HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-06-07 - Orange Coast Pilot1 I
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Fake bo01h
try ends
NB arrest
• ID
Bomb aquad members Leon Benninpdorf and Debra Murray, at left, •
Valley
recall
turnout
light proceu X-rays of 1uspeeted explosive device Monday in Newport Beach.
Stanton-fires off salvo at U.S. Navy
>
.,.;
.-• ..t; EDINGER AVE.
,
AREA TO BE DEVELOPED
( 2nd. golf COUl'$8?)
UJ FOUNTAIN. VALL
l t-RECREATION ~ CENTER
:::> %:
I ~ m,
\
I MILE
SOMARE
PARK
m c
0 r--0
en :-t
Bolsa bill
weighed
by Senate
' I I ......... ..,
Students line up· for 450 hotel jobs
; Map 1how1 area of Mile Square Park under debate •
• ! !ttud dunip declare<!
j Jluntington nuisance
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48 Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, June 7, 1983
MUD DUMP ...
"I WJnt a public nuiaance d~
dared and nothing put in (the
landf111'1) place that would be a
public nuiaance," ahe aaid.
PbylUa Sariego decl.arecS the
lite hid an effect on people
outalde the immediate area be-
cause of the nearby location of
RECALL ...
of votes for a successor.
• Running to -.une the achool
board seats if the trust.eel are
recalled are Edward Sidney
Landon, Devon Dahl and D. Kurt
Hanaen.
The poll.a opened today al 7 a.m.
Aliaon Wessler, election inspec-
tor at Masuda School. said only
eight people bad voted there by
8:30 1un. She said 1,133 people are
regiatered to vote at Masuda. She
said the early turnout was lower
than UIUa1 for a local election.
At the Greenbrook Clubhouse,
21 people had voted by 9 a.m.
Election inspector Helen Moore
said 760 people are eligible to vote
at the clubhouse.
A larger turnout was reported
at Harper School, where about 50
people bad voted by 8:30 a.m.
Election inspector Josephine
Amato said about &<><> are regis-
tered to vote at Harper.
I • ,
F.diaon ~h School and F.d1aon
Community Center, both acrom
the street.
Jane Gant iold offldala that the
fence around the site has been
broken and that oory reeervotn
could PfOVe fatal to children.
Pulletme. the landftll'• oper-
ator tor the last 10 yeen, aa1d oil
wastes covered about 30 acras
nearly 40 feet deep when he first
started operationa.
He said the liquid materiala
could be covered in about 'two
more yean if he were allowed to
continue operations.
The landfill site baa been men-
tioned as a poeaible site for a
trash-burning power plant, and
much of Monday nigh''s crowd
indicated more interest in future
development plans than current
operationa.
The ~an Energy Corp. of.
Costa Mesa, which reportedly is
buying the landfill site, and the
U.S. bwironmental Protection
Agency have conducted tests for
poesible haz.ardous materiala. Re-
sults haven't been available.
City officials say oil field
wast.es were first dumped at the
location around 1838. In recent
years. only concrete materials and
inert materials have been dump-
ed there.
ST ANTON'S SAL VO •..
revocable until there are further
talks."
There currently are plans to
develop a golf course at the
r Ed.inger-Brookhunt location cov-
eted by the Navy for the land
exchange.
Stanton, a former city coun-
cilman and mayor of Fountain
Valley, said there have been no
requesta to change the plans.
''What irritates me ia that we
haven't received any requests
from local offidal.I an1:t DDe
government bureaucrat think.t he
can go over their heads to make
a deci&ion."
Fountain Valley City Council
members are slated to di8c\m the
latest Mile Square Park develop-
ments at torught's meeting in
' council chamben. 30
BOLSA CHICA ...
legislative package that could
lead to construction of a marina.
5,700 homes and a commercial
center at the site.
It is backed by Signal Land-
mark Co., which owns 1,47-0 acres
of the wetlands and adjacent
property.
Glenn Olson, a spokesman for
the National Audubon Society,
said the bill could eliminate 1,800
Tiie llurgMry ell e -°" IM MOO -of ~brM ........ ....-..Sln .... .....,.,, -o1 aaio1n C9lll -........, _ • s..oeo.
acres of limited weuands. He
questioned why Stgn.al should be
allowed to "make an end run
around" coastal land-use restric-
tions.
The bill originally applied to
any wetland in Orange Cou,nty,
but an amend.mer\t propoeed by
Sen. Robert Presley. D-Rtvenide,
and approved by the oommlttee,
limited its provlsiona to Bolla
Chica.
Fountain Valley
~ bn!Mll'llo ·-MonOlly ...... Ill~ 111.0Cll ~ ... la HedeflCle -.... ,._..
lie olglnCte ---• "Denwl, 1'111 good'' pin -.,, 8ftlll'fl' MlclliMI ~ '---
-.............
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·19 p!clf~d,
fpr cpunty
:grand jury
FBI agent cheeks out briefeaae after bomb squad
finished its work. ' i
BOMll THREAT ••.
From Page A 1 ~
rear of the ~ property. Th@
note re~y • eakt the bomb
would be def\.cl when the
money was delivered.
Doo wa1 arre•t•d
mid~temoon when a Dil!llhbor
of the bank, who said she'd
obeervered a SUI= penon loitering DoMl' the ted drop
Man held in
~· a=·---..·~-· ..,.,.,...., ........, ""-.. -.......
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach
AMao...,..<111-.ofeOlll_ .... ..,.
• IOdlilCI .,.... ...... ''°° ....... ....... DIM.
I ~ c ..... ---11.lllO ... -···--. ...-..--... ..... ...... ,.. ....... *Miii ............. .. '* fliocll .. ~ Oil¥9.
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BAXTER'S BAYSIDE
IS NOW OPEN.
lsn t this where
Emesto's used to t>e? '.....--
Morning I og; clouds
w·
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NATION
Percy believes Reagan,
Andropov should meet
\
BJ dae ~W Pnta.
WASIUNGTON -American and Soviet anna necottaton are
not wortc:b\8 with enouatl teme° of urgency and should be apurred
on by Pn!aldent 8-pn and Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, aaya
the chairman of the Senate Forei8n Relations Q)mmJtt.ee. Sen.
Charles Percy allo said Reagan and Andropov should hold a
aummit before year'a end. He aa.ld their meeting should not be
delayed, u the White HOU8e and Kremlin have augeeted, until
there la a pre-arranaed aaenda that would guarantee auooeea on
aubltantive i..ae..
Inmate seeks suit on health food
-·-------. -
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTITueeday, June 7, 1983
F. Douglas Ryen Peggy Ann Ryen Jessica Ryen, 10 Joehua Ryen, 8
LINOOLN, Neb. -An lnmate has filed a lawsuit aeeking
$2,000 a month for the rest of his priaon term and a court order
C1lowlng him to order food from a "good health store." Richard
J . Van.Keuren, a pri9oner in the Lincoln Correctional Center,
claims in a federal lawsuit that Correctional Center Super-
ini.ndent William Foster baa violated hia civil righta by denying
him a vegetarian diet. Foster and the center's staff acoommodate
apedal dietary needs of Mwilima, but have denied hia requests,
\1anKeumen said. He aaya his diet is baaed on his own religious
beliefa, .. which comply with Theo-Sophical teachings."
Cl ues. so~ght in1Chin o · slayings
Sliultz leaves for NA TO meeting
WASHINGTON -Secretary of State George P. Shultz was
IJettlng out for a NATO foreign mini.sten meeting in Paris today
to eolicit allied views on how to speed up U.S . negotiations with
the Soviet Union on limiting nuclear weapons in Europe. The
United States is especially eager for an show of allied unity on
the 1-.ae because thia will be the last NATO meeting before
deployment of the American cruiae and Pershing 2 missiles la
ICbeduled to be81.n in December. American officials have said
~tedly that talks with the Soviets aimed at limiting
deployment will have a much better chance of success if the allies
can maintain a aolid front.
WORLD •
Democrats approve budget proposal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Democrats in the California
Amembly sidestepped Republican complaints Monday night and
approved an unbalanced $27 billion budget propmal. The
Republicans had stopped the budget proposal twice in less than
a week. saying it wu $2 billioo out of balance. But the Democrats
amended the bW late Monday ao that it needed only a simple
majority vote l.nsteaod of a two-thirds majority, and it was approwd
42-31.
U.N. troops urged for Lebanon buff er
BEYERL Y HILLS -Iaraeli minister Ariel Sharon, speaking
Monday on the finrt anniversary of Iarael's invasion of Lebanon.
wjed that U.N. troops be uaed to create a buffer zone in Lebanon.
A U.N. troop deployment could leed to new negc>U.tions for
Ianeli withdrawal from Lebanon, Sharon aaid at a newa
conference. But such renewed negodations would not include
Y 1119er Arafat or other Palestine Liberation Organiz.ation ie.dera.
Disability payments to be restored?
L06 ANGELES -A federal judge, accusing Reagan
administratkll\ offidals of "arropnce.'' aaid he'll issue an order
that could restore Social Security diaability payments to more than
72,~ people. The payments, which are generally $4~1 a month,
go topople who becaU11e of mental or physical disabilities receive
Supfflemental Sod.al Security Income or Social Security Disability
Imuranoe.
U.S. District Judse WUliam P. Gray said Monday that Health
and Human Servicea Secretary Margaret M. Heckler has ignored
ruUnp by the 9th U.S . Orcuit Court of Appeala by cutting the
paymenta without proving the reciplenta are no lonser disabled.
"Where does lt aay that if the aecretary doesn't like a dec:Udon
ahe can limply ~ ii!'' Gray aaked.
STATE
U.N. troops urged for Lebanon buff er
BEYERL Y HILLS -llraeli minister Ariel Sharon, speekinc
Monday on the first anniverury of IsorieI'a invuion of Lebanon.
uraed that U.N. troops be u.ed to crea~ a buffer U>De tn Lebanon.
A t:J.N. troop deployment could lad to new negotiations for llraell
withdrawal from Lebanon, Sharon laid at a news conference. But
such renewed negotiatiom would not include Ya.er Arafat «
other Palestine Liberation Orpnintion laden..
ClllNO (AP) -A milling
family car, stolen credit cardr ana
a possible eyewitneml llCCOW\t
from an 8-year-old boy remained
the best angles .today for
authocitie1 inve1tigating four
brutal alayinp ln the affluent
Chino Hilla.
Detectives tried to interview
Joshua Ryen, the only survivor of
·the bloodbath at the Ryen family
home early Sunday. But the
injured boy, who just a few hour&
earlier had had a tube implanted
in hia throat 10 be could breathe.
was too aedated for an interview.
"We don't want to puah him,"
San Bernardino County lheriff'a
Capt. Phil Schuyler said.
The boy had been found in a
bathroom hacked and cut on the
neck and beeten about the head.
The bodies of hia parents, Douglaa
Ryen, 41, and Peggy Ann Ryen.
41, were found in a bedroom.
The bodlet of Joshua'• sister,
Jeelica, 10, and a neighbor who
waa 1pendlng the night,
Chriatopher Hu,hes. 10, alal
were found in the eecluded houe,
located about 35 miles east of Loe
Angele1.
Some detectivas on the cue
de.cribl!d the~ u a "blood-
bath."
All four victlml had at leut 20
woonda MC}\ and died within
mtnute1, Coroner Brian
McConn.lck caid Monday.
A ~tcbet waa found a~t a
half-mlle from the ~ aioo,
F.ngllah Hoed. but authorities raid
they bad not determined lf ll ...
a murder weapcin.
Tidwell eaid the kiJlen ap-
parently did not try to ss-re
.JOlllua. .
'"They probably thou&bt be
WU de.ad," Tidwell laid. "He WM
In very bad ahape, but none of the
wounds be ~ved were fatal."
lnY'eSUpton had DO modve in
the killinp.
, The aberiff aaid the cue being
developed IO far by a 3$-member
tMk force wu "very week." But
authorities were cautlou.aly
hopeful Joshua could provide
vital lnfonnation.
S F Catholics
take softer
stand on gays
SAN FRANCISCX> (AP) -
Wh1.1e the Catholic Chun:h. can
never enOOr. the lmt\&al .:tivity
of bommexual9, It lhouJd treat
them with the comp-wkm and
underltandinC afforded all Quia-Uam. a new report by the
Archdiocw ol San Ptancteco
mys.
The offida) poUcy of the
~ eald that "home••·
lnvmtigaton were MU"China
for two emapem from~ nearby
Calltomla lnltitutlcm for Men.
along with a 17-year-bld youth
from the Boy'a Republic refonn
llchool. The juvenile and one man
eecaped Saturday, and the third
man eecaped Thunday.
Tidwell ldentlfled the e9Capee9
as David Trautman, 2~. Alboro
Knori, 31, and M.lcahel Fut Hcne
Martine'%, 17, of Ariwna.
"We have no reuon to believe
at th1a time that anyone of them
are connected. No evidence con-
nects them up. Tiley are Ju-1
pomibWtiea that we are checking
out,", he Aid.
'The family'• white Buick It.a·
tion wagon with wood ~
and liceNe plate 2ALL 731
not been recovered, and a liceme
plate taken from ~ family'•
tn.aclt. RYEN4, allo WU mbcing . David Trautman Alboro Knori
Dioxin poison kno-wn 60s • ID
NEWARK. N.J . (AP)-Feder·
al offidals Ignored ~am.11\88 20
yeen ago that wotken at a
dioxin~taminated plant here
were IUffering from a aevere akin
di..-that c.u.ed facial boils
and hair growth, aa:ordl.ng to •
doctm' who treated them.
lhe Dallas-based Diamond
Shamrock Corp., produced
herbicides at the plant. which waa
10ld in 1971. Dioxins were
byproducts of the prooesa.
'Their akin turned black and
they grew hair all over their
faces, even on their eyelids. We
I
had to treat them with auraerY to
remove the boiJI or drain them.••
Brodkin, Who WN paid by
Diamond Alkali aaid. '.'They had
co much lidme9I they couldn't
afford to let people go to a doctor.
'Ibat's why I went to the plant
and worked at the inftnnary.
Dr. &pl' BrocUdn of the Uni-
venity of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jeney Mid Monday that
he treated mon than 50 workerr
at the now-abuM:IOned Diamond
Alluall C.o. plant, which manufac ..
tu.red the defoliant Aaent Orange
in the 196()11. He said he informed aovemment offid.ala of the prob-
lem in 1963 .
D e rns seek t ax c u t c urbs
The plant ~ the P-ic·
River in the 1n:mbound eection of
Newark w• .eeJed off Thunday
after Gov. ~ H. Keui
annountled buanba levels of
dioxin had been found in the
ground at the site.
Diamond Alkali, now part of
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Democratic leaden-in ~
have launched a move to limit the
10 percent cut in indlvidual in·
come taxas 8et for July 1, but
Senate Republicana predict the
effort will fail
The plan to place a $700 cap on
the Kheduled tax cut wu an-
nounced Monday by Hou.e
Speaker 'lbomal P . O'Neill,
D-Mul. The speeker raid only
ta.xpaye.n eunlng more than
$50,000 a year would be affected
T V p rod u cer I. Tors dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ivan Ton, the Hungarian-born
producer of nature films and 1lteb televtf1on aeriee as "Sea Hunt,"
"F1.lpper" and "Gentle Ben." died in Brazil over the weekend, bis
attorney aaya.
Ton. who would have turned 67 th1a week. was vi.citing
Druil'• Mato Gremo Plateau with hla eon
when he died of an apparent heart attack
Saturday, attorney Arthur Staabower
Mid MondAy.
The pair had been 9COUting locationa
for a planned wildllfe 1eleviaion .ma.
Such ahowa made Ton famoua.
Bom Ivan lAwrence Ton in Buda-
peat and rabed and educated in the ame
dty, Ton came to New York i'.n 1939 and
later mfarated to Hollywood. where in
1941 he joined Columbia ~ • a
.:reenwriter.
by the S700 limit, which be
argued WU needed to produce
more revenue and cut budget
deficita.
'60 Minutes'
n ot guilty
LOS ANGELES (AP) -At-
tomey'I fOf' Dan Rather, ~ and
the top-rated ahow "60 Minutes"
cla1med a vk:tory foe a free prem
after IUOCe9lfu1ly defending a $30
mUl1on slander ailt filed by .a
California doctor.
Dr. Cul Galloway, who
cla.lmed be WU unjustly llCC\llled
in a "60 Minute." report on m.urance fraud. raid that during
the trial be felt "lib David up IPlmt Goliath. I don't have my
own networts..••
The disputed~ titled "Ira
No Acddent," Wiii brwdcwt Dec.
9, 1970.
Disability payments to be restored? ua1 orienlat.ioa. ii not held to be a ---------...-:------------------------
LOS ANGELI'S -A federal Judie, aocwd.na Reapn
adminVtratlon offidala of "arropnce." -aaic) he'll isle an order
that could reston Social Security dilabO.lty paymentl to more than
72,800 people. The payment.a, which a.re pnerally $451 a month,
go to people who becau.e of mental or physical diaabWtiel receive
Supplemental Sod.al Security Income er Soda1 Security DlaabWty
Inaurance. U.S. D1.1trict Judge Wllllam P. Gray aald Monday ihat
Heuth and Hwmn Servicee Secretary Margaret M. Heckler haa
ipored rulin&a by the 9th U.S. Circuit Coun Of Appeala by cuttlnc
the paymema without provtnc the red;tenta are no tonam'
diaabJed. "Where d.08 it aay that lf the Mlcretary doeln't like a
dedlk«> abe can limply Ignore It?" Gray aaked.
alnful condition... aowewr. a
atatement rehcrd With the re-
port. aid the church '4c8n never"
.cDept bommexual Ufestyla that
endone rexual activity.
'nle report ursee both beter-~xualr and bomoexualr to live
a life of ch•tUy. •-aia.uty le a
virtUe of respombWty," the re-
port cald.
Between 16 percent and 20
percent of the reedenta of &n
J'randcco are belieYed to be
~
We're
Listening •••
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Tell us what's on your mind
OAAHOI COAST
DlilJPillt
~Md~~
IO the Publltier
........ c...
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Among the moet ctunble oefWI
malerl•I• In the wJrld ere IM
IWO ••on•• •• b•ll J•d•. Nephrite and J•d•lte. Long
before Jade ••• u .. d tor
om*'*'1 or Jewel1Y putpOllM,
pren .. torlc peo9le recognized ,., .. CIMr9Ct•lttlq •nd carved 10011, con.,fntte 1nd eating
~fromtt.,
Jede le toft• ''*' Deemond. wNGh ~ II ill mote .... ty
ICt'Mdled. "" J .. '°""'* th•n Otemond. J • I• mo.re c~ve 8M would eurv1v. • INllP blO* tha• ctutct chip or hetwe•~
The ..... -.,-.~ J.oe ·~.a ......... ~ "'ln•r•t whloh oooure In • ............. -. ............
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tror ,......,,.. ... °'"' ..... .... ZMMnd, W)'.omlnl. AMllca. and th• reo9"tly dl•covered
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Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tue.day, June 7, 1983
Tbe trophy, prwnt.edl~~ ~t Bernard J. L la
the btchest lel'Yice and leldenhJp
boner tbllt can be bestowed upon
pn_OCC atudent who bu exhlbi-
led lelflell dedication and tirelem enero on behalf of the college ""1 ita ltUden1L It la not pres-
r nted every year.
Hall. a paduat.e of Corona del
Mar Hiah School. was elected in 1982 to OCC'a $1Md.ent Board of
TrusteeL In 198~3 ahe served
as a lb.ldent member of the Coast
Community College Diatrict
Board of Trustees.
' "While a member of the dis-
trict'a board and durina a yeu lined with trawna and strife,
Julia exhibited a tremendous
~t of poiae," occ President
Luakin said.
Hall will transfer to UCLA In
j.he fall
Heuennann, a U.S. Navy vet-
~. graduated from high achool on Virginia. An engineerlpg
cnajor at OCC. he haa been
txtremely active in the college'•
enero program during the put
two years.
He helped design OCC'a new
Recycling Cent.er and played a
key role in obtaining state and
federal IJ'&llb for campus energy
projects. He was president and
busine91 manqer of OCC'a
Energy Club and was editor of
the campus newaletter, "Energy
Update."
Dale Heuermann ·
Heuermann has been accepted
next year at both Cal Poly San
Lula Obispo and UC Davia.'
High schools list
1 l valedic'torians
--Eleven \'ai.d.k:tor1ana wW pll'-
tic:tpata in paduadon OlremcnJel
\hia month ln the Newpon-M-
School DlWict.
Sherman Dom. valecllctorian.
will leld c.oron. de1 Mar mp
ScboQl11 aniduatlna clMI of dO
durtna U)t 8:4D p.m. ceremon.lea
on June 18. Beme>aureate eer-
vicee are IChecluled at 4 p.m.
Sunday.
At ea.ta Meea Hiah School,
valedict.oriana Glenn Arnold,
Kelly K.ealer, Keith Khorey I
Michele Raua and Stacey Shane
will pertidpet.e in the 5 p.m. June
16 graduation for 309 1enion at Oranae Cout Colle1e. Bac-
calaureate Ml'Vices are acheduled
for 7 p.m. JW\e 14 at Newport
Harbor H1ah School.
Rebel Ely. David Inadomi and
Daniel Shapiro rank at the top of
the 375 6tanda Hiah School
graduates are receMna diplomu
at 7 p.m. JW\e 15. Bemelaureate
aervtcea are scheduled at 7p.m .
Sunday in the OCC auditorium.
Motorcyclist dies
on Ortega curve
An Orange man WU killed
when hia motorcycle veered into
oncom1na traffic on Ortep m,h-
way and amaahed head.on Into a
pickup trµck, the California
Highway Patrol said.
Ancm, Gonzalea, 22, wu travel-1.n& westbound at about 80 mph
on the highway, 14 milea eut of
Intent.ate 5 Sunday, when he io.t
control oo a tum and oo!J!ded
with the truck driven by Tfavia
Kq. 44, of Stoclctmi. who iuf-
fered only rblnor injuiea, offioera
said.
West.em Medical Center"a heli-
copter~ team. Med-Air,
treated the victims at the 8Cebe.
Newport Harboc' HUlh School
valedictorianl Jamee !tlyera and
Mard 8ckknnn will leld their
390 clamnates in p-aduaUon cer-emom. at 3 p.m. June 18 at
David8on Field. Benra•aw.te
.W. will beiin at 4 p.m.
Sunday ln the qu.d.
Costa Meea councilwoman
Norma Hertq will be the fea-
tured speaker durtnc a.ck Bay
High School aniduation cer-
emoniee at 10 a.m. June 16.
Extended n.y School will p-adu-
at.e 2' l8nlon during the 4 p.m.
campus ceremonies June 16.
Youths get
summer jobs
in 12 cities
Oran1e County's summer
youth employment prolf'Ul1 will
get under way JW\e 20 when
acme 850 disadvantaged youtha
aged 14 to 21beginworldnaIn12
cities and unlcorporated parts of
the county.
Spc:llllOl'ed by the county's
apec1al pr'OlrUDI office, the youth
proeram. funded with $1 m1llJon
in federal funds. will be the
lara-t ever apomored.
Thoee enrolled In the prqp-am
will be ~d $3.~ an hour for
their work if they still are in
ICbool while thOle of out 8Chool
will earn $3.78 an hour at jobs.
The youtha will work anywhere
from 20 to 40 hours weekly.
The prC>Cl'UJl ii administered
by the county whkh h1rel. coun-
.U and ~ the youtba. Host
employers introduce their ch.ar&-to the WCll'kina environ-ment and aapervt.e wodt and
attendance.
County airport usage increases agai~
Recruitment la betna bancf1ed throuah ICbooll and plllcement
cent.era located In Costa Meea.
San Juan CapUtrano and W.i-
mlnst.r.
off and 1mded from John Wa~ To be eligible for the prosram,
Aiport runways during the one must be from a family llvlni
month, an increw of 2.3 percent at or below the level at wbich a
---~4
Newland House
tours presented
• I
4 •
Toun and a luncheon at the historic Newland Holm will be ·
offered Wect:n.da~ the Sand Dou.n, the women'• divWon of
the Huntmaton Chambel' of c.ammen...
Tldtets of $4.75 for the tour and lunch am be ~
Wednelday at the lite nears-ch Boulevard and Adami Avenue.
' • Proceeda will be u8flCI to restore the poundl the Toun will be conducted frcm 11:30 a.m.. to 2:30~.m.
old manl1on built just before the tum of the cen . :·
'
County history lecture scbedule'd
William R. Coner, fonner dean of Santa Ana College, will
apeak •t 7:30 p.m. Wednellday at the Costa Meu Historical Sodety
~.comer of Plumer Street and Anabetm Avenue.
• "Happtnem ia to be in Orange Ccunty," will be the toJ* of
the free talk coveriJli 40 yean of local hlst.ory.
Musical evening set in Laguna
l...aaWl& Beach High School'a music department will host a
"De.ert Show" ewnJna of mulic Saturday at 'llvoli Terrace oo
the Festival of Arts srouncta.
Tbe fund-rai8er, the J,ut for the year, inchadm dinner,
dand.n& and music. A no-host cocktail hour besina at 7 p.m.,
followed by dinner at 8 p.m.
· Dance mulic will be provided by the hJ8h ICbool ju:I
ememble and tDe vocal jazz ememble, Tlcketa. at $17.50 w:h, are
available from bed atudenta and at the 9Chool acdvltia office. For
more lnfonnation, call 494-8M6, ext. 223.
Aububon Society tours Caspers Parle
Tbe South Cout Audubon Society wt1l tour Calpera BepJnal
Park June 12, Jed by Don 11lomM, )ftllklent of the CMpft"I Park
volunteer group. Tbe ll'OUP will meet at 7:30 a..m. at the park,
located about le'YeD m1le9 out the Ortega Hi&hway from San Juan
C.aptatrano
For information, call France. Talldey at 495--0107 .
Speaking, writing classes set
A 8eriea of two-hour c1-on speakina and writin& with
hwnor, style and flair. will be beCin June 21 at the Mariner's
branch library in Newport Beach.
The c1ua la offered through the dty'a Parka, Beeches and
Rec:reatioo department and taught by Mort Stein. Cla.M will be
· meet etaht oomecutive Thundays at the llbnry at 10 a.m.. For
more lnfonnaUon, call 640-2271.
Airline pamenger traffic and
private aviation activity con-
tinued to~ at John Wayne
Airport in April, surpaaaing the
levela recorded in April 1982.
205,706 pasaengers who uRd the
airport in 1982. The Lncreue in
paaaenger traffic amounts to 4.7
percenL
For the year, the number of
pueengen availing themaelves of
the airport haa lncn!Med 7. l
pen::eo\, Cable u.id.
trom198~2·~1~~~-,-~~~~tamny~~T~·~aaJ~iftee~~tor:=..-.!public~=-=aid==. __.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I i
I ·
Airport Manager Murry Cable
reported 215,911 passengers ar-
rived and departed from the
airport in April. up from the
Gann HJarks
I
Prop. 13's
5th birthday
. I SACRAMENTO (AP) -While
state lawmaken wrartled a few yards ~ away over a $1 billion-plus deficit in
the state budaet. Proposition 13
co-author Paul Gann celebrated the
fifth birthday of his tax cut initiative
in the Capitol.
The 71-year-<>ld Gann, who teamed
five ymn ago with Ho.,vard Jarvis to
cut Calibn1a property taxes In half by
' votera• initiative, brought a
2-by-$-f~ cake in the ahape of the
State ot ~Ol'Dia to the Cfipitol for a
~ Mooday with IUppO.l'Wn.
''What • wonderful oocuion thlil ia
tor me ~y and for the people
. of Callfornfa. Happy birthday Prop-
osition lat" Gann sakt • be cut the
cake, IUfl9UDded" by a half-dozen
comervaUV. Jeplaton. "rm th.rilled to be here today. At no
time in our history do we . need
Proposition 13 more than today," said
one of the lawmakers, Amemblyman
Bill Baker, R-Danville, dting what he
said could be a $2 billion detidt in the
budget bill pending on the Amembly
floor.
