HomeMy WebLinkAbout1983-06-27 - Orange Coast PilotIt's· big
beautlful
and worth
a· m1111on--
1be world'• l.lqe9t Carved
emerald ii on display .to the
pubUc ln a Newport Beach
jewelry It«& th1I week.
~ 38-pou.nd, 14-lncb-tall
~. which made the
G~ Book of World Re-
corda, la valued at $1.2 million
and hu been displayed to the
pubUc on only aix"' other oc-
culona.
Unearthed in. the remote
Camaiba area of Brazil ln 1974,
the 86,000-carai gem la owned
by Glew Jewelers of Palo Alto.
Most of the •tone LI not high
quality, and it lacks the clear,
dark 1heen of the prize emer-
alds which are used for jewelry.
So George Gleim com-
. ..... ........... u ......
-missioned four carvers in Hong
Kong to'lculpt the maai'l!e rock
-whicl) originally weighed 62
pounds -in the 18th century
Ch'ing Dynasty style.
It took them a year to finish
the project, cutting 24 pounds of
the emerald away and grinding
fSee EMERALD, Pqe A%)
· ary Barr of Barr Jewelers, Newport Beach keeps a close eye on the
world's big8eSt emerald.
' Ill 111111 CDllT.
1:11m 1111111
MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1983 OR ANGE COUN TY C ALIFOR NIA 25 C ENTS
Protopappas case begins
Hearing to determine if dentist stands trial in 3 patient deaths ---------·-----.
Tony Proto~pas
Ballot On
ne:w tax
seen as
\.
certainty
BY GLENN 8C01T Clt"-0.-......... .
)t.!r.J,Y,£. ~BLE Proeecuton laid today they
believe the preliminary hearing in
the hiehlY publlci2ectcme will lut ·
1evenl days. perhaps a week.
Proto~, a high-profile den-
tt.t w practicing, a1lo would
aet plenty of attention during his tesal proceedinp. Newspaper re-
porters and televlaion camera
crews were everywhere inlide the
municipal courthouse. A pre-beuiDI WM under way to
determine if new. C8JDerM would
be allowed imide the oourtroom
dw'lna the hearing.
A preliminary hearing to de-
termine if one-~ CO.ta Mesa
c:14!ntist Tony' ~~~ppaa should
at.and trial in ~ deaths of .three
patienta .began t.o<Wy in Harbor
Municipal ~Court i,n Newport
Beech. ' Protopappaa, t.free op $250,000
bail, ii ~ of .econd._degree
murder ln the dealhl of the three
female patients, one a 13-year-old
bun Sacramento. 'The three died
following ane1thesia-related
treatment at Protopappaa' 19th
Street office.
'
Wearing a light-gray .Wt and
cowboy boot.a,' Protopapp1111 wu
surrounded by attorneys and
friendl while waiting mar-, than
· an bom this momlng Ultt the
bee.ring to begin.
At one point., after he WU
allowed into the oourtroOm.
Protopappu hugged aeveral
well-wilhen · while an attorney
straightened the dentill'• necktie.
It WU clear from the lllart that
A~ hearinl ia held to
determine if there ii IU.ffident
evidence to order a defendant to
stand trial ln Superior Court.
(See PBOTPAPPAS, Pqe Al)
Not even brief pt;ek
lor HB bikini buffs
llY ROBERT BA.RUB .,.. .............
About 300 aun -er, bikini
wonhippen -gathered at a
Huntingtori Belich IWilmuit st.ore
Sunday to check out the talent in a
Puadena radio llatiOfi'a "Bikinf
Girla" contest.
Huntington Beach Police Sgt.
Mike Relic. ''We maintained a
high vWbtllty Ulla time and didn't
have any major problema," Relic
aaid. .
1be ''Bikini Girls'' contest WU
part of radio .cation KROQ'•
promotion campeicn in which
swim lhops from Malibll to New-
(See BIUNI BUJl'PS Pqe AZ)
Kathy Becker holds a ~orld globe u ahe t~
line to Lido Isle Yacht Club dock to end croi&e.
Cruise com-plete·
'Hurricane' experience only on film
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY , OflM ............
Six years to the day a.her they left Newport Beech on a world
cnlile, Jay and Kathy Becker nceed their aloop into the guest dock
at Lido late Yacht Club Sunday, where they were peeted by ICOl'e9
of friends and relatives.
Looking u if thiy had ;..t complet.ed a weekend cn.u.e to
Catalina laland, the Becken laid ttM!y vWted 33 countries on their
cn1i1e with no lnddent more llmiow than a broken lteerina vane
and rudder.
"That gave ua aome anxious momenta on our .c:ruilie from
Hawaii to the Marquee.. Ia1anda," laid Becker-. °"1be st.eui.ng vane
went first and then the.rudder.''
•
Becker, 61, a reUred mechanical encmeer. laid he .... able to
jury rta the rudder and complete that leg of the voyaae. Other
~ps .lncllJde<l the UIUal problems of ~m•iMn •'Ch-
u C>CtillOnal ~~aDifili"Obli boam.
Before the~t wu even leCUl'ed at the LIYC dock, Mn.
Becker wu acrumlng with delight .. her 6-month-old granct.on ·
WU handed aboard by the proud parenta.
1be Beck.en had llal'ted the Newport-to-Hawaii lei of their
voyap :~ aao with IOIDe help. 'Ibey were accompanied by
aon BUI and Rod Blanton. After that, they were on their own
for most of the ax yeen.
From Hawaii, the couple cruiled to the Marqueeu. French
~Americanand Westem s.mo. and then to Australia and
New 1.ealand.
(8" CIUJJU, Pqe Al)
' ............... 0.... ...
Kathy Beeker holds grandson Donald Broida, 6
month1, aa Jay Beeker gets a handahake. Irvine's achool board is 80
percent certain to call for a
November ballot measure seeking
up to a $50-per-parcel tax. board
member John Nakaoka laid today.
But he laid the board's five
members aren't finished doing
their homework on the mea.ure,
which had to be introduced quick-
ly to be approved before the
dadline for the November elec·
don.
John Nakaoka'.
But to the chagrin of all. the
contest waa held behind cio.ed
doon of the SUJ'llhine Suit Co. at
123 Main St. And despite standing
on neubycan and a lot of puablng
and ahovlng to get a peek through
a anall opening in one window,
pwken got little more ~ a
crick ln the neck for their eUorta.
Laguna fugitive is recovering
Irvine Unified School District
boerd members rea1ir.e the ballot
• naeuutt i.i "IOmething t1li '•
nec-=ery" to CX>Yer financial op-
tions, be laid. But they'll a1lo keep
1nCk of other means for increas-
ina district funding. Nakaolui acknowledged that
ltate Schooll Superintendent Bill
Honig la tryiJll to win. a $600
mOJ.ion fundinl increw thia year
• from the ltate Jeplatw'e. But he
llld it im't clear whether such
./J
funds, if budgeted, would go
toward district operations or
special refonns.
"Even if Honig ia successful, we
don't know how much we're going
to get," said Nakaoka.
Thus, he said board members
are backing the ballot. me&.Jure -
which needs.a two-thirds vote to
pa1S-as a means of ensuring that
the district still will be adequately
financed by the 1984-85 flacal
year.
Although the measure woUJd
call for a tax on all parcehl,
(See IRVINE TU P .. e AZ)
How ..U. the ''Boaaty ''
la TUldaa waten? f
Spleadhlly, nport1
ADU.0.y Hopldu,
lateetof die CaptaJa
Bup..hpBS.
•
Two or three people were
arrested either for alleged drunk-
ennell or foe blocking entrancel to
nearby beachfront stores, police
aaid.
Suspect in kidnap, rape sulf ered overdose of cocaine, heroin
1be event, part of a leries of
travelinl abowl in ooMtal dtiea
and featuring aome local pll, wu
1Uppmed to ltart at 4 p.m., but
didn't aet under way until 7 p.m.
1be unexplained delay caUled
larp numben of people to con-
te. But even at that, it wu
like 1Mi year'• crowd.
Abou ,000 people lhowed up for
that one, and the crowd turned
"quite unruly... tlOOOC'dlna to
If._ STEVE M1TCllELL A~ fugitive who al-
lepdly kidnapped, shackled,
druaed and raped a woman
whelm be had lured to hla IAcuna
Beech apartment, ii recoverinC at
UCI Medical Center today after he
lnplted a tarp q\Wltity of drup
priot to hll capture Saturday
evenlnl. authoritia ukl.
Meanwhile, hla alle1ed
23-year-old victim bu been
tr.led and releMed from SaddJe..
bMS Qimmun.lty HolPtal. where
lhe WM taken foJlowina her
Fordae leeODd year ha a row, Ille EMt
~~·-4-~Germau ba•e defeated Ille U.S. ha a
daal tnek meet, ... OllCle apia it WU
tlae Eut Germaa womea who made
tlae dllf ereaee. Pap C 1.
Gay parade
......... 400,000pyriPla•p-I ............ ,, ............ e1.-, .... r.au1..,ua to New Y~IMat 1 ....
U..tAIDS, ... myaterlCMlt dlle••
............... d., ...............
•• , ....... o1ai.e ........... ••II•••-r.-A4. 1 .
two-day ordeal which police laid
began. Friday nJaht when lhe WU
lured to ~~:,man promia-tnc to take p6cturel of
her.
Police offlcen found Mark Ed-
ward Huett-. 32, h1d1ni ln heavy
brulh on Graceland Drtw three
houn after be led poUCe on an 80
mile-per-hour chue throqh
Laa\ma ·,downtown ltreetl. 1be woman, who w ... not
klenti&id, Wiii held foe nearly 20
boun in an Oak Street apartment
recently rented by H\llha, police
allep. At about 3:30 e.m. Satur-
day, Huabea reponedly left the
apartment in the victim'•
rust-colored car to p.arcb.e food.
The woman. wbo.ud n Wiii ieft
bandcu.ffed ln the apartmmt,
manqed to crawl to a door and
call for help. >.. police were
questklni.nl the woman, Hup.
retumed to the .... lpOtted the.
of&en and fled.
After a~ m..
throu1h nprrow re1ldenUal
au.ta, thea.pecta~ the
( ... LAGUNA, hp Al) . -·
. I
I
--, -., ..
~· OrMge co... DAILY PILOT/Monday. June 27, 1983
l I qontlnued stories
IRV-INE -TAX •••
Nakaoka l&id he and board mem-.
ber Gordon Getchel are lr\liati.nl
that IOme exemptiOQI ahould be
made. 1
For example, peroela owned by
community a.oda~.milht be
remo~ from the't u1n1ment ..
role, ~ l&id. . ..
He al8o noted the meuu.re ia
written to levy a yearly tax up to
$50 but the figure could be lesa.
Each year, the echool board ~d
be requlreC! to hold public Hear-
ings before aetting the tax rate, he
said. . .
One reason for hurrYtng U>'" get
the measure on the November
ballot is to give the district more
time ahou.ld • taxpayer group
challenp the 1pecial tax -if it
~ -in a lawsuit after the
election, he said.
The tax would go into effect
July 1, 1984.
The board haa called a apecial
meeting' at 7:30 p.m. Wedneed.ay,
July 6 at Lakeside Middle School
to' review the issue and make a
final decision on the ballot
meaaure.
At the full $50 rate, the tax
could raise up to $1.4 million a
year, district officials estiinate.
Next fi.acal year's tentative spend-
ing budget is $46.9 million.
LAGUNA SUSPECT ...
car and eluded officera'on foot. A
three-block aree was aeeled off.
and a Newport Beach police
helicopter and a Santa Ana ctnine
unit reeponded to hWlt for the
fugitive.
When captured three hours later. ·the groggy .U.pect told
police he had consumed six grams
of ooca1ne and a quantity of heroin
while hiding from police.
Hughes ia being held on $75,000
bail. llowever, the FBI bu placed
a hold on him in conn~n with
the alleged 1982 abduction and
rape of a 22-year-old University of
Wilconaln coed. A federal fugitive
warrant .wu i.18ued last year
charging Hushes with unlawful
flight to •void prmecution.
t...gu.na Beach police booked
Hughes on suapicion of kidnap-
ping, uaault with a deadly
weapon., aexual assault, forcibly
administering narcotics to commit
a felony and auto theft.
CRUISE COMPLETE . ; . .
While in the South Pacific, they and their boat participated in
the filming of the movie, "Hurricane." •
o.....One of the most unique experiences recalled by Becker
occurred ip the Red Sea. en ~te to the Gulf of Aden.
''The wind WM 10 light that we had only made good about 60
milee in 24 hours when a large towboat pulling an oil barge overtook
ua. She took ua in tow f« J,200 milee.
Other anxious moments were experiericed when the boat went
on a reef near :e.li. and .,.tn when they went aground on a aandbar
on Pyramid Shoala near Sinppore. Each time the boat wu
reflo.ted without 8erioua damage.
Would they do it .,.tn? . ' .,..... \
Without question, agreed the Beckers. "It was a wonderful
experience, but right now what we want moat ia to get to our
home ... in Dovel' Shores," abe aid. I
"Although rm retired, rd like to get back in the swing of
thinp," said Becker, who originally had thought the global crui8e _ _.-<=7ia1ike---oiiJY two to three yeen.
~ Cal-34 a1oop ia the first large boat the Beckers ever had.
Before that, Becker raced Mercury aloope in Newport Bay. Before
embarking on the world crui9e, the Beckers cru.iaed the Cal-34
around the Channel lalanda and occasionally to Mexico.
"She's a fine boat and served ua well," said Becker with a fond i1arice at the cluttered cockpit being invaded· by friends.
PROTOPAPPAS CASE ...
Protopappaa aold hia c.c.ta
Mesa practice earlier thia year and
bu been living with friends in the
Laguna Beach u-ea,1 according to
his attorney, Stanford Shaw.
·.Irvine man injured
when gun goes off
A 22-year-old Irvine man was
treated eerly Sunday for a gun-
shot wound in hi1I rfsht ~
be said he rolled over on a
~while aleeptng.
Nicholas M. CMIOO told Irvine
police investigators he nomWly
lleepe with a loaded gun under hia
bed. On Saturday night, he said,
he remembered wakina up and
cocking the handgun for an un-
known reMOn before falling back
uleep.
Then, he laid, he rolled over on
the gun while barely awake and it
fired, eendinc a bullet through hia
right calf and into his mattrem.
Paramedics called to the apart-
ment by the victim'• roommate
found ea.o.i atUl in bed, his leg
bleed.ina· Investigators aUd tu. story •P-
peen to be true but they con-
ft.cated four 8Ulll they found in
his Park We.t apartment for .ate
keeping.
lnine
A_Mllf,.._I _ _.,.,,.._...,. .. , ........................ ~ ... . ....,.,_.,..,= ................ ... _ ...........
........... 1111...._0fl .. MIO._.ol ....... ~ ..... ---~ ..... ~llfllMO .. Mdl,erd.
Newport Beeeh
Tlle,.,...•1 II ----· .............. ....., __ __ --·-··••wr.:iee. ....... . ............... ._ ....... . ....., __ ,...rl __
..
He surrendered to authorities
last April on the murder charges.
His surrender came after law
enforcement officialia had been
tearChing for him for three days.
Deputy Diatrict At1omey Jim
Cloninger haa aaid he believed the
dentist wa1 trying to evade pol.ice.
The murder charges atem from
the dNtha of patients Kim Minna Andreueen. 23; Cathryn Louise
Jona, 31, and Patricia Marguerite
Crawn, 13.
Cloninger said in documents
filed with ' the court he will
produce evidence alleging
Protopappaa acted with malice
and "wanton disregard" for their
lives.
The dentist bu been hit with
numerous civil lawsuits from for-
mer patients and the families of
the dMd patients whick .eek total damaaea in exceaa of $65 million.
He al8o bu been ordered to appear
before an adminiatrative law
judge to detennine whether hia
IJcenae ahould be revoked.
No date hu been aet for that
bearinl· '
Protopappaa hu maintained in
legal documents that he wu not
reeponlible for the deaths of the
three patients.
; ~--
---We.askea:---, ----~ ·=---__ ,._
Should Jails be located lnelde or outside city llmlts,
or with.In p9pul_ated ar~as?
Legion
seeki'rig
ua·yden's
ouster
.. .
PALM SPRINGS (AP)-Cali-
fomla'a American LeOin ia ww-
ln& the at.ate A.19embly to expel
·Tom Hayden becau.e of a1Jesd
advocacy of. f~ government
in the United Staie.. I
Bob K•r1,
etudent, ·
CoataM ...
··Jails· should deflnltely be
outside the city; you don't want
criminals near populated areas
where they can commit more
crimes If they escape."
Ol•ne DeJone.
te.cher,
Fullerton
"I don't think It makes a
difference where they put jails.
If the person escapes, either
way, he'll end up back In the
city."
-
o.oroe H•nchett, etudent,
El Toro
"Put them In unpopulated
areas In case the criminals
were to escape. Jails also bring
down property values, so It's
not fair to have them In the
city."
-.. ,. ,.,,,,,r:
~ J. !,f •. ~ .. ~· S: I s. .:..~
Cr•lg beJong,
•tudent,
Fullerton
' .
"I'm used to having )alls
away from the downtown area.
I think It makes the most sense
for beauty reasons; guarded
structures. with their big walls
and gunnery towers, don't look
very nice. Of course. who
wants one In his own
backyard?"
A rt!90lution pealed Saturday
by 3,000 delegatea repreeenting
200 .. 000 Legionnaires sta1ewide,
cited Article 7, Section 9 of the
It.ate ~tution, which provides
that no penlOn who advocaie. a ~P...---1 --fbretgn.~tln'Uie Un!UiQ
Staie. lhall 6old any office in the
it.ate, aaid Legion spokesman C.F.
~ •river Hollenbeck,
hoUMwtfe,
Newport lleach
"Often people get sent to fall
for stupid things, ·llke parking
ticket vlolatlons. So I think Jells
shoulc:t be located In the city to
make It convenient for friends
and relatives to visit."
Andre• BHr,
•tudent,
Newport BHch
·'Jails should be outside city
limits where It's really desolate.
That way, If they (prisoners)
escape, the police wlll have
more time to catch up with
them before they reach the
city, where they can get lost In a
crowd."
1 JenkinaofLaMirada, who helped
draft the re90lution.
Hayden was unavailable for
comment SWlday ru,ht, and "l
don't expect he will re.pond," aald
his chief of 1taf1, Steve Riven.
Jenkins alleged -Hayden had traveled to North Vietnam in
1965 and 1967 and made propa.~
ganda broadc:asta over C.orn-
munist-<X>n trolled radio stationa
with the intent to interfere with
the morale of U.S . aoldien.
Jenkinl l&id the Anned Forces
Rtiree Amociation WU gathering
· tu.res statewide on petitionl
:: for Hayden'• ouster. 'Ibat
group'• goal ia 20,000 signatures,
heuid.
The Aa9etnb1) can expel a
member by a two-thlrda vote.
''Thia ia not a matter for the
voten in Santa Monica." Jenkina
18.ld.
U the Aalernbly does not act, he
said votera could call for a writ of
mandamus from the court de-
manding 9Ction.
Connors upset
in Wimbledon
quarter£ in a ls
WIMBLEDON,~ (AP) -
South Africa'• Kevin Curren,
blazing h1a way behind an as-
toundina 33 aces. knocked out
defending champion Jimmy Con-
non 6-3, 6-7. 6-3, 7-6 today to
move into the quarterfinala of the
Wimbledon Tennia C h•m-
pionaht.pe.
Illegal alien files huge claim
Curren, a fonner University of
Texas 1tar w)lo atill lives in Aus-
tin, Teua.. ia IMded 12th in thia
famed grua court tournament at
the All-England Lawn Tennia
and Croquet Club. Connon waa
aeeded No. 1. (Additional result&,
Page Cl). Gardener says Laguna police falsely arrested, imprisoned him
For Connors, who defeated
John McEnroe in the final here a
year ago for hia aecond
Wimbledon title and later cap-
tured his fourth U.S . Open
crown, the toes ca.me on c.ourt No.
2, referred to here u tN-"jinx
BY STEVE MITCHELL otlMDl:lfNM ....
lAguna Beach council members
have denied a $1-million c.laim
filed by an undocumented alien
who said he was falaely arrested
and impriaoned after the car in
which he wu a passenger wu
.topped by officers on Glenneyre
Street two months ago.
Candelario Aguilar, who does
gardening chores and odd jobs
aroWld Laguna Beach, filed hia
claim with the help of John
J Gabriela, a frequent police critic in
town.
Gabriela said that Aguilar was a
pueenger in a car that pulled into
Jiffy Gas on South C.oast High·
way last April 30. The driver
pumped $2 of gas into hia car and
purportedly offered the attendant
a $50 bill, which the service station
man l&id he could not change.
Saying they would return in a
few minutes with the exact
change, Gabriela said the two men
left the 1tation.
The attendant apparently had
tee0nd thoughts about the prom-
1..e to return, G•briels said, and
called police.
Tempera tu~ .. ... ....., n IO A*"'...,. ... Ml9tlo IO M
AodlO,.I• • N
AMMI• tt 71
Allertto Olly 7' .. Aue:ln • ,. ,,
Police Chief Neil Purcell said
the vehicle was subeequently
.topped, but not before the two
men had returned to the station
and 1ettled their bW.' .
Pol.ice Lt. Jim Spreine said the
attendant failed to call police belck
and report the men had returned.
Se aaid the officer who stopped
the car obeerved what he believed
to be two marijuana cigarettes "in
plain view in the vehicle" and
asked Aguilar to step from the car.
"Under normal circwnatances.
we don't even question the pass-
EMERALD •••
From PageA1
it into dust as they carved.
The stone is intricately
aculpted much like a jade fig·
ure, with trees, caverns, tem-
p\es and 27 figures covering its
surface.
The emerald will be on
display, free of charge, through
Friday at Charles H. Barr
Jewelers, 1048 Irvine Ave ..
Newport Beach.
enger in a case like this, " Spreine
said. But when the officer aaw
what he believed to be marijuana.
"he asked (Aguilar) for identifi-
cation."
Aguilar purportedly told the
oftic:er be wu in the prooe. of
obtaining legal papers to stay in
the U.S .
One of Aguilar's employers,
who wu not identified, aent her
attorney to San Diego, where a
stay of deportation was obtained
from an immigration )..ld8e, .now-
ing Aguilar to remain in the
country.
In a letter to the city COW\Cil,
Chief l>urcell said there I.a no
evidence of falae arrest or fal8e
imprt.onment in the ca.e.
He l&id the original call from
the service station attendant In-
dicated "that a criminal llCt had
taken place," and that, du.ri.ng the
investigation it was di8covered
Aguilar WU an undocwnented
alien. "We did what we could to
help Aguilar," Spreine said, add-
ing police helped find the Mexican
national in San Diego and con-
tacted San Diego immigration
legal authorities,
court.'' --~
Ria la. followed by two rounds
the upeet of Chria Evert Lloyd.
the women'• No. 2 seed, by Kathy
Jordan.
In another upeet, Wllleeded Mel
Purcell eliminated No. 13 Brian
Gottfried 4-6, 6-3, 6-3, 6-2, while
In women'• play, No. 10 Billie
Jean King ousted No. 7 Wendy
Turnbull of Auatralia 7-5, 6-3.
BIKINI ...
From PageA1
port Beech competed for best
bikini.a and best models.
Even t.h09e apectaton waiting
uound for-the end of the abow to
catch a cl1ms-of the i;irla were
doomed to fruatation. The girls
put on regular beach attire after
the contest and d.iaappeared into
the crowd wmoticed. •
Sunny afternoons due
.. 16
• eo .. 72
80 54
87 641
78 ..
.. Tl
IS 71
81 II
71 IS
81 18
13 f7
IO 7a
10 46
.. 72
82 .. .....
t7 70 .....
IO .. ....
83 N
IO 71 ....
IO 47 .... ... 12
U II
11 42
11 J1
1t •
l't t1
17 14 ... 11
ti 7t
17 14 ti 10
M IO u .73
100 71
" n
' '
78 87
t2 73
.. fl7
Ill 74
87 78
.. 71 .. ..
13 74
.. 74
12 71
81 7fl ....
17 .. u ..
IO 1't
.. f7
106 7t
87 13 7t ..
18 IO ,, ..
.. t7
72 .. .. "° It 71
IO n • n .. ..
t7 " Tl M .....
13 ..
71 • .. 71 .. tf .,. .. .. ..
IO M ....
.. t 1
.. 71 ....
lllf llPllT
-.
NATION
Soviets showing flex1hil.ity
--in-RAtegie arms-redtte~-
BJ dae A1eecla&e4 Prea1
=~HINGTON .....,. The Soviet Union haa ahown a fint lien of
flexi ii\ the Strategic Arma Reduction Talka in Geneva by
dropplna a propcal to ban new submarine-launched bAll.lltic
millUel, eceordini to a publlahed report. U.S. officfala decl1ned to
comment OJ'l the report carried in Sunday editiom of The Bolton
Globe. The Globe laid the Soviet Union had dropped the propmed
ban on new aubmarine-launched ballistic mimiles and appeared
rMdy to mqve away frpm a propoul to ban long-range cnme .au.ues. '
U.S. 'can't rule out troop use'
WASHINGTON -Prealdent Reagan shouldn't "cloae the
door" to sendina U.S. troopa to El Salvador or Honduru becau.e
they may be needed some day, Sen. Nancy Landon Kulebaum.
Kamaa Republican, 18.id Sunday on the NBC televiaion procram
-"Meet the Pre..'"K.ueebaum 18.id the United Stat.es can't rule out
the Ulle of troops in Honduras in the event of an invuion by troops
tent by Nicaragua's leftist government.
PLO mutiny may strengthen Syria
W ASHINO'f6N --A Syrtan-donwfate<I Pal~~
ment, lea willing to consider negotiations with Israel, appears
likely to emerge from the current mutiny within the ranka of the
Palestine Liberation Organization. That is the view of Mideast
experia·both in and out of pemment. While Yu.er Arafat still
cl1nga to his.post aa head of Fatah, the largest group within the PLO,
a Syrian-backed mutiny againat hil leadenhip haa grown. .
Brush fire consumes 170 acres
SAN JOSE -A brush and.grass fire burned out of control for
more~ 12 hours, but fire officials 18.id early today that the b~
appeueq to be conta.lped ~ consuming 170 acres. "Fog nu
alowed everyihin:g down and we don't anticipate further spreed,"
<:" ukl California Department of Forestry Capt. Fred Burn.a.. The
"'"blue w~reported at 4: 15 p.m. Sunday on the eastern slopes of
Mount 1WDiltpn in Santa Clara County, about 15 miles east of San
Joee. ~1 I
I
~ Three window washers rescued
I LOS ANGELES -Three high-riae window wuhera, who
dangled 25 st«ies above the street for nearly two hours after their
equipment DMUfunctioned, have been reecued by firefighten.
The windbw washers were uninjured in the downto.wn mishap
Sunday afternoon on Grand Avenue, fire department spokesman
Jim Wella 18.id.
$450,oOo.fire 'deliberately set'
....._ .
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT /Mondey; June 27, 1913 48 . -.
F reig~ business "income taxable
. ' Supreme Court rules states may base le-.:y on multi-nationa..f!!_ worldwide..iacOllU! ....--· . -' __.__ --..._._.,,,. ,,~---. -__....,_.... . -...-r. -. "' . ..
WAsRINGTON °(AP) -The annualaalee, SlOmlllioninannual feelina the ftMnda1 pinch of the The dedliotl •ttlee a dispute
Suprerl'.'e Court today u=:: payroll, and $26 m1lllon in prop-recw.fon. that ume after a police officer
rllht of atai. 1o collect erty in the state. At 1-Ae W• In another impol'tant c:.e, the ahot od wounded KJvlin u M-ot millionl of doDan by ~ about t72,000 in hJaher tax bui8 court ruled 9-0 that dtiel and attempted to fJee the 1CeM of an
taxes paid by multi-natlonal cor-from 1~ thrOOah 19e6. The 91.t.m whme police officen lhoot a1Je8ed burSlarY·
ponUOna \ on the companies' company hat been paytna the a1m1nal IUlpec1J e-e wider no The )..x. al8o refUled to let
worklwide inccme. higher tax rate under protelt atnce corwtituUonal duty to pay the public IChool offidlla in Texas u.ee
then. auapecta' hospital bUla. does in a dntpet.-type eearch to The court ruled, 5-3, that c.Ii-
fomla did not violate the constittl•
don by oomputin, the tax on l
portion of MCh corporation'• in·
come from fonqn IUblidl.arM!e.
The rulina ':fi MYe all ata1-$6~
million ann y, aocordina to tl1e
Multiatate Tax Commi..son, an
oraanization that re~tl 20
states. ~
The court Mid the com~es
have the burden of proving tliat
the income apportioned by the tax
to California waa out of line with
the buainesl transacted within the
Today'• rulina ia expected to be The juaticea laid the city of detect atudentl carryina dn.iaa or
oeeted with reU,f by state of-Revere, Mui., did not violate any alcohol
lJdala who were ccncemed that of Patrick KJvlin'a COllltitutional The court, without comment,
the court mi&ht impoae Umtta on rtghtl by ~fusing to pay a neerly Wt ini.ct a federal appeala court
revenue-ratma power at a time $8,000 hQJpital bill he incurred ruUnc that baruuch u.ee of canine
when their pemmentl are atill after being ahot by police. drua detecton. ..
Guard aims at floOd looting
By TH Aaaoclated Preti today at Parker Dam, one of three ~wa, re9ervea and regular depu-
Colorado River dams between u. 811lating," he added.
Volunteers in Colorado worked Arizona, Nevada and Callfom.ia One Bull.bead City woman re-
state. overnight ln the rain to bolater ~re floodgates were opened ported aurpriaing a auapected
Container Corp. of America, two sagging dikes againlt the last week because of brim-full looter in her flooded home Sun-
which la hued in Chicago, n.d. rising COlor&do River, while the reservoirs. --day,MidDet.ectiveEvmrWtllDiina.
fallect to prove that cue-:tlfe coUii N~tional-Guard-wan:al:led-tn--to A dozen National Guardmnen Witna.es told deputies the man
prevent looting in Ariz.on.a and called in Sunday to patrol 18.id. ' California flood zones. ' were fled int.«> the river, but Williama
California measures corporate The s.wem .. ., river haa farced flooded river homes between said, "No one in hil right mind
6&&&"6 Bullhead City, Ariz .. and Needles. would go into the river." tax liability by looking at com-more than 1,200 Colorado nsi-Calif., said a civilian volunteer for W""-~ __ ,,.. ..... _ had been
panies' worldwide buainesa and denta to evacuate as stonna and the Mohave County (Ariz.) &&MAI•• -w"'"' a
then deciding what portions of the spring runoff pushed it to a record Sheriff's Department who asked rub ,of looting rec but 18.id he
firms' payrolla, sales, and property crest. not to be identified. didn t believe had been _
are located in thatatate. Hundredaof.mllesdowna~, -~!"ll»y-are-on the acene-now;-~ ,..tbaa-two 9Ctmt-looting -~putec:What-eorr--fed~rlloffiCfalSwere co Ciering just patrolling homes around the inddentl -and no one had been
tainer Corp. had $33 million in whether to releue more water clock. We have aearch and reacue arrested. He Mid eome edgy
..... ------------------------------------------------------------------..... residentawereapparendyreport-
I
Up and away
·While other com-
petitors wait to lift
olC Sunday, one
pilot over the Con-
corde Obelisk in
Paris waves to the
crowd at the start or
the Gordon Bennett
international
balloon race. The
race has started
from Fountain Val-
ley's Mile Square
Park for the last
three years but
ing Jootin1 jult on the buia of
.eeing crowds in the .....
About 30 of the 70 homes in the
Topat Manh area ~ Bullhead
City were ev.cuated Sunday, he
said. &Dona ihoee were .veral ariimal farma.
The last tO go were ~ hop ln
18 inches of water', Williama said.
One man died and 15 were
injured in a weekend rafting
eoddent in the river• npids in
Grand Canyon National Park,
while two men died in the swollen
river in Mexico, offidala aaid.
Weekend raina and mountain
anowmelt aent the river nearly
2~ feet above itl 11-foot Oood
stage at Grand Junction on-Sun-
day, itl ru,hest Jevel since re-
cord-keept.na bepn in 1908., Na-
tional Weather 5el'vioe official.a
18.id.. '[be old record crest of 13 feet
came in 1917.
LOS.ANGELts -Firefighters say it appears a blaze that ,_..-1--~ta
cauwi ~to a two=story~-ornce· t>LilliBili tn NCi1J\
·Hollywood wu..deliberately eet. Eleven fire companies responded
------movecl iis takeo"lf -t Gary Chancy, a National
Weather Service forecaster in
Grand Junction, said the river
could ri9e by as much aa another
foot later today, and stay near that
level eeveral days before receding.
to the Sunday alarm Fthe blaze co. ntrolled 33 minutea later, said fire depar!bnent Jim Wella.
I I
'Fwo de~utitfS injnred in crash .
MALIBU!-!rw~ aherifra deputies were injured early today
when their~ tu.mblid to the beach off the Pacific Coast ffighway
aa they tried tO aid th~ California Highway Patrol, deputies 18.id.
Loe Angeles County sheriffs Deputy Bob Stoneman said the
deputies. whoee names were not immediately releued, were taken
to Santa Monica Hoaptal for tn!etment.
WORLD
Nfie ~~ltl ut Meloy kidap-murder . BEIRUT,~ -Police have arrested nine Lebeneee
lef*'8 and PaleatidLana on charges of c&n')'in8 out the 1978
lddnap-murder of U.S. Amb+=eh Francia E. Meloy, econamlc
coume1« Rol1ert 0 . Waring and their Lebme9e driver, the Centn1
Ne-wa~ reported today. 1be privately owned agency said the
-...pecta confeiaaed they carried out the abduction and ki11lng of
Meloy, Waring add their driver on orders from the Marxist Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine.
' Soviets ~aunch Soyuz spacecraft
MOSCO~ -The Soviet Union today blasted a Soyuz
apececraft intO orbit With two ooamonauta on board, the offic:ial
news agellcy)Tasre~rted.
T .. 18.id the Sdyuz 9 spacecraft was launched from the
Baikonur base in the central Asian Republic of Kazakhstan at 2: 12
a.m. PIYI'
Pravda cites blame for PLO mutiny
MOSCOW -Current infighting in the Palestine Liberation
Orpnization is the reault of achemlng by the United Statea, Israel
and "regrettably, 90IDe Arab figures," Pravda 18.id today.
The Communist Party daily newspaper, in itl first lengthy
anal)'lia of the PLO rebellion, 18.id diaputea within Yaaeer Arafat's
AlFatahguerrillafaction"areevermoreaggravatingtheaituation"
in the Middle East.
The newspaper referred to Arafat only as the leader of Falah,
0 whkh la part of the PLo" -rather th.an i~ntifytne. him aa
chairman of the entire orpnization.
Some Western obettven au~ this lign.lfied that Moecow
II beck1na away from Arafat while awaiting the outcome of the
internal PLO fichtinc-
Walesa says
'won't quit'
Solidarity
WARSAW, Poland (AP) -
Lech Walesa Mys h1a work aa
1Mder of the outlawed Solidarity
labor movement im't pleMant but
that he won'\. quit, despite reports
be Uliaht step aside u a result of
Pope John Paul Il's recent visit.
"I won't run away. I can't run
away," Waleaa Mid. "It ia not
pleaaant to do this work, but I will
not quit."
He WU interviewed Sunday in
hil hometown of Gdanak by ABC
News.
1be 39-year-old shipyard elec-
trician, wbo helped form Soli-
darity in Auguat 1980, Mid he ''felt atronaer' af1el' his meetina with
the ~ Thunday at the cioee of
an elCbt..day papal pOcrimaae to
Poland. Both Walea and the pope
haw declined to di8clme detaill of
the audience.
A "tront-paae editorial Friday in
the Vatican newspaper
L'o.ervatore Romano ...,,.ied
tha1 by meetina Walea privately,
the pontiff may have been trytnc
to e.e bltll out of h1a role• leader
of the union, Which WM banned
under martial law.
We're
Listening •••
What do you like about lhe Daily Pilot! What don't you like?
I
Call the number at left and your meeaaae will be l"'ecorded,
traNCribed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour an1werin1 service may1be used to record let·
ters to the editor on· any topic. Mailbox contributo 1 must Include
fhelr name and telephone number tor vertriutlon. No circulation
642•8088 calls. please. •
Tell us what's on your mind.
OAAHOE COAST Dilly Piiat ,
ChuJ Dow.-W llla•••nd M1Dl. .. n Editor ~ AeeiitMf . Controller tottle~
.......... 0....
~' .......
Cl111MM .., ....... f1'IMl-ll1I All....., •• , .............. ,
~OPPICa 330 ""911 ley II., C-1 .._, CA
Met --llOa 1MIO, CC..I• MeM, CA 9'21
~,~ ... ca.~~"° ne•• .. 1011 ... llhot1r11ton1. •dllorl•I '!'•II•• 01
-1-.......... ~bl •eprocM>9d wllhOul IPICl9I per~°' ~lgN -
VOL 11, NO. 171
'·.
point this. year to
commemorate the
200th anniversary
of the first manned
balloon .Oight by the
French.
''We're ta1.kina about three to
four days before it~ enough
not to worry about lt," Tom
Gancan, a police spokesman. Mid
Sunday night.
From the at-ease Private Label Collection ...
Our Year 'Round Suit
... made from the finest
two PIY dacron•·ane1 woor blend.
