HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-05-30 - Orange Coast PilotDay off from the movies
' A lot of people are uan, \he boll~
weekend to l'ellt up hn \he arueUna worlt world
by, 80ina to the beech and maybe tak1na ln a
movje.
But Dbt Karalee Dickenon. She'• taJd.na a
break frGrn a week of 1erloua movie-aolnl. ~ Lucu' "Retum of the Jedi" la the
movie the .. been a<Nna t'o -four tl.lMI lince the ftlrn opened lut w~ with first-day box
offtce receipts to the tune of $6,219,829.
Dickenon, 26, who worb In the accowid.ng
department at Taco Bell's corporate headquarterl
In Irvine, said she camped about 42 boun at
Edwards Newport Cn.na aeein8 the film that
first day.
"I waited in line for the midnight showjng,
then ... 11.i e:ao that mornlnc and .... at 8:46 n
that nlaht. .. the eald. She ltl'anaed her V8Catlon
time trom work a year _,o, wl\en lhe learned
when the llrn would OI*\. ahe ...ad. ~ "1d lhe •w L~ odMI' filrm, · "Star Wara.11 iand' '"nie !:aop(N Strilclil Bick." at
leut 30 tiMel Heh.
She al.lo COJlecta Star Wan1 memorabWA -
lobby carda. photm and ~ arddel. D6ck~ who la teylnc' 1* hand at a mence $eland~ •muter'• delret h1 Enallah Cal Sfaw J'UUer1.c:Jn, ll1d she thouiht "SW an" wu a war movie whe 1t
aune out tn urn and didn't bother to ..,. it. "Finally, a frtenQ ~ roe to eee It and rve t?een hoolc,ed ever linoi, •• ~ uld.
IUllH CUil Dll 11.lllM 111lY. NPIR
ORANGE COUNTY . C ALlf-OHN!A 25 CENTS
Death
causes:
weird,
diverse
BY PllD.. SNEIDERMAN °' .. .,.., ........ . How did Orange Countians die
last year?
Many passed away from illness
or natural cau.es. But statistics
about deaths related to more
traumatic circwnsta.nces have just
been released by \he Orange
County Sheriff-Coroner's Depart-
ment.
Its annual report provides the
following totals for Orange Coun-
ty deaths requiring investigation
during 1982:
• Traffic fatalities, 271 ;
• Suicidee, 269;
• Accidents, 267;
• Homicides, 91; .
• Sudden infant death syn-
drome, 38.
Among \he traffic deaths, 51
were pedestrians struck by a
vehicle; 50 were operaton or
~ on a motorcycle; 10
were ridinc bkycles or tricyclea,
and one WM in a wheelchair. The
' hfChe9t rilk,. pitepy ,,,.... men. aaes 20 to '29; 81 of ·the traffic
de.atha were in this group.
Gunshot wounds were the most
(D'llllW'l means of suicide; 131
I victims u8ed thia method. Druga.
injected or ingested, were l.-d by
63 people. Hanging, inhalation of
auto exhaust fumes and jumping
from heighta were the next mart
common means.
Least common methods of
suicide --each used by one penon
--involved being struck by a
train, and inflating a blood press-
ure cup around the neck.
Again, men, ages 20 to 29, had
(See CAUSES, Page AZ)
Disneyland
tourists'
•
van stolen
The holiday weekend wasn't all
it was cracked up to be for a
young coup1e who lost everything thef owned when their car and
van were stolen out of the Di&-
neyJand parking lot Friday.
"'!bat wu our future that
disappeared," said 23-year-old
Douglas Maderas. "It just feels
lib your insides being taken out.
That WU OUI' life."
Maderas and his wife, Brenda,
21, stopped off at the amu.ement
park while moving from Phoenix,
Ariz. to Tacoma, Waah. where
their young 1001 had been lellt
earlier. They were driving a
rented moving van and towing
their car.
When they returned to the
parking Jot Friday night, they
d1a'lovered t.beivea bad taken the
Jocked whiclel, alona with toola,
tl,000 in CMh, ft&miture, clothee,
their marrtaae certUJcaw and
eYel1 pk:ture1 of t.betT chOdren
beina born. The couple put the km at
'45,000. "It w• wane than a fire,"
MaderM aid. "At lelSt if there
bad been a fire we milbt have
bem ablia to pab ~and
hold onto it. ~ onlJ thinl we
cu 1lve ofJ (of) ii our memories.
All we _.. II four people ltartlna
out from aatch. '' ....... como1a1ned that J;>ta..
De1 offldah r.6-s to help him
find lodCbll « ~ hil wUe a
jldrM. .
Joe Aautrre. • I>llmYland ._.._...,,, llikl It tt ~ Dla-DeJ poky to __ ..am JDllU.. •
. b'l'tie cOu~ flew~ to T.cDimia
llllwdlly, wlMft tlW)' ~ to ~ wHh Brenda ....,...,
lliiodw'.
Ritual or remembrance '\ Karen Turk, records &ecretary at Pacific View Memorial Park,
888isted in placing flags on the graves Of war veterana. al the
~rona del Mar cemetery prior to MelQIQJlial Df1Y serriee.. .
'Proud I was ir1)flelnam'
Time, therapy and compassion help ~ur most recent -yeterans
By LORENZO BENET
OftMO.-, .........
They were \he youngest, most educated
group of BOldiera thiJI nation haa fiver produced.
They were \he produeta of the ~World War
n baby boom, t.eenagen who readily bou&ht into
the '1lystique and glamour which once accom-
panied fi&ht.lng under \he flag.
But when Jerry Durbin, \hen 19, returned
home from Vietnam In 1968, he aaid he was spit
on 14 times and called a ·~ killer" as he
walked th.rough Travis Air Baee terminal
in Northern Calllornia.
"You come home and your own country
turns on you --I never killed any babies," aaid
Durbin, 35, aa he sat recently in the Vet Center
in Anaheim.
"When I came back," recalled Dave Ferrier, .
a counselor at \he Vet Center, "I wanted to
re-integrate myaelf with young people, the group
that w• mo.t atrongly apinlt the war. I ~ to
deny and play .down my involvement in Vietnam
with friends and family. We had to shove a lo&
down lnaide of us; the guilt, the ~Uon, the
anxiety of not feeling safe.
"We were yoima. IO we had the strength to
keep thinp lnlide," he Mid. ''Today \he averaae
Vietnam vet la about 86. He doem't have the
.k . .... ......... ~ ....
Jeri')\ Durbin reealla bad reaction
to his return rrooa war in 1968.
·~ youth or atarnlna ~. but he still fftJa the
pain." .
(See VIETNAM, P4f• .U)
I
.;...
r---'Pt,.....iln:'flue of Liberty
may lose ah •l'D;l if
we, the people, don't,
foot the bUI for a 139
million f aee Ula. Page
A4.
l:J.~ Festival
cr.ow«l rowdy;
one man dies
DEVORE (AP) -The US
Festival finally found ita audience
Sanday u a sellout crowd of
300,000 rock mualc fans blanketed
a sweltering outdoor concert
bowl, but the event waa marred
by the death of an -ult victim.
JamM· llltell of Pomona, Calif.,
23, died abo\.at 3:25 p.m. Sunday at
San 8emardino County Holpital.
He had underaone brain surgery
after he WU beaten on the hMd
with a tire iron « pipe, nW'ling
superyiso(. Susan NichoJa said.
David M. Plant.on, 22, of Stan-
ton, wu booked for inve.tigation
of attempted murder in the at-
tack, but after F.atell'a death wu
booked for Investigation of
murder. He wu held without bail
at \he.county jail. ~ .
.A 17-yMr-old pl al.19 WU
taken In custody fdr lnvestiga~
of murder. Sheriff Floyd 'l'Jdwell
uld the WU Plant.on' plfriend;
abe waa not.identified became she
Isa~. She waa taken to the ~tr-Juwnlle Hall.
· llt.IU w• attaclrecl ovs • "T.'& ... about uo -..; ~~ted~-.._~~u.vedJohethe
~ PCP. Tldw'eU al-~ tbat Bltelle otterecl to tell .me to Plantan'. who alilo uies ~ --~MOrpn. "£~tofdr\lotbat ... ~in thia&owd,
(the ) """'~t wiuaual at d.,, .
:~ moot# la ~ teood." he ·~ and noted that aepuu.
were inakfna arrem on1)' outdde
·BfUfft.Op greenery· .
cramps HB parking
Good beech weather la CQJlid-
ing heed-oil wt~ good ~
w.ther and, ... l'fllult, there'• =to be considetablly 1e11
on the ocean lkie of
O>ut Highway in Hunt-
lnatm Beach. 1lbat cheln of events la being brouaht •bout becaUle of the
d.eve1opment of a blufftop park. a
narrow stretch of ereenery and
park benches running from aouth
of the pier to'Golden West Stiwt.
Fencina already .._ beerl In·
stalled in the area and work
CftW9 are tearing OU1 parking
meters for about 150 c:&r1 10 that
teriOUI comtructlon Work can becln· The meters. will be out of
opel'9Uon for ~t four months.
<>ifk:lala ay \hey are anxtoua to
prtll ai)Md with the work IO
they can ~t plants and arua In
to take ~tale of the wann
IUl'DRlltl' months for aood arowtna conditklm.
Unfortunat.ely, it's alao ~
beech weather too and that's
where the rub ClOID!S 'in. Beach
vlaltu'S will have to find parking
ellewhere and the demand may
spill over beech-area residential
11reets.
Beachgoen already have
punched holes and knocked down
portiona of the metal installed
prior to park landlcapina work.
'We just hope that the public ia
patient and undentandl that we
are tryin.g to do scmetb1na
benetidal for the dty. We plan to
plat more 8'X9I points throu&b
the fence for their convenience,"
Max Bowman, ...mtent directm
of dty beflcbe9, aid.
Donations by the public and by
comJ)Nllea have m.d about
'8301~ for the creation of the new puic. that formerly wu
noted for~ ~and
other ~tly feauare..
·.
(
' t
t .
11
~· -Orwige COUt DAILY PILOT lt.!onday, May SO, 1083
RB eaucator, fellow officers to check up on Korea
BY aontlTIL\Ultll or .. ...,._ ...
Jim Maoan la NUrinl .. dlfec..
tor of educadonal .-vtc. In the
HunUqton Beech Oty (ei.nen-
tary) SChool a.trict at the end ot
the 9Chool year, June 16. And the
Orient la berkMfna.
One of the top t.hJnel on bia
..,wta 11 cheddna up Cll1 develop-
ments In South Jton.. lbclon. &0, .-wet In that COW\-
try more than 80 yean ICO • a tint lieutenant In the U.S. Anny'a
medical eervice corp. a. wasn't a dOctOr, but one of
CAUSES OF DEATH ...
From Page A1
the most suiddes. Tbe ooun~'a.
youngest auidde victim lul yMr
was 13. •
The moat common cause of
accidental death waa ingeatlon or
injection of drup. includiQI
prescribed medications and al-
cohol: 71 people died ln this
manner. The next moet oommon
ca~ of accidental death, Involv-
ing 62 victims, was falls.
Abo, 38 people drowned l,n salt
water, fresh water, poola, poodt,
bath tubs, apas and an ice cooler.
Other causes of accidental
death included choking on food. 7
victims; private aircraft crashes. 7;
bums, 7; gunshot wounds, ~; and
electrocution, 3.
In the county's homicides, gun-
shot wounds were involved meet
commonly, producing 4'9 deaths.
Next waa stab wounds, with 23
victims. Other cauaes included
battered child syndrome, 7 vic-
tims; strangulation, 3 victims; and
inappropriate nutritional suppart.
one 1-year-old victim.
Men,.ages 20 to 39, were ID08t
frequently the victhn• of
homicide.
Following ia a breakdown of
trawnatic deaths for Ora.nae
Cout communities, u proYkled
by the coroner's office: (Note:
theee figures include ~tbs in
county areas within a dty'a
boundarie9; for example, the
single Fountain Valley homidde
occurred in county-patrolled Mile
Square Park and la no& recorded
by the dty'• police department.)
• Costa Mesa, homklde9t-2;
suiddf!I 17; traffic fatalltiettH;
• Fountain Valley,
homicidee-1; suicid~2; traf-
~;
• Huntingto.n Beac h ,
hornicide&-8; suicidet-21; traf-
fic-24;
• Irvine, homicldea-1;
suicidea-9; traffic-13;
• Laguna Beach, homicide9-2;
suiddee-2; traffic-10;
• Newport Bea c h ,
homicidet-1; auidde&-13; traf-
fic-12.
Sidelined temporarily on holiday
hia duU. Involved ~ the
front llma at n!Cht to p6ck up
American cuualllea in an
annond batt.itradt vehkle.
Macon md bi. wife, Joan, wbo
ia a teM:her In the Garden Grove
UnWed School Dmic:t. will be
joined In the ~ by hia
former commanclini offlee.r and
aformer fellow officer in Korea.
"The country WU jult devu-
tated,". he uid. "rm look•ng
forward' to aeetng how much
prop9I baa taken place .••
Before emba.tkina on the trip,
MllCOI\ and hia wife will conduct
a ..mnu-for telChen In CalUmet
City near auc.ao. The purp.e of
the pracram. he uid, will a,., to
lncreue the buic akJila of
tMl:hen.
Macon al80 Intends to stay busy
In the field of education ainoe he
la the presldeni..elect ot the
11,000~member' California Read-
1.na ~tion, an organir.ation
dedicated to l.ncrelllinl "*11ng, liatenlnl and thinking akilla of
you.opt.en ~ voluntary
t.ralnlng of their t.Mchen. Macon. who la taking early
retirement and will work in the
dlatrict 30 days a year, formerly
aerved .. director of curriculum. When= be Mys bia top amJll' i ~ in coordi-nattnc ~of teechen in the
latelt educaUonal devttlopmenta
and the bonlnc of ~ "1lla.
He Mo 'paid tribute to the
"~" teach.ina force and
to the district'• prtndpell, who be
aaid haw the herdest joba of all
·~re the ie.dera. 'Ibey aet the
expectatklna at eech dx>ol."
, Kathryn Franee9e, 4, of El Cajon gets eome fint aid for a skinned
knee from her ~atlaer Ke-y Francese in the Sumet Vista camping
area at the Hanthtgton Be.ch pier Sunday. Waiting for her to
rejoin them Oii skates are Bryan and Niki Norvell of Huntington
Beach and Kim and Kerri Francese.
Clouds to break up
Jlm"Hoobr ember. wpor19Mch
"I don't eurt m)'Mff u
much and JUlt avoid the
bad air by ataytng near the
beach. I alto take more
tripe to San Diego and
Mexico." ·
....... Gili'nler. SNfve .. ............ c ... .....
"To counterect the amog, I
walk by the beect'I to aet the
negatlv• lonlzera Tn my
ayatem. I alto have lnltalled
a negative Ionizer machine-In
my home to take away the amog.··
.,...,KMnOn. .................
Newport ......
ctwtltlMaama,
etudent
lntne
"I don't go to Loe
Angelel ""'-It'• .. ,..
That way I don't haw to ...
It. When I do drtve up there,
I roll up the wlndowa and
put on air conditioning. The
amog can make your lungs
tight."
"On bad days I
don't turf u IOng. I
try to aurf harder for
a ahorter tJme. My
ultimate eecape ta
taking.out a
1a1Jboat."
CJMhla 9rannon, ...... Ne•PGQ"t~
0 1 hate the smog and ltey lnskSe u
• much a possible. It's not good for my
llttle girt Nacole IO I don't take her out
u often u In the winter."
••
KA TT INi>UCTED INTO HALL OF FAME. • •
CMc u,ht Opera and appeared
in a national tour of ''The Sound
of Mwdc."
Hia movie role9 have beer\ ln
"Carrie," "Fl.rat Lave," .. Ba
Wednelday" and "Butch and
Sundance, 'nle F.arly Y ean."
In the
pink
Made for this
and many more
Summers to
come ... our
exclusive two-
picce set of
cool cotton
oxford in soft
pink pastel
stripes. The
button-down
pullover is
teamed with a
trouser skin.
Sizes 6 to 16', $92
UH .)'Olir Broalt1 Brotlt"I card
or A1111r1caJ1 Bqr .. 1
11
,
NATION
T.ennessee farmer facing '
·11 counts of manslaughter -By ne AllOdated Preti
BENTQN, Tenn. -The owner of a worm fann where an
Wepl t.treworka fectory blew up Wt week was charged with
11 count• of involuntary manalaughter Sunday after
•urrenderinl to authoriU.. Dan Lee Webb, SO, whoee mother and a brother were amona thoee killed Friday in the blast that WU felt milea
away, wu charged with the involuntary manalaughter counts
and one count of manufacturing and poaaeasing illegal ~v., said Polit County Sheriff Frank Payne. Webb waa
held at the Poll< County Jail in lieu of $300,000 ball. A
h was aet for ThW'9day.
Utah capital flooding, sweltering
SALT LAKE CITY -Runoff from Utah's mountain
snowpack grew more ferocious under 90-degree temJ>e*tturea
Sunday, pushing floodwater down a street by the Mormon
Church's Temple Square for several hours, closing roads and
tJiaering mudslides. Flooding was reported throughout the
nortnem -half of the nonnally arid state as temperatures hit
the low 90s for the fifth straight day. The National Weather
Service predicted relief Tueeday.
VIETNAM VETERANS ADJUSTING. • • to start
l,OOOmarchers protest MX plan
CHEYENNE. Wyo. -Over a thousand demonstrators, led
by preai~ntial ho(>eful U.S . Sen. Gary Hart, gathered
Sunday to protest the propoeed deployment of 100 nuclear-
tipped MX miaslles beneath Wyoming and Nebraska. The
protesters marched from the state Capitol to a city park near
Francis E. Warren Air Force Base, which would c:ontrol the
MX misailes.
Lightning-struck plane lands OK
CLEVELAND -Lightning made a hole in the nose of an
airliner carrying 77 passengers shortly aft.er the plane took off
Sunday but it landed safely minutes later, officials said.
Otfidals aaid cabin pressure was unaffected and there was
little panic aboard the plane. "It was a little scary to come out
and see a hole in the noae of the plane," said one unidentified
puaenger.
