HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-06-24 - Orange Coast Pilot~ -.
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TOllOMOW. •
FAIR
FOMCA81'80NAI
L. s.vtnl Newport leech, Cotta Meta. Huntington lelch, lrvlne, Laguna leech, Fountlln v..., Ind ..,... Or1ft11 County
C ALIFORNIA MO NDAY JUNF :>4 198~ ;c_, CENTS
~bortion slated for rape victim .
hys icia n s at UCIMC set to aid woman
. allegedly raped a t La Mirada hospital
taan Valley, found that most doctors
and clinics will not abort fetuses older
than 20 weeks.
There also were concerns of bab-
11 ity should Eldridge's health be
further threatened by the abortion.
to do this, and I JUSt hope we're not
going to be let down," Mrs.
Stcgmoyer said at the time.
:rhe Stegmo_yers won con-
servatorship of Eldndgc last Friday
when Supenor Court Judae Henry
Moore ruled that tbe prcgnan~y was
life-threatening. The ruHna allowed
the Stcgmoycrs to pursue an abortion
for Eldridge.
.
Moore said.
Anti-abortion activists have sent a
telegram to Jud_sr Moore ur1m1 a
halt to the aboruon and offenna fr~
med1cal carc-10 bnna the baby to full
term and foster cal'C for the child
Doctors have saJd the brain d1sease
has rendered Eldridge in~pable of
speaking or knowina what is bappen-
1na to her. Some physicians say
Eldnd&e suffers from Huntington's
chorea. while others believe she
suffers from anOlher nervous dis.
order.
8 y ROBERT HYNDMAN ...... .,.., ..........
An abortion was scheduled today at
UC Irvine Medical Center for the
1evercly brain-diseased Fountain
Valley woman allegedly raped while
bospitalized in La Mirada.
Laguna Beach glass
sculptor Tibor Schnelder
la look Ing for a home for
his tiny w()rks of art.I A3
Callfomla
Sirhan Sirhan expresses
first remorse for as-
sassination of Robert
Kennedy./ A5
Natl.on
Discovery's land Ing this
morning ended the most
successful of 18 shuttle
flights./ A4
Indian and Canadian of-
flclals are Investigating a
possible llnk between
fatal Alr-lndla crash and
airport explosion In
Tokyo./A5
Sports
Fountain Valley Hlgh's
Dave Swigart carries the
South All-Stars hopes at
tallback./81
Entertainment
NBC gives viewers a
close-up look at Ameri-
ca's first lady tonight./ A9
INDEX
Bridge A10
Bulletin Board A3
Business A 7 -8
Classified B6-8
Comics A10
Crossword B5
Death Notices B4
Horoscope B7
Ann landers A9
Opinion A S
Police Log A3
Public Notices B4-5
Sports B1-4
Stock Markets A8
T elevlslon A 1 O
·Theaters A9
Weather A2
Physicians at the medical center
were sought after parents of Laura
Eldridge. 35, had trouble fi nding
someone willing to abort the 2()..
week-old fetus.
Eldridge's mother and stepfather.
Helen and Tom Stcgmoyer of Foun-
The couple were told la te Friday
that a doctor had agreed to the
abortion, but backed out minutes
prior to the operauon at Norwalk.
Community Hospital.
"I I'll take a doctor with a lot of guts "lfthccondit1on ts left untreated, i1
could probably result in death."
"'Babies in the womb have been
born and arc walking around as
normaJ humans." said the telegram
Slglled by Edward Jamison, a member
of the board of dtrectors of the
Cahfom1a Pro-Life Council.
0.-,,.. ,.._.., ~ .......
Hunttnaton Beach police officers ~ine pickup truck in•ol•ed in a fatal era.ah with three other •ehicla.
Boy, 9, dies in Huntington smashup
By ROBERT BARKER
ud PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of the Delly ..........
Traffic accidents 1n Huntington
Beach and Laguna Niguel k1lkd two
people and injured three others
Sunday. pohce reponed today.
A 9-year-old Huntington Beach
boy died after a pickup truck he was
nding 1n struck a car on Paci fic Coast
Highway. It was the 11th traffic
fatalit} of the }ear in the beach c11y.
teven 0 11\·er was ejected when the
pickup rolled over tw ice in heav}
Sunday morning beach traffic about a
mile west of Golden West Street.
police said. He died ofmasssive head
1nJunes. authorities reponed.
Phillip Larsen. 33. the dnvcr of the
pickup and reponedly a fnend of the
boy's mother. was reponed 1n senous
but stable condition toda} at Foun-
tain Valley Communll) Hospital.
Two occupants 1n a 1985 Ford
automobile that was struck b}' tht'
truck. John Brandt. 70. and "1arcella
Brandt. 71. of Arlington. Mass .. ~erl"
treated for inJunes at Pacifica C. om·
munil} Hospital in Hun tington
Bc<ich and later released
The Brandis· car and anothc:r
(Pleue eee FAT AL/ A2)
Eldndge once was marned, healthy
and has a son who 1s now 11. She now
1s weak. however. and wetAbs less
(Pleue eee ABORTlOJll/ A2)
Terrorist
wants
U.S. ships
removed
Moslem chief adds
n ew condition fo r
r elease of hostages ----
BEIR L T. Lebanon (AP) -Nab1h
Bern. a leader of the Sluttc Moslems
holdin 40 Amencao hosta m
1rut. sa1 t y t c captives wi
not be released until the United States
pulls 1ts warships back from the
eastern Med11erranean.
Bern's demand added a new con-
dition for the release of the Amcn-
cans. now 1n their 11th day of
cap11v11 y. Unul no_w. Shmes have
only demanded that Israel free more
than 700 Lebanese pnsoners.
Earlier loda). Israel released 31
Lebanese from '\tlll pnson near
Hat fa
Speaking to small group of re·
poncrs at his home in West Beirut.
Bern d1sm1ssed 1he release as a
.. poh11cal zigzag.··
He 1ns15ted the Sh111cs will not free
the 4() 4-mcncans seized June 14
aboard a hijacked TW.\ JCI unul 735
other Lebanese behind bars in Israel
have been released.
Bern. who 1salso Lcbanon·sJustice
minister. said l '.S .\mbassador Re-
ginald Banholome\Ao 1elephoncd him
toda\ to rei terate 1ha1 ~ash1ngt0n
\.\Ouid not pubhch pressure lsratl to
lrl"e the prisoners "'ho Mt" mostl~
\hllll"'>
Rem 'did · fhl" ad' an~l" of the 6th
Fket to\.\ard., uur shores forces us to
(Pleaae eee TERRORJSTS/A2)
ParentsgivegoodgradesinOcean View poll Yacht's at
.,,,., ..... AN AMed If they ~ally uttsfted with the OYef .. , half mast
.... .._....... • perfonMnee of (their) •• *"<>st 1900 parenu relPQndtng Aweldna the rwults of tt\elr annual community aurwy. ~ eave the dlatrtct tta best grtade ever on that 'questton: 91 percent Mid .\ 50.1001 ~l"t\'h. Gala1ea. l)UI of San Vl9w SchoofDtatrict ofllc6al8 brlleed ~for the worst. yM -• '\': • D1l"go lost hoth ns main mast and
OWf' the put year the Huntington ~baaed elementary · "-' 87 .-rcent answered_ to the..,.,. n1-tJon during the m11Zen mast ~unda~ v.hen nscaptam ditltrtcthMdoeedfour~ eliminated th.and.........., h...-Aaa -·1 -s-... -attcmp1ed to mo1or under the ~0---. .._,.. :""''t "'-three preYtc>Ua~. In 1~75, the first Y98r that question WU asked. toot-high hndge be1v..een the Dana :at b!O ottw9 and wrt layoff notleel to doana of t..awa. 77 percent .,.. .. ed yea. . Point~ e,1 Basin and Ea~t 'Basin
,,._.._probably were dl8'>1eued, clatrtct offlcilils speculated. "We're ablotutety thrllled," said Gayle Wayne. lldmtnlatrattve Thl"re were no inJunes
But the 9Ul'Yey reeutta, unveffed last week, lndlca1ed just the &Nlst.nt for the dtatrict. "Over the put~-~•'• been a lot of Tht' o"' ner. John J Murph~. told
oppo91te. {raea99 ... OCSAll/ A2) £Please eee y ACBT I A2)
.Mesa drug firm
finishing tests
on AIDS fighter
Coast 's dolphins
win the attention
·of OCC professor
From 1taff ud wire reports
Researchers arc expected in July to
complete a four-month stud y on a
Costa Mesa company's drug that may
be effective in treating AIDS v1ct1ms.
The study of the drug ribavinn.
designed to treat children's respir-
atory aliments. W1ll be conducted at
New York Hospital-Cornell Medical
Center and include 24 patients with
lymphadcnopathy, a persistent swell-
ing of the lymph glands that can be a
precursor to Acquired Immune Defi-
ciency Syndrome.
The number of AIDS cases re-
ported in the United States has
climbed above 10.000. Half of tho"sc
vicums have died.
Test-tube c ultures studied
previously by the national Centers for
Disease Control in Atlanta showed
that the drug ribavinn slowed the
reproducuon of the virus believed to
cause AIDS. according to a repon 1n Lance~ a British medical Journal.
So w . ribavirin has shown no
serious side effects in the test patients,
although mild anemia has been
reponed. said Dr. Roberts Smith,
president of Viratek. a subs1d1ary of
the druJ'S manufacturer, ICN Phar·
maccut1cals of Costa Mesa.
Smil'h. however. calTCa The anemia
' (Pleue Me AID8/ A3)
Teen pilot escapes
plane crash in HB
A small plane ovenumcd unda)'
durina a forced land•nJ in a plowed
field beside Edison H1ah School 1n
Huntinaton Beach. but the pilot was
uninjured. pohce said today.
The ·Pilot. Chris Barron. 18, of
• Fourttain Valley. look ofT from
McadoYlllatk Alrpon 1n a 'ingle-
cnaine Cessna I 72 on Sunday eve-
nina. hortJy af\crwacd. Batron ex-
perienced en11nc f11lurc. accord1n1 to
Hunt.iftllon Beach pohcc.
That fo~ Batron to try landing 11'1
the field II 1hc soulhcast comtr of
.J
Magnolia trcct and Atlanta Avenue
at about 7:25 p.m. The plane over-
turned upon land1na. police said.
The incident 1s under invcst1gat1on
by the Federal A.,1at1on AdminiS-
1rat1on.
Barbara Abels. an FAA
· spokesy,,oman. said the pilot rcponed
thal elcctncal problems prompted the
fo~ landin1t
he stud tile plane. which rcet'wed
rn1nor damaac 1n the crash. remained
in the field near Edison today as the
f l\A invcllt1gation continued.
... ............ ......,
Denn.la ltellJ atadl• dolpllla llf• a1-. W•t Cout.
Manne biologist.
studen ts seek links
ro .. famny structure·
There's something undeniabl~ the·
atncal ahout Dennis 11..clh and his
dolphins
Holl} v.ood might l'3St th1: Orange
( ·oast College mar~ne tuolo~ust as a
"'1ld old sea sah. spinning his } ams
about dolphins .. as big as co ws" that
)w1m O\er to l~·al surfers to pla}. and
_QI ace thl•1r large ""cl heads a fTet'·
11onateh 1m thl· '\houlder<1 of1hc1r
human cou,.1ns
More a('('urateh the "1h er scrttn
might ec:!nra} hi m as an ect'cntn
professor. obsessed ior }'ears w1tll
uncovenng the 1ntncatc web of social
relations he behcvesex1sts wuh1n a
mile of the Orange Count) shoreline.
1n the populauon of .. Turs1ops Trun·
catus." the Pa 1fic bonlenost'11
dolphin made famous b) the I QN.)'s
telcv1 ton how "Flipper ..
In recent months. the 37-}earold
Ron Ho""ard lookahke, On&Jnalh
from Holl~ wood. has spent constd<'r·
able time both on and off lamcra
talkU'!Jabout his reS<"an:h at OCC"
Kell) 's appcaran~ 1 n front of the
camera. talking to n<'v. t<'.;amo; from
<\BC BC CBS. C 1'\J and pubhc
tele~ 1s1on station . ha 'c hct'n sprnt
lugcl~ dt u'is1n1 h1<; work ht'htnd the
\'amcra -p~otograp,hintt and tud\ ·
1na 1hr Mlmq qo 10-50 dolph1M that
Kell) hasd1\rovettd hvin1 alQnJ th<'
Ocan&e C'oa~\ in the pat;\ C'l&ht \e.a"
lo..tlh and 26 st1,1dent' lrom his
JEFF
SKLANSKY
NEWSMAKERS
da'\\C'\ in lKean11graph\ manne
btolog) dnd marine mammal<, ha\ C'
formc-d the Mannt• \1ammals Rl"-
~arl·h (1mup at ('X "l .\rmt'd~llha
H"nrl\. bud[tet nl 300UI S 000. the
group ha., hccn ta~ing a close look at J
th!· local do.!l!hul1201211la1101'1, one of _
four 1\no"' n populat1C\nl> of Pacific
llottlenoSt"d d1,lphin'> ofTthe coastal
l nt tC'd • la IC'\.
"I neHrt"''C'n 'N'iJ'll'l tc.-d that there
""Crt" dolphani.around hcrt" that vou
lOUld "tUd \ .·· t-..t'lh ..atd tn J ~nt
tnten. It'~ SUrTOUtldt'd h\ dolphtn
posters and manncdt"corat1ons 1n h1'i
'i<lU1h ~nta .\na apanmcnt
\.\hen a 'itudenl intcrruptC'd a
IC<'tUrT on the C iangcs RI\ tr dolphin
in I QP to askahout thedolphtn\ lhe
\ludent said he had Sttn v..h1k \Urfin1
ofTlonJ healhe~. ,._,ell\ ~a .. in ·
credul ous
But ~elh \OOn became a hchtHr.
spun't'd b\' 'reporu from S<'\tral
tudtnt\COnfimung the ~ntt of
la~ numhers or dolphin~ C"ln~ w
'hort" The rae1fi hottkno'Sf which
p0pulat~ the coastal watel"'I from
(Pleue eee DOLPllIPt8/ A2)
I
I
I
._
. . .
A2 * OrMge Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday:'June 24. 1985
State GO P leader in eounty,
bids fo r De m oc rats' backing
Nolan calls on Calif om fa voters to reas"Sess
t heir beliefs again s t pollttcal regtstratton
By JOY DEE ANTHONY .._,,...°""' $ • 1
Repub)jcan Assembly leader Pat
Nolan wants California Democrats to
rtUSC$$ what they suppon as voters,
in compari~n to the stands their
party takes.
Speakina at a breakfast mcetina at
the Saddleback Inn Friday, Nolan
told the Youns Executives of
Southern California that Democratic
voten in California are not oonli~
tent. Si~ 1948, he said. the majority
of Democrats have chosen Re--
publican p~ideots in every year but
1wo, while selecting a majority of
Democratic candidates in the state
legislature. rn the last election, though Demo-
crats did well on the state level.
President Reagan carried S8 of the
state's 80 Assembly districts.
The problems is that for most
people, it's been 20 years since
they've examined the issue of what
party they belong in. Nolan said. He
wants to change that now through a
direct-mail campaign that will con-
trast the Democratic position on
various issues with the Republican
stance.
As part of the campaign, voters will
---
receive a letter from Gov. Georae
Oeukmejian ellolainina why be
switched his alfgaance. from the
Otmocrats to the Republicans.
Deukmejian's messaie will tell
Californians that ··for years I've
fo~t to institute 1he death penalty.
Rose Bird and Jerry Brown j udges
refuse to implement it. The Demo-
crats in the legislature support every
effort to force the coun to do this.
Please join me and the Republicans to
have an effccijve death penalty."
A letter from Propos1t1on I 3 co-
sponsor and lifelong Democrat Paul
Gann will relate bow he decided he
couldn't afford the Democratic party
any longer. "They're for higher taxes:
th~y'rc for more government," Gann
S&Jd.
A letter from former UN Am-
bassador Jeane Kirkpatrick will tell
voters: "AJI my life I've been a
Democrat. I've stood for a strong
nationaJ defense. I've stood for free-
dom. And now I find that the
Democratic party doesn't stand for
those things anymore." While
Kirkpatrick denounced dic-
tatorships. Nolan said. the Demo-
crats deserted her.
It's time to tell voters that problems
Pat Nolan.
like the impending Social Security
crisis will be handled better by
Republicans than by Democrats.
Nolan said. "It now takes two of us to
support every person on Social Secur-
ity. By the ume we get there it will be
one to one. I don't think our children
arc going to want 10 work all year long
to get half of 1t to suppart us."
Nolan favors an opung-out system
whereby wo(Jcers are encouraged to
choose IRAs or other retirement
accounts that pay far m ore than
SociaJ Security is able to.
ABORTION FOR RAPE VICTIM TODAY .•.
From Al
than 80 pounds.
The pregnancy was discovered a
week ago when Eldridge was X-rayed
at Norwalk Community Hospital.
Attorneys for the Stcgmoyers be.-
lieve Eldndge was raped while con-
fined at Mirada Hills Convalescent
and Rel'labiljtation Hospital in La
Mirada.
The Stcgmoyers said Eldridge was
strapped to her bed with wrist
restraints every time they visited her
during the past year. They said they
knew of no other visitors other than
family members.
The Los Angeles County Shenfrs
facilities division of the Los Angeles County Health Services Ocpanrnent.
Mirada Hills faces a fine of up to
$10.000 and has 10 days to submit a
plan that would prevent a similar
problem in the future. Lopez said.
Ao attorney for the hospital said
closing Mirada Hills "would be an act
of uner irresponsibility."
··An unforfb.nate sitUtion has oc-
curred," attorney Robert Gerst told
the Associated Press. "Nobody
knows what caused it or who was
involved.
"We have no evidence to indicate
that the licensee or the administrator
failed t o discharge th eir
responsibilities under the regu-
lations."
But Lopez said health investigators
have concluded that Eldridge became
pregnant at Mirada Hills.
··we have concluded that there was
abuse," he said. "We have not
concluded who specifically did it, nor
who wa.s negligent. That is not our
job."
Depan.ment and the state Health R f · it . fl d t h 0c~rtment are investigating the . e ugee gu1 y Ill re ea
incident.
Tfle Mirada Hills care facility By The Auoclated Prt.11
already. bas been cited and could be A Vietnamese refugee was con-
closcd. health officiaJs said. victed of first~egree murder m the
Health inspectors told the As-death of an Anaheim baker whose
sociatcd Press that Eldridge was body was doused with gasoline and
abused and received treatment at set on fire.
Mirada Hills that created "a substan-Van Tam Truong. 41 . also was
tial probability that death or senous convicted Friday of robbery for
physical harm would result." taking the woman's purse and jewelry
The facility may bc.. • .closed. said J S he fled her burning bakery Aug. 21 .
RaJoh Lopez. head of the health 1983. He was acquitted of a separate
charge of burglary. Jurors deliberated
four hours .
The Orange County Supenor Court
Jury's verdict could send Truong to
state prison for life without the
possibJlity of parole when he is
sentenced by Judge Theodore M 1llard
Sept. 6.
Truong denied dunng his tnal that
he killed Tam Nguyen. 52.
YACHT ••• FATAL CRASHES ••.
Jl'rom Al
Harbor Department officials that he
failed to correctly gauge the bndge·s
he1aht.
Witnesses at the Dana Point Yacht
Club. where the Galatea had been 11ed
off to other yachts. said the crunch
could be heard back at the yacht club.
Murphy motored back to the
Harbor Department where he re-
ported the accident.
Damage to the yacht was not
estimated.
l"l'om Al
pickup truck they struck alter being
hit from the rear by Larsen's pickup
truck both were knocked over the
highway embankment.
Police were invesugaung the acci-
dent today.
The second 1nc1dent occurred at
9:10 p.m. Sunday on Crown Valley
Parkway north of Pacific Island
Drive.
Ken Daily of the California High-
way Patrol said Mary K. Benson, 21.
of Balboa Island was traveling south
m her 1978 Honda Accord at about 70
miles per hour. For an unknown
reason. the woman put on the brakes
abruptly, causing the car to swerve.
Jump a median curb and strike a tree,
the CHP officer said.
Daily said the woman was rushed
by helico{>ter to Mission Community
Hospital in Mission Viejo, where she
was pronounced dead on arrival.
Poisoned dolphins spark
warning of DDT offshore
By JEFF SKLANSKY
Ol IM Delly ..... Ital!
An Orange Coast College manne
b1ologJst says dolphins found dead on
local be-aches have toxic levels of
pesticides in their 11ssues, ind 1cat 1ng a
passible health hazard to people who
eat fish caught here.
But regional health and water
quality officials say they are not
convinced of any real danger. and arr
await1Dg the results of studies of
marine life before deciding 1f they
should ta.Ice any acuon.
Dennis Kelly. professor of oceano-
graphy and marine biology at OCC'.
said that 12 dolphins found dead on
Orange Coast beaches since 1982
have been found to have lhe h1ghes1
levels of DDT in their tissues ever
recorded in mammals.
DDT, an agricultural pest1c1dc
widely used during the 1950s and
'60s. was banned in 1972 because of
its poisonous effect on animals and
possible danger to humans Kelly said
the dolphins' tissues also revealed
high levels of PCB's. a toxic chemical
banned in I 97S.
"People who eat fiih caught locally
in no way are taking in as much DDT
as a dolphin." Ke~I said. add1Dg that
dolphins cat rou ly 20 pounds of
fi cve~y. " ut if you eat fish
year after ~gnfteT }"Ur. it sforc"J In·
your body and it can come up one day
and poison y0u.
··1 personally would not eat fish 0111 or Newport m yself. and I would not
recommend that to anybody. But r m
not '8)'tnl it'll kill you 1f you cat the
fish," he said.
State and county environmental
officials say put studies of Orange
Coast water., have not confirmed
Kelly's findinas. which are based on
1n\•estip1ions he has m ade alona with
a group of 0CC student\ who have
been study1na dolphiM h v1na near
tbe c:oast since 1977.
They point out thtt Kell y has no1
$bown the dolphins died from the
pcsuddcs tbemselves. and say their
own studies arc not yet conclu\lve.
'1'be best mrormauon that we have
iJ WI the"'' nod.a~ ... SJ Id Robert
-==-=::::11 -e ...
DOLPHINS STUDIED •..
From Al
Santa Monica Bay~uth 10 LaJolla,
differs from others of the dolphin clan
in one conspicuous respect
Its members, which Kelly specu-
lates may hve about 40 years, ha' ea
short, rounded beak-about four
inche'\ long, compared 10 other
dolphins whose beaks ma~ \trctrh a~
long as a foot.
But the bottlenose 1s no1 short on
speed. stren$th or smans. Kell) says.
Local dolphins, some 11 feet long and
l,OOOpaundswhen fully mature.
normally cruise the shoreline at abou1
2 knots. but can shoot through the
water at up 10 30 knots for '>hon
bursts.
"They're very 1Dte lhgen't." Kelly
said with theairora proud father
"They have a brain bigger than ours.
They communicate. solve problems
and have long-term memones. ·· In
studjcs else;iwhere. dolphins have
been documented to remember 1nd1-
vidual people, and local surfers have
reported being befriended by
dolpb.ins_aftcrscveral v1s1ts Lo the
same area.
"They're very. very fncndlr
animals," Kelly said.
23-foot boats owned by OCC, and
survey the entire Orange Coast ID
search of the groups of dolphins,
called "pods," which roam the shal-
low waters. The largest number Kelly
said his group has ever recorded off
the coast in a single day was 60
dolphins.
The students and their instructor
then photograph their subjects and
record such information as how
many males or femaJesarc in a group.
how many babies, and what the
dolphin~ arc doing when they are
seen. The key to identtf}'ihg the
dolph IDS, Kelly says. is the dorsal fin
which protrudes above the ocean
surface. revealing nicks, scrapes. cuts
and other identifying marks.
··with these. we can identify a
dolphin just like you can identify a
human with a fingerprint," Kelly
said.
Several times each month. Kelly
nctrompmvt~the~ m two
Kelly feels sure that the local
dolphms have a complicated social
order based loosely on the family, and
says 1hc pods arc a sort of extended
family unit. In ume. Kt'lly hopes to
unravel the Orange Coast bot-
tlenose's society and its rules, an
intricate hierarchy he says still awaits
-~rehenhercand~
Me~an, dirtctor of environQlen-·
tal health for Ornnae County.
.. At the present ume there 1s no
data to sugest that there 1s any health
haurd to people eatrng fish caught ofT
the Orange Coast," Merryman said.
Two 1"tlJOnal agencies -the state
RegjonaJ Water Ouahty C'ontrol
Board and the locally funded
Southern Cahfomia Coastal Water
Research Project -arc studying
animals and sediment in the Orange
Coast area to determine the level ol
chemical pollution In the area's
waters and its cause.
Joanne Schneider. an environ men·
t.al spedaJist wuh the state board. said
prtvtous $tud1e! have hown "rela-
tively high'' levels of DDT m San
Diego CrTek and 11\ tnbutane\. as
~--=--1
well as Newport Bay. A sediment
study ID January revealed DDT at all
22 stations the board monitored in
the Newport Bay area, Schneider
said.
Schneider 5ald much of the DDT
may have been 5praycd on Oranse
County soil before it was banned 13
years ago. and could be showina up in
the water and sediment now becauK
of widespread construction tumina
over topsoil in the county.
Kelly sutaests 1he DDT bcina
found 1n thedolphms may be decom· po~ Dichofol. a pesticide similar to
DDT which 15 still used leaally in
Orange Count)'. But Schneider said
D1chofol 1s not nearly as widely used
herr a, It would have to be to account
for the levt'I~ of DD J being detected
..
Cloudy inornings will continue
The apace lhuttle °'8covery droPS*I out of a QOfd·tlnQed
dnert dawn onto the dry lak• at Edwtrdt Air Force BaM today.
but moet of SoutMf'n CeUtornle had to atart the day with a
gloomy. gray outloOk
s--t lot 8 p1n. EDT, Tut., .""9 H
The coastal., ... ..,. aub.19ct to the lnfluenet of a tow
Pf991Ure ., .. on the Southern c.Jlfomla coast that la moving
toward the eouthw.atern United Stet• and wlU oontmu.
drawing low ctoud• further Inland at du1k and dawn, the Netlonal
W•ther ~ aald. Along the Otanoe Cout there wlll be night and morning low
c:touda and fog, othefWiM fair. Sllghtly cooler Tuelday. Lowa In
the low 50a to mid SOa. Highs Tuesday ranging from the upper
SOa to low 701 along the beechel to tho mid aos In. tri. warmer
Inland valleys.
Utt .. Rocle 112 73
1.0ullvijle 118 66
I
Temps
Mef'rlp/111 93 ,. ••<ftt~ '"°"": HiOh low lor 24 hour• endlnO et 61 m Mlemta..cll 91 70 ............. 16 $3 Wetm-COIO.,..
~ ... • Mpi.-St Pll\ll 71 61 ~ .. SlellOtWYA.-AllluquetQue " 66 NMtwtlle Ill 19 SllOWert Ali\ ,_,,, .. , ~
~ 117 81 .... OOMnt 90 70 N91GrW W.... atMc• HOM. U 8 0... 9' C-U II 60 -v-,, 71 A--0-
AllMte .. " HOtfolk.Ve .. 71
Attanttc: Cffy 74 17 Ok!Mome Ctty 90 n Calif. Temp• 72 53 Au.tin 97 73 Omll\t es 66 $111\la S..bet• Baltlmof• .. II OrlenOo 19 71 Stoc:IClon '° 57
81rm4ngh¥11 99 97 Plllllldtll>N• as Ill Hlgll, low I0< 24 l\OUts enOinO 8t 5 P m HIOh. low tor 2<1 hour• ending et 5 o m !MtSIOW l()f .. 81am.,c~ 73 55 Phoenix IOI 97
8olM 95 so 112 97 Belc ertllt4d 112 14 91 64
Boat on 78 87 Picttbu~ POl'lll .Mt 17 eo 8111\oC> Eur•U eo '1 Blylht 113 IO
ButlClllo 81 511 P0<11~,0r 58 '1 F1eeno IHI .. Cet .. int I& se
c~ 113 12 Provl<Mnct 79 ee Lanc:atter 115 92 LonQ BMOll IO 11
Chllt14Mlton,S C ae 111 :~::n.ty ae 17 lot~ 79 63 MOfWOY\41 IO se Cl\MIM\Otl,W v_ 81 14 II 82 Otl<..,.d Ill sa MonMitey " se
Cllariotte,N C Ill M Reno 89 55 Peeo Aobltt 81 ~ Ml wtleotl 71 IO
~ 18 S3 Rlcllmond 113 96 Atd 8lulf 113 ,, Newport 8Mdl .. eo
ClllCegO " eo 8tl0Uit 111 ,, AtCIWOOCI Cttv 75 57 .. 59 ()ftlMIO Clndnn•ll 15 97 St "91• T """'9 112 73 Sect-lo 92 55 p .... ~ 114 n 96 sa ~ ... 13 Seit Liiiie City 119 71 Stltnat P...0-ee 14 56 ColumDus,Oll 95 ... Sen AlltoNc> 90 75 San Oleeo 73 At...iot .. 57
Conootd,N H 90 ee SM JUatl,P.R 19 75 S... Frencl9co 117 541 SM &ern¥dino 82 61 OMas-FIWO<tll 113 71 s..11 .. as 411 ., 57
Otyton 13 14 Slv...eport Ill SanOa11tlti ee Sen~ 79 69 o.n .... 114 91 Sc>ok-II 31 SMt•Ane ~ eo a...._ eo eo Syr900M 94 13 Tides Sant•Cna st
O.troi1 82 67 TOC>tl!a 114 ee fW-Ve/Wf "° OuNtll 67 311 Tuc:aon ICM 711 Torrence ~ 61 El PNC> 911 71 TulM tlO 75 TOOAY 57 \'OMmlttVly F.i<b.,.kt 11 50 WUlllOQlon 88 70 Second hl\)11 3 51 pm 13
S«:onotow 11:23p.m 25 Fergo II 47 Wlelllla 112 73 Fl.tan 83 61 Wiik-Batre 92 ee TUIEIOAY Surf Report 0.lltld Rapids 117 53
Greet Falle tlO !14 Fir. t ll;gll ''°• m 4 I
HertlO<d 91 :~Extended Flnt IOw 1131 •m 06 LOCATIOef llZI MAN
HelttWI tlO s.ccw>d high •·33 pm •8 Hunllng10f't 8Mcll 1·2 poor
10 51 pm Ill ,.,_Jelly, Hewpot1 Honolulu .. 72 Stcono IOW 1·2 poor
HOullon 116 75 Fair tlvoug!> the perlOCI willl wwmer .0111 s1.-. Hewpor1 1·2 poor
17 dtya but -lett night lltld morNng Sun Wll tOday et IOI pm. -22nd Su... Hewpot1 1·2 poor lndltNpolt$ 18
.Jtc:lle0<>,Ms 115 10 low c:ioudUI ,_ tflt OOMI ~ TUMC!ay at 5 43 a..m lltld Nit IQllln as BelbOa WtOge 1·2 poor
et 97 wecin.csey renglng lrom 70. -.,,. IOI pm uoi-~ l.,Z poor
__ .,,...
J<-.u 14 ._ OOM1 lo llOa tnlend WwmlnQ aC>Oul S Moon r•-today at 11 SI• m . •• T~yet 12 ttla..m lln(lr-~at
Sen Clemente 1-2 poor
Water temp. ea ~Oty 19 14 dtgt.-tnlenO portlona -In the 12 57 .... s .... direction. ao.i"'-LUY-105 81 '*100. Low9: 52 10 65 !>
TERRORISTS TO U.S.: PULL SHIPS •••
FromAl
add one more condition -this time
for the Amal movement-and that is
the withdrawal of 1he 6th Fleet from
our coa.st."
In Washington, Deputy Press Sec-
retary Robert Sims said Berri's latest
demand will not change U.S. policy,
which he said is not to deal with
terrorists.
Asked if the new demand was a
troubling development. Sims said:
"It's troubling that they're continuing
to hold these innocent people ... It's
complicated enough already."
The Pentagon has confirmed that a
U.S. Ootilla led by the aircraft earner
USS N1m1tz is in the eastern Mediter-
ranean. It was dispatched after the
TWA Boeing f/27 was hijacked by·
Shiite extremists on a Oight from
Athens, Greece, to Romt'.
nle warships are reparted about .25
miles off Lebanon's coast.
Saturday Berri accused the Un1ted
States of planning a "military o per-
ation·· in Lebanon. He made the
cha'le after F-14 fighters from the
Nimitz were reparted to have flown
over Beirut. a charge lhe Defense
Department denied.
The 31 prisoners freed by the
Israelis were turned over today to
·representatives of the International
Red Cross at Ras el Biyada, five miles
north of the Israeli border.
Officials in Israel said release of the
prisoners was not intended as pan of a
deal with the sky pirates. But Israeli
sources said 1t was aimed at providing
an opening to end the impasse. which
began with the hijacking of a TWAjet
with 153 people aboard.
In an interview today on ABC-TV's
"Good Morning America,.. Israeli
Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir
said the rest of the Lebanese prisoners
"will be released when the situation in
the southern part of Lebanon im-
proves."
"It's a leg.al process. but 'it doesn't
have a plan or a timing. We have to
sec how it proceeds," Shamir said.
Those freed today included 2S
Shiites and six Sunni Moslems.
according to an Israeli government
official who spoke on condition of
anonymity.
OCEAN VIEW GETS GOOD GRADES •.•
l"romAl
activity that's no t normal and not
pleasant. B1>t people seem to have
realized It wlls neassal'). ·
"We expected a much higher
negative response because people
don't hke to see their neighborhood
schools closed."
Like other West Orange County
school districts. Ocean View has
experienced a sharp enrollment de-
cline, losing S,000 students over the
past 12 years. Its current e nrollment
is about 9,000.
In past years. the district has closed
two elementary schools. Thi$ mon1h.
It ended instruction at four more
(Glen View, Pleasant View, Lark
View and Meadow View). leaving 19
still open. Beginning in September,
lhe district will no longer offer
seventh and eighth ~rade classes a1
Westmont, Circle View and Village
·View schools.
Wayne said these changes will
affect almost 30 percent of the
district's students. She speculated
that parental respanse showed ap-
proval because 1he decisions were
made in May 1984, allowing a year to
prepare for the changes.
Extensive teacher layoffs had never
before been required 1n the district.
But 1n Mav. Ocean View sent lavofT
notices to 04 I teachers, Wayne said.
She said the district hopes to be able
10 hire back about a dozen in the fall.
During April and May. Ocean
View's annual community survey,
established in 1974. was conducted
by an Anaheim research firm.
This year, more than 2.000 surveys
were mailed at random to Ocean
View parents. By return mail and
telepbone interviews. responses were
obtamed from 92 percent of these
parents. Results were computed on a
district-wide and school-by-school
basis.
Wayne said favorable responses
were obtained throughout the 15-
square-mile district. which ranges
from affluent Huntington Harbour to
areas of more modest income where
students need special help in learning
English.
At fi ve schools. not a single
respandent said he was dissatisfied
with the overall performance of the
school. Wayne said. Those schools
were: College View. Golden View,
Lark View (which JUSt closed),
Manne View and Star View.
Parents gave the district high
marks on other questions:
• 79 percent believe their principal
was responsive to their concerns.
• 92 percen1 believe their school
was reasonably well maintained.
• 82 percent believe they were
be1Dg adequately informed about
their child's progress.
• 76 percent believe student dis-
cipline is being handled properly at
their school.
• 88. ~rcent believe the proper
emphasis 1s placed on basics such as
reading, math and English.
Only about half of the surveyed
parents believe their school provided
adequate food service.
. Wayne said. the district is trying to
improve that in area. But she added,
.. There's no way to make 9.000 kids
all like school lunches."
AIDS DRUG TESTING WINDING UP •.•.
From A l
"llm11ed and reversible "
No genetic damage has shown up 1n
lcsts on primates. he added.
Approval by the U .S. Food and
Drug Administration for ribavirin's
use against respiratory syncytiaJ
virus. the chief cause of lower
respiratory tract disease in infants
and young children, is expected soon,
Smith said.
R1bavirin works by short<ircuit-
mg 1hc genetic process used by the
virus to reyroduce , itself, said a
spokesman for ICN.
Smith said Viratek hope the drug
will prove useful in combating AIDS,
D== le Ouerenteed
Morl09y ~ " '°" 00 no! ..... yOur peo. O'(
530pm cMbtbt 7P"' ""° 10"' ~ .... t>t ~
hepa111" A. genital herpes and herpes
lOster. which causes chicken pax and
shingles.
But as an approved 1reatment for
any of those diseases. including
AIDS. nbavirin still needs more
research.
··w e're very hopeful we can make a
contribution against that dreadful
disease," Smith said.
AIDS breaks down the body's
immune system, leaving it d efense-
less against tr variety of potentially
deadly diseases. Its victims ure chiefly
homosexual men, hemophiliacs. drug
users who share needles and Haitians.
When the New York study is
complete, cl1n1cal studies of
ribavirin's effectiveness agains t
AIDS will be considered at hospitals
hke San Francisco General and He~ry ~ord Hospital in Detroit.
Sm 1th said.
While excited about ribavirin's
Potential for AIDS patients. Smith 1s
!1'01"t Optimistic about its USC a&ainst
influenza.
As many as 4~.000 people die each
year t>:ecau~ of IDfluenza, he said. "In
an ep1dem1c y~r. it can be 100.000.
In my view. influenza is far more
important."
Wbat do you llkt aboat tbe Dally Pilot~ Wlaat do•'• yo. llb? Calf tile
number at It.ft ud your menage wUI be recorded, trae1cribed uct dt.Uvered to Ute appropriate editor.
ftt. tame !4-ltou u1werl•1 service may k aat.d to record let ten to tltt.
editor on u y topic. Co.trilHltor1 to Hr Letters eot1mn •••t tnclllde tltelr
name ud tele,.one namkr for verification. No clrcalatloa calla elease Ie"H•~oa-yMr__...._ ·
K..-.n Wtt1met'
General Ml'IMgtr
Clrculatlon 714190..tm c ......... 8dvwttelng 714/IQ."71
AU other cl9pertrnente M1-41t1
MAIN OPPICI
3JO WMI 8iay 61 ~a ....... ~A
M..i aoor-flo• 1seo ec.. 1.1-. c" 9~
la1uro.v 11\d Sunoity II
10U Oo no! ,_ yOlll ~ 0y 1 e m G4iJ bt'OI•
10 t m and y<lul CoPY -
Fr.nk Zlnl
Fdllnr
AoMmary Chvrchman
Conirottor
COpyttgM 1118) °'"'9" Coetl ~ ~ Ho
-t:io.,.. llWtrenant. e<MONll me11er or eo-1 .. ,,.,., ""t'll ,..., be •ec><oouc.a """<Jut ..... I* -111~\lftQlll-
°' °"""'eel
Clrculetton
Tel1~tM
Moll
()rsngt (;cum\o ··-.......
--<
Robert L. Cantrell
Pr0<.1uc11()1"1
Manager
Hou a d Mullen..,
Advei1111ng °"ec1or
Donald L. Wiiiiama
C1rcu1a11on
Man&Qef
' ---_..._ __ _
I ..
.
Kids' playiround
reopeningln BB
Adve~ture ~layaround, located next to the
Central Library 1n Huntington Central Park 1n
Hun11ngton Beach, opens its summer program
today. A grand opening pany with refreshments
games and pnzes will~ held next Monday. '
The Tom Sawyer environment of Adventure
Playgro und gives children the opponunity 10 build
their own fons, sail raf\s on a pond, walk over water
on a. rope bridge and slide into a sea of mud.
Adm1ss1on 1s $1 per day and more information may
be obta1ned.. . .by calling the, Huntingtq,n •Beach
Community Services Ocpanment at 538i.~ or the playground at 842-7442.
Vacatloa aecurlty dlscuued
Costa Mesa's Dcpanment of Leisure Services
and Police Dcpanment will co-sponsor a comm uni-
t) relations seminar Tuesday on home security and
vacation checks 1n the Neighborhood Community
Center. 1845 Park Ave .• Costa Mesa.
The free seminar. scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m.,
will offer suggestions. recommendations and steps
to take to secure the safety of your home while you're
away. Call 645-8551 to regJSter or obtain more
mforma11on.
Whale mlgr atlon newed
The latest research findings on gray whale
m1gratton will be discussed at Thursday's meeting of
the Orange County chapter of the American
Cetacean Society.
Michael Poole. a graduate student from UC
Santa Cruz. will speak on his research on
chemoreception and ni~ht migration of gray whales
along the northern California coast, The meeting,
which 1s free and open 10 the public, will be held at 7
p.m. in the Costa Mesa Community Center, 1845
Park Ave .. Costa Mesa.
Quake measures alred
A free earthquake preparedness seminar will be
held Thursday m the conference room of M1ss1on
Community Hospital, 27802 Puena Real. Mission
VieJO.
Paul Russell. disaster planning director of the
hospital. will lead the class from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Call
495-4400. ext. 580, for additional information.
Dem• mull death penalty
Capital punishment will be the topic of
discussion at Friday's monthly meeting of the
Democratic Club of South Orange Count)!. to be
held at Western Federal Savings. 26980 Crown
Valley Parkway, Mission VieJO.
Paul Loveless will discuss current legislation
and recent controversial California Supreme Court
rulings at the 7:30 p.m. program. which as free and
open 10 the public. Call 240-8665 for further
information.
Claalcal program slated
The Crystal Cathedral Symphony Orchestra
will present its fourth annual Tchaikovsky spectacu-
lar Friday at 8 p.m in the cathedral. I 214 l Lewis St..
Garden Grove.
Featured works will include the waits from
··Eugene Onegin," the suite from "The Sleeping
Beauty," the "Romeo and Juliet Fantasy Ovenure··
and the "1812 Overture" complete with choir and
cannon. Call 971-4162 or 971-4164 for reservations.
Lazerlum set by Irv1ne
The Irvine Community Services Department
will sponsor a "Lazenum," an evening at the
Gnffith Park ObscrvatOI) for "Lazer Platinum
Rock" Saturday from 7:30 to 11 :30 p.m.
Admission 1s S9 for participants 16 and older
and includes adm1ss1on and transponauon. Regis-
tration is being accepted at Deerfield Community
Park. 55 Deerwood West. Irvine. and the deadline is
noon Thursday. Call the park at 551-8638 for more
information.
CALENDAR
Monday, June 24
• 6:30 p.m .. Costa Mesa Planning Commi11ioo
. City Council Chambers. 77 Fair Drive.
• 7:30p.m., lrvlaeTrauportatJooCommiuloo
. City Council Chambers. 17200 Jamboree Blvd ..
• 7:30 p.m .. Newport Beacl1 City Cou cll, City
Council chambers. 3300 Newport Blvd.
PoucE Loe
l .
