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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1989-07-04 - Orange Coast Pilot- <. - .. Court · OC teen restricts Fly your knocked rlglit to flag on out of America's abortion I Wimbledon birthday WORLD/A4 SPORTS/83 THE ORANGE COAST 25CENTS TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1989 Move to: alter abortion law expected Staie debate will focus On -outlawing public funds for abortions stance by the state ooun. allowing the oourt to accept the anti-abortion clauses of the bud&et. ly AUX \llJUJAMS ind KATHERINE MARTINEZ " .. 0....., P'l!M ...., Oran&e Coas; lqislators expect he U.S: Supreme Court's abortion uTlJ\I to prompt impassioned argu· nents for bills supportina both sides •f the explosive issue when the state ...qis&turt reconvenes Wednesday. Gumman . ~ hides behind his sons The federal court decision. which grants individual states the right to outlaw the use of public funds to maintain abortion facilities, sho uld intensify the already heated debate in states outside Missouri. the state offocus in the recent Suprcmf Coun hearing, legislators said. Debate should be strong in Cah· fomia, predicted state Sen. Marian . Bergeson. R-Newport Beach. While ant1-abort1o n activists find the federal ruling an encouraging step toward an eventual national ban on abortion, pr()-abortion lob- byist.s find the dcc1s1o n a harrowing and sexist rollback of personal hben1cs. Bergeson said the fed~ral ruling will add to the momentum of state Y•nkee DOodle D•ndy residents who oppose funding of abortion clinics out of both fiscal and moral ooncems. LanaUllC already eiusts 10 the state bud,ef •{>proved June 30 that wo uld. block significant portio ns of state fundins annually granted to pay for abortions. The budget would still-allo w funding for abortio ns by wo men who either conceived a child Ila 8r0wn of Cotta M•M' 9et1 Into th• ...,. of~~ teldv•IJ decorMlng her houM on • Street. TM unabashed flag-waver ha a 1peclal fondneu for In· dependence D~. Sh• ••• born on th• P'ountl of J...,. C 0\ I H 'I OH\ P01.1·11c·, . -- dunng rape or incest or by women whose life was endangered by c:arry· ing a child. But the same lanauaac has been written into the last fl state budaets. only to be overturned by the state Supreme Court. Assemblyman Gil Fcriuson, R·Newpon Beach, said he hopes the fedcra.I decis.ion will serve as precedent and justify a change 10 The pro.life assemblyman said be anticipates an immediate push by pro-choice advocates for state Su· preme Court action to strike dOwn the anti ... bortion ~ 1.n tbe b\ldaet. But Ferauson Slld be alto antia patcs tu~ ddiente of the lanauqe by antJ-abortioa forces. Fersuson said the puaion sur-· .,.. ..... A80Wn0NS/ Alt- Ag~eement may end opposition to Triangle Square ly JANET ZJMMEAMAN Of -Diiiy ,_ ..,. A group of dentists threatening a re fe rendum o n Costa Mesa's planned Triangle Square shopping and cnteTtainment center have reached a tentative settlement with developers to sell the propeny. it was announced Monday. Costa Mesa Dental ~ies. one of two voops of propnt)' own- ers whose shops and offteC'S arc to be razed to make way for the $~ million develo pment, had until Thur1day to pther enoush signa- tures in their referendum drive to put the project before voters. In a special mcctina Monday night, the City Council actina as the Redevelopment Agency approved a letter of intent regarding the S 1.25- million purchase of the land by the· developer, Tnangle Square Jo int Venture. • But Rieb Shapiro, one of the developers, said the agreement would not be complete until a final ~ianin& of~~ Wednesday rcprd· LO.I rclocauon sates. Gerald McClellan, one of the property owners, said he hu not yet seen the city's proposal, althouah t he terms have been d1scuucd. "We have asked only to be re- placed an kand and n ap~ this 1s a step 1n that direcuo n. ' he said. The 185,000-tquare.foot proJect. on the block bounded by Harbor and Newport boulevards and 19th Street, was approved by the City Council and Redevelopment At!f::nt;y on May 24. Supportcn of the Spanish-themed project have hailed 1t as the ca.,._ of a 16-y_car downtown rcdeveloP- ment cfTon. .,bx:b already b8a produced the Costa Men Courtyards ind Pacific S.vimp Plaza But those on the oppositic side of the fence said the move would hon their businesses., and the aJtcrnatc sites offered under the relocation plan were inadequate. Accordioa to the letter of intent. a buildin.a will be constructed at w corner of 19th Street and Anaheim Boulevard as a temporary relocation site. The Redevelopment Aaency will reimburse the dental poup for "all reasonable out-of~pockct ex· penscs" for physical n:location. After two years, the aroup can relocate in one of two ot~ down· town propcrt ics -on the nonhwest comer of 18th Street and Newport Boulevard or the northeast comer of Broadway and Newport Boulevard, accord1n1 to the letter. Tnanalc SQuare has been on the draw1n1 board since the early 1970&. Plans include a multi--screm movie theater, an uodersround su~· market. shops, restaurants and an open "town square" for cona::ru and other outdoor ptherins-. Politicians gear up for Fedi5tfiGtiRg County DA robing mushroom farm deal • 8y P'AUI. AllCHPLIY Of --.,._ ....... tional auidelines and imposina new rules to stifle politicians' creative urscs. to taluna the redistrictina pro- cen out of their hands aJt<>sether. Ai least two of the initiatives are ho mc·a.rown -one of them proposed by a Lquna Beach at· tomey, the other by Assembly min· onty leader Ross Johnson. R·full· erton. Johnson is proposina a lqjslative reform approach that wo uld include imposina a two-thirds, or super ma- jonty. vote for approval of any red1stnctina plan. Attorney Jack Stanaland is spearhcadina an effort to place the FAIR Reapportionment Act of 1990 o n the ballot, which would appor· lion distncts by addina contiguous census tracts until the ~uired population fo r a district Is achieved. Stanaland contends the d1stnct boundancs would chanac substan· tially after each census, so his FAIR plan includes the provision that d1s- tricts would be open 1ftcr rcappor· t1onment and no one could claim incumbency. Finally, unhke the million of dollars tl\e Lqislaturc now apends to create convoluted. incumbent· safe districts, the FAIR plan woul cost an estimated SS0,000 to 1mpl" ment, Stanaland said. Plans hkc Johnson's requinna super ~ority approval ,.,on't solve the problem, Stanaland said. "I think it wiU just be an incum· bent protection plw\," he said That con«m is echoed by Dr Alan Heslop of the Rose Institute o f State and Local Government. Heslop said dcspne Republican complainis about Dcmocntic acr· S')'mandenng. tb;&1~oo, have bttn 11\Cn d1stncn 1he thrcat of I"--1M OfSTltcTS/A.21 fires keep authorities f?usy four roof fira -one causi• StS0,000 da~ and thl'ft othttl lb.at wtre minor -broke out in a Seal BC11ch neiihbOfhoocl. Un· tl*iflcd 1llcU} ffttwOi'\1 wttt re- portedly nttd ]n tho area •mmedi-...., before the fim mapte4. the =County fa,. Depeltmee•,. TM Rm bcpn 1b0u• ~:)() p.a. Oft the 4400 block of Elder Avenue. Serious dafnllC OCC\UTtd at a \WO- ., --Uaat loll its roof. 1nic IM llco"lld MCWJ betie ftre crews CJlthipilhcd the b&att, the depar1• meat reponed. ~ a Rililho man Jumped off the ~ a.da Pilt about 7 ,. ... ilMI ,__ an unidentified mu wM Galy lftOIMIHI before t...d nan GOODMO NING .. Mesa draws ordinance to era$e graffiti lr .. VM ..... _. Mlln m·111MAN °'-......... c.. Mell it eicilatina ill war ~·~--Pft11 ud *ir in-Cl'elliDIJy v111ble callina cards: araf· fiu. City Cou.ncil members pve kn· wive approval Monday to an ordi- llDCC &bat makes il unlawful for property ownen to allow paffiti lO remain for more than 15 days. The IDClllUte al9C> provides for city u- .;...._ ia IOlllC cate1 (cw tbc re- moval ol tbe Umiihdy 1Crawls. Graftki. as · 4eflned by the ~ Cll'diauCe, inchlda .. any interipLion, fisurc, drawina. verbal m"' a a. le1tmna or symbolic meuaee. whether in desip or sym-bol. scratched. carved or painted on the exterior of any real property or permanent structures in public or private ownenhip which can be viewed from a public street." The fint readinJ of the ordinance was passed J-1, with Councihwoman Yciung OC flier in Siberia MOSCOW (AP) -An 11-~r· old Oranae County boy on a aiobe- circlin1 fliJ;ht in a priv~te plane landed in Siberia after a day of ni&ht milts~ the Tau news aeency llid. . Tony Alienaena's journey in a blue-and-white Cessna 210 took him lO a pair of cities ofrlimits to foreian fliers since World War II. Sunday's ICCOnd stop SUJMlay was at Tyumen, ~ the younpttt from San Juan · Capi1trano was treated to a tour of the Wes1 Siberian oil and aas com- plex and a Youna Pioneers camp. the news •ncy said. "This 1s the first appearance of ~n American plane at our Jlirport since World War II,.. Tass quoted Vladimir Polyakov, deputy head of lhe"local civil aviation depanment, IS sayina. Sinoc Friday, Tony has nown I ,250 miles eastward from Moscow. The youngster, accompanied by his father and an entourase of re- porters, friends a.nd a world-record observer in a 5CCOnd plane, began his fliaht on June 5 from Orange County. Cahfomia. His fli&ht plan will take him 19,000 miles over 47 days. . ·Fireworks shows Nti:1 0... will cap of festivitiet with a ftreworks show at. 9 p.m. trance is SS per car. The B..U.S-Beedl Parade begins at 10 p.m. at lhe comer of 6th Street and Acacia. A venue and apes noa.b on Main St.reel to Yorktown Avenue and Lake Street. En1ertainment and ftreworks at the Hunti"lton Beach Hi&h School Stadjum begin at 7 p.m. Admil&ion 11 S2. · Tbe Oranae County Fiesta at Mile ~ Put in Fountain Valley concludes wilh a fireworks show at 9 p.m. Admission is S3 lldults. S2 senion and military in uniform, SI children qn 6-10, free .. s and under. Gata open for the Concen on the Green and Fittworks Show .ll lnlM ~a.el St ... ._ at 3 p:m. Entenainmenl be&ins at S . p.m. Admimon is SI for lldults, SS for kids under I 2 and seniors 65 and over. ' A..1119 Vleje will host a picnic and co~ at Sheep Hills Park. localed II Moulton Parkway and l..apna Hills Drive besinnina 11 4 p.m. Ftreworb show at 9 J»m. Swnmerfest '89 kicks off at Crown Valley Community Parle in i..,.. Nap.I. Fireworks II 9 p.m. A community fair and picruc will be held at Marco Fonlcr Jr. Hilb. 25601 Camino Del Avion. in SU J ... Capt1true. Picnic bcaiJM at 4 p.m~ fi.IP'orb at 8:45 p.m. Entenainment wiU bqin at Lake MI..-Vie~ at 3 p.m. with fireworks al 9 p.m. ... rareworb displays also att llated over ..... a.e. in Laauna Beach at Dae ._t Bart. and at Lake Fera& v .... AW.tic Put. All sh.OWi beain at 9 p.m. HOLIDAY ''°"' A1 wirepor1ed, jumped lD feet flnt and awam to the man, who was floetina t.ce down, said lifquard supervisor Oordoa Reed. No update on the man·s condition WM availab&e Monday nipt. Manwbilc., officials ui Irvine. Fouawn v.uey and Costa Mesa reponed DO eveD\I OUl Of the OrW· ury. In fact. they said, the Third of ~ wu qWeler than several non- Y deys. ··utuaUy. our holiday weekench &end to be pretty qu.iet because so maay DCoDle leave town," said Sat. Jim Waaion of the Cotta Meu Police ~nt. COMtal Ofticialt ex~ no IUdl calm. To monitor the tbfoao ol tounsu and the intense U'afllC, ~lic_:e ~menu in J.4una llmdl. Newport 8adl H~n · n lelcb and sea.~ . ntra UDiu to ci8cf dOn on oliday = ~ IUCb u drunken -rowdinal. Newport 1wb poticC repoi1'd IJO ...... ace midniibt July I , .... .. tYDical for • ll&lllmtt weelccnd, poliee Lt. Tim Newman said. To compensate for the added number of citizens to monitor. Ncw- pon Beach eoliciled Jaw enforce. menl help &om the California Miah· way Patrol and the Oranee County SbCriff 1 Department. The Sberiff 1 deployed 120 to 130 0 CODll'Ut tO the u.suaJ 30 to 35 thal would be combina the town on a typical summer eve- nina, Newman said. The 17-year-old Costa Mesa boy who suffered severe facial bums when a modified lepl firework ex- oioded Sunda~ wu releued from Ua Medical Centtt on Monday. OuiJtopber Doyen wu injured trrben be and bis brother David Doyen apparentJy emptied the con-tents of 12 .. ~ .. Piccolo Pete fireworb into I plMlic box a.nd ipi1ed lhe contea\I ~th a match. Qowds at local beaches were about tYDieal for a buty aummer wecuncFday, libuarda said. Steve leUw, a °ljaipard at Hunt-iaaton Balda. aid the surf WU unaJJ -about 3 feet ta1J -and = lbaped, mMDilll rnon beac mu ~t their time lou.naina oa the leqeson Mid tile majority oPiniOD ecboel the opinion of the ~ty ol Ca1iforDiD. 5andy Oriis $3~ Coun· cilman F.d Ola ~-Final approval is ex at lbe eecond radtna July l . The council added Lanauaaie to tbe ordinance 10 exdude painted murals. Sips that a.re an compliance wilh lhe city'• sian ordinance would also be exempt. UndeT the ordinance, ~ti on private property thal i1 visible lO the public may be removed at the city's expense, with l.k eontenl of the PIOPMY OWQCt, Failure to comply eould rauJa in crimiut proeecution. "It's been sbowa, I believe. 10 other cititl. tba1 these types or pro- pam1 which proVlde for the prom.P' removal have been c&ctive in di,.. ~~ the ra~ce of araf-fiti," Auislant City Attorney Jerry Scheer said. Genis questioned lhe constitu· tionaJity of the measure because it would require removal, which would be accomplished wilh ••a bil of arm t~· on the pan of the city. n "After all. if you can bum •. aa you can nrnt.bly keep araffit1 on waU.~lhe .uc:t. ~ncihnemben stiffened the pol- icy to require removal in I~ cays, ralher lhall double that time as earlier DrOOOSed. . Colt& Mesa officials say the city bas experimced an increase in png activity in recent yean and 1!1-t o~e of its pcinci~ manifestations 11 araffiti. princ1pa1Jy in the nonh and east sidel of town. On May 5, aboul a dozen rts1· dents or the Mesa del Mar OC•ah· borhood woke 10 find their walls and pfll.C doors spray painted with JolOS that pob« said could be tht work of aanas or "wanna-bes," you~r youths who emulate aang behavior. Police attnbute much of lhe true pna acuvity to outsiders from Santa Ana and Los Abaeles. who may be tryina to establ~sh territory and rt- crun members 1n Costa Mesa. FARM 37th STATE SENATE l)ISTRICT From At Wills cha1nnan of the Grand Jury's 'administration comm_iuec that signed the letter to Bannister. said there was "two or three things that need to be looked at." • SAN BERNARDINO COUNIY __ r-____ _ __r-- SAN • Borrego Spnnga COUNTY COUNTY IMPER I AL COUNTY Brawley El Centro The retirina Grand Jury will will ask the new jury to continue th e inquiry, he said. Bannister said he's pleased that the ~robe will continue .. bccauS( there s been too many innuend~s and the air needs to be cleared ... Questions have been raised about how the land was appraised and whether unnamed former city of. ficials turned illepl profits on the deal. Bannister, Councilmembers Grace Winchell and Jim Silva and City Attorney Gail Hutton wed the Grand Jury in April to become involved. The controversy had its ~n· nm~ in I 98S when city offiClals dcoded to 10 through a 1bird part} to buy the land for Ss.5 million an three phases. Sen ... M•rlan ••r1eson•1 17th District stretch•• from S••I ••ach to kl•on•. The purchase of lhc first two parcels went wilhout a bitch. But attempts to buy the third parcel at an •arced upon price fell through. DISTRICTS ''°"'"' ouster by the opposing party is vir- tually non-existent. "Republican incumbenu have made oul like aanabusters. .. he said. "They're basically 1enured for life!' The pnctice of serrymanderina - cn:atina partisan or mcumbent ad- vantaee from drawiq jurisdictional lines -bas been a pan of the political landscape loRFt" than the United States has existed. But the current form was 1p1wncd by the U.S. Su~e Coun decisions oft.be 60s. Chief Justice Earl Warren establi5bed the "one man-<>ne v01e" rule, which effectively eliminated all the old rules that aovemed reappor- tionment. Equal populalion became the paramount auideline, and rc- disuicten were free to ianore city and county boundaries and Olher traditional conlttaints on distriCI mauup. Home hues of local Jeackrs, such u ci1y counciJmen Ind county auperv1son., are frlamented. dela'- , ""' them from runnina aaain1t in· cumbenll in politically stacked di~ tricu. Heslop called il ••lhe dealh of competition." ... we·re crealiDf. a new feudal cast here." he said. 'Women, l.atin<>Si Asian' blacks -they•re all locked out, because lhe AnaJo Jnales are locked in." Funbcnnore, districts in •hicb reptntioD is overwbehnina for one panr. or Uae Olber lend to elect peny ~IU of the extreme rilb• or left. ·The Republicans are tippiaa to the kooky riaht and the Democra11 are tippana to the kooky left,•• Healop said. The chance for consensus diminilba and. u the California J..ea,illature so amply demonstrata. little of consequence is ac- complished. Voters, if not already · disen- franchised by the &m')'manderin& proccu. have little incentive to vote anyway when the ou1come is fore· ordained. In 1986, 33 percent of the eliajble voten cast ballots in U.S. House taC?t lhe lowest turnout since l 942, a nd m 1986 and 1988, all of Cali- fomia '1 conpeumen were easily re- elected. Of coune. for every ruJe there is an ncept:ioo;-and Oraqe Count)' has at least two. Stale Sens. Marian Btrle9on, R- Newport Beach, and~Jobn ~ymour R-Anaheim, repraent odd...U districts that were lo clump t<>sether aa many Re- publiQn1 u pouible and carve oul a Democratic enclave in tbe central county. Daoice the safety of their districts from l>emocratic opposition, both 1tnator11R comidtted moderates who work II consemut-buildina to push r!Ction. And n, ..tlose district en- compuees UDdRds of square miles froni lbe Omit Cout 10 the Mel· ico and Arizona borden, said such ~rnaoderina isn't always in a tqa~tor'• belt interesU. "lbe' bizarre draAina of lines doesn't serve con1tituen1s and i1•1 hard on leaislaton. and I can attal to that, .. Me said. Altbouah recently appointed to the Senate Elections and Rtappor- tionrnau Commiuee, Berteton 1up- pons takins the proce11 away from the ~•ture. "I thank DO mat1e!' how you to try to siruetw-e it, lclislaton a.re con- cerned about incumbency proteQ. tion," sbe Mid. She Avon tome kind of indepen- dent commitaion that would draw concise, politically balanced dis.. tricu, "so you•re not paranieeina aafe di1ttict1. •• ··~ton have lO be accoun· table,,_~.~4 . At _., one an1nat1ve push.ina the commilSion proposal will likely be on the ballot. Called the Heunina Initiative, il is supponed by lhe Leaaue of Women Voters and tax crusader Paul Gann, amona others. However, voten ~ a similar inhialive sponsored by Gov. Deu- kmejian in l 984. Nady all of the proposed in- itiativet a.re usina some aspect of the paidelines that have been for- mulated by the Rote Institute at OiftCftom McKenna COi . Called ACTION Guidehn~ an acronym for A Constructive Tech-n~ la ~nizina Neutralization of Rediltrictlna. they propose that recUsaric_tina "units" -defined by ~ heWays and ancria1 hi&h- ways -be used to form di1tricts, parantedna cities and communities remain intact when possible. The C.~lines funher call for public · np, lime limits and other provitiou daiaed to deprive redilUicten of the c6ancc lO create aafe but otberwi.e nontmlical dis- tricts for their political brethren and illCUIDbcnU. ·~e think we've identified a fail· safe procedure to take the worst kind of politics out of the Pf'09CSS, .. Heslop said. .. 1t•1 ralher clear some thil')kina bas been influenced already by what we've done." And, if the paat is any indication. judtes will have an opportunity to use the auidelines, too -sometime after t.M 1990 elect.ions. ..It.• a buic law of redillrictina that il will fall into the hands of the cowu sooner or la1e!'," Heslop said. The SBE Corp., which brouaht the property with the undcntancling 11 would sell it to lhe city al 111ttd· upon prices, went bankrupt. officials sa.id. The land, alonJ Golden West Street north of Elhs Avenue, went back into lhe lepl possession of lonatime owner Victor Di Stefano. And he reportedly pushed up the pri« to more than the city agreed 10 • P8{ybile the deal was btina consum· mated, officials claimed that 01 Stefano, because of a past arievancc with lhe city, refused to deal direc1ly with the city. The SBE Corp., whose principals arc Craia K . and Sharon B. E1chqoycn, were broua,ht inlo the deal. Bui the corporation defaulted on buyina the 1111 sqment of land and sellina it to the city for S 1.8 million, officials said. When the city tried to buy thc land from Di Stefano. he said it would cost $2.2 million. officials said. Di Stefano told them t.bal was what SBE alJeaedly still owed him from past tran11clions, officials said The City Council has embarked on eminenl domain prooeedinp for the lhird parcel of about nine aetts A trial is scheduled in October. " closed door meetins is scheduled Wednesday by the City Council to discuss lqal slraleajes. offiicals said The mushroom property ullimate· ly is to be incorporated into thc sprawlina Central Put symm. But the DUCtl that the city i1 ttyina 10 condemn is earmarked to accommo- date tenants beiQ& diaplaccd from a mobile home pa.rt by a luxury hotel. . Scout clubh ouse 'destroyed in fire 9y Cly News SeMce A SI00,000 fire that virtually de- atroyed a ·Girt Scouts clubhouse in Anaheim was caused by an electrical lbon in a 11oraee room outJeL The blaze broke out about 9:45 Sunday ni&bt at the unoccupied G1ri Scouts of the United States of America clubhouse, 1769 Broadway St .. in a wood paneled sto~ room. FIND OtJT WHY WE'RE Tt:iE #1 JAGUAR DEALER IN THE lJSA FOR 1989 / 111 ·1.1.1·:·1·1" 110 ·\HD Art museum plans children 's workshops The Fa mily Arts Council of the Newport Harbor Art Museum will hold a series of summer workshops to teach children how to apply various an skills. A "Mini-Masters" workshop for children ages 3 to 5 will be held from 10 to 11 a.m. on Tuesda)s and Thursda}s, July 11 . 13, 18 and 20. Another session will be held on Aug. I, 3, 8 and 10. Student!. will be guided throught the current exhibitions and then explore a variety of media including pa1nt1nJ.. collage and sculpture. The cost is SJO for council members and $40 for general admission. An "All About Art" workshop for children ages 6 to 9 will be held from I to 3 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays, July 11. 13. 18 and 20. Anotber' session will be hela on Aug. I. 3. 18 and 20. Students in th is course will v1t•w the current exhibitions, see the development of recent an trends and learn basic an appprec1ation as well as an introduction to various art techniques. The cost 1s $30 for council members and S40 for general adm1ss1on. A "Junk An" workshop will be held from 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays. Aug. l2 and 19. Students will look at examples of collages and assemblages from the history of modern an and · the n make thcir•own artworks at the ~cond class meeting. The cost 1s $15 for council members and $20 for general adm1ss1on. Call 759-1122 for registration 1nformat1on. Diabetes education Diabetes education classes \\Ill be offered from 7 to 9:30 p.m. on Tuesdays from Jul) 11 to Aug. I in the Education Trailer at Fountain Valle> Regional Hospital. 17100 Euclid ~\C. A $25 fee co,ers materials and 1ncluck~ one famtl} member aucnJing \\1th the d1a~11r. Call 966-8168 from 8 a.m. to 4.30 p.m .. Monday through Frida). for more information. Children's b~ach club A supervised "beach club" for )Ouths ages 7 to 14 will be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays. Jul) 11 to ~ug. 29. by In inc Commun•· t) Services at Deerfield Community Park. 55 DceNood West. Children will be supervised by ci t)' stalT who are certified in life saving. Children will learn safety tips while swimming, sand castle building and pla)~& garyies at Newport Beach. Staff will transport part1c1pants in cu v "ans Call 551-8638 for more· infunnauon Teacher-aid e training A three-week accelerated teacher-aide training program will be held from 9 a.m. to noon. Tuesday" and Thursda)'s. beginning Jul) l l at Coastline Commun1t) College's Costa Mc~ Center. ~990 Mesa Dm e East. The class. "Education 100," pro' 1de~ practical training in classroom management techniques such as superv1s1on, record keeping and tutoring. Qualified part1c1pants will be ehg1blc to scne as ctrtified paraprofessionals 1n Orange ( ount~'s public elementary and secondary schools begin· ninJ in September. Panic1pants will also be g1,en us1stance 1n completing apphC'ations and prepar- ina for JOb interviews. Call 241-61 76 for rcg1strat1on information. League looking for charities The Junior League of Orange County will hold .. Project Information Niaht," for all county agen- cies or individuals interested in funding or volun· tt'er support. at 7 p. m Jul) 11 at the Costa Mc~ Communit) Center. room A. 1845 Park Ave The league 1s comm11t1ng more than $60.000 to qualified community projects for the 1990-91 year. All applicants must have non-profit. tax- excmpt status. The event 1s free and open to the public. Call 720-74 77 for more 1nforma11on. H~lp w it h refund forms OA ts Senior Center 1n Newport Beach 1s offering assistance to homeowners and renters on fihna claims or refunds under the Property Ta" Refund or Property Tax Postponement Act. Call 644-3244 for more information. f \ I . 1-: " D ·\ H Tue day, July 4 No meetings scheduled Wednesday, July 5 • 6 p.m. Ne.,.rt 8eac~ Pub. BeacMI UMI a.ttuu.a CemalaU.. council chambers. 3300 Newport Blvd. • • 7 p.m. ff•tl.,.._ Bead CttJ Coucll, council chambers, 2000 Main St. P O I .If .•. I Of, Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, July 4, 1989 H'3 residents mince Red Onion plan I ly ROBERT BARKER moor Homw ..... ners Assoc1auon, said the she can't sleep beau~ of the noise. even tables would be locared on 1 public "' -o.., ,_ "-" Red Onion 1s seeking "to make more with the wmdows closed and a pillow walkway 1n a bus)' harbor area. Requests by the Red Onion Restaurant mone) .. without resolving n0tsc prob-over her head. The officials also claimed that the to install tables for outside dinins over-lcm!.. The Red Onion 1s seeking a con-restaurant 1s S«k1ng the same rights looking the marina at Peter's Landing has "The Red Onion 1s composed of two d1tional use permit to put 10 tables enJO)'ed by every other business and touched off howls from residents of an d1s11nct cntiues,'' he said in written com-o utside the restaurant. alons the resident '" the area. adjacent condom1n1um complex. mt'nts to be delivered to city officials. bulkhead of the manna, for dining on "V1rtuall}' every Broadmoor resident "There 1s the Red Onion Restaurant and Saturdays and Sundays from 10 a.m to has patio furniture outs1ck as well as Residents already compfain about al-the Red Onion OlSco-bar 3 ever) restaurant in Peter's unding. The leged noises from pany-goers. squealing p.m. Red Onion 1s the only one not allowed tires and car alarms 1n the middle of the "II "e onl} had a normal Meiucan The Planning Comm1ss1on has already this pnvilegt' .. rught at the popular restaurant and night-restaurant there. }OU would surely not turned down the bid, claiming that fresh-Bill Fancher of Tait & Associates Inc. club at Huntington Harbour. find the oppos1t1on that you do. We air dining would be tnMmpatible with con.sultino engin~rs. hired by Red would like to find out who allowed <l•accnt hou~-holds bcca f d o "' In remarks prepared for a public hear-600 b " ~ · ..... use 0 noise an nion, said in a repon to the city that the fcutt1ng a -person ar and its parking additional activity. c m h 1 b J d JI 1ng scheduled Wednesday night before ot ne"t to 244 homes. 1 . o pany as recent Y u1 t soun wa s, " n appcahna to the uz Council. Red rcal~ed th d 1 ~-"' "' the Huntington Beach Cif Council. "That d"fincs incompatt"ble ·· O m e soun system. co~ 011 .. n1on o 1c1al~ said outs1 e dinin11 would win ows a d I t-"' 1 Stefan Steinberg, president o the Broad-One resident on Grenoble • -ne said • n imp emen ni new po ten L4 generate no add1t1onal noise because the to cut do"n noLSC. Jail nurse is no prisoner to her career ly ROBERT BARKER ' Of -Dolly ,,_ SCaff Dorothy Wills has finally gotten out of Huntington Beach Jail. She's been there since it opened in 1974 and loved every minute of it, she says. But at age 66, it's time to retire from her job as a registered nurse and dett'n· tion officer. a position she's held for I 5 years. She's the last of the original nurses that's staffed the jail on a 24-hour basis since its doors first opened. She's dealt with murderers and rapists and other rough-and-tumble elements. She's always a lady. her colleagues say. She may hear four-letter words, but she ignores them. "We (the nursing stall) act as censors. The men watch their language most of the time." She's been hun once. That's when she slipped and fell on a concrete Ooor that a Jail trusty had just mopped. She suf- fered a broken leg 1n the tumble on Cinco de Mayo day in 1988. She has a couple of rules that have stood her 1n good stead. She nevt'r turns her back on a pnsoner -sht' calls them "arrestees." And she treats them like the people she meets 111 the neighborhood grocery store that happen to get in trouble. "I can say without qualification that it's the most satisfying. least taxing JOb that I've ever had. I get to deal directly with people. There's a m1n1mum of paper work." Police Chief 81 11 Payne called Wills the fo undation of the jail's nursing staff. "I attnbute much of the success of the registered nursing program to her," Payne said. "'Her testtnJ and her ex- pertise has been lots of help and has saved the city problt'ms "She's been able to 1dent1fy the in- mates with the real problems and get them to the hospital." Payne said. "She's also able to sort out those who Just claim they have med ical problems to get o ut of jail lockup. "I can't speak highly enough of her ... Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa, who's known Wills over the years, called her "ver) compasstonate, someone who makes you feel comfortable to be around. "She's pleasant and low key. and 11's nice for someone like her to be worki ng -·-· ' Dorot hy Wiiia h•• been •t the Huntington •••c" J•ll since 1974. in the jatl." Wills, who retired Fnday. has had nursing jobs at a hospital 1n Massachu- setts, a medical chn1c at the University of Texas, and at HMOs in California. She claims that having women nu~s on duty in the Jail around the clock has a calming effect on inmates and the rest of the detention stafT. The {>rofess1onal standing of nurses and their standard of performance also uP_8rades behav1oraHevels in the Jail. she believes. Wills, who worked from 6:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays throu&b Fndays. screened inmates for hcalttl problems.. pve blood pressure tests if asked, ad.min· 1stered blood tests and did typina and photography. She also searched female suspects. One of the nurses. not Wills, found a .45-caliber revolver on a female inmate. Another trusty once escaped. And in· mates set fire to their cells once or twice. But there's been no major jail brcalc or heart-pounding excitement over the Mother of OC soldier convicted of espionage pleads for compassion DARMSTADT, West Germany (AP) - A Lquna Niguel woman whose son was 1entenced to 30 ycan in prison for sivina military secrets to East Germany bu pleaded that officials gjvc him a chance to .. redeem himself,'' a newspaper reported Monday. Winnie Peri. the mother Army Pvt. Michael A. Peri, made the p~· a statement to the military newspa r S and Stri Pm. ri'." pleaded guilty last month to takiJ14 1 lap.top computer and two ditcS conta.anina classified defense information into East Germany on· Feb. 20. and tumina it over to the communists. Peri1 who returned to his unit March 4 with tne computer and discs, was con- victed of cspionqc June 24 and tentenoed to JO yean in prison. ~perts determined the ditea had been copied in Eut Oermany. Peri wu also stripped of all pay and beneflu and demoted from specialist four co the k>weat rank, private I. At bis cou.rt·martial, Peri teufWly asked for forsjveness and said be bad aone to East Germany bccaUte he wu frustrated with his job u an intelU,Cnc:e analyst and electronics sianaJ inte.n:ieptor. "His (h,edom and rank have been stripped away. He is hurtina inside," Stan and Stripes quoted Peri's mother u sar,na. 'He is a tensitive you.na man who will carry this bunkn for the rest of bis life. P1ease empathize with him: leave him the dipity to redeem himself and to con· tn'bute to society," Peri laid. The judae bearina the case uid that under a pre-trial aareement. Peri's sentence would automatically be reduced to 2" yea1s if be remained oa aood behavior the rant three years o( his tcntence. ln addition. under the military justice system, Peri's cue aoes before several automatic reviewa that could reduce the tentence even ft.anhcr. "We ask the review board to ~ 22 yean of model behaviol' u a ton, brother, citizal and IOldier tpinst 12 days of coofulion and dilOrieGwion." Peri wrote in the statement to the newspaper. ··we uk them to be compusionate, to take into acciount bis -.e and inuperi· enc:e and not destroy hit youth," the said. "He made I milta.ke. which be deeply resreu.. He bared his soul when be uted for forsivenca We ut bis unit and his country to eocept b.is apolosy," her sta~ meot II.id. At hit coun-martial ~ uid be re- turned ••becaute I ~·t handle leavina my pe.renu behind, my ftieodl beb.ind. Taki~ What I bad col'Difta wu better." • Peri it beina kept 11 a military facility in Mannheim pendiq ttaosltt to Fort Leavenworth, Kamas. His mother. father, Fred, and lister, Oetircc, attended the OOW1-.mar\l.al in F\l1da and tatifted Oft b.is behalf. Stan and Stripes, t.led in Darm1tadt, is an unofficial publication for the U.S. armed R>rocs. 9 · ... ® years, Wills said. She performs first aid. But people with major medical emergencies arc shipped over lO Pacifica and Huntington Humana hospitals. Wills and her husband. Bill, an at· tomey. have two children and five annd· children. She plans to do volunteer work at the Huntinaton Beach IJbraries ··because I love to read·· and also keep hn hand in nursini, also in a voluntary role. ··r need to get out foT stimulation." Man charged with running maruuana farm ly JOKftH Df LEO Oatlfr .._ muc ... au• SAN DIEGO -A San Dieao County man was ind.cted by a federal arand jury Monday on charges of c ultlvatina more than 200 marijuana plants in a remote arc.1 of t.ht' Cleveland National Forest in Oranac County. Brett C. D1emff, 27. of Santee alt0 was charaed with possession of a loackd Chine~made AK--47 amult nne. I loaded .45 caliber semi-.automatic pistol and two explosive dcvicn when he was apprehended last week by aaents of the U.S. Forest Service. U. . allomc)' William Braruff uid Diemer was characd with manufacturitW marijuana on federal proocrty. Braniff saad a total of 248 marijuana plants were removed by federal qenU from the Ora_nae County lt'ctor of 1lhc forest. lniM . A Deafleld resident ~rted to DOlicc &bat former nca bon in Santa Ana had ~rJically mplanted a crymJ cbip inside bi• stun while the resident WM bavina dental sur· ltf'Y. The tcsidmt no. claims co be routinely awakened at nitht~ by d\e aouDd ot hi• former neiahbon tcftamina into bis brain. Aldtrwoi>d Buics Plus School. located at l Atderw<>OO. Huntington Beach Costa Mesa H1ah School BhtblJI Someone smashed a window to a Boosters when a thief cut the chain residence in tbe 6000 block of of their fi reworks stand and stoic Briarcliff Drive and left three porno $372 worth of the festive explosive,. films behind and the family's VCR A auard in a nearby motorhome did countttf'e1t SSO bill at Parkers Sea- food Restaurant. .309 Palm SL. on Saturday. It appeared to be a photo- copy and the "quality and detaJI wasn't comparable to lJ.S curren· C)! ... 1hpped into Bebe Wortd. 18960 Brookhurst t., and slipped away with with a bank t>., contain1n1 $3,000 1n cath and ch«b. • • • A Wes\ Yale loop midnt told police he MW lWO maJa tprl)'palnt 1 ...u .. x•· on a Cutt» _,.bis tioute Ud felted tbC incidint "" Pnt· ......_ 1lw ret.ident mnoved the "X .. IWnlelf. • • • Onftkl marti• the aamnnt (lfttNOI o( ·•toe SutcicOl..--W., lbUlld Kt9W1ed bOdl on tbt rear not hear the cnme m pf'OIJ'tu bf.. still turned on.• • • tween m1dntaht Fnday and Saturday A ICTttn was ptahed in while mom1na. mi<knts were horrie in the 7000 Two women• J.;cma at HO&Uc block of Beachpoint, promptina Bennachatl" 1976 Newpon Blvd .. fcari of an lntru$ion by a cat buralar. bid their purses stolen Friday ni&ht. It turned out it was • ~l1 tour-A total o f $39 was taken. lcgtd cat. The family taooy re-• • • pc>nedly chmbtd a SCTttft and bent A SlOO propane blrt>eQue was at Of1kcr1 11id daw maru ~ kft JIOlen oft' a porch in the 200 Nock as evidence. of Mft& Drivt on Saturday niaht. • • • • • • Someone stoic 1 SlOO VCR and a A l7•)Ur-<>ld Costa Mesa man SI oo aold chain ftom 1 ret.idtnce in was arrat.cd fOr • traffic warrant the 500 block or 18th tttet. Suftdl)' momina bllt 1 K•~h 11 the Intruders m:ahJ a wiMlow aftd ~ tutne!d up two small .ts of itolc a compec::t disc olayer white Whit waa thouaht to be ('()CeJnt and owncn O( a residcntt f n 'the 17000 he WU booktcf 9'°! ~NI ~a. ·=...,x...~·•btuc~k.,..., -'of Dli'7 view <:W.. .....,.. •MJHOMla~ WU brobft vacation. tMo earty Sunday_ momin& white Thieves en~· a~micltnol ilac lll!IW an the 1'00 block of West· 16000 ......... L. of Jib arde-Md _.--. ... ...--Aftht. In . '° """" $400 wonh ol l'amllt Sl.O'° in men's ""*" ...., .._ with chaktm•t dothn.:tbe mncnt, chcckbook1. crt-dh aiaM Mii ....,._ 1M Mil o1 cMftlt ll\ an1~• mtchine. ...s 10c* the ecer4bi~ New,.n~-. .. A"unnow.~~· " • • • A clean crook stoic a shower held from a public restroom at Iris and Qccan avenues be\'We(O 8 p.m. Sat• urday and 9 a.m. unday. • • • A 1980 ~uda RX7 Wit stolen ftom the 300 baotk of 36tb uoett wh1&c the owntt wat out o( town from 9 p.m. Frida)' \0 8 a.m. un· day ••• A thief smashed the windows of four vduda ()Irked outlldt 1 car ratoration busanesa at 4360 Campus Drive betMCn 6 p.m. S.cvrdly ad 9:U a..~. Sunday. Two MOO IWIOI wn itoltft hln 1 Volb>11 ,_.. and TO)'OSA MIU. • • • A tbief tmlllled dMt SlOO ..,_. ot 1 lM7 Menlll11 I•• patW m • ...,... .. w111•111a.ftla~ a IS ,.,.., ._ The c:rimw oocmwd bet .. n 10 p.m. S.nardly aftd t:«> a.m. S-.nday. • • • Reve~rs reeonedly llfllltd an ...., known Uplosi\lt 1n a ~rdbo&td IM it hthtJ)' l>Umcd I 1911 U~ hmous1nc 1n the 17000 blOck tJI 8rookhur1t ttttt. • • • a.&lpnu pncd open a tlidi•..,. door in tht 9000 blottt ol La 1-a oun and ,.,......._ • .._ bedroom. ActMI ~ WIN ... kno-n. M 0...,.. COMt DAILY PILOT/ Tueec:tay, Juty .-. 1989 r me Court returns abortlpn de bate to states WASHINOTON (AP) -The fllbt over abortion1 called "our Viet- MID o( tM 1990s' by one partisan, mums &o 50 state Maillatum with ww iatemity sparked by the latest Supreme CoUn nalina. But &be bjp court'• role in the deeply diviaive lepl and political Mnlllle ii &r from over. Endina its 1988-89 term Monday. IM court cut beck abai;ply on women'• constitutional ri&ht to lbanioa. But i1 stopped sfiort of MttiJll stain out.law most abortions. Tbe jlllticet also said that aome- time in 1990 they will decide thRC new dispulft - a move that could lead t.bem &o .aap• cowU 197.3 decision in Roe vs. Wade legalizing abortion. Tbat would let states rcaulate abortion more strinaently, or even out.law iL "Thia decision indicates that Roe's da_ys arc numbered." said Randall TCllJ of the anti-abortion poup <>Perataon Rescue. Kate Michelman of the National Brush fire deStrOys 1homes near . .__Whittle~ HACIENDA HEIGHTS (AP) - A firestonn roared through a suburban canyon Monday. damag-ina or destroyina IS many IS l S espeasive homes and forci"8 evacu- ataon of about SOO people when Oamea vaulted from brittle brush to rooftops. Five W&ler-dropp~ helicopters, two air tan.km ana nearly 1,000 firefiabtera from throuahout Southern California attempted to dovte the fire as it raced alona the rid,e of homes in exclusive Turnbull caDyon, 20 miles east of downtown Los Aftlelea. Tbe came of the fire, reported at 1:43 p.m . was not immediately Down, LOI Aneeles County Fire lnspeaor John Lenihan said, but it was under investiption. Lenihan said anon investigators pinpointed where the fire sW1ed on die shoulder-of TurnbuU Canyon Roeicl ... There's no reason for an area like that to be touched off," he 1&id. .. h's not an area where you would expect to have a fire iantte." Lenihan uid be1ween 13 and IS 1 tiomes ~ damaae<f or destroyed by the blaze. At least siJC appeared to bave been destroyed as a hol eve-Dilll breeze fueled the fire. Erratic winds and l 00-deane temperatures in1en1ifled by the ftania temperatures caused prob- lems for firefiahten. said Los An-telet County Fire Department Spokeswoman Arden Beer. .. It'• bumina like a maniac,·· said FU"eftabter BID Borthwick. Fire of- ftciaJI said they di4 not have an estimate for containment. Lenihan said the only injury re-=· was a bee stina to a fire- . As of late Monday nipt. an csti- m81ed 1,500 acres buned. Abortion Ri&hts Action League said, ·•women's fives bana by a thread, and the justiQCS handed politicians a pair of scisson." Activists for both sides pledied renewed efforts to lobby state l~iS>­ laton and make abortion the mivor issue in state and local elections. "Every person who stands for election in this country is aoina to have to answer;· said Molly Yard, president of the National Orpniza- tion for Women. Doualas Johnson of the National Riaht to Life Committee called the decision "an invitation ... to the states to begin to restore protection to unbom..cbildrcn.-I'm sure thal a number of lCf,islaturcs will accep1 the invitation. • . Judith Widdicombe, founder of the Missouri abortion clime in- volved in the high coun ruling. said: "This is the beginning of a war. It will become our Vietnam of the 1990s." ln its closest-watched case of the decade. the coun gave states greater power to make abortions harder to ae1. The j ustices, by s..-votes, rcstol'C'd key provisions of a Missouri abortion law -allowing it and all other states to bin any public em- ployee frofn helpina perform an abottion and to ban abortions in all public hospitals. even when patients arc willina to pay for them. The court also ruled states may require doctors to determine throuah various tests whether a fetus at least 20 weeks old is "viable~· or capable of surviving outside the womb. Missouri and many states make it a crirne to abon a viable fetus, but the 1973 decision had drawn the viability line at 24 weeks. It appears now that a clear-cut coun majority -Chief Justice Wil- liam H. Rehnqui'St and Justices Byron R. White, Anthony M. Ken- nedy, Antonin Scalia and Sandra Day O'Connor -believe Roe vs. Wade was wron&ly decided. If not for O'Connor's reluctance for procedural reasons, the 1973 landmark essentially would have been swept away in the Missouri case. O'Connor, the court's only woman, will cast the key vote in next term's abonion .showdown, when the coun could for the first time in more than 200 years take away a constitutional right it had created. If so, the word will come in a case from Illinois. Ohio or Minnesota. The court aireed to study all three af\er returning from its three-month summer recess on &he first Monday in October. The Illinois case stems from that state's unsuccessful attempt to en- force elltensivc regulations on abortion clini«. A federal trial judge and the 7th U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals said the Illinois rcaulations would have forced abortion clini« to become "the functional equivalent of small hospitals" for no valid purpose. The invalidated Ohto abortion law aencrally required doctors to notify a parent of unmarried girls Supreme Court limits the use of religious displays in public WASHINGTON (AP)-A sharp- ly di'lided Supreme Coun on MoD- day strictly limited Christmas nativity scenes and other religious displays on aovemment property. bannina them if they convey an endorsement of religion. Court agrees to hear first 'right to die' case before performin& abortions. Lower courts said the law 1m- pennissibly interfered with some girls' constitutional right to seek an abortion. The law would have required any doctor asked to perform an abortion on an unmarried girl under 18 to contact one of the airl's parents or perhaps some other family member at least 24 hours before the opcr· ation. Young girls could seek to bypass parental notification by seeking the permission of a state judge to have an abortion. • The Minnesota law requires some girls to tell both parents at least 48 hours before hav~ng an abonion. It was upheld' by a federal appeals court but enforcement was stayed pending review by the nation's high- est court. The 1981 law requires unmarried girls under 18 and still living with a parent to provide written notice to both parents, if possible. before ob- taining an abortion. The VlW also imposed a 48-hour waiting ptriod, and made doctors who perform abortions criminall)' liable for violations. (' ·\I, I t 'O H '\ I .\ H HI t : t 'S ly The Associated Preu No punishment In protester's maiming WASHINGTON - A Navy official has overturned the proposed suspensions of three civilian crew members of a Navy train that ran over a weapons protester in Cal ifornia. S. Brian Wtllson lost bo~ legs following the Sept. I 1987 incident an which the train hat ham outside the Concord Naval Wcai>ons Station. where demonstrators had ga thered daily since June to protest arms shipments to Central Amcncan go~rnmmts. Admiral Robert Ailes of the Naval Sea S)'stems Command an Washington D.C. said the major factor an has dec1s1on was the behavior of Willson and other protesters. who tried to block the tram b) standing and sitting on the tracks. By a S-4 vote, the justices said a Christmas nativity scene standina alone inside the Allqheny County Courthouse in Pittsburgh violated the constitutionally required separ- ation of church and state. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court o n Monday accepted its first~vcr "nght-to-die" case. agreeing to decide whether a Missouri couple can remove their brain-damaged daughter from a life-support system. Nancy Cruzan. 31, has been in what doctors describe as a persistent vegetative condition since a January 1983 car crash. surgi~~l~l!~:~~s'~ :~rd s~~~C:cfruzan. want lO remove the feeding tube Mel Blanc, voice of cartoons, hospltallzed The coun said it would review a 4-3 ruling of the Missoun Supreme Court that forbid doctors from removing the tube. A decision is expected · LOS ANGELES -Mel Blanc. the voice behind Bugs Bunny, Pork y Pig. the Road Runner's "Beep!" and Woody Woodpecker's laugh. was in serious But by a separate 6-3 vote, the coun allowed a Hanukkah menorah one city block awar on the front SleJ!S of Pittsburgh s City-County Building. _ne_x_t..;y_e_a_r·---------------------.i1•-condition Monday at Cedars Sinai Medical Center. hospital spokesman Ron Wise said. Blanc, 81 . was suffering from several medical conditions. including a hean problem. said Wise. His condition has remained unchanged for the pasl week. He entered the hospital on May 19. Justice Hany A. Blaekmun said the menorah, a nine-branched candelabra used during the Jewish holiday Hanukkah, was pan of a display "conveying ~e city's secular rccogmtton of dttlerent tradations for cclebratin& the winter holiday season." ·· The menorah was surrounded by a much taller Christmas tree and a sign saluting freedom, Blackmun noted. ' By contrast, he said, the nativity scene or crcche -canying signs Opposition in Mexico alleges election fraud MEXICALI, Mexico (AP) -ffE position leaders from left and ri t acc11sed Mexico's lona-govcrnina n- s1itutionaJ Revolutionary Party on Monday of committing fraud in state elections that officials prom- ised would be clean. The oha11es came after the .,.ny. known as PRI, claimed victones an four of lhe fi ve states that held elections for new tcaislatures ·and mayon Sunday. Jn Baja California, which also chose a new governor, Marprita Ortcaa, 38, of the PRI and Ernesto Ruffo, 37, of the conservative Na- tional Action Party both claimed victory. Parties in this border slate were basing claims o n their own counts and projections. By law. election boards have until July 9 to an- nounce official returns. If he wins, Ruffo, a former mayor of Ensenada, will become the first opposition governor in Mexico since the PRI was founded. National Action leaders· in Baja California and leaders of the lefltst Democratic Revolutionary Party, runnina a tight race for the state lqislature in Michoacan, com- plained of balloting irregularies. PRl-dominated electoral com- missions in Baja California and Chihuahua said irregularities ex- isted, but denied they were import- ant or affected the results. ha1hng Jesus as the son of God - pve the impression the county was endorsing Christian principles. "Government may celebrate Christmas in some manner and form, but no& in a way that endorses Christian doctrine." he said. "Herc,. Alleghen~ County has transgrtssed this line.· U.S. Embassy in China fi'les complaint BEUING (AP) -The U.S. Em- bassy filed a protest with the Chi- nese aovcrnment Monday allcgin,a soldiers deliberately fired semt- automatic rifles into American diplomats' apartments last month. China denied the charge. Eleven apartments in a diplomatic compound were struck by bullets June 7, according to a U.S. Embassy report obtained by The Associated Press. "There is no doubt ... that certain apartments were deliberately taraeted by the Pl.A (People's Liberation Army)," the report Staled. No one was injured an the com- pound. The report said two Ameri- can chtldren an one of the apart- ments were shielded by their Chi- nese nursemaids. One apenment was hit with 18 bullets. and another was examined Quadruplets In good condition SAN FRANCISCO -A Ukiah woman gave banh to quadruplets who arc in good condition. according to a spokeswoman at Children's Hospi tal of San Francisco. Robena McCutcheon. 22. delivered two girls and tttio bo}s by cesarean scction Friday at 6:25 p.m .. said spokeswoman Terry Hastings. The babies, who were born eight weeks prcmaturt', ranged an weight from 3 pounds. 7 ounces to 3 pounds. t 5 ounces. C hances of giving binh to lave quadruplets arc one m 60.000 to one on 100,000. Hastings said. '\ \1'10'\·\I. HHlt-:J·s Plant explosion kllls two DECATUR. Ala. -An exelos1on in a chemical mixane vat 11natcd n fire at a 3M Co. plant Monday. k1lhn& three workers and iruunng two others. plant officials said. The cause of the blast was not known. said Hugh Hillhouse, site manager of the plant's chemical division. ll was the first fatal accident in the plant's 27 years. The vat was used in the manufacturt or two chemicals that arc pan of the production of high-temperature psket~ Church of Christ moves headquarters FORT WORTH, Texas -Oclcptcs of the United Church of Chnst voted Monday to move its national headquarters from New York to Cleveland, endina what had become frequently sharp debate on the issue. The 17th G~ncral Synod of the UCC. considered one of the most liberal of the mainline denominations, also resolved b¥ acclamation to "deplore" Monday's U.S. Supreme Coun ruling &hat rcstncted women's rights to an abonion. "Historically. the United Church of Christ has stood for women's nghls. puticularly freedom of choice in abortton," satd Rev. Avery Posl. the rctirina presidenL The 700-plus dclqatcs rcpttsentina the 1.8 million· member churth elected the Rev. Paul H. Sherry president of the denomina- tion. HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FIRST RATE! and found to have been hit by Attomey pleads for Nonh 1evcral rounds fired from Kt0$S the street, and not on the fl'OUnd be.low WASHINGTON -lmprisonana former prcstdcntial atde Oliver L. 11 the Chinese have clatmcd. accord-North would encourqe hi&h officials to make their subordinates take in& 10 the rcj_)_Ott. raponsibhty for "leplly or politically risky" ventul't'S, defense lawyers Embassy Chal'Jt d'AfTaires Ray-araucd Monday in coun papers. "A een1ence of imprisonment would be mond lurpardt delivered a note of cruel and ustjusti" defense lawyen said in response to independent counsel protest to the Chinese Foreian Min· Lawrence E. Wa lh's request that North be sent to prison. "Such a sentenct . 11try, but thf'rc was no immediate would be deeply and fundamentally unfair:· ret nse. North. 45, who is scheduled to be sentenced Wednesday by U.S. Guardian Certificate, 6 Month C.D. • to-_. ___________ Dittrict J~ Gerhard A. Gesell, facet a possible IQ.year prison sentence for three felony convictions arisin1 from his participation in the Iran-Contra affair. "OHi U llHll I' Ruling party loses Tokyo election • I ' ' l'C . .. .... .. ... ~ I .." '. I At r Ba ne. M1 mi di< wa ~~ "G an fer ma me Jut He die ace Pa dri fiv an• S)I wa . Pa an CVt bet I kn bu M1 of SCI cal vc Ri I 10 on pn sn ash up AC Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /TUftdey, July ... 1989 ft' EA 'I' 111·~ H JVarm suR to st-line on Fourth ©f July aftivities >•ANOI COUNTY MIT•O· CIOudl -tog 1NHvy ow• rne IOUChH" tUT AH ~llA -hit Wttn M'""Y .., ... ,. ' ' ""'>'""" Wr~WJ.ty South-ti • LOI AHOIUU -0 VICINITY -'" •o 1 \ '"Ph 0u<1ng rht M\etnoon '°"''n of Jib wnny .,.., ... .,.,, W t11 2 ""'""9 "°"'' High• •""Ging lrom w>nd• to I 1 mp;. '" "'' •lte•noon .... ,, '°' •• .,.. 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C°""'Y P'-"M..,..1 \Lll\Q ... d I-• r•t"'!IJ •tt '' '°'°""' 1'">000 "'' QWt t;r 0-SO -"'"" SI 00 .,,,.,UllhlV 101 rt• ·~ .,,""::::.,~ 100-1•• .. .., .. 00.11 A lwJI >1"9" >'"'°9 -rt II,-., - l"O ~I I •• 20().174 I -ono U _. -· •I 17S )ff -• 1n1<C1 Wftgf' •n .. "'10 urf report Andrei Gromyko, Soviet's former Cold War architect ,dret A. Gromyko MOSCOW C .\ P> Former Foreign M1n1'iter Andrei .\ Grom} ko, the dour d1ploma1 "ho served and sun 1 vc<l c' cn ~<H 1c1 leader from Josef 1a1i·n un11I M1kha1l . Gorbuchc"'s "nl'w 1h1nk· ~"cf·· pushed hi m out, has died 111 age A tough negotiator. he helped guide 0' 1e1 fore ign Poliq through the t\\ISl!I ol (old War and dl·tente whoe,cr was 1n L'hargc al the Kremlin. Grom} ko \pent 28 }l'nrs a" foreign mtn t'ltcr and held \C\l'rnl other go,anmcnl and C ommun1'il Part} post!. O\ l'r half a ccntuf} 1ndud1ng the then-l:ir~{'I\ ce r· lim Backus, 'Messrs. v1agoo and Howell' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jim dus. the mullenng voice of tht" ars1ghtcd cartoon character "Mr. &goo" and the self-indulgent llionairc of "Gilhgan's Island." :d Monday fro m pneumonia He s 76. fhe veteran character actor. who .ycd fabulously weahhy Thu~ton >well ·111 on tclevasi o n·s 1illigan's Island" and was featurt"d dozens of motion pictures. suf· ed from Parkinson's disease for iny year5. -ie had been underaoanJ tre:it- ·nt for double pneumonia since ic 13 at Saint John's Hospital and -alth Center in Santa Montca. He !d there Monday at 8:45 a.m., :ording to. hospital spokeswoman ulette Wear. 'I'm a working. man's hypochon· ac," Backus said 1n an 1nterv 1ew e years aio "I used to do benefits d I'd come home with whatever nptoms \\Cnt w11h the disease I s benefiting. 'When they told me I had rkinson's, I read a magallne icle on it. and ovem11ht l had ery symptom known to man. I :a.me an authonty on 1t.'' Backus' throaty bantonc was own to m1l11ons as that of the mblina. mr,()pic Mr. Quincy .,oo on the 'Famous Adventures Mr. Maaoo.'' On the animatrd ies, Maaoo played vanous histon· f&&urcs. including Lona John il- r, Friar Tuck, Wilham Tell and p Van Winkle. He subsequently was introduced ,lfnerattons of 1eltvisjon watchers "Oilliaan's Island," the am· )blt)lc comedy about a eclectic: >UP of peopac shipwrecked on an and w1th nothana 10 do but d~am ridiculous rncuc schtmtt. "' the 10th birthday of."Oillipn's Jt111 llacllut Island" creator-producer hcrwood Schwartz two years ago. Backus was so Ill he had \O be c-arncd up the steps, s.aad Tina Louise, who pla)'cd the scxt movie star Ginger Grant on the scnes. "I asked ham to dance and he bet me a malhon dollars he wouldn't be able to dance, but he did." Louise said. "I love him. I was so saddened to lose him, except I don't feel I've lo$l him bccau~ he's always in my he-art." Said Schwanz: "Jam and I ao back a Iona tame, all the way back to the Allan Youna days in radio. We did 'I Mimed Joan, my fint tclev1s1on show. "He was a unique talent," Schwart<l _said. ··1 created that (Thurston Howell) character with him an mind because I don't know anybo<h else who could play that character the -ay Jim dad ... Check the lassificds for details. emo n1al post ol president. but wa'> a prl\ ate c111zen 1n re11remen1 "'hcn he died ·unda}. 16 da)S bcfcm· his 80th birt hday. He lost h1'i last pos- 11100. a scat on the part} ( en1ral Committee, tn Apnl. No cause of dcath was announled but a Forl•agn \1 101~111 11pokl·1,man said Frida} that C1rom}l..o haJ undergone !>urgcn for an un· specified 'asc.:ular 'problem \O\tll TV, 1n a lhe·rn1mlle annuunlcmrnt rcv1ew1 ng (Jrom' ku·~ hie. said hc died after "a long 1llnl''" " Gorbachc' announred 1hc '>l.llC'>· man's dl·a th Monda} tn n c;e!lsaon of the Supreme O\'lti lcg1-slaturr "His whok lite \\8S COJlnCcted "'tth ht!>lor\. \\1th our ach1c' cmcnt\ our problems. w 1th {'Ve~ thing that fall'> on the lot of a pcr<,on an 1hc 1 hit k of C\ en l~ for whole decadl'<..'. <1orhalhc' said after dcpultl''> uh- '>cr,cd a m1nu1c of silence l dS'>. thl' offil·1al new.