HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-06 - Orange Coast PilotHIQHl5 LOW70 CUii 110111
--------MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1984 o RANG r co u N r v c AL 1Fr;r-<N1 A 15 c ENT s
Laguna Hills • Edwin
Moses keeps hls win-
ning streak glittering.
Page Cl
Coast
Cable televlslonJlrm
wants franchise ex-
tension./ A3
Drugs b1amed In jail
death./A3
California
There's more than one
way to watch Olympic ..
GamesonTV./A4'
Nation
Connecticut shootout
sees convict killed,
another wounded./ A4
Ban on leaded gas will
send prices sky-
rocketing? I A4
World .
Vietnam says children of
American Gls should be
allowed lnto U.S./ AS
Japanese remember
Hiroshima bombing on
39th anniversary J A4
Haitians moving Into the
Bahamas create big
worries for officials./ AS
Feature
Wiii fancy f ootstrlngs that
dress up bare feet tie up
the shoe market? ./81
The new Incentive for
high grades at a southern
church college Is free
travel abroad./85
Sporta
The U.S. women's vot·
leyball team needs one
more victory to win the
gold medal./C1
Joan Benoit's victory In
thewornen's Olympic
marathonwas a Sunday
stroll In the park./C1
The U.S. women's Olym-
pic basketball team Is
within a game of clinching
thegold./C2 ·
Entertainment .
Director, producer
James Komack'sout for
'Revenge.' /BS _
Bualneu
IRS zeroes In on tax
cheaters./85
INDEX
Bridge 84
Butletln Boaid A3
Buslneea 85
CallfOmla Newt A4
Claulfted CM comae. 84
Ctouword C7
OMth Notloee C4
Help Yooreelf 82
H«oecos>e ce
Arin L9nd«t 82
Mind and BOdy 81·2
Nation.a Newt A4 ~nlon A8
Paparazzi 82
Poflee Log AS
Pubtlc Notlca C4
Spottt C1~
Stock Mnet• ee
TMVttlon 82 ~ 83
Weather ~ A2
WOr1d Newt A4
--
oc·road ca:rn.age claims. 7
odies of t:wo more roadway victims passenger 1n a car So•fl& lhc wrona drh" mto the Oevcland uonal
way on the ta Mesa F~wayand a forest la5t Thursday _for day of
man "ho apJ)Orently fell asleep While practice shootiqa. Offitnl 1d 1t
dtivina on the n Diego Freeway. appear$ the driver lost control of the
road t b~ nue of
airborne? struck a rook em-~ ..... -
and tumb ed mto the ta\iane." found days after crash on the Ortega
Oranac County Sherift"1 deputies car on the twi inJ roadway.
recovered the bodies of two men · The driver of .reef Chevrolet El
Sunday in a canyon below The Camino wasjdentified as Thomas W,
wind.in& Ortega Highway le th n a Home, 2S, of Mission VieJO. His
mile from the Riverside County lane, pa ~nger was Mark John Cano. 20.
according to California Highway of San Juan Capastrano. according to
said.
By STEVE MARBLE
OftM~ .........
In one of Oranae ~ounty's wor t
weekends for highway camaae, seven
people were trilled in traffic acddents
and two rm>re were discovered dead
in a remote ra¥ine whcie their car
apparently crashed late last week.
authorities reported.
The dead included a )..year-old
Santa Ana j.lrl who ran into movina
traffic, a l ()..ycar--0ld moped passcn-
acr from Huntinston Beach. a 19'-
year-old man who reportedly was a Patrol Officer Ken Daily. authorities.
The t ... o men reportedly ~ere .. It appears lhe!r car left the
··The car landed on ns tort and
way down in the bru~h where pau1
traffic couldn't see 1:· id Dally. .. It's very easy to disap~ OUI ID that
area. We're alwayi findiM. 5tolen cars
out there that have bttn mi (or
months."
(Pleue .e CAIUfAQE/A2)
Coast's Lewis
shared the gold
with his family
'His sister had told
him to stand up very
straJ ht, and he did:
By PlllL SNEJDERMAN
Of .............. .
David Lewis. an in$urance sales..
man from Newpo11 Beach, sajd he
and his family acted on faith wbcn
they. sat down durin& an Olympic ~~t Sunda~ afternoon-al~ •:s4.::!~~~p;'~~'."':'""~~-==~ ~~?;]
Hls son, Brad Alan Lewis, was
c.ompetu11 in the double scull race
involvillJ two-man boats at the lake
near Ojai.
"We took a chance and put our
folding chairs ri~t in front of the
Stories on.LMM' victory
and.._. medllllwon by
two UCI P.toductaon C 1.
medal awards platform," David
Lewis said today ... We'd hate to be a
jinx. but we had a feelina he'd do
-well." .
That hunch was an accurate one.
~~-1..olns. 29~ and _partner Paul
Enquist of Seam~ edged past a \Cam
from Belgium to win Oti)impic aold ...
medals in the 2,()()()..metcr race in
which each man rov.-s with two oars.
Boats representmg six nations CO{n·
peted in the event.
.. ' '#ti very ~ • .. rocaltcd •"""---+-•
medalist's fitber. "They started out
in sixth place. At 1.000 mclC'n. th~
•·ere m third place. At 1.500 9"\en..
(Pkue 8ee LSW18/ A2)
COnattacdon worker ilillfted
AD-anldfmdfled laanlllat 18-Hfted-onto
Llfefllght copter bJ' .raca.en after eaffer--
~leetrtc •hock at ea.ta llesa conatnic-
tlon idte. see •torJ Paee-A2. · · · .
AJrport foes gird
fo~ .battle on · bill -· .~--·'
Laguna brush fire
probed for arson
Robinson plan would
limit noise claims
to I per homeowner:
Opponpdts of Robinson's bill are
getting fead) for a tighL
Despite a series of amendments.
thebtll "is no better than iteverqs, ..
said Barbara Lichman of Newpon
Beach. Liebman is the director of the
By JERRY HIRSCH Airport Working Group, a coaliuon
Of .. .,..,......... of homeowner orpniz.ations fighting
expansion a\ the airport.
A showdown Tuesday 10 Sacra-Ltcbman an'1 Steve Pflaum. an
Half an acre of wildland brush
blackened near Laguna Canyon Road
mento may determine whether New-(Pl port Beach residents are restncted in eue .ee ~RT I A2)
their court ftihtsapmstJohn Wayne
Airport and its owner Oranac Coun-.C 111
ty.A state Assembly bill authored by ).J Hl~·S UP
An arson investigation is under
way after a weekend fire in Lquna
Beach blackened about a half acre of
wildland brush, Fire Manha! Herb
Jewell said today.
The SUSPICIOUS, early-momina fire
in the 3200 block of Laauna Canyon
· Road caused no injuries or damage to
buildings as it bumed toward CUtle
Rock Road, accordina to reports.
Firefiahters brought tt under control
Wlthin 10 minutes. Jewell reported.
Jewell said that investigators have
not determined how the fire started
but ha• ruled out natural causes. He
said earlier reports that matches
found near the scene caused the fire
were "erroneous."
"We can't tell if it i.s related" to
several other fires of suspicious onain
that have occu.rred in Lapma Bea.ch
since April," be added.
"Tbde was no evidence found at
the scene," Jewell said.
Meanwhile, a fire that caused about
$3,000 in damage to a tailor shop m
the 1100 block of South Coast
Highway Sunday momina is still
under investigation, Jewell said.
Jewell said the fire in European
Custom Tailors, in lhe Village F ·
Mall, was initially dampened by the
building's water sprinkler system,
which prevented it from spruding
quickly. Firefighters arrived and ext-
inguished the blaze in approximately
seven minutes, Jewell said. A neiah-
boring book.shop suffered minor
water <tamage in the 9:SS a.m. blaze.
Traffic on South Coast Hiahway
was disrupted for about an hour while
firefighters investigated the incidcnL
Assemblyman Richard Robinson. (). • t •
Garden Grove, that would hmn v:f lffi airpon lawsuits 1s scheduled to be
beard by the state Senate Judiciary •. · ~~~ · s spect1·n Robinson wtll prescofthe bill to the
committee J'CJ'50nally in an effon to · ·
. movet!>emeasuretotheSenatefloor. 'car theft according to Jack Gemwn, a spokes· ;..._ __ _... man for state Sen. Olhe Speraw, R-.
Newport Beach. Deadat68
Actor Richard Barton,
nom.lnated eJCht tlmea for
an Oecar without a win, bu
died of a brafo hemorrh-..e
ID Genen. Swlt&erland. Tlie
actor. who &alned notoriety
with bla two mun.,ea to
Ella beth Taylor. wu 58.
See nory. Paae A-4.
Speraw opposes the bill and ha
written letten to each of the commit-
tee members urging the measun:'s
defeat. Germaan said.
A S1m1lar bill mtroduttd b} Rob-
inson last year passed both the Senate
and the Assembly but was vetoed by
Gov George Deukrmjian. J. The earlier version would have
"' proh1b1ted people from filina small
claims suits aprnst the airpon.
PoliC'C believe the dri'er of a stolen
economy .car that ·crashed in •
Newport Beach pileup.-kilhna one
and inJunna six. ma) ha'e been
v.-anted 1n a rash of San Dieao car
.thdb.
The unidentified driver was killed
in the spectacular car accident whict:
followt'd a high-speed ct\UC throu&h
much of \Outh Orall&C Count\ Fri-
(Pleue eee WATAL/A2)
Reman_ian' s escape realiz~S
KAREN
KLEIN
Medical
facility
for Poor
in Mesa
15-year dreani of freedom
Engtneer left wife and chil.dren behind ~e:~dn:h~,~~':b;b':~~ ~:.~~~~~
to flee oppression and come to the U.S. :d~t~~n catt of fnends at another
..
PEOP LE IN TH£ NEWS
• Persecution. Oppression. Secret
escape plans. Terror.
Octavian Oumitrucu's life story
sound like 1 Cold War spy novel.
• Dumitra"'u, who aocs by "Paul.''
arrived in Co ta Mesa la t Wttk aft.er
dtfecting from his native Romania in
Cairo, El}'pt.t in May. His nearly. two-
day fliabt to freedom -from Caaro to
Athens, cw York, Minn poh ,
Phoenix and Ora~ Oounty -wa1
the culmination oh 1$-ycar dream.
The 43-ycar-old mechanical cnai·
nccr id it took him 1 S yean to find a
way to pe the tnct control' of
Romani n authoriu Iona enough to
dtd.att t t1on o defCC'l to the
Wet
Dum1tra u •ho taught him If
Engh h, 1s a wtll·pubh&bcd cnia r
who i h m the h t tft'atmrnt
Of mc··'s. He d-1·..a~ h• had lived "My family ~ill be fe. ph) 1ca!ly. pa.rticij?ate in rollccti\e fanning and
wu "'" \KU ... at least," he ,..d. 'Tm not C\ptttina ~as Jailed in t 959. He remained 10
Iona enoUJb with the disappointment them io be rcall) persecuted but the> pnson untd 1964.
and the disadvantqcs of ~iety may get some ha.ra,\mcnt:• He !d The labelina of his pattnt as
behind the Iron Curtain. thatJudJina r-romcucs he k.ncwofm .. intellcetUal " -citizeM who qu
Nowstayinaat the homcof1 Co ta Romania. when 1 famil)' member tioncd or mistru ted the Commun1 t
Mesa woman ~ho co-Pon sored him hves abroad the rest of the famtly aovcmment and its pob -v.; ld thtouah the Costa Mcsa·based Ban "acts vnytlftfbt . . {)la)' heavily into the rest of
the Soviets Coalition, Dumitrut'U His life in Romant1 ha_ been a Iona Dumitrucu' life.
deacribcd in ba= but acicllent ' c apin t. ir\justice • and GI> .. t that time. the officaal poht') £n&Li$h fli&ht to om. prcuaoa. Dum1traseu said h t prevented ch1tdttn com• from
'Oumitrascu ch<* to come to the difficult, he id, to dcscnbe the bacqround W1th 1natllectual p.ircn
nited ta • he id. becau he C'Vtnts that led up to fo d«i ion to to ntcrlhcuni c 1ty."h siid .~ ,at
''felt sail .. he .. The United tates is forsakt his hom land. lea t initially, he was rtfuscd enll)
a country which will d end frtcdom "It i hard to SI} what i ," h into the un1vcnat .
better than any oth country," he said." y o hfe has contnbutcd But in 1962. Whc
added. to m dtc1 11 • " finall allowtd to to the unsvc
-~~k-=--.:.:.:ta~!!!!.!~~~]~---=1VV'~!JI-~"' h •a a ht um 'leK;Wff 42 ib t illfQ-
tal 1 t era. His father. a pri t 1n the
E '' Orthodox church, cnuc11cd
the ao'Vcmment fi r fort1n c1mcn to
E.IU.&IN
..
•
A2**<>tange Coast DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu11 o,· '!I '
Power line shock:s Mesa worker
eon truction wortcr rccch-rd
nou bums over 0 percent of his
body early today when his head
touched a 12,000.voh electrical hne
at a con truction site in C ta M
police id
1bc 2S. r-old man .. tio was not
identified. was no~n by helicopter to
the bum want at UCI Medical Center
MEDICAL CLINIC FOR POOR •••
Prom Al
founded SOS ... We've been secma a
lot of people in the last year who need p~riptions but can't afford them:·
she said.
Tbose who don't have insurance
and can't afford pnvate medical care
must have pre-payment deposits to
be admitted at county medical clinics.
Forbath added.
A lO-member SOS comm1nee has
worked on the idea of opening a
medical clinic since an anonymous
couple donated S 10,000 to OS for a
.. special project" more than a year
ago:
The medical clinic will be housed
in an old Bank of Amenca bualdina
that was relocated to the Rea Center.
Forbath said the chnac will be
desi&ned to provide medical help that
1s not already bein& provided throuah
other free proanms
"You can att p~natal care. drua
treatment and VO and prqnancy
testing el~where," she said .• "We
want to have a chnic for sick people
who can't afford medicine or treat-
ment."
Costa Mc)a Dr Don Drake. who
said he will serve as medical director
of the new chnic said the need for
mcdJcal care m Costa Mesa alone is
"larger than I ever ant1c1pated."
He said staff doctors and nurses
frnm \osta ~f'~• Meche-al Center
Hospital and Hoaa Hospital in New-
port Beach will be asked to volunteer
theic time at the new clinic.
"There will be no dearth of volun·
tecr5:' Drake p~1cted. "A lot of
people till feel that drive lo aive of
themselves."
Forbath said she ces about 160
families a da)'. at the SOS food and
clothing distnbut1on offices Many of ·
them despcr9tely need medical care.
she ~id.
"So man)' th in~ arc not covered by
Medicare.· she said. "Also many of
the programs have been cut. Seniors
have to pay a large~ share of thc1r
costs or find they arc ineli&ible."
CARNAGE ON COUNTY HIGHWAYS •.•
Jl'romAl
The gnm discovery was made
Sunday afternoon by fnends of the
two men who retraced the route
tryina to locate the two men, officers
said.
Elsewhere, 3-ycar-0ld Sema K.Jm
was killed Saturday noon near her
home when she ran m front of a
passing car on South Shawnee Drive
m Santa Ana, police said. The girl
died from internal inJunes about 30
minutes later at Fountain Valley
Community Hospital trauma center.
Angel Esquivel of Huntington
Beach djed late Friday at the Fouo-
tain Valley hospital after the moped
he was a passenger on collided with a
car on Spnoadale Stl'C(t. The l().year-
old suffered internal inJUACS an the
wreck.
FATAL CRASH VICTIM •••
From Al
day. He earriedrno identification, Hermanson, 41 , of South Laguna.
police wd. San Diego officers were Both were taken by helicopter to the
enroute to the counry morgue today Fountain VaJley Commuruty Hosp1-
in an effort to identify the man. tal trauma center.
'vrhey think they may know who he Hermanson underwent emergency
Kevin Hackett, 19, of Santa Ana
dted Saturday mommg when the car
he was ridmi an crashed into a
motorcycle whale traveling the wrona
way on the Costa Mesa Freeway,
according to authonties.
The dnvel'of the WTong.way car -
1denufted M Kevin Jordan, 20, of
Santa ·Ana -was arrested on suspi-
cion of drunken driving. officers said.
The motorcyclist suffered moderate
inJunes
David Norman. 18. was killed
Saturday afternoon when the Navy-
rcgu.teicd van. he was .dn\ling rolled
off the San Diego Freeway near the
Brookhurst Street offramp in Foun-
tain Valley
eontinued fair and warmer
PrcMOel'!Of 17 ::raty ., 10 ..
""'° 17 41
~ .. " ·ICf~ c 6t
=~l~ 16
II 11
~lell•Ollt :: 11
Sell AntOlllO 11
lellllleOO 11
= Sen FrMCllOO ..
NMP" .. ,.
S.M-.,. ., .. " .. ~ : ,,
70
~-.. .. eyr-It t2
l~ n 71
Tuc»oft 17 ,.
ruu ,, 71
w~ .. 70
WICM• .. 71 wa. ....... 74 ..
Wllll'llrlqton.Oe '7 •
71 • Tide• 70
10 ., TOOAY u 74 e.oorie11ow 1' 41a.m n a-Klhlgh e22pm .. .. 71 TUl.tOAY
71 Flftl IOW . 1·Mam. ~2
73 =~IOw •3hl'I\ u ,. 12141.m 27
72 8eoolld Ngll 7 14p m, ,,
14 17 aun •• 1oa, J. 149 pm. ~ 1' TueeN)r • I ot a Ind Ml• ...., 9t ., 741pm
N Moon "'91 tocla)I at 4 11 p m . ••at .. 127a m T~endr-~llf 11 .. pm
Tempe
SURF REPORT
Mesan seized in molestil!_g
of boy, 8, at Estancia pool .,
By KAREN E. KLEIN identify Ward from the t2-year-0ld's
0t ttie o.itr,.... •l411f -descripuon, • 1
• A ·20-ycar-0ld Costa Mesa man The 8-year"'Ofd victim, wtur lives near Ward•s home, was located who worked as a camp counselor for Friday afternoon. Cappuccdli said.
Detective Cappuccilb that Ward was
to leave Saturday for this year' ~·
long trip to Camp Osceo1a, where he_....___
would have been a counselor for a
group of boys.
Cappuccill1 said be has ~s . not
di$COvered any addi\JonaJ v1ctuns. .
H is investipuon is ongoing, he said. is," Newport Beach Officer Tom surgery Friday and remains in serious
Little said. "He may be a man they've but stable condition. McAni~ch.
been loolong for in relation to several headed toward the beach at the umc
crimes." .. o£'1 the accident. is hsted m fair
CHP officers said they believe the
driver may have fallen asleep. Wit-
nesses said the van was traveled at a
normal rate of speed when it suddenly
jerked off the road. ripped throua.h
200 feet oficcplant and slammed into
a tree.
the Orange Coast YMCA was ar-The pool staff members knew
rested after he aJleaedly molested an Ward by sight and said be 1s a
8-year-old Costa Mesa boy at the frequent visitor to the pool, which is a
Estancia High School swimming popular hangout for childml on
. pool. summer afternoons. Dennis James Ward was taken into
War-d remained in the Costa M~sa
Pobcc Department Jail this morning
The unadenufied dnver. said to be condition.
an bu early 20s and quite tall, was Four c hildren rid1na in
chased by police from a U.S. Border McAninch's Pontiac station w~gon
Patrol checkpoint near San Clemente suffered broken bones, lacera\lons
to Newport Beach where he crashed and bruises. All had be~n released
into two other cars traveling an the from Costa Mesa Medical Center
opposite d1rect1on. Hospital b} Saturday
Three other people were lolled in
separate traffic mishaps over the
weekend. Matthew Carols. 19, was
killed Saturday m a traffic accident m
the Silverado Canyon area, a woman
1denufied as Pegg)' Ann Floyd, 23. of
Fullerton was killed Sunday 1 n Buena
Park. an an unidentified motonst was
killed early today m Cypress
Police suspect the man m~enuonal-}he Ford Pm.to S!JltlOn wagon
Jy-rammed the other vehaclcs, one dnven by the unidentified motonst
dr\v4n by Susan E. McAninch, 35, of was reported stolen from a San Diego
Anaheim and the other by Barry B. woman last week.
LEWIS SHARES HIS GOLD •••
From Al
they were m second. And dunog the
lMt 100 meters, they took over the
lead and finished haif-a-boat ahead of
Belgium."
The crowd of about 10.000 was
cheering wildly for the Amencan
oarsmen. the proud father said.
For the family, the greatest thnll
came dunng the medaJ awards. cer-
emony.
"Brad led the way up the ~latfonn,"
Lewis saJd. "Has sister bad told him to
Stand tap Vf:ry Stralght, itnd he dtd.
Then after the ceremony, he haodtd
the Oowers to his sister Valene and
put th~, gold m·edal around has
m other't neck.
~'She '(Brad's mother Bee Lewis)
was standi'rta nght there. marvelously
proud. Hundreds of pc.ople took her
photograph wrth the medal." ·
Asked the reason for this gesture. h1mselt quit r he two pracuced on
the medalist's father said. "Fourteen their own and eventually beat the
years of hard workculrrunatedin tb.Js. Olymp1ccoach'scho1ceinachallcnie
and I think he wanted the whole race, thus winning a place on the
family to mi.rem the joy of victory." Otymptc team.
That preparation period began in According to has father, the mterest
1970, when Brad l..cWJS rowed on the an rowing runs an the fam1Jy. David
Corona Del Mar High School team Lewis rowed for UCLA an 1941 , and
that lasted JUSl one year. The school Brad's brother Tracy rowed for Or-
dadn't even award sports letters to the ange Coast College in 1970.
participants. David Lewis said his son prepared
Later Brad considered attending for the Olympics with two-or tbree-
Orange Coast College to oontinue hour rowing workouts-in Lido Chan-
rowing. but wiis persuaded to attend net each momma and running or
UC lrv1ne and row for C91ch Bob wea&ht traimna each afternoon The
Ernst. After college, he · conhnued athfete 1s employed by Wells Fargo
rowing, making· that 1980 Olympic Qank at Fashion Island.
team. Brad was disappointed by tJie • The medalist's father sajd the
boycou of the Mdscow Olympics. fus entire family was at Lake Cas1tas on
father said. . . Sunday, pulling for Brad
Earlier this -year, Uwis' · t>artner. "I figured he had a good chance,''
Eoqurst, was cut ·from a team of David Lcwas said .. "But you never
O'ympic rowing prospects, and Lewis know." ,.
AIRPORT BILL FACES OPPOSITIO:N .. :
From Al
attorney hired b} the city ofNewpon
Beach to fight a1rpon expansion. both.
plan to attend the Sacramento hear-
ing ano te<;t1f} against Robansoi:f <1
ball.
"The bill IS JUSI a way to llC the
noose tighter around our nee"'.''
Lachman said. "We think we have a
iood shot at defeating It."
Robinson plans to introduce a
vanety of amendments to make the
bill more palatable to the committee
but L&Ghman thinks the amendments
will only make the mea~ure more
cu mbersome
Some of 11$. chaftles Robmson 1~
considenng. accordm& to Lwhman}
would be to hm1t the number of small
Just Call
642-6086
cla1fl1s suits an ind1v1dual can file
against an '1l1rport to oriJy one.
Small cia1ms iu1ts naw cal'I be filed
every I 00 days. A1rp0rt operators
such as Oranie County and other
backers of Robinson's bill cla1mthat
1hc muh.1pk fihnJ of small claims
suits against an airport constitute a
nu'i1sance and financial dram.
The ball also would ltm1t the
number of municipal or supenor
courts suits against an airport to one uni~ there 1~ a dramatic change an
lhe average yearly noise level of
01ghts comm& from the airport.
Liebman said
Pflaum said the way noise statrsncs
are figured there would have to be
about a 40 percent increase an flights
at an airport before a new suit could
be filed . '
.. The basic point we Will araue us
that 1t is not fair to get to sue only once
and no matter what .hap~ns you
can't sue agaan," Pflaum said, adding
that the standard for being able to file
a second suit 1s m\Jch too h1~.
"That 40 percent 11 an enormous
increase,'' he said. At JOhn Wayne
Airport a 40 percen~·ump would be
an increase of 16 fl1 ts. At a major
airport like San ranc1sco l'nter-
nauonal the same 40 percent increa~
would represent 400 nights. he said.
Wb.tl do you llke aboat &be DaUy Pilot? Wbll don't you like? Call tbe
number at Id& and 1our messaae wlll be recorded, truscrtbed and delivered
to &.be appr~prlate fllltor.
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editor on any topic. Contrlbasors to our Letters column must loclude tbtlr
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Tell ,111 wbat's on yoar mlnd.
Dally Piiot
o.llYeJY
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Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
MAIN OFPICI!
10 • m no 'ff'J coo., ..
l:lt ......
Circulation
Telepho ..
l orn• Bruchet
·Adv ~tis ng Dir tor
Rosemary Churchman
Col')tro! r
custody Fnday at the Costa Mesa CappucciU1 w d he contacted Ward
pohc:e station on suspicion of child Friday and asked ham to come in to
01 I d ...;;.1 -ulat' the pohoe department to talk about o estauon an ouu cop 100• the incident. After the detective had
accordina to Costa Mesa Octecuve interviewed Ward, he booked him
Paul CappuccilH. into the pobc:c departmentJ'ail. Ward was observed Thursday
afternoon alloaedly copulating the 8-Ward. who saad he 1s a carpet layer,
year-0ld victim in the men's locker denied the allegations, CapJ)uccilh
:oom a& tM-pool, 2323 P~niia-said. -
Ave .• a pohc:e spokesman said. The Jim OcBoom , executive director of
city's leisure services dcpartmcnl theOrangeCoast YMCA. saidWard
opens the pool to the pubhc during went aJong as a counselor last sum-
the summer. mer on a one-week trip to Camp A l 2-year-0ld boy, who walked into Osceola. a Y camp near Bia Bear.
the locker room and all~y saw "He did a very good JOb for us,"
Ward and the victim, notified staff De Boom said. "We bad no indicaoon
members at the pool about 2 p.m. of any problem. I don't know what to
They were unable to locate either the think at this point.''
vteum or the suspect but were able to Another YMCA employee told
an lieu of$250.000 bail. ~,
Woman abducted
and raped in Irvine
A 39-year-old woman was ab-
ducted from an Irvine hopptnt
complex Sunday and dnven to ~
deserted tndustrial area wbere-she-
was dragged to a parked van and
raped, pohcc reported today.
The woman told aulbontie:s she
had been shoppina at a retail center m
the Woodbndge community when a
man forced his way into her car and
drove to an mdustrial area at Von
K.a.rman Avenue and Barranca Road.
~mm~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ROMANIAN DEFECTOR •••
From Al
' ' .
helpful. very cooperative," he said.
A fo rmer c olleaaue of Dumitraacu· cnainttr 80ri1 Lana.
au, had emi1t1ttd to the United
tates in 197S and returned to
Ro mania twice to vasat. He now Ii
in Huntington Beach and worklat an
engincenna firm in Irvine.
On h11 last visit, in 1978, Undiu
dctcribcd Amenca to Dumilrascu
and told him be could call him fi
help. 0 1nyt1mc and 1nywhcrt" he
could manqc bis defection.
Dum1trucu made sood on thit
romise a rouplc of da)'I afttr he
declared h11 1ntcnt to defect, ruc:h1n1
Lan<au from Cairo Landau tracktd
down Da d Bat 1scr, of the Ban lhc
vict Cotlit1on, 1lID1i.bC liia seen
on ltlc 1 ion some mon1h1 nrlitt. ··E,eryonc was ~cry hels>n.I I am
glad lo be tfCTC;· DU"mitn u k1.
' •
)
"
. Eliz.aide Gallery
sets ~rt exhibit
E1izald GaJJery Intemation I, 314 forest Ave.,
l.quna Beach, will present an an uhit>it on turday ug. I I,, f~rn • to 8 p.m. . · ~1nttnp an pastel by Annandina Louno, 1eulpturcs b~ Vernon Terry, and photoaraphy by Antonio Steinhardt wiU be featured,
AJao invited are Alfonso Morua of Puerto Rico and
Eduardo Cardenas of Mexico with paintlnas; Sarah
Beaem o~ Sacramef'!tO and John Pontiosky of Orange
Coui:ity ~th ceta"!1cs; and Carlos Garcia Estrada of
Mex1co witb enarav1ngs. • ·
For more information. call 497-S303 or SS9~160.
~d offered rape rictl.m•
The Laguna Beach free Oinic Counsclina Center ., c~ntly offerina a progressive support group for rape
vicums on.Tuesdays from 10 a.m. to noon. Dea~line for registration is Aua. 14. For more
tnformatson. c:all 494-9428 or 831-8143.
!ABWA to meet Aug. 14.
The Irvine Chapter of the American Business
Women's Association will meet Aug. 14 at the Irvine
M&rlott Hotel, 18000 Von Kannan Ave. Irvine.
Social houi will bqin at 6 p.m . with dinner at 7 p.m ..
ud Proaram to follow on "Education and Career
Advancement."
. Yolanda Morales Dickey, au~t speaker, is project
· litn:ctor of the Adol~nt Day Treatment Center for
Western Youth Services and it involved in prevention
and treatment of child abuse. She is a licensed family
therapist. Carol Altman will be vacational speaker.
For membenhip information. call Man1yn Cooley at
!38-1022, or Anita Aemina at 67~88S.
Running agalnat hunger
RUIUlera paM tbroqb Newport Beach
atone Paclftc CoUt JUibwa:r u they make
their way to Santa llonlca from lleldco.
The l"llllDen were part of an lntemadonal
-
ran to apread th~ m~e tbat h~er and
at.a.nation can be ended If people work totether. For more lnformadon aboat the
1roap, call Doa.na Balter at 894-3134. ..
Cable rm
asks to keep
its franchise
87 ~ INEIDDIUN °' .. ..., .......
A cabk &devision company ~four of die
Ori• County dries it tcrVC5 to aran1 • fiveo-year
frandlise uiension that would ano.., It lO finish bwldlo&
Ill cabie mitm•
The compuy. Diek.inson Pacific ~ ..
cnkftd into• I~ franchise ..,.cement wuh Hunt·
ln&lon1Beatb, Fountain ValleyaDdWesunutstcnn 1979.
SWlton)oined a on time laser. UDdcr their contr'IC:lS.
lbe dtaa ha vc the option of m_in,g ownenblp of l1¥ ~at the end of the lS.yearpctjod.
If the five-year uterwon it putcd. Dktinson
Pacifi would coatinue U> own and opcra&e the fYllC11l
tbrouabScpt. 30, 1999. Tbeeompany would continue
to pey hncbise (ces U> the four dti
In e.ubanlC for thlS franchise ntcnsion, the cable
company bas agreed to make additional oommitnttnts lO
thi four atics.
• Citycounal inthcfourcommunit1csarcbcinaasked
U> review the proPOlcd franchise extenston pnor &o the
Aua,. IS mcctinaoflhe Public Cable Television Authonty.
The panel, made up or council members from 1hc four
clues, ovcnccs construction and operation of the cable
system.