Glass menagerie
looking for home
Sculptor of aniinaI -
miniatures hoping -
fObeatOdds again ---By LISA MAHONEY
Of tM Dilllr ..........
Laguna Beach glass sculptor Tibor
Schneider has beaten the odds more than
once in his 44 years.
The Hungarian-born craf\sman fled has
communist-run homeland m 1966, helped
his wife escape two years later then brought
his daughter out. setting eyes on her fort.he
first ume when she was 4 years old.
Five years ago, the Schneiders pulled up
stakes and moved from weden, where
they had been granted asylum. to the
United States.
Now living in Westminster. Schneider
found a home for has craft 1 n Laguna Beach.
But whether he can stay there depends on
his finding a cheap place 10 work and
display creations which mclude some of
the tiniest miniatures m the world.
Examples of Schneider's mimatures -
standing less than one-eighth of an inch
high -are on display at the Gumness
Museum in Sweden. The unr. glass
sculptures are smaller than a pencil eraser
and intricately made despite their Lillipu-
tian size.
lf}ou ask ham, hne1dercan reproduce
the f.amaly pet or any othtr request on
demand. ,
Schneider spent has fitlt two years lO the
United St.ates tounni with mft sh.ows
until 1982 when be bcpn rcnuna space 11
Laguna Village, a collect1on of anists'
kiosks on a bluff top alona Pacific Coast
Hiabway.
fhe Village. owned by Bob Buettner and
Edward Olson, as one of the few affordable
places left for anists in downtown Laguna
Beach.
Schneider says he was happy with hit
workplace overlooking the ocean and t.he
improvements he made to his kiosk made
him feel the place was has own.
But, V1llaae management was apparent·
ly displeased with the glass sculptor
because he spent time away at craf\ shows
and dad not keep his kiosk squeaky clean.
Schneider sa)s Buettner told him 10 late
Ma y that he must move from has one-man
kiosk to communal work space ma larger
bu1ld1ng near t.he highway. The sculptor
refused and found himself out on his ear.
Sc-hne1der said what upsets him most
about his ev1cuon 1s the loss ofh1s clientele.
He's handed out thousands of business
cards over the years listing Laguna Vil-
lage's address and his now-disconnected
telephone. The phone number is the only
way some of his repeat customers know
how to reach him, he said, and Schneider
fears he won't be missed 1f the Village
replaces him with another glass artist.
Tibor Schneider need.a a home for Illa fracue animal•. Schneider does not use a magnifying
glass to help form the mm1a1ure dogs, frogs,
fish and other creatures he makes. Depend-
ing on the naked eye alone. he uses a name
to melt the colored Italian glass. then uses
implements to make its shape. most often
that of an animal. Ttn) eyes, legs. fish fin s.
bird beaks and tails are expenl) added.
"My customers (will be) asking where 1s
Tibor. where as the glass and t am not
there ... He will put somebody else there
with glass. That gu y ultimately will take m)
customers," he said.
has been renting space at the Sugar Plum in
Laguna Beach, but business has 001 been
good. he says. The variety of ttems to ~
and bu~ dilutes the effect of bts glass an,
Schneider ~vs
Schneider 1s asking for help lo find a small
place of tlis own where he c.an mold his
glass creations while awed children and
fascinated adults look on. "I not need a big
place Just a place I can find peace and
make happ) agarn my customers." Smee leaving Laguna Village. Schneider While grateful for the d1spla) space.
Most tainted cheese gone; probe continues
1 LQS <\NGELES ( ;\P)-W1th more than 100 tons ot
recafled Jaliscocneese destroyed. state o fficials focused on
mspectton procedures to prevent any repeat of a bactenal
outbreak that has claimed -'3 lives.
Stuart Richardson, chief of the food and drug branch
of the State Department of Health Sen ices, said Sunda}
the arduous process of find mg and removing cheese from
store shelves has nearly been concluded I 0 days after the
June 13 recall of cheese made by Jalisco Mn1can Products
Inc.
"We're close to I 00 percent now. Los Angeles County
Federated comes to Mesa
Keith Powell (left), pre.ident of the Feder-
ated qroup, and Wilfred Schwartz, cha.lr-
man of the board, celebrate the weekend
1s done The) alone ha"e gone to 2bA..W places:· said
Richardson.
Inspection records sho" that between Janua!) I Q84
and May 1985, cheese manufacturers m the state
underwent an a\erage of 2.3 sanitation 1nspect1ons per
}ear and 2.5 pasteunzatton inspections per }Car.
There 1s no law regulattng how man} 10spec11ons
must be made. The State Department of Food and
Agnculture's Milk and Dairy Foods Control branch
adopted , self-imposed guidelines calling for four
pasteurization 1nspect1ons and three sanitation lnspec-
tions a year.
grand opening of the fa•t-growtna elec-
tronic• retaUln& chain'• newe.t atore at
620 W. 17th St., C08ta Mesa.
Hans Van es. deput) director of the state Food and
Agriculture DcpanmenL iniuall} predicted officials
would impose stncter 1nspecuons.
··V.,.e're gomg to have to change procedures. lighten
procedures." he said last week .. We need to putt.he system
under the microscope."
But he said Sunda) "I want to wan unul I find out
what went wrong and what went nght so we can e\ aluate
\\hat needs to be done. 1f an) thing. in the future 1 rea.11)
have to have the final results to know where I'm at and
where we ought to be going... r
Toxic fumes.
rout2,000
in Anaheim
By tbe Associated Press
..\~ .\HEl~1 -:\earl~ ~ OUtl people remamed
tempor:mh homeless late this morning as tO\K l ht>m1cals
smoldered in a pest1ude "arehnu~ after a "et.>kend fire
that forced t"' al ua11nn ol a ~uarl' m1k around thl
building
'41 nl' pt•opk ~nmpl.unn1 t\I nau\<.'a and heada~he<,
after t"\poi,un· to the luml·~ but nl>nl' "'l'rt h1.1sp1tah1ed
One eng1m• rompan~ and '"u hazardous matenab
speci alists n·ma1ned at tht· "'an·house tcxla~ to monitor
the smoldenng bla1e. said c11' spot..es"oman Cartil
Johnson
Most of the C'' acut'C'S found their o"' n lodging and
on h about 3 people bedded down at the -\mencan Red
Cross shelter at K.uella High School unda' night. shelter
manager Tern ~h Laughlin ~1J
"The' 're 1at..1ng 11 QUI!(' "ell I think,'' Mclaughlin
said
..\ hazardous "astc tc.>am staned cleanmg up tht·
chemicals toda\ but "ere procee<lmg.slo" I) becau~ of the
potential for e"<plos1on \.81d -\nahe1m Fm· CX-panment
ln,esttgator Mile.> Dcxh
-\nahe1m ~put~ Fire '1arshal va11 \1cCloud said
residents "'mg on tht" pcnmeter of the-e' acua11on zonl'
might be able to go home aro und noon He had no 1Jea
"hen those ll'tng closer to the "arehouse would bt'
allo"ed to return
.\It hough damage estimate~ were-still una' a1lablc.-. he
s,a1d. "The hrtfight1ng costs and d1splacemen1 costs "'111
prohabl~ ncee-d damage costs ··
Bandit pushes into home,
robs Mesa couple of $430
I '18.i ~u1uk.1 550 ml>lorr H·k '1t1kn
"h1le at was parked in lmnt lll \,1m·,
•Seafood Restaurant. 1621l\ Pal·1ti\
Coast Highwa). unda'. • • • A shoplifter was apprehendi:d .11 J
Mcrvyn·s depanmen1 store l.l!\l I
A.dams. unday. The S600 in dothing
and perfume he allegedh s1ok \\3"
recovered
'toragc ltll Jt l ll50" <.. rJrltt•ld .\ H • • •
Burgla~ broke: a \\ indo"' 1n thl'
l 1000 bloc!.. of Flo"er and stok J
'1deo cassette rC'torder and J<'"Clr"
'alued at S 1.300 •••
Someone broke into a 11.l"' ~
~lerct'des-Benz in the I I 000 block ot
l\·tJ I .rnd .. u 1il' .111 .\1\11 f-\1 ,a<;..etll'
.rnJ ,11hcr r.1d111,•4u ipmcnt 'll\H'd at
SMlO • • • Thie' l'" entered a home in thl
I 6000 bk'll.:k. of Mt Eden through .1
bt'droom "indo"' and stole LP rC'-
t'ord'i 'alu~ al SJ50 and ransackt-<l
the rcs1dt'nce
An armed robber forced his way
into the home of an elderly Costa
Mesa couple late Sunday night, tied
the v1ct1ms up and left wi th $430.
police reponed this morning.
Lt. Jae« Cal non said the bandit cut
the telephone lines outside the house
in the 800 block of V1ctona Street
before knocking at the door about
I 1:30p.m.
Answering the door. Frank k1n-
ner, 70, was pushed back into the
house by a man displaying a small
blue handgun, CaJoon said.
Skinner and his 68-year-old w1ft',
Jean, were then tied up by the rob~r.
who said he onl) wanted mone}.
The assailant was descnbed as
"'bile. 6 feet tall. 160 pounds. in his
JO "''th shon brown hair and a well -
tnmmC'd mustache and beard.
ThC' t..mners were not tnJured.
No further dt'taal!. were a' ailable
this morning.
Coeta MeM Laaun• Beaoh ll'Tlne
One man was inJurcd and another A man reportedly exposed himself ~ S3.000 cellular phone was taken
• • • Vandals smashed the gla!I tront
door of a Don Jose·) rt'<.t.iurant.
151 01 Golden West. unda' The
door was rcponedl) wonh S5()() • • • A man and a "oman '\H'fl' ap-
prehended for shoplifting at a \lont-
gomcry Wa.rd depanmcnt store in the
Hunungton Center. .,77"' Edinger.
Sunday. The) were cited and rt"-
lcascd. and the S40 ele'l.·tnc hlendcr
they allegedly stok "'as rc<'l" aC'd •••
Woman 'shows' thief
where her wallet was
Cll'arl\ '1'1ttle rrom '.1.llhin tht'
pur;c "'·a., LattC'n·~ S 1.50 dC'~1gn<'r
wallet. contnmmg s:.WO 10 cash
pohce reportt'd
~ner betn[! .10,tll·d and bumpt'd,
1
was arrested u~day after a soccer Su.nday afternoon in the alley behind from a ve h1de parked on Baddie
game that ended in a brawl. at Kaiser Forest Avenue, the victim told pohcc. Dnve
Elementary School. Albertmo Vaca-Thesus""'ctwasdescribcdasamanin b • 1• ! d h · G · 25 f c t M as . ..-. . omconc urg anze t e mus1c . arciasr~. · ~ . os r8 :.sa .~his late 30s._ with dark hllL.and &...-1000, nnchTCl[tl offict :trt1n'l'Vel"tiTy _.booked 1MJ...,$.\lSlUQ.ftOJl.i ~. a~d &-~1 fiffiS ac e-:-POTice were unable to Higl; School over the weekend.
A thief stoic S 113 1n l'a h. a $455
camera. and a S 1.200 n ng fn.)m a gold
N»-4 ~ttd-at ,~~ll
Brookhurst and Bushard aturJ.i'
night. The victim, a resident 1t1 1hc
22300 block of Brookhurst. ~1d 1ha1
the 11cms were t3ken wh1lt' he wa., at
1he beach
It "as a clear tut ca~ of"now )'OU
~e 11. no" \OU don't" for the "Oman "ho~ "'allet was stolen from her
tran<>pnrent plastic purw at a Co ta
\.fr"'1 l>hopp1ng t'Cnter
Norma Sue Latten 'W, of V11ln
P.!!r~ Vias camin~ the ss.:c:lhr~h \houlder ba.g "l'it e watUn& m c
l'htcl out hoe around :?·40 p.m
')undn' at t-·\O Schwarz. an e'clusiH
h" '\tore rn '\outh Coast Plaza.
Latten am' t-d at th<' cashier. and
d1~Q\cred thaUWJl("Ql)C-bad .......,._a:;,.... __ _,
nap into tht" 'lidc of hC'r purse an
dTeadly we3a8ponfa Aer h1car o a azh~r locate the man's wherc,1tbou1s: Musical instruments were found orrcs. , o na e1m was 1t • • •, • . . Sch I ffi · I several times on the head with a metal A man s wallet with cash inside was strewn about. . oo o 1c~a s arc
pipe. Both men were treated at Costa taken while the vi.ctim. was. at the trying to dt'termmt if an)'thana was
Mesa Medical Center Hosp11al and ~ach Sunday on Vactona Drive. taken. •
• • • • • • then rtlease~. V11ca-Gamas re· A man's Peugeot bicycle valued at i\ Mu1rlands Parkwa) fi'!"' re·
maincd 1n poht; c.u ~od)'. $250 was stolen Saturtay on Ocean poncd th~t romcone 1.ook Oil and
Jewelry and cash wonh $45 wc:re Way. the victim told police. lubncant from the hu1ld1ng ovcm1aht
ed I r. h h • • • Saturda) report sto en 1rom a ome in l c Pollet •~sted four moton~ts on · • • • .
1600 block of Elm 1reet. some11mc suspicion of dnvina under the in-A JU"emlc was !ient to Oran~ ~tween 5 pm. and 10: 10 p,m nucnce ofalcohol. Dean ott mith, Count) Juvenile Hall on susp1c1on of
. aturday. Entry was made through an 31. was arrested shortl) after mid-a\Jault turday. No fun her details
unlocked rear kitchen door ni""'t unda) on North Coast Hiah-err-na1lahlc • • • .,, K I • • • A $500 Persian cat. l)amed wa). Theodore Lonnie el erman. • Cu auyen. 19. was arresttd on
··Sa1mm," was reported stolen from 43, was stopped at S p.m unday On' su,p1c1on of po sns1na stolen prop-
the front porch of an apartment at South C'oas\ H1ahway ,.tn l )nl\ ert) ~turda) He was booked a1'
2340 Santa An• A \.C . tictwccn 8 am Telford 29. was arttsted at I .SO m Oran&e Count~ Jail and 3 p.m unday It wa reported!) Mot1day on La Brea trttl and Nonh
the fint time the prd1&rttd cat (oa I H1ahway Franets Leon'
wandtrcd from the l"C'>1dcnn· fo r McKen11c. 27. was \topped . turda) Hunttncton Beach
mon.-than five nunutr\ at a time cvrning on Glcnnc re trttl .\ \\ C\tmtn\te"r man had h1~ blue
_.,
• • • Entenn& through :m open garage
door. a thief <;tole 5500 m cash from a
home 1n the QOOO blocl of Bobbie
Saturda) night. Accordma to poh~
the cash. in SSO bill'>. "'a\ <;attmg on
the kitchen sml • • • meont' stole a I 1·~pttd N1~h1l1
bt~-cle worth S200 from 1n front of 1
home 10 the 1 S.\00b1°'k of .\ndaman
turdt) night
P'oantain Valley
Thte\lt'S stole a telt'' 1~on s.t't and J
bnt'fcut contain1na m1sttllaneou\
documents and mem~nh1p card"
aOcr brea .. 10g 10to 11 motor home 111 .l
talen her wallet. police reported.
The total loss ""as estimated at S 3 I 00, ai: ·ord1ng to pohC't' rrpons.
Gunfire kills 3 in Compton
l<)MPTOI\ \.\Pl -Thrtt men
..... e~ l11l('d and 3 founh .,...,s wounded
earl\ Monda' in a h:lll of sho" fif'f'd
trom a p.i~sina t .&r. pohct said
I:kad at the scene was John ( otbin.
lO H1~ brotlK'r arl. 1 • and nellhbor
Monty Hannon. 19. died !>hortl after
am,al 11 Manin Luthtr lung Jr
(f<-ntral Ho'ip1tal, DctC\.tl\e Stone\
Ja1;l\on S31d
Kctth Jo.nC$.. 17. was hstcd 1n t.ablr
rond11 1on with hull<'I ~ound'i 1n an
arm
f h<' '1tllm~. all n·\ldenl\ of(. um
pton . .,...C'rt ..... alkang 1n the CIOO block of
North loan .\\enue "hen the car
'ilowC'd down 'and 'ihot we-rt fil't'd
trom the front and bacl \Cit .
"1tnes5n told pohct
I\ mou"e for the I 4 am ltlhngs
v.as not immC'duucl) lnnwn, but
polK't' duJ not think It ""a5 pnJ.
related
i\lthoua,h dct.111'1 of tht' dnv~-b)
hoot1na ~rt." \kCICh )-. Wllne'i..~
d~nbed tht 'eh1 It a\ a dar\-
'-'olortd To,ota or Oat un
....
I
f
. •
A4 * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday. June 24, 1986
sri uttle ends 'suocessf ul ' t r i p
---Deep, sandy trough
indicates braking
problem unsolved
EDW RD AIR FORCE BASE
(AP) -Discovery's international
crew swooped out of orbit today and
guided the space plane to a (X'rfcct
dawn landmJ on a de~rt runway to
conclude a flight hailed ns one of the
most successful of the 18 shuttle
m1ss1ons.
As the shun le rolled to a top. 1t dua a six-inch-<ittp trouah 1n the sand.
1ndicatm1 a repetition of the brake
probkm that hns rerouted the landing
site of the shuttle from F1orida to this
.descn base.
Five Americans, a French te§l.pilot
and a Saudi Arabian prince touched
down at 6: 12 a.m .. after a weeklona.
2.9-million-mile journey during
which they launched a record four
satellites and their ship served as a
laser target in the first "Star Wars"
Orange County's
easy
listening
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KDCM
1D!l.1
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Bon Voyage!
space shuttle trst.
··we are very proud of thoM'
accomplishment :· l'Ommander Dan
Brandenstem said earlier No other
shuttle crew had launched more than
thrte satellites.
Jesse W. Moore. ~huttle prOJe<:t
dJrector. told reporters "this was one
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shuttle program ... lt was a fantastic
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Two loud ~n1c booms crack('d the
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"N1<.'e job. Dan. welcome home.''
M1s~1on Control radioed as the shut-
tle rolled 10 dusty stop.
lA
Supreme Court OKs
arrest of protesters
WASHIN<.iTON (AP) -The u-
premc Court ha~ ruled that protesters
may be prosern1ed for demonstrating
peacefull) at public celebrations on
mihtan bases if the military
prev1ousl} barred them from t>ntermg
the base.
In a 6-3 rul ing Monda). Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor said for the
court the "important government
interest in assuring the secunty of
military in stallations" over-rides the
protester's First Amendment rights.
"Nothing in the First Amendment
requi res military commanders to
wait until persons subject to a valid
bar order have entered a mi Ii tary base
•
to see 1fthc) will conduct themselves
properl} dunng an open house."
O'Connor said
The court ordered the reinsuue-
ment of the conv1ct1on and three-
month pnson sentence of James V.
Albcrt1n1 for illegal entl) onto
Hi ckam Air Force'f3a~ 1n Honolulu.
Hawa11.· ~ '• .... .a
In 1972. Albertini poured animal
blood on secret dOC'umel\lS in an
office on the base and served 90 days
for conspinng to destroy government
records.
As a result. he was barred from re-
entering the base unless given wnttcn
permission by the base commander.
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Your advantage bank.-
100 Years of Safety • Assets Over $7 Billion
COASTAL ORANGE COUNTY-Huntlnston lkedt, 9tn Adatm Ave . 962 2"46 • ~pon Bud.1, S Cc!tpOnlk Plaza, 644 1811.S
S.ltic. lJland. 301 M1f\nc A"e . 675-Jll~ • BaJboe Pttint1.lla. 600 E Balbom Blvd . 673·170t •Lacuna Buc.b, 2600can Ave , 494 7S4t
Moruird'I Bay. ' Mon&l\.11 Bay Plan. 4Q6.l20I • Captltrano lkacb. ~206 Dohtny Park Rd . 496-020! •San Clemente, 60t N El c.nuno
Rut '92 119~ •San CkmmtelAwnlda Pico. 400 A~ Piro. 498-6330 •INLAND ORANO~COUNTY uhdm Hilb. SS50 Slnta
An1 Clll)on Rd • 998 62.SI • Onlnp!Tuitln 11 Hdm. 23"15 Nonh Tu.\tin Avr • 998 MOO • Founta'fa Valey. IOl75 IMer Ave • 963 7736
Woodbridp. 4 20 Blllranca P\wy . ~~9-81K>J • U.,Urw HIUJ. 2'301 Pbeo de Valencia, S86-5IOO • EJ Toro. ll688 El Thro Rd . 8)(). 7220
Mildon Vlrjo. 25.)Jl C.tiot Rd 77Mi.w6 • bpna Ntpl, .lOltl Cmwn V.ltey P\wy. '9~--62!0 •Sen Juen Caplmuo, ll22l CamtM
C11p~n.no. 661-0807
I! NATION ---
De ~orean: Conservative
conspiracy closed plant
Dc-1 ROIT -f-orm~rauto c~ccut1ve John l . De Lorean says memlabcrsof
1:. d to clo~ his sports car p nt an Bnuun·s ruling Con~• vauve P~n} con pare d t an interview pubhshcd Northem Ireland and plotted his arrest. accor . 1ng o .
Sunday 111 the Octro1t Free Press. He dad not c1~e ev1dcn~ of any co0P~;~
but ~id the plot was discovered by has partner in a new ca.r venture. "ho v _
Novel. Novd. a former private investigator from New °J''3<,n~o~~rs ot~aJc duty" ev1denl'e including photographs. document an
recordings -io'bc disclosed at a Rome news conference this week -to prove
the c.-onspiracy. lX Lorean said.
Fast blaz e spar k • panic at re90rt
PORTLAND Ore. -A fa!it-bu.rning grass fire raced u.P to a P<;)pula~
Central Oregon resort where guests fr~licked in th.e pool. starun~ 8 f:in~~tth~c
sent people fleeing to their car and seriously mJunng fi ve men w o ou&'' t
blaze. Helicopters femed the 1nJured -fou r employees and one g1;1est ~l ~h
Nee-Tah resort -to Portland's Emanuel Hospital. The most senous Y un,
Pat Ritz. 43. was listed 1n scnous cond1t1on.
Mosque bomblng l inked to ho•tage cri•l•
HOUSTON -The ~eekend bombing of an Islamic 11'.'osque may have
resulted from hos11hty 1emm1ng from the U.S. hosta$e.s1tuauon in Lebanon as
well as erroneous perceptions about Islam. a religious leader says.. Two
homemade bombs exploded nt 11 10 p.m. aturda). an hour a~~r wo!'5h1ppers
had finished tht>ir even mg prayers and left the mosque. authon11es said. About
$50.000 damage resulted from the blast and subsequent_ lire at the DAR US
SALAM mosque 1n a strip shopping center. a~on ~nvest1gators reported.
Sakharov 'may have suffered stroke'
BOSTON -ov1et d1ss1dent Andrei Sakharov suffered what might have
been a stroke during a hunger strike last year and was told b¥ doc~ors he would
become an in valid. his wife has told relatives in a letter. Wntten 10 Novem~r
by Sakharov·s wife. Yelena Bonner, 11 did not reach her so~ and daughter unul
last week at a human rights conference in Ottawa, ~ud her son, Alexey
Semyonov, ofsuburhan Newton The Boston Globe published excerpts today.
Sixth power plant worker dies of burn•
PHOENIX. Aru. -A s1Ath worker injured in a June 9 explosi~n .at ~he
Mohave Generating 1a11on nl.'ar Laughlin. Nev. has died of bum 1nJunes.
John Dolan. 39. Needles. Cahf.. died Sunday at Maricopa Medical Center. The
s1x who died were among 16 worker~ who were scalded by 1.000-degrce steam
when a pipe broke 1n a control room at the plant. on the Colorado Raver 90
miles southeast of Las Vegas. The powt>r plant 1!. operated by Souttiem
California Edison .
Gas prices up 10 cents since February
LOS ANGELES -Desp11e a decline in mtema~ional crude oil costs. th~
average pump price of ga~ohnc rose a quarter<ent •.n the last . two week.s. oil
industry analyst Dan Lundberg says. The boost conunued a d1mb_that began
in February. the publisher of the 011-onent.ed L:undber:g Letter said Sun~y.
"This latest two-week increase hasocrurred in sp1teofw1dely reported declines
1n the international and domestic price postings for crude oil," he said.
Motorists are paying almost $1 .24 for an average·gallon of gas this week.
' Domlnelll sentenced to 20 years ,
SAN DIEGO (A P) -F1nanc1er J. David DominelJi was sentenced today
to 20 years in prison for masterminding a multimillion-dollar investment
swindle. The sentencmg came 17 months after the forced bankruptc'S' of the La
Jolla-based J. David & Co and it s affih,ues, the money trading and investment
network Dominelh founded m 1979. "Your actions boggle the mind; th.:)
chan$ed the li ves of man~ people 1r, this community -fOrever:· said U.S.
D1stnct Judge Wilham Enright. who also ordered Dommelh to pa} rest1tut1on
to the 1.000 investors who lo!>t about S80 million.
Thousands watch Gay Pride Parade
WEST HOLLYWOOD -Up to 150.000 well-mannered spectators
turned out'tor the 15th annual Ga) Pnde Parade, held this year for the first ume
m the new ci t) of West Holl) wood Los Angeles County sheritrs deputies said
the crowd ranged from 50.000 to 150.000 spectators. An estimated 8.000
marchers. 1nclud1ng transvestite~. teachers. doctors and scientists, bands.
baton twirlers. rel1g1ouo; groups. a blond Marilyn Monroe lookalike and
poh11c1ans moved along the 1.5-mile route.
Infrared camera to search for bodles
SAN FRANCISCO -In vestigators say they will use an infrared camera
to speed their search through a rural cabin site that has yielded bones and
evidence linking survi vahst Leonard Lake to at least 20 missing or dead people.
The camera. pTOv1ded by the LI.$. Department of Justice. will help detl'Ct
whether more bodies or other pieces of evidence are buried on the 21h-acre site
in Calaveras County. If no more buned evidence is found, deputies expect the
search to end this week.
Carnaval draws 30,000 celebrant.
SAN FRANCISCO -Sunn) skies brought o ut 30,000 people Sunday to
watch San Francisco's version of Brazirs C'amaval at the Civic Center Plaza.
Braiil's Camaval 1s usually a pre-Lenten event but San Francisco's is always
held in June as a celebration of hfe and art. Samba dancers dressed in fishnet
stockings. high-cut leotards or tiny b1k1nis moved to music playing from one of
two stages in the plaza.
WORLD
Bush begins 11-day European tour
ROME -U.S. Vicf President Get)rgc Bush meets today with Italian
government leaders for talks ex pected to focus on interna1ional terronsm. U.S.
barriers to pasta imports and Europcal) pan1c1pation in the "Star Wars" space
defense program. Bush. who arrived in .Rome S~nday i~ the first. stop of a se~en-country. European tour, me~ts with Premier Bettino Crax1. Foreign
Minister Giulio Andreotti and President Sandro Pertin1. This morning Bush
had a private meeting with Pope John Paul II.
'Peace Conqueron' returning to airport?
FRANKFURT. West Gennany -Investigators arc taking seriously a
letter f~o.n:i an unknow~ group of ecological radicals who claimed
respons1b1hty for last week s bombing at Frankfurt Airport, police say. The so-
call.ed ··p~ce Conquerors." cla1me~ responsibility Saturday for the bombing,
which killed three people and Injured !$2 when the explosion 'ripped
Wednesday through the busy pa~scnger departure hall. In a letter sent to a
French news agency. the group said 1t would also destroy a "major building at
the Frankfurt airport and a jumbo Jet" before the end of the month.
Plane cra•he. ln Ama.an, 13 dead
T
~10 DE JANEIRO. Brazil -A twin-engine airplane crashed ~hile ~~ing an emergency landing in the north~m Amazon state of Mato Gro$$0,
!LJllmg all 13 people on board. airport officials said. The dead, all Brazilians.
1 r:icluded 11 passcnger:s and l wo crew members. The 19-passcnger. turboprop
a!!J?lane exploded whale trying to land at an isolated ranch near Diamintino offiCilllssa1a. ---·o...;..:..• --
Sarvlvor uy. to 11C11tter llmJ6ele '• bone.
.TEL AVIV, Israel -A twin who survived cruel genetic experiments by
Nazi death camp doctor Josef Mengcle says the Nazi's bones should be scat~ered ~vcr the ocean so 1hat like his v1ct1m • he has no grave. Miriam Tze1g~r said unday an Of11!'1Lat1on oftw1ns who survived Mengcle's fiendish expcn~ents docs not bchcvt Mena,cle 1s dead, despite conclusions of
!.nvest1J!.1t.<;>rs that a skeleton exhumed two weeks aao an Brazil is Menac.lc's.
But 1fit is. my personal ~u~t 1s not to bnna him to burial but to scatter his bone~.'" the ocean so that his flm1ly doe not ha vt a &nave.just hke m famil
donn t and thost who~ f1m1hes died 1n the concentration camps 1n i?'urope r, she ~1d o n l~mtl Radio · •
Clui•tl.an Democrat. back COAl6•
ROME -C'hri ti•.n Democr1". rtv1tMhzed by Jlins in m1d~May local
rlcct1ons. have fJVCn sohd SUPl>Ort 10 prcs1dcnt1al candidate FranccscoCossip
1n a hid to rqatn that lat'ldy cetemon1•f1>0St. lllrtwo-1imc former pn!mier
received the suppon of JO"S of329 Chnst11n ~mOC'l'lt electors Sunday He is
expected to be cfccted an formal ballouna today, t S6, he would bt the youngest president ever of the hahan republic.
--• ---,-----r-----------~----··-l " • '
.l Orenge Coul DAILY PILOT /Mondey, June 2 .. , 1116
Grisly airlift retrieves bodies fromjet .crash
Saboteurs may have set ~ff
explosion, 329 feared dead
CORK, Ireland (AP)-Helicopters and rescue ships
pulled.soorea of bodies from the cold North Atlantic and
forenSJc expens bqan examining them today for clues to
what caused the crash of an Air·lnd1a jumbo jet carrying
329 people off Ireland.
Offi~ials said. saboteurs may nave set off an explosion
on the 01ght, which originated in Toronto, Canada. All
those aboard were feared dead.
. Thea~rline'soffices in London and New York said the
flight earned 307 passengers and 22 crew members. The
airline stud 278 Canadu1ns were aboard. almo t all ot
Indian descent
Also on board were at least 28 Amcncan rM1denb.
1nclu't1ina seven U.S ci111ens.
Authont1es said 131 bod1~ were found in a ma 1ve
sea and air search Sunday and today.
.. rhc examination of the bod1~ involves extensive
tests because the poss1b1hty of crime cannot be ruled out,"
said Joe Jennings, director of the Irish Government
Information Service.
A British Royal Navy doctor. Lt. Richard Cribb, sa1d
bodies he saw were "badly shattered and broken but all in
one piece. Deaths were very swift, 1f not instantaneous."
Hehcopt~rs ran a gnsly airlift from the crash site to the
southern lmh city of Coric There, burned and broken
bod16 ~(( camed throuah pcluna ra.in to a temporary
moriue 1n an a1rpon bu1lcfin1
The Boe1na 747, travehna from Montrul to London's
Heathrow Airport, plunged into the ~an 120 mJIC)
southwest of the lnsh coast.
Top lnd11n aviation experts amved 1n Cork. today to
lead an iovesopt1on 1n which 8nt1 h. American, lri hand
Canadian expens will take pan
Indian Civil Av1at1on Manmer Ashok Gehlot wd
SundJty the crash appeared the result of an explosion. He
noted that wreckage was scattered over a five-mile rad1us.
"Sabota&e is a distinct pos 1bility." he said.
A Spanish radio station serving fishermen today said
it overheard the captain ofa Panamanian ship reporting he
had seen an aircraft explode an the ky.
Jnus femiro. director of the Onda PaQuera tation.
told TMA aated Pre 1n Madrid thataradaoemployee
l\ad overheard the conversataon betv.tto ca.l)l&Jn uteban
Fraile and the ltup's London ap:ol.S.. •
"He ~a.rd Fralic uy that he w an explosfoll 1n the
rar of an a1reraft wb1ch thto turned twO somersault.&.and
fell 1nto the aca," Ferttiro aaJd..
He wd the radio Ol)Ctl\Ors did nots~ with Fradt.
and did not lcnow the name oftbe ship or its aacnt
Salman H11du. a spokesmal\ for lndja's F~ip
Ministry. told reponen in New Delhi theaovemment was
aware ofanonymo1.1scla1ms made to news orvniutions in the United States and Canada in the name onhe Kashmir
Liberation Army, the All-India Sikh Students Federation
andtheSik.h IOReaiment, .
Link of
crash,
blast
probed
Terrorist Targets ?
TORONTO (AP)-Canad1an and
Indian officials are investigating the
possibility of a link between the crash
of an Air-India jumbo jet out of
Toronto and an explosion in luggage
from a Vancouver-to-Tokyo flight.
A Tor<?nto . newspaper today
quoted unidentified Indian officials
as say in$ two Sikh f ugittves were
susi:>«ts an both disasters Sunday.
A Canadian official. meanwhile.
~id his government was 1nvestigat-
m1 an anonymous caller's claim that
a Sikh student group placed a bomb
on the Air-India jet.
Militants of India's Sikh communi-
ty, a reli&JOus minority of 13 million
among a predommately Hindu popu-
lation of 730 mllhon, have been
agitating for autonomy or 1ndepeo-
dence. Sikhs have been accused of
assassinating the late Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi.
Engaged
Rock mute •tar Madonna
plan• to marry actor Sean
Penn in Aaaaat. accordlnc
to columnlaf8uy.
Sirhan
admits
•great ,
sorrow'
WSANGELES(AP)-Seventcen
years af\er killing Robert F. Kennedr..
Sirhan Bishara Sirhail says he sllll
can't recall pulling the trigger but
accepts sole blame and, for the first
time, acknowledges "great sorrow"
over 11.
However. he also claims there is a
lack of balance in a judicial system
that frees Dan Wh ite, the killer of San
Francisco Mayor Georae Moscone
and Supervisor Harvey Milk, and
keeps the Jordanian immip'lnt be--
hind bars.
"There arc guys who have com-
mitted multiple murders and auys
who have hacked people up or
tonured them to death who have
gotten . sbQ,rter sentences," Sirhan
said. "That 1s not fair to me. That is all
I am askiDJ fot: fairness."
In a senes of interviews over the
past year -the latest on the 17th
anniversary of the June S. 1968,
assassination of Sen. Kennedy -
Sirhan told the Los An,eles Times he
never intended to kill Kennedy at the
Ambassador Hotel the niaht the New
York Democrat won the California
_ _presidential primarv.
Sirhan, 41 , uysthe assassination
wu the result of "a pent-up political
rqe that unfortunately_ WIS fueled
that evenina by four Tom Collin•
drink&." He said there were no
conapiraton in the death.
He called on the state Board of
Prison Terms toJ'vc him beck 1
paroJc date revok three ycan llO· And he blamed 11.ate Attorney Gen·
eral John Van de Kamp'• political
ambitions for his inability to pJn
relede from Soledad state pnson,
southeast of Monterey. The _p1role board wall conduct the
aeventh bearina Wednesday at
Soledad state prison on irhan'a
suitability for releue from prison .
.. All we are askJn& is that the parole
, board not so in wttb 1 precx>n<:Jeived
notion about what their decision
should be." u1d irhan'a attorney.
Luke McKlssack. \
Pacittc Ocean Atlantic
Ocean
"'•""'* Indian and Canadian offlclala are ln-the fatal Alr·lndla cruh and an ezploelon In veattcattnc the poeelbilltJ of a link between ta.aage compartment at airport in Tokyo.
Indian C1v1I Aviation Minister
Ashok Gehlot said "there may be a
linkage between the two" incidents.
"Certainly people are looking at the
possibility of a connection between
the two incidents," said Sean Brad).
spokesman for Foreign Secretary Joe
Clarie He said the ..government wa~
"definitely luoking at" th e
anonymous claim on behalf of the
Sikhs.
Canadian Press quoted an uniden-
tified senior government official as
saying Sunday that "there arc a
number of little things staning 10
come up suggesting very strongly that
these incidents are linked. There are a
number of very intel'C$ting leads ngh1
now that people arc following. ..
No su rvivors have been found
from Air-India Flight 182, which was
carrying 329 when it apparently
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Two Japanese baggage handler:.
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If
U.S . must flex
muscles with
wor ld terrorists
Perhaps the most haunting question asked sin~e
TWA Ai~t 847 was hijacked in Athens 10 dar ago ts:
Why don t they ever hiJack a Russian airplane.
The question took on increasing significance as
Americans around the world ~ame tafBets f ~r
terrorists with alarming frequency m the days immedi-
ately following the hijacking. . .
Perhaps one reason the Soviets are rarely the objects
of terrorism is that they supply weapons to so ~any
terrorists. But not every Mideastern or South Amen can
ideologue bent on making a polti~l statment through
terrorism uniformly loves the Soviets and hates us. ~he
expression of Russian influence in many developing
nations is abhorred as vehemently as Amencan
influence.
Perhaps the Soviets are immune to terrorism
because the world knows the Soviets would no more
accept the terms of terrorists than they would, well , allow
a Korean airliner to drift into thei r airspace unmolested.
Certainly, the Russians a~e to be condemn~d . as
harshly as any terrorist for blastmg KAL 007 and killing
269 people. including an Georgia Congressman Larry
McDonald. The act was brutal. murderous and
unnecessary.
But we may have gone too far in the oppo~ite
direction. While Americans around the world are bemg
shot and stabbed and bombed with regularity, we. as a
nation, have given terroris!S a t~ngue Jashins. .
While we have loudly decned the prohferauon of
terrorism -most of which is aimed at us - we have ·
created the best of aJJ possible situations for terrorists.
We have let them know that they can get what they want
without serious recriminations. We have, in effect,
promoted terrori sm while protesting it.
On the prevention front , we have ma~~ g.re~t
strides. We have nipped dozens of attempted htJacks m
airports, confiscated weapons and made arrests. But
once a terrorist J,akes hosJ,ages. he. in effect, holds our
entire nation at gunpoint.·
Certainly, our government must do as much as
possible to protec t the lives of Americans held by
terrorists. But once a hostage crisis is resolved, it should
be our formal policy to pursue the terrorists "with
extreme prejudice," as they say in the spy novels.
That policy should also apply to the organizations
or governments that sponsor terrorism. .
It is not enough to only remember the 220 Mannes
murdered by a car bomb in Lebanon in 1983 while
serving with the peacekeeping force. We must treat the
terrorists as crimmals of the worst sort and insist they be
punis,hed for their crimes. Our resolve should not be
diminished simply because individual terrorists can be
so difficult to find.
Rathe r. we should treat them the way the Israelis
treated fugiti ve Nazis -we should create a special force
to hunt them down. no matter how Jong it might take.
If we had taken an unforgiving, unrelenting attitude
toward terrorism long ago, Robert Stethem might not
have died at an airport in Beirut.
Twisted sense of values
blaJD.ed for problelD kids
To the Edstor:
In answer to Norma Heruog's
guest ed1tonal. I cannot see where she
offered any solution other than to
break the mold that creates problem
children.
To me that sounds like eliminating
the producer of the child -the
parent. If she thinks our product from
the '60s Oowcr child IS had, wall a few
years and sec the product of the punk
rock age. What can she expect when
fathers exploit their own children for
sexual purposes and money?
We have removed God from the
public school system long ago along
with what 1s nght and wrong. The
majority of our Juven1l~ delinquen ts
do not know ni)ll from wrong. Why?
We have repfaced morals wsth a
philosophy of: If 1t feels good. do 11.
Is she suggesting we tum our
product over to those "who have been
trained" to produce a better product"
God forbid.
In basic psychology under the
heading of abnormal behavior one of
the listings is homosexual. The only
question for discussion ss how did
they get that way? Rather than
helping the~ unfortunate souls. we
now have special schools fo r them so
they can foster their ideals
\\e do this I belsevt' because
everyone wants their nghts -what-
ever that ss -regardless of how 11
affects society.
Our sense of values hall been
twisted a long time: we pa y our
athletes more money than we pay our
president.
Pcrpaps the answer 1s 10 •Hart all
over again.
BARBARA E. FORTEVILLE
Costa Mesa
Top execs generally
rub someone wrong
A~g tl\~fcitecutive~fficcrs chicken fa.ctory farmers-no;. tum on
of the nation's top firms. it's almost the coop lights at 3 a.m · ·
impossible to find one who hH not
bee fired from some job at leasl once. Even before the nucl~ar age. H G.
according to the survcy1aken. Wells wrote: "Human history becom-
The lonaer the days. the more CQS
the chickens lay. Chicken farmers of
old JU St knew 11 and c;hruggcd. But the
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
es more and more a race between
educa tion and catastrophe "
L.M. Boyd /1 • 1y11dlc•ttd
col•mal•t.
,rMlrZ1N
ECMOr
Tom Teff
,......~&!Or Don,_._ °"' ....... , c,... ......
SOOtU ldl!Of
=.J---=-...
.. /haven 't been to Mex/coin many years /sort ofen]oyoursystem.
where a parking ticket Is 81 o whether you drive a Volkswagen or a
Porsche."
Mexico visit might be fun
if reforms take effect
Otherwise, it's not
worth the chance
of getting h assled
I've been readingan awful lot about
Tijuana lately. The first article that I
encountered was one about surfers.
and not specifically Tijuana. but that
area of Baja that lies just south of the
border and on the Pacific Coast.
h seems 1hat surfers in particular
are en'countering difficulties with-the
police in that area. Two of the people
in volved told of being hassled by two
men who claimed they were from the
Federal Police. also known as the
Fedt'rales.
The surfers we re held at gunpoint.
their camper was searchc.-d. and the
police found a plastic bag with two
pills in it, as well as two knives. The
surfers claimed ownership of the
knives. but said that the pills were
planted by the Federales. They were
told that th e pills placed them in deep
trouble in Mexico.
.One oft he surfers offered S2010 the
Federates. as pa ymen t of any fine.
The final figure agreed upon was S60.
The surfers then were told that 1 f the\
said anything about what had haP-
pened to anyone 1n Tijuana that they
would be killed.
The) went home and didn't file a
complaint -not because of fear, but
because 11 would have been too much
tro uble.
Were the m'en really Federates?
Were the pills really planted? Was
what happened typical of Mexico.
where bribes are an accep1ed pan "-Of
dar-to-day 11fe?
don't know and. to tell the truth, I
don't plan to put myself in the
pos1uon of finding ou t firsthand.
I haven't been to Mexico in man)
years. I sort of enjoy our systt'm.
where a parking ucket LS SI 0 whether
you dn"e a Volkswagen or a Porsche.
I also hke the fact that ifl feel as 1fl've
ljcen wrongly accused. I can go to
court and fight without being locked
BILL
HARVEY
up on the assumption that I'm guilty
until proven innocent,
On the other hand, I'm really
interested in Mexico, and feel that it's
a marvelous thing to be able to get
into yo ur car. drive for a few hours
and arrive in an actual foreign
country. A country where. for the
most part. a different language is
spoken and a different culture
prevails. I've always been interested
in people and their wa) ofhfe.