Wilson weds
WASHINGTON -U.S.
Senator Pete Wilson
married Gayle Edlund
Graham in a private
ceremony in the
congressional chapel at
sunset on Sunday. It waa
the second marriage for
both the freshman 1enator
and the bride, a former
resident of San Diego
where Wilson was mayor
for 11 years.
WORLD
Japanese quake toll rises to 54
TOKYO -Five more bodies have been found along the
shores of northwestern Japan, raising the known death toll
from Thunday'• earthquake and tidal wave to 54, with 48
people ~ missing.
Wax models insult Charles, Dian,a
LONDON -Spectators gave "gasps of horror" at the
unveiling of new Ufe-aiz.e models of Princess Diana and Prince
Charles at Madame Tussaud's wax museum, the Mail on
Sunday newspaper reported.
The wax prince9. wearing a white silver-sequined gown
with a blue bodice and replicas of her diamond tiara and pearl
choker, looked too thin and too hard, musuem-goers at
Saturday's ceremony said. One called the waxworks "an
insult."
New Marine unit enters Lebanon
BEIRUT. Lebanon -A new unit of 1,200 U.S. Marines
were ferried uhore Sunday in helicopters and amphibious
vehicles to replace leathernecks who have been in Lebanon
since February. The fresh Marine troops came from two
helicopter carrien and other U.S. 6th F1eet ships from about a
half mile off the Mediterranean coast south of the capital.
Another company came in four CH-46 helicopters aocompan.ied
by two c.obra helicopter gunships.
STATE
Fire damages SF high-rise offices
SAN FRANCISCO -The 29-atory Civic Center bighriae
Fox Plaza wu hit by a fire early Sunday, damaging a
telephone equipment room and causing some phone
diaruptions but no injurlea, the Fl.re Department reported. An
estimated $75,000 damage resulted.
Jammed telethon raises $20 million
BURBANK -Democrat• said Sunday that their
nalionally televiaed fund-raiaer brought in up to $20 million in pJedaes. but charged that &publlcana aabotaged it by jamrninl
phone lines with at times up to 10 negative calla for every
supportive one.
From Page A1
For many Vietnam veterana, that pain
continues to manifest ltaelf in what is commonly
known a.a post-Vietnam dramatic stre99 syn-
drome. Its symptoms include feelinga of de-
pression. anger, rage, nightmares, flashback. and
sleep disturbances, among others.
Kenneth Flint, di.ttctor of the Vet Center,
said veterans of all wars have experienced it.
"If you have seen death and destruction cloee
up, it's hard not to be affected by It," aaid Flint,
a Vietnam veteran himaelf.
But the nature of America's longest war --
the divisiveness it caused at home, the feelingB of
alienation among thoee who fought, the guilt of
losin.g fritnds in battle, and the way the
entertainment industry perpetuates the myth
that all Vietnam veterans are Q"mented toula
--has generated more victima than in put
conflicts, Ferrier explained.
Flint estimated that aince the center opened
two-and-a-half years ago, between 60 and 70
percent of the more than 1,500 veterans it hu
counseled have exhibited aome form of the strem
disorder.
What'• more, he said, many of the estimated
20,000 to 30,000 Vietnam veterans in Orange
County aren't settinl treated.
"It's fnatrating that we can't help more, but
with a staff of three we do the beat we can," Flint
aaid.
But there are ways to combat the ailment,
Flint aaid. Last month, the Vet Center sponaored
a blo-feedback program. that helped 1eVen
veterans and their wives cope with the aymptoms
of stres.1 syndrome. For four comecutive Satur-
day morning seaiona, Lynn Daukas, a registered
nurse, hooked each,-penon up to their own
Galvanic Skin Respome machine, which
measures forms of at.rem, and helped the QOUplel
identify certain people, objects and action1 in
their lives that cauaed atl'ela. ,
During one aellion. Daukaa held up a a
drawing of a circle with a CJ'088 in it, causing the
machines of a few veterans to aound an alarm.
The symbol reminded them of a rifle acope.
She then taught the couples how to~
stttss symptoms -7 1~ ~ beat, mua:le
tension. and hi8h bloOd premwe, to name a few
--and then how to relax by utWp.ng a brWt ~ '4
FESTIVAL ...
From Page A1
totaled 89 by Sunday afternoon,
including 22 Sunday. Tidwell aaid
more than half wt:re for felonies
like assaults, drug p • IBion or
sale, robberies and oonapiring to
use counterfeit Ucketa.
Sunday'• mostly male, mostly
youthful crowd completely ob-
9CUl'ed the graaa of the M-acre
concert bowl in Glen Helen Re-
gional Park near San Bernardino.
60 miles east of Loe Angeles.
Pair washed
overboard
MALIBU (AP) -Authorities
airlifted a 67-year-old man to a
hoepital with chest injuries after
he and a woman were wuhed
off a sailboat that hit a reef next
t o Zuma Bea c h Sunday
afternoon.
The 65-foot sloop Olinka ran
aground ju.at paat the surf line at
4:30 p.m., Zuma lifeguard station
Lt. RUii Walker saia.
The man and woman were
wuhed overboard by waves
broachiltg the aallboat when it
waa toaaed on lt• aide.
The lnjured man wu taken to
UCLA Medical Center by
aheriff'a helicopter. Hospital
apokemnan Vlctoi' Metry would '
not identify htm or apecify hla
ln.jw1ee.
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ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
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COO'l''llN ,..,, ()r'lllft Co.I l'llelllWll ~ HO
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0( .. .,.., ........
Cj
Oran1e County will take a r. Jona .. waited step into tbe futwe •
Thunday when P'OW'd-~
cermonie• are held at Orancewood -the county'• new $7.~ million home for~ and
~=cy •helter eventually will have facWU. to ,
_annually hou.e, feed, clothe, ,
IChoo1 and care b: u many •
4,800 children. ... 6 to 18.
Oranpwood. to be built on a •
1even·acre parcel on The Qty
Drive ln e>ranp, will~ the 1,
over-crowde<f. 128·becl Albert
Sitton Home, built ln 1969 to
howe 36 chlJdren_
What i• unique about the o.llJ,...,...... "'CMrtM M9T ~o:.::~tt;; ~
Lynn Daukas, RN, and Kenneth cooperattveeffortbythecounty'•
Flint, director of the Vet Center, public and private eec1lcft.
h I ( ~ty percent of the hlncQnc ~
e p veterans' amilies adjust to for the home. .m te.1 m1n1ao,
stress. ==:from~~f
meditation period to control their emotionL foundationl. The renwlnfna $1.4 I
Durbin, who served in Vietnam for three million ho. aomt In tbe form of-I
years ln an Army reconnaissance unit and who pnta from the county'• 218 du. f
aaw action .in the Tet offensive, aaid the and county aovemment.
bio.feedt.ck program hu helped him oontrol bJa The ~ heme. to be anger. built in a liadenda style, will
"My 80l'l la 11 years old and he knows the include a two·1tor1 main
rt h buttona to uah to mak dadd lode .. ne bulldtne, ax l'tllll'*1Ual C10t11.-. I t P e Y exp ' a dinin1·recNaUon butlcllna, · said. ''The other day he was being provocative, achool and ...._ .... ,um. When I
but instead of blowing up I juat turned around •~·~-&et :
and walked away. I went in the other room and completed, it will bouaeweeu
relaxed. The bio.feedbeckand the Vet Center 164 to 186 ch1ldren daily.
lf ............ _ --The tint phue of the project, ve helped me understand myae U1Cucx·. & ~ conatructton of the cl1nlna hall
ldrned to keep calm." ---t
lt hu alao helped make thia M---'-1 Day and five oona,et, ii ...... __.._... to .,.._... be completed In 1984.
more apedal. The need for a i.,... home ln ,
"For the first time I am proud to -.Y I'm a Oranae County baa crown Vietnam veteran," D.urbin said. "I\ doesn't conliderably in recent ,_,.. In
bother me any more Wben people say that war "••t th t fiv tbi wu a waste. I think all wan are a waat.e, with all r--e PH e yean, e , num~r of rePoria of cblldrela ~ ~-It doem t. ma~ to me that we wan. b.i.-l abuaei, ne11ected cw or~l aerved my.countey and I'm proud I w• · .ibaftao.ned h; in~ 12.0
there." ~ iiili -"' i. ' . " -5±! J ! :rq afflcl -r= ....
From the at..ease Private Label Collection ...
Our Year 'Round Navy Blazer 4>
. made from the finest ctacron• and wool blend tor
oomlonable wear and easy trawl.oor two button blaZ8f
with patch &rd flap pocketS is a neo8$81l'Y ~Sic
in fll8fY men's wardrobe.
-..
• . • ~ I .
• •I
I
l i
· 1
I .
I
I
Highland gathering
While Kimberly Hoff, 12, of Petalmna danced
and Ke•iQ Brady competed in a 56-pound
tou, Pipe Major Bill Merriman of San
Franeiaeo perlormed at the 51.-t anaual
Scottish Games that ended Sunday at the
Orange County Fairgrounda. One ·team was ·
sharing lta kilta when ita photo wu taken,
answering a time-honored question.
•
La~y 10sing dignity?
Statue of Liberty, tired and poor herself, needing restoration
,
)
Orange Coat DAILY P1L.OT/MCM1day, MIY 81,•1N3
· How much will motorists p'y at the pump auring n11tional tourist season?
.,..,~ ........... _, ............
Cold shoulder cockatoo
Chloe, a pet ol leather shop owner Alex Evans,
perches on the shoulder or a bikini-clad
mannequin outside his shop at the ft(>uth end of
Leguna Beach. The 3-year-old bird is a favorite
with customers, although Evans says Chloe likes
to chew on the merchandise.
NEW YORK (AP) -G.am.
Jll'tc. are lncblnc hfabm'wttb the·
approelch of IYIDIDtr, but few
~,... expect a Npeat of the ~ aurae of the pMt
two moothl.
"It appwa t.hat~price In· er--. .,W be ate th.la
aunmer," •YI' Tril~·undberg. e41tor of the Lund Letter,
which . foUowt the rtcan
~·market. The natioqal •verace price at
the pump re. from $1.12 a pllon
\
In Mardl to $1.22 In May. 8CCOr'd·
IQ8 to the Lundbera Letter'•
• IUl'Y9)' o( 17 ,000 eerYice stationa.·
·Half the gain WM due to a
~+gallon Ne ln the federal ,..,,,,.., tax .
. The upward trend bu alowed
IA ~t daya. bowevet'. The
E of prlCl!9 tb1a summer
~ mainly on whether
demand ia revived by
an lmprovlnc economy, •YI' Ted
ti, chiet econamlst at Standard
Oil Co. (lnd.1ana).
"If people hop in their can and ao •'!Ot. (prices) could ao up two
or three c:enta," !'.ck •ya. "If demind ia not., greet, prices may
stay about the aame."
Becauae the United Stat.ea ia the
world'• largest. oil market, with
E ·the~oil
the outlook for guolJne
and ltl effect on llUIDIDer
driving ia a crucial factor foe
reflnerl and guoline dMlen and
for tbouaanda of vacation apota.
Ahn Wilbur, director of public rela~ Jt the' American Auto.
mobi\e fition in Waahinl-ton, D.C.. ya hia group benew.
the im · oondltion of tbie
nauon.i y -coupled with
~---..a11mmerGmaPr1.-~
the effects of a 10 percent cut In
income tax rat.ea acheduled for
Jufy l -may prompt more car
travel.
The AAA'a barometer of sum-
mer travel plans ii projecting a 1
percent increaae in miles traveled
by the end of the Labor Day
weekend, Wilbur uys.
Geoff Hertel. an analyst at the
Houston investment firm of Rotan
Mmle, aaya he expects gMOline
prices to peek In late July at three
or four centl above current levela.
But i1 people return to the 'tr'a·
ditianal pattern of driving more in
the summer, prices could rile even
more, he aaya.
That traditional aurge in awn·
AP
mer plOline 00NUmpUoo WM
broken after guollne prices
aoared above $1 a pllon in 1979. c.or.rvat1on took hold, and auoUne u. llumped ~.1 J*'Cl'ftt
fu 1979 -the f:lnt of four ltraliht
years of decline.
Hertel expeci. a 1 percent to 2
pel'Cent rlle In guoline comwnp.
tioD for 1983, while other analyata
are cal1lna for DO chanle or even
• alight decline.
Last yeer, gJ;IOllne U. WU the
least since 1972, before the b6I
runup In energy pricea.
In April t.b.la year, Amlrtcanl
uaed f.2 percet Jem guoltne than
In April 1882, and u. for the fint
four montha of the year WM off
Much of the incre • e ln prka
WM plll9!ld a)oQa at the pump. ,
and on April 1 the fedenl.,wm·
ment lncre•ed ftl penllne tu by
a nick.el, to 9 cents a pllon.
E\len IO, Lundbeq'I tllltimated •venae pmUne price of $1.22 a
pllon fol' May ia only two cmtl
bJcber' than • year • and ia 16 •
CIDW below the all·time peak ol
•1.38 ln March 1981.
Actual pump pricm wtJl vary
widely thrcJucbout the netlan.
'l'bat ia due ln put to dlffamca
in IUpplien' and paoline deUn'
l)ICllt marpw •well• nnt and labor coat.. plua dlffenlae in
local economic oondltiom.
Researchers say yorilhs under stress show drop in IQ
W ASHING'ION (AP) -Children under streaa
from a death or divorce in the family or a medical
problem exhibit a sharp drop In their IQ acorea, two
Georgetown University ~rs report.
Reeearchen Bernard Brown and Lilian ftoee.
nbewn concluded that streaa can affect "the growth
of intelligence," and they sugested that teaching
REWARD
... "JUT -unm::.: ------·-... -au.,. ... ..... ••IUllU·ll'l.IZll ..... m. CAe••u ... :::...,...,..
"""' J , .. ...., EiilllW S.JNI
RUFFELL'S
UPHOUflRY, INC. .... " ..........
lfli HAl9Cll •YD.
COITA MUA -s4-11M
COMPUTER
CLAUE8
In
Fountain Valley
(S.~ln
lundly'e PloC)
STANDMD
COMP Uni
children ways to cope with stnw may help impoYe
their IQ.
They bued their tind.ingl ~ a study of aevenl
thousand ?·year.old olds wbo~t extensive
medical and peychological t.eaU6i ln the 1980s.
The reeearchen reported their ftndingl In a
paper prepared for pre9e0taticm to the American
A.ociation for the Advancement of Science at itl They found 900r9I declined from 105 1o 91 oo
annual meeting in Detroit on Saturday. the Wechaler Intelllpnoe Scale for auldren-a 13
They Mid: "Streaa influences IQ test per· percent drop -• 1tre1a levels incre11r from DO
formance In both the immediate testing situation and _ probJem1 to more than 1~ prnNenw.
developmentally. Alona with genetics, environment 'lbe problemll included me. cawed by physical
and experience, it shapes the growth of in· and mental lmpairmenta, u well • by trouble or
t.elllgence." deeth in the home. 'lbe ~checked ftJCIOl'da
Oil 4,154 children., who tOok put ln a study of ~.ooo
mothers and chOdnm conducted by the Natlcnal
Institute of NeuroJoclcal and Communk:ative Dia.
eues and Stroke .
Studious
shutterbugs
Photography
atudenta at Gisler
Middle School in
Huntington Beach
lia•e a real
keepeake in their
hands. They were
auigned by teacher
Jim Fallon to ahoot
the End Cale at the'
end of the pier.
Just a few day1
later, a 1torm hit
and demolished the
landmark care.
.. We found that the 8001W for children with
poor vilkm declined more than eo peromt under hi8h .a-on the block drlilp and lnfcnnation testa
-a level 10 Jaw that tMy,coukl not be expected to
succeed in IChoo1, •• the IWl'Cbes1I reported.
They ai.o found that cbOdren wbo were held
t.ck a pllde or who were _.r-1 ~ apeda1
educatioli c1-lhowed a~ of 15.5 penient in
IQ and. of 33 percent on the information aabte9l.
They corncluded tbe9e obildren .... pu1icu.larly
IU8Ceptible to *'-·
They wd their flndinp may affect the
oontroveny over why minority cblldren pneraDy
IOOl'e beloorf •venae on IQ testa. 1ber noted tba1
aome have da1med that pnetic::a are ··c•ble for ''the fact that b1eck Sower--dam children Ye mred
lower than white~ chlldrenon certain IQ
subte91a."
''We have, however, dia'lovered that the9e ume
aubtem are the most lenlitive to ltn8. Tbeftfme,
we conclude that .ere. ia an emesitlal fac:tor', alooc
with pnetk:I, environment and exper1enoe in
determlninl intellla-ce," they laici.
2 coasts roll
By Tbe Anodate4 Press
Earthquakes rattled opposite ends of the
country Sunday, ahaJdnc ~them Mmne, put of
New Hampehltt and the California cout north of
San Francisco. No dama1e or injurie1 were
reported.
The eastern quake hit at 1:46 a .m .. wa1
centered'° rhlles north of Portland; Maine, lasted
only a f~ .econdt and measured f .3 on the Richter
acale, the National :Earthquake Information Center
Ip Golden, Colo., reported.
The CallfomJa quake that hit two hou.n later
and meuured 4. 7 on the Rlditer ..i.. w. tientiered
in the l'aclflc Ocftn, 80 mllee off Cape Mendocino,
whJch la 22~ miles north of San Frandlco.
"It was a sharp jolt rather than a rolling =: said police dispatcher Karen Bullock of
-.m !i' far men th.ul 100 _y.n, we have ptbsed on Mwtal to pay tribute to thme men and women who~ ,....... , wdfldnatheir llV9I to prwrve our fr-.bD md
wGdil JMCe· In dalnc thla. we are remtrwted that neither pw.'e
ncr Ulllrty ii cuaranteed, and th4t our natkmal ldeala remain threatima by pbal oadOict, economic criw, vtoJence, and
agr I tan
~tour~. America hM been a lymbol of hope
for all people. We mwt alway. accept the many respcmllblidea
that thia r9qulra 'nlua. we are prepared to usllt other natlcm
In tbllr ltruaJe -eMbOIDlc prosre8I; to help th09e In other
lalwll who .aler from political reprellion and injuatice; to deter aar 'on by~ demcw:racy around the P.>iJe; and to
work d.re1-l:y ~ a ~ without war.
