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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-07-03 - Orange Coast PilotHtGH 88 LOW 68 - - TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1984 .. 'Dead.' OC w~mall used in·eop ruse La una NI uel wife poses as crash victim to snare hubby in aHe ed plot to kill her By liREN E. KLEIN Of ... 0.-,,... ..... A Laauna Niguel man who alleged· ly arran&ed to have his estranaed wife murdered by undercover lawmen he believed to be killers was arrested Monday after the investiKators staced Coast A tall ship parade wlll highlight the Fourth off- shore on Wednesday./ A3 What's going on along the Orange Coast on the nation's birthday? See complete list./ A3 California Fiim, TV directors vote to avoid strike just before Olympic Games./ A4 Nation Supreme Court says women must be allowed to join Jaycees./ AS U.S., Soviets are talking about talking about 'Star Wars.'/A4 World Former Israeli president Irked by Soviet lnterrog- atton./ A4 Someone with a mean hook ts hitting airplanes with golf balls In Austral- la./ A4 ----.. ..... an elaborate ruse to convtnce him the woman bad been killed in a traffic accidenL Investigators who were 0 hired., by the man had the wife made up by Orange County coronet deputies to look like a corpse and then took pictures of her lying on a slab in the coun1y moflue, accordina to Lt. Dick Olson, a spokesman for the Oranae County Sheriff's Department. Olson said Frederick Edward Pen.. ney, 57, of Laiuna Niguel, was taken into custody at 6:45 p.m . Monday at the Sheriffs Depanment South County su~tation after he identified the .. dead" woman as his wife. The arrest came after an extensive lhrcc·wcek investigation by under· Mlnd&Bpdy 'Therapy via two-way radio helps people over- come their fear of free-Burning box car ~ cover investipton of the lherifrs department. Olson laid. .. Penney was apperently upset over a pendina divorce and property settlement and hC blamed (his wife) for these j>roblems. •• Olson laid. The s~ officen took to carry out the .wm,opcration are .. very uDJque, .. the lieutenant addc<L 0 We've never done anythina like that before," he said. Penney, an inde~dcnt contrac· f tor. allegedly solicited an undercovn 'investiptor to kill hiscstrantcd wife, Susan, and make her death look Hke a traffic ac:cidentz Olson said. He alf'Cd to pay $3,000, tn two install.malts, to arranac the murder. 01.son fteclined to commmt on bow Penney fmt contacted the under· cover officer. sayina that information will be vital to the case gainst Penney. On J uoe 26, be said. the officcr met with Penney aiid alkacdly n:cdvcd Sl,SOOfo mall biDs 1tOr '\he murdtr. The ofT&eer ~ that Mrs. Penney would be killed wilhin 10 Clays. At lhat pojnt, Ollon Aid, lft. vcstiptors ~ for Mrs. Penney to cooperate in ·me cue.. ""She llRC!CI tocomedown10 the(OraQICC~ coroner's office." Olton said. 'NIS actually made up to loOk u if she .-as a deceased paJOn. PoCd in &he ( ......... lllOU&L/A2) Laguna· weighs 'granny uriits' Council considers change in city's building codes BJ DAVID BlSUOP DaiJJ Pilot Cll'Ull •es1 A change in the city1JUtfd.ing code to allow construction of a second housing unit on properties zoned for sinpe and multi·Wnily residential uruts will be considered by the Laauna Beach City Council toni&hL l'he city plannina staff is J'C(; ommending that these so-called .. granny .. units, which arc provided for by state law, be allowed in the city only if they arc limited to properties where the owner is in residence. The state legislature in 1912 ~ quired local governments to provide for secondary units. Cities then were &iven the option of adoptina their own ordinances for ~_vidina sec· ondary uruts or modifying the ex- isitng state gwddines. City planDing director J\lDe Catalano said the O .. "DC'r-OCXUP9DC)' viiion is the only addition to the e guidleiocs that the citY-stiff/ o~ing; ... Other ciu~e Ordinances tliit loosen the reslrictions, .. she said. -in Laauna Beach .-e are ad~ a rcstric:tion to ~· Coanty fliifl&later Scott llcDalnDant 8lfta ~ ___ ...__._'" -rem••na of · ta.nilta.re tbat caaillt fire wblle ~-- Benefltsofplastlcsur-carried on • Barl.tqton llfortbem boz car ~ ways./81 of cl8•-.e to deda &Del claaJn tat were bOUad f• P • whatthestatcbasatieady provided.~ Pmnltare ID Jnt.r.Mt. ODe wttn .. -.Id iM •W a lfOapV · Statcrestrictionsioclude:Theunits cblldren plaJlaC on the boz car before tlae Ore broke oat. must be for rent. not for sale: any gery are no longer just for afternoon ID Tutla. Tfie Ore caued aboat $80,000 It tooll 30 fh'emea aboat 15 mlDatee to pat oat tbe blue.. (Pleue eee •GRAlOIY' / A2J the rich and famous./82 Sports Corona del Mar High workhorse Jeff Brown ts looking forward to the opportunity to hit some- one at Friday night's Or- ange County All-Star football game./C1 The Dodgers send slump- ing Greg Brock down to Albuquerque to work his way back Into shape./C1 Cale Yarborough has grabbed the pole position for Wednesday's Fire- cracker 400 In Daytona Beach, Fla./C3 Entertainment Orange County com- munity theaters captured all three prizes In the pre-· Olympic festival In Los Angeles./84 Buslneu Those family 'gifts' no longer a big tax break, but they're better than nothing./ Al INDEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Bulletin Board Bualnetl Callfornla Newa Cluatfled Comlca CrOMWOJd Death Notlca Help YourMff Horoacope AnnlandWa Mtnd ,,,d Body Mutual Fundl Natlonal NNI ~m' Potlce Log PubUc Notic.t Sport• Stack Market• Televtelon ThMtett WM th« WoftdNews 82 C10 A3 A9 A4 C7-9 C10 C9 ~ 82 C8 92 81-2 A9 A4 A8 81 A3 04-6 C1-3 A10 83 83·4 A2 A4 . Concert noise violated new law BJ ltAREN E. &LEIN Of ... ~ ........ Costa Mesa's city noise ordinance was apparently violated Saturday night durina a rock concert at the Pacific Amphitheatre, Tom Wood. Costa Mesa city auomey, said today. Wood said he spoke with Gordon Brickenbthe acoustical engineer con- tracted y the city to perf onn noise tests dunng amphitheater concerts, and learned that there were noise violations recorded durina Satur- day's Jefferson Starship concert. "When we receive an analysis of the (sound testina) data, we will file criminal charges against the amphitheater," Wood said. Residents of College Park and Mesa del Mar, the two nei&hborhoods closest to the amphitheater, com· plained bitterly at a city council meeting Monday about last week· end's trio of concerts Friday, Satur- day and Sunday ni&ftts. The homeownen. who haYe for- med a croup called the Concerned Citizens of Costa Mesa to fi&ht the amphnncater. uracd city o fficials to 8earablp •nolM!n•llen' Paul Kalitn.er. Grace SUCL take some actio.n against the amphitheater. Wood said the city wjll keep monitoring noise levels and pros.- ccut1n1 violations apinst the amphitheater. "We'll do anytbina we can to stop the noise problem," Wood said. Amphitbcaterofficialscoukl not be reach.cd for comment this momina. The city's noise ordinance, recently revamped to match the county's standard:1mposes a $1,000 fine per violatiort. County p~otechnic dealer blasted by legal fire:works Anaheim manufacturer said in default on $20 million, faces fraud lawsuit --- By JERRY HIRSCH Of ... ..., ....... Oranae County fireworks mogul W. Patrick Moriarty isn't icttiog a bang out of this Fourth of July. California Canadian Bank, an American subsidiary of one of Can- ada's \araest banks, filed a S40 million bank fraud lawsuit against the Anaheim fireworks manufacturer al~ leging that he has defaulted on nearly $20 million in loans. Some of the Joans were apparently made at the ban.k's Newport Beach office, but Mel Akers, tbc bnmch manager, said the company was not talkina about the suit .. The bottom line is that we have no comment," be said. The swt. filed Monday in Orange County Superior Court. also .seeks $20 million in damqes an4 im- plicates the def\lnct Bank of Irvine in a conspiracy lo channel money to Moriarty thro~ a variety of busi- ness associates and connected firms. Moriarty is under invcstiaation by a federal arand jury in Los ~les for questionable business, bankina and political activities. Neither Moriarity nor bis lawyer. Donald Heller of Sacramento. could be reached for a response to the charges in the suit. Moriarty is the owner of Pyrotrooics Corp., the manufacturer or the Red Devil and the Wildcat brands of .. safe and sane" fireworks and has been involved in several controversial attempts to liberalize fireworks regulations m California. The swt alleges that Moriarty used hls busmcss assocu.tcs and thelr connected businesses to improperly .. commingle" assets to obtain the loians. The sun also claims that Monarty flied false financial statements and ' used bis posilld,n as a member of the board of diredors of the Bank of (Pleueeee FRAUD/A2) , City inspectors p~r~isting ln lawsuit to clear names AIDIEA ADELSOI Ex-Mesa cop denies'. sex charge Cleared figures tn Irvine bribery probe Seektn 2 .5 million ln defamation action BnsceBu1larda™iAn Nck ntan apology from caty hall. But even mo-. the city inspectors -*•nt thetr nam cleamt. as much ~ iblc af\er tbef \it been linked lO one qfthe few scandal 10 rock lr\line in its 13-ycar hi tory~ Bullard and Peck's S2.S milhon defamation suit apinst the city open Monday, thrtt ycan af\cr chcy wm cnmc hcd in a bribtjy probt 1h1t ltd toacriminalconvic1ionofa third C•tY in~Ptttor. ' .. , pcnl lS to 20 ye.an building a reputation." Slid Bullardo .S., of COlt.a M , who bcpri workina for Irvine 1n 1976 ... , feel my honesty•nd antcarity wett pretty well known. ''But l'vt bttn i'obbed. •~ in11cd The only thins I ha c to tcavc m~ chiktrcn." said Bullard. peu ina, hi voice bftaki •is mx iooct name. Th• ( uit)is impOrtlJlt Pttk. 55, of Anaheim. said the uit • 1 mean of clcarina their clouded l'C'puiauon The 1n pcctors cha Irvine, its top officials alM! an El Toro contnte:tor with '1cflmation of charactcurid 1nvuaon o(pnvacy. The cloud hn,m.. Only last month. Pttk rmlls. a dty U contl'IC'tor at wort on the Hilton Hotel a cd him -hat·haOOCM'd 10 .. c diny ra .. accUICd Of'bribery: .. Aftttyou ,ct tnto' it' like bei"I in a htrfpOol. You Wonder 1ftbere' ever a bouom.·· hck., the fatbcr of" thttt. Id tiredly. H and Bullard Mvcr c with bri . They ~ c acccptina a ~tu1ty for prifomu their job. mi cmcanars that v.~ uhim1tcl dropped f4 r in ufficient cvid nee 1n Jul • 1911 . NH\S B ~cKGROUND \ fired Costa M attuJCd of ~lual ·A2**°'•nge Cout DAILY F'4LOT /Tuesday. ~uly 3, 1984 Uudge tosses 'G · nfession' ~nlove/greedrnurdercase 1 STEVE MARBLE .. .._,......,. A Municipal Coun jud&e hH ~out an alleged confe ion made a Huntiniton Beach woman who u ~_..,~-I'\& held 1lon1 with her ttported ~ ver in a Huntin1ton Beach ;ove jiianaJe murder case. <The ruling by Judac David ·ckner means Jeanette HuJhts and lier allqed boyfriend will not face the th penalty when tri~ foC' the urder of James Hughes, 37, the Wdge ruled today. Prosecutors contend Hughes was Ued by bis wife and Adam Salas mirez in a plot to collect insurance )noney. . · Huahes, a computer ena.mcer with ..S500,000 life insurance policy, was shot to death Jan. 10 as he slept in a l:1tdroom of rus Hununiton Beach home. The murder was deptcted by ·Pohce as a case of .. love and greed." Mrs. Hughes. the 29-year-old wife Of the' dead nan, atlcac<tl y made incriminating statements to pohcc the day after the slaying. The stat,.. ments led pohce to conclude that Hughes, her lover and a third man had plotted the murder for financial gain. But Brickner, claiming pohcc failed CONTINUED STORIE S to honor Hushes• rfahts during the intenopuon, to~ out what pro • ccuto~ said was the ingl 15t daninina piece of evidence in e murder case. .. The evidence wa e~tttmdy ~ • nificant," said Deputy Oistnct At· tomcy Jay Mosley. Brickner today ordered Huahes and Jtam1rez, a 42-year-<>ld ck-con- vict alleged to be the woman's lover, to stand trial for murder and a second cbarse of burglary. A thfrd suspect in the case, Ramirez' 21-year-old son, also' was ordered to st.and tnal for murder. It's aUcaed Adam Edward Ramirez Jr. drove bis father to the Huabes' home w~re the murder took place and planned to ~ndezvous with him later. But in the same ruling. Bnckner said there 1s not enoug.h evidence to charge either Hughes or the older Ramirez with murder-for-profit, a special circumstance chllflC that could have meant the death penalty or life in prison for the two defen- dants. The ruling is a mltjor blow to the prosecution, said Mosley. The district attorney said he intends to ask a higher court to review Brickner's decision to throw Hughes' st11emen1S lO police . One 0111-cc, who said he did not want to be identified, said Hughe , in effect, confessed to pohce a plot to,kill her hus nd. • Jn discussing his decision to tbrow out the evidence, Brickner aareed Huntington Beach detectivesadvised Hughes of her rights to a lawyer-as required under the U.S. Supreme Court's .. Miranda·· rule-dunna the four-hour interview but later tried "to talk her out of talking with an attorney.•· At one point dunna the question- ing, Hug.hes asks "Do you think I need an attorney?" accordin1 to a tape recordinJ played in the counroom. Pohce arc beard tellina Hughes they could not advise her one way or the other. A short time later, Hughes apparently asks. "Am I m trouble?" Bnckner said that the detectives, at this point. tried to "downJ>lay" the seriousness of the situation by tellina her that the questions were just "a fonnahty.·• The judge, noting that H\lghes already had flunked a polyp-aph test before the round of questJons, said police tried_ to "coerce" Hughes. ··'GRANNY UNITS' CONSIDERED ••• From Al ' increase in ex.tsung floor space on the property is limned to 10 percent; and w construcuon must conform to .'Uisting local bualdina codes, parking d open space rcqui~ments. No age ;estricuons on occupants would ...appl} under the proposed ordinance. The staff's report to council in- dicates that existma city codes regard- ing height, view preservation and general plan requirements "should provide us with adequate control over the design, location andlmpact" of proposed second units . ATTACK THWARTED ••. Each city h~ 120 days from the time the first application for a ··glllnny" urut is submitted to either arant a conditional use permit for construction -accordina to the 1t1te auidelines or to adopt its own local ordinance. Laguna Beach bas so far had only one application, Catalano said, whi~b was denied ~use it required a zoning amendment Council members arc also sched- uled to consider final provisions of the 1984-SS budget, iocludina a salary increase for the city clerk, an increase in city attorney fees and an ordinance regulating the establishment of bed and breakfast uses in tb.e city. From Al sldewalk but she s:aught her self with her hands, got baci< up and kicked the man In the groin. The second suspect, de~rlbed as a sllght man with a mustache, fell to his knees and the woman escaped, she said. She ran to a phone booth on Pacific Coast Highway and called her brother to pick her up. The brother picked her up and then called the police. A search of the area was unable to turn up the suspects, police satd. •· The council meeting begins at 6 p.m. in City Hall, 505 Forest Ave. EX-COP DENIES SEX ASSAULT CHARGE ••• From Al Lauchlan as charged with the felon> sexual battery and false 1mpnson- ment of a 22-year-old Orange woman who he.stopped for a broken tatl hJht on the Costa Mesa Frcewa)' dunng the early morning of Jan. 10. He also 1s on trail for a misde- meanor charge of sexual batter) involving a Costa Mesa woman. The fonner officer dented fondhng the Orange woman. saying he only comforted the woman. who was distraught following a fig.ht with her boyfriend. . In the second incident. Lauchlan said he noticed the woman dnving erratically on Baker Street an Costa Mesa. · Lauchlan tesufied that he told the woman he would not cite her this ume but that 1t seemed she was drunk and should not have been at the wheel. The woman responded to Lauchlan with a hug but he testified that he .rejected her advance rather than encourage it. The prosecution called several Costa' Mesa police officers to the stand today to testify on police procedures and whether tauchlan should have routinely called backup officers when pulling over drivers late at naghL Today as scheduled ·to be the last , da)' oftestamony and° final arguments should follow. INSPECTORS SUING TO CLEAR NAMES ••• From Al alleged has employees were solicited for liquor, food and overtime pay an exchange for speedy anspecuons. The mgu1ry led to Peck's and Dullard's finng. a two-week admm1s- trat1ve appeal heanng. and their eventual rcmstatement sax months later w1th back pay. Their punishment was a I 0-da) sus~ns1on for accepting a bottle of wh1slcey two w~ks bcfo~ Chnstmas. a city pohc} .,.1olat1on. Their attorneys contend whaske}- gi ... mg as a holiday trad111on an the construction industry. Bullard and Peck sa)' the real pnce is much higher. They contend they were returned to jobs of lesser respons1b1hty and prestige. Stress-caused high blood ' pressure. diagnosed by a city phys-- acian. eventually forced Bullard to quit work on a medical disab1l1t) Peck believes has daughter's preg- n:mcy ended premature!) because of emotional stress. Bullard's son de· veloped ulcers and had to drop out of presug1ous Haney Mudd College an Claremont. " And their legal pursuit, estimated b~ tht' opposing attornt'~ at S60.000. has cost Peck and has wife of 32 )Cars their retiremt'nt accounts and nearl)' exhausted college funds set up for Bullard's children The suit "as our v.a> of nghung a serious tnJust1ce," said Caprcu. "But there as an addataonal messaae. These folks ha-.e to pa)"a n awful price to go Just Call 642-6086 DallJ Pltot DeHvery ta Querenteed M ldlr r , II !'OIJ oo "°' '-.. yOI ~ °' $ JC) I> "' ( ... lle40<• 7 p "' rel ,_ CClOt .. .. ~ a.t.nllr INI ~ • ""' • dll 11(11 ,_ "°"' through thCJUd1c1al system." For the city of Irvine, which has refused settlement proposals. includ- ing a S28S,OOO offCT proposed last week . the suit has another message. It's about making Irvine em- ployees. from the city manager to a city inspector. meet a h1Jh standard. according to Deputy City Attorney Roger Schnapp. Irvine has pledged at won't tolerate even tnvial impropnet1es. Rather than settle. they will permit city offic1aJs to be sullied m the expected "smear campaign" during the trial. he said. Vance Simonds. the inspectors' lead attorney, has put city officials on notice that their acuons -acccpung lunches, sports tickets or bottles of liquor -will be subject to scrutiny. Schnapp said. "We've been waiting for the startl- ing revelations. If he's got names, dates and places (of other im- proprieties). they wall take ca~ of those people. too." he said. "I have to rely on them. that they have nothing 1n their closet.'' Schnapp said. "It is common place all over Cahfomaa for inspectors to accept bnbes (But Irvine) as a new city that hasn't got a 20-)'car history of corruption. "Tht' Cit) has taken on a whale of a task when they say the> want to run a squeak> clean ci ty. When this hap- pened. it appeared they failed," he said. Irvine has two gratuity policies. One 1s that any gift over $25 must be reported. A second, apparently super- ccding. policy as issued every holiday season. It says those accepung gratu· 1t1es arc subject to disciplinary action. Even gift candy is placed open on public counters so v_isnors can gobble the goodies. Schnapp said. "Certain things ... come under the gua~ of ccmentang relations. It's either appro-.ed or forbidden," he said. As an example. Scnapp said "if the cit y manager takes the presidertt of the Irvine Co. to lunch, the rule is that (Bill) Woollett should pick up every other check." Schnapp admitted that the bribery 1nqu1ry wasn't thorough. as only one inspector was convicted. During the personnel hearing. Peck's attorneys showed he was on a Caribbean vacation on the day he was supposed t~ have solicited a bribe. "The issue is they violated a polac} ... Schnapp said. "From my pcrcepuon. there as no basis in fact that they've been damaged. But that's not to sa} they haven't suffered." Irvine 1s nwaatmg a ruling on two motions. One as for dJSmissal. The second asks the court to ~strict the suit by throwing out the invaston of pn ... ac> allegations If the suit g<>t's to tnal. 1t will not onl> be long. but disruptive, be said. E'ery cat) inspector and five admin- istrators ~111 likely be subpoenaed. Already. depositions fill 26 volumes. What do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't yoa Uh? Call die number at left and your me1111e will be rttorded, transcribed and deUvtred to the appropriate editor. Tbe same %4-bour an1werln1 service may be used to rttord letters to tlle editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must lnclade tbelr name and te1epbone numbu-fei: nrlflHllon. No clrculatlon calla, please. Tell 11 wbat's on your mlad. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. L khW•l'U Ill Publisher Circulation 714/142...._ Clautned edV.ntaln(1 714/M2..f871 AU other depertmenta 142-4321 MAIN OFFICI ~~•lerll Colle.._ CA• 81»-lkl• IMO Colle.._ CA 929J't capy "' 1 • "' c.af llt'Or• TD I "' ..... i'°"' CClPf d ........... Chaz, DowelfbJ ~ ChUrchmaft Editor and Assistant Controller ClrCUletlon T•lephot ... to the PubllShef VOL. 17, NO. 115 ... Coastal 17 IO .. 10 11 11 . .. " 12 .. 70 It IO 71 12 .. 12 13 17 17 11 IO IO 12 16 11 51 .. 12 17 71 1t t1 IO IO .... 15 11 .. .. .. . 12 .. ,.,{IO FlllQiltan Gland~ Hwtlot'd ........ ~ Hou.ton Indal ... Jedl-.Me ~ ~ ~Clly lMYeget Uttle Aodl t:.::r:-MemPl'lll fMllnj leedl ~ . , .. 12 ... 17 II .. .. .. II IO M " IOI 12 IO 11 11 .. 57 M .. 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The llfemse mural, 18 feet acroee by 27 feet, deplete a aarfa~lna Callfomla pa,-whale. W11an4•1 othel' wal11 are in Lajuna Beacb aad Dana Point. Veterans to honor Mesa official Costa Mesa's vice mayor, Eric Johnson. as to receive a plaque from three Costa Mesa veterans aroups on Wedncsd•> for his support of vet· crans ac11v1t1es , CoNT1Nu£0 SroR1E s ~..._"""---- ---- NIGUEL WOMA:N ••• homAl moraue, then they took photos of her cu~tody, were waitil'\I to be picked up to show him." at the sheriffs South County 1tatt0n, 1 Olson said the work was convinc-in Laauna N.,uel. ing. "S~ looked to ttal you can't "When he went there to pick them believe it," he said. up b~ wa~ placed under arrtst for Us•l'\I the photos of Mrs. Penney, solicitahon of murder," Olson said another. i~vtstiptor po ina as a Penney was bookt'd into the Oranae coroners anVCJttptor went to Pen· County Jail and 11 beina held on ney's home Monday and told him . S3SO.OOO bail. . Mn. Penney had been killed in a car Olson 111d he is tcheduled to accident. 19pcar in Oran.at County G'ential Olson said the \nvcsti~tor had Coun on July ' for an arral&Dmcnt. The ( o ta Mesa World War I Penney identify his wife from the Penney had ql'ftd to meet the Veterans. the American Lqion and ph~os and tofd h~m that hi '"':o invcstip~or1his mornina to pay bim the Veterans of f'oreian Wars aroupa children. •ho were an Mrs. Penney s the rtmam1n1 $1 ,500, Orson said. and their au.1ulhants are to present . J~hn50n witti the plaque dunna their FRAUD er. . .& DGED fourth of July ~ncaltc breakfast at ~ the Co ta Mesa Veterans Memorial rrom A 1 • • • Hall Al lated to bC honottd at the bttaHHt 1' :red Falk, a ~eteran of World War I, who will rttCi\iC an •· mcri n C1t1zcn' AYt'lrd" from the VctcraM ~f Fort11n Wars. If' ane 10 dcla) pay~nJ on the loan1 " The Ba_nk Of lnt1nc. \rih1Ch WI clostd b ta&c ~ulaton 1n Ma), .. acted a a conduit' forahc fif'fWOr manufatturtr. the uit atlqcs The u1t nam 18 ind•' 1dual • mMt at.\0('1&lC\I -.i1h Monar1y. anJ 16 finna. The defendant also include Edpr l!. .~•_11 ... ~,>. 111~ &nl of Jnw\;'1 m"'onty o"·ntr. Ht"nr)' L Bear, anoth~r former bOard member of tht Bank of lrvint' 1nd P>)rotronics prt ~nt Jamn C. u1d . J.' • Art exhibit bus tour pl nned tn Laguna A au1dcd bus tour of contemporary exhibiu by Oranae County artists will be sponsored by the Lquna Beacti Museum of An and the Oranie County Aru Alliance Saturday. The bus will depart from the Lquna Beaeh museum at 9 a.m. and Is sched\lled to visit tbe Irvine,Fme Atta Center, NOJuchi Sculpture Oarden, Oranac Count)'. Center for Contempo~ An, Suun Spirltu1 Gallery of Phot<>&raphy, TLK. Oallcry and Pacific Mutual Sculpture Plaza. The event is part of"An Connections" -Oranio County's Olympic Art Tour. T1ek.c1' cost S2S and include a aourn\et boxed lunch. For infonnation and reservations call 49~S31. Ooal-•ettlag rul~ dJ.caued Nine rules for settina aoats will be discussed durina a four-hour seminar Saturday in Room 1t2 of the Counsctina and Admissions Office at Oranae Coast Collqe in Costa Mesa. Jerry Broussardt a speaker experienced in manaJC- ment and sales lrlinma. will CQffduct the session, wh1ch will be held from 9 a.m. to I p.nf. Pre-rqistratfon fee is SIS and $20 at lhe door. Can 432-S880 for funher information. Divorcee naaace. viewed Financial adviser Frances Johansen will present a free workshop on financial plannina durin1 and after the divorce Friday at the Women's Opportunities Center of UC Irvine, 2811 Main St. Irvine. The seminar, scheduled ftom 1 to 3 p.m., will assist women with planning their financial issues in their new lives. There wiU be discussion, questions and answers. Call 856-7128 for further information . . Tal.t •et on delegat1ng How to effectively delcpte work and responsiblity at home and at work will be discussed Saturday at an Oran# Coast College workshop in Room 113 of the OCC Counselin& and Admissions Buildina. Lee Ann Taylor, a frequent lecturer on gbusiness, public relations and advenisina topics, will conduct the prosram, scbcduled from 1 to 4 p.m. The fee is SIS in advance or )2() if the door. Call 432-S880 for further information. • Hotline training anaoaaced The barqaeCaaahtenoc, a llmdcan naYal •euel The Gay and Lesbian Community Services Center of Orange County will bold a trainina proanun for hotline monitors beginning Saturday at the C(nter, 12832 Garden Grove Blvd .. Suite 200, Garden Grove. Trainees will team to become effective listeners and peer counselors through lectures, discussions and practice. A $20 donation is requested to oover costs. Call S34-326 l between 6:30 and 10:30 evenings for information. 'Pilgrim 'to join tall ships at Long_Beach Copyright lecture at OCC Fourth of July parade at sea among highlights along coast A "h w .. 1 ... .,. ._... 1... d An impressive wet parade, including five large ~ to ecture on copyn.,_.tst uavemariu a~ international maritime training ships and about SOO patents will be pre~nted ~turday fro~ 9 ~.m. to ~ P-.m. m privately owne4 sailinJ vessels will be held a Iona the Room 110 ofthe..C-Ouf!schng and AdmtSsions Buildjna at Southern California sfWl'eline beginning at noon Wcdnes.-Orange Coast ColJqe m Costa Mesa. . day. Newport Beach.attoi:riey N~veed Alam wall lead the . Theevent1sorganizedb thePonoflon Beachand program and the ~stra_taon fee 1~ St S. Call the colleae at is the result of several years of planning by the f..:avy 432-5880 for add1uonaJ information. _ Lcaiueofthe United States. OranJeCountyCouncil. PanicipatinaCalifomia ManumeAcademy training vessels arc the49S-foot ··Golden Bear" and the l 4S-foot offic1afsaili n1 ship of Califom ia. "The Cali fomian. •• Registration for summer swimminl lessons is ongoinaat Costa Mesa's three public pools between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. daily. The swimming sessions run for two weeks, Monday through Friday, for 30 minutes a day. ParentandMe, Tots and R"cd Cross beainner throush advanced lessons are offered. For infommton, call your nearest pool: Estancia High School, 642-4891; Costa Mesa High School 66~-2798; or the Downtown Community Center Poot' 64S-2797. • Ceramlc slide lectpre set A slide lecture of ceramic sculpture by artist Jens Morrison will be held at the Lasuna Beach Museum of Art July 12, bqinning at 8 p.m. As part of the Contemporary California Artists series, Morrison's work is currently on display in the museum's Cuprien Gallery through Auaust J 2. Admission to the lecture is S3.SO for non-members, SI for students. For information call 494-6531 . Tuesday. July 3 • 6 p.m., Lapaa Bea~ City Coucil, City Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave. • 8 p.m . .t. Foutala Valley City Coucll, City Council Chambers, lu200 Slater Ave. • S:30 r .m. lrvlDe City Cowacll, special meetina in City C9unci Chambers, 2801 McGaw Ave. PoucE Loe Me·sa fugitive captured after high-speed chase · A Casa Mesa man wanted on charges of armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon was arrested early today after he allegedly stole a car. led police on a bi&h-speed chase and stru&&)ed with officers who tried to detainhim; police said. Jaimy Jay Weis , 23, was observed drivina out or the Bay Auto shop, 2033 Newport Blvd., about I :SS a.m .• accordina to Cosa Mesa Police Lt. Gary Webster. A patrol officer atttmptcd to stop Coetalleea A South Coast Plau unty auard suffered minor injuries Monday when he w15 a ulted and beaten by three men who buralarized the Fila Ctothina Srore insicfe the mall. Loss to the store. which was buraJarized last week, came to $4.IS 1 in mcrthan-. dise. The thiev smuhed a mall door andthcnlhe re'sslaJsdoontOP-tn entry. •• • • A videocaucucrtt0rdcr, valued at St,100. wa stolen from a home on the 2400 btodc of Ora nae A vcnuo over the wttkcnd Police 11id it wu unkno'ft'n how th thieves pined entry. • • • • A praac bu~lary at a home on the 3300 blO<'k off uch 11 trttt Mond1y nrttrd th1c:H ahout $4. l 10 in clcctnc Weiss, whoaJlqcdly led the officer on a SO mph pursuit to the 400 block of Hamilton Street before he pulled over. Webster said Weiss fled the car on foot after bcin1 questioned by the officer. A police search of the area shortly turned up Weiss one block west of Hamilton, on Parsons Street. He allegedly threatened several officers who attempted to take him into custody and fou&ht with them before he could be subdued, Webster ' tools tnd computer equipment. • • • A St ,000 Honda aenerator wa stolen over the Wttkend from a van parked at the Academy of Defensive Driv1na. 88 fair Drive. • • • Thieves apperently uSC'd a key to enter the Ncwpon P\utics company. 3198 Airpon Loop. over the -wttkend and Steal $2,600 worth of tool and electronic equipment. • • • A key was also used in the theft of a typewntcr, sale and addin1 machine· rrom the Bay uut at 2o:u Nc~n Blvd., onr th Wctkcnd. The 1os was placed 't S 1,040. rt~ae.cla A Corona dcl Mar man reported 'ht theft of S700 an 1ewelry and ca h said. Af\er Weiss was arrested, pohce found the car he was driving had been hot-wired. They also discovered he had a warrant outstanding for his arrest.r-1ssued by the Orange County Sherins Department. on the robbery and assault characs, Webster said. Weiss was ~od into the Cosll Mesa Police Dcpanlhent Jail on the warrant and on suspicion of a\ito theft Bail for t}\e wamnt is set at SS0.000. \Vct>s1cr said. from his home in the 300 block of Dahlia Monday . • • • Ncwpon Harbor Hi~ School re- poncd Monday the theft of a scale valued at St 10 from a clo t in a cla room. ••• Wrin&)ers Associates. a bu inus at 1300 Quail. reported the theft ofS 170 in cash and five c)'S Monday. • • • Champion per\ Plua Co .. located at 1100 Quail, repotttd the theft of 200lpark plup valued at SI each. • • • m one threw two roe at two window. of the Cannery Re taurant at 3010 lafl)tttc, bttaki~ th~ ~•n· do and doini $70 in damage Sunda • • • • • cwPOrt ~:u:h man rq>orll'd the • 1 ntemat1onal man time traininaships wilJ participate as well. These arc the 376-foot "Hanbada" from South Korea, the 410.foot "Taisei Maru .. from Japan and the 309-foot "Cuauhtemoc" from Mexico. "'Venturous," is scheduled to ckpu1 from Manbatan Beach, nonh ofManhattan Pier, at noon. It will then pus PointVicentcat l:30e.m.,the GateinLO&Anedes The 5_9uare-nggcd Barque "Cuauhtemoc .. is the fastest sa1hngshipand newesl trainin,shipin tbewortd. accord mg to Anhur Hassel brink. pres1den1 of the Navy Harborat3p.m .. theQucen Ma around4'p.m.,aod arrive in Seal Beach at S p.m. · League of the United States. -• Gov. Geo,..e Oeukmeijanwill sisDal tbestanoftbe parade and will attend the 9 p.m. fi.rriom cddnlion at BelmontPierinBelmoatSbores. Lona~ ~ In add1t1on.about SOOothersaiJinaandcruisc ships of vanous sizes will be displayed. Aniong ~will be "The Pilanm" ofNewpc)rt Beach, .. The Bounty."arephca of the original full ship with the same name and used in the curttnt movie "The Bounty." and the 608-foot Lona Beach cruise ship-Azure Seas." The siarade wiU be easily viewed &om anyWhere alcq the Lona Beach shore line, orp.nizers say. Becaute of the cvtnl, Coat Guard ofticials•Y the area between the Belmont Pier and the White and Grissom oiJ islands will be closed dutina the whole day, and the Anads Gate entrance to Los~ H.art:lor will closed dunna the parade only. The parade. led by lhe Long Beach Coast Guard ~tttr thef\ of $660 in cash and a pair of diamond SS.000 from his home on Lido Park Dnvc Monday. included stereo equipment worth $200. • • • Tools worth $300 wen: reported Fountain Valley stolen Saturday from an unlocked shed at lhe Chevron Ott property at Thieves stole three Motorola Clay Avenue and Golden West Street. ponable radios with charaers valued • • • at $5300 after pry1na open a trader Someone eniered throuah a front door of Kitchell Contractors Inc.. window to buralanzc a home on the 9930TalbertAve. 1700 block or Delaware Street, I • • • resident reported Fnday. The loss Someone broke a window 1n the included a nflc wonh S 180. knives l8000blockofMt.Wash1natonStreet hS60 nd . l -i.SJl'l..L andstolea 19-tnchcolortelev1s1onsct wort 1 J~""; ~ WO•w 7V. valued at $400. Hand tools wonh S 1.00 I were BuraJars tot:: ~icrowavc oven reported stolen Suurday from an valued at $360 from 1 residence in the unlocked praac on the 16 700 block of 9000 block of Pearl Avenue. lrby Lane. • • • • • • . A resident of the 19200 block of Someone enttted a P~ m the Evenina Hill Onve told police Mon- 17000 block of Greenleaf Street ~~-day that someone blew up his stoic a red moped valued at S220. mailbot with 1 firecracker. The Bantmtton Beacla da~ -.'U nt~m:t~ at $20. B~akina a windo to enter some-Enterina throuah an unlocked pr· one bural1n1cd a blue 1976 Old aac door~. somCOM stole a blue mobile parked unday on the 7$00 or Ptuacot b~lc from a home on the Vol"Dri"e Thel included ereo 17100 block of Granada Lane. The equipment wonh StOO. 60 t lo estimated at S2SO. wonh $300 and $240 in cash. Someone b•.!.1!..o~ a home on • • • \N~l.....v A aotd Dauun pickup bur· the 300· bloc or 2nd treet by alaritcd .,,h11c parked in a c.arpon on entcrina th~ an unlocked rear the 17100 block of Ookkn w wi,ndo-..1rcs1dentre~rted Monda). trttt. Thelossincludeda~suiw The lo indudcd video and tcreo and a SSO razor. ~ui~nt worth S wale • ., • •onhS.SOand1t1mera nbSl70. I\ oman arre ted turday at • • • the J, C Penn :y tore at Huntinat.on 'cknt or the 17400 block of Cenm:. 7777 Edi A<v • on u.tpa· Cotonado Lane tokt police bi bl~ cion otthcf\. RccoVttcd wa 1 M.lltt Mo BMX biC')'Cle was tolm w-onh $46. f o y from the bike rack at OoC:an • • • Vinit Hi&h hool. The I meonc broke into a Yohitc and tirnated at SJ'° bu.-.und) 1971 Vol n con· • • • 'cn1bl parli.