Ava.ilable In solid Shades of blue. g~
can. olivl and laupe.
wt.-the CofwWlt II Oulllr Ind .. Dir.o:su 11 ~ ..•
. $185.00
@)~c~~~~
44 ,.-on .... tt•polte.ah. ~
1001Wlltu411acl8Mt. \-..woad Wiiie • IOllONIJS
o I
J
1
4 • --------...---· -.. ,
·"" prange Cout DAIL y PILOT /Mondey, ;,June 27 ,'1983 . ,
Lead.lev.elSi1re higher ·· .
Mi'rr~ manuf actuting pla~i.~~ntaminates West L.A. residents··
..• : r;a:;'"X)lfuE'd'!S'cXPr= Risi:---Iiu-~ Inc .• a pi.nt on '
denta of a Weet Loe Angelee Canne~ Avenue, has been cited
He aald ie.ta ahowina only al.x of
55 chUdttn were f~d to have elevated amounta of lead in their
blood did not mean they had a
clean bill of health or that ai8nlfi-
cant lead contamination baa not
taken place.
neilhbothood heard Saturday by the. •~\,lth Coast Air Quality
they rni8ht have hiaher levela of Managernel)t Di.strict and the
lead in their bodiee than previoua-st.ate ~pational Safety and
ly estlmated fron\ emmlona at a Health AClnUnistration tor failure
nearby mirror manufacturing to limit lead emilaiona.
plant. Dr. John Froines. a oonaultant
A UCLA hN!th con.ultant told at the Us:;LA School of Public
a community meeting ~t blood Health, and several local, state and
test reeulta releued earlier by the federal ~'ficlala met with about 75
Lot A.ngelee C.ounty Health De-West l.qll Angeles residents Satur-
partment may not be aa rea11uring day at ~~elina Avenue shoe
as the county had indicated. store. ' -.
Three ho-spitalized
in crash-lag.ding
"' c ----' p -,,,
VICTORVILLE (AP) -Tfiree power lines crossing the freeway.
Northern Californians injured the sergeaht said. He was att.empt-
·w hen their light plane ing to rise above them when the
cr~landed on-logy ln&eFStat.e landing gear~ struck the lines,
15 in the Cajon Pass of the San forcing the plane down.
Bernardino Mountains were re-One powef line broke and
ported in good condition today. became entangled in a truck's
Theplane,carryingtwocouples wheel. That. line was lat.er re-
from Woodland, struck power moved without problem.
linel u i~ came down on the The plane remained intact but
freeway around 11 a.m. Sunday, sustained damage to its landing
uthoritiesMid gear, propeller and engine cow-
The single-engine c.esana 170 ling. Gonthier, said.
landed on the shoulder of the 4
Frolnes, wl'lo was identified as
811' authority on lead polloning,
said 90 pettent of all lead ablorbed
into the ~y eventually bullda up
in the bone marrow and teeta auch
as thoee conducted by the county
might not pick up that contamina-
tion.
Still, the,dlrector of the county
health department'• iom-
municable di8eue J>l'OIJ'am, Dr.
. Shirley Fannin, .told the cro.wd
the blood tests are reaaaurlrlg even
though they 'are "not perfect."
"We have had high lead lev~l!_ _ ot emissions" in the neijhborhoc)(:t, -
but it hasn't been taken in by the ·
people," Fannin said. "The six ·
children with the highest levela
were thoee who lived ~y
across the"Street fr-om the plant:'"-
Froines said officiala should
concentrate on removing the peril.
"If you eliminate the source of the
lead, then the children won't be as .
imperiled because lead builds up
in the marrow over a period, of ·
time," he said. ''T_be thing to
worry about i:ight now is
cleanup."
northbow}d side of the highway,
about a mile south-of the
-4;190-fooC mountain pass, ·San
Bernardino C.ounty sheriff's Sgt.
Mesa. pools a e open
Hugh Gonthier said. a
James..Peier.m, 40, wif' Rita,
38, Bernard Stewart. 49, and wife
Sharon, 42, were all taken to
'for a sunim·er . -Bsh
Victor Valley hospitatl where the ·Several pools' in Costa Mesa are
Pet.eraons and Stewart were open to the public this summer for
diagnoeed to have back fractures. people interested in lessons and
Mrs. Stewart was treated and recreational swimming.
releaaed, while the others were Pools at the Downtown Com-
transported ~to Loma Linda Uni-munity C.ent.er, Costa Mesa High
versity Medical C.enter, 'said a School and Eat.ancia High School
hospital spok~QmaJ'\ who re-will be ~n Monday through
fuaed to identify henefl. .• -i'tiday. Coif of two-week lessona ~wo-couples had flown out is $15.
~f .Rialto airport early Sunday en Recreational swimming is of-
route to Woodland, north of fered at Costa Mesa High School
Sacramento, Gonthier said. from 2:30•4:30 and-6 to 8 p.m.,
Pet.enon was attempting to gain Monday through Friday. At
altitude through the pass when he
encountered heavy fog, then saw
-------,,,,__ ---·--
Gay ,Prid-e
p,araders
cite AIDS,
• • actIVISDl
By·Tlte A11oclated Pre11
Feen about AIDS, the mys-
terioua di.eaae that strikes mostly
homoeexuala, dampened 90me of
the traditional enthusiasm as
more than 400,000 gay rights
supporters turned out for parades
in dties from California to New
York.
Estancia High School swimming
will be offered from 1 to 3 p.m. on
Monday through Friday and at
the Downtown Community
C.ent.er from 5 to 7 p.m. on Monday
through Thunday.
Recreational swimming is 75
centa per Be98ion. For more infor-•
matton cont.act the downtown
C.onununity Cent.er at 645-2797.
Costa Mesa High School at
662-2798 and Estancia High
School at 642-4891.
'"Thia community together is
saytna, unequivocally, enough is"
enouah. We are fighting for our
lives," Virginia Apuz.zo, ~r
of the National Gay Task Force,
proclaimed to cheering marchers
following a Lesbian and Gay
Pride parade that polfte said drew
40,000 people Sunday in New
YorkCty.
Man get& AIDS warning armband wrapped
around bi& arm at Gay Freeilom Day Parade in
San Franci&eo.
San Franct.co's Market Street
wu cloged for nearly ~our hours
u about 200,000 marchers, many
in colorful oostume9, marched
behind a motorized cable car
bear1ni about 20 AIDS victims in
the dty's 13th annual Gay Free-
dom Day Parade.
Andrew Small. who said he
once was uked to leeve a jury
becau.e of hit di.eaae, drew cheers
u he told a crowd in the San
Frand8co Ovic Center, ''I am here
to oelebnt.e with you the largest pthertna of lesbians and gay men
in~world.
''Tbme of ua with AIDS are
fighting not just for our lives, but
for all of our live.," Small _~f.:__
Ellewhere around the ~.Y,
marchers and apectafors
numbered about 90,000 in Los
Azicelea, 30,000 in Chicago, and
600 in Columbua, Ohio, according
to police in thoee cities, and 50,000
in Houaton, ~ to or-
ganlzen there.
NewYork'a 14thannualparade
along Fifth Avenue, com-
memorating a 1969 riot that
followed a police raid on a
bomoeexual bar in Greenwich vw.,e, was dedicated to AIDS
victima.
'The dileue -.acquired im-
mune deficiency syndrome -haa
afflicted more than 1,600 people
nationwide, more than 700 in New
York and a number of others in
San Frandaco. Male bomoee~
have accounted for 70 percent of
the fatalities of the diseue, which
robe the body of ita ability to fight
inf~on.
"I am a penon with AIDS. I am
a breathing, feeling, sexual penon
with a dileUe -and I am not
alone," Bill Burke, 31, said in an
emotional apeech after the New
y ork parade.
Bur"ke then introduced his
mother, aayinl(, "She walked all
the way."
Pande ~paata take the Gay Train down Santa Moalea Boule•ard
dariq Sunday'• fetti•al themed, "Feel the' magie, 1hare the pride."
••• ' I
I •
\ -....... _. -
Agencies
'~protest
joliS .bill
targets
BY llEPF ADLER Of .............. ---The Onnie C.ounty Leque of
Women Vot.en·and a,.coelldon of
private, non-profit aocia1 ~
agencies have joined fOl'CleS apin
to protest how the ·Board of
Supervbon plana to apend a
portion of federal Emersency Jobt
Bill funda. .
League President Lee Podolak --d-· tfie .Upervilon• ictiona in·
seeking the county's $1.9-m1llicm
share in the federal pf'Oll'Adl
amounted to a "violation" of the
provisions and objectives of the
~J~~h~L!:.;t.!:a.1.:::::...g~,...:..:;....~-;..~__:~----~-------1--ne~w~l!X..J~~~aeJ]U.emeqtieney..~-j job8act.
fire walker?
No, Perry Ritenour of Huntington Beach i1 not
cooking his feet · for lunch. He'& ~ooking
hamburger& on a small barbecue inside the fire·
ring on the city beach in Huntington Beac". . .
The board ia .cheduled to vote
Wedneeday on the county'• appli-
cation for the fundlna, eannarked
for Job-&eneratlnl public wotk:a
projecta in varioua dties. The
projecta to be .funded all previow-
ly have won approval Wlder' the
federal Housing and Community
Development block-grant' pro-
BJ"&m. .
''In our preeent -economy,
streeta and llldewalkl and l\lttel'I
can almoat be conaldered
amenitiee when people are home-
less, starving, in need of medical·
care and jobl," Podolak said at a
recent newt conference. .
Instead, she and repttjenta-
tives from .everal county IOCial
aervice agencies, auch u the
Orange C.ounty Legal Aid Society, ·
suggested that between 30 and 50 ·
percent of the federal dollars be :
allocated to the financially .
•trapped aocial aervice agencies. '
('resident says he's
'proud of proudeSt'
-WASHINGTON CAP) -Gen.
Paul X . Kelley replaced Gen.
Robert H . Barrow Surlday e.ve-
ning as commandant of the U.S.
Marine C.orps and President Re-
agan told the new chief to tell his
Marines "we're proud of the
proudest."
: . ~commandant, the Marine Corps
has never been "better prepared
to carry out ita m1.alon."
Tw.o weeka ago, the ie.,ue and..-
the agenciee called a news con-
ference to focus attention on cuta
supervbon were making in rev-
With the shift, Reagan has
replaced each member of the J oint
Chiefa of Staff.' .
'The change of command cer-
emony at the Marine C.orps Bar-
racks, built on a Ii te telected by
Thomaa Jeffenon in 1801, was
Iona on martial music and drill
work and abort on apeeches.
Reagan said that as a result of
Barrow's leadership as the 2'7th
. enue-sharing funda that had been
He aaid Kelley, fonner chief of given the agenciee in put yeara..
the Rapid Deployment Task Force The $4.6-billion F.meraency
based at MacDill Air Force Baae in Jobs Bill, signed into law in
Tampa, F1a., haa been "an in-March, should provide California
novative leader of Marines." with $860 million, aocording to. a st.ate Finance Department esti-.
"I issue the f:int order for you as mate. ·
commander-in-chief," said the Included in the st.at.e's share are
president, st.anding on the bar-$27.l million budgeted for IOCial
racks parade ground. "General. service grants and $2.9 million for
tell it to the Marines. Tell them other community services. Thoee
that their countrymen are gJ"at.e-funds, as well as other funding
ful. Tell them that we stand cat.egoriea included in the job8 bill,
behind them. Tell them we're are given in addition to the
proud ol the proudest." county'• $1.9 million portion.
EVerything's Conling Up 'ft.0SY'
Orange County Fair: A Salute t9 Pork
Color' 'ROSY' The Pig Contest
--------------------------..------------------~~
ENTRY BLANK
PRIZE: 4 tlcketa MCh to the Anaete &
·Tioera 0... 7-21 ·~ l-24.
Name---------------:-----------
Addreel ----------~------------
TMphone ------------------
.Age Group 03-5 OM 09-12
RULES & REGULA TION8 ...
1. Send EntrlH to Aoay Cotortng
Conteat, P.O. Box 1seo.
CoaJa Mela. Ce..
2. Entry deedlllie Juty 11t, 1118.
.. s. W1nNng ~ ... IPll .. ,
at the'*· .........
I
\
. . . Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Monday, June 27, 1983
-~~tack by b~h~
r~mains .. puzzli!lll= .
WEST .YELLOWSTONE, Wis., had been ~vered.,
Mont. (AP) -Althouah a large The bear, 1dentWed u the
grizzly that killed a Wiaconai.n animal that pulled May 8C!'eall\1na
maih has been put to death, from his tent at a Heb&en Lake
offidalutill hope to learn why the campground early Saturday, wu
bear attacked ~ camper and taken to a wildllf~·~ in dragpcrhtm ittismlnf...,..;::fl'Oirib,;.;:~h,:,.:IS,,...-....pBO~ze;,;.:man~~fr:-or~a routine autopsy.
tent, still in a sleeping bag. "'
State aJ)d federal wildlife of-Officials will be-looking for
ficials killed the 600-pound male diseased organs, paraalte., or any-
~y Sunday with a lethal thing unusual that might have
lJljection at a ranger station in the irritated the huge animal,
Ga"4tin National Forest, said MacPherson said, adding that it
information officer Ross appeared healthy when captured.
)\facPherson. ·
The bear waa caught in a leg May was thf first person killed
u:ap Saturday, about 29 feet from by a bear in the Gallatin National
where the partly eaten body of Forest since officials began keep-
William May, 23,ofSturgeon Bay, ing ·records there in 1900,
Beach tactics
to ·be outlined
MacPherson said. There have
been four fatal bear attacka in
adjacent Yellowstone National
Park, he said.
After being caught in one of the
...snares-Set. around-t eamp--
ewport Beach Police C hi;{ ground, the bear was.tranquilized
Charles Gross and Marine Direc-with a dart gun and placed l.n a
tor David 88.l)ihbarger will dis-cage.
cuss beach problems at a breakfast Investigators at the Montana
J'riday at the Balboa Bay Club. Department of Fish, Wild.life and
Gross and Harshbarger will Pcu:ks laboratory l.n Bozeman and
explain how police and lifeguards the Montana Crime Lab in Mis-
cope with weekend beach crowds soula ve_rified that the--bear-had-
of up to.200,000 people. - -killed May, MacPherson said.
· ·The breaklast is sponsored by "Both labs found hair in the IC8t
the ~vernment Affairs Coma;t-(droppings) collected from the
tee of the Newport Harbor ~ea bear," he said. "The hair in the
Chamber of Conuneroe. There is a scat matched that of the victim.
$10 charge per person. To make They al.so found pieces of human
reservations, call 644-8211. flesh."
Moving experience .
v ~l~eaJ.he..Coaatline Communif,' GoHege-Cente r
'"Sraduated" during the weekend 1\-om I 0231
Slater Ave., Fountain Valley, to its new site at the
corner of Warner Avenue and Newhope Str.eet,
also in Fountain Valley, it took five moving vans
and plenty of people power to .shift all the
paperwork.·
.·Cranston turns guns
, ·'on Reagan tyranny Pentacostals to leave·Russia ~fter y~ars in U.S. Einhassy
'•' , WASHINGTON (AP) -Refusing to criticize
hi& rivals for the 1984 Democratic presidential
nomination, Sen. Alan Cranston says President
,Reagan is "a tyrant" who must be turned out of
. office next year.
{ Asked whether he had an y criticism of his
" · fellow DelTlQCfatic presiden tial hopefuls, Cranston~ ii said'"l'd ra ther answer by saying what's wrong
1 ·with Ronald Reagan l ,, . "Ronald Reagan is a tyrant. We have to get rid
of that man," Cranston added during an appear-
•ance Sunday ..oG-ABC-TV1s '"fhts-W~mr
David"lrrinkley."
, .. 1 ~·rm not going to run down my Democratic
,op nents," Cranston said when pressed to
p-iti · former Vice President Walter Mondale
.,f4nd€n. John Glenn, D-Ohio.
·' I 'm going to stress what I believe ~. and I
'bell ve I've been doing well because of the clarity
Eil)d strength of my message, putting the nuclear
precJicament at the very head of the agenda."
}Even though he has a liberal voting record,
, Cranston said his victories in statewide California
I elections demonstrate his widespread appeal.
I "I don't think I am far to the left of center,"
Cranston said. "My record is not one of knee-jerk·
I Ube~... I vote l.n a way that is defined as
~be~~· But I'm pragmatic."
1 , iCranston has consistently received a high
1 ranW.ing for his votes on major issues from the
liberal Americans for Democratic Action. He has bee~ giving low ratings by the conservative
1 Americans for Constitutional Action.
I
I I t,1
'\9st
I
'I
' ALL WINNERS
FOR THE DESIGN
· I THE AD CONTEST
WILL BE PRINTED
~N WEDNESDAY,
JUNE 2 ·9th
PAPE Rf
MOSCOW (AP) -Exactly five years after
Pyotr V ashchenko barged past Soviet guards to
seek refuge in the U.S . Embassy, his Pente<:ostallst
family prepared to leave the Soviet Union today,
ending a 23-year struggle to go to Israel.
The flight is'-<he Vashchen.k~' first step to
joining their eldest daughter, Lydia, 32, who
unexpectedly was allowed to leave for Israel on
April 6.
Vashchenko, 55, his wife Augustina, 54, their
12 children and daughter-in-law Ludmilla were
booked to leave on a flight to Vienna, a clerk at the
Austrian Airlines office in M0800w said.
The official Soviet news agency Tass made an
unusual announcement Sunday thllt the family
had been granted permission to leave their horll'! in
Chemogorsk, Siberia, to join Lydia.
The announcement made.no mention of the
he Best Sa1e tJndern-
The Sun! SFA Takes
VJ Off* Swim-
. Things.
• Now, find VJ off original prices on SFA s
best swimwear.
• Swimsuits: now 21.90 to 56.90.
Originally •32 to 185. Choose maillots,
surplice-wraps, one-pieces, two-pieces,
bikinis and more.
•Cover-ups: now 16.90 to 166.90.
Origina/l.y 125 to 1250. You'll find just
about every shape, color and texture.
• The very best from Bill Blass, Oleg
Cassini, Ann Cole, Michaele Vollbracht
Gottex, ~Ion by Monika Tilley,
Harbour Casuals, and Gabor.
• In Sand and Sea Collections.
• VJ oft indiat.s savinfl from orifinal priers.
NO! eYtty style in ~color i nd size 1v•rl•ble m e~ st~
•\ •W•
I '
• other two "Siberian Seven11 Pentecostalists -
Timofei Chmykhalov, 21, and his 60-year-old
mother, Maria -who burst into the embassy June
27, 1978, with Vashchenko, his wife, Lydia and
two other daughters, Lubov, 30, and Lilia, 25.
The Pentecostalists are members of a Prot-
estant fundementalist sect that stresses direct
inspiration by the Holy Spirit and speaking in
tongues.
South Coast Pl1za. JJJJ Bristol Sttftt Costa M~Open Monday through Friday lrom 10 am to 9:30 pm.
' _ -S.tutday 'ti/ 6 pm; Sundly 12 noon to S-pm -•
'
•
' Orange eo.t OAILV PIL9TJMonday .. June 27, 1983
. T·-Cfista Mes~,
how y~u've grown -~r ~the past "*1ili the Daily Pilot has joined with the
~namqer of Commerde and the city in SPQtlighting the eventa and
accompliahmenta that Jed to the incorporation of cart.a Mesa in;
1953, and the city's wbaequent development. .
It ia a edlorful, fut-movingcllronology that, in many waya,
epitomizes the opport~ty and the.potential of the Orange C.oast.
) 1 Today Costa M~ has taken a big step into a bright future that,
will eee it emerge as the cultural, financial and residential focus of
~County. Cindarella has indeed grown up, d.reaed up and
will aoon be the belle 'of the aouthern Callf ornia ball.
. .Yet, despite ita high tech, high rise, high intesity growth,
there ia a decidedly small tQwn sweetnees to the city. Businesses
are still banded down from· parents to children. The Grange
remains the active heart of the agricultural community. And
·~_yo~ someone y-OU-know at.-your
favorite eatery. .
It ia preciael>' l>ecau.e .a~ compatibility .has-been fostered
here that Coeta Mesa's 30th anniversary picture is so rosy.
nie Pilot is proud to be a member of the business community
and a long-~ resident of the city. We hope to aee you at the big
· blnhday·party Wednetlday, at 'the Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club., we can wish each other 30 rpore wonderful yeanr.
MAILBOX
No way ·to· t,:eat a guest . . .. ,
To the Editor: · ~ -citizens. I have never before aeen
. 'lliia 1rmy fint1 trip to Orange such a hostile, negative 11ttitude .,..
"County in· 10 Yeiu"5· I love the' displayed by a public employee.
quaint, charming beauty of Cor-I would have let thii slide by
ona del Mar aM-i\11 aurroun~. except that 8.fier reading subee-
On June 12, I attended a function quent articles in your newspaper,
sponaored by IOflle downtown I felt the pol.iceman involved was ~ta for the ~ of not properly chastiaed for his
contributing to the. !lunttngton obnoxious behavior. He may have
Beach Community Clinic. People had a right and a duty to perfonn aeemed to be enjoying themselves . . ' and the 4ay's activites were but . the manner m ';Yhic~ he
considered a succeaa. earned it out was certainly ~P-
Then the police ~ to follow propriate. It was almoet ~ &f he
up on an apparent com ·
the band was too lqud and was, in
fllCt, playing without a permit.
The officer was doing hil duty if a
.. ----'
Sauili maf take Qi1 Fap
-----~-
.llCI 11111111 ~
that &udi revenues have already
dropped by 17 percent, "suddenly
reversing a pattern of rapid
growth." .
Last year alone, SaUdi oil
production fell from altDost 10 compared to the good old days million barrel. a day to just over 6
when they could spend biWona million. Thia year, it'• been run-withhardly a aecond thought. The oil money Just isn't coming in the ning at 4 ~ barTeJa a day.
way it uaed to. · nere are sdll ligrlll of apparent
''The economic retrenchment pro8perlty, as construction work
that began last year will continue · .,_...__ tin But the in FY 1983-l984," the American m WA...,, areas oon ues. Em~ __ , __ .... _ port embusy. no~ that t.helle are
~--:T t:ll.~JHUI~ W'Cf-re .J!l'O.P lal.o9£bed eatliet jn boom
'PllM ~w::w dew:~ -1iilliil'aha warns that 80IDe of
projecta were funded laat year, them will be MJted as the Saudi
_and fewer are~ thiayear." · government tries~ retrench. _
---'. --~udia' past prolli-1'itiieaa1 laard time9 atread 8l1'!Y ia catching up with tnem to rule wasn't being followed. How-tourists and viaitorrto feel the
et.rer, the officer involved totally · local police· may be abuaive in.;..· -J-iM!>tn>dolmrinito1~'9a'udl~ffefi
&hocked me )VitbJlW~-ve~-deattng WiUitFie pu ·c. Itcertain-
he-levereQ at o~ of the men ly does nothing to enhance the
cutting hair. I , . public relations for an otherwise
for web giant ftrnw u ARAMW the"point that they will have a $10
and Bech~ which for yeen have billion deficit in &cal 1983-1984.
I'm from Tampa, iFlorida, delightful area.
where the police 'rein.force the
c0mmunity ef~oJ1s.-of their .
•
JANE HEROLD
Tampa, Florida
··-01y~pics deserve-better press
To the F.ditor; lovE!Q having everyobe there.
At the various events there waa
80 much enthusiasm that you
couldn't help getting caught up in
it. Whenever a Japaneee team was
competing and would IK.U'e a point
or do well, a large contingent of
Japaneee spectators would stand
up and wave tiny Rising Sun
Soarcet la tile ad.miniatration
told my associate Lucette
Lagnado that Yamani has always
had his enemies within the large
and oompetitive royal family, and
the current fiacal criaiapve them
an eXC\llle to make him the
1eapept. But he remains a
favorite of King Fahd, and if
replaced he will be given a
face-saving position aa a royal
adviller.
Intema.1 cable traffic from the
U.S . Fmbuly in Riyadh to Wash-
ington makes clear that the Saudis
are hurting financially -at Jeut
been waxing fa~ on Saudi_ con-This ma:y aeem like peanuts by
tracts. According to llOUl'Ce9 m the U.S . standaiaa, bUf u the report
State and Commerce depart-pointed out, "Saudi Arabia has not
ments,Bechtelhaaalready laid off haci"a budget deficit in 20 years."'
a couple of hundred ~rican Some IOW'CeS predict that the
employees, and ARAMOO 18 abo Saudi deficit wlll run aa high as pre~ to cut beck. $30 billion .
To make matters wu., the "The outlook for the foreign
Saud.is have been stalling on their buaine9a community ia not en-
payments to the U.S. firms. Some couraging," the embaaay cable
billl are reportedly aeveral wamawith80DleWMieratatement.
months overdue. ''To the extent that the govem-
The American companies are ment Jucc:eeda in directing a larger
playing down the situation, in shale ol available oppo~ties
hopes that businem will p6ck up. and sales lo Saudi finna, the
But this may be a vain hope. The foreign firms will be aqueer.ed."
embusy'a economic report notes In short, the party'• C1Yer. Both
. hosts and guests are in for wvere
hangovers.
PROFITABLE POT: Each
year, aa much u 11,300 tonl of
marijuana ia llDuggled into thJa
country from Colombia. A Drug
F..n.foroement Acency study give1
the dollars-and-cents reuon why
the traffic ia impomible to halt: lt'1
limply too lucrative.
Some 10,000 c.olornbian farm-
ers bave found they can earn five
times aa much growii\g pot al they
-~--.....---=-_-.--::E:::tl
The fannen harvest their
plants by hand and pack them
~ il}tQ__.lQ(bJl!O'JIDQ...-U'*&,--:-11
· 'I"nlNported on muleback, the
crop brings an~hete from $2 to
$5 a pound from middlemen., who
compre91 it into bales weighing 35
to 50 pounds.
'The American smugglen pay
$50 to $100 a pound. Much of the
difference ·goes for payoffs to
corrupt officials. A .ecret DEA
report notes drily that the Col-
ombian government "lacks the
manpower, material reaou..rces lllil
and peraiat.ence'' to combat the pot
traffic.
A joint U .S.-Colombian effort in
1981 netted only 2,000 tons of
marijuana, le. than one-fifth of
the annual "e~." And • d>e
DEA noted, 1mugglen can lole
four out of five loads and llill
make -profit.
I certainly wWi that sports-
writers and other · ·ne~spaper
p>Jumnista would start thinking
and writing more J)Ollitively about
the 1984 OJympic I Games. An
example of negative wri~ was
sportswriter Bud Tucker'' column
in the Sunday Pilot where be was
predicting that everyone was p.ng to get gouged by illegal
ICalpen. He aaid "the aecurity
forcea will be contending with
mucging, murder, rape, gand
theft, riot and terroriml and will
not likely have time to stalk ticket
flap.
Everyone learned to hold their
breath simultaneously before a
critical dive or holler with the
crowd "Me-hi-co" if any Mexican·
did well
Congress must change its-ways ·
~ton.'' •
Mr. Tucker haa evidently never
attended an Olympic Games. We
went to the 1968 Mexico City
Olympias and never had IUCh a
1oocLtime. One of ~ rea.>r\8 it
WM 80 much fun is the wonderful
feeling of cameraderie amopg the
spectaton who have come fi'om all
OYer world to aee tbe9e inarveloua
athletes t.erform. Everyone wu
happy. 1bia wu probably one of
the highlights of their lives and
they were going to enjoy it. The
Mexicans were happy too, they .
I can't imagine any rapt.ta,
murderers or rioters operating in
that atmosphere and eepedally in
auch a congenial crowd. I think
Mr. Tucker waa letting bia im-
agination nm away with him and
trying to stir up bad feelinp
toward the Olympic Games.
lt'a a wonderful experience and
I hope that everyone in Southern
California who wants to will have
the chance to eee at leut one
event. I can hardly wait. rm
already getting excited ·about it.
MARY WAGNER
Balboa
Oponoon\ eapres~ea on the ~poce dbOve are thow ol lhe Daoly Polot 0 1ner vte.ws e•·
prusea on tn1s pai;ie are lho\e of lheor author\ and artosls. Reader comment is invol ·
eel. Aeldre\s The Oao ly P1101. P 0 Boa IS60, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (/141 642·4321
l. I. BDJd / Some spread
Half the homeowners in Arkan-
-live in boutes valued at lees
tJian $31,000, and half live In
ho&.-. valued at more. Half the
bcmeownen in Hawaii· uve in
~ valued at lem than
tl 18,000, and half Uve tn bou8eS
valued at more. 'nlat'a it, ~ low
'and die hlah natklnwide in th1a
matter of median hoU8e valuee.
..... Oeorp Burm at ace 87 hu m opnm on .a. too: "Do it
a..blnd locked doon. U what
JUU'n clomC can be done in the
~ 10" miebt 81 well be P.tc:binC~·"
To that lilt of lnnoYatlana Jdven
ID the world by c.ali.fomia, add the
llllldbN'.
Q. Did YGU•Y the a..n.JI bMno
Wk?
~COAST • -llllJ Pilat
~-----·-....... =-~·-·~
..
A No, I said the palm tree has no
bark. That Ab1can pup known ..
the buenji has a bark it rarely
Ula. .
Q. Didn't Premdent Ronald Re--acan once· do a .... -and-dance
comedy routine in LM Vep1?
A For two weeks in 1954, yea.
At. the Lut Frontier Hotel there.
W..n't what he did belt. It didn't
IOOYer.
Albanianl nod the beiMI lo •Y
"no'' and abalce thct heed lo •Y
''yea.''
M.L ... ••ta• .........
C..,Du• ........ ~ .... ,.....
' ..
WALTER R . MEARS
AP ....... C.t 19 P
WASHINGTON (AP)
Stripped ol the legialative veto
power it baa wielded for 50 years.
Congreaa will have to be more
careful -or complacent -about
the laws that usign presidents and
~tory agencies the authority
to manage the government.
Until Thuraday, there was
another way: write the law, but
write in a veto provision 80 that the
Hou8e, or the Senate, or both,
could overrule a particular rule,
regulation or deciaion made under
that law. ··
fte S•preme Co•rt ruled that
prooe91 unconstitutional, which is
what presidents have been saying
about lt alnce the days of Franklin
D. Rooeevelt. They've Called it an
improper intrusion upon the
power. of the presidency. C.on-sr-ional advocates of the l)'1Jtem
countered that it w• a valid
restraint ·on the e>te.rdle of
a\lthority delegated by Congreaa
to the executive branch of govern-
ment. ·
To keep the kind of control the
legialative veto pennitted., Con-
Sft91 will have to write far more
detailed mandates and limits into
the laws it pa.... That would add
an immerwe new worldo9d to the
agenda.
And there alreedy ia a new
work.load waiting. It will take
yean to ttVi8e the more than 200
laws that lnclude legialative veto
proviaiana of one IOrt of another.
T'MH laws permit one or both
branches of c.on,re. to overrule
an executive branch dedaion by
~ a raolution that •YI no. ln moSt CMes, all that took WM a
majority vote of the Hou.e or of
the Senate.
For example, until the court
spoke, either branch could over-
rule regulations of the Federal
Electiom Ccimmillion aoveminl
campaign pncticea. Both bnnches
could, and did, overrule 80llle
dedlkJlw of the Federal Track
Commillion..
Preaident Reagan had to
withstand a leplative veto at·
tempt in Ol'det" to 1ell A WACS
radar aurveWance planes lo Saudi
Arabia. It would have taken
majorities in both ~ '° block
that deal, and the Sena~ aided
with the president.
Congreea always has the power
to rewrite a law under which a
pttaident or a regulatory agency ia
doing eomethinc it doesn't want
done. But it ia a lot easier to get one
houae or the other lo adopt a
re90lu tion blocking action than it is
to get both branches and the
preeident to enact a new law.
When the preeident'1 polidee are
involved, he can employ bia own
veto power to block such a law.
b recat yean, the legialative
veto system hall been expanded in
efforts to check federal
rulemakera, "unelected bureau-
crats" to the. oon.ervativee who
often accu9ed them of going
beyond the intent of Congreaa in
applying reaulatory authority.
c.ongre.lonal. conaervative. aaid
the knowledae that apeciftc ac-
tiom were 1Ubject lo veto would
restrain runaway f'el\llaton.
But former Ptellklent Gerald a.
Ford, no fan of the reculatora,
disputed that in arsulnl apimt an
extemDon of the ~
veto system a few years bldt.. nw
FecJeral Trade Commi11ion.. then
run by an activist Democrat, wu
the target of that campaign.
Ford said at the time that
Congreea should pus better laws
in the fint place, inate9d of wridnc
into legislation a procedure to •
block results it didn't like. Beadell, ,
be said, if Congreea didn't want an ~
actiwt trade~ the Sen-
ate shouldn't have approved the
nomination of an activist to run the
place.
It wUl be far more diffk:ult to
write details limits and reltl'ain1a
into the laws in advance than it baa
been to enforce them after the fact
through the legialative veto. It will
be cumber.xne and slow.
But Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger laid it will be wcrth the
effort and the probleml. "With all
the obviou8 flaws of delay, un1idi-
nem and potential for abwe, we
have not found a better ;:z..: pneerve freedom than by
the exerdle °' power IUbjllct .., I the m.refully cnfted rmtnin•
apelled out in the Comtltution,'' be
Mid .. the court OYSTUled ..
Jecialative veto.
Finding th·e I u1lness of life .
A friend's father died, quite old,
and I heerd IOme ot biacrome. •Y
at the f~ "Well, he lived a
full utr,'inywa.y." It started me think1na about what II commonly
meant by a "full life."
Somet1mee It mNn1 )lat an
accumulation of yean. But the
-.Jeand the twan Uve at lllMt 100
years, and the carp and the pike
are believed to nmed 150 -yet no one would think of caWna that a
"tull IUe."
.. • ANMher ~ ia more.,.
«11')' than ~ •• the
dec1•ed had ~ dlwr.
~had traV.W a lat. or
wcmanllld • lat. or rDlde and lalt
eeftnl fortu.nel, or took bis
pleMulw wbtnwr he could ftnd
~
-111-lh-.-... ---~
..
Did he have a .. ._ full" W.
lhan hla .....-,cani.mponry, .N•=•bocbmWld the ... ol beiwe.-Sclownln
dill'-and~I•• ttbat
ti-Uwaare..........,..
--that wb .... Ml ...
otlMr, In the ,.,..... clawtkm
that wb ... iDIAtft ... tlO ..
........ .., ....... 1111 '
mmtofCIM'tnadft.,......_DO ..... whet...., .........
• •
-
.
"' M~OAY, JUNE-27, 1983
82
,..
OFFICERS
TELE\llSIGN-~
COMICS
-------·-.---..-
84
-• · Ntws · c rrespondent Jessica
·~S~ch _ aDChMI bllt TV's
· "Crossfire In El Salvador,." which ·· , __ --------. conveys an Image of death and :· ~
de~alr. See 83.
. '
, Thi! Grange... It survived longer than farming in Costa Mes~
.l. LORENZO llltlllET ·, Steven Tate, whoee grandparenta operated a farm ;{..!....,,...... • years aao in El Toro.
l...on& aao. in a galaxy far, far away, there uee Tredltionally -ever aince the first chapter
to be fannland in a.ta Meu. lpl"W'lC up 116 yean ago to battle the r.ailroad's
That's right L ft:n putures, .Uoa, cattle, greedy act of putting transportation tariff8 on _ , __ ._ and lannen' crops -·the Grange has been a lobby and field after field o beam. b~-eyed ~ group of 80l'ts .looking out for f.armen' apedal com -the stuff 6f great Ame~ novels. It's
hard to believe thll$ this scene was common here intereeta. not more that 15 to 20 yean ago. lt only aeems T~y -as they have been doing for years-
galaxies away, with. the endless menagerie of the Grange bu been wielding ita pltchforka at a number of thorny U.ues, ranging from the suburba,n t;racta, roads and poncrete. oondltlon of COUhfy fOidS "iii01iighways to
Still, there ii one vestige of the old farming bl-1.i.npal educa~n in echoola. At their
community flc>uriahing iil Costa Mesa -the bl-monthly breakfast meetingB, re110lutiona are G~e,-one of 7,500 chapten acroea the United paaaed, forwarded totheatate Grange Convention,
StateS. . and if adopted there, Grange lobbiesta go to work
On a local level, they award annual echolar-
ahips to the .ana and daugbtera of Grange
members, although the daughters only became
eligible a ftw yeAJ'llilg<>, Tate said. In addition, they
apoNOr projects ranging from hearing dog
programs for the deaf to supporting the annual
Orange County Fair. Meanwhile, memben of the
committee on women's activities •w blankets,
slippers ~d lap robes fOT patients at rest homes
and mental hospitals.
atmosphere of it all. About 40 percent are retired
f.annera; none preaently earn their living off the
Janel.
Tate, a 40-year-member who worka as a
photographer for Chevron OU Fl~d Reeeareh Co.,
said the county Grange membership (there are
three other chapten here) has dropped from a
high of a~t 1,200 in th~·mid-1950. to a preeent
figure of roughly 600.
