HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-06-20 - Orange Coast PilotI l I
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lervlng Newport leach, Cotta ...... Huntington 8-ch, lrvlnt, Laguna leech, Fountlln Vlltey lftd South Orange CountJ
ORANGE COUN TY. (;ALIF ORN IA THURSDA Y JUNE 20. i98~ 7c, f'FNT S
·Five hosta s shown in Beirut
Gaptives presented at news conference -------------to prove no harm done by Shiite militia
, BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) -Five
American hostages from a h1Jacked
TWA jetliner were brought by Shiite
Moslem Amal militiamen to a packed
news conference at lkirut Inter-
national Airport today.
;-~aguna
loses
$2M
lawsuit
By LISA MAH.ONEY
OftheDe11Jl'tlo4atM1
A Long Beach man who was
paralyzed after a 1979 automobile
accident has won a S2 million jury
award against the city of Laguna
Beach and the dnver of the car he was
riding in at the time of the accident.
An all-woman Orange County Su-
penor Court jury found the cit y and
David Brown. 27, a Northern Cali-
fornia college student. respansiblc
Wednesday for injuries received by
Nathan Blue. 35. of Long Beach.
''God bless their little heans. They
did the right thing." Thomas G1rard1,
Blue's attorney said today.
One of the hostages. Allyn Conwell.
39, of Houston, started to read a
statement, but did not finish.
According to a CBS radio tape of
the news conference. played in New
York. there was some $CUffiing in-
,--
\._-\
volving militias and reparteri. and the
news conference ended.
Other hostages who appeared were
Thomas Cullilll. 42. of Burlington.
Vt.; Peter Hill, 57. of Hoffman
Estates. Ill.; Vicente Garza, 53 of
Laredo. Texas. and Dr Arthur To~.
33 of St. Louis.
Amal leader Nabah Bern had said
he would present some of the 40
Amencan hostages from the hlJacked
airliner1y> the press at the airport
cafeteriran an apparent effort to show
they were not be1n1 ill-treated.
The thrcecrew members were stilJ
aboard the Boeing 727 on the a1rpon
tarmac. AkefHa1dar. a member of the
Amal militia. which Berri heads. said
tht" 37 passengen taken ofT the plane
were being held in "8 or 10 places" in
aod around Beirut. to prevent an)
rescue operation.
.,.., ........... .., Lee,..,.. Laguna Beach City Manager Ken
Frank said the city is considering an
appeal. Under a legal doctrine called
Joint and several liability. the city
probably wi ll be responsible for
paying the entire judgement. ·
HeaclhlC the oraanlzlnf: committee for the
Olympic Torch 5 and fO kilometer {UD at
Newport Center are .(from left) chaftman
Bob McCaffrey, 1984 aold medallat Edwin
M09ea and Peter Vid..lnar, captain of the
gymnaatic• team.
Bill Wilcoxen. Brown's attorney.
said he had not thought about
appealing the case. Brown, a 27-ycar-
old student at Sonoma State College.
is not insured. Wilcoxen said.
Blue has been paralyzed below the·
waist since the Nov. 8. 1979. acciderH
in which Brown struck a parked car
on Cypress Drive while driving Blue
home.
Third Olympi_c Torch run
readied at N·ewport Center
· Girardi successfully argued that
Brown was largely responsible for the
accident because he was under the
influence of ~lcohol and dnving too
Gokfiitedalist Edwin Moses headtng benefit
event to finance athletes in '88 Seoul games
fast. By ROBERT HYNDMAN Girardi also convinced the jury 0tti..De!IJl'l10Ut-"
that the city should take pan of the Olympic gold medalist Edwin
blame for Blue's inJunes because 1t Moses joined Orange Count)' volun-
ma1ntamed a dangerous 1ntersecuo n 1eers Wednesday to announce plan s
at Cypress and Aster streets where for the third annual Olympic Torch 5
Brown lost control of his car. • and 10 kilometer run to raise funds
Frank said the city will decide for training U.S. Olympic athletes.
whether to appeal the S2 million The event will be held· June 30 at
(Pleue aee LAGUNA/ A2) Ncwpan Center in Newpart Beach
and w1ll 1nclude an 1nterna11onal food
fair and demonstrations of athlruc
skills.
Moses. spokesman for the e\ent.
was the gold medal winner 1n the .ioo-
meter hurdles 1n both 1976 and 1984
and is the current world record holdt>r
in that event. Moses. who trains at
UC Irvine. laves m Laguna Halls with
his wife Myrclla.
Peter Vidmar. who led the U.S.
men's gymnasttcs team to gold
medals last summer in Los Angeles.
101ned Moses at the "ednesda'
reception hdd al the ''k~port Turtk
restaurant
Vu.Jmar and ht'> \Aotfe Donn.i 11,e 1n
In inc
Whale tlk IQM4 Ol~mptl Games
raised surplus funds for the U.S.
Olympic Committee. not all of 1t can
be used to help train athktes prepar-
ing for the 198 games. Moses !>aid.
Murh of 11 has been set aside to
(Please see OLYMPIC/ A2)
l\ long table, set with plates, glasses.
kmves and forks and pieces of cake
ror 36 people was SCl up 10 the first·
floor eafetena m the mam terminal
building overlooking the com-
mandeered plane. It was apparently a
preparation for the presentation of
the hostages. but there was no
explanation for the discrepancy be-
tween 36 places and the 37 hostages
the Shute Moslems clai m to ha ve or
the tact that only five showed up.
Gunmen huackcd the plane last
Frida)' on its way from Athens to
Rome. and sin~ have rcleasCd most
of the I S3 passengers and CTt'W. They
killed U.S. Navy Petty Officer Robert
Dean Stethem of Waldorf. Md
Haadar dechned to say exactly
whe~ the hostag.es were be1nj kept
"Ma) be they're not very comfortable
(Pleue/He PIVE/A2)
Newport, county
holding talks on.
JW A problems
Attorneys bidding
to resolve flights.
expansion hassles
By JEFF ADLER
Of the DM!y '11ol Ii.fl
..\llorne}S tor Newport Beach and
two ant1-a1rpon c1t1zens groups have-
been meeting quietl)' with count)
auorn<.'ys for the past few weeks 1n an
attempt to settle years of legal
wrangl.ing 0' er John Wa)nt" A1rpon
Board ol upen asors Chairman
Thomas Rile) disclosed Wednesda>
"I am opt1m1st1c at this point a
settlem~nt may be possible," Rile)
said m a prepared statement issued
after a closed-door meeting \Ao 1th the
count) ·s aarpon auome)S.
He declined to 'discuss the specifics
ol the negouauons. but charactenzed
1he meetings as "sensatl\e." Rile)
u1d the count} ·s special a1rpon
counsel. Michael Ga~zke has been
directed to continue meeung '-'llh
attorne)~ representing Ne"po n
Beach.
One of the ctt\ ·s auome,s. t~'en
Pflaum. also deciined to lO mment un
the negotaauons. ofTenng onl) that all
d1scuss1ons with the count) were
"tentauve and _prehmtnaf) :·
Howner. Pflaum did sa) that thl'
legal seulement being da~·ussed en-
rnmpassed "hal hl' terml'd "a global
~t'ttkmt·nt" tu tht• lo11g,1andang kud
mer plan~ tn l'\pand 1lw 31rpon
For ht'> pJrt. Cia11ke '-!1d onf\ 1h.11
thl' tall..s "l'rt' .urned Jl Jth1e' mg thl·
l ount} ·., pnm.1r: ohJl't t t' l' "to 1m-
prO\ e rond111 om at John WJ)nl'
-\1rport that ha'e hecn nct'dcd for the
laf>l 15 }l'clr\ with a minimum uf
public e'\pt>n)C Jnd d1<;rup11on ..
C1atzl..e ');ltd JO) settlement protl-
abh \\Ould ~ a rnmplilated and
comprehensne agreement that
'-'OUld end four separate pending·
court acuon!>..
• ..\ state court appeal of lhe
count} ·s t 9lS I propased expansion
plan.
•An appeal ot a dec1s1on affecting
the ne"'I> completed North Clear
Zone parking 101.
•A. Supenor C'oun contempt-of-
coun tinding lhal halted au planrung
on a proposed 1985 a1rpol'} ex-
pansion. and
•A federal m un lawsuit now
pending an l S Distract C'oun 1n Los
A.ngt>lt>s
<;ourct~ familia r with the ncgo-
11auons indicated that a scnlement
v.ould ha' e to be struck w1th1n the
next )C\eral weeks 10 stop fUnher
coun acuon The sources agreed to
d1scu~s the negouauons on the con-
d1t1 on that tht>)' not be 1dent1fied
A.n agreement probably would
focus on t11gh1 limits the \1zc of the
terminal at John \\a~ne .\1rport. the
search for an addauonal regional
aarpon site an 1hc lOU nt~ as v.cll as the
means of concluding all la11gat1on. the
sources :>aid
\ISO. the add1t1on of the stunningly
quiet I 00-passcngn Bnush ..\ero-
space BAe-1 46 v.ould have to figure
into the agreement. a source \31d ihe
twin~ngine Jl.'l ha~ ~en the ~ub1ect of
con 1dt·rahle allC'nu on '>1m-e 11 Ile" a
\enes of demon,lratwn tlaghl\ that
nermllll'd a1thnt•, fl\ 1ng lhe n<.*W
plJnl' 10 Jpph 1111 unlt011tcd numbers
nt t11g.ht\ at John \\ J\ nc ..\1rpon
Thl u1unt\ anJ \.l·\\rt1n &·Jl has
"'di J\ thl' ..\irpon \\ orl..ing C1rou p
3nd '\tllp PQllut1n[l Our "l'\Ao pon
ha'c hel·n emhrutlC"d in ht1g;H1on
\temrnmg from tht• a1rpon ha11lc for
'rar'>
. In llJ!\I tht· ut' and PON
'>Ull"l''>\fulh blod.l·d rQunt) plans to
(Pleaaeaee AIRPORT/A2)
Coaat Trustees say charges in recall drive are false
Costa Mesa honors Flor-
ence Schumacher and
Fred Owens for work with
organizations In Orange
County./A11
Boating
66 yachts are entered In
the 33rd blennlal Trans-
pac race from Los An-
geles to Honolulu./81
Sports
Bert Blyleven deals
Angels a 2--0 setback, and
there are some second
thoughts about trade that
didn't happen./C1
Entertainment
A Fountain Valley drama
student gives her Im-
pressions of ttte Ashland,
Ore., Shakespearean
Festlva.1.184
INDEX
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulle11n Board
Business
Cla11lfled
Comics
Cro11word
Death Notice•
Moroecope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
,,lay 'Review
Polle. Log
Public Notices
Sport a
T9'evlslort
Th .. tert
WMther
Bl-2
B2
C4
A3
85-6
C5-8
C4
C7
C3
C7
82
A10
.;91
J 84
A3
C3
C1-3
83
83-4
A2
.·
8)" PHIL SNEJDERMAN
CM .. O.., ..... SWI
Two Huntington Beach Cit>
School District trustees targeted for
recall in the wake of school closure
decisions said today thednve is based
on false allegauons and does not
reflect community sentiment. One
said she has not even been properly
served with "intent to recall" papers.
Tuesda}. members of the SO
Burke comm1ttet" sa id they wen.·
notifying trustrcs Gary Nelson and
Karen O'Bnc that thq "''" t:olkct ~gnarurcs to force a special dec:taun
aimed at rl'placing them.
SOS Burke members are angry over
the decision to close Burke Elemen-
tary School at the end of this ~hool
year. T hey expect 'iuppon from
parents of students at Gisler Middle
School. which will be closed next
year. D1'\tnct official\ rate declining
finances and dv.indhng enrollment
for the do-.ure'>
Ed /<;chochr. prf''lldC'nt o l 'iO~
Last shall be first
in Newport's gala
'Irrelevant Week'
The gu:r would .be perfect for an
American ~xpress card commerctaL
''Do you know me? I played
football for the University ofGeofJia
and was the last player selected in this
year's National Football League
dran. But most people still don't
recognize me.
"That's why I carry this ... "
The camera zooms in on a grctn
plastic card where the name
rcads ... OON CHUMLEY.
It's true. Don Chumley is not a
household name. He made no all-star
teams while playtng for the GeorJJa
Bulldop.
Youna football playen do not wear
black·and-rcd jerseys emblazoned
with No. 76 on their backs in tribute
to him.
He plays a po ition. defensive
tackle. whert the only stali1t1cs they.
keep art for iackles and fumble
rteoveries.
Chumley had OM rbl\"lblc rccovel')'
an three seuons at Geoflla. He dad
have 83 tackle his senior year. but
had help on 37 of tho'se.
His putest cooctibullon to Oeor·
11a rootbell. someone said. was malt·
Ina Heitmann Trophy winner
Herschel Walker lopk aood durina
1ntra1Quld rimmat.et.
Even the San Francisco 49ers. who
con a~ Chumley the H6th best
ROBI~T
HYNDMAN
THE LIGHTER SIDE
college football player av~ilable in the
dran. arc reserved 1n their praise
"He mity have a chance to make
our team," said 8111 McPherson. the
49c.D dderrsavC' hne coach.
C~ey may be Mr. Anonymou11.
but af\er a week-long stay in Newport
lkach that begins und y anemoon.
Mr. Anonymous will ~me Mr.
krelevant.
Whether that's on 1mpro~ement 1
imlevant.,
What 1s 1mponant 1s that NM't'pon
~ach once again will celebrate se"cn
ttays of 1mvercnt. 1rrepreu1ble. ir·
responsible fun known as Irrelevant
Weck.
Chumley. 2J. will pn-<iadc o"cr the
week·, madcap event .
Whether he has fun. of cour"t. Is
1mlevan1 But hi, chances of havina an awful
time 1n Nev.port Beach arc about a
,
'
,
Burke. said the rel.aJI papers dUlrge
the tru'>tees w11h failure to rnnf>1der
other non-teaching cutbacl..'i in place
of the closures. He 'l31d Ncl'lon and
O'Bnc were targ<.'tcd for recall be·
cauSc: the} do not fact· re-d ecuon 1 n
November
He said ht~ group would 'iupport
other candidate!. when thl' tt·rms of
trustees Bnan Garland. Pat <. 'ohen
and Sherry Bario" e~pare an lhl' fall
f o force a \pl'uJI elelltnn rerall
'upponcrs must gather , "'HS 'ahd
The "Lowa.man Trophy ...
slam as has chan<."C l)f making the
rosttr of the upcr 8<1wl champion
49t" onsadcr h1'4 ~hcdulc
C'humlc)'. who haf> rarclt bttn
out 1dc the confines of the CTrortJa
'tatc liintt • will be Oown 10 the Wtst
C'oast. where ht ~ 111 ta) for wt.'<tk Jt
the Balboa Ba) t lub .
The ma or -.,,,11 wel omc him Tht>
p~ will quc uon h101 The pubh"
will wish him well (n<St '" making the
4~~ but 1n 'Uf\•1v1n.. lrrtlt"vent
Wttk) •
The OC\l da). a aolf tournament
will ~ held at 1t)c II" 1ne Coa\t
Count!')' C'tub The golfer w11h the
bnt \Core 1s uTtlevant Ounna lrrclc·
(Pt .... ee. iaa&L&V A.NT I A.2)
' !>tgrtaturl'!> lrum rL'gl!>tc:rc:d 'uler\ 1n
1hc ">thool d1<;tn1..1 .trl'ord1 ns io thl'
count~ Rcgl\lrar ot \ 01a-.· nffict·
Nelson and O'Bnc wert· dect<:'d to
four-)ear term!> 1n r-.i o,embcr l'~~p
(Zschoche \A.a<, an un,un·essful l'an-
d1da1e in the ..ame ral · I
Nelson ~ad the recall proponents
"<;eem 10 he a )mall group nl
frustrated parents \Ao ho~· interest onh
'l't'mS l<' hJH' ht·t·n p1qul·d <>1m:e therl' ,,3, an Jnnounceml'nt that lhl•tr
,lhl'<'l"'ai,whecto<;C'd .. Hesa1dthl'
1.'hargl'' h">tt:'<i 1n th~''lnt~nt w re-call
pJpcr<, are ·filk'd with fal!.Choods"
and "p.itent untruth~ ..
CYBnc said Nelson's name ~
listed on her recall no111 .. ·e -not ha
name
"I \\J\ nl1l prnperh 4'C'f"\ cd .. 'ihC'
~1d tc>da'
O'Rrtl -.aid thl' allegn11on' l'ontatn
"m111,\u<"" ''' 'uh,1an"e · ~hl' '411d the hliard m.1,k 11lhl·r hud~··t, uh tx·1ort'
ren·1' 1n~ ...._ h1l1ll , ll• .. Url 1·, om men-
,!Jl11'n' fr11m Jn ad' 1<.0I'\ , nm m111e-e
Lagunan guility
o rape, s-iay1ng
By JEFF ADLER
O!theDelJ~•tllft
\fter drltt~:ratinp. • 1.Ja\ '>. an
Orange <.. ounl~ \upt>nor l 1,urt Jun
tound Da' 1d "ii ham l t'ttch guilt)
Wcdnt>sd.l\ of '>t.°l·ond..Jev.rcr murder
in t~ I \ltO rapc-'ila,,~ ot·h1'i ~11-
\car-old l'\-g1rlim·nd (11ngrr l 1ir
raane f1c:1~·h h
The c1gh1-man 111111 "'uman 1un
al<,o dett'rm1ncd 1h1· lormer lJiun.1
&ach resident \Ao:l" not gu1h' ot
add111ona l rape' and r1,ht'tcn l'har1e'
allegC'd in tht cnme
The proc;c-cut1on had .1-.kl.'d 1urof"\
10 find the iti-\C'ar-old L <.'Ill h gu1h\ ot
lirst-degn.'<' niurdrr al t1n1t \\1th thr
'>f'll'l'l.tl l trl um\lanl l'' 11! rape and
rohh<'f'\ dunnj! a munic'r ~h~ch
"uulll h;I\(' t.1UJh l1ed him for the
dC'ath pt"nalt\ 11 COTI\ ICtC'd
Ht• IJl't'' .1 ma\lmum \('ntt'Ol'e of IS
\CJr' 111 hlf' 1n \IJtc prtt;<.>n \1n1.e he
Jlrt'Jlf\ l'a,f;. 1'11.l'O IO l U IOCI\ for
aim<'"' lnur ''-'ar' I eatc-h lOU.ld be
t•hg1hlr tor parok 1n about t~o 'rC&f'\,
w11h gt'lod ~ha' tor Deput\ OlStnct
.\ttorne' M1l..r Jarnh' <.aid
Judgt Rotx-n h11irrald 'thcdulC'd
a ~ntC'nung hearing Jul) I ~
l e11c~ and hi\ rcll'lmmaH' at the
11mc Thllma~ Manin ThompM.,n . .30.
""'th \\Crt' Jt t U'4'd t)f \tubbani
(Ple&K eee LAGtmAN/A.2)
Rock concert sparks
more noise com plaints
8)' TONY AA VEDllA
Of ... o.llt NIM ._
Rock ~•n&cr Rohen Plon\ .. JHl'' t'd
th•~ wt'tk that ht> rould <am a tunt' -
nght out elf the Pacafi( '\mph1thc-atrt'
and 1ntc'I 1 < O'iUI \~t'Y ntitthhurhood
""here rt\1dtn1' "omplaint'd tll rnn
<'t'M nOI'-<' ~. -
"lt Wll\ e'tl't'r'(l~\1. loud \\ C' ll)U(d
ilmo t hear e'<''"' v.md that the• pcrfonnt'r ..,.., '>1n~in11 "'1111 hc,mt"-...
o'l'-ncr l aun<' l u,i. .1ttt·1 1hr Tu~~'
n1gh1 lt'lnlrn
l \AoCOI} n1nt• n01\C lUmpl.11.,l'I
\\tf'C' rrcra" <-d I°'\. poll" t' O"C"r th~ pcrforman~·c "'' Plant lormt'r 'Jtn~
for the I ~ lt.'ppt"hn hind c 1t\. Man r t-rtd r'Qblal td
the \'l1mpt11nh "<'re, all from the
~k\A del '1ar ne1ghtltuhood hehtnd
th<' am(lhithrater "h h 1$ on lbc
f Pleue eee CONC&RT I A2J
••
L
A2 * Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/Thu1'9day, Juno 20, 1985
FIVE HOSTAGES SEEN IN BEIRUT ...
Prom Al
house , but the) 'rt acccplablc
houses."
EarliC'r he had i,old The ssoc1atrd
Pits that the hos~cs ""ere "in a very
aooc:t situation."
"They're eating ~ell anll have TV
sets in their rooms. Thty an: acuing aood food. There's always a menu in
Arabtc and in English. They have a
~stc for .Lcban~.se food. Everything ~ISfi ·--Haidar added. "They talk aJI thc-
time with the hi.Jackers."
Bem. Lebanon's JUSt1ce m1mster,
has emerged as the chief negotiator
between the h1Jackers and the United
St.ates and his Amal militiamen arc
guarding the hijacked plane where the
three crew members arc being held.
He also has said he has control of,
or access to the other hostages, and
has ini.1stcd thlH tu.· will not rt•h;a~c
them untll the chief dcmund of lht.'
hijacker~ 1i. met -th3t l•iacl rclea~
700 Sh11tl· Mo!>lcm pn!>ona., 1.1kt•n
from ~outh I chanon dunng the
li.raeh arm~ 01:cupa11on
Airport radio test reslated
The Federal Avrnt1on Adm1n1~·
'rau04, bax~crrcdiA~rc\ ~
will qain test the raoio na\ igauonal
system at John Wayne Airport that
helps jet~ land •nd depart. The tests
will be conducted at about 8 a.m.
Frid3y
Add1t1onal JCt noise 1~ an11r1pated
because the tests require a Jet to fl }' as
low as 400 feet.
The tests should not last lonv.er
thaW~ minutes. according to Ralph
c.Ale11~td: -t~· EAA) .air traffieo·
rnanager at John Wayne Airport.
When the FAA conducted tests of
th<' nav1ga t1onal aid June 12. the JCt
noise prompted numerous com-
plaints from Newport Beal'h and
Costa Me~ resident'>.
However. Odenwald siud the JCl
pilot checked the wron$ points in the
system and the tesung mu'it be
conducted again
LAGUNA HIT FOR $2 MILLION AW ARD ...
·• From Al
award after tallung with its insurance
carrier. The city 1s responsible for the
first SI00,000 of the award. Mead
Reinsurance C'orp.. Its insurance
earner at the ume of the accident.
would have to pa y the rest. he said. ·
G1rard1 was cri11cal of Frank for
requiring his cl.tent to bnng suu
against the city. Blue was anxious to
reach an out-of-court settlement. he
said. "The city of Laguna couJd have
settled this case for much lower than
they will eventually pay." he said.
Frank said the city rejected an offer
to pay Blue S700,000 because "we
thought we had a good chance of
winning the case since we had a
drunken dnver going 50 mph."
Frank attnbuted the city's losing
the case to an emotional jul) and
sympathetic judge.
He criticized Judge Jerrold Oliver
for allowrng into evidence a City
Council decision subsequent to the
accident to install a stop sign at the
Cypress and Astor intersection.
Frank also said he was upset that Blue
was not found to be as negligent as
Brown since they had both been
drinking. and Blue was a~are of his
companion's condition.
Liberal hab1hty awards in Cah-
forn1a have 'il'ared a number of
insurance compan1e~ into abandon-
rng the stale. c11~ oflil'1ab anJ state
lcgislatori. agree.
Undrr the joint and several doc-
trine. the co-defendant best able must
pay a damage award even 1f that
defendant 1s as hnle as I percent
responsible for the situation.
Mead Reinsurance canceled its
Orange Count)' policies. including
Lagu·na .Beach's last December.
Laguna was able to find a new liabiliry
carrier but only by increasing its self
1 nsurance from $100.000 to S250:000
per incident.
CONCERT BRINGS NOISE COMPLAINTS •..
From Al
Orange C'ounl~ Fairgrounds.
He said the calls began around 6:30
p.m.. apparent!> dunng the pre-
concen sound check, and lasteQ until
the show ended at I 0:30 p.m.
It was an a,e·rage number of
complaints for the rock concen that
nc1$hbors said could be heard inside
their homes. despite closed windows
and blanng television sets.
After two seasons of "free con-
certs ... residents said their patience -
not to mention their eardrums -arc
weanni thin as the open-air arena
enters its third ~um mer season.
"I don't know how much longer we
can take it," said Jo Nichols. adding
that she and her family tried to sleep
Tuesday night with the windows
closed.
"It was like having a ltve band at
the foot of the bed. It \Vas so loud your
cars hurt." said Nichols. who lives on
Pres1d10 Dnve. ··vou JUSt feel like
throwing your hands up and scream-inl" usk. who lives about a mile from
the amphitheater. complained that
she couldn't venture out of her Serra
Way home because the! noise was just
overwhelm ing.
"It's as 1f a neighbor has music
blanng. .. she said.
Lusk saJd she was mostly frustrated
because nego11at1ons between
amphitheater attorne) Neil Papiano
and community leaders have been
somewhat fru11less.
"Pap1ano has said he is trying to be
a good neighbor and bring (the noise)
under control, but it's like there's no
JUSt1cc," she lamented.
Jn earlier interviews, Papiano has
accused the residents of beang preju-
dicial against rock music.
However. Lusk countered: "It
doesn't matter if it's Frank Sinatra or
Barry Manilow. if we want to hear
SOtnethrng. I'd rather go over and buy
a ticket.~
And Plant's performance?
''This stuff was awful," Nichols
said.
LAG UN AN GUILTY OF RAPE, SLAYING ...
From Al
Fle1schli five limes in the head on
Sept I I. 198.1. in their one-room
apartment al 1261 Ocean Front in
Laguna Beach.
Thompson was tned and convicted
of first-degree murder with special
etrcumstances 1n a separate trial 1n
1983. He has been sentenced to death
and now is confined on San Quentin's
death row awaiting the outcome ofhis
appeal.
In the courthouse hallwa) after the
verdict was announced. Jacobs told
Jurors he was up~ct b} 'their dens1on
··11 bothers me one ix-ason is on
death rov.. lht: one v. l)o didn't plan 11
I think hc(Le11ch) is in there laughrng
nght now... Jacobs said. "The}
should be cdlmatcs on death row
together."
Le1tch's defense attome'. Ron ...
Perry , said his cl ient ··didn't seem
very upset" when the verdict v.as
announced. "He's a :oung man and
he won't be an old man when he gets
out. He said he felt he had a fair tnal. ..
Perry said.
Le1tch's father. arch1tet1 Richard
Leitch. who had attended the tnal
with other family members virtually
every day, said he was disappointed
the JUI) hadn't found his son guilt) of
the lesser offense of being an ac-
Ce'>SOI) after the fact.
Jury foreman Harold Schuh1 of
Fullerton said Jurors were split 6-6
between finding Le11ch guilt: ol flrs1 -
and second-degree murder
··when we couldn't reach a unani-
mous verdict for first degree. v.r
decided 11 had to be one of the others.
We considered evpything and ac-
cessol) after the fact didn't tit. He was
more in'ohed than that. bul man)
felt that he d1dn'1 know in advance or
was involved in a consp1raq :·
Sch ultz said.
Se'eral other JUrors. who declined
to give their names. said thc:r had
trouble "telling the truth from lhe
lies."
Evidence presented during the trial
1nd1cated Fle1'ichh \\as handcuffed.
gagged v.1th duct tape and raped
before she v.a~ repeatl'dl: stabbed
with a fishing J..n1fc.
Jacobo; argued during his d osing
statt•mcnt that Flcl\c hit v.as killed
becauo;e she had r omc between Lei tch
and his ex -wife. Tran Leitch . while
the two wtrt· auempting a reconcil1-
a11on.
AIRPORT SETTLEMENT SOUGHT .•.
From Al
expand the airport when a Supenor
Court Judge ruled environmental
plans for the airport were inadequate.
A new plan. calling for a $150
million expansion of the over-
crowded airport terminal. was ap-
proved by supervisors early this yea r.
but was blocked in Apnl when
another Superior Court Judge found
the count) 1n contempt for failing to
submit the nev.. Pfan for court
approval. as thl' 1981 Judgment had
required. ••
In add111on the rnunt\ filed J
fed eral court lawsuit this year asking
the court to uphold the new airport
e).pans1on plan~ its r~latcd airline
access plan. which controls the
number of nights permuted, a land-
use plan for the Santa l\na Heights
community and related en-
. vironmental Jocumrnts
A heanng on 1ha1 case1s scheduled
Monda) before Judge Terry Hatter.
However. a11orne}S for both the c11y
and the count} said they plan 10 ask
that the hearing be dcla~ed unul July
21so1hc1r m:got1at1ons can continue.
OLYMPIC SUPPORT RUN PLANNED ...
From Al
ensure l'ontinuing finanu.il <.upport
ovt.'r ~' cral vears ·'That's w0h)' fund-raising e\.l·nts
like this arc so important ... Moses
said. "It costs a lot of money to train
an Olympic athlete." .
Despite the 'iurplus from the 1984
games.. more.. t.han..$115,()()()_~ ~till
needed to subc;1d1ze the trainin$ of
athletes at the Colorado Springs
Training Center. s~ud Bob McCaffrc).
chairman of the event.
Moses said 1t will be especially
difficult for athletes tra1n1ng fo r the
upcom1ni Olympics as the 1988
l!,Smes wrll be held 1n Seoul. ~uth
Just Call
642-6086
Dilly Piiot
O.flvery
I• Guaranteed
Mf~+dJt'+'f'•'")' '1' ,.
f\t"·I ,.,..._ If~ ( •I•', fly
~'.JO I rr 4 Ir I •• C ..
l\.orl'a
The I 4X4 g.tm\·, \\l'rl' hl'ld 1t1 I o'
.\ngelc~ with tht· '>Upport .ind
enthusiasm of the entire: count!)
behrnd the athletes.
"E,erything was gung-ho. but 11·,
not going lo be the same th1'i time
around.:!..hc~1d. -
The third annual fund-ra1..e r 1<;
being coordrnatcd b) do1cn., ol local
volunteers with the suppart ofse\eral
local compan1c<;. More 1han I .<><XI
runners have already registered for
the-races
An internat1t.nal food fair will be
held at Newport ( enter v. 1th ~O
Orangt.' < 11unl\ fl'\laur.1 nt<, 11fknng
loot! \1<1th l ll l..l'l -wk<. JI'<' tx·nclitllng ·
thr < )l\mp1t C ommittt•t·
1-,h1rts and po'll'r' \\Ill be sold to
r;i1<,e additional lunth for the athletes
Demon~trat10ns of 'iuch a1hle11c
events -as fcncrng. wctghthfting, vol-
leyball and gymnasucc; will also be
staged The w mm1ttec ra1S('d $400.000 for
the 19!!4 Ol)'mp1c team and hopes to
do even belier for the I 98R !>quad.
Mc( alTrev sau.l
For add1t1onal ran· 1ntorma11o n.
can 891-5529
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f 11, • .,,. .fl 1~-w fl't'ti11!1)t'l e. ~~ S.lur f' ~ : !;.,,..,.,, '"' "' nc r"'' p~ P't t d •• 130 w..i i:....,c,,._ f fl !'I'" !~/!() r,,.,. M • C..••YT1• 97tl1f
VOL. 78, NO. 171
------------
W rATHfR
----
Coastal fog will spread ii:tland
A low presltire arN ott ttw1 cenirel cout wlll apreed IPf~ 8 EDT Fri ,Me 21 nigh time low cloudaand fog extensively Into the Inland val~ of The Foree.et;'°' p.m. · ·•
Sou,hern California through Friday, the Nallonal w .. ther
ServlGe a.id.
DaY11me temperatures are •lC$>9Cted to drop u a rnutt.
altflOugh highs In the lower deeert valley• .,. 11111 expected to
reach 110 degrees. Coastal area hight will range from upper 60s
at the beaches to u~=-n the Wjlfmer Inland valleys. ~ -no rile Ora 1~e w111 bel~~ MCS'4ocel
fog extending Into the valleya In the night and morning hOUrl.
otherwise fair with hazy afternoon sunshine. A little cooler w1tti
highs ranging upper 60s at the beaches to the upper 80a warmer
Inland valleva
Temps Wiiie Aoct. 12 82
lOUl1vlMe 77 54
MIOll tow 101 74 nou•s eno1ng al 5 am M~ 11 13 ·Q~G) "'OHTS
"IO&ny 73 50 Miami 8Moll 17 79 w11m-Co10.-. AJo..q...,q.,. 17 $1 ............... 73 .. Mpi...$1 Peu4 71 St Occivoto..,.,. SlaloOf'a•y a. Amet•IO 14 13 Sl'IOwllt Rain F!Urr•H Sr>0 .. AnGl\or90• $1 47 NMhyllle 79 64
N..,Or!Nnt 13 7) N•-w .. in.. s.iv<• NO•• us O.r• ~· c""""'". A1t1n_i. 74 SI ...,_VC)flc 71 13 AllanUc Clly 79 12 Horlolli. Va as ee Aulltn 14 10
Biltmore 80 57 Olli.horn• C.ty 83 .. Calif. Temps r-v~ 14 4e
BitmtnQNom 75 54 Ome/\a 75 Il l Ton-74 :i OtlMOO 94 74 YOIM\it• Vly n a.-••ck 78 62
~ .. 99 84 PnNll09fp111a 12 $1 High. !Ow loi 2• 110urt .,,ding at 5 e.m
109 15 a. .... lleld 103 86 Bo.ion 71 82 Ph<>enlll
Buffalo 67 55 Pt1t1~ 10 50 Eurtl&• 85 SI Surf Report c-19 57 Pool Me 78 511 fr~ 103 64
C-ton.S C 90 &9 Portlal'd. Or 14 54 Lenc:ut• ~ 6 7
Cll-tlon.W V 72 54 Pt-71 59 Loa ~ II 64 LOCATION llD 8HAN
ChttiOtte N C 82 St =ily 13 59 Otklenc! 12 59 Hun111'Qton 8eec;ll 1·3 ltlr
C"-Yen"" 81 $8 85 50 Pt.o Robles 78 50 R...,.,.i.ny.~ 2·4 hllr
Choe.go 72 44 ~ 98 12 Rea Bluff 98 17 401n S1rM1 Newpc>ft 2..4 ,.
Cincinnati 78 54 Rlcl\monel 86 81 Redwoo<I Cny 78 $1 l!.nd SlrMl. Newport 1·2 ,..
C........,,o 88 St SI lOUia 7S 60 s--•o 13 511 tio. Wedg9 2 .. ,.,,
Columbl• s c 19 12 SI Pet• T.,.,,1>41 93 75 SlllnM 85 St Llglin• e.ctl 2·3 , ...
Cokltnt>u• Oh 74 SS s.tt l.11<• Cl1y " 86 Sat1 0!990 73 14 Sat1C.-le 1-.3 t.11
Con«>rd,N H ,. 51 S.n Anlonto 83 7{) Sin F1tnel~o 60 S7 Wll•lemp IS
Otll .. ·FI Worth 88 64 SAii Juan.P R 90 78 Sant• s.rt>at• 89 51 S-dlr.ctton IOUlh S..llle 78 51 Slookton •• 511 Oeylon 72 51 0..-87 12 Sntevepo.t ... 6e Higll. IOw tor 24 110<K1 eno1ng al Sp m
Soc*-9? 54 a.r.t-1 Oil , • OM~ 78 53 Tides Oetrou u 4e Syr-7t 56 !Ilg a-17 47
OuMh 71 40 T()C)ella u sa 8lWIP 103 60
llPao 83 13 TUCllOl'I 105 17 81yth9 108 81 TOOA\'
Ftlr'*>kt 88 49 TUIN 81 115 ~lalinl 15 59 Second low 4 27pm 27
Fwgo 72 53 WMNnQton 82 sa Long8Mcll 73 81 s.cot>O nqi t049pm 59
FllgstaH 115 49 WICM• •t 65 Monfovll 89 S8
Grind Rapicl• 71 48 W1 ..... ·8'tfe 73 52 Mont«ey 64 55 ""°"" GrMIFelit !M 60 Ml Wlllon 71 88 F>rtl low 827 •m -08
Hanloro 78 54 ~8Mcll 10 81 ~::,.. 1 25•m 3.11
H ....... 93 82 Extended Ontario 90 61 5 17pm 211
~ 1111 74 PWn Spt1ng,1 114 77 S.cood hlQfl ll31pm SI
HOV11on 76 10 p ....... es $1
lnOllNipOI .. 75 55 Night ...0 mQming IOw ctcM.ot lnCI ~ 90 59 Sun Mia IOd•y 91 I 07 pm . ,_
.Ille* ton.Ml 81 511 l:T. flle COMI exl...olng ln10 lM SanB«-Olno 93 60 Friday et 5 42 am ...0 M119Qlln al 8-07
JKktonvtlMI 93 17 v ew1y m«nlng hou.-OlllerWIH S1nGa1>r~ 85 60 p m.
Juneeu 5a 42 law •ll.lrday ""OU9" ~ond•y. Hight Stn JOM 71 59 Moon NII lod•Y •I 10 21 p m • ,._
KantuClty 17 sa -70 at IM~ ·~ng 10 mlO Sant•""' 75 111 Friday al 8 33 • m encl Mil agail\ et
LMVtQM 112 80 90s _,,_ val9ys Lowa 5 to 15 Sw>t• Cna 12 55 II 10 pm.
IRRELEVANT WEEK RETURNS ••.
From Al
vant Week, it's the player with the Salata knows what a tough path it
worst score that wins. can be from the modest streets of his
Tuesday morning. Chumley tours old Highland Park neighborhood to
the city. Later, the Balboa Bay Club the bayfront lots of Newport Beach.
hosts the College Night RaJly, billed But one thing he said he learned along
as an evening of cheers. beers and the way was to recognize that good,
entertainment. dependable people aren't aJways th.e
Someone known as The Fox will ones in t~e limelight.
display his unique talent for making "I was a good ball player in high
mugfuls of beer disappear. No ma-school, but I made third team all-city.
gjc1an or master of mirrors. The Fox not the first team," he said. "lo
gulps beer with sleight of hand and of college(at USC), I made the team, but
gullet. I wasn't a star."
How The Fox learned to $UZZie .. If there's anything Salata loves
beer so qu1ckl} is. of course. 1rrele-more than football, it's an underdog.
"ant That's why he decided in 1976 to
Wednesda). Chumley and others honor the achievements of the very
tour Disneyland as guests of Mickey last man selected in that year's NFL
Mouse and Donald Duck. That draft. •
e' cning. the Balboa Ba) Club hosts He intended rn1ually to simply
11s Sports Hall of Fame Banquet to 1nv1te the University of Dayton's
induct Olympic di ver Greg Louganls._, Kelvin Kirk out for a week's vacation
and football great O.J. Simpson. V in Newport Beach before. Kirk was to
It's a good t~ing Chumley stands 6-report to the Pillsburgh Steelers.
foot-4 and weighs about 260 pounds. He mentioned it to fri ends at the
They sq} 11 takes a big man to put up Balboa Bay Club who wanted to help.
v.1th the abuse d1sbed out at the The stage was set. but K.trk missed the
hanquct plane to California. Salata. for -no
The t.'\ cnt also provides an op-reason at all, chose a 42-year-old
runun1t)' to roast \humley and butcher from Auntington Beach to
rn:sent him lhe Low,man Troph}. replace him.
I le1!>mann Troph) v. rnners. honor-Kirk eventually amved and lrrele-
t:d a\ the tx.·<.t in college football. are vant Week was born.
1rrckvant in Newpon Beach. It's the The name came from Salata·s
l.owsman winner who's Si>c:C1al. impatience with the attitude during
Thursda}. unusual and irrelevant the '60s that everything you did
contests will mark the superstars somehow had to be "relevant."
compet1t1on at the Balboa Bay Club. Therefore, Salata reasoned that if you
Frida). Chumley and his entourage wanted to do something for no reason
descend on Hollywood Park 10 lose at all. 1t would have to be irreleva nt.
mone) at the races. That spirit has survived.
>\nd for the weekend. Chumley is This year's event is special as it will
nown 10 Reno as a guest of the MGM ·mark the I 0th anniversary of lrrele-
Grand Hotel -where he·MU\ lose vant Week.· Past winners of the
t•ven more money. Lowsman Trophy have been invited
The man to crrd1t (or blame) for to return to Newport Beach for the
Irrelevant Weck 1s Paul Salata. the anniver:sary. -
former ~wcr installer who turned Chumley will find himself rn the
effiuents into affiuence. t11stinguished company of such foot-
Now a success$ bus1tessman who ball · legends as Kelvin Kirk. Jim
lives on Linda . la ta 1s k'nown Kelleher. Kevi n Scanlon, Phil Nelson
throu~hout thc-tiew~ Beach area and others.
lor his generos~ry 10 c antable or-These former Mr. lrrelevants have
ganizauons and his razor harp wit at acquitted themseJves with d1stinc-
spcaking engagements. tion.
"Irreleva nt Weck means doing Consider Irrelevant Week's
~omething nice for someone for no checkered history.
rea~on ... .;;ala ta has often said. He has • Following Kelvin KJrk's late
made that saying the motto for the arrival, Mr. Irrelevant II decided lo
.rnnual lrrdcvant Wet'k . arrive on time. Bui Jim Kelleher lost
I
Don Chumley
his lu~ge. He reportedly was with
the Minnesota V1krngs JUSt long
enough to sing his alma mater at a
team dinner.
• Lee Washburn, an offe nsive
lineman from Montana St.ate, was
most famous for spikini a football
after his teammate scored a touch·
down.
Washburn's spike may have been
enthusiasuc, but 1t also was illegal.
Montana State was penalized.
• Mike Almond in 1979 was the
first Mr. Irrelevant to bring along a
wife (his own). Arkansas quarterback
Kevin Scanlon did Almond one
better in 1980, bringing along a
pregnant wife (also his own) ..
•Tyrone McGnff and i1m Wash-
ington broke tradition ... they're
playing professional football.
There are. unfortunately, draw-
backs to Oying young men out to
Newport Beach for a week of thrills
and spills at a pivotal time an their
gridiron careers.
According to Salat:i. they often
report to football camp and tell their
coaches: "I don't want 10 pla). I want
to go back to the Balboa Bay C'lub."
Casual Collections
from POSH
>·a
Stay cool
this summer
in our POSH
sport shirts.
f)ff ered in a
__ /
variety of
End on End
stripings,
pastel plaids and
subtle checks.
Gentlemen's Clothing Inspired by Tradition
•
46 Fashion Island (714) 640-8310
"
New· play slated
for LB pre1niere
. "American Pac,'' a new play b}' Steven Sargeant,
wall be performed alurday evenina aube An1sts'
!healer al l.:.agua1t'BMdi Hagb~hool CUrtam time IS8 p.m
The play -a one-act dealing with a man's
dreams and desires and the frustrations he en·
counters from society and friends -will feature
Daniel Winchester. Lyndsay Ludwig, Russ Butler
and Eve Gravell Call 499-2677 for ticket infor-mation.
ReacUngprogram,launc~ed
"Ride lbe Reading Railroad" as the theme of the
1985 summer reading program from Monday
through Aug. 24 at the Newport Beach Public Library branches.
Children from pre-school through sixth grade
may sign up for the nine-week program at their local
branches. Call Maqtaret Poarch, children's coordi-
nator, at 644-3 186 tor funher information.
Dancing classes at GWC
Ra!.1t dance mo\ements and hO\.., they are used
in all forms of dance will be taught during an e1ght-
week program beginning Monday at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach.
The sessions will be held from 7 10 9: 15 p.m.
Monda)s 1n the College Center. There is a fee ofS 19
and more 10forma11on may be obtained b) calling
891 -3991. -
Fashion, finance linked
Thl· investment firm of math Barne) and
ousa and Compan) will JOm forces Tuesda}' to
present "Fashion and Finance." a free seminar
scheduled for 5:30 p.m at 621 S. B St .. Tustin.
The program wall introduce the professional
man and woman of the 1980s to some of the
•financial and fashion opponun1t1es available. Call
851-4265 or 851-4~4 I for reservations.
College day at *'occ
Rcpresentit1vcs of five Southern California
colleges and univers1t1cs will be on the Orange C'oast
College campus Tuesda) to answer questions and
d1stnbute 1nforma11on about their 1nst1tu'1ions.
Represen1111ves will be present in front of
OCC'sAnCenterSnack Bar from 9:30a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Cat State Fullenon. Cal State Long Beach. UC
Irvine. Chapman College and Southern California
College of Chiropractic will be represented.
Shrine game deadline near
The deadline for buying tickets locally for the
34th annual Shrine All-Star Football Classic, to be
played July 27 at East Los Angeles Community
College. 1s approaching. accordin$ lO David Young.
ticket chairman for the El Band110 Shrine Club of
Ne" pon Beach.
The game v. 111 feature 56 recently graduated
high school players. mclud1rrg Mike Beech of
Newport Harbor High School and Chuck Kunsa11i~
of El Toro High School. Tickets. priced at $8 and $6.
can be purchased by calhng Young at 549-8386
weekdays.
Ice-breaking course slated
An evening workshop designed to teach
techniques for meeting and talking to people for the
first time is set for June 27 at Orange Coast College in
Costa Mesa.
.... John Fergus. a ~ocial scientist. will lead the
workshop titled .. Meeting the Opposite Sc·c What
Do You Do After You've Said Hd lo'l" which wall
meet from 7:00 to Q: 30 in Room I 12 ofOCC's Social
Sc1t'nce Building. For more information about the
workshop. phone 4J:!-5g&o.
Stroke clinic set in Mesa
A team of health care professions wall conduct a
free stroke prevention clinic Frida) and Sa turday 1n
the tnterior mall of the Harbor Shopping Center.
2300 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
The screenings will take place near the Edwards
Twtn Cinemas from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. under the
supervision of the Semor Citizens Medical Center.
357 Wilson St.. Costa Mesa. The project is
sponsored jointly by the Costa Mesa-Orange Coast
Li ons Club and the Harbor Center Retail
Merchants' l\ssoc1at1on.
Thursday, June 20
• 7:30 p.m ., Irvine Planning Commission. Cll}
Council Chamber~. 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
PoucE Loe
'
Orange Coatt DAil. Y PILOT /Thurtdey, June 20. tM5 *
County OKs $7 mil1ion land bur-
By JEFF ADLER
Ot .. .,... ..........
Orange County supervisors agreed
Wednesday to pay more than $7 malhon for
47 acres of land near the exclusive Nellie
Gaal anch housfog ~lgpmenl an
Laguna ffilts-tand the county could have
purchased five years ago for about $2
mil hon
The land is the subject of a dispute
between the county and the Presley Co. of
Snuthl'm C:ilifom1a, developers of Nellie
Tent cify goes up
Gail Ranch The county nttd5 the land as
nght of way for the proposed n JoeQuln
Freeway, which supervisors are hop1na to
build thro!Jih the foothills between Corona
del Mar and San Juan Capistrano some-
day.
( tlc settlement accepted by the board
will end years of lawsuits over the property
-ti11gat1on that in the end drove up the
property's value. Supervisor Bruce
Nestande was in Sacramento and did not
attend the morning meeting. •
The Presley Co. filed swt apinst the
couoty ui 1982 after supervisors refused to
pay between $2 million and SJ million for
the land, contcndana the developer had to
surrender the acruse. because a final tract
snao.!M~vdopment-~tom homes stitf had not been approved.
Although the Presley Co. won when tbe
case was heard in Supcnor Court, the
matter still is pcndJOJ 1n federal coun.
tnggering the ncgotiauorts that led to the
settlement.
~ .. idr<1 flaying pay1n& $7 million for the
47 acm. the county alt0 will contnbu&e
$17S.000 for the construction or tou.od
wall to muffie noite when the freeway is
bu1h. In return, all lawsu1u concem1n1 w
parcel will be .dropped. -
l'h~ In the 1.-;;d·s value was
blamed on 1nflat1on. cscalat10J la.nd values
1n the area. lhc shptly ancmued acrcqc
thr count) purchased plus lhe county's loss
an the lepl arena.
The land as off Moulton Parkway and
Nellie Gall Road.
Work crews ratae tent.a at Jamee Muelck
Honor Farm In El Toro. where about 200 low-
eecQrity lnmatea are to be moved on Satur-
day. The tranefer le part of an ongoing effort
to eaee overcrowding at Orange County Jail,
where eome inmatea ha•e been eleepln& on dltlon.al tent. will be conetnacted at the
noon becau.e there lan't enough bunk honor farm later th.la eummer for another
epace. In all, four tenta will be raleed at the 200 lnmatea who are elated to be mo•e there.
honor farm -two for indlatea and two for The county eventually plan• to replace the
meae hall.a and etaff accomoclatione. Ad-tent. with permanent etructurea.
County, Laguna near court fight Over tract
Supervisors seek access to disputed home sites,
won't rescind approval
By JEFF ADLER
Of, ... OllllJ ~ St.n
Rather than o' enurn their earlu:r ap-
proval ofa 108-luxuT) home development
in the coastal hills adjacent to Laguna
Beach. the Orange County Board of
Su pen 1sors instead directed count) plan-
ners Wednesday to stud) the feas1b1ht} of
gaining accces to the 4 71-acre parcel ofT
Laguna Canyon Road.
The board's action. which came on a 4-U
vote following a 15-minute public heanng.
seemed likel) to steer supervi~rs and the
Laguna Beach Cat) Council closer to a
courtroom confrontation over the dis-
puted Laguna Heights project proposed by
the Carma-Sandling de velopment group.
Alread}. at least two lawsuits concerning
the pro1cct ha~e bct·n filed.
Su pen 1sor Bruce Nestande did not 'Oil'
on the Cit} of Laguna Beach's appeal oft he
project because he was 1n Sacramento
attending state Senate confirmation hear-
ings on his post as chairman of the
California Transportation Comm1ss1on.
City officials. who have refused to grant
developers access to the tract along Alta
Laguna Boulevard. asked supervisors to
reconsider subd1v1s1on committee and
count}' Pljinnmg Commission approval of
the project. which 1s situated on unin-
corporated county terntor) bordering
Laguna Beach.
A key part of the project involves the
developer's· donation of 41 0 acres of
undc' eloped land for inclusion in the
Laguna Greenbelt.
Representing the cit). attorney Phillip
Kahn told supervisors the pro1ect should
not have been approved because the
developer can show no legal pnmary access
to the propeny and no secondary emerg-
enq access. .\lso. supervisors failed to
consider adverse en' 1ronmental impacts
traffic generated b)' the development wi ll
Mve on the citv.
.. It as the c1t~ (s pos111on that in appro ' 1ng
the prOJCCt as propo~d. the cou nty rs
loding 11sclf into an unfil\orable pos-
1rion." Kahn said
He hl.ened what the county "as doing to
one an which a count) v.ould find that a
neaghbonng count} wa!> cons1denng locat-
ing a toxic v.aste dump near the county hne
while intending to provide access to the
dump only from streets within the neigh-
boring count}.
He added the cat} had considered
approval and anne,auon of the project
into the Cit} 1f the development "'ere
hm1ted to 70 home sates.
Representin~. the Temple Hills Com-
munity A.ssoc1at1on, Becky Jones told
supervisors that I 08 homes would cause
residents an her ne1ghbonng de' elopment
to "suffer" associated fire dangers. din
pollution and add1t1onal people he told
the board she supponed the ··en' aronmen-
tally superior" 70-home development.
And Elizabeth Brown. of the Laguna
Greenbelt Inc .. told the board the develop-
ment as propo~ would "destro'v the
u11lat )'" of the land to be added w the
Laguna Greenbelt.
In moving that the count} uphold
pl'ev1ous count)' actions. Board ( ha1rman
Thomas Rile' said hr helre' e' the l!I -
ho me proJect.1s ··~n~111,e to its locauon
and 1s well within the requiremt'nts of
previous appro' al~ b} the Board of
Cheese firm sued.after tot's death· r
County couple seeking
S2 millf!>n in damages:
more lawsuits looming
By The Associated Press
LO ANGELES-Acouplewhose ch1ld
died two days after birth have filed a S2
million lawsuit against the maker of a
Mexican-st~ le cheest' fou nd to be con-
taminated wuh a bacteria linked 10 dozens
of deaths.
Mana Eugenia and J\lvaro de la Lu1 of
Orange 'lued Jalisco Mexican Products Inc.
Wedne\da\. alleging Mrs de la Luz'
...
consumption of the ta anted chee~ led to
the death of their newborn daughter.
The Superior Court suit. filed 1n Los
.\ngele b) Arnold Gross for the firm of
Belli and Sab1h. 1s the first to be filed for a
death alleged!)' caused b}' the chee~.
San Francisco auome' Mel van Bella said
he plans to file about i 5 more "rongful
death suits before the weekend.
Stephen A. G1glaot11. auome} for thc
suburban Anes1a cheese factory. said he-
has not }'Ct seen an}' paperv.ork on the-suit
filed Wednesda) and so could not com-
ment on 1t.
In another development Wednesda).
Los .\ngeles Count~ 's director of health
wn 11.e~. Robert Gate\ . ..ard :!00 Depart-
ment of Health emplo)ces would check
19.000 restaurants and 9,000 markets b~
Sunday. Gates said the inspections were
being re1ntens1fit'd because su~c's con-
tinued to shov. a um percentage of
restaurants and marlet-; s111l stocl.ing the
recalled cheese.
The bactena Listeria monoc) togcnes
causes a disease lmov.n as f1~1enos1s.
which. howe\er. can ha'e sources other
than contaminated cheese
The number oflis1enos1s deaths in states
affected by the Jahsco cheese contamina-
tion reached 4:! Wednesday. but not all
have been tanked to the cheese
Fonv such death-; or stillbirths ha' e hcen
rcPoncd in Cahforn1a since m1d-~arch
Supervisors. including local coastal plans
for that area ...
Rak\. \\, ho!>e d1s1nct takes in thr d1~
puled acreage. added that he IS awart' the cit~ 1s planni°' a neighborhood park: "dtreetl} on the nght ofwa) ··to the project
.., can come to no other conclusion than
that the Cit) as 'lttking b) an) method
possible 10 stop the project.·· he said.
F1nall}'. Rile) said he does no1 believe
efforts to block the project are in the
interests of all lOunt\ residents. "It
certainl}' stops our acq u1~1t1on of a pac~ce of
thr greenbclt:· he commented
In \.Otins co uphold its earlier approval
to be finalized in tv.o weeks. suptrv1sors
directed that count) planners invesugate
\\hether the count) can consider a de' elop-
ment plan allov. mg access to the proper1}
from Laguna Camon Road The repon
\\Ill be ~ad ' m 45 da\ !.
Also. thl· hoard n•qu1rc'd < arm..a-')and-
ling to pro' 1de l'ml•rg1.:nL' Jl1.l''' lo the
parl·el Imm H \treet !(I the neart''' ruhl!L
street rn Laguna &J1. h Jnd dear' l'l?l'tatron
and tal.t" other lirt· prn t•nt1on meJ un:' a<.
de~1gna1l'd h\ lhl' nr:inge ( llUOI\ Fire
Marshal.
Real hot records
at Wherehouse
Even oblcure bends had the hot-
test all'>um. in town this week When
fir• erupted at a Costa Meea record
store, where a Rt candle had been ten
aft• ctoeinJJ time.
The blaze hed apparently burned
ltaetf out .net ... amoldertng by the
time ftNflgh ... ~at the Wher•
hOUM t9CDtd stwe, 488 E. 17th St.,
around 8 a.m. Tueeday.
The ftfe. controffed by ftreflghters ln
90fM 28 rnRltes, apparently had
eruf>ted90mettmeaft• 10 p.m., wherl
the stor• dosed.
Shots, scuffle, chase mark hcer b\. a CUSIOnlt'f "hn left thl' \l\lrt'
v.11hout pa}ing. The theft occurrrd
shonl}' after I a.m Wednesda' • • • -\ prowkr reponedl\ v.as seen btl'
Huntington ~b
.\ burdar stok credit lard~ and a
checkbook from a IQ J blue ( adlllal
El Dorado parll'd tn tht" I Q{)OO hltx ~
of Magnolia eitrl. t-Oda"
...itd hi' •Jr "·I' p.1rl.l'd .11 l..:'th ..,tll't't
and Pauf1, { lxt,t lhgh"J\ \'hl•n thl'
1nudrnt lXl urrt'd • • • 'H'meonc <.tnle tOt'I' .tnJ .1 tool h1n , a luC'd JT S44n from a 1 tiRO "IHte
To'''tJ '"'I.up tru, I. parl.cd at 17 th
~trC't't and Orangt' V. l·dne\d.l' after-
noon l\lli•t ..aHi the \tl'llm a
n:'\llknt in th( <JN)! i hkxl. 1lt Pollacl
had k it h" 't h1dl' unlodcd
Coast shoplifting arrests
By STEVE MARBLE
Of..,. o.ii, l'llo4 ltefl
Newport Beach police arrested a
Los Angles couple Thursday after-
noon after a shophf11ng episode at a
Fashion Island store that was punctu-
alt'd b)' gunfire. a fistfight and a
aulomb1lc chase.
Andn· Brown. 18. and La1uana
Brown. 24. were arrested on susp1c1on
of commercial burglar) and assault
Wlth a deadly wepaon. Both are being
held today m ht'u of SI 0.000 bail.
The incident started at 5:55. p.m.
in$1de tht' Neiman-Marcus store at
Fashion Island where two store
SC<'unty officers chumed they saw a
lrrine
A 20-ycar-oTa man was arrested on
suspicion of stealing car ~tercos from
two Volkswaaons on Promenade
Wednesday. B1nh Q Nguyen was
arrested after he was allegedly seen
taking the Stt'rcos frn.m the vehicles. • • • A SJ.000 1nph1<.' monitor was
rcpo1'1cd tolen from an Aston Street
businc . • • • Aadcboc Lincoln 1 Mertury rt·
poncd the thd\ of a arccn 1984
Mcrtury Towncar Wedn(lday
I) •••
Tools1wcrt stolen fmm two con·
~trucuon sites ovcm1aht • • • Fouf m1crov.aH oven\ "alucd t tSOO ap1ett werc rTmo'cd from
woman <iteahng a ~nu dress. accord-
ing to Officer Tom Little
Secunty officers John Hall, 27. and
Louise Kearin. 28. said they followed
the woman as sht' left the store and
ordered her to stop. The woman.
however. ran toward the parking lot.