Hunun1ton Beach City Councilman Don
MacAllister, a PCTA board membc'r said that ..,cy•5
clliecton have already approved tbe franchi9C extcnS1on.
The directors have bttn uked to take tbe pr I l;latk to
their respective councils for ratification. ·
• MacAllister said be has di.sC'usiCd the pt.an with his
council memben aod anticipates no probtems in secwiDa
approval at Monday night's meetlf\I.
1fl~torlcal Society to meet
Newport Beach Historical Society will present Ellen
Lee, Orange County historian, author and speaker, at
Sherman Libvrtry and Gardens, 2647 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Mar. on Wednesday, Aug. l S, from 6 to 10
p.m.
'What do you think is the biggest thrill of the
Olympics so far?'
Accordina co a memo prepared by PCT A att.omey
Alan R. Watts. the cable company obtained a $27 million btJ1k loan in· 1979 to fund construction of I.be system. ~fpce1hcn. DickiriiOn haS bom>wcd mother S l S millioo
il\construction funds from its parent corporation., R.,-s
C.ablesytems, Watts' repon states. Tbe c:8bk company
estimates it will need to bom> another $4.6 millioa to
Lee will speak about Newport Bay in 1892 and the
be&innina of the Balboa Pavilion, completed in 1906.
Reservations with SS check to the Society should be
made to Mrs. W. Bertuleit, 39 Balboa Cov~ewport Beach, 92663. For more information. call 6 24 or
. ~~64. -===· = '
Six different courses will be offered by Orange Coast
Collese's Cinema Department this Fall. Fall semscster
classes beain on Monday, Aug. 20. The courses include
"History and Ai>precialion of the Cinema, .. "Super-8
Workshop," "Baste Motion Picture Production," "Mo-
tion Picture Sound, .. ''Special Projects." and "Advanced
film Production."
Classes meet durina the morning. afternoon and
-evcnlna hours, Monday throu&h Friday.
Registration for FaJI semester classes ts under way
throuah Aua. i. 7 in OCC'sAdrnissions Office. The office is
open Monday through Friday. from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Open rqistration, on a walk-in basis, runs Aua. 16-24.
for more mformauon about the cinema courses or
rqistration procedures. call 432-S772.
Tall ltavlalli, H
teacller
lrvlDe
"I'm from Israel and I'm
impressed with the fact that
people here were so wel·
coming to the competitors
from other countnes. At
-------... e opening ceremonles, BeUerue to addrea NOW the · _uanu Imm China. Rumania and Israel were SaJ)y BcUerue, delegate to the Democratic Conven-loudly chtefCd by the
tion in San Francisco, will be aucst speaker at the meeting crowds. h's somethina you
of the South Coast Chapter of tbe National Orpnization don•t sec m other coun-
forWomen at 8 p.m. on A.u .. 15 at the El Toro Library. tnes."
BcUerue, who served on the Laguna Beach City
Council from 1976 U> 1984 and was mayor in 1981-82, is
presently a member of the Orange County Pla.nnina
Commission and alternate member of the California
Coastal Commission. She will Ttlate hen-:x-pm--..·c:-nce-s at, and impres1Joos of,
the Democratic Convenuon and what she perceives to be
the strona and weak points of the pany.
The public is invited. Refreshments will be served
and child care provided. For more information, call
586-2737.
5emmar oa m orgages .et • : A ftU seminar will be presented Aug. IS, at 7 p .m. at
ttie office Qffullerton Mortgage and Escrow Co., 90S S.
Euclid St., 'Fullerton. Subject will be "Adjustable Rate
Monaaaes. FHA/VA or Fixed Ra~~cb Is for Me?"
: Relervations are required. \..all Tom Morris at
S7o...41 l.
CALENDAR
..
! :r-. . . • .. . . Monday, Aug. 6
• 6:30 p.m., Cotta Meta City CoucU Meedq, City
liatl, 11 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
TedStab,H
Realtor
Coroaa Del Mar
"The opening cer-
emonies were spectacular,
a t~fic show. Equally
cxc1t1ns was women•s
swimming. I never ex-
pected that the Uruted
States would win the gold.··
• PoucE Loe . •• ...
Rayford Jollmoa. 47
real estate broker
Newport 8eaclt
A
"The opening cer-
emonies with the lighting
of the Olympie ton:h."
Ka~y Wltopscbll, Sl
bouewtfe
MJuloa Viejo
"I watched the bicyclmJ
m person, thc-..Oute was
just three blocks from by
house. I was impressed
with all the patriotism
beina displayed. It was a
fabulous experience.··
;pitizen halts burglary t ry;
~Suspect collared in Mesa . .
A cituen apparently stopped a thief
at the Win-All ps station, 790 W.
19th St.. Wly Saturday mom1na after
•be alleae<tJy smuhcd a window and
~ • attemj)~ed to rob the itlUon.
A COsta Mesa Police DcJ>&f!l!'ent
. spokesman said Jamie Ortiz, 20, of
Cosw MCSl&. was arrested on su pa-
oon ofbursJary shortly after tlie 3:20
a.m. bufilary attempt,
A citizen who allqedly saw Ortiz
smash theputa~n window chased
him northbound on Palace Avenue
until a patrol officer PQttcd the
co.ta Ilea& window Saturday at a home on the
700 block of Shalimar Drive. The A Placentia woman walkina resident. who was at his own wcddin1
llhrouah a parkina lot at the South at the time of the buratary, left for his Coaat Plaza Mall, wu robbed and honeymoon before discovcrina the
beaten by a man who stole $20 out of theft. A $50 television set was the only her punc. The au pect. deacribed u Caucasian, in his mid to late 20s. S-item reported stolen.
foot-7, 130 to l40 pounds with short •
blond hair, ran up behind the victim, Lafaaa Beach
kriocked her to the STQund and bclan Charles Paul Tyson. 2S, was ar-
hittina her in the face and ~k. rested for child annoyanoc at Cleo W1tncucs in the area ~ bonk1na ..__ h da "_.....__ d car bom1 and the uspect ran to bis tteet ~c on Y &•KHIUUM an
car and drove off'. The victim uffered released on 55·~ ti:11.
tund bnaiJea but wu n~rious..ly Someone threw an unt_no n n,Juied, police 1&id. chemical sublranoe at a movi
• vehicle in the 1300 bl of Gt n· ••• • A cl n of South Africa stayina in
Cos&a Mcu on a visit had h•s 1
• oltn after he ~tit down at a bus stop
on Harbor Boulovard and Adams
tttet and walked away 10 look (or a
neyre trCc1 unday 1 emoon. No
auspccts ~located. • • • Someone reported!')' brOkc thro
thcbcdroomwindowofa den in
the 2900 bloc of -'' uftl
su picious activity and apprehended
Orttz.
Ortiz was booked into the Costa
Mesa Police Department .;ad on
suspicion of commerciaJ bur&Jary. the
spokesman said
an attempted robbery at OU and
Glenncyrc Street Saturday afternoon.
Ray Ltt Miles, 24. Albert Joseph
Sherwin. 28. and Christo.Pher Rod
Gruner. 291 wcto each beina held on s2s.ooo bi•t.
• • • • • l:nk Lind y Nudd.. 19. wa ar·
'rested for commercial b~I') Fri·
daY. ni&)'t and released on S 10.000
heal. ' • •
' telephone. uit clothtn cMh
nd camera equipment "trtJ&mOJll
• the nem 1tokn. lbc ~ue wu
pl~ at Sl,BIS. '•
Bout vard mctt(flC bet n Tfiu •
day ind Salilrday niaht and too ....... ~~
uDdctcnnincd amount of valua I
Police have no u 'oen' . ,,. • • • 'Iha vcs pried open a hdan gla • Thttt mtn ~re rrcstcd foltoY.i
. .
complete construction of the system.
The franchise extension was requested U> pve the
cable company five extra years to pey off its deb~ Watts•
rq>ort says. -
Councilman MacAllislcr said Dickinson Pacific's
costs have been peat.er tbu anticipated bec:ause of hi&h
. · 1erat. ta1Q. and high underitound cable iASullatioo
expetnes .
: 1n ex m tbt frauttmt exteDSiqat
compan ~ thac
---..:• ............ .JYS em ·u be~r&>ll\Pktcd by (kto ·~ (Most remairufta construction is in HuntiJJatoo Beach). -.-
•Multi-unit complexes and mobile home parks that
have signed qreements for cable service will be connected
within two yean; multi-unit owners and mobile home
park ownen will be'abte to sip bulk or individual service
agreements with the cable oompan).'.
MDet Elled&e, U
teadler Crail Dlteaed.11
ltMad
• Eath cjtyoouncil chamber WtlJ be wind for teLcca$\S
at no cost lb the aties; video equipment Will be ~
availabltfor local propmnmina.
•All pay services., incl~ the Disney Channel. will
be offered on a stand-alone basis. Costa Men
·•All the games have been
arcat. I guess. since I'm a
bike ruler myself, I aot
really ellcited when we won---
gold in women• bicyclinJ. It
was the first tim~ they
competed in the Olympics
and they won lfs in-
credtble."
M111loa Viejo
I've been standina in line
for five hours to buy tickets
for the women's basketball
game on Su.nda The
tickets were expensive but l'm~bou
going. rve caught the
Olympic bug, ( auess."
•Two.way cable service will be Uliuatcd when it is
technically and economically feasible.
•The cable company will pay a .penalty for late
payment of franchise fees.
~
Medication causetl
jail inr.nate' s death
A 37-)'CIJ:-<>ld man who died last month in a Seal
Beach Jail cell after being booked on suspicion of public
drunkenness took a massive overdose of an anti-
deJnssant mcdJcation. an_awopsy lw~ ... --~-~--John Roten. a Garden Grove resident. collapsed in
thejail cell on July 26 after bein& arrested wiierin the day
at Rockwell International in Seal Beach. Security officers
at Rockwell wd the man had been loitering in tbe area and
actina susptcious.
Results of laboratory tests oooducted by the Oranie
County Corooor's office indicated the man had ta.ten a
massJve dose of a dnaa called N~n. Police said the
dosaac was larae enouah to be.fatal. : ~ a.utopsy also revealed Roeen bad been drinking.
Patrfda Jo~ H
botelOWHr
Vera MeCa.Uun
lloaewlfe
Olympic busing available
Private bus tran.sponauon IS available from
Anaheim-area hotels to Olympic events, ac:xx>rdinc to the
Ana.betm Ara Visitor&. Convention Bwuu..
lnlDe Costa Mesa
"I act a kick out of the
fact that the traffic is not a
problem. IS bad been so
stronaly predicted on TV.
Now the newscasters have
nothing to say when it's
ti me for the traffic reports.··
There's no question
about it. Watctun& Ban
Conner and Mitch Gaylord
each score 10 on the U.S.
men's 1ymnastics team. It
was an exhilaratina ex-
perience."
Continuing tbroush Sunday. buses will leave the
followtna hotels: The Grand Hotel, Quality Hotel.
Emerald of Anaheim and Anaheim Sheraton .
Olympic bus service from RTD park/ride lots.
includina the faahty at Cerritos College 1n NorWalk: which
serves Oranae County, ls also available.
JO> ride before crashing tt. The club were not sure bow much cash was
estimated it will cost $850 to fix the taken.
Momma Glory A venue and Ward
Street in Founlaln Valley. The loss
was estJmated at $2,500. damaae. • • • A Newport Beach man reported the
theft of an auto stereo valued at
Sl,500 from his Toyota Celtca Supra
parked on FemleafSunda) • • • A Corona del Mar man also
reported the theft of an auto stereo
valued at S l.SOO from his Toytoa
Celica parked on Goldenrod Sunday.
• • •• A Newpon bd\ woman reported
the ~ft of SS, I SO 1n)Cwelry from her
home in the 2700 block of Hilltop
Saturday. • • • A Newport Beach man reported the
theft of an Olympic banner from the
1972pmcs from the front yard of his
home in the 900 block of Citrus Place
Saturday. He estimated the value o(
the loss to be SSOO. • . . . -
A Newport Beach woman reponcd
the theft of an Ofympic bennen·aJued
at SSC from the from of her home in
the 2000 block ofCliffSatwday. • • • A Newport &Kb man reported the
theft of an auto crco YalUed at
• S 1.()()() from hi f tteiedes parked at
4300 Von Karman unday. • • • • A N~JK>rt BCaeh mnn rcporttd
unday the theft OfS 000 lD lry
fl m her .h me tn the of
Lane.
• • • An emplo~ at an auto pans shop
on the I 5000 block of Golden 'West
Strttt reported that a stranp.acting
customer entered the busin smeH-ina like "stancr fluid:·
• • • • Paramedics were called to a resi-de~ on the 17000 block of OU Lane
where a person bad swallowed u
unknown qua.nit1ty of rat pois0n. The
ind1vtdual v.-as treated Humana Hos-
pital 10 Huntinaton Beach.
• • • Polu:~ "'ere called to a l'Clidcnce on
the 8400 block of Edinaer A ,·enue
after nel&hbors reported seeina a man
climbed a bakdny and break tn a rear
sliding &lass door. Offictts dis-
covered. however. that lt was a
resident who had locked his keys
inside. ·
Pocuataln Vallef
Tbc owner of Gene's Laun d.
896S Garfield A~e., reponed th.at a di~tled cu tomer removed a sin
from the bathroom ti of the •
busi . The ~-.ndal left a noted
}1 .. Yoor mac t
my randd1dnot~~
I bro e )'OUt sink. us:ma,is
Htimatcdat SlOO.
•..
• • •
A resident of the 9100 block of
Caladium A ven~ reported Sunda)
that someone b~ his t 97 t ~hite and orange Volkswagen bus
and stoic a SSO stcn:o power boo tcr
from &lo'c com~nL . ... .-~-
.\ 13-}ear-old Jirl from the I ti I 00
block of Li"in tone Street rcponed
Saturday that someone tole ht>r blue
and white Schwinn cruiser b1cyclc
from her open prqe. The loss was
csuma~ at S32S. • • •
Someone mashed a window to
burglarize a blue 1982 Dod&e van
parked Satwday on the 1 7300 block
of Euclid treeL "The.loss included a
military uniform .. 'Orth $21 S. tereo
equipment wonh $190 and $4 in
• • •
Gunfire
leaves
convict
dead
Five-week manhunt
ends for 2 escapees
In chase. shootout
Facee of Richard Burton lilclade, at lett. ln
a 1953 film: ln .. The SandpJper.•• 1964: and. at rUbt. u Kin• Arthar mutcal, "Camelot."
Ling-Ling the giant panda
lose cub at National ZOO
By A lat Prett
W HINOTON-Lin ·Un& the si nt panda at the National Zoo,
btnh I te Sunday to 1tUlbom cub, 100 officials announced today. Dr. Ro
Hoaac gpeclaJ a istant to the 100 director, .aid the infant panda appCated
be normallydevelooed, but that iu x andthec:au~ofdeath wercnottno flli.
A ne(ropsy was scheduled for later today. The uny cub wu the iault o ,.
matin1 on March 19 between Lma:Lina a~d the zoo'• m'le ~nd&. HIJnJ· Hstna. It was only their second mauna in nine years of t.ryln&; 'The fint, ~It
year. produced a male which died of•. respiratory infection three hours a er
binh Ul July 1983. .
I
Greenpeace quartet .cale Lltierty.
SOMERS. Conn. (AP) -Two
benk·robbina prison escapees hit a dead end after five violent weeks
when the state trooper they asked for
directions recoanized them. scuina up a shootout that left one convict
de.d and one critically wounded,
officials said.
A third convict from Tennescc's
Tumey Center pnson remained at
large today, and authonues, believing
the trio had traveled together,
mounted a search in north-central
Connecticut.
Richard Burton's death·
a shock to Liz, admir e r s
NEW YORK-Four memben ofGrccnpeaoe, the environmental _proteJt
aroup, scaled scaffoldina on the Statue o~Libeny early today, and unf\Jrlcd •
banner calling for an end to the tesuna of nuclear weapons, a aroup
spokeswoman said. Helen Perivier said the four climbed tbe statue at ~bout
5:30 a.m. and were prepared to stay on the statue all ~y. The aroup picked
today because it is the anniverury of the day the United St.ates dropped an
atomic bomb on Hiro hima, Japan.
FamUy pol.aned by pesdclde ·
M~MPHIS Tenn. -An auto~ wa1 ordered for an 11 ·ycar-old sirl wtlO
died after she c.ime into contact with a pesticide, and ber six brothm and
sisters were scnously ~11. official~ said. Pam~~ Murphy, ~. and Theresa. S, Of
Tunik.a, Miss., remaaned an cnt1cal condiuon eatly tOday at Le~n_bew •
Children's Medical Center. s.aad hospital spokesman Scott Kent. Their 11~iol.
Sonya died Saturday niaht shonly after the family was brou&bt to.the hospaw,
Kent ~id. The children apparcndy ing~~ted or.inhaled an orpn1c ~hosphate
contained in either an aancultural pest1C1de or insect spray, Kent l&Jd
Their escape had already cost the
lives of three searchers in Tennessee
who were lutled when their helicopter
crashed shortly after the breakout.
'Make up your mind. Do you wish to be
a household word or a great actor?' -
William R. Prentice, Michael
Hartsock, and Lohman R. Mays
dashed for freedom through the pre-
dawn fogJuJy l after picking the locks
on their cells at the prison in Only,
Tenn., authonties said.
Shortly after noon on Sunday,
Prentice and Hartsoek puJJed up to a
police car on a northern Connecucut
hi&hway to ask directions to the home
ol Prentice's relatives. state pohcc
SI.Id.
GENEY A, Switzerland (AP) -
Richard Burton, a Welsh coal miner's
son who fascinated the public as
much with his turbulent private life as
with bis acting virtuosity, has died
from a brain hemorrhage. He was 58.
A ~nowned Shakespearean stage
actor and the star of more than 40
movies. Burton uved hiah. drank
bard and pursued a hiahly publirued
love hfe that included two marriages
to Elizabeth Taylor.
Burton's wife Sally Hay, 36, per-
Japanese recall ·
'~-=-=Hir-oshima . attack
HIROSHIMA. Japan (AP) -An
estimated 50,000 peo~le observed a
minute of silence this momma at
Hiroshima's peace park to com-
memorate the moment 39 years ago
when the city was devastated by the
world's first atomic bomb attack.
About 118,000 people died from
the beat. blast and radiation of the
bomb. which exploded at 8: 1 S a.m.,
Aug. 6, 1945, in the final days of
World War 11. Another 60,000 people
died of the bomb's effects over the
next five years.
In a s~h after the minute of
• silence toda~. Hiroshuna's mayor.
T•whi Araki, said "the spirit of
ltiroshlma ·has pcnnc4ted the whole
world" m the search for an end to the
nuclear arms race .. Popular campaigns aga10st nu -
clear arms have ansen spon-
taneously," the mayor said. and "we
solemnly urge the nuclear powers to
heed this 1ntcmat1onal outcry."
Araki called "" thf' f ln1trd States
and the Soviet Union to resume
disarmament talk.s and said the
nuclear powers shouJd "initiate an
immediate nuclear test ban, and
begin to eliminate their nuclear
armories."
A floek of doves filled the sky above
the park as the bnef annual ceremony
ended.
Among the crowd were surv1 von
of the bombing and relatives of those who died.
Three days after the bombing. a
second U.S. atomic bomb killed an
estimated 78,000 more m Nagasaki m
southern Japan.
Prime Minister Yasuharo
Nakasone will attend the Nagasaki
memorial Thursday The central
government was represented today
by Health and Welfare Minister Kozo
Watanabe. whose ministry deals wtth
the contanuang health problems of the
bombs' survivors, called
"h1bakusha."
Ban on leaded gas
would hlk.e prices?
LOS ANGELES (AP)-A govern-
ment announcement that banning
leaded ,aasoline from the market will
only raue a.as pnccs two cents a pl Ion
is "almost laughable." says 011 indus-
try analyst Dan Lundberg.
The government's plan to ban
leaded fuel by January 1986 will
vastly increase pump prices and
couJd shut down 100 refinenes and
thousands of gas stations that will be
unable to afford the chanaeover, Lundberg .said Sunday.
'There's no question" that the
changover will mean higher pnces to
consumers, he said.
The Environmental Protection
Agency, in announcing the 1986
deadhne for removal of all lead from
gasoline, esumated the cost at two
cents per gallon.
f
sonally called Miss Taylor "to spare
her the media shock" after Bunon's
sudden death Sunday, said the actor's
agent of 34 yeats, Valerie Douglas.
.. He was a born actor but be was a
bit wild and chose a rather mad way of
\.hrowin& away bis theater career. He
was awfuJly good to people and
generous," actor Sir John G1elgud
said of Bunon.
Bunon was taken ill Sunday morn-
ing at his villa m Cehgny outside
Geneva and rushed to a Geneva
hospital, said one bis brothers.
Graham Jenkins. in Porumouth,
Enaland. He died at the hospital late
in the afternoon.
DouaJ,as told reponers at the actorTs
villa that he will be buried at Ccligny.
She said further details, such u the
1ime anQjilaceOftbeftm~ had~ to be arranged. ,
She said IJltlJlOrill..1£n.li:es wnuld be held m South Wales and London
but that no dates had been fixed.
When told of the actor's death,
Miss Taylor was in California with
two of her children, including Maria,
the daughter she and Bunon had
adopted during one of their two
marriages, said htr publicist, Chen
Sam. .. They are extremelr. extremely
upset," said Sam, weepma. She said
Miss Taylor was too shocked to make a statement on Sunday.
Laurence Olivier was said to have
once told Bunon: "Make up your
mind. Do you wish to be a household
word or a great lcto~Olivier, wno
was to soon make a movie with
Bunon. called him "a vecy fine actor
and has early death is a great tragedy
to the theater world, the film world
and the public."
Bunon 's splendid ban tone render·
inas of Shakespearean lines in-
variably electrified audiences and his
piercing blue eyes and commanding
presence riveted screen audiences of
such works as "Who•s Afraid of
VirJinia Woo1rr•~ .. THe py Who
Came in from the Cold" and
"BcckeL" But critics caJled several of
his other SO films mediocre or
terrible.
A month ago, Burton celebrated
the first anniversary of his marriage
to Hay, a film production assistant.
She was with him when he died, said
Burton's brother Verdun. ·•she is
very upset. She can ba.rd1y speak. She
is bean broken," he said.
Mrs. Burton became alarmed when
the actor failed to awaken Sunday.
Oouf.1as sa1d."She could not awaken
him, • the agent said. "His breathmg
was 11ot correct. She called a doctor
and immedjately had him sent to a
hospital:'
Bunon once said his alcoholism
was "as bad as cancer." In June he
declared that his drinkina bouts were
throuah and announced bis 0 scmi-
retirement" from acting.
But he took on a heavy work load.
Humpbrey m on itored by FBI
ST. PAUL. Minn. -The FBI closely monitored Huben H. Jfumpb~·s
contacts with Communist leaders after bis election as m1yorofM1nneapolis ln .
l 94S:-accordint to newly released aovemment files. Altbouab FBI aaert:
reported allegations of the future vice president'• ties to tbe Communist Pany.
one repon concluded Humphrey could not be considered a "close ally of ~e
Communists," the St. Paul Pioneer Press repo~ Sunday. "'fhe confidential
memos aJso indicate that Humphrey's cou.rts~1p of FBI Director J. Edpr
Hoover and his frequently expressed admirau~n of the •ncy may have .
helped him escape comina under attack dunna tbe McCanby era. the
newspaper said.
He pla yed O'Brien, the 1nterroptor,
in a new film vergion of George
Orwell's futunsttc classic "Nineteen
Eighty-Four," then a small role as a
consressman alongside his daueter Kate in an American TV series, • ElHs
Island." M cDonald'• or16UJal g oing to m ueam
Burton was born R1c)?.ard Jc~ns. DEARBORN, Mlcb. _ A museum dedicated to the history of tbe
12th of I 3 chlld~n of his coal miner automobile wants to pay tribute to 1 byproduct of the car culture -the fas!·
father and ~arma1d mother, on Nov. food restaurant, a spokesman 5ays .. Tbe Henry Foi:ct.Museu~ m the Detro!t
10, 1925 an the village of Pon-suburb of Dearborn is makina a bid to buy an on11==:~~na)d s trhydfen, South. Wales. :aiaurant. complete with_1oJden arche so it <::aa-bc. • >Iay.ed.
Ht mot~·~~ ~and . id museum s~kesman Don Adams. The museum wants to ac.qwre the old·
he was raised by his au!!~ unttl he style arches, facade, counter, doon and coolrin1 ~yment &om a
came undec thupe~ -McDomltd"rtrn.1r!Syracusc, N.Y., suourb ofDCwilr,one oTUre onaiiian S'"or
a t?cher w~o detected the youth s 16 franchises Adams said. actma potential. •
The schoolmaster trained him in _,..,..,_ • l
the classics and heJped him rub out Yu.ma •oolng 'qalck y W.-uuu.ig coup -
his thick Welsh accent. Finally, ·he YUMA. Ari,z. _Yuma County offici~ hopeful that the eliminati~n
adopted him as his son, and Richard ofa l?-year-old requirement that couples set.blood tests before marry.ma will
took Philip's last name. mean a return to the marriaae boom that preCeded that law. State lawmakers
Richard had intended to study at scrap~ the law this year after medical testimony that the tests were
Oxford University and work in a practically wonhless. "People came here to get away from publicity,': said
mane to "toughen myself up," but a Supenor Court Clerk c.c. "Pat" Newman of the southwestern Arizona chance encounter in London led to an actin&JOb. He made his London stage community.
debut at age 18 io fellow-Welshman •••• Emlyn William-'s "The Druid's
Rest."
"In a wretched part Richard
Bunon showed exceprionat ability.-
wrote The Statesmen of his flnt
London role.
After three years 1n the Royal Air
Force and studies at Oxford, he made
acting bas career. His Shakesp,earcan
roles won him acclaim and 10 1952 he
went to Hollywood to star m "The
Robe."
Phihp Burton recaJled in an mter·
view with the Sunday Times: "It was
the first film an Cinemascope, a great
event in the movie Industry, ims
when he was cast in the lead, my
ltoodness, that did somethin1 to him. I think that's when they really got
him."
"Nobody," said the teacher, "is
more aware than him that be bas done
no end of Junk as a result of that., and
his love is the theater."
Burton was nominated seven times
for an Oscar, but never won the
award. He captured Tony awards for
starring in the Broadway plays
"Camelot" and "Equus."
Temblor •lJdea Palm SprbJ.g• area-
PALM SPRINGS -A moderate earthquake jolted a wide area of
Southern California des.en and mountam territory around this resort
community early today, but there were no ·reporls of damage or in.Jury,
authorities said. The quake struck at I: 14 a.m. and a preliminary estimate of
the magnitude put the tremor at 4.S on the Richter scale, said Dennis Meredith,
spokesman for the seismology lab at the California Institute of Techno1oSY in
Pasadena. The epicenter was 13 miles nonhwest of Palm Springs, be said.
LA-peace marcll termed 'largeat'
LOS ANGELES-Five thousand peace activists rallied to mark the 39th
anniversary of the first U.S. atomic bombing of la~ and to make sure the
post-war generations remember the attack. Althou'"ab dwarfed b,Y. tbe crowd of
90,000 attending Olympic events at the Coliseum a few miles away, the
attendance at Survival Day '84 in MacArthur Park on Sunday was the ~t
in more than a decade for an anti-war event in Los AnFICS> police said. 'In
sheer size, this is one of the largest I've seen," said Deputy Polic;e Chief Lew
Ritter.
Saa Diego blue lajara S
SAN DIEGO -A late ni&ht fire broke out in a 36-unit apanment
build.in&. injuri.na five people and forcma the evacuation of 80 residenta, city
fire· officials said today. The blaze broke out •!!only before 11 p.m. Sunday in
a second-floor unit of a threc--story Oakwood Garden Apartments comj>I~ io
Pacific Beach, said Fire Department spokesman Bob Radder. Ftrefi&bten
contained the blaze to the one unit, although an adl..acent apartment suatained
heat, smoke and water damaae, Radder said. Damage was estimated at $250,000.
Wive. •ai tch oa Wer •upect
SACRAMENTO -A JO..yw-old man was back in jail today, facing a
murder c.harJC be beat six years aio, after his fonner and current wives pve
iovestipton new information. Slntiago Palafox Gonzalez of Roseville wu
tried three times in the 1977 shootina death of 19-year-old Jerry Oihon, but
was freed the following year after two hungjunes and a mistrial, accordina to
a repon in the Sacramento Bee newspaper Sunday. Susan Gonzalez, who was
married to the 1u5pcct at the time, and Carol Gonzalez, his current wife, told
Placer County investiaatora in separate interviews last month that Gonzalez admitCed he kiJJcd Gilson.
.. • t
l .
ltA •roap of Ameraalan chlldnm lD Roehl lllDh City, VletnarA po9e8 for the camera lD 1982. ,
I
~----
Haitian in
real concern
for Bahamas
Estimates Indicate
1 out of 10 pepple
prune maruster, Sir Lynden Pi~
ot in u lfC&l numben., DOC • a
1tt'ady st.ream u ;&bey uted lO. But
every month there wilf bc cwo or tbree boatloadl ...
AlthOU4fJ unempfoymenl ln the
NASSAU, Bahamal ("P) -Saha· ~mas 1sCSllmaiedat more lban 20 percent, there arcc.onthcuna VJeWaon mian officials say thetr thit&an prob-Whether they"~u ad rt"SCly affecud
In nation ls Hattlan
lem could become much 10rse n the 'm>nomy.
the influx lb.at became a or .. In many ca , they petfonn
concern in florida in 19 0. services Bahamians refuse to do. While an estimated 40.000 to Tl.-_,.,, • S0,000 HaiJians have settled among 111")' .,.. .. orm mcrual JObl.," qppost·
the nearly 3 mtllion ~pcopk of lion leader hales Aid.
Florida's southeast coast in the past Pindling ~ bul .idded Wt
10 years, Bahamians esti~te that melaboruruonurpelheHaitJam
one of every l~O ,people in this nation eventually will cause lower~ an
of nearly 2so,ooo is Ha.ita n. • scneraJ becaUJC they are trill1A1 to
They e~cu concern about the work at wbsiandard pay. ·
implications for tht future. . . ..The praiest mplC't 1s ill the areas
.. Ri&h.t now. it's not a major issue. or social Cducauon and Welfare,"
but tbe Haitians here are havinf PLndlingsaid in an in~·ew ... More
chiJdttn as fast as the BaMmians do, than bal f of the patients in public
said Kendal Isaacs. an attorney and clinics in a number of areas are
leader of the opposition in Parlia-Haitian 1mmiarants. SCbools have
ment. "The Haitiam cotiJd have an become ovncrowded.
impect foryean to come." .. The Bahamas bad been relatively
The tide of illepl immiarants from dise.asc-free. But then we . staned
Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's sctti.DJ cases of malaria. which we've
poorest nation. reached a ~ of . wi~ out ~in. and some tubercu-
15,093 known -amvals in f1orida in lom. They vc kept our facilities
1980. Amid worries that the French-under a strain:·
and Crcolwpeaking Haitians were Bahamian officials formerl)' n>
add.in&· to Miami's sOaa1 strains, ~the Ha!Uans. but that~
Aoricfa officials lobbied stronaly for mcnt was suspended by the Haitiasa
federal tielp. • aovmuncnt IWO yeaR 8'0·
· The Reagan admin.istrauon re-There were stnim in November
Amerasians ca.ught up by quotas sponded m October 1981 by ordering 1980 when Bahamian officiall round·
Site U.S. Coast Guard to intercept ed up 109 Haitians stranded on tbe
refugee boats off Haiti and C1COn rocky iSland of C..yo LobQI, wt.ere
them back home, unless the refugees their ship foutldctM. Tbe Haitians
could penuadc U.S. im~tion fought off Baha.inian policr, who
officers aboard that they qualify for-returned with dubl l.nd forced them Vietnam says cnlldren of American fa the rs
•. ~hould be allowed Into U.$. more easily.