A few minutes earlier, Baker had
been among 32 Republicans who for
the eecond time in a week temporarily
blocked the $27 billion spending bill
Mbre than 39,500-ail'Cl'llft Cloclk.
. "'..,....... ' A11emblyman Richard
Mountjoy watebe• Paul ·
Gann cut Prop. 13 birthday
cak~
for the corning year, denwldini
spending cuts to bring it. in ~:
Gann aaid his partner m authoring
Proposition 13, 79-year-<>ld Howard
Jarvis, wu hoetlng a ain)il.a.r' an-
nl~ party in San Dteao.
One ofAmerica~ top wine lists.
Th< Wm" ~t,lf1•t
Fine Dining .
3801 wt Cu.1 t Hii(h•·.ty
Q nina Jel M 11r, Call(uml• (714) 760·0HI
•
•
...
·~
;
~=='~J.i~
The ~ .... belnc left where the aptmaJ. die.
'lbree yeuw aao. in one of the 1ara-t animal ..... projlcta in c..Il.fomla h1ttcry, mare than
8~11 WeN trapped and
rmMMdl from the Wead by
~-'J'bat opll'atil OCICUrrecJ
after. f9deral )adet,Jiaaed a
~ °"* that pNft!llted a planned Navy k1D.
The Navy la .,nd1.na $5o .. ooo
to have the pw endicated from ttie 57-aquare mDe Island located
65 miltll northwest of San Diego.
Led by Dr. Steve Carothen, an
environmental corwultant from
Flaptaff, AN., the du:ee-man
teem la attempting to extennlnate
the herd and rid the Navy of a
longtime problem.
Since the early 1970... the Navy
has trapped or killed more than
-
~Hungry bear. after gourm$t . far,e . .
T AHOll: SHORE VJ') -After a winter of He aid it waa the first beiar llabted at Lab
bibematic:Jn. a bear near this Lake Ta.hoe reeort Tahoe thla yec. But this II ~ to be a
. apparently bWlt up an appetite for 10mething heavier year than usual fOf' bean, he aald. sllkle
more exciting than berries or nuts. late anowa in the Sierra Nevada could drive many
Nevada wildlife officials said the black bear into populated areas f91' food.
was carted off after it was aeen hanging around nie bear wu tagged and taken to the
a J'rench restaurant at nearby Logan Shoals for less-populated Georgetown area near Canon P ..
'most of the weekend. and releated, accordina to Tanner.
Wildlife Department spokesman Greg Tan-Blade bean, the variety usually een. in the
ner aaid diners at Le Cordon Bleu ·notified Sierra, are genenlly not oomldered cSancerous.
authorities after watching the bear through the Tanner uJd that when the bean are friahtened,
' windows of the reetauranL The animal was they're far more llk.ely to climb a tree than attack diatnl through the garbage. Tanner said. anyone.
COMPUTER
No matter CL.A88E8
what you're In
Fount8'n Valt9y doing, your
hometown (See lcf.cMe In
The •.
~·PIOt)
STANDARD
a In. COMPUTll
964-8050
--··~ . --
Phony dog
deaths land
1nap in jail
GR£1:NSBOBO, N.C. (AP) -
A man haa been lndlcted for
allepdly reporttna 67 phony doc
deetbs to collect $3,500 from
eeveral lNuranoe companiea.
The ~t involvtna the dop waa 26 inaura.nce
fraud charps f~ charges of compracy banded down by a
Gullfmd County Grand Jury :r=.:= i. Cnwford, 26,
Crawfonl WU u.t.d in fair
condition at Mmes Cone Ho.pi~
with a oollapeed tuna due to a stab
wound Monday, a hospital
apokeswaman uld. Viola Iaaiah,
28, ,who lived at \he~ addrell
81 Crawford. WU cbar&ed with
... uit with • deadly weapon,
poUoe eald.
The indictment aald that
Crawford reported a many u
ellht dop at a time had been nm
over by can.
Her master's voice ----
Naatas&ja, a bauet hound puppy, gets her ldeb
from a stereo tape player with her own penonal
head set. But the Hong Kong pooch isn't listening
to the latesi hits, but to the voiee or her owner, to
get used to it.
I I
I !
I I
..
.
i
A• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, June 7, 1983
.
tJI MAILBOX oc •
~ wareness . will h~lp
To the F.ditor:
• Alxhefmer'1 nt .. ue la preeent-ly at epdemk: prol*SiOna In thia
cpuntry, with 2.5 i:nOlion Amert·
c*m affected. 'Ibe recent article
Qfl thJa dn9d dJ9eue WM ex-
i lmportant in ed&acatina
bUc to the ravacee thia
baa not only on the
but the family and, ln-
IOdety .. well.
Hopefully, through public a~ famillea will not feel aa ~ted and alone as they have in
I
the put. Once the public under-
stands the fDllDlbade of the
pn>b1em. we can then, hopefully,
lee great ltrides In ~ to
el1ld.lcate WI country'• 4Ul 1-d-
tng killer. Until then. we ltlmd
ready to offer ..mtance in my
way we can to the families In
Orange County.
'JOAN E. DASIUELL
Praident. A.lzbelmer'1
Diaeaae and Belated DUlordera
A.xiation. Inc.
Orange County Chapter
Who could be master?
To the Editor:
In an ediiorial paae article
Sydney Harris proposed the crea-
tion of a new category fOI'
()\IUta"'ling t.eecbera. The title
'1llDOkl be "Mutef" Teacher''. All ~ the reaooing proix-d by Mr.
Harria la valid, however, what he
~ la the little matter of
unkma. Would the teachera union
termit any teacher to be ad-
tanced above ooee with more
lll!Diority just becauae they were
judaed to be better teachers? I
doubt they would. e ' what would be the
ti.Ona for becoming a
Teacher" and who .
would determine which te.chen
would be IO advanoed?
Mr. Harris has a good Idea,
however, in today's IOdety it
eeems u though there 1a very
little in the way of rewarding
outstanding performance. Con-
sider if you will the whole
question of dvil righta. Would
acme predet.ennined number of
thoee d..ignated u "Master
Teechen" have to be female, or of
minority racea?
Sony, aa it ia our IOdety will
not let Mr. Harris' plan wOl'k.
H.WlllTE
Newport Beach
No one seems to understand
T~ the Editor: C:::: latest actions of the Orange
ty Superv18on. the oourta,
~ F .A.A. should finally i.ndJcate
., all that very obvio\Wy they
MD not, or cannot, undentand ~situation that OVerute of John l"•yne Airport by large oom-
~ jets baa thrust upon tboee .f ua living in Newport Beach and
~ of Costa Mesa.
will uae Long Be.ch, LAX or
Ontario airporta for all deatl-
nation flights beyond that per-
imeter.
Our concel1ed efforts abouJd be
directed not jult to penonal fliaht
me, but ai.o to our bwlne8 .....
We ahould urge all tboee who
delire to dobusirW8 with U1 to M
much u pomble oontonn to our
plan. The $250,000 lep1 fees we have spent each year the million FAtabllah a pJedce book ln Qty
dollara « ao apent ~ repona of • Hall wbk:h. we can all 9'p
one kind or another have not iuaranteetna our ~
oonvinclf:d even one authority of and ¥fberence to this cm:Dmwnty
the legitimate ~blenell of plan. .•
the pcsition of the people of tbil The percentage of airline In-
area, which is to achieve a bal-come we can IUCCellfully divert
abCed .-of the a1rpol't by from tboee aldinlll. wbo -.ow
dedbly acceptable planea with a caDo\mly dlow abdutely no
aemible total number of flights awarenee, eemitivity QI' sym-
p&-day to achieve as near-normal pethy for the unlivable condition
tJving conditions aa our situation they are imposing on Ull, lhouJd
could reuonably allow. IOOll fon:e a pnlCtica1 declstoo
Certainly it ahould be con-from all of them to deml8t their
slbered time for the people to take unwanted aervioee and quit an-
whimpialy dealing with WilI power and conmtent CS. £: into their own bands and noY1na ua all.
hypocrites. tem>iNdion II all we need. whk:h
If we can't negotite a firm, legal ii c:ien.lnly a dem..rable alternative UDdentandin8 on a mutually ac-to clwn~ more and more
ceptable numbeT of flights per hard..-med tax doUan down the
day that we can all live with, then rat bole.
let ua uae the power that no one AddiUonally, we will be livinl
can takeaway from us, let us our Newport Bwh otficl•la tm:DI
ldf-19trict our me of the airport Jevezqe to work wHh ln their
We m.m all n90lve to limit necot1atiom to -" a fair and
fli&hts bun JW A to within the equitable mluUon to du. problem
perimeter limits of San Franci9co, that hM plagued W for 10 Jicm8.
Sacramento. Phoenix and the HENRY BUJUOI:
Beja. We mwt pledae that we NewpQl't Be.di
Removing a fixed target
To the Zdtt.or.
Now that the $625 mUlion foe
tbe MX hM s-eci both hcM.-. of
Qactew, I have been thb1king
about tb.ta ''vulnerability" 1alue.
'Dae Minuteman m rm.ne. are
vulnerable to a first strike. The
MX wlil be, it 1a generally ac-
eepted, juat u vulnerable .
l'urthermore, becauae the MX'a
more powerful, IDOl'e deadly,
more accurate, there will be
more incentive for our
adwnu:iea to knock them out liefcn they are Ulled.
'). have carried thia 1op: OM
further, uJd.ng m)"M!lf
t would be leis vulnerable?" en, the answer clearly 1a, ''No
•
land bwd mlwf!ee Id alll'' If we
Md DO telnptinc Jand t.ed mi9-
Qea, whlleltillpc•ezrlncUtenlly '
tboc..-ndt of lnvulnenble ma ...
dar warbeeda on IUllmartnJ
and bomben, no advenary would
have any l'e8IOfl at all to strike
first! 'n>ey wouldn't have any
targets to aim at!
If we could avoid building the
MX -· if would dJmnantle our
eJdstlng land bwd mwt1ea -our
national RCW'lty would ectually
be lncr111rd! Addltic:mally, u •
bonus. we would uw all the
bOliam ol dollan ... doWn the
MX m bole.
CAROL ANN BRADJ'ORD
N~a.cti
ep1n1ons Hl)rtS~ '" lhl! SP«t abOW .,. ·~ o4 IM O.lly Pilot Otner .., .. ,,., ••• ,.-e1Wd on this~ a re the>W of tlleor .wthoo and art11ts. Re~r cem,,,.1'1 I• lnvlt *'· Address The Oo'11ly Polot. P 0 . 8o11 1~. Co,t• Mew. CA 926211. Phone 1114) , .. , ... ,,,
.l.IDJd Romance thrives
---~
-· -· .
An unflattering· picture
WASHINGTON -JM:kie
Premer. the beefy. ltreet-mw1.,
56-year-old newly~ preml-
dent of the Teumters Union, bu ·
promJ8ed to nan "an open. bone9t
adminiltration." He11 be lfvm a
cbanoe today to rewia1 hll plant
for cleanin1 up the
mobster-In.filtrated union when
be tesU.flea befon Sm. Ontn
Hatch, R-Utah, oo pl'opoeed
anti-racketeerina legialation.
Juatice Department me. paint
an unflatterlns. tbouah pomibly
unfair, portrait of Pr I . 'Ibey
.i.o provide~ mat.en.I
the .enat.or might want to quiz
the new pl"flllident about. P'm-
example:
-An April 28, 1977, ln-teJJJaence report titled, "Labor Racketeertna in Ohio," contained
a u.t of alJe&'ed mob-mated ftaur-. tnc11Nftnc ~·J-=lde Prem-
er, a well-1mown canupt unioa
labor ie..ler (wbo) hM eantlnued
to build tu. pub)ic imate 1n the
(Ohio) area. ma pi• rtfpul tedly
the pnslde:ney ol the Inter-
nadonal." .
-Anodler department repx1. ~Crime md the Labor
Uniona." written by aUiameya
Ibp RolJel' and Peter-Vai.ra.
states, "The orpntaed crime a.f-
flllatiom md lnY01wmeat of
Pr 111 er tmou,b and ~+<lent
of the Teumten Uniaa are well
documented."
HOWEVER. a aource cloee to
Pt cm r told my -.:iate Tony
-__ Q
JKl 11111111 ~
Capecdo the report pl'OYidel no
evidence of thta 1uppoeed
docwnentatklr\. ''YOU don't have
even one py taytnc, 'We have
PrtWr pla)'ine golf with a
known mob member,"' he uid.
-Accordinl to a atill-!f!Cftt
=:anent. lnfonnant Juna ''The
e-1" hadanno told fedenl
lnwstleaton that ~ the
~ of CJevelaDd Ol'-
onbed crime fJ'OUP mernben, IT--.,.._ to aDow (Fratian-
no) the -.-of a mob ftnancler to
aet up • Wllon dental p1.n 1n WUT91,~" 1be Pr -.:late aid that
wbQe Pt r ~ l'ntianno'1
ftmnder met briefly, "Jaclde
threw him out of bkal:floe," and
-mobster 1WWl' '"receiYed IUCb a contnct in Ohio."
-Another lnfonnant. Comillo
yaMaero, a ... between 9or Oblo
and New h:nrJ mob famlliM,
told New Jerwy state troopen
that Pr m zr wa. hia cont.Id in
about 1975 for arrangl.na loam throu&h the Teumteft' Otnenl
Statea Pemon Fund.
Pr e•!r•1 -.:late aid that no
loam were m9de from the fund in
dwt period.
-in March 1979, eavmllvp-PDI FBI acerits heard ~
Qty mob chief Nk::k Ovella YOke
hia desire to get Pl e B EI •1 llp-
proval I« Roy WIWeml -later
coovk:ted of bribery-to •acceed
the union'• then~t, l'rank Fltplrnrmrw.. U1 pcm11ton
waa "po.tUw," an FBI .tfldJvtt
atats, "Ovella wanted to .ee
him" about Wllliams.
WILLIAMS did in t.ct •acceed
.FltzBbnmona, but Pr 1e111 er•a M-
aodate aaid; "Jackie Pre• r baa
never met Nick aveua or dealt
with him in hia life."
- A Labor Depertmmt af..
tidavit atatea that lts in~
arec:urrently lookinc into" •
tiolw that Jackie Pl E II Ir
emhenle the funda" of two
Teamater local.I by paytna
"~' erqployeea. At leeii
five friendl of~ wen~
on the union locd' . boob ae
bwlnem apnta, but bald run up
no expema beyond theU' la1.ariea.
'Ihil ia "m indication ol a failure
lo perform work," the .ttldavit
atatea.
WBAn IN A sua.MtE,:
CIA oftidala are aUll mtchina
their hMda over • 1op-eecret
meaa1p aevera1 weeb ace> that
indicated Brazil WM ClQ the Yerp
of invad1na its ,,..,.,.... to the
niartb.. the leftiat fCll1Dlll' Dutch
colony of Suriname.
They've DOW crmdtded they
were either the vlctbm of nm
rnyst.ertowly motivated dllln-
fonnatim or that the 1"ulliull
were blu.ffina. It w• a dramatic
report wblle It i.ted, thoueb-
Tbe top a itil mewae atated
that • bl1pde of "BruiUan
aoldlen bad croued into
Suriname and .... po6led tn the
jun&lm I« an au.ck on the
capital. Parmnaribo. Meanwhile,
the BraW.an aovermnent alp. po.edlit:"t an uJUmeiaa.n to c.ol. llell I t.ene, the pmldalt of
Suriname: Bia capital would be
attldred tn 72 hours un1-he
ldcked out bis Cuban and "-'
German lldvimn.
8-dy atuff, indeed. But the 72
bow'I c.me and went 'tritbout
inrident.
ID its pc-.-mortem oo the
Benny Penny alarm. the CIA
noted Brull'• undentandable
ooncet n th.al Surln.mne 8eelm to
be turning into the t int
pro-Soviet country in South
America. Cuban MIG-23 jl!ta
could atrike 1,000 miles deep into
Brull from a U.S.-buih airfield
the Dutch left behind. And. ia r.ct. a bilb BruWan offida1 bat
.. thl'M da,. In Paramaribo re.dina 5urtnamMe otfidala the
riot act about • week befoft the
ultimatum repwt..
Footnote: Some 90Ul'Cfll ay
CIA olfldale are not• p•nled •
they pNtend to be over the
Bruilian flurry. Tbme SOUl1*
....... dwt the CIA quietly
encour.,ed Brui1 to brine ......
ure on &arm.me 1o ouat •• oammwmt advt.era.
aoy, have I got. T-r-o~u-h-1-e
-Some unidentified penon
wbo mot me a copy ol JQJ book '° be aUloO'aPhed, ---I lmt the enveloie he ot lhe pw me to
send it beck in. I don't haw any
idea where to 8!Dd it. and rm an rm In plenty of trouble with
whoever lt ..
I
l
• f
----
TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1883
ANN LANDERS
ENTERTAINMENT
BUSINESS
82
83
85
Walter Cronkite examines
George Orwell's "1984"
past, present and future on
CBS special tonight. B3
Getting' credit!'•• Bureaus th~t ke-ep tabs on credit history
J A CREDIT
BUREAU IS
WATCHING
J LOUISE CXX>K • II,,,_....,
What you don't know about your credit rating
can hurt you when you're trying to borrow money,
get a job or even buy life insurance.
Information about your spending habits is
collected by credit bureaus and iJI used by lenders,
employera and insurers. A miatake on your record
could mean your rejection.
The Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1971 gives
conaumen the right to see their credit records and
a growing number of people apparently are taking
advantagbe of that right.
TRW Information Services Division, one of the
country's biggest credit bureaus with files on 90
million people aaya 700,000 consumers a year ask for
their records -up from 500,000 two yea.rs ago.
Some credit bureaus -like TRW _. will give
you a copy of your record; others will simply let you
see it. There is generally a small fee -$8 l'DOlt places
for TRW report, for example.
There is no charge, however, if you have been
turned down for credit, employment or insurance
within the paat 30 days because of information
contained in the report.
NOTE: Credit bureaus do not make value
judgements about individuals. They simply gather
facts about your past payment practices -whether
you habitually are late paying your bills, etc -and
forward that information to their clients.
---------------
If there is an error in your credit
file, notify the credit bureau im-
mediately. You have the right to see
yoUJ' credit record&.
You probably provided much of the infor-
mation in your record yow-.elf. When you fill in a
credit application, for example, the creditor will
forward the details to the credit bureau along with
a request for information on your past relationship
with other creditors.
U you have never wed credit, you may not have
a credit rating at all. And that can be almo6t as much
of a problem as a bad record. A New Jersey man who
won more than $1.5 mllllon in the New York state
lottery was turned down by two banks when he
tried to get a credit card. The man had always used
cuh -not credit. And one banker said lenders are
"suspicious of people who have no credit rating; it's
unusual."
You can find out who has a credit file on you
by looking in the yellow pages of your telephone
directory under credit bureaus. Call the bureaus
U.ted and ask if you are included in their records.
If you can't locate the nearest credit bureau by using
the phone book, check local merchanta or creditors
to aee which company they get their reports from.
lf there is an error in your file, notify the credit
bureau immediately. Give the bunieu any pertinent
data you have concerning the error. 'l'he law
requires the bureau to reinveatipte the situation
and modify or remove lnllocurate information. Ii.
may be a lhnple matter: The erroneous material may
refer to eomeone with a limllar name, for example.
The problem may be more compllc.ted, how-
ever. It may, for example, involve an ongoin&
dispute you have with a Cftditor. U you are not
satified with the resulta of the reinvesUgatlon, you
may enter a statement in your file of 100 words or
less explaining why you think the record ii wroq.
You also may enter a statement showing a apecia1
reason, like illness or la. of a job, for a late or
delayed payment. The credit bureau must include
your statement -or a coded version of It -with
any report it issues about you. And, at your request.
the. bureau must send a correction to anyone who
redeved a report for credit purpoees within the put
six months or for empJoyfnent purpoeee within the
past two years.
By law, the credit bureau must provide nneone
to help you interpret your record. The lnfonnation
in &he record varies from bureau to bureau. But
Associatied Credit Bure1us Inc .• a trade a.odation.
says the records generally include pel"80nal data like
name and address, date or birth. place of employ-
ment, dependents, etc., your credit w.tory and
thingB like bankruptcy or oourt judgementa that
could affect your ability to pay your debta.
. . .,, ' ~i ' . ..
·v.n1Cre Americans spend the most
(Average annual retail spending per person. 1977·)
,,
"1
~.500
3.400
3.300
3.200
3.100
3.000
TOP 5 STATES
1• 1. Alaska
"• 2. Nevada
., 3. Wyoming
'' 4. New Hampshire s: Oregon
$4.607
$4.526
$4.019
$3.885
$3.83~'
'Most r<'Ccnt awulahlP
1. Mississippi
2. South Carolina
3.Alabama
4. New Yortl
5. Artlansas
$2.514
$2 794
$:_> 8..10
$:' 8-lll
$:) ~~t)
Al' N1 ·w:~ ~ ~ r. tpl 1 u .~
This chart shows the geographic d ifference in distribution of
~here American& spend the m ost money.
•
New resource dir.ectory
A guide for more ~han 3,000 county agencies
By KAREN E. ~LEIN Of .. .,.., .........
Where do you go if you want
information on child care, a listing
of llcenaed pre.choola, a directory
of Orange County's newspapers
and radio stations, infonnation on
filing a legal complaint or a
regj.ster of poilOnous planta?
Instead of having to conault a
ball a den.en bulky volumes for
the answera, all Glenda Riddick
has to do ii reach for a copy of her
new bqok, ''Re90u.roe Directory
for Orange County 1983-1984."
In tQie 114-pege paperback
guide are the names and phone
numbers of more than 3,000
county agencies, along with short
infonnatlonal articles on a myriad
of topics.
Riddick has just put out the
1eCOnd edition of the ret10urce
guide, which was originally pub-
llahed in 1981.
The Orange Coast C.ollege as-
llOCiate profe9801' of hwnan de-
velopment got the idea to compile
a llat of 8e"1ice agencies after she
taught a ~ called ''Child, Fam-
ily and Community."
"People don't know where
the9e agenda are." Riddick aaid.
"They hear advertisements for
1101ne (of the profit.oriented agen-
cies) but they don't find the free
ones."
Riddick a1ao noted that many of
the agencies are not llst.ed in the
telephone book or can't be found
under the moat obviou s
cateaories.
"U 80IDeOne cloee to you ls
dying,.you can't find help under
'death' in the yellow pages," ahe
said in a recent interview. But
under the headin8 "Death and
Dyt.na'' in the l'fllOW'Cle guide
there are no ie. thu 30 qmdes
which provide help for thoee
copina with pief, with the lam of an lnlartt or with the death of a
•l>OUR• .
Glenda lliddick 1how1 off the new
Directory for' Orange County." ;; .
ty directories like this but it lest C01Dtributinl bli. and ...... "It
ita fund.lng," Ric:l<ilck md.. wu a mllllive W'l(lenaJd.na. We
That ~ant that• lot of county called evw:y ... ~ llltal
human 11rvicel employees ana ln the book." ,.
90Cial workers were out. • Riddk:.k aald the 8Uide wOUJi
. '
Average retail· spending Other features in the ft!l90W'Ce
cl.lrecto.ry are: an article about
wrttlna comumer complaint let·
&en, Information on a lit-
tle.known diacoUbt medical pro-. aram and articles and llst1naa on
nutrition, peta, plan'9. .afety, ~Clu~~aodmccer
tfeln try-outa; amoaa other
muc:h·needed re90W'Ce volume. be u.eful w bomeownen Pd
So Rldd1ck decided w pUt out av~ cltilenl • well • • i her own cl.lrecto.ry. She worked COUDty aaployeea. : •.
' The West spends more because it has more
r,.
"ne Western state have higher
1pending beeause their ineomet are
hl8her." While the Northea1t it
1eeond in income, it fell behind in
'retail apendiag.
CALIFORNIA., ta,U'7; 9. Hawail, ta,597; 10. Dela-
ware, t3,$8&;
thlnp. . RJdcUck WM workina wlµi
varioua community CQlJepa lor a
fa.t.er pu:entll' contereoae ln 1981
wht!n lhe did much ot the re-
...rdl ahe ~ foe ~ d1ftc..
t.oey. '"l'beft WU a IOda11er'Vic8 ~ wbicb put toee.U. caun-
for llx months on the f1m ed!tion ''EYer)-one a c:oncenwd ~ . and~ put lt on the market fw-the economy 11oday, and iboUt
$5.25 a copy. howi.na, employment and OJOi.:
"I'm 1till ln the hole'' ftun the ...., ~·· lbe llld. ~QQ hilh coeta of that flnt ,wde1 the haw to know 9b0ut a Jot 0t 't~ aid. She'a hoplna to tir.k ~ ~ DODOCIJ Mi&.11 10'I ~
on the tee0nd edition. in which them uni-'°" kriow." ·'.
she'• altqdy lnve.ted f7 ,000. • • •
"I certainly won't pt rich with
the project, but I do feel lt
provkSte an bnportant public lef'M
vice," lUddick aid.
She not only funded the book
herlelf, but Ulelllbled it on ber
own wjth 60 O! 70 volunteen
1 ,
I
m Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Tue.day, Jun. 7, 1883
He wants ·to wrap Up problems over Eur coat -. -~· H ,,
: i I:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thia ta a long story.
P1eue l\ay with lt. I really need help. Here ao-:
Lut Thankactvtng I purchued a rather expenaive
fur coat for the woman 1 thought would be my wife.
1be coat wu chan&ed wi\h the undentanding that
I would make a .Ub.tantial down payment (nearly
hall) and .end another check f1Very month until the
a.t WM paid for. J pve her the coat for Chriatmaa. . S-waa thrilled. Her mother wu not pleued. ho~ it WM much too extravagant.
Unfortunately, the a.t wu too large. I wanted
her to eelect another coat ln the proper ai.ze, but ahe
dedded t.o aak for the cuh instead. Thia I bitterly
reeented. Soon we broke up.
The tenn.lnation WU fairly amicable. There WU
no~ oc name-<:all.lng. No tean. Now we
have• problem that centers a.round the coat. My
former plfriend believes ahe ia entitled t.o the full
value of the coat and that I ahould give her (on the
inl\allment plan) the checks that I would have aent
to the store.
T JOUI HfAlTH
OR. PETER J. STEINCAOHN
DEAR DR. STEJNCROHN: I am not asking for
any advice, but I thought readers might be
interested in what I'm telling. The subject is
"courage" in i.llnes. U Congressional medals were
banded out for bravery, I believe that my husband
would be a likely candidate.
I suppoee many people have been sicker, but I
wonder how many have caJTied the heavy load of
i1lnel8 aa well as he haa. We have just celebrated our
g .. LWaS
I want to do the right thinl but I don't eee much
aeme ln giving checks to a girl f will never date again
and t.o wnom l am barely apealdna. May I have your
vlewa, MiSI Landen?-NO SIR WALTER
RALEIGH
DEAR NO SIR (wklcll la also my aclvlce): Sioce
_.e womu 4Jd not accept _.e coat ancl took tlae caall
lDlteacl (a no-clu1, ,reedy mueaver), you obU-
pttoa to Iler ud1 there. In my oplaloa yoa woald
be 1tapld to contbaae to make paymeat1 on a gift
tllat wa1 not accepted.
P01 SHOTS
BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT
WITH
A LITTLE
MORE COURAGE,
I COUL.0
GET MYGELF
INTO f
A LOT
MOR.E
TROUBL E.
