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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-07-02 - Orange Coast Pilot( HIGHU LOW•· l:IAIT lllTill MONDAV JUL V J 1ll~!4 Congresslonal approval of McDonnell Douglas cargo plane would mean thousands of Soothern California jobs.I Al Orange Coast residents talk about their plans fQr the Fourth of July./ Al Callfonila Pay phone calla go up to 20 cents and home phone bllla are also on the way up./M Motion picture and tele- vlslon directors set for strike vote tonight./ M Nation President Reagan uses a barbecue to push for · Soviet arms talks./ A4 Seema a lot of folks are getting the seven year Itch, divorce statistics show./M A sailor spends nearly six weeks adrift after his mast breaks./ AS World Iraq I jets blast a South Korean cargo ship In Per· sianGulf./AS Bollvlan soldiers round up 100 suspects In tolled coup attempt./ A4 Feature. You can bet on learning a lot of atrategy at the Just tor Fun Caslno In Foun- tain Valley./81 A new handbook tells outsiders how to act awesome In Southern Callfornla./B1 Sport. Three former UC Irvine rowers and a Newport High graduate are on the U.S. Olymplcteam after shocking the favorites Sunday./C1 The Angels continue to play well on the road aa they beat the Miiwaukee Brewers agaln./C1 An Olympic offlclal who resides In Huntington Beach says there Is nothing wrong with ath· letes using '$terolds./C2 Entertainment The actor playtng Jesse OWens In a TV biography says the athlete made his greatest contributions to young people./83 New theme emerges In labor negotlatlona./BS. ce A3 BS A4 CM 84 C7 C4 81-2 B2 ce B2 86 M Ae 11 Q cw C1"'4 • 12 124 Al M Soi·I tests for t~inted bay.-------. State armed with new year funds. launches probe of. Coast pesticide By JERRY RlRSCH Of .. Dllf ........ Soil tests scheduled for later this month may shed some liaht on the mystery of bow pesticides and toxic chemicals aet into San Die&<> Creek and Upper Newport Bay. With lts new budaet in place for the new fitcaJ year that sta.ned Sunday, the Santa An.I branch of the State Reaional Water Quality Control Board plans to take soil tests from the A yucky experience _ Aabl:l..e~t!r· 10, of Newport Beacb, &eta a clw-~oolt at a llqQlcl d~ 1'ewport-IC-Ulllfted ool Kraft's lawyers lose bid on trial Request to move case out of OC nixed by judge By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., ........ Accused mass. ~lier Randy Steven Kraft will be tried in Otanse County, despite arguments that 1t will be impossible for the one-time computer consultant to get a fair trial, a Superior Court judge ruled today. Ju~ James K. Turner denied a chan&e of venue request made by Krafrs attorneys, who wanted the trial to be moved· outside Oranae County. Kraft. dubbed the "scorecard killer" by prosecutors, is a suspec! in the brutal homosexual slayings of 16 youQ& men and boys. He is chal)Cd with 37 felony counts includma murder, robbery, mayhem and sod- om_y. The Long Beach man faces more murder ctwaes than either Freeway Killer William Bonin, convicted in 14 slayinas, or Hillside StranaJer Angelo Buono, convicted in the murder of (PleueMeCBANQB/A2) channel of s&n Dieso Creek in lrviae as part of its investiption or how pesticides and other toxte chemical pollutants sot into the auk:. The water board announced earlier thas year that tests ohmall minnows in the au turned up unusual levels of the banned pesucide DDT and other ins«ticidcs and herbicides.. But an investiption into the source of the pollution was derailed when the board ran out of money for chemical tests last month. · "We plan to start up a prosram of some IOil conoa in the cbanod of n Dieao Creek to see if there are bi~ levc1s of the pesticides there," wd James AndenOn, the water board's executive director. .. If there is a lot ohtufTin the soil we will know that it tw been a continuous and Iona-term problem. Jf tha'e i1 uoChi1t1 m. we Will bow at. is a one lhot deal lllDd • ..,_." Aodtrson said. When the Polludoll WM .. 9 covered. waler officials detaibed Ille the levels as .. swprisias" ad "a- trctne. •• They were especially m~ .,,_ the pretence ol ,DDT in ill Wllqle form. The pesticide was beml ed more ~-llACKMY/AS) .. Man shot, mom held By ANDREA ADELSON Of ...... ,...~-· A 31-year-oJd Irvine man was listed in &ood condition this mornina in a Santa Ana bospilal after bciila shot in the lea by hiS mother durial a family &fl\UDCDt. ailtborities said today. • Felix E. Rhodes was restins com.; fortably in Wes1em Medical Ceaser after a bullet &om a .38 caliber revolver piei'ced his thilb above 1be knee cap, lrvinC police' Sil. Ricbard (Pleue ... llO'IW/A2) As in the past, most panelists are oe retirees CM .residents say jazz concert worst BJ JERllY BIRSCB °' ............ The new On.n,e County Grand Jury will be impaneled today, and like past Junes. 1t will mclude mostJy retired people. Tbe jury was to be establisbecl durina ceremorues at noon at tbe Supenor Court buildina in Santa Ana By liREN E. KLEIN Of .. Dll9r ...... The music maf have died, at least for the tilne being. but the anger generated fi'om this weekend's con- certs at the Pacific Amphitheatre in 'cost.a Meta continued to echo this momina it the residential neigh- borhoods adjacent to the outdoor concert hall "lo some ways. Sunday's was the under the supervision of Superior worst concert of alt, .. said Russell Court Judge James L Smith. Millar. president of the Concerned The 19--mcmberGrandJury. which Citizen's of Cost.a Mesa. a home-Sits for a year, acts primarily .as a owner's association whicb has fought watcbdoa o~ other government the amphitheater since its premiere qcnetes. ma.kins sure they are speod- seasoo last summer. l'°' tu dollan properly and rec> A jazz concert' Sunday lasted u ii ommendiog improvements in 1oca1 shortly after midnight, Millar said. government. (Pleue eee CM NOISB/ (Pleue tee 0C GllA!ID/A.2} ·. Dis-ability no ha~Cli pf or pluc~y ·mom Elaine Craft's picture made the front pqes of newspepers across th country when lbe had 1 bilaby on Dec. 12. 19~ at SL J0teph'1 Hospital an K.ant11 \..ity, Mo. Her unc~ who hved in tot ~ teemed the ne-s when he saw a ~ of Elaine and her MW ton, 8-pound. l V>-oun« Jama JOMPb Craft. iA &be Loi A*la Tima. BlesliCI evenll usually dOn) rat PllEWOM .,..)', but this one was notcwonby. ltcameJUlt before Di. Jona saJk's 1nti-poUo vactine wu rtady fbr public ~\lie and there Wll I ICM of natlonWi* ln1ttat in at. Un- ronunattty (()f her. Ela nc coetncted dreaded and cripplina polio -she still doesn •t know how or why-five months before the baby amved. Elaine could move her riabt band and ri4ht bi& toe. She had some rttlina 1n her Tower left arm. It wasn't an every-day affair for someone with polio to have 1 beby. he recalls that relatives and friends prasurcd her to have a therapeutic abOrtion ... But I •id no, that being alive •nd bavtna 1 bl~ is a sift from God.'' For awhile, 1t tttmcd th.at ~-ont rears or her R'latlv and friend would be reallzid. Sh<>rt_)y befort the blby wu to arrive Elaiat .._,.to hemo~. Baooa ttaftNllOM kept htralive. "Tbc WOrd1of'tbe23rd ........ 'ftnl throuafl mr mlnd. ·n.e Loni flt my ........ .. Mt wnt. .. ' Alld I ~t, I~ now rm 11>111 to now-. ti .. '° die. "'Alert I w.,. .. into the ...-:J' Ro1£1t Bu1£1 P EOPL '. IN l Hl NEWS I ... ,---es ~ouncil to appo!nt Fairview Park cOmmitt ----e A nine-member CJtittns• commit· tee ronnccho ht in the plan for lhe F:airvae .. Rqional Park development will be named by the CO$tl M City Co~ncil at its 6:30 p.m. meetina toni&ht. · The park development plan. which ha drawn a larae amount of citizen inteTt5t, would dd St 0 rlhlhon wonh of improvements to the 28>-acre park lite O\let the ncJLt veral )'ears. According to a memorandum writ· ten by City Manqcr Fred SOrubal, 24 cttizcn applied to be on the oommince. Sorsabal uid he mad hi recommendauon1 bescd on local ~idency. He also tried to choo people who had not been active 1n caty affairs recently. His suuest.tons for the committ~ are: " • · Gilbert Collio~n .Du n. Jim Ferryman Ga Gray, Richard Mehren, Sharro Renna, Marprtl Weaver, Aleo Weber Hd Pam Wriaht: all of Co ta Mca The committee will diecu optton1 for the dcvtlopment of the park and make recommendations to the city and the county, Sorsabat said. BACK-BAY SOIL TESTS ORDERED ••• Prom Al than a decade ago and although 1 ts by- products how up in the environ- ment, at is unusual to find fresh DOT. While the levels of pollutants did not pl'C'Senl a public health hazard. Anderson explained that It was bad for the fish and wildltfc an the area. Consumed tn large amounts, DDT can iffect a person's nervous and respiratory systems. Anderson thouaht the DDT miaht be a result of illesal u e somewhere aJong the creek's path throuah Orange County. An investiptton by the County A&ncultural Commissioner's office, ,..however. found no suspectS or OC GRAND JURY SEATED ••• homAl "' One improvement Incoming Grand Jury member Phyllis Drayton would like to sec as better county facilities for emotionally troubled children and teen-agers. waste and water p0Uution in the county. But Drayton said she will have a better idea of what the jury will investigate Friday aft.er it has met for the tint time. A member of the Newport Harbor Junior Leaa\&C. Drayton said she was inspired to.apply to the jury out ofa sense of interest in the oounty. evidence of the pesticide's use. Meanwhile a new testina proaram on bacterial pollution in Newpon Bay started last Thursday aftera month of preliminary planruna and ttttana. The water board plans to issue a repon on bacterial pollution in the bay latet this month. names were then drawn randomly to select the 19-member ju_ry and 10 alternates. One of the remainint 30 dropped out during that J)9rt or the process lea vina an extra alternate spot open. Ttdea Temp11 .. &.e " 1$ .. 14 1' IO ,, .. IO • 71 • " n .. .. s alang Goast . . \ llln•l(lllMI 17 • 71 IO II .. " ., 71 ,, u .. .. .. .. 74 n '° .. 14 '° u n .. " '° 74 .. .. .. 71 u Tl • .. ·-ft .. SuRf R£POR T a 11 l,_ ---=--==-~ --_ ---- - L.OCA1'09t Eztended ::.:==:,,, .... i.z.-.:~---·--· ......... ~ =-=_,on ............. 10e.~::-.: ~ 111 IOI lllllnd. i.-111 .. ~ ~c::., •• ICZll 1.S 1-3 1.S 14 t.S ,.., 1.S to.Ind eo.. ....... ... direction:~ • .. 70 M_IO IO M 101 IO =: .... 11 .. 11 It f7 .. a .. U II It 11 11 .. 11 7! ua IO I) It 71 IOI 7't .. .. 104 ,, n 11 71 11 IO II ft la .. 11 11 .. es " .. 17 .. .. U II 10 71 Ii eo .. 1• 71 10 12 14 IO 60 .. .. It • .. ., .. . Q .. 10 .. .. .. ONCnotil "" ,.., ftlr ,.., ,.., ,. ,.., "From my point of view, the county needs to look after its chil- dren.' said Drayton, who lives in Newpon Beach w11b her husband George and 1he1r three childl'tn. ··There are no facilities in the county for adolescents with emo- uonal problems," Drayton explained.. Drayton. 47. believes the jury also should look into problems of_ t9xic • J ud,ae Smith headed a five-member selection oommattce of Superior Court judges who chose the jury from 300 applicants. They interviewed 80 ·prospective jurors before cuttina the list to 30. The CHANGE OF VENUE ••• The jurors will receive S2S a day plus malcaae for four full days of work eaeh week. That is wby the Grand Jury is made up of mostly retired people or people who do not have other jobs. Court officials point out that f~ worlciDJ people can take a year off to partia- pate -on-the-Orand Jury . Founeen members of the Grand Jury arc re~ Q arc eiaht of the .Campputs Coast kids intouck·with nature From Al nine women. Kraft was arrested May 14. 1983 in Mission Viejo by a California High- way Patrol officer who allegedly discovered a dead Marine in the front seat of Kraft's car. Attome~pr~senting Kraft main- tain that use of the amount of P.re-trial publicity, it will be impos~ able to find 12 jurors free of "preju- dicial feelings" toward the defendent. "The water has been poisoned,~· sa1d Douglas Otto, one of two lawyers represting Kraft." It has turned putrid and you can't draw from the Orange County well. There is no way to remedy it." . But prosecutors successfully countered with an argument that a survey conducted by Kraft's own attorneys showed that more than a third of the potenlialjuron in 0..ngc County had foJlOlten about the case. Deputy Distncf Attorney William Bedsworth said the survey reveals that another J 9 percent said they are familiar with the case but have no ~bou&hts abo~t wbeth~r .Kraft is innocent or gwlty. "We should be able to find a fair jury out of more than SO ~t.,Pf a population of two million in this county, .. Bedswortb said. In arguing the need to move the trial. Otto stated that there had been moTC than 23S an.icles_printed on the case. Kraft's name wa! in more than I 3S headlines and mentioned more than 2,200 times in conncctionJllf.tith the string of slayinp, Otto said alternates. · - The l 9 members of the new jury arc: Charles J. Andresen. 66, of Oranae; Rose Beckman. 74, of Hunt- inaton Beach; Dorian W. Boyd. 63, of Seal Beach• Drayton; Margaret M. Johnson 34 of Anaheim· Harry Kalfin. 6s, of Yorba Linda; Thomas J. Kehoe, 64, of Placentia; Marpet L Klinaensmith, 49, of Santa Ana; Henry M. Klipstein, 69, of Santa Ana; Unda J. Linder, 38, of Anaheim; Harold Mcintyre, 62, ofTus!_!ni Paul L Moreau, SJ, of Santa Ana; tw~ L o•Neill, S6, of Santa Ana; V1vien Owen, S4, of Santa Ana; Maureen K.. Parrott, 33, of Garden Grove; Kathleen C. Pickett, 61, of Los Alamitos; Warren F. Taylor, 69, of Irvine; John M. Thornton., 63, of Westminster and lrvina Wagner, 61 , of Garden Grove. MOTHER HELD IN SHOOTING ••• From Al · Bowman said. Olive Audrey Page, 57. was ar- rested for suspicion of attempted murder and booked at county jail, Bowman said. Page, the receptionist for a Newport Beach financial ser- vices firm, was being held in lieu of S2SO,OOO bail. Page c.alled police to repon the 11: 15 p.m. shooting and surrendered without resistance, he said. The weapon was found in the home. • The shooting was the consequence of an argument that erupted into violence when Rhodes, the owner of the gun, handed the weapon to his mother and said .. Shoot me,•· Bowman said. ''She did," he added. The sergeant said the Sunday niJht argument was part of an ongoing dis{>ute, the specific nature of which pohce refused to disclose. ..It cul- minated last night." Bowman said. Rhodes, contacted by telephone today at the hospital, refused to comment on what ~receded the gunfire. "I don't want it published," be said. Rhodes, who apparently lives with his mother on ~ Blossom, said he was "feeling fine and axpected to be released from the hospital within a few days. ·Bowman estimated Rhodes was standing less than 10 feet away from his mother when the WC4'pon was fired in a hallway near the lcitchcn. "It was a clean wound, tt be said, that didn't shatter the bone. Police have not been asked before to solve disputes at the borne, Bowman said. CM NOISE COMPLAINTS CONTINUE ••• From Al \ hour after the 11 p.m. deadlme when the city arc hkely to be available in a concert. the permitted decibel limits in the couple of days. A new parking permit system city's noise ordmancc decline. ..We will be films a complaint 1f which went into effect in the Collcae "It was very loud from about 9:45 ~ere are any violations," Hall said. Park neighbomood Friday seemed to p.m. on," Mallar said. "I called the When we talked to the Neder!anders be helping, Millar said. About 2S cars amphitheater twice and tried to get (the ~mpany that operate~ .~e were ticketed for violatina the permit them to understand that people have amphithea~er) last year they said it is system over the weekend. 10 get up an the morning. but it didn't the.tr practice to have t~e concerts .. It (the parlcing system) hasn't had do any good." finish by !0:30 P·rr'· O~mouslr they the real test yet, though," be said. "We are not domg that an this case.' haven't had 18,000 people there yet." Allan Roeder, Costa Mesa's ass1s- tlnt city manager, said city officials and police asked the amphitheater's management to close the show about 12:06,this morning. "We asked them to clo~ down rather than going in and shutting them down ourselves," Roeder said. The city's action was 1m1lar to what would occur if complaints were received about a loud party, be said. Amphitheater officials could not be reached for comment this momm1- Costa Mesa Mayor Donn Hall said noise tests from the weekend done by Gordon Bncken and Associates for The city revised its noise ordinance Millar said the Concerned Citizens two weeks aao to include a maximum board of directors met Saturday to S 1.000 fine for each violation. discuss whether or not ther would Millar said the homeowners' pursue an appeal of a lawsuit which acoustical engineer, Sam Lane, had was dismissed last week. turned up a number of violations of The hom~owners' lawsuit. charg- the noise ordinance during Satur-ing that insufficient environmental day'sconcert. · review was done on the According to a report prepa~ by amphitheater, was dismissed last Costa Mesa Police Sp. Dick Oefran-Thursday by an Orange County cisco, the police haison with the Superior Court judge. Millar said the amphitheater, 33 complaints ~re board members 'Will consider aJJ the taken about the noise duriDJ ahe jazz lepl and financtal aspects of an concert Sunday. Defnncasco said appeal and vote on it at their ne~t about 21 complaints were received meeting, which will likely be in about during Saturday's Jefferson Stanhip two weeks. SHIRT RIPOFF BRINGS ACTION ••• ....._Al ftW~. brile S*te. TI..-y lllitd -.... ct1td ... Cir fot .n .... lnddent Arid were able to tra down N four~. An 1~yellr.old boy .......... taking tM ihlrt. wordlrtg to Cbrtstensen, but toW1MHljlltort M didn't know • pellt gun. W11 aok>g to be ue.cs. WOMAN SHRUGS OFF HANDICAP ••• From Al olhen or sec lake others may be discou.rqcd and have hc:.tvy he.arts. But they should tealiz.e that the handicap is just a factt of their lives and not them." Cran recently completed a stint b cbai~n of the mayor's ttd hoc commttlee on the handicapped. She said ah4'• la.med &hat mna 1crot1 • ml,jor intt ct1ons -espcctally if you'reeye iaht i n't '°keen -can bt fn timidactng. he' al\O found out first hand th.al wheelc:ha1r ramp\ arc too "ecp and ' often are located too clotc to 1nter- sttt1ons -pumna the handicapped in Jeopardy of bcanJ run over by comer<uttana moconst Cran·s next project f'or the city will ht-to act u a host for th Huntinaton Beach Honzons how on cable tele- vision. The show1 which wall explore the ~tatc or the n fn and arouna Huntinaton Beach, p~mieres Aua. 8 at 7 pm. on Channd 10. She's handl~ more than a few other chores in Hun11n1ton Beach. I 1n ludrna; hcatlana lhe children"• art fesdval. scrvans on the Newland House restorauon committee. ser- vin• as president of the Women's Division of Chamber of Commerce, l:iina• membCroftheci1y'ullicdarts t>Oard; bcina a member of the Hunt· inau>n Beacb .UistQric&I Society, acr- vinaon thuiitercn1commiueo, pm pr? ident of tbc coordinatina counctl and be1n1 the former president of the Patrons of Golden Well Collqe. • She was honored as the Hunt1naton Beach c1t11cn orthe year in 1976. Teachers volunteer time and effort to gJve youngst~rs a head start in science education By UREN E. KLEIN OflMDl:IJ .......... Chris Turnier of Lquna Beach picked up his mottled purple squid and stared doubtfuJly at its slithery, tentacled mouth. .. The squid has a beak just like a parrot, but it's inside the body, .. explained Bob Kelly, 39, of Costa Mesa. ••Take your scissors and see if you can grab the beak and pull it ouL But watch out -if you pull too hard you mi&bt pull tbe ent.itt esophaps out," Kelly said The 10-year-old Turnier yanked at bis squid mifbtily with his scissors .• .. U&h -1t wraooed around my finger,.. Turnier ~bed. as the Iona. slimy esopbaaus popped out of the squid's mouth and attached itself to his band come tO&tthC'I' for the camp," Kelly said. Dunna the tbJee>.wcek scaions, youthfuJ campers paticipete in classeS such u .. Fielck, Ponds and Woods~.. ..Kitchen Chemistry," ''Seubore ure.·· and ·Kdly's "En· vironmental BioJOI)'." • •a defuiitdy a bands-on aj)proacb to science in the camp clllles," Kelly said. u be invited bis students to shake handl with a crayfish borrowed temporarily from I.be center'• muddy pond. And in case thiD&S get too academic, field trips to places like the San Dieao Wild AnimaJ Park, La Brea Tar Pitt, Sea WOttd and the Oat C&nyon Nature Cent.et help combine leamina and fun, said Arlene Parker, a volunteer instructor at the center. Dissc~ing .squid. clams and n. the Kitchen Chemistry class one crayfis.h is only a start for youngsters recent momioa, Judy Gielow, attendma Nature Camp ~ 984, held at another te.acher, was in.structina a th~ ~e~n-~esa Urufied School class in how to tr0w rock candy and Oistn~ s Envuonmental Nature crystalprdoos. i.-s-ince fourth of July Center 10 Newpon Beach. . is coming up we're aoina to do some Each s.ummer for the past 11x ycan, crystal-crusbini and make ice two sctsaona or the nature day camp· cream " she said. have been held at the center Kelly ' · said. each for S3 studenu aacs 1 to 12. She also cooked up a batch of Kelly, who teaches fifth and sixth boysenberry dye usiaa berries from grade at Newport Hei&hts EJementary her backyard prden and bad her class School during the school year. beads a· tie-<iye a patch of white cloth with the group of community volunteers who concoction. staff and run the nature cent.er. Jn bis six summers working at Nature Camp, Kelly baa seen stu- denh wbo he bad in bis fifth and sixth pade classes come to heJp out as college interns. .. AJI lcinds of people who have common interests in kids and nature Maraaret Arnold a teacbtt at the Top of the World School in Lquna Beach, WU sbOwinj I JJ'OUP of kids bow sand is made m preparation for their trip to .the beach. By pti~kina a sugar cube m a cup and fetuna the studcnu stir it up with a wooden ton&ue depressor, she illustrated how rocb are worn down and become sand The nature center is an ideal outdoor laboratory for students whc rarely get to see wildlife in its natural habitat. Kelly .said. It was in 1970 that the center wu founded by a group of communil)' members concerned that native Cah- fomia wildlife and planu were fas1 disappearina under asphalt parkina lots and buildings. Assisted by the school district, the city of Newport Beach and local volunteer groups, the board of the center came up with the idea to create a 2.5-acre mini-californi.a, includ.ina wildlife habitats that mimicked all of the various environments found in the state. They built the center -strictly with student and community voluo~ teer labor -on a strip of land oriainally used for pazioa animals at the adjacent Newpon Harbor High School. The center now includes Oora and fauna representative of 12 separate environments found in California. A desert. Redwood forest and Southern Oak woodJand are amona the habi- tats constructed. The second session of Nature Camp runs July 9-26. Cost is SSS per week for the entire session. with a discount for families with more than one child attending. Some scholar- ship assislallce is available. In order to keep th~ class sizes to seven or ei4ht students ~r tt.acber, enrollment 1s limited to S3 fuJl·timc students, Kclly said. For 'more infonnataon on Nature Camp, caU 645-8489. Jr.ist Call 642-6086 Wbat do )'OI Uk about ~ Dally Pilot? Wbat doa't yoia U.e? Call tbe aamber at left ud your meanie will be recorded, tra.a1cribed and dellverecl to dae a,Proprlate HJ&or. ne ume u.-"r aa1werla1 service may f>e ated to record leu rt &o tit& editor • ny topic. Oiatnb110r1 to oar Letten colama mua& ledade tbelr ume u4 telePMae •amber fer verification. No clrculatJOn call1, pleue. D~ 11 Ou•r9fttMd Molldey·fl'ldly " ~ 00 noc 11eve yoi. INlll* by 6 30 p m Cll 1191or• 7 p t'I\. encl 'fOAll capy ... Ill ........, e.turOty encl a..ndey II ~ do "°' ,_..,,. 'fOAll copy by 7 a.m . Oii betole 10 • m "'° 'fOAll ~.,. Ill dellwered Clfoulatloft Tel1phot11M Moel Or1111g1 COunty Al... Ma..e l.agulll~ ...... TeJJ 11 w1Ut11 oa )'Hr mlild. ORANGE COAST llllyl'lllt H.L.8chwert1• Publlshef Chuy Dow.., Rae__, CMtofNnen Editor end A81ittent Controller to the Publisher When a dMth oocura In the fliMlr you need to make a lot of right dedltona. Vou need to unctentand wMt II belt tor you and how much you cen anord. Oii Pldflc View Mortuary When you need ue. _.., Ctrculetton 714/Ma-4m CIMelfled ..,,~ 714/142~ AM other dep9ttmenta 142-4121 MAIN OFFICE 330 w..e Bey S1 eo.t1 MeM. CA • MU~ loll IMO, Co9ta ....._ CA t2t2t ~ 1113 Or9110t Co.I~~ No ,.... tiOllll. -..rmior.. edilorill ""'* or ~ mentt .... mty Ill ltlPIOdllc'Ad wlltlOul tpeCMI I*· m1111on of~ owner Pactflc View Memortal Park 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, Calif. 92883 calt: ...... 2700 . ._ .. -BULLE TIN BOARD Soap star will ea HB's Fourth parade . ~ayn~ Northrop, star of NBC'1 .. Days 0( Our Lives. , will serve as Cclebnty Grand Marshal of the Huntmaton Beach Fourth of July Parade the oldest and laraest parade in SQuthem California, Wednesday · • Also participating in the parade will be Sam th~ EalJe (the official mascot ofthe Olympic Games), the Budweiser Clydcsdales, more than 20 floats, l S marchina bandt and 30 equestrian contio.senta. ' The parade beams at 10 a.m. at 6th and Main strell and ends around noon at City Hall (Yorktown and Main). La1t Year more than 2S0,000 spectators lined the parade route. 1:Jlis year's parade marks the 7Sth birthday of Hunllnaton Beach, as well as the 80th anniversary of the city's celebration of ~e Foutth of July Holiday. . Nonhropand his wife, actress Lynn Herrin&. will ride an a ~ 9SO M.erced~s l 70S Cabnolet, one of only a handful of this classic car model left in the world today. Trull plckup delayed Areas of the Orange Coast regularly scheduled for refuse collection Wednesday will not have their refuse collect~ u~til the next day, Thunday. Thursday's collection wdl be on Friday and Friday's collection will be on Saturday. There will be no Wednesday street sweeping on the ~l this week. P JJUdren '• work•hop •lated . Teaching your children "It's OK to Say No" is the topic of a five-hour workshop to be held Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the San Oemente Community Center. The instructors are Mary Bruggeman and Pat Everett, marriage, family and child counselors working in private practice with children and adults who were victims of abuse, neglect and sexual assault. Call the San Clemente Community Center for funher details at 361-8264. The cost is S 18 per person or $30 per couple. Job dJM offered at OCC · Practical tips for effective job intervieWiftg will be offered during an Orange Coast College seminar Satufday. Titled .. Techniques of Effective lnterviewins." the program will run from 9 a.m. to noon in room t13 of OCCs Counseling and Admissions Office. Pre-regjs- tration is S l S; at the door $20. Topics to be discussed include: .. What is an lnterv\ew, .. "N~tive 'F'act'Ot'f"" IO' Avoid," "Interview Prepinltion," and "Types of Interviews ... Lee Ann Taylor, a frequent lecturer to college audiences. will present the program. She directs a company which specializes in matters pertainipg to small businesses. ,. Registration-for the session is now underway in OCC's Community Services Office. For more infor- mation, call 432-S880. . . LJfe lecture at college Oransc Coast College will repeat the popular "Rewritins Your Own Life Script,." lecture with Chris Schriner on Saturda)'., July 14. The program WJll be held from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in room 112 of OCC's Counseling and Admissions Building. The registration fee is S 12. Shriner. a Costa Mesa resident. will discuss childhood drama media stereotypes, as well as how participants can revise their life scripts. Schriner has been a counselor for more than IS years and is author of the book "Easy Effort: The Art of letting Go," and "Confident Livina." Registration is now beng conducted in OOCS Community Services and Ticket Office, located in the Student Center Building. For more iofonnation, call 432-S880. Stop-smoking cllnlc set The American Cancer Society's next Stop Smoking Clinic will be&in July 16 at the King of Glory Lutheran Church, 10280 Slater Ave., Fountain Valley. The classes will be held Monday and Thursday eveninss from 1to8:30 p.m. through July 26. The clinic will be led by ex-smoker Yvette Perdue, a trained American Cancer Society volunteer who bas been successfully conducting stoP smoking classes for over two years. The society requests a SI 0 donation for either clinic. Pre-registration is required. Cal! 752-8600 for further information. Monday, July 2 • 7:30 p.m., Irvine Unified Scbool Dlacrtct Board of Trustees~eside Middle School, 3 Lemonarass, Irvine. • 7:_IO ~.m., Huntlnstoa Beacll City Coa.ncll, City Council Chambers, 2000 Main St Po ucE Loe Rough and ready More tJaaD 100 hardy ...tmmen blut off tn thes.ttb amma1 Bantl.qton Beach Roup Water Pier Swim SaturdaJ Partlclpanta in the mornJ.na nent. eponaoreclby tile city and BUJdnaton Beach Swim Clab, atroked aroa.nd tile city pier. The wtmWI tfme of nine mlnatee, 20 aeconda wu poeted by Robert Gene of iallerton. The Ont woman to ftnJab wu Sandra Oberle of Placentt.rltb a time of 10 mlnatee, 29 eeconda. Mesa crash victim dies Costa Mesa resident Margaret Helen Dill, SS, died June 23 at Fountain Valley Community Hospi- tal of injuries she suffered in a car collision earlier this month. Mrs. Dill is survived by her daughter, Annetta Ann Martin, of Adelanto; her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas .L Johnson, of dition a1 Fountain V~ley Mesa, Ariz.; her brother, Comm1Ctity Hospital. Tho~11;5 L. Johnson, Jr., of Thery .ts a passenger in Lou1sV11le, Colo.; and her Mn. Di's car when the granddaughter, Jeannetta collisi~~ occurred on R. Martin, aJso of Adelan-Placen~A venue. 10. Mrs. Dill's sister, Winona Thery, who lived with her in Costa Mesa, remains in serious con- The f&P.ily has requested that conJbutions be made in Mrs. )ill's name to the Heart Fud. Correction Due lo a reponing error in Saturday's edition of the Daily Pilot ("Cellmate cha~ in assault inci- dent ') the names of an assauJt victim and his al- leged assailant were incor- rectly transposed in the account of an incident that occurred in a Laguna Beach jail cell early Thursday momina. · Robert Michael Rogers was charged with assault and is in Orange County Jail unat?le to post S 10,000 bail. Tbj alleaed vi.cum in the indent was Gregory · Scott en, who was treated l South Coast Medical nter for mtnor d released. 'ly Pilot regrets ••• Congressional OK would mean thousands of JobS In state LOS ANGELES (AP) -McDonatU Douglas Corp. officials are optimistic about conare ional support of their C· l 7 carao aircraft program, wh.ich would employ thousands of Southern Cah- fomia.os if the four-eOJine jet iocs into production. .. ,, bas more solid support now than it ever bas bad," saidJ~ Van Dyke, Do viQC president and C 17 program manager. ··we believe it will SQ through.'' If it en ten Production. the C 17 program would have a S 16 billion price taa· for a planned fleet of 210 aircraft.; Van [)ykesa.id 14,000 new work.en would be employed at .DouglaS Aircraft in LooJ Beach. About 400 engineers and technicians ~ntJy arc assi&ned to the propam. The l 6S-foot-loncjet is intended to meet Defense Department nCcds for a lonc- ransc transpon that can land at small airports. With a wingspan or just over I 7S feet, the C17 would cany a maximum payload of 172,200 pounds. , The Air Foroe requested $(29.3 million for fiscal I 98S to launch the C-17 prosram into full scale development by this Octo- ber. late last month, the House and Senate voted to authorize nearly the entire amount McDonnell Douglas officials say the authorization bills made theirwa) thtouah the armed' services conuruttces of t&e House and Senate without ICrious oppos- tion. '1'h~ were no aaimonious debates on the bj " uid Robeft Kindlr, va PRlidm~or '&0Vtt1l1Dall ,,..... de-~lopment. .. we didn't:~ Mlill killd ol Opposttion WC wtft aoina IO have, Mow. -feel vny IOOd abo\rt ,~ C 17 lftd me SUIJPC)!t lft the ConlraJI,"' • The Senate and lfoute walioal Varied by about S2 mitli<>tl. 1 difrenDU".IMJ will be jroncd out in a confermcc c:oauninoe. White Mc.DonndJ lobby\su soup& • rcsoluuon last Friday, the OOftl9liUoe ~ 'Vibtout &akifta actioa. The Air Force waats to bclill produaioa of the C 17 us 1917 lld put the 9irplMe iato service 1n 1991. Tbe fitm ~IO~ two of the ttubby alrlO plaMa per mwb KindcT said.tf,e Cl7 lhould ~ (CW" problems la&cr Ibis year .... die measure comes up for apPopiiarioql. die second step t.oward recciVIQICXJiCi Moul fundj The °to. AnseJes Tima rqKW1Cd aodly that a top committee sWr aide for Seu. Ted Stev~ R·Alaska. cbai~ of the Seolte Appropriations SubC:omm1ttee c:.:a J)e.} fense. said tbe propam may not batt any champions but it abo'hl.t oo major' eaemy. Stevens bat uPP9fted the Cl7 and bu spoken in favor of me ~ acvtnJ tames in commiuce bearina tbia yar. congressional soun:a tDld Lbc ~- Mc.Donnell Doualu woo a~­ petition to build tbe C l 7 in 1911. But tbe foUowin& year, the Dcfeue ~t decided to renew product.aoo of a.be 1960- vintBF Lockheed CS. Tbc aovernmcnt order for SO C-Ss was in spite Of Ill Air Fo~ decision that the planes could not fulfill the C-1 Ts mi.taion. Lockheed bas continued t.o lobby the Air Foroe to buy more of tbe C-Ss, Ud McDonnell DouaJ,asbasbeeD ~its ~ ''Wh a t do y ou p lan to do on t h e Fourth?'' hyMoq.liaa.U retitt4 •VH "I will be meta.I detecting at Newport Beach. On a busy day like that, I expect to find money and jewelry. I will probably also be helping a lot of people whb have lost things on the beach.- Mldaael Dickson, U putnrtler for California Milk Prod11een "It's my day off. I plan t'J relu at the beach and get a tan.'' · FTUk O'Brte.., 41 OW11Uefl~~ rice .. I will be out sailin& with fricDds durin& the day. IA the late afternoon and evc- ni na. I will have a lot of people over in my home' on the (Balboa). P~ninsula. and we will barbecue, drink. watch fireworks and be real happy." Rob Brenmu, U, filllennu "111 sl~ all day and pany at night." • • • StneBe 1 ~t1 ....... , al a "91111 all' ..... ,. .. I will tty io do oothina at all, just relax on the beach ucl have a~ with my family." O..Med_ Ddermu "I will party with my mom. The Fourth is her binhday. ru take bu to a nice restaurant." n ·rug suspects chose wrong 'sp&.cy'.man to offer acid A fr t aJass window was smashed A car stereo worth $300 was reponed stolen m the I 00 block of North Coast Highway unday niaht They also smashed one of the wind- shields with a rock. It must have been the beseball caP. with the team name ••frcebascrs ' that gave two men ina beat-up car the idea to offer acid to Irvine police~· Richard Bowman, who was in plainclothes worluna at the Irvine Meadows Amphitheater Friday ni,ht. r;"They said I looked • pacy'," Bowman said. With his cropped dark hair and short brown mustache, the lnln• . House 11tters on Aptc returned to lhe home 1n their custody Sunday afternoon to find it ransacked and 1 kitchen window forced open. They couldn't dettnnane what had been taken. • • • A t0nic 1lann lhat activated lii.hts In a homo on Summentone sea.ml off. would·bt thiev who were tryiftl to pry open a front window Saturday niaht. • • • ~ Kan woman rep0ned the theft of $100 1n ;o,vci,y turday, left · ovcml&ht on a li.iaht at.and in a room in the.ff'\llM Mamott • • • • An Oriental boy turntd in four SIOO bills and 1 S20 bill, found in th area of crbourp and Gascop Avenues, to Jnult police Friday iftcmoon. sergeant is the epitome of clean cut. The two men tried to act away whe' a police car pulled in front of them and one occupant ran off. Long- legged Detective Mark Hoffman pve chase,~ coflarina his man near the once-occupied animal pit at Lion Country Silfari. Bowman, who supervises the de- tective bureau and leaves narcotics ••• A Tustin man was .arrested for JUspicioo of pand thef\ Fnday nt&ht, suspected of pilfenna saddle and tKk ftom his cmplo)'er, lodustrial Uason. Richard 'f encka. 