According to observers. the woman
turned and hat one of the officers and
tned to choke the second.
A man believed to be Andre Brown
was wailing an a car parked jUSt
outside the !ilore. Police said when the
man saw the scuffle. he emerged from
the car. drew a handgun and fired a
shot at the security officers.
Nobody wns injured 1n the shoot-
ing.
apartment buildings on San Ramon
and Los Gatos.
·' Co.uMeaa
I\ clock. a fan and cloth•f\4-all
worth S 140. were reponed ,.olen
from a 'home an the 2500 block -<lf
Santa ' na Avenue. sometime be-·
lWNn 7:30 p.m. and 8:20 p.m
unday. Entry apparently wa made
by pryin& a locked door • • • Golf dubs weft' reported \tolen
from a men's locler at Cost.a Meu
Golf and Count ry ( lub, 1701 Golf
<.:oursc L">nvc. wmet1me bctw' ·n 6
p.m. fndny and fr «"1Tl Sunday. :'l'lt' ~rew\ had. been remo,ed from u.c
~cured lndtr • • •
Following the gun tire. the man and
\\Oma n leaped into the gctawa) car
and sptd north. A police helicopter
sponcd the car a ~hon 11mc later and
police cars from Ncwpor.t and Irvine
took up pursuit on the an Diego
Frcewav near Mac ;\rthur Boulevard.
Lillie said thc-0ee-upants of the car
threw the handgun onto the shoulder
of the freeway at one point. He said a
molonst retne,ed the "'capon and
took 1l to poh<.·e
The chase ended without incident
at the intersection of Jamboree Road
and Bnstol Street.
Andre Brown is being held al the
Newport city Jail and Lajuana Brown
at Orange Count) Jail.
power hoostct. wonh $85. was
reported ~tolcn from a an unlockcd
vehicle parked in the 200 block of
Fa1rwa) Place. between 8·30 p.m
unda} and 6 a m. Monda) 1 he
booster was lifted from thC' glove
compartment. • • • Keys stolen dunna D burjlan,.1.Q the
200 block of 23rd tree& were u'led to
take a cat tha week. lso taken were a
nn& nd some money
tapna&each
J>oh~ helped exhn1u1 h a ~matt
vehicle fire Wcdnc~a> cven1n1 a Iona
the 200 hlock of BQch tretl • • • .\ North { oast H1&,h\\I)' bu inc
reportt'd the then of thrtt 12.p;a l ol
Tuc-sday on Bndge Rnad. Offic-cr;
responding to the call. ho\lle\ er. v.cre
unable to locate an~ suspects 1n 1hc
.area.
Fountain Valley
-\ clerk at the 7-Ele,en <;tort• at
16..$ 7S Harbor Blvd 1old pol 11.·t"
someone entered thc bu<.iness
Wednesda>. . grabbt-d a canon o.f
Marlboro 100 cigarettes and left
without pa)ing. The th1ef0ed an a red
I Q84 pickup trul·l. The lo~" wa~
estimated at $7 QQ. • • • I\ student at Los -\m1go-; High
· hool. I 656ti Ne"'hopc . t . rcponed
Wednesda) that someone placed a
trtt trunk under the rear axle of has
red 1977 Toyota pickup and 'ilolc the
rear tares and nms. worth about $300
The 'ltudent was at a graduation part)
when the theft foo._ place. • • • Someone tned to brt'ak. into a rust-
colored 198 I Chevrokt Ci talion
parked 1n an apartment carport on the
17000 bloctt of n Bruno. a 'l'n1dent
reponcd Wrdnesday The bufllar drd
not gain cntl') but did S IOOdam c lo
lhc lcc)'WI) •nd the window tnm
Newport Beula
woman rcponC'd that he rr-
cc1 vcd an obscene telephone c.ll from
a m n wi\h a youna· undanJ vottt • • • A stc~o syS1em ''alucd at SSOO V.'l.S
'ltolen from a BMW parked 11
NcwS'Qrt Center • • • .\ ~ix-pack of 8udv.'t1scr beer v.u
stolen from a con,cmenoc lore on
the I 00 block of Bafbol Boulevard-.,..
• • • Someone stole an $~!)(1 car sll•rel'
trom a 1980 To,ota l re<,<.1Ja par~ed
near the tenn1scoUTt<. ot ( 1nldcn \\ l'St
College \\ ednc\da' night ••• -\ shoplifter "as apprehended at a
Target store. Q~8~ .\Jam<. \\edne-;-
da) e'emng The man \llJ\ c1tl'<i and
released. and the S 17 BB gun hl'
alleged I\ stok \\a'> n•nn ern1
••• -\burglar <;tole S4 "' an la'h trom a
IQ 4 red Ma1da pil l.up trucl
Wednt'sdll) l'\C'ning I hC' '1c11m. a
resident ol th<' I ~lOO blt'M. k of Holh
. . .
-\ hurp.lar "''I<' SI 41w 1 v. orth nt
\ldt•o ~u1rmrn1 and a d1anH1nd n ng
v.nnh SI 'tl(t trnm .1homr 1n the\ \()(I
hlol" I. M T l'm f'l' . . .
~ome"nc <.l• ill .111 hlllf "heel-; from
.1 brand nr\I. 1 ·>~'> blacl. < or\' c-ne
"'h1ch v.a~ f\Jf,l'd ''n the-{ orm1cr-
Dc.·llill1 c hl'' "'kl l<'l I 211 Stach. \\ni ne~;"
. . -Mesa police seize eight
in Estancia vandalism
-\n estimated s~. 50C) an broken
w1ndov.<. and othl"r damage\ ~ere
rcponcd th!\ v.CC'k :1t a 1-stan<'tm High
hool. whtf'C' ( o<.ta Me..a police \aid
a student prank apparent!\ get out ol
hand
om~~ rt~pond1na to a \llC'nt
alarm earl) Monda) dcuunl"d ~vcn
student found in the vicinit" ofthe
Placentia 4'vcnue hool "" adult
also v.a arre tC'd on \U pmon of
drunken dm ins and "° ~'lsion o( a
~~dJ> v.eipon
Oflktr Chns Mom \11d a hchcot1:
tcr and !IC>mt' patrol car\ """Crt dis·
patchtd about ! 10 am .. af\n a
buflla'r! alarm 't\U.ln~ b' $0mC-
OM ~mpeor1n ""llh IM JOOt' to the'-
hool'Homputef room
t'C\llCC aided b' the htllcopt.er.
c ha~ \f\t"ral l <11"' and dfllHncd
'°m(' ~tuden1<., whf1 wctt latC'I' re
lca~d rn thl•1r f'31'l'OI' ''°m' u1d ~)It \uttc" "'ere-u~
10 hreal. 1hmua,h tht' f': di°' kt'd pll'\
at E~t.ancia w1ndo"" \\\"rt hrokcn
and cha1M wttt p1l~d 1n th<' ~n101
quad wuh1n the ~hoot bualdina H~ 5ild MC offiett ~.... about I
doren tetn-a,.en rush1na ...... , from
the sctne m a \mill motonzed can.'
u'!C'd b' hoot ma1nlenat1Ct" worker\
The cart ..... \ f'«o,cttd
l!i.tanna :admin1strator1 failed to
return ~<.'' C'ral 1rlcphont calli
\\ edncsd.:l' ;and th1\ monun h v.--a:
not C'lear 1t 1hc· 'l"hoo1 "'' p~nn1n1
in) J1~1phn1" 11..llon
-
I
I
-~ ---
A' Or1nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, JuM 20. 1985
6 Americans killed in Salvador
At least 13 killed as gunmen s pray 2 outdoor· Myra Barr ad as. W n n g W1tne~Sl'S said many of the lllJured
spokeswoman. identified the men as were taken uway by relatives or
George Viney. based in Coral Gables. lnends bcfon• ambulances amved
Fla .. and Robert Alvidrez.. based 1n The Mannes were seated at a
Lowell. She said the company had no sidewalk tabk when the gunmen
further information. "pulled up in automobiles. hopped
---------J.. cafes with a utomatic fire: 2 Ma rin es unhurt
SAN SALVADOR. El Salvador
(AP) -Gunmen disguised as
Salvadoran soldiers sprayed two
cm.wded outdeor eafcs with auto-
matic weapons fire, killing at least 13
people -including four U.S.
Marines and two othtr Amencans.
officials said.
Salvadorans also were killed in the.
attack. W1lhams said earlier. Wil-
liams said two Mannes esca_pe9
· ury: He said it w~ ear-lfthe
attack was directed at the Mannes.
"At this point it appears to ha ve
been an act of random terrorism," he
said. He characterized the gunmen as
·•a squad of guerrillas dressed as
though they were members of the
Salvadoran armed forces." •
The Pentagon identified three of out and began spraying" patrons of
the Mll'l"t"nt -m Sgt. Thomas1.-theafelocate(jil\'2onrRosa, an area
Handwork. 24. of Boardman. Ohio: of ~1ghtclubs and restaurant in the
Cpl. Gregory H. Webber, 22, of capital. Th.ey esca~ in a. pickup
Cincinnati, Ohio; and Sgt. Bobby J. truck, Walhams said. He sa~d there
Dickson. 27. of Tuscaloosa, Ala. were between s1>. and 10 assailants.
AH the Marines at the cafes
Wednesday night were embassy
guards in civilian clothes. said U.S.
Embassy spokesman James Wil-
liams. The United States has Marine
auard.s at all its embassies.
Handwort..'s father. J .R. Handwork A waiter said that when he first saw
Four Guatemalans and five
Officials of Wa ng Laboratories in
Lowell. Mass .. said that two of Its
American employees were killed in
the attack.
of Beavercreek, Ohio. said his gQn the assailants, ht'. thought th1:} were
had recently re-enlisted with the conducting a military document
Mannes. Handwork said his son. the check. fhe assailants said nothing
oldest offive children. wanted to be a and cu!>tomers didn't react until the
Manne "since he was old enough to shootmg began. he said. It lasted
talk and walk." about 15 minutes. he said.
Mengele ID '99% sure'
Doctors , offi cials question ing
3 hosts about teeth , medicine
SAO PAU bQ.Jlrazil -A West German consular
official says his country's police are .. 99 percent sure" that
a skeleton exhumed in a Sao Paulo suburb is that of Nazi
death ca~p doctor Josef Mengcle.
Meanwhile, Douglas Catan, a spokesman for the Sao
Paulo coroner's office, said results of tests to identify 1e
skeleton could be announced Friday.
The West German official. who spoke onJ~ on
condition he not be identified, said Wednesda) that "rwo
dozen indicators" used in attempts to identify the Nazi war
cri minal were positive. iricluding "the pattern of the story.
the testimony. what was found in the grave."
Later Wednesday, however. assistant cu~ mor&ue
director Jose Antonio de Mello said pos1uve 1dcnuficauon
of tbe skeleton may not be possible. ,
''It could be that we cannot give a name to the
remains," he said. Israeli officials and several Nazi hunters
also have said they are skeptical of repons the dead man 1s
Menge le.
Mengele. who would be 74 if alive, is blamed for
sending more than 400,000 people to their deaths at the
.\uschwuz prison camp in Poland during World War II.
The skeleton purported to be his was exhumed June 6
from a grave in the small town of Em bu. 17 miles outside
of Sao Paulo. Wolfram and Llselotte Bossen , Austrian
immigrants, have told police a man they believe was
Mengele was buried in the grave after drowning at an
Atlantic Ocean resort on Feb. 7, 1979.
On Wednesday, doctors questioned Gitta Stammer
and the Bosserts, who claim to ha ve harbored Mengele in
Brazil.
Stammer. a Hungarian immigrant. said doctors asked
her "about diseases, (the alleged Mengele's) teeth and what
kind of medicine he took." She said she told them he took
only aspirin and one of his legs was larger than the other
because of an infection.
The Bossens told expens the man they identified as
Mengele had has teeth treated in Brazil, according to
Munoz. who said investigators were trying to locate the
dentist for questioning.
Forensic tests already have revealed that the body
belonged to a male about 5 feet. 8 inches tall. Mengele has
been described as 5 feet. 71 ~ inches tall.
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Wolf ram and Llaelotte 1k>e•-
ert queationed ln Brazil
Satanic
deaths
probed
TOLEDO. Oht0 (A P) -A sheriff
said today that work crews will dig up
parts of woods and fields in a Toledo
suburb in a search for as many as 50 to
60 p<;ople he believes may have been
buried there .
Luca s County Sheriff James Telb
said an imestigataon of the Spencer
Township sne began three months
ago when a woman told deputies she
saw children slain in satanic rituals.
The woman has not been identified.
Workers were to begin using hea v)
earth-moving equipment in the area
today. he said.
The sheriff said bodies may have
been huncd there O\ er a 16-year
penod.
Telb said he believes a satanic
group held regular meetings attended
by up to 200 people and used a satanic
calendar that called for live sacnfices
a year.
Telbd1d not immediately efaborate
on why deputies believed bodies
would be found at the sne nonh of the
city, or how they estimated the
number of bodies that might be
buried.
He characLenzed the group as a
splinter group of a non-tradiuonal
satanic cult.
"Tradiuonal cults use animals.
Non-trad1t1onal cul ts sacrifice chil-
dren and human beings." Telb said.
He said he believes the cult has been
active in the Toledo area. in nonh-
west Ohio. smce 1969.
A house near the site was searched
today. but nothing was found. Tel b
had said he suspected a raid on the
house would yield shotguns. drugs
and cult-related paraphernalia.
The house is owned by a man
sought an th e disappearance of his
granddaughter more than two years
ago, Telb said.
Death aura
hangs over
compound
WEST POINT, Calaf. -An "aura
of death" hangs over a mountain
compound where a survivalist has
been li nked to 22 missing or dead
people. and investigators say they
may dig up the entire area in search of
more bodies.
"It's very tedious work, it's emo-
tionally draining." Calaveras County
sherifTs spokesman Jim Stenqujst
said Wednesday. "The aura of death
1s there. the stench of death. A lot of
(workers) aren't sleeping well." .
Top defense contractors
investigated for bribes
By The A11oela &ecf Preu
WAS HI NGTON (AP)-The Pentagon is investigating 45 of th~ nation's ~5l' ro.o.traetors-i.Mlvd~ninr ..of tho-&.op •• J.O -for allega~that
include bnbery, kickbacks and bid-rigging, according to .DefCnS< Department
docOments. A hst identifying 36 of the corporauons was prepared by Defense
Depanmenl Inspector General Joseph H. Sherick at the re~uest .of Rep: John
D. Dingell. D-Mich .. who released the report today. Shenck said he did oot
release names of the other nine companies b:ecausc t~ey were not .aware they
were under criminal 1nves11gat1on .. Dingell said. ldenufied companies includes
such firms as McDonnell Douglas Corp., Rockwell I ntemat1onal Corp.,
Lockheed Corp .. Boeing Co .. General l)ynamics, General Elcctnc. Grumman,
Sperry Corp .. and Litton lnd~stries.
Shuttle launches p r obe of Mll~y Way
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. -Discovery's astronauts today laun~he~ a
science satellite to search for a mys teri ous black hole tha~ may be swallowing
stars and cosmic dust in great gulps at the core of the ~alky Way. The space
agency also said the crew wi ll have another chance on Fnda} to conduct a "Star
Wars" laser test ruined on the. first ti) by an embarrassing goof at M1ss1on
Control. The m1xup occurred when Mission Control fe~ the ship's c<;>mputer
instructions in feet instead of nauu'cal miles. Discovery. instead of pointing at
a 9, 954-fool mountain•pcak in Hawaii, began searching for a non-existent peak
9,954 miles in space .
Nicaraguan Embassy bums Jn Washington
WASHINGTON -A deliberately set fire did $30.000 to SS0,000 in
damage to the Nicaraguan Embassy early today. Distncl of Columbia lire
offic1alssa1d. Police said the building was broken into. and the fire started when
towels and a chair in the embassy's anteroo~ and an ~djoining bathroom :-"ere
set afire. An embassy spokeswoman. Sarah Porta. said the embassy considers
"this a direct result of high-level threats by the Reagan adm1nistrat1on .against
Nicaragua."
Reagan plans draw fire from mayors
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -The nation's mayors shelved party differences
to attack President Reagan's budget and tax proposal~ saying the plan would
leave cities floundering financially. "I think our messages are clearer th.an the>_
have been for a long, long time because we are more together on the issues.
said New Orleans Mayor Ernest Morial. president of the U.S. Conference of
Mayors. The 160 mayors urged Congress Wednesday ·to continue three
programs that Reagan wants to cut: deductions for state and local taxes on
federal P.Crsonal income tax. general revenue shari ng. and the tax-e empt
status of'mun1c1pal development bonds.
Grasshoppers plague Idaho's farmers
BOISE. Idaho -Federal aid may be too late to save man) farmers from
financial doom as a wave of crop-munching grasshoppel'S lays waste 10 almost
5 million acres of range and farmland on the state's southern edge. Gov. John
Evans says. He expected two Air Force C-123 aircraft to arrive today from
Ohio. where they were being outfitted to assist in the aenal war on the hoppers. "~•-'ve sprayed three times ourselves. and they j ust keep coming in," said Jack
Harman, who runs 1.500 acres near Rupen. "You t·an driw down the road,
and that grain 1s just black. covered with grasshoppers."
Spy defendant cries 'crocodile tears'
LOS ANGELES-I\ government prosecutor angrily accused tbe Russian
woman defendant in a spy tnal of crying calculated tears to sway JUrors who
heard anti mate details of her sex life with an FBI agent. Assistant U.S. Attorney
Bruce Merritt complained to the ;udge after Svetlana Ogorodnikov wept
quietly through the mo t personal testimony yet by her former lo ver. Richard
W. Miller. "This amounts to testimony, not under oath. that a witness is lying
and that he is upsetting her:· Merritt said after 1urors had left the room. "Th as
is prejudicial to the government.''
Teen arrested Jn chemical auault on bas
LOS ANGELES -A I 5-year-old continuauon school student "'as
arrested for investigai1on of assault after 14 j unior high students were spra) ed
with an Mace-li ke aerosol aboard a school bus. The students suffered eye. nose.>
and throat imtation Wednesday during the 3 p.m. incident on a bus returning
to East Los Angeles from the San Fernando Valle} School officials said the~
had not determined the mot I\ e for th~ttack.
Record fine for San Jose nursing home
SAN JOSE -Owners of a nursing home have serious questions with state
allegations that "sex 1s rampant" at the facility. including charges of
prostitution and rape. an attorney for the center said. "We think there are some
serious questions about the accuracy of (the reports)." said Jay Hanz, an
attorney for El Dorado Guidance Center. The stale ttealth Depanment
Tuesday slapped the center wnh a $92.250 fine. the largest in Calfornia's
history. According to a state'rcport, men paid cigarettes, candy bars or a dollar
to have sex with one woman patient, and other women were raped by
employees and patients
2 dead in Squaw Valley copter crash
SQUAW VALLEY -Two ~ople were killed in the crash of a helicopter
that was helping dismantle a ski hft. Yict1ms' names were not released pending
notification of next of kin. A Squaw Valley Fire Department spokesman said a
pilot and one other person were on the craft when 1t fell and burst into flames
1n a partially wooded area late Wednesday. In vestigators of the Federal
Av1at1on Administra•ion were examining the wreckage today.
San Dlego 's earthquake strlng rolls along
SAN DIEGO-A minor earthquake hit San Diego early today. the latest
1n a swarm ~f. trem.ors that ~ave rattled the nat ion's eighth-largest cit} thi~
week. author1t1cs said. Todays quake wa,,t..centered about four miles southeast
of downtown and struck at 4:56 a.m . rc~iStering 2.9 on the Richter scale. sau.1
Dennis Meredith of the California Institute of Technolog} 1n Pasadena No
damage or 1n1unes were reoorted.
WORLD
I German police see.t airport bomber
FRANJS,.FURT, West Germany -Police said today they were searching
for a YQUng man seen running from the terminal shortly bcfort a bomb blast
that killed three people at Frankfurt airport. A J>Qlice spokesman said the man
was seen jumping into a dark blue Mercedes sedan Wednesday afternoon and speedln~ away from continental Europe's busiest airport. No one has claimed
responsibility for the bomb and the actual target of the attack is unknown.
K~ng'• opponent. bomb Nepal palace
KATMANDU, Nepal -Five bombs exploded in quick succession today
at government buildings, the royal palace and in a hotel lobby. killing fi ve
people and woundutg 25. police reported. Radio Nepal said King B1rendra
called an emergency meeting of the National Assembly, where one of the
bombs killed an assembly member and critically wounded three. The
explosions 'occurred the day after the king warned proponents of a return to
multipany governmcn't that he was determined to thwart any "attempt 10
undermine peace and order" in the Himalayan kingdom.
lnvesugators have spent two weeks
in near 100-degrce heat searching for
bodies in the case that so far has led to
the rcm&Jns of six people and piles of
unidentified bones. None of the six ae.t.IJ toll In CU bla•t mount. to 80 mostly skeletal remains have been
------
identified.
The best prc$Crved of the bodies
was unearthed Tuesday, but even that
has been difficult to 1dent1fy.
Cala veras County Coroner Boyd
tephens says the v1ct1m was dcnd
less than a year.
But tcphens was definite that the
latest body was not that of Charles D.
Gunnar. an ex-marine who was a
BEI RUT. Lebanon -A rc<tVolvo car packed with explo ives blew up
outside a candy store in the northern port of Tripoli where Moslcms had
gathered to huy sweets for a feast. killina at least 60 people and wounding I 00.
police said today. Rescue workets searched throuah the rubble all night for
more victims and divers scoured the nearby Mecfitemne,n Sta for bodies
thrown into the water by the blast. Amons the 60 dead wtrc two muti13ted
bodies pulled from the~ today, rescuers said.
friend of Leonard Lake. the OSLO. Norway -Ame Tttholt, who held high post in the Forcian
surv1vah t who lived in the Calaveras M1n1stry and other aovernment departments. wa convicted of spytni for the
t"ountyC'lb1n. Gonnar, a large man. is--sov1et ltnion today and smtmctd \0 tfte maximum pnton term of 20 years.
among the missing and it had been Chief Judie Astri Rynnina. who •read the ~ntcnet to a packed and t11htly
rtported that his was the si.llth body auarded courtroom. said the former diplomat was fo und 'uilty on all but one
uncanhcd at the "tc. of the more than 40countst~ apinst him 1n a I S-(>l)le indictment. The 20.
"There's no poss1b1hJy the ~ year sioson.. term was thcmuJmunucntc~ lfnekr ~orwqian taw. 'Tnilotr
even re'ltltlbfes that size or a man, • also was ordmd to forfeit SS0.000 confiscated from a wi 6ank account and
Stephtnci ~1d. • SS0.000, prostcuto,, id he camN'.t by ,py1na.
•
•
. -·----·-·----
/ Orange eo..t DAILY PILOT/Thurldmy, June 20, 1111
Lukewarm inflation rate holds
Commeree Department says economy
lsgrowtngatannual rateof3. l percent
WASHINGTON (AP) -Con-
sumer pricesedacd upjus\ 0.2 percent
last month, dampened by a second
"""'r.ai_eb1 drop.Jn ~ a~ ea~iog in the spnngtime gasoline
pncc surge, the government reponed
today.
~si~es the slowing in gasoltne
pncc increases, new and used car
prices fell, making transponation
costs in general "largely responsible
for the moderation" in the overall
calculation, the Labor Dcpanment
re n said.
Private analysts said such low
inflation figurcs could continue
through the summer ll)i\_ that no
rciJ surges are in s1ght10ri'he
rest of the year.
In a sepa~te rcpon, the Commerce
Dcpartmen estimated that the econ-
omy is grow1 g at an annual rate of
3.1 percent in the still-unfinished
second quaner.
Taken together with the C PI calcu-
lat1on, the GNP, which was up from a
small 0.3 percent growth in the first
quarter, suggests the possibility of
24 · · optic swirl lamp
renewed economic a;rowth without a
rckmdling of inflation.
The 3.1 percent rate, which wall be
revised several times. was better than
most projections and holds out hope
that the economy could yet exceed a 3
percent growth rate for the year. The
RCIPI' · iatra ion f~
arowtht>f 3. 9 percent or all of 1985.
On Wednesday, a forecast from
Standard and Poor's Corp. suuested
the trend of low or nonexistent food-
pricc gains would continue. That
repon said a warm, moist spring had
raised chances for bumper crops later
in the year, mcanina no supply
~ that ~ :...dri.Yc prices' a&her.
In May, today's Labor Depanment
consumer price rcpon said, food
prices fell 0.1 percent followina a 0.2
percent decline in April and no
increase in March. Prices bad fallen
through the p~ina nine months.
May's food price decline included
decreases of 1.2 percent for meats.
poultry. fish and eggs and I. I percent
for frullS and vcaetables.
ioday's Labot: Dcpanment pncc
report said psoline costs rote O.S
percent in May, much less than the
3.1 percent April' jumf that had
helped drive the overal Consumer
Price Index up 0.4 percent for that
month. Gasoline prices have risen 7.4
percent in the last three months but
arc still 11 .2 percent below their peak
level of March 1981.
OUR FIVE NEWEST
PRICELESS AT
$125 TO $185
Imagine the bnlliance Multi-faceted full
lead crystal trimmed in gleaming brass to form a
lamp shooting beams m every direction Here is
art ln lts very own spotlight. mouthblown.
handcut. wtth a value that endures like the
Waterford legend itself Our tive newes1 Waterford
table lamps are trom a collection that grows
continually bigger and brighter and represent a
group valuable not only for practical prices but
tor new gi.tt-qiving potential. Honor someone with
crystal and llght!·Remember to ask about our
Waterford Club Plan. Robinson's Water1ord
Crystal. 142. all stores except Palm Springs. To
order. call toll-tree 1-800-345-8501. 24 hours a
day Please add S3 service charge for deliveries
Rob1nsorrs
' '
Dr. Lonnie Brlatow
18 Lismore budvase lamp
16 ·petite vase lamp S!So
.
AMA board
elects blac~
CHICAGO (AP)-Election of the
first black to the American Meicliql
Association•s boud of tn11teet is a
landmart for the AMA ind will lead
to more minority penicipetion in the 260 000.membet . . AMA
de . -Dr. Lonn.ie J( Bristow, a specialist
in internal medicine from Berkeley,
on Wednesday became one of 14
trustees, who ovenec a $12S million
annual bu.t.
"I think It's a landmark, .. said Dr.
Audley F. Connor Jr .• a dcl_etatc from
Chicqo. "Whal wu 1urpris1na to me
was the support he bad frOm the
South, the Southeast and tbc South-
west pans oftbc country."
15 round lamp S 145
YOU CAN NOW CHAllGI YOUR ROllNSON'S POICHASI ON THI~ EXPRESS CARD ~--i:---.-----~-· --.rAS ~AS YOUR 109INSON'S CUDIT ~D._
_, r • • j \ . . . .. ,
A8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Th"radav. June 20, 1985
ALL
BEGINS 9:00A.M. FRIDAY. SA
..
FOCUS SPORTSvVEAR
30% OFF
COLORFUL PLA YCLOTHES FROM
YOUR FAVORITE WOMAN
DESIGNER.
Designed with your good times tn mind. Color -
block T shirt with dolman sleeves. S-M·L, orig
35.00, 23.99. Twill pleated short, sizes 4 to 14,
orig. 36.00, 24.91. Assorted colors. Focus
Sportswear, 456/ 198.
Save 30%: On cool, summer separates from
your favorite woman designer. Dept. 198/456.
Orig. 28 00 to 44.00 18.99 to 29.99
Save 25% to 33%: On two styles of print
separates in rayon. Assorted colors. Dept. 441 .
Reg. 48.00 to 68.00 . 35.99 to 46.99
Save 25% to 33%: On skirts, 1ackets and knit
tanks from C.M .I. Dept. 44 1. Reg. 38.00 to
68.00 . . . 24.99 to 49.99
Save 33%: Cotton knit and cotton/linen
separates from Cygne Design. In white. coral
and purple. Includes jackets, tanks, skirts,
pants Dept. 441 . Reg. 30.00 to 66.00
. 11.99 to 42.99
PLAZA SPORTSWEAR
25% OFF
JANTZEN COORDI NATES IN COOL
POPLIN AND SEERSYCKER.
Fresh seersucker and poplin coordinates in blue,
pink and white. Cotton /polyester sizes 8 to 18,
S-M L Seersucker crop top. Orig. 30.00, 21.99.
Seersucker pull-on short. Orig. 32.00, 21.99.
Anchor polo. Orig 30.00, 21.99. Pull-on shons.
Ong. 28.00, 19.99. Plaza Sportswear.
S.ve 25%: Catalina summer playwear in sizes 8
to 16 or S M·L XL . Dept. 162. Orig. 20.00 to
50 00 . . 14.99 to 31.91
S.ve 25%: Embroidered T-shirts, square neck
or tohnny collar, sizes S-M -L. Dept. 149. Orig.
16.00 . . . . 11.11
S.ve 25%: Famous maker embroidered and
eyelet blouses by Rhoda Lee, Teddi and Div1-
s1on II, sizes 8 to 18 Dept. 66. Ong. 24 QO
.. -17.19
S.ve 27%: Pacquette 1umpsuits in summer
brights Sizes 6 to 16. Dept. 135 Orig. 30.00
. ---··· ......... 21•
S.ve 26%: Summit spltt skirt 1n spirited colors.
Red, fuchsia, blue, khaki, white or gray. Sizes 8
· to 18 Dept. 442 Ong 30.00 21.M
\ ----------I .
SPORTSWEAR BO'S
S.ve 33%: On silk noile separates for fall from
Pieces 'N Parts. 'In black. persimmon, emerald,
and deep violet. Sizes 6 to 14. Jackets. skirts,
pants, shirts. and sweaters. Dept. 443. Orig.
28.00 to 66.00 ................. 17.99 to 43.99
S.ve 21%: On cotton/poly printed separates
from Jean Baptiste. Dept. 125. Orig. 40.00
....................... '' ............. 29.99
Spedel purcheae: Crinkle cotton gauze warm-
up with short sleeves. In white, yellow, red,
jade, turquoise, plum, and navy. From Sport-
sphere. Dept. 6 . . . .................... 29.99
S.Ve 21%: On casual pants in cotton from
Sasson. In silver, white, red, blacK, and yellow.
Sizes 6 to 16. Dept. 252. Orig. 27.00 ..... 19.99
S.ve 21%: Cotton polo print T-shirts from
Systems by Fenn Wright and Manson. In white,
green, jade, red, a~alea., gold, and orange. S-
M-L. Dept. 252. Orig. 22.00 ............. 17.99
S.ve 21%: On crinkle cotton separates from a
famous maker . In white, yellow, cobalt and
fuchsia. Sizes 6 to 16. Dept. 78. Orig. 28.00 to
40.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ 19.99 to 29.99
Save 21%: On bright shorts and T's from a
famous maker. Sizes 6 to 16, S-M-L. Dept. 78.
Orig. 27.00 ............................ 19.99
SPECIAL SIZES
11.99 AND 19.99
SPECIAL PURCHASE : AILEEN
T-SHIRT AND SHORT.
Summer essentials. Our color block T-shirt,
19.99. Tea med w ith interlock short with elastic
waist, 11 .99. Easy-care cotton/polyester. Sizes
38 to 44. More Woman, 279.
Special purchase: Voulez-Vous over-sized
striped campshirt, sizes 38 to 44. Dept. 127
. . . . . ' ...................... · ....... 19.99
Special purchase: Pantmaker shorts in red,
white, blue or khaki, sizes 38 to 44. Dept. 127.
. '. . . .12.99
Save 25%: Josephine campshirts .in blue,
green , red or ivory, sizes 38 to 44 . Dept. 127.
Reg. 28.00 ........ . . . . ............. 19.99
S.ve 26%: Cherokee pants with an elastic
waist, gathered pockets. Khaki, white, blue and
red. Dept. 127. Reg. 37.00 . . . ......... 21.•
Speclel purcheae: More Woman jog sets in
turquoise, white or yellow polyester/cotton, 38
to 44. Dept. 127 . . . . . . . . . ....... 21.•
S.ve 21%: Catalina summer sportswear for
sizes 38 to 44 . Dept .. 279. Orig. 23.00 to 37 .00
..... : ................... 11.M to 21•
S.ve 21%: On Aileen activewear for More
Woman sizes 38 to-44. Includes terry striped
tops, pull-on shorts. clamdiggers and scoopneck
T-shirts. Pink, aqua and white. Dept. 279. Orig.
23.00 to 37.00 . . . . . . . . . . . ... 11.M to 21.•
DRESSES
Sped.a purchae: Cotton dresses in summer
colors. Dept . 49 /73 ..................... 31.M
S.Ve 21%: Cotton full-skirt dress from Robbie
Bee. Sizes 6 to 14 in assorted colors. Dept. 21 .
Orig. 56.00 ............................ 31 ••
COSMETIC ACCESSORIES
S.V. 30% to~ On Revlon's nail grooming
kits for men and women. Dept. 118. Reg. 12.00
to 25.00 .. . .... ,7• to 1 ...
leve IO'M.: On two-way vanity mirrors. Dept.
118. 5 1 /2" OVfl. Reg. 6.00 . . . . . . . . . . . ~.
8" round. Reg. 12.00 . . . .. . .. . . . -: . . . . l•
leve 40%: On our 12-piece travel cosmetic
brush sets 0. 118. Reg. 12.50 . . . . . ...... 7.41
JUNIORS
16.99
OUR COLORFUL KNIT MINI
DRESSES FOR SUMMER .
Orig. 24.00. Bask in the sheer pleasure of our
daring little dresses of cool cotton/polyester.
Yours in black, white, turquoise, pink or red.
Sizes S,M ,L; 3 to 13. Juniors, 85.
Grett value8: A selection of clingy cotton rib
knit tops, pants and short skirts from Judy
Knapp. Dept. 97, 129 .......... 11.99 to 14.99
Spedel purcheae: On our cotton bustier dress
in summer solids. Dept. 64 . . . . . . . . . . . 34.99
Save 30% to 35%: On selected casual pants
and sleeveless shirts. Dept. 521129. Orig. 20.00
to 30.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12.99 to 19.99
Save 25%: On Sasson's pure cotton sheeting
shorts. Dept. 236. Orig. 20.00 . . 14.99
INT/MA TE APPAREL
SA VE 20% TO 30%
FAMOUS MAKER BRAS AND
FOUNDATIONS, 7.99 TO 11 .99
Reg . 12.00 to 16.00. Our very best names like
Maidenform, Warner's, Lily of France,
Vassarette, Olga, Vanity Fair, Bali, Subtract,
Lilyette. Christian Dior lntimates and more.
Shown from our collection: The Lace Artistry
underwire bra #4375, in white, nude, oyster, 34
to 38, B,C, 32 to 38 D. Reg. 14.00 to 15.00,
9• to 11.M. Bras. 19.
S.ve 21% to 40%: All Myonne and Pam pan-
ties in.our collection. Dept. 260. Reg. 3.50 ea .
. . . . . . . . . . ............... 1115.00 or 12/24.00
S.Ve 21%: On the Vassaratte panty shaper.
Dept .. 139. Reg . 13.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.19
&eve 21%: On the Hikini by Vanity Fair in
white, beige, candleglow or black. Dept. 139.
Reg. 6.50 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.99
S.ve 1/J: Emil Bole sheer lace teddy. Dept.
=~ 0{l g~:a· ei~ii~ ~ti·~-i;i<~·~1~~p~hiri~119
pink, blue polyester. Dept. 288. Orig. 21.00
...................... •' ............. 13.ft
a.ve 112: Famous maker summer shifts and
&undresses. Dept. 67. Orig. 22.00 to 30.00
............................. 14.• to 11.19
S.V. 40%: Our exclusive long plisse robe.
Dept. 61 . 011g . 45.00 .............•..... 21.•
leve ~ On our entire collection of Barbizon
cotton/pe>lyester sleepwear. Dept. 24. Orig
32.00 to 38.00
. ............................. 11• to 23 .•
left JllM»: Our California Dynasty gauze
loung• dresses in turquoise, fuchsia, jadf, lilac,
red, black or white. Dept. 67. Orig. 40.00 .a•
S.ve 111: Our exclusive classic pajamas. Dept .
24. Orig. 14.00 ................ -...... I ••
•
FASHION ACCESSORIES
45.99
CLASSIC PHILLIPPE LINEN
HANDBAGS.
Orig. 69.00 to 70.00. The sophisticated sumrr
accessory. Cool linen bags with sleek leathe
trim. In four styles: triple compartment,
envelope shoulderbag, luggage handle and S<
chel. Trimmed in bone, bridal, light and dar1
taupe. Handbags, 172.
Save 20%: On selected textured. hosiery from
Berkshire, Adolfo, Jonathan Aston and more
Dept. 3. Reg . 3.00 to 14.00 ....... 2.40 to 11
Save 50%: White leather and fabric belts for
summer. Classic and updated styling. Dept.
86/449. Reg. 12.00 to 24.00 ..... 5.99 to 11.
Save 50%: Fabric and stretch belts in summe
brights. Dept. 86. Reg. 8.00 to 24.00 . 3.99
11 .99
Save 30%: On ou r three-inch wide cinch belt
with leather tabs in a variety of colors. Dept.
86/449. Reg. 18.00 . . . . . . . . . ........ 11.
Special purchase: Leather checkbook clutche
from A & L Seamon. In ·~el. ostrich and lizarc
textured leather. Dept. 142. . . . . , . . 15.
Save 30%: Our entire stock of semi-precious
jewelry. Includes mother-of-pearl and semi
precious stones. Necklaces, bracelets. and ear
1ngs. Dept. 141. Reg. 15.00 to 50.00
. . . . ..... 10.00 to 35.
Save 50%: Our entire stock of private-label ec:
rings. Drops, hoops, buttons and more. PiercE
and clip. Dept. 20. Reg. 10.00 to 12.50
......... 4.99 to 5
50% OFF
OUR ENTIRE COLLECTION OF
PRIVATE-LABEL EARRINGS.
The latest looks at half the price. Choose fro•
drops, hoops, buttons and more. Both pierce
and clip. Reg . 10.00 to 12.50, 4.99 to 5.ft .
Fashion Jewelry, 20.
Special purehue: Checkbook secretaries, at·
taches and swagger clutches from Rolfs. In ta
wine and blue. Dept. 142 ........ 7.99 to 16.'
Save 33%: On selected leotards and leg
warmers from famous makers. Dept. 223. Reg
10.50 to 32.00 .................. •·• to 20.
Special purchMe: Leather shoulder bags in
contemporary styles from B.H. Smith. In sum·
mer colors. Dept. 422 ................... 11 ..
Special purcheH: Vinyl clutches in a vitriety •
styles from Toni. Summer colors. Dept. 37 . I .
Special pwchw: Fine leather handbags in
classic styles from Ganson. White, bone, ash
and black. Dept. 172 ................... a
Special pwchme: Classic linen handbags fror
Phillippe. Leather trim in bone, bridal, light eni
dark taupe. Four.styles. Dept.. 172~ ....... 41.!
8pedel pwcft.M1: Summer banja bags from
Leather Express . Dept. Xl.7 .............. 12.:
8pedel purchaae: Pleated nylon bags f ram
Jordache. Durable, roomy. Dept. 227 ..... 11.:
S.ve 33%: On Pierre Cardin signature handba•
in tan, taupe, navy, and black. Dept. 179. RI{
66.00 and 78.00 .............. 43.• Md M .!
S.ve 40%: On textured vinyl handbags from
Jordache. Satchels, hobos, shoulderbags, moi
White, bone, taupe, royal, red, grey and black
Dept. 37. Orig. 26.00 to 33.00 ... 14.• to 11.!
ap.aW purchM1: S~lected natural strew hats
with bands in a variety of colors. From f1mou1
makers. Dept. 263 .............. I• to 12.t
•v• ~ to IO'M.: Selected scarves and bod\'
wraps. Dept. 41 . Orig. 12.00 to 28.00
. . . ·-.............. l.llto 17.!
a.ve 20%: On all Dim hosrery. lncludet sheer,
~m-~~~~ .~~~ .t~~~~~~·. ~.e.pt. .3. ~1.e:·: ~
S.V. 20%: On all Berkshire queen·slH hoeiefv
Sheert and control-tops. Dep.t. 3. R99. 3. 76 tc
4.25 ............................ J.• to I.·
TH!
Laguna,Hllla.: 241
-er
20
99
to
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Sen 33% to 50%: On white and spectator
:. jewelry from Mone.t . ., Necklaces, bracelets,
:; eerrings and pins. Dept. 11 1. Orig. 8.00 to
•• 60.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 4.99 to 39.99
• S.ve 50%: On natural wood and shell jewelry
, from Encore. Ne-cklaces, bracelets and earrings.
• Dept. 20. Reg. 7.00 to 30.00 ...... 3.49 to 14.99
Sped.a purchase: On glitzy fashion rittgs w ith
faux pearls and stones from Orion. Dept. 20
.... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9.99
Speciel purchase: On sterJing silver earrings
and silver-plated bead necklaces. Dept. 141
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.99 to 15.99
Sped9I purchMe: On cubic zirconia rings, ear-
rings and pendants in round, oval, marquise,
and pear shapes .. 25 ct. to 5 ct. From
Giambelli. Dept. 141 . . . . . ...... 8.99 to 19.99
SHOES
23.99
ESPRIT'S LEATHER CASUAL
Orig. 37.00. Esprit's leather huarache,
"'Margarita." Junior Shoes. 75.
99 •
S.ve 1/3: On our woven espadrille in summer
colors. Dept. 140. Orig. 30.00 . . . . . . . . ... 19.99 •
S.ve 30%: On ~van Picone's open toe
'
MEN 'S SPORTSWEAR
S.ve 33% to 31%: On summery short·sleeve
woven spo shirts from Sasson, Joel. Oleg
Cassini, ow, Frank and more. Dept. 21::J/41 7.
Re .00 to 25.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.99
e 1/3: On a knit sportshirt collection from a
French designer and Paul d' Avril. Dept., 212.
Reg. 25.00 to 30.00.. . ... 15.99 to 19.99
S.ve 30%: On classic striped and solid Arrow
knit sportshirts. Dept .• SO. Reg. 19.00 . . 12.99
S.ve 27% to 47%: On Sasson and Arrow Car-
riage Trade long sleeve w oven sportshirts in
assorted pattern s. Dept. 417. Reg. 22.00 to
30.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.99
Saye 33%: On shorts from Recess, Cadaz and
Sportsphere. Dept. 109. Reg: 17.00 to 28.00
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.99 to 17.99
S.ve 21%: On Haggar's belted pinfeather
slacks. Dept. 182. Reg. 28.00 . . . . . . . . ... 19.99
CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS
espadrille. Dept. 221. Orig. 36.00 . . . . . 24.99 .. ,
S.ve 11.01: On Joyce's sling back sandal w ith •· 99
00
d
n
:l
1
l9
"
" )f
I
"· I
t9 ,
~
" t9
t9
~s
t9
e .
t9
..
et
.,
IO
wood stack wedge "Soldina." Dept. 285. Orig.
48.00 . . . .. .......... 29.99
S.ve 10.01: Comfort casual from Naturalizer
"Nova." Dept. 222. Orig. 37.00 . 29.99
Speciel purchase: On our easy-on-ihe-feet tie
mocassin. Dept., 140 . 29.99
S.ve 12.01: On Nike's leather aerobic shoe
'"Aerofit." Dept. 101 . Ong. 32.00 .. .19.99
Special purchase: On our kicky beaded sandal
"Bandits." Dept. 181 . . . 14.99
•• lave 33%: On Bandohno's strappy leather san·
dal "Ephard ." Dept. 108. Orig. 46.00 ··-29,.99
Save 33%: On Caressa's elegant croS&.strcJp
pump "Network." Dept. to8. Orig. 64.00 .41.99
Save 33%: On the summer sling from Nina
"Susan" on a high heel. Dept.. 249. Ong.
70.00 . . . . 45.99
• Special purchase: Axiom's classic leather
•• pump. Dept. 35. . ...................... 32.99
..
Spedel purchase: On the woven sling from
Cassis on a stacked heel. Dept. 221 . . ... 39.99
S.ve 11.01: On the scalloped side pump from
Jazz "Jalapeno." Dept. 8. Orig. 48.00 .21.99
Spedel pwchue: M ika's closed toe pump in
fashion colors. Dept. 8 .................. 34.99
Spedel pwchue: On our a~ymetrical vamp
pump from Trumps. Dept. 75 ............ 34.99
Speclel pwchue: On A xiom·s daring snake
skin pump. Dept. 35. . . . . . . . . . . . .. 39.99
MEN'S SPORTSWEAR
19.99
FAMOUS MAKER POLO SHIRTS .
Save 28% to 33% on these snappy classics in
cotton pique or interlock knits. Men's Ac·
tivewear, 291 . Reg. 28.00 and 30.00, 11.•.
lave J3%: On Robert Bruce Orton v-neck
sweaters. Dept. 171. Reg. 25.00 ......... 11.21 a.we ~ On swim and beach wear. Trunks,
bikinis, and coordinates: jackets, shirts, vests
end more. Club del Sol, 455. Reg. 15.00 to
38.00 ..........................•.• to~.• lne ~ On Members Only cotton jackets In
White, driftwood. tan or grey. Dept., 217. Reg.
86.00 ················ ................ .... ..,,. 20IMi to 27%: On seasonless belted slacks ~.~nt~.r~. ~na ~~~~· ~~t.' .~~'. ~.~·. ~~:~~:
lave 21%: On B.P. Britches pteated.pophn
"8ck1. Sizes 30 to 36. Dept. 245. Orig. 26.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1•.•
12.99 AND 14.99
ARROW BRIGADE DRESS SHIRTS
Special purchase. Short and long sleeve
Arrow Brigade fitted dress shirts. Men's Dress
Shirts. 218.
Save 38%: French name long sleeve broadcloth
dress shirts 1n white, blue or tan. Dress Shirts,
218. Reg. 25 00 15.99
S.ve 33%: On French designer logo linen
w eave ties. Ties. 122. Reg. 12.00 7.99
Save 21%: On American designer sohd cotton
dress shirts. Long slAeve: full-cut style. Dress
Shirts, 147. Reg. 32.SO . . . . . . . 23.99
S.ve 33% to 31%: On patterned American
designer long sleeve dress shirts Dress Shirts.
147. Orig. 30.00 to 31 .SO . . 19.99
S.ve 30%: On all our Don Loper leather ac-
cessories. Men's Accessories, 220. Reg. 8 .SO to
23.50 . . . . . . ·. . 5.88 to 15.65
S.ve 30% to 40%: On cotton terry velour robes
by a French designer and Diplomat Men's
Robes, 164. Orig . 50 .00 to 60.00 34.99
511,,.. 33%: Aigner long sleeved broadcl-oth
dress shirts in five solid colors. Dress Shirts,
147. Reg. 24.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.99
S.ve 34%: On A igner patterned long slee~ed
dress shirts. Dress Shirts, 147. Ong. 26 00 11.99
S.ve 33%: On patterned designer silk ties. Ties,
122. Orig. 15.00 .... . .9.99
S.ve 39%: On pure silk designer ties in many
patterns . Ties. 225. Ong. 21 .SO 12.99
Special purchase: Designer belts; reversible
and non-reversible. Furnishings, 41 5. . 12.99
S.ve 1/3: On all men's sunglasses. From Ray
Ban, Tropic·Cal, Riviera and more. Accessories,
105. Reg . 10.00 to 65.00 . . ...... 8;70 to 43.15
S.ve 33%: On all Centura hosiery. Dress,
casual and athletic styles. Furnishings. 281 .
Reg. 3.00 to 3.SO . . . . . . . . . . . 2.00 to 2.33
SAVE 25% TQJ50% -
O~~n~~~.~~o~~~~!n~o~~~r
sucker. oxford doth and more. Men's Fur-
nishings. 164. Orig. 30.00 to 40.00. 11.•.
011 ~na Hills Mall. Huntington Beach. 777? Eding r Ave.
r i
\
-....1-
Otange CoU1 OAILY PILOTnhundmy, ~20. 1M6 A7
-
MEN'S SHOES
S.ve 33%: On North Star's• cool mesh.casual.
Dept. 57. Orig. 20.00 . . . . . . . . . . . 12.99
S.ve 33%: Freeman's leather casual for slacks
and jeans. "Towers". Dept., 57. Orig. 48.00
. . .31 .99
Spedel purch9se: Nike's competitive sport
shoe with leather upper. "Soft Court." Dept.
284. . 29.99
YOUNG MEN'S
SAVE 25 %
ON LEVI 'S 501 JEANS
Young men's comfortable shrink to fit SOl s 1n
cotton 1nd1go denim Young Men 123 Reg
19.99. 14.99. 38 inseam reg 21 99 16.49.
_$ave 33%: On M odz cotton madras bermuda
shorts Plaid or stnpes Dept 185 Reg 18 00
11.99
Save 25%: On upbeat Shah Safari cotto11
woven shuts Dept 183 Orig 20 00 14.99
Save 28%: On classic Le T1gre str1pf'CI polo knit
shirts. Depr 411 Reg 18 00 12.99
Save 33%: On ChC1uv1n short sleeved strtped or .
plaid $hlrtS Dept 183 Ortg 18 00 11 .99
Save 25%: On shdrp J J M cWays clu ck and
pophn dress slacks Plain fronr Dept 187 Oriy
24 00 to 25 00 ~ 17.99
Save 30% to 37%: On short sleeved Dev and
J J M cWays striped polo knit shirts Dept 53
Ong. 15.00 to 16 00 9.99
Save 43% to 50%: On M odz 1w1ll and canvas
pants. Dept 186 Was 30 00 to 34 00 16.~
Special purchase: Complex casua~ pants Dept ·
186 . . . 16.99
Save 33%: On· Levi's pique bar stripe knit shirt
with snap collar Dept 53 Orig 18 00 11.99
Save 33%: On Modz bright swim trunks 1n sizes
29 to 38 Dept 185-fleg 20 00 to 24 00
12.99 to 14.99
Save 32%: On long sleeved shtrts by Chauvin.
Sasson. Charlie and Visage Dept 183 Orig
22.00 14.99
Special purchase: Cotton blend sport coat
from 4 40 Jaguar Dept . 187 49.99
Save 25%: On Ritchies pleated slacks Dept
187. Orig 30 00 to 34 00 21 .99 to 24.99
Save 33%: On J J McWays shirts 1n soltds.
-stnpes and plaids Dept 183. Ong 18 00 11.99
Save 25%: On Sergio Valente and Jordache
five-pocket indigo denim 1eans Dept 94. Reg
30.00 to 40 00 21.99 to 29.99
BOYS'4T020
SAVE 113
LE TIGRE KNIT ibPS
Find striped J'nd sohd knit tops by this famous
maker Boys sizes 8 to 20 Dept. 26 Ong 12 00
to 15.00, 7.• end t.•.
S.ve 33%: M odz woven sportsh1rts in sizes 8 to
20. Dept. 26. 0-rtg. 15.00 . t.•
lave 30%: On Bugle Boy sheeting slacks. Sizes _
8 to 20. Dept. 98. Reg 20 00 13.•
Seve 113: On M odz and David Stuart short
sleeve campsh1rts and shaw1 collar shirts for
boys 8 to 20. Dept. 26. Ong. 14.00 and 15.00
. . . Ulanctt.•
S.ve 22% to 44%: On Complex and Bugle Boy
casual sheeting and canvas pants for sizes 8 to
20 Dept 98 Reg 18 00 to 2S 00 13•
t
~
BOYS4T020
S.ve 1/3: On selected Oshkosh playwear for
sizes 4 to 7. Tops, pants and overalls. Dept. 74
Reg. 15.00 to 16.00 .. t.99
Special purchase: Boys' 4 to 7 corduroy cargo·
pocket shorts Dept. 74 . 1.99
Save 113: On size 4 to 7 snappy maker bright
striped kntt tops Dept. 74. Reg 15.00
.9.99
Save 1/3: On Modz cotton bar striped shirts for
sizes 8 to 20 Dept 26 Ong 13 00 . 7 .99
Save 25%: On Texas prewashed blue denim
1eans. sizes 8 to 14 Dept 98 Reg 15.99 11.99
Save 25% to 33%: On all boys 4 to 7 O.P.
swimwear and screened T-shirts Dept 74. Reg
8 00 to 13.00 . 5.99 to 7.99
Save 25%: On all Adidas acttvewear for sizes 4
to 7 Dept 74 Reg 7 SO to 13 00 4.99 to 1.99
Speciel purchase: Boys 4 to 7 West Coast Kid
tank tops Dept . 74 . 4.99
S.ve 25%: On boys 4 to 7 Billy The Kid cargo
pocket shorts Dept 74 Reg 8 00 5.99
Save 25%: On snappy famous maker bright
strtped knit shirts Boys 8 to 20 26
Reg 15 99 11.99
Save 1/3: On Jay Jay cutted pledted shorts.
Boys 8 to 20, 241 Orig 15 00 9.99
Save 1/3: On selected Van Heusen oxford tloth
dress sh irts for boys 8 to 20 Dept 239 Reg
12 00 to 14 00 7.99
Save 1/3: On boys 8 to 20 Farah duckcloth
dress ·slacks Dept 98 Reg 18 00 to 20 0012.99
Save 20% to 33%: On Jay Jay rugby and
cargo pocl..et shorts for boys 8 to 20 Dept
241 0119 10 00 to 12 00 7.99
Modz cotton mdciras plaid shorts Orig
16 00 10.99
Save 25% to 30%: On all boys 8 to 20
swimwear leio:cepr Ou1ks1lverl Dept 241 Orig
10 00 to 22 00 6.99 to 15.99
Special purchase: Bovs 8 to 20 upc1aterf
Chams tops Df'D 26 9.99
Save 25%: 011 boys 8 tlJ 20 At1idrt'> 11140 shirts
Dept 241 Orig 17 00 11.99
Ad1dd s sport 'ihOrts Or1y 14 0(1 9.99
WEST COAST KIDS
SAVE 113
KI DS SPLASH Y SWI MWEAR.
Swimsuits for infants 12 to 24 months •odrl ..,,
boys and q1rls and girls 4 to 14 West Coast
t\1ds 90 137 234 268 Reg 6 00 to 26 00 3.99
to 16.99.
Save 1/3: On Carter s playwear tor newborns 3
to 9 months infants 12 to 24 months toddler~
21 to 4 T and girls 4 to 6X Dept
83 90 137 234 428 Reg 6 00 to 18 00
3.99 to 11.99
Special purchase: Plush monkeys raccoons,
dogs koalas and more Dept 102 S.99 to 29.99
Save 1/3: On funloving sundresses for infants
toddle•s and girls 4 to 14 Dept 47 90 96 Orig
14·00 to 34 00 8.99 to 21 .99
Save 1/3: On rompers for toddler girls and
t>oys plus girls 4 to 14 Dept· 44 83 90 234
Reg 10 00 to 16 00 5.99 to 9.99
Save 40%: On babydolls and gowns for girls 4
to 14 Dept 79 Reg 8 00 to 18 004.99 t~ 10.99
$8ve 30%: On' aTI glrfs legwear Anklet s tights
knee·h1's and-sportsocks Dept 56 Orig 1 99
to 6 95 1.39 to 4.87
Save 1/3: On shorts and lo.nit tops for girls 4 to
14,.. Dept 44 83 268 Orig 6 00 to 14 00
3.99 to 8.99
S.ve 1/3: On toddler girls and boys' shorts ,
Dept 90 234 Reg 5 00 to 6 SO 3.29 to 4.29
Save 113: On newborn infant and toddler girls
twirls Dept 90 137 428 Reg 9 00 to 10 00
5.19to1.49
Save 1/3: On infants and toddlers shortalls.
Dept 90 137 234 Reg 10 00 to 12 00 S.• to
7.91
S.H ~ On babies' cotton creepers and
bodysuits Dept 42 Reg 4 00 to 6 00
2.IO to 4.20
S.ve 25%: On Ch1ldcratt• oak finish solid
maple crib and matching changing chest Dept
81 Reg 2SO 00 and 325 00 1a• Md 231.M
S.ve 30%: On Apncs newborn strollers Dept
81 Reg 200 00 ' 131.•
. __ _.._
-
t
-
A8 Orange Co••! DAILY PILOT/Thursday. June 20. 1985
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~;..._--~~----~--~~~~~--
CHINA
15% to 50% off: Our entire Mikasa collection
with selected 5 pc. place senings at 12.99 to
19.99
60% off: Selected 45 pc. sets from Noritake
.
J I
........ ······. ········ ...... 1•.00
SILVER
Silverplate or gold electroplate service for 12 in
silver or gold scallop panem . . . . . . 1•.00
GLASSWARE
J.G. Durand fuJI lead crystal tableware
. . . . .19.99 to 29.•
CUTLERY
70.00 off: W MF 7 pc block set. Open stock
value 131 .00 . . . 69.99
15.00 off: 4 pc. boxed steak set. Open stock
value 35.00 . . . . . . . . ........ 19.99
48.00 off: 5 pc. knife block set. Open stock
value 96.00 . . . . . . . . . ... 49.99
5.00 to 25.00 off: Assorted Wusthof Trident
open stock cutlery Orig. 20.00 to 60.00
.. 15.00 to 35.00 ...
SA VE 6.00 TO 12.00
WUSTHOF TRI DENT OPEN STOCK
PROFESS IONAL CUTLERY 20.00
Orig. 26 00 10 32 00 Choose from 6" sandwich.
6" frllP.1, 5" bonrng, 5" cheese sheer or kitchen
shfJars. Dept. 194
SAVE 71.00
WMF 7 PC . KNIFE BLOCK SET
59.99
Open stock value 131 00 Space saving cutlery
set complete with d three way knife block.
Dept 194 .
ALL
· SAVE 14.50
MIKASA 5 PC . PLACE SETIINGS 12.99 TO 19.99
Reg 27.50 to 44 .95 Choose from 3 of Mikasa's most popular patterns. Also save 15% 10 50% on
our entire Mikasa collection Dept. 408 ·
SA VE 285.00 TO 385.00 '
SELECTED 45 PC. DINNERWARE SETS FROM NORITAKE 199.00
Reg. 48&.00 to 586.00.-Seve 50% on beautlfutly crafted 45 pc. sets In 3 $tyles. Oept~.