HO CHI MINH CrtY, Vietnam stays ome: -• · " ,...,. L
. AP -Vietnamt1echildren f•lhcrcO 'Re said he tnows...liulc about. his
ry 'encans durina the Vietnam father, whom be identified only as
war have become the focus of dispute "Gilben," other than that he was a
between U.S. and Vietnamese of· pilot.
ficials regulating refugee departures "He ao when I very youna. Only 3
for the United States. months old. Don't know why," Mmh
The Vietnamese contend the chil· said. "I want to 10 to America. My
dren. many of whom be& for money father is American.••
and food outside foreign tourist Like many of the other Amerasians
hotels here, should be treated as a on the block. Minh claimed he will ao
• separate aroup by the United States, to the United States in three months.
ouuide normal refuace quotas, and But a depanurc so soon appears
that the"¥ should be allowed to leave unlikely at th.is point because of the
with thetr entire Vietnamese fanu.hes disaarccments between the United
-mother, brothers and sisters.. States and Vietnam over the de-
But the United States says lqjs.-parturc ofVielnamcsc refugees under
-lation passed by the U.S. Cona;ress in the Orderly Departure Program
· 1982.4oes llOt pemut th1S. (ODP).
The Vietnamese estimate that the The dispute is esscnually over -~amffil!mrdt11n:lm1--11tnnl.Ddm! IJ"OUD.d num0ers~u.res, ut Vi -
Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saiaon nam's demands also sugaest st •
number 14,000 to I S,000, with 30,<i:X> burning memories of the war and its
.. relatives. consequences, which Vietnamese of·
. -. Each morning IJ"OUPt of the clul· ficials say include the half-American
dren -their non-Asian skin, hair and children.
eye colon evident -~er outside The United States has taken in
" the touriat hotels waiting for West-more than 20,000 Vietnamese under
erncn to em~. the ODP, which was estabUshed
"Give me to eat. .. one called out in through the office of the UN Hi&b pi~ EnaliJh outside a hotel recent· Commissioner for Refuaccs in t 979
ly. I bun&r)' now. You not come back to reduce the number of Vietnamese
.,,_ Iona time." fleeina by the hazardous sea route.
Over lunch bou&ht for him by a ODP refugees resettled in the United
foreisn visitor, Thanh Minh said his States include more than 1,200
mother worked for the Americans Amerasian children.
durinathewa.randnowdropshimoff The U.S.-Vietnamese disqrce-
at the Cuu Lona Hotel downtown ments came into the open in late
every mornina at 6 o'clock to bca for April. when Vietnam accused the
the next 16-17 houn. United States of "shirk.in& its re-
. Minh_. pving bis aae IS IS but sponsibility .. by confinina its acceP:-
lookina much younaer. added that his ta.nee of Amerasians to ihe overall
three older brothers and sisters all monthly ODP quota of 1,000 Viet-
work while his 46-year-old mother namese of all cateaones.
A top Vietnamese ODP official has permitted only asmall perceqtage .political asylum. . aboard 1 Haiti-bound ship. • ,
said in an interview here th.al the of these people to leave. The propa.m cut kllown Haitian The Haitian eovernment Wd on a
Umted States should quadruple its Some U.S. and international aid arrivals to 134'in 1982 and 333 in special welcomo!hom"e ~for OQ~guotaandaccept "5,000oreven officials mterviewed here and in 1983, according to the U.S. lmmigra-the refu~ and President Jean----:::;~~
l0,0CXTAn:terasilirsfl0001lt\loder:a Bangkok. .. Thailand; ~t~~..._'7"'"l!i:.oen....-..~·ldamtatitlti n ce. me Du~ iiSUcd a sia&ement
·se te pr~. "" --· -Vietnam is making u issue of the Bab.amiari ofticii:fS say·1hefe-m-<lePtonng tlitlr-4'ri~.r ·•
"The Amerasians we consider a Amerasians only to speed up ODP still Haitians that slip throuab and In February f98l. Bahamian of-
separate problem from the ODP cases departures in senerat, believmg that tand undetected at this 700-illand ficials rounded up '400 illep1 Haitwl
because as we have said and said the children easily pin the sympathy archipelago between Haiti ad aliens and imprisoned them. But the
again ... this is part of the legacy of the of the Amencan public. Others say Aorida. Haitian government soon afterward
American war and the American the Amerasians are unwanted in "They are.-still'anivins." said the stopped ICCCJ>tina refuaees back..
government has the responsibility to Vietnam not only because they don•t
settle this problem and process to the fit into the new Communist society, ~c~~ a~:~t~:e~~ra~dn ~~~; pn~ ~r~~~;~1at:~t1~5~=: Official state soil? Why no. t?
Tuyen, chief of the consular office in Vietnam.
here. While some u.s officials have COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -An soil is as a natural resource.. .. said Nal
accused Vietnam of discrimmatina agronomist is tired of bavq people Smee~ an qronomy professor at But Amencan officials said the in the Buckeye state look down on Ohio State Univenity.
U.S. liogislauon does not permit the against Amerasians, Tu yen said they din and is Pu.shin& a p~n to have the If Smeck bas his way a kind of dirt
Amerasian chtldren's relatives to ~<;e"~fm~fesp,ro~e~ie::m~ General Assembly designate an of-known as Miamian 10il -or more
accompany them, not even the children. ficial soil, right up there with the state commOnly -Ohio clay -would jom
.mother. The lc&isla.tion requires that bird. trtt, insect and fouil. the carnation, cardinal. Buckeye trtt,
the Vietnamese emiarc have a -span--Said a Westerner who works with .. Althou&h Ohio is thought ofas an tlint. ladYbua and tomato jwtt on thc
sor 10 the Umted State~ and guaran-the chtld.ren: .. It depends on the industrial tatc. lgri.culture is still the list of official state syinbolS.
tees of support forfiveycars.Onocthe family. Some are welJ ta.ken care of; back.bone of its economy. and this is Smeck says be plans to present his
child turns 21 and becomes a U.S. othen are abandoned." an attempt to point how important idea soon to the Assembly. c1tazen, he then can petition for av~ ,.....----------------..;;;..._---------------------"-----
for the mother .
An Amerasian is considered by the
United States to be a U.S. citizen if
the father acknowledges the child as
his and proves that be was in Vietnam
at the time of conception. The child
then is listed in the U.S. priority
category .
Oth~rs considered to in this cat-
egory arc former U,S. government
employees in Vietnam. civilian or
military personnel of the former
South Vietnamese aovermment.
close wartime associates of the Unit-
ed States and people sent to the
Communistgovcmment•s "re-educa-
tion camps" after the war.
ODP figures indicate that Vietnam a
< ............................. illiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii------~--------------t
1
: Moon rocks get royaltreatment
I ~ • from scientists throughout globe
io SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
,:. -Jn a laboratory warehouse of
&lcamina steel, scrubbed glass and
flltered air, protected by security
worthy of crown jewels, more than
800 Pounds of lflY moon rocks are
• preserved IS a national treasure.
The rocks were carefully collected J' yea.rs aao in six A Pollo landinp on
the lunar surface, brought to Earth in
scaled boxes. unpacked in ainight
cabinets and stored since then mainly
in oxyacn·free vaults or labs.
To a layman, the rockl look llke
unimpressive, dusty sraY chunks.
Green cheese would be more excating.
• But for 1eientisu, the Apollo moon
rock collection bas ~n endlessly
absOrnini; S1udi0a of the rocb b.ute-
chan&ed some basic·conocpu about
the universe.
... ..Geologisu ta.kc a very different
approach bCcawe of the Apollo
experience," says ~en~ell W.
Mendell, a planetary 1CtenUst at the
' Johnson Spe.oc Center.
K.nowledae pined from studies of
the 842 Pounds of moon rock have
swept away centuries of l~nd and
r,s apccwation about the F.arth s nearest
' celestial neiabbor. l.asoM learned
·rrom the moon have expended an
undei'ltandina of how planetJ. uch u
the Eanh. fonned and evolved.
For a "'."rule, tbou.b. when Apollo
11 iiturncd from u.e flnt landina I S
yan .,o. the moon rock1'-&Qd dusi
-ere treated u hazardous subltincM.
Some IC:ientista warned Of moon liUiliJliertia m.OOD rock at the lloutOD Splace Center.
tmn• that couJd rqe u~ • aaou a defenltlea -Eanh. Othen I)
were concemed that moon dust could
be poison. nete views were con defC'd e •
ueme. bul the National Aetonautl
and Space Admani ttation t no
chaqca.
The men of A1>0llo 1 J and thetr moon rockt :MfW ...,.n1iaed:for 21
day11n thC'Lunar Rterelvana Labora· ~ totYll the Johnson PKCCenter. Tbe
rocks were unp1acked and treated u if
I . .
Our Level Pay Plan
will show you how.
High or I<)\\'?
l 'p <>r do\~11 ?
If vou're tire<l
< >f p~i~ i ng ga."
hilb that go up
in che \\inter ~md
dcm11 1n the '-lun1
Jncr. n1a)he it\ ti1ne
n >u becan1e ~u1 a1 'erage
hill payer.
Our Le\'d Pav Plan GU1
takc the gue,-~,\ >rk out
of pa)~ng gJs bill~.
And n1ake n1onthlv
budget-; n1uch ·
et"it·1 t(> plan.
In fa t, our
Lt'\ cl Pay P411n cah
h Ip ~ >u l udg t
your g:L'\ bills t r an
cntir ~ \ear. I tu ,.
it hd1 s balan } ur
higher \\ h11 r g~t"
bilb \Vith' ur I ~ r 4
sun1n1er ga" bills.
.. ) ~ ou face approxi-
n1~uel} the san1e an1ount
on ) our ~l" bill every
n1onth. St11111ner and
"int r.
Look in y< )Ur August
gas bill tor det~ub on
the len:>l PLt\ Plan. And
to p~uticip . .ue. 1u~
pLl~ ;"°the Le\•~[ Pa)•
Ph.u1 atn< )Unt indi-
aued < >n \ )Ur bill. r b u can
drop the plan .lt
at1) tin1e ~in1p~· bY .
notif\ing us.
1( you·d like
1~or ; into nnation
on the Le\ el I av
Plan , iu~t call tli~
a.~ Ollll ~l}~ ld
'' t: ll > happy to
tdl \ u au L lit . "' the '311 ot
being m m r-a .
tlrll11nn:aN CA . ~ COMAWf
..
.
When Nancy .
t8.lks, Reagan's
advisers listen
It was a bad week.
but First Lady kept
it from being worse
SANTA BARBARA. Cahf:-
Prcs1dent Reagan 1s spend.mg a
pleasant vacation at his mountaintop
ranch. ndin&about 1n perfect weather
and wonyi oa some of his po ti ucal
adv1scr5 that he could be headed for a
fall.
Even m the best circumstances,
Reagan'sadv1sers tend to worry when
he is up on "the 11111," as they call his
688-acrc retreat northwest of here.
Reagan rece1 vesa packet of ma ten al
every day at R.ncho del Cicio and
talks to an aide or two. but lS free of
the nonnal work.load wh 1ch besets
even th1s most delcgatJ vc of Presi-
dents 10 the WhJtc House and 1s
removed from thegiveand take of
Wuhmgton
·Reaean. an IOtUlllVC poht1c1an
whose UlStincts work best an the heat ·
ofbattJe, tends 'o become out of touch
and unfocused dunngprolonged
stays on the bill. As a result. s.ay some
of Reagan's managers, he may be
una_ware.thatbc had a bad week wh1k
Walter MondaJe and Gerald me Fer-
raro were working up a head of steam
fortbeDemocrals.
The bad week actually began an
Washington on July 2 7. the day
before Reapn launched his 19 day-
vacation with some free publicity ma
sycophantic Olympics-opening inter-
view awarded him by ABC. The day
before thisap~rancc, Reagan ta~d
six television mterv1ewsat the While
House under ground rules that re-
quired thelr release the following
week while be was on vacation
One result of this was that Reagan
appeared on W AGA 1 n Atlanta
describingcontrovers1al Anne
Burford as "the v1ct1m of an at-
tempted tynch.mg" thc day before he
accepted her withdrawal from the
advisoryeov1ronment.al panel to
which he had appointed her and
which Burford had denigrated as a
"notbini-burgcr ...
But this was not the new~ 1 n
Detroit, where Reapn appeared on
WOIV to urge that auto workers show
"some restramt" m their bargamang
talks with the b1gauto com pa rues.
This needless White House inter-
jection into a collect1ve-bargaining
process that appears to be running
smoothly homfied Reagan's pollt1cal
advisers, who arc more bullish about
Michigan than any of the other
andustnal Midwestern st.ates.
A respected poll in Michigan
recently gave Reagan a 14-point lead
there, and a Republtcan congressman
known for his support among bluc-
colla.r workers labeled the President's
-commmcnt "a big m1stalcc." It was
the congressman's view that Reagan
should be cult1vatin' blue collar
workers, who gave him 48 peTccnt of
thelr vote in 1980, rather than
encouragmg them to vote Demo-
cratic
Reagan'sothcr 1nterv1cws were not
disastrous, but they were not models
of clarity. either Asked about the
Stmpson-Mazzoh imm1grauon bill
on WPLG m M1am1. where the issue
is an emotional topic, Reagan said." I
never comment on whether r'll veto
Lou
CANNON
something until I see it finaJly on my
desk. because sometimes what's been
an apple upon Capitol Hilt turns mto
an orange before it gets here, or vice
versa." Then he said he would sign
the Senate version of the bill and
tenned the House version "unaccep-table."
Meanwhile. Reagan was maJung a
play for the Catholic vote by taking an
apostolic nuncio to lunch. Over cold
cucumber soup, turkey salad and
angel-food cake, Reagan met at the
ranch with Archbishop Pio La&h1 and
talked about Poltsb sanctions, wt-
West 1ssuesand Central America
Ball}'-hooing the meeting 10 advance,
Wh1tc House spokesman Larry
Speakes said \bat, "'The President has
valued lhc v1e"'softh.e Holy Father,
Pope 1o1m Paul II, on a wide range.of
matters."
If these mattcn~ntlude bann1na
m1htaryweaponsinouterspacc. the
pontiff must be as disappointed as
Reagan says he is. A day after the
lunchcOh the White House acknowl-
edged that prospective talks on ban-
ning space weapons had collapseQ
and blamed the So.viets.
The weekended WJth a final
foreign-policy fizzle in which the
White House delayed so long in
announcing the lifting ofU .S. sanc-
tions against Poland that the Polish
government actually announced
them first.
.. All mall.it was a good week to put
behind us ... said a Reagan stratCjUst
The week was rcvealmg of the role
ofNancy Reagan. who at the photo-
t.akingsess1on with Pio Laghi fed
Reagan a hne he had forgotten on
arms control. Her real impact, how-
ever. is on Rcagan'sschedule. It was
Nancy Reagan who insisted that he
take this Jong-planned vacation, even
though Reagan's managers felt it
would take him out of the fray too
tong. And it was Nancy Reagan who
wisely won a change in the President's
AugustcampaiJO schedule. whi~h
hadcaDedforh1m tocompelewtth
his own convention in Dallas by
making speeches in other cities.
One can scarce I y imag.ine a better
way to advenise the unimportance of
the GOP convention. and the sched-
ule has now been changed. The ne~
plan calls for Reagan to campaign in
Ohio, Iowa and Mwouri Aug. 19-20.
returning to Washington a few hours
before the Republican National Con-
vention begins.
When Nancy Reagan talks, her
husband listens. So do her husband's
campaign managers.
REAGANISM OF THE WEEK:
Descnbi ng the opening ceremonies of
the Olympic Games, Reagan said
they were .. out of this world and only
mAmenca."
Loa Cazmoa i1•1yndlcated
colamni1t.
· L.M. Bovo
I
Call it
a career
Q. WhBt's a typical retirement age
for a U.S. military officer1
A. Commissionea,-43. Ncin<om-
m1ssioned, 39.
Said Great Bnt.am's mustard lung:
"My fortune came not from the
mustard people cat, but from the
amount they leave on their plates."
A queen termite can lay an egg a
second while she's at it. Remark.able.
That's 86,000 eggs a day. Stop her!
Overheard: .. Granddad drives Hke
a Boy Scout-one good ~ma day."
Hundreds but not thousands of
certain dist1ncuvc trees in this coun-
tl) arc listed ma special register. You
might try figunng out which st.ate has .
the most trees on that list. No. not
Cahfom1a It's Hawau
Q. What makes Mars red?
A Ru st.
Through the streets . of old Ger-
many went the pushcart purveyors of
shirts and socks, crying .. I have that!"
Orm their German, "Habe das." And
when they settled in stores, they
remained known by a variation of
that street call, "haberdasher."
Melt the ·~ of.An!J\rctica, and half the world's populatJon would be
forced to move up from flooded
co~thnes.
Why 1s H called the French horn?
Germans developed iL
The Chinese serve food in bite-size
pieces. 01ent asks. Is this because
ancient rulers there outlawed knives?
No. 1t &ot started bee.a.use bite-size
pieces cook much more quickly, thus
conserve fuel, which has always been
scarce.
Q What's a "roclcoon "?
A. The rocket-boosted balloon that
pushe!I weather instruments 60 mites
high.
L.M. Boyd I• a 1yadlc•t~d
colamal1t.
°'1.J'"Yit: ,, •• •I f '\1' """" ~\~ ........ ,~ ..... , ............. 4 ....
HOW STUBBCRN CAN
REAGAN OETi>. ...
HE /CCEPTE'D OUR
0FFER NJAJN ... !
......
.....
1
Bill
HAIVEY
f s _.,· oyou
•
want to·
learn
to sail
Sooner or later.
every sailor tries
to teach his art
This column is supposed to be of
general interest and oflocaJ in tercst
Because our beloved Pilot bu its
main areas of circulation along the
Orange Coast, and because there are
thousands ofboats around here, and
because I am a boater, this panic:ular
column will be about boats. Mostly,
sailboats.
There comes a time in the life of
each andeveryboaterwben bei~
considered good enough, either by
othen or byJumself, to teach some of
the skills needed to properly move a
boattbrough thewater. lfbeis
con ideredJ904enoughb}'.others, he
maywe1f1'egoodenough. lftheonly
one wbo considers him good enough
is himself, well. that's another story.
Sometimes, a rather gruesome
story.
Nevertheless, every sailor is called
upon at some time in his life to teach
some of the ski Us he bas learned. In
the case of\he power boater, I'm
unable to comment at great leoath. I
am, you see, a sailboater. In the case
of the rag hanger, (sailor) teachina
someone to sail can be extremely
complex. Indeed, I have knowlcd&e of
a particular sailboater who will sit you
in the cockpit aod march around the
deck fortwodaysexplainina various
parts of the ng befere he will take the
boat, and you, out.
He'll cut this procedure to a mere •
I 2 hours if you take proper notice of
his decrepit, beat-up, rancid, nasty To~idets and make proper sounds or:
deliaht nd reverence. He's been :'f •
wearing these same shoes fot 19 years :
and wouldn'tdrcam ofboardinga
boat without them. He'll do his best to
teach you how to sail, but he's
con vi need that proper sailing rc-
quircu properlydccrcpi~ beat-up,
rancid, nastyparrofTopstders, and
lhathe'saot tbeonlypair.
Anyway, ifyou'recallcd upon to
teach any of the boatiogsk:ills, take
heed of the following: Murphy
(author oftbe law that whatever can
10 wrong, will go wrong) loves
teachers!
Let metellyouofmyown
experience wtth1lttemptina to teach
someoftbesailingskills. I wusittin1
in a cabaret, mindin& my own
business, when, somehow, I found
myself in conversation with a very
pretty blond lady. Let me hasten to
•dd. Ulls "'8.S durina my sing.le days. • •
Sbe noted the silver ship's wheel that ':: :-;
I wear on a chain around my neck. "' •
and said "Oh! You play Frisbee!" : •: •
My. response was, I'm afraid, •:•:
"Hubf'
"I sec that you have a Frisbee
hanging around your neck. so ... "
After properly identimna the ob-......
jectinquestionand ooungihe :-: ..
squealsof del~teacb time I said the "':;;
word "Ailina.• it wasdecided thatl .. :.:
would \each her bow to sail. ..:: : :
I distinctly remember stand.in& in .:: :
thecockpitofmyboatand,assumina : .. :. Stool pigeon sq· ueals on invest_ igators ;~~~1$;~~.s.=:.;~~j
Note that it isanached to the mast. ·;i':
andispivotedsotbatitcanswina ·-: -• cnme figures in more than a decade. r. twoi~v~tions~e-namedCoco from11detoside. IfthewindwcTeto • ;. Organized crime strike force chief. Bccau~ofthreatson histife. he1sin andf1rcb~:aHawau11rlkeforce cllan&ed.irection, the boom could :::
--theW1tnessprotcct1on program while officia~wd: 1bey(Lo~Angeles)JUSt swinaacro andCLANO!!!OUCH!! .:::! LA lawyer targets of federal probe in pnson. Jac1 satonit.P~le~e~wilUnatotalk, OWOWOWOW!Amlbleedinar· ·'!·!
• --Vanalsopveinformat1onto wehadruaJrtluahtyinfonnantsand Reasoninatbattbisinterludc .,::.;
WASHINGTON-Cul'Tt'ntand doing. Rangel'scommitke. lnaletterto _AID£RSO cxoeUentw~by~e o;aa~nff:-would mak.emeappea.rsomewhat .•:: Over the past year, a special Attorn~~~neral William French mentAdm~n1sttat1on. ut e ~~M!--lfll' oeend, perhaps;mofe---"T~ fonnermcmbersofthe federal or-mvcsugatorfort.heJiousecomn:uu.ee South. ngre$$1nan 5aW lb~., an • lcntriefurrc1usnaewfd I approachable in bereyes, ltookber ·::
aamzetknme Un Ice force'" Lo~ has interviewed organued<nme fia-provided 11'\fonnauon "<:oncem1ng up out several days later to teach ber\he :•:
Angeles a.re themselves under an-ures and state and locaJ law enforce-allegations of official corruption and A DEA official said: ''The do~ pan proper procedures forsafcancborina. ::
vestipt1on by \hcJust1cc Depart· ment officials in Cahfornlaand derehcuon of duty relating to committee with investigatingallep-wasu bjgas the French C.Onnectton. "SOmepeople feel thlt it's necesa-f;
ment. They ha ve been accused of elsewhere. His pnncipal infonnant, narcotics enforcement in the south-tions of misconduct by federal of· But 1t went nowhere. We weR all ary to throw the anchor as far as .;
delayinaorfa1hna to pursue grand however. has been Jerry Van, a self· west area of the United States." ficials.'' andaddcd: .. lhaveevery frustrated." possible away from tbeboat. That's t
JUfY&C'llonagainst underworld fia· described muscleman forCahfornia's Ranae!added:"Mr. Van'salle~-confidence lhanheJusticeDcpa.n-Altho~ twotatpuoflheCoco wro Theproperwayistobold the
ures 10 California and Hawa11 top racketeers and arsonists. t1onsare dltected P.CC1ficall)I against mcot will obVJatc the need to do so." and Firebnd invest\ption•-wbich ancbor over the side of the bolt, like
My associate Indy Badhwar has Van, now serving a prison term on the Los~gcle~stnkeforcc, 1ts · Michael E.Shabccn, bead of the involved drugs.anon, labor lhis_and implylct ao."(splash) .. Wc
teamed that the targets of the in-extortion and assault charges, has formerc:h1ef, Richard Crane, and us OflkeofProfeuionatResponsibility, racket.cerinaandwbit~stavcty-mustbccarerui.ofcoune, tose,elhat
vestipuon arc the current stnke force been cooperating with state and current leader! Jim Hendc~n. bas informed Rangel that "we have were ~ntly indicted. the Hawaiian ouranldcurc not cntanjlcd in the
chief.Jim Henderson.and his prede-federal authontiessinc.e 1979. lnfor-Crane, uperv1sorofthe stnke force initiated an inquiry into Mr. Vao•a strike force official said \he indict· anchor line, or\he uchorcould putl
cessor, Richard Crane. who is now an ma ti on he hasp ven investigator , as in LosAnictcs for I 3 ycan, res1ancd 11 f ons •• menta were too HttJeand too late. . us into ... SPLASHI! ... ••
privatelawpracticcin Lo Ar;igcles. wellash1stest1monybeforegrand l\Jspositionandwentintopnvatc 1 ep 1 "Webaveo'trnadeadentonthem," • Aslcamctothc urfacconthe
Theinvesuption by the Justice Junes and mcnm1nal triab. has led to pracucc .... WhenCranc'schents AJthou~ federal authorities have he said. "They'reprobablystronacr 1~b0anhide, lwut.Rated toa very
Depanment's Office of Profe1$ionat almost a dozen indictments and have probtc:m1 witb. lhc Los Anaeles used Van 1 information in selected than tbc.y were." fetcbina v ewofher, ~naovn the
Retponsib1htywasbqun under convicJionsforsuchcnmesas slJ"lkcforce,theyarerarclytouchcd crimmale1sea unuJnowtbercbas 80 hC d H ponlideand sayi~"BiU?.BaU?
pressurefromRep.CharlesB. munkr,anonforprofit,mailfraud bccausethccumntc.hief,JimHcn· bccnnoanv t.1ptioo,ofh11broedcr footnote: 1 raJ'M!ln cni· Whma~you.Bill7"
Rana.cl,O.N.Y.,cha1rmanofthc anddruasmualin.a. dcr10n.1 afriendandformer cha~thatorpnizedcrime dmoDyebcmently~~Ran,e • ancelh1dbetnimpoli.fclyyantea
HoUJC Select Committot' on federat andToc:al lawmen dcscnbe ubordinatc: of Crane's." noun hes in C lifom1a btcausc of ac:cusauons. Crane said! .~ over the &tarboenbidc~ I wu lbtced
Narooti . Both Hendcnonand Vanasoneofthe most valuable and RanaeJurscdtbeJustictDcpan-ineptitudeandconnict ofinterat ~arc ho~, unbehcva,ble. I 1ocomctothcconclusion that &bc
Crancvigorou lydcnyanywrona· crcd1blewitnesseupinstorpnizcd-mentto"'undcrtaJccavigoro in· wilhmtbcstrikcforc.c.Hchad runaavilpracticc orcorporauons. didn't nowpan&om tarboatd,ao
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
. .
H. L. Sc:hwert1 ltl
Frank Zlnl
M•n•oino F.0i1l'>I
Tom Tait
C::1Y tail.at..
vnt111uon"ofthec.harses.u~Uas providodw.riuendctailedanfor· t'vcneycr.~n\Cdan~on~wbo . as ch,, ouldprobablybevermakea all~ttons anvol\llfll Eddie Nash, a mation-names ,platts, daces, tames was beinaiov~ted~t!ldicted by aood . 1k>r.
convicl.CdfclonwhowasVan'sbou. -1othe tt1kefortc,thcJu ticc lhefederalstnke ~· llatcrstamm~somcueute
Th. ouih the11Jcga1ious were flnt Dcpanmen1'1Crisrunal 01v1 ion and Hen~rson ad. 1.wu nevua about ha oabtt.n told b)i mydOctor
mad 1n 1979-80, there ere no the Cahfonua au omcy 1cncta.1'1 or-•ubordina~ of Crane and 1 never that lam allttmc to water, and in I t . "1nd1"ctmc:ntsintheNashcascunul r. knewhtschent1.Tbescchat1CJ&re flh IAifPQ woukfbcunabletl\
1983. ''Mr. Van urmiscdtbeindiet-
11
"· prt>a&cand~oncy.lfsomeca ~nti~~~er;.i~n&l ns. ,.,
mcntsonJ)occu!TNwhenthe11nkc • , ·• • ~ddayed.nwas~u of -~MLhowe~ ganot.JolL.ldid_.::...a...i!.j. fOrc:emaJittdtheH~1:0m• " '.l' ted-manJM>M! .. ldweliCMnetm m&nqe.)'0Utce,totalkht'f1n\O mat~wa loo inaintotbcmaner." byljwenf0rctmcntofficaal tntcr-• invcsUMtion. tcad11namebowtofri~.
IUngetwrole va b)'a Hou na:roc>tJ commn-· • W 0 .....
Thcconare' man~tcthatatwas tecinvc t tor.'Rtprdinareo-J•dAltlenMltaqHkalM a:=,.I HarveJ v .. not h1s 1nttnuon to .. involvc this ommcndAt1ons for1nd1ctmc.nt11n N/8ma&
• ' I
· ANN LANDERS 92
TV U8TING9 112
BUllNESl 111
Will barefoot becich crOwd I •
get a case of 'string'··fever?
Latest fashion fad
adds elegant touch
to the casual look
By ANDI DAVIS
DelJ .... 0.rl IJ IF fll•t
Sharol Olson and Kay Vlasck
started their business on a shoestrina.
In fact, their business is shoestrinp,
or more accurately, footstrinp.
Olson and Vlasek have invented
Bare Tootsies, a bottomless sandal,
which they hope will tie up part of the
shoe market.
, .. but I hkc somcthina on my feet ... She
bcpn experimenting with ribbon ,
lace, elastic, buttons. leather, cloth,
rinas. and any kind of decoration she
could find.
Unable to remembCr when she
invented her firs.t pair, she says, "l
have always had a pair."
The first time Obon saw Vlasek;s
foot decorations, she recoanizcd their
patential. Olson, who has a pnntina
and advertisinf shop in ~nta Ana,
talked Vlasck 1ntb gains into busi-
ness. ln November, they bad created
their line and opened up a mall
office. They hired Elwyn Industries in
Fountain Valley to manufacture the
sandals.
"Everyone who SttS them falls in
love with . them,.. Y' Olson, who
expects the footwear to hit full stride
next summer.
Surprisul&Jy enouah. initial sales
have not been to the yQuna. beach
cro'f\d. Most have been bouaht by
those whose feet arc more than 60
years ·aid. Most sandals to date have
been sold in Nevada, thanks in pan,
to an agaresshe repre5er\tative there.
Olson expects ihe sunbelt. particu-
larly Florida to be a bi& market
because "they sell 20 percent more
swimsuits in Flonda than in C~i-·
fomia."
A rclabve of one oftbc compan)"s
silent partnen took 60 patron a crwse
and sold JI withtn ao hOUr.
Olson says 1f She takes samples &o
the beach, she can sell &hem all within
several hours, but . she wants to
market them on a larger ac:ale with
seme shoe chain ltOf'CS. •
·The laces arc available locally at
The Persimmon Tree, Perfumes of
Lido, The Nail Affair in ewpon
Beach, and the Walnut Village Phar-
macy.