"We have faded from the limelight ..:or.rt ...::.tbe;.:::;..-11-~
• .. Gnnp 8GRURWJ\Ky~o em ''Ow ph&eophy is to promote the-wei111:re of California are quite active," he said.
the oommunity,'' Tate said. And from their meeting hall on the <:Om er of
The majority of members. like Tate, have Thurin and Victoria avenues in ~ M~. they
never plowed a field or milked a cow for a living. continue to gather to diacuaa the U.ues that no
They are indiviuala, in Tate's words, with farm doubt have great.er impact on theU-brethren in
backgrounda1 who are interested in related · Nebraska and Indiana, un el~~u.;sym~hoowlas..ooi-a--11--; TheOOlta~,presentlyl50strong,--orr polltidana in Sacramento and Washington to
m-;~1-...__,,..'L..yeara-old~ Grange Master tee tha~theirinteresta bewme: blw.--tqU}attort,-cornmtmity projects and-ttre-;1rat.erm11-time"gone by-. --
. •
The f int city hall (right~ was located
at 111 E . 20th St. before moving to
77·Fair D.r. in 1968 (below) .
. t
,,
At~ I utla Coast Plaza.
Cd*ta Mesa •••
It could have become part of
The ~it}1 ;~f Newport Beach
By J.01>1 CADENHEAD; ................
Costa Mesa ,almOlt· became a
part of Newport~ 30 yean
ago, and despite ~sam_pajgn-~
Ing incorpora~ barely passed
when voters., went to the polls on
June 16, 1953.
of Coeta Mesa, said Pinkley .
"I felt we should have gone
with Newport Beach,'' said Pink-
ley. "We would have been the tail
-that-waged the~
Charles TeWinkle was elected
the fint mayor and wu aided by
Claire N~ Bert Smith, ~
The 30th anniversary luncheon for Costa
Mesa wm be. held Wednesday at the Costa
Mesa Goff and Countty Club, 1701 Golf
Course Dr., at noon. Tickets are s 12.so.
t • Every door in CoSta Mesa was
knocked on and evety mark.et in
1own had a peti~ .. r to sign
up voters to make ~.~wn into a
real city. ·
Bob Wi.laon, who headed the
incorpOration committee and later
became mayor, said the campaign
truck he drove wu 90metimes ~ted with tomatoes and even
:'.toclu by overzealous opponents.
"We wanted to keep oil wells
'out of Costa Mesa," aaid Wilson, '.recallinl the main impetus behind
• the ~tion drive.
Alvin Pinkley, who later be-
came mayor, was one of th<l9e who
favored eo.ta Meu beooml.ng a
pert of Newport Beech. The
problem waa, Newport Beach was
only interested in a anal1 section
Martin and Walter Miller.
Smith, who wu a volunteer fire
c.hief and ii now chainnan of the
board of Citizens Bank of Costa
Mesa, recalled the first council
meeting when memben had to
chip in $50 a piece in order to buy
postage and office supplies for the
new city.
"We really had to work in thoee
days," said Smith. "We had to
write all the laws. The council
memben worked 40 hours a
week."
Ccet.a Mes, was no longer a
sleepy town on the way to
Newport ~ach. Signs of growth
were everywhere. The city'• first
housing tract, FreeOom Homa,
w~ up on the west aide of town.
Coslr'Meaa famllies needed only
$400 down and $42.26 a month to
move into the three-bedroom
homes.
Prior to incorporation the city
was only slightly over three
square miles and the population
was 16,500. Homes were being
built at a rate of 500 a month to
meet the demand of young famll·
ies. Collece Park and Mesa Verde
homea followed.
City Hall was a amall tin
building on Newp6rt Boulevard
and the police force conatated of
one man -Art McKenzie
McKenzie, who latet became
city manager, aaid he could drive
down Newport Boulevard for 10
minutes and never aee another
car.
By 1954 the original three-man
police force, that worked 12 hour
ahifta the fint alx months, was
expanded to 15 men by 1954.
"We knew everybody in town,''
aaid McKenzie, recallina the city's
early daya. "We'd 80 by the Boya'
Club and talk to the kida. We
knew how many k:ida were in a
family and when they'd pu-
ate." -
Gradually tbe amal1 town save
way to oommercial growth that
included car dealenhips on
Harbor Boulevard and South
Coast Plaza mall in 1966.
The Segentroma, ownen of
South Coast Plaza, were not keen
on the idea.of building a shopping
center, according to Bert Smith,
who, at the time was a councilman .
''The Segeratroma would come
oU their tractors and meet with
the cquncil at night," aaid Smith.
"They would never talk until all
five were in the r0om. It was Arlie
Swartz (then city manager) who
talked them into bi.ring a cor.al~
ant who •uaested South eo.t
Plaza. They didn't want that."
By the time McKenzie became
city manager in 1965, he said tbit
Segentrom's were very eager •
build a restonal shopping cent.et;
The family supported annex.atlall
of the property to Cost.a Meaa ov.,;
Santa Ana, said the former dtj
official. ·:
"Costa Meaa wouldn't be w~
it la today without South~
Plaza,'' uid McKenzie. ''That!.
Co.ta Meaa:a mint." ·:. ~
Ra20f!-. str-ap·tralnlng ••• 1rea0ers-who'vebeentHereten1t iK~it is
FROM ClilcAGO: Our father, like and wttn-d the re.ulta of child ~
"Wia'omdn," uled to beet ua kida with at>uae--.n'd dop't let anyone tell you:
belts, extenlion oorda, hairbnlahel -ruor«rapptna 1111'1 chUd atMaae. ~ ·
anythl.ngthatwMhandy.Ip-ew.upAtrakl kida are plentY mmut u . The beatiftel .
of anyone ln authority.lam 27 now and have 'ln8de them mary, .reeentful 111111 :
lti11 frllhtened of my father. I happen tO violent. nteyare~'acrtmlnala.-';
DEAR ANN IJJfI)ERS: I ha.,. aome-DEAR B.T.: 1'aUI for a letter tlaat th1na to •Y 1o ,the_~ from Wiax>nain .. ya plea&J. I reeel•ed ....... , 0. &Ma wbowas~plimdt"ltha ruor~and · nbjeet. Here an ..... edlen.
"9ed, one on hla ~ cbildr9l. He wro~: · ''Thil Aa the beet way 1o handle the little FROM SOUTH BEND: That letter
twerpl.. from the father who kept hia l(lda ln line ~ what you are aying la that with• razor 11.rap brouaht hick nlgbt-
Yiolence 'is okay The atatistks ahow ~.My father beUevecl that way, too. I
olherwille. It la a ~ that children who am the only aan (out of four) who apnka _ abwed become hateful, meen and to him to this day. way to keep ldda in line WM to raiae wel" ..... ~.. on their t.cbtdel With a ruor db~. ~ ~~ ~ ~ :! FROM Gl!X>RGIA! Low and under-we wen~ rerdy to to to hll wab,
· ther ~will tirtnc paren'8 and children a my little brother (then • 8) handed ~they •:yC:-~ei may &ot cim.r than a ttrap ewr could-believe Mom the ruortirapthathlld been \.-1 cin
::, °'you .. ~., but deep in ~ me. I atill have mub on my b9dr from w too often and mid, "How about burylnc
._.,. ~ 11 fear. And tear=one wbeN the buckle cut. • th'9 with Papa? Whenever 1-um thlnl I hate him, and I don't want to haw ta.. tt•wayfrombate.-~ ~ IN FROM DfPOIUA, KAN.: When my awful feelln&l .•ymore." -NO 810
father died, I WM 14. He, too, bellewd the PLEASE -
-~-
know he WM beaten by hia father, and ACARINOMonlD -:
Grandpa~ trMtecl theaame way by hia. :
Well. the buck at.ope here. rd rat.Mr have • my chUd.ren come 1o me With their FROM BIRMINGHAM: Every sau.:
problema than teeve the room when I daymomtncfather"helCloowt."HeUmd:
enter. -BAD MJ:MORIJ:s up the aevm of w aowecould all aee "'-=
PROM. JACKIONVILLE: 'The letier
from that ~ who thinka he hail the
whole ..,..itinl pme aewn up with a monc hand on• ruar .U.p aot to me. I
haw worked In \he.publlc IChoo1 qltlenl
happei..ct to the~ who hlld • •
h1m durtnc the ..... It •• brutal .
happMs\ day of our Uwt w.a wbm .._
ftnally ldebd him out. ... dW. ~ -
brobn man. I ~ hit DTY far ~
Notonemrw•lhed.-ANONYMOU9,: orcouau
·• l· -.. -.. -·-· I •
• ... --()rMgtJCOMtD~IL.Y PILOT/Monday. June 27. 19'3
lnstallatlons.·~;u.-1 __.....~ • J
1 .r• _ • I
....
----~~·"'·ye Qrpo ·s;aew"UJAder-AeWieadershi
Joyce Reaume of Newport B..cb ia the new • ~Guidance Center lna~ lta new officen at def\ ta; Bets)' Stoddard and Sally Ulene, eec:-chairmao of the Onnae County PbilharmonJc • • luncheon in the Newport Velvet Turtle .re~ Joan WUJ.iame, ereuurer, with Lou
8odely'a...WC11D111'aec.mi~ofctirectuaa: Rataurttlt.-Md. "Howard Holden, the new FrumhOh u ....tatant, and Ruth Steen, parlia-
Tbe Women'• C.ommlue. ia a auppon 8fOUP pr'elideot. will be ulistad by the Mmee. Ralph meotartan. ' --
of the~ wi\hl.800-'"""*9~ into~ ..bi.xcil,, Wayne-Pean, hmel Harper, William C. EWe Faber, who heads SoWMI ot Music. wu
commltt.iie ~hout the COUil~~ 7be 8fOUP ~CarltonRu..ell,Law1eniceFoa',RalphE.· lnatal1ed at a luncheon in the lJ.nda lale home of ru. fundl to help support the mpnlation'a Smith Ir. and Lawrence Fry. Jan Una. Other officen are Sharl Euyian, Karen
ClOIM!ICI featurtnc the'Lm Anaelee Philhannonk I The center offers psych18trtc help for chll-Bet.on, Madeline Blackwell and Barbara FrewMlt,
Orche9tra and renowned~ dren, and funily c:oumeUnc on an abWlty to pay vice Pftl'identa; Sally Lorenat, Joan Orr and Doria
In addition, the committees oraaniz.e and buia. About 300, referred by 8Choola. doc1ora and Bartelt, secretaries; Jan Und, treasurer, and
preeent a variety of youth muak? ~ ofiered the courta are aaiated monthly. A thrift center ia Martha Green parliamentarian.
.tr. of charee. to the county's public and private operated at 807 W. 19th St. in Coeta Mesa with • e, •
IChoola. prooeedago.lngtothecenter.~.Jame. r ia _ ~ ___ _
Reaume,iaafnnprr boan1Jr:ee11•rer•ndcb•tr~ ----WUJiam Grundy of Newport Beach
1~--orthe 8fOUP a annual fuhion lhow fund-raiaer. • • • aMumed the duties of prelldent for the 1983-84 Servtnc with her durina the coming year will · · lleUOI'\ of Trojan League of Orange County dwin& :be S...an Beechner, Erneatine Allerhand, Linda Two chapters of the Orange County Per~ an lnatallatlon held in the· Fullerton home of Mn.
·Mayeda, Qorot.hea Thouaand and Jane Grier, vice forming Art.I Center recently flUlOundng officera Richard Bishop. Others taking office are the
:chtJ.rmen;NonnaJeanMaaleyandBeverly White, for the '83-'84 term are Sound of Music and Mmes.RobertFrands,M.P .Doder,Da.nSiaemore,
acretaries, and Renate Colli80n, treasurer. Camelot. John c.ahion and John O'Donnell, vice presidents;
• • • , Jean Lucas '!1stalled the Camelot officers who · ~rt Moody and. James Kollenda, secretaries;
are Ciel Woodman, preaaent; Hope Von Hen.en, H.D. Mac LeiQl, treasurer, and Donald Ward,
-
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: My husband calla
·me atubbom becall8e I won't allOw our 9-year-old
daughter to have chest X-rays before her hernia
operation. The other day her doctor casually
·mentioned. "rll order routine chest X-rays before
the operation." When I heard that, I told my
husband I wanted to change doctors.
l:m fearfully against a child~r even an
t-having unnecemary X-rays. I wonder how
feel about it. Aa I recall. you wrote a column
time ago about "unneceaaary X -rays." Of
-oour..-¥OU know the reuoo rm 10 anxious. When
our only daughter grows up, marries and has
children, I don't want needleee ,X-rays to play a
part in any pcmible trouble in our ~hildren.
Doesn't it pay to play it aafe when we know that
~-rays can eometiml!ll be devastating? Mrs.!".
,,,__ ........... --
.. DEAR MRS. N.: More and more, people like
~are becoming aware that we should take
protective WU'S against X-rays. Dental pa-
ijenta, for example, den:!&nd to know-why .Lray&-
.oouia be taken every aix months or_!._¥~· and ~ wanHo be protected by leaO aprons. etc. I
recetve many Jett.era from anxious people like you, ~ N., who wonder if they aren't being
~y expo.ed to X -rays.
..
G ini Robina and Phyllis Carpenter, vice presi-Parliamentarian. ·
In responae to your penonal problem, you'll
be interested to know that a recent releaae, from
the American Academy of Pediatrics, leads off
with this aentence: "Routine preoj>erative che9t
X-rays for children should not ~ required and
should be performed only at the discretion of the
attending physician."
Routine radiographa , identify few un-
suspected signiticant diaeues among children.
Chest X -rays should not be a substitute for a
complete medical history and phyaical exam.
Nevertliele9a, the.attending physician should have
the freedom to request preoperative chest X-raya
when, in his judgn-Mznt, the procedure ia needed.
Think it ov~ "before changing docton."
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: Our 2-month-old
'"90ll doesln1Wve a day When"he 'ia Iriefroin colicky
pains. rm eorry I didn't begin to breastfeed him.
He'• on a formula preacribed by our doctor. Shall
we let him know? Do you think It should be
changed! Mra C
.DEAR MRS. C.: Of ooune, let him know,
today. Why have your infant auf.fer another day
when a clumo in fonnula may 10lve ~problem?
Many inf an ta are intolerant-to protein in oow'a
milk.
Qlfflll
By P~L INTERLANQl oLLaouoa..Seach
"So much for ordering in French. You got
'!'orange' but noduck."
' .. eddlngs Bi
__ ··( ........... E __ ng~ements
TM ~)' ~ want. y our ~ and_ !., mgapnwnt ,,,,,.,..---
To help~ 1ubmll the.required lnformatJon, · ,
lormure•vai.J.able•t the DaJJy Pilot off~. 330 w. r
Bay Sc., Cosu Mau.
For w~ only a bUtck and white pbotool '~.
the bride la ltef'ePU.ble. Shap-.boia, PoJ.ary;id and ~
color ph<>tl» ojln 't be u..ed. '11>e photo mutt be
submitted no later thlUl three weeks after the •1
wedding, otherwise it will not be publiahed. !I
~men< iofqripatJOAM ~bmlttetl91
leasJ ~ven weeks before the wedding. . ~
Forms and photos can be dropped off a1 the
office or IDlliled to the Ed.J.torial Department, Dally {;
Pi.Jot, P, 0 . Box 1560, CoSui Mesa, Calif. 92828. f,.
Engagements
~oodfield-Ochoa
18
l~
I\
.rt
Frances Goodfield of New port Beach and
John Ochoa Jr. of Pasade.na are planning to marry J./
Oct. 8 in Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, H
_Mo.Jllecito. ------111
't
---nnrtH1de~leff1St.fie dailgtjter of Mrs. Carl
Troyano of Newport Beach and• Uewellyn
Goodfield Jr. of Carpinteria. She is a graduate of .·~
Newport Harbor High School and attended Santa ")
Barbara City College. •')
Her fianoe graduated from Royal Oaks High :q
~~ool and USC. His parents are Mr. and Mrs.
· "'llm.0choa of Covina. =•1
Pippen-.§reen . . LO Mrs. Vivian LaVine of Temple City has , ..
announced the engagement of her daughter,
• Donna Gail Pippen, to Michael John Breen of
Costa Mesa, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin J . Breen l
Sr. of Fulle.rtbn.
1 The bride-to-be is a graduate of Arroyo High
School and Cal State Long Beach. Her fiance is an
alumnus of Servite High School. Anaheim. and l UCI.
They are J>lanniiyi ~ marry_ Aug_ '6 in SL -Angela "Merici Catholic Church, Brea.
Delillo-Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Gi!orge DeLillo of Newport
Beach announce the engagement of their daugh-
ter, Tamera Lynn DeLilloof Huntington Beach, to
Donald Richard Morris, aon of Harold F.dgar
Morria of Perth, Western Australia. , ·
The couple ai:e plaruling a Nov. 25 wedding in
Wayfarer's Chapel in Palos Verdes. ·
..
' 'l I
t
* _., .... ..,, ....
(11G Ml-ml
..RUFFELL'S
UPHOlSTE,IY, INC.
SAVE MONIY ON
YOUR INSUIANCI
'1CTmOU9 IU-U MAim ITATu.NT
The t9llowlng l*90nl -doing l>Ull-•: PASSION FOR FASHION 5106
Comw911 Dr •• La PMna. CA 90823 JANIS LEPIAE 51011 cam... Dr ..
L• PMIN. CA 90923 Thie~ "oonducled by. .,,,
lndMdu9I
I •
'! ........... -4 .... .
. 1922 HAllOl llVD.
COSTA MIU -S4S-11S6
: .•
ll .. AOIHT
•• GOWANY
.. MOHMY
'"'~ ...........
RABBITT~
441 Old Newpert llvcl.
New,-1 '-ch, Co.
631-7~40
~-.~-----NOWPLAv:~~,,
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ADVANCE TICKETS NOW ON SALE FOR
Rfr"URt:O"F s....-; ~ ~ • llfEJEDl ,.._
~="'°"'"'~== OUT LETS (lncludin9 Music Plus)
11:41Z1'11100 7:40 IO:ZI
~ID
U 1JO l'"~'O l atO
ur.,-.,_
751-41 ..
TOWN CENTD :-..:::~
751-41 ..
SOUTH COAST .............. .__ ____ ...._ ____ ~ :::'.
CllMA WEST -... -ltl-JUS
544-2711
•
'
_Hopkin.s-sets· sajl
as latest Capt. Bligh
pz f91J TBOllAB .......
'"110U.. YWOOD~How eillilhe .. Bounty" in
Tahitian waterl?
Splendldl~ Anthony Hopkim, latest ol the~ptaln. Help>b by telephone from
Tahiti, when • Bounty" la midway throuab
location fllmlna. The .... mllllm Orion Ptcturea
releMecompleted inllllrior~ in London and
la now ,under ail in the Southern Hemplaphere.
corretpondent, ls anchor for the weekly procram.
NEW YORK-"CrOMf\re ln' El Salvador" on pub~ TV tonight doesn't demYBti!y the.-avage, MORE... ABOUT "F.AMC! -An ad h« :_
.eemln.gly lntennlnable dvjl war 1n that dlltreelled network of 82 stationa, lncludlng 22 NBC affillats,
C-entral American state, though, it does, lndeed, haa been aseembled to ~p the TV eeries "Fame"•:
convey an Image of death and despair that la not on the air next aeuon, the show'• pcoduoen aay. '·:
eaay to forget. When NBC canceled the prograin Jut month,··
In one acene, a dark-haired child of 7 or 8 MGM-U" Televiaion,ltaproch.acer,atar1edpu~:
recalla the slaughter ctt aeveral friend.a and together'ihe network. · :.·
relatives, incl4dtng h1a own mother. "There was a Under the eetup, MG M-UA will produce 24
• • •
whole mountain of people on top of me," he says. new ej1llodes of the aeries and distribute them to··· ~
"We've finlahed tour weeb ol JocaUona and
we're ri8hka~1" •Id lleplDm; 'l'fhat'..-
ratber an acmmpHehment, aimldering the dif-
&ulty of wortdnc at-. lfa touch maneuvering
the boat into the ricbt pomtian, and ai.o we have a ~
abort day. lt'a winter here, and we have to quit ahootine about four, otherwWe the ca.nv;ra ahows sJinta of light from the ettmc aun."
"When I came out, I was all bloody." the 82 stations. .
---..--m-.nother ~t;irgravedtgger ~--~come froin foriijpl sale. of t.M' ·
Identify a body left the night before on a quiet show and from national advertilers provided by
He added that the director, Auatralian-bom Anthony Hopkins is-tJie new skipper •
fto8er' DonaJd8on. 8Cemed't0 have the situation in of 'the Bounty., band, aurprillna becaUR h1a previous filma have
been made in New Zealand on ahoeatring budgets. required two complete movies. Meanwhile De
It wu a different atory 22 years ago in Tahiti. -Laurentiis had spent $4 million on a brarid-qew
When MGM'a 8eCOl1d "Mutiny on the Bounty" seaworthy HMS Bounty. Fin.ally the production
wu filmed there, U. budlet ballooned to $2:>-jelled, with Anthony Hopkins as Bligh and Mel
million ($50 mil&n in today'a ~~ Gibeon AA []etcher Ch.ciatian. ----
,.,.,..Jlriiffifj .....,_ had-i-Iq:.ru.t.ory~i·,n---"We're not' .-v;na to steal a mareh on the other filrm. datine bldt to an early 1930a Australian -J~"6 venion that starred Errol Flynn. Clark Gable and . two films," 'said Hopkins. ''The story is ao great
Charles Laughton apPeued in the 1935 "Mutiny that it's worth retelling, and I think we will be a bit
on the Bounty," winner of the a.car 88 best more accura.Je about the actual events. _
~; it WMJi,lmed at Catalina laland, 25 miles "Bligh was not a sadist, not a monster. He was
from the Pldtic c.o.t. ~later movie starred a compassionate man, who generally treated his
Marlon Brando and Trevor Howard and was less crew in a humane manne.r. His main problem was
well received. that he couldn't communicate with his crew, and
Dino Di Laurentiis wanted to retell' the story, especially with Fletcher Christian. When they had
and David Lean ("Lawrence of Arabia") prepared a misunderstanding, Bligh lpst grip of his
an epic venion. Too epic:, si.noe it would have conunand, and the mutiny resulted.
SM complete Hating• In TV Log
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 KNXT 1CBS1 Lo11 Angl'tl'~
D KNBC 1NBC1 Lo<, An4e1t•<,
• KTLA tlnd I Los Anqt•lt>~ D KABC TV 1ABC1 Los Anyelt>'>
()) "FMB 1CBS1 SJn D•~qo 8 KHJ· TV ttno I Los Anq1•t1•<,
OJ) t<CST IABC! San D11•q1
I Knv 11no 1 Lo~ Angolt•,
KCOP TV 1lnt1 I Los An4ptf''>
83 KCET ·TV I PBSI Lo~ An1wtrc,
Ii> KOCE· TV 1PBS1 Hunt1114ton Be.icn
JUMBO
1.6 oz.
MARGARITAS
S!.50
with
LUNCH or DINNER
COMBINATION #1-24 on Menu
COCKTAll,.S
WELL DRINKS s'1.oo
Mith IUnch or dinner combtn11tton
#1-24 on Menu
Good Tuee., Wed., ThUf9., Sat .. Sun.
11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Daily Lynct.eon Specials .. $2.95
'11U~H.
Costa ....
645-0324 hnlfls lllJW.r
<HJTENNIS 0MOYIE
-2:10-
* * ~ "Blue Coller" { 1978) Rlctlerd Pryor, Hervey Keitel.
-2:30-D m NEWS e MAACU8 WELBY, M.D.
CQ)MOVIE· * * "Fighting Mtd" ( 1976) lton Isaac Kennedy. J1m61 lng"'1¥1.
Q!NEWS
MOVIE
-2:4$-
* * * "Venom" (1i82) NICOi WW.
lmton, Klaus Kinslll
tCJMOYIE * * * "Equus" {1977) Rlcl\lrd Bur· ton. Peltr Firth.
-4:00-
(f) TOP 0' TH£ MOflNM
OMOVll **"The Woman Ntx1 Coot" (1a81)
Gererd Oec>ardieu, F1nny Ardent (%)MOYIE * * * * "Tile Deer Hunt•" (1978) Robtrt Oe Nifo. Mlf)'I SlrMP.
-4:15-(j))MOVIE ** * "Enchantment" (19-49) Orttd
Niven, Teresa Wright.
-4:30-~=":11 AHNUAl l.Aff off RNAL8
re9idential atreet: Lexington Broadcast Seiyices, spe<iall•ta in-:
"'Desconocido,' an unknown person," the advertiser-spo080red productions, and "Fame"
narrator tranalates. "We don't know anything will begiventopartici~tingstationaatnoooet, the:·:
about him. No family. 'Deeconocido."' producers said. ·:·
It's the story of people, many of them "Fame" had only 39 completed episodes
presumably innocent, caught in a bitter conflict available for syndication. With the new deal, there·:
that is hauntingly suggestive, at times, of another, will be at least 63 if it only lasts a year under
earlier war. MGM-UA sponsorship.
"Something we learn from you, in Vietnam," "It's truly an original program. You don't ever
one member of 8 right-wing "death squad" says, want to see an original die before its time," said .••
matter-of-factly," on the subject of torture. "After Lawrence Gershman, president of TV distribution
you obtain your information, what do you do with for MGM-UA. • • •
thelJlt.' the.JWTator asks. ·~~ ---==-__ --____ -~1---'-
did;"tlie gue says, 'lillltl)em. This is war." EXPLORER'S CLUB -Ben Cross, star of
· The hour-long documentary, seen in a the Oscar-winning ''Chariots of Fire," will play
roughly edited version, attempts with some Christopher Columbus in a new film biography in
success to examine the civil war from both sides. the works for CBS' for broadcast in the 1984-85·-
Government leaders· and National Guard soldiers season. Crose was in "Flame Threes of Thika" on
are interviewed, as are guerrilla fighters and public TV's "Masterpiece Theater," to be rerun
civilians caught in the middle. this aununer, and will appear in "The Far·
All of El Salvador has been touched by the Pavillions," a Home Box Office adaptation of th,e.•:
war, though there are tho&e who prefer to ignore novel by M.M. Kaye, plannJ!d for distribution next·
the conflict. Naturally. year. · •
"No, there le no war here," says one man, Watch for CBS to annouce "Race to the Pole," : ·
lnterviewed during a Christmas party in San an "ITT Theater" special starring Richard
Salvador, the capital. "We are happy." Adds a Chamberlain and Rod Steiger as the arctic
young woman: "Right now, we have to party. explorers Frederick Cook and Robert Peary.
We're having a good time. I don't care." A gr~t from Ct-ievron U.S.A. will bring "A .
"Crossfire in El Salvador," pr6duced f>y J eff Willk Thiough the 20th ·Century with Bill .:
B. Harmon and Chris Wenner, is the latest Moyers" to public television in January. The .·
installment in public TV's (;Frontline" documen-20-part series examines eventa, penonalities ..
tary series. J essica Savitch, the NBC News and mores that have shaped the current century.
lf you thoucht the DJCht before wu funny,
wait tW you tee the nett day.
• ........... ' , ,~ .. .,, .1
.......... 1111\o ..
~
,-. . . .. . .... I ~ .~ ~ •• ,, 1 --~-
"0CTOPU88Y" , .. ,
'19. HI. ... ,~ .....
"SUPERMAN Ill" "'°1
• OOl..91 tTOllO ~ ... .__ ..........
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
"8UPER'1AH Ill" '"'' • 00&.a'f • T'l:MO .............. ,... ..
"FLASHDANCE" tRt ........... , ........
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAL• IN
focvltv At 0.. AmO 21J/6U•t211
"WAROAMES" '"' ~ ......... ,,.
"YELLOWBEARD" , .. ,
.,.,,~~·~._,.. ..........
"RETURN
OF THE JEDI" ...,
.......... f'lm.0 '"'.,., .... ..-....
Jae"'"' al Co"c:Uewooo
213/531·9510
"0CTOPUS8Y" '"1 ·--a:A.ktl.. ............
"WARQAllES" '"1 .................
"PORKY'& II:
THE NEXT DAY 1111 -----·-
II JV · W """" '°"' '""'' -''°" 111« .. , u ANAHEIM DAIVf·IN, HARI OA I LVO O•tVl·IN & llAANlf D•tV£.IN
11• ttl I• lAIUllO&f 1 l~f
"YELLOWHA.M>" '"J "OCTONllY"'"' ....... -"LONe WOU: MCQUAD«" 1001 ''fO..CID VENOEAHCI" 1111
CtlOf •1 IOllNO
pir ,,,,,..., f'A.-• •
BUENA PARK OlllVI IN
uricotn Aw• Wfff Of C"°"
121·.070
._ti! ~4 ~ I A6',.
LINCOLN OlllV( IN
UftCOtn .-.. Wetl Of C"OH
121·4070
• ""''A "4
CHlf II tOllllO
"WARQAllES" --'ONE DARK NIGHT" ... ,
"PSYCHO II" ..., .... "8ADBOYS"...,
"IUPEMIAMlr'--FOUNTAIN VALLE Y
ORIVl IN
... 00900 f ....... l tOOiftYllf (lo) "HIGH ROAD TO~ .. -
ff2•2411 CMl "-
UTffa SURVIVORS" .. , .......
"THE TOY" '"'
Clllflf-
CM fllOllOID
t ' '~. A
LA HABRA 11w .• 1 1N
-·-So.. ) C._Gl_ff_
~91-369~
"T'RADtNO PLAcal" "' -"AN Offlcalt AND AUNT\.IMAM"1111
"IUPSRMAN r----• -·..,. 1 - -"HIGH ROAD TO C.-A•.,.
WARNE'-""'• 1 -.
t
AN8WEIS TO lllOOf}CWll= -
Q.l -Both vulnerable, u the moment. just take a sim Whal do you bid now?
South you hold: . pie preference lo lwC> spades. A. -You certainly wanl to be
+ 1Ut5 <::'IU07S 0 AQJM That is ample. sinre you have
Partner opens the blddlnf already bid at the two-level.
with one spade. What do you Any move should come from
respond? , pa.rtner.
ft ~Rt'lt:r.D by Jim Davis A.-Your hand is lfO atrong Q.3-As South, vulneraWe:
for a jump ri lse \o three you hold:
spades. In support of spade•. +K87 <::>KJ4 OQ98 •10785
l" _
you have a 1l111let.oa elub.
Q.1-EMt·Weat vulnerable,
u South you bold:
•ts <::'1'1"812 0115 •••
Partner opena the bidM8f
with one heart. Wu~ elf,.,
respond?
•J4.l.O~~o-1-_,·t-evaluatertrt~ 'Ptie bidding ITU protl!@CI~:,..
. in game. but you un't be
sure where to play the hand
-spades. heart• or no trump
could be rifht. Bid three
clubs-partner's next bid
should help cle~r up mallen.
Naturally, should partner
1'~! cluti , you 1nlirid cor-
rec 'ng to four hearts.
Q.5-As South. vulnerable,
you hold:
A.-You can't even be,_..
whole hand l~ ii-from 7our
poinl of view, tie .,,_.11
eould euily have a pme la
spades, or more. We suattt
you jump to four heart.I at a
preemptive meuure._ Nor·
mally. you would like a bU
more 1hape for tbat aetlo11-
a singleton ii eome suit. Bui
here your siJith heart la a
signal for a barrage.
r
, ...... -'"''·l~_...,,....,.. ·\~ ..
IRE
t'AMllL \'
CIRCl'S
by 811 Keane
"I'll be bock in a moment -following
those m's!oges. ~
"· ~.\R~.\Dl'9't.: by Brad Anderson
"Arefyou sure he took the pie?"
l
~00'° ~l'LLl~S
PAY SCALE' ...
NOT IN HI I ~-No-· OUT
OFFICE, I IN TME HALl-
HOPE:. WILL BE FINE.
I
P£.\Nl'T8
~-.. ~ ..
l II'
MAVBE.,WMaf WE 6ET BACK,
·VOtJ CAH 50.l SOME OF ~ rMOT06W'HS 10 A
WILPllfE AA6AZIHE ...
Bl6GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ,.. .. ~ .
-.----.. ~,,.-:~ ...
...... ·
"I h1te Moncl1y1."
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
MR. HARTBURN,
A80UT MY RAISE ...
DY Charles M. Schulz
l1M ~T V0U CAU.
SEMl-Wll.OLIFE
-------~--'·
you must-count 5 for the void N..U Eaet 'Setltla Weet
because of your spade-fit: I O PaN l NT PaN
That is enough to start with 2 • Pa.. ?
a jump shift or three What action do you lake'l
diamon~s-slam should be a A.-You have a maximum
virtual certainty. for your first bid. Your hand
Q.2-Both ·vulnerable, as is imp/oved by lhe facl lhat
South fOU hold; you have a fil for both or
+IOS. <::>KJ3 0 7 •KQJ8S3 partner's suits. Raise to
T~e bidding has proceeded: three clubs. Don't worry
Nortli Eaet Set1th Weat about the fact that your hand
I + P111 z • P... is Oal-partner's is not. You
2 0 p.,. ? owe him mild move.
WhlLdo..¥.QILhid now't.-~ei~her--YtilnerablerH
A.-Don't rebid t'lubs . lo South yo'u hold:
"Show thal you have a six·card +A7 QAQI0762 0 A+10762
suil -lhat action would show The bidding has proceeded:
a S41b-minimum two-over-one N-tli Ea1t Soat .. Weat
res,ponse and no particular I + P111 2 11:1 Pa11
liking for partner's s'!i. For. ' 2 NT P111 ? .
Jl'Of;t.: PAR9'ER
SHOE
. ~~1tWH
~'IOt.JRVt¥ raz_~OOJT?
t •.11
FROM WHAT YCVVE DESCRIBED.
IT SOUNDS LIKE A PSYCHIAT-'
RIC PROBLEM, RAYMOND' HAVE YOU TALKED WITH YOUR .._...___.,
PHYSICIAN ABOUT IT? NOi
(X(A~ I MOM, ~i,f.ff
1'M~'f ~~~ C,Oi
5')MB0RN£.0 ~ Hf.
(.~'1' E.~E.~ MO'Jf.1. ~
~
•·' l
I'VE NEVER TAU<E.D
10 HER &ff I Kl~D
Of <£T 'THE FEEUN(;,
1HAT OHE UKE6 ME
100 !
+K93 11:1Q854 OAQIOQ H
The bidding has proceeded:
Nortli Eaet Se1tli Weet
I+ Pu1 I 0 Pua.-
l NT Pate ?
Whal action do you take'/
A.~ With 11 HCP and a five·
card suit, you have to make
one move toward game. but
what'! To bid two diamonds
-showH ~nd with 1 lon&-.dia-
mond suit and not much else.
You aren't ii.rong enough for
a jump to three diamonds or
a reverse to two hearts. Thal
leave~ ·just,,n~ bid~ raitt-
. to two no trump. even thouith
.
How de 1" ~ die
beet epe.UC a.MT CWIM
Gerea Alu die .... .,. hr a
_mpJ ........... Or d ·-Lea11t," 1ea• U.85 &!
"Gerea·L....," can ef tWi
eew .. per, P.O. In~
Nerweed,N.J.07141 ......
--... pay.W. -te -N .... -· ,.,.,..... ..
by Kevin Fagan
l AAO'tO UN1
A 0oU. '4 'f O GU
""~ HOME~
by Lynn Johnston
1He.N ORDC>'{ LIED!-~E SM?
WZl.IE AND\ HRD1b5l.UP
IN Ttie SARN-W~ 1HE.·
~ WHAT'6™E ProBLEM; WHEM 100
PEOP~ AA.€ I~ LOVE I
rT'5 PROBAS~CJ lME HAPPIE5i , tXCITI~,
tva>T FUL.FIUJ~
EXPERIENCE IN. UFE ~
BEID"° OF1fte.
ANIMAL.SJ
-
by Tom Battu"'
WOOL.D ~ MINO
CDMINU ~ME Aro EXPLAl~t.K:J ~n
f'<V.J GIRLrnENO ~
L~~!.~~UOI ~09.}~l Nf.Q~!!~.,,;,!q~~~T~O~!!Q~ s
l•CMA ... •tA•Dll,.,ITIOl'fTMI NASO ANOIN"l"IT -•I _ J • --
a
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mond-V, June 27, 1183 -••
....,,,--...... ·· il
..
'·
• t .l ~ California economy
'rosy. through 1985'
81 Ille Altodaled Pres•
LOS ANGELES -Calitomla'a economy ia
rebou.nding and ahould provide more.Jobe and penoba1
income throuah 1986, two new econcimic forecaN •Y·
The UCLA Graduate School of ~t aa1d the
upft'ini in the naUonal economy, rialN federal defeme
•pending and the •1984 Sumqwu Olympa in la Anaelet will boost tl)e state ec0n0my f« the next 19
montha. California OOl'll\lmera will have almost 6 percent
more· real lnoome next Year.,, the UCU forecast aaid,
becau.e of relatively low lntlation and a projected 10.2
percent n.e in before-tax penona.l income.
.. ~· l ...
·( L
~
Gasoliqe prices up slightly
IX>.5 ANGELES -The average price of guollne,
""' ~JM peaJ thm-mootba._may beain-to... ----
decline allgh~y a an increase of only four-tenths of a
cent in the last o week.a, oil analyst Dan Lundberg
says. The na averqe price of all grades of guoline
at 1elf-1erve. · ps increueCi to $1.24.19'a pllon, he
uid Sunday .. ''Thia modest n.e of only e.• oould pnsap
the kind of lOng alow decline that OCICUiTed lalt year, aa
aeaaona1 driving bu been nothi.na like it hu been
historically," said the publiaher of the Lundberg Lett.er.
He noted that price levela began "deteriorating" .in
the latter half of July 1982, when summer driving wu
alao lem than UIUal due to the rec::ie.ion.