DOMESTICS
50% off: All our cotton printed beach towels.
Orig. 18.00·30.00. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
50.00 to 120.00 off: Carmel reversible com·
forters from Croscill, twin to king. Orig. 100.0
to 170.00
. .. . . .. . .. . . .41.
33% off: Matching accessories. Orig. 25.00 to
72.00 . 18.99 to 41.
33% to 50% off: Queen and king Marimekko
sheets a('ld cases. Will be 18.00 to 34.00 •
• • · • • • • • ,. ·, • • • , , , , , ... , .11,11 I
75.00 to 130.00 off: Matching comforters,
full /queen and king. Will be 125.00· 180.00 49i
SAVE 50%
COTION PRINTED BEACH
TOWELS , 8.99
Orig. 18.00-30.00. Reg. 30"x60" towels in
assorted colorful prints. 100% cotton. Not all
styles In all stores. Dept. 23.
LUGGAGE
An eddldonlll 20% off: the sale price of
Gaucho luggage from Atlantic. Orig. 45.00 to
140.00, sale 29.00 to 79.00 . now n.• to 11.1
An addldon., 20% Qff: tt\e sale price of Wor~
Wide luggage. Special purchase 29.99 to 69.95
........................ now n.•to•t
An addldot.a 20% off: the sale price of
Madison from leisure luggage. Orig . .0.00 to
100.00, sale 17 .99 to 39.99 .now 13.• to 11.1
An ~ ~ off: the sale price of Easy
Pnrtuggage iron} Samsonite. Orig. so;oo:-
120.00, tale 29.99 to 79.99 now n.• to a.t
----/, ------------------"> .
.. -I, .... ......., _______ _
I ·SAVE 100.00
TECHNICS STEREO 599.00
99 Ong. 699.00. 70 watt audio system delivers pure, rich sound reproduction. Dept. 88.
)
99
99
...
TELEVISIONS . .
90.00 off: Zenith 19" remote color portable.
Orig. 439.00 . 349.00
70.00 off: Zenith 13" diagonal remote color por-
table. Orig. 369.00 ...... 299.00
70.00 off: RCA 19" diagonal color portable .
Orig. 319.00 . . . . . . . . ...... 249.00
VIDEO RECORDERS
I Z~ith VHS wireless remote
Zenith VHS direct access VCR
HOME LIGHTING
.399.00
.549.00
MIRRORS
47% off: Grandson mirrored clock . Reg. 150.00
. .79.91
33% off: Black lacquer rectangular mirror. Reg.
150.00 99.99
CARPETING
34% to 60% off: Wall to wall carpeting 1n
assorted plush or cut 'n loop styles in
Anso' nylon or nylon in over 100 decorator col·
ors. Orig. 30.00-49 00 14.99 to 29.99 sq. yd.
3'% off: European crysta l vase lamp. Reg. lnatalled
100.00 . . . . . . . . . ......... 19.99 33%~0 60% off: "Majal" Oriental design area
!50% off: Mouthblown, handcut crystal ginger rugs in pure wool. Orig. 100.00 to 600.00
jai..Jamp. B.eg.. 200.0CL. ~-. ·-·-~--....,;•~~--~· .• ·~ ... _ _. ·-.................. 41Jla..to.m.OO
!50% off: Antiqued finished brass lamp. Reg . 33% to 50% off: Madrid area rugs from Spain.
200.00 ....... 89.91 Orig. 150.00 to 600.00 . . . 89.00 to 391.00
. SAVE 34 % TO 50%
-
WALL TO WALL CARPETING 14.99-22.99 SQ. YD.
Qrig. 30.00·49.00.J!l assorted plush or cut 'n loop styles in Anso nylon.
Mall . Huntlnpn Beach: 7777 Edinger Ave.
Orange Coatt DAIL V PILOT /Thurtday, June 20. 1985 d
SA VE 40% TO 50%
SIMMONS MATIRESSES 59.00, TWIN EA. PC . SIMMON'S FIRM
Orig. 129.95 ea. pc. Prices lrsted are for Simmons Firm. We have 9 other styles for you to choose
-from. Orig. 199.95 full. 119.00 ea . pc. Orig. 399.95 queen, 279.00 set Orig. 499 95 king. 379 00 set
King and queen sizes sold in sets only. Dept 69
FURNITURE
' 900.00 off: 2 pc. sectional sleeper. Ong.
1599.00 999.00
S00.00 off: 2 pc stationary sectional Orig.
1399.00 . 899.00
108.00 off: Rattan swivel rocker with dark
finish. Orig. 225.00 119.00
200.00 off: Trans1t1onal sofa in Olefin velvet.
Orig. 699.00 • 499.00
200.00 off: Matching queen sleeper Orig.
899.00 . 199.00
200.00 off: Matching loveseat Ong 679 00
479.00
171.00 off: 5 pc Country French dining room
set Ong 1675 00 999.00
130.00 off: Arm chair Ong 325 00 195.00
1100.00 off: 2 pc china cabinet Ortg 2000 00
1099.00
100.00 oft: Queen Anne wing chair Or·g
299 00 199.00
SAVE 200.00
TRA NSITIONAL SOFA 499 .00
JI
Orig. 699.00 Transitional sofa 1n Olefin velvet expands your design
options. whether your decor is contemporary or ttad1t1onal Dept 38
SAVE 676.00
DINING ROOM SET 999.00
Ong. 1675 00 In a ttadit1onat country French design 5 pcs Oept 274
\
,
...
Unbelievable!
Water district
lowering rates
A funny thing happened in the annals of officialdom
this week.
The Irvine Ranch Water District Board announced
it was going to cut rates. That's right, cut 'em.
At a time when less costs more, when the consumer
is accustomed to being gouged, when Pacific Telephone,
for example, wants to double its rates, somebody wants
to pass some savings along.
Curious. But the story checks. No joke, no catch.
The water district that serves 36,000 customers in
Irvine, parts of Newport Beach, Tustin, Santa Ana and
surrounding unincorporated county area will reduce
water and sewer charges beginning in July.
The average homeowner will be paying about $2 per
month less when the district's Board of Directors gets
done. It's not a lot but it's better than $2 more.
And it's not a first. The same district cut rates last
year. and the year before.
Officials say they have reduced sewer rates 26
percent over the past three years.
That is progress.
That is government at its t>est.
District officials explain they are using greater
quantities ofless expensive underground water because
of the Dyer Road Well field in Santa Ana.
Money spent to develop it was well-invested.
And, water district officials are passing along a
reduction in water they import from the Metropolitan·
Water District. The MWD. you might recall, is the same
agency that raised rates last year when water districts
thrqughout Southe rn California used less water. But
that's another editorial.
Now the giant Metropolitan Water District is
cutting rates and Irvine Ranch Water District customers
are benefiting.
Sewer rate reductions were credited to the district
changing the way it processes sludge and to increased
sewer connections and sales in reclaimed·water. In other
words. it was a triumph of efficiency.
Somebody out there is d oing something right and
we think everybody ought to know about it.
Maybe efficiency in government will catch on.
Worse practices have become popular.
So bravo Irvine Ranch Water Distfi.ct -and.
encore!
School bans pastors, but
teacher invites Krishnas
To 1he Editor:
I'm wnting th1!> leuer bccau~ I'm
concerned about the vanous 1n-
Ouences that arc being allowed and
diiallowcd..on the campus of Corona
dcl Mar High School.
The high school pastors from our
church and other churches 10 the area
had been visiting students from these
churches at the high school dunng
lunch fur a long lime. The Junior high
pa!>tors began doing the same when
the junior high merged with the high
school las-t fall. One studl·nt .... rott· J
letter of complaint to the nc"''>PJJ>l'r
last December and, a~ a result. thi:
pnncipal. Mr Fvans. clo'>cd lhl' high
school campus to both 1hc high'><. hool
and junior high pastor' and to 1h"
da) they are not allowt·d to '1'1l thl'
students at lunch time
And yet, thl· 4th perm<l P" d10l11g'
class taught h' Mr ~Orl·no. hJ'
allowed Han k.r1'hna' homo!>l''\U.il'
mo' ice; on !ht.• •1l·tul1 and a lH rnotl\I
m the classro<'lm lx'tJu'>e '>On1l' 1 if thl·
stucknl<, chO'>l 1(1 \.I.fill' ii fljl°>('I 1111
•
L.M. Bovo
these vanou subjects from a list
suppJ1ed b) Mr. ·Moreno for the
students at the beginning of the
semester.
M) first quesuon 1s -1s 1t fair to
disallow the high school and Junior
high pastors from Christian churches
in the vici nity to visit t he Coro na del
Mar High School campus al lunch
hour because one student . com-
plained'>
· My second question 1s -1s it nght
to allow people with theSl' lifestyles
(homosexual'>. Han Knshna. h}pnot-
l!>t!>, plus mo .. 1cs on the occult) to
come into public school classrooms
that arc being paid for by our ta'<
dollars''
I tould gt·t a petition of' I 00 ur mon·
'1gnaturc\ of concerned taxpayers
"'ho an: JU~t a' concerned about these
l m um..iann·<, ac; I am If \OU "'ould
ltkl' lo h;l\·l' ml' \l'nd \Udl ·a ~lltlOn
plt'J\l' lt·I ml· ~nov.
\l~\'lPYLE
I nrona lkl \1ar
Hea vy.pass enger s
eat up fu.e!budget
\\-nght ol the J'eragc man ma-. Ix·
16' pounds. a., frcqul'nth rl'ported
hut that's nm thl' wc1gh1 of the
average man who 011.'\ IO Jl't ,11rplaOl''I
He'<, do'>er to 185 poun<J<. A1rllm•<,
en'<·uti vc-, found that out "'hl'O 1hc1r
fud tO'>I'> l'H'I'\ .. car anwuntl·cl lo
m1lhonor; of doliar« .. murt than 1ht•1r
computer-; h;id predicted
~ell majlQCrcd diner\ of Moru('C<l
1rad111onall) uo;c onl> thre~ linger\ of
the nght hand to dip mto thl·
communal poi
In arcac; wh l'fl' watt•rhcd\ art' \old
one· hnuo;chold 1n l'"ei; four h.-i<. 'uth
ThC' ratw of ph}\1l 1an\ to mcrC'
mortal<\ tn >\fnca 1~ OOl' 10 ~I IJ(XJ
Wait change mer<' mortJI'>. to r\.·al
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
iK'.oplc Nu. make that pcr'iOO\ 1n
gtneral
<) '>' lwrc did tucumtx·ro; come from·)
·\ Northern I nd1a probabl}
\ ou·,e read ho.,.. man) husbands
1n India escape pun1~hment afier they
hurn their unwanted w1 vcs to death in
dowry dispute,. In Bra11l. men who
murder their w1vco; in "cnm<' of
pa,sion" u\uall)' go tree. too
l ingu1w. Ill counter -intelligence
\av a !:>1mpk wa)' to catch a spy 1s to
gi .. e \a1d \USJ>CC'I some !t1mpk
:w-1thmet1c ~ man l\IW<l )'C. rnunb in
h1\ native tongue
L M. Bo d Is • #yndlrated
columnist.
Frank Zlnl ran"'
Tom Telt >'.,,90!"9 Ftl1fnt Don,.,.,
C•ly Ca.tor
1\1~ _, ""~ n1 ,...., ''"' 1• i :in ""'"'I\•• St ~,. ,.,._ Ar»...t ""''~~ 10 ,,.,, •V.O Cr•lg &hen i90n1 Edllor Cotta ~ CA t'6?fl
·'There Is no enstbl e way In which nuclear weapons can be used. Thi
Is why we mustget rid of them."
•. 8'/r tJj/S
~iv WINT@
~ et. ·YoVR _, -
ff,OOy e&tW ... )
, .. fftJD1Hl ~
ONlY \INl1Cl> 1D
HOW '/AA~
CAMERON C06GRO\
STEPHEN
CHAPMAN
.Court
trims
SEC 's
feather~
Ex-investment
advisercallstil1-
publish newslette:
lt's time for superpowers
to dismantle their nukes
The Sccunties and Exchange Con
miss10n. which has used extrerr
interpretations of its regulatory du tic
to expand its power. got its feathe:
trimmed by the Supreme Court la
week. The decision was a victory fc
investors and for intellectual fret
dom.
The SEC had sued the publisher<
two Wall Street mvestment new
letters to prevent him from publist
ing. Christo'pher Lowe's right to wor
as an investment adviser had bee
revoked by the agency in 1981 after h
There just isn't any
sensible way to use
those awful arms
By CAMERON COSGROVE
I share wtth other Americans a
sense of hope -however fragile -
now that we are at last engag~ in
resumed arms negotiations with the
Soviet Union.
There is no substit ute for these
nego11at1ons.
We depend on the Soviets for our
very lives: and they must rely on us
for theirs. Talks. no matter how
difficult and rrustrat1ng. art' the
kc) stone to working out our destiny.
It was the human species -indeed
Americans -that invented the
atomic bomb. with 1ls potenual for
global self-destrucuon. It 1s the.(Cfore
wi thin the means of the human
species to C'\tncate itself from this
nuclear deadlock that now holds
hostage all thr c1111en~ of the earth.
W1ll 1t be survival:' Or clc~trucllon'!
When we l'nlered the nuclear age
some 40 ~cars ago. Albert Einstein
said. "W11h the unleashing of 1he
atom everything was changed save
our modes of thinking and we thus
drift towards unparalleled
catastrophe.'' Yes, we must change
our way or thinking. We must think
more deeply and with greater care
than ever before.
Every thinking person fears nuclear
weapons and all that they imply.
Meanwhile, the most powerful na-
tion-states vigorously develop their
own dreary ··state of the an" methods
for global destruction. ~e know it 1s
maeness. yet the madness ~~alates
further each day.
One trillion dollars a year' is spenl
on developing and maintaining nu-
clear and conventional arsenals
around the world. The tragic irony. of
course. 1s that this is the same world
which has not )'Ct solved the mosr
basic of problems ... death by starva-
tion. Whal a waste of our money.
What a waste of our best sc1en11fic
minds.
There 1s no ~nsible way in wtuch
nuclear weapons can be used. That 1s
why we must get rid of them. But we
must do so in complete cooperation
with the Soviet Union.
Consider what sc1ent1sts have
taught us recently about "Nuclear
Winter." In a November I Q84 Atlan-
tic Monthly anicle. "Nuclear Winter
and Nuclear Strategy" au1hor
Thomas Powers describes nuclear
winter this way: ..... Smoke from as
few as a thousand fires in a hundred
ma1or cities could cast a sooty pall
over the Northern Hemisphere thick
and lingering enough to bring dark-
ness at noon and radically cool lhe
eanh's surface ror months. (hereb}
triggering a climatic catastrophe -a
·nuclear winter· -that would threat-
en many plant and animal species,
including man. with extinction."
Because there 1s no sensible way to
use nuclear weapons, it is time lo
consider the ways that they can be
safelv di'>mantled. Former Director
of the National Securit~ Agency and
rrnrcd four star Admiral Noel Gayler
has put fonh the following sugges-
tions.
First. "'i.' must recognize that tht<
onl~ wa} to get nd of nuclear
weapons. 1s to get nd oftheml
Second. we must develop a process
where all Soviet and Amencan nu-
clear weapons that are dismantled-arc
done so under the direction of a joint
team of Soviets and Americans.
Working together, this team would
inspect the weapons for their fis·
s10nable material. The fissionable
material would be diluted with
uranium-238. turned into fuel for
power plants and burned up in the
production ofelcctriclly. The process
would be repeated until all of this
material disappears from the face of
the earth, with agreements that 11 not
be replac~.
Third. we should also make doc-
trinal changes. We o;hould agree to
sign a pledge of "no first use" of
nuclear weapons. which the . ov1ets
have already proposed. We must
abandon the notion that one side or
the other can disarm its ad\Cro;ar. 1n a
was convicted of fraud and thef
first strike. It cannot be done; and in When he continued publishing h:
any case no one would survive the n~letters. the SEC went to court t
nuclear winter that would follow. stop him.
Fourth. we can give up the habit of · addressing each.other in insulting and One striking fact about the'sull wa
pointless. threatening language. as the that the SEC dido 't claim Lowe ha
leaders of both nations have done in published false or misleadmg info1
the past. Language is very important mation. It simply reasoned that a
in creating mindsets. attitudes and investment adviser who was barre.
ideas about the implicit ine vitability from offering personal advice t of war. individual clients shouldn't be allo"
Finally, we must abandon the idea ed to offer impersonal advice to
that jf everyone does not live the way group or subscribers -as ir ther
we want them to, then no one will live were no difference between the two.
at all. Instead we should view the A federal d1stnct coun rule·
differences among nations as those ltpinst the agency. declaring that th
expressions of being human. Dif-First Amendment guaranteed Lowe·
forences in societies pale in com-right to publish. Bu t an appeals coun
parison to the similarities. These finding no constitutional infringe
realities can be reco~nized without in ment. said the SEC had every right t•
any way compromising our demo-suppress the newsletters.
cratic pnnciples. If you are feeling overwhelmed -The Supreme Court came dow1
don't. The stlldy of human history somewhere in between the two. 01
would suggest that there is plenty of the one hand,. it declined to dccid·
room for optimism. We are sur-whether the constitution permits th•
rounded by recent fundamental sort of rem~y envisioned by th•
changes in our way of thinking. In the SEC. But it said the-agency hac
last 200 years. we have abolished overstepped the authori ty granted 1
human slavery_ which was deeply by Congress.Jhc result: Lowe ma~
rooted on this planet both socialJy publish.
and econom1cally for thousands of That's as it should be. The appeal·
years. Women trad1 t1onally denied coun had argued that preventin1
equality arc gradually becoming Lowe from publishing is "no differen
equal panners with men. from saying that a disbarred laW}e1
No..... a new consciousness 1s ~ot sell legal advice." But no om
emergmg which recognizes that we .would ever imagine that a disbarrec
arc one species. lawyer could be forbidden to write c
It is imperative that we change our column on legal matters for a news·
way of thinking. But one of our paper.
biggest problems 1s that we do not
have much time. From the touch ofa
bunon to global genocide, we can
obliterate our only world and undo
4.6 billion years of evolution in less
than eight minutes.
We. citizens of the planet Eart h.
must collectively bring this new way
of thinking to bear. ln the forefront of
our minds, we must remember, our
obligation to survive 1s owed not just
to ourselves. but also to those who
have come before us and to those who
will come after us. It 1s us "humans."
blessed with the gift of intelligence,
who must speak for ourselves and for
Eanh.
An investment adviser. like an)
other professional licensed by th e
government. may be forbidden tc
practice his occupation. But tt's hard
to imagine on what grounds he might
be prevented from exercising his
co n·stitutional rights
Most civil llbertanan!t might have
preferred a broader decision stnkin@
down the law on First Amendment
grounds. But there is considerabk
merit to the approach taken here.
which 1s to avoid questions that don·1
have to be answered. And the opinion
offers no comfon to those who want
the government to control wha1
Americans may read.
M flitary's $600 ashtrays
not as bad as cost overruns
The decision rested on the court's
conclusion that Congress had taken
pains to ensure that the SEC'!. powers
would not conOict with the First
Amendment. The law, 11 said. was.
aimed solely at the personalized
advice that investment counselors
provide. n.ot the broad recommen-
dations offered by newsleuers.
The latter. 11 said. are specifically
excluded from the agenc)''s regu-
latory authority. Said the court. "To
the extent that ... the newsletters
contain commentary on general mar-
ket conditions. thcrt' can be no doubt
about the protected character of the
communication. a· matter that con·
cerned Congress when the exclusion
wasdrafled."
WASHINGTON -In the ap-
parently endless chronichn'-of Pen-
tagon waste. it's the $640 toilet seats,
S400hammerund S600ashtrays th~t
get the headlines. Less sensational.
but far more wasteful, are the un-
publicized delays and cost overruns
on the Pentagon's b1g-t1cket items.
One of these 1s CAM IS. the Con-
tinental Arm y Management Infor-
mation ystem, on which the Pen-
tagon has already spent enough to buy
more than 66,000 overpriced ashtray~ with no diKernible results.
After three years of development
and expenditures topping $40
m1lhon. the fancy c~mputer system is
st1ll many months and millions of
dolla~ from even reaching the draw-
ing board.
How important is C'AMTS w na-
tional sccunty'' An 1ntcmal memo
frol'li> the Arm\ Forces Command
chic:fof,taffpui 11th•!> ""a}.
"fhc nf.'cd for ( AM IS can be
\lmpl) "'llcd. Without 11. the !\rm ~
4.Anllnt l)efform thr fun~t1on$ needed
to mohil11e th<' {r<'~t'rvc) forte. rc-
d1.,tnbute P<'ro;onnd. e-qu1pmcnl and
matcn<'I h\ priorrt' and pre part'
unm for (,kplovment 1Ao1thin the-time
frame de manded h) n. 11011.11
'>lratcg} .. .
But for all 1\t u;iicnc~Shc CA M IS
pro,ect has bogged down m the vu y
firo of"' preh1ninary Sl&leS: fiaunng
0111 \\.hllt the lc>mpu~system \hduld
JACK
AIDE I SOI
and JOS£PH SPlAR
be able to do when it's eventuall y
built and pr<>frammed.
Our associate Donald Goldberg
obtained hundreds of pages of
internal Army documents detailing
the pro1ecrs problems. With the help
of Joe Bumiccc. an analy$\ with tht
Project on Military Procurement. a
private watchdogaroup. thc story has
been pieced together.
As envisioned four years ago, the
computer system was to cost about
$600 million froat.. start to finish .
urvey1ng the ap~lllng extravapncc
tu date. sources involved in the
, project now predict glumly that the
uluma1c cost 1s sure to bt w~ll over Sl
billlun.
In 1982. the Army chose Rehab
Ciroup Inc ... a Washington-based
compsn). to do the basic
"bratnsturm1na" for CA MIS under a
mall Busmcss Adm1mstrn11on "sc1-
a 1dc ... But the General Accountin&
Office ruled that Rehab was too bia to
quahf> for the spttial small-lfusirt&
treatment. ~o Army offi<.'lals gave
~ \ .
Rehab a sole-source contract. arguing
that it was the only firm that could do
the job.
Army attorn eys questi oned this
reason111g but were ignored. When
other officials insisted that the project
be opened up for competitive bidding
as originally planned. the brass
created a separate computer project
-and gave Rehab a sole-source
contract.
By the spri nJ of 1984. Col. Luther
Crum, then-c:hrector of the Army
Automation Manaacment Office,
wrote a memo to the chief of tbe
Anny Reserves charging that the
CAMIS project was out of control.
Detailed plans were "essentially non·
existent.' he characd. ind even the
amount of money already spcni,,was
imP?ssibfe to figure out.
• Adequate controls over the sole-
source contra~or. Rehab. arc lack-
1na," Crum complained. "They arc in
control, rather than being con·
trolled."
rum's recommendation tl)at
Rehab's contract not be renewed was
ianored. and the company is now in
the runnillj for yet another slice of lhc
CAMISp1c.
The Army's inspector aeneral is
reported!) invcstta,ating the fiasco.
Footnote: Rehab has dt"clincd to
discuss the matter.
J•ci ~ aN JH.,. S,.r •rr •Tfl'llc•IM t"Ol1m1l•t1. '
),
A footnote hinted strongly that the
court is skeptical that such regulalion,
if it were allowed in the law, could be
reconc11cd with the Constitution:
"Because we have squarely held that
the expression of opinion about a
commercial product ... is prdlectcd by
the First Amendment. it 1sdiaac~
sec why the expreHion of opinion
about a marketable security ahould
not also be protected.''
Contrary to the EC"s presump.
tion. leaving thcte newsletters un-
rcJulated docsn•t leave inve5tors
wathouc protcc&ion. They have the
same protection as readers of other
pubhcations: the ftct cxprc sion of
compctina ideas. Financiftl news-
lettm like Lowe's operate under the
ume con traint as other pubh· at ions: the sufferance or readers who
demand honesty and accuraty. As
befott, publishers who commit f"-ud
will get no protection from the law
The uprcme Court's decisidn
aives freedom Its proper due. ll also
compels a new humility at th~ EC.
I "'I
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----------
I I Orange Coat DAILY PILOT~. June 20, 1111 Al I
Their enthusiasm
.helps groups
serve countians
OC spends-$60,009
for fi ness cent er
ly ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... ~ ........
~County 'Ot
athletes similar to athletic 11cadenues
commo=I found throuahout
Eutooe,.. ia1a ' --
CM chamber names
pair Man and Wo-man
of the Yea.rfor 1985
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of lMDelfrNetStell
Florence ~humacher and Fred
Owens. by tl<eir heer enthusiasm
could sell ice to Eskimos 10 m1d2
winter.
When the normally modest
Sch umacher Jokes, with a grand wa ve
ofthe hand. that she simply 1sOrangl'
County, you want to believe her.
Byt she won't let you.
Schumacher 1s Quick to share the
credit for her community service
endeavors with other volunteers
throughout the Orange Coast. Owenci
1SJUSt as humble.
But the two"'havc helped raise
thousands upon thousands of dollars
to fight birth defects and fut"I the
performing arts in Orange County.
Together they were recently named
"Man and Woman of the Year" by
the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce.
And true to form . Schumacher was
eager to please wh ile being inter-
viewed during the awards luncheon
last Wednesday at the CosLa Mesa
Golf and Country C'lub. ·
"You want me to sing~" she
offered.
Schumacher was only half kidding.
She's a former mezzo-soprano who
figured the next best thing to being on
sLage is being in front of one.
That love of the performing ans
prompted her to become a volunteer
for the-Orange County Philharmonic
Society some 20 years ago. She now
sits on the group's board of directors
and holds sjmilar positions with the
Orange County Performing Arts
Center. as well as a handful of other
cultural arts organizations.
Although she doesn't live 1n Costa
Mesa. the chamber award seemed
fi tting for a woman who has worked
endless hours to help bnn& the new
arts center to the city. The complex .
under construction in the South
Coast Plaza area, 1s scheduled to open
1n October J 986.
"Everything we've done has JUSl
been from the ground up. with fa11h.
trust and a lot of luck," says
Schumacher. her voice rising with the
intensity of the statement. "Saying
that something can't be done is just
the challenge I need -it'll get done ...
Much of Schumacher's work has
been to organize social fund-raisers
-luncheons. dinners. parties -10
reward people who've contnbuted
and wooed those who have not.
She says being a social butterfl y
isn't merely serving cookies and I
chauing about the day's ten nis lesson.
"This isn't Just another tea party.
we're handli ng a lot of mone). and 1f
\Ou don't have a handle on 11 (!>ht.'
stops abruptly and furro~s her t.')('-
'-b rows) ... This is business, not 1ust a
"bunch of society ladies:· says
SChumacher. her serious expression
sliding back into a wide smile.•
Long before helping to launch the
arts center project. in fact long before
coming to Orange County.
Schumacher was a trend setter as the
only girl bassoon player at her high
school.
And it seems that whenever she
Jumps on the bandwagon. she ends up
driving it:
"I don't ever want to be left behind.
I want to keep up with everytbing."
said Schumacher.
When it comes to keeping up. Fred
Owens has never had a problem
toeing the line in the annual March of
Dimes 20-mile Walkathon. But he
ironically met his match while riding
as ''Man of the Year" in the recent
Costa Mesa Fish Fry Parade.
"Wouldn't you know it. my car
broke down," says Owens. sha king
his head with a chuckle. He wasn't a
hit purplexcd by the mechanical
difficulties that dela yed hi s hour of
glory.
The good-natured lnshman 1s no
•manger to life's little surprises. In
fact. he was well into his adult years
before he found out that he had been
spelling his name wrong.
While filli ng out the application for
his marriage license. Owens dis-
covered that the name on his birth
certificate was "Fredrick" and not the
"Frederick" that he had been signing
all those years.
But that's OK. Most people knew
him by his ni ckname. "Kie," anywa y.
The moniker came from his old er
sister, who used to call him a
"crybaby," but never could' pro-
nounce tbe "R. Thus, Fred Owens
became "K.ie," to his family. and later
to his wife and children.
But when you're a former wrestling
champio°.t. and an ex-college coach.
yocrtan anord to have pet names.
Owens' bulky physique docs little
..&o betra¥ his 57 years. The Costa
Mesa resident is a dean of instruction
at Golden West College 1n Hunt-
ington Beach and is the chairman of
Student nominated
for youth award
Tanya Prather, a student nt Marine
High School in li,untington Beach.
has been nominated by state Sen.
Marian Beracson: R·Newpon Beach.
as an lniemat1onal Youth Year
Awards n:c:iplcnt.
The JYY Awards arc 1ponsorcd by
the U.S. Department ofEduqt1on'to rccotn•tc outlt•ndina youth for thrir
leadership, community ~crv1cc.
•cademic ability and other ach1cvc4
mcnts.
Lqlslators ate a ked to nominate
three students or )'OU th 01J1nmu10M for~ 1on·un<Jcr e program.,.·
the March of Dimes' annual Orange
County Walkathon.
Besides serving as head organizer
Owens took to the streets himself last
A(>ril during the Walkathon that
raised $430,000 for birth defects research.
His inter6t 1n the annual evt"nt was
partly sparked by his background as a
wresthng and football coach at Or-
ange Coast College. It was also
prompted br his youngest sister. who
li ved only Siil years after being born
with hydrocephalus. or water on the brain.
When his wife became pregnant,
Owens feared that he may ha ve
passed the ~eformity to his offspring.
• "I didn't give a hoot in hell 1fit was
a boy or a girl u long as it was all
right." remembers Owens.
The baby. a 'irl, was born health}'.
as were Owens next five daughters.
Although he never had a 4'0n.
Owens is a merit badge coun1Clor fo r
the Boy Scouts of America. The 23-
year KJwan1an is also lieutenant
governor-elect of the group's 41 st
District, which covers the area from
Costa Mesa to San Clemente.
• •
Supervison have approved spendins
up to $60,000 to clear the way for
construction of a SSO million fitness
academy in tbe coastal foothills of
South Orange County.
The board voted 4-1 Tuesday to
spend up to SS0,000 for staff expenses
to prepare amendments to coast.al
planning documents for the pfOjcct.
The aliditional tt 0,000 would be
for an owside consultant to help
prepare cnv.i.roruncntal impact ~
ports.
Ttle prOJCCt would be built on a
l 7S-1tcre site in Aliso Viejo -a newly
planned community east of Laguna
Beach.
Supervisor Ralph Clark voted
against the expenditure, arguing that
more infonnation was needed on the
project and what role the county
would play beforr funds werr al-
located.
_.Clark said such requests for fund-
-~.should beMCOmpanied by more
background information.
But supervisors Tom Riley and
Bruce Nestande have been actively
supponing the project, which would
be developed by the National Fitness
Foundation. ··
The areen ~ an Aliso Viejo
waschoten last February from amona
seven considered in Oranae County
and throu&hout the nation.
Orpnizen said the South County
site was chosen for its year-round
comfortable climate and us proJUm·
ity to water and a laf'IC city.
Foundation trustees' said in Febru-
ary that. they hope to comple1c the
fitncu academy within four years to
honor a pronuse made to President
Reqan.
"Construction wou.ld be funded by
contributions from corporations and
individuals as part of a l~e fund·
raising campaJgn, offioals wd.
The S4.S mLIJion project was
funded by the fmne Co. and the c11y
of Irvine. Thomas Nielsen, president
of the Irvine Co., will be among the
speakers.
Alton-15 Interchange
dedlcatlon Friday
On a final note. Owens also sings
tenor, though his performances are
now limited to lnsh funerals wed-dings "and when I'm dnnktn'.:. Florence Schumacher and Fred O.eu
The academy. which would be built
and supported by private funds. is
envisioned as a nauonaJ training and
research center for coaches and
Dana Reed, undersecretary of the
California Business. Transportation
and Housjng Agency. will panic1pate
in ceremonies Friday at l 0:30 a.m. for
the opening of the Alton Parkway
interchange wtth the Sant4 Ana
Freeway.
Advantage Checking.'"
$300 minimum balance.
No fee), Unl1 m1ted ched,-
\Hlt ing. tnO
lntere t Checking.
Earn intcn.~~t. Pa} no -.en ll.'e
charge~ w1Lh $1.000
monthly minimum haJance
l.111 till· rm er or a Circa! Ameril..'<111
Chcl'li.hooli. JnJ )t1u'l1 hnJ a \anet} nl
\l'r,.111k l..'het·li.1ng an'llUnl\ Mo~t 1mpor-
1ant . )llu·11 trnJ th(' right one to help you
make the mo'\t of your money. And )'(lllr
time. Mon.• rea~on~ why Great American
i~ ynur advantage hanli..
Advantage C hecking.
Keep a lov. minimum balance of S.300
and never pa~ a ~.rvice charge. That
mean~ you can ma~e a~ many depo~it'
or write a~ many c hccb a~ you lik...
No charge
Interest Checking.
Earn 51..4 'l intcrc~t on your hafan1..·c
And there arc no M!rvice charge~ when
you keep a low mininmm balance.
Insured Moneymarket Checking.
Earn htgh monc)'marli.ct rntcrc,1 with
onl y a $1000 balance. EJrn even higher
intere'lt with $5000 or more. It )our
balance fall'I hdow $1000. }'flU'll ,till earn
~' Cl intcrc.'t. And you have unlirn111.xl
chcckwriting privilege-;.
Centennial Checking.
rh" JC\.'llUnl l'llmll1Cn10rJ!l'' l IUI
IOOth ) ear nl '-l'f\. ICC. Open 11 \\Ith .1
minimum tlepoMt of $100 and e.trn 5' ~ ',
inlerc~T. )hu~ll al!-0 rccei\ c a frl'C ,afc
Jcpos1t box. And you .. :an pun:h.1M.' tr~"
der ... cheque~ and money on.kr' '' ith,iut .1
'-Cnice charge. All for a llm ll;jt ml)nthl~
1Cl' or yno can a\ oid the ICC h~ lllJlntJIO-
tng a Im\ monthJ) halant·e
Senior Advantage Checking.
· 1f ynu're60orovcr. )nu 1.:an gct a H'r\
'~l 1al pacli.age nf \Cr\ ice' It m1:lu,1c -.
our lntcre't Ch('d,mg A,·count lrcl' nt .m~
\Cr\ ice charge' •You l..'an JI~' qu.ihl~ lnr
free chcd.~ "11h <.hre4'.I depo~t Al~' tr .. ·c
photocop) mg If )OU r comhnK'li JCt'llU nt'
tntt1I $10.000 or OlllfC. you'll al~o recc1' c .1
fret· -.ate defl<hit hm And p.ly nn ti:"'
"hen you purch.t..c trJ\ckr' dle4u"' and
nloney nnkr'
*f rec ofter hm1h.'(J h' one 1..·he,:l>.1ng
:1(1..'0Unt ~r l'lhhllll('r
Insured Moneymarket
Checking. Earn high
in1ere~t. Unhn11ted
ched writing•
Senior Advantage
Checking. Pay no -.er' Kl'
i.:hargc' Get free ~n 1n~' 11
)mfre 60 }CJr' or ll\Cr
Centennial Checking.
Earn intere~t Get free
~n ice~ for d lo" flat
month!} fee.
Comenience backed h) 'trength.
And choice.
-Cboo~ Jn) Gn:Jt An"k:ncan 1..'hecl>.mg
':Jl'l'OUnt and you automat ll'31l) get the
l'<mvcnience of our ninety 2-t·Hour Tclkr
lncatrons 'talc\\ 1de Plu~ )OU can appl~
tnr Bonm, Rc~n c.-. If ~ou qualif). yuu'll
have the -.ccuril) of ll\ crJraft pl'O(ect illn
AnJ )'OU kno'>' your funds a.re safe
8Jcl>.cd by Grear AllK'rK;m\ 100 )ear' ol
'ounJ tinanc1al management. S7 b1l11l'n in
a~'ct' and F UC insuranc('
Judge a Great American checking
d\.'l..'llunt l)n hm~ 1t fit, )Our financial
rx't'l.I' \\lc're contiJcnt 1hcre\ one that\ to
, .. "'··· ~~1 . ._,....
Great American
)bus-~tage bank:-
l(X) Yi;-ar' nf Salct~ • A'.,cti. 0\N $7 R1ll1on
COAST AL ORANGE C:QlJNT\-H111u1na1on Buch. 91' \AH~ ~ .!4'W! • 1'e'*P'Jf1 Beadl. 'C\~ flt&l.t M-4 1Klt4
Balboa Island, '<>! M•n!}r <tt t.7~ UQ • 8atboe ~ninsu1a. tiOO E &lb.la BhJ t>"!1 r"Ol • lapna 8eadl . .!600cQn A'~ ~ •\.41
Monuch S.y. \ MtlNll\ h lb" P\.\u 496 1101 • C1pbU'a.no lkKll. ~ Dobm} Par\. Rd . 4~ • ~ntc, tiOI N El C1m1no
Real 4<>2.flQ'.\ •.an ('lc:nwntc A\"Cnld'a Pico. ~I A'ttW. Piro. 498~.' 10 •INLAND ORANG COUNTY-Anahdm H 5.S Smu
NI Cllll~in Rd . 998 n.rn • Or1J 11 Hdm. 2Sl.S Nor1hn1~an Au:.....M.·&400 •..fOWl&ain. \alln. 01.\Sbm~Qta..l-1'"1t>
I Woodbridae. 4'W B.trranu ~~' . .S.S9 880J •.l..11\loa Hiiis. 24'°1 ~1dr Valencia • .S86 .SIOO • t.t TOC'O. Z"\N\8 Fl 'lhn' Rd . ~'6-T.!l\l
Mminn Vttjo, 25\U Catww Rd 71Hn~ • Lafuna N~. ~ll C'tf>wn Valley PtW\'. 4Q'.\.fl~IO • S.n Join C'•ptlfrano. mz.! C'am1no1
C'~..rrano. Ml ~7
..
.1
.......... __ ..._ __ ~.o-----~~--.i--------~----t~~~~------~--------)·~--.. -"-·~--
. . (
• I
'
I
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I
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"\
A12 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /T.Quraday. June 20, 198~
a'rash collectlon fees up ln countyareas
Trash rates will be going up :! 5 ... ~t'lectcd. could result m a further rate refine-recons1dcration. let the ordinance
percent JuJy I for Orangl' Count\ The rate increase wilt mean cus-ment. GSA Director Bert Scott ad-work," said the refuse collectors'
residents living in unincorporated tomers who now are paying an $6.38 vised the board. attorney, Verl yn Jenstn. "They don't
areas. per week for trash-collecuon servlt'es Although supervisors in111ally in-deserve this, let the ordinance so into
Supervisors unan1mou~I)' JP· will see their. bills dimb to S6.54 tended todela)' the rate increase until effect."
proved the refuse hauhng rate in· beginning in July. the contracting review was com-Scott said, that although he didn't
crease Tuesdaywith the prov1s1on B> ~ptember, after the review of pletcd, an attome} repre~nting the oppose the increase. he had rec-
that it 1s subject to evaluation in three contracung procedures 1s completed. trash haulers asked that the mm1 -o~mended the board delay the rate
months when county officials expect county General Services Agency of-mum 2.5 percent rate hike be granted hike to prevent "multiple rate in-
to complete a review of the method by ficials expecL_to open rat.e:gllill&, on a temporary basis. J!£ases and mu1tiple....ll!£_ adjust-
which tl'llstl-baulmg firms negotiations w1~trash haulers that ---uWhile we'relnthe pen6d of men s.u
....
a G • • : .. ~
S'ro OFF
All14K
Gold
Earrings
Fans
Reg. 114.00 s
Hoops
Reg. 153.00 4
Knots
Reg. 220.()0
All 14K Gold
Charms
OFF
0 OFF
14K
GOLD PINS
Pellcan
Reg. S45.00
Turtle
Reg. 325.00
Giraffe
Reg. 430.00
Fish
Reg. 280.00
;:,O OFF 14K
GOLD CHAINS
16 .. Tri Color Br•lded
Reg. 160.00
16 .. Rope Ch•ln·
Reg. 300.00
1 a·· Herringbone
Reg. 67.95 H
20" Herringbone
Reg. 124.95 54
24 .. Hollow Rope
Reg. 356.95 l I 1
Jo·· Tlnsel Ch•ln
Reg. 248.00 t-2"4
OFF
PEARLS
Mufti-Strand
Blwa Pearls
Reg. 1450
·6mm Pearls 22"
Reg. 91 0.00
6-6.Smm Pearls 28"
Reg. 1145.00
8.Smm Pearls 15"
Reg. 1850.00
D ).
OMEGA WATCHES
Ladles' 14K Round Watch Reg. 1 J 75.00
Gents' 14K Strap W at(h Reg. 1375.00
Lad les' 14K Baguette W atch Reg. 1500.00
-1
Limited Supply
OFF SELECT
DIAMOND RINGS
& WEDDING BANDS
14K .29 ct. Diamond
Wedding Band
Reg. 900.00
18K .28 ct. Diamo nd Band
Reg. 1520.00
1SK .95. ct. Diamond
Dinner Ring
Reg. 3550.00 ~
1 SK .45 ct. Diamond Band
Reg. 2 '25.00
1 SK .24 ct. Diamond
Wedding Ring
Re . '210.00
LARGE SELECTION •
CONCORD COLLECTION WATCHES ____ OFF SEIKO
'
.
() Gents Stainless Steel Reg. 125.00
ALL MODELS IN STOCK Ladles Dress Watch Reg. 2 1 5 .00
Gents Strap W atch Reg. 150.00
llAFF jeWeJry
32 Fashion Island • 644-2040
) .
1----·----(
>• . .
HtintingtOn budget
has $67 million
I •
in expenditures
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. ~ ..... -•• _ _.
The Hunungton Beach City Coun-
cil has approved a 1985-86 city
budget that calls for S67 .3 million 1n
general fund expenditures for day-to-
da.y operauon of the city.
When special fund expenditures
are included for activities such as
park acquisition, equipment replace-
ment, self-insurance and redevelop-
ment, the tot,al city budget for
1985-86 will be $97.5 million. city
officials said.
The budget was approved in a 6-1
vote by the council Monday night,
with John Thomas dissenting.
Dan Villella, the city's director of
finances. said the new budget calls for
no fee increases for refuse collecuon
or water service.
Under the new spending plan.
Villella said. the city will employ 13
more full-time workers than called for
in last year's budget ... brin&i.I\.&..~
City's employTil~nt tO CrJQ fulJ:;nmc:
workers. Four of these new em-
ployees will be in public safety, which
includes the police and fire depart-
ments.
The new general fund budget is a
$5.5 million increase over last year's
general fund spending plan. T he
overall budget has increased S2. I
million over last year's total.
T~ .new general fund budget
designates S 19 mill ion for police
service and $10.2 million for fire
protection service during the coming
year.
The public works department,
which oversees street maintenance
and the water system. will receive
$16.3 million. The community ser-
vices department; which supervises
beach operations. local libraries and
recreation programs. will receive S6.5
million.
JW A landing fees reduced
Becauee of the lncreaeed number of commerctaJ tughta now
nytnq out of John Wayne Airport, Orange County IUpeMIOfl agreed
Tuetday to 31 percent reduction In alrflne landlng teea.
Beginning Juty 1, landlng feel wm drcp from the current $1,38 per
1,000-pound fee to 95 cents per 1,000 poonda, according to JWA
aJrport offlclala. ·
Supervleora were told the decrease was In order becauae the
Increased number of dalty flights, from 4' 1 to 55 begk\ntng Aprh 1,
amounted tofncreue In total landing weight, on which 1he feel are
b ... ct.
By board resolutlon, the amount of the landing fees, can be u88d
onty to recover costs assodated wtth commercial mr carrier
operatloM at ttte airport and· cannot be ueed to ralM any general
funds. - - -----.... -_
The coat to the county for commerclat air carrier operatlona at
JWA It pegged at $2.'4 mllHon per year, Including t1.4 mHtlon for
operilttona and malntenance.
Supervisors approved the lncr .... without comment on 5-0
vote.
E.F. Hutton executive
Ralph Rollins Jr. of
Newport B~ach dies
Ralph E. Rollins Jr. of Newpon Beach .. who
was an executive vice president with E.F. Hutton
and Co. for over I 5 years. died recently of cancer at
his home. He was 63.
'Born 1n Des Moines. Iowa, Mr. RolUns
graduated from Amherst College 1n Massachusetts
and later served with the Nav} in World War JI.
He was o n the board of directors for the Pacific
Coast Stork Exchange. as well as being a member of
the NASO advisor) committee in 1968. He also
was a member o f the board of Drewry Photocolor
Inc.
Mr. Rollins. whose wife Judith died in 1983. is
survived by his son. Ralph E. Rolhns 111 of Costa
Mesa. and two daughters, Ellen Rollins of Santa
Barbara and Judith Duncan of Costa Mesa. Also
surviving arc a sister. Mary Louise Drewry of Ralph E . Rollin• Jr.
Laguna Beach. and four grandchildren.
The family has requested memorial contribuuons to the American Cancer
Society.
Walter Clinch of Costa Mesa
Funeral services were held Saturday for Walter Erskine Clinch of Costa
Mesa. who died June 11 in Kaiser Hospital of Anaheim after an extended
illness. He was 72.
Born in Elmwood, Ill., Mr. Clinch was a power switchboard operator with
the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power for 22 years. He was a
member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. the Seafaring
Masonic Lodge 708 of Newport Beath and the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
He is survived by his wife. Dorothy; a son. Charles C. Clinch, also of Costa
Mesa, and two daughters. Edith Kunz of Phoenix and Julie Clinch of Beverly
Hills. Also surviving arc a grandson, Charles W. Clinch. of Costa Mesa. and a
granddaughter. Jennifer Gulledge. of New York Cit).
Services were held at Pierce Brotherc; Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel in
\osta Mesa. followed hy interment at Pacific View Memorial Park.
William Callahan of Newport
Services ha ve been conducted for William J. Callahan of Newport Beach.
a retired banker who died at hi s home June 12 at the age of84.
Mr. Callahan. wtro had hved 1n the area for 19 years. h~d retired from
Security Pacific Bank in 1966. He wa.san_acti..vememberand usher at.Our Lad-y
of Mount Carmel C hurch in Newport Beach for many years.
He is survived by his wife, Rose; five sons -Robert of Nonhridge.
Francis of Glendale. Raymond of Costa Mesa. John of Andover. Mass .. and
Thomas, in qermany -and six daughters -Mary Underwood of G lendale.
Joan Mc David ofBurbank. Rose Logan of Newport Beach, Michelle Avallone
of Pacific Palisades and Ann Ac.osta and Kathleen Solan. both of Huntington
Beach. .
Also surviving are. a sister. Agnes Callahan of Elmwood. Conn .• 22
if8ndhc1ldrcn and one great grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted June 9 at O ur Lady of Mount Carmel
Church in NewpoCLBcach. followed by interment at San Fcmantto Mission
Cemetery .
Orange County's
easy
listening
radio station
KDC-M ·-
tm.t
FMSTERED
4•. W CTZTQiU ;..,_,.,
• -
·.
-. -~ ---.,,..-----~-. ----
llily .....
..... , THURSDAY. JUNE 20, 1985 ·m
ANN LANDERS 82
TV UITINGI 83
Newcem~Fs ame>ng
66 participants
in Transpac race
When the 66ehtncs in the 33rd
biennial Trans~raecfrom Los Angeles
to Honolulu answer the starting signal at
-I:Joa ers ~
hit fuel
transfer
plan
.I p.m.July 4, there wi ll be newcomers A
and'old timers seeking overall or class LION
honors in this most prestigious of West
Coast deep water races. Lo
Among the fi rst-timers there will be COBEY
Richard Rosie's 54-foot ketch Ariel out of ••••••••••••• Dana Point; Mike Campbell's 44-foot
cutter Blast Furnace. Long Beach.
and Michael Schlens's Blade Runner. Redondo Beach. one of the smallest
entries in the fle~t.
Blade Runner as a new EM)re.ss-.37, designed by-former Newport Beach
naval arcllllect C8rl Schumacher. and built by Allsberg Bros in Santa CruL
There are two other Express-37s in the race and a J-36. compn sing the
minimum raters in Class D.
None of the Sch umachcr boa ts have competed in T ranspac races before.
forSchlcns, the idea to make the Transpac race came 1n the 1984 Los Angeles
to Mazatlan race.
"We had so much fun an the 1.000-mile Mazatlan race last November that
wedecadcd to make the Transpac this year," said Sch lens. ''I've done a lot of
racing out of King Ha rbor on Santa Monica Bay and some coastal races. but not
anything longer than Mazatlan."
One of the vetera ns oft he Transpac 1s the Cal-40, Montgomery Street,
skippered by her69-yearold owner James DenningofSan Rafael. Denning and
Montgomery Street have made seven previous Transpacs. Denning wants to
tic the performance record ofnine races by the schooner Queen Mab an 1969.
Denning bought Montgomery Street in l 969, when Cal-40s were repeaung
as overall handicap winners. a nd has been sailing her ever since.
"The boat knows how to gqt there o n its own now," quipped Denning ... Its
got asroove established which 11 gets in and just goes."
M ontgomery Street is intop condit1on. The latest updates include a new
mast three years ago and a new boom this year. Structural reinforcements and
fiberglass repairs have been accom~ished as nece~over the years.
Denning's son. David. will 5erve as helmsman' th as year. "It's his tum to
drive," said Denning. As an t;mployee of Cal Coast Ma nne Boat Works.David
has done most of the work on the boat.
All ofthellbove mentioned boats will be seeking handicap honors. More
than a dozen new 66 to 70 ultra-light displacement will pnmarily be see lung
line honors (first to fi nish).
Among these will bea pa1rofNewpon Beach entnes: Don AyresJr.'s
Atr quality board
wants recovery
systems on fuel docks
By ALMON LOCKABEY
o.ltr ..............
SQutllcm -and n6flhef'n--8lltfonna
boating organrzauons are geanng for
an aJI out fight against South Coast
Air Quality . Management District's
proposal to require all mannc fuel
docks to install manne fuel transfer
equipment on their pumps.
The alarm was ....---
sent OUI by Bob
Leslie. 1mmed1ate
past president of
the National Boat-
ing Federatio n.
and Alan Clarke,
representing tht
Northern Cala-
fom1a Manne A.s--
soc1a11on and the L...,,j--
Cahfom1a Yacht
Brokers l\ssoc1at100. LEsUE
Leslie and Clarke were both present
at a Ma) 17 m~ttng of SC A.QM when
Rule 1144. requmng the manne fuel
transfers was proposed. Vehement
opposition b) Lcshe and Clarke
caused the board to postpone an)
action on the proposed rule for 60
da}s to gne the staff an opponunit)
to respond to the concerns of the
boattn$ public
(PleaaeseeTRAl'fSPAC/B2) Don Ayres Jr. of Newport Beach will..Uhl• Nel80D llarek68, Drumbeat, ln Tra.n•pacrace. Leslie 1s urg.in_g representati ves ot
the So uthern Cahfomaa Yachllng
;\ssoc1at1on. Northern C'alifom1a
Manne '\ssoc1at1on. orth l\mencan
Cruiser Assoc1auon. Recreational
Boaters of Cahfom1a. Southern Cali-
fornia Marine .\ssocauon and the
Cahfom1a Mannt' Parks and Harbors
Assoc1atton to be on hand at heanng
1n Jul).
It '11 be costly to get in Tr_anspac racers' way
By ALMON LOCKABEY
The stan or the Transpac yacht race
from Los Angeles to Ho nol ulu tra-
ditionally draws a huge spectator Oeet
to bid bon voyage to the racers on
their 2.225-mile passage to Diamond
Head on in the island of Oahu.
Many of the spectator boats follow
the racing Oel't as far as the wes\ end of
Catalina Island. and scores of others.
vacauoning at the island. gather at the
the west end 10 cheer the racers on
their way.
Regardless of where you watch the
Transpac stan. 11 could cost you a
bundle this year 1f you happen to be in
the wrong place at the wrong time.
T he Coast Guard has warned that
special regulations will be in effect as
the racers assemble for their I p.m.
start Jul} 4 in the waters otT the Palos
Verdes Peninsula west of Los Angeles
Harbor.
With 6Q boats. ran~ing from 35 to
70 feet manuevenng tor the stan and
after the stan. it could pose a hazard
to-nav1gat1on. warns the Coast
Guard.
··While the C' ent is in progress.
"essels arc stnctl) proh1b11ed to
lo11cr, or impede the through trans11
of participants and or patrol craft 1n
the area." the warning stated.
.. These regulauons have been
prom ulgated to ensure the safet) of
life and propert} on navigable waters
dunngtheevent.·• the warning added.
What could ti COSI you 1f )OU
interfered w11h one or more of the
racins )aChts bet"een the stan and
Catalina Island?
..\mere five bills. In plain language
that amounts to S500
Copies of the Special local Regu-
lattons may be obtained from: Com-
mander. 11th Coast Guard D1stnct.
400 Ocean~te. Suite 901. Long
Beach. 9082-.
·'When the hoard meets about the
middle of Jul" "'e should ha' e all out
guns there read) to tire or we wtll
thereafter be strappt!d with an ex-
pensive fuel recover) 'I) Stem thatJUSt
"on't "ork on boats <i.a1d Le'>he.
·· ..\nd )'OU kno" who" 111bepa}1ng
(Pleue see F UEL/82)
Joan and Sherwood Rowland, left, greet Sasanne and Jack Pelta80n, Mary and James R008evelt, Dan and Jean Aldrich, Rich and Phyllla Matheny, William and Ingebor& LUlyman.
Festive atmosphere honors top UCI researcher
Dr. Sherwood Rowland given
first Daniel Aldrich Jr. Chair
By BETTY PORTER
OellJ"""~'
"Dr.Saterwood Rowland ... Isn't he the m an who
told us not to use hair spray in aerosol cans?" asked a
middle-aged woman.
"Dr. Rowland was the first scientist to warn that
fluorocarbons released into the atmosphere via aerosol
propellants were depleting the eanh 's critical ozo ne
layer," answered E>r. R-owland's younpctel1TI -
assistant, Dr. Donald Blake(with wife Laarle).
"Oh, that's what I tho ught." responded the woman.
Then she sm iled'a nd asked . "What's ozone?" (Ozone
shields plants a nd animals from harmful ultraviolet sun
rays.)
"I thought he (Rowland) was the guy who said we
should get rid of cows, swamps and rice pa'ddtes because
they belch methane gas." offered a confident-Sounding
male guest.
"He's the acid-rain man," said a bystander.
Dr. F. Sherwood Rowland. professor of chemistry
at UC Irvine, and his wife Jou were being honored by
friends and me mbers of the Daniel G . Aldrich Jr.
Society at Un1vcrs1ty H ouse-the Dover Shores ho me
ofUCI CUncellor Juk and Saale Pelta1on.
There was reason to celebrate. D r. Rowland had
just been named the firs~ recipient of the m ilhon-dollar
Daniel 0. Aldrich Jr. Chair. he dinner gany for 80 was sccnan oed to the most
minute de tail beginning with "6:30-Gucstul'Tive and
·~ &fvcn name tag.S •.• ••
Rc<'civingguests in the a tn um were the Pcltasons
and the Rowla nds (ClauttUor Emeru .. Da1 and Jeu
ANrtdajoincd the m later).
If one expected a renowned professor ofchemtMf)
to look.liku mild. be pcctadcd "Mr. Peepers:· the)
we~ in fora delightful surpnsc. 1 he Rowla nds-O-Om
Walter and Darlene Gerken, Marllyn and Tom Nlel1ten dined at Uni•enlty Hou1te.
\
Corona del Mar-are handsome and statuesque The)
have a warm dignaty and smile often.
. T he gracio us Pe lwon's timing for a pan}' was
perfect. Their d aughter Naacy EllloU (Wlth children
Krt1tlDand T~modiy) was visiting fro m Evanston. Ill.
And the ho ts ma naged to catch most ofthe1r
oph1s1tcated friends Just before the~ were to dash ofTto
exciting place (and events) around the world.
"We'~ rac~cd toao to Italy,'' rcpo<tCd J~n
ldn ch.
''I'll bcJ01mng the World Associatton ofVctt·ran
thlctcs' gam(San Rome(on turday)." said tl"lm.
Lanned Dr <\ldrich. "I've been worlungout e' ery day to
get read)'"
"We'll be fly1na 10 London nght behind) QJ.t,'' Mary
Roosevelt (wtth husband James) told the ld'nchcs. and
Dr. Blake was excited about h1 upcoming "methane ga
samplc·a,athcnna" m p to laska.
Party 1nviLat1ons had read "buffot," but a drhc1ou~.
cold d illed salmon dmner was se~C'd ~white Jacketed
wa1tcrut candle-ht tables tor I 01n the garden. Later.
guests adjourned to the lh 1ng room forbnef speeches.
toa t andcham~gne lan,lassesetched with the words
"Dante! G. -\ld n ch Jr. Soc1ety-l"'1ne."
"I am grateful .. forthe ch:ur mone) and forthe
opponu01ty and frct'dom 1fotrcrs for research ... \atd .
Rowlaftd __,_ ,h
H~"cscaA'tl has led to~a lauon 1n t~l'~med
t.ntcs (and other countncs) fCJUlatang the manufat·turt
and use ofnuorocarbons Hts 1n1ual 'ltudars ho" that.
thee'<'t s release of methane ()'CS. from co-w . swamps
and nee paddies) may contnbutc to the "grccnhou~
effect," a gradual wannang(weathrrchan cs) of the
Earth' urfact Ro" land ts aJso stud}10ga<.'1d nun'
impact on the en" iron ment.
"8.J~r m Ciuc tsarc1nHtedtot'n1m the rt' t ofthC'
e' e01ng. Pick up your champagne gla s(a g1IO on the
wa) o ut . "conC'luded the par\) S<'Cnano
Other guests were Walter atld Darleoe Gulten, Tom
a nd Martlyn Nielsen, Edward and Floss Scbumacber.
'nomas and DoroU.)' Doan. Alic~ Lowell, E '<et"U t 1' e
V ace Chanctllar Dr. WUllam and Ingeborg Lillyman,
Vice Chancellor Dr .. Hwaee a nd Barban Mitd1eU, Dr.