6tartma a bu.s1ness on a .sboestrina
lS one th1na. But crucial to this
company's succcu is aoina to be
kcepina to the bare(foot) essentials
Before you laugh, consider the
nakCjl foot. Even with a manicure, the ·
most attractive foot "is just han&ina
out there," says Vlasek.
"You see kids wearina telephone
cords around tticir necks, but you
never see anythina for feet," says
Obon of Irvine.
LEARN NOW, FLY LATER
Bare Tootsies will rectify that,
addins that perfect touch of elegance
for a head-to-toe casual look. Avail-
able in hundreds of colorsf they can be
worn with swim, patio, OUOJC, and
sleepwear. They are appropnate for
casual barbecues and the beach, and
they mi&ht even act you past those
restaurant sicns that say, "No shirts,
no shoes, no service."
Other advantqes which can tickle
..)'Our fancy. Your feet dQn't sweat
You C41\not wear out the aoles. One
mefits ill. They can"raet tootiaht.
And they are inellpcnsive (about S6 a
pair). .
They are not, however, auaraptced
to protect your feet from hot pave-
ment or sand.
The cuJTCnt models of Bare
Tootsies are silken threads woven
through matchina cotorea beads.
They come in a variety of colors and
styles, all slippinaoverthe'SCCOnd toe,
stretch ins over the top of the foot t<t
the ankle where they arc wrapped and
tied in a Roman style.
The soleless creator of Bare
Tootsies is Vlasek, a teacher at the ....,,...,...._,.....,.LlllM TeWinkle Intennediate School in
Dealree Rice of Coeta Meu model8 a pair of beaded Bare Costa Mesa.
T I th t hi ......... fall .._.de ·-1 ~et-.... --'-'-"l-&ov1e to on barefooted," sbe ~".S • ~ta -• are ~ ·~· U& oancewea14D&ra • -~·
P APARAZZI
Southern church
campus offers free
travel to Europe
COLLEGEDALE, Tenn. (AP)-It
used to be that the only· reward for
camina an academic A was personal
satisfaction and perhaps a spat on the
dean's list.
But bqinnina this fall, studcnu at
the Southern College_ of Seventh-day
Adventisu will .rap more tanaible
benefits -free travel to Europe.
The students will act credtt toward
roundtnp airline tickets to Europe for
each hour of study, accordina to their
class standina and grade paint 'aver-
aic.
The result of an agreement with
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines, the
proaram 1s the first of its kind in the
country, and Southern Collqe of·
ficials hope 1t will help staunch the
school's dechnina enrollmenL
"l see it as havina recruitment
patenual, retention potential and
potential for makina the kids a little
bit more senous about their academic
achievement," said John Waaner, the
school president.
Sou them ·College is one of 12
Seventh-day Advcn_tistc~llcges in the
United States. Enrollment 'at t.M of C to $8 for each hour of A. ~ucational liberal aru collcse
reached a hi&b of 2 091 in 1980 but ~e hi&ber the sradCs. the more
dipped to l ,62S lasdatl partly bccauSe (credit) they can make, ud tbesoooer
of decl10in1cnrollment in feeder high they can accum~t.c c:n<>uab to_rn.ake
schools run by the church. a tnp to ~uro~ .. said 1-{oo!berttn. .. . who has 11nce imuated smular pro. Those (hi&h schools) are ex-arams at several other schools.
pensive ju~t. like we arc," said . Southern Collqe pays for the
Wagner. Tu111on at Southern Collese airline tickets but the 60-eredit
is $4,~ I year, and Other COSts push requirement means it will be at least
the annual expense to almost $7.SOO. two years before any trips are made.
"We are-not the most ellpen.sive in . . . theMa~t:is •SOOd. dmt JDOFe IA the mcubJDC, the: :9claool •
npensive thaD commum fQ ~ uina the ~ in recruit.
which we find are oU'r chief com-ma new stu4ents end hopes 11 Will
pctitors.," be said. deter CUJTCDt students from trau-ferring. So far, tbe response bas been
enthusiastic. Wagner said. So when Rene Noorberien. a K.LM
representative whose dauahtcr .at-
tends Southern Collcae, approached
Wagner with bis "learn now, pay
later" proposal, Wasner was
enthusiastic.
Undci the program, a student must
carry at least 12 semester hours to be
chgible and must accumhlate at least
60 credit hours in the proararn before
redee~ the credit for an airline
ucket, wh1cb may be purchased only
through the school and only for a
KLM flight. ·
Credit, which 1s non-transferable.
ranges from SS for each semester hour
J'here are no restrictions on what
time of year the tiCkets may be uted.
KLM hopes the students will take
advantaac of air-sea.son fares and fill
empty seats io slQW travel periods. ..
.. I'm sure some people will tee this
as a kind of bUckstcrism," said
Wqner. "But I think it has some
educational and redeem.in& value.
The travel by itself, even if dley only
go there and spend four days. is
tremendously broadenmg for some-
one who•s never been to Europe. So I
don't sec that as the same as aivina
away balloona."
Sandra Broclle and Anne Colln wore their own jewelry •h~w; Michael and Vicki Scher watched allow and hoete. Jo Anne 111.z chatted with Barney Barnett.
'Best friends '· . .
wei:-e dazzling
at this mixer
By VIDA DEAN
o.llrPtletltrle• ....
Diamonds, they say, arc a &irl's best friend and you can &ct really emf1\rby mmnaa llll! emer11amn1ustciofffiC·m td' 1· ·um..-1.-000~--..
ring.
That was o ne of the many sparklina .. trinkets" from Neiman·
Marcus precious Jewels collections shown at the Bia Canyon home of
JoA.DeandGe11eMlL I
The cocktail/buffet/fashion show affair was a fund-raiser by the
ColleaaucsfortheCenterforCreativeAlternativea.
More than l 00 were on hand to ooh and aah over the collection and
witnCsscd the debut offive models-Mary Lo• HopkiU, NewponBeacb
714 columnist; Nora Lellmu, Gentry mapzine publisher, Din voe
Bvser, Newpon Ensian society columnist; S.au McPaddea,editor and
co-publisher of Ora nae County Mapzine and California Homes and
Lifestyles plus you.n truly (who found that attcndina a lot off a hi on shows
does not a model make).
The journalists-tu.ned·models enlisted by &.ltty Leslie met their
dW!lines1ndeliperfalbion1abddrippinawith thousandiofdollan
wonh of~ry uona witb pros donatinatheir time-Lela Flya. Car-91
~ N-, IAllle,Panl Blbdand .h.u... · 1-rior to the show ~u ~ nibblina from the buffet (Bob
Penninaton included b11 fabulous baked brie)and viewiritthe Mixes'
newly mlone home.
Sponson and committee memben there jpcluded Au and Bob
AMenea,MueJaand Did lla••aa, c-le Mer1UAM, Pat and Nell •
f'Mter, DlllJ ._.and KAJand~ Wma. .
Othtn there were Mlc!ll1ll and Vlc*i Idler (be' ttA director),
SaMraand ~ 8elPl.let ~ofTus11n (soon to bea HarbOr~i
residena), NWJ and J.C. CUlftl,..,..,.. and K•• l'T•••t. Tem and
&m .. J ... l\lhJ, l!e.. and OU. Stapf, Aueue H•rwln. MJtU and ----:~~----~==:-..=~•&.'l'M•••••n4M•l'Jan4Clut .......... ( WOD*pri.H-.~--
M aotd bcc). "" -Procetdswlll it Dina •o But r renled ln
to help individual a Wint pearled~ tbe ears.
I
.:
t' ,
-
i T ONICHT'S TV Daughter's r-elation~hip
a nightmare fo~pare,its
. --- - ---
OEARANNl...ANO RS:Two
rs aao I he rd n.amors that our
da~ter(thenqe 16)washavin an
amurwith htrh1storyteacher. At first
I thought it wasjust&o sip buufte1
doinasomequiet inve ti ting I
lea med the tory was true
I decided to phone his wife and tell
herwnatwasgoingon Shesaid.
.. Sounds likeyou have a personal
problem,• and hung up on me.
When I informed my hµsband
about the situation and the phone
caU. he became enraged and rushed
out of the house. An hour later, the
pohct station called and asked ifl
wanted to comedown and provide
bail for my husband. When I saw him
I couldn't believe my eyes. The
teacher bad beaten him toa pulp. He
also had been charged with breaking
andente:nng.
When the news got out. the pnn<:1-
pal sided with us. The teacher
resigned quiet I> a nd we thought that
was the end oJ it
We grQunded our daughter tor
several weeks but figured '>he'd get
over being angry and come around
eventual!}.
lnJunetheg1rlgraduated. We
surpnscd her w1 th a new car but she
refused todnve 1t. Two weeks later.
thedayaftershttumed 18.she
packed her bclonaings and left in the
middle of the mghl.
We notified the pohce 1m medi-
ately The} found her-moved in
Wlth TH<\ Tm""~ NO h1<. ~,f,.t Wt•
:l: HELP YouRSELF
--~~
A11t
l.uDERS
..
were told that since-she is oflCSAl aae ~ecan do nothing to act her out of
there. Ann. she is our only child and
we are heartsick.
How can we get ourdaughterto
come back home' I have lost a lot of
weight. 1cryalot.It1s hke a bad
dream Please help -GRIEVING
IN NEWARK
DEAR NEWARK: Tbe sltualloo la
biurre to say lbe lea1t and, a.n·
rortOllately, lbe law 11 oo ber sldt.
Get some CODJlstllDJ before you
fall apart. All you can o now ls let
your daupter know tbe door will
always be open-ud pray tbat
eventually sbe will come llome.
wbere sbe bel~Dfs· • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: How sad
to read those letters about disabled
men who choose lO become depen-
dent and demanding. I want >OU to
know about my husband.
Two months ago he died after a
coura~eous bout with cancer Not
onlyd1d he suffer an ten~ pain. but the
treat men ts caused excruc1at1 ng side
effects He endured 1t all with d1gn1ty
e. lo the end, he lcepl
h m JN\ t and well-1toomed, 1n. i tan ondo1n forhim elfand
permmina no puy.
M1dYr'I) Jhrough the ordeal it wH myb1rthd~ y.Hepveme beautiful
card. Enclosed wasa me~ ation and
tickets to my favorite vacation spot.
1 hete are the words he had written:
"I havearranicd for Claire to call
and check everyday. I will be just
fine. You att to take off for a week to
be cared for, catered to. waited on and
p mpcrcd! Never, not even for a
moment, do I forget how hard 1t has
been for you." ·
I am proud to sign my name and 1f
youchoosctopnnt 1t alonaw1th this
letter. you have my pennission to do
so. -MRS JOHN GAGLIARDI.
HICKSVILLE. N. Y
DEAR MRS. GAGLIARDI: Tbuk
you ror a real btartwarmer. Wb~t a
1rHt tribute to botb 1oa aod your
basbud. •
• • • .\nn Landers' new booklet. "Sex
and the Teenager.·· eAplams ~very
aspect of sexual ~hav1or-where to
drawthehne. howtosay no. the
various methods ofconrracepr1on.
the dan&ers of VD. the symptoms and
where to get help. For a copy, send Sl
and a long, self-addressed. stamped
en•·elope(J7centsposrage) to Ann
Landers. P.O. Bo" I 1995. Chicago.
Ill. 6061 I.
Smoking boosts stroke risk
·I§~ 1.~ ntROUOHM
CllNIWS
NICNlWS
OD( VAH D't'K£
MOYIE
• t!tt ~ (19831 Kan Mtntili
Lytlttt AnUlony.
(O)MOVll
tt ''Tllne Wiik•'' (1M2) Ben MUt·
~·=Brophy. ** ''5'1111 Town Gkr' (1953)'Jn
Powel, FttllyOrqer.
-ao-• MACNO. I WtAER
NEWSHOUR
flAOJEC'T UNIVENE
NEWS
WHEE. Oii FORTUNE
EDTHATGIAL
-7:00-I CISH£WS NICNEWS
l'M A BIO OIRt.. HOW
• IMOHIC~
tEW8 m THAEF8 COMPANY
I wtel Of FOATI.M ... COOP£R'S ORANG€
COUNTY
(I) P.M. MAGAZlNe
O! LOVE C<NECT10N mMOVie *** ''King Rar (t9&5J George
Segal, John " CID THE I.OMX BY DA. SEUSS
-7:30-
• 2 ON THE TOWN
I Cit FAMl..Y FU>
rrtAUVM
ONE DAY AT A TIME P£0PlE'8 COURT
Wl.O, WILD WOALD Of
ANIW.I I ~=' FAAOOl.E AOCk
MOYE
tttt "Umberto D" (1852) Cerio
Battisti. Mn Pia CMllo. _..,_
8 (I) 9CAAEOAOW ANO MAS.
DEAR OR. STEINCROHN: M} sugestions in Postgraduate· Me_d1-KING
husband, who IS a two-pack-a-da~ cane on how lo prevent the effects of D a MOYE
f h ' l t': * "On'""-a....,. Tr'"""" (1""'1) ~ ...... man at the age o 44 says e s sure Jet lag: Retirt later and an~ ater 1or ,,,. """" --,_,
that h1sc1~rettes will not be the dearh p three dajs pnor to travelin from eat CdlrnM. Midllll lAmbtdc
of him. e lJasesc 1t o n hrs good . . n£I 'towest. 'lletireear 1erandaruc.carHer ~'Chllldt"' 11"4) Cary
heredity "Although most of my for Jhree days prior to traveling from Grent, Aucny Hepburn.
immediate famil y were smokers." he s west to east. Gett-good night's sleep D JOl<Elf8 WILD
says, "I don't recall one ca~ of hean TEINCROll( before departure. When erossing four (!) 1WlJOHT ZONE
attack or lung cancer an the bunah or more lime zones, schedule stop-m ~AIHMEHTTONIQKT
Why arc you so sure that my smoking , overs. G> .v.11: . h k ** * "U-lfTlbo" (1954) Clalk will bnng on cancer or a can attac cond1t1on, he 1s overlooking another Exercise in your seat and stand or '""V
in me? Qu11 worrying." scnous threat against his life. Recent move about the cabin. Don't overeat Gable, Ava Girdner.
But good heredity or not. I sull fet'I studies have revealed there's another . and keep alcohol intake to. a mjni-fD =~
that he is harmmg himself Could )OU potential danger to smokers: dccrcas-mum. Eat only food to which you arc MOYE
convince him that he's m>t as 1m-ed blood nov. to the brain and n sk of accustomed. **~ "Rlllly Buwllu'' (19831 Tom
mune to future trouble as he thinks'! stroke. • • • CIUIM, Rtbtcca DtMomly.
MRS. V Until now only the hean. lungs. FO~ MRS. C.: For your low back (ft)MOVIE
and leg anencs were involved 1n the pain. if you do not require surgery (or ** "Snoo9y Come Home" 11972) bu~~~~~~:·h~: !:'r~ng~ G~ smoking problem. Now it"s the brain. haven t been helped ~y surgery) ask Animattd
Bellen.ell your husband. Mrs v. that your doctor to look into the special imMOYE
heredttydocs help. but he'd better not he i!>n't "home free." he's sull tn exerc1~ programs for back pain ** "Hcriytri M1n" (1982) Clint
rely on 1t. Let's suppose that he's a danocr for example. here's a con-established at 936 YMCAs tbr.oua}l-Eutwood, Kyle Eutwood.
good risk: he isn't fat. his blood clusi'on after stud}. b\. Roben L. out the United States. Accor~11:1g to OOTTIEWEST:FUUOAClf
pressure IS normal. he doesn't haH~ Rogers. M .A .. and several ph)SIClan Ors. Hans Kraus and W1lhbald -UO-
d1abctes. h1scholesteroltsOK. Under associates "Results reported indicate Nagler of the. New York Hospttal -· =DC>UQH
such cond1uons. cigarette smoking 1n that cigarette smoking ~hould be Cornell Medical Center and Alex-
-11:30-• I MAGNlM. P.I. l lC=Of-AfQIE IUNKEJlfl PLACE
I STAEET8 Of SAN FAANCl8CO LATENIOH1~ WKN> IC OINCINNA Tl
· 700CLUI MMACYFU
cC>MOVIE -11:40-
• ••• "Dog Day Atttm00n" (1975)
Al Pecino, John Clzlle.
-~ B 1WIUOHT ZONE
MOYE·
***~ "John And Mary'' (1989) Ouetln Hoffman, Mia Fttrcw DMOVIE ** "Th• ViollAt ProMellonltl" (1975) Rlchsd Conte. LW Mnn-
~~NEWS THICKE Of THE tlOHT
MOVIE *** ''Thi I.Ml Outpolt" (1951) Ronlld AtfGln, Rhondt Fleming.
a.fOVI!
t t~ "Bltdt Runner'" (1982) Har-r ord, Ru1gtr .._,.,,
(%)
t t + t "Ont Fw Ovlf Tilt
Cuctoo 1Helt" ( 1975) .JIClc Nlctlot-'°"· LoulM Flttctltr. 1tself ma} not be the usual threat. con1dered as a nsk factor related to andcr Melleby: MS of the XMCA tDP.M.~.:-
But better tell him he's overlooking increased incidence of stroke as "ell Back Program in New York C1_ty. 80 8 (I) ONE DAY AT A TIME MOVIE
something. Although a hean attack or as for enchanced cerebral anen-percent of nearl} I 2!000 pantc1pants U ~LA. ** "Friday Thi t3ttl, Pert II'' (1981)
-12.'05-
-12:30-a a l.ATIS NIGHT WITH DAW> LETTERMAN 8 AL.FAE> HITCHCOCI<
PA£S8(l'8
Cf) ROWAH l MARTlt8 ~
41) LDVE. AMEAICAH STYLE e PEAIONAI. ANANCE
.Cl)MOYIE ** "Portly'• II: Tilt Nat Oly'' "9831 Din Monahan, wyatt ~t
/ ··-12:.40-
~!\f~~r: UM8}
Klf1c Douglas. Faye Oul\IWIY.
. -1:00-
80EHEAUTRY i ~PAOTtCTORS *** "Aaou Thi Elttdgt" <1esn Rod Sttlger. OMS Knight.
. . -1:30-
D HEALTH AELD D AT THE MOVIE.S
Cf) MOVIE
t 'n "Cllncy Strtlt Boyl" (1943) LIO
Gon:.y, Huntt Hd. CD ALL .. THE FAMA. Y a ROWAH a MART1N'8 LAUOK-.W
-1:36-
(8) THE WHO TOUR 1812: THE
FWALSHOW
-1:60-
(C)MOYIE . **** w (1"4) "Rlc:hltd &.w1on. Ptttr O'Toolt.
-t00-
Cl8 NEWS MBHTWATCH
a!NEWS
MOVIE lung cancer are less hkel~ because of oscelerosis" Mrs v perhaps these reported a decrease m dJscomfort. Q ,..;ng AmySteel,JohnFu<ty.
his good phy~~I cond1t1on. he 1s new findi n~ will influence }our ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ overlookrn~ something. Although a husband lo "cut down -or QUll." • '--~~:~_a~-u~r ol_f'~f s c_;~r_;~s:_~~ _Fo_R M_RS. c_.:.He_re a_re a_rew. CBS celebrates unsung heroes ~
E~rly Bird Dinner
Specials 16.9S
'American Portrait' presentations
.
Statue of liberty. which is now betng Statue of Liben) includin& one on :
refurbished and re-enforced. Angelo Bornman to. an 1mm1P,t
.-,,., Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
T / Complete Dinner with choice of --r-=: ~ soup or salad and dfisert
\. tTii)_•II !. 4 to 6 PM
0. ~~~ l D•r• I Wield
BALBOA 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726
A Stfperb paint job ... only $320!
Stt1ng is bd~v11111 . .C01flt m 1mtl Jtt tl>t <Rn JIUI pt1in1ttl "1
E.ltB•nr.. Compar; 011r 'lu11/it_y with ot'1rn thnt <Ost"!"'~ mort.
Ekg1'11C "''" mtliulu a dtRr top CORI /ilu t'1t <X/tnllVt '"'P!!rtl·
Tht Eltgnnr. pai11t ji'b it"" 1mtllting VRl1Jr "' $380-but ifyou
'1rin.q in thr rn"pon brlow you9tt nt• ndtlitiomtl $(>() ojj1
/lJ10 .~ WPOR I IUJL'I Hi4 Hf>.<'O\l'A ti/ \.-I l ~141."'41f·711tt
r---------------, Special Discount $60 off! I
-rr('flll 1111\ COUf"Jn ~lu-n \1)11 or.kt''"'" I
f l.:µ111 r.i1n(l'oh Jll>J r CC'I\<' .I S60 Jo\<:ounc I
off th.: rc~11l.1rlm• Hl-0 prk~
f 1m1tul 11mc .jfr'f'. 011r,... 1 I'" /llllfl I
<iOr.Jt>. -.. ____________ ...
1
-----salute Lady Liberty's centennial "Originally, 1t was '01ng to be just wbo 1s a foreman on the statue · 1
the story o~. im~1f!'ants," said reconstruction project. '
Pomasanoff. But ll s a broader At the same time as "An Amefi}1ln •
spectru.m. now, . altho ugh the Ponrait" beams. CBS will premJCTC! By JERRY BUCK
,_,T.....,....Wrftilt '
LOS ANGELES (AP) -While the
Statue ef L.•berty undergoes -an ex-
tensive facelift, CBS w111 keep the
torch lighted wttb a dally one-minute
celebration of individuals who have
left their mark on America.
From epic sculptor Gutzon
Borglum to Rosie the Riveter to Rosa
Parks, who helped spark the C1v1l
Rights movement-:-from the anvc~
tor ·of barbed wire to Vlad1m1r
Zworykin, the father.of television -
thC$C one-minute vianettes are de-
sianed to illuminate the unsung hero
or heroine.
"An American Portrait" will be
telecast Monday throu~ Friday be-
grnning Seet. 24. until the lOOth
'
anniversary of Lady Liberty on Oct.
18, 1986. In aJI, 130 V1gnettCJ will IX
made.
Each story will be told.. by ·a
celebrity, such-as Gregory Peck, who
will open the scnes with a look at
Emma L...azarus, who wrote the poem
inscribed on the base of the Statue of
Libeny.
"Like 'The Bicentennial Minute.'
we'll provide 1nformat1on but we'll
deal more with people," said
producer Alex PomasanofT. "They
will hin&e on the unsung hero. people
whoaren't rn the common knowledge
of history. Many of them wtll deal
with immigrants who entered this
country under the arm of the Statue of
Libcny."
The idea for the series began as a
celebration of the centennial of the
e~.Ph~s 1s snll on rmm1grunts. ~"Sportsbreak" on Sawrdays and ~un-
We ye got researchers .reading days. It will feature one-mitqlte
every:th_ina they can lay their ~an~ on ~ 1>dates on major weekend SPorriPg
pcrtaulln& !O Amen~n ltfe and events. Vanous CBS ~pom-:~r-·
culture. We re not gomg to do any sonalities hosts. and when?.'•:
Rockefellers or Ca~egie or any of the propriate, "Sponsbrealc" will -:
well-known peop~e. mate from the scene of an 1m~l'
. PomasanofT.sa1d ~s much as poss-weekend event.
1ble the cclebnty will be matched to
the person beina celebrated. Cicely
Tyson will do the piece on Rosa
Parks, Jason Robards the one on Bill
W., the founder of Alcoholics
Anonymous. Christopher Reeve on
Robert Goddard, the fou nder of
modem rocketry, and Dann} Kaye
on Charles Brace, the founder the the
Children's Aid Society of New York.
At least I 0 of the vignettes will be
devoted to people connected to the
. --
.
Beauty queen:
in soap opera ~
•
NEW YORK (AP) -Soap opera
fans will a t their chance to revtew tho
actina style of Suzette Charle • tb~
new Miss America, when she ap
on the ABC senal "Lovin
October. ' •
The network announced that it had ~1gned the 21-ycar-old to a shon·u~
contract that calls for her to pla)7. •
model "who holds the ~rrt .ib
someone else's past," according \O n
ABC press release •l
"Loving," ABC~ n·ewest n I.
finished 24th amona 26 da)thtte
shows in •he last measured niua PCriOO.---
Charle) became Mm Amerie(ti)'
default Jul> 23 after sexually uplieit
photos of her predccc sor, Vane ~
Wtlhams, were. published Penthou~ magazine. ;I~~
Get your dlvor
byhandycae
1lnier Waylon Jenn!:,:bo will be a 101
•tar la an apcoml~ . , "'Welccnn Ba
Waylon Jenni •· to alr In the faU. '
•
..... ~omack's out
or 'Revenge'
IM-'1~"-•....,
ANGELES-Jame Komack
adlincd as a comic ii\ Las
appeared in .. Damn Yan~ce1"
dway, produetd ''Chico and
an" and "Welcome Back,
for television.
he·a dircctin' hlS first movie,
's Revenic: and find he's
"the most marvelous time of ..
it's the third comina of
•a," the outrageous comedy
§t new rteords for bad reviews bnil~ia box office.
ck. who could write his own
lbrsitcomswith any network, is
na "Porky's R.rvenae" in
and Jovina It. As he explained
hone after a week's work:
been tryina for I 0 years to nail
l feature as a director. I almost
vc at First Bite' with George
ton, but 'Welcome Back, Kot-
te ,. picked up for another season:
I soioa to do 'Somebody ls M~nna My Husband' with Farrah
FCM:iirt but 'Chico and the Man'
'inrerl'ered. I almost made a picture in
Australia* but the Australians
wo\lfdn't let me both write and direct. ~en 'Porky's Revenge' was of-
fertid tQ me, 1 thou&ht of it as
sometbina raunchy and seamy. Then
I ran the whole picture and I was
surprised to see that it had a begin-ni~iddle and an end; It was
raunchy, scatalogicaJ and prurient,
but at bad a aood story and l<>od
players. I also saw ·Porky'• JI' and
bated it. I couldn't believe that both
·had been directed by Bob Clark,
whose work l admU'e.
··1 decided it would be aood for me
to be 1$10Ciated with a commercial
P.roperty and let people know that
this auy can brina in a picture at a
Jood pnce.' From my experience with
'Kotter' J knew I could deal with a
aana type of humor. And I thou&ht J
could stay within the •Porh's'
framework, aivina the characters a
heller relationship to each othec. ••
· Komack had been in television
since· playing Jackie Cooper's
m1lhonaire buddy, in ••Hennessy."
Danny Thomas and Sheldon
Leonard introduced Komack to
directing. and he directed everythina
from "Combai" and "Dr. Kildare'' to
"Tarzan." His forte was comedy, as
he proved with 1"be Courtship of
Eddie's Father," still his favonte
show, thouah "Kotter" was bis bia-
gest moneymaker.
.. He last worked in television as
executive produc.er of "9 to S."
"I'd had it with TV," Komack
explained. "I was not Jivina more to
the medium, and I felt I bad done my
best work. Besides, the bottom bad
fallen out for half-hour comedies.
When Norman Lear, the kina of balf-
hour comedies, comes back with
""AKA Pabto'-ud-can't make it. you •
know the medium is in trouble JamaKomackle~ftnt film -'PorkJ''•ReTen&e.'
Less"flash; but all sho:w for Humperdinck
----------'---. • ·-J • - , ~ Pac1f1~Amphithea re VlUlhie a career that was gQina no-amplhtheater snll pt~ycd up tiis ap-Selleck!" .
_ where. peal to the wom!'n m the audience Ballads continue to b'e appearance proves
la success with cr?wd
By CHRIS CRAWFORD
09lr .... c.n.., ..... ,
What's in a name? Succe&s, if you re'n~me yourself Engelbert
Humperdinck, says the former
Arnold Dorsey from Leicester, Eng-
land.
So he borrowed the name from the (who greatly outnumbered the men). Humperd1nck's fone, as he amply
composer of.the opera ••ttansel and "l'm really nervous ... this Is a brand demonstrated with selections from
Gretel," after goinft through a Iona new show in virain terri-bis ToP. 10 hits such as ••After the
list of composers. 'Johann Strauss? tory ..... (pause) ... "but it won't be for Livin',' "A Man Without Love,"
Amadeus Mozart? Not sexy long," joked the King of Romance. "Quando, Quando. Ouando," "Am I
enough," he said. But even as Humperdinck has per-That Easy to Forgefr' and his per.
Now, almost 20 years later. fccted the role of sex-symbol-as-sang-sonaJ favorite. "The Last Waltz."
Humperdinck bas achieved a com-er, he has also developed a refrcsttjng Another sqment of his newly re-
fortable point of moderation with his ability to poke fun at that 5ame vised show is a tnbute to the late Nat
image and his staae prtsen~. Gone 1s image. As his back-up singer Kina Cole -"my favorite singer,"
the flashy,. sequ1~ned costume launched into "Look at that face... said Humperdinck, and his voice
weighte-d down by gold chains; in its look at that nose," Humocrdinck very smoothly handled a long list of
stead, the singer now opens bis show interrupted with, "I bad it fixed!" Cote hits: .. When 1 Fall in Love,"
in full tuJtedo with tails. And after performina surprisingly "Mona Lisa," ''Lazy, Hazy, Cruy
J enon n •s 0)'1 without
any onginaJ mem rs for lhe fim
time since Jtfl'cnon Airplane \00 off an 196S.
Guitati t Paul Kantner, founder
and luc rem inina on1mal member
in the llneuptj n''-board
"I don'tthrnk. he has m1 a o
in 18 years." v list G lid
says. "He 1s not cumntl~ do n,g the
lhOW$ We h~ t.n be doma shows up
to Chnstmas.
..
I
The arouj)'s tour taned Jn mid·
June. Jefferson Starshtp, wnh
Kantner. ~rl'ormcd on June 23.
vocalist Mickey Thomas sayst thou&h
he can't remember in "'hat aty. TM
rest of the sroup .,.ent to Los Angeles
the neu day to do press and the day
ancr that Kantner telephoned, .. say-
1na he wouldn't bt 1ttend1nt, .. He ll
• on the lat.e$t album. Nudear i========;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;;a::;~llll_lil
Furniture." on Grunt Records, d15-
tributed by RCA.
Thomas and Miu Slick are 1nter-
v1ewed at RCA Records in New York,
where they have just organill(i mak-
ina a second video from "Nuclear
Furniture," of"layin' it on the Linc."
The first video accompanied ttie
.. ______ ........
IR LID!§l~ ·--====0 rr:===:::::========:::;:;-~I ............. -............ RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTUY, llC.
F• The Int Of Yu lie tm,... avo., com 11SA -us.
"A wonderful movie."
-G,;iry l'rankhn KCBS TV
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--~
"LIKE NO'IHING
YOUVE SEEN SINCE
'THE WIZARD OF OZ':'
-"~oc R..d ''
WIDSillO'l
Eihwwds Watbroo*
Slft.4.401
"IT'S A 8WCJCBl.5TFJl
A l.OU.A.PAIOOZA, A ClASSIC." ................... f
In his newly revised s~e show at
the Pacific Amphitheatre.