Walkout ends at. Wilson Foods
OKLAHOMA CITY -A three-week strike
againlt Wlbon Foods Corp. ii over, but union officiala
Jaid they would continue to protMt the oompany'a
handling of lta contract. "We are going to have to have
eome time to examine our fee~," uid Bob Adama,
vice premdent of the Oklahoma at)t local of the United
Food and Commercial \Yorkers Union. 'To aay we are
pleued with the contract ia premature.'' Union
employees were expected to begin returning to WW.00
planta ac:roa the country thia afternoon. The new
propoul waa approved at six of the teven plan ta where
a total of about 6,000 workers had wallcA!d oU the job.
Dollar dips sharply; Gold up
LONDON -Theoollar&pped aharply against key A
currencies~ ~ly ~ • aborWenn-U.S.-
interestrates (ell following~ drop1Jnlil'U.S.
money supply. Gold pricea edged up, but looked shaky.
Dealers noted that the contraction in the money supply
announced by the Federal Reaerve Board waa bigger
than expected and predicted that the U.S. currency will
continue to.allde. Falls inJ.nterest rat.es make the dollar
less attractive to i.nvestora. Some dealers believe the U.S.
currency ia now ove.r-valued and will ease against major
currencies.
Gold
By die Alaoctated Pren
Selected world gold pricea today.
IAM• momin8 fixing $423.25, off $0.25
IAM• afternoon fixing $419.50, off $4.00
Puia aft.emoon fixing '423.17, up $0.35
Jl'r&Uf9r1 fixina $425.00, up $1.77
Zuiell late afternoon bld $419.25, oU $4.00:
$U0.00, uked
BaMy 6 llannu (only daily quote) $419.50, oU $4.00
Eqeaud (only daily quote) $419.50, off $4.00
Eqeaud fabricated (only daily quote) $440.48, off
$4.20
NY ~mu gold spot month Fri. $424.00, up tl.50
Metals
NEW YORK (AP) -Spot nonleJTOUS metal prices today:
Copper -80~-82~ centa a pound, U.S. destinations.
. C..U -76.55 centa per pound. NY c.omex ipOt month
c:lmed tri.
LeH -20-23 centa a pound. zme -40 centa a pound. delivered.
Tim -$6.6232 Meta.14 Week composite lb.
Alambnon -76 centa a pound, N. Y.
Merevy -$290.00-$300.00 per 76 lb fluk, New York
Pla1b111m • $430.00-4436.00 domestic merchant troy
ounce. N. Y.
Silver ,
Silver • $11.840 per troy ounoe, Handy & Harman (only
daily_quote.)
SUver -$12.262 per troy ounce, NY Comex spot month
cloeed Fri.
. . ........
...
When 11ou put part of your &avings
into U.S. Savings Bond.r you're
lwlptng to build a briiJ..hter future
for 11our count'll and for 11ouraelf
Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/.t,4on~ay, June 27, 1983
••• r
I
II II
L·
Spectacular 5x6-foot
. .
pictures from your T.V. .
set bring · big-screen
action to your
-'
living room ..
. .
--
A•AZE ~
YOUR FRIENDS
Imagine inviting your friends and
neighbors over to see T.V. Specials,
Movies, Sporting Events, etc. on your
new THEATRE SIZE T.V.! Everything
takes on a breathtaking new dimension
with this complete Giant Lens Projector.
You can use it outdoors, too; at night. ·
Convert your back yard into an open-air
OUTDOOR THEATRE (iovely on those
warm evenings!). '
Forget about that little 14 or 19-inch T.V.
screen -this is a giant 6-foot picture!
Ten times bigger than the one you're
used to watching. You 'll feel like you're
right in the middle of the action, enjoy-
ing ~ whole new dimension of entertain-
ment. ALMOST LOOKS LIKE 3-D ... IT'S
THRILLING!
PERFORMS LIKE
SYSTEMS COSTING
THOUSANDS OF
DOLLARS
You 'll love the clarity of the Giant Lens
Projector. This new invention projects
a sharp brilliant image of your T.V. pic-
ture directly onto a wall or screen, puts
new zest in your viewing. You'll marvel
as your favorite T.V. shows and per-
sonalities come to life as lf on a movie
screen.
SIMPLE AND
SAFE TO USE
It's amazingly simple to use. You don't
ne~d any electrical or mechanical con-
nections to your present T.V.. No
special aerial Is required. No ac-
gives you super T.V. screening, com-
parable to commercial projection
systems costing several thousand
dollars. And it does it for only $29.95!
AMAZING LOW COST
How Is it possible? How can we do it so
cheaply? Well, you do some basic
assembling. Nothing complicated -
even a 10-year-old can do it quickly. No
special tools are needed . Your kit
J comes complete with an unbreakable,
lifetime guaranteed Precision Le~nnd
11 "x17" illustrated EASY assembl in-
structions. •
You can use the Giant Lens Projector
with any T.V. set, 10 " to 25 ". It will
enlarge pictures in either black and
white or color. And ther.e's nothing to
wear out, no tubes to buy, no bulbs to
burn out, no servicing necessary.
..
EXTRA .. INCOME ,
If you could use some extra money,
here's an easy way to make some -in
your spare time. Simply assemble and
sell these Gi ant LenSt Projectors to
your friends,· nelghbot s, relatives, at
swap meets, etc. Sell· them for $60.00
eact_i (remember, we're tafking about a
projector that will do what systems
costing THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS do)
and you'll make $40.00 on each easy
sale! · ~
30·DAY NO RISK
. ~e~~!s!~~~~ risk to yoQ
We're so sure you'-11 like the tremen-
dous pictures you'll get from the ~iant
Lens that we're ma1<ing you this offer: _t
Try it. Put it to use in your own home.
Show it off to your friends. tf you're not
satisfied;-we'll refund yo~r money IN
FULL.
r ---------------~------~---, · ... , A 44 I Giant Lena Company , ~O~~ -·I I 8033 Sunset Boulevard, Suite 12 .a._\\. I~ · · . . I
LOI Angeles, CA 90048 ...,. ' ..
I Yes, I want .to enjoy GIANT PICTURES from my own T.V. setl I'm ordering I I with the full under~tandlng that my satisfaction Is guarantf;ted rbr I get my I -I money back In full. I
I o Enclosed Is $29.95. Send me D Or send me TWO kite postpaid for I
POSTPAID complete Giant Lena for only $49. (A savings of over • I Projector Kit. s10:90) I
I NAME I
. cessorles. It can be removed In
seconds for regular size viewing. AttdJt
Is f\BSOLUTEL Y SAFE! ·I I ADDRESS-----------------....,......---"-------Yet, simple as the Giant Lens Is, It pro-
jects 'up to 5x6-foot pictures (7-foot
diagonal) onto a wall or screen, even In
the smallest room or apartment. It
~---'=--
• ,;' I I I CITY STAT -ZIP • I
L e OIANT LENS CO. 1913 9at1tprnla rHldente •dd 8Y, 'It Saltt Tax .'I ----------------------·----. ___ _.,,.. -· ____ ,_
.. '
:.:
•
..
I ----
~lllJJ Piii-= •
MOJUU.Y-J • ..22,...1983
-._...---......"--·---·
Ilona'Slupianek (left), Alberto Juantorena and Dave ·McKenzie (ri~ht) have a big day at Sunday~s T_.A--C. track meet.
Jj.S~ still trying tQ narrow gap With-East Gernians
~~~~EN • Larry Myricks winning in 20.59 and teammate
LOSANGELES-Forthe secondstraightyear, Calvin Smith taking aecond in 20.76. And American
the U.S. men's track team has defeated the German high jumpers Dwight Stones and Leo Williama
Democratic Republic (F..ast Germany) in a dual meet, finished 1-2 as both cleared 7-6. ,
'but u in 1982, the F..,.at Germans rode some strong · Likewiae, U.S . long jumpers Jaaon Grimes
performances by their women athletes to score a (26-4 \.i) and Ralph Spry (2~-11 ~) were 1-2.
But the atara of Sunday's competion were the dropped the two Ameri~ back to third and fourth.
F.ast German women. Two-time Olympic champion "Everything wu going fine, the pace was
Baerbel Wockel won the 200 meters with a 22.52 excellent and we were ready' for the final kick at 300
clocking; Antje Schroeder ran a personal best in . meters," said Webb. "I wu ao aurpNed that it took
winning the 800 in 1:58.9~; and Kerstin Knabe led me a few aecond.a to realize exactly what had
another F.ast 9e~_l -2J\niabJrdth,.a 12 7~ in tlie--happened.'L -=-~ -=------=-----=--=--
oe~'1ftffiDes"WiDl ---iJettiNl Jahn finishing Meanwhile, East Germany's Ilona Slupianek eet 197-18J.YJ~ Sunday.._ ---· -= -· --"'finiahel'Sr==-' -·--"r-r--~ =-~ ·-====--=-~In atr.ille East Gemians iiSed ;;efl 1-2 finishes "I feel very .good about winning but I wish I
to take the team title in dual meet portion •of the could have run a little faster," admitted Myricks,
aecond (12.81). an American All-comers record in the ahot put with a
The most controversial event of the day was the heave of 71-6 3/4. It wu the beat-ever throw in the
women's 3,000-meter race. Americana Brenda Webb United States. Times/T .A.C. International Summer. Games at the whose best time iB 20.03. "Moving into the sprints has
C.oliaeum. And when it was an over, U.S . hammer been good for me this year. I think I can run under 20
thrower Dave McKenzie admitted the Americans seconds this summer."
have some work ahead of them before the 1984 Such optimism is shared my many of the U.S.
Olympic Games on th~ very same trac.k. athletes after some of the performances Sunday' in
"It will take time and a lot of serious interest on the c;oncl~on of the two-day meet. For instance,
beha1I of the United States to narrow the gap with McKenzie, despite finilhing third in the hammer, eet
th~Easfi;Gennana and Soviets," admitted McKenzie; an American recont with his 244-11 heave. The
~ho finished third behind two East Gennans in the hammer winner, East Gennany'a Roll Haber,
.econd event of the day. recorded a 259-3 throw to Rt the. GDR record,
Actually, the U.S. showed plenty of interest in breaking the old mark of 259-0 set last year in the
eev-:ral events, including the 200-meter race with same meet by Delle~ Gentenberg.
Dodgers' lead.now 21h games
~JJight, Thon deliver as Astros finally def eat L.A., 9-7
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hous-
ton's Ray Knight was in the.race
for the National League ~tting
championship a good part of the
1982 9eUQn, but he fell off the
final weeks of the aeason and
linished 12th, at .294.
.. 1 was thinking I had to get
three hits every game, and I was
worrying about what other guys
were doing,'' . recalled Knight,
who's giving it another good run
in 1983.. .
''nm year," said Knight, who
ciollect.ed three hits Sunday when
the Astroe outlasted Loa Angeles,
9-7, "rm tak:iilg lt Qlle at-bat at a · tm.f.· ... ~t'• all" .
. · Qaht'p 3-lor-3 1ified his bat-
ting average to .333, second in the
NL to St. Louis's George Hen-
lbick, who iB hitting .342.
'.'Ray reminds me a lot of Rusty
Staub, when he was going for the
batting title in '67," said Houston
Mamaer . Bob Lillia. "Both are
gOod hitte~, they rtMake COl\tacl,
and they have good 6atting eyes."
Knight got the Aatroe started
on their first win all aeuon
against the Dodgers. (they had
dropped the flrat aeven meetinp)
with' a two-run single ln the flnt
inning. He singled again jn the
third inning and in the seventh.
Dickie Thon unloaded the decis-
ive blow, a three-fWl homer in
the sixth inning, his elghth of the
"aeaaon, expanding the Aatroe'
lead from 5-3 to 8-3. The~
came beck with two runs in the
sixth on Rick Monday's fourth
home run, a run in the eighth on
Mike Manh.all'a sixth.homer, and
an unearned run in the ninth.
"I don't try to hit home runs,''
said Thon, who has four in the
last nine games after hitting only
three his fint four years ln the
majors. "I wu looking for a pitch
I could drive, and I got lt."
The 1088 left the Dodgers with
only a 2\12-game lead ln the NL
West after leading by 5 \.i one
week earlier.
"lt'.a important we beat these
guys," Thon said. "We've got to
'beat them' all the time, at least
three of four every time we play
them, if we're going to cat.ch up.
The Dodgers have good hitters,
and I knew they'd be tough, even
when we got ahead. They keep
coming-back." .
It was Thon'a e.rror that con -
tributed to the Dodgers' run in
the~~
Mike Scott, 4-3, earned the win,
but Dave Smith pitched the final
3 2-3 inni.np to praerve it with
his leCOnd save: Alejandro Pena,
6-3, the first of five Los Angeles
pitchers, took the la..
"We're starting to score aome
runs,'' Loa Angeles Man.ager Tom
Luorda said, alluding to the
Dodaera' prolonged hlttine
slump. "Bot we got seven runs
today. and didn't win. That's
tough to take." .
and Maggie Keyes were running 1-2 with about 300 Speakingofthe shotput,afewhourslater, in the
meten remaining when things quickly soured. International Games portion of the meet, fonner
F.ut Germany's Gabriele Meinel then pushed Cost.a Mesa High standout Bonnie Das8e took second
Webb. The American stumbled, nearly falling to the place with a 52-11 ~ effort.
track ahd was quickly out of contention. Eventually. Another area product, Brian Theriot of Newport
Meinel and teammate Ulrike~ paaeed Keyes Harbor High and UCLA, finished fourth in the 1,500
.r with Bruna winning the race tn 8:57.46. with a 3:41.63 clocking.
A Short time later, officials d.t.qualified Meinel The Americana suffered a few unexpected
and gave aecond place t.O Keyes and third to Webb. setbacks in the F.ut Germany meet, auch as a
But that wa&n't the end of the issue. A short time disappointing fourth-place finish by d.i.acua thrower
later, the Jury of Appeals reinstated Meinel and Ben Plucknett, the national record holder.
., ...........
Thibodeau's
goal gives
West 2-1 win
When Ocean View High soccer
coach Paul Kollar needed a goal
duri:ig the 1983 soccer seaaoJ'\, he
usually got otie from Reid .
Thibodeau.
So it came as no aurpriae th.at it
was Thibodeau who connected
for the West's winning goal Sun-
day in a 2-1 double-overtime vie·
tory over the South in the cham-
pionship game of the Orange
C.ounty prep aoccer tournament at
Chapman C.ollege.
Thibodeau had already scored
the West's first goal to CQ\U\ter a
penalty shot goal by the South's
Pat O'Brien of Garden Grove
High. Iron ically, lt was
Thibodeau who tripped O'Brien
in the penalty • area midway
through the eecond half.
Thibodeau's tint goal came
early in the .econd half. His bad
angle shot eluded South goal-
keeper Jerry, Babic of Marina.
Angels' Luis Sanchez tries to survive Sun-
In the girla' All-Star pine, the
South defeated the North, 3-1.
Two goals by Ocean View's
Karen Batt sparked the South. day's rainout at Kansas City.
Another easy day for Martina
This' time, it takes 39 minutes in win over Kohde, 6-1, 6-2
WIMBLEDON, F.ngla.nd (AP)
• -C-ontlnuina her awmome de-
struction of the women's field at
Wimbledon, top-.eeded Maiuna
Navratilova en.wheel West Ger-many-_ Claudia Kohde 6-1, 6-2
today to advance lntO the quar-
terfinai. of the All-Enclarld Ten-
nil Championahipe.
. The" defendlnl champion ttop-
ped Kohde, the No. 16 eeed, ln a
rapki 39 minutes.
Earlier ln the·toumament.; she
e~ied South African Bner-
ly Mould ln 32 minutes, then
maMd '°'mlnutee to OUlt Mlma
Ja~ of Yupavie ln a
third-round bAttle.
Movlnc with • q~ and
.,..., Navratilova brolw Kohde
in the ~and llJdh -of the . f1nt. let, which took 15
~ aet ai the 19-year-old West Ger-Vennaak, who wu w.eded,
man won only 16 points ln the joins top-seeded Navratilova and
mat.ch. No. 11 Barlma Potter in the
""'-6 2 ~-women'• quartedinala. 1me -West ~rman never Tanne.r whoJmLto S~a
.knew wha~hit her. ~avratilova• BjomBcqlnthe 1979tinalatthe
ripped off the firlteiaht points of . All-EncJ.and IAwn Tennis and
the match take take a 2-0 lead. Croquet Club, clefeeted Robert
Then ahe held her own eerve for Yan't Hof 8-2, ~s. 8-3, wbl»
the lli!COOd time, th.it time at 30, Lewis, the 1975 Wimbledon jun-
and ahe wu quickly on her way tor boys champ6on, ellminaied
tdvictory. Nduka Odbor ol. Niaeria 8-1, 8..3,
Kohde finally wu able to break 6-3. '
•'--• .. h in the fourth---, hold-TOOAY"I ..... n
WU...... --~ MM'* ......... .... f"8 her own ~ at love. But 1toecoe T.-1u.1.1 "'· ...,.. v1111•1 tw Navratilova wu not to be denied. cu.s.t, '"'· w, .. ,1.,,.,. ~u.s.t "'· ,... Mt<:~ (AUltr ... ,, .... ,...... ~ ....,
She held her 1Mt two •rvice ~.s.la::~.a.Ji.~:t..'=
pmea at.love and broke Kohde at <~ ~~ -30 ln the sixth pme. ..,_,."'"" CU.S.I ... Lo.-..., IU.S.1.
1-1, t-41 ,_,.. ............ cu.a.1 •·a.... Me.nwhile, V~ Ra.ioe K.._..llldllWllt~h .. ,,t-tiv-...
-·-·-~~ ..... -WIM!a .... Tmmll' uid J«11i1 .... ....,... ..--,__.,, ....
Jandlr Chril Lewll fldVUICld to ClfW l.!~--,,:-A ...
Steve Sax 1tretchel but can't reach RBI single oil tbe _bat_o,-----
Hou1ton'1-Tony Gwynn Sunday.
mlnutm to eomplet9. nw Cllcho-
aloYaldml-bom left-Under_ thin -r 6tt*e Kohde'1 IM'Ytce In \be fifth
and aeverith pm. of the~
the~ whlll YYGDM T~~~.i:-.._ ._..._ y.....,..elg of, 8outb..A.fdaa uplM Aha)~~H, .. 4
12th ••d9d VtrpUA RuDd of "*-LtW-Men '-., ,..._ ~u.s.1-....., Romania ln the womell'I ........ ~ ... ·~~)·.._ ~..,. I wct•.,.•lll.
r
•
..... ··-. 1
Staub ties a record
with eighth pinch-hit
From AP dl1patcbe1
NEW YORK -Rusty Staub, the a
New York Mets' $35q,OOO-a-year util-
ity player, has an explanation for his
recent pinch-htting success.
"It comes from many years of labor and
discipline at the plate," said the 39-year-old Staub,
whose eighth conse<:utive pinch hit Sunday
aft.emopn tied the major league record set in 19~
. by Dave Philley of the Phillies.
Staub singled in the bot-
tom of the ninth inning off
reliever Ron Reed in the first
game of a doubleheader with
the Philadelphia Phillies.
r "When you get into some-
thing like this, hitting seems so
--~-t--~~~-_,...'""-t strnp~-sunl>, W 0 IS
13-for-30 as a pinch-hitter this
season, with one homer and 11
tTAue runs batted in. "¥ou f~l like
you're never going to make out~' h
.
--.. Quote of the day
"I didn't. know what I should do. She
tofd me, before lea'ving the court, we should
·curtsy toward the Royal Box. I told her I had
never curtsied before. She said, 'Just put
your right leg behind your left leg and bend
down."' -Betb Herr who was defeated by
Billie Jean Kmg at Wimbledon.
Mize gets first win
Larry Mize rolled in a 20-foot birdie
putt on the final hole Sunday, then had to
waii a few agonizing moments before his
first PGA Tour victory was secured in the
n
Danny Thomas-Memphis Clas&c. Mize had to wait
for vetel'all Funy Zoeller who had a 10-foot putt
which would have kept him a tie with the
second-year pro. As it ·turned out, Mi:ze avoided a
possible playoff. Mark O'Meara of Laguna Niguel
finished fifth in·the same tourney, earning $14,600 ..
. Japanese golfer Ayako Okamoto, who led the
Rochester International tournament from the st.art,
-: captured-the first prize Sunday by sinktnge1-ro=toot
birdie putt on the third playoff ho)e to 'defeat Katby
Whitworth and Donna White .
YOUNT LU.-1
Davis pitche8 up-a storm -·
Storm Davis of Baltimore, the :a
oungest .. player in the American
r::ague, hurled eight hitle. lnninp
Sunday, handcuffing the Det.toit
Tigers, 3-1. Davis, 21 , gave up a n.inth-1..r!fling
pinch-hit home run to the Tigers' Rlclt Leacb. It
was Leach's first homer of the seuon ... Elaewhere
in the American League Sunday, Robin Yout
doubled home the tie-breaking run in the eighth
inning and Cecil Cooper hit a pair of home runs to
~ Milwaukee to a 4-3 decision over Cleveland .
, .Gree Lalla1kt's towering, two-run homer keyed
a four-run third inning, and Scott Fletcher drove
in three runs to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 9-7
triumph over Minnesota in a game played in 100
degree heat ... .J>ave Collins drove in five runs,
while Mickey Klutts belted two home runs to lead
Toronto to a 19-7 drubbing of Seattle. The
Manners have now lost nine of tt\e last 10 and are
1-1 under new manager Del Crandall ... 0-lgbt
Evans launched a Boston comeback with a
three-run homer to power the Red Sox to a 12·-5
win OYfil:. the _New ork_Y ~ ~ ~ Daoay
Darwin ·prfched a three-hi it.er to lead Texas to a 4-1
victory over Oakland.
Eight straight for Pirates
Blll Madlock singled twice and a
scored two runs and Rick Rhoden fired
a six-hitter, leading the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 5-0 victory over St. Louis
Sunday in National League aetion. It was the
Pirates' eighth victory in a row, longest winning
streak in the majors this season ... In other games,
rookie Darryl Strawberry had three hits, includ-
ing an RBI triple and a solo h0111e run, to lead the
New York Mets to a 5-1 victory
over Philadelphia to earn a
split of their double-header.
Joe Lefebvre hit a three-run
homer in the opener to give the
Phillies.m 8-4 decision ... Jody
Davis drove in six runs with a
bases-loaded homer and a
two-run single to spark the
Chicago Cubs to a 9-5 victory
over Montreal. It was the
MADlOC:K second grand slam of Davis'
career ... Brett Butler rapped four hits, includifl€
a pair of triples, and Pbll Nlekro allowed just'three
hits to lead Atlanta to a 5-1 triumph over
Cincinnati. The Braves have won four straight
over the Reds ... Max Venable cracked a two-run
bloop double in tl).e fifth inning to give San
Francisco a 4-3 victory and a sweep of a
-dOuble-hea<fer with San Diego. In the opener,
Atlee Hammaker struck out 12 in blanking the
Padres 2-0.
,,_.,._
Greg Louganis of Mfssion Viejo shows winning form m 1.0-meter
diving victory Sunday.
... Loui8nis strikes gold ag8in
Mission Viejo diver repeats at National Sports Festival
COLORADO SPRINGS\ Colo. (AP) -Water
dominated the fifth day ot competition at the
National Sporta Festival.
Swimmer John Sauerland 1et a meet record,
diver Greg Lougania, out of UC Irvine and Mission
Viejo, claimed another gold medal, rain waahed out
most of the outdoor eventa, and in boxing and figure
skating the fana felt the judges were all wet.
Controveny became commonplace Sunday as
the fifth gathering of America's top amateur athlet.et
wnapped up ita fint weekend.
But the f~val al80 had It.a share of dramatiC,}
perforrnar¥:et. ·
Besides S.uerland and Louganis, Mark
C.OCkerell turned (n a nearly Oawlesa Cree-skating
routine to wtn the (IOld medal in flgutt' a.katlng, and
world champion Tyrell B41P, plagued by bad luck. in
pas\ fe9Uvalt, made It to the auper heavyweight.
boxin8 finala at 1-t. ·
-• Amona eventHoheclw.ct ~-w~belketball.
IWiJnrniQc, archery, tMm hand volleyball, roller
lkatina judo and, weather pennitUnc, buebtil and
aoftball. Scattiue4 showen were fe>recut for the area .,.m \Oday.
· Rain forced pottponement Sunday of bueballr
'
..........
men's and women's softtall and women's field
"'hockey. Men's and wome.n?tennia matches were
moved to indoor courta. Played despite the rain were
men's field hockey, archery and equestrian event.a.
Sauer land, of Cleveland, aet a meet reoord in the
50-met.er freestyle, turprisina American aprlnt
champion Rowdy Gainet. Sauerland was timed in
23.38 seconds, .06 BeCOnda fast.er than Bruce Foster
swam the distance ln 1982.
Galnet. who barely ml.tied the festival re.cord lJ\
winn1ng the 200 freett)'le Thu.nday n.llht. wu
jie(:ond ln the ~O in 24.06. Sauerland'a perfonnance
waa even more lmpretlive becawie it wu achieved at
an altitude of 7,~oo· Leet.
Lo~ania, the world champion on the 10-meter
platform, had little trouble winning the event at the
feaUval for the 1eCOnd year 1n a row and 1alnin8
another spot on the U.S. team to-the Pan American
Games. Lut Th~y nilht. Loupnia won the
3-meter-~;where M'I allo world champ.
The Milli°'} Viejo atar w11 only third after
Friday'• prelimlriarie. from the 10-meter iower at the
Air Force Academy Natatorium, but blew 'i>'. Bna
Kimball and Matt ScouSn with the help Of three
perfect lOt on hit aecona-of tilht divet ln the flnala.
--
_Baseba . ..::.::ll~=ay
1958'._ BWY=~
pe.tect game with two out ln the ninth innlJ\I when pinch-hitter F.d Fit.zGetal~,.
doubled. Pierce still came away with a
one-hit victory.
1973 -O.vid Clyde, at the time an
· 18-year-old phenom, pitched five -tnninp
wb.Ue.atrilc.ing out eight and allowJ.na one.hit
for the victory aa Texaa beat Minneeota
before 35,698 tlna -the ftancera' flrtt-ever
home aellout.
~ -:A.nt eiica '.s:fitp=
trials worry
Australians.
Today'• birthday: Texaa Coach Wayne
Terwilliger ia 58.
Michigan survives a Blitz
Quarterback Bobby Herbert Ell
threw five touchdown puees, two each 4 •
to Antboay Carter and Derek
Holloway, to lead the Michigan Pan-
thers to a 34-19 United States Football League
victory over the Chicago Blitz Sunday night. Both
teams are now deadlocked at 11-6 atop the Central
Division but the Panthers have won both
head-to-head confrontations. A crowd of 25,041
braved 99 degree heat, while the players suffered
temperatures on the artificial turf reportedly
skyrocketing to 134 degr~. But no one waa hotter
than Herbert, who completed 12 of 21 puaes for
247 yards. His five TD paaaes'aet a USFL reoord ..
. In-Philadelphiav-MIH Han• -ran fol t~
touchdowns and set up another with an option paaa
as the Philadelphia Stars built a 24-0 cushion and
hung on to defeat Birmingham 31-10 in Philadel-
phia. The Stai;s, playing their second night game of .
· the season; improved theil"oiecord to 15-2, best in
the league. They clinched a post-seaaon playoff bid
two weeks ago. Birmingham, al.ready eliminated
from the playoffs, fell to 8-9 on the season.
Shula mourns Gordon
Miami Dolphins Coach Don Sbala
recalling that Larry Gordon once played • "the best g~e I've ever seen a linebacker
play," 5!!9 _ Sunday that that the
seven-year NFL veteran's death was "a real
disappointment ... a tremendous shock." Gordon
died Saturday while jogging in the desert.in Laveen,
Ariz. An autopsy Sunday revealed Gordon was
suffering from a heart disease known as ideopathic
cardial myopathy ... Quarterback Ken Stabler picked
up on waivers last season from Houston, has signed a
contract with the New Orleans Saints ... Rowdy
Gaines and Steve LudqaJst, two of America's top
prospects for swimming medals at the 1984 Olympics,
said they were considering retirement as early as this
fall. Neither would cite a specific reason for thinking
about quitting so cloee to the Olympics .
NEWPORT,· R.I. (AP) -Two Australian yachta
have dominated the June trlala for the America'•
Cup, but thelrakJppersaay they need much atroncer
competition if they want to beat the Americana.
"The .firtt half of our oourtes have been very
t.lght (competition)," Sfid helmsman John S.vace on
Sunday aft.er ecoring the biggest UJ)llet of the rac.
over Auaale rival John Bertrand.
"The .eoond half of the counes have been very
eaay. That's where we would like to tee ..ne
improvement. The Americana have bad a tUIB1e aU
around the COW'le in their races." ·
"We've Fl to get the competition," conlhal!~
Bertrand, mast.er of the radical new 12-
Australia II. ..The boat that cornea out of
elimination series has got to be race-hardened."
Savage, sailing Challenge 12, ~away with a
10-2 record aft.er pinning a 51-aecond win on
Australia II in the morning.
The two yachta are among seven challensen
assembled from foreign nations that have begun
~liminations~~-tbe_p~t tb.t:... _
A.mencan defender in the cup finals in September.
Courageous, the 1974 and 1977 Cup winner,
finished the June trials with a 6-5 reQ)rd. Stablemate
Defender was 5-6. Liberty, skipper Dennis Conner's
choice to replace 198C>-eap-wtnner Freedom, waa 5-5.
Rock N Roll
rolls to win
Rock N Rpll, skippered by Sue Rogers of the
host club, was the overall winner in the spinnaker
class in Dana Pomt Yacht Club's Dana Belles Series ·
for women sailors. The four race series concluded
Sunday. '
Winner in the non-spinnaker class was Serena
with Hilary Sylvester at th~he . The fourth race was sail in conjunction with
the first race of the Orange unty Women's Ocean
Racing Series. Winner in race waa Bang Bang
Maxwell skippered by Ka y Adamaon, DPYC, in
the spinnaker class. Wilmer in the non-spinnaker
class was Altair, sailed by Karran Toffelmeir, DPYC.
Television, radio BCYC race lures
TV: Baseball-Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 6 p.rn.. ~ () I;:
cttanneM-(taped). ~---"-....;;.J-t<J~--.---IJ-oa s lo ay RADIO: Baseball-Texas at Angels, 7:25 p.m ..
KMPC (710). " Fifty boats in seven classes turned out Saturday
and Sunday for Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's
North America
title to Curtis
annual Stars and Stripes Regatta sailed over courses
inside the bay. Trophy winners:
SABOT A -1. Tim Cassel, Bahia Corinthian
YC; 2. Tom O'Neill, San Diego YC.
SABOT B -l. Willie ~ericks, Balboa YC.
SABOT C -I. Chris Miller, Balboa YC.
LI00-14A ...__ l. Jeb Marahall. Alamitot Bay YC; '
SAN DIEGO -Dave
Curtis of Marblehead,
Mass. continued his
domination over North
America's top J -24 sail-
ors b winning the 1983
Nort l\merican Cham-
pio Ip here with a
gin of 24 points over
his closest competitor.
Curtis also won the 1982
NHYCduo
• • v1ctor1ous
• 1n regatta
Four classes of sail-
boats turned out Sunday
for Balboa Yacht Club's
One-design Regatta sail-
ed in the ocean off New-
port Beach.
Winner in the
2. Paul Blank, South Shore YC: 3. Ron Lohman,
North American cham-Balboa YC.
pionship at Corpus LIDO 14B -1. Randall Risvild, BCYC; 2. Roy
Christi, Tex. Woolsey, Lido Isle YC; 3. Del Willi.ams, BYC; 4. Bob
This year's r~atta, Ucciferra, ·svc.
hosted by . San Diego LASER -1. Bill Symes. Windjammers YC; 2.
Yacht Club, consisted of Jay Stokes, BYC. ·
six races in moderate LUDERS 16 -1. Ben Hromadka, Cabrillo
weather conditions· off Be h YC 2 J ' H BCYC 3 Be Co Point Loma. The 42 con-So~th ~t·Y~ ost.et~r. ; · m nstan,
testants came from New __:::.::..:::.=.-=...::.=:.:-=-.:..:_------------
York, Puerto Rico, Ohio,
Michigan, Wyoming,
Lousiana, Texas, 'as well
as from up and down the
West Coast.
The fint four run-
ners-up were all Cali-
fornians. Mark Raat.ello
and Eric Kingaard from
Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club, Newport Beach,
were second with 48
points; third was Mike
Bartell from Long Beach
Yacht Club; John
Kostecki, San Franciaco,
was fourth.
Etchella-22 cl.aaa was .-----------1
C lose Encounters,
co-skippered by Dan
Thompson and Tim
Hogan, Newport Harbor
Yacht Club; second waa
Bushwacker, Don
Whe.lan, San Franci9co
Yacht Club, and third
was Nirvana,
co-skipi)ered by Rick
Evans and Andy Marcus,
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club.
Energy sailed by Glyn
Davi.a, Bahia Cor.inthian
Yacht Club, waa the
winner In the San-
tana-20 Ciaaa. Run-
ner-ue_ was Starburst.
Kelly Roeera, Capistrano
Bay Yacht Club.
'The Soling Claaa waa
won by St.eve Beck,
Balboe yacht Club: eec-
ond waa Guton Ortiz,
BYC, and thin.I WU Phil
Richardton, Voyacen
Yacht Club.
In the nu.tie a.. the
winner waa Bruce
Grcme, Miulon Bay
Yacht Club.
Masters title
goes to Gales
We have rates 30% under
rnmdud rates for d1111e1s
Q<>rween the age\ ol 30
and60
There's a good rea\on for
this Farmers knows that
1hc•Sfo• drivers rend to be
\afer and more carclul on
rhe highway.
You're rhe drivers who
have fewer accidents.
That's why Farmen create.'<.!
our l0/6o p.Kkage auto
policy If you qualify. you
could ~ve substanttally
on your premiums.
T•r""1s lnsuran('e Croup
Is worliing consi.lncly to•~
the costs of lnwr&nce
down, .ind the ilmOVl\I of
pmtec:tlon up. And this
l0/60 p.tckage auto policy·
is one w.ry we do it. Why not
ult mef
CARL SIPES
5142 Wata# &w .. ,
#105
Hwatbapn Beach
Calif. 926t9
846-7707 ••
SAN DIEGO -Pet.er
,Gales of Alamlt.oe Bay
Yacht Club waa the Gold Flicht wlMer ln the
MMterr-D1¥111oft or the
Naples S.bot 8enAor' Na-
tional Cbamplonablp
held Saturday and Sun-
day out of Coronlldo
Cayt Yacht Qub. '-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil•--
In the cool white "bottle.
--. Aak for It at your
favprtte store or restaurant.
Available th.rou8h
Straub Olltrlbudnl C!o., Inc.
(714) 88&-0'7l8
{714) 788-3475
(714) 637-7333
• •
~ . ' .. "
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
Amtrtun Lffeu• ' · W L .. ct. GB
WIST DIVISION 39 31 .SS7 3' 32 .SU t ~~ 523 ~1/) tl6 34 .S14 3
33 39 .•st 1
JO .W . .OS 11
21 .. ·* ".,..
a.111rnor• -Toronto ·
Oetroll
New York
lloslon
MllwaukH
Cleveland
aAST DIVISIOtC '° JO '° JO 39 31
l6 33 lS JS
•33 35
31 39
suncs.r1~
.m
.571
.SS7 .521
.500 .... s .451
1
l '-'2 s
6 tll'J
Allellt a t Kan1a:1 City, Pl>d-. raJn
Bo11on 12. New York 5 Bel!lmon 3, DelrOll t, Chlcaoo 9. MlnnHOll 7
MltwaukM •· Clevalllnd ~ Toronto 19, Seallte 1 T .. u •. Oakland 1. I lnnlno1, rain TMaV'I Gamet
T11<11 (Honavcull 10-3) er Aft9lh
CKlson 6·ll, (n) Bolton (Oieda •·3) al Cleveland
l~arker S·7J, (n) • · •· Belllmore (McGregor I·•) at New
Yorlt (Rawlev 7·4). <nl
OetrOll (llerenouer l · 11 at Mii·
waukH (Hau 5·2). (n)
K1n1n Cltv (Gura 6·1) 11 Olkllnd
<Callat\an 0· 1). lnl
Clllcaoo (Koo1man 6-11 11 Saallle (Clark 3· 1), (n)
NetloMI LN.W
WHT DMSION
W Lm .. ct. GB
'5 26 634 Ded9W'I •
Atlanta 43 29 .5'7 21h
San Fr1ncl1<0
S.1101"0
Hou11on Clnclnnall
• 3' 34 .S35 7'h
l6 36 .500 9'h
36 37 .493 10
JO 43 .•11 16
EAST DIVISIOtC
MonlrHI 37 31
St. Loul1 ' 34 JS
Pllllad41!Dhla 3'1 34.
