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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-06-02 - Orange Coast PilotTHI ORANGI COAST . °"" ........... .., CitlMle .._ )avid Perez leads his cows back to his truck after they were found' randering in the 900 block of W .. 18th Street in Costa Mesa. CoWs! lri Costa Mesa? Daisy and Wendy take a little stroll. down city . s treets th, JODI CADENHEAD cv-°"" .... ...,. .Daisy and Wendy apparently got tired being ·.cooped up in their smaJI Coeta Mesa backyard Wednesday, so they decided to go for a lit"'e stroll down 18th St.rttt. The problem is. that: Daisy is a 100-po'und calf ·and Wendy is a hefty. 350-J)ound red cow. So you can imagine Dave Perez' surprise when he awoke # 7 a.m . and discovered his two "pets" had ~ved away. ''l woke up ancl they were gone," said Perez, Cl. who was keeping the animals for his IU'lfriend, who is taking an animal science class • Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. "I was rea.11 y scared ... Now you'd think finding a couple of wayward cows on the streets of Coeta Mesa would be an easy job. It's not as if they vastly outnumber all the cars and buildings. Perez headed f9r the bluffs and drove up and down the westside roads )OQk.ing for the lost pair. Finally, at about noon, he spotted a city animal control truck parked at a nearby business at 98~ W. 18th St. Sure enough, there were Daisy and Wendy, chomping away Or;l the "distressed b,uainesa owner's grass. Perez, who had been warned once before about keeping livestock, was cited. Daisy and Wendy were escorted out of town and taken to a dairy in Santa Ana, where Perez says he hopes they remain. CDUIJY IDITIDI. I · I OR ANGE CO UNTY CA Ll f OH NIA 2!> CENTS I _HB· res~d -ents flay · I .. . .. trash-hurR pla.nt I ,.1 I By ROBERT BARKER Of"-°"" ,... ..... Residents appear to be warm- ing up . to the possibility • a multi -million-dollar , trash-burning power plant may be located in their Huntington Beach neighborhood. But in letters .t.b the mayor and to city c:ouncil members, the residents probably aren't wann- ing up in the way that backers of the possible development would . like. "I cannot believe this was even &>naidetl!d," wrote resident Helen Hobbs. "We do not need the traffic, toxic fumes or noise to . our beautiful neighborhood and beach," she .sa.td. · · ~ Another retddent, Cindy Low- ell, wrote~ e~. t\er Y~m -"' a~n." • ' "Frankly, I can't understand'or co~~ve of . b~ding a (power plant) so cloee to such a heavily populated atta," she said. Resident Henry W. Bohrman wrote, "I am diaappointed ind downright outraged at the thought that th.is company (Ryan. &lergy Corp.) is still considering the project .... "I am pleadJng, praying that you council members will st.op this bastardizing of a beautiful residential oonununity. Would any of you want" a solid wuie disposal plant In your neigh- borhood?". "We object -100 percent object," wrote Mr. and Mrs. T.')'. Boyne. I\ petition bearing 11 signa- tures allo complained abGut pma- (8" fLANT, P11e Al) ...., ....... Proposed i!tite of trash.·burning plant. I I I · 1. I Schmitz to pay for fund usage . I I .1 ~orm·er stat e senator will give ~3,000 to state politics panel By STEVE MARBLE or .. Dlilr .... ...,. . Former state. Sen. John- Schmitz-of Corbna del Mar has ·agreed to pay the state Fair Polltlcal Practices Commlaion $3.000 as pert of a 1ettlement involvtna allegations he made perw>nal U8e of capipailJl con- tribution.a. The case centered arouncl $9,000 the former GOP lawmaker received from Dr. John McGrann of I,.a Palma. S!::~tz received .F V recall fac tions take the ir c a se to D A's office BY PHIL SNEJDBRMAN or_...,,_ .... Campaign leaders from both sides of a tountain Valley School District ~ election have now preeented allegations to the Or- ange County Dtatr1ct AttOmey's Office, claiming illegal, activity by their opponents. Deputy Distr1ct Attorney Wally Wiide aaid he received material early today submitted by Jay Stout, chairman of the No on Recall Committee, wbidi oppoees efforts to unaeat 11Chool board members Cheryl Ndrton, Roger Belgen and Suzan.he Moore in next Tue9day's 1pecial election. Stout charges the Committee Advocating Responsible F.duca- . lion, CARE, which initiated the • rec:!al.l campa.tp, has i.Uegally duplicated And used names of "(See FV RECALL. Paie AZ) money from Mc:Grann ~ ! in1m. I ~tz had lilted the money . as a loan but the state oomm11'k'cl I regarded it as a campejgn con-l tribution. The comniiaron ac- cused Sc.hmitz of failing to ac- curately report the· money in l campaign documeot&. f · ''Frankly. rm pleued_to have · I this tettled out of court." Sdunltz ~ today. ''I don't need the ahouls in the media spendina their whole summer going over this." Schmitz, planning a run for C-oogrelS next year, said he will pay the $3.000 fine by Monday and amend put campaign state- ments to ahow the $9,000 • a contribution. "It's all just a technicality. I · always regarded it as a Joan.•• the former aenator .id. A spokeswoman· foe the oom- rru.ion Mid that beaause 8Chmltz (See SCBMJTZ, Pace A!) i e was only 14,.aiid he says there was nOWhe,re to go. . ' I I 't the age of 14, John said he ly became an alleged slave sex object to a Newport h man he believed was the y perl(,)n ln the world who er.tood him. left his parents. his two and his friends for a donship hf said would both t and attract him for the four years. ,. ohn aaid he was having prob- at home, 8peclally with his r , Qid he considered the man ' his friend -his only friend, The Even though he lived away tradeoff, however, was J,llegedly from home, he successfully kept a daily ritual of sex. details of the alleged affair eecret "We did everything together, (rom his frl~ and family. He but it always ended up, beblg said he contln1,.1ed to go to school sex," he aaid of the affair. and led his parents to believe he · Twice during the relationship, had moved out because of prob- John ended up in the h0tpital lema at home. f>ecause of th!? tunnoU In hla lite. "It was like l had nowhere to The last t.lme, he remained curled turn,"·he explalned. "I couldn't in a catatonJc stupot for a month. tell anyone about lt. I felt guilty unwiJ.li.na to tell docton what was like 1 wu ~ a big mistake going on ln 'hi.a head or in hJi'Ufe~ _but I couldn t stop it.'1 "I wu in the rubber room," he. John, no"' 17 and a Hfah 1ehool sa.ld. "I couldn't.'talk. I knew 1 senJor, talked openly about the should talk, but I couldn't.'' alleged affair -the object of a police in~tlgation -becau.e he wan~ othen to be careful of the trap he dalmed he fell into. "It was 10 easy. It . ha~ much more than you'd think." he aaid.'"I never (eh like.a victim. Not until the very end.•• Though he now hu reconciled wtth his P-ren•. John u1cl he ttmalha frightened and torman- t.ed. . In polke terminoJoo, what alle,edly happened to John II known u ·a •fchJckenhawk" Clll!t· A chickenhawk ·ii • lMI\ who pre)"I o~ )'OUJ1C bo)'t '1>d est.lb- )Jahes him8elf u a father ftaw'e while tak.1na 11exual advantage of hil vict1m at the 1a1ne time, de~veeaay. Vk:t1ma. police claim, are left ~onal cripples becaute they have ,wtt for what they are dotna but c.an't stop ~u. of a d1nllna need for their seductor'1 . affection and friendship. · Pollet uy chicltenhawk cues are not unusual ahd .that ye>Ung . ~boy. who don't have a father • or~ have probieJM at home-.,. taUor·made tarpta. .tohn, a lall, aUm. • handlome .....-lllSIDE---------------------- H elping kids Financial colomnl11 SylYia Porter oUen somf! Jtnitegies for parents con1idering helping their kid1 buy a..bome. PaMe 8 1 O. " Building block Leaden of an iDteroational reeearch team have "' eonlirmecl the llndU., of. key ••b·n •elear ,.r1Jele, a giant atep toward the hulld ln1 of• · . tlnale theory to explain a ll lore" ha n ature. Pag~ A9 • . teen, aa1d his alleaed affair bepn all 'toe> easily. He was wor~ at a bowlinl alley. A man, who later -.rtedly demoostrated hi.m8elf to be kind. undentandlnl and generoua. struck· Up a con~tioh. the ieen~aaer said. •'We went to a perk and talbd. He Ft kind of cloR to me and then ... ," Jo)ln Jet hll voice trail off. · Tired of hid.lnl. Q'9 i J1e11 d • affall) and ant.chine for r111 oe• \o expWn .,. frequent ..... IDW (See TllAPPBi>, Jllap A•> I It . ' U Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, June 2, 1813 ~\ ·J1 \\.• Conti.,ued stories 1 FV REC;\.LL CHARGES. • • people vJho aigned petitions call- illl too the special elect.ion. Stout claims that CARE.memben have used theee nar.-in dtculatlng campaign materials, a tactic he says ia illegal. Wade said he had not yet studied the charges made by Stout and had not yet checked the law to which Stout has referred. Because of trial commitments, Wade said he did not know 1 whether he would have time to rule-on the charges before Tues- day~ election. Stout had requested a prompt ruling, saying he hopes to prevent a campaign mailing by the recall advocates. CARE Chau-woman Carole Dunn denied the organization has improperly uaed names gatliered on recall petitions. She said the group is using voter liS\s purchased properly by the Or- ange County Registrar of Voters office and some names read into a ta~ recorder and later tran- scribed. "Now they're reaching the bot- tom of the dirt bag," OUnn said. "IC they want to take us to court, fine. Finally, we'll get all \}le EX-RAM ... Robert.son assertedly told of- ficers he'd had three drinks and when · asked where ~ponded, "Around, blankety-blank." chatiP out in the open. We we.IOOine it." , $~t'• allegationa CAm4t Jm- medi.ately on the heela of CARE'S char~ the achool district ha illegally uaed its publl~ f\&nded newsletter fOf polittca't mesa.aea concerning the recall campaign. CARE has asked the t>f.atrict Attorney's Office to inves .. te this charge, but Wade aaid he does not'be'iieve the probe will be concluded ~fore the election. After probing earlier CARE charges concerning the acbool district's busines,, practices, Wade announced that no criminal charges would be filed. ~ foe 'Stout al80 claima CARE tias made untrue 1tate- ments in its campaign literature and silid he has written to the Orange C.ounty Fair Campaign · Practices Commission about these charges. But Orange County . Regi.str~ of Voters Al Olson said .that watchdog group has no authority ' over school board elections. CARE Chairwoman Dunn said her group . stands behind the statements made in its campaign materials. SCHMITZ ... admitted his mistake, he was given a break on the fine. Schmitz said he regards the incident as ''harassment'' from the commission, \dding, 'but I'm not holding any hard feelings." .. Service is our business? It .may not have been what' the owner or this street_ sweepe; had in ma~d when he took the vehicle in to be serviced at a service siation at the corner or Harbor.&ulevard and Adams AvenQie in <Asta Mesa Wednesday. A lQW truck was. needed to-lift lhe back er the truck &o the hoist could be lowered. . School funding mtist ·wait Deukmejian will back budget boost-after state deficit paid SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. GeQrge Deukmejian says he will support a $700 milllon budget boost for California .chools -but not until after the atate'• $1.5 billion deficit is paid off next Clraft of the spending. bW, which ls due on hia ~ in two weeks. Burned boy will go to Boston A 6-yeer-old boy who w aeverely burned in a motel fire his father .Uegedly set will leave Orange County next Tuesday to continue treatment in Boston's Shrinen Hospital, Buena Park pollce·aay. The. hospital has offered to - treat young David Rothenberg in its bum unit, Officer Terry Branum said Wedne9day. "It's one of the best in the coµntry, and the Shriners said that once he improved enough he could be treated there," ~anum • said. "He'll be there three weeks to a month and be an out-patient after that." The boy's father, Charles · David Rothenberg, is charged' with attempted murder, anon, assault with a deadly weapon and cau.lng great bodily injury so his son, who waa pulled from a t1amlng room at a Buena Park motel l.ul March 3. Rothenberg, 42, has cold police he set the fire which aeverely burned David over 90 percent of his body. The father aai~ . hej felt the boy's mother, Marie Rothenberg, wouldn't allow him to aee hia eon ~ain. Ahhouah David recentl learned of the charges 'against · father, Branum said the boy w in "really goqd spiri tll." Pol.ice said a routine record check revealed the former foot- ball player's Califom!a driver's liewlSe expired in 1979. Patrol officers abo alleged they dis- covered a partially smoked mari- JWUl8. cigarette in the ashtray of the car. PLANT .CHARGES ... , year. The Republican governor's proposal W~esday to boost the state's $8.2 billion support bu~t for local achoola by $100 mUllon this y.ear and $700 million rpore next ,year was l.mmtdtately re- jected as "grossly inadeq(aate" by the California Teachers~­ tion. · The speech abo marked Deu- kmejian'1 first commitment to a major ' i.ncreue in achool fund.a oomparable to the $700 million bc>oet in the state's $8.2 billion support budget for local shoola approved last month l?Y the state Senate or the $840 million ICbool bill approved by the· Amembly. · "He's dotna well. He ~ sur, gery last Wedne9day (hia ~ round of akin grafts) and ~ grafts are taking. · • I ''He waa depremed for a whil after he learned about hia father and0he has moments when be~ depn9ed, but he aeema to ge back to his old aelf. He's exci ... "I'm not taking any blanke- ty-blank test and I'll kick your· blankety-blank," Robert.son re-. portedly told police' at another juncture of the exchange. "When I get out if I see you I'll ram your cars.'' . Police said Robert.son tried to kick open the door of a police car after he'd been handcuffed and placeG in th~ pa~l vehiqe. Robertson reportedly asked police to let his 24-year•old female companion drive his car home. The woman. polite claimed. also failed a sobnety test and was driven home by · a policeman. A _, IMnQ on -~ tlioek o1 tt.n-OrCle -~ - -w--..,.,,.. -ol .... ~~kit*-...., -_,,_.., ~ ,. -mooect ......., "'aoo -·~ ---8200-ol~A- ible odors, air pollution, noise, health hazards and devaluation of homes. Touching off the spate of letter writing was the disclosure in late April by officials of Costa Mesa-based Ryan Energy Corp. they were going tO test a 38-acre mud dump across the street from F.<iison High School for possible hazardous materials. In a new\Jette~ to 280 p~ owners, i:xn-dpany~ Preddent ban Ryan $aid ~ co-generatid'n pla,nt is "one of the possibilities" for development at. the site, at the southwest inten.ection of Hainu- ton Avenue and Magnolia Street. Proposals to build a power plant whicll converts trash and other 90lid waste materiala into Fountain Valley A """"'*' ~ -M,000 In -In 1 1-.c>W~-lll~Savingl -~~.171110 ...... ltt P,oloe Mid,_ ...,._ a CIV~ ...... c:.eer .....,..,...,., ~ ----lolO "*" IO jllJI Ille _,.,, on the -· • ,. ,_,, In the 18000 -Of El~ ----•lodledk~-­'°'* .,,.., YIOeO ~ .... , 1100. ,. -twpOned -_.._.. ....., • coet....,_ IO -open Ille -ol hie -MC1llolil•--1>99W-•pelrol ~lplloo gill.-tor an eetlmatecl ioea ol 50. ·Irvine ' energy at the same location now called the Ascon Landfill - cai;ne under strong protest last year. Ryan later abandoned plans when investors reportedly pulled out or' the project. Rya.t;l Vice President Arthur Cole said Wednesday he could understand the concern of resi- dents, but it was premature be- cause nothing has been settled as ~ f Juture r.velo~t; tie aald results of thtB con• ducted lnto materials dumped Into the site over the years have . not been determined. Ryan previously said it planned to pay about $100,000 to find out if the dump contained ha.zardoua materials. · ' ·,. tado. ...._. ... -......., -,.,...,,,.., ....., w-.,, "'""' • -"" AlderwOod 1n w~ ..-...., Costa Mesa Laguna Beach 8wQlert ,,..,. oll .... llO In -.. _ • -1n -400 bloclt".--c-Hlghwey _.... w..,,_,..,, pOlloe ...., Cloudy mornings cnwiotte. N c 55 Cheyenne 43 ChlcagO 53 was ta I Clndnnall .. Ci.wtand 41 • CIOolCly nlgltt _, ~ ColUmbla. s c 47 Osnu-Ft Worth ee llwOllllfl F~ -:ti Oeyton 48 -~~ 10f2mncl ......, 14I01' ~..,... Otnwir 4& 1t IO U dolodl end =....,,. O..Mol,_ 57 ---~--~ -Detroit ~; .. --~ CIOudY '"" OuluOI -lllWMOf( _....... ........ El Puo . • • 1ll02S"'lll\lll-....... ~ .. .....-.--F•b8flll• 81 • -... to ...... cnll .._., F.,gO 49 _.__.._,.,,_~ Fl909tllff 4.1 ~IO ... o.-te ...... lot GrM1 Feltt 47 ........... WIOIO.,,.. ... I H9rtford 51· ttM>IMl-..........,.._,_... H9lene 50 .... ,.... ... _.,.--.~ Honotulu 71 ::&. T:7 Ml IO 20 Mote...._,. Houslon .. llO loG!...,_ .... IO ...-... 2ioa .... ...,._ lirldleMpolll " ........ ..,-. .. IO • IMl QouOif JKICllOO, MIN 81 ~~~ ....... ~ II ee Juneell " ~Qty M Exrended LM V9Qll .. 1.ltttt Rodi lorecast t:.:r- LIMOdl -----~~ ~. .............. ... ..... ............... ~ ... .. :1:........ .. ........ _,. ...,.. .__.....,...._u .. a .......... Newon.n. .... YOtll Ncwtlll Hof1'I Nitti =:ne°"Y Ot'1W'dO Other reaction to Deu.kme~'s proposal in a statewide radio address was predictable -Re- publicans praised it, while Demo- cratic leaders, in a radio rebuttal, were cautloualy skenti~ and crtticaJ. . I f t I .. I • I ' · De\l.kmejian ·ala> repe•tect hia opposition to the more than Sl billlon in amendments which Democrats in Senate and A&- ~mbly budget committees have added to his '25 billion 1pendJ111 bill for the coming year. He promiae<f\ to trim 'th.at bill back to prevent Uigering a penny-per-dollar standby ules tax increue enacted four months ago in a cocnprom.iae to pay off the state deficit. ''We c8n provJde the .ervkes that Californians need and expect . .. without major tax incntues. '' De'ukmejian Mid. "At a time when w~ are trying to stJ.mulate the eco~ to create more jobs, it 1a·unwl9e to increue taxes.'' While peukmejian promiaed agaln to balance the 1982-83 budget with budget cuts instead of major tax increases, he did not lilt any specific item he ·planned to veto from the final But Deukmejia.n's demand that. the bulk of the. new money tor IChoo~ be delayed until the 1983-84 filcal year left him at' odds wlth both Democratic leaden of the Legislature. at going cl08er to home," said th officer. · A trust fund police establish for the family'• expenaes total $102,000 in donations aa Wedne9day, Branum S1ll4. 1HB chiefL,gives hints to p;revent hreakin~1 There were 2,737 t-iome bur- glaries in Jiuntington Beach in 1982. Pk-operty loaes in robberiea, thefta and burglaries amounted to r_nore than $8 million. accotdine to police statistics,. . Police Chief Earle Robitaille often the following hints if you wish to avoid ~a statiatic, especially as the warm weather I and v.acation season starta. . · Robitaille lists iheae precau- tions: , -Cloee and lock all doors, including the garage. Use tPin-twnbler, cylinder locks on !outside entrances and safety lat.chess on win<iowi. -Use an automatic timer to turn lights on and off each evening. Alao connect radio 01 televis!On aet to timer. -u .poaible, protect all and windows with an inexpen sive, portable burglar alarm. -U.e outdoor lights on pore and in yard. • -Don't leave jewelry 1 · around. Keep it in safety deposi box or install a floor safe. -Ask a neighbor to pick u mall, newspapers and ..,-,,...,..,,.,,. ... while away. -Leave key with ·a trus neighbor and have him or he ch2ange the position of yp drapes and regulate lights. As neighbor to notify the PQli department .of ·suspicious activi t . .. NATION Flor:ida sieps up Medfly war MIAMI SPRINGS, Fla. -The 1tate' Department of • • AlricWture has e.calated it.a ~ar on the M.edl~ ff.u1t fly after finding one of the dee\rUCtive cltn.11 pest.a near. MWnl International Airport. State-inspectors normally chei:tt traP11 ' fOI' Med.flies every three week.a. but "that'• in paceUme.'" Mid__ William Brewton of the state Department of Acl1cWtw..) "Now it's war'time and we'll check them every pther day or every day." Nixon. nrges strong China_ ties & WASHINGT0N - Fonner President Ric~ · , ur~ strooaer U.S . ties with China, aaya Preaident lbOu.ta meet with Chinese leaders before any summit with Soviet leader Yuri V. Andropov. Reagan alfo ~ eue restrictiona on sale of American technologyt to the Chinae, Nixon maintains. "Bef<>M a summit meeting with our potential advenaries takes~. it is vita1 that a meetfna ~ eCbeduled with our friends.," Nixon said in a speech Wedne9day night. STATE Teen driving curlew to Assembly SACRAMENTO Drhrers undu •. 1&..yean-eld-weuld -~ have to be off the roads between midnight and 5 a.m. under a bill approvtd Wedne.:iay by the AMemhcy Ways and Meana Committee. The vote was 11 -7 to send AB115& by Amemblyman Alister McAliater,'D--Fremont. to the Aleembly floor. Driven who are 16 and 17 years old could get an exemption from the curfew for work and for medical e,nergencies. Cable cars will be ready SAN FRANCISCO -The city's picturesque cable can should be clattering and clanging along their predpitoua tracka in time to greet vilitors to the 1984 Democratic Natlo~ Convention and the summer tourist ~n. project manacer Clay Baldwin says. "It's going pretty well rlsht now," Ualdwin said Wednesday about progreaa on the $58 million reconstruction of the century-old 1yatem. Officl.ala initially ._td the project could take two years to comple1e, .but have been preainc for an earlier date ~ work b4pn last ~ Regulation foe named to board LOS ANGELES -An attorney who haa fouaht air pollution regulation of small paint manufacturen, inCluding his his own. for the last six years, has been appointed by Gbv. George Deukmejian to the S 9,uth Coast Air QuaUty Ma~gement District board. William M. Smlland said the aovemot's staff was aware of his paint industry oonnectJon. Ju a member of the district board, Smiland will be called upon to vote on upcoming smog-0>ntrol rules affecting his industry. His principal position in past argument.a was that the industry , ah.ould regulate itaelf. Raids bit yout!i gang violence LOS ANGEL.ES -Sheriff's deputies raided 20 homes acroas the San Gabriel Valley Oil Wed.neaday, .arrestinc lix people and confiscating a.bout 30 weapons in what w• bllled as an effort to fight youth gang violence. The raidt ,wer&· conducted "to acquire evidence for proeecution..JO atrve notice that violent gang activity is unacceptable and. . . . to let the community know that the Sheriff's Department will u~all legal measures available to stop violence in the\r neighborhoods," said Deputy Bob Dearmore. ' . WORLD China starts firsi,/uclea~ plant PEKING -China has broken sround for the fint Chinetle-detigned and ~built nuclear power plant, the official Xinhua ~ewa ~ reponed today,. Work ~ WednadaJ ~n the 300,000-kilowatt Qinahan nucleer P,tant 80Uth of Shailghai in Zhejiang province. ~ plant II one cit the key projects in China's latest five-~ear plan for economJc development. . Israeli units pulling back · TEL A VIV, hrael -Israeli Prtme Minister Menac$etn .Begin, trying to allay fears of war, uya hJ.s-country la not plotting to attack Syria, and Is.rae1l ninfc>lftmeD• ~ started pulling back from the oeae-tire lint In ~ '1lt doelll't even occur to ua to attack Syrian fon.-es/' Belift ..rel ln a apNCh to the braeU Parliament on Wfd,netday, alt« 8,ria repeatedly charged ~l wu prepari.nc to make wer. llrliil ~ reiilf~ta into LebanOo I.alt week.to. the Syrian ~But combat Wlita heeded beck ~ on Wedneeday. tbe narrow roeda in aoutherft Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /T~urad1y, J The h~ that ~ • from m~~le ~ • ..,_. .. rain -~ mycoroxbl -ladon. wlik!h lel"Vtl to diwrt mey be a .-tunl ~ attention ·tnim the cont.tn&.dnl hat in faCt bilen uhaUltiwly human tr..rtd)' in AU dofl JJtdt • atudJ.t tnd ..... ~Uy n-to contrtblde to a IOlulba to~ jec:ted, by ~.and qual.l-problem." ~ ,.Ad. &Id ldendN ln and out of Thomlll See)ey, a a.~ at pernment,•• Rornberl Mk!. Yale Vnivenlty, end Kirtbew Rambert c.'Ol\tended tha$ when Meaebon, profwot of natural the en"" ~ of evidenclt ~ ldenoll at Harvud Univenlty. cwnultted by die Uptted Stai. II pn!Mnted evidence Tu.day ln· 'xamined U1itte II lit&» doubt~ dJcaUq that iemp1ee of yellow the ~ ~ foun&I .. i.eo.. rain ool1ected \n IA09 and Tbal- Cambodia and· At....,.. _.. land conta.IMd partly d .. 1 ltad ~produ& ol AdellbiftM pollen and bore a ltlU\I ,... ... ~~~ ~ ...,.,. .• ~ semblance under ~ ~fore, be laid, ''a bee could · not ll!'l'Yfve to e~t.e the toxin." •1n1 tM fMll Of thil ~ examination to the excretnent of and ~ data drtwJ) bees. . WASHINGTON (AP) -A Republlc jetliner's emergency landJ.na in Arlr.ona with virtually empty fuel tanks demonstrates anew that hW1\IJ\ error ltill t:hreatena llf e in a,n industry . "here equlpmel\_t.. failw-e ii be- c:unlJla more ~: Federal lnveStipton ~~ Wectn.day that the Repu~c AirJ.ln-. DC-9 with 8e people aboenlw•~beforeit ~ Fresnoi Calif., last Sat- urday, (orctns the emergency !anding · at ~ airbase near Phoenix, ,20 miles short of . lta destination. · When the plane landed it had lea than five gallona of fuel. ,enou,h fot just 30 tee0nda of flying time, according to ~ National Transponation Safety Board. It was the latest in a raah of aflation incidents in recent montha, aome narrowly avoidJ.na catastrophe, that have been linked to human oventght. l"tit 'example: Yi e ts agree ..to ~.give u.s~ GI bodies -March 23: The pilot and co-pilot of a Frontier Airlinea Jtt Sharing' forgot to lower the land1na . . . wheela -on ~ir Boeina 73'1 and p t f the lane 9 ,_ a r e n . s o . . macSfan~=beJy~ '17-month-old Je(- at the Cuper, Wyo., airport. . frey Manhall of BANGKOK. Thailand (AP) --AAril 2= The pilot of a Re-Morgan Hill, ~ho ·Vietnam will · tum over to the public -DC-9 falled to tum on a United States "a number of re-·fuel pump, causing the two en-died after a trana- maina" of. U.S. servicemen listed gines to stall over the mountains plented ~iver failed as ... ,-.. ,, in actiGD d .. ..i.... the of southern Utah. After 81Jdin8 f . ~ . ..._... .... .... f r f min ·-th .... '"' .. -to onctaon, ave war m Southeast Alia Trfday, 8 o our u~ e ....... .,... were Vletname9e Embusy apoke1man -~ 4,000 feet above the donated his eyes said The~ said the re-~ 5~hamc. did not put and other organs ma1na would be handed o9er critical eeai. onto oil plup of all for transplanta to following a three-day meeting in th.tee -enginel of an F.utetn · other children. Hanoi between U.S. and Viet-L-1011 jumbo jet. . ~ off.ldala. · · · . He could not prc)vide a ·~ F . I . . nt d ~~~~~~--1na ar.gurn~rrr s . ·, qe. ~~~:~-in '60 Minutes' trial gathered information on the • , , identities of three other .er-LOS ANGELES (AP) -.The vicemeh: . Judp ln the '1eo Min~"~ "lmJ>l~ting Its bu.roan-srial ·hM iokl attorneys for bOth itarlan ppUcy and u a geitute of : aides he felt the p)ajn~f failectil> aood will. Vietnam ha agreed to prove "actual hatred or ill will" an hand to the United Eftates a the part of CBS .or newsman Dan number of remaina recently ~ Rather. · covered," the embuay apok-.wl After four weeks of testimony said. bllhlJihted by the ·appearance of There was no word on the Rather, the trial waa to move into identities of the rernaina. Nor-closing ?J!!ncs today. ~'¥·no ldent:ificatiooa are mAde The bM lnlUucted • J>Ubllc until after the remaina are~ torneya or the plai~tlff, returned to the United States. Lynwood phys(dan Dr. Carl Gal~ · }9way, and defendanbi CBS and Rathtr .not to ~ the '-ue of pUnj*'-~· SUpldotOMart l'udae Jack Swink.. nai.t 1aie Wednetday that Galloway Md failed to prove· CBS showed "actual hatred and ill-will" -a defhution of mauoe that ii a legal prerequlll~ ~ punitive dam..