Ann and 1 plan to travel the world
when we retire. going where the road
leads. and living with the people.
We're not the least interested in
tourist traps and guided tours. I'd
love to hve in Mexico for a year or
two, but not if I must go armed.
The second stof) I read was a
breath of fresh air. and bolstered my
op11m1 sm cons1derabl). h had to do
with Tijuana.
Apparent!}. the chief of police 1n
Tijuana Ill deeply concerned w11h the
recent drop in tourism and has come
to the conclusion that this loss of
income ss related directly to police
corruption and street crime. He's
decided to do something about it.
I'm sure that at least a major part of
the loss of income 1s related to the
U.S. Navy's curfew. Because of
extortion and bnbery demands made
upon our sailors and Marines while
they were in Tijuana, the Navy has
put that border town off limns
between the hours of 5 p.m. and 8
a.m. In my yo unger days. I made
many pilgrimages 10 TTown,and my
expcnence was that there 1s nothing
10 do (at least. nothing I wanted to do}
until much later than 5 p.m. Thus, the
town 1s effecuvely cut off from its
supply of military money.
I have no preconceived notions
about the innocence of our m1l11ary.
Some of them have the ability to get
into trouble while in a monastery and
some could start a brawl 10 a
retirement village: but there is also
the fact that extortion and bnbery
exist in Mexico. Sometimes on totall
trumped-up charges.
Thechiefofpolice has decided that
any American milila~ personnel
arrested in Tijuana will 1mmed1a1ely
bet umeoover to the Shore Patrol at
the border.
Any tourist arrested sn TiJuana
must be taken directly to the chief of
pohce. or to one of his lieutenants.
Okay, soµnds good so far. But how
does this affect the average policeman
on the beat? The one who has
depended upon bribes to supplement
his very meager income? The one
who has a wife and children to feed?
The average income for a police
officer sn TiJuana ss about $1 52 per
month. Not a whole lot of mone)'.
even below the border. A good cop
can make that much a day in bnbes.
The chief has started the wheels in
mouon to nearly double the salary of
the average cop. It's hoped that th is
action. along with retra1nin1t and
education (i ncluding instruction 1n
English) will se' ercly cuna1l the
bribe!"\ busines~.
As to the fake cops and the out-and-
out robberies. those go on most
anywhere. The chief has plans to
greatly reduce these as well. A system
of communications between them
and us will help too. It's very true that
some of the tales of has;dships
encountered by tourists in Baja are
greatly embellished by the time we
hear them. Some of our oh-so-
innocent angels who go to Baja solely
to eat tacos and buy plaster sta tues
somehow seem to lo~ their wings as
the y cross the border. ·
At any rate. 1 wish the chief good
luck. and hope that he d oes what he
has set out to do. I'd love to go back to
Tijuana for a small vacation.
It's been a long time since I bought
a plaster statue.
Co/fUllO.lst Bill H•rvey llve1 lD
Baatlagtoa Be•cb.
-1\LWllll!i·i~IUW·LMil·i------------
S ul tan of Oman staunchly
on U.S. side in Middle East
WASHINGTON -Tbe United
States has a staunch Middle Eastern
friend who 1s unknown to most
Amencans. •
Sultan Qabus bin Said, the 42-ycar-
old absolute ruler of Oman, the
Kansas-sized dcscn nation at the
eastern end of the Arabian peninsula,
doesn't proclaim his pro-American
sentiments from the palace rooftop in
Jac1
AIDEISOI ,
.md OAI l VAN A TT A
Muscat. But he is on the U.S. side ultan Taimurbin Said. The old man,
when it counts. a fundamentalist fanatic, kept his son
bors. seemed a likely prospect for
such dollar diplomacy.
According to a top secret CIA
report. the Saudis kept promising
Oman development funds, but tied
their l&f'IC1S to the removal oflranian
troops from Obofar province. The
shah's closeness to the Americans bad
always worried the Saudis, and they
apparently didn't want their liule
Omani nei&hbor following the shah
into the CIA 's pocket.
Oman was one of two Arab states under virtual house arrest for more
that gave public suppon to the 1979 than a year. Finally, with the help of
Camp David accords between Israel the British and parti~ularly of an old
and Egypt. And in 1980, the sultan Sandhurst buddy. :rsmothy Landon,
agreed to let the United Stat.cs stash Qabu.soverthrc':"'h~sfath~randbepn
military equipment Ill stratcaically labonously .bnngin~ his 900,000
tOt'llted ba~s. which can be uled fQr-OOUntryme~'~.20•1lccntury .
intelligence gathering, communica-When Qabus set~ed ~e throne 10
tions and as $tagjng areas for U.S. 1970,0manhadjustSmslesofpavcd
rapid-deployment forces in the event roa.d, . three schools a.nd . no health
of a Pers1an Gulf crisis. fac&llt1es wonh mentaon1na. .There
Qabus was eager for the Saudi
development money, and the deal
was "alJ but signed," the CIA noted.
But the Saudis were .. playina a game
with Qabus-withholdina assistance
until the Omani sultan (saw) the lijht
and (sent) the Iranian troops" home.
The'&I I anrument fell thfo'*Sh1 leav-
in& the su tan professina "to be
mystified by Riyadh's handlfogofthe
matter."
The sultan's friendship w1th arc now. more than 2.000 miles. of
America has cost him more than Arab paved hi&hwa y, another 8,000 miles
resentment. We have learned that of araded roads and more than 460
more than a year aao the Saudis.. ac:hool attended by both ~xes'.
ev1dentally Jealous of their perceived The young sultan al~ extm1u1shcd
status as No. I U.S. aJly in the Arab a aue,mlta movement an the southern
world, offered Oman S2 billion if the prov1ncc of Dhofar . that was sup.
•ultan would put a little distance pOrtcd. by the Sovlets.
between his country and the United The Saudis were not pleased with
talcs. The hsahly sttret bribe offer Omarft ~1vc and independent
wa rtJCCtC'd. eou'1C. They consider thcmselvC1 a
Qabus ss the very model of a sort of Bia Brother to the smaller
modem enhahtened Arab leader. Persian Gulf stales, maintainina their
Educated at Sandhurst. the British dominance by the judictous npen-
m1htary college, he brought back diturc of petrodollars. Oman, whose
some Western ideas that were too oiJ reterves an= p1ddlihJ compe.red to
proares ive for his isolotionist father, 1t5 more fortunately situated neigh·
:------·
..
Our sourca say it was Landon. the
sultan's Sandhurst pal, who was
laraely m1>.<>nsible for the 1980
aarcement tllat allows the U.S. ba$CS
in Oman. He aJso ~ressed for further
cooperation on a visit to Wuhinaton
in the firi1 weeks of the R~n
administration
But we 1'ive learned that °Landon
has been klinquishirfr~is role 11
Omani-U.S. mediatot recently. Sou~s say be bad notbina '9 do with
bchind·the-scenes WolAilans to Jive a British firm the ruc:ntive
caitll.kina contract to opente three
U.S.-fananctd ba1a in Oman.
hd AMtnM Mtl Dalt Vu AIU. .,.. .,..,..w cwhr..&tll
j
BILL HARVEY
coJwnnl•t
RICHARD
Co HEN
T obacco
industry
ign ores
dangers
Ads aimed at youth
tap dance around
reaThealth issues
WASHINGTON -Back when
Milton Berle was Mr. Telt'vision and
I was just a lad. I used to 'neak out of
my room and halfway down the st.am.
where I would sit. peeking at the
show. One of the things I remember 1!>
Berle simul taneously urgrng the au-
dience to continue applauding and
also to stop In comedy. this 1!. funn),
In industry. it's downnght d1shone:.1 .
But 11 is in industry -spcc1fically
th e cigarette mdust~ -that you can
now find the corporate equivalent of
that old Berle routine. In a recent
issue of Parade Magazine. for in-
stance. the R.J. Reynolds Tobacrn
Co. ran a fuU-pagc ad headlined.
"Docs Smoking Reallt Make You
Look More Grown-up? · The answer.
as any kid can tell }Ou, is yes. but the
ad did not say that. Instead. 1n a
cutesy fashion it said: "A fiftcen-year-
old smoking a cigarette looks hke
nothing more or less than a fit\een-
year-old smoking a cigarette ...
The ad then turned downnght
parental: "Even lhQ!Jgh we're a
tobacco company, we don't think
young people should smoke. There's
plenty of time later on to think about
whether or not smoking 1s nght fo1
you."
There ss not a single mention of
cancer. Not a word about heart
disease. Not a hint that smoking can
cause emphysema. Just some cleverl)'
worded phrase about there being llml'
later on to decide.
R.J . Reynolds handles the problem
of teen-age smoking the way the
Reagan admmistratson handles the
problem of teen-age sex: It counsels
patience and ignorance.
Cy nic that lam. I wonder who th1!.
ad 1s aimed at. I have seen at or a
similar one before 1n the Nev. York
Times MagaL 1ne. I v.ondered thrn
how man~ 15-year-olds read that
magazine anywa~ Parade 1s a dif-
ferent matter But an ad that 1<.
nothing but a block ofteXrt 1s hardl~ a
grabber and one that does not even
mention cancer is just tantamount to
a lie. The reason a kid should not
smoke is not because it will not mak('
him (or her) appearolder. but because
1n the long run 11 might loll him.
C'ynsc that I still am, I think that
this ad and others like st arc nothing
more than a pan of the cigarette
industry's propaganda 01Tens1ve For
some time now. it has been running
these cute ads about the alleged civil
nghts of smokers -and how the poor
dears are harassed by non-smolung
zealots. I agree that there are such
zealots. but there are also people for
whom cigarette smoke 1s downn~t
obnoxious. It makes them sick.
But when st comes to zealotry, it's
not people opposed to smoking who
exhibit it. but the cigarette industry
itself. With its ethics in a blind trust. 11
walks a straight ltne 10 the bank
ins1st1ng that there as no proof that
smoking cause'i anyth ing other than
stained teeth.
When 11 wa~ n·portcd rccl"ntl y tha t
the government is spending SS
million a year on research for a ··sate"
cigarette (compared to the nearly $3
billio n the industry spends on
advertisi ng). a spokesman for R.J
Reynolds was asked sf his company
were also loolung for such a cigarette
"I don't know anything about it." said
Da vid Fishel. "We don't know of
anything that makes a cigarette
unsafe, so how could we ~ working
toward a safer cigarette'?" Where do
they find these people?
The same R.J . Reynolds that
sponsored the ad in Parade al5o
makes Camel cigarettes. For its ads.
there 1s no huge block of text. bus
ra ther a picture of a he-man moun-
tain climber taking a cs~reue break
If the company was sincere abou1
discouraging teen-age smoksnJ. 11
would illustrate ads osten~ibly as med
at young people just as graphically -
with maybe a picture of 8 cowbo)'
headt,,.......thHast 10t1ndttp bcaast-
of lung cancer.
For ~he first time this year. luna
c.anccr 1s supposed to overtake brcut
cancer as the leadina cancer ki ller of
women. No one knows how to avoid
breast ~ncer. but avoi~ina most tuna ~nocr 11 hardly myst~no~s. Smoking
1~ a cause: not smolong is n prcYcn-
llOn. It could hardly be more simple
Yet the ciptttte indu<1try bh1hel
pretends otherwi~.
Rather than uraently warn kids of
the c;tanac.rs or smoking. 11 runs
sanct1 monsous ads telhna them mm
ly to wait. "Why be in such a hurry.,..
the ad a ks. For the ants-smoking
force•. the answer is ea5y Becau~
people arc dyi ng.
_ #Udtrrl Cofteo I• • •JltdJCltlff c./•maltt.
~ -
Otano-Coat OAJlV PILOTI Mondey, Jun. 2•, 1911 A"I
•
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TAANIACTION8, Al
How to-make a lawyer cry
Authors tell how to'plan your estate
and beat high c ost of probate. truces
By JOY DEE ANTHONY °""' ..... c..-... ,.,....,.
however, to prevent .. last-minute"
transfers. This method is not risk-
f ftee, he says. Some people irrevocably
transfer a policy to a person from
whom they later get a divorce.
Although fi ve editions of "Plan
ommcnd you drat\ for younclf with Your Estate" have b«n published
the forms they provide. since 1980. "Your Family Records"
When Marilyn Monroe died, she
left an estate worth S 1.6 million. After
a debt ofS372.136 was paid. and after
lawyers scooped up more than a
million for handling probate m a
seven-year P.rocess, just S 101.229 was
left to d1stnbute.
If Qnly Monroe had studied "Plan
Your Estate: Wills. Probate
Avoidance," Trusts &. Taxes," in
add1Lton to "Your Family Records:
How to Preserve Personal, Financial
and Legal History," her heirs might
not have seen such a sum disappear
into lawyers' pockets.
Such a situation may be extreme,
say authors Denis Clifford and Carol
Pladsen, who visited the Orangc
Coast durinJ a recent promotional
tour for their books. Bu\ in almost
every case, prior knowledge of esta te
matters can prevent chaos. financial
distress, and huge legal fees.
There are basically two issues
involved: the probate process and the
estate taxes.
"Probate" refers to the act offiling a
will, locatini the assets of the de-
ceased, paying legal debts, taxes,
probate costs. and legal fees, and
distributing the assets to those named
in the w1ll. which the authors rec-
The idea, Clifford explains, is to was only first co-authored by Pladsen
keep as much of the estate o ut of and Clifford in 1984. Pladscn is an
probate as possible so that there will executive at Nolo Press, a Berkeley
be less for lawyers to take away. firm which published the 1980 book.
Totten trusts. living trusts and JOi nt The more she looked at Clifford's
tenancy agreements (for assets Like work, she recalls, the more she began
bank accounts. boats, cars. and real to think that a second book would be
estate) are ways in ~hi.ch a person ~n helpful to deal with the personal
put valuables off ltmtl. thus making aspects of financial orpniz1og. She
them immune to the ravages a!_ wanted to create a book with forms so
probate court. people could write down where their
Some recommend avoiding the assets are located, what details of
probate process entirely by establish-family history arc worth remember-
ing a living or "inter vivo" trust, a ing. what personal debts have accrued
mechanism which transfers all assets and what actions should taJce place
of the deceased at the time of death. upon death. Perforated pages in the
Although occasionally recommend-book allow the storage of secret
mg such trusts, Clifford, a lawyer by information in safety deposit boxes.
training, refuses to call them "the Pladsen says that when the first
legal wonder drug" some say they are. book came out, people would call up
Legal hassles still must be dealt with and say: "I need to do estate planning
and estate taxes still must be paid. because my motJ>er died and it was
Trusts can be as complicated as just a mess. I had to go into her house
probate in some cases, be points out and try to find all that stuff." That;s
To keep estate taxes to a minimum. not estate planning, she points out.
Clifford suggests asset transfers that's organizing records. By using
whenever possi ble. Ooe method is to her book. the task of finding every-
transfer an insurance policy to thing is completed in advance.
another person so that proceeds do Geneology is another part of the
not become part of the taxable estate. Pladsen/Clifford manual. Pladsen
The law requires that you do this said her interest in this subject stems
more than three years before death. from losing track of her own family
~~~Ai~W~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
NEW YOllK (AP) l lt1Cllr • ·~ Drl9!Cn 20• 2S HeivcsF 37'lll JI MAvnOI NASDAQ QUOlellon• l lV.._. DUllllD t 23~ 1).\j, Hoven 3~ 4 McCrm thowln9 lllOhHI t>ldt 6 1 t • 16 6 >ti Ourlron 10't 11 HoovM 16" 271'0 McFerl tnd 10wn1 ~ llv fk'wTom 1~ 1'"1 OvnKn •"-s Horlzlh 3 l l'I MeOCr• merkt tmet<enuol • l utf.iJ 37~ 3711'1 EetVen llll'" 3131 ... Hybr~c 21~ .. 22f• ~'
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history. When her Norwegian P.!'rcnts
sold the Minne ota home they d lived
in (or 65 years, movina to a house in
Arizona, shc'fch her roo"h were about
to be lost. Her grandparents were
dead. Sht"d lo~n two uncles and two
aunts.
"All of a sudden people in my
family were dead and I didn't know
what Ute1r middle name was," or
much el~ about them, she s&Jd. If her
relattvcs had used a book hke the one
she helped write, she'd have those
family memones today.
Interest in the book has not been
limited to older folks. the.authors say.
You°' people frequently call m when
the pair do radio programs.
But thost who will benefit most arc
the middle class, he says, including
anyone who owns a home. The poor
don't have much of an estate to worry
about. he explains. and the nch may
have a situation that's too com-
plicated to handle without extensive
help. But even the very wealthy can
benefit from learning the basics. With
·a little extra insight, he points out,
they'll know when their lawyers arc
doing a good JOb and when they're
only pretending to.
The books arc available at 8.
Dalton's. Crown. and other local
book shops.
OTC UPs & DowNs
NEW YORK (AP) -The toltowlng tlSI shOws the Ovef -the -Counter stocks and warrants that have gone up the most a nd down the most based on oerc.nl of cha119e tor Frldav. No securilles trading below n or 1000 sha res are Included. Net a nd i>ercenlage chanvft art the difference t>etw.-n the s>revloo$ closing bid price and Frldtf;\ last bid price.
Name Las! Chg Pel. 1 ~all~CP 2'1• 'h Up ?9.6 2 I :N Ptlrm wt .w. l4 UP 21.•
3 rovinc Sl't 1ft UP ll.s • l~IStar wt •1111 'n UP 1 .I s ~rdl~lmT WI 3111 ~ UP 1 !
9 Hefll nt pi 1 l.4 1'"1 UP 1 . 9 Aero vsllnc ~ v. UP 1 .
' ~~~l~f~· l~ Yt: 8g l .
10 AQuanaut S-16 Up 111.1 l )hesS>k.lnd 'h 'I• UP l. 13 ¥enexCP 'h •;. UP 11.
l. H~:r'~ ~ ~ 8g llJ lS Alfa~I wt ~h ~ Up 1 .6 16 SPI Phrm s I 1'4 Up 1 ·1 11 SoflwreAo 1 'h UP 1 • 11 ArchlveCp 1"1 UP 1 . 19 MlcrQnTCh I/• l4 Up 1 . ~ ~taSwllch 41/• ~ UP .
orPLearn I'" 11. UP 9.S axor wt 11• UP 9. l
4 Uld~k~~ l I~ 8g iJ
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Name Lall ChO Pel
I Hllhlnfo -liOi ~7·1 ~ PolY=sh ''• -l4 l
• i=ntkx
1 ~ = 3~ f ~ ~;:~ ~ = :~ lt·.
7 NCA ?~JI •'• -:I.. 1{1 9 RamletlCP 21ft -'n 14.. 9 lntrctlOvn 3 -n 14. 10 Sloan TechnolOV 6111 -1 11.
11 ~IS Capll 3~ -''2 I
112 lllsource 7 -1 11~ ~ 3 alle)lCP 31'1 -., . '' TermOata s1-, -:I.. 1 IS Burrlllnt 19 -2'"1 I 1 6
16 CrowrtAuto s • , , 11. I
7 Maroau•Cll ~ J,. 11 1
TlmtEnov s ,,., -,,.. lf ·' ii~ ~,!,!:~~~ un89 :,: -~ 18:~
¥tdTOtJ 6~ -J,fo 1 .0 wlsltTrl WI 2 9-32 -''• .9 Am Fyrnlture lO'l't -1•,1e .4 AvantGar~ 6 ~ 9.• Sclenlnc s 6'AI -~ 9.3
NYSE UPS & DOWNS
N1*1 It' I~ "'l()IMA!...,,. 1 .o • ' I
Cl9d cl lhf -.rwi.. ~"ln\J ,..,.,. • "'
·~,. ..,. ,..,,r~ ~' ,.:u-
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encl .. U(1 ""If' •"" ..... !f' ~
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OhOnt! 6~2 5678
Dlllp .... ,....., ..........
Authors Deni8 Cllffo rd and C&rol Pladaen.
~ CoDlputer bOok available
Small-business people interested in
finding out whether computers can
help them run their businesses more
smoothly can pick up a free "How To
Computenze" book from thetr local
computer or software dealer.
Business owners can select from
three different books. humorousl}'
and simply wnnen so readers d on't
have to be computer buffs or account-
ing whines to understand thcm.
.\mong the local dealers ofTenng thc
books:
IBM Product Center 3420 Bnstol
St.. Moore Business Ccnters. 3400 B
Bristol St. Pathfinders. 181.! NeW-
pon Rh d , all in Costa Mesa. '>1tcro-
.\ge Computer Stores. 18120
Brooli..hurst No 4. Fountain \ alle'.
1n Huntington Beach. Egghead [)1s-
rnunt ~olt"are. 18589 Bea .. ·h Bh d
~loon.· Bu~lOl'S~ (\·na·~. I SOS.,
(1oldC'nwest 'it . and Software hop-
pe. 19909 Beach Bh d and (om-
puterland. 4200 Scoll Or . Newpon
Beach • • • POI NT 4 Data Corporauon ot
In 1ne. ~leading manutacturer oflo" ·
cost quallt~. mult1-u~r 1bus1ncss
computer S) stems. components and
soft\\are.. rcccotl) anm1un .. ·ed the
1mmediat<.' ava1lab1l1t\ ol their
nc"h-n.'' 1S<.·d Product' &. '\en tlC\
( ataiog
The' l."atalog 1s a'ailat">k free nt
charge. 1n hmtted quant1t1e"1 Fm
more 1nforma11on call S.., '-1 1 11 • • • Three fum1\hed otfae "arehouS<'
condominium models and a sale-;
office have been completed al MeScl
Business Center in Costa Mesa. b)
intenor design firm. Pap11lon an
In tenor Design Com pan'. accord mg
10 R \11chacl Hall. chtl•f e'~utt'e
oflic'er and managing g~naal partnC'1
of The Troy Investment Fund.
Thc 96-umt, S 16 milhon com-
mercial condominium conversion
prOJCCl Wlll hold an open house this
month. Hall said.
Mesa Business Center at 711 West
I 7th St.rttt was completel) re-
designed b) the intcrnauonaJl)-rc-
nowned architectural firm ofW1lham
L. Pere1nt Associates. Each unit has
two offices on the first floor. a double
officc su1tc on the second floor and
two-story warehouse spacc to the rear
of the oflice-s
The officc warehouse con-
do miniums a~ pnce'd from S 135.000
to SI .,5.000 v.rth two financmg pro-
gram' Thc.-units range 1n ~1ze from
I .4(l(J to ~ 1'11.lO !>quare feet
For adtltuonal 1nformat1,1n l j ll
M~-~4ti I • • • The EngJamkr Group. a Nev. port-
bas<."d adH'n1sing a.gene~. ren·n1h
addC'd tht• .\1nel Plaza Hotel. one of
the nc"t'.'St hotels in the San Fernando
Valle\. to 11s roster of chcnlS. Th~ EnsJander Group will develop
an advertising rampa1gn. which '>''lll
include dire-ct mail. outdoor. and ads
placed in both consumer and trade
pubhc~uons Robin Frank has been
appointed the account e\ecut1 \ e • • • Rosscomp ( orp. ha' complete-d a
fin.mcing agreement "1th a group 01
'enture rap11al 'hart'holders th.ii
could pro' 1de up w SI 5 million in
add1t1onal "'or"mg capital. accordmg
to Dr Gerhard Rottcr cruurman of
the board of the Costa Mcsa corpor
auon
.\ctording to Rotter the add1t1onaJ
financing will aJlov. the compan~ to
mt'<I current work mg capital ~u1rc
menl<>. and rnn11nue marl.eung and
pn.xluct1on rt•qu1rt'ments.
.. Ouray "elly'~··
OPE~ FOR l l '\CH & Dl~1'ER
\tonda\ thru f nda'
l I ·\ \1 to Q P\1
Hi™3fl &.tsifless-
au&ness Opportunities
-'\nnounc r~ The Relocit1on of Thelf Otf1ce~ To
THE ARBOR VILLAGE CENTER
,..-95 l~ffrey Road «>u1te-210
Irvine CA 92'""1 4
• bu.,rnl'" 5.lleo; • Business Pl.inning
• ~le~ & Leo1w\ of Commercial & lndustrral Real htate
• Propert)' M<tn.iR~m~nt
CONTACT JUDY COATES
ll1o&.l"t ("' ooprr .. tton
hll"nd~d Tn "II Rrnl'"'' (714) 651-8030 1
(
~ '
I
----..
,
l/
J
MONDAY'S CLOSING PllCES
~Xfj~
..Co .,.,.
vra • enllhE ro l
•
Market down slightly
EW YORK(AP)-l;hestock market dosed
with a minor loss in sluggish trading .today after
rebounding from a sharply lower opemng.
Prices tumbled over a wide front 1n early
dealings in a reversal that Wall Street h~d
anticipated following the market' strong rail}' 10
the previous session:
Many analysts considered that rally !arg_eJy
technical, saying it related heavily to the exp1ratton
of options and futures contracts on stock indexes.
As the contracts expired. professional in-
vestors aggressively traded both trr mdex con·
tracts and the stQCks underlying those indexes.
contnbuttng to the rally in prices.
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om
NEW YORK IAPI Jun. 24 Prev.
NEW YORK (AP) Jun. 24
Prev.
Adv~nced T1 dav
Dec~ned ~ ¥nc anoed
Advenc.ed v·c~ned nc anoed T13 df m
ota1 1fisue$ ~ewh ons ewlows lJ
AMEX LEADERS
NEW YORK (AP) -sa1u , • P.m. Mondav prl~ and net chani>e of ll"te 10 most active American Stock ExcnanQe Issues, trading nallonanv at more than Sl.
WanQLabB m 17'h + 1'" BAT Ind 2 4 3·16 + 1-16
Texa•AlrCp n· j5'.-'i t ~ DataPrO<I , l 1/11 l/i W~tch 11 , li~ '"3 Wsl 11011111 1 , 1 'h 117 Con tore n I 5, 1 1' I~ c~on 1U. sv. lh A hi I llV. ~
TIE omm 1 , •~
GOLD QUOTE S
METALS QuoTES
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot noni.rr-metal Pfleee
Monclay
A~ O 15 centa II"' pound NY CofNv IC>OI month clOMd Fri c...-· 87~·70 oenta • P<>Un<I, U S <1aa1lnat1<>na c...-80 46 cenll Pe< po.ind, NY Com41• fPOI
month doMd Frl
Leed 19·2 I CAnl•. pounCI
ZIM • 04 ·• 7 e«tta a pounCI CMll--ecl ,,.. • Ml 0593 (Melala Week compoe11e ptlce per lb I
..._·Ml 145 pet~ Hand-f & Herft\Wl
lltMf • Ml 126 I* troy.,.,,_, NY ComeJC l9QI mot1th
CloeeclFrl
lilafc"'J. S30300.$313 00 I*' 78 lb hMll, Nw '\'on. ,..._. 1276,00..1279.00 ci-11e menJhtlnl ltfY'/
ovn99, NY
otal l~ues ~ New~ohs New WI
NYSE LEADERS
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
fl~H1Yo,:, <A~~-;,,~1rin•1 ?°~.·Jo~"?
Ind 131SiOl~.7 m1. 3201 . Trn ~ .01 . 639. .... 1i 5 Utl 16 .61 14 163. 165. ...: . 65 Stk S4 .66 .SS s.11. S44f . ~us 1,300 u~~r ~JOO
65 Stk 16', S',\I
NASDAQ SUMMARY
famou.s lab<zls ...
,.
Jl
Or1nge Coat DAILY PILOT fMonday, JW1e 2 ... 1116
An las~de look at Nane-y-Reagan tonight,
~Y1~1~.~!:; SCHAFER But 11 also portrays Mrs. Reaaan as shunned her veal and Io na sown to canna people lD the world. .. be atd But the dnvinl forte an Mrs. I
WASHINGTON N R • touab-mandbed' and assert~vc lend a more serious note to her t.alb "And really cares about family a.oci ~·111.fe isdear-txuupport of . . -ancy c-woman. one w o as an evcr-arowuia wtth the pcn11ff h ,.,., .. b ···--"'
•·"·· wcannlJca.DS a.nd a work shirt, center of inOuence in the White omc J•C. er ~ . 11aivmg ~he White House doS, Lucky, Houte and 1 power to be reckoned . Cull~ ttom nearly three ho urs or Mrs. Rcapn acknowlcd&es that at As .1on1-u~ aide Michad Oeavu a scrubbing. with in her own riaht antervtews with reporter Chns ""lras iaken ume for ha to &c abJe 10 puts 1t: "SM s waicbed out for bun.
As he hoses down the black Besides tl"llCi her sometUbes Wallace, Mrs. Reqan admats to usma lau&h at henc:lfand allow bcrtdfto be she's ta.km care of him ... Jbe'1
Bouvier puppy in a metal washtub, painful childh::t and early days as "all. my little antennas" to femt out morcopcn:.so that.people can~ to w:omed. ~ed and worried for
• ht T wedding ring plops into the soapy an actress. with scenes from films like White. ~.ouse perso.n~~I probl~ms ~now her ... If I think people hke me, bim. Aftd 1l a becau~ of that, the] ~'ter. The fint lady pokes repeatedly "Donovan's Brain" that might be and will .try to stop at 1f she thillb I m better. she sa)'I. they att both~ they an today.
mto the water, mildly frantic until the best foraot ten the show abo details someone 11 not serving her husband
golden band is recovered: her ratbeT rocky development as first well. Try More Than 'Relief'
For Your Next Headache
··1 found it! I found ill" Mrs. lady. Reagan says his wife steps in ~eaJ&nexclaims, the dog still squirm-Buffeted by criticism of her because be is a "soft touch" when it
tng 1n her arm~. . thousand-dollar desianer dresses and comes to disciplining or firina people.
Such chanmngly s1mple scenes of a purchase of expensive White House OT as their son Ron puu 1t, sbe has
relaxed, co.nfidcnt first lady.~ coo-china while the nation lapsed into a "a real son of bloodhound's instinct"
trasted against the formal glitter and painful recession the show reveals for people who arc trying to use the
glamor oftheReagan White House-how Mrs. Reagan became the focus of president for their own ends.
By Dr. Jame• McEacbern.. CblJ'opractor
a~ pan oftbe NBC-TV special "The a calculated Wl\ite House effort to "Tbe bottom line for my mom is, is
First Ladr Nancy Reagan" to be Jive her a more compassionate this person hurting my father or
shown tonight at 10 on Channel 4. image. helping himr' Ron said ... And, once Of all the BO-called triumphs of
the pharmaceutical induat.ry, the
'h~che remedy' is the moet
dangeroua to life and health.
However, in no oondition will a
headache be eliminated until the The show? which offe~ views of the Mrs. Reagan plunged into her she's come down on one side or the
Reagans' Pr:tvate rooms LO the Wtiite highly praised anti-drug campa.ian. other. then she's gonna be e1theT a
House, their Santa Barbara moun-toppcdoffmostreocnlly withher v1s11 very powerful aJly or an enemy you l~intop ranch and the p~sidential in Rome with Pope John Paul II. Auf don't want to have." h1d~way at C~mp pav1d. ~d.. her clothes were meant to tip off her
I don't want to convey the
image that headache pills are
poiaon and are in themtelves
dangerous to life. However, the
lea toxic and the more appu.ent-
ly effective remedy is dangeroua
because it 1uppresaea a symptom,
while the trouble cauaed by the
symptom may continue to pro-
provides a rare ghmpSe a.nto th. e hfe of mindset, Mrs. Reagan is shown In the show. Mrs. Reagan e ven Pre d t R d hi ,., drops her normal reticence to speak s1 en cagan an s wa1e. wcarina a business suit, having out on pohcy issues, saying she would
One less burned-out teacher
DEAR ANN LANDERS: When d~ out of our yarct,lomplaini~ to
school begins next fall I will not be their parents about minor vandahsm
teaching and I would like to tell you and making occasional calls to the
why. A police when the parents were out of
I am a good teacher. I've had more Ill town and the kids had parties that
than m y share of praise from peers kept us up until 3 a.m.
and administratio n. l've done m y I ...... EIS Nowthcgirlsaregcttingmamed-
best in a demanding profession but I LAIU one at a time. When the first
can't hack it anymore. It's not lack of invitation arrived I told my wife to
respect. It's burnout from overload. th.row it away. She scot a gift and J got
Studjes have proven that when importance of education in this mad. We did not att~nd the wedding.
there arc 21 stude nts tn a class, each country but we can't educate children Several months later we were invited
additional student decreases t he effi- who get no discipline at home, watch to a second wedding. Again my wife
ciency of the teacher by at least 5 TV half the night, eat a candy bar for sent a gift. I raised bell. Last week we
pcn=ent. Yet 27 students 1n a class 1s breakfast, and fall between the cracks received a third invitation and I am
considered .. normal... I've had 35 while Dad is busy making money and boiling.
students for the last five years. Need 1 Mom isn't home. -Had It in These people are not fnends. We
tell you such numbers make Dubuque. have nothing to do with them.
classroom management v1n uall}' 1m-DEAR DUB: TILuk.I for a fine Am 1 a clod or should we let these
possible? letter. Cklcago Heel to laave a t aper-neighbors pick our pockets for the
Today we must teach not o nly the l.a teadeat of pablic 1~0011 wlao laad third time?-Ticked Off in Hyannis.
basics but we must look for signs ol many of tlae same coaceraa yCHt la.ave. Mass.
sexual abuse, drug abuse, inform Gaeta wlaat bappeaed to Iler? Site wu W, BY: U tlae reladoulllp 11 as
students about VD. how to handle fired. ca1ul H yoa describe, I cauot
divorce among parents, be on the • • • udentaad wily yoa wffld be invited
lookout for kids with suicidal 1enden-DEA R ANN LAN DERS: Our to tffle weddla11 or wily yo.,. wife
cies -and now Ann Landers tells us next-door neighbors have six daugh-feels obllpted to sead pits. lpore
we should also teach manners. ters. Our only contact over the years tills lavttattoa ud 111 bet tlaey take
We are expected to be ex pens on has been chasing the kids and their yo• off tllelr list.
how to deal with hostile children. 1--:;:=:=~~====:::;:::::::;::::=============;;;;;;;;:---1
passive children. children who are Advance Tickets for THe Ga0N·1·es
stoned, drunk and who steal. We.
must also deal with mothers who Oii .SALi al noiciir. "4S7WJ1t_ 1Mv~=Pl.us
dump sick kids on us because they are
so involved with their careers tha1
~will not stay at ho me even when
their children are ill.
But mostly I am quitting because I
can't bear to sec what we arc doing to
the generation that 1s expected to lead
us into the 21st century.
M uch has been said about the
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
F• 1\e lest tf Y .. Uh
1122 UIMI lln .. COSTA l lSl -541-llW
M>W
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prefer that her husband and Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev hold a
.. get-acquainted" session rather than
a formal summit. She sars she IS
intrigued by Gorbachev s West-
ernized style. gresa. .
Interviews w11h long-ume political
aides and friends also throw some
light on Mrs. Reagan's role.
Edward Rollins, one of Reagan's
chief political advisers. said Mrs.
Reagan has "as much clout as she
Pain, particularly headache
pain, is the alarm bell which
nature employs to signal 'FIRE.'
Ringing the 'fire' alao:n never put
out the fire. cau.ee ha.a been determined and
oorrected.
wants to." There are headaches that seem
to have a simple cauae. The
'morning-after' type, for in-
stance. And it u.eually pusea as
soon as ita cause-a clogged
digest ive tract -bu been
cleared.
Whatever the cause, the head-
ache aymptom should be acepted
as a natural bodily warrtlne to
seek proper diagnoeia and treat-
ment of the problem.
"I think if she wants to weigh in on
something, it certainly becomes the
focus on has agenda. and certainly can
become the focus of a lot of other
attention around the White House."
Rollins said.
On a personal note, Mrs. Reagan is
shown in touching moments with her
aged mother. Edith Davis. In recount-
ing the death of the man who adopted
her, Loyal Davis. tears well up in ~r
Other headaches, particularly
the chronic or r~J. type, will
send the careful, intelligent per-
son straight to the Doctor.
The cau.aes of headaches are
many. They include digestive,
eliminative, kidney and heart
troubles, ,.,ye.train, infected
tonsila, . nerve pressure from
spinal conditions, and sometimes
brain trouble it.self.
Many i ndiv idua ls seek
Chiropractic care both for relief
of the headache symptom and {or
the correction of the underlying
cause.
eyes.
Even Michael Reagan. the son of
the president and his first wife, Jane
Wyman, and o ne who has openly
feuded with his stepmother. gives her
credit.
"She 1s probably o ne of the most
..
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Dr. McEachern maintain.a
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1755 Orange Ave., Suite
"E," Co•ta Mesa; (714)
631-0085 P.U a4 .. rtt.•-'-
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C.AN OIE vL· ''Ill' '0. A PAl I (HRrSUo' A 11.l•SSIQo; \ l(JC ..,.. .. " • Rl" fPCI
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AlO Or.nge Coaat DAILY PlLOT/Monday, Jun. 24, 1Slr85 ...
FUNKY WINXERBJtAN .. by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY by Gary rudeau
·f£~~Q-~~A~ I'•~~ I ~~
lEM8 •.. / . . -A • :~ -.JJ HffANLR, ~ ~ MM5 P6IANlJ.
J.&i&.&~:~\
L TV Lis flNGs
DRABBLE
UM&R£ ~ ~ GO\NG
roQ ~~.~MAN ~
'
GARFIELD
I THE HfAA'T OF THE DRAGON
AllBC>M PlAYHOUlf
!'Mm THIE LON>
OOMl!ftPYU
MOYIE u •,; '"The lady 1n Red.. (19791
Aobltt Colwld. Pwnell Sue Mlrtln (B)MOYIE
H I,\ ·•Hambone And Hlllit •• (1sa..)
Llllilfl Gilh. Timothy Bottoms
(J)MOYIE * * * "The Secret Of N I .... H "
(1912) Animated. Voas of Elizabeth
Hartman, Dom Oel.ulte.
-&:30-
1 TIC TAC DOUGH CAHNON .
HOW TO MN<! A MIU.JOH
DOU.AAS _.._,
1::::AWE
***'h "Chisum" (1970) John
lw!&;~
IAAETTA
MOYIE * t "The Man Who Wasn't There"
( 1983) SIM Guttenberg, Jelffey
TembOr. (%)MOYIE
t "The lonely lady" (1983) Pia b-
clOra. Lloyd Bochner
-t.30-l ~ ME LM
9ITfRT AINMENT TONIGHT
THIE llQ RAK
MOYIE ** t "9 To 5' (1980) Jane Fonda, Qc>tf Plrton MOYIE
tt1,; "Something Wicked This Way
Comes" (1983) Jl50I\ Roberds,
Jonathln Pryce.
I=~ eNEWS
EYINNO WITH RAY
l ='THE~ CAUJNCJ AU. SPORTS MOYIE *** "GMy Park" (1983) William
Hu11, Lee Marvin.
-10:15-
81) ABJGIOU8 PAOGAAMMINO
-10';30-., N>EP£NDEHT NEWS
I!> CAPITOL JOUANAL 0 8AANEY Mll..l.£1' ~~ * t 'li ''The James Dean Story .. I 195 7) OocumeQtary
-11:00-
l flxi• Cll O a NEWS
OOHQSHOW
JEffEA80H8
BAANEY Mll1.E1'
!~COURT
• "Setlslactjons" I 19831 John Leslie.
Rhonda Jo Petty
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"I like dogs 'cause if you' re doing
something stupid they don't yell
at you. They do it with you."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"I can't explain the cat comics to you ...
I just read them."
by Jim Davis
SHOE
~ 1¥), I'VE~ rT
AGAIN!! l 'M ON TIJE
WJ?ONG SUS !1•
I 6(,1!" >fx/ ~"""1
HN1'ENEP10 I llfP.
~Pf!M 1i \ LIT'fl.6a1f.15.
I
PEANUTS
TME SIGN SAID. -NO
EATIN6 OR DRINKIN6
IMSIDE TME TMEATE~ ''
/T MS
trfflr.tY
L~.
\
SO RJOMT IN F~ONT OF
ME IS TMIS KID
EATIN6 AN OAAN6E !
AN ORAN6E ... CAN
YOU IMA61NE ?!
WU. 8e HIWW6
A~INHl5 HONOR~
AN{) ltt'P l/Kt
~1DBt110t.
I
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
TUMBLEWEEDS
COMeON,EL~ EN~AGE '
Pi LITn..E FREE
et4\e.Rffi!SE. j
~
... M
~ l'M5 A $JCH A 6lKTU,
~ JUI£ ~.
jlJfM IJllAW. f(EAPfN6 UWEJ.Y ' YIH(N()fl/ .. , lifHIU. smMMAIN.
I I
by Charles M. Schulz
by Lynn Johnston
FOR THEM Ii S FREE ···· F~ Me; rr.5 AN eNl~r5e
by Tom K. Ryan
Hl,'WEe~. ~\le \t)<J &H:erJ t.A1l!l,'7 G01 ANVTHttJG-FOR R)f{K~. I ~1'A~P A,-A
~VIPtJG. HOOSE. IN ~PIV Crrl ~ J W\'1'5. FOfV< ttt.f:S t
BRIDGE
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
MEY, ALL YOO TURKEYS! YOU
HAVE 10 00 TO WORK
~PAAE 1"1ME WOOLP M. M0R£
fUN If I MAP Lf.55 TO 5MRE
Q.1-As South, vulnerable. you
hold:
• Ae ~ K_. 0 K5 + AKQ9873
The bidding has proceeded:
What do you bid now?
A.-Obviously, you don't like no
trump, but you s houldn't take a
preference to a suit that partner
has not rebid when you hold only
three low cards in that suit. Tell
partner that you have at least 10
cards in t he minor suits by rebid·
ding t hree clubs.
support s pades? H the latter , is a
simple raise sufficient? We don't
reel you can afford to suppress good
fou r-urd support, so we would cer-
tainly raise spades. At the same
time, we don't t hink you are strong
enough in high cards to do more
than raise to two spades. While that
might risk missing a game, a jump
t.o three spades could easily propel
the auction to an uncomfortable
level.
AND I PON'T J
MOON MULLINS
®
JUDGE PARKER
As SAM DRIVER
TALt<9 WITH THE
r:()RMER NEIGHeOR
OF weNOY ~~'9
w.RENTS. 5t-E TELLS
HIM THAT MR9
SAVERN COUl-0 NOT ee WENOV'$
NA"TVRAL MOTHER I
J1M NOT
Sf'EAJ<IN4
OUT TO ~AVE FUt-J,
EMMA .'
North Eut SoatJa
PaH 1 • ?
What do you bid now?
A . -In light of the auction, we
would give up all thoughts of slam.