-'> agcnl ~. lallcd Cirom' i..o "one of the maJor So' ll'I diplomat) and statc'lmcn uf the '1cn1or gcncrat1on ·· Grum\ l.o "ac, thl' ull1mJll' telhnoua1 and a mu<lcl hun:aulrat eAcu11111g l)Oht' without shaping 11 With no rx>hl1cal consutuenc) nf hi-. O"-n. he po~d no threat 10 thl' Krcmhn h1erarch) -a \urcfin' frir- mul:i for \Uf\'IVIOg A'> a diplomat and fo reaan mtnas· ter. Grom)'kO ht'l~d l~e the al· ltancc that won ~ orld ~ ar 11 He JOIOl.'d 1n draf\1ng lhl' L :-... ( hancr and part1u pated 1n '>upcrp<>"C r talk'> that '>haped the modern world He outlaMcd ~1ahn. !l.J1ktta S Khrush,hev, Leonid I Brczhnc'. Yun \' .\ndropo'' and Kono;tanlln l Chl'rncnl..o .\s an ambassador. he scr,ed 1n the l 'n1ted States. Britain and thl' l 'n11cd 'ia11on'> Foreign M1ntstr) '>Poke-'>man Cicn· nad}· I. Gcrasa mo' ..aid Gromyko "wu part of our h1\tOI). with all its good '>Ide~ and all m bad sades" and historians should Judge \\hether h1., "influence-was -good or bad .. Gcras1mov spoke to reporters 1n Pam "here he had gone an ad vance ol a '1s1t by Gorbachev. The funeral will be held Wcdnes- da} af\cr the body hes m state for the hours an the Red Banner Hall -at so .. aet army headquarters. tht night· I)' news program "Vremya" re- poncd Bunal ""'II be at Novodevachy (emeter). the second most pres· llg1ous resting place after the Kremlin 11 said Khrushchev, Anasta s I. Mikoyan and Vyacheslav M. "'101010 .. arc buried there During World War 11, he took o'er the Foreign Man aslr)'s U.S. !OCCtton and was appointed am-· bassador to Washington 1n t 943. 'Newport to Catalina Island In Only 75 Minutes! • "CATALINA FLYER" Daily Serv1c~: Dcpan Ncwpon 9 :00 a.m . Dcpan Avalon 4:30 p.m. RESERVATlONS (714) 673-5245 CATALINA PASSENGER SERVICE INC. - @lb ~orlb ·~illnge GERMAN HERITAGE DAY Enjoy the tra<itions, l1lJSic and dance of the OLD WORLD fl the flavor of a Bavarian Vlace Settilg Slllday, My 9th, 1989 From 11 a.m. • 7 p.m. Old World ·· Village will host 7581 Center Ave.• Hiantlnlf'On Beaeh .....,~ ielilall •••iliiltH &er °"""" COIM DAILV PILOT/ Tueeciay, July 4, 1918 u Ing Construction falls . for four straight months Public building projects led to increase while private jobs.stayed flat Non-residential constructio n spcnd.ina rose 2.6 percent to an annual rate of $98. 7 billion, the de~rtmcnt reported, and Berson said he expects that to continue as industry expands in anticipation of risi na exports. $86.2 billion, despite a drop in the hiahway and street s~ndina from $2~.9 billion to $27.4 billion. The conservation and development cat· ~ory more than doubled from S3 billion to $6.6 billion. 8y JOHN D. McCLAJN WASHINGTON -Housina con- struction feU for the fourth straifht month in May, but fublic building projects led overal construction spenclina to a 1.3 perttnt increase, t~ aovemment rte<>rted Monday. The Commerce Department said total private and public construction totaled a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $421.3 billion 1n May. alter falli111 0.8 percent in April. May's spending level was 3.3 percent above the pace of May 1988, But private construction remained Oat at $335.1 billion at an annual rate followina a 1.6 percent drop in April. Residential building was ofT 1.6 percent from April, includin& a 2.5 percent drop in new housing units to an annual rate of S 138.6 billion. The decline in new housina rep- resented the fourth consecutive drop. It included a I .5 percent de- crease in si n&lc-familr. homes to an annual rate of S 115 billion and a 6. 7 percent drop in muhifamily units to S23.6 billion. . Analysts believe the pace of res1· dential bu1ldina will pick up later this year as mortgage interest rates decline. Fixed rates peaked in March at an average of 11.22 percent and fell to I 0.07 percent by last week, accordin& to a survey by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. Rates had been driven up by the Federal Reserve as it tightened credit in an attempt to halt innation. "I think we'll see private construc· tion numbers movina up again. probably by the end of the summer' as rates continue to fall , said David Berson, chfof ecnomist for the Fed· eral National Mortgage Association. "We would expect some improve- ment as firms try to meet export demands," he said. "Some of that wiU necessitate increased spending on new plants, new industrial build· ings." Publjc construction was up 6. 7 percent in May to an annual rate of ' ··That was probably due to one or two bi& construction projects that came on line and will go back down next month," Berson said. Berson said he expects overall public construction to remain Rat for the remainder of the year be-.. cause of federal budaet constraints. Crystal Contreras, an operator for On-Line Yellow pages, takes a call. Vladlmlr aerelson and Boris Kushnir of Laguna desl9ned On-Une. Rus$ian pair invent compµterized yellow pages for OC 9y DONNA MOONEY 0..., ............ Two Russian immigrants say they have the answer to Oranae County's bulky telephone d1rectoncs. It's a matter of whose fingers arr domg the walking. After two and a half years of research and a $200,000 investment, brothen-in-law Boris Kushnir and Vladimir Berclson have assembled a computerized list of businesses callers can access by dialin& an 800 number. It's a plan to toss 2.000.page d1rec· tories into obsolescence. .. In this age. wh> should we have a book?"' Berelson asked with a strong .Russum accent Called "On-Linc Yellow Pages." the service offers name of up to three fimlS under about 40 different categories such as tailors. rctaurant~ and a11ornc)'s. L1s11ngs are located from Nev. port Rt'ach to San Clemente. The pair say their scn1ce. wh1C'h began Saturda). g1 vcs advertise~ several advantages over telephone directories. Farms have the option of prov1dinJ an advcrusing message along with mforrnauon about lo- cation. prices and d1rect1ons. For an IT'S SO GOOD IT'S ALMOST UNREAL! Is this the best investment in the world? F Rt I Hf< J)HOl U MESSAGE r· t V t~ 1'. I c) .~ M /<.. / I N C DE T A IL S (114) 111·2• additional fee. On-Linc Yellow Pages provides calk'n with direct connection. Included 'n the packagr 1s the opportunity for advertisers to change their message up to 12 lime~ a year to promote special offers or sales. The full package costs $475 a month, compared with $225 to $600 a month for advertisements in d1rec- toncs. Kushn11 o;a1d . A packagr called "bridal suite" offers the ser- v1ce for $300 a mo'}th to fi ve or more businesses that sign up prom· 1sing to include 1n their message\ references to the other firms. On-Linc marketers have be ... n sol- ic111ng advertisers from throughout Orange County and the compan) plans to cover the north and east beginning October. Starting in Feb- ruary the team plans to establish service for Los Angeles Count). Kushn1r's fingers had to do a lot of walking before they rested on a hard table in On-Line's El Toro office. He gave up his homeland and a job as an executive in a Russian furniture manufacturing company for the chance to come to the U.S. In 1979. with $900 in his pocket. he and his pregnant wife landed on American soil . But knowing no English, Kushnir was forced to start from the gro und up .. He v.-orked brieny at a New Orleans v.-ood firm makinf less than $5 an hour, often putting an 14-and I 6-hour days. He then moved to Los Angeles. where his brother-in-law came that year. Berelson. who studied physics, computer programmina and systems analysis in Odessai Russia, found his first job as a qua ity control super- visor at an electronics firm and later became a computer systems man- ager for MGM. Pelted with English from advertisements. TV and people around them, the pair quickly learned to speak the languaae. Eventually the two settled in Or- ange County. Kushnir, 40, bouaht a home in Laauna Niguel, and Bcrclson1 37, came to Lasuna Hills. Their w1ves1 who are sisters, run interior design shops in Mission Viejo and San Clemente. And now the pair have laid their money on the line. "That's what this country is about," sajd Kushnir. Bcrelson added, "'You have to risk." Bank of Newporl ~:~~i :;i;;.°;;:~" Court allows government to & Co mpany i---M._mber-NASD-/SIPC-760--097----47 enforce anti-dumping rules ay JAMES H. RU81N Aoed4ltM "'-Wit!« forcian companies and importers of the steel products. The Commerce Department, which shares raponlibiJity for en- fon:ina anti-<lumpina rules, aid some of AJaoma Steel's exports to the United States were sold above fafr market value. Commerce officials said that over · one six-month period more than half of Alaoma Steel'• exports were sold above fair martcet value. Ataoma Steel said that fact. in effect, wu ianorcd when the Inter· national Trade Commission de· termined dumped IOOdt were caus- ina injury to 0 .S. Industry. The Cuadian company said any fairly traded producu lhould be ex- cluded from the commi11ion'1 aueument. But a federal 1~1 court here upbdd tbe comnullion's findina in January, nalina &be commillionµ not act arbi= or ca~y wben it ind the tairty tnde IOOdl in ill mlculatiom. ...... y IUCb (&irty Vllded) ... milht be the bell cvidcnce pollible tbat the less-than-fair-value sales had served their purpose and t.he United States =~titor wu in full rcttat. .. the a coun aid. ••Jt is therefore not at all obvious that the more-than-fair-value saJes are (auto- matically) lcpJly irrelevant." 4'1bma Steel's ·~ was sup- ported by the American Association of Exponcrs and lmponen rcp- rcscntins 1,200 U .S. companies in· volved 1n international trade. "The indulion of fairly trlded imports to decide htjury in a dump- ina cue blwi lhe di1tinct.ion be- tween fair trade and unfair tnde, thereby .,...1izi1t1 booest U.S. im· ponen wtao foUOw intemationally accepcable practices,.. the ueocia- tion said. Alto t.ckina tbe appeat wu Con· 1umen b WOrld Tr9cle, wbicb said U.S. trade llw wa beillJ mituted to erect proUictiOftist banien. Tbe ..... admiAiltration wJed ~ '° reject t11e· ...... ca ii Aleoma Slee(' Vs.. U.S., U-1711. drop; fariri economy -e~cte.d t~ contln• •e • I ,. ll [ r. I c • " i r f t s t s •• r p r ) t p c I t • • I ' • 5 r t i ' \ I I Davis ly SIC• WO&.liNMftO ,,..._....., NEW YORK-Paramount Com- nunications Inc. bou Martin S. >avis showed with a dramatic offer i>r Time Inc:. that the folks who ave us the "Indiana Jones" movies an jolt the takeover world with ome hair.raisin& stunts. Davis wailed until there were 2112 vceks left before Time was to vanish nto an embrace with Warner Com· nunications tnc. before launchina •aramount•t unsolicited S l 0. 7 1i1Jion tender offer for Time. The bid enrqed Time executives. ent Wall Streeters into a speculative 1uyina frenzy and forced Time bareholders to wei&h where their oyaltlet lay. lo a stioiina letter, Time's chair· nan and chief executive, J. Richard ,funro, said Davis' bad "smacks nore of spite titan strateay ... ·"You've changed the name of •our corporation but not its charac- cr: it's still 'en1ulf and devour'." dunro wrote his counterpar1 at the ·ompany that until only recently aad been called Oulf & Western Inc. The move put the normally Ofange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tue9Ciay, July'· 1~ A.7 Paramount chief has :r:rme in his gunsights media-thy Davis m the middle of a blnle for one of the most revered companies in the American media busine s. He declined to be inter- vaewed for this story. Unlike many entertainment u - eculivet, Davis shuns the ~lebrity s~tlitht. ~e likes ridin& hones. tankenna with clHsic cars and prac- ticina photop'lphy, associates say. and lives quietly in Connecticut s affluent Fairfield County with his 1C<X>nd wife, Luella. But he can be tou&h in the boardroom. He was part of a aroup of outside directors at RJR Nabs1co Inc. who resisted a S 17 billion man· aaement-led buyout offer for the company and aot shareholders $25 biUion instead. Davis was born Feb. S. J 927 in the Bronx. He quit high school but eventuaUy returned to p:t bis diploma. He started in the entertain· ment business as a teen.age office boy for movie mogul Samuel Gold· wyn. Later he worked as a publicity agent for the Allied Artists studio, and JOined Paramount Pictures in 1958 as a director of sales and marketing. He rose to be chief oper· M•rtln s. Davis atina offi~r. G ulf & Western acquired Para· mount Pictures in 1966 and Davis moved to the parent company three years later. He was a top lieutenant to Chairman Charles Bluhdom. Those were the days when con- alomentet ~ {&sh1onablc LO cor-~te Amenca. epatomiuid by the far-flun1 corpocracy Bluhdorn had assembled. Gulf & Western owned companies that made cipn, clothes, bedd1n1. auto paru, hydraulic presses and coin-operated v1deoaamcs. Jt owned supr'.'lfowina operations in the D<>minican Republic, a pair of horse race tracks and a $900 million ~­ curities portfolio. It also had operations in entertaJn- mcnt. finan~ and publishing. and these would form the core of the company after Bluhdom died of a heart attack while retum1ng from the Dominican Republic on F(b 19, 1983. The board of directors selected Davis as chief executive over two other hkely successors to Bluhdom five days later. ll'Wln Schloss. head of the sccun- lles firm Marcus Schloss & Co. Inc and a Gulf & Western board mem- ber for 28 years. said Bluhdom had recognized that .. the Street did not appreciate what he had built and put together" and nad begun the divest- ment process. But Davis accelerated 1t, presiding over one of the most extensive cor- porate diuec:tions ever. He liquidated the stock portfolio from March 1983 t.hrouah 198' In Auaust 1983, the company . bqan tellin1 SO busine$SCs with about S 1.3 billion in sales that failed to meet Davis' performance stan· dard&. Tbe YICS produced about S360 million by 1984. Davis sold the s~pr-vowing busi- ness for $200 mimon in January I 98S and the consumer and elec- trical products aroup for about SI billion tllat fall. He sold them be· cause thef were cyclical. rcqwrcd substanlla capital, or faced intens1- fy1n1 foreign competition. Even as the sales were proceeding. Dav1S began .t stock repurchase pro- aram that rctll'Cd nearly 46 m1lhon shares. He bought publishing com· pames like the college textbook pub- lisher Prenucc-Hall Inc.. movie theaters. He got the company more heavily involved 10 cable and broad· cast television. The company's stock price 1s now trading near S60. vs. $9\. the day before Bluhdorn died. be wed tn the blttlc for Tune. Aides said Davis made the choice to stay with publish1na and entn'· t&Jnmcnt bcalu11e of the lo...-lubna profit potenttal or book.I. TV aftd movies. Davis r.oints to Paramount•s "Sw Trek · prognun that enjoyed a short run on network TV in 1960a, but bas spawned books, five movi~ TV syndication revenue and a new syndicated senes. Secunues analysts who follow Paramount had expected Davis to buy something b11 followmc dis- closure of plans to sen The ~ soc1ates, a step that he has called "the culmtnauon of a six-year strategJc transfonnauon. •• They &ot 11 with Paramounfs $1 7S-a-sbarc bid for Tame on June 7, only 16 days before Time and Warner shareholders were lo vote on the pro~ Time Warner mericr. tf Davis succeeds. he'll have a $7.6 btlhon compapy bager than fore1an media giants such as Bcrtelsmann of Germany, Hachcne of f'rance and News Corp. of Aus- tralia. Trading slowest in more than two years Its earnings have more than doubled to $384. 7 million, or S3.2 I a share, for 1988 compared with S 168.6 million, or $1.09 a share. 1n 198i In April1 Davis disclosed rlans to sell Associates First Capita Corp .. taking the company out of the financial services business to con· centratc bn publish.ing and enter- tainment. The sale is expected to generate SJ billion or more that may The buyout would come at some cost to shareholders. Davis told se- curities analysts Paramount would have no camin15 for two years and "s1gn1ficantly lower·:.. d.UeidendL if the proposed takeover went through. But he said the chance to buy Time represents "a once-in-a-life- tjme opportunity to maximize Para- mount Communications' Jona·t.enn potenllal." ty CHET CURRIER II'....,..,...,."'., NEW YORK -The stock mar· tet,' adrift in the midst of a long .ummer holiday weekend, posted a nodest ~in Monday tn the slowest rading in more than 2'11 }ears. The Oc)w JoneS' average of 30 ndustnals, down 91 .81 points last ,..ctk, recovered 12 71 to 2,452. 77 'Advancing issues outnumbered icclioes by about 9 to 7 1n na· ionwide tradtng of New York Stock :.xchange-hsted stocks. with 733 up. 587 down and 562 unchanged Volume on the Ooor of the Big Board came to 68.87 m1lhon shares. M II \'I' '\'SI·: DID NEW VORK !AP) Jul 3 Prev. ,, ~ • dvan~ IK~n inc 1noed 'otal t'ua' 1•w h ghs ew lows 9 '\\SI·: 1.1-:.\D•:Hs DOM JO\ES \ \ ER\Gt:S • ..t~EW YORK(APJ FJnal Oow·Jonu li'St~i' Mond1v. ul, 3. C>oen Hitt! Lew O.W Ctte )(I Ind 2'"·7924'1.49 2~.372'52.77+12.71 20 Trn ~ "'Id 'lli'nr.t'ii 'IU~l:~ ~i~k ,~n down from 170.49 million Friday and the hghtest total since 48.86 million were traded Dec. 16. 1986. Nationwide, consolidated volume in NYSE-listed iss,ues. including trades in those stocks on regional exchanges and ID the over-the· counter market. totaled 80.56 million shares. Wall Street had exl)e('ted a slow session. given the absence of ma n; market part1c1pants taktng a long Jul) 4 weekend. The markets will be closed on Tuesday. That helped make 1t difficult for stocks to mount a rail; from last "'eek's decline. "h1ch was the steepest 1n more than 15 months. "H ·\'I ' ·\'tit·:' DID NEW YORK (AP) Jul 3 Prev. Advanced Monda, r~ ~ ¥ecllned nchanoed otal tfisuu ~tw hghs ew lows 6 15 :\'tlEX I.I·: \D•:HS \\SD\Q Sl 'l'tl.\Rl GOl.D PRl('ES Analysts said traders' thoughts had begun to focui. more 1ntentl) of late on the chances that the economy might in for something worse than the much-ball> hoocd "soft landini" bullish forecasters ha' e been pred1c· ting. New evidence of softening busi- ness acll vity emerged Monda~ morning from a monthl} surv~y of corporate purchasing ei1ecutl\ es. v.ho reponed the fi rst drop tn ne" orders smce Ma' of 1986. Gainers among the blue chips included International Business Ma- chines. up '• at 112~·: Sears Roebuck. up 1 • at 44: Ph1hp Morns. up 1h at I 39111, and General Electric. up 1/J at 52 '·•· Airline issues cl imbed on continu· ing speculation about possible new takeover bids 1n the industf). LI A.L gained 5 to 144''1. AMR I Ya to 63. and Delta Air Lines 1h to 68'11. Another pocket of strength show- 'lSE l PS A DOM'S NEW YORK !AP> -The followlno Iii ! ihOWi lh• New York Stock Exchange \locks and warran1s lhal have gone up lhe mos! and down lhe most based on Percent of chanoe for Monaav No securil1u lradino bek>w S2 or 1000 shares are included Ntl and oercentaoe change' are the differ ence t>etween the Previous clos1no pr ice and M ondav'\ S 30 o m orice HarM 1 AllasCp \ 2 l:HMCP ) vcRuour ' cieAH s vjTOddShP l CarolcoPct LVI GrP pf RodmanRen LL&.E Rovllv 11 lhdk twl I viPubSvc;NH OalaDes1on 1 GalvslHou I' Marcade S Thortec 16 Ws!Un of8 7 NavJlf wtA ~ BrllStee(pp Kvoctr• No>t_aCP 0 Mcormtnt wl M unslngwr &ondlnGld n Art1'10nv s S TltanCo HllM 1 P11nav 2 Veslron UPS . LastC"'9Pct. i~ + 2 Up lS' i ~ t 11-t Uo 12 S ~ ~ UP II S 19 • i 1' Uo 1 1 3' > • u o 1 7 11 1 ! l • UP 7.2 1' 1 > Uo 7 1 s~, 1 Uo 7 I ' • UP 6 7 ' • UP 6 1 4 1 • UP 6 S t~ ~ 8~ :! !': :~ 8~ i 1 • 1. UP 6 • 1 '1 UP 1· I \11 \11 UP .7 96' • '~ UP •. 7 9 • 1 '> UP 1 '1'-'• UP 1·6 41• • UP .6 ]\'e :\9 UP l 1,,. ': ~~ ~o DOW HS LIS 371 • -3 31-t -• ed up ID Japant:sc issues. TDK rose 21/i t0 83, Matsush11a Electric 31·1 to 165. and K)ocera 4~ to 861•. Minnetonka. traded in the o\Cr· the<ounter market. fclJ 2'11 to 22'• The compan} agreed to be acquired b> Unile"er N. V for $:?2.86 a share. a pncc well belo"' what some trader-; had been hoping for. As measured by Wtl\h1re .\\· soc1ates' index of more than 5 -000 actl\cl) traded stocks. the market increased S9 .is b1ll1on. or 0 '0 per- cent. tn \.alue The NYSE's rnmposite index of all its hsted common 'itock<. gained .6 1 to 178.51. Standard & Poor·s industrial tndeJt rose 1.34 to 304.82. and S&P'!> 500-stock compos11e index was up 1.25 at 319 . .23 The NASDAQ composite indcll. for the over-the-counter market added . 71 to 43l>.00 . NEW YORK (AP) -Tne following "'' snows !he Over·tl'te·Counltr s•oclo.s and warranls lhat have oone UP the ~• and down the most t>ewd on percen1 of chanot for Monday No securllles 1rad1no ~k>w ,, or 1000 shares are Included Ne! and oerct nla!M cttanges are tne differtnce between lhe Prtvlous closino orice and Mondav's 1as1 or Old once UPS NaMe LH~Cf. t SluartHall 17 , + J , UP 75 0 2 RalnoowTctt l •~ + , . .., UP ll l ~ ~2'~~1sHld 1 • J '': 8: i' l i ~":}l~'fv 1~ ~ ~: ll ~ 1 los&>her 6 • ~ UP 11 8 amOlnstr 9 ~-UP ls 9 ti. ~ Up I 10 lnllCons t.. UP f 11 Rentrak '' • Uo 9 2 ~1lrson h 71' '\ UP 9 13 enPro~ i • Uo 9 I~ 'ff~~'.'h i· · ~; ~~ H ii ri:,,,,~~, 2 ,. ~· 3-~6 ~~ I 1 1 i1Ant8cp !' • 11• UP 1 FstFnCarb l l UP ~ ~ft'fr~ditll WI 1J~ 1'1! ~~ . AmHI hSv ~ 'I• UP ., Ptoe> vMlch I I''• UP ~com 1~ •. UP 1 1FedWPa 10', >. UP 7 ldewevFood DOW~? + '• UP 7 7 "i1~tN"P• ii•• -14>~•• 2 Fi1exec~1 :s.. -1 3 WldWlda ch 1 .. -I • Amb11d n pl ' -S AtlanF'~ pf J , -'- Pepsico bags chips, former RJR companies ly VfVIAN MARINO ,.,_...,._ NEW YORK -PepslCO Inc. snapped up two of Britain's biggest potato chip makers from a French company Monday m a S 1.35 billion cash deal. giving the food and beverage giant a bigger pie« of Europe's snack-food market. BSN of France had acquired Walkers Crisps and Smiths Crisps only a month ago as part or its purchase of RJR Nabisco's Euro- pean food operations. RJR sold the d1vis1on to trim some of the debt from its record SH billion bu;out by Kohlbcrg Krav1s Roberts & Co earher this year. The latest sale makes Pepsico one of the laricst snack-food producers in Europe at a lime when the conti- nent IS moving toward eliminating trade barriers by 1992. lt also allows BSN to focus on 1ls core biscun and pastry busmes~. industry analysts said. "We view the acqu1s1uons of Walkers and Smiths as stratq.ically important as 11 will transform the f nto-Lay division of Pepsico into a worldwide snack-food manufac- turer,'' said Lawrence Adelman. of Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. Joanna Scharf. of Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc.. agreed. "They're investing in a business that the} know very well.'' he said. ''No one else can do 1n thi~ b1,1s1nes~ what they can do." Wall Street wasn't as enthus1ast1c. In composite tradin& Monday on the New York Stock Exchanae. Pepsico closed down I :!.5 ccots to $53.12111 a share. Walken and Smnhs arc among Bntam·s largest sellers of potato chips and snack foods. with sales e~umated at S460 million this year. The United Kingdom is the world's second-largest market for snack food behind the United States, altbouah per-capita consumption is only 1wo- th1rds the U.S. rate. "For Pepsico, this acquisition rep- resents a one-time opporturuty to S1lnificantly strengthen and expan~ our mtemat1onal snack-food busi- ness," Pepsico Chairman 0 . Wayne Calloway said. "Smiths and Walken have a lead- ership pos1t1on lD the Uruted KinJ- dom s1m1lar to that of Frit~Lay 10 the United Stat~..:.· PepsicoJ bated in Purcbuc. N.Y .• 1s one 01 the world's W,CSt con- sumer products comi-nw:s with 1a.Jes of S 13 bilhon last year. 3'1 percent of which came from snack foods. AmonJ its well-known businesses arc Pepsi-Cola Co .. Seven-Up lnter- natJonal. and the Pizza Hut. Taco Bell and Kentucky Fncd Chicken rest.tu.rant chains. Its snaclc·food op- erauons. which hold a 60 percent marker share in the United Siatet, manufactures products under the name Frito-Lay. Doritos and Lays . BSN. with 1988 sales tota1in1 $7 billion. produ~ biscuits. dairy and other aroce:ry products. bceT. cham- paane and minnal water. The French company had purchased five RJR busineS5CS. in- cludtna Smiths and Walkers, oo June 6 for $2.S billion. 3 Hadson~P I, rnY~W~~ ~, 1n111Rs I pf Orle;.£1E P ~nv N11n1 P All.en Inc ' . 2 • -'• '., -. 'l. -• . , -. J~ -'• ]~= ~ ~ ~fnv,:~~~ 2J~ = 1" i~ 'a!~~;:,,kl~ s 6~ = " .~ 1 iCffs 2'• -'• '6 I VaFstSav '. -~ 'l t2 Profesnllnvt 2'11 -Interest.rates fall to 7 .96°/o ~tdoes~ne ~tll P 41Ck nd s ~NUS C I i<tf:t'fp o eni'Vt'PS ~'~ n a owt ~ •d CM0omeO ArlraGrP ~ -l ,, -. i . -II ,, -i • L:: .: 2''• -i 91 .. -~ ~~= . It~= ~; jr, -~ • l3 wenklnc 2~ -• ' 14 PAC Inc 6 -, ~-IJ it,~ 1~ , = i ~ 4 l R ~11\1 i : = • ) ~~~~o~:r ,.•; ,=~ ,: 6 1'11e1 " -'1• 6 Art~ avMfo l • -''" :.2 ~ Et ~~lcat 1 ' , = 1 '! • 6 l(ruolnll s s•, -~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Interest rates on shon-tenn Treasury scc un· ues fell 1n Monda) 's auction to the lo"'est level 1n eight months The Trcasul') Department sold S6 6 billion in three-month bills at an average discount rate of 7 q6 percent. down from 8.07 percent last v.cek. Another S6.6 b1lhon was so&d 1n s1x-month balls at an avef111C discount rate of 7.63 percent. down from 7.78 percent lul week. . The rates were the lowest unce tnrtt·month bills M>ld for 7.12 ptr· cent last No". ''and six-month bills averaged 7.48 percent last Oct. 31. FARMS stable in 1989. Up to 15 pcftenl of th11 deb1 rcductron ts f1pni f'aJ mets From A6 paytf\t off loans. not loan loun. compctltl e with European "Farmcr'j hkel~ will contanuc to S " avoid an ovcr-lnvestment ltap," ... producer~. and U. . 1arm com· d ;; mod1t1cs cheaper for Japanest con· _H_a_n_so_n_.-......,'==== \:; 1li, sumc~... he said. "Given the con· • " imuina U. trade and budaet dcfi· +1"' cit 1t 1s not hkely that the dol~r -Ya will rebound for an eittcndcd period 'ii to mtd· 1980 levels." Another hopcf ul ~an 1s the 1m- 7 .!t proved state of farm finances, ~ Hanson ~1d. Between 1985 and )?--1-1' 1988. the number of commcretal ~ farmen wuh annual sales of at lea t ; S40.000 who f~ loan default de-~ chncd b} about SO percent to 60,000. Farm debt also fell by S'S b1lhon over a s1it·)~r penod, pun1na produ~rs 1n a much tronstr financial po 1tion than m the m1d-1980s. .. This provides a cushion that 111 enable most farmer& "Tif' wnh tand one or more ycan of rtd~ profilt should qricuhwal arowth ak>w or 1tall in the next few ~rs1 .. he td A"°thcr factor 1 d1ff1CU.n to Judie. but It's IMre: farmt't"I arc surv1vo" .. T<>day•s tanners havt sW'Vivcd a <'Ol1•Pfice tQucat and lht Rna!K1AI problems bfouaht about by la* value def1ation af\tt dtbe 1n~ "' 1hc 1970s,.. HaMOn td. ..They have W'VI\ ed all lM bvii nest prob-- knu of a ~Of rntt and an the prOCHS have lcamed nhaabk la.sons.'' FOf uam""' be said. tecOrit Mt ca"' incomes an 1916. 1917 aiMI I Y I "'Unded to be vted to. " 1tnat1"'el)' 10 pl)' down deM ~M IMkC ~ anve'WMMI 1ftd 1m- P'Q\~nti.'• Whelt llltid \INea Ind ••~ mtttts hive rebOUftdfd ... t• loW fMlb.. .11irift .-. ........ . f'an in ·I 9U lftd ls be<1llll '° ~y N.OT/ T• 11dar, Jvllt 4, 1911 EN111£KD\I , 'I \llH best 'Tomfoolery' yet lrTOMTITUS ~ .... c.. ....... Often the difference between two productions of the same show - wb)'. one may be limply enjoyable while the other is memorable -lies in directorial concept. lmqination quite frequently elevatet a piece of ataee work to peeler bei&hts than even its authors intended. A cue in point is Saddleback Collete'• current Studio Theater production of .. Tomfoolery," a revue conaistina of satirical musical sketches from the fertile mind of Tom Lehrer, who toured American niaht clubs in the late I 9SOs .and early '60s. This is a show that bas played two local enpaements1 both pro· fessionally, but wb~cb has never been quite so much fun as it is in the hands of director Beth Hansen and her summer stock troupe of zanies. Hansen bas left the body of the work pretty much intact, but has injected at with a wacky, EnaJish music hall flavor that aivea its performers a comic identity apan from anything Lehrer had in mind. The performint quartet -emcee Dale Jones, Patncia McClure, Earl D. Weaver and Alex Wexler - I\ I 1''11 '\(~' 7:30 1:00 arrive at the cabaret-style theater in various deareet of mock confusion, then carry the charade on Into their act. Pianist Terence Alaric often acts into the thick of it with some curt remarks to Jones, while per- cussionist Randy Woltz and wood· wind player Mark Cuneo keep up the iempo musically. In betwcen1 they manqe LO toss Lebret's satincal dans with consis· lent accuracy, from the homicidal alee of ,"Poisoning Piaeons in the Park" to the t.ea-tipplina gentility of "Fiabt Fiercely, Harvard." Sacred cows of a generation aao are butcbe(ed with abandon. Each cast member has ample op- portunity to express his or her tal· ents, with Jon~ hitting his stride with "The Elements:• Wexler is the class clown of a company replete with them, and his British mannerisms arc the most broadly drawn of the four. McClure has the least amount of spotliaht time, but uses it well with the ''lrisb Ballad" and a torchy rendition of"Ocdipus Rex." Weaver ha1 a number of fine moments, to_pped off by a lusty rendition of "The Masochism Tanao" that is painfully funny. l As with last year's "Forbidden Broadway," also stqed by Hansen. "Tomfoolery" is tucked into the small Studio Theater for a long summer's run, playina Wed.nesdays throuah Fridays at 8:30 p.m., Satur- days at 3:30 p .m.and 8:30 p.m., Sundays at 3:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. until Aug. 19. Reservations are being taken at S82-46S6. • • • They say the show must go on, even if the leading actor is having a hean attack, and last Saturday the Newport Theater Arts Center rose to such an occasion admirably. Just prior to curtain, on the final weekend of the · musical "Zorba," Demitri J. Hondroulis, who plays the demanding title role, was stricken and taken to the hospital. Rather than cancel performances, producers called upon chorus mem- ber John L. Moreno to step into the breach. Moreno, a veteran tnusical theater performer who had not under- studied the role, carried it off, script in hand. Cast assignments were switched around to fill Moreno's pan , and the new Zorba was ac- corded a standing ovation at the curtain call. l:OO 1:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 DINNER FOR TWO Check The aassifieds For DeWls Ar..