11*e who have lllCl'iticed UMdr llv.-for our OOWltry eerve
u a ntrdnder that..our work II unllnlahed. With vision and
~ and a prayer In OUI' heu1a, Jet UI dedicate ounelVe9 to
I 1nm:"'~«Y· tkltl of ~ American8 to wham we pay Pibute
y, the by joint reeolution of May 11, 19SO, baa
Ncil\llllted the t to t.ue a procl•maUon calling upon the
pie of the United State. to ot.erve NCh Memorial Day u a
y of pnyw for permanent peace and dem,nattng a period on
t day when the people of the United Statet Jniaht unite In
yw.
Now, ibelefun, ~ R-aan, Prem.dent of the United
tel of Amerim. do . ~te Memorial Day, Monday,
30, 1883, Ma_ da~ of prayer for permanent peace, and I
dftdpta the hour '"'Clnni"I In wh locality at 11 o'clock in the
~of that day• a time to unite In )ftyer. I urp the pre11.
~ t.8i.vt.laa. ad all other infonnation media to cooperate in
dlia om.vanm. f I ai.o NqUMt the CJovwmon of the United Stasm and the
E :w.lth al Puerto Rico and the appropriate offldal1 of
unita al P•DIQlbt to direct that the 0., be flown at
«aft durlna tlm Memodal Day on all bu1ld1nga. grounds,
abd naval vemefl tbrouabout the United States and in all areu t; ita )uildldlon anCl contral. and I requ.t the people of the
t.ecl Stat. to diliplay tbe flaa at half..iatf from theh' homea
the emtiamary £cnDocxa period.
In wltmm whereof, I have hereunto let my hand thia 4th
~y of April. In the year of OW' Lord nineteen hundred and
~ty-three, and of the ~ of the U,nited States of
America the two hundnd leYenth.
~ ................ oo Oho,_ ...... M;· ...... o0 Oho D•"V PoO:
res.Md on tnis page are tl'tOM of their aulhOn ana artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t
. AddrH& TM 0.lly Pilot. P.O. Bo• 1.S60, Costa Me'Mt, CA 92626. Pl'tont t]U J
2·'321.
• attire
I
This Greek ~~~~~!1~m~i~!PING OVT?' Tb• WASHINGTON -Greek
Prime Mlniater Andrea•
Par:indreou ha1 become a
baf 10urce of dialcomflture
and d 1may to the Rea1an
administration.
He baa a perturblq habit of denoundna the United States in
full-blown rhetorical outraae.
Yet he RrVed in the U.S. Navy
durt.na World War ll, went on to
teach at Harvard and other U.S.
unlvenitiea, beceme an American
citb:en and married an American.
Ria children are U.S. citiiena.
Admlnlltration offidala don't
know whether to believe hu
word.I or trust h1a t.cqrounci.
Why do they care partiCularly?
Beoauae a new round of neaouauona aot underway th1a
week on renewal of the 1--for
U.S. buea in Greece.
The buea are vttaJ to NATO'•
defen1e1 In the eastern
Mediterranean. But in lut yeu-'1
election campaip, Papandreou'•
Soci•H•t Party promt.ed to ,et
rid of the "lmperlall1t" U.S .
preaence. It wa1 a aood,
xenophobtc cam~ tactic that
appealed to fefii1t votera, lncludin& the Greek Camnwu.ta.
SOME INTELLIGENCE
an.alym flpred Papandreou't
shrill attack• on the United
.. that he doesn't dare renep. 'lbat Pentagon, tryinl to pare a few
---------• . means the renewal of the leues bucks from it multi-billion-dollar •••1 Allfall ' ~~ la doamecL budaet, bu run head-on Into •1111 I !'Tl crUlca on Capitol Hill. The ---------.a--. TB E 0 TB ER v I e w 11 economy in question involvea the
Staie. wen 11n1ply a political opttmlatlc. Thoee who favor it Pentaaon'• bopea of hiring rent-
ploy that would be dtopped C(lCe cite Papandreou'1 American a-cops and private firefighters to
he -ptne4 power. Now-~ey're bacqround. Thia, they araue, handle aecu.rtty dutiea at military
noc., aure. aua-ta that hia antl-Americen buea, lnatead of civilian
They were atartled a' hi• bombut ls hopuh and that employees of the Defense
intemperate reaction when deep down be realizes that Department.
• --'1tant Sect'ettrv of State Greece needa U.S. aid more than In t ~~-bas ~ ·" we need the buea. In this view recen yean, ...._.. ,._ Rk:bard Bun apuond IUpport Papend.roou'• public floaina of forbidden the military to hire
for lncreued nalltary aid to B\Ut wu jult part of a hone -outalde police and firefight.en, = wt month d\&ait~ trader'• technique fer •ttina a but the ~Uon rum out Sept.
Mid noU:, ~ ~~ had better money deal on the buea. 30. Re~ ~ti D-Callf., has
volce4 on earlier ~Iona ln The pe11imlat1, of coune1 ~~ tbae vital~~ wonder lf Papandreou '1 w~. American connections -well the hand• of 1overnment
J:Sut Papandreol.l rffponded known to Greek voters -employee.a. Why?
with a 1reat public 1how of haven't forced him to be Reuonone:Federalemployees indieftation. He lambuted Burt determinedly anti-American u don't have the right to strike. and withdrew Bun;t lnvttation to proof of h1a independence. Emp&oyeea of llrivate cootncton
vtalt Athena. Aa one aource told my a.ociate do -end in the pmst they have
Amona inteW~, Lucette Laanado: "Papandreou done jult that.
there are now two y ii a captive of h1a own rhetoric. Rea1on Two: Publicly paid
opp o 1 e d t'h • dr lea about Dema1oauery hu lta price. It fireflahten are more likely to Pal)Uldreou't'~ catchet up with you aooner or Ullat netahborina communities
One ii _11 U!c. It view• later." in an emergency. Pa ~ _. trapped by One thln1 both schools of Reuon Three: The Pentagon
hJI own m ~ncwnpatcn thOU&ht ae.-on: Papandreou COl(',-c\rtten haven't convinced
rbetmic ~who. a1 oot bM US. pollC)' maksl Contmed. conareulonal critlca that the
eowce put tt. bUIJl&lnted h.bml1f With Cuca In Shake1peare11 move to private aecurity
into a comer.IMe promiled IO ''Jullua Cwar." they admit lt'a eontncton would actually save lorll and., ptnu.aaively to •t "Greek to me." _ the~ any monev.
Lawyers trf and try ~gain
'1'hinga I lAMmed Jh ~ lo
~Up Otber 2'11qpr =: t naUonwtde about 40
peiunt of law ICboal ll'*luatea :
who take atate bar exasm fall CID
the flrat try (and about U
percent of all appllcanta never
put).
-That the pme of ncquetl ortalnat.9Cl In the 18th century In
a h!ah-..ued Ena1Jah prilon, but ~:Juickly acfopted by the
-~~t tbree-fittbl of
all bomtcJdee ln the U.S. are CllllUDltted not by ......., but
~omeone who knew the
lnitmately OI' ........,.
-t one out of fNety two
bou1ehold1 ln California 1
rmmr a l'.ID OQ the p••l ' which ~ti ~ aome of the'
~Item).
-Tbat "Silent Cal" Coolld •
while president, actuail;
delivered more 1peech• than
.
{ -That more Iranian docton
an~ in thla country and
In Wtwt.rn &&rope Ulan in Iran.
-That the. Emeeror c.cn.tantlne, wbo dWlaecl Rome fltid.r88n to OuiltWl M the of r.u,ton, 1uffocated hit
wife, l'auata, in the bath for
canmtiun, adultery.
-~~t St . .AmborM, one of
the ••thin of the (2,urcb. Wal
not bapUM • a CatboUc until be wu installed u Biahop o1
MDut. . .....
-That an "acre" wa1
ortatna11Y defined -the amount ol faN that a Yob of oan coWd
.. In • 3'naJe day, frOlll aumW
fO . .umet. ,·
-Tbat the Atearw. altbauCh they are ptomilioelem1, call
t.henweiY8I "Children of r.a.l"
and caUm d~t from Kina
Saul.
-That Lottnzo Da Ponte,
who wrote the libretti for three
of Moiart'• 1reateat operas,
1ub1eque11tly bec ame a
ahopkeeper in New Jeney and Perinly~. •pendina bja last
day1 In JMUlUry, after tryin@
vainly to establiah Italian opera
in New York.
Shame on two cuatomen in a areecma card •tore who each Mid,: .~f' can't remember what
Memai'lal Day ia for."
C..M.O. ____ .... _ .. ____ , ______ .. __ ---..... .. -.-.-.-. .,
I
' I l
l
k.~eni:
Im.ft J'oroutan llkel poUtb
8Dd hie detelta UW common
~ ~ ot lnniana.
eftart to rebw1ate eampw ---.-.1..1
u.w.c. tor atudmll --un.unreatul effort to fliht ...
lncrHl'I&. .
That';..~ deddM to nm I« the of UC Irvine'•
It WU IOl't of. P'iDd .ta..._
1D --nothJ.na thort of pnmdency, but that'• the Wfll ,..,.ted 0 uate Studenm i.,..... "-'out.an operata More exql-
pl9:
·~tan. 26, who expeata to
rec-'Ye hla doctcn119 in e1ectrtca1
~nextspdna, won that
~ Re will step dawn
Wedne-ky after 8el'Yiq a year
M Pft'ldent.
• He picked up a -1 esi.ie
book at a frlend'I hMM a few
ye1n ... read It and....., ~
exam to .qualify b a re.I el'tllte
Uoenae. He apendl about 1~ bOUn
a week u a Realtot.
Jn an in1lel'View late lut week.
be aid he Md wanted to counter-
• act the popU.]ar notiall aupported
by media account• of
anU-American mobs in Iran that
people from his country are
barbaric. He wanted to offer an
alternative -that most Iranians
are holpitable, cultured people
wbme Penian dvllization ia
among the wotld'a oldest.
• A piano player, be decided
with 101De other lnQlan frieDdl
to form a band. 1'Mty bllan with
virtually no equl~ Now the
group, "Papillon." planl to cu~ fta
first album of Iranian-American
music this summer.
And be wanted to show that
Iranian people know how to
operate in a democracy.
But thoee aocomplJahmenD
pale in oomparbon with Por-
outan 'a highest ideal: "Some
people laU8h at this, but my aoaJ
in life la I want to be president of
Iran 110meday,." he aaid.
"I think, to a large ~t, rve
accompliahed that," laid For-
outan. who worked during his
term coordinating -a suocessful
Foroutan left Tehran in 1975 to
study at Oregon State University
in Corvallis. After two years. he
transferred to UCI, where he uid
he has paid a~t. $-t.~ a year in
Polling U.S.
Politicians moving
to get out the vote
By RANDOµ»B E. SCBMID A111 I I,,._.,._
WASHINGTON -Polit:iciana are aeeking
ways to entice Americans to the polls u another
presidential Ci:>ritest nears, but the Cenaaa Bureau
reports that voter interest has been allpplng
ltieedi!y in recent yean.
One of the wnaDest tumoutll in decades was
recorded in the 1980 election when only 53.2
percent of people old enough to vote took part in
the contest electing President &.pn. In 1960, a
record 62.8 percent of voting-age Americana
wellt to the polls.
The election last fall drew only 58.8 percent
of voting age Americans, but turnout la always
smaller in non-presidential years.
"The apparent d.19enchantment with the
political proceu has led to declining voter
participation in recent presidential elections,"
reported Charles E.. Johnaon Jr. in a Census
Bureau study, "Non-voting Americana."
"Non-votin& American.a are the nation's
Rlent plurality, outnumbering tboae voting for
the winning candidate in every presidential
election, .. be a.ld.
Bemdenta of the North Central aiates had
the best turnout in 1980 with 60 percent of tbc.e
eJJaib)e voting. That WM a alfcbt del decline,
however, from 1976 when 60.3 percent voted.
'The Northeast aent 53.3 percent of voting aae residents to the polla in 1980, down down
from ~.5 percent four yeen earlier. In the West
the turnout waa 52.5 percent, down from M.3
percent. And in the South, lt WU 48.1 percent,
down from 48.4 percent in 1976.
Among states, Minnesota had the beat
turnout, 70.6 percent, and South c.aroUna bad
the vront., 41.1 percent.
Here la a 1tate-by-aiate rundown on the
percentage of the popula\lon old enough to vote
that actually cast ballots In the preaidential
electiom in 1980 and 1976.
1. Mbme9ota. 70.6 and 71.4; 2. Idaho, 68.6
and 6L6; 3. Wiaoomin, 68.3 and 61.~; 4. South
Dakota. 67.6 and 83.8; 5. Utah, 65.6 and 69.4;
6. Montana, 65.6 and 63.7; 7. North Dakota,
65.3 and .67.2; 8. Maine, 65.1 and 65.0; 9. lowa.
63.1 and 63.7; 10. Oregon, 61.9 and 62.1; 11.
Connecticut, 61.6 and 62.4; 12. Micbt,.n, 60.1 and
58.7; 13. M.uuchuatta. 59.4 and 61.6; 14. Rhode Ialand. 59.1 and 61.5;
15. Mt9'W'i, '69.l and 57.7; 16. A1aaka, 58.6
and 48.3; 17 . Vermont, 58.3 and 56.9; 18.
W.ahington, 58.2 and 61.1; UI. DllrvU, 58.1 and
60.6; 2<l. New Hampehire, 58.0 and 58.8; 21.
T ,_J• S, A 1 t .•
Indiana, 57.9 and 60.8;
22. Kanau, 57.2 and 58.4; 23. Nebnlb, 57.1
and 08.l: 24. Colondo, OU oml 60.4~; 55.6 and 55.4; 26. New Jetnr1, &$A and •
27. Delaware, 55.1 and 58.4', 28: ,
54.4 and 58.1; 29. LoWllana, &3.9 and .8; .
West Vqinia1 ~3.1and58.1;11. Oklahoma, &3.0
and 55.6 and :>4.7; 34. Arkanlll. 51.9 and 52.2
35. New Mexico, 01.7 a"1036.
Maryland. 50.5 and 49.9: S?. Km , DO ~
49.1; 38. Florida, 49.9 and 51.6; •. c 71
and 51.3; 40. Alabama, 49.2 and 47.1;4 .
Tennelaee, 41U and 49.6; 42. V~ '8.2 anid
47.7; 43. New York, 48.2 and,50.8; 44. Teua, 4&.8
and 47.3; 45. Arizona, 45.4 and 48.6;
46. Hawall, 44.0 and 48. l; 47. Mor.th
c.arollna. ~O and 44.1; 48. Nevada. 42.5 ~
49. Georgia. 41.8 and 43..3; DO. South
41.1 and 41.7. •
BJ SUSAN LJNNEE · ......... ,.... .....
DAKAR, Senegal - A Fn!nchman born 40
ye.n aao ln Dakar, the former capital of French
W.t Africa, returned recently for the f1J"lt t&ne
in 20 yelltl and ~ he wllhed be Mdn't.
Ile calla the port city on tit• AUantic
"ababby, rundown, a shadow of lta former ..U."
llUf for many foretpen whoee memory of
Africa'•~ continental capital dqes not
10 *k • far, Dakar is a pnceful, comfortable
dty wMre • vibrant, African culture mix~ with
a tdll-ltfOna French pt~. Tall,. 1hin men ln Oo0r-len«th, brocade
''bouboul'" -the natlboal dte.a Of Senegal -
n\ht small cupa or coffee and read a variety of
French and local newspai>en ln a comer cafe on ~a Square where the bull~ are a ~or eerly, middle 81'4 late French OOlonia1
arch1tiecture. 'nwU' convenation la a ataccate mlxtu.re of
Wolof, the principal lansuase, and French.
Senegal ii one of the few countries In Africa
where all the lnhabltantll speak and undentand
the same tancuaae -and lt ta not Europeen.
Lem than a mile •way, women sit in u.ndr,
courtyuda ln the ''edina" or "African quarter,'
~ clref~~ bowll of ri6e that will be .&be-a.e of '• naUonal diah -"oep u
djln" -fiah .wtfed with prlic and paraley, ~ lteelDed with rlct met ve,etablel.
f{o one rum ln Dllbr, and exeitement la
rare. Once a year' the Pana to Dakar aµto and
mototqcle race break• the calm Mrottnd
lndepenC:ience Square u dust-covered vehicles
l'OU' to the finflb Une.
This year leatalative and pretidentlal
elKtiona Feb. 27 created a atlr that la 1UU
reverberattna al~ there waa never any
doubt about who wou.Td win.
s.n..a1 11 one of onl7 three counlri• ~ VI• aDCI' Centrfl ~"1th a multlpany .,-m. There are 14 puUel', etaht of which pit
up cendkkta fOf\ the 120-wt ~· nve nn c-vllde• for ptf!llldeei. It eame u no surpriM that inc'4mbeot
,., ...... AbdcN Dlout wl hla Sod~ Party
won U .PlftilDt of the Wle apd 1 !1 *ti lft ~ .Nau.aJ~. If'
But IDm.J urban d1"llen and lntel.lec:t\ma '
in tbla nation of llx mlllion are newrthe1-
cl1alat1dled with the ,.Wta and have been ~ opmly what 1be ])Otnt of a mulitputy c 9 lf the oppmlUon hM no chance to afleet
~ ~.,,i oppolld~1~ve
The Duke • • • '$ ..
Still another pook· orJ Wayne delv~s into legend's 'Sensitivity ,,.
'I
I
I t
I
OrenQe Coalt DAILY PILOT/Monday, Mey 31, 1883
Dem-8-den: rve been ln th1a work lon8 ~ to know there are more cheatlnC buabandl
than faithful cam, but I WM not ~ for the
bl1J:&Ud of lettlfra that hit my desk lfnce I printed
the .-mer from 'The Other Woman who uked lf she
oou1d U111t r,ny cotwnn to .-ch her lover'• wife.