- 'in a defamation oue fnvolYinc the ptell. . -Le.wyera dlrbed the Judge'• ruJ.1nc after a one-hour con- ference in hll chamben. U.S.''medics · • to assist El Salvador ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Prem .. dent Reagan ia plannin& to tend 20 to ~ military docton to El Salvador to help'train medk:9 and -eere-for Salvadoran troopa. an adminiltntion~ uid today. . The offlclal •?CP,lained there · were "very f~ medical.penol'\- nel in El Salvador and they need IOme help." The announcement came M Richard Stone, the newly in- stalled apedal envoy for Central . Ame~. 'tiegan a 12-day mt.don to the area. His mandate la to promote peece, democracy and economic developnent. He wu due to arrive today in El Salvador, the f1nt stop cm hie 10-nat:ion ~ft.nding journey. ~ the U.S. mllitary doctors. the off:idal aaid the ad- . ministration hlld ·consulted wtth Congre. about the. plan, and, stated that the phyaidana wouldi not count apinat the adrninia- tration'a Umlt of 55 mWtary ad- viaenl iri El Salvadc:r. That limit has been eet by the admbu.- tcat.lon. The IOW'Oe, Who llllid M WM umure how long the team ·would . be in El SalYlldor, poirited out that the adn\iniltradon OONlklend the . phyaiciana' role u "hWDaA- itarlan." . • Tei-rol-lsts vow. furJher U.S. sl~yings SAN SAL\>' Ano a. 11 Salvactor (AP) -The 1IXll' rad-\ ical leftist ~ bed in :J war-tom nadon. has vowed that all U.S. mWtary advi8en wor with the Salvadoran govemmenr will "return to the United Statea in coffins." , Thew~ Wecme.day came · from t!)e Pop.alar Uberadon1 Forcea, wbich ~ ~ty last week for the murder of Lt. Cmd.r. Albert Schautelbera-. 13, ~Qlunt.e.ers bailinu o·· u· t ,. 'tah =~·~~~'PD·· e LJ I aaviaen in ·El Salvador. ~ • • , Schaufelberpr, ln cbargie= Gov~nor ~aisefi e .. fforts of ·thousands i~ stlUe flood eris~ tecwity tqr the military aroup. _ • became the first U.S. ad 81 Tk AHidacef Presa -equipment. aandba; riven on three major killed in El Salvadot when he Cool weatMr'e\owed the runoff , Salt Lake County oUidala atreeta. . was pNled down May ~ while bun ~tain anowa in Utah call Traffic has been anarl4!1d, but waitlni ·in hia mr far a womap toda1 but offidala ln Colorado' • ed on rest~e:nta to belfo,. bnioe 11arne 11\..,.Uom were opebed friend at C.entnl.American Unl-'bniced for rivet ~ 'and a cl\ldna the current' lull the Wedtletday and State Street,· venity. ' landallde ·in CallforD1a Cioeed a floodwaters to come. where a 18\li-incb rainbow trout "All the military advilen een 'stretch of the PacWc OoMt Hiah-"We need to prepare for diJ .was •Ulht 'l\ae9day may be re-here will return to the United way wom now. U it ~ti hot, It (9' turned to traffic by'tbe end of the ·Statet in coffins." the rebel ll'OUPk ~ ev..-ua~ordel' waa in ef-peak lJOwa) rna'} be aooner than weeE said in leaflea aent to Joca1 ndio f-inn-.-Utah about 10 three weeks," &aid County Com-t 'D1-·atations. ] -· DVWl,I • -:--n_ ..... D--"--The creeka. lncl.udin& ~ and They --•d C!-1...-•• • .. n----'1 -u--'-af Salt,.. -•-. w'--a IP~ uu-~ Qanu:·.-. Cott.dhwood -i-,.. __ in .... •ti.-~ ~---•-~ uunn ~ •llP~ -.&.....--. uuw "" WlC murder WU a warniDC ...-i 39.fooi-bi.h wall of mUd ancl $alt ·Lake City contin~ed to Jordan Rt~. whkl\ ~down "the' bellic.ue ~ admlnla· water craahed out of Stone Creek cope with fioodwaten that are the middle of Salt Lake Valley ttation 90 thatltdoes hot continue Tueeday niabt. cbm_lneled · through man-made and emp11• into qreat Salt Lake. lta qgrtmion apinlt our peopa.." · .i I I , . j I 1. I - ---..-. I ·~h"ater : . . ~prices : . . 11 r1~e, too 1 17..18'~ • -While mmt of UI grumble . llbcM the rillna price of ham .. t ~cir rent. cr.nkler the pUaht l Of t I Dfc«t .fer the future 0nnae Oowaty Pwfonnlne AJ1a Center, 1'bo found out 1-week ~ ...._will cmt t26 million more than cdllnall1 antSdpatecl. 'l'be bl&hlY publlclwd double theater, to be built In c.o.ta ' .... South CoMt Plaza Town 0-w. w. eetima'8d to eo1t '40 WWon In 1919. But executive . dlrectm Len 8-cllow aid it D4W ~ Uke ~of the a.ooo and 1.~t theater. wm nm more like $65.5 m1Won, with ~~-=-uled y laid he doem)'t expect futuN fundraising effor1a to be damG by the ~ price tac. ,anything, he ~ it may"ll>eeei'Up the number of mulU-nillllon-dollar donations I roWnc in. So far, $33.1 rnilllon haa been railed. ' · I Bed8ow said he knew when he . °'r1~offldaJI and the coun· , ty WOl'I out detaill of a . &anc1a1 arnneement durtna • .n. of m.un,. that carduded two, w.a •· -~ . I WU hired In 1981 that the qricinal, estimate of $40 mlJUnn, hued on ' I the comtructioD COit of 10 I ~sJamoroua theaters built In the.J.t 16 year.. WM far tao low. Curb _ap~al Driven in Irvine, take heed. You may .. ot find a no-parking sign within a few feet of your car, but the . long arm of the law will find you. ~t~~~ her pJea.e& . . ;.;;. .· \6e full" boud voted aptrwt Brandy 'Bart~, 2, ;'ive9 hU sister. Jenna, I 0 By c:ompui8ao. he said. the 1$-year-old Sydney Opera Howe In AUltralia COit $120 mill.kin. The t.o. Aneelel MUldc Center cost a spendtnc r:L. taxpayer monies tn months old, oae tllOt"e ride bef o~· dinner time .,:' ~ =:-ymp1c ~ 111 they pfay in ~en Park in ·Newport ~c~. • wboppna $24 millkm In 1964 and ~ r\in -$90 million if built today, aid Bedlow. 11)1*9 bM ~ to pay the -== ceultJ In three lJwtallnwsta will · Some~ -Just eornetimee ..--it 8eelm eMies" ~ be poor. .. fully COWi' 4he COit of all --w. the oounty hM been Mked to provide. . I TRAPPED VICTIM _SPEAKS OUT ... • • from Page A1 flun home. John moved OUL He I .1 ~116. da t......f \ t WU two )'S UC ore thristmaa." he recalled. "There were pn!llellta under the tree and ev~. My brothen said, · 'how can you do thil to mom and dad?' . · "But I did. 'There wasn't any Cbrlstmaa that year." John 9Aid be moved in with a friend IO he could spend his time freely with ~ older man. Tho~b they never lived toeether. Jolm Wei they were ~·part. Sobepn an odymey that John md left him on the ed8'e of ftnotlonal ooUa~. In one stretch, he weit through four pey- chiatrtsts and checl\ed in and out of two bo9pitala. The laat time it was the mental ward. He Aid docton lmde him move &eek home. He did. But still the ~ relatioolbip continued. always did things toeether and lt John eakl he took the next step· · always ended with ..x. He laid and went to police. He now hM we needed to have le)( to be aaioeed to be • wtcne. ana to frt~nds. He would get tne to feel testify ap1nlt a man he oooe guilty' if l refuaed."' oonGdered tu. only friend. The break came when John ••1 want to help o~ break said he put his foot down and away. I know hoW diffpi.lt ltlS. refu.ed to participate in the 1 want to tell ~ to ·.,t·out, just alleged dally eex routine. get out."' ~ "f said, <no, that'• not what I He uld he allO wanta to tell want.••• · )'OW'i teelW to talk with their John said he went borne and parenta and not to bottle up their talk~cf with hil parenta. • emotions lnllde. "I w• shocked -they were "In a way I feel like I w• wWin8 to lls1en. When I talked lt uklna for IL It's hard to feel like helped. It helped get aome of .the a· Ytltirn;' he laid, "But. I waa a anpr out." vic:ttm. I know that rraw.:• · COMPLETE local sports 'I I dellver•~.delly In O.e r·.~ 111111 I uw him every day. We :~--~~~==~~==~ l VON HEM~RT 10S ANN~U~es • • J • • . : • . • ' !/ : . • , OUR FAM.OUS ' , :WAREH0.tJSE ·SALE T / . ~ I .. . . ·f®brnson's 1 0 0 Y E A R'S 0 F S T. Y L.E . ·;SAVE -25%·50%, .. .. . \ ... -· .. i l • .. Ml A. Orretora firefly candle . hOldef. Reg. $1~. Sale 110 e. Orretcws o~ )lase. Reg $37 50. ~le '20. K. Our Grammercy CollediOn. trom.~baa Goblet. wine 01 flute. Reg. $20 eacl\ Sa"le It.II . , z Cdonv'• 8linl 7-Pece wine aet. R99. $60. Out SotiOr• Collec11on. fromCO!c11¥ cc. Wine CCJCNr. Reg. "°· Sele .... • . ' . Sale 111.11. • I •• I .. ·--""-....,. __ ........ ... .. ~ J • .• ~ I. I ' .. Here. you'li find all the pieces you need fof ~lnlng .and entertalnl.ng.ln.n_ie giandest style. At prices that make these luxuries practical. We show OOJy a small sampling of our extensively beautiful collection. ~u must see 1h~ rest ! But 9<>n't delay. Our sale ends .June 11. In Robinson's Glassware, 86/FJne · Crystal, 1~, where we've entertained In style for 100 years ... Ask about our Crystal Club Plan. To order, call toll-free 1-t00·345·8501. I, • E: 1<oe1a Boda 8 ~ • Lydia bowl. Reg. 535 .• Sale 111.91, ·' ~ F. l<osta ~ watatllty • C. Kosta Bode 12" Lydia plalter Reg. $29.50. Sale 119.16. . . ' • A• I• ~· L,vdi• plate. Ml of 2. "-g. -t25. Sale, 117.M . - L. Our ~tord Collection, from Mikaa. ~ .Gobtet, wine Of fhlte. Reg. S25 eactr. SIJa St2.AI ... ' . ·w~ Koltt &oda • • ~· · bowl. Reg. $12.!0. Sele ...... bowl. ~., $19.50. . Sale ,ri4.M . . .. ... ~ r , \ ,. .. • ·. H Aalfal goblet, from OUf Diana Coltectlon. Reg . .$18.99. Sale ...... J Etta CoUecaon goblet, from Astral. Reg. $18.99. Sale ..... ~--....... P. Flule. Reg. $18,99. Sale SLll. , • wd to 1d:i t1·v :: I r I i . w 'M . I 3 1 fun ~ .ool O,f; • ran .:· )11!9 aw bot ~ I J . I r ut:> j • 'r:#I I "v; .. off•. !lab I .. ·1 i° I ~rt} ,n"(J tfT au' .,~., ~ llC2 m• •.uf lib I }o ·I "' Orange Coeat DAIL y PILOT /ThutMSay, June 2, 1813 • )1 fte Aa1bdaced Preti NEW YORK -President Rapn'a eldest «>n, Michael, uya he'• diuppointed over not .Jtelna lnvtted to the White HOUie aince the .ma~tion. u ilfhe problem ta I have to ah.afe hhll (the prelident) with 200 million people," Michael .......,. aid while appearina on the "CBS -Momlq NeW.." The adcipted a0n of Reagan and ~Jane Wyman admitted he feela like the ~ member of a public family and ii .lbmetlme9 JM1oua of the attention hta father and • ~ lady Nancy Reagan tum ellewhere. 'Tve always shared o.d,'' he aid' Wed:nea-= ~~h, being the father .of the ,'( FAYE'ITEVILLE. N.C. -Fonner President '6r1er and h1a tam.Uy a~ed a private reunion 4(>1-bJ8 slater, Ruth Carter Stapleton, who ls ~erinl from terminal cancer. .1. AllO attending were Carter's mother, Miss Lilllan. hit brother Billy, h1a wife and several other relatives, according to Ken Cooke, pho.. K archer to address N~wport chamber Don Karcher, preddent of Anaheim-~ Carl Karcher Enterprises. will be the featured speaker Friday at the monthly meeting of the Governmental Attain COmmit1ee of the New· I Pon 8'rbor Area Chapiber of Cbnmei-ce. • : Karcher will di.cu. government regu-. latkma and their affect on private business. The 7:3Ga.m. breakfut meettnc will be held at the Balboa Bay Club. There is a $10 charge for breakfast. To ma.ke.reeervationa, call 644-8211. Back pain seminar set · . · Back pain and stress will be the topic of a two hour lecture 7 p.m. Tuesday in Costa Mesa'• Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave. Orthopedic surgeon .Edward A . Abraham and consultant Daniel Whiteside will l I be the featured. speakers during the free J seminar. For regiatration call 979· 7924. I: HB allergist guest speaker Dr. Richard Roth, a resident of Hunt- inafon ae.ch, will speak at an aathma and a1Jersy workshop Saturday in San\a Monica. Dr. Roth. en allergist. practices ~t Kaiser Permanente medical offices in Huntington Beech and Orange. He will be joined by other allergy exper1a. The panellsta will d1acuas allergy related isBue9 that affect an stimated 35 ·million .Americana. Topics lnclu4e athletes, exerciae . and asthma; allergens in the envtronment, allergy oontroversiea and drua therapy. 1be -runar will be h~Jd from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Saturday in Santa Monica. For further detalla. call the Asthma & Allergy Foundation at (21~) 937-7859. Free vision tests offered Free vision qmaultatlons will be offered by the Braille Institute Thursday at the Oasis senior 'citizen center in C.Orona del Mar. 1be consultations, conducted by Hank E8trada, will inClude advice on visual aida, devices that provide magnification. Partici- pants must have a written referral from an ophthalmolopt, optometri8t or ph)'lidan th pnenl pnctice. Referral fonna and appointmenta can be obt.ahvd by calling 759-9471. children's tryouts tonight Auditions foJ' the Fourrtaln Valley Com- ~ n.lter',1 ..,..,.,.r production, "Yan· ._ Doodle.'' a petr¥>Uc musical f9V\4e, will be ._... tonlaht from 8:30 to 9:30 at the Fountain ~alley Recreation Center on Brookhunt Street #Heil Avenue. Tryouts aleo will be held Saturday from' 12;30 '1'> -.:30 p.m. at the Fountam Valley Qibnwuty Center on Slater Avenue near aookhunt lrtn!et. • ' . The lhow calla tot ao to as r.;rormera 1n the 8 · to 21 ... 8J'OUP and All rolel are avallabli9l ~ will be 8*W'ft July 22-M and July 29--31. Fw1ber lntormation la awOable. at 9&6-&392 or 847-1.108. Eagf,na mixer scheduled ~ for the ray.ti.vm. ~ ind · 'Ilmel ~ a friend of Wt Sta~ ltj W• ibie only outaidtl' pt9etlt 1\mday. Mn. Stapleton. ea. an ~ trillD Fa~, wudt~-~~Gi the PAMW1 lut naciae at l)Alll I C'AQt.W. ReJecdn, oonwn1taMI ftlld.klal tNacm.nt; ahe uid aM will rely on her talth m God to heal her, .ion, with a ltrict diet and exereW. • ~·~-hout .. ~ata~ -fuplly ren.t. Cart.wed Jllra. 8.... . a10ne ci01o¥n. to a lab Where lhe mtdltaa \Vtien 11. they ret~. Carter buepl ha.-,. ~be departed for hil'hclme tn. Oecqlla:1 r- LAUDERDALE LAICl'lf, Ffa. ~ ~ Maf-Ylll ~· • Aita .,. .. , Marvin Gaye, makina • ll'le~ concen t.OUr, liu ·owner reCa1Jed her ~ on the t6ad With Bob been hoip(talif.i6d for dehydri~~ ' I '--.to.-CCJIDldl :..•~ and .. ~bJe l infection... Hope, uyb)l lhe Qme -;-... •n _ _. . · Proctuction ':! .. --ANt! ce eakt ~ ,, ll*)dlnc ~ ~ 0 perfonnlnc_ ~· ~ ' .. -... -bbia. . . 44-tear-old linger, who livet ln Lot Anp)le, WM "He'a Mt. Arnefka."'11.id ,Bryant, who in.de · hospitalir.ed Tue.day at·ft>rida M~ tenter mWtary tow'lwUh Hope tran 1980throuah1966. after-giving eight concerts ln five days at ft.dio . Hope celebrated hit 80th btrthday Swlday City Muac Hall in New York City, follow~ by tinc ·Bryant to remil\ilCe ' four concerts over the Memorial. Day weekend at ~lffe ltUl loy• me and I 1~ him.'' ahe Mid. the Sunri.le Musical Theater near here.Gaye was "He 1a concerned about my permnal life and resting in •table condition. : w~ther rm happy. He •YI I still ling great and SELMA, Ala. -Singer Anita Bryant, now . that he still baa a loft apot in h1a heart for me. Uvt--.g quietly as a houaewife and dnm ahop rd l1k.e to think that." . • >ID , WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Prellldent Richard M. Nixon received ~pat.an ~ trtbutiaal ~ the mWtary t of Greece in bll 1988 electlon c.ampej&n, to a new book by a pri»-wtnn.lna repol1er. • '11\e book, "The Pnce of Power.'' by Seymour M. Herah, •. reportl that Henry A. Killlncer may haw• blocked a Sen.ate inv.ug&Uon of j>omble Central InteWpnoe A,ency. involvement in the poUUcal donations. Tbe book ta echeduled for publlcation June 13 r b! Summl~ Booka. I , Hersh uya the Greek campaign oontributiona Wff'e confinned by Henry J. Tuca. a career Foretp Service officer who had.~ emmmMor to Greece dwinl the N~ ad.minlatraUop. 1n lleCl"et t.eltimony f.1efore h Howe Jn~ C'.ommlttee in 1976. Such contrtbbtiom \¥ere lep1 ln 1968. On Sept. 22, 1970, the Nlxon ~ lifted an embar&Q on anns ahipmentl to Greece that had t.en irripoeed aftei' a military junta~ power lri 1967. The Junta, strongly criticized for lta human rtghta tecord, collapeed ln 1974 and parliamentary elections were held. Herah aaya Ta.ca, who di~ .1n 1979, testified that Greek-American businemnan 'I'hclinaa A. Papp.G served as a conduit for the campaign contributiol\a. ,, . sn_ap•toQ~th·er ·furnitUre ••• .... stu_rdy for . kids' rooms, afford&ble for fil-st as)artm9nt$. ...,..,_.,.., 12"30x66" Reg 29.90 .... 11.17 l . ' . Schools join for joint use of cable TV Four wt.i <>ranee County K:bool dJ8triCta have banded topther io make uae of the recently inltalled community cable telleYtsion l)'St.em. Fcnnlna the joint powers as- 80dation -called the Joint Coun- dl foe Educational ~echnoloS)' - are the Huntington Beach Union Wah School, Fountain Valley, Oceen View and Huntington Beach City achool districts. That amodation hu formed a community adviaory committee and ia looking for members from the cities of Fountain Valley, W~ and Huntington Beach. The committee will give advice foe quality programming on the new educational channel, provide ·technical asaistance to sc'1ools and l act aa a Uai8on with the communi- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, June 2, 1883 ~T'~ iurx:u,ry hote1 set in Fashion Island A 19-atory l~ hotel that would cater to the wealthy and the jet let la being planned for an undeveloped lite in Newport Be.ch'• tuhion Wand. Ardlltectu.ral plane for the 326-room t.ctllty, to be operated by Canada-hued Four ae.ona Hotell, were unveiled today dur- ing a reception at Newport • C.enter. The hotel chain, which epecial- izee In meeting the. w~ of di8C:rimlnatlni aues1B and charges u much u $800 a night for IUlt-es. muat get city approval before buJ.ld1ng ooWd begin. A public hearini date bas not been 8et. lid~~ to the hotel lite -~ about 270 feet tall. U approved, the Four ~ fad.Uty would be the third new ~ expanded hotel In the city. Thie Newport C..ter Marriott r&-j oeived permlallon recently to e»- 1 pand from 377 rooms to 6:M>. The 600-room Meridian Hotel ~ rently ill under conatrucUon near John Wayne Airport. t ! The Four Seuom bot.el ~ ' lnally waa designed aa a low-rile facility but the plan later w• rejected by architects aa bein& tQo malllve. The saller, thinner ~ designers ea.id, will permit~ open landacaped area. 1 ty. People interested in partici- pating on the" committee can caH Jill Henricks at 964-3339, ex- tension 232. ~ $60 million hotel would . stand 200 feet tall but would fall rouchly 70 feet abort of being the tallest 11rUCture in Newport Beach. According to studies, the 18-story Union Bank building - Four Seuona ooW' operates 11 hotel.a lntemationally, includ.tnc the Pierre in New York City, ·Four Seaaona Clift in San Frait- ct.co and Inn on the Park 4J London. Five of the hotel.a are ip the top 30 of the world's best. The propose~ Four Seasons' hotel in Newport. Center i1 shown in this architect's drawing with the existing Wells Fargo building· in background. o..-~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~~.--.;. COMPUTER CLASSES in . Fountain Valley (See ac:hedule In Sunday'• Piiot) STANDARD COMPUTER 964 8050 Steel belted radials for small cars at our everyday low prices. - 29.99 Each. 155SR12. Plus 1.36 FET No trade-in needed Size Toyo steel betted radial blacblalls have wide steel belts for better handling and steering, block tread design tor more contact on the road to help reduce tire wear. Tread design helps disperse water for more gnp on wet surfaces. In sizes for most US. and import small cars. When you buy tires at Target, even at our low R(ices. you get these servtees at no extra charge: •Mounting • Rotation every 5,000 miles • Puncture repair for as long as you own the tires OurEwe~y Low Pr Style Each FET 155SA12 Z25 29.H 1 36 ~55SA13 Z25 34.99 1 48 165SA13 Z25 38.99 1 60 165SA15 Z25 39.99 1 79 175SA14 Z25 41.99 1 84 165'70SA13 7 18 39.99 1 46 175t70SA13 718 41.H . 1 64 185 70SA13 718 43.H 1 78 185 70SR14 718 45.9P 1 91 Save *20 on front disc brake Service. 69.99 Reg. a9.se T•getWI: • lnAll,..,, front di8c brake shoe~ • Rebuld front~ • Aetuface frOnt rotota · • tnipect meiAlt' ~ . ~ ptc• good through Saturday, June 4. ) Meet .He-Man and S·keletor liVe .at Target ; Super Heroes from Mattel's Masters of the Universe collection. Now your kids can talk~ the "real" heroes at the folk>Wing Target stores: Friday, June 3 OJCMrd 7:00 pm .. OnllrtD 7:00 pm Saturday, June 4 ....... ........ clt .. ·Norll211t CoWw ,..... Sen~ Almntn ScMMIO... Friday, June 10 11::30"" 11:30am 11:30em 2:30pm 2:30pm ·2:30pm ~pm S:OOpm Long lwtl· ....._ 7:00 pm ............... 7:00pm Olrdlr1 Orv.. 8roalchurll 7:00 pm Saturday, June 11 Long lwtl•SoulhS.. A4"lllMlm ................ lwtl TCln'MC:9 Long lwtl. Mlnllc Mwd. G9rdln Orv. -Hllrtlar Mwd. I' ' ~ J ) --· ,_. . ,. l ) l , ~ A1 I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur.day. JUM 2, 1883 --~= ,, ~ •ll :ii' 1.( ~ .... 0 Play it safe this summer • ., We can't seem to say lt or pear it often enough. , Lifeguards, oceanographers, public health ofticera, C Mt Guard officials, yacht clubs and anyone with even Ule -- .:-~'-~- al llltest. inferest in water safety have warned surfers., ~ I' 'llmnen and sailors to beware of the sbifta ln the ocean fl I&-this year. . The pounding surf and high winds of this put winter'• st tl1DB have left a legacy of ~ sands· along the cc ratline. · ~1 Sandbars now skim the surface where deep water once ill ~ clear Saning. , , .The bottom suddenly drops out from under the feet of u 1US9· waders .. Surfe who once felt confident about diving into deep w lter no ·risk serious back and neck injuries from the i? pact of lunging into solid sand. n No one is sure of the depth and curtenta aJona the oi ~e this summer. That doesn't mean you can't enjoy the Pacific. It just a !8l'lS you should take extra care with any water n ~tion. . . , Be sale. And be around to offer expert advice next year. " . C 11n1ons to•oresst<d on Ille SO<Ke at>ove ore tho\e ol tne Daily Pilot Otner 111ew s ea f •ssed on tnos oage are those ol trieor autnors and ar1osts Rea~r comment os 1nv1t f Aeldreu The .:>aoly Polol. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mew. CA 921>26 Pl\one 17UI e 2 •J21 • MAILBOX "'l giant step Tc the Editor: l>n May 23, I sat in the 11\ '1ence at the Newport Beach Ci y Comal meeting waiting to ~~ ~ I am SPON'a liai8on to the . Al -port Working Group. We '" nt to find a 80lution to Orange CA ,mty air travel demand 80 it '" p't all end up at John Wayne A ~ta went through my ro ;wt u Mayor Hart explained tb n would be only 10 speakers, ~. ~ and ~ against the change in Iii pert policy to include. _iiloft Ill S)\ta.. N'o attempt w.. oiaae to 1• ~ what percentage of the 1• :ked chamber was for or lll )inst but, I thought, it didn't ID '11eJ' Iii.nee the Mayor bed 111 ~eady pre .. conceiyed the ID 1'hod of dMJlng ,ritll the te- c:a citrant homeowners. The c() mty'a airport manager has 111 tly referred . to this proce91 of cu pandiQi the air'port. the "• 'eam-roller". wen. the "steam-roller" baa 111 eady rolled over our '2ty eav- es ament, I thought., IO my speech •• o't help anyway. The extaeme Ill punt of time rd spent atud)'tna 1~ a subject did not ou~w.,eigh the HJ prebenaivenem that wL jener- 11t Id by this cavalier .. attitude of 1JJ t Council. rve spoken before on 1 l t subject to elected not to .:hove in' way into line eYeD t)ougb haVlna spent the day prepartna eomethina new to uy. Then one bnve member of our group·appealed ln the name ot democracy. People were then out of lnteNe concem over a major potential diluter for the Qty. A count waa taken and 18 people rai8ed their handa to speak. One-half hour mon will be given, the Council aaid. That'• time for 6 1peakera m, even though 1 had raieed my band, I llti.ll ut ner- ~ In my eeat beirw reluctant to 8tand in line aa othen were cloing. Havinc ~ that once at a Supervi9on' ''steam-roller"~­ lng about the airport., I wam't keen nbeing put in IUCh a position again. . All I w~ to say anyway wu · tb*t if our Council capltulatea ~ the <Aunty'• 5 ltepl toward eoMna their ~ problm>.: 65. fli&hta; the huae 1100.000 ...... Plan fadity; no further chaJlence to the total impecta er the ZD\; no altemaUve lite; rn«>h'8 of Santa Ana Hetchts -then all the SupelWon' airport ~ will be O'Vf!r. For the MU' term at 1eMt., it Will all be lel"ved riaht here. Future Boerda may W«rf once ap1n about another she -ot probably not. The c.ounct.l h.aa taken the finrt step -· a giant itep! JEAN WATT c.c.ta Meu 'Jake a real look ·r; the Editor: { have owned property in Col1a Jtl J-over the last 10 yean in the II(~ block of Center Street, Jona 11ii F! diapoeed of, and the 600 hi tck of l'lumer Street and have ,. '1ou11y thought ot dispoling of it · becautie of IOIDe substantial 111 = that have ari8en in this I» hood OW!' the years ·;t roucb what r consider to be an •• ~te lapee on the part of ·tl ,. dly in enforcing 90IDe of ii. •JI 1':"W!""" aoveming the health ·• id lafety Mpec:W of residential ptOperty we in the area. tome ''ahetto" altuationa oo the . eat aide of town. . Obviously, there la a major IOdoJoslcal problem here of growing proportlom, the full ex- tent of which does not aeem to have been tJrouiht to the atten- tion of the public. Thll may be beau.-of the extenalve interelt ahown by the Oty Fathen In the ~ "~pnent'' plans for the city. The9e plans are a Jona way from implementation; mean- whtle, the city streets ~ a diaaster area and the. economic hue h.aa been eerio\&alY eroded by abutting down awcew'u1 ~ nem. in the aree ot 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard .. Perhap1 it la time for the Qty Falhen to focus their attention on . . . Self-deceptioll hurts most ·The lies we tell other people cwtamarily don't hurt them .. much aa the llea we tell ounelws hurt us; lying to others lt debas- ing, but lying to one.ell ii' ul- timately fatal. • Sucpea that camel too IOOD encourages COQlplacency and smupew; llUCCellll that comes too late engeoden bittemelS; even in tenm of .,00 fortune, tlmina ii all. Perhaps the flnelt aphorilm on the human condition w• coined by Walpole, when he ot.erved, "Imagination wu elven io man to compensate him fer what be ii not, and a eeme of hwnor waa provided to comoJe him for what· he ia." We. call our feelings "ideas.'' ~ m __ IO_l_l_---i~., and the feelino of tboae who ~ with di "pnjudicea." People who' ah.irk their duty lack moral fiber, but~ who are inordinately proud of doing their duty cxntain more fiber than n..vor. An autobloo'apby of intrinsic value eeema clw eulest .thing to -!'rite. when ac1ua11y it lt the bardl9t fcnn of composition. A. Cardinal Newman ' aaid about most memoin: "A areet memory 00. not make a 81'e9t mind. any more than a dictionary lt a piece ,,. . of literature ... When people repeat ihe clJche, "You'll always have war," what they fall to reoosni:r.e la that when a quantitative cbanae beOOlnee large ~h. it tuml into a qualitative~(• water tunw into steam), and that what we face in the nuclear future cannot called by the Aine name of ''war'' as it h.aa ever been known ih the }>Ut. A "trend". in ru.tory lt like a wave to a IWimmer in the ocean: be does not aee it unUl it ii about to en,uif hiin; this la why IOCial historiana p<lHe• only 20-20 hindatght. It ii foollah for a teacher to ask his students to aeerch for "sym- bollam" In any work of art, u lf the c::reat« placed it there like 10 many roed_...,. on the path to meaning; un1eas symbollan riw from the oceanic uncomc:6ou9 of the creator, 'it lt a mett con- trivance. Women understand men beUer than men understand women not became they J>CI • !