven
(Pl--... CHILLING/ A.2)
Sc:tiool
~ repay
cash
District's illegal
account over i 0
years pondered
BJ ANDREA ADELSON °' .. ..., .......
'.The Irvine Unified School District
may have to reimbUne the state as
much as $2 million, the amount of
gifts from the lrvineC.O, funnCled into
an illepJ account over the past 10
years to pay for ntras at ICbooll, a
county Grand Jury report c:ondudcs.
The account. created in 1974,
avoadcd restrictions imposed by state
law and paid for improvements that
were not anowed under the aaie·s
bWJdina program, cooduded the
rcpon tssucd Thursday after a thn:c-
mooth investiption by the pend.
The jury concluded tha'c WU no
cnminal wron&doing. but rec~
ommended the diltrict take 11epa to
(Plm8e.e )-
2help
NB tot.
cheat
death
BJ STEVE MAJlBLE
Of .. Ollllr .......
A Newpon Beach fire capt.a.in and a
patrol officer are being credited with
savina the life of an 8-montb~ sirl
who toppled into a swimming pool at
het' family's Dover Shores home
Thursday afternoon.
Renee Cbilds. brought back to life
after she'd stopped breathing, 1s in
guarded but stable condition today at
Western Medical Ccntc!' in San~Ana
where she was airlifted after the near-
tragedy.
fhe toddler had stopped breathina
and turned deep blue when Officer
Steve Martinez arrived at the 1016
Dover Drive rcsiden<:c at 4:45 p.m ..
pohct said. Martinez started cardio-
pulmonary resuscitation on the child.
Less than a minute later. a fire
engine arrived at the house and Capt
8111 Bennett started breathing into the
child's mouth and took over the CPR
treatment. Bcnn~tt continued the life--sav1na
measures until a paramecbc wqon
pulled up at the residence. Before
placing tM girl m the emcraiency
vehicle. color had started to return to,
her face. pohcc said !
Bennett conunued breathin& for
the toddlerunnl she was wheeled 1n10
the emergent) room at Hoq Mem-
onal Hopsp1tal in Newport Beach.
When her cond1tlon was deemed to .
be stable. she was taken by helicopter
to the Santa Ana hospital.
•
sure ••inappropriate.. handhn.1 of
f&lnds isn't repeated. The account was
last July and the remaininc
478.000 wu ttansfemd into the
unty's ttnttal fund.
Whether any st.ate qencies uch as
Che controller or allocation board seek
tepayment remains to be seen. but
jury foreman Ellen Wilcox said she
was .. surprised and dismayed" at
miq disinterest by st.ate officials ..
• .. These qenc1es clearly have an
obliption to monitor" school fond-
iq. me said. .. It's bard for us to
believe that tbey didn't observe these
ichools (in hvme) had aoodies that
_ ~ year contract at a board meeting
duly 10.
However, he said trustees expect to
hold Abbott to a clause in the contract
calling for the educator to pay
I 0,000 or to provide personal con-
•ultant service to find a replacement.
Abbott currently is embroiled in a
controversy that followed the re-
moval of Marina High School Princi-
pal Dr. Paul Berger. Diablo officials
said, however, they began to hone in
on Abbott before the controversy
surfaced. They said it had no efTeet on
1 their decision.
oth~rs didn't have."
Irvine board President John Flynn
said "if those boards think they arc
owed money, they will let us know."
Flynn, an attorney, said the repon
showed the distnct's close rela-
tionship with the oounty's Jaracst
landowner, but that "there was no
intent to break the law.
"When it was discovered it was
being done (illegally). steps were
taken to have it do he oorrcctly," he
said. "It wasn't in technical com·
. plaince with the law. Now it is. and
that's what's important."
The jury report describes the gift
Abbott indicated today the timing
of the announcement may be poor.
"But when we became negotiating
there were no indications of a prob-
lem." He said he agreed not to give
Berger formal notification of his
pending removal as principal and
that Berger agreed to take early
retirement and not make an an-
nouncement until after the end of the
school year.
Berger told faculty members on the
last day of school he was presented
options and the most attractive one
was retirement. The announcement
touched off a,n immediate furor that's
----;~ilftJ;-a~~
..from Al
counts of child molestation which
.allegedly involved a youngster who
was not a client ofhisday care facility.
. The Shipps have three children
~ho ar~ currently staying in the
Albert Sitton Home for abused and
abandoned children.
He was being held in lieu of
$150,000 bail. Police had initially
asked at a bail bearing that bail be
.increased from $50,000 to $250,000
,to try to ensure that Shipp remained
~custody, Capt. Jim Blaylock said.
"' Since the all~tions surf~.
.Bowman said pohce have received
calls from about six parents who had
_glaced children at Dixie's Day Care.
'They keep saying how strange the
·place was," Bowman said. adding
none have reported incidents of
,abuse.
"One or two" parents told police
~they were asked to wait outside when
retrieving their children, . he said.
State law requires operators to allow
parents inside.
One window of the brown stucco
home is blocked out, preventing
anyone from peering in from the
quiet cul-de-sac near Heritage Park.
Two neighbors said today they
regularly saw Shipp leaving and
coming back from work, but that Mrs.
Shipp and her children were rarely
outside the house.
A 16-year-old girl who lives three
doors awal from the Shipps said she
used to cal on the house when selling
items such as ornaments for an Irvine
High band fund-raiser.
"She always looked like she wanted
to buy something. But then she would
go back to see if her husband wanted
something." the teen-ager said. Mrs.
Shipp always said "maybe next
time ... the girl recaJled.
fund's purpose.