She wrote: ••n.-Wife: Your huaband and I
have been~ ~ five years. Pleue let him
go ., we aan bWJd a life trJCether. He la wonderful
COl1ll*\)'. very attnc:tive and be lovee JM. But I need
to betilU' your side of the story. Do you know about
ua? Do )'(>U rally~ him? U not, why are you still
hanging ln there? II it just for appeerance'a sake? U '°• is that fair? P1eue reply through ~ Landen' columft. Call me --The Other Woman''
!Jere are a few aample9 of the 25,000 replies:
• • •
f'rom Manteca, Calif.: Which Other Woman are
you? Please send your name, measurementa and
Social Security number. Lover Boy baa been
juggling three for the past year. And there were at
leasi five before that. Identify yOW'8E'lf, Toots.
• • •
From Montreal: So you want to build a life
together? It will never happen. He is very content
with the life he has built with me. We have a lovely
home and four beautiful children. So get with it,
Dummy, and check out.
• • •
From Tampa, Fla.: Why don't I hand him over
to you? The answer is M-O~N-E-Y. He has lots of
it and I am not about to lower my standard of living.
• • •
From Dubuque, Iowa: I was once the Other
Woman. He married me and I wish to God I had
never laid eyes on him. He misses hia kids and hol~
me responsible for losing them. He talks about his
ex-wife in his sleep, and rm sure he'd go back to her
if she'd have him. Our stolen heaven is a living hell.
• • •
From Honolulu: Do I know about you? Of
course, I do. I figured it out when he had his day
off changed to yours. Why don't I let him go? Why
should I? I invested 23 years in this marriage. It's
T JOUI HIAL1H
OR. PETER J . STEINCROHN
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: I've been stung by
a wasp on two occasions. The first time it happened
was in our yard. I waa sitting back, taking in the
sun in my ba1hing suit, eating a hot dog. I waa
bitten oo my arm. All I felt waa a mild sting. There
was only a mild swelling that went away in a few
hours. The semnd time happened while walking
toward my car in my ahorisleeves. I recall that I
was eating a ham and cheeee sandwich at the time.
This time, my arm was quite painful. It swelled. I
began to feel faint and broke out in hives. I would
call it a severe reaction. Now t'm frightened.
Suppose l get stuna again? I've beard that ~
people have dad frcm a .ana. What do you advt.?
~Mr.ff. Dear Mr. B.: It's evldeat tbt yom•re aow
aeultbed to lueet ttlqt. It maka cood HllH to visit u allerclit. Be wOI probablJ prescribe a..ttnt
aid kit, 8Dd wUI lu":!J" llow to adm1DJ1ter
adreulla If '" evel' It. Meunue, lie wm live JM 1-Jeetlou at latenal1 to deseulthe yoa.
Altbo•P. allel'IJ to vmom from 1U.,1 by bee9 ud
*
• wives
..
euier to clOl9 one eye than to •tart ap1n. . • ..
From Chlcago: Why <k,'1 hang ln there? rd like
to aak YOU that queeUon. After live years of back
roads and mot.ell. it's time you got the pk:ture.
• • •
From Madison, Wia.: Do I love him? Yee. Will
be leave me? Never. Keep the gifta for ''lervices
rendered" but don't expect anything more. He's
mine.
• • •
Syracwie: You and I are both fools -you for·
letting him use you, and me for the same reaaon. 'Tha
guy la a liar, a cheat and an incurable chuer. I'd kick
him out, but I'm too old to start over.
• • • Long Ialand, N.Y.: You thlnk he'a attractive, do
you? I wish you could see him around the houae.
What a slob! . . "
Loa Angeles. Calif.: So you want my h~?
Please come and get him. I can have his baas packed
in 20 minutes. rve kicked him out four timee and he
always comes back. promiaina to behave -but I
know he never will. There were five dollies before
you (by actual count), and you are one of three right
now. I have family moneY, and don't need thia clown!
If you can get him to leave me, ru give you ~.ooo
in c.ash. But ~member, dear, all safes are final.
Got those wedding bell blues over <nJt . . .
guest list ... what to wear ... and other details?
Ann Landers' "New Bride's Guide" will help. For a
copy, send $2 plus a long, !11811-addressed, stamped
envelope (37 cents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11995, Chicago, m. 60611.
wasps Is qafte common., moat people do not bave
severe allerpc reactions. B•t tbey can be severe wu11· breaU1la1 dlfflcaltlet. Fatalltlet are not
common, aboat two dosea reported nationally
darilal dae put year. Meaaw'8e, bere are some HUetdou OD ltow
not to 1et 1t1Ulc. Don't eat oatdOon. Wear Upt colors, not dark clotbf.al. Don't walk barefoot.
Don't ase perfama or balnpra)'I wklle lo..qin1
oatslde. Don't poke aroud la die b•na. Slowly
walk away wllea yoa discover bees or watps near
yoa.
MEDICALETTES (Replies to and from
readen):
DEAR DR. STEINCHRON: : My daughter had
a measles vaccination at age 3. About a week later,
she suddenly had a convulsion. Our doctor said it
wasn't anything serious. Ia it advisable to let it go?
-Mrs. G. Dear Mn. G.: Tllere llave been almllar
ln1tuca reported. Somedmet die lmmalJalioD
reacdoa ocnn wll.lle sun la dae doctor'• office, at
otller tlma wtilln one or two weeb. Wltea It does
occv, tff-palleat1 are wl"1a dae a1e ru1e of
aboGt au moatla1 to 3-( years. ID most c*lldna
wbo bave tlleae reactloa1, no aearolo1lcal
problems were discovered. However, tf teilves
1bowld ocear apla, eumlDatloa by you cll.lld'•
doctor and a aearolo1l•t ls indicated. UtHlly,
vacdudoa cauet DO problema.
~ NOW SHOWING IN YOUR GALAXY • I t
00 • = Q)
~
•
--·=·· RETURN~ ..
ADVANCE TICKETSTICKET MASTER OUTLETS INCLUDING NOW ON SALE M,USIC PLUS < LUXURY THEATRES ) ~ ............. ..,.2~ ... ~ s marmn·nall6i~ms/~~y ) s
*( ii:l.flEWt°ii J * ., ..... ;--; ~~
U•JO ,," •• ,. .,'° 10•JO ,,,n,w' ._Mt
Rene Enriquez is positive spokesman (or Hispanics.
Enriquez finally k~cks blues
By JERRY BUCK ~T ..............
LOS ANGELES -Rene Enriquez says his
own life began to chang~' when his character on
NBC'a "Hill Street Blues" was named Hispanic
Officer of the Year.
That was aJao a watershed for the character,
Lt. Ray Calletano, who rejected the award as a
meaningless, patronizinS geslure. ''They gave him a banquet and what did they
serve?" Enriquez asks. "Huevos ranchero. What
was the drink? Margaritas. One speaker called him
a Mexican and another called him a Puerto Rican.
Nobody bothered to find out he is Colombian. He
tells them off and he walks out. I've wanted to do
that myself so many times. ·
"You work in a place for a year and nobody
knows anything about you. Finally they have to
give him a token. They make him Hfapanic Officer
of the Year. Big deal! How rtMmy Hispanics are
there?"
Enrfquez's character of Lt. Calleiano is a part
of the ensemble company that makes up the hit
NBC series. The series. which veers between
explosive drama and chaotic humor, made ita d~ut
in January 1981 and went on to sweep the F.rnmy
. awards that September. It repeated its performance
at the awards ceremony the following year.
Enriquez is a tall, solidly built man, whose baid
head ia tanned a deep brown from a recent vacation
at his oceanfront retreat in Mexico. He wears a
white embroidered guayabera shirt from the
Yucatan Peninsula.
He says, "All of a sudden my career has been
blossoming. They gave me a three-parter on 'Hill
Street Blues.' My character became such a ~tive
role for Hispanics and others. l'w juat finished two
movies. I've got another movie corning out in the
fall and I'm undet consideration for a miniseries."
&riquez was born in San Francisoo but grew
up in Nicaraaua. where he was descended from an
old, established family. An uncle, Emiliano
Chamorro, waa president of Nicaragua prior to the
Somozas. Another relative was publisher and editor
of La PreJl4Q until his assassination.
He has played a wide ranRe of Hispanic
characters and he hopes he will be mpted in other
characterizations. For the miniseries he ia up for a
role as an Arab.
"I like very much the idea of being such a
positive spokesman for Hispanics," he says. "It's
very rewarding for me the love that Hispanics have
for this charaCter. Whenever I go somewhere it's
like the applauae of Broadway.''
He was recently honored by the League of
United Latin American Citizens in Corpus Christi,
Texas. He laughs as he recalls, "Middle-aged
.women were kissing my bald head. I've become the
sex symbol for middle-aged women."
The role of Lt. Callet.ano, until the Hispanic
award show, was frequently overshadowed by
"Hill Street Blues" more colorful characters like
Mick "The Biter" Belker, Andy "Cowboy" Renko
and Sgt. Phil &terhaua.
Enriquez says, "The role was originally written
for an Anglo-Saxon. The wonderful thing is that
the writers write to fit the actors. They shape them
close to our own personalities, our own way of
talking. The role has been good for me. Before 'Hill
Street Blues' I was typecast as the rich ambassador
or businessman. I auditioned tor the role, like
everyone else, but then I forgot about it until I got
a call from my agent. I didn't know what he was
talking about."
Prior to resting at his house in Mazatlan,
Mexico, Enriquez had roles in a new Cht..rles
Bronson film, "The Evil that Men llo," and a TV
film about four nuns slain in El Salvadoc. "Roses."
"We did the Bronson film in Guadalajara," he
says. "It was very kind of my producer, Steven
Bochco, to let me out of the last epiaode of 'H.iQ
Street Blueti,' Otherwise, I could not have done the
role.''
After a brief trip to New York City for an
appearance on "Good Morning America," be
returned to Mexico for "Roses." He plays
Archbishop Romero, who was assassinated in El
Salvador.
In the upcoming picture, "Under Fire," which
stars Gene Hackman and Nick Nolte, he plays Gen.
Somoza. who was deposed as dictator of Nicaragua
in 19'79.
PLAN TO SEE -. '
.AT AN
EDWARDS-THEATRE
NOW PLAYING
Edwa•s laas 18,000 sea•s dally, total .
perfor•anees,'for .JEDI. There have bee•
NO presales. We have save• all el ....
seats fat ALL perfor•a•ees for YOU, 01JB ~lJSTOMEBt Flr•t Ceme, First !ierve•t
NOW PLAYIN.Gt Oar MX of~eM are epea
at 8:45 a.a. •ally. Tlekeu wW lte •• M1e
eaeh •ay ler that daY,'s perfer•a•eM· .
General A•mt .. lo• .S.ff -ClaU• 1a.se _
®MOYIE * * * "Ridllrd fltYGr Uw From The ~ Stt1p" (1812) R1c:Nr11 Pryor.
-12:00-
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•• "Pa)ichlc Klllw" ( 1875) Jim Hut-ton. Julie Adami..
(!) INDEPl!HDINT NnWON<
The "Pea.nob" gang -Charlie Brown, Linus, Woodstoe~ Snoopy,
Marcie, Peppermint Patty -have a comieal trip through Europe in
"What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown?" tonight at 8:00 on KNXT (2 ).
Six new shows opening
For oomplete llettfti ... TV Log
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Moadar t11ru S.tuNar
All PM'fonnance• befOfe 5:00 PM
lhcellt S,.W fn .. 11111tt Miii "*'Pl
"'tlMA ntL.m••" ... 1 --·---·
wru"..-1 -----·-
...,...,.....car -------
l Al<EWOOD CENTER
SOUTH w••• "
.. ..
ANAHi:IM 11111v1 '"'
"' ....
BlH t•A PA~I< · .-.i '"
ui.ea-. ...... -llM010 ..
LINCOLN I 1111.t I~
... AC8....,.....,..,_
·~Pill .......... ------
"HARLEQUIN" CN)
hMIA.Mli, ... • ~"11'. ........
edword-. WE~TBROOK CINEMA
~::: •. : :··~:" ' ' ">10 4,10 I
. . ' ' ' I .
.... •
'I
r.J
, ... t
Ortngt Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 30, 1083
l 'M GOING OUT TO A VE.RV NICE ~STAURAN'f' TOHIGMT, GARFIE.L'7.
50 '10<J 8E. OOOP WMlLE. I'M GONE
THE
t ',\MILt'
Cl8Ct8
by Bil Keane
"This is where Mommy puts all the stuff that
doesn't belong anywhere."
ll.\Rll:\Dl.KE by Brad Anderson
"I told you not to use his doghouse
as a garage!"
[
PUNl:TI
BIG GEORGE
by Gua Arriola
&IJfQ/ ,.
~r
Flfl'Tle5J
by Jim Davis
WMO 6AIP I
WAH'TEP 'f'O 00
TO VOOR CPJJMMV
RfS'TAOAAN'T,
A.til-/WAV?
by Virgil Partch (VlP)
"I hate Monda ya."
DE~:\IS THE )IE:\ACE Hank'Ketchum
lLiW
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
DARN Rl<:1HT--
LIVE IT UP
WHIL~ Y,A c,AN,
I SAY ..
.-.------------....., by Charles M. Schwlz
I llOHK rrs /JR.AJO
OF HEIOMTSl
~ I ~ I ••• ~\ GOlfl 011 lllDGI . 8 Y CHAA&.£9 H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
AN8WEl8 TO UIDG! QUll
Q.J-Ntlthtr vulnerable, u
South you bold:
tA'1M4 C,1111 OQt tQM
The blddlnr ha• proeeffed:
Nerd! Eut S..-. Wee& , .. , ..... , ..
INT P ... ?
What action do 7ou take?
A.-Slnce partner ii• pua·
ed hand, hil jump In no
trump cannot ehow more
than 11-12 point.. You have a
dead minimum opener, wbleb
ii balanced to boot. Pua.
Then ii no reason why you
ahould want to advertiae a
five-card 1pade 1uit by bid·
ding again.
Q.1-Neither vulnerable, u
South you hold:
•AJIOW <;>QaS o t •IQ8'
The bidding ha1 proceeded:
Nerd! Eut S... WHt
PUI Pua I+ p..,
INT PUI ?
What actiorr do you I.Ake?
A. -Jn term• of high card.a,
this hand is eqwvalent to the
previou1 one. But here you
have a second auit and I
Jl'DGt: PARKER
\lle.'4~ ~
WU.'i MAO
/Cf Mt,
~~\C.K.
.tnrl•ton. '° &hll 11.and ii COD·
1lderably better. Uabalueed
band.a t.eDd to play bet&.et at•
1uit eontrad, '° probe for
your belt 1p0t with a rebid or
three ctube. Indeed, If part·
ner rebid• tb,.. 1p1det, we
wouldn1t ulUc:iM a bold pu1h
to 11111•. u-A• Sot.1th. vulnerable,
you bold:
•AQ8'1tl 1;171 0111 t1l
The ~lddJ111 lw proeeecled:
Nri F.-S.-. Wee& 1 1;> ,... •• , ..
1 0 , ... ?
What action do you take?
A.-On tbil auction, your
partAer almott 1urel7 bl a
1i1-eard heart euit.
Therefore, there ii no pohlt
to rebidding your 1pade1 -
you are unlikely to have a
better fit and you eould have
a worse one. Since you have a
weak hand and tolerance for
partner'• suit, you ahould
pua.
Q.4-Aa South, vulnerable,
you hold:
i s~ 10 "u W«1~
Ol>tt r1~~ £.~AM, ANO
~~CMU~"1
111t ~~e ~t.A1'~. 50 .w. ~w ~ eont
FOB BETTER OR fOR WOalE
I W()t()EF. ~ r.f( MOM 51'(\/s V0tJ
~NS-IN LOVE '9 KINDA areurem.aes REl\U..YlJKE.~ IN y~~.
FtNK t' W INKER•t:AN
>.~ SIC,H )~ 1Mae.E~ ~INC;,
IN 1ME lAlORLD ~ WIJ&SJ 1HAN A ROCK !
tA&flU o• OI +II•
Tbe bldcliq tau prnu .. d:
Nri EM& .._. W•
1 ~ , ...... ..
I ~ r .. ?
What do you bfd QOw?
A.-Slnce pattatr tllould
have a 111-a.rd 1uJt OD Utl1
auction, you have lotated a
flt. There II no neH to N~d
your 1pade 1uJt -you eanaot
play fn two 1ulta. We wouJd
jump to four beartl. Wtth lbe
1ln1leton &mood upended
to 8 point.a, tbrte heart.I la a
distinct underbid.
Q.5-Both vulnerable, 11
Soutb you bold:
•8 ~Qt• OAQIW t&M
The blddl.ar bu proeeeded:
8eedi WMt Nerd! Eut
1 0 r .. I o r ..
?
What do 1ou bid now?
A. -We are Inclined to
prefer a ralle to two heart.a
over a rebid or two diamonda.
Even tbou1b you have a ab·
card 1uJt. 1our moat likely
game ii ln bearta. Therefore,
OOtl'f ~ so ~~«Cl
<>M~.
&I& 6'to1\W.R_
~ ... ---~-
you 111ould make U1e.,... eo·
eour•rf•r rebid poelfble,
w~ld la a raJle of~··
1ult. Had yov llwu 1*a
weaker, two diamoadt w,.Jd
laave been the eorreet ........
Q.1-Botlt vulnerable,1 11
8outa1 you bold: · •a 0 11• OAQlll +UM
The bfddina' lw preee1'8d: ...... ·~~ I 0 P .. I O P•
?
What do 7ou bid aow?
A. -la view of part•r'1
retponN. your haad tau im·
proved COtlliderably. IO fOU
1bould plu to bid out JOUI
1taape. Start with a rebi4 of
two dube now, t~D ralte
heart. at your next t.urn.
That normall11bowa a M-3-J
pattern and a bett.er-tlaan·
minimum open.ill1 bid, or a
aomewhat 1tronpr but ~
balanced hand. With a
min imum you would raile to
two hearu at your teeoOd
turn.
by Harold Le Ooux
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fag·an
~ .... ou·~~
WU.ION'S Of 1"1N~
OUM«~
'™A~
1'AA1' \
by Lynn Johnston
by Tom !Sett~
l .. llllJPlllt
• MONDAY, MAY 30, 1183
SneVa ends · I 0-year : droug tat ·Indy
I
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Tom Sneva swen:ame
a family effort by Al Urwer Sr. and Al Umer Jr.