• any.IUperlot fllCuliy of I.might., but bemme f!W!r'J minority (which women are. pnctlcally J.f not numeri- ~~ a aemiUvtty in the dominant ma- jority far more than the majority bothers to undentand them. Havm, the at.a.tu. and per- qublttel of a celebrity does not 1au.ty anyone -it ;.t prevents h1Jp from being •tWled with anything lea Companions linger in me~~ry Coming home lt .aJways the beat put of gotna away. Tomor- row Ml be holne f.or the finrt time in a.month. Wb.l you talk.. with frienda about your nvei.. rou bore them becau.e you keep repeett.na tboee ume few inddenta, or you keep de9c:ribina ~ ume pi.-• if there hid been DO othen. YOU . spend .• lot of money Fini to eome faraway J11,1mr. and two weeke later all you ftlDPIDber ii haw lteep the billa were in San Franct8co, or what the plumblnc tixturee wen llk.e In the beth- roam in a hotel in Rome. ~THING rm PD& to mO.t after tlu. lpec- tacular month Jooldna down oo the United Statm frcm a~ ter, ii not thia JmCD.l,tlcmt tadir the peat and tenible tblnllt people have done to it. What rm aolna to remember molt Is the elabt people I travelled with: l've J'.W1Vel' been Involved with a ll'OUP ot people, .ch. one of wham WM ao .m at what be or she. did. There w. not a dud in the crowd and that'• unualal. The four people who work in tele-vtaton. I laww well. I hid ~ them for the jobm,.U becaU1!9 in • ' t:'' -.. -.-.-n -----...4 ere ~f careful. Th4t}' CDnbme 1he acrobatic talents of a Baron von Richthofen with the kind of concem for life that my mother showed when ahe but- toned me. up for ICbool on a fttJWY day. On the ground at night, after a day'• work. Bill and. Dave are not IO careful. . . lt'a apparen\ that Slkontky c:Udn't d¥De the two 'tnalnten- ance men who are travelllna with us at random either. There can't be any better. Mike Krill and Otto Keepn ha\te driven a ataUon WMOft full of tooll and spare parts and met us ~ ni&ht. M1ke la the crew chief and you'd think the S7e waa · bit baby. rve watched Mike'• hansla 'wl1h admiration -ha'• coaxed tome piece of IDllCb1nery out of Its De1Una place under the enclne c;owlfna. To anecne who hal. trouble aettlnl up a jalck to cbanee a Cil'e, h1a aldll with a wrench or a .::rewdriyer ii amu-tna. · Otto Keegan la the electrical wilud. One day 1Mt week we landed an a hard. barren field in South Dakota. When we took off apin, a atone, roiled up by the tom8do ere.led by the rotor bladet. bit the wtndahield. ~ boun ' later w~ were OySC -owr moun- talna in Wyominc at 10,000 feet.. The tanpentwe dJ'Olll*l to 34 . decrees md BW Knmer turned Oil the beat. Betw.-the cold ou18de, the beat iDlllde and tbe . tiny Wp the llDall .... Md IDlde, • jlald. lilb--llb cnck lhot acra. the ~Aeld THE PILOTS IDlde a few phone calla !nm the nut UUle airfield and the followlnc ntcbt. when. we tot to D19 Mol.._ the new wtndableld WM waidne for m. We went to bed. MDre and Otto .pellt the ni&bt puUilaC In the new wtncW>telCL Tbft s-t month. rw --Amertm tbeway VW'/ fww ...... haw~~ it. Now I hope.,.. can make aaood ~ l:ntld- cmt out ol the ......_ ,... tooll. Whether we can ar no&. lt · w.m't a km. I mMit low' mw frleDdl and met low Amertawl who ~ know bow to . do 9CllDethlna wen. Bow oltlla .. =~to you in a maath ol .1 l I I ·lt'• too late for the city to start tt tprelllnc lta concern for the • ltll·belnc of thole unfortunatel •ho are betna aaked tO move out al I rental propertiel under a , ~y notice. A few moot.bl .,o , ""' newspaper puhlilbed --It baw~~owr ral life prob1ema. · DAVID A.W. YOUNG Newpcrt BMch ... t: I.• llDJd /Polish conpection ... . I .. -- NOAA blames coast dwellers Agency says ii's time to use good sense bu!lding n ear. shore SA.lf; J;>l!XX> (AP) -Lut winter'• storms ''ahould be evidence enouah" for Cali- f~ that there are hazards of ·bulldlnt too cl09e to the ocean, U)'I the had of the National Ocean1c and Atmmph.eric Admin- latration. While the federal aaency ad- vises "the states to act with aoine wt.adorn," NOAA doesn't adV<>cate an outright ban on coastal con- struction. a4m1ni8t1'ator John V. Byrne told a news conference Wecm.day. He ~ that Census figures "shbw 60 percent of the popu- lation inoving i.Qto coastal areas," and thM~OAA will be concen-tratinft on elimin.ating coastal haz- ards and helPine the states come up with coastal plans that will meet the confllctina needs of industcy1 coast.al dwellen, and . recreatiohal water users. But Byrne did ·have strong words for some C081Jtal builders. "Just last week I opened hur- ricane aeaaon, which runs from June to the end of November, and the building that has taken place, primarily near the Gulf and East <;gasts, is in my judgment ir- responsible," Byrne saJd. "Past hurricanes have eliminated motels and condomiilia, and big- ger motels and condominia have been built right in the same place.'' Before ad~ the opening 9e8Sion of ~tal Zone 83, the third national aymposfwn OJ\. ocean and coaatal management, Byr:ne learned that the Reeaan adrnin.istration is supporting a reorganization of the Department of c.ornmerce that wW make NOAA a aeparate a(ency. "For us, the creation o.f NOAA as a aeperate agency will allow ua to do a great many things that heretofore we were not able to do as part of the Department of Conunerce," Byrne said, But in his prepared speech. Byrne noted that the federal government would be withdraw· Ina frcm many coutal and ~ ~· "I Pi.dee that we ln NOAA will -.une our ahare of ie.derihlp, by maldnc " "'°" eHectlve tbo9e prccrmm In ICience and eervb that we can best provide, .. Byrne aid. He sa1d U.t actentlftc ~ w an apProporiate NOAA activity and noted that the ~ wt1J continue atud.les In the at- mospheric and oceanosnph.ic ld- ences tac pred1ctlng the wather. plua experiments In flah~ry biology. ·Puzzle fiends leave hank holding the hag BECKLEY,•W.Va. (AP)-Paying t750,000 fcir a $1.3 million mana1on that WM once offered aa the prize in a Cl"088Word p~ . contest has lefi""'a 'bink feeling like leae than a winner. Tpe top bidder at Tue.day's auction, Flat Top Natioryll Bank. underwrote construction of the 19-room mansion in 1976. The bank fo~ after coal operator Alexander Campbell was unable to unload the 14,000-aquare foot houte through the "Fint Mill.ion Dollar ero.word Puzzle Contest." Entrants were asked to. put .up $250 apiece for a crack at solving. the puzzle. · Contest. organizen said entries arrived from aero. the country, but not the 5,000 needed "to come cloee to the property'• value. Set on fou.r acres, the Georgian-style mansion ·includes four fireplaces, a spiral staircue and gold-plated fl.xturea in its four and a half baths. • Al Sines, a Beckley lawyer who assisted in the auctico, said the bank probably will "sit on it a couple of yean and hope the market comes around. and hope to minimize their I<.es." . Orane-Coll1 DAILY PjLOT/Thurld1y, June 2, 1883 Gov. George Deukmejian tal"8 with reporters in Sacr a mento Wednesday,· rea ffirming a no-tax position . . Gov.says he won 't hike .taxes --SACRAMENT<> (AP) -Re-peatJnc his pJedce of DO aenerai tu b1rrcf "· Gov. George Deu-kmejan dMarpd Wednaday tha' IOme Jeaiala~ ...... trytna to bult the buqet" by addlna spendJ.ng p~ to trtuer a ..ie. tax tncreue later th1a year. In a speech to a. conference of 9000Untantl, the Republican gov-• emor added that Ile. I.a going • '.) ata~wide radio to "convince di 11 Legislature to pay • little lefll '2 attention SO the tax apenden aQd ll that we pay a little more attentiat to the bottom line." 1*11 ta He aaid that bottom line "~ r.) belanoed budget with a oomplele payoff of OW' deficit by J\me ~ 1,.. 1984," and no new t.axea beyom .. th' t4.66 •million ;"looJ?.hole"-closing. package • 11 propo.ed last mon~ . ~ added in an iJlotj 'ff promptu news conference thellt l1f are no drcumstances under wbicli he will 11Upport a tax mcreue t.t\i )!) year, even for Jocal echoola. DeulaneJan refu8ed ~ rn which lawmakers he waa cri :i n cizing except to cite the Finance and Amembly Ways and Means committees. which aM ·~ adding spending propoul.a to h.la bu",_. . '"' > '"6'"... • .t l ---------------------------------------'-----------------------------------------------------------------~, ' Particle ·found that may unify theories on univer sal· forces GENEVA. Switzel'land (AP) -Leaden of an international research team Wednesday confirmed the finding of a key sub-nuclear particle, a gj.ant step toward the building of a single theory to explain· all forces in nature . .. We have finally found the 'Z-zero' sub-atomic particle, whOBe existence has long been postulated, buYwhich was s0 named because it was expected to be the last particle ever to be d.iscoven!d.'' said Carlo Rubbia, professor of physics at Harvard University, who Jed the team of 126 re:tearehers at the European laboratory for particle physics, CERN. The confirmation follows the announcement in ;Jamaary by the~ team of another breakthrough, the ~ of the "W" particles, sister particles to the ~~;;;.1• Professor Herwig Schopper, director general of the laboratory, said he wu ~rtain the two ~es will merit a Nobel prize in physics. He said it ''was the most important discovery in physics" ~ the invention of the transistor 25 years ago. CERN's. findings are signifiCant becauae they add .weight to the Idea that a single theory can be found embodying only a single physical force to drtveall nature. Until 1967, there aeemed to be four: gravity; the ''strong nuclear force" which holds at.oms tt>gether; electromagnetism and the "weak nuclear force" which la respomible for certain · radioective decay reactions, including tho9e that · power the sun. "With the di8covery of two W particles, one with a negative and one with a positive charge, and the Z-tero we now know that electromagnetism aJ'l(i the weak force are two rnanifestationa of a single 1 force called !electroweak.'" said Dr Rubbla. All attempts to oonatruct theori«lS showing that any two or more of the four fOl'CeS were mani- f~ of a single proce9 fa..mdend OD ln- oona.tencies until 1967. In that year, Stephen Weinberg, now at the Univenlty of Texas at AUit.in, SbeldoWI) Glaahow of Harvard and Abdu. Salam of The Netherlands independently produced a consistent theory uniting the electromagnetic and "weak" forces. U tho9e t.halries are correct, the collision of protons and anti-protons -a proton of opposite' electric charge -in a giant accelerator such as the jOoe at CERN.should produce, among other things, 1 the W and Z-:r.ero Pllrticles. 1 1 A full analysis of the results will take months but hopes are riding high that a further major ~ery will be made this year, Rubbia said. Whistle-blowing guard tired from LA prison LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Tenninal Island federal ptiaon guard who ~ a $2S million laWBUit . alleging cxim1ption at the inatUutioh haa been fired, and h.la attorney U)'I pri9on off:idala "want to pt rid . of him." Alfttd N. Willrich, a ~3-year-old guard who haa been at the prbon for 12 years, wu auapended effective Wednaday. Hla attorney, Jeffrey Schwart%, aaid Wlllrtch will remain on pa.id admlru.trative leave for 30 da)'I to give him Ume to appeal h1a cttsm._t Schwartz IUd be will try to appeal through the Merit Servke Protective Board, an lnqependent fed«al lgeDC)', raiber than throuah the federal pmon system. wbkh tbe attomey contends la bi.ued ep1mt h1a dienL . . ' The mc:.l Meent allegationa concerned =·• ,n • 1 tiilwe to work durl1'4f pNoin --mdel Allril • aDd May 1. _Schwartz Mid on April 28, Willdda hat biill'i p1.-.:t oo tick l•ve by the priloa'• cloilDI' bli.aum Olt_hlah blood. pc •we. md that~ bbft .... to WW1t Wts not normal ~~-· .,. . \ ~ LOOI< whats 50% off. . . The greatest savings ever on our Top ~f the Ll~e~ Kitchen Knives from Solingen, Germany.? ?; .. --.., ., • • • ---=ic.: 1 r T~~.satmon Sllcef' (81892) Regular P I • 5• U1lllty Knife "'411) Aeouw Pf'loe 122.00 8"'ftfloet11.00 ·~ 5l\" W1YYUt111tyt<nite - • C8l8l1l Reoutar Price 123.50 ... ,,....11.71 ' bl !1 '" t11 i i i r a t · .'\ (' t . -. --· __ . ...,._. -·~ -. --·-.,.,.... ... . . - A:J• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, JuM 2, 1983 Gump's in SF: It's still one 1z.1Jf a .kind I r I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Stocked with everything from a $20,000 aquamarine ring to a $2& ~ lnd1an fedah car;ving, Gump'• is the lut word ail t:h1naa awnptuoua, stately and showy. IUke a grande dame fingering her mink and ~ bangles, Gump'• revels in a mystique com- Plf,lnded from a allghtly acandaloua put, a quiet, "" ~opulence, that touch of diatain for aho~ WllO paw through merchandise in hot pursuit of a barpin CW" rittJe through mere· catalogs instead of "tlft books." And, of course, there's The Box, Cllr4ttully wrapped and stuffed with tissue paper. . -'"[ look at retailing a.a theater," aaid Robert Leifl1etn, president of Gwnp'a since MacMillan Publishing bought it from the Gump family in 1969. "The atmosphere of the store has to convey the feeling and mood of the merchandise we're pres- ~ etlt:iJlg' .• ' . - Tb.at theatrical seo.se also came into play when ·~ 1~2-year-old luxury emporium yielded to l:~ who ''have been asking ua to make Glamp's more available to them" and decided to ~out, Leitstein said. -i Before opening in Houston and Dallas, Gump's had 1o conjure up the ambiance of its main atore off San Frandaoo's Union Square. By dyeing carpets, ma~ wood finishes, recasting hardware and ~hitectural details and sending two "wrap ladies'' to·t.each their craft, "you know you're in·Gwnp'.s" whatever the location, Leitstein said. A third branch will open this fall in Beverly Hills. . Solomon Gwnp's store started in 1861 by supplying mirrors to San Francisco bordellos and barrooms, where bulleta, barstools and even bodies often flew. Since breaking a mirror meant buying a new one, Gwnp's prospered. As San Francisco, flush with Gold Rush fortunes, began to dust off its image, Gwnp's augmented its merchandise, adding gilt frames for pictures, molsfings and home furnishings. By the tum of the century, Gwnp's was featuring gifts, paintings and Oriental art. In 1911, wben the l.ut dynasty fell in China, Gump's buyers were there, snapping up rugs. jade bowls and vessels and b~ from the Imperial Pal.ace. MU9eUmS a.round the country drew on Gump's large and unusual stock of Oriehtal art in amassing collections, and such renowned private collectors as the Mellons and Rockefellers also were customers. Today, Gwnp's prides itself on doing "what other people don't do, and we do more of it," said promotion. and sales director William Goulet. • It doesn't aell diamonda·or wati;hes. "A lot of people do," he explained. "And lots of people do a vety fine job of it." . Instead, Gump's des!gners create the em- porium's jewelry and concentrate on one-of-a-kind pteces. Villagers on the Japanese island of Kyushu· craft a· bamboo and rlce paper \apt.em specially for Gwnp's. f 'I With a string of cottage industries producing excluaiv.e artifacta, aorne for as long as three generations, "we don't need to worry about looking like everybody else, •l.ling the same things," Goulet said. And when thestoredoesaell the "same"~ 1 it Jays claim tQ,,.Jl half-dozen superlatives: It's tht: largest buyer of freshwater pearls in the United States and gets first pick of the pearl harvest. It tx.sta the largest engraving, wedd.i.ng, china, crystal and silver business in the city. Stomach ulcers . . get fast relief BOSTON (AP) -Taga.:net, a medicine widely p.reecribed for intestinal ulcers, also speeds the healing of hard-to-treat stomach ulcers, a study shows. . Until pow, it seemed that nothing worked ~r than time in clearing up these sores, which are · a1lo called gastric ulcers. But the new study shows that the medicine can nearly cut the healing time in half. . ''The potential advantages of faster ulcer 1*Iing include a lower overall cost of therapy and p«'baps·a lower incidence of ulcer complication&," the ,raearchers wrote. . J'l'he study WllS conducted by Dr. Walter L . =-of the nan.a. Veteram Administration Center and other hospitals in Dallas, Los Alllie1es and Saq Diego. It WU published in Tlninday'• New England Journal of Medicine. • Docton tested the <trui. a1so known 88 ~. on 101 ulcer patienta during a 12-week sUlilJy. They received either Tagamet, ant.acids or IJ1a(;tive substitutes called placeboa. _J...l.Until this study, nothing had been shown to ....... ,.,. better than placeboe in clearing up gastric ubin. 'lbe rele8l'ch found that half of the patients ~ Tapmet had healed within four ~eelal. It tdOk 8eVel'l weeka for this many petienta to get better ~ takina placebos. . ... :·{.:Within 12 weelal, 89 percent of the Tagamet ~ta and 70 percent of the placebo peopl!? ·had -~ered. Antacida WCW'k.ed faster than placebos but i • ~well u .Tapmet, and they also cauaed ~;:::-in many patienta. -In an accompanying editorial, Dr. Armand t.aUnan of the Hinell. Dl., Veterans Administration HoliPtal wrote: •-n.re la no doubt about it. Clbietidine i.e.da to healing of pstric ulcer faster ~ ux.e frequently than placebo.'' Tapmet ia one of the most commonly Wied -In the trnlted Stau.. Itoftm la pwcrfbed for in~ or duodenal, Ween. . FREE · MARKET EVALUATION ONYOURHOMI No Colt 0t Obtlgatlon AP~ Robert Leitstein, president of San Francisco's luxury emporium, Gump's, sees retailing as theater emphasizing the mood of the merchandise. Why should fat rats run ? URBANA, m. (AP) -Put a fat rat on a diet without exam:Ue and what do you pt? A roU&nd rat \hat weJaha ie.. And the same th1na happena to people who diet without •xerdllna -~~= weiaht but remain fat, say. Univenlty of nutritionist Donald Layman. ''The bathroom .cale tella you you're dol.ni aomethJ.nc,right. but you actually haven•t improved your body oompoettion," Layman aaid. F.atlng lela produce9 a to. of both fat and mu.cle, and that ii the problem, he aa1d -the percentage. of fat in 'the body rema1na too hiah. , In hla e-xperimenta, Layman uaed' the geneti- cally obeee Zucker rat. At tint 0 they look like furry basketball.," but he takes them down to the weight of a nonnal rat by feeding them leea without · exerdale. '"!be th1na that 8W"J>l't.d me w• that we ata(ved some of thcee rlta down 7~ Det'Clftt In wet,ht. and their body compo.&Uon didn't ch&n,e," Layman uid. • '"Ibey went from belnc tq, fat rats to being mnall, fat ra1a.'' • He aa1d the same thJ.nc haPJ*W to people who diet but don't exerdae. OfteD they rep1n the ~t and the penientage of body fat I.nae uea even more. "You're wone off for h.avine done it," he said. Layman aa1d it ta the p.-centaae of. body tJat, not abeolute wei&Jlt, that la Important to health. "You can find a 250-pound fooiball player wtth 10 pen:ent body fat who ii a very healthy Individual but mtsht be conaidered obme,'' Layman .id. ·'The bathrooql ICale la a very poor way to measure health." ··Clot dissolver can sa ve hear ts . . BOSTON (AP) -Doctors can atop. • heart The new treatment allows doctorw to d.1->Jve attack u it happens and reduce damage to the heart this clot and, they believe, reduce the amount of by injecting medicine dlrectly into the blood clot that ~e that occun. ·causes the 1elzure, a study ahowa. · "We still did not preveJJt infatttion," « ~ The re9earCh la the first that directJy oompares death, aaid Ilr. Jeffrey L. And.enon, .. but we feel the result& ot the new therapy to · •laJ¥1trd that we limited the effects of lt favorably." treatment. It shows that heart attack vicUma have 'nle medicine, and enzyme called streptokinaae, less pain and their hearts work better, but only if ii Injected Into the clot with a catheter _ a skinny they get the medicine within three or four hours tube \hat ii IDAked •'--'"""'an ...... ""' into the heart. after the star\ of their attacks. .. .. ""'61. -~,, This may be a draw~ to everyday u.e of the 1ll8 study, directed by Andenon, waa pubJ!ab- experimental therapy, becauae another study ahow-· ed in today's New En&1and Joµmal ·of. Medfdne, ed it ia worthleaa if started just ~IA hours after the along with another experiment by Dr. Fa.reed Kba.ja attack begjna. and other docton from Henry Ford Hospital In The treatment, called lntracoronary stre1>'7 • Detroit. tokinue, waa flnt uaed in Germany about five yean In the Salt Lake City study, the doctors ago, and it has been the subject of intensive study randomly selected 00 heart attack patienta. Of thiee, in the United States since then. ~received 8'r9Ptoldnme wth1n four bow-a of their Heart attack I.a the biggest killer in the United chest palna, while the 1'81t got ordinary treatment. States, and it claims ~~.000 lives a year. mood flow resumed in the heart mu.cle bf 19 Otten during heart attacks, a blood clot forms of the 24 who got atreptoklnue. During their in one of the arteries that feed the heart. The heart's recovery, theee patienta needed 1eea pain medicine own source of blood is cut off, and part of the heart than the other heart attack victlma, and a variety of . m\dcle dies. · tests ahowed that their heart. were ~orking better. . · AMAZING P5A VACATION ·SAVINGS FOR USING VER5ATELLER~ AUTOMATED TELLERS. BANK OF AMERICA DISCOUNT WITHPSA GREAT ESCAPE HbLIDAY.Tt,O Yoµ've been putting off your vaca- tion, right? Not enough time. Not enough money. Bank of America has good news. We've arranged for discounts on the new PSA Great Escape Holidays. Your pick of excit· ing mini-vacation packages that can save you up to SOo/o off regular rates. Come see~~ PSA won the West with a snt' Choose nom these glamorous PSA destinations: Las Vegas. San Francisco. Phoenix. Yosemite .. (Fresno). Reno. Tucson. Seattle. Los Angeles. Portlahd. San Diego. Sacra- mento. Spokane. All you need is proof of 6 qualifying VERSATE.LLER :ATM trari~actions. Best of all, this diseount applies to up to 10 members of your party! OUR VEl'lSATELLER. AUTOMATED TELLERS ARE AMAZING TOO .• Our VERSATELLER ATMs are so fast and easy. For getting cash, they're easier than writing a check. And Bank of America has_ so many automated tellers in Cali- fornia, there is probably one right near you. Open 6 a.m. to midnight. You can make cash withdrawals, ciePosits, loan payments, check your balance. Our automated tellers are simple to use. And to make things HOW TO EARN YOUR AMAZING . PSA VACATION DISCOUNI: . . ----------------1. Make a VERSATELLER• ATM transaction on 6d1ffcrentdays bctwben June I and July 17, 1983. Be swc to sa~our nansact10n ~ccord from each visit. 2. Make a p~opy of the front of your 6 lra~ act!On Records. O~ if you don't hove access to a phiHoc:opfer. take each nansacuon Record and cut off the stub just above the words, "TERMINAL NO. . .. BUSINESS DAY." Write your VERSATEL• cardnumbcr(thc numbcr1sshownon thenansaction Rccordl on the stub. Copy the Calendar Day onto the main portion of the nansachon Record to keep for your files. • 3. Clip and fill out this coupon, t'1en mail along with either tbc photocopy of yournansaction Records, or the six stubs, to: Bank of Amtrka, VE~A'l'E1' . Servke, 3360 Pl•ir Drlw, El Monte, CA 91731. Olscount r~ucs~ muat be postmarked ~Y July 20, 1983. 4. We'll send you one PSA Discount Voucher gocxf ' towards 'the.purchase of the PSA Great Etcape Holiday* Package you select. The Vouc~r is good for dcpar· tures throu~ OC!cember 15~ l983. Limit, one vacation package pct PSA Ducoun t Voucher, and ont: Vouchet per customer. Discount applies to all member. ol your party. (Not to exceed 10 p11~r1. Sub;«t to seat and hntd availabiijty.) Voucher i tran1fcrablc but not ttdecmablcJor cash. PLEASE SIGN ME UP. (I h.ve cncloacda c:opyof my• ' six VERSATiLLE'R automated tdlcrTunsactlon Records.I Narfte._...;.._~_.._..........,..__ __ ..__,_.. ....... ~~--__,,~ 1 .. 'I llllf 1111 THURSDAY, JUNE 2. 4983 Passive role now transferred to men. ANN LANDERS ·J See Erma Dombeck, P age 82. D ·D 111 .. 111111 mm ENTERTAINMENT TELEVISION o.lr .... ..__ _, ............... Johnny Hall and Gary Lee (above and right ) are members of that new wave of firemen who will go anywhere in .Orange Cou .. ty to combat a hazard ous spill. They · are members of . the hazardous material team stationed in Irvine. -Disco.vered. again She vvas . o nce praised by 1 Papa ' Hemingvvay By BARRY SHLACBTER 'rr 'I,...._ .... EDITOR'S NarE -Detective work by a <.:alifornla restaurant own6 has Jed to the reprinting of a 41-~-old autoblograpby, pniaed by Ernest H~ay and written by a ~ llVbo -warJ tnteroatloml I.me !OT a 1938 traM-Atl.antic solo llight. 7be woman fiill leadtl a full life in ~nya. where_ she grew up. BARRY SHLACHTER NAIROBl, Kenya -Beryl Markham hunted boar with a spear as a barefoot girl in Africa, spotted big game for royal safaris by air, trained eight Kenya Derby winners and became the first pilot to fly the Atlantic solo from England to North America. She alao wrote a book. "West with the Night," whoee title comes from tha\ flight, is a literary rarity in that it was one of the few worb lauded by the late novelist Ernest Hemingway. It was Hemingway's unbridled praise -. "a bloody wonderful book" -that eventually brought about the reprinting of the 1942 autobiography early in May. The decision by North Point Ptess. a San Franciaoo publlahet, was weJooine DeW1 to Mrs. ~arkham. who at 80 saya she has fallen on hard times. Her 25-year-old Mercedes automobile, which she once drove about 2,000 miles from South Africa to Kenya, finally gave up in nµd-May. But it did aee her through a coup attempt here last Aug. 1, when Markham was wounded slightly in the jaw and the car received teVen bullet holes. Although still active aa a trainer, only two racehones are now in her care innead of the usual mble full. Married and divorced three times, she is now alone. Her only child, a 900, was killed years ago while lerving in the British army. Frienda arranged for a night watchman at her cottage on the grounds of Nairobi's Ngong Race Cow-.e after she was beaten and tied to her bed by burglars in August · 1981. Just recently out of the hoepital, where she was treated ·for a back problem and an undiagnoeed illness, Markham la thinner than even her nonnally svelte self, and unhappy by the al.Qwer paee brought on by advancing years. She deecribed benelf in an interview as a woman never held back. She explained that she was brought up by her father alter her mother left them and was allowed to run free aa a child. "l admire my father for the way he raised me,'' she aaid. "People go around kissing and fuaing over their children. I didn't get anything like that. I bad to look after my.elf, and then I uaed to go and read by myself and think by mytelf. "Funnily enough, lt made me." Her father, a gradua~ of tile British military academy, Sandhunt, left the army to take up farming and hol"le training in Kenya. He arrived in Africa in 1906 when his daughter was 4. She ran away flan govememes and a Nairobi 8Chool - more at heme amon& Nandi tribeapeople near the family farm with whom ah&hunted and learned to see the continent from a penpedlve dtffeftllt from that of other colonlata. ''The games we played were Mandi games becaUle I knew no othen and there WM no white child, except m)'llelf, anywhere DMI' Njoro," lhe wrote in "We9t with the Nlaht" of her bocne1own in the hlghlanda on the west.em edie of the OreAt BJ.ft Valley. ''Among my p1axy of .::ara ta one which 8{l unpllant Nandl boy, whom I had betlted in a wrestling bout, made . with his father"• sword." Other chOdhond a::an were left by a lion, which mauled her lea MU' the famlly farm. Thia unfettered childhood -vividly and at tUml ~ c.hronlc*I in her book -left her with. bm Martdmn •a child walked the dop of Barone9 Karen "°" Blbrm. • Danish artstocrat who pined literary fAmi tot wri*-"'Out.of Africa" under the~ llakJ:>tlM!een.. 1:"f found her nither bottnl.' Markham· Mid In the 1nWvtew. 