-'4111 (In Sllreo) Dr.LY ... C... ....... Tit• C,eel Trlpleb, lfrom l•ftf Joy, Monie• and Leanna, wlll be th• Gr .. nd streets and 111ove1 north on Main to City Hall. A pancake ltrealrfaat at Seacllff Center and a Plrework1 •xtrav ... n•• to- night at Huntington aeach High School are also part of the city'• celebration. Marlhal1 of the 8Sth Annual Huntington •each l'ourth of July Parade, which ••· 9ln1 tod41y at 10 a.m. at Main and Acacia POP Jarreau shares stage in Mesa By KATY BOUCHER Of\tlw Delly l'tloC St_,, ' When Al Jarreau 'took the stage on Saturday evening at the Pacific Ampithcatre. he gave the impression the audience \\Ould be divided into two catcgoncs: those who had Jarrcau's new album. "Hearts Horizon .. -and those who didn•t. spotlight most of his band members. starting with saxophonist Michael Paulo -with a son of a Kenny G sound -who made the most of his many solos. 1 Throo"1out the performance. Jarreau looked a.t case. strutting and performing mouth-mechanics of a nute, drums, and bass guitar. He told of his admiration and association with his eight-member bend. Dressed in a "Hearts Horizon·· T-shirt and dark sl1tcks, Jarreau launched into a medley a tunes incl ud- in~ ··So Good" and "All of My Love,' two of the more p 'l>Ular tunes from his latest release. He sat at the end of the stage with bass guitarist. Ricky Minor. where the duo performed a great rendi- tion of "Take Five." Jarreau also gave equal time to percussion. drum and electric guitar solos, and managed to fit in the much awaited. "We're in this Love Together." At one point he almost taunted the crowd when he ~·id, "Do you know that song? If you don't -yp u dc11·t have my new album." )arreau's style was laid-back. as well as the au- dience·s, and he planned to give them just what they came out for -a night of live music. Although you couldn•t help fc~I a surge of un- spoken cneray, Jarreau wasn't able to bring the crowd to its feet u~til the last number. "Does Anyone Want to Go Dancing." Although his talent can't be ignored. he chose to Newport Beach llAL90A CINS:MA 7ot l laltJOI llvO '75-JS 10 ~:,-.... a..~ ...... ...., IDWAllOS N~ CIMIMA JOO Newpott CHl!t< OtiW •44-0760 I ....._.,,_.. ..i .... ~ Cr ..... lf'Gl)j II 4S. l JO S IS 8 10 JO Hllu1•••••ltlf'Gllt I IS J4S l>IS 8 4S II 19-fl'<il)I tOJO I JO 4 IS 1 10 UDO OM.MA ~ lfvd 1>1 Nn.pot'I V~ '7HIJSO DeM .._.. Sedecy l"Cil s JO • 10 JO ~ THCATIM 1'°5 [ Co.tJI ~q,w~ to1J-6160 uttte v ... a II! 1 • IS Costa Mesa IOWAllOS CINUIA a111na 1701 tUrbor ..,d ,,.,,.,.. Vt<## C~., '7•-414 1 101;; ... _..,..If fl'OI 10 IS 11 JO. J, S JO 8 2.._.,,, ...,...,.. "'9 .... ll'GI 10 IS. 12 IS 2 JO .• 0 . 1. • • • l Tfw ---ICM l'ett tit jPCiJ 10 JO. I. J . to. •• )(). 1045 ,:,.-...... f'lwe jl'GIJJ 11 4S l . 4 IS. 7 JO. ... AaDI 0NCMA H.trOof 1111<1 /~ Aw 54'.JIOl .... .,. .. V fl'Cil ll JO ) IS S 4S 8 IS, 10 JO .. AaDI aouTM Co.vT "-"&A J4 IO ltbtOI SI S4t.-1711 '1 •1•1111 1 1 N l"Gf 11. I IS. J 4S. 6 IS. 8 45. II l 9-tp'Gllf 10 IS. 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IOU'nf COAST l.AeU9llA 06 S CO.I Hli'!wlr 4'7 ·I 7 I I , ....................... 0--. r'Glll SIS. I . IOJO l ....... ~l)j 4 IS. 7. 10 July takes living outdoors See our fine selection of Patio Furniture, · Umbrellas and A I • I< D 1 ·1 0 H I \ I Fourth of July time to rejoice 11y ftRESID!NT GEORGE BUSH To every American citizen. here and abroad, Happy Fo urth of July! The fourth of July is a day to pau~ and thank God that me n such as Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin had the strength, courage and inSlaht to forge a nation predicated upon the noble ideaJ, "that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable nghts." After 213 years, Americans can say that the experiment 1s a resoundins success. The Fo urth of July as a ti me to rejoice in this success, which has inspired all ~ho seek to break the shac kles of totalitarian rule and breathe in the hfe-g1ving air of liberty As a boy growinf up in Connecticut. the Fourth of Jul> represented the best o holidays. It held the promise of paradcll. picnics and fireworks. More important, however. at introduced a small boy to the promise of America. Everywhere I turned, I would see the red. white and blue of our flag. As I grew older, I realized that the flag has reminded generations of Americans how fortunate we arc to li ve an a free and democratic republic. Jt is a banner respected around the world. A Declaration by tt)e Representatives of the United States of America EDITOR 'S NOTE: The opentng and closmg paragraphs of the Declaration or Independence should be remembered on Indepen- dence Day. The /,JJ7-word dec/ara11on 1\BS adopted .?/J )ears D8o today, on Jul> 4, 1776, tn Ph1/adclphia b> the Contine11ml Congress and signaled the beginning of the United States of America. ~ When in the Course of human Events. it becomes l"ecessary for o ne People to dissolve the Poltt1cal Bands which have connected them with another. and to assume among the Powers o f the Earth. the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and o f Nature's God entitle them. a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that the> should declare the cau,es which impel them to the Separation We hold these Truths to be self-evident. that all Men arc created cquaJ. that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unahenabk Rights, that among these arc Life. Libert) and the Pursuit of Happ1nC$S -That to secure these Rights. Governments are instituted among Men, dem 1ng their JUSl Po\\crs trom the Consent of the Governed, that whenever an) Form of Go"ern- ment becomes destructive of these Ends. 1t as the Right o f the People to alter or to abolish 1t, and to institute new Go\crnmcnt. layana its foundauons on such Pnnc1ples. and organ111ng "" Powers an such Form. as to them shall seem m ost likel) to cffoct their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, 1ndt"Cd. will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient Causes; and accordingly all Experience hath shewn. that Mankind an: more disposed to suffer. whale Evils are sufTcrablc. than to right themselves b_x abolishing the Forms to which they arc accustomed. But when a long Train of Abuses and Usurpa-· tions. pursuing invariably the same Object. evinces a Design to reduce them under absolute Despotism. it as their right. it is their Duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards · for their future Security. Suc h has been the patient Sufferance of tpesc Colonies: and such is now the Necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The History of their present King of Great Bri,ain 1s a History of repeated lnjuries and Ursurpations, all having m direct Object the fatab- tishment of an absolute T yranny over these States. To prove this. let Facts be submined to a candid World. We, therefore. the Representatives of the UNITED ST A TES OF AMERICA. 1n General Con~ss. Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the World for the Rectitude of our Intentions.. do, in the Name. and by the Authonty of the good People o f thcs.: Colonies, solemnly Publish and Declare. That these l 1n1ted Colonies are. and of R1~t ought to be. Free and Independent states; that they arc abohshed from all Allegiance 'to the Bnush Crown and that all political Connection between them and the Stale of Great Britain, is and o ught to be totally dissolved. and that as Free and lndependent States. they h3ve full Power to lcv) War, conclude Peace. cont111ct Alliances. est3blish commerce. and to do all other Acts and Thi!lgs which Independent states may of npt do. And for the suppon of this declaration. with a firm Reliance on the Protection of divine Providence. we mutually plcdac to each other our live$. our fortunes, and o ur sacred Honor.'' ORANGE COAST 11.11.111111 ________ _ ··~·~.._.. Tom Teti Qon F'nley Tom Clanin Stt'\lt Mewl* RC)Of r 8IOorn 0onN Mooney ROgt"r C.8rlson • Tom8udd Ttrt Pupo 8oC> Fr iJflk C hdlQn Go0<1 ,., ... Stwh Rnond~ Wttd Oorv'41 Jacobson ~,..,, ............ " q.tftN...., »OyOPlltf!Q ...... A. ..... ..., .. , .. ,, -.c.- ... Ta•ail lcltor As~Edllor N~Ed1tor City Ednor Ft~turts Editor b1iwu Editor Sports Ed1ror OmMdon Dftctor C1mauon Mkt Mgf HOIM Ot'lfv«y Mgr CllltorMr ~t<t Mgr Odds -are against Cincinnati institution weathering storm "Say ll ain't so, Pete." That was the lhouptt. but when the alumni of the University of Cincinnati got together as they dad last Saturday, the didn't say "ain't." i.l'owever, Cincinnati's civic in- stitution, Pete Rose. old Charlie Hustle. as under siege and the ex- patriots didn't know whether to rally or to boo. None of us would admit to being around during the infamous Black Sox scandal days of the 191 9 world series. That's when Shoeless Joe Jackson was implored to "say it ain't so." Now we know how those folks felt. Stan Cohen articulated our dilem- ma best. no one hkcs to lose has heroes. That's because there arc too bloody few of them , panacularly in Cinc1nna11. Your choices an the sum- mertime arc between watching the tar bubble or baseball. In the olden days, every sand lot had a game goan* and the boys had free "Knot Hole • tickets to see the Reds at crackerbox Crosley Fie ld. If the glfls wanted to be where the boys were. they became good rooters. It was a way of life, for all of us. to idolize the baseball star. Charlie Hustle really appealed to the German work ethic so even our parents hke him. He was not m) fa vorite, though; I thought he had a dumb haircut and my heart belonged to third baseman Grad) Hatton. (Whatever happened to Grady Hatton?) There 1s something else )OU should know about Cincinnati: ll has a very convenient split per- sonality. It modeled itself after 1ts most famous product. Ivory Soap (99 and 44/ I 00 percent pure') All the "sm" things were across the nver in Kentucky. The problem Wlth Pete Rose 1s that he didn't go across the rt\er to bet. There would bt no problem for Cincinnatians if he did that. Every- o ne else did. Now the whole mess is a federal case. The only winners arc the book- ies who will get time off for rat finking. It really doesn't matter to me af lhc "big boys" want to tum baseball into theater or hippodrome hkc pro- fessional wrestling. Perhaps we can bnns back the Ro man circus or chanot racing -anything to keep the ma~ happy and stupid. This was the consensus when the University of C'ancinnau alumni got together for ats annual nostalgia tnp. Frank and Barbara Wright of New- port Beach usuaUr. host the event and it's called a · Taste of Cincin- nati." Rotund, genial Alumni Executive Director Chris Demakes can s o ut the special hometown joodies for which we secretly pine. One year it's Cincannatr Chila and this year we had a "wurst" theme. you know. bratwurst, meuwurst and knock- wurst, plus hot German potato salad. The dessert as alwa)'S the same, though, Gracter's (sic) Ice Cream. Sixteen flavors arc the maxi- mum that Chns will drq out. I don't know what flavor aot dropped but the new one, Chocolate Ra pber- ry, is sensational. Next year, you must JOln us. we ordered White Castle hamburgers for the fea st Now back to the Pete Rose saaa: It seems ancvitablc that the men will lose one of their lonllJme heroes. The big debate now is will Cooperstown lose }lim also? Frank- ly, since he's sold off (a11:cJcdly) his World Series rings and his record- scttang balls and bat; what docs he have lef\ for the trophy case? The men can keep their phony baloney sports heroes. rm sad be- cause one of my big heroes turned out to have world class .. feet of clay.~ Do you remember bow I have been touting Peter Ueberroth for everything but the pope? frankly I aot booked when I uw what be did with the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los An,atln. Anyone who could make the and.locked freeways Oow was extra-\encstnal as far as t was concerned. Instead of coming in late and o~er budge(. be made millions. What a secret weapon he would be al aov- cmment had him at the helm! Then he worked bis maaic with the spoiled brats of baseball: we're talkina both pl.ayers and owners here. He averted strikes and saJary impasses. He got tough with the dru11ies. I thouiht he was a modern day Superman. The capstone of his career, to date, would have been the judicious handling of Peter Edward Rose. Instead, what does he do. He retires two weeks early and dumps the mess on A. Bartlett Giamatt1. The former Yale president didn't have the stature in the mdusuy or the reservoir of good wilJ needed to successfully discipline Peck·s bad boy. Therefore, I have p veo up toutinJ Ucberroth. As far as I'm concerned. he should JOan corporate raider T . Boone Pickens Jactle Headier 11 • Ne.,,port Bead r.11de.01 ud • former mayor of IUI city. Abortion decision guarantees political showdown for states WASHINGTON -Through eight clccu on campaigns. abortion hns surrcd b1ttemc<>s and H'nom into American poht1~ -and the Supreme Court' de,1s1on Monday points to even ananer contc:n11on. state b\ state bv state By ·allowing '\late to ~rite abortion curbs mto their la~ ... the -coun auamnteed every lega loturc a nood of abortion bill\ thAI wall divide and ~mcumes tlnmmate each or the SO tatc cap1Wl'i The oraan11at1on . the '\lratcg1es. the cam~1an war chc"" and the wrath built over I 6 )can of lcg.'lhzC'd abortion an the n 1ional arena \\1ll be turned now loward the lca1s- laturcs and their members. Activist on both side say they intend to for('C C\CfY candidate al t\'Cry level of pohU<'!I to C'hOO'iC a 11dc Abomon stand$ nt the rntcr- teCtion or moral111,1. theolo1Y. pnvlC') and ~omen's right The~ arc tcw -1f an) -neutral part1c on that c;orncr OM achocatc of a njht to abonion 1J the it ut will be to tM l990i v.bat V1c1nam was to an •rher poht1al l(ncrat1on. Titat it •n ominous prospttt for IM ttaMn ~horn tMn~ns han llltted 10 <kil •1th the lttdtUONI .... of 19vcm1f\Jo a ~ rcqwnna ~ttt and c1\'1ht)' <'~ '" .W1 c wmcnt. In the tbOn~oron ~ ... ...... .a nu rnom •~ w.•• ..... h I tM pohlt,'11 eqUl\aa.I ef W, INt IWtt t no C'OMOftkil ntft\J. ....... t111 aa IM ubjttt wt* ._ -•..we pollta. .. ~ in wh1d1 n IMlla no d11Tcrcnce ho" clo a an- d1date' \ ICW may be tO that or lhe '-'Oter 1f the~ d1\tlff'CC on Ont', htmus- tcM lOPIC i\bort1on I\ that ~ind or topic. iMt the court leph1t'd aboruon 1n 197 , bo in1 that d«1 ion on a WOman•s COD'111U\I nal rll}\t tO pnv•C)', the nt1·1bort1on m O\'C-- ment has taken to the 1trccts ha shouted down rand1dtttt"l1 demon· "rated. hlockt'd the a oors to abortion clinics. IU fottts M\C ihoutcd • U\11• lions of murckr at Dtmocniuc pres•· dcnual c1nd1datC1, "•' 1n1 ansl ptacarcb at campa11n "II'~ m an effort to pcnalile PQhllcaan v.ho would "°' support a roMtttuttonal amcndmtnt lo ~n abortion 10 hm1t It. More than a doLcn states alrcad} have '>tandb) l11ws rcstrtct1na abortion earl> three doten l'('Quare parental 'ons.cnt tor abortions for minor~ M o'lt of the tatcs ha\c $0UJht tO bar financing Of bnnaons under the Med1ca1d r>rogram of cnrc for the nc~h According to the at1onal Abortion Ra&hts .\C't10n Lengue more than ~5fl restncuvc bills ha'c been an1roJun·d an 'itatc lcs1slatu~ IU'it \lnc:c la1>\ vear At !ta t .?9 ahortaon-ltnkad polatl· t'll 1cc1on oomm1ttccs. pro and con. are rc11stert'd wtth thr FC'denil flC<'- t1on Comm1s ion. Thert will bC' more bill~. m ort fund-roisina commmeu, mort monc). and mote P~'urc on tht 1tate ~ovcrnmcnu. from bo1h aid . Randall T~rry. v.hOllt <>peraoon Re uc S\llt ckmM tniuons to bluck the doon of 1bon1on Cl••K'St said there will be an avaluehe "of lq11>lat1on lO ban abon1on. *'f b)1 tate. "In c ery \ak" ~ around th1 ~ntry wc'rt ~• to ~ blttl ovtt tbt 1bott1oe t~ .. said N&nc')' 8rofr or th< Abonton .Rtahl t..c-.~. nd lhe ~mtndcid. .-¥ antr t fC>tCC:t Wlltl"I th11 ....,. 'I thn't wall be no ~ for an~ P6'•· 11, tan to hide on this ttlUf -an)'• ont .. ho 1 n"t 1 uppcwwt m.m be the cnem,. .............. ..,. ,. ...•.. illiltl <Ill I I lw ftt 1199 MLI ........ ~.­..... rer,,..,..,,, _ u,..,.. Tu.day, July •. 1te.9 Many in city slept during mass slaying To the Edi tor: On a bleak, overcast., dW'Q.1.1 momina -Fnday, June 23, to be euct -a small band of wca.ry~yed men with -weather-beaten faca started mo unung D8s (better known as caterpillar bulldozcn~ wilh blades l.atat tnoug,b to level C1ty hall. EnJJncs roared and black diesel smoke belched from the 1tacits as the men made their machines jump ahead. Down lhe street they moved. Be- cause of the car:ly momms hour. no one was an sight to Witness the upco mana onslaught. W1th1n minutes they were at war; killing went on for houn! Limbs were tom and the slatn lay scattered throuaout the area. Man (the city administration) and machine had conquered a part of nature. Eucalyptus trees that took SO to I 00 years to ma run 'Ne1'e destroyed. All that beauty that was siven us for so many years was destroyed by a wntten order with a J<k:ent pen. You ask why? It's to expend the parkina area behind Caty Hall. HOWARD SUBNlCK HunUQJton 8eac.b City manager is very good investment To the Edhor: I would like to pn11e lhe Daily Pilot for re<:o&nizing and ultim.alely taking the time to profile the n- em plary characteristics poaessed by our city manaaer, Robert Wynn. ,In today's world, where intqrity, humility and respect sometimes ~t lost in the entirely humanistic. yet self-centered need to control and "'win at all costs," it's heart-rcndcr- ina to sec oraJ and ethical values such as these, in one with such authority. t would also hk.c to add., in my limited contaet with city ofliciab, Mr. Wynn 1s not the only pt.lema.n poucsslO& such olltstandina_ charac· terislics. Mr. Donald C. SimptOn, special projects rnanqer tn \be ~ Uc W orb Department. is allO a mirror-imate of Mr. Wynn's •t· tnbutes. Which leads me to beli"e that there arc probably mort employees such as tbeac • two, servina the ciuzcns of Newport Beach. Con~ quenlly. I believe I am not alone in saying that I consider myseff quite fortunate, as well as CJttrernely &ra~ ful . that m y tu dollars have been so wisely spent in employing individ- uals of such calibre. 11LL LINDSAY President Coves Community Associauon Arrest casts shadow over FV City Hall 19·" REMOTE TU VHS Video Record« with Wlreleaa Remote Control • cable compatible tuner lockl In up to 111 channel• with eccuracy • program to record 2 9Ytnt1 over 7 day1 for easv unattended · recording • preset up to 1 e frequently-tuned atatlona for fast. NIY access s179 ONLY $20/MONtH•• ' . 19" Remote Control Color TV with Electronrc Tuner • cable compatible tuner locks in up to 82 channels with drift·free precision • automatic color control maintains accurate color from channel to channel • ltmllar to Illustration ~199 ONLY $20/MONTH .. Sherwood 25 Watt• Receiver with Surround Sound • 16 FM & 8 AM preset stations • quartz locked computerized tuning • video sound Inputs • dual LEO peak power meters • loudneas control • .digital readout s119 · Frlgld•lre 18.0 Cu. FL No Froat Ref rlger•tor ~ • full width refrigerator shetwn · ,,. lllde out for easy retri9Yal of hard to reach Items • large fr .. z• door shelves display your frozen Items and k"P them organized e av.._.. In while onlr k I I l'l \f, f 01 \I It's not over till it's over Just when you thought you'd read it all about Pete Rose: Having just fi nished reading every word of the Dowd Report, I now realize why it took so long to prepare. The intended-to-be-confidential, 225-paae report on Rose's alleged gambling activities, prepared by in- vestigator John M. Dowd and pres- ented last week to baseball com- missioner A. Bartlett Giamatti. pres- ents overwhelming evidence (tele- phone records, betting worksheets, etc.) with corroborating testimony 10 indicate that Rose wnacred heavily on""basebatt. Rose's attorneys were forced to challenge the structure of baseball via the court system, realizing that Giamatt1, acting on the report before him, would have had no choice but to ban Rose for life. The claim of "bias" by Giamatt1 was only a legal smokescreen, a straw to be grasped. The Dowd Report also makes one thing perfectly clear: None of this would have happened if Rose had paid money owed to bookmakers. He'd probably still be out there betting two dimes ($2,000) a game. So what happens now? Once the lawyers finish making money for themselves. Rose faces virtually in- evitable suspension from baseball. Then what? That will depend on the Internal Revenue ~rv1ce. If Rose can escape those auys. he'll probably go to Japan, become twice as rich and famous than before, and blow his money on sumo wrestling. 0 Other hohday sports notes and observations. gathered while won- derina if the rumor about the S I million offer from the new-and-up- comin& sports daily (the Nauonal) to L.A. Times columnist Jim Murray 1s true. •Former NL batting champion Bill Madlock S8)'S he has S 120 million in bacltina and is seeking to buy a major lc.aaue team. Madlock's choice as manager: Bill Robinson. • Dodger manaaer Tom Lasorda and Bears coach Mike Ditka were denied permission from their respcc· tive sports lcaaues to participate in a new rcstaurant-loun•e in Las Vcp~ but the project 1s still on without their names. • Has anybody from the Dodgers front office noticed how well Steve Su (.324) and Pedro Guerrero (.296. SO RBI) arc hitting for other teams? Probably. , • Bo Jackson, who cams SSSS,000 to play baseball with the Kansas City Royals and Wlll cam $84(), I 48 to play football pan of this season with the Raiders, has been reduced to dcs11natcd hitter status because of rccurrina thiah irtjury. Do the Raiders have any pla)'1 for a desipatcd 1Unner? • Broadcast rumor: Cubs' an- nouncer Harry Caray will retire after thas season and one of his sidekicks, Dewayne Staats. may move to a more lucrative job with the Yan· kces. Ste~ Stone will stay in Chi· ~· • Iowa will celebrate I 00 ycan of colleaiate footbell thi• aeason by teari• up the anifkial turf at 'Kin- nick Stadium and pla,Y•na on real pan. Mcanwhilt, &traps of the okl atatff will be sold to fans at a public auction. Maybe the farmen think it will lf'OW. • Honey mywttry: Steve C.uthtn hu beeolilc the ODI)'. jockey to Win t.bC Wofld"I bat~ ~bred clertMei (Irish. K.entUdty, Freneh, ~)but he coaidp't win SI0,000 cJaimina races at Senta Anita. ..::=:-~:t~ .. Heary's win over ne Ban ia me 1911 Arliftllon Million hal been unveiled at the S 160-million Ar1ina· IOft International Rececoune. a ~~ny ............... 8 Alnllilll newt: l!menoe Fh· ...._... aepa winnlna nica • "'"* ntWI: =~ Daft Ora~· Mi ... , ........ .-. 8Pi 1t1•11~v-­ .-ra.....?111s ":t:=: WMll .. !fi& . .-a £...1.• ... --·~--a..... .., ..• l!&E!' ~&'I· " . ~ TUESDAY, JULY •. 1989 1 :J Haley -takes ama~ingjourney to Bulls Funny7 Perhaps. A'mazina? That's more like it. And naturally, 6-10 Jack'Haley is as amazed as anyone. Who wouldn't be after never play- ing a sinlle game of competitive basketball in high school, then be· coming teammates and best fnends with Michael Jordan of the Chicago Bulls? To say Haley's backaround is un- usual would be putung it mildly. You sec, he wasn't interested in basketball while attending Hunt- Lngton Beach High. Surfin' and snow skiing were on his mind. HaJey was working for his father. Jack Haley, Sr., at Captain Jack's restaurant in Seal Beach. when he became tired of people asking him who he played basketball for. After all. a man of his size is prone for questioning of that nature. In the fifth and sixth grades, Haley grew so quickly that he was taller than everyone else, and also less coordinated that everyone else. When the kids would choose up sides for a playgr6und game of basketball, "the guys would fight over who got stuck with me." Haley J.ck H•l•y said ... And that turned me off." When Haley amved at Hunt· ington Beach High, he was best at PRO BE..\('H \'Ol,l ,t :l ·H:\1.1. Top seeds win Laguna Open championships Chisolm-Carrillo, UC/ grad Opalinski take women's title ly MARGIE LUCK D..,, ,_ Coi11ipoo- When you enter a tournament seeded first. the pressure 1s on and the attacks are coming from all sides. But in the Laguna Open pro beach volleyball tournament finals Mon- day at the Main Beach in Laguna Beach, the top-seeded teams were able to withstand the pressure. In the women·s final, defending champion and UCI product Janice Opalinslu and her partner Linda Chisolm-Carrillo neatly disposed of Lisa Strand and Judy Bellomo. I 5-6. The match started out as a battle, but it was all Opalinski and Chisolm-urrillo after the first 10 minutes. "It was sort of an anti-climactic finish," Opalinski said. "Strand and Bellomo didn't play their pme. We forced the play. and we won with control." This ~as Opalinski and her 6- foot-2 partner Chisolm-Carrillo's sixth tournament together and the two play well together. Opalinski said. "We stay focused and control the pme," the former beach series world champion sajd, .. You need to work toaether throu&h the highs and the lows, just like any relationship." The victory was definitely a "hi&h" for the two. who vabbcd $8,250 for their first-place finish. In the men's final, top-seeded Pete Aroncbick and Mark Eller won a heated battle over Dane Selznick and Andy Fishburn, 15·9. In a pmc which took nearly an hour, Aronchick, a fonner pro basketball player in Australia, and Eller finally put their rivals away for the $20.625 prize. The much-taller team of Aronchrck and Eller entered the fi~ls undefeated over the weekend, whilt Selznick and Fishburn emera- ed from the loser's bracket Monday momina to eam the finals berth. Selznick and Fishburn won the Laguna Open in 1980 and had faced Aroncl')ick and Eller several times before. The match started out quite one- sided, with Aronchick and Eller using a decided height advantage to power the ball by their opponents. However, the team of Selznick and Fishburn were relentless, fighting to the end but suffering costly service errors. Aronchick's stuff block scal- ed the victory. "Ifs been areat, though pretty hot," Aronch1ck said. "It was a little hard to ~t psyched up to play one match after resting all day Ion~ There was some great competition. ' His panner Eller. who had four previous Open v1ctones. agreed that Selznick and Fish~m were· hardly pushovers. "They had beaten us before. so we knew what we were up against." Eller explained. "I guess we got them back today. The feeling is just arcat." In the ··1 Dig Legends'' competi- tion, the first finafs match of the long. hot afternoon on the main couns of'Laguna Beach, the team of Dennis Hare and Buzz Swarts put away Ga7 Hooper and partner Fred Zuclich, 5-7. Though the match started out t11ht, Hare used several penetration blocks and Swans came U{> with some well-plac.ed rainbow spikes to widen their lead. Several outstand- ina ralhcs were not cnou&h for Zuclich and Hooper. who was a 1977 La&una Open champion. Swarts. a fire captain from Hermosa Beach, won the 1974 Open with Matt Oaae and also owns the 1972 Manhattcn Open title. Before the finals competition started, the fcst1v1tics went on for an hour at Luuna Beach, keeping the estimated 10,~plus spectators in the volleyball mood. Dusty Dvorak of Laauna Beach, a member of the 1984 U.S. Olympic aold medalist team, read a letter from President GeolJC Bush com· mendi'-" the competitors, sponsors and· ciu1cns of Laguna for the Opcn's success and anti-drug abuse mcssqc. Laauna Beach's Scott Fonunc. a meml>cr of the 1988 aold medalist team, served the ball to referee Georae Carey to kick off the finals. Abbott sets first-year pro ~ajor league win reGord individual sports. His favorites were snow skiina and, like his father, surfin~ And he "ill had no interest in playina basketball .. , was proud of my father. and I wanted to follow in hlS footsteps," Haley said. Huntinaton Beach basketball coach Roy Miller, who coachw Haley on the surf team, wanted him to&ive basketball a shot. But being a close friend of the family, Miller understood Haley's feelings and never pushed the issue, Haley 'Satd Then Haley's father mandated that he gain a varsity IC1ter 1n some spon. " ... so l became an All..CIF bad- minton player," Hale> said. "That was pretty fun. "Then. when I was working at m) father's restaurant. Captain Jack'i;, as a busboy and wai ter. I was a senior (1n high school) and up to 6-8 People would ask me. "Who do you play basketball for?' Also in my senior year. my best friend and I would surf together and one day we went to play basketball with some other surfers. I'd really never played before, but I started to play and I enjoyed the game. I knew I was tall and I just didn't want to be some old auy saying 'What-if.' After that, 1t got me wondering " Haley ta.lked to Golden West C-ol- lege Athletic Director Tom Hermstad and th,. rest is history. On Jim Grttnfield"s Rustlers squad, Haley was merely a "practice pla)'er" at fim. then started later and earned Freshman of the Year honors. He wasn't sur~ of his next stop unul the following summer when former UCLA standout Rcga1e Miller told Hale) of the Bruins need for a center. "I was playrng in the LA summer league:· Haley said. "And that's when Reggie M 1 lier told me there was an opening for a center at UCLA. So before I knew what hap- pened. I was at UCLA. I had reall y 1mprcs!