Sunday to end a decade of fruatration and win the
87th lndianapolia 500~
IChoo1 principal from Spokane, Wuh., built leads of
up to 30 eeconda durtna tile 200-lap nee, but found
himeell behi.nd Ume.r, a •three-time Indy winner,
aft.er the fifth and final caution period of the day.
First, a yellow flac for a tow-in on BUI
WhiUington'a car on lap 168 cut into Sneva'a maq1n.
Then Mike Moeley, who started in the front row but
never wu in contention after the f1nt few laps,
brought out the yellow tlq when he tapped the wall
in the f1nt tum on lap 170. Mosley wu not injured
and the leaden aped into the pita for just enough
fuel to finlsh the ..-e.
w•ed a two-lap penalty by the U.S. Auto Club for
the pa.tna ~ his father and Soeva under the =f fill on the 190th lap while poeldonJ.ns between them.
to be • l'Mlel' ...
Another ""0011-11Cet-n, after be eot pat the Umen.
wu hla fuel comumption. 1be !uel Ucbt. lndfcaUne
he WU runninl out, bepn flk:Urtna Oft the I.Mt few
laps 8hd went IDlld red tu. lalt Ume around. Sneva, a three-Ume runner-up and the first
man to officially break the 200-mph barrier at
Indianapolia Motor Speedway, finally captured the
richelt prbe in auto l'lldni on his 10th try.
Al Jr. uld he had palled hla father Wllnt.en-
tionally, and once he rea1iJed lt, let Al Sr. pu1 him
back.
"The crew to1d me we blld erMJUQb to flnW1. I
uw the tJaht, but you haw to 10 with It," he lakl.
Sneva wQl take home about $300,000 fmn the
total pune of more than $2 mtlllcn, HJa speed baa
been bettered at Indy only by Mark Donohue, who
1et the record ot 1e2.926 in um.
He drove a George BAgnottJ-Dan Cotter March
to an 11.19-aecond victory <Ner the elder Umer, who
almost won on his 44th birthday with help from his
21-year-old llOll.
1lle unofficial elapeed time for the winner was
3 houn.. 5 minutes, 3.066 leCOnda, for an average
speed of 162.117 mph, the 1eOOnd-faatest in Indy
hlatory.
Umer beat Sneva out of the plla and, with Al
Jr. running between him and Sneva for eeveral laps
and doina tome intentional bJocldng for his father,
built a 100-yard ie.d. .
Sneva flnally dived low and allpped put the
younger Umer 8°'na into the tint tum on lap 191.
He then whipped put the elder Umer coming out
of the teCOnd tum and lte.dily pulled away, d.rtvtna
the white-and-red Texac:o-apomorm racer llCl'09
the tiNah line nearly half a atraightaway a.heed of
the elder Un.er.
"Winning IW"e feels better than finiab4'g
eecond," Mid the bespectacled Sneva. "They (the
Umen) made me work for ft. 1bat little kid ia going
Rookie Teo Fabl, who establiahed one-and
four-lap recorda ln_qualltytna foe the nee -208.°'9
and 207.395 mph. re.pectively -pided the 3kar
field Into the lint tum.ifrom the pole pmition and
stayed eesily in the ie.id.
The 34-year-old Sneva, a former junior high The younger Unaer oompleted UM lape but waa (See INDY, Pqe B!)
LA overwhelmed
Sixers' finish puts Lakers down 3-0
INGLEWOOD (AP) -
Fourth-quarter lightning, with
Moees Malone and Julius Erving
the bigest aparka, took the Phila-
delphia 76era to the brink of their
tint National Basketball Aaocia-
tion title in 16 years Sunday.
"U you don't get us early,
you're In trouble becauae we will
get you in the second hall, •• 76en
c.c.cb Billy Cunningham aaid
after Philadelphia took a 3-0 lead
aver the Loa ~ Laken in
the NBA champ6onahip aeriee
with a 111-M victory. Philadel-
phia out.cored the Laken 39-22 in the fourth quarter.
'1t hae been characteriatic of
th.ta team all through the iJ~yof& in the second half to over
defensively. niere has been a lot
of talk about thia team havfn8 a
lot o1 atan, but ft ia time for eome
credit on deferwe."
"We are just like a little train,
we get the momentum goiJli and
then get more agremive" said
Malone, who had 28 polnta and 19
rebounds for the 76era. Erving
added21pomtsand12ttbounda
.. Philadelphia outrebounded the
IA.ken 54-41.
U Philadelphia can win pme
four here 'l\ae9day nfebt, it would
cap the mmt • ...._,.... playoff
mmpelen in NBA hlatory and end
a six-year nm of frustration in
the championship aeries.
"We're abeolutely not going to
loee four in a row," Malone Mid.
"We want to fly back to Philly
and have the fans waiting for ua
back at the airport. But l'm not
going to get too happy yet ...
"We want to end it in four,"
Cunningham said. "We want
people to remember thia team.
No team in NBA playoff hla-
t.ory ever has come back to win a
best-of-aeven aeries after being
down 3-0.
Philadelphia, which last won
the title in 1967, lost in the finala
in 1977 to Portland and fell in
1980 and last year to r.o. ~
But thiayear, the 76enare 11-1
In the post.euon and no NBA
team bM ever made It th.rou&b
the pla__yotts with <Wily .. lam.
1be L.a.kera, me.nwhile are on
the verge of becoming the 14th
•.trtraig ht Ieque champion that haa
failed to sucoeeefully defend ila
title. 1lle last team to repeat u
champions waa the 1969 Bo.ton
Celtics.
/Lndrew Toney added 21 pointa
for Philadelphia and Bobby Jones
17 off the bench. Kareem
Abdul-Jabber led the La.ken
with 23, while Jamaal Wilkes bad
20 and Earvin "Maaic'' Johmon
18.
Abdul-Jabbar, sharpJy criti-
d.z.ed for aettiJl8 only four re-
bounds in MCh of the first two
games, came through with 15
Sunday, but it waan't enough.
Philadelphia trailed 52-49 at
the half, the third llraiabt time
the 78en were behind at half-
time, but they ICOl"ed the first
lf!Ve!l pomts of the third period to
go a.beed for the flnt time in the
game.
1be Laken opened a 26-12 lead
in the flnt 7~ minutes u they
took the ball inside lnOl'e effec-
tively than at any time n the
seriet. Forward Kurt Rambia,
averaging just 7.5 points per game
in the resular ...i and playoffa
for Loa~ bllll 8'gbt points
In the early 9'11'91!1 Abdul...Ja~-~. 10 potnts =:-:~in~'=· Tom Sfteva wav~ to the cl"dwd after winniq Sunday'a
Laken ahelld 3~21. Indianapolis 500.
Unse:rs' ploy annoys Snev.a
But Indy winner shakes off tactics in wake of Indy victory
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -T<m Sneva.
finally an lndJanapolia ISOO winner, WM
elated by the victory but annoyed by the
father-aon tactics that be worried would
leave him a frustrated runner-up for the fourth time. •
Sneva aaid -and the eanctioninc U.S.
Auto Club qreed -that Al Umer Jr.
pe-1 two driven Weplly to leld inter-
lennce for h1a father in the final lape of
Sunday'• race. 'Ihe youD&l!I' Umer WU
pena11led two laps for the aatbl.
"I Wal pttina a bit DelVOla out there,"
aaid the 34-year-old wtenn from Spokane.
Wash. "I know thia ia racinC. and a driver
must take what he can. But the ru1-state
lped6ca1Jy that a drivel' ahould not 11911
under the yellow flag."
Al Jr. aclmowJedled that he had puEd
can under the yellow caution a._ to get hia
machine poaltloned between hi•
pece-eettinC father, Al St., • three-time
winner of thia race, and the hot-pursuing
Snt!'Ya. I ''I could understand lt lf Al Jr. waa
oompe~for the vk:t.ory,'' Sneva lald. "But
he .,,,,,, Wen behind and had no chance.'' nw youppc-u .... ~ 10th. eight
lap1 behind the Jeedms.
The nllD9 WM a1n:dt • dnmatlc in ha
ftnfah .. the almolt wheel-to-wheel duel
between Gordon Johncock and Rick Mean
a year a,o, when Johncock edaed out a
triumph by .16-eecond., an advantage of
about 20 feet.
The drama for the 5'ieva-Umer ftniab
Reggie breaks slump, • tie
Angels capture seventh straight, 6-4, to pad West . lead
CLBVELAND (AP) -
AltbQua}l Regie Jadmon. by
reputation, plays h1a best bMeball
at the el)d of the yeu, even he baa
~ concerned about h1a ex-
tremely unproductive per-
formance aver the put ff!W
w~ka.
But Jackaon alu11ed a
tie-~ two-ND homer in
the top of the ninth innm8
S~y to live the Anaell a M
victory OWi' the C1.veland In-
diuw and be thlnka lt milht be
the hit that turns h1tn around.
"I t.el better," he aid. "At
1.-t I felt today that I couJd otter
o. rt',.,,.,,
Cll•••el 6 •t 4::1•
at the bell. Tbe IU.YI were very
ham for me. They'Ve been
pullinl for me, and that'• the thine that'• been keeptnc me amn.."
Tbe homer I coupled with a
uc:rUibe fly mrUer, pw him
three RBI and brob aD O-for·21
streak. It al80 ataeltbed the
~· winnlnJ m..k to .veil ~ tytna tblir ~ OYW Uae lalt two om and upped
wu let up when Mike Moeley bm&ed into
the wall.~ out the yellow flag on the !:!:'.~ie:i~~= went into the pita. 'nlere, UDlll!I' pined a
tremendoua aclvantage when hla crew 8ellt
him bllCk out after only 11 eecorm while
Sneva needed 32 leOOnda, puah1nc Umer
into the lead.
"No, I didn't have \0 chance tires."
Sneva · laid of h1a final ptt stop. "I WU
·~ low Oil fuel. and Al had a lot of fuel Jett. We had to put 38 pDgm tnto the tank.
and that took time."
Sneva started drivirll ftOdt cara in 1989
and wu Can-Am champion with
IUpel'·modfflecte that year. Tim mubd his
10th lndlanapoUa nee.
l r 1
Orenge Cout E>Afl y PILOT /Monday, May 30. 1913
Return of Cooney
delayed by injury
From AP .....,_taea
NEW YORK. -Heavywei1ht ml Gerry Cooney will not return to
llC'tion apimt Phillip Brown June 18 ·
as acheduled becauae of a knuckle
injury that bu hampered his trainin1. co-
mamces' Mike Jones said Sunday.
Jones said the fiaht, which wu eet foe Laa
Veeas. wW be racheCluled for mid or late~ul .
1be -.year-old Cooney, who h-. not f t
since being 1top~ in tle
bid aplnat Larry Holmes last
June 11, was examined by Dr.
Richard Smith at
Mauachuaetta General
Ho1pital In Boston last.
Thunday for a bMily swollen
middle knuckle of the left
band.
Cooney came away from
the doctor obvioualy relieved.
COONl'I and told reporten Thurm.,y
night at Providence, R.I., that he would be able
to go a.head with the Brown fight. He said he had
been given the option of surgery or letting the
injury heal ~ rest. He deecrtbed. the injury
ai ''like a little bone chip'' and said the knuckle
had bothered him for about 10 weeks.
"He just hun't had enough time to spar,"
said Jonee_ explaining the ~ for pPStponlnl
the fight.
Quote of the day
"l won the fight undisputedly. I proved I
am the uncrowned ch•mpfp~." -
Challenger Tim Wltllel'SpOC!ll, who lost to
Larry 'Holmes, the World tk>xing Council
heavyweight champ\on, in a 12-round split
decision.
Four UCI
athletes
to coinpete
Four athlete. will repraent
UC Irvine at the 1983 NCAA
Track and l1eld Ow,mpionships
in Houston bQinnina Tue.day
and l'U1lDin&. tbiouch Sunday.
Juniors Bick Holliday and Ken
Milla and sophomore Mike
Powell will OOltlpete for the men.
while .ent« Michelle Kelley wW
represent the Anteaters'
women'• team.
tt0Wda1 and Powell qualified
for the natlonala in the 9eUOll'•
first meet againat Stanfwd and
Long Beach State on Feb. 19.
Holliday aoared 53-10 ~ for a
9Chool record iD the triple jump.
Meanwhile, Powell went
26-5 ~ {or a penonal beet in the
long jump and Milla qualified in
the d1aNa with a acbool-reconl
tom of 191-9 apimt Orepl OD
March 2$.
Kelley wW cam~ in the Jmia
jump after~ a a:hool record
of 20-8 in the Nike lnvttadonal at
Northrldae on Allril 17.
Junkic'-Mark 1\uelu fell abort
in his bid to qualify for the
nation.ala over the wf!ek.end, but
did wtn the 1.500 met.en at the
Long &.ch Invitational in • time
of 3:•9.4.
Diaz, Schmidt club Expoe
~·~Wts=r.~~o;~ ·11 ~ to apatk PbJlad.tDhla to a D-2
triumph over Monu.l Sunday lri the '
National Lh1ue. Rl1ht·handet e
<-"ril&eD.IOD. 2-4, allowed :"f: ~3 over · for the vtctory in • ~ la~ 1 houn. 2
minutes at~~ t>y ratf{ . B ... Bit twa-.run doubt htahllaht.ed • four-run. f t 1nnlna tbal~. Atlan to 8-2 'ttin_.;wer tM
. wn:6 ihJ.-vtctoi'Y, e vw..mewc:t to within 1 ~
ea of pace-1ettln1 Loa
ngele.-in the NL West
. . . Jamie Q1l.lrk capped •
four-run fifth lnnina wtth •
three.fUO ~r, bis MCCllid in three years, and drove in
four runs to lead St. Louia
DlAZ past Houston, 7-3 . . . BW
MadJon aingJed to tie the pme and scored the wtnn1nl rua on Riate BelNler'1 bunt l1ngle in
th• leVenth inning, llftina Piuaburah to an 8-5 d~er Cindnnati . . .. Mootie WUIOD hit a homer and Bable Brook• capped a
thtef..run inning with a tie-breaking a!nale
in the New York Meta' 3-2 triumph over S"an
Diego.
"' Walker, Betz lead Generals
Heracla'l Walker rushed for a EIJ
United Statee Food>all League rec:orii II
UM yard.a and Dave Ben ldcked a • t
~-yard field goal with no time left u
New Jerwy edaed Wuhincton 32-29 Sunday
afternoon. The Generals drove 33 yards on 1eVen
playa iD ~ eeconda before Beta kickl!d hla fourth
held ~ of the day. Betz wu added to the roe:ter'
this ~ af~ Genenla cut Dave Ja~ ... Fnak .srabbld Jobale WaJ-.•1
14-yard touchdown pal after It waa Upped by
teamtbate C'llarlJe SmJtll on the Jut play to cap a
MCODd-half comeback and lift Boston to a 21-17
victory over Philadelphia. The dramatic ending
gave the ~ their third comecutive victory
and an 8-6 Noord.
Slew 0' Gold wins easily
NEW YORK -Slew O'Gold, m ridden uy A,nael Cordero Jr., set· •
atakel recora at Belmont Park
Sunday u he won the Peter Pan
Staka by 12 lengths over I Encloee.
Slew O' Gold iB partially owned by Laguna
Hilla' David Ringler and is a pcmible at.art.er in
the Bebnont.
..,..,
Jays eat~h Doi 'n~ East.
Lloyd Moseby droVi in t~,_..,.,.._..
l'W1I with hla fifth and lixth hormn
of the IH80ll and Jim Gou scat_._
three hlta Sunday to lead Toronto to •
rain-ahortened 6-1 victory over Boeton. The
victory, which wu the flnt game of a scheduled
double-header, lifted the Blue Jays into a Ue
with the Red Sox atop the American League
FA.at . . . In other AL action, Kirk Glbaoa
belted b.la 11eCC>Dd homer of the aeuon with one
out in the eiahth innin8 to live Detroit a 7--8 win
over Mi.nnelota and a lour-1ame sweep of their
aeries with the Twlna . . . Oscar Gamble
cruhed a three-run homer and Jay Bowell and
Rady May combined on a four-hitter as the New
York Yankees blanked Oakland, ~-0 ...
Vance Law homered and tripled and Carlton
Fl•k a1ao homered to lead the Chicago White Sox
to an 8-3 victory over Texas. . . Ricky Nelaou '1
tie-breaking homer triggered a five-run Seattle
sixth inning and fellow rookie Matt Yoang
acattered .UC hlta through 7~ innlno w pace the
Mariners to a 6-.f deciaion in Mlfwaukee . . .
Rookie Pat Sllerldu mmcked b.la aecond homer
of the aeuon in support of the seven-hit pitching
of Paal SpllUorff and Daa Q•IM•berry as
Kan.au City stopped Baltimore, 4-0. Quisenberry,
a product of Cotta Mesa High and Orange Cout
College, pitched the final two l.nn1ngs for hia
11th save.
Irwin not denied this time
Hale lrwta, denied a victory by a n bizarre bounce in the. first Memorial
Tournament. won the efahth ediUon
Sunday with a storm-delayed final
round o{ 69 that lifted him out of a three-way tie
with Ben Creulaaw and David Grabam. Irwin,
twice a U.S. Open winner, scored the 15th
victory of b.la career with a 281 total, aeven abota
under par . . . Patty Slleelwl f.ired a reoord-
ahauertna 9-under-par 63 to win the LPGA
Coming ci..tc. Sheehan'• 72-hole total of 272
also shaved etaht atr<>kee off the coune record of
280, which she shared with Saadra Spulcb.