Indeed, even 11 tricks at five clubs
might be out of reach. We think that
your best chance for game liea at
three no trump. An ace in partner's
hand, or even a second spade stop-
per, would give you nine tricks o(1
the top. Bid three no trump.
by Ferd & Tom Johnson ~ Q.2-East·Weat vulnerable, as AND 7flAT'S South you bold:
IHt; 'Tf?UTH . •AKe ~Ktosw OK +AKes
The bidding has proceeded:
S.._. W eet Nw&li Eut
Q.4-Both vulnerable, u South you
hold:
• J ~ AQ10652 0 AJU +83
T he bidding hu proceeded:
OMAR
SHARIFF
CHARLES
GOREN
l ~ Put 2 ~ P... Nertll Eat 8..cli Weet Q.1-Botb vulnerable, as South you
"''Y. . . :.·.~. ~ • ,... a NT ,... ! ~T ~= ~ "c:> ,... hold: ~ ~~ I •AK102 <:i5 OKQSS +AUOCS .::h_t~t-'?'T-(f,· What would you bid now? What action do you take? Your right·hand opponent openUhe l:-/,··. // J A.-lf you aimply bid four hearts, A.-Even t hough partner hn blddln with one s a~t...ac· ,(.~-~-r • "ive won'fTauft yov-.::t e poTri of t ,..e--howtrrmilrimum 110-"trUrnmr11p1-1opeMM119n-~ir-10'-='n-::ao you ta e ·-~1-., question ia that. despite your ins with trump aupport (with a max· A. -You have no Mfe action. A dou· , .. ~.·f powerful hand a nd partner' a -imuhm hebwould have made a cue·bid) ble would probably elicit a hNrt
positive rebid, 7ou muat five up all rat er t an raiae to four heart.a • reaponae from partner, and it la too
thought. of alam. Wl\7? Beeauae It ·you could eaa'Oy make a tlam If you ritky to overeall at the two-level on
by Harold Le Doux tounda to ua t hat partner'• valuea don't have two fut lOMra in clubt. a four~rd tult. PaN and Me how r-----------------·-are in diamonds and apadea, and Your dlttribuUonal valuea are the auctlon develope-you mf.sht be
oo YOU KNOW NO• GWEN 010 TELL Me that he haa three low heart.a. The worth one move. Cu .. bld five able to double profitably later If &he
WHO n-E ~ ONCE lHAT THEY HAO~ choice now ia between pmea and dlamonda. If partner cannot accep& opponent. btcol'fte lncautloua.
U P A TRUST w~~~~~= we would chooee three no b-ump the invitation. you bave done 7our
J:OR WENDY? GOOFATHeR ! -nine tricka mlcht prove ea.aler duty·
than 10.
'I 9
Q.J -Nefther vulnerable, u South
you hold:
•'711 OA8$0 +ilMa
The blddlnr hu pl'Oeffded:
S.._. WHt N..taa Eut
I 0 P... l • P ..
I + Pue tNT r ..
7
• rt
Q.5-As South. vuln rable. you
bold:
•QJU OA&85U ON •t
The bidding bu proc..cted:
8..dii Wffl Nwda Eut
1 C\:> ,... 1 • r ...
?
What do 7ou bid oow?
A.-Ob'1oual7, 701.1 have lwo prob-
lema here: Do 7ov rebld bean. or
.. \
I
'Ii
Hot Angels
home (briefly)
They play Indians
in 3 -game series
after 11-1 victory
Coming off a three-game sweep and
sporting a 21h-game lead over the
Chicago White Sox in the American
League West, the Angels appear to
nave momentum -to say the least.
They can pick up even more
ground tonight when they host
Cleveland, the team with the worst
record in the major leagues (21-45).
The Angels' three-game series with
the Indians continues Tuesday and
Wednesday nights.
The An,els will have Thursday off
before a sax-fame road series which
includes stops at Kansas City and
Texas.
Whether the Angels add 10 their
lead depends on the offensive punch
of the team, according to Mike Witt.
Witt has it figured this way:
"If they get me four runs, I should
win. If not, then I'm not doing my
job."
The Angels got Witt four runs in the
first inning Sunday on their way to a n
11-1 triumph and a three-game sweep
of the Chicago White Sox.
"The way I saw it. ii was over in the
first inning," said Witt, 6-6. who
allowed but six hits and struck out
ejght in the seven innings he worked
as the Angels made it four straight
over the second-place White Sox.
"It's always nace to gel 11 runs."
said Witt. who has been victimized by
poor support e:ulier in the season.
The Angels have scored two or less
runs in six of his starts including two
shutouts.
"We either don't get him enough or
we get him too much," said Manager
Gene Mauch. "If a pitcher like Witt
grinds it out, he's going to be a plus
winner. I think he realizes that."
Witt, who earlier ws 1-4, has won
four of his last five decisions.
''With the talent he has. that's the
way it ought 10 be,'' said Mauch.
M) at
Jones. Rob Wilfong and Mike Brown.
Gary Pettis and Craig Gerber had
three hits each while Rod Carew
drove in three runs and Reggie
Jackson knocked in a pair with a
double.
Witt was a handed a quick four-run
lead in the first inning capped by
Jones' solo homer, his ninth of the
season. off loser Bruce Tanner, 1-1.
The Angels added three runs in the
second. Craig Gerber singled for the
first of bis three hits and scored two
outs later on a single by Carew. Daryl
Sconiers walked and Jackson doubled
home both runners.
Wilfong hit his second homer in the
fifth off reliever Bob Fallon and
Brown, replacing Jackson in right
field. belted his third homer, a 1wo-
run shot. in the sixth.
Carew drove in his third nin of the
game in the seventh with a single that
scored Pettis all the way from first.
Witt bad a four-hit shutout work-
ing until Rudy Law doubled with two
outs in the seventh and scored on Tim
Hulett's double.
The White Sox have lost four
straight games.
"I'm not smart enough to know
anything about a psychological ad-
vantage, but 1f there was Sunday
today, we had at.'' Angel Manager
Gene Mauch said.
''With Witt pitching, we had the
advantase." said Mauch. "and that's
not putting down (Bruce) Tanner. It
was a tough day for anyone to get
behind." •
MONDAY. JUNE 24. 1985
Pedro Guerrero hit• No. 12 thla month • Dodgira breeze. m.
Ex-GrMn B•r qu•rterlNlck Cecll labell d .... 113.
.,.., .... ,....
Swigart fits
in All-Stars'
ganie plans
5-10, 180-pounder
sizes up his role
wiffi South squad
By ROGER CAJ\18)N
Of ... 0.-, ........
With AJl-CIF credentials and as a
three-year staner for Fountain Valley
H1gh's Baro ns ll seemed almost
automatic that Dave Swigart would
be o ne of the keys to the South All-
Stars' offense.
Bui at has been even more evident
to Saddleback High Coach Jerry
Wme's Rebels.
"Right from the start we figured
ham as our No. I," says Witte. "Of aJI
our players he has fit in better to our ·
system than anyone else."
Swigart ran for 1 ,391 yards and
scored 15 touchdowns as a senaor, but
when the ma1 or college recruiters
took a peek al the Barons It was 6-6.
250-pound Brad Leggett (USC) and
receiver Carl Harry (Utah) that
grabbed their a1tenuon. not the 5-10,
180-pound tailback.
So the 26th Orange County All-Star
football game at Santa Ana Stadium
Saturday naght has a lot of meaning
for Swigart.1t's a chance to show JUSt
what he'scapableofagainsta massive
North squad.
··1 want to do the best possible,"
says Swigart. "Something could be
there for me and I'm defin1tely going
in as 1fit is another big time game."
At 5-10. 180-pounds, Swigart has
been going against a 250-pound hne
that has not been moved around a lot
by the offensive hne 10 practice, and
he figure's to see more of tt Saturday
naght against the North defense.
But Witte 1s not concerned Wlth the
size ratio at all.
deliver a blow. He d~n·t care how
b1a the other auy IS, he's go101 to SCI
you.
"He's able to cut back so smoothly
and he has great vision.
"We're a quick-hitting onented
offense with the option and he fits."
Swigart admits he has had some
trouble in pick.JO& up on Saddleback's
nomenclatures. but LD sheer per-
formance, Saddleback's option
philosophy as has idea of an offense.
"I lo ve the option,'' he says. "I wish
we could have done that at Fountain
Valley."
Swigart 101led under the dlrccuon
of Mike Mainer at Founwn Valley for
three years at tailback within a very
disc1phned style, but credits Milner
and that philosophy with a realiza-
tion toward rcspons1b1lity.
"Coach Milner taut.ht me more
about life than JUSt fOotball," says
Swigart. ··1 remember a couple of
umes he called me out of cws and
JUSt chewed on me. I went back to
class with my eyes watenng. If he had
some1hmg on his mind he'd let me
know. But yes, I do feel good about
11."
Long Beach State. Northern Ari-
zona and Cal State Fullenon
provided most of the attenllon from
the college recnuting ranks for
Swigart and the 18-year-old says he's
still undecaded between FuUerton
College, Golden West CoUege or Cal
State Fullerton.
In a lot of ways he as reminiscent of
former Golden West star Randy
Vatana. who went on to Stanford and
the pros with marked success wtth
Jim Plunkett.
,. He caught 22 passes for 314 yards
as a senior. inducting touchdowns
plays of 45 and 42 yards with
recepuons.
The Angels hammered out 17 hits
including home runs by Ruppert
"We have a bad combination going
now," said White Sox Manager Tony
LaRussa. "We're not hitting enou~
to overcome getting behind early, and
we're not sconng. It's a difficult
combination to overcome. It's disap-
pointing getting beat 11-1." Fountain Valley BlCh etandoat Da•e Swtcart bu optioned
himeelf Into a leacttnc role with the South All-Star team.
·Tm really impressed w1th tus
stamina." says Witte. ··He has ~ken
some shots in practice. and he'll
"Our quanerback coach (Dave
Penhall) wanted me to be a receiver.
(Pleue eee SOUTH/84)
l
Bentley, Clark are making some-waves
Berndt, Woodhouse win
at Mission Viejo meet
to close out the action
By BRIAN UNDERWOOD
o.11y .... c:.. ... ,. -· Compcmive swimming. hke most ind1v1d-
ual sports. is a cyclical kind of thing that always
has somebody on the horizon who one day ·as
taking the bows and the next day winds up as an
answer to a trivia question.
Upon the conclusion of the Swim Meet of
Champions at Mission Viejo Sunday, two
Orange Coast area products had pushed their
national reputations to new perimeters in
swimming circles. $iving spectators, the media
and even other swimmers something to think
about with the U.S. National Championships
just five weeks away.
People who know their swimming are
reluctant to push household names like Alex
Baumann. Jens-Peter Berndt. Tiffany Cohen,
Mike O'Bnen and Amy Wh11e out the back
door 1n ,favor of names of like Amy C lark and
Steve Bentley after JUSt one meet.
Bui Golden West Swim Club Coach Greg
Holland has reason 10 believe otherwise.
After watching two ofhis pnze pupils enter
a world class field, weary from intense training
a nd swim extremely fast times against world
reco.rd holders and medal winning Olympians,
Holland left the pool Sunday with a good
feeling about the chances for has proteges to
finash 1n the top two slots at the nauonals which
would qualify Clark and Bentley for the Pan-
Pacific Games the next week in Japan.
"I think they have a shot." Holland said. ··1
think they have to believe that after this year
and this meet."
Bentle). who took a w~k off from 1ra1010g
two weeks ago to go to Yosemite. finished 11 th
tn the men's I 00-meler breaststroke on Frida)
at I :07. 97. .\nd while world record holder
V1c1on• Da' 1s of Canada set a meet record of
2 18.43 in the 200-meter brcac;1s1roke 'iunda'
the c'-Fountain Valley High star swam 10 ·a
respectable 2:.N.25. good for seventh place
··Last year I "as a little bit faster but I wa~
shaved and tapered." Bentley started. ··Thi'>
year I came in here 11red and I almost did m}
best. My times just keep getting better. II sce1.1s
hke evel) time I S'-' 1m I get better."'
Entering the women's I 00-meter
breaststroke Fnday with the n1n1h fastest seed,
Clark was pleasantly surprised 10 place second
behind Susan Johnson in the finals at I: 14. 7:..
··My time was faster than I'd thought 1t would
be." the three-lime All-Amencan from Foun-
tain Valley High School commented "I went
16 ( 1:16) m the morning and I d1dn't 1hink I'd
go that fast in the finals."
a1urda}. Clark made people turn 10 1he1r
heat sheets once again. ~w1mming to a third
place finish tn the 20<}..meter breas1~1ro~e at 2:~0 27. a quarter ofa second offherquahf~ing
11me of 2 ~O 00.
"The 11mes were prett) good. I JUSI wanted
10 go faster 10 ma} be get down closer to m) best
(2:39.32). "Clark explained. ·
In a meet.dominated by Commo nwealth '
countries. Clark and Bentle} are encouragmg
talents for a countr) 1ha1 1s going through the
·poM OI~ mp1c blahs' according 10 Baumann ·s
coach. Dr kno T1han}1.
··1 th1nk there are a 101 of guys like me that
are down 1n the rankings that they (the top
(Plea.e eee SWDl/BS)
McEnroe
has f oilrtli
try at title
Navratilova also
hopes to.defend
Wimbledon crown
_____ __.'":"" .... ,....~, ... It_
---J on Hanley defenda on a hit by lllke Dodd ID the La.Cana Beach •olleyball tolll'Dament Sanday wbUe Tlm Hovland dJC• to keep tbe ball ID plaj.
.
t
Smith, Stoklosretain Laguna Beach volleyball title
It takes 35 minutes
to win championship
as 9,000 view matc h
Singin Smith and Randy toklos success~
fully defended their t..aauna Beach lnv1ta-
11onal volleyball title unday. dcfeat1n1 Tim
Hovland and Mike Dodd. I S-S. befort a
crowd of9.000 at La~una Beach.
Smith, a four-year II-Amen a from
UC'LA. and Stoklos. nttdtd only JS minute
to win the championship and $3,500 pnze.
Hovland and Dodd played two pmes just
before the champ1onsh1p match, whale Smith-
Stoklo observed the contests from the shade
of an umbrell1'.
In the pme JU St prior to the final, Hovland
and Dodd put 10 a 1ruelina hour aaainst the
th1rd-placc team of Jon Hanley and Jon
tevenson. The crowd witnessed a 2S-minutc
match point betWttn the teams. wtth Hov-
land-Dodd finally llkina an 18-\6 dccmon
Hovland, a U All-Amencan. and Dodd.
who played with the U .. National team, wttc
clcarl)' drained from their urher workout
They d met Andy Fi hbum and Ja Han th.
"'
the eventual fourth-place finishcri.. 10 the
momma round
Hovl11nd and Dodd got to tht• final round
vta the loser's bracket. which rtsullt'd 1n their
havang to pick up e'll"I game on the final da'
· Perhap<1 thr1r 1oughc-st a <11gnmrnt prior to
the finals w against Hanley and tephenwn.
a two-hour match which found Hovland and
Dodd down by an 2 m1H11n
But Hovland's h1tl1n1Jnd Dodd' hlockina
came to the forefront · and the~ evtntuall\
foracd into a 12-11 )cad ·
The lead continued to chanae hand fOJJr mo~ um" in add1t1on to a ruh of s1drouts
and Hanley and Steven n wt're 1n matt"h·
rx>•nt situations six limes.
But ()odd ti nail got the ~inner over the lltt
again t an outstret ·hed Hank}
m1th and Stoklo art the top two mone)
winners on the profc-\ 1onal beach 'ollt ball
nrcu1t The) mo\t rccentl} won the
Clearwater. Fla . 'tllk' ball tournament
The 16-team Laguna Beach ln\1tat1ol\ll. ~1}1ch was held for 11s JI '"ear. had an $8.()()()
puf"i<' and sunn \k1r\ to won. Wlth h 141 the
oldC\t prof~,1onal hrach \Ollt ball IOU,..
namtnt.
Tom Knapp. a tournament ~pokesman.
$aid the crowd Y..IS 100\e 8\Cra&e this \Car,
and no m~r 1nc\dents were reported
,.
-Orenge Cout DAILY PllOT/Mond1Y. June 24, 1N6 ~--iiiiiiiiii-------------------------------------------------------Howe3 hours
late, fined $300
LO ANGELES (AP) -Los
Anaeles Ood&crs relier p_•!chcr
Steve Howe was fined $300 for
amving three hours IAte 11
Dodger Stadium Sunday for a
pmc between the Dodgers and
Houston Astros.
Guerrero swings his way to sweet 16
Homer ties club mark
as Dodgers rip Astros
to lie f nlnk Howard's Los Angeles club record
for home runs in one month, set m July 1962.
"The reco rd J want 1s Steve Garvey's," said
Guerrero, alludina to Garvey's Dodaer club
record of 33 home runs in 1977. Twice, in
1982 and 1983. Guerrero hit 32.
two outs sn the S.C\entb and Bill Doran
followed with a s1naJe, Niedenfuercame 1n for
his fifth $.IVC. .
Guemro slammed a two-run homer in the
third off Ron Mathis 3-2. .
Guerrero's homer followed a two-out Str\ale
by Ken Landreaux to give Los An_aeles a !.O
lead. The Dodgers"madc it S.O in the fifth as
Greg Brock doubled home one run and R.J
Reynolds singled home two i:nore ..
Howe. who was suspt'nde.d for
the entJrc 1984 season by then-
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and
suspended twice in 1983 by the
Dodgers because of his involve-
ment with cocaine, said he was
Wdy because his wife C~dy had
accidentally left the family homo
with his car keys a~e had no
ride to Dodger St~~
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hot-hittins Pedro
Guerrero has no ready explanation for his
torrid home-run pace.
His sudden cxplo 1veness bqan when he
was switched from third base to the outfield,
"But I'd go back to third base tomorTOw 1f
they ask me to," s.a1d Guerrero. "No way I'd
say no."
"I'm swinging the bat and the long ball is
coming." said Guerrero. who cracked his 16th
home run this season -and 12th this month
-in the Los Angeles Dodgers' 6-2 victory
over Houston Sunday.
Guerrero's 37th and 38th runs batted in
supported the five-hit pitching of Rick
Honeycutt and Tom Niedenfuer as the
Dodgers won their founh straight game.
Dodgers have won 10 of 12 games with the
Astros this season.
Honeycutt. 5-6. who was chased in the
second inning of his previous start, did not
allow the Astrosa hit until the fifth inning. The
left-hander lost his bid for his first shutout of
the season in the ·Sixth when Jose Cruz
doubled home two runs.
Steve Sax. with one hit sn his previous 16 at·
bats, got bis ~cond hit o~ the same in the
Dodger sixth with an RBl single.
The Dodgers are now five games over .SOO
for the first time $C8SOn, with a mark of JS-30.
Howe told repa J!F1s wife
also had his wallet and credit
cards
"(Hitting coach) Manny Mota told me to
drop my hand . and it's working," Guerrero
said, ex plaining-hi&-$lzzhng turnabout.
Guerrero's latest blasl, which moved him to
within one run of National League home run
leader DaJe Murphy of Atlanta, enabled him
Guerrero has so far hit seven nome runs this
season aga1nst Houston, including's1x 1n the
last six games agamst the Astros.
"Usually we play them close," said Houston-
manager Bobby Lillis. "But the last couple o(
series, they've JU St walked over us."
SPOR TS BREAK
Formula One racing
off to slow start
in North America
From AP dlapatcbes
The Formula One "circus" has con-
cluded its one brief visit to Nonh America
in 1985 without making many waves. • It is safe to say that millions of
Americans and Canadians were unaware that the
glamor child of international motor racing spent two
full weeks on their continent.
Both the Canadian Grand Prix in Mont~aJ on
June 17 and Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix were on
national television -one on cable and the other on
network .
To the local media, the races were big stuff. but
there wasn't the national impact as for such events as
the Super Bowl, the World Series and, in motor spon s.
the Indianapolis and Daytona SOOs.
And therein lies the rub.
North America is a very 1mponant continent for
Formula One racing. The European-based sancuonmg
bodies that run the series -and the multi-national car,
cigarette, clothing. camera and oil companies that fund
the teams and spon59r the series -want more races in
Nonh America. pirticularly in the United States.
The big stumbling block is money.
It costs a minimum of$2 million to bring Formula
One to a community, while the domestic version of
open-wheel racing -Indy cars -can run an equally
appeaJi ng show for under SI mil hon. And the names of
the drivers arc a lot more familiar to the man on the
street.
Still , Formula One means glamor. It's the Jet set,
the sophisticated and wealthy of Europe and South
America, that make Formula One racing hum. And
more than a few American promoters would hke to
have such a show.
Christopher R. Pook. who promotes an Indy-car
race in the streets of Long Beach. after eight years of
Formula One, openly laments the depanure of the
Grand Prix set from his venue.
For three years, Dan Koren. a New York City
businessman, has been unsuccssfully putting hean and
soul into getting a Grand Pnx for his home town.
RaJph"Sanchez., a real estate mogul from Miami. as
the promoter ofboth sports car and I ndy-<:ar events. but
admits he'd love to have a Formula One race 1f 11 was
economically feasible.
Bids, realistic and otherwise, have come from
groups in such cities as San Francisco. San Diego.
Chicago, Cleveland, Miami and Dallas.
Carlton on disabled list
PH I LA DELPH IA -Steve Carlton of •
the Philadelphia Phillies was placed on the
disabled list Saturday because of an inJury
-for the first time in his 20.year major league
career.
Carlton. 40. a four-time Cy Young Award winner.
was put on the 21-<iay disabled list because ofa strain of
the left rotator cuff.
He is 1-7 this season despite a 2.43 ERA. Carlton's
tot.al of 314 wans is 11th on the all-time major league
list. and his 3,908 strikeouts is second to Houston's
Nolan Ryan on the all-time list.
The victory was the Dodgers' founh straight
and their seventh in a row over Houston. The When pinch-hitter Glen Davis singled with
The Dodgers have outscored the Astros.
4 I -9 in the last two series.
Toronto outbrawla Red Sox
En.le Wllitt hit the first grand-slam • home run ofhis career and R.uce Mollllltkl·
cracked a two-run homer Sunday to spark
Toronto over Boston, 8· l. highlighting
American League baseball action. The game was
interrupted by a bench<learing brawl in the founh
inning that began wtten George Bell charged the mound
after being hat in the helmet by a pitch from Boston's
Bn« IUMa. BelJ kicked Ki son 1 n the groin area as both
teams swarmed onto the field. When ord er was restored
nine minutes later, home plate
umpire Derryl CoHllla ejected
Bell. while Kison remained in the
pme . . . Elsewhere. Fraak
Tuua, making his first start in a
Detroit uniform. pitched seven
shutout innings and Cllet Lemon
hit a two-run homer as the Tigers
beat New York, 3-1. Tanana. 31,
acquired in a trade Thursday with
Texas for a minor-league patcher.
scattered eight hits as he im·
IU80D proved to 3-1 ... Caney Lansford
hit his 11th home run of the season and Mike Reatla had
a triple, double and single and drove in two runs to lead
Oakland over Oeveland, 9-3 ... Gia Coot. making his
ma1or league debut, pitched 61/J shutout innings as
Texas defeated Minnesota, 3-1 ... Larry saieeta' threc-
run homer in the ei&hth inning powered'Baltimore to a
6-3 victory over M,ilwauk.ce ... Spike Owea and Bob
Keaney hit home runs while Mike Moore combined
with Ed Vaade Ber1onafour-hitterto lead Seattle to an
8-2 victory over Kansas City.
Qaote of tll.e-
.... ••••-. _, aallgl bnf~~ oom-"*"8tor. Qft ...... CeNll ..............
OOldt Jim V.._.~ ~ up tO ~ crowd In
Ourtllm. N.C. dur'lnO 11'9 Duke ChlldNI•'• a111rc c1I•:: tcunlmlnt! ·"V11wno woreet. The Ot"'1 WM I .. lfrtlld he.,.. going to get·
hit tongue aunbumed on the golf courae. ••
Bevacqua •s slam paces Padres
Klll't Bevacqaa belted his second • grand slam of the year m the fifth inning
and Dave Dravttky scattered nine hits as
San Diego won its fou rth consecutive game
Suaday with a 6-1 decision over San Francisco.
Dravecky, 7-4, struck out a career-high nine batters
while only walking one. giving up the Giants' only run
on a two-out, ninth-inning homer by Rick Adams ....
Jobn Tudor pitched a two-hitter. scored two runs and
drove in one ac; 'itrcaking St. Louis defeated Chicago 7--0
and handed the slumping Cubs
their 12th s1ra1gh1 defeat. The
losing streak is one shy of the
worst streak 10 the Cubs' history.
which they set earlier and tied
three years ago ... Vance Law hit
a two-run homer. Tim Rallles
drove in a pair or runs with a tri pie
and Brea Smltb pitched a seven-
hitter as Montreal defeated the
New York Mets, 5·1 ... Jaaa
Samuel scored on a throwing
BeYacqaa error 1n the ninth to boost
Philadelphia to a 3-2 victory over Pittsburgh ... Steve
Bedrosian and two relievers teamed on a four-hatter to
send Atlanta to a 2-1 victory over Cincinnati.
Miller aeta earnings record
AIJce MWer shot a 2-under-par 70 l!I Sunday. claiming her fourth victory of the
year by si~ strokes and establishing a
Ladies Professional Golf Association re-
cord foreaminJ.S in a season. Miller, who only had three
victories and $374,992 in her first seven years on the
tour. finished the 72-hole Mayflower Classic with an 8·
under 280. The victory was wonh $37,500. That
boosted Miller's earnings for 1985 to $31 8.250 and
to the si e-scason record ofS3 I 0,399 set 1n 1982
by Jo.Aue Caner. Mary Betb
Zlmmermaa and Beth Solomon
shared second with a 2-under 286
... Wayne Levi sank a 12-foot
birdie putt on the second hole of a
sudden death playoff and de-
feated rookie Steve Pate to cap-
ture the Atlanta Golf Classic.
Both Levi. claiming his e1gh1h
tour victory, and Pate, who had
never finished better than 53rd,
parred the first extra hole after
Mµler finishin$ in a 72-hole deadlock at
273. IS under par on, the rolling hills of the 7 ,008-yard
Atlanta Country Oub course. Levi, who earned
$90,000 for the triumph, had a closing67 and Pate. a 24-
year-old Californian who led after two rounds. shot a 69
... Defending champion Arnold Palmer gained a
record-setting 11-stroke victory in the· Senior Tour-
nament Players Championship after shooting a 14-
under-par 274 al the Canterbury Golf Club.
NBA considers new lottery
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The m National Basketball Association decided
Sunday to consider two alternatives to its
controversial new draft lottery system.
As it stands, the lottery includes the teams with the
seven worst records. The New York Knicks won this
year's tint lottery and drafted center Patrick Ewing.
The Golden State Warriors, who shared the worst
record in the league, came out the big loser in the lottery
and drafted seventh in the first round.
Jerry Colangelo. chairman of the competition and
rules committee. said one proposed change would have
fi ve teams drafting in inverse order after two names arc
drawn.
The other change would set upa weighted lottery in
which the worst team would have seven slips in the
drum; the sixth team would have six slips. and so on,
with the team with the seventh's worst record having
one shp.
At lea st 18 of the 23 teams would have 10 approve
a change in the lottery bylaw.
The Boston Celtics, who lost in the championship
finals to the Los Angeles Lakers. proposed a change 1n
the playoff format but failed to get enough suppon.
This season. the team with the best record was the
host forthe first two and. 1f needed. the final 1wo games
of the seven game se nes. The Celtics said the new
formal contributed to their loss.
Alford leads Indiana five
TORONTO-Steve Alford scored 32
points to lead Indiana University 10 an
82-75 exhibition basketball victory over
Canada's national team Sunday night.
Canada was led by Jay Triano·s 22 points.
Triano scored a three-point shot wi th 3: 19
remaining that lifted Canada to a 70.69 lead. before
Alford led a late surge.
Stallion• get conference title
CWf Sto.dt threw a third-quarter EE
touchdown pass and Ted Walton scored on 4 •
a 46-yard interception return less than two -
minutes later as Birmingham defeated
New Jersey, 14-6, to capture the United States Football
League Eastern Confe_rence title Sunday ... In other
USFL games, running back .Don Roberta caught a
touchdown pass and ran for another score as San
i\ntonao beat Ponland, 21-13, in the final game of the
year for both teams ... Kelvlll Bryant and Allen HarvtJa
each scored twice to lead Baltimore to a 38-10 regular
season-ending victory over Tampa Bay ... Mike Roder
scored four touchdowns and Ed Lutber passed for 3 70
yards to lead Jacksonville to a 42-6 triumph over
Denver.
Roarke leads Keuler Open
DUBLIN. Calif. -Craig Roarke or G
Santa Clara averaged 238 for the first 12 .
games and had a 23-pin lead over Charlie '
Tapp after the second round of the
S 125.000 Kessler Open Bowling Tournament Sunday
night. -Roarke, seeking his first title on the Pro Bowlers
Association tour, had a total or 2,856. while Tapp, out
of St. Paul, totaled 2,833.
Mark Baker of Garden Grove. who rolled a 300
game in Round 2, was third at 2.823.
Baker and Tapp are the only champions among the
top 12 bowlers. having one title apiece.
Earnhardt win• NASCAR race
KENT, Wash. -Dale Earnhardt of ...
Kannapolis, N.C.. came back from last
place after a flat tire to win a 200 NASCAR
race Sunday at Seattle International .
Raceway.
Jim Robinson of North Holywood finished
second. JUSt 19 seconds back. 1n an Oldsmobile,
followed by Demke Cope in a Ford. Both had to stop
for fuel with five laps to go, whale Earnhardt. the 1980
Winston Cup champion, had changed tires and gassed
up his Chevrolet on the 26th lap of the 55-lap race.
Anderson get.a Funny Car win
SONOMA -Brad Anderson and • WaJt Rhoades were the big winners Sunday
during National Hot Rod Association
racing at Sears Point Raceway.
Anderson. the reigning NHRA champion in the
Top Alcohol Funny Car class, turned in a 6.363 second.
226.13 mph performance to win that class Sunday.
Anderson. of Covina. was behind the wheel of a Pontiac
Trans-Am funn y car.
Rhoades. of Gardena, won the Top Alcohol
Dragster competition with a 6 41 5 second. 214.28 mph
perfonnanc$!.
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I I
INGLEWOOD {AP) -Calling up
a burst of speed in the stretch,
Greinton ovenook th e favored
Pre<:ision1st Sunday to win the
$500,000-added Holl ywood Gold
Cup at Hollywood Park.
Ridden by Laflit Pincay Jr .. who
put his career earnings over the $100
million mark Sunday, Greinton fin-
ished I l/• len$ths ahead of his arch
rival. It was his second victory in two
starts against Prccisionist. who also
ran second to the 4-year~ld colt in
the Californian Stakes June 9.
With jockey Chris McCarron
aboard, Precisionist finished I 'I•
lengths ahead of Kings Island. piloted
by Gary Stevens.
Lprd at War, scheduled to be
ridden by veteran jockey Bill Shoe-
maker, was scratched at the ,last
minute. "They (ownq Peter Perkins
and his wife) would rather not run sn
this race." trainer Charlie Whit·
tingham explained Sunday. "I guess
they don't want to run against
Prccisionast and Greinton."
Whittingham's stable also includes
Sunday's Gold Cup winner. and the
victory gives the veteran trainer a
record seven winners in the cup's
history.
With Lord at War scratched,
Greinton defeated six n vals in the
11/•-mile race for 3-year-olds and
older. collecting $275,000 for owners
Mary Jones Bradley of Santa Monica
and Howell Wyn ne of Dallas.
Hewasclockedat 1:582/S,just l /S
of a second off the Gold Cup record
set by Quack in 1972.
Sent off the No. 2 choice, Gremton
paid $4.40, $2.20 and $2.10.
Precisionist, the even-money
favorite, paid $2.20 and $2.10. Kings
Island returned $2.20 to show.
From AP dla~tcbes
BERKELEY -Am encan record
holder Steve Scott. a UC' Irvine
graduate, easily beat New Zealand
rivaJ John Walker in the mile on a day
of lackluster performances Sunday.
here.
Scott's relatively slow time or
3:58.43 was his IOlst sub-4 minute
mile. Walker. who finished fourth at
3:59.65 behind Ireland's Ray Flynn
and American Richie Harris.ha.snow
run 102 sub-4 minute miles.
The mile highlighted etght world
class invitational events held in
conjunction with the two-day Pacific
Conference Games, a quadrennial
meet featurin_a national teams from
Carryin1 120 pounds and starting the U nitcd States, Australia. New
from the fifth ~st position. Grcinton Zealand, Canada and Japan.
was kept outside and reserved off the ··1 kind of had a feeling it would be
early pace. But Pincay urged the colt a slow. tactical race," said Scott,
into second place down the back adding "it's easier to get up when you
stretch as pace-setting Precisionist have {Sebastian) Coe. or (Joaqutm)
bag.an to pull away. Cruz in the race."
ln other invitational events, Ruth ~~~~~~w~.~o~-:G~u~n~·=T~R~o~~e~r~f~s~o~n~.=~=t·s~t=o~n~i~g~-~t~-~~~M~~~
4: 11.1 0; Billy_ Konchellah won·· the
800 in I :46.40: Joe Dial, who ,et an
A se ven-bout card, featunnf top-rated state wel-~ 111ld .. ~11 rugcd nvaJ !D Maruo. w.hu t) ran~cd as Japan's American record of l 9·2V• m the pole
1erweigh1 Hedgemon ··Two-Gun' Robertson of Hunt-No. I super bantamwc1.ghr.Maruo s record 1s 17-2-1. vault last month, won at I 8-41..'r. and
1naton Beach. Santa Ana's Georaie Garcia and Olympian Shannon, the bantamwc14ht member of the U.S. John Brtnncr won the shot put at
Robert Shannon. will be presented 1on1ght at the Irvine Olympic team, will be scckina his fifth straight victory au 68-8V2.
Marriott Hotel. staning at 8 o'clock. "'-' pro. As they did on Saturday, U.S. . · . The 23-ycar-old native of Edmonds. Wash. meets athletes dominated Sunday's events
Robert on goes against Eddie Nuno of ~omona in a Ralph Out1erre1 of Los Angeles in a si:Mounder at 122 winnina 11 of the 18 competitions: I ().rounder. Robenson has a 20.S· I record. 1ncludang 18 pounds. On Saturday. mencan$ won 14 of17 knockouts haonon lost to Sunf K.tl Moon or Korea 1n his events !'-nephew of onMame title contender Hedgemon second-round 1984 Olympic match. Amons the Amcncan winners ~re
Lewis. Robenson is now manlJCd by Orange County San D1cao's David Gutierrez. who lost,. dec1s1on 10 Harve)' Mc wain in the 200 meters
bus1nes man Frank KJaus Jr. and. Tom Adams. Fra~k Mark Breland 1n the Olympic tnab. 1s matched apinst (20.83); Nat Paae in the 400 burdlc
Klaus r. held the world m1ddlcwc1ght championship an Nonnan Oabrojiel ma wcltcrwc1&ht six-rounder. (49.56): Schowanda Williams in the
1913. In other bouts: Dino Ramirc7 oppo8Cs Oen~i;o women•s :'00 hurdles (Sf>.85); Owen
Nuno. who has an 18-6 slate. holds the onty win ever Hernandez tn a six-rounder at 129 pounds; John Ann1JO Torrence in th9 women's 200\23.57):
scored over Cahfom1a junior welterweight champion faces Frank Manina, four rounds. at l S7 pounds; and Carol Lewis in the womeo s Iona
Andy Nance. Grca Puente fiahts Rene Bonilla in a four-rounder at 131 jump (21 -9); Art warti an the discus
Garcia 1s paired against Japan's Tadastu Maruo in a pounds ( 195-2); and Ramona Paael an the
10-rounder at 121 pound$. Owner of a 20.3-1 mark. Garcia Tickets will~ on !131t up to fi&ht ume. women', shot put (6()..41/)).
r.
·~
. -.
I
MA~ LIAGUa STANDINGS AmwtcM~
WllTDt~
w " ltd. oa • 2 5'7
34 JO .Sll , .... >s ,, sn 3
33 l) .500 .....
Jl M .~ 7 n 36 ,..... a
27 41 .l97 Ill/~
Toronto
0.lroll
Btltlmort
Bo SI on lffw Yortl
MllwaullM
Cle11 ... ne1
8AST DtVIMON
42 26
Jt 27
JS JO
)6 )1
)) l2
JO )4
21 4S S..Y'•~ .,...._ 11, Cllkaeo 1
O.trolt 3, New York l
Toronto I, Sotlon l
Ttu• 3, MlnnetOlt l
SMllle I, Kans.• City 1
Balllmort 6, MllWtllkM 3
Oakland 9, Cle~ l
TMmY'l GailMI
.... ses .m
S37
.50I
.469
311
,...,
SY'I
S'll
1'11
10
20
Cleveland IBlvle11en 6·6) al A'*"t !Slaton 4·51, n
0.trolt ITarrau 1·21 al Bolton (8011d l·S), n
Balllmora ID Martlntz S·4) al New York !Cowlev S-l ), n
Kanws Cll11 <Guolcta 4·41 t i MlnntM>ta IFll10n l-4), n
Tex .. (Wtt'1'1 l·l) al s .. 111e (Wiii• 2·1), n
Clllc.aoo !Burnt 7·5) at Oakland (Krueger •·7), n
Tl*CltY'• G4ll'nes Clt11t1tnd al ._,....., n
0.lroll a l Soslon, n
MllwtultM al Toronto, n
Baltlmort et New York, n
Kanie• Clrv el MlnntlOla, n
TtxH al S.alllt, n
Clllcego al Oall141nd, n
MatleNI LMeue
WIEST DIVISION
W L l'tt. GB San Dle9o 41 27 603
Dtdeen JS lO S3e 41'1 Clnclnna lf l4 J2 SlS 6
H°'islon J4 3J 507 6V2
Al141nlt 79 JI C33 l 1'..,
San Fre nclKO 16 4'l 311 IS
SI. LOUI\
MonlrHI
New York
Clllcaoo
Pfllladtle>l\1•
Plllsbvrtll
EAST DIVISION
3' 27
40 79 )7 19
~ ll 2t JI ,, '3
~Y's ScM'ft Dtdeen 6. Houston 2
MontrHI S. New York I
Pllllaoetollla J, Pl1t11>uf9ll 2
St Loult 7, Clllcaeo 0
Atlanlt 2, Cincinnati l
~ Dleoo •• San FranclKO I
TtdaY'• Game
St l
SIO
S6l
523
424
331
4'" II
16112
Houslon INlttlro 4·71 •I Otdears (Wetc:ll
l· 11. n
Only t>tme sclleovltd
T..-Y's~
Dtdeen at San Dlteo. n N-York ., Clllcaoo
St. Louis al Plllladtlollle, n
Montrnl •• Plll\Ovrgll, n
San Francisco al Clncinnell. n
A1141nle el Hou1lon, n
AMERICAN LEAGUE
.,_. 11, White Sox 1
CAL.,OllNIA CHICAGO
Ptlll• cf
Carew lb
Sconlrs dll
Jadltn rl
Brown rl
O.Cno30
SchOf1ld '' "~" Wllfono 2t>
Gartltr n
Boonec
Nwronc T.-
•t>rl'llll
• , l 0 l •w 11
S I 2 l Hutti! 21>
• 2 2 0 Balnt• rt J I 2 2 FltlCllr 21>
2 l l 2 GWelkr 11>
2 l l 0 Kiili• dll
l o o o Boslon cf
S I 2 l Salaz¥ 30
S l l I Halrttn Pll
S130 Gulllenu
4 0 0 0 MHIM c
l O O O Gambit Pf'!
U II 11 t T .....
~ ..........
.. ,,,,bl
4 l 2 0
3 0 ) 1
4 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
4 0 2 0
4 0 I 0
3 0 0 0
0000
4 0 0 0
2000
l 0 0 0 n 1 6 1
c;..,,... .. 012 --11
Olk.He --lot-l Game Wlnnlnt RBI -Carew (3)
E-MHIN, Hultll DP-<allfornla
LO&-<allfwnla a. Clllcaeo I
2&-0telnces, RtJacilM>l'I, Le• 2, Hu .. 11,
RJonn. 3B-Sconleo Hlt-RJones 191.
Wiifong (2), MCBrown ()) SS-Ptltls 1791
II' H • ER ea so
~
WlllW,6·6 6 l I • Coroell 0 0 0 0
CNca ..
Tanner L.l·l 11 ) 7 1 7 0
Fallon s 1·3 9 4 4 l 7
BJ a mes I I 0 0 0 1
Agoito l 0 0 0 0 l
T-757 A-26 ....
NATIONAL LEAGUE Oedelr1 6, Astr.s 2
HOUSTOM LOS ANGELES ettrl'I bl ab r II bl
3010 St•2t> Sl2l
l 1 O O Duncan u 4 O l O
0 0 0 0 Landrx Cf 2 l l 0
4 l O O Guerrer 11 1 2 I 2
4 012 MldndoH 0 000
l 0 0 0 Broek lb 4 I I l
' 0 l 0 R .... nkn r1 • 0 l ,
4 0 0 0 ScloK141 ~ 3 0 l 0
3010 Andtrsn lb 4 110
l O O O Honevcu11 p 2 o o o
2 0 0 0 NleOntur P 1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
1 0 l 0
Doran 2b
C.oell lb
DIPlnoo
Garner Jb
Crut II
NlvPftry cf
.... r1
a.11rr c
Tllonu
Wa1111'19Ph
Ma"11s o
ScMl'IOP
GDa11lt lb
T ..... J12 5 2 T .....
~ .......... )I • '.
Htu•tlft -002 --1 ..... ....... 002 OJI Oh-6
Game Winning R81 -Guerrero <7> E-Dunun DP-1...os Anoeles 1 LOB-
Houlton 6, Lo• Anllt4n 1 28-erock, Crut
HR-Guerre<o ( 16). SS-Rlttvnoldl 161.
Cruz (SI. Duncan 1121 5-+iontYCUll.
I~ H It Ell aa SO
Htutteft
Malllls L.3·2
Solano
DI Pino
L .. A.......,
s 2·3 9
1-3 0 , 0
Honevcn W,5·6 6 7·3
Nltdnfuer S.S 2 l · 3
T-2 '4. A-38,116
6
0
0
7
0
6
0
0
I
0
4
I
0
J
0
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
American LMeue
0
0
0
SATTING (160 t i btlsl-R HenderM>n,
New York, lS3, COOHI', MllweukM, 321,
Soo9s. eos1on, .m; P Bradlt11, S..llle, .mt WM+eller. Otff'oll. l20
RUNs-11 Handtrwn, New Yortt, SS,
Whitaker, O.trolt, S3, Rlolcen, Btlllmort ,
52; M Dtvl1, Oakland, Sl, Molltor, Mll-
weullM. 4S
RBl-erunansk•, Mlnnesola. 47, Mal· 1"'9tV, New York, 47, E.Mvrrav. Baltlmore,
46, I( Glt>tOn, O.troll, 46, S are lltcl wllll 4S.