Humperdinck recounted how. at the
sugest1on of his manaaer, he sought
a new name back in the m1d-'60s, in
an etron to re-sculpt bis im-ac and
Admittedly, the pants arc still good impersonations of l,,ibtraoe and Days of Summer," "Rambhn,
ultra-tight, and Humperdinck's con-Jerry Lewis, Humpcrdmck siicf. with Rose," "Too Youns." and ••When
versational patter at the a sl n, "Eat our heart out. Tom FaJI an LoveWl _:.;.;.;t;.;;h;..Y.:..:;.oou.:;..;.." _____ 1 .----------~------------~~~~rw.,...l'!"l'!~------------t THfAr•fS ThE
~EVERENDING He·s been raised by wot\.te~ Coptured by apn
Hunted by a boy~allng tq!r
And adopted by a bumbling
bear named Baloo
Whod have thought U.1u~le
could be 10 much run'
AAAHEIM FOUNTAIN VALLEY LA MIRADA OMNOE ·=r Edwards Fountain Valley SAO Gateway StacflUm Dnve-ln
839-tsoo 523.1s11 m.ano
PUaPLS IUU .. ta)
AT 12:41 310S 1121 7:41
At I 0:01
MST Dt!f'UIS& ta) At 12:15 2:11 4!U'" 1 .15 1 :11 a. 10:11
Fint r-lllllt ... ~ * ONLY S2.7i U._ 1111ff
8111 Murny Oa" Aykroyd
GHCJST'9USTEllS (N)
S"OWI •t 12:21 2 :40
4 :11 7:2S t :I0/70 MM
CUtDIUM(N)
s11ow1 at 12:30 3:00
1 :301100 a. 10130
ntll LAST UtDUUeA JOffD a n. STAIU~teHfta (N) T--.. 0.-(N) At 1212021401100 s11ow1 at 12100 2 :30
/:30 10120/70 MM l :OOI~::: ~JO :OO
=MESA IRVINE ORANGE WESTMINSTER Eii'V#e\ u ;i 2) WAVH ~ =•f!ht!• )
THll IOY OP Mll (R) l NEVSa ._..,..._ Cinema Center
'1M14t 0
C6STAMESA M";'
Edwards Woodbl'tdge • AMC Orange Mall UA Cinema
551-0655 l --~-034{) 893.Q5.46
LAGUNA HILLS ORANGE EdwatdS/Sanborn UA City Cinema
Laguna Hills Mall 768-6611 634-3911
• NEWPORT BEACH •
,_ 6 WO D(U'I STtllO .._.,,"'
mfUOflOClr'(Nl
715.tlO
• SO COASf PLAZA •
TOWN C£NTO "Wl $l~·~r1rn ~·.:.::..... .,. ..... CNl mttu UstUJOO 10110
TOWN C(Nftl "'WICOC ~.__..._,..,._ MUl&llllr' CNl
........ Ill' H) )I) ru 101\ m•IM IUUHI
foWN ct1tftll ....... aa ct> 111.,hw Ul~1IO .. \ ,...... ••a• IO• 1~1 •IM SBtTOOO
TOWN CCNTUI ~·m~o~
.anCll PMfT .. Cll
110 ~ 10 too
OOlfl SllllfO
1WUUlr Oil ltStGO•I~
!WI 2111 l.IO 1040
SOUfH COAST ... .-. "" •••• I >I. HS UQ. I Ii. ltJI a--UMIHt
rJ;f~1~0AST
Sllows at U :OO STOaY (N) 11 :30
2 :00 4:00 1 100 1 :40 3:10 1 ·00
I 00&. 10:00 1:101. 10:20
• COSTA M£SA •
CDW MOS OCU'I StUlO _,
.......... (I) . ._ IJO 9 lO 546 3102
HAR80ii TWl'4 ltAlPI! MM:CllO
·m ttl u-<'> ...... "lll UIAll r t'Cl .... """ Ul~ ... ""' 715 t lO
100 100 1000 ilAi fwiH OCUY STfllO -"'IWUUll" Ill~ llQUSM £11CACl•lft ·-lilla TW\ 700 ti "M4f!UIW' '31 l!IOI *" n.ri 715 tM MESA ,_,, ....
• WESTMINSTER •
CllMA "m •n~• c..-HlltU
CkMA WUT
....
DRIVE-INS m~
STADIUm a
Ill l?lt.!!t1tllf ""' !ttb ..
OllAJlfDV ... U.s..A. s
) "lu1 Co-Hit Ca""o"IJ•ll
lt.11n II (JIOt
Walt Ol1n1y'1 IUWGUl
r 800K (Q) ""' Tro" (ltQ) C"ltd ,.,Ices
aACM•LOR PARTY (It)
ltlut Sto1rTr•k Ill' Tiii
Seolfcll 'or Spock (ll'C)
O•DIU•cPGI
N•verl:ndlnt Story (ltG)
...VU.Oil OP THE N••DS (a) PIUI You"t Ooctor1 Tn Love(")
KST~(R)
.. lus Co·Hh Cor~tca" erotl'l1r1 (PG)
• El TORO •
SAOOl£8ACI 1IMn u111 ... nair ui.... UIS US Jn
I• '"' •• •nt UST 11...ml" (fl) Sii ~10 215 620 1010
SAOOHBACK
\D '•• I I 't
~ .. ~110 •
ICllUG Of
Ill IOllS II I I 10 S I t
I ~I• JOO
S-OOl.£HCK IGl ii •1 111 \C ••• I ,,. }Ola Ul Oil Ul
) '•• •1 • U'8 rooo m~~
SADOUBAC'K
SAOOI (
"' t., .. ,., ...
~·~ • MISSION Vf[JO •
vu> rn 111..-,.,.r"' 600 I GO, IGOll
.·· STORY rm ..
...,... UlmDA ~
~ 1)4 SlO Ciatfwly w 639-ano S2J.tul
COSTA llJA ._-.,
Edwards eu.. Uwd Vilje
c.rtw 97Mm r .. 1»6991
9fOlllJ•WAWT .._
f llllilJ f M SY\lfY City
' 963-1307 Center '34-2S53 .. -wt•• Cdwatds l.IMnty Edwltdl .....
&S4.Ull 540-7444
9l.A MBA EIMIEI
Nit, f IShloll UA ....,..
Sqllarl (213) 691.(1633 ... 193-4541
SM lWt eMS'TUll
Miision v.,o Dr-IA 493-4~S
lA&IN IOCH 497-1711
Edwards So.~t ~na .. OOlBY SlUlO
,
LaMIRAOA ~
.._ UIJ .. M lDIU fl
...(\I'll l fl 1CMM OOl.11 S" llO I 00. lJC ,. UO I~
.-m., ... m'JJ,
ltJa. t1'. $.& 1 Al. ltJI
11141 ... l ... 'U ....... Lt ........ ..__
..... ~ , '111Uaflnt...-111 12 JO 111 t 10 US & OI lt1IO IHI 1 f' & l.l t IUO 1~.t•~• 1auo 11•
-.uauu 1 ,.,
l!A J'tl i a bl JUI
MISSION
WAR NER .
·~:11:.iJ • .:T'l.rJ. _
...
I ,,
r
IP
ttl
IO ..
"
' I ~
j
GARFIELD
HOl*MNOIE POWTMAK Ml.PO 11'!
THE
FAMILY ..
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"On your market, get set .... "
BIG GEORGE
by Jim Davis
80ME"f1Mf.~ t'TS MARO 'TO FIGHT
PRIMAL 1~1'1NCf5
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
0 1 h•t• Mondaya."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE
"So it's r8'nlngl His dog1use Is in the next
yard ... why can't he eep there?"
. I . ·.
MOON MU ~LI~~
<ilVE Ate> TAK~ (JT °*') ...
1 WANT ,A ®
$'50 R,AISE:
,A WE:t:K
o~E/.SE!
i
'
Hank Ketcham
'l.OOK,JoEY1 THEY'RE AUWJJf SELLIM' ~RISTlMS TOYS 1
lT MUST BE AIJ6IST.' ~
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
No. IT1S:
)bysrAY ONAS JS,
O~SLSi! ~ \~
DARNr OlJT-
N~T/,AT~D
,AGAIN ·
-:-• -. -by ·charles M .-Schulz-
I
/
\
PEA~UTS
IT RAINED ONE DAY
~EN WE WERE IN PARl..1.
SO WE SAT UNDER AN .,.
AWNIH6 AT AN OUTDOOR
CAFE AMD HAD LUNCH
IF ~~INK TMIS IS ™E
SAME, CHUCK, IT ISN'T !
)~__.__.... ............... ........__~~ ~~-......J ~~::J..!..U.L!.::
I TUMBLEWEEDS
1.00K A1''1SM weePS:A PAI~
Of ~lJ,Y-~I I \SP, SOLIV Ga.'7 PICE,
;.MV ME W11lOJI A SON. . I
.. " • ,,
by Tom K. Ryan
--
I BRIDGE
-------
.CHUtJES
GOREii
AN \\ ERS TO WEEKL\' BRIDGE Qt 11
Q.l -A South, vulnerable, you
hold·
•Akl1054 ~J OAQGZ +Q9
The b1dd1ng:
South West North Ea1t
' l • Pat I NT PH•
?
What du vou bid now?
A. -11 I~ a clo l' deci ion bt•Lween a
1ump to I hrtt pades or a simple
n•b1rl of t v. o diamonds. We thank
t.hat your most likely game contract
is four pade , 51> we havt a &light
prefercnre for the 1ump rebid o{
your lrong ma1or.
Q.2-East Weit vulnerablt>. as
South you hold :
• Q9 52 i::183 ¢ 792 .• 95-4
Parl.1~ r opens the_ bidding. wilh .one. _
'lpade. Wh1\t do you re'lpond'!
A.-Wt• rulize that it takes great
rf' traint not to raasP partner's uit
when you havf' f1ve<"1rd support.
However, bidding two spades has
everal drawbacks. Partntr could
overbid because hP expects you to
huv1• ome valuu. or double the op
pOnf'nts in -.an unbeatable contract.
Al4'0, 1t could alert a dt'ft'nder to the
fact thut his partrwr is 9ery short in
spadei.. and that rould be a decisivt>
factor in the 1tuct1on. The wist>
coune i'> to pas<;
i-
Q.3-Both' ulneTable. a South you
hold:
•AK632 ~KQlOZ 'A83 •7
SHOE
BRABBLE
The b1ddin1:
outb Weit 'ortb Eeat
1 • PHt Z O Pan
1
Whal do you btd now?
A. -No heart ralH will do full
justice to your hand. For the mo·
ment we 1uggest a bid or lhrtt
diamond . When you follow that up
with a jump r111e In hearta, you will
have completed the picture o( your
hand. 1nclud1ng th fact thet you
havt a 11ingleton club
Q 4-Doth vulnerable. u South you
hold:
+Q762 OKS . _oQt02 +AKSS
Tht b1ddin1:
South WHt + Pau
2 . PHI .
?
North ,_.
3 o,
\\. hat do ~ ou bid nov. ''
A.-Partner I!> probing for game.
and you have an uct'llt'nt hand for
ham. 1nduding help 1n thP suit
where he need~ al. To bid anything
other than four spades would be a
gross derehct1on of duty
Q.5-Ncatht>r vulnerable. as South
you hold:
•At093 ._,J92 v AQJ763
The bidding:
South Wett North EHl
I ...> PH1 l Pue
?
II
NORMAN, IAM'f AAf.
"l()J ~IN&
5f.CAL>~ 60~Y.
~ l-tA\R WIU.. ~6'..-4 ~
1'ouf'Ef.? ·~~ flu.. OOi,
P~1~1<:.K..
FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE
FUNK.'\' 1t'INKERBEAN
lJM .. :MAyBE ..
I OONT1RINKI
MISS HoMe.SO
MU~-
FIR&1 ~R.£ BORN ,-n4EN ~'RE. 80RfED ...
VJ BETWEEN I &..E'f'S Gf i MARRIED !
DR.SMOCK
IUDGE·PARKER
-e.ecAose ~HAVE! AN A "T""'f" AC I<. CHIHUAHUA
IN "fHE!"S "1"0 Kele!P e>ANc>l'T'OS PROM s1'eAL-ING MY L.UNCH/
..
What do ,you bi(j now1
A.-Thert aro four possl
-•jump to three c1iam1>n
pie two diamond rebid. 1
two hearts: aad. bid or 0
Since we do not, believe
wit1t to auppreu a ru1on
card major ault, one spade
nod. Second choice would b,
to thrte diamonds.
Q,e-Neither vulnerable,
you hold: + AJ(8$4 li?93 0 AQ71
The bidding.
S•utli Weat Nortli
1 • Pan 2 ~
?
What do you bid (low'!
A.-You do not have th
to show your diamond s
three·level -that would
reverse and show a mu
• hand than South pos~sse
can do is rebid two spade
For lnfol"Ulatloa abou
Gort'D't new Dewtletter
playt'r1, write GorH B
1909 Claumlaeon Ave ..
IOG, N.J. 08011 .
by.Lynn Jo
PEOPLE.
IN IT.
by Tom a
Lifescapes Corp.
appoints p~esident .
Llleatapn, IDc. of Newpon Beach has appointed Mel Cttll president and di~t~r of _operations. Cecil bri~gs more than 20 years of management,
adm1rustcattve and plannsng upcnence to the international land planning and
landscape an:h1tcctural firm. including 13 Y.ears as directo1 of facilitie and
MAINS RAU
construction at Disneyland, where he managed more than 700 employees and
was responsible for creating a IQ.year master plaq for the park's expansiori.
Lifcscapes, Inc. is presently designing an interoational botel/reson an South
Africa, as well as commercial and residential developments in several states in
the U.S. • • • • Robert B. Raa, president of Parter BaaalflD Corp.'1 aerospace aroup in
Irvine, has been elected a corporate vice president by the ftrm's board of directo~. Rau, who )Oined farkcr in 1969, will continue his present duties. A
· Newpon Beach resident, Rau serves on the Executive Council of the Boy
Scoau of America, Orange Coun!}'. cha~r, an~ tbe Board of Dirctton o(
tlie mcfulnaJ Leape of Oru1e Couty.
• • • Huntinglol) Beach chiropractor Dr. CalviD B. Rori recently joined more
..
COMPLET~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, Bl.
Overlooking the Pacific
Tb:la 1IC&le model of Rlcbard !ftxoa PrNJdentlil LJb'iiiiY
praenta an o•erall Y1ew of Shnlab-atyle ballcll.na Mt ID
enYlronment of palm trees an boqan...Wea. The PlaDned
than 3,500 other doctors of chiropractic, their spouses and assistants from
several count.nes. at a four-<iay post-graduate seminar in Anaheim. The
seminar was sponsored by the Parker a.tropracttc Ruearcll Foudattoa of
Fort Worth, Tex.as. • • •
Nancy Ma11a1 bas JOtned the staff of Coz ft Buell Advertl1lq Co. as
account manager. She wdl work on the firm 's account witli Tlte Mesa Groap.1
IK. of Irvine, •Inch dc.velOR$ and market$ IBM mainframe software. Main~
was formerly director of corporate communications with K.aoware, be. of
Cambridge, Mass. Before that, she was manager of marketing communications
for CIE Sy1tem1, 1Dc. of Irvine.
Overvalued art used as tax abuse
Recen.t-1.ax legislation woUld tem~~bUy ~ paid for keepiiig arc meamOgleu and
the credit must be caJculatcd on the
$2,100 real price of the !ystem, the
agency said.
London, witbabiiifstopoveiio ew
York to clwlgc airlines. protested
that be was cbaracd the tu on the
Omaba-t<>-New Y ork.lq:. He said t.bc
airline that flew him on that lq
claimed it had to collect the w
because it bas no agnement with
other carriers fot throush chec.kiaa or
bagacr and interchans of ticlc.eu.
eliminate such types of fraud
• • • By JIM LUTHER
UTuw.-Newport Beach resident Briu A. Gilmore bas been llppointed ·$CCondary
marlcetin' manager for Slpal Savin&• and L9aD A1soclation, Wlth primary If t.ax cheating on wages were as
responsibility for buying and ~lhng Signal Savin~s loan portfolio. He extensive as it is 00 donation of art
formerly bandied loan production for-the firm. Gilmore is an active member of works 'to charity, the federal deficit
the Ballder'1 l.lada1try A11oclatton, the National Mort1ace Banker'• would be many times the present
A1soclatlon, and the CaWornta Mortgage Banker'• A11octation. S200-bitlion-a-ycar ranic. ,
Car M f h 1 fi • r* • f Some of the most glanng tax abuses I ltcbell, o t e aw irrn o Paal, Hastings, Janofsky Ir Walker o uncovered by the Internal Revenue Costa Mesa. has been elected to membership as a fclJow of the American Colle1e of Probate CoDD1el. The college is an international assoc1at1on of Strvicc in recent years have involved
lawyen with membership by inv1tatton of the Board of Regents. grossly ovCf'Valued . charitable con-tributions of pamtmgs, books and
Attorneys Cller DI Liberti and(;:.,; Goldsmu have purchased a 6,000-other works of an A special panel
square-foot office build mg at 50 I Ctvic Center Onve in Santa Ana from Title created to advise the IRS studied 223
G f Sa F R · bo h · th · an obJccts donated to museums in uranty o n ranc1sco. cprcsenting t panics in e transaction were 1983 and found that 52 percent were
MJcUel Peters, Jay Caroa.baD and MartiD Frazier of C.1b.maD Ir Wakefield in overvalued. The average over-
Newport Beach. • • ·• valuation was 671 percent. One
Fonyae/Mucelll of Newport Beach ha$ been chosen to handle all estimate missed the mark by 17.400
Uruted States markeung and advertising for Karl Stort E:adoscopy of percent.
T.uttlingcn, West Germany. Storz manufactures optical systems doctors use to Among a sampling of 342 art
see inside the body. ,, obJCCts involved an estate tax calcu-
Stellreckt Co. has chosen Reid Ad:ertt11Dg and PabUc RelatJon1 of Costa lanons, the panel found, the wrong value was placed on 83 percent, Mesa u aiency of record for Beacon Bill Cove. a 40-home project in Laguna requiring adjustments totaling s 16
Niguel. Assi&nments include a proJcct Drochurc, sales office design, million. One appraisal was off by
adveniscmcnts. a logo, signagc and a stationary package. I 9, 900 percent.
The electronics markctin.ggrou; ofWyle Laboratories of Irvine will break The tax law just approved by
ground Aua. I on a 44,000-squ.arc-foot distribution facility in the San Congress and President Reapn aims
Fernando Valley. Manager of the new division will be Joe Caravau, to cut into such fraud. It requires that
previouslr director of sales at the Irvine division. He assumes immediate a deduction for any contribution
responsibility for the present Los Angeles division in El Segundo and will :~~~iedm~~a ~~:el;P~~
manage the transition to the San Fernando Valley facility. AJso Joining &he new Any appraiser w.bo cheats could be facility will be Barry Newmu, wbo will serve as product marketing manager.
He bas been a member of the Irvine division field sales staff. · barred from practicing before the • • • . IRS; a donor who overstated the
Donald G. Nlkoll of Irvine has been named vice presid~nt of Callfonala value of a contnbution by more than
Federal Mortage'• income propert)' financinJ in Orange County. Nikols was · SO percent could face a penalty of 30
formerly scmor loan officer at the Aliso• Co. m Newport Beach. percent of the tax understatement.
The penalties apply to any returns
filed after this year; the appraisal
requirement takes effect with con-
tributions made next year ..
If there's a sucker born every
minute, there must be a new tax-
avoadancc scheme hatched at least
~very other mmute. One of the newer
ones uncovered b) the IRS involves
the 40 percent tax credit allowed for
purchase of .. renewable energy
source" equipment. such as a solar
heating system fo~e home. -
The IRS cites the case of a person
who pa.ad $3,600 for a solar-powered
water-bcatina system with the undcr-
standinJ that the seller would hand
over a S 1,500 "research grant" if the
buyer would periodically measure the
tcmperalure m the system's storage
tank. .
The buyer would claim a credit of
S 1,440 -subtracted directly fro.tn
taxes owed -which, when combined
with the SI ,500 "grant," would mean
a finaJ price of only $660 for the
system.
In a new revenue ruling, the IRS
says the scheme won't clear muster.
If a fire or burglar bas ever swept
through your home, you probably
know how difficult it is to dctennine
what was I~ The IRS can help.
The agency's Publication 584 is a
.. Disaster and Casualty Loss Work-
book," a 23-paae booklet that greatly
simplifi,es keeping ~rch of what
you own. For example. one ~
covers the entrance hall and lists 11
items -from mjrron to umbrella
stands -with ~ to write in otben.. _,,,
There arc columns to list what you
have to prove when claiming a tu
deduction for casualty loss: the datt
each item was ac:qwrcd. the fair value
before and after the loss, decrease an
value and original cost.
The booklet is free from the IRS.
Improvements in the nation's air-
ports and auiincs arc .financed
through an 8 pcrocnl tax on airplane
tickets. but the law spccific:aUy ex·
empts fares for uninterrupted Ulter-
nabonal flights. The IRS says the law
is perfectly c~. but apparently some
airlines are not so sure.
That bas no beari.n&. the IRS said in a private ruling. The enlirc fli&b1 61
the description of an unintemJpted
intcmatiooa.1 fl.iabt, the ~cy said.
admina the tupayu ha-to tiet 1
refund o~ lhc 8 percent.
~nnctbJ. Masatofryltt. Tex.as.a -
pilot for Continental ~ paid
S245 for contact lcmcs and S60 for
aV1ator sunglasses md daimcd a
deductaon on grounds the expenses
wcrc .. justified on the Ms.is Of'
personal appearance and imqie 'tx-
occitd of an airline pi.Jot.·· -The Tu Coun IT'jcctcd Masat' .
arsumcot that the glasses and con-
tacts ~ a oceemry business ex-
pense, ootina M wore the lenses at tM
trial. .
UPs AND DowNs
NEW YORK (AP) -Th9 followlno llsl shows the Over-the-Counter SIOdlS ~ warr.,,ts thet heve OOM uo the most and down the most beMd on Business ~agazine ~:~~ =V·Sl or l(M)O
' di~~.,.he~~ gets television show 7"'":;,'' ~-;:-Pc1
i E·' ~ 1!! 8:m •l. For the first ume m the history of
Orange County, a busmcss magazme
will also have a weekly television
prOJ™TI profiling Orange County
business people, with intcrvtews on
how they have made their compantcs
successful.
With the same theme as its "How-
To" business maaazme, Business. To
Business on cable in Newport Beach
has been accepted by most of Orange
Countycablestations, with the first of
its weekly shows bcilinning Aug 8.
and continuing each Wednesday.~
The host. and publisher, of Busi-
ness to Business Magazine, Ivan
Katz. has interviewed such dis-
tinguished Orange County business
people as Peter Banfield. preside11t of
Manin A v1auon; Bob 01fford, chair-• 1am1s .,,_. 1 UP
man of the Uruted States Otr,mp1c s MultTd\ 2~ ~ UP 1
C . 0 C ) 6 VIS11t<=" 2~ '41 Up omm1tt~ range ount) o un-7 Hel 0 wt 6"'1 1"'2 UP .
tecrs. and spcaal advisor to the l McQuev 1n. 3~ UP
chairman of the Board of the Na-1 ~ioe 2141: 71" M: .f tional Bank of Southern California; 1 ,.._ s ~ ..., UP 1
Ted Robertson of Master's Fine An a ec:trat"t .,,.. ~ UP '
in =Beach; and Michael Nasco 11 ~~s 2 36~t 11:! H: l f C C 1 ~st n 2-V) Up o ommurucauons orpor--1 111-16 +1~ oo
ation. 1 g•' Pt ,,., 1 UP Bcca f h th t YI unl6 lft l Up use o t e promouon a J lfl \4 1"2 UP
Business To Busmess M~tne wtU CalMIC 1 ,,., 11\ uo .
thi h .. h lnco wt \'\ ~ uo I give to s new s ow. t rou~, us lntLb , Jlt 'h UP •
selected circulation to ovcr-100.000 ~ ~ ~ Up-.
readers in Orange Count)'. Group W j ~"""C1~ 1 "' ~~ 8: ·
Cable of Newport Beach has agreed to ctt>lo 1-> n .. UP
air the weekly show wtth immediate Chlnd' 00~"1.s ~ Uo ·
partic1pauon of most of the other Name Last c'lt PC'f
3 Vawlp un = ~ cabte siations of Oran~ Count) ~ ~f:·';" un l -1 ~·
• AttnFd ~ -1~ . ________________________ ... S ~1IFd 1 -2"'2 J
A C 1 rt $3 ·11 · .. J:".,1t l Mori!,, un i ~ -~ It tr a repo s m1 ion pro1.i , u~Fd 11~ = 2~ ,,
ll ~~·~. ~ -!~ 1~· By &be Associated Press
AuC'al reported a net profit o f $3
malhon, or 36 cents per share. for 1ts
second quarter oo Monday
Ir was the-Newpon Beactr-ba.scd
percent to $78.6 m llhon from SS9 8
million
The auime's operat1na profit was
up 46 9 percent to S7 5 mtlhon. the
~y 14.-
For the first m . months of the )cat.
the airliM had a profit of$3. 9 millton.
or 17. 7 cents per share, on revenue of
$144.4 million. rompaml to a toss of
$8.8 million, or 14.9 ccnh per 'hare.
in a comparable penod l t )car.
IS nrVnl Iv, -1 l
!6 W't>A s ~ -~ l1 ~1 ,..,.. • -'1 . 1'.
g ~~: "' -:~ 11). ij ~:v; r-~ l .
i, t:$f i~ ~1 lt
•
On
the
•
Dow JoNES AvERAGES
WHAr NYSE Orn
NEW VORK (AP) Aug. 6 • T~: ~ '
I NYSE LEADER S
I
t -• .
WHAT AMEX DID
NEW YORK (AP) Aug. 6 ':J; Tod' .. ,v. i::r t~
AM EX LEADERS . .. . ' . ~. .
GoLo QuoTE S
... . . • .... ,. -.. ~
..
ME TALS Qu oTEs
That'sanaptd rtpttonofboth bustn ssand , •
business people along the Orange Coast. Toke p track of
where companies are gain~ and which peopl a r e helping
them get there, just watch Credit Line· - v ry day In the
==---~Business section of your new DailJ lil_lt __ ~
• • . ---
L
U.8. eycHat
D•vl• ~lnn•J
fln•llJ geta
hla med•I. C2.
GOld111•d1l1t
T"IJICJ Ceuldne •r•H'atlllle lo retire. C2.
Piece of heaven
for Brad Lewis
Corona del Mar~ graduate Brad Lewla
(riaht) and partner~aal Enqulat of Seattle
ezcb.anae glancea aiter receiftni l(old
medala ln rowing Sunday at Lake fultu.
A S<?litary stroll .
gives Benoit gold
She talce's a c hance
and s urprtsfngIY
no one challenges
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Joan
Benoit took a chance, nobody took
after her and the shm ironwoman
took the first Olympic women's
manthon as if she were taking a
solitary stroll.
"I don't know,how to say this
without soundmg cocky, but it was a very easy run for me today," the lfltty
Mame runner said Sunday afteT easily
takmg the gold medal. "I was in
control all the way and I was very
surprised J was not challenged at all."
It was the best women's marathon
field ever assembled, and Benoit was,
by far, the best of the best. She
exploded into the lead under gray
skies at about the 3-mile mark and
maintained the pace under sunny
skies for the la,n half of the 26-mile,
385~yard endurance test.
Benoit showed no such reluctan~. ·
After she had taken her victory lap
while waving an American fla.ai
"when I saw Grete-on the infield I sa1d
'congratulations.• And I told her I
took a chance and I lucked out,"
Benoit said.
"1 didn't want to take the lead, but
it was natural," she added. "The pace
was slow. J picked it up expecting
other people to go with me. Nobody
did."·
Nobody could.
The world .rccord-holdt;r in the
event turned the first woman's mara·
thon tn Otympic hJStory into a banle
for second place.
Her time of2 hours, 24 minutes. 52
seconds was the third fastest by a
woman and the best 10 a marathon
restricted to women. She also has run
the fastest time -2:22:43 on the
much hillier Boston Marathon course
last year. Waitz finished second
Sunday m 2:26: 18 and Rosa Mota of
Portugal won the bron1e medal in
2:26:57.
How far ahead was Benoit?
Rower. partner
end uphill climb
with gold medal
By ROGER CAI\LWN
Of .. IH/lf"-4 ....
LAKE CASIT AS -The fire that
burned within Bradley Lewis, who
refused to buckle to a system which
appeared to be excludin1 him, forged
a &old medal for himself and his
partner, Paul En<\uist ofScattle, at the
rowina competition in the XXlllrd
Ollmpiad Sunday. ike the story that brought them
here to Lake Casitas, they came from
off the pace, last at 500 rpete:rs, ftfth in
a field of six at the midway point,
second with 500 meters to 10 and
came home with a flourish, brcakina
-the plane at 6:36.87 to '"'e the lold
medal for themselves and the United
States in double sculls without cox-
swain.
It is the first gold medal for the
United States in this event siooc 1932
when the rowina competition was
held at Alamitos ·Bay in Long Beach
with Kenneth Myers and William
Garrett Gilmore doin& the bonon in 7:17.'4. ' . .
And, 1t was the only &<>Id medal for
the U.S. men on Sunday - a day
which saw no-nal10n win more thatl
one aold medal .. -
.. We're. in heaven now;.." said the
happr -~wis, a former \..Orona del
Mar Hi&h and UC Irvine oarsman.
"When we crossed the finish line it
was like a big wave of relief came over
us. A million pounds was lifted off my
shouJdC.CS..:' --
-The two turned the course in
6:36.87, forcing Belaium to s,cttle for
the stlver and Yu&OS.lava the bronze.
.. Sure 1 felt confident early (when
the U.S. boat was trailin&)." said
Lewis. a NC!wpoft Beach resident.
--
., ......... "She did go out fast early and it was
a good tactic," said silver medalist
Grete Waitz of Norway. "I had thou~t about doina it myself but I
didn t know ifl wanted to take such a
biachance.''
"I wasn't sure if Joan was way
ahead or if she pulled out," said
seventh-place finisher Lisa Marttn of
Australia. "I kept wondering. 'ls she
miles in front of us or has somethma
(Pl eue .ee BENOIT /C2)
U.S. runner Joan Benoit wa•ea American 0., after captur-
tna Olympic &old medal In the women'• marathon Sanday.