24, &Jkpdly sent the ~tern~ to friends tltcwhcrc in Califorrua for rcale. He was booked at cowuy jail lf~Beacla A Santa Ana man reported the tMft ofS.,060 of boeting equipment from has ~l toled on_ West. Ba)'Ji4e turday. ~ A Costa M nurx reported the theft ofa valuod-at-S400lrom her BMW pu~td at HOii Memorial Hoapltal turday. • • • A Ne ~I Belch man~ the the.ft of an 1vo~ tt.a valUied at J»J from tli.a stcn an Utt 1600 bloct ol Pidfic Cot t H1aflwa• turday. invcstiptions to another scrieant. innocently said people are always mistaking the meaning of his baseball cap. The woutd-be acid sellers were amona about 20 people arrested and released for a variety of drua. liquor and trespassing violations at the Berlin rock concen, which took place on Lion Country Safari's arounds .. • •• A Newpon Beach woman n:portcd the theft of two blcycles valued at sn each from a rc11cfeo~ in the SI 00 block of Seasbott. • • • A Ncwpon Beach man reported Saturday I.he Uacft of a host cnaine valued at $2,000 &om bi boat Stared in the 100 block or iP'.)Wd Satur- day. Coleall* The d\aldra's unicr at Oranee Colat Colklie Mii brota .,o owr the ~ ud aboU& SI tin c:Mb WU S\06eft. Thie lWoite Gel ft. d0Wlmthtb01ft1. •• A S400 Iola ~ hlh a bUf. lllry at a home on the lOOO bled of 'Nat 11th trut Tbundl)'. 11iirva tatenld by· an unkrioWI IMIM aad ... uoo cub .... With two 1¥11tdtn and twO ri Satuni at the Photo and Sound Co .. 3303 rbor Btvd., and a $4, 794 r was stolen. A tire iron was mash the •lass. police sa1d. • r. No I was reported in the break an of a ndry room at the Pacifica A nts, 710 W. 18th St.. Fnday. ievd apparently attempted to pry open ttnsbtn& machmc but dad not succee • • • ~mployec who worked at th Cout PJau store -.'1.5 • • • Matthew Enc Elhs. 21. and Scott James McGowan. 26. were a~ted for lewd conduct early Sunda} morn- ing at Mountain Street beach and reJcased on S l .000 bad each. • • • Pohcc said a subject known to the vtctJm removed $3.SOO from a locked safe 1n the 200 block of Legion Strctt Saturday afternoon. • • • Mart.Jn Fierro. 32, was arrested for dnving under the influence of alcohol al Wesley Drive and South Coast Highway early Saturday momma and released on S l ,SOO bail • • • A residential burJlary reponcd in the 300 block of Holly Street Fnday niaht resulted in the lo of Jewelf) wonb$<42S • • • ciart Edward Wareham. 48. "''IS &n'CSted for dnvin,• under the 1n- fluentt of alcohol Fnday ni&ht 1n the 200 block of North oast rh1hv.'ay and released on $1 ,SOO bail. P'oa.ataln Valley Buralan e anto • sun 1n lhc 1 lOOOblocko to Avenue and t fi \'C sun Tbey also t l a tclcvt · n act for a toiaJ take of S~IOO. • • • '.'W\f'l\M\n# broke a windo in the ---~ ..... .a..... ... Of n:Jaan nd tolca ni ~idcort<lOnkrand two 'lm:O speakcn valued al • • • Thieves siole a portable telcvt 'on ~t. a cassette recorder, cash. jewelry and a camera valued atSl. 755 from i residence tn tbe 10000 block of ADlea Avenue. Bantl.qton Beadl Someone forced open a rear t.idina wmdow to burglarize a home Sunday on the 8000 block of Sail Circle. The loss tncluded a camera worth S23S, a $60 flash unit, a $600 vtdcotape player and a $1.000 fur coal • • • A resident of the 1000 block of Gcoraia Street reported Sunday that his red 1982 Kawasaki motorcycle was stolen while parked in front of Muwcll's Restaurant on Pacific Coast Hi&bway TM lou. was esu. mated 11 $2.SOO. • • • Someone bufllanzed a home oo the 19900 block of Cannania Lane by entmna through an unlocked front door, a l'C$icknt rtponed Sunday. The lo included 1 S300 col r tdcvisaon set • • • no an on I 4 Ford paned behind a home on \he 00 bloc of Uth ttttL The I c timatcd at S7,SOO - l M **Orange Coa t DAIL'Y PILOT/Monday. July 2, 19M ..... ___ Ro eag&n , osf;;::;;__s ~~~-: BBQ summit S ultz, Dobrynln huddle In serious talks at function WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmi· dent Reqan, trying to entice the Kttmlin to discuss resuming nuclear anns talks. apparenll)' used a White House barbecue to press his case with Soviet Ambassador AnatoJ&I F. Dobmtin, but both sides remained tiaht-lippcd about what was sa.td. . - NATION • -NOW girds for Door · fight for wo111an on Dem ticftet: ~ BJ th Alsoctat• ANH r MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The Nitionat Oroniution for Wom~n. I oprnin1 the possibility of a noor fight, has a&tCCd ·that that a woman V1~ i prc1Jdcntial candidate be nominattd from the Ooor of tbe Oem~uc National Convention floor if Walter F. Mondale picb a man for a tuNMOl~ mate. The resolution, which w11 approved overwhclmmJly at th~ . , convention here Sunday recommended ll strateay for .th~ orpnizauon • ~Uticat action comminec. NOW fetommcndcd that na PAC .adopt an 'intensified campaian for a woman vice president.'' ~ 400 Inmate• In pd•on riot WALPOLE, Mau. -Nearly 4400 inmates on a rainpqe at Wall)C?le State l>riaon. set fires' and smaahed furniture for two houn before auards us1na d.Oll and tear II' were able to subdue them, authorities said lod:'Y· No officen or prison sWT membctt were hurt in the disturbance Sunday ruJht, althouab one • prisoner irtjurcd his foot when ~e ate~ on a piece of llw. Correction Depanment spokesman Joe Landolphi wd. Inmates were back in their cell~ by 10 p.m. and the entire muimurp security prison wa1 lockcd down u officials as.sealed the dafflaac and investtptors tried' to find a cause for the riot at the 670-inmate facility 1 S miles southwest of Boston, Landolphi said early today. P8yc1Jlc. hold oWD con vendon Dobrynin, the dean of the diplomatic corps, was seated between Reqan and Secrewy of State George P. SbuJu durinp lhe dinner Sunday ~tin honor o the diplomatic corps in the East Room. . .. LUZ11ry ahlp gr ounded Crutae 1hlp Sun Dancer limped into dock ln Brltiah Columbia Saturday after the cap· taln ran the •eeeel. lnto a rock, cauln1 a20 by SO foot hole in the hull. The abtp Ii now ROCKFORD, Dl. -"E.T., the Extra.Terrestrial," hu rolled America's crystal ball back into the Jimeli&ht, paychict at a local fair aay. About 25 ~ psychict pthered at Rockf ord'1 Ramada Inn over the weekend to read palm1, pze into their crystal balls, and read card a for more than 300 peop,le. ••Movies over the put three or four years, such as 'Star Wan,'' E.T.' and The E.mpire Strikes Back,' have set the pc;ndulum into fUU swina." Marlena 0 Tbe Rock ' Lady" Heidt ofChicaao said Sunday. Despite the presence of other auests at the president's round table, the the three men enpged in animated convenation throuahout the meal, lauahina often. I .. • £artier, while Reaaan was arecting hi1 auests outdoon on a hot, muay niaht, Shultz and Dobrynin huddled toaethcr in a secluded comer of the Green Room, away from the other 380 auests, deep in private convcrsa· ti.on. The talk looked serious and in· tense, 1n contrast to the jovtal mood at the dinner table, but there was no confirmation later that Shultz had indeed brouaht up the latest Soviet offer to discu~ ncgouatin,1 a ban.on space weaponsm Vienna rn Scptcm· bcr. Film, televisio to vote on sttik direCtOrs tonight .. Tomo 'car' a aecealty? LOS ANGELES -Toxic dump sites remain ncalccted due to poorly funded, undentaffed anb ac:attcred cleanup cfforu that underscore tho need for coordination under a toxics ••cur," the state's Little ff9<>vcr Commission aayi. ••ne hope and enthuaium which accompanied the creation of the superfta.Od proarams bu been rcpi.ced by frustration and diuppointmcnt," the report says. "After nearly three yean of attemptina to clean up California'• wont dump sites, the data shows that we have lost more around than we ha.ve c Seven -year ~tch shows JndtVorees • ,,, .. -_,----r' HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Film and television directors, threatcnina their first strike in history Thursday, bqjn voting tonight on a three-year con- tract with producers that was unani· mously rejected by Directors Ouild of America leaders. Both sides negotiated into the early morning hours today and talks broke off after produc~s amended that offer. "We nqotiated for some ·nine or ten hours throuah the night resolvina a number of points, mak.ina some significant advances, we felt, in a number of areas, and offered them a ~mplcte and final packaae," said Charles Weisenberg, spokesman for the producers. The DGA could not be reached for comment on the amended offer and what impact it might have on the previously scheduled contraet "This is a members' auild. The Prior to the new offer, membership is aoin& to have the final. spokesman Ch~ck Warn ha~ at 3 say, no matter what the recommcn· a. m. that bo.th •~des were "md part dation is," said Cates, director of such on the maJor ~ucs and th ~· filmsas .. I Never Sana for My Father" been n? proaress m ~c talks a 1. ~d "Summer Wishes, Winter Ear~1er. Waz:n said last· nute Dreams." • ncao.ttattons . with .producers o~ld The oriainal contract offer cmcraed continue until th.e 7.30 p.m.. ting from l 9'h hours of marathon t. ......... by West Coast directors beain t the . .....~in Beverly Hilton. lnJ over the ~eekcnd at the Alh.a~ce "We'll stay _there as long s is of Motio~ Ptcture and .Tclev1s1on necessary," DGA Prcsi<fent lbert Producers headquarters an the San pined!' · Cllar •park• IJl• drive SAN DIEGO -Howard Mitchell still recalls with anatr the cip.r smoke that ruined a dinner and lit up hi1.~fTort1 for a no-smolcina law that took effect in most San Dieao'County citles th'ia weekend: But Mitchell, 52, a former Navy pilot who quit smokina in 1962, says be won't rest until every city in the county, follows 1u1t. "My dinner was ruined." MitcheU·said of tile ciaar incident. "l twice asked him ~litcly to {>\It the cipr out. The auy refused, so I knocked it out of his mouth. 'The passion of that moment drove Mitchell into the camp of the anti-smoken. Cates said of last-minute lks. Ferna.ndo Valier. . "Wc'reaoinJ to try in what cv time Oulld nc1ot11tors reJe<:ted the • is left to brid&c the aulfbetwc us." document at S:JO a.m. Sunday, then StUl no 'ball tor DomlneUI Warn refused to discuss the ·fie the national board voted it down 2S.O issue• because of a news blac t on Sunday afternoon. SAN OTEGO -Jailed financier J. David Dominelli bas cooperated with the talks. "I aucss we're aoina to strike," said authorities so a jud&c should drop 1 contempt citation ~ssucd &pin.st the Directors in New York will te on ncaotiatina team member Jerry Paris., founder ofJ. David cl Co .. his lawyer says. Dominclli bas been hefd Without the contract Tuesday at the Ba azon who directed many "Happy Days'' bond since Al'f11 28 because of the contempt rulina by U.S. District Judie J. Plaza. series episodes for ABC· TV. uwrence lrvsna. impe>Rd affet" Ute 43-ycar-old former st~kbroker alleacdly •-----------------------------------ianored a court order that he not leave California. The contempt citation also said Oominelli was not coo~tina with bankruptcy trustee Lewis Metzaer's . efforts to recover S 112 million in missin& funds invested in J. David cl Co . Bolivian soldiers rrest 100 Pay phone, home phone cO.t. up LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP} -The government reportedly has arrested more than I 00 anny officers, police· men and paramilitary aunmen as suspects in the attempt to staac a military coup by kidnapping Presi- dent Heman Siles Zuazo. _ "We have detained various officers and will continue these arrests until we dismantle the entire coup-ylottina apparatus of this country,' Gustavo Sanchez, undersecretary of 1 refuae in two cmbauics or went into said Sunday. hidina. He declined to say how rm San~hcz on Sunday accutcd army m custody or identify the Col. Rolando Saravia, ao advisor to Prcsencia, a leading ncwspa , re-two former military presidents, of ported today that more th I 00 beina one of the masterminds of the people had been arrested in c n~ plot. He said Saravia r.ecruitcd presi· tion with Saturday's atte t to dential JU&rds, narcotics policemen, topple the elected government paramilitary units and a vice presi- Thc drama began before wn dential aide. Saturday, when Siles Zuazo a kc to There was no word on the whcre- SAN FRANCISCO -One won't do it anymore. It's aoi.na to take two. Two dimes, that is, to make a phone call fro~pey phone. The cost of 1uch calls increased Sun froro f,() centl to 20 niti the fint bike since 1952. Paci6c8ctt announ~the increue June l 3, afo with a S 131 million rate bike that increases the cost of residential service a t 7112 percent, Basic rcsidcntal service charies are now $7. 70, up from $8. 30. Measured service increased from $4.14 to $4.4S. ;;;;;;======================:::;;-1 the sound of footsteps and sq ·nted abouts of Saravia, who was cashiered into a flashlight held by one f the for tryin,a to kidnap President Hugo .-.... Early Bird Dinner Speclals· '6.9S Prime Rib or Fresh Fish -r-/ Complete Dinner with choice of ~ soup or salad and dessen ~~~ 4to6PM I ON THE PENINSULA l D1y1 A W11kl BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726 Fast Closing! Flexible Terms! Affordable Rates! - ~r flexi~ te-rrm .net •fferdlble rltet rNlce it euier for you to qwlify. We hetp you move in soontt, too ... by closing your loan f ert Finance your home tfw Great Anwrinn w.iy. Start today. Phone for ~.iils .ind current ratet: fountain Valley (714) 963-7736 Laguna Beach (714) 494-7541 Great American first Savin~ Bank Gt -llHfll abductors. By late that aftcmo • the Banzcr m 1974. Reinstated by the Brltaln urge11 Soviet. to talk 70-ycar-old president was fr , ad· army in 1978, he came under suspi-MOSCOW_ Britain's forelan secretary, Sir Geoffrey Howe, met today dressing thousands of checri sup-cion last year for alleged plotuna with Soviet Foreian Minister Andrei A. Oromylro and .. --A the Knmlio to parters. while his abductor took against Siles Zuazo. .... ....~ .. twa~iiiClmmaiiCK:iiiCie$iDc;ieiac;ieiCiieiiCmiliiCK:iiliaiiiiill ncsotiatc with the West on limitlna nuclear, apace and chemical weapona, the 1 1 Bntish reported. A statement issued by the Briti5h dclcption also said Howe I N MINUTES E GOLDEN BROWN GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 'l..V41 ...,. SOUTH OAST FIT & FIRM 3500 8. RISTOL • 5'5-8803 Suite 200 -mll• North of South Coatt Plaza Coatt Bank Building "~'s Seafood ~estaura"t • GRAND OP NING CELEBRATION AU THENTJ CANTONESE DINING Speclall ng in the freshest of seaf oo dishes prepared by H g Kong chefs LUNCH DINNER 7 NI HAPPY ON·SUN 11:30 • 3:00 TS A WEEK FROM 1.-00 PM UR 7 DAYS A WEEK "6:30 PM 2 For 1 'ell Orlnka., a.., I Wine Compflmentary ra 'd Oeuvrea •Banquet Facllltlel 1052 DAIS AH.. T IUCI I LYD., MUITllGTOI IUCll ,..., 38-8877 raised the question of human ri&bts in the Soviet Union and mentioned the names of physicist Andrei A. Sllharov and other Soviet dissidents duri114 4 session which lasted a little more than two houn. It did not mention the Soviet reaction. Jack•on march to TU~• TUUANA, Mexico -Marchina at the bead of what be described as "a moral offensive for peace," the Rev. Jesse Jackson led more than 2,000 Hispanic, black and white supporters acrou the international border to Mexico to demonstrate for a ''war-me zone" in the western hemisphere. "All signs say war ia on the horizon, but peace is pouiblc," Jackson said in tho Sunday marcb. Jackson said hit "bands-acron-the-bordcr" march was only the first of a many taet would continue beyond his Democratic presidential campaian until the threat of war in the hcmiJphcre is over. I lAK£WOO() CENT£R BllNA PARK MAU. BREA MAU. N. ORANG£ MALL I ' LA<UA ttiS MAU MISSIW YIJO MAU: tUCTIGTON CENTER SOUTH COAST PLAZA .... WES'lWtSTtR MAU LOS CDRITOS CDmR .KAM> COOlR 00. AMO COO£R I . Iraq jets·blast S. Korean cargo~ ... IJTTlll'MMdatN Pnn~-..-......... m11Jites JUUCIC h 10.ios:ton carao l!'Mli .:icu rockcled and destroyed 1 hip Wonjin-ho on unday, injunftl South Korean carao hip, forana 23 fourettwmcmben.hsaidallpfthoK crew mcmben to abandon the vessel aboetd ~ p1clita up by Iranian near the Iranian Pon of Bandar rcscucri. Khomeini, South Korea 11id tOdiy. Th~ ministry uid the ship was Iraq re~ed dcstroyiftl five naval carry111,1 9,000 tons of Sl«I from IJC&slnddov.;ninaa~ lraniaf! plan~. Japan to Iran when 1t wu hit in the 5outh Korea 1 Foraan Minmry an enaine room and Kt ablaze. Seoul 111d in a statement that two An unidentified Iraqi military ~~~ft!ln, ·~ ma un y over 6qlldad' Rad.lo, claimtd that fraq•1 navy ha4 destroyed five .. naval wseu" in the KJ\or Moutu Canal b.d1q from the Persian Oulf ao Bandar Khomeini and that two othert had betn dam.-CS when they struck mines whale n«ina; He 11id Iraqi jeu Ibo( down one of Iran's U.S.-made F-14 fl&hter plaoa which was amo1t1 eeveral that 1eramblcd in reaponee to the attack. OrMgt Colet DAILY PILOT fMondey, ~ 2 THE RELAXING SOUNDS OF ·rME HARBOR Ex-reporter spends..,....___,~11=l~~~::::::::: dam~ dozens of ;shipe in the Saudi Arabia and Kuwaat have weeks adrift at sea ~~=nt~~~'~:n': si~=0n'i'~t>b1:i}~:.n~ KDCM t I B.I which Iran uscs to final)te its war aidina Jraq arc .. fomentnlj a war. and effort. Iran has been ~led of they art not aware of tbe fact that any NANTUCKET, Man. (AP) -t\. lcp, He's been on the boet since be retaliatory attacks on several Saudi aarav,tion 'of the co.nflict would FM 5 RED ~tired Al~ted Press reponcr and . was one month old." Shaffer told The Arabian and Kuwaiti ships, althouah ~ip tc their own destnlction." I I: h11 dot. Sa~ survived on rice and •Ca~pe!.··~Cod~T~i~m~cs!:·:..___.__~--~it~h~u~de~n:ied~them=~· :..·~-...:i_.:....::_~__..;~..J.~....:..~-...;...;.,l. __ --:-~=~~==~==~=-====~~~~!!!!!!!!~1[1!1111-­fresh-Quaht usb while adrift 1t 1ta for ,.. nearly six weeks in a homemade 39-f oot 11ilboat. "If xou 10 to aea you better be ready, 'RobenSbaffcrwdSWldayu he deacribed his adventutt. ''If tbci'e is anyt.hina not quite riabt with your boat the tea will find it.1 leatned that the hard way." The 63-year-old 11ilor said he thoupt the rockina motion of the sea caused hit mast to snap u be headed for Beaufotti N.C. from his home pon in Jacksonville, Fla. Shaffer and his de>&t a Gecman Shepberd·black Labrador mi~· rived ·in Nantucket under t Guard tow late Saturday, havina survived the last fcwweebeatinarice and fish be cauaht with a net. "I'm leamina the bard way," said Shaffer. Shaffer left Jacksonville on May 18 in the boat he built mostly himself. the Sham Rock. Three days later, bis mast broke and until June 2S, when a Coast Guard airplane l~tted him, Shaffer; drifted nonb. Without charts nonh of Virginia, be was unable to steer and was unsure of bis food and water supply. 0 Wben I kft-JackJonville I had only P.lanned to be at sea a week, .. be said. 'And then when thishaPJ)ened I didn't know bow lona we'd have to go. I knew there was a danacr ofbeina swept straiabt east and our next stop would be Enatand ao I was careful about food and water. "Sam's so adaptable, be'a got sea Kennedy intruder was nude HY ANNISPORT, Mass. (AP)-A woman was escorted out or the Kennedy fa!'.~~mpound after lhe reportcdlr naked into Rose Kennedy s home and later created a disturbance at the home of Ethel Kennedy, police said today. T.be woman was found sleepilll nude early Sunday in the bed of Patricia Lawford, siSJcr of Sen. Ed- ward M. Kennedy, ~Mass., accord- inf. to one published report. 'She has not been charaed u far u I know," said Officer Michael Manin of the Barnstable police. He and Sst Richard Howard confirmed a woman had been led from the compound but declined to elaborate. A spokesman from the Hyan· nispon Rescue 5Quad said the woman was taken ffom Rose Ken- nedy's home to Cape Cod Hospital, where she was treated for an un· diaclosed ailment and released, the Cape Cod Timet reponed t~y. The newspaper, quotina nei&hbors, said the woman reappeared at the home of Ethel Kennedy about 8 a;m. Sunday and beaan banainl loudly. She was reportedly led away by police after Christopher Kennedy, 21, the son of Ethel and the late Sen. Roben Kennedy, discovered the intruder in his bedroom. The woman first entered the com- pound shonly after midni&ht Satur· day, The Boston Herald reported. Domestic servants found her aleepina nude in Mn. Lawford's bed, the Herald reported. Rose Kennedy, matriarch of the family and the mother of th~ late President John F. Kennedy, ti re- cuperatina in the house from a stroke. PotfarmerS golndoors these days Wt,\SHINGTON (AP) -U.S. martjuana aro:wcn are switchiq to indoorfarmiftitoproduc:ean incrcu- in&ly larJer aupPbt of pot and thwan eff oru by polio: lO apot their iUetal crops from the air, conarasionaJ iovestiaat0t1 say. . .. They alto uy dOmestJc man.Juana cultivation has become so profitable that ilie iiidus~ -~~uab •~ill dominated by oidiury ciUUft.t with 1 backyard .P.9tch or a ICCrCt plot on public parkland -i1 attr1etina oraanacd crimet which has the money to keep tbe Plantina-bidden. The ruently released repon b)' &he General Accountiftl Office wu hued on infonnation provided by 1tate, police gtnclea; bUt it included flaures rrom the National ~nization for the Reform of t!Urijuana Laws. (NORML) wbidl Mnts to lepliz.c manjulna. • , Sill m!! MC? domatac ~ucen ·-==a«o==untealOi abOut 1 percent of me U.S. rnattet. estimated at up to l4',b90 tolll a year, the ;NfVCY laid. The lltctt f1lijfa Show Americafts supplied IS ~t of the iMrbt. accotdina to OAO find•• NOllML aid Amcricant provide up to SO perunt. THESE SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 3DAY80NLY MONDAY, JULY 2 THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, • 1984 ;ill ,. M.LtiTO~N WILL-.o ..... 4th of JULY • PRICES EFFECTIVE IN ALL SOUTHERN. CALIFORNIA ALPHA BETA MARKETS Reel Ho~ ec1a1 · . . . : •OOESNOT EXCEEDJO'r. FAT CONTENT • 3 LB PACKAGE OR MORE ··•LIMIT &LBS. LB~ FRESH GROUND BEEF •COCACOLA •·PEPSI cot.A • SEVEN t:JP-... EA. ~URA SCUDDER'S POTATO €HIPS •BOUNCE lWINPAK •REGULAR •DIP •BA.RBEQU£ •SOURCRFAM ... NORTHWEST "tc~~----. . CHERRIES • 160UNCE LB. PACKAGE RATH HOT DOGS •PACKOf 8 •PLAIN •UTEBE£R EA. . •BUDWEISER ~ •€00RS REGUl.AA ORUGHT ,...,. .. how to perflclpate In our plett ..• '...... .. ... ,. .. --. ..... c-... ...... .... ..... "". ·~._-...i ................. ........ ,&, ------...... ,.., ... '""" plKa --...... C!IMlt .. ""' ........ ..... ..._ ..... llfft ,...~ •.all • ' <, <. 'A' T f ~ <; A 'i A' l A Al f ' .... A, l t· A • •I U .... ' ' . Shoddy security may let terrOristS steal nuke bomb Despite response, experts fear it's too late to remedy ~ASH I !'iGTON -. Terrorist grou~ are known to be trying to steal the ulumate terror weapon: a nuclear bomb. Security experts fear they will not only succeed but could sneak the bomb nght out oftbe~rscnal. For two years. I ha warned that secunty is lax at our uclear weapons plants. These facilities arc operated by the Energy Department, which ~latedly has started to tighten its security arrangements. JACK AIDEISOI Portsmouth, Ohio;-,_.ere found an woods near the town. The plans included details of the plant's security systems. Officials maintained that the drawings contained no sensitive information. Dingell was dubious about thls claim and wrote to Na- tional Security Adviser Robert Mcfarlane. demanding .. how any security plans can be considered anything but scnsiuve.'' Energy Secretary Donald Hodel shut down a weapons-assembly plant at Los Alamos, N.M., after a security team easily penetrated the plant's most sensitive areas in mock attack. If they bad been real terrorists, they could have stolen plutonium to make a nuclear device or perhaps swiped the device it.seJf. -Oassificd documents turned up in a loun_ge cha~rsc~t to the Distnct of . Cancer Columbta's pnson in Lorton, Va. . -While letting genuine secrets slip its pasp. the Energy Department has cure divides doctors Hodel has also put more guards on the payroll at othen1uclcar weapon-s plants and has set up a training center in Albuquerque. But my sources in the Energy Department say these moves may be too littJe and too late. The people who arc responsible for the lax security at the weapons plants, meanwhile, have been routinely re- warded for their negligence. For e>.ample, Gen. William Hoover runs the office of military 8P.Plk~tion, which oversees weapons-~lant pro- grams. He has just been nominated for promotion to assistant secretary for defense programs. Members of Congress, however, arc concerned about the casual at- titude toward secunty at the plants where nuclear bombs arc made. Rep. John Dtngell, D-Micll., ordered a congressional investigation. Now he has written a sunging letter to Sen. John Tower, R-Texas. chamnan of the Anned Services Committee, about Hoover. There bas been no indication. Dingell charged, th.at Hoover took "any meaningful action to correct a deplorable situa- tion." In fact. he actually tried to fl'lislead a House commmee on the extent of the security problem, wrote Dingell. Tower has-quietly postponed Hoover's nomination hearing. Meanwhile, my associates John Dillon and Indy Badhwar have turned up more appalling examples of the Energy Department's secunty breaches: -The department has a disturbing habit of mislaying top secret docu- ments. Seven of these sensitive docu- ments were Jost sometime before July 1980, but the department waited two years qcfore even launching an in- vestigation into the disappearances. Five of the papers originated at the National Security Council. and the responsible offic1als told the council that the documents had accidentally been destroyed. According to my sources. the truth is that officials haven't the foggiest notion what happened to the secret papers. -In another embarrassing snafu, eight cartons of classified documents were sent from Los Alamos to a Rockville, Md .. company that wasn't cleared to receive them. -Last ..,October, construction drawings for a nuclear facility in dehberately used its classification Even the best into the Memorial Sloan-Kettering stamp "lo conceal inefficiency and Cancer Center in Manhattan seeking adnunistrative error; to prevent em-can't agree on ~ t~~~tm~nt medical science bamwmcnt, and to delay the release -----. But the "best treatment" may ~~f!t~i;I~0fh~~~\f:~ 1*'~~ bre~-unovat·r---.: ~ Hepena on which door she enters. security," Dingell wrote. Through the York Avenue en- -An independent assessment Doctors get excited. even as you trance she will meet Dr. Samuel team found numerous security and I with ''what's new." Hellman, who adovcates 1caving the problems in 1980. DOE officials' 0Pen-heart surgery is a presently breast intact. re'!'oving any sm.all response was to disband the team. prevalent operation which may be tu~or_, and lreall.ng the area wt th Hoping to correct the basic problem, Dingell has introduced legislation that would creatc.....an independent Office of Safeguards Evaluation within the Energy Depart- ment. Hodel and his top aides oppose the legislation. Footnote: The Navy is so fearful that terrorists might get their hands on nuclear weapons that a secret directive has gone out to fleet com- manders around the world. It orders them to make sure they have available the capability to "neutralize nuclear and conventional terronst explosive devices.'' BLUNDER OF THE WEEK: overdone. rad1atJ<?n. . I don't know. Nobody knows yet. But 1f the woman walks into ·the NQr h.A' medical science resolved ~~r!n:~~6st~St~:Ct !~~o~ m:~ the debate over how to treat breast Dr. Jerome Urban, who considers the cancer -mastectomy or lumpcc-mastectomy "the present best cure." tomy. This debate has continued - . Remove the breast -or remove someti~s raged _ for two decades, JUSt the tum_o~. . . has led to sharp and emotionally For 1?hys1c1ans, a p~mful choice. cha'Jed confrontations among cancer For patients, an aaonmng one. specialists. The most thorough and balanced Some feminists insist that the recent evaluation of tbc two male-dominated medical profession procedures which I have seen has just 1s callousl}' and unnecessarily been completed by the Wall Street "mutilating women." Journal. Jn the middle arc the women. The Journal discovered that a I I 5,000 each year. woman wtth breast cancer can walk Sixty percent of women discover L.M. Bovo PAUL HllVEY breast tumor while it is stm small and confined. With a mastectomy, a woman's chances of surviving fivt years arc 85 percent to 90 percent. · Those statistics arc based on de- cades of experience. We do not yet have comparative numbers for women who opt for the lesser operation, the lumpectomy. But we will have the first of those numbers before August when the results of a five-year study are released. Perhaps then the debate can be resolved. Paol Harvey 11 a •yMlcated colam- IJJ1t. Walter Mondale's money-hungry campaign staff blew the chance of support from an ethnic croup. the National Association of Americans of Asian-Indian Descent MondaJe's people set too high a price for their candidate's appearance at the croup's convention. Jan Pillai, the association presi- dent, wanted to hold a fund-raiser for Mondale and have him speak at the group•s Atlantic City convention last month. He was rebuffed on both counts. It's a bkfJ, it's a plane, it's ... A Mondale staffer told Pillai th.at the candidate would be on vacation the week of their convention, so he couldn't appear-unless the associa- tion guaranteed at least $75,000 from the fund-raising event and an addi- tional $25,000 if Mondale spoke to the convention. Pillai could offer only $35.000. The Mondale aide said no dice. So P1lla1 invited Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan. The Mondale staffs behavior "gives us no choice but to support the Reagan administration," P11la1 said. The Mondale aide still doesn't Jet it. "We have no differences with them,'' be said. Want to bet? J•ck ADder1oa /1 • 1yadlc•ted colamal1t. Ten times a year. about, frozen green blobs, weighing up to 30 pounds each, fall out of the sky. One went through the roof of Tilly and Harry Dceder's house in Toronto on a New Year's Eve. Another demolished a Cadillac in Texas. But most fall where none but rabbits run. Said blobs were the contents of airliner toilets. Add in haste: The green is disinfectant. Couldn't descnbe a golden silk spider for you. exactly, but do know this small beast weaves the strongest of all spider webs. A steel wire of equal diamatcr is no stronger. in fact. Proud ol your Irish ancestry? Teach your dog to put up its paw when you say, "Tabhair dom do lamh." That's the canine shake-hands instruction in Gaelic. Q. Did whales ever live on land? A. Some did, scientists think. The)'.'ve dug up SO-million-year-old fossils in Pakistan to prove it. Q. What nation's flag docs not look the same from the front as from the back? A. Only Paraguaf s. Q. The termites that cat the wood in your house -where do they live? A. Six to 12 feet underground. • Amoni the most frequently asked queries 1s: What's the "D" in "D- Day" signify? Lot of answers to lhis one, and every answerer is absolutely certain. But I'm told by reliable sources the "D" does not stand for "Designated," as so often reported, but merely for Day, even as the "H" in "H-Hour" stands for Hour. and the "M" in "M-Minute" stands for Minute, nothing more. The hemng gulls at New York City's garbage dump double their population every I 5 years. But they're not keeping up with the garbage. If you didn't tum out another six pounds of garbage today, you didn't keep pace with the national average. The suicide rate among com· pulsive _µmblcrs is reported to be 6.5 times higher than that of the general population. L.M. Boyd 11 • 1yadlated colam· aJ1t. That's funny, I didn,'thear anything Watching a performance of Neil Simon's new play.·· Bnghton Beach Memoirs" not long ago. I was reminded of a remark made by Anur Schnabel. the great pianistic in- terpreter of Bttthoven Schnabel once told an interviewer 'that the art of the piano does not consist in stnking the notes. "'but in the pauses between the notes.'' It 1s in the prqnant silences of the phrasing that the essence of the music is to be found. During this moderately amusing play. the b1aaest and longe!t laugh was not ehc1ted by a funny hne-but by a pause. when the father forgets the name of one ofh1s sons. The audience has been set up for this, of course; and the pause tells us more than any of the jests in the dialogue. And. many years ago. m t~old ThCJJtu Arts magazine, James Thurber wrote a piece explaining how he and the director had collaborated to make Thurber's play, "The Male AnirMI," 1 perennial favonte amona scqecomcdies. Their ba ic approach. durinatryout , wastoehmmateas many "comicaJ" hn(S 15 they could At first Thurbcrob1cctcd to tl'I~ • ORANGE COAST lailyPil SIDIEY H1111s deletions, feeling that tho play would lose much of its humor. But he was both surprised and delighted on opening night. when he heard the audience's most apprcciahTe Jaughtercom1ng from a pause 1n the aialogue, ora silent bit of stage business. The unparalleled master of com- edy, Charlie Chaplin, knew this instinctively and early on in his career. None ofhi!"talk1ng" mov1c5 equaJcd the wistful humorofh1 silent ffims, because true comedy resides less in what we say than 1n howwcbehaveina bodily sense, m the way that the total organism react~ to I si tua HOO One of Chaplin'\ la t films. "The Great Dictator," wau noble failure. because satire of this kind 1s l•r&elY on H. L. Schwartz flt ~ Chaay DowMlby E61or and AtMtant to Ille Pub!•"* Frantc Zlnl A OCilll fCMO• Tom Tau City [dllOI an intellectual plane. What 11 most ludicrous in us is our unconsciou! repertoire of pretensions, and it is the disparit}' between what we really are and how we want to be regarded by others that 1s both comic and pathetic at the same time. The deepest comedy is ··mime." ~~ .. ~11.: .. 