Set qainst an era of explosive
srowth and • cumbenome formula
by the st.ate to fund new schools, the
Irvine Co. tried to speed school
development ·to prevent over-
crowdina and a possible side effect: a
push for arowth control. the grand
Jut)' concluded.
Accordina to the memo. for every
piece of raw land the, distnct
pUKhascd from the Irvine Co., the
development firm would ~put 25
perocnt of its value into a special
account to pay for .. enhancements
and landscapma."
yet tQ be reSQhed.
"It (the embroglio) has nothing to
do with my decisjon to leave, .. Abbott
said.
Abbott. who's won acclaim for
setting high standards and high
expectations and then carrying them
out in the district that numbers more
than 17,000 pupils in ~ven high
schools. joined the district as super•
intent in 1974.aftcr serving a stint-at
as an associate suppenntent at
Oceanside. He attended schools in
Fresno and has a PhD at USC. He was
a left-handed pitcher in the Brooklyn
Dodger ~rgan1zation from 1951-55.
The teen-ager also rcca.lled that one
of the Shipps' children used to play
baseball with the neighborhood
youth, but quit coming outside some
months ago. She didn't know why.
Meanwhile police have so far been
unsuccessful in reopening investiga·
lions into two sex. abuse inCfdent.Sthat
allegedly occurred at Dixie's Day
Care in the past two years. Bowman
said police haven't been able to
contact the mother of the 3-year-old
girl who came to authonties in
November and believe there is stiU
insufficient evidence to prove to the
earlier allegation made in 1982 by the
parent of a 4-year-old girt.
Charges were never brought in
either incident .
The day care home was opened in
1981. Shipp works with computers
for Hughes Aircraft in Irvine,
Bowman said.
ARTWORK SYMBOLIZES OLYMPICS •••
..
From Al
County, if not "big crowds." 1s what
-s&me of.the aFt1~t5 said the work-shop
lacks.
"One of the frustrations is Hunt-
ington Beach seems to be a place that
has not recognized they're a maturing
city and they need to be ready for the
ans." Edith Palombi. who helped
organize the project. said. ''It's been a
real struggle to make the officials and
people aware of the importance of
this ex.change."
Palombi, a Huntington Beach resi-
dent. worked on her watercolor,
which depicts various scenes along
the California coast, from the Golden
Gate Bridge t~ the mountains of Big
Sur and south.
"I can remember all the places.
They just come to me as I paint," she
said. "I don't even know how it will
end up looking. It will be a surprise to
me, too.''
Images of California is also the
subject expTessed by Miguel Aldana.
the founder and director of the
Guadalajara museum.-f:le-...uid-his.
work. "California: Land of Water on
Fire." is about "the colorful and
friendly and very warm land that is
California."
"The workshop is somethin~ new
and different," he said. "It 1s the
freedom to do something more spon-
taneous and free."
Marcos Huena. who created on a
three-dimensional image of a man
and a dog, echoed Aldana's feelings.
"Since this is a workshop, we are
trying to do something experimen·
tal, ·• he said.
A mural by Raul Anguiano, who
Andersen described as "the last of the
Mexican school which included
Diego Rivera," showed a large eagle,
painted i:n the Aztec style, and a
feathered serpent looking over a
primitive Mexican artist. Above the
heads of the beasts are the Olympic
rings.
The painting, all grays and blacks
·UCI CHANCELLOR'S AIDE •••
Prom Al
tag on a trapped sea lion. (Try the
Scripps Institute.)
Words and design came naturally
to the daughter of a woman who now
designs jewelry and a man who was a
promotion director for Times Mirror.
"Each piece became more interest-
ing, but at times I wasn't so sure," said
the 42-year-old mother of two. who
grew up in Laguna Beach and Rolling
Hills.
She concluded that being without a
direction early in life wasn't so bad.
"There are other ways to get here that
are not so directed at the time." Jones
said.
Beneath a wall of poster art and
above her desk is the framed cover of
a recent Time magazine. Pasted over
the face of Shirley Maclaine. in top
· hat and tails with her left leg extended
' in a joyful kick. is an inked likeness of
Jones. "Gening Her Kicks at UCI" is
the caption.
, She came to UCI in 1968 as a
,. graphic artist in the publications
: office and later as publications direc-
tor.
After a brief stint as a freelancer.
' ·working for the Scripps Institute and
the Leakey Foundation, Jones re·
turned to the UCI post in 1980.
. • With the appointment of John
c _Miltner, a new vice chancellor in
charge of advancement, UCl's
internal quest to be known as the
"Johns Hopkins of the West" began.
It was Miltner who sugcsted
merginJ. communications
responsibilities into one job.
.. This is really a complex. place. It's
not the pyramid hierarchy'' of a
c-0rporation. Jones saJd. "Decision·
makina poWer is in the bands of a lot
.. of people."
" Staying abrca t of an ever-evoJving
campus with four schools isn't easy .
.l! Ont of the few times sbe felt cut off
m was durina last year's controversy
over an lrvint ho pltal, with one
ill &fOUJ)Vy1n&fe11 spotOf t.a~j)US land.
.. That reflected a bas1cd1fferencc of
i,.. opinion. and 11 was reflected in how 11 infonnation 901 10 che pms." 1~
' said. wt.en the unlvmuy wa1 cau~t
1n the skirmish bttwttn C'OmP'Unt
inleftlO. "I don't ICC thl1 II tM .. C'OmJ'""' ,, ... ,'°" ..
IL1
Jones sees UCI. one of the nation's
top research institutions. as an un-
tapped resource better known on the
East Coast than among its own
neighbors.