Fred and ylvla Relnea, .\cting \ice Chancellor teH
Relyea. Dr. Lffea nd JoanScatwart1(he 1 acting
d irector. UCIM('). Vice C\ucellor Dr. Jou Miltner,
Job FeJtmu {president. UCTBT A.). Roeald CrtbbM
(manager Irvine Mamott). Patrtcll and Barbara
Cfflpa. Daallo and Pew Cattlamatta, '"e and
Juet Fryer, Vicki He.toe, Gary and Joaane HHt, Ra)'
'and U.da Jelluaaoa, WIUam H. Lane, IUclk Manuck, E4
McGradi, Wanland All« Mu1oe, Robert and Barbara
aieltom and "sctnano-plannc~" Gina Kel1el9 nnd
Stepite• O.r11tea n . ·:.
Paparwu11 ... cdtrttl b\ r>.,,h Pi/01 \r, Ir C't11 ror \ 1d11
lkan
>
\
--~~---------------~----~~---------............... & ............................... -
1
Or.nge Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, June 20, 1985
~armer's son also-rises to feed elite appetites:
LIKE parks h1 own helly. blue Ford p1cic-up truck.auarded bya
blaclc Labrador he introduced as "My Lady." • • • PA TllER .. :' lrt had
known my son would
have grown up to br
--IQ IQJ1n.J.w0111d have been nicer to
him," said friendly
farmer Jack Hubbard
(who admitted to
~phrasing actor
----Brnv
PORTER
PUT THI IN YOUR PIPE. A ner Oot. I, Orange County~~ who "li&hL~iQlationj)f• law _
approvedliitT\lesday by tne Board ofSupervisors may see their chance for promotion go up in smoke.
The new la wallows smoking in only I 0 percent of
county-owned (or leased)work areas. including private
offices and lounges. ~e-J~eferrcd to JollD Hubbanl, fo under and
owner of the spectacular Irvine Ranch Farmers Market at
Atrium Court. Fashion Island.
How wi ll violators of the "No Smoking .. ordinance be
punished?
"Annual employee fitness(evaluation) reports may ·
reflect non-compliance and thus affect promotions."
declared Supervisor TllomH RUey, who admitted he was
"once a chain-smoker who bought I Ocartons of cigarettes
at a time." (Riley said he smoked his .. last Camel on New
Year's Eve, 1975. ")
"My father gets all the credit," responded John
Hubbard. but his modest father woufd admit onl y to
"digjng up and potting the 3-foot tomato plants(with at
least a dozen ready-to-ripen tomatoes)" -a new item (at
$25 each) on the produce scene.
Shoppers at 1he fashionable market-meeting place
may utihze the valet parking. but not Jack Hubbard. He
"I am sympathetic to the smoker who wants to 'kick
the habit.· .. said the supervisor. "and we hope to provide
educa tional programs for such individuaJs ...
Can immature teens hold
hurried marriage toget-her!!-
DEA R ANN LANDERS: He 1sa
college sophomore and she is a high
school senior. A wedding has been
scheduled ina hurry because. toput it
crudel}. there 1sa bun in the oven. •
Whether the child was inadvcrtcn1-
lyconceivcd in the heat of passion or
wbethertheyd1d this on purpose to
fo rce parental pcrmis1son to man). I
don't know. E1thcrwa). there are 1wo
sets of distressed parents and l\~O
immature teen-agers who most as-
suredly did not weigh the conse-
quences of" hat they were doing.
Is be man enough not to feel
trapped., Will he end up blaming the
girl forwnat wasessentially .. nrotua1
consent"? ls she ~apablc of car:ing for
an infa nt without beingenv1ousof
her fnends who will be gomg to the
prom and enjoying the activities of
whjch she can no longer be a part"
Of course, there 1s no medical
insurance to co' er prenatal and birth
expense, so there 1s bound to be some
resentment overthisdram on par-•.
ental resources. Such dependency
leads to hum1hat1on and ill will. ft is
not easy to accept the generosity of
others. espec1all)' under such circum-
stances.
I was an unwed mother who
relinquished a child for adoption. In
•• WDEIS
my opinion there isn't an iota.of
difference between the burdc"l1 ofa
forced marriage and unwed mother-
hood. But. oh. the glory of the
frredom that can be gai ned from the word__NO! __ .
My message is trite. but I pray you
wtll pnnt it because it is wisdom born
of.expeoonce. -HOPING FOR AT
LEASTONELESSSTATISTIC IN
HARRISBURG
DEAR HOPING: Nearly 10 percent
of tbe females from 15 to 19 years of
age in tbe United States get pregnant
every year. I'd like to tbink your
letter miglat reduce tlaat number by
more tban one. Tbaob for writing. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: May I
respond to the letter from a male
nurse who complained bitterly about
the state of the art? I have been a male
nurse for I 0 years and can back up
Ultimate posh room
has a TV that works
lf)'ou· want to talk competition. no
one plays the game any better than the
l)ation's innkeepers.
Ask anyone who travels-they can
be led blindfolded mto a hotel room.
open the ir eyes and in five seconds tell
you.exactly how much the room cost.
The basic no-nonsense room will
have a bed. one plastic glass wrapped
10 see-through plastic. a bottle opener
on the door and a bar of soap the size
and thickness of a cred it card. The
room key will dangle from a piece of
wood that looks like a tree trunk.
There 1s bug spray on the light bulbs.
As you move up in the corporate
world. your room will have a picture
in it. It 1s always the same one ... a
Ja~nesc fishing boat sa1lin$ into a
bnght oran$e sunset. There 1s room
service which consists of a tray
entombed in plastic to keep the food
hot.
Success 1s within your grasp when
you check into a hotel room with the
toilet tissue folded over mto a point so
you don't have to hunt for the end.
The stnp over the toilet seat is a
giveaway. You arc in carpetla nd. The
soap 1s bigger now, and sometimes
there are two bars of 1t so you don't
have to use-the sanft one fo r the
shower and washbowl.
No one can e"cr forget the moment
they check into a room and sec the
''PLEASE MAKF llP MY RO()M"
card in two language\ (E\en \l.hl·n
you·re in W1scons1n.) You JUSt kn o-...
this 1s a room where there are three
,,.
ERMA ~ ...
Bo11EcK 1~ L
sheets on the kin$·Size bed and a
bedspread that weighs 137 pounds.
That is why it is turned down each
night.
At the next level of power. the room
key turns mto a computer card that
you just slip into the door and wait for
the click. There's a terry-cloth bath·
robe hanging from the hook in the
bathroom and an electric shoe
polisher to tri p over by the bed. The
art has changed. Covering an entire
wall is a white canvas with an eyeball
10 shades of green. It has a brass plate
on it with the name "Sunrise." There
1s a phone book in the room. Status
~n't'get much better than that.
The to.p of the line? Wmdows that
open. A hairdryerthatactivateswhen
yo u take it out of the holder A
stocked refrigerator with your own
key. Heated towels. All the lamps
have bulbs in them. ll 1s located on a
floor acces-;ible only b)' puttmg a key
into an unmarked floor on the
elevator Room service calls you by
name when \Ou call
The ulumate level., ..\ rnom where
the TV works.
every word of his letter.
You bet there is blatant discrimina-
tion agajnst male nurses by their
female colleagues. I r s worse than he
described. Although it is true that
there has been an increase in the
number of males who have entered
the nursing profession in the last I 0
years, many have lefi . Those who do
...stay usually work in intensive care
units, o~rating rooms and emerg-
ency rooms-plac.cs where it is
considered safe to be assertive.
As a male nurse assi,ned to a unit. I
know what kind of patients I will be
~ven to care for. They arccntically
111. diilkult or oomba\We, elderly-·
andor male. l-will aJso beuked to
move and lif\all the heavy patients.
Nursing is a profession that re-
quiresan expensive education, un-
qualified commitment, and nerves of
steel. The rewards may be great but
they don't translate into money. A
n ursc makes less than the clerk at the
local A&P grocery. I, like many others
who are disillusioned, am also look-
ing fora way out. -BELLYFUL IN
PORT AND, ORE.
DEAR B.F .: I bope yoa fl•d it I OOD.
I don't see bow aoyo.e wbo feels so
exploited can do a good Job. Tbaok1
for writhlg.
CALENDAR
Balboa Yacht Club and Newport
Harbor Yacht Club will host big boat
racing this weekend with BYC con-
ductin~ the fourth and fifth races of its
66 Senes for International Oddshore
Rulc (IOR)and Midget Ocean Racing
Class (MORC) yachts and NHYC
staging the sixth and seventh races of
its Ahmanson Series for IOR and
D1ckson Series for Performance
Handicap Raci ng fleet (PHRF) ra t-
ings.
At Dana Point. Capistrano Bay
Yacht Club will conduct its Schools
Out Regatta for one-design boats.
Elsewh ere in Orange Count).'.
Huntington Harbour Yacht Club wtll
host PHRF and one-design boats in
the second race of its Bolsa Chica
Series Ojl Saturday.
~h• other Southern Cali fornia
Yachting Association areas:
Los Angelea-Loag Beach
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club -
Cabrillo Series No. 3 (PHRF). Satur-
day.
Santa Monica Bay
California Yacht Club -Cham-
pagne Cup Del Mar race (pred icted
log). Friday; Soouthern California
MQRC Championship. Friday. Sat-
urday, Sunday; Pacific Cup (MORC),
Saturday, Sunday.
San Diego
Coronado C~ys Yacht C'l ub -
Ladies of the Waterfront (invi tational
handicap). aturday, Sunday.
Oceanside Yacht Cl ub -Coastal
Scnec; to Dana Poi nt. Saturday,
Sunday.
San Diego Yacht Club
Oceanside Overn ight race (IOR.
PHRF, MORC. SOH F), Saturday,
Sunday. ;:::==========:::::::::::=::::::::::=::::=::;;;::===============::i Coronado Yacht Club -Barr
LI DO MARINA
VILLA GE
SUMMER
FASHION SHOW
'86
DA TE SATURDAY. JUNE 22. 1985
T IME 11 AM TO 4PM
• LIDO SILl<S
• Vtl~E COMPANY
Series (inv11auonal). Sunday.
Silver Gate Yacht Club -Wheel-
chair Regatta. Sunday.
IZES
..... 6. 10
I
It's doubtful that the ''No Smokint'' law wiIJ land
county employee 1njail. But if that should happen, the
violators could then smoke all they want -becau~ the
law exempts adults in jail or de ten ti on facilities ... which ivts risc10,a.n~mbuofquc£tions, induding"Oo ---
prisonersnavc more frccaom of choice than county
employees?" and "Will the ACLU insist o n a non-smoking
section in the county jail?"
"fund-raiser") l\oaRawllu who said he was "1mprcsstd''
(as well he mi&ht be)wilh the$22S.000alreadycoltcctcd
for a hotel for nomeless women.
Rawlins and 70guests from commu;;;:.rr aovernment.
and private l'ndustryapplauded Supervi ~s ·
presentation ofSSO.OOOand the$ 11 ,SOOchcck presented
by Newport Harbor Zonun:lub president Leora Seara to
YWCA advisory board chairman Jea.a Alcldd and ••• HAVE CLINIC, WILL TRAVEL.A new, unique"quit Harriet Harri• (executive vice president, YWCA
Women's Foundation)-all earmarked for the new b~tel. smoking forcharity" plan wa~ presented by hy~
notherapist Melody Criner-Gordo• at a recent OM NI
Business Club meeting in Huntington Beach.
Scan credited Zonta member Barbara Naa .. ar wt th
initiating Royal Princess Line cruises to raise the
contribution. The funds arc a partial response to a
$100.000challengcgrant from Tltomu Nielsea, Tbc
Irvine Co.
Groups of relatives. friends, or employees who want
to quit smoking don't have to go to her El Toro office; she
will come to their home, office or club -and as an added
incentive, a percentaJe ofher fee will be donated to the
group's fa voritecnanty.
The million-dollar hotel for40 homeless women -a
second floor addition to the existing YWCA building-is
scheduled for completion in early 1986. • • • • HOWTO RAISE$1 MILLION. YWCAexerutivc Rawl ins said the hotel will be a "model" for programs
to be duplicated in otherareasofthecounty. to meet the
needs of more than 500 homeless women.
director Mary Doqlaa threw open her doors last
Wednesday to welcome new campai&n director (spelled
Mr. and Mn . Robertaon
ROBERTSON-RUNNELS
Westwood United Method ist
Church was the setting for the June I
marriage ofSusan Alicia Runnels and
Alexander Robertson IV. grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Gifford Searles of
Laguna Beach.
The Rev. Mr. Legard May of the
Lawndale Church of Christ in Hous-
ton officiated at the ceremony and
singer-actor John Raitt was soloist.
The couple greeted 250 guests at a
reception at the Los Angeles Country
Club.
The bride is the daughter of Dr. and
Mrs. Charles B. Runnels of Pacific
Palisades. She is a graduate of
Palisades High School. and attended
Seaver College and earned a degree in
business and nutntion from Pep-
perd1ne Un1vers1ty. where her fat her
is chancellor. She is employed as a
financial analyst at So uthern Cali-
fornia Edison Co.
She was attended by her sister-in-
law. Jasmine Runnels as matron of
honor. Bridesmaids were Ginger
Runnels, sister-in-l;tw of the bride.
and Aimee, Heather and Nicole
Robertson. sisters of the bridegroom.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and-Mrs. Alexander Robinson Jr. of
Rancho Santa Fe. He attended Cor-
ona del Mar High School, the Univer-
sity of Southern California and a
semester at sea before completing his
business degree at Pepperdine. He is a
third year law student at Pcpperdine's
school of law and will work this
summer with a Los Angeles law firm.
Tyler Runnels. brother oft he bride.
was best man. and ushers were Duke
Runnels, brother of the bride, Wil-
liam Applegate. Bradford Farmer and
Gregory Hexberg.
After a honeymoon in the
Hawa iian Islands. the couple will
make their.home in Santa Monica:
BROWER-DA VIS
_Kimber!J Patricia Davisi...a for mer
Irvine resident. and William Gil~rt
Brower exchanged wedding vows on
May 25 in the La Jolla Presbyterian
Church. A reception followed in the
Verandah Room of ·La Valencia
Hotel m La Jolla.
The bride is the daughter of Cra ig
C. Davis of Los Angeles and Mrs.
Randolph Davis of Irvine. She wore
.an ivory satin princess style gown
fashioned with lavish beading on the
bodice of Alencon lace and puffed
sleeves. The satin skirt swept into a
full cathedral train. Her headpeice of
fresh flowers held a cathedral length
veil.
Matron of honor was Nancy Ke-
nyon. and two sisters of the bride-
groom. Lori Dante and Robin Page
were bridesmaids. Other bridal at-
tendants were Carol O'Connor. Rose
Evans. Sue Wright. Ramona
Hoertner and Sarah McCoy. Adrian
--
Mr. and M.ra. Br ower
Dante. niece of the bndegroom, was
flower girl.
The bridegroom is the .son of Mr.
and Mrs. R. D. Kiser of Eugene. Ore.
His best man was Jeff Calavan, and
ushers were his stepfa ther, It D.
Kiser. his brothers-in-law. Keith Page
and Sergio Dante, Craig Davis li t;..
brother of the bride. Jim Harrison,
Roger Barron and Craig Nelson.
After a wedding trip to the islan
of Bora Bora and Moorea. the couple
plan to ma ke their home in Miss100
Bay in San Diego.
Submit wedding news =
To help you submit the required wedding and engagement
information. fo rms are available at the Daily Pilot office. 330 W. Ba)
Sr .. Costa Mesa.
For weddings. quality photos o f the brida~ couple or bride only an.•
acceptable.
Engagement information must be submitted at least seven weeks
prior to the wedding.
Forms and photos can be dropped off at the office or mailed to the
Wedding Deparunent. Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif:
92626.
FUEL RECOVERY PLAN •••
From Bl
for it -not the fuel companies - but
you and I and the rest of the boaters
wh o use gas. What's worse. some fuel
dock operators have told the staff
they would rather go out of business
than pay fo r the mstallation of the
recovery system.
"fueling a boat is entirely different
than fueling and automobile. Marine
fuel tanks are difficult to fill. but not
for the reasons stated by the SCAQM
staff." Leslie testified.
"Boat fuel fi ll Imes often have
several bends and turns prior to
entcnng the tank which tends to
create back-ups resulting in over-
nows This IS not due to plugged or
inadequa te ve nting. Attendants will
frequently wrap a rag around the
nozzle to prevent the overflow.
"When fill ing a boat tank, one
list~ns to the sound of the ve nt to
establish-when a tank is nearly full
Do la ...
Sizzle into summe r
in these sandals
White or Baby Camel.
and wi ll shut down the pump pn or to
overflow. thus avoiding spillage:·
Lesl ie continued.
The overboard vent on a boat 1s
separate from the deck fill pi pe. so the
vapors will still be released, Leslie
explained. Furthermore. he added.
the vacuum assist system would rob
the consum er of the fuel he has paid
for.
TRANSPAC •••
From81
Lesli e told the board that the
proposal 1s not cost effe<:tive. based
on ioaccurate assumptions of the
St.lfT.
If small fuel dock operators prefer
to go out of business rather than
install the expensive new equipment.
boaters would be robbed of many of
their refueling stations. Le slie warn-
ed.
Nelson Marek 68 Drumbeat.and Peter~ 1hon·\ NM-66 Pandemonium. both
flying the burgec ofNewP.?rt Harbor Yat'ht < luh.
-:'II of the ULDBs wi ll ~ out to break the elapsed time record of the 6 7-foot
Merbn, 8da)ts. 11 hours, set 1n 197~ Merlin will also be seekjng to better her
owo reco_rd under the helms~nsh1p ofSk1p Stevely of San Franciso. ( Mcrhn
barely missed her old r~ord 1n 1_98 1 when she fini shed 46 seconds short).
Scnd-o.tf p.any andmstrucuon dinner for t·his year's-T ra nspal: will be held
July 2at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel, Lo Angeles.
Enroll Now -Fall Semester
Starts Sept. 8th
Re880f\able Tuition ,_
Join the um m er Fun
at DAY CAMP!!
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JULY 8th thru AUG. 2nd
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& THAOuGHOUT THE VtLLAOe·
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TV Lis TING S
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( 1143) Bob Ho91. Dorothy l.alncM.
Cl)MOtt'IE
t M "Lott Horizon" (1937) Ronald
C<ilwl. John Howltd
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FAllA.YFBJD THAn INCAEDlll.E
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CID PENNY POWER
-t:OO-
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D alOOllY SHOW eMOWE
Ht "P.J " (1968) Geotge Pep.
---
Malcolm-Jamal Warner la In trouble with Ill•
parenta (BUI Coeby. Phylicia Ayen-Allen)
when llom ftnda a marijuana ctcarette In hla
achoolbook·on .. The Coeby Show" tontcbt .,
8 on NBC, Channel 4. ·
l)lfd, Raymond Borr
8 0MOYIE "In Like Flynn" (Premiere} Jenny
Seagrove. Wiiiiam Espy. i=·WIU) I :::AINMOO TOH!Om
t t lh "T tnSC>Md And Brown Shoe"
( 1980) Ben Vereen. Jell Goldblum.
I ID MVST&rfl
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CH)MOYIE
H "Blchelor Party" ( 1984) Tom
Hinks. Tawny K11aen
(.S)MOYIE
t t t "The Escape Artist" ( 1982)
Gntlln O'Neal. Teri Gerr
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~~
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MERVGIWFIH
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Ralph Richardson. Christopher Lam-
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Ktimer. Lucy Guttendge
-9:30-D QI BK) SHOTS IN AMERICA
(!)MOVIE • • • .. NlcilelodtOn.. ( 19 7 8) Ryan
O'Neal. Burt Reynolds.
-10:00-
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l eeNEWS .
9 20/20
tlLOUOMNT • M .._,,.ARY AHO TME NEWS
MBllA
Ci) SH SHEPH9'D'S AMERICA
a!) 894N> THE SCENES
l:)WAESTUNO ~MOYIE * *'"' "The AlnlllUI'" (1982) John Savage, Chftstopher Plummer
SEX AHIJ ntE AMERICAN ~
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GDAD'SMW'f . 8D IAOTMEA AHORf.W AHIJ
HEROES OF M FAITH
lllZAAAE
MOVIE
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OPEN FOR LU CH & DI NER
Monday thr..u Friday
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Chuclt Homs. M.-y Louise Weier
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t t "The Hou" ( 19721 SIM Ewing.
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Orange Coat OAILY PILOT~. June 20. 1915 88
Cosby's one-two punchr
propels NBC to a big win
By JERRY BUCK
,.,,~~
LOS ANGELES -Rau~ leader
8111 Cosby landed m Nielsen s Top 10
twice. with his regular sencs episode
Thursday plus a Father's Day show.
as NBC kept far ahead of the
compet1t1on for the week ended June
16.
Cosb}' bad almost the same effect
on NBC's Sunday schedule as be has
had on Thursday rug.ht ... The Cosby
Show" Thunday was first. while a
special "Cosby Show" rerun earned
on Father's Day was in ninth place.
The entire Sunday prime-time
schedule was &,iven over to Father's
Day. "fathers and Sons," a rcJCClcd
pilot. was m a three.way tie for I 7ta
place. The movie "A Faihcr's Love"
was No. 26. Two comedies telecast
before Cosby. "Punky Brewster" and
a special Sunday showing of
"Di ff' rent Strokes." failed to benefit
from C'osb)'s presence. Both finished
near the bottom of the ratings.
into the fall 1l needs •o Qu1ld nunas
~ks OINMMr ftiahts.. too. -CBS was first in the evenma news
category. NBCsecondandABCth1rd.
The raung,: CBS I L I , NBC 9.8. ABC
9.S.
Herc are the week's h1ghc t and
lowest-rated shows·
I. ''The Cosby Sbow," NBC. a
rating of 21 .3 or 18.1 million bouK'-
holds. 2. "The A-Team," NBC, 19.4 or
16.S million.
3. "Family Tics," NBC, 18.5 or
15. 7 m1Won.
4. "Riptide,'' NBC. 17.3 or 14.7
m11J1on.
S. "Remington Steele." NBC. 17 I
or 14.5 million.
6. Tte-"Trapper John. M.D .. " CBS.
16. 7 or 14.2 m1lhon.
6. T1e-"Checrs," NBC. 16 7 or 14.2
m1lhon.
6. Too-.. N 1gh1 Court, .. NBC. 16 lor I 14.2 m1lhon.
9. "The Cosby Show," Sunda)'.
NBC. 16.4 or I 3. 9 million.
10. "M11m1 Vice," NBC. 16.3 o
13.8 million. -
11 "H1ahw1y •o Kca-vco." NBC.
15.6 or 13.2 milhon .
12. T1e·"Cra.l) Like a foA •. CBS,
15.S or 13.1 mt.Ilion.
11. Tie."20-20." ABC. 15.5 or 13.1
m1lhon.
14. "Facts of Lafe." NBC. 15.0 or
12.7 m1lhon
IS. "Who's lbe Boss.,," ABC. 14.8
or 12.5 mjUaon
16 MoVl e-"Summer Fant.asy,"
NBC. 14.6or 12.4 m1lhon.
17. Tie-"Falbers and Sons," NBC.
14.4 or 12.2 miU1on.
17. T1e~"Kate & Allie," CBS. 14.4
or 12.2 million.
17 T1e-·'Newhart," CBS. 14.4 or
12.2 m1lhon.
20 "Simon & Simon ... CBS. 14 I or
12.0 mt.1J1on.
Alto~ether, NBC grabbed nine places 1n the Top 10, including the lop ,--------------
five pl~ces and four of the next five.
CBS's "Trapper John. M.D.," in a
three-way tie for sixth place, was the
only compemor to make it.
HE CAN FLY A JET. RACE A CAR
ANO OJTSMART A COMPUTER
NBC' won the ratinJS with a
network average of 13.6 10 the A.C
Nielsen Co. survey. CBS was second
with 12.4 and ABC was third with
10.0. The networks say this means
that in an average prime-ume minute
13.6 percent of the audience was
THE GOVERNMENT CREATED HIM
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tuned to NBC.
Here is the Top 10 (All NBC except
f'BS' "Trapper John"): "The Cosby
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. June 20. 1i85
--Ashland Shakespeare
~E t m&rks 50th )!e_ar
By GRETCHEN BAY ........... ,,..,,...
The Ashland, Ore .• Shakespearean
FcstivaJ first opened on July 2. 1935,
founded by An3us L. Bowmer. The
festival which now consists of three
beautiful theaters, began with a small
o.utdoor wooden platform that has
since expanded to Its present status.
This year's festival. the 50th, began
with an interesting production of
Shakespeare's "K.inJ Lear." As the
deep, intense music poured from
somewhere in the background of the
primitive, Stonehenge-type seuan$.
the players became v1S1ble in their
stunning costumes adorned with fur
and leather. The savage, primitive
setting was perfect for the portrayal of
ancient England, which was equally
as savage and pnm1t1ve.
The gray, brown, and beige cos-
tumes were very striking against the
dull gray-brown of the set. Although
the play bordered on being slightly
overdramatized 11 was not at all a
disappointment. Performances by
John David Castellanos as ~dmund.
the bastard son of Glouster. and Joe
Vincent as the Earl of Kent were
delightful high points m the play. and
helped to make up for the few
imperfections found in this pro-
duction.
Castellano~. with his stunmng
black hair. gives an equally stunning
gcrformancc whose request of the
gods to "stand up for bastards" is well
met.
Joe Vincent also gave an excellent
performance as Kent. who. along
Wlth some C\Ccllcnt accent changes.
was very convincing 1n his portrayal
of one of Lear's only true and loyal
fnends. The huge stone set appeared to
change mysteriously possibly reOec·
ting the changing and twistjng prrscnt
1n the script. Although not the most
si:>ectacular and stunninf. production
of "King Lear," a fair y good one
which was enjoyable to watch.
"Cnmes of the Heart." a delightful-
ly funny play by Beth Henley, was not
quite as impressive. bordered on
being absurd and was played a little
too comically. The "bttterswcet"
qualit} oft ht> play was completel y lost
in this overdone productton. which 1s
too bad because the script. if played
without the stereotyped characters
and the near slapstick manner in
which it was done. contains enough
subtle humor on its own without
being overemphasized.
The characters of 4nny Magrath,
played by Priscilla Hake Lauris, and
Barnette Lloyd. played by Larry
Paulsen. were the two played the most
closely to the script, and were ex-
tremely well done.
.. Crimes." which deals-with the
reunion of three sisters all on the
verge of breakdowns, is a great story
that almost makes up for the direc-
toral Oaws. Although somewhat of a
disappointment, "Crimes of the
Heart" stm succeeds in being fairly
entertaining and enjoyable to watch.
What did come across well was the
relationship between the three sisters.
who. phystcally. were all perfectly
cast.
One of the most fun and entertain-
Oran·ge County's·
easy
listening
radio station
ing pa~s of the festival w:is
"Trclawny of the Wells" by Arthur
Wing Pinero. The elaborate ··period
piece" is a celebration of the theater
and is highlighted by some outstand·
ing performances, stunning costumes
and enjoyable musical numbers be-
tween acts.
At the end of every act. the
characters would freeze . captured
with the lighting. and the set would
spin around to reveal the next act.
This factor of the production was so
well done it did a lot to add to the
performance. Steven Martin Beck
who played Tom Wrench. was per-
fectl y cast, and gave an outstanding
performance.
The performances of Stephanie
Shine as Avoma Bunn. and Giana
Biegler, as the title role, Rose
Trelawny, wt>re also highlights to this
fun and very enjoyable play. The
actors do so much with the de-
liverance of their lines to add to the
play and make it the excellent
production that it is.
The final play, Steve Metcalfe's
"Strange Snow," in climactic fashion
moved the audience with its intensity
and outstanding performances. The
play. about Vietnam veterans and
their necessity to deal with their
problems was well acted. convincing.
and intense. ReOective ofa line in the
play -it made the viewer want to
laugh and cry at the same time.
The emotions of all the characters
are reOected so well in the faces of the
actors. The performance that was
nearest perfection was that of Jeanne
Paulsen who played Martha. the
sister of David. a Vietnam vet. She
held h~rself perf~y and stayed
1otally in character .
Overall. the Ashland experience is
a very enjoyable one. One has the
chance to · view some outstanding
plays and experience the quaintness
of the town itself. I plan to attend the
festival again next season and would
recommend to anyone who could be"'
in the area then to do the same. .
Gretcbea B•y, • FtHUJlala Valley
re.Idol, 11 a 11Neat •I H•mboldl
Seate VaJvenlty ud eorolled Ill •
clH• oo play crltJqflhlg.
Lalnie Kazan
Youth show
setatSCR
You can learn how to eat like a
child. a~ well as how to watch
television. act 1n school and generally
conduct }Our young life at South
Coast Repertory this weekend.
SCR ·s Young Conservatory Play-
ers.will present five performances of
Delta Ephron's "How to Eat Like a
Child" on the Costa Mesa theater's
Second Stage. Diane Doyle. director
of the Young Conservatory, is staging
the productt on wnh children from 12
to 15 ) cars of age.
The cast. all graduates of the
theater's two-) ear Young Con-
servator)' program. will enact
sketches on the finer points of
"correct" child behavior. including
"How to Have a Birthday Pany" and
"How to Sleep" with the typical
comic wisdom ofa child.
··How to Eat Like a Child" will be
presented Saturday at I and } p.m.
and Sunday at I. 3 and 5 p.m. at the
theater, 655 Town Ce nter Drive.
Costa Mesa. Admission is $4 for both
adults and children and tickets may
be reserved by calling the SCR box
office at 957-4033.
Atlwm1ee Tickets for THe GOONiBS
ON SAU at "°"_,,,;::;.,iiiniiiir:i• w.v ~~~Plus
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Lainie Kazan joins
TV's 'Paper Chase ·
Drama Uc role on PBS show marks another
phase of sin tt-aetres_s_' zt__..=!g:__m~~!z!..---
By JERRY BUCK UT..._..,...,
LOS ANGELES -Lainie Kazan.
whose career bas zigzaaaed from
glamorous singer to playing zany
housewives, takes on a strictJy dra-
matic role as a middle-aged law
student in "Paper Chase: The Third
Year.''
She stars as Rose Samuels. who
enters law school andjQins the realm
of Professor Charles Kingsfteld and
students James T. Hart, firanklin Ford and Willis Bell. ·
"She st.arts out slow. but she
develops into a powerful lady," said
Kazan. "I think she's an inspiration
to women, especially divorced
women. I think that's one of the
reasons I was inspired lo pJay the role.
Her husband leaves her for a younger
woman. and she goes back to school.
"In the begi1111ing the other stu~
dents just look on her as someone to
mend their clothes. Then she emerges
as a powerful person and han~les her
own di vorce case.''
It is the first continuing film role for
Kazan, who was Barbra Streisand's
u11derstudy in the Broadway run of
"Funny Girl." She will appear in 10
episodes of "The Paper Chase,''
which is on the Showtime pay
television network.
The series, which began on CBS.
then switched to PBS and finally
Showtime, also stars John Houseman
as Kingsfield, James Stephens as
Hart. Tom Fitzsimmons as Ford and
James Keane as Bell. Houseman won
an Academy Award as best support-
ing actor for his role in the movie
version. which inspired the series.
. On the stage and in her singing
appearances sbe has been an attract-
ive, dynamic woman.·• But I've never
done that on film," she said. "I've
played mostly character roles. A
housewife who can't get her act
together. downtrodden women who
seem to find humor in their failure or
position ...
"I want very much for the female
audience to say. yes, I can do it, too.
Thete's life after family. It's not a
vacuum. Not just as an enten ainer in
a beaded dress, but as an average
housewife -after divorce, all
rejection, after her children lea ve h1
"Rose is a well-rounded charact1
She dates a younger studenl, she dal
one of the parents. She has
wonderful relationship with the ot~
students and her daughter. ll's a re
chance for me to have a to
personality."
In her career she's been Russ12
Spanish. lt.ahan and Jewish. She sa
"The role J understood most was t
Jewish mother in 'My Favorite Yea
I grew up in that kind of a netE
borhood. I know that like the back
my hand."
She 1s herself a di vorced Jewt
mother. with a 14-year-old daugh
named Jennifer.
"l started as a dancer." she said.
did that until I got to high school.
wasn't popular then for children
want to be in show business so Itri
. after that to be a regular person. I we
fo ur years without performing. I ha1
drama scholarship to Hofs1ra U
versity. I always sang within t
confines of a character. I always t
be hind the character .
"I had one job asa night clubsin1
then I went into 'Funny Gi
Because of 'Funny Girl' I beca1
known as a singer. The producer, R
Stark, signed me to study with Pe
Daniels. who became my husband
She appeared frequently on ·1
Merv Griffin Show' in New Y<
during her time on Broadway. Lat
she sang frequentl y on "The De
Martin Show."
Kazan also starred in such mov
as "Lady in Cement, .. "One From t
Heart" and "Romance of a Ho
Thief." --
·· 1 consider myself a singing act re
but I get the most satisfaction fr<
singing." she said. "It's the most to
form of self expression. It's a char
to communicate all my.feelings ani
chance to not only emotionalize t
physicalize my aTt form .
·"The actress part of me. I'm getu
better at it. I'm learning,. Even tho1i
I've done films and theater. it's L
it's new to me. I guess the height of 1
dreams would be to do a Broad\I
musical or a movie musical."
If there's one thinq you must do
this sum.mer, it's "Return to Oz ... "
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•
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN8ACTION8, 81
~ ._ . _ ---MOF gag rate11ip foreca~t
Brower publishes newsletter Fannie Mae presidentpredtctsdecline
The first issue of a newsletter.
.. Martin Brower's Orange County
Report," has bttn published, with
conten~s rang!ng from the gyrations
of ml\!or developers creating the
county s new "downtown." to the
county's new, young movers and
shakers.
The monthly news letter is geared
for business, professional, institu-
tional, governmental and other de-
cisiol\ makers who need to under-
stand the nation's sixth largest coun-
ty, according to Brower, editor and
publisher, who also writes a column
that appears weekly on the editorial
page of the Daily Pilot.
Brower had been director of public
relauons for The Irvine Co.. the
county's largest landowner. for 12
years prior to resigning in January to
publish the newsletter. • • •
Computer Consoles. Inc .• a manu·
fa<:turer of computer systems •. will
consolidate its OranJ.e County oper-
ations in a new fac1li1y under con-
struction in Irvine Spectrum.
The Rochester, N.Y.-based com-
pany has signed a 10-ycar lease for a
SI 0 million, 150.000-square-foot fa-
cility being developed as a joint
venture by the Irvine Industrial,
Research & Development Co. and
The Koll Co., according to Richard
G . Sim, IIRD president.
Irvine Spectrum is a planned
business and technology community
at the juncture or the Santa Ana and
San Diego ~ays in Irvine. The
2.2~acre community 1s being de-
veloped by IIRD. an independent
operating unit of The Irvine Co .. and
encompasses c-0mponents for in-
novative high technology firms, t'lcc-
tronic.s, bioscience, research S de-
velopment, retail and office uses.
Situated on an 8.3~acre site in the
industrial component of Irvine Spec-
trum. the CCI facility was designed by
the DeReverc Partnership. Newport
Beach, and will encompass about
I 00.000 square feet of manufacturing
space and 50.000 square feet of offict'
space. Completion of the buildmg 1~
slated for December 1985.
-'1lct'mm--------------
NEW YORK (AP) -The fotlowlng Usl shows the Over -the • Counter stocks and warrants that have gone up lhe most and down the most based oo oerctnt of Cl'lange for Wednesday, No securities trading below S2 or 1000 shares are lnclUOed. Net and percentage cnanoes art trie difference ~tween lht previous closing bid price and Wed~1fi•v's last bid price.
Name Las I Ctig Pct.
1 Fst.Fdll<.alam 111/• t I~ UP 16.9
2 Radvne I"" 1tJ UP lS,4 3 grandlnsul ~ UP 14.l 4 ptn;raft ~ Up 14.
J otei.com ~ UP 14. LawhonFrn ~ 9-16 o 1 . OeclsnSvs ~YI 1/• Ho 1 .
I Nov,~rm WI 6t5·16+13-16 UP 11. 9 NA~' un 6'h + 34 Up 1 . 10 Dwight It" 41.-, ~ 'h Uo 1 S
NEW YC>ttK. (API 81fOlnc 1:1.. I~ QVGnl
NASDAQ C1U01•llon1 BlrlcM ' 4'~ DovlOB "'°wino nlo,,.11 l>kh BIYvoo1 Orle!Cn
I
, Alfacell wt ~ t M UP 2 Haganah un S 3-16 9-Up 3 ComP\.ltNtlW 11/4 Up i TwlsltTrt wt 2 ·16 +7· 2 UP 1 Audie Cp ~ 'I• UP
I ~~Lse wt8 4\4 ~ Up 1 orp wt 151.4 1\-'J Up 1J ~s Ptr un S~ VJ UP ~ oa~~~:rn=ceq ei: ~ 8~
AmHomShld s ~V• ! Up !llsvlle un 1-'t ...... UP arrlerScl 1.4 UP · ndoLase ~ Up sl logfc 1 t UP ovaPtlrm wt V• V• Uo
Nal'Tlt UldBankSF H thlnfo Everoood
DOWNS
Lait Chg "• = ~ l/4 -~
Jr. ~;:~ ~~::&"' ,~"' ,~ .. =~p 2~ 251/J HtnrOF 371.1) 3' MevnOf end tow•\ I ollen l>v • I I · I 6 6 l.o OunkO s 23 .. ?3"4 Hooa11 3~ 4\.'t McCrm rnerllelrnektr\Hol4 BrwlOI" l'l 19-16 Durlron
P rn. Wtoneidev Bulleh 37"• J7"41 DvMcn
Pr1G11 do not Include 8urnpS 7'' 7~ EelVen r elelt m e rk u o CNLFn 3 Jlo Econlb
rn.rkoown or corn-CPT 6 • •• • EOCmc> mlnton for Wtdne1· CelM•C 9l\ 10 EIP11 elev CelW!r s •S ... , Eldw8
Stoa 8lcl A.ii CenonG 19"-19lio Etec8IO
AEL ' ll 24 C•nred 6'"> 6'9 E!eNuct
AFAPrt 4 J91 > C•PSWI 17'h 17"'4 Emco<
Acedln n ~ Cewvs 26"-26-\11 EmoAlr •cuRav h l<9 Ctntcor 14 u v, EnoCnv AOecLb >.. 1' Ctlul II II''" Enrwl111
Adelle j "> 6:i., CllrmS \ 19'-It~ Eor011 Adf1nW 30,'l CllrnLH 1S I> 17'.., Frm(;
AdvC1r • r.: Cll11Ut '24"2 2S FedGo \ AcvRos '• AflBin n'• 1 1, CtrSGe 221111 '12' • Fidler ' AJlcoln "' ClrUI A ll1'l 39 FtEmP Amce11 '. 16 CllUI 8 ;Mt, JS FIWFn A Furn I 1, 11 l Ci.rkJ 23 '> 24 FINFI 1
AGrHI ~ '• 37'. ~IOwCP u~ "'' Fluroco !mtc:r 1):~,u~ I~~ ~w· ij:r.: ~f~o AOu~I 11 IS·32 'l mwTI ~rnlllip Ana 111 S S''• nPeP ' >., '• rn~ l An11 A 14', 14\9 ordl' e>.to 1" '" G Mo~ ' 1~·32 f~ or•i' H~"> ~· Frr,mnr ~::Mr . , ~r 'Y1\d:C, 'fl: :: ~F~~~h
Melen • ''"'" Y.':f. IS'. I nOc-;a AOG1LI • ~ ,S( I~ I >• nRtEll
101;. II Hoover 26"4 ?1 McF erl 4'\ S Hort1R1 J ~ MtOCrt )I 31 H.,Wltc 23"-24 MtOEI 1
ll'Y n IMS ' 24'-2S Mlcorn 9~ 10 ISC IO'i. IC>"-MOnW 1 IS' o 15' • lnfORK 23\lt 241~ McllOCa 171o. ll1'l lnttrn II'• ll11J In· MIOIBk •• • 6h treln 7\.'t ,.,., Intel M INipr
• 141-w I•'• 23''> 23~ In· Mole)( 11-16 13·1' lrcEnr 2'n 2'11 MonfCI •~ lh lntooll ' 11•1, 11~• MonuC 11•., 11"4 ln8W '5''> •6 MooreP 17•, 19111 JamWtr 11 11•,, Morr'"
7 71/t JefMert 6 '> 6~ MotCll> 61~ 61~ Jerko 20''> 20lot Mutt!« t2"4 23 JonlCl>I .... 6llo Mullmd 30', ~ JOSPil1n ,,,. ••• Narro<:
SS'• S5l... Jollvn 31 311 • NOe1a s1~ Sl11 Kelver 11-16 13-16 NMlcrn
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30"'° 31', Ke<no SI''" 57'• Nlt..e 8 11 '> It K.lmt>el ll 311 .. NC•'Y' U1 .• l4t'. !Sl::Ja' J~ J~ rl:~l's i6' • "-KnaPfV ~,., tt'., ~oxell 11~ 4~ ~~; Ii~ 14~ NUC1':,
,>.. 0 ' • Lenct ' ?9 • ?9 ., f~o ' • 2 • LenOlh II I~ I ... IOCe >.. I'. LantCo 50.\0 SI Fero
At1Re1 l4 1 ls 011um s>.. 6 1-1s Avrtltk 19 , 9i.t 08ter r ecQ 8800 4t1 • 4911> Sl-16 S IS·31 rPllSC
BilrdC J"" 1•1o ~lbA 24"' ,,,.., r evAd ~noH l6 9 •!Md ' '• ifAl>IO llMAm I 10' t tCen I '1 14' • vrOdV
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I>!> ' 3 • l., uOt 5'. s -,, ~r1f '
'"" 1 1 L..01• .. • .. ~IV)C If,, ll' • Le•kon l 9· 16ff,.,, 1>0 '• J''• ~llnv1 ~'h trTP I ? I lvTul I '-I xoco 71'> L n8ro 30''> CA Int 9 10 MCI .. 1'4 PcGaR 2 • 2 > MeoGE 26' • 26''> Pen1P11
ff tt• • MeoelPI PeulPI '• '• l ~ l 11-16 PeerMI > I~ Me1Rt I-" ,.,, PenaEn
GTiCp 4Yt -1'ie -H:2 ~d aOY~IC
f E
-l}J
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ilfCf:: 3.4
N1!f. :S1Lab l/'J -. ..., it) ~ -~ 1 ., OK~ -,..., 1:: M~lh ppt -If.I IS C 'i~ -2~ 14. Amowr unt9 -~ I . 2en~ -~ 1 .
ew F~s ~ -~ 1 .
Hme ~ 14 -2 1 . N!~ I« r -lf.1 1 . U lgn -~ 1 • View st :i -13.4 I: Henovercss -w. ~umagam -~
!'a -~ I : In 1oor -1''2 ~SI~ 4~ ~ t . 4~ -~ 11.
in 12 percen t home loan interest ra~
WASHINGTON (AP) -The 12 percent. may drop to 11 5 percent
pl'Csident of the nation's largest before increasing slightly by year's
provider of home mortgage mon~y end, Riedy said. But rates would
predicted Wednesday that mortgage probably not be above 12 perctnt
tntertst rates wiJI decline shghtly aftenhat yc!ar~nd increase. he added
from their current level of 12 percent Riedy also acknowledged that h1i.
for the next few' months. prediction may be overt> cautious
"Mortgage interest rates at worst and that rates may decline even
will stay flat and possibly continue to further. Sax months ago. man~ econ-
decline for at least several months," om1sts thought .. ir we h11 12 pt"rcent
said Marie J. Riedy, president of the we'd be lucky; we hit and and ~c·re
Federal National. Mortgage Assoc1a-piercing 11." he said.
tion. popularly known as Fann re The .. tremendo us drop'' 1n rates for
Mac. li'\cd-rate 30-}ear mortgages from
Mortgage rates. which now average last Jul~ 's level of 14.5 percent has
also made ad.Ju table-rat.e monp&a
(ARMs) le popular wtlh home
buyers. R1~y said.
''The)' an: locking in tht CttUl.Dly
of lo~r rato of the ftled.-rue
monpses." he said.
Whale adjuitable-rate mort..,e
rates dropped from 11 percent to 9
percent in the last year: the decline
was smaller than for fixed·fltt mon ..
gages, he said.
As the gap between adjustable and
fixed-rate mortgage rates narrows.
there 1s an tncrcased incentive -for
both lenders and borrowers -to
finance home purchases ~th fued-
rate mortgages, Riedy said.
Lower rates have also made I S-yc:ar
mongages more popular. be wd
Consumers can save hair to threc-
quarters of a percenta~ point
-l:l'tl~l~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-JL
It~='~' WI 20 CX Corp 21 aPw adl of
39~-..... ~ ~= :,: 211.4 -1•.
H H CentrnOala •.4 i:alrchld .c4.J .c Ideal Basic 3 5 Mclean wl
NEW YORK (AP) -The fotlowlng 11$1 5hoW5 the New Yorlt Stoett Exchange $lodt• •nd warrants INll have gone up the most end down the most based on perc.nt of cl\ani>e regardless of volume
forWednndav. r:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~=====================:;.-No *urltles trading t>etow S2 are Ind-I -uded. Net end e>ercenl8" d'lenoes ere the differtne• belwMn the previous c\o$lng c>rlce and Wednes1J~'s 2 P.m. price.
2 omnMtg wt ~ ~ UP 11.S 3 qulmrk CP ~ ~ Up 11.1
Our Lowest Rates Ever .
Second Trust Deed Loans
Name Lalf Cho Pct. 1 ;LI 2.7Qpf 1. 'h 21/o Up tU
4 uthRovl 1 ~ JI/. Up 10 l
! E~~A:~~~ 1 $ 1~ ~~ U Available at Rates as 9 ~E~ 13.'-'Pf 1 4 I~ Up 7.9 lil 1t·~li~ pf n~ 1~ 8g I·~ low as
ti H 1~ 111~ 1~ 8~ !:f 12 50% I~ rts crat,,e . ~ 1 3Jo 8~ 2:l O 1' Oet 9frif V. ~ Up 6. • ~J ~~noc •~ ll 8g I: cker~~ pf ~·1. ,:~ 8g :~ plus Wr points• ~?:' ... ,, J :~: 8g s:l 1 2 91 1 ~1usru· pf 2~ iv. uo s.1
ous.war OO~NS 1h Up 4 9 •
Ne me Last ChiJ 1 ~nltOrlll 311, -'h 2 IObMar 23Jo -11.o 3 anAm wt 31/• -1;. 4 MACOM 1734 -1 5 Et\lrndv 11 34 6 wnun 1'pf 11 ~ 1 v1u·nvl...... 5'1e -~ I v~•nsPd 2 -,,.. 9 v1CNlrtCo 2'1'11 -'1'11 10 PatrlckPtr 2111 -119
111 Bt.ltttes1G1 of 4'h -v. 2 F11Ch Cp 121h -JI/•
13 ~1StoraveTch 211. -v. 14 tXHlnll 2' • -f~ 15 LC Am 2~ -Ve 16 Mohwk Dal 21,, -11e 17 FstChl adi pf '8 -2~
RU Ff EU'S
UPHOLSTERY, lllC.
Fof lht Rest ol YOllf ltlf
Pclit3
.3 .1 6.6 6.4 6.• 6.0 5.9 S.6 5.6 5.3 u s.o 0 ..,
1922 HARBOR BlVD., COSTA MESA-5"8-1156
EOUAl. HOUSING U!NOER
w •• Rates subject
to Change
Loans to
57,650
30 year amortized • Due In 5 years
Call Angela McFadden (714) 495·3300
MONARCH BANK
30000 Town Center Drive
Laguna Niguel. CA 92677
(7 14) 495-3300
Member FDIC
EquaJ Housing
Lender
Southern California Savings Presents
MONEY MARKET PREMIUM
Check our compet1t1ve rates
on $ 100.000 o r more
... with Checking Too!
MINIMUM DEPOSIT RATE YIELD
•
$2,500 7.30 7.657
(monthly)
$100 5.25 5.466
(dally)
Rate• Subject to Change
YOUR HOMETOWN BANK
SINCE 1887
SOUTH~RN
CALIFORNIA
SAVINGS
NEWPORT BEACH
2727 Newport Blvd.
.Newport Beach
(Balboa Peninsula)
S73-5NO
IAVINE
15~75 Jeffrey Rd.
· lrvlne
559 4413
"' Member FSLIC Equal Houelng lenct.r
' ' . ,.
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Market closes mixed
NEW YORK (AP) -A late upt~n in blue·
chip stocks helped the broader market <.'tese miitcd
Thursday.
Before 1mprov1ngtfh the r.nal hour. the market
bad been mostly lower following the government's
repon of economic growth for the current quarter.
The Commerce Department on Thursday
estimated that the nation's gross national product
is rising at an annual rate of 3.1 percent in the
secon'd quarter, up from a revised 0.3 percent rate
in the first quarter. The first.quarterg.am originally
was reported as 0.7 percent.
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om
NEW YORK (API Jun. 20 NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 20 Prev, Prev.
Adv•nced Todm d•E Advanced Tl• ·~ Declined ~ft Declined
¥"changed ¥nchanged otal Issues ~ ofal lssues
New highs New highs tt New lows l1 New lows
AMEX LEADERS NYSE LF.AOERS
NEW VORK (AP) -Sales, 4 p m Thursday price and net change of Ille· 1ij NEW YORK (AP)-Seles, ' P.m . Thursday pr ice and net cha~ Of tile IS mosl active New York Stock Exchange Issues. lradlng na tiona lly a l m o s I active American Slock E xchange 1u ues, trading na llona llY a l more more lhan Sl Amer T&T than s 1 ConSlore n 8AT Ind lnstrS<tsl MtchlEn9 WangLabB Hasbro s Echo8ay g r exas.-.ircp TIE Comm WslOlgllal
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l'wtt efternoon fllllnQ S320 49, oft '2 93
F1-*fwt fixing $321 30, Off S3 25
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
Z..tdl 1a1e en•noon blO S318 20, off $7 20 S3 1e 70
atlleel
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NY c-· oo+CI llPOI monin Wed. $322.30;off S5 40
METALS QuorEs
NEW YORK (API Se>ot nonftlfrout rTMI~ ptoo.t r""'acsay
NEW YORK(APl -Final Oow·Jones at~&:\' ,for Thu~$4ay( ine rn·
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Ullls 1.1 00 65 Stk 17,6 ,IOO
NASDAQ SUMMARY
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·-
-llllyPHat THURSDAY, JUNE 20. 1985
Amertc.'• worat goffera h•~• tun deeplte eub-"r uya. C2.
MeJor leegue b8eebatl to at-. drug teet• In. mlnora. C2.
'[hex're counting_on hooking'ang1€ -
Sportsfishing businesses report their
catches to lure additional customers
By SHARON FRUTOS
Of ~ Delly "'94 alafl
You've/robably seen them float-
ing aroun the sports page, or heard
them bein~ ridiculed on a Los Angeles
radio station. But fish counts are as
legitimate as -well, grunion runs.
One halibut. 25 milckerel, 865 sand
bass. The count reads hke a daily
stock report of the sea. The numbers
may mean little to those whose
fishing adventures are hmited to
opening a can of tuna, but to the
serious angler, fi sh counts are their
bread and batter.
Dave McDonald, who runs the
tackle shop at Davey's Locker
Sportfishing 1n Newport Beach. says
fish counts are responsible for a good
deal of his business. Currently, fi ve
boats . work out of Davey's" Locker,
and McDonald says at least half the
anglers on the boats have planned
their excursions around the repons.
''It's one of the biggest ways of
attrac ting our c ust omers,"
McDonald explained.
.. Assigned deck hands count the
fish ," Me Donald said. "'At the end of
the trip they usually check the sacks
and gi ve a rough figure, and it's
usually pretty accurate," McDonald
added .
"The avid fi sherman sees the fish
count and kn ows when to go (fishing
for his favorite)," he said.
A repon of 200 or more of one
species indicates a strong run to fish
count readers. and usually means an
extra angler or two per boat.·
Area sportfishing businesses phone
their respective reports to newspapers
daily, hoping to lure more customers.
"[ don't know percentages," said
Lindsay Hesketh of Newport Land-
ing Sportfishing. "But quite a few
stric~ly come 10 because of fish
counts," she added.
Hesketh said the deckhands work-
ing the five boats out of Newport
Landing hand count the catches.
"They know the ditTeren~ between
fish." she said.
Most of the deck hands were fishing
fanatics pnor to their employment, so
they recognize everything from
bonito to blue-lipped perch,
had plenty of Ii hing expenence
They recofnize the size and the hm1t
· pretty wel ,"he added.
Both Newport sponsfish1ng bus1-
nes~s take anglers to Laguna. Hunt-
ington Beach and Catalina Island
waten.. depending upon the season
and the haul.
While most counts are taken by
deck hands, some skippers handle the
chore themselves. The mosll)'.:ac-
curate lists arc given to the sports-
tishing operators as soon as the boats
dock.
"We are very accurate when 1t
comes to (the number of) anglers."
McDonald said. "We go by the
number of ticket sales on the boats."
Most of the catches reported to
newspapers include the common cow
cod. the rough-looking rock cod, the
salty sculpan and the barbeq ueablc
barracuda.
"Once in a while we might catch a
small shark," McDonald said,
"nothing too unusual. though."
Saturday afternoon Tom Hesketh
of Newport Landing reponed the
catch ofa 20-pound bluefin tuna. He
said the fish 1s uncommon off the
Orange Coast, and a more fa miliar
native of San Diego.
··They read tt in the newspaper -
they DO read the reports,"
McDonald said. "That's when I start
to fish ... when the fish counts are
good.··
"Usually the counters have fished a
lot." McDonald said. "They've all
Fish reponers are sometimes a
species of their own, dramatwng
particularly fat fi sh with a "huge
halibut" or a "beautiful white sea
(Pleue eee FJSH/C2)
Barry Mitchell (left) and Randy
Scheuerman hold calico and aand .bua.
0.-, .... ,......, ...........
part of their ftah count at Newport Land.Inc
SportflahlnC.
Easy-going Mitchell tough on court
Mater Del standout will get epportunity
fo sho~gr~t for North All-Star cage team
and as_ a senior he was :t\111 playi.ng a
"support role." although you would
have a hard time convincing some of
that.
Mike Mitchell
By ROG ER CARLSON
Of tlle Delly l'llot atafl
Leon Wood, the Cal tate Fullenon
All-Amencan basketball star was a
good example that you never judge a
book by 11s cover.
As a prep with t. Monica High he
would saunter an. head down. at the
end of the hne with his basketball
team. almost as an afterthought or as
the potential ballboy. then proceed to
knock ·em dead on the floor.
Mater Dei High's Mike Mitchell is
another example.
The Monarchs' All-CIF 5-A selec-
tion. the key for the North in
Saturday's Orange Count} All-Star
game at Orange Coast College. offers
an ancrebiblv easy-going look with a
Matching up with
North a tall order
Quickness will tie
key for South girls
in All-Star game
By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS
Of -Delly Nol 11.eff
South Coach Carol Strausburg of
Fountain Valley High will be looking
for a way to combat the Nonh's size
advantage when the two teams square
off Saturday night at 5:30 in the
Orange County All-S tar girls basket-
ball game at Orange Coast College.
The girls contest will precede the
boys game which will follow at 8.
.. Our s1Le 1s certainly not a
strength." Strausburg said. "They
(the North) are much tall et and
Lewis. and as a senior he was still
playing a .. suppon role," although
)'OU would havl' a hard t1ml· con vane·
ang some of that
When Lewis was ha"10g trouble 1n
the Tournament of Champions
champ1onsh1p game against Ocean
View It was Mitchell who tum who 1s
being.. assisted b¥-La -Quanta-Htgh's
Mike Link.
"Mike has been a big help. we
communicate very well." she said. ··1t
helps sharing our 1nformat1on and
havi ng another set of eyes."
Clippers hold
off on Maxwell
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Los Angeles Clippers have put on
hold a trade for Boston Celtic
forward Cedric Maxwell. but are
\\1th onl) 10 practices. blcnd10g
the talent together 1n a lim1tepular on
the campus because he's really a
happ) person:·
A Staner for the North in Sa tur-
day's ba ketball game. Mitchell wtll
also be a starter at wide receiver for
the South an the Orange County All-
tar football game June 2!S. But 11
doesn't seem to Ile}. dunng the
C\Cn1ng.
"All the kids ha\e been working
hard." said Strausburg ... Most of our
fir~n eight practices have been an
attempt to blend the girls together
into a uni t.
"I behe\e the b18$est adjustment
for them has been being on the court
with different people. And when
you're only allowed 10 pracuces, it's
no1 a lot of time to go into any great
detail."
Strauo;hurg noll'd that anoth('r ad-
.1us1ment for 1hc girls has bctn the
ne". 'mallcr hall which will be
emplo~ed 'iaturda~ . .\nd. s1nre only
one Sunset Leag ue girl 1'\ on i'he roster.
Strausburg 1s not totalJ)' familiar w11h
man) of the pla)ers.
"OurJObcoach10g 1s to If) to get the
players mto shape and me5h-t~t~
what five people play the best at one
ume." she said.
The South has been hstcd as a SI\·
po10t favonte an the game b> Orange
Count} sponswnters.
Among the arra pla}•ers scheduled
to compete for the South will be
Woodbndge's Holly Ingraham and
Lyon: Michelle Chomicz of Ocean
View: Corona del Mar's Fran W)'nn:
and Dina Graham of lrv mc.
Mater Dc1's Maf) Gainey will be
competing for the North team.
coached b)' John Koehler of La
Habra.
When Lcw1s'was having trouble in
sleepy smile. the Tournament of Champions
But don't be misled. When the ball championship game against Ocean
goes up he comes down, usually with View it was Mitchell who turned the
a vicious stuff shot. ude with 20 points.