'N~\,,, which 1s what Chaplin actually was. If a Neil Simon could team to be less dependent on the spoken word, less fac1lew1thgags, his talent might be assured of a more permanent niche in the theater. Mere virtuosity is not enough. as Schnabel knew. Many p1an1i.ts can hit the notes more accurately than he could, with flyina fingers-but it is fbe pauses between !he notes that gjve the musk mc.an- mg. SltbJey Hurl1 u • qadlcated col•m•l•t. BILL ·aann Nobody • JS always right But the custo{t'ler used to get an even break . Wordsareextrcmely important to a writer.just as nairsaretoacarpenter and bullets to a soldier. Tbemorc wordsavailabletoa writer, the more stories be can relate. It's extremely difficult to tell a story withoot the proper words. . But words. unlike nails, sometimes than&e. A nail is ahvayuJlai1 but timebasawayofchangingtb~' meaning of words. For example, the word "artificial" once meant "filled with art,'' and was a complimentary term when used to describe something. Y esterd.ay I lost one of my words. The word is "warranty". It used lo mean that the.manufacturer of a product had made the best product he wascapableofmakingand took such pride in th.at product lhat ifanything went wrong, he'd fix it. Warranty now apparently means nothing. Last December. Ann bought some very expensive video equipment for me. It came with a "90 day labor, I _year parts warranty". I've had the equipment for about 7 months, but due to other very prcssinJcommit- menlS, I've used it very httle. A few days ago, 1 lcarmd that this equipment completely drains a six hour battery in 17 minutes. Something was obviously WTong. No problem it's warranted. I won't go into a lot of detail, except to tell you that there arc three components involved, and t, not being an electronics technician, had verylitlle idea of which pan was at fa uh. I started calling "Authorized Service Centers." I asked to speak to a technician, hoping that by describing what was happening, maybe he could tell me approximately what was wrong. The first told me th.at I couldn't speak toa tech on thepbone. Well then, what could I do? I could bring the equipment in and leave it. The second told me I could speak to a tech, but only between 3 and 4: 30 p.m., and that the tech would probably not tell me anything ofusc over the phone. What could I do? Bring the equipment in and leave it. I finally made direct coot.act with the manufacturerof one component. I was told that I could ft 't speak to a tech. Bring the equipment in and leave it. Oh yeah, there 'II be a charge to look at the equipment. Isn't it under warranty? Yes, for parts not for labor. How much?S59. 95! Fifty nine dollars and ninety five cents just to look at the component? Yep. I got mad I called a higher-up and, I'm afraid, yelled a little. I made them very much aware that even tbouah I'd had the equipment for seven months, it had been used for a toi.I of two hours. 'finally, they agreed to .. look" at it for free. Bring 1t on in. The11rt at the counter took the component and wrote out a rcceip1. Part of the paperwork was 1 postcard to be maifed to me when the equipment was fixed . How long would-ihat be? ~month to a monthandahalfl By now.twas really steamed, but not so mu~h as to not know when I'm beat, J'vccome lo theconchmon that from now on, whenever I buy somcthjna. 1•mgoin1tohaveto accept the fact that ifit brea2, I'll ha vc to pay to ba ve it fh:ed. 1 ne "AuthorizedServiccCcn'ter" isaoing to make il as hard as possible to do business with them, a nd if you do "brin fficequipmentln" you'll noa see it 1Pin fora Iona, Ion& time. I toolc the equipment toa unall, independent vidcolhop. Ht promistd mean estimate for repairs within two days.and thCrt would be nocharac for the estimate. I'll bavc to ~Y labior and parts, bl.it ~ievc me. 11· wonh it. C-11HHl118111 H•nwy llWI bl Hut,.,._.._,., . -.. . . .., ~V gamblers have nQthing to lose . (, . . . . ' c....... Richard Janatacb wu a qaJck atudy at the crap table when the Coeta lie.. football team boo9ten tried tbelr UUla at the Juat f°' Fun Culno. Dealen come from the 9POUOrlnt troap wblcb.adda to the fan of the pesta, at rtaht. It has been sa1d that "$Amblin• is frequently a means of gettmg noth1 na for your money." In FountaLO VaJley that statement docs not hold true. At the Just For Fun Casino players have nothina to lose, and for the modest admission fee they can pjn aamina experience and hours of fun. As an evenin1 progresses so docs the excitement. Loud cbeen accom- pany the sound of dice hittina the side of the crap .table. Beu are placed on the table but the players arc not gambli.na. They arc learnma basic stratcaics of casino aames and money management. Owners Dottle Cravens. who with husba!ld John offers customers a caring and sinc.crity that is not found at Vegascasinos,commentcd, .. We're Learn how to act-awes·orne Handbook pokes good-n a tured fun young record company executive or publicity agent, the BMW 3181 1s the car for you. Make sure you litter the backseat with press releases or scripts and don't forget the brake covers. at driving, dressin g in Sout hland LOS ANGELES (AP) -Imagine a plac.c where your car is more impart· ant than you arc, where it's rude not to have a nic.c day, where your friends arc called contacts. and getting paged 1s a dream come true. If you thought of Southern Cali- fornia you have a head start on Jonathan Robert's latest book "How to California" ($6. 95, Dell), an 11 • week crash manual which auaranted"'" that if followed, you too, can live like a Southern Californian flO matter where you arc. "I wanted to b~k free from what I felt was ultimately a limited provin- cial life," said the 29:year-old East Coast native who wrote "The Official Preppy Handbook. "I wanted to experience a place with a different culture and Southern California fascinated me." So three years ago Roberts moved to Los Angeles. stupid idea. I thought surfing was The fancier BMW coupes arc done by trick photography. J thought driven by the Qlder record executive Southern California was. well, silly." or agent. In this case, leave the What he o th oht f sill h backseat alone but get a mobile nee •ur._: 0 as Y e phone. A safe bet fior the rest of you oow describes as ·an incredibly visual, young. new place that reflects successful and under-SO -pro- a heightened form of American pop fessionals is the Mercedes SL. Those culture.". _ over SO and retired need not be Roberts s~aks glowinaly of ashamed of turning to the trusty Southern California as a mecca of Cadillac. opportunity; where big splashes arc If you're sull in school, the Honda made very quickly; where it's OK to Prelude makes the perfect sweet 16 act and look "nouveau riche"; where ·sift. Male tcen-aacrs who can't fool r,ou don't have to be pcdijrccd to around at home drive vans... ·make it" socially, an<! w1ierc eclectic Finally, you too can look like the and often exotic lifestyles flourish. California Girl who's always just out In "How to California," Roberts of reach on the highway. Get yourself pokes some good-natured fun at these a VW Bua Convertible. lifestyles. And for those inclined to be Almost as important as what you Californian anywhere, all the time, he drive is how you look when you drive. tells you how to do it ri$ht. The Rolcx President watch is a must. The first chapter as aJI about And .Roberts advises, "If you can't driving. Not only do you rarely get afford it, kill yourself." out of your car, you are what you Southern California, he cautions, -It ts considered poor form to look your age. So lie, add a few years and blame it on the fact that Californians arc not noted for their mathematical skit . -If you're going to die and you're not a celebrity, don't bother because nobody would come to your funeral anyway. . -If you're divorced, celebrate .. You get points for getting out of marriage in California. -An innocent aame of tenrus with a studiq executive could ruin your career in .. The lndustry" if you win. So play to lose. -When minJiing at parties you should get excited about isolation tanks and tranquilizers; use the words .. greet" and "aWeso.mc" alot; never talk about prep schools. How will you lcnow when you can pass yourself off as a native? Once you've made plans to build a vacation home on the San Andreas FaulL here to help people arid teach them more about the sames... · · For a S7.2S admi ion ftc a ~n is given a!akcSlOO worth of chips. By canfully bettina ·from SI to $SO a person should be able to spend an enjoyable evenina and Walk awa>· a winner. "Wtnners .. have their surplus chip credit added to a computer list for their next visit. The Cravenses plan to award a gambler-of-the-month certificate to the pc:rson who ac- cumulates the most points. They said the casino is the first business of thas nature an Fountain Valle) a.ad the only tuch 1tore4roftt bu iness ~tina 1n the county. Evcrythina at the c:aliAO is dOnc IO the letter of the law. Charity Fad Veps Nitcs arc ru n 50 that Ill pA1!1="' have ~ual~hance ofWi.....-. ibe main pnzn. lnstad of aw.rdi111 prizes to the biarst Winnett, die llUb on the idmission ticket 11 uted as die bl.Sis for door prize drawt"lll adt even ans. A plumber by profetsion, Cnvms IS really a jack-Of·all tJ'lda Wbo hil (Pleue _. CA8Dt0/m) , .v.. ,, ll "I thought Southern California was a made-for-TV son of place," he said. "I thought perfect weather was a drive, Roberts observes. has its own code of ethics: Therefore, choosin~ a car is serious -You should never overdress. To business. Note his tips: If you're a be safe wear athletic gear at all times. Robcns, who calls himself a writer of frothy commercialism, admits Southern California is much more than what he taJks about in his book, "I wanted to play with the media (image of) California." And he also wanted to make people laugh at themselves. Ia handbook author Jonathan Roberta medltatlnC oa dur beneftta of llTlnC ln the Southern callfornla mecca? 0.., Net,._.,....., Twn ·-Anabel Konwtaer, boeteu to the boeteaaea, ucbanaed decorattna Barbara Bowie, Nancy Neeley and Mary Wolff are entemitatni ldeu for holiday diaplaya with Mary Colby, left, and C&rol Porter. people wbo welcome c hance to aapport Raman Optiona pl'OlftlD•· -Wantfun?Try 'Entertaining People' Hostesses with mostest s how holiday decor for ch arity ---- By ANN CONWAY ...... c.. ........ . With visions of suaar plums d1J1cin1 in their heads, 2<4 of~nae County's prominent hostesses met for luncheon in the Corona de I Mar home of Aubel · 1.•wller to celebrate a new fund-raising concept - a public vicwina of their personal holiday decor. Vianetted isplays-tilled"EntcrtaininaPcoplc" -w.all betel up in La&una ·~new Ritz.Carlton Kotcl in mid-Novem ber with pr~oiOlto Human Op- tions. a sJielter: forabused women located an the Laauna area. Members of the benefit committee and the Human Options board hosted the .. host .. m the hiJI id J9'a &tawlMr home that command a rt\apiody·in· blue view ofbay and sky. The women d1nCdon morsel· filled pasta and shared theme ideas. "I'm not sure where to bqin." pondered Nucy Neea.y. "-our furnishings arc so cclcctac. it' !I hard lo set\le on one theme -what a fun challenge!" " Mary Colby-ownerofColby' antiques an San Oemente-will work with designer Gay Davlt (the hostesses will collaborate with their interior de tancrs for"Entertainina Pcople")tocrcate a "Chinese N ew Year."· . Stepllailte Robert:IOD decided to do a 0 Childrcn ·s Christma · Pany";Ju Baktt,a "Trce·tnmmang Pany .. and the Irvine family opted for'-C.rlltma• Evt · S.~r." • SaUy'IHn ckc1dedon "New vear·s Eve Dtnncr" andBeUy A...._ will do an "Enalish Cbri tma . " TheCurtifam ilychosean"lta1ianChri tma " Other ho tc for the Nov. I 7·19c\ent which will feature a boutique. a S&turday niiht kickoflblack·tie dinncrdance,a undaybrunchand Monda luncbY.Jth prcs\iaiouslecturcrsin theficldofcntcna1n ng1rc M•"· rletCott•.AHJDt IM,T•1Fon r, r Harry Riller, Alex Robert ... m, ftomas Wolff, AJeUDder Bowie and Jamu ha.pp. The Knott and O'Netl fam1hcs-ab&will panicipatc as wiU J9d1e ~Ua SoetaUJH. Head ins thobmefu«>mmiucearcMmes. Herbert Porter, chairman, and Tlmotky Devlae and Ray WiDterbaJter, viccchaionen. A i ting them on the cxccuti ve committee arc Mmes. David C. AJdermu, Paparazzi i t'dllt'd b ·Dirty Piiot t}l~ E.ditor Vid.t Dean. Orange Coat DAIL y PIL.OT /Monday, July 2; 1984 .... Mother defends sdn 's sleepingarrangements 0 · RANN LA DERS: I hope )OU will rethink yourtwsh a s mentofthccon«mcd father \\ hOSC' moahrr1 . dau,htrrsJ~ in his btd. Labelina u "bOrdtrhnc -(Tlwtnmnny·t.11n, ·'""*~- Naturall) the fatherwhOSt l l·y r- olddaushtC'r1slharinJh1sbcd hould be told entlytoend his daughter' Dd from bclac alolt. You llave five ons. lf lltey were dnpten •Hid yoa aUow tlttlD, one at a time, to take .. pt wl&h tlaelr fatber? a&htr •bed. I caJltd It bordfrllne lncestlto.1 aDd tUt'1 uactJ1 •hi& I et.at. 1lae t1ann1 of au may aot bo pre at now, b1tlJ ala& arraogtmeat coottoae11tx aJ f~llnJ• are bound toemergeud tb.t1lrl'1 llfe wUJ bf a me11. 10 t1.aypalrof1lt~Hd rla~1bed. :s incc tuous'' wan bit h.eavy ... Inap- propriate" would tu1vc b«n a bcuer .. .._term •• lMDEIS bad habal. But to imply that the amnacment is "borderline tn· cestuous0 h nonsense. -A MOM IN BUZZARDS BAY, MASS. Yoa aay a bed It for slttplDg. Trae, bat a bed 11 mucla more t.baa &hat. It'• IA &be lan&ua,e. Wltea a maa ask• a woman, •'lf.ow woald you Uke &o come to bed wllb me?" Ile 11 aot lnvldllg Iler to SLEEhttlt blm, my dear. And event.be qoe1tloo, "WOii id yo11 care t.o sleep wldl me?" lmpUea a wbole lot more lb.an clo1lag one'• eyet ud 1Upplq off to 1huoberlaad. • • • I'm a de«at fellow wllb. u hnporl· ant mn111e for loae)y alrl wbo wut someone respectable: Open ~or eye1. Lookaroo1d. Talk to 1omecm you don'& know. J wllll 11 would la1ppea tome.-BOBINP4. DEAR BOB: "i our advice 1ouad1 1t101lble. I 11ggnt ttaat yoa take It. -· Believe 11 or not. there are many people who rtprd a~ ns utilitarian. They use It for sl~plftl. Not all people see the bed es a symbol for sexual actlvity. My 8-year-old spends many n~t5 sleepina onuhe other side of my k.ing- s12e bed. There 1s no cuddhna, no body contact. A parent and child who share the same couch while watching TV ~clo5Crphy jcaJlythan my son a.nd f when we sleep on opposite side ofthebcd. l have raised fivewcll.ad1usted male children. Each of them napped with me in my bed until they were S The sixth l\ad nooneshannah1s room Like the other$. so if he wants to DEARMOM:Sony,ldoa'tbuylt. U a •llole load of kid.I wu&a 10 plle llto Mom'•~-~ moralllg for a bit of frollcki•a, fl.De, bot one ctllld la bed wl&b a parent of dae opposlle 1e1, after lite age of%, ls vel"bo&eL TIM aame 1oe1 for a cb.lld wb.o wut1 to 1leep whit Mommy and Dad. Tlaete U&tle sbrewdlet often 111e dll1nae10 bec.ome lite center of aattattoll, Cla111 preveartng &tom ud I repeat my orl1tnaJ advice -an 11- year-old aJrl 1bould oot be 1bar1D1 ber DEAR ANN LANDERS: May I respond to .. Star Wltae11"? be want• to koow wbere all tbe alee 1uy1 are. Tiiey are on lb.I Job, in 1tore1, 111 1talloo1, fac1orle1, offices, and they walk down the 1treet1 •"ery day. Tb~ problem: ll'bey are 11ty. . Womea 1bo1lda't be 10 Umld about making tlte fltt& move. Tlae mu wbo approacbtt ber la anally u ex- perienced smoollale wlto Imo•• bow • • • Do you feel awkward, self-con· scious-lonely? Welcome to tht' club. There'shelpforyouinAnn u nden' booklet, "The Key ro Popu- l1riry. "&nd soc~nts with your .. request Ind 1 IOf18, Stlmi>tt/. ~If. • 1ddres cdenvclopetoAnn linden. P. 0. Box J 199.1, Chi~, Ill. 606 J I . Migraine: The worst headache . A headache 1s a headache as a headache is a headache. If you arc a chronic sufferer. you know the for- gomg.repeut1on 1s not exaggerated. DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: As a kid I recall how my mother used to suffer from headaches. They were so disabling, she'd excuse herself from the rest of the family for hou" - lying 1n a darkened bedroom. ~hen she came out. she'd look as if she were half-dead. "l hope none of your children ever grow up to suffer from these sack headahces. ·· Well, at last I've Joined the bripde. l"m 21 and they began when I completed my last exam m college a few months ago I've had three attacks smcc then. They last for hours and actualry <11~ble me with nausea and vom1ung.. I haven't been to the doctor yet because I think they're tension headaches which began dur- ing the stress of taking finaf exams. Would it be all nght for me to take as many as six aspinn tablets a day? CASINO ... From Bl hand-crafted 43 blackjack tables and I 0 crap tables. In 1982 Cravens obtained a patent ~r "Crazy Horse," a race track type of game where 30 to 40 races are run during a hour as cards from two decks · reveal the numbers of the horses in the lead. He compliments his wife's abahty to deal with the public and she praises the handiwork of her husband of 33 years. The couple, who have three children and five grandchildren, hap- pened into the casino business a number of years ago when Dottie saw a. newspaper ad offering a craps table for $35. A'fter looking at the table, Cravens decided be could make a better one in his garage workshop. When the tabJe was finished they gave a party for a few friends and soon people were begging them to put on Vegas parties. The Just for Fun Casano-can handJe parties for 100 to 250 people so the Cravens have put on fund-raisers for non-profit groups, corporations and private birthday parties. The c.\Sino is open Tuesday-Saturday from 7 p.m. to midnight. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, INC. f• .. Int " ,_ lh 1'22 .... am .. COSTA EA-SQ..115' Watch for Kid s ~ UllITT llSIUIC£ \.. ~ Non·smoker • ~~ Rates b 831-n40 441 Old Newport Blvd. Newport9Mch,Ca.. • Pm1 Sn1ic1oa1 capac1tattn1 -as your mother's used to be ... Sick Headaches.. is a good dcscriptioh. In addition to nausea and vomiting some patients have abdominal pain and diarrhea. Some become djsonented and confused. I recall one patient who sustained a leg _..~.-, ... _ . fracture in an auto accident because ••••••••••••' he momentarily foraot he was at the wheel of his car while suffering a mi&raine attack. They don't help much, but every little bit is appreciated. Miss Y. DEAR MISS Y.: My guess -and it's only a JUCSS, mind you -is that you've mislabeled your condition. It's more likely that you've been suffering from migraine. Th.is is usually more disabling than most headaches. Migraine headaches are o~ hereditary. Usually there are warnings of an attack to come - prodromal symptoms like flashes of light or interference with vision. The attack is usually one-sided. Attacks carrbegin at any time of the day or niahL They may last for hours or days. They ~ pounding and intense -probaf>ly due to diJatioo of the aneries in the bra.in. Medication is more effective when taken early - during warning symptoms, before the main attack bqjns. In some patients the pain is bearable; in othe,,, actually in- Ergot type medications are often prescribed. Never take them without direction by a doctor. Which brings up this point: I th.ink you'll agree it's time you had a checkup; so you and I can stop guessing about the diagnosis D.-, ........... ..,.,...~ Dottle and John CraYena tamed their knack for hoetlng veau partie. and craftlnt fame table. Into a bualneu. n.. popcom~ in rite~ n.. nuts.,. on rite SCl'Mno --o -..... --·· .. -.... UAllEll 179-9150 El TOIO 511-SUO OUICl 634·2553 PACIFIC ANAHEIM DR·IN EDWARDS SADDLEBACK CINEDOME llEA 990-4021 llYlll 154·1111 SllTA W 540.7444 UA MOVIES 4 EDWARDS UNIVERSITY EDWARDS BRISTOL COSTA llSA 979-4141 LA llUIA 523-1111 1£STllHT£1193.e541 EDWARDS CINEMA CENTER SRO GATEWAY 5 UA WESTMINSTER MALL 1£STl11ST£1 • PACIFIC HIWAY 39 DR·IN • 891 -3693 'There is a lock, five blocks long and six stories high. Come find the key. [Tonight at 9:00 on KOCE Channel 50 II A path between two seas, dreamed of for cen- turies. Thelesult: a modem day Noah's ark where endangered species thrive. A look at teapots that fly. A poignant visit with Anne Morrow Lindbergh . And a trip from Moscow with three Siberian ti~ers. AJI this and a world more await you tonight an .. Crossing the Distance:·~ Smithsonian W>rld television ~pedal. The h~ is author and historian David McCullough S,flWLlN \\ORLD A PB • Tele"Won rid funck-d b the James • Mcl>or.MU fOuadadon. Co-produced by Wt.I. , WashJnaton. O. ., and che mldoonlan f nqfaurkm. / ......... ---- . - and proper treatment. ••• FOR MR. 0.: Yes, jlaucoma is a po s1bthty. Es~ially so since your vision is failing and your "change of glasses" don't seem to help. You have diabetes so your risk is at least twice as hi&hj you're over 65 which increases the nsk at least four times. And you're black. According to a recent report. blacks gcJ glaucoma at least three times more often than whites. ln view of these facts, and never havina had a complete checkup by an eye specialist, it's time you had one. No doubt you've heard-and rightly so -that most often fiaucoma (produced by abnormally increased pressure within the eye) -often sneaks up on the victlm painlessly robbina him or her of precious sight. Popping the question Don't wait for pain to propel you to your doctor. Tonometer and other tests for eye pressure are painless. So is daill "eye-drop treatment" to forcstal blindness, if glauooma is actually present. Stephen Kainpmann propose. to Rebecca York on .. New- hart .. tonltht at 9:30 on CBS, Channel 2. -•:OO-GDNEWS 9 UTTl.E HOUSE ON TlE PRAM • o IASE8Al1. GIJ/LOIO i :Tm AMEJICAN HERO * * "Vega" ( 1971) Robett Urlch. :-~AOOEM e MINE.88 AEPORT Ii) tUiWIT1E8 THAOUQH THE ART1 ())C81NEWS i=~DYKE • • ''Gr.... r (1982) Maxwell CN!illd, Mtchefle Ptettter CZ>MOVIE * * "Hri Wiiiiama The Show He Never~ .. (1982) Sneezy Waters, Dixie Settle. -l:30-ID MAMll. /LEHRER HEW8HOUR I :er lHVER8E a WHm"' FOA'TUNE IDTHATGR Cll THE OOOllE BAOTHEAS FAAEWEU. CONCERT -7:00-8 Cll NfWS D..CNEWS 9TAXI ~==WOMAN e WHEEL Of FOA'TUNE Uv COOflfR'S ORANGE ()) , .M. MAo.AZIHE I~ COHNECTlOH • * "Plavalrl" (19541 Shelley Wlntere, Berry Sullivan. -7:30- B 2 ON THE TOWN 8 FAMILY FaJ0 errtALMNG I ONE DAY AT A TlifE P£0PlES COURT e WILD. WILD WOALD Of NAW.8 ID 8NfAI( PAEV1EW8 ())TIC TAC DOUOH (Z)MOYIE * * • "F entasbC Ptenet" ( 19 7 41 Afw. llllled Voeces ot Cynthia Adler, Bir· ry Boetwldl. -l::OO- • ()) 8CAAECAOW AM> MRS. 0.0 ~=-AM) 8 THE AMERICAN DtAAY 9=~ m OO'ERTAINMENT TONIGHT Cl)MOVIE • t • "The Helen Morgan SIOI')'" (19571 AM Blyth, Paul Newman. 8 GRACE 8UMBAY AHO 8HIALEY VSNTT IN CONCERT AT COVENT QAllJEN ID GREAT PEAFOMIAHCE.S ~MOVIE * * • "The Th<ee Faces Of Eve" (1957) Joanne Woodward, Dtvid w~ ®MOYIE • * 'h "The Last Atnlfan Vwgin"' ( 1982) LIWfenoe Monolon. Diane Frrilln. Ca:lMOVE •••~ ··Qk1at1omar (19551 Gotdon MICAie. SNr1ey Jones. ())MOYIE •• • "The Road wamor·· (1981) Mel Gibson. Bruce Spence -1:30- ~=DOUOH m P.M. MAGAZINE -t.00- • (I) ONE DAY AT A TIME GQIMOYIE • * "Children Of OM>rce .. (1980) Barbera FelckJlil, Greg Multayey G THE AMEAICAH tMARY G MOYIE * t t .. The Cowt>oyt·· I 1972) John Wayne. Rolcoe Lit Brown GNEWS m r.av OAF'RN ti!> 8MITHSONIAH WOAU> ENT'ERTAIMHT TONIOHT . OMONET MOYIE * * "Sitlt Nolft.. ( 1979) Pattlek Dtwatrt. Myriam Boyer -t:aO- • Cl) NEWHART Cf) HANK WIWAMS: THE MAH AHOHISMUBC tD FNJE OUT: THE ER06K>H Of IL.ACK IMAGE.a IN THE ME.D&A I PEOPLE'S COURT PETE1'00NH MOVIE * * "ic. Cutlet" (1979) Lynn-Holly JohnlOn. Robby 8erltOn ®MOYIE tt'h "Spring Brull" (1983) David Knell. SIM 8aslet1 -10:00- 1 CAGNEY l LACEY Cl)NEWS DMIAM eOAEAT~ ID ICE>t#AITERS /WOAD lfTOIMAOE OTAXI l)WAEmJHO MOYIE * * 'Curt.11t11'" (1983) John Vernon. Setnlntha egg. N(WPOllT 10 •I laQ C-lllY SIUlO ~ •-• . ._IOIOaM ~ • NEWPORT BEACH • • COSTA M£SA • CDWAllDS • OOllY Sl(J{O "'HOTCll"' (N) 1 IS t 30 ,....., 1'M! ti OOllt"" rn W.. I 30 I JO 10 30 644 0760 I 00 l IS 100. UO 104 ~ NEWPORT 10 -'IWll SlflllO ~ "ICI' •mt• '"' '"'111 llO ll 11« IUICM fCll lflllCI" (N) 1aM 171S 21S U S llS tlO rt.ID •li.tllS tOO ·1or aClll-INI ~ llllo I""" 1 IS tOO IOtt ~IT ~ .. =~ t:\a • ---· c...-. m-... "1M(• (I) Ao9 llS TOMI C£NTCR M • "wa oommllO ,_ ICI ·nc •MM· ,,., .. ....... 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(N) '-"' .,,, 1100 no \OO. 1 ».1tot HI 3'3!1 • sue• "9 Clf:MA WUT '"1lM iliii' '91 lit•-"" II 4S I U 480 ....,. tint 'IS I JO. I04t ltl JUS llltt He CRili iiitSt "!GP •c:sr IN) •"-"' 11.50 I j » 5-'9nl ~ N 7 IS t I\ II• • IRVIH[ • HI lU1 IUUJ• • HUNTINGTON 8£ ACH • ...... ' ·-~63102 itAA80it TWIN ....... ..... fA\rJ TWIN OCUY $1(11(0 ·r1t uun w CPI> HS 10 IOI~ ...... ·-Ul·l~I KSA .,_,' IMI •t--Y .... lOl'(N) ii• .... I• H~ I••• 1000 CllMA Cllt OM A .a'ID l!tow& ..... rn -lt4S l4lt SI~ Ill t4 91t '1•1 sue•>• CINEMA CTll Ul llYllClDS ~ .. ·~•r<N> 1 n ·~ rn uo 1 .. s suo•tte • LAGUNA REACH • SOUTH COAST (4,rn .... ......... , ttJ.1711 -10:30- Cl) INOEPEHDEHT ~ ID FNJE OUT: THE Of a.ACK IMOE8 .. THE MEDIA 9 WKAP .. CICNNATI (Q)MOYIE *** "The Gtoow Tl.lbe" (1974) Ken Shlplro. Rldlard e.rz. -11:00- •••W «I lllG NEWS g SATURDAY MGKT I AOWAH & MAATW8 LAUCIMN THE JEFRR90llJi8 • IOU> OOl.D ttT8 LASTIONB MOYIE H "Y~d" (1983) Gr8'llm Chllpmen, P9ter Bc¥e. -1~ B ()) MAOHUM. p .L 8namoN~TE D OABC-.wsNGHruNE DlflEMCHOf- (f) ONE 8TEP IEYOND • ~ IUNICER'8 Pl.ACE • STRE!T80f8AN~ • LATENDfT AMERICA QD700ClUI (C)MOVI! * * * ~ "IA Caoe Aux Follto" ( 1979) ~ ~· Mldltl SerrlUlt • • "Ooc:tor Detroit" ( 1983) Din t£'& Donne Dixon H 'h "The Sign Of Four" (1982) lln Rldlardlon. Devld Hetty . -11:48- D a llf8T Of CARSON ~ -12:GO- I TWIUQHTZONE =HOU.YWOOO *** "P•rnlillbl To Kii" (1975) Oitti llogltde, AYI Gwdnlr. Cf) ll>lP9aNr NEW9 • H TORO • SAOOl£8ACK ""°' ll'alT" r:. u ,., .. lt 0 .14$. 0 , " ...... 610 Ht ltSO Sil SllO IUt•M SAOOlCBACK ..... 'Gl'I " u '•• ,, ---aull"lal 11 ••••• I 00 l IS S 11110. It: Sil-IUU SAOOllBACll •a..MllJ...,... , ..... , ins no.•n .. ,., ... 130 U I• JO (PC) ~I SltO llJttltl SADOl.CBACll ~-r . \D '•• if IUS U• en ,, , .... 640 tie II 09 (fC) ~ .. SllO *Mllll.lt•IM S1""'£8ACll ...... IN.> ,~,, 11>0 1>S H~ses ll'••" •• IUt Sll SltO ., .... SAOOllBACK \t •• , •' , ....... Sii SllO ..... (NI lll0,ln 4CO 'JS tM.10" ta.••a. • MISSION VIE JO • YUO T• SO 1., It It ,., a... .... 130 090 VIM> TWIN " ... ,, " '" , ....... . llo-&HO VlJO MAU " ..... "-••· U562ll YUO MAH u ,.,,, "'""'' .... ilSTOl . ..... II ... Mt, ... •ISfOl .... ....... ~Q 7«4 "11·-·rn SAIOltll .... Ht.ti •. I I .... ~r.l .... ,rn SUea,_ l •• ~n , ... UIUHt .. ...,, •• 115 , •• ~ I I I 1· I 1 Dorta.a Harewood Actor playtn Olymptc sprint champ says he made reatest contributions to youth By JERRY BUCK Harewood heads an all·stlrcast for .-,........._.,.. the two-pan film, which will be LOS ANGELES -Everyone re· broadca tinJulybythestationsanthe memt?ers Jesse Owens as the black OPT network. It is timed, of cour1t. Amencan athlete who spoiled Hi· to run just before the 1984 Summer tlcr's plans to tum the 1936 Berlin Olympics. • Olympics intO a propapnda feall for The movie also Points out that the .. supa race.' . Owens was an a vocatc of diatoaue . Owens bcc:ame the first pel"IOn in · and peaceful means in resolvina h!story to win four sold medals, and racial conflict. This often put him at tu~ defeat of Germany's best aeot odds with some leaders of the civil Hitler mto a funk. fiihts movement. "Nevertheless, I think bis area test "Every dvahzation," Harewood contribution, wbu:h dwarfs his llh· says, "has asked whether to solve iu letic contributions, wu bis develop. problems by pca<leful means or men.t of youth owanizations," says v!olence and has ended up usin1 Donan . Harewood, who portrays ~o~ence. Jesse never sot involved in Owens 1n 'rrhe Jesse Owens Story" c1v1I nghts but he set an eumplc as a f~r the syndicated Operation Prime human beina. He maintained that T1me network. was the most effective way to ake a ... H~ pve his money and au of h1" statement. ume1 Harewood says. "He thou&ht it "Jesse was a very complex persOn." Wl;S 1mponant. that you~& people be the actor says. "~e bad a very well au1ded 1n the naht way.• thought-out pubhcjmage. He wanted Yet the event around which the to make sure that 1t was alway' four-hour drama revolves is Owens' pe>sitive. As a black American he trial for income tax evasion in 1969. always wanted to present the best His ~ife is told as friends and image. He had an almost preacher- assoet.at~s are . qu~stioned duf'!na . a like style of speaking that I wanted. to pre-tnal anvesuaanon. Owens died an capture." l 980. Harewood. best known for his role -------------------------• as Simon Haley in "Roots: The Next. Generations," says. "When they of· Housewife tough role for actress BJ JERRY BUCK ,,, .............. LOS ANGELES -Janet Eilber confesses she had some difficulty in the beginnin& ielll11J1l handle on her role in the ABC series "Two Mar-"8tft'~r. a dancer turned actress, stars as Nancy Armstrong, the wife of a doctor and the mother of two children. "She's a very nurturinJ sort of person and her largest aspiration in life is to make a wonderful place for her family," she says. "When I started with this character it was very difficult fo r me to understand that she didn't want a career. That she wants to stay home and scramble eggs. But they have balanced it out and I'm not just a doormat for the family. "Not being a mother or a house· wife, and being career-oriented since I was 12. I found it hard to identify with her. I'm not a very good cook and I could care less about waxing the floor." Ei lber studied at Juilliard for four years, was lead dancer.for the Martha Graham company. soloed at the White Ho~se when Gerald Ford was president, and since turnina actress has starred in such movies as "Whose Life Is It Anyway?," "Romantic Comedy'' and "Hard to Hold." "I thank women like Nancy disap- peared for a while from television," she says. "But like the co.unuy itself, she'scomina back, along wi th the old· fashioned values. It's not that she's anti-feminist. This is just the career she chooses. She doesn't just stay home and·mix martinis. Some day I could see her running for the school board. only family-oriented show not centered on sex, intrisue and a generous lather of soap suds. It comes from the same company, Lorimar Productions, that turned out "The Wallons," "Eiaht Is Enough" and most of the prime-time soap operas. Eilber, Michael Murphy and their two children comprise one .. mar· riagc .. of the title. Karen Carl son and Tom Mason are the other marriage. and in contrast it's ber second marriage and she works as an engi· necr. Wearing a red blouse, black skin and a prop wedding rinJ, Eilber takes a break across from MGM Studios to talk about her show. She was working on "Romantic Comedy" in New York when she was asked to come out and audition for the role. The year before she'd made another pilot for Lori mar. "The first time I auditioned for the role they said I was too young to play the mother," she says. "Finally, four or five days before we bcpn shooting they gave me the part. And I didn't say I was too young." When she's acting EilbeT works out in a gym to keep in tnm. And when she's not, she foes back to dancmg. She says. " 'm always hoP.ing the big musicals will come back. ' fered me the rote, I know the first consideration was my dramatic abili· ty. But there was concern whether l could do the athlttic pan. It's certain- ly the most demanding and the most difficult thin& I've ever done for film. "There were so many events to run in and we went at it 12 hours a day. They had to ha vc an actor who could do 1t or they were stuck with JUSt footage from the 1936 Olympics. Fortunately. I have a background an track and I wu in ptcHy good sha~ because I play a lot ofbasketball. Still. I had to re-aawuaint my muscles with. running track." Harewood also had to learn Owens· st_Y,le of running. "He was very different from the athletes of that time," he says. "He was very smooth. very controlled. He was like a Jean Stapleton on 'Scarecrow' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jean Stapleton, who was everyone's favorite d,ingbat for 10 years on "All tn ~c Family," ponrays a British ~l Service -agent in an episode of CBS' "Scarecrow & Mrs. King." Stapleton. with series stars Kate Jack.son and Bruce Boxleitner, filmed the episode on location in Salzburg. Austria. She poses as a sketch artist to uncover . an espionage ring selling mfonnataon to Eastern bloc nations. From 1971-80 she starred as Edith Bunker on "All in the Family." one of telcvisjon's most memorable and lovable characters. "You'd think it would be an easy role to play, but it isn't for me. I use my mother as a role model for Nancy. The writers have been good about lettmg us have our input. Every now fllW COSTA MESA 751..4184 ORANGE 637-0340 and then I'll have to say. 'Come on SHOWll&l Edwards Towp Center AMC Oral\&e Mall es m h1nc I ot 1n ht l \h pcofm). hfc. Of course, the last da)' of hoouna , l piucd out ... Hircwood. who r~ up in Ohio. onamally set out to be • i1nger. His first two rea" at the: Univcnity of C1!\c1nnat1 wcrr on an optra tcholar· hap. "Then I dt('tded opera \\IS too confinan~ and 1w1tchcd to musical t~eatcr; he ys ... Fonunately. I did sana opera for two )Cln and I'm able to do 1t. 'MiJs Moffat• was close to opera :· That musical, "Miss Moffat," was pivotal in Harewood'• career. It wa an Amcncaniud version of "The Com Is Green •• Emlyn Wil- liams' play about his formative years in Wales and lhe ieact\_er vwho helped hape them. Bette Davis, who starttd 1n the 1945 movie. was also in the musical. "I became an actor because I was sidetracked by Bette Davis," Harewood says. "She talked me into an aeting career. I've shelved my rccordin1asp1rations for the last eiaht years. Even thouaht rve been very successful as an actor I'm ~acuvat1ng my rccordmg career. I recently did a demo record and I think I'll have something coming out soon." Not only did Davis uric Harewood into actina, but so did Josh Logan who directed "MISS Moffat." "Ho~ can you say no," Harewood wonders, "when you have two legends en· couraging you?" Hi s first movie was "Foster and Laune." a TV film which also starred Perry King. Recent roles include "Against All Odds" and "Tank. .. He will soon appear 1n the title role of ··The Nat Kang Cole Story." Hoag produces h ealth movie . A film produced by Hoas Mcm· onal Hospital Presbyterian an New- port Beach has been included in the "Health for Life" permanent exhibit sponsored by the Hospital Council of Southern California. The exhibit opens th IS month at the California Museum of Science and Industry in Los Angeles. The film, en ta tied "Wipe Out." is a 28-minutc docudrama about a t~n· aJCr who becomes paralyzed when he dives m shallow water at the beach. guys, this isn't UOzzie and Harriet." AIWlll 772 ~u6 cost• ur.a 971!1 •141 Nancy should participate in this .,,_ " ~ ~ ORAi& 634-3911 - NOWPLAYlNG scene and not )USt stand there."' Brookhurst Theatre Edwards Cinema Center UA City Center =' .. '.= ..--IUD! '-'---··-or...· *Cf-S.0-.. , Jiit 111,an "Two Mamages" was first tcle<:asl AIWllt 639-8770 MVR 85-'·8811 WESTWeSTO 895·5333 cmf.6-W last summer on ABC and is now back Stadium Dr-In Edwards Umversity UA Westminster Twin =...., .... --~ ==-- for another six episodes to Stt if it will a 199 catch on in the ratings. It is currcntly 11tEA 990-4021 LAGIN ti.LS 768-6611 WESTWeSTER 891·3693 ::.