25th wedding anniversary. Du.ring thoee years, we ",..,._., •• .,,, ""'""°"''"'-
have brought up a family of four children. My L.-;oo...;.•_•-~-c--_;....;.Y..,;.5Y--*'-" -""'-----------
husband has suPJ>OCted us even though many a cavlty aa there are of breast cancer.
morning on the way t.o work, illness must have filled Here a.re methoda suggested to teach the public
hia bones with pain and h1a mind with despair. on telf-examlnation for deted.ng early signs of
Here ii a llat of what he has suffered in illnesa: cancer of the head, neck or mouth:
gall blad~r operation, loss of a greater pa.rt of his • Check all akin on the !N:e, neck and lips for
stomach to an ulcer, hepatitis, repair of an hiatal chaJl&es ln color, lumps and 90res.
hernia, operation for cancer of the bowel (for-• Check for amall lumpe or tendemem in the
tunately With no recurrence after 10 yean). amall ri8e juat below the ear.
Throw in a hemorrhoidectomy and sinus • Check for amall lumps and tenderness in the
opention in the interim. He haa had two attacks of neck for trouble in the lymphatic glands.
pneumonia and suffers from arthritis. Although • 'Illt your head back t.o inspect both the hard
only 48, he now faces perhaps the moat .erioua and eoft palate for~ in color.
surpry of all: a coronary artery bypua surgery for • Look for white, red or dark patches on the
angina. lnllde of cheeks and inside the lower and upper lips.
I auppoae many othen have abo had 8erioua Utt your tongue and check the bolt.om of your
lll:nem and operatiom during a lifetime, tNt the point mouth foe abnormal lumps.
I want t.o make is th1a: In all theee yeera, I have never • U you find anything irTegular, .ee your
heud ooe word of complaint. A more cbeerful and doctor.
optimistic man is lmpnmible t.o find anywhere. Whebever I read about the late Sen. Humphrey and
remember his sm1.l.lng face on TV, I think of my
husband. May God bless them both!-MRS. M.
FOR MR. Y.: According to American C-ancer
Society estimates, thia yeM there will be about four
timel aa many cues of cancet" of the face~ oral
•••••tt knock• often ..._, you
uae r---gettlng Dally
Plto• Clual'fled Ada to
~ IN Oranoe Coeat martc ...
Phone 642·5e78
RUFFELL'S
U'HOlSTUY, INC.
... !. ...... ~..,,.
1•22 HMteoe aw.
COSTA Mu.A -t* I U•
~his is ~,~!Y~
is having a
SALE
her first
June 7.9.9.10 l l a.m. to 4 p.m.
Having served the people o( Ounge County for 20
yun With grea1 designs and the higheat quality in
ftM j-.elry.
Specilic items
greatly reduced.
881 Dover Or.
Newport Beach
SALES • SERVICE
LEASING • TRAINING
Suite 14
Call 631-1152
FOR MRS. V..: A. your doctor 1aya, it'.: not
enoup to make a diagnosis of high cholesterol or
triglycerides. What'• important is to di8oover what
type lt ii.
For example, ln ty~ 4 "hyperlipoprotelnemia"
or ln endotieooua "hypertriglyoeridemi.a" there'• a
high concentration of very low density lipoproteina.
c\\ FOR~~ ~°t"~ Girr 'Ii' A~
~ -fat -~ ~FATHElrS DAY~
ENDS AT
flitlc"' t•!!r.
5outh cc.,~!lJiPJs'L LEVEL
COSTA MESA 0~::.~~:.·;~~~~ .. ·~!.~~"·
We'll gi ve you a taste
of old-ti me country goodness~''
The Biggest Name
in little Computers4'
TRS·BD® COLOR COMPUTERS
NOW s100 OFF!
1 &K Standard COior Computer
"llWW. 28.-3004 19995 Dal<I cat. No
. 299.95 ~:=
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2nft_Q5 Reg cc. No. .,..,.. 3H.95=
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have more than a
mouthful for "Steamed Stella" ln Shon HW1. N. J .
She ta the woman who thouaht people who wrap
Chrts1mM preeen .. for their pe .. and put them
under the tree are cruy.
I have two mlnl8tu.re pwfles that have liven
me ~ ~vaUon and more pleaure than my
grandchildren. The Duchem and Q.E.m have be~
mannen and are more appreciative than them kids.
People think I am nlt .. becau.e I bake birthday cakee
for my doP.
For the last aeven Chriltmaw my poodles have
ut patiently around the tree and walt.ed for me t.o
t.cm them their git ... They open \hem with their
teeth and clawa and exPl'ell unbelievable joy and
p1euure with the rubber kitty, angora ball with
t>eU.-whatever I have wrapped for them. TI>ey
never fail t.o let me know how pleued they are.
'nley yip, leap at me, kill my face and their little
t.alla go a mile a minute.
I feel eorry for folka who have never ex-
flMA 80M8fCI
AT WIT'S END
Every year, ln the name of fun. millions of
Americana pack their entire homes ln auitcaae9 and
head out for a good time.
Ignoring the advice of teaaOned travelers who
warn you t.o "pack light." you still Re t.ote hap that
double the body weight of the carrier, and little old
ladies ~ along auitcaaes on wheela like
they're on their way t.o building a pyramid.
It's amazing what aome people thlnk they
cannot live without for two week.a. With eome, ft'•
shoes. God forbid .ameone ahould 8ee you ln Rome
wearing a gray pair of shoes with a tan akirt.
rve aeen back-packers carrying aawed-<>ff lawn
cha.ln, Boy Scoull "roughing it" with 36 ca11ettes for
their stereoe, and a lone hiker with a stove and a tent
for flve strapped t.o h1a back.
With my husband, lt'a a tripod for h1a camera
which he has carried all around the world and U8ed
only on one occasion.: to fish hil hat out of the water
when lt blew off hia ~ while he wu riding in a
canoe at Disneyland.
Most of us a.re overprepared becauee we were
taught at a young age t.o cnsider every contingency.
The year my fint-bom went t.o camp, we
received three mimeographed sheeta (lin.iJe-•paced)
ffom the oounaelor telling him what to bring. It was
amazing to me that he functioned ln a rather active
eodety at home, yel he did not have enough clothes
for camp. It took us two weeks and $400 t.o upgrade
hbn t.o living in a godforsaken field ln a mildewed
tent with 20 other kida who looked and anelled like
they had been nu.eel by wolves.
'nleir main concern was dry feet and required
no lees than thn!e pain of ahoea. You cannot know
how utounded I was t.o dl9oover he waa not living
in trenches.
I have learned long ago that wherever you are
~. • .... --...------~-----NOW PLAYlllG---... -··""'° f>1t U H .... , . ...,
&ht ........
S40 144-4
•ciellA.U ~a..... S4t 1101
niw I.A.... llUWHA &lwlr9 S......... MIC, ..... 5qu11, &lw .. CIMIN Wes!
511 SllO .. , °'" "' '935 ,._.,..,,_..... ...... WU,,_TD
Eft•dl ~ ~ IWltlc'i 11-W~ >t C-.. Ut Oltt U4 2553 DIM HI H I ·Mt3 ---~.......... .....on..e ·-"'10• 0.-SS10IS5 131.1770 w--1 , ______ ,
"HARLEQUIN" <N> .,........ ...... 11 ....,.. ......... .,.
HEVIL DEAD" (It) --..M ... ....... 1-.....
e dword ~ WESTBROOK CIN EMA
·;· -•.• ' . . 530-4401
....rra&WAU'-
REJURNQE
1HE
JEDI
. ,
perienoed Che thrill cd OWDJ.nc • pet. They aft! : i
mt•hll out on one of the ~ tMra of life. My i1
frtenda call me 14cuckao." 1 call t.benl'~vect." ru ·
llln thit Jetter-DAJTY J'OR' MY DAllLDIOB IN
PALM BZt\CH AND DON'T CABE WHO KNOW8.i.
rr . ' DEAR DAFFY: Let'1 Mar It for die pet Inert
everywltere. I wu .._..W by aeu.n fnm
readen ... .., ,..... et Miile 111.lP& ceto~,..~
...,..._...eata.tee. ( :
CONPll)ENTJAL to Used ud Adam.. 11 }:
Trelltoa: Be patleat. Ttme woucll all Miel1. He'lf i ~
set kl• eooaer or la&er. • i
Dl6oover how to be dlite btiit without la.11Jn6 • :
hook, line and .mlcer. Ann L.nders' ~ , ~
''Dating Do'• and Lbi'i.'' will belp you be more--•
poJ.ed and .ure of younel/ an dares. Send !JO oenu • '1
tiong with • lo(Jg, awnped, aell~ enwlope. : i
with your requa1t to Ann Landen, P.O. Box 1199~. : '~
Chiacgo, m. 60611 .. : :
' ·,
• : < rQU==-=l=f l=lf=------------------, ~
.... ~ By PHIL INTER LANDI \.~:
.,
·' '
f :i "' .. \ 1 . ~
i " -...---.:.._ x ~ '
. I . ~ ii jl' ~~' ;:
5 . ., •;; I
"Your pipe is trying to Lell me something." ·~ 'I
------------------4 ~~~ I
going throughout the wuid. the weather will ~ · ~ "umeuonable,"., don't try t.o pack for it. It will~;
the tint Ume ln 200 yeen lt hM rained ln the daert, . '
snowed on the equator, had a drought ln a ~ '
forst, and reached 120 degrees in the Arctic. l I watched a f.amlJy the other day at the airport
clutching their ••leCW'ity blanketa." The younger :
daughter carried a batao (that lhe would le.ave in an •
airport resti'OCllD ln Kaw Oty), the older daughter
lu.gged around a 5-pound mound of hot rollen for:
her hair, the mother canied a Jag containing an}-
unfiniahed afghan and the father carried an attache
cue of newsletters and annual reporta that woufd
put h1a teeth to aleep ln 10 minutes.
What foola! None of them bad remembered to
bring a coffee pot, oord, cup and coffee that w•
atUffed ln my t.ote bag. They don't have coff•'
everywhere, you know.
..
IT'S 22 YEARS LATER .
AND NORMAN BATES IS COMING HOME.
cnma .. ar 1
REIURN~·-
~g~~,in.:~iK£TST•cKET MASTER OUTLETS .:-~~~~NG
__.. --...
·~A.TEAM r'h ::n": 73" 11817) Tom
A-HAPPY DAYS ilJii: CITY HEWS AWAa ~ .M.MMWJNE
~Bid Seed" t 1956) Nancy K~:y Mc:Connack. l ~HOHOR
HORSE RACING MOVIE • * * "The French Lieutenant's Woman" (198 I) Mtryf Streep, Jete-
®'l.M * t "Sat.n 3000" t 1981) OeVld Cw·
rldlne. Stockard CllannlnO 1= WEST: F\JU. Cffn.E * t * t "Ylllkee Doodle Dendy" t 1942) Jalnes Cagney, Join Leslie
-1:30-
1 ~ =.sCHACHI
UEDETECTOA
BOU>ONES
-9:00-IJMOVIE
• • • "Jusl TeH Me What You
W1nt' t 1980) All Mac:Grew, Alan
IKingQt RBllHGTOH STmE
(fl THAEFS COMPANY
M'A'S'H AM£A1CAH Pl.A YHOUSE
COSMOS
MOVIE • * "The House Where Evil Dwells"
( 1982) Edward Albert, Susan George
())MOVIE **'Ir "History Of The World -Part
I" (1981) Mel Brooks. Madeline
Kehn.
(%)MOYIE
• • • "Tragedy Of A RK!M:ulous Man" ( 1981) Ugo Tognazzl, Anouk
Aimee -•.30-•@H05 (f) MOVIE
• • t •, "Nightmare Alley" ( 1947)
ione Power. Joan Blondell
M'A'S'H
THEVIAGHAH
MOVIE
t t t •;, "PollergetSt" t 1982) Craig T
Nelson, Jobeth Wiiiams
-10;00-11 JrllC WtfTE PAPER
•• NEWS
HART TO HART
SAlJDe ARABIA
MOVIE
tt ''The Fanner Takes A Wile"
I 1953) Betty Gra~. Dale Robertson.
-10:11-fl~,.,.,.. "om *'"""" ~'! s .... Mlttln. 9lmldlttt
-10'.JG-LllUPIMDENT ._..NETI ...... WOAK-c ntE llUEJ YIU!a
IT\IPD Sf AMNG
-11:00-l&CfvUNlWS
It llNICH Of ff• ntl! J9ffA90HS
IBllVHU. ......l&ORT Pll LATEHIQHT
700CUJI
MOVIE
H "Hot Dellu Hlgllta" (1i81)
Riven Tutner, Twa Ftynn. ~~AHO
(%)MOVIE
•• •,; "Lauri" 0980) Dlwn Dunlop,
Mllld Ao.ns -11~-lllc:r
ABC NEWS HIOHTUNE "t..owA$<ED R>R IT
• • • 'lei No Man Wrtte My ep.
taph" ( 1980) Shelley W1nten . Burt
'* G) MARY HARTMAH, MARY
HART'MAH
(C)MOV1£
t * 't "l.Jttle Miss Mar1tlf ' I 19801
Walter Matthau, Jultt Andrews
CB) OAAYl HAU & JOHN OATEll IN
CONCERT Cl) A NEW DAY IN EDEN -1:t00-I ::::AIHMEHT TONIGHT
* * "Catry On Jd" ( t966) Juliet Mills. Keoneltl Wllllems , •
(f) IHDEPENOENT NETWOM
NEWS
~~ AM£AICAH STYlE
t t t "The Thing" ( 1982) Kurt Rus-
sel, Richard Dysart DMOYIE
.
-1~15-(U)MO!t'll
t • ''If You C<M0 See Whet I Helt" ( 1"2) ...,, Sll!Olf, R.H. Thomeon -mo-~NOHTwmtDl\YID
ICCUILU
ONION ONE 9'J COTTU: UP eu>se =-~fTYU
-12:40-
• Cl) MCMIUAH & WR 11'> _,._,
,. ~t Al Comlnclle Creelc"
i,!..813~ Mu<phy, Colleen Millet.
n ,~ "Thi Sid Slat" (1967) J«ry
Lewie, D•Vtd W•vne
(!)MOVIE
• • "Tell• T1tror'' (1935) Jdm
Wayne, Gabby H1ye1. eMOVE * t "The F1111 la Sprudlng" (Ho
Date) Tandy ~llOlm Blot. I:' TOHIOHT
t * t "The Corn It a,_, .. 11979)
Katllettne HepbUrn, Ian Saynor
Olrtcied by George ~or
-1:1&-
(C)MOVIE
t "The Comebaca" 11979) Jack
Jones, David Doyle -1:30-
• al NBC HEWS OVERNIGHT
{!) ~COTTtE: UP Cl06E
t * "The SN Wol\'M" (1980) Gr&-
gory Ptck, Roger Moore.
-2:00-1 =NEWS NGHTWATaf
* t "Fighting Miid" ( 1976) Leon
ISNC Kennedy, James tnglehart
UMOVIE t t "Author! Authot'l'' ( 1982) Al
Paclno. Dyan Cannori
-2:10-
())MOVIE * * 1.\ "Cloud Oencer" ( 19801 David Carrldtne, Jennifer O'Ntffl
-2:30-
t t ~ "The TurlWlQ Point" ( 1977) 8 HEWS
... complete ll1tlng1 In TV Log
CHANNEL LISTINGS
9 KNXT (CBS)
8 KNBC CNBCI e KTLA (Ind.)
e ICABC CABCI
e ICFM B <C8SI
D l(HJ-TV (Ind )
G KCST <A8CI
• KTTV (Ind)
e KCOP·TV (Ind)
e KCET (P8SI
e ICOCE CP8 Sl
(DJ Qn. TV
<%J Z·TV
IB HBO
Cl tCtnMWixl
(WOR) N Y.N Y
@ (WTBS)
lJ (ESPNI
CIJ <Show11mv
• S9ott1ot11
• CCable News Network)
'20-20' housecleaning
seems to have paid off
BJ TOM JORY f a ,.._ ....
NEW YORK (AP) -ABC swept bowie at
"a.J-20" alter the first, d1aMtroua show five years ago
Mmlday, and the exerclle, abrupt as lt wu. aeema
to have paid off. The newsmapzine is still around
-indeed competitive -and that alone is an
~t. .. Are we 80lld? We're here," says Stanhope
Oould, an Emmy·winner and one of the program'•
mcist ~t produoen.. "Here'• proof in a ~tive eumple: HBC bl9 newr been able to 90lve
the problem, and that FeS way back to 'First
Tuaciay' and ~ and 'Weekend.'
"1 worked there," Gould aaya. meaning NBC,
"and I don't know the~ Here, we've been five
yetn in competition ln the toughest league there la,
and we're still ln bt.aslne9. I don't know why that
la,. either.
"We're still~:· he says, "and I fUe9 "!fte aotng to-=ramble fcnver. Maybe that'a where
ttie energy .for the ahow OOlm9 from.'' ·
• An ABC News producdan. "20·20" baa been
~by critial fram time to time u glitzy and
too fond of light fe.tura on rock at.an and other
oclebritie&. But that'• just prime time.
. "People Mk whether we're a newa ahow,"
Gdlald rays. "Listen. I can't count the times we've
ripped the program apart at the lut minute to put
ln • new, more timely CJI' more Important 8egJ'.Dent.
T'blt"a news."
Gould ahould know. He ran the in·
vestiptive.reporUng tam for CBS' "Evening
News" through the early '70.. and ahared an Emmy
fer' a segment called "'l1w! U.S .-Sovtet Wheat Deal: Jt 'There a Scandal?" Be won another for "M~t
~ Crisia," a "20-20'' p6ece on the Hyatt Regency Sot.el disut.el' fn KanlM Oty two yean ago.
The Jll'OIJaftl baa, from the atart, fought aimpu;.oo with the prototype, CBS' ''60 Minutes,''
which enjoys a prot.ecied Sunday evening timeslot
that hla been r.irk:ted by the Federal Communica-
tions Commi..son to family.type or Informational
~ng.
Rather than compete hwt·to-head with "60
lOwta" -NBC wtll i.st that questionable tactic
-f.all with 11-0Manltor" newmnapzlne -
"•20" took a Tbur.day·night time8lot. and that
8 TENNIS
LESSONS
•2.000
clearly baa ah.aped the style and content of the ABC
Pl"08J'Ull. Av WMtin, the eeriel' executive producer,
explaina the appror.h ln his recently pub1iabed
book, "Newawatch ." "F.ach week. the 'mix' of '20-20'
stories takes into consideration the reality of
prime-time te1evt.ion competition. It is a fonn o!
intellectual 'triage' delianed to hold the audience'•
hand from clickinc the dial and turning away to
watch another provocative clinch 1n the bedroom at
'Knot'• Landing.'"
1ll.at mea.na at 1eut one--thlrd of the procram
will be devoted Neb week. Westin aaya. to a "pop
culture pleoe" -muaic, movies, new books. style,
humor, penonallUes.
· NBC'a increul.n&lY popular "Hill Street Blues."
tiro.dcMt oppolite "20·20," bu hurt the ABC News
a.bow eome, but. aaam. that'• prime time. "rm not in love wtth doing a atory about Lonnie
Andenc:in." Gould aaya. apeak1na now of the actrel8
farnWar to fans of CBS' recently ahelved "WKRP in
Undnnati," "but U ~t'l)otng to hook people in for
a piece on the We.t Henk. it'• pat wtth me."
Holdina the audience involves eomething mor'e.
"I think ln the crafting of your pleoe9," Gould
saya, "that'• where the difference cornea In. We
cannot afford to be bortnl. not at 10 o'clock at nlaht.
••If you look at the ahow, you 9ee the style of
editing -it'• aot to move, aot to go," he aaya. "And
it'a got to be unpredktable."
The ultimate in unpredictabWty followed by
only daya the premiere pro,ram. June 6, 1978. One
prominent critic called the first ahow "potntlem" and
''dlJ:zyingly absurd.'' ABC bounced arbolta Harold
Hayee and Robert Hu,hes. and brought Hugh
Downa, an old hand from NBC'a ''Today," aboard for
the 99COOd propam. Downa baa been anchor for
"20-20'' ever alnct.
Two more annivenarlee to celebrate in June.
Ted Turner'• Cable Newa Network, the first
round-the-c1ock, all newa channel for cable TV, ta 3
thJa month, with an estimated 19.2 m1llion hornet
recelvinl the aervicl. And Group W'a SateWte News Channef for cable TV ii a yew old, with 3.4 mWJoo
tut.liben on line and 10 miWoo projected few the
end of the year.
'
Orsnge Coast DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, June 7, 1183
CBS News presents
special on '1984'
BY FRED ROTHENBERG W'T....._....,
NEW YORK (AP) -"l~ Revtatted'' ia an
appropriate title for CBS News' ~ aped.al
prosrun about bow near or far we are to the cJ09ed
world of Oeorae Orwell'• "1984.''
The calena.t may aay 1983, but 1984 already
bu arrived ln many waya. TonJaht. Walter Cronkite
exam1nee 1984'• put, present and future.
When Orwell wrote "1984," it wu UM8, tnd h1a
naUve Encland WU atil1 removtni ahrapnel from
World War n. In lnverUna the 1aat two numbers of
UM8, Orwell actually WU creating a parody of h1a
times, more th.an he waa pndJcUng oura, aooordln&
to authoC' Anthony Burpm.
Even IO, the year 1Q84 hat become the
catchword for totalitarian aaaault on penonal
freedom, languaae and hlatory i~l!. t.hrou&h the
m1su.e of informational databanka, electronic
surveillance, tw<rway television and behavior modi-
fication. Indeed, Bia Brother haa never stopped
watching.
''The year, 1984," saya narrator Cronkite ln his
dramatic tones, which give th.la broadcaat particular
weight and portent. "How cloae are we?" How cloee?
How cloee?"
Cronkite, who's taken viewers to the moon and
back and nearly everywhere ln between, is the
perfect tour guide for an examination of how history
could pomtbly be undone-by modem technology.
Cronkite helped report and write the documentary.
I Orwell's main character, Winston SJDith,
worked at the Ministry of Truth rewriting history,
eraaing "unpenona" trom the face of the Earth.
Historian Jonathan Sanden aays on the broadcast
that the Sovteta have been pulling pages out of the
history booka for years.
After the power ahlft from · Stalin to
Khrushchev, Soviet police chief Lavrenti Betta fell
°"t of favor. He IOOn ic.t both hl9 11.f.e Md Ide Jflll.
Hll llCdorl In the 8cMel ~ ... rwplltlld
with an ardcle on the BeftnaS... Bow~
Jy con\19Nent.
In another caH, Bandera 1bo~a
befor.and·atulr pctw._. befor'9 .... ~ •
revolutionary wu dia:redlted and aft. bit pllllCfJ in
a group portrait waa taken avw by a bmll. '1fbo . ·
oontrola the pn!lll!llt aontrolll the plll&." ...,. : Cronkite. ,,
Today, dtllena. whether they lib lt or not. /In
on the computer ron. for vutow Periu:iJl,Pt
apndee, the phone company, bmband mm~~
inltituUona. ln the WftlnC bands, eay unilel' In ..
adminiatration that beu.wd In bit u... and
tricka, these recorda could aet 1nto the wnmc
And what about pemmmta that
around the truth? 1be CBS br-wA• ahowrll
aucceaaion Phsldent Johnlon taUdQs about
Vietnam, a Soviet offidal •Y1na Ill pwmment
not lmix-e fl\lrUal law in -POiand and Preaklt!Jb·
Nixon declaring, ·~can be no wb.1--..h at White Hou.e .••
In "1984,'' it Wal called ''newapeaL" Now
called doubletl)ieak. and WlWmn Lutz ot
Doublespeak Committee of the National ~ .
Teachen of EncJ.iah aaya polltid.alw me the
to oontu. t.auea. Lutz glvee amne examplea of
doublespeak glcmary: "
Peacekeeper for nuclear im.tle; non·~ or de-hired for fired, and neaauve economic
for receealon.
Orwell's Smith, alao known • 6079,
from the flock and waa dAUoyal to Btc ~.
torture, playing on h1a wont fears, lnvolwd a
of rata. His behavior w• aoon modified ,
At Copenhagen'• Univenlty llmptal.-.....
and therapists are ahown trylJll to ~ene ._
rav.ges of~. '"nlla ia the -only clinic ot'hm
kind," aaya Cronkite. "They haw a waltine n.t of
hundrem from all aver the world. How clme . .,)a
1984?" Movie planned on life ----------;:
of John and Yoko Ono
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The 15-year creative
and romantic relationship between former Beetle
John Unnon and hia wife, Yoko Ono, will be traced
in a \hree.bour TV movie produced by Johnny
Canon's Canon productions.
Canton Producti.ona president John J. McMaboo
says he acquired exclusive rtghta to the Lennon-Ono
story from Ono over Memorial Day weekend.
,...,,,.,.
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JS -4 t'llOI ..,. ~----11S, •• , .. ,.,"',
*BARGAIN MATIN-•
Monday tJu11 l•tdef
All Pelfionnenc:H belOfe 5:.00 PM
(~ ..... [II .... 1111 • ......,.)
"™' MAM WIT'M TWO MA .... ,., ............... , .• .....ACS ...... ~·· n9N I IDallOm"-•• ------
"FLASHD ANCE" • I "RETUlltlt °" TI9 .-of" -·---.---· · ..:.."::".::":. -•fM&*• 'iii,~•-ffiO J
MTENOPt MIRC.I" -
_ .... ___ _
LAKEWOOD CfNTUl
SOUTH WAL• •H
"WAAQAMES" '"' ... ---·-
-··· , .. ANAHEIM 01.11\11 1N
' ..
BUE h A PUlo.. • . ~
~--·-·.,... Ht"4010 .. '··
llNCOl.N 111/IVI IN
. . ..
fOUNTAIN VAll[Y
llll1VI IN
--.
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'
---.. TOO,....._ -----
.. WARQAllES" ------
.._.ACC...,..
~•TMI ~! I I I IOll9" -... ------
"P8YCMO r ,. -"9AD llO'YI" 1111
I
\
'
..
IM Orange Cout DAIL v PILOT /Tuelday, June 7, 1983
ts.\Rt'l•:l.lt
(( l "' ;
!
'2 !
,____---1~----1
~7
THE
t'..\:tl IL l '
CIRCLS
\\It soys '1-0 -U a quarter. love,
the Tooth Fairy.'"
.'tl.\R,_ \Bl.KE by Srad Anderson
I
"We're safe ... he panhandled the
pizza placel"
I PEA~l'TS
tVE NEVER LOANED ANYONE A PAIR OF
SHOES BEFORE, SIR
by Jim Davis
Bifi fiEORfSE
"WhoN tr1mpolln1 11 that In the b1um1nt?"
• WHO PtCKEO THl5 DU\\6 ppOORAM ? •
by Hank Ketcham
by Charles M. Schulz
GOIDI 011 lllDGf
BY CHARLES H. GOREN ANO OMAR SHARIF
NOITH
•U
<:1 AIUH
o AKQI
tQU
WEST EAST
•Qt0t7 •5
<:1 74 <:i UUI
0 101 o JAH4
+KJJ042 t87
SOUTH
tAK U O
<:1 Q9
0 7S
tA U
Readers will remember
this problem from April. We
received some 6,000 replies.
and lhere were about 1.000
correct enlries. So me
answers were eight pages
long. and we orlen had lo
read all eight pages before
we round out that they were
SHOE
DR.\BBLE
~
!>MOIJ\.0 (,61
~ ~-eoffoN
1'~~.
wrong. '!'here were two com·
mon mlatakn. Many rudera
thought that South would
have two entrlea to hll hand
al hit ab no trump eontract
If, after a diamond lead, he
won In dummy and led the
ten of heart• from the table.
Not to! Eaat elmply ducked.
declarer had one entry and
he had l.-0 reaort to the line of
play we recommended. If you
continued correctly with the
right squeeu, you will be
receiving your prize shortly.
Uthera found a squeeze
thal does not work. They
won the opening lead in dum
my, fineued hearu and then
cashed their red suit winners
to reduce the ~and to this
pos1t1on: NORTH
• J3
t'l':\K ,. "l~Kt:RBEA'
I lHOIJ(;,Hi "THAT OPENI~& A
5€.COND PI ZZA PL.ACE WOOL.D
BE A StYIART SUSINE.55 MOVE
BUT f(V.J O™ER OPEAATION 19'
CX>IN& Wal AT AU. !