HI Ts.-9 8rMlltv, Sealltt, f1, lolloi,
Botton, 14, Pvcilt ll, Ml~a. 13; auctl·
ner, Botton, 12. COOHr, MllwavllM , II,
Garcia. Toron10, II OOUBLES-BuCllntr, Boslon lt; Mal·
llnol'Y, New Vorlt, It, Butltf', Cleveland, II.
GMfll, MIMetoft, 11; C-, MllwaukM,
11; Ward, Tna1, 11
TltlPLES-WllM>l'I, Ktnie1 Cltv, 11,
Puckell, Mlnnnote, I. c-. MllwaullM,
1, !kitltf', Cle.,,...nel, S; P 8 rtdltv. S..llle.
HITs-<twv1111. S.n Oleto. •• ...., • St
LCHJh, M, McGee, St Loul1, '1, Gar11..,,
Sall 0!99o. IO. Pe"", ClllClllNll, 1'
OOUILl!S-Wallacfl, MontrMI, 21,
Partier, ClncllWletl, "· Harr, SI Loul•, 11, GwvNI, kn 0 ..... 17, 4 tft lled •1111 1$
TltlPLEs-Mt'Gtt, St I.out., I. •alllft.
MontrMI, 1; Wlttoft, ~la. 5,
S.mull, Pfll~la. S, 6 et• lltd wltll 4
HOME ltUNs-MIKPlly, Ali.nit , 17,
~ ~ 16; CW11, St. L..oul•, 14,
Ctv. C-lllcaeo, l2; Gar11tv, S..n OlttO. 11,
Pat'11er, ClnclnNll, II
$TOLEN IASES-COltmtll, SI L.owl•,
47, LONI, Clllc.aoo, 17, McOat. St Loul•. 21, Ractus, Cincinnati, n, Ital....-. Monl,...,
21, s.mue1. PlllltdtlPllle. 21.
PITCHING C. dllc:Klonsl-Hawklni, San
Dlavo, 11-1, UI; HanlllMr, ~ 7-1,
1.10; AndUlar, SI. Louis, 12-2, 2 67; O.rtlne,
New York, 6· I, , 20; Co•. SI LOUii, 9·2. 1.10.
STRIKEOUT~, New Yori!, 125,
Rya n, Hous1on, 102; VllltMINle, Dtdeen,
100; J. 0.Leon. Plttsbufon, 9', Soto,
Clnclnn.11, '9.
SAVES-RHrdon, MontrHI, 10;
GOIM19t, S..n Dlavo. "· L. Smllll, Clll(.aoo,
lS; D. Smllll, H-•on. 12, Suner, Atlanta. 11
c-..
Mlf'Ttt()P()UTAN L•AGU•
(at O...w..tC.....I
StNlt lluden 7, c.,.,... CUM l
CUiis 101 000 1..-1 ' ,
Rustlers 200 211 00.-1 t l
Hoc>otr, HOOllln• (61 and Malller Boren,
Ooutv 131, Hun I (7) •nel 5'11r1ty, T omalldl ISi W-OOUty L......._ 28-Hk U (Cl.
Demaio (Ill HR-TorcllloM (Ill
WIEST COAST l.&AGU• (f'ln10-) °"'* c:-tlry""""""' s • .......,,, ••••
A'• 010 001 2-4 ll I
M41tro. 001 003 1-S 14 0
Mu•lll, Morrlwn (6) a nd Ct trltC4it>ura.
Brink, Soales (7) •nel ICll~ W-Soaln
L-Mof'.rlwn. 2B-Gomez (Al 38-&errell IA), Balnt (M)
(s.c...11 Gamel
Me1rft 11, A's 0
A's 000 I»-0 S l
Melros 350 3•-11 9 O
Peeslte and F01t11. Marlin, Mtndoze (5)
and NlchOIM>n, W-Marlln. L-PM•lat. 2B-Roumlmotr (Ml
HalVwoed Part
SUNOA Y'S IHSUL TS
(4'ltl tf '7·cln ltltUUIMltcl ~)
f'lllST llACL 6 furlongs
Atten's Prcne>ec1s (Pincn> l 20
SoYerti9ntY ISt...,en•I
Clear M11 Siege (SI Martin)
Time 1:09
SIECONO RACE. One 1T1lle
2 40 220
1'0 2 20
2 40
Pltntv Conscious IOI.,,,,) 27 20 12 60 10 00
One Evtd R~ (McCarron) 4 90 3 60
Juli ArrlYtd (Cross) 12 00
Time: l-C7 JIS.
$2 OAIL y OOUaLE (HI Paid '49.IO
TH•O RACE. 6 furlongs
Sum Excllttlllt IPlncavl 9 20
ProfnlOI' Rot>trll IHewltvl
Al>Solule IDeithou\MIVt)
Time· 1:09 215
SS E:XACTA 14·91 oald $47 00
) 20 2.60
240 220
3 20
FOURTH 9'ACE. 1·lll61h "111t,,
Maren Wi nner (M cC a rron1
~uera (Deta hOusMIYtl
•rry's Cllemo IS1t11ensl
Time. 1:41 ?IS
11 00 6.60 • 60
4.20 3.20
0 0
SS EXACTA (9·21 oald116200
P:lf'TH llACIE. One mllt
Tat>un 800dO ( McC er ron > 9 IO s ao 4 40
S1oooe (Stevens) 6 00 4 20
Perftc I Bten<t ( Snotmak er) t 20
Time: l:ll 41S.
'5 EXACTA IH I Pelo 111650
SIXTH It.ACE. One milt on tr.. 1"'1
Al!Owence (Hawlevl II 00 6 20 4 20
Afflanc. ID ... h0une11el I 20 6 20
Nonno ISleventl 3 IO
Time: 2.15 lfS.
SS IEXACT A {4·81 Pt•O 1137 SO
SEV•NTH llACIE. One molt
Party LH<ler (Sit ...... \) 1l ao
Flftll Six tna !tow (Pnol
Suotr Dlemolld CM41ia l
n me· 1.33 I s
720 520
340 )00
0 0
S5 EXACT A 12·31 oaod S 160 SO
S2 l'ICK SIX ( l·4·9· 1·4 21
1274,470 40 10 one winning 11cke1
llOrse\)
EIGHTH RACE. One mile
Grelnlon IPlncavJ 4 40
Preclslonlsl (McCerron)
King, Isla nd (Sltvens)
Time: i:se vs.
S5 EXACTA CS·71 oald11700.
NINTH RACE. Ofle mile
Derby Dewnlr19 C Plnt•Y > 4 60
Protect YourMIH CMcCarronl
Cosmolron ISle11ensl
Time-1:48 415
SS EXACTA (6·SI oa oo S66 00
Allenelanct. 44,9'S
, 20 , 10
?20 7 10
220
300 240
SIO 310
300
Swim Meet flf Cumpiens
(at Mis.-Vlalel
MIN
OiJRMft "' meten 200 rnel ~.-1 Peler Barnell (M1u1on
Vlelo), 2-0S.48, 2 Roi> WOOdllOuM (Austral·
Ian Soort>. 2 08.06; 3 Rlcarc» Prado I Mus·
lengi). 2:09.si .. 4. Gerllarl Van Oar Well
(San Jo">. 1'08 SI , S Chris RI"•' (Dad''
Cluo YMCAI, 2 10.71, 6 Brien JOllnson
(Unl.,.erlltY of Catgarv), 2·1096
100 fr-l Peter Rohde tCalaoit\tsl 51 07. mHI record, Old record 51.S9, Rowd.,.
Ge lnes, 2. Mall Biondi <Golden B••r l, Sl 62,
3 Miiie HHIPI <Gainesville, Fl• J. 51 62 , 4
Scott McCadam !B•dlltr DOlofllns>. S2 44.
S JObn S.ue<land <Bruin). S2 11, 6 Franz
MorltnlOn (Bruin I S2 82
200 b<easl-l Victor Davis lW•le<IOOI
2 lU3, "'"' recorct; Old reco<d 2 .20 17. Glenn Berlngen of Aullr•ll•. 2 Marlo
Ft1.:ntOO.lJMlnlQn VltJo1. 2.24.96. 3 Dercv Weftlnvtord (Laurtnllan U.), 226 it 4 Glen
Ma119um (Santa Clara), 2:77 53. S Jellil<h
Tre1101 (MM!tal. 2:2101, 6 Jtfl Tend CLong
BeKlll. 2-29.13
lSOO Ir-I Garv Brlnllman (San Joie)
IS:41 4S, 2 Vic •'911• (Minion Vltiol.
1S42 ~. l Dan Joi'-!Min ion Vltlol.
lS:U.>2; 4. Ale• Stllft IMuttnornalll.
lS.52.91; S Cllrls Cllalmtrs (LonCIOn Y),
lUUO; 6 .J«I K0&loft Clnelv"rv H•l, lS:.56 ~
400 1r .. r ... v-l Minion Vitro A IOon
e.reer. Pele< IMmdt. Dllll Jorlltl'IMn, 0,11
VHldll. J.37.19, 2. MIWOll Vltio I (John
Heldenfels , Btnnv NltlHn, Cl,rk
McDoclald, Mfllt O'Brltfll l:ll. ... l San
Jose (Gerllllrd Van der Wall. Cllrls Hiii.
T ro11 Dalt>tY, Garv Brinkman> l l5 lt
WOMeN
HOME llUNs-«:lnciman, Oak141nel, 17, 200 ~ med -1 Mlcr.r. Pn rM>n. !Aus
8r unanMl.v, Mlnnttola, "· FIV., Clllaeo, tr alien soorn, 2. II 14, 2 Jennifer Camooec1
s.
16; ,.,...lev, SMtlle, 15; Armat, Bolton, 14, (Laurenllan U.I, 2:19.'9, l. Erik• HanMn
I(. Gft>son, o.troll, 14; M.Dnll, O.ll1"nd, (G.,-n'!tnlo..,n Aca<ttmvl, 2:20.H; 4. IClm 14 Smvtt. (Lon6on YI. 2:23 .. 06, S. MMv Wavlt ---·---~ Heflderton ·N:.-·~t?'!· Vde -vorti: '°• ,....... Mlitih.~~ • 100 .,...,_ 1 ~... JoMwi unovw 1;'o.,,~· 2rutltf'' Cleveland, 21, MoMOY, Hll!I), 56 ,., , ~nl... NIMO, (Ml~
PITCHING 16 oechlon•>-Terrtll, o.-Vi.lo), '9.01; S. Mellua TrU90loocl (Aloi.>.
troll, •• ,, •• II; Codlroll, Olkland, •·>. 4.11. Sl.O?. 4. MIC:Mlt .... ,'ton (Auttrallaft Gulclt'f Hn Vortl l ·l UO 111........a, SHrtl. 51.0f; S LIM Dorman (COM'Ol'd PIL
.,,..; 1·1. U'l Ktv, f0r1)1'1t0, 5-2, UO Hiii), 91:11; 4' Jent ktn' l!IOCllcokt ), fl.l2
STIUKl!OUTS-Motrlt, DttfOll, f). F 200 l>t'Msl-1 Oomlnlout "o"""' (Can-lkiwllt..,, OllQeo, IJ, lo'Y1S, lostoll, IO, .clal, 2;JUS, 2 Sinen Johmon (MIHlon ~ ~ ,. Slltll Toronto 15 VltiO). UO.ll, l Amy Clark (Gotdeft W.t), uv•s-e.,,.,,.., • clllcMo. ,,,. D. N027;. JtMy HMI (Ml\t*I Cir,),, ....
,...,... ...... IS Htrnaftdtt 0.troO 1$ S. Nina Htrlltr1 (Mlu lon Vltto), 2 41 tt. 6 ........................... _...:. 14 Qvl•~ K . ~ TOl'lt Cllflcll (Mullnomaf\I, t'-0..16 J ..__,, _.._,,., • ..,_rv, an 1500 ~I Klm lrOWft (Ml»IOn Vlelol,
.. , Cit¥. > 16325'. t Erl\• ~ (0.,,,....IO..rl
AcacMmvl. 16 46 ... ) O.otllt a.o."'°"
(M!Ulon Vltiol, l6..a.l7, 4 Stacy si-.. (l~trv Hl I. ""' " s Diane ~ IA~ IUI ... • 0-'t W\itrwrw " ~ YI, IU210
400 1rtt r-N-1 MlulOl'I VielO A,
tPtmMll Nltn41. Tiff~ CtNll. Dteollt
Babe.not!, Kim er-n), 2 S7 13, l 1.-ntrv
Hllh 14.IM OllelM, ti.CV S.-, si-1
Smltll JtnM JollMOll I ) S1 71, l Fon
Lauderdale (Jocl'Y (ytH, ~ TrtH s.r...-GlllmOA. Katti• Coff111l 4 .. 14
Up and over
Tim Hovland •plketa d~ the fl'nal• of the La4[una
Beach In'ritatlonal volleyball toqrnament Sunday. llov-
land and Tim Dodd loet ln the fina1a to Slngln Smith and
Randy Stokloe.
At&entaO.Uk
(at At!Mta)
t1l
•·Wa yne L.e111. \90,000
Sltye Pate St,000
774
Ra11mono Froyd ~.ooo
276
Mac O'Greo., n .ooo
D•vod Frost n 000
271
S<"oll S11T1oson 17 37S
Danrw Eowaros 17 31S
VI
Jim C 01oer 1, i..ooo
Tony Sills l•.000
Larry Mize 14.000
Tim Simoson, 14.000
Vt
Joe Inman, 9,900
Clt rtf'Ct RoH. 9,800
Cllartes COO<lv, t ,800
Roger Mtlll>lt , 9,800
Don PooieY, 9,800
1IO
Boo Eu lwooel, 7,000
Ktflh Ffrgvs, 7,000
Larry Nelson, 7,000
L•nnv Wadkins, 7,000
J .+t Sanden. 1.000
Hale Irwin, 4,507
Dan Ponl 4,507
211
Booo .. WeOltlns 4 507
Lou Grellam 4 507
Hal Sullon 4 507
Chlo &Kk •.507
Lenn•• c-"'' 4 507
Loren Rot>41'" 4 507
211
Boo Muro1w l 03I
L.,r'I' Rlnlter l OJI
David T11ore, )OJI
Dave Barr, 3,038
Georoe Archer. l .038
Andrew Magee. l OJI
113
BuOdv Gardner. 7.304
Tomm'f Valenll""· 2 304
BOOl>'I' Cltme>efl 2 304
Garv Koen, 2 ,104
Brad Feoe•. 1 :ICM Pa ul Aringtr 2,304
Scott Hoc11 I 100
Fren~ Conne r I 700
Tom M;llt l 100
A,ndv Been. 1.100
George Burns l,700
GIOOv C.ott>erl 1 100
215
BOO Twev 1.33S
Da11ld Lundstrom. l lJ5 ,..
JI,., Dent, 1,245
Ken Srown, l.14S
211
Dt vt EICl'ltll>trlltr I 173
Fuu11 Zoelle< I, 173
Morris Ht lt likv I, 173
Jim Tlloroe l.113
Lon Htl'lkle I 1)0
8arr .. JHCktl l 1)0
Booov NIChOI\. I 1)0
119
Donnie Hammond. I otS
Tom Jtnli.lns l,OtS
Ronnie 8'-Ck 1 otS
Mike NlcOlellt, l ,otS
190 Wavne Grady 1,066
Garv Pinn' 1,060
ROOt<I Wrenn. l 060
?fl
Don For\l'l\tn I Cll5
Mll<t Hult>trl, l 035 ,.,
!ton Streck. l 020
11·68·•7·•7
67·66·11·69
68-68·68· 70
67·10· 10· 69
69·69· ... ·14
68·69·69· I 1
•9·6S·68·7S
70·68·73·67
6S·71·71·69
73·61·69·69
67·13·69-69
70·72·69·61
69-69·11-70
74·64·7HO
69·1?·66·71
69·70-61·72
70-66· 7S·69
71·70-69·69
72·66·71-70
69·71·70·70
69·68·71·71
11·10-74·66
70·71-71·69
71·70· 11 ·69
7'·6S·71·70
6~·70-70 09-71·6,·n
10-1<>-69· n
69·67·7<>-7S
71·69·73·68
61·12-13·10
74·61·70·70
71·6S·13·71
11·68·71·71
70·6S·74·13
611-71 ·74·69
68·74·11·70
72·69·71·11
6'·73·71·71
11·65· H · 13
10·68· 70· 7S
10 10 ,. 10
71 69·73·71
68·12 n n
7S·64· 11 /2
69-o9·l1·l•
69·68 12 75
12 ·61 77·69
67·75·67·7'
70-71·11·74
70· 70-11 ·75
.S4NerlT~
(at ... OtwtM, ONtl
174
Arnold ltaim.r, $)6,000 61 11 ·61·61 as
LM !ldef, SI 7 475
~Littler \l7,47S
IWltr ~ •11.41S
Cllarln Owtm ll 7 475 -1111. ,.... .. 115
Ari w ... te,17)
.lacll ,ltQ M,175
,_.,., TllOmM>ll. SI l7S
111
Oon J_,.,,, l4 000 c11ar1n Sifford w.a -l •llY N\a•wetl U . .00 ..
ktfl SHll, U 000
"' Orv ~ ... .,,
'" Howle JoM\Ofl. M.l75
11 10 n 11
IJ•n -10-10
11·69-11·7• .,..,, 1r n
11-n ·n 11 n•n -,..10 Jt..n-11-n
1H•·10·n
.,.,..,, n
n 11 n -11
71-71 ·,.,.,,
n ... 1s-n
11·1S 11 11
71 ..... ,..,.
Dan Sikes. U S67
Harold Henn1r19, U S67
Jim FtrrH. '3,S67
Gev Brewer '3 S67
Gordon Jones \l .S67 aoo Goe11> .. ll,S67
ltl
Rootf'IO DeVocenz '1 SSO
Georoe La nn1r19, S2.S50
Mike Ftlelllck. S2 .SSO
Jim 1(1119. n S50
294 aoo EnckM>n, '2,*
Doug Ford l2 OSO
l9S Dow F1n1ltrw•IO \l 17S
Boo Slone s 1 17S
191
James Baroer s I 77S
B•ll Jonnsron s 1 17S m
8t11 Co<l<n\ s l 700
Ke• Naoie s l o~
JOO
Art Solvtr\orone s I S50
Al Ba101no s I S50
Jim Cocnron s I SSO
JOI
lten Town\ '1 0 0
l02
Bob Toik1, s 1.350
Jerry Beroer. s l JSO
Pwle Huemer s I )50
J03
Julius Soro\ s l 250
l04
L1one1 Htt>ert '1 laa
Tom N1eoorte s I. 188
Mike Souctlak. '1.188
Mlkt Au\lon $ l 118
l05
Frrd HaH SI Ill
Frro Hawk'"' $I II)
>01
Bt<1 $In."' $I 070 Al Btrn••·nk SI 010
Ptie Brown s 1 020
lOI
>Ot
JIJ
Tommv Jecoot 11 000
Jl6
Ed Fur90' SI 000
ll7
Me lOn R udolOll \l 000
12·71 ·1t-10
7HS·74·71
7'·74·16·61 ·13.74.71 .74
71·7'·7S·69 1s-11·1•-n
74·71·74-74
7S·76-n ·69
11-n -1s-1s
71·14·13·1'
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14·15·71·14
71·16·7S 7J
14·90·74 69
76 7l·1S 13
lS 71 14 77
11 16· IJ 7J
76·74·16 74
73 n n 11
1l 79·1S·73
1S·79 11·10
79·72-75·76
15·73 77·77
76· 76· 76· 74
78·1S·7&·74
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IS 7S·90-74
71·71·72·76
73·7S·8l·7S
7S·7S·77 71
1• 1S·11 7J
74 7S· 19-79
80 11 IO 76
77 16 77 ,.
74 77·90-71
1S·IO·ll· 77
77· 71·1J· 17
J) ,, 79 77
LPGA Tournament
(•I tndlanae>tlll)
1IO
All~e Mollfor '31 500
1"
Jene 81o>oc k 11 IO'I
M Zlmmermon 17 109
6t111 Solomon 11 109
Loro C.aroecr 9 tell
Amv Benz 9 617
,.,
'
"' Susie 1hrn1119 I Ot
Sue Ertl I •SI
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1'1
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10 71 I) '?
1>8 I~ 10 ')
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10 14 ·69 7:;
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68 IS 75 73
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Orange COet1 DAILY PILOT /Mondey, ~ 24, 1-•
• ._ .. I WM W'• ...........
(at l•r•r TN, l......n
DellMtt ~ Merllllt ,,qwattlo¥t IU S >·Pam Shrt-
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l.,._JoM Hartlrtl
l~JoM Hwtlty
l•l-Wllliam •-Ila• lm--w!•llam lttMllaw
l.rwlll•m Rentllaw
I~ lttflll\eW 1•j.-Wlfil9m ,_.,,,...w
1116-Wllllam Rto11Nw
1•~1uwtorct
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lln-Wllfrtd BadOtteY
lm.-JOll'lut Pim ,.,.... Jothva Pim
lits-Wilfred BadOtlrt ,.,.._....,Old MallOney
1191-R-le F -eon.riv
1'9t-lteog .. F ~11
19"-RtOD .. F ~.,.
1~-le F Oo!IM111 1901-Allhvr Gore
1902-H Laurie ()one(-lv
1903-H Laurie ()one(-tv
1904-H Laurie Dohtf"rv
190S-H L•urle 0-111 l906r-H Laurie 00/ltrlv 1907-NorrNn SrOOk ..
l90t-Artll4.K Gore
l~Artnur-Oor1I
1910--Anlhon'f Wlldln9
1~11-AnlllOnV Wiiding
l9l~Anlll0n11 Wilding
ltl3-Anthon11 Wiiding
191-Norman Sroe>Ms
l9l s-lt-No1 Hald
19l~ald Pellerson
1t»-W111lamJ1-
19'2t-Wl•lam Tiiden 1922-Gen.d PelltrSOft
1923-Wlttiam JOlll'ISlon
192-.Jeen Borolr•
192s-41t nt UKOSlt
1926-Jean Borlor•
1927-+itnl'I CocMI
I~-Lac:oslt
im-+ienrl Coehet
-193CFlllll TllOtn 1931-Sldntv WOOd
ltn-Elbworttl Vine'
1933-Jaca Crawford
l~rtd Perrv
1935-f'reo Perr"
1936-Frtd Pt<rY
l937-Don6IO B~
1931-Donald ~
tm-eoot>v Riggs
19..0-•s-Hol held
l9..,....Y11on "'91r•
1947-J•ck Kremer
1941-BoO F elkent>ur9
1949-Ttd Sch<oede<
lt~UOIM Pally
19S 1-0lck S.11111
19S2-Frenk Sed9man
195)-VIC Sth1H
19S4-J•rQ~•v Droonv
i•ss-Tony Traoen
l9S6-Ltw HoeO 1957-Ltw Hoed
195t-Alh .. Y COOPer
19St-Altx Otmeoo
1960-Nealt FreM<"
196 l~Od Lave<
190--AOd La,,.,
196)-Cf\vck McltU!ltY
196.t-Ro" Emenon
l~ov Emtr!oon
1966-Manutl Santana
1961-Jolln Ntwcomt>t
l~ROd Lt,,.,
196~0CI Lewr
19~ JC>M Newcomoe
1'71-JoM ~Comot
19n-S1an Smilh
I '73-an Kooes
197-Jommv Connori
lt7S-Artl'lur ASM
1976-BIOnl Boro
1tn-Ba11 Borg
tt~Biorn Boro
19~8iorn Borg
1~.orn Boro
1991-J~fl McE~r04!
198?-Jommv Connor\
1913-Jolln McEnr04!
1994-JO"" McEnr04!
0eec> IN fl"'lfttl
DAVEY'S LOCKER (lffWC*' ... Cfl)
-775 an111tn 4 o.rrecuoa. 17 bonito l l
U llCO beU 197 Mind l>HS I ,S7S mackerel
41 rocto.l•Sll
NEWl"ORT LANDING (Ntw-1
... di) -193 u no oan 66 ca1tco o.u '3
oonuo Sl oarrecuoa 2 l'\el•OU• IS scui1>1n
416 mac11.e<t1
USFl.
WESTERN C<>Mf'E9'EHCE
W l T P<1. l'f' l'A
" Oa~lano 11 4 1 ns U2 J.1'
, Denve< 11 1 0 • 11 439 '3 l
, Hou\loo 10 1 o see sn 3S7
Arl'ione 8 10 0 444 l16 405 Porllano 6 12 o JJJ 27S 412
S.n Anton•o ) 1l O 178 ?96 43e
EXP<"Ul 3 15 0 1'7 266 4S6
EASTERN CONFERENCE
'. 8irm1ng11am 13 ) 0 711 43' m
•·New Jersev 11 1 0 tel I 411 317
•-~P'll\ 11 1 0 & II 42' l37
>-Bt lllmou 10 1 I SIJ l6I 7'0
1 • Ttmoe 8av 10 I 0 SS6 404 422
Jack JOnvlMe • 9 O SCIO 407 402
OrlandO 5 lJ 0 271 )QI ...
.,.cltnclltd Conitr""t Cl'\enu>'4)11Sllle>
• • Cltnttltd Olav oft t>e"•,.
~.,.,~
8 otmt"llt\tm 14 New Je<lotrV •
J41c1tsonville 42 Otrftver tt
San Antonio 21 Porttano ll
Banomore JI Tamoe 841• 10
T.....,..,~
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ENO RIEGULA• SIEASOM
w..er..s "1lftMdeM
B4SlaALl MwncM'--. ~••&we1u "•uo 9111 ~ kfl~ celcntr on rr.. lS·Otv dlMOlfld '"I NEW YOR1'. YAN"EEs--Pla<td Butcll
Wvneoar ca1<11« on Ille l S·C141v dlUll!leO
Ut l RKalled J...,, E llllno Ul<:Pltr ttom
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htldtf Ol'I lflt lS-0.Y dlMOitcl Ntl
l"tilLAOELP .. IA PHtLLIE~1"1
S,_ Car tort .. ~ on lllt 11 ·dll11
ctittllleO " ••ulltcl •~· c~, .. tc:twr tram Pertlanci ol ,,,. PK•hc Coe••
LMe<lt
PITHBURGH PIRATE !>-fl\acta iOM •
nit i..Mell.,. .--11100 on llW IS .. 11
dlMOltd •st llttc.-0 S.mm11 lt"911ta
\horl\IOe "°°"' Hew• ~ Ille PKlfl< CM•I
l "9ut UVtlTU\I. u.M SllMltt ........ ~
WUTCHUf (R Y«,OFH APf'\..U-
Sl..-..o Al ev11l c.<1ttr encl Ma•' Devi.
lliln;arO ~ii
COlLIGI C ltEIGHTO-~ TO"v ••ront
... Ot\li••be Ae(fl
Isbell, ~
Ez .. Packer
star, dies
GREEN BAY. w · (AP)-Cttil
l1bcll. wbo led lhe Orem Bay Packen
10 the 1939 1tiooal f ootbel.l LQlue
championm1p with 1 27-0 victory
over the New Y Ott Owns. died
Sunday aft.er a lonam.nes.s. Kc was 69.
Isbell a Hall ofFame q~
had suit'c~ Crom kidney and liver •
d1scoc for the last three months. said
Alice lsbtll, bis wife of 17 years.
He joined the Packtts lJ) 1938 as
the team's fll"lt-rou.nd draft choice
from Purdue Un1vcrsity. Isbell led
the Packers to a record of 42-12-1 in
five seasons. He was ioductcd uno the
Packer HaJI of Fame in 1972. and alt0
was a member oflhe Collq.e Football
Hall of Fame.
Whtie Isbell was with Gnien Bay,
the Pacleers won the Western
Dtv1S1on utle in 1938 and tied wtth
thcCh1~Bearsforthetit.lcin 1941.
The Packers bad one of the moat
potent passing anacks durin& an era
.,dw.-1ncluded Pro Football Hall of
·Fame quarterbacks Sammy Bauab of
th~ W.uhinaton Redskins ancf Sid
Luckmann of the Bean. Isbcll's most
frequent target was Pro Football Hall
of fame receiver Don H..utson.
Curly Lambeau, the foundtr of the
Packers and Jsbcll's coach. always fdt
he was the best quarterback of the era.
.. Isbell was the best." Lambcau
once said. ··tsbell was a master at &QY
range. He could throw soft passes,
bullet passes or lottg passe$."
Isbell threw 24 touchdown passes
dun ng the 1942 season wh.ik operat-
ing from Lambeau's single-wing of.
fense. He threw touchdown passes in
23 straight gamc:s -12 in 1941 and
1 l in 1942.
In a 1942 game against the
Cle..,eland Rams. Isbell threw fi ve TD
passes. He once gained 333 yards
passing on I 0 completions against the
Chicago Cardinals.
lsbell's shortest sconng pass was
four inches to Hutson, a National
Football League.standard unul Eddie
LaBaron threw o ne that was
measured at two inches in 1960.
Isbell never received the rccog-
n1uon that Baugh and Luckmann got.
but pan of the reason was th.at b.e
rettrcd a t age 26 after the l 942 season.
--Ros~rg
spark~wtn
at Detroit
SWIM. • • From Bl
r:inl ed 'l~lmmcr<;J don't think about.
'>\) l thinl I ha'e an ad"antage."
Bentle\ 'ilated ··1t gi'e'i me a \hot to
mo' e up M) goal ts to make 11 to the
tinals. and I think making at here is a
good 1gn:· Bentle\ \31d
Bentle\. \,\ho S" am tor Golden ~t''it ( ofk·gc and wa'i r«entl) "01ed
the Oranir < ount) communn) col-
lq c athlctr l>I 1hc 'r:u is headed for
\'SC 10 the tall
..\nd for ( lark'\
··11 "'ould hc Oll"'t' Thr m<'t't ''
ma ling me thin\. that tt''i poss1bl(' but
11 will hc a hig l hallC'ngr:· \aid the LI("
Bcrl ek\ 'iOphom\"1rt'-t<>-hc
1 he l nitC'\1 ~tatc'i finished with I ~me fin<' ix·rtormanccs on tht' final I
da\ of C'Ompctltlon in add1t1on to tht' __J
. co~~-
Follo~1ng a letdown in the 400-
metcr 1nd1' 1dual me-die} Saturday.
8cmd1 rt'l'Ol lcd m the :?OO IM
~unda~ holdm$ ofT another .fierct
eOon h\ .\u\lrnlta\ Roh \\ oodhouse
1n the la<11 final 5() meters 10 win 11
~ 05 4 \\ oodhou"° 1n the 4CX>-met
er 1nd1\ idual medic" o' crcame a half
a hod' lent.th dcfin in tht l1s1 100
mC'tt'.'rs 10 "'" 10101 •"•' Jenna Johnson and k.Jm Brown
hc,\1h ~1nt'd 1hc1r W'C'Ond "1" of the I
m('t"I Johnson. 1o>.1mmini for tbt-\
lndu II°\ Hill ·\Quau Club. came
w1th1n etJhl one-hundttdth~ of !let-
110~ • mtt\ l't'<'Or d With a S6. 79 ... h1k
8ro"'11 a IS-Hu-old trort) th<'
~'"''°n \. 1c:10 ad.adore'-pulled
awa) from tht pack 1n the I. 500
mrttf'\ hrtt11na 10 a If\ U S2. l ~
~'<'ndc. • head of ond platt nka
H n\(n
I
Oranoe Cout DAILY PtLOT~onday, June 24, 1MS
lrft.ae Valley 110CCe1 camp
lf"1ne Valley Collqc. formerly S.ddkbad.
CoUqt" Nonh, 1s sponwnna a s«'Cer ciimp for
youths 7-17
Scven·lhrolij&h-13 year o lds will mttt July
8-12 and July 12-26. while those l 4-17 attend
Jul>-I S-19. All C'lmJl'S arc scheduled from 8 a.m .
to noon 11 thr c;ollqie. located I'll 5500 Irvine"
Center l>nve.
Players should brina soccer shoes. ball.
beverages and snacks The fee is $60 for tht' first
child, and $40 for each additional child from the
seme family.
The f~ 1nC'ludc~ 20 hours of instruction and u
T-shin
For furthrr informouon. phone 559-1313.
Beaellt 1ou tournament
RC'g.lst.rauons arr being accepted for the
second annual Stcm -Brief(Tavem Club Golf
C1W1C'wh1ch will be held July Bat The Linksa1
Monarch Beach for the benefit of Commun11y
5(rv1cc Pro&ram's Youth Shelter
The fondraismg tournament benefits the
Community 5(rv1cc Program's Laguna Beach
fac1hl}. which serves as a temporary home for
young people expenencing d1fficuhy in their fam1I~ setting.
This year's event features 18-holc play. lunch
and pnzes for a S 125 entry fee.
Official en try blanks may bt' obtained by
phoning Michele Crosby at 540-6921.
Atblete. Jn Acdon 110ftball
Athletes m Acuon spons club of Saddleback
Valley will hold its second annual three-pitch
softball tournament Saturday, July 27 m
M1ss1on VICJO.
Teams from Los Angeles to San Diego arr
invited to part1c1pate. The entry fee 1s S 130 per
team. with awards going to first, second and
1h1rd place finishers.
The tournament will be held m one da) with
32 teams panicipatmg.
En try apphcauons should be sent to Jim
Kenady, 24871 Costcau, Laguna H1Us. 92653.
Borlftl c.rd at Jlanlott ~lit
A 1even-bou1 card. fcalurin• weltCfWciabt
Hcd&cmon Robertson of Huntsnalo• Beach. Santa Ana's Georaic Oattia and O lympian
Robtn bannon, is scheduled for the Irvine
Mamou Hotel toniaht. bcainnina at 8.
Robertson socs apinst Eddie Nuno of
Pomona an a I O:rounder teekina to improve on a
20-5-1 tteord, which includn 18 knocltouLS.
Nuno (18-6) ho lds the only decision over
California Junior wclterweiaht champion Andy
Nance.
Garcu1 mcc1s Japan's Tadashi Maruo in a 10-
roundcr at 12 1 pounds and Shan non meets
Ralph Gutierrez of Los An&eles in a six-rounder
11 122 pounds.
In other bouts: David Gutierrez of San Du~go
boxes Norman Gabrouel in a six-round wel-
1crwciah1 match; Dino Ramirez opposes Genaro
Hernandez in a six-rounder al 129 pounds; John
Arm1JO tighls frank Martinez in a four-rounder
at 157 po1unds; and Greg Puente meets Rene
Bonilla in a four-rounder al 131 .
Tickeu arr on sale at tho hotel.
OYer-tbe-JbJe beacb tourney
Southern Cahforn1a Over-The-Line will hold
llS fourth annual Beach Summer festival
tournament at Huntington St.ate Beach Sunday. ~ntry fee for the tournament is $21 per team.
which includes a four-game guarantee.
The tourney 1s open to men and wo men teams.
for more information, pho~(l I 3}-6~l98.
1Ve.t Cout JM•'nti .:bool The West Coast Pusma:::C ool will return for
its second year at Saddleback College July 8-12
wtth Sad.dlcback Collesc Coa~h BilJ Cuncrty and
Un1vers11y of Utah Coach Jim Fas.set running
the 1nstruc11on.
The pass1n1 school will reature drills in the
fondamentals of lhrowina and catching and
evaluau ons of each quarterback and receiver.
The S(Ss1on runs from nooo to 4:30.
The fee for the ~hool 1s S 125 per person. and
enrollment 1s hm 1ted. f or more informatio n
phone 831-4545. '
--Delly Piiot June 1 11. 24, br .. otuncl o1-..10n '° M ~ o (.~IH No11ct) ftllJC MmC( My I, INS reootcMd Ho~ H , All WOil 11 .. lie...,.._;
-,m.-.. --.. M-630 1"3 • i..v No. a ••1•1 ...,.., ·=--"°"' ~ - ---------of ()fflcMI Aloordl"' the°"" 1he.,... In ... --WILSON ewm 8TA,_.,. MOllCl Aoe of "" Aeoordlr °' Or· IOI to Pro09ed RA YMA 8 WILSON The follOwlnO pereone .,. "8JC ._ COUnty. AWAllD Of' CoHTMOT·
• ~~-8eld ...... medebut • • 1'8ident of 1AiuN I' !XtcUllHE UMOU-PICnnoul. ..... wltW ~ Ot ;.,.,. TM c::w ~ ":
Hilla, paaed away SIN (8) HIWPOAT H()l r::"' .,..~.,. ,=~Ot lfnClled ..... =-_. c:-:.ieb6dl, 10
J une 21, 1985 In DAT LIMOUSINE. 3810 8· do#la=:W-OW . tttlt pe n 1'cn, °'.-..,,,,,It. dCllnllllt) In •
L • i u n a H 111 a . ~,:-· H, Santa AN. 8 J 0 A 0 u M 0 u I' T ~ enoee. to ~ ~ bid. to "*'• .... In tN Swvtvon include her MlchM Seen Meltl. aa 10 HOME, 8312 Ct9M cir.. ~ ~ """Nici in.-°'.,_ 0..-Ind to brolhe G-'l W ilao a. f10wer Ste. H, Senta AN. Huntington I H Gh, CA ~ ~~ :r._. retect al Cit'*.,.._ r, tu n CA 92101 t2Me -' PAOPOeM.OUAM.NTU
o f El Cajon; nephew Kenneth JOfln MoN•t>. Oevtd Alt>et1 Outeeu. '3ta •In Mid not• ptO'Med, -. ANO IOHOS: bctl * .....
Charle. t . WU.00 o! 131i w. 1411boa Btvd., St•. Crane c1r:.,..ttunttngton :::-0. :..C,~ tn!: b• MH:ompanlM ~
Whittler; neice, Ann =-~ ecti .. C•lll, ~·C:,.1,,... la con-.._ctwlfo-,end..,,...e :"~.«~• ~
Phillipe of San Diego; Thie butlMM I• aon-~ t>y.1n lndMduel of IN 1:by~of0:: bOncS on tt1e "'"'6IMd
a1ao aurvived by her ducMcf by. • generll l*t· O.Yld DufMu ~";~ by the 0..-.. .,.,.,_...
long u.me pel'90Nll • ~ Thl9 etatement wee llled ._, .. ..: ...... wll be held on· !Mt t>lddlr wWt ~ en ftlnt MICNlel I Meltz with Ille Counly OMttt Of Or· ...... -. .. made to "'"' In • aodate Jean Parker of Thie ....tm.nt WM ,...., .,.. County on Mt!Y $0, Monday. July 1. ttee, at cordenoe wtth 1N .,,,,. of
La1una Hilla Ma with IN County Clet'k of Or 1988 ':ao p.m. In the IObby to the "" bid promptly ..,,. Wu~ ............ · f • Pl771l1 buHdlng IOOated at IOI woni • •a "~loll u.un re ... ~ ~m = County on June 4, Put>tleMd Or eo.t South Lewl9 St~. OtMge, lnlur= .,;;-~·in.
the U.S. Navy attain-~ O.lly Piiot June -:r. 17, 24, Cellf0tnla ueea. ~Seid~ Of blO-
lng the grad e of Publlell9d Ot CoMt July 1. 1985 At tN time of Ille 1n1tta1 def'• bOncS .._.. be 1n 1n
L ieute n a nt Com -naoa.. Piiot •·-'i;r.11 24 M·62G 1>U*-t10n of 11111 notice, amount of not ._ tNl'I ,,_, ...,.,. • • • tN tot., emoun1 of the un-S2 soo oo Only bot* a.
manhighder .h S h1 e tad ugh1t July 1, 1Ne M-622 ·-.,. ..,,.TIC( pe1c1 t>elanoe of the obll-Met i)y ·oompei.._ wtlldl
IC 00 an co • .--.n. nu =MCl.ltedbytheabOW .,.ratecl "A"«"A+"lnthe
le ge ln So. Cali!. She NOTICI °' bed deed of truat Ind "e.t Amina Gulde" .. be received the Teacher TMl8Tlr8 aALa .. tlmated aoett, .,,.,_.. ~. ,.-..... to *'*"'" .... .,. . and edv e nc•• I t..__... ......... bot* .. be of The Y ear Award ln ,._ NOTICE L.Mft ~n•11 S24U 2t.OI. :;;-°'bid
the Long Beach fltetmoue•·ll... r• c.11111 TN totll lndebtednw PREVAl~TU (>,
Sch ool 0 Is t r I ct. MAim erAfi...n. uNrf COD9 c ::"" en .. =• on -= WAGES: In ecoo1 clenon!WI
L ie ute n ant Com -The foidMng peraone.,.. \/AL BAN CORP., e CaM-may ~lined~ ttMt Pl~~ leatlon
mander W il!lon w as a ~~AP~ 39 romi. corporetlonU.:.,~ (714) 315-4137 or (213) ~°'tt!'9\JW'91Pf'9W=
member of the U.S . w.i~t 18 eo.ta .....a. h =::::~deed of t27-4M& tlle day befof9 IN r•t• Ot I* dtel'll-o.9 w
W omen s Olym p ic 92927 ' lnlltWllLSELLAT PVBLIC ~ted·Mey 31 1915 holldaylndCMttlmeWOttcln
Track Team ln Am-John VeuQhM Groow, AUCTIONTO THEHIGHEST 'uc ,... thelocelltylnwNdl1NWOttc sterdam 1928 Ser-139Welnul #t ,eo.taMM&, BIDDER FO" CASH VAL MN ca. • c.. •to bepet1onned l'laabeln . . ' CA 92927 AND/OR THE CASHIERS ._,. C.. .... " .... obtained hm the Dnctor
VlCCS will be held Trec:y Anne Thell, 139 OR CERTIFIED CHECKS T,_..., ~~ of the o.p.trnelit Of ~
Tuesday, J u ne 25, Welnut #8 , eo.te M .... CA SPECIAED IN Cl\llL COOf COll9JANY ai.... •ri lrtal AeMtlone. a copy of 2:30 P.M. at Pacific 92821 SECTION 2924h (payable el Clftdr ..-... •• A... whldl le on ftle In the offtce of vie w M 0 r t u a r y Thll butln... I• con-the time ot ..,. In lawful tMt ...,.._,, to1 ...,. the City Clertl of the City of
duotect by: c:o.J*tnert money ot the United Stat .. ) l .. l~Of CA lrvlM end wll M made &Vlll-
C h ape I, N e w port Trecy Anne Thell e11 right, 1111e and Inter.et 1::; 1 rrw)' .::I:' able to eny lnt.-.CS I*')
Beach. Interment will Thill atetament waa tlted con~ to and now held Publlehed Ot CoMI upc>n ~The ClOfttr~
follow C hapel Ser -with IN County OMttt of Of· by tt under Mid DMd of Dally Pilot June T 17 24 tOt' and eny euboootraotor
Vi P lfi V. ange Counly on June 4, Trust In the pr°'*'Y herein-198g ' ' ' under him ltlell pey not leee ces. ac c 1ew 1985 after dM<:flbed: then the ~ .,,.. .. IQ
Mortuary Directors. ,,,.. TRUST OR: ROBERT A M..S 17 ratee °' Wll9M to .. WOttc·
644-2700. ~ °'** *NGK 6 OIEDAE J. men ~ II\ "'9 .._ Delly PNot June 111, 17, 24, FRANCK, HuatMlnd Ind wife l'tB.JC N011C( ec:utlon of the oontrea1.