The ··other hair' of Mater De1's one-two punch (along with All· And an almost e' ef) instance 1t was Mitchell who took the heat ofT Lewis American T om Lewis). Mitchell ft~-with his clutch pla~. ures to be at the hub of the North s /
game aturday nrght. Lewis IS out of ··Mike never got wrapped up 1010
the game because of an injured ankle. points," says McKnight. ··He just
.. W~lbout a doubt he's our best enjoys playang. He'sa hard-nosedk1d,
player and best athlete." says Mater but he's been vef) popular on the
Dei's Gal) McKnight, who'll coach campus because he's reall) a happy
the North. ··Mike runs the courn-eal -person:·
well, that's the kc). And his hard A staner for the Nonh in Satur-
c.Jefensc gets him the open 1.·oun and da) 's basketball game, Mitchell will
the dunks," also be a starter at v.1de recei ver for
As a sophomore and j unior the South in the Orange County All-
M11chell stancd on a unit which Star football game June 28. But it
included Matt Beeuwsaen and Lewis. doesn't seem to matter to M1tchell
,.,...,...0
Cle•~la.nd'• Bert Blyle•en worlla to Rupert Jone. while the
.coreboard ahow• the Antel• had a frutratinc nf.&bt.
where he's playing, just as long as he's
playing.
··1cs m) last high school game and
I'm going 10 gl\ e 1t all ," sa)s the 6-6,
210-pound M ttchell. ·•The South 1s
JUSt another opponent for me Satur-
da). The) 'II ha' e different jerse)'s
than m10e so they'll get no sympath}
from me."
McKnight has Mitchell at his "No.
5" spot, which 1s inside. The rest of
the starting lineup. according to
McKmght. are Mater De1's Mike
Kelley at the big forward. Servite's
Mall Honikel at the small forward.
Sa"anna's Tim Pittman at the ofT
guard and 61 Dorado's J 1m Mansfield
at the point.
Mitchell combines strength and
pov.er with sheer finesse as evidenced
by his ability to defend the opposition
and seldom foul out. He fo uled out
JUSt twice (as a sophomore) an three
years -an his first game after coming
out late from football. and 1n the state
finals against Crenshaw.
With an 86-5 record in three years
at Mater Dc1. there were some close
calls and some big moments. but
when 11 comes to a turning point.
M11chell has no trouble in bnngjng to
hg,ht the ke} reason why the
Monarchs were 29-0 this past season.
It was the loss to Lo ng Beach Poly 10
the CIF 4-A finals an 1984
"We knew e' eryone was out head-
hunlln$ since we· won the cham-
pionship in I ~3." sa)'s Mitchell. who
played hlS freshman season at Gahr
Htgh before tranfemng to Mater Oct.
"But v.e v.ould ha'e been spoiled
with two straight champ1onsh1ps. We
would ha' e had nothing to shoot for"
In a game sometimes dictated by
egos. M11chell v.as ne'er troubled by
numbers He ~ored at a 3 0 chp
thro ugh the regular ~ason as a
sophomore. then e'\ploded for a 16 0
average in the pla~ offs '-\hen he was
(Pleaae see MJTCHELL/C2)
Blyleven: He's no
big deal to Angels
But there· s no doubt
a trade could have
prevented shutout
CLEVEL.\NO I .\Pl -R1iht·
hander Bert Bh It."\ en '!Ml\'i he fed'
confident now ·unhL.e the beginning
of the season "hen he "as "tntng to
wan two or three ball games al once ..
Blyleven e' ened his record at 6-o
by tossing a thrC1.•-h11ter and retmng
the last ~4 hitters as the Clc,eland
Indians blanked the .\ngels. ~..()
Wednesda\ night • ··11h1nk ma'ht' at the beginning 111
the season I "as pre~" ng 100 much ...
said Bl}le'en ··1 "a' tn1ng 10 win
\\\O or three hall game<, at onn· l fed
confident no" I Tl'a h1e I ,·an·1 Jn
a0\th1ng about the 1r.1dt' rumor'> so I
1us1 tr. 10 g.01 out Jn1t bu'1 m' rear
and"'""
Rh le,·cn lta<o, tx·l'n .i,L...ing the Tn-
d1ans ttl tradr him io th·· .\niwh
'lhars wf)\ \\(' mN110 trade tnr
him." .\ngcl!I third lia..eman Doug
DcC1 nces said after Bh ll'' \'n strurL.
out S('vrn and walkt"d none "l n-
fonunatel\ for u v.ed1dn·1 maM' lh\'·
deal I think \OU'd find J lot Uf\Ole'
10 hert to make that deal. i.'\pl:etall~
after he '-\as a na t~ as 1omgh1 ··
The 3+~ ear-old 81\ IC\ en "1th a
3.19eamed run aHrage. has tossed a
league-leadmg four shutout\ and no"
harse dUring his 1mprtsm·e larcer
Blylevrn postC'd h1\ 200th ma1or
league \.ICton 1n his pre,1ou' 'tan
"WhC'n I go out there m' fif"ll
1lht('("ll\e 1s 10 p11 rh a no-h11ter I
~ (Romanick
Clewtand (Schutze 3-6)
Tlme: 4:30.
TV: None.
Radio: KABC (790). ,..
1-3} at
heard Sand\ Kou fa\ ~' that "hen I
"as ~oung.~· Bh le, en said .. Then.
when I gn.e up a hit. I gl1 for the
shutout. anJ 1fl g.1,e up.a run I go for
the win ..
C1corge \ ul \.n llh hned J t\\o-out
h\1l-run <.1ngk ,,fl Jim l\latnn -l-' 10
tht• <.1\lh inn1n11-tor the nnh ru n'
.. \ uL.e\ ( \ ul 11\ ll h I h.:i.J thr t'l1g hn
He·._ m' hero wn11tht · Bh h.•\l·n -.;.11d
\\ ilh Onl' ,1ut 1n lhl' lrhiljO' ""th
latnn "alll•d \I 1l e Hari:,m' l' Rro,•l
.IJ\.ol"I\ <i1ngkd 1l.ugr11\l' Ill 'l°lOn1•
and .1 111·1 lht• "euind 11ut. T•'n'
Berna1arJ Jrc" th1' '>t'\l'nth "all
1ssul·d h' -..1.iwn 111 loJd 1he ha~'
Vudo\1lh thl'n (trilled h1~ ~inll.k
through th1 m1dd k to drn t' 1n tht·
g.amt"' llflh run'
The .\ngel<. thre.ttl'nca aga10'1
Bhkq~n'cinh 1n lh1• 1·1rst inning
C1Jr. Pru" k'ad nil wnh a <i1ngk
'>tok 'e1·nnd Jnd tool. third on d
1ntii.'lc.J h11 h~ Juan Ben1que1
81~ ll'\ l'n 1h1•n [lot ~1ug fA·{'1 nct•\ to
ground into a dl1ut-k pla\ to end thc
inning
.\tiff l>JT"\ I 'u1n1l'r' "1ngled lead-
ing 1111 1h1• \ ngd,· <.econd. Bl ) lc\Cn
then did n111 .tlln" an11ther base
runner a' the Indian<. '>napf'l'd a l(lur
game loo;ing 'tr1•al
still looking into movmg free-
ageot center Bill Walton.
The Clippers' interest 1n Max-
well was dampened by a medical
examination Tuesday that show-
Guerrero ends 0-11 slump; Hawkins ends 11-0 streak
ed the veteran's len knee was 15 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pt-dro Guerrero ~rcent weaker than his nght. gave the Los Angrles Dodgers a hft the)' were
M a x w e 11 u n d r r we n 1 lookmg for.
arthroscopic suraery on his left The third b:iscman regained the home run
knee in February. touch he found on the previous road tn'J) and 11
Walton. 32. became a f rtt agent led to a 5-1 victory Wednesday night ove'r the
last month and has until the end an Diego Padrt'S.
of July to sign an offer sheet with Guerrero, who had hit seven homer~ tn
any Nauonal Ba kctball A~soc1n-seven g:ames and eight 1n nine coming intoithc
tion team current homestand, was blanked the fint two
Two ttams are said to be n1~ts against San Diego pitching. •
interested in Walton -the Bos-'There was nothif\I wroni. I was still
ton C'elucs end the Laktrs. sw10~n1 the bit aood. I wasJus1 m1 mg some
The Celtics were interested 1n pitch ma." Guerrero said, explaining the 0-
deahn& Ma,well for Walton and for-I I ~lump before leading ofT the SC\eruh
the two teams d1scu~scd a Chp-1nn1n1 with his 14th ho me run of the sca~n per~ dran choice •. but Maxwell'' "I knew that one was gone."
phy ical changed i1fl that Thc Dodgen. who bad manaacd onl}' thrct •lll••••••••••m::-:', hit the previous n1aht apinst 03\t' -~eckY", -Nlndcd Sen 9iqo nJht:haf\dcr
Andy Hawkins his first lo s of the season after
11 v1ctone"
Jcm Reuss, S-S. who matched Hawkins
pttch ror pitch through seven innings, camed
the victory and Ktn Howell hurled the final
two mnm.,. rc11nng the onl}' i.tll Padre hC'
facNi for his ~venth save •
· ltawkins entered' tht 1985 ~r..on wuh a
I .S-21 career record. but was the 5t'C'ond-
wtnmn~st pitcher 1n the National Lcagut
ao1n1 into the ~me. one win ~htnd Joaquin
Andujar
'Tm nevcr101na to foract th1s streak." ~1d
the persona~ Hawk1ns. "This bas bttn a
very aood part of m life It's been. dream·
come-true. I wac; rclu1vcly unlnow11 unul
now. and t'vc ba 1call been picked apan for
the past fi\lt ors•' wttks
"Ifs be-en nlC't"
MtR' Mmhall. wrm oot~cd l'WO or fl'lt'
Dodaers' St'< hits, "31d, "I thouaht Ha"'\.tns
pitched ~11. Great. 11ctuall Hc prohahl)
pitched •" w~lt a, he did 1n tho'< tint 11 Ht
n1 n ht at u" It'"' JIJ~I thll Reu"s pttc-hed
better "
<\f\er Lo11 \neck~ ortJ an tht bouo m t'f
the <.utth v.llhOlll·the 11d t1f 1 hit. ~n 01ego
ttt'd the . ore v.1th an unet\T)l('(J run 1n thC'
W\'(i\Th .
C"iucmro then hroL.t thr 11e with his le.adon
bomer 1n the SC\ rnlh and h•'> fil"'t home run
<.inct ht tomd ~tl'('nl.. la"t Wttl -.ccmmgh
1nsp1rt'd the l>odfler\
The\ tillcd thC' ha't'' .rnd l>a"t o\ndtf\1ln
"mgled homC' one run \ 'lt'\.Onlt run S("Ort"d
wht."n Cnm1rln \'1an1ne1 ll\l·rran the hall 1n
tht." Id\ tit Id Ptnl h-h1ttcr R J Rt' nold'
'\tngl<'d homt the founh run llf thr 1nni.ng
E'en with the lo\4i.. ~n L>tcgo d1>'ie'd out an
I S-pme. four-cit) mp v.1th an g • .., mar\ and
return home vmh a '\•-.-game oHr runner-up
Houston 10 tht' at1onal lea lK' \\c'lt
Lo ~ngrl~ 11> 1dll!'..lol'11aht and then bc:J1nu
lour-&ame K"ncs wuh H1..1u'>ton Fnda'
When thc Padre kt\ t11"n on their longest
tnp of the ~a son thC'~ "ere on)\ 11 -game 1n
ftonl. the Pad.tt.s were to _pl.a) .W -A
l"ranct'l<'O Cii3nl'> th1c, alkrnoon "", __________ _ -r-• '
I
.I • .I
• T
7
--------.-:...---. --
Orange Coal DAILY PILOT /Thurtdey. JUM 20. 1985
SPO RTS BR fA ~
~ -
Playing the game
ls die liaadlcap
I or nation's worst
From AP 41tpatcktl
PONTE VE9RA BEACH. Aa. --If II America's Worst Avid Golfer tournament
wasn~t golfing's finest hour. there was no
question it was the sport's longest.
AnacJo Spapolo shot 257 bad strokes to win the
dubious tiUe of America's worst recreatio nal golfer
Wednesday at the Tournament Players Club course,
one of the country's most difficult.
The 31-year.old grocery store manager from
Fayette City, Pa., lost about 60 golf balls along the way.
almost half of them on the difficult 17th hole, which 1s
nearly surrounded by water.
Spagnolo appeared to be only the second-worst
golfer. behind Jack Pulford. until he shot a 66 at No.17.
Pulford, a 48-year.old restaurateur from Moline. lll ..
firiishcd with a 208.
"I just came unglued on 17," said Spagnolo. who
sank 27 balls into the water before he was forced by
course officials to walk around the green and putt down
a narrow cart path to the fl~.
"There was a big hum in my head on 17. I kept
hearing my son saying 'Dad' and laughing,.. said
Spagnolo who was awarded a crystal trophy and a tacky
green-plaid sports jacket.
Claiming the distinction of best of the worst was
Kelly Ireland. a 42-year.old trial Lawyer from Tyler,
Texas, who boasted a 179. Course par 1s 72.
Originally scheduled to start at noon. tee time was
set bade to 10:57 a.m. to make sure the two twosomes
bad enough daylight to finish 18 holes. While an
average 'game on an average course Lasts somewhere
around four hours, the brave denizens of weekend
golfing perscrvercd for a few minutes more than seven
hours.
"It's betterto be the best of the worst than the worst
of the worst." Ireland said, adding that he wasn't sure of
bis t itle until the end.
White Soz win In 12th, 8 -7
Rookie speedster Oazie GtJUeo scored Ill from second base on a wild pitch in the
12th inning to &ive the Chicaao White Sox
an 8· 7 comeback American League vi tory
over Oakland Wcdne$day night. It was the second
extra-inning victory in two ni&hts for the White Sox,
who h d tied the a,amo 7-7 in tfie ninth on a solo home
run by CulCoa Pltk and .a two-run homer by Gre1
Walker ... Elsewhere, Wa~ ToUesoa drove uiLuu
Parrf..-with a sixth-inning sacnflcc tly to lift Texas to a
5-4 victory over Seattle ... Hal
McRae hit a solo home run and
doubled in another run to power
Kansas City to a 3-2 triumph over
Minnesota ... Roa Ha11ey hit two
solo homers and Dave Wlafleld
clubbed a two-run shot among his
four hits as the New York Yan-
kees trounced Baltimore I 0-0 and
completed a three-game sweep
over the Orioles ... Lou Wbltaker
and KJrll Glb1oa each homered
Piall and drove in thrte runs to back
the combined eight-hit pitching of Walt Terrell and
Aurelio Lopez as Detro it beat Boston, 9-3 ... Jim
Cluey scattered seven hits in seven innings and George
Bell cracked a two-run triple as Toronto halted a six-
game losing streak with a 5-1 victory over Milwaukee.
Cuba lose eighth etraight, 1-0
Dwlgbt Gooden pitched his third Ill
shutout of the season, firing a six-hitter
Wednesday night as the New York Mets
handed the Chicago Cubs their eighth
straight defeat, 1-0 ... In other National League games,
Jerry Kooamaa and Doa C&rmu combined on a five-
hitter and Gres Gro11 singled home the only run, giving
Philadelphia a 1-0 victory to snap a five-game St. Louis
winning streak . . . Crai1 Reynolds had three hits.
including a home run, as Houston pounded four
Atlanta pitchers for 14 hits in
support of Joe Nlekro. who
collected his t 97th career victory
with a 7-3 win. Niekro. 4-7. the
Astros' all-Lime winningest pitch-
er with 139 victories. scattered 12 1 hits ... Jim Woblford'1 pinch-hit
sin$le with two outs in the eighth
inning scored Vance Law with the
winning run as Montreal defeated
Pittsburgh. 4-3 ... Bob Brellly hit
a three-run homer to cap a four-
en run third inning and he added a
solo shot ~n the ei~th to power San Francisco to 5-2
victory over Cincinnati. Left-hander Dave LaPol.Dt.
3-6. and reliever Scott Garrelt1 collAborated on a four-
hitter and didn't allow an earned run.
Wrlg\ey llghte get to ~t bue Crosby to have an odd format
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. -A plan to let ii
the Chi~o Cubs play night baseball at
Wrigley Field if they make the National
League playoffs passed a first test Wednes-
day in the Illinois General Assembly.
MACON. Ga. -When the old Bing l!I
Crosby National·Pro-Am golf tournament
moves from California to Nonh Carolina
next year. $5 million in prize money will be
split among 50 amateur teams in an unusual
tournament format. The House. 85-25,gave preliminary approval to an
-amendment that would suspend a state law barring
night ball at Wrigley -the only major league ballpark
without lights -so the Cubs could install temporary
lights rc:v post-season games.
The ban on night games would still apply to
regular-season contests.
Preliminary plans. according lo Kathryn Crosby.
call for fou r-man amateur teams from each state to play
for the prize money, whicl1 will be used for charities in
the players' home states. said Harley Bowers, sports
editor of the Macon Telegraph and News, in a column
published in Wednesday's editions
The amendment needs another round of approval
in the House before moving on to the Senate. The Cubs
also are expected to continue legislative efforts 10
overturn the ban altogether.
Rashad, Sims move into semis
The Cubs and major league owners have been
pushmg for perpiission to play night games at Wrigley
because of the'f'tlcreased television revenues generated
by the largerviewing audience.
CARLSBAD -Former Minnesota E1
Vikings wide receiver Ahmad Rashad and
current New York Giants quarterback Phil
Simms headed a field of eight players who
·The rtlinois Supreme Court is weighing the team's
request that 1t overturn the state law as well as a Chicago
ordinance preventing night baseball a\ Wrigley.
qualified Wednesday for the semifinals of the Gordon's
Gin sports celebrity tennis tournament.
Integrity convention to open
Rashad. now a television sports announcer.
collected 18 points on the third day of the round-robin
doubles event at La Costa Hotel. He ran his total to 58
points as hr led the standings for the third consecutive
day.
NEW ORLE<\NS -A series of get-Ill
tough rules aimed at cleaning up the
Simms earned 19 of a possible 24 pornts
Wednesday to up his totaJ to 54. four back of the lead.
worsening scandals in college sports ··will
sail right through." the president of the
NCAA predicted Wednesday.
"The presidents and chief executive officers have a
pretty high deiree of resolve on this one," said Jack
Davis on the eve of the NCAA ·s special two-day
"integrity convention."
The other top point scorers who qualifed for
Thursday's semis were: Reggie Theus of the Sacramen-
to Kings. former Los Angeles Laker Happy Hairston,
Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Steve Largent, former
Pittsburgh Steeler Franco Harris, former New York
Knick Earl Monroe, and Doug Burke. member of 1984
Amencan Olympic water polo team.
"The feeling,'' Davis added , "1s that s~mething
must be done."
The special convention. onl> lhe fifth in the
NCAA's 79-year history, was expected to dr!w more
than 1,000 delegates from about 500 schools. mostly
those with major programs who would ·be directly
affected by the radical legjslauon.
Televl8lon, radio
TILlvtllON
No eventa acheduled.
RADIO
The meeting was called by the Presidents
Commission.
4:30 p.m. -BA-AU.: A~ at Ctewland,
KMPC(710).
B8.seball to start Moran
drug tests in July returns
NE'W YO Ri...(.\P )-The fir~tdrug lUa ll> C\eryonc associated With Fri day
tests under a mandatory program for baseball -a to tal of about 4.000
everyone connected with pro-people. Although major-league play-
fessional baseball except maJor-crs can voluntanly undergo drug
league players will begin next month, testing as provided under the drug
Commissioner Petu-Uebeff()Hl ha!-agreemcn1 t>etween -rh~ ownllJ an<J
told club owners. the players' union, the> can't be
Ueberroth ..aid in a memo to forced to take the tests unless the
major-league clubs Tucc;day that players association approves the tes-
minor-league players and umpires ting program. .
would become the first to be exam-The memo said the testing program
1ned. following by a group including 1sa1medat detectmguscrsofcocaine,
ma)Or-lcaguc managers. coaches. amphetamines. marijuana. hero in
trainers and umpires. plus oOice and morphine. and win cost $400,000
personnel at both levels. 10 imple ment this year. It calls for
The tests for the first group will go unnesamplcstobccollected random ·
on until the end of the minor league ly at ballparks and transported to two
season in ~ptcmber. The second unidentified labs to be processed
group will be tt''lted through No' em -
ber.
T he program encompasses v1r-
ACCEPT THE CHALLENGE
COMPARE:
· HNSl•U lttUT PAYM•NTS
• lftl CIAL 14 MO. FINANCING
• LOW PAYM•NTS LIKI A LEASE
• CONVINnONAL-U' TO 72 MO.
J-..Houaeof
unpoa•ta INC.
J,u;J, MERCEDES
I J 1., J l a
tt4 O J 1HO II• I~ 110! · 11J 111 l~I
FISH .•.
From Cl
bass."
The rarer the catch. the more
exuberant the fi!lh report. There are
less-than-spectacular catch reports as
wdl. "On~ octopus."
Bob Gray. a salesman at Davey's
Locker. admits that not every fish is
1dcnt1 fiable.
"Some of them wr don't even
repon. ··Gray said. "We got n hold of
onr the other day, we d1dn'1 know
what 1t was," he added, Gray wd a
Fish and Game employee knew it ~s
tht' ever-popular ragfish. _
"Many of them "'e don't know,"
Gray said. "We don't have all the
books yet ... but we'rt grttma them ...
Tom Hesketh could descnbe every
fi h he rcponed Saturday. including
the one sheepshend "It looks ... ltkc
a sheep·~ head,'~ ho said
The United States national speed-
way champion. Kelly Moran, will be
-return+ng-m hrs hom~Tt'tlclc rnday
night at the Orange County Fair-
gro unds in Costa M~.
Moran took ·a one-week leave of
absence to race speedway in Auburn.
located 1n Northern California. How-
ever, it had little effect on his point
standings as newcomer Bob O tt took
last week's scratch main event and
many top riders failed to transfer into
high poiJlt events.
In addition to all the local favorite\,
Rick Miller will also be on hand
Fnday for a one-night only return
from the Bntish League.
Miller. who captured one of fi ve
open spots in •the June 8 American
Speedway final. will be sharpening his
skills on the tight oval at the
Fairgrounds, only 10 return to Eng-
land next week and the Inter-Con-
tinental final July 14.
In the last two weeks, the scratch
main event has been won by ndcrs
who have never been in the winner's
circle. Last week. it was Ott and the
week before Shawn McConnell cap..
turcd the top priLe.
This is giving some of the top riders
contesting for thr national cham-
pionship this Octohrr ~mt concern
a nd there 1s some talk that many of
the to p performers are re-work.ins
chassis and butldtng new enlJnes for
Fnday night's event.
The ptes wilt open Fridlly at 6:30
p.m . with the first race at 8. Ad·
m1 s1on for adults 1 $6 and children
ts $2 with parking and race progrnms fl'C(.
Arnold and friend
Actor Arnold Schwarsenne&er meeta with
the Laken' Kareem Abdal-Jabbar and hb
four-year-old eon Amir thla week on the eet
of Schwarsenneter'• latat film .. Com-
mando", whlch Ii beln& •hot at the Twen-
tieth Century Fos Stadfo ln Cal•er City.
Massimino says no to Nets
He rejectsofferof$37 5,000 p er year,
says h e'll stay at Vi ll a n ova Unive r~ity
EAST R UTHERFO RD. N.J. (A P)
-Rollie Massimino today said he
l)ad turned down a lucrative offer to
become coach of the New Jersey Nets.
deciding it was in the best interest of
players. family and friends to stay at
Villanova University.
Massimino and offi cials of the
National Basketball Assoca:::lion
team met thro ugh the hight trying to
iron out the final details ofa reported
I 0-yearcontract that would have paid
Massimino $375.000 1n each of the
pact's first four years. said Nets'
President Bernie Mann.
However, at 7 a.m.. Mann said
Massimino turned them down, say-
ing 1t was in his best interests to stay at
Villanova.
"We're back 10 square one again,"
said Mann. "He was our number one
choice. It certainly 1s disappointing.
We put a lot of ~ff on into 1t."
Mann sajd he believed the team
and the 51-year.old Massimino had
an agreement and the Nets had
scheduled a I :30 p.m. press con-
fere nce for today to introduce their
new coach.
Team spokesman Jim Lampariello
refused Wednesday to disclose who -
the coach would be. but Mann said
the team and Massimino were ironing
out the final details of the deal.
Massimino. who guided the
Wildcats to the NCAA title this past
season. issued a statement through
Villanova Sports Information Direc-
tor Craig Miller:
"I felt it was in the best interests of
my family, Villanova, our players and
(team trainer) Jake Nevin 10 stay at
Villanova. The decision was very
trying and tiring."
Nevin is suffering from Lou
Gehn~·s disease.
Winfield, Reggie
1-2 in OF voting
NEW YORK (AP) -Dave Win-
field of the New York Yankees has a
large lead in fan balloting for one of
three starting outfield spots for the
American League Al l-Star team. but
eight other players arc still in conten-
tion for the other two berths. \
Jn fijures released by the baseball
commissioner's office today, Win-
field increased his outfield lead and
now has 320,066 votes. Reggie Jack-
son of the Angels is second with
263.472. but even other outfielders
are within 95,000 votes of one
another and are clearly in contention.
Baltimore's Fred Lynn, a five-time
All-Star game starter, is third wi th
237,207. but leads a group of four
players separated by just 5,41 2-votes.
Jim Rice of Boston is fourth with
236,330; Kirk Gibson of Detroit is
next with 235.642: Minnesota's Tom
Brunansky. tied for the league lead 1n
home runs with 16. is sixth with
231 ,795: followed b) New York's
Rickey Henderson with 201 ,456.
Boston's Tony Armas with 181 ,765
and Chet Lemon of the Tigers with
169.377.
Rod Carew's lelld at first base also ,
narrow~ Th Angel'--1tar -has
282, t 09 votes. com pared to 231 ,008
for AL RBI leader Eddie Murray of
Baltimore.
George Bren of Kansas City leads
all AL vote-getters with 465.185 for
third base. Runner-up Doug DeCi-
nces of the Angels is far behind with
146,590.
Lou Whnaker of Detroit and
Baltunore's Cal Ripken also have
commanding leads at second base
and shortsto p. respectively. Whitaker
has 37 t. l 82 votes to 182, 775 fo r the
Angels' Bobby G n ch, while Ripken's
448. 7 4 7 votes is I 72.653 ahead of
I
L>etroll's Alan I rammcll.
Lance Parrish of the Tigers has
3 78.263 for the starting catcher's spot;
Carltoo Fisk of the White Soi1 has
272,21 I.
The All-Star game is scheduled for
July 16 in Minneapolis.
MITCHELL • • From Cl
switched from outside to inside.
As a junio r he was in double figures
while . Lewis and Bceuwsaert were
doing their inside.outside punch.
then he scored 16.0 as a junior in a
span in which Lewis was running
amok with 32.0 scoring and 11 . 7
rebounding averages.
"It really didn't faze me," says the
18-:year-o ld when asked about all the
at1ent1 on going to Lewis. "I knew I'd
be no llccd, too."
Saturday's game at Coast is just the
stepping stone to his college future at
Fresno State where he is expected to
blend in as a big guard or small
forward a lmost immediatety.
As for football, he say~the June 28
game will be his last.
The North is a two-point favorite
because of Maler Dei's presence, and
Mitchell appears c-0nfident with the
role. ··1 think we're getting closer and
closer with every practice.·• he says.
It's Ho nikel who hjls been the big
surprise for Mitchelf in the North
cam1;>.
Mitchell knew his Angelus League
nvaJ. but not in the vein of an outside
shooter. "His coach must have had
him in the wrong position," says
Mitchell. ,
DO
Miller said that he thinks "the
university as a whole is dclighted that
Rollie Massamino has decided to
stay. ThQ..rare quality he has to make
his athletes better men 1s something
thaf-is hard to find."
\VA.TTNBW
-CANUCKS
OOACB
Andujar, Vlrgll at odds agaln
ST LOUI (AP)-Joaqum Andu-
Jar and Ozzie Virgil. who have been at
odds before, almost came to blows aaain Wcdne5day night durin,a the
Philadelphia Phillies' 1-0 victory
over Lhe St. Louis Cardinals.
An inside n1nth·innina pitch from
AriduJar to the Philadelphia catcher
triggered the bench-dcanng episode.
After Virgil made two steps toward
tl'le mound. teammates assisted in
kcep1na the two player, apan and
Virait "'turned to the batter's box LO
around out.
Vi'lJI s~ud a previous inside p1tt'h
from AnduJar that he fouled off set
the stage for his show oftt'mperame nl
-On a J..2 dcJ•VCI'). '
,
.., aot the bat out in front of mx
head and f'ouled it ofT. J was luclcy, •
Virgil siid of the prcvious"pitch. "I
just lost control, then somebody said
something in the crowd. Then I really
blew up."
Plate umpire Ed Mon~uc assisted
1n r.cstonng order bel~ ~ndujar.
who st ruck Vifiil witti f:.P~Ch in 1984.
"I don't lthow now close the pitch
was. they said it· really wasn't that close. He Just reacted," said Philadel-
ph11 Manaaer John Felske n. defense
of Viflil.
"What people that haven't played
the p me don't reahze is how much
that baH w1fl hurt..Sometimcs, ifaJUy
thinks u auy's throwina at him • .he's
afrnrd it's goma to end his career."
Last summer a brawl between the
two teams ensued when Andujar bit
Virgil with a pitch, but this time St.
Louis Manaacr Whitey Hel"loa
thought the fcuct was overblown.
"I can't believe that. The balls
weren't that far inside," said Herzot
o( Vi'lJl's action. ''I a ked (Cards
catcher) Randr. (Hunt). Randy said
the balls wcren t more than 3-4 tnchcs
inside. He (Virail) pulled the sarnc
wna laat year."
No player e)CC1ions accompanied
Wednesday r11S}lfs incident. which
took on added oonfusion momcntari·
ly while when Virail trotted to first
besc on what he thou&ht h d been ball
four.
-~--~ ~~·~~~~--~~--..-~~~~~~~~~~--~ ~~-------.-. . --5 a
FoR TH£ RE co Ro
~ . . "' .
MAJOR L•AGU• ITANDIHGS AIMrkeft Ut9"
Chleaoo A'*'t
Kania1Cllv 0.111ancs
s..1111
Mln1111011
Tuai
wen DIYUaO•
W L ~-~· )4 ,. .5'7 ,. ,, ~ ,.,
lJ lO U4 2'"1 ll 32 .., 41ft ,. 3' 431 •
,, 3S 42' 11,,
,. 38 ~ 10
Toronlo
Detrol•
Bos Ion
B•lllMOre
Ntw York
Mllw1ull"
CllYellnd
IEAIT DIVISION
3' 2S
l S 26
JS ?8
33 19
l2 19
29 32
21 41
WldrllMMV'• kor.• Clevtlend 2, Allllk 0
Toronto S, MllwaullM 1 Oelroll 9, l otlon 3
New York 10, Banlmor-e o
Chicago I, Oekllnd 1 ( 12 lnnlngt)
TtUl S, S.1t1le 4
l(antu Cllv 3, Mln1111011 2
TldlV's QetNJ1
2" 3 ~ s
~
I'">
11
A"""' \Romanick 1· 31 at C1e11tl1no ( kllullt 3·6l, n
01kl1rte1 (l!llmas 3· 11 11 Cn1c11110 tS.e· ver 7·4), n
New York (RHmuuen 2·4) •• Oe1ro11 (Morris l ·Sl, n
Boston (Oled1 4· ll a1 Toronto tAleic· ena.r 1·3), n
SHille (Young S·I) a l To11 1Hoo1on 3· ll, n
Mlnne.011 (6u1c11er 4·61 •• KanH• Cliv (Ll1or11nc11 6·4), n
Onlv gamH tchedulld
,rider • G.m.•
Aneels 11 ChlcaQO, n
N1w York 11 Oetro11, n
Bolion al Toron10. n S.alll• al 1(1nsin City. n
Ttxat 11 Mlnne.ola, n
Balllmore 11 Mllw11u~ee. " Cleveland al Oa ktend. n
N•"OMI LH9Ue
Wl!ST DIVISION
W L P C1, Ga San Oleoo J7 27 S71
Hou11on 33 JO S14 J•.,
Clnclnriatl 31 30 .S 16 4
DeOeln 31 30 s 16 •
Atlante 27 3S 43S 9
Sen Ft1nclsco 26 31 406 11
EAST DIVIS.ON ~
Montr1a1 31 77
New Vork JS 21
St Loul1 JS 21
C11lc100 34 27
Phlladel0111a 2S 37
PlllSburgn 21 40
WldnesNY'I kerli OICleln S, Sin DleQO I
San Ft1nclsco s. ClnclMlll ? Monlree l 4, Pltisburvn 3
New York I, Chlca11<> 0 Houslon '7, Allan11 3
PllhMM!Phl• l, Si Loul\ 0
TldeV'• Games
.SIS
56S
S6S m
.403 .3••
\l.,.l
1 111.,
IS
c111ceoo tFon1eno1 1·21 al New Yorio.
(Ftrnenoer l·4J
Son Francisco (Goil 3·•1 al S•n DllQO (HOYI 1·4)
Plllsburvtl (Rhe>Oen • 11 111 Montreat (ScneUl<lef 1·?), n
Hou1ton (l(neooer 6·31 al Ailen1e
IMalll1r IO·Sl. n
Pllll1oet1>11l1 (K.Gron 5·6) •• !>1 LOU•\
tCox •·1). ,,
FrldlV't G1me1
Hou•lon •• Oldllln. n Allan!• et Clncltlnall, 2, lwl·nlol'l• Montreal al New YOf'lt., n
Plli1burgh e l PnltedelPhla n
CnlGll>O 11 SI Louis, n
San Francisco at San OleQO, n
1nca.ns 2, A"9ll1 0
CALJFORNIA CLEVELAND
Pttlli c1
Cer1w lb
8enl<1u1 II
DeCncs3b S<onln Oh
J•ctnn n
Grlcl'l 2b
8oonec
SchOlllO U
RJontt on
Total\
ob rllbl abrllbl 4 O 1 0 Buller ct 4 0 0 0
4 000 Francon 40 1 0 l 0 l 0 HarQfV tb 3 I I 0
3 O O O Jacobv 3b 3 t 1 O
3 o l o Tel>W dn 4 o o o
l O O o Bernrro ?t> I 0 0 0
3 0 0 0 Vu1t.vc11 rt J 0 1 2
J 0 0 0 Cer ter II 2 0 0 0
2 O O o Wlttard c 2 O O O I 0 0 0
1' O J o Totals » , s ,
Score by lnntne'
CMlfomla 000 000 000-O
o.vlllnd 000 002 oox-1
Gam1 Winning RBI -Vukovkn 121
DP-<eH1orn11 I, Cleveland 1 L08-
Calllornla 1, Cltveland 7 2B-Jacot>v
Franco SB-Pttlls (781 Sconiers t 11
tP H It ER 81 SO
C1lffenlil
Staton L 4·5 s 2·J 5 1 2 7 J
Ctmen~ I 1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Cliburn ' 0 0 0 0 I
Oev•rld Blvteven W ,6·6 9 0 0 0
T-131. A-6,34'
Docteers s, P•dres 1
SAN DIEGO LOS ANGELES
JeOaYIS rt
8Brown rt
Rovs11r 2b
Ftennrv 2b
GerYIY lb
Mclhnlc1
K1nneov c
Marilnr II
NelllH lb
Tmolin u
l1ewkln1 P
Lltfflrll o
Tetlls
1b r h bl ab r II Ill
1 0 t 0 Dunc1n u J 0 1 0
1 O O O 8Run l 2b 3 0 o I
3 0 0 0 Landrx c1 3 0 0 0 IOO OMldndocl 100 0
4 t 0 0 Guerrtr If 4 I I t 4 0 0 0 Brock ID 3 I 0 0
4 O I I Marsl'lt l r1 ' 1 1 0 3 o o o sc101cl c 1 I O o
3 0 I 0 Andtln lb 2 I 1 I
3 O O O Reun o I O O 0
3 O O O RRnlds on 1 0 1 I
O O O O Howett o 0 0 0 0
31 I 3 1 Totlls 77 S 6 4
Scor. by lnlfts
San a.... 000 000 100-t
LM A"911e1o 000 001 40x -5
Gema Wlnnlnv ABI -Guerrero l6l E-Allderlon. Martinez. LOB-San
DllQO s. Los Anoeles ' 2B-l(ennedv HR-<iuerrero ( 14) S~tun, Duncan.
SF-Bltuuet4 IP H A.EA aa so
Sen OlleO
Hawldnt L. II· I
Lett.,.11
LOI 4""'91
6
1
5
0
s
0
1
0
0 1
Reuu W.S·S 3 0 1
11owtll 1 0 0 0 0 0
Hewlo.lnt PllclleO 10 5 ballers tn tne ]In
HBP-Andtrson bv Howkins T-? 10
A-4S 415
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Am.rlcan LH8U•
BATTING (14S 11 bell)-R H1ne1trto".
New YOf'k, 34.t, Both11, 0.kland, 324. P
8rlOley, S..iile, 324, COOOtf'. Milw1ukH.
323, Wl'lllek1r. Dttroil, .311.
RUNS-RIPkln. Bllllmore, SI. M Davit,
Oekland, SO, R Henoerton, N1w Yori... SO.
'N"!teker, Detroit, 4', RICI, BollOll. 11
RB1-M111lnv1v. NIW York. 41,
Brun1nskY, MlnnetOll, 0 , E. Murrav, Belllmor•. 4S; K. Glb•on. Ot1roll, 44,
l(lr19~n. Oekllnd, 44 HITs-P 8redlev, Staiile, *3. 80QQt,
Bos Ion, 7t; 6uckntr, 8 0110fl, 1e, G4"'cl•.
TOf'OllfO, 7t; Puclltll. MlnlllWll , 17
OOUBLES-9udlntr, 8otlon, 19, Met·
11no1v. New Y0111, ti, Bu•llf'. Clevllllnd, 17.
GMlll, Mlnnet0ta....IL.WarCI. TIJ1H. 17
TRIPLES-Wiiton. l(anw\ CltY. 10, C-r. Mllweullff, 7, Pucke11, MlnnHota,
], Bulllf'. Cleveland. S, P. 8 redlev. Stailte, s. HOME ltUNS..-BruMnlkv Mlnnet011,
It , Fltk, ChleaQO, 1' Klnvmtn, 0.kland.
16; Arm11, Boslon. 14. M. Devis, 0 •11\and,
14, PrllleY, S..lllt, 14. STOLEN IASE!r-f"-., ~a, Jt t+tndtfa.on. New Vortt. U. Ce11tn1 oa1r1anc1.
21, •utllf, Cllvllal\d, 19, Most«>v fOf'onto,
ti. P1TCHING (5 CleCll lOM)-Llmc>, TOI'•
Oflto, S•O, ).24, Oltdl, 90\IOI\, 4 I. 2 S 1;
Tlf'I' ... o.tron. 1•1, 4.lt, STltlK~OUTs-Morrll, O.lroll, ti,
Bovd. aoston, IO, F. l1nnllter, Clllceoo. 7t,
Btvteven, CllvllendJ. 76, SlltO. T oron10, 10 SAVES-a Jemft. eii'"oo. tt , o. MIOWI, A"91h. 14, J Howell. Oeltltnd, t4.
Hernanes.t. 0.troll, 13. OUl..nt>err'I., 1(1n·
111 Cllv 13
TRIPl.Es-McG .. SJ l.oul1. '· h lMs, Mon1r111. 6, G W\boll, fltllladlloMI, $,
S.f'n\111, Pl\lledlionl1, $
l10Mt! f(UNs.-Mur"""• Alianlt, t•, O~. °'"'"' 141 J. Clark, SI 1.ou11,
14; CIY. Chlceoo, 12, 4 ere lltel wltll 10
STOLEN IASE~olenlarl. SI 1.oult
44, McG ... St Louis, 2', UO... Clllcaoo, 23, Ralnet. Mol!lfHI, ,., Oladdln, Sl.n
Fr1ncla~. 20.
PITCHINO tS dllelslont)-Hawklna, &en DlffO. 11 ·I, Ul, Anclulet. Sf Loula, 1?·2,
2 6%, 0 llnG. New YOfi\1 6-.I. 2 U.
........ ~ "''· '"'ftt-Mc~ Ntw York, S· I, t ,,
STMIKEOUTs-Qooden, New York, IH;
then. HGIJiton, \00, J De~. Plll~Qtl. t3, Solo, ClrlclMall. '9, v..._ueea,
~" SAVES-ltt1rdon, Mon•rH I, 20,
GOUtllt. San OllQO, IS. Lt . Smit,,. Cnl·
caQO, U. 0 Smllil, HOUtton, 11, Su111f' A1i.n11. t
, AM· Star Ntoftn9
AMalUCAN l.aAGU•
Fi n ballotlno tor lhl Amlf'lcan LM-AM·Sla r 1H m for lhl 19'S ff~. lo De
Pllvtd TliffO.v nlghi, Jutv 16, •• 1hl
Mltrooomt '" Mln1111polls: CATCHll-
Lenc1 P1rrl\h, Oliroll, 211.263 Cerllon
Fl"'" ChlUQO, 2n,2ll, .. 9-, Aftetb, IS6.-1. Jim Sundl>e<g, l(enw• Cltv,
IS2.n3, Rick Osn>PSIV, B1lllmor1, 93,SS<I,
8u1c11 WVntQ•r. New Vorlt, 70,237, Miii.i
HHlh 0.klano. 34,SIO, Rich e>.oman.
Bo11on 21 934
FIRST 9AU
lhd C1r1w, Aftllls, 112,\09; Eddi•
Murr1Y. a11t1mor1, 131,008; Kent Hrbek,
MlrmHOll , 119,038, Don Ma111RQIV, Ntw
Yorlt, 149,944, Cecil c-. Mllwauklt,
126.SJO, BIM Buckner. Botton, 111,N l Alllln
Di vis, S.11111, 63,,90, Wiiiie Uo1l'law Tor
ORIO 28,4 1 SECOND IASI
Lou Whliaker, 0.1ro11. J71, 1'2. a.Dbv
Gnctl. Anelli, 111.ns. Fr1nk Wl'lllt , Ken·
HS Cllv, l2S,7 .. , Julio Ctur, Chlc.aQO,
117,841; Tim T1utll, Mlnneao1a, 117.607,
Jim G1n1ner, MllweukH , IOl,'93, Wiiiie
R~Ph. New York, 19,421, D1m1.o
Gercl1, T Of'onlo, 56,?30
THNtO IASI
George Breu, Kansas Cli"', 46S, 18S,
Deue DICIN:ea, ""-"• 14',StO, Paul
Molitor, Mllw1ukH . 1'2S,432, Garv G .. 111.
Mlnneso••. 111,m . Weo. BOQQl, 60,•on.
ICM, 199; Derrell Ev1n1 0.1roll, 93.41S,
Buddv Biii, Tuu, SJ,?46, C11rnev
Lan1tord. Oeklano, 42, 139
SHORT$TO,.
Cal Rli*lft, Belllf'nore. 441,747, Alln
Tl'emmell, Oetroll. 216.094, Rooln Yount
MllwaukN, 167,553; Onltc Conc1pelon, Kan·
1es City, 123,143; AllrldO Griffin, Oekland,
43,'10, Jullo Ft1nco, Cievet.nd. 43.C..
Sollte Owen. s..1111, •l.190. Tonv Flf'nander, Toronto, ll,307
OUT,llLD
Oave Wlml11<1. New York, 310,006, RH·
tit JaClnan, """''· 2'3,-tn, Frt0 Lvnn. B1lilm0<"1. 237,207, Jim Rice, 8otion 13',330; Kirk Glblon, Oliroll, 13S.6'1; Tom
Brunan,kv, Mlnnuoie, 131,79S, Rlcklv
Hende"on, New York. 201 ,456, Tonv
Armas, 8o\ion. 181.165. C'11e1 l emon. O.·
!roll 169,377 1<.lrbV Pvtlo.111, Ml~tOle,
1SO,OS1, Wlllle Wll,on. Kansas Cl1Y. 134.l37,
Herold B1l111,, Cl\lca11<>, 132.221. at1N Dewtllne. A""'1s. 107,012; Ron 1(1111e, Chi·
CICIO, 1()4,334, Btn OQHvle, MllwaukN
99 •l S Lonnie Smith. Kena.at Cllv 83.169
LOI Alamitos
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS •
14Jrd .. fl·n6titlt QU1"""'"41 meettol)
FIRST RACE. .00 verds. Golla Policy IGlll) 4 40 310 1.60
lkt Trie v111.e (Garclel 4 00 3.00
Ch1~l1 Eeste< Jei (Creeger) 310
Time 20 14
U EXACTA (2·9) oa1e1 Sl660
SECOND RACE. SSO yards 1ma Cteuv Reo~ll ICrgr) S 00
Dovoulhlnlmcule (Baro> S111 N Six ( LIWll)
Time 11 SS
360 2.10
14.110 7 60 "'° 760
n EXACT A (6·1) Paid SSS"°
THIRD RACE. lSO Yard\
Sov Fiver !Ruiz) 1 00 B1eme1tcin Mldmgn1 (Armilrng)
Cl'lantrelle I Ltw•sl
Time· 18 J1
FOUR.TH RACE. JSO varo1
Real Sun l'lv Treasurt) 140 Calvx (Rull I
MIU Oev+I$ Doll ((rHverl T1~· 17 90
U EXACTA tS·2l oa o ll6 •0
FIFTH RACE. 3SO ~ere!\
W•lder Tue~., t8are11 & .a
Wn a1 A Ree lRulrl
Mutual Prolll1 tEdwlfdll
Time. IUS
U EXACTA (1-7) oeld S86 00
SIXTH RACE. 170 ve rd1
320 JOO
)0() 280
• 60
)60 HO
500 260
210
l 00 320
1l 00 680
• 00
G<i On Holme <Crea11erl 1UO 620 320
FINI MlcktY (Ltwltl 3 60 . ) 00 Crimson Lucio. I Hartl 3 40
Time 4S 57 U EXACTA 17-~) POld U I 40
SEVENTH !(ACE. 3SO Yl rds
Brazen Brllche1 (Hrl) ll •O 9 00 5 80
Sltrn CCr1age<°l 10 ?O 6 00
APOiio Jonn (Lackevl J 40
Time 17 II
n EXACTA 12·1) Paid S6780
EIGHTH RACE. 440 vard\
Never Sllort IGarclel 6 00
Cell Celeb fTreasurtl Scoll Lewl1 (Bard)
Time: 21 69
n EXACTA (5·3) oeld SHOO
J10 210
360 HO
140
n fl'1CI( SIX (3-S· 1 +2·5) oeld S47S ?O 10
33 wlnnlnv 1lc11.e11 lllve llorsesl C1rrvover
s IS,681 73
NINTH RACE . .00 vard1
Hennl Pin (Herll 4 00
Tumblewff<I Ace (F•vueroa)
Bordv (BrOOkt)
J 20 320
6 60 S.60
• 20
Time 20 1•. n EXACT A tS ., oetd S36 60
Alltndenct • '9S
HollvwOOd Partt
WEDNESDAY'S RE SUL TS (42ncl .. '1·N Y t11orCM1tllbnd meeflnll)
FIRU RACE. 1 luriongs
Nuci.a r Allack (McCrnl 16 80 S 00 l 40
CaprlciOUllllU (SI Mertlnl l 40 160
ArllilTc Venture (Plncay) 3 60
Time· I 22 415
SECOND f(ACI. • lurlonv\
Hlon Toucll (DlllSYI 11 40
Hacllala T1c:11a1a (H11wlevl
Cer1tu1 Look tSlblllel
Time I tO 2 S
620 4 40 800 4IO HO
U DAILY DOUBLE 11·t l i>a•O 5218 40
THIRD RACE. One mile
Barlen<I lM11al • . .O
Altrl RuoonH (Ste~1nsl N1ml (0.ll hOUSlaVI)
Time t l5 4 S
15 EXACT A 16-ll 011d J 116 SO
f'OURTH RAC•. 6 flfrtonos
ln<1ul,lllv1 (Pedro1a) 11 40 6 40 4 20
SOid Tooslcter (Ollv11rH) 14 60 11 40
Thi l<.ld't Awake <Shoemaker I S IO
flmt 111 IS -
U I XACT A (9· 101 Date! ,.19 SO.
l'IFTH RACE. S turlOngs
Snow Cnlet lMtral & "° _GlorY Path (McCerroo>
Wind •• HI• Back lSlblll•l Time. S1 )1S
U IXACTA l•· 11 01kl '42 SO
SIXTH ltACI. 6 lurlonlls
)40 >?O uo 140
7 60
Fire Mtu Llldlf' (SOI) t 60 3 20
OQ-W1lklf'I LldY f Pll\CI Y) l 40
J.20 uo
l..O Annie LI'° ILOIOYI)
OO-Flnl1hed flrll
olaad-..Cond Time 1.11 llS
dlsouallfled arid
U IXACTA (1 e1 Plld 0, 00
S5VINTH llACa. 6 lurl0n9s
AaillOOW Ploce (Slbllfl) .ll.IO ll.00 S 40
ExPKI MMe (Sl~\I l 40 2 IO
T .. I ncl Sc~•ll (OeiahOv"tYel l 70
Tlmt I 10 11~. u ••ACTA (M l oald •U•oo
'1 ...Ck SIX 16•6 9·4~1 13· I) M IO
lln.707 to 10 one wlMlllO 11<1111 (sl• "°""'' U PIO Six COMOta11on Paid U ,464.00 lo SO wlMlllt tlckth lflve hOrM'll
l .... '"4 ltACI, 1 11.tflonll' Pt-ouoe11 Doon (Plnc1vl UO 2 IO J 40
No11a1eta•1 Sir fDelaNMn~""l >60 ttO
Prtva11 Junele (Mt1tl 2.IO
Tlmt· I 21
U IJlACTA (>-" paid U4ot
NUfTW IU1(I . 1 I ltlPt "'I"' on tun
COUIM Qutell lS• IW1nl 1 00 3 70 f 60
lr1n1e 1"1nt•vl l 60 140
Turn Tlla "'"' CMcC1rr0t1l > 00 TllN I 4' J/5 ti IX ACT A fl•a) PIMI M6 SO
AlllNaf\CI 11.m
o... .. ~
DAVIV'$ UKJ<llt (.......,, hedl)
-15' 1nettr1. 11 ~rraa.c11, 2 ~. 1
-Vlllt•lall. 1 rot11 flll\, 2 ~. i.9 canco o.o. 111 uncs oeu. s20 mec:111t11, 1e t<ulClfn. I Wlllll .. I .. I L
TN& .... , tr.ut .......
LOS ANOILH _, BIQ Roek Creek,
CHll lC Lake, JKklOll L•ke. Pvtlmld I.Aki
SAN B•f(NAltOINO -Auowbffr
ukt, Big &Mr Lake. GrMn ven.v Lek•.
s11 .. 1rwooe1 L •k•
SAN DllGO -Doane Pono, Sall Lull
llteY River
KalllN -Aldlf' Cr• Cider Cr•. Klf'n Rivi!' (Oemocfal Otm lo Kitt
Pow1thouH, Borell Pow1r110uH to Demo·
crel Dem, tu l>ella Dam 10 BO<"tll Powlf'•
l'IOUH , KRl ~Wlf"°!JM IO L1lt1t IHbtllo)
MADlltA -Son Joaquin River lmlddlt
!Wk). SlerkWHll'lll' Lake
TUl.Altl -Bone CrMk Oeer Cr-. Orv MaodOw CrMt<. Freemen CrNlt (el
Pvles C1mol Kern River uoutl'l tork
F1lrvlaw Di m lo KRJ PowtrnouH Jonn·
1ondalt BrldQe to Fairview 0 1ml, NOOt
Younv CrHk, Uooer 111d Lower Ptooer· mini CrMt<, Poso Crltlt, South Cr .... , Tull
Rlvlf (mlddll,lork, l\O<ih ano M>Ull\ fOf'k• of main fork, Cedar SIOPI I tta>. Wnlle RIYlf'
INYO -B1ktr Cr11k, Bio Pine Crffk, Bl1110o CrNk (IOwer. middle, soulh and
1n11ke 111. Georoe1 Cr"k tnd~ence
CrNk 1.1111 $tt>rln1, Lone Pine Cr ....
Norlll L•k•. 0Wen1 RIYlf'S (l>elOw
Tlnem.na. Law• BrldlMt d0wns1r11m •o St1werf Lanel, Pteau.nt Valllv A11trvolr,
Sl'lffhMdl CrNk, Svm1Nt1 Cr"'" TabOOse Crllll, Tlnlmtfla Cr ..... Tullla Crllll
~ -BrldQeoort R1..,vo1r, auek·
eve Cr.HI<, Convict CrMk, Convict Lake,
Ondman Creek, Ellarv Lake. George
Leite. Gian CrNk, Gr1F1I Lake, GrHn Crffk. Gull Lek1, June L•k• LH Vlnlnv
CrMk, l0u1h !Wk of Lff 'Vining Crffk.
Liiiie Welker RIYlf'. Lundy Lake. Mamla
Lake, Mammolh Cr..._, Marv l 11te,
McGH CrNk. Miii CrHto., Owens River
(B1n1on Crou lnv ano Blv SDf'lnv1 > Rob·
1n\On Cre8, Rocio. Crfff< (Peredh• Cems> 10 Tom's Piece, Tom's Place UPSlrtem 10
Rock CrNk Lakl ), Rock Creek Lllkt, Rush
CrHk, Saddiebao Creek, s.00110.g Leite,
Slllf'wln Crllk. Sii-Lake, Sweuoe<
CrNI<, T•OQe Lake, TrumbuU lake. u-
and Lower Twin Lakes BrldGeoort, Twin
Lake1 Mammo1n, Low1r Virginie Creek, Upper end Lowlf' Vlrglnl1 Lakes, Welker
River (Cllfls Fial CemOQl'ound lo town of
Wiiker LtaYl11 MaadOWI C•"'l>QrO\Jfld 10
Sonor • Brldllt >
USFL
WESTERN CON,•RENCE
W L T ,.ct. ,.F PA x·C>altleno 11 4 l 73S .U2 138
x·Oenver II 6 0 647 •21 :147
~-Houston 10 7 0 588 523 357
.Arlaona I 9 O 471 34 367
PO<lla no 6 11 0 .JS3 162 401
San Antonio 4 lJ 0 13S 27S 423
1!11Preu J u O 176 2S6 439
EASTERN CONFElltENCE .. ·Birmlnvhem 12 5 o 106 4Z2 193
•·New JffWv II 6 0 641 411 363 •·Memol11s 10 1 O SIS l90 l09
x· Temoa Bev 10 1 0 S8I 394 31-4
x · Benlmore 9 1 1 SS9 l30 1SO
Jacto.lOllvllle 8 9 0 •11 36S m °'""°° • 13 o ns 191 o• x-cllncneo otevott oerll\
Frlcla't'I G1me
l!Xll"IS a• Orlando
Seturca.v•, G1me
Arlaona •• Mamonls
SllftdaV' • G•mt'I B1rmlnvllam al New Jenev
01<1ver al Jac1t1onvllle
Port11no al San AnlO<'llo
T amDa 8av el Ba111moft
MendeV"I GltNJ
Oekleno e• HoullO<'I
wom.n•1 tournament
1~1 Ee11Mul'M, ·~ Third lllllnd ~ Merll,,a Navraillo.,._ (U.S.) Oti Alvc10
Moulton \U S.l, 6· 1. 7·6. 8elllna BunQe
IWHt Germany) dltf Olenne 81les1ra1
(Auslralla ) 6·J J 6 6·2 Barbare Poller
(US 1 def. Caterine L1nC1<1v111 (SwlOenl
5·1 1·S, 6·l
Wlmbtooon tarn, "9ures
Foell and flvuru 01 tile lC>lln A~
England Tenn11 C11amo+onshlP1 II Tne All
England Lewn Ttnn11 end Crooue1 Club
l!VENT-Tne 1081h eonuel All En111ano
Tennis Cnamolonsl'll1>$, tile second ol 1enn11
tour vran<l slam evenil to t>evin Monoev
and end will'l ,,,. men's 11nQles hlle on Julv
1
SURF ACl!-Vrau .. SIATlltQ CA,.ACITY-<enler Court
lies 12 433 Hall sienolnv room tor 2 100.
No 1 court 11as 6,216 sea1' 1111nolnv room
lor 1,SOO One dav record ll,21S on f.r11
Frlda v 1984 Tournament recoro· 360,••2,
191J
l"URSE-11.U million wlih S147710 to
'"' wornen'1 c11amoion and S 163,IOO 10 tne
men s chemotOfl
Fll!LD-121 01aven m eacn ot '"' men 1 end women's slngte. compemlon
TOP SEEDS-Women Chrlt Everi
Uovd and Merlina Navre••IO•• ~n Jonn
M<Entoe DEFENDING CHAMPION-Women
Merline Nevrelllova Men John McEnroe
FORMER CHAMPIONS IN FIELD -Women Marlin• NavretilOYI Cnn1 Ever•
LIOvd and Virginie waoe Men Jonn McEnroe end Jlmmv Connon
TILIVISION-N8C, wl'llcn Is it1tvhi"9
Wlmblldon tor 1ne 17th con1ecullvt vH r
will nave 1 tolet ot 11 noun •S m1nutt1 of
coveraoe. lnclUdlnv 1 ono·novr ortv~w
Sunclav. Boin Int w<imen s eno man·• finals
will bt ltll<:est llve on Juiv 6 end 1
rHotellYllY t199lnnlnv ., 9 a m POT
"' Wln'llHdln d91V 1c:MdlM
~y, JUN 24·MlndlY, Ju4v 1
1 JO a m -Eulv round olov In bOlll 1111
mens •nd women'• slnQ!e1 comotlilion
T ""411V, JlllV ,
t , m -women's qu.ritrfln•ls Wldnetdav, JUCV l
9 • m -Min's oua rtt rllnals
TillH'MlllV, JtMv 4
t • m. -w omen'• ""'1flna•• ' -Frldlv, JI/IV S -
t e m -~en'• aemltlnall
S.IVl"de¥, Jvtv 6
t 1 m -women·1 hnels Sundlv, Jl/llv 1
t 1 m -Mall's final\
w..,.._r, traMadllM
8ASa•ALL
Alftlf'klft .........