Pl1111>uro11 31 36
ChlttOll .,, 12 JI NewYOr~ ,..-43"'
S..ndav'• Scorn
HO<.lllon t. ~ 1
Plll11delolll1 a. New Yor" 4 New York S. Pllllaclelollla 1
c111c100 9, MorHre11 s
A111n1a 5. Clnclnnall 1
Pill\lluroll 5. SI L0<.111 0
3'h
4
5"'> • 10'h•
San Fr1ncl1co 2·4, San OleOO 0·3
TMaY'I Gamel Clllcaoo (Ralnev 7·61 11 Montreal
(Laa S·J ). (11)
Pl1111>uroll <Candelaria 6·61 11 SI
L0<.11• (Alldular >-10). <nl Allan•• (Perez 1·2) al Clncin111ll (Solo 9·5>. lnl _
()llty Dltnel ICr..dUled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
A'trot 9, Dodetn 7
HOUSTON LOS ANGLS
Moreno Cl Pulllri
Scoll rt
Thon H
Gerner lb Cruz K
Knkll'll 11>
wav1no tt>
Ooran 21>
Ml1erock c
MScoll P osmllno
abrhbl etlrllbl
S 1 1 0 SS.x 20 S 1 2 0 3 0 0 0 Roeniek Cl 3 I 1 0
1 1 o O Baker If 3 1 o I
4 3 2 3 Guerrer 30 S 2 2 1
50 00 Mondavr1 2 112 4 2 t 1 Mars/\I lb 4 1 1 1
) 0 3 2 YHoer c 3 0 t 1
t 1 0 0 Ancle\n U 4 0 0 0
4 0 2 \. APena p 1 0 0 0
• t t 2 zlchrv P o o o o 2 O 0 0 Brock ol'I 1 0 0 0
O 0 0 0 Backwlh o 0 0 0 O
TllOml Ph 1 0 0 0 Wr'9/ll P 0 0 0 0 LndSIY Oil 1 0 0 0
Nladnfr p 0 0 0 0
Tel9h 34 9 10 f T.W. U 1 t 4 Sc9r'e ..., .........
Hwttell l02 ta 1•-t
Ln"""9ift llOO 101 011-1
Game·Wlnnlno RBI -Knlol'll (3).
E-Ml11roc1t. Moreno. SS.x. Thon. OP-M0<.11lon 2 LOll-+i0<.11lon 7, LOI A~oeln 6 2B-Mlzerock. HR-Tl'lon (I ),
Mondav (4). MarsllaM (6). SB-Moreno 2
<2•>. Tl'lon 2 <11). Aoenlck• (3), Baker (3), Walling (1). S-MSColl, OSmllh. SF-
B•k•r
H._,ltwl
MScollW.4·)
11" H 1ta1t H SO
s t-3 s s 3 5 ,
OSmlll'I S,2 ) 2·3 3 0
LnA ....... APena L,6·)
2 t-3 s s 2 1
Z.C/\rv 1 2·3 1 o o 1 1
8ackwltl'I 2 2 3 3 2 0
Wrlglll 2 2 1 1 0 I
Nladnfuar 1 0 0 0 0 0
T-3'GI A-4.401
P:llUT GAME
......... Mets.
PhlladelOl'lla 100 IM2 loe>-t 12 New York 000 .00 ooo-.t I 0
Oennv. McGraw (41, Reed (SI,
HOllalld (t ) 111<1 0 111, Seaver, Orosco
161. Swan (I), HOiman (t) and Orlll. W-McGrew, 1·0. L~ever, 5·7.
HR-PllMtcMIPllla , Lilfe0vr1 (2), 0111 (61 New York, BrOC>ks (S).
saCOND GAME
Miatl s ........ 1
Pl'lllaclelPhlt 100 000 Ol»-1 l 0
New York 000 120 20lt-S t o
Fi rmer, McGraw (5), Altemlr-
(t) end Vlroll, Torrez encl HodOn. w-Torrez. S·t. L-f'ermer, 0-5
HR1.-New Yor\, Strawt>errv <SI.
Foster 1131.
.,..,,.. S, ltads I
A11an11 no 010 Ol»-i 13 2 Cincinnati 000 000 100-1 3 o
Nllltro end Berllldlct; P111ore,
F'ower (7), Haves (9) al\lf 811ardllto.
~i.ro, 3·4. L-Paarore, 2·7.
-,,-
• ••
Orange Coat D~ILY PILOT/Monday, June 27, 1983 Cl
---•.. llil .. liilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;~~:·;;;;.~·~·~:t....~;-;;;;;;;;;;-;-;-;-;-;-~;-;-;-;-;-;-;-~.-·;-;;~--~~~~~~----~---_,.--~----------~~~~----
•
C\1111 9, ••-S C lllcaoo 0.0 0.0 O 11>-f 11 1 Montreal 012 000 101-5 14 1 "1ole1, Lefler11 (I), Prolv (f) and
01vl1; LarCh, Welsh (2), 8.Smlln (Sl,
SC1111zeder (I) 111<1 Remos_ W-Notes. 1·3 L-i.ereh. t·l. Hlt-<llkego, Oavls (12).
l'tt1t111 S, Car.W. 0
Plt11bur1111 000 311 Ol»-5 I 1
SI. LO<.lls 000 000 ~ • 0 Rhoden and F'ena, .Allen, Lahti (6). Merlin (9) and Porter. W-RllOden. 5·7.
i_-Allan. 3·t. --·~BT._. Gie.2.~-
S.n Oll90 OOI 000 ~ 4 3
S.11 Francisco 000 000 20x-2 2' 1 Lollar. Hawkins (I ) and Gwo1d1;
Hammaker and RaOb. W-Hammeker,
9·3. L-Loller, J·S. SECOND GANIS 0-... 4. ...... .,
San Olaoo 001 010 100-l 11 2 San Francisco OtO 120 OOx_. I 0 Show, Oer..eon (6). Mbtt'lfl (I) and
ICennadv; Laskev. l.av141e (7) llld
Brenlv. w~ev. 1·7. L-Show, l·S.
Amertcan LH..,. Orllles I, Tleln 1
O.irolt ooo ooo 001-1 2 o
Belllmore 100 020 OOx-3 t 0
Morr!\ alld Perrish; G.Oavl1.
'T ~rllnel (9) 1"41 D«'nPMV. W-
G.Oavls, S·l-L-Morrls, 1·6.
HA1-0e1rolt, Leach tll. laltlmore,
Bumbrv (3), Rl'*"1 (12).
erewen4,llldlilnll
Clevel..,,O 000 ocn OtO-l 7· 1
Mllwauk• 201 000 Olx_. 1 t
BIVteven alld 8endo; Caldweft,
Tellmenn (7), Ladd (9) alld Yo\I. w-Tlllmann, S-2. L-81v1even, 5·7.
HRs-<levllllld. Thornton · (10),
Tl'IOmtl C71. MllwaukM , C-2 ( 14).
ltM S.• 12, Yw-S
New York 210 000 :ZOO-S 13 2 llo1ton 000 4IO IMx-12 16 1 Keouoll. Fr11Jar W . Slllrlev (S),
M4Jrrav (I ) elld Cerone, WYM!lar !II;
Hursl. Slanlev (7) and Gedman, New·
man (5) W-t1ura1. S-7. L-Keouol'I,
l ·•. HR1-H..., York, Bavior (t ). llos·
ton, Evens ( 12) .
W""9 S.• 9, TWIM 4 Ml11neso1e JOI 000 030-7 10 1
Cllk•llO 014 120 10x-t 14 0
Oeltler1. Lewi• (31, Lvsandlr !.,,
Wllllef\Oull (7), Davi\ ti) alld Smllll; Dolson, Tldrow (1), Barolal (9) elld
Hill, Fisk: (6). W-Oolson, 7·S. .L.~lfS, 0-S. Hb~• 8 u1b 161. Br!MllqkY'Cttl. ~LUl
(10), FlelCl'llr (1).
...,. An 1t. MarlMn 1 • Toronto 126 032 140-19 21 O
Seallle 000 030 l12-7 lS 1
Acker. Jacltl.on C7I, Moroan (t) alld
Wl'llll; B Stoddard, R.Tl'lomas (3), Sien· Ion (J). M.Calllllo (61, Ceudllt (I) and
Mercado. W-Aclcer, 7·0. L-8.Sloddard, 4· 10. HA1-Toron10,
w/\111 m . Kk.l•rs 2 m .'Mu111n11r.1 <3>.
._. 4, A'I 1
Oakland 100 000 00-1 3 2
Texas 201 1'00 Ox-4 I 0
McCallv, Buromeler f') •"41 KHrMV. Oerwln elld Sundberg. w-Oarwln, 6·6, L-McCa•tv. l·l
HR-TIU\, Ball (I).
Miii« LH.W IHden
American LMtllM
BATTING 4 (170 at bats): Ca,_,
Anellt. .•13; 801101. aos1on, .lst, McRH, Kansas Cltv, .343; Griffey, New
Yorlt, .338; Thornton, Cleveland, .l27. AUN~ RIPken, Balllmor•. 49;
Cu llno, MIMISOlt. •: Younl, Mlt·
waukM, •: E.Murrev. llaltlmor•. '7; Ward, Minnesota, 47.
RBI: Klllle, Cl'llcaoo. 51; Werd,
MlMllOll , SO; c-. MJlweukM, •;
D9ClllCft, Aft9*, 4'; lta. eo.ron. 45.
HITS: Booot, Boston, '2; C-,
AftMb. '2; Whll1ker, Oa!roll, t l; Cattlno, MlnnHOta, '9; Werd, Minni·
IOla, •• DOUBLES: Mcbe, K-• Cllv. 2'; Booos, lloslon, n ; Hrllll<, MIMesOta,
21; P1rrl11'1, Detroit. 20; .... T1•11. lt,
S.Henderson, SHl11e, 19. Tlt1PLE$: C.Moor•. MltwaulcM, S;
G.Wllson, Delrolt, S; Griffin, Toronto, S;
Herndon, O.lrOll, 5, K.Gloson, Oa!rOlt,
S; Wlnfllld, New York, S.
HOME RUNS. Kime, Clllcaoo, 17;
Armas, Botton, 16. Alce. Boston, 16, DICJllcM, Anellt. 15; C.Jollnson, Tor· onto, 1•: c-. MllwaukM, 14; Wero,
MlnnHOla, 14. . STOLEN BASES: J.Crut, Ollceoo.
34; w1t1on, 1C1nsa1 Cltv, 34,
R.Hendenon, Olklancl, 32; It.Law, Clll·
CH O, 29; S.mPle, THI, 2S. PITCHING (6 declllontl: FlanaOan,
e.111more, 4·0. 2.72; KIMll. Aft9*. 6-1, l.2l; Koosman, Clllcatlo, 6· 1, 4.05;
R.L.Jackson, Toronto, Sulclltte,
Clevllend. t ·2, 3.12. $TltlKEOUTS: SlllO, Toronto, 101, Blvleven, Clevllal\lf, '3; Morrl1, 0.·
lrolt, •; HoY1. Cllkaoo, 751 Goll,
Toronto. 1l.
SAVES: Oulsent>errv, Kansas Cttv.
11; $1antev, lloston, 16; CaudlN, SHllll.
14; l.-1. Delroll. 11; R.Oavls, Minna· sore, 10; T .Martinet, 8alllmora, 10.
Netlenel LMtllM
.... TTING (170 ., INlll): Hendrick. .)I.LOUii, .342; K1110hl, Houlton •. 333;
MadlOclt. Pl11Mlur9", .327; /WJrOfrl. A11en11, .316; Oawson, Monlr'MI, .m. RUNS: MurPftY, Allant1, 65; Garwv,
San Diego, SS; ltalnet, MonlrNI, 54;
Evans, Sen Fr1nclsco1 521 Oewaon,
MonlrH I, 4S.
RBI· Oewson, MonlrHI, 5'; Muronv.
Allenla, ,,.; Hendrlclo, $I.LOUii , 52;
Ev1n1, Sin Franclaco, 41; G•rner,
Hou11on. 44; Schmid!, PlllladllPhle, ...
HITS: Thon, HO<.ISlon, 90; 01waon,
MonlrH I, 17; Mufllllv. Alllnll, IS; Gar....,., Sen 0 119Q, .. ; ()11,,.r, Mon·
trMl,Q. ,
DOUBLES: Garvey, San Dteto, 19;
Buckner. Clllcaoo. II; Dawson, Mon-
1r111. 11; J.Rav, Plllsbureh, 11; Knltlll,
Hou••on. lt; Oliver, Monl....,, 11. ,
'
J
SCOREBOARD
TRIP~ES: Mot-. ~ton. t, 8vl·
ter, Ati.nte, 6; Dawson, Mont....,, 4; Ralnat, MontrMI, S; W111tlnolon, Allen·
''· s. HOME RUNS: EY•ns, San Fren·
els.co, 19; MurPtov, Atlenla, 19; 9-· ~. ~. lSJ Oewson, MonlrHl,
1•; Schmidt, PllllaOe!Phla, 14. STOLEN IASE$: Relnet, MontrHI, l3; LIMaller, '911 FrancllCO, 27;
Wiiton, New York, 24; Mor-. Hout· ron. 24; Ls. .. ~. n.
Miil• Lffc,11 !U.S.I vi.. SaNtv Mever L.HA
(U.$.1. (et lttcMlter, N.Y.)
8111 Sc11110n (U.S.) YI. JoM McEnroe •2 (U.$.1 Av•k• Ollamoro,.ll0,000 W-Oonna Wlllle, 116..IOO
Mertine Navralllova <V.l.l YI. K•lhY Whllworl/\, 116,IOO
Claudia KOIWle <Wnl ~many) JP Jennli.t "Mundel ( Africa) ••· Vkkl Fergon, 110,000 Hana MendlllkOYI (CllCl'IOllOvakl•I. .. Vlrolnla Rullc~ <Romania) vsa. JoAnneCarnar, S7,500
Yvonne Vermaak. ~11'1 Afrka). Jene 81aloCll, 17,SOO
LIM 8ondlf (U.S.) vs. 8erbare 1IS Poller (U.i ,). • kllV King, W,400
6'·71-67·76 71·71·64·74
71-70-72•6'
72·70-13·69
10-n -10-12
Leverlty, ea11ama1, 21.17. •. Mtl'lonv
Sharoa, Cenadl, 21.44. S, I JMv Hlckl,
Ulllled Stern; 2Ut.
Mln'I 3000 Sl~se -1 • .Jafl •'fiaH, United States, l:G0.00. 2,
Shlolvulll Alkvo. JIH/I, t:uM. l. lven
Huff, Unlled Sleles, l:JS.O.. 4, llanctv
Jackson, United Stern, l:JS.'2. s. Oavld Barnav, Vllltld $t11t.n . l;,f0.43,
PITCHING (4 declllon1I: Falcone, Allanla, 6·1, 2.42; Montefusco, San
Oleoo. 6·1. S.13; Rv•n, Houslon, S·l, t.O.; P.l"Wrw; A1111ntr,· ,.2. u1:
......._DrfJ 1, 1•JUt
Vlr11lnl1 Wedi (Brlllanl vs Eva * fllefl (Well Germenvl. __ s.nor .. Hevnle. M.eGO 10-.7l·7..-----
Cll111!8 IHsell (Canadll vs. Alldr•• CalllV Morse, M,IOO 6t·n ·7S:Z'!---....--~u.s.. ---t~1':nr10
Wllldv Turnbutt (Auslrella) n . little 11a111 Oanlal, M,IOO ST1tlKEOUTS: Cerllon, PlllladltPhla,
'117; Soto, Clnclnnall, 107; McWIMlam1, Plllsbureh, 94; hrenvl. Clnclnnall, IS;
R-ra. MOnlrMI, 12.
J11n Klno (U.S.> cis n -71·71·72 t<alllv Rinaldi (U.S.) v1. Kalhv Jor· Jenet Anderton, M,IOO 74·71-67·7•
71·71·7o-74 den IV""'l. L-a Cole, M.IOO :tA'(ES: ltNroon, MonlrNI. 12;
La.,..., San Francisco, 11; a.~1an.
Air.nit, t ; Lll-Sfnlltl, C~I 4 ere
lied wllll I:
HllYWMd re111
IUNDAY'I ltHULTS t4tl'I .. 41 •• y ......... ,,_..)
PaST ltAC&. 6 furloftes. •1c:1 U1 (Plncav> 4.10 J.00 UO
Rettlna """ (MeH) 5.40 4.60 Indus $tar (Delallou6MYI) S.00
AIM> rec:ed: Lulol Tobin, Lord ol A~. Barllla, Tom's Plc:ll, Port Derwin, Tri
Chimes, Storvbooll Prince. Oauohln Ou
Nord. TallV HOoe.
Time: 1:t0 1/S.
Mlmtltlb Open ,,.
Urry MIH. 1n,ooo Z7S
Sammv ltachels, 12' ... 7 Fuu v Zoeller, 12','67 Cl'llP Beel<, 12'.167
211 Merit O'Mllra , 114,600
JOfln Mll'laflev. llUOO John FOU9111, 114,600
271 Merit McCumlllr, 111.600
Tim Simoson, 111,.600
Mike SuHlven, 111,600
279
70·6S·6t· 70
6'·•9·•f·41 6'·61·'7·72 6S-.. ·7H1
71·64·71·6' 71-67·7~69 6'·61·7~71
6'·71-71·6'
70·6t·41"71
70·6'·67·73
Jim Oent, lt.200 41·69·72·70 11COND ltACI. 1 l /16 mlles. Jim Simons, 19,200 41·69·72·70
.='!:>(=::!al l0.00 ~= ~:: Fred Couoles. lt.2:7·{0·71-71
Limo JOlln (Fuentn l 4.60 Oouo Tewell. 17,400 6'·71-70·70
Alto rac.d: AU lnclu1lve, """ Vic· Torn Purller, '1,.00 67·70-6'·75 torv. o.oreea1111. Merkevl Line, •1
HOltnll\• HlllL Oavld Edwards, 16,400 72·70·6'·70
Time: 1:56 2/S. Ed Flori. 16,.00 6'·73·7o-70 n DAILY DOU9LE (11·41 oak! Larry Niison. 16.40041111111111111 64·71·72·72
.,
,.._Pull. 13.520 -MlndV Moore, 12.ftS Lauri P91erson, 12,ftS
Nancv LOMl, 12,ft5 Ketl'lrYn Youno. t2.ft5 ..
HOlll1 $1acv, 12, 190
Sharon 8errtll, 12, lJO
Kalnv Merlln.12.190 Allee Miiier, 12,190
Peoov Conlev. 12, 190 OeOble Austin, 12, 190
2'0
Pam GlelHn, 11.760
Judy Elll1, 11,UO
Salldr• Souzlcll. 11,760
Vkk.I Tabor, 11,760
2'1
Rose Jones, 11,4'0
Mvra Van Hoose, 11.4'0
Donna Caoonl, 11,4'0
13-67·n ·10
77·13·61·70 72-71·61·77
n ·1S·10-11 71·7•·71·72
71·73·13·72
76·71·7o-72 10-n-13-14 ff· 7 s-7 5-70 1s-12-12-10
71•71·76·71
76·72·70-72
71·72·74·7J 1s-n·6t-13 12-n -10-1s
69·74·7•·74
72·74·71·7•
75-14·71·71
........... meet
(MLlll ..._..I
Women'• Shot Put -1, Regina Cevanauoh, U11lled s111n, W· 1'1•. 2. m• m
THiaD UCI. I 1116 mires. ~j,~~ls!'~s 71·72·71·61 Bonnie 01111. United Starn, S2·11'h. 3,
Norbel (Ol!vsl UO 3.00 UO .Jafl Sandin, M.MI
Pleza Prlnee (Pdrtal 4.00 U O 0on Poolev. 14,141
Clllvav IC11l1nlda) J.20 .. ,,.,. Jaeckll, M,M
71·6'·73·70 Ramona Paoet, United Stein , 51·914. 4. 41·71·72·71 QIJlnM ... , .. .,., United Slates, Sl·t lH.
71·6'-.,·73 s. Plftv f'o#Kk, United s1a1n.
W•.,..._»,LM~21
(ka"t lloY Qlllnan)
L .. ~ .. 7 J .. t l-21. .-........... 17147-•
LA-iMrne11 1 run !Abllotl kklll
LA-Ram, .. v 1 run (Ablloll kldtl
Wu-Tavtor 2 run IVllllllo kldo) W11-J11T111 5 run (lftlllllo kle:t.I
W1..-Harr11 l2 oau from McQullken (Vltlelto loldll
LA-eoddll 6 run (Ablloll kklll
Was-Jeme• ti run !Vllllllo l kkl
A-f,792
G-Stlltlttla
L.A Wll Flr1I dow111 lt 21
Ru1hll·v1ro1 l4·1., :U·lll
Puslno v•rdt 115 113
ltllurn n rd\ 7• 141 P11ses 13·2'·2 17·26-0 Seckl llV 3·30 4·32
Punts 6·43 6·42 Fum1>1et·to11 0-0 2·2
Penallles·v1ro1 7·51 1·44
Time 111 Possession 21;W J1:06 ..,... ..... kl
RU$HING--i.OI .Angeles, Harrlnolon
11· 105. Bernell 7·13, lloddle S· 17,
HasllP 2·12, Ram..., 2·1. Washlnolon,
Jamn U ·90. Tavlor ll·d , Blldsol
11·42.
F'ASSING-t.os """'"· Ramsev S· 14· 106·0, RM •· U·7'-0. Wallllnolon,
McOullken 17·26· lll· I.
RECEIVING-Los Anoelel, T-ns·
ell •·60. Allen >·M, Harrington 2·2',
Ha~lo 1-13. Moser l•t. Haines 1·4,
Durell• 1 ·•. W11l'llno1on. T avtor 5·•S. Jemes 4·14, H1rr11 J·5S, Roma·2·1S, Ctllsalv 1·30, Clalll 1-13. lleclwa 1·7.
MlSSEO FIELO GOA~
.Also racacl: Nelural $C>llndOI', m
Awesome Knleht, SMlan uci. _ J.Aa.Tnw!Ao...'3.o27 -Tllfta;.:l~'U$.--=-=------Jtm-""" .... SJ,ot7 IS UCACTA (4·5) oald UUO. Pat MCOowen, 13,027
'9·71·6'·74 49·10'h. 4, Sharen Hamlllon, United
s1a1n, 49-tv.. -H-6>-72-70__:::--~noeo-1.yiulc:ftl YDMlllJK--:--::-10=11-n-~ JiPiri. lJ:t0.n .""1'; Edueroo C111ro, 70·70·n -70 Mexico, 13:A0.56. 3, Frank Heine. E11t-
Buddv Gardner, 13,0V P:OUllTH RA<;.• •• FURLONGS. erua Lllll••· '3,027
.,.74.70-10 Germanv. 13:44.21. 4, Sieve Ortiz, U11ll·
6'·4'·73·72 Id ttarn. 14:00.6'. s. lenaelo MalHlo .
Alealdesa (VlnHI 3 . .0 2.10 2.IO Gllll>Y Giibert, '3,027
Amloa La G. (Slloal 1.MI S.00 Ron Slreck, 13.027
71·73·67·72 Mexico. 14:1U1.
Mlllnoo IE1tradal 6.20 Jedi•-· '3,017
69-7~70-74 Women's 1600 Alltv -1, VnOed
72·71·64·74 Stetn-SoullMm Calltornla Clllltalls Also r~: Frosty Tall. 8olCI alld J.C.SnNd, '3,o27 70-41·41·77 (Gavle Klllon. GerVlllM McCraw, Zlldl
Jol\MOft; Monica Tavtorl 3:31.•. 2.
United $tetes·LA Mercure11n 3:44.Sf.
Wllllno ... ,. Lan. 214
Time: l;OI 3/S. Jeff Sluman, 12, 160 6'·6t·76·71 JS aXACTA !S·6) oald 111.00, Garv McCord, l2.160 70·73·6t·72
.i.rrv Para. s2,t60 n ·'5·13-n l'lP'TH ltAC&. 1 1/11 mlln. Mika Ool\lld, U .160 6'·70-71·7• Alu were ISlloal 17.40 uo 1.20 T LeNna ... , t60CI 73 70r6t n Jus~ ArrlVld(Mun) 11.AO 1 AO om nv-• as' · ·
llCllando (Pffro11J 6,20 Lon Hinkle, sUIO 72·71·72·70 Also raced; Foroe. RICll Walson. Grev Norman. IUIO 7~7o-73·72 Georotos, Natomas Exchanea, Crl\tal Aav FtovO, ll.6IO 61·71·7•·72 oe Lune. Take 1111 Fl6ck. c.ro Pinto. H11su11on. l l.6IO 10-n -10-12
Mlleslk Fe•. Moon ROCll•I 11. Van« HM!nef, ll.4IO 71.71 .... ,.
·Time: 1;49 1/S Oevld P9ooles.1I,., 14·1~•1·1• IS •xACTA (4·S) oald 1429.00. ..
Auu Cocnran. 11,210 SUCTH ltAC9. 5 turlOllP. WalV .Armtlr-. tl.290 Otlolnal Cln (Metal 13.20 4.Ml U0 Bltl Murclllton. I U IO
o.n.<11 Jlmmv(Vlnta) 5.20 4.10 0rv1• "-dv. 11,:llO BOid RUOCIV !Shoal 7.00 311
Also raced: No Holda e.ned, Allen Miiier, 11,032 Lauolllno llov, /W. Prime Mlnlller, Tom Jenlllns, 11,032
Wllll Liberty, PoncHeltl. Vklor lt-lado. 11,032 Time: .5' 3/S. Gary Kocl'I, 11,(02 -s•v•NTH ltAC•. 6'h IUl'IOnOS. Mark '"'-11 ......
Son OI S-V~c:rnl UO YD J.20 Lon Nla!Mn, st.w Record C•tct> (Sl>oal 6.00 >.20 Jev Cudd. 1M4 Leon Leon (Vint) 2.10 ..
Also rlCICI: Klno'I Finder, ...,._. .Al O.lber-. ,,.
borNn, Mall A~rer, Oerenoo. Geocge Ardllt,s,.
Time: 1:15 415. Plln Hancoca, Stell
IS IXACTA (2·71 Hid 1101.00. Jeff Kern. I'°' • -11 ...CK sax !4·4··.-S-4-6·21 oald· ~ cowerd, -11,767.IO wllh t2 wlnnlno lk:lllls (llx 2'1
horses>. 12 Plclt Six consolation peld Tonv $1111."" '305.60 wllll 631 wlnnlno llekell lflv• Tl'IOmU Grav. 1161
horsatl. Gevln Llvenlon,""
llGHTH ltACE. 1 1/4 mllft. Oen Forsman, ... 292
l1lalld Wl'llrt 10.M 1.00 S.IO 5.IO O•v• E~oer. 1136 Polev (Mccrn) 7.60 5.20 Mlle• HOiiand, 1136
Prince 5"llllOUllO (CH I) S.00 Jon CllaflM. lll6 Alto raced: Exllk>Old, Erlns Isle, ~ OIYtln. la:N
71-71-74·70
70·71·73·72
•1-11-1s-n
71·72·69·74
7$-41·73·71 11-n -11-12 10-11-n -14
71·6t·72·75
72·7o-75·71
'9·72·74·73 6'·70-75·74
11-11-1•-n
70-7•·72·13 70-70·74·75
70-73·69·77
11-n -n -16
10-1J-n -1•
49-13-n -n 11·n -11-n Pwnn!lrove. m
Time: 1:5' 2/S. Oen Halldorson, 1112 74·6'·17·7J IS aXACTA 13·2) oalc:I 11SS.00. Lindy Ml .. r, SIU 74·70-73·7'
NINTH ltACE. 1 1/16 mllH. s.Mrl Teumement • Oere You (Mcc:rnl lJ.20 6.20 3.IO (at CaleW'Y ~)
Quenlum LNO (Pncvl 4.Ml J.00 214 .
Fabulous Oed <SMll UO Oon Januarv, 133.2~ 61·67·71·6' AIM> raced: C1fll1n Tevtor, Pa111•1 274
Trlumoh, Fenlel, o.llance. El Olvmoo. Miiier eartler, 11t .. so
Tlmf: 1:•2 2/5. -IS a XACTA (S-61 M id 1 ... 00. ltod Funtelh, 114, ISO
Allenclance -'3, lH. 112
w .......... .,.,.
POUllTH aOUND llMOLH Miii Jlmmv C~ (U.S..) vs. KeYln Curren !Soull'I Afr!Q).
Tim Mevo111 (U.S.1 v1. JOfln
Mc:Curdy (Autlr•ll•). NdUkO Odlzor (N~I n . Cl'lrlt
Lewi• (Austrella>. •
Brian GollfrllCI (U.$J n . Mil ""~
IU.S.I. Roscoe Tinner <U.$.) vi.. ltOl)art
Ven'I HOI (U.S.). Pel C111/1 <AuslreMll) n. tven Lllndl
I Cildlollovakla).
Blff c.-. I t0,575 ltooerto DeVknt, 110,575
811 JOflnston, t 10.575 m
811Collna,16.750 GaM Llttw , 16,150
214 Jack FllC:k, 15.400
Pate Tllomtoft, ISAOO -Freel Hewltlns, M,925 ..
Arnold Pelmlr, M, 15'
Cllanll SlflOl'd, M, 151
Guv WOii~. M. 151 .,
8oo Erlekson, 13.375 lob Goalllv. 13,375 ~ Norman, 13,J7S
(219
Jullul lorOI. 12,416 MldlMC Fetellldl, 12,474 Oout Ford, s2 ,476
Howle Joll-. S2.476
a 111v Maxwell, SJ.A?• ..,, w .. .,,.,. 12,474
64·6'·71·74
71·71·70-70
67·70·73·72
67·6t·7o-16
10-10-10-13 12-6'·n -11
U-73·73·13
'9-n -n -11
10o11-n -'1
Jo-71-75· 70
67·72-13·7• 11-n -1•-"
1•-ff-n -12 67·71·7'·71
13·13·n ·"
Men's 1600 Relav -1. Unlled Slatn·~lws end Strlon TC (Sam
CHMr, .Anthollv Caire, Wlllle .i-,
larnard Jedlaon) l :OU7. 2, Cenacla,
3:07.21. 3, v-zuela. J:Of.75. Mln'I Olscu1 -t, Lull Oatis, Cuba. n2·11, 2, Juen Merllnll. Cube, 21S·O.
J, Jowl Kutin. Cnc:t.os1ova1tla, 207·2.
•. P1U1 811MP, United Stain, , ... S. 5,
Rernlolu1 Macllura. C1acnostov1kla,
119·7. Min's IOO -• 1, A!Mrfo Juanror-. Cuba. 1:41.92. 2, Wllllem wuvke, Van· .,.,u91a, 1:4$.17. 3, Jollnnv Gra.,;. Unlled
Sletes, h is.fl. 4, Rav lrown, United
$tales, 1..._99. 5, Merl\ H1ndll1man,
llreel, hf7.l6.
Women's IOO -1. Joell• Clerk, Vnlled Slltn , 2:02.'7. 2, Cynthia Wern·
er, United $1atn . 2:02.• 3, Grace
Varbllk, Canadl, 2:0Ul. 4, ONnna
Gutowski. Unlled St1111, 2:04.7S. s. ltosa Monday, U11lled Steles, 2:07.S7.
Man's Trlclle Jumo -1, Sieve
H-. Bahamas, 53·41'1. 2, ltOlllft
Cannon, United s1a1n , 53·3:\4. l , lt•v
Klmtlll, United Starn . S2· 11V.. 4, Jose
Seiner, v__... '2<714. S, Satoswl Kanamaru, ..ieoan, 52·0. Women'• Hlllh Jump -1. COiien
SomrMr, Unl!ICI Starn , •-2-... 2, o.b·
t>!I Brhl, Canada, 6·2:\4. 3, Vanetsa
Brown, Aus1re111, 6·1"6. 4, Oise
Glsladolllr, l~nd. 6•1"'4. 5, PhvUls
Blunrson, United s111n , S-11"'4. Mln'1 Hloh Jurno -1, Gennadlv
llelkov, Soviet Union, 7·4'h. 2. Brent
Herkln, United Slel.,., 7·5. ), Miil
Goode, United St11nl 7·S. 4, Francl1co
Cenlelles, Cuba, 7·>. 5, Joa ltadan.
United Stein. 7·5. Man's 20ll Walk • 1. Meurhlo Oa
MJl1n1, 1111v, 1:25.53. 2, Sandro Bellu«I. llalv, 1:27.42. l , Oen o ·c-. UnlllCI s111n. 1:27.49. •. lt•lf Kowelskv, E11t
Germany, 1:21.2(. S, hl!81 Stmomsen,
S-.dln, 1:2U7.
Women's JOOO • h Monica Jovca, lrellll\lf, f:OO.tS. 2, PelllSul fllumer,
Unlled $1tln, t:02.90. 3, Meroarel Groos. Unlled Slates, t;OJ.te. •. Mldllll
Bush, Unlled S111n . t:OUl. S. Gari
Flldl, Canada, t:Ot.07. Women'1 a Hurdles ,. 1, '"-tr•
Kruo. E•SI Gennenv. 55.7•. 2. OICll>le
Flintoff, Autlrelle, 5'.22. J, '9"4fr• Fenner. J amaica. 54.4 •.Gwen WeU.
Canada, w.n s. Gavte Kellon, untied
s111n, 57.AO !American Junior 1tecord; OICI record, Kellon, 57.90, 1"3).
Min's a \rdle1 • 1, Greg ltOlle, Bahamas, so. . 2, Bernie HOlloWIV, United Stein . .17. 3, AllmlCI J1111lm
H•madl.i e.tnlll. Sl.Ol 4, Ian New· llOUse, u nlcla/SU2. S, Andre Har·
11rov1, United Stain , Sl.n .
Women'• 200 • 1, Aneella Tevtor,
C11nlda. 22.ID. 2, ~ Nedd, U11lleo
Stein , 13.71. l, Jackie PuMV, Jameka. 2J.72. 4, Olene Dixon, UnlMd Sia,..,
2u1. s. L-Evana. Australia, 2UJ. Mell'• 200 • Section 1-1, Jeff Pll1111PI.
United SI•'"· 20.Sl. 21_ lerntrd Jeck·
son, Unlled Sl1t11, iv..... 3, Clancv
EdWerdl. United $1•'"· 20.M. 4, Lull
ScflMIOer. Clllle, 21.07. Sllc:llon 2·1,
L-do ~, CU0.1 20.'2. 2,
AllM Mallorn. Clllldl. 20.JS. 3, ltudv
0.... IM hhifte
AltT'S LANDING (New-1 kadl)
-133 1no11r1. 510 mackerel, aa oau. f sllftpshead, 2 INlrracuda. 26 bOnllo. 2
1<uloln, 1S roelt fish.. DAVIY'S LOCKElt (Mw-1
kadll -2'3 •noter•. IO OltrKudl, 103 bO!lllO. •so INIH, ,,. talko bell,
1,125 macltlrel. 11 s~d. 1 l'lall· bul, 1 rock fish.
Tnnsacttenl
aASa8ALL
Amllr1CM L.--AME RICAN LEAGUE-Named Joe
AllOllllll alld Billy Gar4!11f' coac:l'tls lor 1111 AH·$tar Geme.
MILWAUKEE 81tEWERS-$IOMcl
Robin Younl, 1nor11100. lo • tnYlll·YMr
c onl r a c l . SEATTLE
MAltlNERs-Flrld Rane Ud>emenn,
'1'•na-. •"41 rll>taeed him wltll Oel Crancsa•. Oetl-led Gevtoro Perrv, Piicher, l lld Todd Crill. l/lorlSIOO, for
aulenment. t alleO uP Sl>lke Owen,
111ort1100, encl Mike Moore, pllcfllr.
lrom Salt Lek• Cltv ot 1111 Peclflc eo.11
L-ue.
TEX.AS RANGt RS-BrOU!lfll uo BOObY J~. lllortSIOO·llnt INlsamen.
from Ollllll'loma Cllv ol the .American
A11ocl1tlon. '
Na1lllMILMWI
HOUSTON .ASTR~KlllllCI JoM
Mlzeroelt. c•lcher. from TUCIOft ol Ille Paclfk Coal! L-ue Rllurrllld Tim
Totman, lnflelder·oulfltldlr, lo Tucson.
F'H IL A OEL PH I A
PHILLIES-Placed Garry Maddo•, oulflllder, on 1111 lS·dlv dl111111C1 nit
SAN FltANCISCO GIANTS-Seti! Cl'llll Oavl1, oulllalOer, to '"'-nix Of 1111
Pacific Coall L-ue tor • lO·oame
rellabllllallon -loO. Placed CllamP
Sumnwr1, oulflaldlf, on 1111 21·dlv
dlsalllld N11. ltecalleo Cllrl1 Smllh. llrtl ba-n-0<.llflaldlr, from Plloanl1 and
ourch11ed the con1rec1 ot Rich Murray,
llrll 0111man, from Phoenix.
POOTaALL ......... , ..... ~
CHICAGO BEARS-Slonecl Lftlle Fr1111f 111<1 Dave Duerson. cor·
neroacks, Jev Hlloenber11. center; WJMla
McClendon, Arrlal Grav. end Scoll ltepp1r1, running D•ckl, Pal
Oun1mor1, 110111 •lld, alld Tom Sl\remo,
dllenslve tackle. NEW OttLEANS SAINTS-SleneO Ken Sleblar. Quarreroac~.
Camel. Where a man. belongs.
8 mg. "tar". 0.7 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette. FTC Repon DEC. '81.
Werningi The Surgeon General 14as Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
I
\
·,
•
Orange Coeal DAIL v PILOT /Monday. June 27. 1~
Washington's Eric Robinson ( 40) is wrapped up
by Express' Dan_ Lute in second quarter Sunday.
DoornJats walk over
Express' playoff hopes
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Wash-
ington Federals, the· doonnats of the
United States 'Football League, broke
open the champagne Sunday as they
recorded their second victory in the last
three weeks.
who owned a 14-4 record against Jauch
when both coached in the Canadian
Football League, felt the game was
won by the Federals ability to control .
the ball late in the game.
"They smoked us in th e final six
minutes," Campbell said. "Whenever
they got into a power situation they just
tried to ram it down our throats and
they did it."