"1JCI is very ambitious. There's no
sense of complacency anywhere; not a
dean or faculty member will say so,"
she said.
One of her jobs is to find new
opponunities where the staffs of the
information and publication offices
can intercede and boost UCI. such as
through public service annoucements
on video tapes and campus suppOrt
groups.
"My job is as a catalyst. to make
sure we're all doing it." she said.
Aside from work. the adventures of
her 6 and 9-year-old daughters Jive
Jones the excuse to vent an anistic
bent.
She recently helped one girl design
a costume for a production of
Shakespeare's King Lear. "We put
together a thrift store formal with a
piece of jewelry that was quite
extreme and a cape. She was quite
wonderful lookinf: altho.._J}:I she
could barely move. ·Jones said.
She. the girls and her husband,
Michael. a systems analyst-"there's
got to be somebody orderly" -live
amid a menagerie near her girlhood
home in µguna. Two rabbits, some
mongrel fish, a cat and dog, a hamster
and an elderly, slightly crumpy tor·
toise share pace with 1be human
inhabitants.
As an adult. "people think you are
crazy if you can continue tO play.
Children are a Jood excuse to keep
playin&," she said.
Last year they vacationed at a dude
ranch in Moose. Wyo. This year. the
Jone~s plan to f.O campina.
Between family and work, Jones
said she finds little ume for her own
artistic intcrcsts. "We have a room
where all those tbinp live. .
"l have a dream for a studio with
natural liaht instead of one where you
step O'\'Cr the vaccuum cleantr," she
said wtth a lau&h.
•·Some ptO°pk. when they open a
can of 1urpml1M. thank It 1mdls
awful. When I OPt'n one." she said.
inhalant for emphas1 . "I think it
'mdlt wondniut ••
cxccpt.for-1.lle.Jiyrnan fiaurc. ~itb
stands out in brown. celebrates "the
inclusion of Mexico in the Olympics
and the relationship of Mexico and
the United States," Andersen said.
Jorge Arau. who works with tex.-
. tiles, weaved a fiber. henequen, into a
wall hanging depicting a landscape.
"What is important is to take
advantage of same kind of medium to
express yourself," he said. "I chose
this fiber because it is very Mexican.
The fiber belongs to Mexico, as do the
colors and the cultural heritage.
.. The message is in the medium,"
he added.
Vicki Carona said her landscape,
s_howing a mountain, flowers and a
bird in bright blues and oranges,
represents a place near her home in
Chapala in southern Mexico.
Coordinating tbe gathering,
Palombi said, is "laying a
JrOUndwork for something to repeat
Itself every year."
_,J
Fair skies for the weekend
Coutml
Tides·
TOOAY S~p.m,
t:Mp.m.
IATUN>AY
5:22e.m.
12:50a.m
4:24 p.m,
J039p.m.
8un Mii tod~ at 8:0t p.m., n... tletur<lay at 6:45 a m. Ind ... , llO*" tt a·oapm.
Moon Mint 9: up m .. ttwe Seturday at 1: 10 a.m. lfld Mtt -oMi et 10:02 p.m.
Ml Le u &5 t6 .. .. I&
72 "° IO '10 15 .. ee n
" eo t1 11 11 51 1,:
11 N
12 51 -... 51 .. 7t Ma 11 .. ea u
IO 63
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HotfQlll, Va t1 t1
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a-tie t2 ..
~ .. 71
11.irn~ 111 '2
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Ponlal!O.Or, ,. 57
"'~ t1 ..
="City
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aacui1n.n10 ... 68
t2 12 Sll.oule ee ee
90 M St ...... Tttnpe 11 71
93 62 a.It Ulla City N 72 ... 68 SenAnl-90 75 n 48 hnOlego 74 ..
90 M SAii FrtnCllCO eo 53
15 5!1 Sen Julln.P A et 75 ., 5t StSi.MlWte 64 .. .,
90 SI SMl\le t7 " IO 51== 90 74
13 71 alou• ... 84 N
M 87~ et 12 91 eoa~ 79 5t
15 14 Topalla t1 et ... 11 r-. 101 73 .. 17 Tl.llM t2 97
SURF REPORT
-------
3 brothers face murder rap
By STEVE MARBLE
Of•Olllr ........
Three brothers will be anaigned
Monday on murder charges for their
alleged involvement in a wild, shoot·
ing escapade Wednesday that left the
wife of one brother dead and a
shenlf s deputy wounded by a gun-
shot to the face. ·
The shootout occurcd after the
routine traffic stop of Charles Gcorac
Slender. Six. shots were fin,d in the
driveway. of Slender's Tustin home.
authorities sai~.
Slender. 21. and bis brothers Step-
WE'RE L1 s1rN1Nc
Just Call
64-Z-608S-
D=t
•• Ouerenteed
MondtrfficMy. " you dO nol tww your ,,... by 5;30prt1.C:.-~7pm
Ind your OOf7t .. ba
~
Selwdlly end &inday " rou do no1 ,...,. your
hen, 23. and Monte, 20, were arrested Department sorted through the vary-
Thursday on tuspicion of murder ing accouqts of the late afternoon
after the Oranae Coun1y Sheriff's shooting.
Fountain Vall~y Fiesta starts tonight
The second annual Fountain Val·
Icy Fiesta bqins tonilht. offering
carnival rides, food boolh1, chili and
rib cookoffs, a benefit run. a beauty
pageant, a breakdan<le oompetition
and musical entcna.inment.
Activities lake place at the Foun·
tain Valley Recreation Center at Mile
Square Park, Brookhurst Street at
Heil A venue. The event is sponsored
by the Fountain Valley Chamber of
Commerce.