--;:.s---·--lllC.,~ °'""" ", .. 1>4Jtl, the only family-oriented show on the UA Movies 4 Laauna Hills Mall Pacific Hiway 39 Dr·ln -1•-...n networks -or more correctly. the 1 -· ,.._ • .., ~~~~~~~====~=====~~;;:;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;~~~m§·§~~::=::=::=::=::=::=::=~ and t/Ja ff(! (fjJ fPl/1.IJ @/! /g}~{(j}f/fj},_ NOW PLAYING 70MM ·-··••ICACll r....~ ...... ·- 11~•"'"' 1<~1111: ~nr '-il.MJIMT& NOW PLAYING .... ··-.......... ( ...... , ..... ..... , .... ---.. r...."""' ~~ ... , ... ..,.,, ... ~.,. ~ ......... ---0... ~ •1·"'' l)tft&1 ..., ......... .,_.UlllTlllM Un*OMIN 11HllO .... , ... .. -·--· llt-1711 Stadium Or -In -.A 990-4021 UA Movies 4 COSTA EA 631·3501 Edwards Harbor Twin -COSTA MW 7~ 1..4184 Edwards Town Center GIZMO, STARS ANO STRlPE! THE ONLY WAY TO S PENO THE 4th OF JULY. Gt£MUNS5 .. e • DOLBY STEREO ORO '58 l ·5880 Edwards Saddleback tUnleGT°" BEACH 848 0388 Edwards Hvntinaton -t.A .W.A (213) 691-0633 AMC Fashion Square MISSION VD> 495-6220 EDWARDS MISS~ V1£JO MAU ~634-2553 C1nedome WESTIMSto 891 -3693 Pacific Htway 39 Or-In ..STWeSTO 89 l ·3935 Edwards Cinema West ·-55 l ·0655 Edwards Woodbr e t DAILY PtOOT /~. JAi1tJ 2, ... l U.XUIY r .. AntlS FntT• ............ OILY IU I U...._... · •urt 9'eynoldt CAlllJI W.U. .... II lN> Sllo wt at U 1SO J :O$ 1 :25 7 141 tO:OI 9'o1Mrt 9' .. ton1 ·~i::.t:;;. Ay~o.x• TMa-.ATUltA&. ._, -.,_. Sllows at '2:01 !"1441 Sllowt at U 121 2:40 1 :20 1 100 • tO:SO 4 111 7121 7110/ 70 MM -~ AMiii QM77t Stldlunl Dr ... ... t9M021 UA Mowles• _. r• IZl-4971 8..a Pan Orin IMMNIA IOMS 6 Tll9 T __ .. 0--lN> lllows at U :OO %1JO' 1 :00 71SO a. t O:OO COSTA IDl s..l5M UA S...111 Coast com 11:sa 546-Jltz l ...... C- in. 551.-SS [d'nfGWoc64« um. IUQt 4'7-1111 Socllll Coesl lapia ... .., ... 1 EAdVilllDT• oum '17.Qel AllCOr-.1111 CUii ~u UA c:.ty f.-. IEIWIB m..es. . UA Wtsblirta:ta' 1111 *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES* loMIRADA ~ ----. ·-- ........ ,..oeut S'ltllO ....... ....,.l ............ .... "nlr SlCllm' (PS) 12 30. 2lS. UO 6 •S. S 50. 10-.SS 1U81JICll" (K) 12 JO. l'OO. s JO • aoo 10 JO "lll •11U... (PC) 12 JO 3 OS S 40, t20. ll 00 .,.PQP( °' ••***au.-CJ) 1a Ul 5A tll ltW .,.," 3i) 12 JO. NO. 4·SO. 1:00, llO. JJ'OS PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES• • , l I, I - I I .. Or~ Con1 DAIL y Pl OT /Monday, Jult 2, 1984 GORN GARt'IELD l HAVE l MIS NAGGING FEELI NG 1'1~ FORGETTIN(, 50METMING 0 72. THE • F.utlLl' CIRCUS by Bii Keane "How old do bobies hotta get to start bein' boys and girls?" M1'RM1'DUKE by Brad Anderson "And not ordinary sunglasses, mind you .. 1 I had to buy him designer ones!" MOON MULLINS PE1'NUTS I· I TUM BLEW: EEDS DIP 1 EVER TELL YOU ABOUT WAAT MAPPEHEV TO ME. OHE TIME \AMEN I WAS IN LOOISVILLE? &..IMF'IV &.l?MP, I'~ SC:ff&PlJ&.EP SCAJ..Pll\kt "*'11CI ~'THE 1"1N~ •. · J ' ~ u Jl J~ by Gus Arriola BR IDGE ===~ ............ ~CHARLB by Jim Davis OM vE5, l fORGOT I KICl'\E.P OPIE INTO N£>lT WE.EK , LA~l WUK BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) -'.~ -~ --· . --=-- 1·' "George, you re1lly should have your eyes checked more often." DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham f ' 1 ~ r • \ • HEY' WHICH WAY DIO ™E FIRE TRUCKS GO (. by Ferd & Tom Johnson by Charles M. Schulz ANS WERS TO WEEKLY IRIOOE QUIZ Q,l -BoLh vulnerable. u South you hold: •KQ712 OAKJ9$ 0 1 tQS The bidding hu proceeded: Sou~ Wen North Et.•t 1. , ... z. p ... ! What action do you t.ake'! A. -Arter partner's support, your hand revalues to 18 points, so e'ven if be hu a minimum raise your combin· ed values art!" on the fringe of game. Since your hand has great trick·Laking possi bilit1es, we would go straight to four spades without revealing anything about our distribution. Q.2-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: +983 l:?KQJ9 0954 •tOM The biddi ng has proceeded: Eut SHtla Wt1t Nortb I ~ P ... 3 o PaM 3 <:> Pu1 4 ~ Pau 4 NT PUI 5 'V P111 6 <:;> ? What action do you take? A. -You know there is no way the opponents are going lo make this so, naturally you ... pass! Why? Because you have the opponents where you want them and if you SHOE DR1'BBLE double, you might ch11t them toai• no Lnlmp -ulam that might be unbeat.able. Q.3-Both vulnerable. as South you hold: + 10985% <::19' 0 A97 • AQ5 The biddinr has ~r«eeded: EHt South Weit Nordl I • Pau 3 I::? PaM 4 !;? Patt 5 O Pue 5 <:1 Pue 6 !::> Pa11 PaH 1 What action do you t.ake? A.-11 you elected t.o double, you show scant res~t for both money and the auction. You won't get rich doubling slams holding two aces, especially when, as here, one of the opponents has c:ue·bid a suit in which you hold an ace, thereby promising a void. Pass. You might beat this contract anyway, because you have a chance lo collect two club tricks. Q.4-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: •83 ~73 0 92 tKQJ97&3 Partner opens the bidding with one no trump. What do you respond'! A.-Your chances of makJng 11 tricks at a club contract range from slim to zero. FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE I CPNT Pi.Ft{ ()Jf ~. uy&.1 GOIA MUSI<( LE:S~. FUNK l' WINKERBEAN DR. S:tlOCK I.UH'/ 00 I MAFTA PLF.'/ THe. IRUMPE.T? I 0M W~TiN'A PERFE<:Ji..'{ ~ ~INHERE.I by Tom K. Ryan IUDG£ PARKER HAviNG-5~ TO ~E SAM DRIVER l';T HIS OFFICE AeeEY lS TOLD THAT HI: IS R TURNING CALl.S ,ROM CLIENTS• , GOREN Howevtr, your hand rat.ea ti>, product six or stven trick a( a l\O trump contra~t -part· ntr must havt1 either the ate of clubs or tome length en the suit. W4' would gambit out three no trump Q.5-As South, vulnerable, you hold: •AK9 <::1 AKJ87 0 9 ttO&.tt The bidding has proceeded· Ea1t Soutb W 11t NorU 1 • Obie ! • Pu1 , ... z"' 3 . s ~ Put ? What action do you Lake'/ A. -Partner might not have much in the way of high cards, but what he does have is three or four I.rumps and a singleton club at most. Since that is all Jou need to give your sidt a good shot at four hearts, bid it. Q.1-Both vulnerable, as Setith you hold: +Q7 t'KI071.t 0 983 •75! The bidding has proceeded: West Nert• Ealt Soulia I NT Obie P111 ? A.;.. Whf'tht>r or nc>t you mak<' two ht+trt 1 not issut h~rr. l'artnrr stated lh3L ht "xiwcu dtf at QDP no trump doublr1 of no trump 31'\' ptnalUul. ond you have rea1on to ovorrull.' h1m. dtied . your smattering values mlJhl bf> rxortly .,, he net'ds to makr lhr pen1 ,ub tantu1I. l'a•~. Sead u y qoe1Uoa1 for tJ eol11•• to: Charle• Gor aod O•ar SbarU, care of tJ new1paper. Each week l!fUe of I COPJ of the 84 "Gore•'• Bridie CoapletA 1 19.95 valtte. will be awu eel for tile qu11doa Jlldsi cM be1t received. Cr..tt.1 Gorn aad Oa S•arlf pertoaally UH •adertake l9 aa1wer • que1tJon1 submitted. by Jeff MacNel , .. b~~evin Faga1 by Tom Batluk AND HQO.) ~ FO~ IM£ 5TAAl6ITT Kl 05 ~ by George Lemont by Harold le Doux -- CM lm; hni to 1111 lor no Jn o< ~al lty ti• ea 1it • w .. • Nqrris promo ed to sales manager Irvine resident Rob Norri. has been promoted to sales manager of the Southern Califomi~ region of Norris, Beu• & SJmpsoa, which has a Newport , Beach offic~. Noms, who previously served as senior commercial marketing rcpresentauve (or lhe local offiee, has also been honored with the President'• A ward for the past two years for negotiating the greatest number of transactions in.t~e reai~n. I~ 1~831 Norris' negotiated transactions were in eitcess ofS9.5 million. ~nmanly m tne areas of South Orange County, John Wayne Airpon, and Tu.st.an. As sales manage~. he will be responsible for office manqement and suJ)etVlSt~n of the commercial and industrial brokerage staff. Norris, Beggs S Simpson ts hcadquanered in San Francisco, with offices in seven other wfficrn cities. • • • Suuy Glib has been promoted to executive vice president and director of marketing and training for Bl1bo1>'ff•Wk Commerclal, lada1trtal aacl I NORRIS MCCARDLE GISH ' 't y bJ.VHtmen& Real E1tate, which has an office in Newport Beach. As executive 'OCC president;Gish will be responsible for overall .. ~tj9o.s of~~ firm's six offices throughout the West Coast, as well as ~!l'!lting and training for the company. She has been with the firm since l 980, Wl'(Cn she took on the post of director of marketing and raining. Bishop-Ha#h.has six offices, with headquarters in Santa Oara. ••• Jack W. Askel1on of lrvine~!ias joined the Anaheim office of B•lbaeu Properties Brokerage Co., as an industrial properties specialist. Askclson, who bouts 20 years of e~iience in sales and management, has been with the ··Ntwport Beach regional office of BPBC. fo.t the past three years. BPBC is a real estate brokerage· firm that specializes in sate and leasing of commercial, industrial, office and investment propertv. • • • Terry L. McCardle, owner of The ReaJ Estaters of Costa Mesa, has reported that the first quarter of 1984 was the firm's best ever. McCardle, who lives in the Mesa Verde area of Costa Mesa, is also a director of the Newport . .Harbor-Costa Mesa board of Realtors. ••• -Nadoaal Patten• Care, which is headquartered in Newport Beach, bas acquired New Bortzou of Irvine, announced board Chairman David B. Stayaer. BlalDe K. Strattoa, former president of New Horizons, has been elected president and chief executive officer of-Natienal ~ent Care. N~w Horizons expands Nationars services with health careconsul11ng ~nd ~tee management, inchtding professional practice brokerage and appraisal se_rvioes. Meanwhile, Stayaer Developmenl Co. of Newport Beac~, an ~te of National Patient Care, has contracted to provide management ~ for • · Stayner's medical facilities in ~f~mia..Arizor:ia, Utah '1\d W.asbillJlOn, and appointt:<f So~ ManlWI as adnumstrat1ve-assistari't to supervue all Southern California projects. ' • • • 1 , Pal1e V. Simpson, president of Clli1e111 Bank of Cotta Mesa ~s announced several promotions. They include: Mldael B. M.tlarky, vtoe president and manager of the main office; Dee WUIOD, Nora Hant aad Nucy Brut, assistant vice presidents; and Amy Brooks, escrow officer. NEW YORK (AP) -The following llst shows the Over -the-counter stocks •rd werrents that have gone up IM mos end cioin the most based on percent of ~henge 1or Frldav. 2 1000 No sec11rnles trading below s or sheres ere Included. ,j ~et end percentaeJ changes are the d erence bet lh r vlou closlng bl orlce and rr~v·s r.,r b,d prlce. UPS Lest ,r1 .. 11·:~: ,,.., 'le 1 .~ 8t'tl. :Is Up . UP . Up . 8~ :l Up . UP . -- 1 ~ li'wo themes. v1e for Btte.Dtioa ia labor talks By JORN CUNNIFF AP 81tlaet1 Aaaly1t Two vast themes a~ vying for attention in this year's labor-mana~ ment discussions: • The old notion that profits arc primary. and that the welfare of workers, the community and the nation automatically follow. • Relatively newer concepts of a commonality ofinterest-that labor, management and the community must wotk together for the &ood of all and that all should share in market- place decisfons, rewards and penal- ties. The older notion in its various forms seems built on the belief that the deterioration of productivity and ·profits followed overly generous ben- efits to labor, and that a return to the old days will be better for everyone. The newer concepta, also con- ceived in the distress of recession and lost productivity, have been worked out by academics and a relatively small number of companies on the forefront of change. The ·ideas of the latter are often based on the premise that workers desire to be productive, tO: pursue e:xcellcnce and to make ~ucts of which they arc proud -if given the opportunity. Rardy in the past decade or so has the contrast in views been more neatly defined. Many managements believe they now have the upper band and are in a position to demand more labor concessions. And labor is armed with a profusion of scholarly tellts that urge managemen t to share responsibiHties. The contrasting viewpoint might come to a head this year when negotiations take place involvinJ 3 million wor1c.ers in rails, coal mining. autos and other leading industries. The big question. says A.H. Raskin, a student of labor relations during many years as labor editor of the New York Times, is which of the two contradicfory trends born of austerity will prevail. He observes that one trend runs toward jettisoning antagonisms in favor of labor-management partner- ships built of profit-sharing, em- ployee stock ownership and giving workers a greater voice in dectsion- making. "The other runs in the opposite direction," he says in an anal)'lis for The Institute for Socioeconomic Studies. "It involves a movement under management pressure away from standardized wages and work rules .. that unions have built slowly since World War II. Each side is under pressure fro m an accumulation of events, includinc reduced production efficiency, de- terioration of quality, and h.ish prices -all of which have come to a head because of foreign competition. Moreover, both man•ment and labor over the ~ have been inclined to push problems off'into the future, each side hoping that some- how the consumer would bear the consequences -in price and quality -without rebelling. The two sides, however, have not been entirely at fault Government regulation and monetary-fiscal poli- cies have · contributed, and even, according to some scholars, the °'8tion's schools of business. Myopically, says Prof. Seymour Melma~ graduates of business schools have concentrated on profits while ignoring the need for.efficient production as the basis for those profits. He blames tbe military too. In his recent book. .. Profits Without P~ duction, •• Melman points out how military and other government con- tractors have encouraged affiliated firms to maximize rather than mini- mize costs. Orqe C<lalt OAll.'.Y PILOT/Monday. J"Y.I. :1-. • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • e s! L D yes. I want to lock in your current high yields on a 6 month Investor Account right now. 6MONTHTERM 12.300/o 1.1.65°10 Cu r.rent Yield * Current Rate . oO « 111~1y~..,....nt•IM-t1tt1mt~!!t~'"''"'-\ 4!ldl'.tnf'f~1,.-, .1nnu,i,,..,fb•""""'' '"" 1 •~ bAb «!!""'-''"'" ttwuutf'ftt 1••• ~ -...bfp. t 11 ~'" up111'1 "~ M.t\•rnum LIN~ S (Mnif'Jt• m.n>...," lhltf'1'"-' •IT\ hm. 1...,1 .. ~ '""'"' '" twll'll •I~ pou110 ITMl.nill, .. IU t vh •n ...ti.un1"'11n1..,,.,., I""'"'' Int ,..., t<llt' ~bi-\ I Ill•""""" 1\;~ -----• @ For more infomvtion or to opeti your ac -illl the toll.frte Financial Urw now: (800) ln-9000. Or vi: an Gewt American~ today. On the , • DW.f'• ~ uno. • MONDAY'S CLOSINC PllC£S Dow JoNl S AvERAGE \ Due to transmlulon prob- lem• In New York, today'• ll1tlng wilt not appear In, the Dally Piiot. WH AT NYSE DID Due to late tranamlsalon today'• llstlng wlll not ap- pear In the Dally Piiot. NYSE LlAO£R S Due to late transmission today's llstlng wlll not ap- pear In the. Deity Plfot. UPs nNo DowN s ti . -• • ~ I Due to late tranamlgon • today1'1 listing will not ap- pear In the Dally Piiot. ! WHAT AMEX Orn Due to late tramamllllOn today• a II at Ing wUI not ap- pear In the Dally Piiot. AM£X LE ADE RS Due to late tranamlulon today's llatlng will not ap- pear In the Dally Piiot. GoLo Quon s METnt s QuoH s ) . . • • . I j That·san apt description ofbothbustnessand . business people along the Orange Coas . Toke p track of where companies are gotn~ and which people are helping them get there.just watch Credit Line· -every day in the Business section of yo_ur new llllf Pilll ·-~--------~------~~--~~~~~~~~------------------------------------------'--~----------------------------1 -. --. .. -.. ---.. . -.. .. • .. -. -. . . ,. '• Ward lhlnk• eterokl1 ere forOlym~ 1thletn. C2. a,ympic rowing upsets! Three UCigraduates. ex-Newport rower stun favorites and are heade for Games s.edal to dae Dally PUol PlUNCETON, N.J. -A spokes- man for the U.S. Rowina Association made one of the jJ'eat under- statements Sunday followina the completion of the U.S. Olympic rowina qualifications. Noted Kathryn Reith, .. We had a lot ofupseu today:• . Indeed, there were upset rowers here followina final qualifications in the five final evenu -but there were three fonner UC Irvine rowers and a Newport Harbor Hi&h araduate who weredoinaa lot of cefebratinaSunday evenina. Brad Alan Lewis, Cunis flemina and Orea Sprinaer -all UC Jrvine 1J11duates -and Dave DeRutT, who went on to UC Berkeley after .,adu- atina from Newport Harbor in 1979, made the U.S. Olympic rowina team much to the urprue of the U.S. Olympic coaches ~~. \Jpsettins the coaches' hand-picked crews. Lewis, rowina in tl'ie double sculls with partner Paul En<1.uist of ~ttle, clocked a 6'.3S.S to win their 2,000- meler race over favorites Tiff Wood and Jim Dietz. Then. Aem1na, a Corona dd Mar Hiah jraduatt who works at Oranp Coast Collcae and lives in Costa Mesa, t~med up with three othm from indepen'dent clubs to knock off the so-called Olympic boit in lbc men's quadruple sculls with a win· nina time of·6~03.S. .. Joinma Aemina in the winnin scull were Gres Montesi, of Bat· nniton, R.J., Bruce Beall, of Van- couver, Wash., and Ridgely Johnson. of New York City. ,,. Spnn.acr. whocallsCanou Park his home, qualified for the Ofympics in the men's four with coxswain cat- caory with a 6:2S. 7 clockina. Joininft Sprinaer were couwain John Sti inas, Ed Jvcs of Hamilton, M~ •• M1diael Bach of-West Hart- ford, Conn., and Tom Ktefet of Salisbury. C.Onn. The team sdeCi.cd by U.S. Olympic Crew Coath Kris Koneniowti fin· ished ia 6:29. OeRufT complete<! the day of upsets when he teamed with John Strotbeck of Philadelphia to win the. men's pair without COll'f4tn finlJc with a.timt of'J:Ol.9. .. People who haven't been seltttcd (from the U.S. Olympic selection camp) fttl they have been over- looked, .. 111d Stilli""' who ia from Seattle. "'We had somcthina to prove." • Reith said teams in other catqOries selected by the coach automaucalty won a place on the team Ind did not (Pl ....... OLYllPlC/C2) Blw lbbetMD· White, Moffet turn attentions to Olympic Gold Ameriean coach says swim team has 20-med goal Mission Viejo Nadadores. J>odae~ ellortatop Da•e A.Ddenoo·-{left) appllee tai to Chlcaco'1 Ryne Sandber• at MCODd bue ·dartni tint- -.,.., .... ,..... .,, ....... u,. lnnhlC action at J>odier Stadium Sanday aftenloon. Cabe earriTed a nJntb-IJulhaC rally to wlD 4 ·S. Schubnt added that White's elTort was particularly impress.ive consider- ing she had to wait SJl tense days before senina the opportunity to ~Lasorda 7umes after CuBs win--com~. ~d she hopes to hH the 2: t 3.0 mark tn the Olympics. She said only an extra stroke at the finish Saturday kept her from b1tttna that mark. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A bit of advtcc nearly cost the Chicago Cubs fint place in the National Lcaauc East, but in the end, all it did was raise •• ,lbe ire of Los Anaelcs Manqer Tom • Lasorda. • • · · The Cubs held on to edae the Docfaers, 4-3 Sunday and capture three of four pmes in the week.cod series. leavina town with a one-pme lead in the East race. But in a bizarre ninth inniDJ. the Cubs were forced to bench their ace reliever, Lee Smith, when Chicaao Managtr Jim Frey was detected im~na advice to first baseman Keith Moreland, who in tum took the message to the mound. "AJI he (Frey) told me to tcU lee was, 'The runner on second means nothina, ao after the batter,"' Moreland related lateT. Since Frey had made an earlier trip to the mound, his messaae to Moreland, in clear view of DocfaeT third base coach Joe Amalfitano, constituted a second t.rip to the mound and thus made a pitchina chanae necessary. "As soon u I walked to the mound, Amalfitano started yellina." Moreland sajd. "The umpires. 1 aucss, didn't realize it was the second trip. But it doesn't mattcranyway, we won." But not without some drama. The Dodgers, who trailed 4-1 entering the ninth, had scored one run before Smith was forced to leave, and apinst Warren Brusstar, they col- lected sinaJes b).' pinch-bitten RJ. Reynolds and Bill Russell to close to within a run. And when Brusstar walked Steve Su walked, the bases were loaded. Brusstar, however, struck out Ken Landreaux on a 3-2 pitch, which l..asorda said was "up in his eyes.." Lasorda protested the aamc, reasonjna that the umpires should have banished Smith as soon as Moreland spoke to Smith. At the time, Brusstar was not warmina up in the bullpen. Moffet. mcanwbde, will compete .. in two Olympic events -the 100 breast and 200. He finished second in the 200 Thursday wttb a 2: t 7 .66 after breakinJ the world rcco"5 in the JOO with a tame of I :02. J 3. Moffet. a 19-ycar-old product of Newport .Harbor Hl&h. cd&ed out Sieve Lundquist who tinisbcd the 100 brQst with a umc of I :02.16. "Potentially, we have a chance to WLD more gold medals than any other Olympic swtmmina team. I'm sure our aoal will be around 20." KACURAHASANEW ROLE Newport Harbor grad to try ITiiebacker in All-Star game BJ ROGER CARUON Of .. ~......... ~ Brett Kacura was the "stopper" for two years at Newport Harbor High, so he doesn't fiJUrc to have a great ·deat of\rouble adlusting to a new po itton for the South 1n the 2Sth Oranae County All-Star football game at Orange Coast Collcsc Friday niJht. In fact. movina from nose auard to middle linebacker is simply a matter of growth for the 6--0. l 9S-pound 17- ycar-old. who dominated the Sea View Lcque with his pte1Cncc. Althou&h Steve Brazas was the unanimous selection as Sea View "Back of the Year on the way to All.Cl F laurels. and wasawardedascholanhipto the Un1vers1ty ofllhnois for his accomplishments, such luck didn't come Kacur11's way despite very similar honors. Kacura was the unanimous stl«uon u Ltneman of the Year. was honored with All-CJF laurels for the second lime. was a two-way standout and shared the team's MVP honors with BT'Uti. A.mona his endeavors in a two-year span at Harbor, which'-helped produce 567 points (25.7 per aamc), and, among other thtnp, hm1t1na seven 1983 opponents to no touchdowns included the followtna: 243 key blocks. 144 tackles. 42 quanerback hurassments. 20 sacks and 8 caused or recovered fumbles But when it comes to maJor college rccru1tma. well, his coach, Mike G1ddinas can citpla1n 1t best: ·"They basically don't tteru1t anyone under 6-4." says G1dd1np.. who ea.ms a hving wtth hts professmal scouttna sen.ice "It's a mistake." continues Giddings "P1ttsburlh's Mt .. e Webster. for instance. 1s the best center in football and he's 6-01 • "Brt'tt 1s young (he doesn't turn 18 until Sept. 30). but 1t doesn't look hke he's go.ina to act to 240 or 23S, so his future 1s at linebacker. "He'\ shov.n he can do It in practice. He moves latenlly vef) well and beckwards. The only problem has bttn mov1n1 toward the ba.11, but by pme time (8 o'clock (Pleue ee. ILACUL\/CS) Tennis great• honored at Wimbledon J · Twin• manaie to tame Ttaen .... s_.l_li_tt...._.._o_r~f~f_r.,.....e""'!"'tir __ e_s_'!""'!"'• .. rrna ~rctc!~o~~~~''!i:t~-~ a ter a 13-vear hOmcranddoubleastbtMioncsot1Twm1 -J coolcdofTlhc Dell"Oil Tiacn, P.OSunday. It Stay -.Ith ROY.&IS the firat vtctory over the Ti&m in five career tries W .I for Viola, 1·1 who has won bis fut four at.an a career-hiah. 1 be 1wiftl jumped on Detr0it 1taner JIU From AP cll•.-•cr.et KANSAS CITY -Veteran left· Ill hander Paul SplittorfT. who s~t hiscntitt I )..year career Mth tbe Kansas City Royals. announcu! rus retirement Sunday. plittorff, who had a 166-143 career record for &he Ro~s. had been releaated to the-bullpen this year. He was 1·'3 with a 7.71 eamed run average. "I think IJC and inactivity probabl~ bun me as much as anythan• else, .. the 37·yeat-old patcher said in announcina his tttirmcnt follow. in& the Royals' 8--0 victory over the N~ York Yankees. ••t couldn't do anythma about the age and the work load wasn't &<>in& to cbanJe," he said. SplittoifT last pitched Tues- day when he started the first game of a double-header apinst Oak· land. He had made two other starts and nine rcliefap]1earances this year. llpllttorf'f ."Paul Splinorff is a credit to the Kansas City Royals, both on and off the field," General Manager John Schuerholz said. "He epitomizes what our organization is all about. Not onJy has he been an outstanding pitcher who has won many cruciaJ games for us, but he has been an outstanding representative of alJ this organization stands for." Qilote Of. tli.e day Nicklaus falters. Norman wins Gree Normu made up four shots on n the leader over the front side, then stared down suddenJy strurJtin4 Jack Nl.ctlau and scored a two-stroke vJCtory Sunda,Y in the Canadian Open Golf Championship. Norman, the Australian known as the "Great White Shark," produced a .5-under-par 67 in his head·t~bead battle with the man he bas caJJCd "my idol,•• and won this nationaJ title with a 278 totaJ, 10 shots under par on the Glen Abbey Golf Oub course in OakvilJe. Ontario. . . In Hershey, Pa., Amy Alcott fired a tournament record seven-under par 65 Sunday to win the LPGA Lady Keystone Open with a 54-hole total of 208. AJcott, who started the round six strokes off the pace, had eight birdies and just one bogey in her record round on the 6,388-yard West Course of the Hershey Country Oub. Five players had shared the previous 18-hole record of 66 . Muldowney listed as stable MONTREAL-Shirley MuJdowney. Ill a three-time National Hot RodA.swciation world champion, remained in stable con- dition Sunday foUowing surgery for leg wounds susta10ed in a weekend crash. Muldowney, 44. suffered thrtt fractures of the right leg. a broken left leg. tom knee cartilage and damaaed nbs when her top-fuel dragstcr veered off the track Friday at the Sanair International Drag Strip in nearby St. Pie. She underwent the one-hour operation at Montreal General Hospital so doctors could clean the leg wounds. Be~r. 4-6. th Tia,trs' only pitcher wilh a losi,na record, for two runs an lhc third in.nina and never were lhrcaaencd . • . In other American Lequepmes. Je11e Barfield'• fourth b.it and 1tCOod home run, a thtee-l'Un shol in a four-run seventh innjna, rallied Toronto past C>.a1dand. 7-6 . • • Carmen Castlllo drove in five runs, four of them with bis first career .,.and slam, leadlna Cleveland over Texas l3-S ... Dave Rnd~nM led olrthe ninth innina with a home run and Mart 1..Qa.•toa pitched a three-hmer as Seattle edaed Boston, 1.0 ... Hrbek Eddie Miirny and Wafllt Grot1 homered as Mike BoddJcler and the Baltimore Onolcs beat LaMarr Hoyt and the Chic:aao White Sox, S-3. Boddicker, I 0-6, allowed six hits as Hoyt sJippcd to 7-8 . . . Wtwe Wilson hit a tw~run homer and C..rlle Lelbrudt and Dan Qaiseaberry combined to scatter nine hits as Kansas City beat the New York Yankees, 8-0. Nlekro win• 1bth ln a row · Jerry Ma.mpny belted two homers Ill and drove in s1x runs and Joe Nlekro pitched a six-hitter for his sixth straight victory as the Houston Astros 'trounced Philadelphia, 13· 1 to highlight action in the National League Sunday . . . ln other Pinet. Jeff Ra1sell pitched a four-hitter and Brad Gllldea llit a tw~run homer to aive Cincinnati a 4-1 triumph over Montreal ... Pinch runner Jon OqM9do scored on Jeff Dedmoa'1 wild pitch in·tbe seventh inning, a1vina the New Y ort Mets a 3-2 victory over Atlanta and a sweep of their doubleheader. The Mets won the opener 2·1 as DarrJI S&raw· berrT• two-run ai.nale in the seventh innina broke up a aoore- lcss pme . . . Adee B1••11Eer pve up three bits in six inninp , and Beb Bl'elllJ flit a thJ'ee..run double u San Francisco defeated Pittsburjb. 7~. The Giant1 ba~e­ won five strai&ht pmes while the l'flebo Pirates have lost six straight ... Ed Wlalt1oa went 6;.i, innings to pie~ up bis ninth victory with rcliefbelp from R~ Gesaap, who ea.med bis 14th save, as San Diego defeated St. Louis, 3-1. Arizona rallies for USFL win The Arizona Wranglers, who had to 5l win their last four games to qualify for the • II • United States Football League playoffs, rallied from a l 3--point fourth-quarter deficit and upset the Houston Gamblers 17-16 Sunday on Gre1 Ludr)''• 11-~ touchdown 1185S to Doea Demllloa with l :49 lef\ m the game. ~elevlaloa, radio Ez-Dodlen honored Pee Wee Reeee (left) and Don D,iyed&le were on buad Sanday at J>odCe1' Stadlam to ban their anlforma red.red. HB's Ward has advice-on steroids No start, .. -BO 8¥.S_; tonight . WAS KINGTON (AP) -MajoJ' Lcquc ~bell's all·llme ~ from pitchina m1Sten Sandy Koura Bob Fellfr and Warren Spahn, sluaers ,'Hank Aaron. liarm Killebrew and Joe DiMagio wi dust off tbcit 1pikes and· aJov tonijht, reldndlina diamond day1 ll~ncs pest in the Cracker Jack 0 Tamers Claulc. Some 30,000-plus fans are c~pcc to watch the third renewal of the fiv inninJ exhibition at Robert F. ncdy Stadium. One player who won't be there Wallie Mays. The fonner stat o fielder was accorded with the wa est welcome by the crowd int>! introductionsbutleftinabuffa er was not inserted in tbe startina lineu Asked to come apin, Maya declined the inVltation. "We would hope in the futu Willie will be back," said Dick c.ecil the pme's director. • The American ~e won the fi game in 1982, 7-2, wttb I.hen 7S.yc&6 old Luke Applina's 280.foot hom run off National Leafue starter Spahn. Both players again will P~t toniaht but Appling is not. looki11f forward to another rouod .. tripper. • ••rm foina to sinale to rilbt frolO now on, • Appli.Qa says with a 1m.Q4, ''Otherwise, it's too &r 10 run.,. • American Leasue Manaaer Bil Ripey's team includes a mound 00'11 that includes 300-tamc winner Eutf Wynn, Feller, Whitey Ford, E,a Lopat, Oaudc Osteen and Cami:J9 PatcuaJ and Mel Parnell. • Official offers Killebrew will share third bue wi Brooks Robinson, Others ~ tum in the AL infield will be A~lµi& athletes as independent Of bis roles =· ~ ~we~~ a with TA{; and the USOC. -• uvva n-..:;.-na "If you think of athletes as cheaters and Jerry Coleman, Bobby~· UN athletes method to beat drug tests for takina dnip, then this proarain Ray .Boone. . helps them cheat, .. he said last week. DiM~o, Rocky Colavito and "But if you think of the program as a Kaline W1 I provide a Startin& outfie way to keep athletes from abusina that comblned for 1.100 bomen ... overall. From AP dhpatclaes drugs, or hurting their health, at least The senior circuit squad will be Jed The coordinator of a U.S. Olympic it shows that someone cares.... on the mound by Koufa.x, maJcina ru, Committee instructionaJ pr~m ... AlJ the drug information the fi · thi Soeh sa~ athletes must make up their oWn athletes are Jetting is biased. Those nt appearance an 5 .-meR ben~ mfnds about using banned steroids, people who use their medical credcn-Juan Maricbal. Robin ° n.,, and be tells them how they can beat tials to mislead athletes arc guilty ot Vinegar Bend Mizell, Lew Burdetae drua tests. t~'!~ _of the worst kind." and BiJJy O'Dell . .. This is a way of J.ening as much Q7SOC and TAC officials told the ee~tind the plate will be John.n! information as possible to the ath-Los Anieles l;'imes they didn't know rlc' NL infield. movi.na from first lete,. Let them make up I.heir own Ward was telhng athletes how to beat to thint. includes Ted Kluszewski ancl minds. If they want to (use drugs) d~a t~ts. .. Wes Park.er, Dick Groat and Bid then r,ou have to aive them the right . Thas co~cems m~ a ~t deal. .. Mazeroski •. Ernie Banks and Johru,t facts, ' says Or. Paul Ward of Hunt-said Dr. lrvang Dardi~ ~hairman ~f ~ and Ron Santo and T~ . Jnaton Beach, a coach in shot put, the USOC Sports Med1ane Councal. s· javelin, discus and llammer throw. "Paul is a great coach, even thou&h be 12.emorc. t • Ward acknowledged that anabolic has always been a proponent of <fruas. steroids, synthetic derivatives of the Everybody is entitJed to bis own male hormone testosterone, arc opimons. But wc don't want to have banned by the International Olympic an educational program th.at is con· Committee. trary to what wc arc trying to ithieve, Sailth, Stoklos i wm beach tltle l But he supports use of steroids, which is to &et athletes off drugs and which many believe can build muscle into more constructive methods of and enhance performance, as a improving their performances." LONG BEACH (AP) -Top: "therapeutic tool." "I will personally help any ahtlete seeded s· · lnith and Randy Ward, who has a doctorate in to find a lab or a doctor to make their Stoklos o::tfa:ted Tim Hovland &ll~ biomechanics, is a USOC coordi· drug use safe," Ward said. Mike Dodd 2.5-22, 23-2S, 26-2 nator for throwing in the elite a\hletes He said he sends drug information Sunday to win the Lona ~b ln•ex•pen•atve• program, founded in 1981 to help to athletes who ask, includina rec-Invitational pro beach volleyhaB ·on ik spen· 81111 not high Olympic candidates develop. He is ommended dosages for certain Ster· tournament. A timely gift from an old friend It's yours for the asking! The 1984 Olympics co1m::ide with the beginning of our 100th year, so we have a timely anniversary gift for you: the Gumness Book of Olympic Records. Included is every winner of every event held since the modern Games began in 1896 (11 years afrerour founding) ... 260 pages of record-breaking facts and photos ... plus the complete schedule for this summer's Games. There's no obligation. Just visit any Great American office and ask for your free copy (one per adult, please, while they last). It's a timely gift from an old friend. Come by for yours today! Great American H11nti~ leach 9132 AdamtA'lfn~ TtlfPhent 962 2446 Fountlln V.tll.y 10175 St1tff A~nut Tttf()hOne 963 71 ~6 lllbol lsllnd 301 M.tnMA~nofl • TtltphOnt 67~ 3212 ..,_~wnaut. 600 C.ul 8'1boe Bouftvlfd Telepl'Otlt 673 3 701 N..,.,tlelch 5 Corpor1tt P1111 ffl~ 644 188!» first Savi~ Bank ... ldct 4520 81n11lc.1 Pa1kw1y Teleptionf 559 8803 ~Buch 260 Oc•n Mnue Telephonf 494 7!>41 Mon.di .. , 3 Mon11Ch Bly ~ll TtltC'hone 4 96-110 l LlpneNlpei 30112 C.own Vlllty Pkwy T111phor111 49~ 6210 Sin Jw.tn C.pi"'ane 32222 Cimino C.ptJlrtno Teleptl<>M 661 0897 Capistrano leKh 3•206 Doheny Pet~ Roed Tetept\Mf! 496-0201 Stn Clemente 601 North El Carmno AMI Tele~ 492 119~ Saft Oemtnte/Mtlnldt fJico 400 Aw-n1dt PtcO ff'fflptl()nt 4 6)30 1 n pr 1 ce; r ••son• b I•; also b1omedics chairman of the men's oids, a schedule stating how close to a Smith and StokJos, who advancc4 c1au1ri.c:i ... ..., development committee and throw-competition the steroids can be taken through the tournament undefea~ advertising _, .._. ing chairman of the women's de· without being detected and a list of. collected $3,000 each as they won fot Classified Advertising velopment committee for The Ath· drugs believed to render anabolic the second time this season. 642-5678 letics Congress. steroids undetectable in urine sam· Hovland and Dodd earned S l ,500 r-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiHllelsailsilihal·sialdlvl1celiolnlldlru~~l .pl~es·· ............ ll!lll ...... ~ ... ·.P.iece .. fi•o•r•6•ni•sh•i•n•1 •seoo .. n•d• ........... Famlly Aestauranta > 3 1-----------------1 BCYC regatta lures 40 dingh~es CLEAN & PAINT BOTTOM $8 50 Per Foot Labor Only ' STEAM CLEANINO ••s.oo hr. V ARD LABOR $40 00 Per Hour KAUL OUTS TO 75' -75 TONS/Marine Seate 223· 21 ST STREET NEWPORT BEACH (714) 67&·2S50 Forty boats m six classes turned out Saturday and Sunday for Bahia Corinthtan Yacht Oub's Stan and Stripes Regatta sailed over couraes inside the bay. The annual Independence Day event is fordina,h1es. Three races were sailed in li&ht to moderate brceus. Trophy winners.: LJ00.14 (7) -I. Cart Blank, South Shore YCi_.2. John Pinckney, BCYC~3. Blaine 1 home, BCYC. LASa:.R (7) -I. Lewi Rowe. Balboa YC:l . Bill Rubin, Hunlin11ton HarbourYC; 3. Mike Taylor. iicvc. SABOT A (8)-l . Alu Camci, San Dieao YC; 2. Eric Trout. BYO. 3. Giselle Carnet, SDYC. SABOT B (S) -I. Chrissy O'Anaelo. BC'YCj 2. Brian Camct. SDYC; 3. Jcff Mcu~n BCYC. SABOTC-1 (5)-l . PCterSCbrowe • BCYC; l. Joec Sancha Plpno, unattached; 3. Joe Yokam. Balboa Island YC. SABOT Cl (8)-I. Stephen Lord, BYC; l . Jonathon Feldman. BYC: 3. Matt House, BCYC. OLYMPIC URSETS. From Cl have to ao thioup trials. be said those catecoriea arc women's double and ~uadruplc .rull women's four and e1ahl wtth coxswain, men's four without couwain, and mcn'1 eiaht with couwain. • Bruce Jbbcuon. yea another UC Irvine araduate. WIS in that cateaory. havina. already qualified for the Olympics last week an the mcn'sclpt withco wain. The dramatic 1howin1 may not have come as a shock 10 many crew followers in die Oranae Coast area. U I and even <>nnae C0&11 Collete are wtll•n:tpcc'ttci In rowina udcs. OCC Coach Oa-.c Grant, •n fact. i1 an 1.11i,1anl Olymp•c caach under . Korien•owki. • Spri•r's bolt dcbled the boat sdected by Grant u the belt bolt the Olympic Games which beain later thia month. The 1ucceu of the maverick~ was recounted by Brian lriis. fat of Brld Alan who quablMid tn me double KUIJ. "Brad called and aid he chccrif14 Cunil on when he noticed (Olymp•c anisiant C01Cb) tf.trr>' Parker in front of him -loOki•,.l atum.'' the tenior Lewis •id. Brian Uwi• said he HPICU hts IOn to pay his O'Wt'n ~ home from the trials in Order 10 lpend lbe July • holiday with the family. MAJOA LIAGua STANDINGS ~mef'kaft ~ WIST OIVlSIOH ....... Mlnntt0t1 Cllletoo Otlllan4 St•llle W L ~ct. GI 41 37 512 ,. ,, ••• 3 37 ., .. 1 • 31 42 475 .,,., Ken .. , Cltv Ttua 3t 47 '7S 4YI :M 40 .St S'h 35 d ,Of 71.'.1 aUT OIVIM>N Dtlrolt SS n Toronto 44 )1 B1lllmor1 .., 3S lotlOtl u ., MllftlllllM :M 4l Ntw Yon l) 42 Ctevtftncl '2 42 ... ., •• kWlt ~ ....... 1, MlhplukM, 6 MlllnftOll t, DtlrOlt 0 TOfonto 7, Oeklan4 6 Cllvtt.nd 13, Tu1a 5 Seettle 1, Boston O S.ttlmor• I, Clllc:eeo a 714 .5'7 ' S$1 121.'.1 ... ,19 4'2 21 .440 21 4J2 ?1\'J 1(1nM1 Cltv I, Ntw Yont 0 T .. 'f'• GWNt .,_. (Wltt 7·1) at Toronto tCllncv 6-1) K111se1 City (Gura 1·4) •nd (S.berrwteen 2·7) II Clevtllnd (H .. ton 5•" Incl (5raltll 2-0), 2, O·n> lffttle (Mooft l-S) Ind (ltrolat 3·2) 11 MllwtukM (Sutton S-7) t ncl (Porter 6·3), 2, (t·n) 0.kllllld (McC111v S·6) 11 Benton (Cltmtnt l ·2), lnl Detroit <llo1am1 •·O> 11 Chlcavo (lk11· "'"" 4·61, (n) New York lll1amu1sen 1·3) 11 Tt111a (Darwin 5·4>, (n) l1ttlmor1 (McGreoor , • ., 11 Mlnnetofl (Butcn« 5·5), lnl TUetdlV'a Glmtt Alllll• 11 Toronto, In) K.ansea Cltv 11 c1ev111no, (n) ·O•kllno 11 Boston, <n> Detroit 11 Ollc100, <nl S..ttle 11 MllwtukM, (nl New York 11 T1ua, (n) 81ttlmore 11 Mlnn-.011, (nl NltloMI LH9Ue WIST DIVISION W L Sen Dleoo 45 31 Atllnt1 '3 37 ~ 41 40 Hoo.itton ll •I Clndnnlll J1 0 Sen F renclac.o l 1 4S IAJT DIVISION Pct. GI "2 -531 4 506 -.6 .... .. , . ...., .... ,,,... 408 14 '3 34 .SJI \ ,.,.._.. &Atwe a.t.TTING O H 11 Detal . Gwvnn, left oi.eo. J S7; Frencone, Mon1r11t, .,.., S."°**'9. Otlcato • ..M6, """· Houttoft, .m. WaUlll!ltoit. Att.n11, m RUNS: a.mull, Ptllla4*hll, S.: ,..,_., btfo. Cllk.HO. 5'1 Gwvnn. "'" Dteto, »1 Dtrnllr, Cllle.tllO, 52; GWrtn, ~ so. ltll: Otvf1, ClllCffO, S7; "11mldt, Pt1111· dtlollla, "4; Ctftlt', MOnt,...,, s.l; Durtllm, Cllfc:ato, S2; S.ndblr1, ClllcNO, IO HITS S.l'ldbtf'1, Chlalfo, IOf; Cwvnn, k n DltoO, 105, S.mutl, Piii~, lO'l; ltemlrn, At11nt1, HJ Wv~. Pltt~Ofl. N. poua1.rs. 1anc1W1. ct1tceto. io. Frtncone, Montr.t, lf; Cll'!er, Mofttttel. It; HubMrd, Atlanta, It; lan'luae, Pllllaclal· '1111, 17. • TRIPI.ES s.nGW1, ClllC.ll07°' 11; S.mull, Plllll~. 10, crui. Hout•OI'. e, Owvnn, S.n Oteto, I; ltevnotdl, HO\NOI\, 6; ~. SI. Louis, 6.. HOME RUNS: ~. Al19111a, 17; S<:llmldt, PhlledelPllll, 1': Cltter, Montl"MI, 14; D1vt1, Cl\ICaOO, 1J; Mlttflll, DNeen, 13. STOLEN 8ASEI· Samuel, PhhlldNNI, 3'; W19elna, Ian Di.to, 3'; ltldua, Clnctn· nell, i1: Otrnltr, Cl\IQoo, JO, "-''*· Montreal, 25. PITCHING (I dtclslont): Soto, Clncln· netl, t·l, 2A; Pwtl, Anent., 1•2, 416; 1tv1n, Houston, 1·2, Ul; Oal'llftt, ~ YOt11, t·), 3 65; I.ff, MonlrMl, 12_., UO. STltlK&OUTS: VlllftUltle, ON9en. 124 ; GOOdan, New York, 11J; $010, Clnclnnltl, '91 1tv1n, Hou.ton, t4; Carlton, Phl .. cltt· phl1, "· SAVES: ~tttr, SI. 1.oult, ltJ Hollln4, P?lflldtll>fl.11, 17; Smllh1 Chieffo, 15; Got..... Slf'I Dleoo. 14; Oroaco, Ntw York, 14. AMERICAN L.AGUE Aneets 7, Brtwtrt i CALt,ottNIA IWLWAUk•• llHlllll Mrlllll Ptllls d 2 t 1 o James rt s 0 t 2 etnlQur 11 S O 1 o Gllll/V 21> 5 1 2 O MClronrf 4 2 2 1 Yount clh 4 0 0 0 1.vnn rt 1 o 1 o COoHr lb s o 1 1 Olympic Gamee hl•tory Swtmmtn1 medallata MllWI 1,JtO PaalSTYUI '"" A-. (1, .. ......,.., JeO Mtdlee IU I .), tt1CO, 2 """"" UIO 1. AlfrM H•!Ol IHunMry), IH! 2; t. C.leHl'll, lt:lof S. JMll Andr90l.t CGtMcitl, 2'~ •: 1. .. tM1. LAi11111111 rt1t1""-a.--. (Greta), I'll • 1, Jttnft MCl..ane (U.S.), lt:IU, I JoM ,,_, ~--C1Mt ,...,... ~lllall f Aultnt .. >. lt:J1.J; J Gvor9Y •· Jofln Atthur Jerva IGr•t ar1t11n>, Mitro <~v>. ltA.2. IJ:.40 2; I. Otlo W.,_ (AW"8). 14 s.J.61 I. tHJ, ....,.. Zelt.n Hlllmet (Hunotn). 1S;1M 1. '°'• K..,.. (UJ I 1e'°J, 2. S!Wo lfMr. K &.-. (1M9.M fMllrl) H11hi1ume (J1Mf!), 1t41.A, 1 Tetsu. 1:erntt lltau~ (~), 27.11..t; 2. C&tmoto (In ), IUU. Geu Kin (MunMN), 21.:2U; a. Francia ~ (U.$ ), 1'l'O 1-. u.IM u.-"""'"> I. Hlnrv Tavtor lGrMI lt'ltalfl). tt-e 4; 1. Tllott\n a.ttwtew (Gr .. , lrltalft), D.51 2; 3. ,,_. -..U...trt (Autlrt ), tuu. mi. StitdlMln• 1. Gt« .. ~ <CanMa>, n~o.o. 2 Jofln Hatfltld IGt'MI MleJnl, inf.O; J ~Old HardWldl (Auatraile), 2l:l5.A Int. .,.,...,. l. Normen llon CU.$.), n=D.J; 2. o.or .. VlrllOI (C.Ndl), 22:X.4; 1. Frenk IMurtNlrt (Alltlrdl), 2l~ •n.. ....... I. Anc1rtw CMtlton (Auttrlllal, 20:0U; 1 An~ 8ort (S.....otnl. l0:4U, 3. Frenlt ... l#'tl>elfl CAutlr"11I, 21='1.A. 1'11. AmleW911m 1. Arnt lort (Sweden), 1U1.1; 2. ""*" Chetffon (A11t"9lll) 20'°2.6; 3. Clwtnce "Buattr''Crabo. CU&>. 20'.a.I. 1mLM~ 1. Kuauo Kitamura CJ•~>. 19:12.41 2. lhoro Mlkllno (J•oanl, 19:14.1; 3. JemuCrlatv (U.S.>, l,..39.S. ,,,., .... 1. NOCION Ter.de (Japan). tt:ll.7; 2. HllYWMd ll'artr SUNOA Y'S ltllUL TS 1tM, M Ill 1 Uf'M I. MIJl'rr; llo.t (Auatr .. a), 17 51 t, 2 T~ Ylm9Mll1 IJINft), lHU; 1 Geot11 lr.n (US I. 1 ... U . tMt,RtfM \. Jofln 1(--(AU1lr9Gi). 17.1'6. 2 IW/lr1v It ... IAultre ), 1731 7; t ~ Ir-IU.I J. 17~6 1'64. T-.e 1. ltobtrl W1nc11e (~,.. I. 17;411.7; t. JoM ....... cu.s I. 17:111.0; J Alall WOid (Auatr 11. 11m.1. 1"9, MlldCl9 ow I. MkNtl aunon (U.S.), 16.lt.t, 1. JoM KIMelll IU S l, 1':S7.J, I GretOrY lrtuoll <Auttrl ), 171DU. 1m.IMlldl I MlcllMI lurton (U..SJ. IS;Jl.51; 2. ~relllm Wlncteett (Auatr ... ), 1UUI; 1. Ooutlat Nortllwr; tU.S.>, 1':0f.U. '""---1. Brien OoocNlt (U.$ ), lS:OUO, 2. lobbv Hackett (U.S.), 1S:OU1; 3. Sltslhan Ho1e114 (AUllrlllal, 15:04 .. '6. 1-.Meectw I. Vlacllmlr SIMluv ISovltl Union), 14~27. 2. Altbllldr CllMv (So11let union>, 15:1UO; J. Mix Meftlltr (Auatrel .. ), 15:14.At. U ~ SIX <•+7·6-2-2) M id Mt,215.20 wltll four wlMlnt tldlett lllx lwirwt). l2 ~ SI• COMOLltlon P9ld 177UO wllll W wlMlnt lldlltl (five llonal). ltGMTM uca. 1 111 mlln on turt. llo\'91 Heroine CTorol 340 uo 2.10 Adored (Plnc:ay) ,.. 2.60 Comactv Act (Ha'#llV) 3.20 AltO rtctd Sett SCl'ltlO. Na 'n Procltr. Tlf'll'lll, FICI Finder, Her Dedtlon, L'Attreyenle. ... ~ Bvrum, 12, 113 8oObv C1-r'l\Pttl, 12.113 JOdll MtAd.12, 113 Mika McC\lllOUOll, 12,113 <>en Heltdonon. S2,113 JOlln Adlml, S2, 113 ~ 2" Larrv ltlnMr, 11 MO HowerO Twitty, '1...a fltOMle BllQ. S1"'90 Leonerd ThOl'nMll, I 1;'40 GIN Marlowe, S1"'40 m Jeff Mltdlall, S 1,ao Grl« Jonta, Sl,2IO Loren Ro«ltni, 11 ,ao Pt•er 0oa1 ... 11u1a, 11,ao 7) If n. ..... 74·1?+6'•71 6MN>-7' 6f.7•·7Mt n·'7·7"'7t 71·ff 7M3 11·70.'2·11 75·7'·"·" 76-70-6'•7' 70·7 .. 70-12 14'-76-72·'5. 70-71-76·70 7J· 70-7'• 71 ,. .... ,,.71 11-,..n-10 72 .... 79.70 7'·7'•70-70 7S-7J·70-71 ,,.,,.77.72 7'Mt-61·1S 7'·71 1')·71 ,,..76-11·71 1s-n-11-12 7.S-.... 7•·1') 7>-7•·71-73 1s-n -10-n n-•15-14 7 ... , .. 74 72·70-11·" 75'-70-72·75 76·12·69-15 11·74·7t·ff T7·7J·74•ff , .. ,,.7.,.70 . 75-7l-73·7' 7'19:7)-75 n -n ·n-12 .... 13.79.73 71·n-7H5 7S-72·72·75 73·75-71-75 12·73·7'2·77 1'·1 .. 1•·11 1S-72·7S.-73 75-72·7J.7S 1s-10-1 .. 1• , II 1 .. n.n H-n-n , .. P>:t! ~~~ e • ..,. n·• ,,.,. N-11-n ,,.,..." --~JI , .. ,,.." ,..,..,. n-~n n-n•H n-1.-1• ,...,,.,. 11·1'"11 11"•1' n-n-n n·•n JHf-ll 71·Jlo'M ,,.,,.11 11·n·n , .. ,,.,. 1"'1~1' :111·7Mt 16-1)-11 7)-74-7' 7H5-7S 1>-T1·1S 1J.r,..'N ,,.,..,, 11-1'-'1' 7 .. ,..,. ,.,.n,.in , .. ,..77 "'"' .. ,., JS.71-77 7•11-71 Clllcavo Ntw York Plllllcltkifila Montrtll 40 3l S4I 1 47 JS SU 1 DtCn« 30 4 2 I 0 OolMt If 4 2 2 1 DwMO dtl S 2 "f"• Slnwnnl 3-S-1 2 1 (Slat .. '1·•• .......... ,,...., ,_ST RACL~ ,.,,..,..._ T1m8' 1.17 115 U SXACTA (H > Mid 122.JG NINTH llACI. 1 1116 mllal on tllrl. 2" 8oO ,,_,.,. '1,0M m DD~M.tl .. Dan ForVNn, 11,024 77·70-7S-74 7S-7S-74·73 73·,,. 77·,. ...., ~. '212 _____ .._._ 1 St 1.oult PlttlMlll 17 39 .., 5'1'! JI 41 A l 6 lO 47 .3'0 ll ~'f'•SC... Clllceoo 4, Dedtln l Ntw Yont 2, Alllnll I, 111 Olmt Ntw York J, A t11nt1 2, 2nd Olmt Houston ll. Phllldtll>hl• I Clnclnnell 4, MonlrHJ 1 Sen Frenclaco 7, Plttsburoll 4 Sen Dll90 l . St. l.oula 1 Tedl'f't Ckmtt Pflt11>uroh (McWllll1ms 4·6) 11 Dod9ln IHonevcvtt 7·3>, (nl Mon1r111 IP11mer 2-ll 11 At11nt1 (Berktr 6·1) Hovtlon (Scolt 4·51 II NIW York (Gooden .. S), (n) Clnclnnlll (Hume 3·7) 11. PtlllldtWll• (lt1w1tv 0·0), (n) Clllcloo (ltlUIChtf 4-3) I I Sen Dleoo (Drntckv 4·4), (n) Only llmft ICl!eduleO T""4llV'1 OllMI PllltbUrlh 11 Dedeln, (n) $1,-1..Qul• 11 Sen Frenclsco Houlton II NIW York. (n) Clndnnell 11 Ptlll1dtlphl1, (n) MofllrMI I I All1nt1, (n) Chieffo I I Sen Dleoo. lnl MAJOR L•AGU• L•ADERS Amet1cln LM9Ue BATTING (115 11 bill): Wlnfllld, New Yont, .J7~1. MlttlftllV, New Yortt, ..33t; Pu<Mtt, Ml,_IOll, ;rn; Hrbek, Mlnne- sot1, .l24, SNrldan, Kensal Cltv, .>20. RUNS: Evan1, Botton, 60, Mo1t1:>v, Toronto, 5'; H~aon. Oeklllnd, 55, Trtmmtfl, Detroit, $5; l utlar, ClevtllnCI, SS. llll: Murrey, 811tlmore, 64; Kll\lln'lln. Oeltland, '3; Rice, Boaton, 60; D1Yl1, ~ttrt, ~ Perrlal\, Ttxu. 5'. HITS: Oerc11, Toronto, 100, Mlttl119lv, Ntw Voric, ~i Tremmtfl, Detroit, ts, Wlnflllcl, NIW Torie, 94; ..... Toronto, 90. DOUll.ES: Gercl1, Toronto, 20; P•r· rltll, TUii, 20; Ltmon, o.trolt, 20; Teufel, Mlnnt1011, 20; Cowtna, S..ttlt, It; Mlttlno· IY, NIW Yoric, It; Wlnflef(I, New York, "· TRIPLES: MciHt>v, Toronto, 10; Collln1, Toronto, I; 0Wtf'I, S..lllt, 7; UolNw, Toronto, 6; Glblon, Oetrolt, 5; Lew, Chi· caoo. s. HOME lltUNS: Klnem4ln, OelUlnd, 21; Armea, aoaton, 1', Kittle, Clllceoo, 11. D1vl1. s..1111. 17; Thornton, Otvellnd, 11. Grid\ 2b 2 0 0 t $4.lftdbfO c • 1 1 0 Mister o.Maro (Ollv1rt1) UO 4.60 3.00 R.Jdllll ID 4 0 1 0 ltomtro ta l 0 1 0 800MC 40 10 Mlllnnecf 2 110 SHldY (HIWllV) t.20 UO lrlatl S'oetll (Vllen1utla) UO •Plcclolo u 4 0 0 0 Also raced: ltovtt CYdt. In Hltl#'lll Form, Golden Watdl, Plentv Comdou:I, Tet.tt U 7111 T..-J7611S ktnlrt ........ Clllfamte 400 IOO JOO-1 l ht '"' 8udt. Time: 1;10. MlwlullM 100 002 110-6 RCOMO RAC•. 6 f\irloneS. GllN WIMlno Rll -Downl119 16), Dp......cellfornl1 I. L08-C1lllornll 7, Mllw1uk11 t. 28-P11t11, Gentner, Coooet, ExdUllVI Kkl (81Kk) lUO 660 U0 W.C. SMQty (PeOfOU) 6.40 U0 Pr1 Book l!M11) UD 1toJ1ctuon. Slmmona. 31-Jemn, MCBrown. Hlt-Downl119 2 (11), Oollvl• 15). AllO r.ced: Frtcltflco Pronrllll, Rvt 11 Ste, Tr9111, Provo Duke, Good Ttn11oM, Liiie ltldot, Art's l.uckv Son, Otllwar1 Exor111, Gtv 8'-dt. Clllftm6I Silton KlaonW,2·1 l.S.nchlt 5,t MIWlllllll I~ H ltaR H 50 SM 7 3 l Q 2 I 2-3 4 3 l I 4 2 0 0 0 2 1 Time: I: 10 31 S. U DAILY OOUILI (2·4) Plld U7.20. TH•O RAC•. 7 furtonta. McClure L,2·4 '2·3 I 5 5 2 2 Tiit 81o One (OClvaf'H) S.00 3,00 UO 1.•00 21-3222 33 Stlcllttt1 (~trl •.OO l.00 Kll<HI ottdltd to Dllltrl In 1111. H8P-Ptllll Dv McClure WP-Klson 2 T-2-51. A-25,MI 8u11Mu Sdlool (l.lol\lm) UO Also r~: Fltun.n, Bold DIMaoelO. Clear Crvst1t, Ac:r11n1r. Time: 1:2l. NA'TIOHAt LEAGUE U •XACTA l4·3) oeld MO.SO. ~«AC1L 1 1111 milt&. Cub1 4, Dodetn a CHICAGO I.OS ANGILS DlallCI {Hawlt'll 1.20 uo uo Giii Circle (Ptdrou) UO 2.IO Own..,. cf Sndl:>f'O 2t> Mlllll••" WOOdS l1 Mor1nd lb JDevls c C..,lt> Cotto rl Owtnu Edterstv o Jotlnlln on 1.ISmltll P 8 rvn 11r p 111r11111 nrlllll 5110 S1112tl 40 10 4 0 2 0 1.IMr• Cf S 0 0 0 4 1 2 I StubOI rt 4 0 0 0 0000 Gulrrtrllt 4000 3 2 1 0 Manhlltf 4 I 1 0 4 0 l 2 SClosc.le c 3 I 3 0 •Oto e.noror 0000 • 0 0 0 Brodt lb 3 1 O o J 0 0 0 Andtln M l 0 1 1 l 0 0 0 ltll~ ~ 1 0 1 I · 1010 Mldndoor 00 00 0 0 0 0 Vtltnllt O 2 0 0 0 0 O O O Wllltfld pn 1 0 0 0 Hootono O o o o lfltuatJ pll I 0 1 0 U 4 11 1 Iltlb. JS a I 2 Scott !rt ""** s.111no w .. t 1on11ara> uo Alto rac.cl: CINr Vtfdld, LI Verne's ato Mac, ,..,son'• Lieder, G9'1ant Minded, lltlllO, C..Wkln, Plltf'no, Tower Bridet. Time. 1 :At l/ s. U •XACTA 17·5) oekl 151.00. "'™ llACL 1 111' mlla on lurt. Pill Puller CDtlahouuve> \HO UO UO Go D1nctt (McClrronJ 2.40 t.20 HontVllnd (Plnc1v> 2.10 AllO rac90: Acadlmk, Pait of Deuctl, HI.Ill 81111. Tltnr 1;40 215.. u •XACTA (6-4) orald seo.50. SIXTH RAC•. Sl/'J furlOnOL LOfNJI (OllYartl) 6.40 UO 2-'0 lloval ~<Dllllltuftv•> 15.20 5..00 Cllkl.. 010 200 010-4 NktllOllll (Slt>lllt) 2._, AllO racao: Metronomic, T1nk't Pros· L" A"9Mt 000 010 00'2-J oec:t, Cer1la1, Ott Uo America, Gem• Wlnnl119 Rll -None. E-Anderson, Owtn. DP-Loa A,,._.1 T1ntlltml.r"". Timi: l:CU 3/5. l. 1.08-<hlcffo 6. Los Allotlts l 21- MOrelenO, SClolCl1 38--J01Yl1. U IXACTA 12·1) oald '273.50. I~ H R •it II SO CNu11 s•v•NTH RAC•. One milt. \/t i Dt llol (DtlllloullVt) l.IO UO >AO Ecktnlev W,2·5 I 4 I 1 2 4 0 0 Flett PIUI Alllton (M<C.tTon) 6.00 U0 LtSmflll 2·3 2 2 2 0 0 I.MO AdVOCllt (Mtll) 7.AO Bruuter S..l 1·3 2 1 1 Atto recacl: JlmtlO'• ACI, T1mbtr Tv· ,_,, 81Ut Stu, Gerlt>!, Home Court llUCtftt, I.Oii CrMk. '--........ V11tnzll l.,l ·t 7 ' 3 l 0 4 5 1 1 2 1 Hooton 2 T-2:51. A-47,460. Tlmt: 1:36 4/S. SS •XACTA (2·•> Plkl 1147.00. K.A:CURA ••• From Cl Friday ni&ht) he'll have that. It's just a matter of rcadina." Kacura cauaht the eye of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. but be says he'll pass up the scholarship offer, and probably thou&hts of walkina on at Illinois, in order to play at either Golden West Collcac or Saddleback this fall. "I eventually want to play at Cal," says K.acura. "That's my lo~1me aoaJ." . Althou&h it s a somewhat new position, K.acura enters with the advantage of playina under his own coach and he admits it's a bonus ... I know what he (Giddings) wants. "He demands your attention, but more, he demands you durina practice." At I 9S, there is a potential physical mismatch with the North boastina a mammoth line, backed by Anthony Weatherspoon (240) at fullback. "I don't see myself standing Weatherspoon up," says K.acura... "But I think I cao gel the job done.•• One-on-one situations against Weatherspoon fiaurc in trap and draw plays. Kacu.ra is the youngest in his family, and a put deal of his 1ucceu lies within survival after backyard scrimmaaes with bis older brothers (Tony and John) as a younpbter.. . . v -• b' . . LI . h A 1 usLDCU maJor 1s .-cura s am anon 1n co ege wit an eye toward the hotel and restaurant business. 0 Wbat rd like to do is own the Cannery," says IUcura with a smile. Presently he is work.in& at the Newport Beach restaurant. Brazas. the 6-3, 21 I-pound touchdown-maker (4S in two years), sot most of the press clippinp as the Sailors marched to the Sea View Leque championship, but K.acura has no mental problems. "Coecb Giddinp was aood about that," be says. "He made sure everybody knew why-because we blocked" Giddinp' scoutina servicle rates collqc players for prospective pro cmploycn and labels them with colors - with blues at the top, followed by reds, sreens, etc. SaYt Oiddinp: "You would think B.raz.as would WUl ""J • • ·--• Dllr,... .... ,..... thcMVPvotchan<lsdown,butwcwo\lldn'thavcaotthcrt l'fewpott Harbor Hlill'• Brett Kacma will without him (Kacura). We had 1 couple of blues, Jet's face -11--IWl41e)I to IJ.Debtloke r-:'FrtdaJ nlCbt. it." . ! Royal Herolae rallies far Hollywood Park Win • TNGLEWOOD (AP) -Royal Heroine. odcb-<>n aacrin1 favorite ''ofthecroWd of33z37~ rallied on the 1 outside around tnc nnal t~rn lf!d ullcd away 10...a I Y....Jcnath victory 1n unda)''I Bcverry Hills ·Handicap on 1 the turf at Hollywood Park. 1 Ridden by Fernando T6ro, Ro)'al Heroine ~'I ~r beck 1n the fitld ~f I fiUi 1ndm1resJ.)U1'-0ldanduprn the early aoina. but, Toro btlln • ovina hct toward the front heaOina 1-into the last tum. S2.l0. Adored. ridden b) La.mt Pincay Jr. and e&.n)"iOJ 121, ttturncd S3 and Sl.60. The &ho peyoff on Comedy Act.. 118 and ndy Ha~lcy. was.$3 20. dortd v.as ct to tltc pact most of the way and cb&Jkn,&Cd Royal Heroine in the final i:uecnth, but could not o~me \bf win Corned}' C1 hc-ld tbt ad biiefl entcrina the hom treich butt kcd a trona finishint ick. • Cervult1 (TOl'o) UO UO HD Offlct Sliker (V111!1.Nllal 7'10 UO Promonlor( (DelahouuVI ) 2.IO AltO rlC9d. Oc9en View, Alllnttltlllk· lftedom, Kntlftf Mlflnt, ()per1tlonal, JolWI !tit TOl.tlh, Ridler 11V Fw, Mlnertv, Mont D' Artllur, Fl\'tl'!I lrtlM\ln. Time: 1 ~I 4/ S. U •XACTA (3-f) 1>1kl Sill.JO. Alltndtnce: J),37'. USl'L Piaveffl DIVISIONAL ~1.AYO,~S s.tutdlY'• sar.. W•twn Clnflr-.. I.A ••-• V. Mkll•oen 21. 3 01 ...... CllllflnftU Ptlllldt!Onll a. New Jwsev 7 kMlv'• Sctr.- w.twft c----Ar11on1 17, Hout•on 16 •utan1 C•al,..a,,. .... ioora 81rm"'9Nn M. T-81v 17 COM,aR•NCI CH.,..,...SM'" 181W*'f'1$lft'9 LA • ..,,.... 11 ArllOlll ~Gll'M llN'nrt1wllt"1.iltflM111.n1m 11 ~-'*' UWL.eM~• .......,,..,,$ (At T.,,.., l'IL) E11tern C111llftne1 Cl'lamlllon VI. W•t· trn Conf11 lf'ICe <MmPlon 0.. ... ftlhlne DAVaY'S LOCKI• (Newl*t 8"dl) -255 1'191tn. 1• l>lrrac:udl, m bonito, 22 vtllowtalt, 2 lllllbl.lt, 41 c.nco blu. 330 seno DIU, 300 med!trtl NKW~T LANDING (NIW"" lteadll -132 1ntllrL 113 oonoo, 130 seno blH, S5 barrecucll, 13 ytflowt1h. 1 Whitt ... l>IH, 150 marttr~ "' G1vill ~.lkl Olann Coodv Sf41 Brttt Uooer. ifo Tom Wtlloll~. 1'41 Tommy V1lenttne, Sf41 ~ O'Grldv, "41 2" Jim Neiford. Slt2 RavStewart."'2 Mark Mc;Nutty, Slt2 Joey Slndalar. Slt2 AndYNor111,Sl'4 Mlk1Sm1t11,-.. DIYI Oorln, SM4 DIMY Tllbot, Sl36 Tonv sru,, 1136 8oO M£.ir"1v, 113' u rrv Zlt91ar. 113' PIUI AWolr, Sl1' - JOI J.C~.SI04 -Tom L~.""llCM JimC:OIOtrt, ,,.. o-S.uen, va. Gtao Obotl. ,,.. .. -Tl'IOmU Gr..,, 17'1 -VosNftwl KMlko, S7+o Mf¥r a HatullY ' 12·7S-77·74 10-1'·1'-1• 77 .... 7 .. 76 7S-72·7S-7' n·1'·n·1' 7S-70-7J·t0 7)-7S-77·72 74·7S-7f-7S 14·7 .. 71·7' 71·72·7...0 76-12·1'·7' 76·71-7 .. 77 7'-7•71·90 73·7S-7t-74 76-72·11·75 n-12-1s-11 n-n-n-11 n-n -1r1' 71-7 .. 77·79 74·7•·7•-tl 7 s-rs-7'· 71 74•7•·7t-to I0-70-72·12 14·72·U-76 77.72 ... 7M2·12·WO LNv Kwa-. °"" ( .. .......,.~ .. , -Amy AIOotl, IJ0.000 ., Marftla He.IM. SlS,SOO Jul!nktltr, SIS.a -. ~1• Jen SteoMMOn, 11,375 Jo AM w11t1am. se,37s Donni H Whitt , Sl,37S ROiie J-, Sl.J75 Jll ,..,IV $Miiian, U,750 ~Hel.U,750 212 DantM StrtOltl. U, 100 JIJ Nancv t..ooa. 13,413 Batly Kint, S3A3 214 V.-it SAlnnar, Sl,000 Myra Vall HooM, 13.000 73""1 ... .. ·71-70 ... 72.70 ... 72.70 10-•t-11 .. • .,.73 '9-74·" 70-72·" 69-71·12 71·72·70 n-6t-n 70-71-73 •71·75 8oO Stone, 0 , 141 * * THE MOST * * D a - CO LU Ml CLASSIFIED •.. ' INTHE WORLD! ................. _._ M•M t ........ ,. ._....,_ ... ______ ...., ___ .,. ··----· .. --... -.... -....... -.-.... _°"'_....,.,_ ... .., ...... p11 ............. .... ---------------. ,.., .. n-,. Jt-71·11-71 7$-7>-D-74 , .. ,.., .. ,, . 15-n-11-n . ~,...,...,. J'S-7>1MI n ·1f-1t-1' •n-1'-77 1$-11·11•1' 71·14--1 ... ,....,...,..,. 7t-n-7~75 75-n-G-77 74-74'-71 .. 1 71.7 .. 71-ez •1.,..1-n , .. ,,.,...11 ... 1>1S-1' ,,.. ,,. 7f.ll 12·7' ... 7' •7H•71 fl-1 ... 7>7' )'S-Js-.. l C4 Baseball 11-St balloting NEW YORK (AP) -The results of the All-Star ballotina by fans for the 1984 All-Star ~me. to be plaY,ed Tuesday night, July 10, at San Francasoo's Candlestick Park. AMERJCAN LEAGUE (nroapJueH Calder Lance Parrish, Detroit. 779,11 0; Carlton Fisk, Chicago, 481 ,678; Bob Boone, AD•el1, 317,1~%; Rack Dempsey, Baltimore, 272,403; Ted Simmons, Milwaukee (DH), 162,96'2; Jim Sundberg, Milwaukee, 154,882: John Wathan, Kansas City, 118,554; Mike Heath, Oakland, 87,704 NATIONAL LEAGUE (Tbroagb Jue %6) Catcben Gary Carter, Montreal, 711 ,910; Terry Kennedy, 602,248; Darrell Porter, St. Louis, 427.728; Steve Yeager, Dodgen, 359,81%; Tony Pena, Pittsburgh, 270, 76 7; Jody Davis, Chica~o. 258.686; Bruce Benedict, Atlanta, 182,9 18; Bo Diaz, Philadelphia, 129,759. FintBase Steve Garvey, SaQ Diego, 1,123,691; Keith Hernandez, New York, 650,252; Al Oliver, San Francisco, 344,530; Chris Chambliss, Atlanta, 296,390; Ray Knight, U uston, 144, 190; Jason Thompson, Pittsburgh, 124,042; avid Green, St Louis, l 0 I , 791 ; Dan Driessen. Cincin- ti. 94,398. Second Base Alan Wiggins, San Diego, 600,889; Steve Sax, Dodgers, 550,7fl; Ryne Sandberg, Chicago, 505, 744; Manny Trillo, San Francisco, 455,098; Glenn Hubbard, Atlanta, 322,112; Tommy Herr, St. Louis, 260,901; Johnny Ray, Pittsburgh, 143,861 ; Bill Doran, Houston, 106,262. Third Base Mike Schmidt, Philadelphia, 1,019,007; Graig Net- tles, San Diego, 694, 725; Ron Cey, Chicago, 333,290; Ken •OberkfeU, St. Louis, 247,946; Pedro Guerrero, Dodgers, .196,904; BiU Madlock, Pittsburgh, 177.640~ Tim Wallach, ~Montreal, 142,345; Phil Gamer, Houston, 87,563. Sbort1top Ozzie Smith, St Louis, 958,300; Garry Templeton, San Diego, 635,393;'-Dave Concepcion, Cincinnati, 288, 7 14; Rafael Ramirez, Atlanta. 264,572; Bill Russell, 230,327; Ivan DeJesus, Philadelphia, 182,540; Johnny LeMaster, San Francisco, 163,885; Dale Berra, Pittsburgh, 116,092. .- Oatfield Darryl Strawberry, New York. 988,287; Dale Murphy, Atlanta, 870,649; Tony Gwynn, San Diego, 710,400; Pete Rose, Montreal, 507,144; Andre Dawson, Montreal, 378,026; Leon Durham. Chicago, 376,872; Tim Raines, Montreal, 366,563; Jack Clar_k, San l rancisco, 359.710; Claudell Washington. Atlanta, 348,669; Mike Marsball. Dodgen, 3%4,115; George Hendrick, St. Louis, 293,381 ; Willie McGee. St. Louis, 280.971 ; Dave Parker. Cincinnati, 276.826; Keo Landreau, Dodsers, %69,685; 9ary Matthews, Chicago; 258.864; Lonnie Smith, St. Louis, 258,343. Beck captures 3rd win in row ST. PIE, Quebec (AP) -Former El Toro resident Gary Beck. attempting to become the first driver to win consecutive National Hot Rod Association top fuel dragster world championships. won the 14th annual Molson Grandnational Sunday for his third consecutive victory. Beck, now li ving in Hemet, defeated his car owner, Larry Minor of San Jacinto, in the final round. Beck's winning time was 5. 76 seconds at a speed of 239.36 mph. Minor's identical dragster trailed at 6.45 seconds, 144 mph. Billy Meyer of Waco. Texas, drove a Ford Mustang.to his third Funny Car victory in the last four races while Warren Johnson of Duluth, Ga., earned his second Pro Stock victory this year. Beck's victory, the 18th in his NHRA career, pulled him within 496 points of Winston Series leader Joe Amato, who was upset ID the first round by Connie Kalina. Beck now has 5,282 t><>ints to 5. 778 for Amato. "We had some mecha nical problems early in the season when Amato won two strai~t races," Beck said, "but our car is running quite good ngbt now." Beck, driver oflhe No. I Lite All-Star Team dragster, has now beaten Minor twice this year in the championship round. His first victory over Minor came at the Cajun Nationals in Baton Rouge, La.1 last month. ~k followed that with a victory at the Spnngnationals ID Columbus. Ohio, on June 10. · Meyer eliminated Ed McCulloch of Sanger m the finals recording a lime of 5.85 seconds at 247.25 mph to McC~lloch's traction-plagued 12.43 at 61.01 mph. McCuJl~h is the third membe~ of Minor's racing tea'!"· The victory leaves Meyer an second place. 40 points behind Mark Oswald of Cincinnati in the funny car world championship race -4, 712 points to 4.6 72 -and mar~s thdif'lt t1me Meyer, 29, has won thret NHRA events an one season. . . · 7 6s JohnJOn's 1984 Hunt Oldsmobile was urned an . seconds at 182.18 mph in defeating a Ford Thunde_rbitd driven by Bob Glidden of Whiteland. Ind .. which finished tn 7.69 St<;OOdS at 180.72 mph. G lidden eliminated Lee Shepherd of Arliniton. Texas 1n the semifinals, end1na Shtpherd's tJ1ree·rn<.'e 1984 ~1nmna streak and stopp1na the Tnan's Cirand- nationul strealc at four 1 The Angela Brian Downing (5) la wel- comed at tbe plate by Mike Brown, left, ---=--=--------- l#Whptlote and Doug DeClncea after hitting h1a mee- ond homer Sunday ln Milwaukee. ANGELS WIN BEHIND DOWNING •.. From Cl home on Cecil CoopeF's double to the gap in right-center. Milwaukee added three more runs in the sixth to tie the game 4-4. Oglivie led off with a single and scored on Ted Simmons' double to left. . . After Sundberg lined out to. center, J<..!son .relieved Slaton. Simmons advanced to third on a wi ld pitch, but l(json struck out Romero for the second out. Rick Manning drew a walk to have runne~ on .first and third . l(json then unloaded a nother wd~ pitch, enabling Simmons to score. Dion James then npped a tnple to right-center to drive in Manning. . Slaton. traded by the Brewers to the Angels last wmter. improved his record to 3-2. He gave up three runs on SCVC;O hits. two walks and struck out two. Sanch'Cz earned his ninth save. . . McClure fell to 2-4. allowing five runs on e1ght hits. two walks and striking out two. Downing'ssecond home run came after Brown chased McClure with a two-out single in the seventh. Ladd walked DeCinces on four pitches before delivering the home run pitch. . "I wanted a fastball away on Downing and 1t went over the plate." said Ladd. who has given up eight home runs in 53 innings this season. "DeCinces is the guy I have to get out and I lost him, and I didn't get the next guy either." "It was Just one of those days. I felt fine. But I was too wild on DeCinces and then put the ball over the plate to Downing," he said. . Angels Manager John McNamara was glad to see his team break out of a mild hittina1lump. _, · ' Three-point goal adopted for 1988 Olympic Games Brown gets tip, wins at Henley HENLEY-ON-THAMES, England (AP) -Brow11 University put to good use a tip from the coach of a~othc1 Ivy League competitor to outrow Temple and win the Ladies' Challenge Plate at the Henley Royal Reptta. In winning Sunday by a ~tlenglh, the ~vidence R.I. crew ~e the sixth Amencan crew to win the rm in nine years. Brown Coach Will Scoggins. said his Prince~r counterpart Curtis Jordan warned him to watch for~ mtd· race thrust by Temple/Temple used a quick 20 stroke1 Saturday in the middle of th~ 1-"'ile, 5 5().y~ co~rse tc erase a one-length deficit aP,IDSt London Umvemty anc eliminate the last non-Amencan crew. • • ''He (Jordan) told us that they (Temple) reall: cranl£ed it up in the middle of the race," Scoggins said. Brown liad beaten t'nnccton by one lenith in tbe othe semifinal. · · ·-· Temple cut a on~length deficit to within a half-lengtt bu_t could get no closer. . "We had jumped into the lead early on at too hi&h rate," said Temple Coach Gavin White, who ba. masterminded victories over London and Yale with th quick-thrust attack. "They were too excited and it 001 them the race," White said. Temple went out at 36 and 37 strokes to the minutA: higher than the planned 35. When the Owls attempted to come from behind thi time in the middle of the race, there was not enough energ to make it. "The plan worked to a tee twice1 bµt the third time i was not quite properly executed," said White. The British Olympic crew; rowing under the name c Leander and London, defeated the University c Washington by three lenlftts in record time in the premie event. the Grand ChalJe~ Cup. . But the British team s time of 6 minutes1 22 5ec0nd was 12 seconds slower than the course recoro the Briton set Saturday in winninJ their semifinal against th University of Pennsylvarua. Brown's victory over the Temple crew came in one a the bcst-rontcsted Ladies' Plate events ever. Saturday's quanerfmals produced three sensations comebacks, and the same thing happened in two c Sunday's three races. Washington's defeat in the Grand was a defeat will honor against a British Olympic crew that may not be fl behind the medal positions lo Los Angeles. The Huskie! varsity crew made no attempt to ~ble at an early leai and tried to ban& on to the impossible. Washington Assistant coach Jiri Zapletal, the forme Cz~h international, said his crew refused to take th• gamble, "but we onl~ lost half a length in the last part of th race and neverquiL' U .s. Grand Prix results "ttulta of SVftdlv'a U.S. Grend 14. koll aravton, Mardi MC Prix at Ille MNctowland• lndY·c:.ar Co1wort11, t2. race, wltll type of c:.ar, lal>$ com• IS. Jte~ v~. C.ned4 llttlld tlld wlnoara av«aoa N>M<I In MWCll AC·Cotwortl\, h . mott: I. Metlo Andrettl, Loll T-IOO-, .. Torn Oloy, Mardi NC•COI Colworth, 100. I0.742. worth, IO. 2. 0.MY SUltlvan, LoNI T·IOO-11. HowdY Holrnft, March NC Colwortll, 100. Cotworlh, .0. a. Geoff llrabtlam, Australia, 11. Dal\llV Onlalt, MMCfl MC Mllretl 14C-Coa11110f'lll, "· C°'wot'ltl• •S. 4. Al Unw Jr .. Mllrdl ...C· lt. 0trB Dllv, ~. Marc Cct1worlll, '9. MC ·CoawotthL. 44. 5 Al Ho!Ottl, March MC<o.-20. Kevin ~Of911, t• M~'9n worth, tt. tlac, 32. 6. Tom SMYa, Marci\ NC-Cot• '1. Jim Cra~. kollenc worfll, "· T«·Cotworlt\1• JO. . .-------------..., ·---------------------------1. Emerson Fllllpaldl, er.1111 14 ~lmm. IWIKTI Q•CIMI• Mardi IC•Coawortll, "' r H. Appaloosa wins dressage event ARCADIA (AP) -Jaye Cher- ry rode ·Moga, a 13-year-old Appaloosa. toa !().point tnumph in Sunday's $2,SOO Federation ~uestrc Jntematio"alc Grand Pnx Special Sunday as dressage competition concluded at the Santa Anita International Hor5e Show. Cherry's Jumper a~ the only reaistered Appaloosa competing on the grand prix level. the hiahest rating by the FEI. govern- ing body for Olympic cqucstnan Sp() ts. Cherry, from Burhank, fin- ished with l.141 points 10 I 1l1 fM Mana Meters. OlyIDpians top All-Stars MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The U S. Olympic basketball team, tuning up for the Summer Games less than a month away, squeaked past a star- studded batch of NBA players. 94-90 Sunday. The Olympians. paced by 16 points from Nonh Carolina's Sam PcrktM and 12 from Georgetown·~ Patnck Ewing. now have won the first three of nine aamc$ apm•n NBA all-star· teams. But it wasn't easy. Atlanta's Dan Round field put the pros ahead 9().89 wtth a minute to go. but Ewing hit some key free throws 1n the final seconds as the Olympians escaped with a victory. A C'rowd of 19,018 watched thr fint-rver basketooll pme at 1hr 2111- year-old Hubert H. Metrodome. Humphrey Perkins scortd I 0 poi nu in the first 10 minutes, puttina the Olympians ahead 22-14. But a pretty three-man weave enainccred by Los Anielcs' Maak Johnson, Dallas' Mark A&uirre and Detroit's Isaiah Thomas, followed by a Thomas steal and N.sket. brouahl the pros within 22-20. Coach Bobby Kntahfs Olympians then look control. opcnina up a ~2-40 marain at hatnimc. Other lcadina OIY.!"P,lC ~"rs included Nonh Carolina s Michael Jordan and '· John's On1 Mullin. each' wt th a dozen points. t. Al UnW. Marti\ MC-CCK-JOMlt Oaru, Me.alcO, Mat<: wortn, tt. -MC-Cotworth, 10. t. Ciiio Oanaul, Me.rd\ MC• 1'. Didi $11T10n, MatCll MC Cotwortll, tt. C:otwortll 1'. 10. ltlek Meara, Merell MC• u, 1t°'*10 Ouerrlt'O, Ool0mltl1 CO&wortll, '6 March MC·Cot*Ottfl, 16. ti. loelbv ,.an.I,. Me.rel\ MC· ,.. ~ Hallmer, Merell MC Coa-111, M. ColwOftll, 't. lt Oontoft Joflneocll, Marci\ -..C-t1. Teo FM!, ttaty, Ma('('tl MC C:oswortll, M. Cot-ot1t1, i. 13. MlctlNI AMl' .. 11. Marcfl It. Ken Adlttoll, ...... Mlitt'f;J e..c 10--co•wont1, "'· ac-coswor111, " PEBBL£8EACH~AP)-The 73rdann"'J QUfornii AmatcurVolf CbAmpao= wa won by UCLA 1mio Duffy Waldorf, ~ho ara an early lead and went th· route to beat Mark Phillips of Studio City land I in the M hole nnal~ at Pebble Bead\. The ll-ycar-old winner of Tanana. who had bOtl dominatiOJ the front nine all week. took a 38 in th morn Qlto\U\d Saturday and a 37 in the afternoon, but 23 car..old PhilliP,S was unable to pin &round. Plulll"' hid 42 ln th~ mom in1 and posted 77 10 Waldorf• 74, -... - • -I I - • • l 1 : t s ( I f f r s s f l ( J r , r l • I Nl.IC *>TICE MLIC NOTtCl MUC llJllC£ Nil.IC MDJICl FICTmout.,_a IMJMt FteTmousw... ncTmout ..... 11 P1CTmoua•n·a M ~nou..,...11 ncnnoue• a 1 H1 NAMI ITATl....-r NOnct TO NAiii ITAro.NT MA .. ITATIMUIT Mm n A.,...., NAMl ITA~ um RA,_, f~ fOlloW!ng C*90n le CMDtl~t The I io.uw ~ Ml 1"'-f~ PWton It ni. ~~eon II lfMl~.-.ont.,• ~ ,.,_. d~bullMA .. · M9UUC bUllMH ~~Al 00111a11U~• ~bu*-_. ftllJll,_ OOl!IO ...... • JOliNSTOH ADVEATlt. TRAMSnA :AM...D£.VEU>~Oll. :..T..&.l IMSUR.t.NC&i~ -~-:oecoft. 'l"':t("i e tV.SIMJ"t:O , CWltON 11'0 COJJP"AWT. 23 -,~ 1101-11 Ill OvitO, Hhfpon CY. f\400 Witntt AY9nUi Maple, Cotta ....... a.Ill ~ Dr. Fu191 c.Mf ~, l.E 1C Q.U9 nN ~ 1 .. cncomt>er. Co<ona dtl bt07 U,C.C I ~·Cali! 12113 ,, 178, HunllnQton BelCll, 816n t2635 NoCJOt ~ ~ to CtnyOI' Aoeo. l.agvns Mar, c.ltt.12825 Notice 11 MMby gl¥en to Wllllal'I\ J . 810fl1l, Ca.Ml 91541 M.-y Tiw .Sam.on, lowatd C Ka~. •l08 crect11on of the hflil\ ~-'~ ,.......,.. M•roat•I Jol'lntton, 23 •ti. Cfedl~ Of HAAOLD s '18 VI• Quito. Newport Ronald fM191C> Ttll&k• 2237 Mapi., Cott• ...... fQji °' ,.,,on, Calif NllNd 11.,...0ftl "'* • ..... ... ,r .:::.....~ ""= ~ombef, C0tona del HAACOUAT Tr1r11feror, ~. Collf 92603 94500 Wo11w A""""8•171, C llf '2627 O~& bU1 ~ 11 ai110UC to bl L&ttoo • .._,..._ ~· -'4ar, c.iir. He25 wtlGClt ~ add,.... It Thi• buli,,..• It con· Hun1tno1on acl'I, Calff Thb b\ialnete 11 COP• c.bloO Corwu!tine eor. mlde 00 ~ ptClplf1j tit77 This butl"9M II con-ITto' kYPtflC Ctrde, City ducted by .,, Inell~ 91147 duC'9d by;.,~ POtatlon • c,ilfcifnie Cot· l*elnMter ~ .. con-1.w--.. ---lllll!l--------.. -ouc1ed by. an lndM<Mll Of lrVine, County Of Or1nge, William J SIOfm Ttitt bu11nn1 II eo1'-Mary ·Samson POratiOtl. UO& f'ox Or , f4al. lN NmM Md~ duC*' i)r. ilft lndMdi.lll r- MllW9t Jotwwton Ital• Of California thll 1 Tllal ll&l«Mnt .,.. flMcl duetld by: en HldiYldual Tl!ll ttmln! Ml tiled er\Oft C.. ~ Of v.. ~ ;11enr., ,J~ ~ Thit-, .. ,..,,.,,, WU filed bultC tran•ltr II aboul to be W.ltl IN County C*li Of Or· Ronald T•IWI• "'th,.,. ~t; O.k Of Of· T bu. II con-traM!erOR .,. Cl.OISE Tnb ~ .... llild wllhtMCountyewtlofOr· m•de to POUL L. ante COllrlly on .>UM 11. Thia taWMnl wM rMlf.,. Cowlty cin Jun9 'I. ®cted Cly: a~· '*1• flVLMEA Ui Hall•r. N~tOlliftaU)r• €LA anoe COut\ly on June 7, SOAENSfN Ttan•f•t .. IW With the Count; ce.