· i~~Loweot&M...-w
Sox ....... Uie flnt maJoc' ...... to·blt
fOUJ' bomil l\IN la ...... ~ ''bbox'' O\amberlain In a 20-l l viCtary
<YVffl Cincinnati. Two of the homen w In
the third lnnina and Lowe ai.o lldcSed •
alnile for 17 total '--
1922-The Chbilo OD tndM Max l'ld to the St. Loull Cardlnala for Cliff
Heathcote between sames of a double·
header and both played one pme for each
team. whtlte the Cube swept the twin bW
by ide.n~ 3-1 acorea.
1927-Shortatop Jim Cooney of the Ch1ca&o Cube executed an unaaUted t.rtpi.
play by arabblna Paul Waner'a line drive,
atepplna on leCOnd bue to double Lloyd
Waner and tau1na Clyde Barnhart oomtnc
frokm first bue.
19M-MJ.ckey Mantle of the New York
Yankeea hit what la regarded u the ~
home nm in Yankee Stadium hia1ory when
he homered off the right field facade with
two men on bue. .
Today'• birthday: Houston pitcher
Mike LaC. ii 27.
Bonnett wins again
Nell Bouett caiftured hla second • straight NASCA World 600 In
Harrisburg, N.C. Sunday, grabbina
the event after two of the leaden
were involved in a late accident at the Charlotte
Motor Speedway. Bonnett, in capturing his 12th
Winston Cup victory, led 69 laps, including the
lut !53, while averaging 140.707 mph on the
1.5-mile oval and held off a charlina IU.,..
Petty for a one-eecond victory whlCh e8rned him $~,.05 . . . Mr. Prime Mlalater, the Jonaat
shot in a field of four, took the lead al the be9d
of the ltretch and held off PoleJ to win the Los
Angel.el Handicap by one length before a crowd
of 31,02!5 at Hollywood Park . . . ~euy
Roberts of the United Statee, riding a Honda,
won the 500 cc race in Salzburg, Austria in a time
of .fl minutea, 26.84 seconds . . . Driven DUe
Nalon, Julor Jelauoa, Glaa .. Flrdlall" ....,..
and Rod1er Ward, u well u engine-builder
Fred OffeabaHer, have been named to the
American Auto Racing Writers and Broadcutera
A.saociation Hall of Fame.
Connors advances
in French Open;
Evert gets scare
PARIS (AP) -Top-aeeded
Jimmy Connora, playing an ag-
gn9ve game not normall~~ on clay, raced past Eric
6-2, 6-1, 6-1 Sunday into the
quarterfinala of the French Open
Tennis Championships.
Chria Evert Lloyd, now the
favorite for the women's crown.
had a bit more difficulty, drop-
pl!JI her flm -of the tour-nament before overcoming
18-yee.r4d Helena SUkova of
~ 8-2, M, 6-3.
'l"blrd·aeeded Ivan Lendl,
meanwhOe, wore down Brian
Qqtttxled, 7~ M, 6-3 in a
b111Ure b91'Je i.unc 2~ bows.
Yannlck Noah, b6ddlna to be the
tint Jrendl Wfnnal' of the title in
3'7 )'8111"1. downed John Aieuoder
of AUltralla 8-2, 7--8, 6-1 • an
emtllcl crowd at Roland GGTOI
audlu.i lhouted ~t.
In WOIMI)'• matche8, No. 8
Anatr. J11e19', IUffertna from
larynsldt. defHc.t Britain'• Aw Sobba $-2, M : Gretchen Bulb ol. PlUlbutlb defeated
IYllDM ~.0-. of~
dna. e-.3, 8-2; .nd No. 8 !lane
MandlllrOYa defeated Andr.
T....-vari ol. H~, 8-2, 8-1.
raced about'center court. hlttina
numerous winning volleys
agaiNt Fromm.
"l have never felt u com-
fortable as this on clay befare.''
Connors said. "I don't know why
I am feeling., good and why I am
playing 90 well. LMt year I
decided to improve my ee.rve, to
attack mme. and r. to the net
more. 'lbafa wha •~me
here." . c.onnon la ..-led 1o mat No.
2 John McDvoe In the final. No
Amer1c8n hM won the 1'rencb
Open Ude in 28 ymn. the last betnc Tony Tr8bert In 1955.
Lloyd ii DOW t.wrecf to win
the WOIDID•8 title a:ince Martina
NavratOova, the cWendina ~
pion. w.. us-et by. 17-~
kathy ~th an Saturda.y.
But LIOyd's victory Sunday
w-i't an e.y one • Sukova ~==~~wt-= ~::: drop 8hota are the way
to a.9t me,•• Llo1d ....... ••a.Jma
played a Jot of FOCI.._ but a •.played..-Wana I don't lbfnk .. ~ ...., Well. But .a. ...,,.. and ~well and 'The Ant.eaten ftnhlbed ~
to Fresno State ln the recent
PCAA Champlonahlps in P"n!sno.
In that meet, Ruelas turned in a
penonal beet Ume of 3:44.85 in
the 1,500.
Other top performances turned
in by UCI athletea in the PCAA
meet lncluded Pat Nash'• 7,132
points in the decatbJon. Powell's
runner-up finish tn the hllh
jump at 7-0 \Ii and Bob Rust's
third-plMe ahowing in the kq
jwnp at 24-1~.
Kan888 City'• George Brett,,(bottom) upends Baltimore'& Rich
Dauer in an unsucceuful attempt to break up a double play
Sunday. Kanau City won, ~O.
ea.on. wtxJ. tepUtada\ hat
baeQ IDlide on,_.. aurf..-, Wei
he la lftjoyinC ~ on day.
UnliP wteran clay~ pla)'V8
wboMtdl to the~. c.onnon
. • could be~" ~1.-11. bed• aetpmtatMlll ,..-.At
the end· ... .aw4 fGU.r ~ldl
po&ata betal't ..... \mW. ••
Momentum· sweeps to victory
BOATING
~ • • ... . "
W L ,._ QI
27 11 .too
20 20 .IOO
22 23 ....
22 23 .... 11 24 a.a
21 21 A3I
20 H 07
UITl>MltOtl &oelon 25 11 .668 Toronto 25 11 SN
8111tlmo<• 25 21 .~
New Y0<lc 23 21 .523 MllwMllc.. 21 21 .600
0.lf'Ojt 22 22 .ooo CleYatand ,. 25 .a32
--·~~ o.ftOlt 7, Mlnneeote I
Alli
5
I 7
~ ....
1
2 3 3
5
KaneM City •• ..,,~ 0 Toronto I. 8oeton 1, I lnnlnge
Toronto •1 eo.1on, 2nd geme, l)Od .•
rain
SMtlle I . Mltwu .. 4
New Yorlc 5, Oaklend 0 CNeaoc>•. T-s Toclef'e O.....
At1t•I• (John 4·21 at Cleve lend
1'°'*-'24),n
llllllmore (lloddlcker 1-21 •1 Mlnneeote (Cullllo 2-31 Oakland (Underwood 3·11 et N-YOftl~0-21 ClllceOO (BurN 1-21 at lloe1on (Hural
4-2) S..tll• (llee"le 3·21 " .. , ........ (AuguMlne 1-0) Toronto (8tletl WI at Oelroll (l'wtty
5-2)." Ken111 City (lllacll 1·01 at Teua (Denrln ,_.,,n
Hettonel Leet•
WWIT~ W L ,_ Cle
30 1• el2
2t 11 ..... 1111
2• 21 &33 ....
21 ... A47 10141
11 29 4U 11
20 " .•17 12 IUT DMllOtl St LOIM 24 17 &e5 Mon1rM1 22 11 .an ~a 20 11 .m
PlttttMgh 17 23 .•25 CNcllClo 17 ff "6 .... "°"' 15 ,. 311 "" ,,., :f9o ~ • ~5,Montr_,2
Atlal>ta •• CNcago 2
Ptnll>Wgfl I, Clnelnnat1 5 St Louie 7, Hou91on 3
New YOftl 3, San Diego 2
2
5'At
l'A • l'At
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PNJaOalpNe ,.......,.. 0-1)" DMlefe (-1-3). n
Allante (McMl.rtry 7·11 .. "'"aburgfl
( llltltly 1 • 5 I Ctndnnall (P-1·2) el 91 loute
(Sluper 5-2)
Ho"91on (Maodell 3-0) " Ch~ (Jeniln 1-31
..._ Yor11 (.-...., 2·5) et ... Franclaco
(~-1 Montr9111 (Aoger. 7·11 .. ... Dlloo
(Hew4tlNW).n
AmNCAN Li.A-
Anaele 1,~4 c~ CUvn.Mm ....... ., .. _,
C.-dh 5030 "'-*'Cid 5010
lenlquz" 1110 ...,..,1>11021
Ae.Jk-r1 4 1 u Hergrv 1b • 1 2 0 Ao.JI<-3110 0 0 0 1lrnln dll 1 1 1 0
L,nn d 3 2 1 1 Mcer1de rl 3 0 0 0 o.cir-31>1 1 2 0 llllllvoll" 0 0 0 0
Oert!ll 0000 ~· 3000 llccwW9 111aoo1 .... If 1000
Gr1dl 211 a o 1 1 r ... 211 • 1 2 1
loonec •010 I'-• 3010 A.c!MN• A1 10 H~c :l010 Tabllr p11 1 0 0 1 Dione pr 0100
!MllllO 0000 ,....,ptt 1000
TolM 31•11 t T0181e 33 4 10 3 .... _, ......
Celllornla 011 dbl 012 -t Clewlend 000 100 210 -4 a-wi-tne A11 -"' Jecti-111
OP-Cellfomle 1 LOl-Celltornle t , Clevet11nd 7. 21·Hergrove, Haney. Trtlo ~YM 19~ fie. ""*-(1). 1-
V'*Cllllcll 8'·1111 ~
c;....,.,. • " ""' • ao l'Of'ldl • • 3 ., ' 2 ~ 1'A 1 1 1 1 0 Wltt(W~) 1~ 1 0 0 0 3
CMelaM ....... ~14434 .__(L.1 -4) ,~ 2 2 2 0 0 "°""' plldled to 1WO .,.,. In 7tfl WP~ T~ 03 A-11.74'..
_,.,., ...... 1
9oe4on 001 000-1 3 0 Toronlo 012 120-I 11 2 ........... ,..,
~.~,., ... Newman:
Goll and Whitt. w -1)011, 2·4 L-
Edr.....,, a-2. H"9 -T-. t..loallOy
2 (I)
"""9 1, T .... t .....,,_. 000 410 OtO-t 11 1
Oattolt 100 200 11•-7 12 2 Vlote, L~ (A) _, &IQle; Mome. ~ 111 Ind WOClll4MM. W-~ 3-2. L-LyeMder1_l-4· HA-Oe1rOlt.
<Mbeon(I). A-12,9K
Y ...... t.A'et 000 000 000-0 • 0 Hllw Ycwtl 000 002 Oh-I t 2 ~. a.lt•(l)lnd HMlflc HoWI. M9Y (If Ind C.-. W-MllJ, 1•2. L--
iw..., .1._4-t. H,._.... YCfil. ~ (II. A-n,ASI. ,
Aere114.0r-.I
llellllnOre 000 000 000-0 1 1 ~City 101 010 01•-10 0 o . ....,.._ and ~ 8pllltorll,
011l1tnti.rry (ti and W1111en, W-
lplttorfl, 2·1. L-0. MMt1n9. M l -011IMnlletry (111. HA-KanNe City, 8'*1dan (2~ ............... ... ,... O 10 001 ooo-t 10 o
Mllwauk.. 100 000 oao-. I 2
YOUflCI, V.-~ a.di (t) and a-; Sutton. m. ~ (I)
and Yoet. W-Y011f18, W . L-811t1on.
A·2 8-Ca11dlll (1f). HAa-IHltt.,
Nelaon (21; Mlhlf811llM, Coo~r (t ). A-25.301. .......... .._.I
T-001 010 II~ • 1 CNeaoO 222 110 OOx-1 10 0
Smith.on. 8ctlmldl (~ctw (I), .io.... (I ) and~ , Lemp tn BwOIM (I). Hldt.ey (t) and 1'1111. Ht1 1tl. W-Kooaman :S-0. l-lmltllaon,
3-3. HAa-CtllceQo, V. Law (1). Kittle
(10). F19ll (3). A-h.nt.
NATIONAL LIACIUll
Glente I. D1dg1re 4
llAH l'IWICl9C~ LGe .......
alul\1111 a1tre.111
LeMatt• 1010 a.a..211 12:SO Evww 11> 12 2 1 L.aMnt c:f 4 1 a o
Yngbld 211 4 0 0 0 Jo.Mrll pll 1 0 1 1
8et1llM 3b 0 0 0 0 Mldndo cl 0 0 0 0
CW\rl 3211 .... " 4121 ~U" 5120 1._,p 0000 C.Oa'M cl 0 0 0 0 Quwer 111 I 0 U
O'Maly SI> :S 0 0 0 11toc11 11> a O 1 0 a..nw. pl! 0 0 0 0 """" pll 1 0 0 0
F'ettlnl 211 0 0 0 0 ......... r1 4 0 0 0 v-111e cf 5 1 2 3 v...,., o.. • o so Mey c 3011 Anct.n 4000
l<Nk-p 3020 A.'9Mp 10110 Mlntoap 0000 Mcndypll 1000 ~ p 2000 9'oll'Wlll p 0000
"°9ndl pll 1 0 0 0 Nleclnfr p 0 0 0 0
L.Mdltyll 1000 Tocala 315 1' I To«eie AO a ta a
s.n ~ _,oa~o 002 -e
Lee A1,.iaa 000 000 310 -4 ~Wlrw*'9 RSI -V..... (2).
E·YOllfttlllood .•.•••. lOl ·l•n
l'ranoleco 12, Loe An9ela1 11
28·Y"891'. llmll•, Jo. ....,._ M-8. SM. Hl'l-l'www (10). Clerk (7). 81·
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M.,.on o 2 1100 ~ (W,2-0) 3 3 1 1 0 0 LAI,..... ,._ 4 13311
Bacllwlttl 2 1 l 1 3 Nladeni.r I 0 0 1 1 8'""1 (L,4·11 1 2 2 . S 2
Kl'\lkow pitched lo 2 bel14n In Ille 7th,
Minton ~ to 2 Mn.ri In the 7tfl .
81<·'"-· T-3:11. A-A5.~2.
T•10 ~~:.=; ' ICMI
c-_...: 1-,. J\': ...... Kc: M 1 • 11 .an ....... 4$ t ... .Ml MclA9a. KC 40 t• 2t a Mt
YCM!t. Ml 42 1tt IO M ..141 Thornton, a. A4 1Q 24 11 .141 81mmona. Ml 40 111 11 IS .aa !llG)a, Miii 11 111 11 11 .121 ~.Pf'( ., ,.. 2A 11 .U7
........... 42 19' 1• eo .m ........
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PatYlell. TH•, t :. Li-, ....... ts ~. Torollto, I; Wlnllld. IMw Yor11, • ...........
Ward, YN llO'la. '7· Kiiie. Cflloaoo.
3'; lrett, "'" .. ' Cit;, U · Hrtlell, Mlr111Hota. 14; "Ice. toeion, 14;
TllotnlOn, CllY9fa1td, 80: Upellaw, T OfOllto, IO. "'".:n~·1.1::!~!.''t"J: "'"*· A ..... , ... 11---...AllllMlt.•11
Jac*llCHI, TOtOfl~ it,~teliOllN,
......,...., 4-1; I, -Yoitr, 1·1; Oa1111, 'lalllmore, 3·1• Tellmenn,
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UTIOUL~
Madlocll. "" :, ~ 1! ~' ~ "'"9dlct1 Atl 4A 111 ft 411 ,S31 ._., II'. 4 t 149 • • ~
SCOREBOARD
4U 1M' IO ... ,
11 1N 11 41 .lat
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41 1• 40 14 .aao M 111 t 11 .J1t 42 143 11 41 .a11 41 ,.. a. .. .a11
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Cl•errer' DM9ere, U1 M11rpll]I',
Allenla, 11; 1W--. Sen l'Nftdloo, 10;
Klngmen. New Yorll.1. 10; lreell,
De4tel'9, t 1 '°''"· New York, t : lcllmldt. Plllledelpllla, t . D11rllam. Cflaoo, •• ~. len Dlloo .•. ......... MIMPfly, Atlellta, N ; Heftdrlcll, 11. L~ $2; ....... ct-I Jp ..... 0..-,. MonlrMI, IO; ca.mir, Hwt10fl, IO;
Kennedy, Ian Diego, 10; lencll.