DR. SMOCK
t>-
0 1
+QH
WEST EAST
•Q10t1 +5
c;> -c;>J
0 -0 J 8
.,, ' •81
80U'Ql ,
+AK 8·
c;> -
0 -
tA U
They now end played W eat
by leading ace or clubs and
another. But Wul can
counter. Arter winning the
king or dubs he exits with
the queen or spades! Now
declarer 111 stranded with
either a spade lose in hand or
a diamond loser on the board.
UH POt.&'1'
11.)t c,E;f .
~.MOM? ~
'
Wt would like to than• al
thott wllo &ook the time(•
effort to enc.er. Wlruaer< wi
be receiving thelr pl1u
shortly.
by Kevin Fagan
!U~ Q\~INfJ-1'H~
~ 141!11'~ ONL."f
~I~ "b.XZ
™'t\E.~ (£f~.
by Lynn Johnston
'{OOR MRRK'S ARI!
HIGHER1HAM
MINE .
.
by Tom Batiuk
I ~BASl.'1' 5ti()C.)U)N 1T
MAVE OPENED IT Pl.RO'XJ
"THE S1REE1 !
by George Lemont
. ·
:)
.--------------------=-O~r~~g~•C=o=··~tO=A~IL~Y~PIL~O~T/~Tu=Md=:!•y~.J~uM::..:.:,7.~19=83~~·~·:........a111111111m1•1111-----------------------
A commercial effort
11 you e•er wondered what it really takes
to make a 1ucceee£ul televieion com-
mercial, the Ford Motor C:O. just might
ha•e the amwer -65 tons or steel
1-beama, 20 Iona or plywood, 1,500 yarda
or .U•er tape, 800 pound.a of welding rod,
7,000 bolaa and, of couree, one new car.
That'• what it took to set up Ford's
commercial, currently airing in Southern
California, for the new 1984 Ford Tempo,
a front-wheel drive model that went on
sale late last month. The Ml for the ahot
waa built in the California de.ert and
featured the name df the car spelled out
in letters ranging from 36 to 52 leet high.
In the commercial, the car doee _a
complete run around the loop created by
the "0" -but don't worry, it'•
radio-controlled and ridet on a rail, much
like the amusement park roller coasters.
Irvine's Sp~rcraft merges
Span::raft Corp. of Irvine has announced that it
ia expanding its domestic and international oper-atiom to incorporate Steam Sailing Systems of
Sturpon Bay, Wiac.
Sparcra.ft is widely recognized as the premier
~ and manufacturer of spars and hardware
for racing yacbta. St.earn Salling Systems is a builder
of fully integrated mast, hardware and rigging
systems from the chainplat.es up on sailing vessels. Mereer of the two companies was announced by
Ren Love, pn!Sident of Sparcra.tt. The two com-
pnaia reprement more than $5 million in annual
aalea. The merger will result in the global growth
o1 Spercratt, according to Love.
1be Steam operation includes facilities in
Lyml.ncton, ~. and La Rochelle, France.
Business women meet tonight
The Mar Monte Chapter ol the American
Bam.,... Women'• Aaeod.ation will hold a business
meeting tonight at the Revere House Restaurant in
Tustin.
The speak.er at the meeting will be Fried.helm
Ingles, graphologist. Dinner begins at 7 p.m. For
mon infonnatioo, call 633-8630.
TO START A FORECLOSURE
24 hr. Service
RESl>ENTIAL
COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL
WES PAC RECONVEYANCE
A C--Corpot1llon
(714) 955-0696
"The rnerser of Spa.rcraft and Stearn la a
natural," said Love. "We're combini.ng the t:>e.t of
both oompuliee in product selection, expertiae and
knowledge." ·
Commercial Credit
offering mortgages
Branch offices of the c.onunercial Credit
C.ompany in Costa Mesa and Huntington Belch are
offering first and aecood mortgages to homeowners.
buyers and aellen, ocmpany offid.ala have an-
nounced.
c.o.ta Mesa manager Steve G. I.amheon said
several dilf~nt typel of prosrams are available tn
the finrt mortgages.
He abo aald eecond rnor1gage rates "are aa low"
.. 12.74 percent.
Commercial Credit Company, in businem llinoe
1912, la a subeidiary of Control Data Corporation, a
computer company operating in 47 countries.
Commercial Credit a1ao owna ERA Real Est.ate.
Able president to speak
Irvine baled Able C.Omputer founder and
president K~n O'Mohundro will be the featured
speaker during a 7 p.m. dinner June 15 at Irvine'•
Registry Hotel.
O'Mohundro, whoee oompany 1pedalirea in
devices that bridge the pp between computer
systems and peripheral equipment., will dilcum the
llO-CB.lled add-on industry. c.ost la $16 for Orange County C.oundl memben
and $25 for non-members. For regiatnltioo call
851-1133 or send a check to Cynthia Page, 2300
Michelaon Drive, Suite 110, Irvine Ca., 92715.
Our interest rate on home equity loans
just took a turn for the better.
12.83%S~
That's a lower rote than we've
been able todfer In some ttme.
But hurry. Thls rate Is only gOQd
through June 30th .
&JI:\ COMM~OAL CRf,DIT Pl.AN, INC \:I~ a Control Data CompMy
COSTA MESA • 370 E. 17th Strtet • 6-&5-8700
14UNTINGTON BEACH• 16075 Golden We11t St.• 8-l7·7771
MJSSlON 'VIEJO• 2.1395 Alicia Perkway, Suile 2E • 770·2661
Alicia Town Pleu
SANTA ANA• 1224 Eut 17th Street • 547-5871
..
Mellia auction tonight
• • •
"Advertl.llnC from the CUenta Potnt of View"
will be the topic when Jou Deibler, executive
a.istant in markeCU., and public relationa foe El Tonto-La Fiff&a aetaauuta, he., spea1u to a
meeting of Southern California Women in
Advertiling Wed.naday at 6 p.m. at the Newport
Belch Marriott Hotel. Ticketa are t16 for
members and $20 for non-members.
• • •
Butlqtoa NaUou.I Baak of Huntington
Beech has announcec$ the appointment of IJR
Bulaore u aenlor vice prelident and llellior aedit
officer. He will be responsible for the lending
fWlCt1ona of the bank. A veteran of 18 years in
banking, Buhore WU prevtoualy with Secvity
Paclftc NaUoul Bui. He II a reUdeat of
B~t!Dstc>D Barbov.
• • •
B.J. S&ewar& AdverthlDg and Pobllc Bela·
ttoa11 Ille. of Newport Beach baa added Wanda
Buller to the agency'• staff aa an aaailtant account
executive. Buller wu previoually with Codarue
Cllaae, Uvtap&oa and Co. of Irvine, R•pet Ad
Bo•ae and Walker EvUll Adverthla&
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW YOltt( t.U') c-c. 11141 n HOt1Jlh , ,_ Ol#erro
NASDAQ ~ CorTll ~m. IMS Ml n• !3141 OIWT" ................. lllda c.o.. 1J.S2 " ISC ·~ 1se. "CAIN llNI iow.t oflen IW c.mciH ~n .........,
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ACldlM ~mi. oe.. .... IHI ,_.,,. . JM ll lllollHI = 11\'il 11'11 DIKM n-:ra k.i.st " 21 M ~ MW. IS o.tCMT MN 11'• l(elv.r 1 lt-142 ,.....
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8eOO I Giit OWi Entwt.n 11 "" lofl "' l\'il 1¥1Mr • ~ ,, IJV. . .,. '"' ... JM 2:2\'il ,_, ..... 14"'-Wllr '1W'l'llO 41" 41111 "' "' llVIMd • ...... , ,. 511111 ,,,.. M1'lo ,.. ~ "' ._,.,. ...,.... l'AI 11\li .. ,..." a Ill'> aa.. aH' ...... ..... 1114 11 F1l[nwl ""'IN II ""' ..._.
~ • .... ,, """'111 l \'il ... 1.-. 1S ~ ....c. l'AI 111111 ,,... JM .... 11 ~ SWl!ISV ...... ...... ,,... >Slill Hl'il 17 !7\'11 ~ llr1ICIW l\'I 1• "'9H"I "" n 111'11 IN SlCIMkro ..,._
16" """
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BASHORE IUU.!A lllRE.NOI
IUl "a.It"..,.... Jr. hl9 been aPDO(nted
vice ~t and ,.,.,,.... ot Marbte Na ......
Baak I monc-&e loan department In Santa Ana.
Berenlia, a l'elldent of Irvf.ne, w previoualy vice
president o1 • local man,.,. benklng firm.
• • •
Imperial BaU haa annou.noed two vice
presiden~_ •pPOintmenta at lta Orange County
Regional Headquarters office in c.o.ta Me.a.
David D. Sudoval la vice pl'9ident oommercia.l
loan officer and James A. GubJ la vice
premident, commercial banking officer. Sandoval.
o1 Whittier, was fonDl!f'ly with Secartty Pad.lie
Baak in Loe AnplM. Gaskey. of Hunu.n,ton
Beach, waa formerly with Buk of America of
Newport Beach.
• • •
Million Viejo Realtor Barbara Bartnick haa
won a statewide apea.ldna competition spomored
by the California Federation of Bt•s!rvw and
Profemional Women. She will compete in a
national contest in July. A Real&y
World-Saddlebeck Valley agent, BertnJck ill a1ao
president-elect of the Seddleback Valley BPW.
UPS AND DOWNS
~ s• ........ ,. ... ~ i.-. MID DOWMI
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OranQ4t Coat DAILY PILOT/Tuuday, June 7, 1883
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OUOTATIO.• INCi.VOi TltAOltOfll '"' .... 'f0111t,Mt6WHT .... ct~IC, ~··· IOUON, OSUOll ••o CllllCINltllTI •TOC:ll lllCMAltOl,t llNO lll"lltlO l'f tM• lt/otO AltO lltlTINI T
---------~· ~---
Norton Simon Inc.
to become ·private
NEW YORK (AP) -A tlM bOllaQ s*n to tab
Nortion 8lmcn Inc. prtvaw bal been put bwmd by a
poup he9ded by David MahoD9y. the cba1rmul ot the
divenlfied ~
Nonon 8&mon Mid Monday the propcm1 '9 b.mf
ltUdied by • oommSUee mlde up of outmde dlred.on ot
the food, fMhlon and car rental company and would be
aabjl!lct to ahareholder approval and uranaementa foe
ftnandna.
Speculation of IUCh a move bad been buildina in
finandal clrclea. dspite repeated den1ala by Norton
Simon.
Interest rate hits 9.04 percent
WASHINGTON -Starting today, the maximum
fnterelt rate that flnarw=tal imtitutiona may pay on
lix-month aavinp certificata ~up to 9.04 percent.
Under the aovemment'a 8yatem of. c:akulatlftl the
maximum allowable rate, .avtnp imtltutiom lMt week
had been llmlted to 9.0 percent whlle cm:m:nerdal banb
could pay no mon than 8.02 percerlt.
The banks and •vtnaa lrwtltutkma are allowed the
aame m11ximum thJ.e week becau.e the avenae dboount
rate on llx-month TreMury bills aucUooed by the
aovemment Monday waa above s.1~ percent. It had
been below that figure 1ast week.
Unions settle witb <:oars
OAKLAND -Two California wWioa charged by
Adolph C.oon Co. with thrmtenlng to disrupt the
annual Gilroy Garlic Festival becliu.e the beer
oampany wu there have 8dUed out of court, C.oon
artbounced '4onday.
Coon filed cbarpa with the Natkmal Labor
Relatlona Baud Jut IUIDIDe!', cbartPna that .even
c.alllomia unlonll had threatened to dtsru~ boycott
the Santa Clara C-ounty-t..ed festival if producia
were IOld there.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
WHAT NYSE DID
lllEW YOAK CAP) Jllfl. •
WHAT AMEX DIO
HEW YOAll IAPI Jllfl •
DOW JONES AVERAGES
.._~IC(A .. )FIMl~~·.Nl.6.
i~~·~i~
AMERICAN LEADERS
. •• ..
I
l
. -.
, .... _.,..... .........
DlllyPUat
TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 1983
I 4.
CllSSlfllD C5
5 area players drafted
Amaral, Mabe, Poissant, Grandstaff, Nettles selected ••
Rbdney Poissant
~
Former FAtancia High aJ¥i Or-anae Cout c.oneae Nndout Rkh Amaral. now playtna at UCLA,
Irvine High pitching ~tion
Rodney Pot.ant and ~
HJ«h'• Todd Mabe lead the lilt of
UM bueball atan te1ected Mon-
day in the ' league'• free agent draft.
In all, five Orange Coast area
standouta were selected by major
league teama in the firlt six
round.a.
A1.ao selected were Golden
West C.olleae third baseman Bob
Grandstaff and Orange Coast
College pitcher Bob Nettles.
Amaral, was the 34th player
selected overall Monday. The
He found a new outlet .
Burlingham, ex-UCI athlete, stars in rugby
B~ CURT SEEDEN °' .............
• Only a UC Irvine basketball trivia buff may
n$lember the name Ed Burlingham, but that
• ~·t mean the fonner Ant.eater guard vanished
I wtthout a trace.
. Inf.act, Burlingham, now 33, is probably one of
the top athletes from Orange County in his latest
spOrta love -rugby.
"It was right after my last basketball game (in
1972) when an English gentleman, John &sex,
approached me and said he had a sport I might be
interested in," recalla Burlingham. "I guess I played
bMketball pretty aggressively.
A. it turned out, Emex and hil aon started the
Saftta Ana Rugby Club and both felt Burlingham
would fit right in to the sport. Burlingham stuck
wi\b it and today finds himaelf on the U.S. national
rugby team which leaves Wednesday for Canada
and then heads to Australia for a four-week tour.
What kind of man plays rugby?
'Td say it's for guys who played football .or
basketball in college and are now looking for a new
(athletic) outlet," says Burlingham. "There are
doctors, lawyers and people like .that playing
rugby."
Burlingham is vice president and gent!ral
manager for a sporting goods manufacturer in c.o.ta
Mesa. When hi.I work la done, it's on to the rugby
field for a little head-bumJ>i.nl.
"It's a hard game. It's a lot more physical than
I thought," admita Burlingham. "The great pert
about it is the camaraderie of the l~ guys on the
field, though. It's a real team-oriented apor1.."
Rugby ia di.atinguiahed from other sports for
wveral reasons, but the most notable la the way in
which a team moves down the field towards the
goal. Unlike football, 90ClCel" or basketball, where the
ball la either kicked or thrown forward, a rugby ball
can only be thrown one way -badcwarda..
That means the ball canier haa no one in front
of him and that meana no block.en.
"I think the reason people enjoy playing this
sport ia b!alu.e unlike football. every player geta a
(See BURLINGHAM, Page C%)
Dodgers' Brock earns respect
Batting average is low, but he's showing plenty of power
ATLANTA (AP) -Greg
Brodt spay not have made them
forget Steve Garvey in Loe An-
ge.le. yet, but he's earning re-
Jpect.
The Dodgen' rookie fint
bUeman, considered one of the
'Didst promising power hitters to
::ome out of the organization's
fine minot 1-gue system in re-
!el\t years. has ripped 11 homers
.:>bu this ~ tying him for
thfrd in the Natimal League with
~te Pedro Guerrero.
Brock. who turns 26 on June
Manny Mota said he baa told
Brock to be more aggressive at the
plate and not take so many
pitches. "When he's hitting, he
hi ta everything," said Mota.
Brock, a strapping 6-3,
200-pounder who hit .310 with 44
homers for the Dodgen' Albu-
querque, farm club last year, got
the Dodger job at first bue when
Garvey played out hi.I option and
signed as a free aaent with San
Diego prior to this eeuon.
Brock, who said he's normally
a alow starter, comment«i that he
feela comfortable in hi.I major
league role.
the fans have been good to me."
The aoft·1poken Brock abo said
that h.ia Dodger teemmates and
the club management made him
feel comfortable lmnwriiately.
"I haven't really felt a lot of
pnsure," he said.
Los Angeles Manager Tom
Luorda eeesna generally happy
with the job Brock'• dom&-
"He'• gotten a lot of key hita for
\.1111 hit IOIDe big borne NOS and
done a good job in the field," Luorda aald nioently. .. And I
think he'• going to get better as
he~ alona-"
Chicqo Cul» pJcked h1m in the eeoonc1 round of the felUlar
phue. The 1-doff hitter at OCC
two years ago, he own.a the Pirate
record for DM»t runa IOOf'ed in a
eeuon (52).
Thia le8IOll at UCLA, Amaral
batted .341, hit five homers,
knocked in 30 runs and stole 26
baaee. He WU named to the
All-Pac 10 Southern Dtvt.ion
~. .
Mabe, a switch-hitting short-
stop, batted .4M> for Ediaon thia
eeaaon. The Kansas City Royab
selected the All-Sunaet League
ahortatop in the aecood round of
the regular phaae and 50th over-
all.
Potaant, a hard-throwing
rf&h~hander, WU drafted by De-
troit in the .econd round of the
regular phtile. He pitched the
Vaquero1 into the Cili' 2-A quar-
terf.lnala and finished the 1983
IJeMOll with a 7-1 record and an
0.85 earned run average.
Grandstaff batted .421 at Gold-
en West and the tophomore third
buernan -who baa ~ a
letter of intent to play at Ari%.ona
State -shared the most valuable
player honors in the South Cout
Conference with Fullerton'• Kirk
Bates.
The New York Meta went afuer
the Marina High graduate in the
fint round of the eeoondary
phue.
.................
Es-UCI baaketball player Ed
Burlingham concentrates· on
rugby these days.
Rich Amaral
•: alao has driven in a club-high nm. aoma into tonight'• game
.... u ... the Braves, ra.nkina him
th in the Jeegue. the one disappointing area of
performance ao far haa been
batting average, which ia .238
recent 2-for-18 and 2-for-32
"I didn't know what to expect,"
he said. "All I knew is that I wu
going to give It a good ahot.
"I felt the jitters the first day of
the seuon. but rve been relaxed
ever since. Obvioualy, every day
you feel more comfortable .. .And
Angels return home; face ChiCagO
\4"" ... J,.os Angeles batting coach
The Angels open a six-game homestand toniaht against the Chicaao White Sox after
a road trip that produced iJ wins in 11 pmea.
The Angela enuer tonight'• game 3~ games ahead of Qaklencl in the American League
West.
The Angela play three games with the
White Sox and three with Toronto.
'The Milwaukee Brewen finally had to
face reality: Rollie Flnaen will have IW'-
rer'I and won't be badt until late in the
l8UOll. if at all. .
But Tom Tellrnann, the 29-year-old
rookie who baa claimed Ftnaen' spot aa the
No. 1 abort relief pitcher, came through
apln Monday night. Tellnwm relieved
winner Bob Mc:Clure durine. u -nm Ana'e1
etahth lnninl and preeervecl a 0-7 Brewen'
victory over the Angela.
Paul Molitor, on a 16-foc--33 batting
tear linoe be returned to the lineup after
recovering from • wrist Injury nine pm.
ago, drove in three nma with a homer, two
doubles and • llnCle.
Jim G.ntner added a two-run triple
and Robbl Yount a two-nm double to help
the-Brewen build a 9-1 lead. Ron Jacbon
hit • ~loeded homer to spark the
Ancela' elahth lnninl before 'l'ellmann
stopped the rally. Fmcen. who tore a mu.cle in ht.
foreerm 1Mt Sept. 2 and bem't pitched in a
pme II.nee, la to have IW'aerY Friday to
remove a bone apur in hil right elbow. Dr.
Frank Jobe, wtdelr. known orthopedSc llllJ1l'IOO who aped• .,. ln IJ)OC1a-relaied
Angels go fo~ hitting in· d~aft
They select outfielder lrom W.iscon•in iii openlns round .
I
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11
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I
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Grant to return
as OCC crew coach
Daw °"°' Y(01 ..a.am • h9d 9 OOMb ol the Oruae Cwt coneer
CNW after a two-year blatm.
Grant. who bM spet\t the IMt two
y.n concentratine on hla duties • dean of
amodated atudentl. will be entenna hia 19th year
• tht Piraw• rowln8 COliCb. "I love tbe llpOft and rm gi.d to be t.ck.. ••
l8ld Gnnt. wbo at the time be left the ooechtna
polltian Indicated that it w• a temporary move.
"I think tt w. good to get away and set a
per~W! of tbe prosram." Ut the return of Gral\t. who started
.....,..,.,.. the c.o.t rowen In 1983, Larry MQOl'e
• wfll r9Cum • fn!abman CIOICb at OCC. Moore hu
filled In • the Pirate junior val'llty C09Ch In
Gnnra abeenoe. (Becau.e OCC ii a community
colleae. the .:boo1 doel not field a vanity crew).
Jim Jcqemen, who handled the Pirate
freehmen. will -.am, full-time W4ehtna
NIP" .Wbilities in the OCC pbyllcal education
department.
Irook:ally, on the same day Grant announced
his return. two of h1a former atheletes -Lee
Miller and Todd Landwehr -.med All-Padfic
10 banori at the Univentty of w~
Miller, a coxswain. and Landwehr are
members of the HUl&y vanity eight which won
the Padfic-10 cha~p tbil year.
Waahirqiton navi compete for the
natklnal collegiate rowing champlonlhip J~ 18
in Clndnnati.
Quote of the day
"We bu.ilt OW' chancter' when we lost.
Without what happened in the 1ut a:lx yean
we wouldn't be where we are today. We
didn't write the acript, \ft jult acted to il"-~ 76era forward J.U..
Emq.
Decathlon record broken
BJ:RNBAUSJ:N, West Germany m -Jueqen m.......,, of WMl Gen:nany
has bnJken the warid decathlon re-
cord, 1Dtalina 8. 777 pamtl. ~ mark ot 8, '741 held by Daley of Britain.
JDnailen'• record-braldnc came at a ~meet for the Auaust Workl Tnck and
Qwnpmablpa at }leWnkt, Fln1md. The
two-day decathlon ended Sunday.
fflnalen, a 25-year-old Jporta student. blld
the tonowtna raulu In the 10 eventa: 10.92 for
the 100-meter dMh; 23-5~ for the 1or'C jump;
5J...3 ~ for the ahot put; '7-0 M fw the hfCh jump;
47.90 for 400 uwten; 14.11 for the 110-mew hilb
hurdlea; 16S-e~ for the di&'w; lM for the pole
vault; 220-8 for the javeltn, and 4:19.76 for the
1,M>O-meter race.
Kemp canies Yankees
N.-w York'• Steve K.emp,· who 111 earlier misplayed 0.miqo ftamOI' fly
ball to live SeaUJe a 2-1 lelld. rude up
for h1a mistake with a three-nm
inlkle-the-park homer Monday night to lfve the
Yan.keel a 6-2 win aver the Martnen . . .
Eblfwbere In the American League, EDot CUeU
hit a'9olo homer and LH \ftltaker a two-run ahot
before Alu Trammell hi&hlighted a five-nm
etabth inn1nC with a three-run homer to lMd
Detroit to an 11-6 rout of ea.ton. Dwtpt EYUI
and Gleu Boffmu homered for Boston ... A
two-run homer by Cal Ripka Jr. and a three-run
bl.Mt by Leo Denudes carried Baltimore to an
8-1 victory over Toronto. Tbe triumph moved the
Oriolel into 80le pomemion of tint place in the AL
East. The game wu delayed 4~ minutes at the
start and called after a ~2-mlnute wait in the
sixth.
Breakers blitz Qlitz
BOSTON -Richard Crump Ell ICOttd two toucbdowna and Johnnie •
Walton ran for ano1her aa the Boston • •
Bftaken rallied from a 13-0 deficit for
a 21-15 United States Football League victory
over the Chim&o Blitz Monday Nlabt.
..., Boston'• fourth conaecutive victory left both
t.eema tied in the race for the wild card playoff
berth with reocrda of 9-5. Chk:aao lost for only the
aecond time In iu 1ut aeven pmea.
A crowd of 16,087, the Breakers third 1argemt
in their aeven home games, att.ended the game oo
a warm evening.
Tbe Blitz t.ook a 10--0 lf!9d on Frank Corral'•
33-yard field pl with 15: 18 left in the tint
quarter and on nm Koeaiel'• 29-yard touchdown
PMI to Turmaine Johmon with 10:37 left in the
teOOOd quarter.
C«ral'• 29-yard field pl mllde the ICOre
13-0 with 4:16 remaining In the tint half. It came
one play after nm Spencer'• 1-yard run for an
apparent touchdown Wiii nuJl!fled by a holdlna
penalty aoinat rtaht suarci nm Norman.
The Jlreakera launched their oomeblick when
Bill Rowe recovered a fumble by Knln Lona Oil
c::hbao'• next .n..
Startini at the Blitz l~. the Break.en p6clted
up five yardt on a holding penalty before Waltan
acooied around left end for a 10-yard touchdown
with 1:38 to go in the tint half.
Russell's father dies
LOS ANGELES -The father of Ill Bill Rua.ell, the Loa AnaeJea ahonltop, Warren . Ruaaell, ~
Monday in Pittaburg, Kan., followin8
a Jen«tby Wnem, the bMeball team announced. l\meral eervias are ect.tWed tor Thwmay
momlna at the Bath Funeral &me in Plttaburgh
with interment at Highland Park Cemetery.
Bill RUIRll ia expected to rejom the Doctaen
Frlday in ClndnnaU.
I •
I Gorman Thomas trade
upsets Brewer fans
We hive rites ~ under
standard ,.,es fOf drtven
between the •gn of JO
and60.
There's a good reuon fOf
th1~. hrmers kncwws that
tlw1e drtvf'n lend to be
s.afer •nd tnOl'e careful on
1he highway
You're the drivers who
hilve fewer 1cc1dents.
TNt's Why F.lr~ aeiled
our lOl60 ~ ill.Ito
pollq. If you qwlrfy. you
<XJUld YVe wbllar11ialty
on your premium\.
Farmers limtrlllC'e Group
8 working c:onstandy to keep
the cmts of inwr'nct
down,~ the MTIOUnl of
protealon U9 And this
lO~ pachge .UtO policy
is one way ~do•t. whynoc
call mel
BONNIE
A.NDEltSON 1"90 ,,.,.. ~ ..... ,..
l'odW. v.n.,. Ca 9t10I
714 96fr.0797
Garvey to step down?
WASHING'ION -Rd Garvey,
executive director of the National ¢•] FootbAll I.ape Playera A.udadoo.
would not confirm repor1a th1a morn-
ing that he will atep down u head of the playera'
unkn.
The Boston Globe In toc1ay•1 editiona quoted
unnamed ~ • aytnc that Garvey will
reslgn at an NFLP A..awardl banquet In Ch1caao
on Sunday In order ~ b«ome a Wiaoomin
uaiatant attorney aeperal.
"l will haw no CCimment until 1 meet with
the board thil week,., he Mid In a telephone
int.erview.
Garvey indicated he would hold a newa
conference with the NFLP A board ~ Friday to
"end thia tpeCUlation." He aaid the time and llite
will probably be announced Thunday.
'"nle dedldon wheUler or not to leave la mine
and mine alone,'' he added.
NFLPA aowces aay that Garvey la leaning
tow~ ~ the union post.
Texas advances, 6-5
OMAHA, Neb. -Jamie 11 Douabty'• double ICOAd Mike Trent
with the wtnntnc nm In the bottom of
the 11th l.nntnc to lift top.ranked
Tena to a 6-5 vtct.cry over No. 3 Oklahoma State
In the Collep World Sen..
But had thlncJ happened Jllahtly different,
Douabty •b:,,~ have been playing hia bMebaD11~111.111.l at State.
"We recn.dted him, helped put him In ~ coUep...we knew he'• a fine ball player, I uid OklaIMaa--State c.o.cb Gary Ward after Monday niCbt•a pme.