>ed some people during the summer league, playina with guys like Ma11c Johnson and Moses Malone, some of the greatest players in the NBA. "So here l was, with only one year of experience in organized basket- D.-, ...................... _.., J•nlce Opmlln1ld fr .. htl block• • 1p11&• ltJ Lisa Str•nd In tit• women~, fln•I of ttl• ~un• Open at th• M .. n aeactt. ball, and I was play1na against the best in the world and holdintmY own So UCLA gave me a scholar- ship." Haley backed up Brad Wnght .;n 1984-85. averaaing a couple of minutes a game, before starting his final two )'cars at UCLA ( 1985-86 and '86-87 seasons). "When I got to UCLA, I didn't even know that Kareem Abdul-Jab- bar and Lew Alcindor Was the same guy,'' Haley said. ··ucLA had a lot of great centers and l had to 'hear about 1t from everybody else." While at UCLA, Haley played with guys hke Miller. Montel Hatch-(,..ase tee H.M.EY /92J Crossett makes U.S~ skeet team ~ JON FE'RGllSON ot -0..,, ~ "-" Don Crossett, who recently gradu· ated from Fountain Valley High, will tram with the U.S. skeet shoot- ing team in future mtemational competition. First up 1s the CAT competition between the Americas scheduled for the late summer in Puerto Rico. The ultimate aoal is the World Cham- pionships in Moscow in 1990. a stcpptnJ stone to working toward the U.S. Olympic team. Crossett, who pitched for Fo1.1n- tain Valley's Sunset League cham· pion baseball team, will compete this fall for the skttt team at Trinity Unavcrsity 1n San Antonio, Teus. He'll compete for world clau shooter and coach T ~rry Howard at Tnn1ty. At the National Rine Association sponsored U.S. International Shoot· ina Champ1onsh1ps at Chino's Prado Tiro Olympic shooT.· fa- c1hty which concluded last end. Crossett finished second in Jun- ior D1Y1S1on (ll·and-undcr) and fifth in the Open Division (all ages) to earn a spot on the national team. Crossett elected to bypass the 1989 World Championships in Italy. where he could have competed in the Junio r 01v1sion. to train for the Open D1vis1on team competi"g in Moscow a year from now. He shot 383 of 400 piaeons. whjle winner Mike Schmidt from the Army Reserve Tra1nin1 Center in ffiltene lft CROSSETT /12t Winds hold In Transpac ly ALMON LOOCA.-Y ~ .............. lt was rainina on the Transpe.c parade Monday, but the strona winds 5ltll held., mov1na the leaders past the 7QO..mitc mark on the l,22S· mite course from Los Angeles to Honolulu. But the winds shifted about 30 dccrttS Sunday nipt movina the lead yachts Into the favored north· cast tradcwinds 11 they sailed south of the thumbline to avoid cbe ptlHle .. ec>ATING/Ut Defending champions end first half In fifth UOltLI I(' 't llt ii'; I io State p/ayi rs turn favorite assistant into newest head coach · I' I H • HI I\( Ht.ff' ~ • 'I tr COLUMBUS, OhJO -A~r stumpint ~ (or Wee week• for Randy Ayers to be • elevated tom iuiMMt to head coach, ,. many Ohio $&1 ... University basketball ----- playen welcomed-MODdaft announcement of Ayers as the tUClCellOt to Oaty Williams . .. We really went to bet for him. That's really what did it. .. laid Trq Lee. a ~foo1-8 forward who will be :J:C.* at Ohio State in the comina academic year ... I to (atliltant athletic director) Bill Myles, and tome of the otben •nt ttraiabt to (athletic director) Jim Jona. I also ~ directly to (Ohio State presi- dent) Ed Jenoinp whetl I IA• bim on campus.• )ooes said the playeri hid a part in Ayers• hinnt- -rhey aouaht me out.• Jones at.id ... Obviously, 1t bad a bearina. l can't qua tify bow important it was. 1 don't th.ink our youna people should be ipored. AJso, I don't think they should make the ultimate decision." Jim Jackson, a two-time Ohio Mr. Basketball who is Obfo State's prime freshman recruit, said, "I'm pretty happy. This iJ what we were pullina for an along. (Ayers has~ been in the system IO long wt won't st.art over. We II just continue." Ayers, who has been an assist.ant at Ohio State for the wt six yean, was named Monday as the Buckeyes' l lth buketball coach. Williams migncd on June 13 to become coach at the Univenity of Maryland, his alma mater. . Ayers, 3.l, has deep Ohio roots. He was an all-state player at Springfield NorJb High School. then became Canseco stlll ba!_tllng Injury Joee Canacco, assiane<f to Huntsvllle "'-• ~ (Ala.) to recov~r from an ir_ljurcd left ~It, ~ did not play 1n the Stars prne against • • Columbus Monday nipt. Canseco sajd be underwent treatment on his wrist before the J&!!!e and it ••still feels a linJe sore." wrbis 11 like aprina uainina. •• be said prior to the pme, won by Columbus 2-I . "In s,P!ina tnfoini pmcs. you don't play the whole game. Right now, I just don't want to push iL" Jn other bucbaU news: • Joee Gonzaln of the Los An&cles Dodaers. wbo bit .468 last week., was named Monday as the NationaJ Leque Player of the Week. Gonzalez bad a homer and a double amona his 11 hits, scorina three times and wa1kinl five times. He beat out Howard Jobmon of the New Y one Meta, 1ut week•a Player of t.be Weck. •Frank Viola, last year's American ~ Cy Youns Award winner, was named AL Player of the Week. t.be third straiaht Minnesota player to earn that boGor. Viola, who bepn the year 1-S. wu 2-0 last week with two complete .-mes. allowina only one earned run in 18 inninp in wins Q..Ver Oakland and California. • The Pbiladelf>ltia Phillies announced pitcher Steve Ontiveros notified the club that he has decided to have 1WJ1tfY on his injured pitching elbow and will not play the rest of the teason. Ontiveros. 28, was examined last week by Dr. Frank Jobe in Los Anaeles and &iven the choice of a possible rest cure or an operation to repair l.ipmcnt damale. '1\I OIC 11 \f.11 B\'I B\11 ' an alJ-lealue standout at Miami of Ohio. , "There are followers and there arc leaders, and Randy Aycn hat always been a leader," said Darrell Hcdric. his c:oacb at Miami. •·v ou could telJ be was aoina to be a coach from day one. He knew that's what be wanted to be. But you could tell he was going to be successful no matter what he· did." h I I A-yers was the last player cut by the NBA 's Cbic.aao Bulls af\cr lf'lduation in 1978 and spent one year playina in a scmipro lcque before moving to the sidelines u an assistant coach. "He was a player who almost (made) it as a pro. ,• . That's the beat experience you can have as a coach," said Lee ... He knows what it's like to be a talented player out there. He's still a youna guy, so he knows what we're 1oin1 throufh. Sometimes, head coa~hcs tct •.•.. ~' · so far away from playang that they forget what we tt • / · goinl throuab." . '· Chris Jent, a 6-7 sophomore forward, said, "I think ~ · this is aood because Coach Ayers knows us all. It's , 1 •. ~1 • .;.--,~ 11 •• '• touah wnen a new &UY comes in. He thinks he knows "You're right, Dick, It does look llke everybody and how they react to certain cin:umst.anccs. Armageddan ... WAAAHI Old you see that?! I But it's hard for him. Coach Ayers knows us." sank a chip shot! I sank a chip shot!!" Guard JamaaJ Brown, who staned all 34 Ohio State games last season as a freshman, said. "This is what -. most of the players wanted. We won't skip a beat. It's Rose's suit -changes courts not like a new coach coming in, where everybody would _ have been (like first-year players)." C NCINN Tl p R • I · . l A -etc osc s awsuat ,.~ . Ayers as the first black head ~sketbaJI coach at against Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatu ~. qh10 State and the fourth in Big Ten Conference ~ was moved into federal court Monday, but . . history. it may be sent right back to state court. tp I 0 I I . 0 I I H I U \ \ DavW c..e, New York Mets staTting pitcher. after teammate Dwight Gooden became the third youngest pitcher. at the ag~ of 24, to reach 100 career victories: "Dwight is e freak of nature to us normal ,1uys. You can't emulate what he has accomplished." Mccumber captures playoff OAK BROOK. Ill. -It took Mark .,; McCumber lonaer to act ready for Mon-e uay's sudden-death playoff at the Western ----Opep than it did for rum to win iL McCumber, who took an hour .of treatment for his ailina back before teeing off. defeated Peter Jacobsen on the first extra bole to win the SI million toumamenL McCumber made a routine par-4 while Jacobsen - who lost last year's Western Open with a double botey on tbe 72nd hole -three-putted from 40 feet. with his short par putt curlina out of the cup. It was McCumber's first tour playoff victory, his second Western Open triumph and his seventb win of his PGA career. The playoff ,had to be carried over until Monday because darkness sci in after ihc two players ended up at 13-undcr-par i7S for 72 boles Sunday in a round delayed 31/z hours by rain. Both players a~ that it wu too dark to continue. Actina on a motion by baseball's lawyers, Judges Carl B. Rubin and Herman J. Weber of U.S. District Court in Cincinnati said that because technical requir· , mcnts had been met, the coun was acccptina the 'bsc even thou~ it had "substantial doubt'. that the suit should be 1n federal court. · Because Rose is "closely indcntificd with the Cincinnati Reds and the city of Cincinnati," the judges said the case would be moved to federal court in Columbus, Ohio. where it was assigned to Judge John D. Holschuh. Reuven J. Katz, a lawyer for Rose, said papers would be filed Wednesday with Holschuh ask.ing that the case be sent back to state-court. "We do not believe there is any merit to it," Katz said. "We will file by Wednesday morning our motion to remand." Earnhart holds points lead DAYTONA BEACH, Aa. -The top .jf;. thrtc drivers in Winston Cup racing had ~.:.:'. subpar showings in Saturday"s Daytona 400 • • but retained their positions in the latest standings released Monday by NASCAR. Rusty Wallace, Dale Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip finished 17th. 18th and I 9th in the race at Daytona International Speedway. Earnhardt continues to lead the Winston Cup standings with 2171 points. Wallace is second with 204 7 and Waltrip third with 2014. The next Winston Cup race 1s July 23 in Pocono. Pa. Higuera continues -success against Yankees Brewers ace improves t o 1 1-2 lifetime vs . N Y.. in 8-5 w in ''°"' TN A'90dMed ,.,... Teddy Hi&uera is .,.eat apinst the Yankces. ••1 pitch t6e ume apinst every team but I don't know what tbey think of me," be uid Monday niabt aftet Milwaukee tot 16 hits and beat tbe Yankcct i.s. Hipeta. 3-2, allowed 10 bits and four runs in elaht- olus inniftllt 1triki111 oua six and walki,._ none. It was his I Ith YJctory IP.inst New York 1n 13 career decisions. ·~0ae of the ahinp Teddy does is throw bUd early and t.bcn try to paint the come~" said catcher B.J. SWboK, who drOve in two nans with RBI siftlla in the sixth and 1eventb inni.ftal. DU PlcMc firulbed for his 20lb 1Ave in 2S opponunities. Milwaukee, which bad 14 tl1t1 in Sunday's 10-2 vlclOry over New Y Olk. trailed l· 1 bief«e raltyiq_ for five runs in the sixth off Dave Eiland. l·l, Ind Clftl Qlditet hits. The Onob 1COm1 at least one run in each of~ lint six mninp. With Baltimore leed1na S-3 in the fourth, TtttJeton homered off Mike Schwabe, his 20th homer of the eeason. Ttt,ltton also drove in a run in the first with . a .,ouodout Mike Smith won bis fint major-league decision. pi&dun& four 1COreless inninp in bis second appearance ror the Orioles. Doyle Aleu.nder, 4-8, pve up five runs Mad lill bitt in 3 1·3 inninp and is winless in seven IWU lince May 29. AIMedct 1, .. ,... t: Dave Stewart became the American Leque'a Rnt 13-tame winner and Dave Partier drove in the only nan u host Oakland won its fou111l ttrailht. SteWUt. l~. allowed four hiu in eilbt..plus in- ninaa, IU'UCk out teven and walked none. Todd Bums 0 a and Rick Honeycutt finished with hitless relief. with Honeycutt pining his 10th save. Mark Gubicza, 8-6, pitched his maJor leaguc- lcading ei&hth com~lcte pme. allowing six hits, strilun1 o ut nine and walk.ing one. NCAA looks Into llllnols CHAMPAIGN. Ill. -The Univcrs1ty * of llhnoas h.as promised to cooperate fully with an NCAA inquiry into the basketball ----· proaram over the recruiting of a prospective student-athlete. . .. We are as committed as the NCAA is to knowang the faclS, and we will do everything we can to help it in a thorou&h and timely fash1on,'1 Chancellor Morton Weir said in a statement released today. "The inquiry may well find nothing amiss; 1f so, the sooner that is known the better, for all oonccrn~. If we or the NCAA find problems," h~ ad~~· "we will deal with them aperopnately and s~ftly. . Weir was informed the National CollegJatc Athletic Association's CoOlmittce on Infractions had laun~hed a preliminary inquiry of th.e basketball proaram m a letter dated June 23. David Bcrst assistant executive director of the NCAA informed Weir, "As of this date. the mfor· mation' has not been sufficiently investigated to de- termine whether an official ·inquiry 1s warranted." In other news: •Former University of Wisconsin footbaJI plajer Nate Odomes. no" a defens1ve back with the Buffalo Bills,!leaded no contest to a mariJuana charge and was la on probation tn Eau Claire (Wisc.) County t Court. The NCAA cleared Texas A&M's football pro- gram of allcptions that former player George Smith received "hush" money, saying 11 could not distinguish fact from fiction. • Former middleweight champion Carlos Monzon was convicted of homicide in the February 1988 death of his longtime companion. Alicia Muniz. and in Mar Del Plata, Argentina. was sentenced to 11 years in prison. Tt:l,E\'ISIO\-R.\010 TELEVlstON 6:30 a.m. -HOASE JUMl'ING: Grand Prht of Rancho Murleta (laoel. ESPN 9 a.m. -TENNIS: WlmbledOn tournament (delayed). Chanrnil • 10-.30 a.m. -BASEBALL: Detroit al New York VankM$, WPIX. 11:20 a m -BASEBALL: San Diego at Chical>O Cubs, WGN. 11:30 1 m. -BASEBALL.: New York Meis al Houston. WOR. 2:30 p.m. -AUTO RACING: NASCAR Pocono (Pal SOO (tape), TNN 3.30 p,m -BASEBALL: 0009ers al St Louis, Channel 11 •:3S p,m. -BASEBALL.: Montreal at Atlanta, TBS. S o.m. -BICYCLING: Tour cle France uodale, ESPN. S p.m -TENNIS: WlmbledOn tournament (delayed), HBO. 6 p.m. -BASEBALL: Tun at Angels, Channel S. 6 p.m. -BOXING: Dan Schommer vs. Alberto Gonzalez, mlddlewelght,, from Gardnervllle, Nev .. ESPN. 6·30 P.m. -AUTO RACINGt British Ot>en Rally Chamolonshlos (taoe>. SoortsChannel. 7 o.m -HOASE JUMPING: Dubai Cup from London (taoel. SoortsChannel. 11 om. -HOASE RACING: Hollvwooo Park reolan, . Channel S6 <Prime Ticket, 10:30 om ). RADIO t1:20 a.m -BASEBALL: San Diego at Chlcaoo Cubs. KFMB (760). • 3:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers al SI. Louis, KABC (790) 6 o.m. -BASEBALL.: Tens at ,Angels, KMPC (710). HALEY IOIC 1111 IClfOICU MAJOlt L•AOW ITANDtMGS ~ ...... WMt OM.- ~ w L; f'd. G8 0.klend so 3t .610 ..... 41 3t .StS l'h ~•nia1Cltv ~ 36 .550 s THH ~ 3' .sso s Mlnnesote ., 40 506 ,,,, Seallle 37 '3 .~ 12 Chic.go 32 SI .JU 1e•n EHt DMllM Battlmore 45 3• .S70 New York 39 41 ... 6'1J BOiton JI 40 "87 6'1J MllweukH 39 •3 476 71/) Toronto JI '3 .469 • Cleveland 37 '3 .~ .. , Detroit 31 ... 392 14 MeMleY't k-.....-s. r .... t MllweullM I, Ntw Yorlt. s 0.-..llnd •. Cnlcloo 1 Tor.mo J, Botton 1 """'-' 11. Detroit • OelUelld I. Ken111 City 0 Onl\I eames 1Cll4tduleO T .. Y'tG-. 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Brtn,.man, Tl\lro McCllllend T-He A-?f.61• NATIONAL LEAGUE Pirates 4, Oodears 2 ~ITTSBUltGH LOS ANGELES 8ond' II L11>02b VanSlvll Cf '°"""lb GW1lson rl Lanorm o Ol"fno lb RQunns u Blleroenc Jltobntn o lflteviot rt Tet"' arllbl •brllbl J 0 0 I ACiflHtn u J 0 I 0 4 000 ltndl0117b 1 010 ) I I 0 G10l0fl H • 0 0 0 • I I 2 Murrev lo • 0 0 0 3 0 l 0 Mersl\lt rl • 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 Sc >Otel• c • ' ' 0 l I 1 0 Hemtln lb 3 I I ., l 0 O O C.on1111 ct J o o O 4 I I I Morten o I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 MIOen P" I 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 BtlCl\tr P 0 0 0 0 30 • ' 4 Totelt 2t 1 S 1 Score bV lnnin9S Plmtlur9" 012 000 100-4 Lit........ 001 000 100-2 E-Moroan LOB-Plll\burllh S Lot An11tlt\ 6 28-Scooscie HR-8on1M• 110) Hamlnon Ill S-MOtoan. JRoC><n\on 1tQu1nont\ SF -Bond• H•mlllon IP H It Ellt B8 SO ~ithburtft Jltooll\SOO W,S-6 1 7 1 6 Landrum S 10 0 O 2 , Les Anetlfl Moroen L. S·9 8 3 2 1 8t•cl\tr I I 0 0 0 7 H8P-D•"etano ov Moroan. BK-JRotM~on Umpfr tt-Homt Tata Flftl 0.Mutl\ !>le ono ltlootv. Tl\i<O Froemm1no T-22S A-19 673 II 0 IC St·: IC \ ( I '\ f; Wit .... C•t Wll•••••:. .,,....., Ma .. ,_. . .._...~ Stlll•n Edb«t, S•IOlfl, def Amos Miii soorl, ,.,. ... , •·•. 4-J. 4 2, Tim Meyot11. Boston, ctef Mlc:l\HI Cl\a/lll, Plecantle. 6·l , 6· I, 6·J, Me" Wltende<. Swedtn, def Cl\tltto ven lltl'l\butt, Soutll Alroce, l-4 1· S. 7·S, 6·3; D•n OOIOle, Meleen, Ve , def SIOOoden Z>votl'IOYIC, Yuoos&evte, 6·•. •·•, 1·• ti·•>. Peut Cllemtltf'tln. TOllOO, Of\IO, cMf Ltll Sl\lfH , Mllwt~M. 7·S. 6 4, 7·6 (1·41. JOlln McEnroe. Covt Nect., N Y • def Jonn Fitr11trel0 Au\tret 11, 6·3. 0-6. 6·•. 6·•. Borl1 14cKtr, Wes t Gtf'manv, dtt Aeron Krlchttln, C.rou1 Po1ntt, Mien , 6·4. •·•. 1 S Ivan l.tnd1\ Ciacl\oslOvalll• cMf Peter Luncklren, Swtdtn. ·6. 7 6, 6·1 6·• l'lnt •eunc1 Deutlltt Jote Oal\tr eno Fer,..nao Roese 8ra11t def Eoole Edward1, Soutll Africa end Gr19 H04Me' S.lt Lake C1tv. 6·4, 6·4 6·• Kevin Curren, Au\lln T ta as 111<1 D•v>O Pett La\ veeas, 0-4 Mert Flur Durl\lm N C •no Joty ltlvt , FOii Lau0ero.i. Fla 7·• 17·01, 7-6 (1 01. 3 •· • I, Sco11 Devil Leroo Fte '"° Ttm Wlllt.lson, A\l\lvllle, N c ~ 8reo Gtl~I. P~t ano Oery MUiier, Soutr1 41nce 6·1 16·•>. 7·6 (7·lJ, •·•. • 3 •·1 Jonn F·•zotre•d, Avttralle. encl Ano.rt Jerrvo SwtOM d-' Matt Anger ADtot. encl Merty Devit Heroor Bl'f '"' ' 7 (0-7) ' • •·• •·• 11· 16 *'"' llteund D.ullltt lttCll LtKI\, Llll\ll\I 8.ecn. ano Jom Pvon Patol Veroe\ Oef Nlek ~own 111<1 Nick FulwOOO, &r.111n 6· I 7 S 6·4 Jev.,. Frene Ar~tone ertd Ltoneroo Lavt111, Mt•teo oef JOl\n L•llt, R0111no Hlllt el\CI Bruce Men $on H1n9, Gttndete 6 4 6 • 1 6 Pieter 4klrlc" el\d Danit Vittet, Sovtl\ Air kt 094 BroatrlO DYii.•. Auttra111 •"O Tom Nlinf<'. Net,,...tandt 6·7 l• 71. 1·6 !1·1). 1·6 11·•1. 6·3 Gree Ven Emt>urOI\ N•Dlt\ Fla eno Simon Yout, Au'· lrelle dtl S11pr1111 Bot11e10 end Jame\ T "' ner. Brlleln. 7·6 17 •1. 6 l . 6 4 Gu.llle<1mt Reou.<1. Frence Eric WlnOGr•d\kV, Frenc e def Brea Drewett and wauv M•wr """"•II• 6·1 6·•. 1·6, 1·6. 6·l, Sammv G•emmatve, Hou\lol', •110 C.ttnn Levtndtclitr. Porto11 Velltv oet Omer C•mPOrese and Oie110 Nergi,o. lletv, 6 3, 6·1 6·4, Plltr Ooona11 al\d Leurit Weroe< Autlret· le, Ott Vllev Amrotre1 Ind•• 1rto Cnr1t Beiley, Britain 1 S, 6 I 7·6 t7·o . Oor•n lv•ni\tvlc, 'Vu110tlavle , encl Nicolet Pereira, Vtnewete, dtl K81tv Everl\dtn, New ZHlend eno Jonan Kriek N•Dll\, Fl•. 7-S. 1 '· 6-l 1·6 (7·•1. I(~ Fleet\. Stbflrt9, Fie , eno ltolHtrt St9u~. s.t>i· 1no. Fie oef M•tottav Mecir C1ecr10\10vel\t1. ano Merlo. WOOOforot ""'''•"• 3 6 6·7 19· 1 I) 6 ) 6 • 1·6 WOM•N F .ur1t\ lteuftd ~ C•"""' L1noov1st Sweoen oci Helen• Sul<ov" C1tenottovatu1 6 4 7·6 1 SI, Ar•nlao s.ncn.11. Soe·n, Ot1 LOf MC.Neil. HousJoa. 6·3. 2 6. 6 1 Aosetyn Faoroen1' Sou1n 41rtee def Me<Y Jot Fernenoti M.am• •·•. 1·6 6·0 Mertine Navrelllove, Fort Wortl\, Tun , oe1 ..._ ~ ..... , ~., ...... ,, •·t, ~. ~ kn ~. _. Je·AMt FWll, A11.1tre•ll. •·1 (S•ll ... 1, •·t, ~• o.i.r .. , llel\I, CMf J-Ho1tOllll, C~ ...... 1·• <7 O. 1·• •·•. Ovit E¥9tt, 1oca .. IOll. Fie , °"' P111v FeM!dt, s.cr-10, 6·2, 6-2, S1eff1 ~·' wn1 Garmenv, def N\ofUC.I S... YUOOIJl•I•, •·O, 6 I ~·---o.... Cleu411 Kol\de·KllKI\ Wnl Gannan\I, 111C1 Clew•• POf'wl11 wn1 C.«manv. def L.119" Anlll Eldl"90N, Allffenl. Cellf . and Lnirt O M&llcwen. ltelend. 6·1, 6-f, ~Y awne, Auslretla, end ltOOln White, Sall JoM, Gel Heidi Se>runo. A1111r11 end Kim Stllnmell, 51 L.Ouls, •·•. •·I, P9ertut Httl>ef', kn FrMCIKO, end wenov WM•. Atlente, Clef Pennv B111, NOf'll\ Mleml Btecn. Flt . •lld lt011nlt Itel\, Mleml, 6·2. >-•. •· 1. Ellt11Ht111 SnltU. •net wenov Tu<nbuM. Au\lrelle, Gel A~ Mlnttf', Austrelle, end Julie ltlel'lerdson, New ?Nlend, •·•· 6-l, 6·J. Menon 80lle9ret, Ntt~te!ICft, end E•• Pfek, WHt C.ermenv, o.t Berti.re ll"otttr Woodbury Conn end Ketnv ltlnelOI, Amell• Island, Fie , 1·• (1·61. 1·2, Ketrlne Adlms, ClliC•90 •nd line C.ernson, Houston, Gel ltosle CHllS, S.u~llO end Sl•eron Pete, Albu QUl<CIUI, NM •·. ' J N•Coit Provl\. Aus•ret )• •nd Elna ltelnecl\, Soutl\ Alrlc:e. or 'i11 N• Sert C•4r!IO end Sl\eun Stefford C.1•1Mtvlilt Fl• •·I ••.• J C.lel F101enoe1 P.-10 It co 11\0 Lor• McN•M HO\i\IOll oef LINS.I Ber111ro end Keren Scn·m-Soutl\ Alrtc.e 4·J 6·2 Et" Buro1n. 81t11more eno ltMelVn Fe f Denll Soutn Atroee. 1111 B•I" Hlfr DavtOI\, Ol\4o ano Cendy ltt'fnolOt tr.no •• ,,. T""' • I 7 S Jane Novotne encl He1tne Suto.ova C1p<l\O\IO v•"·• o.t 8et11na 8 un11t West Germal'v eno Catar,na l llC!ov1\I, Sw-n 7·6 17 31 1 S Mert.na N•vrelllova Fort wortl\ Ttaet •nd p,,., Sl\rlvt r Lullltf'v11,_ MAJ Oti Terry P"-'P' Lerc11mon1 N v end ltatf11tta lteeo; ltatv 6 0 6 l Pe try Ftn<1;c11 Secr•m.nto. eno J1M Hetnennvton. Ceneoa <•I def 881·ncl• 8orneo arto Ctere Wood 8r11a1n, 6·0 6·1 s1ett1 Gr•I Wttl Germany and C.et><ltle S•OIM; Aroent•n• ciet L '" C.reeorv Soutl\ AfriCa, ano C.retcl\tn Me~rt Sen Anton~. 6·3, 6·0 Cnrl\ E veri Boca ••ton, Fie and Ha111 Mano11~ov• Aust•••••· Ott LO\ilse Allen. Wlnston ·Satem, N C ano MOllV van Nour•no, Brlolllw•ttrs NY 6 J 6 l. E•t Plett, Wttl Germ•nv, ano Menon Bottter•I. Ntll\trland,, o.i Kattlv ltln•tol. ,..,,.tit ltlend Ft•, •no 8111>1r• Pot· '"· WOOC!burv COM 7·6 11·6). 1·2. rtllfed DAVEY'S LOCK•R (Ntw.-t ... Oii -7 ooatt 43S en111t" JU 111rrecuc:t1, 11• bOnllo I cod 1 l\llfOut, 137 cetoeo °'" l'U ""° bin is meekl!ftf o 'culo•" .. DIW oercn 2 tele S U>ttOtl\leo 14 roc1r.1ts11. 1 blue tnari,, (r etu..O) NEWftOtlT LANDING -S boll' 204 angJea . ~S seno bell. 44 o.rrec..oe. ' oonuo. 26 rnec,.trtf 10 rocllhtn. II teu•P•n S tneeotnt1d. 113 cat-co oeu 21 04ul o.rcl\ t cebuon HllYWMd f'arlr -DAY'S lll~TS SUITM •llCI • ~ ltomet1 P°"'I !Sol •I 0 tO ISOO S 40 Nev., II , M IC--.J 1110 S 00 Ln Aa.mH9S ~4T'S lllSUt.n e , ., .... L-" 10....'Cll-t U• )20 ....... ,., IC.,UKOI ... nm. • ',,. Uhl .. M·•w -........ _, P'lllST llACL I I 16 M-.. V-• •O••-'l 4 .. IHO 710 ~·• Na\•'• (a\Ktl.t ... 40I Xtl't"-t l•~ LI.IC' tOa•ll l .0 T• .... l •S1 SICOMO ll.4CI t '"'-' ,..,,,. • ., ToOln l(tlr~M '10 JtO 1'0 NH•e -llleH) 00 J 10 Pronte\\ O•bOf•" f\10•1 .. , ; .0 r 1,,,. 1 10 J U OAILY 00\JILI 11·11 "If 00 WM T•M>...,.• l"-01111 1'0 Tl-111 • $1V•MTM llACI • ,,,,_, llil"CMlf 0.ov• (O<ft .. 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Clotu•-• IC•ot f 00 1 • 1 JO Mon F .-< ~of!< I 0.-c• 1111 2 .. l It )ff .. ~ illle<lll J .. U UlM:T4 1'·tl H NI tlfot 1 JO IL.IVIWTM llAc l >Jt v., .. J .. °"'*-U-IP!Ol"'l""I •oe J • , ., o .... " -tW.19111) , • IN~.,..., .. .,. r ......... '1 IUCTA "fl M IO ,U .. 1• ,. . •• e>r.,. eo.c DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, July•. 1911 llS f ,o I t • I Tom KIM 2 Sttvt ,,_ l Mark Cek.eveccn1e • Curtlt Stre1111t s C"IP e.o.. 6 Frid COUPiet 1 P1ynes1 .... •'"' I Scott .rlocll ' Mer1l McC IM'l'\4>er 10 Mark O'Mffr• 11 PIUIAJ'- 11 llM OIHM>n 13 Tim ~mi>son I• C.r" Norma" 1S lo«>Twn 16 JOOlt MUdO 11 Crelo Stadler 11 8ruet Lltlll<t If G-S.u.r\ 20 Nlc.t. F1100 11 "'" C.rHI\ 11· Sanov L•tt 2l Scou Slmc>SOf\ 24 Ot'fld Frost 1S Tom Byrum 76 wav,..Greov 17 Miki Sullivan 21 GI MorHll 1f Oa.,lt Love Ill lO Nlek Price JI &ari CreMhew l2 Oevld Oorln J3 J>mC.,.ttr ,. Davia Eowaro' JS B McCelhlll!f 3' Sttve Pett l7 Mllo.t HulDer! ll Merl< W'- )f ltoOtrl WrtM 40 1.,, 8eker-FlnG11 • 1 Peter Jacoown 4f Oevt ltummeltt 4l L~Ml1t .U Ml"e lltlo •S. ~•t Sulton "'Lorenltooer" •1 Jonn Hut1on • Lenny Wedl\on\ 4' Dan Pon1 SO Larr v Nelson Sl Kennv Perrv S2 Joev Sindlflr SJ Fuuv Zotll¥ ~ DonPO<Hy SS Ronn" Btetk S6 Stl'le e ttunoton S7 Tommy Armour ~ Wn,..Lev1 St Teel S<?lvlt 60 Greo Twtoo\ 6 I Mika Donel<! 62 Dave &err 6J Tom WaltOf' AA !kid F"ewon 65 Jey Don 811~e 6' Bred 8r111ftt 67 OoM•tHt~ 61 Ktftnv Knoa '9 J Get1eo,,., Jr 70 Bernl\aro Lenoe~ 71 Lon Hl,,..le '1 Ed Flori 73 Clertne.ltow H &Illy lltav Brown 75 Ccwl'V Pavln 16 S.vt 8aflttlerot ••saULL ........ ueeue .... ,_,... . ....... Uff.016 011141 Uzt,lt7 •ms~ ~.~ M1t,n2 ~·~ ... u .. ..,.,007 Ml7 .... us• m 13SU11 Ul0.030 1321 240 U09,S26 $2'0 l2l t2tt.7'• sm lf'J ,,.. Ill nts t3S '~~ '71' 111 '771 401 n s1 '31 n s1 n1 '240 )41 t737 llt U3S 11l sm11s sn6 42S 'ns n• •n• .,. sn••lf 'n'"" '71' .,, '110 2Sl "°'in noe.•9• ':xM l•S '100,79S t 19S 9t9 11'3."° 'lt? 919 '190 171 '117 7lt0 '116.•52 ,1 ... 113 \Ill s It '111 6SS '"I 07' t ISt.t'lO SlSf 2 ... $1$7 512 t lSl.ttS '151.lM 'IS0.801 "so 101 ''•HQ '141 211 ''ll 111 l Ill '5J '1]7 ll7 '1J7 143 '137 ISt ",. m '1ll 1l2 \Ill ,.. tlfl 111 '127 6'l ',,. 170 '120 '31 ,120 "6 1111 us ""Jet t 116.lt4 PHILADELPlitA PHILLIES-Pieced Jonn k rux, O\ilfltflllr, on 1111 1$·d•v d•Mllil<I tlst Catted UP Jim AO<lvcl. O\itt..ioer ·first lleseme" trom Scr1ntOt1·Willln·Berre Of tile tnttrnatoona1 LNOIJI .. OOTSALL c-4111111'..-.auaeue HAMIL TON TtGER·CATS--lt ... eMICI BU"t Cumm11111s wloe rec.iver, l.eonaro 1-\ co- ntrbe<ll, ano •· ScGMrO SIOIOec" COLLIGI OHIO STATE-fUmecl llenov A..-. ,.,_., betlletDlll COICll. OHIO UNtVEllSlTY-4IWIOUflUCI "'81 Johll .. ...tot-o Clftler !\at left 1111 beuefbeG 1 .. m end wlA lreMI• lo _,,..,. K.l\OOI PltlNCET~romolld Amy C.tnDCllll to et\1t11n1 d•r tctor Of etl\leta Nemed M JonnM>'I es"•'•"' women·s Ol"'-ttbell coec:ll Chang meets mat'h ly STEPHEN R. \lllLSON WIMBLEDON. En.&)and -For the past month., there seemed to be no shot. no s1tua11on. no opponent that Michael Chang couldn't handle. He was in the cloak of invincib1h- ty that ttnn1~ pla>ers call "The Zone ·· where nothing seems to go v. rong. and 1f 11 does. you sull have the confidence the shots and the luck to win On Monda) at Wimbledon. the 17-)ear-old French Open champion tumbled back to earth. cut down to size b) a fellow A.mcncan who taught him a ksson <tbout pla) mg on grasi. h was no contest. 1n fact, as Tim Ma) Otte served 'olle)'ed and even drop-'oholled his way past Chang 6-3. 6-1 b·3 in one hour. 43 minutes "Everybody's aware when a pla)'er gets on a roll, and Lhe) want to be th\.' o ne who stops 1t," Mayotte said. "There's a collc-cuve thing about not wanllng one gu} 10 domina te or win too much." On the surface. the result was not a big surpnsc. Mayotte. the eighth seed. is a gras\.coun veteran who has reached the Wimbledon quarterfinals five limes and made the semifinals m 1982 C'hang. seeded one notch belov. Ma}'otle. 1s a natural basehner pla)- 1ng 1n onl) his second W imbledon -and iJ'en w little ChlflCC of w1nn1ng b) some that John McEnroe even threatened to drop his shorts on .Centre C'oun 1f Chang reached the finals. But Chang alrcad~ had defied the odds by becoming the youngest male pla>er to win the French Open. unraveltng top-seeded Ivan undl 1n a five-set marathon and outplaying Stefan Edberg tn the final. He continued his roll at the All England Club. swcep1n~ into the round of 16. running his winning streak to 12 matches and getting stronger on the grass each day. But ll all came apan against May- otte. who ex~sed Chang's biggest weakness -R1s serve Chang said he wu sausifed to get as far as he did "I th1nl ll was a good tournament for me. To lCt to the round of 16 m m> second )Car 1s quite good;· he said "I hope next )'Car I can do better." How far can he go? " ' "I want to Wln everything. .. Chang said. "l want to be No. I. l want to be the be1t. Hopcf ull). no tour- nament 1s going to elude me .. From North Orang@ CCM.