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~ Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 30, 1113
I · ,.., .. ;;~-==-. "ma~• Nonac"~rl:urs Sf. Meftll• ........... IMI -~ TN......_""°" II fOlf\t -.1. , r;! t.a.• 1w ni. taillOll*ll .......... ..,. ...._ • '-•"ltLSI H. CALLJIO :J
•
T=:.•oflo• TO....... toe'ITNlMllMQC.loU~ •h CHARLEI uuo .. \'OU AM • CANO'I , 1141 Wut Co .. t 1111 et., °'°"9 ...... CA 9*T CAU.JSON, ab a1MUJ!:S
JW •9011r1T1!111N••• I...,,, 1tt11 9t~ c-. ...... CA'tna1 p • T I T I 0 H YGU TMa M:ft* 10 ll TOii" TO· LA Pill TA Thil butlMel II oondUIMd l:ly M ii:. T 0 ti u.ee11 A HaD M =•Y. Nt•P•rt •Holl, CA ~~1w11w.a.1. CALLllON AND OP
vow. fltMIMan rr lllDTAUMHTI. 1NC . • c.llbnle lndMduel. ADMtN1l'l'Ea UT.Aft NO. •o~• AT A Puelac _.... ..... 14&0 'Miit• Id .. INtne, '°' ---A·U~lt. •
t • y OU Ma • O AM CA 121\S. Thie "9ttment -ftl9l;I wltll IM To .n ""'-" .J bentf"""''""-"°" w 1M1 IMYUM TMe ~ 1e oonc1uc1ec1 1:1y • County a.ti o1 ~ County 11r1 •-.. .._-. NOc-111 w.T .oci=.'.!~ ..._ Mmy 11. 111!. cr•dltora and contlnpnt ~-.. COMTMrf A -~-=·•inc ..,..1 credlton of CharlH H. ._._.__ Publllltlecl Orenge Cout Delly Call.lion. ale.a Chara. Huah °" w....,, ..iwn.u.-. et w.tln M. c..y Piiot. M.r "· n . ao. Jllnet. 1• CalJfeon, •k• Char let ~ A.M., 'AH AMlNCAH IA'NK Vice ~1 tJ1t-a C Ill d h 0, LOI AHGllll .. tluly TMe .......... Ned wllh IM • '°" M\ perlOnl w 0
•110111100 Tr11•tM u11Cler end CO&'"'Y Ca.tr of Orenge County on rnay be otherwt.. interested .......... to o..,lf ol TMt reoorCled May I , 1NS. "9JC iiiiCi In the will and/or tstll\e. ~ 7, 1 .. 1. • INL Mo. •H. ....-1 AI/;,titJon .ha.I .........._ .,,_. = 1424', Pll9 1MI ol Oflelel PulllltNd Orenoe CoHt Delly PeCniOUi .... -.:II ~ di In tN dftco of IN County Piiot, "'-16. n , 30, June ~t 18«i ..... ITA..-r by et'maJ'I Zander In the
ordtr ol Orona• County. n81.-S Tht lollOWlftO 1Mteon 11 doing· Superior ~t. of Or,"8e
Celllomle. WllL HU. AT P\JlllC ~lilt! Cou1Uy • .req_UHtln1 that
AUCTION TO HIGHRT BIDDl!R PmUC M)TIC( NlW,011'1 8Hl!ll, 2100 w. Her m. n z. n de r be m=D~~:.·~;.~~~o.~ iifSnnOU&WU =~~~~lgflwey, Newport appointed U personal
*"°of .-1n ..._,. fN)f'9y of 111e llMm aTAW Oeoro• k•=.r1e11, 1411 repre1entatJve to adminlater UN•tid 11111• e1 1t1e North tront The 1o1ow1ng .,.,_ _ dolllO .,._Pl, Mon , c.. 90'40 the eatate of Charle1 H .
tntranoe to IM~ coun~. bullr-. -Thil ~ 11 OOflCtuot9d ~en CaJllaon, Cotta Meaa, CA
700 CMc C.... er... w.t. Sente a RA 1 N AND II RA w N lndMduel (uncler the lndepend11nt =-~-:0"::; !: .::l ~~'.~0~1i~ "* ..=:c":'twttt1 tM Admlni1tratlon of 1Atate1
by It undet eelcl OMO of Trwt In tM 112827 County a.ti of 0Nnee County on Act). The petition ii tet for
propotty ellueled In Hid County Wllllem RulMll HHpo, 11211 MAY 18, 1MS. hearlna ln Dept. No. 3 at 700
Md 9tll• a-tbod -Monrcm., Coete M..., Cellfomle ...,.,. Civic Center Drive Weit, ,_. ... 1: Unit No. 1!1 .. lhOWn 112$27. Publlehed Ofenge CoHt Delly S A C WICI cMeclw'IOed In the Condominium Cuyn Logen HHpe, tt2t PllOt M.r n. 30, "'-'o t , 13, 1~ anta na, A 92701 on
"911 ~ on May 18, 11178, In Monrovia. Coet• .,._, C.Utornl• ~ June 22, 1983 at 9:30 a.m.
10011 1287~•• 318 to 387 112827. IF YOU OBJECT to the
lflduelw. of Record• of uld Thie~ 11oonduclect1:1y • "8JC NOTICE =t.ina of the pellUon, you Courity. o«*W per1~. d , .... __ .... _ Percel 2. An undivided on• w-..n fl Heepe ~ COURT Oii e mer •ppear at .....,,
tony.tour111 (1...Uth) lnt-t u • eeryn Loe-n .....,_ c;~ hearln1 and llate your
i.nent 1n oommon 1n lhelM Int..., Thie •i.menl -ftled wttn the COUlfn Ofl oaANM objections or file written
1n end to the Common,,., .. of lot• County Clertl o1 Orenoe County on 109 CMe Ctr. Dr. w..t objection• with the court
1 end 2. of Tract 1111711 .. per mop Mey 111. 11183. ....=i~cA = ~fore the hearln1. Your ~.~_!~· !:~ ~~-~ 11'11971 ap..-ra--.. y be ln ,_...,_ .,. ,.. __ ........, ·--"' Publlehed Orange CoHI Delly DIPINOA T: .tlllOMI '· ~-~ ...... ,,_ ..-·-·· Mid County,• euc11Wl'n11 defined Piiot, Miry 23, 30. JuM 8, 13, 1983 ........., NYU.11 IL cuwna or by your attorney.
In Ille Attlcle .ntltled "o.tlnltlone' 2411-83 HHN•llM, ah 'HYLLte M. I F 'i 0 U A R E A
of 111e o.clatetlon ot Covenanll CURTl8 _. DOma t ""-"' 1o, CREDITOR Condlllon• end AHlrlctlont ............. or a conUngent deec:tlOed In "SU8JECT TO" belo'A "8JC llOTIC( kWOM -~ c:redJtor o( the deceued. you
(tN "Oeclat•llon"); C.. • tet117 muat We your cla1m with the P•rc•I 3: Enemente .. Ml '9Cnnoua WM NOnCl8 Y• .... MM --. court or pretent It to the
torlh In the Section• •ntltleo llMm ITA~......,.. Tiie-'.., ..._ ._...,... peraonal representative "C«teln E-te tor Ownere" The followtnO penone -... ...... ,_, .... ~ ...._
end "Support, Settlement and • , .... UT ,_,........ ... •..,...,.... appointed by the court encroechment" ot th• Artlolt FA THEA SEARA S AES TAU"""'• h......,. I ..... within four montha from the
entltlad "E•Hr11en11" of lht DELI, 31751 Cemlrlo ~.. "JOI.I wte11 to ... tM ecMoe ot date of flnt l11uance of
o.a.retlon. Juen ~~~7:;38 en •ltorney In thl• melter, you letten u nrnvided ln Section Petcal 4: E_,1, .. IUCh ARMAH0 J. • lhOuld do eo pn>mClltty eo tM1 your r· ~ · • ~ti -~ Mt '°"" E. ~ Lane. Orenge. CA.I written reeponee, 11 any, mey be 700 of the Probate C.ode of
1n Ille Atttae ent1ttec1 "e-,11· 7. tlled on ttme. California. The time for ol Ille Oeclet•tlon of Co¥enanl• JACK WEINSTEIN, 2138 I!. AVl,01 U•••• tu •ltlt flllng cla.lms w -'-
Condition• end Afftrlctlone In Orengevl•w l•n•. Orange. CAi 4•••4e4e. a1 trtlll•"•' 11•••• prior · to four w mo~hl ~;;;'~
"SUBJECT TO:" below (lhe 82tf7. ... ...,_ 4M. • m A Alee .. ,,. .. ,., O.Clat•tlon") under Iha Thlll ~le oonduetecl by•. -.. U& ,........ ..... the date of the hearing
Section hffdlnge In Mich Artlc;la ~~J ,,....:......, ••..._'--le ~In.. noticed above.
.ntttled • to1owe: "Ownen Flight1 "'"-"' · _..,..,.., ..._. YOU MAY EXAMINE end Out111, Utlllll•• and Cebl• ,,:'* Welnel9lrl ftled wl1ll tfle ~I U•1•0 dHH 1ollo1te1 •I the file kept by the court. lf
Talevlelon", "~:,t end,. __ .., ~~t~ ,. __ ..,,..:, conMJo de un •bogecto en Ht• you are lntar•i•-d ln tha hnlement", "Ena ".end"""""•~"'~-...-.......,,,,-· ••unto, deberfe hecerlo "'"' ..., "'
"Community Fecilt!M e-wi1" Mey 29, 1_.. lnl'MCll•t-t•. o. Mt• ~•. est.ate, you may oerve upon
Pe1ce1 5: An ••cluelva .... bl•-.. ~ ~ Co f'ltnaD "'~ eeortte. II "-Y lllglltla. the exe c u tor or -1 lor ~-'*'II end ru ,..,_ .,.enge HI laity ~ -r9Qlllr.O. • tlempo. dmi . tr to th Oedl with IUPC>Of1l\le pllr1g9 under. P11ot, Mey'°· June 8, 13. 20. 18«i 1. TO THt" DEFENDANT: A cMI a nu a r, or upon e
01111, througll. end ecroH th•t 2!11a..3 complaint hH bMrl flled by the attorney for the executor or
portion of lot o, T...ct No. 11123. .. phllntlfl ega1ne1 JOI.I. It you wWI to admlniatrator, and flle with
perm., llled In Booll 386, p..,_ 29 PtllJC fl)TIC( defend !Ne '-"l. you muet, wttllln the court with proof of
end 38 lne:lullw. of Mlleellel-10 d•Y• •ft•r Ihle 1ummon1 le service, a written requeit
Mape, ,_di of Mid County. • .. _-.-we! on you. Ne with tNe OOUr1 • a ta ti no that you da1jra more per1lc:uletty ~bed In the .. _ ~ reeponee to the oomplalnt. e "' "'
column anlllled "APPURTENANT '9Cnnou8 WH UnlW you do llO, your defeul1 wll 1pecial notice of the filing of
l!ASEMENT" of 1h•t portion ol llMm ITA~ be antwed on -s>Pllcatlon or ttle a n I n v e n t o r y a n d
Eldllbll F of tri. o.aw.tton wNch The tollowltlg .,.,_ -OOlflO phllntllf, encl thle oour1 may enter• apprailement of estate a.eta ~~the "'operty ~ ~=P£AKIE Wl!IT. 14437 =i::o't8': ~~: or of the petition• or
Peroet a: e..n.m O¥W Loe. f Culver Drive, lrvlne, Cellfornl• could reeutt In gatnlehment of accoun ta mentioned in
encl G of T~ Mt8 u per -. 112714 -oee. •lnO °' rtlOMY or property Sect.Ion 1200 and 1200.5 of fled In 800ll 414 Pae-15 1o ~ Oanyl Odum. 18 8roe>lld.,.. or other rel'lef requ"1ed In th• the California Prob.t.e Code.
lnclualw OI ~ Mape lrWle. ~ t27t4 ~·-M iacorda 'ot nlO county, ror lhc Fred• Odum. 16 lrOOlld•I•. 0e1eo·Apr11t1,1M3. leltael J . Oldmea,
llUfi>OM of drWnega .,.,,..1111111 th« !MM, c;..,,.,. '2114 i.. A. Branoh. CWll A t tor a e y at Law, 11 JI
P'CC*fY ~ ._. pr<Mdec Thte ~ 1e conducted by A. AllOfloahl. Deputy <>rule Aveaae, c.rta Mea,
th•t much dreln•11• •h•ll no• lndMduele~~ & Wife). ALAN L WHrTa CA t tz7; 7l4/14'·1U4.
unreuonably l'Mtr1Ct IN lnlandec ~·" vuun• ALAll .I. DIM>8TI' Pubfl•.._. Or "-·-1 n..uu -Ind an~c of Mid loll f Thie MaterMrlt -fled with the ~ ~ KINO _._ enge c.v... ~, end c. County Cleft! o1 e>renge County on a N• •ON Piiot, Miry 30. 31. June 8, 11113
Trvt1or or --0 owner: LESLIE Mey 25. 11183. ... ~Ctr. Dr. •1000 2ll0-e3
H 8 URSTEN 4ND SANORA H ~ Coeta MeM. CA 112929 BURSTEN Publlehed Orenge CoHI Delly Publltn..:I Ofenga CoHI Dally Tiie 11r .. 1 eddr111 end 0111a1 Pflot, Mey'°·"'-8, 13. 20, 198S t. Mii'( '9, 23, 30. June 8, 1"3 HCililOUe alll•M
coommoo dM!gnetion. 11 ""'·of tilt 251t-«S nao.A." um ITA~ , .. , property deecrlbed ebove It The f~ ~ -OOlflO pu1portad to be: 11 l•kHllOfe. ,.. ______________________ •! ~ -
trvlne. Cellfornle t2714 ACNE HE Al TH CA A E
Th• unda,.lonad Truel•• IOW S CENTERS INT£AHATIONA.l. 1517 =~":!.:"~ ::.!b~ f~ I TIE TllE =ovle. Newport Beech, CA
Md oth« common deelgnetlon. 11 TO .Jiii F-Up P1or 1 I ot1ll 8llln Core ,,,.,.,, lhown ""'*'· Center•, Inc., • Cellfornl•
Seid HI• wUI b• med•. but UllO RUL ESTATE corporation. Ue7 Monrovle. without covene11t or wuranty. Newport 8-:tl. CA t2M3
~ ,,, ~ regerdlng lltle, Thil ~ .. CJOflduG1ad by •
f;lc111111on. "'--~.to IEW-RT IUCI oorporellon. pay Iha unpeld balence OI th• rv F-Up P\'OfllllOWlll no1e(1) MCUred by Mid DMd of 81lln c.,. Canten, Inc.
T"'91, to-wit: 162.052.75, lndudlng J a c II Ca"' p be I I ,
H provided In Hid not•(•). We are a progressive, Innovative growth CofttrGller
advencee, II eny. under IN ..,_of and markett .. n oriented brok,.raa. firm Thie ...._,. -Ried with the MICI Deed of TNM. ..... dlaroee -oe --e-County c.1' of o..enee ~on Md~ d IM TNMM enO of lleeking a.ociates with exceptional aales Miry 12, 118S.
.,. truet• orMlad 1:1y ..io o..o of ability ,.....
T"'91 • PubltlMcl Orange CoMt Dally
The ~Y uncter Mid Dead At Lingo Real F.tate we can offer vou Piiot. w.r ,., 23• IO. June t. 1M3 of Tn.rlt hei.cofoie necuted end the J . 221S-«J o.ilvered to the underelgned • finest training available to help aadst =nd~='. :W, 0.:-:11~ you in your aales efforts, along with the
Notice of o.teuft end l9ectlon 10 best marketing, support penonoel and w . n. ur--iact C*.ad Mid 9el'Vica. We al80 offer one of the highest
Notice of o.teolf end Elee110n 10 graduated commission Pl"nOl'a"'• in the ... to be-'*' In the OOUf11Y ind••.n-v. ·----.._.. the real~ Wlocaled. --J
T "'91• Of C*1Y oonductlno ... F c 0 l 0 N I Al t Ru s T D l E 0 or a confidential interview' call Bruce
8VMCES, INC~ 13117 ~ Hldl9y Barsamian 644-7020. ,,,..,, WMmer. Clllfomle llCMI01
'213) 811&-29t2.
~
PAH t.MENCAH BAHK Of
LOS ANGELES
• uMl"TNetM By Colonlel T1u11 Deed
Inc.. •• Agant
By Cerol Ann Kudlnofl ~81gnature
Del« May 11.. 11183 Publllhed Oranoo eo.11 o.i1y Not. May 30, June •• 13, 1M3
247..a
REWARD
.... 111 1111 .. URCllllllQI • .................... &tr--•·-..... •• llAID 111. 1211 ·11111 • m. CAl'"1 A -·.=.. ...... i...J,.·-e.-HMI
HAMOe ~~MT. OUVI
Mor'lult\' •Cemetery
Crerna1orv
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
54C>Sss.4
'9CalaonmS
lal.-OMWAY
MOl'TUAIT
110 Broaowav
eo..a.Mna
142-1150
144-7121
,,
4 .
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
; ' •
642-5678
~ ......... ~ .... IFIED· ....., '" "'' ='""'==--=·=-=~~ INDEX ~ _,__11...,__......,111 ... 1. ....... aen
To Place Yu All, Cll ::~Md,!,tJ:;t~::: * 111101 llllE * 642 ·5678 l;tO , ••. 1M r.mw•
MAL ESTATt ~'c,",;d~~r p~~~10:f1::.~ Come ~t tbe mc»t fabuloua view new
0.--.1 11:00 nooft ~. cuatom home in Newport. Nothlna to ~i!:':.!:::t'" compare wi\h tht. 4 bdrm, tam nn, ~
a.u ... ""n'"""'" llUI .. bath, formal dining. 3 frplce, 6 car ~=~ ~:., H•lftlll garqe. Large pool & jaeuui. Come to f::~~ ::-,:o:.uiec:;:;i: the gale and aak for 3 Yorkahlre,
II Tun. tor tM next •e puti.: 7~9-1931.
f",...nMIU\ V.Jk' ...,,_ '°1 ~ end 11•nunc ..... ._... Mond'•'I publlcaftona, IPU 11&.Y ... Uunl UarbuUit
''""' 12:00 ,,oon 8aturdo'J. IELEI I llWI i...~ur ...... " ,, .... Uk for o "klll . • :::~~ ~:~~ :am::;·.:.rian oancel· IULTOI, 110. 144-1114 ~=~~=·~J ~r.:~~n:h 111111 ~' Ju"" l'epo•tr•r>o Chock YoUt 9d dally and ;;..,,,. An. report .,.,QtS lrrlm9dlllt•
:-. •• a...-h ty. TM DAILY PILOT • ~"~: .. , ~:' 1utne1 Ueblltty for the
Tu.ton fl,.t lncorrec1 ln..nlon
lllAI =· "••lrt.t\~h t Mu•,.,_ u,., ......
1\.ri"'t(.I
Ap.,r~n~ R-•1• h ....... .,. •tl Ii
AuNtlt .... ..,.,.,...,,\
(.~,.., .. &.t•r\ I ••Ur>
(."unvul ._,fll!J.-•rlt.
l "1.-,.liilfhO'\tU/llfo
111.t~~.,. l!tt.1'6
ti.-.. w1>r M+"'..i :::;:~n..7·.e.:.\,
L.ut .. 1111 '-tit
Mub.~· ........... ., ...
ltfJfTALS H._ .. ,,..,_
Hou. .. UnfwnllhPd u,.._.,. t-v~d •rt
UnlumLol>ood
('undu •'Wn
('"""'• U11I Townh-"*-•· furn "rtnwnne......_ .. Uni
Owp&e·•· .. ru.m Ou,. . ., .. Uni A,..,,.,,... .... Ul't'I~
Apoor\nV9,. Uni ...,... PIAnt or Uni -ku.Jm .. &...rd
u ........ """'"' G1.M1'1 u...,..,.