Volleyhll
Retton, Szabo are dazzling rematcJi
Between them, the 17-)""r-<>ld Szabo and I 6-yc1r-0ld • for •oJd Tqey combine t o wt!!_.! 0 medals-
t o boost Inte rnationa l status
Reuon~lO-mcdals-dunna ~~----
at Pauley Pa vi hon. '1 MOWA19 L MAlmY
S bo h th . . all c1 . .......-....... • za , w o lo t e prest111ous -aroun tJtle to
Rc<ton on Friday, came back with renewed detenrunauon LONG BEACH -It ..._ IO
LOS ANGELES (AP) Their confidence and in the individual apparatus finals Sunday night and won come doWn IO•, .............. M
international sta~us boosted ~Y Olympic gold. Ecaterina aold medals in the vault. balance beam and floor exercises. U.8 . ......, .• YGllJt II •
S1.1bo of Romania and Amencan Mary Lou Retton have ·, "After Friday ni&ht J mobilized everythina with1n tMtld ._ ~ of a.a. *"1~
emcflcd from the Lo! Anaet~s Games as th~.newcst mysclfandldideverythinglcouldtosbowyoulamasreat F,._~lnpOOlpllr. chal~enacrs to the Soviet dominance of womens &Ym· symnast," Subo said at a news conference ... I feet very N'll/J ._I Whit hlJP•• e..
nasucs. ·proud." · ~ ftlgtlt et LGinl ._. •
HB·gym1;1ast Johnson
wins bronze, retires r
LO ANGELES -Kathy Johnson, at 24 the
olde1t member of the U .. aymna tics team, retired
Sunday after winnina a bronze on the balance beam
in the Olympic apPfratus final .
The blonde aymnast from Hunti9aton Beach,
also won a ilver medal v.:1th the U.S. team la t
Retton, the dynamo from Fairmont, W. Va., added a * ~.,. .,._..
silver and two bronu medals to her Olympic cache, .._.....~ • :"~
contt<iin& she had lost some of her momentum after ~ -
becoming .the first American woman to capture an an.
around 10Ui medal.
"Friday ni&ht 1 wa a tittle more psyched b«aux the
all-around wa more 'mponant to me," he said.
Wednesday.
She has worke'd 13 y
The Soviet Union' boycott of the Gamci prevcntrd
rc1gn1na World mpioo Natalia YurchCrt ko and
team mat Olp M epanova from competina apin t the
two ~foot·9 teen en. The soviet stars finished one-two
in the all4roundat the World mpioosb1ps io Buda t
n to tand on the vtotor's in 1983·
platform • .. You can 1m ne the crowd, the hghts. the
camera but you n t imqinc th fttllna." he d.
TeanfillC'CUobn n· ey 1ssoonashcrfccth1t
the mat on a d1 mount fiom the balance beam.
where he mrd a 9.8S to clin h the tironze. •
unda)' night wa a comeba k for Johnson. In
the II-around eompctihon Friday. he fell from the
m•nd '" ff-t nw A ih floor eMiQtu,..---~UJ04'1U-...
knockina htf from founh to I 0th 1n th 1and1
.-
O@-~
"'Well, .. he added, "I WU I little bit
concerned at about 6 or 700 meten
(they were stilJ fifth). I was gcttina a
little sweaty at that point."
~ut they p~ed through the field to
claim the pnze that many obviously
felt was out of their reach.
Enquist was cut from the U.S.
squad by the coacbina staff, and
Lewis didn't lite the direction be was
headed in and quit. &o combine with
bis old friend.
.. The ones that counted never
doubted in me, .. he said. cbuctlin&.
then break.ioa into a ~uah ... All thiu
of them! ·
.. We prepared for this," the 6-4,
19'4-f?Ound Lewis said, .. and nothing
else.
They spent houn visualizina what
was ncccssary and both are 29.ycar-
old v~ but when it came time
ffir ttie bi¥.; one thm · SOD)C
problems to overcome. • .I
"I put my oars in backwards and we
nearly tipped over," said Enquist.
''Then we couldn't decide wbe1ber to
keep our bats on or not and we were
still talkina when the race bqan."
Enquist will admit. howcver • .Jhat_
~en more nervous before
the repechqe ra« which they were
forced to compete in after losin& their
openi°' beat a week earlier .
Despite the nervousness, Lewis
said he felt they had all of the mental
(Pl-... eee L&wta/C3)
I
Tw6UCI
products
get silver
ByBOGERC~~~"----~~~_..-c=11t-1 ... ..., .........
IAK.£ CASlT AS-Everybody ·
had those SOlden thoughts Un•
day at &be rowina competition an
the XXlllrd Olympiad. but one
of the most balanced fields an
rowtllJ history forced some 10
settle for silver medals -includ-
inl UC Irvine products Bruce
Ibbetson and Orea Sprj~.
There wett ej&ht fma.ls -anCf
ciabt different nations able to
bout a JOld med&J petfonzwM:e
-and for tbe Uoil.ed Staies lbat
booor wont to another ua
product. Brad lewis. and his
partner Paul Enquist of Seattle in
double ICUils without COL
WbeuSunday'sfinalsc:amc &oa
conclusion witb tbe pmnicr
~vent -the ciabt witb COll -
Ibbetson and his teammates were
foroed to settle. for iilvcr, as did.
Springer and bis teammates in
fomwitbco
AlsomedaliQ& for the-U.S. were
the foun without cox (silver) ud
the pairs witb COX (bronze) IS
America finished with ft¥e ...
medals durin& a day in which t•
countries shared 24 medals.
Second -&o-the II S in mcd•ls
WIS Canada With three. which
stunned the capecity aowd with
its victory in theci&ht.jum~to
a buat lead early. t1ien boldina the
U.S. off down the stretch.
(Pleue ... OCl/CS)
Moses: He may ·
never be beaten
Hurdler runs streak
to 105 with victory
tn 400-meter hurdles·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Et&ht
years after be won the 400-meter
hurdles in Montreal and seven yean
after be last lost a race, there 1s more
Olympic gold for Edwm Moses.
Sunday ni&ht. Moses ran bu in-
credible victory stnng to 105, cruising
past the rest of the field at the
Olympic Games to the thunderous
cheers of a nearly packed house at Los
An&des Coliseum.
He Joined Evelyn Ashford and
Joan Benoit as U.S. aold med.al
winners at the t.btrd day of track and
field compeution. Elgbt more finals
were scheduled today.
.. I JUCSS J have to loot"' at my
aoc:omplidunents and trai~ and
what rve done in • different pet'·
'peaiv.c than anyone dsc.-•• he said.
.. But in my mind. I've won 10.S races in 1 row, but in my mind Pm JOins
into a race with a ().() record. Every
time I JO out. it's a big race. rm expected to win. ..
Moses' teammate. Danny Harris.
won the silver at 48.13, while Schmid
was third in 48.19. Schmid filed a
protest cwmi111 Hanis im~ lus
arm swing bctwccn the ctahtb and
ninth hurdles.. but the allegation was
~jccted.
Schmid refused to call Moses
unbeatable.
.. Tbe chance is always there, and l
don't think I'll give up." be said.
"Moses was not as fast today as be
bad been."
For Ashford. Sunday's victory in
the women's 100 metcn m an
Olymf>icrteerd 10.97 marted the end
of a dtfficult battle apinst 1 smes of
adversaries.
"I'm just happy enough to win, ..
said Moses, who wanted to break the
Olympic reconS but fin1sbed1ust off it
at 4'7.7S ... lt"s the kind of race where
you go in and you want to concentrate
on winnina first and everything else,
second." Moses., who will tum 29 years old "Now 1 wish. l could &Cl three
Aug. 31. knows a lot about wtnnano (&olds), .. she said. "I'd love to set .... duce. rm happy to have this one, but He hasn't lost smce 1977 The man I'd love to be in that 200 me ten." who last beat him. Harald Schmid,
won the bronze medal ~re Sunday The200mctcrswillbcrunlatcrth1s
niaht. week. but A hford won't be in it. She
Moses' time was one-tenth of a failed to qualify u 1 U.S. entry 1n the
second sJower than his wmnm& effort event bcc::ause of a bamstrina 1niun.
m the Montreal Games of 1976. "T~" v.'ls in the"back of m" ·•Overall it wasn•t the most de--; ; mandma race rve had," the Laauna mind. had fear, but I ovcrcamr at."
Hills resident said. "But 1 reafoed she said.
with'the other auys uwde 1 had to get The 27-year~ld world ttrord-
out fast and establish myself." holder wm~ed her bometowu crowd.
_FQ!' a lgn t' · ~OIDJXUUOD _leadint' 1-' finish fouhe u S,1o&um.-
bas been at east 1 step behmd. but Ahccro~ won th~ silver. ..,h1k
Moses bas maintained his motiva· Merlene Ottey-Pirie captured th~
oon. bronze.
Angels and Twins:
It's a splitdecision
By RICHARD DUNN ....... c..' •.•
'
f
I ,
• Tracy ~ulkins,
at the age of 21,
decides to retire
.. rem AP pa1e~
LOS ANC1H ES -Tracy Caulkins of 13
Na hviUe. Tenn.. lhe most decorated
swimmer in United tates history and the ~inner of thtce aold medals in the 1984 Olympics ••
retired Sunday ll the age of2 I .joinina a grow1na hst of
teammates.
Caulkins said he wa returning to the University
of Florida for her senior year to pursue her JOumahsm
major.
.. I'm full of fond memones, .. said Caulkins. "It ha'i
been a wonderful and enjoyable swimmina carter. 1
guess it's kind of s4d."
A kedabout reports she was on thcvcrgcofSJ~IDI
a SS00,000 endo~ment contract. Caulktns said 'Bob
Fraley (of Orlando, Aa ) es represenung me and Wlll
have to answer those questions. Endorsement o~
portunaues are some1hmg fottif!l to me. I've bttn
di ussi na some thaogs w1th jum. •
Fnnll Rolillftl IR., who WU tnd .. man-.r Of
the s.n FrandlcO Ofentt. on-'* M would JNwe
done dlft....,.tty. "I would not l9t people tanc m. Into
bef{IQ eomethtng oth4M' th.n Whet I em. I WOUid not have eocepted poor play. mlstak•. excuaes. t Wiii a
llttte too~.··.
Moreland'• slam beats Expos
Trlo of Y _nit one-lilt lildlana
-F lph.chcd hit.lcu I for • SYJ inn1 befo Broo J ooby' scratch
ngJ and Mtk Ann tr nd P U
Nttkrorompl ltd the one-hitter undayas
tbe N Y rk Y nkecs blanked the Indians 4-0 for their
e1eJtth con~uuvt i tory. Fontenot 5·6. fl ced the
m1n1mum 1 S nm 0' er the rim five inninp, ttikina
out four ••• In ot er merican ~aauc action, Pat
rt keyed a four-run first innina wuh·a two-run
omtt and cur le Let randt patched eight butout
irtn1 as Kansas City be~• Detroit 4-0 to 1weep a double·
hcndtr and the four.game week·
end ~ries with tbe slumpina
Tigers, The Roy Is took the
opener ).4 wh n Due fora
doubled home two runs with two
out 1n \he ninth inning to break a
3.3 tie .•• Mite Heatla, C1nae1
Lansford and Jim Eallu hit
home run • offsetting the damaJe
done by several Oakland mas-
Jllleluo takn. and the A's beat Seaule S-4
... Chicago's Gre1 tall.01kJ ran his RBI streak to eiaht
consccuuve pme\ with two run-scorina singles.
leading the White Sox to a 7.() 'ictory over strui&Jing
Milwaukee ..• Toronto's Cliff Johnson set a major-
league m:orcJ by hattin• the 19th pinch-bit home run of
his ca~r an the eaahth ann1Dg, breaking a ue and Jiving
lhe Blue Jays a 4-3 victory over Baltimore .. Rookie AJ
Nipper allowed three hits over the first eight innings
and Tony Armas and Rlcla Gedman belted solo home
runs Sunday. leading Boston to a 4.2 victory over
leu~.
No more drought for Eastwood
Veteran Bob Eaatwood, who wentn
throuah 12 long years without a victory,
acquired has second tttlc of the PGA tour
season Sunday an a two-stroke tnumph in
Keith Morelud' grand slam and one· 111 the Memphis Classic. Eastwood 38 who broke has hit relief pnchmg by Rick Reasclael led career-long vactol) drou t 1n Ne~ o;leans earlier this
first-place Chicago to a 4-3 victory qver the season, won this one wnf:'a final round of par 72 and a
Montreal Expos, the eighth tnumph for the 280 total, eight shots under par on the 7,282-yard
Cubs in I 0 games .. Elsewhere ID the NauonaJ leque Colonial Country Club course. h enabled ham to join
4)unday, Jeff Leonard's grand slam in the top of the Tom W•tsoa, Tom Kite, Greg Normu, Peter Jacobsen
ninth 1nnanf gave new Giants Manager Dauy Ourk and Gary Kocla as multiple winners on the American
his first victory oft he season as San Francisco defeated tour.
Atlanta, 7-4 . George Foster'• two-run. 10th-inning~ ... T 1--'-l di san&Je following a key error by Pittsburgh shortstop e c•.. OD, ra 0
Dale Berra lifted the New York
Mets. behind Std Fernadez and
reliever Wes Gardner, to a 3-1
victory over the Pirates . . .
Cardinals reliev~ Neil Allen
walked Jolln Wockeafas1 and
OuJe VlrpJ with tlie bases loaded
10 the e1gbtb inruo& to-fs>~ io lhe ti~bre.Uing runs. as Philadelphia
defeated SL Louis, 6-3. VnBayet
added has 12th homer in the ninth
for two PbiladeJphia insurance
runs ... Steve Garvey slammed
three hits, including a two-run homer, and Kevin
McReynolda drove an three rul)s as San Diego defeated
rtouston, 9-S.
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Great American Gl --llNDCA first ..
ftr I
J
Phin~ey gets his medal
U.S. cycllngteam
settles for bronze
inf reeway race
By HOWARD L HANDY ........... °""" ......
CAR ON -Cahforn1a'1 freeway
ystcm may never be the same apin.
Some 26 nations with 104 ndcrs
and their escort C3rJ took over a 17·
mile stretch of tht 9 I (Riverside)
Freeway Sunda)' for the IOQ..kilo-
meter team lime tnal of the XXlllrd
Olfmp1c Games.
he Italian team; u ina bik~ with
'iolid wheels of a fiber yet unknown to
the U.S ·and other nations, finished
first by more than four minutes with
the American team picking u~ the
bronze medal. Switzerland finished
s.ccond, 8/ I OOth~ of a ~nd m front
of the U.S. •
The event concluded the cyclin&
ponion of the 1984 Olym1>1c Games.
The California Highway Patrol cstir
mated a crowd in execs of 7S,OOO
viewed the race from variou vantage
points on overp:a se and alona the
sides of the freeway in an event that
wa) balled a1 a non-spectator race.
Davis Phinney of the U. S. four·
man team. picked up a medal that
eluded him in the road race at
Mi ion Viejo a week earlier. His
Wife, Connie Carpenter-Phinney,
~n ihc women• Id medal m r
CJn& t Mission iejo.
.. rm glad l could 1panially keep
wuh the wife;• Phinney id ntr
winnina the bronze.
"Afterthcr d oe, 1 wa linlebit
Jct down. I had to battle to get my
momentum bad: forthi race. I felt to
good for the road race. 1 couldn't
come back 100 percent .
"The heat also affected us out th
today. I felt good for three-quarters of
the race, but the I st 15 miles (60
overall) was tough. My eyes chHled
and my suit was soa1'ed. Our helmeu
do not aJlow any ventilation to the
body.
"I was almost hallucinatina at tbe
finish. I nearly toppled over r. was ao
hot. All the hqu1d in my body wu
·gone." . ·His wife had said she was retinoa
from nacin& and would help him to
realize his potential. Another Olym·
pie medal isn"t in his current plans,
however.
"I don't know in could ever top the
experience of ridina in the Olympi
in America. I fed so aood about the
expencncc. 1 don't th1Dk I could ever
10 beyond thi~."
U.S. within game
of clinChing gOld
Like so many other Amencan
athletes when they finish a race and
even after they are through with their
events, Phinney was proudly carryina
a small American flaa.
"Rlaht now I want to eQJoy the
Olympics," he added. • I'd really like
.. to get to the village and__gct a little of
the flavor of it all. w.e•ve been.riding
in the hills at San Juan Capistrano
and Laguna Hills this week in trainin&
and haven't been to the village yet.
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Cheryl
Miller and Anne Donovan led the
unbeaten U.S. women on an 18·2
spurt opening the second half Sunday
and the Amcncans went on to crush
Canada 92-61 . The victory moved the
United States wathm one g.amc of
clinching a gold medal m Olympic
basketball. ·
That five-minute burst, both
coaches agreed. settled the outcome.
"At the stan of the second half, we
rea1Jy broke down," Canadian Coach
Don McCrae said. "Credit goes to the
Amencaos, They shoved the ball
inside as well as some men's teams
_40. We wer moouog poorly fr~m the
penmcter."'
Pat Head Summitt, deviating from
her p«?hCy of not talking about
individuals, singled out Cheryl Mill-
er's performance in the run.
"Miller took four charges and
tipped m a shot.'' the University of
Tennessee coach said. "The momen·
tum went our way. It had been
Canada's game in the first half.''
McCrae contends the U.S. women
have been more dominant than their
unbeaten male counterparts. The
Canadian coach 1'n't even sure he
could beat the United States with all·
stars from the other five nation here.
"The American men are •oing 10 have some battles left." he said.
The U.S. women have been so
overwhelming that their smallest
victory mlflin has been 28 polDts.
... think the competition as fine."
said Miller. "We've just played well
I'd rather win by a large spread than
have it close.''
Miller and Anne Donovan each
scored three baskets in the first five
m1Dutes of the second half and helped
tft'Umted wcs to-a -cML
The Americans used their rcvolv-
ing~oor substitutions to wear down
Canada, 2-3.
A fifth consecutive triumph in the
preliminary pool moved the United
States to within one decision of the
country's first gold medal in the
women's spon.
The Amencans will face South Kott-a for a second t1mf" At ., p m
Tuesday ID the Forum
tvOLLEYBALL VICTORY •••
"This has been a Iona year of
r.reparataon. I've ridden somethUlg
kc 11 ,000 miles preparin1 for the
Olympic Games and 1 want to set
wmc rest. . "We used the bikes with solid
wheels Friday in tna1nan1 for about a
half hour but they arc so heavy oo the
road -the ones we have. They are
good for short races on the track It
ma&ht have been different for the
ltafians 1f there had been a wind
today.
"Phys1cal~y l don't thi_ll,k.. we were
any less prepared than any other
team."
BENOIT •.•
From Cl
gone wrong?"'
Something went wrong less than
four months a$o." Just 17 days before
the Olympic tnals. Benoit underwent
anhroscopac knee surgery. She
lhought ofa mural of herself that had
been placed on a wall outside the Los
Angeles Memorial Coliseum where
her run IDtO history ended Sunday
• , morn1Dg.
P-· 1•1 .. 1.-: <111. 1~10 -.a-.. llOCNftlJllte.l_.... .. ~thatwe "They've put 1t up for nothi"I at
rtoaCl
-~· v-,., .,...,, .,.. • -•• --"' all." she thou&ht at the lame. "I won't won cwsJepM. 1~10. 16-7, 1M. ..lted to apoee the o-ne to the even be there." GreenweeoneoftM~ publtc.Ow.rtt'Mta.t 10)'Ml'tmor• 'But she was wrong. She won the
once "*" &lndev ~t. At one people Mw become lm.r.eted In tnals easily.
point lhe got Into aile1d •· ~ than any oth« game In "It took me pbout four weeks after
changt with one of the Ptrwf*t thta country. We feel *Y heppy the Olympic Trials to realize what t pla~ ~that Hlmed to o-t her abOut that." bad done." she said. "To this ~ay. I
teammatee going. When the P«uvtant t~ the flrst stall don't know how I managed to
"I dOn't.,... Bs**h." Grein game acore at 14 after t,....ng, quahfy."
N&d. "But f WM ICt'emninO actoet 12~Jt-.ppeenid they might h•ve And now she doesn't know why
the Mt Md t ttMnk It ma.de UI more the momtntum to wtn. nobody chased her Sunday. ·
agg~. Ro ( Hyman) and' Alta ''We toet our motnerlium on "I ran most of the race today by
(CrOckett) ~got lntO the game attack," Sellnger MJd .• ·•1 Juet tokJ myself, and most of my training as by
then. them to g.t 90fMthlng extra on "mystlf, so I was very comfortable out
0,..,. aayt aft« Tuelday'a · thetr~endhWOlt<edllkettdld there today." Benoit said. "I'm sur· a--ft._ no lmmfdt.te plel"8 fn Wt1f1fY other e-ne. pnscd nobody went with me because
for the :tueure. "I would tlke to "-'o "Now that w. haw madi the· the I 0..kilom~ter split (about a quar-
Cteu llop .._ Mtt•. BUt I wonTt nnate, f do not worry enymore and I tcr of the .~ay mto the race) was not all
be ooelllil-O •teem.·• don't think the teem lhc>uld worry that fast . • u.a ~ Arte = Mid anymore ..... would hav. been Benoit s:ud .she wasn t bothered by · . ~ ==.-... tf .. ......_ • ._ .. _ ...... the smoggy air dunna the race and tM IWft hed ~ .._ ~ we.-.t..,~t,,. added that she never really felt ~ helMld Mt. , A little ~ted tf threatened by her competition. 'TM next ~ Wll 1Je ..._ we dkln t C, to the .But now "I followed the yellow brick road
Yliled,•• he tekJ. ''~ W get rm ~. Ch!!'-Is a WfY 50 to speak. I said LO myself, 'you feei the~ medal or not. aur ~ rapectable teem, aa1d Selinger. too good to blow this one ....
Reds consult football play book
Andasaresult, Cincinnati
tops Dodgers in 11 inntngs
CINCINNA TJ (AP) -Cincinnati Reds third
baseman Skeeter Barnes got a big hit to tie the pmc in the
ninth inning Sunday, but his I J th--mnina slide into Los
Angeles second'bascman Steve Su proved to be an even
baucr hit.
Barnes upended Sax to break up a potenttal double
play and 11ve Cesar Cedeno the openana he needed to score
on the play leadin& to the Reds' 2-1 vaetory over the
Dodgers.
"I "layed a hulc footbaJI today -defensive safety,"
--sctrncsJoked. "But I don't hkc it."
Barnes sin&Jed Wlth one out in the ninth to tie the
game 1-1 again t Dodger starter Fernando Valenzuela.
who took-a bid for htS firstuf'CCf' one-hittet"1nto the nint.tl.
Jerry Reu . 2-S. relieved Valenzuela in the bottom of
the 11th and urrcndered a lead-off sin&Je to Cedeno. who
then wu ~cnficcd to second. Sames drew an intenuonal
walk to set up the double play, and Dave Van Gorder bit a
1rounder to shon,top Dave Anderson to play into lhe
Dodgers' hand
But Bame shd hard into Su as he took the flip from
Anderson for the force. knocking the second baseman to
the vound. Cedeno kept runnina around third, and Sax
repined his feet and .made a wild-throw home over the
head of C'"1tcher Mike Scioscia for an error.
"I probably rushed it," Sax said of the throw ... But J
felt l had a shot to get him."
Sax had worried that Barnes would bowl him over on
a double-play try. Barnes also took Sax out hard on a ninth-
inning force play after Barnes~ single had tied the pme.
"l thought about that before the pitch," Sax said. "I
knew he was goina to be on me if we didn't hold him (on
first base). He was there when-I pot the ball."
"They didn't J\old me on. had a bia lead," Barnes
said. "l was nght on top of him." ·
The Dodgersuain failed to s~n Valenzuela, who
gave up Just the two tins i:n IUlnoinas and fanned 10 to
move two ahead of the New York Mets' Dwiaht Oooden
for the maJor-leaaue trikcout le~ with 167.
The Dodgcrs have scored one run 01 less in 10 of
Yalenzuela's 1.ast 19 starts. The left-bander hasn't beaten
ttftr ~dBtncc-Jont'13"0ftast yw.
It appeared Valcn7uela would finally end the streak of
futihty 'unday, desp_ite the continued weak om~nsive
suppon. But a lead-off walk to Eric Davis in the bottom of
the ninth led to the tyina run.
Davis was crificcd to second. and Valentuela then
tos~ a wild pitch to put him on third. Nick wsky drew
Valenzuela' ~ix th walk of the same and Barnes dnlled a
1-2 pitch to left field 10 tie the game.
ANGELS, TWINS IN SPLIT DECISION •••
From Cl
..
don't want to do it set swept. I think tb1~ is a bit plus for us."
*
J
..
.•
·.
XXllt OL Y~AO MMll ....
Meclalt IOl•ta ltltovol'I SundeV'a 1vent1 et lht 1,.. Symrnw Olvmi>lc• Wlfll COUl'llrY, told. allvw, wonit •!'If total medals won .... lever lnna.Tttlt Ulll!tOllelft '1 . .,,
WttlOtrmnV 7 11 •ornellla IS • Clll1111 ,, ' Cane de •• • Aldtr1ll1 , 7 Jepa11 7 ' Gt .. tltllahl 2 ' '''"' • 2 ,,.ll(;e 2 ,
Swtdeft 0 5 ·Nt~s 2 2
"nlaflCI , 1
MealCO I 2 '°""' Kor .. 1 2 ~ 1 I VlltlOtle~la I 0
$w11Ht1e!MI 0 ,
Newl.Mlt"<I 2 0
DIMWI"' Norwev Greece
Auttrl.t ltHI
c~ Ptru
SMln l'ortaeet
Tttwan
Vt11t1utla Jetnelca
0 I
0 I
0 1
0 I
0 I
0 1
0 I
0 I
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
Rtwlnt
(et Lall• c:atltll)
MllN'I f'INALI ...........
14 t2 n >O s ,.
' t• 7 21
10 20 • lt
II " .s lS • 10
I 10
4 • 2 • I 4 I 4
2 4
' ' 2 4
I ,
2 )
2 ,
I 2
l 2
0 1
0 I
0 l
0 I
l I
l l I I
I '
l K~ (f'lnlefld), 7;00.24; 2 l(oftlt
(WM! Germelw), 7.-Z..lt; 3. Miit (Canada),
7:lUI; 4. ...... (~ S'9tlt), 711WJ ..
lberre (Artentlne), 7;14 Sf, 6 Kontomanoll1
(Greec.), 7:17.0J o.-. le* .._,,en 1. u..M ..... ,........, ...... ,.
6:lU11 2 .... tum (o.toof, Crol1), 6:311';
J. VU90llevla (Panek, Stanuklv), 6:Jt.59; 4
wa1 Gtrmenv. 64041; s. uaiv. u.a2t; 6.
C.AllM, 6:A6 ..
~aln Wiit cu
1. llafY (C. A...,_, G. Allba10 .... DI
C..U.), 7:0t."; t llOl'Mllta '"°"'°"· Tomof"8, R~), 7:1l.211 I. Ulllllf ...._ <• .......... MtNM), 7:1Ul1 ..
8'ad, 7:17.17; S. caneM, 7:1Lfl; 6. W•t
Gw1t•1;, JS1'.. • hlrlWMliilUt-Cn
I. Romtnla (k>Wb, Tom.), 6:AU9; 1
Soeln (Clll'liem, L.awrt90uJ>1 UlA7; 3.
florway (0,...,.Ud, LA*tnJ, 6:51.11; ..
Franc.1 U2.5'; S. ltelY, 6:SUI; 6. Un1t9t1
...... \D91l.llft, """"'~ 6:MM. , ..... Wiit Q.
1. GrMI artteln (Crou, •UdOett,
Holmet, R~Y_!,_ 81lton), 611U4; 1 ............ , ................ a.a;"""" -,...._,, 6dl.il; I New Z.lencl <L.awton,
Symon, Ma«ltlett, Tont, '4olllt1ttr), 6:23.61;1
4. 118"', 6:26.M; S. CeMda, 6:21.71; 6. Wal
Germanv, 6:3oUJ. Peun....,.cn
I. New ZMland (()"Connel, O'ari.n.
Rotiertson, Tra6k), 6!0341, t. Unlt9tl S•M
(Cllrti, """"' ..... ,.,..,, ...... ; 3. Dtnma"', (JftNll, Nle!Hn, RMIT!U&Hll,
CtW'lit1a11te11>. H7.n ; ' wnt Gtrmanv.
6'M.27; S. Swlt1trtenc:I, 6M '°' '· SW9den, 6:11.71. ~
---MllleWt Cm • r. ww GtrNnv <~. "°""*"'· Wledlnmllnn, DurlCtl), s.s7-"" 2. Australia
(RMdV, GIAloc:tl, Mcl.ertn, Lovrldl).
U7.fl; ) CellNa (HatnUIOf'I, HUllllM,
Mondlton, Ford), 5..5907; '· tlalV, 6:00N; S
France, 6-0US; 6. Spain, 6"04 "· .._. __ Ca
1. Cenede <Turner, Ntuftld, fM(tl
Evans, Mein, SI .... , Mltl• Evans,
Crawford, Hotm, McMahon), 5.4U1, t.
UntM Ste .. 1 ( LWMft, SuUUftl, T_.....,, """9Y, ~ ~. a... ..................... ,. "41J4; J.
Au11r11t• <Muller. Hmr~ P•ll•n.
WlloufNW, Ectmuncll, a.tterlbv. PoH,
Evens, Tilrtdeolcl), u:uo; .. New ZMlancl,
SU.I,, S. GrMt lrttaln, SA7.0l; 6. Frel'ICll, 5-M 5'; 7. Ctllne, 6:G7A
1'4MIM
(It LAN a.di)
OUAtlTH,INALS
ll•IV def GrNI lrltaln, 2·f ffrenc. def. China ,.,,
A1.11trle def • ..,.Jum 4·f
Wttt o.rmanv def UnlltO Sletn J•t S•Ml,INAU
tlalY def, Frence 7·t ,
Wnt o.rmenv d.t. Austrle J·f MOHH MIDAL France def. Austria )·f
GOLD M•DAL
llalY def. Wttl 0trmt11f 7·1
w..-.,. ftmnlltkt (etP...,,.._.
• 'LOCM 8X8aCtM 1. acaterltle &11to, lltomenla, 1u1s
Po1ntL 21 Jullannt McN11M1e, Sin "-"*'·
1UIO; '· MMY I.au llttti.n. ''""'°"'• w.ve , "nsi '-ZllOu Qfurut, Clltne, 1uu1 t.. ROl'lll K•tltr, S•llrtrland, 1U7.; 6. Me
VtMonl, Clllnl, lUI01 7. Meltll Marlo,
J111i1n, 1' '751 t, l.•ur• Cutlne, lltome111a,
lf, llO
'-~ --
Olymplc schedule-~
Today
IAlllAU
Cito.-.,~, f!t P.trl. -Two urntt 111mn IASk•TaA~
,., .. "'"""' .... Wied) 10 1.m•l::IO Pm -Twa men•a .uarltrflnll nmn
S·UO o.m -Two men'• u.r•arfllllf
tltMn IOJCIHO
(at LA S~ ,lrtna) I UO a.m. ·2.o.m . -Pttllmt •·NO 11.m -Prfllma CAMOllNO
lat Ventllfa) •
7.:*)•1045 ern -MMl't •!Ml women'• IOl).mtter llMti; men•• IN!