(d tul\Sa) on the 6SOO someone Sl le S 700 in h from a block of Wamtr A"cnu.c. The t purst end an ) S oair of cow boots from a home on lhe 7600 b1oclt of Commodore Circle. a resldent reported Monday. • • • A resident of the t 9200 block of Hardina Lane reported Monday that someone ~tole property from her 1984 Jeep CJ7. The loss 1nch.MSed a $300 camera arid IS c:asseue i.a}>cs wonh $120. • • • A home break-in was tq>Ortcd Monday by a rcsldcnt of the I %00 block of Sacramento Lane. A ICCOnd- story wmdow was pried open lO CJ'.Utr. The loss included a revolver worth $380, SS80 in cash. a sold and opal nna worth S80 and two bottles of wine wonh S 10. • • • A re ident of the 400 block of 14th treel rtported Monday that some- onc stol a~SOsetofaotfdu ~ his vehicle. • • • Someone punched out a loclt to buralan« a white l 981 Camaro par~cd on \he 6400 block of Warner A"enuc. The loss 1l\Cludcd tcrto equipment worth $300. : • • • • mcone Dried e>pen_ a iide doof lO bur&laritt Curtis Plasli 53ll f'ro.. duct1on Oriveovcrthcwcckend. t included SSOO in Vl ~uipmcnt wonb St ,SOO and a cam· era .. onb $600. . . . -A ~ l\d b\lra)ary MS reOofttd Monday 11 Coasthnc Coltctt'1 f'tt n Learnina._ Ceo , 20&62 fatlllWOttb Lane.• Tbe loM ncluded compu u pment w rth S6,000. • • • lOflllr' . b\lfllary re-~ onday by ~lf\.'ICr or an apenmcnt compk at 6'401 Wam A\C. Thel in ludedcarpet an.d tinol um nh Sl0.000 ' * OrqeCoul DAILY PILOT/TuMday, IJuly3. 1DS. ·~ • -=-- LAKEWOOO CENTER BU£NA PARK MAl.l BREA MALL N. ORANGE MALl LA~ HUS MAl.l t.1SS10N VIEJO MAU HUNTNJTOM CENTER SOUTH COAST PLAZA WESTMWSTER MAU LOS CERRITOS CENTER N..AND CENTER OE1. AMO CENTER Follow your team in the llilJ ~Hit - l:J. Sovietsn1ull 'Star Wars' talks WA.SHINOTON (AP} -Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin met for 90 minuteS toda~ whh Secretary of' State Oeora.c P. Shultz and said afterward they held a detailed dis- cussion of outstandinJ issues.. includ- ina proJ)Oled ncaouations to ban weapons in space. Dobrynin told rcJ)Orters that he was leavina later in the day for Moscow and that the talk.a with Shultz, held over breakfast at the State Depanment, were .. useful." .. We discussed the present state of Soviet-American relations because I am leaving today for Moscow," he said. ••So h was useful to go item-by- item and we discus~ of course, the proposal fo r the demilitarization of the cosmos." He declined further comment , ~ It was lhc fourth known mcetina between Shultz and Dobrynin ln the last three week.a, lncludin:y snsion last week at which Do nin de-- hvcrcd the Soviet proposa to hold talks in Vienna m SeplCmbcr aimed at bannina weapons in outer spaoc. Despite election'1'ear pressure to accept Mo100w'1 offer to neaotiate I ban on space weapons, presidential advisers believe Reapn should insiat on addina nuclear arms discussions to lhe aaenda to avoid seeming overly eager. A high-level administration official conc.eded that the administration realized it was risking a rebuff by the Soviet Union by proposing resump- tion of nuclear arms talks. Dir·ectors OK pact; avert Games strike HOLLYWOOD -Movie and TV directors on the West Coast over- whelmingly accepted a settlement that would avert a strike during the summer Olympics and political con- ventions, and officials predicted final approval tonight when East Coast directors vote. Gilbert Cates, president of the 7,300-member Directors Guild of America, said "it is possible, but not probable" that East Coast members would vote to strike. The strike previous offers." Cates said Monday night after the pact was approved at the West Coast general meeting. "We're happy there is no work stoppage. We feel that we have achieved an adequate package for our members," he told reporters. Mohday night's vote for lhe pan of the package covering free-lance direc- tors was I. 989-126, said guild spokes- man Richard Claussen. For tele- vision network directors it was 148-18. deadline is Thursday. • . ..We found _ there was substantia! Members of the guild in New York tmprovement over the producers ~ere to vote tonight. · NATION ---- Warner sells Atari, Inc. assets for $240 million BJ tbe A11oclaUd Preti NEW YORK -Jack Tramacl, who left Commodore International Ltd. af\er tumina it into the nation's leadina home-computer maker, now pl4ns to challenac Commodore's Jead with his newly pu~.hased ~mpany, ~tari, Inc. Tramiel and his assodites bou~ht the bulk of A tan sasseli, tn~ud~& 1t1 home- , computer and home-video drv1sions, from Warner Communacauo~s Inc. for $240 million in debt and other considerations. It was the end of a b•!terswee~ relationship between Atari and Warner, whose fortunes soared with Atan during the video-same boom of the early 1980s. then crashed when the craze finlcd two years ago. Atari, once one of Warner's biggest money makers, already lost ·SS73.5 million through the fi ve quarters ended March 31 . Teacher report sparks arguments MINNEAPOLIS - A report aimed at clearing the air on where the nation's large$t t~achers' union stands on issues like ment pay and teacher competency testing has instead become the springboard for the most heated arguments at the group's annual convention. Most. of the leaders of the National Education Association. includinf its president, Mary Ha~wood Futrell, support the 18-page study called ' An Open Lener to Amcnca on Schools. Students, and Tomorrow." But at least some of the 7,018 teacher delegates gathered here ha ve charged that the report is so vague that it might actually erode the union's credibility in the debate over education reform unless 1t is thoroughly revised. Woman taken off death row RALEIGH. N.C. -A 51-year-old nurse convicted of poisoning her mother, boyfriend and two other people was moved off death row after a U.S. Supreme Court justice stayed her Aug. 31 exe<:ution, and it is unlikely a new date will be set this summer, authorities said. Velma Barfield was moved Monday afternoon from Central Prison's 'Death Row back to Women's Correctional Center following the decision by Justice Warren Burger. Both facilities are in Raleigh. No woman has been executed in the United States in 22 years, and North Carolina has not put a woman to death in 40 years. Copter crew dies In search ONLY, Tenn. -Despite a helicopter crash that killed three searchers, an intense manhunt for three prison escapees went on today with scores of officers, dog teams and another helicopter equipped for scanning in the dark. A Tennessee Army National Guard pilot and two associate wardens from Turney ~Center prison died Monday when their observation helicopter.crashed near the medium-security facility, where the inmates had fled by jimmying cell locks -------------------------'--------------------------. and climbing..two fences in dense fog Sunday, authorities said. ----··--- Leasing means I can upgrade my telephone anytime. ''Fresh pain t, some new wallpape r. Whe n I redecorated the bedroo m, 1 figured why not change the pQoncs, too." Free phone upgrade "Because I lease my phones from AT&T, I <'a n exc hange my old l )lack ph one for a fancy Trimline " like thi s. And leasing means payi ng just a littJ e hit each month." Repairs at no extra charge "Thi s {>hone rloesn't just look hrreat. i t's )ui lt great, too. But suppose I did have a repair prohl em. L(>asi ng means AT&T will Pxe hangc it at no extra charge. I just call their toll-free number or take it to one of their Phone Centers." Leasing means relaxlng "There are three good reasons to lease a phone from AT&T: low monthly cost, repairs at no extra charge and free upgrade and exchange of equipment ... then there's the fourth reason. Leasing means I can relax!" AT & T Con•umer S.le• & Service Call th is toll-fret-number 24 hou rs a dnv 1·800-555-8111. This numtwr will connP('t you to tht' nffite in your art>u. CostaMeu Irvine rr!1. • ATlaT • Kqc••••r••ll ,.,..,1~mark or AT.t T, • ., c 111•• Ar•T C"••n•vm~ !I'll••• ll•"'k'• Anaheim Anaheim Plaza 500 N. Euclid St. Suite t09 3033 S~Bnstot St Suite A Eat Antihefm 2236 E Lincoln Ave. 14805 Jeffrey Road Suite F Mlalon Viejo Orange Town & Country m S. Main St. Suhe 11 24000 Alicia Parkway SP 34 • • \ . C~nstructlon spending, factory orders up WASHINGTON -Gains in factory orders and construction spending in May signal continued economic expansion, some economists say, but others are warning of a recession by year's end unless the federal deficit is cut. Orders to U.S. factories climbed 1.9 percent in May following a 3.4 percent drop in April, while construction spending rose 1.8 ~rccnt to counter a 1.5 percent April decline, the Commerce Department said Monday. Gunman allowed to burn LA FERIA, Texas -Firefighters allowed a house to burn down while a man was inside because he had wounded a police officer and they feared he might shoot someone else, authorities said. "No one knew if he was out or not. We didn't want our men to get shot," City Manager Tom Kolterman said after a charred body was found amon4 the rubble from Mond~. The victim's name was withheld pending positive identification after an autopsy today. Lawyer admits client killed two LOS ANGELES -A defense attorney stunned Jurors br, describing the burly ex-convict accused oft he notorious Trailside Slayings as 'a man who was out of control" who had killed two people. "He's a mess," attorney Larry Biggam said Monday as .his client, baldin_S. 54-year-old David C.arpcnter. fooked on. The surprise statements came on the finahi•Y--Of •rguments in Carpenter's trial on charges stemming from two rape and murder attacks in Santa Cruz County forests. Prosecution rebuttal was set for today before the case goes to the jury. Molest rilmbursement slow LOS ANGELES -The parents of two children allegedly molested at the Virginia McMartin Pre-School will have to wait more than a year to be reimbursed by the state's victims' compensation program for therapy to heal their psychological wounds. They and 28 other families whose children were allegedly molested at the Manhattan Beach preschool are among the growing number of people who have applied for California's Victims of Crime Program. Bacall, Peck given award LOS ANGELES-Laureh~Bacall and Gregory Peck, two of Hollywood's leading screen performers, received the Rudolph Valentino Award for lifetime achievement in the cinematic arts. The golden awards honoring the actress and actor were presented Monday during a dinner at the Century Plaza Hotel. Film clips featuring the work of Miss Bacall and Peck, including their co-starring 1957 comedy, ''Designing Woman," were shown. Dlablo not to blame SAN L!J~S OBISPO-Diab.lo Cany<?n nuclear power plant operators did not act mahc1ously when they fai led to disclose a 1977 audit critical of plant workmanship, a federal official said. No sanctions will be recommended against Pacific Gas & Electric Co., which owns and operates the SS. I billion seaside plant, Tom Bishop, director of inspection and enforcement for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said Monday. Viet vet on hunger •trlke SA~ ~ANCISCO - A Vietnam v.eteran who Is staiins a hunger strike for perm1ss1on to speak at the Democrauc National Convention has dropped · 20 pounds and lo&ks emaciated. a friend says. But Randy Taylor vowed Monday to continue his fast "until the end." Taylor, 37, ~as developed an irregular pulse from his 38-day hunger strike. "l never conceived it would go this far," Taylor said, adding that he will keep up the hun.g~r str~ke to focus at~entio~ on the plight of veterans and the dangers of U.S. military involvement 1n Lalin America. That's an Incredible shot MELBOURNE, Australia -Someone with .. hontndous hook has been playing havoc with airplanes landina and taklna off at Morabbin Alrpon. The A v1ation Department says it is investiptlng a collision on Monday between a plane and a aolfball over the alrpon. An department ss><>kesman said the plane wa.s landing at the alrpon when it was hat by a •olf ball which dented the PJtntwork. . "iflghtlst groups aaalJ Duarte SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Two riahtist political panics, ancludina one viewed as a po sible all)'. of the new administration, have published sting~na critiques of moderate President Jose Nap0leon Duane's flnt 30 days in office. The National Conciliation Pany, which ~maincd neutral in a May 6 runoff cltttton and dropped hints that it supported Duarte, published a newspaper advertisement on Monday cntllled "Thiny days or bid aovemment." Ez·l•raell cb.lel quizzed PARIS -Former bracli Pre idcnt Ephraim Katzir aaid today he was "d~ply offended" over bcin& intcrroaatcd f~ an b9ur &rut.a half'D' \he Soviet secret police af\cr he was p"vented from vlsitinA a Soviet Tew fn Lenin1t1cl Kattir said ~viet aulhori~~cs were aware he was a former president and 1u~s1cd &ht-1ntcrr<>P,tion ml&ht havt-been a mcasa to the refuseniks and any fututt or potential refusenilcs •• Cbrl•tlan• ta.te Guatemala lead GUA 1 l!MA:lA CITY -The centrist Chn1t1an Democratic Pany has taken. th~ lead m votma for an a semblJ ts charttd w th rcwnlln,a the constituuon to allow for a rttum to civih1n rule next y~.ar. The uprtmc E1cctoral Tr1bun~ id late Monday th11 1he C"hnstian Dcmocratin had 1 • 208.02• vote • or 17.6 P"C"Cnt of the total. • . ' .. ----.--~ Ottnge Coat DAILY PILOTt:r~. J4iy a. 1114 d tJ tY 4iFi 9-A--:-M. TO 6 P. M . . NEW STOREWIDE SAVINGS HAVE BEEN ADDED TO CELEBRATE OUR SUMMER SALE. WEDNESDAY ONLY. HURRY IN! TAKE AN EXTRA ---· 20% OFF THE MARKED SALE PRICE ON ALL DRESSES AND SPORTSWEAR FOR MISSES, WOMEN, -P~TITES AND JUNIORS. EXTRA 20% TAKEN AT CASH REGISTER. SWIMWEAR NOT INCLUDED. . 25% Off YOUMG MEM'S~ASUAl ¥ANTS. · 14.99 TO 20.8 Save on all our casual pants from Bugle Boy, Zeppelin an&-many more of your favorites in Young Men's 186. Reg. 20.00 to 28.00, 14.99 to 20.91. Young Men's, 186. 33% OFF ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S WEEKEND WEAR. 14.67 TO 36.69 Great take-it-easy styles from the most popular makersl Orig. 22.00 to 55.00, 14.87 to 31.U . Men's Activewear, 251 . 25% Off All BOYS' CASUAL PAKTS. 7.49 TO 18.00 Great savings on the most popular styles. All our boys' 8 to 20 casual pants, including the hot nylon parachute looks. Orig. 9.99 to 24.00, 7.41 to 11.00. Boys', 98. ...... .. . . . . SAYE 212.00 CONTEMPORARY II.I.ED ARM SOFA. &a.00 Orig. 900.00 . With P1raons leg1 and 2 coor- dinating accent pillows In bisque neutral tones. Furniture, 38. . SAYE 46% GALLERIA HURRICAJI LAii» FROM IBOl 6.99 Orig. 12.99. Assorted colors. Selection varies by store. Gifts, 70. . ----- 25% Off YOUNG MEN'S KNIT TOPS. 3.74 TO 27.00 All knit tops from Chams, Tomato, Zeppelin and Modz. Hurry in and take your pick from a terrific selection of stylesl S-M·L-XL. Reg. 4.99 to 36.00, 3.74. to 27.00. Young Men's, 53. 25% Off All lD'S SHORT SLEEYE, fUll CUT OR FITTED DRESS SHIRTS. 8.25 TO 15.75 Stock up on a selection of patterned and solid shirts. Reg . 10.99 toil .00, 1.26 to 11.17. Men's Furnishings, 7 /147 /218/431 . 25% OFF BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS. 3.74 TO 16.50 Summer's here1 Save on all knit shirts for boys 8 to 20, except Quicksilver. Orig. 4.99 to 22.00, 3.74 to 11.60 . Boys, 26 .. ...... SA VE 201.00 ' TRADmOUL CLASSIC WING CHAIR. 199.00 Orig . 400.00 . Plush acrylic velvet cover in brick, fawn, wine, or blue with reversible T -cushion seat a~d cabriole legs. Furniture, 276 . SAVE 40.00 • GllDPlJTE FLA1WAIE SERVICE FOi 12. . 159.00 Reg. 199.00. Monaco 65-pc. service for 12 with 6-pc. place settings and hostess set with tablespoon, pierced tablespoon, cold meat fork, sugar shell and butter knife. Silver, 59. • .. ._, •. - -.- SAVED SHARP 19" DIAGIW. COLOR POITlllE. · 259.00 Orig. 329.00. With automatic fine tuning and 1 1-year limited carry-in warranty. Televisions, 72. TAKE AN EXTRA 20% OFF THE MARKED SALE PRICE ON SELECTED INTIMATE APPAREL AND FASHION ACCESSORIES. PLUS ALL SHOES, MEN'S TD-' Isl~ all sai.,iced s~, r1Ms alll ...... fall slip, llall·slip, bib, cmiHIH, teddllS • • •! .-.... ttpu, ~, • ~nlap, Slllll lak pllls • lllSI ac cessaies, Ai.st Slloes, ,in Mlirltl, Betts, llli1' Ill Ill's Sims. EXTRA 20% TAKEN AT CASH REGISTER. cos• JEWELRY NOT lllCLm • 0 - 33% Off MEN'S DESICJIR JEAIS. --- 19.99 TO 26.6& You 'll find your favorite American and French names and status styles. Dark cotton denim, solid or striped. Reg . 30.00 to 40.00, 18.99 to 26.88. Men's Sportswear, 290. ......................... 25% Off All MEN'S HOSIRY ANO SWPwW. 2.25 TO 41.25 Save on hosiery, from dress to casual Styles. Reg . 3.00 to 8.50, 2.26 to 1.37. Stock up on robes, pajamas and slippers. Reg. 8.99 to 55.00, 1.74 to 41.25. Men's Furnishings, 164/281 . SAVE 50% KEYllOICS CORDLESS 1ll£PIDI . . 79.99 Orig. 149.99. Allows you to make and receive calls up to 700 feet from the base station. Telecommunications. 426. SAVE 226.00 BARCAlmER~ ROCKER RECLIMER. 399.111 Ong. 625.00. Tufted back with fully padded wrapped arms. Covered m wide wale corduroy of Herculon olefin Camel or chocolate Recliners 210 SAVE lU SAllO 65-PC. CHIU sn. . 89.99 Reg. 250.00. Includes 12 each of dinner-; salad, cup, saucer, soup/cereal and 1 each of covered sugar, creamer, 14" platter and 9" vegetable. China , 11. · .. SAYE 50.00 IWUVOX VHS VIDEO RECOIOEI. 449.11 Ong. 499.00. Frontlotd recorder with 14-dayf l -event timer, wired remote and elec· tronic tuning.Video Record r , 235. 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SOllY. II Pim Ol llAll. ORtDS. ' ' -. :-. . •' r . A.8 Oran Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuooc:tay, July 3, 198• . ·Mondale feeling the heat of picking a potential veep. NORTH OAKS, Minn. (AP) - Working to pul into placc the final parts of the puzzle of a united Democratic Pany and a peaceful national contention. Walter F. Mon- dale still has two m.;otpieees missing -one labeled "The Rev. Jesse Jackson" and the other "Vice Presi- dent." · Mondale was going to work today on one of the elemen ts, meeting with Jackson in )lansasCi ty, Mo., for what he hopeVS"a_ unity session like the one with nval Sen. Gary Han in New York. The probable Democratic nominee spent Monday working on selecting a runnihJ mate. He mterv1ewcd Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, the N(w York Democrat at the top of many lists for the job. Mondale pronounced her 0 quaJi,. fied .. and a ''truly impressive~· leader after a three.hour meeting at his home. Ferraro said Jhe wanted tb~ job to help defeat Ronald Reagan in the fall, but that she wouldn't be part of an effort at the Democratic National Convention in San Francisco two weeks from now to challenge his choice if that choice is a man. Both Mondale and Jackson were scheduled to address the annual convention of the National Associa· tion for the Advancement of Colored People after their noontime meetina in privace. · Mondalt has been under increasina pressure from female supporten and other feminists to name a woman as his runnina mate, with Ms. Ferraro the choice of many or those women. But Mondale shruaacd it off, includ- ing pressure from the National Or- ganizacion for Women, after his meeting with the congresswo,man from Queens. ..Dealing' with pressure is basic~Jly what a public leader does .... That's politics," Mondale said. Karel·· barrel of peril NEW LOW PRICE! THE BEST-SELLING PORTABLE COMPUTER REDUCED '200 Karel Soucek, of. Hamilton, Ont.. (lmet) rldea Inside hl9 barrel to the brink of the Bone.hoe Palla at Nlacara Palla ju~ aeconda before!Cunatnc to the bottom to become the e th ~n to do 80. Be auffered only m or IDJUrtea. TRS-80® Model 100 Comes Ready to Use! Supreme Court rules Jaycees must admit female members • Pereonal W9..rd. Processor • Auto-Dlal Telecommunlcatlona • Address and Phone Directory • Date and Appofntment Scheduler --=--- • BASIC Programming Language ' u:ory 599!! AS LOW AS ·= w .. $799.00 In cat. RSC-11 .. 24K TRS-80Model100NowOnly1799 (126-3802, W• S999.00 In Cat. Aac-11) Don't be misled! The TR8-80 Model 100 is the lnfoWOOd9andPortable1009 magazines! Frts in fly batt~ated portable computer with your briefcase with room to spare, and features 1ve management programs and a direct-an ~ine by 40-character display and fuU-size connect tektphone modem built In! It was even typewriter«yte keyboard. Communicates by selected "Hardware Product of the Year" by phone with Information networks. Summer Computer Camps for Ages 8·15 Now In Session at Nemby Radio Shack Computer Centers-:--Enroll Todayl CH£Cl YOUR PHOHE IOOIC FOR THE PARllCIPATING ladle llMlek STORE. COMPUTER CENTER OR DEALER NEAREST YOU A DIVISION Of TANDY CORPORATION a PRICES APPLY AT RADIO SHACK COMPUTER CENTERS ANO Pil.RTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS • CITILINE IS A SERVICE MARK Of CITICORP YIEll RITE /-....... WASHINGTON (AP)-The Su- preme Court, in a ruling that could threaten the male-only status of some organizations, said today states may force the Jaycees to admit women as full members. In a 7-0 decision, the court upheld a Minnesota public accommodations law that state officials say requires the Jaycees to grant full membership to women. The ruling's impact on other male- only organizations as well as groups whose memberships are based on religious belief or national origin is not clear. The justices reversed a federal appeals court decision which said the Jaycees, under the Constitution's right of freedom of association, may exclude women. By overturning the appeals court ruling, the high court sided with the Minnesota Supreme Court, which said the Jaycees are covered by the ublic accommodations law and thu~ RUfFELL'S UPHOLSTIRY, INC. f• the lat .,,_ Ufe 1922 HUl(l IUD .. COSTA IEA -541-115' ~rnv 1mrnr 111 dw LP1hw~1rncn1 m;irkt•r Our fl«xrhl<' rww i1J'pni.1d1 t<1 C[)., .111u· ~ 11h Amcn1 .in 'i,I\ 1111!' \lv{.'rl' the n:mon' lar).! .illy lt'I'-ynu <lc1erm1ne I h1•1r \I:\', 11•rm :ind r.11<' 1,t ...,l\'lni?' .md lo.m ""h 11\l'r $~I htllion rn Th(' more you dc~n .. md 1hl' lnnan ynur c;in ch.1ngt· qudly. C1ll uur toll·fn:c Ratr Hot· l1m· ;it 18001 ZZ7-X57 I weekdays hcrwecn Ham find 8('m Or v1'11 ;iny Americnn SavinJ?S cifrcc • t,'l'I' Th.11 ' \\'h.11111.1~1· ... 111 otfn you h11.:h rt·nn 1h1· morl' you t'ilm v1cl.l< n m\~lnwn111rrort11nttlt .... likt'th1'11nl' Hut don'r d cl.1y. h1:C':lll'l.' !ht''(' r.11n ~ AMERICAN SAVINGS \1 """""' r1·nn 111 '• mnnth• "11'1 ~~11.lll'ICI m1n1mum drp.1111 .o\pf>I•~• tu tcmu /mm /HO to JW du"Vs \ubm.mual AND LOAN ASSOCIATION /, n.i/h /m ""ii "111,./.,,,. ,,/ r\rin1wl "dJ h(lk·J on 1ump.111ndm~ "llC'll '"lt'ffH 11 le/I 1111 dt/wiui /M rhr C'llllrt "'tlfAVIC( Of f NANCIAI. ~AfnN OF AMHllC'.A 1 .,m A/.,,,. ''"' "'/,/ 11n1/ lt'mh 111/11r<1 lo dvmRe u 11hm11 nn11.r A .. 1111110 1n11•rt1l up to $/()(),()()() COSTA MfSA NN ~ Ar"i"I (>71l Q~)O ITTIKESlll lllEllnt GA RDEN GROVE ll 141 t 1.1rJt•n C 1rm ~· RIHI 1 H ~tiQO HUNTINGTON BEACH 71'13l1 l Jm~•t·r A\'t' LAGUNA HlL~ 2408i EI 'fom Rd 770.l~lb t 'i4~ 2Zll SEAL BEACH Ml P:mhr C'clN H11ehwav q4.si c;s 11 TUSTIN Ml ( I 1 Sm-e r ~H hSI ORANGE 1965 N Tu tin 974·1b20 cannot bar women. instance, arc "large and basicaUy Justice William J. Brennan, in the unselective f.Oups,~· ~~nan said. coun opinion, drew .heavily fr~m Th~c~apters la~kdi.stancovechaf:ac-t state officials' arguments in sµ>tltli.....J~Q~\1.g_jbat m1~t ~fford • ..£0J!S~llu-__ that the Jaycees were different from t1onaJ protection o the decmon o the Kiwanis Club for example. members to exclude women," be The Jaycees' local chapters, for said. IN MINUTES BE GOLDEN BROWN GRAND OPENING SPECIAL •..Vfl ...,. ..... ABK BOUT OUR •A TIBFACTION GUAllANn• SOUTH COAST FIT&. FIRM 3500 8. BRISTOL • 545'"'803 Sutt• 200 -'-4 mite North of South Coast Ptaa Cout 8-nk Bulldlng ,.....,, .......... THE RELAXING SOUNDS OF IH,_E HARBOR KDCM tDB.t FM STEREO to bztta.r 9Z.rW. your .. holiday shoppif19 naad~ ... \Mill l::xz. opzn tomorrow, ~nczadoy, july4th from ~ 100.m to 6p.m • 1· .. • ~!Coelt~LVPt&..OTn~Nlf3.1_. 7 INTERIOR I EXTERIOR WHITE LATEX PAINT SJ!! IA&.I .... J GM.. _., •• ~ i'----·--" 2 GM._' -ti.00 You. lmT COST 'S!'.!. PRESTONE WINTER /SUMMER ANTI-FREEZE • unsuroassect coollno svstem protec· 0 ANTIQUE BRASS 52" CEIUNC FAN WITH · . LICHT KIT _sag•• CAMPIE HAUSFElD POWER PRO 1 H.P. TWIN CYLINDER AIR COMPRESSOR tJon for vour car OSCILLATING PORTABLE 2 SPEED 9" FAN ,, ••• 'r x 4· x 8' ECONOMY CRADE STUDS • use on new and nardboard stdlno. easv clean-up. <3VH4()) ~249" • 100 PSI maximum pressure. 78~ • t.arve 11 oanon tam. IVT9101>. 9 . )( 12" SV• CU FT. PORT AILE REINFORCED CONTRACTOR STEPPING 5 SPRINKLER sir x 1s· WHEELBARROW STONES SYSTIM GARDINHOSI -····. 44L ,, ••• '8!!~ t ALL B·B·O CRILLS .NOW ... 15% OFF OUR REGULAR LOW PRICE GALVANIZ£0 STEEL YARDSAVER 4' x 7' SHED s99aa TYPE 4050 26"' WIDE 'STRIPES FIBERCLASS 8' PANEL •108,.!1 • Tougn, snatterproof panets 10' , .... 1,. , ... PlASTIC HOSE 3 GALLON 1 ST\JROV ECONO 4' RAIL SHUT-OFF~ 'Y' w I PLASTIC PUMP CAP,FAN PRAY SPRAYER SECTION 98~=-'2188 , ••• • Comptetelv aOJuSUble and wnlsoer Quiet <BIB-12> "' All ALUMINUM EXTENSION 16'LADDER '1888 ... ·-·· - • Hardwood handles IO &.a. IAC • waters three 20 ft. 1 ~.nm.NOii • <LE07VILUOOC/LE08YO • Reststanc~ to 3ddS. • 211 ~ t11on ~Jusat>te. • Enamet flntsn. OCCP.5). ~Tl -I.Ill ClrdeS Cl.E113.+4l MMOm • ... CUCAMONCA: 9775 BASELINE RO IL MONTI: 12260 E GARVEY • CAIDINA: 13999 S W£STERN ~ CIOVI: 12662 CHAPMAN MUffT1NCTC* II.ACM: 1800 EOCNG It LONC;llACH: 2.511E SOUTH1T. •VU.: 15353 CULVER OR - 1714l 980-0212 1818> 443 69SS 12131 S32·28U 1714175().3441 17141847-6066 C213t428-7S6\ t7j4t SS2·Slbaf WOOOUM> HtL&.S. 22940 V1CTORV NOllWALK: 10935 E FIRESTON • ONT~2314S MOUNT~N POllC*A: 655. NORTH Mil LS ~ 10351 MAGNOllA OIANGeSHOW .. f818t S48.a&SO 12131868 9991 1714) 5·3844 17141624· 1693 17141687 2054 17141889 9661 12131~M122 1714) 919 8181 ii 119951 '"· _ .... HOMECENnA8 .. Dems concocted confusing mes_s for state voters Almost a month after the June 5 pnmary elect1Q1:h pnc thina and maybe only one is absolutely clear about that ballotmi; The new system Democrau used to select their prcs1· denual convention deJeptes 1s the most confused mess Californians tutvc.ever bad to cope with. And it's obvious the system must bC chanaed. Not oruy dad many Democrats not know who to vote for or how many holes to punch. but some oven felt they could not stomach votina for the presidential candidate they liked best. This happenstance befell some voters because of one unique aspect of the state law that created this year's fouled·UP system. Californians were the only pnmary clcct1on voters in the nauon who couldn't vote directly for the can- didate of their choice. Instead. they had to vote for Joe Smith -or in some d1stncts, as many as seven Joe Smiths. The candidate's name was wntten beneath would-be delegate Smith's t\ame, but in much smaller type. And 1f the voter detested Smith but hked Smith's prcs1denllal candidate, he bad to choose whether to vote for a delegate he rca.lly didn't want or to waste all or part of his vote. What's more, some Democratic votes counted for more than others. At least. some Democrau got to cast more ballots than others. This was because delepies were elected by congressional itistnct, with each dis- trict' s quota determined by how strongly it voted Democratic ID 1980 and 1982. Some districts got as few as three delegates. others up to seven. All this explains why many voters weren't quite sure who tbey voted for. And it explains why the polltalcers and televmon analysts had such difficult tlmes figunna it all out. The one person most dehr.htcd with all the confusion was probably Secretary of State March Fon1t Eu. lHo•s Ellis Eu bas fought for the last four yean against early television projections of election results, claimina projections of Ronald Rcaaan's landslide win in 1980 based solely on early . Eastern voting caused about 400,000. Cali- fomfa voters to stay away from the polls. Those votes wouldn't have changed tbe presidential outcome, but they might have affected the rcsulu of several close leaislative and congressional votes. What better way to act back at the TV networks than by crcatina a system that makes ex.it pollina un- reliable and projections a near im- possibility? But revenge against television is not sufficient justification for a system that deprives many Cali- fornians of the ability to comfonably back the candidate of their choice or to feel certain they know bow to express that choice. Nor does it justify giving one voter more clout than another just because be lives in a solidly partisan district. Some other resulu of the California primary may have been unclear and muddled for a while, but one thina was obvious before the primary and it's also obvious today: The new Democratic system is unfair and unworkable and it must go. Legislators have until 1987 to make the change, but change is a must, especially for a party that takes such loud pndc in supporting the one- man. one.vote principle. TbomH Ell•.1 l• • Sue. Moolc•· IM•ed colr111ull•t oo •&ate 1 .. 1H. Your nose takes trip down memory lane You know how certain odors take you instantly back to your childhood? SC\wdust. Creosote. Varnish. Burnt rubber. Kelp. Attic dust. Banana oil. Gun smoke. Whatever. There's a reason. The olfattory nerves arc wired directly to the brain. All other senses pass through intermediate gateways. What you smell 1s not processed before 1t rcgJstcrs in your brain. onl y after. -The westernmost pan of Alaska 1s farth er from the CMtemmost pan of Alaska than San Francisco 1s from New York Cit), I'm told. Here's a note from a dcpanmcnt store detective who calls himself a counter spy. The gJ ue on Israeli postage stam ps 1s cendied ko!>hcr. Q. lf"dry aoods" are dry, what arc "we1 goods'-1 A Lot of early stores were run by New En~and merchant shippers. Their main cargoes were calico and · rum Tl'lcy put the cloth on one side of the store and the rum on the other. Q. How niany babies arc born every year in 11is country to fathers over the age of SS? A. About 7,000. Q. Which of the United States was named after Julius Caesar'? A. You must mean New Jersey. It was named after England's island of Jersey, and thAt's a corruption of Caesar's island. Our Langua$C man has seen fit this week to enunctate such negatives as: "No. debrief doesn't mean take off )'our shorts." "No, nobody ever strolls chalantly." "No. you don't have lo be buked to gel rebuked." Likelihood that a scientist will marry a scientist is five times greater than the likelihood an artist will marry an artist. Bamowls snore. L.M. Boyd I• • •yadlcattd colum· al•t. - ''The new system Democrat used to select their presJdenttal convention delegates Js the most confused mess Californians have ever hadtocopewtth." JACK AIDERSOll Soviet arsenal aimed at Amerlc4 U.S. threatened by 'intermediate' range missiles WASHINGTON -What Presi· dent Rcapn di1misted in early April as "rcaular and routine maneuven'' by the Soviets turned out to have been a massive, unp~cnted cxerciee that included the launchina of lb nuclear mis.sites toward the United States. They were presumably un- armed. Published reports described the peat number of Soviet wanhlps that left Arctic and Baltic seaports for war games in the North Atlantic. ~t Pentagon tallies showed just bow huge the flotilla was: at least 13.5 surface ships and 70 submarinca, includina nuclear-missile subs ih their l&J"&Clt deployment ever. Now my associate Dale Van Atta bas learned from intclli&enc:e sources and biahJy classified reports that the exercise was more ominous than evtJ! the numben suagcst. One source sa¥f it appeared to be part of a combined conventional-nuclear war plan. For one thing, the CIA discovered that an entire Soviet city was evacu· atcd durina the exercise, in a test of civil defehse measures th.al would accompany a nuclear strike. Even mor'CI. significantly, the CJt· ercisc supported the Pcntaaon•s suspicion that the Soviets' supposed· ly intermediate-ranac SS-20 missiles may now have to be counted as inten:ontinental missiles capable of bitting targets in the United States. It was the SS-20's massive deployment in Eastern Europe that prompted the decision to arm NATO with new U.S. Euro-missiles. The Defense Intelligence Agency bad spotted something pecuJiar - and alarmina -about some oTtbe mobile SS-20s located in northern Ruuia early in 1981 : The launchers appeared to be aimed at the United States, not Wcstcm Europe. The CIA pointed out that the SS-20'1 range was believed to be ~.000 kilometers maximum (about 3,100 miles) -not areat enough to reach imponant U.S. ta11ets. The CIA su .. estcd the missiles miaht be dcsaaned to "roll oNer" after launct\,ina and head toward Europe. This araument won the day. But after April's ta.raMcaJe Soviet war pme the CIA is now concedin& that the SS.20 may have to becounted as an ICBM. What chanaed the aacncy's mind was that the Soviets launched six of the missiles from ~e western town ofYurya on a northern trajectory -that is, on the polar route toward the United States. The missiles, presumably armed with ony dummy warheads, were destroyed after they reached outer space. But the very fact of their launchina demonstrates that hun- dreds more nuclear misliles may be aimed at the U.S. mainland than bad previously been thought. Theydidn'tcallhim 'Dry Hole' for -nothing Herc's why: Top-secret estimates put the number of mobile SS-20 launchers at more than 400. Each launcher is believed to have five missUcs, and each SS-20 carries three independently targeted.. warheads capable of 1 baJf.mcpton nuclear blast. That meanu totalofmore than 6,000 warheads. The SS-20's efficiency is friabt- ening. The Defense lntelli~nc:e Alfncy estimates that the missile's warheads can hit within 28S meters (about 314 yards) of their taratts more than half the time. and that its launch ~liability is 9S percent, its in- nlaht reliability 97 percent, and its warhead reliability 97 percent. The weapon system's overall reliability i1 He was sure there was oil under East Texas field -and It turns out. there Indeed was In las1Tuesday'sScarchhght 1 told you that. today. I would tell yo u the story ofhow D. Harold Byrd of Dallas, Texas who was cozened 1 nto putting up money to tum Harry Welch Memorial Park from a beach park into an active amu~ment park. Fir't you 'II have to kn ow who D Harold Byrd waHand~ hope~t1ll 1s) So far as I know, he is still alive and a veg nice auy he 1s and was. H wasa very nch man indeed· for two reasons He made a lot of money 1n 011 and he mamed a Miss Caruth. whose famil y owned all of the land which btcame downtown Dal· las. It was Harold's pride that he ne ver u5C'd any of Mrs. Byrd's mone} for anyofh is b1&Khcmes "Just m)' own money that I ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ca med," he used to say. Sound a little bit like a Smith· Barney c;ommercial? H1swayofearn1ng was ex- traordinary. In Texaso1l circles, bis 1nit1als were claimed really to stand for"Dry Hole" Byrd . Kc was one pf the principal developen of the Eut Tcxaso1l field. As a graduate ae<>IOJist he had studied the area and was convinced there wa'I 011under1t-arcat aobs of it It turned outjust the way he proJtttcd, bu 11 t took a Iona tfme. +le 1s reputed to have finan~d lnd dn lled 19 dry holes before a discovery wtll came in. Knowtn~H~~s J do; I'd be wllhng to make k tnat the l~nd 11 true.Even when he would set hold of what looked hkt a hopeless . H. L Scttwutz.W Pubildt'4f Cha~ Oowatlbf EO•IOf 1no A I~ to lhe Publfshet ~,..1 •••Y doty 111 ,.,. ,_., •t JJO W•.i R.oy I.it Qotta ~ Aa;,t .. t COf• ... ~· IO Roi 1-.eo Coot• MPM CA 1'1\lfl Frank Zlnl Att«•tt• ( dtlOt Tom Tatt cu~ rcti101 / propos1t1on. he would sink his Jaws into 1t and keep on trying. That's what happened at Harry Welch Park. By this tunc1 the develo~ment promoters haa succeeded in planting enough stories with the radio and newspapers so that the old-timers on the Ora nae Coast Weekly went alona. They called it Newport Dunes. WALTER Bu11oucHs Poor Harry Welch! Thest Newport Dunes fellows werep-eat promoters What they didn't know(or foTJ.Ql) but sure as thunder they were no liquor sales, at that time were for- accountants. They made a project.ion bidden on county-owned property. as to what it would cost to aCQOmplish Byrd tried to &et the Board of all the improvement• in their pJan. Supervisors to waive that rcquire- And the~ also projected the income ment. Hi1efforu cove~ 1everal they beheved It would be produce. I years but not unlll af\er be had taken don't rcoicmbcr all the clements of his losses and aone home w111t the plan but I do remember a ftw. pos 1bletohavea licensed baron Forcxample, tbeyprojectcda NewponO\r.net. mcrry·ao-round, a Ferris wheel and Harold wat the founder of the an icesbdnarink.a much biger -Nataonal CiVJban Air Patrol which 1erics ofboat dockt and a hotel. One • did ~eoman service both before and of the bif eamcrs was to be the bar in dunna Wos:fd War 11 •. That was just the hote and an addi tionaJ hquor one ofh11 b11 cntcrpnsa. A nolher peddlina operation. was an cnormou1drum, upward of 12 Almost HID anerthouaht, the feet 10 diameter, which he bou.aht for promottrt had disc4vcred that DH the Uni~ityofTcxas band. Byrd wau sucker for bowhnaallc)'s. No matter. Old Dry Hole Byrd wu So they puta bowlinailtey lnto tht indeed a deh~dul pcnon. He uted to plan. drop into the Pilot about twi~ or Asrrprnco\Cd to Byrd. the thttetJmesaweelund moan over the promoters thou&ht the variouuttrac-trutment h wa aclhn& from u1 t1on~would produccenoujh income JousyCaJifoml1n1.0noncofthcsc to yield hand80me profitand auhe vi11ts,huaid, "J h~r you'rra umtumtpayolTcheinvcstmtntin mcmbcrofthatclub1n n Francisco IO ycarsorlc-s1 tluthasthcp tsummcrcnc.mp- ment. .. I admitted it. Said D.H., "Boy, I'd Jive almost anythina ift could Jet an invitation to that summer affair." I carcf ully~explained to him how it was very difficult for me to ~ve him any hope that I CX>uld set an invitation for him. That panicularyear, 1 to1d him, I had cominaalona time friend of mine who was publisher of the New York Herald Tribune and tb&t I had committed mytelfto&Jvean invita· ti on to several other people in succeedinnears. ByrdJookedudisappointcdathc did when the Board ofSupervilors tumcdhim~own. Bu t, towuaaehi disappoinmcnt I said, "Harold, J'rn tembly 10rry. lfat lhould ha~n lhat one of those I've already inv11td is forced todcdlne, l'IJ act in touch with you." About two or th rec weeks later Byrd was in my office as usual. My tcereWycame 1nand said "WaJtcr the Herald· Tribune is on the line." i picked up the phone, it was my friend BobWb1te. Not remcmbcrina that O.H. wuthm, I U11tnedandtalkcd. Al I did SO, I could tee Byrd I tart to arin. He raliud tht1 wu notice of the Yal'M'lcy I had prom11td him. l'vcnever naman h.avcsomu\;h fun a he did that ummer. Wtllw •• ,,...,., u &N l'l#ol '• , ...... ,..,,..,,. 