"He put me everywhere but at Tau." Douabty aalid o1 Ward. "How ~ waa 1 to aotng
there? I had the papen In my hand. 1 bad the _p!!l
in my hand. That wa until (Tena) Co.ch (Cliff)
Gust.at.on caD.d and ~t me a plane ticket. 1
went down and loved ft."
Doughty'• pme-wfnnin8 hit advanced
TOM. 63-14, into the wtnnen brllck.et f1nala
'nlunday at 7:10 p.m. aia1Nt the winner of
t.clnf&ht'a Michlgan-Alabuna contest.
Television, radio
TV: Bueball-Dodgera at Atlanta. 4:35 p.m.,
Channel 11.
RADIO: Bueball-Dodaera at Atlanta, 4:40
p.m., KABC (790); Chicqo White Sox at An&ela,
7:.25 J?.m., KMPC (710).
ENSENADA (AP)-Scou..-S Cony MoMQHn
of Bonita drove their OM!noweth ~toe. piece
overall emonc tour-wheel ~ ID tbe m..ae 1 Baja IJ>temdonal oft.fOlld J1IC9 )Mt -~t I
Don Atlx:raft and Dall Smltb ol lluntlftCtGD .
Bwh were tint m:DCDI the mutal~ on • H~ in 7:46:2'. JArry & er Jer and Scot
Harden of IA M.a were~ on a H\8qY111"1Ml In l
7:47:43; Scott and Kent Pfetffet of. c.o.ta .... were I third OD a Honda in 8:1&!35.
Here U'\' the top thra finiaben in -=ii c1-:
Unllmlted alnale -ten: 1. Jui.on and D>berU;
2. Bud Feldkamp and Ron Gardner of Rivenlde, ,
F\lnco, 10:34;32; 3. Bob Rem and Dick Clark of &pl
Diego, Chenoweth, 10-.37:12. I •
UnUmited tw~ten. Scott and Ccrity
McM!llin; Mark McMillln and Hoke; BOl Hrynko :
and Gary Bland of San Dleao·
-1600 cc one-.eaten: 1. Larey Smith of Temple 1 aty, Funco. . I
-1600 cc two-9eatera: 1. Jim &unn..a of
Hacienda Helghta, Raceoo, 10:00:52; 2. Mitch :
Mitchell of Huntington Beech, Neth, 10:46:06; 3.
Doug Fortin and Bob Gookin of. San Dleao.
Chenoweth, 11:56:06.
-1200cc11.ngle aeatera: 1. Ray Gutel1um and •
Pen-y McNeil of 'njuana. I
-Open 1600 cc buggiet: 1. Steve Bouras-and :
Dave Richard9on. ~
BURLINGHAM • • •
From Page C1
chance to handle the ball,'' Burllngham •ya.
In rugby lingo, a acrwn aeema to pin much :
attention. Similar to a taceoff in hockey, the ecrum ,
finda ei&ht playera from eech team locked ~.
with the ball beneath them. The objlct la to aqu1rt :
the ball to a player at the b9':k of the tcNm allowtDI l
him to pick it up and then hMd towarda the pl .
'"There have been aome broken necka in the
acrwn becaime the head takee all the premure. But
you really don't wony about ln.jurieL 1 don't think
you can. There are probably DO llXll'e broken banee
In J'Ulby than there are in footbell. But you do wind
up with a few more cuu and bndaee and ltltcbll!I,"
Burlingham admlta.
1he l'ftlDn 11 rather aimple -no paddtna ii
allowed on a ncl>Y player.
Burlinlham left c.o.ta Mera today to fly to
Seattle where members of the U .S. t.emn from throuihout the country will ~te. Tbey1l be
bu8ed to Vancouver to meet Canada Saturday.
'Then, it'a oo to Australia where the U.S. team.
dubbed the ir.gJes. will play aevera1 exhibition
ma.tchea with Australian teem& from variow Jll'OV-
incea.
The toW' culmi.natea with a match apimt the
Australian national team July 9. · Burlin3bam hu been a member of the U.S.
national team llince 1980. The t.emn b clam by •
membera of the U .S. Ruat>y Amodatioo.
Burllngham •ya ruat>Y ...:iatimla from all
over the worid are pMtnc to have the apcl't in the I
Olympic Gamea. Only twice -In 1920 and 1924-
hu rugby been an Olympe apart. and in both
Games, the U.S. took heme the gold medal
30th Annlwrsary 1
Merchant of the Weeli
~'<>''' ~t. ~ --· ............ _ ~ ~ IMteller, Mfta !COio.i Coll999.
I •. Rollble Wine, Houelef\, aitc:Nt. ~
l'lotna sreta. t, Mett'-sr...-, Totomo,
cetcher, Medtnela Ha!OM•. 10, ReYtnQ!ld
Havwetct, S.11 oi... left·"9n.OM 911~
Univ of Oklllhoma. 11, O."lcl Clerk,
• C:.....-.nct, ~. o.OllCI Clark, J.caaon
~ . .
" "
M4JOa L•AOU• STANDINGS Anwtl:aft LAle9'M
......
OMlaftcl
1(-.aCl!Y
Te ...
CNceeo
NllllMIOll
S.ttle
a.tllm«•
BOiton
W .. T Dfvmoet
W L Pct. ea
)() lJ 5'6
24 26 .500 3\1> n 24 .at • t4 26 _., 411>
24 21 .411 s n >• .'26 111> n ll 411 111>
•AST DtVIMON s..
, Toronto
JO n
2t t.l
H t.l
.Soft I
Soft I
.i20 2\1>
•_,
MllwMlk ..
Nw Yori<
Detroit
C....,.nct
24 24
27 2S
16 2S n ,. MIMI.,., Sew.a
Mllweull .. t, ~ 7
s 19 21,'J
SIO 3
.451 6
h"lmore I , Toronto I (6 lnnlnva, rein)
N41w Y0111: 6, S..ttle 2
Detroit ll, 9oaton 6
Oeklolnd et Clevelend. OOd., ••Iii
Onlv eemea loCNClul9d
T.-Y'a o.m.&
Chlcaoo IOOtaon S-5) at .._. IWlll
J-5>. In)
Detroit (Wllcoa S-6) at Bolton ITuoor
l-3), In)
Mltwauk• <Caiow.N ~I a1 e.111mon 10 . M.w1lne1 3-t), (n)
Clevelend (lllvtaven 4-4) al N..,t York
(IU8fiettl 7-2), In)
NllllMIOta (Schrom 4-0) at Kan .. , Cllv
lltenko 4-4), (n)
TOfenlO (Gott 2-41 al Oakland (Nof"rla
4·5), (nl
Tana (HoNvcutt 7-21 el S..llle (8
Stodclard 4•6), (n)
NatMNI League
WEST DIVISION
AllMla
S.n Frendico
S.n Oleoo
Houston
Clndnnell
W L Pct. Ga
35 16 ·"' :W 11 .6Sf Ill>
2t 24 .Sll
24 27 471
24 lO '" n JO .434
7'" 11
12\l'J
13
•AST DIVISION
Sl.Louh
MontrMI
71 21
26 n
.563
.. SO 1
PNIN1lollla
;. ClllcaoO
Plttati.1911
New York
21 74
22 2t 11 ,,
" 31 MlllllllV'• Sar'fl
.467 41,'J
. .uo ' .lll ,.,,
.347 91'1
No --sdledllled T .. V'a Genlel
DedliW'I (Weld\ 4-4) at Att.nta IP
Pret 6-ll. n
...... York 15",... l ·Sl at Cl'llat9o
(htnev S·4)
Pllllburotl (Candelarle 3·61 al MontrMI
(LM l-1). n
S.n O'-(Show 6·2) al Cincinnati (Solo
7·3), n
S.n Fr.nclsco IHamm.ktr 16·t l at
Houston (IC-1·1), n
AMERtCAN LEAGUE
8"_, t, """"' 7
C'Ul'OtlMA MILWAUK••
car-11>
Foll u
Adetnlu
Sconlr'\ lltl • ..,....,, rt o.cnca• l.vmd
~cit\
Grich 2D
II" e.nkluJ II a-c
T ....
•rllbl lllHllM
40 10 MalllOtltl 4 3 4 3
4 1 1 0 Yount" 4 1 1 2
0 0 0 0 c-11) s I 2 1
1010 Stnrnn\dl'I 5 121
4 1 1 .. &rotwcl Pf 0 0 0 0
4 110 ()fll'<tle" sooo
3 I 1 1 C-erf 4 0 I 0
311 4 GentnrJ!> 4 022
4 I 1 I Yo.t C S 1 2 0
4 0 I o Ectwrchd > 2 2 0
4 1 I 1
lS 7 lt 7 T .... ,, "'' "-"'"" .... Cll9lr1M •1 -... _ 1 ...... 1•• --· , 0--Wlnnlne Riii -Molllor 14).
E-Gnd\. OP-Cellflwnlll I, Mllwa .....
, 1. Loe-<allfornla 6, MllwaukM I 1. 2&-
1 c-, C"'-'e, Lvnn, Molt!Of 2, Yount,
Slnvftonl.. >&--<Wtlnet. H•-eoone Ill,
, RoJeckaon 12), ~ (5) ~ (t ), Slmmont (3), Yott (1),
Edww ! ). 5-Ec!WardL
P It R•lt N IO
s
2
1
11 ' )
0
' 3 , > 0 2
0 1 1
~, .......
~w~-1 11-> 1 • ' s 1
4 Tllltnem S,S 1?·3 3 I 1 0 2 t Goltt Pllctwcl to 3 f)attwa Ill !tit 6111.
~!Ure. T-l:Of. A-17.llJ.
l
~ .. IMlleJllYt 1
-MO-I S 1 ., --· .. (6 ..... ,..)
l.Alll, GelMI (4) Mel Merflnn; McG<--
ancl NiMln. ~. 7-3. 1.-t..MI,
S-(. Htt-Toranto, C..Jofnon (10). e.ttt-
"'°9, • ......., "'· .............. (5)
................ 2
..... --119-2 6 I
.... .,.,. •1 • •x-6 11 I
,,_.rv, 5tenton Ill, Venda 9er9 !II, C.udlll
(t). Tl'lomu (t) end """'"'*· GuldrY -WYrtllflal. ¥11-Guldrv, t-3. 1.-V9lldl kv ..
1·1 ........._ Yortl. Nettlal 7 111. K-
(6).
T'-'11,ltMS.6
Olllr'llt te2 lit $-II 11 I
...... ,., •1 ··-6 12 ll ao-. ...__ta> . ....., m. ~
(1) end Wocbnfusa; °'91M, "-tt• IS),
St..-(7), ~ It) -~. ~ (fl. w-eer-. 2·0..
L~ • .-1 HR-a.troll, C... 11),
Wllft.., {4), Tr_,.. Ill. ~. Ev-
11), Ho#men (1).
MAJ0tt ~· LaAOERS MMtoliaL.MllM
.. .,,.. , ....... )I c:.-, .......
.Cl11 .......... .JN; ar.n. 1(-
Clly, .Ma: Mc:be, ~ .ptv • .Ml;
Of1llill¥ • .._ Yft. ...
RUNS: c.lllle, """'-!a, Os ar.ti.
"-Qy, -b*M, ----.. a6J ........... ., ....... Mllln.-i ... M.
t._I! WIN, --. '11 ""9, or
(ll9f, •1 ...... ~Cly, JI; .... ~. '11 ........... "~ ........ .... Y.ti.1/1.
HJTllC.. ..... "' ........... 11; c..e. ,. --,,, .,..., ... ......... ., ......... ...
....... &.eMM .......
8ATTIHO <1'11 et •tili o.w..n. #Mt-
INlll. .W1 McOet, .. .uutt. ~; MNIGO,
~ ~ """""'· Heualvil. .Jaf; . __. .... ,~.-
RUNS: ~. Allllde, ~ ~.
lell '*'9, a; 1-, .... ~.II;
...,,_, ~. a6J LeMett#, IM "''*'" dtct,.. ' "''l""'·Altliflltll,01 ~. .. J..,N.. 0--. __...,. o-er,
~ 11) T~. a. Oleta. k
~ o--. ~. #J n., ""*"'· ,,; o.nw.... oe... .... ._..,..., Afllllltw, t4,J Ohtt, "'°"'"91, ... ..........
••IAAll~ ........
t, nm..,.., L16u••· ,_ .. ,... ........ V..-....... 1,ICwt ..... 01 ........... TllMwl
~a.-~r... ...... -~·~~-~-. ............... .,..... ..
-...... OlliliWll. ,..... t F fl 0 .,..., ........... .,..,......~a.,
NN --...,., • ...,.,.._, T-. 7,
Slate 11, Ron ~. ~llb\lrtlfl, OUI•
lleldw, Mof•M. 13, Joel Oevl1, Cl'llcaeo
Wiii.. Soll, t11M-flendld plldler. Jeck·
tOIWllle, Fla. 14, Rldlarcl $IOI, MontrMI,
riOllH\Mdad tNtdler, Univ. Of MlcH9M.
IS, Arnold ~. Oemlll, 11tt!t•llend9d
pl1dler, Ll*lock, T•ut.. .... 9rlall Molmafl,
MontrMI, rttf\1-~ oltdlier, Wlc:l1lla,
Ken. 11, Terrv eea. Seattle, cetcriar, Old
Dominion. lt, It'll Sontl6re, LAM ...,.._,
ten•"9..-Plldw, Wlctllta St•te. It,
•-o.n-t, lloMon, rkltll·llMOecl
pllefler, Ulllv. of Teqa.. 20, s1.,,...,, J.t·
teoon, N-Yori\ Meta, oulflelotr,
~CMltm9n. 21, GwY Tflut'rMn,
KanMa City, outflllcler, lncllanaPOll1. n, ,..ul Jorden, ~. flnt
bllaame11, s.era,,_io. 23, Mark Ooran, A,,...., outflllcler, Univ. of Wbcoftlln 24,
Jat'llft Llndlmen, SI. Louil, llllrct .._n,
lreoth. U, Wavne Wltaon, httlmore.
rlOl'll·IWI,,_ p/ltflw, Redondo llMdl, l6,
Oanlet PteMc, Mltwauk... ltlfl·l'landecl
Pllchtr. North C•rotlM Stale. • Soecs.t~
21, Calvln Schlreldl, New Yori< Mel,,
rlohl·l'lanClecl ollchtr, Uni"' of Teua 29,
Rua.-MOr"'611, Cl'lluoo Wllll• Sot , lint
f)a-n-oulfltiOI<. Wldlll• Stei..
S....R.--2', WIMlam Swift, Ml.-.ota,
rloht·hanclecl P4teller, Univ. of Maine. JO,
Cllrlalooher Sabo, Clriclnnall, tl'llrcl
bll&amall, Univ. of M~n. 31. a.oroe
TllrMdolN, TlllH. oulfleldtr. Whll•vlll9.
N.C 32, Onlcl Maoaden, New Y0111: Mala,
nn1 f)aaaman, Univ of Alatlame. 33,
Anthonv llrumMtv, eotton, al'lortaloo, Univ.
of TH!ll :W, Rk:l\arcl Amaral, CNal9o
Cul>t, .->Cl f)aMl!'Nln, UCLA 3S, MICllH4
e ranti.v. S..llle, oulftetd«, Coe1•e1 Caro·
llna Coll.
3'. Slanlev Fantltr, Plltatlurot>.
rtolll·IWlndecl Plleller, Elllna, W.Va. 31,
Wet>altr Garrison, Toronto, lhortstoo,
Merrtro, LL 31, MldlM4 Chernl, Los
Anoeles. rlvl\l·llend9CI llltchw, TM Cllaclel.
3', Andrww Allenson, Cleveland, caldler,
Univ of RlchmOnd. 40. PW O.lel. SI.
Loul1, i.lt-rwinclacl llltdler. Granda Miiia.
41. JOMOfl Ollftr, Clndmatt, caldler,
Orlando, Fie. 42, J-Jeflwton. M«t•
treat. rletlt·hendacl Pltc:Nr, Arlt-......
<I, RodMV Pohaem, Detroit, rltlN~
Pitcher, lrvlne '4. Jeffery ROlllMoll, SM
Fr ancbClo, r'-"-Mndtlcl pl1dtlr • C..
Sl•,._Fultrton. 4S, Rooer "-• Chle8go
Wtllt• Sox. oulfl9tclw. ~ Stele COil
•• RoW1 Hamiton, LAM """'91,
tlvl\l ·llenOed llltdltr, SI. .....,..,,., Fie.
0 , John Toaie, "°''°"' !Nrd ...,._, Corel SP'lngs, Fla. •, Lib L.opa, Los
...,..._., Cit~, ,.._ Ytn. ft, Todd
Mae., K-Cl!Y, "'°""""· Huntington e.dl, so. Mlc:l..i Cdpltt, f'tll1ill•rtila,
ihortllOCI, Oktnul9ea. Okla.
SI, lllllv Merrllllld, Cetttornle, a/lortatoo,
Welte F-1. S2, Garv Grwn. SI. Loula,
a/lortatoo, Oklallome Stele. SJ, Mlc:llMI
CO!llrt, llelttmore, left-tlandacl Pl1Cller,
Mamlllon, ONo. S4, Gt9M lr'atoa, MJ·
weukea, oulfle!W, Unht. of,.._...._
HCOllDAllY P'ttAStl
....... R ...
1. OOdltie ~ Jr., ~.
outflelcl9r, An-, .. .._ t, lloo.rt Ttiomp-'°"· Sen Frenc!Ko, llllOrtllOP, u""'. of
Flor1cla. l, ltlc:llwcl Rice, a.tttrnor.,
rltlttt-'*"'9d ~. UfllV. of Florida. 4,
Tonv ai-.cd, ""'*""'• ...,......., Plldlar, Florida Slala. S. Olla Grwn,
Toronto, flnl f)a-out"9ldtlr. ""'*"'
Oacte No. C.C.
" o.rv P-ter, c~ cuos. rtvfll·rwino.d llltc:IW, Univ OI Soutl'I Cero-
llM . 1, Robert Nelson, OeklMcl, ltnl
!)a_,.,, Mt SM Anloftlo J.C. I , Tom
Mauc:ll, SI. l.oull, outfleldef, eel
Pol'<t·Pomona. t. aradlev Arn.oere, -....
Yon Yank-, r1ohl·llanded Pitcher,
Mierad, J.C.' 10, ,.,,.,.. Tlndall, MontrMI,
i.ft-lleneled ~, Sinden J.C.
11, Ralldall e~, Bolton, ~.
e.ttk'MA C.C. It, O.'ricl Mlrw'ldll. ""'9·
delollla, rl!IM-flandecl Plldler, Rice, U,
M1c:1MH11 Youne. Clllc:9eo White Soll .•
ltlfl-1\endad Pltc:llar. ~J.C. 14, ......
lleld, S.n Oleoo, ahor11t09, Unl'tt. of Ollle·
-· IS, e vron Kaminer11fte, ~. f"lvl\t-hendacl Plldler, Lemar.
16, Robert Granci.tafl, Hew York Mith,
third be...-, GOI09n "'"''J.C. 17, o-.i
~. o.trolt, rlolit·....,,... "'°"'·
Datealll Central J.C. 1', K9'tln wm.-,
An.me, l"lvl\t·llanded Pltdllr, ...,.,. J.C. lf,
Rlehard lelll, ~. rllllt~
Pllefler, Clll*ill J.C. 20, Ro09r1 Dll*t,
Ctndnnatf, r1Qlll-tlancl9d ~ • ..,..._
in.ton, c-.
21, Rlc8rdo AbOOlt, IW!weube, ln-
"91dtr, Tnaa·EI Palo. 22, P'N Wllemt.
Houston, outfl96dar, UfllV. flf °"11111oma. D,
JoM Rodlaa, S..ltta, rlliflt·~ .itdW.
NI~ State. 24, Jon LAeke, Loe .,.....,
lnllelder, SacrelT*\IO C.C. 25, .JoM• NtR,
tt.n... CllY, outftlllcler. Fullerton J.C. 2'.
Ra,,_ Rosltlentlaualtr. Texa1, ~.
P1me J.C. ..........
'11, Henry GoftUlln, ~.
rltllll-Mndecl llffdler, Ml. San A.ntolllo C:.C..
a , SlePtlen IC•:"', San Francl1C9, catc:tw,
9r"'*7\ Y-2', Rotl9r1 Mll9dll, hltl·
rnGre, rl!lllM1a1"'9d Pltdlw, Ye'tt .... J.C.
JO, J9lnft IE urton, Pltttllur.,,, ca Idler,
Cltnll J.C. ll, Mlc:lw9I a.Riii, T«onto,
tlltdler, Norm.,,._ J.C.
J2, Car1lall Hwnlllon, ~ CUl>I,
lefl-tienoed oltc:Nr, TrtlOll J.C. 33. MM'k
--· Oallllltlcl. rWtt-lland9cl .itc:IW, Unht. of Mleml. J4, Jedi Hein, SI. l.oula,
rlllht-lleftdtd pfteller, ~-n J.C. JS,
W11arr1 Fulton, Noew Yon YM$-.
rkllll-1\ended Pltc:hef, ~ J.C.
16, lloetofl HSMd. 71, Mont,... .......
•• Mlc:llNI ... .,., ""' .......... rtllht·~ ltftlc:lw, ~ ......_ Jt.
Troy ,.,.,,_, CtllcMo Wtlllt S... M -
lllldW, Ml. Sen MterllG C.C. .0, Ted
llodla 11•la1W, SM O.... left......,_
pltc:t.. ~ c.c. 41, ,...,,... Diet, .,.... atlcrtar,
M60ll9 0-.-c.c. Cl, IC4nMlll bed,
Hew Yor1o Mlfl. rltN ....... ~.
~ J.C. 0 , lc:ott .... '*'°"· ,...,..._., 81tc:Nr. Mm9 (N'ft.) J.C. '4,
t1mofflv EN!Ud, Alltnle, t11111-MndM
~. RIC& 45, Cl9WlltilM ..........
~~.~ . .......,.
A1111 C«m J.C. '1. A......, MoNrtf. Mllw1t ....
...... ....... tltdllr, v-..-. u .... Scttt ,.,,....,, ............... ..,.c.c. "· o.w.~ ............... c....
J.C. •• T"""31 ...._, La AfteM, llrft ....... ,....,, ,.,,,..,. C.C.11, • ...,,
V~. ~ Qy, lllH11PIP ~
., • Qlefflly J.C. .. .,.,., ..... Tl!IM. ....................... "" ..... ,,.~ ................ ........
IM l'flllCllC»,,..... .,_,... tllCNt, ....,_
... .J.C. ... AILfl ................ .
""" ...... llldtlr, .......... c.c. ..
--OIMlll, ~' .... ~ • ~ '-C. II, ..... .,,_, T ...... ., ............ ~c-.a. ~a. ......... ,-... ... . ~ .......... ~#:.. .. .... • .,...,,.. "· "'°'*' ..,.,....,, UIW\i, .. ~ "· --v....,., .... .,.,. v-.................. , ... c.c. .. ...... ............ ll'tl ............... ...
114tcMr, ~·=· c.c. ....... K...-rw. a...e~-.-ti ., ... .. """' ~ ... ..,..... ....... .. .,..... ,_.. .......... , ....... ~ .................... ,. .. .. .... .,, CP.nfl... c...i. ...,.,
.._._,._.MIC.C.
ca.at .........
<tta...J ' ..... ...
~-,;~::: ........... ~
Gf'9M Mir .,, .......
(et L.Mma) ...............
JlmmY C--. (U.S.) fllll. UOVd ~
(8'119111), .. J, .. ,; Tim Mllwtte (U.S..I ....
MM 8-(U.S..), 7·S, 6-J; Y"-o.n.1111
(U.S.) clef. R-1\ KrlalWlaft ( ..... ), 7·S,
.. 7. 1·S; ~ Currtft ('°""' All'tcal dlol.
Joao Soetft l8'e1Ml, .. I. .. ,, M ScMIDfl
IU.$J def. .,,,..., ,,,,_,, ~), .. ,_
6-J; Hdl Pftlter (U.S.) WI. GIV.-a.noa. (!Ind), 1 ... , 6-2; Mw'COa Hoc:ewr
1ara1Rl d91. •od Hanl'*I IU.$.), 7-S, .. ,_
Sammy Glamma!Y• !U.S.) def. Jofln Aln-
encllW (Aullf'alle). ..... ,.... 1·S. . .,.,.,.. . ...,,,.,,...
( ................... , """' ..... ..... AM Kl'fOfTIW• (U.S.) .... "-Marl9
Fernendn (U.S..), 6-4, H . Liiie For'OM
IU.$.) clef. SMlllla Slmmondl (lhlfY), H ,
6-3, 6-~ s.nOr-. C-. (U.S..).
o... ... .....
AllM ~ ( .......... a.di) -
Q .............. -....... 6 mec:ker111. " llaU,
17 l'odl 11111, I ,__,..
DAvrrl L.OCkllR ( ........ 9Mdll
-61 ~ .. bOntto, IOI JMCI beu, ~
calco ...... Ml3 "**--· I rodt !WI. DAMA WtfMI' -H .,,......_ 141 f)U1,
,, "**9rll, • "°' 119'1.
~ ... trwdlel• aAl98ALL
~ ........
aAL TIM()tq OttlOUI~ '-AIM
lla"*91. 8'!Ctler, ftwm It ..... of .,,.
ln!Wnallol!9! '--"· 90$TON lEO SOX-._.__ IM1
lt\lddV i.AllOUll Jr., ""9f'9I _,,_, Ila
•tlU!Md control of tria CllAt and MtNct
Dtdl O'Gellllll ..... ,,,.,...., .
Mll.WAUKIE aREWlltS-TreOW
Germen T'lllfM6, ~. .... Jamie
latllr!Y ...i E,.,. c:.tlledlo, ~. lo
"'9 ~ llldlenl fOr Rick Mannine,
~. • •ldl wan.. '""*'· TOltONTO tl.UE JAYS-fllac:9d Dew
Cllllnt, ~. 1111 IN 1...., .....
~-dlMl*d "''· Pl.n:NMd tN '*'" lf'ect "'...,, ~ .. Plldw, "'°"' ~
of "" SoulW'll LMiou9. Recllltd .,..,
ldnMlr, Oltdltr, ,,...,. l(lftltell of .,,.
~ UelUI .,.. ....... """ ..,
a""""'9nl.
---·
Oren e Coaet DAILY PILOT /Tuad1y. June 7, 1883
Boston's Tony Armas (left) is safe at home as he slides behind the
tag of Detroit catcher John Wockenfuss Monday night. Tigen won,
11-6.
Rustlers, Pirates gain honors
Six GWC stars, three from OCC earn volleyball laurels
Six members of the Golden West College men's
volleyball team.and th.reeplayers from Orange Coast
College's 9quad have earned all-South Coast Con-
ference honors.
(Golden West); Todd Schaefer (Santa Momca); Sean
Followfield (Santa Barbara): Scott Sato (Santa
Monica); Eric Dlehl (Santa Barbara); Bruce Parker
(Pasadena).
SECOND TEAM Golden West's Mark Barrett and John Kosty
earned first team honors and led the Rustlers to a
17 -~ record this aeaaon. Barrett ia a 6-0 sophomore
out of Newport Harbor High, while Kosty is a 6-4
freshman from Fountain Valley.
Area atandouta earning aecond team honors
include Golden West'• Jim Ft.cher and Dwight
Pfeffer and Orange Coast'• Bill Matti.as.
Chrtl Fischer (Golden West); Dwight Pfeffer
(Golden West~ Bill Mattias (Orange Cout); John 1 • I
Ribaticb (Santa Monica); Christian Kiernan (Santa
Monica); Mark Jacobeon (Santa Barbua); Andy
Aguiar (Santa Barbara); Matt Dodd (FJ. Camino) .
Honorable mention goes to Orange Coast's Paw
Ireland, Larry Clark and Paul Coenen and Golden
We9t'a Joel Rodgen and Jamie Mtle.