--------July 1, 1MG u Jt. tenanla, and WILLIAM LABOA AEGULATIONI: rtaJC N0l1C( M-532 C. SLIFF 6 EVELYN l . CfTY Of' lltYM The oon1r11Ct0t' lflall ~
SUFF, llulbend and wtr. u CAU'OMIA with .. the ~.,.,.,. of fltCTmOUa ..,.... --.. ---.,.-..,,.-TICE---1Jt. tenanta 11 NOTICa IMTING Section 1777.5togeittwwtttl
NAm 8TAftmNT .--..., "" BENEFICIARY: VALEN· _,. 1111 other ~ ~
The klllowtng per.one.,. fltCTmOUa .,_.. CIA BANK, e Celltomi. e«· NOTICE IS HEREBY menta of the California
doing ~ ee: MAim 8TAT'Dmlfl pontlon Gl\IEN that .-.CS bids wlll l.abOf Code.
RIGHT ST ART, 2900 The......_..._ RECORDED October 20, be received by the City Clet1t DRAWINGS ANO SPE().
Brletol, A-108, Coeta MM&. doing~ :-i• .,.. 1981 u lnetr. No. 2$134 In ol the City of IMM, Cel-ACATIOHS: A NI IM of
CAt2tat WrAR'STHEeEACH 325 Book 14292 Page 12ee of lomlalOt'fUmWllng .. plant, ~ .. ..,....,...,,,
LS. Hunt and AMoclat•. B Merine Av• eait>o• Otftclel Records In tile oflloe lebOt ..w:.. mat.W., plc:«up without~ at the Inc., a Celltom6e corporetlon !eland CA 92982" of the Recorder of Orange toolt. ~I. euppllea. Purd\aelng DMllon In the
Thie buelneee la con-T ·Shirt roductlon Co County: treneponatlon. utlllHM Ind City of ltYlne. ~· ducted by:• corporation Inc a Callfomla ~· Mid deed of tn.iat .,.. .. other Items and hlcllttiM and ~ docurMnta wCI be LS. Hunt Ind~ ... etlcin 332 N Palm Cyn • ecrtt>ee the followlng: neceaaary th•r•lor, H meled, upon r«*Pf of ,...
l.aDeMe 8 . Hunt, Pr-. Palm•Sprtnga, .CA 922e2 ., lot 8 ol Blocll 28 of N9w-provided In the contrect queeta no lat• tNn ten (10)
Thill ltelement WM llled RonOIMW.14 8antaeter. port BMch. Ctty of Newport doc:umenta. lOt' TN ~ ~ dayl pr10r to the
wtlh the Counly OMttt of Of· Or RancnO Mlanlge CA BMch, .. eflOWll on e map lllrflc:lng of t2 Extetlng T.,_ dat• 1M tor ~ t>6de. enge County on June 4, 92270 ' recorded In Book 3. Page nil Courta • Verioua Lo-SECURITY. fOA COM·
1985 Thie bull 1 2e, Mltcellaneoua Mepe, ,._ c:atlonl together wtltl ~ PLETION Of WORK: The
flrnm ducted by. e":-!. :;:: e«dt of Mid County. purt•n•nc•• thereto, In City wlll r.i.in ten (10) per-
Put>Mehed Orange Coast nwlhlp . YOU ARE IN C>eFAUL T •lf'lct eccordance with the cent of ~ amount untl ..
o.lly Piiot June 10. 17, 24, A T-&llrfProducUon Co UNDER A DEED Of TRUST ~Iona on ftle at the the wont l'laa been OOM-
My 1, 1985 . Inc Scott aoy.. PrM!derii DATED 10/9/81. UNLESS office Of the DlreciOt' °'Pub-p6M9d to the •tlefectlOn °'
M-63& Thi. at&lement ... ,llled YOU TAKE ACTION TO Ne woni1. CIP No. 550-41. the Ctty. Al the r9qUelt Ind
---------1wltlltheCountyelertlofOt PROTECT YOUR PROP· BldNo.85-317. ~of the euccmM rtlllJC NOTICE ange County on June 4· ERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT DATE OF OPENING BIDS: bidder, the Ctty w111 pey the -------~--1 1985 ' A PUBLIC SAU:. IF YOU Bide will be reoelYed In the emount eo 1'9talned ""°"
fltennou. ....... ~ NEED AN EXPLANATION PU<ctl ... ng Dlvlllone of the aompllanoe with the~
NAm aTAftmNT Publlthed Ofenge Cout Of THE NATURE OF THE City Of Irvine located et ment9 of GOYltnmen1 Code
The tollowtng per-.on. er• Dally Pllo.l JUOLJO. fl. 2'. PROCEEDING AGAl NST 1l502t Sand Canyon, INIM, S.Cllon 14402 end the
, doing buelnMe ... July , tteG OU, YOU SHOULD CON· Callfomla, 12114, untll 11:30 ptOYlllone Of 1he contract Ot~EP CO 3089 Klondike ' M.531 TACT A LAWYER. a.m. on July 10, 1985 at documentt pert~:l
~ ~
6-3 and under buketball lea/Pe
R_eg1strat1ons arc bc1ug accepted for the f'ast
Action 6-3 and under basketball league. The
summer season begins 1n July and concludes 1n
mid-September.
Games will be played at Ncwpon Chns11an
High School on Sunday afternoons and eve-
nings.
Cost for a team, which includes home and
away Jersc)s. 1s $395 lnd1viduaJscan rcgmer for
$50.
for m ore 1nforma11on. phone 831-2455.
BOATIN G
Mlxed double. tourney
A mixed doubles qualifying 1oumamen1 has
been scheduled for Saturday and Sunday a1
Oakwood Apartments in Garden Grove.
The winners oflh1s local qualifying event will adva~ to sc:cuonaJ competition with a chance
of advancing to the nauonal finals, to be hc~d in
florid.a 1 n October.
Morr than 1.800 teams competed in last year's
tournament. malung 11 the largest grass-roots
1cnnis compc1111on 1n the country.
For more information. phone The Racquet
Profcss1onalsat 971-1041.
Ave Coeta M..., CA 92e26 2814 end 2814 114 w. Wllldl time and plaoe bldt to"SubstltutlOn of
Cheri•• Cll••t•r IVH •-.,. ..,,.TlC( OcHn Front, N•wport will be put>lldy opened In llM." 3089 Klondtke Coete M ... · .--nu BMctl. CA 921183 Councll Cheml>erl. Bld1 PROJECT ADM I NIB· CA t2&29 ' ' "(If a 1treet eddreee Of etlell be tut>mltted In M86ed TRA TION: All queetlonl ,..._
Thie t>uilneee le con-fltCTmOUa .,..... common d•1lgnellon ol enwlopee marked on the IM to ttlle project pr10r to ducted by. en lndlvlduel MAim aTATRmNT pr°'*'Y la etiown ebove, no outtlde, "Blda kif Tennlt o~nlng bid• •tl•ll b•
CherlM ·c ivee The tollowtng P«'IOflS.,.. warr1nty la gl¥en .. to hi Court Reeurfectng-venou. dlrec1ed to: Larry Hanernen,
Thll 1t.,.;,,.,1 ... llled doing bullneM .. : completeneee 0< e«rect-Loc:atlone. 8ulldlrlQ ~ at (714)
with the County Clet1t of Of. Ml. VALET. 425 W. 30th n•H)." Th• t>•n•tlclery LOCATION OF THE 857~124. For queattone,.. enge County on June 4 St .. Newport BMotl, CA under Mid DMd of Trwt, by WORK. The wort! to be I*· latlng to the b6d ~
1985 ' t2M3 r...on of• breed! 0t ~ tonned ~ II located contect Robert Laport•.
'21t1aO Terry Lou Fay. 5 10'A In the oblgatlone MCUr-ed In the Cit) of Ir-Me, Count) Purchallng Agent, •t (714;
Put>41thed Orange COMt Femleaf, Corona del Mer, th•r•by, l'lefetolore ex-of Ora ng• et DMrlleld eeo-3428.
o.lly Piiot June lO. 17 24 CA 92925 ecuted and deltvered to tn. Part!-55 o..-.ood Weet, BY ORDER of the City ~ 1 1985 ' ' ' Thlf bualneaa la con-underalgoed • wrttMn 0.0. Ho•ptner Perk, 5331 Cowldl of the City of irw..
' M 537 duc:1ed by. In lndMdlJal laratlon of Default 11\d 0. Ho.ptner, Racquet Club DATED: 5-~ • Terry Lou Fwy mend kif S., end wntten Perk-4050 Rlat>on end CrTY Of' ~ 8Y: ------=-====""" Thia etatemenl wea flied nolloeofbreec:handofelec> Unlve fllly Perk • 1 NANCY C. L.ACFf, cm C•ll 642-5678. with the County Clet1t of Of. tton to c:auee the under· 8-atll,_ Line. CLIRIC, 8Y 8AR8Alll~
Put • few words ange County on June 4. elgned to ... Mid ~ DESCRIPTION OF WORK: ,A&JeKA, mPVTY 1MG to utlefy Mid OOllgatlone. The WOfk to be performed PublWled Orange eo.t lo work for you. ~ and tll«Mft• the under-8haff Include but not be ltm-Deity Piiot June 17, 24, 1916
Put>41ahed Ofenoe Cout ned ~ Mid tiOllCe of tted to: Clelnlng, Priming, M-538
4yachtsdoubleinBYCrace It's a
Passion-2. Matangi, Contention and
No Big Thing score in race to Long Point
By ALMON LOCKABEV
0.-,l'llotlloellfteW .....
tion. skippered ~y <Jordon Uraham,
won both races 1n PHRF-B. and No
Big Thing. with Harold Rutherford .
BYC. was a double wi nner in the
Midget Ocean Racing Class.
Four yachts scored double wins 10
Balboa Yacht Club·s Balboa 10 Long
Point and Long Point to Balboa races.
the fourth and fifth of the 66 Series. The results:
The yachts raced 10 Long Point.
Cataltna Island, Saturday and raced
home Sunday,
B•lboa to Long Point:
IOR-A-1. Amante, Mel Richie}.
Jtm Wanmngton's Passion 2. out
of Newport Harbor Yacht Club. was
lhe IO R-B winner tn both races, while
Ed Carpenter's Matangi, BYC. was a
double winner in PHRF-A. Conten-
BYC; 2. Its OK. Lewis Beery, BYC; 3.
Free Enterprise, Dick Ettinger.
NHYC.
IOR-B-1. Passion )., J im Warm-
inglon. NHYC; 2. Chicken Lips,
Bruce Anderson. Capistrano flay Y C;
Bailor on disabled list
PIERCE BROTHERS
IELL IROADWAY
MOftTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
PACIFIC VIEW
MeMOfUAL PARK
...c.me1ery ·~
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach
644-2700
McCORMICK
MOftTUARY
1 795 Laguna Canyon
Road
Laouna Beectl Ca
92651 •9•-9• 15
HARIOfM.AWN-
MT. OLIVI
Mortuary • Cemetery
Crftm•tory
1625 Giiier Ave
CO•tl Mu•
5•0·5554
D
FALK
H ELEN M ARIE SOUTH •..
Jl'romBl FALK, passed away
June 12. 1985 in
Santa Ana Beloved
mother of Ch arles
Fa!JA.._.,L.\>..,_j,l.IL.-..oULJ~-m
sonvd le,
H elen Rae of
Cameron Park, CA.
Also survtved by 3
grandch ildren Mem-
ber of St. Joachim
C.athollc Church of
O:ista Mesa. Servi('t!S
W~N> held Saturday,
June 22 at Good
Shepherd Cemetery.
Huntington fk.ach
Under the dir«tlons
of Pierce Brothe,..
Bf'll Bro adway
M ort uary , Co~ta
Mesa 642-91~0
f or eta.iflfd Ad
ACTION c.a
4 DAILY rtl.OT
U.ftSCMI
MJ.Ufl
"But 1fl go to college and
they tt ll me I'm going to be
a ~iver I'm 'oi na to do
my best at tha t. •
Sw1pn had a lo t of b1a
moments in his three years
at Fountain Valley. but the
one that sticks with him
was tht two-point pass he
caught which pve the
Barons an I 1-10 victory
over nval Edison 1n the
final seconds
"I auess that JUSt about c~pped ofT evrrything." he
says.
Witte. of cou~. hope'
SW1pn can cap ofl' a few
more items Saturday niJht.
3. T inder Box , Bob Burkhardt. Dana
Point YC.
PH RF-A-I. M a tangi , Ed
Carpenter, BYC; 2. Mas R.apido,
John Fradkin, BYC; 3. Christopher
Robin, Bruce Hansen, Voyagers YC.
PHRF-B-1. Contention. Gordon
Graham. BYC; 2. Tsunami, David
Gray, VYC; 3. Indigo Tiger, Ron I
Deacon. VYC.
PHRF-C-1. Antares. Alan An-
drews. BYC; 2. Pussycat, John Szalay.
YYC: 3. Windshift. George Chalfont,
BYC.
MO RC-1. No Big Thing, Harold
Rutherford, BYC; 2. Wredcless, A.G.
Kading. Capo BYC: 3. Bullet Dick
Brown. Bahia Corinthian YC.
Long Point to Balboa:
IOR-A-1. hs O~ 2. Dare, Walter
Beck, Los Angeles YC; 3. Cursor.
Steve and Jeff Farwell, NHYC.
IOR-8-1. Matangi; 2. Rythm. B '
and M Gooding, VYC; 3. Wild Fire,
Bob Stockwell. BYC.
PHRF-8-1. Contention ; 2.
Prophet, Tad Springer. NHYC; 3.
Cannon Ball, Paul Johnson, BYC.
PHRF-C~l. Cats Paw, Robert
• Hench. BYC; 2. Obsession, Bill Apps.
VYC; 3. Happy Trails, Frank Kl isura,
South Bay Yacht Racing Club.
MORC-1. No Big Thing; 2.
WrcckJess; 3. Bullet.
Boardsailing
course slated
The United States Yacht Raci ng
Union (USYRU) has arranged to
se nd its head boardsailing instructor
to Southern California for a Wind-
surfing Instructor Sem inar.
Hunt1ng1on Harbour Yacht Club
will be the host club for the seminar.
the first of which· starts Tuesday and
corttiiu.t Jhr.Ql.l&h.J.rida.y_ T -
ond course will be June 30-July .
The course will be given by James
Couts. former head instructor for the
Royal Yachti ng Association of Eng-
land. and presently head boardsailing
instructor for tht U.S. Na val
Academy at Annapolis, Md.
-Couti will also give a one-day, Stlt·
hour program for the intermediate
racer.
Cost for the session is $200 for the
1n tructor's counc, payable to
U YR . (Comparable commercial
00,rd courses cost SS20). The all-day
COUf'S( will be $40.
Th~ arc community sa1hng pro-
arams. open to the public. tudents
mu't supply their own standard
sailboard.
Enrollment is on a fl rst-comc-first-
served basis. For further 1nformatJon
phone J. Greenway at 846-2 179 or
963-5634.
ly
Coloring Contest
Orange County Fairgrounds· Costa Mesa •July 12 ·21
WINNERSl--0.e wl• .. r I• Nch ... trotqt wlll.,. di-•· E..c.h wl• .. ., will He.Iv•' Hell.et• 10 the Ora ... Couaty Fair WI• t
plctun• wlll .,. pcMted In the Flnc AIU Eihtblt at the Falr9rou1td1. • " ..
AGE GROUPS CJ4-5 CJ6-8 CJ 9-11
R•I•• aad R-1-tlo••
1. All entrl•• muat be completed by a child In the •9• group• ll1ted.
2. Send entrl•• to Coloring Contest P.O. Box 1560. Coeta Maaa. CA 92626.
3. All entrltt mutt be received by July 5. 1985.
NAME HM.PHONE ~~~~~~~-
ADDRESS WK.PHONE~~~~~~~
J
-
1
ACROea
1 Dutc:fl town
5 Study
• Gotden-louc:fl
klnQ
14Noton1..,e
16 Proftclenl 18 acc...,_,
17 BllndM --
1 I T ennl9 QMt'
19 Ceptel ltem
20 -que non: an
-''-' 21 Fumt>te
23 Neighbor of
Wyoming
24 Cutting tool 21 EoftOeted c:trcle
21 Ptf'9 prodUc:t
2t Mtonletled SS 9rotce In MCeldown
S7Aow ==lor 40 PeclftSt
41 Ion °" Soot 42 Toe.In
43~ "°'ower ... ,...,.., btrd
47 ... c:aee that
<48FOt1,....
52 Legiend
55 An8M•"'llgeifMmNlen .. 't
57 M wound:~
58AW'( to s.orem.nt
81 F .. tONY 62~ 63A,_ ..... .,
84 tllOftee
85 Untidy
M Fender mn
87 Nov•
DOWN
1 Cut
2 Leg bone
S-"9Wde
4 Dlecerned
6 NY...-... ea.men~
dllnt
1 SUtlorn I OlctMCWINp
8Me.F8"0W
10 Affront
11 Ool!OI lh~
12 CorlfUMcl
13 Abel'•kln
22 0odp 26 "1'¥1 .,.., -I"
27 Aresunll
2t8quetty
300Nbe'akln
31 Aoofedos
32 Pul9d 33 M..,._im
34Wlnfll!•
35SllcMe
MHnd
3tlehool~
40~11tc:.
42 Otowwp
,
~--
..
'1
-OrMge Coast OAILV PILOT/Monday, June 24, 1985
• 4 I.inc-•. 5 Otyt, •6 DolJan. • Ads may r.nct'I early. but nu portion o( 11aynlt'nl It rt'fundahle. • AcWidonal ._may be purcb.awd for •2 00 n ch
• Price. mu.t be tncludtd 1n 1tw-ad • ~ nol apph to 1h" rnl t»lat". r .. 11111. or help w111led du.6caba.. or autOIDClhilff priced over $2000, Call 6 4 2 -5678
• \vatlabk univ 10 pm •II' pulv 1dvcrti«n telling mercha.ndl.e.
THI DAILY N.OT DIADUNH
Cl.ASSlflEO OfFlCE HOUl'IS a:riON £1:,,t T s.r..io. M f • ...,.. ~ 600PM ~·' • :~ 111.ir-Coon!« M F ~~ ~ .,... &00 AM • 6 00 PM ~•' ~~I :::::
~!!!!,.!!!,.,!!!!,__~ ........ lalt ...... U ...... Aprt!!Mta, l!L ..,..,._ .. ,Val.---Ai!rti!•tl,'Uat. Carat" ltr ltll OWN YOUR OWN N.8
,,..... ______ 1_11_a cs-.te 11H c..1a 11eu ...... c.... ... 11u na Cina ._ -nM •!!1!!• .... ~ 2111 Int A~ s.Mot. Plll't
. ... ... New Eutllde Townho~ rn. 2 bed. ' S:ifi. Up, ...... , _ Loe 18d yrty w/o-112blk Ob .. atorege gar loced~ ~~~: ::rrio :~~:-:,; -+-GrMt Y\la. 60Mnc balbo!', 2Br. den, dbl gar 21A811 l>f1\'8t• beech, gardener, Went • .-etlon of ~t to beh. no ,,_ .. SMC> In CM IUSO/;>. Fri. "4000/Compl. ,.,,..
...... ~r,~n!ve~Oa~\~ $1100/mo. 852-1S18 nonemol(_r,~io-"°ern-' IMng? We can offw enrc-Craig 813-eo47 850-58 tut le opportunity.
Up front a t>MutlNI 3 4BR/crnr lot•lmmic. PREFERRED AREAS gerege, ' th~lrom a ln\all apt o LIDO WATER VIEW Eatt1lde C.M.-10JC20', 7 52 -07•0 wkdy1 : ~room, 2 battl home 1195,000/ofr. Cell E\IES POMlb .. 28r home 1tylt Lg 28r 1'9. dbl gar, MW a 4 hM. 11 k><*":N In Lux 28r 28a. 2 lg dec*t. 170. p/mo. Ea~. 643-29"9 ~ndt
with brick fl.r•plaf;e, 8e1-5075 '°' appt. w/patlo eulpt kltch pool paint & crpt t112&1mo. CM.NB.or HB think U1 trplo 11500. 875-8359 V«Y MCUr•. 7 '1J
Bright IUMY kltcbwt 2 Jecuu mid '500'• 873--1889 ()( 873-8890 :, '°' that ctlo6ce of Vertalllee Studio Condo. flct lntala 14 ~' ...
rentalunlta. Excell«rt~ ... Jau Ca.1; 1171 •NM111* CMta... 1714 TSL ~~ 642-1903 Part rum 1815/mo+utlta f§d m 271' 266 at ... 'i-iiii-· ~·~~~~!!: ~unity. GrMt lncOme. PrObet•s•. it,,2\tL Or rent to own Sbdrm 2 2BM 111\b T/R d NB REALTY 875-1642 Avall lmmed. Prlnclpell $13o11Q 'tt 1817 WNt-Widow hat money for
Cell now. &4N31S TwMm. I 110K. HURRYI =t ='sf:!~ ~ Ffpic, Pvt :..lo. No ~~: ........ Ii n4i ~ly !37: 1998 ~ Cliff, NB. AGt 5' 1-6032 !r°.":11 ..... ~:!·= ::
M.000 VA·FHA Terma 539-8190 S.t Alty'-. IMS/rno•p. 646-1510 ij Qi.to Ooten, 2 ea;m 1 lu Cle!•te fl71 ~lllllQ9, 21toryor-OenllOf'I Ateoc. 873--7311 THE REAL
ESTATE RS K~A~,~h~J:.;t" Prtvetepooleoola3bt2ba 2Br 1~8•. Vacant. 'A ba twnhH. Qul•t .......... flew nc..1 IQftw/lhOwW I I W ... tfli
ee1-3e730f581-1100 hie tnc:d yd 2 gar patio $e75/mo, S300 aec ct.p. Adu1tase1s. 53&-0490 1er Coodo In eecurlty S950. 2815 Lavt8Y9tt•· ;;::;•.,.•';;ullli;iiT'.-...... ...... llM " O much more $800'1 Call 546-3878 bldQ. non 1mkr, no p«a. 545-7983 &lllSSl&IT liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Prem_ l.S 539-8190 BMt Alty,.. 28R 1ba, deluxe Moble •BEACHWOOD VILLAGE avallabl• now. S595. CdM'I beet otncee. "426-Senior Of a.mi. '°' loC:al
"""' -ll04 ""°'I -10 --llTTlll 2 Ro0SE8 &fa g;; SHARP EASTSlOE 2BR h<>rM. Adult pwit. 140 • RI 97$-7990/W 788-5680/H $1100 Incl utff, AJC, plcg, CPA nrm. N-4rn61r. Mtld :"'~· =-..:.:".:-= lb9d lot Otder 2 Groea $19.200. S188,500 1 ba, garage, yard Cabr11to. $850, MM725 •..,. .. ml Lata Au 2'111 janitor. 2855 E Coast reeume & MtetY hi.tory =tr==-°.,::·~': ~oom home.'°' hie»-15% On. Owner Don $750/mo. call 54&-9950 28r 18a, poof, lndry rm . AH/mo 28d 2be pOOl Hwy 675-8800 anytime t°: 1500 ~ ;;:t, Hwy, :::'!'°"...::.~ =...., ,_ wny Of rent• Of bulld 2 Goguen 497-8287 Spac. 3Br 2ba. bonu9 rm. $587. 1834 Monrovia. No En)o)'Huntlngton Bch clubhouN, oloM to alt. ' mMnYE llllU MJIOUt'l9iliiiiifiiiBriiU
..
~ ...
Sell ., .., p,~,I c. Cla1111W,
642-5678
for information
& surprisingly
low cost.
units. CALL 873-8900 (7) UNITS BAL PENN Avallab19 8/1 $1200/mo pata. S48-033e Llfeetyte 2S2'1 SUnnow.r Full Sen10e 881 DoV9f Or, .&lllJIT lllllY&ILI • ......,... ... Mn 100· to bc:h + poof, fully 5'8-7001 or 7st-t350 2BR 2ba 2car gar. Frplc. wtl ~~:::"Setting TIL IAllU•IT Nwpl Bch. 831-3651 Mutt haw up91'. !MM ~t:::· ,M~re;ker Spack>u1 38r, dlM rm. WHher/Oryer. Micro-•SpKtoul .::.c unit• 142-1111 nH UIT n arM. ~1::· Call tor
g Clean, quiet 'ch<*le loc. wve, Pool/epa S950/mo, •Biiiard Reom • Huntington Beech Prof. appt. 1117 TmllUTIOll lrg yd w/lr .... lndry avall 7/l, 7eo-te11 •a..utlfulLwldecaplng Hit ••trt bldg, • mo'1 tr• rent --&IYllTlllM-,.=:===----"'!!(~ll!""!~~c!!!:tt!!!!ll!"'--•I Coete MeM/Hunt Bch hkupt, gu, water & truh 2BR. frplc, gar., 1mall yrd, * Prlvat• patloe & deck1 2'11!1 plUI Improvement allow-&lllllf Uii1 Rft
100· to . + pool, 1. 24 untt .. $1,820,000 pd. $895/mo .• a.r gar new carpet, 050. •CIOMtobMch Luxury condo-walk to So. anoe to qualified pro-Needed tor d l eplay
carporta, fulty occupied. 2. 20 unlt..St,100,000 avt,..xtrel. 2<41·7213 831-3527 • •Buuervloeatdoor Cat Plza, tplc, •leg. t ... 1onal1. 700-1500. Sq. advertlilng Sal•• at
Safe lnvee1ment. Kttt AGt 3. a Unit• *625.000 Tri thla 2bdrm homey IPOI IUT I II.Ill* *Laundry room1 trench dra air ln·home feet at 854. Call now for rapidly expanding tocel
536-67tl8 •. 8 unit .. tm·OOO w/gar frplc kid ok patio * •ProNeelonal manaoett MCurlty tbr 1ba lneld1 appt. l. Weill, 835-0618 dally new1p•n•r Ag· 5. e unit• ,000 •• w .. tllde 19r w/carport 1 Bedroom from $675 • • .... · ---M'ft--... --,-y---8. 8 unit. 1S,OOO more -25 mo 53M 190 "495/mo. M2·1700 Exec: 1 Bdrm from $586 Wlh/dryr, alao pvt club Fully encl llng .. eat gar· grelllW Mlt-dledplMCI
. 7 4 unit. $330 000 S.t Alty f• 2 Bedroom from s705 w/tna ct1, pool. Jae. ege. 399 w. Bay St., CM fndlvtdual1 may earn ex-llll MffDI Ceutorlnto&~,.... I t IMC~ _ .... •NrSCPtza.S.A.2Br1Be Sorry NoP«a uuna. belut. dee. ses.oo 650-8357 oellent Income (Mtery & + A good t>uy. WaJff( to bay • u • ..,... C6ndo. Pool, epa. carprt 9 32 M s ctubhM & much mo<e. comm1111on), b•n•tlt• or beach. On Balboa Act fMt, wont IMtl 2br 2~ nu iW( conao sec 1700 No petl 722~11 1 1 agnolla t. 1875. lnclds moet ulll. lido Vlllege 359•S18 lq ft and advane«Mnl op-
Penln Point. 2+ den or 3 TIL llVUWll Rec amenltlee Avl lmrMd 3 BR 1~ba. $]80/mo + 964-5587 eM-557• Oeys, 638-0W5 or evee, otrlcea wlsth 2't,C ~ = portunlty. SalH ex-
Bdrm, 2 batha, 2 etory, 2 Tom Lee 642-1502 $900. 21~248 aec de oilt 883.c 731-7S28 parking. 1. 1q perienoe requtred, rMdle
car garege. Been r• ht Ii c.ilJlty 3BR 2be, bftlnt, encl gar, P1u~. J 854-.7592 N9S/~$87S/mo 2-3 Bd ..... utll. 673-3777 Agt uperlence advan-
modeled. S29S,OOO. Cell a. lt•• ..._ ,,...... $99S Mt apta end gar.Indy rm, New Bldg 0C Airport tageoua.Sendreeumeto:
to Me 67~120 n•etL ~ :1tt 53i-0921 · • ure $725/mo 2 8d 1 ~ba =atlo1, cloH to FEM. WlfY ioe rm, ltlr 68. area. eon* of Redhlll & ... .a? 15 KfW "'ROU; l w;a btwn • TownhouM gr .. nbelt, , nr major lhop9. kltch & Tndry prvlga Bristol. 700 1q rt & 1350 111.Y Pl.IT Mol9W & c.nt11. Arnpte •Br Exec:.,.._ RV pt1mg. lndry rm, ntoe loc. Huntington 8eacf'I.,.. l27S. 646-2346 1q ft lmmed occ:py.
wet• $37,500 SW Of 3Ba. LR, friMc, den & llb. 2078 Thurln (Mngr-2417 WNteeandl) LG ru pnv ba kit prlv R & H INVESTMENTS p .0 . Box d..~2e2t
..... Ce1 240-8199 S1395/mo. te2-1s23 TIL lll'M•IY IPT llAll IDLn utu ~~·new ~t. r;_,; 8S2-871• COO• Meea. ll btMap Hii • 28R BEACH CONDO 141·1111 Oeya8T5-1&42 $280 54&-2S73 CM Nwpt Bct1 acroa from Adv9rUelng
-on watetlguard/pool & £\w9e()..'4814 /d Jotln Wayne Airport. 800 .....,_ Ul.D
IF YOU CAN'T SEU IT, ..une $95011M 545-0713 meatiBJIU Brigtlt & IUnny 2Br 28a. N u:;.r: rm, ~!fy· w ef9 IQ ft, 2 oMcee + reoep-NHded for claHlt .. d EX~~; ITI Cozy oottage nw OONn New crpte, drps, tr9lhly f:oo+t2 ~1= 494-7~ tlon ., .. $1.2S grosa. edver11eingdept.atrepld-~-----,....,~ hat khch app11 *425aleo Ill clMned & painted. Pvt ~ 8S2-8713 ly expending loo.el deity
______ 1_m_, ...... ,....... 2bF $550 bllll pd "... =~· .~~ garage. ltttla,l!!tth 2904 Nwpt Blvd, C.M .• lnllde ::.:=i~~
IY.... Ctnu Q Iii if D 539-8190 a.t Alty._ F......, ":-J~ dbl OM . 840-5504 pu UI 9ITEL otrloe, lmmac quiet, 11s IQ uall mey earn exoelertt
OldCdM 2Br 18aBchCot-.. I lu'---ma . ..,_ -...-. ~ly rentals now avall ft $135/mo. S53-111S lncx>tM (Mlary & oom-
tegew/brtck petlo. • blk• , oontemporery UL ..., ...,. ~&ape. No pet .. DELUXE 2Br 2811 • PLEX S126/Wk&up.227<4Nft~ mlaalon), beMftta and
to bch. Many upgredee. home. SO lllp Incl. Fum F;:pjC wwme orpt 4 &m ~ W ~=-+~5-= Crpt, drpa, bttlne, hkupe, port Blvd. C.M. &46-14<45 ~ ~~~~Mq~ 1~(, edvanoement ~
R-2 comer lot $2'9,000. or untum. Elegant home hme tncd yrd Dal petto . enc gar 187S + $100 dep. Sift S 140/ 553-1115 ty Telephone Salee ex-
801 OrchldAve640-01'7 ror ••ec:. or pror.ak>nal. chlld nn. appta $675 No P9!• ~ ID I Ill LlllE mo ~required. media
CharTTief So of PCH 3bd ~:;1$3= ~o.~ 53Mt90 e.t Alty'-meatiBJIU W .. V111 ••1 3028 W.Coaat3New-O.C . Airport Area experience adv•n:_
2t>&. ,_.-tpf, tile, fr MrPanno(714)771-3909 lnlat H4f • .....,.. Pof'IBeactl,r91r ,TV 226'-&46' ~ta 01 prklng, t~eaMM10.
Do or 1 . s 289 , 50 o or 1714) 991.2•1M -&PllJmTI WIY 111'1 s12s+ wt<lgl,no epollt. j~~t;~,M~1~f~52~'3&e Attn; M4111nd• Theckery
Own/agt 646-12·20 ,._ta•-· 21•.a **luEITILI** 1••1111•, ... • l1"t I•" Bis Office •P•"'· for rent. MIMI.at 1t~t •--1-.. ~ •-WI CALL S REGARDING .__.. __ a... UYI wl'l«e you haw ....., 111.f Pl.IT
.,.. I -. H'I EUt CM 2 8( (In 36r h.. IRVINE LEASES --..-•Spect8CU!w apte ATTENTION SENIORS 30()..500 IQ rt. W•tcllft P.O. Box 1580 • O™I• e •• ...,..) 3 Br ••7s • ... I-'--•-~ .......... •xllWi, * 1 & 2Br, 1 & 2811 eult• Andrews by the See la now Bldg, 17th St & INIM. -~ or -·· · .... ..._ _, -•1 acceptln~ appllcat1on1 631-3113 12-4pm COO• Meta, Ca. 92ae NEW HOMES Rm/kltoh furn. •9~7« I 111-llM Ix ....... er•• .. , •Spectou1 townhouw f
I • ...a..;.a....J. •Ar ...... _,,_ or ral enta In their p 1 C 1 .. __ ........ AIDE for lady, 3-4 hrl LLOO~ PDOAYWMNENT ...... hf1rfl4...... . HERIT'"GE P'"RK CONDO .,., ..... -. . _._ bMutltul llcenoed horM r me 09 a ,,,_ o ... ,.. p/dey S5 hf P..onel-" "--a) ----z-,.. ,.. _..... •Pr1vate balconlea or ror the elderly. We offer: Suite. 1200 + 1q ft. 118a<pg' ~753 aftn/ew
2165 CANYON OR .._.. ..._. 3 Bd 2 ba AIC, 1 i.v.1, ...,... Garden patio. 3 nourtahlng meals Ocean view $9SO/mo. !-:--:---:-:----=---,,....
COSTA MESA 2 bdrm. 1ia t>eth. Xie, gar. $950/mo 720-3939 1... 1111-8121 WIY lln 2, hr1 loving care 631-8260 Alk tor Ray Apt Menager Couple
631-7(µ6 condo w/poof & IC>a. 1\.\ Univ Prtc Home 3Bd 3Ba. !'*-1~ 1111 *3 ted tennlt court• Chauttwed outing• Malzo or Bftt Taylor w/e'q) fOf t>Mutlful 81
FOR SALE BY OWNER blodce from SC Plaza at tennla, poof, J.c S 117S 2 ... Ila llll •2 ~ pools Mek1 aervtoe * 1 MONTH FREE Unit Garden Apta, CM
2BR townh,OC'M. M ... ww~~n-~·~· .. 2FS1.1 mo $200 dep &44-41S7 ,.1L1111t ·--··11 •SttMml &--• Doctor on call EXCEL LOC-U11l Incl Sataty+bonul+ Apt. No ""' '""'""' "'"' ..., =----=----=--....,...,...,,..,.,. • _._. .,........ Call Kathleen •95-2118 FROM 95c SF & UP S*tM2""'14~d)'e._. Verde. uaume S65K VA S69S/mo & se9s depoalt. Lapu ltacli U4I 111 L 1• 142 .... •Sorry. no pell ~2=. ~-=~ Serious credit check: r:rgn;2ea; pvt & quiet. 111 L 21st Ml-2• •~m!Wllnga evall ..... CALL (714) 988-8193 A1a19t ~tock
754-+413 Of 7S1-'330 °"': by nre: lap a ~ Ocean View. frplc, fr1g, 2211 , ..... ~ WHY NOT CALL latala ntl l11iats1 * *11111*
•• s•1T11T1•-• TH N~:.112ee•trc ~'f~~·..J~.9;-em Ml-NH IQ.1111 GQ;#Um28d11eeps8 lntall ltll Our 1ntemat1ona1 ~ • -• ,...... or more. June $350/wk; Cannery Vinaae on 31.1 Nie company needa to l IUl. llY AT l R-2 lot. tBR 2 car gar .••• iii~~; R Ocean View 2BR 1.,.ba. • 28d JCtra lge TwnhM. 1 IUWlll YILUIE July $450/wk 875-2910 St. 870lq ft-etorefront hire & train MYWal qtMll-
$119,500 OMC 873~59 • • --~: Beamed oelllng, etove, 112ba. patio, gar, W/O 155S5 Huntington VIiiage w/gd prkng. Antlq~lft· fled appllcant1 to WOtk In
38R 2~~ noor. REPO E-slde s1s1,ooo lo tj d/w, wuh/dryr, retrlg, hkkp. nr OCC, no pet1. Lane, from San Diego Vacattn marine&. botlquea. l.... our Orange County
._ dnNACANT M ... Verde -• gar, n-smkr No peta. S695 +dep 5'8-6091 Freeway north of Beech leatall 2to? by owner 875-6909 bued ottlc:e and to 1•'191 ~'"1:'i0 ~~!-;:rm. IWID WIU IW $189,900 Agl 5'8-7739 o;!k S39s ~bdrm~~ $1000/mo. ·Evea/wknd• • LIKE A HOUSE• to McF&dden west on C1rmet cantornla b oll Ct••trcial ~u~~:;~ ~8!i-:s:"::t
•Y 1111111.1 ILTI. FllWIOI 'Spaclou1 2 •ty· s Br 3 ba, apple ~e1dJ' detalla 497-590t. dya 855-0508 3Bd 2 ·~ba, t800aq tt. 2 McFadden. . House'. Fully tumllhed. I t J 2tll Germany u we11 u other •••llH Minutes to So. Coast many amenities. Owner 539-a190BestRltyf .. Latiaali~ael 92 1ty,newcpt1/drp1 NrSC liat lu .. •. 2742 Wllllleep4.Walktobch 1111 natlonatandlnternatlonal _. Plaza Spacious 2Bdrm 546-&M9·-Plaza. S72S S4&-11S2 • r & VIiiage. 7141497--4817 Greenhouee to rent. 2566 loca11ona. Muit be ln.-IL.,l-IWPT IUOI 2Ba Condo In ematl pn.. Ctreu ••I .. , 1222 2Br 2Ba LU URY CONDO ;VibX DEL MARt eq. rt. In c .M. ca11 wuaon tense and enjoy a rodl
vate Complex Pool IPA .. t. IHc• l 3Bd 26 ti nt p; Private End Unit. Frplc. •WlllUll Y'ILUll• Spacious 1 & 2Bdrm Apt1. lntah ti l•are 2tOI (71•) 642-3800/dyt M-Frl. and roll atmoaphere. No MUD UY fabulous location Exoel~ •. new cp P · Dbl garage. S1100. mo. 2Br 1'ABa, bltnt 1595 + All bltlna Including dllh-M Ll&ll IPTlll lent condition and price hrfeet fir f 111t1 hM doors. 509 Cernatton. Yr lae. No pata. s.. S600. No pell 540-44&4 wuh« newty decorated •ON THE BEACH• Small thopa for rent exper. nee. Ult ba
Choice end unit. Popular E lnctudel washer dryer Only S 1'4,5001 Huge La Mo-Mo S 1800 646-.1220 today! 756-8175 The Fox -B .. utlful land1caplng. Shr the belt Nwptloc & vu. S.80/lq ft. 120 E.23rd St sharp In appearanc•.
plan. 3 Bdrme, 2 l/2 and refrlgeratOf.' All of Cuesta R Club. T/Hml 5 bike to bch on Gold-Co. Reatton lP'TwrTI HSW pool, Jae. MUna. BBO'. Spa. flreplt & more Unll 29 CM 631-2&42 ::::,~~.~.=
this lor only $139,000, 3BR 2b• + loft. prlv1te enrod. 2Br 18a, D/W, I ... L m 9 Redec: 2Br 2Ba. gar, Jae. Encioaed garege. Enjoy S650+. Jim &4S-7S57 Aa .. view II M VI batha on lulh wide green-75 1-3191 y1rd & patio! T•nnl1 retrlg. W/O prlvl, 2 C8r ~rt I• .._ patio, frplc. No J>«• 1895 quiet adult rMng neat BelM.ltltul home In pree-at1ac.... 26 52~ r. neon, ~y'~·CltyVl•tlght~~ ~.~~! coorta. Bike to belch! carport. brick patio. 2itltm/den « 3 Bdrm 2 mo. 21s1 Pactnc AYe. OOMn. Lowmove-lnC04Jt. tlglou• Harbor View for SPIRITOXL REAbiNGS •=-=-..,..,',..,,·~,.-----
tamlly room can be •th C:::. SELECT Call todey. S26-6025 Quiet $1150/mo +dep. ba. frptc, trnt & back PM 855-0865 Of 831-8107 we care about our r..i-Prof. M/F. 7s9•1653 Advice In All MattWI & BANKING
Bdrm. AJC, wet bar As--1-' PROPERTIES lniat 1144 1st, laat. $600 NC. AVI yard. All new carpet1, Eutllde 1Br, end gar. No dent•. Sorry, no pet• Counaellng. 181S So. El Ol·~EI IUmMbl• 111. Owner _ 7110 Wiii snow now by blinds, range. no retrtg. peta Fr1g & -.c: range $850 & $750 &46-17SS CdM, M/F to lhr 3br hie, Camino Real, San Clem. ., ..
,._ 'M· .. • -..... an otteri· appt 873-9023 S950tmo 67s-eeoe S460tmo. &42-s964 °' 840-3990. pvt t>a, wtd, frp1. on 1oc. Uc'd. 492-7296 IEl.,..E -·--..... non-emkr mull be nMI WIW
$299,500 SANDY MIT· 38d 2be S1100/mo Back Bay 11ea. 3Br 2'hba Specloul 1bdrm 1Partcllng lniat 2744 $450/mo. 875-4950 SCRIU.LEJS IEPIEIEITITIYE TMAN •Bd 2 'hba $1500/mo T/H., tip, decic S1100 clean $47S poof No petl Nft
New 28d"9eyrld0e Condo Dys 619/457-5S7• & ev Call 760-2653 · · W'?°"bttdge condo 2.br CdM pteaent room, Fern ANSWERS $139S Ag1 720-~22 619/453-87'3 1 ~ba $800/mo. Carport, n-smkr, evall the 111. ---=--~--,,..,..,..,-----.,-,,,.......,...-..,,,..-....,... SS7S/mo 2 8d 1ba patio, treahly painted. 720--0878 $330. Call ew 7S$-91"3 l .... Option •br 2~ba Belcourt Hin lux Condo pool ln<lry rm E·alde 1oc -SI Knotty-Bland comm. poof,tennla. Ocean 2Bdlllbrary. 2 marble ct• to alll · ' Llpu llt'tl ., Pref rnale SS+ Nr 4<>S & SC Crert. Olgeet
GE 759.9100
--------
view $2000 rno. 640°'41S2 frplc. ocean/nit• view 149 E. Bey m"bth., 2S'. West NIM Ptza, CM $300+dep, Pett DEADLOCK mu ftlll mlTI IUUY.... Timi llft ,._ • fi24 guarded gate $2700/mo TSL MANAGEMENT 9otf eouree. 1st, last, + utlla "32-7388 A lllp of the tongue bye -••••-• •••ir llNE TIWllll•EI "'991a IN oV261·1SOOtev759-9175 &42-1903 aec. Avtlmrned 861-1238 Female to 8hr w/aame 2Br radio announcer did not
Great Westem'1 Costa
Meaa br*'Ch hat an Im-
mediate FuU-Time open-
ing '°' ...... oriented, Nit-motivated Ind~
who enJoyt WOfl(lng wtth
ptJblk:.