89 percent. · Even thote who still qucstibn whether the two-stage SS-20 could be an intercontinental missile must con· cede that its thrcc-staac version -the SS.16 -is a tested f CBM. And tdJ>- aecret reports point out that tbe Soviets have more than 400 SS. l61 that can be loaded onto SS-20 launchers. In fact, they estimate that the Soviets have three operational SS-16 reaimcnta, with 12 launchm each, at Plcsct&k riaht now. BOONOOOOL£0FTHE WEE.I{; The are hard times indeed for American fanners. But the Walh1 • ton official• who abould be help( them are Uviaa haah off the bot. Acx:ordina to aariculture citl)C(U. about SO family ~nns ao broke ev~ diy. One caute of their demise 1 t rcstrictlve loan poJ ci of billlk• rqulatcd by the Farm Cru!it A.dm1n· isaration. And Yth11e fann after fa~ a aoina on the auction bloc~ the F~ Credit bu~aucrau have just moved lMtr swivel chairs into a luauriou $25 million new hcadquanen. Jact AM ,.. 11 • IJMkelf'd to/rta./tr. . Paal C. Mu pa ha ~n appointed vice president and aenerl.I man acr of the Southern California reaional office of Bltlaot Ha••· Com- m rctaJ/ladD1trl11/lovett n Rffl Estate Brokeraae. The ttaional office was opened rtccntly in Co1i. Meu u an e~pansion from Northern California and Ort'&on. ManpnJoans Bi~hop Hawk with 12 years of experience in the~ estate industry. Ke is a member of the National Assoc1atron of Reahon and holds a tcacbina credential in {Cal estate. " • • • New~rt Bca~h·bued KlDelle Compater y1tem1 has promoted Mlc'8el tu to vice president of product development, where he will be '"PC)nsibtc for product enhancement. custom proaramm1na prOJttts and overall sales upport. Dolan is the founder of Dome Sy1tem1, a computer systtms business lhat mcl)Cd with Kinetic Computer Systems. Kinetic has also added Woocl1 Lue to us marketina staff. Lane will be reponsible for mark'et development and promotional projects and systems marketing. OrigjnaUy trained as an enaineer1 Lane has held positions in marketin& and mamangement and has managco owenrsh.ip positions in computer-related businesses. Kinetic specializes in hardware and software for manufacturina, distribution and account in&. • • • • Jody Smltla of Costa Mesa has been promoted to to assistant investment processor with responsibility for in-house appraisals at Coraentoae Corp., a mortaaae brokeraic firm tteadquanered in Irvine. ReplaciOJ her in her prcvfotis posf u administrative assistant is Sbaroa Jeula&• of Mission Viejo. She will take on responsibility for payroll, office purctWina, personnel and financial information. • • • Irvine-based Alpb Mlero1y1tem1 has selected Nlkl Crtaer as the company's new controller. Criner previously served as audit manaaer in the Orange County office of Artllar Yoan1 Ir Co., certified public accountants. Alpha Microsystems desians, manufactures and markets a family of mteroeomputers. • • • Qrl.1 L. Ledl has JOtned The ED&luder Groap .. a Newport Beach advcnisina and public relations agency, as account coordinator. Most recently, she was a marketina assistant for a San Diego marketina consultant, where she pthered and analyzed food and bcvera&c market data. • • • Jou Welte has been appointed materials ma~r for Pluley SolcU S&ate, an Irvine-based circuit developer and supplier. Weise was formerly PJcuey's sales office manager, with responsibility for customer service. In her new post, she will oversee the company's material resource plannina system and direct the activities ofa support team. • • • Gloria Ztper recently attended from a conference on entrepreneurial management at Harvard Ba11Det1 Scbool in Boston. Zigner, president of Marketing business group t opic Dennis Oark will speak lo Tbt Business Development Association ofOranae County at noon on July I 1, 1984, at the Newport Sheraton Hotel in Newpon Beach. , Gloria ZJper4' Alaoctatea ofNewpon Beach was a.mona 120 member of the Committee of 200 who attended tbe three-day event. The group is a national organization of senior women business leaders from a variety of industries who meet regularly to share their experiences. Oark is an expert in two marketing areas; telemarketing and scientific lestin& of advertisements. Currently be is usina telemarketing to sell his servioes as an advenisinJ consultant and to syndicate articles in national business trade publications. He uses a r::=========================:r--;:========;-.;.. format for selling by telephone, which • • •• CocHalae Cbue, Ltvla11toa Ir Co. has moved from frvine to new quancn in Newport Beach. The move lo S Civic Plaza marks a return to Newport Beach for the 17-year-old advenisin4 and public relations firm, which operated from offi~ in tbe Wells Far10 buildin1 for five yean be'fore moving to Irvine in 1979. The new office provides needed room for growth. accordina to CoeUue Cbate, founder and chairman of the agency. enables him to establish positive business relations wt th better than 70 percent of his cold call contacts. OvER THE CouNTER Family 'loans' taxed ·as gifts 1 Making interest free demand loans to family members hu long been 1 tax savina technique . For funher information, contact Kathy Prater. director of marketina. Coleman/Caskey Architects. at ..76-1010. . Typically, a pa~nt in a hi&b tax bracket lends money to a chifd in a fower or zero-tax bracket. The child then invests the money and plyS no income w or less tax on the earnings than the parent would have to pay. The overall talt bill for tbe family has been decreased, and the parent can .. dema.nd" repayment of the loan at fi~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l1 any time. ' The U.S. uprcme Court, in its recent Dickman decision, hu ruled that such ioterclt free lo ns m "transfers ofpropeny by gif\" and arc •ubject to the Jift w . The amount of the gift ls the current market interest tatc on the loan, not the principal of the lotn (which praumably will be re~jd). 1'he lRS plans to apply the 01ckman dttis1on rclroactivt"I}': . Jhcrcfo~. anyone who ha made an / mtettSt free loan may be liablt foe aH\ taxca. Thcdtt1s1on does notcliminttcthe benefit of interest free Loans entirely. \:1ThoSlO,OOOannu1l 11ft tallt udu ion still ~t'T1)its a t•Jtpeycr/lendcr to &in uptoS10,000(S20,000onjoint lift) to any individual ch year. izcabk Joans an tht~foR ~ made bcf'oR &in tax li1b1hl¥ is ancurrca. 'funhcnnore, cven.tfthe loan trc so tarae that tbc .. aifltd" interest would ~ceed the annual clu11on, th~ 1 1upa)cr'1 ••unin~ (rcdit .. may till • ( keep him from havin& 10 pa~ &iR t&.\, Theo cumnt unified credit aJlo S32S,000 to bt" tran rcrttJ ta•·f iu: this amount in re~ 1n incttmcnu to $600.000 by I 87. • '· .. A//o,.'Ja'/. Jb1,.;nv1 of,.,.c~ a11J ;/);,.,.,,. CONTINENT AL SPECIAL TIES ;J~. V.·i;,., ofo111•1r Cowcrli~l•r:r dlo-,, :J',,, • .,,..~ O,,/f,1 -1 ,,,,. lv.ni1111 ol ti.. g,..,.J Pl•tto, .f _. _K.lliJ e1.w .s,,,.J.,. 695 Town Center Drive, Costa Mt 751-2820 CLASSES FOAMING NOW IN ORANGE COUNTY •I TOW Ml> COllf\'1l"f OM& ~ .....,,"' Y£~1?J t1al tuition d1KOunta by ,.. ACAOSS FAC* 8UU.0Cl<S F~ SO SANTA Nu. .. ~OUI ~ Dlilyllillt 642-5678 ten11"9 cl ..... now _..._.•--. THE OUT IS ON! AT GREEN RIVER BY oean- JULY 6th, 1984 m!l17,990 5'1"-u" 7 ~ <\ 11t ... h11111 ~ F.amdy Del.ic~1 Hctl!f' Official Campout Rules and Regulations I. ll you or a membtr of )iour part}' should I ave the area. you must check our \\ith a Deant Hom Otfioal. t. ~u should register with a Deanl' Home fftdal at sale area -locat~ at th Gsttn River Sales Area 5. B!i!to )our own food. camping gear. ~tc ~ . .-- 1. Emergenqr Md «)' rvt will tK- cProVidfd if nttdtd. 5 . L hltng. rlty • ~ troom fadllti . Im 7. Falhft to bt ~tnUM. nt m •. 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' LAl••O ti s• • I l:=r~ ,. , 10U 'h;:: : ~~'·' 4 • JO '1~:-• to~ of3 "° II 21'•+ • tewlt;' i la 15' Ii ·1 ~l:l":t 11 lll 'j,: tL ::~,. .t2 ~ 24: ~ :r.t~ 1,'! ii ,ij! i}~~ ; ~:!,~~r': •i t t.,t~l ~ ::r's ' 101 t': t 1-!:'l,,. 14 ·~-" &ul4 11 sa. i.; ;Me, n I , • - TU£SDArs CLOSING Pl Dow JoNE S AvERAGES WHAT NYSE DID NEW YORK CAP• Jul. 3 ~ Tl ·~"'· ovw~o ~• I' ' ~twlowa 6 NYSE L£AOER S UP s AND DowN s WHAT AM EX DID NEW YORK (AP) Jut. 3 Adv":r ~,nged ¥otal nues New highs Newtow1 AMEX LEADER S NEW YORK (AP) -S.leS, T~y price and net ctt.nGe of the 10 most 111 Amerrcan Stock E11challff luues, tra nci nationally at more lhmSl. ..._ , ... Anthemi , 1~-+ ~1 ~nd•nceO , 1 + 1'4 ~f>T~B '. 2 J. j1 = ~ Y~c'°;~. 1i: 11~ -" s~t~~ ! , H*4 -•• ~a'~J2PfV :1 Utt -,,. NASDAQ SUMM ARY GoLo Qu o1£s METAL S Quorr s That· s an apt description of-both business and business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of where companies are gotngandwntch people are helptng...,,__----~ them get there, just watch ·credit Line' -every day tn the Business section of your n.ew Daily Plllt - First love teaches us about trust Talk about first love and most people get starry eyed. I thipk about Howard. Howard has always been in my l.JIDI la.cm life in one way or •••••••••••ill another. He is the son of my Mom's oldest friend. Our Dads played in the same card game each week. Together, we learned about love, caring, trust and friendship. I look back with nostalgia to the time we spent together. We felt quite grown-up at 16 and 17 and were cenain that ours was a true and everlasting love. We laughed and went on picnics. We had loo of friends but were q~te content to spend inordinate amounts of time alone together, solving the world's problems as well as our own. We shared a mutual commitment to family and to the importance of education. We helped each other study and write papers. Our Ii ves were going to be wonderful ... separately and together. The three and a half years we were adolescent lovers -or whatever that meant some 20 years ago -provided an important foundation for all the more recent relationships in my life. And my relationship with Howard had even earlier roots. In the truly psychological sense, first love has to do with the Jove bond we form with one OT both parents. We can be free to develop realistic expectations from the people we love, only if our first experience with Mom and/or Dad included enough warmth and security. It is a result of these first human bondings that we develop a prototype for alt intimate relationships. We've been programmed, against our wills to love certain kinds of people. ' · There's no question that sex and physical attraction are important components. In fact, the very first process in choosing a mate depends on sexual energy. Forthe most pan, however, it's our pre-programmed ~yches ~hi~h determtne who we will find interesting and stJmuJatJng an the Iona run. Most of us tend to ignore the role of these unconscious forces ... and for most of us, that's OK. <;>thers. who find themselves in and out of too many mamages would do well to become more aware of certain rcpcatina patterns in their siani.ficant relation!Jlips. These panems often have their roots in the first love experience. . . First romantic love is just another peak step in the hvina process. How we feel aboua ourselves as adults is determined by an accumulation oflife's peak events. I hope Howard is happy. . Dr. AJsazi is a psycholosist and marriage counselor m Coron• de/ Mar. AddreJS any questions to Linda A/gazi, Ph.D., c/o Daily Pilot, P. 0 . Box J 560, Cost.a Mesa 92626. Dr. Jerry Kuclorf demoutratee how a two- way radio can help 1e&M1ll'e an acoraphoblc .............. .., ............. u be-or •be drtYeS tbe..freeway and recelYa encoa.racemeat by tanrtna to a tb.eraDlst. TUESOAY, JUlY3. 1184 Preserve herita e ofhea th Valley Force .. . The Minute Men .. . Paul Revere's ride ... As the Fourth of July C•Mf approaches, more ,.. I ,. . and more people set R into the spirit of In-OTIEllEIC dependence Day.llll•lilill••llllll•••• Americans every- where should be proud of their fine bentaae and tradition. But what about your own personal beritqe -your body? Arc you t.aluna pride in it and takina care of it? Remember that the strcnath of our nation depends on me will of the people to be healthy in body, mind and~ Look around you. How many people do you know who have slowed down at 20 OT 30 and appear to bie carryina the burdens of the world at 40? How many do you know whose backs are bent; whose eyes are dull, whose stomachs protrude? How many have allowed themselves to get soft, Oabby, and out of condition? How many have you seen whose health hU deteriorated merely because of poor habits'! - - Radio link can hell!_. cure fear of freeway Let's start up this July Fourth by strivins to improve our health and fitness. You can feel beucr quickly tiy foUowins some SJmple rules. first of all, eat nutntious and balanced meals arid develop intelligent eating habits. Don'.t overeat; don't undereat A void diet fads. Get plenty of exercise. The human body functioas best when it is active and bas good tone. When you oon•t use your body, it atrophies; 'A'bcn you misuse it. you subject yourself to injury and disease. For example, if you carry a normal arm in a slins for a period of time, the muscles become weak and smaller. An X-ray will even show changes in the bone •tnx:ture. Sometimes basis p f _phobia fSlack 9f a n escape rou te By SUSAN MONAHAN .,.., .... c.. 4 •• 1 For agoraphobics-people who fear venturiog out in public -freeways can be a hopeless nightmare. Jerry Kasdorf, Ph.D., a psychologist who specializes in the treatment of phobic disorders., has developed a treatment modality that turns technology to the agoraphobic's advaniaae. The therapy takes place via-. two-way radio that plugs into a car'sciprctte lighter. A therapist is on the other end, ready to reassure the patient as he or she drives the freeway. "People wt th agoraphobia can do almost anything, as long as they're with someone else," said Kasdort: who opened PhobiaCare Treatment Center in Santa Ana I 8 months afo. The· radio-assisted desensitization" is conducted on an appointment basis, "to make sure one of us is available," said Kasdorfs wife, Janet, who also bolds a doctorate in psychology and is program coordinator for PhobiaCare. Initially, the patient may need someone else in the car in order to comfortably drive on a freeway. The radio, which has a range of3S miles, is "a nice in'tennediate step" for the person who is not quite ready to solo, she explained. Kasdorf estimates that 2S percent of his agoraphobic patients have used the radio as part of their therapy since symptoms, and hence treatments, vary from person to person. "Agoraphobics stan avoiding situations where they feel trapped," he explained. "'Maybe they can go to a restaurant or a movie theater as long as they're near a door and hncs are avoided. Some people can negotiate surface streets. "'But when patients say, Tm afraid offrccways,' what they're really afraid of is not having an escape route." Agoraphobia 1s characterized by panic attacks which stnke when the victim is in what is perceived as a thrcatenin& situation. Most people, said Kasdorf, describe these attacks as "coming from out of the blue." Because of this, some psychiatrists and psychologists think that panic attacks arc biochemical in origm and ~l'>ould be treated with medication. Kasdorf disagrees. "In many, many cases, they're not spontaneous at al~ but related to separation," he said, citma case histories where the initial panic ati.ck is often associated with ds vorcc. separation, death or even a major move. "~e have~ ~ych_iatrisl(Dr. Jeanette Hannah) who prcscnbes mcd1cauon an other cases ... It may relieve the panic but st won't help the avoidance behavior." The therapy at PhobtaCarc, which he describes as "half behavioral and half counsclina... is seared to "provide a1oraphob1cs with all the support they·need and then slowly remove the props." "Slowly" 1s the key word; Kasdorf says that "in vivo flooding" which has the patient con.front the feared s1tuat1on cold-turkey, can produce ovcrwbdminaanxiety. He favors "continuous step desensitization .. to help them face their fears in incrcmen1S. Patients arc tauaht such coping mechanisms as relaxation techniques and auto-hypnosis. They also arc given "homework" assignments SQ they can work on (Pleue 11ee PBOBIAS/82) Deterioration can occur with muscles, organs, limbs. and functions when you lead a sedentary life; an injury can occur when you are negligent about your health or safety. The body is meant to be active. When.i1js uvd with proper care and maintenance. vitality results. If you ha~e bad the opportunity to visit a fomsn country. the difference stnkes you almost immediately upon setting off the plane or ship. People walk. people btcycle. people participate in 5POfU activities. Our high standard ofliving has made us a populatioll of nden and viCWC'rl rather than doers. Most health experts recosnizc the problem we f.acc in a luxury society that ajves incentive to eating. riding and watchiag, rather than actively participatin,. . Review )'OUr family's living habiu. If your fa.rriily call too much. sits too much. rides too much and exercises too little. this might be a good time t~~ to (Pleue 11ee BAC&/82) CHECKUP ON CANCER Qu iz covers n ew tech n iques, ben efits of self-examination A) False. Breast cancer 1s the most common form of cancer among non-smoking American women. Women who smoke have about the same 1nctdcD<lC oflung caoocr. There arc about I 00.000 ne~ cases of breast cancer and Answer Jne or __ _;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;_.;_ about 40,()()() deaths from breast cancer each year ID the False: United States. At the pre-sent ume, one ofcvef) 11 women A ) B r e a s t wtll develop breast cancer so her hfetJme. cancer Is rare la Although n's true that the nsk of breast cancer is womea H der H BRENNAN greater with increasing age. half of all new breast canoers years of a1e. occur an women under 60 years old. One-third occur m 8 ) A breast c women under 50 lamp t.Ul ls palaless ASSIDY . Besides.age, a woman has ~ greater risk sf she has, I) a ls aot llkel7 to be farnlly hsstoh of breast cancer, especially if found before breut cancer. menopause. i> cancer an the other breast or uterus: 3) earl) C) Canttr la lite breast it euler to treat ud to eve u onset o f the menstrual cycle or a late menopause (after• food early. ~ 50). or 4) her first prqnancy after age 35. 0) Tllere are aew tecblqa es for brust euttr 8) False. Two out of three breast cancers arc painless screenlq so tat die daa&er of ••ill& X-rays for breast lumps. N1net) percent of breast masses arc found by the screenla1 ls no loa1er aeceaaary. ~ (P1eue 11ee CAlCCltR/B2) Beauties were alive and.framed .............. ...,_ Katby lllller wu more amaed tlaan baebaad JolLD: Jack and Marlon Shea al8o Yle1nMI art. .._.,.. .. ___ _ .. Orange Coast OAILV PILOT!Tueeday, Juty 3, 1984' Cosmetic surgery nO loiiger for only the.rich Transformation won •t always -----meet expectations Last year 1.5 million Americans chanaed their looks -and their h ves. Some rewrote the persona! bia1ory etched m wnnkles on their face Some defied the desuny of anatomy by adding or subtractina mcbes from their torsos. Some altered the noses, chins and cars they'd been born with And many felt tt was worth it. S11le Ledbetter, 49, an Austin, Tell.., housewife, was one of them. Unlike cclebnty patients Carol Burnett (who reshaped her Jaw), Michael Jack.son (who got a new nose) and Mariel Hemmgway (who "enhanced" her bosom -and her chance for the lead in "Star 80 .. ), Ledbetter is neither ncb norf&moui. After swhina money i.n a face-lift fund for years. this attractive arand- molher checked into an outpatient suracry center and lef\ later the same day, minus the puffy eyelids and saaina jowls that made her look olaer than she felL "I'm a new woman1•• she says. ·•1 don't just look better; feel better about myself. .. In the comina ycan, millions of other ordinary people, yeamina to IOC the best that they can be, will spend billions of dollars on face-lifts. hair transplants, btust implants or redye,. tions, tummy tucks and buttock boosts -operations once considered the preroptive of the privileged. Acoordina to the American Society qf Plastic and Reconstructive Surgebns (ASPRS), more than half of today's ••aesthetic .. surgery patienu earn less than $2.S,000. · They include second-time-around singles, 1elf<0nscious teens, late- bloomana housewives and l&Jfll ~x­ ccutives. Ono-fif\h are met).. and accordint to Bo11on urweon &:UJCM Courti author of .. Male Aesthetic Suf"ltt'Y," tbe .. aende"PP" i clo ina fast. Thett'seven a trend toward .. his- and-her" face--lifts, with husbands and wives schedulina surgery for the same day, sharina a hospjtal room and "arowina-younger together." Why are people of modest means suddeoJy seek.in& out these expensive -aod painful -Ot>Crations? Psy- chologists and soc1oloaist1 have proven what the rest of us suspected: Loob matter. Pretty children are teachers' pets; anractive applicants set better jobs: in vinually every circumstance, t~faitest fare best. On tho other hand. their unattractive peen, reports sociologist Robert Agnew of Emory University, are seen as moreasarcss1vcand ant1social, l intelligcnt and likable. Pta.Stic surgeon have not onl)' profited from this social preuvre. th~'ve contributed to it. The problem, though, 11 that the transformation 1t offen may not live up to the ~tienf1 expectation&.; Many people approach surgery with the fantasy that a face--lift or nose-job will profoundly chanae their fjvcs. Sometimes it~; often it doesn't. Some 1uraeoo1, too1 advcttitt their work in mqical terms. promising ··escape from the sentence of acnes and circumstances0 and displayina dramatic "before .. and "after0 ehotos of perfected profiles, taut foreheads and "contoured" torsos. They're not likely to emphasiu that much coJ- metic surgery -about one-quaner of nose and breast Ot>Ctaticms -is done to correct the mistakes of prcvioll.4 suraeons. ln truth, the "before" is not always so d, nor the .. after .. so attractive. Rather than be swayed by co metic drums of &Jory, anyone cons1dcrina cosmetic 1uracry hould begin with a hard look in the mirror -and an honest look within. "The patients who do the best arc the best informed and the moat rcaU1tic." says Dr. Vincent Pennisi, clinical professor of plasti~ surgery at the UC at San Franc1sco. He advises pro pectjve patients to think fint. to coosider the worst as well as the best pos ible outcome and to do what they -not a spcwe, parent or employer -want. In acrteral, people wtth modest expectations of surgery tend to do best. Dr. Julien Reich, an Australian plastic suraeon, interviewed 3,000 cosmetic patients and found that most didn't hope to beoomc beautiful -just inconspicuous. They wanted to lose "the fcclina of 1elf-con ious- n about an aspect of thdr appear· ance that they believed to draw unwelcome au~ntion:• ixty pct"CC'nl had difficulty cstablishina rela- tionships and 2S percent felt socia11y isolated because of their appearance. The source of self-consc1ou1ness may be a Dolly Partonesque bosom, a weak clun or the crtascs left behind when, as one writer put it, time walk.I across the face. "What mauen most is how the individual feels abOut it." says Los Anaeles psychiatrist Marcia Goin "Because offamily atthudes or childhood teasing, a small bump on the nose that may seem trivial to you or me can be acutely di1tress1J11, P~chotherapy can help someone adJUSt to feeling aclf-conscioua about the way he or she looks. Su11ery can· actually elimina\c sclf-consciouancu -but only if the 'defect' is its real source ... 'Tall woman.reach·es height of tolerance But what if it isn't? Tbouah suracry . for the right reasons can hefp mind as well as body, surgery for the wrona reasons can harm both. And ultimate- ly only the patient can decide whether suIJCry will help; even a well- mcaning doctor can't make the de- beina reminded. Io fact, the next DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing in behalf of all the unusually tall women in America. C'mon, folks, we have known fora very long time tbat w~are "different." rt doesn't make us feel betterto be reminded of It I am sick ofheanng. "My God, you·rercallyupthere. How tall arc you anyway'?" I fl were obese I can't imagine anyone saying to me. "My God, you're fat. How much do you weigh?" A11 LAllDEIS ' person who asks, .. How's the weather up thcrer' mar get punched out. - LONG JEAN N LONGVIEW DEAR JEAN: Not all &all womea feel u 101 do. Some deupt la beta& ttahlelqee. No oae loob more rqal IMD a very tall female wlM carries lter Mad ~O. movet wl*' grace ud appean to 6e extremely comfor1able W'i*'~leofall 11ut. J do not enjoy hoven ng over people, especially shorter men who arc embarrassed by my height. They move away quickly at cocktail parties and of course they never ask me to dance. It is difficult to find slacks lonJ enough or dresses with waistlines where they belong. Most pantyhose arc too short. Same goes fo r nighties and housecoats. Forget aboat puchJ.Dg oat tbe conballt w•o uk d1mb qaettloa1. Mott of diem are probably naat1 wbo win Cite good Lord bad pvea them more llelpt:- Being tall has other disadvantages. I'm writing this in the hope your readers will be more sympathetic to our plight. We know we area bit freakish and we don •t appreciate • • • DEAR ANN: l'IJ tell you howl handled the problem of a mother-in- OPENING ••• -P'r omBl art in California. (The show will tour fi ve other museums nationally within the next two years.) •·And this opening represents a milestone in the 23- year history of the museum-the largest single gift ($100,000 from the Irvine Co.) and our unique participation in the Olympic Arts FestJval." Other brief welcoming speeches were given by Tom Niel1en, lrvme Co. president; Robert Fitzpatrick, director of the Olympic Arts Festival and Doaald L. Brea, renowned art collector and chairman of the I rv1 ne Co. Hel ping to celebrate the black-tic opening were Bertie and Harry Bubb, Jewel Plummer Cobb (Cal State Fullerton president) Suan and Kevin Consey (he is the museum director), James Corcoran (leading Southern California art dealer and consultant to Bren), Vlrglala Doaobap, Betty Mosa, Joanne and Warren Fix, Doree and Denny Freidearlcb (museum dlrectorot develop- ment), Virgina G1te(museum Business Council president) and Judy and Rogue Hemley. Sharing the excitement of Orange County's participation in the Olympics Arts Festival were J oanne and Gary Hant, Sa11y and Roger Luby, Molly and Leon Lyon, Jo and Robert McLain, Elaine and William Redfield, Noey and ~ack Schoenborn, Marion and J ack Sbea, Yvonne and PaaJ Scbtmmel and J udy and Joel Slutuy. Also in attendance were Judge Sheila and Y gal Sonensblae, David Stein, Susan and Tim Strader, MauriceTuckman{L.A. Art Museum director), Gene White and Judge Barbara Wiener. The exhibition continues through Sept. 9 on Tuesdays through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m ~ ANNOUNCES BILL BLASS OSCAR DE LA RENTA GEOFFREY BEENE MARY MCFADDEN HALSTON CA ROLIN A HERRERA ADELE SIMPSON BOB MACKIE ANNE KLEIN CALVIN KLEIN VALENTINO CHAN~L ANDRELAUG JACQUELINE DE RIBES GIANFRANCO FERRE CHLOE BRIONJ GENNY JEAN MUIR ZANDRA RHODES J UDITH LEIBER BAGS & BELTS AND OUR FABULOUS SHOE COLLECTION 66 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (71-4) 120-0255 I law who showed no apprcc1at1on for the letters l wrote to her every week fortwoyears(ofcoursc, my husband never wrote a line). • I put a great deal of effort int6 those letters. I told her bow the business was goin& what theebildren were doing and saying. I reported on the rest of the family. My letters were long and newsy.Heronlyresponsewas, "Dear Sofr,why don't you ever write?" Finally I told my husband I would not write to bis mother anymore since it was obvious that she didn't ap.. preciate my letters and wanted only to hear from him. He said that was fine. He wrote every month. His letters were all the same: "Dear Mom: How · is everything in Aorida? Have you bought a new car yet? No thin~ new up here. Love, Kenneth." Af\cra few months WE received a Jetter. It read: "Dear Kenneth and Mary: Plea'se ask Mary to start writing tomcapin. Younevcrsayone damed thinain your letters. I am anxious to hear what is going on. Love to you both." That was30yearsaao and my mother-in-law has never failed to than le me foreacb and every letter since I went on strike. -AP- P REC IA TED lN INDIANA DEAR APPRECIATED: Great solatloa. Tbukl for sharing. cision. . Like attractiveness itself, plasuc surgery is always more than skin- deep· 1t touches the psyche as well as the s0ma. Some physicians describe 'their work as ''psycbosuraefy," since thcy'v.c seen bow deeply it can cbaDJe a person's life -when it's done for the right reasons. But the mind can also project its desires onto the body and create a fantasy that no SWFOD can match. Next: What you should know before surgery. American Healtb Maguioe Service Efficient plumbing still down the dfain It is of no comfort to me whatsoever that NASA has put five years of research and $12 million worth of engineering into a space shuttle toilet that does not work. If the right stuff has the wrong parts, we're all lost. E1au Bo11£c1 What chance do I have with a husband who resealed ours with Play- Doh and then instructed me to "jisale it ••••••••••••• after you use it"? What hope is there for earthlinas to have.an efficient plumbina system when an astronaut who has a doctorate in civil engincerini bad toilet malfunctions on I 0 out of the last 11 missions? . As far as I'm concerned, plumbing is the key to peace throughout the world. It's the universal language that needs no interpreter, the one ethic \hat binds us all together, the common denominator that is shared by us all Can you possibly imagine the adulation due the nation that finally perfects a system that works? I once toured the interior of the space shuttle in Houston to see what our future would hold. I found it tttc closest to pnmiuve camping J want to get. The area where the astronauts live is no bigger than a table at the Las Veps dinner show. The food was packaged and contained 1n boxes on the wall. At niaht. you were restrained from floating around by han&lJli m a sack from the wall (we once did that in Michigan), and every time you moved, you bumped your leg on the water \ank. My main concern (as with all mothers). however, was the toilet. "How does it work?" 1 asked. "Just like any other ioilet. say on the airlines," I was told. That was not altogether true. Toilets on airlines do not have seatbelts to hold you in, head and foot restraints and look like a death chair. I didn't even want to know who cleaned it and how. The way it stands now, toilets arc programmed to function a five-day week. gurgling. gasping and backing up on Saturdays and Sundays. They go on overload when there arc more than five people tn the bouse. Bending something under the tank top will make you feel better, but it will accomplish nothing. I wouJd like to think the United St.ates would lead the world in buildina a better toilet. As for the moon, we could put a toilet out there tomorrow if we wanted to. But first, we have to find a plumber who works Sundays. CANCER QUIZ HEL,PFUL ••• From Bl woman herself, and eight out of 10 breast lumps are not cancer. However. every lump must be properly evaluated for the possibility of cancer. C) Tnae. All cancer 1s more tas1ly treated and cured 11 found in early stages. Breast cancer can be detected by X- ra y before there are any symptoms at all or before a lump can be felt . · Symptoms such as pain. swelling, redness. discharge from the nipple or retraction or "dimpling .. of the nipple or skin do occur 1n some breast cancers...Any of these signs should be thoroughly evaluated. but the fact that most cancer in the breast occurs ~1thout symptoms emphasizes the! need for frequent and regular self-examination of the breast (see below). D) False. A highly detailed X-ray picture of the breast tissue called a mammogram is the best way to detect early cancer. A mammOjJ'lm can detect a cancer when 1t 1s too small to be fell and more likely to be cured. It is also often done when a lump is discovered. The lump and adjacent tissue can be evaluated and the opposite breast can be X- ta)'ed for any bidden cancer. Mammography is nol danacrous. It has never been demonstrated that the radiation involved can itself cau1e breast cancer. In fact, the rachation docs of one mammoaram might theorcocally result 10 one e~cess breast cancer for every one mtllion mammograms . .But the naturally occumn1 incidence of breast cancer is t .000 per one million women. Other one-in·a·milfion nsks include your chances of --------------------------PHOBIAS .