#rty From South Orange County 540-1220 496-6800 CLASSIFIED INDEX 642·5678 "~'1.1••• .. ~.· ,.. I.I Corona def Mar 1022 Hunt. ltacn 1040 Newport IHd'I 1069 Corona def Mar 2122 c-. Mtsl 2124 Coa Mtsl 2124 ~It.ch 2169 Cozy 2BA Coctage • Stu-Tll llOln'l Im •UM l&YFlllT • 2 BR, 1 BA troot House * Nwpl Rl\liefa 48A 2'.,BA LUil "'111 s 1225,Mo 3Br 2·~a.. 2· '"°"' "°"'" OMNQI co . '"OM IOUTM O..AMOa CO. ..... ,. -1111 oaAOl.MI ~~··· -·-· -· ,....,_ ·-&::::' ... ~ .... "" ..... := :::: ...... , ....... '"r.' 1!!-w. ;:: ·.· n C .. CK YOUR AO TM F9"8T DAY ........................ ........_ .... ... .,,.~...._... .................. ................................. NC•...,,_,,,.., ........ ...., ...-.rl ,,,............ ..... "" ,.. ...... ..... ......................... ..... .. .. ................... ~ ...... ~,,....,_ .... ---...... .., . -...... ......... .. _... ... -.... (,.... , .. ........................ .,.. ......... -4 .......... .. ....................... ..., .......... .. ..,,.....~ .... ......,,.. .......... .. ....... _.... ......... , .... ... ................................. Let the~ In dntlfted help~ write.,.. ad that will 1et responte • d10 on R·2 lot nice build Frplc, retr1g. laundry FrplC, gar. yard, poot spa car gar new ca..-. & Ing apot to edG Only Just lllled-4tl\ ol July LocatlonlL<><:atlonl room $1 ,050/mo S1•00Nopets722"'8011 38A 28A home on vwy . .,,_. $472 500 Agt 673 !1354 FIA~CAACl<EAI Model Superb Homet 673-4565 Of 759·9570 EveslWknds 722·8140 private trM-11'*' strMt !)91nt Avetl now 4309 • pertect lrg •BA 2'.,BA Specious Lot' wllarge lot New rool Pair~ Ag!. 557-..373 HIMn/Condos hOIM near Ocean w/111sh Extra larQe dock' *•OCEAN VIEW 322 E 23rd S1 fences, doon & Windows. Century 21 Prol 11.Get_-.ier.11 ______ 1_00_2 COSU Mts.1 1024 landscaping & many IX· Will consider trade Cell 'BA 3''1BA temlly rm 2 3BA 2BA. large yard. AV S 1500/rno • 1 year to 2BR 2·~BA Condo f'llONy 1I .as.l~rll *PRIME EASTSIOE J BA tre.s A value al $397 .5001 Carolyn Ross Merrill Ir p I cs 2 c &I g 1 r acCftS. S 1365/mo _..,, buy at $329,000 Ex-uwtded t'Pk'. Newport OC>Pot•te Cei.'"S~hool home • rental HUQe IOI lo SM, Call PATRICK Lynch Reefty 673-7677 12950/mo Agl 673·53S.t gardener 644-0711 elusive listing! CAll North $1400/mo AV11 3eo• ocean. canyons & $319 900 Sr-ry TENORE 721· 1200 Agt 72&-7262 3 Homes to cc..,, Blvd 3BRH OUM 1·~ea bi9 ..,., ••4 now 729-7250 •97-9918 mtns view 3BR 2BA Co•how. Bkr 64&-8003 llAnY *'If .llLJ SAIDJ IUCH 3BA 28A, lam rm, $2500 yard. near South Coasl II 1·JJU * * lll' 1' .. hOme on hHltop F~. EASTSIOE 5BR 39A on ... IOAJU mo 1tt. IU1 .. MC 2 t6 l>lau gardener incl pvt road • orctlerd in-tr .. ·flned atr .. t 3BR (0V9f 1100,000,000 So+d•) WITll DOCI! Jasmine SI 759-9070 $1150/mo 557.57,7 S~1~9~ =,,:':.·&-'=~ come S895,000 Of will 28A pool home on cul· Beachlront prvt ro1d S785 CUTE Cape Cod 28' trade for OC properly d•1ac A.gt 673-8700 &8' on the watet. 'BR 1BA. conve<tlble den. wood floors. n aw *___,* 970-2127 or 855-6997 31-'BA. pnvata petto an· s 995 v E ..... 3 ... r 1y E'Slde. Oe>en Sun t-5, 3 tranc:41 s 1 ,95.000 28A, dbl garage 1 c1rpet1p11nt 111111us.cS iew aec .,... ... *"" KJlllS •::::. ~ 6 BR. 2BA. lg llltchen, A.gt 673•5354 bncil S~5-'= )'9td NEWPORT TERRACE 3BA ~ l2SOO I.gt 7!!°!.322 hardwood lloore, open lrvlnt 1044 •llO•llOO• Charming Frencn Country 28A v+ew, end un11 on 15 •RENTAlS AVAILABLE COLDWC!LL BANl(eR~ E\l>t'\1 tJk•ht.·-..t •Y•I 11 ....... ADORABLE 1 ~story 2 BA townhome Falbuloue flOOf plan Quiel location )'9t slept to pool & 19a 4 ~rt MW Seiter ta ready 1omo..,,.1 ....... beam9d c.lling, 2 trples, 2 BR HouM. So ot PCH ALL NEW CONC><f STYLE acre park No pets *•ID ...... 385 Flower By owner 11111111 MTl ~ \\ Antique 1i11tures/BA •2 o.droom. 2 bath St751mo. • 64'· 1'80 · Mani 1\Qt ~2-nOI L.;;;:.. r'3~!= 2~:;! ~ici~t 1 (lr:J~•2+UM1 =::-11:~~~~~~;::, ~!:?.r;::: !:~~". w1d. 21 3BR 21.,0A ~Hgt-. 3BR 28 .. home ~ e nature park 17 Rustling ~ _ petlO */bulll·ln 880 & lnci, $925 end up 605 Hunt. ltld\ WIO, 2 car QIP'. gardener " "'' "ry ·wind Century 2 1 Prol ------more Avail 8 /1S Vlet0f1e ~2-9811 '* •BEACWWALt( • • lwatw-pd ll'•mllY. 110 prlva1e trM-lined street Fran 1.ugo 557~373 WllTOLlfP Ollll $1,800/mo 681·9526 .. .,.,1 Im==< lBA w/pvt TOWNHOUSE 3 br 2' t pe11. $1400/mo 111/iu, w/large lot Naw root, ' 28 A 2BA 1 1 1 "' .. ..._.. ba, double gar flrapleca. S200 dlJI) 252 Patmetr tencea, doors & window•. HOT! HOTI HOT' 1 lSS.OOO ·63 ~~5~98P00 111111 VIEW gar. d/w, atove. ceble pool spe, no peti s 1350 850--e017 or t73-03t5 11500/mo • t yur 10 Turli.tock 2BA & den only ~y. c.11 fan Pool •pa, + MCurlty 53$.-0878 -..... tkly at S320,000 e~ S335,000 Vtew of city & llLLS 880 & lndry rac t71 E •...,.. ·-clu~ Hating! CALL nac11re park 17 Au111tng Moblt Homes 22nd St 831·7376 2 S1ory TwntlouM 2Br 2 Bif'Townnom. with 11p ..,.,..... Wind Century 21 Prol. Fors. 1100 SereMc.nyonviewstrom ----1'.\Ba oar .pooC 1•.,m1to 1,UOe/f,got!COl.lf'M ... ,..... FranLugo557·4373 tt'tlelo~48A38Al'IOme .. UfJIW•lll lo t>.ach a&751mo No vi.w., ~ wfd ,.._ -••-123.000 own8f will carry tn Cofone o.i M1r 3BA 2•.,BA 2 cer g&~ pets 730~221.581·0227 ale. 2-car attc:h gar. Call -Nf'l-WDCM--rt-... lt-1<1'1--1"'!'06_.9 :,~ 1~:,,:ciM = 121001mo t~ ~~ E~~: 1 _..Niii..... ~e tor eppt 780-5494 •LmUn.J• fromt>eac;h 722-7537 •lll-1MO• a12751mo Plait 1182 Llndenwood Nr 00EANFA0NT·PENIN8 • Ex--.iie COnl*'llPor....., Prop«h• 642·9797 Baec h/Oa rlleld 3br 3BR 28A-$tUO. Aernocl, ,.'11'om. -1 2' •be 2-Qll' anci ger ~ ac>c>4 A.veil lml'Md. ~''°' PT~~~· ... Ill II.Ill ~~ .,, ....... ,. Nu pnt/e<pl Pallo. lrplt 723-0352. 7804111 lrg pier i el p '2.050,000 28A 18A e.mall yerd *LARGE UPQtaded 28R f>Temlaea N9 Pool/Spa 12 N9'# d .. ~ cuitom BIHQrvnctyAnr g1w 1e 1 clubflouae. swimming 2'~8A ~ 1tory, 2 paOo.. N·pat1 11200 mo 28R 1.,,, St,400 "°"'*-llt~led In East· __ Po04, ~IZI 111 In • 5 country ltltchen. pool, 111/LaatJStOO Sec VILLA 8AL90A ,.,,,hie, ......... "~·1 M ..... ..,. ••.,.Ill.I* ,,., ~ H<lfM Pari1 tenriili 2 cet oataoe No '3000 ~"' '41 '°'., 29A d..-. & 1--...:: we.,.---.... ;;" ;z.a .::· ~P'EN 11 ... 1•11119 ~· No P81• &oe1 -"P SPIOlllS 211 pe11 °' amottrna s ,,50 Ov•1Ew "4-etU w nd vtew9,, 900-·"'Y• HOU•5. '""&AYDAY~ 1rrr 4J* bte MUST SELLI Agl 816-4112 P.EMUILSw.A •IA De" 0ALE80UT ASSOC Sophi9"Caled and eitoant iVIHG ~t ol Slale Condo quiet comp .. • -lrvtnt 2 I 44 t't.le pa110S1 175 a"1·7-... noma.c:iommand"""main ONLY S.28,600 Ot beat Welk to t1t•t"thlnn l ~... ' ........... '2•• .... -._.., Channel ""*8. •Tt> for Oller 8VHll1S·5120 $1'50/mo' " 38R 28" twnt'tme • dplx, 28fll 28A 11'1 Walnut L~~t~U QOO 2'""· 1a.oeyect'l1p1u12amellef dey91"2-.4321 ••1 437 tormatdlnfnO,lndrv.trj)te. SQuete, AIC, IQ J>'l'IO fn.u,rs .3M ..,,;..,,, 980 aide Ilea, ~ !04, a.rt for ~ •• ..._1•• 2 Giit garage & yard Xlnt ~ ,..°.!'......., ~.} U$O NW~T HOTS~ • .,_ &2.0S0,000 Catt Cnetl ....-condl No P4tla I 10$0 mo r-..,.. .. ,. 81 9.,....5402 + pooU2 790 Swift 723-0ISt ~II 631-128' Beeutlf\11 Ht'lhwd hWW'n, 2 HAA VU HtLlS. ,.,....., Qrubb & Elltl AMllOfl •·TIE WITEI !AITStO! o.ki•• SIR bed 2'' b• tnoo Nu ••A. hctwd .._., nu MHl200 28A 28A Mob1te noma. S t'AIA 2 ttory ,.lfeplace, T1itttln rtne;I\ t'tome. 3 bed -~I pe!IM~ U.• 1 -.. ft -8 1• P•k. Mt.&00. 2 Cat garaee. S 1l00/mo 2be,t1500. 651·1411 ()efAN ,. T , ~ ....,. ••-.. UTJ-14 Av8"1/15Afll7Mt12 lae)~fWn.~~ tO?VIARAVENNA ~INdt 2148 13400 38111 2''8.A M75.000 ~ ·~ UITW-;. ·-"'°° AMA '""'" ... t16 .. t30 •I .ut lln #II ¥-:! ........... 2124 ---MA, 141119,.., ywo, * -•• * l*t pool, 9"' ~ .__ -acer ow...-. llv.i4 .,,, •• sa~ i•• Huie tot, v... we UIOO .... 'Jm• '1.ttiO NlW C.. COd t 1H07rno ,.... Def\• f't to Cat ... ne Cltff'4AYIN ..... 3 •. 2" ... ffplO, ID ..., ... l4000tmo '* -. .• , .-..... & .. a• ao.t1, pwt Mtoo"'-. 111-aNI No lllUf'I _. to bell IAYnQ!fT lt ._,""' uted btlCk/yatd IMctl ,. ... -.. .,,.. ... J9Ao .... ~ ... bf..-. M5-2MI ........ "'"' . 4trtra ~ M;:r90 11100/mo • .. , .... ,, 9 It ......... .. _ - ce"' W4 o....,.m 2122 c;_.,a;; ''•m OCIAN Ww ..... tM •IAITtldl Jlr , .. CCM· 111 • •Hll .n .... _,, '* •l!ACt4 ClOH* * ....... * •Hiil * 277 .. .... I ..... dedl,........ ..... trple, at~. plft eft• 28R. 1',YA T~ H..w 1 .. •ltor!MI ..,_ 28A & MA, 1 & 2 BA Deluxe 2BR. 2'~BA eeeh HUHTI ON BY THE LUil IPfm ....,, ........ _.to ~ ~ nr pOOI, tlopeca 11CIGOllMtnY"•+ ttance , 1m1ll ,.,d, PoOI. pstlO, email pet ok .,.., OIW. oek clblueta, 1716 & up C.. BR°""" BA GREAT FOR S!A RV ~ARK 2 OOO IQ n comrnerciaJ , ....... MMr YPl'ede&. Hwga INlt9r, '''*· 'llld utl. Avei! 111. In.ti~ 1171/mo &41-182 t175 541-3t23 qui.t 10C1 Lndty Mc & .. 170·11M.. ROOMMATES Frple, dbl Vac:1t1on by the OCMll Wldlng In eo.ta M ... .. ... u. IUOO/mo l*up, 2 car Pllflllno. • • 'DE 28R 18A bUtn -pool 8ngl ... No~ 09', R.c ., .. , pool NO Cll .. t facllllle9 Book now Rent""' •t 75C IQ ft. "l-5111 l 1110Jmo ._. 175-4112 >= ~. i'n4 , ClEAN 18R 1BA, g81age, S&t5 Cutt II e31-12&e IMnt 2644 s>et• S1125/m. O"" MC. wl\lle few~ remain Str~I •-ue w/"""tlon ....,. ~ --_»! ClelllnGS. trplo, g81ege 2 feundry ladflO... yard A t ty 675-0C>U AaMrvallon 538 8318 ..._,.. --.. ~ROI HR. 2'UA 21R.21A.Newc:rpt.1415iliipew..,..k•ltng-•c:tMn~--i2~•,,.,,•t peraona Nopetal795 + t720/mo+t500MCdac> .... ,....,. llT•llT1 !f' !' 1• • tot>uyacl22t,OOO Call CONDO°" pt9"y oreen-d/w, oetbeOe diapoeel, 1v.Ba$750 Alf utMe paild llOO MC 850-Hta • H&-1521 . NeW9t 18R w/fOfmal dtne Win Din'* For Twot L.91 UYflllT"' ....... PllllllU for detail• .. In lh• lluff•. =·Ste w~. No Oar~sorrr, no re· E'SIOE -~ dNt\ O/W k bl 2BR W/bMutllUI bay View! 2 BR. 2 BA HOUM With b•Y ..,., • .,. • 1eso1rno. Call ~th • 75 "7"7. 1 w• • •c • • apac: · ••-.. ar... ' 06 ca net•. •73 02• s 0001 k ••4• • • • ,. ..,.. Hr 18•, pool, cable .,.., quiet loef Lndry fee & Llgunl ltach 2648 yrty v ·4 v view avall 1, w ll1•u 41 ~.Ike*• M7-40f 1 142· 1424 142--4805 ava61, M75 No peta. ~BR, new c.pta/drpe, 1 car pool. Sngl ad1t. No pet a _ -- tr • °' 730-1200 ,,..,.lnll SMINUTESTOBEACH "6-5137 from 11am-7pm gar. St50mo:._!&o-13~ set5. Curt 1163'4126& Sleepy Hollow oceanfron1 L.91UYflllf ... ---- --'SIDE t8( M05 bl --Apt $2200/mo yr IM. 38R 28A, 13500/mo yrty . . associated ~""••nil<>\\ lk·alt' \iARGf beaut 281' 2Ba lllboa .. LI _,.. •Lo & quiet MeM .... 1;u~ ct*tca • N~ 28R, atrium Avall 2BR 1~BA lo li'~lng rm 818-282-7733, e73·32St ="O'#Mee 2-cat Plf1 tncf ...-18A, S550-Sl2& Verct. 2BR 2BA. d/w, nu ..... upa, wa • • 711,2e35SantaA.naA~ w /balcon'y Im med ---·~. auper dean, walk to llllfld 2606 ""'28A, S850-S725 dt9"'. encl garege, Indy gar. no pell reta reqd. 352 1795/mo. Small com-Call M ·, 494•3570 OCEANFRONT 3BA 2BA, . · .. ··~ & 119', Immediate * ' -·,.. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Ht ""'3BA, 1900 "' •' 1785 No peta t40·2495 ~lctorta. 145-8181 ac>Pt. pie• 641-&582 occpy. g frplc, patio, d/w, w/d, 2 lflll 11 -'\ Ml t70 2993 .... ,,.. d p di . · · car garage, 12500/mo Summer Rental Private ... nw5 PGlll on. • yn. new, Carport, private Gas/wit P · 001, gar, W -• MESA \1£ROE * SIDE 1Br, trplc, ato~, --w• wa• Newport lflCh 2669 VIP Propa 675-2232 Horne, all furn. Uva nr eoo or 1200 1/1. 887 W. I ',.._ I -... ---. p I I Io• $ 130 0 I mo 642-&073•850-1099 2BR 18A lower g•rlge tafrlg, upatafra unit In ..,._ ... --beach N B S 1 800/mo 19th, CM. Agl 541-5032 38A~·111oo1mo yrfy 173-2•22 1700/mo No 'petal • quiet comple>C. le25/mo. 329 AVOCADO ST. #J. •EXCLUSIVE GUARD• ,fll IUIYW APTS 838-84~4 213-592-49701-;;:;;;;;;:;;;;~;...--.~~ ,. ..... A...-..RltrCl75-8161FURN.111 cia 1Br 18a. 5•0-5441 '* utlllnctuct.d.548-1627 2BR 18A,am,llaldeyard, •GATED COMMUNITY• Spae10U1 2-3BR (aome 1vmeau0e 'indusutat •2788 ----7 Wealfleld pool aide patio i new • .. UIYll w/ocean vleW) on Fairway • Mf NW lndry, 880, an I only, no Delu>Ce 28R 1'1lBA twnll ... E'SIDE 2BR 1'..tBA. Beautl--carpet, mirrored dining 3BR 2BA 1700 a/I wlgotl of ~ort Beach Coun-Newpe>rt Beach, QUIET 1250 SO FT front olflee. O.U.. _....._. condo. 2 rr'i!n, Y(T74)1:, ·=~~mo HU1WIYS attached gar•o•. w/d ~.-=~~~'=·'-:~· rm, new O/W, c.thng fan. courM VIEW. Frplc, wet try Club Gated comm. 2 furnlahed hOUH near lerge ,.., drl~o d()()( -"7 "'" 88 642 9795 St75/mo 642-1850 bar, micro, wahr/dryr car garage w/atorage beach 1850 per Week S7&0/mo 1240 Logan ......, _.. .... 2BA. 2 car NORTH liivrro I. Yrly la(ge attractive Apts In • ~-~•. frptc, lg patio. 931-..0 or -hkupa, 2 car gar wllttta FrplC, w/d hkupa, pool & Prlvat~arty. ~a-5994 ' Ave. Costa Mesa Dys ·=·~ ~/~t 8paclou1, 18 , frplc. bUuhful garden MlllnO ~:i:t· r~':!'!:ci ~ lllAT LllA11111 Ideal for llngte O< couples atorage. All maintenance •P• Nopet1 NOwleaslng So Laguna oceanfronl 211 640-9352 Ev 646-068. 1 175--4912 P9~1f050~~~~tih. ~:,~~P;°'~.a~~t• or pet•. St15/mo 388 w. 18 R 1BA, lrg patio, pool, 548-2363 Incl. No pet•. 644-0509 by Appt (714)844-0803 BR. 2 BA furn Condo lndusTri81-Commercial -.,. •• ~ --2Bdrm 1' ·B• $776 Bay St, C.M. Joye• :t~_g:o ~~.S';;~i:. TRI IVi°"E'ald• EHC. VERSAILLE·Larg• 18t p.:.~~1Jou:;:o~:~ ed 1000-IOOl 141 ,, lefts ;_!1!!mi~ .• 2 a.lboa,tnn&A 260l ~::~::'son 831.:: 7141997·Slo.4 JO Prop-S500MC M5E. t8thSt TWnhm. 6yra. SBr 3Ba, 2 .... TIUlllAAPTI penthouse In Quiet lo-I NB-CMarea Nowleallng 11ory hofnel In an •x-arty Mgmt 7141751"2787 .~5-5221 • aitch oar $1450 Nsmkr• *""" •r SUPS• cation. Avall 811 No pe11 South Lake T•ll<>e PRIME PROPERTIES c:4uelve aru Frpt~, gar-* 2BR, 1BA, complete re-.,._;-------"'4o 3 BR, 2 BA-:-upatalr&. fresh --233 18th Pf. 835-070& EXCLUSIVE BEACH TRW reqd No foe $850 Vacation Rental• from 714-145-3940 , ~deck• or patio. turbllhed. S!n5/mo 1 yr t ....,room carpet drapes & paint Large3BR2BAupsta!raln -COMMUNITY /molse 644-7211 Agt laketront llomu to .. _ .. 1Y 1 1 l e•••· Ava II nowt 301 Avocado 642-9850 Only Ssoo/mo Nr So •-Ptex. Nr OCC Garage 2BR 2B.. ·"'-··! M W t ...,~...,.,. 1 h .. to cabins In tile trees Call Jncomt Property 2790 10 ""'' ryM 641-2828,George. 1.,._;;------.-;"'"5 C6atP1az1&0-C Cot-1o.40-C Valencta. S900 ....,....__.,.U .. bay ....... icro. as.,.....,...... ou collect 916-542-05S7 . •4BR 2BA S1750/mo .,_,room ...., mo No pets 545_7983 ~--... d/w, trptc, gar & enjoy '"°8ach. 38A. 2BA Yrly Coldwell Banker •EASTSIOE C.M• •38A2'1'8A S2000/mo. •LIU11Ulffl* 241WW11eon 631-0960 1ege 720-8730 · • • our pM beach $1675 $1,250/mo Avall Mid-3BA 2BA& t BR lBA.All -WILUBTW Frptc,garaoe No pets. lee $525/mo .. dep. Mobile lllT SEEi &PllTMllTI A~~1:n~!:.:C:,~~ July. Bkr 642-3850 Roommates Want~d remod. 50111306 R~.!-!>t .. IJl-a11 857-1778 Of' 760-1713 1BR. fireplace, encl gar-home No pet• Mature 2Br 1ea GoJf Courae Sparkllng clHn, large 272.. S265K O/Agt 42-........, " ------age walk-In cloHt •dull• Quiet, secure View Deck. quiet. tennla Garden apt• S..ulllully *leatlllas lltrl* Misc. Rentals 'T HOTEL So Arizona 43 r.;-lfAllUll ·• .... f PllllSILl 16s0/mo.Ava11July 18th. 1091 Newp0f'1 148·8373 1725/rno landacaped grounda. SORAY,~6 PETS. '* OCEAN FRONT * units bar rfft bank Big Outatandlng gate-guarded *BACHELOR-Cute & Betty 644-2270 ave• -554 Joann POOi & ape. patios/deck•. UU. 1 .... 11 Rooms 2706 NewPort Beach to share s maker Trade for house 28R + den 2'hBA 2 cozy upper w/amall Tei MGMT 642 1603 garana 0< earport ---2 b 11 1 3 • .._....,1 On 1 ... _·golf cour'M kitchen. lull bath. No Upgraded 2BR. new etove, ...,..8li8 nu ~ -----= -•-· ......... ,. IJ Tiii( t OUM garage ~ cash 602-882-770 n,..... ,,. .. ,_ 1 11 ~ ,.. Near Harb0< & Adams. 2 1 Bedroom S680 * 111111 lllO * • "-•" $625/mo 760-3061 All t~ betla & whlatleal parking. S600 t-14 u1lls. .J.ar1e~h ~~ p;7~·5/mo. BA, 1--BA, garage, w/d 2Bdrm 1'1·Ba 1605 Frig, dishwasher, stove W 11Y PAii * RITlllTU IUOI "*33&0/mo • 760-5014 *LARGE 28A tBA upper · -8488 evenln 1 HHflHITS hkup, no pets. 2868 8 t81 E 18th St 642-0858 lnci No pets 545-485.5 1988 24' Tarry RV• fO< renl Bayridge Condo. N B. Fem 7 Unlts. Retlnngl 8 gett-8 duplex w/lg balcony, 1 731 g ... _ Hickory $735 432-7767 ---------b th th I k to shr w/prof lernale arkln 1799K Aleo NB llWllllll quiet locallon, Ught and ~ blight, 2 flreplacea, pool, double garage, S 1550. 722-7381 IPPElllCI llYYIEWS! A Bedroom, 2'' Bath, newly decoratad pool home, 12700/mo •llO-lMO• $2.30 per day That's All you pay for 4 linea, 30 day m nlmum In the SERVICE DIECTORY Fot mot• Information CALL TODA.VII llFll Liii ••••••• VOit/ii s.rvtc. Directory ~t•tlVea Ml.all ...... n. Callf Pubtlc Utlllf• • Comtnlaaion, REOUIRU 1Mt .. UMd, houMhOtd oooda ~·. print tNlt ~.u C Cal T number, car garage, $1050/mo. •2BAlBA on the blulf. nr These auraclive Apts fee--.---· Bachelor $615 *2'111 llOO• ~ e ";on n P:' Poot. garage, wl d $600. ~ i.:New 11it1 I Mull VILLA RENTALS bch, quiet pvt, lndry ture pool, •P•. pnvate E SIDE. MUST SEEi NEW 1 Bedroom s610 Frig. dlsllwaaller, stove w greet acllltle:_ ec Avall lmmed 640-6655 be '!o,d, Bkr ~2'j850 676-4912 hkup yd gar $72!1 Pet patio• or decile, garage lfg 28' 2Ba, many •ltH, 2Bdrm w.ea S79~ Incl No pets 545-48S5 dep + 111 mo 53 8316 * CdM Home -----ok? S46 l2641642 9668 or carport In• baautllulfy bit-Ina, D/W, akyllgllt 22&0 V d 640 9626 · -A In g real llm w/poot, nr LARGE atudlo, steps to • -tandaoaped Hltlng. gar $1050 642-7334 • anguar -ON THE BLUFF NR HOAG OCC Perfect tor fem Siu-Prof M/F N/smkt 2BA/BA beach & bay. $A95/mo •2BR tBA, patio, garage Sorry, no pets_ " . ---------Lg 1Br, frplc. gas pd, walk-dent type N-amkr 1325 pallo, lrplc, laundry, wlk plus Hcurity Call O/W, cable, laundry 1 Bedroom $660 Nwpt across the ttrMt. 1 Bedr~ 1705 In closet 5725_1750. to bch Imm $550/mo Abraham, 631-0144 room No pelt $650/mo ~Bdrm 1Y<Ba $770 Sngl lvl 2BR. ltplc, gar. 2Bdrm rnBa $815 Poot,apa,gar_orcarpor1. Inc ut1I 662-2123 even . 852-1351 daya .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~!!'f ~5--6662 °' 650·2318 2Bdrm 2Ba twnhM '865 No pets S795/mo_ 1665 151E21at St 548-2408 NEWPORT TERRACE 67S-9805 day1 760-1077. eves (oroN df' Mar 2622 ---111 lll'fll SfUn lnllne Ave " 1. 720-9422 1401Superl0<646-6838 Newport BHCh R11p COM Summer Rental luJ'ntsS 111 I -* ·6~1& ~Ef vt * COST A MESA Sunny E'S1de, 2 BR;l BA. Hunt. ltach 2640 e 2BR 1 'hBA patio cable prof female, walk to bey Fam Prlv 2nd ltory Mstr e>pportunlt!!S 2904 aaaltau•••·H 11 •2 · HA 1 ••11•14 private garage & yard. 18R 1650 0< 2BR StOO N p '$69S/ '-1,00be~l~s:>;.~~""• Bdrm View Laundry ttlAlllllSl._I .--A amall, quiet complex -• $800/mo. Ne•r lhoe>• & Downatalra. 3 block• 0 els-mo. -v-.,....v ~" W/D Walk To 8th $490 •--•5 • Charmng 2 ~room,1 i!r8~AC::n.~:.C:~~!':~ llLIDTIWUllU achOOls646-4631 ~-O~tt:5~~pler ___ s.~Jf_f2~;"' Hotels Mottfs 2718 w/ulll 723-065eanytlme ~rC:."'~fth Bath lront Duple• Fire-lbadral ceUlngs. ~y. 2 BR. 1'.9 BA, frptc, encl llWLY llllUm BEAUTIFUL, extra large EASTSID! CM Cttarmlng Wake-up•Pick-Up Mall- pt1ca. -s900Tmo. ~gt garage "Like new & very garage, w/d hkup, new 2BR w/gar. bit-Ins, fncd yd e.cM!or Apt, 4 block• townhome styie •Pl '*lr 1U WI MTIL 2Br. hardWood fire, new •Make deposit 675-4912 private ·· POOi, spa, BBO. d«:Of, lg prtva1a patio, no w/pallo-636-4120 1-5PM from beach, alt ullllt... Feshlon laland, 2BR 2BA, Wkly rentals now avail paint, lfg backyard. F non It's ume to vacatton ta11ndry lat ., MC. No s>et•. quiet Elden Ave. 867 Victoria •o· .. $720 paid, no pet• $500/mo + frplc, no pet• s 1050_ S 140 00 wk & up 2274 amkr $500/mo 548-9979 714/540-22S5 I Ull, UI. Ml· 1111 Small Remodel & Addns Battvma-wardrobe-cfoors 30 yra 0 C Oualtty Work. --~ ~ . . . · .. ' .. ' . . pet• Velma 549-2447 Sl75/mo 873·8632 M19SantaAna 'I' $735 depoait 115-4164 15'-7742 or 854-7855 Nwpt Blvd, CM 641-7445 Fem n-smkr allr large -------- Nwpl. Bch view home lnvfltment MlllllLl..mlll FrM &tlmat.. e75-«>45 Uc 423Mt ,.,_enc. ·p i••L ..,... .... .=-.... ... Hang· T..,._ Tb lure Patc:hea ••••m• ........... ...... ''" '"' ........... J.AUIUlllllOI. liHe 1111 Lle#UIHO •M2·11t1• .............. FAST GUAR SERVICE 22 Ytl Eltper Free Eat I All Types Rootlng-Repairl HANGING/STRIPPING Skytlghtt •557494 VISA-MC 873-1512 Ml•llt1 ........ ---SUPERIOR'WiiiCoverlng lnatallatlon Removal Wall Repair Prompt lie. 41 -516215 Mark 642-6842 Remodel/PltlOI ---lnaurano• WOf'k WEgatalhd heng togetllef Interior flnlah Strip-Install, acMoe to the ' lie 461152 crary Deaton consul· 882-321 t tatton, lllnt ref• 633-71721..,.,,,....,,...--..,.. JD CoMtructlon 641-5403 Room Addition, R•· modeling, decil~ patio CW9 Uc/lnded ffM ht ---- ., ... , : ., w/2 prof women '750 ~ Opportunity 2908 Y, Utll 760-0980 -ENJOY 14-15% return on FEM PROF In NB beaull-Trust Deeds $10,000 10 lul 2BA 2BA apt Poot. $1,000.000_ Call Denison Jacuul $510mo Avail Aasoc. 673-7311 NOWI Imm 759-3023 HUNTING TON Harbour. Money To Loin 2914 Fem prof to shr lrg 3BR •WIDOW HAS SS$'4 TOii 2~BA house 1380/mo • s 1o,OOO up No cred .., No ~utillllas 840-12 ~ penalty. Call Denison M/F 25-35 rnpon to shr Asaoc:. 673-7311 NOW! ~ulet clean 3Br Costa . OllTIFIE-I Meu home, w/d $350 + ,_.. ulll & dep. Cat ok Approved Fannie Mae Ap- Oavid, 648-2722 anytime pralsal• S22S Aleo M/F for 3BR c M house, comm'I & lnduat'I, land. nr occ Own phone line, propoeed conlt. 835-6123 dog o4' S4 15 .. $400 dep Avall lmmed 979-6622 N B Condo nr Hoag $450 + dep •·~exp non smkr. •II ·~~~;~r°''lae. Loa I ro&ni 2925 Shara OCEAN FRONT 2BR Clean. resp N/smkr M/F No Drugs Aval Imm $850mo 646-0426 PrOr rem n/amlir ahr bffullful NB condo close to bell! All •men1t111, w/d, encl garage, etc Sl50/mo 831·1098 lllTTM ... t .... _.Tl FOlll> ADS ARE FREE Cal: Ml·Hll NII FOUND: BLACK & TAN. Tll 1111.f Pl.IT baby Pug dog w/collar -.. •-•• •• Found on beach In N.B ••n.M9&--813-2018 -Ml·llll ---FOUND -.f.JlllllAf MALE SIAMESE KITTEN JaMI• lsll•I 38~• 1mob _ OldP. 1t1c1 441th. ... , .......... a:,.,r:s •n nau a IU.1Mlll .. l /F titf WESTCllFF OAIVE m 3002 Hwpt Bch, A.gt ,.. 1-5032 .. mllJ!!ll~----------OENTlEMAN IMfll lady ...,_ n1-1n. tor compenlonlhtp and Perfect for ltnllll ~ .. With etoea-«eaalng Pattttng. MO-MO • MO P O. Boll 9561, ~t Cll SCOTII 141-27'4 -..ctl, CA t2MO MARIN ORIENTED~ T'Nr* you St. Jucii fOf apaQa available. 550 IQtn '9YOI'• '**"*' ttltOUQh °' 1200 aq(h Newport your lnfefcallelon. J.M. Harbor ·~::ure. ft(,tllT _ Looated °" .-.n. • -tneull. Cell 17'""44. F A AICEIVED -THMJUGH YOtlf• Cowrclaf Property INnACUltON O A.E ·2118 ~ .... · .. Or1nge Cout OAILY PILOT/Tund•y, July •• 1"81 SSJO ~ 5Sl0 i SSJO Emptornr1nt 5Sl0 E..,.,mtnt SS30 Ell!!O>•••lt 5530 Fumtturt 6014 l'tanOi '°"'"' ower r IUlDTHI ·~ .:=~ ._ PART-Tit.I HOlllS ou~•=.,s~~~~li"~us c,_.,.... ,, ... ~! . ..., tl~~r1,.. ·--·-·· NEWSPAPER 3018 BOYS Altl GILS Tr.:'.'::'."=·::: =: ..... TIE Li••·• •._"'""'•-•"•"'•"'-1 ru~;~u~•ff,ME1 -'""''-'·-"~.:;.~·~:=,'--''-""'-1 Wllllll TUM k ••P•rlChlldC•t• !NTOU~l.ARS fllltulllll Rut E1t111 0..91opmenl f'"l JIUr P'Y Bf\AND MEWi 1155 1450. Appr1ls1d 11 tr•. 000.W, ~ CIOft.-Un'ill.cl oppot1ur\tlylo~ Co. Proflcllnl 1n com-UI.. IMt n CALL•l!l.&0-1733 • $1200 991-1311 dl1 1on , 1 '300 . nalloNil r..i .. ,.,. mar-put• 19'.-d sl'lfHtf • 1fran1farr•dl Cot1101a PIANO SPINET dMu•• 1'4191i44H k.Clng _,..,.,,, with un· WOid ,.._ ....... .__ ..,__ T .. ·~-' MA roe: ,._,.. F tn .-·-"II ._.., 11000/WkPoten\191 T .... CO'OI' .-.--"'rm ... , .....-...n.like,_ttw.,..,...· 24' LY N lootf9 ,f wlcooklng !Of l•muy _, CROSS COUNT RV w/12 Y' okt, 7 'ff otd ' WORK AFT£R SCHOOL No ••P MC, CA licenN r•-~by. M•tur• womat'I, n-ANO SATURDAYS GET· quired. M1cGr1go1 .,nkr' •Kpettene«I only. TING NEW CUSTOMERS Yachtl, 1631 Pl.cetilll Mull ilPMll 90fM Eng· FOR A LOCAL NEWS-Colle M .... The Numbal' 0!1'I ~ ..... 1 ..,ro4on09, or • amok'""' otttce IOcltld nf ' -~--1~ ~· c I I ' '---·" PETE '"I n"' m&tkltl""' oll1ca IUO· If "'"~-. n•n'll rm out. Tl.itlld I Olli-eel. ~aal 1181 n• OM, ~. LU.11.Ufl Pf'IVll• room PAPER. NO 0£LIVERV & bo91'd, 200/wtl.. Cor-INVOLVED ANO ALL on• cs.t Mar. Call weelt-TRANSPORTATION 01)'9, Cll"dy 120-0101, PROVIDED ev AN rtenlng• ' WMk.end• ADULT SUPERVISOR Niia. 6'4-74UI ' YOU CAN AVERAGE peper Pfomotlorl COl'"pot· orma ""'· ..., "· Fathlon ISi and Call ··• 3 end bll9 wtck 240 II Jn,. allon f'las lmmedlltl OTTO II SELECT La1,1tle 7141759-!153 1 pllM. Easy nts 6.AM-1 2 Mt, 11 If S850. PP 1•7.·5e72 V-1, .P• ooen1n91 for Ci-.. Man-BETTER HOMES..& Pr1ne1pat1onty Noon NoWMkenda. I :1~:.s~·1,:1~:6.39 ~i•r SPINET fEv~1tt) p1ano board .... ~~O o•o -·· __ ,, ~.. GAROENS --~-NO EXP NEC -Min -"· """' ..... ----,....-.--.;;;;--..: be VlfY Mtl-mollveted REAL ESTATE 751-5000 UOlft&IY WA TERB!O compte11 good cot1dlllon S.600. •AVAILABL P'OA and craaUve. The 1bilfty llll llTATE UL.El Mature person to •Sllst C1H t>etora 12 Noon I with healar I& t>edOlng 11 6'•-S062 MEOtATE SALE. 1170 1or1!at• IO lefl'1~1 ln a E 'd ~--'d BH&G Comm"! RE 8k1 Sharp NEWPORT BCH 673-3735 Gealrad), lwm Ilia GIQI 38' Grand Bankl tW1n woiklnQ envlronmenl 11 1 •P Ot .,_,.p MCty & comm lkl!l1 PT COST A MESA 548-6919 Pltk> labla, •8"" round tno dlaMls, fvll)' 41q~ped. musl. fne uM 01 a van. Ad vanls.ge Training Pro-Jall 253-32801S48-7618 SOUTH O.C 582-1240 I umbf•ll• Mia~. wltn 4 llc)'dft 6060 Owoar l'l'IO\ltng ~ Of tr\ICk wllh a lhell, or Jar1>9 gram Oldesl RE olllce In --~,~~-~-I Chair•. yellow l wnlta. _ area. ott41rad b9IOW mlr• wagon 11 neceuary Irvine Call La !Of 1,,tltf· llGn/UWIFFJO( THOMAS TEMPORARIES "'S1r1111111" lounge 20·· OT FREEST'YLE BIKE kat. Cell altar $pm • view ll'Ane Coasl Re-Min la"" &lip ne8ljed IOI f'IU numet"OUI otf1C4i OOS· chair, yel!Ow ~etvel, an.d Good Cond!Oon. UMd 15 76&-Mt2. .' WI 1111111111 alters. BH&G 786-7500 1nergellc. 1111-oecea ltlofla 1v1H. F0t 1t1\ttrY1eW m1tchlng ottoman Call rno1. 1700 value. t0tl--,--= .. =;,;;=;:.:,..--;-$75 OR MORE DRIVERS WANTEn R~CEPTIONtSf -: P•r.art N-por1 office Asst to call ~-•433. ""° fee 7 8 6 -40• 15 • v• n• ng a 1225. !163-4i85 * SI& UY It' * We oiler •n a-.:cellent Friday to an1wer phonel. lag•• ••cretary Xlnt • rum &Im * I belOf• 8.30 Of weekend• ·-··•••Ill• Twirl ~. r9dw «di. guatlllllM OI $.400 Pet flle & light 1y~ng 1n a lyPtlt. WP 5 0 64lll ·9l90 0 C A ' o .. •& --E.:caAar!t cordtlon. + J IDVERTISlllG SILES •Newport • 81Jb01 • COl'on• del Mai v'QOQO EARNINGS .,..NO COLLECTING GIUl42·41U 1i00 ........... , Tn1 Delly Piiot and lnde- p1nd1n1 seek• e11 - perl1nc9'd 1dv. • 111e1- pet.on to join e.tpandif\Q 11att. Ad aalel Of print t>•ckgrourod prel•rred Lucrallve compero111ton p11CkaQ9. PM-ate call or M"dr ...... meto FOHIERYICI Olll~l1ptrl1101• OC F1irground1 catere1 Sttong Bra1kt1st line needl PTIFT help AH Cook nee<le<! l0t Orang-e positions av11l1ble cau Cou.nly Fal1groun.d1 loc 10am-3pm. S48-4•87 54&-446111ter 10am CPA ottloe needs Book-FlllT IESI. GUii keeper E•P . In GL. 7B, E•P Pfll ~I will train. C1ll FS Pr19. Ind Computer IOI'" kltflf'YlflW , 6'2-~ DAILY PILOT 330W.8aySt Cotla Mffl, CA 92627 Ann: Lind• Caster (7 14) 6'2-4321 APT ASST. MGR COUPLE Part time. Mml rellred, 8ll- p1r11nc1d. 70 unus. Cotta M .... 6'2-9190 111T.oenw•m•1 PITtlllU ll•"lllEllEPT Input H e are1 964-5 lSfi CREllT UllOI Te!ter 101 Newpor1 Be1ch office Wiii train. Qu11 c1nd1date Compe11tl¥e salary & bflnefjts. Can Diani tor lnlerYI-appt. (71 4) !155-6359 ----CHllE UIP CUEH •P11d to travel world'lltiOe •Fr" rmlboatd oo Ship •No 8llP re<fd 540-3332 DELIVERYDRiVER Load- !rog & unfoadlng lurn1lure D1n1 Poin1 bued co •96-!1•1!16 Ellperleroce In wr.tlng. edit- ing and page 1ayou1. Will --OENTA°L 1telll editor In real el· DRTll UST fHIT ffC /IECTY For busy orthodoollc olc In Irvine. Typing & COfflputer Sk ills. FIT M-W-F. 7·2 T- Th. 8-5 786-0777 or 6•0·•292 STllEITS lllSIWIYES MDOILllMnlS P1rt lime, 81S'f WOf~ AM or PM No exp necess- 1ry Hou1ly . Bonus 642·432 1 Ex1 431 or 228 W111 for beep. ask lor Cry11al or Ben. IEIEllAL ff"CE Full-lime 1)1l1r'lgu1I Sp1n1sh person needed tor lront ol!lc.e du 1-1es ln Cniropfll01Jc otrice w.n tat•, au1omot1ve and FIT M·W-F, 7-2. T-Tll. 8-5 ad"*'1l1fng aupplem&ritl Fun loving. lut paced Wl11 coo1ider exper1eoce lrvlna pracllce needs 0<.11· 0\/9f' Degree Ablllly to going FIDA wle•p h•ndle v1r1e1y 01 Job 186-0777 o,..6,0-4292 tvncllon• In, llSl·PICed -1r1ln 775-65• I .,..Wonm9ri1. CALL DICTA-PHONE TYPIST •, Type .0,50 wpm E'a.p OIFl SHOP • OC ..,AlR- .. 1_.1111 ...... , needed CaH l(ri~lll] PORT Rel f9CI Call AM IOI'" Trilha GiD~e or •••71?.-0963•• :{;, Be!lle Tue1-Frl belo1e Mary Carler * * * * 1lr ** * 1 30pm 852-9186 EQUeJ Oppty Empl DISPATCH D~ll\IER llllECLUllll ~~~~~~~~~· IDAIL 't PILOT needs a per-Help needeo, PIT, !or l&ID/•lfEI MELP 90!'