1114,111 ---tedrm houH, frpic. B""'-1 better •bdrm 2ba Park Newport. go unnoticed. Hewuan-Enter the huge C8lhed1'91 3 Bdrm, 3 ba home In Olde 3 bdrm, 2'A ba. CanMI $800/mo s250 MC dep ._... • 1 lg 2br 1ba, dee*, upetalr1. GOLF COURSE. attractive $320+ utll 840-88&5 nounclng a couple'• ror-pettttve Mlary. ex<*-oeltlnged IMng room and COM. Sylvan eettlng, yet Model. Upgraded. GOOd Call 5'8-3878 . -2bth all kltch appl1 rpk: encl gar., near S.A. lower condo, 2br 2ba. w/d . tleth yMr of "OEAO-l9n1 ben9flt1. Bank Of
fMI at homel Rultlc close 10 all. Solld, !Nin-location facing greenbelt. S 1200 ~rly call C.Club $800. 548-1938 bit-Ins, patio, gar. no pet• F rmte lhr 2bt condo CM LOCK." Savlnga& Loan teller and
t>.ama. Dining room alble 1n<l lllghtlyeontern-Excellent ptJrctieae plan. 2 Bd 2ba Condo spllt tevet 539-8190 Rlty fee lrg 2Br In 4-Plex New 1835/mo. 770-1950 n-9mkr $350-+'hutll $350 .--:-ir;;;;---.--...~ new acoountt experience
Family room. 3 1Paclou1 porary. $369,SOO S 177.900. lrpk:, W/O, 2 car gar. Blue ribbon 2br 2bth gar-paint, erpti. No pett $575 lnprt ..... Hit dep. Neetlreep &45-0933 Ltet ftaa• preferred.
bedroom1. Sunny llrlllln. l llliw I ( ( 1 f 11( ~ f lm1t O.llf ltaltJ pool. IP•· s950 556-9200 age patio kid fine not far 22•8 Canyon 832-1788 -F snr 1ge 3 Br w/F In whlchr ;;;;;;=;;;;;;;; P!eue call for an appoint·
Upgraded and reno-Realtors 675-6000 1812•Cutver0r Irv. •OllAllllll* to coast $700 S39-8190 2BR 2b $100/mo+. ()()Cat. u -fOlJND ADS ment at; vated. Central MC. Laroe · lll llOO ' Best Rlty fee Mae Verde •· slitanoe, 645-2357
i tlo Call now 546-2313 • 3Br 28• exec. house frplc, lndry, gar. Dix. llUT WESTEll
llYllU
Cl1•) llMNa
· 0 Lovely Land1cp, frplc. BLUFFS-Condo 4Bd 2 $775, aVI 711, 2<41-7383 M-36--45 ehr 4br 2ba hM ARE FREE ~f!"-=~·~1 Yll "••"f IUT TllS ltwprl ltac• 1H9 grdnr dbl gar $1000 'hba, encl patio-new nr So Cat Plz Pool IP9 ? 5 --1213) 59a-ogs4 · carpets s 1250 &«-1'60 Nice Ea11slde 2Bdrm 1 Ba. IN NEWPORT BEACH 50 .. ,.y 1325+ utll & · Cal: __ --~-~!-_ 1111,000 lllTUSIUl.ll Avall 711 . Small yd, gar Agreet ptaoetoltveonthe maid n/ll'l'ltlr 850-9311 ...................... ,Newport Terrace Aasume Absolute value on thll •Nwpt Rlvl9ra TwnhM $e95/mo 11t, lut + $300 Upper Bay. Private • ·
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii loans thet total. S92 ooo apacloua 4 bdrm, 2._. 4Br 2'~8a. Frplc, patio, DOLlllYI UIT&LI cleanlng dep. No pata. clubhoutH & health F n-emkr 25-35, •br hM 142-1111
._ ..... ___ II under 12% lntereat 2 bath home w/VIEW. pool, IPt 1 1150 No pat• PENINSULA PT: •BR Rell r9q. &45-9395 IC)U. IS tennis courts, 7 shrw/3,NwptShrs, pool-~~~~~~~~~~~------
COLDWC!U
BANl(eRO
UllUmllll
SEA TE~J'-1:.1:eR. den
or 3 BR. Ooean view.
UMd bl1ctc patio. new
paint, pool. tennis.
IMech. Private • gated
Expended lanai End of
culduecttreet Theper·
Met r9'W.,,,.,-,t or tl•rtef
horM.
144-...
~rm Garden Home wtth Almo1t 3,000 1q fll 722-8011 w/tam rm. 3 nreplac., Pvt tBr frplc pool, patio PC><*. cJoee 10 buatnele, tne aYelf $295. &42-3880 r:
a vlewt End unit In a great W/lormal dining room, 3' 80 2 'hb• Condo patio. S2000 annual. gar NO petl 399 w. e.Y OC Airport, FHhlon MfFltlrCM hOuM Cerpn
location. Call today lor famlty room, 2 llreptaoee patio, dbl gar. 11200/mo LIDO PENIN. BAYFRONT St. Ss9S . tso-e35,. llland, convenient shops ·Jee, W/D $325 l ~ utli detella 6'6-717 l and almost Ol YMPIC furn option 645-04M5 CONDO. Large 2 bed + on 8'gtlt. MC 1 mutt 646-27156
THE REAL
ESTATERS
SIZED SWIMMING POOL · den, llgh11 & weter Quiet Meta Ven:M 2Br
w/great aun ar... fOf 3 8d 2 '~ba MW Condo. VIEWS. $2450/mo SLE 18&, end O-. lower Unit. Stngtee 1 & 2 Bdrm Apen M. ~of. non-arnkr, 32-39, r;;;~~-=~~~;-;-;;~~;;~~:-::::-bar-~uea. rn• and car encl tre· lndry rm, VILLA ON WATER. 8 $800/mo. Aefa. 49&-1938 "*'" l Towntiou.... lhr Nwpt ~ta hrn. lrg I ur-BLUE PRINTER. Exp nee
dancing. 350 ,000 frplc. StO 5 644-7087 WlflrfrMt ..... IH. Sper1(Mng ctMn 2Bdrm (Aak ebout turnlthed rm. Diana &4 -3442 gent loan ot S4000. Coata Meea Blue Prtnt.
For Ad Acti.nn ~;";.uE:i,~~elru'f:: Affordable3bdrm2t>eprv1 111·1411 lll·llM H~Ba tees. Utlta pd, apta,comptet•wlttlTV. Profwelonelover30tolhr Pteeeecalla55-5M3 1890 Placentia. CM
""' $309·500 wlTERMSt ~ patio mom'1 kltClh kid refrtg, o-eoe. 1 oNld <*. Hnenl l ~ fTMIYbe 2Br28aHwptBchCondo ml&-•... 548-5&71 appt 'ea1i Petrick Tenore welcome S72S hurr no p«a. • .. 2 ........ rented for ltlOf1 tenn or $325/mo. 846-1332 _, -CaH a 631 -12M S3M190 S.t Atty... Newport Ille Cottage 11/2 1980 WeffaOe .... _...., long«). On Jamboree Prof f.-n"" 28d 1be fully No Credit? Beder.dtt? Ill liirii F/I
Daay· Pt'lot Clean lbr, gar .• yard. no ~; ~~O::. r::;: •STUNNING LQ 1 & 281 = •t San Jo9quln HMI rum :t bell apt. ac..i MaJor ~~~~ ~~~&ch.
• pets. nosr'~51mo An~ual seo'o. 650-'.0o497 2811 Garden Apt. Pool . '"-1111 vtft at1t7S-1183 Advenoec,t Credit 8ytteme boerd 15-20 hl'9/Wk. 1()..
$525 & Up. 710 W 18th Seek mature ~.IF will 554-8800 ~!t~typlng, &pr
1
--. AD VISOR 3B 28a I encl tlO SEAWIN0:5 BR. 3ba, view, conelder chlld Of P9t lhr _,, "84&-o193 .....
• Beyfront S79,500/TrecM-7 ra.herw~ hk ~9~ ,,..,. pool end tennlt TWYllTlllU 4bf 3ba ha.. $400-+""1\ll 642 5678 Outux• mobl ... 3bt, 2ba. :o ,,_: ~P $2500/mo 559-9539 '1N~rw1 ~~.rJf:a ~~ •WA'lllflllT•· s100 dep. 8<47--4564 F.v. nfllliid/
• boet lllp avail. 813-8022 E/SIOE attrac11ve 28r 1ba WESTCLIFF 3 Bdrm 2 lnt,tncd ~.water pd a..utlful 2br, 2ba. den Shr 28t 2ba. ooean vu, Eam trewl credit.. HITl-W llTllT ------~-~~~~--;;;-:4!ii~iii~ii!!~~!iiµc.M.1.J®&Uon-wl bath houM ~· IC'f<>NA at apt.. encl ar. pvt . ~~~~~o~w~~-~~~tti:::::-:C~~'!P.:~ '::::'.'~~lt-~4,•• _rw"'-1.111911 CJard, wtr pd. No pata 9'·M•9e ot VT-83M120 1·6PM 9Y .... =~t5 mo N·lmOk• $650. 875-3806 lulwt ~ .. lf l ltralaht copy. · ..,.....,.cu.•• 'O<i.A" Juttllltedendonly1/2bltc Julyt.St257151-38H ;;• TOP _,_ ..... '" ....... _ _.._....._ 1;.,,s14 ........ aid --......__.pool 80W~Nq.Goodrnert!-iii~~~~~~~ area. _ ...... f'O P.•1· "_, --· "' .... ~· &uw ....... • Balbo• I• and O•f• up lkllta mancsato.y . • ~ ... -........ ol ,,,. I 0 b. a ch T hr.. =EA-=-s=:T=:s""'1="oe=""'1~B,....r .-cl-:-Mel-n-. ~~-I l'IOUM rent8126' inCd B!AVTIFUL 19' MOO Up D9 pett.. 7eo.ot 19 ~ women.Matute • 1 36 • 0 0 0 . c .. h : Botti POltlone .. aO In ._•:·,~"',::-:...::~':: bedroorna. 2 bath, fir. yrd. '550/mo. P"' off Warner 53M190 UNIQUE Bachetor 1628 E/lluff tux To.MouM tm n.l'M t&oo t4M557 OwMr/Agent 87S..llM pfwtt. MecllCef a ~ Cul&oee· befeoni.a and 644-3155 or 998-3434 a.et Alty,_ ~~ClEs~ ~ 2br 2'.iW>e Oome>I ~. Stir !ult"""-· vu peeto, 1"· ~ ,.. ' 119 ln1uranc• paid. Call
f
0 ICY T H T I ~°t2a~OC:--Ur• to E/lkMC.M.1bt,cteen, ,,.,....,, .. ME8APINE8:&4$-:i447 2gw.w/openwa .. 751mo 1 .. t, dee>. uth S325. growttl ~ ot the~~ .. ~~ Schulman,
I I I' I I I Y,d & gar. IMO. Avl 7/1 epptm ~. 87&.ooee eee-Ml'i, 646-0303 teeo.. You . ,..... -1ert.291 ~ 11 10 HC ,.,,, I 5'&-3155 or 198 )4.34 u • ~· lloer*9 to ··•• llllT -
111)"1 1""1..c ~appee1~ C.talltN •M ~a~uUt-MYN.11 I BAL o N I REALESTArt bltlna f)'cwlded gar 1 WOODLAllD YILLAGI Matempnemw11ctorn 1tywortt1~ttw°"Oh saow.~8l:.
I, I I 1• , a1-1• ••d• t578 u•fl• p 21a 2s; a yr OiCI conao. to Met Bdrm w/ptttw bL ourMMcla Thl91anou Mw.c..1a21 . . . -. · f 53H 190 e.t My ._ Prlv Indoor llS)e. fully tum. A• A _.111111'1 ton. etortger. Appro1e ~to-()M lttOt tot-1---=:-:~::::----752-1125 .._. l30C)..tvm19-831-9441 tery. Cell Mr. Green: Ill I I r R A c T I . A"'° ol IM~ by ereo.o Lm... mu,.. m• NIOe 1 BR Dul*x ~ Com, & '"'°'out r16tuMup1~ Quiet tomlorl•blf hv•na. WANT£0 1Bdnn IM'lfUm as2-1ne .. '"*" ""Port T-.co .
.... ~_.l ....... l._' ....... I __.I_ .. f ~-:.=..!~. ExFoeptlonalb I 5 Bdrmb ~t ~~~·ft.·~ tor t ~ per9on. NO crw lo lrtt1111s So eo .. " Pim wllilf Ol'lly monutn lo Ill# Apt. N/~r at. etti.n. ESTA8Ll8HEO QAM!1-546-=:::17:-57==~--. _ . . . . ......, . .., • u oua uy a ,..._...,...,.room"' P9'•"'50 54e-t021 bf.ell Cf' tsoa<l.tblf Ctrill9¥98H1-n33 VEHOtHO AOVTI. ~ mf.--------~, lottlllll veer o1 -SJ.27,500. courH . Cul·d•·HC ,..,. • .,.. • ~' -tt9'\, Htgl'I rweum. No ?4'.30. 3:30-7:to 11•7 I C I T £ D S .... ~ml S 1650/mo lnCI grdnr ~ ctown. Mr. Wotfiw ,IT. Country°"' Com· ' I I I~ I I • c-.--....... -II TILT v.-.. 291-1863 ...... ....... .., 714/-· ..... -,..__ ··-.... -~ .......................... . . . "" ...... ·~ ....... -7-"· •• -~ifiii;'iiiiT•niiei~ ......... , _ __. n• • •••• .... ..,. 12 .-~-·--~-·---L.. _.....__....__,__~----..... 1·--,.,.,, t>--Owner/Agt. 220 Vie MN EMtllde T ·...... tmUl•I -.nn 10x'20garagupww/IM ... F~a.549-I081
Ii r r 1· I) r r I' I P~. Otc, MO 4181; 38drm, dbl gw. 2~ 1 AMIL= patlO. = -·,."' •·m -acoeeatn MCIM'9H...... * ......... * K ...... • "''N' """'4f•to Aea87" -•1176/mo 162-1818 ..-.,S750/mo•-moNn-u.a.-• · -· StS/mo C..536-t7• .... , •• r MCI ,,.h0meftr•burf'-1t11l•S !?' +gvo11'U _. ,...,.. --.::'1 .. ..... ..... ' Stot ...... • Alf'I M-Ing lhi9 •tet Fiii YOUf
I I I Mete "fOUI ~ ..... Areyou "1us1 lootclng ? "1111~2-...-£ t75/mo. 81or11f41 onty, nw • lcM9I IOr "'* firewood Mot01 by look. •~='•""'"I I I I I I ter by uelng lhe Deity~ Wa llke browtara In Went Ao ~7 nl W9llT ~I Ml·llU 9ll18, 724 Jemee It, wtiti ....... , Ing In 01u11t1u _Jl~lll~*ft~Ufl~!_JAlll~IW!lt!!H!Jht~·~-!!!·~!l~ .... !!_~111!!2!..J;.tot~C~tw~lfl~led~A~da~.~=J_ Clu11fled 8"2·5$18 &42-5878 eo.t. .,._. 81'1-7717 VA~ &41..f182 &42·5_!78 __
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0rMge eo... OAJL Y PILOTfMondey. JuM 24. 1815
..... Jl!lf ... .. ...... • .... •••••
'",,,, ..... or yout$. 3 ·····-2-..-....... .... --WllM19T •n11n••11• .. ·-· &.a .TV.\"4'11 ..... Wfllllllll C"uap~~-·.··~:y u.-:. ,J:.. I ..... ~ ... ·-:..1--Pwt ..... Olftter oouneet. .... 7tl1 bCWl'\Mu.t' ·-"""'*'· °"' ..... '"!-... ... .... ...... • ,,.. ...... In .... d I 11 I ~ ,........ 10 • ...... ,.-c:... •
. CllOrgle ~ ~...., ..... bo)l9 UCAOWwc,,,..&at .. _·p 1111n.11111. =. :.·r=.~i· .. ~~ ~'-C::.':*~ ·~.!'"::.:-~~· 111~.otd ... t200.'64-11m"'°' :=·.-..:.:;
.._,_., ~ _.,. Owt. ao4tdt nft 8JC ~ ..._ -.... ·-""*'I I QPelllllO' -.,_ ""9dtooellwtor ._...1,,_-....--....,,..,....,,.-=--~-~==~~~-MllDetloMI ree6dentlal auMcttptlont on _...., c.11ii;:;'i'a1tto4-· for V. tolo:dftt poe.. owt90ln9. Compeny No.,_, nee. 1**'9 AA1D -Ola 275 rm11 group,~~ .... Tau Nt.C .,...,..,, P'Ol'lmi ~ ~row.. ..... ~ "'°'* .,--. no -.per, nee. ...... a.i.ty, "°-._ I.17th le CM M-1112 I ....,.,... ,......,. ,..... 10 wa. (Show
I M"I IHft; '°' .... ..,_ wOttl~ wttf\ 10.13 Yf hcell9nt lnooffte for -•lllill ::r....:-Mt. lmtth, =·~:°'"· Atf .. on MAMTMla -§~ = quillt)')IU-IUO \411wOlltst-tae oldt.~~---Homt -...,. won. Knowtu .. °' onentat .,...... , .. _._. wonor. ... "'*' ,,,... cL!fiCW: ~ ~......,.. twa. f<wtntoc.11 MIN. ·nm-n• •n& 1 -ec, ....... 10. ~ ~.._,_. 11eo~ Mt-4111 ~eo.,...,J.. Convn"'6ooonly. 50U410311EJQ.4-4M Mlllfttm .... ,_,tllne,,...., 111dl.• ...-..-,:....,. tor IOft-witWMtoMf. TZU: M liiii-.:i~iiiiiiiiiiiii*ii;
time Clerlul per-~~~ Jal.ITmNY pootott..-CllUb...,.,. ~ ~ IMt ~ ~· Mon-frt F--. leln. ,,....,.., ...... & ~. aon. 21 ut. NIT/Tm-dHlrM, •wpervl•ory tood obaln1. Ce ll M .or .. ,..,_·No.,.,. 0-.. ~uaon to Wlleln .. & Aetoo. _.,. ,.,..._ 1 fMlil t
typtnt ~erlenoe Opport niu.. Y9'1ebte ..,. 1-IOO/l31-6HI neo. CoftipMy nm.. t-40.ooo. I .. ...,,. tor ~ ..... ~ -. '300-. l46-4I01 1621/0fr. 2 eal _. bedlL
Mllllll y. · 1'50 Ml•l.ut with h LOS :..C..U lllltmllfll8 lllL&Wlal a...ry, "°.-no,..,,._ one wottd ~ 1eo-' 1HJH TZU". Adcrallll M.C *226bs11U11tll0-1211 amnNT 111.f Pl.If TIMES CIRCULATION POio9 or ~ bee*· FIT.1P45WSN'ft,"111* ~a.offlo.. Carol, NmtWAa1111• to ,_ I . 11 IJK ~ hlbClld • ._.& ._,...~citme ~ ~t tn our,ctoot ground~. 2--.~00 43 """*"' COrpol• • w-• ~ ---a 111pe wt111 .,.,...._ t melt 1 Good ~h poe1t1on In to door ,,...,,..,... ..... llLD lllUTll'f , .• _ MAL llTAft IALU IOe *"' 11'1 ~ .::;::;., ~ trllfllc ltm. l300-. MMeot ~ ~ ~-= ~~o~·c;:: IATAllm ~au= °=~~=-lnMr· ~-=-tor ... then ::;:m..::t.."\': ~.Huny!Ct1-MIO !1111 f!!l '275JoDo.64CMIOIO =:~~2:.r~ ...... ~':J:~ ~T•alnl:;"::"ftt~,=•· r.=: JOIN Tltl COU>WEll Si~ ··-' lllf ;iiliiWJI* "=~ •JU>tr, w/Word-Pro-N, . ;.·~ provided. Pottntllt to 4PM-IPM. 1800 Von ... IMTI • A N KI R a EA". • ~ llklltld ~ ~ore • ,29' Up Fu.on l8S). Mettr. 0)9 ~ • pfue, Varied Inca. • '-'-wn $300. '*"per.... Klr'IMft A~. !MM. EOE FINANCIAL OENTEAI penon. Yow """' ~ COMPANION AJD£ • Exp, w..... .. • Up 133 ... &lrt 9'2. !"91 ~ii office dutl ... LAM Abbo"· S41800I Foun~.c.11: M"NJH AY9lllebleln: f<>f' A CAMEA OP!Pi1 ...... t~• followlno ~~::,.Elderty1n0t ~;gea1.e.c•1Up e,.,....13
20-30 H,. p/wk to ltart. btwn a.m..2pm. EOE H7·2311ut.1204 HOU8E ctwlCtOllMlca: · ALL APPUAHCf.8 e.ut.-tl<c"wltnd
wt11 dt¥elop Into full time --•fll HOUSEKEEPER NEWPORT BEACH -.. JI IT 1'11 • ExoeptbMMty brtQftt, Nanny/U\9 .._...,.., 2 .::=.· .. · ·--·· ··-poeltkln. ~ 1n '*'°" ... w PDT Ha. UYe In for ~ ledy, 1.AOUNA BEACH 22tt Harbof Blvd. In "'**-*' to Pl1orMw email Qk1e EncJIWt IPio. oi--top dOOt'8, ~ Mm 4'N"· et:. Compeny In~ hail an ftll•llM ~ 87~enoea. Non LAGUNA NIGUEL . eo.ta Mw. ~ tMka & auoetllfUly com.-....._ CM'lnlout. Wood-111•11 connec ..... a *---111 ~f--lminedtate opening for Uoyd Peet Controf nMOI Expet1ence .,,.._,._, but ptN "*'Y ~ MCtt bndge IN 13S-1at7 UHtQUt! 'VAH!TUN! •ldocd l3C)O.. •1-4116 1lMI ...... Ate. peraon wtth DEC u,_, route technlclen. We ~eeper • Mon & Fr1. not nec .. aary. !arn .~ ~ "-· ,;....... *'V ..._ 1"~ ~St. Din~<:::'"
.. Outlet Include typl"O tre6n. Mutt heve QOOd 8 ""'Md\, 15.00 per hr. "'50 -MOO per "'°""" •cen do'·---~ ~ )oO Flf-PfT. ui. Btwn £dingier l w.,.,. on __ .-... -.cn-
propoH11. letter• & drMno reccwd. c.I Mt EXPER. REF11 & SOME No ~ Cell 1oam • PerillCt s;;;;.,.... _.. .._ No kJdt. HwsJt· .._ St. See the e.ri """'""• -· -.,. 'f14/IM-IU1 1tatl1Uca1 typlno. The TeylofAMat9n.«121 ENGLISH. Cell Ev .. to4pm Monci.y Fr1dey & •-=~~· ._ ••-l -·····-ldealperaonmuttbeebte 78o.15IO · • · dltplaywrlter ••· .,.,..----~-.,,.-----...-.&•• -• •-to ~ Under~ lllml-Pn e•=.ur Ml•llmllT ~In ..., ver .. tll• Companion-~ 1o-a:Sun 12·6 LES M7-ltS3
end be ...u oroentz9d e73-1510 1111 mB 111,y w -~ ,_, --ofb. • .,....,. COi a AkM. Elcpet1eliced, ,...,. I M......_, IHTERiOA O£COAATOR
Star11n9 college thl• llAMUUllm HAIASTYLJSTWantedtor CT .... !:"921' Muet be r~ Md ~-=".: ~~7•13 LES 957-1133 mo...,,_,. w:irtftoel
yew?W.heveatlu. PIT tU 11• Shop In Huntlnoton fm:llllllll _._ ~ T)Plnoett .. Center Dr Newpor1 Woman ... k• hoUH· a..it ~ Din • potlUon evall w/our • C..t•. ee1•1192 &.fll..r '°. wom.wpm. W Wll train, but Beedl t2eeO k"'*'° FIT or PIT refl RECONO. APPLIANCES. S500: C<llf ltl6e ..c *3751
dynemlo ao'1ware co. DECOAA TE INTERIORS Experieiioe In el~ of ell&)erience preferred. 8'5-9131 W..n.r.. dtyiw9, ~·· Haltem Cotton: Sofa/
Dutlet lncdd Jr. Proerem-Oetlgn, comm, r ... ? Wiii ....., ............ runnlno houethold8 In-Cll Join 131·12M SECAETAAY/Aut8t FIT $50-$300. tb> Superb iow.t S500: ~~un-"* tr.intno. «randt, 1r.,n PIT FIT Nat firm lllnt H• opening fOr men & cludlno cooitlng, ct.n.-.... W/-.Y ..-ino reep, Olgeilbd b I C M. 646-22281831-3197 uMd) 13501 Stunntno
W/P, data entry l oust. carw opp 77~7 women. " you type 40 Ing, leundry, etc. 5 daya Oen. light office dUS.... ~ w/ort penonellty. mment OI c;; Ii&-Aelr1g. CotdtpOt SIS. 21 Brw --din ... 12SO:
MN!oe. Call Twry OI' DENT WPM l 1n lnt...s.d In ~ .. weett Mutt ..,_.. Muet type 46 wpm, t..._ EJCP ,.q, idnt wcnJno en-tens wentt r-.p Indoor cu. ft. wnc.mkr, fnt. ~. t:w ....... "~~ Sieve for lnt.,vl ew. AL Front office M-exoe161nt benefttt With a Engllh. ~ EnolWI phoneexp.pref.Wlltr.in Wn In NB. Jllml ~ homee Shott & MU· cond t 75 ~ ...,..,...,._ _..-
754-1039 ~:f:' ~~=op-ltartlng Ml...y of M.87 Japen•uf)Mklng. Noft.. bf10ht lndlvlctual wtth RECEPTIONiiT . u.w ftrm Mon-Fr1 (714~25 **'· · Sto-&20. Mlm• ~: 2~/tll4-M7j In cln Ono 11500 w: "60;
CoMtNC:tlon • · 7ae hour. 40 hour'I a ..-. amottw. 11300/mo. Send good attitude. 831-1800 In Hwpt Bc:t\, llght 'Yi>lno. im'illf/mfl Malet. Leeoue. Und• Almond lllCq&* c;::"
••111-um mwm111111111 ~~~~e~dE =-~o·~~o -"" ~=·~ner~s:~PJT\n..tioura,1pwn 892-8968 s=~=:-=~~.!Sd ... un.i weft eetab 0C Dev.loper E1xperdd Potltlon avall ' . . . Santa Ai,. A~ ~. A. Five uplrlng peraont Mf1cArttu etvd Suite offc. 649-1978/ 645-2139 HI~ a ~ ball Swe. Both or llC)Wtle. 1575; cd tb1e _. 1375.
looking fOI' retld PA or 1= cJ'l''1i" •ttab· ... /...... . eo.ta Mele.~ 92927 needed In Santa Ana •25 """'-t271S -;•-of 1ur: 'lwk1 CFA regia.-a. Otfw 642..e549 Sect1on11 reclfner IOfa AMlst. Min 2 yrs exp & rm. Hl9h Ftt4 lentn order ... No uper. ' ' ' -" _. 1 tered, lhoe.. M..._ S 1!0/ orig S t.800 MC S750t ALL able to reed plena. ,_. pot_,tlel eernlng. Call for Apply 1 <Lit.u. nee. Company trelna. RECEPTIONIST lmmed. opening forexper. Fem $200 M&-3132 WASHER & DRYER 11.S )(LNT QUAUTV +CONDI
IUfM & M1ery iwq lo: appt btw3-5pm673-9510 Mon-F~ ':r'°"· ...--. .. JEWELRY SALES lmmta Mutt tt-1 lmmed. SMO. Sm Corp lkt or9lf*!ld perton, thould be · EA. DtSt4WASHER $100. No~ ofter ,...
Purchaalng, PO BOX lllYll tauranta, 1::C,H~~ openlno-ex~ ~eon. mo . Mr. Kruger, lndfv~/Ql'Mt~ • .,ttlul~&"'::i 8=~3E~~= I• 1141 luMd!P/P972_..11 17149 lrvtne ca. 92713 f\Jll time. Valid ca1n. onv. lrvtne. 752-71S6 ~=. f:,_ N~ 8452•5844 rr::'* typ~ 1:::~ = eppeerance. Mod-8 •••. S 100 .. ell WlllhW l °'Yef. Top of the l(lng SIZil 8td wlttl ~ llT/flllPllATll .,. Uc. Some mKNne It~. Ored Gem pref PAITTma S1000/mo. 831-2320 em offlc9. good ben-873-2ee0 he Speed au.en. 1 Yf bo9fd.andtMt.llmtr·
P1111 time. Mutt type 35 lfl09 wont. Expef. help-More ,.,,,..... In gMting 64-4-8325 Almen Evening Attendant & -nllllT ,_ eftta. rv S6 Frwy. Variety Have tomethlng 10 Nit? new MOO otlO 720-1632 8Prino bo.uprtnoe, 1125.
wpm. &4&-9000 lul. 557-3384 ttle ~ "bug" t1161 Llmoullne Drtver. Paclftc _. ..... _ / 11"9• of dut,_ BIO futur9 for C&aaelfted edl do It well w Idle items 642.5678 873-1452
year. If you have • Mlaa6on VlejO, kllch & View Memorlal Park. wented P/T1me f()( N.8 promotion to lnllde ...._ '--------
Find some deals on wheels 1111111 camper INt'• not getting lndfy pMdgt. pvt ba. Ao-fS.4.4..2700. Lynn ~ Svs. 1-5PM, & ~ to outl6de in c1assmecf1 lranspor· Ov9r' 21-od recordl UMd .... 11 now with • c-. to pvt lake & bd\. M/W/f, S7 hr. Mutt be ..... tor quelfled per-tatlon 11s11no1. 842-5878 Veterw Cab. 493-8888 Clatlllfted Ad. '400/mo o.y. M7-M23 HITl-IP del•ICIMI& 752-0740 son. Apply t529 E.
-~ --~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili Pd~ .,J ~~ -lll•IT ~~r1~. Santa
ArVDraftlng !>«*ground w. .. ..-ang a pro-~ Non = ---HOROSCOPE SYDNEY
·01a11 HIRING
NOW
UP TO $8.00 PER HOUR TO START.
Great Opportunities
in All Departments.
• Lumber Dept. •Garden Dept.
·Bldg. Materials •Plumbing Dept.
• Wallcoverings • Electrical Dept.
• Paint Dept. e Ceiling Fan Dept.
e Lot Men •Receivers
•Hardware • Truck Drivers
• Furniture • Cashiers E.O.E.
Outstanding Benefits also!
Apply in Person Now .
6912 Edinger Ave.
It Golden West
Huntington Beech, Ca. 9264 7
601 s. Placentia "'9.
Between Orangethorpe end
CMonw1 NMI' Hwy. 57
Fullerton, Ca. 92631
helpful. Must be pro-l111I01191 receptlooAet tor ottlce. 542-4242 Or
ouctlon ori.nted. Witt OA11 Tuttln oMce. Outlet 646-4642 ewe aft. 8
train. Apply Pennyuviw, lndude .... wing wry .._ ... -··· 1MO Pl9cer11te Ave. CM. he9WV t~•: oreet· ~--t 1 ...,. lnO and dlrectllig vWtora. sa&-9402 fll .. Hl•H hpertetlC'9 preferred,•-------Laouna 8Nctl "Mfg Co but • • • 111 t re I"
Medi mature pwn for en...,....tlc lndlvlduel
our front office to~ wttf\ ~ peraonaltty
1wltchboard, open & and tront offtce llP9"'· route mall & aulat ence. Fotlmtnedletecon--
w/peraonnel dept wont aldeo atlon ~ appty In
I09d & IMc filing. Type penon. . 80 wpm, prevloul a.teal lndiultrlm L-oue of
exp a.elred: Orange County
We offw xJnt pay & ben-Credtt Union
efltl lncld I FOUR day 16901 AedrlMI Ave., Suite
wont week. C.il tor an 101. Tutttn, CA t2t80 T~N~ BERKELEY INC. llllP'flllllT
P9nonnel •M-9401 EOE Pleaaant pe raonellty
Taftday, Jue ZS
ARIES (March 21-.\pnl 19): ()pporturuty for .. new deal" 1s
present. ContraCl can be changed. formula could be improved to your
advantage. Status quo 1s shaken. you can gain greater degree of
mdcpcndeocc.
TAURUS ~Apnl 20-Ma> 20): Low-key approach bnngs best
results. Emphasis on family relat10nshrps, scc~ty,pr.opuiy, b<wc
cborcs and employment. Emphasize moderauon. keep promises
concerning diet, nutfitlon, general health. '
GEMINI (May 21-J~ne 20): Emphasis on phy.s1cal anracuon,
speculation. new contacts which help you m expression of ideas.
talents. Otsplay humor. versaulit>. enthusiasm. You could be asked to
travel in conncctton with vacation or entertamment Good phone mann«• Plal'I flZD and 11P9"1'anct. New-CANCER(June 21-July 22)· Read small pnnt. make sure terms are
now ~ ,.... port Beach area. clear. protect inteTCSts. Focus on famil) unit. propcrt}. long-ran$e ~~.Full & ;!: SW:. 84MMO I • _. pro~pccls. Definite gain md1cated '1a unorthodox procttdtng.. Scorpio 8~13ee lllPf/UITT I ... "' native plays unusual role.
--------Frtendly Offtce nMdl • lllLY PUT LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)· Keep opuons open and plans flexible. flY ATTEmlT per'ICM..,.. ~aecty. • .... .,. Emphasis on communicauon, v1s1ts. rclau,cs. ideas which can be ~enntl ~94-0";72 iaiguna heeYy ~ V9ri9ty. SO It you ,.,. ~lrig tor utta transformed into v1able formats. D\alogue With member of opposllt
· WPM. Send ,_,.,. to IP"idlno money, or lllte sex proves fruitful. Sagiuanan figures prominenll) -
PET SITTERS,,..,..'*·~ STE 21 2. 20l2 Mk:tlelaOI• to go piecet Mle Magic VIRGO (Aug. 2>.Sept. 12)· Fam1h Situation IS h·0 hlighted. wnttr r.....-: Pem ~ Dr. ntne.. Ca. '2715 or Mount8'n, Knotts Berry . • . • '&'
1-18103 &typertc So call for Interview, Farm, or wtn Pnz. and domestic adJUStrnent 1s imminent '\'ou receive gitt. you could also
Ste O,lrvtne 92714 95$-1506 Awwda. c... ua now! We locate article that had been lost m1s">1 ng or stolen What had been out ULllAllllTUT have MYeral opeillnga tn ofreach 1s no" available and at )Our disposal ••••nil.DI Elcper. P1•1ed. Major C.M., H.B. or F IJ. LJBRA (Sept 23-0ct 221 (\de rf'mains htgh. \OU .:an d1CUIC'
Part-time, Mon-Fn, daya. 1toctt bltrl nr o.c. A.tr· 842~ your own terms Moon in 'our <.1gn stn~ss.t's 1n111at1' e creau' 1t~ ~:= =t 1::1° PC>tt. 35 hr wont wt! (M ). TELEPHONE SALES charisma. Make personal contact~ and special appeal<. ?1\('es. Virgo
-----· ---· 'Yi>lno 50 wpm, i55-e000 TllEI Piii 1nd1v1duals figure 1n dynamic scenano ..-E-UID... HlghHI commlulon1 SCORPJO(Oct 2J-'\l1' ~I) 'l ou ha,estrongadqx:atc 14 0 rlrnf tn
Eight appointment ..n ... Fun time READER AD paid. c an Bob Stevent. your behalfbehind scenes. 'l ou 'ould be pan ot··po"'er pla) ·· You·1 be
needed In Santa Ana of. SalH tor p1 .. un1. 1714> ~7296 asked to pan1c1patc 1n 'ielret operatio n ~ d1scrc<'t concerning ~J:'",:\~:= potltlw lndlvldUlll woo ~ -clandestine meeting..
'Fri. t-1 Sat .. No exper. = ~~ ::n!~ Part lime wortc In s.nta SAGITrARllJS (NO\ 2:!-Dec ~ 11 What ~ou have bttn 14atting
nee. Company train•. count.ir ed9. Work In • ~ ::.n.~~· for 1s now available. You need no lo nger rt'main 1n <Jet pos111on. Kno"'
Jennl1w, 8452-5843 beeuttfut, trlendty offtce noMfllng. 5-9 M0n..Fr1. « il.-move ahead. stnve to reach"' 1der audtl·nce LoH.: relat1onihlp grows
Plant1-tntwtor Plantlelp-t-5 Mon-Fri. APP'V In &-1 Sat. ldeel tor High strong.. <Utes pla}s definite role.
Ing Maintenance. Full Ot ~·reon, PenneyHver. School ttudenll. cam. CAPRICORN ( D« 22-Jan I~) H1g.hhgh1 Cfl"all\ II\ . .tb1hl\ to get
part-time. 543-9585 eeo Pteoentle Ave, CM. §§2=§844 10 heart of matters. Focus on pre<.t1ge. 3l hte' cment p1on~nng sp1nt.
Plumbing ~ FIT ~ TIW n.111111 You'll make new start 1n ··d11Terenl°· dtrt'l!IOn Leo \lj uan u~ persons W'l •TD tlon In ret81t hardwlire Exprd w/P.Oe. Bring OMV play significant roles lft.,HI• store. HW Wrtght Co 128 ~t. E:Ac:M a~ .J AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb I bl Ob~ta1..le llhommun11..~ation. tra' cl
ProgteealweCo ~ 132 ind~ay CM · 1s remo-.ed. You'll nSC' atx)\c ~ti~ anno,an~ lntu111on 1s sharph ~.::tr:, oc ... am: 3 ~~-u.-rm.tnNT honed. Emphasis on iam1h ball lma lt\ t'\pre~s10n .. ofk)\e <. anCCT lth~t.f"e endla muet Other hrl 10 7owPM req .c:curacy tm-nauve figures prommenth = ~n t~r plum::O be.,.,..1geci.Exper.pref. perau....v.idouaother of· PISCES 1Feb !\}-March 21ll Finanltal atTam emphasized -
trede. Can eem 25K-354( A«Jtt In pW'IOf'I. Kenn flee Ikuta ,.q'd lndudJng partner or mate re'eal$ mu1..h about mone' S4..heme Dtg deep tor
per yeer. pd vecatlonl & Rima Hatdwer•. 2eee phOMa,IMlng & llt• bk.png infonnauon. rcahze po1en11al 1!i great 1f 'ou .allo"' freedom to other\
medical benlflt1, OP-Herb« Blvd. Coet• Meea Cell 973-2176 and yourself. Long distance 1nqu11) bnngs ~ults
portunlty lor ~SAL.ES PERSON. Retail In ... flll&Y IF JUNE ts IS YOUR BlllTHDAY \OU ha\e tenden" to brood. =·~so!"A:':"t.! ~°'!· ~ OtverM dUtlel with Gen. }'OU gain through medJtat1on.)OU are ps)1..h1c. )OU often ~cnfice for
Eatrella. San ciem.nt• Mr Burdin 642•2222 ContrKtor. Good wagee welfare of o thers. esl)«1all} tamth. You are sp1ntual. determined.
(7 14) 49S-14&5 S.:..Retall '°' --~le. t>nghtC:-sensual. prescient. Cancer. PtS(.'t' . \ 1rgo person pla} 1mponan1 roles
POOL CLEANER with lllnllll = ~h ~tt~ 1n }Our hfe ) ou are on bnnk of maJor achievement. \?U'tl soon bend
truck. P811 °' full-time. FIT or PIT room to Id· atatement on qui llfl-of unnecessa~ burden. new '1~t~~ opc.-n and -.ou II reach 141dC'r
Very good pay. Call ~ Crown Hardware catlonl & goa11 TRG. audience Love is h1ghhghtc:-d .ind .. ou'll h:i' e rt"al chan(<' for
•9S.-S100 644-4570 Box 3128, N.B. CA 92M3 happiness. ~ugust "'II be memorabk lor 't'll in I %5
l
·"'95~ el ., "I, .... -,,_ * l'Vel .•.
I -4•-.-4 a llw
p ........... " ........ , .......... .._
1 ..... ~ ..... ·"'"" -.. _.._ ..... , ..... , ..,....,_ ,....,._
tr-1lw R ....... , _....,...,,., ..............
I/
UNIVERSrTY
OLDSMOBILE/HONDA
WlllTUll
TIPllLLll ........
2850 HARBOR BLVD
COSTA MESA
54()..8640
0 CHICK IVERSON 0 THEODORE .ROBINS
FORD .
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441E.0.ast llwJ., h.,.rt haoll
lll·OtoO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 NABERS CADILLAC @
2100 llARIOR ILYI., COSTA IESA
(114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1211
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
• Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
WE'RE
IEW
WE'RE
IULlll
Ac'"9 from •It 'A' on K ...... lult .... o4 57 (Ofente) '""
~ 0 CREVIER BMW 4' "*" SALES • SERVICE e' LEASING ~
"Where Professional Attitude Prevails "
lp•d•lla.lftt tn Ewopeen ~. Excettent htectlon ot
NliW and~ PNP91ed UMd 8MW't always In atock
835-3171
20I W. 1•t St., Senta An•
Corn« of Broadway & 111 St. Closed Sundays
SAUS -uma -ws•c -PUTS
Overseas Delivery Speciallsts
ltAlffl Dl'AlffMINT ONN I AT\MOA'I ~HUQI
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 JamborH Ad.
U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service. Parts. Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
20IO larlter lh~ •• Cesta M111
. 142-0010" 1'8-1211
Wl Wil l NOT
Bf UNDERSOLD
LARGEST SELECTION
of lat• model, tow mlteege
Ced"'8c9 In Oruge
County1 See UI today!
1'8-1110
.. ,...,,.. .. MU"
Auto. llr. full ~. tll1.
em/tm 1tereo & mew..
Juat over 20K ml.