A full schedule of Fiesta events is
included in today's Pilot Weekender
section.
Wlaat do yo• llke abCHlt tbe Dally Pilot? Wlaat don't yoa like? Call tbe
aamber at left ud '"'message wm be recorded, truscribed ud clelJvered
to *'e appropriate edlc.r.
Ttte same H....., ...-weri•l service may be used to reconl letters to tbe
edllor Oil 8!)'_~c. C.trtb9Jor1 to oar Letters colamn mHt laclHe t~elr
ume -tele,litoM utbhr for vei'Uf.citfin. No clfc.1"11 oa call•, please.
Tell •• wlaat'• oe >'"' mlacl.
ORANGE COAST
llily Pilllt
H. L Schwartz HI
Publisher
-. ..
Clrculatlon 7141M2-411S
Claalfted edYertttlng 7141142..,.
AH other depertmenta 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
330 WM! 8ay St.. Cotta ..._ CA •
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Editor and ASSlstant
to the Publisher
......._, Chun:itNMft
Controller
.. ......... ,.c ....
Production
Mllneger
AMLING
VOL 77, NO. 112
' s
[· '-]
'
Cout
Camp Pendleton brass
says no torch relay ·
through base unless
Marines run It./ A3
Laguna Beach's City
Council winners were the
California
President Reagan wants
to deliver a longer speech
than allowed at LA Olym-
pic Games opening cer-
emonies./ A5 ................. ·.:-_·.···············--~.· . ._,. ····· ......... ·.· . ...... ,,.'-''····~ ., ........................ ~-..·=-~'!',, ... !•.·~· •.•.•
Nation .
Rev. Jesse Jackson dis-
appointed Reagan won't
meet with him after CUba
trlp./A5
World
A bearded Japanese man
turned 119 years old
today -the oldest man
In the world./ A4
People
The oldest member of .the
Orange County Board of
Education is honored on
A his retirement./ A7
The Jim Oun bars have
spent $8,000 on their 17-
day vacation to the Olym-
pics and they haven't
even left home yet.I A7
Sporta
Costa Mesa's John Mof-
fet qualifies for the Olym-
pics In his second event .
-the 200 breaststroke
-at the U.S. swimming
trlals./81
U.S. Olympic water polo
coach Monte Nitzkowski
made the dlfflcult de-
cision of cutting the final
two players from-the
squad./81
Entertainment
Now you can have yof
Fourth of July symph y
with ff reworks wit ho
going to the Hollywood
Bowt./W .. kender
Fountain Valley's Fiesta
starts SIJldays of family
fun with dancing tonight.
/W .. kender
Bualneu
Former Mesa planning
commissioner forms
architectural support
ftrm./85.
INDEX
Auto Pllol
Bridge
Bultetln Boatd
8ullneM
California Newa
~
ComiCa
Crouword
0.th Notlcel
Qardenfng
HelpYoureelf
Horoecop4t
AML9ndwl
Mutuaif Funda
Nllttonel Newa
OplntoouzJ =Log
Publle NotlCM
$Porta Mook Martcet1 T ..... oo
ThMt•• W.ther
Wortd Newl
C1·10 ce
A3
85
A4
C&-9
84 ca ce
A9
A8 co
A8
85
A4
A10
A8
A3 e1-1. ce
81 ae
A8
WMk~ • A2
A4
to state,
Artwork
captures
Olympic
• •
Foreign painters
.converge In HB
for big display
By SUSAN McCALLUM
Of .,.. o.llr ..... ...,,
The artist stood before the pai nted
canvas, looking at his creation of
abstract images of horses running
through a flowing sea of violets and
browns. He said the animals were
crying out for freedom-the freedom
to do what they want, unencumbered
by any obstacles.
BiU Andersen said the impulse
behind his artwork was the spitit of
the Olympic games.
"We took it upon ourselves to
create an Olympic spirit in the arts,"
Andersen said.
The .. we" he discussed includes
ht mself and 15 other artists. six from
the United States and nine from
Mexico, who have gathered to create
artworks evocative of their home-
lands and of the collective spirit of the
summer games.
They worked all last week at the
Huntington Beach Central Library.
prcparing-uie1r pt~s for dis-phry
there throughout July. A rectption
honoring the anists is scheduled
tonight at the library.
Eight of the nine foreign arusts
came to Huntington Beach from the
Museum of Modem Art in G uadala-
jara. Thursday many of them con-
verged on the library to work on final
details. ,
A canvas depicting many different
colored, abstract silhouettes of
human figures, all flowing together. is
what Ignacio Aldapa worked on for
this Olympic tribute.
"It i'$ the spirit of togetherness. of
different roles of human beings
coming to a convergent point of the
Olympics., transcending differences
for unity," Aldapa said.
Pepin Hernandez-Laos. who
created a three-dimensional "uni-
verse'' out of paper on canvas, said
"arts and sports are ways of trans-
cending other human experiences,
like economics and politics.
"lf athletes don't have big crowds,
they still compete. If artists don't
have big crowds, that doesn't stop
them either." Hernandez-Laos said
"The value of artists is in the working
together."
Attention from people in Orange
(Pleue eee ARTWORK/ A.2)
You'll find the
beet euto IMf. jlong
the Or-.. ·cw.t In
toar'• AutO PllOt
-P ... C1
By UREN E. llEIN °' .. ~ .......
A lawsuit filed by a C~ta Mesa
citizens aroup over an envir6nmental
review of the Pacific Amphitheatre
was dismissed by a judge tn Oraqe
County Superior Court Thursday.