The Federals, 3-14, who lost 12 of
their firsl 13 games still have the worst
record in the USFL. But in their own
minds, they feel they finally have
tumedJt.anu1nd in a .belated rush.1or
..---..-~ The latest evidence came Sunday
Th.e-E:xpr~J ~~ .>Wa&,elirnjrulted,...
-from-any-playoff possibility" when
Oakland won on Saturday night.
when the Federals posted a 28-21
victory over the Los Angeles Express
before 9,729 fans at RFK Stadium.
"Missing the playoffs had us down,"
admitted quarterback Mike Rae, who
replaced starter Tom Ramsey at half-
time beoause of a sprained ankle. ·•we made up our minds four weeks
ago we would have our own four-game
playoffs and we have won two of our
first three," rookie running back Craig
James said after rushing for two
touchdowns. "Next week . (against
Philadelphia, the USFL's top team) is
our championship game."
James, who was taken out early in
the game after (umbling and rein ju.ring
an ankle, tied his pro high with 90
yards on 14 carries.
The Express took a quick 14-0 lead
one 1-yard touchdowns by John
Barnett and Ramsey. The Federals cut
it to 145-7 when Billy Taylor scored on
a 2-yard run with 11:15 to play ln the
first hall.
James' 5-yard touchdown witti 7:35
left in the third quarter tied the ga.Q'le.
He had set up the score with a 19-yard
run on the previous play.
James' 18-yard run with 6:28 left
broke a 21-21 lie and provided the
Federals with their winning touch-
down.
The Federals took a 21-14 lead with
nine seconds left ln the third quarter
when Mike Harris caught a 32-yard
touchdown from Kim McQuilken to
end a 90-drive.
"He hurt his ankle and had it taped
up at halftime," Federals' Coach Ray
Jauch said. "I thought he ran superb
after that."
Los Angeles, which managed a
season-high three touchdowns
rushing. pulled even when Tony
Boddie-went six yards to tie-the game at
21-21with10:28 to play. Los Angles Coach Hugh Campbell,
DIATH NITICll
MAUOY
DAVID J. MALLOY, resi-
dent of Little Balboa laland,
puBed away on June 17,
1983. Survived by 2 nleces,
Margit Easley and Inger
Marie Graham and l
grand-niece. Mary F.aaley.
Private memorial .ervices
were conducted. Friends
who wish in lieu of flowers
may l'1'l&U cootributions to
the American c.ancer So-
dety. Malloy-Mitt.en Fu-
neral Home direct.ors. (213)
WAINSCOTT
DON M . WAINSCOTT.,
paged away on June 24,
1983 at South Coast Medical
Center, South Laguna. Ca.
Born in Cali1omia, 90n of
,ACIAC YllW
......,llAL,Aal
. Ce"-I~ Mortuarv Chapel-Crematory
3500 PK1f1c View 011ve
Newport Beach
644-2700
NeeobleCll MOITUA•IH
Laciuna Beach
49"4·9415
LaQuna 11•11s
768-0933
S*1 Ju.n Cao1111ario
49S-1776
/ --
HA l90l LAW..... MT. OU YI
Mortuwv • Ce,,.. terv
Cretrwtorv
Ul25 GISier Ave
Cotta Mesa
540-5554
r ~
MLft•l•OM ....... nmt&l ~~ eo.a.Mna •
&4M~7 1 •
Joh n and Mild r e d
Annstrong Wainscott. Mr.
Wainscott was a programer
for North American Rock-
well, besides his parents he
leaves his wife Barbara
Wainarott, South Laguna,
Ca., a !On Kris Wainscott of
HuntingtDn Beach, Ca., and
a daughter Joi Mari
Wainscott of South Laguna.
Ca. Private services under
the direction of McCormick
Mortuary, Laguna Beach
with interment at Rose
Lawn Cemeter y, Cham·
paign, llllnols. The family
requests in lieu of flowers
that donatiorut be made to
the Emphysema Fund c/o
Lung Association of Orange
County, 1717 Broadway,
Santa Ana, Ca.
SURANYI
JACOB SURA.NY], a resi-
Island Whirl
a surprise
INGLEWOOD,. (AP)
-J ockey ~die De-
lahoussaye hadn't ridden
Island Whirl before he
and the owner were both
pleasantly surprised ln
the $500,000 Hollywood
Gold Cup.
The 5-year-old son of
Pago Pago captured the
$275,000 top prize Sun-
day as the odds-on entry
of Erins Isle and Ex·
ploded ran out of the
money, undemuning the
f o rmer 's
horse--0f -the-year cam-
paign. •
Delahoussaye, win-
ning rider in the latest
two runnings of the Ken-
tucky Derby, gained t he
mount on Island Whirl
dent of Loe Angeles, Ca.-----------
Passed away on June 25, 1983. He ia survived' by his", ___ ,_;.;;..;;.,;,..;.,;,;;~~--
wife Malvin, son David
Shichor and 2 grand·
children Nadav and Nomi.
Graveside 1ervlce1 were
held ~n Sunday, June 26,
1983 at the Harbor Lawn
Mount Olive Memorial
Park. Services under the
d i rectio n ~ of Hprbor
Lawn -Mount Olive
Mortuary of b:.t.a Meu.
640·5564.
.aTAft Of O•t WOW. 0,"10 1 OP TMr ITATI
MOMfft!Ol ---II DDMT-..rCW :~~-· AD _,.
SEAL!O PAOf'08Al.8 wll be ,. OlllveCI 1n Aoclf'll ao 11, 101 Soulh ·~·Loe=~ untl 2.:00.J::., , .Wf1 13, 11113 .. •llN ~ bt 111*-llCIV Of**' end rMd 1n ftool'll 1101 •Mld~lor:
IMt,,tEOIA TEO PUBLIC Ult IM·
P"OV£MENT8, OIPARTMEHT Of
P,UU(8 ANO llllCRlATION,
9111Y8TAL. COVE STATE PARK, OR· ANGECOONTY. CAUf'OANIA(W.0 .
NaH3).
T'llll profec1 oompt1-COMllUO-
tlon of pet1llng .,..., -in..
prowment end ponable enl'*-
.a.ructute.
Conet1uct10n lnoludel lit• c:IMt· Ing, gtlMllnQ, MPNlt concnt• peY·
Ing. ConcnMe ciurbe, gutl«t. ....
w111t1, ~I attlplno, atonn
dtllneQe, benllf po.aa, metel trefflc
control gal•, ~ melell
catpenlry. mlllwol1l. bet1ten aytftfl\
prellolllhed IMCll rOOllng, p!Ut\c gluing. wood cMell door. llldtrlg
m«el wlndoM. "'-herdWv9 Md painting,
Bidder• m•)' Ofder ~ end
..,.ctttcaton• by oontactlnQ Con-Ir ec1 Manegemenl8ec;tlon, P.O.Bolc
10]8, Seer-lo, 95805, T .....
phone (918) 322-21111. There II• nonreturneble cherge ot 121.00 (dleclc peyeOte lo Ofllce of
::,!':=:~ Wh ... of
Eecti blddet '""" be ~fled under the Stele Contract Act. ~ bidder INll tumlell
p!IYIMl'lt bond. ~ pertormenoe
~ ....... .,, ....
Purauant to SeotlOn 1770 of the
LAI.bot COcle, The Oeperl"*1t of In·
dutlrlel Rel•llOnt hn .-telned
the 98Mfel prevllllnQ 11'8 of W9Q91
In the county In wNcfl the WOfk " IO
be ~ to be • llet..s In ttw o.. pertment of Trt11llPC)l1atl0n booklet
entllled Genatel ~ Wege R•t•. dated 11 Mt forth on
Propoeel Form. Coplel of ltlll book·
let are on Ille el 1500-llth Stl'Mt.
S.Cremen4o. Cellfoml&. end ere
evelleble lo eny lnl.,...ed perty on ,.queet.,
WHfTSON W. COX, F.A.l.A.
STATE ARCHITECT
Publlehed. 0renoe eo..t Delly
Pllof June 27, July 5, 1813 -
2652-&3
Mt.IC ll>TICE
FtCTITIOUI .,._ •• ...... ,.,....,., __ .,. Mft~
The IOllowtng per10M -doing i---~---""-'------~.;-~UTO SERVICE ~ E. rtelihOUl .,_H
17th St .. Cocall ..._,CA 92827 • The ,::!:i STA~ dolnO
OAVIO LYN SMEATON 9341 Par· bulinell ea: "rt::°'...%L.":NTICS; llemel'lt. W•tmlneter, CA 92t83 ....., ~ ,.. __ ...__ ,.._ MICAHEl SMl!ATON 21N Of· 30...,....,.,arAve ......... -.......
1nge, Cotti,,._, CA 8H27 8~ 0 ..... ,.._ ....i. 17 WILLIAM L SMEATON 9341 Pet-'"''"' ... .., ..........,11..n, 11
!lament. Weatmlntter. CA 821183 Ven Dyke '--· Huntington Beecfl.
Thia bue1n881 11 conclucted by: • Ce. 92648
generel pertner9fllp DeYld 8, Cempbell, 3029 Daoder
Orie SmMton "-· Coet• Mwe. Ca. l2'2t
Thlt ttet-t -llled w1tt1 the Thia ~ II concluc:1ed by: • ~nty Cleric of OrMQ8 County on generel pertMl'lfllp. • Mlf1c 0. Cooperat91n
-22, 1883 "* 118*'*11 -ftled wlttl the nm11 Publielled Orenge Coeat Delly eouni C*1c of Orenge County on
Pltot June 27, Jvly 4, 11, 18, 1883 June 5 1913· \ ~
- . 2t28-83 Publllhed ONll9I eo..t Delly
..
Piiot June 20. 27, .Wf14, 11. 1N3.
2'11-e3
·'
' --<>renr Cou1 DAILY PILOT /Monday, June 27, 1983 a
.. ---i
.1
r
.•
CLASSIFIED·
INDEX
=...... ... .... ...... '".... ...... .. .. '""'... ...... "*'!"""'J* ...... ,.......... .......... .... ...... .......
t!!!f!nttll &Mtlwtl awe.. ..... itM ... ••~:..~ .. .-i·~f!· c..... ... .., nae..... !B ~==•••=~===••== 1111 .... , • 1,,..,.. s101.ooo bl/ ..,..,.11 -.... !UP>. z-.-to0wn). tG&m:n:rn? N "· y/r." com . .,, •eaw . I.ml llLI 11"8111 ,, y a '\ owner. Glent yerd, __ u IU0,000. Oontlder gmr, no~ 'Mal Pf9f .. MIO. u••· Incl. tNIFI To Pllct Yw M. Cll • • • l>Mutlfully upgred~. _., ww IM/S:·~dl lll'-62a, 117-2312. tn.11u"' lftllO. Beau lful 1.,J nne.t IAaoon view froro drunatie 3 bdrm, 4 Owfw wenct out of thlt 01*! 8un. at 2005 1= ~ C::,: O: 9111 2 Ir. 2 ea Condo. 1 oet g11r ~01et0t1 Townh04IM ,_;.. :.._ PooA ~-=-642-5678 beth pool~. $1,,60,000 Fee. ::::."" tt! '::;P2 = Arnold. 148 S440 =eecurtty ~to r= ~ 1111 In • 1ndry rm, . pool, avall now 1995/mo. Petioalclecb. No pe19.
R!Al ESTATt II---....... ,... OM1W .. 111 _. 11% 1t.i1en l'fWtMe 1131/mo, 112.-el 173-0lll. -"426
uicn 1
9'95 r-....; V.A. io.n. Pno. only ••• ~ w. 4 Ir.' ea 1 2 *'Ya er crpcd a&.,__,._._ -•.a :fir-, -.-10 .;.ftft<al Anoholin Hlllo
Ball>oo w.nd .. ,_ .............
eap..ir.....a-..
C'oroNdtl Mat
C.:.1a M-Don.t Pvonl
II T<H"O P'uwl~n Vali.y
Hunu...-&owh
Hu,n11 H.arl.11our
lrvuw ~ilro•h
LAcvno tlolla
Lacw>-HllV'I l..ko ,._, M_v.,,,.
H""'pot' J\orh s.n o........... •
S&l\.J ... n O.pt>lnnv
San"' AN s .. 1 e..or1t
Swlh l.."fuN
Su"""' llrO<'h
Tueun
WnUNn.t•r
Mobol•llorrwo
A<Tf'•F
AC-r\mt'f'IY> a. .. h .......... y Du.I,...... Prop1y C'I..-<) .......
C'ommt Propt'rt)'
€CliM:M"4wn.
Oup4 ..... VNta
tlo..w. IO .... MUW'd '""°""' l'n>po-rty lftd .... n.I Prop<y ...... ,.,, Saito
MOO.Ito Homo Pot1u
~o::;-;ie..o.-.
OU1 ol Co..n1y
Out olS~"' """' ....., •.. ""' ~~~ ... · RI.~ .. ll& ............. .
, RENTALS
lll'Ulft "'1nlah<d .-Un~
HOUMI J'l.moah«I cw Vn,_
Condo """ Condo Vnl T_,,,,___ lum
TDw"""'-Vnl Dup6ouo rum
Dupl<uo Vnl
A..,.,._11 t'urnlllwd
"-11Vnl A,oL l\wn or: Vru -""""'"Board .......... Molela G-•H-Sumnw< !1.nlala
V acaUOft llcnlall
•Atftta1aioShare . 'Atftlall WanWd
o.._ror:AM•. OflnAtftt.111 ........ """ ..... Ccnvnl llefti.tlt
lndlMI "'111&4 s ......
..... llHolab
100t S~beyfton\d a,br,2beup;2br, t1H,to0. Call now.COZV, yt00D8Y hCHM w/oelc wlndlngltmartldrth tcJdtokMOOkld9Y._---,lr.1\41a MIO 1ooe 2 'be dn. 2 boat..--. -$1,500,000. 541-2StS Mrw home behind llalrW9Y or...., .. to.,. 2 w. 1 b&. P11Ci9if tor 1m--..190 8E8T 1 I 2 if. m . pot/, 1au '""· .....,11 ::~ Pllll-.A ~. Huie, A-2 elabprate recrHtlon in......,. M 1S41,000 i440 "°'* /bub~ ~ t.o. From teo4. 111 E. 11'1'. 142-4111
_ ion ""'"""---~ ·"-·-. ••--'--. ....,,..,,. 4 bdnn, 3 lot wttfl ~ to expilnd, arH. Patio lnolud•• wtlldl le -er below ap-....... w Utlle peld. 541 0331. --= 1024 ....._, m ,,_. WMUUJe .~.. add unit 0t enJov IN or-Hydtolpa I !lied MQ pt'lllMl, lkt, 1314182 Z:...Lov-to OCMf'I 8edletor -
IOM ..__th 37 _., .., X-narl.1-ft •1 ooc. 000 cNlrd. 11215,000: ~ center. The -· 8 .... ,, 190 IE8T Alty ... 1 lrl 't/1 k T'l'?tl"90X/, nu 1 ldfm, . · 1ou ... • _,.... .. • ..--•· • ,...,.., . "°'home few ....,.:u;. ' HOME FOR RENT pan crpt. • mo. 2 Bdrm, 1 \4 la '5IO :~ Lm llLI ... 111. C£.RNER LOCATION -~. 11.7215,000 ·en111•11 HunelnaCon ...... 28drm. 145-1181. 'm4~w.,
1042 Remodeled 3 bdnn, 2beth+1arp rec. rm.. ••m ,.:~~,.:: ~!Md ........... am.llto ..... tipl.tunlt•, 1700."hnoedyard&gw-1 bd IUmltNd Apt
::: beam ceilmel. fumiahed, patioe. $420,000. w• to the bMdl rrom Well l)ttOed au120,ooo. Wtll99. MiM200. =:rt~.:"""'::''· f198. IUdl & ~ WlloOne. Newty un decofat.cs and .. ~tftldtt ·~ FU••• .. I UIOI •LL.._ tNt 90fgec>l'9 PenttlOuM • or • 545-2000. Aoerrt. no fee. cerpated S•cwe & fWrla www::m iou .._.... •wr condo. 1 Bdrm wUh bellto ... "'-atiom.. =•· 10 >'W't llX-HOUie HuMenl 3 bdml 2111 Maple. c . ...-: ~-
-:~ New 4 br, 4 ~ ba, cuatom French Normandy bonul room« 2 Bdrm 142-1111 SL MDmt 142•1803 multi beatt g11raoa/ltwlp 14715/mo'+-~ NoP.a.. BMutlfUl oatden apt•.
10P Eatate 1.2 prime acre hilltop $1,250,000. and large upgraded ... •-•-..__......... .,,.,.. avaH 7/f M75 To .... c:ell 145 te04. J*IOt. deokl, .._ No ::;: -lllll~YI llYFlllT ' kndten. "-llM sao.ooo ----, _.. ~190 ._BEST Atty '*'·
::: Coronado laland t. bayfron\ lo\. 85' .......,.t =::~e0t.~i1• Begant °'*om 5 BR 2 8-f HSI <>cw doM 2 81 frp6c 2Br, 1'_.8-twntlea, = ~~~ 131..C: .....,. = farnlly home With 2 GCtm Ind a;;, P8li'll 0:: btMIY patio gar '400'• patio, gar, no .,..._ · IOINi deck. Plant avail. ow $370,000 w/trade. ·~ _......, ........ ..,. ft __.. .. ...._ , & .. _ .. _... 53M190 ._BEST Atty mo. 278 Avoc:edo St. ,.,.W,....•-1t1""'tl4....,.de-lr'"" .. -. -.,.-igtl....,.-•t -oe...,..--n
ION .... epa ......... ,..... • -· .... ---• -· -541-7510Mpm •• • • 1090 Piii UM MIM ,_!Md. A "Mutt See" own• r , I 3 OK . Small 1 Br ·~0 pell .· 1 81, 1 Ba w/pcwctl.
::: i _ property. M25,000. Cell 714-780-1...a. _ ·1450/mo utii Ind. Avaff 2 er.. 2 a., 2 atory, 2 caar MOO/mo. A.Gt. M0-0817. 3 br, 2 ba, uple, beam celling, 2carcarport. On ........... 644-7424 Bkr 111 1536-83 2 ger, '850/mo no._.. ::~ greenbelt. Comm. pool. $125,000. •alL...a lal.-.a IMI Nw new i:IOf1dO W/loft 2 . TW lltl'"/11111 ~ 1 ' ceil Chip 139-J512 . Condo 3 Bf, 2~ ti.. pool,
1m llllftH• llMI --etory, 2 81, 2 Ba, frJ)lc. 111111111 ... YI 4 bdrm, 2~er. lnlM 114! 2 Br 2 Ba. Ir Mng rm :C..f~~mo. Avf!A_JYt'/ :~ ~ ............... -*Mflta, tc:ergmr. U>, IO °'*fl!.!~. 2 bd.~ln lt06;000.,J..1 . alTIU 2nci floor, J.-. frplc: , -1~ Near new 4 ~· 4 bath, lake view .• 3500 eq. ~Aaito4Mf ti.. ~J_Penttlouae. ..... ..... to-4bdn1t.•7'G0·.,1200. •IAOle 1aat 157,SLmo. Detux. t~MO r:C ,000:-Will~t. t>uelr'9881nt...a.s.,. cont6der trade Complu. s.te by owner Plai!< IHI . 545411.5. --,2~~ -~.· .... 2.-mo1.· m : .... thla3 812 Ba pymt. &dp 839-7512 enabl.. bargain ---'315 ~ StUdlo -°'*'09 -....., t~ home. Lowty 5 8f_3~ '272,500 • ExcieptJonM --~ &lalde doM ~-i1Fc.1Nlmlda--..1"Vrv-'-2..18'._.i..1 ...1a.,._ _ __, :~ nracH~TIM,OOOE .. .,. TY home. very privet•. llnanclng. 541-5103 Vacation In Strat-utllt pd M2~1' w/gar, newly decor,
14:!l .. ..,. ~L E/tlda. 12311,1100. fOl'O-Avon tour 8rttJM lfy · · crpta, drpa, blelna. $1585.
me 173411 146-36157. Executive 5 Br 2 -... pool anct=-Europe and enjoy 1410 1 81. patio, no peg. wall July 11. 142-1711.
1:MJri a.1L.... llzJld lo1, ewryttting new ffMdom and uvtng by RefrtQ clMll I bl'laflt
am ·---PWIDllTm ---. . -~ :loo New· low Jilc•. owning your own 18th 651-1177 l'2~·Jemee.173-ni7.' ......... n• :~~: ll'llUll a&. llm--1-llY Ptaianla lll'I s=t~ ~~,.:'C~ nnan:.oM~ a en": ~~~TL~:, detaiMt • U "RllUPll a;;mino OIL t &. qui;, :=: ....... fm.Y-'fllNm'Y tide ne~ood . the tummer. Agent · Ml-1111 S:.J:.':r:=1~~
1800 .... ,........... Lovely48rhotnefMturtng 28r~=-~. $122,500. . M&-1044orl+'-1742. • ..... ,.,...~.. -llllP980llOMW 1 81. gee I · water peid, . • . 182$ ...... II _...__ ler.ge IMng rom, dining "-'"table io.rti of .... encted gM, 9.89 b~. lg 38r, 2k bttne, frp6c,
..,.... .... room and brHkfHl 1114500 anor 111800 UDO ISLE. 104 Via Cor-I~ ..... lilt~ ••H--dltlwlttr.~. gerage, no P•I•.
2100 noc ... .,......... room. Library wtttl plan-• • l500:. • · dov•. 2 Br. 2 ••· "iXHftf ..... -1-559-71M 111-4144 tatton .ttuttett. "tMge S.P.=,Prln~C::.to ... hiai ... 1375,000. Coe>pefatlng ~. ~:::1'e!f,.,:,_.4;;u; ~ '12:.:'°~· Nice and dW: 81udlo Ill
yard wtth roee .c_: 131-32111~.175-5418 wl8fotlett. 873-<4083. w/2 Mii ~ c:ttl-. 381 Ba2garpool& 173-87 . '400. 2 81, I k $500. = • fnt I fM and _,,pettoe. evea. UDO ISLE. 142 Via Un-drwt. 3 Witt oNt ltar1 . patio k*'.,_. '850 Call W-.Y ~
1•ic TNl!owPf3bdtvnlltree to '3Sll,009, land In--..-mr dine 3 • 1,,. a.. 36 ft Aug 10th ea1121f.ao11 53M190 ... 8UTRtty ·$495/mo 2 Br. 1 Ba apt,=-...,,........,,....,..-.........,-,.._.,, me & c:tw. Located on a eluded. A8k for Mary cenM ... ... ltn ~ Dana Point ltr9et lo1 • Prtoe. r9duced to . HOME FOR REHT 8'M:I patio, 8"\811 pet OK, Studio apt doM •o bch, ..
U2$ quiet~ Dantta. 144-7020. • ss5o le Vafual.... C*'Pof't, lndfy rm utll pd. 1350/mo. ~ 2bloc:bfl'omttlewet•. tmllULDTln 4..,. 11~.--io.n, uJettno 2 Bdrm home .ooo. Cooperating .... LaguneHllt48drm,2ea. 7'1WflttlSt et1..-1'2. ~ Youownttleland.Call needtn.C. Undermerll1 With room for enother. w/Bkr9.873-QS. ....al . --Sn5.~ywd& TSLu-e 542 1803,..,.... ______ _
MOO ..al""' S210,000.850-34S5. CIOM to Matloa and ._. g11r11ga ._.... -&lper~181Vllle.court = TlmRtMIMAgt780-&823. Thi im.=t;,y rneln-f Doheny Perk .............. h'2L'.CdUi666/mo Klda&pMl-'c:om.. i515 Avell7/1 l:'5l,· qu .... no S*•.
2900 p-.y-.:.i 3 Bd i hM two llTll'lll Owner/bu5~•1tlal. t;otwilua,2Br,1kUMd yi1y. 545-2000.Agent,no .... 2 Br. apt w/patlo. .111-S313.
2902 t rm - -· Juel 1137,0001 today brtd(,CU1ellndoomerlot, 8Pectel IUITll'Mt ,...._1 145-1100 Alt &PM, I ... r ....
2904 L!..\ 3 edmt 2 Betti home aeparate J:~ Two 3 ~ com-fOf video Ot 1n1peoo alley eoow. •115,0001 8r condo on bey 4 81 IUllila f1tie UiT i5 al. • •• .. = flr:p~.~t~ll~ l::.""'andnga bec*yard pletelyradeoorated&,.. Ev.5'6-ll92S. rambllnghouaaonMltl. HmrorM. 3 aft• •. 3 1~~2\,~rm~~~ ~~mo, furn. up. f I 2 &.
: located. A--. 1112% that goee torewr. oe-turbllhed lntlde & out. ... .-y ~ tuLn ea. 1750/mo. Fenced ldry tee. Ger. No '*'· ""'""'" · pool, .._
2909 loan. Full price I 144,500. tlreble area and red Btftty tltuated on.~ 3 bdrm and den. CUatom ,_'I"~ k!· kldW..RN OK. Agt. Ref. req'd. Avell now. ~'r.f 1~ 142"2934•
2112 131-7370. bo1tom price. Only :a' 901 ~ open R-2 By owner. "85,000. 11UlM1ll .... 545-2000. 540-4338. 1=-.....,.....,...--·-----,-
::; 1132,500. 751-31111. a!!tr~ ~o 13713 S•.Hhore Dr. MALLOACA. 2 Bdrm, 2 i575toii40lmo 2 Br 1'A BecNlor apt w/ltow I
2111 C::.sa.£CT ment onty on IN pride of fMatala 850-e671 SUMMER RENTALS tt• ti.. Lake View, ~· be twnhea, pod, titdty a:t;,:-~ "::m&:: = -rPRDPERllES ownerthlp bHutyl falley 1Uf OCEAHFRONT evallable~ 'r~ wttfl ~~· · rm, <*'Port. SM patio, no lll0-1l70. ms 122,500 annual Income. F'Aft?atJRY l8R Sb:'. Reduced •o 1425,000 tor tum ,...-:_. V"'~ peta. ar.at locallon.'2181.,.....---·-----759-1501 °' 752-7373 fMt ...._ a.et BMc:tt • .._. .. _7 ..._.... le rt..... Ult E 11ttt St. ~kit,"' bdl, quiet MNOONCEMENTS ~':t=S2250,c:ell front b•~· own, vi:""'e::'.":e,tttouM 2?rBa IJQil TSLMgmt 142-1803 pareon, no pell, """°""""""'" 3902 • tar&t ~&LEE M0-7tl0, 221 2BR 1 .......... rt · cot\age w gar, •2 8r1....._ ... ..,,_a-t& non-tmkr. 1425/mo. Lao1 a. round 3004 aa.ay LIU9-.. ~ · PllllMIT... ....,, MOU ty, deokl. brtd( W111t weya, .......-.,._,,. lll0-0587.
p..._..i. 3012 ~ ,..,, -"pllAI 3 peia PociA. . ~aoo~ ltt.='it'IC>._f115/mo. t°:221S=~F':w:=~:;;Mt.;.F~~~~~iii==-=~ =t~ -~: -... 1111 . 12 0,000. 541-HH ~ •BR!iii*"'Y '*"W:: 28 •vall Sept 1 From 1475-MOO
Tnw1 ~ .. ~s & 3011 p~· m'::o:,t m~r~~~ ~. ~=~·· 532--4145 :,.,~ ~ = LrJ:°<:~~· Lovely 3B~ •:..~ t;~u2:'C:,: 1 :::~::;J.t• F=r.,z·
uv.>111u gr•t oppo11unlty. E•-lut. ..... lid pool and;;;;;-~ la-ham., quiet locttlon. 5SH190 BEST Atty tea. .Ci · ~·· No peta..142-t807 FNNClAl I pec:lally IMrl> 2 Bdrm ••NIT---~., dlltlet. Aaklng $388,000. lmmac. and bftaht. Avall 3 Br. w .. tcllff Home. 5'":i:.S· Bay St. 111221 Delawwe St. ·au..,_,., Saito .01i plUa den condo In excel-3 Bdtm, 2'~ b8th. ,__, r... By owner, 4 81• 2 k Cell deya 173-2311 July 5ttl, l1llOOTmo. 11250/mo. 146-11333 eek · o.1uJ1e 2 81. 2 ba. 1n ;.:::_-w~uN._ ::: ~taAt~e.=rit park, trplc, COfMI pool, ---~t!r:rvcs:= 111•1111.n WATERFAONTHOMES lora.yteAgt. WTWlWm 4-plu. cpt•. drpa,
•1--•0pponwu,_ 4011 won't lelti Cell to ... ='in~T~~ ............ 11111,500 . ......-11 111111-ft11 N1·t• BEACH YEARLY: 3BR 281· 1'AM35/mo. bulltlnt, encl. gar,
ln_.._.,.w...,..o = 846-7171 Done ontiln_thit_EM.et of ...... 2ti.. 2 ear .981'· ll02 W C*'Pof't,ywd/bek:ony, .. '*~· no I** 11525, ==~== .me U,_.l ()lll 11VMl:S ••• wttfl IN ~ ...... IW'W TIWlll•E Balboa 81. U /mo. Mi ~.lndfyrm. 540 Ulll ...__To , 4029 Realtora,87MICJbb QUellty meterialt. A~ 2 Br 1112 Ba co-op unit • ......... U17 Loeb 213/515-2111 fX 25318antaAneAve. Hunt1ngeon Cf.-~
llgfltful HR C•nyon rtgflt on !tie IMd. Prtoed DESPERATE OWNER ,.. 2Bf. R:liCI nbftld. get,""[ . TSL Mgmt 142-1803 ll.oR#y adlM hlng. 1 I 2 OftOYM£NT ~eat 10Wl)l'IOUM w.th 9t lower than 1NO ..... duoMl11.000be6ow.-palnt/cptaJdrpt 1125 ~T~~..., ELPUERTOMESA Bdrm,wtttl..,..... llMI
tMp w11n1r<1 swo WI• 011 veulted oellnge, formal price. 1130.000. R I H pt1llMI for IMMEDIATE 175-3882 btwn 6-9pm • • 1 Br. gerden apt. & weter peld, ~
'Jobo WAnl<>d )If» wmw YI.Liii dining, femllyroom,com-llW't. 751-51119. Sale.3 bd. 2 ti.. PrtoedM frplce~ ~dbl encl. gar-1425/mo. & up, lndda eecurtty. From '510. Call
ANIMLS Win Ul1111 The tm.t home ror 811 ••-~: = WILi 11 IUIL ~·::'· :S..c:o;: cott C... W ... UU ~c0mm. PoOll~,..:;:i utile, poo1. 19511 .. .,._ 846-1113 from M .
C.11 S!o06 r.-2 Bdrm 2 .. _ ... ___ .._ a ................ , 3 tlae ...... .-t .......;.._ __ .. Oneofaklnd.eu.t2bdrm • a;;;;mwwh6f/ocn,2bl' Shor ... 11200/mo. 11t, Ave.C.M. • .. •••ILi ~ ~~ ~ llr~.-cc:=::i ~~,,den~vwt1h went;to"°.;..;:-..... home w/nperet• ,.......... 2*-,FP,2cgar,nuJ>'.No laat +depoelt.145-114t, XLG1811495.2Bri595. 21;.;,~T~Aplt. ~ ~ patio, RV°' boe\Alar11ga. herdwood floors entry, M4-ll'1 mother-In-In quarten, PenthouM, 1 bdml. ~ pets. 11100 IN 8'(M)8111 Deelaner decor~ Pool, Patio, Frplc. frp6c dlfw lrgp.eto
,,.. ~ 2~ gar11ga .tlth ad-f8mlly room and kltdlen.. ' OY9ttooklng lake pertt. duced to 1115,000. By 2 Bf frp6c, blt-lne gar no 2 8' w/g11r rw Dlhwar. 557-2141 'endedeinate •
dltlonal work•hop. Vauttedoelllnglnaepec-Mutt ... to llPP!'edete. out of town ·owner. PM8.sao'o.144-7IOll'. SIOO't flat mek.. LMve1bd DIW C8fport <*~,lll'ltunt. ECHAfl>ISC M«tculc>u8 I~. tacuter IMng room. 2 XlNTtenne.536-02tl l34-1511 ot!IG-2529. 53H1908ESTRlty,_ $400tmo '2216B MtrW H~.F'rom'585/mo .
........ .,... . &oll Huge lot zoned for 2 wood burning llreplecet. ,__.__ 1m WATERFRONT DUPLEX: 4 bdml, 2112 be. 2100 eq St 151-2°175 84CMMI07. APt>I...._ ::~ more unite. On Ill mirrored wt1rdrobee In Mnm9 ~ 2 dOc*a 1475000 EMy ft. f /P, w/d .,.._Avail. HARBOR VIEW HOMEa · ="';......... tol• 1120,000. &lbmlt all o • 8drmt. All protmlonelly ... .. term1.' By ' o.;,ner. ~~m:* 1 l~~ .. 7~0· 4~ 2'MSA'J:":on P811111·..J! Lar98 3 81. 2 BL M85. Ill-e--...• sq...,.._, eo11 tera. Call ~ Hiii laildac:aped 3 C8f gar-, eeo.1toe ·or --...... ......... vu, • """ Frplc, dbf ~. large w 1 ...
Ccimpii.n eo11 751-3191 . llg8 Pl1ct 0nty $227 000 nm.•.. ...an Nw MW 3 bd W/dectc 2 mo. 494-• • fncd yw'd. Mo pet9. 2 8'. ....._ ~~..!"" = AmUtt .... cell5*-231S 111111 f&l.m Mutt .... ~. on caar gmr. Sloeo/mo. akr. H.V.HMS. 8eautlful MON-1 Ba. MIO. 534 Benwd New 1 I 2 8Clrm luxury c.,_ s.... t101 A ltlof1 Wlllldna dlttance ~ Y• ~ 3 lmll'l'&f l40-t.258 ACO. 38R 28a 11150 Incl St. 142-4806. apta In 14 ~ 1 Bdrm
Hwhold c-621. to Ute bead!. A. neet 58R Br 21 k cemret . 2 -nBll • g11rdlnertwtr ao. to Lar98 F.aat9lde 1 Br NIN-from 1646, 2 8Clrm from ,..,....,.. et•· 3f720.nomi ~ 1ge ,....,._, •••• wti•F 3'T 2t111rwut11101gar . .., 144-ee10•173-3114 ., wood thnH>ui m "30. Townhouee from w.rh.......,. em 1wn11y room and 2 fire-rnlnQ, lake rec. 80% loeit tall?·-2 yn .-. No peee. I mot · • r • • MM + poo11, tenM,
.. __ . elll placet owe paper °' et 10.75%1nt. avall. ~ "°'" n·· new"*'• roof I• e . • I 5 0 I m 0 . PANORAMIC refrig lndd.1435. 130 E. ..... , .... pondt. o .. ~=-~~"!,,_.,. ~ ---m••• lle9& ..... trade for i.... Income .... carry 2nd. l11K and ext....,,. UM of 70ll'M>rchid. 851-11135 OCEAN VIEW 20th, St. #D. l51·9S22. forcootilng & heating
Oflt<• rumnu,,." ..... --•-95911 w11111 property The beet vtew mol!9I )QI In.~ to French window• and or 144-4201 Highly upgraded 4 81, 2 ~ _..._........ paid. From Sen Diego
£qu1pmoon1 sni Rere 1rv1fte Terrece four 111,111 few the ·money et oNt 1172,000 for quick .... doont -It'• a delgttt to Pnme loc 190 deg oceen Ba lamlly home, fr/dr. Pvt ~-.u ,.u P:rwy drtve North on ~&Orr•ne 6221 bedroom home. On,_ 1416.000. a.. at 44() 559-7()61. thow. Two redwood vu HA 2ba newly W911edcomm.S1115/mo. 111&1&1 ,Bw:tl to McFadden and
TV. ~00"8!...,. :~ land. family room wtth You mutt .. thle onel Mendoza Temca PllVIDJ patlot With epe and pn.. NmOd 11250 i7~53113 144-1480, ......... ter""' weet on Mcfadden to
BO*TS wet belt. ~ knc:t1en =•= :.t.!d~':' UU. M4-1t11 = ~d~elk.00:. or 7_,: 11111 • Specbie 4 Br. 3 'A ea. 1 Bdrm N30 '850 {7s ~:.:.!.".~11v111 e g •.
:"hww. ll#n• " 7<l10 =~=:-ln tacned ;eraoe. *t t~ Mimi DrM by 1201 Clff Dr W81ctobeadl 41dr ftm-..,.,-.t• bol1U9 rm, lam Frplc, veuned ~. ,_.,.., ~n.-r•I 1011 Ill DllT pool bu1 private and In tttlt 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba fllet• "*'call · 11y rm, 2112 ia, ..... -.. rm, frp6c, pettoe, av.-dbl gar pool, .-. ...... ..... IHI
,,_..,. 1012 --quiet. Call to ••• Modtt In Patti II. Laroe .. --·-count untll told hang, Neely lndtcpd. eteW 11tttSt ~ s..1 ~::: Ill 1 llm 5*-2313. ''"'"Y room, central •-•-tMO/mo. ll'M1511. · 111550/mo. 140·1327, '45-27't 142-4t06 No end llClO o::" ..:t ~rw'%.p 1011 lllln 1• 1 1•aa l·a::;: ... 1aa.a atrll.m. Larae loC on FEE -,_ . 5151M111, otc 720-ell7 L-2 ... 1 •a .,__...._ •-4 3044 .
Main• .s.rvitt 1020 • • ... , -•-1Md.111UOO 11M111 mt Spactout 48r, 3'Mte. eep ;;;-... · n:;--:;;:;:: . ~:.:;°"""' ~· ....... . bonutrmt,t.mrm.trpc. ... 1C.l31..-155. •~Jll+!!!