SumffW"'"f' H.owb v ... ,""'" R4•nwhi
•tc.t"flWhi to ~kliln• •tt..·nt.1itl• Wanwd c;_,..,.."' fur t<.-nt ""•" ....... .... __ "',, .. ..
l .• ..,., ~nw.b. ......... "'" .. "' ~'"..:~nt.lllll
::~~ ......
'110 =:::::: -l~~...... . .. ,
:~~ .... .. .!·~ ....... ..
IJ?: law down! law ""--t, :~ Uncto a.n wente to 1111p . .... '°" with lower peyrrtanta. 1m TAU< TO USI ·~~ Brobr M2-1700 ·~ ~~~~~~~~~ :~ "I" :m .......
•MO Pride of own•rahlp In 1eoo Cotta Meea. Giant 2
• ·~ ltory wfttl 3 belha. twntly room. W1IO yard. Walle to
llOO .. IClhoo4ia_ mG ~
l'lO( 8chool. PYtoo Of1"/ t 14t. too. Coll to eee,
54-2313 2:tOC
140ll
7410
UtG uu Z~lO
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
2Ul •
~ Wiii tradtp lake Arro·
tlOO ....., homa « lot In the
l900 community Of Hamlltalr
tt02 for Newport leach = homa. 114/152-7et1
~
2907
'ZtOI
not
ti12
'914 11111
.lllll
211'.IO NU NH
AJIQJMCEMENTS
.....
MtUllUO"
Double door entiy to tho
~ • Bdrm. a bait! home. Huge famll'/ room,
brtcll flrepteoa. country
lcltotlen. ~!Ina poof
Ind wide open YleW of
propoMd Co•t• M•M Patlc. Prloe onty t241,
600. Call for lho'#lno.
M&-2313
An1to1U,...,'Mll.,.._ u•• & ..... 1111
....... .,.i..
t""f111.,,,_IS.,'f"\kW 8'hii••t. Al lr1111lll'\A.\tllif\
Tn.u I
a.-.,._ ..... S..t. ·--IW...,...,.._ ,..,_,.._._. .. nl4•1
•fft"'9A,... nl l)pp'"una~
to\o.im.-n1 Waiftwcf
•Moni•\' "'Lt•" • Mun-.·v WllY'1Wd
Murtt(.•• TU•
£MILOMNT
A11t..,.U4' At>ti4w,-.1._
Ai.-hun.•
8ltJt( M .. 11n.a. , • ....,,,...._., l-'~pm..nt
C."umpv'4~
t""n1 "'Yw
'"""'~ c .. ,... s.1.~ 11....-wo ............. \
M•.,•f'tl·n w-~lf._,....,.
M• Wi.nMod
M...---..1 1"9lN~\a
Offll'f' P"Urnnun Al i:q..,,.....,.,
.......... 0r1-""""'"'u... TV KMttu Sh~,..,
BOATS
111110
llOll
tlllll
"Ill .....
'°'" iO'l2
ll02:I
•ltO
Ull 11214
•218 Ill(
~120 •»•
if'tn
7011 101i
70H
'IO" 7011
THE :REAL
ESTATERS -----1111 ...
30 = to 8try. Charm-ing C)j CdM 1elldeiioa.
4 bdrm eptlt ,...... with
P•rtlal .te. of harbor. Ideal for entertaining.
'525.000.
.... IULn
• .,...1111
.n ..
Tll 1111FTY
A ~ to move Into 3
Bdrm f~ b9ttl homo on • tatva lot. ~ paint,
n" car ... t and • do-
llth,lul kitchen mall•• U. attroctl¥a home ""'Y =•an 101t unc11r tno, -• muat to .... can 148-7111
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
.... ,.llU ~ 4 Bdrm 2 Ba
home locatM In Mell•
Mer. 0wnw YfltY motl· ¥9l9d. Wll .._, to MY offer. 181-1370, 64&-7ae
Tf~ \f)Jl 10\.\1
r. ! " r '
7030 ·---------7022
1014 ~ 70H
A•n"TJofl *''" """'~. .itun , • ......,..... )IOl4
~...... ........ *"" .,..."""°"'.._......... '°" M•14•• ., • ..,.... M02U
II\'• llCTl2 Tr.ultn. T,.,,.1 *'l ..
Tr .. 11t·n. U111ih MOJI
AUTOfltOTM
Av•uL.._..,,., .U10
Aw•• S.-n-I'-•Q
Avt•• W#l1N ~
11p..,.. ...... "'""' "'" ' .......... ,,,..... llOJll
fn11lu •N \ ... .,,..,
(\P\ltl~...,.., l.,,,...,. ~~'
AUTOS WOltTtD
AH.-"-••••u
""'h t'\lrtl!'ltft "~'"'
~IU)
tlfr:'
11111
•Ill
•114
1117 ....
•111 I ll:!
.....
l11UM
Wfli/I. to tilt"\;Mdi ffom
thll ... .,.... 2 ldrm
2 batll oo~do with •
fMnclty ~. tf\et
140I OO'I'/ warmth. In·
ctudot mMy WMnlt .... YoU 0tn't t!Mt thl• tor ,... -... .... It t~
841-7171
THE REAL
ESTATERS
LlllA Ill.I lllflllT
Ft.netl Laaoon view from magnificent 4
bdrm, 4 ~th pool home. $1,450,000.
llYllll PU• llYFlllT
Spectacular bayfront dplx 2 br, 2 ba up; 2 br,
2 ba dn. 2 bolt IJ*l!I. Reduad-$1,500.000.
nlmllU .. E IOUIFlllT
Ocean & jetty viewa. Marine room. 4 bdrm, 3
both. 3700 oq.ft. $1.385.000. Oceanfront.
L,tll lllE
Remodeled I bdrm. 2 bath + large rec:. nn.,
bMm oeUinp, fwnJahed. patioa. $420,000.
FlllUllll IUOI llUTlf N~ 4 br, 4 ~ ba, c:ust.om French Normandy
F.atate 1.2 prime acre hilltop $1,250,000.
OllMUI OIYI llYflHT
'Coronado llland cust.. bayfront Jot. 85' bolt
dock. Pl.am avail. Now $370,000 w /tenna.
PUIUMOHM
3 br, 2 bo, frplc, immaculate condo. On
8feenbelt. c.omm. pool $125.000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
! i ~, 't' , f, I J' • "".t !", {J 9 ~ ,. I fJ I
--· I .....
Eaet1lde Coeta MHa looatton -2 Br & tro
lamlly rm, 0t 3 Bdrm.
Mio• llvlng rm wt
woodlM.lmlng fireplace.
Priced 10 Mii fHt et
t1S?.ooo. '°""'-·can wt HOiiar 1-.0100
QEC\ROE HKIMS CO
--t111.m
Small condo develop·
ment In~.....,.
locatlon doM to ehop-
plng. 2 bdrm.. 2~ beth
unit reetty to l'nO'<le Into
with lowly ~ and
drAP" plua all de6UH
~J lrlo .. -e ftreplace -.. *Or1clfw>C> tor dadl Short of f11nd1? Try •
..... optkM .•
1714167M400
IJIJI 6n.nJt
MARaOR
"O"
DOWN!
&.pet ~ 3 BR condo. VA temw.. 1104.500.
W ..... JM-1112
COLDWel.I.
BANl(eRO
Ill oan• Sl.211,MI
Splendid contemporary offering
spacious living & elegant
entertaining for a family
wanting security. prestige &
privacy. Fully furnished in
today's ultimate design. Oeative
financing including lease/option.
Sl.275.000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
..
IMllAmt
Cameo Highland•, 3
ldrm, wcant. new c:er-1*9. paint and gardena. Vaaant. 1unny, cleen. Fee ., '3111,000.
UPl!jl()t)I: t1{)MfS
AMll«e, 875.-eOOO
IK LUii
IPTlllM,IOI
C....Uf!I ... ltu
SIDlECLJFS
JU91 lllled, oc.n.
eenycn vtew, stunning
4 Bdrme.
1'11 Y1ll UMI
Gerry ' Ctlrt9ta e1~ne1 1eo-1397 ..... .... ......... ..
11..t
4110 ........
You need to -to ap-
preciate. CNnnlng older
home on 2 1011. R-2 zoned. or .. 1 poaalblll·
, .... Localed on OCMn
.,. o4 hlghw9y. 2 bloc::k•
trom bey Wllllng to ne-
gotlalt on price. Call "~er The Oreek", V\a
Udo AMl!y, IS7M742 . ..... Beet ocean view In Oranve County, c:uatom
,_ Bedfor'd. 35,000 lq
ti, 5 Br. $735,000. w ...
tem &ta1ee. 551-1234
rJD.NIGEI.
01\I LEY f..
ASSOCIATES
LIT'S 11111 417-417~ Oehlla. 2 big untt. ror 1 vtew hOmel 3
bdrm, 2 beth, dining "" plua 2 bdrm, l'A bath
Ytew unlta. $389,000 • .......... ,,.,.,
lla..MN
!fl: Macnab -lr111ne
A
BIKE
Do It the easy
way-shop
classlffed.
Reading
cfasslfled
regularly la the
surest way of
finding the beat
buy on e>Caotly
what you w nt.
•<l• ,,,
nt
I '"' In
~
"' to ., :>
-,ti
111
"' J • 3 ..
)(I
•• '"' IO '~
'• ...
b•
HI
~0 I
''!'Q •eq
Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Monday, May 30. 1813
AC~OSS
1 °'"' IJ Ptll
9Br11M
14 Halt
15 Montr..i
bellpteyw
18 Onion'• lrin
t1tl•~
Item
04 Aetout• ee OUtceat
81 USSR reno-
98 Behold: I.at.
88 Nourtehee
10 Produced
71 Troop unlta:
abbf.
DOWN
19 Rfnt llQaln
20 furnl.tllng9
21 Tourllt•
23Shlpare..
25 MelpclM
~ Futened
28S~
l2L ..
37 lauc'•
1 Winter aporta ~rfi.ti4io gear
mottler
38 Jazz piece
39 Farina
41 Glace
42 Sepatate
45 Groupe
2w .. 1 Pointer
3Cowt
4 Comebacica
5 Posaeuive
8 Way out
1 Armadillo
8 Oppoalte
9 Crlee
10 London area
11 Disturb
12Asaert
13 Fondle9
18 Blrdllte
48 Aven~ 1Force 50 Shred Ego
51 Lock Dingle
S4 4-cka Pod
58 Eye problems 30 Contnt
62 Cotonet 31 Femmes
63 Pe>pW 32 Mardi -
2 3
33 Absorbed
34 Culture
medium
35 Neo•tlve
36 Clean houM
40 Strong smell
43 Subdued
anew
«Frights
46 Shawl
47 Hit on the
head: al.
49 Pekoe
52 BMt It
53 Carvedllab
55 Philo Of
Cyru1
56 UpllH
57 Auctions
58 Veal aource
59 Nautical
direction
60 Runner'•
goat
61 Flail
65 Speed
10 11 12 13
..
$1.14 per 'day
Thee'• AL.L ~ .,.
far. "°.,,*f..-4
DAlY
Pl.OT
SERVICE
DIECTmtY
HOIOSCOPf
BY SIDNEY OMARA
T11esa7, M~y 11
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Sudden tum of
events will enable wish to be fulfilled. Apparent
~trtction boomerangs ln your favor. Focus on
dremns, friend&. contacts which lead to succeaful
career, buaineas enterprise. Aquarius, Scorpio penom play parunount rolea. .
TAORUS (April 20-May 20): Your position ia
strengthened M IUperiOr', in aurpNe move, lends
support A.ooent on _lll'OllW. promotion, ability to
hurdle obstaclee. Unorthodox procedure help.
achieve aucceaa 1n bualneu, career enterpriae.
Sc:upo, ~~ ... play key~
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Change of pace -
and scenery -may be necessary. Cooperation is
gained through diplomacy, not force. Open lines of
corrununication, define philoeopbical terms, outline
objectives in realistic manner. Li bran plays
important role.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Listen, observe.
permit logic to overcome tendency toward
impulsive actions. Money la involved and ao is a
fabe promise. Be positive that prospective associate,
partner has assets to back up claimS. Pisces is in
picture.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Action regarding
contractual obligation ia emphaai7.ed. What had
been delayed will now take place -your
responsibilities could be clearly outlined. Focus on
intensified relationship plus rare financial
opportunity. Cancer native ia involved.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22): Finish what you
start -audience is wide, your performance ia being
evaluated. Accent on tasks at hand, employment,
health, abillty to convince UIOCiates that you are on
right track. A.ties, Libra persons play Irey roles.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22); Get to heart of
matters. be direct, confident, willing to pioneer a
project. Cl'eative juioea now and your own style will
be emphasized. Set pace, atreu independence of
thought, action. Leo, Aquarius persona figure
prominently.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Intuition plays
major role; you'll know what to do in connection
with reatrlctfona, responsibilities and property
values. Older lncliv:idual ill slncere but could be
misinformed. Act accordingly. Cancer, Aquarius
penona fl8w'e in ~o.
SAGmARJUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Pull away
status quo; accent versa~ willi.ngnesa to
tb-41m)!dilna new. Scenario ta vblta, tripa,
relatives, communication1 and pursuit of
educational project. An active Gemini figures
prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Money ia
available but delay i. also pert of .oenarlo. Check
detalla. read between lines. locate needed material.
Be poliUve of eources, realize cycle ta flear peak and
there really la no need for gloom. Scorpio plays key
role.
AQUABIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Sl&nlflcant
changes occur, cycle moves up, tlmln8 and
judament are on target. Clrcuma1ances favor your
efforts, popularity increues and you can write your
own ticket. Accent penonality, make per10nal
aPPMJ.a. weer brl&ht colon and pt ideas on paper.
--P18CES (Feb. 19-March 20): Look behind
.cenes for answers; family member could lend
man) mxl ftnandlll Mlppcrt. Awa of aJamow-ext.ta
-member of oppoeite sex oontides feelfnp and you ~ be dlp]amatic. Majol' domstlc ad)altrnent la
l..lbra Ill In
Gott Clut.Pro. mdl, w/
''"' grtpa -,,. & ..... b•g . esoo 1oao 87M1'2..,.._
CONHHl
:Hf VllOl.fT .. .
• I''
!>Cb-I 200
Or.nge Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, May 30, 1083
... .,. ~ "61 fOUI
191TMAU&.
•na . .... ... . NiUm Ma• If. Cllll • '4lDI
ATLAS CHIYSLH·PLYMOUTH
2929 Harbor Btvd .. Coat• Mesa. Tel 546-1934 3 bloclla
llOl.lth or San Diego Fr-ay off Harbor Blvd Complete
body ahop. Sain. Service Pana. Service O.pt. open
Monday thru Friday 7·30 A M. to 5:30 P M arid 8 A.M. to 5
P.M. on Saturday.
01tANGI COAST AMC/JH,/llNAULT
2524 Harbor Blvd . Coata M-.
' S4~8023 ~7770
• 1 Jeep Dealef In the Weatl See ua today tor ulea. MrVie;e
& leeling There -reuona wtty we .. 11 1 ... Price and
..iectlonl Atlo. the all-fww Renault Allance ta here!
THIODOll IOllNS POID
Modern aales. MrVlce, puta, body, paint & tire tSaP.11.
CofnJ>etltlve ratea on leue & deity rental9. 2060 Harbor
81-td., Coate M-.. 641-0010 or 540-8211.
DAVID J. PHILUPS IUICIC ... oMnAC•MAlOA
8 .... •s...vtc.·~ 24181 Alicia P•kny
837-2400
MATCH THE MUMIERS OM THE
• LONG HACH IMW
MAP Willi THE MUMIERS IM THE IOXES • Large Mlecllon ot new & qu.llty uNd BMW'• and other tine
carat Sales, MfVICe a teulno. Trad.ma ..ic:om.1Take405
Freeway to North Cherry off-<amfl, turn right & go 8 block• nor1h to 3870 N. Cherry Ave .. Long Beech.
(714) 636-5790 1213) 427-5494
• NAlllS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa. Tel s.40-9100. Orenge
Coonty'a Largest Cadlnae dealef SaiH. Service Lealng.
SOUTH COAST DOOM
''YOUf' Frlendty Nelgflbomood Dodfe DMMrlhlp''
2181 Hetti« IMI., eo.ta Mw 540-0330 I a.a.. Leulng & A Ful 8erW» Dlpertment
lnotudlng BodV Met Plllnt Shot>
111• apectattze In CUltqm VIII\ ~· In all prtce t'lflOll ANO WE PAY CASH FOR useo CAA8 TOOi • CHICK IVlllON 'OISCHl-AUOt-YW
415 e. Cout Hwy . Nftl)Ot1 IMctl. e1~. 1"t'9 °"'Y
c1eai.a1t1p 1n 0renoe eoun~ wtlh ttieae ttv• o,. INllk .. undef one roon
IOI LONGP•I 'ONTIAC
13800 a.acti 81-td .. W•tmlnater. Tel. 812-M&l. Orange
County'• oldeat llnd largest Pontiac cteei.8hlp. s11ea, s.Mce. Par1a.
DICK MILLll '8AT/LANCIA "Pro~ the loWeat priced Reta in Sou1hern California"
(lOC:.ted 1 mlle north Of South Coaet "'aza
nMI' Main St. end W•MI Ave. In Santa Ana)
120 W. Warnftf, Santa Ana 567·2132
• SANTA ANA OATIUN
2001 E. 17th Strfft, Santa Ana. Tel. 568·7811. Your
Original Dedic•~ O.taun Dealer.
• SUNSn POID, INC.
CHome ol Willie the Whale). 5440 Garden GrOYe Blvd • w .. tmlna1er Tel 836-4010
• OIANOI COUNTY VOLVO
10120 Ollrden Grow 81vd .. 0.den Gnw•
Tel. 530-9190. fxck191Yety VoM> to cowr all yOUf' "°"'°
requffementa. .
New•Uaed•S .... •Leaaing•Pame~Body Shop
Frwway cloM In the hMrt of Onlnge County et Garden
Grove Blvd. a 8fookhurat.