1-She .-i't my cup of C.." Kenya In tbe ino. -1930t .... ~ fOI' tided l'.wvpaaN. Beryl Mtiid lhOu&dln wt1h dMirD 8 ~ • t t:raiNr', a pn411illcn ihe _. u~ time at 17 ,rhim bit' father, ~ NlMd .., • ~ left to ti'Y. bil luck In Pen&. • 'Iha ~ ol Wlndlal', thin the Prlnce of Wai. and, late, JtJiiii Edward VJD ol Onet Britain Wldl he abcllaUed ln ine. Wll taUn -• ~ w .... Mutchlm. who oltien ICOUtlill .... , ..... ""' JAoperd MO\h ...... ................. 0 Ha~dllng haza~d~us spills "~s Special , fir~ te.am ~oes: ,!flto training at Irvine FD~: j ~GLENN SCOT!' • . , By the time the team beginl operations on July 1, memben ~ l .,_.,,....... be1 equipped to go into areea where until now they've noi dared. -4 ••• ":·.,.. When Johhny H-11 and Gary Lee atrap oxygen tanka on Qtetr Fotexample,RohdeaaidtheFlreDepartmeniprob&blycouldhaYe,1-.· backs and stuff themaelv'9 into dark p-een butyl rubber environmental stopped an ethylene oxide leak 1ut Nov: 12 at Bentley Lam in Irvine.,~,:.> suits, they look more like apllCllme?l than firemen. much fut.er if the team had been operating then. An eigbHquare-mile Firefighters, aft.er an. are suppoeed to run around carrying axes area roughly equal to the industrial zone waa evacuated that Frida)')u .1 d hoae --'--night, Rohde explained, becauae "we had to stand back to let the tank _r , an ' not moon ·~· vent ii.elf." ... But the space age abd all tta high technology is changing thiDp, The new team with Ua more 10phiaticated equipment, he said. . ,t and nowhere la the change mpre apparent than in the manufacturing might have entered the ~.11""1 .... and re ..... ,....,.. the leak, red•"" .... thA •• , .. section of the Irvine Business Center. ~-a .-u---...a-a " ~ Hall. and Lee f tb 12 Or need to evacuate auch a lar1e aiea. are two o e men stationed at the ange Coun~ · So why would fireffghten auch u Hall and Lee zip thesmelves <J.r'J Fire Station at 17862 Gillette Ave. in Irvine who make up the inaide their .... ~ haz8rd suits and risk fon"" into a cloud of toxjq1711, · department'• new team undergoing specialized training to Oand1e fumes? ·~ .. ,, . J -... ,, ) hazardous chemical api.1la or leaks. "' Their-station is in the heart of the tndUstrial ........ on, a··-·._ ... _... BecaU9e, they say' all firef.lghten are going to be called to~ I _..... ""•vu.111.K:Q spills aa they occur more .often. It will be part of the job. by medical laboratories and other plants that rely on dangerous Said Lee: "rd rather be a little more prot.ected and a little more hL'. I ·chemicals to manufacture and sterilize 'their products. knowledgeable." ,1..;~ The Fire Department's ha%aJ'dous materiala team, called ffAZ.. Rohde said the team memben were recruited from throulhout tht\Jw MAT for short, ia located in the industrial sedor becaw. it is the lop:.l department, ~th emphasis placed on people with a apedaJ grasp oftt"n.6 spot for responding to spllla. But the team will go anywhere in tbe chemistry or plumbing and pipe-fitting. Each ~ber will receive at.1 'JI county where spills pret1ent danger, said Capt. Mike Rohde. least l~ hours of training by July, he added. . ,d / Thia is where the space suita come in handy. Rohde said his telun Much of that training has been donated by expert.a at private will bring with it equipment that few other firefighting teams in the facilltiee such u a Shell OU Refinery in Canon and the San OnofreJi, • l. state have, thanks to a recent $47,000 allocation made ~y the county Nuclear Generating Station near San Clemente. Board of Superviaors. The training, like the unifonna, ia different from the uauali w i Besides the environmental suits, team memben will carry devices firefighting regimen. But that'• the idea. · · -ncd to monitor air and water qUality, analyze gas and fiuah out dangerous 0 It'a new for everybody, for every county and for evtt)\itl•o fumes. "We've never had thole things before," said Rohde. department," said Lee. "It's the new wave of firefighting." ·~· ,. Dream at work ..• The outdoors is classroom J:·~~r ~ .·.; .,: •q • -J. .. Jhoq . --------------------t=~-.... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thurlday, June 2, 1.083 . . . DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am married to a year old •wer-mouth. Aside from having-a abort per, b1s ~ is peppered with every ftlthy I you call lmailne· When we were first married (l~ ,.ns aao>. he y uid damn --and \hen he excuaed hbmelf. Bill ia well«iucated, an executive lft a fine firm and from a l~y family. I have never heerd c inll)l'Olr>ef word from either of hia parenta. What bothers me most la the way Bill talka in front of the ch1ldren. Yesterday he loet his temper let Jooee a string of obecenitlee. that made me ~ w t to crawl under the rug. The kida looked lltllr't!l!od. then eml:>arnmed and finally hurt I have t apolten to him since. A few weeks ago when I told him I couldn't tu. filthy mouth any longer he said, "1 can~t pit --I picked it up at the company." I know aeveral of hia asaociat¥ and not one of them talka ~ that. His beh8vior ernbarTaaeee and infuriates ~. How can I teach the childn;i:i it is wrong to uae . language when their father does lt? -- C ERRY FACE IN ARK. EAR ARK: SomeWq u1 gone bywlre ID y~ llUbud'1 life. UatU lie leveb Wida yH, yoa ~·t llelp 11.lm. Tbe real claager 11 diet Ge kid• will e jnlor 1ewer-moada1. Step ID immediately lie UH a dirty wonl la froat of &Mm ..... y, you fadler didn't talk like diet, kt I caa't • ytll.la1 abotlt It. I don't ever wut to llear Slldl w t''fh from yoa." · · I DEAR ANN: That letter about the averages on se~ activity reminded me of a poem I clipped . several yean ago. I ean't remember where lt ~. Do you have nerve enoug)lt to print lt? -- DLEBURGH,a,. N. -'i. . DEAR MIDuLE: Of colll'le. Y oa clipped It fim my collllllll. A TIME FOR EVERYTHJNG 1 From it to 31 lf a mu live. rlpt, lt'1 ot1ce ID tilt mor"DJ.q ud twice at DIOt. From SI to Cl, lf Ile 1tUJ Bns rtpt, lite C9ta om tb monalq b•t perfonu at alOt. , From ie to so. 1r1 aw u1 .._, . From 50 to M, It's God boWI WML · From IO to '10. lf be'• 1tUJ lacllae4. .Don't Jet lllm kid yoa -It'• all la .. , m1Ac1: ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am in my eer)y 60a, reeently' divorced after a 1008 and (I tboucbt)'bappy ~e. My husband baa now remarried and we ll.., ~-the same community. • What is the best way to answer the question. "What and who cauaed the diYOl'Ce?°' --A PIUV A TE PERSON IN OONN. DEAR PERSON: fty do JO• feel J• mat amwer every .-sUoe ,.a to yMT Penemal q.e1Uou are asked -1y by •HUIUve·roeklleaa. Tile belt way to bDdle l9cS q•e.tlou II WITB a qae1Uoa: EUmple: "fty .. tH world woeld y~ be la&ereste4 la 10meWq sq completely penoul?,. DEAR ANN: I need a little nuaet of phila.>phy, 8Clnetb.ing to remind me that we go dii. way only Oftee. I bep wuttQa predoUa time on foolishness. Can you come up wlth 101Dething I can •.. lape to my bathri>om mhTot? --ALICE IN ABILENE DEAR ALICB: Here It 11 -1tar cllppta1 aa41 taplns: Yu&enlay ii a cucelled clleck. Tomorrow t. a proml11ory note. Today 11 .. e oa.Jy calll yoa bave -to 1pead It wilely. WUt11 th 1tory oo pot, cocal.oe, LSD, PCP, domn, qeefl'! Our "°" a.a. Ihm JI J'N're cue/al'! Sad for Au: LalMlen' all..-w ~t, ''De wwH,,. •Dope." For eadt bootiet o1*re4, 1-4 $1, pin • '-1, ldf-a~. 1W1JJ*f mvelope (l-'I ce.u po1fa6e) to Au Laden, P. O. IHz JIHS, CtlC!al•· HJ. IHll . flMA IOMlfCI ATWIT'S ENO The Qriginal column was called, "Where Have All the Men Goner' It touched upon the plight of 282,000 women between the ape of 25-50 who con1ldered baaic, healthy traditional, non-threatened males to be an endangered species. In a statistical breakdown. I reported there were only 17 of these men roaminl the earth. Well, all 17 of them have cbecked in. . .and mare. A lot more. We're talkina New York Jock Exchange here. I have no intention of makina matchel, but I thought women would like to hear the other lide of the oohL OOLORADO: ''Where are the wcmen .who aren't too career-oriented to aet involved with a man! Who have not been hurt by ane moron 10bad they're compJetely turned off, OI' have an Adee what style OI' dua ii and don't U8e profanity that makel a tn.dter blush?" CALIFORNI& "Eye contact la im~ and I CODveradon ia out of the question. rm not Burt. . Paul OI' Robert. Figure it out. ~000 Loni ~ aren't going to eettle fOI' a commoner• 1ol>c aa there'• a chance al one of the ~t 17." MASSACHUSE'ITS: ''Women are terribly hard to make an impn!.lllion on anymore. lt'• what they look aL They don't take Ume to Jook far quality. rm not a chauvinist. but I am thlnk1na of petbape marrying a Mexican woman." · NJ:8RASKA: "Some of UI' are )Mt plain old country boys. We may not be perfec:t, but perfecdon ii bard to aualn. '' . WISOONSIN: "I am ltlll liviJW at home. My mother hl9 dinner at 6 p.m. and all my drawen are filled With clian folded dotha I law to tpelXI money OD a llnttY ~but I have at a !5ata due to the fat ihat I would not Jet bet-.,.-,." CALll'ORNIA: UJt'• difficult to find • i.dy, • ' oppcmd to a breed or a mm-. female, wbO belieYe9 in conwrwa*-1. Ume to know one a.noches' ud hM the ..-ucadon Cll" imelJ,Dadao to haw rww atUtudel f:hat maM ~ ..... . 1'har9 w• a ..... threed that ran ~au d. the ._, wrlten. Conb.allon. Thi men bamltlJ didn't mow what h8d happened to all the tndltlcnll worDm Wbo bor'f a f'H nhl ...... to their ~ ~ bad no ks.l wbai wcw1w1 wen loold04 for and didn't D'W ~wen moup for By STEWAR1' TAGGART A• I IE.,,... ..... HONOLULU (AP) -They began on the lower runaa and climbed the ladder of bureeucracy. Once they were coUece clM"Dltte9. 'nMry are Hanolulu Mayor Dleen Andenon and Pally M1nk, cbairwomlm of the JUrw.member dty~ty ooundL F.ach 11 55. Each la marrled. F.ach 'la dedicated to her elecCed tllllka mid nwporudbWtlea in runn1hg one of ~·· m.ior dty-eouoty aovemmenta. And they are die fint women to win their re.pective politlor)S in the 111ate of Hawaii'• ahon . ~tween them they hold the top jot. in the city and county of Honolulu. encompuling the entitt la1and of Oahu. About 762,000 of the .state'• approximately 925,000 residentl live on the Wand. ''What it takes to succeed," Mink aays, '1-a to1a.l commitment to the "8Ue at hand. You can't go into it in a half-hearted way." "I don't think anyone ii sua:aaNI without workfng hard at lt." Andenon says. "I •tarted out at the bottom, in penonnel, 'and worked ,ny way up." . ,Andenon won the 1980 Democratic prtmary over three-time mayor Frank F. Fut She swept the general election with 69 percent of the .vote cast. Mink'• political blatory reache1 beck to wh~ Hawaii wu a territory. . She 8erved bo~ • a territorial repnmentative and territorial le!Mllol' before winning a 1eet In the U.S. HoU.e of Repreantatlva in 1964. She eerved six terma in the Hou.e and in 1976 w.t a Democratic primary bid for the U.S. Senate to Spark Matsuriaga. Honolulu Mayor Eileen Andenon, right, and Patsy Mmk, chairwoman of the city-county council. · She .erved ln the State Department and u president of Americana for Democratic Action before I dedcling to jump into QOWlly polltita. la a handicap In politics. "The dlfficulttes are the same for bQth •xe1 when they run for elected office,"· lhe uya. "I haven't found it to be anything but a myth that there are dlffJculties unique to women. "I would have hoped there would be IDOl'e women ln Congresa. and boldin8 aovemonhii-,'' abe aaya. "It'1 been a long and cliflicul\ rc.d. but certainly on the local level we've made utound1ng procreil." "Many more women here in Hawaii are runn1na for Office apd are bein& ~ and are being COnlldered for advance:meral." lhe •ya. "But we .un ha~ very few women in c.onare-." Andenon Mys without bi~ that bein8 a woman waa a liabiliiy fOI' her. Now lhe aaya "1oc;al government i; where tile action la.,, She was elected to the Qty Council last November -with 79 percent of the vote, and in . January WM e1ec:ted to cha1r the coundl. · Mink ditrn' !I notion that • Woman Andenon 8ll'eea that wcimen are makiQg ''I would have to fay that at one point beinc a Woman WU the bigest ot.tade to &ettine ahead in government," she uya. "At a point in my career when 1 wu clearly eltgible from an experience and appoint of view to attain a.a~ .,lminia-. trattve level joba 1 found it very difficuh to pt that." tnrced8 in local ticl. WllO PARTIES AT LE CHARO(lNNAY l()UNGE? Now~ John Mab mt Us. Mlyn+int ,. ~ who know where Happy Hour sparkles between 5 and 7 p.m. with snappy conversation, our chefs spedaf hors d'oeuvi;es and drinks priced 2for1. · Also drink, dance and romance to the dynamic music ol John Mallon and Us tonight between 9 and 1:~ a.m. ~your plans now and don't be late! After all, who parties at Le Owdonnay Lounge? .EXCJTlNG PEOPLE LiKE ~U. . 18800 MAQ\RlliUR BOULEVARD; l.RVINE. CALIFORNIA 92715 714-752..ffm SIGN 1·N TO WI·N Register now for a free drawing to be held June 24th .~ · , '50°0 Gift Certificate For EASTBLUFF PHARMACY EspadriU~ ... Brings you a fresh look for Spring. Evan-Picone Th~ Blstfoo is available in navy or natural canvas with ro~ wedge. 7-10 ~10 SIZES N ,M ~ ........--.~""i~ SHOES..__ .... 99 Fashion Island, Newport tsea~ 759-9551 "The perfect gift for Dad." Makes any backyard chef a wlnn.,, 1200 natural gae ........ ' COMPARE BEFORE YOU BUY ~ ffi \ N-BC hits high mark in May. s~eeits placed by national 1pon- 1or1 on a 1ta- portedly complained about the network'• de- dlion to broldcut • blockbuater mlnileriel. "The 'nlom Blrdlt.. tn M.tfc;h rather than May. symptomatic of our llow ABC down 3. but lteady Jm~t In~ Nie.lien rattnp. In prime Urq,, 'llid NBC CBS finilhed ti.nt at ~ Cun Block. 16.1, up 2 percent over NBc hu been th1rd in the network•• 14.8 re- Prtme time l1nce 1977. corded 1Mt May, with but bu drawn cber tn · NBC'• 14.9 up.., penient the ccmpedtSon in recent from 13.9 a y-.r qo, and AJ!C• lf.7 down 8 per- cent from 16.2 1ut yar. H!:W YORK (AP) -t1oo-by-1tatton. rathel' NBC mded up In .ccJIXt than netwol'k. bmi8. The pi.a. in the cruda1 May networb, to help af- ratlnp 1weeps, 'the fillatea, attempt to hJcbelt flnilh for the ICbeclule 1pedala and network ln flw yean. other bq-audienoe pro- aecordlna to tlau.re9 aran-in the sweeps from &titron anc1 the period. A.C. Niel8en Co. . Doy" Dane Bernbach, The May aweepe are the adveJ"tlstnc aoncy. pardcuJ.arly tmpor1ant to M1:imated recently that , local atatkma, becau. \ ~ will put $4.7 they are the ...._ for bWJen Into 1pot advertf&.. natkmal spot advertising lnc In .1983. The qency ratee during the sum-laid that la 30 percent of mer. Both Arbltron and a national advertlalng Niellell conduct ~ budaet that wU,1 total national sweeps ln Feb-$16.7 billion. ruary and Nowmbel', While NBC 1tepped and' they are the only up, ABC fell to third. In ratinga that. J'DOSt sta-dte May sweepe for the tions receive duriog the fint time amoe 1976. year. · ABC affiliates, meeting Si>ot ads are thoee earlier this month, re- The JJllnileriea at- tracted a hup audleQce. but dld Dot affect \be outcome of the 1982-83 prime-time competition, which wu won by CBS. NBC, me,nttme, acored heavily Clift the 1Mt night of the Arbi- tro.n period, April 27 -May 24, wt~ a renm from the network's top-rated aeries, ''The A Team," plUI a Clint East- wood film, ''The En- forcer.'' The Ntelaen sw~ps are conducted April 28-May 26. "We think um is See ~ .·· Relulta from both ...... 'Yicel ~wed the au· dlence for network pro- grammt.na .. a whole increued 11Jchtly from May 1982. In the Arbitron rat.: tnaa, CBS wu f1m at 15.1, followed by NBC at 16 and ABC ai 14.9. A year ago, ABC wori the Arbitron race.. with. 15.3 ratmc to 14.7 for CBS and 14 for NBC.· NBCt1 i.ncreue tn the )'NI'. WU 7 percent, while CBS wu up 3 percent and Rare film footage found DAN AYKROYD.EDDIE MURPHY In a Special Sneak Pmiew of this summer's funniest new comedy. · LOS AN~EJ....ES (AP)- . Joan Crawford is at the door of her daughter Christina's bedroom as the child uya, "Good ' night, Mommie dearest..., Crawford ten. her, "Happy ctreemJ." Then abe faces the camera and aaya: ''Sometimes I won- der lf we truly ap- preciate ... that greatest of all gtf1a ... the knowl- edge that your child ta happy and healthy." The rare. film clip from a public service announcement ta in- cluded in the movie, "Holly\vood Outtakes&~ Rare Footage." "'That undoubtedly ta the rarest bit of footage in the movie,'' uya Bruce Gold8tein. who assembled the movie with Doug &.ini. "ft!a. an old charity abort that we came llCf09 in a theater. It Wllll a cwioD- ty then, but when Christin.a 'a book. •Mam- mie Dearest,• came out. well, it took on a dif- ferent d.i.mensfal." The movie allo in- cludes outtakes from W.C. Fields, Laurence Ollvier, Martlyn Monroe, Humphrey· Bogart and Mickey Rooney. In one, James Dean takes a break on the .et of "Giant" t.o make a ~itch for automobile Safety. It waa his 1ut film. He was killed in an automobile accident in 19~6. . Tonight a:oo ~ Some 'iery fun rt}' business •. ~l PCTl.ffS ~HTS~ AAIU4 FUSS0 mD.JelOO· A LAtOS/FO..SEY Fl.M llo\N AYl(R)V() Elm Wf'HV TIW».G PVaS" RALPH IE.LAMY·~ AA£O£ !9tO.M ELLOll AKJ JNlfE. LEE rums t.tJSC BY IDER ~ EXEQITM Pim.ml <mG Rl.5EV ,.R WlffTEH BY l MlTHY HAlftS & 1-ERSOEl MNRX> ~ lf1 A/lb FUiSO CHCTED lf1 .nfl l.JV{E2 ~~ ~ R~·~ ...... Clllc*E:Rna'n.Nllr•s... . '- COITA •IA IU• MIUIOlt YIEJO DRMll WllT .. aTUl Edwlrds Soutll Coast Edw1rds Woodbndge Edwlrds Vie!O Twin CiMdonle EdwlnlsClnlma West Ptw s.-u111 Cinema ss1 oess 930 et9o -&34-2553 991 .3935 ,__,.,aun Edwanl$Fountail1Valley 939·1500 NOP ACCUT£0FOfUH18EHGAODIEHT STEVE MARTIN IS A WORLD FAMOUS SURGEON. · . HE INVENTED SCREW TOP, ZJP LOCK BRAIN SURGERY. ·TRUST HIM. * 11» rattnp lndlcate the perceni.,e ol. homl9 tn the country with tele- vWoa tuned to. *l*'fk: network in an •vence minute in ~ time. ..n'AR.WARS"- REfURN QF 1HE JEDI * 70 MM 9 Track Dolbj Stereo • 35 MM Dolby Stereo . • • 2 8creene * 2 Screen• * Pecltlce La .,_. w.alt ... n te4 MOO - *BARGAIN MATIN•••* Monday titru lelantay Atl Pt'rlOfMenc:K•bet.4. 5:00 PM ( ,,... f .......... ......,., "f'l.AaHD&Mer-_____ ,_,... ~-..cll•" -----:J"' LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAl• ... ~AIOel Mto 211/~ 111 ... AC9~~ • ,. PCIMlll ll9 llOll9" -•• ------ rACWIC Jl4Ul9U DAIYf·lll IWAI •un unstClt ----1111 llf Al' AIWl(I ~. KA.oA ILYD, Dlllft·• I OIWIGf H IVl·lll t•1'11NU-f6-f __ ,_,,.,...,..."...,. T~rt.=-(N) ........... .... ..... 0 E T '' .: •• (1111~ r...J.c.ue cm · WJ .. U:ll. •Jll ut UHARLEQUIN" .,., ~ .... .. ..u.. .......... . "aVIL DeAI>" Ut> ......... ... .................. edword" WESTBROOK CINEMA ~;·.·:~. ·:::~~.' ""." " 530-440' LUXURY THEATRES ,or 1at ....... tlHt .. l11uONlYS2.2JiUMtultMnrriselltt4. S llHfeN4•ti.tl6l~25ssf~~,) g;:~ * ( FOR FOOi EXCrTEmEml V1S1tOur... ) 1:( : ~ ~ 70MM ILJl!Jif!JU'll.-!.,£.. ''"' "l'i4Mh•• •Jil ~""i-a ~ l2•H Jioo S:JO l ctO 10:JO J:\'cl":\'l\ ,_~lo -~ l!J I t dO 1 :10 10:10 t 100 l ido & 10it0 '''4h''l•nf!F416l6w11101~.w) ~CIHH1Sound°"9<\ Tobir<OtllodioOr .. itlQ!lonery~ Richan! Gere I~ !"«"! BREATHLESSm '1'~"1'> Al10 l"lrst eiooct (RI 1EteaP9 f'rom N-Vorll (R) A lrPl•n•11 Tiie lequ .. (f"'ll -·· I • 84 Orange Coeat DAILY PILOT /Thursday, JuM 2, 1983 Weddings •)• Enon-Long ·• After hone)'mOOl'linar In New York and Canada. Robert Crail Paort and hJa bride, the former Hllhberly Ann Long, will reside, In Huntinp>n Blillch. They were married May 14 ln the Communl- t1JChurch ConiJ'egational, Corona del Mar. ,. Tbe bride ia ~ daughter of Mr. and Mn. Robert L. Long of Fountain Valley. A ll'*luate of Fountain Valley High School and Oranse . Coast Clbese. lhe ia employed at Conroys Flori.It, Calta M-.. -' Her husband attended the University of 1 ~ and is a technical rnanaier for the ., MM>ona1d Corp. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. ~rt F..on of Rochester, N. Y. I . w .I . bi 'I :t Bentley-Price i'C '· After a European honeymoon, Theodore Cran-din Bentley and his bride, the former Katherine Dine Price of IM.ne, will live In El Toro. They ~fjebanged wedding vows May 28 in the First United f\\Ythodist Church, Costa Mesa. Y The bride is the daughter of Janet W. Price of I.r'vine and Dr. LeRoy Price of Orange. She attended Ol'ange C.oast College, Costa Mesa, and works at the Umd Title C.o., Prange. 0 Her husband earned a degree in business adhunistration at Cal State Fullerton and Is a sales ~er for Bentech Engineering. His parents are Mt'. and Mrs. D. J . Bentley of Newport Beach. ~ Kimberly Essoq • Ann Dicostanzo Dicostanzo-McMillan· Ann Janell McMillan of Irvine and David John Dlc:ostuuo of Tustin Were, married May 28 in St. Cecilia Church, Stamford, C.onn. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Stuart McMillan of Stamford and Mr. and Mrs. John Dlcostanzo of Irvine. · The bride is a grit.eluate of Green Mountain O:>llege; Poultney, Vt. lier hua~d. a graduate of · Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, Is self employed. After a wedding trip to Lake Tahoe and along Ule West Coast, the newlyweds will live in Tustin. 21d rra1s111tter FREEi WITH PUlfCHASI •I• ·H.P. Garage ooorO•ener A rugged 1/3 H.P motM With pmntum screw-ilrtvt m«Nntsm 4YJ minute "autONtic light fOr sate entrn 30CI mt f10m yaur ~ AllttlfMk gf!ty rMf"Sf. Radio controts With 960.alde apttons # 333 S. . Wrjter praised by Hemingw8 .. ·-,tom, ... •1 ~ · • "I W8' 10 rtunned beaaUM ")tut if people like it; iJl'. fleminp~knew ber, ~t lfem.lnaway pWoried every other better!' only u a t, and 1-ter ex· wtlter m. StendabJ to J.,,_ "W..i wt th the Ntcbt,"' ~ f9e J>NeMd t In• Jetter to Jone.," Mid (lutekumt. who hid -~ w• Written tn Loi ~ h.1a editor, Maxwell Peri1nl, that· 'not heerd of ihe Markhaln book out of .... bar.tam wben •• the had authored a book. before. In~. he Mpn a huaband tP.tJl, lla••l "Did you read Beryl wtcb, atded by tlw Marin Coun-Schumacher, hlicl ~aft tow,..- Markham'• book, 'We9t wtth the ~library~· computer, and f<JUawtna tbt ,.f'l'W .aa.dt"'-' Nlgt\t'?" Hemlnpay ~ ~ titer two weeb local.Id a copy Pw'l Harbor tO Jtfl. She bepn knew her fairly well lo Africa which he read in one litUna. ~..aboClltX..,. liQd i. and ne~ would ~ve llUlpeded "It wu a'1:f:tety tranatbc:lna/' l1fe to the ~ lbe ~ ·--that ahe could put pen to paper 0 ,_, _ _. In .._ hone In a NoVJ Sootia q , ~ except to write In her flyer'• log. uteiu.u•" a te..,p notoriety u the tint pilot fO y book. lnte~ from Calltom.l.a. "Osi eut to west alone ~ JL the next day I read it ipln. jult Atlantic bun Enaland ' "AA it la, ahe_ t{U written ao to make awe my enthusiasm and "l )lat •t UJWai..s well, and ~Y well. that love fer It wu not mtaplaoed. But everyooe wu filhUQs." abe I WU completely e of I found it even more compelllng. o.f the early wartime J*to4. 'I myself u a writer'. I f t t,hat I was · rhad ~ered a literary gem." just thotqiht I'd write it t..u. I limply a carpenter wl words ... Aft.er showing th book to had lived here. Writing came ~-~allgirofl canwhowri~-~d friend,,noveU.t Ev.; S. e.onneit · quite easily to me. but l don't .. "'".... us \.Vim& er h d d · rt think it would now But then, ounelvee as writ.en." Gu~~ ~~ m~ e~~ then, I had ao many ~~ to On a 1981 trout. f1'hing trip In ecuUves at North Point Presa that think about and write about." ldaho, Hemingway's eldest son, they. consider reprillting "West Beryl Markham had written John, asked a friend -and With· the Night." They dJd. magazine articles, but never a HemingWay admirer -Georse . book. and neVer-again. · P . Gutekunst whether he had Beryl Clutterbuck Markham, In 1942, when the book wu read his late father's letters. who. retained Markham from ~er publiahed ;in Britain and the Gutekunst 64 a Sausalito Calif. second husband and maintains United States, the New YQl"k refiaurant' o~er, h.ad.n'°t. But her Brit.lah natlo~ty. exp~ Herald Tribune called it "more that night he went through them, . mild bemuaement ·over her sud-than autobiography. It la a poet'• d.iacovered the reference to Beryl den redl.acovery •a write('. feeling foe her land, an -aclwn- Mark.ham and w~ jolted by ' "I thou t it couldn't pombly tw'er'a evaluation of h~ ~ Hemingway's rare kind words. • be u u all that," ahe said .. lngs and human destinlel. HOME CEN:JEA8 - DUAL BURNER Oelu•• Ga•Grlll OS.UXE Charcoal Grill ' SMOKER Charcoal · -llrlll PORTABLE raale '1'011 I l'I .. l'lrlll I ... STURDY ALL PURPOSE UTILITY fl4'' lllec~rlc ~ Ori II •tt•• The 51ng1e speea °"' to moose ror 119ht a~ wort 30CI ~ bulldlng or rtmooelln9 JobS. Double ~tea. needs no grouna1ng. 17004. 7 arawer 'l'ool cw~ 11 •0111,,,, Colll~ comllo PRIC~~~ ••••• 1?' ...... I~~ ca111n cn1t 1 nsor.'"' Designed ·for the ao:1t · YDUtWtt" to prO¥tOt a wtr • satlf stl)(9e Ufllt. .. Twin lndtOtnotntfy controlled sUlnleSS stltC llw1m. EJsl to mdl alfttrds. '""· I 590 SQUart lndl a>c*ln9 area. upper and ., draft controls. Adjumblr ~ fhP\. lstnl. 1 QUART 568 'squart lndl cobnlg am. Upper 011ft aintrol RtdWeoCI Side t*'5. 2·posttt0n COOldnV gr1d. 111>39. .. ,,,,,~.,. ,.,,,,d . •••• . , '. , . . · . ~ ..... Kent Mace (left) and helper Liz Monfort .begin their daily routines at Malachite Farm In Red .Wing, Colo. 5/8"' x 11~" x •. Pare1c1e •oord . ,,.,,,, ••. . SALE PRlc&s GOOD ntRU TUES., JUNE 7, 1985 •·xs· Siii'' Pottle I• ••.• ,.,,, . SANDED SHOP GINMAL PUltPOSE "' .. , ,,.,, "' ••' SIB'' ,.,,,., •• d .,, .. e~oc• C""ln &Ink ,...rlc eac: .. ~. ... fir •••. 'i, ....... - . roofs,..-. ... ~ ::.==. .......... .. Or•• Cout DAIL y PILOT /Thur.day, June 2, 1183 J . O' x 9·• "CORONADO" •e•·••"" 11'1 .............. , ••• 2 " x ... . ·udtJ,.,,d• %" ••d• . la b-9d Clft • reverence for the land, "• ~p ~ be puled on betwMD ~dona." joSJ, ~the Wm wtll ~ da tilelf. J'or oow. -- de ~ ~ Jll'Ofita ~l I i -Wood uq, and daDa-. Uiom. 1ndudinc ~ of entlelbfl • I talner' .John Denver. .i~ Evmti11tJly, •YI ?Uce, ..-, puenta will ~ to the fanaM becaUle "the lbWty for .-er· ..:.l •tiona to undemmd and live wttbR ~ each other la very important, ...., n one of the most difficult thlnp tu · ·j-t f thil day and .,. ... It la late afternoon now. A snow . I fiurry has dusted the valley, and the wind that ahakes the Ru.tan ollve1 and ·cottonwooda tum. chill Kent retuma from the woodahop. Inside the, ~1' where they were bomf Alana~ Amo9 lit by the wood-~'t stove watching "Ser•me S · · "We're not ucetics who ao in caves,'' saya GeyJe. '"nlia la ~J the perfect •tting to work ·~ yourself. I re.ally feel that wbei..J. people leave, they're ready to tackle the next thing with ~ • ideaa." GtO Mace agrees. ''This isn't ge~ away from it all, it la gettiJli o.k.e to it all." 11·11·• ......... •t·•···· 10·11·· ......... •ts•~•• 10' X 6'~ "PRINCETON" ln•e•·•""" -····· ' cnat tor • tfl05e dlll"5 ;au .,.., tD store ., protKt fnJm CNldrtn and "'2Ctler. 