WOl'l\ttl't 500-t!*tr rffKflare , ••.• S Ptn -~··Ind Womlll'I 500-l'N!tf Malt. ,,,.,, ....... women'•'°'"""'" r~r• DIVING
l•t USC)
•:J0--6 11 m -Wome.1'1 Mlf'lnObOttd nn.11 ' ,llLD HOCKIY
(at ... lM A..-.) uo II m -irnenl WHI Gtrmtn'I ...
llldll
• 1S 0 .11'1.-(wonvn) w Grmnv n ""' l.lnd HA NOIA LL (at<af ,,.,. ,........,,
11 1.m.-<men> Wall Germano/ n Korea
IUO P m.-<met1l Otnmerlt "' Swtdell 2 o.m.-(IMfl) Soeln vs U S A
6:30 p.m -(l'Nn) Romenit vt Jeoa11
I 11.m.-(!Nn) Jl(ffl VI A!Mflt
f'lO P.tn.(mtfl) Yuvotlavl• VI S'#llttr·
land JUDO
(at Cll Mite LA)
H Ml. -~a•rrt•
<•t~alNlnl)
7•10 o.m. -Quarterflnar ma1c:11 at., ... Ant
S·7 o.m. -qu.,-tlf"fl1111t m11~11
TRACK AHO "BLD
Cat LA CtftMUm)
t a.m.·12JO 11.m. -Polt vault, men••
200 l'Mferl (first Ind MCOnCI rounds), l ,000
mtitr <flrat round)
4•7:15 P.m. -Flllllla In -wem.n't 400 end
IOO, womtft't levtlfn; flllllt In man•t
llemmtr tf\l'ow, lone lumo, IOO, 110-meltf
llurcln. 10.000 mtters; Ml'l'l<flMll In women'• .-.meter lluf'dlel, mefl'a a.
metera; ""' round of l ,000-m.ier ,,...,.. cheM VOLLIYaALL
CetL-a.dl)
10 e.m.·2 p.m -Arpenllne vL Tunisia, CIMde va.. JaHn
6:3t>-10-l0 p.m -EJYPt n lletv, United
$1elft VI.. lrHI WATBlll flOLO
(et l'llJI ... M.-ul
'INAL ROUNDS
1:30 -Vuvo11e111e vs. Australia
10 -CNne vs JaJlell ~ -~Qlltd Stein
l wc.nMe "'7Gt-.. · "-===
7:30 -lreill "' llatv ' -SHiii .,., Welt ~l'MllV WllGHTLlflTING
(et ~--l'VIMUftt, w.......,,
2•4 P.m. -Haavvwelotll• •·• p.m. -H"vvwelllllt•
,.,.
)>'-
WOMEWS 9ASKITIALL
United Stlltn H. <:aftlcla 61
(et .. f'IN'I'!)
CANADA -PollOtl •2 2·3 2. McAre
1-1 H 2, PendarAll 2·' H 4, HUO.nd l•S
0-0 :z. $Mir( 0-2 0·0 •• L.a"9 •·1' ·-· 12, Smllll ,_, MO IS, SwatMY 1-10 2·3 t .
Clarttto11·~ 1-1H2, ataaw .. 4·12 Cl-I
I, Tilotnu 3-' 0-0 6. Totatt D·6' IS·U 61
UMITID STAHi -EdWwO. l·J 0.-0 2,
Hanrv 1•2 2-t '• Wooderd 4-1 2-2 ICJ,. Donovan 4·t" 2·2 1', aoaw.11 t-J H o. ·
Miiier 6•10 0-3 12. L.awr~ 4•0 1·2 t,
Notlle 4•4 2·l 10, Mulkav J·6 1-2 7. CutTV ,., a·4 '· McG.e •·• .... •• Mankan· ~ a-• 1-2 7. TotelS 3t·,. l4·22 tt,
Halflf,,,...:;...{Jnltld St1tn 41·31. FouiaO
out-imUll. R~•nad• '9 <uno, $WMM't, &ledlwel 5). Untied Stein 42
<Miiiar 7). Aulata--<anaci. • !Smlll'I 2),
United Stain 2) (HM\rv 7) Tott!
toull-<entde 24, United Stet" 22. °""' ~ Soutll Kor~ 6t, Clllne "
Mlft'I bellr.tblil (at ... ,..,,.,,,
kMIV'I tc... een.. ...... 11 ....
areau 100, France "
Fletd Mell...,
(at •nt Lft Me111M c.laeal
S..Y"• "-" -· NN N-Z..latld 4, Kenva I
GrMI arttelft 4, Natharlanch l
Paklttan 7, Clntda I
WOMSN
Nel'*"-ncla I: Wftl Garmany 2
YACHTING
tat '--... Cll) 100-. 11.m -F rea
Tueaiky
IAlllALL
(el Dtdllr ~)
4-11 p.m. -Two final aames
IASKITIALL , .... ,enim, .......... ,
l•I'° 11.m -T" final .. 11'111. 111 llVOUQh .,,.
IOXtNC) , ..... ...,. ....... ,
tlem9'11.tn.-,., mt •·HO 11.m. -,.,tllms
IQUHTRIAN
I~·-S o.m. -m J~
ottnM1111on
l•tArc.~·
f'INCI
(It ..... a.di) '•Jft ·I II rn -Min'• IMm fOil ,, .. !mt ,_., lndMdual aaora llW~; tn11t'•
~· .. .,, nnaw 1•11 11 1'1\. -~'• ,..,,. loll wal&m. mtn'I ~1cfuel .. _,, Wadl'N; IMft't
lndlvlduel ......
Pl8LD HOCKIY
, .... It Lea~)
I e 11'\.-fmanl Pakl1t111 n. Gl'Mt arttatn
t0 llft.~Womafl) Hoiand VI c.aMda
1 4S p m.-(WOfT!aft) Auilrella v1. u.s A
) 'JO II "' -<mall) HolleM "' I(""*"' GYMHASTICI
lat U{01
530-130 • m. -Man'a uaratua 1111911 HA .. DBAtL
(If Cll ..... ,..,..,
'lO o.m -<women> Cllkla 111 Austr1e
I 11 m -<womat1l Vueollevl• vs. Koru
•JO P.m -(womenl United SlelH 111
Wtst Garmenv JUDO
(It Cal l19N LA> •·• u n. -Helf mldctlewalohll
T•NNIS
(et UCLA)
t a.m.·5:30 o.m. -1' metctln
VOLLRYIALL
(at LAN ...0)
10 • m ·2 • m -Women'a tlnelt, 5111 llVOUlh Ith tllJllQt
4·6 p.m -lro1111 INdet tame CJeMll
vs. Peru)
U0· 10-JO o.m.-Golcl t'l'l9dal ..,.,... (U.S.
"'. C"'"8) WATElll flOLO
(tt l'I JI ... Mi99)
UO -UNled Sletaa on. Austraila
10 -Graace vt Jlloan 1 >O -VU90llevl• vt. Waat Gef'mpy , -ti efy .,., Ctlill8
7.lO -., ... VI. CIMde
' -HOllalld "'• SMln Wll.IGHTL1"1NG
(et L..-.M91.,,.llllt W......_l
t·4 P.m -HMvvWelOhta
.. , p.m. -Hetvvwe!Ohtl
WllllSTLING
, .. MaMllM}
Hoon-3 pm. -Fr"'tYla Ol'fllml .,.,:30 p.m -Fr .. tYla ortliml
YACHTING
(et LAfte a.di) 1J0-6:JO 11.m. -Shell! rece
'-i-
/)
T..m "8nclilal atandlnel
GaOUf'.
W L T Pft
ltome.,11
VutOllevla
6wlt1tr\lllCI
!Qie!td
Ai.er~ Jeo.n
3 0 0 ' , 0 1 5
2 I 0 4
1 I I 3
0 ) 0 0
0 l 0 0 GttOUft.
• D«wnerk J O o ' 71 '° Waat Germany l 0 0 ' S7 52 $110ldall 2 l 0 4 74 " $Nin 1 1 0 2 63 " UnJted Stein O l O 0 S3 " South l(Cl(H I 3 0 0 " " TNIY"I 09mn
Wnt Garmenv v1 Soutll Ko<•
Dallltltrk 111. Swtdall
Spain v1 Unit" Stlln It omanle .,.. JeOlll
lcalend Vt. A'"'1a
YUOOtlevle vs. Swltttrland
• )~
Mlft'I Veievbll ~
GaOUP A . W L. l'b ~ PA UnOICI Stataa ., ... > o ' 1•5 n 2 I 4 14' 121
Kor•
Arean11111
TunaMI
2 1 4 Ill 106
I 2 2 121 IU 0 4 0 6' Ito
NOUf' a 4 0
3 I 2 I
I 4 0 4 T,_Y'• OWMI
C•nada "' Japan ltttv VI. Ecrvot United ,, .... VI lrazn
ArtM!llW ill -aum KWM
• 1'7 "' ' 167 II)
• '" 126 2 142 20S 0 100 113
w .. ..
(8'PHJIF ... )
MllDAL. aOUMD
TtMl W L. T ~ PA Pt1
UnltlCI Sle._ I 0 0 10 I 2
waa1 Germanv t o t to t 2 V~vlll I t t 7 2
S.ln 0 1 011. Hollfld 0 1 0 47 0 Austr.ne o I O 6 10 o
TODAY'S ICHIDUL.•
1:30 • m -VUllMllvle .,.. Australia
10 e.m. -Cllll\e n J8Hft
l::at 11.m -Unllld s .. tea n HOllN > o.m.. -Cetiada .,.. Greec. ) J;lO 11.lft.. -.,., • .,... lle!Y
' o.m. -S..ln n. Wet 0."'8'1Y
TV•SOAY'S ICH•OUU
0'.311 t.m. -Unl!ICI Sta._ VI• AAntrtlle ... •·"'--"'· ,.... ~ o.m; --YU90&la"18 .,.. W•I Ger-~
menv • > 11.m. -ttelV vs Chine 7:30 11'.tn. -arezl .,. Caneda
• 11.m. -~ VL S..ln
THUUDAY'S ICHIDULI
1:30 a..m. -Unttld Stat.. VI WMI Garmenv
10 a.m. -a.11111 .,.. aretR
liJO tM'll -Miatraa. VL Holaad
3 o.m. -CIMde n . JllHll
7:JO 11.m. -ttatv vs. Greace
t 11.m. -YUIOllavla.,.. S..ln
'9UDAY'S SCH•DULI l:lO e.m -Wnt 0.IT!an'I .,.. Holland
10 un. -.JaHn .,. ar.111
1:30 11.m. -5"1t1 vs Austra
J 11.m.-~ ••Ir.!¥
7.30 11.m. -Chine vs Greac. t 11.m. -Unl!ICI Stalaa n Vutlllllvla
MM'I cvdft9
. (et C:.-)
ROAD RAC• TWAM TIMS TlllAL
I. 118"', 1.9.21; 2 Swllter1end. tin.JI. 3
Uniled Slelaa (ROMICI Kltftl, ltov
Knlduna11. Devis PtllMav. Andrew
WMWI'), 2;()2.4', 4. Net'*1Mdt, 1'02.57, S. Swadan, 2'0'M; 6. Franc:., HS.07, 7.
• Oellmartl, 2-os.Jl, • GrMI arttall't, 2:05.jl; t. Vueotlevle, 2:05 SS. 10. Norwev, ffi.05.
.......
(et~....,,,
S..Y"• sar. c ....... J-4
South KOfM 7, Nturaoua 6
Chinese ·diver
tops McCormick
as No. 1 quaJifier
c 1 todly,~ .IJ .-kt ... waa a liale
ncn·ou1, bul 1ner leVcrlJ diva I Wltl
vet) rdUed ..
Flftt u.a. bcmn1 lw
LOS A GEi.ES-ddrick ~ay-FroJD. AP dllpa&daet lot, 1 17..year-old fca~t. led
LOS ANGELF.S -Li Yu ua -or three more U.S. bOxtn IDIO
China outluted Kelly McGomuct of quattcrfuW.s of lhc OlrmPIC boUll
Columbus. Ohio, Jn a ttle tounwnml, but,.R.obert SMnnaa
Sunday to bcc(\me the top qualtficr s stopped by una·.Kil Moon of
forton1&ht's finals in womcn·s Olym· South KOtt.a,
pie sprinlb<>ard diving. Joiruna the i2s-pound Tl)'lor •
Li was ihe leader of 12 divcn v.1io nnm were PtmeU Whitaker, ~
reached tht finals, IOOnng SI 7 .92 132.pound dao World cb.lmpioa,
poinu to S 16. 7S for Mt'COmuck. and Jerry Pqt, at 139
whose mother, Patty. won l\\O divitta • hannon•s losi left the U4Kecl we
said medal in both the t9S2 and lhe th 8 19.1recordand11 boxers 1 • l 9S6" Olympics. · lh u · Li was rn fourth . plAct a!\(r fh·e ln e .compe boo.
1 tbr~c J>tchmm•ry.. Wb1~. ofNorft Va .. :r.'WU==-~the~·---1i!'9'1 but ihe jumped into first place with st i\mcncan an OD Su aoay.
ber seventh d ive, an inward 2'/J he uled a fOOd nahtjab, left leadn:Dd
somersault from a tud' PoS1l1on. be CC>f1?binauons ltO pouDd out a 5-0
scored 6S.61 poinu on the dive/the dea ion over Geofrey Nyek.o oJ
hi&best point total of the day. Upnda. Whitiker. wbO wllf :filJ:n an
McCormick, 24t came ba~k 'With the quanerfinals Tuetdly .n.Jsht, 111191 ~.68 points on her ei&hth dtve, a JUSt too &lick for me Upndan.
revc:~ 21h some!sault lrom the tuck Taylor. Jooki~ very im~ve, ~tion, to rcaam the lead by 1.17 ICOrell a S.() dec::iSIOD over F:randlCO
points. . Camac.hOofMnicoinlbe 12~
But L~ outscored McCorm~ck -clas Sunday ni&hL
who rqistercd an all-tame h1ah of .
SS9.3S points in winnina the sprioa-M ~ boC:~ b~:!~ anotber bo&rd at the U.S. Olymptc trials last extcan ~nn.s .,~~ ~
month -63.()()...6LS6 10 the ninth pm,. sconna • S..O dccisaoa o
round and 63. 9()..63.00 on ttie la t CktaVlo Robles at 139 po~
dive to win the No. l sccdina for the Shannon, the U.S. l l~pouad ~
medal round Of 10 more divei, tttentativc, WIS mocked CloWn twice
.. Today was jus1 the prelims, but 1 ao.d stopped by Mocm 1t I: 14 of Che
hOJ)e tomorrow the judaina is the third round.
LEWIS WINS GOLD •••
-PromCl ;;p ~
bUii c:tNerect and ,sa.1<1 mucb of his the happy Enquist i.bout tticir times
-mental technique came from ruding while prepariq.. ••But I wu the stn>kt
Ptak Performance. and bad the lutuy. We bad to keep ..
Both admitted they were furious each other happy."
with tbeqJsclves for k>sina in their Tbeydidn'tentertbefinaluntbtbe oriaina.l h'Cat on Sunday, but LewiS favorite's role, but Lewis said be felt
said in the lona run, it was the bHt confident, espetjallY, after studyiq thin& that could have happmed. beat and repecbav~ "J thoQsbt
.. We learned SQmethinJ in the beat.. we'd be in tbe thick of it." be aid.
and we learned someth1oi apip in .. But it was the West Germam wbo
the re~~· "!'hieh was 1mponant I was worried about. .. Tbc CicmWI
to us, said 1..ewi5. boat finished fourth. out of the
When it was over they took their 111.oney, ho\dina that politioo vil'-
place in front of the &randstands to tUally all of the way.
accept the go1d medals and 11o'&tcb the The Bcl&iwn boet of Picrfe.Marie American f\aa hoisted betTtecn Dtloof c3 Dirt Crois p lhe jump
Be ·um and Yujoslavi.an flap. oa the field aAd led 1bc U.S. cuuy:by
en ttWis da.tRd 1nto lbe crowa llmost thtU ~ "lt"1001Jfe1Cie1t
and pvc the gold medal to his dad.._ maintained its lead \brou&b l.SOO
David. to hold. meten. bu\. tben LeWis and' Enquiu
.. I wanted him to hold ii for me," twued it on. \
wd the younaer Lewis. "He's as The U.S. ~t'«ptits were l:37.4S;
.ppy, maybe happier Ulan me. He 3:1'.0S&Dd,:Sl.7lbefore · • in
cc;>uld hardly talk. he was beside 6:36.87. BelJJum's spliu · were
himse1t:•• l::M.75. 3:14.93 and 4:56.29 before
Lewis stood there m front of the 6rusb.ina in 6:.38.19.
packed stands,. bold.in& his clenched Y\.llOslavi,Jike West Gemia!lYJ.i:i
fists b.tlh in ~owlccfsina the ova-founhjQce.naycdverycJosetothi.rd
tion, while Enquist waved. from start to firiUh to tet the bronze
Then they rowed off to store their mcda.I in 6:39.59.
boats with the easiest strokes of their Lewis and Enquist turned the field
lives. inside out becaux of their detennina·
The two had spent about $21500 tion and work, but when they bad
eac~_ JOina the route they tooK to what they wanted., the aold medal,
qualify for the American team (car many of their thou,hts were directed
rentals, motels, food and boat rco-toward othen-trainer Mitch Lewas.
tals), and it had been a Iona hauJ to the Brad1s cousin wbo be called a "God·
top to beat the odds. send" becaux of his physiw help.
Lewis was beaten by su inches by the entire UC Irvin.c boathouse, MiU
John BiJJow for the riaht to represent Livioastonc .. a. form.er Cal coach, and
this nation in the slll&le sculls. even Lewis' employer ....
Irorucally, JUSt minutes later. "1 swted with' Wells Farao Bank
Biglow firushed founh in the single (in Newport Beach) with the Otympic
sculls, never challengina for a medal. Job Opportwiitiet Prolnm three
Althouah Enquist was s.impl) cut. ycan qo," said Lewis. ""l could n.01
be said be wasn't bitter -that have done it witbO\lt their help."
perhaps the deasion was justified. So, it is over for thete nwo 29-year-
Nevertheleu, the two didn't aive olds. theY:,ft~ their aold medals up and combined. and they're itqui\s. Tbedrc:am
"He did most of the talkina. ••said bas been fulfilled.
UCI PRODUCTS •••
From Cl
One newsman1 who appeared
to be well vened in rowina, asked
aloud, "How tn the hell did that
happen?"
Answering were Canada•s
Dean Crawford and Ibbetson.
"We ..-ere hanaina on." said the
Canadian. "You put your heads
down and give evef)'te~I you
have and today we had enouah.
There wasn't even an~ adrenalin
I
r
• _ .... _,._
I
j
racy Caul -ins,
t the age of 21,
decide · to retire
l.OSA'NQ -'11 y ul inso( a 'a hville; Ten • the m<Kt led
WJmmer 1n Un11t'd &al hi tory and the
wtnner of three Sold medal1 '" 1ht 19a.. OJymp' ,
mired "unday a1 the ofl 1, JO•nana a arowan' h11 of
lcammatn
uJkani id retum1na to th Univ
of Florida for bet ~•or y r to pursue her jou map.
.. f' m full o4"fond mcmones," uid ulluns ... h baa
been a wondetfµI and enjoy blc 1w1mmina rcer. I
1t'J kind ohad."
A1tedaboutrepon' hewasonthevcrseof !'?1n1
a U00.000 cndonemcnt contract. c~ulluns taid . Bob
Fraley ((){Orlando. Ha ) it rcprC"1Cnt1n1 me and wiJI
tulvc to antwcr those Qucst1ont Endorwmcnt op.
ponunillct uc e.omethtn& fore1f!' 10 me. I've been
dJ u .!nl 10me 1h1np with him, •
lldtla Morelud'1srand1lam and one· ii hit rehe( pttchtn& by .Rkt Rftsdtel led
fint-place Clucaio to a ~ 3 vM: torr over the
Montreal Eltpot, the ciahth tnumph (or the < ubt 1n l O pmn ..• EISCYthere m the NauonaJ League:
Sunday. Jeff Leoar4'1 Jrlnd slam in the top of thr
ninth inning save new Giants Manaetr Daay Ozarls
ht\ firtt vie10ry of the tcaM>n et San Francisco defeated
Atlanta, 7-4 . Ge«se Post.er'• two-run, IOlh-mnma ~•nale folJowin& a key error by Piusbursh 1horUtop
...
Trio of Yanka one·hlt lncllan•
Veteran Bob EHtwood, who went n lhrouah 12 Iona )'cars without a victory,
acquired hi• \Ceond lltlc of the PG.A tour ~'°n Sunday an a tW<Htrokc tnumph 1n
the Memph" < laH1c. Eastwood, JI, who broke h11
career-long victory drou&ht in New Orica.JU ear11er th11
suson, won th•• one wttli a final round of par 72 and a
280 total, ctaht \hots under par on the 7,282-yard
C ·01onial Country Oub courw. h enabled him to JO'"
Tom Wattoll, Tom Xtc.t, Gres Normu. Pee.tr Jacobin
and Gary Kocla at muluplc ~•nncrt on the Amencan
tour. ,
Te~lon, radio
Dale Berra ht'ted the New York
Mru, behind 814 PenwtAlez and
rchever Wn Gardaer, to a l-1 Noan-2:30, 4-9, 9:3().;11 p.m. -OLYWIC
victory over the P1rato . . . GAl!ml: Track end ·n.kt. \'OleVbaff. bOXJng, < ard 1 nal1 reliever NdJ AJJn C*\Oelna, dMng. wet.-pok>, CMnnet7.
walud .r• Weckme11 and .. · ·4:36 p.m. -uta•AU.: Dodger• et Atlin~
Oule V!:r I w111)Jhc ba9n drd HCh~~-~-·~-~j.t!t~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~.: an lhe e rnutng "'t(,,u in Uii L: 9'ADIO
tte·bfea 1nl runs as Ph11.adclph.. 4:30 p.m. -•A-.U.L: Oodgef'I at Au.nta, •
ddcai.ed St. Louis, 6-3. V• Kaya KASC (790).
added hit 12th home:r in. the ninth 7:30. p..m. -•AmAU.: ~ 4t 8eattl9, for two PtuladeJphia insurance KMPC (110). run~ . . . a.eve Garvey •l~mmed MOMOA~• TV
three h1t1, 1nclud1n1 a two-run homer, and Ke\'la 8-10 a.m., ~2:30, +it, 0!30-11 p.m. -
Mdle1aotd1drove1n three runs at San Di.qo dcfca~cd Ol.VWIC OAme CMnnef 1. Houston 9-~. -'
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I C RSON -ahfom1a•1 freeway
sy1ico:i may never be the ume .in.
Some 26 nat1on1 Wrth I 04 ndcr1
and their CJCort car• took over'1l 17-
m11e ttetch of the 91 (R1vt'rs1de)
Freeway Sunday for the 100.kdo-mew t m tame tnal of the XXJflrd
Olympte Ciamn .
The Italian tt.am, usm1 bikes with
sohd wbecls of a fiber yet unknown to
tht U . and othtr nattont, fintthcd
first by more than four mtnutn with
the Amcncan team picking up the
branu medal. Swillerland finished ~c()nd. 8/IOOlh1ofa1oecond m front
of the US. .
'rhc e'1cnt concluded the cychn
po.ruon of &h 1914 Olympic Gam~.
The C llfom1 Highway Patrol t ti·
mated aowd in excess of 7S.OOO
vttwCCl lhC r c from van"us vantqe
points on overpa :s and along the
si~ of lhe freeway rn an event tti.t
was billed 111 non· ~pcctltor fllCC.
D v11 Phinney of the U. S. four·
man tc m, p 'ktd up a medal that
eluded hjm in the road race at
Minion Viejo a week earlter. His
wsfe, Connie Carpenter-Phinney,
on the women·• old medal 16 road
nc1111 t M1 ion CJO .. rm glad I could :paniaUy ~ up
wuh the re," Pbin· td wtnaa the bronze.
.. Anerther d • I
let doWn. I had to ti to I my
momentum for thi felt
for the road race, I couldn't
come k 100~1
"The h i alto afTC'Cled us out
today. 1 fell good for thrce-quarttn of
the race, but the Ja1t JS mtles (60
ovuall) wa1 touah. My cy ch1lltd
and my ult Wat ked. Our helr11et1
do not Uow ny ~entalatlon to
body. .. , wu almost halluan 1tn1 at lh
fin11h. I rly toppled over I w so
hot All the hqu1d in my body s
one:· • H11 wife had 111d the was n:unng
from racina and would help him to
realiu hit potentiJll. Another Olym.
pie medal 11n't in hit current plln1,
however.
"I don't know ifl could everU)pthe
upcricncc of ridina in the Oly
in Amertea. I f~l ao ~about~
upcnencc, I .d~'t think I could ever
1'1'.bc.ll'..OJlltl..lllil!..'..:~~~~......_,....,;..-_ ..
U.S. within game
of clinching gold
Like so many other Amencan
athlctc:t when 1hey fini h a taa nd
even after they arc throuJh wath their
events, Phinney wu proudly carryana a s.mall American flaa.
"R1Jtlt now I want 1o·cn1oy the
Ol~mpics." he added.' I'd really like
to act to the villa&e and ICt a httlc of
the flavor of it alf. We've bctn ndtna
in the hills at San Juan Capistrano
and Lasuna Hills this week in trainina
and haven't been to the viii St yeti
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Cheryl
Miller and Anne Donovan Jed the
unbeaten U.S. women on an 18-2
'pun open ma ~he ICCOnd half unda y
and the Amcncan1 went on to crwh
Canada 92-61. The victory moved the
United SutcJ w1th1n one same of
chnchins a aold medal rn Olympic
basketball. ·
Th.at five-minute burlt, both
c~he1 agreed. aettlcd the outcome.
"At the 1tan of the 1oecond half. we
really broke down " (anad11n Coach
Don McCrae taid "Credit socs to the
Americans. They 'hoved the ball
m11de 11 well a'...wme men'J team' cso. We ~et•t.hootu poorly from tne:
. perimeter ...
Pat Head Summitt, dc-via1in1 from
her policy of not talking about
indiv1duah, ainsJcd out Cheryl Mill-
et's pcrfonnancc in the run.
0 M1ller took four charges and
upped 1n a shot," the Univcn1ty of
Tennessee coad1 u1d ... The momen-
tum went our way.~ It had been
Canada's aamc in Che first half."
McCrae cont.ends the lJ.S. women
have been more dominant than their
unbeaten male countcrpans. 'The
Cana~han coach t1n't even wrc he
could beat the lJni&c-d States w11h all-
11.111 from the other five nations here
"The Ameracan men are eoina to
have aome battles left," he said.
The U women ha vc been \0
ovcrwhclm1n,1 that their 'm•lle\t
victory maraan has been 28 points.
••1 think the competition is fine.''
said MiJler ... we•ve just played well.
I'd rather win by a larie •pread than have it close:• ·
Miller and Anne Donovan each
JC.Ored lbrC"e baskets tn the fine five
minutaof1he-=ond tr.dfand~
t e United Statca to a S~·33 lead. ·
The American• used thefr revolv·
ma-door 1ubttllU11ons lo wear down
Canada, 2;3.
A tinh consccuuve triumph in the
preliminary pool moved the United
States to within one dec111on or the
country'• first aold medal tn the
women's pon.
The Arncrica1H w1U (ace South
Korta for a ~ond 11m,. iu 7 " m
T uc~y 1n 1tu• r orum
~
iVOLLEYBALL VIC~ORY •• ~ ..... c1
"T h1' tw been a Jona yc.ar of
preparation. J've ndden something
like 11 ,CJ<.tJ miles preperina for the
Ol ympic Games and I want 'lo Jet
wmc rest.
"We uw:d the bikes with solid
wheel, Fnday in trainina for about a
half hour but they arc so hca~on t.hc
road -the ones we have. They are
aood for short races on the track It
m1&ht have been different for lhe
ltafians 1f there had been a wind
loday ,. . •·Pn,,tc.lly f doo•t ltun •t wt
any l~s prepared than any otbcr
team." "
BENOIT ••• rromc1 ~
gone wrona"'"
5omechina went wrona less thin
four month' a$(>. Ju~t 17 days befo"
tht Olympic tnals. Benoit undcrwmt
lrthr()j(;OflC knee suracry. "he
lhouahl 0 a mural ofherKlf that hid
been plaud on a wall outside the L:ot
Anaele1 Mcmonal ( ohsc.vm where
her run into h1uory ended Sunday
morning.
Peru. 1 ... 14, 1M, 15-10. aft • ~. t e.ld .. ~ th.i W all:::r~:l;~~~J,\ ~t ~~e ;y:-n~~~~i;~n~~
WOftOWf....,.15-10.1,..7. tM. Wlnted to~tM~tc>1he even be thcrt'"
OrMftWllOMoftht----pi.Mo.OwwtNIMt 10)'91Rmor• Rut '.\he wH wrons She won the once .-In .._ nlafrt, At one peoS* MY9 b9oome ~ed In cnaJ, cu1ly.
P<*i -•got IMO a•Jtillited .... ~...,.,.. 1Mn *TY°''* ~ In • • " took me about four Weeki afkr
change wMft_ One of .,. ~ W. ~· We ,_ *Y h9PPY the Ol~mpic Tnals to reahJ.C what I ~Mdthet Hlmedto9euw· abOUt lhlt.' had done:• ~he ta.id. "To this day, I ...,.,,,,,.... Qo1no. WMn the Pef\Mlnl UtcUhe flrtt 1t1ll don't know how I manaae<J 10
"I don't~~." Green -~ IOOf'9 et 14 .,.. er~~ qu.aJ1fy~·
Nkt. "But I W811Cf~ acrots 12;.~lt app..-ed they mlgM hew And now she doesn't know why
She net Md I thlr* M made ut m«• the momentum to wtn. nobody chased her Sunday.
ra:•Htw. Fk> ( Hymen) Md Alta 'W• tolt our momentum on "J ran most of the race today by (odc.n) ,._ OOt Into the o--attac:ec," a.linger Mid .• hi juet tOkf myself, and mott of my tnunina 11 by
tn.n · OMm to geit tOmethlog extra on myself,'° I was very comfortable out ~ uy1 ett« rueid.ra thW~andttWOl'kedllkthdid there today," Benoit said ... I'm tur-~ .,_._no lfnlNdlat• p11rw tn ~ otMt game; pnsed r.obody went with me because ~ ~ ......._ "f WOUkf '*-to~ "Now thet w. hew macu the the I O-k1lomekr apht (about a quar·
-. ... ...., ..,.... But I won t ftrWt, I dO not~~· and 1 ~h~~~!~f .~ay into the race) wu noull
be OOIClfllHO. t.n:• don't "**..:: ~ "": = Ocno1t Yid she WHn'l bothc~ by u;a. c.dt ~.ad mnymor• . • the 1mogy air during the race and
tM.,,. tied the ==::-A'!!!hedn~tmede.:.~ added that she nc-ver t~lly felt ~ tMt 9* .... , · """" threatened by her compcu11on. ''The '*' game .. N ...._. w dldft t C. to the • But now "I followed the yellow brick road
Vteed.'' he .-S. ''WtietMf ·•· 9M f'm ..el1 • Ch!!'-la • Y«Y to to speak. I u1d to myself, 'you fce i
the ootct mec:llll or not, our~ ~teem. Hid~· too itood to bf ow this one"'
Reds consult football Play book
Aridasaresult.Cinctlln~tl .
tops Dodgers in l .l lrintngs
C INC INNATJ (AP) -Cincinnati Red1 third
balcman Skeeter Barnes aot a b11 hit to ue the pme in the
ninth innina Sunday, but h11 I lth-1~nin1 11ide into l,,o,
Anaete1 Kcond baseman Steve Sax proved to bt an even
biucr hit. Bamcs upended Sax to break up a potcnt11I double
play ind sive CnarC'edcnothe open1n1he.ncedcd to score
on the play lead1n1 to the Rtets• 2·1 victory over the
Dodjtrs. ·
"f played • !JUie football today ~ve fet y.''