•• Prom Bl weakcn1na the phobia outside of therapy. Bclicvina that aroup thcTIPY fosters dependeocc. Kasdorf sa1d th.at a patient who follows instructtons from one-on-one counschna can c pea to handle fria,htenina ituations in eiJht or nine w~kt and .. it takes lonacr to develop self.rcltance ... He sajd q~hobiCJ cypica11y hne had over- protected ehildh ' or one tn which the d\Ud feared . abandonment or ~ration. Often adult qoraphobks have a fPOUSO who d1scourqes too muth indtpendcnClC.. :rho-National Institute or Mental Hctlth estimatn that IS millionofthemort'than 2S million Ammcanswho have a phobic dalOrdcr have qoraphobiat and K.aldorf fiaures that 70 percent of his paucnu.suffct from it That tall tk prompit"d the Kasdorfl to open addnional centcn in Fullcnon, Colton and Hun1in1ton Beach because .. people with 11oraphobia would call the San1aAnaccntcrand ~would explain ourp~m. l'hey would think h sounded 1 -and then they d ht afraid to drive that far.'' dying from traveling I 0 miles by bicycle or 60 miles by car or getting cancer from smoking less than two C18'rettes. And, the radiation dose of one mammogram is about the same as you would act if you lived in Denver for two months or traveled on one transcontinental flight Newer techniques -thennography, ultrasound and drphcnography -scan-the breasts by temperature, sound waves or shinina light and may complement, but not replace, mammography. The American Cancer Society recommends that women over 3S should have mammo-grams every one or two years. Self-exam1na1ion remains the single most imponant screening technique ror all ases. Remember that nine out of I 0 breast lumps are found by the women themselves. Do self-examination every month, two or three days afcr the end of your period. Examine your breasts in the show by alidina your soapy finaersoverthe btcast tissue and check for any lump, hard knot or thickening. Repeat the cum while lying down. Examine each breast with the opposite hand usina the pads of your finacrtips. Examine the left bTCast with your ten arm above your head and a pilloW1fndcr your left shoulder. With your fin~rs Oat, acntly press in 1 circular and clockwi1e motion untal every pan of the breast tissue 1s cum1ntd. Then acnlly squeeze the nil>Ple to check for discharae. Repeat the p~ure on your riaht breast with your riaht arm over your head and a pilfow under the ri&h t shoulder. Oct to know the tructure and feel of your breast timic and rcpcn any chanacs or abnormaliucs to your doctor. Dr. J. Bttnn•n C•ssidy practices f1m1/y •nd ~mna-1ncy medicine in Costa Mesa.- BACKTALK •.• r.ro-•1 aome of the wholesome aetivuies that Wt'tt popular !O or o4() ye.an aao. Then, the ncrase child walked to Khoolj 20 yean qo ttie ch lid was <:Ontcnt to nde on tht b\aa occaaloftally . 'Today, he 1sextttmelf unhappy and oftcri ttfu1e11090 k> xhool unless hcn&l bis own auU>Cnobile or is dn ven boO way . . This is a area• time of 1~r as wt celebrate our 1ndcpcndcn~ to ta kt 1 new pnde an )ourwlf. your body. and •n A~nca. Get in tht' p1rit of health. Dr. C•ry Rot~nhctJ. • Hun1i111ron IJNt.h chiropractor. 11 hem of .. Bid: Ttlk." 1 Wtttly btlllth how on C•b~ ChannC'I 10 at 'Ip m, 'rueJdll . ... - -, .. ·potpourri ·of Pops lives on Arthur Fiedler• sphit ides famed orchestra By TOM JORY • 111111• ............. An awesome mlulon • Rlcbard Tbomu peen onr the Berlin throach a tannel a.nder the wall in the TV Wall u be prepare1 for bl.a amblttoua marie .. BerllnTunel21.''alrioCton1'btat attempt to re.cue people from Eut Berlin 8 on CBS, Channel 2. ToNIGH T'S TV (Q)MOYIE "Serena" (No Diie) -t2:0D- " TWIUOHT ZONE G EYE ON HOUYWOOO &MOVIE * ··~ "Mad Dog Morglf'I" (1976) Dloots .HOA*. DMS Gdpllll (UIQJl9l)ENT NEWS e TltQCE OITHE NOHT 9MOVIE * * * ''Girtl Of PMlure ~ .. ( 1953) Leo Genn, Abby o.11on ®MOYE * * "10 To Mldnlgflt" (1983)Char1el BrOOICll, Andrew Stevens -12:30- • M.fREDHrr~ PMIEHTS I L.A. TODAY flO#M & MARTIN'8 LAUOtMN LOY!, NllE1ICM sm.E l:::W-ANANCE * • ··rime w-.. .. 119921 Btn Mur-m: Broptiy· ... "Lldy In The O.." (19'41 Ginger Rogers, Ray Mlbnd -12:15-- CDWAIOS llCUTSIU(O ....... '1119UfCIF' (PC} -7 IS t JO ~·ltOl HAA80R TWIN OC11Y Sll•O "11( llMAlt ... f") \ I~ 1 4~ II> IS ......... ) ...,,Gt llS tt• ... • l AGUNA BUCH • SOUTH COASl c-.. ... .. -.. 4t1-1Jll eMOVE • •·~ "Twwity-four Hout1 To Kii" (1M5) Mickey ~. Wltttr Slmk. -1:30- .AUlfTHEFAIAY -1:A6- I HEALTH RELD flO#M & MMTIN'I LAUGH-It LR OR Of.ATH If THE EM£ROEHCY ROOM -1:50- (Q)MOVIE * Blonde Goddna (1912) Jonalhln Fcwd. ~ Bntton -2:00- • (J) C88 NEWS ltOH'IWAlat !: ** "Squtm Plly'' (1981) Jiff Hlrrls. Jenni Httrlc* -2:16-IBNEW8 (C)MOVE .. ''Night Of The Juggle(' (1980,, Jalnes Btolln. °"" Gotmln -2:»- 8NEW8 eMOYE } * * ., ~Homtl • Nell (1970) Rock Hudtoll~:: Flnloni ! MOVE WB..IY, M.D. **** "ni... Llk• Us" (1974) Keith Cttradtnt. SMiiey Duvall. (%)MOVIE * * "Strlt Nowt" ( 1979) Patnc:k eew.r..~e., -2:!0- MOVE * * Algtrt Of Wey" P9131 Bette er-ts. James Stewart • _,._ eMOYE H 'It "Tiit City'' (197 I) Anthony Oum,E.G ~. (!) ace> AHO THE MAH -3:30- (1) FAITH20 -445- S~WCK "Tel' •Cllf' (PC} \t ..... ll tS lOH~ .. ..... 00 tllO 10~ !Ill !IUO SUUHI SADOUBACK •NIW(Of ,, ..... .._,..,....411 ,, ..... I • J IS SJ\ I II It~ ~I~ SADOlCBACll ur.,,. , ..... !Ill sno SADOUBACll u1 .. 11 111 .... !!al 5"0 SADOUBACJI ,. ,., .. fl'•• tf !Ill SADOUBACK ti ..... I ' ... ~· Siii u,. ... •-ca. M IOlll'IU"' lllS 12t U S ••us 1t»1"1 sun,. .... l~flS·f'tl 11 I ~ HlSU •• tt• sue•ttt ....... "' :·. 14\ •• ' s •• 1140 a.••• • t.QSSIOH VIE JO • , -s1a11Da"' ............ 4"} ••I I\ ltl~ ~ Oraoge COMt DAILY PU:OTnueeay. My 3. 1'84 • Thicke' marriage off ByJEIUlY 8 .,, .......... __ LOS A OELES-T)ipically. Alan Th ide rcOcaed on the ocdlation of his laae~n;,ht talk show 1lUcke Of Che Npt. .. '"tb a Quip: .. TJ>ey said it couSdo .. 'Mdone and we pro"·m it:• The sof\-tpOkm. &ow-key Thicke, a wnter. ~oductr and former host of 1 C•nldian ult &bow, was the calm eye in the hur· ncaoc of hype lh1t preceded the launchio& of hi 9().minute syndi· cated show lul Septem!>cfd. ......_ .. _ Amt the '·~ frenetic pace of the show. his laid· back manner made.him seem a ,uest u bis own party. His inhffeJ!t good nature came lhrou~, but un~ fortunately, that wasn t enoush. de- spite a loyal core of fans. One aroup . sent a petition for bj renewaf with 6,000 s.1gnatures. .. ThickeoftheNi&bt" will le.ve the lit on Au_g.. 3 J. Its death was announced tn a statement Fnday by Bob Bennett, president or Metro- media, executive producer Fred Sil- vcnnan and Larry OershmAn. amsi- :lent ofMOM-UA Television Group. A decision had to be made because Tiucke's contract expired Sunday. -rbe station suppon was not there, .. they sau1 Thicke, lD a tele- phone interview from Ontario, Can- ada, said tbe natio.W rallng was only l.S and that many mdependent stations were ready to desert the show for the higher ratings and bigger financtal rewards of running old netwOriweriet. The canocllauon came the day after his wife, singer-actress Gloria Lorin&. filed suit m Supenor Court lO end their 13-year marriage. "Thicke of the Nl&bt" was in trouble aJmost as so&, as it went on the air. The intense promotional campqn that Pleooded 11 tMJ1 ~..:.• apectaUon II WM aevtf-IO ftllfilt. Tbe II )'.pt. 1n faa, bec:anie a habi~ in some tnttanca.. The u.enion lhlit' "1bick.e of the ND1M WU the IDtWtf to NBCs .. Tlbe Ton p1 ~ Pl• lhat Johnny Carsoa was ~ me t.ck 10 .iay like an emblrrall- i na and unwanted luelL ThicU stayed aloof from the 'lfype aail mOdcstly diJClaimed uy ambidollil, to c~ Canon. 4 The Sbo•' eaded production cm May ' and bat been 1n muns 1tMC the end of~)'. • "J'm d' ppointed 10 Jthe n1ell\; that a year .., we bad an hoped ro; better thfoas, and rm rdieved dial on<:e -.e were well inlO the show at "'1i' apparent that 90-minutes an ~ niabt synd.ication was not ,oi• to work.·· Tbkv said. The ratinp amona the ftdwotk affiliate statlOM canyia& lhe sbOW was 2.6, but O\'crall natioGal.Jy at wa LS. At its Peak the show wu scca on 128 stations. Thicke laid. -Tb.at I .So rating spelled the end oflbelhow. We were not abie to deliver eood eno'4b ratinp lO the sponsors.•• Tb1cke was 1n Ontario with bas soni, Brmnan, 9, and Robin, 7. fpr the Wayne Gretzky Tenais Tour- ~nL Asked bis futu.re plans. he sa1d1 04fve bad a number ofopl)Onun.ities to act a.ad it would 9CCtn that I wiD dO some of that in the next few month 1n addition. a number of c:ompe,aics have ex~ interest in dtvelopdc prime-tune dramatic and corned}' ~es f« me. I think that Will be my ntxt move... · .. His m~ to Lori~ who ian ID the NBC daytime teriaJ .. Days or---- Our Lives, broke up over •·irrecoo- cilablc differences, .. said Susan Patri-oola. a spokeswoman for the actres1: When the divoroe wu aa~ June 20 Loria& said. "Tbete is a price lO ~paid by ~Ol bavina time to~ ~.talk~. ·~ ... .,.. MWlll '39-lno Stadium Or-411 AIWDI n2-6446 Broothurst Theatre BIO 990-4021 UA Movies 4 COSTA IEA t7M141 Edwards Cinema Center COSTA IEA 751-tl14 Edwards Town Center .. 154-1111 Edwards University lA6lJCA ttiS 761-6611 La,una fills Man mAlll '37-0340 N«,{XqtMaa mMll '36-3911 UA City Center WE'SMISTEI 195-SW UA Westm1mster Twin ElmlSTEI 191-3"3 Pacific H1way 39 Or-Jn loMIRADA Q --. -.. 111•• l4ll/U ...... Lt .... ,"--- ~-Elm" (PC) 12 lO. 2lS. U O. U S. 150. lOSS ''STM TISI It M SDICH Fm 9'0CX" (PS) 111 i.m~v-..... ,_, .... Sill ,. , .. ,.,,....°"" 11ec. no ~-1~1~ * CINE-Fl SOUNOI At t11m sy ..... P.t .. u wect t• Y• All Cllf * fllla: tt " ..... .nti • c rt ,_tioft, '1ri1! !"' ""' AM pll!W.. ALL OPEN 7:30Start Dusk O.W.-~J2~FR£E ~ : Fountain Volley LA HABRA lA HA.f'llU, :I ~Coast OAILV PILOT/Tu day, July 3, 1984 ' ... INTERMISSION -------- - County theaters sweep LA pre;Olympic festiva:f Orange County community theaters made 1t a clean sweep o~r the weekend at the Southern C"4li· fornia Community Theater festival in Los Angeles. Entries from county playhouses captured aJI thrtt top pnzes in the three-day tournament at the GaJJery Theater. staged to select three United Statos representatives an the lnter- nauonal Community Theater Festi- val to be held next week in COflJUnc-tio~ with the Olympic Games. And another local troupe snared one of the two runner-up des1gnat1ons. Toi TITUS Boruta Valley Players. 8:30 cunain, Tbe amphitheater is located in the city's Village Green Patk on Main Strel near Euclid A venue near the. Garden Grove Frcewa~. Call 636-7213 for ticket infonnat1on. Three other local productions wind up their respective el\&41ements this weekend. all ofTcJing final per· fonnances Friday and Saturday at 8:30. They are: _ .. A View From tbe Brid1e"at the Costa Mesa Cjvic Playhouse, 661 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa (650.5269). The wanning productions. all musi- cals, were: -"Josepb and tbe Amazing Tecb- nicolor Dreamcoat" by the t'lewpoh Theater Arts Center. directed by Eileen Fishbach. The · Newpon, Santa Ana and Buena Park theater groups will com- pete in the international feslival July 12-15. A schedule of performanoc times has not yet been released. Other Orange County playhouses entered in the Southern California competition were the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Irvine Community Theater, Westminster Community Theater, Classic Players of Orange and the Cypress Civic Theater. -"Mn . Glbboaa' Boys" at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, Main Slrcet at Yorktown Ave .• Huntington Beach (832-140.S). Getting their klcka OD the Pilgrini ·· -"Movln' On" bv the lntercultural Committee for the Performing Arts from Santa Ana. directed by Adeleane Hunter. -''Tile Mousetrap" in the Patio Theater of Goltlen West College in Huntington Beach (895-8378). A half-dozen other shows -aJI musicals -continue this weekend: Catt members of the mualcal com edy •• ADJtbl1:1i aoe.•• etrut their etaff OD board the PIJCrlm 11 ln Dana Point Harbor where the Cole Porter allow open• Wedneeday for a sammer-lona ran. Call 71U-1S44 for ticket lntormaflon. -"El Grande de Coca Cola" by the Buena Park C'iv1c Theater (onganally mounted at the Huntington Beach Playhouse). directed by Kent John- son. Named runners-up in the festival. which attracted 20 community theater groups, were the original musical "Tales of Fannie Keenan, Better Known as Dora Hand" by the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and "The Actor's Nightmare" by the THE SIXTH ANNUAL Grove Shakespeare Festival gets off and running this week, inaugurating an ambitious summer with a production of the Bard's comedy "Much Ado About Nothin~" m Garden -Grove's Festival Amphitheater. Lee Shallat, former resident direc- tor at South Coast Repertory, is staging the production, which opens Friday and runs through July 28. Performances will be $iven Thursdays through Sundays with an -"Tbe Fantutlcb" for the South Coast Musical Theater in the Univer- sity High School theater. Campus at Culver, Irvine (786-4384), Fridays at 8, Saturdays at 2:30 and 8, Sundays at 2:30 through July I 5. -"Tbe Faataatlcb" in the Studio Theater of Saddleback College in Mission Viejo (83 1-4656), Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8, ~undays at 3 lbrough July 29. -"Tbe Bnt Little Wboreboa1e ln Texas" at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (979-551 ), nightly except 'Summer Sunday' survives in its live shakedown cruise By FRED ROTHENBERG UT~Wltlw .... Mondays at varying curtain times GIZMO, STARS AND STRIPE! through Aug. 19. NEW YORK-NBCs first install- ment of"Summer Sunday, USA" was live television on the edge. It didn't exactly fly, but it didn't fall off, either. TH E O NLY WAY -"Lavender FoUJet" at Scbas- TO SPEND T H E 4th O F JULY. · tian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 A¥C . Cabrillo, San Clemente GtEMLiNS5.M • DOLBY STEREO (492-9950), Wednesdays through Sat- urdays at 8, Sundays at I and 7 through Aug. 2. • NBC News' first multi-part ven- ture into prime time since the cancellation of "First Camera" ex- isted somewhere between meaningful and meaningless Sunday night. -"Funny Girl" at the Grand Dinner Theater, 7 Freedman Way. Anaheim (772-77 l 0), nightly except Mondays at varying curtain times through Aug. 19. •1'40M-9llC)ll m -"Tbe Maile Man" at the Curtain "W"RNER COMMu •• N.~T-ION_s c_OM_.!_,.._N_Y -~ Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino fliiillliS~lt-i:iaii1'TI1ol-'EnrTiiiODs'i58iil -:S588MnO---~·ORAiiiNG£if~63U4:'?. 2~55~3-f Real, Tustin (838-t 540), nightly ex- For regular newspaper readers or evening news viewers, there was no new news, unless you count the previously unreported fact that the Rev. Jesse Jackson was the tallest Democratic presidential hopeful. Stadium Or-In Edwards Saddleback Cinedome cept Mondays at varying curtain _-.0 990-4021 llJNTltGTON BEACH 848·0388 WESTWCSTER 891·3693 times through Aug. t 9. This piece of news trivia, which came in a pre and post-<:ommercial question-and-answer spot, suggested that the experimental "Summer Sun- day" was a TV news show that was less news and more TV show. UA Movies 4 Edwards Huntington Pacific H1way 39 Dr-In COSTA EA 631·3501 •u HABRA (213) 691·0633 -WCSTMNSTER 891-3935 Edwards Harbor Twin AMC Fashion Square Edwards Cinema Wesl •tosTA MESA 751 -4184 MISsaON VD> 495·6220 IVK 551-0655 1 Edwards Town Center EDWARDS MISS VIEJO MALL Edwards Woodbrid NOW PLAYING SIX-TRACK CXJIDOLBV ST£REDr PRESENTATION COSlAMUA EOWaros Town Center 751-418"1 IRU Minn Brea Plaza 529-5339 ltfWP'OflT IEACH EelwatOs ~!1 Cinerm 6«-0760 MISSION VIEJO Edwaros Vieio TWiil 83(}6990 WESTMlllSTtfl W JUAN IMTA ff ll'MIGI Edwards Cinema West CANTRAMO SRO La Mirada 891·3!13$ ~ sc.i Paallc's M1$11011 IJnve.ln lolij@ilM M !M> OrM In 49'3-45-'5 523-~1· OMllGf Slildium Offle-ln 839-8770 Burt Reynolds Dom De Luise · Dean Martin· Sammy Davis, Jr. Jamie Fa" · Marilu Henner · Telly Savalas and Shirley Maclaine AIUl 171-1150 El JOH 511·5111 GUllE IJ4.i5ff ACIFIC ANAHEIM OR IN E.DWAROS SAOOUBACK CINEOOME U ttMt21 lmll 154-Ull SUTI W 541-7444 MOVIES 4 EDWARDS UNMRSITY EDWARDS BRISTOL STA IW 17M14l LA llUIA 52J.11ll IUTllUTH llMS41 DWAROS CtHEMA CENTER SRO GATEWAY 5 UA wtSTMINSTER MAU WUTRSTH •PACIFIC HIWAY 39 Oft IN • 891·3693 ' I Dysart joining cast of 'Mask' And it was.~But that isn't necess- arily au' bad, provided the broadcast can be lively and interesting, and, for the most part, "Summer Sunday" was all that live TV is supposed to be. UNIVERSAL CITY -Ricllard Dysart has been signed to a feature role in the Martin Starger production of Peter Bogdanovich's .. Mask.'' There were plenty of technical and editorial kinks, but the program showed the potential to be daring, provocative and alive, which is more than you can say for most TV. Starring Cher and Eric Stolz, "Mask" focuses on the unusual relationship between a "biker lady" and her extraord1nary teenage son. Dysan plays Cher's father in the film. It achieved its objective to be different. and it won't be confuscci "* * * •/2. Get me in the right mood and I can laugh aU over the map. That's why I like 'TOP SECRET!"' -Rogtt Eben. Chicago Sun-Tlmn '"TOP SECRET!' may be the funniest movie ever made ••• 'blows every other comedy this year oat of the water." -Michael Dare, LA. Wttkly MU EL T1lftO LAGUU IEACM •OIWGE •·@•ua:csw. Mann Brea Pia.la Edwards Siddleback EdwJtds South Coasl Cinedome OIWIGE Slldium 529-5339 ~I 5880 497 1711 634-2553 Orivt-ln 639-f770 COSTUIUA IRV!llf lffWl'OAT 1EACM WUTllWtSTOI WUTMIMITER EdWards BnstOI Edwanls Unwtrsity EdWalds Lido ThUtre Edwards Clllema PICllic's Hi Wry 39 540-7 «4 854-81111 673-3350 West 891 ·3935 Dove·ln 891 ·B:l .,...,.,.,,m:n ,,. ~· (iiOMiiU~u,,.,._........,J ..,.. Sll)INJ AIAtlll t)t-1770 Stadium Dr·rn ~,,.., St»um mo 990-402l UA Movies 4 lnlOtt..i ttwr 11 Ora f.y BlDA PAU 121-4070 Buena Park Dr·ln lmcoln W ol Knott ' can a tough New York cab drtver be tumed into an ovemtght sensation by a country girl COSTA lilSA S.O~M UA South Coast 1561 W Sculflowtr w.t of ltlllol • COSTA IEA 54&·3102 Edwards Cinema Hel'llOt tt ... 1¥11: S!l-0655 Edwards Woodbrid&t BattMCa rt.y Cast.,t C4il•tr LAQN BOCH 497·1711 South Coast Laiuna Coast .._, •t 8toadwlr • OOl.BY ST£R£0 from Tennessee? OO'e•:r PARTON ... .., IJO.Qtl Edwards Viejo Twin lt l'ar at ChrisantJ ~ '37.0340 ._ Oran&• Mall . t lltbll So of t.itlcloln C.Alll 134·3'11 UA City {enter "' Hit c.ty Sllo$l0ill Ctllt WDTIMSTIJt 193.0541 UA Wtstminsler Mall san o.o rw, a18o!Ut11t with time slot competitor "60 Minutes." ft also won't be confused with follow-up Pn.?v..am, "Knight Rider." The clash of ideas on "Sum- mer Sunday" is preferable to the crash of.cars. Andrea Mitchell and Linda El- lerbee, billed as prime time's first female co.anchors, seemed uncom- fortable as they sat under umbrenas on the rain-soaked Washington Mall and conducted live interviews to points all over the globe. Most of the Lin1Cups worked well enough, satisfying execu tive producer Steve Fncdman's vision of a "Wide World of News." The one major exception was the interview with Hu Na, the tennis star who defected from China. She was on camera., squirming, unable to hear Mitchell's questions. Back in Washington, Mitchell then had a technicall y safer, face-to-face conversation with another expatriate, this one from El Salvador. lt wasn't exactly face 'to face, though. "Rosa Maria," an illegal alien. was wearing a big hat that covered half her face to protect her identity. As an opponent of the American-~cked 1overnment in El Salvador, she served as a counter- point to Hu Na. She said she was unsafe in her homeland and un- welcome here. "Summer Sunday" was at its best when it found people with different situations and stances. successfully examining them in between promo- tions for NBC's other news shows and its own correspondents. The best segment was "Trading Places," in which Sen. Gary Hart got to throw hardballs at three reporters who covered his presidential cam- paign. But, just when the significant issue of news judgment was raised, Mitchell cut in to ask Hart whether he would accept the vice presidency. His answer was the same one he's been giving for weeks. He intends to be the party's presidential nominee. Another promising segment was "Face-Oft," in wh~h former' presi- dential candidate George McGovern and former Secretary of the Interior James Watt disagreed on American political philosoP,hy in a live debate. Cameras showed alternating closeups of the two men, giving the feel of two boxers in a clinch, but, just as they started to mix it up, Ellerbee came m to ring the bell. That was one of the major weak- nesses of ''Summer Sunday," which has eight more weeks to run. The fonnat wasn't flexible enouah to expand the good segments and kill the lame ones. On Sunday night, nobody would have missed a superficial J>!>ll that was too broad and unscientific to be taken seriously. ln -011e question, 90 percent of the respondents said that America was still the greatest country. There also was a highly self-serving spot that merely gave prime-time visibility to Ken Bode and Connie Chung, two ofNBCs floor correspon- dents at the political conventions. Bode gave odds on the Democratic vice presidential ~sibilities without adequately explaming his touting. But N.BC, with its promotions for · the "Today" show, "Nightly News•• and its convention correspondents, did11't do the onlyon-etr advenisinit. Mike Love of the Beach Boys preferred to plug the group's appear- ance in Washineton WedRCSday in- s~ead of answenng Mitchell's ques- t10ns about Watt, who canceled the group's Founh of July performance there when he was interior secretary. Ah. live TV. It's not always great, but at least it's not always predictable. lUXutrY THIAflfS W'ALK-INS * First Two MltiNt SltowifllS * Ollll Y S2.7i Ualess Notti" Burt Aoyno1d1 C:Al .. 10 .. IMU. •u .. 11 (N) Shows at 12:50 310{ 5:25 7145 10:05 Ao1>ert Redford THa NATUltAL IP'8) Shows 1t 12:0S 2:40 5 :20 1:00 t. 10:30 TOf'-.CRET (NJ Shows at 12: 1 O 2 :1 O 4 :10 1:10 1:10 .. 10:15 8RIPIUlllS l'NJ Shows •t '2130 3100 l :SO 1100 t. 10 :30 No ... SHI No ••rw•ln flrlcos eu~'i:Lfa Ay1croyd ca a rGJ Showe •t 12:21 2 140 41H 71217110/70 MM llllDIAlllA MMID • Ttle T--efDeel9~) Showa at 12:00 2:30 1100 7130 .. 10:00 No h u H /70 MM DRIVE -INS :1:~~ llilil•JLihlW6t Ill 1Zlll!l11tl!f ""' ,.,,.,,"' llACHSLOa PAJIT'Y CIU s ~hu c o-ffuturo ~r1cv•s II (ft) TO.-KCllKT (NJ ~hu Co-ffuture ffl11hdanco (ft) 0011v ~.,to11 Sylwu ter St11one llHHl&STQlllll (NJ UfalWi.llv YOWi ~) «ii@t?1Ua;i2J;\'.v:u=:.,.n".) ~~r,.~r,J W1CH VILLAOa (IU .._...PW-") THE .0.. °" ••1:EJ11-I STA• TUK Ill .,... Showa ., 12:45 3:05 lhOWI It 12130 2130 5:3111:00 & 10 :21 1:00 7:30 10 10 0170 MM ~nnah ShctH n C.n~~Q) m- BRING YQUR FAMILY TO CELEBRATE mE 4TH WITH THE GREATFSf ADVENTURE OF ALL TIME! . [,} I Jeff Brown Brock: Dodgers • ? .g1veup. Battlngjust .208, he's sent to minors with Carlos Diaz LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Anaeles Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda knows that managing is not aJl fun and baseball pmes. After the Dodgen defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-4 Monday night. he had to tell fint baseman Gres Brock and relief pitcher Carlos Diaz that they were being sent to the mi non. "I'm happy we won a baseball game, .. Lasorda said. "But I'm sad that I had to tell two players they were going to the minor lcaaues." Brock and Diaz were sent to the Albuquerque Dukes of the Pacific Coast League. Brock, who bit 20 homers as a rookie last season, has strualled so far this year, hitting just. 208. "We feel that the move wiU help him (Brock) repin his confidence and P.!t bis stroke back," Lasorda sajd. 'We feel the move wi111rclp this ballclub." But Lasorda said the Dodgers were not givina up on the 2S-year-old first baseman. "Hey, after Willie McCovcy won rookie of the year, he was sent down." Lasorda said. "He was havina trouble with his stroke, they sent him down, and he came back up to hit 500 home runs. We feel the move is the best for him (Brock) at this time." The Dodgen recalled Sid Bream, a first baseman bitting .353 at Albu- querque, and third baseman German Rivera, who was hitting .320 for the Dukes. The Dodgers also recalled an offense Monday night. coming up with a 14-bit attack. (Pleue eee BR0Clt/C2) .., .... D~anot 1)8nlcklng yet, bUt uaoru doff Juggling •ct. C2. . . An~theropportunity to hit That'showCaMwor horseJeffBrown- looks at Firtday•s All-Star contest By ROGER CARLSON Of .. OlllJ ........ All..Stargamcs-they'rcfilled with two commodities-haves and havenots in termsofcollqcscholar- ships. And, in the case of 215-pound fullback Jeff Brown from Corona del Mar High, surprisin.aJy he belonp in the latter classification, somethins that lias his own coach, Dave Holland, and South Coach Mike Giddinp from Newpon Harbor a little mystified. "He's probably even more over- looked than Brett K.acura," says Giddings, alludina to his own stand- out who failed to catch the eyes of a maJorcollege recruiter. Brown, a tWo-ycarstarterforCor- ona del Mar at fullback and linebacker. was a second team All- CIF Division Ill choia. He rambled for l ,038 yards on t 93 carries. good fora 5.3 avcraae. includina 11 touchdowns. And, he came out of the backfield to catch I I passes for 99 yards. His favorite play: A quick pitch. "lt'sa mystery to me," continues Giddings. "Every time I saw him he wasn't blocked and he's bit enouah riaht now to be a linebacker or running back. He's strona and quick. "But what happens, sometimes. if you 're not 'flashy' they don't go after ,.,~ ...... Dodaen' hanklln 8tabb9 breab u p double play Mon- day u Plttabaqh•• Job.DD)' RaJ can•t make throw. you. Brown isa workhorse. I know this-if*cwould have bad him, too, we would have won itall." w Uptoth1spo1nthe' p bablythebest all-around football pla~..,,,..,. fcnsive philosophr. but be'i&akinsit in stride. . coechcd.'' Holland asrea with the o"enight. "Surprised and disar,pointed? I sure am," say~ Holland. I don't know why. USC recruited ham (early) and maybe when word aot out ... I don't know:· And8rown1s,ettinamorcfu out of the 2Sth Ora• County All tar footballpme, which stansat 8 c)'clock Friday niaht at Orange Coast Co~e. than simply the kickoff. He soneofthosewhoartsjustas much fun from the pmc an practice. where the sheer joy of contact bas its rewards. .. La t rear I bacho leam i& all over ... saysBrov.·n. wtw>carriaa'3.2p. "And this )nt 111 have IO leam h liU ovcrapin. lt"•kindofhard, but ljUll wanttodo my best:' In the fall Brown wilt play for Golden West CotkJt. Asked ifthcheiaht factor(6-0) m1&ht be a tipoff. Rolland said, "Yes, maybe that's what SC thinks. And JUSt maybe he'll beat SC someday." Brown is one of those Silent types with one basic love. hittina-the kind which coaches love. In the weight room he benches 350 pounds and Holland says that will project to 400 pounds soon. "This has been more fun than practiccatCorortadcl Marbecause therc'smorehittina," says Brown. 'ljust want toaet intense and used to the pads api n." Brown 1soncofmany 10 tbispme capebleoftwo-wayduty, but figures to sec most ofh1s acuon at fuln.ck. rather than linebacker. -1 decickd on GOiden West bcdUtt of their past record.•• says Brown. '"They aet more players scholarshiP' to college." AsforFnday'uhow,Brown'l . in tens1 ty on the prxtice field rcflec1s the attitude of the South coach. "He(G&ddinp)just wants to put Oft' • sood mow. no mi.Jukes," says Brown. . "He'sagreat practice player," continues Holland. ''A true fullback. He's channeled everything into spons, lifting and playina football. Thercisquiteanadjustment for Brown because of the different of- Make no mistake about BtOwn- hccomes to play. Na vratilOva advances to Wimbledon semis Mattina topples Bulgarian; Evert Lloyd also posts win WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -Top-seeded Maruna Navratilova and No. 2 Chris Evert Lloyd continued their march today toward an expected showdown at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships. Navratilova, who bas yet to drop a set in th1s, the IOOth anniversary of women's play at the All-England Oub, became the first player to reach the semifina:ft.wbcn she ou.$led seventh-seeded Manuela Maleeva ofBulp.ria. 6-3, 6-2. Lloyd, who is one round behind because of Monday's ram delay, ousted I 2th--secded Claudia Ko~Kilsch of West Germany, 6-2, 6-4 to move into the quarterfinals. Her next opponent will be surpnsiDj Carina Karlsson. a 20-ycar-old Swede who had to qualify for the main draw. It was the first meetina apinst Ma.lecva for NtvJatilova, who is seeking her third consecutive Wimbledon singles title and her fifth straight Grand Slam crown. And the 17-ycar-old Bulgarian became the left- hander's 40th victim of 1984 against only one loss. Navratilova, serving strongly, teored service breaks in the third and ninth games to take the fint set in 24 minutes. In the second set. the winner broke Maleeva-an ardent baseliner who came to the net only once durina the match on her own accord -in the founh and final pmes. The young Bulgarian had five pme poinu in \be ci&bth Yes, they can still hit 'em out WASHINGTON (AP) -The waistlines are b1gcr and the gait slowed, but the home run swings that cheered generations of America's baseball fans were still very much in evidence Monday ni&ht as the Na- tional League Old fimers blasted their way to a 9-4 victory ovcT their American leaJue counterparts 1n the third annual Cracker Jack C1assic. .-me. but fell on the aecond ma~ point just as the clock licked past one hour. Uoyd won eight strai&bt points in one 5tretCh to srab her openina set apinst Kobde-Kibcb, ta.kins the third and fourth games at love. She was servina for the match in the eighth game, but Kohde-K.ihcb staved oft' a malCb point and went on to break Uoyd's service. Kobde then held for 4-S before Uoyd doled out tbe 73-minute match on her next service same. In the men's draw, Jimmy Connon isUk.Cia thiesame question at almost every major tournament tbcle days - when will you retire? · • ··As Iona as rm playins like rm~yina. I don't see why I can't go on anot.ba' year or two, said Connors after an impressive four--set, fourth-round victory Monday over fellow-American Tim Mayotte. '"But then apin, if I lose my interest, rd sooner~ OUL" · Like the rest of the men left in the siQ&les tournament. Connors enioyed a day oJf today as the women took to the show couns OJ' the All-England Oub. Connon, 31 , seeded No. 3, disposed of Mayone 6-7 (4-7), 6-2, 6-0, 6-2. With over 100 IOumamcnt vtctories behmd him, Connon is playina 1n tus 14th Wimbledon. Asked whether the spark of enthusiasm was u bricbt today as in the~ be replied emphatically: "It bas never left. I think that's what keeps my aarDe alive and is why J'vc had such aood success the IUt two yean.."' I Volleyball pairings announced Six home runs were hit in the game. including National league blasts by Henry Aaron, Johnny Bench. Tom Haller and Billy Williams. "This is Washington, the most powerful city in the world. You've got to bring your power when you come here,.. former Chicago Cub Ernie Banks said before the game. U.S. men open Olympics vs. Argentina; West Ge rmany to oppose U.S . women LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Anaeles Olympic OrpnizinJ Com- mittee Volleyball Commissioner Rolf Engen Monday announced the teams and pairings for the men's and women's 1984 Olympic Volleyball Tournament Engen, a Laguna Beach resident, said seven new teams, four men's and three women's. have been named to CM's O'Meara places second Costa Mesa's Catherine O'Meara reached the finals of the Maureen Connoll)' Brinker tennis championship in Dallas Sunday, losina to Jennifer Santrock of Texas. 6-3, 6-3 in the lknd- under division. panici~tc in .the Games. replacina boycotting nations. In the men's tournament.. with 10 teams. Tunisia replaces Bulpria. Korea replaces Poland, the People's Republic of China replaces Cuba and Italy replaces the Soviet Union. The other teams in the men's competition are Brazil, Argentina, ~Pl. Canada. Japan and the United States. The eight-team women's tour- nament participants arc the Federal Republic of Germany (replacing the German Democratic Republic). the People's Republic of China, Brazil. Canada (rcplacinJ Cuba), Korea (re- placing the Soviet Union), Japan, Peru and the United States. First round men's action on July 29 will find Kott.a meetina Tunisia at l O a.m., China facins Japan at noon. Argentina and the U.S. squarina ofat 6: 30 p. m. and Caoada meetina ltaJy at 8:30p.m. On July 30, the women's competi· tion opens with Canada mectina Peru at 101.m .. J19&1tJak.ina on Korea at noon, Brazil facing Chtna at 6:30 p.m. and West Germany meeting the U.S. at 8:30. Men's second-round action on July 31 has Egypt battling Canada at l 0 a.m., Itafy and China matched at noon. Brazil facing Arientina at 6:30 and the U.S. aoing against Tunisia at 8:30 p.m. Action continues each day ell:ccpt Aug. 9. throuah Aug. 11 . The women's semifinals are set for Aug. 5 with matches at 10 a.m .. noon, 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. The women's finals are Aug. 8 with the seventh and ei&hth-placc teams meetmaat IOa.m .. fifth and siuh and noon, third and founh at 6:30 p.m. and the championship match at 8:30. The men's semifinals are on Aug. 10 with games at 9 and 1 l a.m .. l p.m .. 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. The men's finals are split over two days Wlth the seventh and ei&ht-plaa tams mectinaat6:30Aua. IOand the sixth and seventh-place teams play- ing at 8:30 p.m. that day. On Aua, 11, the third and four\h- place teams will meet at noon and the championship match will be played at 6:30 p.m. Bench, who at 36 was the youngest participant, was thrilled to be playing 1n his first old timers' game. "All these guys were heroes to me. I hope they ask me back. I would hke to catch a Warren Spahn or Sandy Koufu." he said. The American Leaaue also played lol\fball scorina on sofo home runs by Harmon Killebrew, a new mem~r of Baseball's Hall of Fame. and former catcher Andy Etchcbarren. The five-inn1na pmc. which now serves to both open and dose Wash- angton' s baseball 5e&SOn, attracted a crowd of 29,698 fans despite the 1nclcm~t weather. t Aaron. baseball's all-tame home run king with 755, splintered his bat as he drove a pitch from Bob Feller some 300 feet into the left field seats for a l-0 National 1..Qaue lead after one innina. Bench, who retired Int year af\er 17 seasons in a Cincinnati uniform and after bittina more home runs than al'1')' catcher in baseball history, sent a pitch from Whitey ford into the left field stands for 3-0 lead after two 1nninas, "" R J , II Bank Aaron nrtkee a famlJlar poee u he watch ee h1a flnt-ton•ni two-nm bomerllOllda.J nlCht. It was the 1CCOnd tim~ this summer that O'Mea~1 a senior· to-be at Estancia Hifh, bad reached the ctwnpion1h1p match of a national toumamenL Earlier ahc had lost to Stephanie Haraes of California m the Easter Bowl tourney in Phoenix. In Sunday's match in Dallas, O'Metra more than held her own gainst Santrock. She had won four matches to ~t to the Cham- ptonll\lp finale. Angels' .Brown ma~es the most of last-minute start O'Meara's next m-,ior compcti· tion is the intcnecuonal cham· pionihips in Atlanta the last wttkend in July. Thia wtekcnd ahe will compete in the national hankourt tournament in Butl· iftllme. O'Mtara, 17, itthedauahtcrof John and Martha O'Mea~ of Costa Mesa. ' • I TORONTO CAP) -Miko Brown atldom ~ts a chance to •rt in the outfield -for the An,els. but he's alway ready. Brown, a lut-minutt hncup ld- dition after center fickler Oary Petti wutcntched beau ora ~ir\jury, 10Cked two home runs ;Monday aftetnoOft as the Aneels banded tbe Toronto Blue Jays a 6-3 dcfeaL .. , ~ mytttf 10 ~.Y every day," said Brown, 24, a Pacific Coast l..eapc Aft.SW' in l 13 with the Edmonton Tr1pptn ho has ap. ptarcd in 29 of California• 80 pm ' - this )Car. "Riaht now I'm not a tanana player. but l ha~e to come to the ball park rad)' every day.just as if l MSI Starter. .. I've bat home run in the minon and a few up be~. tf I put a aood troke on the bill it'll go out or mOlt blllotrb. .. n.e home N~ were Brown's tbird and founh of the season. A two-run shoe by Fred Lynn and a two-run • t'by Bob BooM accounted for tho~ •other run Ri&)\t·handri Mike Witt, 1-7. teat· tcn:<t ei,ht hits before •ivina way to Don Aase with two out in the ninth. In posuna his thn'd wa.iabt v.U\. Witt stnlek out five and walked three. Dave Colhn tripkd home one Toronto run. Emtc Wbin nsled in anolbcr and the other Nn scott:d on a wild pitch. Jam Clancy. 