(#1GMS761). K-.V llUe Book SUH, OUR
PRICE ... .... Katel!elt57F~
ANt*m
'70 COUNTRY. SQUIRE
Wegon. xlnt c:ond .. red! & 4 hitch all optlonl 1950.
850-6130
•-ts~ ol •1
.... "'._. ... ... PU.. aa4 , ... Rep.n
fff•J-...i..-.
I r«ffi~ ao t.n. -
19 ta-fr-11.e Pilot
a•4 _,, -retpoDH ,,_, ... ltPln
I •• •«J i..,p, wido 1M Plt.4 ,..,., ..... ,., .. ,,.,, .. ~.
9 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 M.~
South COunty *' 2121 larMr lh~ •• Ctsta M111
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200
MONDAY-FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
S,.cial Parts U.. 54&.9400
8:30 AM -9:00 PM
8:30 AM -6:00 PM
10:00 AM -5:00 PM
YOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
CALIF'S 11 1 a LARGEST VOUIWAQEN DIALER .
-NEED WE SAY MORE?
Parts Open M-Sat 8 -5:30 Sat 9 -4 p.m
Service m-Frl 7:30 -8 p.m.
11711 HACH IRYD HUNTINOTON MACH
714/ 142-2000
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS INC.
• LONG TllM LIASfS
" COMNTITlvt ..URCHASf P'ltlCIS
• HUGE INVENTOIY
dial MERCEDES (t\
213/714 837-2333 'C:;I
Next to Santa Ana Fwy (5) on
Manchester/Beach Blvd.
0 BILL YATES
YILllWllEI • Pll•E • PIMllT
SALES • LEASING• PARTS • SERVICE
11112 , .... ~ ....... ~ ........ ...
•11-4111 lll-4111
G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT
# l ,_ TN Wat 111
,_ JH, """ 111 I run
'JOe:n~e • SALES
Ut< MA~i!~vD t : ~~~~:~~ -s4'iui023 • ACCESSORIES DEPT
9 UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd .•
Coat• M•N 540-0713
Newport Be•ch 840-8444 ~·~~~_... _...._........_.,.,..,..,..~ ......... ~---~-~~~-......._.~~ 3 Block• so. of 405 Fwy.
CD JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1301 Q&IMI •t. -Mlw C•r Loc•tlon
1001 Dull •t. -It..-, Dlvlelon
Q) World'• Larg•t Selection of IT'\
M~S.nz \(;;)
l33-l300
Wei . Ulllll ; ,_ . SerM . ..., n.,
o COMMONWEALTH
·VOLKSWAGEN
~ .'FAMILY STORE SINCE ·53· -W Sale• -S.rvic• • Lening ~
BRtS'roL AT IDTNO!P N8·0110 IN SARrA AHA
SALES • LEASING • SERVICE• PARTS
•suBARU OF ANAHEIM
We're Not the Bi11e1t,
But We're the Be1t!
at 91 £'iwy and Harbor Blvd.
1221 N. Harbor Blvd. (714) 772-9800
Anaheim, CA 92801 (213) 924-2367
o· 108 ~ONGPR• P~NTIA(
Orange County's Otdett & la'Vftt ~ DM .. nNp
M liNdt .... A..._ CilJfden Grow'.~ __
1714 •2 11•1 l714J .... a_ w. petfonlt ... ftondk W9rrlNWy WOf1t. '9911""911 of
where~~~)Qarmt. ............... ..,., ........ ;
}
r
TOMORROW:
·FAIR
I
FOMCAaTa ON A2 ,,
Serving Newport Beech, C0tt1 Meta, Huntlngt0n BNch, lrvlnt, Laguna leech, Founteln Veller and South Orenge County
C Al IJ O ftNIA MU N DA l' tlJNI : l 1'1H' ;•, C t N T S
errorists em an
Coast
Laguna Beach glass
sculptor Tibor Schnelder
Is looking for a home for
his tin y works of art.I A3
California
Sirhan Sirhan expresses
first remorse for as-
sassination of Robert
Kennedy./ AS
Nation
Discovery's landing this
morning ended the most
successful of 18 shuttle
flights./ A4
World
Indian and Canadian of-
ficials are investigating a
possible link between
fat al A ir-Ind ia crash and
airport exploslt>n In
Tokyo./ AS
Sports
Fountain Valley High's
Dave Swigart carries the
South All-Stars hopes at
tailback./81
Entertainment
NBC gives viewers a
close-up look at Ameri-
ca's first lady tonight./ A9
INDEX
Bridge A 10
Bulletin Board A3
Business A 7 -8
Classlf led B6-8
Comics A10
Crossword B5
Death Notices B4
Horoscope B7
Ann Landers A9
Opinion A6
Police Log A3
Public Notices B4-5
Sports 81-4
Stock Markets A8
· Television A 1 O
Theaters A9
Weather A2
its wars e
1
.,.., ..... ,..... "'~ .........
Hiintington Beach police officer• ezamine pickup truck involved i n a fa tal cruh with three other v ehlcle9.
Boy, 9 , dies in Huntington smashup
A. 9->ear-old tlun11ngton Beach
ho) died after a pickup truck he wa~
nd1ng 1n strud. a car on Pacific Coa~1
H1gh"ay unda) I 1 ""as 1hc 11 lh
traffic fatalit~ ol lhl• H'ar 1n lht· hl'alh
Cll}.
SteH:n Oh.,.er wa<, ejected when the
p1ckup rolled O\er 1w1ce 1n heavy
l)unday morn1ns hcach traffic. He
J1cd of masss1ve head 1nJune'
authon11ec; rcponed The accident
nclurred about a m1h: "est of Golden
\.\t''I ~trl·e1 polilt' -.aid
Phillip Uir-.l·n. 3 t the drn er o l lht>
p1l kup and reponedl~ a lnend oftht•
bo\ ·.,mother. was n.•ponL·d in senou'>
but 'ltable cond111on toda) at Foun-
tain Valle) Communll} Hospital.
Two occupants in a I Q85 Ford
au tomobile that "'a" strud. b' the
1rud. .. John Brandt 70 and \1arcella
Hrandt. 71 of Arlington. :\-iass . '-"t'rl·
1rt'ated for inJUrll''> and reh:ased .it
Pacifica Commun1t } Hospital in
Hunungton Beach
The Brandts' car and another
p1d.up trud. the\ s1rud.. after being
h11 from the rear b' L Jrsen\ p1dup
trud. both "ere ~nlX ~C"d t1,er lht'
h1ghv.a~ cmban~ment
Police "ert· invt•mgating the alll-
dent.
Parents give good grades in Ocean Viewpoll
ay P*l.UEm.MIAN
Of .. O.., .......
Awaiting the results of their annuaJ community survey, ocean
View School Olstrlct o fflciaJa braced themselves for the worst.
Over the put year, the Huntington Beach-based efementary
dlatrlct haa ctOMd four schools, eliminated seventh and eighth grades
at two other• and sent layoff nQtlcea to dozer)~ of teachers. ·
Parents probabty were displeased, dls1nct offlclaJs speculated.
But the survey results, unveiled last week, Indicated Just the
oppoalte.
Asked If they were ''generally satisfied wtth the overall
perlonnance of (their) echoot," almost 1,900 parents responding
gave the district Its best grade ever on that queatlon: 91 percent said
yes.
Only 87 percent answered yes to the same question during the
three previe>Ua yeara. In 1975, the flrit year that.question wu asked,
77 percent answered yes.
"We're absoM81y thrilled," said Gayte Wayne, admfnJs1rattve
assistant for the district. "Over the past year, there's been a lot of (Pl--._ OC&Alf/ A.2)
Mosle m chief adds
new-condttioo.Jor
rel~ase o~ hostages
B£I.R UT. Lebanon I.A.Pl.=-Nab1h
Berri, a leader of the Shitte M<>Slcms
holdjng 40 Amcncan hostages an
Beirut, said today the captives will
not be released unul the United States
pulls its warships back from the
eastern Med1terrancan
Bern's demand added a new con-
diuon for the release of the Amen-
cans, now 1n their 11th day of
captivity. Un11I now, Shiites have
only demanded that Israel free more
than 700 Lebanese prisoners.
(Pleae .ee Tl!RJlORl8T8/ A.2)
Mesa
firm
fights
AIDS
Research winding
upon drug to treat
victims of disease
From staff ud wire reports
Researchers are e>.pected 1n Jul) to
complete a four-month study on a
Costa Mes.a com pan~ ·s drug that ma )
be effecll'e in 1rea11ng ..\IDS n ct1ms
The stud' of the drug nbavmn
<ll''>tgned w 1reat l'h1 ldren's resp1r-
,11on ,ulmt'nl\ "111 be conducted at
'\e" 't or~ Ho~p11a l-Cornell Medica l
(enter and include :!4 patients with
l~mphadenopa th \ a persistent swell·
mg of the I) mph gland~ that can be a
precursor to o.\cqu1red Immune Defi-
c1enn S\ ndrome Th~ numt'ler of ..\IDS cases re-
poned in the l mted tates has
chm bed abo'e 10.l"XlO Half of thost
'1ct1 ms ha' e died
Test-tube lultures studied
previous!\ b'r the na11onal Centers for
Disca c Control 1n o.\tJanta showed
that the drug nha' mn slowed the
reprodul'.'t1<ln ot 1he 'll'U!> be he' ed t(l
l ause .\ID~ 3lCllrding to a repon in
Lrncet a Bnt1<,h med1Cal 1ournal
~) far. nba\lnn has shown no
senOUS Side efTCC t!l in the IC l paucnt\.
(Ple .. e .ee AJDS/A:2)
Abortion slated
for Valley woman
raped in hospital
Coast 's dolphins
w in t he att en t ion
of ace professor
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of"'9CWIJ' ...... ..,,
An abortion was sched uled today at
UC Irvi ne Medical Center fo r the
severely brain-<hseased Fountain
Valley woman allegedly raped while
hospitalized in La Mirada.
Physicians al the medical center
were sought af\er parents of Laura
Eldridge. 35, had trouble finding
someone willing to abort the 20-
wcck-old fetus.
Eldridge's mother and l>tepfather.
Helen and Tom Stegmoyer of Foun-
tain Valley. found that most doctors
and chn1cs will not abort fetuses older
than 20 weeks.
There also were concerns of hab-
1hty should Eldridge's health be
further threatened by the abonion.
The couple were told late Friday
that a docto r had agreed to the
abortion. but backed o ut minute
pnor to the operation at Nor'\\'alk
Community Hospital.
"It'll take a doctor with a lot ofgut'i
to do this. and I JUSI hope we're not
going to be let down:· Mrs.
Stegmoyer said at the time.
The Stcgmoyers won con-
servatorship of Eldndge last Friday
when Supenor Court Judge-Hen!)
Moore ruled thal the prcgnanq was
(Pleue 1tee ABORTIOl'f/A2)
Marine biologist.
s tudents seek links
to 'family structure'
T herl"'> .. oml'lhing undemabl) the-
atrical ahout De-nn1'i ~ell\ and ht~
Jolph1n~.
Holl~ v..oo<l might ra'>t the Orange
( l)ast College mari ne hiol0$1St as a
"ild old ~a s,alt. )pinmng has) arm
.1hout dolphins .. a, h1g a<, cows" that
'i"•m cncrto lex al surfcf'I to pla). and
plal·e 1hc1r large "l'I ht"ads .ttT~
llunatel\ on the <ihoulder\ ofthc1r
human cnu'i10'
More al-curatel\. thl' '111\ er screen
JEFF
SKLANSKY
NEWSMAtURS
classes 1n oceanograph\.. mannr
b1olog) and manne mammals have
ln rm<'d tht' \.1annr \.1 ammals Rt'-
~arch l1roupat ()( ( .\rmed w11h a
vearl\ hudget l11 about S8.000. the
group has bc<'n taking a do<,e look at
,
______ ..,..... ___ ~..__-t-fl~4--p<>rfra> ham as.~ttta•
professor. obsc'ised for )ears wt th
uncovenng thc 1ntn ate ""~bofsoc1al
relauon's he bcht' es et.1 ts" Hhin a
mile oft he Orange Count) shorehne.
1n the population of .. Turs1ops Trun-
l'atu ··the Pacific boulenoscd
dolphin made famou'> b the I 96().,,
tclc' 1s1cm 'lho". "Flapper "
ffffical dol~A~let1011. out ot ----
four lnov. n population" of Pac1fic Teen pilot escapes
·pla'ne crash in HB
A sma\J plane overturned Sunday
durina a forced landinJ in ' plowed
field beside Edison High School in
Huntington &ach, bu t the pilot wa s
unin1urcd, police said toda)
The pilot, Clms Barron. 18. of
Fountain Valley, took ofT from
Meadowlark Ai~rt 1n a s1ngle-
en1inc Cessna 172 on unday eve-"'"J· hortly ancrward. Barron C~· ~nenctd enaine failure. according to
Huntington &ach pohcc
That forced B.irron to tf) land1n1 in
the field at the ~uthtast corner of
Mngnoha trect and Atlan1a Avenue
at about 7:2S p.m The plane over-
turned upon landina. pohce s~ud
Tht inci dent as under invest1p11on
h~ the Federal Av1at1on Admin1 -
trat1on. ·
Ra rhara hcl,. ll n F A
spolceswoman, said the p1lol reponcd
thnt electrical problems prompted the
forn•d fonding
<;he said the plane. which n.-cc1vcd
minor damaar an the cn:a<1h. remal•d
in the fit'ld near Fd1son toda' a\ tht r \ \ 1nvc,t1[uit10n rnnlinoc<l·
.._ ..... ,... .. .., ...... ,
Oennt. Kelly atud.le. dolpb.ln Ufe atone W..t Cout.
In rt'C't·nt months, the 37-yearold
Kon Hov..ard IM kahke. onganall)
lrom Holl) '>'ood. has !i.pent con 1der-
ahle 11me hoth 1rn and ofT camrra
tallungahout h1<. rco;ean:h at()( (
"-ell~ ·,appea"'ncesin front ofthe
lamcra. t.alli:ina to news teams from
4'BC'. BC.< ~. < and public
t('levmon 'itat1on . have b«n \jknt
largrh d1~us\lnll h1 work bchind the
r amera -photOJrllf.h•n& and '\tudy-
ina the $(.1mc 170 to .. ~)dolphin tha.1
Kelh ha'ld1..co,rr00 ""•naalona the
Orangd oa\t in th<' p:a\t eight )f'•"
Jo..tll\ and :!ft <itudt'nt\ trom hi\
,-
•
hottlcno5'.·d dolphins off the coastal
l nttC'd late'
··1 nC\Crl'\t"n \U\pl'('ted that thtrt
v..erc dolph1nc. around hrrt that \.OU
could stud\.:· l\ell'r \aid in a l'C'Cent
antcn te\I. o;urmundcd h\ dolphin
poo;le~and mannt'dCC'orat1ons 1n h1\
~th Santa Ano apartment
When a \tudent intem.ipted a
lectul"<' on the Oan1rs R1verdolph1n
an I Q71 101'lkahoullbtdolphins the
''udent \atd ht had Sttn while iurfina
om<X·al ht"ach~ Kell) was in-
credulou"
Bui Jo..rlh \OOn b«amc a bchever. pu~ b\.' ·repons from several ~tudcn1s confirming the prcscn~ of Iara~ numb(rsof dolph1nst'loiic 1<1
'lhore
The Pac1fi hottl('nMC which
po(lulatros the coa\l.Jll water\ from
(Pt.._ eee OOLPBl1'9/ A2)
I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday. June 24, 1985
,stateGOPleaderincounty,
·bids f oi-Democrats' backing
Nolan Calls on California voters to reassess
their beliefs 8:_gatnst political registration
By JOY DEE ANTHONY
Oellr .... 0-rt J I 4••1
Republican A scmbly leader Pat
Nolan wants California Qemocrats to
rcuaess what they support as voters,
in comparison to the stands their
party takes.
Speaking at a breakfast mect101 at
the Saddlcback Ion Friday, Nolan
told the Youns Executives of
Southern California that Democratic
• voters in California art not consis-
tent. Since 1948, he said. the maJority
of Democrats have chosen Re-
publican presidents in every year but
two, while selecting a mcyority of
Democratic candidates m the state
• l..eaislaturc.
receive a letter from (jov. George
Deulcrocjian expla1n1ng why he
switc,hcd his allegiance from 1he
·Democrats to the Republicans.
Deukmejia'?l's message will tell
Californians ~ "fao years I've
fought to institute the death penalty.
Rose Bird and Jerry Brown judies
refuse to 1mplcmen1 11. The Demo-
crats in the Legislature support every
effon to force the coun to do th1~.
PlcascJOm me and the Republicans to
have an efft"ctive death penalty."
Pat Nolan
-.
The epace lhutt1-Oltcovwy dr~ out of a ool<:Mlnoed
MMrt dawn onto the Oty le.kt at Edwetdt Air Foree e ... today,
but most of Southern CallfOf'nla had to atart the day wlth a gloomy. gray outlook.
The coutal ., ... ..,. 141bj9c'I to the lnfl'*'°' 01 a low preuur• ar .. off the Southern Callfotnta coast that la moving
toward the IOUthweatern United States and wlll continue drawing tow clouds further Inland at duak and dawn, tht National Weather Service aald.
Along the Orange Coast there wlll be night and morning 10'\t clouds and fog, otherwl" fair. Slightly cooler Tuesday. Lowa In
the low sos to mid eoa. tilgh• Tueaday ranging from the upper eoa 10 low 70• along the beaches to the mid 80s In the warmer Inland valleys.
Temps llUle Flock 112 73
Ll>Ulavllte 811 65
M9mt>ll .. 93 78
liogh IOw IO• 24 llOlllt ttndlllQ •• s. m Miami 8Mc:I> 81 70 MllWllik .. Ml 53
AIL*I' ... .. M~StPeul 71 51
<\lbvquerque 113 e6 N•ll\""9 91 119 ··<@ ~ "'ONTI:
W•m-Cold..,....
Showert Rlif't '"'"" WW Occ:kld•d,,.. StlliOMrY ~
-lllO 97 Ill New()flNnt 90 70 1M10N1 W...... -...C• HOM US Olol Of C-~ A/lcihot9 81 60 HewYo.i. 11 71
Allant• .. .. Nof1ollc. V• ae 71 AtlantlO City 14 17 Ol<-Coy 90 77 Autlln 17 73 °"'-es 65 Calif; Temps Santi BMDer• 77 S3
&.n!mO<• Ml ee Orlando .. 71 Stoc*lon 90 $7
8..-mlnjlham " 87 Pnlltodell>N• IS 119 Hlg/I low tOt 2• l'IOUr1I andlo9 Al 5 b "' lloam•"~ 73 ~$ P"->I• 106 87 H'llh lowlor?•hOUrtanGll\QAISI m 8A£1lOW 108 Ill 8otM IS 50 Plll-::'/h 82 87 8.Jk••lielO 112 14 8llhOI> 97 54
Boston 78 117 Port I M• 67 llO Eur•• llO 47 8lylM l 13 80 lkllfalo 81 st PortLAncl Or 611 47 F.-no 96 66
fn the last elect1on, though Dem~
crats did well on the state level.
President Reagan carried 58 of the
state's 80 Assembly distncts.
The problems 1s that for most
l)COple;--it's been ·20 · yea~ -si:nee
they've examined the issue of what
party they belong in. Nolao said. He
wants to change that now through a
direct-mail campaign that 'will con-
trast the Democratic position on
various issues with the Republican
stance.
A letter from Proposmon I 3 co·
)ponsor and lifelong Democrat Paul
Gano will relate how he dec1dcd he
couldn't afford the Democratic pan y
any longer. ··They're for higher ta,es.
they're for more government,"" Gann
said.
A letter from former UN Am-
bassador Jeane K1rkpatnck will tell
voters: ··All my life I've been a
DemoeF&t:--r -ve stood for a strong
national defense. I've stood for free-
dom. And now I find that the
Democratic party doesn't stand for
those ·things anymore." While
K'irlrpatrick dcnoun<>ed dic-
tatorships. Nolan said, the Demo-
crats desened her.
h~e 1he 1mpt·ndmg Social Security
cn~s will be handled better by
Republicans than by Democrats.
Nolan said. •·1t now takes two of us to
support eVl'ry person on Social Secur-
ity,~ Ille lime we~ei-lhru:tHt wi.l~bc ~
one to one I don't think our children
are going to want to work all year long
to get half of it to suppon us."
Nolan favors an opting-out system
wht:rcby worke~ are 'Cllcouragcd ro
choose IRAs or other retirement
accounts that pay far more than
Social Security is able to.
CUC* Chw-.1onSC
Chat ... tonWV
Cha.rlOttt.N C ~ C111CA90
Cineonna11 c -.,,d ~.Oft Concord NH
0.llH·FL Worlh
e>.yion o.n ... O..Mo1n ..
93 62 Pr-Ml 78
::::::Coty 88 14 ee 65 Reno
88 53 RIOl'omond 111 llO Stlouis 115 87 St Pet• T•mpe •• 83 Sa!l l u•Cny -~-a. --9an-Amomo -
80 66 S...Ju•n PA
113 11 SMtti. 13 14 Shr.-...pon .. 81 Spolc1ne eo llO SyreQUM
CatlllM 16 68
711 96 t...encA91tr 95 82 LOl'll 8MC1> 80 111 86 67 Loa~ 711 83 MontOllla 90 68 ee 112 Olllltand 1111 68 _,.,.,. 65 68
" SS PuoAoblM 81 63 Ml WlllOll 71 llO
93 ee ~Blulf 113 73 NtwpOr1 9Nch • llO 91 73 ~WOOd Clly 75 67 Ontano 89 se 92 73 Seu-to 112 55 _pa1m SC>Clng• J tot. n 911 71 Sall.QM lit 58 puao.ne 16 56
9(t' 'TS S•n 00.00 73 66 RI__,. B8 67
811 75 San Fr1nc1eco 87 !>& S.,, etrnardlnO 92 68 115 49 San Gabriel 113 67 91 1111 San JON 711 59 1111 38 5.,,,. Ana 78 llO 84 113 Tides SAnt• CtUl 64 56
As part of the campaign. vote rs will It's time to tell voters that problems
, TERRORISTS TO U .·S.: PULL SHIPS ...
From Al
• ·Earlier today, Israel released 31
U:bancsc from Atilt pnson near
Haifa.
Speaking to small group of re-
porters at his home 1n West Beirut.
Berri dismissed the release as a
"poh ti cal zigzag."
He insisted the Shutes will not free
the 40 Americans seized June 14
aboard a hijacked TWA Jet until 735
• other U:banese behind bars 1n Israel
have been released.
Berri. who is also Lebanon'sjust1ce
minister, said U.S. Ambassador Re-
, ginald Bartholomew telephoned him
today to reiterate that Washington
would not publicly pressure Israel to
free the prisoners. who are mostly
Shiites.
Berri said: ''The advance of the 6th
Fleet towards our shores forces us 10
add one more condition -this time
for the Amal movement -and that 1s
Lhc withdrawal of the 6th Fleet from
our coast."
In Washington. Deputy Press Scc-
retan Roben Sims said Berri's latest
demand will not change U.S. policy.
which he said 1s not to deal with
terrorists.
Asked 1f the new demand was a
troubling development. Si ms said:
"It's troubling that they're continumg
to hold these innocent people ... It's
complicated enough already."
The Pentagon has confirrned that a
U.S. flotilla led by the aircraft earner
USS N1m1t1 1s in the eastern Mediter-
ranean. It was dispatched after the
TWA Boeing 727 was hijacked by
Shiite extremists on a flight from
A~hens, Greece. to Rome.
The warships are repon ed about 25
miles off Lebanon's coast.
Saturday Berri accused the Un1t!!d
States of planning a .. military oper-
ation" in Lebanon. He made the
charge after F-14 fighters from the
N1m1Lt were reported to have flown
over Beirut. a charge the Defense
Department denied.
The 3 1 pnsoners freed by the
Israelis were turned over today to
representatives of the International
Red Cross at Ras el Biyada. fi vc miles
nonh of the Israeli border.
Officials an Israel said release of the
prisoners was not intended as part of a
deal w11h the sky pirates. But lsraelj
sources said it was aimed at providing
an opening to end the impasse, which
began with the hijacking ofa TWA jct
with 153 people aboard.
In an in terview today on ABC-TV's
"Good Morning America," Israeli
Foreign Minister ¥itzhak Shamir
--said the rest of the Lebanese prisoners
"will be released when the situation in
the southern. pan of Lebanon im-
proves."
"It's a legal process. but it doesn·t
have a plan or a timing:·
AIDS DRUG TESTING WINDING UP ...
From Al
although mild anemia has been
reported. said Or. Roberts Smith.
president of Viratek, a subsidiary of
the drug's manufacturer. ICN Phar-
maceuticals of Costa Mesa.
Smith, however, called the anemia
"limited and reversible ...
No genetic damage has shown up 1n
tests on pnmates. he added
Approval by the U.S. Food and
Drug Adm1mstration for nbavmn·s
use agamst respiratory syncyual
virus. the chief cause of lower
respiratory tract disease in infants
and youngchildren.1s expected soon.
Smith said. ·
Ribavirin works by shon-<:1rcu11-
mg the genetic process used by the
virus to reproduce 11~11. said a
spokesman for ICN.
Smith said V1ratck hopes the drug
will prove useful an combating AIDS.
hepa11t1s A. genital herpes and herpes
zoster, which causes chicken pox and
shingles.
Bui as an approved treatmenl for
an} of those disease~. including
AIDS. nba' inn still needs more
resea rch.
"We're very hopeful we can make a
contribution against that drcadf ul
disease," Sm ith said.
AIDS breaks down the body's
immune system, leaving 11 defense-
less agamst a variety of potentially
deadl) diseases. Its v1ct1m .. arech1efly
homosexual men. hemoph1hacs. drug
users wh o share needles and Haitians.
When the New York study 1s
complete. cli nical studies of
ribavinn·s effectiveness against
AIOS will be considered at hospitals
li~l' San Francisco General and
Henry Ford Hospital 1n Detroit,
\m1th said
While cxc:1 Ll'd about nbav1nn'o;
potential lor Al DS patient!., Smith 1s
more opt1 m1)tic about its use agamM
influenza.
A!. many a!. 40.000 people die each
year because of influenza. he said. "In
an cp1dem1c yc:ar. 11 can be 100,000.
In my vie". mfluenza 1s far more
1mponan1.··
Poisoned dolphins spark
warning of DDT offshore
By JEFF SKLANSK Y
Ol IM Delly ........... DOLPHINS STUDIED ...
An Orange Coast ( ollegc mannl' From Al
biologist says dolphms found dead on Santa Monica Ba-.. '>Ou th to La Jolla. ~\-foot boats owned by 0('(. and
local bea1..he'i ha\.C l<>XIC h:1,d' of u1ITcrs from 01herc;ofthcuolph1n dnn \IJr\e) thel'nlm•OrangeCoast 10
pes11c1dcs m their tl'i'>UC\. 1nJ1ca11 ng a 1n one rnnsp1cu0uHe,pect \carrh ol tht• ~roup'i of dolphins.
p<>ss1blc health ha1ard tn peopk who It'> ml'mbcr'>. ~h1ch Kt·ll} 'IX't'lt· c:Jllcd .. pods. · "h1ch roam the shal-
eat fi sh caught hcrc l;:ih·,ma;li"eabou14(1\car\ ha\Ca li1wwalt'r'> lht•largcslnumberKcll y
But regional hl'alrh .mtl water \horl rounded bcal.. -ahoul lour 'aid tu\group ha' l'\'Cr recorded off
quahly oflic1al !> \a) the) arc not 1 nt hl'\ long. comparl·d 111 olhl·r lht• coa\t in a !>tngle da) was 60
convinced of any real danger. and are dolphi n\ whose beaks ma\ \trctt"h a' dol phin!>
awa1t1ng the results of studies of lung as a fOfit. · The :.tudcnts and 1he1r1nstructor
mannc life before deciding 1f they But the bottlenosc 1s not ~hon un then photograph 1heirsubJectsand
should take any action c;pced. strenith or smarts. Kell} \3)~ record such mrorma11on as how
Dennis Kelly, professorof oceanu-Localdolphans.some l2fcc1 longand , many malesorfemalcsare1n agroup.
graphy and marine biology at ()( ( I 000 pounds when fully mature. how many babies. and whatthe
said that 12 dolphin'> fo und dead on nnrmallvcru1setheshorellnea1ahout dolphinsaredo1ngwhcntheyare
Orange Coast beachc., since I ~82 :! knots. but can shoot lhrough the ..cen The kc) tu 1dent1f) mg the
have been found to hav<' the h1ghc\t "atcr at up to 30 knots for sh on dolphins. Kell) ..ay~ 1s the dorsal fin
levels of DDT in their llS'IUC' ever hur\h ~h1ch protrudesabo\ c the ocean
recorded in mammals. ..The} 're' cry intelligent.·· Kell} surface. reveahni mcks. ~rapes. cut<;
DDT. an aancultural pes1Jc1dc <.a1d'>'1ththea1rofaprouqfathcr andother1dent1f)angmarks.
widely used dunng the 1950s and "Theyha,eabramb1ggcrthanours "W1ththcsc.wccan1dcntif)a
'60s, was banned in 1972 because of Thc}commun1catc.\olvepro.P,lcmc; dolph1nJU'ithkcyoucan1dcnt1f)a
its poisonous effect on animals· and and have long-term memones" In human w11h a fingerpnnl." Kell)
possible danger to humans. Kelly c;a1d s1ud1es elsewhere . dolphins have said
the dolphins' ti ssues also revealed been documented to remcmhcr md1 -Krll) fccl"i !lure thal the local
high levels of P(·B's. a toxic chemical vidual people. and local surfer\ have dolph1nc; have acomphcatcd soc1al
0.lroll 82 57 T()l>tlk• 114 66 Tal\Oe Vallty 79 40 Duluth 17 39 r_.. l(M 79 T0trane. 74 51 EIPuo 96 71 Tutu 90 75 TOOAY 'l'ownlt• Illy 89 57 F•lr[)ank1 71 50 Wathlnglon 811 70 hconcl n19n 351pm I 3
F•roo 118 73 s.cono low 1123pm 26 47 WIChll• 92
Flag11111 83 51 Wilk-Barra 82 66
82 5J TUHOAY Grand R111>1d1
GrMt fella 90 S4 Flrll hi!lh 2 .O•m 4 t
Surf Report
Hart10td II ~~ Eztended Flrat low 1131 am OS lOCATlON ICD IHAN
~· 90 S.cond l\ljlh 4 33pm 4 8 Hun11n91on 8.-ch 1-2 POOt
Honolulu 66 72 S.Cond low t051 pm It A'-Jelly Newport 1-2 poof
Hou•ton Ml 75 40!1\ Street, Newpor1 1-2 poof Fwr lh<ough ll'>e period Will\ ...,,,_
tndla/\flPOill &8 87 days but -•• ,. nlghl -l'ftOl'ntng Sun NII tod•y II II 011 P m ,._ 22n<1 s11 .. 1. Newpof1 1-2 poor
Ball>OA Wedge 1·2 Jaclleon M1 95 10 10w c:louda ,,_ 1119 coat Hlg/11 T.....S•y •t S 4.'.l am end Mlt 1Q8111 at poOf
LAQur\118-1 1·2 JK'laon111tte et 87 W-ay r~ trom 70....., 11'4 II Oii pm poor
JuMlli 14 48 c:oe11 to 80e In W111mlng •bo<.lt 5 Moon ,_ locl•y ., I 1 s 1·. m NII San Cienwll• 1.2 POOt W•lw temp 118 ""' ... City .. 14 ==-~ port1ona lei• w. , .... f....Oeyal 12 t8•m MClll-IQflHUI
• .... ditc11oft -.1-lHY_. 105 11 LOWll. 52lo115 12 57 ....
ABORTION FOR RAPE VICTIM TODAY •••
From Al
life-threatening. The ruling allowed
the Stegmoycrs to pursue an abonion
for Eldridge.
"lfthecond1uon 1s left untreated. II
could probably result in death,"
Moore said.
Anti-abonion activists have sent a
telegram to Judge Moore.t. urging a
halt to the abortion and onenng free
medical care to bring the baby to full
term and foster care for the child.
"Babies 1n the womb have been
born and arc~ walking around as
norrnal humans." )31d the telegram
signed by Edward Jamison. a member
of the board of directors of the
California Pro-Life Council.
Doctors have said the brain disease
has rendered Eldridge incapable of
!>pcaktng or knowtng what 1s happen-
ing to her. ome physicians say
Eldridge suffc~ from Huntington's
chorea. while others believe she
suffers from ano1her nervous dis-
order.
Eldndge once wa!> mamed. healthy
and has a son who 1s now I I She now
1s wea k. however. and weighs less
th;in XO JXiunds
The pregnancy was discovered a
week ago when Eldridge was X-raycd
at Norwalk Community Hospital
Allorneys for the Stegmoyers be-
lieve Eldndge was raped while con-
fined at Mirada Hills Convalescent
and Rehabilitation Hospital 1n La
Mirada. ·
The Stegmoyers said Eldndge was
strapped to her bed with wrist
restraints every time they v1s11ed her
during the past year. They said th ey
knew of no other visitors olher than
family members.
The Los Angeles County Shenffs
Depanment and 1hc state Health
Dcpanment are 1nvesugat1ng the
incident.
The Mirada Hills care faci lity
already has been cued and could be
closed, health officials said.
Health inspectors told the As-
sociated Press that Eldndge was
abused and received treatment at
Mirada Hills that created ··a substan-
tial probability that death or serious
physical harm would resurt."
The fac1litv may he closed. ~1d
Ralph Lope2. bead of the health
fac1lit1es d1v1sion of the Los Angeles
County Health Services Department.
Mirada Hills faces a fine of up to
SI 0.000 and has I 0 days to submit a
plan that would prevent a similar
problem in the future, Lopez sajd.
An attorney for the hospital said
closing Mirada Hills "'would be an act
of utter irresponsibility."
"An unfortunate situation has oc-
curred." attorney Robert Gerst told
the Associated Press. "Nobody
knows what caused it or who was
involved.
"We have no evidence to indicate
that the licensee or the administrator
faile d to discharge their
responsib1ht1es under the regu-
lations."
But Lopez said health mvestigators
have concluded that Eldridge became
pre&nant at Mirada Hills.
"We have concluded that there was
abuse," he said. "We have not
concluded who specifically did it. nor
who was neglige nt. That 1s not our
JOb."
OCEAN VIEW GETS GOOD GRADES ..•
From Al
activity that's not normal and not
pleasant. But people seem to have
realized 1t was neccssa11 .
"We expected a much higher
negau ve response because people
don't hkc to sec their neighborhood
~hools closed."
Like other West Orange County
school districts. Ocean View has
e'pen enced a sharp enrollment de-
cline. losing 5,000 studcntc; over the
past 12 years. lt'i current enrollment
1s about 9,0<Xl
In past years. the d1stnct has dosed
two elementary '1C hools. This month.
11 ended 1nstruct1on at four mon.·
(Glen View. Pleasant View, Lark
View and Meadow View). leavmg 19
sull open. Begmmng in September.
the d1stnct will no longer offer
seventh and eighth ~rade classes at
Westmont, C1rck View and Village
v ICW S( hnol\.
Wayne \a1<.l lht''>e changt·s will
affect .ilrno\t 'O percent of the
dic;tm·1'\ 'tudcnt~. She '>peculated
that parental rc~pon!>e showed ap-
proval bc,·ause the decisions were
made in May 1984. allowing a year to
prepare for the changes.
Extensive teacher layoffs had never
before been requi red in the district.
But in May, Ocean View sent layoff
notices to 41 teachers. Wayne said.
She said the district hopes to be able
to hire back about a dozen m the fall.
During Apnl and May. Ocean
View's annual commumty survey.
established in 1974, was conducted
by an Anaheim research firm.
This year, more than 2.000 surveys
were mailed at random to Ocean
View parents. By return mail and
telephone interviews. responses were
obtained from 92 percent of these
parents. Results were computed on a
d1stnct-w1de and school-by-school
basis.
Wa yne said favorable responses
were obtamed throughout the 15-
square-milc d1st nc1, which ranges
from affiuent Huntington Harbour to
areas of more modest income where
studl·nts need special help 1n learning
Enghc;h.
Al five sc hools. not a single
respondent said he was dissatisfied
with the overall perforrnancc of the
school. Wayne said. Those schools
were: College View, Golden Vitw.
Lark View (which just 'closed).
Manne View and Star View.
Parents gave the distnct high
marks on other questions:
• 79 percent beheve their pnncipal
was responsive to their concerns.
• 92 percent believe their school
was reasonably well mamtained.
• 82 percent believe they were
bemg adequately mforrncd about
their child's progress.
• 76 percent believe student d1s-
c1phne 1s being handled properly at
their school.
• 88 percent believe the proper
emphasis 1s placed on basics such as
reading, math and English.
Only about ha lf of the surveyed
parents believe their school provided
adequate food service.
Wa yne said the d1stnct is trying to
improve that in area. Bui she added.
"There's no way to make 9,000 kids
all like sc hool lunches."
Toxic fumes rout 2 ,000 in Anaheim fire
By tbe A11oclated Pre11
Nearly 2.000 people spent the mght
away from tl)eir Anaheim homes a)
toxic chemicals conunucd to smolder
an a pesucide warehouse af\er a
weekend fire that forced evacuation
of a SQuarc mile around the building.
Fire officials tentatively expected
the residents would be back hom<' by
noon today, said Gail McCloud. a
deputy city fire marshal. However.
the smoldering chemicals first had to
be examined by hazardous matenals
teams.
Ntnt' f)t!oplc complained of nausea
and headaches af\cr exposure to the
fumes. bul none were hospitahzed. 4
After nightrall Sunday one engine
company and two hazardous ma-
tcnals spec1ah11ts remained at the
warehouse to monitor the smoldenng
blaze, said city spokeswoman Carol
Johnson.
banned in 1975. re parted being hdncnded b) order ha..cd loosely on the fam ily. and
'"People who cal fish caught locall)' dolph1n\aftcr\Cvcral "1~1t'i tc1 the ~Y~ the podure a sort of extended JUSt Call
in no way are taking 1n as much DDT same area. famil) unit. In time, Kelly hope'I to
What do yoe like aboet the Dally Piiot? What don't you tllle? Call tlte
number at left and your me1111e wlll be rec:orded, trao1crtbed and dellvertd
to the appropriate editor.
l
as a dolphin:· Kc~I s~ud. adding that "Thcy'r" very. vc11 friendly unravel the Orange Coast bot·
----OOT'j5hnrs eat roa ty-20 pourt<M-6 f-aAHMls." Kelly MU • -----1t.J.ic:c:.llDOSC'~eLy aru1 us oilc.s...an-----~6086 fish every day. .. ut 1f you eat fish Several times each month. Kell y intncatc h1crarchYh"e says still awaits 0 , ~ -~
'-year after year afier year. 1t tores in and com pan\ take to the seas m two researchers here and elsewhere.
:n e Hme %4-lloal' an1werlng 1ervlce may be used to record letters to the
editor OD an pk oDtrlbatort to our Letters colam1UD11.t.JAJ1:1a11&.1&11U-_.j
name an e epllont 1u1m r ver lea OD. o c rca atlon tall1 pleate
Tell us wbat'• oa your ml1d. ' ·
your body and 1t can come up one day
and poison you.
''I personally would not eat fi sh 011 1 or Newport myse lr. and I would not
recommend that to anybody Bui I'm
not sayina it'll kill )'O U 1f you cat 1he
fish." he said.
State and county enviro nmental
offic .. ts say ptst tud1c of Orange CoaJt waten have not confirmed
Kelly's findinas. which are N$Cd on
invcstipuons he has made a Iona w1 th
,• & JrOUP of OCC Student who have
been studyina dolphins living near'
the cioest sance t 977
They point out that Kr ll y has not
shown the dolphin, died from the
pcsticldel themJClvcs. and say their
'' own tudits are not yet conclus1 ve.
'"Tbebestlnformation that weh3vc
1s that theft'J no dan,c1-. .. s.ud Rohen
'
Merryman. director of cnvironmcn·
tal health for Orange C oun1y
"At the present umc there 1, no
data to suggest that there 1s any health
huard to ptoplc eau ng fish caught oil
the Orange Coa t." Merryman said
Two regional agenc1e~ -the state
Regional Water Quality Control
Board and the locall y funded
Southcm California Coa<1tal Water
Restarch PToJcct -ore studying
animals and ~d1menl m the Orange
Coast area to determine the level of
chemical pollu11on 1n the area's
waters and its cause
Jo.·rn ne Schneider. an cnv1ronmen·
t.al pec1ahst with the st.ate board. said
previous '1ud 1e~ httvc 'ihown "rclt·
t1 vcly high" levels or DPT IO San
Diego Crt't'k and 11~ v1hu1anc~ a\
f
well 3'l Newoon Ray A sediment
study 1n January revealed DDT al all 22 sta11o n the board monitored an
the Newport Bay area. Schneider
)41d
hnc1dcr S31d much of the DDT
may ha\\c been sprayed on Oranac
( ounty w1111eforc n was banned 13 yea~ ago-,, nd cou Id be sh<J'\/i na llP in
thr water and sediment now because
of widespread construction turntn&
over topso1l 1n the county
Kelly suggest~ the DDT bc1na
found m the dotph1ns may be dccom·
po~d 01chofol. a pcst1ctdc Mm1lar to
POT wh ich 1s '1111 UfCd lcplly 1n
Oranac County Sut Sch ,,eidcr u1d
Dichofol " not neatly as widely used
here as 11 would have to be to account
for the level' of l>D I ~mg detected.
D .. IJ ltllot
Delfy..-y
11 Guaranteed
....,._, ( llG*y " )'Ou -...... '°"' 1-'eC* DJ ~ 'C> p "' r., -· ' r, "' -'°"' (OC)y ... .,. ~~
8elUOd9y _, Sur>oar 11
Y'lll .,... net "' -./°'• C"'1r Dy 1 a "1 f t9''"' 101"' _Y'.,.,, ......
°'~.., -
Clrculatlon
T1lepMMI
~ .. , 0o...,r ...... 1, ..... , ~
~i~~~E Diiiy Pilat
Karen Wittmer
Gf'neral Manager
Frenk ZJnl
fd1tm
Robert L. Cantrell
PtodUClt~
Managt-1
Howtrd Muflenary
AdYtttll •no ()lractor
'
RoMmery Churchman
(.l)f lrOlif.r
Donald L. Wllllam1
C•1cu1e11on
a.caneoer
Pe991 a1ntn1
Cla illed OlrectOI
Clrculatlon 114/142..Q31
C .... ltled ~ 1141142.-n
All other .... "*'ti 142-4.121
MAIN °''ICE
lJO WttM Bay S1 Cotta .,._ CA
MA•~ 9o• lt.80 C:O.•• W... CA 9~6
I '