1~1009-PI. 10·11·· ............ •t , ••• ·1 l I . ) I .. ( ,( - .. ~ COllt DAtlY PfLOT!Thurlday, Juf'9 21 1883 _ ( 4 THE FAMILl' CIR.CtS by Bil Keane by Brad Anderson \ - AHO'M! ~ ~I ~ ~tJOSAlJ BIG GEORGE v·~s TH~ '91:~\'" ir ('"';> r Non•·••W wlal1t11bl•. Sod .. "°"" ..... . tiQU O IQJU ., .. WEIT . !Ml' •IUU •AQ8 <:?t'IU ~Itta o a ~ ·~ 1•u •lH'U ,,.. I SOUTI •UI """ OAHI •AQI The b6ddiag: ~ ., .. ~Ei;t · INT r .. INT Pul , ... )ui Opetlinc lead: Fout of • . In the pa.7 of the band. there ii eeldom such a thlnr SHOE ' ·-:. . ~· ~ .. •• How cltclaNr IH Uti q-.ofchlbtud..,&W tn ., ........ ... boerd. ... ,.. w .. ,........" ... ~·-' moed, dedanr ..... ... to&M..-Of ....... .. ~toW.lluil~tM . aa of Men.I &. tab ... Ill& dlaMeef: ff ... ,.,. ..... . Mart. dedarw ..... t.u ta.. ~ of lrieut.I ~ tlll .. mU..tworedladietoatM table wouJd teore tile lut two~. by Jeff MacNelly I .. . \ . * * * "BIWlng The Sound Barrllf" • .(1952) Relpfl ~cbon. Ann Todd. 00 IWM. HAll & JOHN OATES IN ~ ** "LOOktr" (1981) Albert Finney, Jemes Coburn. lZ)MOVIE • * • "I M.-rild A W1tct1" (1942) Fl'ldric Mwcll. Veronlcl Like. -t:30- •AUOE ·~~HEALTH ll8'JEI (fJ IWINEY MllLER Cll LOOl.ALNE I OOMERPVLE MOVIE . * • "Helrtbeeps" ( 1981) Andy l<allmln, 8'rnldel1e Peters DQIJFNl/E DMOVIE -7:00- **~ "Doomsday Flight (1966) Jd lord, VIII Johnson D l!I CONOO OUOVE ** "8""'t Song" (IMIJ RoC>er1 DI NWo. Jlnnlter W1mn iftMAGAZM * * * "Tiit Chapman Rfport" t;._~2) Elrtm Zimbllltt Jr . Jane Fon- m SNEAK~ '1il IHSIOE OMHO! COUNTY mMOV1E U "RetlKn Of Jeck Slide" (1955) Jolln Eric:IOl'I. Angle Winson (C)MOVIE **\t "Calv'• Slledow" (11178) Welter Matthlu. Altllll Smltll (.H)MOYIE * U "Deathtrap" (1942) MlchMI Caine. Christopher All"8 IS OMOYIE *ti.; "Some Kind Of H«o" (1942) RICllard Pryor, Margot Kidder .. 9:30_ 8 CIJ MAGNUM, P.1. D 01l TitE NEW 000 COUPLE (!) CHAAUE'8 AHG£L8 a> UE DETECTOR fD IN8U STORY '1'i> SNEAK PREVIEWS -l:00- 0 QIJ ~ABAEAK D «I TOO CLOSE FOR COWORT G> M'A'S'H fll)MY8TERYI '1'i) MASTEAPtECE THEATRE ©)MOVIE **Yi "I Could Never Have Sex With Any Man Who Has So little Regard For My Husband" ( 1973) Carmine Candi. Andrew Our.can. fZ)MOVE * •; "DMlll WISll II" (1982) Charles Bronson, Jill !(eland -t'.30- t)MOVIE **\-\"Three's A Crowd" ( 1969) Lar· a:r~--a a rTTAKESTWO C!l MOVIE • • * "Minnie And Mosl<l>witz" (1972)' atn. Rowlands, Seymour Cassel. G> Cl) M'A'8'H m TlE VIAGIHIAH -10:00- 0 !B HU STl&T BLUES DOG>tl>NEWS D 9 "20HO &;) TO nE MANOR 90AH mwvsmm Cl) P.M. MAGAZJHE rC)UOVIE * * 'h "Uttte Miss Marlter" ( 1980) Walter Matthau. Julle Andrews lt1)MOVIE t t "Patadise" ( 1982) W1Hle Aames. Phoebe Cates I SJ WHATS UP AMEAICAJ OUOVIE * * * "Eye Of The Needle" ( 198 1) Oonlld Suther11nd. Kate Nelligan -10'.30- • IHDEPEHOENT HETWOAK NEWS . fD TOM MANOR 90AH (]) UE DETECTOR I 01LOYINOFNEHOS00 PEJffCT COUPLES -10:35- \ Z l CHAAl.ES CHAMPLIN~ THE ALM SCENE lZ)MOYll -1:40- ... "The Diep" •1•77J Robert (C)MOYll Shi'#, Jacqueline ISllMI. t * * * "Outc.ua Of The ltllndl" -11:30-( 1952) RoC>er1 Money, Ralph Rldl- arcbon. -11:40- (H)HOOl(EA -12:00- D EHT!RTAINMENT T~IOHT OMOVIE • 1.; "Trained To Kill" (1975) S1ep!MM Sandor, Rodtne Tarkklglon. C!l N>EPEHDENT HETWOAK NEWS Cl) LCM. AMEAICAH 8TYt.E ct)WOVIE * * "Cllandlef'' (1971) Warren Oates. Laite Caron {S)UOVIE * * * "E)'t Of The Needle" (1981) Don.id Suthenlnd, Kate Nelligan OMOVIE *'"' "The Seduction" ( 1982) Morgen Fairchild, Mlclllet Sarraz.ln. -1t15- ( 0 I PlAYBOY ~THE AIR -t2:30-o at LA TE NQHT Wl'Tlf DAVI> l.ETI'EMIAN D COUPt.Ea D OJl OHE~OHE Cl) TOM OOTT\.!: UP CLOSE Cl) LCM. AMEAICAH 8N.E -12:40-e Cl) MCCtOUO 11') ®MOVIE • • "Siient Rage" (1982) Ctluck Norris. Ron Sil vet. -1:00- D MOVIE * *'"1 "Jtl OvttThe Atlantic" (1959) Gvy Ml<llaorl, Virginia Mayo DUOYIE * * '"1 "The Southern Star·: (1969) George Segal. Uf1Ull Andr ... . l!J MOYIE * * ~ "Thunder Ill The EIS!'' ( 1953) Alan Ydd. Deborah Ken -2:00- • W Cll NlWS NIGIMTWATCH I&~~ H 'h "Some Kln4 OI Htro" (1e82) RicNrd Pryor, MMgot Klddtr. -2:20-<HJ MOVIE * * * "0..S Merl Oqn't Wttt Plaid" (1~2) SIM Mllrtln. Aec:hel Ward • -2:30-1 L~ * H "Ship Of Fool1" ( t9e5) Vivien Leigh. Simone Signortl. -S:OO- (!) MOAHIHO ITAETCtl CZ)MOVE * * * "Vie W111ttr Of Out DrMml" (1881) Judy OM. Brtwi 8'awn. -3:15- (Q) THE SOUi«> Of MUAOE1' ($)MOVIE • • * 'h "Some Klnd Of Hero" (1982) Richard Pryor, Margot l<lddet. -s:ao- (!) FAmi 20 -3:40-(C)UOVIE * *'"1 "Culy'1 Shldow" (1978) wan .. Matthai, A1u11 Sml1h -3.-90- (fJ) HBO t.IAGAZINE -4:00-C!l TOfl O' THE MOANM 0MOYE * * * * "Lenny'' (1974) Dustin Hoff. m111, Velene Ptrrlne. -4:20- ®MOVIE * * * "Oeatlltrap" ( 1e82) Mictllel Caine. Clltbt~ All"8. -4:30-C!l SW.WINKLE (%)MOVIE * * * "S 0 8." (1e81) Wi11i1tn Hol- den. Julll Andl9wl -4:60-D RATPATlQ. 8" complete Hating In TV Log ~HAKNEL LISTINGS 8 ICNXT tCBSI E) ICN6C (N 0CI g IC TLA (Ind I 8 1(A8C tABCt 0 l(FMB tCR!>t 0 l( ... J TV (Ind I Cr:> KC!>T CA BCI CD IC TT V Clnd I IJ) KCOP TV (Ind I &:> KCET IPB!>I Ci> l(QCE IPB!>I C561 1(00C (Incl I 0 On·TV l l TV " HBO c IC1Mf'IVal t tWORI NV ,N V '11 IWTBSI l IE!>PN I S (Showttmt'I a SJ>o111v111 C!t (Cable NCW\ Nf'lwork ) DIREa DEPOSIT~ YOU'VE GOT IT COMING • JUSTASMUCH ASATRIP TO SEETHE GRANDCHILDREN. Remember the last time you saw them? And how they reminded you of a little boy- or girl-you once raised yourself? Grand- children have a special way of moklng you feel QOOd Inside, ond Direct Deposit con help make your next visit even more of o ~osure. With Direct Deposit, your Soclal securtfY.- or Other Government payments-go straight to your account, so you can enjoy every moment without the worry of a check sltflng unprotected back home. Jost ask fOr Olreet Deposit wherever You hove a checking or savtngs account. lt'S free, and lt1s something you deserve Just as much as a chance to spoil Yo Ur grondchlldren. I 1 . , . :r-,,~----,....., .... ..::,..,....Cwd , .. Orang• Cout DAILY PILOT /Thurld•y, June 2, 1883 -"; Jam,on Parker, left, and Gerald McRaney star as brothers in CBS' "Simon & Simon." 'Simon & Simon' alive, well By FRED ROTHENBERG ~T....,..._ ...... NEW YORK -"Simol\, & Simon ,'' left for. dead a year ago, is being hailed now by C8S programming boss Harvey Sh~pherd as "tfte success story of the past seuon." Last year, "Simon & Simon" was so certain of cancellation that ita two stars, Jameson Parker and Gerald McRaney. lined up jobe in other 1982-83 TV projects. Executive producer Philip DeGuere was equally pemirnis1ic. "I had Wllitten the show off," he said. "By March of '82, it was a memory." Now, DeGuere has a hit. VSimon & Simon" waa the aeventh highest-rated ileries in the 1982-83 aeaaon. And the network has put another DeGuere p'roject on lta fall schedule -"Whiz Kids." The resurrection of "Simon & Simon" offers a faacinating glimpee into the haphazard world of network Tv: Despite all the reaearch and testing. it's often random factors that can make a busted sb<J:N go boom. . In thia caae, the overnight Chang'\_ in fortunes can be attributed to savvy proiJJ:amming maneuvers, Lady I,.uck and that popUDlr ladies' man. Tom Selleck. "Simon & Simon" premiered in the fall of '81 to deddedly mixed reviews and lukewann pub~ act:ieptance. One of eeveral new de~ve shows, ita distinctiveness was the chemistry· between the .straitlaced A .J. (Parker) and his free-wheeling brother, JUck (McRaney). In IOl'De cities, in fact, in~t was nil. DeGuere says 16 CBS affiliates didn't C8.JTY the eeries. One week. the San FrancilCO station pre-empted the show for a apec:ial on venereal dt..eue in Boston. But the biggest lndigni?.'.• wu when the San Diego station almost yanked 'Simon & S imon" off the air. The 11eries ia .et in San .Diego. · Broadc::aat at 8 o'clock on Tue9day, ''Simon & Simon" limped throujth that fi.nrt aeuon, l()fing to ABC's "Happy Days,"-"Lav~rne & Shirley" combination and NBC'.s "Father Murp hy." . . In April 1982, CBS tamed. the sinking "Simon & Simon" a life preserver by moving it to Thundays following "MagnWn. Pl." for a~ week trial. "They were compatible in style." says Shepherd, CBS' vice president for programming. "What did we have to loee?" Selleck's "Magnum" was a major force, but !ta follow -ups were not maintaining the audience. "Knots Landing," "Nune" and ''Cagney & IAcey" hadn't worked at 9. "Thoee other p~ were on the serious aide," says DeGuere. "What CBS hadn't tried was somethin$l ~la, light adventure.'' By the third week, "Simon & Simon" bad grabbed a lofty 30 percent of the viewing audience. "I guess the audience didh't want a doee pf reality after Selleck," says DeGuere. CBS' programmen. prepanng to announce the 1982-83 fall achedule without "Simon & Simon," were so Impressed that they gave the ahow a 13-wee k commitme nt and the r.e rmanent sweetheart position behind "M.agnwn.' . "They l.ndicated to me that the renewal WM conditional on certain changes." IleGuere •~t'• their air, 10 ~ studio and I had a hat-in-hand • attitude. We accepted their suggestions and even a lesser licensing fee. CBS wanted harder-bitting ~rie. with pater jeopardy. 'Ibey wanted tqaer- locationa, a blger cut and a ricbef look." . DeGuere uys "Simon & 81.moo" ai.o benefited from NBC'• Thunday experiment of .. the best night of televbion on televiaion." in which the f ft network ltr\1n8 tosether four eophisticated .maw. "Fune," ''Cheec'S,11 "Taxi" and "Hill $.tn:et Blues." "The mua TV audience generally does not want to be told what not to watch by critics, or the n e tworks themselves when the y promote something a.a better than something elae," uya DeGuere. "The audience wants to flnd lta own ' favorites." ' ) }' ! ( Big Savings on Rattan Foldin Chairs! I Chandle(s buyers 1ust made a huge special purchase of these handsome rattan folding chairs and tables. because they'd never seen anything like them! 1 ; >·· ' • r l I . , , i ... 88 Orange Coae1 DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, Jun. 2, 1983 tac Telephone, 1'f Cl b8ttle ov.er IOng distance •I r LOS ANGELES (AP) -The MCI Comunica- dof'S Corp. 11 battlmi California'• largest local tel~phone company, PacWc Telephone & Telejraph Coj, over whether MCI can continue provtdJ.na intrastate tong-diatance aervioe. ! On May 12, Pacific Telephone aought a • ~-and-desiat order from the California Public ~· $ties Commiaaion to prohibit MCI customers~ ·= MCI's aervtces on tona-di.atance calls within • omla. ~ , · MCI Chief Executive William McGowan said W~; that he regards Pacific Telephone e~~p MCI's lntraat.ate service u a violation of :the U.S. Justice Department decree that will br-Uk up the Bell System ne>Ct year. i ~'Pacific 'telephone is trying to ... undo what the coq,ta have done," McGowan said. "What they are ~to do is to tell the people of California that th'y are going to be the only ones shackled with a tn<J'l(>poly while the rest of the country i.s going to be free to compete." ' Washington-based MCI has already won aulhoriz.ation from five states to provide intrastate lot'lg-distance service. The company did not apply for suc;h authorization in California until it learned that Patific Telephone was lobbying the PUC to stop MCI's service, McGowan said. · The break ap of the Bell System has made MCI's intrastate servic;e an issue. . Next year, Pacific Telephone will become an independent company that will be allowed only to of~r "short-distance" long-distance calls, meaning lorjg-distanoe service within small geographic areWi su~h as between Long Beach and Los Angeles. American Telephone & Telegraph Co. will get thi longer-distance intra.state toll calls. I • lfosta Mesa typesetter 1'1ens new facility ; Type-A-Graphix, a full·service typesetting and p~uction service has opened an office near John ~yne Airport. The business ls located in Suite 130 atH30 McCormick Ave., Ccsta Mesa. The firm is equipped to handle a variety of ting needs il)cluding newspapers, newsletters, hures, booklets, manuals and legal documents,' ell as smaller jobs such as invitations, fonns and rs. . J Brian Hyde, ACT director, and Sylla- bus President Jim Hodgson work with 'student director' Christine Jutte. CoIDputer trainer· picks top stud~nt High School senior Chri.attne Jutte of Garden Grove will be settllng lnto a junior executive poeition this sununer with an Irvine-baaed computer traini\8 firJn. ' She won a .. \ "student director" contest at Accelerated Computer Training, 18201 W. McDunnott, and therefore becomes a member of the Board of Di.recton of Syllabus, the group that operates ACT. Syllabus President Jim Hodpon said Jutte will work in marketing. mana.(ement and course de- velopment' aecton -and she'll also get to continue taking the personal computer courses the company offers. ~ Other winners of the contest include second place finishers Susan Cohen of Huntington Beach dlM.l Marc Itzkowiu f>f Irvine. Joeeph Tarsha of Irvine placed in a tie for third. TO ST ART A FORECLOSURE 24 hr. Servlce RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL WES PAC RECONVEYANCE ! .... A CMllO<fllOI CorporallCWI (714) 955-0696 Presenting the S695 typeWfiter that comes wtth these letters of recommendation. .MIEClllTY•llll------- ~ . . M~cro General promotes four Irvine-hued Micro Geoeral Corp., whlch dea1,n. and manufacture1 a corophtt.e. line of rnkrocompu• postal and COWl\lna acale9 mar· keted Uuouah ~ equlpment. dealen, bU annol.U)Ced lour It.aft prompttona. William C. Cottle baa been named vice president. of finance and chJef f1nandal officer. He wu prevtoualy with Getty Syn*itk Fael1, Occidental Pet- rolellm and Erase ' WkltJMy. Goelda L. Sbott1 bu been named ~r of admirult.ration and corporate 18Cl'etarY· She wu formerly with Wettera Dl&Jtal Corp~ of lrvUie. Peter£. Kenny wu named national aal~ manager. He waa a vice preeldent and founder of Newport Beach-baaed Hewttt·buy Corp. Carl N. Bulla has taken the post .of d1rector of product tnarketina. He was fonnerly ~dent of Tiie Software Group and Micro UtOutlon•• be. • • • Patil .A. Joaet hat been named aeruor vice president and caahier of Garden Grove Commlllli- ty Bank. He waa formerly president. and chief executive officer of the Southland National Bank in Arcadia. • • • Steven Walker has joined Western Growers Asaodat1on of Irvine as vice president and sales manager for the fresh fruit and vegetable trade association and ita sube.idiary companies. He was tonnerly director ef insurance for tJle 801pltaJ touncll of Soueben Callfonala. • • • Two new sales asaociates have joined Marcu1 &r Mllllcbap, Newport Beach investment real estate brokers. They are Ramon J. Polin, of Seal Beach, formerly with the Beverly Hills office of the firm, an<J Larry Eugene Dodd of San Dimas. • • • Barbara Stewart, chief executive officer of B.J. Stewart Adverti11D1 & Pablic Relat10~1 in Newport Beach, will be the featured guest at the June 9 "Buy a Drink and Meet..." evening sponaored by the Orao1e Coanty Ad\tert~IDg Federation. The meetins are held every Thurs· OVER THE CDUNTER . NASO USTINGS MUTUAL FUND BURLIN day in the Blue Parrot Room at the Weattn Soaeb Coast Plaia Hotel at 5:30 p.m. ••• Nationwide Boller, Inc., the -largest boiler rental, sales and aervice firm on the West Coast. has announced the fonnation of a subsidiary corporation, Nationwide Boller, Inc., LA. The new subsidiary is located at 4000 MacArthur Blvd. in Newport Beach. Denoia R. Ac&oa has been named president of the new subsidiary. VM\°"' ,.. I••• • ~~f;:S4 m·: ~\, UPS AND DOWNS ~~ ;, .. ~ NEW YOlllK CAPI -TIW fol_.,. llll WarnEI 11 21~• -llW 0....r llW ·Coun!M W"1Enr 1~ u ltock• -werr•nl• U..I Niw -up woaeo ~ sn. llW mo.c - -ll• """' e>a-on Wt;old SI Shi 119~ ol ,,..,_ lo< Wed ' w,,._, " '''' Ho -wltlft l r.ilnv -~ • IOOO :r~ h~ ~ ~ ~tinc,:r:tEHTAGE O<AHGU WolvAtu 14 w. A R E T H E womoc :io·~ :IO"' di,.._ --IN P"VIOUS C'°""V • Woodl.ol t!o 50 Old ~let -100,;l1•'1 lllG pru. WrleltllW I~ 10.. H L 7 Ch ct Zlo~I ~. 31'. HIH,r~a ·,~ • ~: ut> iu 11-a --lteol• } NIH I wtA 7\< • f\ Up ._, ! =r.:. ,t~ : h. ~ ~~ S E ..... RK 2'• • .... ut> 3A • NtHIU. •'• • '• Up 21.t 1 e.-n 3... "' ue1 i...o I X-I~ • J.. ut> l•A t MiM9dl 1 4• ut> ~ :t ~'= ·~:: : :"' ~ :::~ a ~~r ~:: : ·.. ~= :~~ 14 1,.itlPr I\ ... t Up 1J t IS ~ I~ • I UC> IJ 9 It Tp\on • IJ • I , Up 11-S 11 Tocom 10.. • I t Up 1J.2 ,. ._ wt 1 • '" ut> 1UI 19 c..tllTV 1 -"' Ue> '2.0 10 11\Mlnd J' > ... Up IJ 0 ti ........ 11'1. -I. ut> 11.t E ~~K •5· i., ~ :M i. ()pl1<.om 10•. • 1 UC> IO.I U F-erFlv 'i • '• Uo t06 00\lrNS ........ L•ll C-OI• n JHOta wt -· }'' OeHtoro 1•, vovaoer u 1. Mank,,,, .... Alanc:o 1 Cl.sl•r ... YU BAA S .. Pulllrn J ll-1• T~V Q 1 .. GftlelEn w t Jt CatlrQ> J 1101• J n.rm w1 11• Vecul>fy •I· "-<SI• 1 l-lt a .... E•<n , .. r.:t:~'~ 3: Otml• 31., HH()Ol 1 v.... , .. Btaallm 12 ooc ,.., JHlpla 7•, '~t °"~', .. I 011 IS • .. OU ISO , .. ()ft I• l "' Otl 1•.0 ~1• Olf 1lS \. ()fl Ill '• OU ll 0 ._I. ()fl 129 .. Oft 12 s 1Joll120 '• Off ll 1 1• Ofi lt • I Oii 108 1 1 ()fl IOS •,,. Off lO l .. Oft 10.0 • Off 10.0 "'• °'' '·' .. Oii 9.1 '" °" •.1 '• Oft 9S ... °" ,. 11 I Off •.• ) " ,. I ..•.. .. -..__.. ------ • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT !Thuraday. June 2. 1983 Retail chains report big incr~ase in sales By tbe A11oclated Pre11 The major retaU chains today reported big increases in May sales, and the chalnnan of Sean, Roebuck and Co. said consumers were reacting to an improved economy. Separately, the Labor Department reported that firsHlme filings for unemployment benefits edged slightly higher in the third week of May. Even IO, the number of filings has declined substantially from the start of 'the month. In Chicago, Sean said its sales in May were 6.2 percent higher ··than a year earlier, led by strong increases m sales of major appliances and home furnishings. Edward R. Telling, the Sears chairman, said the increww:d sales of such goods was a reflection of improved economic cond1lions. t Among the other big retailers, K mart reported a 10.3 percent sales gain, F.W. Woolwort~ Co. was up 4.2 percent and Allied Stores was up 16 Percent. · In its report on unemployment benefits, the Labor Department said first-time filings rose to 455,000 from 449,000 in the previous week. The latest week's total was nearly 30,000 less than in the first week of the month. -1 New plani s pending declines NEW YORK -U.S. manufacturers In industries other than oil earmarked 8 percent less money for spending on new plant and equipment in the year's first quarter. The Conference Board report Wednesday said capital appn>priatioru by manufa, except In the petroleum category, slumped 8 percent from the final three months of 1982. The business-supported research organlz.ation laid that capital appropriations in the petroleum indus&ry, which tend to be volatile and large, rose 17.3 percen~ in the first quarter over the levels of the final quarter of 1982 . .But pverall, it said the first-quart.er capital approprlations of the nation's 1,000 largest manufac- turers were a aeasonally adjuated $21 billion, a 0.4 percent decline from the end of last yNr. However, the organization aaJd-the backlog of , unspent 'appropriations fell for the sixth o0naecutive quarter to $69.7 billion, down about $700 million from •the last quarter of 1982. And it said the backlog waa 28 percent below the peak level of late 1981. The Conference Board sai<t t98S'B ~prop iadon - levels do not bode well for actual capital spending ln 1984. AMERICAN LEADERS HE..,. YOlllt ,.,.,. s.ln .• pm. irou -~ ~,_ Gii .,,. -,,_, «U.. A,.,..Uin !>lock EM....... •-. -----------------1 treoing NCIOnelly el ,_. lllen 11 WHAT NYSE DID =''' =~ ,t-:,.; NEW YOllK IAPl Jun I w...uoe. ol-,... -.. Pm ~~ ~= 1l~ : ; T0o.ty o.Js eo.w.... 1111 Z».-~ + o,. ~ 1mplim 11J.too '"'• .,.. • 'ill :~' m:= ~... . .... ·~ 1~ kl1'1:1Y ... lt.1,4CIO .... • .. I t WHAT AMEX DID NEW YORk (APJ J"" I Today * "' llO 10 ~ ) GOLD QUOTATl~NS SYMBOLS - ' .. '• •, , . .... -,. . . 11 11 I • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thul'9day, June 2, 1983 .. "'~t~ategies for elping child inance home Your beloved only child ~ being married in and u a wedding gift, you want to help the ~couple buy a home. How can you manage i ~ at the lowest tax cost to you, the parents, as ;9Wtll u to your child? There are five tax strategies ~hkh to choose: 1) Make a gift of aU ot part of the caah dqwn t. Your child and your child's spouse take • out the mortgage and buy the house. You can give up to $10,000 a year ($20,000 if your own spouse -joins in the gift) without paying any gift tax. The gift is on a per-recipient basis ao if you and your spouse make the gift to your child and your child's spouse, the toJa) exclusion jumps ~ :> .l.'.1..-to $40,000. That's a tidy, tax-free i ~ down payment, indeed. i :' , 2) Your child makes the down payment and ,· ~· th~ mortgage. But you give your child enough ~ · advance ao that your child can "buy do'Wn" the interest rate. , ourchild gets a standard mortgage at, say, 131y\ percent but the monthly payments for the first ~are baaed on 9'h percent. gradually increasing .-_ 13'h percent in the fifth year. Your deposit of ~ iDoney with. the lender is used to make up the ., difference between the 9 ~ percent your child is paying and the 13 ~ percent market rate, T A benefit of a buy-down, says Prentice-Hall, is that your child may be able to qualify for an ~otherwise unobtainable moctgage. Your deposit ;tllpplementa your child's monthly payments. ; ~~ 3) You make the dpwn payment, obtain the ~ and buy the home in your own name. ' you rent the home to your child with an 1 buy, say, within five years. i -. Your rental income offsets the expense of ; QWning the home and you get a tax shelter, too. The • 1'!ntal lncome Is taxable but like any landlord, you c.n deduct your out-of-pocket expenses for upkeep ~ ~and maintenance and you are entitlec;l to ~~~tion deductions based on the full purchase :pnce. Your writeoffs may not only shelter your :rehtaI income, but some ot your other income as :well. i · ; If you eventually sell the house to your child :b' more than you paid for It, most or all of your uw:nfit will be tax-sheltered capital gain. This gain is 1 fliXed at only 40 percent of the regular income rate. ; l ·4) Your child makes the down payment and 1 iakes out the mortgage. But your child borrows part • oe the down payment from you and gives you a !~note in return. The note matures in, say, !&re yean and no payment of principal i.s required ! bsfore then. : If you are charging Interest , consider :watponing interest payments until the note Ylijpt\ues -and spell out the poetponement in the .. ..ireement. That way, Prentice-Hall emphasizes, ~you won't owe tax on the interest until the note :matures in five years. • Of coune, your child can't deduct interest until .. h our child pays it in five years . .But by that time-, f yoor youngsters probably will be in a higher tax ) tir"acbt and the aeduction will be worth more to ,. them than now. ~ Ia there a taxable gift if no interest is charged ~(or the interest charged is less than the market ~rate)? The government may say "yes." (This issue is ~now before the Supreme Court.) But. in any case, ;fyqw gift tax exclusion ahould provide yo"' with ~ i.han enough shelter. fl..a.i;._}> You and your child enter into an "equity · '~ya..: ~;me~· of the cash needed for the c:Mwn payment and buy an interest in the house. ¥p.t take title along with your child as a co-owner; . e¥h of you pay• a proportionate ahare of the t 1fl\Drtgage cha~~s and maintenance-upkeep ~·Your d pays you rent for use of your lt of the home. ~ Thia ia a two-way winner. 1) By shifting ~tirtJn1ae .payments and expenses to you, your child afford a home otherwi8e beyond reach. The ~-..~a more than compensate for the rent your bu to pay. 2') You get the tax-ahelter:ed ~benefits of owning income real estate and if the rlles in value, you get a share of the profits, at low capital gain rates when the home is M, Ford. offer .8% financing n sonJe models ! DETROIT (AP) -General Motors c.orp. and !J'ird-M~tor Co. are offering new, 8.8 pereent ~ programs to buyers of certain of their • ~can and trucks. ! The programs. replaced 9.9 percent financing ! that expired this week. ! . OM'a new offer applies to ~he Chevrolet Nl~l!'Ye·tte, Cavalier and Citation; Pontiac )000, 2000, t Enix; Oldsmobile F1renza and Omega; Buick ~ • J hawk and Skylark; Cadillac Cimarron and t: ! _ let S-10 and GMC S-15 pickups, a GM : tesnent aaid. I t: Ford ia offering the 8.8 percent rate on its I ffi EXP, Lynx and LN7 can and Ranger t -up truck.a .. ~ · Both companies said their rates will rise to 9.9 t.I ~::;~ction -outlay i liinbed in April ID STUTS fBOBS., ID GOOD TBRU JVIE· 8 See those two weirdos .SHORTYAND CHEAP CHICKEN live, in person at these stores on Saturday, ) June 4th: LA MIRDA 9:30 TO 12 • DIAMOD BAR 2 TO 4:30 Look pretty good for the JDOD9Y. wltb c:aue Mat cmd back, and they'N"icuy to put togetlwr, too. (Eaaler than a Jlgeaw puale of the Horth Pole.) ' EYEBfiREEllS Tiii IUllPEB SEA fiREEI JUlllPEB OLD fiOLD JUMPER YOUR CHOICE 3•• 5GAL. Three of the world'• fOYOrttH for lcmchca:plng the bomeatead. (I bad phenomenal luck wt th my garden tble year-nothing came up.) . tBACOI TEBR-0-... 91 .. T .. E . 4•7 GAL . All-purpose ferttll&er ~ figbte lte way through bard eoll to t..dbuabee. tree• cmd all yow green etuff. HOLMES ULL Y GlllAfiE DOOR 15Plllllfi ••• #P121 w.· .. been waiting to eprtDg thl• one OD you. It'. no eweat to replace tbeee gup when they're all eprung out. KWIKSET SlllGLE CYLllDEB ~-f.:~0 DEADBOLT tt;~ ·-·59 ... #llO Keeny duty Pollehecl Brau flnlab lock with l" et Ml bolt and tapered c:yUnder gu.arda to realat prying (wteh I could). · TBOllPSOl'S WATER SEIL 744 GAL. T llb a ...t to wuw. Pl'otKta wood. mcuomy. brick cmd more from tbeclamaglae ett.cta otmo1mu.. DOUGLAS . nB · Standard cmd Mtter 8'8. 20°1' OFF REGULAR RETAIL REDWOOD ID random length• MS. 2D°k " SIZE 2X2 2X3 2X4 2X6 2X8 2x·10 2Xl2 4X4 4X6 4X8 4XIO 4Xl2 LEIGTRS 6' • 12' 8' • 12' 8' ·20' 8' ·20' •'·2'' 8'·20' 8'·20' 8'·20' 8' ·20' 8'.•20' 10' ·20' 12'. 20' REGULAR RETAIL 17' LIN. FT. 24•LIN. FT. 25•LIN. 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Replacea tlw old o~ ball Mtup cmd ecnea you water. too. WbierecSoe. the Umego? llere lt la, June~. cmd I waa lut ptt1llg uaed to awlmmlDg fo won. iitcl. STSIEll 1555 FA w.· .. got a good .. 1ec:t1oo for Amerlccm forelpcan. Drawl.Dg la NP"••atatl ... wbJ.cb IMClllaDO Nlatlcm to reality • CISTBOL IElft DUY I • ft. , ______ ..,.___ . . 111181 llL 7"1• QT. i . ~ I ,. 7 •• lllllJPHal THURSDAY. JVN! 2, 1983 . Glllllf llD ca ~ . (:orona del Mar doubles its pleasure , . . . . DlllJ .... --bpC....... ..... rona del Mar's Brien Sullivan returns a shot en route to three ictories in (our matches in Wednesday's CIF title contest with '1iralf"slc-. Sea Kings top Miraleste for 4-A t~tle By DENNIS BROSTERHOUS Of'IMOellJ ..... IWf When the Corona del Mar High tennis learn of Jeff Ewing and John }Yuher bad completed their afternoon's play with a 6-4 aecond-aet victory over Miraleste's Craig Johnson and sophomore Tim Fres1nius, it clinched the CIF 4-A championship for the Sea Kings Wednesday afternoon at the Balboa Bay Club. And CdM Coach Dave Heffern thought it was fitting that the deciding points were secured by that top doubles team. "I was happy to see them do it," he said after Corona del Mar had officially wrapped up lhe champlonship match by a 16'h-ll\11 margin. "They Were so con&istent for us all 11eaaon." Ewillg and Washer garnered all al~ possible points, beatina Miraleste'a No. 1 team of Rod Gabuya and Neil Winterowd, 7-5, 6-2, and Johnson and Fresini49, 6-1. 