6-9, took the I . Boon a veteran caichcr. says he hkes ._bat be tca in Witl '"He the potential of brina one of the belt pitchers in the •• ot said. ..He'a aoi a attat C'U~batl and an oumandina fl tbell that the Anttl ha"' been lookana for l for a Iona ti me. "He has a lot of potcatiaJ and he's mnina to realm it thi year. Hc'uull a baby and he has a ~t arm." . The A I fil'5t tn tM Amcncan L.eque W~t. have 'tVOA three iA a ro and six of c~t ~m on ~rCUJ"m\t road trip. ~ now ll-l • on the road and IS-at home. -we haven't bat at home hkc we have on the road.•• explained Man- llef John McNama~. "We're an first pl~ because of our pitchi ..This club ('an win.,, It hi in anz put. and that includ Yello~one. \. Toronto Ma~ Bobby Cox was not unhappy with Oanc:y's pcr- form.antt. The b' f'i&ht-b.andtt pvc up fOut · bes.adcs the two homC'I'\ before bci~ put~. "We ju.at dtdn't hit Win." he "d. .. he only onca we bit. they cauaht." The A ls and Blue J1ya meet in n· t(4:30.K.M rad107IO) wath Tomm_y John (~~txiaa Tor· onto's Jim Gott (4-2). conclude tbc Rries Wednesday 4; , I ). The A ~rafiu ton . t DAILY PILOT /Tu81day, Juty 3, 1984 Outdoor ncqadbllll toal'Do~ he Nation I Outdoor RacqtJttblll Cham· p1on\hipt v.111 be held fnday throUJh Sunday 11 OranJC Coast Collqe. Tbc rompttll1on fca1urtt '' d1~1 o.ns; Men'& optn 11n1lc:s. optn doubles, B 1n&Jes and doubles, C doubles, 1tnior doubles, .en1or sinalc muter doubles. women's open ''l:e' and double 8 ain&lc• and doubks, C 11n es, Jun1on. ( 16 and under) and mixed open dou le&. .\mona 1ho5e compc1ma ut natJonal women'• uu1door ch1mp1on L¥nn Adams of Costa Mesa. and men's national outdoor doubles champion) Bnan Hawkes and Dan So"them. both ofHuntinston Beach. There is no charac for spectators. Compct111on bcllns 't 8 am each day and concludes 11 appro,umatel~ 8 p.m Fnday and Saturda) Finals 1n all d1V1s1ons arc scheduled to end around 4 p.m Sunday For add111onal 1nformauon, phone 432-5 l 24 or 957-2969 l"lrecncker Opea 1011 toumey The 13rd annual Firecracker Open innta· 11onal golf tournament will be held Fnday at lmpcnal GolfCo uflC an Brea Estrr Kraemer and family. one of Placcnua·s lir'lt srttlers. foundt'd tht' Fin"CT8ckcr Open an 1961 The tournament has an rntry hst of more than 150 golfers. three-founhs of whom arc related to thr Kraemer family. The enurc family dresses an red, white and blue F1rt>wor,!<s and a shotgun stan kick off the cH•n t at noon An award~ dannrr follows at the lm~rial Clubhouse For morr 1nlormat1on. phone 528-0820. Padres' Bevacqua arrested after hassle with wife From AP dllpatcbc1 m SAN DIEGO -Kun Bevacqua. a pinch hitter with the San Diego Padres. lS free on $4.000 bond after beine arrested following an allcrcat1on involving his ex-wife and a man Manuel M Smnh. a San Diego police officer, said that Be'acqua was arrested early Sunday at the apanment of has ex-wife. Carrie Sue Bevacqua. The 37- } ear-old pla)'cr was booked for investigation of charges of assault with a deadly weapon against his u-wifc's companion. battcl) on his ex-wife and vandalism. Accord1"g to Smith, pohce were called to Mrs. Bc"acqua's apanment aibout I a.m. Sunday, where the)' found Be,acqua The player was esconed awa}. Smith said . The officer said police were summoned again at 2.55 a m . aRd were told that Bevacqua had broken a windo"' to get inside the apanment, then tore down a bedroom door to confront Ms. Bevacqua, 30, and her companion. JdTre) Karl Kaake. Kaake said Mrs. Bevacqua asked him to stay with her because she feared her ex-husband would possibly try to enter the apanment and harm her. She ~as custod) of their 6-year-old son, who was staying with other family members that night. Kaake and Mrs. Bevacqua were in the master bedroom when they heard a loud noise and glass breaking, police said. When Kaake went to investigate. he saw Bevacqua armed with a knife, screaming incoherentl}, and approachiog the bedroom door. police said. Kaake 1mmediatelr slammed the door shut and told Mrs. Bevacqua to cal police. Kaake and Mrs. Bevacqua said they wert threatened by Bevacqua. who got into the bedr~n:i ~y tearing the d09r off tts hinges. He struck Kaalce with hts fist . then grabbed his ex-wife and pushed her down on the bed, the police repon said. ae .. acqua then allegedly placed the knife against Kaake·s throa t and ordered htm to get out. Quote of the day Dan C•ntw, a New Y~ Cotrno. defender, on how tM North Amer1oan Soccer LeegUe team prepared for the Toronto Bizzard by maJdno &-1 Jeff Dugan the focal point of their defente: '1tttev (ttie Blizzard) ptay an Englleh atyle. T~ get tM batl, knock It up to their two f~dt end we Just say, 'Jump, Jeff, jump.' That's It." Owners fight over Red So:x 805 l ON -fhc v.1dow of former m Boo,1011 Red Sox ov.nerTom Yawke y and a pannl'r moved Monday to buy out 16 limited pannersh1ps 1n lhe American League Club and sohd1f)' the control of the team they won an court Jean YaY.kC) and Ha-..-wood Sullivan seek to oust general partner Budd} LeRoux and ltm ited panners attorne\. .\lbcrl F Cu rran and Kentucky coal magnate Rodp,ers Badget! NEWP ORT HARB OR 5111pYARD CLEAN & PAINT BOTTOM $6 50 Per Foot Labor Only <;TEA M CLEANING $'45 00 hr. \'ARO LABOR $40 Olfl'er Hour Olymplc-'loot:IZJ.6 upo ,,. Outdoor J:nlhu>1a\li. <"On ~ th( newest 1n po"' nf\e anJ auns, U'ap and lk~t \af'Ft tqu1pmcnt and hunting car at the 1984 h llftl fapo, K l for July .. 9-Aua. 4 It Prado Rea1onal Pirk, near Chino. The C\00 run• conturKntly with the Olympic shootin compe1111on. al~ at Prado Rcaional Park. A frtt ahunle 1trv1ce w11l l.)pcnitt between the txL'O and the ahootana «>mpe11tion where S7 countnca wtll be compe1lna for medals, Alona with manufaC1uters' d1splays1 special cxb1b1t1 wall include black powckr hrtarms, various weapon seminars and hunt!na films. Viaiton will also be flncd It the show for custom hc.anna protectors Information booths from the N111onal Rille Auoc11tion and lcadina outdoor pubhcataons wall also be at the expo Hours arc 10 a.m -6 pm. weekdays and 10 a.m -4 p m Saturday. Admission is $3. Yoatb all-comen •trim meet Newpon Beach Aquaucs i.s hostina a youth all<omcrs swam meet Wednesday at Newpon Harbor Hl&h from 10 a.m.·noon. Events will be held IO four strokes for all aae aroups, qes S-19. There as no entry fee. Entry forms arc available at the Newpon Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Dcpan-ment office, 3300 Ncwpon Blvd. They will also be 1v11lablc at the Newpon Harbor High pool from COllch Grca Tye today between 4:30 and 6:30 p.m. For additional information, phone J~ Jor-aensen at 631-2292 or Dan Iwata at 1he Newport Beach Parks. Beaches and Recreauon Depart· menL Kittle Otlh1e Royals make It five in a row Steve Balboal continued has recent Ill slugging wt.th a two--run homer in the first game and a home run and double in the nightcap as the Kansas Ctty Royals swept \fonda} ·s twt-naght doubleheader from the Cleveland Indians. 9-3 and 4-3. gt\. ing them a five-game winning streak for the first time this season. George Brett also htt a two-run homer an the first game to suppbrt the seven-hit pitching ofLarry Gun, 9-4 .... Elsewhere m the American uague Monda>. hot-hilling Keat Hrbek and Mickey Hatcher homered and JobD Butcber scattered I 0 hits as Minnesota rallied to defeat Balttmore, 6-4 . . . Harold Baines and Ron Kittle slammed two-run homers and Floyd Bu- nls ter checked Detroit on five hits as 1he Chicago White Sox de- feated the Tigers, 7-1 for their first victory over the East Division leaders in seven tries this season . . . Rick Manolog homered and Gara scored two runs to lead the Milwauk« to a 3-2 victory over Seattle in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader. In the nightcap, Ben OgUvle hit a tic-breaking home run in the bottom of the eighth inning and the Brewers went on to defeat the Manners. 6-4 for a sweep .. BIUy Sample'• t1c- brcaking two--run double in the fifth mning capped a Texas comeback from a 5-0 deficit and gave the Rangers a 7-6 victory over the New York Yankees .. Mike Heatb led off the 11th inning with a double and scored the first of three Oakland runs on a sacrifice and a throwing error aHhc .\ 's dcfeatccl Boston. 9-6 ........ Umpires join Lach's Legion MILWA UKEE -The umpires Ill weren't wearing their familiar blue uni- forms tn the first game of a doubleheader betw«n Seattle and Milwaukee Monday. The umpires were wearing Milwaukee Brewers caps and "Lach's Legion" T-shirts, which refer to Brewers Manager Rene Lachemann. Home plate umpire Ji~ McKeon was wearina bl.ue jeans, Larry Young at third wore blue slacks, Tim McClelland at first base wore gray jogging pants and Dan Morrison at second was wearing a pair of Brewers' pinstripe pants. . The umpires" uniforms had not arrived on a flight from Kansas City in time for the $8me. The ~uipment finally did am ve during the opener and the crew worked the second game in their full uniforms. -UCI Yolle7ball cb&mplomldp The Southern Cahfomia Ora Valfeyball • mpionstup will be held 1urd1y and unday at UClrvme, bcainnin11t 8:30a.m. and cqn11nu1n. the rc1t or the day. Cornpet1t1on wall be held in men's, womtn'• and co-t'd doubl« with n fntry fee ofSl2 per tc~m ~qui~. The event will be held 1n a pool play format and wm bcriefil Lhc UC lrvine volleyball proaram. For more information, phone UCI C~ch Mike Puritz at U6-7218 between 8 a.m and 5 p.m. • Bod~~ cbamplolUb.I,,. The e1Jhth annual WorlcfBod~surfing Cham-p1onsh1ps arc set for Aut 24-26 an Oceanside The co111pet1t1on. which annu.alJy attracts M>me 400 entr1nts from the U.S. Canada Australia and New Znland. is open to men and women over the •ae of 12. ' There arc seven aae brackets. includina 55 and O\er. and two women's d1v1S1ons. Compttit1on beains at 6:301.m. each day and concludes With finals in •II aae brackets on Sunday. Aui. 26. Contcslallu will be araded on all aspects of bodysurfina -wave selection, quality of entry and ~it. stylt, position. distance, maneuvers and sponsmaoship. Entry blanks can beobta!ned by phoning(619) 433-2520. Entry deadline as Aua. 8. Entry ftt is SS. Mets rookie has strikeout lead Rookie Dwlot Gooden took the • m 'or-league leacf in strikeouts Monday n1~1 by fannina J 2 Houston Astros in leading the New York Mets to 4-2 victory. The 19-year-old right-hander fanned Jerry &!~er for the third time in the game to surpass ~ VaJen1ulea of Los Angeles with his I 25th strikeout of the season. Gooden gave way to Jesse Oroaco, who collected his 15th save by gelling the last two outs of the game. Wally Backmu led the attack by driving in three of New York's runs ... Elsewhere in the National League, Sbane Rawlef., making his first start for the Phillies, gave up just two hits in seven innings and Ozzie Virgil and Glenn Wilson hit solo home runs as Philadelphia defeated the Cincin- nati Reds, 4-0 . . . The Chicago Cubs committed three costly errors in losing 5-1 to San Diego. Errors by loser Rieb ReHcllel, VlJ1U 4-4, and Gary Matbew1 led to four of the five Padre runs to make it easy for wi nner Dave Oravecky, .5-4, who has gJven up just three earned runs 1n his last 18 innines ... Andre Daw1on'1doubledrove in the lead run m a four-run sixth inning to help Montreal to a S-4 victory over Atlanta. World 10,000recordsmaahed STOCKHOLM, Sweden -Fernando m Mamede of Portupl looking like a beaten man with seven laps left, surged back with a tremendous fimsh to break the world I 0,000-meter record with a time of 27 minutes, I 3.81 seconds Monday. Mamede..i... who took over the lead from fellow- countryman carlos Lopez with two laps to go, became the first Portuguese to hold a world record in track and field. It was the 65th world record broken at Stockholm's Olympic Stadium, site of the 191 2 Summer G~mes. More world track records have been broken here than in any other stadium in the world. Henry Rono the great Kenyan runner, held the prevtous mark of 27:22.4, set six years ago in Vienna, Austna. Lopez, who took the lead JUSt after the 7-kilometer mark, also crossed tbe finish line under Rono's old record, clocking 27: 17.48. American Mark Nenow, of Lexington, Ky., was third m 27:40.56 in h1story·s fastest 10,-000-meter race. Albcno Salazar holds the American record of 27:25.61. Leg Insurance --$1 million TOK YO-The Hankyu Braves of the • Pacific uague will insure the legs of Yutaka Fukumoto. Japan's greatest base stealer. for the equivalent of SI mill ion. a team spokeswoman said today . Fujiko Sakamoto said the Bra ves, which previous- ly had insured the 36-year-old speedster's legs for 100 million yet1'(S425,000), will more than double its protection when Fukumoto reaches hi s I ,OOOth career theft. Fukumoto, who is 5-7. was once considered too small for professional baseball. He has stolen 995 bases dunn1t his 16-year career with the Osaka-based team. . Dodgers not ·panicking yet Lasorda uses ajugg 1 to keep club close to Pa es LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Anacles Dodam. injury-riddled and incoMistent t0 far this su'°"· aren't panickingjui.t because they've fallen back into thtrd pl ~ in the Nat1on1l t.eaauc We t. . • 0 Thetc's 5tlll 1 lot of t:xasrb:lll lcfi." waid veteran catcher Steve Yea,er. "We're not 1oin1 to ~ve up until there's four pmcs ef\ and we're five behind. ' . The defendina West champion Dodgers came into June with a half-pme lead in the division race but nowt beainnina the second half of the season,. they fino themselves in 1 tailspin. Followina Mon~y·s wm over Piu~urah, Los Angeles was barely over .SOQ (42-40) and was 61/J pmes behind Wes1 leader San Dieao. • "We've had our hare of problems," wd Dodacr Marrager Tom Lasorda ... We've had a lot of injuries, 1n awful lot of in.Juries, much more than you'd expect.". The disabled list at one time or another tW ~l11med Dodacr reaulars Mike Marshall and Orea Brock, the latter sent to the manors fotlowina Monday's pme, as well as pitchers Jerry Reuss, who has missed six starts with a sore elbow, and Tom Niedenfuer, whocamcupwithasorearm whic h sidelined him for a month. For Lasorda, all this hu made juggling his lineup a daily necessity. "We've had to use different players in different situations," he said. "We've had· to go 'ri~h ~ lot of youngsters that we've had to call up from the manor leaaues to help us." Lasor.da's patchwork team -which was in first place with a 29-23 mark on June I -held up until two weeks ago, when the club suffered through a seven-game losint streak. Aller losing to San Diego 5-0 on June 26, the club's ninth defeat in 13 games. Los Angeles fell to 6112 pm~ behind the Padres. .. We haven't played as well as we're capable of ptayina," said La'°rda. "We need Pete Guerrero, Marshall and Brock hitting the ball hke they're capable of hituna. They do that and we'll be all riaht." Man killed in ballpark fall CHICAGO -A 40..year-old Cati-• fornia man attending the American League baseball game between the Detroit Tigers and the Chicago White Sox died after falling 12 feet off a ramp in Comiskey Park, authorities satd. He was identified as Geo'le Grob of Camarillo, who police said had been visiung his parents on the Nonhwest Side and went to the ball game Monday night with two friends. Grob fell from a ramp leading to a lower deck about 12 feel below and landed on his head, said police Sgt. Thomas White. "Our medics applied first-aid treatment" after the 19 p.m. fall , said White Sox spokesman Chuck Shriver. "He was alive when paramedics picked him up, but apparently died in the ambulance en roufe to the hos pi tat." Grob was pronounced dead at I 0:20 p.m. an Mercy Hospital, a spokesman there said. He was bleeding from the right car and bad a bruise over his right eye when he was found on the tower deck, White said. Pohcc were searching for the two friends who were with Grob at th e game to determine the circumstances of the fall, White added. • When police went to the hospital a while later, the two friends and Grob's parents had been there but left, a hospital spokesman said. Sandberg. Winfield take lead NEW YORK -Ryne Sandberg ofi"he • Chicago Cub~ and Dave Winfield of the New York Yankees have taken the lead at their res~tive positions in fan voting for baseball s All-Star Game, the baseball commissioner's office announced Monday. Sandberg, who leads the National League with 109 hits, jumped over both Steve Sax qf Los Angeles and Alan Wigins of San Diego to take the lead among NL second basemen. Sandberg now has 925,377 votes to 724, 125 for Sax and 664,326 for Wiggins, who led last week. Winfield, the American uague's lcadina hitter, moved 1head of Detroit's Chet Lemon and the Angels' Reggie Jackson amona American League outfielders. Winfield has 1,046,-949 votes to 925, 1 Sl for Lemon and 861,330 for Jackson with Ron Kittle of the Chica.ao White Sox closing in on Jackson for the third SPot with 764,667. Voting for the game ended Saturday, but the finaJ teams won't be announced until later this week. The American uague starters will be announced Wednes- day and the National League staners Thursday. The ~me will ~ played on July I 0 at &an Francisco s Candlestick Park. fl'elevtalon. rad.lo Wimbledon giant-kil!ers BROCK ••• Prom Cl ''It was nic.c to sec some basehit1 out there," Lasorda said. That's Annacone, Karlsson who upset seeded opponents WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -Two qualifiers, a 21-year-old American man and a 20..yeat-old Swedish woman, joined the roster of Wimbledon giant·killcrs Monday by reaching the quarterfinals of the All-Enatand champ1onsh1ps In his very fir t tournament as tt professional Paul Annaconc of East Hampton, N.Y., dispatched No. I i-secd Johan Knek in stra1aht $Cts, while Canna Karlsson put out I .Sth-~cd Andrea Temcwan of Hungary. "I think my aetuna this far 1s a shock to 1 lot of people hutJt "the b1ggest shock to me," said Annacone. 1 former No I player for the Uni versity of Tennesstt who ts coached bv hlS brother teve. "But I olaycd well in quahfyani and I think I deserve to bt here fhc depth in men's tenn11 is so .,eat that there arc a lot au> s in the quahfyina event who could hold thctr own 1n the m1in draw." , lucky breaks:· Annacone said. Kriek, a South African-born naturah1cd American. had dropped sets in all three of his earlier matches and Annacone's game plan worked perfectly. He won in straight sets 6-3. 6-2, 6-4. Annacone also has his own special brand of mental sti mulation. "Before and sometimes durin& the match, l do dccp- breathina exercises and try to focus or concentrate on somelbina. I empty my mind of Cl'trancous thouaflu and to try and visualize mvsetf hittina aood shots." Annacone had only twice played on an~s bcfo~ and when he finished, he heard a vo1c.c callin1 bii name 11 the side of the court. "It 11td 'Plul Annacone, do not move.• I thouih I was about to be assassmated," he joked. .. Bua when flookcd uound, I saw this sm1lina ftcc. My mother. Cathy. had dttidcd in the middle of the ni,Jht to surprise' me and come over." Karlsson, d.auahter of an insur1nce broker from O~bro and ranked 182 in lhc world, broke Bnti h hearts Saturda with 1 marathon thru-set ''ICtory over Vi,.inia Wede. went one better Monday by cl m1na&in1 Hunaary's Tcmcsvan 6--4, 7·S. Third baseman Pedro Guerrero had two hits, drillina a two-run double in the founh innina to Jive Los An1e1es a lead it would not relinquish. "I'm swinain.a better and sceina the ba11 better,'' said Guerrero, who wu in a slump earlier this season which saw his averaae dip to .170. "I feel I'm out oflhc t lump now;• he said. "l ~now at tt\c end of the season l'll be hinina .300." Rookie Franklin Stubbs had three hats, incJudina a triple off tho rip1 field wall in the seventh. "l"m fccli~ much more com· fortablc now, said Stubbt.. "rm swinaina mo~ naaural btcausc I'm more relaxed.'. , Los Anaetts go~ a bia outina ffdm i'\aht·hander Akjand.ro Ptna. who improved his f'C()C)rd to M by pitcrun,a 7 l·l inntnp and atterina ei4nt tuis. I think Prna pi&ched outstandloa tonilht." Latorda said. HAUL OIJTS TO 75· -75 TONS/Marin~ Scale Nol incc John McEnroe in 1977 has 1 qualifier reached the la t ei&ht of the oien's s1n&les at Wimbledon, bu1 th1nas did not start out LOO well for Annaconc. Jn every match, Karlsson. ho IOtt 1n the IC'COnd round ofQuaUfy1n1 he~ last ycar1 has bitcn followed by a lf'OUP. of Swedish fans who cheer ncr evrry Po nt. 223 21 ST STREET NEWPORT BEACH (7 14) 675-2550 He amvcd late on court 10 lht annoy1n~ of a fru'llratcd crowd But once the match started, he soon won over the f1n1 with a display or co ntrolled aaarc ion. 'I wanted to make this match s'1ortcr but I djd n t knowhow so IJU t went into it and pla)td. TOday' m tC'h was much futer but undoubtedly the t wan of my mrttr,'' he said "Wc'rcknock1oaon the door,·• said Pnubur&h man-.er Chuck Tanntt. "'OJ,c play hero, one play there. Wc'ft llkln teams ~t to 1bt wire." :T'ra11in1 2-0 m Lhc founh inniflf, the OodJ " look the lead fbr &OOd, Konn four tirnt'S. , "I knew Johan was very 11lentcd but thll if I ~ould hana 1n the~ he could be erratic: and thut I may act o few -.... Yarborougl;J captures pole J It marks the seventh time veteran driver haswon position for annual July 4 race DAYTONA BEACH, Aa. (AP} - Cale Yarborouah, a four-time Fire- cracker 400 winner, captured the Pole Position for th~ annual JulY 4 NASCAR race Monday with a fire- cracker-record speed ofl 99. 743 mph. Yarborou&h circled the 2.S..mile trioval at Daytona lntemational Speedway in 4S.OS8 seconds in a Chevrolet Monte Catto, but hi1 quali~1n1 speed was well off his track rceor of201.848 set durina hi1 Pole- winn · a ride for the Daytona SOO nearly five months aao. It marked the 1eventh time the 44- year-o&d drinr hu won the Pole for the $387,300 fircmcker. a 40().male event act for 10 a.m. EDT Wedntt- day. A crowd of about 70,000 and Prnidfnt Reapn are expected for the raoe. "I didn't think we were aoina that fut, .. said Y al'bcsfouah, one of aeveo drive~ to top ifie flRCtlcwqualify. in& record of J96.63S he 'Ct in 198). "Since that held up, I don't mind whatsoever that we didn't run 200 (mph). HITS: Gwde, Toronto, IOOi Mattlnttv, New York, ~ Tremm.I, Detroit, f7J Wlnntlld. Hew YOtt, '6, 9'1t*tll, lhll"'*'-• '1; Yount, Mltweull•, '1. DOUILES: Cowena, S..ttlt, 201 Gare", Toronto, 20; Perrlan, TeHs, 201 l..tmOn. Detroit, 20; 'rMI!, MIMttOte, to. TRIPt.ES: Motffy, Toronto. 10i ColllM, Toronto, t; Owtn, S.elllt, 7; \Jt!IMW, Tor111to, 6; KG'"°", Detroit, 5: &Aw. C:lllceto. 1 HOME •uNS: K"'-""9n, OeAlenct, 22, MA.Iott LIAGUI STANDINGS Annu, to.ton, 20, Kittle, c:NcMe. lt, American Leeeut Oevtt, SMttlt. l7l TilonllOll, ~. 17. .... Mlnntaola C"lca"° Oakland K1nw1Cllv Stelllt TtxH O.lrolt Toronto Beltlmort Bo11on Mllwauk.H New York Cltvtlend STOLEN IAaS: 9'Helldtn0n, Otldend, WIST DtVtSION 31; htlh. .,.... •: Gercle. Toronto, 17; W L P'ct. GI luttw. C:ltVtletld, H ; C:oll!M, Torento. 21. 42 37 .531 PITCHING (I dtclalont): CWdlll, Otll· l9 39 .500 3 lend, 1·1. 2.15; L•I. Toronto, 1·2, U7; 31 .0 ."7 • Petrv, Detroll. 1M. U6. Morrlt. Ottrolt, ?! ~ ~! ;~ lN, 2.56; Siie, TOt1WltO. l•J, 2.Al. i ; M3 6 STIUKEOUTS: Witt, ~ ltl; Stlett, 36 45 ~ 7.,.. Toronto, 17; Nltltro. Ht.w Yon, 16; Morris, •AST DIVISION Detroit, 12; Houefl, Tnea, 11. S5 2:3 .10S SAVES: QulMlltltrrY, Kemea ~· 22; 46 :n .SfO t Flnetr1, Mllweuket. 17. Ceud!~~ ~~ •• t.. 12.... 16; Dellh, Mll'lfttWle. IS; Htr·--·· ...-43 ... ...... •• trolt, 14. ,. tt . .u lf M O .AU ltli'I NatllMI LMeue S3 0 ,.,. 21 IATTIH.G lllS •• Mia): GWYM. san Mll*Y'• 3lc.: .A21 22 Dlt9o, ..35'; ,,~. Montl'MI. ~; Slndtltre. CNceeo. .loU; Cetltl, Houaton, AiWa 6, Toninto a m · Wutllneton. Attent• •. su. Kenws City f , C:ltwllnd 3", lilt MfM RUNS:· Senlull, P'Nl••Ne, 57; Send· Kamas Cltv •, Ot¥tlend 3, 2nd,.,,.. -.. .-...~ ..... Oernllr ~ SJ· Mllw.ukH 3, Stell'-2, ht pme ...,._ ____ , ,.; ' .. .._...., ' \ I "I know we're: J mph faster than 197.668. ihc tb1rd best run of the day. I t ummcr:• he added, "and l &'1 He wu followt<t by Labonte, you can uy that'stnainceri~" t 97.S42; harsoo, 19:u>62; Petty, Dile Earnhardt. also dnvina a -196.962. and Elias.. 196.782. Mo"" Carlo, was the 1CCOnd·~t.cst -rm rally su 'sect to RIA that quahfier amona 20 dnven cla1m1~. wt .. Elrott f ~VJlle Qa spots ln I.he 40-Car field. 1be otbtt 10 '1 .. 1 • 0 , • • .. posations wall be decided &oday. sata. . .. But Cales 1 IOI~ to be a Earnhardt, the 32nd of 49 driven tou&h httle guy to outrun. hc:adina onto th~ uack durina mom-Round1n1 out the 1op 10 ~ 1983 ins qualifyina in 16-dqree heat, was Firecracker w1Mer Buddl Battt_ clockedat t97.676mphontbeflrstof 196.4~8;8cn~yPano.os, 19 .l08~ftd his two taps to move ahead of Ball two-tame . Firecracker champion Elhou, Terry ~bonte, David Bobby Alhson, 19~ Pearson.. Richard Petty and rookie La.kc Speed, 19S.~ DantlJ Tommy Ellis ~bo all exceeded Waltrip, 195.72S; Harry Gant, Yarborouah'• old record. l 9S.648; Rusty Wallaoe, 195.4S2 and Elliott was tbe first to shatter the Phil Panons, I 9S.2S7 occupied the previous mark with a speed of next five spots. Olympic Games history · Rowlill medallat. MIN'S '·CMM.OAR•D SHILL W1THOUT COXSWAIN 1tM. ... L..-ttS1. ........, 1. US., CtnlUN Iott 0., SI. LOIAs, 1. YU90llevle, 7.1U; 2. France, 1;11t, J f:OS.I, 2. U.S., Movnd Cltv lllowlnt dub, SI FtnlMd, 721.l L.oula, nt, 3 US., W•lern lllowlne CJue>, SI. 1956, M•r,... Louis, nl 1. Canedl, 7.ol.I; 2. United Stelft <.tom 1' ... LAMM Weldllt, John Mc:Klnlay, Artt1ur McKtnlay. I. Grnl l rllt ln, Meodlltn Colltot l .C., JMlft Mclnlostll. 7:11.4; > France, 7:21.f, Oxford, 1:34.0; 2. Ortet Britain, Leander 1Nt. lll81M Club, nt. 1. United Stein (Arthur A'ffeult, Tad ltM. P'ar11 Neall, John Sayre, lllldlerd Walles), 6:2A.U; 1. Grtet lrllllln, 1:0U; 2. Canada. MLO, 2. llalv. 6:21.71. J. SOVltt Uftlon, 6:2U2. 1 Swlltar1end, nt. ,,.., T.-V. lf'JI. AmdllUllllh 1. Dtrvnertl. 6:5'.lt; 2. GAel Britain, 1. GrHt erttaln, 6!lU; ~led St•I .. UJIU7; 3. United Stem (Geoftrtv Pk.ltd, (Char1es l(lflt, w-.rn , 0wrve" lfldlard Lyon, TIMOClort Min.I, Thtodort MllwaukH 6, Sfflfle 4, 2t1d 911M ---~GWYM, Sell 0lt90, D I ..,.,,.,._.,...,.., Oaklend f , to.ton 4. 11 IMlnes Sl.11111: O.vla, CfllQeo, S7; Schmidt, Phlle· • C"lcaoo 7, Ottrolt 1 cM!Phle. ss· c.rttr Montr..i w· Durtiem Hteits, Ernnt 8e¥9r), 6:37..0; 3. ltatY, Huh!, 7:0U7. 6:37.6. 1MI, Mtxke Qty lftt. LM A.-. 1. Eeat Gtnnenv. Uf.11; 2. Huneerv, Taxas 7, New York 6 cnic.oO. U; SendMrt, ~: fO. • Mlnnnote 6, B•"lmort 4 HITS: Sendbttt. Clllceeo, 110; GwvM, Ttc11Y"1 0."'" S.n DlteO, 107, Sotmuel, PtllladelPftle, 10.; AMlh (John 4·61 al Toronto (Golf 4·1). lllarnlro, An.Me, '7; wvmt. Pltttburttl, (~ ,, KanM1 Cllv lllldl f·S) et 0.vtland 004.JBLES! SlftdMr9, OllQeo, 20; • • (Jeffcoat 3· 11. (nl FrallCON, N\onlreat lf; c.n.-, Monfr981. Oakland (Conroy 1·31 at Bolton (Hl,nt 11; H'*-td, AllMtte, lt; Semutl. Pt'lllecMt- l·S), .(Ill Phll 17 .. o.1ro11 1wm11 0-1 or a.1r 4-11 •• T'iuitLes: Senclblr9. chlc:Mo. 11; cti~a:,~sar~:,!;6"4!5'/ •t Mltwau11.. =::: :nn~:;i:; ~~~';'. =:=: ~ (Gibson 0-21, lnl Doren. Howton, 6; McGee, St. L.oult, 6. Nt,w Yotk (Bvatrom 0-0) et Teu1 HOME RUNS: MutW!v, Atlante, 17; (TtneN 1·71, (nl Sdlmldt. PMedtlPtlle, 16; Clt1tr, Monlrtel, Balllmora (Flanaean •·SI el Mlnnnol• ,. ,.._ I ........ ~ lJ ....__..__ --(SmllNon 1·71, (n) ii .,.vs,~. ; --..._.., .. --. W ...... T to 1• 1~ STOLEN IA.SES: Samuel. ~le. --at oron , n ---..... •--............. ,. 9'edua CltM:1n Oakland et loalOft ... ; ........... "'. _, .......... ; • • 1a111more 11 Mlnnnota :!!;,,!!;, ~· Chieffo, JO; lllelnft, t<anMI Cltv ti Cltvtlend PITCHING (I dt<Wonll: Solo, Clnc:IG· ~~:.~It ~~n) • --nefl, f-1, 2.AI; lllven, Houston, M , l.13; New York al TtxH1 (n) O.rllne1 New York, f-.J, US; L ... M«t· NatloMt L..NtllM trMI, lz-•. UO; Ptfez, AllMta. l·J, S.00. STltlt<EOUTS: Gooden, New York, 121; W•ST OfVfSION v ........... °"""" 1J4; SolO, Clnclnnall, w L -~ GI "' •van, Houiton, '4; Cer11on. Phlladel· San Diego 46 31 .597 llftle, 19. AU.11ta 43 31 .531 S ....SAVES; ~I.-, St. Louis. 1'; Holland, Dedlws 42 ..i .S12 ·~ PhlladelPl'lle, 17; Sml"', OllcMO. IS, Or· Houlton JI '2 ,47S f\'li oteo, .... York, IS; Go&Mot, San Dla9o, Cincinnati 37 43 .463 10YJ i.. San Frenclaco 31 4S .a 14~ •AST DfVISION New York • 41 33 .554 ChlcailO 43 35 .551 Ptllladt!Pllla 43 35 .SSl Monlrnl 31 Jf .4'• •~ SI Louis 31 41 .4 1 5\'J Plttsbur;h lO a _..5 1l Mel*Y"• sc- Dedlws s. Ptttlbur9" 4 MontrnJ 5, Atlanta 4 Nt• York 4, Houalon 2 Ptllleclelohla •. Cincinnati o Sen Diego 5, Chl<eoo I Onlv ~mes sctledultd Tllt1deY"1 Glmft Plrtsbuf;" (Candalarle 5·61 11 ~ (Herstlfaer 3·3), lnl St. Louis (Alltn l·l) at San FranclKO CKrukow J-7) Houlton (Rnn 7·21 at New Yon CBaranvl 4-f), (nl Cine Inna II ( Pulto 0-1) al Pfl1IMlelPtlla (K~n 1·61. (n) . Montr•I IGulllckson 4·51 at Atlanta (Mc:Murtrv 6-11. (n) ChlcellO (Trout l·ll at San Diego (Thurmond S-31. lnl WMntMllY"I Gemn Pllllbur9" 11 OM9tn, lnl SI. Louis al San FrencfKO, 2 Houston al New Yon, (n) Cincinnati el PllllectetPflle • Cnl Montrnl et Allenta. (nl Chlcaoo at Sen Dleeo, (nl AM•AteAN LEAGUa A"9lh 6, Blue Java 2 CALl,0.NIA TO.ONTO · M.rll~ C.rtw It> • I 0 0 MCBron rt 5 2 2 2 LYMd 4 122 RtJkMI dll 4 0 1 0 Downlno " l I o o Wlttono 21> 4 I 1 0 Grid! lO 4 0 I 0 Boontc l022 Plcclolo 11 3 0 O O Cotlln1 If Ftrnnd? H Mwlf7vd UPthew 11> Alktnsdh larfltld rf Mullnka• wtl(ll c Grlffln2b Laach ptt ... , ..... s 0 1 ' 5 0 2 0 3 0 1 0 •• 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 4 I 2 0 • 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 M 't 6 T ..... M J 12 tc.. ft"""'* ~ ., ... 111-6 T... m ••1-J Gemt WIMlno 1111 -ar-n <JI. LO&-Calllornla 6, Toronto I.. »- LHdl, co111n1 Hlt-l.vnn 001. Brown 2 (4) 5-Pleclolo Celfor'llllt Wlll W.1·7 AHtS,1 T.,.,. 1" HRl•llto I 2·3 I 3 J • S MOOOO O Oencv L,6·f 7 ' 5 S 4 • Lemp 2 31100 Ctancv llltelltd to t belltn 11'1 l ttl. WP-Witt T-2:33 A-2',227. NATIONAL L8AGUa ~S,Plra1e14 ""TT1aUltOH LOS ANOILS ' .. ,..... ., ..... WYnntd 5010 S.xh 5011 ltev 2b s o 1 o 8RutMI cf S 1 3 O M.a4ldl • S 0 0 0 Outrrer a S I 2 2 JTIIMll II> 5 0 2 0 Me,..,.lf , 0 l 0 L..IC'V flf 0 t 0 t La•• If 0 0 t 0 TP'tnac J J 1 0 MlclnCIOrf 4 0 I 1 Maull! II • I 1 o v...., c • t t O "'°'* tf > 0 I I s"*" 111 • 1 , 0 ltftua • O i 2 A'*-tlH 2 1 1 1 McWlrNP 2 0 0 0 Afl9nep l 1 2 0 Otl• pt\ 1 0 0 0 Nltdntut P 0 0 0 0 GuenttP 0 0 0 0 Mavllfl I 0 11 Te4'ulvt II 0 t 0 0 T""" )04114 T ..... M 1141 lm"e.,., ...... ........... •tt•nt-4 '--'~ •• i.ic-s CWM W1n!11N 11111 -~ m. D~ltlMtll t. L.oe-Plllallur9fl 10. L.ot A,_.. 11 21-etrre 2, Fr ..... , TP'tna, Outtttro, ~. A""'8. )8-St~ l-AP9ne. &l'-AnOer\Ofl, ,_. HltHallO 6 11 • • • 6 ' 1 1 ' • ! 1 1 I t t • USl'L llltYtlfll COM,.ltlMa QtA#QIONSHIP'S Sl1uNIY"• Game LA ••llNIS et Arizona SUMllY'• Gema Blrmlnll"•m et Ptlffedtlpfila US,L CHAIW'tONSHlft IUMaY, .Mv IS (At nn.e. ...... ) Eastern Coi~ cfllmc>lon "'-Wat· Mn c~ cMmolon HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL Norftl·Soutll Al·Stan Collt9t ctlolcel of l>laYtl'I c:omciellno In Frldtv nl9"t'1 Orenot Countv AM·Ster toott>al temt al Orenea Coast COlllOt SOUTH AJUIONA STATI -Roller! Bovd (Santa Alie VeltYI CAUN>ltNtA -Don Prvot (CO!""OM dtl Mar). CAL STATII l'ULLDTON -Jeff HIPO (Edison). CHtCO STATI -Scot Hevev (Costa Mete). GOLDIN W•ST -Sttvt Mltlullcll (Eattncle), Jeff Brown <Coront dtl Merl, 1oC> Simi (LOS AmlOOll. HAWAII -Brien 9tldler (Fountain VdfY), tLUNOIS -Jttw lrana (Ntw-1 Hef11or). LONG aucH STATa -Jamie Crtfl (Fountw!ft VeltY), Jeff Grllhlm (Eat•nclal. NIW MIXICO-Getren Brown (Mater Dell. · O.IGON STATI -M<Ktv Galole <Wntmlnsttf'I. ,AC.,M: -Danni• McGowan t EdllOftl. STANl'O.D -Mike Newton (Fountain Vakv). USC -Joa Walstie (Foolhlll UTAH STATI -lrett SltveM (Foun- teln Vtlevl. NOttTM ARIZOMA -Oavld Wtntera IVetencle). Aal10NA ST'llTI -Crale L•ahltv (La H~WTHIUN -Tom Gltlrltl (Whitt* Cllrlsllenl. CAL '°4.Y SAN LUIS 09IW'O -Ttd Prukop 1Sarvl1t), lllobtrt .... (La Hellrel CAL STATI ,UlL.DTOH -Mike Muru (Sunnv Miits), Ctlfla Vemtl (~ Hiii), AMY Kllnktn«ltrt (Kai.lie), •C1Dtrt 8ekl1t (Lot Alemltosl eol.OAADO -Antl'IOllY w .. ttwsPoon • IL.a Het>re). DARTMOUTH -Arnold Wtntkloer IGanltn <itovtl. 'ULL•lt'TCHt COLLIGI -llllchard Wl•1-Ma (FullfflOll). Jiff EIMftmlM ( ltff). Vinet VIII Dt1dtll (.,...,, Jiff SmeerdYk (I.A Hallre), Jemts Wnt (Sunnv H ) IOll4t'I Gorntl CVeterlelo). MA*A• -Lvtt 01e CKIMtO) OCOD&NTAL -Tim Carftltn lMlt- NVllndl OttlOON -JoM ,rl~t (L.Mrel. OttlOOM nATI -Ill Sloan (Servltel. ST. MARY'S -Scolt C.'1"4 (Aftll'ttlml. NIVADA US VIOAS -1'0ft Krltttt (Vettncll) WHT P'OtNT Cflrlt Stllo tE...-11111> 1. Gr .. 1 lrltaln, 6:.st.I; 2. Germany, 6:A1.64; l. 1111¥, 6:44.01. 1:0>.o,1 J. 1111v. 7:04.0. _ 1t1i, Mllllldl atM, 1«9111 1. EUI Gtrme11v, 6:24.27; 2. New Zee. • 1. Germany, 7:0U; 2. Gr'tel lr11aln. lend. •as...; ). W•I Gtrmenv. •:2U1 7l06.5; l. Swl~ 1!l0..6. 1'76, ~ • 1t4I,, LtMllll 1. East Germenv. 6!37.A2; 2. Norwav, 1. ftelY, UU; 2. Dtnmer11, 6;0..S, ) 6:AU2; 1 Sov1et Union, 6:CU1. United Stal• (Frtdtl'ldl JoM Kln9MuN, 1-. MMc.w Stuart Griffing, Greeorv Gata, •ot1trt 1. EHi Gtnnenv. 6.111.17; 2. ~lat Pwtwl. 6:'7.7. Union, 6:11.11. J. Gr•t Brllalfl. 6:16.S M•N'S P'A••D-<>AA•D IH•LL WITH COXSWAIN ,,... P'W1I I. Holland. 7:34.2; 2. France, 7:3U; 3 France. 7.57 2. 1ta ,,,,.,,.. 1, llalv, 7'56.0. 2. Fr.,_, 7-.57.0, 3 Swlltertend, nt ltM, """' I. SwllzMlend, 1:390; 2. 11.iv, d .1; J. Unlled Stales l~ Butilr, Hwold WltM>n, Edward Jannln;sl. nt. , .... ~ t Swllztrland, 7:42..6; 2. France. 7:4 •. 3 Belolum, nt. 1"1,LM.,..._ 1. United Slalft t.loM9h Sd\eutrl, Ctwta K~. Edward JennlntSI. 1:25.1, 2. Poland, 1.31 2, 3 France, ~1.2. ltM, .... 1. Germanv, l'.lU; 2. llelv, l:ff7, 3 F ranee. l :SU. , .......... 1. Denmark, 1:00.s. 2. ,, .. .,.. 1·12.2; l Hunpry, 1:25.2. 1"6, M.-1 ,,. 1. Unlltd Siiia (Arttlur Av,...., Conn Flndlav, A. Kurt Stffftrt), ~1; 2. Ger· many, t:2f.2, 3 Sovi.t Union, t'.31.0. 1Nt. lt81M 1. Germeftv, 72'.1•; z. So'tltl union. 7:J0.17;"3. Ulllteo Stet• (9'1cNrd 0r"9tf', CoM Flndlav. H. Ktnt Mltc:llll), 7:34.51. IH4,T•ve I. Unltfd Stain IEd'Kerd ""F"INY. -C-onn Flndlay, H. Ktnt MltcNI), 1:21.23, 2. F ranee. t:23 1 S; l Holend, l:23.A1. ""' MeJdc:e Cl'f 1 llalv, UUl, 2. Holland, 1-...0; l Dtrmertl •••. 70. . ttn. ,...... 1. Eur Germany, 7:17.2S; 2. Ctec:hollo· Hkle, 7:1'.57, l. lllomanle, 7:21.)6. 1'76. MIMr'MI I. East Gwmenv, 7:51.9'; 2. Sollltt Union, l.'Cl1.t2, J. Cztdloslov•le. 1-o:J 12. 1'52. ~ ,,., Mlac:ew 1. Frencie, 1:21.6. 2. Wei Gtrmanv. 1. Eur Gatmanv. 7:eu.; 2. SOvlel l:l2. 1; J. Otnmet1t, t'Xf. Union, 7:G3..U. 3 YU90Slavla. 7~02. LM Alltmlfl9S MONDAY'S lllSUt..T1 (Mlfl .. f2·ftllllt ..,.,,..,... ""'""9) ,llST llACI. 350 varcta. lltvons HoH (Lackey) UO 3.00 2.40 Euv Juen IC.rdoze) S.40 3..20 NIOl'll /Wood (TrHaurt l 2.IO Alto rac9d Vtttu Juan, Chrl1loclfl« Slv, Strait Touch, Tu Oh Two, Rlvtr Fern Sull. Ber lht Coach, Mr he Nott Tlmr. 17'4. 12 IXACTA 12·1) oald S16..00. SICOND llACI. 350 vardl. 111 Euy Baby (Crafftf") 7 60 3.IO 2 40 OrfttY Occe.ton (Lldttv9 6 00 100 A RHlllv (Garclel 2 ..i Abo rac9d Bleck Denim, Rtftr to Mekaf", Miu Heart~nt. Llllla MIH BrOOl!t. E•av Marvlll. Tlmt: 1T.IO TH•D ltACS. 170 varcls Ml._,..,1000 (TrHIUrt) IUO S.40 4 00 Wiii WlnalOt (Peu11ntl 4 20 UO Pe1Mm Junlof (Fl«nl 3 60 AllO raced: Walk on Air, Mr Colfax Lertr., SUOtf" Pollcv, Ill 9dntek Broll1ef" Tlmt: ... 21 l'OUltTH llACa. )SO yards Ltll• of Credit (Ledltvl I 00 S..0 S.00 Ima Ezv Gel (Gerdel 13 40 I 40 Ooues B\19 (Fryday) S.20 Alto raced: OUr Char91n; L.aOV, ~~ No No, Rtmt>ltrl Chic Klltv APOllO, Nlct lo 841, Na\19f!tv Merla, ilertna Luckv Cat. Tlmt: 11.0I. U IXACTA 110-41 Hid S224.IO '11'Ttt lllACR. >SO vercls. lroadWH Plev (Fuller) •2 40 14.IO 620 Tor di Illa Motwr ( ltuh) HO UO lollfle Fell·(Frvdevl 4.20 Alto rectd I Got sotrll, Trudllt A/IMI, ltoellat llY Word, T~ Ooll, Rtbth Van· 8QUI. Tlmt: 17.'1. ~ •XACTA t Ml H id '391 IO SlXTH •ACI. l50 ver• .JoMv Twi.. (Crtfftrl 4.00 J 40 J 00 Mace o.neven (Hermon> 6 4IO • 00 Finl N11e Cul (Ed*ll'chl =~ UO A110 remd. EllMndtd IM • Cooll1" COllY. ~-. Ster LllCIV. Afrlclnl, ~lflttlolt, ... A Vanelllel Timt..... . s•VINTN ••c•. 170 .,..,. Teua V Int (Hert) 440 Ht )00 C-.... EllW9M (LacktYl 1• $00 Al ACM Wlft (NMl\!Oftl • s.a AIM rK*t Joteto, ""11.-0. C:owtov. K'*"' K_.,, Ml'lo ~. AJurt CMllnOI. Ttnwt ..... ~ UACTA lHl Mid lS1 ICI. • ....,... uca • ..o varcb A.