Supp1_,1,,..,,...._ 1oze t..rga39tp+ D9r1 ~ ttt. gar, frplc, A/C, pettoe, ovwtieng, nicely rlll ~
sAa-...i. 70'ZI Make )'O'K tnoc1P1ng... w/1IO".OoMnVlew SOI" mlc:lo ..we, patio, pool. lndecg:. $1550 · Lrge 3 bd, 2 ti.. cerpat, Pool and facllltlH.
TRANSPORTATION =~.=i":..DaJly~ a.:=r==~78 ~i.~2~<:.>: lty .... Juw•n• ~fltmM&O. ~~·55M1 .. dr..,.. 5.7~~· ::i~Rlohard
~;:.'.! ::~ w!TERMSIW'ontlaet. 65,..1177 OCEANVIEW BeautlfulS8l 2 8aformal ua M/F,non«nkr,o.-30,to 2 Br new optatdrapea, o.m.,.... 9014 a_c. __ .__ CallPatriclcTenoreAgt 281Condo, 1140,000. M-DR. dtolce Meta Vent. ft 2 bd llP' .. e.t C.M. bit ..... pool teeolmo.
Mow Bok" :~~ 78M702 IUIM ~: 1\~ .;.;,.,,, '7115. 1197940 abOde dahw rm ~5~": ~11&111. 0 0 W n I 't a I r I • ;:!_~Sc-.. 8020 .... llN* «IW'IW -2 bdml 1 ti.. end kld1/pet 14115 ruah • Dovw1w .. tolllf ., ••. ~":'i.-n Tr ..... I ::! 3 81. 2 8a. frplc. + air ..... LI I• ~ pvt yd. Ldry ~190 BEST Alty. ~Bdr co:'~ = _M_5_•_41 ____ _
T'r .. kon Vllhly IOM =·at·: .. :. ::t *~==::ix mo.&:· .. ~ peg. 1152! ..... LI -July 1st. 7544611 ~ ~i~·,:
AUTOMOTM !Mt. Cell Pafrtclc Tenore, --pootuec. -PIP. &lllllde a rm..._ wNI &fi't iMi i578 2 6&m St. MM1ot
Au111 ...,_..,, 11110 ,.....,__ISW'l.-C:O Agent 71CM702. ... ... f7t,IOO llM M62 lnod ...4 kkfrl pet :or.: ~~~1~~ .. 4T det._allt Eaac lluff ~ 1•, ~::. 5:."n=P•na V(ll) WILU .... ... u• 53M'190 BEST... --.., ._.. Nty • ... .... pool, .,._,. .,... no
Spurte "-.. ll<•h = • 1Wl\IMll ••11.-U941.1111 Tnd ~ looklng M "°"'8e Loe 2 br 1 be dUIMeX. g_. South C0Mt PIUa .,._ 3 Quiet 1 81, .....,....,., doM peta.1515 mo. 144-47tl' ~· 0n-. 9030 -3.::::;.;::: i:.;::; ~h-.':'Y_.ceri>et. ,.... ._Pmra..-...-,Ort« llook-usi' tao"c~~ dM to bch~•Pl•ca. For 3 woning..,... 3 • v.... = :er:=~~ movS~o~!_ lt2l',800 Cell tn.&'711 and taolcy .. r'fr, '='"'::.=~t=.-r: No peg. 1626. 54&-1MI. 51M190 BEST Alty..: :titt:O. 2183 -=: 2 _,. a a • at r I um A"°""'' r•-• !HM) ..--. ... Thantrytflll 1 +den 2 """"-tlMnc-Mallow .,.. i3iO lamlly CM Meneaet Jett · w,......_., dbl ...,..., AUTOS ll'OltTm plan 200, 3 Br. 2 ba, large family Mory, wtlld\ Ml t>eert ,._ 1ng. Prtoed from Stt.eoo starter wtpool 11urry ph • ........., 1111 17. C.. ~. • llP' 11000/mo. Npt Hgt•
rm, choice.comer location with lllONdlOltaOftQ!nal(but to $15500. Llfattyl• 1539-e1908E8TNty ... d1imre:IG your9 ::::u1.875·UH ,
mini view. Newly redecorated. ~ produoflon llP-48t-6748 w... Verde,.. c1a1uxe 3 mod lddal:X wont IMt el~ yard & entertainment 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil pwwioe. Brok• coop. = .., _ tr gounMt xt'8I I oar ~190 T Atty._ ~if< ::STOl Lar981 llt. Veerty, ~ blodll ~· 11 etltlon, S152.000. L"'8 - -..-..-""'* '100'i ._,..... ·,..._-=-...., nr beldl, .......,, t110 0t a. mTlll•I& mw111-eo11. ~ Lanoer home. __.1901UTNy ........... hralaW IC MM442. 1111w1oar + 1111a. 1tt,
UPLM•11111 .......... 181 ~:.:_1 .. 8:.': ~..-... iuuy ~ .... 1111 1 .r;e_:.::,,.~ ••-.11M111.
n.. 11Mne1a MAND ~ Mmar =.:. '""· ·auoo. a • oonc1o. "°°'"'°' p;;m1if rn CNd o1c petto -. ga9 Lmllftllll'f !!!:'ot'L~ on!l ...... 1"'~,& l', ... ~ W ...... 131-12M. areat ocean' view, "°"'9, dlltl.· ;a.it• . ..,._ 1..!!· llcl ... 1400"1111. ~ -· ...-• a PMlc M IN'Oan. 2 oar Na,~ MlllO 2M. ,..~ 1a715 Imo Day 1 lftdrY rm • ""'"' )lmo yr,,.
of tN .,..,3 • ~ 911'· 1117.900. °"'* 11a, • oonct m.... OCEAN MTN vu· --141·. 2111 • ev .. IPMO ' a1..-101 11S-01 orsn.Dll'. atat•• mee11va 1-..... • · · ·-1 • bedroomt + 1tudy. mollla pent. BOie -.0, 2M. ftllW dbc. yrd, MO I 5-7208. THE CiAiLEi: 1 •. nu--. Ail .. ~
SuNlen lt¥9lng room 1111y-. t41M. taoM ...-. Frpl. llOO/mo. CM Winter l'9"tal 28" fWYI ape wtgmr. °'*'*"' --. Juae ...,.. In. veulted=· , mined dlln,OWC...,,t7...a7 lluffa. Ul·UOI, lltllhore Dr, w . ..._.: '9nOedyttwlP.llo, l4lf ~o lft u. ,,
gleM, ta. hand 11 ._ e ... ., lltii ~ 141~111 ""· No ... l100/mo, 0nnae· 'T'. •10. eel Jillouaf, '"*· .......
oer"9doak ,.._, ---~ _.. llll 8tlerpMw_..41f,a IMMl1S -1-1 ........ 120. .... ........ .... -·-... ¥ .... _, .,........ -.... --..... muott~..._,,,._ •• :V;w: •=•·Cleft ..,.,,' S1ot01mo .......... let. 11runfUmllNdlPt,..., !!._Miii. ~ .....
velealf'Mtwmtmtaga ... ,.. ~ ~..... • .... 0. ··--daoor .......... ,.., =.. ........ _ ........ lamp..... --Oll'41-tf11 a== --11M Maple, CM. 1411 .,.__ ............. ......._,_.,.::s/ Pt •..a. = mo.+-.-.No.-.NNPOM NA AMA:
I LA 0 H [ V I t ---·•---C 1•111111 r·-& .... ,_· ilff.ZJ!. fC!L . To -... ltlllk ._·.Ir. t IL -
I I l I I' I -.. ·.....-·· .bdnn.211LNpC=r= .. ·-~ ...... __.. ---..... caoe.tAI*, ~· • ..,.
cc TT o I ~~2::::~=~ ''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil =:r,~1:,..; -·-a., .. d Adi. yolar on. Sf:.. 1~10: ~\!!"!..Mt ft 1ia11a• -1....-.1-, -r-1 ..... ; Ii Aw • .,,.,. eoi, ....... ':In:.* -. ......,. ... 1111. .. .... pedo,......., a ....., •· ...... ..
t 21r,a:'f'!..-.up-..... t: .. '=oo ot USITHI ,,_, ..... ltP :"'-..11t11etr-..No =..:..":':: ... ~
MITOS, DOIESTIC s A " u c I ...... ..... .. • • "". K-..... -----:.:.:: DAIL y PILOT ., "' 1 "" 1 "9r9clfl = 1• mD.... 1• = . ··= ::1:::r:1::1:~i· c•~~°"U:~-=~~~ model.1111,000. 11~LllllM•I ...., ..... ...,... ..,AST U I IL 1~~ O.M OCIAii WWWW:v4 ~M--·-•-·~-~1. 10 ... _ 1111111. ..... llMIOft, t•.OOO. llSULT'' ~ .... ~· .·· 1 lld.1 .... .._-. ~ .... ~ ..... ~ •. -........ --"*9~1'M-i114.Joo (11')~ •100Clft-Mo."9nt ,_.. .......... Miii ...
• Nit ------le C-:i....,. ~ _ Koot •.,....I If, I~ Newilrt ••1o0,,9 SllVICI l.-cu-..~IJWl\.C W:UVlltlDti t1lOOIWMi.•11M•
::: .__..__.__..__,__.__.~z.:.:T:!Z~ -. ..... ,..,G.ny lllee!L._.-.n DtllcTOIY --~ •96
1='11...:: c;·.:~.rz ~..----... '"11111 ~Fi~~~iiiiiiHN""A.:-P7""F1'iad~1l!! .. :.!!!!J · --~ 'ur-kA·~ -.... W -...,..,..,,..,_.,,. I 10 ti~ It • ..,l•I••• Sc•h 11·1· """ ID1ITl!wtll ....._ -ma ... ,.., ... na . HlrtlorKMIJOOftdo ,,.z.1•11 .. _IAlm Tl&._.. .... _ -..=:',•1&1111!-000 "'wt, 1.. re l!'!f ~-·~ ,.;l~~~!.,.~~~~~lJlll'!!!J~tft!:~Llfl~l!l9a! .. ~"·"'"~ll~·~·~·~··!~•1~•!1~1~llll!!!..l::::::::::::::::C..,~::~Jll.tll~~~f,====~~~~~~~~=l!=:::~;:~·~·~::~~-~= .. ~·~.,..~~._..~::l'~•~~~~~==~~:b~~~~~~~~
All•""""°'' Ill~
Audi 9107 . AW!Ur'I 9109 llMW 9112 ~= 9114
9117 1 l> ........ •n t ilt . rHYN1 t ill "" t lU ~ t i ts ....... t l11
J-tt21 "-" ,.,.
~.,.. ... ti»
LMV\f tlJ~ t.oo .. ti» .._ .... .. ..,. .. tl4l , . ...._8rN tl4$ .. ,_
. 1147 MO "* t O,.t tlOI ,. ......... "" = ....
tllf -· tl ..... ~ •1•1 ..._ t i ...-.... ........ t in -=., ti
tl71 v.....-...,. t l7 Vot..o ti?) ..... tl'7
-· . • -..
J
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Monday, June 27 1883
....... ., .....
· $1.84 Pef dav
Thal'• All you P"Y for a
30 day ad
lntN •
DAlY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIECT(IY
,_ ____ _
•
..... IHI ... Illa It c..-dal hneuJI Hll ltlt Wu... Siii ltl1 Wutt4 5101 ltl1 Wut.. SI ..
, u 111'8.. IUrt IHI ... Illa ltll '*"" tATI• U•l1hlrllh1 a.'t 8111. Huebandl wtt. twne wtMJ
I M YI Roommate t;oofdlnators iOO aq. K .. PYI Ctti, water LARabT & MOST RE-1 S.iaty commeMUt•t• with Higtlty lkNled R.D.A. lor io.... to trevel & expectt to Wk~ rentals now evell. Live .,_., lor ._ & gee pd. ale 9Y9ll. Ind. llABlE · ~. 545-~ tut peced orth<>dolttlc IMk• l5000 Pf mo. Call ~ :'• Color 22T'/4 S30 looklng for a piece 1800 ~ It. of ~ 972-1000, 24 hoUra prectlct In MIMion Viejo . Cfalg 802-274-0539
Newport &~· CM. MOtoalleccpllcanta ~;r:·~ 'c~·~~,,! OIROll OF UWllTWIALD area. Full time. Or-1·m•fr•lanoewrtt•look· &46-7445 · 551-70n, 213-Sff-5334 831_193o · · · Pr•tlge Interior Dealgn thodontlo exper. req'd. 1ng for peopte who epent
HOIOSCOPE
BY SIDNEY OMARA
24hra · 11•••11 Annualnted~ 830-3703. patt of the6r llfe IMng In ..... ..... HiS Room t needed tod ... OUlalde uJea people. T RECPT 2 Clev9lend Of In tN oan-
Tues4ay, Jue· ZS WWWa:J Gd l &; 9a1~8 ~. $302.~'. ... Utrill 719 NO. HARBOR BLVD Growing Company. Man-°:!!;tor buay ~Ta •al northern Ot»1o area.
ARIES (March 2l-April lD): tou get your way· at It• Beau CASA VERA I 87M559. ...tlla ltlt FULLERTON ~~~11*4 9ch ofc. Exper & pleuent wt1o 11• now IMng In Or·
despite opposition from one who is envious and =~whole~e::: Stlare~lrlleve!Dena ......... .!!~ .... 111 + lnauran'ce. c':Ti ~~:;.:llty 8 muat. = ~andinc::
expreaees doubt concerning your sincerity. Gather oon\'9fllent"'1ocat1on • Point home. Private ar• ••llT... &• 21M52-3429 · and oolorlul h ttlelr -old WOf1d elegllnge In a on ground i.v.I. ftmele 270CUqll,weelmalntalned ATTRACTIVE ..,............. .....,............ tobt. hobb6aa Of llwa In and synthesize infonnation. Wish comes tru~ you garden room Hid 0"9I' 45. Non amkr. ~ bldQ on quiet ttr .. t. MASSUSSES F >fiMl--~P aMUt.if\il retnment Fe-general. " you ~ win allies and influence others. Cancer native plays courtywc1 aettlng tor tN peta. '350. Utll Ind d. 846"-4800, 845-3323 TO S~VE YOU ' Ot':' ~or c111ty In Irvine. Hotel and !Na dMcrlptlon 0t linow
paramount role. active Hrlor citizen. 493-3392. daya. ~ l)(eferred, dlnnet hcM'9e uper «»-10meone who doea. Call
TAURUS (April 20 M 20) ,... ___ -""~·•· Owned and operated by Shrhee,deen,neet,doM .-75 2286 ll ~ mele0tltmale. Med. &calent wonting 875-4478 ef'ler ePM Of. -ay : ~r .,....,.._ ¥ an RN. 714/240-033(! tothopa/bua. F.S2501nd .~~ 18101 Redon-ClOmmitalononly.Calltor condnlona and benefits. between 7.AM and combines with calls, comm~cationa. tripe, visits and I utll. ~7 evea do C¥ctt.'n. Huntington appt. 7M--ee77. Cell 851-186& 9 to 12 7:45AM. Wiii pey ~tor
increasedsocialactivities. You'llbeexcited.buayand awr __ ~.842-2134. IC2mQlllY~ MonttwuFrl -· !:1oott1at r.ut 111 pu~----i
jmpiwU .C-OiN.. SagiUAli.1.a.s. peCllOQI' uf,igwe . "' __. .1 ,
scenario. Focus on advertising, publicity and educa-• oa •an • •g•nt Int ' 11'.....,..•li DllM Wii for new department. Mutt have uomotlve ex-lllW ti home, garage, llMpt e. blllla p; dbl ouJngie gar-W.......... Bectlalor/Bechelorette Contact RI ch a rd, pertenoe. 493-3375 Mr. • Acoountlng Cleril.
on. • t • P • to b ••ch· age, atreet entrance .... Aaalitance League In Otflcl & Birt~ PartlM 714-Ms.-2114. Spotta. BARWICK . IM· A~ency uperlence r• GEMINI (May 21-June 20): It is time to begin 13254575. ~. -·red. e7S-33t3. Coat• M ... la oontlder-Tll Ult llllAll PORTS Inc. qulr«'.
b ildin Ge ... h" 'th k .... '--Apt. Manager Coupl.. • Flleewtl re u g process. t m t.ouc Wl ey -BALBOA IS. 3 BR Eleg "'V night time cfllld care. 738-8538, 558-8538 w/expef1ence for Coat• EXPERIENCED B<Nkfut .......
per90nnel Emphasi.z.e knowledge of customs and home. Gar. Sips 8, ltep9/ Offi" lnt&h Jtlf 21 /2 to 5 yra.11 lntereeted REWARO-lnto on Jerry B. M... Apta. Salary + Coo6c. Must be fut end _.
laws. Meditation is ..-.arv if you are to quietly bch. $325-$800 willy. Call: 94s.es7o. Roblnt9n ..... of 894 bonua + apt, no peta. clean. XLNT Working en-'_J_H_E_R_BE_RT_H_A_L_L __ _
··--J 848-&333 1500 aq. It. A/C oftlQa + Wlllon$.;,rM. Write Box 842~907 wttdys. vlronment In Balboa. BREA MALL regain confidence and perceive potential. Scorpio is eciulll warenou-nrO C SCRAM LETS v 875-7829 involved. BAlBOA ISLAND. 3 BR Airport. Avail. On eni,,; • 3984, Bdl 90740. ARC Amerlc1 Corp In PIT office poeltlon open.
Elegent home-Gar. Sipe term bula. Attractive ANSWERS . ICllteh I Newport 8eact\ hU a tult fLIWll WJ Call Torn Rey, 529-1278 CANCER (June 21-July 22): Opportunity exists e. ltep9/ bc:tl. $325-$e00 rate. Contact Mr. Stuart time opening In IN Geo L I
to recoup 106.">. Dig beneath superficial laye1"9-you wtdy. 84~ 54M21t. Heiv.d . Oc1et lutnctin HH aral ServlcH/Prlntlng M~':1n~ Ag1en~/R~c•p~lo ~11 t
are on brink of making valuable diacovery. Clash of BALBOA ISLAND. 3 BR 1817 Wettcilft, N.8. 275 to Sumac· Embelm Flight miOfl in YoUr Dept. Call!. Driver'• Lio port BMcfl. Mutt heV9 needed lor letge ~ 'd · u1a · rod · Chang f Elegant home. Ger. 81pt 3e00 aq. rt. 2,435 aq. rt. THEM to Mf alrp&ane. BFR'1 & lnetru-required, good Company pteuant pertOnlllty. Call neaa lndulltMI pettt In
I eas proves stun ting, p ucuve. e o 8, atep9/ bch. S32S-SSOO ~ for medlcal or I found out whet happen• ment training. Don Colt Benefit•, no exper nee. arter 8 PM,213-350-0152 Orange Co. E.xper. In
scenerycouldfollowwritt.enrequest. Virgo plays key wk"' &46-8333 ., ... ,,_ , ... 1 ..,,..,2 1 t'"At -t ...... t 114-551-51~ S33-3232ext. 50. K•ry leealng a publlc r•ttona 1 .,. · ....._.t ....... ·--.. ,!,~ --=...:.· ~~ Fennell. An equal op-Fun time/Part time, hlQh-uHtull, pleaH call roe. Balboa Penlnauia, 2 er. 4001 Biren. N.B. ..... THEMto ME. AIQht tnttruciton 10 your Portunlty affirmative ec-IChool or college ltudent 549-2988 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): People tend to say "Yes" ~25 to 7-2 $300/Wll. 3 440 eq It $450/mo af~. BFR'1 & 1n1tru-tton employer. tor new fut food ,._ _,,.,,.......,_,,..,,,,,·~""="=-=-~=
to your requests. Lunar, nwnetical cycles highlight ~k'7~2 to 7-18 $425/wtt. Agent 541 5032 · I.tit I,.... iiM ment tralnl~. Don Cole taunnt. Apply a1: LEGAL SCTRY/OFC MOR pe~•AA'v....._ diplomacy, domes•'c adit•llf'rnont and ~243. -714-551-51 ART SALES Wheetley'• Hamburgers. TRAINEE Npt 9ch R.E. .,,._.. -·-. w ,--·~ a .. 4 .. I.... Car-opportunity. Wiii 7480 Edinger g ""' • 5 and Bua Litigation flnn
exchange of gi..fta with loved one. Tautus, Libra, Bal ltl tum 3br 1~ ba & Baytront omoae trom 300 .,. atolen In the &It Bluff ••llt .. I 1111111 t r a In. FI T . P I T . pm. , h • • o P • n In II Io r
Virgo natives figure prominently. Serious consider-2br lba, ~~n~ler. aq rt. Ar-.S-anyoneplOklng ,,~II lnlal llM40/hr. 837~ mottvated, energ9tic. u -
ationdue pcmible purchaaeof art object. ~~:I7~~~7 Y·1111-1m I upacetpta-.'*'•llc. M/F-1to1 YJ•.Call~ ...._......, .... nm.NY ~n~ l99elactry.
VIRGO ~-) p -.._:........ no. _,com.ct N9WpOtt lect tor detail•. e to 11 Couple dealred 1 1 PYT·Tm-aklllt and lhoft· (Aug. 23~pt. 22 : ast contacts bear Bayfront 3 Br. 2 Ba, -I a.di Polee. AM d a II y. K • r • n . Pfoperfy 111 Or.,,; C::: opportunltlH avallabl• hand/IC)eed wnttng req.
fruit in connection with health program. employ-11800/mo, 21 a.Ibo• .... NW ' !Ii.-213-31&-3734. ty. Mutt be experlellCed with th• Loa Angl" Oppty tor adV8ncar'nel•t
ment. You gain acce98 to privileged infonnation, a eo....94&-5135· eoo.101 aq It evall from att ..... ,.... ~L4-I and have Calll r•-Tlmee Clrculatlon O.. tor qual. ~who I 1 25 .,. lt«*n In the &It Bluff _._ · pa r t m • n t I n 0 u r demonatrat• attention "•pedal" penon provides practical information. A Corona del Mar Fumtahed. BASEMENT 11.00 aq rt. Ar-. See 8'1YON plddng ~;ping rm leranoea. No pell. Salary door-to-door ~ to detail and --9-
oolleague may take too much for granted-possible 1 bd apt w/peUO. Sieapt 2500 aq n Cell Mon-Fri up • oet. pta-. ••• lie. all ~ p1ua apt. J50-2900 ..._ l)(ogram Guer'an-to IMm. Cont.ct Mr. An-4 people. w .. k,ly. 9"15 842~ no. and oontac1 N9WpOtt 842-71 557-9150 D• ....... ter wanted tor 2 t--' ............ ..;_ ...,_ dru.. 840-8880 rilt disturbs aura of bannony. 873-8349 · a.di Pottce -F-• _, ,..,...,, -_... ...-
LIBRA (Se • 23 n... 22) F ..... 11....... . --------DELUXE OFFICE SUITES . • .• ·---....... ..,. boyll, ... 2 and 10· In commlaalon. Houra: 9 • -111ur11Mrr po.. ~\. : ~ are ln-Furnlahtd 3 bd • home 8-yfront bldg. 700.1 007 I .. 4 .... I.... u._.. Vf!: my home. Houre M pm, AM·2 PM. Of 4 PM -9 Proi:tf upet1anct. Per· tensified-axnmitment ia made,. responsibility in-w/patlo Nr Bch and 111 1, 1 · ••y•••••• -·Tl Mon-Fri. Call 541-2983 PM. Training II ptovlded. 3 dav creeaes and you are "completely involved." Lunar Shop• . All Amenltlea aq It avail rorn 1.25. ert ltol«l In the e..t Bluff - - -before o. 873-7498 evea. Potential to •m l300 manent day w .. 1e. F lty.· 2 WMk ml 1 · BASEMENT a1.00 aq It. Area. S. lln)'OM plclclng Be your own bou. p1u1 per_.. Foran tn-873·7120, spotlight on speculation, children, change of scenery. 8~9 n mum. 2500 aq It. Celt: Mon-Fri up • cet, pta-. •• lie. Ca~'!'" mtg mold•. Banking ttrvlew. c ~ 11 ( 7 14 l._UfllUD ____ W_llTD __ _
creative endeavors and romance. Ganeer, Caprioom M . 842-4&44 no. and oontac1 Newport 0* 100 hulla, 1 compl. •1111111 957-2381 •JCt 1204 8 ----BMcfl Pollet. • t>oet. seooo. 1-350-8561 · &i.,_. t.euat be 1 yra pel"IOna figure prominently . -r-• EXECUTIVE SUITES ,___..__ Immediate opening for Full time, aharp take old. W .S,I pttif. but wlM SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21): Yo u 've been ........... •FULLSERVICE* unw-t muHnger/general cnerge type peraon tor lntervtew other apc>ll· , h 1,u ...... back" kno h cir line _A11__ 2 bdrm, 2 ba deluxe. 320 iq. ft. for only Otlert!aldtl •II warthouH aHl1tant. 1 plMMnt office, lmtMd. C8ntl. 493-1541
' 0 ~oe . -w w en to aw . ' .~ '3.000 per month. 3713 I e 2 5 / m 0 . M. r y . FOlll> ADS 111-00llTE aaa Regular dellverlH In opening. 815-4971. Leen Proceaeor transaction may adUa.lly be completed. Focus on Seuhore Or .. 850-&578 ~::f~~:r:,s. Broker· ...,. bri vehlclel. Frequent Ex.P« Loan Proc:MaOr
territorial rights, 9eCW"ity, the end of a cycle. Be ON THE SAND ARE fREE IO l'IMvy llttlnQ required. .UT IPPM needed for tiuey ~-"creatively eelfiah." Means don't permit your own SUMMER RENTAL 'For IMM, COl'POf'lf• omc;e MOO/mo, XL.NT beneflt9. New Hrvlc;• concept 1ng otfloe ,,.._.,. eur
best interests to be pushed aside. 3 er. 2 ea. unit, ... bar. apece, 1800 aq ft .. OCMn Cal: llYEITllllT e.o.E. MtF 861-9900 C--Owr1rnencti!'1ng '" ~· roundlnoi. mt ~:
SAGl'M'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Accent ver-~~~·.!T.J :W·1n~11 =. •Report.edeflgurtlncome .~~·1•11,lllilll ""'•=. c2°iLu1cetor~lnfo: =1:1~n~n~ satility, originality, independence, courage of oonvic-garage. 5802 Seuhor9 near C09lt · I U5 aq Ml-Mll neceawy. _.,_. 11· 549-0827· PfooeaalnQ. Send R.-
tiona. Short trip may be n-rv to establish new, TSL Mgmt. 84'-.·1~ ll. full~ with_. •Aefar9"0etrequlrad. p..,lllMpr, Growing NASO Arm on _.,,.to: Undeey & Co. ---J ly &J.-_.;~ ". ' w&.,,._partclng.Call •CanMmuptol10Ka •••1111 &at 6 Wett QOMt Meka 17871 lrvlne Blvd, Ste productive contactB. You'll get to h eart of matten M•-~1 ,.: · 1 Sytvta: ~PropettlM Found 8lk ta 11'1111 approx month. 1 t ., ... ----• lklenled Btok.,.. to join 201, TuatJn, CA. t2te0
w here love l.s concerned. Leo, Aquarius peniona ........ i · _1117 Inc. 71 /&45-MOl 20 tbt, vie irw. & Santa, •Rltlt ,,atentlal non I a •--•.., --Newpor1 8MCtl office.
figureIPRIOOR· 'll c::gun;on&m.2a; ••• ,...... CM.&4Mt42. exl9tant~fonocuh I ....... = MU9t be aperlellced In ..... ,.. ..... m
C RICOR · 1 D. ~ 4 • all -. requl,..,.,,.,,ta. ..._. -.a tax ld'ltntaoed lnvitet· (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Female family .-. • ,..v vu cent.a. aq ft. AJtt COncl. 6 Found dog; Med, ai Call Sien 839-7582. ~-.. ,.-,._, ,,.,.._ pul)llc a. pnv.te •illtlHlll ln'lf ..
member requests "aerious d..i.:u.asion" concernina Auguat. 3000 /mo. Y' old bldg. " ~from blklwtlt tam. Vic Flc>w9f. -·----offering•. ate. Need Plumbing, elllctr1cel, WOOd ··--e 494-5857. bHch. 538-7§04. C.M. 848-7080 or ".!..~you21~tyou~ lllllJH-111 "'' ttrongcllentllat.eflO&n working or related payments, collectiona. Needed material is available, a SPACIOUS 3 Bf, tum nr 873-2295 851-5158 .._. '22, ..., on a....,., .... rt Mmlngll pc.alble lend tr~ Probtetn eoMng
dinner invitation UI part of "interesting" scenario . ... COM, wkly --Lux. NB otnea.' Avail. 1n Found male Ootder'I ,_.. lnvaetment. you PfoOebly "'' 1111, Nel#M to Del"9 Secun-apptltude HHntlal.
You'll recover article that had been loet, mi8li.ng or vatlonl. 873--0&84. 1 exec. 1Ulte. a145/mo. trelver gold, male wouldn't l>elleve m.. ......, ,.,..... tlM Inc. 5031 Bird! St. Commerclal bulldlng
stolen. ltatala.. Non1mkr. 846-3700 brown/whit• Lhaao Rlgl'lt? If 1 ..,, l\lrther .... -........ Sult• C. Newpor1 Beectl. k~:~I: helpful.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Stress indepen-IUn IHI N.B. Approx. 843, a/Q Apeo,femal• brown ~~p;,t:':i~ lU-4111. Ce.t2MO. ~ 12 no!:;',:."
d ini . ti . and faith upper ahwr & knchen-Doberman mix. bull ,100 bef0te .,.,.., Mm· .. --Handyman ence, ua ve, penuatence ln your own. F 1 t h 2 •~-r.m... Codler Sp9nlel ·~· ..... nr•• capabilities. Correct decision results in profit . You'll :.'d~o!n f b~h :i'~ 8 • ette, ......,, 841-2'47 blue collar, tamale tan lngUtarted to ,cover t"9 Peraonablew/good phone Tlf'lllll ..,..,,... llllmt-
be at right place at right tlme--Judgment and 1225/mo'. + ~ utlla: I •WMl IUll Terrier mix. Nftlport ==· ,e:t~ ~ .. ~ volo• and manner. ~·::::-'.:;::.~ e.m MllO to MOO p., lntuitionhit~t.LongdiatancecallaldainmakJ.ng 536-?Haevea. : 1000~:,,-:,._.~,:* ~Mw"':4"644':.· normal. However. 1M rM 831-7846 " t~.Somecerpen-_."you heve • *-decision~ travel. COM lflr 3 Bf apt, own rm AaeiOMd OlttllnG. · F-...... M _,:::::::i T__._ PfOYe to you theit thla CONSTRUCTION try ...,... helpM , We ~ 0t:::..::. a ~ trpc REFS 0"9I' ... ~ ..-.... • .,,.,_, ,...,_, Pfognm cen..,,, you • NewPOt:t ., .. jOb alt• train. Cell CNlr1le Tuea Call tiilr AounttM at P (Feb. 19-March 20): Your natural 30.Call art e:so' pm. gar11ge1tavell. Ot trl-color. NI Anlmal t'9tum of"'* 1~ on n a• d 1 : • x p · d 8:30 to 12 noon. 54t-JoM btwn HAM & talenta .,.,..._to forefront-you'll "know" what ta S300tmo.~. 6'6-3323deye. Shlft«1211MIMDr.CM. ya.If money. For cteealla, pelnter~-18/h 97t-e021 3PM..----e... ,,,....,,..._,,,......,...-...,,..,,.......,.-_.,_· NEWPORT CQtTE& 1"1111 eu MM. ~ • Mlf..addf11111S, r. l1borer1-U /hr. _ -OCCW"ring behind 8t'll!l'leS. Nece.aty malerial for <t,_wfl ft 29r ,_, f. MrWle Ex.autM ~Found· M lanlblll AlahM. ~ erNtlope and CUSTOOIAN•mature .... ,,...... _.... •.
rebuilding proce91 ia now available-cooperatibn II ~·.:::.eio· F. '67Mllt. '40-6410 M eOtct/wtlt l'etr~ sa.oGto· Aaoort. 1&4a.O only. Penn. PIT. owntn. (,.,_II ..... ) H-3 =* 111 Met-received from quart.en usually le. than friendly. ..,._.._ mix. M b11 L11b 2 die*• AdWMAV9, Coata ,..._ '400/mo. 846-4411. &un-nu. 11 PM-~1-AM. kettng ----!'lmtM. No
-----------------------M/F 2 • '-· ~t w/d, O:O-..:r='::~'~~ cNlne,MbltlbmOobte. CAHe2e. llDITllH9'1 8tarUlparhour. ·~ nee1tMri.
Atu!antl, Vaf. Atartatat1, Val: law IHI =~~;:'.· HB. =~Ir~~·~ = ~ = lliMi ti LM8 4ft4 · ..... rt..... '=•= ~"~~
...... -~ Dll lu CltMatt 1'111 mo. 9«oea etr;;Jbdi. MIF n/lmk, 3bd 2be. avail 3 Illa E. Gt ,..,.., a tr'le¥W, fOld. M llmlWtlt •PU'f-LIYI* Ille............ Newpor1~142 .... 1 Appolnt~I Cllle "°1'
PAR• NEWPORT
APARTMEN IS
Prime w, Not lk:h. Call 711 In CdM NGO mo Adami. i.. ~. r Doble mbC. NoCredlt ~ ...... /w .. "'"' Cell In~ l<JnO, Ill :t~~-t:~ ~~7&-7tHEwa.Avall ~.v9·a " 7114-1040,Mfff90Y _ ::.~r:.·.~~ 7SMl229-t7.bkr M/... ' ~ •Hl"Ul.Ull z ~11 · F ~ _ OoMnvlewhomeMett•, •HtO/up, oarpeia. Anlmlll.._..1.1"Mele .. ..,."4 LlliHlll Rik. HOUllC&.INlftitO let·~. I Yt1 •ICHf. ~~~ Nr IO General Hotp, :-~=: ~2'3:.:'wr:: r~== Dt,CM.IUl•ll f.lol " ' ... .., .... 111rt :,,. ...... ~~ :..ur:Mt.-euM H,
.,...112 1dnnApen. ~· H~2!:; ~~ 8-4731 or a..cwDMl42.,741. ~onlwh.Ml-ns4. ~-·.--d~ ili;oAAT . "t..,..PIT,IR l:Y' ,:::,111111•• ... .... :
::i'! ~r•T~Y 1J'~~514mo. fUfnl•h•d room. m•t. ":U:".~':-9..;= •'M!J&W• ~ 4 ~. lt4' -==~r-.:;;'~~~~:·~~.:'on."'=
IUrnltNd. working fem. pref. IOI ,, lllO/mo. + \t With ttlort *"" ..... fUI own.,lln¥"t., nHdt C.M. vlo pref•rr•d • ....,...1•
'rom M tO .. ... UtO/mo. &42~1717. utue, oell aft 7PM ..wie ...... Keep'°"' Fouftd: Imel llnlwn ma6e 116,000 2ftd TO at l4~ -tl7....,1 • OnJarnbOt'elrd... *-tynew1tlree8drm 2 ~...,,_Pvt ba. 111~ !"9ed low a dot. Marlnera Med. int ~ Off1tt Cell Mr Tllll :Y? • MiiOliW otaoewiiil
SenJoequlnHmllAd. bdt apt """ ~..n. 76 ""'-6/"--~-· ~"a:i;r.,. P'Oo111 ...._.__ldl.f7M1tl uiall'awe.M· ... na nHded lmm,edlataly ~':.:-="' ·.,::~i=·11~ =· '9rtlly ,,..... .a.a.a_,_ ~ . ....__ • · ..,.,, .,..., "--•· 1ii9iP. M/f _.,.. MW 2 -Oii!I: DertltllM for """-.....,,,.. per · Airport ....... _. oeifd;y-;;, "::f norMmOtc•,4'4-0411 bdrm oonc10 CM/Npt. 0owr0t. 1 ._. ~ ,...,.., blk u.uma Hw l'roduOta. a eot-...,_ • ..,.,,.,,....., • ~-: 1 mile from ~•tW2.0lt9.0ff/tt4 lllm, Nwpt Bch, pool, ua_:.. 1/2 .u. tll" Al por19Wtl .• l4ll1• :iriu:':.41;t:. ........ aetell'~oompeny. HOi 1 fS'.r. W.,.~ # •
bd\.142· H1. total unlll In buldlng '2211/mo, WomM only, 842 1 ..... 1•w. .... , .. -iind ...... , tot llderty ,..... to ., llfBll 1 v.,...... 2 "· a ea; POOi pu1111c tennle oouru ;:cf 311 up. 842990. Raap. roommiM ..meet. tt . Dill '• .,_ .... COO( ....,.,...~ tw: bebY91t our bwltlf\11 ~
ClubflOUle, "1*. a'125. gotf oourae rtoht tMNnd MMANllTIL Houee 1360/mo, 111, . ":;Cooker '::cJ':1111.1..,._ Mlllellton ienetytt~· ....,.. ~~°"'a:'= ..... ~.t_ ~..._..., s.noy 942.,1•1 Pf<>t*tY. onty mlnut• to Wkly ,_... now eva11 i.t. d.D. ltleron. Wk 11th CM. aoo "'°or oei .....,... ......, · IMl·l111 146-4111 ooafllOn, ~ 101 • be ............. •
State PM! Mel ~ ''" 6 up. OolOt rv' 111--iio. Home Mr Hir.t.CJ1l)21'1-1tOI • WIDOW !iAI UI tor •1•. "· NliWPOtt IMDtt daye °'~~-=.. Nunl1tl terv ••· ·.::,,!:· '::> a:i;:.~: EZ~~:c: =,r =.: ~:,~ ,::::-.=.== •. · .. ua · ~'P~= ~~=.:. o:z::-~ lrti'~ ~~e'w~-..~~nn.~~~~·--
111 .... · NOW! Call--et (714) ...... 1.... . . O.M. ll'{ef ..... n Y"8 ' .... ••• Cell Deftlao1' AllOO. Ina ,..,... ~ IO. =.~~~:llHPltll neo •
..... ,..... 142.0131. up, Amy 151-tlOI. -- -&..oil Ten ,_.,.. ... en.nn. =~: OOITA --"*' ,. ,... ......... ....... Pll.._ .... -Mfat Tradi ,_, otc1 9tuft for ·~. """"..,....,.. ...,_ Ude .. ~, 11.UPMff, ,_ MN te. ~ ..... Ad. ...... .......... .. __ ,...;...;....._ ____ ,Ind wllat 'tOll want In new ooodlH wltll a .,_ at hofM. n•a ~ dla-. IMI i, C.. Hwr. io.. ,.,_.., ~. llL&. ,d .. Item~ With a ... '· Cella no. tltl.. 11'.0 . ._ 1tlQ, .._Iii 1 q y_llt ..