6-4. Corona del Mar had earlier &eaten Miraleste by a 22'h-5'h c<>unt in a regular-season match, and despite the cloeer 8COre Wedneeday, four of the Miraleate points were obtained bn defaulta when the oulcome was already determined. Nevertheless, Heffern thought his team was tested in the finals'. "It was much harder than we thought ft was · · going to be," he said. "They have 10me good young players and they switched their lineup around on us." Miraleste's lineup included three freshmen in singles and a sophomore and three juniors in doubles.· One of the surprises was that Johnson, Miraleste's top singles player waa ~t in doubles and the Marauders did manage three of six points from that ~am. But Ewing and Washer dealt them the decisive blow. "One of the reasons that we didn't win by aa large a margin aa the first time was becaWle our ~. 2 doubles learn (Frank Hinman and John Hostetler) lost their two aeta to Johnaon'• team." said Heffern. "Otherwise, it would have been about the same or worse." . The stars in sif\glea for CdM were Brien Sullivan and David Propp, who each won all three matches they played while defaulting the fourth. In the featured ·singles matching pitting the two school's No. 1 players, Sullivan outlasted Miraleste'a Pete Fitzpatrick, 6-3. , Sullivan led the entire way, with his key service break coming with the 9COre, 4-3. At deuce, Sullivan caught the comer on a return, then captured the game on a passing shot. He held serve to win the mat.ch, despite Fitzpatrick's staving off a peir of eet pointa. The deciding point was won when FiUpatrick returned a blistering Sullivan 11erve into the net. Sullivan also knocked off Miraleste'a No. 2, Bob Langley, 6-0. and No. 4, Dave Bier, 6-3. Propp, meanwhile, survived a tiebreaker against Fitzpatrick to win on the final match competed Wednaday, 7-6, taking the tiebreaker, 7-4. 'He beat his other foes. Langley and Rich Goldenaon by identical 6-0 counts: Scott ~rownaberger managed a pair of easy victories in singles, but was aurpriaed by Bier in his final match of the afternoon, 7-5. That matchup featUred eight aervice breaks. Corona's other slngles player, Lance McLean, captured one point by beating Goldemon, 6-3. . "We wete a little aurprbed about their lineup ~changes," said Heffem. "But·then again, we knew they had to try something new since they l011t to ua by such a J.aree margin in the first match." The Sea K.inga cloeed out their 8easorl with a 25-0 record, while M.iraleste had two kmes. aiuna' s ·strategy hack£ ire~ ...1al~basas nips Artists for CIF 3-4 tennis crown JOHN SEVANO lileO..,NoclWt CALABASAS -Laguna ach High tennis coach Art ahl thought he had it planned ectly. In an attempt to offset the lly potent doubles teams of :alabasas. Wahl figured he ould insert his ace, Rick Leach. e recently-crowned CIF incti- . ual singles champion and gen - rally considered the top prep ~. nally. into one of the Artists' ou les pairs. ahl rationalized that while h could get four pomts pl.ay- singles, he could get the ts six points, and neutralize urcer: ig hit in NY NEW YORK (AP) -Bobby .turcer has one big hit under his telt this season and hopes another 1 on the way. There was no doubt about the int hit, a leadoff home run in the ixth inning Wednesday night hat broke up a 9e0reless game ind etarted the New York Yan- :ees to their sixth consecutive ictory. 3-0 over the Angels. The other hit, Murcer says, de- iendS"'-'on the public. The :'7-year-old veteran has cut a ountry and western record enti- led "Skoal Dippin' Man" and na to appear on several radio &atiom today to plug the song, vhlch has a tune called ''Bad Vbiakey" on the flip side. 1o1 don't know If it will aell or ot," Murcer said. "It's the way 'OU sing. Either they like it or hey don't." U it's up to the New York fans, be IOhg will be No. 1 on the harts before too long. Murcer ..Uy is the rnciet r>pular Yankee 11.bougb be bun l played in the leld e1nce the 1980 eeuon and is 91<1 ult.ra~y u a pinch Jtt.er and ciesisnated hitter. ~ the Coyotes In the process, in sweeping his doubles matches Wahl also calculated that while Leach wouldn't be i;ililying singles, the players he d1a have. at ~orst. would be able to break even. Of course; what Wahl couldn't count on was Calabasas Coach J oe Trahan. who had a plan, too, and has scheme was to virtually con- cede his doubles matches and concentrate on beefing up his Slngles. Unfortunately for the Artists, Trahan's strategy proved better and, as a result. the Coyotes are the new CIF 3-A champions today after de throning the de- Bobby Murcer Wednesday night. he was m the starting lineup for only the third time ~ year and collected his 252nd career homer, his first since last July 28. It al8o was his.first RBI. Oacar Gamble added a two-run homer and Ron Guidry, 7-3, hurled a five-hitter for his third shutout. Murcer's homer may have quieted recent rumors of his poa- lt>Je retirement. Even the public relations outfit pushing his record referred to him in a release as an "ex-Yankee outfielder." "Retire? Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha. You know ~. I'll never announce my retirement.." Murcer said. ''I've pl'Obably got about 10 more years left." fending Utle-holders by a 15-12 count at the Calabasas Racquet Club Wednesday "We just left Rick Leach alone." said Trahan, yielding to the Laguna Beach southpaw's supenonty ''We knew, as a team. we were going to be down 6-0 the minute we walked on the court. "I felt the only way we stooc;t a chance was to play our top four p~ers m singles.'' So, Trahan took Nelson Gary and Steve Oliver, freque nt doubles players, and made them Calabasas' No. I and No. 2 singles entries. Trahan's ploy not onl:)( cauihl ,Wahl off-guard. but at proved to be devastating for the Artists. Oh. Leach, a senior, and his junior partner. Erik Dickerson, did their jobs, sweeping four straight eets while losing only ft~ sames ln the process; and Laguna (22-3) even got an unexpected boost from it.I second doubles team of senior Kris Kollenda ~d junior Ted Brandt, who won three of their four sets. But when it came t.o singles, where Wahl thought Laguna could hold its own, the Artista managed only two wins in 16 matches. and one of thoee came by way of default after Calabasas <See LAGUNA, PaRc CZ) Welch 's one-hitter· sp_oils Carlton bid LOS ANGELES (AP) -Steve Carlton allowed just three hits and struck out seven to move within one strikeout of a major league record, but it wasn't enough for the Philadelphia Phillies. Los Angeles' Bob Welch countered w ith a one-hit shut.out as the Dodgen beat Carlton and the Phillies 1 ·0 Wednesday night in.a classic pitchers' duel. "It was one of those pitch-by-pitch, inning-by-inning games." Welch, in his fifth major league season, said after notching the second one-hitter of his ca- reer. "We just finally stuck a run in there." Welch, 4-4. got the only run he needed ln the fourth lnping, after Steve Sux singled for Ole tint hit off Carlton. Sax 11t.ole aecond, ad- vanced to third on Bill Rusaell'a sacrifice bunt, then 9COred on Pedro Guem:ro'a single. The Phillies' only hit off Welch, who struck oUt eight and walked four, came in the fourth ln.nlng, when Von Hayes laahed a lhatp eing],e to right field . Carlton, Dfted for a pinch-:hi«er after seven inn1np, aave up two walks as he suffered hla fifth la. -aaJ.mt aix wlna th1a year. The seven strikeouta gave the 38-year-<>ld left-hander a career total of 3,520, just one short of the major league mark established by Houston's Nolan Ryan last month. Ryan, who rewrote Walter JohNon'a long...i&nding record of 3,508 etrikeouta on April 27, WU injured on May 2 and placed on the di.sabled list. Carlton. who has 86 strikeouts this tle&90n. will probably make his next start next Tue9d-.y night in Philadelphia when the Phillies face St. Louis. In the last inning he worked in the losa to the Docf.gers, Carlton struck out the side.· ~ott Brownsberger of CdM UWS a backhand shot in his victory· Wednesday over Miraleste opponent. Lloyd breezes lo victory She reaches finals with win over Jaeger PARIS (AP) -Chrla INert Lloyd outstroked Andree JMll"\ 6-3, 8-1 today and reached Ulilt final in \lie French Opeb TenrUi Champio~pe. • She i. biddin8 to win the tide Costa Mesa football· alllms to battle I• CURT SEEDEN i( .. D.-, .......... Only in an alumni football 111fOe will you find a player who !Ill boot a 30-yard field pl and 1Mft race up to the praa bo>C to do he color conunentary over the e~ eyst.em. -~belonpto New Orleans Salnt ._mcll'l/!J a.my IUcardo. wbo bt ~.the eo... Mm ahunl "'*>' ftilht when ...,. wM an fManda equad at Newport Harbor •• Dlvld.ari ~)d (7). the iecond ennual con-~lllil~'.n \M two rival COii. .. , L ... i CZ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tl'luraday, Jun, 2, 19~ . ~ owe ID While pltiful and frightful, the case of SteYe owe t.sn't any more tragic than that of any 5-year-old man whoee Ille ia being destroyed by addiction. The dllference is that Howe wft1 have his saga xplolt.ed because he is a rell~f pitcher with the Loe les Dodgers. This also entitles him to a new lstinction ln aodety known as chemJcal dependence. This phrase was coined for pro athletes lest they known by the same terms aa the junkies who do ot have their pictures on bubble gum cards. I dattsay the chemically dependent tag wu vented by the public relations guy of one of the oepitals working miracle cures for pro atan who get 1ked on booze and/or dope. The big leagues have who have spend two, three weeks, a month one of thoee "drug and alcohol abuae centers" and out cured. Graduation day ia often marked by press conference wherein the gu~ ;pves a timonial on his chemJcall~ dependent past that is ow behind him. Steve Howe checked out of one of those centers d into spri.ng training at Dodgertown anti told his Has Jahbar played fin al game with LA? From AP dispatches INGLEWOOD Kareem PD Abdul-Jabbar, the second-leading scorer in National Basketball Aslocia- tiQn history, may have played his final game for; the Los Angeles Lakers. Jerry Buss, the club's owner, says it's better than 50-50 but not 1l certainty that Abdul-Jabbar, a six -time NBA Most Valuable Player, will' play with the Lakers next season. But Abdul-Jabbar, 36, became a free agent immedi- ately after the Lakera were beaten by the Philadelphia 76ers 115-108 Tueeday night ln the fourth ~ final game of the NBA championship series. The 7-2 center has led the La.ken tQ a pair of NBA championships · in the past MOUL.......... four years. But in the finals this year, he was overshadowed by MOlleS Malone as the 76ers swept the aeries. "Of course I would like to be back," said Abdul-Jabbar, a UCLA All-American who has been a standout dwins his 14 aeuons ln the NBA. "But who knows?" Quote of the day "I got no dispute with Witherspoon. The young man gave me a good fight, but there was no question who won. Two rears ago, he couldn't have worn my IOCks.' -Larry Holmes, WBC heavyweight champion. - story. It hid 10 do wt~ an expenaive cocaine habit which became ao p~t ln h1a ext.tence he waa moJ11ng in the clubMu.e at I>odaer Stadium. Howe told the \Ytitera be waa thankful he finaU)' rea1W;d his ~bit wu 1ead1ng to the loaa of h1a family, hia ~ And "even death.'' Sadly, there la 1)9W ttMOn toauapect Howe may have spilled his guts for the joumallaU at Vero Beach and wentiJlunedla~ly behind the granclatand and took a short snort. In the9e cases, there is always the unfair implication that the team is IOfDt!how partly to blame. A couple of a.Mated cues were reported on the San Diego Chargers and the football team was being described as something like .-an unsucceesful , Kittle flexes his muscle Chicago rookie Ron IUUle took Ill over the . American Leasue lead in home runs with his 12th of the year Wednesday night --a two-run blast in the sixth Inning --and the White Sox went on to post an 8-=l dedsfan over Boston. White Sox starter La.Marr Boyt, 5-6, got the victory . . . Elsewhere, Oa.klarid banged out a •team-record seven doubles and' 'Rickey J!enderaon singled in the tie-~ run in the eighth inning as the A's broke a slx-~ losing streak with a 7-5 verdict over Mllwt.Ukee ... Gary Roeatcke, who went 4-for-4, inchldlng a homer, drove in four runs and Eddie . Marray doubled twice as Baltimore outslugged Minnesota, 6-3. Scott McOrecor, 6-3. got the Win and Tlppy MartiDei picked up hla sixth save ... BlUy Sample homered and atngJed to key a {3-hit attack and f\Jck Boaeyc•tt, 7-3, coasted ~gh the first seven lnnlngs as Ten,., dlefeated Kansas City. 7-4 . . . Dan Rozema yeilded just three hits in eight \nninp and A•rello Lope& pitched a perfect ninth for hia aeventh save as Detroit edged Toronto, 3-1. OC to provide protection Orange County's Board of Super-• vuors formally approved Wednesday an agl'ftment with the Loe Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee to provide law enforcement and lire protection durfna the 1984 Games. The plan calls for the LAOOC to pay $222,881 to the Sheriff's Department and $19,127 tor the Fi.le.Department to cover anticipated costs during Olympic eventa to be held in Orange County, eouth of Los Angeles. This marks the third agreement reached by the LAOOC which previously had reache4 aa:ord with the Cty of Los Angeles and Ventura County to the north. ·Olympic ticket broch,ures I • Sears to distribute them beginning June ~ 4 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Free public distribu- tion of 36-page Olympics ticket brochures will begin .June 14 at Sears, Roebuck & Co .• retail outlets acroea ttie country: it was reported today. 'The company has adviaed lts store managers of such a development with Sears the Iareert single 90Ul"Ce for distribution of the brochW'ellt which contain tick.et information and order forms for '370 tiebeduled Olympics events. No tickets will be aold through Searl, however, or through any other outlet that distributes the brochures. 'The buyers must 11end their Ol"dera and payment to the LOs Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee. Dlltribution of the brochure is a key step ln the sophisticated, romputeriJ:ed ticket system designed by the LAOOC to eliminate middlemen and deal directly wtth the public. It had been rumored for months that Sears was Beach volley ball set this weekend \. The Offshore Four-man Beach Volleyball Taumameot la wt for thia weekend at Corona del Mar State Be.ach. Althou&h the tournament la part of the summer pro beach volleyball tt>ut, it la unique ln that teama ant COCDrpri9ed of four men rather than two. LMt year, the teams of Karch Kiraly and Sfn81n SmJth and Randy Stoklee and Mike Dodd teamed to captu.l'e the championship. And, they'll be back to defend the title while eeekina a lhare of the $1,000 i.n prhe money. Applications to pertidJMte ln the tourney are still aval1able. Intersted teama can c:all Mar)l McK.el:lzie, toWi>ey directol', at 632-4367 for ad- ditional lntonndon. 'lbt taumammt. la Mt to bea1n at 9 a.m. Saturday, wt$h the finaJa echeduled for appro>c· imately 1 .,.m. Sunday. l!'.ntry fee Is $40 per teaM. ,., l Rams sign Moor~'s son the national retail. outle\_ selected to distribute the brochuret, bot the. Olympics organizen retu.ed to conflnn the reports. On Wedneeday, however, two Sean store ~in dlffen!lll parts of the country said they Md recetved pacbtll adviai.ng them when the brochures will be received and releaaect to the public. Despite this con.f.lnnation of the plan, however, spokesmen for Sear;s and the Olympiql 1oommittee still declined W~y to offidally announce the releue date for th brochures. · . Although ticket. will not be delivered. to customers until about a month before next year's Olympics, organizei:s of the games have said tnat buyers 1hould order as 1000 as pomible. Organizers have adopted a "first-in, first-served" policy fw events that are not told out during the initial ticket ordering period of 60 to 75 daya. · When a "premium" evt!nt -such u opening <:It cloeing ceremonies -l.a oversubacrUied, sucx•af\Jl buyers will be dete~ tb.r®gh NU\dom com- puter selection. ThCiee who do not get what they order will either have the1r money refunded or be offered 1Ut.emativ&·fkket. cho~ Becau.e bl'och~ diatributiGn will begin June 14, presumably tick.et orders beering that -poatrnark will be hOnored by 1he Olympics aimmittee. In all. CJrKanllr:s'I expect to ofter more. U\an wven milllon Baseball today 1925 -Lou Gehrig" replaced Wally Pipp at flrat base for the New York Y a.nkees, and the "Iron Hon&" then ap.- peared in 2,129 consecu.tlve games. 1941 -Lou Gei,rtg died at age 37 from an illnem that ended h1a career two years earlier. 194~ -The Phlladelppla Phillies smacked five homer runs in the eiahth inning of a 12:.3 victory over Cincinnati to . equal 'l major-league record. 'I')vo of them were hit by Andy Seminick, wtfo had three ln the game. Del Ennis, Willie Jones and Schoolboy Rowe had the others. Today's birthday -Houaton Manager Bob Lillia is 53. Beanball suspected . ' I RENO -California League of-Ill ficlals say they're looking into charges that the league's top hitter was intentionally hit by a pitch. . Reno Padres second bueman Mark Wasinger. underwent surgery Wedneeday for a bto~en knuckle aft.er being hit in the left hand the'niaht before with a pitch thrown by Tim Kammeyer of the Redwood Pion~. California League President Joe Gagliardi said he would take "some kind" of action as soon as he sees the umpire's report of the game. "I'm not sure yet what I'm gomg to do because I don't have all the facts yet," Gagliardi said. "~t this kind ol thing has got to stop, whether It was intentional or not." Wasinger, who was leading the A league with a .~ batting average, is expected to be out at INS~ aix to eight weeks and poSsibly the entire season. The injury followed his best game as a pro, in which he hit two home runs and seven RBI in the seoond game of a dooble-header sweep against Redwood Monday. . Wasinger wa5 hit in the first inning of 'l'uelday'a game. Later in the game, Reno's Kevin Towers hit Redwood's Mark Bonner with a pit.ch. UCI aide gets j~"b at So.-Utah Ever since t]C Irvine assist.ant c0ach Bob Schermerhorn lost his head coaching position at CbaUey College, he has been Yearnin& for another head post. Early thia week. Schermerhorn got h1a wtah. The 40-year-old ca.ta M~ resident hu been named head coach at Southern Utah State College, an NAIA IChool. He replaces Torn MCCracken, who moved to the University of Utah as an -,iatant. • ----' bullPiri • ~· Said Stewart, "A&~ u you control It <ctru.ta>. lt 19 no ..a =· It is when it l\artl controlling you that lt a problem." s•lrt~ ~t well enough but hia totally ~l&Atement point8 up the fact that the educaUonal proc 111 • in that area of aodety are no further advanced -or undentood any better - than ~ywhere elae. BecaUle a young AD-American type athlete Uke Steve Howe.._caan deposit a major-league career down the toilel the general publlc will feel another shudder bui very little will m.nae. ~ 1'h9 trtatradoo la ~Uwract St.eve Howe co"14 buy tm dope outside the gate at Dodpr St.diuni much the mne u a llChool kid can set lt on CUlIJUll or a bt.lline9 exea.ltive am purchue it In. the lobby • -pedlaps by credit card. The point Mina that why should the univerw of pro lportn pe aoy le91 venel'bale as long • • acumbap are out there peddllna the garbap and ~ty aocepts the notion all it takes to cu.re lta effecta are two weeb in Aru:ona? . Harper's HR' beats Pirates Terry Q.arper hit a three-run Ill · homer as Atlanta acored four times ln the third 'lnnlng, and Pucu.l Perez picked up h1a sixth vfdory (against one . defeat) of the aeuon, aa the Braves ~ back· Pittabu.rgh, 6-3, to hlghllght National ~ action Wedneeday -. . . Eleewhere, Jolaa MU1ba . . ~ttered five hits and knocked in three rum to 1'*1 St. Louis to an 8-3 pounding of CnQinnati. ¥arttn. in helptna hta own cause, stna.Jed home a run in a five-run fifth and then doubled home t.wo ~ ln the eighth ... Le~hande'I' Atlee Hammaker allowed ju.It five hits and two unearned runs as San Franci8co poaU!d . a. 4-2 triumph over the New York Mets. The Mets' Tom Seaver ---~. allowed only five hits in EVen NMZ inningl. but one of"thoee waa Jack Clark'• eurhth homer, a two-run blast ln the third 4tning. tlammaker, 6-2. nows leads the National League ln earned run average at 1.20. Se~lVer's record dropped to 3-5. Carew player of month Rod Carew of the Angels, who Ill leads the American League in hitting, has been ~ American League player of the month for May. Carew hit .438 during the month with six doubles, a triple and a home run, while driving in nine runs and compiling an on-base percentage of .490 .... Minnesota North Stars right wing Dloo ClccarelU was one of five people injured in a six-vehicle collision in Detroit. Ciccarelli and two passengenJ in his car were not seriously injured in the accident and were to seek their own treatment . . . Sally lJttle, the third-leading money winner on the LPGA tour, said knee surgery would keep her off the tour for at least three more months .. Ben Llndaey, fired after one seasen as heA<i basketball roach at the University of A:-izona. has been offered a staff position m the athletic department , . . Atlanta Hawks Coach Kevin Loughery appears to be shop~ing for another job. Television, radio TV: Baseball -Angels at New York Yankees, 5 p.m . RADIO: Baseball -Angels at New York Yankees, 4:55 p.m.; New York Mets at Dodgers, 7:35 p.m. LAGUNA ... From Page C1 ' (21-1) had clinched the crown. Gary, a aophomore. and Oliver. a freshman, were outstanding for the Coyotes, although it was onver who posted. what both coaches agreed. was the turn- ing-point vidr>ry of the mat.ch. Oliver's back-breaker came against l...llguna'a Eric Shantz in the first pine of afternoon for both players. After battling to game ..-ores of five, six and aeven-all, Oliver finally pulled out the aet by winning the tie-breaker at 11-9. "We needed that," qreed Wahl later. ''They (the players) needed to believe they could win one ln singles." · "I'm 1osina a · great assistant coach• but that's how,,.tt go. ln thia game," aid UCI head coach BUI Mulligan. "U y~ ~ve a good asslatant, Tt won't ~ long before aorpebody· makes him a bead CQICh, Bob Schermf"rhorn Oliver, after his SNelina open- ing match, then went on to take an important wt frten jwllor Wade Perry, who;eplaced Leach ln the No. 1 ainCle9 dot. Perry, down 4-1, came back to de Olivet at ..... only to le. 6-4. "In Beb. we had a juy that not only coeched. he·recruitect He dJ,d lots of thlno jn the office.. \hat most cuya don't want tb do. He w• vwy will.lna." hom lnhedt8 a sue- ceafut proeram at Southern Utah, one· that has rec:orded· a 40-14' mark, lncludJnc one cham- plc>nahip, during the put two .. IOIDI In the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference. · "H.'• .iw-.ya been NCCe91ful " Mulltlm 4ldded. ' NatW'lilly, hlndatght ls &h*t in this kind of situation, but Wahl wouldn't ~-auesa his de- cision afterward&. ''I think lt w• the rieht lineup. That's just the way it went." ,he aald. -----..-...------ Netting another victory Corona del Mar's John' Washer (right) returns a shot during Wednesday's CIF 4-A tennis championship against Miraleste as Jeff Ewing watches. Washer and Ewing won all four match.es as CdM captured the title. . Prep wrestlers clash at FV F~iday be top high chool ~ in Orange County cJMhFrid;~ " night when the annual North-South All-Star match is held at.Fountain Valley High. It starta at 7:30. Price of ad- mimion Is $1. Leading the South All-Stars are Edi80n High's Arnold Alpert and :Fountain Valley'• Jay Ru.ell. Alpert finished third in the state and will be wrestling at the 134-pound level Friday night. Ru.ell w• eighth in the state. He will compete at the 177-pound dlviaion. Sparking the North team are 134-pounder Greg Guron of Western, 167-pounder Brian Folson of Kennedy and 177-pound Ty Pembleton of El Dorado. Pembleton was the sta~ cham- pion last aeaaon while G8800n finiahed eecond in the '1tate meet, aa did Folaon. ~ me:nbers of the South team lnclude: 118--Manual Her- rera (Sadd.leback); · 126--Dale. Suzuki (Marina); 142--Manny Ramirez (Huntington Beach); 150--Chuck J\icbarda (Fountain Valley); 158-...Gary Goldstein (Edison); 167--Bob Gurbuz (H\mtingtoo BeaCh); 190-Dave Abbott (Marina); and heavy- weight--John 7.ehndtt (Hunt- ington Beach). Other wrestlers for the North include: 118--Mike Leonhardt (Villa Park); 126--Tun Campbell (Villa Park); 142-Brian Ramam (Loara); 150:-Mike Jackman . (Tustin); !58--Scott Young (Loara); 190--Rene . C.onriquez (Can yon); and heavy. weight--Mike Ambulhle (Ca-· nyon). · The North coach ia Cal State .Fullerton'• Dan Lewis while Golden West College's Dale Def; fner will·guide the South. Carpenter honored ..... ......, """"'°"COURT Ofl THI HClllMIUI alll... .,,_ C9URf Of' 9TATI fW ~ MAim 9TA...-T O~OMIA ... .,.....,. MTNCT The tollowWlo S*"Oftl .. doing CCMMTY fW OUW PlAIN'TW'F: TOM WCZN< .,.,._ -.: "' HM ....._ 9f .. ...,.._ 0 f ,F E N 0 A NT : C L A AK 1. MEADOW& APARTMENTS, ....... 11 ...., WLUA11 .....,., WOOLAIOQf, W. QUY COii, LTD.; 2. HAAFOAO 80\IAM. LTD.; ,...._ P..-. OOVf1' EQVfTfU, IHC .• OOf.8 I 3. WILLOW LAKE. LTD.; 4 . . ~AM MO. AO t'"7 '• tlWOugfl l.. lnc:UN9 WEATHEAID<H A~AATMENTS, cn'ATI0Mf'9..,..... .. •am L TO .• 17H2 Cowan, lrvlne, CA T• MCMAM a.uon: C... ...._.WC -92714. 1y orw of wa Coun, you .. M0nCe Y• .... --..... leverly Hiiie AMlly, Lid., MtebyoMd..S~IO..,,,.., ftle .... ..., .......... ,_ Qenet'al Perin.,. 17tl2 Cowan, ~ conoemlng u,. adoption .._. ,_ ...... ...... ..... !Nine, CA 92714. Of RICHARD LOUIS !U.IOTT, JR. ,_.::::: ._ •..,....... Thie-~ 11 oonducted by MISTY LU l!L.UOTT, a minor. .. IR .... fml1«f ~. b9fore Ille Judge of tflll Court In the If )'OU Wlltl to ..... Iha ~ of · a.....ty Hiii Aaelty. Lid.. County ol Loe A~. State ot M attorMy In thla matter. JCM.o • Caltfomla llnWMd CallfOf'nla, et the Courtroom of .._.do ao ~ ao IMt }'IOUf par111er1hlp, Qenerel Dept. 11, TOO CMe C-ler om. Wl1hln ,...,.._, • ariy mey be tied Partner W•. SantA Atw. CA 12701 °" J4!'/ Oft tlfna. ol Wiiow LMll, Lid. 22 1113, .. f:"6 LIT\., of II'-' dWt, A Y It 0 I U 1 t I -91 a 1 I ~ I 8y. 8tout..aNlllQy, Inc., ' ............ II .,._.... .... a Cellfomia oorpcnUon, ...... _.,. U& eM # I Ill a ' 0.-.. P9r1rw of 8werty Hiia l'lllalty. Ud. 8eddJebllck o,u .. wilJ bold • IUmmll' youth football cmmp July 26-18 en the oolllle'• llOUSh cam.. , pu.t. · YOunpten, ..-9-13, are elillble for the camp, which •u..et fu.nd&rnen"'11 and la noca~iact. Members at the Gaucho foot- bell staff will conduct the camp. Cost la $40, which sntludea a T-ahlrt. The camp wW nan from 9 a.m. . ~dl noon MCh day. For more infonnaUon. phone 831-4645. Soeeer team lormla• Girl l()ClCer playen are needed for a club, 90CCeJ' team In the Fountain Valley-Hunim,ton BMch area. • Orpnbert •Y the club eoccer-tcbecfule will not interfere with the tebool --.i. Glrlf, ..