____ l'IWeYI 11-00 lOO ~-AY't Del-. c-..41) S..00 100 HeA Tru .... Clliila1l J 611 """'° rKM! ...,,. ,.,., ......, Stien. 'Ii ... ,,., '•llW Del. """"" 0.... It T1l"8 1l tt. II ..cit •ll <J••l·~S·7J M1' tU.Sa• . .wi .. W""*'t .... 1'1• -..WJ.. ti~ Ila a.w•Mr1181if UllaOO .......... llCMtt ............ ., ~ ...... .,., ... °"""" ..w_·(~) •.M ~· UI ,.,......,,...,.., UI tAI Fem-lHlnl IA --,... Oii Tlib " .... Mill ....._,_.~~·o-1_,,.....,._ ..., .. G.!t !...,_ ..... ni.-1 ... 1 .. •UCTA 041 .... MJI it.nu •••*M• w.rMt1• MONDAY'S lt8SULT1 MM'• J<-111 • ..,... ~ Jotln McEnroe (U.S.I def. 811 SCanlon CU.S.l, 6-3, 6-3, ... 1; Jln'lmv Connot"S (U.S.I dtf. Tim Mevottt (U.S.I. ... 7. 6-2, 6-0, ... 2. Ivan Ltndl (Cztchosk>vaklel def Scott Oevl1 (U.S l, 4-6, 6·• • .,_4, S-7. 7·5, P•ul AM8COM (U S.I def • .lol'lall Kri. ISOultl Afrlc:e), 6·3, 6-2, 6-4. Pel C.sll (Australia) dtf. Kevin Curren (Sovlfl Africa), 4-6, 6·2, 7-6, 6· 1, JoM SaOr1 CU.S I dtf. VllH o.rut.011 (U.S.I. 6-3, 7·5, 6·7, 4·6, 6·l, Tomes Smid ICttcnoslo....tllel dtf. Jlfnmy Arl•S (U.S I. 7·5, 6·4, 6·l. W"'*"• ,_. ._.. SINltl Cetlna Kanuon (Swtdan) dtf. M«ff Tamaverl (Hunoarvl. 6·4, 7-S, Martina Navrall'love (US I ~'" S.nr1 (Austrelle), 6-0, ref' , Mendllllova CC1td'0110v.-lel .....,. 5'1kiwa (C?achOa!OVakllll. ..... 6· 1; P9l'n SIW"lver (US I dtf. Beftwa Potter (U.S.), ........ l. Kathv Jorden (US.I dtf Wtft/ltV Tutnbull (Austraflal. 6·2, 6·r. MenUelll Meletva (8uloerla ) dtf Ann HOl>tll (erttalnl .... 2. 3-6. •·3, Jot Durie (8rll1ln) def. Steffi Grat (Wttl c;.wrmanvl. 3-6. 6·3, f-7 .,,..,.,...... meet (et SIMat *t'l, fWMla) .... tOO -1 Allen ~ (U.S.1. 2UO, 2 Dwevne £viii\• (U.sJ, 2016. J. ar.ov Crain (US.I. 20.ft. 400 -1. Mld\NI Frlftks (U S I. &S.11. 2 Mike Ok.OI (lJoende), 4'.lt. 900 -1 JalT'lft MllYI (U.$.), 1 4U2 1,500 -I Steve ov.tt (lrilaln), UW OtWs· J Crtuck Ar890n (U.S.), U7.• 10,000 -1 ,tmelldO ~ (Portv· .. .,. t7 13 11 (WOl'td ~41. ... "*11 • Htrnttomt. KtflYe, 27:2U, lt71); t C..er1o6 L.U (fl'ortueell. r7 .17.•, l. Mlt1l ~ <U.S..J, f14IO516; 4 ~ di ~ (ltalY), ••Ut; 5. ~ .... Nlcnla (I _.,,, 21.0S.U . Othrl I Gery 9*'tlt.IN CU SI. 2l'01.l2 T J -t. Wllllt lenlU (U.S.I, 5~t\'t, t tdlllaw Hoffman (,...._.), $1-t~ WOMllM 400 IH - 1 ~ lelluk ("9181'd), 54 71. UOO - 1 Ctnltlla ..,_,., <Sw•tt~I. u.s.3'- ., . U.S. OtYmtlk .,.... Id I._ TN r.m.1n1nt trtaaa tw lfll 1,.. US ()tymplc tMITll OtVm9k ........ tcMdlllit , .. ~ ...... , T'*499y, JIAV 31 -Dlatl*'9 MMDel c.'tme111lts. 11.iv "' ~ ll..-.C •• p.m.; OllneM Telotl YI.. USA. 7:)0 •.m. WfdnttdeY, '"'9. I -Ceneclil YI.. NlcWNUe, 4 • m.; J..-n YI.. ~. 7:JI p.m. n..no.v. Aue. 2 -Dol••kall lll89UMc YI.. C..... TlllMI, 4 ,.m.; USA YI.. IWV, 7:311 p"" ~r"'-) -K--w. CMedi, 1 p.m.; Ntanera ""' JeNn. 4!31 •.m. S.turdev, Aue.• -~Ill~ n.. USA. 10 a.m.; lt•l'f "'"" Cl*ieM T....._ SUndeV. Aue s -c...-""' .,_, 1 · p.m., -.,...,. YI.. Kor•. ':Ill -.m.. """"'*". At.Ill 6 -s.tnlf1nelr. t•"9 DWlsion ~· ,,. Wtll1e Divis.Ion "'""" ,..-\e, ' ~ WNle Olvls.lon OW'rllloft ""' IMut Ot't!Wn NIW*'-. U0 II.ti\. r..-v. Altlf. 7-~= 8r"Onla "*"' ....... , ........ ~ --). ' IM'I... ~ ..,. Siver Medel ...,.. (~ of Mmlftnai ..,,_, 7;.)0 II m. Deep ........ DAV.Y'S l.OQ(Ea (......_, e.dl) -"' .,.......... ' benweudll, f7 llOftlto, l V911oWtal. JS lllNlcore. 2 Nftut. 14 c.lco beU. 17S Wind beu, 150 mack ..... I .... ~. 1 ICUIPln. 1 rtdl ftsfl. •EWPOaT LANDt•G ( ... •""9 9eedl) -71 ~ 41 Wind .... .. bonito, 2 ~. 1 vtlllowtlill. 154 lnedunl DANA WMAR, -151 _,,...,. 776 bnl, 77 berracude. ~t>onllo. 1l velowf••· 51 rock ""'· 315 kaf"tl, 11 ~. 7 ICUfpin. \"4 ...,..., ....... Now GNnion mev 111 1-.n bv ,..,.. ontv. no nen. lluckm, Wind IMt• or 1r-. a!IOw«l. A Cellfornla fltlllne IQrtll la raoulr'ad tor anY01111 16 enQ 0...-Thi acntdUll: JIAV 3 -1:23 e.m. to ~ a.m. NIV 14 -1._,5 run. to 11:JS a.m. Jutv IS -1111 Pm. to 1:11 a .m Jlh 16 -11 .. p""' to 1:i4.S a.m. Ah 17 -12:25 UT\ IO 2:25 aJT\. .>ti/If 3t -11 :22 P m to 1:22 a.m. Jutv 31 -12 15 am. to us a.m. Auo I -111 a "' 10 J:l7 a.rn AUO. 2 -Ul a m IO 03 a.m. Fahnhorst. expensive ~ property EDEN .PRAIRJE, Minn. (AP) ..... The Minnesota Vikinp decided oOJ to make linebacker Jim FabnborA thear hiabest paid player and when 0.. Nauonal Football Lea&ue teams wCii 1ntCT'CSted in a trade for the fonne} Minnesota Gopher. he became mt expensive prQPCTty of the San Fr8tt cisco 49crs, a V ik.in& executive says.; Fabnhorst has played the last seasons with the Arizona Wranaki_t of the United States Foott.11 Leaa:Di.. The Viktnp drafted bim in the foU-iU round of the 1982 draft, Ii viQ&_ the• the nght to match the 49ers' offer. San Francisco has offere Fa.hnhorst S 1.5 million over fo yea.rs.. 1 price tq Vikinp Oen Manager Mike Lynn bas said was out ofline. Lynn annouooed Sunday niabt had not matched the offer and teams wanted to deal for Fahnhorst.: "There were absolutely no taken Of thc26otberclu~" Lynn said. ~Their reasons were divided.. Either tti compensatton ..._s too blab or thct didn't think he cowd make thct sq\lld." "The clubs an need of a mjddJC hnebackcr wt went to first, .. L~ added. "We had interest witb number of clubs. but they just didn want the contract even tbouah thet had the need " Lynn has c:ntiC1zed the 49cr m..,.. aaement for offcnna fahnbom w he considers an horbitant contrael., "I've sa1d a number of times ~ they've done more ha.rm than USFL," Lynn said. "ljust Sol otr~ phone w1th an agent for a pla~r 1' trymg to acquire He said. 'You lookana at m) player as an in ment. lf I deal with Sa.n Francisco. they loo~at him as a wnte-off. "~ Fahnhorst was paid $80,000 and $85.000 an has two seasons with the WranaJerJ, Lynn Slld. Undcrthe490' pact. he'll rctt1ve $200,000 an l 91 S225,000 1n 1985, $260,000 in l 98 a.nd $32S.OOO an '87, plus a SSlS, sianina bonus in 1991. ICCOf'Ctina'1i> Lynn. The deci51on not to match the om!r •us mack Thunda). but Lynn layed the announcement. GapoBayYC sets open house - ' J f>t&.IC NOTICE PlB.JC NOTICE rta.IC NOTICE Plel.IC NOTICE PlB.JC NOTICE -____,. ,.__ ' **THE MOST * * 0 a COLUMI INTHE WORLD! ................... _._ Mf l>ft hfll-1e, -... . -.... .. -...,. .......... .... __ ....., ............. .. .... ................... -.. ~ °"'a.-,,_,_ .. .,. •-111•• , ........... ... -. .............. _ .. ____ .... __ ___ C&.A8SIF-IED ••• ~ l'Oll MOl'IT• UU FOR R•8ULT8 .: .... . 842-5818 ' -------- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TUllJMMY, '4AtJ 3, lllM C9 DEATH NOTI CES C8 Orange Cout DAIL V PJLOT /Tuesday, July 3, 1984 .... lllT•Yll 11A11 ilWlm IUllO 322 5th St., Huntington Beach 536-889• OllUIFMllTllU 12422 Lampson, Garden Grove 537-4840 YJ.P. TIYI 1985 So Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 631-3222 WIOIEI aan1111soo111 11705 Edin~. Fountain Valley 839-7239 UlllllPlm 2180-D Harbor, Costa Mesa 548-5523 SCIWllU WOTIOllOI 17882 Giiiette, Irvine 863-0200 IWS l.Y. llEITl11110. 15092 Howard Ave., lrvlne 554-5600 lllCI TllPllY DI EllUVlll 01. 170 E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa 646-3141 . lllECIT lllCIUI lllllEll I lln UIP 1989 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 548-2314 SUlllEW 1711-C Westcllff Dr., Newport Beach 646-4514 AOCOllTULE FIUIOIAL IEIYICEI 1711-C Westcllff Dr .• Newport Beach 645-4479 WAii IOllLE IOIES 1731 S. Euclid A, Anaheim 991-4990 COSTA IHI 111 lllP 3165 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 662-1313 LllOllULn 3377 Via Lido, Newport Beach 673-7300 lllUP llllLE lPPLlllCE SEIVICE 946 Sunset Dr., Costa Mesa 548-7788 IWllOll lllU lPPLIAICE 1240 Logan, Costa Mesa 549-3077 lllEL UILEY lll ISSICIAT£S 2732 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar 644-7211 TllE SllP FOil PlPPlUU 3404 Via Oporto, Newport Beach 675-5454 llOICO PLllllll 961W.17th St., Costa Mesa 646-0622 COlmY CLll COIVILESCEIT HOSPITAL 20362 Santa Ana Ave .• Santa Ana 549-3061 . 11111 ITUlllOllE 2001 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 642-9777 lllVllE LICI I WE CO 4251 Martingale Way, Newport Beach 833-2034 llEITlllllT IOTO 4300 Von Karman Ave. Newport Beach 752-7151 WIPPOITPIW 10084 Adams, Huntington Beach 963-9757 IOITIElll ClLIFORllA COLLEIE 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa 556-3610 llOCCI COIPUY 1635 Superior. Costa Mesa 645-2216 ITU SEllYICEl'I tLC llOUSECLWlll Newport Beach 667-7252 IUCUFF IOTOl IOT£L 1661 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach 494-9717 OlllTllY ITlllE llTIUTIOI 1775 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 548-7751 IHEll Pl YWIOI OllPAIY 2969 Century Pl., Costa Mesa 549-3073 llllALIUI IEPlllTIHIT ITllE 300 Main Street, Balboa 673-4910 OllTA IEU 111101101ma lllPITl1 301 Victoria, Costa Mesa 642-2734 llOl'S Plllllll I IUTlll Cl., 110. 220 Victoria, Costa Mesa 646-1407 WEIOIPRlmll 1765 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 645-2522 I.I. lfFIOl FllllTlll 2044 Placentla Ave., Costa Mesa 'r 631-2777 'Jll lllllTll MTU 18800 MacArthur Blvd. lrvlne, 752-8777 .... OllTAGTlml!ITW. 13139 Harbor Blvd, 2nd Fir. Garden Grove, 539-2032 llWPtll ILYI. TUYIL 2156 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa, 650-1500 UIEIPl.YWlll 2969 Century Pl., Costa Mesa 549-3073 111101-llllllE llllllWlllE GO., 110 2700-B W. Coast Hwy, Newport Beach 548-3407 UICI lllLIEll llPPL Y P&OIFIO VllW MTlllY 3500 Pactflc View Dr., Newport Beach 644-2700 .......... ChrlsUan Knights Barber Shop, C.M. • 642-2183 . SMTI OIUl llAl YAU 2270 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 675-2837 llW llllOT1111 Fii Wllll llO. 2601 Wiiiow Ln., Costa Mesa 548-5546 OOIT IEU 1Tlt1111111 270 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 642-4563 1514 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa • 642-4184 UY1Hm11mn 18632 Beach Blvd., j220, Huntington Beach 847-2622 IElll llQ UllWlllE 2666 Harbor Blv<t, Costa Mesa 546-7080 LEll SIEIE llDL Tll Clll FOi WllEI 2036 Quall St., Newport Beach 852-8655 IEWNllT TUllll OEITEI 4020 Birch St., Newport Beach 752-0224 llPElllllEI 119 E. 18th Street, Costa Mesa 645-6110 EL OAlllll lllOI STlTIOI 5410 Walnut, Irvine 552-7686 lllllEE PIPE I llPPL Y 925 W. 18th Street, Costa Mesa 646-7180 IHI YElllE lllTEI 1mo11ST ClllCI 1701 W. Baker, Costa Mesa 979-8234 WEIEll IOOFlll 874 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa 645-1691 lllE'l PLIOE IEITllUIT 1576 Newpo!_!.Plvd., Costa Mesa /'t5-8560 · ILIE lllLS STATIOIEllS 304 Main Street, Balboa 673-8170 A·Hllll WlllOWl I ICllEEIS 869 W.16th St., Newport Beach 548-1191 AUTO IECllfn IPECIALllTI 2318 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 631-6123 OlTWll PAllEllER IEllVICI 400 Main Street, Balboa 673-5245 FEllWlllFlll Newport Beach (714) 642-8233 CllTl IEU TIAYEL 1901 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa 646-4431 ULNA UllWUE 200 Main Street, Balboa "75-7283 111111 OWllll 605 East Balboa Blvd., Balboa 673-5800 Ullll llUll PEllY Agate St. & So. Bay Front, Balboa Island 673-1070 IEYEILY TlllPlll llTElllll 1369 Galaxy Dr .. Newport Beach 644-8330 11no1m1 Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Corona del Mar 549-2298, 673-0111,64?-8446 llY'I UTElllllTill OI. 1733 Monrovia, Costa Mesa 642-8926 .11c1 aon'S Fiii m11 2490 Fairview Rd., Costa Mesa- 556-6281 11110TIHI1um llPPLY 18047 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 847-0188 lllYIEll PUllllEL IEIYIOEI 2082 Business Center Dr., Irvine 833-9410 LIBERTY AND JLISTICE Fm ALL Daily Pilat ~-"'-" SHUIHll SPllll llllEI 6842 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach 842-2591 II Clll IEIJCll llEITllWIT 296 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 645-7626 IAllOI unu 11n SNIP 601 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 673-1830 IWlllllln 608 East Balboa Blvd., Balboa 673-8310 UUOAlllEIY 301 Main St., Balboa 673-2040 llTIUlllll Lido Shipboard, Newport Beach 673-3602 TllE UY IEPDTnlT ITME 303 Main Street, Balboa 673-5650 PUIPllU PIT llUUY llTIL 20592 Laguna Canyon Rd .. Laguna Beach 494-0142 WTILIFF OWllll 2547 Eutbluff Or., Newport Beach ~4-()932 l ITMl'I TllllW 2400 w. Coaat Hwy, Newport Beach 548-4070 llll'S OlfPll IHP 105 Palm Ave., Balboa 676-7320 111 U ... Hn&llllT 21002 Pacific Coast Hwy., Huntington Beach 536-1684 11111111'11L •Tllll lllYlll 10101 Slater Ave,, Fountain Valley 964-9090 llYll-lllWl ... llY 411 E. 17th Street. Costa M9'a 648-168• 'lllUllll IUll OI. 125 Rochester St., Costa Mesa 642-0084 UOLl .. IOllP. 145 Cabrlllo, Costa Mesa 646-3261 UY'I DTlllllUTI• OI. 1733 Monrovia Unit U, Costa Mesa 642-8926 . I .1.0.A. IUllE HIST . 2300 Unlver1Slty Dr., Newport Beach 642-9900 Liil Yll Ill ITIUll 2200 Alton Ave., Irvine 9000 WZLll 11•11un11 1773 W.ft St., Costa Mesa 548-4100 .Ill OlllLll Plllll• I IUTIH 1675 Superior Ave., Costa Mesa 548-5558 WESTEll lllEI •llT • 1716 Orange Ave., Suite C, Costa Mesa 548-8040 mSIULTlll 9582 HamUton, Huntington Beach 962-7788 m1'S 1n1un1Y 11m11111 23011 Moulton Pkwy, Ste A-11, Laguna Hiiis 855-4383 Tll FLIWD IU ... 38,41 ,Blrch St., Newport Beach 852-9155· HAlll'IUll 711 East Balboa Blvd., Balboa 675-1073 ULMI PlllllOY 716 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa 873-5370 UllLIA'l IU FMl I RWAI Ull&IUIT 311 Marine' Ave., Baf6oa Island 673-6580 hllU IAYlllE UllU 300 E. Coast Hwy .. Newport Beaoh 673-1331 lYll IEIT I OU 3939 W. Coast Hwy .. Newport Beach 650-0925 EU FIUT •Elllll U&Ln 25270 Marguerite Pkwy., Mission Viejo 768-69:10 1nn110T111 19929 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 536-4070 IAIOMTlll 2925 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 979-2500 1111am1111111¥111 oarm 2604 Bristol (at Central), Santa Ana 540-3131 l&UEU'SMlllP 369 17th St # 18, Costa Mesa 646-8891 l&SIUL• 2744 E. Coast Hwy, Corona del Mar 640-1900 WIL n11m IOI OIUll 369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 645-0162 111111111 UTIWIY llAIW&Y Ill 1680 Superior Ave., Costa Mesa 645-2221 lllllEI UI a• 878 West 18th St., Costa Mesa 548-0757 IAL-IEU vmlllUY lllPITIL 1542 Newport Blvd., C.M. 642-2100 ~ G. J . Camaras, D.V.M. LllllY'l lllLllll llTElllLI lltl. 1151 W. Baker, Costa Mesa 545-0448 1111 Ill ISllGUt6 2125 San Joaquin Hills Rd., Newport Beach 640-4868 OILIWELL IAllEI 2161 San Joaquin Hills Rd., Newport Beach • 644-9060 aun n1111TUU11111 Ul.111 TIUTll Nwpt Fwy, Dyer Rd. Exit, Santa Ana 549-1512 111111 IW. UTATI 170 E. 17th St. 200 0, Costa Mesa 549-8547 TllWl-,_I 2060 Harbor Blvd., Coata Mesa . 842-0010 ·- Tll .... 11Mt&dlU1 lllPITWlll· .... 2650 Avon St., Newport Beach 842·2255 *YIUITlfa 2231 Brookhkurat St. #C Huntington Beach, 983-8078 lllllT •AIM, IPTllill'IT (Seara) South Cout Plaza Coate Meea, 657-8066 ...... UY 1985 Placentia Ave., Costa Mesa 842..S141 umousiam...-. 548 Baker, Costa Mesa 557-1480 llP-1-ITllP 1634 Ohms Way, Costa Mesa 548-7622 1111 llVEITillll. nauo IEUTllll 610 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach, 644-7644 WEITOUFF TIAYEL IUYla 1829 Westcllff Dr. Newport Beach, 642-3020 FllE &ITS P&lmM I WlllW•I• 660 #36 17th St. Costa Mesa, 646-7035 IUllTUI .l&OtlEUI ~IU 2720 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar, 760-8560 UOllE Olllllllm ITlll Antiques, Furn., Collectables 369 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 631-0281 LllllLIMlllE 18700 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine, 553-8222 OllMITIO OU UIE 3199-C Airport Loop Costa Mea 241-0131 FUllLY FUJI IDYIOI 12344 Garden Grove Garden Grove, 971-2740 TllllllL- 2600 E. Coast Hwy Corona del Mar, 760-1822 FlllT WNLI mm 3810 Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar, 673-7930 ....... IDl ......... 1¥1. 171 S. Anita, Ste 103 Orange, 978-8866 ... ..,. b.111111 W 2323 N. Main, #510 Santa Ana, 5-i 7.0383 1&1111 •••• ...... 3421 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach, 876·9191 llTA11-. 15560 RockfMlfd Btvd. Tustin, 859-1629 f'\alC NOTICE "FAST •ISULT'1 SllYICI DlllCTOIY for Hesult • rvke ·1111 642-1671 Ml.IC NOTICE THE DAIL PILOT CLASSIFIED OFFICE HO Telephone ervice~ Monday· Friday 8:00 A .M.-5:30 P.M. Bu1ine s Counter: Monday-Friday 8:00 A.M.-5:30.P.M. DEADLINE Pl'BLICATIO \londa~ Tut> d ~ 'f'dnt-rta~ • Thur da~ Frida~ Salurda~ Sundo~ :ot. \Ion. Tue-.. Wed. Thur~. Frida~ Fri. DEADLINt: 11 :30 a.m. J:30 p .m. l:30 p.m. l:30 p.m. t:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 v.m. CA CELLATION & CORRECTIONS: Canrellation and c:orrertion maty be made on ame deadlines as above. Plf'ase ask for . a rancellation number when ranrelliog your ad. ERRORS: <>rftl9I OoMt DAILY Pll.OTn~, '4Jtt '114 07 642-5678 ........ r • • . ~' . ,. ..... -. ...... !i . . ..._ ..... -~ --~ . ' ' 1 L $2.17 per day Thal'I ALL )'OU p1y for 3 llnet, 30 dlyt In lht DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY plus tht IRVINE MIRROR and tht HUNTINOTON BEACHCOMBER every Wedneeday at no axtra charge! CALL TOOAYll lllfOI Liii Your Dally PllOI Se~ Directory Atpreaen1111~ MJ...Q211d. IOI er I•• llr••l•r ............ ic.ltttrten . ......... IHU., Laa4Hajla_L -Pa.latl.aL ,.....,11pr Tnl•tJtn'tt ~Jxecma.. ...... · LANDSCAPE sERv1c1 HAuuNO oA Mov1No PAOF UJMSCXPi HMV RXIRaow Pl iAtlRo · * .., """ * T;PTng"?WOfa p;nng Cornput.,, Moel ,... Fr• CUSTOM REMOOLINO T,..trlm, l.JlWI Mant.'10, e..t A•l• I,, .. •l 80f'ded. 20 Yn In ...... Quality" our pollcy All but!.,..., tctiool IP«· ..,,..--...,....,...,.,....,...---,--1 COYntel ~ M2·7047 wee. t. ..... And Ool'tle fret est. Juan 549 •• ,.. 24111.131-1083 T Mcweeney 645·512<4 150-1641 JEFF lie letl ly, TA141-5112 tonal PfOjec1e. 151-1041 ~t.tt Belt. (714) 241-1411 Shrub91T'" Trtm. Comi)I IUI Cltu'H LlatlliH EXTERIOR-TOP OUAl.ITY ;;.fl;,;:;lljijlt~t~l mnilfnM"'-la•tw HI 81 • ca all gerdenlng. COmP4ttltlYt RoBtN1s Cl. NINO a .. :u •-ar I.Imo I!! ~oft( '°' yo.Jr • Fr .. •t. . -iiiiftWwHiillr+lllE"w•1wl!'ifR"o-- ,..,.-,.,-------1 facing, bare & lonnlce • • Pf'lcee. Chuck 1'2•2873 SEAVIC!: a thofaughlY Fr~c·h;;Ptant tor ';y Reri. 0•1• 641-5137 Neil P•tcM9 I. Texturtt; WINoOW WASHING C04Jnlertoc>t. 5<4 ... 5747 All TeAl\11'91 A Acouttk: , •• lrtel IOtlt clean hou... 540-01&7 QO(;ISIOn S20hr 645·8084 H.. Pelntlng, 11'11/txC. lnl/E.xt. frM "'· 945•825 QUALITY" 831·2021 u t o CABINETS & ClRPEN· 'rH Ml. KeYln 873-1503 L1wn•-'lrub·t,....lnat1ll Like a CLEANER HOU'St7 aaoa Quality at lowett ret•. aa.lat C1talln1 trom John TRY. SMaff JObt. repalrt, II tri I Tr .. trimming & Removet. e11pertlttl8uppllet/1.le 17 , Fr• .. t Dev• fS.42"4513 1•.•.•c--0-.. ... ,-.. --•• -,-.-lt1t1 Law Wayne Airport. ' fl'9ht1 fr" ••"f!'lat• e.&·2003 H Cl RotoUttlng·Lewn mllnt. Jacqueune 541-oe51 Brick, 'llock, Conertle, INT/EXT. 20 Yeare exper • • • M •a,-... ,.miii:""'w-req-ul .. re-1""!1!Pfi""!tt•1~1i " d•r If• not u-1 --PAlllll ILllTIJO Fr .. 11t S.a.8085 Sunaet eo .. t creenlng Stucco. I.ow cott, lie, •x-A...,tOt Room 129 • Sl!RVINO N.B., c ·• contractors wtio ptff«m ptnalW Onty S30 ... J!!try Quality~ ,, .... , ~work. 931-1181 Bob M1terra11 fS.42-c>44a CdM, Irv .. H.a ,,V. work OV9r S200 Including w.-i PP. Group rat .. f« Expert ~try s;;cio; 425513 ' 9ea-1.4o 1 ~~ U:'n ~~~~ "'=:! :,':"~-.d Af,':i C1.11tom Brlcl(·Stone llUPllU P&ll'fm. Or1lnec1Mr from S15 labor end matttlalt mint ,.... Chart•• IQ Ca.. Repak~Rtmod·Addltlol\I l 1557 ~ .. ,.. ti t' 75 J1P3•' 81octc·Conorete-St·---I I , I ~ I ,J 12-·1r tauc:ieu, d'-. etc. bt u-----Unltoentld Mexico & Nev 75&-1020 0oor ... 1c 5<41-4980 ,, .. e.umtt" Grt P~ 90 _....,., " ma.. M~O: 0 Ref• Fr .. •t 549.gm nl txt. rMMt. ,,_, r.. 'An'Yiimt MIM 942:'.'to33 contr';1;;'' thOuld to Arti I Gra~lea Doort·Wlndowa-Patlo•· :::~~;omm·~~~~~ I J!H Outllty houHCIHnlng • ~ · ~°fs~;~·(m=~· E>tpett i«ViCi l Atptir ttatt In their 1dY9rtltlng. Alteratlont·Addltlone Carpent lFalnf w:p;y;; Thorough, rffpon1lbre tn•t . 31 1 eiq> 18 yre In aru Contrectort and con-XATisf E'.6. iii. Cultom 35~ exp Jerry S4S-.• 13 RESID/COMM'L.llNO to~ Zp. •II ~ .... 1nc1 local ref• Pat 497-325<4 •&-1 llYlll• PAINTER NEEDS WORl<I ur U09035 "4-tt19 . IU!Mf'I, contac'\ Mary Wk.contemp oil pelntngt, 28 ~· Do my own wort! mobfle Ml Mnl« die-Aellable. t'lonett, reuon-CL~N l EXPERT Int/Ext, cetllng1, refln cab. Grondlt at 551-4088 with nudel,portalta 5'3--0350 t anttt Lie 278041 Al fS.46-1128 count •AC 9~293 PTL able exp. local couple. o,,., 25 yutHxpertenc. (21) YI'• aiq> .. wort! guar. PrtJtdr al.at. any que1tlon1 Contr• &l\l9Wey1 PIG path1 • -•-Ample refl 813·1221 I.le T 118 428 130-1353 DaVlt P1 ntlng ll'-3837 I lelftcn tor' a State LlcenH AJJhlt t N 'to al ' I 111.1111 Ellpert Rtpeln 15 ~up . • ' QUALITY PAINTING FAIR 8o11d, 28 CIVIC Center pa&Fng x; ... • R9')aln ~ ~lek:V j:.O~ 1 Gen m1lnt. electlcal, Very thorough Od r•!•· ITUYlll HI.Liii PRICES. FREE EST. Gtn repalre-oarpttlno· Plaza. Room ffO, Santa Reaurftclng-SNlcoallng plumb Craig 53S-.1111 ~d1ble & exper d. mllm llYI• OI Call John, 931.2050 tlle-palntln~Hnlng, Ana, CA 92701 . Ind . S&S 831-4199 ~n• Ill TOC)ptd/removed. Clean-R~alrt. Painting. Drywall, 54 80H or 552·11522 Oran99Co OrlQlnal • RC'• PaJntlng I R9oalr land~lng 7414 Cfirt11Jan motfl:r to c.r1 up, new l1wns 7S1~78 elc Free atlmatH. talt lttla.J Student Mover1. Tlleured EXT SPECIALISTS IHflq Ac1a1tlcal A1tt Dttalllat tor 2-12 rc Old non/akr CINnUp1•Tr•Trlmmlng Gery 6<45-5277 PTL VlcXTioN HOME CARE Lie T12, ... 38.6<41·14~7 953-4293 ..................... _, ..... -... -,.-- Cel llli 1 XUtO bET'Xll AT VoOR Lots otT c s.a-1759 Yard Malnu Haullng Hli•J We Tak• Car• Of You; NEW Warehou .. Storage p {i . · . llc#415232 * 54M21S Lef-,,,,.,,,, HOME. YOUR CAR LIKE DAY CARE In my home MIKE 850-3283 baMPJoes i Peta. Plante, Peper, Mall adc .... ""' If • R-rviyed or new Call for NEW 4~·586'4 1 '~ to 8 ~· Pt/full-time Com"*Olat/Realdentlal SMALL ••ovtNG JOBS etc Howerd 5<48·3• 16 ~ Wa11cov.1ng In· Quality Roonng: ~r. cltl.nn ~..,... · LOUIN C M 5'6-8088 m ----College professor CorM1 1tallttl~. Re ... Contult• dltc. Rtft. Uc. #341177. spectat&lr .. •lt• Aft 8 1t tN . t ' OuLa1n1dlCal)t1:!t "'--·~.ln,t~!nce1,_. MIKE6<46-1391 Reap met hoUMtlttertor to your home. Eve antAalgnmt 581-8590 K Funkee-45-0193 r~~fl' ~()U(~ Dally Piiat · p.m a .. 7.7901 I ••• . ••tr1cm1 ...,.,,_ ...... "' Augu11 NB,CdM, LB /oth 1558·9282 •119·2719 U'5tlHl/ltaMtllat St"lct "--eral bon ed 20 yrs In area HFuArUnLlt·uM,,..O, VTEraa·RhE,MTr~! 01720-3251 El7159·11177 ' FARTHING INT!RIORS REPAIR Speclalr.1-$200 & ... Mcweeney Landacape .. ...... Palatlat . HAN~ING/STRIPPING i.ta Fr" est. 30yrt exp. eutldtRemod: Spec kit. UHH llYlll IUlm·llOI o.n. 8•5·5124 963-5415 NORM oracover 1 buyer for tho.. RicAXRb SlNoR's VISA· MC 87~ 1512 710·21!15 anytime Walt 642-5678 bath. ofc, rm add, pallo Wt clean your hull and re-Remodel/Repairs: cornml LANDSCAPE & CLEAN· Cle11lfled'• having e 1ale long-forgotten arllolH Newport Custom Pllnllng NORMS WALLCOVERING All torts of people uM cov/dck1.b1ywndw Uc place zincs at your •llp. andreald.Llc'd,bonded, UP.5Ynexper.fr""'· on something you need. above tht gare;e. UM 18yr1ofhappycuatornen Fr" e.1. 10 per roll. clttalfled ad• to NII t tt 446485 Steve 5•7-8078 Call todayl 848-07112 Ina. For tit: 552-9142. Oavt 780-9071 6<42-5878 cl1tllfled. fS.42·15878. Lie. 2806'4. 875-0383 #330988 780-7211 tortaofthlngt. 842·5878. ·-------!... HOROSCOPE SYDNEY 0MARR ...... VafuaJ.... lprtatat1, Vat. IMa1 zt00 Office ltalab Ult Pt111aala 3111 ltlt Wu... 1111 ltlt Wp!!f l!J! Inert hie~ 22'9 Ctlt1 .IN 1714 Non-1tralghl malt h11 lfFIOl/ITllEI TOPSU Wm Clerlcal, Imm.ct. opening Newport llland 2 bdrm, E'lldecteancozy28dhlt if,~,a~~it~~S~~;,~ 580Sq Ft FemaJUpref.Modet1end Two Auletent• poeltlonl 104' PIT wort!. 16-20 hrs 11;, ba, )'9811y, $800 mo w/gar, yrd, lh•red PoOf. "780.0.4'7 · • · 3011 B. Harbor Blvd CM Elcort1. (213) 8ee-19~ evallable. Training pro-pr wit. Send tttumt 10: No pets 850,..749 $815/mo, no dog• Mgr. Harbor-Baker Center· gram. Good opportunity Richard Price l Aaeoo .• Newport TerrlOe Condo 2453-B Oranoe Ave. Rm ig..tlm CM/NB arM. (across lrom Fedco} Ptlltall for advanc:tnWlt. Alcfl.. 1590 S. Cout Hwy. 118 28r. 2Ba ~viii now S750 Furn avl, $300 mo d1ya 1' + 12Jc'40. Qulcl( po11. .Stmcn 2114 ard Ou.U.U• Salon. 200 Laguna Beach. 11t +MCW1ty648-7958 STUNNING L.atve 18drm 979--8791&45-8120.v... Offered If $625. NewportCenterOr.N.8 ComlT\l.lni"'StrvlotCoor· garden ap1. pool S'85 Agt (619) 728-9665 or '' mntt 2271 11ow 18th St R1=!n~1t1ttH~~~· <7141850·3386 *ORIEITlLIPI* llHlllPll ~::'C:i~::1:i&:: New .e; me •. guara;a Westfield 113-2913 673·5008 C1aatrd1l ,. IEWPllT HAii Exper. In A/P AIR PIR. birth detect• foundation WedDeaday,JDJy4 gate, comm PoOI. etc 8 leatala "Ill Maauge and Ac· ~~Fr~~TNc\Yf~~· Energetic, well·oroan, ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19): Reunion indicated, holiday spirit s2100 Agt 492-4343 APARTMENTS 0· Lagun• nr bch. empl " cuprettUft. Open 7 deya · good apaaklng etc1111, prevails. Focus on partnership, celebration. knowldeae of backstage Ba1ut1tu1 Gard•n Apia, pdnons;~k_+. ~ 4~;"34": 16020 HarbOf. F.V. 10am-12arn. 493 N Old 558-0nO eblllty to coordinate lund . y uld be.. behind thro •• far fi . . . Jau •· 271 patios. dtct(a, IP•· No ...... • 12'40 aq ft . Newport 81 ACC*I E BOOKKEEPER F/C ralllng actMtlet • must operattons. ou co power ne u as estlvttJes ~ 0u5 c•""" r-tal• 3b 2b ,...., B I ,II A~nt S.41-5032 Fron I~ Rd 11 161h St Immediate FIT .v.a1t1on ror Eltclnt btnentt. To be COncerned P,.,_., V1'rgo nau·ves play unusual roles in dynam.ic ., __.. -· r a ........ 1tt I 1ttl1 2~ ""' .. . · '""""'"'• trpic gar S725 or 2br 2Bdrml1'/•B• 1645 m -S-hoc>-1-s-10-,.-,-0-ffice--ap_ace_ South blocks Ptrton with 3 ye1r1 exp considered tend reeume sccnano. $800'• o•r 1rg yrd 28drm/2Ba S855·S885 SUWI lmL 300 sq 11 or more. reaa (714) S..8·7208 and knowledge of con-w/aalary upec. to 861 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Basic plans are p ut in "your charae. •• 539--8190 Beat Rily f" 398 w Wilson 631·5583 Wkly rental• now avail c. M•t1 c.2 5,a. 7249 atructlon. fS.42· 7854. Hamllton Rm.850 CM Focus on food preparation, discussion of economics with one whose Ct •• l I But. hie• 274 S140/wlt 6 up Color TV, •CdMdlxsultea.AC ampl Oregon achool t•acher 11 BookkHperlofc mgr ...,9,.....2_8 .... 27 __ ~..._,..___,,.,..,,=- 1deas might clash with your own. Political and other proverbs fly back· U I• •1 ..... ••tO g Bdrm+ tam-rm. 2 trPla. 2~~~~~~~B. lvd c M prkg, from s225. 2955 E 8rr1ee26hou"'t ttt.!' 7116 thtru n/akr. computer exp•+. CONSTRUCTION SECTY and-fon.ii. You 'LI win, but remember to be gracious and realize there is • ara I .. 2 ba. clean. In presttgloua '-6'&::;445 · Coaat Hwy. 675-8900 plant~ar1~ "t;.·~~~':g':'t! lrvtne 281-2020 anytime Seeking motivated tndlvld· -a tomorrow. Rancho San Juaq. Qi;; 2 neighborhood, nr octen t 1 esld M 1 BOOK PASTE UP uat w/xlnt typing tldlll & GEMINI (M ay 21-June 20): Take special care if around fireworks bd 2 b~den, avt. 7-7. & an schla Qrdnr lncld. laaatr ataaHata I ree r enct. a ure PERSON WANTED ~~~1~1~·ven~!r1 or sharp obiects. Tendency is to act on impulse and to think about it 11• 150· '-5887 s t 2 o o . p i mo. ca II lntal 2•A.1t S P1RITUXL READiNds exp'd local ref. Cell P1rmanent part-time. ...... .. ~ A .. 12·2/6-11. (213) 858·6892 1 .vv Advice In All Mattera & 5•0• 1289 M·F eves. Mond1y 2 PM to Approx ~• 29-later. Ac.cen t on children, specu lation, entenainment and romance. 1ta1at1 ara or <714> 650•3610 8XL96X 1 Bar .. t• at Counsetlng. 1815 So. El ttltatal 8:30 PM. Tu.day 10:30 Ollml Pt-•i/f--~ What had been prohibited will now be out in open. beach S350 l'O 11 k c R s c '"' .... CANCER (June 21-July 22): Double celebration could oc.cur -Near beach. 2Br, 1'.\ ba 675-5102 w imlno, eal, an lem. Wul.. 4022 AM to approx 5:30 PM. lagunaArt·A·Falr Pn.la1al1 2'07 T h Bttt I le I Lied. 492-7296 No experience ~ (714)240-3029 famil¥ is involved, romance is feat ured and scenario will highlight Ooeanfront S900mo, y:a i:rn w~9iec ~n~p O=. BAL ISL, ELEGANT 3 Br Pige1nt of Mastel'S tlc*ets 3 ~~dS ~O~ ~~~l~ ~te:o ::z,ur:~~t~' COUNTER PERSON feelings, emotions, sight and sound fireworks. Stress mdcpendencc, I•. dplx,fum 2br tbM1o 695. Call 536-0921 ~~-~'~ !i •:.f~j July 19th $14 oo C.M. expand opefltl0"9. Se-· · LB Cleaners. Apply In Ptf· crcali:Vity and be open to love. Leo, Aquarius persons fi&ure atereoa 873--0967 SUWlll Y Ari League 5'8-433a cured by receivables Mr CISllEI son 320 Legion St " promLEOmen(llJyu.ly 2 ,Aug. 22): Sense of direction is resto--' reunion with C11ta ••11 2 24 E/llde c M 1tud10, iv11t •Splrttual Psychic, Ad· Machut1 75, ·5021 Full tlmt, lncld• wknda. •94-M50 .r •w. YILUIE 6115 Nr belCh & thoc>t visor & Card Reader• • t Good pay Growth Com· --------relatives 1s featured and you"ll be imbued with holiday spirit Short trip ~25 Dix mobile home. no New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury PV1 yard. prkg S700/mo Put. PfeMnt & luture. •nfl,!H, pany 15 1ocatlon1 Apply Ollm FUI '911 could be on agenda, emotional response is featured and romance will P•t• Mature adulll apts in 14 plans 1 Bdrm. ~ ullta 6<42-20~-675-2495 or 631-8964 TJ). I 4021 In person. Metro Cir Candy mfr & lalet at 0 C be part of scenario. Follow through OD initial impressions. Quiet, aecure 2 Bdrm and Townhomel Newport Beach delulte. IA t' r • WANTED· People needing Wuh, 2950 Harbor Blvd. Fair. July 8•15· No exper. VIRGO (AUJ. 23-Sept. 22): Don't overspend on boHday get-1991 Newport 6<46-8373 .. pools. tennis. water· laces beach, slpa 8 Pvt 1 Ha pV1 TD SU S10.ooo up Colla Mesa =·~n= 7~nF~; together. Be SOClable without being extravagant. Travel indtcaled, A,utant1, Uaf. ~1!, ~~s Gas rid gar. w/~31~/wtt. pp No credit""· no penal~ CHILDCARE PIT. Mature (fairground•). ,,_, appty budget is discussed. money matk.ets a.re talked about and you learn dnve North ~•oh~ _9 _ FOUND •OS Denison Assoc 613·73 Englllh tpMklng lady tor 12:Noon. women apply about effective savings program. Sagittarian plays significant role. Gtaeral 2702 McFadden and Weet on NEWPORT BEACH " iifil Wut.. SI ~~~C::dren. my ':PM July 3. Mactdn1e LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Plans arc subject to sudden cbanac -Apta for rent tn Garden McFadden to Se1wind V 100 n FHI SUI ARE FREE 1111 PllTI STIU -=F....,Ud-=ge=""="'Co~--=-----kcep options open, mainta1n emotional balance and sense of humor. Grove 2 weett.s rree rent Village (714)893-5t98 1 Bd lromS325-S400wk c ounter ules & photo fin· CLERICAL CUSTODIAN·Chrl1t1an 0clc bi~, you'll gain added knowledge about people, nations and 00 1 ,,,.1 2nd mo11 hFor iny l!!J!rt hack 761 ~:~'[~1~00c:'~~St Call ·. •lhlng. F & P/OrM. Non· O£P•RTM£NT School. Apply 18835 b l b 'ght I h th t ou d e abo t comfiort and In °· P aase ca 1 • man· -smokl"" ~•uon Appll I\ Brkhr9t FV. Ref. req. ts O!)'. ear n co ors, s ow a y o car u iger 554•6732 near all conv•nlenc•• ··• --• happ1ness of those close to you. ~-675-8127or1197-0452 t•2·Hll cations laken 2-7PM. CLERKS Dental omc. recptlontat SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Look behind scenes, check with ...... PENNINSUL~ 7532 E. Chapman. . NB. PleUant group prac- indivtdual who has promised to "barbecue." Signals tend lO get Ptaia11l1 2707 LIOO ISLE Orange PHOTO MART ··"'•'• .,....... ~~~a~:y s:t !':~d~~ crossed. Open lines of communication -don't permit excess shyness 1Bedroom, 1 Bath. Walk IN NEWPORT BEACH July$3500 Found fem kitten approx 8 •IEUYHY Ill• perlence necessary. Cati or8ridc tomarholiday.Memberofoppositescxcaresverymuch and tobeach$625 Agreatplaoetonveontht Aug '4000 wk1 old Ilic. Hamllton Neat eppearanc• & Here'• • tantHllc op.-851·1442forappt wi J convince you ofit. 6<45-8324 Upper Bay. Private Agt 675-8181 /Maple CM 548-612' pleasant peraonallty re-~~~ty~~ ~~Pi.'::;--------- ha SAGfm~d IUS.(Nd~v.ed22-~.U2bel):baWisb cohealmthes trucd,realte~porarythat CtrtH ••I Mar 272 ~~':h~u~;nts&~~!"~ ltalala ti FOUND· male Retrvr. red ~~11~~g ~:~,~~veB~~ clerlcal exP«lenot. we 111 ... 1 c ng~ 0 ~I epce ID teat l you • ppy, y an lZC 2 Bdrm. t ba. pool, aea. PoOti. close to bullnm, ·~·rt Loung Vic Royal Palm & tound In drapery help· = ~ari::h ~s:= Com~l~~r.p~~o:!~G Min p~ogn1st1cat1an ts for pro~penty: You U h:ave Jood reason to celebrate, bltna,2 pertona. no pets. oc Airport. Fashion aker, CM. S..0-0583 I. but not ntte. COIT wlll and production related 3.5 yra exp. Mech Con· wtsb comes true and you U receive surpnse gift. Lat S715 mo 850.()473 Island, convenient shops Found: Silk¥ or Austrian t11n c~~0-1366 1297 depart menta. Typing tultanla nr O.C. Airport CAPRICORN (pee. 22-Jan. 19): El~ments O~rJ?YSt~ry &!Jd rom~~ 2 Bdrm, 1 bi, South of on sight. T•rrler. male 962·2721 ogan. Miiia of 45-55 wpm la Dalll, Taylor & Auoc.I are part of scenano. Focus on prestige, partJc1patton 1n patnotJc PCH. gar. w10. S725 Found: Set. Br/Bk male •ULEI* MCeaUry (71•>649-523-4 "happening." You'll be present at unusual cerem o ny atmed at 427'~ Iris Craig, Bkr, Singles1&28drmApart·F::i~'~nlh:S•~:c,~i:: puppy,w/blaci(fleacollarNea1 app .. renc• & 1 DRIVERS dut 1. Local honorina one who did much for welfare of community, country. 730-5559. 642-8719 men11 & Townhouse• Av 111 7 11 8 0 b b on Monrovia & 19, CM pleasant pertonallty r• Come talk to va •bout a plok-up & dellv.ry LA AQUARIUS(Jan.2~Feb.18):0oodlunaraspecthighligbtstravel, x1n1 h1rbor 11U,pr111 28d :~~~6801.Pt~~~:.:'~ _ 675·9643 Y 675-5695. quired Mull h~ good P<*tlon with Shiley. We Harbo<.Call850-1970 patriotism, solid plans for future. Older individual talks about the put, 2b1 Frld,d/JlltShr ,w/d with TV. linens & utenllla, F9mile 10 share ocean-FOUND: tiny klnen, bfk ~;~~~ 1~~~~ ei:~ ~':e:/:=~!f' :n: Drivers ~ntry. Cll regales many wt th s10ries of weather and heroism. Plan ahead, reach gir St 100 846-0096 must t>e ren1ed tor short front hse In N B 1500. 111 wtgm eyes Vic Costa ful but not MC COIT wtll ent1 Including mecllcel, lie req. McGregor Yacht• beyond current expectations. You arc going to get the money! C..ta ••u 7 4 term or tonger) On Jam-& IHt 631·3145 Mesi 64&-~30 tram Call 540-1366 1297 <Senta! and oc>tleal plane. 1831 Plecentla CM p~ (Feb. 1.9·Marcb 20): Finish what you. start, dig deep for 1325 ..,, 11 3br 2ba, grnd boree Rd at San Joaquin Femal• to ahire •Br Found Whlle dog with ID. Logan. CM Stop by any time Monday EXECUTIVE SECR.ETARY dd ttonal nformauon and take no unnecess.arv nsks around fire or ...., Hiiis Rd ~ ... o In EASTBLUFFS Newpon Beach Anlmal '67 Camaro. rebtt 327 v.•, through Frldey bet...., 1-0111 office '°' ,... Mt. a I I ~.::-~. nr garden apt nds quiet 144 .. 1100 "s"'24""5 759-82821720-1328 Shell 6'4 3656 u 8AM·5PM lor I typing COMUltant In Irv. Extfnl fireworks. You"ll gain added recognition, you 11 learn more about Mnamve non· smkr, no • auto, custom. tire, magi. '"' and to be Inter· tkltls req .. comp. •llPtf investments, t.a.x shelters and possible inheritance. pets. b9aut d«: wtmany ll9Ufll Beach hse, prv1 loll Gray/wh Cockitael, paint. S3000 631-8186 viewed Call tht numbtf helpful. Superior Wfkng x1ra1 Frig. w/d hookups room. balh, •nlr1nce n e 1 r SA He t g ht• belOW lor direction•. W• cond. Salary comm. w/ ln1n Uafuab, .. It .... Vat.rah~ .. av111 encl g1r .. w/open + Lido Bayfront 3 br, 2 b1. Sl50 111 & 11114117.4391 545-65211556-1500 &CCllmll DLlll a 7 r 1 ! cloMd Wednesday exper. Call oa-1895 1043 sq ft of patio, deck· trplc, sandy beach. 1 car------L t M le c k 191 .., Ing. garden areH S850 gar. yrly S 1500 mo. Lg tum rm/bl Npt Bcl'I 1pl 0• · 1 oc er tpan ; Lile accnt'g ex.per. Cuti FIT RDA ror busy or- 631 2025 631 156, 675 "120 or 673-02•n Nlcel Resp, quiet N·tmkr golden, 2 Y" old. rcpta accnt1 payable for s ,....... t•----Good • ~ • .., u• pref S375 ~ 631-0377 Bojangtea 646-7069 Co11i Men construction HILEY INC '""'on "' .,,,,..., 1Br S•10 utlla pd, carport. UDO VIEW Spac d.tux F II/ I u.lary. Call 495-0600 lndry No pets Avall now cu1t 18r, 2 ~bathe. Lse MATURE N-Smk Reap Lost Male Shettle Collie-company. u t me. f no collar, nr 19th & s 1100 to s12001mo 111111111 nU/ftlll• PIT 383 w Bay 548·9516 S1250 lte 87 -e359 MIF. all !urn. C.M hM nr Harbor CM.8,6-51'4 Cell 557-5511 1195 - ---iAiUli Irv. SI $300+ 548-83811 .