\ for pic k-up and de· hou1ecl1ening 1erv1ce livery ol ad copy Mon Teenager 0 K . preler For 1andwtch shop. Full l 1-5, Tues-Ff! 9-6. Sal own car 6•2-2238 ask PIT Nancy 6•2·5•22 8-12 tor Oebt11e or leave llLHll "•OllUllS FIT IOI'" comm"t tfoor1ng contrllCIOf Hi N.B Data wolry e•p hltlptul. 60 wpm, Mlary-blnetu1 JualCa 873--0760 b·~· , I n you h1ve a good driv1t'lg record 1nd en1oy driving lhl& IOf:l 11 tor you Call Mary C1rter at 6"2-•32 \ eat 275 lf19f t2 ******** :Jun .A/1 .. Sc~ool W.,L 11 to 16 Year• Oltl WOIK IVININGS AND SAlUIDAY YOU CAN A VllAGI PB WflK •7500 OR MORI CAUSHARON 714-Ml-9091 lnsurarce AgencytCSR c a r eer opp H 8 Sa1ar//hr1 open 963-56 1 . LEUL llHETlllT Hunt. B&ach. FIT or PIT Mlf\ 3 yrs 1-.:p 960·2• I 1 LIGHT TAILOATNG 20-25 1'11· wll. $6 00 hr W11! lr1in GINGISS FORMAL WEAR. S C. PIUI ID 111/0ILLECTllll Computer ellp FaShlon Island, 644-4151 ID HllffTllllSl PIT. ••P nee: Fashion lll•nd, 644-7148 llllTl.lllEE S7 OOl hr whlle ~Clo\, learn P9CJPle-orl9nlad, clMn a !rl9ndly environment Fla•lt>1a hr• MAIL TODAY, Co111 Me•• 6'5-152•5 -ISSISTlllT DISTRICT Mllll&ER • FuH or Part-time ·early AM 1t111t • Mu1t h•11'9 rallabla Yft'1k: .. and 1nwr1noa • Oooct Sa!•ry & Mil9909P11d W ... otMl-41U IA.M,.&P ,M,M·F • •.M .• 10 A.M. Sat-Sun w.• Alter Sclieel a S.luU11 -- ' ......-whlle -ualn you p1•111g{ous F1sh1on llDn/IEOEPT vacat~•= 'TC:~iy lMlsctfllt'ltOUS 6015 1111111 llJde lrahr. 813-1fT1 Alter training. your In· lll•nd Co. Hrs nex. pit lnvotve1 lyping, llllflO & ••c•llf'f'I working en-t Hob•rl l·800 60 Qt Ukt •••• A1Mrtt11 ar WIN..Y come PO!eflllll 11 un-760-1145 ast. l OI Heid• phonii WordS\ar or vlronn •• 111 , Immediate mixer. 1 llx 10• 12 •1lk-~n •*•Mp .... , Loaded. twin dlllMllt, .. llmlled Rec:apt1on111,-:-F 1T perm WordPerlect preleffeCI openl1 Travel Adven· boK. 1 3 comp 1/1 link r.I ..... 1150000 975-94t0 Call M r Philllps po1ltlon Some ex~n..:: N-porl Beach Reil Es-10'0'0"0'0·-"0"0'0705020-00 7 0•0•-ll •!host. reel. 1 custom 9!:J~~ llllG new '· · U~ht tYploo. 0-.n olc 111• olllce Full !lme with 1 wOOCI 1ra11'1 Dtt'I; 3 11tlec-ltlw"'9W, t EUITlll P--213-477-3163 ' 1111•11 -· skill $11.SOnr •7•-0972 Oene!lts. 714·759-9100 lrolr•eze 30N-CA0 • ~ Dum.ldMWlnl, 1llO, 11'. NURSES,RN"S.L\l~fS Recollont1t T!T lrnl ol< SECURITY OFFICERS TYPIST yogurt m~h. 1 3!15 11s w•-no cove r. 18500. we need you Call ABC ;;r wrk ltlte. 1tenlNfWI421-. -•1:• 721--0ISS-CtiUOrens Home Care &I Imm opening Must be Work tor 11\e l:>etil E ~og.url macn 724-8682 Man's 10-s,peed t>\cycle 1n • 3~· 11 t9 lor 1ppt EOE prol & min 1 Y1 •~P )I LNT llUlnE llCllITT Newsroom Neeot Part·!' TOBY gooo cono1uoo lor daily SEASWIRL 11 Foot, VI t>eroafl11 8911-91 I I 114-11C-411Q · treve! CiU Mark 11 305·110 ONC, 1915, loW Nurllng RESlAU""NT time T1011t Musi Be --lll·lt11l•e 786-80•6 or 856-11763. nour1, a•c•Uant cot)-R N L V N NA ,...... OUICk ,l.n.d Accurate 20 Sl300 97~ · , · · -· • HIYE• Secunty Otllcers 11_,,, P-w-. Flo•-'11cket1 11110 level cen1e< 01y1 or eWlt'l1t'lg1 df11on. . For conv1Je1een1 ho1p11a1. n """ ... rletd S17510BO 't k 1 Costa Mesa 642--0400 lllGASllll PROTECTION ':,i. Ce11 Peg McAhs1e1 low. v-at ii.st~:s!l,,----~---..-,1 : .... ;:::::i:f.;Y:oa:<N~~CNI-.;;:;:.:::;;;.,. -Ole AUist1ln1 A09ncy APQly II 7568 Ed1nget S22510BO. 962-8870 Spotting Goods 6065 RUNAWAY FOR WEEK- Compl .... rd proc skHI~ l;iHi.eiiii"i'i-•;;i'ii"i;ii'-.";_'"'-1 TIE IAILT PILI! ••n 1111 "'"'"ETI -ENO. o-t..-Stat..ot,-ca1ei!r opp s111ryl h•s IS OUR --Sl<tS Art 34· CIMIOdt. Pt..g oPflll 963-56'7 Resl1uran1 142·4121, (It 112 6 "'"· NfW Oak t1111sn ROISlgMI STS. 180 Ctn, deal w/alllpplf. 975-7100 For Appointment 5'2-91251642-27• 1 Paul Tyrolla 3600 1ac1ng blnd- p:~~!1';!11!'~1~g.E\n~:Js MOW HIRING PROFESSION! l '~~~==~~=:1Mo~1ng Salli R9"irl9, misc ~~~~I~ ~~ueg[!:~: 1;So11~1o:;;;;MS~...,~,.,.,.;7~0,,,14 1 -2-3 andAfle~perence fuin. rug, eJ1erClM bike $!15 , 589-1 237 le1ve 12· KITE S.ilboet .,.th helplul. Airport area Mr • BARTENDER \oys. lO speed b!kes. me1sage !railer, good condition, Shannon 752-0102 • FOOD SERVE A etc ErnployrMnt \llinted 760-S•!IO dy, 760-26509,1---"'-------1 •$100. Call 8'6-e042 PART TIME evenings Mil-t<.;~~!':":i.~~:ni Jiii TIE l·------...:5•5•3"5 o:;' E.. c,•:::;., C:,~ ~:! 111' HOBIE CAT with Ing !lowers & pictures 11 725--0777 lor app! Alter Hlllll&TIU Oil IE HT1 no.t rill wlwood oar. trelllr, emell 'bC*. like Tne Hop in El Toro C1ll 5pm call 12 131 ,69• t333 Win Din.,.,. For Two! typewnter itan.d. 6. wood new. 8-1 offet. 7 141785-8819 l '.':::':'""';~::'~="'~"I * tl&ITIRLY WSE ladder l Misc l1em1 5*-178' Par1 Time lnlEWS * 875-8509 Genef.i 6l02 It'• aaa RETAIL SALES Ffl Adv P"I VA"'lllll "P~LA~N~E~T~ICKET, 1 -;1y, Beautlfvl conclit!Pft, l"-OOPI Can Mac642-2779 * "' - * LAX to Chicago, 111•, UW.&UIAIE board, lull k..i, lull mlllTS lllSEWIYES ••11u1m1s LAMPS PLUS 7262 Ed-* PlllHLlllYI * $100 oco day 962-1356. Ull1 equipment. Cf!"t now. ioger Sl. HB EOE p•il Wlllll FW -Aoo!1ng * _. * Al'!tkf!1 6010 wkad 9e2-1695 GaM~nd 4 Ulll M0\~~0111 . 'UE ••f PE•HI -fPElfHS CHINA CABINET GaleM!g Wedding Die11. t>rand _l.~!J.. 2-1$4T-l·2l70 _.___ Part time. easy work AM ....-1at>le Old chliia Gian new:-wn1 satin w11ace &· ,.._ or PM No ellp necas1· H!ghly 8llpenenced. re-TlllHWelTO.C, Jawelry Collec tltltea t>U01, ll 6 Pd $1150. •.1•.1111 30' CM S1llbo91:. HAS tr~ 'Hourly _ Bonul tired or semi FIT, PIT 2 NB. 6•6•00,7 Sac S6SO ,g7.7370 ~ ALL. Raclucld fof qulcil 6•2-4321 Ext 431 or T1ke-oll person,. 1 Roof-DYJllMIC WiU PAY CASH 10< uled ...... f .. f..UY '*· 71(. c..1821·1313 228 Watt tor t>MP. 11k Ing Salesperson Wlll1•l•,.ok1t Ch+ldrer,.1c10thet l!'I ~ l1IOAll·I,_. tor Crystal Of Ben. ___ 6;:_'2"7222 PROTECTION w1t1• wftti 111 .... Call good cond .• Ilia 0-12. FllllYWfMt.. .... SeMca~ fqu'Jf,..._ PUT TI•E ULEI AlllllAIT fll·IHI. °'' "*"<;• ,.._.,,. 5'fr!lt' · 701Q, s1uden11. hooMWIYel, etc. Snurson Lel\man Hut1on SERVICES --Corona def ·~ 6122 1917 Hydrotlolst. >CLHt' wJth car 10 service estab-tiai epening 1°' Drlght (11')111·1110 h:ilances 6011 ColectJblfl 11_ l'lll 1 •••e condition. Muat MCl.C delail-onented lndividU•l ,. ~ ,_ ,..__ 1.0500 &42 -1 -tlll'led routes •-5 hrsl diy ,_ ,.. 1 'II E. l.llELL.I t!I PHILCO REFRIGERATOR '.Ill .Ill -1 • .-. obo. -r"" ... AM Moo-Fri Gurarantee nolarn 1n c lefll se•· ,. • __. Chatmlng 38R 2BA flOrne. • S•O d vices 11'1 11'1e 1:ir0ke1age In-llUIE Cl 12111 2 ooor. 22 cu tt .• goto. Old down coolt:le Jars. 2 E.:1en1iW1 ,uee ot brld!. & u....i ~·i••-. .. per ay dustry. Ouahlled can-t frost lrM, -.:Int cond Oflglhll "Llllle People" tile. WIO<e v.ined &hut-....,... lotVUU .-1p70,:; Ltrl'1 lltall11 dldate1 should t>eweu Of· S235 722·6922 Ootlt signed by C•tit>age ter1. Poot. Securny •vs· i--..,.-----•<r'i: 979--0747 ganlzed, have a!"' ora! STIFF llYELOPES WaiiW~dryer . retrlg, elec· Palch 1rtl11 Cal l tem.13300. 873-6614 ~~~ :~~:::"8 c00~~9n1~~-N,o e 1 llperlerlce n«,essary 1 1 ;·~«~·~·~,0~,~-~1~,50~!':";"~·1~6~7~5-~8~509~~~~~~~f~~!~~~i~~1i;.:· ~1~1'~1111~-~-~~T~· ~~;~: PEST CllTROL lECR Local Pest Control Co Need.' Aou1e Tech We !rain. Must have good driving reco•d CALL Charlie am 979-6021 EOE PhoMWork m1Em IOISEWIVES MDllLlllnlS P&rt time. easy ""°'k AM or PM No ellp nece11- 1ry Hourly · Bonus 6'2·4~2 I Exl 43 1 or 228. Walt !Of t>eep. ask t()I'" crys1a1 or een. POOL IS COOL! BiHards IS back! Be ?'fl ol It by 1otning ital! ol new. upscale bUl1rd/video center. We"r• seell1ng 21 ye.er Old Pfl or FIT netp. women encouraged lo apply. $5/hf Why work for !1st lood when you can have more run with us! 985-22•0. Aak IOI Robert or Miki ,._HOLEll Full ti me Mon-Fr i 1 30am-4pm. SS 251Hr eeoenta. No e_.p nee Apply In PllflOrl. Bookl on Tape. 729 Farid St . Cosla Men 548-5525 PIT CLERICAL ASS"T Fle11lt>l4 hours Work In bul)' proper-ly mana119- ment olllca. 957-8191 e1.1Lmotmtt. Clerk. F IT Mo n -Fri 7am~·30pm, $4 751Hr Benllils No exp nee Apply In peraor'I. Book1 00 Tape, 729 Farad SI ' Cot!• Mau 5•8-5525 UAL man &111 Enjoy 70-100% comm. w11 TOP Producing Co. AgrltSIV• Hll·atarl•rt Mrtd resume to: 115 Cor- poral• Plaza, N.B. !12860 n r,. • ut or part ume or •no Dlshw•:Wler . $125. Cotor L"IB Costa Meil bl 24 lr1\ler I mooring-~ cur11ely One-Y9&f OlllCe & appUca11on. send 51111-TV -$75 15.46-56411 Compultn cv Penlnaut1 873-5613 :• lllP Call Doro1 t1~ addressed stamped -WMISMJ: 957-6500 EOE MIF/H envelape 10 p O Boll AT 12MHZ, 5121<, $650 37" SIDE TllE at ~ W.ESPEISll 1841!1. Dearborn Ml 48120 Furniture 6014 3815 20MHZ. 1MB, S.11550. raaidenca ,..... Pl'lllllon.: Both wi1h mono moroltor 4TI Of~LY' Av.ii now . Sall only.• ApPty-ai--1931-NewpOrt Bl Cos1a Mes& The Anlique For hbefgl•ss sailboat• 2~~: &~;:~am~ 2L-33.l.UcLl31-1165/t ~· -t::;:=~·~7~._....~~· :;:=~ d1Uon. Sl701pai• C1H 11211111UYSI ** • * UP to 55' Nil. &de 119, Emporium. 642-8990 Final assembly & bll· 1ngu11 ne1plu1 Apply l!lam-3pm. M1 cG1egor 'l'ech\1. 1631 Placentia. Cos11 Mesa H1rry •1 760--0370 Syslem. from $1250 an.d Udo 1-.. W9'ar ' ~ IUSS IUllUll I UC). 722-8880 .a mm rr ==~=~ 11: -ULHI llLEll llLEll For Art Gallery. Mlturl Nlespet"IOn w1ntad lor blJ1y gallery. 894-6393 Fooit>oard w11h r1Hs. LBM 386 25 M;z eom-1--c•~·~·~f~.l~M~U~--I;;#~"';;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.'. queen 11ze S 1!15 8•0-8733 palible 1 mt> ram, ,0 mb ii11C4 TrlrllpClftlClon 01nl!'!Q r~ 42i6ij lid. 2 Ors I 2 1 4A, 18 bi1 TILDffllULES gltSI "wlbreu 11and. 4 VGA card. VGA co4ot" c;;rlnJTrllln i)ii_ llDO-llOG IYI WI ITllllTS •OH upl\bl tulip chairs 2 monitor. mouM. 2400 _ Lei's lace II, making Dog lllllWIYES yrs old, $11100 new -a$lt· modem. 1e11 ... qu1111v 1111-. 'IW1' money 11 e•c1Ufl0 es-MlllllllnRS \t'IQ $650. 965-31533 prlntfll S3LOl!,?15~~tw.~. -Genef.i 7011 111&11 • peci11ty when you re only MATTRESS. 1177"1nter-1 ~·~"';;;;""~::;;·~~~·~;·~~1 :=:;;;;~;;:;;:;;;;'""15'-Pa I , galley. ,,_ WOfklflg Monday th1ough spring, queen Ml•. daan,\;p I •~-~ .~9 m'f llU llAT '''"/1"t1Mla, MW I IP"-1 Frl(l1y 9 to 5 Aggresllve Part ume. easy ""'Ol'"k AM •lnl Condition S50 C•ll1:;:"'~.;.~~:.::~::;~·...,~~::;;..I ig77 lit! Bay Roel Out ptB/IO'Mnl HOO 080.• sharp person lo s.mpry or PM No ••P necess-5-48-2512 Al<C Cockw Spaniel. free flelO elec:tric: frt 111~reni i12..sol3 : sett ad s.pace 111 1ne best ary Hourly . Bonu1 c•c•nn==~n=m=-1 i••-to good no..ie White with oondilkwt. Musi NII. c.11 I --0*"'-"'.;;E;=,HEW~c.~2"•"' -~ local pollGe & l1re put>ll· 642-•321 Ext •31 or -_.. DIOl'l(la lraclllft 2 ,._,-s •tier 7pm. 531-1510. 1911 TITAN CLASS-A c111on1. Call Mr Reed 11 228. Wait lat Deep, 1sk m1t1re1s & trundle, never old all shots 15•-5S4' I ,;;;;;;;~;;;~;;;;:;;;;;;I MOTORHOME. 11•-141-•355 forCrys1110t Ben uledl195.•840-1733• ~ ----I ~ s 5 --------..1-~!" ...... ----0.-... ~ ...... ---'lluALMA TIONS Mo1·ng. Pawerlolb 7011 Low mlle1. 1 .. pa .;j r'" mtill Mii Al<C , male & 110,500. S.. fffll •t:- NEW' PAPER lam Muir tak• Doln 13 " Whaler ~ Sport. 2211 E. Pacific AYI.,. doga. S150/Pf. 551-801~ 1985 40f'lp Y1mah1 Cott• MM&, then celt- ---load~d. $4950 Ev1i 759-11o.4 or M•-1722 f DIUSI llU Ill ===·~'~'"~"~"~::_,:]il::::;;~=-";;;;;J. DELIVERY A<C •og •-. "'mp•oo --.Ydln/ 11ne ,1.11 1t1e11. II mo old 11' ...,. .. Wl&lD Scoot EK>IB S800 6SO-&A711 IYI mtg 100 HP. LORAN. filh lndr1 .,,~;:;;~"';;;,...,.,,,..;;;;,;;; •HP IUll , • 8afbba Island 1'ill5 HONDA SE! <J<Md. moored. VHF, a•trlt. wing. F~ IOeded, ~ * NO COLLECTION * Early morning motor routes available Musi have dependable vehicle and liability ins.ursnce. 1 d•y• per week. 2 ;30 •. m.-S:JO •. m. ABOVE AVERAGE EARNINGS Call 7 14/6 42--1333 be1we•n 6,QQ a.m,-5 ,QO p.m . ("-Fi 6 a.m.-IOa.m. !SAT & SUN) AREAS AVAILABLE: Huntington Beach Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley, & Newport Beach WIN DINNER FOR 2 AT FINDO.UR HIDDEN CLASSJFIEDADSL_ ONTEST RULES VUl·IEllEL .... oo. Ii~• -S.5000 •9•-1237 WILL SELL FAST! $7900 ll•d edition, SIS500 •. FIRM 6'•-0121!1 968-0300 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS t "".,•~u•I' ti r "'"""° fodO"' I\ °'i-nth , • I-' ...... ,.. ~,...,.,,, .. "5 n.-.1, 16 ~n!rlf •O 17 NO" QM!!lf'•~ 1Q ,l.o!o<;ifo. XI ~ "'''"'"'' } I I •tu•O> J~ ( ''"""' ?• l)O( "'" 2fi S1.qm;i\ ;>7 '<ll"im 30 0•1>llf''' 12 M111t O••'" :r1 ,,.us.c:u••• J• "•ac1-a• ,7 l'"'~ull<I" 16 ................. ! J9 \'; •na,., .io • ..... r, • ' "'!(]hi '"01(\• • 1 ''""''<I •'> N 'I "'"qi> >It\ ',ho.< Ullo• I 411 '"'"'" •nl/"J •. , r>"'"'""' ~; "-'•Id 011tto ~ ... q, "*"'"' ... , ............ .nq f\I I ' r• .. ! ' .. ,, , f>l R#'voo.e t>2 Essen, .. 63 Guv~ 6• Sr>o""'°''\ 6~ f •PIO>I DOWN 1 l ••o• cut 2 c ... ,, Pf()• 3 l llll'<l' ' Rom~'''~· e••t 5 p .. , ... l{l fi HmO, roll" ' ""' " , ..... ,h <IPP•t> hi><" Q G¥nt, ""Dl"e< IQ R11•n I I +l,.11 11 p,..,, Pf''! l'.j lHIOfP\~"J •I C..on••y11n<:• J3 l ... ~, 11·1 JS Rono1 "' ;>6 !;U<'IOQ ;>? Run 00"'" "'"• ]l!l An.,.,11 ?9 HO~lt!.> /tf I~ lO QollfWo )I "'111111•!01•11 tnO•an __.,......., 1~ S.-.veon '"'1ef 36 "noett•• ,. COmb<.1,1'1">"1 19 """'"" 7 UIV!AIOll • • Inf'• 1Uf'< 411 1\1 con~•ol• '>('I Run ~ 1 ,.,, ... ., •• 1 ' " •O ' ' ' I. Simplyftnd O\&r hidden ctaw~ ad'I '°'1\t'¥1-hc.1t i11i our t l•\s1rk-tt K\"1ton C\n •ftd puui lhe ldt on the tnlt)' blink and m11t tl'W'm to. DAil Y Pit.OT, J)O W, Ba)' Sutt\. OM• Mna, CL 92627 c/o Dinntr (or .:'! Con1a1. l. All en1rin mu•~ lrti\'t b)' fnday nt)M. J, W\nnttwUI •t"'*n b)' qndQmdrawtnlo 1nd-..1nl\(r·, ntme ¥>111 •1'1X"•r 1n ll\t lbHOWll\I Fttd1y'1 plpn. o~ WllU'ltt ptr Wttk "· "'"1 ... ,n run 6/12 . f /28, --~~~~~-ENTRY BLANK.~~~~~~..., • '""lfl,t.O .... ........ .... T ---1 .. Tiie regl1trent com-P9'11ionet '° cNl'Ot "'*''* '1Cnnou9 MWll 9071S "1CftYIOU9 llUIMH • .. ...,.., 10 trainMC:I ~ ,,,... from a.orie·~ MAim ITATWlmfff T m Miiier, 6426 (HI MAim ITATlmJIT ............. ,.,illill -,_ uncMf tM llC11110vt SMC:ftU lo Nlnolctlk• Cor-The tolloWlng pereone •• AmtMlfWOOd. AnaNltn. Calif The ~ pertont .,. The IOl!owlnO perlOlll If• if'i,MO Wt*-&Aeded. ....._ rwne ot nemee IN e1o1ng ~ n HIOI dOlnQ ~.. dolno ~ U lmmKUI••• ~".':': ....... ....,. on June 1t, IT 19 HERE8'1' ORDERED CASA MO~RO APART· Tiii• bu1lne•• II COl'I· -MARKETPLACE FLOWER VIOEOMATIC 2275 New· ....._. ewtom .• 1... th8tallpereonalnttt•ted W't MENTI, 1~0 Newport ducted by a general pen· MARt<ET.•1.scamw10t J>011 Blvd , Co111 M .... 8upert> Gondltlon. 9emard ff ~ IM metl« elOfeuid tPOeet Cent., Duve, Sutt• 1•0. nettNc> Unit tt1A. Irvine. C11Jf Cell1 12127 (2MH LOO) Private TNe ... '"'*'' .,.. hNd ei.fOf• tllll OOUl1 in ~111· Newpc)(I Beach, ceiit 12"0 Tll• reglttrenl com-tn I& Jolin coon.. 207 1r1a Ave . party. 71'4·815-7957. wlltllheCOl.HltyClltllofOf· "*It No 3 It 700 Cl~ Ao01f Ebert Turner & rnen<led 10 trtnMCt butl-CatOf Cook. 2"32 C.,., COfOtlacMIMar,Callf 92126 w • • k d a 'I • • ... County Otl June ''· Centlf Drive w .. 1. Santt Mary Sllnley Tuttllr. MM under lhe lic;Utlout Juenleo. l..AOU'I• HIHI, Cllif TIM bu•I""• II con· 1t4-M'4 .... t10 "" Ana, CalttOfnll, on Juty 18, Trutt ... ut!Olf dec:ll(ltlon butlnett ntime °' nemee tH53 dueled by In ll'IOMdual T-<178 H 0 ND A AC C 0 8R D ,.,.., 1Mt, at 2 00 o'ctocll PM. 01 Truat "-ltd 713 lf7& tor lltted above on NIA TNa buaiMtl la con· Tll• r1gl1t11n1 com· ---------leoll• HATCH I ACK I I 2, CHEVROl..ET, 'M ~ Otange Cout and 11\en and I here Show the 1>41Mfil ol Roger Eber1 Seti\ E. Wolln1 dueled by 1n lndlYlduat meinced to trenaac:t bu8'- ,_.,,., MOOftd °""" 12.500, 1tr, ~MIFM CAVALIER Diiiy Plot June 17. ~ •. c:auee, 11 any ~balll. why Tuttlel Ind Mery Stanley Tlllt attternent WU filed Tb• reglttranl COlll• ,... under Ille llctl\IOUI -,--------... -... -.. -.---.-.- .. CMMtto 1 cytJnder teaMt'9. I0,000 mllel. All powef •Ir '4 cyl 11. 11, 1Ht Mid petition '°' cllange ot Turner 2811. B~thor•• with tlle County Clef'tl of Or-menc:ed to tret11Kt bull· tiu.inMt t1ame Of n•met ""N .. '"..--IT'"'::a-NT 1410010•0 • PP . 75t--1114 Loededl, (lPUB002) T-701 nemeahouldnotbegtanted New~BMc:ll,Celll UM ange Cou11ty on June 20. nes1 under thl llctltloU• lilted 1bove on Augutl 1, -.. ,,,._ $4495 IT IS FURTHER Of'dered Thi• bu1ln•H II con· 1t89 l>U"""' 11ame Ot namea 1HI Tiie fo4ioWlnO perlOfll .... 145·1HI tvenln91 & .. •1 lff H II 10 Beaoh •-.,. MftTM'tr that a copy of tt1l1 etder to ducted by· Femlly Trull f42217t ll1ted 1bove on Augull 1, Joh11 Coon1 ' dOlnQ buTUalRneeaE u:P~RFECT . .....,. 2 DoOf, 75,000 ml .... ~ un ngi n """"" ...,,_ allow CllJM be publlalled 111 Tti• reglitra11t ClOm· Publllhed 0rlllQ9 Co.It Ital Thia 11111men11 iwu llled Pl"C "' ,p .. d , A/C, AM/FM CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH theOranoeCo.atDellyPMot, menoed to lllllllCI bull· Delly Pilot June 27. July 4, Carol Cook Wiii\ Ille County Cllflc or Or· 218'.t 34111 St., NewpOtt T d=~ ~M~ ~lau~ld• c .... ue, well main-18631 Be.cl\ Blvd NTJTIOUe IU .. 11 • 11ew1p1per or gene111 ""' unct.r Ille llctlllou• 11, 18, 19811 Tllla 1t1t1me11t wH llltc:I anoe Oounly on Juoe 20. BMc:h, Clltt. 92113 • ll • on-tained 12500 080 8'42·oe31 NAMI ITATIMINT oltculatlon. publlthed In this l>Ullnffa 111me Of lllmM T-702 with the Cou11ty Clerk ol Or· ttat Grant Swlggt. t485 I Jet. d6Moft, ~2 ....... 11500, uu,' ..... -•• CHEVY 1g72 IMPALA Tiie I011ow1n9 pertont .,. count~ 11 least once 1 week lttted above on December t, aoge Cou11ty on June 20. F4.12111 trey Rd .. IMne, C1tll 92720 ..... ...,....., •-40K llel ciellenl dOlnQ but!Mte u . let lour conHCUtive weeka 1918 "8.IC M>TICE 1989 Publltl\ed Or1ng1 Co1tt At11t1 Sltv1rmt11, 211'h MERCEDH 250-1-97-2-ex--di ic: P • '11 t '~l A. V. HOMES, 2400 Main prlot to the day of t1ld !\ear-Marys. Turner f42»U Diiiy Piiot June 27, July 4, 34111 St . Newport Beecl\. SELL <*lent condition d•rk I . ~ • ..,"'V . S1r••I. Suitt 201, IMM, Ing. Tlllt 11a1ernent WH 11141<1 fte:TITtOUllU ... 11 Publlllled Or•noe COHI 11, 11J. 1189 o.lif.92113 ,.,_,, '8 OOO ~·8•1921 brak• .• Gre2a0t ;on.cO ~OI c.11..!., 12714 Deted JUN 07 198t wltll lhe Coullty Clel'k ol Or· NA• ITATEMENT Dally Piiot Juoe 27, July 4, T·703 Tiiis bu1111ns Is con· .. 1' • • G.,. 1 . .... .. lip H. Mc:Namee, 2400 ,..... A. JACKMAN, ~ County on June 23. Tiie f041owlng peraonl .,. t 1, 18, 198t duc:1ed by .• generll Plfl· even ng1 541-8175 Mein Str .. t #201, lrvtne. Jvdt• of ltle luperlor 1989 dol l>Utlnen 11 T. 705 P1alC M)TIC[ rienl\lp throu•h cl.luifi~d 1111 '11...... CHRYSLER. '88 ~· ~27t~1 T Cewt . ,~ 1:YcHEAP CHARLIE Tll• reglttrlllt com· Gold ctvorM Wheels 2 NEW YORKER 711 w 17111 St F·5 rC'c!.':'• ~~&6~hine gt"~i Publllhed Or~ CONI (b)CHEAP CHARLIE s . 1655 '1CmtOUI IUIMH ~n:, ·~:~11:=; &*I .. wef 9100 topl $1'4 500 175-6130 AH Powef V-6 air cf'UIM MMe Call1 127•14 ' T · C'" ... 2~r_, • Dall)' Pilot July 4, I I. 18, 25. Sllerrlnglon Pl "2109, New· PtJBllC M)llC£ NAMI llA~NT - -• • · · ( ·2J D. N 8 71 • oro. "' • .,..,., t989 port BMc:ll ca111 92163 Tiie fortowlng pertons are bu91MN neme °' ~ l l!P!!!ll .. !!1!!11!111!!1!1!11!1!1!!111 NISSAN 1'MS7 Pulsar NX. Loaded I 1 Thi• bullriHI II con· Publllhed Orange Coast T-723 Antranlg. N AlllllbUll'I, YOU ARE IN DEFAULT doing bu.llMN.. lilted aboW on J4.tne 1, 1989 CR BMW Automatic AC T-top Sl3,"S ducted by: 1 generll Pert· Diiiy Pllol JuM 13. 20. 27. 1855 Sllerrlngton P1 •2109. UNDER AN ASSESSMENT BRADY HOMES 229 Al-Anna Sllvwman AMIFM ca...tie. ~ CH~lngEi 1r'p~~Oh ~!'> regll1ran Cl>ln· July 4• ll89 ,..8T •-IC ..,..TV'C Hlwpott &Mch. CaftL 926&3 LIEN. DATED FEBRUARY 10. bell Pt , Cotti M..._ Cllll ThiS ttltement Wll llled ti bfak.. I\ Utl. Ex-"'~ ... ER ... '"" "' ... -. nu I IW. Tiii• tx11l111h la cori-1989 UNLESS YOU TAKE 92!27 wltll Ille COunty Cleft! of Or· ,... • r 16661 Beach Blvd menced to lranllci bust· ""CTITtOUI -··-·· dueled by· an lndMdual ACTION TO PROTECT Steveri Cllarlel and Ruth ange Courtly on June 6, cellent condition $9500 842-0631 1'11.e UAder Ille fictitious .. -IC ..,..TIC£ ro --Tiie reg111ra11t com· YOUR PROPERTY. IT MAY Setter Brady 229 A.lberl 1189 • ~J1a s"' 080 63'"'8713 • • -bullnesa l'lllM. or tlemel rUIK. nu NA• ITATl•NT menced to treriMCt buSI-BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC PllC9. Costa Mna Ce11I f4'UOO •I ,,. I ' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-F9RD 88 TAURUS lieled above on M1rct1 5. The follOwlng peraorll .,. ,,... under the llctlltoul SALE IF YOU NEED AN EX· 12127 Publlllled Orange Coal •~.lb At -111111.G~,1 • door, PIS, PIS, tape. 1981 flCTITIOUI •UllNEIS doing bulinet• •• business 11ame Of names PLANAllON OF THE Tiiis bu11ne11 11 con. Daily P110• !t1Ml'L20,~ •n u~11 ~_.,,.,.,..,....1 S400 mtlff. BEAUTIFUL Plllllph McNeniea NA•ITATIMINT REAPLANO INTER· liatedatxweonJulyl 1989 NATURE OF THE duc:ttc:lbyllusbilldandwtfe July 4 198t ··~·· .,. .. 1,....I, ...... *8112 ATS5887 645-5038 Tlllt 1tatement -hied Tllef041ow.ngpersons.,. NATIONAL. 3121 w Coeat Antr•"""Allltabu111' PROCEEDING AGAINST Tll• reglltlllll com· • T-678 •• mt A I 40 000 Mli.. Ch•rcoal -wttll Ille Courity Clerk Of Or· doing bulloess as Hwy IJA. N-porl B .. ch, -.... CON ....,, "'"" 11'0llQl'01 • · FORD '86 Coun on June 16 BACCHUS DESIGN t961 Callf 92663 Tiiis stetemenl was hied YOU. YOU SHOULD • meric:ed 10 tranaaet bull· --------- ' '116 At"•' 11111YUO• Digital Out\. Le1thef In-CROWN viCTORIA = IY · Sellta Anl Ave , Costa Arthur D. Axelrod, 3121 with tlle Cou11ty Clerk of Or-TACT A LAWYER NOTICI neat u11d11 lhe flct1t1ou1 fUllC N011C[ I 1 terlorl T-Topl S12,000 Or All Power, euto, elr, f4D47t MHI. Callf 92627 w Coast Hwy 6A, Newl)Ofl arige Courity on June HI, Ot; buslnet• name or names --;.;;;.;=;...;.~..;..-;..__ 11-11 1 8"f0tler. 731-5784. Loacledl (1PUM686) Publltlled Orange Co.at Elllll Murphy Fowler & Blach.Calif 926&3 1989 n.UITElllALI llt1e<l1boveonJune7 1989 FtCTfTIOUIMlllMIH Hewport ''""''\~~I $6996 Delly Piiot JUM 27. July. David Fowler 1961 S111ta Tiii• bualneu II con· F422412 T.I . NO. 5222, Steveri ~ Brady NA .. ITATIMINT at Ed1naer. Sant• HUNTINGTON BEACH 11, 18, IHt • • ""'Ave., cosi1 Mesa, Ca1,1 dueled by 1n lt1dlvldual Publlthed Orenr Coast NOTICE IS HEREBY Tiiis 11111me111 Wll llltld Tiie lollOWlng perlOnt ar• Service and P'11S ttuurs CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH T.893 92&27 Tiie reglatrent com· Delly Piiot Ju11e 2 . July 4, GIVEN, lllal ori Wednesday. with the Courity Clerk of Or· dOing buslllels u: I am 6 30 m Mo r 4 • 31 This 1>ua1ness 11 c011. mericed 10 tranaect bull· 11, 18, 1989 J~ly 19. 1989. at 11 00 ange Couiity on Ju11e 18, BITS DATA CRUISE. 6030 P n " ...... '11I11IO ___ 8 ~6 -• .,._II' ...,..TICE ducted by husband and wile neas under the fictitious T ·'94 o clock • m ot nld d1y, 111 1989 E Lldert LIM, Anallelm. ~~'!!:!!S~~~m~~~p~m~S::a;-I -~ If-FORD MUSTANG GT .--nu The reglatrant com· bu11neu ntme or 111mes Ille Ir .. 181 Hid~1°' COii· F4224ft Oalll 92807 ~k!.,O:i ~eel~,~-ldu1t' owned.' eittraa, 1m: NAMI ITATlllll'NT I ne11 under thl llctitlou• 188t , ~~~~T~'SEog~~I~~ ~~~ ?~~8Pl~~;ure 2 . July 4, ~:.C::':2ak:n•. An11111m . ... ) * llW 1987 black 5-spffd FICTITIOUI .,._1 menced to tranuct buel· llated above on June 14 rta.IC M>TICE ductl11g Trutt .. • s1111 Publl1118d Ort~e Cont Shera·Clll TMf'IO, 6030 E • YD 21• ca1Mtl• PM:n" ••frui m.culate S 10,950/olter Tiie followlng perton1 are 1bu~nesa nime 0c°' ~~me,• Arthur D A•elrod '~!~:>~:A~~=~· VICE 1800 NOl'lll Bro1dw1y ' ' T-697 Tllia bu1111111 11 con· , 831-3024 846-4330 dOlng butinen u 11t ..... 1b0ve °" to.,... • Tllll tletemeril WH filed s . 00 I hi c I i Mu11 ... to believe thla ____ • ~ __ A SPECIAL EVENT 34 163 1981 wltll the County Clerk 01 Or· Tiie lollowlng P8flOOS ar• ult• I . " t 1 Y o ---------dueled by: .,, lndlvldual beautiful 1utomoblle. Cell •JEEP/EAGLE SALE* Pacific Co.at. HWy.' Dane Ellerl Murphy Fowle< aoge Courity ori JuM 23, doing buSl~eas es Santa ~~· c;'"&ufor~;· flUBllC M)TlC[ Tiii reglatrarit com· NIW& USED nm.ml--.... ~ ...... 1540 JarnbOrM Rold Nerwport a.acn ...... ... .-a ...., ..... ..•.• , mHNllll.I 11 you're tired of all the andh ....... Of new car, WHY US. Our II 1 pri- ority 19 your Mtltfaction In prloel, .-.C11on aod after .... MNlce. We want your buelneat, let UI pt0¥9 II. ..,..,..,,, Come .-1.-. ... new 1tl0 tntegra. NOWI ...... .... 1001 Ouell 91 Npt Bell TU·Hll DATSUN 260-Z-Alpine 11-0, e/C 1978. S2100 ObO. M&-104 I 8 5 9 . 3 8 7 9 • I•. v. P1 Calif 92129 • Thi• 111tement was llled 1989 WHITEY s CREW. 113 •noe. • • . __ ;....;;;=;....;.~..;.;..;;,...._ menced to lrttlllci buat-meseaoe 1"' OYER Kathl .. T PawN IOHunl wllllllleCounlyClerllolOr· '4n1IO Morrl1tow11 Lii . Costa REAL ESTATE SECURITIES fte:TITIOUllU ... 11 ""' ulld., Ille flc:tllioua $11:000 090 /0 I Ion St. •7 Hunti.... ~ ange Cou11ty on June 27. PubllShed Or1rige Coast MIU, Cellt 92626 SERVICE. 1 Cllil0tnla COf· NAMI ITATl•NT buSlnes1 lllml Of 11ema ' llYOICE ~ C1ttf 92M8 "..,1 1189 Dally Pilot July 4, t t 16. 25. Frederick J Wllltalord, POflflon II duly IPPOlri\~ Tiie loltoWlng peraori1 111 lilted abOve on June I, tt89 '42"30 tt89 113 Monlstowri lri . Costa Trvst .. of Ille Associet..,.. doing butt""9 11 Sllen-Clll TMnQ Thie butlneu la cori· P\ibh$1141d Orange Coesl T. 710 Mna Calli 92626 herel11 referred to, pursuaril R A N c H o Tlllt 1111emen1 was flied .~ ann *-_teEa/on0all lLEI d~~4:' b:.;.~~u~om D1Wy Pilot July 4 11 18 25 Rosa Whltel0td. t 13 Mor· to Ille power o~ ~ er· CUCAMONGAIPENNHILL with Ille Cou11ty 0-k of Or-lllUl~..,. -~ r-. menced to trtnuct butl: tl89 . . rtatown Ln.. Costa Me~ ~°"1, .. ~'c-lr~~,!..~!! 47 ASSOCIATES. 3"1 ange-Colmty on June 6 . ..., .., -,.., T-720 Nil.IC M>TICE Cat11 02121 ... ,,,., .. ,o .... -"''-"""" MecArtllur Boulevard, ~t• 1919 .,: ':,., .:' .. .._. .._,, In tlodll MM urnt.r Ille flclllloua Tllll business 11 con-Code. by the AUOclallon I •240, Newport Beach. Cati! '42107' ,.. wo 11111t -• .. ~ .. c-,, bulinlM tllme °' ,...,,,.. Fte:TlTIOUI 8UltNEll dueled by hutban<I and wife Artlelft and By·L•-· Of 0c>-92ee0 Pul>llStled Orenge Coat -..----· • .._ _. lilledlboveonJune 1 .• 1989 P'tB.IC M>TICE NAMI ITATl•NT Tll• reglstra111 com-eratlng Reguletlons, llllCI by Thomu E Tueller, Gen-Diiiy P1lo1 June t3. 20. 27. I •AU .uLS AYMAllI• ' IEEP UILE ~~"':1!1~~ was flled FICTITtOUI MlllMIH Tiie foltowtng peraons are menced to tranllCl bull-111e ~~~lion o~_?>:-• r 11 par 1111 r. 3 t 9 t July 4, 1989 .._ ....._.. W • NA• ITATl•NT doing bu..,..... 11 n.ss ullder the llctttiOus nantt, """"'"lont .,.., .. Mec:Attllur Boutev1rd, SulM T-674 In W• .,.,_,,. 32811 Camino c.pi.trano wttll lhl County ~k of Or· Tiie tollowlng pertonl are PACIFIC DESIGN & COM· bull,_. oame or OllMI strlCllonl recetde<I Ac>fll 3• •240. Newport a..dl, Cahf --------- l• .;;· SANJUAN CAPISTRANO= County on une 27' dolngbuslnlUH MUNICATIONS, 1620 111ted•bove on.June 7.1H9 eou1°'8 1" Ille officer.:: 928'0 rtaJC NOTICE .1•• -11 NftU7 (a)LIOO PACIFIC YACHT Nutmeg Place. Suite 203 Fred Wllltelord llty Recorder o , Tllla busl~H 11 COl'I· __ .......,.....-~-..---- • --Pubtltlled Orange Coest CHARTERS (b)LIDO PA· Colt• M .... Clalf 92628 Tllll 1tttement Wll filed County, ~ ~";33~ I~· duc1tc:I by • ffmlte<I partoer· Fte11TIOUI .., ..... Invoice amount mey ••· 09ily ~lo J "'4 11 18 25 CIFIC 634 lido P1tk Or Ste. Advlf'!Ced Tecllrilcaf Put>-'IWlth the Cou11ty Ci«k of Of· strumerit o 4 . ll\lp NAMI ITATIMINT • • ,_.. • -· -Orllt< "' ~ actual dealer COit 1t19 1 1 u., • · • · 200 ~I Bffch Call! llcetions loc Caltlornla 1nge Cou11ty on June 27, Wl\lch Artlciet and By·L-~. fll• r1g111r1nt com· Tiie lollow•ng P9f'O"I are "8 ~· • du• to Incentive• T.711 92663 · 1520 Nutmeg ·Place. su11ti 1999 Of Regulations, end ~llr· mencec1 to \(ariuct bull· doing busm.t u: VOLKSWAGEN, '83E OUANTUM !S tp, air, c:a .. (2BMC 142) 13396 ! Huntington Beech CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH 18631 Beech Blvd a.42-0831 ptovtcled to lhe dealer by Ma. Derilae C Lewrence 203, Cotta MH1, Call! F&nSM etlon. 11 1Uppiemerit..., ~r nMI undlf Ille flct1tlou1 PM CONSULT ANTS, manufacture+'. Offer H · Curry 1851 Park leri Cr 92e26 Publllhecl Orarigt Co.st arnerided, Imposed apecilic buliMU t11me or nema 18"5 Anallelm Sult• 1!1-E p1r .. 48 hfl 1fter pubtl· fta1C NOTICE Cotti Mesa. Calif i2e21 ·· Thia bu11rie11 II con· Delly Pilot July •. 11. 18, 25. obligat~N on the~~ lilted ebove on NIA eo.11 Mesa. Calli. 92821" • cation. Sii• e1tcludH Tiiis bu11ness 11 cori· ducted by • corporlllon 1989 the rt• property --.r T'llomu E Tucker 1 Myrt St1l111Ur, 1145 Wrangler1In11ock. PICTITIOUI IUIMll ducted by an 1nd1vldu11 Tiit reg11111111 com· T·71S l\erllll 10 pry:~"*;,''· Tiiie ttatemeril w11 filed Anlhllm Suite t~. C~t• NAm ITATl•NT Th• reglstra111 ·com· menced to 111nnc1 bull· by reason ° • rue °' .. Wiii\ th• Courity Clerk of Or· MMe, Callf 92627 Tiie fottowtng J*IOl\1 are ~ to trensact bull· nets ullder the llctlllou1 flta.IC NOllC£ ::• 1~ A~~r.:b"::'~~~!; ange County ori June 11. Pl\11111 Eiler, 1845 Anallelm dolt19 l>Ullnell u : ,...., u11der the llctihous buairieu name 0< n1m11 F b 0 w 24 ~989 In llld 1969 Sule 13-E. Cotti MHI, 8CM AUTOMOTIVE, 1630 butlrien name 0, nemes fisted 1bove on Mey 15 FIC-TITIOUI IUt .. EIS e ruiry • : F422470 Calll. 