-, 14-lS, wbo are interested in pla1iJll can phone 9&1..o916 for ~tion,J lnfonnatlon. . Teaals tralnlal eamp The Chuck Boyle Temua Academy. wW hold a tenn1a training camp at Chapman Collep thil,llUJDIDer with a five-week -1on ICbc!duled between June 12 and Aua. 20., 'l1M! camp II demhmed for junior players and ywDi .dUita, ran,inc in .. from 12-24. The camp coven eeveral drillt, Including stroke producUon.. footwork. balanced hitting, tOupd tactics and match play. Seliia.a are echeduled for Jime 12-26, Jime 26-.July 9, July 10-23, July 24-Aua. 8 and Aug. 7-20. For additkmal infonnation, phone (213) 4~22. occ slates tourney .. La wa llowllal Some 51 Australlana invade Or-u,,e County to compete apimt la*n bowline club temm In • aene. of seven match.ea beclnnlna • Tuaday at the MMdow. mobile home park in .Irvine. • All matches will conaiat of two 12-end games gjviQI feCh vtatmi bowler an opportunity to compete at MCb of the seven lawn bowlinl · p-eena. The Australian group' will ai.o compete at the Grove8 mobile home park in Irvine, the Newport Harbour Greens, c.uta del Sol in MtHion Viejo, Saddleback Greens in LNfuna H1IJs, San1a Ana Gt'eena and at Recreetion Park in Loag Be.ch . The A\MJtrallanl wW compete .,unst al'ee teams throuP JW>e 17. The fint match of each round will beg1ri at 1 p.m. The public fa invited to view the oompetitioo, free of charge. For mdl'e information. phone 551-1007. ' Orange Cout Collece will hold lta annual National Warm-Up Racquetball Toumameo& Friday June10througbSWldayJunel2 on cx::C'a 13 outdoor courts. Reptralion deadline for the tourney ia Tue9day. doubla; and mixed A. B and C doubles. Sta.rt.ing times will be available next Thunday and will be posted in the cx::c'a men's locker room, or may be obtained by phoning 551--1075. Christian h~ds speedway lineup Alan Christian ol H~ Beach will seek.: h.ia ~ sttJilht scratch main v1dory Fri..f . day night at the weekly mocor- cyle program at the C>ranae eowi ... ty Falrgrounda. Nlnet.een different competitive bncketa will comprbe the tour- nament. Competition will be held in men'• open, B, aeniora (35 and older) and junion (16 and young- er) alngles; women's open, B and junion alng1es; men's open, A. B, 9ellion and mast.en (45 and older) doubles; 'women'• open, B and C Entry fee ii $12.50 for aing)es and $25 ~ doubles team. Trophid will be awarded to the ti.rat. second, third .-Id COl"90la- . lion winnen in each dM.lion. A T-llhirt will al90 be gjven to each participant. For more information, phone 644-4492 or 551-1075. ·Christian wmt wire-to-wire toi capture 1ut week'• main event. but Friday he'll apin be 1m1ed by the likM of John Cook. Brad . Oxley and Mike Faria. amonet others. • The p~ open at 6:30 p.m. with the action due to bepn at 8. 1 ' Parking and programs qe free. Fot men ~ phone the speedway at m.99. Pm.JC flOTIC( HCllllOUI Mill IA ~ : . ~ . . • • IMIOR W-eTMIDll .. ""'£-:.t.:r' W L ..._. 21 21 .m -21 21 .800 3 n ~.•a ... n " .47' 4 21 25 ... 1 5 22 H .431 I.,. 20 31 • .a l '.t llAS1' CIMleOM • Tcwonto 2e 20 .MS lloetol\ 2t 21 .w ... N9w Ycwti 2t 21 .553 .,. -......_. 27 12 .551 ... ... I ....... 23 22 .511 2\41 OMta1t n 23 .500 a ~ 2228 .... 4 ... ...... f"I ..... ....Yotll:S,.,....O CNceao I. loelon :s ~a.a....2 09lrolC 3. T OfOlltO 1 Olklerld 7, ......... 5 ....._.. .. .......,..3 T-7.~Clty4 , ............ ... (z..twl ~) .. ,.._ Yotll (Nuf*11 7·2~ fl "-~ 4-3) .. o..tOll (Wlcoa ~ O•kl•flcf (Codlroll 4-31 e t Mllweull" ·~ (~4-4) f a..ttte , •. 81oddanl. 4-61 .. ClftelMd (8udlil W), fl · ~ City (Qur1I .... , .. Ct*"80 (Ool8on ~S). fl Onl,gM*~ ........ L.eepe WUTDMelON W L ...._., aa 14 ,102 - 31 17 .... 2'4 21 21 .M3 .... 21 " .447 12 22 " .440 12'4 22 " .431 13 llAS1'--- 8t. LOUii " 11 M1 -....,_ 2S 21 .ID 3 pt' s ,.... 20 21 ... 4\t ~ 11 ff .411 N Cl*-11 21 .. , I . ,._ 'fon M H .3641 10... ..... "' ..... ~1.'tP s:Z:i.:o Ct*"80 3, ~ 2 A __ &.,.......,.3 St. LOUii I. Clnc*IMtl 3 ...,.... •. a.. Diego • . ISM fr9ftdlaO 4, N1W Ycwti 2 ,..,.. ..... N•• Yorll (Torrn 2·1) •• DM1er• (V..,_.W).fl PMrtugll (Ahoden 2~1 •• Ct*"80 (Trout .i Ml l'lllledell>lll• (Denny 4-:S) et Sen Diego (l>reoec:*y ~-:SI St. LOllll (Fondl WI .. Al*"8 (f*°M 2·1). n Montreel (LM 3· 1) el Sen Frencleco (McOlllllgmn i-a). fl Only ...... ~ AmRICAN UA.W y..._a,.,....o ~ ..... ~ . •rllM •rllM c... 1b 3 0 1 0 ~ dll .. 1 1 1 !'ell • .. 0 0 0 OrifloW 1b .. 0 0 0 "8Jktn r1 4 020 ~d 3100 o.ar-3113 0 0 0 OeMlll9 r1 3 , , 2 ........ 4000MullfWycl 0000 ~ 'Gt1dl2tl 30 00~11 2010 v.....an. • 3 o 1 o ~ c a o o o ......_c1a oo o~· 2000 eoon.c 30 10N91111831t 3010 ~2tl 3000 T~ 30 0 5 0 T°'811 27 3 4 3 ............. Cellorfllll 000 000 000-0 .... Yon 000 003 OOll-3 Oen'9-Wlrll*IO Nit -Murcs (1~ °" -.... Y"on 1. Loe -c.llorM •· ..._ Yen J. HR -....,_ (f). OMIClle (4~ __ .,..13). c.m.r'F1a • " • .. -80 Oo11z ILP4> "" • a a 3 2 0....... "' ~ CUra J , .. 00 000 ... T ... 3 CMdry(W.741 ~ a o o a a i l"9 -._._ T -2::06. A -21.4.27 0 • ~ .. -.. , 1 TIWOMO 100 000 000-. I 3 0 Dllr'Oll 000 000 12a-S I 1 CIMcy _, WNl1; "---LAii* 19> end ,r ,...... W -~ M . L-Clllnoy, 4-4. ! 8 -\AplS (7). Hft -Toronto, Oercte ( 1~ A ~ -1,Nt. . ..... .. _._. .. , " Ct*"80 110 ooa oa 1-1 11 o t-:b .....,. 000 Ot2 CI00-4 I 1 !' • HOrl. Hleker (I). ti.ow (9) WWI "'*: .., T~. p ... , (t) enCS ca.ci"'en. "" -~ c:Ncego, IOnle(12). V. Law~ A -11,151 . ..... ......... ll ._.. 000 tOO Ot0-2 I 0 ......,... omoooOlll ..... 1100 " f'wry, v...-... (l~C..-(I) _. b --.c; _..,,.., ....-n ... HM19r. w " -IMIOfti.:-~ L -..1....!-1. H" -' ~ (1).A-•,IWL o.tl1'8 .. t.-• .._.. aoo 001 111-1 12 o ~ 110 010 CI00-3 12 3 ~. T ........ mend 0..-: yeMdlr fl). "-0..... It). * .:._ ,..._l-L~ • ...-.1-0T. _ .... _....,..~Cl). ...... (l).A -....... ...... ,~~ W L•M ..... ::::mm • i _.. ,., m 4 .... 210 121 AT\MmCDM90ll .... ,, .. 112.M .,.,.. • I .. ,. ..._..,_ 4 I .30I w ..... .-. 1 12 .077 C91TML~ Cl*-eo I 4 .• T~-I 4 .m ....... . ... , . ·-·-1 ..... .......... W~llO.-,"­..,,....,•,i=c:.,. . ........... mttal ..... m 111 18' Me ==·-·--.. · :Z::C..'-MIGMal LI.._. a ....... r ~·.:~-f- "°'era:terC ..... c. MoCMen 111 110 1oe aa.m .111 .,,.,... ., 1M 103 3,a10,4IO Olrllll •• ... .. .. * 3,1/M,.164 OoN1to •1 120 n t.•.144 v.....,. .. • 12 2.-..a 0. 162 146 123 2.IMAll v-..... 571 • n 1,m,tfO ~ ... 108 ... 1,118.208 AM1e11o eea n M 1.10&.te1 H9Wy 491 12 M 1,lllt,eta .,..... ,.. ... 24 11.m.010 * I "4 · II Un,atO 117 21 3S Mtl.171 a1 12 • 1.357.IM4 1aa ae 11 1.o41..eoo dO M 37 U7,535 114 ,. ~ .,. ..... 2'4 43 u 8'0.662 240 2t II ut,321 224 12 30 IOf.374 ..... 4 3 0 4 4 0 4 • 0 11 I I f I 1 I I 0 t I 3 • 4 ' • 2 2 • 4 1 Tim Wallach breakfnl a four-pme Montl'eal 1011na streak. "You always to aet that bed streak ma~ The m.tr&tina thine ii that we Md a chance to win all four ot tix.e games." · Montreal ttliever Bryn Smith, 1-2, pitched ahutout ball uver the final five inningJt to earn the victory. Martin ab.solved of any wrOngdoing From AP dJ1patdaff u ..... -BWy Martin of the N;,..-M· Yankees hM been ablolved of any wrongdotnl ln ~ incident at a hotel bat last week. Charees were dropped lpimt Martin, who wu ~by an El Toro real-ettate salesman ~of ~~at him at-the bar ot Hyatt Hotel early Ma) 25, lt was announced Wedneeday. The incident occurred a a>uple of houri after the Yankees had been beaten 7-6 by the Angela oP May 24. • l\oblD Wayne Olson, 27, filed an asault and bat\.ery complaint apinat· Martin tom three hours alter the ind.dent. . Tbe Anaheim City Atto~y refuled Wedneeday to mue a q ~---- DOWD ~M.OOWD, born January 13, 1900. P-s away on June 1, 1883. She la IW'Vived by 2 fDm 1'bomal v. Dowd ~William P . Dowd, a19o 11 srandchildren, and 8 are•t-grand- children. Memorial ...-Acea will be held on Prida.Y. June 3, 1983 at &:OaOf1il at St. JOllCbim'a Catholic Cbun:h. Onnae Aw., a.ta Mae, Ca. OREY l'WRENE WATSON ouv . .-tel··~ Ma1 30..--1983 In ¥e1a, Ca. Be-loved •11• of Col Richard a t ·. y . 0 f c 0 • ' a Me•a, Ca., mother flten1.:: .-.. U..STATDmWT AQIO AND COOPER ASSOCIATES. 11t52 MacArthur 8tW ..... 206, 1n11M. CA 12'715. KENNETH W. AOID, INC .• a C.tlltofNa corporatJon. V .H . COOPER, INC .• a ClllbTlla CQtPOnllol~ NI.IC NOTICE • u-.-am Moo 1 t -S... No. 7..alNI, AP ~4-20. '20.42 No. 1~ -S... No. 7 .. neoM, AP ~-cM. l16UO No. 13 -a. No. 7 .. 211114, AP 04&-CM3-14. 12q.oe No. 14 _, .... No. 7~1401, AP 0464M-17, .. .62 No. " -91111Jllo. ,.....,_•AP QS.S57.QI ~ 1f7-452~7'). 1317.oe. M\ 1t -a. No. 1'-<ll831a. AP 111-3n.oe. t1.iauo F11n111 VIWY cm No, 20 -a.le No. 7MM7486, AP 1~. l1,IU4.2e PAOPERTY 80lD TO THe STATE.IN THE VEAR 1977 FOR TH!: TAX~! A880$MEHT8 AND OTHER CHAA0U OF THE '11CA1. VEA.A ,..,...,.,_ . lll11llTll •a• cm No. 21 -S-. No. 77-14aa74, AP 1--1-tt. 1557.31 11111 •EU llTf • NQ. 22 -S. No. n~~1t. ~M3 (lllnlwty 119-021-11). 1,QM ..... ~ <>r-. come~ Plot...._ .e . .._ 2. 1tl3 ~ Where am I? ~ ·CHICAGO (AP') -Lee Dia isn't cm1aln whetber he'a hMded f« heaven or hell, bu\ he'• 'bouol tQ nave. few words for the offidal ~rer that cledde9 --thinp. ' "I step on the ~ of life," the Chkqo Cubl maoapr M)'I mattet-9f~i.w;tl>" Left un,ald ii how much th1t hard-headed, quick-antlirll. f~·year.OOS former pla;yv W. to IJDll1l the"°"" too. But for tha moment. he la probebly wonderiJli whether hia. employers will Jet him stay in thoir prden. He ~ two votea of oonfidence Wu a pair of well·pUblldred outbuma, but the final dedaion wtll probably turn on whether be can make a lq·promil)ed "New Tradition~· buebal.l team .top playtnc Ute aame dkl ~· "I love thla place, no doub\ about It," he aatd. "It WU the only town f ~r played bll leatutt ball in anCS there'• been plenty ot thlnp I, can poiht to with uatiafaction llnce taking over (ln October, 1981). "rve watched 'lot of kida develop and I know ln her9," he aald poillting to hia heart, .. that rve given lt my all.'' H1a all wu. aobd enough in hia rookie eeuon as manager, when the Cubl finilhed fifth in the National League F.aat after two auoceaive cellar-dwel.Ung doles. ~ ~.!!!!!!' .:::Z4t-.YOM TM f .... nt P.t:°f. dOlnt °'MU,,_...,.. ~ e.: 1 ..... tttMm=.c.c . • {AJ M~O LOClleTllC• (I) NOlQIS~fN!a'( I MtOl'O L TICI 1IOO M.. Milk ,,..,,.._ II ~ to._ of A__,., ...... ~ Cc*a ....._ the petiaonat proe>eny ~ ca..... btlOw'. ~ .... ~ 1IOO r11t IWN Md ...,... ..,_ =:-at:.=uttt '°.:l;· °"'' g'o'::L~L~~u"1 Till8 ..,._. 11oonclua'9dbJ 111 LLOYD. lt1t W, ~ ....... lfldMdll.tf. An1, CA, •nd 902 Peotflo OOM1 Ol*Mlrl --..._ ~· Huflltntl'Ofl 9-111. eA. Tflll ,.....,.,. .. tlld Mii h The name(a) and butlnen COUnty a.ti of <>r.,. ~on •ddrua ol th• lntend•d Mlf to, 1MS • \r•n•farH(I) .,.; VINSAY K.'O. ' ft1t1M 17l31 DowMy Ave .. Ball\owtr, CA .. ublltlled Orano-co .. t Daily 807ot. Ptlot JuM I. t, 1t. JI, ,.,1 NI ~~~~*: :.~..: 1 _________ 1 __ atock In tr•d•. merollandlH, .. _LA -auppllH. fl•lurH, equipment, nlllLRI "'"""' goo6wtll and \r.O. of that C*tMI 1-1"°"'*'9i;C;mi0iitii•iiuiii1ii1i•ii11e-~ "-ae: D'I DONVTI. "AMI ITA~ Sald_ptopeny II~ et:"3e12 Tiie tollowtno pttaOn It doing WM1 l'1rwt · It,... .-ma ~ CA ~ 111: and 902 "Klflo Cout HIQfl.WtY, HOH1Y MIN & ~ CO., ~on a.ac:tl. OA. 2006 W. lllboa lflod., Ne 21', Sa bulk 1ren1fer If tCI be Newport Beldl, OallfOrnla 92t9I Oii Ot ...... .-.,.,_ 'nm lawwr, 2008 w Balboa 1113, ..... oflloe of, end alllllw ~~~ t1e, ~ IMdl, ~ 119 llled with, Tf'IPU CHECt< ,,,_,,.. .. t2M1 ESCROW &eRVq. 102t AIOrld19 ~~ II oonc1uet«1 by.,, :;'::&:.-:~·ii~. ~tr.1:m 'nm~ 391-6808, (114) ~. Thie~ WM ftled with the Thie bulk tranefw le eu.b)eet to County Clerk of OrlftOI County on Sao. 0 108 of th• Unlforltl May n . 1N3. Convn.rdal Code-Butt! Tr.,,...,. ~ TIMI ... , date '°' Hllng dallna II Publllllff Oranoe·eo .. 1 Detty June 14th, 1983. Piiot Mey 2t June 2. 1 11 1MS So 1111 aa II_, to llMI lnt.nded • • ' 24'7-83 tranefere•(•I the lnt•nd•d ----------tran•faror(•I uHd th• lollowlng ~ N011Cl 1.Sdlllonal bu1lna11 namet and ___ ;--..;._;~;.;;;.;.---addrNMI within llMI thrN ye.re PICJlllOU9 Wll NAllllSTA~ TM followlng per1on 11 doing IHt PHI' (If "non•'', IO •tat•.) NONE. Oiied Mey 25th. 19J3. Vlnuy KJlo tnlenoad Trllnltar• Publl1hed Otano-Cout OaJty Piiot, May 21, 1"3 .New York's Graig Nettles has his helmet pushed over. his .eyes as he arrives head first at third base against the Angels Wednesday. Attempting to make the tag is Doug DeCinces. . ,, But mQderate IUCCleS8 and a d1ama1 1P83 start doee not a "New Traditiop" make. And if you th.row in the tintdes, not ev~n a month apart, what you have in the parlance of the game he once played with great Jntensity ,but little auocem, la at,rip two. Thia wefk, Elia repeatedly told a televWon cameraman to pt out of hia office, then covered the 1enaea with a pair of towels and puahed. ~HC~ITO MARKET, IOO·O tan JoaQutn Hiiia Road, ~ lleecltl, c.llfomta l2t80 John Aleunder A·ndlklan, 22eo1 Hilton Heed OrlYt, No. 11. Diamond ear. CllltOfl'la 911ea lllla ~ II oonduo'9d by an lndMclual. • John A. Andldan Aem&i ~ NA*ITA Th• followlno praon I• dolne· ~- Thousan s greet 7 6ers "I forgot about it u llOOn u he left."-'Elia ahrugged. '1t wu'o't until 15 minutes later that I reallr.ed I'd been ln a alugfest." The camera crew waa back in hia office the next day, and Ella was all amilea. A. they left. he IC'l'eWed up hia mouth in a halt-mille and waved at their backa. Tl* etaMmenl .. flied with the 00umy an Of 0range County °" Mey~.1Na. flltN9 PublllMd Ofang. Oout Oalty Plot. Mey 2t, "'-2, 9, 11. 111S 2374-a (Al 8PL!NOIO; (8) PILLAR P"'OTECTIVE CGAtlN08: CCI CHEM·HAAT INTERNATIONAL, it409 Promontory 01111• !aa1. Newport 9Md\, CA l2980. Vldll J . ...,,, 1409 Promontory Drive !al1, N•wport Beach. CA 92teo. PtCTmOUI ....... Philadelphia honors NBA champs with parade One month ago, Elia took off on the fans after a touah. boo-fllled !cm to the~Loe Angeles DOdgera. fwninl that "Most of the world's out making a living ... The other 15 percent come out here (to Wrigley Field)." NAm ITATllllNT Thi followlng .,.,_ -doing bull,_ .. : TNI ~ II oonducted Dr M lndMdull. V.Hart Thia atatMNnt -Ned wttfl the Covt\fy CWtl Of Orange County Oii PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The Philadelphia 76ers, who arrived home Wednesday with the National Basketball Association championship trophy, were to be hono.red today in a parade expected to attract hundreds of thousands of fans. The parade was set to start in center city and proceed to Veterans Stadiwn for ceremonies. Mayor William Green headed the parade, and said he had invited Pennsylvania governor Richard Thornburgh. "We're all going to celebrate and have a real slam dunk of a time," Green said Wednesday at a news conference detai.ling the parade.· The 76ers swept the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers in the best-of-seven title series, clinching the championship in Loe Aneeles Tue9day night. The 76ers' championship was the franchise',s first since the 1966-67 season. This was the fourth championatup parade in PNladelphia in nine years. Starting in 1974, the Philadelphia F1yers won the National Hockey League's Stanley Cup. The F1yers won again 111 '75, and the Philadelphia Phillies were feted in 1980 for winning the World Series. Police estimated millions lined the streets for thoee celebrations. ·· This parade would feature floats carrying the Sixers' team, the media and city officials past the cheering crowd expected to jam center city streets and into South Philadelphia. The mayor warned that reckless behavior would not be.. tolerated. When the team arrived home Wednesday, General Manager Pa\ Williama stepped to the m.icrophone and exclaimed, "We owe you none." Williams' reference was to the failure of the 76ers to win the title, even though they made the NBA finals ln three ·of the last 1eVen eeaaona. "We owe you one," has been their sl<>San ever a1nce they lost to Portland in 1977, Police estimated 3,500 people crowded behind a cyclone fence to welcclme home the champions, who set a record of losing only one playoff game ln the 13 it took to win it all. Green headed the city's official delegation. Coach Billy Cunningham declared, "the only thing I want to say is that 'this team haa proven itaelf really special. It picked itself up and went over the mountain." Earl Cureton, a valuable member of the tearri's reserve corps, whirled a broom in hia hand symboUc of the sweep over the Laken. Mosea Malone, the 6-10 center who was named the most valuable player in the playoffe, looked at Julius "Dr. J"-Ervtng, who ln seven years had never been on an NBA champion despite his fabulous performances. "We renlly got this for Doc," said Malone. "And when we got it for Doc we got it for the city. Now we'll try and repeat." .. When Genen1 Manages 1>a.uaa Green heard a tape of the outbu.nt. Elia almost joined the boo-birds in the unemployment line. · 'They are the fana of Chicago, and 1f apologize • la the right wont. then they have lt from me," he aid after leavfna Green's office. Sockers topped MONTREAL (AP) -Alan Willey became the leading career point-getter for Montreal Wednesday night u he aco~ two goals and added an asaiat to help tbe Manic to a 6-1 North American Soccer League victory over the San Diego &x*ers. Tbe sbc goals by the Manic equalled a team record 1et last June against the Fort Lauderdale '"Strikers. The goals by Willey .were his fourth and fifth of the eeaaon, In his three-ye~r with Monu:eal,· he haa 26 goals and 11 assists for 63 points. Thompeon Usiyan held the previous club mark with 21 goels and 17 asmts for 59 points. . . May 18, 1N3. W.ARMINOTON MARINE ENOINl!!RIHO, 3080 Pullman SL, Coetl MtM, ~ 92t2e. • WARMINGTON lHTeMSTS, a ,....,, C1ltlorn(1 oorporeHon, 3090 Publl111ed Orano-Cout Dally Pu11tMn St .. Coell MtM, CA t~. PilOI, Mey 19, 28, Jw'9 2, I . 19113 Thll bualnell 11 conduct«' by e ________ 21_1_1-ea_ c:orportrtlon. The WannlflGton ln- E.O. Wlll"*'Gfon, .N., '"9. K.-U Thia 9tllt.mtnt waa ftled with IN ACTn10U9 .,_.. County Clef1I of Orange County on NA1m IT A TDmNT Mey 8, 1983. The fotlowtng per.oM 11 doing . . ,.,_ ~-. RH 0 D ·~to: AW.. a ROLLIN' ROOTER. UOO A '""· ~ C.., :::::e'-S.-102, Colt1 "'-· CA 4111 -:et==-# 105 Jcitin Bel. 2:300 ..... S-102. ~ ~. CA 92te0-2091 ca.ta MtM. CA 92828. Publl1hed Oran~ Coal! Dally ~ ~ la oonclucMd by an Pilot, Mey 12, 19, 2tl, June 2, 1983 • .idWI 6111 120()o83 Tlll9 irta'-11 -Ned with Ille ----------County Clef1I of Orano' County on ___ MUC ___ NO_T_tcE ____ 1 May 10, 1983 STATIMRWf ~ WITHDRAWAL ""* ,,.,.,......., Of'DATlleO UNDO FICTIT'IOU8 .,_.. MAim Th• followlng P•r•on h.n wtth<lrawn u a G«*al partnat from tlMI partMrlh!P 099r1t1ng \lflder --;...ciCirii1ni10Wiiiii•iiiuii1in•iii11l-11c:t1t1e>ua bw1rMM name Of 'HUNT' MAim ITA~ GLASS ANO MIRROR CO. at Thi ~ per-eone .. doklO Paularlno Av• .. Cott• '7A•a. • ~ Ill: 92021. • LA HAUTF 21152 .,._..,,. Th• flctltloua bu1lntH nam Huntington~. CL Hf4e :. atata<T*'ll '°' tlMI Plrtnet'INP wi aetlna Inc. (• Callforl)tl lll9d on July 19, 1 .. 2 In the County corporation). 211152 Ill•• .Ln., oi Orange. Huntlnel'on Bead\, CL 12141 Full N-and 9ddf-ol p.,_, Thll ~ II C111ftC1UcQc1 by a wi;:::;:7 Wyan, IN ~ ooiporlllkll~ INC. Circle. Cotta M .... 'CA t2t29. ~ L Gongora. Aonald J. Wyatt ~ OCC ro.w-ers .falter at IRA ,_ Thll ••• .... _.., w4111 die Pubt11"9d Orang• Coal! Dall) County a.ti of ~ Counity on Pttot, Mey 19. H . J\lne 2, 9, 1N3 Mey 2'1 1tlS. -229!_-«I • ,.,,_ SYRACUSE -Orange-Cout College held the lead for the first 700 meters today in the junlor vanity eight race at the 8lst an- nual Na\lonal Inter- c o 11 e g lat~ -~Rowing Champlomhipe h~re. 1 Unfortunately for the Pirate crew, the race was 2,000 meten. In rowi,ng tenna. the Pirate JV eight "caught a crab" at the 700-meter mark and tiniahed 1aat in its heat today. A shell cat.che. a crab when a rower's oar hits a particularly high wa~. Such an thddent slows down,A boat con- 1.siderably. A. a result, OCC clocked a 6:58.2 to finish ~ Navy won that beet in 6:47.0; Northeaa1em WU econd at 6:61; the Princeton "A" boat WU third at 6:53, host S)'1'8CU8e wa fowth at 6:58.0 and 0CC WU riibt behind. The Pirates can still reach the iRA finala, but ttiey'll have to win or finish aecond 1n their re- p«haae heat Friday ~-In the repechaae, the Pinta wt1l be up aplnlt the aecond and third-Place ftniaben 1n the two junior vanity beats ~y. In the acond JV eight heat of the day, c.llfomla WU the win-. ner wiJh a · 6:53 docking, while Cornell WU~ at 6:50. Coach Larry Moore'• rowen re~t the only community 1---.,---.,.--,__~=---=--PubtlaMd Of ... C0Mt Deity college competing in the JV eight ,._.,, nu•"4 l'llot "'-2. •. 11, n. 1ta races. They rolled up a 19-4 re-PlCTinOUI ..,.... an.a cotd f -'-ls MAlll ITAT'lmNT __ .,. ..,._ against our-year a;uOO The following J*ION .,.. doing ---:;;:ii..._iii~"";;i'~iiiii'- durtng the regular 1eaaon. ~~:STREET PARTNERS. 'PiC:.lJ:."':IA~· V II b II I 29515 Main Street. !MM, c.rHofnla Tiie tollowlnt ,.,_ la Ming o ey a eagues 92114. bulll.-_ Mark J. Schulz, 21 Ab•to. PET COUNTRY, 1111• 'for t:"rlS r•aJUled 1~~~~2~~!·gllam, 14 ~ Fountain v-.,, Ca. ..,...._ Cl f th ~-...&.-Shooting Star, lrvlne, Callf0tnla Oarrett H•rlllcll, 144•1 UIC .aC>)'I U 0 e ~ 12714. Area and Newport Volleyball Thia bullr'89e 11 conducted by• ~way. Colla....._ c.. Club are sponaortna volleyball lmlted oertnereNP. n. ..,..._. 11 oon•••= e,,., t . ~ J. ~ lndMdull.. leaguet for ~la ages 9-3 this . TN111at-t wee flled wttll ttia 0emin ltorilCll summer. County Clerk of 0range County Oii "* -··•" _ ..... ..-.. Mey 18, 1"3. _ Cow1ty a.ti of ~-.-..on All girls and their parents are .... _ .,.. 2., ...,_..,.. - invited to attend a clinic and aign Publlahed Orang• Coa•t Dally ..., 2 • tta. ,..,_ up for league play which ~ P11ot. May 19, "· JUne 2. 'a 1983 Pub111Md °'~ coa.t DaMr June 20. Oirla ahould wear tennis 34M3 Plot "'-2. '· 16. n . 1ta · ahoet .. \hey wW be invited to "8.tC N011Cl ~.a aTtnunage. ftll.IC 11)111 , I y I M01'C8 °" .,..,... tALI ~ ..... ~ ........... VOU AM It _,MAT~ A DllD Of' TMMT D,ATlD JULY 7, Ml. UNLaM YOU TAU ACTION l TO "°1'WCT YOUR NONllTV, rT llAV • IOU AT A ~ IALI. IP YOU NllD A• f IDIPUMA110ll fl' ntS NA'NM 0. nta NOCftD9M A~ I , II I I I Ii ~ 1MOULD CONTACT A TOKAI MNK OF CAlll'"OAHIA. • Callfoma lanklnQ COri>otatlon, .. ~ llPClol!Md ..,."* .. uncs.c die ..,..,. cMaortbed Deed of T,,,,_. and ~ to the ~ of .. c;ontalned In Mid o..d ol Tru•I. Will SEU. AT PU8UC AUCTIOH TO THE HIQHHT BIDDE" FOR CMH ~at the lime of .... In lewtul money of tt1e united 8tatM or by • ctllllter'a ch«llc drawn on • ltale "' Ntlor'9I batik. • Ital• or __. .. ot9dlt ~. Of • ttat• Of fad•r•I ·~~and loan aeaoolaUon. In .,,. ttal• of Callfornla) all right lltl• and tn-..i oon~ to and ,_ held by It Ufldar Mid o..d of Truet In Iha property -.tl\aftar det«lbed: TAUSTOI\: WAlTEA F. HAU. a married man, " hit tole and ~· property. BEHEFICIARY· TOKAI BANK OF CAUFORHIA. a c.tlfornla banking Corponllon. ~ Jllfy 10, 1118t .. 1,..,, no. 130M, otOfllolal Recotda In the office of tr.. recorder ol Or•nge • County, State or Cellrornla: Hid Dead of Truat datcrlbn Iha ·~ ptoparty. Parceil 48, In the City of lrvlne. County or Or•nga. Stat• or c.llfornla. .. par map lli.d In Booll 134, Paoaa 27 to 38 lnclutlve ol Paroat Mapa, In the offlc;a or Illa County Racotder of Mid county. The atraat addrau or other common dHlgnauon or th• rHI property ~ daacftbad la purport.ct '° be: VACANT LANO. Thate le no ltrM4 addt-and/or °"* common daalgnatlon ror the ,..., ptoperty daacrlbad above any lntarattad party may obtain direction• by •anding • written ~t wltl*I 10 d'YI lrom IM ftnt pubtlcatloft of Ihle notice to th• beneficiary who•• name and addr•H follow: Tokal B•nk ol Callfomla, 634. W. 8th St .• lOI Anoe'M, CA 90014, Attn: Gerald ~ TM uildaralglied TnmN hereby dl9dairna .. llabMlty for any tncooectnaM In Mid atraat .Odrw °' other common dMlgnallon. The bailMlclery under Mid. Dead of Tn..c. by r.ucn of a btMdl or 6MaAt In the obllgatlon• aac:ured ~. ,_.oforw eixacuted and d .. l~•d 10 the undenlgnad a 'M1ttan Oedwation of Default and 09mMd fOf Sala. and written notlea °' bfMdl and of alactlon to cauM th• undaralgnad 10 Hll H id PfOP8l'tY to •ti.fy Mid obllgatlona. and th..-aafter the undaralgnad cei-.s .wt notlCa of bread\ end ol .-:tlOn to be recorded Fat>Nary 11, 10U -lnatr. No. 83-417583 of Mid OfllcMI ~o •. 8•1d ••I• wlll be made, but ""lthout covan•nl or warranty. ~ Of tmc>lled. regarding Ulla, ~ or ancumbraM:M, to -WV tM pMdpel balance of the not• Of other Obllgallon __, by Mid Deed of Trual, with lntaraat and other Mime .. provlct.d tl'leraln, plua .OV-, If any, under Iha tarma crHlad by Hid Deed ol Tn»t. The aallmaled amount of Mid obllo•uon, Including but not llml1ed to the ~ balance of Iha CIOllgMlon. *'--· '-· ctiarvea and ...,._ of lh9 Trua1N, at Iha tkna of lnltlal publleatlon or this Notlea .. 9141,3511.74. Said ••I• w lll be held on Thundey, June 18, 11183, •t 10:00 a.m .. , at the Chapman Avenue antranc• to Iha Civic Canter Building, 300 IE. Chapm1n Ava . Oranoa. CA and ._. be conduc:tac:t by ln1..atata Truat Deed Setvlc:e. Inc --addr-and laiaC>t><>ne · numw are 505 N Tu1lln Ava . Suite 238, Santa Ana, Calllorn1a 92705. (714) 54t-3201, a agent for Hid TrualM. OU.: M9Y 20. 11113 TOkal-* Of Celttomta • Call!. 8af*lng Corp. •MIO T,,.._ ..,..,...,. Trua1 Deed s.n.o.. lne., agent 8Mrry Battarty, VP Pubff91\M Orange COHI O•lly Plot, M9Y 29, June 2. II. 11183 2465-83 .. ..,. P'ICTnlOUa ~·· Mm STAnMENT The to4low4rlg par"""9 .,. doing ~-= CURTIS -HERRERA ASSOCIATES, 548 Ocean AV9nue, SM 8-:11, Calltomla 907 40 Barb•ra A. Curtis general J*1n8f, ~ <>ce.'I A-.a,• s.91 8Mch, 90740 Sondr Herrara. general par1t*". ~ Avenue, SHI Baactl. Callt ll0740 Tlrit ~ la onducled by a llmltac:t Pllftn.ahlp. Barbar• Ann Curtlt Oanaral Partner TNa ~ -flled with Illa CcM11y Clertl of Drano-County on May te. 1$83 ,,,.,. Publlahed Orange CoHt Dally PlllM. May 18, 28. June 2, 8, 11183 2342-83 ftCT11lOU9 WU MAm STAnm:NT The followtng parllOn lt.Oolng ~-ISLAND lADY INTERIOR OESION, 117 5-pphlra Ava .. 8elboa i.IMd, CA 112842 Unda J. M¥1Jn, 117 Sapphira Ave •• 8alboe taland. CA tnee~ Thie ~ la conducted by en ~ Linda J. Martin Thia lllat-1 WU lltad wllh Illa County Clertl of Orange County on May 18, 11183. • '21..U Published Orange CoHI Q.ally Piiot. May 111, 28, June 2. II. 11183 2a38-&3 NOnc&.OI' TMltftl'I IAU i.-•CUM T.I. .... ~ ~COOIO • T 0 . 81!AVICf COMP'ANY M d appointed Tru•t•• under th lotlowlng dMCtlbad dMd of true Wtll 8ElL AT l"UIJllC AUCT TO THE HIGHIEIT llDOER FO CASH ANDIOA THI! CA.SHIERS CERTIFlEO CHECKI SPECIFIED IM CIVIL CODE SECTION 21124h (payable 11 tlla time of Mia In tawtvl money of the United 8tatH) flll right, Ulla ~ lnl ..... I oonveyecl JO and now ha6d by It under Mid Deed ol T ruat. In the property harelnatw dMollbed. TRUSTOR: OOVOLAS G CLARK, J EDWIN CLARI( BENEFICIARY THEODORE P. NELSON, VICTORIA NELSON Aecotded Fatiruary 4, 1962 H lnllr No 82-04211111 ol Olflclal Record• In Illa office ol tlla Recor<* or Oranoa County; Said dNCI of ttvat dNc:rlbaa Iha following lot 12 tn Block 7 ot Illa RHubdlvlalon ol Section 1 ot Balboa laland. In the City ol Newport Beach, •• par map rac:ordaO In book 8, page 30 OI mi.oatlanaoua mapa In Iha otftoa of Iha oounty recorder of uld oounty YOU AM IM MFAUU UNDOI A Ofl!D OF TitUST DATID 1:Ml7 .. 