• Of Of· ..... netilllP L~ e.cri, CA. '21St .. County Oft ,NM 7, THE DAILY ~ILOT FIED OFFICE H ll 1HC • 1111hoN ~ addr.., f>41111 anoe County on June 11. "67722 HoMtd c Ka;taf Thi IOCat.IOn 1n ~ 19'4 Dn7t1 8 '' Oucreat Ave • City of Publllhed Orlll'lge Cout 1914 • PuOlllMd Oranoe Coeft Tt\19 t1111Nn1 wM flllld Of SM c:t>llf ~iw ~ ,..,,. PublllNd Ofante CoMt Bree, County of Ofanoe, Dally P110t June 25, July 2. l l PMll1t 0.lly Pilt1t June tf", 25, .,.,.., -.mi Ille Covn11 Clef1I. of Or· OI llflnclpel ~ offioe Publlllled 0r..-C.. Dally Pilot June tf, 25, JUiy St•I• of Callfornla. 18, 1984 Pubtlthed Ora~ CO.I 2, t , 1tl4 ~ County on Jutw 7, ot "'9 tmended 1r.,.rwor 11 Dally Pilot ......_ 1f, 26, Jil!t'I 2. 8, 1984 T.,_ pfc>perty 10 be Irena-• M'1 Dally Pilot Ju'lf 25. July 2, i. M2'7 '984 SAM 2, t . 1tl4 M2t Mrted II dtaotlt>ed In ~ 1G, 1U& nt1P11 AM otW ~ n8rM1 ~5 era1 ... AM atock 1n trees.. "8.IC NOTICE 1 MQ rta.JC f«>TIC( Pu-'llhed <><aooe eo.1 w.o ..,, ... "*' b)' ,,. ·-.,. nH' ---------1f1111ur••· 1qulpm•n1 and Dally Piiot ~ tt. 25. July an~ venat«or within ..--11>1"4 P\ILIC NOTICE good wlll of tn.t PAINTING flCTfTIOUI w...... ..Ori<:E cw TMllTH'I 2, •• 1M4 tine ywft .. , ....,. i..1 t"M:TITIOUI •1•••· !HOP butlnett known .. NA• ITATUIOIT IA.LI M2t l)A.ll IO,., -known to.,. NA* ITAtumwf l'tCTmOUI euaMIS HAAOLD S HARCOURT TM IOllO'Mng petton ii , .. ,. .,. MnTJCE LMft .... MUNO lnlef'o.d tran.t.r.. ere The~ -.. MAm ITATl•NT PRINTER 4lnd loc:aled .. dOlnQ bulinete ... _... "" T.S. No.1·21.. . " I NON ~-.. --- TM I~ per'IOfl II 17to1 SkYl)aftl Citctt. City . SULTAN'S TA LE. t&7t ncnnoua IU ... 11 UMT Coot! I TheNIN(l)and buliNla9 ~~~-~ Telephone n ice: 1onday-Friday 8:00 A. f.·5:30 P. ~. Bu in Counter: f ooaay·Frida> 8:00 . t.-5:30 r . 1. clOil'G l>utiMte ae; Of ll'YIM, Coun1y of Orante. ~ B~d., Cot11 M... TD. R.RYICI CO. llddr-of the lntenffd ""'C COMMEACIA GROUNDS stat• of Callfomla t27.t4, callf 92127 KAMI! ITAn.HT at duly llC>PC)ll\1ed TM11.. trMtfwtll(•> we VIRGIL a '""' H. 234 E. t1VI St., Pl "BLI(·. MAINTENANCE, 2316 S. The bl* trwmer Wfll.IM Ginger G SlmMk. 312 The IOllcM!rio ~ IS undef the follo* ng ~ Pl8JC fl)TIC( WE88 Ind MARY JEAN =71l7.eo.ta..-.-c.11. OEADLI E T ION Dt: DLI .' PM!. °' ' Santa An•. Callf oonaummated on Of aft• Denita P1ec.e. Coton.a dtl doing butinMI .. 1C11bed dMd Of tf\16l WILL WEBB tto5 w..c p ... 92101 the 1t1h d of July, 1M4 at Mar, c.111 12e25 CALIFORNIA CREATIVE SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION NOTICt tNYmNO 1m1 Roed A.ntheln\, CA 02804 RE/MAX °' Com MeeA. • WlntonL.Jordan.23158. 10.00 A':J II Q~OVER Thi• butln ..... oon· PUB~ICASTIONS. ts'!52Cvl--TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER Notic4JllllerebypY9111ha1 Ol•t lhe ~C)C*ty peril-~'::"~·.':!· Pltlc Of · Santa AN. Oellf. ESCAOW CORPORATION, dUC1ed by an 11\dlYidual vet u. ·• ulte A· 1 "• !MM, FOA CASH AND/OA THE the eo..o of Trull ... of tne nen1 hereto i9 deterl!>ed In pore ' 92707 whoM eddr... II 23800 Ginger G SimNk catlf 112114 CASHIERS OR CERTIFIEO Coest Commun ty coa.oe Qtrl•ll u ... turn11u .... fi)t· 23A [.. Mmti St . luh• 111. Thlt bu1fnea1 11 con· Rocklleld BIVd. SI•. 2N. El Thll 1tetement w .. llled Catol J Liiiie, 308 Onyx. CHECKS SPECIP:IED IN Diitrlct of Orange COUnty, 111111 and equlpm•n1 ~ti! ::.: ~~ dUcted by. In lodMdual TOfo. c.llfomla with the County Cient of Of· Balboa laland, Calif. 92682 CIVIL CODE S!CTION California, wlff receive Mal· Ooodwlll, phone number, ed Winton L. Jorden Thlt tti. 1a11 date fOf llllng ange County on June 111, Thia bualn•u I• con· 2924h (payable 1t 1he lllN of ed bldt u., to bu1 no later IHMtlold tmprov~o1a ~ala~ ~~~ Thia lllttment llfU flied clmlma In tile MCl'OW referred 1914' ducted r "'lndMdual Nie In lawful money Of tile than Tueada;. 10.00 1 m , Ind lnler•t of IN.I cet1..,, Thie '1•*'*"' WM flied wllh IM County C*1c of Or· to llereln la July 18. 19&4. ~ Catol Little United StllH) aft right Otte July 10. 1984 a the Purd1411-t1avel ~ end located et with the ,._ .-... ,. ......... ~ ...... ~ County on JIJne ti. 8o fllf .. II known to ttie Published Orange Coul Thia itatement wu Meo and lnlareal conv.yed lo n-.... t of latd CD!-2•0 A Fore11 Avenue ........,., ...,... "'"' 1914 Tr·"•I.,... •II bu1lnH1 ,......, Piiot ~ 25 Ju"' 2. 9. Wlth tile Coul'lty Clefk Of °' he4d b II under Ing .....,,.. ·"*' . . ange County ()fl June • ..__17 ... :.:... ..... _ .... _~ .. __.. ~1.-1 1,,,.~ ., enoe County on June 11. and now f T Y i.ge d111nct)oeated 11 1370 Leount a-:n. CA. 1..,. • r-·-·-.,.., ...,..._ _ u, .,.,.. d Deed o rust tn the Adems Avenue Cotti The~ name'utled fl'M1Sl2 Publllhed Orange Cout by the Transferor I« IM • M48 11184 IF,_11 propert; ti.r•m•lt•r Oe· Melt. Callforrua 11 wtllGh by llliO tr.,,.._ora at Mid PublltMO Ofenge ~ Delly Piiot June 25, July 2, 9, put three. yMrW err. SAME. senbed tll'M Mid bid$ Wiii be pub-locatlCM Is ELOISE FULMER Delly Ptlot Jc""9 tf. 25 JWy 18, 1984 Dated June 11. 1984 IUM.tC NOTICE Pubhllled Orange Coel1 TRUS TOR JOHN P hdy oPer*' and reed klr TRAVECS • • I M42 POUL L SOR.ENSEN Tr.,,._ 0.1y Pttol June 25• July 2 9· BRUNO, STELLA S BRUNO PRINT AHO 81ND FALL That UM2 bulk 1rantf• 11 2• t , t9M M30I ler.. NOTtCI IWlf1'*Q U>a 18· l9M 8ENEFIC\ARY. P,AUL P 1984 COMMUNITY S&R· tnt9nde6 to be Con9Um- QROY£ .. llCAOW Notallllerebyglven th•t M•O PATA.POFF. KATHERINE v I c ES 8 R oc Hu ffE. m•led at IN offloa of "8JC fl)TIC( 2llOO lltoctrfteW 9"d.. 8te. the Board of TruttMI of the PATAPOFF COASTLINE COMMUNITY S~EAASONIAMERICAN Ml.JC NOTICE 2N Cont Commut'llly College RECORDED JlnuMy }4. COLLEGE EXPAESS ESCROW CO . FICTITIOUl llUatNIEIS II Toro, CA. nao DillrlCI of Orange County, 1982 as Instr No 82..015v78 All bids .,. to be In ac--1913 E 17th SL. •21', NAMI ITAT~•NT Publllhed Orange Coat California, wlll reoelve Mel· Ml.JC NOTICE ol Olliclill Record• In the of· cordance wtlh the Bid Doc:u· Sant• Ane. Coullty 01 Of. The followfng pertont era Dall)' Pilot Jul)' 2. 19&4 ,ed bld1 up 10 bl.It no i.ter Ilea oJ l1'e Recorder of Or· men11 wtwch are now In file enge, Callf0tnte 92701 on« doing busm.. .. : M-51 than Tue9dey, 11·00 e.m.. FICTITIOUS llUSINlll ange Coun1y. and mey be aec:wed In the .rt• July 1a. 1914 RE/~AX OF CORONA July 18, 19M ettlle Putct\.U-NAMe ITATDllNT said deed ol trult de-olflce of the Director of Thia bull! transter la 11.ib- DEL MAR. 234 E 11th 81.. PtllJC NQTIC[ Ing [)epwtment of MIO cot--The loltowlng per90n 11 scrlbel Ille I~ P<ot>-Purehaling of Mid co1ega .;act to CallfOfm Uniform Suite 117, Cost• MeM, Calif. 1ege dlslrlct located et 1370 doing b\llinea at erty dlltrlct e1a1 Coda Sea.Ion 112827 NOTIC~ INVfT1NG _,, Ad1m1 Avenue. Coile C O.M /CREATIVE OE· PARCa. 1 Lot 42 ot Tract Eec:t\ bidder musl ~ 8108 RE/MAX of Costa M.... NOTICE IS HEREBY Mela. Colilomla •1 which SIGN AND MARKETING, NO 8959, 1n the City ol Wllh hit bid • cashier'• The name and ..sor.. ol IMne. Newport 8etcil. Inc.. GIVEN t h 1 t 1 e •I• d Ume Mid bid• Wlll be pub-3115 16th St. Suitt •II. Hunt· IMne. County of Orenge, ctieek. certdJlld c:tleclc, or th• per.on with wtlom A Clll10fnl1 Corporation. proPONfl for furnlehlng all tidy opened and raeo for: lngton Beach, Cahl 112884 State of Callloftlf•. • per bidder'• bond made peyable tllm• may be filed 11 234 E 11th St .. Sutta 117. labor, malerlell. equipment. p UR C 'ti ASE OF Mwk Gerard OrMn. 318 "'4llP recorded In Book 278. to the order of Iha Coast SHEARSON/AMERICAN Coate Mela. Calli 92827 tran1por11tlon end 1ucn CUSTODIAL PAPER SUPP~ 16tb St. Huntington 8eactt, Peges 41 to 43 lncluSMJ. Community College District EXPRESS ESCROW CO .• Thll bu1lnea1 11 con-other fecllitlet u mey be r• LY Calli. 92684 mlaceltaneous mapa, lfl the Boatd or TrustMt an an 11113 E. 17th St... •214. ~IOUl•..-:H II~ l'TATDllllT TM followlng '*'°" la' doing bualnea .. SUNSET SWEEPING! SERVICE. 21372 8'ookhunt1 St I 722. HYmington Beec:h.' CUI 92&41 Vlc:1or Manuel L...cta. 21372 Btodlhlnl St 722, Huntington 8-:h, Calf~ Thi• bualneat la con- ducted by en lnCIMOual Vlc:tor M i..v.da \londa' Tu_. da·~ \\' rd1u•Mia' T hur da~ Frid.a~ • aturcla~ !'und ~ ~at. \Ion. T uri. •'r.d. • T hur. fridca~ Fri. 11 :30 a.m. l:30 p.m. •1:30 p .m. :30 p .m. 1:30 p .m . 3:00 p .m. 3:00 p.m. ... \..am·cllat ion a nd corrf':ct ioRJ ma~ btt m ade on iamc deadline.• above. Plu e a k for a cancellation number wht'n o nc:-elliog )'our acl. ERRORS: Check )OUr ad daily and repor1 en on immediately. T he D ILY P ILOT a umes liability for the fin l incorrect in ertioo only. CLASSIFIED 642-5678 dueled by: a e«porlllon quired fOf MODIFICATION All bid• are 10 be in IC· This bu1ln•11 11 con· office of lhe County A..-amounl nol lest lhat five Senta An•. CA 92701, Attn Crelg W. 8ttley, Pretldent OF TRAFFIC SIGNALS ON cordanc. with the Bid Docu· dueled t>y· an Individual corder of said Coullty. percenl (5%) of the aum bid Kc SlnOr, Elcrow No. 4589- Thlt 1t1temenl was nted WEST 19Tli STREET AT mentl wtllch ere now In Ille Mark G Green EXCEPT all Oii. oil rlght1, u a ouartnlee that the bid· kc. and lhe IUt day fof flllna with t.,. County Clerk of Or· POMONA AVENUE AND and mey be HCUl'ed In the Thia tlalamenl was filed mlnerel1. miner al rlght1, dttf wlll enter Into th1~1lm1 by any c:tedltOf Ill.ti lnQt County on June 8. WEST 19TH STREET AT ofnc. of the Director of with 111e Couotit CIO<k of Of· nawr.. ~s. natural ~ proposed Contract if tha be July t7. ti&C~ the 1914 PLACENTIA AVENUE, will Pure1'111lng of Aid college ange County on June 18, rt g ht s , an Cl O 1 ht r ..,.,,. 11 -arded to him In bllllnell day befOf'e lhe Thia st•tamtnt WU filed ..... ..__ ._.._ I m__.,;;, .. ·-·- With 1he County Clerk of Or· ............................ --........ _ .... ---------------~~ : County on June 7. ..... t• ..... 1!91 f'M711t -------·· -------· Publlahed Of ange CoMt Publlshed Orange Cout Costa Meta 11 lhe omce of Eacl'I bidder muat klbmlt F>U511 IOeYtlf" oame krlO*Tl that Into 1uch contract the fled at>ove · o.lty Piiot June 18. 25. July tile City Clerk, 77 Falt Or1\le, wtth his bid 1 cuttler'1 Published Oranoe Cout may be wtthln or under the proceeds of ltlechedt;..... be Oa1ed June 22, t984. Vlr· Deify Plloc June 18, 25, 2, 9, 1984 ...... F247-be received by the City of district. 198" hydrocarbon• b; whit· lhe event of f.iiure to ant•'~mmat1on date apea. 2. 9, 1M4 Coat• Mesa, CalifonU. untll c:Mck, cer1ifiect ctlectc, or Dally Pllol June 25, JVky 2, 9, parcel of land ._.,,.bove lorMlled, or In the c.. of 1;~ G Wat>t> M31 tile hOUr of t 1:00 a.m., Jutt bidder's bond made peyable 18, 1911-4 described, together With lhe bond, the 1U1 1Um thereof!:~ Jean Weot> 10, 1984, 11 whlctl time they to the Ofder of the Cout M45 perpetual right of drllhng, will be fortefted to uld cot.-.Intended Tr.,....a) wl" be opened publdy end Community Colleoe District mining. ~ encl oe>er· lege dlstnQ, Pvbhlhed Orange Coest -------CE--·•read .iood lo the Coundl Boatd of Trutt .. lo an allng lherefOf and storing lfl No bidder me; wl!Mfaw e>.Jty Plk>t Juty 2. 1984 M24 Prestigious Bayfront Villa, 8 Br. 1~ Ba. --NlJC--11>-TICE--• pooL spa. lu'8e boat doc:b. $4.850.000. l't8.JC NOTI Ch 1 m b • r 1 . S 1 a I e d amount nol lea that five TICE end removing tile same from his bid I« 1 period tor toriy._. M-59 ..:~o ACTmOUI IUS*EIS l)<opc>Nla 11\all beer the mi. '*''*'115%) Of the sum bid Pta.IC NO taid land or arry otMt land. 11119(•51 days attw the datt CMDffottl NAMe STA~ of the work and the name Of as a QUllflllt .. that the bid· FICTITIOUS llUSINISI Including the right to whip-set for the ooenlng thereof 0. MAJ( TM following petson It the biddef l>u1 no other dlt-der will enter Into the NAME STATE'lftNT 1toek or dlreclionllly drill Ttie Board of Trusteaa r• ~ Channing Spanish 3 Bt 2 Ba OD 4.5' lot. courtyard & 1rg deck. pier & allp. $1,100,000. doing bull"flS .. : tlngulthlng mltka Any bid proposed Contrect II the The following '*'°"' ar• and mine from lands other Mrvet tile prlvtlege of reject· (lee& 1101 MEDIUMWA'-19000 reoelved after the tc:heduled nme It -•rded to him. In doing bu"'-u than lhose herelnabove de-Ing any Md all bldt or to PtB.JC NOTICE -t1G7 U,C.C.) Bea.u1i.ful 3 Br, 2 Ba. playroom.~ MecArlhur 81 :. Suite cloelng lime for,.,. r~t the event of fllilur• 10 enler VIVON. 3420 E Coast terlbed.oll0<gu..U., tun· w11veany1rregularllle1orln· Notloe II hereO)' ~ 10 '---.....;Jin~ Xln• li .. ..-M.....ttft '..,..'H\,000 . 1119. Irvine, Call . 92715 Of bld9 11\all be r•turned 10 into tuch contract. the Htohway. Newport e.ach, nell and Shafts Into, tlltoughl lormalltles in arry bld or In I~ COURT cred1tor1 of the within ~ .......,___ • .......-...--... ~ Paul Maleclca. 1605 Sher· the bldel« unopened. It tMll prooeeda Of the check wlll be Cl!lt 92625 or across 1M tut>euttece of lhe bidding nMMd lnntfwOf{s) that • lnglon Piece A.pl Y309 New-be Ille tole reponllt>Wty Of lorf1111ed, or In I.he cue of a Satan Heldltl 508 Yortl the land heratnabove de-Open July 10, 1984 • 10 00 OF CAUIFo..-A, !MA .,..,... • about 10 be pon Beach Callt 92663 the bldd« to -ttlat hit bid bond. the run tum thereof Town Hunllngtoo Beacti ~::::Soex~ 1! ':r'!:"1or1": ;1mgned COARELLAN J In ~~.': ~ made on ~ property This bu~lnm It con-I• r~ In proper lime. wlH be forfeited to Mid col· Call '92<181 dro''-... wells. tunnel•. Ind THOMPSON ~tton ot n..ina.tter deec:ribed lndMd al A Ml of plant and SpecUI· 1ege dllttlc1 B J h 1 """' ACK The nam. and ~ duCPl•edut Mby~... u catlont mey be obatlned at No blddel' mey wllhd~aw '6"~reu·~·-k·: .. ~ .. •r an tnalts under and bllnellh or Exec Vtee Chancellor CHARLES JOSEPH J • tddr ... ol \tie Intended ·-I.,. Otfloa of the ,...., Engl his bid f ........... ~ forty I ~ I..,.., ""'" beyond lhe IJlteriof ltmltl ... &*-5 Affllrl SON Ttm 'statement wn filed ''"'7 • «a,...... ...... or • 229 £nano Caltl 913111 lhereof, and-lo.rednll retun-Coes1 Commul\lty College f« cnanoe of .Name transferors •r•· AES· with IM County Clerk of Or· near. 77 Fair Drive. Costa tlve(<t51 days alter Ille dlte Morleu A Fsfahanl, 8945 nel. equip, maintllln. repak'. Distnct No A 123598 T AURA NT CAC.TORS, ~ County June 8 MeH. Calltornle, upon Mt for the~ lhereof 8olM Ave Westminster d__,, Ind .......,.le any Pv"'1s"-... Oranna Co111 OROER TO SHOW CAUSE INC• • Cllllf Cof?., te6 1984 • nonretvndable payment of TM Boatd of Trust.., re-Calil 92683' . --..-.. ...,..... "' """ .-FOR CHANGE OF NAME Baker St,_, Suit. 2e7, l"M7l1t J 10.00 addlllonal charge ~the privilege of reject-ThtS business 11 con-suci1 wells or mines. \lrllhotlt Dally Pilot June 25. Juty 2. Costa Meta. CA. 9262S Cout of S2 mu11 be Included II ing any and •" bid• or to ducted by a llmlled partner· however the rtght to drlll.1 1984 CH A ALES J 0 SEP H The locatlon In Cell1omia 2 han by mall. Plant, waive any lrregutarltlet or in-... , mine. store. explot• and C>P-M·50 JACKSON hat flied a P9U-ctllef of'llcl • Ill II d th I i-...... 1 .. 11p ertte lhrnunh Ille aurlaca or tlon In 11\is court tor~ Ofdet of Ille ••ICIJI~ ce ons an o er formal t,..1 In eny ""' or n Sua.n Heidarl the upp;,-"soo leel ol the allow1no P•tltlo.n.r to or prlnc:lpal llUW.. ~ M47 tr«:t docum.nta may the bidding. This slll9mant was flied aubsurtace o1 .•he land her• P\lll.lC NOTICE chanoe tlls.'htr name from of tile lntanoed tr...,_or • elso be examtned al lhe QI. Open July 10. 1984 • 11:00 with the County Clerk ot Of. inab<>ve delertbed, .. re·1 CHAALES JOSEPH JACK· SAME. ---------~ ~~ t':tt~I~ of the s;'necs CORA ELLAN J . ange County on June 8, served In the deed from the LEGAL MOnCE SON to CHARLES JOSEPH Al other ~ ~ Pl&.IC NOTICE Each bld lhall be 11\acM on T~~ 198" ---. Irvine Company, recorded NEWPOftT-MEIA UN1F1ED BROWN end 9ddlWel uMd by the ---------n•••-Novembef 23 19781n Book SCHOOi. DtSTNCT IT IS HEREBY ORDERED ln'*'1ded ,,.,,..._°' Within K-11171 the Propotel torm, lhMta Exec ViGe P\.lbfisheO Orange Coast 9898 Page :io:s of Official NOT1CE IS HEAEllY rt1aurpenone .-din ""-,..... .... ~ lelt ACTmOUt ""..... P· l l~ougn P-8 provided In BuliMu Ahlira Deity Piiot June 18. 25. Jvky ~di . GIVEN lt\tt the 8oatd of the mot\tr 8'0f'e9aicl ..,.. pes1 IO la..-.. knOwn IO tl'ie N.-ITAn.Nl the contracl documents. Coat Community Coflege 2 9 1984 PARCEL 2 A non .... Education ot the Newport· befof• tNI ~In~-Intended tran•fer• - The following perlON are end an.II be accompanied °'9tnct ' · M33 ~ appurten.nt ..,.. Meu Unlfled School Dlstt\ct ment No 3 at 100 CMc NONE doing butineu ea: by 1 certified or euhief't Published Orange Coast ment I« Ille pufpoMI Nit of Orange County Wiii r• Center 0nve Wet. s.m.a TM '*"91•1 and~ 824 WEST 18TH STREET cfle(;I( « 1 bid bond for not Daily Ptlol .i..,,,. 25. Jut; 2. forth 111 that certain Oecfar. c.ivesealedbidsuplo 1100 Ana. Calfomla. on J4i1 23, eddt .. of the lntendl!O ASSOCIATES 82.4 Weal leSI than 10% of the amount l984 11100 ofC:Ovenants ~ AM on the 17th day of Jutt, 1984. et 9 " o·~ AM .. trenaftret(ll -EDOf{K0 18th Str•t Cost• Mesa. of the bid, rm1oe payable to M-51 f'tlJ()C ftOTIC£ dfllon.s and AesloctJOnt r• 1984, at the Purc:hulng OI· and Ulen end tt.e ltlOW INVESTMENT COMPANY,• UYW ..W lmMLI W Jetty & Bay view. newly decanted Mai Kai. 2 Br. 2 Ba. 4()' patio. $695,000. KWllU -IE' R I If Ocean & Jetty views. marine room. .. Br. 3 Be, 3700 9e1. ft-, car parking. $1,28.5,000. unm..-uu 1n Speciacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 a. up, 2 Br, 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1.35(),000. u1m ... ••- Panoramic ocean & city view, 5 Bt 3 Ba. irpeciolJI mtertai.DJng home. si.100.000. Bill GRUNDY . REALTOR : • ' • • • ~ • • r CA 92e28 ' the City of Costa Mesa. No corded Sec>letnbtr 18. 11169 liee Of seid School District. cauee. if any they ~. wtly II ml led. par1n ... 1hlp, 11 A. Lawrenc. Crowe, 824 proposal lhall bl con· PtB.IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUllWSS In Book 9082 Page 369 Of located II 2985-B S.11 I.id petttlon for ch~ of Country Mudow. Ro41lng l!ii~~ii:ji~~j!!;;;; Wn t 18th Street Cotta lidered unleu accompanied NAME STATEMENT Olflctal Rec~ds and 0W,, Street. Costa Mela, CA namelhould no1 be granted. HWs &tel•, CA 90274 f M .... CA. 92826r,..:_ 82~ ~!a,,~ bl~~~· F~~:.=• d jhe :!!fwlng '*'°"1 ere the land detc~lt>e<I and 921126, at wt\lol\ time said IT IS FURTHER Of'dtred Thal the Pf°'*1Y pert!-Uw.T.ft'fllll I Ctlar1et E. C v-.... .. No bid lhall be contldered The lollowfng peraon1 are 0erltBOA~1~D DEPT Shown on a map ma1ked bids WlH be publlcly ~ that a copy of this order to nent tleteto 11 deletlbed In Unu9Ulll comer loc:alion ~!!~ c1!1h~!'8eet. Cotta unlna 11 It made on• ~le doing bulinns as. OF RECREATION, 223',... exhibit "A" allahced to lhat ano read tor INTERCOM lhOW ceuM be publtstled In general• various"*"-of on the Main beyfronl ..._. .... "'-IE certain notl09 recorded May sys TE Ms F 0 R HI Q H the Orange Coa1 Daly Plot. fumttut• fixtures. equtc>-w/unobStNCled vtew of RaNsallD Hunt 824 wnt formlurnlthedbytheCltyof R IMAX OF COSTA Stpphlre. Balboa Island. 6 197 1 .1n.,-~9631 pw SCHOOLS. 1 ~of general menl,IHrahOldlnt.,...and ,.__...ont .,........., Oneof ' ' Cotta M ... and It made In MESA. 2~ E. 17th StrMI, Calif 92662 • """"' · ..,,.... In ~ ta and located .,..,., _,, ... , COU>WC?U BAN~eRO Cl~th,,2S81!!"'· Coste Meaa.1ccord1nc• with th•Sulte117.eo.11Maa.Calif Pam Sctlua1anctc, 223',... 87of0fficla1Record1 j A"blds-tobe 1C·C1tcutat1on,put>Mhedlnthls ovemen lherweloc:ataon11nNew-"' • ,v YOU ARE IN DEFAULT e«dance wi1h Conditions. county 11 letst once e ...-at 220 E. Kttella Ofange. port Beech! A home of ----Aobtrt Met<ntgnt Jr 824 provltlont of the PrQ90UI 92827 Sapphire. Balboa lsJand. UNDER A DEED OF TRUSTI Instructions end Spectlt· lor I~ conMQltlve _., CA extre«d!MfY ~IY l W•t 18th St,_' Cotta requlfement1 RE/MAX of Coat• Mesa, Calif 92662" DATED t 112018 1 UNLESS I cations whidl ere not on Ille prlof to Iha day ot said Mllf· The ~ name UMd deteiltng Thta 2-story • IAlf• Md • .,..._ CA. 92e2e ' Tht contrtctor 1h1ll IMne, Newport e..cti, Inc.. Arthur 0 Barry, 553 YOU TAKE ACTION TO In the ottice of the, Purchal-Ing by said tranlfer~ at Mid rMidence hat• llPKIO'll 11~ Tllli butlne11 II con· comply Wilh Ille provlSlons A Callloml• Corporation, Promontory °' East, New· PROTECT YOUR PROP' Ing Oiractor of Mid ~ Dtted June 14, 1984 locetlon It CAPPY s rm formal Anrac:tiw i.t.,. ducted by 1 generel Pllf1· of s.<:1ion 1770 to 17~ In· 234 E 11th St • Sulla 117, port Beach. Calli 92660 ERTY. fT MA y 8E SOLD AT District, 2985-8 Bear Str•l. I FRANK OOMENICHINI Thet atO ~ trensler It liYlng • I l•b r e r " /dtningd e n ...___ -t-' ...:._,Ion ti nenhlp clullve, of lhe Cllllomla Coat• Meaa, Calif 92827 This busmeu Is con· A PUBLIC SALE IF YOU Cosla Mesa. CA 1 Judge of the Intended to be conaum· r m , ......,. • -· ••-. A LaMance Crowe Labor Code; the prevaillnQ This buslna11 II con· ducted b; I general pan· NEED AN EXPLANATION Eech btddef mull tut>mU SuperlOf Court mated 91 nie office of BUR-wl.boollce.... 2 matr de9Crlbe this 28R condo rNt tetemen1 llfllS filed ratt and acale of wages es-ducted by 1 corporation nertnlp OF THE NATURE OF THE 1 bid ~I In lhe form of a Publllhed Orange Coat AOW ESCROW COMPANY. suit• & 2 femUy bedrma. In the heert of ~ 'eoun Clerk f Of tat>lllhed by tile City of Craig W 8ttley, Prelldent Pam Sc11lltterlck PROCEEDING AGAINST' Certified or CUhler 1 Check Dally Pilot June l8. 25. JtJk; 1857 E Lincoln A~. Or· Waterfront patlot to a..ctt. Pert.ct tor e QOU· :;.•neCounty ty on Ju:!. 5. Coal• M ... l•V•ll•ble 81 the This llaternent Wll flied This 1111emen1 WU filed YOU YOU SHOULD CON·' Of • Bond ~ lo ten per 2 9, 19&4 toge. County of Orwlge, efljoy entertalnlnp & • pie. Private tenntl l poof 1914 • ottic. ol the City Clert!), and wllh ,.,. COUnty Cleric Of Of. wilh the County Clerk or Or· TACT A LAWYER cent (10%) of the amount of M-35 c.tffornlo 926e5 on or after pnvat• cour1yWd .ury nurt>y. l"M7IU 1hall forfeit pen1lllH ange County on June 8. ange County on June 18, 1947 t Sierra POf'lo Road, the Bid, macs. ~yable to the .Nty tll, teM w/IUah ~ e... ••• 1111 II .. .., l .. l)<tacrlbed therein fOf non-1944 1984 .. _ I ,.._ ..._Mesa Th• bulk trans1w 11 tut>-lty ..............,....._ -'-/*'"' t A en. eta na, ec ., com""ance ol tl'le Code. FM7IM f 241$t4 Irvine ea. or ....... o u .. ·--........ -~ ...-_ or GM!bte a llWtcwy ,.... (It· a 51, .. 1 addrut or unified Sctiool Dlttnct In ject 10 Celltom\I Uniform i.ge yecttt Shown by I~~~~~~~~~. I Ctwta Pla&a. suite 2IO The City Council of the Publllhed Ofange eo..1 Pvbllstiecs Orange Cout common designation ol Ille _,, ot failure to ariter Commwdll Code Section appt. to quatifted buyef'I I~ N•w,ort IHc h CA City ol Cotll Mea9 r...-Dally Piiot June 18, 25. July Dally Pilol June 25. July 2. 9. property Is shown aboYe. no' 1n10 such Contract lhe 8106 $2,150 000 FEE Ol..111 .... ntlO-ltlt • · the right to r•ject .. bide. 2. 9. 1984 16. 1984 watranty 15 \}IV9n u 10 111 proc.eds of the cl'led< w111 be The name ano adOf.al ot Smell tM OCW\ from tNt Attn: ....,,lap• '· ~ EILEEN P 6rty"~ M32 M44 completeness or correct· Ion.tied 10 sa6d School Ott-rtaJC N011C[ the person wltll wn°: -"\fl Kt Ml" 1 newer 3 bedfoofft, 2+ 12 a._ nest) The beneficiary lrlCt of Ofanga County de.ms may be filed 11 8U ti' lu l ._ •·--ba. home Bright & Wly P1ublahed Ofange Cout Pubhlhed Oran~ Coul un~ $8ld Deed of Trust by A Performance Bond may FICTTTIOUS 11US1N1U ROW ESCROW COMPANY, • ... -· Assumableloen Celnow DIUyPtlotJune 18,25 . .My Dal~Poot.June2 end July raasonolat>reactlordefiwtt berequlredetthedlac:retlon N ..... ITAT'UlaJIT 1657E Unc:olnA--.Of· RULESTl.TE '546--2313 2 0 1HA 2· 1 84 PEoiPLE Tl10 TO CL.A.SSIPl.£.D In the obllgahona MOUl'ed of lhe Dtstnct.o The k*owtng per90nt ... ange CA t2985 &a-ow No ..,,....., ' ' M·21 M-<t4 h f No bidder may Withdraw d<>'ng buslnea es. 4007 LR and the leat day lof '•-1111[11111 _____ _ BECA\IS"E TREY KNOW OTBEll =~::yand :.~:·10 ~~ hll Bid lor. period Of lofty· OASIS FARMS. 1201 flhng Clllmt by en; creditor,. -THE REAL ESTATE RS EMMI NG ER 0 tr A N E EMMINGER. aged 71, resid ent o f Pountaln Valley, HAMORLAWN- lllT. OUVI M<lftua.ry •Cemetery Crematory 1625 Glslef Ave. Costa Mesa 5-4().5~ PllRCI IROTHIU llUMOADWAV lllOlnUAllY 110 BtoedWay Colt• u... 842·9150 paDed away June JQ, 1984. Mr F.nuninger became Fountain Valleys first Building lnapector in 1962 and redttd In 1977 as Building and Safety Director. He waa a1-> a member of the Fo u n t ain Valley Historical Society. He ii survived by hia wife Dorothy E . E mmlnger; son M ichael Duane Emmlnltt, of AlLa L oma, daughter, K a thi• Felix, of Foun\ain Valley; 5 arandlona. Funeral teMc.w will be held lPM Tue9day July 3. Brown Colo n ial O\apel. Santa Ana. tnterment wW follow In Aacen1ion ~.El Toro. ~E ARE SELL.l.Jllf;. undefsigned 8 wrlltan Dae· five (45) days aft• the dale South Beach Boulevard, lhall be Juty 18. 1984. wfllcfl IEIT YAL•- larallon of Oefatll and De-' set for the 099fllng thereof I Sult• 105. La Habre. Calif II U.. ~ day belor. II IF .. ~mnc rvc-r"•hlnc from '""'""'''"'"' 1op••,.,... lo ''"" naturr o( p<'npl• rn div.rd nld hobbll"S and takr up nrw nnn (n• lamll..,. tn mnv,. •nd cmw Arwi th,. ix-~n• 1tw.1 Ol\C'f' Yrvrd lhrm w.-ll nutltvrth,.lr uv lulnru. rhen~ tn """' ll(r ntf'~ll•rr • JIUIT~tw lwn ~Ii ri.-10rtt- 11 mAv mak,. lhnw r han"" Ill lttllf "'°"' •fTord• bl.- • , __ _ _ ...... The Board of Education of 90631 th• con1ummellon date mend lor Sate Ind ~rttten1 lhe Newporl·Maaa un111ec1i Richard A Marshburn specified above "Decoretor perfect" :!,~gf :":: 0~:1 SChool OISlflct ,...,.... tile 1450 Recaoo Roed. Le Oeted Junes 11164 Large. completely ,.. signed to .... said property right lo r•iect anyor ... 8idt Hlbfl He!Qhta. Calli 90831 EOOKKO INVESTMENT mode6ed. ~ P' 10 sat~l't said obligaliont and not nec.sunly accept Donald C Mar11ht>urn COMPANY lor9, ,.. kltdW\, i.ths, Ind lhereaner the under~ lhe !Oii.eii Bid. and to • .,... t9172 lJt Prlden Yorba By Toru MltlllN> gentr"lll 3 bedroom p11.e fwnlly Signed cau$ed said nola of any tnlormlltty or lrr9QUlari-Linda Cal&f 921M penner ........ ~ lwnillld room plus, etudy, 2 + 12 t>re.adl and Qf etac1ton 10 be ty 1n any Bid rectlV9d Tht1 bu11neu os con· By Klllu ""-"-bsthe. al rooma C>P9" recorded Marel'I 20. ieM 11 NEWPORT -MESA UNIAED ducted by a limltectP81'tner· panner onto petkl6, cozy ttr-. Instr No 84-11 S383 of Of. SCHOOl DISTRICT sl\lp By ILurnl Malitn0 llmoll9d p I ace S 3 t 6 . 0 0 0 hc1a1 Recouis 1n Iha offtCe of ol Orange County AICl\erd A Maf'lflbum oanner &«-6200 Lole J~ lhe Rec()(dtlf of Orange Dorothy Henrey Fl1har, Thol statement wet filed 8y Mokl Hirata•• •moted Count c P M With,.,. County Cterti o1 Of· penner s.J sate••" be made 001 P\Kcha11ng Dlractor ange County on June 7 lnlanded TransterM(a) WlthOUI covenant or ;.,al. (714) SSS-3217 19M ·~· HCROW COM- ' •P<ess or lmpHed r• DA TEO June 28 198'4 FM77M ,A.HY ~~J:~ 11118 p0ssest1on' or Published O.ange Coall Pul>l•Slled Ofange Coaat 1t5f I , Llncdn •- enc mbrances 10 pay the Da1ty Pilot. July 2 July 9 Dally PllOt June 18 25 JWy o..-.,... CA.._. rem':..n.ng pr~pal tum 01 1984 2 9 198'4 PubftaMd Orange Coat 'f/: Mac nab · Irvine umm•• LoV'Clfy 2 Bdrm condo gtowlng with warmth ~ comfort Neer MW W/2 car OWllQ9 pool & ape A cMrrNng .. .,,.. '°' the young couple Pnoed to Mii now• Don ·t pua WCI this rer• buy Cell &46-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS SELL Idle lte me with a o.lty Plot 0 111"1'1ed Ad. Ille nolelsl MC\lred by said U5411 M211 0..ly Piiot .JI.tty 2. , ... M-S7 de.cl of Trust, With tnterut u In Sltd note pt~. ed· vanc:es ti any undef the 1..-rns of Mid Deed of ltUll, fee& chatgll aM ~ of the ll'V9tee IOO of 1he lns$11 c:r .. ted by Mid Deed .. ~· s@ R"1lA-cl£~s· -.... ol Trusr Said .... ""'II be held on T~y. JVky 2• 1914, II 2 30 pm at Ille CNlpman AYWIUll .,,trance to the Ctw: Cent• BulldlnO. 300 &at CNlpman Ave . Orange CA 1QJot At the time cl tne lnttllll Func1t0n publlce1'°" or ·,.,a. 1M total MIOUtll Of the ~ p..o ~ °' the 00'!- 0A'llOft MQlM 11:1>r ttla ~ OlecJ jbed --of tl'\lt1 ~ ettim.19d cioeta ~ and~•l'2.CAIS n.. local lnd«>tedl'llM8 ~ an .._on wt1iGll lhe Of*Wll bid iaCOfnP'lted maiy be OlltlliMid tir c:..lling oerwal 00--..... ,, Pl;blCSMC, ~Wotl&.I ....... ,.,... Ool~ CelP'el ""'Pt041•••• °"* TOTAL CT141 ~131 or (213) 0. .. kw"""--~ 121-'U! •• day tllbw lt'9 .. Dated NM 2 t , IM TO R~OO . ..,, ..... G~ Pl'.HY. f#ih A ~ ~ J &2000000 Al Ot,_ ~ sa.•1.015 12 292.NO l ,1t1,4» 2.M0,'36 1.20S.S20 1, 102,3t& l20 .... ~ S-.TOtll 10TAl tt96-15 400C*d ~ M .111.015 12.212.tto • 117,'56 ueo.'35 ,..zos.~ .. ' tot,315 ,,ORC!O 1'1,7'30.1«) a1aoooo suo:ooo 120000 ------...._cut • -..... •=-::.:"-=. ~ _ ........ ._ .. __ _ I ROTYAT I I J I I I 1 I I s [ E 8 0 I I 1 • I' I t SH UCO I 111'1'~ ~••una.1w-l SLEOET I .-~1.-Tl---r.:-I' .,...I -rl--1 e ·· .... :-..::'.:.-:= -----·---_....._; .. ___ :11..-. 642:.5678 -, ~----~ - • I•• llr••IDr ln1n tu kit l1a1n ftr ltl• = ...... =~••-.-W .. lt;_.....i ltutt fu l!!t • Ltta ftr lal1 HOO 1 ..... VafanJa•.. lt11t1 Vaf..UU.. bartatatt, Uaf. Gt __ ._11_11 ___ ·1_00_1 .. .,.. H02Gt .... • .. 11.-11,__ _ __...l..-.00 .. 2 Cor1aa ••1 •ar llU lnrrt ltac• 1011 lllllllEI CHta •111 1114 l!!ftrt ltae• Ult Cetta.... 1714 Beun fer Sale Fu.I' OLDE OUpfex: BEST 80v . 1dnt IY IWIH OOWI L f --• H111>or Rid,.,. 2 er 2 bl • ~ 8d SlllHTllE harbor vlewt s3eo.ooo by 3200 sq h hOUM. 5 Bd 3,~ FlllT •W,000 01 or -• zOMd A· 1 Nr So Co Ptu 3bdrm 3b1 •-• • E lid• clNn cozy' '* IUOH llOUSE If swimming pools and • owner 848-0oie ba fam room. formal llV· Home/Duplex. OP«t dally (egrk:ulturel), 8300 tq 11 $750 apllt level w/dthWhr view, Uk• nu. 11800. mo. w1911. yrd, 1tlar9d poo4 back yord· cook outa Ing & dining room, alto 2.e. 5109Seah0fa. ownr located off Meu Or !>.-&. dbl g11 539·8190 S..t Agt 8'40.1529 759--8459 se 5/mo, no dog., Mgr Ill OCEAISIDE aound Ilka summer to you bar&. game room. On end /agt 545·2847 845·972 t tw.en Santi Ana & lrvlne Riiy f• Newport ltland 2 bdrm 2453--8 Orange AWi this C"'•ld .. _ ...... , OU llPLD I d Bhld. $73,000 ()( S&0.000 1•L ba ye•·ly •• ,.,. mo' but It's 11gh1 on the "" .,... ..... Y M0<• Ilka two 3 Br 2 Ba o cul· •sac neat Yale 1 OCEANFRONT w .. t N.B. au cash Oulat IBr encl gar '" • .. • ....,.,. · UTIRI YllW BLUE PACIFIC 3 Bdrm ire IOOklng for Charming c 0 ndom 1n 1um 1 . 1 ind Irvine Center Or $525,000. 2Br, 2ea + · 2 pertont no pelt elec No peti. 850-4749 1 Br wit°"· encttd CllftOt 2 s1ory 1•-. b1. 2 fir• 3 Bdrm. 2 bl home with ipacloua remodeled St87.000 term1. Call F°' sleeping loft. By owner r1nge S425 8"'2·599'4 Newport Terrace Condo balcony. lndry, bltlnl,. nc pieces and OHi tho•• decorator wallpapera Cape Cod ohwmer In an appt. 851· 1778. 7&0-3820 wl<dy btwn 9.4 Traditional 3BORM 28a 1516 28', 28L Avall now. S750 peta. S750 HS·OHI SUNSETS Terma . terms ind window coverings Yll "al HIT excellent location. A rare Realty c1 .. n f1m •""t mod bltnl 111 + MCurlty &4&-7958 SPMC. ind prt<*I to Mii 11 llld It 1 immacul1t1. BY\ -UITALI PlllTllllll ....------.,...---.-i-S350 000 can the belt pert of all Is the BHms. bricks solld offefl~ at 1385.000 S.. 831-7370 part blllt pd Pk Udo Condo 28r 2Ba, nr Newer 2 Br, cpt1/dt,e Waltaoe I Ce llttrs big balance . low 1nter .. t MWer 3 bdrm. 2 bath.~ •t 513 1rci.tut. cat!.: i:8Q¥dlna ICY! . -· .. ~U11l--•lll·lllO* Hoag & bchea. Encl git OIW. gerage, no pelt 11sum1ble loan ind the block to bdch In Old Call for de\&lll An elegant home MCluded Ale luxury In 4bdrm 2ba 1795. No pell 5-4&-8251 $530, 8-45-55 77 1t lH·HH pric. of only S 135,500. CdM With help It could diDl44-12 1 _.ain In one of Newport's finest O f I multi gourmet kit coot SunMt vlewl Upgraded ""OOL pvt atlo .1_i... 751-31111 have view $385,000. 'fjllO-~ nelghborhood1. Liff.I at t tltl pool 050 4 Info 1bdrm upper $500'1 X-LG ieR f535 '28R $831 POOL llOIE .SELECT l.J~l()Uf 11 Mfc • COfMr lot with clrcu ar Prt rt 539·8190 S..t Rltv fM w/optlon 2 buy off N...A E tide, no """II •,•1-2•~· "EDUCE. 111 000 ;Ji t If drlvaw1y Excellent floor , ""• -'"'' -' PROPERTIES Re11tor1, 875·8000 ea y pl1n Includes master~ a OUM on ac Sh1rp & Cleln 4 BR 2 bl. 539-1190 8"1 Alty,.. p ·-· 2B 1B Q NOW S 159.900 Splath suite with itrlum. formal Aprox 1700 sq.ft $65,000 new paint gerdenlng Mr I J "C zz 00-d• r. •· l"'91 t111t1 summer 1n your own TMllH lllTS New open houH BY dining & famlly rm Ivan 875-6488. vice $975.548-9950 • la ala If. 71 prlv1te. Back Be'Ji. lfvlni pool 3 Bdrms. bonus ,. O lll . lalHalalaa•t l OWNER Sat t=e/ Sup 786-1172 Wellt·bultt for only 8oacbeautMClvaca/lnvt ouaiCaporent'iJa3br2ba AveS550/mo 8-8t2t room w/balh & we1 bar vOll I L 1111 llPLE 12·8, M·F 9·8 1005 ~-S285,000. 840-7171. land nr Klamith Fall• Ore air:1gr.::;,,r:95 frplo ,G•r 8725 or 2br Pllll UITllll Verymo1tv11ed sellerwlll Largeownersun1thu3Br nleOooneTerrece,ll"vlne 125.500 ule/trede 557_3118 $8001 gar lrg yrd Clean&therp 2 Brlnani hear otters, carry t1n1nc· and 3 be plus two 2 Br 2 IOI II. UY HOIT Terrace, COM. Fantutlc 675 8,..86 539.e1~ Bnt Alty'" quiet complex, f~ Ing Call today 546·2313 ~=t~~ts,~~ v.;1,~~:,~~:~~ ~;::~~~~~=~7o~~a;..::.:.~; ~l~r~:rn~:~h\~~=~ lt11tal1 . WllTllll C11•t•lala•1 w/b frplc, appttan ':T v THE REAL ESTATERS Grew11 income Beach unit PLUS 3 Bdrm rental. Convlenent to 111 lo· 3880 Michelson Drive 2 Bdrm, t ba, fed yrd. ger, UaJaralJ~.. it410 patio, pvt gar+ per~~ Side of Coast Hwy c1tlona. Cool ocun lrvlne Super tharp cuatom S595. 862·1700 ! S875/mo 361E.18tn St PlllY&TE IUCI n $449,000'' Ask for Mary :r;.r;;~ :.~~ srz5.~ breezn. 3 Bdrm 3bl In· llPH IOIE twnhome 28r 2ba. den, ll•••U Fuahh• side 3Br. 1Bll. $675 or B1Yfront fbdiuooyee.r-Mgr 848-9794 Oent11 Owna.• •44.9 13 clud11 mo.th•r·ln·l•w f I I overl'g Bio Canyon golf 2000 112• w/grdnr, w1ter pd tyl Llk10o7~ .. 31ty3Agent Vlr· So Cout Plaza ... \ B• ... " rt lth 1 or entert1nng with Ila cour1t ~ed .to $2991 ______ _....,-. " gn1 ...-1 2: ...,, qua WI w MP•r• • m1rvelou1 1cou1tlc1. 11t ,.IHI & aec depo, refs Ale. pool, epa. OU wate one of the nicest 3 Br 3• 12 bath• tiomes 1n Emerald bay L1rge street ot strHI lot Spect1cul1r v1ew11 Private tennis Can RO<I Deley or David Hlrschler for priYltl showing $' 650.000 CRUii i ELLIS H•·l020 l1IH1 entrance Famlly room. w01~m5•.,B,'yuonw1n.~r •. 1 3• -i-11-.-•• -.. -1-cc--~z~l~f-D 548-0590 1tt 5pm wkd"• Rancho Sin Juaq. vi.w. 2 pd. MC. S525 84<>...e7.59 • • 1 1007 Ext re large m11ter gorgeoui aunseta and ..... S " .. • ' bd 2 b1 den avt 7 7 Ul.818 I bedroom aulte and blth night llght view. 3 Bdrm. Se1laland(FOC'd& 2 86'.i-tii BA ,attach dbl 0111 Pilat zm $1 ,150. 6l•-sM7 . • . STUNNING Laro--tBdrn ..... QRUll I ELLIS .... 1020 WI flWIOllOI Jull a blt It In South WIY HITU1 ILICI Tl IGW/llY You can own II two Bdrm. QUALITY bullt 3BR 2b1 single story condo New England style home. located near South Coast Pnced to M1l 1mm•cll11tety Plaza directly acrosa w/assum $250,000 In II from 1he new O.C Music ONLY 10~.-,.. Ceflter Well maintained lll·l 120 querded gate complex oNtfl 1 community pool, spa club house. weight room and rembhng walk way Unbellevebly priced e $79,750. Call TODDY SMITH GE lSQ-QlOO ------- I . I G1rd.,-i1 In two batha 2 • 12 ba Plan 0 In Turtle J1mborH) 662· 1673 garage. am fenced yd.. •.t t g1rden 1pt, pool S-46! Security gate 3 Cir gar· Rock Ridge $315 000 1dull1 no pell 848·2661 r •. Pl o. gar. yr A,.rt•••t• uab .. 