92627 (rear bldg). Cotta lltttc:I •t>ow ori NIA 1989 . NAME ITATl•NT 0"~·.:-~~~ ln:;;~l Publllhed Orange Coast Thi• busln•H II COii· ...... C.it1 12127 D c LIWT~ Curry Dentel J Boret1, PrHIMnt Thi loltowlng peraons er• ~LA~ PUBLIC AuCTION Diiiy Pilot June 27, July•. ducted by .• general pll1· Rlchlrd 8ond. 143 Melody This statement was hied Tllll tlltemer\I Wll l11ed dOlng butlneu .. TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER 11 16. 1989 Mtahlp ln •82, COiia ~. Calll with tlle Courity Clerk Of Or· .ith Ille CouMy Clerk of Or · P.EDERSEN DESIGNS, FOR CASH lawful money ol T-695 Tiie 11gt11ra11t com· 12'27 ange County ori June 23. •noe County on Ju~ 27 344 Monroe. Irvine. Ctltl I II• U,.. 1 •1 e d S 1 11 •1 mericed 10 trantact bull· Ronald l• CMrter, 14 t 1999 1189 92720 eviderioed b 1 cuNer'i "8.IC M)TIC( neu under Ille fictitious Metody Lt1 irO, Cott• Mesa. f423'74 f.4HU1 Der1n1t E Pederaen. 344 y bullneA 11eme or 11am.. Cellf t2127 Publlthed Orange Co.it Pubtilhe<I Ortnge Coast Mor"oe. lrvtf'll, Celtf 92720 clledt drawn on 1 11811 Of l'ICTlTIOUI IUllMlll lltted lboYe on M.-, 30, Thi• butln111 11 COl'I-()elf plot J I 4 11 16 25 Daffy P110t July 4 11 18 25 Tllll bu11neu II Cori· natlonal btnk. or th• NAMe ITAffMINT .... HONDA 1ear Prelude ,.,._ bam11dc 9300 llTUll • .. 100K mitea but XLNT •lllllBf ducted by t generel part· IH; 1 u y ' · 1989 ducted by an lridlYldull =•11~::;.111~':;~fn:~~~i!~ Tiie f~lng P«IOfll are Myn Stalnlller nershlp l -714 T-716 Th• reglttrtril com· . doing butlneM.. TNI ttatemerit Wll filed Tiie 11glatrat1t com· menc:ed to tranSIC1 bu~ specified lri Section Sl02 ol Hf S M081LE DETAIL· with Ille County Qer'k ol Of. menced to tranuc:t bu• --ti' ..,..Tll'C --•c ..,..,ll'C ,,... under Ille lictitlOUS 111• Cililornlt FlnttlClll ING, 1081-t 25tll St . Newport ..,. County Oil June 5, -under the flctltlOus ~ nu ~ ... _. nu ~ business rieme °' n1,,_ Code Wh.lcll II authoftzed to ee.cn Cellf t2'43 IH11 do l>uSlf>esl ill Ille Stell of • .... 07I ~---riameon,,;. tl\llMS, 1919 ~NOR COUl'T flCTITIOUS 8\.lllMlll Utted ibove on Julll 14 Callfomla. ALL PAYABLE Byron Llngdon Heril'\I 11• ~1 ,.._, • ...,.,... Of' CALWOMf!A, N.,_ ITAT ... NT 1989 AT THE TIME OF SALE. 111 1°'~ 25th SI · N•Wl>Of! PublWled °'T. Cout condtt.lon. Regularly Mr· CADILLAC 1981 Coupe de 48.000 m1i.., IMthef I~ viced, Autometlc, air VIiie. mint condUlon, terior. aJJ power, wht1e a S I 3 0 0 o b o loeded t>eautyl $12,750. buu11tu11 '5500 obo 176-51111175-5191 14()-8582 650--03"4 Ronald L Cl'lerter COUNTY OF OftANGE Tiie lotlowlng petllOf\I are Olnnlt Ptdera.n ngllt lltle Ind lriter•t lllen ~. Cakl 92113 Deily Piiot JuM 1 • 20, 27 ......C IGTICE "8.IC IGTICE NlJC NOTICE -Tllit itatemeol wa hied lri 1111 Matter ol Ille Ape>ff. OOinO t>utlneu as Tl\i1 atltemenl WIS llled lleld .by SANDY BERTHOLF Jam11 Merline W11U1ms, JVty •. 198t T-•12 ---------_________ , _ __,.;~---------wtlll Ille County Clerk ol Or· cet1011 of MARIA DEL IMPERIAL AUTO SER· wltll tN Councy C1er-k of Of· Of clllrned by any oti* IOI'-' 25111 St . Newport v fltem10Ue WSI f-411JD Nied a~ on ~y I 1989 = County on .NM 27 CARMEN SANCHEZ for VICE 3905 W 5-gefatrom ange Coullty on June 27• party, In aod lo that reat 8Mc:tl. Cthf 92113 llAlm ITAftmNT Publlthed Orange Coast Jolin De Sliva I Cl\~ of Nam.I Slf'lll Anl C1hf 1969 properly Sltu1t1 In 11ld Tiii• bUllllHI II COf'I· Tllelolowlngperaon11r1 Oeily ~ J4.tf'll 13, 20, 27. Tllil lllllmlf\I WU tiled Publl--.. Or ~ No A148712 Ried A Et M1art 2281 Or ~ OountylndS1111.cteterlbed duc:led by • genetll p.,. Clolr!l llultl'IW • J4Jly. 1M9 With tllrl C~I)' CWk of Or· ...... ange • ORDER TO Miner Apl c Cotti Mese Publitlled lllQ9 ...... st at lolloWt ~ f'ICTntoUI .., ..... 0 I H PRODUCTIONS, T-679 ange Courily °" June 20. =Pilot July 4, t1, 11, 25, SHOW.CAUSE Ce11f. 92627 • . =Pilot July 4, 11, 18 25, PARCEL1 1'111 reg11111rit com-NAm ITAT'lmNT 2950 •C2 Alrw.y, Colla t9H 1 T 722 FOR CHANGE OF NAME Jamal A El Muri, 2281 198 T 721 An u11dlvlded 1144111 ~-~~tr:~~ 1'f'91• Tiie f~ J*IOnl ll'e MeM. Cellf. IHM "8JC NOTIC( fa2'711 • MARIA DEL CARMEN Miner Apt C, Co~IJI M.... • lnter .. t In and to lot 2, ol MM ..,....., 1 1 1 ous dOlnO l>UllMM u : Howwd Oavtd Berk0Wlt1, Publilhed Ofenge Coatt SANCHEZ lla1 hied t petj-Cel1I 824527 Trtct 12312 In 1111 City ol bUtlneu natM Of nltMI ACW PARTNERSHIP, 800 :::enoe Ave., Newpor1 FICTITIOUl.,._.I Delly Pttot June 27. Jul)'•. 'M.IC NOTICE tlof\lnthllcourll0tan0fdef Zleel A El Mtt1I, 2211 "8.IC M>TICE Newpol't &Men, County oJ llltedab0¥1onJuM 1, 1989 N. H1rbor 81\IO .. Fullefton. Celif MAim ITATIMINT 11, 11, 1989 1llowl11g petitioner to Miner Apt c. Cotta MeH. Oreoge, Sta\• of Callfomla, Byron L Ha11ri• II Cellf t2t32 Oreeorv T Fltlcller. Tiie folowtng peraons.,.. T-704 fteTlTIOU• ._..., chll\ge hllll\er neme lrom Cell! 12121 ftCTITIOUI eu...-11 u per map recorded In Tiiie 11a1emen1 w11 flied Louts A. Ometu. 30Q E 211M VII Cerrito, Lagutll OolnabUetneMH. NAMalTA~ MARIA DEL CARMEN Thi• butlllHI It con· N..-ITATWMINT 8ook551 Paget35tllrougll WlllllheCourilyCler1lol0r· CoutH'#y .. NewponBMol\, -..... Calif CONSOLI DA TED RE-"8JC NOTICE• Tllrl lolloWlng Pl'IOnl are S A N C H E Z t o ducted by 1 llmlted pertner· Tiie followlrig P«tont are 3 7 lt1cl~tlv1 ol Mia-ange Coullly on JuM 11• callf, t2llO fflla butlMU 11 COii• SOURCES. 19991 Mt. dolna bullneu.. MARICARMEN CORTINA lhlp doing butlneet.. CllllMOUI Mtpt "'tlle OI· t919 "®wt I( 8fown. 1&31 ~ by. a general pwt• HutCft1naa. Fountain Ve!Jey, FtCTITIOUe ~II JO"Y'CEES INTERIOR IT IS HEREBY ORDERED Tiie reotttrtnt com· NEWPORT MANAGE· flee ol tlle County RtlCOlder 'UMn ~ Rd . Areedla, C.llf netlNp Cellf t2"'1ot NMim ITAT'lmNT PLANTS, te0 8 Jeffefaon that 111 perton11ri1er .. ted In menc;.41<1 to tremlClt bull· MENT & CONSUL TINO, 177 of Mid County Publlllled Orange Coalt 1100I Tiie registrant com· Cotaaen Olene S•lallll. Tiie following peraooa .,1 Unit 0 , Plteenha. Calll tlle metier tletellld appear ""' under Ille llctllloul Rivertlde Otlve Suite 1103. EXCEPT 1~etrom Unit• 1 Delly Piiot June 21, July •. Edwerd Simpkin•. 31 menceo to traneact buel· 1"9 t Mt Hutetllnga, Foun-doing buslneaa u 12170 t>efOfe this court In ~111· bVtlnesa neme or namee Newport Bead\, Cell! 92163 tllrough 6 and 50 tllrough ae 11, 18, 1189 W•t Live Dell. ArCldl1, NM wndet tllrl fletltlOue taln VllM1y, Calif 827<>1 NEWPORT CHARTER. JoyCI E Amolcl, 363 N menl No 3 11 700 Civic llStad above ori a llmlle<I H Veughtl Or899, 608 81 ~ upon Ille Con· T·H2 Calif t100I ~ neme or riamea TNe butiftetl la cori-272t N. 8fletol. Santa Ana, lrOOk Glen, Ofange, Cthf Center Oflve West. Senta partnwlhlp Carnet'°!' Ave , Cof<1n1 dll dofnlnlum Pieri ("Pten") r• Ttllt 1>U1lne11 11 cori- lllted 9boveon June 1, , .. Mted by: an lndMdl.lal ClllL t2708 t2Mt Ana. Clhlort111, on Juty 11, Ried A El M-1 Mer, Celir t2'25 corded June 23 11M aa tn· "8JC N()TlC( duCtad by. a limited pertner- Howerd BettcOWIU Tiie r1g111ran1 com· Chau T Yung, 7041 E Thll bualneu la con-1189. at 2 00 o'c:IOCll PM . Tiils 111tM*!I wu lllllCS 911111• A. Drage. 601 strument No ei.212911 ol tfllP • Tlli9 at.-..nt .,.. flied ~ to trenteet ~ Country ca,ti I.ti . Af\ahetm dllcted by. M lndlYldual and ttletl and lhlr• ~ with tlle County Cieri! of Or· CarnetlOtl Ave . Cofone del 0"1elal Ricord• of Hid FICTYne>Ue ...,..... t111 reg1strat1t com· _.._County eten of Of. ,_ urlder the flctl1IOU• Hiii. Cellf 12807 Tiie regl•lf•nt co,.,. ~.If any they l\lve, wt1y .,. County on June 27, Mw. Callf t2t2.6 County NAMe ITATIMSNT menced to transact bull- _,.. Coufley on June I . ....,_ name Ot MIMI Thie ~ II con-menoad to JrllftlllCt bu"-Mid pehllOll fOf chlnge of IH11 Tiii• bl.lllnetl II con-RESERVE THEREFROM Tiie tollowlno perlOM .,. ,,... under Ille ~litlovl tt1t ...... above on Merdl 1, OUCted by WI tndMdu• MM un0er Ult ktl\IOUI f\ll'l'llhoulid "°' begfatlled ~ ducted by: a glflefal 1*1• tlloae ~II~ doing~.._ ~ f'llllM or namet ,.,., ,. -1'11s~o••trat1t com· ........ ~ Ot """* IT IS FURTHER O«Mrld Publtllled OrWl(l9 Coat'*"~ ltl&.c:tlon221Atlttad ..... C.~NtEA FOR PSY· lltted ablN9. on Mey 30, ~ Orange Coeat ColtMn 0 SWl9'! menoad to ttMUd bull· ltMed abCMt on hPtember 11111aCl09'fof11\11 order to Oefty Piiot July4, II, 18, 26, Tiie reg111rant com· lrl9tiOtl Of &MfWll" Of CHOSOMATIC HEALTH , 1989 D9ly Not .IUne 1t3, 20, 27, Tiiie ~· ... llled ,,... ""°" IN fictlhOU'I 13, 1H3 ttloW CIUM be publl9hed lri 1119 ~ to ttanaact bull Mlde II of Ille o.c:a.r.11on 200 N9wport Center Ottve, LOUii Omllal ./lllly '4, 1Mt wetti .._ COl.Hlty CWll ot Of. ~ neme or nemee Joyce [ Al'*d the Orange COMt Daly PllOt, T. 111 .,... undlf Ille ltc:lltlout of ~t• COfldlflont SIN!• sot, ~ ee.cn. Thie 111tement wea ltted T -177 Mg1 County on June ti, llMed above on NIA Tllll ltlllelMnt -llled a ,,..,~ Of general bultne9I neme Of nemet end Aetlrlcl~ &.~ Cell! t2te0 wltll 'lie County Cllr1I of Of· ---------ttet ~ T Yung Wltll the County Cler~ of Or· Cir"culallon. pubfilMd lf'I tllle "8..IC NOTICE lieteo 1boveon June 1. 1919 lnQ A Pten of Condominium Sandr• Hervey, 1741 MOe Coutlty on June 5, '9JC mllCt ,....,, TIMI tlatemanl waa hied M9I CounC) Otl June 23 county at IMlt ~ a _... H. VIUOf'tn Oreoe Owneralllp lor 8eyvlew Motlll Ceno Qrde.1. Hunt· 1Nt ~ Or-.noe co..1 wftfl .,.. County a.. of Of. 111t 1or lour conaecutlw --.. Ptennoue .,_11 Tiiie 11ttem9nl w11 tlted Couft ~-• AllOCll-lnQton 8Mdl. Callf w2f.41 . '411'71 HC-IWM.,!i,! .. M!'W ~ "9t June 27. J4llly •. M9I C01.H11y on June 11. Nmll ~o &lie day of Mid !leaf· ~ ITATnmN'T wttll tlle County Clerk of Ot· llOfl ("Oeclaratlol\'·). r• lllla butlMll II con· Pubalfled OrMOe coe.1 ••••.MT "· 11, 1Mt 1.. Publllflecl Ofenge eo.11 Tiie fOltc>Wln9 per.one., • .,. County on June 27. corded~ 3 1 ..... !ft. OUCMd by en lf'ldMdual Diiiy Ptlot June 13, 20. 27, lllcAc ,._... T_.. '411111 09llY Ptlot JUiy 4, tt, II, 25. JUN 01 tMI d06nQ buetMel ... 1"8 ttr\Hl'lellt No M-1*•5 OI Tiie reolatrenl com-.M)'A. 1Mt -......-a: , _____ ...._ _ _..._ ~ Otenot Collet tllt ~I A. ..AcacMAN1 MAPFOLIO 417 GOIO· Nllllt omca.1 "9cord• Of 11lcl fMn09d lo traneect bua1-T 471 T PU9LICATIONI, -..c llmCI Deity Not June 21, Nit •. T-7\) ...... ef .... ..,.,.., entod eor~. .,., Mar ~ OfllftOI Coeet County. ... UftCll( IM tlctltlout --------., ~ Ottwe. HuM· -11. 11. 1MI Cewt Callf Me25 • Dally Ptlol .My •• , '· 18, 25, PAAC[L 2 tMlnetl 1'1""9 Ot '*"* "8lJC lll)TIC( ............ c.. .,.... "!!!!!,D"• .. =9•n T..... -.JC~ ..... Def Cer"'91'1 lenc· ~ J 8mfth. 417 Gold-,... Unit"'· .. defined 11'1 flit .. ted llbove on June 10, -----=;..;.;=----.,..,...A.~.-1 -,.,_ •• , --.,_, MM2 8'igtwl Pl , £1 enrod Coron1 oet Mw T-71t Deotaratlon and M ~ "" MltrlOUe-11 ....,... DrM, Hwltlf'lf90n ,.. ........ ...... .. PWIJC ..,. "". an OOUaT Teto, CA·~ Clltf t2125 • upon !tie""" ..... H~ MAim ITAT'llmfl ..... Cell...... ............ ----------------· OPOMINAID' ~ Ot~ coe.t Tiiie but111 ... It C.01'1• ... llmC( PAACEL3: Tllla tt•temenl --ftled Th9talowtng'*90n11rt Tllll ..... ,,... 11 con· .IDMWM t MAGii. ..CTl'i'IOUl.,_M eouft"ICll'IA'W Delly Piiot June 1 , 20, ir, ~by inlndMduel r...em.ntaOY1rtlleCom-wtthlheCountyCllrkotDr· dOlnl......,_.•: ....... 911 ~'* , • .._.... MMll, IMne. c.-f ..... ft&WS! " In.,. ..... " .. Aoo41· Mr •. ,.. Th• r•9lt1ran1 com-NflHOUI-• mon ,.,..., .. tuCtl tetrTI " enoe COl.Hltv on June 11. l't'ITIM AHAL VIMS. OE· ,,._ rettatranl co111-"'9 ....... pereoNare cetto11 of eLOAI' HM IMflCed to trwect "*° MMmlTATll IJIT defined In 1M 0-.ation, ltlt _..ANO ASUU ... ENT. ,..._. .. w..act ...,._ ...... 1.. Oa e1Ne. II dOlfllt ....,_ • ~ IANCHIZ lor ,_. under .,_ "9ml0utl TM follOWlnO per90nl .. end M auc:tl ......,,. we ,... ~ 101 Wlmbledot1 Way, ,_ .... ~ AMl9. wtwne. a. .. WHTl"N WINDOW Cllanpof..... .-.rmm ~ '*"'. """"'dOlnlbuiMW• . deecllbed lind ll""'9cl lfl ~ ..... ~ ........... CoetaMeaa.CIM t2t2t a.... --or .... WAIHING. 1'3U ......., No AMlrW :=z: led aoowe °"(Mil~) . ,f'MfEWO TEACHERS, hclton u .,......, "()wr\. Diiiy Pllo4 June 21, July.. """* ....,,. Nelgl'IOOfa. ...... 't ...... '·,.. ........... " OOfto ~ •••• T__.., Celf. lltlO ONllltfO ti I OP • JoM J .,,.. ua-24 ltr"'· Newport .,. Non·E~ hM· 11. 11. ,.. UH Wlmlbledott Way • ....... .. ,... W..rtll•1 t... lerNlld ffeul ""'9eu, ==~ -1~~TOP TM9 -•••• .-flled -.adl,c.M.1*3 inent10ffntof!M!ol.ltc."of T-700 CO..MW.Clltf tMH Tiii •11••1111 •Aelll• --.. '911elret11 ••"'· 110, lo ,..,.._ • ,.,, P'Ofll It.AME I IOi'9 .ittl .. c....., °"" of Or· Ctvltty OleM Catron. ~ti Of Ille DeeilerettOn unct• ~ •~• . .... c.Mra.r.efOr-• ................ AN.Calf II* .... ..,__ ----... OauMy 911 """' t3, ,IS·I• ltrMt, Newport Tiie .. ,_ ....... Of Ult Wl1111btedon W1y, ... eo.itlr Ill ._ I, .. ....... T'lle ............ WI• ..... e .-n In Ihle TN fil: -,.,IOM tt11 lead!, Cellf 9"13 OCW comlMft ~'°" 0oMa MW. Calf. t2t2t .. --· _... • __,. ..,.,..., ...,, '" ..... 1f _. W1 ... •"* ..... ._._..... .. .-el ._. Thie bueiMN le con-of.._,_.~·---MtmDUlalll 1116 T1'la bue1MiM It oe>n· ,.., ...... hatHM ,, r• Gt-. c... __,.., OfllMMdl• oove C1Hor1•ed la -••II Y ..._. • .....,end.,.. -,1Mlii··-·~=NI" ="""-~ti.''·"· Tile , ..... ,.," COlll· pUfpOl1tdtollle: -~ "-...... ""°"'.,. TN , .. ,.,,ant C:Ol'ft• I ,111 .......... .,.,.. ....... ~ ........ ...-.c.. ............ :. ..... .. .,.... lbwlj.. ....... ....,., f ·'f11 ,_ ............. ..,,.... . tl.C.'I . CUMmNcY IJC. -...... kwoue N.IMlt-,:1111_...Qlll._ ..._ __ .... ., TM ............ • t?JI_......,. ...._ W • .___ AK JI .... _ ......... MIA .............. ..,. ~..-:-Celf .......... Ol'Mle1,,... ...... ...... _ a..o.:a.--·-.. Ill .... ..... u....-. ........ .. l 0..-0...-• .,_. l=F1 -119' ..._ • ... ...,,_ ~............ Mil ,...._. Tllll ....... _ .... ,., ._' J11U .... Gml Clllll •Or· J 4'&L I 1 o..lrle.-Wt ..... •0, .. llit()NWf Cllfl Of Or· .. I~-~ II; ...... Wll M ..... '-.Ql9-.... C8w"Y Oft .IUM I, er9'lltl!I.,. ..... ?-....,_. ' ,.. . ., -....... -.. .-....... ·--~ •... ,.. ...... --.!"-Ml. P £$J f 0-. 0.---. -* I•• ,....trMt HM• • 1 .... Of.-Cell? -· ce1t; -•4·tt.ta.a .. ....., ........ ,.. .. ......, ...... .,.,......._,.,11,.tJ. _............. --........ 4.-.... f·1'1 m. :-• .._. ,... • ..._ T-tn ~~-~ .a, , I ........ fl = .... • ..., a.---~--------~ii~ -du'n ="*'c.... .......... 'MOCM-Ul '*" -- --· --~ Cllllftl .. Or. ,......... ... ... ····.:::== . ......, .. _ ... .. ;r.-r• !Wli-lliil)\lllt , .. , ....a I ' I ~ . ' . P\l'\IC\//I Orange C0Mt DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, .My 4, 1111 The 4th bas special meaning .for host 11y VIDA DIAN o.-y ,... c ........... (wcaril'\J stars and stripes vest and hat), Stepbale UJoyd (stars and stripes hose), Rut and Aaa Pua• (red cape and waving a flaa). was 111111n1 "Come Onna My : house ... r saw this pretty sirt. ubd her to dance and fell in •k>ve. Nowf For Welf Stera, the Fourth of July has a deeper meaning than it docs · for many Americans. To most people, America's birth- day means picnicking, fireworks and rclaxina and visiting with friends and rerativcs. paane to toast the nation's birthday in a friendly atmosphere. On Friday close to 300 aucsts were catina, dancing and swappina Fourth of July stories. A number of auests had areat "Fourth" stories -... I remember spending the holiday in Denmark. The Danes threw a ~t celebration for the Americans,• said 1.-Wells attendina with Mary Aaa and shar- ina a table with Nora and Cbrle) Bester (just back from a trip to Illinois) and Mar1aret and Boward Ricardson. I can't remember her name, but remember her face." The 7th of July is a IPCCial daJ.: -Tom Rlley. He met l!:mma a..r1., and Nora Hester at celebratlon. llOHO,('OPI< 'hetday, Jaly 4 ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19): Moon 1n Cancer. Mars in Leo translates into eitcellent financial ncws. Long-distance call. first related to holiday. transforms into money offer You're told ... You·,e got what It takes:· TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)· lnqumes madc less than 24 hours ago bnng responses Focus on sohd1t). details. accounting procedures. Relauve desires to be .. hfe of thc pan) ·· If patient. this too will pass. Scorpio invoh ed. GEMINI (Ma> 21-Junc 20): fa. change of currcnc) could be pan of unusual scenano. Focus on ideas. con- cepts. delineation of program. Hohda) celebration includes promise of loyalt). Family member wants to be ··c1ass h1stonan." CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Cycle lll!iill!lllil .. llPll high in relation to possessions. basic values, romantic ideals. Timing: 1ntu1-............ 11111• .... lllj ... AI tion prove to be accurate. Family member. recently argumentative. wants to smoke "peace pipe." ay ··OK! .. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on secrets. clande~tine arrangement possibly made with one tempo.ran!) confin~d. potl.1ght O!l glamour. mystery, intrigue. Necessity for being discreet will be obvious. Pisces figures prominently VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22): Promises are fulfilled in dramatic. perhaps "noisy'' fashion. Emphasis on po"'-er. autho nty. intensit). chance 10 h11 financial jackpot. Scenario features money, emouonal fulfillment Keep goint1 111\A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Many will be "amazed-at f~c1 that )OU can be aaarcs i\'e. e\C~n pugnac1ou Pnnc1ples arc involved. D1spla) ab1ht>,.~o fight when cause as naht. upenor Sl)'S. "You're read) for promo11on SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Stress independence, creatl\1t). st)le. Member of opposite sex makes no secret of ph)sical attraction. Handle this with aplomb. New "1stas open. focus on tra,el. drama. commun1cat1on. Leo involved. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-0cc. 21): Attcn~ion ~ntcrs ~round fa.m1ly. security durable aoods. Lcfi rear automobile urc requires repair or replacement. Older female relative 1s cager to impart "wisdom.'' Financial secret is rc"ealed. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Diversify. let others know where you stand what )OU mtcnd to do about it. Scenario highlights publicit)'. special ap~irancc. wardrobe. You'll be asked to "make arranaements:· Holiday spirit prevails. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18): It's time to renovate. rcbui.ld. rcmod.cl. Serious d iscussion involves work methods. cmpl<?yment, phrsical exam.1n- ation. Lcf\ lumbar rcaion holds key to end of discomfort. Do something aboul it! . . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Scenario features commun1cat1on. 01na- tion, participation 1n the "lively arts." Your "actin' talent" ":ill be te t~: Relauvcs accept invitation to J01n forces in chantable proJ«t. Gem1n1 involved • II" MY' IS YOUR BIRTHDAY almost as soon as )OU rould s:t). "Im aoina!" you broke from family tradition. Separation from one or both reftts toOk plaCe early. whether psyc~OIOllcal ~r literal. Taurus., !-e<> ....-.._Ulfll.to-~ play unponani.tolcs 1 ~fc. You are senMH,YC, cmotioAal. unonhodoll. Family relationship currently is undcraoinJ "testina period." You're brakina ftft from restriction which was not fair 1n first ~. You'll make &ah Mrt in A"l•t -nev. love could bt hithlll)\&cd. ' '>1 . 110 \ p Anger taboo with Victorians YE euty in the llOOs ~t 111* aa& just on public nudity IM M an, but on a.,, too. At ..., on diiplays of anecr in the lail!.ilf· Childna wereq•t ~ to fill't. Nor couples arauc~of ... ..., ... bid. bidder. beddctt. E¥Cr)body put w lid on it. Until team &ilne IO lime it bleW. That's .. tbl wOld ··aananam .. ftnt came ialO popular .... co~ up with so far, I'm told, 1s t1,er urine. In short suPP&y. that. If you know how to synthesize It, please send In your formula. Twenty-nine percent of thole who identify lhcmsef vn u journalists arc lef\-haftded. Or IO reportl a l'e-tca~. hnercteiftlt '' true. Thit authority 1111 oaly abcMI' 10 ~nt of' aM ~ ~ .. left-... .... ...... -~Ill '1 IO mm war a.~..-....... -ne ~'3-i:;'iii Wolf and Au ~tern of Newpon Beach do all of that, of course, but for Wolf, there is the memory of his family's escape from the tyranny of Adolf Hitler in Stem's native Ger- man~ another escape from Holland, and unally the move from England to the U nited States. These memories and the love and appreciation for America malcc St~rp·s Fourth of July a super patri- otic event. For the past four years, the Stems have hosted red, white and blue pthcrin~ in the atrium of the red brick building where Wolrs law of- fice is located. The RW&8 party means the best hot dop aucsts have ever tasted, apple pie with ice cream, and cham- Wolf became a naturalized citizen and served in the Army intelligence. "This is the only country in the world where I could have had the schooling (UCL,\). I had to hccomc an attorney. I love this country. At the bar mitzvahs of my three sons, I had "God Bless America" played. I have this flag on my lapel. Today, I wanted to wear a sian that said 'Advice from Stern, please don't burn,' " he said. . President Reagan couldn't make the pany, but sent his regrets by telegram which were posted at the balloon-filled pany entrance next to his photograph with the host. Portrait an1st Majic Mada was at the pany along with many who went with a RW&B dress code -Barbara and Ben Harrlt (he looked like Uncle Sam) Barbara and Ala Mason "During the -Oeorcs$ion.. in my small town, my father who was an attorney and later a judac, would order a box of firework.s .• rt wasn't a very big box, but we would go lo the center of town and everybody would come and watch them lighted." re- called Richardson. Sounds of Music man 8al'1")' Cole said he fell in love for the first time on a Fourth of July. "I went to Rockaway Beach with my family. There w~ a jukebox on the boardwalk and Rosemary Oooney who had been in an automobile accident three days before, which lef\ her with two black eyes and a lot of bruises. On the followina Sept. 29 they were marrie d. Party-aocrs also included ~ - and Lee Buttda, Jerry~ Hein Coffey (the n_iibt before lbe had celcbrat.e4 her birthday at the Hilton with eiaht of her best men friends), Lea and Mary Am ,..... (celeb.-.ied her blfthday with a boat load offriends three days before), Je Aue and Gae MU (she s<>t no sympathy because she had lost 13 pounds and couldn't wear her RWclB dress), -CC and Cl.ulle Wlllt- aey, Harriett Wle4er, PaltJ B,_ , and Rekr1 Geer1e (the weddina ii set for July 22), Cllritd Be....._ Leda De Garcia and ~CllJ ind Rldaftl Barwlts. Stuttering a real struggle for youth DEAR READERS: Today Is tbe Foartla of Jaly, a very special day for my twla and me. Happy Birth· day, Slstle! • • • DEAR .\NN LANDERS: Our 12· year-old son 1s beautiful. bright and a genuine delight. but I sec trouble ahead for our talented youngster. He stutters. "Jimmy·· was talking in sentences when he was 3. We noticed that he stuttered a great deal when he was 4. At S. when he started school. the teacher said he "as the brightest child she had seen an all her }cars of teaching. His curios1t) was without end. He "'anted to know how cvel)- th1ng "'orkcd . Has "ocabulal) ""as aston1sh1ng. But he rarel) spoke up . bccau~ he wns a stutterer. It is painful to watch J1mm~ strug- gle to get the "'ords out. We kno" that his mind 1s \\-Ork1ng faster than has mouth. We keep telling him to slow down and relax. We tell him. .. Don't be in a hurf). There 1s µlent) of tame to tell )Our stOI) .. Nothing helps. We h\C an a small town in Ohio. There is no speech therapist her~. Pica~ tell us ho" "e can help our son. -MR. AND MR . K DEAR FRIENDS: We contacted the Speec h Foundation of America and learned some lnterettJDg facts about stuttering. Did yoa know: More than two and a half mlllloa Americans stutter. Stutterln1 affects foar times as many males as females. People who stutter are as ln- telll1ent and well-adjasted at oonshitterers. Jlesearc1aert can find no definite reaso1as for stutterl•I· People don't stutter wlaen tlaey talk to tllemselves or to a pet; they stutter only when tlley talk to others. About %5 percent of all clalldren 10 throu&h a state of development dar• Ina which they stutter . People who stutter are self-con· sclous about their statterl•I and may even Jet their laaadJcap de- termine which vocation they choose. There Is no miracle c11re for ttut- teri•I· It takes time and patience. Almost au clalldren wllto statter cu be helped with early trtatmeat by a trained 1peecla-Jan1•a1e patlrolo1lst. It l~ bett to 1et ,,... fetslona.I laelp as soon at Ute prob- lem becomes apparent. St11tterta1 can be a terioat lalllbltor la soclal lateractloa. A 41uUflt4 cllalclu cu laelp • statterer malte sreat ttrillet ........ naeacy, lf Ute 41tdre 11 preta&. Wlatto• CllarcllJU, Jam• a.rt Joacs ud Walter Ame•M"I .... tered aad overcame thlr ,....,,.., Here are Mme tacUa tMt aaxl••• partnlt .... w ave!* Don't say, "Slow dowa," or "Tale a dttp breat•.'' or "Relax." Don't fl•ltll tlae cllJld's Hll&ellcel or jump ID, wttla th we ... M It struulln1 wltla. Speak lD a slow, relan4 mauer. Let Ute statterer bow daat Y• are llsteal•I to wlaat lie er • l&JI ratlaer tlaaa a.ow lt '""411. For tlltote WM wut ..,.,....., 1aldaace u4 bMka daat eu ..., ~ • ttatterer, write to UM S,... ,. __ - dat._ of America.~ a .... ,.,.. •rcaaluUoa wt Ila• Mia w-tlae ,.uc for 4% yean. 'be ~ ' ls P.O. Bo1 11741, M= ,.__ SllJl-0741, or call ( )ttl·ntl.- l've seen tlae materlal uill It ti ucellet1t. .. War refugee calls America 1 his country' J' . A Tl.ANT A (AP) -Six years ago, a Navy ship plucked Thaison Nauyen and other Vietnamese rcfu- aees from a small open boat in the stormy Pacific. Now the n~wly naturalized U.S. citizen .. who has taken the first name Euaene from a character in the novel "Look Homeward, Anael," is bound for the U.S. Naval Academy. He hopes to become a pilot, a drum since k watched Amcri....,,~~--........,_ ___ 'Tt:ll __ planes streak over his Saiaon home, but says he never considered JOinina the Air force. .. The Navy ~scucd me. tf it hadn't bttn for that destroyer. I would probebty be dead," Nauyen, 20, said in an interview just before Independence Day. After Saiaon fell to the North Vietnamae in 1975, the family moved to the coasi.I city of Nha Trana. Nauyen'• fathcrt. who had tined in the South vietMmete .. navy, was sent to a "re-education" camp intended to indoctrinate him in communist thought. He wasn't released until 1982. He and his father and a brother made several attempts to nee in small boats. Twice they were turned back by aovcmmcnt ships and other ti ma they were chased off the beach by sunfire. Finally, in September l 983. the father and two sons made 1t to the GPell otearr with-35 other-people in a fishina boat, hopina to reach the Phihppincs. f ive days later they -.ere pecked up by a U.S. dcstro)cr . Nauyen remembers it well· the U.S.S. Beajam1n Stoddard. "The fllJ was what I uw first." Nauieft 111d. "I don't think f ever saw my father so Nippy." Nauyen·s mother, a younaer brother and a lister arc still in Nha Jrane. ,,.. three~ settled in the -lhowed bli acieUeiit "' "' J-.aplg to ..... • Welt led bit fOUl'G-bllt diil- ~. Ud Eut ... dM ....... ery•• play of Gil jick. SlaCI W• w.•t ....... ..., from .. .. iDto tM .... of Mia ...... .... . ...., ................... .... .............. ,... ... ...... ., ....... , ... " .. '° ........................ ... w .... ..n .. .,.. ...... .......... ~ 0 p ...... ,.... .... .............. ~ .. . .................. ... ...... ......... .-.... . Atlanta suburb of Norcross and Nauyen saned ciahth aracte, lcam·"' ina En£)ish 1lona the way. He aid well at Sequoyah Hiah •:s School, e pccially in math. He ma* the soccer team, worked for the school neW1papcr and joined tai. Beta Club, an honor aocicty. Thia spnna. he araduatcd fourth in bis class of 3s<Y. But af\er tak1na Naval Acedetity entrance cums. two thi• llOOd ia his-way: hn hciaht--~~ • quaner-inch shy of the Navy·,. quiremtnt -and a mediocre verW tell $COie. Nauyen becomes a midilUpmaa at the Naval e1dcmy ibis moeda. And he i)lans to stay in tbe ~ beyond the five-year set'Vice ~ ment after &rlduation. "Somebocly picked me CNt of IM ocean, tot me here, eduailld IM. and 11ve me a chance," lilt .., .. Thia ii tftY ~."-·"~~ ,. Ora ... Comt DAILY PILOT/ :ru.day, Juty 4, 1911 by Bit K..,. COUAIDCULTUU by w.att. & Mwatta I ! 1-. l ! I 2 "*'~S 1'0 lAT (~ °" ~ (0& witi\ stQl\Mfd holders 'Why ~s everybody hafta say 'OOOOH' and 'AHHHH'?" .1 by Brad Anderson "I think the mnaage Is, If he doesn't go on the picnic, we don't go on the picnic.'' Ml! IS ~OUR IMTMEll MOME? SURE .• HE15 MERE IN THE MOUSE 50MEWMERE ... DltKKl8 THE llENAClt by Hank Ketcham •· I LOOK FOR MIM UNDER 1'MEL'IOC~IT'( 11 "-<~ 1-'f by Jim Davis ARLO AND JANIS HEY! WMAr'!> ~ CAPlfAl,, Of VERMJTf FOR· BETTER OR FOR WORSE JUDGE PARKER .... nsc;or A~ ... by Lynn Johnston W!:ll.,I see.~·s ~ Na.Ut by Tom Batluk ~ OON''f L..IKE. rr ...