-aa-& PUT/Tiil WMI 2 BO, old•r adult• pref no IH•• z~ 493·8950 REWARD ....... "· pet a no mtrcye'les = M/F retp. non·tmkr, i300 l.ttt PI0-1 Opportunltlea avallabl• 5,8•2720 or e•s.85, 1 2 Rms In• Br Condo, WID, mo 'ltutll. Ctplatreno SCRAM·LETS 0111. IEOIOAIY l-lH, •• 1•11• with 1ht LOS ANGELES _ furn Pool S275, . t Bch 861-8549 eve/wknd lmmed opening for a Mlf· n• -& TIMES Clrculetlon 0.. 2BR 1ba,1ncl g1rege. 279 & dep. 549·•271 1tt 8 --ANSWERS Sllrterlnanextremely (11•)2u.llOO partment In our dOOf to w W1l1on. Apt G --Ne1r SC Plu, 2Br, 2Be fast paced R.E. •· II "17. I .. a... door newspaper Hi.t 645· 1819 $475tmo House 10 sh r S275 • 'It ut111 Hat car Investment llrm ..,.1 ' •P'r• program. Guarentffd -avail Beautiful loc. porl 5411·0234 Gentry · Topaz Excellent cornmunlcetlon hourly .,..,.,. plut com-2 Br 2 Ba SA Sp1. port Hts S325 /mo --Wrung-Yond9' d I lo 1-"ll'-, __ ..__ -.-carport, $675 545-713 1 675·5568 NEWPORT BEACH WATER an orginut na ..... OL••wtaa ro .......... Hours· <4PM 10 S.45 5323 100 n Fiii 1111 required, alOng with first ""'-II PM . Tr a In Ing 11 .!!' . eves Mature employed non· V An overly pampered hus· rate typing & SH Non Immediate poaltlon tor provtdtd Potentlal to Brtnd new condos 1 + smoker, ht• kitchen prlv.. 1 Bd from S325·S400 wtt band requested • drink smokef Strid resume to· A/P Cler'k \O asl1t wllh tam S300. s>tu• per week loft, 2 Br, 2 Br• den Sec $250 CM 556-6378 2Bd S4-00· S'25 wtf. 'I'm buay." Hid his wll1, TMI, •8 Upper Newport poallng, ming. acc:ount· For an lnter-Mw, calt bldg R.ntar office open ~-Well located on 30th St 'gel II yourMll " Slowly Plua, Newport Beach, Ing records, typing & 10 957·2381 ext t204 Mon-Sii 1•5pM or come Mature Im hH room/ba lo nt1r 111 convl•ncea ,,. turned 1round tht c a , 92858·8975 Attn key 1klll1. c:oUnt know!· 1--------- by 810 Beker St. c M rent to n-1mk wrkg fem. 875·8127 or 997·P432 room and lnqulrad, Karin, lncld.aalary edge helpful Aec*'lt high Looking lor e m1.11lc 24I·1275 Fr(fTI S87S 25 • 546-1307 aft 5 30 Rm In lg furn home Nr w"WAhTefERe?~'o we keep tht hlllory No calla pteue achool Of'edl ~. teactler7 You'll atrlkt tht ---N 1 B h d Apply In Ptf90n at: 3'00 right chord when you OlllCI WTSllE ewpor eac con o BICk Bay. w/d, mlcrowv. Aefoblc Exercl .. ln1truc S Susan St . Santa An•. advertlM In c1u11tltd S B room tor ren1 Call mutt'"· $385 m-83t4 Ptrltalh lOIZ s12 50/hr wtll treln. WOfk ~0-887 1 -s42·S871 h1rp 1 r In qulel com· 575.9307 --own area. 772·"•~7 pltx F .. tures lrplc. ap-Rmmtlp\11 entr & lull Bath, .,.... ---------1--------- pllances. PoOf & p1rk1ng A tvg rm, din rm. kite. deck S'll5/mo 381 Hamill on $450 mo t utl 434 D•hlla CdM 873· 7581 D1vld Aide 6 hO\IMkeepel' ror arthritic woman. wknd1 12 noon-8PM. Balboa Ill. 175-0596 Clerks IOI lllllC ··-••&1111 lnteMew&dllly trom 11 :00 a.m.-12 noon at 1390 Nof1h Peclflc Coat Hwy., Laguna Beach (on PCH & VtejO) Clll (714) 494-9233 tor more info. ScMhetn c.Hfoml• daJly news- paper need• uperleooed detk per.on with good leyout end hMdHne wrttrng lklH•. Some featU'9 ~ allo (9qUlfed. Compettttve 111ery end ben· eftt1. EOE R41pfy. ad #400, C/O Orange Coui 'belly Piiot, P.O. 8o>t 1680, Co1t1 M.... CA. 92828. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZIE ACROSS 1 unu .. now ·e~ 11 Vital fluid -14 Roman robe 15 Beach 16 Bruit river 17 Cutout 68 Construct 60 Band leaott -Brown 70 Markamen 71 Curv• 17 lmplementl DOWN --18 Got Mrlout 1 Concorde 20 W•ll·dreued 2 Ear: pref. 22 Fever type 3 Welflt't Item 23 Obi · 4 Moalem God 25 Oppo11tlon & Kind of flle 28 o~ 6 Jewleh 29 lnteel ucetlc 30 Latticework 7 Amuled 32 Rental PIP4tf eound i 34 Rich place 8Tennl•1hot 39 Yearly book 9 "To be" part n 42 Obtalne 10 Semeater ~ Exhau1t1 11 Move 46 Belt I04Jnd •l .. tthlly .e Okt Mexican• 12 Keen or mind 49 Wotfed down 13 Of a pope 50 A-one 19 Plant apllite 64 Flat: pref. 21 Normal 1tate 55 Wound mark 23 Meal courM 58 FalM name 24 Anofnt: arch. 58 Bugle call 26 SlcknetMa 60 -acid. Brit. 27 Seeondary 63 Spok" 30 Doctrine 68 City In 31 Footwear Oklahoma 33 -ammo- 1 2 3 14 17 IULTIOLll ASSIST. DIRECTOR Health Club/P.E. bacJI· ground. exper. nee .. re- IP<>Otib4e and per90n· able. 8«_.864 Hoepltal PRIVlOUI 1tt1ZZL.a iOC.YIO .S.J.J.J &l.:.JU&I -UL!l:Jl:JL.1 :.I .1.:J ... .J :.1.:J i.J iAJ U L~H:J U .:J.J.l.J U.Ji:J~ Ui.:.J ULSU ~~.:J~ ~..JiJ!JI.! U&IUIJ .J~~.:J:.1.!;.J :.:J!JULI .J~.J ..IUIJUUUl:JU .J .J :.1..J .:J .JI.I i:J iJ u l:J fJ L:J 11~.J.J .:t~!J~u uui.:.;u :J ..J .:J .J .a I!!" u u l!I rJ l~.UJ :J .I .!I .J .!I ..I u u i;J L!J LJ .:t.:.l.J&I ;:tUi:.JUl.:J"U .:.I 11.J .ii .J .J i.:. .J lJ I.I u lJ" U:JU~&I iJU~l:J U~l:JIJ ..t.1.:.1..t..J ..t;:J&li:J ~LJ~U .J.i..t.:J.. UUU!.J ~WUL:.:. nlae 35 Flee 39 Phone ·number Increment• 37 Greek lett• 38 Noted Cana- dian doctor 40 At the peak 41 Battery part "4 Central governmen· tallat 47 Maknlaws 7 8 9 10 48 Small bed 50 Fundamental 51 &cape 52 Ellot't Mr. Marner 53 Light blow 55 Fllea high 57 Females 59 Large bu1h 61 Exctamatlon of disgust 62 Vintage auto 64 Frozen water 65Po.,...lv• Acct• recelv•ble clerk. good mtlh Ind verbal lkllll. Newpot1 Beach le> cation good talary and benefl\1. Mr Fehr 840·8950. Daily Pilat .... ' IMllOLUllll WTI CdM, 1 day wk, 4 hrt. $5.00+ tip. Pia call an SPM 875-oe38 PART TIME I ( ' ( HOUSEKEEPER/ AIDE, cleaning, laundry, •r· rand•. ahopplng &. lunch· ... No heavy work NO windows. Children 12 & 17. Need 1-5 dally Pref. mature ~r1on whtlnt refs. So. Lagun• loe. Call A. T. (714)841-8221 Motor Route Available Newport Beach area, three hours per day. Earn approx. 600 per month. Call 11 :00 to 4:00 PM. HOUMkeepet & car• tor elderty coupi. 5 dys/wk Reta Call all 7pm 844..8421 Daily Pilat UYOUT ARTIST PlllT TllE Oran&-COuhty dally newapeper bu an openi.ne foe a quick layout Utilt. c.andidate must be able to work well wtth Ml• people and meet daily deeel~ une.. BMlc lcnowl~ of camera reldy art, typllJlna, and the capability to mark up layouts f OC' prOductiOri a mUllt. Additlonal pro~ may iiaclude flyen, brothww. mapa and ealel ~ entatian vilua& 1·2 years~~~ -ne-.~ prefefNcl.. Send ftiiUme to: ,. ORA CE COA T DAILY PILO'f Newlpaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS Art> PRIZES! ' AE 11-14 1 £MN a. TO $75.00 PEI MDC . w. ...... is.,.....,,........, ...,.,. .... ;..-n lit Tiiie .... Callit llli'r Hat 0. crftll *' •t JJO ,,. ... .-\_..I JO J.• ""'*P OI Sltlrtly. • ............ , ...... ..,. ...................... -=· -~lwi•• ........ ~ ,,..,..,....,,...ur• tMt. • I 'm ·cm l &Ill 'YOfX It.ma tor $50 or ,_. In our ~ OIMEs...A-LINES pub- llMt«J eec::tt S.tut1My '" the OaJly Ptlot. OIMES-A·LINE ada mwt be ~.,'""" "'brlno them Into the a.Ry Plot omc.. a. .,,.. to Include 'YOU' pit«» ttumber or #KJ.. '*-In )Qr *1. ,,.,,. • price Off eeott Item• no~~ Sony. no comm.a.t edl. ~ ....... ~,,,,.,,.,. "'.,...,. .. e?OIPt ... DEADLINE: WlllY CLDICAIS AllTllCll COM ... ELL CHEVROt.ET '"~ \ l 1 • '• I f'-.. I \ \• ~ "' ' S46-I 200 .. WlllT US£0CAAS & TRUCKS COt.llE INOA CALL FOR flll llfUllM. C«rnier·Oel m1llUt 1&211 BEACH 8 L \10 HUNT\?'tQTON ~ Ml .... lJltl 111 1 •WllTTM ..... Ult e.. Bor\ltQ. Qrtoe . Bill YATES VW .PORSCHE 8)7 4800 'q j 4'l' • .,, m ~;an, cond.. &lr,pa, etulM 1317 cont.runs good. '975 obo &27-3215 Lat• '&2 AMera. cuat conv •• many exira. s 111. 750_ awt-ln-3158 C .. illM ·um ·75 cmr eao co;;: ~ 8-Jtdut car, be9ut cond. S9000fflrm Cal (5051392·51•7 '79 Coupe de Ylle. f\liY loeded, tnOOI" oof. truly xlnt 17995 527·9094 ·eo Sevlle 41k m1 s 1000 & •••um bal ueoo $275/mo PP 499-«>12 '81 BlARRITZ. llke new. 29,600 ml St4,700 C... 831~58 '79SEVILL£ • &Mr on ..,,_ 18375 Oy9 831~ E~eso-3917 NABERS CADll.lAC LARGEST SELECT'IOH of lat• model. low l'nlMge CedlliK:a In Southern Callfomla~ See U9 todty1 540-1110 2600 Harbor &Nd. COSTA MESA Qnnlet 1313 I ·61 Corvalr Ctaulc. whtlred Int $2500 760-1270 Cd.,. 8pm '80 Monza 4-apd. )tint cond. New tlhodls. aner. trans S!Mw Wired Int I Pis. ale, amltm stereo. $3100 080 Cell aft 8 964-~ I '8.4 Corvette eY poeeib4e extra. son~· Ilk• nftl. Otter 8~ 110 t-5 M-F , COMMHl ; CHEVRC' l fl .. ~ .... I I • r ~ ' \' 54(>. I 1(l :' • NM. 491·5117 Iv m II gie. '71 Cougar XR7 lollded lo ml xlrlt cond mult Miit 12800 obo 831-2220.,. OWaaeMlt !t T :~ U Ill 1\.1 P.O. BoJt 1080 Com M-. CA 12626 At~Uon: Liu Smith ~~~~~==J.l.!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!lilliiliillimlll=~=~=~~~~~===~~~- ' I CIO f'X r1™ Co.sl DAILY PILOT/Tuesdav. Julv-3. UHM '------~ 6ARt'IEl.D POOKV L()V(5 ME.. t C.AN "TELL 1-. "OK , let her go." by Gus Arriola by Jim Davis ME. P0£5N'T TALI!.\, ME POf.~'T , WALK, Ml. POE5N 'T 1M\NK A L!Tl'LE NO"TMIM6' 00£9 A LONG WAY T HE FA.ttlLl' CIRCUS by Bil Keane ... ..-f ..... ~ ... .RIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) I 'I ~' ,. ! I ' •" ; r , I~ -1 ., l. - 1·1 -i/fp " ... and that'sJtarold. He's our Mr. Per· son ality." by Brad Anderson DE:\:\IS THE :tlE,ACE Hank Ketcham "Who's telling this l1sh story. anyway?" by Ferd & Tom Johnson :tlOO' :tl L LLl'S SU NNY S. SHARE .. S'~" ' 1 M .ALL. Now, PRCl'.-\ISE You WON 'T ··UNTIL 1 <:iET ro THE' PHONE I "THIS rs E'.ARS lo LL A ':>ouL Top SECRET ,........ TELL ME SOME™IN6 .. " . T l lltlRl.t:Wt:t:DS , __ _ ' -..--- "' • O.D '10\J EVEJ1. STEAL I APPLES FROM A l HE161180R'S TREE ~rn i ~OIJ WERE '10UM6 ? I 7X ~~ib.!I I , by Charles M. Schulz 1'M JU5T A KID ... l'M NOT '10\JM6 YET~ by Tom K. Ryan I - BRIOG[ F..ut·Wesl vulner1ble. Nort.h de1ls. NORTH t QU O AJ971% 0 11051 ..... WEST EAST +Vold + IO!SI o IOSU O K o Qu on +J 98712 +AKQI06S SOUTH + AKJ76' 0 Q! 0 AK81 ., The biddin1: Nertll £••t So111th Weit P111 ! • Obie 4 • 5 ~Pau5 +Put &• Pau fi + Pau Pau Pau Opening le1d : Seven or •. The rledgling "G oren Bridgt Letter" scored a minor toup whel'I its second SHOE DRl\BBLE / i.:.'.:...'......:: A SHOW·UP SQUEEZE inue ~al the k!adin1 bridre ma1raxintt'with lt1 report on the Trill• to $elect thf US. team ror the 1984 World Bridge Ol7mpiad. the team led by Malcolm Brachrnin of Dall•• won the right to repre sent Ote U.S. after a hard· fought battle that was de<:ld· ed only in'the laat quarter. Here Is one of the hands from the "Goren Bridre Lfl:L- ter" report. In the one room. the Brachman team htd been content to play in game. Jn other room, their opponents reached slam via the se- quence shown above. Ea1t· West were using an artiracial club sy_ttem. so the two club opening bid was natural ind not forcing. South felt his hand was too_good simply to overcall. and North 's hand Decame stronger as the bid· ding progressed. ... Ag1inst six spades Wesl Oil.~. Al 'klllll<Alt '™' l n i.11.•""" ._ 1RlPLf. ~~ Nf.llf.11 ltd 1 c:lvb and detla.ttr ruffed In dumm.,. He drew tour roundl of tnlmps It Wett alufftd clubs, then ran Lhe queen of heart1 Lo East's kins. Ea1l shUttd to • dllmond. Urclart:r rOH with the. ace _ and led a heart lo the ace. When Eatt failed to follow. decl1rt:r had lit\~e. recourse but to try the diamond fineas•. Down one. There i1 •n alternalive line thtl would have worked . Declart:r 1hould win both high ditmondt and then lead out his remalninr trumps. As the c1rd1 lie, West will not be able to keep his guards in both rt.d 1uit1 -he will be aqueeied out of a he1rt or the queen of diamond1. However, U nothing rood develops, declarer can then fine1se the ta, IAAHl(o, FU~~K!! 00 'l:lU "A'IE loll' ~ 000() Ni;.>!> 10 !tu. Mf, 11 Oaw SWIF ni.Dt of heartf. for •:aatll probablfl dl1tributlon i1 •·1·2~. Hy adoplinX lhi• lhw declarer tuctt.tds whtnever Lhe 1quee;:e operatt1. or the quf'en of diamondt drops. or If West hat the 10 or h:earu. R•bliier llrhl1e cl•lii• t•n .P.•l lH .a•trJ' •M u.. 1 .... -4w k... -· w., 1" HI,! Cloarleo Gtr't•'• "F .. r-DMI lrWp." •W tuc• ,.. ~ 1trsc..p.1 .... """'of Wo .......... lldilitl f .. 11 dial ,...wWff 1M '""' for __... ,.,,_ be'" F• 1 ..,,, ..... 11.75 tt "G.re• F"1•DMI," ure ef tkit 11ew.,.per, P.O. lta ZS!, N..,....i, N.J. 07648. Make clleck pa7ollle te New..,erM.k1. by Jeff MacNelly IT'S llNlol'UOI/. FOR RETTER OR FOR WORSE IA :ffi-TPMH ! by Lynn Johnston }b<JRE. ~Llli'lG- MEO! TFiffilR·ffiffll FU,Kl' Wl,KERREA' 'Tfl l!> I" MINNIE CAMERON U AT TflE JACX!:>ON CONCER"f 11\U<I~ 1b !/:JVIE 'JllPlc:Al MICHAEL JAC.K~ FliN5 1 DR. S:tlOCK FFEE SO< •a LOOK , "f"Me'Y SAY MOS-rOF 1'He: t:'OC.IORS IN R U SS IA A.Re WOME:N/ ..__~~ J UDGE PARKER \ -r---• FFEE 50( .. g SO WHY PON'"1'" YOU OO"'YOU R etOY GeORGe' e>l"f" ANP ,.JOIN 'e,M .'? • ' I i l"' by Tom Batluk by George Lemont A SIMPL..e: "NO" -ro A ~eaues-r FOR A PA-re WOUL..P S UFFICS..' FFEE Ill Ur:& WPU! by Pat Brady " ' I .. . • 1 . ~. -. .... . . . Supplement to the Dally Pilot July Srd 1984 ' • • . . • • • r ) Heather on 'canvas' Heather Sheridon, 10, of lfewpurt-Beach la fttted wltb C09tame for her portrayal ID 'Snap the Whlp, •an oil~ Oil caD'l'U by Wlnalow Bomer. The ortctDaI artwork banp ID the Bader IDstltate of Amertcua Art ID Yoa.n&atcnrn, Ohio. It'• ham.an ~don will be 'OD dlaplay' Mc1nnta1 Satarilay at the Paaea.nt of the Neaten ID~ Beach. It's All A Matter of Tastet Imported chocolate• from 8elglum neuhaus chocolate shoppe South Coast Plaza \ ''•' .md \,f4,ll•r( .Jrd J\111·p1t•d (7 14) 979. 1667 • FESTIV SCH EDU DATES: 7 thrOugh ALV• 21, 11&t TIMES: :ADMISSION: PLACE: Antiques Liquidating -Choice itema at cost: Four drawer Victorian cheat $475, Empire cheat 1550, English sideboard 1650, Bread rack 1200, T. W. Beds, 4- poiten pineapple carved w/box 1prinp, 8o1tDet cheat 1300, Etagere 11500. Fine bevelled mirrora 1100 to 1175, One dozen eleven inch Old pattern glau platea. Pair of covered compotes giant aawtooth 9". Pair of amethyst lustres. Misc: Chin~ Silver, Art Glau. Treasure Treve 1143 No. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beaeh, CA Open 11 AM to 4 PM • Ooeed Sunday and Monday J'-n Wllsea (714) 494·47H • ... .. Pageant of The Maat_..,Ari Advertising SupJ>ie!ment to the DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 3. 19~ -3 ~-rts Fest: l's ·52n·dyear Promptl).' at I 0 am. this S8turday, the gates wdl open at 6SO Laauna Canyon Road as the SZ.ycar-old Festi- val of Arts starts its 1984 season -set to be marked by several new features as well as many that have proved populat over the years. Basically. the colorful annual event -the biggest of its kind in the West -is a display of work by anists and craftsmen of the area: specifically, of those living on the coastal stnp between Newport Beach and San Clemente. Only those whose work has passed muster with a seven-member panel ofjudg~ are eligible to apply for exhibit booths. Categories arc numerous, and include not only a wide range of graphics-paintings in variousmedia, etchings, drawings, serigraphs and so on -but also stained glass, model shjps, weaving. photography, wood carving, blown and etched glass; even jewelry and furniture. All work shown is for sale, and business is often so.good that exhibi- tors are able to coast through the rest of the year between Festival seasons. However, there ~lutcly no press- ure; '\he disp-ray-is essentially that: a setting for people from far and wide to spend time pleasantly taking in the show -including the setting itself, which consists of lawns, trees, walk- ways, a picnic area and benches for rest and peopl~watching. Other displays include the work of an students around the county, ar- ranged grade by grade, from kindergarten through high school. Work by Festival scholarstiip winners is on show. too. A well-patronized feature for many years has been the junior an workshop, where small fry are provided with working space, ma- terials and advice so that they can try their tiny bands at creating their first masterpieces. It's free. · The colorful, hill-girt grounds extend over some six acres and include two lawns that are the setting for special programs from time to time. Each Sunday afternoon at 5 p.m .• for example, dancers from Ballet Pacifica KITCHEN present a twenfy-minutc spectacular Masters -a two-hour program prcs- featuring lively -and non-balletic-ented at 8:3() each evening m a programs, complete with authentic handsome amphitheatre alongside the costumes. grounds. Featuring the re-<rreation of This year•s on-the..grcen prcscn.. great works of art with real people tat ion is a repeat from some years back., posing to represent their counterpans which proved immensely popular: a in the original works, The Pa_geant is series of Moldavian dances, with both aural and visual, sjnce it includes unusually tuneful, pulsating music. not only presentations of the master- Some two dozen dancers are on hand, pieces themselves, but also informa- surrounded not only by boOths at tive and amusin&.-narration -and which the art and crafts exhibitors are_rousjc pro\'ided by a 27-member on show, but also by grounds visitors orchestra. wh9 tum to watch. The pr~m A sellout success for many years, represents a sort of bonus for visitors, the Pageant is the Festival's big since it is all included in the nominal moneymaker, and enables the or- grounds admission fee -$1 foradults, ganization not only to make display and no charge for accompanied chil-space available to the exhibitors at far drcn under twelve. below the cost, but also 10 do two other Other attractions presented on the things that help both the community as green this year are'SCtiedulcd to include a whole and individual citizens - Scottish pipers, whose authentic cos-namely, thepaymenttothecityofover tumest instruments and accoutre-half a million dollars each year; and the ments alone attract fascinated atten-awardingof scholarsltips to students in tion. The Marine Corps band from various.branches oftbe arts, including nearby El Toro is also slated to appear dance. drama, music and writing. at least once during the season. Although a brief visit to the A 1984 special attraction ties in Festival ranks as a must for summer directly with the Olympics, which will visitors to the Laguna Beach a~ the bC-lleld some 60 miles away in Los many attractions warrant more than Angeles. The Festival has been honor-one visit -especially since the display ed by the U.S. Mint as the setting for an of art and craft items ebanges constant- exhibit of official Olympic coins -in ly as works are sold, then replaced by various st.ages of creation. Officials entirely different treasures. from the Mint itself will be on hand to The Festival grounds are within easy strolling distance of the an colony's downtown and beach areas, are open daily from I 0 a.m. to l l :30 p.m. and arc served by both local transponation and Orange County Transit buses, which serve a wide area and stop at the festival entrance. EMERALD BAY The cover' of lhil ..,.a.I publk:atk>n le ~aced tw OalY Plot d"9f SJh9togrllPMt R6ctt- ard Koehler'• ahot of ''Etner. Md Bay.'' .. oll plllntiHQ oommllllOiied tor ... L.aGUne B11th PaQ11nt of die U.... t ... ''Emerald Bey'' W81creeted by locat Wtlat JMe Shuia; "The rM:r"Mtion of lhe p-.sting, with the U89 of he mod1l1, lndlldee the..,,.. foUr yioung- sters whO pOled for the ~ inel. From left,~ ere: Dan F•IJ'*)n. a8M l.ongl'aecker and K~ end Joy Shirkanl. supplement the display with expla----------------------------- nations. In an air-conditioned Forum Theatre on the fP.:Ounds, two types of entenairiment will be offered daily-a first-rate marionette show presented by Scott Land; and showings of old moYies, includjng The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. The marionette show is a paid-admission attraction, runs about half an hour, and is geared to children and adults alike. The movies are free. Also on the grounds is a quick- snack cafeteria and, on an el~nt and secluded upper terrace, there s a full- service restaurant. Also offering re- freshments are concessions run by charitable organizations as fund-rais- ing activities. Finally, there'~ the Pageant of the -It VI.LAGE F AltE MAU OCEAN VIEW & PATIO DINING 4-IOST FOR DllllNG ARTISTRY Continental Cuisine • Daily Lunch and Dinner Cocktails •-seafood Bar • Sunday Brunch Entertainment • Dancing • Banquet Facilities Chauffeured Limousine Service On Request 32802 S. Pacific C-oast Hwy. Monarch Bay Plaza Laguna Niguel 499-2626 / 496-5773 23311 Muirlands at Ridge Route j84 Forest Ave. Lumberyard Plaza Laguna Beach 494-9491 I 752-8558 Open Dally From 8 A.M. ' Lake Forest Village El Toro 770-3222 24399 Dana Drive Dana Point Marina Island Way -West Basin Dana Point 661-9722 Guest Bo.lt Slips r,wo Levels of Free Parking vifth VBl/dstlon 1198 S. Coast Hwy. 497-1667 Dinner Service To 11 lO P.M • Seafood Bars Open To I :30 A.M Laguna Beach (Next to Pottery Shack) L I Here•re.th.e people who're ·· roducing , the Pagea~t show Key production personnel for the 1984 Pageant of the Masters include: Director. Glen E~chison; Assistant Director, Diane (Dec Dec) Challis; Technical Director and Stage Man- ager. Carl Callaway; Background Art- ists. David Rymar and Leslee Strum: Musical Director, Richard Henn; Narrator. Thur) Ravenscroft; Script Writer, Dan Duling: Inanimate Sculpture, Judr. Parker; Casting Direc- tor. Diana Schilling; Makeup Consult- ant, Dorothy Day; · Makeup Director, A llyson Becktcl; Costume Director/Designer, Skipper Skcoch, Wig Styling and Headmeces, Jan Shedd. EL LllliM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M . to 3 P .M. LUNCHEON . fllEXICAn RESTAURAnT ~ BREAKFAST COCKTAILS Dally from 11 A.M. All Major Credit Cards -Food To Go- 213 OCEAN AVE. LAGUNA BEACH Reservations 494-9763 A.round the comer from the South Coast Theater . " ~nDally 11:30-10:00 RESTAURANT ASSOCIATION'S SILVER AWARD WINNING RESTAURANT 1740 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach•• 494-6588 2 Blb. So. of S urf a Sand Be~eea Diamond a Bluebird Cyn. THE AMBIENCE OF OLD MEXICO WILL SOON BE A PART or "THE llARKET ON THE LAD'' CENTER"' IOSSJON VIEJO .............. .,, ....... c....... Prepping for Pageant ' Rln Bard, 21, of Ba.ntlqton Beach, la a Paceant of tile Muten •ola.nteer who will appear u one of ft•e o.,ura ·repraented lD "Tiie Alter of Sa.lnt 'elaato.' Here ahe awalta application of yet more make·ap prior to lolDC OD . 9ta1e. . Celebrating out 20th Anniversary ~ TBI Cft'Utl RESTAURANT 308 NORTH COAST HWY • Ll&Ull IUCH OPEN.SAM EVERYDAY LUNCH AND DINNER NOON-12PM • Varietal Wi nes • Premium Beer ··Patio AND Dining Rooms LAGUNA STYLE COOKING SERVED IN A TURN OF THE CENTURY LAGUNA LANDMARK " . . . Pageant of The Mastera/An AdVerttalng Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 3, 1984 -S Now fully co.tumed. RI.a•• ready to go 'on •taae. • That'• her. holdlni the baby. amid.st fellow cut members and ~e band8. NOW OPEN SATURDAY 9-1 Great color has always been the providence of Master Painters ... until Lasercolor. At LAURSEN CUSTOM COLOR LAB, photographers can now quickly transform their 35mm slides into vivid impressionistic masterpieces. With the help of the Lasercolor Design Previewer, a photographer can freely "paint" an image from almost 3500 special effects possibilities. Bring your favorite slides into our lobby ant try your hand at the Lasercolor's "palette". You could create color that even a master painter would envyl lf,\IJ!t'fij\j C&JilTOM ·~OLOR LAB 1641 'Reynolds. Irvine, CA 92714 [714) ae1-1 aaa J Santo Ano Son Diego Fr eewqy . Costa Mesa .. -· - ·~ -- -- Fest scholarships a Laguna tradition Local school kids pick up a bundle ~~~~~~~~-for future education basis of academic grades, references and creative ability as evaluated by competent jurors. For the field of art, judges are chosen from artists exhibiting on the Started in 1957, the Festival of , Festival grounds. Local authors judge Arts scholarship program for Laguna the writing applicants. Colleges and Beach High School graduates was universities in the ~a ~rovide jurors originally limited to graphic arts and for dance and mus1c, while the nearby crafts. In 1970, it was broadened to Laguna Moulton . Playhouse under- include dance, drama. music and ~es the evaluation of drama can- writing -an action that greatly didates. increased the number of scholarships as well as the amount of money granted. At first, some $5,000 yearly was distributed; in 1971 the awards totaled $8,350; and five years later they topped $25,000. The 1979 figure was $42,500; the 1980-81 budget lists $65,000: the 1981-82 figure was $78,700; $110,000 was earmarked for 1982-83; $115,000 for 1983-84 and $ J 20,000 is on tap for 1984-85. A wards are made for one academic year and extended for up to four years if the recipient maintains high quality work leading to a degree. This year, 1983-84, Festival of Arts scholarships are enabling 83 students to study in colleges and universities of their choice. Selection is made on the . The Festival also gives $2,000 an~ually to the University of Cali- fornia at Irvine and the Laguna Beach School of A,rts (increased to $3,000 this year) and $750 to Saddleback College. Tbc5e institutions disburse the funds to their students as Festival scholar- ships. Since 1971 , 720 graduates of Laguna Beach High School have received nearly $590,000 in grants, according to Glenn Vedder, cba'innan of the sc~olarship committee. It is the loyal support of the many hundreds of dedicated volunteers who serve the Festival of Arts and the Pageant of the Masters that makes such aid possible. •vnrtng' volunteer Kathy Coalter, 13, of Lanna Beach, portral! one of the o.are. lea tared b the cart Luaon watercOlorcalled ·vw.n, rpedition' attle Pateant of tb4 Muten. Tile on,tnaJ ~rt la In a prlnte collection. ' PEOPLE ARE MORE INCUNED10 TAKE SOME RY OUI HIT-Of. ntf,.PADYTIAlS. Remember your Wt puty-bow mudt time llld trouble it WU 10 ~ all the food and make it loot just riabC OK. now fcqct it. Call us llDd order a bcatiftd Hoeey&atecr PIUtY uay. You can st.iU pt the compl.imeiua wit.bout aD the l\au! All IMal IDd amdwidl ~ loclude Hoaey81ted• brand ham. • AHANllM • T1lc V1U.. c.a.er. l 222 S. ~(ll Bal M) • (714)635 2461 CC>tlON4 DU MAil-3700 E. Cout Hwy. (71~9000 ll • Bell T-Plaza~ 24601 ~Way•l(1tEITaroRd.)• {714)137.J822 tftiNnNGTON KACll -19069 Buch llvd. (at GuiSdd Mlt to ltaiFfta) • (714) 14157' OIANGl • 1419 N Tlllllll (a KIUAll) • (714) 997.~ 11IAN LEAVE SOML ---·COUPON---, STORE COUPON 10% DISCOUNT ON All HONEYBAKED"' PARTY . 2 TRAYS •SANDWICH BAYS • CHUSl BAYS • MIATBAYS 5 u 3 days DOCice may be n«dcd on order o( pany lrays. Come m ror our new c°">r pany tray brochure or c1ll us ind we will m11l 11 10 you. Coupon Expires July 31. 198-4 Good At P1rt1cip1tin1 Stores Only (") 0 c a z ----COUPON·--- ONE TASl'E· IS AU rr TAKES! ·-·-----... - • ~~ 312 llo. Coast Highwa1 Laguna Beacll, CA. . (114) 494-2615 Traditional Fine Art by Southern California Artists. Original Oils, Pastels, Bronzes, Lithographs. and Watercolors. ,. • The 'Bay' ooys Pa&eant of the lluten cll.rectm Glen EytclWlcm laelpa little Jllllan LoQ&Decker. of LUana Beach. onto the .et of •&merald Ba~': crealion of Jane Sflue• oil pabatl.DC. Dan re:quon. alao of ee.ch, IRanda poeed for staae debtlt lia Intne Bowl. • • ,. ' . .. ' • 8 -Pageant of The Masters/An Advertising Supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 3, 1984 ,, Attendtng to a 'bishop' · Ronald Foeter, Newport Beach, teta ... 1.atance hom Jan Shedd, rtcJlt. who Foeter, In hi.a Ont year u a •ohm teer, portr&J9 the blabop lD re-aeadon o directs the headdrea department, and •olanteer Francia Becktel, left. •The Alter of Salnt Bla&lo. • , I 2333 E. Coast llJrJ. Ste. A . Corona del Mar ., 11n11·. mis LENNY'S ••• (714} 67S-OBZ3 10 ¥rs. Experience Spee/allp9 -In Consul- tations & advanced cutting techniques. Reg. '25 ('S.00 off with ad, new clients) Specia/1111t9 -In Foil High- lightening. & -Foil-Color Unique Products. Reg . s45 ('S .00 off with ad) Speciall111t9 -In Perming No Friz & No Breakage guarantee. Reg. s55 ('5.00 off with ad) . Ope1 T1esday ~fl Sabnlay .. 9:8011 to 6:00PI "\ ~~out what you and your neighbors can do to pre- vent crime. Write to: Attorney General's Crime Prevention Center, P.O. Box 13197, Sacramento, CA 95813. Learn how to protect yours~d ... TAKE A BITE OUT OF A m--C• &om I.he Crime PrftenUon Co&liUon. m 1.b1t publJoauon &nd Tt\e Ad Counc&I 6 t C 1979TheA4v...u.inceounctl, rno . . .. . . . . . .. . ·-· .. I ... •a HIGH 88 LOW 68 I TUE S DA V JUl Y I. 11.JH4 o HA t-4 < • f < o u N 1 ( 1 A l 11 u H N 1 A .1" ( t t., r ·, Murder evidence-thrown out . Judge in Huntington love trian le case rules police violated •Miranda rights' to collect o.evly U00,000 m life insurance. · Hushes, her alleged lov~r and a third man are facing cha.rss of murderina James Huahes, a 37-year- old computer engineer who was shot to death Jan. 10 as be slept in a bedroom of the couple's Huntinaton BeaCh home. By STEVE MARBLE Of ............. A critical piece of evidence in a Huntington .Beach lov~ triariaJe murdsr case was thrown out of court Monday when a judF ruled police failed to honor a suspect•• riaht to be ' A tall ship parade will hlghllght the Fourth off- shore on Wednesday./ A3 What's going on along the Orange Coast on the nation's birthday? See complete list./ A3 Calif om la Film, TV directors vote to avoid strike just before Olympic Games.I A4 Nation Supreme Court says women must be allowed to Join JayefMlS./ A5 U.S., Soviets are talk Ing about talking about 'Star Wars.'/A4 World Former Israeli president Irked by Soviet Interrog- ation.JM Someone with a mean hook Is hitting airplanes with golf balls In Austral- la./ M Mind a: lkKJY Therapy via two-way radio helps people over- come their fear of free- ways.181 Benefits of plastic sur-· gery are no longer just for the rich and famous./82 Sports Coronadel Mar High workhorse Jeff Brown Is looking forward to the opportunity to hit some- one at Friday night's Or- ange County All-Star football game./C1 The Dodgers send slump- ing Greg Brock down to Albuquerque to work his way back Into shape./C1 CaJe Yarborough has grabbed the pole position for Wednesday's Fire- cracker 400 fn Daytona Beach, Fla./C3 Entertainment Orange County com- munlW theaters captured all three prizes In the pre- Otymplc festival In Los Angeles./84 Business Those family 'gifts' no longer a big tax br4t&k, but they' re better than nothing./ At INDEX represented by a lawyer durina QUe$- tionina. Judie David Brick.ner's decision was seen as a major blow to the prosecution's cue ap.inst Jeanette Hushes. a 29-ycar-oJd woman ac- cused of plottina her huSband's death Burning bOz car I The murder bas been depicted by prosecuton as a case of .. love and arced." Qnqe Coa.Dty flre&llter 8cOtt llcDali'maDt .tfta ~ the rematn1 of faniltue tla&t ca.,aat-Sre wblle ~ carried on a Barlm.ton lfortbem bOz car II~~ afternoon In Tudn •. Th ftre cauecl aboat $80.000 David Sills aims fi r another term • Irvine mayor Weiner ·would like to be considered,' but chanc~s slim By ANDREA ADELSON Of ........... Irvine City Councilman David Sills said Monday be bas enouah votes to become the next mayor, a decision made by the elected officials rather than the electorate. · Sull up in the air, apparently, is who wants to be mayor pro tem, the No. 2 post in the city of 76,000 that bad been held by Councilwoman Barbara Weiner. The official vote<0untin1 is to take place next Tuesday when lhe two council members-elect bqin their terms. TI!cy arc · to be sworn into office tonight at a special S:30 p.m. meeting at city hall. But ever a.incc the June: S election, the politicians have been vote-sbop- ping in .. smoke-fiUcd" rooms work- ang out amona themselvct who will take the mayor's job. While laraely a monial role, n is ~ mayor who s the pace and direction of tele-- ' vised council sessions and cams the most public attention. Larry Agran, who currently holds the mayor's gavel, said bis two-year stint is eno\Jlh. Agran said be is content to finish the final two yc:an of his four-year tenn as a council member.· • Sills is~seekioa l)is fourth term as mayor oflrvine. He held the office in 1976-77, 1979-80and 1981-82. The two new members, David Baker and Sally Anne Miller, elected to office last month, have expressed their disinterest in bccomi.ng mayor, according to Sills. Weiner, however, said she told Sills and Agran she would like to be considered for the job. "I think my chances arc slim," she said Monday. "I wish people would look at me and evaluate my qualifications. rve pulled a heavy load. .. Those who have held the mayor pro tern slot have occasionally taken the mayor's job the followina year, but there hasn't been a bistorica.i proaression. Aaran and Sills said. And if Sills• nose-<»unt is accurate, the first-term council member doesn't seem 10 have the votes to become mayor. "I've been told rm A ruliq was eq>eeted today in West Oranae Municipal Court whether there remains enouah infor- mation to order Hu.shes or tbc two men to stand trial for murdeT. Brickner damaaed the pros- ecution's cue late Monday when he ruled that a police intC1f9ption of Jeanette HusJ>n the day after the killina cannot be used as evidence aprnst her or the other ddendants, Adam Salas Ramirez., 42, and his son Adam Edward Ramirez Jr. In the intmoption, Hu,hei aJ.; legcdly made incriminatina ta~ menl$ that led police to conclude that she. Ramirez and his son ~oned the murder and planned to split up the insurance money. The juctee l&J"Ced Huntinston Beach detectives advised the woman ofherriahts to a lawya--as required under the U .S. Supreme Court•s .. Miranda" rule -~urina w four- of d.emace to deeb and cbaln tbat were boand for RB Famltme In lntiae. ODe-wltnae..tcl ebe •• a ooaP of children pla)'IDa OD tbe bas car before the ftre bloke oat. It took 34 firemen aboet 15 minute. to pat oat tJae blaae. hour in1ervicw but la.tr tned ··'° talk htr out ofJtalkina wath-ao attof'Qey ... At one point durina the quesuon- ina. Hushes I.Sb .. Do you think I need an anorntj?"' .-cordi~ to a tape recordinJ played in abt courtroom. Pol1CC are heard lldlil!I Huabes they could not advise her oae way or the other. A sbon time later. HU&hes apperendy asks, .. Atn I in trouble?"-' • ~ -EVID&lfC&/A2) Club's rent hike unfair? Monthly fee for use of schooj could_g_o from $258 to $3,QOO By PHIL SNEIDEIUllAN °' .. ..., ....... A representative of the Bojs and Girls Oub of Huntington valley says the Fountain Valley School District ii becoming an unfair landlord because of plans for a steep iJ)CIQIC in tbe club's rent for a wins at Bushard School. But a district official insists the proposed rent hike is fair and that it only reflects tbc dimct•s costs for opcratina Bu.shard. . The debete is scheduled to come before Fountain Valley School Dis- trict trustees Thursday at their rquJar meetinJ. - The tilool district and the Bo}'S Oub entered into a fiv~ycar lease in 1979, requiring tbc club to pay S258 per month for use of a closed wina at Bushard. The school is located in Hun~n Beach but is part of tbe Fountam Valley district.. Jay Stout., a member of tbe Boys Oub's board of direc:\ot'S, is nc&0tiat-, ioa for lbe dub to~ a aew \tUe .. Stout bas issued a written statement assertin& that the school" dist.net wants to raise the club's rent from $258 pet..mOntb ~about $3,000 per month. .. The school district is way out of (Pl-..e eee BOYS CLUB/ A2) ,,.. Leg al fireworks hot for countian llayor LanJ A&nn intimidatina." Weiner said. "1 think I'm inquisitive, industrious and in- telligent. I do the best job I c.an." If the mayor's post eludes her, Weiner said .. the position as advocate for Irvine is just as importanL" A&ran, who declined to state his p:ref'Crence for mayor, led a drive last fall to ask Irvine voters their preference over choosina a mayor. 