KANSAS CITY '-OY"LS-P\acff Pli
Slltflden. qulflelder, on tn. IS·Oav dl\aOllcl 11.i retroactive lo June 17 f(tel!llCI l>IY•
L-. ouHttlOlt frOM Omalll of tl'tl
Amarl<IM'I AttOCilllOn fl:OOTBALL
NallOnef Footbl• LNQut
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Sler1ad
Jonllllan HtYf' lltf\t 11\0 lo • '9'"lls of
tour OM-Viet' ('Ol\lf Kti>
PITTStUltGH STE ~LE RS-Wel-..d
1ton Jonnson, dlltln•I ... tiee ..
SAN 01~00 CHAltO!ltS-ittllff
cun11 ,._,,,. runl\lllO llKl., to • ~,... of
-vM# COl!ff'.c"tl • HOOCIY
........... t'fl.M9Ue
N w vo-.~ 01~E •~Wllff \fd .., ...... coed\
PHll.AOIL .. HIA fl. Yl•S-S+tl\ff
Pw•Hrlll £1UUM ~-
.
Oreno-Coast DAILY PILOT /Thurldey, .k.tM 20, 1988 CS
TU
Tiie lolowtnQ ~of' No-YOU AM ... DU.AUi. T T 4-NOft09 °' 001M ... •MlllllllllMOM..M.. tlo9", the ongNI ot wrtlOn UMDC91 A DUD Ol/1 ~ NC)TICI °' ...VATI UU N19f, .. I ......
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erty lflo. 1°" ~~en Ot1 TMI M,\T,._ Ol/1 THI PROTECT VOUA P~ ~ l.llNted:. C.-CMVIH ... -._.. OI
11n ..... 1ntt.eT~·aa. "'OCllOMIMI AOMMIT flll'rt, IT MAY N IO\.DAT lornl• PattH1ahJ~ TNMIMa OI .. 0... "'99 "':=ro.omrAUlT ;~, l~~ co.~~~~ ~i~ ~ ~. ,. =· ~ ~ ANO ILIC'1C* TO MOnCt1 CW O' TH! HATUN M THE Ind~ 1t> Mild~ C .. o arM; ... ....,_ llildl
UL&. -~&AU PROCHOIMGI AOAIHST IMOry Note Md l9Cllffty to PIHCllH• mJGrO•
DID°'TMl8T T..t.MO..-YOV. YOU 8HOUl.D ~~--a &W'IY* ~----LoeitNo. NO:UCI 1g ~HY TM>l-A LAWVM. a,c,JOfl fOf cutl, I ---.. ,.....,,,., to. -09-60t42·S/ITOUT OIV!N, tMt on Wtcl1...0.y. Or\ 113/U 91 tO'OO A.M. ~of the~ SW. bWt M llW tlW\. 2:00 p,m.,
T 8 Ho. F.,,1M1 My 3. 19ta, el 11 00 o'Clodt V!ROUOO Hlf,llC! COA-of AIM<lc&, e ~· JUy t , tMI, tit tN ~ UHfT..,.~ FT Lm ot Mid dty. In ,,,. toom PORA TION .• IN dAliy ..,. dlecll P•Y•t>I• to ••Id V1lltOft ()floe ol .., ldlOll
"IM,.vnTAN Mt .._,. tot CC>MuQlng pOini.d Truete9 under and leMflclarydn1wnonetc*M ~. 11Mi 8 Stt-.
NOTICE" Truet .. ·1 I Me, llW!tNll the pureuant 10 OMd of TNet Of 119tloNlil banll, e ..... 01 HY11tlno1!lifl loocfl, C.U..
IF YOUR PROPERTY 18 IN offic. of REAL EST AT! SE· Acordld on US 11'3. M r.o.e1 Clt9dlt unb\, 0t 1 _. t1M7, .. ~ tllN
FORECLOSURE BECAUSE CUMt!S SERVICE. IOcated Oocu1Mnt no f3.-3I t"4, of etltl or f9clerll ........ encl llllld tlldl .W bo oC**' Ind
YOU ARE BEHINO IN YOUR " 1800 North 8roadwey. OMclll Atcofda In the oMo9 IOetl wodltton domlOled ,..., In .ccotdenoe wltfl PAYM~TS. IT MAY BE Sult• 100. "' the City or of ,,,. Aeectder of Ofenge In tnle state .• , IM meln on-epdic:atlON now on tie In
801.0 WITHOUT ANY SM1& Ana, County Of Or· County.C1lttornla,11t1CUted rranc• to Fln•ncl•I U.offlo9ofMlddl9tl1Ct.
COURT ACTION, and you 1ng9, Stete of Callfomla. EL by AHTHOfilV IJEARSOfil & ~ loCIJed at 12.t 1 NI lta!na ptO'ddod tfttouQft mey haft the .., rlgf'rt to CAMINO 8ANt< .• Cellfomla 8AR8AAA M PEARSON l E.Mt C«n• C4urt onv. In tN9 bid nUll meet .. ~ bl1nO your eccount In good eorpcntlon, IJ duly . 99-CLIFTON ITANWOOO COYlr\A, Celltom19. COble ...,_., atate. Md
ltllldlng by P9vtno ti of pointed Truetae under and SMITH JA. WIU S!LL AT 111 tnat righ1, ~ loG9I OOcMI
your put due payment• plue pur9'1MI 10 "" l>O'*lt of PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE and lnt.....t con~ to The lkwd Of T,,_... ,..
petml11ed COltl Md IX· lalecontwredlnlhltcer1&.ln HIOHEST BIOOER FOR end now held by It ur1CMr ..,,....IM"Oflttorejeeteny
PlnMa wtthln UV. montn. OMd of TN.11 executed by CASH, {P9>'9b6e et tlme ot Mid Promi.ory Not• Md end • t>lde. end to welw
from the date thla notice of Robin F Hanna, • 11no1e Ml9 .,, lawful money ot 1111 ~ ~t 1n mo M'f'f trregu&Mty m.wn
default wa recorded man. recorded Mey 17, United St1tH ) at THE peraonai pr~ ioc.t.o et OC~ ¥tlW IC"°°'-
Thlt amount of principal I• 1983, In the ontoe of tlll NORTH FROfilT ENTRANCE 710 Udo Petk Or1w II\ ...... DllTIUCT. IJI llaell•
11.•95,1147.64 a of Augutt I County R9eorc:Mt ol Mid T 0 THE C 0 U N TY pen a.en. Calltomia, f11t> ...,_, Ct9ltl .. tM .._.
1, 198', together with ae-County. as Reco<O.. 1 1~ COURTHOUSE, 700 CMC nYmblr 205 Ind d9ecrlbed .. T,...._
Clued lnt9'91t due ft~ Mey I llN"*"t No. 83-207SOO, by CENTER DRIVE WEST, N totlowl: Publletled Oraoge COMIC
I, 1985. and lrutt ... ,... I reuon of I breaeh Of default SANTA ANA, CA 92101 all A 136' YICt Wiiiet\ beet• Delly Piiot Jl.!119 20, rr. IN&
encl e•pen ... lncumld, plut In peyment or perl<Hmance rtglll, tlti. and lntet11t con-1tle l'luM numblr of 271732 Th--Ol1
lite ct111gee and wtll In· ot the obllgltlon1 MCUred v..,..o 10 and now l'llid by It a nd 1 CF numb•r of
er .... until '/OU' eccount thereby Including lhel unc:Mt l&ld 0..0 of TnMt In CF48HGA
blcomel current. You may I b<eeott Of deltult NOllQe of thl property lltuated In Mkl Said sale wt" bl midi
not have to P9Y the entire which wu recorded Merch County, Cllll<Hnl• dllCflt>-without ~ant Of •If·
unpeld portion of your IC· 8, 1985, u Recorder'• In-Ing Ille land 1tw11n· ranty ~Of tmplieO To f1CTinOUe ~ ..
count IV9n theugh full pay-etrument No !S--082229. LOT 2e IN BLOCK 18 Of Nu.ty the""'*°~ ..... STAT'lllllfWT
ment wN demanded. but WILL SELL AT PUBLIC SECTION B. NEWPORT balanol due on IN Promlle-Tiil loAowtng por10N1 9fe
you mu1t pey the amount I AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST BEACH. IN THE CITY OF or; Noll. 10 wtt· p o,eee 81, doing buelnlll u:
etated abOve. HOWIVlf, you BIODER FOR CASl1. tewful NEWPQRT BEACH, AS PEA pty1 thl followtng lltlmated F GLAS DESIGN ENGl-~d your beneflclery or ~ of the United Stat•. MAP A~COROEO IN BOOK C09tl, e.q>enMI and IO-NE£RINO. ~ AJleo A..,.,,
mongag.. may mutually or a cull•'• en.c. drewn 4. PA G E 2 7 M Is . vane. at .,,. lnltlll publl-Coet• ...... CA 12e21
egr• In writing l)r10r to the on e 1tata Of nettonal blnk, CELLANEOUS MAPS, IN cetlOn of tt11e No11ce of Sate· Frlnll L Qlaa. 20$4 Allio
time the notice of .... It I ..... or flde<al Credit THE MAPS. IN Tt1E OFFICE Inter•. AdvltlClll and A .. Ave .. Colt• MIN, CA 02ta7
po1tld (whleh m1y not bl union, or 1 atate or federal OF THE COUNTY RE· po 11a1 t Ion Co I 1 e , Thie buelnfft It con•
eatller than the end of the M vin(I• and lo.II UIOCll tlOn CORDER OF SAID COUN· 124."9 23 ducted by ell lndM01.191
three-month period stated clomlelled 1n this st1ta aH TY NOTlCe TO Fret* L 01M
above) to. amono other payable 11 thtl ume of NII. Tne street lddr-end ~RTY OWNER TIW ttatwnent waa flied
thing•. ( 1) provide additional 111 right, tltle •no interest I 01ner common detlQnetlon, YOU ARE IN OEFAUL T wtf11 the County CWtt of Of· time In which to cure the de-held by II, IS Trust ... m that 11 any, of Irie rMl prOQlrty UNDER A PROMISSORY 1ng9 County on MllY 23,
fault by trantfer ol the prop-real pr~ lltuaae 1n eald daecrlbad above 11 NOTE ANO S ECURITY 1985
arty Of otl'tll'WtM, Of (2) --County af\cl S111e. dllCtlbed P<Jrponed to bl 1809 W. AGREEMENT DATED FEB-f'lrT1t1
tat>lilh a eehedull of pay-H follows B1lbo1 Blvd , Newport RUARY 7, 1N6 UNLfSS Publllhod Or~ C009t
ment• In order to cure y_our Lot 19 ol Tract No 10513. Beacn. CA 92&83 YOU TAKE ACTION TO Delly Piiot May 30. "'-e,
default; or both (I) and (2) In thl City of Costa MIM, as The undersigned Tr\111 .. PROTECT YOUR PROP-t3. 20, 1985
Alter thr .. month1 from per Map recorded In Book dl1C1alm1 any illblllty fOf' tny ERT'l'. IT MAY BE SOLO AT
the data of recordltlon of 4.48. Pagel 45 througn 47 tncOfrectlWU of tM ltreet A PRIVATE SALE. IF YOU
thll document (whlett dlta of Inclusive of Mleeellaneoue addrnt and Olller common NEED AN EXPLANATION
record•llon appear• ,,., .. M•PJ. In the Office of lhe,dNlgnauon. II any, allOwn OF THE NATURE Of THE
on), unleN the obllgatlon Couoty RKC>rder of Sllld nereln PROCEEDING AGAINST
t>e4ng toreclOMd upon or I County Said ull wtn bl tnlOI, but YOV. YOU SHOULD CON-
eepatlta wntten IQ,..,,,.,, The atrMt ldclreu or wttnout COYltlanl °' war-TACT A LAWYER
bl'-1 you and your eredl-ottle< common designation re nty. expr .. 1 or Implied, re-Dated. February 7. 1985
!Of permit•• !9'lget Pl':lodc ol IN rMJ pr~ herein-gM<Slng title, . -,.,_Ddll 0,101*'*• tttt ~
you hive only the legll right a b o v e d • • c r 1 b e d I s enoumbrence., to P9Y tne '-' C:.... COW1 DfM.
to 11op the NII of your prop. purponed 10 bl 3 1 t8 K~ remalflltlg prloclpal eum of c.ww., e•11,... t11M.
arty by paying the entire dike Avenue. Cetta Mau. tne notl(a) llCUf'ed by Mid IJ: Qlen11 H1rdc11lle,
amount d9rnlllded by your Calltomla. • Deed of TNtt, with lnt9'111 ,.._., (111) t1~1
credltOf. • TIM! undar•lgned hereby the<eon. u prOYlded ln Nld Publlahld Or1ng9 Colet BULL
To llnd out the amount cll$dalmt all llablllty IOf any notl(t)., advaocea, If wiy. Oelty PlloC Juoe 15 16 17,
you mutt pay, or to errange Incorrect,_. In said stree1 under the term• of the 0..0 18. 10 20. 21 24 2e. 28 30, J 0 Y CE GRACE
for peyment to stop the fOf .. lddrest or other common ot Truet. 1-. cnargee and t985 BULL, a long nme
Closure. or ti your property It detlonation axpan-ol the Trutt" •nd Sa-833 reudent o f Corona del In forec'<*lr• for eny other Slld Mii wtll be made of the truets CtMtld by Nici
reuon, contact· Kim Jones, wttl10Ut warrenty. expr.U or 0..0 of Tru1t tor tl'le ----------Mar. Paued away
Beverly Hlllt S1vl119t, A Fed· Implied, regarding utlt. poe-1mounl re11onebly H tl· P\&JC M}TlC( JW\e 16, 1985 She la
eral S & L Aat0c:lat1on, -1on. Of encvmbraneec. meted to bl. $280,46&.M. survtved by her hus.-2727 I Lu R9mblu. Mlstlon to utisty the principal baJ-The berllflctary under Mid NOTlCI CW ... _ d Robe rt. son
Viejo. CA 92892 (714) anc. of the Note Of other Died ol Trull hlfetofore ••· ~ HIARIMG .... n • •
831-&836 obligation MCUred by UICI ecuted and dellveired to the ~TO TMr Brett, d aughters,
If you hive any q~tlona, Died of Trull, wnh interett undersigned a written Dec. PL1.1••1a Kelley and Kerry.
you 11\ould contact• l1wyer and other aumt .. proYlded 11r111on of Default and 0.. COMMllatOWI mother and father,
or the go vemmfH'll I090C)I therein, plus advences, II mand fOf SI.le. and • written OINIAl CW d S k whlcil mayh1ve ln11.1red your any und« IN iarma lhereol Notice ol o.taull end Elec:· CONDn"IOttAl UM A c ad a n ar is
loan Notwtthatandlng the and· Inter•• on euch ad-tion 10 Saft The underSIQMd ~...,. NO. •u Schnorluan of Corona facttt111yourpr~111n venc11, i nd· plus feet, cauMd Nici Notice ol 0.. NOTICE IS HEREBY del M a r , sister.
forecl<>lure, you mey o!fe< cn1rgea and Hpen-of the fa un and Election to S..I to GIVEN that • publle hMrtng Beatrice Carte r o f your property tor sale. Trut1M end of the INSta De recorded In tl'le county wtll be held by the City Coun-
provlded the tale 11 con· Cl'Nled by Mid Deed of wnere Ille rMl property 1a ell ol the City of Huntington Sant.a Ynez. CA-and
duded ptlor to \lie eon-Trull Tne total amount of loelled Beacn In the Counc11 3 0e1ces. J oyce was
ctuliOn of tne toreciosure Nld obllg111on, including DATE· 5/29t85 Ch1mber ot the c 1 ... 1c very acuve Lil P.T .A. Aemember.YOUMAYLOSE rellonibly estimated 1-. VERDUGO IERVICI Center, Huntington Bltletl,
LEGALAIOHTSIFYOUOOICharQeSandlX,penMI Oftl'le ~ft,Ol\AT10N. .. Mid atll"lel\our of7,§0PM Of U at Harbor View
NOT TAKE PROMPT AC· Trult91, el the time of Initial tniet ... ...., N. llrMd ...._, 80on thltlft• u poeelb41 D~nt.a.ry, Lincoln '
TION publleatton ot 1111$ Notice, 11 Qteftdale. CA 112m. T .... °" MonOay 1111 111 d9Y 0( Intermediate a nd In addition to the amoun1 $40 419 38 phone (111) 500-,_, 8y: Juty. 1~5. tor the P<J'l>OM d 1 M u ......
11t111d above. ehOUld any o~tld· June 11 1985 londfa ~ ot conel<Senng an appeet to Corona e ar • .,...
prior tu•. liens. Of encum· EL C
0
UiHNO 'aANK, 1 Pub118hed Orange Coas1 the Plannl~ Commlaton'1 Schoo] Fanuly SUI·
branc11 bl deUnq. uent or Cllffomle e«poretlon, .. Dilly Pllor June 6 t 3 20. demat of ltional UN I gest that donauons be
become delinquent and tl'le Truetee. I Y: REAL ESTATE 1985 'Permit 8~13 • r~I 10 th Ame • loen ce11 be relnateled, said SIECUIUTIES SIERYICIE, 1 Tll--033 permit _Churcrl MMoe1 and made to e nt'&ll
dellnqueoctes muar t>e cured Callfoml• cotporWtlon It• 1n olfioe wi1111n IM Old• Cane-er Society
u a condition of r•nstat• Agent, •r. D. J ~. 111 ouDtJC MnfJCE World VIiiage FMttvai Hall -JONES menl • Pre1ld1 nt 1100 North r~ nv localed •I Ille n0<1 neu1 tor-ES
NOTICE IS HEREBY Brl*fwey. Sult• ,00, 811nu ner of Center Ort.,. end FRANC L JONES
GIVEN THAT SOUT11LA NO Ana. CA 12709. Tlfephone: NOTICE Huntington V1ll1ge Wey a resid e nt o ( Hunt
COMPANY ts duly ap. (71,1153-411,0 Ca1tforn1e Coastal Com· wlll'ltn the Nor1n Hu,,t1ngton mgiun Beat..h. She has
pointed Trustee under the p bffSl!ed Orenoe Coast m1SSJon DUblic hearing to t>e C e nter Soec•ttc ·Pte,, h f
lollowtng 11 described deed De•~ Pllol June t3 20 27 l'lflld regarding (P1rm11 pu'S4.lant to A1'11Cle 933 of l.JVed tn t '! az:t'8 Or
ot lrutl 1985 "5-85-3331 Beyview • J M :ne Hunltngton Beacn Ofdl· the past 10 years
TAUS TOA JAM£S 0 Tn-054 Pete<S Company prOjecl oil nance COde I Passed away June 17. STOUT SHARON T STOUT 64 acre1 IOClted at Jam· A legal oe.ertpllO<l 1t on 985 Sh ved
BENEFICIARY BEVERLY I bor.. Road and Brl1101 file 1n the Oec>artment ot 0.. 1 e 15 Slln'l
HILLSSAVINGSANO LOAN Street l1ea11ng 10 be held Ylioe>mentSeMoesOfflOI b) her husband
ASSOCIATION MllC NOTlCE during Coutal Com· All1n1 ...... 1edperson111e David. nephe\l'
recorded July 15, 1983 as mlsston s July 9· 12 MStlon I llWlled to attll'ld 111d hMr· Edwin C C rouch o f Instr No 83'305344 of Of· NOTICI! OF INTENTION TO For 1nlorm111on specific 1ng a nd express thalr1 Cam ...._ll CA
llcial AeeOfdS to tl'le office of LEASE RE.Al. "'~RTY dale time and locltlon con-OPtotons for Of egainal MIO P~ . . neice
the Recorder of Orange FO" THf PUflPOSE OF 11e1 Peter Xander Calllomt• appe.i • Mrs Alberta Kelleher
County CONDUCTING A DAY Coastal Comm1sston, Longl Further 1nform111on may of Las Vegas Nevada
seid deed of trust se<:Urtl SCHOOL WITH AN AFTER· 8 ea c l'I 0 I I Ic e ( 2 1 3 ) be Obtained lrom the Otnoe c t t l • s e
c.rteln obligations Including SCHOOL CONSERVATORY 590-5071 Of 1111 City Cieri< 2000 ~·In o mm1 a erv1c
one note for the 1<1m of PROGRAM PubUShed Orange Cou1 S1r .. 1 loiuntlng1on BMcll. w ill be held f'nday
1 150000000 NOTICE IS HEREBY Detty PolOt June t9 20 21 Ceutorme 926-48 . 17 141 J une 21 I 00 PM at
Thai ll'le beneflcl•I GIVEN th1t on the 3rd dayot 1985 536-5227 Wes~ter M emorial :~:;-:~u~:O~~:t=~o1 ~~~:iee~9~~.,~h~,e~ w TF-867, g~ ~ne~TON\ Park Rev Al K.vges.
cured thereby are prlHtltly Scl'>OOI Olstrlcl 011119 County ' Ptel.IC NOTICE II ACH, I r Allele M. F 1 rs I Ch r IS l 1 an
held by the undersigned; ol Orange State ot Call· Wentwont\, Ctty Cteril Chur c h o f H unt·
Theta breaoh 01 and default fomla. det11<m1ned that lhe FICmlOUI llUllNE&I Put>llshed Orange Coe.et I
In. the Obllgallons tor which ro11ow1ng la nd Oulldlng• , NAMI ITATE•NT Dally Piiot June 20 1955 mgton Beech o ff1Clal·
tuetl deed of trust I• MCUr and equipment will not be The folloWlng Pl'tO'I• are Tl'l--079 ing P ierce Bros
llU occurred 1n that pay-needed IOf K l'IOOI purpoMe doing bull,,_ u Sm 1th M o r l u a r y.
ment hU not ~ med• of·1 •nd wOI De let to the the JIFFY PAINT OF IAVINE. Di rectors 536-6539
The blllnee of tlll prlncl· highest bidde r for Ille 17777 E Mein St lrlvne. CA DI-IC wnnrr -----___ _
pal sum of 11.495,6-47 6-4,1 purpose 0' operellng 41 day 9271 4 r~ ""' "" SKILLING
wflk:tl ~due August 1 school w1111 en 11tte<-sch001 Rocne Enterpo-Inc • ERRILL E S 1984 with lnterHI du · conser111t0f)' program tor C11 torn11 corpor111on I SZA1 M . KIL
lhereOn from Mey 1 t98 the e>erlOd from September !1777 E Main S1 1rv1ne CA ttirn=1JC~~UER LING, a resident of
plus lite charges ' 9. 1985 through Julv 30. 927 t4 LEANIACK Newport Beach, CA
That by reuon lhtlfeol 1986 This ous1ness •t con-Passed awav Junt> lh ll'le undersigned present I c h o o I / A d d r • e~ • ducteo bv 1 cor00<et1on Not>Oe is her11>y g/\letl ll'lll • .,-
beneficiary under auch deed Meadow v e ... Scl'l()<) 5 n Aocl>e En1e<or1-inc ..inion Bank Tr1naler0< lhe 1985 Bom July _,
01 trull. has executed and Ct11r1t On':'..e q~unl "OIC>n Jemes l l'loci'e President 1ddress ot wtticn 1s P 0 Bo\ 1913 tn M lt'htgan
dellve<ed to said duly •P-Beac11 CA ~264 . T111s s111e~t wlS nteo 23JA Fulte<"ton CA 92632 Survw ed b '> his "ifi
pointed Trust.. 1 wrtlleo Number of Aoom• S wlll'l 1~ Counh C•e<~ ot Or· ritends to 94141 oertelf'I oet· •
Oeclaritlon of Oefeull i nd Number <ii Squ.,, F .. t enge County on Mey 23 sone prCIPl't'f 10 GFC Leu-Margo t Daughter'\
Demand ror Sile, e nd h•tt 4 830 1985 .no Corpor1110n 111e eddr-N1role Skilling of tht•
depoelled with said duly ep~ All proPosa•s mu" be re-"711• 01 wt\ICf'I is 820 Newport! home Andrea F olltt'
pointed Trultel, IUCtl cl..O c.lYfKI no 1111&1 tnan Tuet· 1 Pu0!!5.bed Orange Cout C.Oter Drive. Sul.ta 110, of La Meia. CA
of trust end all document• day. Juoe 25 1985 et 'l 00 0111) Piiot M•r 30 June 8 N..,.-por1 a.acll CA 92e80
l\lldlnclng ob1199tlons ,._ p m 111 t,,. Bustness Offlce 13 20 1995 and thet Trentt. .. 1n1enc B rother Edwm Sktl
cured thlflby. and hat oe... ot 11'141 Ocean v -SehOOl I fl'l.002 10 1119& blctl to T,_.~ ling of E.9condido. c A
elated and dOM hereby de-Ols1r1t, 16940 B SlrHI. Hunt· I 111d Pet'lonal pr~..,!i G rave!llde servtt'f'
clar• all eumt aec;ured Iller .. Ing ton Beach Callforn11 DI IDIJC MnflC[ gen«ll deterlC>llon ot wttletl • ll ~ h Id Th by lmmedletlly due and pey· 92&4 7 Tl\1 Bo1 rd of ,..~ nv 1111 foltowa "1 e W'S
•ble Ind ha lllCtecl "'° TrusleM' 9'11111 C<l'\9kter tf'e "' YeNelel loc;etecs '" tl"le da~ Junt:> 20, 3 p M
doe1 hereby lllC1 10 ceuM proposals ro leate property '1CN!!!!OOITIA~~.JI count~ covered by >ea-I at tht" Oak H iU M em on July 15 1985 111 7 30 .. ~ -con1umm1led by Tran1feror
the '"'" Pfoperty to bl sold Pm in 111e' Boerd Room of I The foOowlng Petton• ar1 wttn.n the 90 d•ys 0<1Cedtng onal Park 2&l0 Glen to Ntllty the obllgellont M-th Ocean vi~ Scnoot Dis· dOing buai"4118 u c~ .,..,,ICI' are ICCllC>-
1
Ridae Road &,con cured thwlby e MCCRANE" ANO COM· ... ' • 0.ted: June 13, 1985 trict 18:•0 e 5d 11tunt· 1PANY , to Newport Center t11>1e untt1 u oe11nec1 ,,, • dido l A Pact f ie
llVIM.Y HLU IAV· ~2~~; H en 1 ornll 0t1ve. Suite 200. N9wport =~~ ~':,~1= View Mortuary. Di·
IN08, A "°'""" SAV• coo ... or ll'le llfmt Ind e.actl. CA 92680 L-· be'-1111 par1111 rectors 54 .. 2700 INQI AND 1.0AN Al· ond ttonl of tl'le ~ .,.. K1tllt)ln G Mc:Creney 919 Tl'lis PfoPlf'tY 11 IOClled et
IOCIA TION ter111er l~ ~vall~b'I at the Ols1rtct °'' Bl'(910e OflYI Apt 0·4. wartous locetlont ln '"~
MWN.'Ltll.J..t IA'ltllfG nc. et t11• 1fafem10lloned ~ &eactl CA 9~ covnt) 1110 11111 111e and, AND LOAM AllOCIAT'ION. ad<lrHS Minimum terll•I tor Tiii•· but•neu It COii• IMMbllOk •ret\lae1ton •• tol
ly T .D. Ml'VICI COM-cla"'ooms and ~pany ducted by an lndlVldual bl c"*'<I Of\ J~ 28 1985
,ANY. -,...... ly: Uftdl Ing _.,.,CM tl'laH bl ll•ty K•ltwyo G Meet~ et I L59 pm at ltle aOO¥I
I. --~ V\ce ~IS (60'1 '* .,quare toot Thia ttetem.n1 _, Med offt0t ol tne TransletOr
,,......_. 09/ montl'l With !fie Count) Cl«lt of Of. Dated tllll t2th csev oil
TAC *' w rllten PfopoMI• 10 !MM •noe Covnty on Mey 22 Ju,,. 1885 Put>ll8hed Or.,-ige COltl 1985 ................ _.. • ) Deity Pilot June 20 27 July NJd PfCX>41'1V muat oonto<m f'fTT141 __. --(Traos ....
' 10 tl\e 1erm1 and cond1tlol'll 8y: W.,,....Ceft4 A. 9fed-4• t 1· l"6 . Pnoruy In accep11ne1 of a Pvbl~ 0..111199 Coal llMw
Th..073 pr~al 10 leeM Mid prop-Olil'f PllOt May 30 Juoe 6, Put>bhtlo Oo'lnQ9 Coawl j
---------1f1y Wiii bl Ql"eft tO IN 13 }(), 1985 Delly Piiot June 20. 1"5
...._.....;....,.-.. ........ .-.---prC)pONI wntc:il offers low ~H Th-072
~~A~ :.'::i:.;;= ~ Ml.IC *>net
The ~no pereont.,. 01t1onany. prlOl'lty wilt bl I rtaJC fl>TlCl
CSolna bualtt9M • Q1¥1n to• provtder "WM Nitl ACTTnOUa ..,._ .. ,---------. ST THOQAS 9f'l!AAQ!' hod ~ 9'.~I ~ITATl*NT RClmOW ..,.. .. c 0 M p AN y , 2 4 2 1 directing IOI. elemal\llry Thi I~ per9Cf\I.,.. ..... t1ATWWWT
MIQnOll• Garden Oro,.. ecnOOI-• atucMntl tuCfl doing butl1'19M n fhe IOllOwlng oerwnt are
CA l2"'A oon.-va1or; o1*1"QI u AZTECH ELECTAIC ~21 doing ~ • ~ L.. cem.•. t65 w piano Y!Olln v°'°9 <lance. ~· IMnl CA 91714 01~ F"iOA y SEA\llCf
Wll9ol\, ec.. MIN. CA theltw lrts end~ ~" ')t•d~ 5"121 1111 Or-. A¥1 Sufte K tM71 . Thi Board Of ~Ult--R~all. lfvlnl CA 92114 Cotll MIN CA 92$27
Chrtellne Hurn, 1son aervea Ille tight to ~ lnY D•le ~ Ca rlow. &208 K11n.t1~ ..... Wantte
lurQMa. W11tmNter. CA°' 111bideInd10 wll¥t eny Rovale !MM CA ~7,• ,~2, 1 \llctOl'll Ln .,.l.ll'lt·
t2tl3 ~-· tPt1e t>tJtlMM le eon-ltnafon 8-cfl CA 1?141 Thie butlnou 1, cotl D•t•d at "4111\tlnQtOft ted by ~~ 'ltl<e w..._. 11 con
ouct.o by e 09'*11 pin• e.eon. C.~!Om4a, nlla .lru Wlltieim" MMOOWa. 0.. clVC11d tly wi lnOIYtdual
,,.....,. dlry of June. 1N& L c. Ke.,,..,. L .. Went/I
KaNn L C.--OCaMf Y1IW KMOOl. T1Q ltl'tttl'Nnt ._. fll9d TMt ..,.,.,.,,t wee ,-..,
lllla •••-it .,.. !led MTllCT, .,, ,-.. 0..-wlltl tlll County Clet'll ot Of· wtt" tM Co\w\1'; Cieri! OI Oi
wioi \fie Co\wlty C1et1l of °' ,-. "11111 •" ...,. ., f.C Couf\i., on w.y n. = County on June • = CCM'flY on M9Y n T1 ~ Or~ ea.a t 5 ,.,,,_ ., mt1w
,.,,,.,.. 0-'r Hot Mia 6. 13 20 l"\ltlMhld Otlf'99 Co.t ~ Oflll'09 C...
.......,_, ~ Coeel ttd ~ Pllol ~ )0 ~ & o.11-, PilOt ""-t1 20 27 ~ P110t May 16, .JuM I, r~ ll, XI IM!'i J1iy 4 tMS
PIERCE BROTHERS
BEU BROADWA Y
MORTUARY
11(1 Bro•d•8'1'
1..oste Mf>t18
641 91SO
P ACtFIC Vl~W
MEMORIAL PARK
Ce•-n~t~ • Mortuar~
Chat>et • Crema1or'I'
'500 Pacific V~ Orivti
N Wl)Otl 8tt11Ch
O.C•·'700
McCORMICK
MORTUARY
••qr, Laoun• Cn"""n
Aoad
l ~ovna Beac11 c,,
~12g51
•'?4 94 I~
HA"80fH..AWN-
lllT. Ol.IYI
Mort1.1•r'f • Ce~te1~
CrematorI 1e's G111ef '119
Cotl• ~~•0·5~5•
'!), to. Ult& TIH>2S Th-ote .................................. ~ .................................... ,......l ~'~ D
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Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Thurad•v. June 20, 1985 ,_ .. -.,.
PUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau
"George Is showing me. the trick of vaulting
PEANUTS
AU. IN Al.J.,
I TH/NI<
>!WRNfl
/TA 'tfR1
M:Xl.THY
PROJtCT
"
'i'ES, SIR .. I WANT MY
MONE'( 6AGK .. THIS 15
THE WORST SUMMER CAMP
t\/E EVER BEEN 10 !
IF '<OU omlr GIVE ME
MV MONEV BACK, l'M
601N6 TO SUE!
~A Of5EA$t. IF
/T~{)Ne,(F
~8161)1~
[aJU..iJ HA~
.A PAim
\.
''40 w~ tostayAlert
in jWr Goldeh Years :.?
by Charles M. Schulz
ALL IT DOES 15 RAIN !
IT'S TOO WET TO ENJOV
AHVTMIN6!EVEN Mt ATTORNEY •
THINKS IT'S TOO WET.
lightly Into a hammock." BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Did a new dog move Into your
neighborhood?"
DRABBLE
I)~ "4E.l.U), \.lE-'?
~. ORA8Bt.f.. '216~T 1..t
1' M. l.00\1:'.I~ 11-\E.~E..
~ f'.lOQMAN 0€.M~.
DENNIS THE MENACE
t
f ---
!
f
by Hank Ketcham
~
.. 20
•1t1 ~t) SAYS HISMO'ToRSRUNNIN' BUT HISC.WTCM IS
SL1PPIN1
I WHATEVER ™T MEANS ."
B'1 l\.4E WA'l,l~l~ I~ M~
PM .. , MOO?f. 1. i.\ \I
by Kevin Fagan
E.Nit.~IN6 T~f:. Ol<Aeeit..E
i.\O\J~ '' MOi UNl.IKf. E~ie~1t-lG 1"E • 1w1L1C'.~T
'Zet-4€." •
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
I 'VE NEVER BEEN SO
EHOO~ASSE.D I~ M'/ LIFE! ..>-
TUMBLEWEEDS
ROSE IS ROSE
CAMU. ~ BE. U6lNG-™£
1HMl<5 f<)I? 6!N1
5(T{AK'Hff l+f"fH '1e.
~. >W'.f!
bl?OVNP!P l.NTl
~ 'f-S "'!Jlm(mY
\
K!IAUY, I 14145
~N6106t~
1U MP WlrHOVr
IWY£U·O
(?
~
by Lynn Johnston
ISP.ID~
by Pat Brady
GARFIELD by Jim oavis ~am~ A8(W?
005£.RVf, BE.AilNG T~E HEAi
15 S IMPLY A MATTER OF MIND OVE.R eoc;iy
MOON MULLINS
CMEF's SURPRISE ...
WE/..L. .IHE GOLF
COURSE WoN
A ~,A IN . . "-L7._,.
-:-<.)
JUDGE PARKER
WELL., WHAT
Do You f<NoW ··
1 BURNT MY
FINGER ...
TH: RESIDENCE
OFALAN 8
~RKER ' ._._ .. ,,
..-----,.--.--.--.--~.--.----.---
UNFORTUNATELY,
MY 00VY HA~ A MINI:' OF' l"f5 OWN
0
0
by Harold Le Doux
I 'M SORRY euT THE l"EW '
NVM&ER '9 UN~ISTEO I
•
Both vulnerable. South deals.
WEST
• J62
NORTH ..,
+ K 8
~A 1084
0 9
+AK9876
EAST
• AQ109
<:7 K 9
O KJ0872
• J 104
~JS
0 Q63
+Q532
SOUTH
• 7543
~ Q71S2
0 A .1$.C
+v.w
The biddln~
Soat.111 w .. t Nortl9 Eut
Pua P... l + P ...
I <:;) p... 4 <:;) p ...
I ~ p ... P ... PUI
Opening lead: •Jack or +.
Suppose you holct Q-x In a suit. op-
posite A·x in dummy, and.you can't
a rford to lose a tdck. Your
le(itlma~ chance of finding a
tlo1leton king ia so slifht t hat you
may as well not con1fder it. A bet
ter shot Is to lead the que~n and
hope the player on your left baa the
king and not the jack, and falls to
cover. this play ia known aa a
"Chinese finetH:· .,.rhap1 because
you have to be inaaut~blt when
CHINESE FINESSE
you lead the queen.
Sometimes. however, the.lead of
an unsupported queen has auxiliary
advantages. Consider this hand,
where North-South reached an op-
timistic slam. North's jump to game
with his distributional hand is hard
to fault, but South sho·Jld have puU·
ed in his horns in view of hit weak
suit and void in partner's suit.
A spade lead would have ended
the hand rather early, but West
passively opted for 11fety. Declarer
rutred the club o~nlng lead and Im
mediat..ly led the queen or hearu-
pot to take a Chinese flneue, but
beuu1e the only leifllmate way to
bring ln the trump suit wUhout 101
ln1 a trick WH &.o find Ea1t with a
singleton jack and West with K·9·5.
The jack would be ptnned, and
dccla.rer could Onease the el1ht oo
the next round.
However, aince declarer could
euiJy havf' a 1IJt· or snen~rd 1ult
on this auction, West elected not to
cover the queen. Declarer folJowed
with a trump to the ace, and great
was the fall thereon. A club ruff aet
up the suit. Although declarer still
had to concede a trick at the end,
the slam was in the bag for a very
sati.sfacl.ory result.
·CHARLES
GOREN
Pw ........ U. ...._t Cwle• c.,.. •. , ... ..,,•u.1www.. ...,. ..... ,... o ...... ,.... Leu..
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• ~ lin~. 5 Daya. t f> Dolle.ta. • Ada mav r.1nr"I "'"riv. liut no pO!llvn of P"' 111r111 "·,rc-fundab&t. • AdditloNJ ._ may be purchaird f0t t 2 00 u ch
• Prn:H rnu11 ~ included 111 t~ ad • ix~. not •p1•h to lhr r,.•I l"<>talr. u•1111l. or hdp wanttd duiMflcatiorw Oif 11nomoWet pnct"d ov.-r t :?OOo Call 642-5678 ·
• -\v11l1blr 011h 1u pr1V1ll' parh 41Jvrr111era tdl1nc mercha"'-.
T .. DAILYlltLOT
c;1 Al>SlfU:O OfFICl HOUAh
T MPhOf,. s-• M r
100 4M $00 PM au-toun1 .. M I
800AM &00 PM
Dl.ADLINll
ttua\ I( a' ION O• "I" 1Nt r.::,:w '' • •"' .... =~· . r..:.: :::. '"""'..... . "'" . . ... ...... ., '"'r• 1 ... \_.urM• • .,,., Wou ,., .,.,
Af'\'f •"""Oi•"' •"VI U.t·G w ,,._ ~ .0 <UI•' ., •tUhifflO W•ll _,.. \\.ID~'
IO C>l,,I "Of '"' l•O ... I <t"' t
CP\t!''.}4'\ O"""O\.J'f'O •' ..,.t ''"ft ~liiiiiil'iiiiiiili•llii .. =~°" ~:;-:.::!'.~~~;:,a~ •0~ •llo,.nt v \ '""'
...... Jerf!!t. ... .. latarabW ,................ 1~· UaJ. Aprtwtt, It!. ..... IMt OW. a.tall 1114 a.t Ir _.
l!!J!!! iMli°" 1111 C.ta.... mt •wrrt .... Ult &itallA 1124 luL..... 2741 N=· "!.f' .:': 'i • Ital 191'1 ~: =~ t.;· =
11111.IRW&l.111 llU,_IDI LllMIOllTW MOO+t2utl114t4·7~ G~.:~_:~ 8Qh,Mllo ...:..1ucw
Sptdout 4 bdrm,, 2'~ OYer 3000 eq. tt. 48drm + Approx 20QO eq tt. 2 FP't , me8tiB..All 1tB!ACHWOOOV1LLAGE Room. M• non..moker Z. Mar on p (; H AJK 2tSJ~1
bath home w/VIEW. ~ bonut room. Hf golf f«mal DA, 2 bdrm. + • fD Between O.C.C. and So MP entr. Mgr e7W70C) LOST 9t
Almoat 3.000 eq ftl courH. C11l·d•·HC. <*!. Vacant. 11375/mo. TIW•llll • Ml .. -.T Coelt Plaza.~ · Dltn•;::;:r'J:::':" 12
W /forrNA dlnl'Z room. S 18SO/mo. Incl grdnr. c.11 P9t• &31-12t& ...... fw.... ....b ......... ,. New Bldg. OC AlrJ)Ort p.,_ l pl\ot...,._ im-
lwnlly room, 2 ep&eoee v...,. 261-7163 Fr""".,_ .......... ..-..-d... Enjoy tWntl~on Bch ,:::= ., .. Cornef Of Aedtllll & _._.,..,, lt'Nlll ,....,0 It and almost OL VMPIC ,.... •-•wu _.._. "' UfM Btlltol 700 aq rt I 1350 ....... • SIZED SWIMMING POOL New Eute.lde TownhofM gar pool & ape.. No pets. UN Ml 11111. aq tt 1~ oc:iopy. found .• 78&-425 t
w/great IU" .,_. tor 3$8drm, dbl get, 2~ 28drm 2'Ae.t+j)en "35 _.1 :~Ts::'tlng Wtlty rentlle now evaa. Ra H INVESTMENTS w~be-quM. pwtlea and 1175/mo. 852-1e19 eee w 18th 64!>-2739 S12e!Wlt&~. 2274New-852...a714 p--·'-•ll
dancing. 1350 ,000 New EutlkM TownhofM NEWLY OEOORAT£D4BR ~SBll~d .. ~ac unltt port Btvd. C.M. 648-7445 ,..,---..,,.------..--
VALUE • moving out of 28r '*' dbl gar 2'Ai8a Con<So. 3 ba. dbl ~er. .. """"'" Nwi>t 8ctl acrOM from AMISH Ubv ™ ur-
., ... mutt Hll for ·s110o1m0.as2-181e S1350/moyfty649-0 09 ~ !~::"'~:'~1 IUIHILlllE ~~~~~ j!nt loan of S4000
$309,500w/TERMSI F0t Quall~3bdrm2behMdbl SEAWIN0:58R.3ba,'IW#, HHTlllTI •CtoMtobWf'I 3028W.Cout~ oon i.r.a S125groea ..... c.11855-5163 appt call Patrick Tenore near pool and tennis. _.._ *Bu ter'YIOe at dooc Pott a-en, r · TV · · · 831-12ee gar lrplc fned yd k~I $2500/mo. 559'-llS39 Beautlf\JI G•den Aptl . 1 $125,,_ wt1 tg1. no t. 852-.87l3 fra-' Jiii welcome mid $900 a patloe, cJed(e. pool 0< •Leur.dry room• Nwpt Blvd. C.M .. lnlide ..,
I ·~ii\:.~ 539-8190 a.ti Alty f• VILLA BALBOA. Large tp&. No pell. •ProfM9k>nal m:,i:;• Gant n otfloe lmmac quiet 115 M:i EARN x FREE cROISE i~ ·· SCPrenttb ownluxury2br condo. lmmac. 2 BA+ 2Bdrm IV·Ba $890 l Bedroom from 575 XtTENT16NsENiORS rtS1l51mo.553-t 1t5 Pluaeutibonut'• . .....,;!;;; == 2btl'I patio pool tacuz '*'· 28a. Security, frplc. 2Bdrm 28a $7 10 :":!,~!!,rm ~= ~~ An<tf"9Wt by ttie s.. i..now ---------Cd 6d NOW 2t 1-ita i
kltoh applt HOO't $1200/mo yfty. WATER-38drm 2Be S775 Sor No Pets acc99t1ng appllcatlona Nwpt BIVd. CM Inside of· IAYl ..... PUI 539-6190 Beet Rlty I• FRONT HMS 631-1400 398 w Wlleon 631 -5583 t"132ryM • .,.n ..... la St !Of resident• In their flee. lmmac qutet, 1t5 l-..:·-·-38r 3ba 857-3834 • -. "' ' Sitt $140/mo 553-1115 ----. Ital~ Hit ••trt • 2Bd xtra lge Twnhse 1 964-5587 984-5574 belUtlflll I~ home ---------
BLUFFS 48drm 2'MSe Im-s~::p e::'.Ts!DE !~: 2215 1/2ba, p1110. par, W/D I IO<theelderty.W•oftef 0 c, A.lr port A r u ft1 lale 4112
meculate Townhouse. s150'1mog ~·•1Gs.·a...lffJ\ \ hkkp. nr occ. no pets. But. •--L....u 2742 3 nourltfllng meals 225 .545 Iott ot Pr1<ln0. if•f1l1,1u1al1ii1i1ii•nm.a• Pool, nr lhop9. Lg U*lm ·....., ,,....., Prof. dec:onted 2BR 2ba $695 +dep 548-609 l ..,_ 24 hr1 loYlng cat• 1an1t'I & utll peld ----• ~% io.n. $179,000 Incl Spec. 38r 2ba, bonut rm.1 condo. trml din rm. many •-wm-•VibX DEL MAA• Ch~ed outing• Mo to Mo ott 852-9386 ~'~,!:=-~':;
lend. Own« 640-8931 or Avallable 811, S 1200/mo amenlt .... Pool/spalcar· .,.. • nnr Spacious 1 & 28drm Apt•. Maid MrVioe Prime Chlro ofc 19AC41· tor c.tsl Ownet to bu9y & 720-1831 '548-7001or7151-1350 port, MC. ;at•. $800/mo. Redec 28r 28a. gar. tee. All bltlnt. Including dish· Ooct0< on call El T0<0. 85c p/eq. tt. ,....i,.,. to oto to trawt 722-8053 Of 558-1108 patio, frptc. No pets S8t5 ~-........., d-""at--" CaM Kathleen 495-21 UI C .-... ,. *" 1 "272 ..... ""'* TAKE YOUR PICK mo 2151 Pacific Aw. .._,..., ·--·1 ........, """'· ont.ct Mary Jemeeon, ..., ~
HOUSE UNDER MARKET. Impressive 2bd wlfrplclA,utatah fuaiakf4 l'M 855..ot&5 or 831-6107 Beautlfut 1andacap1ng, 1aatr 71 41768-1411 0t
BY OWNER. 48R + FEE cozy patio dad's garage pool. jec. seuna. BBQ, ltatUI 29M 2t3/54M520
LAND. 731-t&lB ctllld nne only $625 0t. · Euttlde 1Br • .net gar. No EncloMd garage Enjoy Prime Cot1a Mesa office
MU .. 11 •llM1H* CMll .HI 2124 ~::;,~~s!2~range ~.~'!'m~n = F~~~:o·::.! s~. Suite 1200 + M:i 11.
t an Stylish 3bd 2ba kids <>ti 28(1 2ba 4 yr Old condO. We care abOUt our r-. to bey 0< beach. VILLA Ocean view $950/mo l&TIM YILUll equip! kltch patio crpt11 Prlv Indoor spa, lulty-turn Eaattlde 1 Br, new carpeta dents. Sorry, no peta RENTALS 67~912 631-8280 Ask tor Ray
luiaeu ftp· teH owA vou owN N.8
On the waterfront, beck g3r81~·~~~~ ,:01 752-1125 :.~~:~~~~:g '650 & S750. 846-1755 8111a1e turn 2Bd sleep• ts Matzo Of 8111 Taylor
bay. Prlv. bMCtt. pools, "'-p , CAs& IE Ill or 646-333-4 or M0-399<> or more June $350/wtt, Waterfront otea. elegentty
......
.... e.1
1
jeoc .. clubhouaet & boat -aa ttat •LL UTILITIES PAID 1--=at 27·u July $450/wk 675-29l0 urnllllr 5ciry/rec91>t ~ sllpa avail. BEAUTIFUL. I " E/t lde spacious 2BR u.i ,.,. etc°' ~ate offloM
l
_.. Mutt ... to Appreciate. Off Golden L.aniem 2b! Compare before you rent 1.5S'A twnhae Pvt patio, 28d 2ba. Xie. pool, encl Furn 2Br Condo In New-up to 800 a/f 646-5055
An...nng Serv'ca Part
ot a larger bullneea.
Houre· 8:30 to 5 Mon tn
Fri $4000/Compl. Fan-
tastic opportun ity
752-07 4 0 wkdyt
643--2949 ......,.wtcr.d•
,;;;;::====10=02:.L:lnn=::·i:al:il==::::; ..,. $55,000. 300 E. Coast Hwy 2ba eq~~~o~!d• h fine Nd~ dec;orated. cuat°7 pool, lndry. No pett. patio. gar. Walk to stores. I port Beach Bay view, * 1 MONTH FREE "J1 I Newport 8aedl 67~1331 upper urryl ea gn eeture. poo • $89 5/ m o . C u r t 11 $850/mo 770-9175 tmtlhsly71ren4/68tal6-0Cll4!_!°' de-EXCEl LOC-UtM Incl Mtt
Resort UVlng I~ Newport f539-81~ Beet Rlty I• ~~:sv'::ihg:.~~1~\a~~: &3l·l 266 CONDO· Exquisite Peter's fl '" FROM 95c SF & UP T ':'i. ' 4tZ1
Beectl. Dbl 2BRw/patlo. ~1atua s eepi ng. N o pets Spacious 1br sparkling 2Br 2Ba In University Vacatita CALL{7t4)968-8193 13® 2 y.., 2NI T.b.
let Us lltl,.YH
Sell Y ,., p,.,.,.,1
C.11 Cla11ifll4
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
I Pvt bMch, 2 cfubhou.... Vall17 W4 Furnished 1 & 2 Bdrm e1een $-475 pool. No pets. Park. end unit on grnbelt. I ltatala 2tt'l , S 100.000. AA.A Fortune
Great location. Must "41 Private pool enhances 365 Wilton 642-1971 Call 646-3618 aft 3:30 2 pY1 patio's, central air, C i C 11 la11an1 500 Com~ 780-13913
1 $25 500 cal Nan or 2 car 111acti .. trplC, lol1ed arme · • fomla Doll 1ta•-•--11 · • 3bdrm 2ba hM dbl ;at Nice 1 BR Duplex. quiet. S575/mo 2 Bd lb• patio, <*lings & many extras I HOUM. Fully turniatled. -= •• Widow tlU money for Carolyn, Agt. 979-6728 trplc mom·• klteh $950 tor 1 emplyd person. No pool, Ir.dry rm E-llde loe, Custom decorated ,0; Wiii sleep 4. Walk to bell Cannety Vlllage. Attractive TD'a. I 10,000/up. No
Of 546-23t3. 539-8190BeetRlty fee petas-450.548-1021 otstoalll owner lyrago Comm &VIHage 714/497~17 stontJfront.. 800 alt I~ eredtt.,.../no ptMtty <*'
IMtat fnpty' llH Private pool enhances Int hack 2149 149 E. Bey pool 'tac ExCept1on1i 'I _,_ ctuOee tract tit• 1795 Oen!aono\MOC 873-73
11
I
3bdrm 2ba hse dbl gar • TSL ~ANAGEMEt<IT rent~ proi)erty Ideal tor I tat.u It mo 875--8330. 631-.82l7
2 HOUSES Cotta M... frplc mom'• kltct't S950 Yll lllUYI m 642-1803 prof. pet90fl. ref• req'd. I S~u. 2tOI . ..,, Wu... SIM
Grou $l9,200. $l69,500 539-6190 Beet Rlty I• QUIET RESORT LIVING Ltg 28r In 4-Plex. New Av8117115. $1200/mo :i's company, '.it blk to C...ucial * ··--* l6% On. Owner Don •Sparkllngheatedpool palnt,crptsNopet•W5 Cell own«collect att7pm bMch. yrty. 1350. 3br ltatala 2911 ••-
Goguen 497-6287 lut. ltac~ •Court yard view dining 2248 Canyon 832-1766 tor apptm. 805-495-5609 2ba frpl. gar. non-srnkr. Xvauabie now-580 M:i fi. B~~-:' =-r:=. V:
1.L bCWJI l 2br 26a·nu·lux con&> sec ev1g119tte BBQ areas Meu Verde 2BR 2be. Woodbridge condo 2br S58-7065 UI( tor Karen Harborl Bak•r Center
PALMS SPRINGS E11· Rec amenttlet Avl lmmed Uwtlght dine In COYrt yrd frplc, lndry, gar 0111. l'Aiba $800/mo. CarPort. CdM pleeMnt room, Fem 3019-A Harbor Blvd nr MllllTUT
ecutlve Canyon Country $900. 213-438-3248 •Gs~!c~a Apartments $775, aVI 711. 241-7383 treetity painted. 720-:0876 n-amkr. avail the 1st. Baker St (acrou from Senior or Semi. f« loCal
Club home. 38r + gueet. 3BR 2ba, bltlnt, encl gar .• •Your own pvt patio Nice EaatlkM 28drm lBa. 1 _ la' •ti 5• $330. Call eve 759-9143 Fedco) Prop m gr CPA ftnn. N-emkr. ~
...,,,,... $140.000 equity .,... pool $995 Mature -~ ~ 6 619-726-9665 eves or resume & ~ lllst«y T,;deorMllfor~ "V-• • •Gourmet kitchen Avall 711. Smell yd. gar GOlFCOURSE atlractlve Prefmale55+Nr405&SC 619•72s.1212 to: 1500 N. Cout Hwy.
Beach Condo ~h~ •dltl 536--0921 •New dove tin crpt $895/mo 1tt, lut + S300 loww condO, 2t>, 2ba. w/d Plze, CM $300+dep, pert Laguna 8ctl 924551
$390 000 (2131975--0232 •Br Exec area RV prtlng. •Lrg walk~n clOMts cleaning dep. No pell. bit-Ins petlo gar no pets utlls 432-7366 Retail Space tor lea9e
2 • · 3-696S 38e, LR. trplc, den & llb. •Gated cover*' prtlng Reta req. 6"'5-9395 S635i mo. 77()..iSso E/Bluff 3br 2be wione 1,250 sq 11 E 17tn St llftlnsml
or ( 13)4 1 $1395/mo. 962-1523 w/storage Pvt 1Br, trplc pool, patio. 2 otner non smkr $475 • Prime IOc 8111. 6"'5-3386 1COlllT Dl.m
I.E. Wut.. 1125 2 IUOIS Tl llAll All UTILITIES INCLUDED gar. No peta. 399 W Bay I"!"' .... ~ 719 'itUtlt. 720·1849 Small snopa tor rent Needed tor d is play TRIPLEX In NWPt Hts.. Dellghttul ocean breezes. St. $595 650-6357 ~I( TO BEACH F let ti / 2Br S 80/sq ~ 120 E 23rd St advertising Sales at
Bch, Costa M .... For Spacious 2Br 2Ba 1Bd. 28d & 2Bd Twnnme 2 8d yrly $680/mo +MC. eme 0 s r w same Unit 29 CM 631-2642 rapidly expanding local I I h Furnished Quiet Mesa Ve<de 2Br 122 25th ST 875-4305 2ba Par k Newport dally newspaper Ag-
l IUL llY IT a· .......
·3BR 2ba. hardwOOd ftoors.
11111 m• HLID aer ous 1nx OUI CH w/gerege. Plush carpets Vlllt our model Deity 9-6 tB•. encl gar. IOwe< Unit . $320• utll 640-3665 Sttrlll nu grwlve ,..,-dl9CiplMO
48dr\TI-home with family bUyer Brkr. &75-8241 & drapes, dishwasher, s pet $600/mo. ~ta. 498-1938 l _ 1_ ......... uels may --av. Iota of closets, bak:ony. orry. no s. F lhr lge 3 Br w/F In wtllehr I 810 sq, 11 WarehouM '""""" -" " roomlnprestlolous M ... ltatala B 1 1 1 ·-•mil* $100/mo..+-occu u -Space. near,John W-c:ellent Income (salary & Vwde. Lots of wood and eautl ul Y andecaped LA QUINT A HERMOSA ---• ""'""2357 -,.-commission). benefits brick end bright corner I FanbW 960-8331 16211 Pet1(tlde Ln. HB 28r 2Ba. gar $650 No pet• .. stance. _.,. • \ Airport. ~ sq.ft Trip6e and edvancement oP-Fir~. Lge family rm.
Cvrd patio S124,750
llYl1lllM.11Lft.
wa..11n
amlTlll
HMUTHS
wtr.dowa. Patio Oft m• taMI . • 2BR BEACH CONDO 141·1441 548-5882• After Spm !Lao 8ctl atreignt PfOllM/F net g· wide roll up door portunlty Sales ex-
t., ...... m R V ..,. .... ..,.