1. UNUH YOU TAKI ACTION TO PAOTl!CT YOUR P .. Ol"lltTY, IT MAY •E 80lD AT A l"U•llC IALI. IF YOU NIED AN EXP~NA TION OF THI NA TUAI! OF THE PAOCHDINO AGAINST YOU, YOU SHCKJl.O CONTACT A LAWYER.. t tll Agua Avenue, N""port Baac:h. CA . "(II ' atrMI addr ... or common detlonatlon ol property la allown above. no warrenly la glll9n ea 10 111 completeness or corractnaN) " The benallclary under ... d Oaad ol Trull. by reaaon or a braacn or default In Iha obligation. aKUred 111ere1:>y. lleretorora a.acuted and delivered to the underalgnad a written Oac:tatallon ol Dalaun and Demand for Sale. and written notice ot brNch and ot elec:llon to cauaa the unoeralgneo to ••II 1a10 property to Mlt.fy. Mid obtlgatton1, and thereafter the undaralgnad caUMd aeld notlea ol breadl and ol election to be recorded FabNaty 18. tll83 as Instr. No 83-t 15422 In Official Record• In the offlCa of Iha Record« of Orange County: Said aale wlll be made, bul wllhout covenant or warranty, expr.a or !mplled, regarding tttla. po-.ion, or ancumb<anoaa, to pay the remaining prlnelpal aom ot the note(•) MCUred by Mid Dead ot T "'"· with lntareat u In Mid not a provided, advancas, II any. undat tlla term• of aald Dead of Truat. r .. s. charges and ~ ol the TruatM and or Iha truata c:raetad by Mid Deed of Trual. Said ure wlll be held on Th"'9day. June t8, tllll3, at 2 00 p m at Ille Chapman Avenue entrance to the Civic Canter Building. 300 Eut Chai>man Ava., Orange. CA At Iha llme of the lnltlal pubOcatlon ol Chia noilea, Che total amount ol tlla unpaid balanc. or Illa obllgatlon secured br th• abow 0.1crtt>ad deed o trutl and a111mated coat•. axpanHa. and adV9nCM la $92.81111.33 The total lndabced-balf'lG an estimate on which cha 0panlng bid 11 computed may be obtained by calling (714) 1137·01188 the day before I.he aala.. Oare Mav t8. t1183 ""•P•NY T D. SERVICE Cv... " .. Mid Truat•. By RoM A Garcia. Aallatent Secretary ~ City Blvd Weal. Orange, CA 828M Tei.· 714-1135-8284 Publlaned Orange Cout Dally PllOI May 28. June 2 8. 111113 24311--113 P\B.IC NOTICE K-05m FICTITIOUS SU81Nf:S8 NAMe 8TATOlllN'T fha IOllOwlng peraona are dOlng buSl.-a • SAMMIS· VIEJO. LTD . 171122 Fiich Avanut'. Sulla 100. lrvlna. Ceh!Ofnla 92714 lee Sammie Company. 17922 Fitch Avenue, Sulla 100, lrvlne. Calllornla 92714. a California corporation Ch rls~e1on lnvetlmant Company • Calllornla llmlte<I parlne(ahlp, 17922 Fitch Avenue. Sult• too. lnllne, California 1127 t4 Thia bu-Is conducted by a llmlled part,,.,.hlp lee Sammla Cornpany Jonn S H119Mta<1 Exec. v P Thll stat-I was Iliad .. th Iha County Ce<k of Orange County on May 13, t883 Allafl. llllatlclna, ladl, OamllN&MalkwJ 4MO MacArtllw tlvd. 81111• 500 ....-pon 9MC.h, CA l2lllO "18401 Publlsnad Orange CoHI Dally Pllol May t9 28, June 2. II. tll83 2334-83 P't&JC NOTICE • 1(-05202 FICTITIOUS llUSIMH NAME STATIMllNT The loflowtnO ~ era doing bulal-• THE MARKE TING DEPARTMENT-. t811152 MecArthur Blvd , Sutta 20~. Irvine. CA 11271!>. AGID ANO COOPER ASSOC IA TES. t 11852 MacAr1hur Blvd. Suite 205. In/Ina, CA 112716. KENNETH W AGID. INC .• a Celllornla corporation, t81152 MacArthur 81Yd .. Suit• 205. lrvlna. CA 112715 Thia buti-.. conduc:ted by a oen«•• partnerthlP Kannatll W Agld. lne. Kenneth w Agld, PrM. Thll alal-1 Wll Ried with the County Clart( of Orange County on Ml)' 5. tlll3 "11M8 Publlallad Orange COHI Dally PHot. May 12, tll. 28. June 2. 1A83 • 2t08-83 6 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 BUSlfCS lo flNANCIAl Bual~ fut :>.;.W ·--()pp><•--~nf'W Wan""1 • tnV'fl'llmM\' ()pplrtunn.,.. lav~'"""'"' W.tnwrd . ·M~-. u,I,.,"°"' •Monr" Want....1 Mu,-\a ...... 1' l' 1t Drl'\.OYJOT H1l"Wo1r'U"'1 •J1it. Wa_ntM Alf• KillfN• A"'1o Al)1U1n &MW (.*ll•t•lf\ l)o ...... D·l.t••'4f" r--rurt P'\.1 "'-laoutU J.....,r J,.,_, ~111n1 l.MorlA u .. u.t ~~au M.ft ......... M11M1lllo"' MO ~ 111ont ..... := 11 .... uh 11o11a ....... ~ ~ w..... Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thureday, June 2. 1883 C7 ) c;a· • , Oranoe Cout DAIL y PILOT /Thut"lday, J41ne 2, 1883 HOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA Friday, Jue 3 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Visit lo one ronfined to home. hospital could be part of scenario. Time spent alone enables you to gain second wind, to review values and to regain sense of direction. Don't panic because of delay. Schedule-is on target and ~ou'll know at. TAURUS (April 20·May 20): Accent on communication. change, meetings with exciting people, especially members of opposite sex. Lunar emphasis on fulfillment.of hopes. wishes. Recent business investment will prove more than satisfactory. Sagitt.arian plays significant role. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Family member talks of hopes, aspirations, career goals. Be· receptive, highlight diplomacy, make intelligent concessions. Genuine bargain available where luxury items or art object is concerned. Libra, Taurus persons figure prorrlinently. CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Long-distance rommunication requires review -be positive of sources, check validity of information. Long term ~ agreement ls spotlighted. If you stand tal.l, temlS will be clearly defined. Pisces, Virgo natives play important roles. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Someone is dangling carrot on a suck -be wary of temptation, offers which lack substance. Check financia.l ratings of those who would be partners or signatories to long-term agrttmenta. Your position is strong, there is no reason to be intimidated. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Go slow, lie low, finish rather than initiate project. F<XUS on public relations. ability to gain attenUon, including media. You'll have wider audience for product and chance for major dlsUibution deal. Aries native plays key role. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Be ready for fresh start. improved working conditlona and chance to recuperate I069et1. Accent al80 on need for proper diet, nutrition and attention to those who rely upon your judgment. Co-worker expresses willingness to coopenrte . . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Favorable moon aspect coincides with creativity, •peculation, speclal relationship with member of opposite sex. Accent also on intuition, direction, dealings with young persona, including offspring. Cancer, Aquarius natives play key roles. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Tendency e xists to scatter forces -key ls to be flexible. versatile, and to avo id confusion. Focus on communication, educational projects, publlilhing and plans for tra~l. Check 8IOCOWlt1.ng procedures, be awar e of property values, make effort to improve aecu.rity. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan\ '-19): Unusual opportunity exista -Includes a.rW of teCW'ity, special purchues, oontacta with people wtio can aid In achieving major goal. Scenario highltahta abort UiJl8, vl&ita. cont.acts with relatives and ideu which can be transformed into vt.eble concepts. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What begins u routlne procedure could result in exdt1ng profitable enterprise.· Lunar e mpha1i1 on payments, collections and income potential. Lost articles can be located. Gemini, Virgo, $agj\tariua penons figure p~~-PiscES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent on apecial appearancee, Ntprile glfta, added recognition and hunch that paya dlvldenda. Major domestic -. ·I I I i t ,. I I I , . -\ Orange COU1 DAIL y PILOT /Thurtday, JuM 2, 1883 ATLAS CHIYSLH ·PLYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Cos11 Meu Tel. 5-48-1934 3 blocka aouth of Sin Diego Freeway off H1rbor Blvd Comt)let. body shop. Siles Service P1rts. S.rvlc:e Dept open Monday tnru Frld1y 7.30 AM to 5:30 P.M 1nd 8 A.M. to 5 P:t-4· on ~turd1y. OIANGI COAST AMC/JH;/HNAULT 2524 Hart>or Blvd , Cost1 M ... 5-49-8023 645-7770 • I Jee9 Oeatef In lhl Wiii! S.. UI todly IC>< 11111. MfVlce & i.atlng. There ere r111001 why W9 ire • 1 . PrlOI ~ eetectlonl Aleo. the all-new ReNult Alfllnce 11 herel THIODOll IOllNS POID M9Cfern ...... ..-,,~. p1t11, body, p1lnt & tire deptl. eomi>etltlvl rates on ..... & dllty renttlt 2<MIO Hlrt>or Blvd . <A>st• Mesa. 841-0010 °' 540-&211. ...... ...,.. ........ MATCH THE NUMIERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE IOXES • LONG H ACH IMW L1roe ~tlon of new=ulllty UMd BMW"a end other llnl caral Siles, eervlo9 & • D fr.O.lna we6c:or'nel Tu1 405 Freew1y to Nofth Cherry o -remp, tum~t & got blocka notth to 3870 N. Cherry Alie., Long Beech. (7t4) f3t.5790 (2t3) 427-5494 0 NAHIS CADILLAC 2eoo Herbor Blvd .. C~ll ~ Tel. 540-9100 0rlt'lg4t County's L1rges1 Cldlllac deeler. S1lel Service. l.Ullng. IOILONGPllPONTIAC 13e00 8eecll Blvd., We.tmin.ter. Tel. 892.ieM 1 Ortinge County'I otdelt Ind llrgMI PontllC deal«ahlp. S ..... s.Mol,Perta. • DICK MILLU PIAT/LA~IA • '"Probebfy CM lowMt pnc.d Flit. in Sou1hem Cllllf«nll" (Loc.ted 1 mlle nottf'I of South OoM1 P9UI new Mt1n St. end W11n« A1'1. In Santa Ana) 120 W WtlftW, SMt1 Ana 557-2112 • • SUNSIT FOID, INC. (Home of W'*-lhe WMNI. &440 Gard9n GroYe BlVd., • W•tmln1w. 'rel. 83&-4010. -·--~....-.-- M~ Supplement to tlw 0.Uy Pilot SOUVENIR PROGRAM -THE COSTA MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB 38th ANNUAL . ., I June a. 1983 --. ------. . ' . 2 -CoSta Mesa Fish Fry/Ari Advert~ng eupplementto the pAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 2, 1983 ' : we·could have called it utopia . . South ~aSt Plaza. ~~.us c .~u --cm ... _ms £ ...... ~ i __ dAL&C --·-_fil . . Costa Meea Fl8h Fry/An Adwrti91ng aupplement t9 the DAILY PILOT/Thul"lday, June 2, 1983 -3 ~ Q t -~-·-~-~------ J: STREET , 19TH STREET -. . .. ~~.Mesa Ash Fry/An A~~ ~t t~ ~DAILY PILO)"~,_June 2, 1983 • I" • , Fish Fry --------- Costa Mesa I ~-.celebrates its 30th _.big year witti a · motltn of · speciat~ eVeen.ts ' 1 . --. ---~-r------ • J . I I •I J :r .. .. .,... -. ... . . 8 -CostaJ.4esa flsh Fry/An AdvertJaing supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Thureday, June 2, 1983 .. , .. , , .... . , ~-,......_ -·----___ ..._ __ .. __ Costa Mesa Ash Fry/An Advert181ng supplement to the. DAILY PILOT/Thureday, j une 2, 1983 -9 Eritrants · see cofltest as fbln and profitable I 18CAN TO TAMOL The Ridge Tahoe Is Laite Tahoe's newest and mOlt IUJcurious ~pote built tlmelhare reson Located higtl WI the mountains Qrt one of the most beeutlful 911• In the entire Tahoe ba11n This private guard gated.resort leatures'cjecorator f\Knished Mty equipped two bedroom/two beth master IUlll oondomlnlumt. tor~. outside c:leQtta .nd bert>ecuea. En)o'y ttie udulM and PfMlll Aldfe Club with inooortoutdoor swtmmlng pool. seuna, tpe.. tennia. recquetbel. along Wtlh a lilSI class dining room and lounge. The rftOt1 hes ski ln/lkl out 1C01M to ~ Veley Sid Relon. · YOUR WUHMD "'°'IRTY ..-.cTION TM' INClUOH: e Aound T llp Alli-· Or9nge Coi.nty Airport IT ahoe (Aire.ti \. • 2 Oeyl -1 NlgM • CMmlQtll ~llOIW (MadT!um 2 penonl) • StMklat • Gtound T terwpot18llOfl !::;!::':;::":_ »n -· "'9 --o1 '36.000 c_.. on1y on. "'10flCI 10 -...,...., A°""',....,..._ ... oe .--to -'fOAJI -- r ~.· • ~· l;-~--F~/~==~==t~theDAILYPl:~::~~=--:~83 --- .. I . I .. "9-'lllVJt ·&IKE CO. • OUAUTY to SPllDS ·~IJ«ES • BEACH caulSERS • PAtTS A Acassoa1ES EXPERT .. REPAIRS . 559-56.07 . , . 14'j() Culvo Drive (Hcnt• Plan) lrWlc, CA 927 I' ' )IK 4?:$0&u.~ . (STOHECUEKP\AZAI . .-VIN£. CA 91114 1ewele::ti'"" ••••••••••••••••••••• • Stonec.reekJ.leaners• • • Ouallty and SERVll AT It'• s..t e 25-3 DRY e • 0 OFF CLEANING • . , • (WITH THIS COUPOH) • • Incoming. Ord# Only • e INCLUDING DRAPES a HOUSEHOLD • • 2 DAY8 Oft HOUaHOLD ' • OfflA GOOD THAU JUNE 1913 r------------------· I Mail To: I I Ad•ertiains Departmen~ lniae Mirror Newapaper •• I . to 330 w. Bay Stree~ Co.ta Mesa. c. 92627 I . .1 1 Yes! I Want To Win a I I . _Terrific Prize · I I Please Ente.r Me I I . , I NAME .... : ................................................................. 1 .• I I ADDRESS ............................................................... 1 ICITY .................... STATE .. ·:··· ... : ....... ZIP................. ' -:.::~~·~~·~~·~~·~:~~·~~-~= 6 I Entrv Fonns Can Be Picked Uo At The9e LOC81 Mer<:Nnta IRV!NE 4200 8AAAANCA PAAKW"Y ("T WEST YM.E LOOP IN STONECREEK F\AZA) 807~1 TUSTIN 651 E FIRST STREET ,AT NEWPORT BlVO IN THE COURTYARD I 731·5888 2300 SE BRtSTOt. BtlWEEN CAMPUS & JAM90REE !>'9-8157• , • l°"9r Noe Vlld on Sued9 Ind ~ •• ·•,~1·1 . 552 .. 6961: . . . • ' -t n )) ,. ."' \ C .-o ~N -··T:~1;;s :T .: ) . Rules 11id· Rllilatio1s 1. ENTRANTS LIMITED TO 12 YEARS OF AGE AND UNDER. 2. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE SUBMITTED ON 8'A x 11 PIECE OF PAPER . ~ ~I 3. DEADLINE ON WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15th, 1983. WINNERS WILL APPEAR IN-WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22nd NEWSPAPER.•· 4. ANY TYPE OF ARTISTIC WORK ACCEPTABLE. 5. USING CRAYONS, PENCIL. WATERCOLOR. CHALK, MAGIC MARKERS OR ANYTHING YOU CHOOSE Will-' BE ACCEPTED. Sorry, no cNkk9ll ol the ~ ol TM Dll/ly Plot or km. Minor ~,,.,,,em.. ·-----..--···---~ GARCl,A·'S T.V. SILES . Ill SERVICE G-~L~ WE SERVICE 11$T UJll IUDS TV'sw1We E .. q.1111 "SMWntl ,ou ,. our ,,,,.,._.,, IN TWO LOCATIONS HOURS: In Sent. Ana 15333 Culffr DrtYe II-TH M:30 208 N. Orend An. . FM.M 8utte 425 SAT M::IO Off 1at 552·5922 SUN. ~MED 136-7793 COME ON IN -WE'RE NOT THAT FARAWAY ALL BRANDS OF GUITAR STRINGS 2 FOR 1 ,,. ··············-····· -.. .! • . • '·• . . . . . ; '·'·· -.« .• -.... « .. ·~ i:I Hr, .• -·-~-Y!~ .2C~2. ;1,0.,..-~~1.-~ • , • • • • ,._ ' II • _. a'• ,1111 Sizzler . \ . • . t •• • '" .. • ' ' .... 12 -Coeta MeM Flafl Fry/An Advertlalng eupplement to the DAILY PILOT!Thurlday, June.2, 1983 . . .....-o.,..1a.a-1op... ..,,., .. t:30-1:30pa. llrfJ!f ·~ The streets of c.o.ta Mesa will come alive Saturday u the annual Co.ta Mesa-Newport Harbor LiOnt Club Fish Fry parade steps off at 10:30 a.m. on Harbor Boulevard. Thia, the 38th annual parade. will feature Robert MCNaughton, star of " E .T . the Extra-terrestrial," and an Irvine resident, as Grand Manha.I. WILSON STREET y START •• VICTORIA ST. y 'Y O ~ COSTA MESA ~ 'Y m 1%: < • • :x: 19th ST • • --------..--------------------~.---~ ... ........._.. __ l I • : l I I I I I t t . . 14 -Costa Mesa Ash Fry/An Advertising supplement to the DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, June 2, 1983 - -..-. .,-:- .. Floats flourish in city Fish Fry parade Beatltilully decorated fioata t'lleh aa <;.ta Mesa's entry into the 1982. par- ade will rm ihe ltreeta S.turday beginning at 10i30 a.m. .. . ------___ , ::i . . , . . C01ita ·u.a Rlh Pry/An ActM'tlllllQ •IPl*nlellt to tt11 DAILY 'Pit.OT ITiulday, June 2, 1-. -16 = -' ::=i .. ""'* ±! ---------------------------------'--------'-----· -1 Coete Mesa Rth Fry/An Adverttstng IUpplement to the DAILY PtLOT!Tftur90ay, June 2, 1983 -17 · ' . Volunteers inan the '"' , ' -. many carnival ·booths : eo. ..... rr...,.. .. 11 'Then this lette!' anived from an irate Kanau farmer who laid the thing landed while he was plow- ing fua field. ffja ~ were 10 frightened. he ~. that they ran through fente, damaging themselves and his plowing equipnent. He wanted to know what the Liam Oub was going to do about it. The club was unincorporated and uninsured, 10 all the members . L t- 1701 Golf Course Drive; Costa Mesa 540-7500 18 -Co.st• Mela Ash Fry/An Advert.Ising eupplement to the DAILY PILOTfThunlday, J..rne 2, 1983 GIFT IDEAS FOR THEIR SPECIAL DAVI . • SEE THE EXCITING LINE OR QUAUTY BUSINESS AOCH80NU .-< HAZEL. Sll.ECT FROM OUR COUECTION ~ PORrrot.IOS. 8RIEFCA8ES. OUK fOU>eM NfO MOM IN A WtOE ea.cTION Ofi M.AT!ft1Al9, COLOM, ANDITnE'S. ......... _____ . Suicide ~d spiced 1971 Fish Fry -~d~-- This daredenl contingent lrom Tijuana made oaotoreyding lpok like a team 1port dartaa' One of the· many eity pUadee tliat terYe to ldek off tit~ annual Fiala .Fri w~kend. SeMng The Community Since 1930 IEWNIT 111111/0llTI ml. 11111 If IULTlll 401 N. Newport Bl, Newport Beacb 646-1671 EstabHahed 1981 .JJa,,,,, 301/. eoua m."' I Personalized gift• for .very occasion. · ~ 11111'1 TllflY/lmUMI I "'11 111L1111a, ..... 141-1141 ESTABLISHED 1968 Congratulation to City of Costa Mesa on its 30th Anniversary Costa Meu Fleh Fry/An AdYertlelng eupplement to the ~ILY PllOT/Thunday, June 2. 1983 -19 • I I I I r 1-·-- 1 ' . I ,--- . . "' • I < It• • t • "' f --~ ~. • .... • t ~ 20 -Coeta MeM Fllh Fry/An~ IU~ tO the DAILY PILOT~. June 2, 1983 ·.THI ORAN GI COAST Dlllr ........... a.... .... David Perez lead& his .cows back 'o his truck after they were found wandering in the 900 block of W. 18th Street in Costa Mesa. COws! l·n Costa Mesa? Daisy and We"dY take·a little stroll down city streets By JODI CADENHEAD ()(' .. Dlllr ,... ..... Daiay and Wendy apparently got tired being oooped up In their small Costa Mesa backyard Wednesday, ao they decided to go for a little stroll · down 18th Street. The problem is that Daisy ls a 100-pound calf and Wendy is a hefty, 350-pound red cow. So you can imagine Dave Perez' surprise when he awoke at 7 a.m. and discovered his two "pets" had mooo-ved away. "I woke up and they were gone," said Perez, 41, who was keeping the an1mala for his girlfriend, who is tak1J\I an animal science class at Orange Coast C.Ollege In Costa Mesa. "I was really scared.'' Now you'd think finding a couple of wayward cows on the streets of Costa Meu would be an easy job. It's not aa If they vastly outnumber all the cars and buildings. Perez headed f<?r the bluffs and drove up and down the westside roads looking for the lost pair. Finally, at about noon, he spotted a dty animal control truck parked at a" nearby businesa at 985 W. 18th St. S~ enouah. there were Daiay and Wendy, chomping away on the diaire.ed businesa owner's gr ... Perez, who had been warned once before about keeping livestock, was dted. Daisy and Wendy were ~rted out of town and taken to a dairy In Sant.a Ana, where Perez says he hopes they remain. CUii 1111111 ORAN GE COUNTY C ALIF ORNIA 25 CENTS u ·B reside_nts (lay - trash-burn plant By ROBERT BARltER ot ... D.-, ........ Residents appear to be warm- ing up to the pcmlbWty a multl -millton-dollar , trash-burning power plani. may be located in their Hun tlr\g10n Beach neighborhood. &.\t In letters to the mayor and to city oouncU members, the residents probably aren't wann- ing up in the way that backers of the possible development would like. . "l cannot believe thl.a was even considered," wrote resident Helen Hobbs. "We do not need the traffic, toxic fumes or not.e JO our beautiful neighborhood and beach," lhe said. Another resident, Ondy Low- ell, ·wrote to expreaa her "concern and' apptthension." "Frankly, I can't understand or conceive of building a (power plant) ao clme to such a heavily populated atta," ahe said. llesident Henry W. Bohrman wrote, "I am disappointed and downright outraged at the thought that th1a oampany (Ryan Energy C.orp.) la still c:oosidering the project .... .. I am plead.Ing, praying that you council members will stop this ~tardlz.ing of a beautiful resid~tial community. Would any of Y.OU want a aolid waste diaposal plant In your neigh- borhood?" . "We object -100 percent object," wrote Mr. and Mn. T.T. Boyne. A petition bearing 11 signa- tures al80 c:omplained about poss· (See ~NT,, Pa1e il) .......... Proposed site of trash-burning plant. Schmitz·to pay for fund usage . Former state senator will give $3,000 to state politics panel By stBVlt llAABLE or .. ...,,......., Former state Sen. John Schmitz of Corona del Mar has .,..-eect to pay the state Fair Political PrllCUces Comrn1ll5on $3,000 • part of a eettlement lnvolvlna alleptiona he ~ penonal me of campeiCn cco- trlbudom. The caee centered arot.md $9,000 the former GOP lawmaker receJved from Dr. John McGrann of La Palma. Schmitz received , FV ~recall factions take their case to DA's office BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. .,.., ........ Campatan leaden from both sides of a Fountain Valley School District recall election have now preeented allepUom to the Or-' an&e County Dlatrict Attorney'• Office, cla1m1nc Wegal activity by their~ta.. Deputy District Attorney Wally W.de said he received mat.erial early today submitted by Jay Stou.t. chalnnan of the No on Recall Committee, which oppmes efforts to unseat 9Chool board members Cheryl Norton, Roser Belgen and Suzanne Moore In next Tueeday'a aped.al ~. Stout charaes the Comrnltt.ee AdvocaUna lle.pomtble Educa- tion, CARE. which lnlUated the recall camP&i"11, hal llleplly duplicated ·ana Uled lWtle9 of <See FV RECALL, P&1e A!) money from Mc:GrUm twcinnins ln 1177. Schmitz had lilted the IDIJDe'.Y u a bn but tl)e ltat.e en• 'ciao regarded It M a c:.mpqn CICIO· trtbudon. The «4hn' '"*"' .,... CU8ed Schmitz ot f.al1.lna to ~ curately report the money tn ~ docwnenta. 'Tniikly. rm P1eued to haw thil 9ettled out ol court." Schmitz said today. ''I don't need the ghouls ln the media apendfna their whole aummer going &ver thl.a.'' Schmitz., planning a nan for Congrell next year, said he will pay the $3,000 fine by Monda1 and amend s-t campajcn staie. menta to show the $9,000 • a contribution. "It's all just a tecbnicallty. I always regarded it u a Jo.n." the fanner ~tor aid. A spoke9woman foe the com- mlllb\ md thal becwR Sdm:aitz (See SCllMITI. Pqe A!) fie was only 14, and he says there was nowhere ·to go BY ft'EVE MARBLE .... Dlllr ........ M the age of 14, John said he willlbgly became an alleged slave and .ex object to a Newport ~ man he believed wu the non In the world who .rstood him. . ft hl.a parents, his two and hl.a friends for a ldllOl»hi,p he said would both tonllent and attract him for the four years. said he WU havlna prob- at home, espedally with hta , and he cansideted the man his friend -his only friend. The tradeoff, however, wu allegedly a daily ritual of 11ex. . "We did everything together, but it always ended up being sex," he lla*1 of t,he affair. Twice during the relationship, John ended up ln the 00.pltal becau.e of the turmoil In hJa life. The laat Ume, he remalned CW'led In a catat.«Jc stupor foe a month, unwillina td tell docton what wu going on 1n ~ head or ln hta life. "I WU ln the rubber room," he said. "I couldn't talk. l knew I should talk. but I couldn't." Even thouih he lived away from home, he auccesafully kept details of the allepd affair teereL from hl.a friends and family. He aald he oont.lnued to go to tchool and led his parents to believe he had moved out becauae of prob- lenia at home. "It wu like I had nowhere to tum,'' be ex Jained. "I ooulcln't tell anyone af:ut it. I felt euilty · like I WM makina· a bia miatake byt I couldn't at.op it." John, now 17 and a h18h IChool eenior, talked openly about the alleged affair -the object of a police lnvestiptlon -becau. he wants others to be careful of the trap he claimed he fell Into. "It WU IO eeay. It hap~nt much moN than you'd think. ' he said. "I never felt like a victim. No,i until the V"1')' end.'' ' · Thouah he now hill reciondled with hJa parents, John IAld he remains friahtened and t.onnen· · ted. ~ In police termlnololY, what al1eced1Y happened to John .. known Ma ·~wk" c::Me. A dllckmhawk ii a !Ml\ who preya Oh )'OW'8 boy. and estab-' Uahel himMlf ... father flpre teen. uid his all~ affa1r bepn while takJna eexual advantap of all too euily. hia victim· a\ the 1a1ne tJ.me, He wu worklna at a bowllna de~uy. alley. Aman, whOlater-= Vfictime. police claim, are left demooatrated h1mlelf to be emotional cripples becauee they undentand.lfta and ~ haw .aunt for what they are 1truck up a convena1ioft. the dCJU\a 6ut t:an'l stop becauae of a teen...,er ta.Id, c:1lnCU'8 need for their teductor'• "We went to a park-.d t.a1bd. affection and frtendahip. · · He 80' kind of cloM to me and Police •Y chlckenhawk cuea \hen. .. ,•• John let bll YOlce trail are ~ un\11\.Ull and. U,.t YC>Unl ' off. · teen boY1f who don't have a father Ttnd ol bfdlnl the .u '' d cw who have problem9 at home affair and ICl'atcblnl tor Mn n am , .... tlli)or .... taf'le'IF. to ~ hll ~' MI,.,. John. • \all, .um. bandlome (liM ~ .. ,., 1 . I 1 I I I. 4 j CLOSING 1.211 M - Retail chains report big increase in sales By Oae A11ociate4 Pre11 . The major retail chains today reported big Increases In May sales, and the chainnan of Seara. Roebuck and Co. said consumers were reacting to an improved economy. Separately, the Labor Departtnent reported that first-time filings for unemployment benefit.I edged slightly higher in the third week of May. Even ao, the number of filings has declined sub8tantially from the start of the ·rponth. · In Chicago, Sears said It.I sales in May were 6.2 percent higher than a year earlier, Jed by strong increases in sales of major appliances and home furnishings. F.dward R. Telling, the Seara chairman. said the increased sales of such goods was a reflection of Improved economic oonditiona. · Among the other big retailers, K mart reported a 10.3 percent sales gain. F.W. Woolworth Co. wu up 4.2 percent and Allied Stores was up 16 percent. In ita report on unemployment benefit.I, the Labor Department said first-time filinga row to 455,000 from 449,000 in the previous week. The latest ·w~·· total was nearly 30,000 less than in the first week of the month. New plant spending declines NEW YORK -U.S. manufacturers in industries other than oil earmarked 8 percent lea money for spending on new plant and equipml!nt in the ~· first quarter. . The Conference Board report Wedne9day said ' capital appropriations by manufa, except in the petroleum category, slumped 8 percent .&om the ftnaJ three months of 1982. ' The buslnea-1upport.ed reteareh organization aid that capital appropriations in the petroleum inchatry, which tend to be volatile and large: row 17.3 ptteebt in the first quarter over the levela of the ftna1 quart.er of 1~2. · But overall. it aid the fint-quarttt ~ appropriations of the nation's 1.000 largest manufac-• t\U'era were a -~ IMlJUl1ed $21 billion.• 0.4 peroent decline from the end of last year. However, the organization said the becldoc of unspent apJ>l"Opriations fell for the sixth comecutive quarter to $69.7 billion, down about $700 million from the last quarter of 1982. And lt said the backlog wa 28 percent below the peak level of late 1981. The Conference Board said 1983'• appropriation levels do not bode well for aotuaJ capital spending in 1984. AMERICAN LEADERS H~W YORK IAP" »lff. , p.m. onu -nit,,,.,_ "' ,,. -,,_, ectlW AINrltMI Stock b c:henee ,...,.., e"' NtloNlly •• m«• ,,,.., ti. Slt,M 1\to ... ~ Ut ,100 1 -~ DomePlfl ll1,000 ~ + ~ W..uoe I 20i,too 40 + '-llltl .,__ 1w,iao· • ..., • "' 0.M>Pnl s 112..00 ,.'-• , .. ·~ 110,100 1-.. -"-=Miner 10.,400 •h • w I rt tl,IOO J ......... 'IO ... l\to METALS COLD QUOTATIONS SILVfR· ....., • ...._,....,._.-._.11.ttll I ~~7:"11* ____ ...... ·~ P!l'"''llY- '"• • ~1 ""· , . ., 1 11 4 . •' I 11·1. .... ,. ~~· , .... .. ~'~ r~ '•I ,.r, ~r.1 a '((. f, ..