TbedivniSllloftbesuit't&instthe
state's 32nd Diuric:t ,·Aaricultural
Association IDd U.C Neamandcr-
West Corp. wudacribed u sbockin&
and dasappointins by die nearly SO
Costa Mesa residents Who turned out
Kafhy Jon.es ready
for new challeng~
in lofty post at UCI
Kathy Jones' eye parkk a he
detcnbcs "a 11ft" j u I bestowed on
her. ·
"I had rehcancd very .carefully
wha1 I'd say, whether it was ya or
no:· Jonci said. But •Mn the
xlcCtton was made. and Jones was
named U lrvinc·s thard ftmatc
a 1stant vice chancellor af\Cf a
nationwtck xa~h. "I was ptteh· less. .. ~ 111d.
.. h's absolutely the moit 1nlefat·
ir\I fob that anyone can have ... said
Jontsdurinaa rteent mtt'n-1cw an htr s1~th-noor offiC'C ovtrk>Ok1"' the
coastal foothill It is just stepl from w campaa' teat of powa-. the
cblliccUof'• office.
She COllMI theft from \he poet Of
direCtOr or tftfonnation net publi-
cations •• ua -0. • ever cnvilioeed ...,..,., ftilfill!JIS;
~ for MV1111 I ltnedt *
th1 ... lft)'. JiM MCI DO Cleiiai vllioft 0(
wt.at • milh• becoatc as an adtt· paduaee. So JOMS Wt out ao ablofb
ewry Tit~ ud every culture wcou WhUeshtd~•atSWaford Un1vcr-
sity she hvtcl foi •yell' in Gmnan
for what they thought was to be a
bearina ordering the amphitheater's
operators to comply wtth cxistina
noise ordinances dunng con~rts.
Anorncys for the Con~mcd
Citizens of Costa Mesa. a homc--
ownen• association of around 200
famihcs -most of whom live in the
Collqt Park and Mesa dcl Mar
neiahborboods adjattnt to the
amphitheater. apparently also ~re
surprised that Judie Judith R}an
a~ the position of the auomeys
P lOPLl IN lHl N[~S
and f~ at the unavmny s over-
tca.s campus. After pad\aoltion she ta.pl an and tcitnc:e to the ch1ktren
of diplomats and American busi-
nessmen at Cairo American. a ICC-onda'l tchool in F.&Yol. She became
conVttSUt in Frendi l.nd 11.alian and teamed rudi~tary ;4rablC.
"That bft*1 ed\aUon tw ~
me well.... id Jo Cl's <'btef
Sl)Okawoma.n, •ho in the last year
1fidded quntiom from tbt ttonal
media and antwttfd triv11 uc" a the
t plact to mum an 1dent1Aation
(Pl••-UCl/A2)
sa
for Nederlandcr-West and the state.
Since the case was dismissed. an
an.junction on noise v1olattons also
was dismissed. ,
.. We were thrown out of court,"
said Russell Millar. president of the
Concerned C1t11ens' aroup ... Every-
one was very disappointed.··
Kc said the homeowners wlll mttt
soon to detcmunc whether or not
they will &<> ahead wtth an appeal
urged by Allor-My Richard Sptx.
(Pleue eee N01S&/A2)
I
District· s illegal
account over 10
years pondered
BJ ANDREA ADELSON °' ... ~ ........
The Irvine Unified School Distnct
may have to reimburse the st.ate as
much as $2 million. the amount of gift~ from the Irvine Co. fUDACled lnto
·y y1
cowty Grand Jury repon ooodudes. ...
The account., created in 197 4, •
avoi~ restrictions imposed by state
law and paid for improvemcnu that
were not aJJowed under the state's
buildins prosram. concluded lbc repon issued Thursday after a thrce-
montb investiption by the panel.
The jury concluded. ~ wu no.
crimiiiaf wron&doiog. but rec-
ommended the district take S1epJ to
ensurt .. inappopriate .. haodlina of
funds lSD 't rcpc:ascd. The accowll :WU
doted last July. and the rcmainina
$478,000 ~ tran.sfctred into the
county's acneraJ fund.
Wbetber any state aa=cies such u
the controller or a.UOicatioo board ICCk
repayment remains to be seen. but
jury foreman Ellen Wilcox said she
~ "surprised and dismayed" at
scemang disinlCTeS\ by state officials.
"Tbcsc qeDcics dearly have an
obliption to mooit~ scbool fuad-.
ina. sbc said. .. It's bard for us to
believe that t~ didn't observe t.bCse
schools (in lrvme) hid .,odiCs tbat
others didu't have."
Irvine ~rd President John f'lyAn
said .. if those boards think they are
owed money. they will let us know ...
(Pleue ... 9CBOOL8/A2)
2 help
NB tot
cheat
death
By STEVE MARBLE °' ... ~ ........
A Newport Beach fire captaJn and a
patrol offioer arc being credited with
saving the life of an 8-month-old girt
who toppled into a swimming pool at
her famity•s Dover Shores home
Thursday afternoon.
Renee Quids.. brought back to life
after she'd stopped breathing, is in
RU&rded but stable condition today at
Western Medacal Center in Sant.a Ana
where she was a.uiifted after the near-
trqedy.
The toddler had stopped breath.an&
and turned deep blue when Officer
Steve Maninez arrived at the 1016
Dover Drive rcsicknoc at 4:45 p.m .•
police said. Martinez started cardio-
pulmonary resuscitation on the child.
Less than a minute later, a fire
cnaine amved at the house and Capt.