WMC,.. c.-..,,..,, o.it¥ "'°'a.••• ,, a...,.• ...,..,1' .-, ,-.. 1 •n...., w.... ~. I ~,...or ••• M . ....._ 1 a......, o..-. . DM.Y N.OT
' I
..
1~-
ACROSS 82 CouP'et
&3 Worltltp
IATUROAY'I
PUZZL.e IOLVID t Increased
600wn~
9 Stupid
t4 Spll1
15 Italy's
Moro·
16 Right-hand
page
17 Library
system .
t9 "-Frome"
64 Be happy
H"'More wan
87 "-bot the
brave .. •·
68 Fusses
6i~poseaol
70 Noun ending
71 Run
DOWN
20 Numertc 1 Fumble
prefix ~ Mature
21 Sailors 3 Occurrence
23 Ensnare 4 Exited:
25 Declare 2 wds.
26 Standard 5 Cheer
28 Kitchen item 6 Malt drinks 30 Duty
32 Said angrily 7 Loafs 31 Bivouac
37 Pebble 8 Sprat's diet: 32 Sinecure
38 Con1unc1ion 2 wds. 33 Pretense
39 Fruit dish · 9 Invents 34 Bear: Lat.
41 Scud 10 Back off 35 High note
42 Possession 11 Throb 36 Move quickly
45 Hoax 12 Planet 40 Extinct
52 A Horae
53 Former US
· President
55 Madrid
48 Goober 13 Relatives 43 Went m
50 ArrnNiJt°";.: ___ _.."'811-an.'IW!e----......... ~--51 Procession ~2. Obese operators chamber
54 Wetter 24 Sprawls -46 Barrel part 60 PU
58 Wagner 27 Conveyance 47 Roman -61 Now: Lat.
opera 29 Opening 49 Kids' aa~m.:,::e:.._.~6~5r:1.;.:,n~~~~
--.-2-'"'3,.._...,..-5 6 7 8 9 111 11 13
--.
(~14) 541-7051 -
..
Coat DAILY PILOT/Monda • June 27, 1913
'
I
l •
ATLAS CHRYSLH-PLYMOUTH
2929. H1rbor Blvd .. Cos1a Mesa Tel. 546-1934 3 blocks
south of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd CompleJe
body sl!op Sales Service. Parts. Service Dep1 open
Monda~ thru Friday 7 30 A Pi.ll lo 5 3-0 P M. and 8 A.Ml 10 5
P M 'or'l· Saturday
OIANGE COAST AMC/JEEP/RENAULT
2524 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa
549-8023 645-7770
: 1 Jeep Dealer In the Wesll See us today for soles. service
& leasing There are reasons why we are = 1 Price and
aetection• Also. the au-new Renault Alliance 1s here'
THEODORE ROBINS fOID
Modern sales, service. pacts. body, paint & tire depls.
Competitive rates on lease & dally rentals 2060 Harbor
BIVd .• Costa Mesa. 641-0010 or 540-8211
I
l
DAVID t'· PHILLllltS IUICIC·ftONTIAC • M~ZDA Salet • Service • Leasing · I
1' • 24888 Altcla Parkway
Legyna Htll1 837·2400
IObTH COUNTY VOLKIWAGIN/ISUIU
(f.QD1)9(1y Jim Manno VOfktw-otnl
fl71 ~ IMotl Blvd1, HuntlngttJn Beach, (714) 842·2000
SALU • L!AStNO • PARTS • SERVICE
WE WILL NOT BE UHDERSOLOlll t v .. Ananclng 0 .A.C. & fl*' 04ecounta
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES. • LONG HACH IMW
Large se1ec11on ol new & quall1y used BMW's and 01her fine
cars1 Sales. service & leasing. Trade-Ins welcome! Take 405
Freeway to North Cherry Oii-ramp, turn right & go 6 blocks
north lo 3670 N Cherry Ave . Long Beach.
(714)_ 636-5790 (213) 427-5494
• NABHS CADILLAC
2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. TeT. ~40-9'100. Oranoe-
County's Largest Ca dillac dealer. Sales Service. Leasing
f8 SOUTH COAST DODGI
"Y0ur Frlendty Nelghbomood Dodge ~Ip"
2888 HarbOr Blvd., Co9ta Meu 540-0330
Salel, L...,ng & A Full S-W:. o.p.tment
lnetudlng Body And Pelnt Shop
We apeclallze In cu1tom van conYWliona In 11t prto. rangea
ANO WE PAY CASH FOR USED CARS TOOi
• CHICK IVHSON 'OISCHl·AUDl·VW
4 15 E Coast H~ .. Newport Beach. 873-0900. The only
dealership in Orange County with Hlese three great makes
under one root•
• ;
• ALAN MAONON ftONTIAC-SUIAIU
2480 Harbor Blvd • Co•ta Ml9a. Tel. 548-4300. Salea,,
Service. LHstng. "Mr. GOodwrencti."
• CLAlllC.AUTOMOllUI
785 Newton Way,-Coet9 Mela. Tel. 131-13"
"JAGUARS OUR SPECIAL TV"
XK 120'1/140'a/150'1/XJ'1/E·Typee
Salee -S.W. -"-'Ot.etone
PAINT AHO IOOV SHOP Off~'*--' t7tn' ""'In~ ......
• • HOLMll TUTTLI DATSUN 901 LONGlltRE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd . Weslm1ns1er Tel 892-6651 Orange
County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales.
Service. Parts
• DICK Mlllll FIAT/LANCIA
'Probably the lowest priced Flats in Southern California"
(t:ocated' 1 mile north of South Coast Plata
near Main St and Warner Ave In Santa Ana)
120 W Warner Santa Ana 557·2132
• SANTA ANA DATSUN
2001 E t 7th Street, San1a Ana Tel. 558-78 11 Your
Onsiinal Dedicated Datsun Dealer
MllACLI MAZDA
We've moved! o u; new location Is 1425 Beker Street. Costa
Mesa Tel 545-3334.~top by & vlall our modem showroom
and see why we're the : 1 Mazda dea* in Southern
Cahforma Sales. Servlc:e. Parta and Leasing .
• COi.Miii DeLILLO CHIVIOLIT
(Formefly Groth Chevrotet)
t8211 8eac:?I Blvd .. tiuntlngton 8each
New • Used • Sales • L .. alng ~ Parts • Service
Come by and ... our Huge lnventOfyt
.147-eol7 648-333 t
• HACH LINCOLN MUMY
''We're new arid M89f for your bull,,...." Comlltete ......
1ervlc• ind body 1hop taclllllH. One of the taro••t
lmlentorlel In 8outhem Cellfornle Of .new LlnoOIM and M9fclll'ye. Located 3 btoell• eouth of the San ~ ,,..._ on ....., Blwt. In Huntlnfton IMoh.
UllOO ~ 91vd. .....7131 ot -.1ooe
28"5 Harbor &Nd., eo.ta MeM. Tel. 540-&t10. Thl9 0.ttun
loc:e11on hM ~ MMng ar.,. County '°' 18 ~. 1 MMe So. 405 F,....y. Stop by & Ylelt ue today •.• new
ownerthlp pledgee to t.it eA competition.
• SUNSIT fOID, INC.
(Home ot Wiiiie the Whale). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd ..
Westminster. Tel 636-4010.
• OIANGI COUNn VOLVO
10 t20 Gard8f) Grove Blvd .. Garden Grove
Tel 530·9 190. Exctullvely Volvo to cover all your VOlvO
requirements.
New•Used•Seles•Le11lng•Pert1•Servic.-8ody Shop
Freeway close In the heart of Orange County at G111Mn
Grove Blvd. & 8roollhUfat.
I
CONNILL CHIVIOLn
2828 Harbor &Nd., Coata Mete. Over 23 ye9ra aervtng
Orange County Sales. ••••Ing, service. Call 548· 1200: special parts nne: 546-9400: body shop line: 754-0400.
IOY CAIVll IOLLI IOYCl .. MW
1640 Jambotee Ao.ct, ~ 8Mch, MO.e444. S~.
Servk:e. Parts And LNling.
. .... .... ,.....La~
t'
-b---all11fU~
and worth
a n,llllon ·
The world11 lariest carved
emerald ia on diaplay to the
public in a Newport Beelch
jewelry •tore thJa week.
The 38-pound, 14-lnch-tall
pnwtone, which made the
Gulnnell Book of World Re-
corda, ii valued at $1.2 millJon
and hu bt1en dilplayed to the
public on only six other oc-
caaionl.
Unearthed in the remote
Camalba area of Brazil in 1974,
the 86.000-QU"at gem ia owned
by Gleim Jewelen of Palo Alto.
Most of the ltone ia not high
quality, and it lacks the clear, da!k aheen of the prize emer-
alcU'which are Uled for jewelry.
So George Gleim com-
. rni.aaioned four carvers in Hong
KC?ng to 1eulpt the maaaive roct<.
__ -:which originally weighed 62
p011Ma -jn the-18th ~ -
Ch'i.ng Dynaaty style.
It wok them a year to finish
Mary Barr of Barr Jewelers, New_port Beach keeps a close eye on the the project, cutting 24 poun<la of
the emerald away and grinding
(See EMERALD, Pqe AZ) _ wor!d'~ bigge~ emerald. '
T'
CIUT, IDITIDN
OH ANGE: COUN 1 Y C A LIFORNIA 25 CENTS
Kathy Beeker boldi a world globe u 1be tOMeS
line to Lido Isle Yacht qub dock to end cruiae.
Cruise complete
'Hurricane' experience only on film
By ALMON LOCK.ABEY otllle ............
P~_Q4-10Jm.ppas_ ~.a~e b~in~
Hearing t~t dete~!_!i~ !!_de~jst stJJ_ndsJri11l in 3 pat~ent deaths
Six yean to the day after they left Newport Beech oo a world
cruise, Jay and Kathy Becher nmed their sloop Into the Pt dock
at Lido Ia1e Yacht Club Sunday, where they weu greeted by 8COr't!9
of friends and relatives.
1.-0oking as if they had just completed a weekend cruile to
C..tallna Ia1and. the Beckera aid they vWted 33 oountn. oo their
cruise with no incident man Rrioua than a broken steeriQ8 vane
and rudder.. •
'!'niat gave -US IOIDe anxious momenta on 'OW' cruiae from
Hawaii to the Marqueus Ialanda," said Becker. '""'9 steering '{Jlle
Tony Pr0topappas
new ax
seen as .{
I "
• I certainty
,. I
BY GLENN SCO'M' otllle ............ Irvine's IChool boani is 80
percent certain to call for a
November ballot measur,e ~
up to a $50-per-paroel tax, board
l memberJohnNakaoka·d~y. ! But he said the board's five
members aren't finiahed ~
their homework on the meuure,
which had to be introduced quick-
ly to be approved before the
de9dllne for the November elec-
tion.
Irvine Unified School Dlatrict
board members realiz.e the ballot
measure .is ''IOIDething that's
• nece91al")'" to cover financial op-
tions, he said. But they'll a1IO keep
trackof othermeansforincreas-
1.q diatrict funding.
Nakaoka acknowledged that
state Schooll Superintendent Bill
Honi8 la tr')'inC to win a $600
million fundina1ncreue this year
from the ltate legialatutt. But he
.ald it lm't clear whether such
. ~
BY STEVE MARBLE otllle ............
. A preliininary hearing to de-
,tennine if one-time Costa Mesa
dentist Tony Protopappas should
stand trial in the deaths of three
patienta began today in Harbor
Municipal Court in Newport
Beech.
Protop1ppu, free on $2~.ooo
bail, ia llCICU8ed of aeoond-dearee
· murder ln the deaths of the three
female patienta, one a 13-year-old
from S8cramento. The three died
following anesthesia-related
treatment at Protopappu' 19th
Street office.
John Nakaoka
funds, if budgeted, would go
toward district operations or
special reforms.
"Even if Honig is succe91ful, we
don't know how much we're going
to get," said NU.Ok.a.
Thus, he said board members
are backing the ballot meuure -
which needs a two-thirds vote to
paa -as a means of ensuring that
the diatrict still will be adequately
flnanced by the 1984-85 filCal
year.
Although the measure would
call for a tax on all parcels,
(See IRVINE TAX Pa1e AZ)
Proaecuton said today they
believe the preliminary hearina in
the highly publicized CMe·will fast
teVeral days. J)erhape a week.
Wearing a light-gray suit and
cowboy boo\'I, ProtopaPpM waa
IUn"OUDded by attorneys and
friends while waitine m+re than
an hour th.la mom&na 'fOlf' the
hearing to begin.
Protopeppaa. a high-profile den-
tist while ~. aleo would
pt plenty ol attention du.ring his
·1ega1 proceec:lincl. Newspaper re-
port.en and televiaion camera
crew. were~bere inside the
municipal courthouse. A pr-e-bearlnc was wider way .to
determine if newa.carnen. would
be allowed lnlkle the courtroom
durtns the hearing. At one point, after he wu
allowed into the ooUrtroom, A pnl1m1nary hearinc la held to
Protopappu huaed ,eeveral deteftnlne if there la auftident
well-wiahen while an attorney evidence to order a defendant to
1traightened the dentiat'9-r·--~-Superior-Ceun~. _
It waa clear from~ that (IMPBOTPAPPAS, Pqe AJ)
Not ev~n brief peek
for HB :bikini buffs . BYBOBE~TBAR&ER I if'ilie ...........
About 300 IW1 -e~ bikini
wonhippen -gathered at a
)luntingtoo Beech swimluit llore
Sunday to check--out the talent in a
Puadena radio 1tation'1 "Bikini
Gii-11" contest.
Huntlngton Beach Police Sgt.
Mike Relic. "We maintained a hlah villbility thJa time and didn't
haw uiy major probleml," Relic
aid.
The "Bildni Girll" contest wu
part of radio ltation KROQ's
promotion campaign in which
1Wim ahope from Malibu to New-
18" BmlNI BUPFS Pqe AJ)
went fint and then the rudder." . ·•
Becker, 61. a retired mec:han.ica1 engineer, aaid be WM able to ·
jury rig the rudder and complete that leg of the voyage. Other
rniabape included the uSual problems of lcng-d.istance cruiaen IUCh
u OCD8l.onal rigging failure and a broken boom.
Before the .boat wu even leCW'ed at the LIYC dock. Mn.
~ w,. ICl"ellDling with delight as her 6-month-old grand8on
WU handed abqerd by the proud parents.
'The Becken had started the Newport-to-Hawaii Jet of their
voyage lix years aao with 101De help. They were accompanied by
aon Bill Becker and Rod Blanton. After that. they were on their own ·
for mast of the lix years.
From Hawaii, the couple cntiaed to the ~ French
Polynelia, American and Western Samoa and then to Australia and
Newz.land. ·
(lee CRUISE, Pqe AJ)
. ..... .... ,......,m.w~
Kathy Beeker bolds grandson Donald Broida, 6
months, as J~y Becker gets a handshake. But to the chagrin of all, the
contest waa held ~ clo9ed
doon of the SWllhine Su$t Co. at
123 Main St. And dspite~
on nearby can and a lot of puahina
and lhpving to get a peek through
a ana1l opening In one window,
gawk.en got little more ~ a
crick in the neck for their efforts.
Laguna fugitive is recovering .
Two or three people were
arrested either foe a}Jeaed drunk-
Suspect in kidnap, rape suffered overdose·of cocaine, heroin
enne91 or for bloddn8 entrances to ~~1£!?CBELL
nearby beechfront ltol'ea. police A Wilcomln fUlf tive who al-
aaid. lepdly kidnapped. ahaclded,
The event, part of a eeriea of 1ln.faed and raped a woman
traveling sboWa In COMt.a1 citiea ) whom be had lured to bis Lacuna
and featuring 90lne local girls, was Beech apamnent, la recoverlng at
.Uppmed to 1tart at 4 p.m., but UCI Medical Cent.er today after be
didn't pt under way until 7 p.m. ma-ted a Iarae qbantity of~
The unexplained delay caUlled prior to hJa ~ Saturday
1arp numben of people to con-eventnc. authorities aid. =. But even at that, it was Meanwhile, hla al~eaed
like 1ut yeu'• crowd. 23-~-old victim bu been
About ,000 peQple lhowed upfor treated end re1e•ed from~
that one, arid the crowd turned b9ck Canmunlty lbpltal. where
"quite unruly," aocording to lhe WM tUerl followinc her
two-day onleal which police said
bepn Friday nieht When ahe WU
lured to Lquna br. a man prornia. inc to take mode DI pictures of
her.
Police officen found Mark Ed·
ward Huahea. 32, hki1ng in heavy
bruah on Graceland ~ve three
hows after be led police on an 80
mile-per-hour cbue throqb
~··downtown ltreetB.
The woman, Who WM not
idenUfied.. WM.held for ~y 20
hows In ui Oak Street apartment
recently rented by Huahea, police
UJece. At about 3:3:J1.m. Satur-
day, Huct-repor-y left the
apartment in the victim'•
ruat~ car to~ food.
'Ibe woman. wboaid lhe w.. left
handcuffed in Ute apartment.
maJ'aaed to crawl to • door and ca11 foe· help. >.. police were
~the woman. H~
returned to the ..... ..,ott.d the
officsa and fled.
After a blah~ cbMe
throuah' narrow l'ftldentlal
ltrenl, the allpeCt •bent.med the
( ... LAGUNA. Pap .U)
--------.:..----11s•.--.f\ ___________ _
FortlaeteeODd Jearfn row~lMT..Mt
... L .wnaau ... e dele1aled the U.S. la a
clual anek meei, ud ODee -1a it wM
ti.e EMt German women&wt.omade
tlae .uff erew. P.P Cl. _
Gay parade 1 1a
Mon tlaaD 400,000py np18•P. , . ::;:.: 'r..;. .._ porten..,....,, ........... del • l,...Califeni81oNewYwk. .. tf , ...... -.,,, ... ,_._, --~--ear ·N...,artlwlaSO IMa~.-.';t!:!~'::!:" ~ .... n..111we ............. .,............... ......., ..... ......
.. I ....._.... • ............. J .. • •r •-..... ~.,.. ... 16.19U ..... 81:
. '
I
I l • I
I • I
-. .u Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Monday, ,un6 27. 1983 ' -. L' gt:s:>:=t .. ,..\~~~We aske~-=-=~=-=~=. ~~ . •
-~ . .d'l!t~~--.... ----.................. 1!'!"'9 ......... m!!!'!!!!!!!!!,~~~~!"'!!!1!!"'""'~9-I
IRVINE T AX ...
~akaok.a said he and board mem-
ber Gordon Getchel a.re insisting
that some exemptions should be
made.
For example, parcels owned by
t'Ommunity associations might be
removed from the asaessment
role, he said. .
He a1sO noted the measure is
written to levy a yearly tax up to
$50 but the figure could be less.
Each year, the school board would
be required to hold public hear·
ings before setting the tax rate, he
said.
-One reason for hurrying to get
lhe measure on the November
ballot is to give the district more
.... Lo.. ' .
time shoµJd ! taxpayer group
challenge1 the special tax -iJ it
J>llSSeS -t in a lawsuit after the
election, }le said. ·
• The tax would go into effect
July 1. 1984.
. The boarcj has called a special -
meeting at 1:~0 p.m. Wednesday,
July 6 at Lak~ide Middle School
to review . .the issue and make-a
final decision on the ballot
measure .•
At the full $50 rate, the i.x
could raise up to $1.4 million a
year, dist.J;ict officials. estimate.
Next fiscal year's tentative spend-
ing budget is $46.9 million.
LAG UNA SUSPECT ...
car and eluded officers on foot. A a hold on him in connection with
three-block area was sealed off, the alleged 1982 abduction and
and a Newport Beach police rape of a 22-year-old University of
helicopter apd a Santa Ana canine Wisconsin coed. A federal fugiti~e
·unit responded to hunt for the warrant ~as issued' last year
fugitive. ' • cl\arging Hughes with unlawful
When captured three hours flight to avoid pro&eeUtion.
later, the groggy suspect to1fi Laguna Beacl1 police booked
police he bad consumed six grams Hughes on suspicion. of kldnap-
. of.cocaine and a quantity of heroin __p!n& _ assa~t · ~th a . deadly
• while hiding from police. weapon, sexual assault, forcibly
Hughes is being held on $75,000 administering narcotics to commit
bail. However, the FBI hasp a felony and auto theft.
•. I
CRU~~SE COMP.LETE .. ·.
While in the South Pacific, the)jand their boat participa~ in
the filming of the movie, "Hurri~" .
One of the most uniqt.f ex ·ences recalled by Becker
occurred in the Red Sea. en route to e Gulf of Aden.
"The wind was 80 light tl)at we d only made good about 60
miles in 24 hours when a large iowboa\ pulling an oil barge overtook
us. She took us in tow for l,209 mileji. --
Other anxious moments w.;re experienced wtmn ~t went
on a reef near Bali, and again en they w.ent aground on a sandbar
on Pyramid Shoals near s· apore. Each time the boat was
refioated without serious damMe. ----
Would they do it again? t · 1 .J
home ... in Dover Shores," she · d.; i
"Although I'm retired, I' like to get back in the swing of
·-·-·
W·i"thout question, agreed~h~ ·r~rs. "It was a wonderful
expei:tence,. but right now w t .w w ' t ~t is to. get to our
thinjs," said Becker, .w ho.ori y had thought the global cruise
wouTcl take only two to three ~ars. :
. '
•
Their Cal-34 sloop is the fi,rst large bo{lt the Beckers ever had.
13efore that, Beekerr&eea M~· Sl~~ewport Bay. Before
embarkin,g on the world , the Beck~rs cruised the Cal-34
around the Channel Islands an occasionall~ to Mexico.
"She's a fine boat and serV us well," siyd Becker with a fond ~ at the cluttered cockpit ing invfied by friends.
0 ·• l . -·
PROTOPAPPAS 'CASE ...
Protopappai sold his C.OSta
Mesa practice earlier this year and
has been living with friends in the
Laguna Beach area, according to
his attorney, Stanford Shaw.
Irvine man. injured !
whe n gun_goes off
A 22-year-old Irvine man was
treated early Sunday for a gun-
shot wound in his right leg after
he said he rolled over on a loaded
handgun while sleeping.
Nicholas M. Casson told Irvine
police investigators he normally
sleeJJl'with a loaded gun under his
bed. On Saturday night, )'le said,
he remembered waking up .and
cocking the handgun for an un-
known reaaon before falling back
asleep.
Then, he said, he rolled over on
the gun while barely awake and it
fired, eending a bullet through his
right calf and into his mattress.
Paramedics called to the apart-
ment by the victim's roommate
found Casson still in bed, his leg
bleeding.
Investigators said his story a~
pean to be true but they con-
u.caied four guns they found in
his Park West apartment for safe
keeping.
Irvine
A -Oft Ille 14300 blodt Of Mlfo Court we ~ ..... .,~ , .. _""' ........,,...,,__..,,...,..'oOOl9_ . . .. ... ._ .... ,__. _ _,,..-.ig .
........... -..t..Meyllllwnooft In . ~---~---°"'""' lOO lllOdl of ..,.,,,wood.
He' $Ufrendered to authorities
last April on the murd~ charges.
His surrender came after law
enforcement. officialis had been
searc~ for him for three days.
~~t~ Di.strict Attorney Jim Cl~~has said he believed the dentist trying to evade police.
· :tt?e~ er cbargeaBt.em from
the deaU of patients Kim Minna
Andre~n, 23; Cathryn Louiae
Jones, 31, and Patricia Marguerite
Craven, 1~.
toninger said in documents
fil with the court he will
pr ~ute evidence alleging
Prbtopappas acted with malice anl$ "wanton disregard" for their uvri. ·~
The dentist has been hit with
numerous civil lawsuits from for-
mer pa.Pents and the families of
the d~ patients whick seek total
damages in excess of $65 million.
He.alao has been ordered to appear
before 1 ~ administrative law
judge to ·determine whether his
license ShouJdbe revoked.
No date has been set for that
hearing.
Protopappas has maintained in
legtI d6clµnents that he was not
responsible for the deaths of the
three patients.
Huntington Beat.II
A tb ,. .. tlwOWfl tlwougll I """'°"" of the T-W-Tr..wl Aull'IO<llyblc)'cle ehop et •01 Mlln
• St .-ty tMI rnO<nlflO, CauelnQ ~of -UOO !Hot114'1t_tty ... 1llcen, -cltnO 10 pOllce •
.
Should j ails be located Inside or outside oity llmi s,
or with.in p ·uJatect are $? · ·
.Bob Karl, George Hanchett,
atudent, • atudent,
Co~ta Meu l!I Toro
.. Jells should definite!~ ----' .. P'-'u,,_.t tM.rn In PQQ.ula.ted..
outside the city; you don't want areas In case the criminals
criminals near populated areas were to escape. Jails also bring
where they can commit more down property values, so It's
crimes If they_!sca~e." .not fplr to have them. lo ..the
city."
Diane DeJon9 ,
teacher,
Fullerton
"I don't think It makes a
difference where they put Jails.
If the person escapes, either·
way, he'll end up back in the
city."
I
Craigo.Jong,
atudent,
Fullerton
"I'm used to having Jells
away from the downtown area.
I think It makes the most sense
for beauty reasons; guarded
structures, with their big walls
and gunnery towers. don't look
very nice. Of course, who
wants one In his · own
backyard?"
,
• .,.~F' .... bltck. hou:, _ ..
Newport Beech
" tten people get sem-t~ 18"
for stupid things, like parking
ticket violations. So I think Jells
should be located in the city to
make It convenient for friends
and relatives to visit."
Andrea BMr,
atudent,
Newport Beach
"Jails should be outside city
limits where It's really desolate.
That way, If they (prisoners)
escape, the police wlll have
more time to catch UR wltti
them before they reach ttie
city, where they can get lost In a
crowd."
Illegal alien files huge ·claim
Gardener says Laguna police falsely arreste d , imprisone d him
BY STEVE MITCHELL on...,.., .... ,_
Laguna Beach council members .
have denied a $1-million claim
filed by an undocumented alien
Who said he WU false~
and imprisoned after the car in
which he was a passenger was
stopped by officers on Glenneyre
Street two months ago.
Police Chief Neil Purcell said
the vehicle was subsequently
stopped, but not before the two
men had returned to the station
and iettled thei:N>ill.
Police-Lt. Jim Spreine said the
attendant failed to call police back
and report the men had returned.
Candelario Aguilar, who does
gardening chores an~d jobs
around Laguna Beach, filed his
cla1m with the help of John
Gabriels, a frequent police critic in
town.
He said the oUicer who stopped
the car obeerved what he believed
to be two marijuana cigarettes "in
plain view in the vehicle" and
aake<I Aguilar to step from the car.
"Under normal cirewnstances,
we don't even question the pass-
• Gabriels said that Aguilar was a
paaaenger in a car that pulled into
Jiffy Gas on South Cout High-.
way last April 30. The driver
pumped $2 of gas into his C-4.f and
purportedly offered the attendant
a $50 bill, which the service station
man said.he could not change.
EMERALD ' •••
From Page A1
it into dust as they carved.
Saying they would return in a
few minutes with the exact
change, Gabriels said the two men
left the station.
The stone is intricately
sculpted much like a jade fig-
ure. with ~· caverns,
pies and 27 figures cover·
surface.
The emerald will
The attendant apparently bad
second thoughts about the prom-
ise to return, Gabriela .aid, and
called pouee.
display. free of charge, th
Friday at Charles H.
Jewelers, 1048 Irvine Av .,
Newport Beach.
Extended
T emperatures
' MMiny
~ .. ~
AllGNI ...
AtMnt1
Atlent:O Clly
AMr..lrl
Sunny aft
lleltlmelf'll .. 15 l o. Angelet
~ .. eo l oulrMI .. 72 lubboc* ......._. IO 54 ,,,..,.,.,,.
IOIM 17 ~ Mleml
eo.ion 7• .. ........ ._ .... N 1• .......at Pu .,... es 715 ......,..
lldnglon 17 11 New<>r1Mne
NewYOflc 0..., 71 153 NcwfOll ~c. t7 7t Notttl ...... etwt.eon. .v. 13 t7 0.W-Clly ~H.C. IO n Onwhe~ ~· eo '5 OrtMdci et-.o " 72 .... ......... QrdnMt· " • l'floMll ~ M .. ....,.,,.,,
~a.c. t7 '10 1"ot11Md .....
~ .. .. ~.°'9
,.....,,WM'I to .. '°'OvldellOe
~ .. • ......
09rl\OI( . 13 13 "'Pie! Clly
O.Molllee to 71 ""'° °"'°" " .. ~
°'*"" IO 47 tu.~ .,._ ... .. ... .._.r.,.,.,. ,.,.,.., IM 12 ..........
""° 13 .. len Alllonlo ,......... 71 •• hllO.. car.., ... T1 17 -~ .......... 19 ea ......... ,.....,.. ,. 67 ....
h....,.., .'1 74 == . ~~ .. 1t lndWll•• ,, .,. ........ ..._..... " 14 ~ .. ,, .... ,, 10 r.-,,.... .. IO ,.,.... =ci.. .. n , ...
'°° 71 .......... u.": • n ......
enger in a case like this, " Spreine
said. But when the officer saw
what he believ.ed to be marijuana,
"he asked (Aguilar) for identifi-
cation."
-Aguilar purport.edly tol~ the
officer he was in the process of
obtaining legal papers to stay in
the U.S.
One of Aguilar's employers,
who was not identified, sent her
attorney to San Diego, where a
stay of deportation was obtained
from an immigration judge, allow-
ing Aguilar to remain in the
country.
In a letter to the city coWlCil,
Chief Purcell said there is no
evidence of false arrest or falae
impri8onment in the cue. -tf e said the original call from
the aervice station attendant in-
dicated "that a criminal act had
taken place," and that, during the
in'lestigation it was discovered
Aguilar was an undocumented
alien. "We did what we could to
help Aguilar," Spreine &aid, add-
ing police helped find the Mexican
natlon!U in San Diego and con-
tacted San Diego ilrunigration
legal authorities.
71 17
92 73
ell 157
81 74
17 71
" 71
" ee
93 74
Ill 74
12 71
17 75
12 541 t7 86
13 .. to 71 12 t7
105 7t
17 .,
n ff
7t IO 76 .. .. t7
72 .. .. 40 • .,.
to n .. n .. .. . t1 11
11 . .. . .. 14
N 14 11 .. .. 11 LOOA,_ .. 17 $!F=-. ,. II .. .. ......
to • 1":"6fll .. • .. ,., relmMMe .. 11 ......... ftl1' • ..
ll•·x:
·L~gion
seeking
-Hayden's
ouster·
PALM SPRINGS (AP)-C.ali-
fomia't American Legion ii ~
ing the at.ate Aaeembly to eipel
Tom Hayden beca1.11e of alJegd
advocacy of a tor;ign government
ln the Unlted Stateti. --,
A re10lution paSled Saturday'
by 3,000 delegates repreeenting
200,000 Legionnaires statewide,
cited Article 7, Section 9 of ~
state Constitution, which provides
that no penon who advocates a
foreign government io the United
States ahall hold any office in the
state, said Legion spokesman C.F.
Jenkinaof La Mirada, who helped
draft the reeolution.
Hayden was unavailable for -
comment Sunday night, and "I
don_'.Ux~kwill N!IPQ~ •• sai
h1B chief of staff, Steve Rivers.
Jenkins all~ged that Hayden
had traveled to North Vietnam i.r)
1965 and 1967 and made propa-
ganda broadcasts over Com-
munist-controlled radio stations
with the intent to interfere with
the mdrale of U.S. 10ldiers.
Jenkins said the Armed. Forces
Rtiree AsaoCiation was gathe~
signatures statewide on petitions
calling for Hayden's ouster. That
group's goal is 20,000 signatures,
he said.
The Aalembly can expel a
member by a two-thirds vote.
"Thia is not a matter for lfie
voten in Santa Monica," Jenkins
said.
If the AMembly does not act, he
said yoters could call for a writ oC
mandamus, from the court de·
~~on
Connors upset
• ' ·_..J in Wimhled~n
quarter£ il)als
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)-
South Africa's Kevin Curren,
blazing his way -.betiind Q!l as-
tounding 33 aces, knocked out
defepding champion Jimmy Con-
nors 6-3, 6-7, 6-3, 7-6 todaS' to
move into the quarterfinals of the
Wimbledon Tennis , Cham~
pionships.
Curren, a former Univenity of
Texas star who still lives in Aus-
tin, Texu, is aeeded 12th in this
Camed graas court tournament at
the All-England Lawn Tennp
and Croquet Club. Connon was
seeded No. 1. (Additional results..
Page Cl).
For Connors, who defeated
John McEnroe in the final here a
year ago for his second
Wimbledon title and later cap-
tured his fourth U.S. Open
crown, the loss came on Court No.
2, referred to here as-the "jinx
court.''
His lea followed by two rounds
the upeet of Chris Evert Lloyd,
the women's No. 2 seed, by Kathy
Jordan.
In another upeet, unseeded Mel
Purcell eliminated No. 13 Brian
Gottfried 4-6, 613, 6-3, 6-2, while
in women'• play, No. 10 Billie
Jean King ousted No. 7 Wendy
Turnbull of Australia 7-5, 6-3 .
BIKINI ...
From Page A1
port Beach competed for best·
bikinis and best models.
Even thoee spectators waiting
around for the end of the show to
catch a gllmpee of the girls were
doomed to fruatation. The girla
put on regular beach attire after
the contest and disappeared into
the crowd unnoticed.
•Rf IEPllT
. . . .:
.
J
l I
• ..
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
QUOTATio..' '"C"UDI TllAD&'O" '"' NIW-'l'O .. C.MIDWIU. ,.ACl,.C,.PllW, lotTOllt, DITllDlf AND d NCIN .. ATI n oc• I XCMA .. OH ANO lllP'OllTIO llY TMI MAJO ANO INt'YINIT
•
c
NB • •
-!-
Calif omia economy
'rosy·through 1985'
By th AIMdalM Pnu
LOS ANGELES -Callfom1a'1 economy la ·· r
rebound.Ing and lhouJd ~~Jobe and peaaoal. _. _
lncome throujh 1~. two new economic tone.ta •Y· :
Theo UCLA Graduate School of ~t Mid the
uplWtna in the nationll economy, Nina federal defenae
•pending and the 1984 Summtt Olympics ln I.a
Anple. will booat the mte economy for the next 19
~thl. Callfomiacomw:oen will havealmost6 percent
more real income next year, the UCLA forecast u.id,
becaUle of relatively low inflation and a projected 10.2
percent rlae in before-tax penonal income.
Gasoline prices up slightly
LOS ANGELE'S -The aver-ace price of g.uoline,
rising sharply ln the put three montha, may begin to
decline llightly after an increue of only four-tentha of a
cent in the lut two weeka, oU analyat Den LWM!berg
aaya. The national avense price of all l!'adel of paoline
at aelf..eerve pumps lncn!Med to $1.24.19 a gallon, he
said Sunday. "Thia modest rlae of only 0.4 could presage
the kind otlong slow decline that oocurred 1ut year, u
aeuonal driving hu been nothing like it hu been
hiatOrically," aald the publilher of the Lundberg Letter.
He noted that price levela began "deteriorating" in
the latter half of July 1982, when aunmer driving wu
ai.o lem than usual due co the 1"eee91ion.
--wa"1kout en"ds a Wilson oods
OKLAHOMA CITY -A three-week s1ri.ke
against wu.on Foods ·c.orp. ia over, but union offida1a
said they would continue to prou.t the .G0mpU1y'1
handUng of ill contract. "We are going to have to have
aome time to examine our feelinp," Mid Bob Adami,
vice" president of the Oklahoma City kxa1 otthe United
Food and Conunerda1 Workers Union. "To ay we are
pleued with the contract ia premature." Union
employees were expected to begin ~ 10 WU.00
plantr acrdll tile llOUfttry~ afternoon: The new
propoeal waa approved at lix of the aeven plants whett
a iotal of about 6,000 work.era bad walked off the job.
AMERICAN LEADERS
Due to late transmission
today's ll'tlng will not
appear In the Dally Piiot.
METALS
Due to late transmission
today's listing wlll not
appear In the Dally Piiot.