1be baUot initiative died when a special Occcmbtrdection was dum~ ed after a court rulina. "The public bu iness ought to be done in public and the 1election of a mayor o~t to be done iJl public, .. A&ran said. Anaheim manufacturer said in def a ult on $20 million, faces fraud lawsuit By JERRY BIRSCB ot ... ~ ....... Orange County fireworks mogul W. Patrick Moriarty isn't JCltlng a bang out of this Fourth of July. California Canadian Bank. an American subsidiary of one of Can- ada's largest banks. filed a $40 million bank fraud lawsuit against the Anaheim fireworks manufacturer al- leging that he bas defaulted on nearly $20 million in loans. Some of the loans were apparently made at the bank's Newpon Beach office, but Mel Akers. the branch manqcr, said the company was not ta)~ about the SUIL The suit.. filed Monday m Orange County Superior Court. also seeks $20 million m damages and im- plicates the defunct Bank oflrv1ne an a conspiracy ..to channel money to Moriarty through a vancty of busi- ness associates and connected finns. Moriany 1s under 1D\.'CSt1pt1on by a federal arandJUf)' In Los A•les for qucst1onablc business. bankma and political act1v1t1es. Neither Monanty nor his laW)'er. Donald Heller of Sacramento. could be reached for a response to the charges m the swL Moriarty is the owner of Pyrotronics Corp .• the manufacturer ot lhe Red Devil and the Wddcat bl'llnds of .. safe and sane" fireworks and has been involved 1n several controversial attempts to liberalize fireworks regulations in California. The suit alleges that Moriarty used his business associates and their connected businesses to improperly "commingle" assets to obtain the loans. The suit also chums that Monarty filed false financial statements and used his posiuon as a member of the board of directors of the Bank of Irvine to delay paytng off the loans. The Bank of Irvine. which was closed b) state regulators in May, "acted as a conduit" for the fil"C'\VOr\s manufacturer. the sutt alleges. The suit names 18 1nd1vtduals.. most associated •.nth Monarty. and 16 finns. The defendants also include Edgar E. PankC). 1hc Bank of Irvine's maJonty owner: Henry L Bear. another fonncr board member of the Bank of Irvine and Pyrotromcs president James C. Auld. • 82 C10 A3 A9 A4 C7-9 C10 C9 C4 82 ca 82 City fnspectoFs persisting· in lawsuit to clear names AIDIEA ADELSOI 'ReQlays' playing politics 81-2 A9 A4 M 81 A3 C4..a C14 A10 83 83..t A2 A4 8Ncc Bullard and Art Peck 111Ut an a~ "'°"' city hall. But even more. the city i~on want their mma cleaftdo •-*'as pouebat after "91Y'vc beitn lifted to ono of tbe few 1t1Ddal1 to rock Irvine in iu 13,-)'Cel'. biaory. Bullard and · Peck's S2., l1'loft dd'am1uonsuat 191in t 11Mdt1"'Ptl\I Monday, thru ~ 1f\Cr \Mt were mmcwct in 1 bribtry probe tfalt led to I criminal C()pvictiOn O(l thtr'CI cny ins1)«1or. i "J pent IS to 20 years buUdi~ a ttputation," said B~ S., of osta Mesa who btsan iq b' lmRia1976."I feCJ my~and intqrity wctt ptttty ~u nown. "But I've btto robbed, u- inatcd. The only thin& t have to teeve my_ ttuldtcn... said Bullard. SJ9USll-a. h1 \'Oltt brtakiQ&. ""\:t mx IOCMI name. Tlu.s (suit) is impe>nanl Pttt. 55, of AnahCrm. said the swt 11 • means ()( cleanna tbctr clouded rcputauon The in~pccton cbafF Irvine, itstopoffi &ndu El Toro contraetor with de~mation or characttt and in\uon of pnvat'). Thf cloud u.,.. On)) last month. Ptck R:Call a dry wall roatnctor at .work oa tbc Hiiton HOtd ed h~ what ~ lO "the dirty rats ec:tuied ofbribtiy. .. After yov ~into·~ it's tiftbeina in a WhlrfpcM:)I. You wondtt tflbett's ever a bottom.t.7 Peet; &be fatbct of th~ said llft'Glf. • HcandBublardnc ~~ wtth bribery. TheJ facc-d ~ lor acccptin& 1 ptwty fbf perftjrmu)I their J • m11dtmeanon that were ultimatclf Clropptd for i ufficimt evidtnc:e an Juh·. 19 1. NEWS 8 AC~GROUNO By ROBERTBAR.IEJ\ °' .. ..., ....... A debate over .. lnstant Replay" 1 brc~ in Hunli on Bea h. potiticos are bri · the 1 into fbcus beaux al11\a"!oi._ Comm· ·01\ mecti will be ihown on "prime time.. C\.'el"y T y nw11., except . ton~\, on loc:aJ cable tefcv&SJOn OW:lael6. • Two of the mttti will ao into homes li~ from Caty CouDCil m Al y Hall. And on ahcmase Tueaday n · when th'e commiJ · · •t m 1 (Pia 111 w UPLATa/ ' * <>range Coast DAILY PU.10T/Tuelday, July3, 1N-4 Starship show violated law 1 UREN . ILEIN ................ ... Cosia M 's city noise ordinance s apparcnlly vaolated Saturday iaht durina a rock concut at the ific iAmphithtatrc, Tom Wood, °'ta Mca city attorney, aid today. Wood said he poke with Gordon ricken, the l(Oustical er;llincer con- tracted b)' the city to perform noise ests dunna amphitheater concen • and learned that theft weft tte>ite violations recorded dwial Sa. da)."s Jeffmion S&anhip CODCll"'" 'When we receive u anatysi1 of the (sound testin&) data. we will file criminal cbaraes ..a.inst the aml>bitbeater, .. Wood Mid. llesidents of Colleee Parle and Mesa dcl Mar, the two neiahborhOods closest to the amphitheater, com· Plained bitscrly at a city council mee,µ111 MOnday about ia.-week- BOYS.CLUB RENT HIKE ••• ;Prom Al . ine in their rent demands ... ," Stout's o( utilities and maintenance~ He ·statement charaes. He said the steep claims he has reached an impasse in • increase could require the club to neaotiations with Assistant Super- : charge members almost $300 a y~ intendent Jack Mahnken and will • for use of the facilities. Club members plead his case directly to the board of ; pow pay just $10 a year for a trustees Thursday ni&ht • membership. In an interview, Mahnken said : Stout said the Bushard center each circumstances have cbanaed in the : month serves an average of I SS boys five years since the first ·Boys Club :; and girls, ages 6 to 18. He said the club lease was signed and that chin~ : provides a public service by keepin& must be made in the aarecmeot · •• the closed wing in use and by rcducina Initially, the school district ex- • vandalism. pcctcd to exchange services with the He also said that under a new state club in coqjunctioo with the low law concerning surplus school prop-monthly rent. Mahnken said. In erty, the Boys and Girls Club ts not cooperation, with the city of Hunt· required to pay any rent at Bushard. ington Beach and the school district, Stout said the school district's at· the Boys Club built a 1}'1llnasium torney disagrees with this inter-near Bushard. pretation of the law. The district arran9ed for Bushard'• Still, Stout said the club is willing to middle school students '(lrades six pay $300 per month and to take care through eight) to have ux of the new Brickner said that the detectives, at this point, tried to .. downplay .. the seriousness of the situation by telling , her that the questions were just "a formality." The Judae, notina that Huahes already bad flunked a polyJrlph test before the round of ~uest1ons, said police tried to .. coerce • Hughes into talking. "I'm certainly not sayi04 the police blundered," Brickner said. "They have no control over when or if a person exercises the rights." Deputy District Attorney Jay Mosely, who brou&ht in Deputy District Attorney Eric Snethen to argue the Mirada riabts issue, did not comment on Brickner's rulina and would not speculate on bow badly it might damage the case. .. It's incredible .. said the murdered man •s brother, Boyd. after the ruling. "I'm shocked that she (Hughes) mipt be walkina free on a tcchnicali ty .' · Don Rubri&ht. the attorney who successful argued that the police interrogation of bis client should be tossed out. declined to ditaW Brickner's ruling except to note. .. It's interesting." Hughes, Ramirez and bis soil have been held at Orange County Jail since end's trio of concens Friday, Satur· my and Sunday ni&hu. The liomeownen, who have for· med a tro_ue called the Concerned Citizens of Costa Mesa to f.,tlt the amprutheater, ufled city officials to take some action apinst the amphitheater. Wood said the city will kttp monitorina noise levels and pros- ccutina violations apinst the amphitheater. aym. But in l 982. elementary classes were halt~ at Bushard because of decliruna. enrollment. thus elimioat- io1 the sharod aym plan. Mahnken also said the district's lease auidelincs "have chanaed dra- matically" since the I 979 agreement was signed with the Boys Oub. He said district now wants to charge the Boys Oub its direct cost of operatina the Bushard campus. (The closed school has other tenants in addition to the Boys Oub.) He ea.id this monthly cost is 22 centa. per square foot. He said the club leases about I 0,000 square feet,. rcsultit11 in a monthly rent of about $2,200. Mahnken said that {f the district docs not recover its costs, it would in effect be underwriting the operation of the Boy& and Oirls O ub. their arrests. The slaying was reported by Hua.hes who told police that a bW'llar broke into their home and shot her . slcepina_ husband. She told officers the bur&llr took the &mily car.,,__-._ The elder Ramirez was arrested just minutes later wben..a patrolman s cd him driving the Hushes' ~ta Celica. Hu&bes was arrested the followina day t..6e police interros· a ti on. The younger Ramm also was arrested the next ctaY. Police alleged he dropped his father off at the Hughes home and planned to rendezvous with him later. REPLAYS FUEL BB CONTROVERSY ••• From Al the programs recorded from the previous mcctinas will be shown again. The television presentations will never make a dent in the Nielsen Ratings, but they're injecctinJ some controversy in City Hall polittcs. At issue, observers say, is whether planning commissioners who plan to run ID November's City Council elections -namely John Erskine - may be gctung an unfair advantage over others because of the added television exposure. City Council meetings arc shown only on a live basis and they can't be cut or rccorcJed or shown at other times, according to council decree. (Council incumbents Ruth Finley and Mayor Jack Kelly and perhaps Ron Pattinson are planninc to seek re<lcction.) Some observers con~d that the extra television can indeed make a diff ercnce, dependiDf on the per- formance of the individual. But Councilwoman Ruth Bailey, who tried unsucessfully Monday night to kill the replays, said politics may be a factor but that she's primarily concerned that the repeat programs are confusing the audience and that viewers may be mixina up past action with the present or future. But Councilman Don MacAllister argued that the debate hinaes on who has control of the cable television-:-Re said the p~ms fill .. an empty marquee" wha~ als<f proVKlttt'ftnfor- mation. He said be opposes any control over programming. Public Information Director Bill Recd, the man in charge of pr~m­ ming over the local channel, said the repeat showings give people a chance to watch a meeting "who for some reason or other missed it the first time." Mayor Kelly has requested a com- mittee to study the dilemma. INSPECTORS SUING TO CLEAR NAMES ••• From Al alleged his employees were solicit~ for liquor, food and overtime pay ID exchange for speedy inspections. The 1nqu1ry led to Peck's and 13ullard·s firing, a two-week adminis- trative appeal hearing, and their eventual reinstatement six months later with back pay. T.he1r punishment was a !().day suspension for accepting a bottle of whiskey two weeks before Christmas, a city policy violation. Their attorneys contend wh1skey- giving 1s a holiday tradition in the construction industry. Bullard and Peck say the real price . 1s much higher. They contend they were returned to' JObs of lesser responsibility and prestige. Stress-caused high blood pressure. diagnosed by a city phys- ician, eventually forced Bullard to quit work on a medical disability. Peck believes his daughter's preg- nancy ended prematurely because of emotional stress. Bullard's son de- veloped ulcers and had to dro,p out of prest1g1ous Harvey Mudd Colleae in Claremont. And their legal pursuit, estimated by the opposing attorney at $60.000. has cost Peck and his wife of 32 years their retirement accounts and nearly e'\hausted college funds set up for Dullard's children The suit "ts our wa)' of nght1ng a senous 10JUSt1ce," said Caprctz. ''But there 1s an additional message. These folks have to pay an awful price to go Just Call 642-6086 Delly Piiot Del Ivery I• OuerentMd ~ ,odlry " YoU 00 noc .....,. )'OUI -b'f $30p1'1 c.ll>t'Dr• 7pm ..., ~ COOy ... .,. __.., through the jud1etal system." For the city of Irvine, which has re.fused settlement proposals, includ· ing a S28S,OOO offer propoted last week. the suit has another message. _ Irvine has two gratuity policies. One is that any gift over $25 must be reported. A second, apparently SUP.Cf- ceding, policy is issued every holiday season. It says those accepllna aratu- ities are subject to disciplinary action. It's about malcina Irvine em- ployees, from the city manager to a city inspector, meet a ~ standard, according to Deputy C ity Attorney Roger Schnapp. Irvine has pledged it won't tolerate even trivial improprieties. Rather than settle, they will permit city officials to be sullied in the expected "smear campaign" durina the trial, he said. Vance Simonds, the inspectors' lead attorney, bas put city officials on notice that their actions -accepting lunches, sports tickcu or bott.les of liquor -will be subject to scrutiny, Schnapp said. "We've been waiting for the startl· ing revelations. If he's got names, dates and places (of other im- proprieties), they wilt take care of those people, too," he said. "I have to rel)'. on them, that they have nothing In their closet," Schnapp said. "It is common place all over California for inspectors to accept bribes. (But Irvine) is a new city that hasn't got a 2~yeer history of corruption. "The city has taken on a whale of a task when they say they w\nt to run a squeaky clean city. When this hap- pened. it appeared they failed," he said. Even gift candy is placed open on public counters so viSttors can gob8le the goodies, Schnapp said. "Certain things ... come under the guise of cementing relations. It's either approved or forbidden," he said. As an example, Scnapp said "if the city manager takes the president of, the Irvine Co. to lunch, the rule is that (Bill) Woollen should pick. up every other check." Schnapp admitted that the bribery inquiry wasn't thorough, as only one inspector was convicted. Durina the personnel hearing, Peck's attorneys showed he was on a C.aribbean vacation on the day he was supposed to have solicited a bribe. "The issue is they violated a policy," Schnapp said. "From my perception. there is no basis in fact that they've been damaged. But that's not to say t"hey haven't suffercd.'1 Irvine is awaitin& a ruling on two motions. One is for dismissal. The second asks the court to restrict the suit by throwing out the invasion of privacy aJleptions. If the suit aocs to trial, it will not only be long, but disruptive, be said. Every city inspector and five admin- istrators will likely be subpoenaed. Already. depositions fill 26 volumes. What do yo1 like aboat tile Dally Pilot? Whal don't yoa Uke? Call tlae namber at left ead yoar mea .. 1e wlll be recorded, transcribed ud delivered to Ute appropriate editor. Tiit same U·lloar en1wetl11 service may be used to record lelten to tlle editor oa uy topic. Coatrlbaton to our Letter• colama muat blcladi t•etr ome ud &eleP'oae u m ber for verification. No clrculatloo calls, please._ fell 11 w~t'1 oa yoar mind. ORANGE COAST llilyl'lllt H. L Schwartz lft Publllher • Clrcubltlon 714/ta....m Cl•ttfted lidYertletnt1 11•1142·1111 AM other ........ "** ~1 MAJN OFFICE 330 "'-' e.y ". Cotia ..... CA. ............ 1llO c-. ~.CA. l2t2t ~ ,.., 0r.,,.. CCMll NIW*'I ~ ... ....... .,.,_ .....,,., ..,,,.. ,,.., ......... "** .... 91'1 _, .. ,...OO(IM ~ ..... ,. ~ ., OCl!Pr'tlhl --• ' ~-..., ~" .,vu ·OO nae '"°""" .,,,.,, CIOPJ "' 7 • "' eel o.tor• 10 • "' tnd ,,_ oeor ,.. ....... ., Cltculetton Telep..,__ ChAIJ Dow.nbJ EditOf Ind Assittant to the Publilh« ~~ ContrOller o.wdL .. alM Otcul9t IOfl • W.l\IOI' .. Coastal low cloads for holiday CoUtal ......... '""*.,,,_tile .... ...,.... ............... .. ·~119114 --........ ..... ....,. :::a,_,. Hlglle 1• to 11 at ~Md to t~ lrllenll v~ LOWt U IO 11 ''°"' POlnt ~ Ian °""""w llllnd IO ttle lkwdtt Wld out to,,. -'"'* ...... LloM .. ..... Wlnde 1#11 m!td ~ '*"' MoolnlnO .... to eoutllwele t eo 20 knoll dllonO .,._ 'c::i Md Wedneedey. Wind -I to '"'· toutllwltt .--. t to J ..... loo'llt lo. Cloude.,: Ind -nino houft °''*" .... y hlOll ~ todlY Ind w~ OUtar •-· W• to llOf'lllwteC wlndt 1210 tlknolllodaV~ 0ey a.a • to 1 teet tome low Clouclt nigh• eind ~ ~ mabla ,. douclll*9 t eind ~ ::., Tides 8ullllo llurlngtOn. vi. ( c.., TOOAT Olertetton.SC 1.-.dfllOh I'» 0 o.rte.ton.w.v. 8-ldlow 7Upm ti Ctlartone,N C. ~ WEMSMAY so g:::o .. ,.,.. Noh UJa.m Fim• t21a.m. 00~ '-'dNoh S.Hpm 4 • CoMtlllla.8 c. 8-"111 1ow l"Ot P "" a.a COMnbue.Otl 81111 Mia ::1'l. 81 l<OI P.11\., rtlee Oonconl,N H. WadMedlir .. $ a.m. Ind........ DllM-f1 Wonll ~~pm ~ Moon..C.atmidnlglll. ...... ~ o.n..... $yat 11 llOam Dea Moll'9I DettOll CMu1ll TemJ>' EIP-F*'**' tile 13 12 .. 15 ... u .. ST 12 17 u 71 .. 1• .. a • 10 .. 50 Extended Whaling Wall III 17 .. It .. .. • .. 11 • a 17 IO II ., Lafana Beach Ha life artt.t RobertWJlaad bU completed Illa th1nl bate lilarlDe m•mmal mural, tla1a ti.me at 11.adnelaDd • tbe Paloe Vent• Pentnnla. Tile ~ Sidewalk superintendents trctched for ai~ blocu alonJ Pacific Cosat Hiahway this momana as a towcrin& crane lif\td 1 three-story houtt atop the hastonc Stal Beach water tower. Owners Gcorae Arm trona and BobOdtll appcam! I nervous than most of the IP«tators 1 the "hiah· .... ~ . ........ p .. ......... .,. .. " ....... 17 • NewOrtNnl 17 ~ NwYOfll .. Norlol<.Ya . .. 71 ~City .. • .. .. °""*' .. 1t .... ~ tOI ., Pti•• d •Ill 1119 ., n ,...... 10t " ==r ... 7t .. .. .. "°"""°· °'. ,. IO Pr~. .. .. =CAY ... .. 11 u ., ,, SeorWNMo t01 .. llLO!a 11 1a ltl"M•T~ '° Tt l eft Lat City tt .. Ian Al!IOniO .. 1• 8en Dleto IO 71 a.n,,_ 11 17 .. S7 sen.-.n.l',lll . .. 71 12 se ..... Marla t6 to ... .. ..... 13 .. t7 11 8'v-.pon .. 13 11 tlO SpalltM ,. 61 .. n 8yr--13 to .. 76 Tapejia a • .. 16 T~ .. TS ., u TIAN to ,. to • w~ .. • 66 St Widwl• ., • a 10 w-.. .. ,. a • toe 11 ~i\jlOo.0. .. 17 t2 1• . IO .. 17 .. ., n .. 7• ttionina the hftle with ropes .. h rose. '/ Rw in the crowd could •lftlllne tbe enainttnna rtquired to lift tht .SO.ion houK' or fiaure the quattcr-anch tolcrancc the ownen alloMd aroufld the rctan after the center ctcv11or ,,,"ft*'' matched euctly. Ii l' TUESDAY. JULY J. 1«8.i e ev1 Coast A tall ship parade will highlight the Fourth off- shore on Wednesday .I A3 What'sgolngon along . the Orange Coast on the nation's birthday? See complete list./ A3 California Fiim, TV directors vote to. avoid strike just before Olympic Games./ A4 N•tlon Supreme Court says women must be allowed to Join Jaycees./ A5 U.S., Soviets are talking about talking about 'Star Wars.'/A4 World Former Israeli president Irked by Sovletlnterrog- atlon./ M Someone with a mean hook Is hitting airplanes with golf balls In Austral- la./ M Mlnd&BOdy Therapy via two-way radio helps people over- come their fear of tree- waya./81 Benefits of plastic sur- gery are no longer just for the rich and famous./82 Sports Corona del Mar High workhorse Jeff Brown Is looking forward to the opportunity to hit some- one at Friday night's Or- ange County All-Star football game./C1 The Dodgers~d slump- ing Greg Brock down to Albuquerque to work his way back Into shape./C1 Cale Yarborough has grabbed the pole position for Wedrieaday's Fire- cracker 400 In Daytona Beach, Fla.lea . Entertainment OrangeCountycom- munfty theaters captured all three prizes In the pre- Olymplc festival In Los Angeles./84 ·eaaineu Those famlly 'gifts' no longer a big tax break, but theY' re better th ah nothing./ Al INDEX &ma Bombeotc 82 BrktOe C10 BuNetln Boerd. A3 ~ A9 callfomla N.wa A4 CIUllfted C7-8 Comlca C10 CroetWOfd C9 o.MhNotlcM 'C.\ HelPYMMlf 82 Horoecope -ca AnnLMder8 82 Mwt~Bocfy 81-2 Mutuel Fund9 A9 Natlonilll Newt A4 Optnlorta M ~=Log 81 A3 PUble Noticee C4.:S s~ C1-3 StodtMn"8 A10 T~ ea Thlllettrl ~ w ... Aa WcWtdN9wl M .( encet David Sills aims for mayor's job on Irvine council Weiner 'would like to be considered,· but chances sltm sets the pac::c and direction of tele- vised council sessions and earns the most public attention. Larry ~n, who cuJTCnUy bolds the mayors aavel. said bis two-year stint is enouah-Agran said be is content to finish the final two Yeltl of his four-year tenn u ·a council member. The two new members. David Baker and Sally Anne Miller, elected to office last month, have expressed their disinterest in becomina mayor, aocording to Sills. Weiner, however, said she told Sills and A&fan she would like to be considered for the job ... I think my chances are slim, .. she said Monday. "l wish people would look at me and evaluate my qualifications. rve pulled a heavy load." ThOSIC who have held tbe mayor pro tem slot have occasionally taken the mayor's job the foUowioa year, but there hasn't been a historical pr<>&f'CSSion, Aaran and Sills said. And if Sills• nose-count is aocu~te, the first-term council· member doesn't seem to have the votes to become mayor. "I've been told I'm intunidatina." Weiner said ... I think fl'IT lllTI I 0 f1 ANGE C 0 UN l Y . CA l I~ 0 H N 1 A 2 :, r f ,.~ l ._, rownout of damaae to dmb and chalrs'tbat were boand for JUI Fv.mltare In lnlDe. One wttna. Mid 8be aw a aroap of ~blldren plaJlne on the boz car before tile Ore bro~e oat. It took SO fliemea Uaiat 15 ml.Dalee to pat oat the blue. By STEVE MUBLE Of .. __, ....... A cnti~ piece of evidence in a. Huntington 8cacb love trianaJe murder case was thrown out of oourt Monda,· -.hen a judte ruled police fad«' •o honor a suspcct•s riJht to be• represented by a lawyer dunaa q~ uonina. J udae David Brick.net's decision was seen u a major blow to tbe prosecuuon·s case qainst Jeanene Huahes. a 29-year~ld womu ac.. cused of plotting ber hu.sband~s death_ to collect nearly SS00,000 in life insu~noe. Hughes, her allqcd lover and a third man arc facing clwaes of murdenng James Hughes. a 37-ycar:- old compwter eqineer who was shOt to death Jan. 10 IS .be slept in a bedroom of the couple's HUlltift&10!l Beach home. The murder bas been depicted by prosecutors IS a case of .. love and greed.·· A rulin1 was expected today in West Oranae Municipal Coun whether there retnains enouab infor· mation to order HUJbCs or the two men to stand trial for mo.rda. Brickner d.amaaed the pros- ecution ·s case late Thursday when be ruled that a poli"Ce intmoplioo or Jeanette Hushes the day after the killina cannot be used as cvideooe "Cainst hCT or the other defendants. A-dam-Salas Ramirez., 42, and his son Adam Edward Ramirez Jr. In the interroption, Huabes al- lcaedly made i.ncrimidating state- ments \bat led poticc to coaclude that me. Ramm and bis son plot1ed the mmdei and JJianed '° split ap tale insurance money. The Judse asrced Huntington Beach detectives advised the woman of her ri&hts to a la*)'tt-as required under the U.S. Supmnc Court's .. Miranda .. rule -duritlJ the fOllr- hour interview but later tned .. to talk (Pleue eee SVID&1'CB/A2) Legal fireworks hot for countian I'm mqu1Sttivc. industrious and in- telligent. I do the best job I can." If the mayor's post eludes hCT, Weiner said "the position as advocate for Irvine is just as 1mporunL" Agan, who declined to state his preference for mayor, led 1 drive last fall to ask Irvine voten their preference over choosing a mayor. The ballot initiative d1ed when a special Decembercltttion was dump- ed after a coun rulini. "The public business oqht to be done in public and the selection of a mayor o~t to be done in pubhc," Aara.I.' said. ' Anaheim manufacturer said In default on $20 million, faces fraud lawsuit By JERRY 8IRSCH Of ... a.llr ........ Orange County fireworks mogul W. Patrick Moriany tsn't getting a bang out of this Fourth of July California Canad11n Bank, an American subsidiary of one of Can- ada's largest banks, fileda$40 million bank fraud lawsuit ap1nst the Anaheim fireworks manufacturer al- leging that he has defaulted on nearly $20 million in loans. Some of the loans were apparently made at the bank's Newpbrt Beach office. but Mel Akers.. the branch manager, said the company was not talking about the suit The swt. filed Monda)' in Oranae Count) Superior Court. also seeks S20 m1ll1on in damqcs and 1m- phcates the defunct Bank oflrvmc in a conspiracy to channel money to Moriart) through a vanety of busi- ncss.assoctat.es and connected firms. Monarty ts under invesuaation by a fcdcral&randJury in Los "~\es for questionable business. bank.in& and pOhlicaJ IClJVitlCS. Neither Monanty nor his la'W)er, Donald Rener of Sacramento. could be reached for 1 response to the AIDIEA AIELSOll charges In the SUtL Monarty 1s the owner of Pyrouon1cs Corp .. the manufacturer of the Red Devil and the Wildcat brands of .. safe and sane .. fireworks and has been involved in teVeraJ contr0vcrs1al attemptS to liberalize fireworks regulations in California. The suit allqes that Moriarty used his business associates and their conncaed businesses to improperly .. commingle" assets to obtain the loans. The suit also claims that Moriany filed false financial statements and used his positton as a member of the board of directors of the Bank of Irvine to delay paytnJ off the loans. The Bank of Irvine. which was closed by state ~ulators in May, "acted as a conduit' for the fireworks manufacturer, the suit alJqcs. The suit names 18 individual most associated -.1th Moriarty. and 16 firms. The defendants also include Edpr E. Pankey. the Bank of Irvine's m~onty owner, Henry L Bear, another former board member of the Bani of Irvine and Pyrotronics president J&mcs C. Auld. 4 'Replays' playing / politics ' ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tueada~. July 3, 1984 esa noise consultant says tarship show violated law ity attorney vows he '11 file criminal charges atnst operators once test data are returned can to stop the noiS: problem," Wood said. Amph1theattroffic1als could not be reached for comment this mornina. JS) LU\EN B. KLEIN ... Dlllfr......... .. ... costa Mcsa·s city noi~ ordinance 'Was apparently violated Saturday IW&ht during a rock concert at the h cific Amphitheatre, Tom Wood, · Cbsta Mesa city attorney, said today. .'Wood said he spoke with Gordon · cken, the acoust1cal engineer oon- ~cted by the city to perform noise tests during amphitheater concerts, ~ ... ~ learned that there were "oise \-lolat1Qns recorded during Sa. '°day's Jefferson Starship concert . "When we receive an analysis of • be (sound testing) data, wc will file criminal charges against the -.,nph1theatcr," Wood said Residents of College Park and ' Mesa del Mar, the two neiahborhoods closest to the amphitheater, com- plained bitterly at a city councal : meeting Monday about last week- F rom A l 1 her out oftallung W1th an attorney." At one point during the question- ing, Hughes asks "Do you think I ated an attorney?" according to a ~tape recordtnJ played in the urtroom. Police arc heard telling :Hughes they could not adVlSC her one ~Y or the other. A short ttme later, l!ughes apparently asks, "Am I in trouble?'' Bnclrner said that the detectives, at this pomt, tncd to "downplay" the senous of the s11ua11on by telling her that the questions were j ust "a formality." The JUdge, noting that Hughes already had flunked a polyJf8ph test before the round of ~uest1ons, said ;><>lice tried to "coerce ' Hughes into talking. end's trio ot concerts Friday, Satur- day and Sunday niglitS: The homeowners, who have for~ med a aroue cal)cd the Concerned Citizens of Costa Mesa to fiaht the amphitheater, u~ city officials to take some action apinst · the amphitheater. • • Wood said the city will keep monitorina noise levels and pros- ecuting violations against the amphitheater. "We'll do anythin• wc The city's noise ordinance, recently revampc(l to match the county's standard, imposes a $1,000 fine per violation. Wood said a maximum of $2,000 could be fined each time charaes a~ filed but that a judac would ultimately decide the perialty. Meanwhile, the city will continue monitorina the amphitheater{ Wood said. The next event achedu ed is a Founh of July Gershwin concert by the Pacific Symphony. Bandit grabs $1, fOO Police are ~bing for a man who robbed a Huntina«>n Beach b9nk of about Sl,700 Monday. The holdup occurred at IO:IS a.m. at the Security Pacific office at 19022 Beach Blvd Police said a man handed "I'm certainly not sayin.a the police blundered," Brickner said ... They have no control over when or if a person exercises the ripts." Deputy District Attorney Jay Mosely, who brought in Deputy District Attorney Enc Snethen to argue the Mirada riahts issue, did not comment on Brickner's ruling and would not speculate on how badly it might damage the case. "It's incredible," said the murdered man's brother, Boyd, after the ruling. "I'm shocked lb.at she (Hu~es>. mipt be walkina free on a teehnacalaty. Don Rubright, the attorney who successful argued that the police interrogation of his client should be tossed out, declined to discuss a note to a telJer, demanding money. Officers said the note stated that the man bad a gun. The man moved a hand to his waistband after passin& the note, but no weapon was seen, police said. Brickner's ruling except to note ... It's interesting." HuahCSi Ramirez and his $On have been held at Orange County Jail since their arrests. The slaying was reported by Hu&hes who told police that a bura1ar broke into their home and shot Der sleeping husband. She toJd officen the burglar took the family car. The elder Ramirez was arrested just minutes later when a patrolman spotted him driving the Hu&hes• Toyota Celica. Hughes was arrested the following day the police interrog- ation. The younger Ramirez also was arrested the next day. Police alleged he dropped his father off at the H ughes home and planned to rendezvous with him later. REPLAYS FUEL BB CONTROVERSY ••• From Al the programs recorded from the previous meeungs will be shown agam. The telev1S1on presentations will never make a dent an the Nielsen Ratings, but they're 1njecct1nJ some controversy an City Hall pohttcs. At issue, observers say, is whether planning commissioners who plan to run in November's Citr Council elecuons -namely John Erskine - may be getting an unfair advantage over others because of the added television exposure. City Council meetings are shown only on a hvc basis and they can't be cut or recorded or shown at other times, according to council decree. (Council incumbents Ruth Finley and Mayor Jack Kelly and perhaps Ron Pattinson are planning to seek re-election.) Some observers contend that the extra television can indeed make a difference, dependin4 on the per- formance of the indiVldual. But Councilwoman Ruth Bailey, who tried unsuccssfully Monday night to kill the replays, said politics may be a factor but that she's primarily concerned that the repeat programs are confusing the audience and that viewers may be miJting up past action with the present or fut ure. But Councilman Don MacAUister argued that the debate hinges on who hh control of the cable television. He said the ~ms fill .. an empty marquee" while also providing infor- mation. He said he opposes any control over programmi~ Public Information Director Bill Reed. the man in cbarJe of prov.am· ming over the local channel, said the repeat showings give people a chance to watch a meeting "who for some reason or other missed it the first time." Mayor Kelly has requested a com- mittee to study the dilemma. INSPECTORS SUING TO CLEAR NAMES ••• From Al alleged his employees were soliot~ for liquor. food and overt1n:ie pay in exchange for speedy inspections. The 1nqu1ry led to Peck's and Bullard's firing. a two-week adminis- trative appeal heanng, and their eventual reinstatement six months huer with back pay. Their punishment was a I 0-day suspension for accepting a bottle of · wh1skty two weeks before Christmas, a city policy v1olauon. Their attorneys contend whiskey- gi vmg 1s a holiday tradition 1n the fs:onstruct1on industry. Bullard and Peck say the real pnce ii much higher. 1 They contend they were returned 10 jobs of lesser responsibility and 1 prestige. Strcss<auscd high blood pressure, diagnosed by a city phys- ician, eventually forced Bullard to quit work on a medical disability. Peck believes his daughter's preg- nancy ended prematurefy because of emotional stress Bullard's son de- veloped ulcers and had to drop out of prestigious Harvey Mudd College in Claremont. . \ \ And their legal pursuit, estimated b) the opposing attorney at $60.000. has cost Peek and his wife of 32 years their retirement accounts and nearly nhausted college funds set up for Bullard's children The suit "1s our way of nghting a scnous 10JUSt1ce," said Caprctz. "But there 1s an add111onal message. These folks have to pay an awful pnce to go Just Call 642-6086 Dell1 Piiot O.llvery 11 OuarentMd MOnOly FnOey """ y<11.1 dO l'IOI ,.,.. "°"' -l>y s JO p "' c.11 O.!or• 1 p"' Ind .,_ COPy .... boo ~ .,.., 1"41 a.-, " '°" . dO l'IM ,_ pour through the JUd1clal system." For the city of Irvine, which has refused settlement proposals, includ- ing a $285,000 offer proposed last week. the suit bas another message. It's about making lrvme em- ployees, from the city manaser to a city inspector, meet a hiJh standard, according to Deputy City Attorney Roger Schnapp. Irvine has pledged 1t won't tolerate even trivial improprieties. Rather than settle, they will permit city officials to be sullied in the expected "smear campaign" during the trial, he said. Vance Simonds, the inspectors' lead attorney, bas put city officials on notice that their actions -accepting lunches, sports tickets or bottles of liquor -will be subject to scrutiny, Schnapp said. "We've been ~iting for the startl- ing revelations. If he's got names, dates anCi places (of other im- proprieties), they will take care of those people, too," he said. "I have to rely on them .. that they have nothing in their closet," Schnapp said. "It is common place all over California for inspectors to accept bribes. (But Irvine) is a new city that hasn't got a 20.year history of corruption. "The city has taken on a whale of a task when they say they want to run a squeaky clean city. When this hap- pened, 1t appeared they failed." he said. Irvine has two gratuity policies. One is that any gift over $2S must be reported. A second, apparently sup_er- cedina. policy is issued every hohday sea.son. It says those accepting gratu- ities are subject to disciplinary action. Even gift candy is placed open on public counters so visitors can gobble the aoodies, Schnapp said. "Cenain things ... come under the guise of cementing relations. It's either approved or forbidden." he said. As an example, Scnapp said "if the city manager takes the president of the Irvine Co. to lunch, the rule is that (Bill) Woollett should pick up every other check." Schnapp admitted that the bribery inquiry wasn't thorough, as only one inspector was convicted. During the personnel hearing, Peck's attorneys showed he was on a Caribbean vacation on the day he was supposed to have solicited a bribe. "The issue is they viola.te<t a policy," Schnapp said. "from my perception, there is no basis in fact that they've been damaged. But that's not to say they haven't suffered." Irvine is awaiting a ruling on two motions. One is for dismissal. The second asks the court to restrict the suit by throwing out the invasion of pnvacy allega1ions. If the suit goes to trial1 it will not only be Ions. but disruptive, be said. Every city inspector and five admin- istrators will likely be subpoenaed. Already, depositions fill 26 volumes. Wllal do you Un about the Delly Piiot? Wb1t don't yoa like? Call tile namber at left ud yoar me11a1e wlll be recorded, transcribed u d delivered to die appropriate editor. 4... Tiie same tt-bour an1wertn1 service may be ated to record letters to tbe editor .... , teplcJ Contributors to oar Letters colamn matt lDchade-1'elr name ud teleplaone amnber for vertflcetlon. No circulation calls, please. Tell u what's on yov mlDd. • ORANGE COAST Daily Plat H. 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OWnera George Armttrong .net Bot> Odill appeared tell nervoua II at the top of the four-atory wuo. ture .net 16gneled to eon.tructJOn . WCH'kera Polfttonlf)Q tM ~-­ropee .. ft roee. . ' 1