Bill Dennen started breathing mto the
child's mouth and took over the CPR
treatment. ·
Bennett contmued the life-savins
measures unttl a paramedic wqon
pulled up at the resicknc:c. Before
placing the cirl in the emeraency
vehicle. color had started to return to
her fa~. police said.
Bennett continued brcathina for
the toddler unttl she was wh«lcd into
the cmcracncy room at Hoaa Mem-
onal Hopsp1tal Jn Ncwp0n Beach.
When her cond1uon was deemed to
bt stable. she was taken by bthcopler
to the Santa Ana ho pita!.
Mystery barrel
found in Valley
An oki, rusty, »t&Jlon barTcl that
m)'StcriOusly appeared at the rear of
Crei1tuon's Cookie Jar bakery in
Fountain Valley 'J)UTI"td an emera·
~-~today l!Y ~hcc and fire
ofriaals.
The baml camC'd a taa that uraed
~ comi .. into contact with at to
a"oid breelhana fum A small holt
de relc>ped and· 10mc of tbc fluid "'P.Jl to leak OU I tint notk'ed it abOut three wee
qo,.. Cook~ Jar o ner Jim
CreiabtonlAidtOda). "Butthcnat
rol~ under my delivery truck. o
one wan\S a tealcina dn.im around.''
.. 1ltie m tt'nou1 Outd didn't tum
out to be as ha.zardou u first
thou&ht. accordi~ to Capt. Mike
Nevin of the Hu.nungton Beach Fire
Department's balardous--material
team .
Prclimanary tests oonducted at the
ite. a«Ot\11 to Nevms, indicate the
material to be am moma wa\Ct u.ttd iD •
cltinina p.OCUK$
.. h can be 1mtatina. but t
doe5ft 'l '° be muCla of a problem," Ne\"ans .-CS "We~rt IO•at
to nd 1t to lbc llb ti' fbrthet
l CVlft h6tiftYa', \be
matcnal coukt be pollNt af'tt bu
u.d in • mbinauon wtth other
c~ oat-.
Al Ot9nge Coat DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 29, 19S..
Amphitheater goes high brow
Tbe Pacific Symphony as hopina to
make make the Pacific Ampb1tht'8tre
1n Costa Mesa •ts summer home,
tocordina to Keith Clar the founder
and director of the Orantc County
orchcst.ra. Thc~pbony will do a summer scriea at least four concens at the
outdoo theater stanina Wednesday.
The 7.30 p.m. concen will mark the
debut ofthePacifi S)'mphon). nte July .. concen will feature
c>iJDist Uooard Penoano playi
Gftsbwin's .. Rhapsod)' in Blue," plua
classics from Bemsltln to Coptand
and the popular SW' Wars mu ic b)'
John Williams.
For tickets and information about
the concert and its closin& fireworks
show, ca.ll 634-1300.
The StOOn~ cuncen for the ym.
phony i scheduled for Aue. 19 and
the tbcrt will be ooe in September and
one in October, Redfearn said.
Future concerts ftll)' include sudl
1uests as D1uy Gillripie, DOC
Severinson and Chet Atkins, aa1d
Steve Redfearn, seneral m naaer of
the P1ficlc Ampbtthcure.
SCHOOLS MAY OWE $2 MILLION •••
Prom Al
Aynn, an attorney. said the repon
showed the distnct's close rela-
tionship with the county•s laraest
landowner. but that .. there was no
intent to break the law.
'"When It was discovered 1t was
being done (illcplly), steps were
taken to have tt done correctly," he
said. "It wasn't in tcchnacaJ com·
plaince wtth the law. Now at as. and
that's what's 1mpo11ant ...
The jury repon describes the gift
fund's purpose.
Set against an era of explosive
growth and a cumbersome formula
by the state to fund new schools, the
Irvine Co. tried to speed school
development to prevent over-
crowdina and a possible side effect: a
push for growth control, the grand
jury concluded.
Accordini to the memo, for every
piece of raw land the d1stnct
purchased from the Irvine Co .. the
development firm would put 25
percent of llS value into a special
account to pay for "enhancements
and landscaping to cacb school
site ... ••
The memo notes that 1f the Irvine
Co.just gave lhedistricta discount on
the land. the state buildina pro&nlm
would refuse to reimburse the distnct
for tbe difference ... Without the fund,
there would be a tendency ... to build
nothing more than simple stud ahd
stucco classrooms ... "
Irvine schools are far from stud and
stucco. Irvine High, in panicular, is a
contemporary structure that shows
attention to arch1tecturaJ detail.
The jury repon concludes that the
dJStnct violated five state education
codes m its handling of the account.
The law requires 1 district deposit
funds from any source in the county
treasury, an accoun1ingofall funds by
the coun1y superintendent of schools..
an annual audit, lhat payments on
school funds by made only by the
governing board and the transmittal
of orders on district funds to the
county superintendent.
None of these requirements were
carried out. the repon contends. ·
The jury noted 1he district was
trying to cope with an expanding
student population. "However, cer·
tain measures taken to achieve their
Joa~s apr,ear to be inappropriately
JUStlficd ..
", iidii'E-1.l{W§tfff<:fd'itOWN'Bti-r: .. .1•
From Al
The lawsuit, which charged that the Nederlander attorneys Neil Papiano
state failed to order sufficient en-and Deborah Nesset. to forgo amend-
vironmental studies for the 1ng their complaint and seek an
amphitheater. was filed m January. appeal instead.