HONORABLE MENTION
Joel Rodgers (Golden Wm); J~ Astle
(Golden West); Jef1 Rodeen (Santa Monica); Larry
The Conference co-most valuable players are
Sean Followfield of Santa Barbara CC and Todd
Schaefer of Santa MonJca CC.
FIRST TEAM
John Kosty (Golden West): Mark Barrett
Clark <Ora.nae ~); Paul Coenen <Oranae Cout); I
Paul Ireland (Orange Cout); Jim Keller (Santa
Barbara); Chria Hannemann (D c..mino); Kavin '
Fiaher (Long Beaab); Richard Phair (Loag Beach);
Watana Tbongtraltu1 (LA Valley); Don Shaw (El I '
Camino); David Spence (Pasadena).
Benihana
Grand Prix
cancelled
12-meter .yachts
cOmpete Saturda'y
CAPE CORAL. Fla.--The Off-
shore Racing Comrnmion of the
A.merican Power Boat A9ociation
hu been informed of the
cancellatiion of the Benihana
Grand Prix out of Point Pleasant,
N.J.
The race, one of the moet
popular on the offshore pciwer
boat r.cing circuit, baa been
aponaored by Rocky Aoki for the
put eight years. It baa been
disbanded at the request of the
New Jeney Offshore Power
Boating ~tion.
In oom!9pondence with the
national aanctioning o~tion,
NJOPRA president Bill Wiahnk:k
cited funding problems of h1a club
as the reuon for withdrawing
from the 1983 calendar. Hb re-
quest to cimunvent prize purae
requirements was rejected by the
oonunillion.
Of&hore vice president Jay
Smith expre.ed appredatllon for
the long-st.andi.ns support of Aoki
and hit Benihana of Tokyo res-
tauranta.
Two of America's most succesa-
ful aallboat racing akippen--Gary
Job9on and Ted Tumer--will
come up aga1mt each other Satur-
day in the leCOftd annual Mas1er8
Regatta aboard the 12·meten De.
fender and Courageoua at New-
port. R.I.
The regatta will be a series of
three match races. A coin flip will
determine who pta which boat in ·
-the first race. 'nle akippen will
then switch boata after each race.
The raoea will be sailed on
Narragamett Bay under the
direction of Thomas F. Ehman
Jr., executive director of the
United Sta tee Yacht Rlldng
Union.
Jobaon ia partidpeting in the
1983 America'• Cup triala u tacti-
cian for Tom Blackaller on the
yacht Defender. He beat Black-
aller in the 1982 Maatere R.ptta.
Tu.mer WU the defender of. the
America'• Cup in 19'17 aboard Couraaeows and ii a member of
the aftef'l\W'd in the De-
fender-Courageoua Group ~
year.
The Defender CoW'atre<>U•
Atlanta's Loughery
to sign witli BullS·
Group la one of the two Amincan
syndicates vying for the rtcht to
defend the Cup-next Sept.ember.
In the Cup tria11 Counceoua ia
being skippered by John Kolit.11
with John Ber1rand aa t.c11dan.
Long Beach
Race Week
lures 55
I I ! I
t
l
f .
Orange Coat DAIL y PILOT /Tu.day, June 7' 1983
:J.1¥™ zG; -.... "°'"°' • H...v ON£N lt)9t .... fiOUN'tAJN VAi.i.iV aeHOOL btlTllllCT hM --.red tllel Ow :.A4"1or,.., ~ .. ._be C' 4IOM~
Up to IWO Ol•H room• ..
WAM>l.OW ICHOOl, loelel" M .,., ~ Dffve, Huntington -...i.Cllfor*.
'ftla BoaNS or Trv.tM• or tll•
'Gunlalfl Val~ lellboot Dl•ll'IOI ~ to ..... Ille ._.U. IO
ln4bled above Uftdar ttle ,.,"'. end condlt1on1 etalad In tll• ~ of the Board. "'9otutlon -~. Th• minimum monthly It~~ ~ ,., the t9rm of .....
11'all not .,, I••• than ••v•n
llvndred twentlf dollar• per en..-(1720,000lcie-oom).
Th• mlnlmv"' monthllf t•••• ~ tor Mbaaquent perloct1 ~ be ed.iu.ted by the eon.-ll'rlo• Index annllel ever•CJ• ~ •• the and of the ....
l*tod. A ~ dtpoelC m.-, be ........, prtor to~.
Ito OOitWl ....... 1 aflell be peld .,..y ~ ,.... ..... broker In 11111
regard, and tll•ra 1hall be no
d•ducoon from any propOMI In determ1n'"9 the ~ f'9IP(ln8lbla
bidder
a..ted ~ to ..... Mid ph)psty _, be ,...._, by Ille
deMO•ted omc. a1 the Founletn
Valley School D11trlct Education c.nt.,, 17210 OM St,...,. Fountain
Valllty, C.lltornla, 82708, no 1a111
Ulan 2:00 p.m., June 27, 1993.
Before aecepllng any wr1t1111
pr~. th• d~ated offloer
allell call tor orel 6tddlng. An)
peraon who II•• hare1otore eubmltted a wrttten bid may IUbml1 en oral bid exceeding by a1 laut .... (6%) percent the hiot-t ......,
bid. l'he ~ reac>OF*ble bidder
lhell be requlr-6 to HIC\.tte Ille
f0tm of leaH, auch format ha•
heretofore been 11ppr1Mtd by Ille Bowd of Trust-.
ni. Board ot Trust-~ mah the determination u to whether to
leaM Hid faclltt'" wilh ten (10)
da)'9 alter nl09lpt of bld8
Information concerning the
prQPONI Should be 8ddl 1111 ~ to.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL DISTRICT. 172 to Oak StrHI,
Fountain Vlllley, Callfomia, 92708,
(714) a..2~1. Attention: CarOI
~
DetMI June 2, 1913.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
SCHOOL DISTRICT
BOARD Of' TRUSTEES
8-le Moore,
Clettt of the Boerd
Publl•hed Orange Cout Delly
Piiot June 7, 13. 20. 1993
Nil.IC N()TIC(
NOT1CI, OF f'U8LtC HIA .. INO
TO •t HILD •Y THI LOCAL AOINCY '0RllATION
COllMl8Sf0N OF OltANQI COUNTY, CAUFoAlillA OM nta
.... Ofl'OSID ~onACHMINT NO.
....., (CfTY tw .. Wfl'ORT 91.ACH
DITACHMfNT)" '"OM THI
COITA llllA IAN ITA"Y
DtaTNCT
Thia pubk '-1"11 wll be held •n
"" Board of Supervtaors Heer>ng Room. first noor. On1no• County
Hall of Admlnl1tratlon, 10 Civic
c.n1er ~. Santi AN. Calllornla °"' Wednnday, June 22, 1g93 at
Ille hOur of 2:00 P. M or U llOOll
thereeflar H the Commlaelon •
agef\da permits, •t wNcll time ..
lnlerealed pertlel wiU be Mwd n.. delac:twnent terrUOfY con9iet1
ol appro11lmat11y l41l acrea
generally located eut and -• ot
Superior Avenue •oulh of tilth s1 ... 1 In the wHt city 11m111 of
~ a.actl A map and legal daacftpUon of the boundWlel OI the
detachment twrttOtY .. Of\ Ille and avallable lor public ,.,,....,, at the
Local Agency Formation
CommlMIOn offloe, tO CMc Center
Plaza, Room 458, Senta Ane,
T*t11t••·.-~..,.-. ...... JllllAl-
11-ltlJTI, ,...,~, .-Ota11t• ~.
NiOTIC8 Of DDA&A. T ---.oMMffMO'nca
" YOU" 19 .. 0,."TY II IN ,O,.ICl.OIU"I llOAUH YOU
AM 9~ IN \'OOf' ll'A~ rr MAY N IOlO wmtouT ~ COUAT ACTION. Ind ,ow ~ ""'9
the ..... """' to br1"g fO'lr 8000llM lt\good~by~ .. .,
yo11r p .. 1 du• payment• plu1
permitted oo•I• and eicp•n .. 1 ~ llw'M montlle from the _,.
""' HcMloe of°"*"" -........ TMI lmOUC'lt 11 M.421.40 • ol MeY ~. 1"3. lnCI ... inar-""'" 'fO'lf ~ beoofn. aurrw'lt. YtN
fftay not 1141'19 to P•lf the entire
1111$1al4 portion or your account,
•ven though full paymanl wH
demllnded, but '°" muet pey ""' emowrit~~
AFTER niAH MONTHS ~ DA Tl Of' REOON>A TION Of' THIS
OOCUMl!NT (wllloll dlte of
~detlon ~ '*9cln), unleM
tlle obligation balng rorecloa•d
upon '*"'"" • ~ pertod. rou hew oNi/ Iha 119111 . I to ltop the fOfecloaure by paying tlle enllre
lmOIMlt dwnal\daid lllf 'f04ltl -'tor. To find out Iha MIOUlll )'OU mu8I
pay, or 10 Menge for. peytMnt lo
•top th• foreclo•ure, or Ir your
proparty ,. In lorKtoeur• r°' any other ,,_,. oontact:
Rocky Mountain Feder•I
8 a11lnot a Loan AUoctatlon, clo
STAfWIDE FORECLOSURE
SERVICES, 5820 Carrttoe A--.
Cypre ... Callfornle goe3o,
lelept\one; (714) 821-3280.
If you have any quaallOf\•. you
1hould contact a lawyer or the oc-mmen• agency wtllch Nul'ed
)'OUf loan.
RllllDA811t, YOU MAY LOH
LRGAL NQHTI • YOU DO NOT
TAICI ""*9'T ACTION.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tt\at e
breKh of and datault Ilea oocurred
In th• =atlon1 aecured by •
'*1aln of '""' Of lrMlter In truet aecuted by:
WARREN l DOMENICK and
NETA E. DOMENICK u Truetort 10
ROCKY MOUNTAIN FEDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
• T<'* .. Ind ROCKY MOUNTAIN FEDERAL SAVINGS a LOAN
ASSOCIATl01'1 H 8eneflcluy, dated November 15, 1882 and
recorded Nowmb9' 24, 1982. u
lnltrwnent Number 82-413201. of
Ofllclal Reoordl In the Office of tM
Aecorder of the County of Or*'Q9. S tate of Callfornla preaent
~ hereby oi-nottoe of Ei.ctton to Sell or '*-to be told
IUCh propett)' to Htl•fY th•
otlllgetlon.
ni. nature of l&dl breech being
,...... to: ..... peymen .. of. i t:-
051,at from Jan11art 1. 111-., 1n
addition to the amount etated
above ahould any prior ll•n
(lncludlng property IUH) be
dellnquent or become dellnquent
uld dllnquenCy ""* bl cured ..
• CONltlon of ~--; and all eubnquenl payment• which
became due lllereafter, lndudtng
let• dlar991 If any and/or ot~ euma peyable under the terme of
uld note 0t deed of trwt.
Pree«lt beneflc:laty under audl Oeed ,_ aucuted and~ to
uld trualM of agent a written
DecWatlon of DefWI and Demand ror Sala, atld hu depOll1ed with
uld tNstee or agent auctl Oaed and
all document• evidencing the
obligatlone MCU"ed thereby
Property a6d-: 5550 tdglmar
Avenua, Anellelm. Calllornla
Addf'91• of prooer1J MCUrtne the obltaatlon (not a requL.......,t of Ihle
notl'c•. e11y lncorrectn••• I•
dltclalrned by the u~I
DATED: Mey 20. 18a3.
VIRGINIA ... PARO
~ Vlca "'9aldenl.
s~ Foredoaw• ~ Al 54_. Trust ..
Publlahed Orange Co••t Dally
PllOI ~ 31, June 7, 14. 21. 1g93
2620-83
Callfornla Ounng no<mal bualnae -----------~ Nil.IC NOTICE
A neoauw dec:taratlon nee been -----------,,.,..---prepared In compllanoe wtth the FOUWTAIN YAU.IV
Callfornle E11v1ronmentat Quallty ICHOOt IMSTNCT
Act tor the P'090Nd detactlnwf11 NOTICa °' ADOP'T10M tw
and I• a110 evallabl• tor publlc ~T~~ ~
review •t tha local Agency DllTNCT MAL ~TY
Formetlon Commlulon office, IND MO D-1t
add r •II • b ove For more NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thet Information, telephone. (714) the FOUNTAIN VALLEY SCHOOL
834-2?38 during normel bu•I-DISTRICT haa declered thal the
h<M'9Da1-" Msy 24 1983 fotlowlng r ... Pfoperly wll not be _, • needed for o--oom ~ BY ORDER OF THE LOCAL The MCond office~ at the AGENCY FORMATION COMMISSION OF ORANGE •outnwHI cor11tr of the office
COUNTY CALIFORNIA bulldl"'ll located at Numb9' One
NcHARD T. TURNER g::= Lana. Fountain v~.
ExtlQJ1tw Officer Th• Board of TrullM• ot th•
L.ocalF ~ti C 1 1 Founteln Valley School Dl1trlct orma on omm u on rMOIYM 10 ...._ Ille hlcllltlea IO ~ County. Indicated abOve under the t1tm1
P I h_ .. 0 c 1 D 11 end cond1tlo111 11ated In th• ub 11 '""' range ou • Y Raaolutlon of the Boerd. Reaolutlon
PtlOt. June 7. 1983 No. 83-37.
2490-83 Th• minimum monthly taaH
----.---.,.-------~ f« the term of Iha ..... • ._ nut~ .,.... not be ._ ttlan one hund,.S
-----------lwerlty-dollaB and fifty oerttl IC..a 1112150). TM minimum monthly
l"ICnnout Mlll•U •H• payment lor 1ubHquant ..._ 8TA~ period• may be adJu•led by th•
The foUowlng Plf'IOn la doing Con1umar Price lndu annual ~ -average reftec1ed •• Ille and OI Iha Vl .. TUE I. 8CH£CK LAND ..... pertod A aecuttty depollt may
PAATNENHIP, I...._. lMM, be requWecl pnor to oc:oupancy ~ 9e9al. CA l2MO No comrrtnlan lhllll be peld ""'!
J • m • • T . Ro u n t r • • , 8 IQenMd ,.. eat•I• broker In tNa ~ ~. Newport 8Mdl. regard, and th•r• •hall be no CA l2M deduction from any propo1at In "* ~ .. oonduc1ed by • del9rmlnlng the 1"91-' 1'9Aj)Onaltlle .,.,,.., p.tl•.e'lp bidder
,,.,,_ T. Rountree. Sealed prQC>Olala to ..... Mid 1
0.-W P9'tnW Pfoper1V mua1 be recelwcl lllf '"' Thia lltMelntnt -Ned wtlfl IN delegated offloer at the Fountain
COUnty a.11 ol OfwlO' ec..my on Valley School Dlatrlet Education Mer 23, 11183. Center, 17210 Oak Street, Fountain
"11-V•lle'Y. c.ntornla, 82708, no laler
ll'ubfla'*I Orange CoHt Dally tn... 2:00 p.m., J\#M 27, 1 .. 3
,.._ ~ 31, June 7. 14, 21, 11183 Before ecceptlng any written
251*-'3 propoHll. th• fflegated officer i------------~•h•ll c;alt tor oral llfddlng. Any
pat1on who h•• heretolor•
eubrnlttad a Wfttten bid may aubmlt
an oral blllt H-""O by .. IMlt
llW (~) paroant"" hlghalt Wfltt .... bid. The hlgM9t .....,onalbla bldd9r
lllall be required to exeout• the
form of leaM , 1uch for1nat hH
11eretotore ~ ac>Proved by the
8oerd of Tnme..
Tiie Boerd of Trlltll-llhalt make
ttie ~tlon • to wflettler to 1MH a#d fadlltl .. WIUI t911 ( 10)
"'" after reotlpt ol bld9. rflfOtmetlon COl'l~ntng the
pr090MI ~ be Midi Ill ~ 10!
FOUNTAIN VAl.l.fY SCHOOL DISTRICT. 17210 Oak 9 1rHI. ,OUl\t.irl v,..,, CelltOt'fl4e. g2708,
(714) M~~2. AttentlOfl· Carol
~ 0a1ect: """" a. 1ea. • PO\MT,... VALLI\' 8CHOOL DISTRICT 10MD OF TAUITUI auz.,,,,. ~. a.rt of Ille Boatd
'ubtl.IMd Orenge COHI Dally ""°' June 1, ,,. ao; 1883 2907
ii6TiCi TO ~TON OM.UM"" ... 4kitlool OIWtot· °'*' ~ ~ t:OO o'«*M* p.rn. °'
"" l2ncl -e1.-.... 19A. "'-of 1Md ~ omoa or ~ Dlf90t«, 9'nlf ........,, ~~~...,._HWI votteoe Tral'lal'NMlon •~"" -lid 1Ht4
"leoe ,.._.,. -on fk Of'llol OI Olteetot, John 'oitar, fthlf•loal ''°'lltro ll'lennlt10, Cout
COmtnuntty =Oletr'tol, 1310 AdatM, Tr...,f: Cot1aMeM.
CA 829H, (114) 707 NOTICE II H~V GIVEN tMt
"" ~ lcifiOol Oletnct of Orange Oowltlf, Celttomle. ~"" by end tllrougll ltl Governing
BOerd, tleralnafler rer.trtd 10 M "DtSTAICT'' will ....tve up 10. but
not ••tar tllan Illa abo..,..•t•t•d Ume. ...., bid• for ... -d of.
contraot tor ttle abO¥a llfOleet.
8ldl """ be reoeN9d In the '*'°' ldenllfl•d above, and •hall b•
opened and publloty re.cl aloud at
the ...,_.aJ•tecl time and ptaoa.
There Wiii b• • NI A d•ro•lt
required tor eacll aet o bid
dociumen .. to guarani .. their ,..,,,.
In good condition wttNn NI A da)'9
after the bid opening date.
Eecfl bid muet oontorm and be
re1po111lv• to tlla contract documenll.
Each bidder lhaH IUbmlt, on Iha form lvrnlahed wllh the oonttact
doalmenta. a 1111 o4 the Pfoe>OMd
eubcontrac1or. on Ihle proje(!t u
required br the 8ubleltlng and
SubcOntr~ Fair Practlcea Act.
Ocwt. Code S«:. 4100 ec eaq.
&di bidder muet eubmlt With Ma bid certtflad or oHlller'• check
peya.ble to the DISTRICT or a bid bond In the form Ml fonh Jn the
contract documenta In an amount
not .... than 1~ of the maxtmum amount of bid u a CJU&f&nl .. that
tha blddar wlll enter Into the
propoeed contrac1 tt the -le awarded to him In Ille event of
fail\Ke to en1er Into uld oontr9Ct,
IUCh aecuttty .. be forfWt. DISTRICT reeerwt Ille right to
reject 9n)' or all bid• Of to walw llY)'
lrregularltlal ot lnforrnallti.a In ....,.
bid• Of In Iha bidding
Pureuant 10 tll• e=•lon• of Secilon 1n3 of the Code o1
th• State ol Calltornl •. th• DISTRICT hM obtained from the
Director of the DepertMent or l11du1trlal Relatlon1 the general
pravllllng rate of per diem -oae
and Ille general prev9lllng ra1• tor holiday and a.....1kl'le worll In the
locality tn wtllch thla WOf1' la to be
performed for eac;f'I c:raf'I O< type of
worker needed to •••cute the
contract. T'-'"" are on Na al th• DISTRICT oUlca located .. Ptt)'llloal F9Cllti.a Pltnnlng, T.....,
Faclllty, 1370 Adam• Ave., Coeta
M-.. CA 82828. Coplea may be
obtained on reque.I. A copy of
l'-ratw 111&1 be poct«f at the Job .....
II lhall be matld&IOfY upon Ille
CONTRACTOR to whom the
con1rect la -clad, and ""'°" et'I)' aut>oontr~or under him, to pey noc
.... than '"' Mid IP'Clflld , .... to
.. worll-~by them In"" executton of Iha contrec:t
No bidder may Withdraw hill bid
tor a period of torty-llW (44) da)'a
after the da" Mt for the °'**'Cl of blda.
A payment bond and a
pertonnanoe bond wtl be ~ prior to ex~lon of the corrtract end ahall be In the tonn Mt rOflh tn
the contract~
PUf'IUant to s.ctlon 4686 of the
G°""""*'t Code of the State of
Callfornla, the contract wtl contain prO\llelonl permitting the ~
bidder to aubetltut• aeourm. r°'
any money• wlthh•ld by th•
DISTRICT to en-• P9'10<m1noe
under Ille contract.
ao....mlng Board
By SIHorman E. WataOf\
~rru11-Pub1t1hee1 Orang• COHI Dally
Piiot, June 7. 14. 1983
25e1-83
NOTICI OF THI f'U•LIC
HRAR•O TO U HaLD aY TM
LOCA&. AOIMCY PO!tMATION
COMllllllON OP ORANOI COUMTY, CALIPCMIMA OM ,,.
ll'ROll'OllD TRANIPIR OP
TlltRfTORY •ITWllN THI
MUMCtPM. WATa CMITMCT '11'
ORANQI COUNTY AMD THI
COASTAL MUNIC.,AL WATaR Dt9TNCT DSllOMAT'ID OU..
COUNTY (DISTRICT)
.._OM'NIZA'l'IOM NO. W'
Thia ~ '-1nCI .. be '*" In
the ao.d °' ~ ~ Room. ttrat noor. Oranoa Countv
Hall ot Admlnl•tratlon. 10 CMo c.oter Plua. Santa Ana, Calltomla
on Wedneedey, June 22, 1883 at
the hour of 2:00 p.m., OI M -
therM tter •• tha Commlaelon'•
IQ9llde permlta, at whkltl ""' .. tnt...ted pertlta .. be .. d.
Tiie aubject ~ conalala of tour ...,.,.. ,.,,..,..
Paroel A contain• approxlmatefy
731 -IOCated eaatar1Y of the Santa Ana "'-and IOUttlalty of 19th Str ... (-1endedl In the ....
Newport Beach area. Parcel 9 con..ine llPPf'Olllmatety 413 aar•
loceted .... and .... of Jambor99
Road eoutllerty Of 8f1'10I 8tr ... In
the northeeat city ltmlta of Newport
Beach. Parcel C oonUln•
1P9'0J1lmatefy 224 --loctlted ... of the ... Joeqllln ....
and nortfl of San Joaqulfl ... Aoed ~~~~"== ~ 1, 121 ICf9' loomed '°"'" of Clfttral A..,.,_ ~ Berry 9trM1 and Slate College
Bou6eVerd In the .... olty llrnttl of
BrM-The prQPONI i. to detach
paroall A. a a c from the 1114un1c11pa1
Wat« Oletrlet of Orange COUntif
and anna11 th• ••ma ''Q!:::.2 IO eo.Jal MUlllapal Water Parcel ttts1o be .... fr'Olft and
.,_. to Muntolptl Watlf Otlm1ct
of OrWI09 COun(lf. Mapa and leQal
deacr'lptlone of "" r-~'*' len1t0tif ere on Ille and ...,.....,.. tor
pulllle: l'9'MW at "" Loaal AolnCY Portnetton Cornmleakln Offtoe, tO Civic C•nt« Plua, "oom 411, 8*\1• ,.,... Callbnla dUttl'lg normal
""l"*' ~--"°"' ,_ bMI\ ptepetad tn oompllanoe Wllll the
California EnvtrOl'IMtntat 01.talll~ Act..,,,,,.~~
end I• alao •v•lla.t>le for publlo
review ti t"a l.ooal AOtl'IOlf 'ormatlon CornmlHton otftoe,
addr•n abo••· 'or more
lt1rort,1aUot1, l•l•pllon•: (J' t4)
Q4.2238 dllf1tlt normal ~ holA. ... Dalltd: ..._ H , Ila.
•Y 0 .. 01" OF THI l.OCAL AGINCY FOll'MATION
OOMMllltCN Of O"ANOI OOUNT'f.CA~ ·~ ol ONrlta Publl~ Ofanee C.... ,...,., June 1, , .. .....
ClASSIFllD M ediun income of DOU11 Pilot /omilie•
ezceeda $34,000o11ear. Your ad reocMs
the cm.mty'i moat ofllt.UTJt bu11ing
audjence.
CLASSIFlm . ="""==:::*== .. ==='"'"' ... Wt ... II 1111....,al IHI INDEX HOIOSCOl'f
To Place Yu Acl, Cll * HIUIR llllE * BY SIDNEY OMARA
642-5678 Come vta.lt the mo8t fabulous view new
cuatom home In Newport. Nothing to
compare with this 4 bdrm, tam rm, 5
bath, formal dining, 3 frplca, 6 car
garage. Large pool & jacuui. Come to
the gate and ask for 3 Yorks h ire,
759-1931 .
lt£Al ESTA Tt We4net4ay, Jue I
t..=.-it.u. ._....,,., ................
~"'::::"' o.&aM-~1'1>1111
II T""' r.....,1a1n V61~
ltunUfllW>-
H\#11 Ha1-.r
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RENTALS
11.-.~ 1""-UnllllNalwd
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HELEI I. DOWD
RULTOR, llC. 144-0134
LlllA ISLE l&YFlllT
Finest Laaoon view from ma1nlticent 4
bdrm, 4 ~th pool home. $1,45-0,000.
l&YlllE PUCE UYFlllT
Spectacular beyfront dplx 2 br, 2 be up; 2 br.
2 be dn. 2 boat ·~· Reduced-$1 .~.ooo.
PEllDIU 1011 OOUIFIOIT
Ocean & jetty views. M.rine room. 4 bdrm. 3
bath, 3700 eq fl $1.385,000. Oceanfront.
Ull llLE
Remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath + large rec. rm.,
beam ceilinp, fu.rniahed, patios. $420,000.
F&lll&lll IWllll IHLLTIP
New 4 br, 4.,,., be, custom French Normandy
Fat.ate 1.2 prune acre hilltop Sl.250.000.
OlllOl&ll O&YI l&YFllllT
Coronado bland cust beyfront lot 85' boat dock. Plans evail. Now $370.000 w/terms
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Let IP of 1ollni
proposition.. You get what ill needed it ~u-esteem
ll maintained. Cycle biCh --you'll reed\ more
people, your 1deu will be tranafonMd lnto profit-
able concepts. Focua on investmenta, dMdenda and
payments.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emphuia on new
enterprbes, fresh 1tarta, more independence and
gains resulting from original approach. Be direct
enough to get to heart of matters. Romance is part
of "atimulating" scenario. Leo native plays para-
mount role.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What had been
missing will now become available --perhape in
abundance. You'll have aoceM to confidential data.
Clandestine meeting is pan of ICef'W'io. Intuition ii
on target --first impresaiona are likely to be oon-ect.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22J: Key ia dl-
versiflcallon. Refuae to be tied down to red tape. Riae
above petty annoyances --research beyond current
expectations. Gemini, Sagittarius pen10na figure
prominently. Wish ia fulfilled In IW'prising manner.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): J>resti8e on upswing --
goal ia achieved, perhaps with aid of Scorpio or
Aquarius individual. You'll break free from restric·
tions, path will be cleared of "emotional debria."
You'll be asked to participate ln community project.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Be ready for
possible change of ecene -exciting relationahip
stimulates creative proce91. Lunar accent on com-
munication, travel pla.na, expansion of publishing or
advertising activitiea. Sagittarius·and another Virgo
~ PAii UDO COllO figure ~tly.
3 br, 2 ba, frplc. immaculate condo. On LI RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Accounting may be
:: bel Co 1 $125 ooo required --aomeone pcmibly is avoiding fair share
Mio green t. mm. poo · ' · of payment. Dtplomacy wins, but al80 make clear
:: that you are not without strength. Dig beneath
:,: surface indicatlona. You can come up with complete . *' story. = SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Spar for time; it ia t; • --._ neceaary to play ''waiting game.'' ~ph.uia on legal .-. -.-afiaio. special rlg.hta, penniasions and u.e of public *' 30 ._,.to a.y. CNrmlno relations techniques. Review agreements, clarify = . -o6det CdM ~ • 4-bdrm. "*' i.wl with terms and avoid any tendency towards = . =... ~ of llatt>or. 11 .. ti' se -uecepnon. ::! 1626,ol:_ entertaining. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Way ia
::: um--11.ALn cleared to fuUill obligations, to complete basic ~ Lot. s Bclrm, 2112 ti.. 2 111-1111 chores, to take steps neoeaary (or emo-m; tpk:'• & taroe famtty _1 -· uonal-financial conditions. Promi8e made by
-room, ._ lilnd. ar.t -• -co-worker is due to be fuUilled. Cancer, Capricorn
ANJOMCOEfTS ;:.'C:1 Reduoed to •-•/htl natives f~' in scenario.