710 w 18th St age wtth Iott Contem· J({Ifil Tllf IYll 1~4' eves s5g5 mon nu, nr Marina Avl 711 i•-------- roof $400.000 lale or alsor Bell value In H1rbor WJHl lllC~ 14 Ftaataia --nert IC• ... ~lfleld pory spanlth with r9d Ille ~ -:-1 LOU S 1200 21~30-0493 I It L •.11.•9 1e ... Enter II PCH llghl, I RI d g. A .. um I b I e 2 bdrm 2 ba. so;;;; ocean v 11 223.a --lii'LLA eXLeoX t t>lk E ot Jamboree ea ty S 185,000 loan Almost view. Deck. patio. gar· I " Luxury 2Br + den ~ . APARTMENTS 780·87'45/644-9840 2.000sqttorcomfortand age Avall1bte7--8.St000 ntert1n nsty • r vlew$2000/mo.6°momln Beautlful Garden Apll WE'RE MOVING TMllSIAY -lllE 211 -Mil Im 011at llwy (11dt1lltll111'•) 7 86-1172 luxury In this Ideal to-per month. Call Cert, 3 ba 1try pool hlM dbl 850--050'4 patlol. deekt. epa. Ne cation One year home 8'43--0811or497·3"'51 . ger pet ok $800'1 U pets S w1rr1nty provided M t It • •iit 53Mt90 Belt Riiy fff AJUluab, • 2::J~,1~:1 .. 55 .. ~~e 759-1501 ~r IC • -..., • ..., LldOifiYfront 2 Bd 2 bi Haat. IC~. 240 GtHral 2702 398 W Wiiton 831·5583 $3200/mo 1ummer IUllllWtrlUOll Apt• for r•nt In Garden Baat. ltac 1 3880 Michelson Drive 845-9181/644-2270 Townhou ... 2 br 2'1\ ba, Grove. 2 ~·free rent 159g mo. 2 br, 2 61 , ;;;a lrvlne ltnet .. afanlltltff D/W, stv. ger. frplc, 1 on the 2nd mo _ _f.or any gar. yd , patio. Newpon UNIVERSITY PAAK, 3 BR, It I ZZ02 Chlld OK. $850 Info. pleaH Call the man-Beech AHlty . Dyl 2'1\ Ba. 68 SeQuol1 TrM aora 538«1637 ager 55"'·0732 875-18"'2, •vet ~t• ----·""t" ... . lt.i .. ~ ~-'_-~ ll&ti ,,,::..t Co tro Charming 3 B rm 3 b1 llvlng wtth ftr• place In the master .Ult• and llvlng room, plant•· lion shutt••· akyllghtt, p1tl0a and dect(a. Thia II • real treat waiting fO< y our dleoovery. Full prkle St59,900. 751·3191 C:.SElECT lfillrHI 'f.fouma dJ vHatt ltac• 1011 ~1>.Ln1../i.eJ Ln on greenbelt at 1dult Bavtront condo. e)C,9C ttyie Old town 2bdrm gerden lalkt falUI 2761 Near beach, 2Br. 1'~ be pool $153.000 Owner TOWNHOUSE 2 b 2'~ b living. pool/Jae .. many spot basic r•ntal w/bltlns TwnhH Bltln1 frplc tnc 788-0579. 8% to broktl'I. gar & cer port, :.W crpt 1xtraa. S2200/mo yrly. won't lait 1'450 a.it Riiy 2Br fba B1yfront. yearfy gar wt9tec opnr Owet ..... PROPERTIES WOOIHIHE Outstanding 14ngle level 3 Bdrm with flreplec., cov· ered 11rlum end green· belt view It's only 7 yr• old but It hu all the grown up featurea llke 1w1mmlng pool, a low rate a11um1ble IOan 1nd a low prioe of SHl9,900 ocEANV1Ew cUstOU *v ·.vr,_, $205,000DUPLEXBy Owner 613-8119~ L11aa1 e~ 1041 1111ppll'1 lncld, reduced lu• .. rl Wiater fH 539·8190 upper d~x. Qul•t.fpl $895 Call 53&-<>921 -to *99,600. DOLPHIN ltlfall Romantic frptc enhan~ VIEWI Si 873-6429. S 0 0 PT Charming lg. 1 bd home, PROP 828•3384 C • I I 170 TU I A near main bch. M•xlcan .110111 IUln mod dHlgn 3br 2b1 troaa I II ut111nc1 $350. START HIE I S63 000 TOTAL PRICE Try S3150 downt 1 Bedrm den condo Community pool and 1p1 This wlll not lastl Call nowt 54&-2313 owe 11·~·1. 111 TD 25 yrs J407 L c..e ""7 .. C.. uie. thruout. p11io. yard. PIOP l&UlllEIT w1app1a g1r11h09 S875 2 edrm. 1 ba, POOi. ae&. 960-t239 by owner s1e2.ooo YEIUJWI ll•l ltl llll 539-8190 Beat Rlty '" b1tn1,2 peraons. no pe11. 1. It a. 'tit W/3CW1 dn (714)493-2190 Super 3Br famlly home. fned yd LOW DOWN or LSE OPT $148,000 Tari (819)728..()•88/~1·2583 THE REAL ESTATERS C:SElECT _,.,PROPERTIES Cla.stlfi.d's hiving a Nie on tomethlng you need 642-5678 HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR Taesda~uly 3 ARl!S (March 2 1-April 1'9): Family discussion could center on special services, equipment, safety measure, employment, pets. Domcs11c adjustment is featured, could include possible purchase of item aimed at improving appearances in home. Libra plays key role. TAURUS (April 20..May 20): Focus on illusion, romance, young people, "aricty and success in speculative venture. Check legal prapers, be sure of agreement, be positive that terms are clearly defined. Pisces, Virgo natives figure in dynamic scenario. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Emphasis on creativity, territon1.I nghts, legal decisions having positive effect on future. Your eosj11on is strong. fncnds and associates Wlll express "amazement • at your v itality. determination. durability. Cancer. Capricorn persons fiaure prominently. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Study Gemini message for vahd hant. 497 .. 466 Twin mastart tult ... xlnl • I .. H LM $715 mo. 850-0473 It ac. • fftl •na l La,aaa lltHl l S condition. some vi.w of Ctrtal ••l •11 222Z Cl 1 & --•I 3b 2b 1~7..,, 2 Bdrm 1 ba South of 4t traet. rm. L . bay, lovely comrm.inlty rce ....., r • ~ PCH · W/D $725 ba. frplc, end gar, petlo 211 l IT /0111 * or gw, 2160+ ft. POOi pool ind •P• .,.. COM COTTAGE fum lnctd mom'• kltch kid• Icy pool , • g1r, • · s750. mo. c213)831.2974 XLNT INCOME property B/ofler OV9f S2000K-9% 1183 OOO · llnens. July 18-Aug. 30 pat ok dlal 539·8190 &eat 427 ,., Iris Craig, BJcr, 1----.,..----- wlth Income of $18.240 fixed By owner 495-3718 ·Liil llirun $300 wk. App's being Alty fM 730-5559, 8'42-8719 2 Br Condo,2'A ba. ~ m ~ ea Sp1c'-"1 3 ~ taken. 7~223 2B B Ind from bch. S795. mo .. -. Y r ""' . Ill 1100 Woodbrld"e detach9d 2 rt I , gar, ry, gu pd ""t 5575 IV .... 5 .. ~.,,. bdrm. 2 b1th home • a 2 Price llUh9d S200K horM • Just 11atedl 1mmac 2br bdrm +•den. Air cond, 1750 Open S11/Sun 11·2 "" • "" .,.. ._.,., bdrm In MP•rate bulld· prop 4 acr .. 4·200 tq 11 crptd decor ti.Indeck + cov Piiio, no peta. s 1000 6 1 0 B M 1 r g u er It e 1-C-U-f1-h1-ven--2-Br--t-ba-.-g-.,- lng Eat1blllhed rental CUST Bunt 12mln frm W&TEIFlllT W/_,.I laundry hkupt & gerege mo 788·2340 548·25251497-2538 patio etc. Ideal '°' r• 1rea on a 50x 100 ft lot. L 8 g NI g u e I a g 1 -v $875 tl1t get1 It call B F tlrecls No petl S525 ~ Flreplece. bullt·lns, 6"'9·2601 NEWPORT ISLE 38R 2b1. 539-6190 Best Riiy fee Woodbridge Perl( Vl1t1 2 r nr ashlon Isle, 850-4873. forced air he1t Owner Try ModjeSka Cnyn coun· frplc llke new Lg• fixed 2Br 2b1 condo av1ll oc .. n·slde Hwy, W/0 , ....,..._,....,.-----...,,--...,,.-, may carry 2nd TO at try llvtng w/clty con~ ,.,. ~Hum In •I 12+ 12% Coat• Mn• 2224 lmmed seoo 752·2209 utll·pd, 360 deg pan-E·bfutt twnhM apt 3 bf 2'.1 Interest only payments. nlence Horse props owe 2nd TO at 1 1 5v. .. --oremlc ocn-mt vu, 2 car ba 2 car gar no pelt S82! $189,000 Clll 831-1 400 View props icre•"• S435 000 850 1908 · • 2bd lb• 1 10Wl'l1h1 M, 2 ~!r L1,1D1 ltac~ 24 gar, $950. lte 875-8995 mo 6"'4·1010 M-F 0-5 f d II • · • ger, p1t o. a ament ... 11-•----------------1--------------or eta 1 egt.649-2601 MoLIJe Bo•tl quiet $850(213)390-1005 1 r Cott1ge, ocean YU, Xlnt harbor vu,prly 28d LIDO VIEW Spec dalu• T • ,.. • frptc. w1lk to bch. S600 2b1. Frld,d/wthr,w/d oust 18r. 2 tg bath•. LM WATt.RFRON nrrrt ltac~ aut new x44 lo 2 Bd hOUae. 11rge y1rd, Incl ut11, 499-2181 gar $1100 848-0098 $1250 IM 87&-8359 HOMt.~ lac. 100 n Tl••-w/u~rad I d It k garag•. 610 Cent•r St -REAL ESTATE • ......, 11 n a u P · $625 675·6921 2 bdrm. 2 be. Som• oc•1n tatl ltH 714 IMlll f11·140P PLUS ocean vlft TWO CMS 7·900· 2Br 1bl, pat view Deck. patio. gar· 1.-. ............. _.,.,..;iiiiioiiliiii Niiiiilloiii•------unita. Top ehipe 48R. OK $17,900 Like new 2Br. 181, frplc, gardener age. Avalleble 7·8. $1000 1325 sq ft 3br 2ba, gmd mt n r o o, 2be & 2BR 1ba. 2 car gar 12x40. NB $22,900 No pet• $650 + deposit per month Cell Cirl, fir, garden apt, nd• quiet furn. Pool $275, ttt. 1 .. 1 Brend new 2 & 3 Bdr con· Gd assum 1235,000 In 9w91•:~"90Mo01:>rll•8!45~mts"o• 548-6827 643·0611 or 497.3451 sen11t1ve non tmkr. no & dep &49·<i275 aft. 8 d I I I .. _ h Ill 1120 ... ~ " - - -pats, beaut dee. w/many 1,,-----,.,----.,... 01, m o uvlC . • -3 Bdrm 2'~ Ba. 6 yrs new, 2 Br. den. 2 bl Condo ittras Frig. w/d hookup• Bnt aru. walk to beach $ t0,000 bonus 6't2·9558 l11ck Prt rt dbl ett garage w/opener, oceanvlew. gated com· IYlll encl gar .,w/open + pool. Jae. tennlt. '350 LHIH OWIH A prlv1te yard, blt·tn•. Mstr suite. mun1ty $1400 963·2923 1043 sq ft of p1tlo, decit· Incl utll Aval!. now 2 houMs on lg41 lot 3 br + g1ted Hclualv• French sec system. new floors B d h S t Ing g1rden ireu S850 Female 64&-8585 2 br Perfect for Investor Normandv v1111g1. 4 Avail 711 S 1050/mo rtn new om;B pee ac 83 i-2026 or 031· 1584 ~ Fum. Bach ~t on goll or utended tamlly bdrm, 4 ba. $795.000 TSLIGllT H2·1103 :·:~,1~~1 ng~or2hB;, 2BR tba.~I gatliga.27V C<MWM.NB maturema~ Super buy at S16~1000. Mary , STIGER ASSOC 38R 1B1. encl g11r1ge. big $1500/mo Call MlchHI W Wiiton. Apt G only. '396. mo. Incl utM C111 tOday 759· 150T 1619> 722• 1171 patio crpts, drepea. 499·3861 or g57.3g55 645· 1819 1'475/mo fr• lndry lac 752·5e03 •••trclal fncd Xlnt tree & sh11p Oceanvitw Arch-Bch Hts 2 B 2 81 SA Spa HouM to lhare, roorr , 1250 hm S660 • MC No "'"'II . r . . • -·1 "-autlful ...... N .... ,. rt 548-5442 770·5629.... 3 bdrm, 2 bl, 111111 July c1rport, $675 545-1131 1v .. gw ........ • ... _ _ 7 s1150 mo 851·015"' °' 545.5323 eva. port Htt 1325/mc IEllOIL lllLllH 3 Br 1 Ba encltd garage eve1/wknd1, 975·9054, -875-5568 ~~-:a ~!~~~~wnp,,~~·~~ r~~la~:~i ~pts. t·~· 478-8700 wl<dy1 2 ~r -e'3~~ ~~pt;:5wa;:: Lg fum rm/ba -N-pt-::;----a-1 11200 Pll lllTI Reahn• your own worth, don't gave up something for nothioa. Finish what you start. reach beyond current expectataoos. get nd of unn~c~sary expense and burden. Eager audience awaits your efforts. IEIA YEHi w1lh part ol monthly ie ... gOlng 1ow1td the down payment When you le ... optton th11 3 bdrm. 2'1t t>ath residence with mini ~•n view! Only 1 few blocks to the betchl 759· 1501 ownership. owner/user $660 reaN 1 arp La~HI Billi 2250 t575'C'Ofange S550 mocat ""-prof 1 ~ S • sec o pets ctep. u1-Grt bldg p1n11h design w11h 548·5442 770.5629 3 r, 2 Ba, bftlns, fpk:, 2 1r 2Br 28a nr SC PIUS.A. OST Bl .-.. 81.._1 windows opentno on gar· 38r 2Ba Monttcello car ger, gardener Cou· ctlo/pool/1p1/carcrt L H .ti 1119 ey~ Ml,: ~:Yn:V~:~,~~~~~'. ~~ Condo Attached dbl gar pie, no pett 8S72~/m3~ 50 chl~d O.K 752· 22 ar~a Y24~22e bef :pm LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): New start tn new direction proves 2812 Serang Beaut 38d 'lun.clisful. You'll earn more, you'll meet iotcrening people and now~ 2b1. ram rm. lg patio you have real chance to imprint your own style. Stress individuaJity, get S 155,000 Prine only ~:::::::i:ri:zC::'I to heart of matters and realt1c relataons~ip Will grow stronger. own/ag1 •8°-{'g~~6~al/Sun I( Super sharp. No pats R•f• required "' -vl " S415 1 Bd, pool, t P«M>n ~;;~~ '8~~ Asking $750/mo Aveu now Cell Act fut 4br Incl den 3ba only No pet• 325J 11th Mature trn h•• room/bi tc Larry 546-5882 Agt rock lrptc 1750 dbl gar pt 646-5137 1tt H AM rent to n-amk. wtkCll rem VIRGO (Aug. 23-~pl. 22): Cycle high, intuition is on target and rmny will ~ck your opinions. Enhance security, take initiative, follow Haat. ltack 104 through on "inner f~ling " Circumstances favor youreffons. you'll be •11lllT.1111111* at nght place at crucial moment BY OWNER LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Doors previously closed will now be CONDO 2 atry, 2br. 1ba. opened -you make discoveries. you'll have reason to celebrate. Focus pool fie. patio $90,600. on clubs raounc. institutions hospital visit that could prove inspjnn• (' 13) 848-4233 wkd1ys • • . l'.I'. • , rn... 1714) 8'46-6048 wken(l (1cman1, ag1ttanus persons figure prominently. ---- SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You almost htcnlly "leap over" lniH 1044 obstJdes You'll have chance to rebuild. revamp and to 1trcng"'1en <itructurc M oon po~111on h1ghh&hu friendship, romance, aspirations and profit re<iulttna from bu1incss or career. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22-Dec. 21): Submit wnttcn proposal. Bt ready for change o f sc~ne. constructive suacations from profes 1onal ~upenof' Mt"mber of oppo,1tc tell plays key role. aads 1n boost1n1 m orale Otal dth&ently wnh aovcmment.al qcnc1es. CAPRICORN (Dec 22-J1.11 19): Ch&f\JC of residence indicated, for puf'P<>~1 of vacation or ml,jor domestic adjustment Empham on travel. communtcatton, lon&·ra.nac plan . You'U le~rn mQte about financaal status of family membcT. Aries play' s1an1fic1nt role. AQUARIUS ~Jan. 20-Feb. I 8): Accent on mystery. tempora.ry confu ion rqardan1 paymcnu, collcctiona, tu or license require- ment • ln11st on clarification. d11 deep for information. become more familiar with rnouroes of th0te ..-ho would be cloSt u~11tes. PISCES (Feb 19-Marth 20): Go slow, he low, collect informat>on ron«rnina lcpJ n•hu. pcrmi ion1 You"ll receive news of one who had bttn t'l<>$C to you. Refute to rush ro Judgment. Emphasis on lon,- temi a rtt'mcnu, seulement of dispute\ Capricorn f1aurcs prom1· nentl) ' ~'f.c>r-1 ~Realty 786-1172 lllTMllULI H V Hamel 1230 000 Darrell PUtl Propeniet 851-1787 HVH PALERMO 4 Br 2'1b1, tam rm, ~a. n.w Traditional Realty 631·7870 kit, upgraded, grnbtlt .,"'°"....,,...,.......,_.~iiii 1306 000 S 110.000 abu n ronr 11aom by O*n 759 9? tt CdM. price red~ for ••I• • i.~00 .000. 476·0416 Of 87~·08'2 ------- -rent 10 own 539·8190 --25+ &•&-1301 aft !·30 3Br 28p•· pool, IP• North Beat Alty f" All Utlllttet Paid. Quiet Newport Beach condc CM ool svc St200tmo 11rgt 1 bdrm $395. 2011 Sierra Mgmt 6"' 1· 1324 LIJHI • tHI 2291 Charle St no peti. room. for rent Cal iBr 3Ba 2 story •xec Nlll°UEL SR ORES Ur, 9&0·3726 Of &4&-8217 915--9""3""'0""'7 ,,....._ home, Meta Verde loc 291. dtn, apa, pvt baactl •2BR DUPL!X • $630• Rm l~l'lm CM/NB .,.. S t200/mo. Av11t now & pool Avllt 7112 Nr new carpet, no pate. Furn avt, S300 mo, d•Yt Call Larry 546-5882 Agt 11260/mo 240 6802 22e1a Pomonae•5·9404 979·8791 845·1120.V... 6Bdr'3 B•1 1rtya1d, M ... llt~tt ltack HH BACH APT. new kltchtn· Aoom,111rbath,woman3C del Mar. at fOO/mo. Bob g BTlomeuet, bNUUfUt •It•. orpt/drpt, lga patio. :201 ~pori.= Koop 831· 1280 Agt hOm In betutlful h· $450 845·'4533 •RARE·1 Br. lrplc MOVE borhood.117501mo~all 8r•nd ~ 2 & 3 Bdrm Unfl.lrn, rm. f« r.-it OM NOWI ~ pllto S595 mo 173· 1701 .Ant condo• cMlce Of ca5=' '315 cf 12 utll M" C.I • • ' ' ' David 720-1'32 Mrs Sullivan. 547--0204 VIEW RENTAL: th ~· g f, $925/up IU·tti Cnarmln bf trl kid pet ott uon to b\iy Orttl 10-.... W1llll l1ttl1 li Cfptd decor w/gtr & w/d Cltlon. Spaclou• 3 BA, Sherp 1 er '" ql.llet com· ll1'll rental S50Ch at 539.e 190 21:>1 nome w/c~rm I de-Pl•• FeatUf•t frplC, at>-Wkly rtntaft now .,.ii Best Alty f" ~I~ 14~000/mo. Call pllanc••· poo1 & parklftO. 1140,Wll & up ~TY f 'SIDE 28R lb• S750 1n-WINTE.A RUflAL· A11et1 S'49Mt10 381 Hamilton PflOMI 1n room. ck.Id• uullgrdnr. tel/tut hpt l·June I . 21A, 1 ba, e !Ilda 1 bdrm. am8" ~t 227• NfwPort ~d c M -depos.t 650-7t55 large liVllHI room, n>Jy Natural wood 84 .. 1445 e·s10 clean cozy 2 Bd k ch9n teooimo can ms & cablM . f.41s l••-Oar, ye,d. act pool, 63Ht400 451·1"' a...:... ... 1,....__.---.....__, $87&/mo no doga Mgr WAYDfltlT lllU ... .... 24S3·8 Orange Avt IUl.Tlll 1~45/tnO I Bd 1~ bl frethly refurbilhld 38r, . -townhM. gar, ldry '"'· 28• ttouse Pool wt11faty Hett•• pair ofHt'\lipft br ~ard, ct 10 "'°°' cover. Xlnt luded 1oC 2ba hmua "'dt:>t oar up• • tUl Pomona ~ ;:=,;~,~~-AYail =~10 0 0 ~:~~~:""a I 11&.11&1&111111 t13·1 27 119S~2199 539 1000ettflltffff MJ-1111 ., • • ( , • r • • • -• TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZIE ACROSS 1Fewet 5 Taunt 9 Sailboat 14 Lopsided 15 Be violent 18 Door part 17 Oahu chant 18P~ 19 French name 20 Erelong 21 Untamed 23 Old highroad 2'4 Footwear 28 Staoe groop 28Compaupt. 29 Hearth area 33 Defy 36Pannllffl 37 Barrier 38 Aaearch room a: colloq. 39 Santa - .CO Half: pref. 41 Mountain. pref 42 Prewnta leC8ll 43 Atlltude '44 Ignorant: II. 48 Outety 47 Poucti: .utt. '48 Bondi • 52 Antenna type 55Cut 57 Fe>tWard 58 Fooflth one 80 Cheele akin 81 Mr. Novello 82 Shrub 83 Out~: pref. 64 Glacial snow 85 Run-down 88 HerneM part 87 Expanded DOWN 1 Asian monks 2 "Marla-" 3 Athenian atat•man 4 Wastrels 5 Small amount 8 Merchandise 7 -Stravln- lky 8Cohellw 9 Female: pref. 10Ctty - 11 "Step -_, .. 12 8otd lootc • 13 Houteof l«ds mamb« 22 Bff'dt PREVIOUS PUZZl.E SOl VED 25 Plus 43 Totality 27 Bishop's offl-45 Repeated c:Ultaeat 46.R~ --: 29 College orga. IUperviM 30 lmptassk>n <'8 Hundredfold: 31 Condemn pref. 32 OllCharge 49 At no Um• 33 Mlance 60 Treasure - 34 Title 51 Spteed 35 " -8an around Adhem" 52 LONI fore. 36 BoUy 53 At n'*ly 39 Board garM 5'4 Facilon 40 In llumW 58 -equad •• , 42 Rogulah 59 Atn6c1 10 11 12 13 Southern Cellfomla dally ~ paper needs e~ desk per90n wtth good layout and headline writing skills. Some feature writing also requtred. Competitive salary and ~ eftta. EOE Reply ad #..00. C/O Orange Coast Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Motor Route Available Newport Beach area, three houn per day. Eam appn>~. 1600 per month. CaU 11 :00 to 4:00 PM. A k for Bruce Em&ley. CIRCULATION DEPr. 642-432 1 ~E IE 11·14 UM " TO m:• PB El . ....... is_..,.,... ... ...., ........... "'.,.... c.. Dllr ...... 0. """ Jlllrt ...... ... .-llllllt•J• ...... GI~.• ........... ~ ............ . ............. ~---. ..... _ ....... Cllldil9 ...... ;,.. ............ a1. (Ill ----------- ~ . ·- I LAAQE SELECTION OF NEW & USED BMW'S! WEIUY CLEO CARS lllTRUCIS CONNELL CHEVROLET .~ ll.1 rhur llh ol t 't IS I \ \1 ~.:--\ 546-1200 WEllY USED CARS & TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL FOR FREE APPRAISAL Cormler·Dellllo CMmOLlT 18211 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 14l-1011;14t-3331 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porache • Audi 441 E. Ceast llwJ., 11.,1rt l1aoll 113-0IOO L•IUOlllW VOLUME SALES SERVICE & LEASING 3$70 N Cheny Ave LONG BEACH (No Cherry eiclt-405) '11t)Hl·l110 'f rade-tns Wel'ome OPEN SEVEN OAVS FOUNTAIN VALLEY •0 WARNER < w a> ANAHEIM "\ i- • # o,. q,~ • EDINGER SANTA ANA 0 THEODORE ROBINS · FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 4'Jlunderblrd RetaJI Dealer Modern Sates, Sefv1ce, Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Highest Quality Sales & Service Compet1t1ve Rates On Lease & Daily Rentlls 2810 ..... ., ..... , Oest• .... 141-0010., M0-1211 0 COMMONWEAL TH VOLKSWAGEN "Family Since '53 Brletol et Edinger In Santa Ana ® 548..()220 0 RAY FL ADEBOE HONDA # 11 a... ... ., Ir., Int•• In The lrvlne Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Lessing 0 SOUTH COUNTY ---VOLKSWAQEN/ISUZU 11711 BMch Blvd., Huntington a..ch (714) 142-2000 SALES • l'EASINQ • PARTS • SERVICE Ora• Countn lMaut Yolks /lm1t Oeallf Yle wt Not .. lhMl10ld PAITS Df:PAITIOT ortN SAn.Y t G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN ~2 ............. .,.,.. In The lrvlne Auto Cent• 830-7300 Oranp Countys Nfwtsl Vol•s~ t11 Dfa/tr Com,mtt Siies, Slmet I Lusint m IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 •• ~, ...... Oistl .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service• L.ealng 546-UH SJeClll Plfts Ult 541-1411 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM e . STADIUM PONTIAC . W•',.. N•w -W•'r• 0..1/ng Acron from the Bia A on Katella tuet WHt of ttt. (17) Orange Freeway Sales • Semce • Parts • Body Shop on Premises 714/315-1111 ' We're New We're Dealing 714-315-1919 w-.~ MISSION VIEJO JI LAKE(:]. '111$810N ~ SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -18UZU Comotet• Automot!W NMdl . SALES • SERVK;E • LEASING RM Selectlon of OUllltY u..ct Vehldee #1 BUtcK DEALER IN OAANOE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BL VD. - COSTA MESA 171-2900 0 RAY FLADEBOE UlllLI •DlllY Wll #111111t ............... In The Irvine Auto Cent• go.;.7000 8 CREVIER BMW · 8ALEI • 81RVICI • ~AllN8 "~ Profealonal Attitude PrWall•" 1111111 1119 In l w11111n!,'::t· I H 1lunt ....... ., ..... ~ .......... ....-.~'" MOdl, 13&-3171 20I W. 1•t It., Santa Ana Comw of lrolldwey I 1st 8t. Ck>Md Su~ - MONDAY. JULY 2 191!1 Congressional approval of McDonnell Douglas cargo plane would mean thousands of Southern Callfotnla Jobs./ AS Orange Coast residents talk about their plans for the Fourth ~f ~ty./ A3 ;:;:;:;:::::=:=:=:~=--~-:::;:;:;: ... :;~::;:.--r.:=:;:,:;:?"'S:::;:: California Pay phone calls go up to 20 cents and home phone bills are also on the way up./M Motion picture and tele- vision directors set for strike vote tonight./ A4 Nation President Reagan uses a barbecue to push for Soviet arms talks.IM . Seems a lot of folks are getting the seven year Itch, divorce statistics show.JM A sailor spends nearly six weeks adrift after his mast breaks./ A5 World Iraqi jets blast a South Korean cargo ship In Per- sian Gulf./ A5 Bolivian soldiers round .yp 100 suspects In foiled coup attempt./ M Jl'eaturea . You can bet on learning a lot of strategy at the Just for Fun Casino In Foun- tain Valley./81 A new handbook tells outsiders how to act awesome In Southern Callfornla./81 Sporta ,Three former UC trvlne rowers and a Newport High graduate are on the U.S. Olympic team after shocking the favorites Sunday./C1 The Angets continue to play well on the road as they beat the Milwaukee Brewers agaln./C1 An Olympic official who resides In Huntington Beach says there Is nothing wrong with ath- letes using sterolds./C2 Entertainment The actor playing Jesse Owens In a TV biography says the athlete made his greatest contributions to x,.oung people./83 Bualneu New theme emerges In labor negotlatlons./85. C8 A3 85 A4 C6-8 EM C7 C4 81-2 82 ce 82 85 A4 AS 81 A3 c....s C1-4 88 82 82-3 A2 A4 • a1m11m11 -o R ANGE co u N r v ( r.. l 1 r<J r. N 1 A :i, c r N • . . Seil tests for tainted bay State armed with new year funds, launches pro e of Coast pesticide BJ JERRY HIR8Cll °' ... .,.., ....... Soil tcsu scheduled for later this month may shed some li&ht on the mystery of bow pesticides and toxic chemicals got into San Oicao Cn:ck A yucky ezperlence and Upper 0Newport Bay. ~ith 11.s new budget in place for the new fiscal year that started Sunday, the Santa Alia branch of the State Reponal Water Quality Control Boatd Plans to &a.kc soil tests from the Aabl~ l>an"CAD, 10, of lfnr;port Beach, teta a cloee-ap look at a ~ted eqald d~ 1'ewport-IC .. UDlflecl School Kra ft's lawyers lose bid on trial Request to move case out of OC nixed by judge By STEVE MARBLE °' ... .,.., ........ Accused mass killer Randy Steven Kraft wiU be'triod in Oranfc County, despite arguments that 1t will be impossiblefortheone-timecomputcr consultant to act a fair trial, a Superior Court judge ruled today. Judge James K. Turner denied a cha~ of venue fCQUCSt made by Kraft s attorneys, who wanted the trial to be moved outside Oranae County. Kraft, dubbed the "scorecard killer" by prosecutors, is a suspect in the brutal homosexual slayinp of 16 yo-una men and boys. He is ct:wJe<t with 37 felony counts includma murder, rubbery, mayhem and sod· omy. The Long Beach man faces more murder characs than either Freeway Killer William Bonin. convicted in 14 slayinp. or Hillside StranaJcr An&eio Buono, convicted in the murder of (Pleue eee CllAJlfQ&/A2) channel of San Dicao Creek in Irvine as pan of iu invntiption of·bo•- pesdcidcs and other toxic chemical pollutants aot into the creek. The water board announced earlier this )'cat that tests of small minnows in the creek turned up unusual levels of the banned pc$llcide DDT and other insecticides and betbicidcs. Butaninvcstiptionintotbcsouree · of the pollution was derailed wheia the . - board ran out of money for chemical tests last month. "We plan to start up a prosram of some soil corina in the channel of San Die&<> Cruk to sec 1f there are b~ leve1s of the pesticides there," said james Anderson. the water board's executive director. .. If there is• lot of stu in the soil we will know that it bas been a conunuous and lona-tmn problem. CM residents say jazz concert worst By IA.REN E. u.E.IN °' ... .,.., ........ The music mar have died, at least for the time beina. but the anger aenerated from this weekend's COD· certs at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa continued to echo this .momina in the residential nci&h- borhoods adjacent to the outdoor concert haJl. .. ln some ways, Sunday's was the wont concert of all,.. said Russell Millar, president of tbc Conocrned Citizen's of Costa Mesa. a home- owners association which has fou&ht the amphitheater Stncc its prcmacn: season last summer. A jazz concen Sunday lasted unul shortly after midnight., Millar wd, an (Pleue eee Cll ROIS&/ A2) Man shQt;, --. mom held BJ ANDRE.A-tU>ELSON ·-""t~ ... A 31-~ man was liste4in100d tioo thia ~ . · ta AU pjtal after beiQa shot Ul the Jes by his mother durias I &mil arsumeot, authorities said today. Felix E. Rhodes was restina com- fortably in Western Medical Cen1er after a bullet from a .38 caliber revolver pierced his thi&h above the knee cap, Irvine police Sgt. Richard (Pleue eee llOTB&a/.&2) Grand ------Jurors· to be seated ---------As in the past, most panelists are OC retirees BJ JERRY BIRSCB CM ... DllJ ........ The new Ora.nae County Grand Jury will be impaneled tdday, and lite past juries, it will include mostly retired people. The jury WIS LO be established during ceremonies at noon at the Superior Coun building in Santa Ana under the supervision of Superior Court Judie James L Smith. The 19-memberGrandJUJY., which s1ts for a year, acts primarily as a watcbdoe over other aovemment aicncics, making sure they are spend- ina tax dollars property and rec- ommendina improvements in locaJ government. (Pleue eee OC ORAftD/ A2) Disability no handicap for plucky mom Hunttn on woman helps others after her own ordeal dreaded and crippling polio -she still doesn't knowhoworwhy-ftve months before the baby arrived. Elaine could move her n&ht hand and ~t bia toe. She bad some fttlina an her lower Id\ arm. It wasn't an evcry:..clay affair for someone with polio to ha\'c a baby. She tecalls that relatives and mends pressured bCr to bave a t.hciapcutic abortion ... But I said no, that beina alive and havi"I a baby is a a;ift &om Goct.·' For 19t'hile. it tttmcd that wont fcan of her relatives and mends would bf ttalizcd. ShOnly before thC "tilby was to arrive. Elaine bcpD to h anorTh• BloOd trUNlions kept bet ahve. .. The wOrda of the 23"1 Psalm went thrc>ulb my mu'<!. 'The Lord is my hq)hctd, I shatl not Wl.ftL.: And 1 thouaht. I aucu. now I'm aoina to know how al feels to die. ~There l was ~ina into the ufl(ry Ro1E1T BllllEI P EOPll IN THE N E~S room on the founh floor on a aumiy and fec\ina miserable. An an thcsaoloeist was \here. He bent down and kissed mr. fbtthc.d. "ltmademeffeth1'capeno and1t bclped me thro "'God docs havt a -atch over all of His hand i on our liv That i howl madt it th ... 'The next th1n1 Elaine~. nu ~ filli her room with f'lowcn the)' had raiMd from ot.Mr room m n had PNctd up the baby and a pbot<>&raphet from the Ncws-~pcr Enterprise Association took her picture and sent 1t to ne papers around the country. The month lcadm• up to James Joseph's binb may have bttn her touahcst time$. but they may ba\'e &i\itn her trc tb and dctemunation and a purpose. And be proved to herself that tht can't keep a aood • woman do-.m. Elaine. SS and her hu ben<twcnt on to have eight child~n in all. nd no the have l 2 IJ"&ndclnldic rode in the Hunu ton h 4th of July Pi.rtdc last year a ~ atY' mother of year. + But there weft more thi in her hfc than rai 1 a family ... thi it' th will of Ood to help mt fl llow man." he id l can do lnythi I don't nctd to take I *k Kit b«au l'~C had I handicap me who cen't w lk like (PleueeeeWOllAJlf/A2) I .. l .u * Orange Co DAILY PILOT/Monday, July 2, 1 84 Valley cOuncil to take on 'press~ng' issue Tuesday coaatal · .-.IO!Wlle --.. lO IO I: IO Fouo 'n' \'alley Caty ounc1l membm T'ucSda) will con idcr a new ordinance pcrtainin to busi· n offerina uutmcnt described as cup ure or foot ~flcxoloay."' The proposc<1 law would allow operators to avoid more stringent local rcaulat1ons aovcmina massaae parlo~ 11 lona as they don't u~ techniques that fall under the dcfi- than a decade 110 and alt.hough lts by· product how up in the environ· ment. it i unusual to find fresh DD'f. While the levels of pollutant did not present a public health hazard. Anderson explained that it was bad for the fish and wildlife in the area. Con urned in large amounts, DDT C&J1 affect a person's nC"T"Vous and ttsplratory systems. Anderson thought the DDT might be a result of illegal usage somewhere nition or r;nanqe. FOU9tain . V1lk)'~1 maSlllC parlor law requires an opcntor to 1ubm1t 10 1 bacqround check and to mttl various b)'liem arid trainina rcquu~ ments In addition, 111 operator must payforam e~nniuswella11he standard city business license fee. City Attorney AlaN Bums id no ma s.a.gc bu ine has opened In . &Jona the creek's path through 01*ngc Count¥. An mv tigation by the County Agricultural Commis ioner's office, however. found no u peas or evidentt of the pesticide'• ute. A serond set of tests on the minnows found lhat lhe Jevds of pesticides have decreased, but AndeTSOn said the water board still wants to find the soura: of the pollution. OC GRAND JURY SEATED ••• Prom~l · 01}e improvement incomina Grand Jury member Phyllis Dray1on would like to see is better county facilities for emotionally troubled children and teen .. agers. "From my point of view, the county need~ to look after its chil- dren,' said Drayt~n, who lives in Newport Beach with her husband George and their three ch1ldren. "There are no facilities in the county for adolesccn~ with emo- tional problems, .. Drayton explained. Drayton. 47, believes the jury also should look into problems of toxic waste and water pollutjon in the county. But Drayton. said she will have a better idea of what the jury will investigate Friday after lt has met for the first time. A member of the Newport Harbor Junior l..eague~Drayton said slle was inspired to apply to the jury out of a sense of interest in the county. J udje Smith headed a five-member selcct.100 committee of Superior C.Ourt jud&es who chose the jury from 300 applie&J1ts. They interviewed 80 prospective juron beforccuttina the lisoo 30. 'Ihe CHANGE.OF VENUE ••• From Al nmewomcn. Kraft was arrested May 14. 1983 in Mission Viejo by a California High- way Patrol officer who allegedly discovered a dead Marine in the front scat of Kraft's car. Attorneys representing Kraft main- tain that because of the amount of P.re-trial publicity, it will be imposs- ible to find 12 jurors free of "preju- dicial feelings" toward the dcfendent "The water has been poisoned," said Douglas Otto, one of two lawyers rcprcsting Kraft. ''It has turned putrid and you can't.draw from the Orange County well. There 1s no way to remedy it." But prosecuto rs successfully countered wtth an argument that a survey conducted by K.ra~ own attorneys Showed that more than a third of the potential Jurors in Orange County bad fo1'otten about the case. Deputy Distnct Attorney William Bcdsworth said the survey reveals that another 19 percent said they arc familiar with the case but bave no thoughts about whether Kraft is innocent or guilty. "We should be able to find a fair jury out of more than SO ~t of a population of two million in this county, .. Bedsworth said. In arguing the need to move the trial. Otto stated that there had been more than 235 articles printed on the case. Kraft's name was in more than 135 headlines and mentioned more than ~200 times in connection with the stnng of slayings, Otto said. Foun&ain Valley under thcte auid lines. Bums said the propoicd I.aw would a,ive acuptCSSure technicians the op- ponunity to provide a written de- scription oftheir technique to assure city official it does not qualify as massaae. lfit is ~pted, the operator would have to pay the reouircd businc hoense fee. .. We have not ruled out anythina yet and we will continue to monitor the Up_pc.r Bay to see if there ate any chan~es;n the levels of contamina- tion,' Anderson said. Meanwhile a new LCSting proaram • on bacterial pOJJutioo in Newport Bay started last Thunda,Y after a month of preliminary planmllJ and tes1ina. The water board plans to issue a report on bacterial pollution in the bay later this month. names were then drawn randomly to select the 19-mernber jury and lO . alternates. One of the remain.in& 30 dropped out during that part of the process leaving an extra alternate spot open. ,.. ........................... ........... ......,,.~---~-....... lncnlllllrlf .. ~ '°"""" ... ,....,_ ... -~"*'*'O aow:::= IN llOl1ll _. W•l'Mrnwtlle T~ :r: T~ ti tO ef _. .. .,... NloNlnllW...,._ ffom'otnt~eo:..~ ..,...._IMtr....,..v., ,,,.,,. .... ltlM 10 .. ,.. nlgflt ""' "'°"*" llOurw~I0 ......... 10to 1t llnote In MCI T"""-.,__ llOllll Md~""" 1 '° .. tool wind•-· ""' 1 to I..._ P:, nlgflt Ind lllOr'*'I IOW _,.. r . ~ "* wlltl _.... ~~ v.,... ""',.: llOn'-1 .... I 10 11 knoll er wltll • to 7-foot -,.,,._ doUdy Tu.da'f . - Tides ._..._ TOOAY I 21 pm. 2.1 llllOMDAY Arel l'llgll 1f'.JO em ... At9110w 1;'1 &.Ill .0 I ~. H3p111 4.1 8eooM IOw 7 42 p"' 2t lull eett !Odey 91 I ot pm., rtlel tl*dey ..... a.m. Md ....... Ill l:OI Piii Mooft .... .s t 1:25 p,111 .. rt1e1 T~ dlly llt 10 4t &!ft. 8nd .... 11811n 11 lllldfllgflt ' Tempa ..... 7t I& .. .. ,. eo It 41 IO II ,. . .. T1 .... ...... "'*" ..... .... lloMon .,... illlltnglofl, VI. ~ac =WV ~.c ~ g;::::.. a-illrlCI c:..wi~•a.sc. ~Otl. eoi.ionl.N.H. Dllll9-#'I Wot1ll = ~Cltf LMVeoM 101 IO Llnll'** f: t7 t:.:r .. • .. :4 ... t7 .. ., 12 ....... " .. ............ u II Nillfl¥lle es ., --~ .. ., ,._YOlll fl .. ~ " 71 City u a Omllle IO .., on.!CIO " 11 ~Ip<. • lot rt PNllldtlptll.I .. .. "'-* 104 11 ==r. ... 72 17 7t ., Pota.ioOr. IO 11 ~-11 .. =="City .. t7 ., ... "-no Ill .. ~ .. .., IO a.ell*llo .. .. ., It~ a .. " : 11--.1-.. IO T& • .. IO .,. n ... ~°'1 .. 14 ft 12 St/I M14ftlO 71 70 Ill\~ • M San Ftmndloo n .. .. ~ ltlt•---IO IO .. • II T7 IO a..nte tt II .. 61 fJ..-' .. • ao 74 WlilfllllgtOll .. • n 14 WlcMe u .. .. IO~ ?O .. " ·~.De. .. .. • " .,.. .. " II The.jurors will receive $25 a day plus mileaae for four full days of work each week. That is why the Grand Jury is made up of mostly retired people or people who do not have other jobs. C.Ourt officials point out that few working people can \Jke a )'.~ off to parti6- pate on the Grancf1wy. Fourteen members of the Grand Jury are retired as arc eight of the Camp puts Coast kids in touch wlfh .nature alternates. . The 19 members of the new Jury are: Charles J. Andresen, 66, of Teachei:s volunteer time and effort to ~nge; Rose Bec~man. 74~· of Huntr-youngsters a head start in science education 1ngton Beach; Deman W. ~ Q ,., Seal Beach· Drayton; M . ·-. Johnson 34 of Anaheim· -HmTy By KARE,.. E. JtLEIN ~flld.e tajetller for the camp." Kelly Kalfin, 65, of Yorba Li?da; Thomas ot1Mo.1J,.......,. · -... J. ~hoe, 6:1$. of Placcnua; Margaet ~ Chris Turnier o'f 'Laguna ~h Klingensma~. 