The citizens' voup's counsel, At-Th Id...._ d torncy Ellen Winterbottom, said the e summer wou ~over an the
suit fell under a sccuon of the concert haJrs second season Iona
California Environmental Quality gone by the time a continued hearin1
Act that requires supplemental or co~d come up. in co~ apin,
subsequent environmental am pact ~mterbo!tom 5:81.d I~ a wnt appeal-
reports to be done 1f major changes mg Ryans declSton ts flied an the
are made on a project. Coun of Appeals. th~ process could
··we·11 have to develop another be speeded up. she said.
strategy on this, but we're not at the/ Meanwhile. the Pacific
cod of the road," Sp1x told thy Amphitheatre's second concert
confused residents outside the season is set to start for the summer
courtroom after the case was thrown this weekend. Several residents at the
out. hearing Thursday said they had
Winterbottom said she and Spix lodged noise complaints with the
decided during a lunch break. after a CosJa Mesa Police Department dur-
confercnce in Ryan's chambers with ing the week while sound testing was
aoing on at tbe amphitheater.
But Papiano, Ncdcrtander's at-
torney, sa.id no one has proven that
the amphitheater ·has vtolatcd any
noise ordinances, despite residents
and city claims that noise from recent
concerts did stray above county
decibel levels.
Acoustics measurement i$ an im-
precise science, Papiano said. Even
two experts measunng noise from the
amphitheater, one hired by the Con-
cerned Citizens and one by the city,
do not aaree on how the measure-
ments should be taken. he pointed
out.
This weekend. during the Beach
Boys and Jefferson Starship concens,
the new city parking permit system
will be apphcd in College Park.
ARTWORK SYMBOLIZES OLYMPICS •.•
From Al
County. 1f not .. bag crowds." as v. hat
some of the amsts said the workshop
lacks.
.. One of the frustrations as Hunt-
ington Beach ~ms to be a place that
has not recognized they're a matunng
city and they need to be ready for the
ans.·· Edith Palomb1, who helped
organize the project. said ... It's been a
real struggle to make the officials and
people aware of the importance of
this exchange:·
Palombi. a Huntington Beach resi-
dent, worked on her watercolor.
which depicts various scenes along
the California coast, from the Golden
Gate Bridge to the mountains of Big
Sur and south.
"I can remember all the places.
They just come to me as l paint," she
said. "I don't even know how it will
end up looking. It will be a suri>nse to
me, too."
Images of California 1s also the
subject expressed by Miguel Aldana.
the founder and director of the
Guadalajara museum. He said his
work. "California: Land of Water on
Fire." is about ... the colorful and
friendly-and very wamrbmd that as
CaJjfomia."
.. The workshop is somethin~ new
and differenL .. he sajd. "It as the
freedom to do something more spon-
taneous and free."
Marcos Huerta, who created on a
three-dimensional image of a man
and a dog, echoed Aldana 's feelings.
.. Since this is a workshop, we arc
trying to do something experimen-
tal," he said.
A mural by Raul Anguiano, who
Andersen described as ••the last of the
Mexican school which included
Diego Rivera," showed a large ea&le,
painted in the Aztec style, and a
feathered serpent looking over a
primitive Mexican artist. Above the
beads of the beasts are the Olympic
rings.
The painting, aU grays and blacks
E£J.CHANCELLOR'S AIDE •••
tag on a trapped sea hon. (Try the
Scripps Institute.)
Words and design came naturally
to the daughter ofa woman who now
designs jewelry and a man who was a
promotion director for Times Mirror.
Jones secs UCI. one of the nation's
top research institutions. as an un-
tapped resource better known on the
East Coast than among its own
neighbors.
except for the human figure, which
stand.s out in brown. celebrates "the
inclusion of Mexko in the Olympics
and the rdatioa.ship 4f Mexico and
the United States." Andersen said.
Jorge Arau, who works with tex-
tiles. weaved a-fiber. ~nequcn, in'to a
wall hanJing depicting a landscape.
··what is important is to take
advantage of some kind of medium to
express yourself," he said. "I chose
this fiber because it is very Mexican.
The fiber belongs to Mexico; as do the
colors and the cultural heritage. -
"The message is in the medjum."
he added.
Vicki Carona said her landscape,
showina a mountain, flo-wcrs and a
bird in briaht blues and oranaes,
represents a place near her home in
Chapa.la in southern Mexico.
Coordinating the gathering,
Palombi said, is ••taying a
JfOUndwork for something to repeat
itself every year."
Fair skies for the weekend
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Su Rf Rf PORT
1--------
3 brothers face murder rap
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dllr ..........
Three brothers will be arraigned
Monday on murdtt charges for their
aUegcd involvement in a wild, shoot-
ing escapade Wednc.Say that left the
wife of one brother dead and a
sheriWs deputy wounded by a sun·
shot to the face.
The shootout ocxurcd after the
routine &raffic stop of Charles Georie
Slender. Six shots were fired in the
driveway of Slender's Tustin home,
authorities said.
Slender. 2 I. and his brothea Step-
Just Call
' 642-6086
Delly Piiot Dell"'J
leQuerentMd
Mor>Orf-Fnay " you 00
not ..... 'fOI." ""'* by 530pm c:el....,,_7pm
and 'fOI." CIOP'I' ... tie
°""*td
hen, 23, and Monte, 20, were anestcd
Thursday on suspicion of murder
after the Oranae County SheriWs
Department sorted thtouah the vary-
ing accounts of the late afternoon
shooting.
All three are beina held without
bail.
The shooting left Deanna LeiJh
Slender, the wife of Charles Slender,
dead from a aun blast to her chest
Deputy Leon Bcnnipdorf was shot
once in the face and today is in stable
condition at Western Medical Center
in Santa Ana.
Thouah aocouncs vary, it ts be-
lieved that Slendcr's wife and
brothers came out ot the house wben
the traffic stop was made. Olson said
durina the commotion that foUowed.
both deputies dropped or lost their
guns.