"--.. -' · 8Nttclln9 family hom. CAP CORN IT\.-22 J 9) Y 'll ..._ • ,_ .. UlltlilOO~ t1V.-t~i WMtl ~ lfWd end twve ,~. -an. l : ou ex-
..._._ >012 Aailllon., 875-eOOO mod pool. Thll 3 bdn'n perience new-found freedom. Elements of timing, ~~8j:-"""""' ::: h • • d •I 1 v ht f u' luck and surprile ride with you_ Focus also on Thwl )Oii ~ wall cover-lrlQe. fl'eeh C#P9I and children, romance, creativity, ability to imprint your
BUSl£SS l .. UY paint, mow "' c:ond. a oWn style. SUOC891 indicated through speculative
FIWICIAL ... .... ...... real Doll HouM.O~ venture. Libran plays key role. =-~... :::! .._...,,_on It*~ ~~~:::or~d'1r call AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Light ii shed oo ~~-::: :;:;-~~ 1.11-1400. area previously obecured, restricted or '!kept in 1..-.w.,...., .a22 roorntiome-ooml-bllm IPJHRm-dark." You'll learn more about property values,
•Mooory '° ,,_ t024 and tack roomll RV °"'* w11 OONlder 1111 basic 9eCUrity and you'll have chance to be rid of
•M<>nry WanWd -lt0'1iOI loo. Oftwed at ..,,,. and CMfl to 0CNW Anoth Aq la M....._ To• .ou S155,000. c.tt 640-1151 doe6ng ooete kif lht• unnecessary expenses. er ua.rian p ys
CWl..OYMD'1 totally ~ and import.ant role.
11o1p w.,...., >1uo MWIY decof.-S 2 bdrm PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Ideas sucoesfully
Jot. w ... ""' ~•03 & den w/POOI & IPM & blend with intuition. Timing improves, meaage ia
AlmMLS !IMO ~· ~~':; ~ved and correctly interpreted. A former »t• attutt.,. and anactee, "teacher" ia back on ecene, ready to aid cau.e. Short _ =: IUll... lghtlng & much mew.. trip may lnvolve relative. Surprise visil ia distinct -.. ,... '280.000 ..._ ctill to .... nnRGibllity.
MDCtWOSE ...... G1-1400. --I
An"'P" tOIO QOM to kMllif........... WATt HI KONT llalft ftr laJ1 ...... ler l&le ...... IUe ".,..._ .,. eof\oot. & ~o. UOMt., 1-. : ................................. ___ ··--------~~~~~~===~ "-::! Cornl)la .. d bofu l"OOlll REAL ESTATE leMraJ lllt ... a) Im ... L..... IMI ~~-. .,,. ...,.,... from l'louM.. 831-1400
C-.wn •11 ~ wM In ~ 19' llft.D 8111 .... ,_ '° You IOi2 8Wtl tor ~. Mlle Mii I Giii on your owrella end mfl .sf from 22201 WOOd lmnd ~"S.w. == ::.~ Piii= or Jim 110111 Clo ,!ult a ltt6eflldn' ••• ~ fUUllU ....._ 9lr1Qle ......, MA .....__ c-. t111 ... M4-· bdrm unit w/good ~ VllaOa W• T~ ~ ":;'9'ft. 1t::, ": ~~ ::: .,_IULDll11 Tait• your Clhotoe. 11119"' =~ =ooo. 8H•Hd celling•. lnMOa.l15UOCl M~n..-CUI -~ cMI '2 br oot\9ge & fent Endoeed PliMO-eicelerlt - -M• w .. ~ .no -• themodam3bdrm,2t.. condition. OeUg!'tful ~
.,......, 1--11 1214 """'*',... ~ 3 "'* or ,,._. "9rMI ElttlW o.oor. NI oondltfonlng, N .. ll&ft <HI••"'"""'"• ·-Mm ._,... ...,......, ~. you .. In Ideal S11S,OOO 1-•1-..!,:'i:o;;_ ;;;; blr. ~a wfth..,. ~ toet1on1 o.r. 111· n _, ___ .. ___ ....,,r-:PT
W'°"1. a.;:_ -~....._ ...., ,.,_.oonalder your n1e. MGMT 11• Iii r.:::. WM llM
BOATS mi = '° ..., J:r'M.! =.-;r:,e ~~~ Untii~ price ear ct.-;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii= o..w.. .,...100. -. --... '8dled s 8dr home 1n.. IUl.n 111 ta. 11 ua .-
Rn>t ::t . . l~'ci1 l!2 •)1{:;:1 ~~~~ . -~ ~.,..
I 1014 ""d what you want In to ttl• value. H11rry. CalbtrlM down, and mow filllM In. ~:: o.lr Piiot awlfleda. 161-3111. .... 1111 !::":.. f =. 0::
7020 .91Cl' II*'-'. ........... = PAONRI~ ~if\6 ~ =:aten~~10:: ~.._.__ : •INIT&l•lf --..ciponda,ter,t\6 ....... ~
TUN$PQlTATION lealllcled tg s or 4 bdrm ... den. 2 c. ........ '-to ofter. a-to
,..,,_,, IOI• hrM 1n '** -gMad o•ted comm., pool, NorthWOOdao ~ ... a...,nr. IOU oommunlty l.e f1M tofa e Un d • 0. , ~ti 0 , ... 000.
._,,..... 11114 bult , •. ...., .. S1tU00.•1 ..,,... -..... =~~ •v•ll. sh.ooo dl'I Oi!tl... 1111 ~':'.:it:.-~ -w/reduced prloH. -~
11v. ~ T1~1bl• tool NMr n.. oondo w~Z TnMlo..,.,.._.. _.,
Traihn. Uul11y 802' -.... •-• ._ •~t .~• taa, fr , ~~ ·-~~ ~~~ A PETE BARRt TI
REALTY """' ._,,. 11111 Room f« your large family In this laW down. no~,; "'"" ~-•1• • bd. plua bonus room "Z" ~· Wll _...,., '°' •••••••••
-.
dwn payment. lltlp
........ Wenll..S ~ enjoy the carefree Uvtna 0 the --.1e12. ... '"'-· "-"'· II<• ...... -~ -1,:';:~°""'· = BluU.. Cloee to pool.~. llCbool 1'14.......... ..... . .... .....
..., and Boy'• Club. Lovely 1arden lt.IPlf=~-: o-~....,_tM , ,, ... -P9tiol. • beet'I ..... Mn 1111 b, F/P, ape. ... on l*tl ,._.,... .. 0. AUTOS 9(JITIJ) ~ .. ..!e.....~ MM1ti ...... ...._ I ..._, ........ _ ........... _ 1\6 ti.. + ~ ""'
~·~:r .. e..~~~ =:;;. AIO.
CIOUr'8 Md pool. Ad now, ei.. t ttoO/iftO. 1. ............ ,, .. IN NEWPOATCDITEA
,,. ·-..... -=---.~-.-.-t-.-L-~-~--"-".
·--J •JN.Aef"ll? ... • ... ..-.w.....--... .................. fl&1 iU':'.fi.E '''t.-·~ r.-=,v-... . ,_....._
----...... ------"------
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZIF
ACROSS S. Giggle
58 Jot
1 Pulled (arotl ) 59 ActOf'
8C~ Andrews
10 Tur'* 81 Sifter
14 Athletic 62 City on the
15 Elegance Tiber
18 EV« and -63 tmege
17 Oubs 84 Ant
18 Guinness 65 Crowns
19 Encamp 68 Salamander
20 Charms 67 Burna
22 Attendance DOWN
24 Catch 1 Suspend
28 Modced 2 Red algae
27 Oisperege extract
3 1 Staid 3 Kind of bean
32 Farewell to 4 Poll
amigos 5 Abandons
33 Bowed 6 State: abbr
35 Dirigible: 7 Cheap
slang magazine
38 Claim 8 Strain
39 Diseharged 9 Dead
40 Rasp 10 Dorman!
4 1 Pronoun 11 About
42 Cadence 12 Occasion
43 Cleanse t3 Kicked In
44 Moor 21 -on.
45 UK forti-repressed
btions 23 Appealed
47 Entice 25 Pigtail
51 Salvage 27 Indonesian
52 Marchers island
3
PETE BARRE TI
. REALTY
MONDAY'S
PUZZLE 80L YED
_. -_-_ ~ -------4------. -· ---""
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, June 7, 1983 ..
. ..,...._... -.
Coat DAILY PILOTITUMday, June 7. 1883
• ,.
~ -,-----= ~ -""r.
st•
...... .... .. .... ,
•u.a.
. Ii .t.~
~)
F « a..llled Ad
ACTIOPf
Call
A MILT Pa.Of
U.'N04l
.U•M1t
I
I I
• 1
I
C8 Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfTueaday, JuM 7, 1083
Eord Motor Company's 80th
· · Celebration.
ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
RATE
In celebration of our 80th
___ ..... ~~,.. ..... , Ford Motor
~yoffers afinan~g
~ista.nce program and a
· commitment to quality
....... .&Ja.a..aa..~.a:ed in the industry.
,,. --
In celebi;atlon ci our 80th anni-, per qualified retail customeJ; and
versary, Ford Motor Company is dealer participation may affect
offering ~special low financing rustomer saving5. Buyers who pay
program. But theres one "M>rd that cash or arrange their own ftnanc-
.separares our low financing rate ing are eligible for cash from Ford
from all othecs ... quality. Motor C.Ompany. See your author-
Quality that begins with Ford ized dealer for details.
Motor Company workers and our
unique "Quality is Job 1" program.
Quality design and engineering
that ha5 been awarded lower
insurance rates on many Ford
Motor Company cars from leading
insurance companies.
Heres what you get
8.8% A.P.R. or $400 cash
on Fonl Escort and Mercury
Lynx.
State-of-the-art engineering
makes these among America5
favorite small cars. Escort is, in
fact, the worlds best-selling car,
based on 1982 worldwide
production figures.
8.8% A.P.R. or $500 cash
on Mercury LN7 and Fonl EXP.
These sporty two-seaters offer
four-wheel independent suspen-
sion, front-wheel drive, optional
five-speed transmis.sions and
higher output engines for '83.
8.8% A.P.R. or $300 cash
on Ranger.
The latest available figures
show our tough Ford Ranger is
the highest quality truck built by
any American manufacture[
8.8% A.P.R.or $500on
Capri and Mustang.
From the 5.0 liter Capri RS
and Mustang GT to the Mustang
Convertible, these cars offer some
of the most exciting performance
on the road today.
Special Financing on all
. odler Ford, Mercury and
Unroln cars ... and Fonl light
trucks. .
See your dealer for other attrac-
tive financing rates from Ford
Credit on all other Ford, Mercury
and Lincoln cars from LID to .
Marquis to Marie VI ... and Ford
light trucks.
1he fine print.
Tu qualify for this special financ-
ing, }QU must buy or lease'}Qur
new Ford, Mercury or Lincoln
from the current stock at ~ur par-
ticipating Ford or Llncoln-Merrury
Dealer, and finance it through Ford
Credit 'lake delivery by June 30,
1983. There is a limit~ one vehicle
The priority Issue at
Fonl .•• Quallty.
I'
Based on a survey cill,000
1982 new car and light truck
owners, Ford, Mercury and
Lincoln cars had the highesl
quality rating of any r.najor U.S.
automaker, based on things gone
wrong after the first three months
of use. \Xe're conqdent that new
surveys of our '83 cars will be just
as positive.
Partidpadng Ford and
lincoln-Mercury Dealers
~the only lifetime
Service Guarantee in
the industry.
The Lifetime Service Guarantee
cavers your participating dealer's .
work for as long as you own your
car. It means that you pay for a
covered repair on }Qur Ford,
Mercury, Lincoln or Ford light
truck once-and never again If --
it ever ha5 to be fixed again, the
repairing dealer will fix it free.
Free parts. Free labor. For as long
as you own your car. It doesn't
matter Where you lx>ught your cu;
or whether its new or used, the
work is still covered by the repair-
ing dealer.
This limited warranty covers
vehicles in normal use. Items not
covered are routine maintenance
pans, belts, huses, sheet metal and
upholstery. See any participating
Ford or Lincoln-Mercury Dealer
for details.
Lower insurance rates
from Allaate.
Allstate Insurance Company,
one of Americ.aS largest car insur-
ers, backs Ford's corifidence where
it counts: in the cost of car insur-
ance. More Ford Motor Company
cars enjoy discounts from Allstate
than any other make, U.S. built or
imported One d the reasons why
is Fords 5 mph bumpers.
<:otne join our 80lh
. Annhersary Celebration.
Add to all this good news, the
new produa excitement-Ford
Thunderbird, 'Iempo, Mustang
Convertible, Bronco II and
Mercury Cou~ Marquis and
1bpaz ... and }QU have a meaningful
celebration, indeed An 8<Xh anni-
versacy only happens once.
I
{ •
NATION
Percy believes Reagan,
Andropov should meet
BJ Sh Alaodaa.I Prat
WASHINGTON -Alnerican and Soviet arma nesotiaton are
not work1na with enough eeme of urpncy and should be apurred
on by Prelklent Reepn and Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, aye
the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relationa Oxnmlttee. Sen.
Charles Percy alao aid Reepn and Andropov ahould hold a
summit befon year's end. He aid their meetma thpu1d not be
delayM. u the White llOU8e and Kremlin have auge.~. until
there la a pre-&rran&ed ~ that would guarantee aucceea on
substantive a.ue..
Inmate seelcs suit on health food . F. Douglas Ryen Peggy Ann Ryen Jessica Ryen, 10 Joshua Ryen, 8
LINOOLN, Neb. -An inmate bu filed a lawsuit eeeking
$2,000 a month for the rest of his pri8on term and a court order
allowing him to order food from a "good health atore." Richard
J . VanKeuren, a pri9oner in the Unootn Correctional Center,
clahm in a federal lawsuit that Correctional Center Super-
intendent WlllJam Foeter hu violated h1a civil rights by denying
him a vejetarian diet. Foster and the center's staff acmmmodate
spedal dietary need8 of Mu.llma, but have denied his reque.ts,
VanKeumen said. He says his diet ia baaed on his own reUatoua
beliefs, "whlch comply with Theo-Sophical teachings."
Clues sough~ in Chino slayings
Shultz leaves for NA TO meeting
WASHINGTON -Secretary of State George P . Shultz wu
.ettlng out for a NA rt> foreign ministers meeting in Paria today
to 10lidt allied views on how to speed up U.S. negotiations with
the Soviet Union on limiting nuclear weapons in Europe. The
United States ia especially eager for an show of allied unity on
the i8lue becauae th1a will be the last NATO meeting before
deployment of the American auile and Pershing 2 missiles
s:heduled to begin in December. Amerlcan officials have
repeatedly that talka with the Soviets aimed at limi ·
deployment will have a much better chance of suocesa if the allies
can maintain .. aolid fronL .....
STATE
Democrats approve budget proposal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Democrats in the California
A.-embly sidestepped Republican complaints Monday night and
approved an unbeJanced $27 billion budget propoeal. The
Republicans had stopped the budget proposal twice in lel9 than
a week, saying it was $2 billion out of balance. But the Democrats
amended the bUJ late Monday ao that it needed only a simple
majority vote instead of a two-thlrda majority, and it was approved
42-31.
U.N. troops urged for Lebanon buff er
BEVERLY HILLS -Israeli minister Ariel Sharon, speaking
Monday on the first anniversary of la:rael'a invasion of Lebanon,
urged that U .N. troops be u.ed to create a buffer r.one in Lebanon.
A U.N. troop deployment could leed to new negotiations for
Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon. Sharon aid at a news
conferenoe. ~But such renewed flelOtiatMJns would not include
Ya.er Ara.fat or other Palestine Liberation Organization Jeeden.
Disability payments to be restored?
LOS ANGELES -A federal judge. accusing Reqan
administration oftidala of "arrogance.'' said he'll issue an order
that could restott Social Secwity dlsability payments to more than
72,800 people. TI\e peymenta, whk:h are generally $451 a month,
go to people who becauae of mental or ph)'lical diaabWties receive
Supplemental Sod.al Secwity Income or Social Security Disability
Insurance.
U.S . Di81l1ct Judge William P . Gray said Monday that Health
and Human Services Secreiary Margaret M. Heckler hu ignored
rulinp by the~ U.S . Circuit Court of Appeals by cutting the
payments without provtna the redpients are no longer dlubJed,
"Where doea it say that if the eecretary doesn't like a ded8ion
ahe can limply Ignore it?" Gray uked.
Newspapers.
When your ad's
in there,
77°/o of readers
open to it
CHINO (AP) -A m1a1ina
family car, stolen credit card& and
a pomible eyewitnem 8CCOWlt
from an 8-year-old boy remained
the beat angles today for
authortti investigating fol,U'
brutal ala in the affluent
Chino Hilla..
Detectiv tried to interview
Joehua Ryen the only survivor of
the bloodba at the Ryen family
home earl Sunday. But the
injured bo , who juat a few hours
earlier had a tube implanted
in t 10 he could breathe,
aa too sedated for an interview.
"We don't want to p-11 him,"
San Bemardlno C-ounty sheriff's
Capt. Phil Schuyler said.
The boy had been found in a
bath.room hacked and cut on the
neck and beet.en about the head.
The bodies of h1a parents, Douglaa
Ryen, 41, and Peggy Ann Ryen,
41, were found in a bedroom.
The bodies of Joe.hua'a mater,
Je91ica. 10, and a neighbor who
waa apendina the nlaht,
Christopher Hughes, 10, a.180
were found in the acluded houee,
located about 35 mil.el eut of Loe lea • ~-detectives on the cue
demibed the acme aa a "blood-
bath."
All four vk:tima bad at leat 20
wounda each and died within
minutes, Coroner Brian
McConnlclt aid Monday.
A hatchet wu found about a
half-mile from the NM.-alol\g
Engliah Roed, but authorities aid
they had not determined if it WU
a murder' weepon.
I 'ndwell md the ldllen ap-
parelltly did not try to spar9
J<Jlhua.
"They probebly thought he
WU dead," Tidwell said. "lie WM
in very bed ahape, but none ot the
wounda be ft'OSved were fatal."
lnw.Uptora bad no motive in
the ldlllnp.
The lberiff aid the cue being
developed IO far by a M-member
task force wu "very we.&." But
authorities were cautiously
hopeful Joshua could provide
vital tnf onnation.
S F Catholics
take softer
stand on gays
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
While the Catholic OlUldl can
never endone the 8eXUal Ktivity
of hom09exua)a. it abouJd treet
them with the oompMDori and
undemandina afforded all Chris-
tiana. a new report by the Arc:hdloceee of San 1'randll:o
uys.
The oftida1 policy of the
an:hcilocw aid that ~ ....
I
Investipt+n were leal'China
for two eKa~ from the nearby
California ~~Uon for Men,
along with a 17-yeer~Jd youth
from the Boy'a Republic reform
achooL The juvenile and one man
ea:aped Satµrday, and the third
man eecaped ThW'9day.
Tidwell identified the eacapeea
aa David Trautman, 25, Alboro
Knori, 31, and Micahel Fut Hone
Martinez, l 'I, of Arizona.
"We have no reuon to believe
at th1a time that anyone of them
are connected. No evidence oon-
necta them up. They are jult
pomibilitia that we a.re checkina
out," be uld.
The family's white Buick sta-
tion WllfOll with wood pane1.lna
and llcerwe plate 2ALL 731 ha(I
not been recovered, and a llcenae
plate taken from the family'•
truck, RYEN4, al.lo waa milSing. David Trautman Alboro Knori
Dioxin poison known 60s • In
NEWARK, N.J . (AP) -Feder-
al offldala ignored waminp 20
yean ago that workeR at a
dloxin-<:0ntaminat.ed plant here
wei:e aufferina from a aevere akin
dl8eue that cau.ed facial boils
and hair growth, aocordlng to a
doctor who treated them.
the Dallas-baaed Diamond
Shamrock Corp., produced
herbicidel at the plant, which wu
aold in 1971. I>icndns were
byproducts of the prooea.
"Their akin turned blaclt and
they grew hair all over their
facet, even on their eyelids. We
had to treat them with llUl'gel')' to
remove the boils or drain them,''
Brodkin, who WU paid by
Diamond Alkali aid. "'Ibey had
ao much aicknem they couldn't
afford to let,l>eOple go to a doctor.
That's why I went to the plant
~d worked at the infinnary. DJ'. ftoeer' Brodldn of the Uni-
vendty of Medldne and Dentistry
of New Jeraey aid Monday that
he treated mott than 50 work.en
at the now-abandoned Dlamond
Alkali C.O.. plant, which manufac-
tured the defoUant Agent 0ranae
in the lMO.. He aid be 1nformed
government offidala of the ~
lem in 1963.
De01s seek tax cut curbs
The Wailt ablg the P...st:
River bi lbe Ironbound aectJoo of
Newark W• ~off Thunday
after Gov. 11lOIDM H. Keen
announced huardoua levell of
dioxin had ~ found in the ll'O'And at the site.
Diamond Alkali, now part of
WASHINGTON (AP) -
DemocraUc le.8den in Congre.
have launched a move to limit the
10 pel'Clnt cut in individual iD-
oome t.axea eet foe July l, but
Senate Republicans predk:t the
effort will fail
The. plan to place a $700 '2p on
the echeduled tax cut WM an-
nounced Monday by Houae
Speak.er Thomu P. O'Neill, D-~. The speaker aaid only
taxpayen eemina IDOl'e than
~.000 a year would be affected
TV producer I. Tors dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ivan 'J,'on. the Hungarian-born
nrodumr of nature films and such television lerle8 as "Sea Hunt," r.ru~r" and "Gentle Ben." died in Brazil over the weekend, his
attorney U)"I.
Ton. who would have tu.med 67 th1a week. wu visiting
Bn.zil't Mato Orcmo Plateau with hia aon
when be died of an apparent heart attack
Saturday, attorney Arthur Staahower
said Monday.
The pair had been acouq locations
for a planned wildlife television leries.
Such ahowa made Ton famous.
Born Ivan Lawrence Ton in Buda-
PMt and rai9ed and educated in the aame
dty, Ton came to New Yan in 1939 and
later miarated to Hollywood. where in
1941 be joined eolumbta Pictures u a
l&ftellwrller.
by the $700 limit. which he
argued WU needed to produce
more revenue and cut budget
defidta.
The measure would r;ai8e $13
bllllon in addlticmal re"Venue in
the next two years. O'Neill aaid.
Democrata contend a cap on last
of three tax cuta pushed through
Con&re98 by President Reapn ia needed to prevent the very
wealthy from receiving wind-
falls.
'60 Minutes'
not guilty
~ ANGEUS (AP) -At-
torneys for Dan Rather. CBS and
the top-rated show "60 Minutes"
claimed a victory for a ·~ pn!8I
after auccMlfully defending a $30
mlll1on a1ander suit filed by a
California doc1«.
Dr. Carl Galloway, who
claimed he WU unjl.mtly ~
in a "60 Minutea" report oo
i.nsw'ance fraud. aid that during
the trial be felt .. like David up
apinst Goliath. I don't have my
own network.''
The disputed report. titled "'It'•
No A.ccktent," wa ~ Dec.
9, 19'79. New researc h prove s that the average
reader opens and looks at 77°1o d a news-
paper's pages.· So 1he odds are very high
that we can bring your real prospects face
to face wtth your sales message. For more
information, call Mac Morris, vice president,
National Sales, Newspaper Advertising
Bureau. (212) 557-1865. Or call your local
newspaper representative.
ual orientadon la not held to be a ---.----------------------------------
We're
Listening •••
842·6086
·Audits & Survey. 1982
llnful OOltidldon." However, a
statement releMed with the ,..
port, said tbe church "can DeW!"'
accept bommexual llfeatylee that
~ .xua1 llCtMty.
'l'be report ura-both beter-
oeexuall and hommexuall to li" a life of chMSl.ty. ''Chliltity la a
virtue of reapombility,'' the re-
port said.
Between 15 percent and 20
percent of the l'elidenta of San
Frand8co ant bellewd to be
booaexuaJ.
What do•you like about the Daily Pilot! What don't you Uke!
Call the number at left and your me91a&e will be recorded,
traNCribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour answerin1 service may be UMd to ~cord let·
ters to the editor on any toptc. Mailbox contributor• must lMtude
their name and telephone number for verilicaUoi. No dl'ftl.lat.loft
calls. please.
Tell us what's on your mind
Cflft'fted .......... TMIW-Wii Al ........ r1 .......... .,
MAIN CM'PICI Ml>W....,el .C..~OA Mell~ loo 1NO. C-....._CA 1811
Among the moat durable gel'l'I
m1terl1I• In ,.,. WOf'td •r• Ut•
two etonee we cell Jade. Nephrite and Jadeite. Long
b•for• Jade we• u••d for Of'n~t Of' ,_..ry purpoeee,
prehletorlc .,.op._ recognized
thl• chM11Ct"11tle Md cltV9d tool•, container• end eatlo1g "'"'*"'*"•from It. Jllde le totter than Otwnond, ~ rMM• It le mot• ...ity
ICt~. 8ut Jade .. lOUOf* ~ Otemond, Jade I• more coMetve encl would eurvlve •
T.blow tftat c~ ct\tp ot
fr .~.
... ,...~ofJade .... ---. ......... .., .... ,
mlt1•r•I whloh oooura In •
... .....,,. ... hue • welt:.: CT-...'::.~~~, == .. Ct!lne, ...... ~ WI mlnQ. Aleaka; th• rte•~ dlaeov•r•d ...,_tnAuetr...._
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n
THI ORANGE CDAIT
~
Bomb squad members Leon Benningsdorf and Debra Murray, at left,
pryceu X-rays of suspected explosive device Monday in Newport Beach.
.
, .........................
'udge: 'American Airlines can fly'
BY JEFF ADLER or ............
LOS ANGELES -The Or-
ange County Bo6rd of Super-
vbon WU ordered by a federal
~ today not to inierfere with
American Airlines' pJana to in-
augurate aervice from John
Wayne Airport beginning Thura-
day morning.
U.S . District Court Judge Terry
Hatter Jr. ordered the county to
refrain ffOID Interfering with the
new air~ opera~ through
June 14, when 11Upervieon ~
ICbeduled to formally oonGder
ratifytna an operatine qreement.
"I ~ thia ooune to be
Weol.. Mid Hatter. ''American
Airltnea can fiy."
Hatter ai.o told American Air-
-~~ Ray1PGQd lkoll o( ~ Beech, that ahou.ld the
cdWity fail to approw the ~
ment, the ald1ne • have to punue normal 1epl cbannela ___ _
Solon
fig~t~~
her .
allies
.·
• : . . .
• ID
. . ..
bomb WM a fake, ofticen ,.._:
parted. :
Offlcmow akl Doo, who owm a:
eleelt J.-n autc11iqb0e, may:
haw owed money to the c.crona:
del Mar bank, located at 2101 r..t:
eo.t W&bway. :
'!be bomb 8Cal'e, bawewr,!
forced police to ewc:uaw about!·
110 bulk emplojeel and a.:
tmmn and to dme ol1 ..ven1:
street.. lncludmc the COMt hiCb-!
way. :
The Onnee County lherlff'a'
bomb lqu.d and the FBI wen
called · 1n to dlmum what Wit
belieYed to be • bomb hlddeQ
inlide ui attecbe c=-e. The a:i-
tllehe~. tt w.a later dllcoYered.
contained WU.. telephone J*'1a and .wl"al boob. but no ex-
ploatw device.