4~, of Santai .. Ana~ picked up his mottled purple sqwd Henry M. Klipstem, 69, of'Sanll A!la, and stared doubtfully at its slithery, Linda J. Linder, 38, of A~eim; tentacled mouth. Harold Mcintyre, 62, of Tustin· Paul . . . L. Moreau, 53, of Santa Ana; Ralph L "The squ1~ ~as. a .beak JUSt like ~ O'Neill 56 of Santa Ana; Vivien parrot, but 1t s 1ns1de the body, Owen, S4 o'f Santa Ana; Maureen K. explained Bob Kelly, 39, of Costa Parrott, 3T, of Garden Grove; Mesa. Kathleen C. Pickett, 61, of Los ''Take your scissors and see if you Alamitos; Warren F. Taylor, 69, of can grab the beak and pull it ouL But Irvine; John M. Thornton, 63, of watch out -if you pull too bard you Westminster and Irvin& Wa&ner, 61 , mi&ht pull the entire esophagus out." of Garden Grove. Kelly said. ~ t.be t.bteO-w.et aesaion1, youthful campers penicipate in clwes such u "fields. POnicb and Woods/' .. Kitchen Cbcmiatry," 0 Seaabore Life,.. and JICdly"s .. En- vironmental BiolocY.". ••'fbere'.s. defi.aitety a buds-on appf'Oldl to ICieftce in the camp classes," Kelly Wet, u be invited h11 students to ahakC hands with a crayfish bonowed tempOi'a.rily from the center's muddy pond tonsue depressor, she illustrated bow rocks are worn down and become sand. The nature center is an ideal outdoor laboratory for students who rarely get to see wildlife in its natural habitat, Kelly said. It was in 1970 that the center was founded by a group of co~munity members concerned that native Cali- fornia wildlife and plants were fast disappearing under asphalt parkina lots and buildings. MOTHER HELD IN SHOOTING ••• The 10.year-old Turnier yanked at bis squid mi'1tti1Y with his 1Cissots. "U&h -it wrapped arouad my finger," Turnier screeched, as ·tfle long, slimy csopbqus popped out of the squid's mouth and attached itself And in cate l.hiilP . tet lOO acactem~ field trips'°~ like the Su~ Wild Animlll Part. La Brea Tar Pit.a,"Sea World and the Oak Cuyoo'N1ture Ceutcr help combine leamina and fun, said Arlene Parter, a volunteer instructor at the ~ntet. Assisted by the school district, the city of Newport Beach and local volunteer groups. the board of the center came up with the idea to create a 2.5-a~mini-catifo~ includin& wildlife haoitais1hat mimtckcd all of the various environments found in the state. . They built the center -strictly with student and community votuo· teer labor -on a strip of I.and originally used for arazina animals at From Al Bowman sa1d. Olive Audrey Page. 57. was ar- rested for_ su_!Pit1on of attempted murder and booked at county jail. Bowman said. Page, the receptionist for a Newport Beach financial ser- vices firm, was being held in lieu of $250,000 bail. Page called police to report the 11 : J 5 p.m. shootina and surrendered without resistance, he said. The weapon was found in the home. The shooting was the consequence ' of an argument that erupted into violence when Rhodes, the owner of the gun. banded the weapon lo his mother and said ••shoot nx/' Bowman said. ••she did," he added. The sergeant said the Sunday niJht <K'gument was part of ap ongoing dispute, the specific nature of which police refused to disclose. ••1t cul- ntinated last night," Bowman said. Rhodes, contacted by telephone today at the hospital, refused to comment on what preceded the gunfire. "I don't want 1t published," be said. Rhodes, wbo apparently lives with his mother on Orange Blossom, said he )VU "feelin&_fin~ expected to be released from ilie hospital within a few days. Bowman estimated Rhodes was standing less than 10 feet away from his mother when the weapon was fired in a hallway near the kitchen. "It was a clean wound," be said, that didn't shatter the bone. Police have not been asked before to solve disputes at the home. Bowman said. CM NOISE COMPLAINTS CONTINUE;· •• From Al . bour at\er the 11 p.m. deadline when the permitted decibel limits 1n the city's noise ordinance decline. "It was very loud from about 9:45 p.m. on,'' Milla~ said. "l ~lied the amphitheater twice and tned to get them t9 understand that people have (.O PlJ.iP in the morning, but it didn't do any good." Allan Rotaer, Costa Mesa's assis- tant ci1y manaaer, said city officials and police asked the amphitheater's manaccment to close the show about 12:06 ihis mW"Ding. ~~e.ukcd them to close down nnbcrthan'&oing in and shutting them down ourselves," Roeder said. The city's act1on was similar to what "'Would occur if complaints were received about a loud party. he sa1d. AmphJtheateroffic1als could not be reached for commen1 this morning. Costa Mesa Mayor Donn Hall wd noise tests from the weekend done by Gordon Bncken and AsSOClates for the city arc likely to be available in a couple of days. "We will be filinJ a complaint if there are any violations," Hall said. "When we talked to the Nederlanders (the ~mpaoy that operates the amphitheater) last year they said it is the1r practice to have the concerts finish by 10:30 p.m. Obviously they are not doina that in this case.' The city revised its noise ordinance two weeks ago lO include a maximum S 1,000 fine for each violation. Millar said the homeowners' acoustkaJ engineer, Sam Lane, bad turned up a number of violations of the noise ordinance durina Satur- day's concert. According to a report prepared by Costa Mesa Police Sgt Dick Defran- cisco, the police liaison with the amphitheater, 33 complaints wett taken about the noise during the jazz concert Sunday. Defranci5(l() said about 21 complaints were received during Saturday's Jefferson Starship concert. A new parking permit system which went into effect in the C.Ollcgc Park neighborhood Friday seemed to be helping, Millar said. About 25 cars were ticketed for violating the permit system over the weekend. ••1t (the parking system) hasn't had the real test yet, though," he said. "We haven't bad 18,000 people there yet." Millar said the Concerned Citu.ens board of directors met Saturday to discuss whether or not d'iey would pursue an appeal of a lawsuit which was dismissed last week . The homeowners' lawsuit, cha.rg- ina that insufficient environmental review was d6ne on the amphitheatel', was dismiHcd last Thursday by an Ora.nle County Superior Court judge. Millar said the board members will consider all the legal and financial aspects of an appeal and vote on it at their next meeting._ which will likely be in about two weeks. WOMAN SHRUGS OFF HANDICAP ••• Prom Al others or sec like others may be d iscourqcd and have heavy hearts But lhcy hould realiu that the handicap I JU t I facet Of their fives and not them." Craft recently completed a stint as chairman of the ma)'or's ad boc committee on the handicapped. s~ 1d he' lcarntd thal tuna aero mljor intc11ttlions -especially if rou'reC)'CSiaht i n•tj()lecn-can ht 1ntimidatina. Shc·s also found ou1 first hand that whttkhair rampt are too t«P and ' often are located too cloto to inter- sections -puttina the handi ppCd in JCOperdy of bCinJ run O\ler by comcr<ut11na moton ts. Craft's next project fort.be city w1ll be to act as a ho a for the Huntinaton Beach Horizons ho on cable telC. vi~ion The ho , *bich will explore the state of the ans in ind around Huntinaion Btath, premieres Aua. 8 at 7 p.m. on Ctulnn<'I 10. he·s h•ndltd more than a few <>thet cbora in Huntin ton Bea h. lrn.ludang: ltcaJm the cbddren·i. art festival, servinJ on the . Newland House restoration commmee. ser- vin• u president of the Women' Div111on of Chamber oI Commcru, beinaa mcmberoftllecity'ullicdarts board; beina a member oft.he Hunt- inaton ~ach Historical Society.' ser· vingon the 5istercitycommittee, past pre ident of the coordinatina council and beina the former president oftbe Patrons of Golden West College. She was honored as the Huntinaton Be ch c1ti1cn of the year in t 976. to his hand. / Dissectina squid, clams and crayfish is only a start for youngsters attending Nature Camp 1984, held at the Newport-Mesa Unified School District's Environmental Nature Center in Newport Beach. Each summer for the past six years, two sessions of the nature day camp have been held at the center, Kelly said, each for 53 students aaes 7 to 12. Kelly, who teacbes fifth and sixth grade at Newport Heiahts Elementary School durina the school year, heads a group of community volunteen who staff and run the nature center. In his six summers workina at Nature Camp, KeUy bas seen stu- dents who be bad in his fifth and sixth arade classes come to help out as college interns. "All kinds of ~pie who have common interests 1n kids and nature Just Call 642-6086 oca~· leQuar.ntMd ~II )'\1'100 -hew 'f04ll ~ by 5 30pm caltllbe7pm end '1WI ~ .. be ~ In the Xitcbe&ehelh11u). class ooe recent momini. Judy Gielow, another teacher, wu inltructina a class in bow to ~ rock cand)' and crystal prdens.. ·siace Fourth of July iJ comina up we're eoina to do some crystaJ-cNShina and make ice cream ... she said She also cooked up a batch of boyse:abeny dye Uli.Da bCrries from her backyard urdri and Ud her class tic-dye a petc6 of white cloth with the concoction. Maru.ret Arnold. I teacher It the Top ohbe World School in L&auna Beach, was tho~ a poup of lcids bow sand is made an pitpUation for their trip to the badl:·BYlllink.ln& a sugar cube in a cup ocf (e~ ihe students stir it up with • wooden ·the adjacent Newport Harbor Hiab ~bool. The center now includes Oora and fauna representative· of 12 separate environments found in California. A desert. Redwood forest and Southern Oak woodland are amona the habi- tats constructed. The second SC$Sion of Nature Camp runs July 9-26. Cost is SSS per week for the entire session, with a discount for families with more than one child attendina. Some acholar- ship assistance is available. fo order to keep the class m.es to seven or ci~l students per teacher, enrollment ts limited to S3 full-time students, Kelly said. For more infbnnation on Nature Camp, call 645-8489. What do YM UM abRt Qe Dally Pllot? Wbat 4oa't yoa like? C&ll die Hmber at left ... yeer maaa1e will be recorded, truscribed aa4dellnre4 to tbe apprtprllise •aor. ne ........... -.wena1 tervlce may be ••td to record letten to'" edJtor • -.:LMflt· nirlcrlhton to o.r Lettera Ool•m• lfl11t I.Del• thlr aame ud ~~•t 1111iDMr for nrlllcatloa. No clrceJatlOll calle, please. 1'eU •t WUl't • 1"I' tlillld. ORANGE COAST lllJPllll Clrculedon 7141-....m ClaMltleded"'1telfti1MIMMel'I AH other dePertmente M2-ta1 MAJN OFFICE. 330 w.t Bey St eo.a. ..._,CA ..._. eddr-801r tMO. CoUa "'-.: CA ~ S.IUrdly end llA'ldl~ II YOll 00 not ,........ YQll oopytiy71m .011~ I01m Ind~~ .. btdllllered Clrculdon Telepftonee ChuJOOW.-., Editor and Assistant to the Publisher MOM 0ranoe eounty Al-..... uiounaN9* ...... ' When a dNth oooura 1n "" flmlr rou need to mU9 • aot °' rtlftt d11•a.i1ei You need to uncler'ltand ..,.. II .,_..., YG" and hoW much )JOU ....... Cil,,.. v... ~..,. yo..t ... . pactflc View Memorial Park 3500 P8Cllflc View DrtW Newpor1 •ech, Caltf. 92913 Cal: ..... 2700 Congr ... lonal approval of McDonnell Douglas cargo plane would mean thousand• of Southern CaJlfornla Jobs./ AS OranQft Coast resident• _,. abOut their plan a for The.Fourth of July .I AS C.Jlfoml& Pay phone calla go up to 20 cents and home phone bllla are also on the way up./M Motion picture and tele- vlalon directors set for strike vote tonight./ A4 Nation President Reagan uses a barbecue to push for Soviet arms talka./ M Seems a lot of folks are getting the seven year Itch, divorce statistics show./M A sailor spends nearly six weeks adrift after his mast breaks./ AS World Iraqi Jets blast a South Korean cargo ship In Per- sian Gulf./ A5 Bolivian soldiers round up 100 auspects In fotled coup attempt./ M ·~--·"'·"""""""" , ............ ~ •.. ~ ·-, .. .._ . .., .. .._ .. . »x·~~~.A.9 .. -..;A;.6.._(.•>.:e•-·~~ •• ,_.,,..,Ji.'IV Featuree -You can bet on learn Ing a lot of strategy at the Just for Fun Cuno In Foun- tain Valley./11 andbook tells outsldera how to act awesome In Southern Callfornla./11 Sporta Three former UC Irvine rowers and a Newport Hlgh8raduate are dn the U.S. lymplcteam after ahocklng the favorites Sunday./C1 The Angeli continue to play well on the road as they beat the Miiwaukee Brewers agaln./C1 An Olympic offlclal who resides In Huntington Beach says there la nothing wrong with ath· letesuslng 1terold1./C2 Entertainment The actor playlng Jesse Owens In a TV biography says the athlete made his greatest contributions to young people.JU New theme emerges In labor l'\eQOtlatlona./85. _wit A yucky ezperlence Aabl:ncaa, 10, of Newport Beach, aeta a cloee--u£1ook at a tecl 9q1lid d~ Newport-IC-Ualfled ~ Judges • given 'death' power ~ Supreme Court says Uf e recommendation may be overruled WASHINGTON (AP) -Judges have the power to impose death sentc'nccs for convicted murderers after juries recommend life in prison as the aperopriate punishment, the Supreme Court ruled today. The court, by a 6-3 vote, upheld the death sentence of Aorida death row inmate Joseph Spaziano, convicted of the 1973 murder of a woman whose mutilated body was left in a city dump. "There is no constitutional im- perative that a jury have the responsi- bility of deciding whether the death Judce.llarry Blackman penalty should be imposed," Justice Harry A. Blackmun wrote for the court. .. If a judac may be vested with the .. otin son Dlatrlct'• 1'atare Camp. Be doem •t look terribly pleaeed by the aperlence, doea be? See aory Paee A2. CM residents say jazz concert worst By ltAREN E: &LEIN Of .. ~ ........ The music ma~ have died, at least for the time bem& but the anger scncrated from this weekend's con- certs at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa continued to echo this momina in the residential nc.igb- borboods adjacent to the outdoor • concert hall. "In some ways, Sunday's was the worst concert of all," said Russell Millar, prc:sjdcnt of the Concerned Citizen's of Costa Mesa. a bomc- owncr's association which has fouabt the amphitheater since its pmrucre .season last summer. · A jazz concert Sunday lasted until shortly after mi4ni&ht, Millar said. an (Pleue eee CM NOISE/ A2) Fa~ily argument' erupts in gunplay; victim recover!~ BJ ANDllEA ADELSON . Of .. DlllJ .......... , ....... A 31-ycar-old Ifvifte taan WU listed in aood condition this morn.ina in a Santa' Ana hospital after beiDa shot in the lea by bis mother duf'inl a family l!IUtnent. aulhorities laid . today. Felix E. Rhodei was rcstina ~ fort.ably in Western Medic:a1 Center after a bullet from a .38 caliber revolver pierced his thi&h above tbe kDCe cap, Irvine police Sst-lliclwd BOwman slid. • Olive Audrey Paje, 57, • reseed for suspicion of anempted murder and booked at county jail, Bowman said. Pale, the rc:ceptioaist for a Newport Belch financi.tl lel'· vices firm. was beina bdd in lieb of S2SO,OOO bail. · . Pa&e Called police to repott tbe I t: I$ p.m. shootiQa and sulftDdered without resistance, be said. Tbe weapon wu found in the home. The shoot.in& WU the c:omequenc::e of an ~ent that~ into <Ple&M eee 110 I A2) Grand Jurors to be seate~ As in the past, most panelists are OC retirees By JERRY lllRSCB Of .. llllllf,... ... The new Orange County Ora.ad Jury will be impaneled today, and like past juries. it will include mOltly retired people. . The jury was to be established duri04 ceremonies at noon at the Supenor Court buildina in Santa Ana undet_ the supervision of Superior Court Judge James L Smith. The 19-membcrGrand Jurr.. which Slts for a year, acts primarily as a watchdog over other goverument tFncies. matina sure they are spend· ins tu dollars properly and ~ ommendina improvements in J.ocal government. (Pleue mee OC GRAKD/A2) Disability no handicap for plucky mom .. . ce . ------~------: Huntl on woman A4 -helps others after c5e: her own ordeal C7 C4 81·2 82 ce 82 85 M A8 11 A3 04-5 C1-4 ae 82 824 A2 A4 Elaine Craft's picture mide the front pqes of newspapers across the country tihen she had a baby on Dec. 12, 19SO...l at St. Jotepb's Hospital 10 Kansas \.'ity, Mo. Her uncle, who lived m Loi Aqc~ leatned the news when he saw a phetOlflpti of Elaine and her new son. I-pound, 2 ~nee Jam Joecph Craft, in the Lot Anftks Times. 8leucd events u ually don't rate P111-0ftt ~y. but this one wat noteworthy. It camc.)IJ t bofore Dr. Jonas Salk's anti-polio v1«ine was ready for pubhc use and there was a lot of nationwide interest in it. Un· fortunately for her, Elaine contrKttd \ dreaded and cripplina polio -she still dOcin 't kilOw how or why -five months before the baby anivcd. Eliine could move her riaht hand and "-"' bi& toe. She had some f~lina an her loWe1' left arm. It wasn't an every'.'C!ay affair for someone with polio to have a baby. She recalls lhat ~lativcs and friends presaured her to baVe a therapeuti abonion ... But t said no, thal beina alive and bavina at.by is a ail\ from God ... For awhile, it SCCIDed that wont fears of her relatives and rrichda WOUid tte raliiea. Sborily before lbc bilbji WU IO arrive. Elaine bcpn 10 hemo~ Blood ttanfusions kq,t hcrahve. ••Tbe'W'OfdloftbCl rd Palm nt throu&Jt mr mind. ''fbC Lord i TD)' J)Mrd. shall not want .. : And I thouJht, 1 aue11 now I'm aoina to know how 1t fttls to die. .. There twas aoana into the uricry ROBERT 8111£1 ,. .. A9 Onnge eo.it DAILY PILOT /Monday. Ju~ 2. 1984 ooting Y-icti husband facing murder accusation A :U-year-old mtln man, wb wilt was killed in a hail of 1unfire latl Wttk, wa to be arraigned Or\ murder char1c1 today even though authoriti have not determined who fired the final ahot. • Charles Gcortt Slender was &r· rested late last Wttk foUow'ina the shootout in Tustin that left Deanna Leigh Stender. 21. dead and hcrifrs Deputy Leon Benniasdorf. 29. wounded by a gun blast to the fate. Bcnni&sdorf was listed in stable coodihoo today at W~tem Mcdic:il CenterinSantaAna. Offic11lssaid the bullet that tru k t deputy P3: thro• bis face and neck before lodging U\ has shoulder. The hootina in the driveway of SJender's family home wu touched off by a traffic catataon that a hcritrs deputy attempted to 1 ue Charles · Slender. accordina to Lt. Richard Olson. Slendcr's two brothers, Monte, 20. and Stephen, 23, also were arrested on f.USp1eton of murder but were released from Orange County Jail on their own rccognizan(C Friday by Superior Court Jud,e Richard Beacom. The two brothers all~ly came . . out of the fimiJy house before the shooting witb sheriffs deputies broke out. authorities reported. Though neither is believed to have fired a shot. lhe two brothers wereJ atrt$ted because of their involvement in a felony that led io a slayina, Olson said. · It's alleged Charles Slender picked up a aun one deputy had dropped and fired the shot that hit Bennagsdorf. It has not been determined who fired the shot that fatally wounded Slcnder's wife Olson said. Slender suffered bullet wounds in both legs in the incident. JUDGESGIVENDEATHPOWER.~. Prom Al responsibility after receiving the ad- vice of the jury," Blackmun said. · A jury voted to keep Spaziano behind ban for the rest of his life, but the trial judge disrcprded the jury's reoommendation and imposed a death sentence. In other cases today, the court: • RuJed unanimously that motor- ists stopped and questioned by police for traffic offenses aenerally do not have to be told that anything they say oould be used llP.inst them. The court said that such warnings and others requ!tcd by its con- troversial Miranda decision 18 _years aao do not apply when police officers ask questions of stoepcd motorists before formally arresung them. •Said that public radio and tel~ vision Stallons receivin.g federal aid may not be barred from airing editorials. Bya S-4vote, the court said a federal law impoSJfll such a ban violates freedom of expression protected by the Constitution's First Amendment. ln the death penalty case, Aorida's capital punishment law, like those in AJabama and Indiana, allows a trial judge to override a jury's rec- ommended scnten(C in capital cases. In Aorida alone, 82 of the some 200 men and women on death row were sentenced to die by ju<taes after juries recommended life senLences. In five states, judge$ -not juries -do the sentenci.na in all capital cases. They are Arizona. Idaho, Montana, Nebraska and Oreaon, aocordi~ to papen submitted" in Spaziano s case. S~o·s lawyer, public defender Craig_ Bemarsl of West Palm Beach, .... _,,, - Aa., bad told the justices that juries must Pli:ti~pate m capital punish- ment decisions. "The death decision is different and unique. It requires the voice of the community ... an expression _of outraae," Bernard told the court during arauments last April. ''The community's voice is heard at least as clearly in the lcaislature when the death penalty is authorized and the particular circumstances in which death is appropriate are de- fined,'' Blackmun said. Joining him were Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Lewis F. Powell and Sandra Day O'Connor. Justices Byron R. White and William H. Rehnquist agreed with the resuJL Justices John Paul Stevens, Wil- liam J. Brennan and Thurgood Marshall dissented. MOTHE R HELD IN S H OOTING ••• Jl'romAl ' violen(C when Rh()!(ics, the owner of the &un, handed the weapon to his mother and said .. Shoot me, .. Bowman said. "She did," he added. The sergeant said the Sunday niJbt argument was ~rt of an ongoing dispute, the specific nature of which police refused to disclose. ..It <:ul- minated last njght," Bowman saiq~ Rhodes, contacted by telephone today at the hospital, refused to comment on what ~ed the gunfire. "l don't want at published, .. be said. Rhodes, who apparently lives with bis mother on Oran~ Blossom, said he was .. feeling fine' and expected.to be released from the hospital within a few days. · OC GRAND JUR Y-SE ATED ••• From Al One improvement mcomang Grand Jury member Phyllis Drayton would like to sec 1s better' county facilitJcs for emotionally troubled chaJdrcn and tcen...agers. "From my point of view, the coun~ needs to look after its chil- dren. said Drayton, who Lives in Newport Beach wtth her husband George and their three children. .. There arc no facilities in the county for · adolescents with emo- tional problems, .. Drayton explained. Drayton, 47, believes the jury also should look into problems of toxic waste and water pollution in the county. But Drayton said she will have a better idea of what the jury will investigate Friday after it b:as met for the first time. A member of the Newport Harbor Junior League, Drayton said she was inspirec! to apply to the jury out of a sense°'-antercst in the county. Judge Smith headed a five-member selection committee of Superior C.Ourtjudgetwhochosc the jury from 300 applicants. They interviewed 80 prospective jurors before cunina the list to 30. The names were then drawn randomly to select the 19-member jury and I 0 alternates. One of the remaining 30 dropped out durina that part of the pr0Cesffca¥inran extra alternate spot open. The jurors will receive $25 a day plus ma I cage for four full days of work each week. That is why the Grand Jury as made up of mostly retired people or people who do not have other jobs. Coun officials point out that few work.ina people can take a year off to partici- pate on the Grand Jury. Fourteen members of the Grand Bowman estimated Rhodes was standing less than 10 feet away from bis mother when the weapon was fired in a hallway near the kitchen. ·•1t was a clean wound," be said, that didn't shatter the bone:- Policc have not been asked before to solve disputes at the home, Bowman said. Jury arc retired as are eight of the alternates. The 19 members of the new JUTY are: Charles J. Andresen, 66, of Orange; Rose Becktnan, 74, of Hunt· ington Beach; Dorian W. Boyd. 63, of Seal Beach; Drayton; Margaret M. Johnson, 34, of Anaheim; Harry Kalfin, 65, of Yorba Linda; Thomas J. Kehoe, 64, of Placentia; Margaet L Kliniensrntth, 49, of -.Santa Ana; Henry M. Klipstein, 69, of Santa Ana; Linda J. Linder, 38, of Anaheim; Harold Mcintyre, 62, of Tustin; Paul L. Moreau, 53, of Santa Ana; Ralph L. O'Neill, 56, of Santa Ana; Vivien Owen, 54, of Santa Ana; Maureen K. Parrott, 33, of Garden Grove; Kathleen C. Pickett, 61, of. Los Alamitos; Warren F. Taylor, 69, of Irvine; John M. Thornton, 63, of Westminster and Irving Wagner. 61, of Garden Grove. CM NOIS E COMPLAI NTS CONTINUE ••. Prom Al hour after the 11 p.m. deadhne when the pe~itted decibel limits m the city's noise ordinance decline. "It was very loud from about 9:45 p.m. on," Millar said. "I called the amphitheater twice and tned to get them to understand that people have to get up in the morning, but it didn't do any good." Allan Roeder, Costa Mesa's assis- tant city manager, said city officials and poli(C asked the amphitheater's management to close the show about 12:06 this morning. "We asked them to close down rather than going in and shuttint them down ourselves,·· Roeder said. The city's action was similar to what would occur 1f complaints were received about a loud party, he said. Amphitheater officials could not be reached for comment thasJnorrung. C<>Sta Mesa Mayor Donn Hall said noise t~ts from the weekend done by · Gordon Bricken and Associates for the city arc likely to be available in a couple of days. "We will be filinJ a complaint 1f there are any violauons," Hall said. "When we talked to the Nederlanders (the company that operates the ampbithea~er) last year they sajd it is thetr practice to have the concerts finish by 10:30 p.m. Obviously they are not doing that in this case." The city revised its noise ordinance two weeks ago to include a maximum S 1,000 fine for each violation. Millar said the homeowners' acoustical engineer. Sam Lane, had turned up a number of violations of the noise ordinance during Satur- day's concert. According to a report prepared by osta Mesa Police Sgt. Dick Def ran- ' the police liaison with the amphitheater, 33 complaints were taken about the noise dunn,g the jazz concert Sunday. Defranetsco said about 21 complaints were received durina Saturday's Jefferson Starship • UcenM P'*· Ttwy Mid ~ Md cfted the .. fOt ... --ln0kl9nt ~ W9r9 ... to tfeotc CtoWr\ the four8'19f**. concert. A new parking permit system which went into effect in the Colleae Park neighborhood Friday seemed to be helping, Millar said. About 2S cars were ticketed for violating the permit system over the weekend. "It (the parking system) hasn't had the real test yet, though." be said. "We haven't had 18,000 people there yet." Millar said the C.Oncerned CittzeSlS board of directors met Saturday to discuss whether or not they would pursue an appeal of a lawsuit which was dismissed last week. The homeowners' lawsuit, charg· ing that insufficient environmental review was done on the amphitheater, was dismissed last Thursday by an Orange County Superior Court judge. Millar said the board members will consider all the legal and financial aspects of an appeaJ and vote on it at their next meeting, which will likely be in about two weeks. WOMAN SHRUGS OFF HANDICAP ••• P'romAl others or 5ee like others may be diteourasect and have heavy beans. But they bould ~aliu · that the handicap is just a fattt of their lives and not them:· Crall recently completed a ~int a chairman of the ma)'or's ad hoc rommmtt on the b ndicappcd. 'he 1d 'h ·s learned that gcmn1 across m-.jor intersections -especially if you're eye i ht isn't so keen -can be inttmid ti hr·s al found out fint hand that whccJcha1r ramp art too ~nrcp and often are located too close to inter· sections -putting the handicapped in jeopardy of be1n.s run over by comer<ulllna motonsts. Craft's ncx.t project for the city will be to act as a host for the Hununaton Bc.ach Hori1ons how on cable tele- vision. The how, *h1c:h will explore the state of the ans in and around Huntinaton Beach, premiere Au 8 at 7 p.m. on Channel 10. he' bandl d more than a few other ch res in Huntington Stach. 1ndud1na: h~ang the ch1lJ1cn art festival, servinJ on. the . Newland House restoration oommtUtt, Str· v1~ as pres1dent of the Women's 01Vl ion of Chamber of Commerce, beanaa membcrofthe city'sallitd arts board; bean& a member o(th Hunt· inaton Beach Histoncal SQc.aety, Sitt· vin1 on the si11ercity commiuce, pa t president of the coordmatina council and beina the former pre idcnt of the Patrons ofOoldcn West CoJl~e. She was honored as the Huntington Beach citizen of the year in 1976. I , . Increasing clouds alorig·eoast- Coaatal Tides 17 .. ". •• " 11 71 " 12 .. .. 41 .. 74 n IO .. .. IO II TT 41 11 • T4 II .. .. 71 • " .. .,. .. .. T1 12 12 15 13 .. 12 ,, t2 ........ ---ic...CI\' IMV..-Ullll ...... ~ ...,..,.. ...,,.. .... ...... .......... ....... .... on.. NIWYcn fllotfolll.V• OllWIOtftl Cll'f OINlwl on.ncto l"tlmS,,,,.. ~ ,.,_.. ~ ... ll'Ol'lllNl.Or. P'rCMcMI-=rOly ""'° ~ ~ '° •t..-= 11,,_.T ..... Tl ... Llii• City 12 a.AMOnlO .. ""°""° 57 .. ,,...., 64 ., .. flltrle .... IO~· MTWIM T4 WllfllllO'Oll 74 WlcNte IO~ .. Wlll!\ll-1.0e • ---.. 70 IO IO '° .. 101 '° • 11 '° .. .. .. 11 • 17 a f7 .. u .. u • ., 17 11 • 17 " u • '° a ., 71 '°' 7t ... .. 104 ,, 12 67 Tl " IO 11 ft .. .. 11 " M IQ .. .. 17 • .. a • IO 11 .. IO • 1t 7t 70 t2 .. IO .. • .. " • .. • .. • 13 .. TO .. ... .. Temps ". .. . n a 12 17 SuRf REPORl .. ---------------~ - .. t.. LOCA"9 11111 Mbeny T1 SI Extended Hw-=9Wll 14 ~ ..... 14 7t IO ............. ... ............. 1-3 Arlltt«llO' 11 41 ::tr"'°"*" ----. ---................. 1 .. Al*!I• IO II .... ...,. ""Y cm --. .. ..... = , .. Alllntlc City 19. ~llllOw .......... 1-3 Awtln .. T1 ~Ill tot lnllnd. La. Ill ,.. _..., ~=··· t4 81111m0fe " ... llOtlndlOt ....... ....~_....... Camp puts Coast kids i D touc nature Teachers volunteer time and effort to ve youngsters a head start in science education By KAREN E. KLEIN Of!NDellJNet8Uft Chris Turnier of Laguna Beach picked up his mottled purple squid and stared doubtfully at its slithery, tentacled mouth. "The squid has a beak just like a parrot, but ifs inside the body," explained Bob Kelly, 39, of Costa Mesa. come together for the camp," Kelly said. Dunna the lh~week 1e11io~ youthful campers participate in classes such as "fields, Ponds and Woods," "Kitchen Chemistry," "Seashore Life," and Kelly's .. En- vironmental Biol<>&Y.'' .. There's definitely a hands-on approach to science in tbe camp .. Take your scissors and see if you classes," Kelly said, u be invited his can grab the beak and pull It out. But studcnu to abakc b.andS with a watch out-if you pull too bard you crayfish borrowed temporarily from mi&ht 1>';111 the entire esophagus out," the center's muddy pond. Kelly said. d. . ~ . AD 10 case set too . The ~ 0-y~r-<?ld T~m1~ y~ked at academic, field trips top like tbe his sqwd m~uly with bis sctsson. San Qieio Wild Animal Park. La Brea "Ugh -u wrappcd-around-my-1Y' 111.l•• Sea w ...... d •""-,..._L finger," Turnier screeched., as the iar n-ouu abo """ ~ long, slimy esophasus popped out of Caliy~n Nature Cen.ter dp combine th 'd' h d bed . 1f lcanuna and fun. S&Jd Arlene Parker, e ~ua s mout an attac •tie a volunteer instructor at the center . to has hand. Disscclfna squid, clams and crayfish is only a start for youngsters attending Nature Camp 1984, held at the Newpon-Mesa Unified School District's Environmental Nature Center in Newport Beach. Each summer for the past six yean, two sessions of the nature day camp have been held at the center, Kelly said, each for S3 students ages 7 to 12. Kelly, who teaches fifth and sixth grade at Newport Heights Elementary School during the school year, beads a group of community volunteers who staff and run the nature center. In bis six summers working at Nature Camp, Kelly has seen stu· dents who he had in his fifth and sixth arade classes come to help out as college interns. ••All kinds of ~pie who have common interests 1n kids and nature ln the Kitchen Chemisuy class one recent mornini, Judy Gielow, another teacher. wu ins1ruct.ina a class in bow to ~w rock cand)' and crystal prden~ Since Fourth of J uJy is oomina up we're aoina to do some crystal-crushin1 and make ice cream,•• she said. She a110 cooked up a batch of boysenberry dye usina benia from her backyard aarden and bad her class tie-dye a patcfi of white cloth with the concoction. Margaret Arnold. a tclleber at the Top of the World School io Lquna Beach, was showina a poup of kids bow sand is made in ~tion for their trip to the beach. By Dlinkioa a suaar cube in a cup and fetting ihe students stir it up with a wooden tongue depressor, she illustrated bow rocks arc worn down and become sand. The nature center is an ideal outdoor laboratory for students who rarely get to see wildlife in its natural habitat. Kelly said. It was in I 970 that the center was founded by a group of community members concerned that native Cali- f omia wildlife and plaDt.s were fut disappearing under asphalt parPn& lots and buildings. Assisted by the school dis~ the city of Newport _Beach and local volunteer groups, the board of the center came up with the idea lO create ·a 2.S-acre mini-Calif~ indudin& wildlife habitats that mimicked au or the various envJronments found in the state. They built the center -strictly with student and community volun· teer labor -on a strip of land originally used for arazins animals at the adjacc8t-Newpon Harbor Hip School. The center now includes nora and fauna representative of J 2 separate environments found in California. A desert, Redwood forest and Southern Oak woodland are amons the habi- tats constructed. The second session of Nature Camp runs July 9-26. Cost is SSS pcr week for the entire session, with a discount (or families with more than one child anending. Some scholar· ship assistance is available. In order to keep the class mes to seven or ei4111 student.I per teacher, enrollment 1s limited to S3 full·time students. Kelly said. For more infonnation on Nature Camp, call 64S-8489. Just Call 642-6086 What do you Uke ab91t a.be Dally Pilot? Wbat don't yo1 Hile? CaU tlM number at lets ud yotr me11age will be recorded, truscr1bed Ud deUvere4 to die appropriate editor. o:r,.~• la QuarentMd Mond8y·Fndly II )'OU dO "°' tw¥e ycu PllP9I Dy S 30, m eel belOI• T p m ~ycu~·­___, S.ti.wdlr MO 8Wldly " )'OU 00 not NClhie )'VI" copy ~ 7 • '" • Gii llefot• IOem ttlO'fOVt~ ... bt0ilh9rtd Clfoulltton Teae~ ... 0r.,... COl#lf~ N-..... ...... The same ff . ...., aawert.11 aerv1ce may be used to recor. leuen to die editor on uy topic. Coetrtbeton to oar Lettert col1am must a.tide Utelr ume ud teleplteae a1mber for nrlflcatlon. No clrcalatJoa Calll, pleate. 1'ell 11 wbat'a oa yoer m.lnd. ORANGE COAST lailJPillt H. L. lctiW.U II Publlshef ChNJ Dow..., fllD11....., CINs4*wW\ EdltOf and Assistant • Cootrotler to the Publisher Clroul1HOll ~ Cl9Mltlecl .._.,.,. 714/MMe71 All otMr .,..tnMMte ta-4121 MAIN OFPlCI 130 Vf• a., $1 . Co81a ..._CA Mei llddr-. lclll !MG. C011t ...-. CA t2at CGp1"{jl1I 1913 ~ C09ll Pulllllfq ~ No ,,..... "°"" .....,... ........ n\1119 • ~ "** hertwl Ny lie ~ ........... ,.,.. ~ OI copyr~ °""" Paa In•. When a death occurs In the f.mlly ~ need to make a IOt of right decllllloiw. You Med to undtrs1and Whet 19 belt tor you and how much you CM afford. c..I P9Clftc View Mortuary wMf'I you need "'· Pactflc View Memonll Park 3500 Plciftc View 0rNe Newport Beech, Caltf. 12913 c.-: liM-2100 ~ PACIFIC VIEW T--'T y T MEMORIAL PARK I -