Olson said Slendtt grabbed one of
the weapons and fired two shots, one
which bit Bcnninpclort.The deputy
reponcdly returned fire, acttina off
four sbou before collapsin&.
Ballistics tesu will be run to
detennine who fired which sbQU,
Olson sajd,
What do yoa like about Ult Dally Pilot? Wlaat doa't yH like? Call die
a1mber at left ud yo~tr meHa1e will be recorded, traucrlbet ... delivered
to tJle appropriate e4i&or.
Tiie same Z~ auperta1 aervlce may be ae4 &o recoN letien te die
editor oa uy toplc. C.trlbtl&on to MT Lenen col•ma mut hld9de dlelr
ume and telepMH 1usMr for vertOcatJoa. No drC91atlOll calls, please.
_ _tell IJ, "•at't..9D JIU .mJ.ad •
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPilal
H. L 8chwertz Ill
Publisher
Clrculetloft 114/MI ...... ca ....... ....,..,, • nuea • .,..
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MAIN OFFICE
330 Wee! ley II , Colle ..._ CA_
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S.1\#dey Ind lklndlty " you 00 not~ 'fOI." copy by 7 a. m • cell before
10 e.m end 'fOI." Q09Y ..,.
-~
Clrcutetton
Telep:toltM
ChuJ DowellbJ
Editor and Assistant
to the Publisher
Roeemarr CIHnhman
Controller
Moel Orenge County "'-.....
Llgln Nigl.-.....
.. ,,...,.,.earuo
ProclJc11on
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DofMlld L wmlalM
Clrc:ulllllon
Meneger
*NOW THRU JULY 311t *
y 77,N0.112
"Each piece became more interest-
ing, but at times I wasn't so sure." said
the 42·year-old mother of two. who
grew up in Laguna Beach and Rolling
Hills.
She concluded that being without a
direction early in life wasn't so bad.
"There arc other wa) s to get here that
arc not so directed at the ume." Jones
said.
"UCI is very ambitious. There's no
sense of complacency anywhere; not a
dean or faculty member will say so,"
she said.
One of her jobs is to find new
opportunities where the staffs of the
info~mation and publication offices
can mtercede and boost UCJ. such as
through public service annoucements
on video tapes and campus support
groups.
EVERY PLANT
20% OFF!
Beneath a wall of poster art and
above her desk as the framed cover of
a recent Time magazine. Pasted over
the face of Sharley MacLaine. 1n top
hat and tails wtth her left leg extended
in a joyful kick. as an mked likeness of
Jones. ··Getting Her K.acks at UC'I" 1s
the caption.
She came to UCI an 1968 as a
graphic artist in the pubhcauons
office and later as publications direc·
tor.
After a bnef stint as a freelancer.
working for the Scnpps Institute and
the Leakey Foundation, Jones re-
turned to the UCI post in 1980.
With the appointment of John
Miltner, a new vice chancellor in
charse of advancement, UCl's
internal quest to be known as the
.. Johns Hopkins of the West" began.
It was Miltner who s~~tcd
mergi nJ. • c~6m mu n 1cat1 o ns
rcsponsib1hues mto one job.
.. This is really a complex place. It's
not the pyramid hierarchy" of •
corporauon. Jones wd ... Dec1S1on-
mak.ana power 1s 1n the hands ofa lot
ofpeoele.··
Staying abrust of an evcr-cvolv1na
campus Wtth four schools isn't tUy.
One of the few times she felt cut off was durina last year·s contro\'trsy
.• over u l~lnt hospital. with one
IJ'OUJ> vyina fer a spot of camJ>us land .
.. That reOected a basic dilTerencc of
opin.ion. and it wu ttflccted 1n how
infonftltion aot to the prns," she
&aid. when the un1venity wu caufht 1n &ht 1k1nni h between competJOI
interests "I don•t tee that as the
common 1hua1ion."
J
j I I
"My job is as a catalyst. to make
sure we re all doing tt." she said.
Aside from work. the adventures of
her 6 and 9·year-old dauahters J!Ve
Jones the excuse to vent an art1st1c
bent.
She recently helped one girl design
a costume for a production of
Shakespeare's King Lear. ··we put
together a thrift store formal with 1
piece of jewelry that was qutte
extreme and a cape. She was quite
wonderful lookinf.. althousJ:i she
could barely move, ' Jones said
She. the girls and her husband.
Michael, a systems anal~st -"thett. 's
got to be somebody orderly" -live
amid a menqerie near ber airlbood
home in Laguna. Two rabbits. some
monaret fish, a cat and do&, a hamster
and an elderly. sli&htly arumpy tor·
toise share space with the human
inhabitants.
As an adult, .. people think you are
crazy if you can continue to play.
Children are a Jood excuse to keep
playina," she satd.
Last year they vacattoned at a dude
ranch 10 Moose. Wyo. Thia year. the
Joneses plan to f.O campms.
Between family and work. Jones
said she finds little time for ber own
ari1suc interests ... We bav~ a rOOm
where all those thinas live.
••1 have a dMm for a studio wnh
natural liJht mstead ofonc where you
tep O\ler the vaocuum cleaner." she
said with I lauah.
.. Some people. when they optn a
can of turptnllne. think 1t smdls
awful. When I open one," he 11id.
lnhahna for emphat1s ... I thank It
mell wondtrful:'
1· . 1~ // I
;;,_,'
..
AMLIN .G ' S·
Ne~rt Nursery and Ganten Center
(Between MacArthur and JamborM)
·1 I
'
.