Po&e aDepd the allp8Ct ~
ped off the briefcw In the
e.crow office at about 11 a.m. A
note attached to the briefcw
demanded $1 mlDkm tn CMb 'and
pve direetiam to .wl"al paper
t.p that bad been plllCed at the
(See BOMB, hp A!)
Man seized
in Mesa
beatings
BY JODI CADBNllBAD .............
.\ Miwim ViejD man hM been
arre.ted by a.ta Me.a police on.
-~ of •tanc and tm'TOrb-
-\WO elddiy ._.. ID tbllr-Center Street apM1ment.
11 LB to consider
'open hills' plan '1 I
At ooe point dUJinl the hear-
ing, Hatter uked the county'•
attorney if U.S. IDAl'lbala would
have to be atatiaaed at airport Joedinc rami» to prewnt county
sheriff'• deputies from arresting
American'• J>UM!lPn· Ikola
railed the prospect ol arrests if
the airline commenced operation
without an operatina ...,eement
with the county.
~ Alan D.....,, 28, cm·
parole for a um anmd robbery
in 0t:Uo. w. tnened Mmxlay at·
hla home at 26982 AYmida Shoo-
to.
Police net. Qyde f'onmmi akl
the two listen, aeecl 815 and ...
told ufficet• ~ Weft tied to
theU beda at 9 p.m. Friday ntcbt
and pistol whipped and beaten for
more than an hour by a cunmm
wbo fled with $37S in CMb.
BY STBVE MITCllELL I .-............
I • ID what might be called an
"open billl" program. Laguna
Bech council memt>en UJniaht
will,com'dn-openioa up the city'•
322..-cre s~ aw. parce1 to
the public at leut als time9 a year.
The ci1Y atill owes $7 millian
fOI' the wedae..baped parcel be-
tTo-een Laguna Canyon and El
Toro ro9da, and cound1 memben
Mid recently they'd like to see
Lagunana get eome u.e out of the
gated, undeveloped property.
'lbere are, however, some
major hurdles to overcome bef<>tt
the citizenry can be pennitted to
hike, ride banea, p6cnic and tiah
on the pristine canyon land and
lake five miles out of town.
For bwtance, no wa1.er iel'Yice la
available for fire protection or
drlnldnc.J'or that matter, there
are no tanitary fKiliU.., no
emereency phone ayatem md no
~ area for would-be via.-
iton.
In other words, aaya Oty Man-
apr Ken Frank, the city'• aotlll
to have .to come up with some
(See OPEN BILLS. Pa1e .U)
~lternate schooling
QK'd for Laguna kids
American aouat'it the apedal ~ claiming ~ county WM
Fe.rful for thm livts. the twe
women did not ewn a.It rrwftral
care md waited undl 10 a.m.
(See BEATINGS, Pap A!)
Students line up for 450 hotel jobs
u * Orange Cout.QAILY PILOT/Tunday, June 7, 1813
. J OPEN HILLS PLAN. • •
bucb lf It wants to punue lt'•
open door policy l'lpl'dJ.nc
Sycamtn Hilla.
A permit system. whereby VS..
iton would ~taln dty permlmon
BEATINGS •.•
Monda7 t.fon repol"dnc tbe
crime·to polloe, Foreman 191d.
"They were 90 terrified by tbla
whole lituation that they belleYed
if they reported It he would come
beck and kill them." Aki Fore-
man. "They were just abeolutely
terrified to the point that they
were Incapable of doina any-
thina·" Duchoo. who wu repor1edly
fired recently from a Rrviice
station job, cnce llwd at the 800 ~ Center s~ apu11nent
oomplpx, aaJd P'onlDln.
to u. the lite, abo pn!l9en'8 '
prob)--. ~ from liUiOlty
abOUid villlton be hurt on the
property, to the staff cost to patrol
the area.
An altemaUve favored by city
offidaJa would be to open
s~ Hilla to the publJc once • month from January to June -
prior to the fire aeuon.
Two part-time dty Ulegu.arcb
utillz:lng a Jeep would be suffi-
cient to patrol the lake and pk::nlc
areu during theee "open houlle"
daya, the report ICata
A gravel parking lot would be
created, two portable chemical
toilets would be provided and
swimming in the lake would lie
prohibited.
as
A LqW\A Hilla man, allefed!y
11¥>t to death by hil US·YW~ld
adopted IOtl. eerved five ID!J'ltN
ln jail in 1981 for mo1eltlng1c:plof
the' boy'• two natural Utert,
\ I
19 pickeij
for county
grand jury
court recorda ahow.
The boy, Ron Lampul, walked
into Calta Mea po1lee held·
quanen Sa~ ~ and surrendered. e..i.nc that be lhot hil lldopdw-perenta John ,
and Ruth Lempllll, Mid police
who turned thft youth 1 over to
Ora.nae County IOlelitt'• deputiel.
Mn. Lampul, 45, WM listed in
fair condition Monday at Saddle-
back Canmunity Hmpital.
Homicide detectlw.t are aware
that Lampeai aened time for
child moleltation. but they do not
Nineteen Orange Count.y know if that fact wfl1 have any
citizena have been selected to bearing on the murder c.ae.
serve on the oounty'1 lf83-84 "We ... ve not eatabliahed a ~· motive at thU time," aid Lt.
The aelectiona were made dur-Wyau Hart, aberiff'1 dip&rtment
Foreman aid he believed both
woqmi were now eeeldnc mecJAcel
help for C\lta they mffered on
their handl and wrista.
Other conditions recxmmencled
by the city would include no
admiasion charge on th~ days,
visitors would have to bring their
own water, and there would be
no fires, cooking or smoking
allowed.
...............
FBI agent cheeks out briefcase after bomb 1quad Ing a June 1 draWing in Superior ~ted that the leXUaJ ~~la~~ abuae took place more thm three
presiding criminal ~ and YMrW qo, and the boy bad
ovel"leel pand jury Opetftibm. remained in the Lampui home
ALTERNATE SCHOOL ...
Meanwhile, the school board la
holding off on selecting a location
for the alternative education
IChool. The fonner continuation
IChool at the high school la one lite
that has been mentioned.· but lf
there is no intermediate or high
achool student partidpaUan ln the ·
program. another-site might be
8elected for the grade achool. .
finished its work. ·
BOMB THREAT ...
From Page A1 •
rear of the bank property. 1ile
note reportedly laid the bomb
would be defused when the
money was delivered.
Doo wa a arfeated
mid-afternoon when a neighbor
of the bank. who said she'd
obeervered a suapicioua penon
loitering near the designated drop
can~~ a~~ ~ ~Y adopted the youth
agalnat individuals and in-and hil twp U... in 1970. On
vestigate aovernment opptiona. June ~. 1980, tlle eldel-Lampul
Memben of ibe newjl9pel who wu c$:a feJcmy complaint
wW be IWOm ""° ofllat JWy 1 filed ln c.oun.,, Superior are: Walie, Beridall. 06, of Wen-(.'hart wt u~ohmlawtul
minster; Luella C.OX. 601 oC Full-intercourm and dWd molnta&n
erton; J. Grant 'Florin, 456, of • lnvoMnc the two slJia. 1ile
Corona del Mar: Ruth H¥mon, aileted acw OCL"WftlCf between
jJ2,Qf SantaAna;.Jobl\J ...... t?. Jaly aod o.c-... 1979, when
o( -.i Beech; NClf1DU ...: the air• .... 11 lllld 13 yanold.
"45. •of Yort. Lande:~ lMn .... ~befonSu-'t.eHoulllier, 56, of • perior c.ourt J~ Leonard
Builder plans tour of Laguna Heights Saturllay · Palmer Lciac. N, ol Bua~ ~ • • ftov. 2'. 1980,
Beech; Edward MMb, 5f ~ of pleeded IUflty io one count of
Milaton Vie)>; JudlOlbodme, 41, chilcl molestation.
of Tu.tin; Murray Patton, 66, ot Other charges were dismia9ed.
BY STEVE lllTCllltLL or .. ..., .......
A developnent oompany that
prop-.. to build 110 cw&am
hmm9 alooc a Jidaellne above
Canyon Al.:ra ln Lacuna Se.ch ia
inviting Lacunarw to tour the
471-acre parcel on Saturday from
1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
The Carma-Sandling Group of
Newport Bach la aakmi the clty
of Lacuna Beech to annex ita
property just put the north-
w.terly end of Alta lAIUna
BoWl!Yard adjlcent to the Top of
the World community. The prop-
erty, known -lAIUna Heichta. ia located in wUncorponted coun-
ty territoey.
In addition. the developer
Newport Beaeh ,._.,... ______ ....... ...... .............. , .... ., ... .., a.-.
v.-. ............... , ..... ..... ............ ,....._ ........ .... ,.. ................... ,....... ... ,.. ~., .... o.tw.. .
. ,....,. .... __ ._.....,._ ... , .... __ ..._._ ......... ~
.......... --.*1 ....... --. ,.....,. _______ __ ......................... -........ _ ... .._ .. .. ....._. __ "'-'-
,._,......, .... __ ...,._ ,.,.._..,,.,_ ............. .. _ .... _., .......... .........
-·--r.90~ ....... ,... ... ..,_.._.._ .. ........
would like the city to allow the
extenaion of Alta Laguna
Boulevard into the uncs.veloped
area to provide aoce. to the
pro~ aooord were reached on
UlOee requests, the developer
would construct homes on only 27
acres of the parcel, leaving the
remaining 445 or 90 acree in open
apace and for a four~ com-
munity park.
Should tile city reject the com-
pany ' a propoaala ,
c.uma-Sandling offidala have
said they will go back to the
county and 98ek a plan amend-
ment that would allow them to
oomtruct up to 183 homes and a
two-lane road throuah an adjll-
cent private parcel. That roadway
would connect with Laeuna Ca-
nyon Road about a third of a mile
from ita intenection with El Toro
Road.
City officials aay they have
conoema about the development
proposal, ap«ifiailly the impact
llO new dwelling units would
have on exiatlng nelghborhooda
ln the hilltop QOmmunity.
With hearlnp on the proposal
aet for thia summer,
Canna-Sandling Wanta 1...agunam
to be familiar with lta plana.
Saturday'• tour will provide
interested neighbors an op-.
portunity to view the vacant
paroe1. and review project plan&.
Huntington Beach
,,_o1 ........ o1 ...... o.M _,.....,..,... ... v.....,.,.... __.._ .............. _ ..........
TN.._ ........ f471---AllcM UDO ..,..._...,..., .. __ . .......,.
IOCll.
..
Morning fog, clo.u<Js ,
10 .. • 74 14 :: • f: ·D
7t ..
~ developers urge visiton to
wear sturdy shoes and Iona
trouaera. To get to the lite, take
Park Avenue to the Top of the
World community, tum left on
Alta Laguna Boulevard to the
lite.
For infonnation, call Woody
Dike at 494-7095.
Santa Ana; Valerie RanNm. 55, On Jan. 9, 1981, Lampam Wllll
of Irvine; Betty Seamer, $6, of sentenced to a year in jail and
Orange; Archie Shaffer, 58, of three years' probation. according
Anaheim; Steven Blames. 67, of to Orange County Superior Court
Anaheim; Georgia Spooner, 57, of records. Mc.Bride allowed Lam-
Corona del Mar; Merle Tracy, 64, pui to delay beginning his
of Corona del Mar; Ellen Wilcox, lelltence until Feb. 6, 1981, court
55, of Newport Beach, and Nancy records abow. Later, McBride
Zelemikar, 48, of Huntington shortened Lampui'a aent.enoe,
Beach. and he was releued June 29.
BAXTER'S BAYSIDE
IS NOW OPEN.
I ..
tsn t this where
Emestos used to be?
I ---
I l
I
: I
1
i
I I
: I
' '
Percy believes Reag ,
Andropov should me t
By die Aaaodated Prea
WASHINGTON ~ American and Soviet utlnAS'\'&go
not working with enou,h eenae of urgency and ah
on by President 8-aan and Soviet leader Yuri
the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relauona
Charles Percy aJ.o aaid Reap.n and Andropov
summit before year>a end He aaid their meetlnJllSlllOUlld
delayed, u the White Houae and Kremlin have
there ia a pre-a.manged agendA that would
aut.tantive ian.les.
Inmate seeks suit on
Orange Coat OAtlV PILOT/Tueedayt June 7, 19&a
F. Douglas RYeft Peggy Ann Ryen JeHica Ryen, 10 loshua Ryen~ 8
LINCOLN, Neb. -An inmate has filed
$2,000 a month for the rest of hia pri8on term
allowing him to order food from a "good healui•~
J. VanK.euren. a priaoner in the Lincoln cn:r-Mu
cl.a.iml in a federal lawsuit that Correctio
intendent William Foster has violated hia civil
him a vegetarian diet. Foster and the center's
spedal dietary needs of Muslims, but have de
VanKeurnen said. He says his diet is based on h
Clues sought in-Chino slayings
beliefs, "which comply with Theo-Sophical teac
Sbultz leaves for NA TO m
WASHINGTON -Secretary of State Georg P. Shultz was
setting out for a NATO foreign ministers mee · Paris today
to dicit allied views on how to speed up U.S. n Uationa with
the Soviet Union on limiting nuclear weapons · Europe. The
United States is especially eager for an show of 'ed unity on
the iaBue becauae this will be the last NATO ting before
deployment of the American auise and P · 2 misliles is
ICbeduled to begin in December. American offi have said
repeatedly that talks with the Soviets · at limiting
deployment will have a much better chance of s if the, allies
can maintain a solid front.
STATE
Democrats approve budget oposal
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Democrats in e California
Aaeembly sidestepped Republican complaints Mo y night and
approved an unbalanced $27 billion budget posal. The
Republicans had stopped the budget proposal Wi in less than a week, saying it was $2 billion out of balance~t e Democrats
amended the bill late Monday so that it need nly a simple
majority vote instead of a two-thirds majority, i as approved
42-31. I
U.N. troops urged for Lebaron buff er
BEVERLY HILLS -Israeli minister Ariel lharon, speaking
Monday on the first anniversary of larael's invaon of Lebanon,
urged that U.N. troops be uaed to create a bufferone in Lebarion.
A U.N. troop deployment could lead to ne-gotiations for
Israeli withdrawal from Lebanon, Sharon~ at a news
conference. But such renewed negotiations w not include
Ya.er Arafat or other Palestine Liberation tion leaders.
Disability payments to be ~tored?
LOS ANGELES -A federal judge, af:using Reagan
administration oftidala of "arrogance," said he'~ i8sui an order
that could restore Social Security disability pa~to more than 72,800 people. The payments, which are gene $451 a month,
go to people who because of mental or phyaical · 'ties receive
Supplement.al Social Security Income or Social 'ty Dlaabllity
lnaurance.
U.S. District Judge William P. Gray said Mon that Health
and Hwnan Service9 Secretary Margaret M. H has ignored
rulinga by the~ U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals cutting the
paymenta without proving the recipients~ no l r disabled.
"Where doea it say that if the 8eCl'etary doesn't e a deciaion
she can simply ignore it?" Gray asked.
WORLD
Soviet peace dissident sente
CHINO (AP) -A mJMina
family car, stolen credit cards anc1
a possible eyewitnel8 allCOunt
from an 8-yeer-old t;x>y remained
the beat angles today for
authorities investigating four
brutal slayinga in the affluent
Chino Hilla.
Detectives tried to interview
Joshua Ryen, the only survivor of
the bloodbath at the Ryen family
home early Sunday. But the
injured boy, who juat a few hours
earlier had had a tube implanted
in his throat 80 he could breathe,
was too sedated for an interview.
"We don't want to puab him,"
San Bernardino County aheriff'a
Capt. Phil Schuyler said.
The boy had been found in a
bathroom hacked and cut en the
neck and beeten about the bead.
The bodies of his parents, Douglas
Ryen, 41, and Peggy Ann Ryen,
41, were found in a bedroom.
The bodies of Joshua'• aiater,
Jesaica, 10, and a neighbor who
waa spending the night,
Christopher Hughes, 10, also
were found in the aecluded bouae,
· located about 35 miles east of Los
Angeles.
Some detective. on the cue
deecribed the acene u a "blood-
bath."
All four victims had at least 20
wounds each and died within
minutea, Coroner Brian
McConnick aid Monday.
A hatchet waa tOund about a
half-mile from the hou8e along
English Road, but authorities aaid
they had not detennined if it waa
a murder weepon.
ndweD said the killers ap-
parently did not try to spare
Joehua.
"They probably thought he
was dead," Tidwell aaid. "He waa
in very ~shape, but none of the
wounds he received were fatal."
Investigators had no ·motive in
the killings.
The sheriff aaid the cue being
developed 80 far by a 35-member
task force waa "very weak." But
authorities were cautiously
hopeful Joshua could provide
vital infonnation.
S F Catholics
take softer
stand on gays
SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -
While the Catholic Chwdi can
never endor1le the eexuaJ activity
of homoeexuals, it ahouJd treat
them with the compulion and
understanding afforded all Chris-
tiana, a new report by the
Archdioceee of San Fnnmco
aaya.
'lbe off.idal policy of ibe
arehdioceee aald that "~
Inveatigaton we.re aearchinC
for two eecapea from the nearby
California Instttuuon for Men,
along with a 17-yeer-old youth
from the Boy'a Republic reform
IChool The juvenile and one man
..caped Saturday' and the third
man eecaped Thund.ay.
Tidwell identified the e9Capees
as David Trautman, 25, Alboro
Knori, :n, and Micahel Fut Hone
Martinez.. 17, of Ariz.ona.
"We have no reaaon to believe
at thia time that anyone of them
are con.nected. No evidence con-
nects them up. They are just
pcmibi.lities that we are checking
out," he said.
The family's white Buick sta-
tion wagon with wood paneijng
and lloeme plate 2.ALL 731 hacl
not been recovered. and a licenae
plate taken from the family's David Trautman truck, RYEN4, a.lao was miaslng. Alboro Knori
Dioxin poison kno-wn 60s • in
NEWARK, N.J . (AP)-Feder-
al official.a ignored warnings 20
yeers ago that workers at a
dioxin-contaminated .plant here
were suffering from a 8eVere akin
di9eue that cauaed facial boila
and hair groW1h. according to a
doctor who treated them.
the Dallas-baaed Diamond·
Shamrock Corp., produced
herbicides at the plant, which was
aold in 1971. Dioxins were
byproduct.a of the pr'OCE!9.
'Their skin turned black and
they grew hair all over their
fa.ces, even on their eyelids. We
had to treat them with surgery ~
remove the boils or drain them."
Brodkin, who waa paid by
Diamond Alkali said. "They had
IO much aicknesa they couldn't
afford to let people go to a doctot.
That's why I went to the plant
and worked at the infirmary.
Dr. Roger Brodkin of the Uni-
ven:ity of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jeney aaid Monday that
he treated more than 50 workers
at the now-abandoned Diamond
Alkali Co. plant. which manufac-
tured the defoliant Agent Orange
in the 19609. He uid he informed
government offidala of the p~
lem in 1963.
Derns seek tax cut curbs
The plant al(IJl8 the Pamaic
River in the Ironbound IM!Ction of
Newark waa eea1ed off Thund.ay
after Gov. Thoma& H . Kean
announced hasardoua levela of
dioxin had been found in th~
gr"CNnd at the aite. -bfamond Alkali, now part of
WASHINGTON (AP)
Democratic leaders in Congress
have launched a move to limit the
10 percent cut in individual in-
come taxes eet for July 1, but
Senate Republicans predict the
effort will fall.
The plan to place a $700 cap on
the echeduled tax cut was an-
nounced Monday by Houae
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill,
D-Maa The speaker said only
taxpayers earning more than
$50,000 a 'year would be affected
TV producer I. Tors dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ivan Tors, the Hungarian-born
producer of nature filma and such television 8eriee aa "Sea Hwit,"
"Flipper" and "Gentle Ben," died in Brazil over the weekend, hia
attorney says..
Tors, who would have turned 67 th.ta week, was visiting
Brazil's Mato Gremo Plateau with bia 90ll
when he died of an apparent heart attack
Saturday, attorney Arthur Staabower
aaid Monday.
The pair had been 900\lting locations
for a planned wildlife television lleriea.
Such ahowa made Ton famoi.aa.
8om Ivan Lawrence Ton in Buda-
peat and rai9ed and educated 1n the 11UDe
city, Ton came to New York in 1939 and
later mJarated to Hollywood, where in
1941 be ~ Columbia Pktu.rea aa a
ICl'eenwriter.
by the $700 limit, which he
argued waa needed to produce
more revenue and cut budget
deficits.
The measure would raise $13
billion in additional revenue in
the next tWo years, O'Neill aaid.
Democrata contend a cap on last
of three tax cuts pushed through
Congre. by President Reap.n Is
needed to prevent the very
wealthy from receiving wind·
falls.
'60 Minutes'
not guilty
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A~
tomeya for Dan Rather,~ and
the top-rated show "60 Minuta"
claimed a victory for a tree pn9
after 11 K.'C!e99fully defend.ina a $30
million slander adt. fileQ by a
California doctor. ...
Dr. Carl Galloway,• who
claimed he was unjustly. 80CU8ed
in a "60 Minutes" report on
insurance fraud, aaid that d\lring
the trial he felt ''llke David up
against Goliath. I don't have my
own network."
The disputed report. titled "It ..
No A.ccklent," WU broedcut Dec.
9, 1979.
MOSCOW -A man who circulated a petition
United States and the Soviet Union to 1Cl'8p nucl
been convicted of "anti-Soviet &lander" and een
years in pri8an. hi9 wife said today. The
Shatravka, a Siberian woodworker. waa arrested
collected signature& on a petition patterned after
independent peace group in M<*'OW. Hia wife,
told Western reporten that her huabend waa eon
in a trial in Vonyepn. in western Siberia. Shatra
known Soviet nuclear prote.eter to be aentenced to ual orientation la not held to be a -------------------------------------
Soviet leader's health said
we're
Listeni~g •••
IU2-6086
What do you
Call the numbe
trar1$Cribed and
The same 24·
l~rs lo the editor
\fleir name and t
calls. please. ·
Tell us what'
ORANGE COAST D1ilyPUat
H. L lchw.U II Pu~
~~~ to tt. Publilhef
...... ,.c-
~
sinful condiUoo." However, a
statement releMed with the re-
port, u1d the church "can neYer''
accept hpmmexua1 Ufenylee that
~ le'XUa1 activity.
The report urges both het.er-
oaexuala and hommexuala to live
a life of chuUty. ''Ch.MUty !a a vtrtue of rspqnability, ,, the re-
port aaid.
Between 16 percent and 20
percent of ibe raidentll o( San
Frandalo are belJwed to 1-
homoeexual.
e about the Daily Pilot? What don't you Ulle?
t left and your meaage will be recorded,
vered to the appropriate edi1or.
r answerln& service may be used to re<!01'd •et·
any topic. Mailbox contrtbulora mual ln~e
phone number for verilic•tlon. No etreuletloo
your mind.
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•NJI Orange eo .. t DAILY PILOTITuad.y, June 7, 1983
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION
OUOTATloett IHCUIOI TUOH Olf 1MI .... YOtUl._MIOWUf, ""'"''· ..... .cnTCNt DIT•Otf AlfO CllltCJ•••t• noca I KCMA ... U A•D •1~•'1'90 I Y Tltl lfAtO ANO l•atl•IT •
Norton Simon Inc.
to become private
NEW YORK (AP)_,. A $1.M blWon plan to take
Nonon Slmon Inc. private haa been put forwani by a
group ~ by David Mahoney, the chairman of the
dlvenlfied buainem.
Norton Simon Mid Monday the propmal II being
1tudied by a committee mllde up of outside cl1redon of
the food, fMhion and car rental company and woWd be
IUbject to lhareholder approval and ~tll for
finandn8.
Interest rate bits 9.04 percent
W ASIUNGTQN -Startin& today, the maximum
lnteres\ rate that ftnandal imtitutionl ~ 1J9Y on
six-month uvinp certlficata goes up to 9.04 pel"Cl!ftt.
Under the government'• system of cakulatinc the
maximum allowable rate, •vin&l imtitutiiom 1Mt week
had been Umited to 9.0 percent while commercial banb
could J>9Y no more than 8.92 percent.
Unions settle with Coors
OAKLAND -Two Callfom1a wUoDI charJled by
Adolph Coon Co. with threatenlnc to dmupt the
armual Gilroy Garlic Fmtival beca..-the beer
company was there have lettled out of court. Coon
announced Monda)'.
Coon filed charge9 with the Natiooal Labor
Relatiom Board lut summer, dW'8ina that 9eYen
California unillOI had threatened to dmu&!c:" boycott
the Santa Clara County-t-d fmtival if products
were IOld then.
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
SYMBOLS
METALS
NIW YOM CN') • lpaC ,..._ .......
TMw. c...,. '191M1 -• --. u.a. .....
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GOLD QUOTATIONS
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Leftovers yield a tasty dish
With chicken ao economical and
nutritious, your selection of
chicken recipes becomes import..
ant especially With leftovers. And
leftover chicken can become a
whole new dish with just a little
effort.
The Chicken Croquettes is a
tuty recipe of diced cooked
chicken blended with parsley,
onion and the popular Norwegian
thin flat bread. The flatbread is a
perfect choice as it'• easy to
crumble and its taste adds a
unique flavor. to the Chicken
Croquettes. The mixture is then
rolled in the ,remaining flatbread
giving the individual croquette a
firm ,ahape ..
For a twist, serve on pasta and
top with a creamy mushroom
sauce and your Chk:ken Cro-
que~ become 9Clllething very
Baby Back
PORK RIBS
Lun a Tender
Terlyakl Marinated
BEEF-K-BOBS
Reg. MM Lb.
Fresh Pacific
RED SNAPPER
NORWEGIAN STYLE CHICKEN
CROQUE'ITES
2 tablespoons butter
~cup flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup milk
2 cups finely diced leftover
cooked chicken
'1i c:up finely crumbled Nor-
wegian thin flatbread
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
1 egg, lightly beaten
~ cup finely crumbled Nor-
wegian thin flatbread
'1i cup vegetable oil
Mushroom sauce (aee below)
In saucepan over moderate heat
melt the butter; blend in the flour
and salt. SUr in the milk grad-
ually and cook, stirring, until the
mixture thickens. Cook over low
heat for 3 minutes, then remove
and cool it.
Stir in the chicken, flatbread,
onion, lemon ju1ce and pe.rsley.
Spread the mixture evenly in an
8 inch pan. Chill·. Shape the
m1xture into 6 croquettes.
Dip each OM first in beaten egg
and then in the flatbread crwnba.
Fry the croquettes in hot oil until
brown.
MUSHROOM SAUCE
1 cup sliced mushrooms
~ cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter or margar-
ine
2 tablespoons flour
'>' teeapoons crushed thyme
1 ~ cups chicken broth
In saucepan, brown mushrooms
and oniom in butter or margarine.
Add flour and thyme. Cook WN-
eral minutes, stirring. Gradually
blend in chicken broth. Cook.
stirring, Wltil thickened and
smooth. Seuon to taste with salt
and pepper.
$·299 BBQ Baby Back . ,
PORK RIBS
Reg. SUI Lb.
.... MlhMfllllt,..._.. ............. Reg. SUI Lb •
$3~! Terlyakl Marinated $ 299
CHICKEN BREAST
Boneleea I ektnlen Reg.13.11 Lb.
I Leen Ground *17! *1'' BEEF .
N•,.Port Tavern Land-0-Lake• VALCHIUa FARMS
OV!N ROA8TeD NATURAL
Turkey Breast
lloed To Order
*34!
HAM $ ~49 Ame:!'!~o ~!,H•e
LAmt a T..-, ~ Lb. $169 Reg.
Uold To Order Reg. S4.7I Lb. Lb. 12.48 Lb.
TOMATOES
----
fl
Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Wedneeday, June 8, 1983 -Cl -
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