1
& 979-3848 Pam IN NEWPORT BEACH to sl'lr beaut newly 'Call 6A 1-4058 ___..._ ... .,.,.. . . . ............ on water~uatdlpool Aru! h Vaf Ag eet pl·-10 uve on 111e1 perienot requlfed. """" .. $195 000 761-3191 ..... _.___........... $9 1•-"'·""' "713 an •STUNNING L t & 2Br r .......... carpeted 2br lower 11M -d • . -.---19un1 -~.,...., ' ' 2B• Garden ipt Pool Upper Bay Private' wlyd & outreg«Ns view Aa1taactatatl 30021 e11pe r1 enc1 a v t n-
$ SElECT Geattal 2202 Ret•wl"" 2br 4 tam hme •-JL....-lalu• 27-· clubhousea & health S 82 taoeous Send reeume to ... ··• ---$525 & Up. 710 W 18th spas, 8 tennis courts, 7 440/mo 49-4·41_ _ SPIRITUAL READINGS HAii( OUST PROPERTIES 12 bdrm. hi. bath. Xie. 2bth w/,ger S5001bd 's -~lso50 l BR/bttlns sml patio •vi TOP le t pools. c1~--to bullneSS. M-35-45 sllr 4t>r 2t>a nae AdVIOI In All Matters & ... L, .. LIT oondo w/pool & spa, 1-,; ocean c oee rm ... • · area. Qu t. no pe s ..,... 5 s El -,...
b,_....1 from SC Pl•w• at 539-6190 Beet Alty fee now. $750/mo to mo ren-BEAUTIFUL 1Br $600 up OC Airport. Fashion nr So Cst Ptz Pool spa, Counseling 18 t o 1 p 0 Bo~ 1560
"""' -... tel 818-289 9307 I PRIV"TE """ Island conv•nient snops so· TV S325..-utll & Camino Real San Clem Woodside VIiiage, 2511 lrri 2ot.1.1 -" balCOny. car...,,...• · "" 7296 Costa Mesa Ca 92626 w. Sunflower. unit F..a. •• ..,,. Ctnll ••l •r 2722 POOL & SPA. 2650 Harta. on Sigllt m1~1smkr 850-9311 Lied
4
92-
$695/mo & $695 deposit * *IEifALS* * MESA PINES S.9-2«7 MI F 25_.0 yrs n-smkr SCRIM LETS Adven1si~. ~s IL"" llST llU YUH 111.F NPIUI PWI I.Ill! Sunny end unn 'E' model Dlllll '*'~Iii -i)~ w/4th Bdrm apacioua Custom beauty bu It by
femlty room' & eating owner. 3 '8clrm1 plus den.
nook In kitchen. Needs LMge country kitchen
dec:Ofator'• toueh Much with breaktut room.
potentlall Own•; may Delightful llvlng room with
. CMry. S2a9,500 Incl land. formal dining & separate
fU/i( (Of SALLY SHIPLEY mut« overlooking pool
Serlou• credit chec k ·· 2BR 1Ba upstairs. Range., Singles 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-1 $345/mo Share 2Br 2be n • Ttl.fPlll( -Drive by first Is 1 must CALLlJSREGARDING relrlg. dshwshr. gar. WEIFFllAOlllOl ments & Townhouses CM 631•3475 GaJl at1 3 Needed tor clO sltled
THEN c ell Patr ic k IRVINE LEASES S 10 00 I m o 4 2 4 •;, Want a selection of greet (Ask about lurnll hedl _ __ ANSWERS adven1S1ngdept atrapid·
631_ 1268 lnlH O.ISt lteltr Larkspur 759-1763 I living? We can ofte< any-apts complete w11h TV M/F ntsmkr stir lrg 3Br I 1y expanding loeal dally
1 .. llOO I thing from a small apt to · · Nwpt Bell Apt et bch Gentry -Abasn newspape< Aggrea.tlve
• Large 38d 2b1. pick Colo< a 48d n-. If looklng In linens & utensils. maybe I $325 111. last 846-2725 Light · OllOWfl s.e1t-d11e1pllned lr.dlv1d· o I new c ar pet Ing. renled tor ahort term or HERITAGE PARK CONDO $l200/mo Bkr 720-9422 CM.NB.or HB think of us longer) On Jamboree N.B Oondo 2BR 2ba. pool, Do Y"" ~~cber ""'•rl uals may earn exoelletlt
O< JOYCE DABOL T & 17th fairway. Call 648-7171
3 8d 2 be A/C, 1 tevel. I first for that cnolce of Rd 11 Sen Joaquin Hiiis trplC W/O garage quiet ... --·~.. ,__ Income (salary & com-
ger. $950/mo 720-3939 Lg 2Br 1Ba, dbl gar, new Ideal llvl~ Rd. -but 'near De.cn 5375_ elePh&nt 1ot1es? Ques-m1SS1onl t>eneflts and
C.nu ••I llu 2222 untv Prk Home 3Bd 38a, ~;~~:59cr:,18~~1;i~mo I ~~L R~~TY r,~: ~~~ 144-1100 Ph 642-9086 ~~P•w"s~y dl~ht: 1~~~1 1dvanoement oppor1un .. GE 759·G100
1111 UY IT&ITll
Cute 3 8d home situated on • large lot. Move-In
condition. Remdeled
ktlchen. hardwood floors
& 2 cat gar. A~lng price
$128,000.
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
TlmJUll WITI ....
Immaculate 4 Bdrm home
with • fabulOUt C\.latom
built outdoor entertaln-
"*1t ., .. complete with
large pool and spa. A
"pride of ownership
home wtttt famlly room.
klddl9 yard and b9eutlful
gourmet kltdlen. Lota of
5 fof lndoOr/outdoor
. Priced -right at
,000
(714) 67a 4400
.. uu -.... A larGa ~ com« Ht wtth • "perttlil ..... end
Iota o4 poaefbllltlea. Some
TLC ,and dtcorallng
would !Niie• tNe a b9dnn
l'IOme a detlQtlt to own. Mklnl 1424.000 ....
WATI HI HO'lll
ltOMI .. a.c.
REAL ESfATE
9'1·1400
THE REAL
ESTATERS 2Br. oen. 2L. Nr bch. tennis, pool, Jae $1175 1 Oceanfront-shr 3Bd apt" elephant stepped on It'? ~r!i~1r!:~~
Gat.frJHc,Wuttef/Oryer, mo $200depM4-4157 Ml& HI 27 4 I M F11-smkr $600/mo AnlW« Nothing, It 1ustl eJ1pe r1ence 1dv1n-
tlle, new apt. 2-3 Adltt . WOODBRIDGE: 2BR, 2 l bdrm. ' bath. garage., laat. ltac~ 2740 •2Br 2Ba Upstairs Gar-tstllest 261-1224 let out a little WHINE t&990Us Send resume to lllTW ••DI S 1200 yrly 875-2!83 b1, 2 car gar. AIC. micro. Cleal!. lrg secluded •% Ml to ocean. 2 Bdrm 1 age. Nr Hoag $675/mo Ammt MIF own Rm & Ba 2 - -----Attn Melir.dl Tl'laokery
•11.a AM 5 blks to bch on Gold· lrplc. tennis, pool & ape. deck/patio No pets •,, bl twnhae Quiet 6"'5-6822 or 675-84 t 1 Blks Ir l>Cl1 $350 • 112 utll Ltat A Ftau 39041 tldll C1&1T
.,._ enrod. 2Br 18a DfW $900/mo. 640-3076 $545/mo. Call Crelgt AdtJfts $875. 536-0490 E/Blut1 tux Townnouae 1 6"'5-59131675-5678 . ••11 y - -Beautiful Costa Mesa ~ 0 ivt' 2 ' . 631·1266 · -1 -,.._, h<>me. Well decorated. r •• Hg, W/ pr • car Woodbridge TwnhM 38r 1 bdrm. 1 beth, gar. leun-Zbr T~be compt rennov Rmmt sl'lr 28d 2be 11ouae P 0 BoK 1580
Remodeled kitchen. Up-carport, brick patio. 28a. ale. 2 car gar, WID -· • · dry 4-pteK, quiet street. 1 2 gar w/QPene<S $975/mol on 46th St Prol. n-srnkf f Olll) ADS Costa Mesa Ca 92626
graded throughout. 3 Q\llet $1150/mo +dep. s 1350 1•1. IHI seso • r ml to beech. No pets. apptm only 675-0068 $4 10/mo 756-0587 Mark I
Bedroom•. 2 baths. Im-m ·o 1;~i1 = ':w ~~ ~~~~ :J~~ ": $495. Cl"ali 31-1266 -UDO WATER VIEW Shr 28r 2ba. ocean V\J ·RE FRrr l /P Ill lfl IUll maculate. Cov.9d patio. 87 9023 ..,....... .. I ii \:.> Lux 2Br 2Ba. 2 Iii decks. I\ U lmmed OQenlng Exper en Well landecaped. Call appt 3-peta. Avl 711. &«-9090 t BEDROOM with GAR-•· r r· lrple $1500 675-&359 w/pool Newport 8ctl C I I A/P llllng. typing. 10 ~ey
54"-2313 3Br 2',;Ba roomy lmmec: I. ... k AGE. $410/mo t----· I N-smoker $550 675-3605 a : & data entry on com--, cond. G.;age & g~dnr Incl ~U C Call S.8-5627 t Versallles Sludlo Condo Shr"°38d 2be 11\ew pool. P\)1er NOl"I smot<., mtg
$1475/mo. 644-1721 oc:;;; vi;: 29R hlb&'. Weatslde 2Bdrm 281 Part lum $675 mo-utlls c1ea.n1ng woman Mature 1•2-1111 I co AWIY at 29l\ w
Laroe 4 Bdrm• 2 'hbe, e.amed oeillng. etove, stove & retrlg $550/mo· SUWlll YILUIE Aven lmmed Prlnclpals fm n-amk SSOO 645-6557 Gerry Ave, Santa Ana (Ott
frplc. evall Im med. ~~· ::h:~~o repe~~· No pets 646-4382 only 637-1998 __ -Stir CM nm Empl Fm n-Fairview Adi
llll S1500/mo Bkr720-!M22 SlOoo/mo Eves/wtcnds 2B r 1,.;Ba v ac a nt WIYllTt VILLABALBOA2Br quMlt. smkr s250• 112 util sso FOUND Cockatlel, New-AUTOMOTIVE
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Cerna Ml llu Leue Option. •br 2"'b• 497.5901 ,'dyl 855--0508 $675/mo, S300 MC dep. Live wtiere you have I ~:;'~~~tss!i~,1;,1· ~g~. de~48·3~76 aft 5pm -pol"! ar~1-5~~i & ID s!!!~:!",!E'~~~
IY IWID comm. pool.tennla. Oeeen Small 2 Bdrm Antique Call 548-3878 _ •Spectacular apta $995/mo 644-2 t85 Wanted tern rmmt $280 E. ced
OldCdM 28r 18a8ct1 Cot-view $2000 mo. 84o-4152 H~· ..... w/det __ .,_,., •rtist 2BR 1be, deluxe Mobile * 1 & 2Br, 1 & 2Be suites ---mo utll inc.Id pool no Found -FV ereeyng B~ lab xi>enen tn
1
vane!\ ..,...... '""'""' " •Spacl townh ses l WALK TO BEACH mix rem. wht en.st/pews or toretgn & domestic tage w/brlci< patio. 4 bike C • ...2.. Studio, near main beach home. AduM park 140 ous ou 2 2b 1. b 11 1 pets P11t 848-5530 H B 962_6655 841_0235 makes Beoeflt5 Appl\" 1r
to bch. Many upgrades. Mii HI -, t 17 Acacia $1000/mo Cebrlllo S650 648-6725 •Flreplaoes sty r. ' 8 P poo _ person at Theodore Ror> R-2 corner lot $249,000. 11160+ tUH MC. EAST-857:8389 . . •Private b1lcon1es or carport bale $755 Went resp M Frmmt pref Found mal• GOLDEN! ins FOfd. 2060 HerbO•
801 Orchid Aw 640--0147 SIDE HO"'E·. 3BR 2ba. 2Br 18a. pool. Ir.dry rm Garden patios 6"'5-0251 age 23-30 n-smkr Stir 3br ETA ER V F "" $587. l&M Monrovia No 12 blk from bch $260tmo R IV le ountlln Blvd Coste Mesa llPLD ...... _ Neat & CLEAN 842-4968 I pets. 548--0336 WIT •n +-'.,um. avall July I Valley 963-4076 ------
Prtvate Perty ~ to 1 Bdrm houn. rrp1e -* 3 Lighted ten11l1 court• Spaciou~ 'ingle · one eve16A6-131 ~ F0und Rabt>lt Ea;is1d•1 ~~~1~!'
buyduplex lnCOMund« $800/mo S250MC.dep. t>a, trpk:, trnt l back 2BR 2ba 2cerger. Frplc. •2Swlmmlngpoola &two bedroom apts lutalaWaat.42909 C M Call aft 6pm ~er &hei.texi>. S350K ft.40-1539 Call 548-3878 yard All new carpe~. WHher/Oryer · Micro-•Strwns l ponds 6"'2-449& type 45, FIT Mon-Fri bl~s, range no retng wve. Pool/spa f9501mo. *c~. no pet1 4 ReSQOnslble working -----l Ml•l mll 1 8d trallor adutt partt, no $950/mo 87~ . avail 71 1. 760-9611 *fu';~ avell males 9ee1c 4BR nome Found Walle« OCC Swap BARTENDER
Pl 1 2 8rl Den. A pets. Couple pref •IUT I OUAll* HB·FV·NB area Non MMI 6118 Call to tdent-2yfaexp. no tet lhlfl 9'1e~~ 1st. 12aS.=.m· 548-2383 *llYlllll* Westside 18r w/carp()rt WHY NOT CALL ~ers 536-7975 lfy 756l-04357_Small Bl 2 ~;~~'W,¥~~ ~~~
rUt-3833 Of &40-e188 28d lba, nuetpt, ~r, Brand n9W 28d«n 28a $495/mo. 682-1 700 dl-1111 anyttme LOS1 I a<* ot1
IPYIUIS n'~1~ '!-91~ $7~ ~ ~s: ;:~ ~.cf.!~ e:::-~ •Nr SC Pl21. s A. 2Br 1B• SUWlll YIWIE larqn tlr ~:16tN 6AA::11~n/Stat•I M~!:: !~!:p~~T
..... .., credttck.5-49--3484 pool$13~/~teb'e 8120 at s~t!~~·7~~rr 15555 Huntington Vl89ge FURNISHED or ltat 2912 LOST DOG Monday6117! Callt0<appt Mon-Fr1
58R 58A. Bonue room. 12 8d 2ba Condo l9llt....,.. ._ "'"· , . • ..-Lene, from San Otego UNFURNISHED 1 car garage 3 14 20th S1 Santa An• St c M 6"'5-5000 ext 52.1
Pool. Reduced to frplc, W/D, 2 cat ;at. laaftlltlh. 3 BEDROOM Freeway. nOt1tl of ee.cn l In Huntington Beacn llllATWlSMAZll
"499.950. pool. spa. 1950 556-9200 ... -.... W•talde 2 tty 3 8d 1 '-' to McFadden. west on li£ALTH S55/mo (213)431-1 77 t snaggy' Grey/M/Coller
LI tert.... •Nwi>t Rl>Mra l'wnhte 8acJc Bay arw: "38r 2',.,ba :,., p~~j7di~~"t:j McFedd9n. I CLUB ffNNI~ t7,tmo Storage -only REWARD 631~43 t
f11 I'! ti I' \ 11\l(
... ·•'' Ht' 11t 711-1411 48r 21 ..... a.. Frplc, patio. T/H., f/p, '** $1100 645-6648/850-7275 l se75/m(>.$e95/mo 2 8d WIMMING plu\ 9JI 1e 724 James St Lost Fem beige ,..._
pool • ...,., $1150 No-"' or, •19/457-5674 • .., apta encl gar.Indy nn. mu,h mort' Sorn. Costa Meu &73-7787 "r • • • (h1' 'lttn ........--·· v "' 3BR 1... .... ...,..,./ • r m" It yrs Old Nr Slat., ,.~11 ... 1a..1 122..eo11 · 191453-8743 ...... gM,......, mo. yde/patloa, cloH to 110 pets Modtl' Db'e 1tor~egar 100.ted HB Reward 846-6971 11! < .111 ""\,\ ~ ... S 1000 MC See at 883-C beach, nr major ttlOP• ~ 3 80 2 'Aba Condo lg a.auty turroundt 2bdrm Pl'Umer. Inquire at Apt A Huntington Beect'I.,... open dat~ q to b In CM 1 mo Call Lost Ml s1.me.. Cat Hwy 642°56 71
2BR R2 zoned Plennl I patio, dbl gar. $1200/mo wlhugetncd yrd fYl* kid Of call 854-7592 (Mngt-2417 WMaeands) ~ 650-S829 nr Acecil CdMar A9w11rdl bt UJ . no tum 09tlon. 64~ . ok cJbl t:.• $800'• "' llAll UAL n . tin lntafi 2914 67H 136. 673-226, ~:..,~f;~3:; 4 BR 28A TOWNHOUSE. S3M190 t Rlty fee 3¥:~~ :ioN:~P·tf.~ Oey9U5-1642 t!U. @ . 278 l '.284 at ----------=------~-~----
0--. 380-t41& 2 pool .. 75/mo +-eee. ~ Hitt tux Condo .mo.831-291& ~M0-4814 A~rtMtftts 11.30/,q ft 1817 W•t-a.u .. u C...~<l ~S\\i...\ 1,-C ~
avell now. 986-1518 28d/llbrary. 2 marble c:ilff NB AQt 54 1 5032 m n u ;:>\.!;:! \'QIU \"' -~ L-<.I' ..,,_ Pm t frplc oe .. n/nlt• vt.w S725/rno 2 8d 1 l~ba Buyl"Q and H111ng at • New,ot1 It"~ So. · · ..-•• cv-• • -l'"' -----
BIG 3 9df 2 be. frptG, din--EMtllde 28t 1811'1 & MCI ~ Ga .. t2700/mo Townhouse grHnbelt, rMaC>n•~ P'~thet a 1700 16th Strttt Cannery 'lm.ge 2 at«y Of· 0 ••· .. ,... ..-, • -
Ina rm, MldwOOd tn 'I ~!'!O~EUN-~261-150019¥74 .. 9175 Ir.dry rm. nice loo. what OIHslfl•d la 111 (at Dov-) floe. 1000 aq n ""'~ '<'V' ~..,~_,..., _." tw SHAKE ROOF. FOt onty ,,_.,,,"" .........,_., V9I 2078 Thurln 1100ut &4l-5e78 ... $950 2815 l~te 'Cf'o ·o' '".,...., .,...... -~
s1u.aoo. Call PEARY 38' a. W/gll, encl patio, BLUFFS.Condo 49d 2 11l •'l••n 642·511,l 5'S-7M3
ZIMMERMAHRlTfL. W..,_!OfywMcupMH '"ba, •not patlo-n•w IU·11D CMt& .... 2714 Nnipoftl~~No. C4M'• beet omo.. S450-1; El' GIR Tl NI
(714) 432.0732 t No pelt~· ~ $1250144-l4'0 8 0 lrvuw Av nUf s 1100 Incl utN A/C, pllg. . -. . . ~:.:~ l ~r:::.~· ·rg ..... MIT.... wo-o-D~ .... VILLA~-~~:~ ~~7~~ I s AH A 8 I ttn.&00648-8* 54Wt65cwtM 34)4 LINOA ISLI VII.LA OH .,........, .... ---llllllM.,... 11--.1--.-1-.......1-1·-i
E/lldeC . ..a.1br dMn,lrQ WAT£~~= A•AllTlllllll f\llls.Mcell10cws 0r . . . . • ..... ..... lMt ynS & OW· tiici. A~ 7/11 =-"800fmo ShOrt lu a-.... m• Nwi>t BCh 43 '-3e31 'l T H L G I 1.· O<I YOU '•"'•"'D•• vo111
---........ ,.... ... 541-31&5 Of ... S4S4 term ~ Com• h 11ioy OU• aaicle~ ''Y" IOIJ Q\alll totlllOll•lllf hftlll ...... .. .... .... --UIT " . . ...,,.. '4 iOlta. ~ ~
Oney • 500I ~ La ,,. CIO\t I~ htt•ftl & $(! C.~\I ""'• "' °"'' Jl!!Nlfn lll llV nni;& ~ r I l I ,,.., ""' ...... fflOll .. , -,,.. Wmw ~ ,.,_. 1~ ~ ..... 1 ... 1 !4da~,~~ No Wall!tl........... butlt w••\Aw 1ilt · 18f CondO 11'1 eecurlty HuM1n9ton 8eecfl Pfot - . --_,,,..,.,,,___"'•-~ 4 BR. 3 IA 'Port ..,._,a " .....,v. ""' gw • ...., · 111· 1• 11....... ::f non ..,..,, no s-t.. '*lg 4 mo·a ,.... rent r ~"with~ Of OOMn HA 2
6
be + IOftlo1• ~ .,_. Sl21fmo SM NIU • IMS • UWt -ava l•l>M no:., ~~! ~ lmprO .. ,.,, allow-\ r. " l N o i.l \ ~·"9 • "'"'"" °"' • -=~ --~ yatd . pet T9M61 ,.._. fncd ttw a. twrM 11-• ... aM t7t-71IOIW 7___..," W109 ~o Q\.l9lfted pro-.......... ,--.{.--... I-..!.,..\ _,,..-4 0 --.... ...... .-
I*" ~ oourta. lb 10 ~I atyle w/tet petlo mom'a Frptc dlelmt Sl4br l'lee 1 -..... It IUta I ~ )00-1500 Sq , ~_: ~,; :;_, ';.,~ :!'.: ff!d!M: hcMtty ~ Cell today. 52t-e025 kltoh k1 da ott • IHO w/vtf!w 2bth o-petlo I mtllll -.atn ,_ at 854 Call now tor
jNd,ctoeetocommuni--··m .... lMI 53t-1110 .... MJ• . =Olltw'Cdl1200'a 1&1.ll&il., .. 18... Ma&ff'llO 29d 2be pool. ltPf>I I. W .... ~11
fy pool. ape end :UMeM Verde .,_ 2 Mcwy tto ... My -Ml H-.-~i.,C:::..:. al LldO 'Mage 3$~ 18 llCI ft ~....... I sar*n..~*-=enT..::=~':c.. 2a~ o-' Ta"OOOSMW1 , ..... , MJ.ltlJ l ....... ., -=~;~2~~~=l "' ... ':!1 ... ~ .. ~;' ,..,~ ~~~~~~~~!•~11~1~.aoo~·!M~IJ..~37~1•!--~1to~Rft1... 11aooa ~l42-1n2 ! = M2·1MI ·~13'3177 ~ 1•1•-lm .....,, !9 ............. lttl
.. -· ....;_ J \ --...
I
,{
. . ~ . . ._... .... . ~ -.... ---·-~----------
• C8 OraniJt Coast DAILY PILOT /Thureday, June 20. 1985
Equal Oppty Employer
M/FIH
BMuty
•Ill Ull Hl•llS Med• alt around halratytlat
for busy lalon. 496-5728
or 499-2221
BLUE PRINTER • Exp nee:.
Costa M ... Blue Print.
1690 Placantla. CM
548-5571
IMllHPllF/O Retell 1tora In Npt. Bcti
Trial balance-on Peg-
boerd 15-20 hrs/wk. 10-kay/llte typing. Expr req.
Call Robfn 845-0793
IMUDPllTUllH
for computerized aoctg
system, n-1mkr pref.
Newport Western Corp.,
Call Carol, 851-0517
CAllUPll•I
PUTDIUEI
Duties Include anootlng
PMT'S, negs, burning
plates. cotor stripping &
equipment maintenance.
TYPISITlU/
P&ITl-IP llTllT
Dulles Include tettlng edl
& S1relQM copy. Typing
80 WPM req. Good mark·
up skllls mandatory.
Both Poetlons are 30 hrs ptwtc. Medical & dental
Insurance paid. Call
Alissa Schulman,
6-42...a21 ext. 291
IUllEOUST
IAIUPILIT
330 W. Bay St.
Costa M .... Ca. 92627 ..,,...., .,,, .......
needed by ramodallng
company 548-8449
OEIT. llllE AlllS
7-3:30. 3:30-7:30, 11-7
PfT. Country Club Conv.
Hospital near Costa Mee.a
F alrgrounds. 549-306 1
Ctitldcare-Mottier need• PIT Babysitting halp-
Summer Mo's 645-7008/
650-1996
Child Cara Worker· co-
8ducat1ona1 resldentlal
treatment program. Day
& swtng snlll, For Inter-
view call 631-9936
OlllOI SIOIOUY
P/T, hrs 9-2 dally, good
pay &45-21&4/ 646-1032
CLUllll IWIT. 20 hrs p/wk S4 p/hr
894-0509
CLERICAL Publishing Co. needs lull-
11 me Cterlcal per-
son/Receptionist. Some
typt n~ experi ence
necessary 863-1250
COCKTAIL WAITRESSES
Part•tlme, Full.time Eves SHIRAZ 548-794'8
Construction
"IOWIH &IEIT well estab OC Developer
looking tor resld PA or
Aallst. Min 2 yrs exp &
able to read plans. Re-
sume & salary req to: Purchu rng. PO BOX
17149 trvlne Ca. 927 13
htt/h1te11
, Ftt4Stntn Apply Jn person, 3~m
Mon-Fri. Hots Hut A-.
tauranB, 18850 Douglas,
lrvtne. 752-7155
HOUSE CLEANERS
NEEDED Full or part-
llme. Need own tranapor-
tatlon. $6/hour &46-8079
lllSIUIPll
PROFEUllUL
Part ~!!~!~rOMnsel-Experl~~n~hues 0 1
ors wanted He4p l>Oys running househotd1 tn-
end g1r11 sotlcll ne"' eluding cooking. ciMn-
subscrlptlons on their Ing. laundry, etc 5 d•Yf
paper routes Must enjoy •per weak. Muat speai.
working with 10-13 yr Engllsh, prefer Englllh olds. Early evening hours Japanese speaking. Non-
worl< days/ lleJdble hrs smoker, $1300/mo. Senc
Cornmlsalon only resume. Including refer-Calt Bruce Emsley ences to: e. Berget, 167C
642-~21 ext 206 Santa Ana Ave, Suite A HUH COAST Costa Mesa. Ca 92627
IAILY PILOT
•Hardware
E.O .E.
Outstanding Benefits also!
Apply in Person Now
6912 Edinger Ave.
at Golden West
Huntington Beach, Ca. 92647
601 S. Placentia Ave.
Between Orangethorpe and
Chapman Near Hwy. 57
Fullerton, Ca. 92631
AGES 11 -14
EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK
We no• have I 'i open1f1i$ tor yount ucer
bums to steure readers tor The Oun1e Co•st
Deily Pilot Our m ws sWt al J 30 pm and
•or~ untll 8 30 o m weekdays On SaturJay we
won a few more hours You w1Q earn many t11C>s
al1d omn alon& w1lh urmnc your own montr
there rs no dehve11nc or collectron rnvohecl
It you are 1ntmstt<I. pltase cilt Mr E art
ME.A
COO( (714) 548-7058
WASHER & DRYER $145
EA. DISHWASHER $100. ........
Whlrtpoot Mlcrow1ve.
targe cooking area. 2 cy-
ctes and 1 delroat cycle. s 175. 559-43 78
C1•11u A
.... 111• B:1F mra-8r:nd new Penoaonlc 3400 auto
locus $850 or belt cuh
Otf•. 873-1943
C..etm 1111
.,,../ / r Gt•flftr
New 128K, 2 drlvH ,
monitor, CPM. printer,
modem S 1690. 1562-a&e 1
IA•rblt ~Uf!!bJ _11_.u._, ____ 1--------~·~·•~ic~Ln~ ... ~· .... ~,.,..,P.-ala __ tl!I .... ~-~-hrMn ;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;Repairs. resurt (SLURRY Remodel & Rep1tr. Alt Palnt-fenctng-muonary-TWTl UlllUPI LT HAULING · MOVING IT'S SPRING CLEANING Plano leuon117tU35 Topou.lftYPaln~ 15yre ~,...~~l~/~UU:&:=";~n=1=•=1=" $2.17 Per da y MIX) Ouat worlt:, hvy roller types. Rough to Anlltl. epoxy ston.-patlol-deckt Main .. gen ctn-up, tree Garage & Yard Ctnups TtMEt Call now for Salon de Mullque tnt/ext. St. llc#33'4050 Past/pr-.nt/M ure
FREE est. Parking lot. Apt. Bllt 634-4782 remodel-«c. tic. 831-59&0 trtm, exp. 20 yrs 631 -3086 Jon 6-45-8192 Special Spring rata• Llaa A. Zeccl\tnt:ft.A. 24 ...... llf.1111 Ad"109 on all met..,..
That'• ALL you pay tor compl11 speclallst. gd le1'I . ---I llL flt *UIUI* Ol.ne &ll0-2'151 3 nn ... 30 days Joe &45-42159 7am-9pm Repelr-Doors-Alteratlom Eltctrlcal TIE IREEl IOE•E 11 • IHI lllSIOLUlllH l
In the I ---Remodel-~kle-etc PUllll -11 I Lawn-tree-sl)rub lnatatl. LOSE WEIGHT. GUAR. .ta_ .. 121 121 12~1 P~l!t !I -P1Jlrlat ltmtuial
D·ILY ··~11ittia1 w35lndow-F ·~2b ~5.7 Qualtt k ............. , Tree trim & Removal AEOROBIC MUSCULAR ---· If • • FINE, PATNTtNG By Rich-,%MRfrJO IA ORS ltnlm
" Ctltl"ittan woman will yruxp.Jetry ............. U2551~W()f ·"Ma..14o1 Lawn main & Rototlttlng TRAtNING.75~-0180 OUAUTY&SERVICE ardSlnor.l&yraoT~l HANQINO/ST~~;~ING· PAoF"lwordProoe:etng
0 babysit dysteves & wknd Retired Bldg Contractor Sprinkler Install . repelr. 8tlJI' If met \ SPECIALIZED CLEANING cuatomera. Lie. 2 . VISA MC 87S 1~ 12 .C Pll T West C.M 631-6063 Remodeling & C1blnet1. NEW/REPAIR. Oueltty. Nol Freeestlmetes. 548-8085 -Lynn 549·1953 Thank-Youl 983-4114 • • PAlct~ .,.· .. ~~7""-12'102._ . -Smalt jobs. tlc'd. 645-6458 job• to amall. r .. aonable. therapeutic Mauege by RAINBOW PAINTING Ex&*'t WeltCOYetlng tn • .,.,. • " " SERVICE Loving Mother with 14 mo --Free eat~ Mc'd. 831-2345 'Mettcutous Japaneee gar-David. Gr .. t for your ..... ~ Ouatlty la our pollcy ttallatlon. AMI. ConaYft. 10 YRS EXP.AH aecretar1al oCt~.to care 63'°'1Y~'75lnJant Cmar t ltmct RESID/COMM'UIND 28 I denef't·•·•.:,,!lnytotyhart !~ ~~7 heel! h 7 14-681-17 51 ICI I 850-e&o48 JEFF Lie 8&N ant Aatlgnmnt 581-1690 IYCS aw.ii. Fut, accurate,
"" are~ . .,., --,n OWllll -·--· ..--cuo P•ml1 "11151-F Coaat Pac !andl(aplng NORMS WALLCOVERINQ low rat•. ~9-M07 DIRECTORY I L I i L I yra. Oo my own won<. Lie 1--.1~ I 1··-1 Sprtnktera-ltower b~•. A.A.A Paln11ng tntl Ext/ ALL KINDS FREE EST --------ll•'J tc.111 Whhet<nlght 9e9·7103 278041. Al &4&-1128 ... ! Hit nug l•wn~n upa 864-23415 HouM/ Apt. F'rM •t. Ucl3S09M . 780-721'1 Tilt
CALL TODA't'll ....... ltmcts . , ..... , AME N HANOVMAN NoalRI§ e l!XRIRd Anytime MW235 l"'"!~~~~~~~-
ASI FOii LOii 6111 One Profll Porc;;l8ln/ OUPIT llH•I-Carpentry. fencing, win· SERVICE: a throoughly •1111ltt CONO!PT TOTAL Int/ext i~-;:;':fnt ~ YU I 1111•11 ..
Your Dally Piiot Ftbergtau Reflnllhrt· tile-Rough Carpet. &4 145e7 FENCE REPAIR. Newtlnkl dowt. plumbing, martlte, clean hOUM. 640-0857 BRICK-RK S-•11 jo~ .... Palnllng, noor to celllng ".-:-'' ' x ~:;,."7 & rtpelr. All ,typee. au.lty. Servi~ Dtr.ct""' I k 30 85", old. Wood, c:tllln . tub tnel, h~tlng, etc. ,,_ """' L t ... ,....,2..... -· en -.: F--Uc.~131· -~• Repreaentatt~' • n -tubs: yra r-9e58 C1terla1 Fr .. •t. Gree. ee&-0118 And Y• Jeeut la Lord HouMCINntng. ~pet• & Newport c'o.t M... owea ra •• ..v.-~ . . ·-_.. . ... .-..
M2·4U 1 Ht. Ht am P1Ji11 ltm ct Ch -bro119d m I ..,,. ....... (lle#30405) 83M244 ~ery. ~.etc. tNlne. ~,., 17W175 25 $~~I~~o4().p~'.~·o. :~ lttd~~ ::,-'* '!!!riat --------•I NEED HElP With Bank .!rood wiaJl the -:'rtm• XJfometiQOPetat&! .... DECKS-FENCES-PA TIO 11"'9 ... 111·1211 IAllllY I ITIOll Bonded. COLOR EXP£AT. tMotum ctw 77M243. j CJ'aalR' fiMICRU@At
Statement• or Accoun11ng mtng1 $4 50 f: r;:aon l Service Hardw.,. Re--• Covera. Repleoe. ~r. *SUSY Houeecte.nlng New & repair Att typea. Ref' I. 963-<>911 Alctierd Tutoring K.12 Ac111tic1l Ctil1•1• • tO-up Oebt>ie ~ 1·8"421 or '"' 241-1 25 lk• placement Speelat io yNrt expel'. 754-820 Reald4tn09. Free .. 11mat• Ou•H1Y. Lowpr1c. DAN SALYER PAINTING Pl..W.. Proflolenc*.113-8304
EJlqui91te Acoustics • C1~i11t ll1Jda1 --c. t ,. _ ___.._ Tll~Y9 942-3490 EJ«:trte..Plumbfng-Orywalt 997-43M Lie 831"2345 Uc U25924 n• ..... , ..
Ory -.... "9941RHI 8et'vtce or Remodel. All Ar• you lootltng fOf cs.-Celt Anytime. 984-20 '7 l.·~ ~ Ptumt*4' !n!'l ...... ::;~e:~190 1 • C=~.;:bl':~· ubn~~· t Oflvewaya, pa&;, ~~· I wotk lna'd. Tom 141· 1292 pend ~·g IN? 4 Y' exp lleft!I co:;;:;' '$3 rm ---~----~own motdl & nntaheei •tc: No l<>b too ... -.. •GEN. HOM! REPAIRS. ,.... Liiian M7..eoe8/l •• ABC MOVING •• GLASGOW PAINTING .. poolo-ape..Metlng,...,..,. FlNlnclel-LAlaieHMedlol!lliMClllO.i
M•IUt u /ltat4tll•1 I carpentry 4~394 ~· Ml<*ey 53&-0553 Topptd/r.,,,O~. Cleen-Paint Orywen Car~try H.OM! CLEANING Ouetlty Quiet( C~I T 138048 tnt/Ext,..f'~ &ef-~2 ~r . OAArNS CLEAR From i1s ~ lllMnQ Utt
AOOM*S•Btdg•Carpentry C ---IC. . Ilic TU l)p, new 1aWn1 751-3471 etc. Gary &45~627'7 PTL • ifdk at, .. ,. rate. Fr .. LO AATES._552-0410 -Fa~.~· Heeter, P/U-Dtl. Annt e.414233
25yr1llc#309152,bond, arratrz dL i j CteanUpelrrwTrlmmlng HANDYMAN LARGE en<i -wt~.ta 521-7339 .• * 1~%EXT ~~~=-851..ff04 M M t42-~ ·~
free ••t lrwlrt, 548-2719 I EJlperi Car~try m ~~'~TJ~ Yard Malnt. •Hwlng llTllll I DO IT ALLI Home a Of'tloe CIMnlng. CL!AN a l!XPERT ,.,.,., rm.,, jObl wtlcome. Expert a.Moe a AlpW
----~r·~tmod t-Mdlt~I 'r--. Prtoa &42 2078 MIKE 950-3283 531-5!'19 Pat °' "'9 mtg. ~ JODI p..._ eeM kif 0wr 25 ... eKJ*lellce ltt-0"2 ~~Anllf~ T . ·~ 1.0, ClllTlllTill Doors-etc -64Mteo ... .._ • 1 •1 • ,, ·~,.-·1~. Uc T 11~28 730 1353 uc 1409031 '*4-tt1t tieee. c1w11119 a _., Ref't Qvallty Work ~· CIMn-Up, gen'I FENCES • DECl(t , ..... m e . .,.. .. ..., ..... ' • v, • CHRISTIAN PAINT!A a.w., ZfoDilir repair.
1403580 ~031 BUILD OR REPAIR Ctatratttn rMlnt, trM tr1mmlng, ,,.. PATl OS . 0All80S Cteanl~ ~· Hom... -rraa• u I NEE09 WOAK. Uc. AMI. .... ltn/lglin ~ '31-2642 d;:~~~~=-.'::?i~ ...... .... Meuro, e31-4tl7 ~8-5009 Condo. a Apartment•. .. •• " ... • Fr .. EJit. M 1·3581 Ulik mr."IDn'
Alrla1Jt Don 9e2-8202 *RemocNI NewC<>Met HOUM Ladlee. 122•7018 OranQ9CO. OrloNI •. PAINTER NlEOS WOAKI Al~. MM.°'** ...... Jl!u!!L
Parklnq tr;;; 1 FG1P41Jre ONE STOP HOME AND Slnoe1H1 #441017 WPlll.ll'I 8tudeintt.4o¥era ~ lnt/ut,celJlnvt,,.ftneft forFAEES.W.838-1000 m wr:=~ Aeeuri1e1ng~ttng COMMERCIAL MAINT Jey De Conltrvetlon CO. Furnltu,_, Treeh, Treee HotM, Otfloe Cleenlna & Uc. T 124""31. IM 1_,.27 (HI Yfl ellP., WOl'lt guet. llWtna a.WIQ ~
SAVE MONEYlt 831-.4 '" CARPENTRY .. 72.073e 548-7, 73 or ~·2 ff3..~ 15 NOAM Coe* Ing~ ~~253 NEW War~ Storage D•llll Painting M'-3137 Sell Idle lt«M &U-"71 e03 Mboa It lTW 138
_____ j ~-·. ..
w
----
..
• t
2 s.t• twin bedt. xlnt
quellty. ctMn,, seo per
eet. S150 fof both. Rettan
chair $30. 642..eMe
MUST SELL. 5 Ami furn.
Antique•. TV, atereo.
plants, r•trlg. 640-7439
Qn sz bed, maple hdbrd.
designer aprHd/drpa
drapea & chra to match.
Xtra. S300. 642~e
•THOMASVILLE. NA new
hi-boy $900, lo boy $450,
nlte atand $175, dining
MU900. 637-8312
DIMES
-A
LINE
WANT ADS .
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
Stlll your Items for $50 or less In
our famous DIMES-A-LINES put:>-
11"*1 each Saturday In the Dally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ads must be ,,,._paid .a mall or bring them Into
the Dally Piiot office. &I sure to
/ncJude your phone numtHtr or ad-
~ In your a<J, have a prlc. on
NICh It.,,, & no abbr•vl11tlons.
Sony, no comm«"Clal a<J1, ga,..
,.,.._ Pf'Odt,.K», /)IM)tl or anlma,.
... at:t»plable.
DEADLINE:
12Noon,,..y
CoetaMeNC>me.
. ._ ..
Orange Coal DAIL V P1L0T IThurldey, June 20. 1116
oow-.
1 la$50
2 School t>ooll
3 OayO•&amer
& Beetle
S -a~"'''° 6 Concepttons
7 Postal Oes>g
"'''°" 8 5Qu111eo
9 . tug Boat
10 Floor co..-ers
11 1nact1Ye
12 Suffl• for IN>n
13 Ouakty sutt
19A.~ 2& S1ay
26House 11rN
28 Garlaf\d
11 M~&Z•nf'
~·'°" 12 l '"' <Je""' 3.l Nf!-9111>0•
ol M•u
J' S1~£0
35 MloQfnA
J'MOMIS'·" 38 Stows ca•qn
•OWon ~I
4 ' A o<'VltO ~·•"O
10
,. Cl\lna l)tf'f
••Pires &9 Lounges
50 lMQe bird
52 Sa11sty
53 ul) loot>'
~WOUndCOYe<
5!1 Wl'le1
'6 S<>temn ..ore
'i7 Hawk
59 Sl\elter
62 .,,.,, ... ~.,
,,
l'M:TTnOUS ......
~ITATDIBfT
The followtng per90nS -dotng ~..-
CO MMONWEA LTH
MOTOR INN. 8550 Com
monweeltl'I Ave Buena
PM'k. CA 90621
I
J.,,._ A Newltlr1! ~ Vt•
Lido Nord ~-Beech
CA 921563 I Mwth• A Newtct~. ~
I v.. Lido Nord ""-00" a.en. CA 92663
Tfili-bull,,.H II C()(I·
OUC19d by .,, lnOMOual
J.,,._A ~Irk
~ ..... _t..-..,Neo
with the County °*" of Or ~;c County on May 23
"'71111
Publlllhed Orange Coal
Deily Piiot May JO. ~ 6 13 ~ f9a5
Th-<>2•
•
C8 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, June 20, 1085
o4 tM Go..4i1M•l1 Code Of ~Of La.All MAL AND .... emlnO • hefelnaMf t• DillJ ..... ,_. • l!J. ~ CNIO 1...-Ol'8 ll'om May IO Mid dAJt1 IP" A legel dWttPttOn lll1d --------
tM ..... °' C8llomla.. .. .,....,..... MU 90l&A&. PWUn '°" ..,,.., 10. "OtSTRICT', Wll T1H17 '· 1M6, ~ tNM ........ DOtmed T~ • written ~· pt.en .,. on eontr1ot wtll 0011tal11 T.a. MO. .-r• 1'NI ~ OtJ COM-~ up 10, but not tae.r • Ind UpentM lncwted, l*ie Declarauon of OefUt and flle tn 0'9 Oepertmtnt of __ ....... .....,.._ ......... __
llOTIC8 TO pnrM1ona permlt*'tl the NOTICI! ti HIRHY DUCY*e WNlf C~ than the •~elated time, PmlJC NOJtC[ let• dtarg1111 Ind wll ~ DemMd tor ..... Ind llM ~t 8eMoe1..
ooenaACTOM IUCHHful blddar t olo1vEN. ""'' Of'I w.dl~. '"I IC HOOL AllD/Olt ...-ct bide'°' IM IW9ld or CfMM unttl YOUf ~ ~ wttn Mid tMr ap.. An lnt...ied per90N CAL&JMI flOA _. IUbetlM• MOUttttee tor llf'f J4Jit s 1MS, 11 11:00 o•o!Odl CHaJ> CAM,..,_.. • oontraoe tor the~ e><o-,.cm.oue .._... tiecom.a ~. You ~ pointed T"*"' eucfl deed ere 1n. vlted to ittend ukf ~ ~..:
ldlOOI oe.tnct: OOMn ~wfthMldbytMDtl-Lm cifMktctty,lnthetoom NOTICI! IS "1!11'!8Y )eet. • NAmlTAT'lmN'f noc ~to P9Y the~ of truat and .. document•i hMrlngendexpr.-thelr 0 ......... -~ •1ll'I
V-. T"ICT to ••n•ur• pet-1191 ..,. tot oondUCtlng GIV£H tl'let on tN 1711'1 ~ 8ldt 11\aM be r9C8IVed In ~ followlflO .,.,..on1 era Ul\PIJd portion ot Yo"' tdl ~ o.,_..lona ... •--· f -•-et .., '""91 """ • llct Deadllnl: l:OO o'dOC* tormanoa undar tM CIOfl-. Tl"\lltM'I Salea, wtt.hln lhe of Jurw. 1HI. UM Boatd of th41 pl909 l<Mntlfled e.boYI, doing bWMllMI u: OOUl'lt ~ lflougl\ "'* Pt)'-cured ~. ind '* • opln...... Of 01 tG-· Strea4, Sult• 2S2. Coet•
', .... of "-elOfltl'I Ny of Ir~. loftloeaof RIAL ESTATE SI!· TrwtMe of the OOMn vi.w and ehall be opened Ind IVA PINECREST llMl1'EO, l'Mnt wee ~. Dyt •ed and dOM Mt.oy.. ukt ..,.,..i. MeM:CA t2t27 • oM/1 1MS o......... ..... ., OUAITll!S HAVICE. IOc9ted School Otltnct of tM COunty put>llOly rMd aloud •• ttMI p I N E c A f 8 T A p A R T • ~ mutt PtlY the amoun1 I oW• .. IU'N leOllted ,._.. Futther lnfonnatlon may Mlt1tyn •• M.,.our. 3$ ~.,..!.! .. ~ ~·. ........,_, CMltl
1
., 1800 North Broadway, Of Or1nga, St.a1e of ~ abov•·•l•l•d lime and ME.HTS. tM52 MecArtl'lut 1tated abo¥a. ~. ~1 bylmmadi9tetyOu9andPt1Y-be obtllned lrpm the Of· MalnMll Dr., CCWona d4I _, ·-....,_ .,_.,...,, PubllNd ~ COMC Sult• 100. In IM Ctfy of fornl9. -.,mined !Nt tM placa Blvd., #440. Irvine, Cal\. and Y04ltf beMflc:lary or atM and 11M ei.cted and flce of the City C1eril, Mar, CA t2t20
luelnH• Oeputm•nl. OallyPlotJune2'0,21, 1tN a.nta An&, County Of Or--fottowlflo lend, bulldlnoa. Tl'ler• Wiil.,. •NIA d-. lomlll92716 mortg~ m1y mutullly doae ~ ei.ct to CauM 2bOO Main SJr•t Hunt-Thi• bu1ln_. 11 oon·
'IMO I 11Net, Hunltnaton Th-412 1nga, 8t•.. of cellfomla. and .._Ulpmant will not M poalt required tor MCtl Ml Of David K. Lamb, 18522 tlO' .. In writing p<lor to tM 'IN tl\l8t pr°'*'Y to b9 IOld lnaton Beech, Callforrn. ducted by. an lndMdual
llMctlProJ'•OAct'*1de7n1lflc•tlon 1WA8HINGTON TRUST neededforechoofpurpc..a. blddocutMnt•1oguarantN M1cArthur Blvd., #440, tm. the notloa Of .... 1a ,10MttlfVtMOl>llOetlOne-ta.48 -(714)531-5227. MarllynB.Meneol# rtaJC NOTIC( DEED SERVIC! CORPOf'-and wll be MM 10 the l1'e 1helf 19tum tn good con· ll'Vlne, Cellforna. t27 t4 poeted (Which may noc be cured ~. o.t.ct: June 11, '* TNj ltaternent ._ Ned NMte: ~ Aotldway I ATION. a Calltofnla ccwpot• hlgl'l•ll bldd•r for Iha dlllon wlthlf'I NIA daYt lfW John Min at. 18852 earller than the and Of the Detect. June 13, 1N5 CITY~ with~ a.ti of Or· eel~ NOTICI TO AGllNH I a110n, N !ally ~ ~ ol QCler811nGJ11ttl>t I~ bid OJ>l{llnO ~'t.--= apArtlWr II~., """"°-· ~lltl perto• ...... , 99ftaT tat.9-aY· 1 ehete; •r. Mole M. ~ County Of\ M~ ao. ~T-"'16_..._i.iift;;;Ptw .,.__ •lllllUPACnW ~rwtwundrWldpurwu ~,,...aiOOland!Or~ 6dt bid l'rilAt ounivrm IMM.Cd'f0rnlat2714 allow) to, amona other W , A "DIRAL IAV• W 1tWOf1tt CltJCterk 1"6 -09Pal1m•nl 11 CAlllMO 1101t -· l to the ~ of .... oon• Cl8f"8 programe IOf the ri-lod and be ~· 10 lhe M~rded Au*h, 18852 ttllng1. ( 1) P<ovtde eddtttonal IMOI AND LOAM Al• ~;;;;Or Cout nTnll ~ addrw r;ouNTAIN. VALLEY ,.,redlntl'latcartAlnOMdof bealnnlna AUIJUlt 15, 11M15. contract doc:UIMnll. MacAtthur Blvd .. 1440, tlmelnwtllcl'l toc:w.thect.1•0c1ATIOM ··,=1 Diiiy Pttot JUM ~. 1945 ~b!llMdPllot Ju~lng91 • 20COl9t. 27,
I
I
.~
I l
...
..
NOTICE 18 HEREBY SCHOOL DISTRICT. PO Trwt axecuted by HUGO A thl'Ough Augu.t S1, 1tee. Each bidder INlf 9'1bmll. lrvlM. Callfomlll 92714 191111 by,,._.., of1he p.-op-..vlM.Y HLL• IA h-07I ,,_, .... 13.
QIV!N tt\et 1119 abo~ BOX 8&10, 11210 OAK PRESTE AND MARIA J. te....e/AtlclreHt Lark on IM form f\JmllMd with All Rall. 18852 Mac.Arthur 9f1Y Ot ot ........ Of (2) ... MC> LOAN Al90CIA110N, T Juty 4, 1N5
MIMd ~ Ol9tricl fOf STREET (02708). FOUN-1PRESTE. Hu1bind and View Sohool, 17200 1he contrac1 docttmenll, • Blvd., #440, lrvlne. Call· labllllh a tcNcNle of P4tY-9Y T.O. MltVICa COit----------I Ortn09 COunty, Callfoml•. TAIN VALLEY. CA 92728 Wit. record41d Sept9mber Pl'*-9t LAN, Hun11f1Gton 1111 of the propoaed aut>con-tornla 02714 m«il1 In or<* 10 oure~l 'ANY, • AeeN. 9J: l.,.. ---------
acting by 111\d through It• (714/M2-M51) 30 ita2 In the offlctl of th41 BMcl'I. CA"92t.47 ttac1or1 on tht1 project M Thi• bullMU 11 con. <Mfaull. °'both (1) and 2~ .... ,.. .......... _. Aul .. •u Vtoe P\ltllC NOTIC( rtaJC NOTICE
GoYernlog loerd, herein-PROJECT IDENTIFI· cOunty 'Rac:ofder of Mid .......,_,...._..3 r9<1ulrad by 1"41 Su1*1tllng dueladbyallmltedpartnet· Aft• ttv• rnonthe om,,...,_. ----------
lft• NIWNd 10 u "DIS-CATION: 810 NO. 16-10. County M R9oofdW•• In-....._ _, ..... l'Mt: and Subcontracting F1lr lhlp IM CS.le of rec«datlon of TAC -~O ACTmOUe euelNRM
TNCT", wtl ~ 11P 1o, MICROCOMP UTERS. 1tru"*1lNo.82-S4403e,by 2,887 Ptacllcel Act. Gowmment JohnMlnat,0.0.,alPart-thlsdocum«lt(whldldateof Publllhed °'*'09 CoMt _,_,....... NAmlTATUmNT butnotla1wll'lllnthe~ SOFTWARE, SUPPORT l"MIOf\OlabfMOl!orcMMull Allpropoeeilmualbe,._1CodeS«:.4100etaaq. n« reoordallon appMtt ,,.,._.DaifyPllo1JuM20,27,Juty ~~l:'i~~~rey Th9foti0Wlngl*90Mare
ttated ttme, IMled bldl fOt EQUlP-.MliNT In paY"*'ft or perfonMnOa calved no latw then Tuae-Each bidder mUll .ubmlt Thlt 11aterM11t w .. ftl4MS on), unlMa 1119 obllgallOn 4, t 1, 1N5 dOlnQ bua1r19ae 81:
the anrd of a contract for 810 OEADl.INE: JUNE 28, of Iha obllgalloM .ecured Ny, July t , 1985, a1 2:00 I wllh ~ bid a certified Of with IM County Clerk of Or-being fOf.ao..cl upon or a Th-073 ~IVEN 1~::':: ~ ~ H£IOIS FAOOEN YOU"T
tM abow profact. 1N5 2:00 P.M. ther•by Including 11\at p.m .. at tM Bulkleal Office caanler • dl4ldl peyabMI 10 8'109 County on May 23, MPW•I• wrttten 119featMnl •-"' Mftftl'r ., .... ~.;,,, of ·,119 ,.._....... 1112 1518 Santenella T•., 9lda lfWlll ti. ~ In Pl.ACE Of BIO RECEIPT bcMCh °' defeult Notloa of of the OcMn View 8ctlOOI IM DISTRICT or • bid bond 1985 ~you and YOUf ct«il-... _ nu1-. ~ • ...,.._,....... •• eorcina del Mer CA 92126
th8 place IOanttfted aboW. I ANO SPECIACATIONS ON whlotl WU r«lOfdecs Merell Oltttlct 18840 B Str .. t. In th41 lorm Ml forth In th41 F1711tt tor '*"'"' • longet P«lod. M ... Unified ScMol Dlltrlct Victoria Jina Tep1>9n
and lfWlll be .opened and l FILE: PURCHASING DE-8 1085 M ReoorcW'I In-Huntington B .. ch, Call· conlraci docurMnll In 1n Publlthad Orange COU1 you MYI only th41 ~ rlO.ht FICTmOUI ..,..... f~-~ange Cou~-...~~ M91oy 1518 Sant.,,._ Tar ..
put>llc:ty tMd llolld at ,,,. PARTMENT 11rumen'1 No 86-077890 tpml• 02647. Sidi wllt be amount nol .... than 5% Of Delly PllOt M1y 30. JuM e. to ltop '"-.... of YO!N pr~ NAm ITA"TamNT "''-· edopted. -· Corona cMI Mar CA 92825 lbov•-•t•t•d Um• and '°" THI QOVWN9fQ, Will SELL . AT PUBLIC opened aubjecl 10 Education the mulmum lmOUnl ol bid I~. 20, tta5 et1Y by paying '"' entir. Tha folkMtng S*90N we of Intention to dedic8t• an Thll bullned la oon-
ptece. ...... e ....... ~ AUCTION TO THE HIOHEST Code S«:tlon 303e5.0. In u • guatanlN that Ille bid· Th-013 amount demanded by your doing butlMla u : ....,,,.,.., ,o the City of New-ducted by; an lndlvldu.I
&cfl bid muet QOl'.'form e.,. A,...e BIDDER FOR CASH, lawful Mau of a public meeting ot der will enlef Into the creditor. (A) CALIFORNIA HEAL TH port BMcl'I, • munlclpel cor-JaM T Meloy
Ind be ~ to th41 l_..,owN: '•"'•'• '· money al the United Stalae. th9 Boerd ol Trult ... on ptOl)OMd conltlCt II 1he PlB.IC NOTICE To !Ind out 1119 amount PRODUCTS, (B) PRESCRIP-poratlOn. for ltorm drain Thia iialem.rtl wM lll4MS oont'110t doCUmentl. • lttoe, Dtt9c1or, •ualwe Of' a c:uhier'I cMc* drawn July 9, 1985, at 2: 15 p.m. In 18me I• 1warct.d 10 such · you mull pay, or to ertange A-VITE, (C). NUTRISCRIPT, purpoaae, Mid ...ament to with 1119 County Clerk of Or-
&ctt bidder llhell aubmll, ..,.._. on • ltate Of natlon8I bank. tM Boatd Room 11 1SIMO B blddef In the ev«tt of failure F1CTITIOUI llUllNmll for paY"*'ft to .. op tha for. 1543·0 Ad81N Ave., ea.ta be loc*ed over. on and ange County on June 4.
on the form l\lmlehed wfttl Publllhad Or1nga COl9t • •late or '90eral cndlt s1 .• Huntington a.ch, Cell--to enl• 1n10 Mid contract, ...,_ ITATaMDIT c!OIUfe.orlly<>ure><op9r'tyl9 M9aa. CA 92820 aooae portlona of that Mid INS
l1'e contrac1 document-. • Dtllly Pilot June 13, 20, 1N5 union Of • ltet• or 19deral fomla 92M7. Any reac>on-IUCh eecurlty wtll be lor-The fOllowlng P9f"lonl are In forecioeur• fOf any other
1
Ramon Stuplky. 11442 ~oel of land located 81 "11112
ll9t of 1he propoaad IUboon-Th-070 •vtnGa Ind loan uaodatlon llble !*'Ion prN«ll II Nld felled doing bullnela u : reuon, contact: Kim Janel. P•lom•. Garden Grow. CA arbot View ScllOOI In IN Publlahed Otange Coall
lractOO on JAii pro)eet U domlc:lled In 11111 it•te. 1111 meeting lhah be given an The DISTRICT r65er"Vet JASMINE PARK L TO., A I Beverly Hiiia Savlng1, A Feel-02643 City ol ~ BMeh. Dally Piiot June 13, 20, 27, requt,..,a-,svt~Sublettlng P\ltllCN0TIC£ payablellthatlmeof .... opportunltytoralMIMbldl lhe rlgllllotejeetanyor1ll CALIFORNIA LI MITED Wal S l l Auoclatlon. Thll bullMH II con· Apubllomeellngll90f'llhe July4 1986
and Subcontracting Fair ell 11ghl lltla and lnt...i 0tallyitterlh4llMladbldl bldt or 10 waive any Ir· PARTNERSHIP 2515 1 2727\LURambl ... Mlatlon dUC1edby:anlndlvldual queatlon Of ·ITIM~IYCh ' Tl'l--Oe8
Preetac-Act Oov9mmenl F1Cnnou.IUWll held by It .. Trust• In thet .,.. opened p<ovldlng 9UCh regularltlel or lnformalltte. Paeeo oe Alicia' Lagun• Viejo, CA 02092 (714) Ramon Sklpeky ~1'g" wlll..!:, ~t
COde S«:. 4100 ec Mq. MAm ITATWNT rMI pr~ a1tua1e' 1n Mid bid lhall axoaed by •I laut In any bids or In the bidding. Hiiis CA 92853 · 831-8836. ' Thll 1tatem.nt wu ni.o ·-..---r •
E.ai bidder mu•t IUbmll The toflooMng l*'IO"I -County and Slate. deecribed five (5) ri-oen1. '1tte ttlghelll Purtwanl 10 Ille prolllslona JUmtne Park Ltd .. • Clll-II you have any queallona, 'with tM County Clerk ol Of· as l•t 11dt ,.,_., Coet9
with ~ bid • owtlfl9d or doing bullneM u : .. tollowS: ol any written bid r904llved. ot s.ctlon 1773 of the Labor fornla llmlted partnet1hlp, you lhould conteet • ~I ange County on May 31, ...... C....,..... on the
cunws °'**payable 10 R& AFIBEROLASS. 1930 Th9 EullWty 100 .... of CoplM of the term• and Code of Ille St1ta of Call· 25151 P•HO De Allcla, or IM government agency 1985 2ICll Ny°'.~,..,.,
tM DISTRICT or I bid bond Plac:entla Av.., Coala ......_ Lot82 of Trllct No 57 In the oondlUonl of Ille ..... -lornla, lhe DISTRICT hu ob-Lagun1 Hllll CA 92653 Which mey "8¥1 lneur«i YOUf l"U'1W1 the houf of 7.~dodc ~·
In IM form Ml lofttt In the CA 92e28 City o1 ea.ta ....U. u '* avellabla a1 tM dlltrlc:1 offloa talned from ttt. Dlractor of This bu1ine11 11 con-loan. Notwtthltandtng IN PubllaMd Orange Cout '°"" w. ' • con1r~ document• In an Ruben SltuentN Rangel, map r.cord41d In boot 10, 81 the aforemenltonad ad-th41 o.p.rtrnent of lndustrlal dueled by: 1 llmllad partn.r-1~ lha1 ~r prop9r'ly la In Delly Pllo1 Jun. 13, 20, 27. ret.J, lloerd el ••a1t11n,
MUC NOTIC(
1mOUnl not INa lhart .10% of 12831 Flelcher Dr .. Garclen page 3 of MlacellaMOu• dr .... Minimum rental for Relallone Iha gener11 thlp loraclo1Ure, you may offer July 4, 1985 Newport-M•H Unified
the maximum amount of bid Grow. CA 92040 Mapa. record• of fald Coun-c1auroom1 and accompany-p<ev1111ng ral• ol per diem LDM Oevetopmenl, Inc.. your property for Hie, fll-OeO ~~ Cou
.. • guw'ant• thal 1"9 btd-. Thll bu•ln... 11 con· ty I Ing Nt"vlCel lhall be S0.32 wages and the genet•I General Partn•. Gerald P. provldad th41 Nia la con-.. _ti' Mftftl'C · ange 1
d9t wlll .,,taf Into th9 dllC1ad by an lndlvldual The ltrMt eddr-or '* lqUere toot,'* month. prevalllflG rale for holkl1y McC~ey. Vk:e-Prtllldenl ciuded p<lor to the oon-r~ "'"~ Dally Pllo1 JuM 20, 1985
P<OC>OMd contrlct " IM Ruben S. RMigel other common Malgnaitlon Written propc>Mll 10 ..... and ollet"llme work In the lo-This s111emen1 was llled ctullon of tl\9 for.cloaure. Th-078
llll'M la -ded to ~ Tiiie t1atement wu nl4MS ol IM rtllll prCJ9911Y herein-Mid p<operty mu11 conform callty In which thll work ls 10 with 11'\e County Clerk ol Or-RerMmber, YOU MAY LOSE NOTICE OP
bidder. In the..,.,,, of i.tlur• with the County Cle<tt of Ot-• b 0 v. d. I c r I b. d 11 to IM lerml and condition•. be performed for NCh Cflfl 1nge County on M1y 23, LEGAL RIOHTS IF YOU 00 ~ ~o '
lo an1et Into laid contr901. ange County on May 24, purported to ti.: 2249 Fair-Priority ·1n acc:.ptanoe ol Of IYJ>4t of worker needed lo 1985 NOT TAKE PROMPT AC-~~
9'ICfl MCUl'lty wtll be fOf· 1985 Ytew Roed, Coa1• MMe, Pf'OPOMlt to ..... u ld execute tM con1111ct. n.... F21120I TION. ~
felted. P'27'nM Calttornl&. prop9r'ly wlll be glYan to ratN are on nte al the OIS· R~RT a. HOLUND, In addition lo 1"41 amount COllMlaaK>Wa DIEMAL F1CTITIOUI .,_,. ~ DISTRICT r...we PublltheCI Orange Coat Th41 undwtlgned hereby p<opoN!s whtdl oft« low TRICT office located at ATTOftNIY AT LAW .. lllled 1bove, lhOUld any Of COMMTIONAL ...,_ ITArn.NT
1119 rlgllt 10 reject any Of all Delly Piiot May 30, June &, dttclalms all lleblllty tor any coet ,... to enroileel and PurchHlng Departmen1. IAIT CHAPMAN AVI:, DI'· prior llJCN, llen1, or encum-llR NfUSf dolThe :::: ~ .,.
bld1 Of to w8'w any Ir· 13, 20, 1085 lnoonectMM In Mid itr..i offer quallly progr1m1. 2085-B Bear St, Co1ta AHOE, CA,_ brancet1 be M!lnquent °' • ~.... RnglLINS POOL" SPA'S, ragularttlel Of lntormallt. lel Th-014 ac:tdr ... or othef common L.MMa may be enlentd Into Meaa. CA 02&28. Coplel Published Or1nge Cout become cMllnquenl, and the • ,.._,,,,__.. IO •
In any bldt or In ttMI bidding. dellgnltlOn with mo<e thin one bid<*. may be obtained on reQUMt o.11y PllOI June 13. 20 27 loan can be relnlteted. Mid llXCEf'110N NO..... ~4 ii81:t St., Cotta......_
PurluanllOIMprovlalonl NI.JC NOTICE Slld .... Wiii be mad4I The governing board,.. A copy Of ttieae rat• lhall July 4 1985 • • • cM!lnquencielmuatbecured NOTICE IS HEREBY Judd c Rolllna 314 e
of S«:tlOn 1n3 of lhe Labor without warranty, •lltPfNI or MrYN the right to re)ect any be poeted at IM Job 911•. • Th-058 u • 'Condition of reln•t•t• GIVEN that a pulblle hear-18th St .•. Colt• M.... CA
CocM of the State of Cell-flCTYTIOUI ., ... ,, lmpll4MS regarding title poe.. Of all bid• and to we.Ive Ir· 11 lhlll be mandalory upon menl. Ing will be held by the City ... 2827 fomla.tMDISTRICThMob-MAl!mlTATl•NT Miiion: or anoumbtanc.. regutarft191. . tMCONTAACTORtowttom PlB.IC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY • tllnad lrom Iha Olr«:tor of The tonowlng l*"IOnl If• 10 Nllsfy Ille prindpel bel-Dated at Huntlng1on lhe contreet II award41d. and GIVEN: THAT SOUTHLAND Council Of th9 City of Thi• bu•lneaa II con-
... Oepamnant of lnduatrtal doing bu11nea1 u : ~ of !ht Nol• Of othef 8MCI\, c.tlfomla, thlt 18th Upofl any tubcontractor The tollOwlng copy ol "No-COMPANY I• duly ap-Hunt~ton Beach, In the ducted by. an lndlvldu9l R~I theof gen~ G T & E. 111 Via Vella. obllgallon aacured by Mid day Of J\lll9, 1N5. under 1UCt1 CONTAACTOR, 111ce", lhe original of which pointed Trust .. under lhe CCouncil·"-,.._9tham .... HberuntlO~ftt~ ~h .... 1C11· .~~ wu ft._.. p< ..... -""" rate '* ... _ .. ~Beech, CA 92083 DMd ol Trutt, wtth 1nter•t ocaAN V1IW ICHOOl 10 pay not i.ae than th41 Mid lwu rllad tor record on followlng 11 d9acflbed cSMd """ .....,, "'' ,. -·-· _,
WllQM and Iha g•n•r•I Gary ThomH H•ng•n. and Olh« lltml u provldad DllTRICT •OARD Of apec:lfled ret• to all workerl 6/ 13/85,ln ,,,. office ol lhe .of 1Nll: Beach, •t the hour Of :30 with tha County CllWk Of Of-~ ra1• for ldday 111 Via Yella, N9wport th«aln; phJt advanoel. K TWUe'Rll, t1J .MMt O.· employed by them In 1"41 IJC-County Recorder ol TRUSTOR: JAMES D. P.M .. or U IOOn tl'ler• ange County on June 4,
and ~lrne WO(k In th9 to-Beech, CA 92&63 an una.r the terma thereof ttok, "'-'daftt ecutlOn of the oonlract. County. It Mnl lo you In-STOUT, SHARON T. STOUT att ... u poulble on Mon-1915
caltty In wtllch tt111 wort! la lflo Edward Andrfr# H91nla, Ill, ~· lnt-t on IUdl ad-I Publllhad Orange Cout No bidder may withdraw umuch u an examlnlllOn BENEFICIARY: BEYERL Y day the 11t day of July, P bl.._ .. __. 0 ~
.,. performed fOf Md! a-a 111 VI• Yell• Newport v1ncH. and plu• , .... Dally Pllo1 June 20. June 27, any bid !Of. ri-lod of llxty I ot lhe lllle to 181d tru•t prop-HILLS SAVINGS AND LOAN 1985, for 11'18 purpote of u _ _. range
Of typa of wont• needed to Beectt. CA 92083 chargw and eiq>enMI of the July 4, 1ta5 (llO) d•YI •fl« IM dale M1 afty shows you may have an ASSOCIATION conllderlng an appeal by D1lty Pllo1 June 13. 20, 27,
execute the contreet. ThaM Thia bu•lneu 11 con-TNllN and ol lhe tNltl Th·o&O for IM Of*\lng of bld1. lnl•est In 1he Tru1tee'1 Sale r«:0rd4ld July 15. 1983 u the 8QPllCent, G. P. Build-July 4• 1985 TtM>64
tltel we on Ille at IM °'8-ducted by. 1 geMrll part-crMled by Mid DMd ol A payment bond and • Prooeectlng1. ln11r. No. 83-305344 of Of. I Enterprt._ I t
TRICT office located at Bual-narlhlp Trual. The total amount Of P\ltllC NOTICE performance bood wlN be MOTICI Of DU AULT ficfal Records In the ofb of 1";'! p 1 1 • ~·· 0
naea Office, 18940 B StrMI, Gary Thoma Hangen .. Id obllgaUon. lnc:ludlng required prior to execution AMO ELICTIOH TO the Racorder of Orane-• ann ng f ~----------1
Huntington BHch. CA Thia 1t11emen1 wu nl4MS reuonably •llmatad 1.... NOTICE TO of the contrllct and thall be HU UNDER County: mlNk>n'I denl•I 0 • PllllJC NOTIC( 92647. Coplaa may be ob-with the County Clark of Of. charget 1nd expert_ of IM CONTllACTORI In the lorm Ml forth In th41 DEID Of TRUIT uid cSMd of lrutt MCUI'• dltlonal UH P•rmlt -__.;~..;;.;.;._.;;....;,. ..... __ ,
tllnad on requelt. A copy of ange County on May 24, Tru.l• at th41 time of Initial CAUJHO FOR IMDI conlrlCt documenll. Loan No. certain obllgatlonl Including #85-19 and Conditional F1CTITIOU8 .U-11
thw rataa llhall be peetad 1985 publtcailOn of lhll Notloa II Sci'lool Ol1trlel. NEW· PutlUanl to S«:tlOn 4590 0&-509-42-3/STOUT one nota fOf th41 aum ot Exception #85-25, 8 r•, MA119 STATUmNT
•t the Job atte. fmmls78 919 ..,. • PORT-MESA UNIFIED lot ,,... Governmenl Cod• ot T.S. No. F-3711&7 s1 500,000.00. q'*1 to permit • 24 unit I The fOllowfng S*"90f" at•
ltlhallb9rnandatoc:yupon Publ~ 0,8'109 Cout oeted:J~ne lO t085 SCHOOLOISTRICT the Stale of California, 1119 UNITCODEF Th1I Ille benellclal ~rnenl compa.x with dolnobullnaaa•:
the CONTRACTOR to whom Delly Piiot' May 30, June o.
1
WAIHINGTO.N TltUIT Bid DeadllM: 2:00 o'clock 1con1r1ct wlll conllln "IMPORTANT lnterNI under IUCh cSMd of i variance to allow a 39, SOUTH COAST ASSET lhe c:ontrect la awerd41d. and 13. 20. 1085 DRU> _,.vtc:E CORPOA-P.M. of lhe 10th d1y ol July. ptoY11lon1 permllllng the NOTICE" trult and 1119 obllgallona -fMt high bolldlng In l'-U MANAGEMENT. 4500 c.m..
upo11 1ny .ubcontreclor "Th--015 ATION, e c•orNa cwper· 1N5 1uccu1ful b idder 10 IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN cured 1'*'-by are sir-rtly of the 35 fMt height re-1 pu• Or., 1138, Newpot1 un<Mr IUCh CONTRACTOR, ......_. ,,_..., 9Y: MAL Place ol Bid Receipt· .ubtUtute eecurltlea !Of any FORECLOSURE BECAUSE held by the ~llgned; qulrement, two ext-1«' BMeh, CA 929e0
to pey not laaa then th9 Mid Pta.IC NOTICE llTATa •CUllll'T'ml Kit· Purphulng Dep1.. 2985·8 moneys wtthhekl by IM Die-YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR That a brMCh o(. Ind cs.teult lobby wtngwllls to en-G.arg• lffper, 2833 IP9Clfled rat• lo all woncera VK:I. a c....,.... oorpor-&Mt Stree1, Coata M .... CA lrlct to ensure 1>41rlormance PAYMENTS. rr MAY BE In the obllgatlon• for which croach 2 fMt, e lnchea Catalp1 SI., Newport BMch, employ9d~hamlnth9ax· YOU Alta IN DlfAUlT attoft, .......... 91: 0. '· Project lden11flClllOn unde<theconlract. SOLD WITHOUT ANY aUcn cleedoftNttlaaec:urlty Into the requtred 15'"' CA02860
ecutJon of I contrllct. ...... A DllD Of TltUIT ...,.., ... "9thl111t, 1'00 Name: ROOFING (FOAM) Contractor• mull •\land COURT ACTION, and you hU occurred In that pay-fronl Mtbtok. and In-Thi• bu1lne11 I• con-
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Oo a. 0 OJ .., < . 0 .. -... ~ -·.., -.. No bidder may wlthchw DATID AUOUIT 12. 1112. Nor1lt .,......,, ..,._ 100, AT VARIOUS DISTRICT LO-watklhrough on June 27. may have the i.gel right 10 I men1 hu not bMrl made of: clualon of four compact-dUC1ad by: an Individual
any blc:l IOf 1 period of forty· UNLIH YOU TAKE AC· laftta AM, CA llZ'10I, T..._ CATIONS 1985. 10:00 AM, •t 2985 bring your aecounl In good The balance ol lhe prlncl-0-99 L~
flYI (45) days aft« tM dll• TtOH TO f'ROTaCT YOUR ~ (714) .,_.10 Place Plans are on Ille: Bear Sl11MI, Co111 Mesa, standing by p1ylng all of pel twm ol $1,405,e.47.84.' alze p8ftclng •tall•. Th9 Thi• ltal-11 wu 1114MS
Mtfortheopenlngofbld1. ~RTY. IT MAY M Publllhed Otange Coat Purchasing Dept . 2985-B CA,wllh MlkeSalleeollh41 yourpa1tduepaymen11plu1 whlcttbecamedueAugus11.1 subjec t prop•rty 11 wlththeCountyCwkofOr-.. -· A ~I bond and I IOLD AT A l'Ui9lJC IALI. Dally PllOI June 13, 20, 27, Bear Slreet, Colli M811. CA M 1 In le nan c e De p I permllled eot111 •nd u -11984, with lnt•r .. I due located On the IOUth 11<19 811Q11 County on May 23 .
performance bOnd wlll be • YOU ...aD M IXJl\.A-lta~ 92626 (556-3390). pense1 wtlhln lhr .. month• thereon from May 1. 1995 I of YOl'ktown Avenu. 8P-1985 requited prior tct .xecutlOn NATION Of THI NATURE Th-OSS NOT ICE IS HEREBY Qowernlng 8oard •r lrom IM dale this noUce of plu1 late chargw. I proxJmat.ty 340 fMt ... t -·~ of the contrect and lfWlll be OF THI PROCllDINQ GIVEN lhll Jh• above-Carolyn a. ttoclter, defaul1 wu recorded. I Th1I by rMIOf'I lhereol,l of Beectl Boulevard Ind In tti. form NI forttrln lhe AQAIMIT YOU , YOU PlllJC NOTICE namedScttoolOlstrlc1ofOt· Putohulnt Director, Thl .. mountolprtnclpall•ltM undctrSlgned. preaent la zoned (0) R3, (Ouall-
contrllctdocumenll. IHOULD CONTACT Aj angeCounty,Calllornl1,1C1-{71~17) $1,495,647.&4 u of Augull t1eneflct1ryunderlUCtlcSMd fled) Multi Family R.al-
PulluMI to S«:tlOn 4680 LAWYDI. NOTICE Of INTIM110M TO Ing by and through Ill Gov-~ Or ... c-t t, 19&4, tog«Mr with ae-ol tru1t, hM executed and dentlal.
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Potache • Audi
441 E. C111t lwy., l1w,.rt 111011
113-0100
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 NABERS CADILLAC W'1
2100 HIRIOR ILYD., COSTA IESI
(714) 140-1100 (113) 117-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
•Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
WE'RE
IEW
WE'RE
DHLllli
AcroH ffom Big 'A' Of'I Ketetta. Ju•• WMI of 57 (Orante) ,,..,
"' 0 CREVIER·BMW ""' W SALES • SERVICE • LEASING ..,,
"Where Professional A mtude Prevalls "
•PKJ•llzJng In Europ .. n o.fl••r~. -Excet .. nt S•lecllon ot
.... end c•r•fully prepered UMd BMW'• always In 11ock
835-3171
208 W. 1et St., Santa Ana
Corner ol Broadway & lat S I Closed Sundays
G STERLING
SALIS -SHYICE -WSllC -PAITS
O~erseas Delivery Specialists
PAlltTI OEPAATMENT OPEN
I ATUADAY MC>ftNINGI
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach ~-840-8444
G JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1301 Ou•ll St. -#ffw C•t Loc.tlon
1001 Ou11/I St. -R_,,,. Dl~l•lon
® World's Largest Selection of 0·
Mercedes Benz A..
833-9300
Wes · tultq -·P1rt1 • 1trNt . IMy "''
~--· -
,..,~. ,,,_. ..
t . st a a
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service. Parts. Body, Paint & Ttre Oepts.
Compet1t1ve Rates On l ease & Dally Rentals
20IO l1r~er ltw~., Cest1 11111
142-0010 or 540-1211
,r Ai..
E.IF ACH
o COMMONWEAL TH
VOLKSWAGEN
.® 'FAMILY STORE SINCE; '53'
Sales -Service -Leaaing
BR~ AT EDINOEP Jt8-0U0 fN SANTA >JJA
......_.,. ___ ~I '
7 • I zr t t
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET -2121 H1r~er lh•., C11t1 1111
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546·1200
MONDAY -FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Special Parts U1e 546·9400
8:30 AM --9:00 PM
8·30 AM -6:00 PM
10·00 AM -5:00 PM
/
SALE •LEASING • SERVICE • PARTS
8 SUBARU OF 1ANAHEIM
We•re Not the Bigge,t,
But We're the Best!
al 91 ~'rwy an6 Harbor Blvd.
1221 N. Harbor Blvd. (714) 772-9800
AnAheim, CA 92801 -(21-3) 924-2361
h+-• ·-~ ..
•
South County
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
CALIF'S #1 A LARGEST VOLKIWAGEN DEALER
NEED WE SAY MORE?
Parts Open M-Sat 8 -5:30 Sat 9 -4 p.m
Service m-Frl 7·30 -6 p.m.
11711 IEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON IEACH
714/ 842-2000
0 HOUSE Of IMPORTS INC.
• LONG TERM LEASES
• COMPETITIVE PURCHASE PRlaS
~ • HUGE INVENTORY
dial MERCEDES fJ::\
213/714 837-2333 \C)
Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
0 BILL YATES
VOLISWAIEI • ptlSOIE • PEllEIT
SALES • LEASING • PARTS .-SERVICE '
12112 ¥1111 111•, S11 .1111 c1,1str111
411-4111 111-4IOO
8 ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
tt i ,, rt. ""' '" llHI }Hp Salls For I r11rs
· OD1n2e. sALEs -Loa'St. sERv1cE
nu "•••o• •lVO • LEASING ' s4i4023 • ACCESSORIES DEPT
G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 540-0713
3 Blocks So. of 405 Fwy .
O,_nge County's OfMl1 & l.tt'grett ftond.9c ~lenhlp
M IH<h IM:I, & IN 0.nt.n Gf'O¥e F~
171• .. Z ... lt (71•168 .. Z-
we ,-rrorm •II Ponttac w.trra~ wprtc, regairdlfts or
. where you orlglnafly puf't'hlltld your car.
_.. MG•AY .V.••.,..,.. .... P •••
..... aMI ....... " Clrowe ......
-lliilwtl ..... caorom..~'-
,
,
' , ,
I
I
Coast
Costa Mesa honors Flor-
ence Schumacher and
Fred Owens for work with
organizations In Orange
County./A11
A dispute over access to
a Laguna Heights project
could steer supervisors
and the Laguna Beach
City Council to a
courtroom battle./ A3
Callfomia
Prosecutors say a spy
trial defendant is "crying
crocodile tears." I A4
Record fine is levied
against a San Jose nurs-
ing home where "sex is
rampant."/ A4
Natio n
Pentagon is investigating
45 defense contractors
for bribery and bid-rig-
ging./ A4 ·
A satanic cult may have
burled 50 persons in a
Toledo, Ohio suburb./ A4
Worl d
Five bombs exploded
today at the royal palace
in Nepal.I AS
Four Marines and two
other Americans were
among 13 killed by gun-
men in a San Salvador
cafe./A4
Boatin g
66 yachts are entered in
the 33rd biennial Trans-
pac race from Los An-
geles to Honolulu./81
Sports
Bert Blyleven deals
Angels a 2-0 setback, and
there are some second
thoughts about trade that
didn't happen./C1
America's worst golfers
have fun despite well-
below-par performances
in tourney./C2
Ente rtainment
A Fountain Valley drama
student gives her Im-
pressions of the Ashland.
Ore., Shakespearean
Festlval./84
Cosby Show made the
tQPJO twice as NBC
swept Nielsen ratings.
/83
INDEX
Boating
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
P•parazzl
Play Review
Police Log
Public No11ces e
Sport a
Television
Thetttera
weather
,,
B1-2
B2
C4
A3
BS-6
C5-8
C4
C7
C3
C7
B2
A10
B1
B4
A3
C3
C1-3
8 3 93_,.
A2
TOMOMOW:
HAZY -. FOMCAITION A2
Serving .... port letch, Cotta Meta, Huntington Betch, lrvlne, Lagun.t leech, Fountlfn Vlllty lftd ~ 0r-.. COUllty
C ALIFO RNIA THURS DAY J UNE 20. 1985 " • • N f •,
.e· ersw1
Dlltr .... ,......., Lee...,...
Heading the organizing committee for the
Olympic Torch 5 and fO kilo meter run at
Newport Center are (from left) chairman
Bob McCaffrey, 1984 &old medaliat Edwin
M08ea and Peter Vidmar, captain of the
gymna•tic• team.
Third Oly mpic Torch run
readied at Newport Center
Gold m edalist Edwin M oses heading benefit
event to finance athlet es in '8 8-Seoul games
Hy ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of lhe Delly Pllol 81e"
CH~ mp1t gokl mt•Jah.,t l d\\ in
M o'>t''> Jotn~ Or~nge ( ounty '\·olun-
tet·rs Wl'dm·<.da} to announn· plan<,
for the third annual Ol)mp1r I orch 5
and 10 kilomctl'r run to raise fund'
for training t t.S. 01) mp1c athlete~.
The c'cnt \\Ill he held June lO at
Nt'\\ oon ( 1.'nkr in Ne" port Beach
and'' 11l 1ncluJr an 1nterna11onal foo<l
fair and dt•mon•.tr~1t1nns nf athklll'
\l1I"
~1oc;cc;. c;pokesman tor the "' cnt.
"ac; the gold med:rl "innl'r in the 400-
meh:r hurdles 1n both 1976 and 1984
anJ 1\ the current world record holder
in that event. Moses, who trains at
l 'C II"\ ine. "'es in Laguna Hills with
h1'i "lte M:o-rella
Peter Vidmar. "ho led the l ' ~
men's g} mnas11cs team 10 gold
medals last summ~r 1n Los ..\ngl'les.
JOined Mo es at tht• \.\ednt'">da~
reception held at tht· Nt·" port Tunk
restaurant
\ 1dmar and h1'i "di.· Donna h' l' 111
In ine.
While the I Qg4 Oh mp1c C1amt''>
raised surplus funds tor the l
Ol:rmp1c C'omm111ee. not all of 1t lan
be used to help train athktcs prepar-
ing for the 1988 games. Moses said
Much of 11 has bcl'n set aside 10
(Pleaae aee OLYMPIC/A2)
ress
Terroris t chief says American captives
being h eld in differe nt areas of Beirut
BEIR T. Lebanon (AP} -Shute
Moslem m1lit1a leader Nabih Bern
said he will present some of the 40
Amencan hostages from a h1Jacked
TWA airliner to the press at Beirut
a irport tonight 1n an apparent effort
to show the} are not being 111-treated.
The} "ere scheduled to be pres-
ented to the press 1h1s morning at
Beirut airport But Bern did no t make
clear whether reporters will be per-
m111ed 10 qwst1on the hostages.
Earlier . .\kef Ha1dar. a spokesman
tor Bern's 4.mal m1htta. told The
.\ssociat.ed .Press that the hostages
were "in a very good situatJon."
He said 37 passengers from the
hijacked Boeing 727 who were
spinted away from the plane to secret
locations in Beirut to prevent any
rescue m1ss1on and he said they "are
kept 1n eight or 10 places."
He declined to say where the
hideouts are. but said all the hostages
were 1n good condition.
(Pleue eee BOST AG&&/ A.2)
Newport, county.
holding talks on
airport problems
Attorneys bidding
to resolve flights-. -
expans ion hassles
By JEFF ADLER
Of IM Delly l'llol llMt
~ ttome) s lor ewp()rt Beach and
t" o an11-airpon cmzens groups ha' e
been meeung qu1etl) with count)
a11o rne} s for the past few weeks 1n an
attempt to settle }ears of legal
wrangling o"er John Wa}ne A1rpon.
Board of upervisors Chairman
Thomas Rile) disclosed Wednesda~.
··1 am opt1m1st1c at th1!> point a
~11lement ma) be possible." Rile)
'aid 1n a prepared ~tatement issued
Jfter a clo<,1..·d-donr meeting "llh the
1..ount~ \ airpon Jttornt'\\
Ht· lkdined to dl'>CU'>'> thl' 'Pt't tlil"s
lll the nego11Jtllln'>. but l haral tl·nud
the meetings a<, ··senSlll\e · Rile~
.. atd the rnunt~ \ speual airport
counsel. M 1rhael Ga!lke. has been
directed to continue meeting \\Ith
an.,rne~s representing N"" port
Beach
Ont· nt thl' lit\·, a11ome,., °'tnen
Pflaum. also declined to comment on
the negot1at1ons, otTenng only that all
discussions wtth the county were
"tentative and prchminal)."
Ho"'ever. Pflaum did say that the
legal senlement being ducusscd en-
compassed what he termed ··a global
settlement" to the longstanding feud
o"er plan~ to eitpand the a1rpon.
For his part. Gat~ke said onl) that
the talks we• aimed al ach1~ng the
lOunt) 's pnmal) ObJC'Cll"e ... to 1m-
pro' e cond1t1ons at John Wayne
l\1rpon that haH been needed for the
last 15 years with a minimum of
public C\pense and d1srupuon."
Gatzke said any settlement prob-
abl) "'ould be a complicated and
comprehensl'\ e agreement that
"ould end four separate J)t'nding
court actions
• \ \tale ll>Urt appe31 of the
lO.~.flt\\ 141<1 pruposed e\pctn:.1on
plan
• \n 3ppeal ol J dec1s1on affecting
the nc"I~ t0mple1ed :-.i orth Clear
Zunl' parking lot.
• ..\ uperior Coun contempt-of-
coun finding that halted all planning
on a proposed I Q85 airport e\-
(Plea.ee !lee AlllPORT I A2) .
Trustees say charges in recall drive are false
By PHIL SN EID ERM AN
01 lhe Delly Piiot ate"
Two H untington Aend1 ( 11~
l hool District trustees targeted for
recall 1n the wake of ~hool closure
decisions ~1d toda} that the dn"e 1s
based on fabl· allegations and does
not reflect communit:r-w1de scn11-
men1. Om: o l thc trustees said \he has
not e\en been proper!} scned \\Ith
"intent to ret.ill" paper'>
\t fue\da' night's '>t hm>I board
meeting. memtx·r, ul the ~()°' Bur!..i:
rommtlll'l' said thq "ert• not1f}1 ng
tru,.tee~ Gan Ncl~on and Karen
<)'Arie that ·the} plan to colkct
signatures to force a spec ial elecuon
aimed aLreplacing the t\\O school
board members.
OS Burke members arc angr) over
the board's decision to c lose Burke
Elernentani School at the end of thl'
cum·nt 'ichool year The\ also hope to
obtain \uppon from parents of !>tu·
dent\ a11endmg (11\kr '.\11dtlle
~rhool \\ h1l·h "di he duscd nl'\I
Last shall b e fir st
in N ewporl-'s-gala
'Irrel e v a nt Week '
The gu) would be perfect for an
\mencan Ewrl.'ss card commerual
"Oo 'ou lnow me? I pla)cd
football tOc the L nt"ersuy DfGcorg1a
and was the last pla:rcr selected 1n this
} car'' N:ltlonal Football Ll'ague
draft Out mo\t people still don't
rerogn11c me
"Thaf'i "h\ I cam th1~ ..
fhe camera ltlOms in on a ireen
plastic card "'here the name
reads .. OON CHUMLEY
It's true, Don Chumle) l'i not a
household name. He made no all-star
teams while:: phl}ing for the GetH)13
Bulldogs.
Voung foot hall pla:rers do not wcnr
hlack-aTid-rcd Jcrsc:rc; cmbla1oned
with No. 76 on their bacl s 1n tribute
to him
He pla)., .1 pos1t100. defcn~IH'
ta lie \\her:". the only ~tftttSt1c the}
Leep arc for tat:l lcs and fumble
reU)\erl('\
( humle\ had one fumbk rt'lO' cry
in three c;ea\on'i .it ( 1cO'rgaa lie did
ha"c 1:1' \acklc'I has senior \'Car. but
had hdp on 3 7 of tho~
H1" gl'C'att''it n>ntnhut1on to (1eor-
~1i1 tooth.ill .. omeone smd. wiu ntnk
1ng Hr1'nH1nn lroph\ "1nnl'f
llcr~hd Wollt•r look gno<l dunnll
1ntrn~u11d 'ltrtmnMgl'\
( ~l"n the '>an honu~o 4~r' "'ho
t'OnSfdt•n•t:H tnnnln --rtTr nt1th hc'<r
ROBERT
HYNDMAN
T Hf LIGHTER StoE
colkgc football player a va1 lable 1 n the
draf\. arc reSt·rved in their praise
"He ma} have a chance to make
our team ... said 8111 McPherson. the
49ers defensive hne coach.
Chum le) ma}' be Mr. Anon) mous.
but after a week-long 'itay 1n Newport
Beach that begins Sunda) afternoon.
Mr ..\nonymous "111 become Mr.
Irrelevant
Whether that's an 1mprovemt nt as
irrelevant
What 1~ 1mponant 1~ that Nt•wport
lk:rt:h once again will cekbratc c;c"cn
days of 1rrevcrtnt. 1rrepre siblc. ir-
rc pon\lblc fun kno"n as Irrelevant
\.\eel
C humlc), 21. will prt'iitk O\er the
\\Cek ''i madcap evcnt'i
Whctfler he has fun. of couf'llC 1s
1rrr1c\ ant
Rut hi\~ h1rn<'t of ho ing an awful
(Pl~eee IJtalltLEVANT/A2)
year. District ollic1als sa) the do~ure'
are needed becauSt' ·or ded1ning.
fina nces and dwindlin~ t•nrollment
Ed Zschoche. president of SO~
Burke, said the recall papers cha~e
the trustees with failure.· to consider
other non-teaching cutback in plaCl'
of the school closures. Ht' 4'a1d Nelson
a nd O'Bnc wen~ targe ted for rel:lll
hecausc the\. do not tare n•-t>lcction in
\;o,emhcr
He ~:11d hie, group \\ould ~upport
<)Iha l"Jnd1tl.11e<> "hen thl' It-rm' , 11
tru,hl~c .l!n;in _(l.ar.laod.. P~ lobrn
.10J Sherr\ RJrlO'' C\p1re 1n thl' fall
Tl1 forl't' J '>J'.>l.'l'IJI ekn1on 1n\ uh -
1ng Nelson Jnd ()'Bnc. recall sup-
porters mu'\t gather ., Q% 'ahd
<;1gna1urc~ lrom registered 'oters in
thl' ~chool d1Mnc1. atcording to the
Orange ( ount~ Registrar of \ ott·rs·
1lflil'e
'\el..,1rn anJ <YRnc "erl' l'lt'l'll'd 111
lllUr·'l'Jr term' in '\,o, lmlx·r f 4~ \
ll'>lhUlht• \\J') an unSUlll'''lul lJl1-
d1d.lh' 1n tht• ,,1nw rJll' 1
Blllh targeted trust4'es said-the)' do
not Ot'hc' l' there 1s enough commun1-
l\ '>uppon for the recall dnve
"lelso n said the recall proponents
··seem 10 be a small .group of
frustrated parents" hose interest o nl)
seem 10 ha'e been piqued since there
\\a\ an announcement that their
\Chl)OI was to be dosed It's un-
lonunate that "l' a<, a d1stnct are
tx·1ng. re4uired Ill \fl('nd 11me. monc~
.1nJ l'nerg' to prepare hir a i:1rnn ~utt
(Ple .. e'aee RECALL/ A2)
j LBman
--; guilty of
woman's
J murder
By JEFF ADLER
DflM0...,"9t l laill
.\fll•r drlibt-ra11ng for .,, da\s. an
Orange l ount' ')upenor ( oun JUI")
\\ eJne'><i.i\ l()und former ~na
&-al h rt''\1dcn1 Da\ld \\ 1lham Lc11ch
guilt\ nt 'iC'cond-<lettr<.'e murder tn the
l Q8 I rapt'-~l•> 1ng of his 2().-year-old
tormt'r g1rlfnend Ginger Lorra1nr
nt'I<;( hh
The t'1gh1-man. tour-~ oman 1ul'\
also determined that ~itch wu not
guilt\ ol add1t1onal rape and rohhel")
l'harges alleged in tht' cnme
The pro~·C'ution had asked Juro rs
to find thr ~tl-\car-old Lench guilt~ of
fi"t~rtt murdt"f' atona With 'thC'
p« 1al c-n·cum'itan~s of rapt' and
robtlel"\ dunntt thr comm1ss1on ol a
murdrr wh1C'h ~oul~ ha'e qualified
him tor the death penalt) 1f con-
' 1cted
He no" fa~ a ma,imum ~ntenc~
of I Ci-\r"al""i·to-hfr to state pn'°n
1nlt hr .ilm1J) has bttn 1n.cuo;tod~
fordmc 10 four )t'if'\. l~1tch could bt
chgihk for parole 10 about two ycArs.
o nCC" ded11~ for good heha\.ior arr
fiaurt"d into tht ~ntenct Dfputy
{Preue ... ftIDlCT I A:2)
\
t .
A2 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thuraday. June 20, 1985
HOSTAGES WILL BE SHOWN TO PRESS •.•
hom A l
••They're euma wcU and h&vc rv
sets m thetr rooms. They are aenma
&ood food. There' aJways a menu an
Arabic and 1n EnaJ1sh. They have a
taJte for Lebanese food. Evcrythina
for them 1s fine."
Haidar added, ··ney Wk air the
time whh the hijackers. talkina poli.
tics and asking quc tions about the
hiite philosophy and the h1ite
rclijjOl'r. · me-of thr discus ns art"
of a very high level."
Berri, Lebanon's justice minister.
has cmeraed as the chief negotiator
between the hijackers and the United
tatcs and his Amal militiamen are
aunrdina the hijacked plane where the
three crew members arc being held.
He also has said he has control of.
or access to the other hostages, and
has insisted that he wall not release
them until the chtef demand of the h~ackers 1s met -that Israel release
700 Shiite Moslem prisoners taken
from c;outh ubanon during the
Israeli army occuixu1on that ended
~·arl> this month.
Gunmen 1ns1de the h1Jacked Boe-
ing 727 tired over the heads of
reporters at the Beirut airport today
after a Lebanese rcl)O(tcr tncd to
sneak aboard the plane by po ina a
an airline auendant. The c.pta1n and
his two crew members said they arc
aboard, surrounded by many gun-
men.
Berri also said he had accepted a
wiss offer tO use its territory to hold
any eitchange of the A.mencan
hostJges:-.__ -
Berri madr the disclosure after
meeting with Swiss Ambassador
Jean-Paul Ramsiere who delivered a
letter from Swiss Forei&n Minister
Pierrt Auben saying, .. Switzerland
puts all its potential at the president's
disposal to contnbute to rt'solvc the
hijack tragedy."
"We have accepted this offer for the
exchanie of the hostages in (Israel's)
Atlit pnson for the plane ho ta&C!I on
Swiss territory ifthe others (Israel and
the United States) accept this." hr
said.
Gunmen hijacked the plane last
Friday on its way from Athens to
Rome. and since have released most
of the I 53 passcnJters and crew. The)
killed ll S Navy Pett)' Officer Robcn
Dun trthem of Waldorf, Md
"frtck, JUurnal15t," hlJ&d.er~
screamed when thc) spotted the
Ltb4ncsc reponer's camera this
mominJ. fhe reponer rode onto the
tarma 1n a food van and carried fruit
up the strps to the plane. He ~n down the staircase as a
unmanap~d.;udoorofthe_pJane
and shot over haSllea . The JQl\man
then turned hts AK-47 assault rifle on
other journalists and photographers
on the tarmac and fired a few shots
over their heads.
Some sprinted indoors and others
dived for cover. There were no
injuries.
"What 1~ 1h1s'! Are you playing
tncks w11h us'!" an angry hijacker
lalC'r a!>ked the control tower. "I want
all nrwsmen out. One has filmed me
shooung. I want that film.confiscated
and 5ent to the plane."
Wednesday state-run Beirut radio
quoted a government official as
saying. "There 1s no danger to the
hves of the hos tages for the 11me
being."
RECALL EFFORT HIT BY TRUSTEES ... From Al
and now a (possible) special elec-
tion."
I le rl"ferred to the Burke commit-
tee's coun baule to reverse the school
closure decision.
Nelson ~id the charges listed i'n the
"intent to r~'(·all" papers are "filled
w11h fal'>ehoods" and "patent un-
truths."
O'Bnc sa11J she opened her recall
paper'i and found Nelson's name
listed on them, not hers.
"I was not proJ>('rly served," she
said today. 'Tm not qutte sure how
this new wrinkle affects their plans. rm assuming l wilt be served when
they find out about the mistake."
O'Bric said the recall allegations
contain "no issues of substance."
She _said the board made other
budget cuts even before receivi ng
school closure recommendat1ons
from an advisory committee.
O'Bnc also said she does not
believe the recall charges reflect the
wishes of all Burke parents.
"Many members of the Burke
community have come up to us and
said they don't support these com-
ments," she said. "It's pitiful that
d1srupt1on of the educational process
would continue because of this."
OLYMPIC SUPPORT RUN PLANNED ...
From Al
ensure cont1nu1ng linanc1al suppon
O\er several )ears.
"That's wh) fund-ra1Stnf, events
lake 1h1\ are so important,' Moses
said. "It costs a lot of money to train
an Ol)mp1c athlete ..
Despite the surplus from the 1984
games. more than S 115.000 1s still
needed to subs1d11e the traamn$ of
athletes at the Colorado Spnngs
Training Center. said Bob McCaffrey,
chairman of the event.
Moses saad 11 will be especially
difficult for athletes tramang for the upcomin~ Olympics as the 1988
JZames wtll be held 1n Seoul, South
Korea.
The 1984 games were held 1 n Los
Angeles with the support and
enthusiasm of the entire country
behind the athletes.
"Everything was gung-ho, but 1t's
not gaing to be the same this ume
around," he said.
The third annual fund-raiser 1s
being c.oordanated by dozens of local
volunteers with the suppon of several
local companies. More than 1,000
runners have already registered for
the races.
An internauonal food fair will be
held at . Newport Center with 50
Orange County .restaurants offering
food with 11ckctsaJes also benefiuing
the Olympic Committee.
T-shirts and PoSlCI"$ will be sold to
raise addiuonal fu nds for the athletes.
Demonstrations of such athletic
events as fencing, weightlifting, vol·
leyball and gymnastics will also be
staged.
The committee raised $400,000 for
the 1984 Olympic team and hopes to
do even better for the 1988 squad,
McCaffre y said.
For additional race mformat1on.
call 89 1-5529.
AIRPORT SETTLEMENT SOUGHT ...
From Al
pans1on. and
• ~ federal coun law<,u1t now
pending rn L' S D1stnct Coun in Los
.\ngele\
our<.e\ familiar with the nego-
11a11on' md1c::ued that a ~ttlement
would ha' e to be struck within the
next SC\ eral wecl>.s to stop further
court a<.·t1on The sources agreed to
d1..cusc; the negot1a11ons on the con-
d1t1on thaJ. ~ not be 1dent1tied.
.\n agreement probabl) would
IOCu\ un 01ght ltmtts. the Sile of the
terminal at John Wa>nc Airpon. the
~·anh lur an addllional reg.ional
airport '>ite in the county as well as the
rneansofconclud111gall lat1gat1on. the
\Ourccs said.
Alc;o, the addition of the stunningly
quiet I 00-passengcr Bri ush Aero-
space BAc-146 would have to figure
into the agreement. a source said. The
twin-engine jct has been the subject of
considerable attention since 11 flew a
series of demonstration flights that
·permitted airlines fl ying the new
plane to apply for unhm11ed numbers
of flaghts at John Wayne Airport.
The count> and Newpon Beach as
well as the Airport Working Group
and Stop Polluting Our Newport
have been embroiled an llt1gat10n
c;tcmming from the airport batt((' for
years.
In 1981 . the c1t't and (.)PO N
successful!) blocked count} plan\ to
expand the airport when a Superior
Court 1udge ruled enviro nmental
plans for the airpon were inadequate.
A new plan. calling for a S 150
million ex pansion of the over-
crowded airport terminal, was ap-
pro"cd b) supervisors early this year.
but wus blocked in April when
another upenor Coun Judge found
the count> m contempt for failing to
submit the new plan for court
approv•tl. as the 198 1 judgment had
required.
In add111on the count} filed a
federal court lawsuit this year asking
the coun to uphold the new airport
e'pans1o n plan, lls related airline
access plan wh1C'h controls tht•
number of fl ights permitted; a land-
use plan for the Santa Ana Heights
l·ommun tl}. and related en-
' 1ronmcn tal documents.
A hearing on that case is scheduled
Monday before Judge Terry Hatter.
However. attorneys for both the caty
and th e county said they plan to ask
that the hearing be delayed until Jul y
22 so their negotiations can continue.
VERDICT IN RAPE-SLAYING CASE •.• From Al
I>"tr1l t \ttorne} Mike Jacobs said
Judge Rot>cn F11Lgerald <;ehed uled
d \1."ntcnc1nP. hea'r1nP. (or Jul\ 19.
Lc:lllh and hi\ roommate at thl'
time lO·\ear-old Thomas Martin
I homp'ion. hoth were accused of
<;tabbing Fle1schl1 fi,e 11mec; 1n the
head on ~pt I I. 1981 . an their one.
room apartment h 1261 Ocean Front
an l aguna Beach Leitch and Fle1schll
had c;hared the bcachfront apartment
nnl )' 10 day<. earlier
I homp<,on "a<. trn.·d and con\ 1ctc:d
iii lir\t-degrel' murder with <,pcc1al
.1r,um c;tamc<. follo...,ing a \l'parate
tn.il 111 I IJ>i ~ I k ha' hl·en '>l'nlenced
to <ll'ath and now 1<. confined on ~an
C)Ul'nt1n\ death row awaiting the
11u1coml' of his appeal.
In the courthouse hallwav after the
"crd1ct was announced. Jacobs told
tumrs. he was upset by thttr dcc1s101+.
"It hot hers me one person 1s on
death row. the one v.ho d1dn ·1 plan 11
f think he (Leitch) l'i ID there laughing
nght now" Jacob-; \Utd "The~
1Le11c.h and fhomp'ion) <.hould be
~ell mate<, on death row togc:thcr ..
l l·1tc.h''i dcfen~ attorne\ Ron
WrRE L1sTENING
Just Call
642-6086
Perry. said his client "didn't ~em
'Cl) upset" v.hen the \erd1ct was
announced. "He's a )Oung man and
he·won"t be an old man "hen he gets
out. He said he felt he had a fair tnal,"
the Long Beach auorncy commented.
Le1tch's father. architect Richard
Leitch. who had attended the tnal
with other famil) members v1nually
c:vel) day. said he wa'i d1sappomted
the Jury hadn't found his son guilty of
the lesser offense of being an ac-
cec;sor. after the fact. fl'i the dcfcn<.e
had asked
Ho1.t.e\er Jen I l'lllh thl· ckkn·
dant\ older hroth,·r l ommcntl·d
"that anytime ~ou 'rl' loolong at the
death penalty. le .... '' hctll"r "
Jury foreman Harold ~hult1. a
Fullenon resident. '>aid Jurors were
spht 6·6 between finding Leitch guilty
of ti,.,t. and second~ mordcr
when the first of three ballots wac;
taken dunng the fifth da .. of dehbera-
llons
"Wh en we couldn't rcach"3 unan1·
mous 'crd1ct for lirst dcgrc.·e. we
decided 11 had to be one nf the others
We cons1drrcd evel)thang and ac·
ce~'>Of) after the fact didn't fit. He was
more in .. oh ed than that. but manv
felt that he didn't know in adv.a.nee (of
a plan to murdC'r the '1ct1m as the
proscuct1on alleged) or was in volved
an a consp1raq ,," Schultz told re-
porters.
Several orher jurors. who declined
to give thctr names. s~11d they had
trouble "telling the truth from the
he<;" 1n reaching their dec1s1on.
Fv1dence presented during the trial
md1rn tcd Fle1~hla was handcuffed.
gag&l'd with duct la!X' and raped
tx·forc \he "'a~ repeatedly stabbed
"Ith a foh1n11. kn1k
Jarnh\ .argul'd during ht'> dosing
~tate menl that F-lc1schlt was killed
beca use \he had come between Leitch
and his ex-wife, Tracy Leitch, while
the two were attempting a reconcili·
at1on.
DunngThomp~on'S tnal. the pros·
ecut1on claimed Leitch promised to
pay Thompson for ktlhng Aeaschh h~
obtaining a !>mall <iallboat for him.
The two were arrested after nec1 ng
to Cabo San Luca\, Me'<ico where
Le11ch's parent'> owned a \acat1on
home
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VOL. 71, N~. 171
• ...
'
Coastal fog will S~rea<!_ inland
A low pr-..ure ., .. oft tM <*ltral ooest wlll 9')rMd IPfMd , /f 8 EDT Fri .Me 21 nlgtlllme low cloud• and tog ••terttlYely Into the Inland valleyt of Tht or~al Of p.m • ·•
Southern California th•ough Friday. the National WMther Servtce ... Jd
Daytime tem~atur• ate tic~ted to droP • • rteull, ltthough high• In the lowtr deeert 1111'-Yt ate atlll expected to
reach t 10 degr .... CoHtal area high• wfll range from upper 801
at the beachet tO~P. 80• In the wanner ln.J!r!d V911eyt. Along ttle Of "COMt there wtlt be !OW CloU<Ji and'~
fog extending Into t valleya In the night and morning ~re.
otflerwlee fair with hazy afternoon sunshine. A llttte cool., with
high• ranging upper 801 at the beachff to the up~ 80. warn.er Inland valleya.
Tempe LUii• Aoc:k •2 112
LOUlt..n. 77 $4
HIQh low 10<' 24 noura anding al 5 a m ~· 81 13 ·Q~G) FlllOHTS • Mlll'lll llMQll 87 79 Albany 73 50 MUWIUILM 13 41 Wttm _ ColO"P'r Al~ 91 sa Mpta..81 Pw 71 51 Am M 63 AnGnoflge 5t 47 ,.,..,.Ylllll 79 $4 SllOwt • • Aaltl Ftv<roaa Sl\Ow Occluded...,,. 51,1o011.i1v ...
NawOl'IMnt 13 13 NOOt"'I w ....... ~t N()U U $ 0.~• . ,_ .. ,, AUani. 74 Ill Naw Y0111 78 13 AtlantlC Ctty 71 82 Nortolli,Va 85 89 AUlllfl 14 70 OklellOIM City 13 .. Calif. Tempa T-Vlliay 84 48 a.Jumora IO 57 =-75 54 Oma/le ,, 111 ron-74 5e OtlMdo IM 74 Y~llty 91 12 78 52 ~ '2 58 High. tow ror 24 llOUrt tn<llng al 5 a m ._. " 84 ""-"• 109 es eo.1on 77 112 8ak...titld 103 ..
lkslfalO 87 SS Ptlt~ 70 60 E<1<.aa u 51 Surf Report CMC* H 57 Port .M• ,. 56 f'retllO 103 ~ Porl*'<I. ()f 14 54 C.enc.at• M 87 Cl>atlNton.S C 90 ee PY"~ 78 51 LOe 4ngelee &1 ~ CherlNton.W v 72 54 LOCATIOM llD eHAN Cl>wlotte,H C 92 58 ::::rci1y 83 51 Oakland 82 58 HlintlnCJlon e..cn 1-3 ,..,
Chey9nna ., Ill 85 50 Puo~ " 50 Al¥9' .i.tly. "-PO<t 2 ... laH CNcaoo 72 .. Reno Ill 112 A«I Bluff Ill 81 40t11 Str-. Nawpor1 2-4 fair CinclnNll 78 54 "'chmond .. ,, ~C11y 711 Ill Ur>d StrMI, __, 1·2 .... a.-o 68 51 St louts 75 llO s--10 83 56 8Mlloe waooa 2-4 lalf CoNml>la,S C 19 112 SIPal•T-113 75 SallllU es 51 UtQuna 8Mcfl 2-J fair COl\imbl;a,Oll 74 55 Sall Lah City IHI 68 SM Dl9Qo 73 84 S11n Cl9'n9n1• 1·3 ,..,
ConcorCl,HH 74 61 Sari Antonio 83 70 SenFr-..;o llO S7 W•tartarnc> es ()alju.. Ft Wortll .. 84 Sari Juan.P R 90 78 5.,,,. Batbar• ee 51 s...n CllractlOn toUlll 72 51 S..I!,. 78 61 SIOGlllon 84 56 Oa)'lon s~ 14 51 H'Ofl, IOw tor 2• ttourt ending al 5 p m o.n...ar 87 112 Spo11.,,. 91 54 8Arlltow IOI 74 Tides 0..Mot .... 78 ~ Syr-71 56 BIG._ 87 47 Oecron ea 48 T01)91te 82 58 lll91\o9 103 80 Duluth 71 40
!IP-13 63 Tucton 105 77 Blythe IOI ,, TOOAY Tutaa , 81 115 Cata/Ina 85 59 Falrbankr--ea •9 Seoondlow 4:27 pm 27
FWQO 72 53 WUl\lngton 82 58 • long 8aacltl 73 81 Sacond lllQh 10.4ll p.m 511 WIChlla 81 115 MOll<OY!e 811 Ill F'l.tiGallll 85 41 .. W~k-Batre 7:\ 52 Mon1•ay 84 55 ~"IOAY Grano Rapjc!e 71 48 77 ea •F1,.11ow GtMIF .. lt 94 flO Ml Wiiton a 27 • m -011 70 81 Hartford 78 ~ Nawpot1 8MGh ~" 125• m 38
H4lana 113 112 Eztended On1atio 90 ., tow 517pm 28
"°"°"'"' 1111 74 Palm Sptlngt 114 77 Sac;Qrftl hlgll 1131pm S8 Puadana as 58 Houtton 111 70 HJQl\1 anc:1 morning JO'# c:ioud• and lndlanapollt 75 55 Rl¥«tlde 90 61 SUll Mlt today •I 8 07 p m . rl-*' IN cout ntanc:llnQ "'10 1"8 SM Bamwdlno 113 80 Friday II 5 42 • m and MU agaHI eta 07 Jadlto11,Me 81 Sii Ml1y morning ~ Olharw!M 881\Gal>rlel 85 IO Jecl<to11Yltl9 93 117 pm ~ 51 42 IU<Clay llYough Monday Hlgllt Sal\JOM 77 59 Moon .. 1.a tOday •• un1 pm .. ,_ K.anau City 17 58 -70 ., , ... -·~ 10 mid Sal\ta 4na 75 111 Friday al I 33 a.~ anCI .... ag-al
LMVaoat 112 IO tot warmar ~ Lowa $ lo 115 Sal\ta Cruz 112 S5 11 IOp m
IRRELEVANT WEEK •••
From Al
time in Newport Beach are abou1 as ·
slim as his chances of makrng the
roster of the SuJ>('r Bowl champion
49ers. •
Consider his schedule.
Chumley. who has rarely been
outside the confines of the Georgia
Stale limits, will be nown to the West
Coast, where he will stay for a week at
the Balboa Bay Club.
The ma.yor will welcome him. The
press will question him The public
will wish him well (not in making the
49ers, bu1 1n sun ivang lrrelevent
Weck).
The next da). a golf tournament
will be held at the Irvine Coast
Count!) Club. The golfer with the
best score 1s irrelevant. During Irrele-
vant Wee!>.. 11's the pla)er w11h the
.... orst score that "' ns
Tuesday morning. Chumley tours
the cit ) Later. the Balboa Bay Club
hosts the College Night Rall>. billed
as an evening of cheers. beers and
entertainment
Someone known as The Fox .... ,11
d1spla)' his unique talent for making
mugful, of beer disappear. No ma·
g1c1an or master of mirrors. The Fo"'
gulp'> beer "•th sleight of hand and of
gullet
Ho" I h(' Fen learned to $Ulllc
beer 'iu quickl y 1r.. of course. 1rrele--
vant.
Wednesday, ( humle> and others
tour Disneyland as guests of Mickey
Mouse and Donald Duck. That
evening, the Balboa Bay Club hosts
its Sports Hall of Fame Banquet to
induct Olympic dive r G reg Lo!Winis
and football great 0.J. Simpson
It's a good thing Ch umley stands 6-
foot-4 and weighs about 260 pounds.
T hey say 11 takes a big man to put up
with the abu~ d1c;hcd out at the
banquet .,
The e'ent also prov1dcc; an op-
ponun1t) 10 roast Chumle} and
present ham the Lowsman Trophy
He1sman n Troph) winner\, honor-
ed as the best 1n college football. are
1rrele"ant an Ncwpon 8<.'ach. It's the
Lowsman wann er wh o's special.
Thursda>, unusual and irrelevant
contests will mark the superstars
compet1t1on at th e Balboa Bay Club.
Friday. Chumley and his entourage
descend on Hollywood Park 10 lose
monl'y at the racc1o
And for the weekend, Chumley 1s
flown to Reno as a guest of the MGM
Grand Hotel -where he can lose
even more money.
The man to credit (or blame) for
Irrelevant Week 1s Paul Salata, the
former sewer installer who turned
effiuents into affiuencc.
Now a successfu l businessman who
li ves on Lmda Isle, Salata is known
throu~hout the Newport Beach area
for his generosity to charitable or-
ganizations and his razor-sharp wit at
speaking engagements.
"Irrelevant Week means doing
something nice for someone for no
reason," Salata has of\en sajd. He has
made that saying the motto for the
annu~l Irrelevant Week.
Salata knows what a tough path 1t
can be from the modest streets of hrs
old Highland Park neighborhood to
the bayfront lots of Newport Beach.
But one thing he said he learned along
the way was to recognize that good.
dependable people aren't always the
ones in the hmehght.
"I was a good ball player 1n high
school. but I made third team all-city.
not the first team," he said. "In 1
college (at USC). I made the team. but
I wasn't a, star." ·
If there's an ything Salata loves
more than football. it's an underdog.
That's why he decided 1n 1976 10
honor the achievements of the very
last man selected 1n that year's NFL
draft.
He intended 1n1tially to simply
invite the Un1 vers1 1y of Dayton's
Kel vin Kirk out for a week's vacation
in Newport Beach before Kirk was to
report to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
He mentioned it to friends at the
Balboa Bay Club who wanted to help.
The name came from Salata's
1mpa11ence with the attitude dunng
the '60s that everything yo u did
somehow had to be "relevant."
Therefore. Salata reasoned that 1f )Ou
wanted 10 do something for no reason
at all. it would have to be irrelevant.
That spint has survived.
This year's event 1s special as 11 will
mark the I 0th anniversary of Irrele-
vant Week. Past winners of the
Lowsman Trophy have been inv11ed
to return to Newoort Beach
Chumley will tind himself in the
distinguished com pany of 'uch foot·
Don Chumley
ball legends as Kelvm Kirk, Ja m
Kelleher. Kevin Scanlon. Phil Nelson •
and others.
These former Mr. lrrelevants have
acq1:1m ed themselves with distinc-
uon.
Consi der Irrelevant Week's
checkered history.
• Following Kelvin Kirk's late
arrival , Mr. Irrelevant II decided Lo
amve o·n 11me. But Jim Kelleher lost
haio. lu~ge. He reportedly was with
the Minnesota Vikings JUSt long
enough to sing his alma mater at a
team dinner.
• Lee Washburn. an offensive
lineman from Montana State, was
most famous for spiking a. football
af\er his teammate scored a touch-
down.
Washburn's spike may have been
enthusiastic, but it also was illegal.
Montana State was penalized.
• Mike Al mond in 1979 was the
first Mr. Irrelevant to bring along a
wife (his own). Arkansas quanerback
Kevin Scanloo did Almond one
better m 1980. bringing along a
pregnant wife (also his own).
•Tyrone McGriffand Tim Wash-
ington broke trad1t1on ... they're
playmg professional football.
There arc, ~unately, draw-
backs to. nying ng men out to
Newport Beach o a week of thrills
and spills at a pivotal time an their
gndiron careers.
Accordang to Salata. they often
repon 10 football camp and tell their
coaches: "I don't want to play, I want
to go back to the Batboa Bay Club."
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