Barnes Joked ... But I don't like 1t." " .J
Sames s1naJcd with one out 1n the ninth to lie the
pmc 1-J apin\t l.>odl(r ncr Fernando Valen1uela. ~ wtlo took i 6ld for htl first career one·hi1tcr.1nto the ntnth.
Jerry Reutt, 2-S. relieved Valenzuela in thebouom of
the 11th and 1urrendered a I d.Off sin&le to Cedeno, who
then wu rinccd 10 second. Sames cfrew an intenuonal
walk to t up the douhle play, and Dave Van Gurdcr hll a
&rounder to thOrt\IOp Dave Anderson 10 play into the
Dodatrs• hands.
But Barnes 1hd hard into . ai a he look the 01p from
Anderaon for the force, knockina the 1eeond ba man to
the vound. Cedeno kept runn1n1 around third, and x rcia1nc~ bis fut and made a wild throw home over the
·head of catcher Make Scioscia for an error.
"I probably rushed it," Sn uid ofthe throw. "Bui I
fch I had a shut to act him."
Sax had womcd that Karnes would bowl him over on
a double-play try Ba mes also took Su out hard on a ninth-
tnnina force play after Barnes' 11naJe had tted the pmc.
''l thouahl about that before the pitch," Sax 111d. "I
knew he wa1101na to be on me if we didn't hold him (on
tittt se). He w11 there whtn I a,ot the ball:'
"They didn't hold me on4 J had a bia lead," Sames
u1d. "J was riahl on top of him ·
fhc Dodiert apm (11led to uppon Valen1uela, who
pvt up JU t the two h1U tn JO anoanp and fanned 10 to
move two ahead of the New York Mets' Dw1Jht Gooden
for the major·leaaue 11r1keout lead with 167.
The Dod&el"\ have scored one run or lest in 10 of
V.1lcnzuela'.1 lut 19 •tan1. The left-hander huii't beaten
the Reds 'incc June 13 or IHI year.
h •J>pcarc:d Valen1uela would finally end the streak of
fut1hty Sunday. detpitc the continued weak otrensive
suppon. Bue a lead-oft walk to Enc Davt1 tn the bouom of
the ninth kd to the 1y1n1 run .
D1v11 wu en need to fond, and Valen1ucla th n
toucd a wild pitch to put him on third. Nick ky drew
Valcn1uel1'1 sixth walk of lhc pmc, and 8am dnllCd a
I ·2 Pttch lO left field 10 &IC the pme.
ANGELS, TWINS IN SPLIT DECISION •••.
From Cl
don't _..nt 10 do 11 11wn>t. I think
th 1 11 a b11 pJui for us."
. ...
*
.·
. .
-----
0 i ''~Pit. G A~f)
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:t Amencan an ecuoa y.
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dcd on over ~ 'NJCko of
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JU I IOO '11.Ck for lhe U~
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KOtt(s a iS-0 dedsioa over Fnndtc:o
CamachoofMnic:oinw 12~
c unday niahL .
. Pa_p boud bis ..., .... UOlher
Maican dUMS die aftcl'DOoD pro-. . • 5-0 dcdlioD r::vio~ll 139~.
hannon. lhc U.S. l 19"oouod rip.
rcsentative. was kJJ<ded a,o.wn·tWICe
and siopped by Moon at 1:14 of Che
third .round.
LEWIS.WINS GOLD ....
bases c0vertd and }aid much' of his
mental teehnique came from read.in&
Peak Performance. Both admitted they were furious
with themselves for losina in' their
ori&inal heat on Sunday, but Lewis · said in the long run, it wu the best
thilfl that could have happened. · .. We learned sonsethinJ sn tbe heat.
and we learned some\Juo' apin io
the ~~haat, ~hich wu important to us, said Lewis. .
When it was O'ler they took their
place in front or \ht van4slaDda to
acc:cpt the Sold medals and ..--.i.cb tbt
Amcncan n.aa hoisted between
Bel&ium and YujOl!aVWl flap.
Then Lewis dancd into the CT<rtWd
and pve the &Old medal to hit dad,
Davld, to hold.
.. I wanted him to bold It for me,"
1&1d the younatr Lew11. "Ht's as hapfl. ybc .happier man mt. He
cou hardly talk. M was beside
himself."
Lewis stood there an froot of the
~stands, bo1din1 his c~oched
li1ts hi&h 1n ac.knowledJlnJ t~ ova-uoo, while Enqullt waved.
Then they rowed off to 1ore their
boau with the easiest strokes oft.hear lives. ' -.-
The two had spen1 about S2 SOO
each JOina the routt they took to
quUify for the Amencan &earn (cat
rentals, mot.tis, food and boat ren-
tals), and it had been a Iona haul to the
top to beat tht odds.
Lewis was beaten by s11 inches by
John BiJlow for the riaht to ~nl
this nation 10 the smaJe 5CUlls
Ironically. JUll minutes • later,
BiaJow finished fourth 1n the 11naJe
~ulls. never challenssna for a medal.
Altbou&h Enquist was simply cut,
. he said he wasn't bitter -that
perhaps the d«1s1on was JUSllticd.
Nevertheless. the two didn't Jl"e
up and combined.
.. He dad most of the tal.kina. •• said
.
tbt happy &quilt &bocll tbtit times
vrbile preperlftl. .. Bm 1-.u tbc t1tOkc
and bad the lut •J· We had to ~ each Other happy.
They didn~taner tbt 6D< with lbe
favorite'• role, but LeWiJ II.id be ~t
confidtnt, apcd&Uy aft« studyiaa beat and .r'q*. limcs. .. ) dloulht
we'd be in tbe tb1ct ofit.. .. be aid.
~lkatitwas die \Vest Gama.u Wbo
I WU worried abouL" Tbc Gct1liu
boat wulbed fourth. out or &be
mooey, hokti.q that position vu-
wally all of \be way. •
Tbe Bel&iwn beet of Piem·M.aric Ocloof' and OiJt Ctois tbt jump
on \be 6e&d and \ed lbt m. e1111y by
almort three teeODds It S00 meu:n. (t
ma.mtained Ill lad tbnN&b l ,SOO
mcten. bul t.hea LeWil and EDq •
wrned tt on.
The U~S. bo9t"uplits ere 1:)7.45.
3.11.0j and.4:Sl.73 before winninai.n
6:36.87. BelJium's sp.lit1 ~ere
I :34. 75, 3: I ... 93 l.ftd •:56.29 before
finia.bint io 6:38. l 9.
-Yut0tll¥aa, like West Gmnany in
foun.6pla«,1t1yed very elate to third
from stan ao finish ao tel t.M bronz.e
medal in 6-.J9.S9.
~is and EnquiJt..wmed the field
inside outbecautel>f theit~
ooo and wort. but when they bad
..,~, ~ wanted; the told medal. many of their tbouabts M:re di1'IC1ed
toward othen-trainer Mitch Lewis.
Brad's cousin -11o be called a .. QOd..
send" becaUIC of his phYtical bdp. the enurc UC Irvine boatbou.te. M.ib
Uvinptone. a Conner C.al coach; aJMS
even LeWis' emDlovet:
"I 1taned wiih Weill Farao Buk
(10 Newport Beach) with the Olympic
Job Opponwritica Pronll\ tbrce
yean llO ... said Lewis. ti} ecNJd Dot
have done it wilbout their help." ..
So, it is over for tbac two 29'-ycar-
olds. thq"ve IOt thCit IOld med.ah
and they're caUiD1 il quits. Tbe dream
bas been fulfi.Ucd .
UCI PRODUCTS~. • • f'romCl
One newsman, who appeared
to be well versed an rowi~ asked
aloud, "How 1n the hell did that
happen.,.'
Ansv.cnna were Canada's
Dean Crawford and Ibbetson .
"We Yrert hanaina on." u1d the
Canadian . "You put ~our heads
down and IJ"t c"cr) · ana ~ou
haYc and todi) v.c had cnouih.
There v.a n't even an) adrtnalan
left at the finish."
Saad Ibbetson. who retires from
the spon at 31 with ha\ sal\Cf
medal: "It v.un't our be~\ cfTon,
t Canacb put on •'""er) tut
effort. We JUit didn't u.ay clost
enouah early. It wH cnt1cal lo
It.I) in contact, but v.c wcrt
... omcd loo much about New Zealand ••
Canada came home 1n S "41 .32,
follov.cd by the U •. <.S 41 74) and
: Au traha (S.43.40). New ualand .
failed to medal at fourth with a
S:44. 14 clock a
· "lf we had put an our bnt
oenormancc this medal would have another· color," sa>d Jb-
be 1 ~ti M ra1dcnt .
.. R t now. d hun . But
u ~ s wonh n. m&)bc after a
couple of beers ru realize u ••• a ~ pcrfonnancc. ••
pn • 0
(finl in lli lb
foft nuns of th
D Chll
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(Cocanoww 7· 111. (n)
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T0<onto et Tuu. (n)
MtnMIOI• •I 0.klend (nl
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Oectetr• ~ ~ Houtron SI 60
Clnc1n11e1 46 64 Sen FratKIKO '3 '4
EAST DIVISION
Cl'ltC•llll New Yon<
PhileoetOl\•e 11"""('0;j'f,---
MonlrM I P111.ouro11
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S.n Frenciico 7. ""•nll 4
Pn1tll0ele>hl1 6 SI Loul1 3
Cllicellll •. Montreat 3 Sen Di.vo f , Houlton S
TMIY't CO-.
Ded9lrl (Honevcull 1·61 et Atten11
(/Miiier 7·6J. tnl
N-YOf'tl !Gooden 9 71 et ClllCIQO
(Rull'tvtn 2·7)
Pnllaoetolll• (Carnon 9·51 et MontrH I
CLN 14·6), (n)
Sen OleQo (Ttturmono f·SI 11 Clncmner•
(Prla S~7). (n) •
Pllliburol't CMcWMll•m• 6·11 el 51 LOU•\
IAndUler lS·f), (nl San Frenchco (LHIUIY &·91 11 Houston
CKne1>oer f·ll <n>
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San D·~ II C1nc,,.na11 Int P1tt10U<Ol't et St LO\l•I , Int
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AMERICAN LEAGUE
Twins 4, An914s 2
MINNESOTA CALIFOltNIA
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
Re<h 2, Dod9en I
LOS ANGl!LS CINCINNATI
s •• 11l
Amtur>o rt
Le"4r •cl
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MAJOA LEAQUli LEADERS
Amertcan Leaoue
BATTING 126S 11 Dll•l Wlnfittc! New
York, 344. Mellt~V. Nt• York, 337,
Hrwit, Mlnnt\Ott, 32', EM.If rev Beltt·
mol't, 316, lllll>lltn, hlllmOf'e. 31S
ltUNS Ev1n1, BOiton, 14, RHtnOerson.
C>Hlend, 7•. l utltr, Cltvtllnd 71, Mout>v.
TMonlo, 10. "''*'" 81111~•. 6' -.e1· l<lnem•n, Ollklend, 17. AOevl1,
kaltte, 13, EMurrav, 8el!lmore, tl; •'<t .
-.otion.7•. ArmM. 8o11on. 7'
HITS Ciercla , TOf'onto, lJS. Malllnglv,
New Y~. m. ""*'"· ee1t>m0re. 1)4, ~ • .-. t<Mron. 12' Wlnfltld. New York,
125. OOOBLES Perrtlh, TOH. )0, Ge<cla
TCW'Ol'lto, 77. Ml11'"91v, New Yor' 77 ..... fuu. 2•. C0Wtn1 S...lflt 7'
Lemoti, Delr041, 26 • TltlPl.ES MoMl)v, Toronto, ll >COlllM
TONnlO. 11. UlllNlw. Toronto, '· ltGil>tOll, c.1r.iu. o-tj\. '-'""· • HOM ltUNS Armta. 1011on. JO Klftg• ~' Oll~ltNI 11. Kltllt, Clll«t90, t•. Murottv, 0t1..iano 2), T!lrnlon, ,,.... ... nd,
1l • STO\.EN SAM S It~. 0.•la"ll
41, ,...__ ~ • Collln•. TorOllto >4. lutter. CMIC!lnd Jl. 1;11c'.i1, terOt1to, ll2
PITCHING (10 dfcblol'l1I L•t. T~to, 12·2, U t. Stiff, Toronto, 1)-4, 2.lt Ptlrv.
Detro t 14 S. 2 N , Otvtl, lalllmoft . 11 4,
14J N ... 10. New Yeti!, tl •S. 2 $/.
STltlKIOVU Wlft. ,......, llf.
Latt9110fl, S-1119 121, ~. ftn\, IN ' 41 ... 1'er.UO. 111 • .,.., .. N .. Yori. 112
\AVES CNl..nbwry Kaow\ Cllr, 2'
(elldl•, 0.k no. ,, '""""'· Mltw•i#"· 11 Ht<Mftdtt, 0.lrott, n, lllOevl\ Minne•
Mii•, ,,
• A\4QUl1 I , 19M
Rll OCarltt, Monlrffl, IO JO.vb,
Clllcuo, n. Sct\rn or, , 6',
Durlllm, Cttkffo, U. ~.ily, Allttllt . •S
~t. Olic.etO 6S
HITS Ciwvnn, kn O..oo, 1st, Sar o
Cl\lu90. 1C71 Sltm*, J>tllladelpnla, '*1,
Wvntre. Pllt~tll. 1'2J Cr11J, Houalon, 129. .
OOVSLES HubOlrd, AOtnle, 1S, llltln·
ft, MonlrHI, 2S, S.114t>trt. ClllUllO, U ; s.muctt. Pflll.o.!111u1, 2•; Gearltf. Mon·
tt'Ml , 23; Htndrtck. '' Loul1. n
TltlPLES Wldberll, ClllcHO, t•,
Semuet, Pl\lledlll»hl•. 14. Crua, Houaton, f i
Doren, Hou1fon, I, Gwynn. San 0"90, t.
McGM St Louil I
HOME ltUNS Mutflflv, Allente. 26, GCartw, Moftlrtal, 21. Sc:nrnlclt. PtlillKlel·
tllllll, 21, Mantl8I. ~ 1t Straw l>tfrv • .__ Yon., 17
STOLEN BASE'.$ S.mutl, i'Nltdelonla,
51, WlOo n• Sen 0'900 46, ltelnff. Mon
.. ,HI, 40, Radin. C1nc1n11e11. J7, ~,,..,.
Cl!ieloo, 31
PITCHING ( .. oech lOMJ Orosco. N-Yortl, 1-l, 2 04, Der,ng, Hew YOl'k, 10-4,
3 )7, PPt<u. Al11111,, 10-4 4 t2; Wlltlton,
Sall D.eoo. 12·S, 3 ... Lu , Monlrt•I, 14 6 .. ao
STRIKEOUTS -..altnWIU, 0M9W1, 167
, Gooden, Nt• York, 165, lltven, HO\.lt ton 1)1, Soto, Clnclnnell, IU . C.rllon, Pnlleoel·
...... 112
SAVES Sullt r, 51 LO\.llt, 79, Hoile na Pl'llladelPNe, 24, LtSm1ll\, Cnleeoo ?4,
Oroaco, N-YOf'lr., '2, GOt.aM, S.n
Oltoo, 21
Anolf averaees
IATTIHG
AB It H H•
Benloutz 21S l7 14 6 Cartw 274 JJ IJ 3
Sconien 67 t 20 3
8rown IOS 13 2' 6
Lvnn 343 50 93 13
O.Clnce1 377 SJ IOI 12
Wlttono 20t 20 S4 3
Nerron 91 7 23 J
Downing 349 •1 U I•
Ptt111 311 41 7S 1
At Jadlson 341 " II 11 GrlCll 211 31 •t t
PtcciOlo '°' 13 n 1 Boone 311 23 62 'Z
SCtiofltld 2S7 21 •f l
Ro JKkMMI 91 S 15 0
T..-i.11 452 '17 '7
l"fTCHING
••• ftet. ,. 341
2t 303
' 299 17 276
'1 271 so 211
20 260
10 2S3
S9 24'
2S 235
5" 235
21 225
' 20'2
22 ·'" " 191 S 16S 421 .249
IP H 81 SO W·L lltA
Coro.II ~ 43 14 '26 3·1 203
S.nc:NI SS:.'> S2 12 '2 J~ 2 II F Of'Kh 16 Ii 1' 3 10 1-1 120
Aase 10 '> 11 • I 0•1 !'1
Ze?ln I~ 1'6 )7 44 10-t 2'5 Witt tffl!J lSf 6l 13' 11·1 3 '5
Romen1c1< 17•1'l 169 49 62 10· 10 l '1
JOl>n 14~ 170 40 3' 6·• 3 IJ
l<eufmen 39 JS 13 2S 1·2 •.IS
t<llOn 2S''l 16 t 30 2· I 4 62 Sla ton 94~ 119 29 lO 4·S US
Curll• I 14 l 4 O·O UJ LeCortt 26'-J lO 12 13 1·2 6 75
Swen S I 0 2 0-1 10 IO Otti./1 11 16 9 S 0-1 f 00
TNll 9IO 1012 107 47' U-U lM
Sevts ~nCPltl 10, COf'btl( 4, Aese 2, KIM>n 2. Keufmen 1 -
o• Mar
SUNDAY'S lltESUL TS
(1111\ ef 4l•deV ~~I
FIRST RACE 6 furton01
lh e At See <CeafeOtdal • 60 100 S 4C.
Fllnl tme119 CDtload•llOJ 9 00 S IO
Tvo.cal Pro IOrltOll t• 40
Al'° rac•a GrtflOC>lt, Wenleiee, Pr~
Book Hert>•• Quavi. Freoenco Pront1n1
M11trol Men Al Gou r
Tim9 1 JO
SECOND ltACI. 6 furlonQ1
Muell Ln (Toro) 1' to I 00 7 IO
lmoret1fve Wind (HewNlvJ 690 6 40
Awkwerd Age (Lll>lleml 1060
AllO reCIO Oebl'l Courtoe Swlfllv Mine, 8otd Oemt, Broedw1v'1 Pride
Romantic Romen, Sl'leelv Hoi lh\, Mu•lct t Ball, Soring Bid
Tr,,,_ l 11 J•S
'2 DAILY DOUBLE (3 91 oeld 190 00
THIRD ltACE. Ont milt
Ageln111>e.,1nooom (Proevl 710 • 60 J 00
. Whitt Ctoud Csi-tnaktrl 10 40 4 60
Be•n 819 ( LOIO'(e) J 00
Al'° rtCIO Our l.ady, Ol>el'e honal COid
No1e a-enners 81uff. Solid So•rn. Em.rg
encv Fund
Time 1.16 l s
U IXACTA ,..7, oe•d 12.&I OO
FOuttTH RACE ' turtonQl
N0<tl'te<n 0•1e11verv 11,.oml t 40 S Ill S 'lO
Neve< F1H IMcCerron) 610 S IO
Burn.no 8oll't En01 COllvern l 11 00
AllO rec.cl Micl\.Mt N•l•IU ll , ArcliC Ace Eml>el'c><·s TvcPlt, C Ge~. /M1e111t,
Sir Netl'lln, Ju1t1fv, Mluvre. EeOle Tl'lrM Timt I II I S
FIFTH ltACIE 6 turiOOO' "'"ef Oeuohter tMcCrnJ 6 00 4 60 3 60 A•l<rt (Mtlll I 00 6 60
CHiie Star CCu1e...ci1l 1310 AllO rec:ec:t Ftv BY C~hCkl, Ml•'I
l.edv. R•11'1 Ortem Lover. Ce hfornle JuOlle., Tr..,Clv Pre11. Tucti,IO ln1tdt,
Beno.re RHI. Mellleurt. lnni•ttowen
Time 110 3/S 's EXACTA ca I) oeld SllOSO
SIXTH RACE 6 furlong\
tnd1genou• (Mtia> 10 60 4 60
Tiger of Erin (Plnc:evl 3 00
Goutr COrltll•I
)60
HO
4 00
Alto recec:t Tell Matt
c:.1ow1no, Wino Hlol'I
Tlmt I II llS
Prine• of LIOl'tl.
• SEVENTH ••Ce. 6 ') •urionos
P~clo<enf fllelen1ue<el • 40 3 40
Soring LOOM IShotm.ktr) • 40
KIOnd•kt Kulit CMcCa,,onl
260
4 IO
3 20
Alto recec:t 8e11m1 Wl'tll Meg.c YOWi·
d• Huck~rv Honey
Time 116 as IX.ACTA 13·0 oeo(I 117 so
U P'ICK SIX It·• 11•1 6·l l 1>1 1d '1"'°4.MI Wtlh ll w1"""'8 "l!Clltll h la
l\Of'WI. S2 Poe.i.. S•• con~liOf'I l>l•d '321 20
witf't 782 w '""'no hcl<elt fflvt nontll
EIGHTH lllACIL One m11t on hKI
fig,,,, IMcCarront 6 40 ~ 10 HO
Oc:Nnvlew (Shotl'Tlek41< I • 90 4 40 Aetu.teo ITprol uo
AllO rece<1 hunefflf :..ew, Cultl"-Wt114, Cr'llllet Courf
Time I JS l S
SS EXACTA 17· 1! Plltd \9000
NINTH ltACI I 111• m1N1l
Otc:onlrot ISll>IHtl 12.40 6 40 S 00
CNler Vtrdk l (Otlvtre•I IS 20 10 20
FamHv Foa (Oeload~IO) 160
Also reced Ba On Tlnw, O•llant Minded,
Ptrrv C.l>ln Gile Clrc ... Cotumel, SecTltt c~. Who , c.o1 A Nldltl, 11111t cnarae
Time• I 42
U I XAcn IS 111 oelel 163f':SO
Atltndlnc• 21,504
0... ... fflhlnt
DAVaY·.s LOCKI• ,......,. e.dll
-nl •ftlller• 1 DerracUOt, 411 llltnlto t 'retlowle•, 1S IO<A ft\11 I lledllul. 11 Uilee
0.U, .. ~d 0.H, 660 "-Ck•ti, 2
•'-fth .. d
1fSWf'ON I t:HIDIJfO CWtw..,I
a.di) -I 11 .. ll{llfl't a t)()llllo, J6 NU, 1
~wlell • '""°'hffd, I •n If Me ..... lll mtUttfl J 1'!11 elllneov1
eoo f H twoocs. s ooe
lt•tt>I\ l •lldrUlll, '37.Jll nmSlmp.011, .,,,m
Mui. o·M .. re, '31,'33
lOf'tll ltoO.rh, t It 000
Mair"' Lve, l)f,(>00
a 111 ~r•trwr. •IS.SU Wlllot Wooo, s 1~.~.J
ltoOtt ¥ell1>1t, t IS.513
Marl! Ir~"•· s 1).000 Curll• 51rtl'Ot, J 1t000
JoM /Mlltlhrv, tll.000
Lon •••nll .. 111.000
Jtn v Patt, U.750
Joelie MuoQ. sl.7SO
Dan Pohl. sUSO
11 ., .. n -w
11 14-70·67 11
14 61•10 7~7
75-69· •t-6t-21>
'1 10--10·16-213 10·12 10·71-7*3
70·U ·H ·71-? ..
•MMS·71-2'4
72·70-11·11-214
. 71•7"1N0-1tS
70·71'71-13-2'5
70·69 7J.11-.2N " n 12·7l-lU ,, ... 76-70-217
PtYnt Sl1w1rt, ii 1~
Donnie Hemt'llOlld W 016
Doell ZOkol, S6 oe.
Howard f w111v.16.0l6
r1111v sa., "·°" ~4111 8rol#n,14 Ol6
11>-10· 7 6-11-2'7
1•·10-12·11-2'1 n-n·•f-71-211 1•-6'·n-n-na 10-13. n-1r-211 n-.,·n-13-m
71-7•·70·73-2"
7S·6'·7f.7>-2tt 10·H·6t·74-2tl
11-10-n 1s-2111
,. 61· '1-11-1" 14'10·17-73-2" 10·70-15-74-1"
Ml •Gove, W.Ol6
Git Mo<11en. Nick Price, t.J,900
Lerrv Neltotl sJ 900
8ool>v Wllellu111 '3.900
Don Poo._. tU OO
~-Pfeil. '3,900 Gt rv McCord tJ Oll
Sco11 S1mo10"' '3.<131
Ger,, 1v ueoer, '3.031
Hiii ''"''"· '3.0ll Jim Tt>Moe, ll.Oll
Maril Ceicevtccnt, 13.031
lluu Cocl'lr1n. U.ZSJ
Lerrv M11t, U .2S3
Cterenu ROie s2.?S3
O.n11 WllM>n S2,2Sl lh ncrv werk1n1. J2.2S3
Jim Gellaoher, S2,2S3
Pa t McGowen. U.tSJ
Oen H•ltelor•on. t l,6SO Pe ul A1lnger. S l,•50
Scott Hoch. s 1.650 01v10 ()grin, I 1,650
Tom Ltl'tmen. s I 6SO
Ge v1n Levtn1on. 11, 113
Tom Jt ntlln•. SI llJ
Jim Neiford, Sl, 113
Joev Smotler, s 1 113
Ron Streci., s I. Ill
Mlkt Nte:oltllt S1 llJ
M•kt Donald. S1 llJ
Jeff Mllcnt•. H 113
Jim S-mon1 s 1, 113
G-S.utrl, Sl,113
Andv Sun s I, 113
R .. Caldwtt. S1, 113
J>m Deni. '1.113
BoOl>v Clemoell, Sl, 113
S•eve L e-. s t.070
Doug Tewtt, 11.070
8re<18rvent, sl,070
Leonerd Tllom1>N1. st 040
c,, o eeci., 11.0.0
Denny Edwerds. Sl,040
M•kt Smlll't. SI.GOS
w .... ne Levi Sl,OOS
JOM ffatl'lef1k 11,~
i-er LlndUv, Sl 005 8•11 S.~ '"° PM Henco<:k S960
Cl'tlrlet Cooov s960
Lerrv R11\kw S960
Oevld PeoDltl S940
• 70·75·10·7•--m
61·75 71·)S-7" n -10-16 11-190
1H•·1•·12-2'1 n·n·7• n-m n-6t·1•-1s-m 13 12·11 74-2'0 n n 13-73-290
72·13·7• 72-291 n 13-13-1:r-191
70·16·71-14-2'1
74·69 n-7s-2't 11·72·13·7S-'lfl
7S-11·6'·76--2'1 70·73·71·77-791
n -10-1s 1~m
71-74·74· 73-291
1H 2·1Ml-2'2 13-1•-10·1rm
6'-n -1s-16--m
73-71-77-72-2'3
72· 73· 7S· 7)-193
13. 7 4 • 73· 73-2'3
6'·11·1•-n-m
74·73·73·13-2'3
n-13·74-14-2'3
73·1175-74-2'3
14 n-n·1-m
69·76·7•·74-293
71-76·72·74-293
13·10-1'·16--293
16·67·7•·16-2'3
74·69·7•-1..-293
7•·72·71-16-2'3
72·7S·74·7l-2'•
74·13·73·74-2'4 71·74·72·17-2'4
12·73·76·74-2'S
74·73-73·7S-2'S
6'·11·70·7t-2'S -
11 ·1'-11-n-m
73 73·16-74-2'6
7T·~7~76-7'6 1o·n -16-7'-2H
7'·70·75·76-297
73-73· 71·7S-2'1
7S·72·71·74-291
7•-73·76·7S-2't 73·74·71-71-30'2
LPGA toumament
(1t~W.V1.)
Allee Miiier, 122.500
8tverlv ICleH, s 11..625
lllctll Slnoltton, 111,625
Judv Clerll. U,17S
Vlctll Alvarez, U ,175
Clnclv Pteoer. '6.175 Jen Sttohtnton, M.500
Dot Gwmaln, '3,234
Celtty Morse, '3,233
.Joen Jovce. '3,233
L"nn Stronev, '3,233 K1111v H11t, n .a
Pel Maver•. S2,G A .. llend!'e Rt•nhrdt, S2,050
0 11nne O.tlrf, 57,oct Martl'le NeuM, n,on
Rotlt Jonn, Sl,531
OtOC>it Hal, S 1,531
Alice Rtttmen, st.U
Sonnie Lauer. '1,531 8tYtf'in' Oevl1, S 1,$31
Nencv ltUOln, Sl,531
C¥Olvn Hiii, S 1,Sl7
T"'rl LUC1<11urs1 s t,014
Cerote Cl'lerbOnnier, s 1.074
Jent 81tlock, SI, 074
Jene Gecktel. s 1.074 Cl'trl• John.on, Sl,074
SNltllv ~mltn, '1,07•
Calllt<lnt O~n. sl,07•
OtOOll MHstv, tl,074
t<atnv 8•lllr, Sl..074 Pellv Havn, 5'72
Geh Hlrete. 1172
Btckv Peer.on, 1171
S•r•h Leveque, 5171
Shtrrl Turner,1740
Marv DWVtf'. S740
Silvie Btrtoleeclnl, S740
Senclre SPU11ch, 1740
Cetllv Marino, '740
Amy aenz, 1740
Dtbtllt Ma11tertln, tnf
Cvnthl• Floo. sm
Jene Creflw, sm
Pie NllHofl, MG
Kethr;n Young, "43
Berl> lunll-lkv. S6A2
Oewn Coe, "42
Allton sn..rd, "°'
C.rl't«lne P•nlon, "°'
Oel>or•ll Skinner. S60S
Jener "'*'ton, lS'6 Ll'8 Yovno, 15'6
Kethv ~lltwelt, S5'6
JUllt Pvnt, $$66
OeeClet Leiker, s5i6'
/Mrltnt F!ovd, 15'6
Judy EMii , S5'6
Merlene H19", S5G3
8etl't SOiomon. 5503 Jove• Ke1mlen111, sscn
Kev Kannedv. 1502 LIOO(t Mweotle, M39
Sellv Qulnltn. M39
•·Cerol Thoml>MHI Su11t 8ern(119, M39
Ml11le McGtorM, $311 Debi> .. Austin, '311
Dtf'llM Strel>lg, 5311
Anne-Merit Petll. 132' ClndV HIR, S329
Sue Foglerntn, sm
Sue Ertl. S321 Pelll Rlno, 7S·7)-14'
M J $mlth 7S·76--IS1
~tnemettur
67-10-7?-209
11-61-n-211
"·72-7)-21\
73·70-70-213 11-n-11>-213
71·.,·73-213 n-n_.,._214
n ·74·69-21S
69-7•-n-21S
71-70-74-llS
"·n ·74-21S 13-n -11-?16 n-n -n-n6
7?·74·71-217
1•-~Tr-217 n-n -n-m
75-71-72-211 1•-n -n-211 7'-14-n--411
71-73-74-211
70-74·74-111
70-7•·7.,_211
'9·75·7f-211
74-76 ...... 21•
7•·76·6'-2" 7•·74·71-21'
71·71·71-219
74·73·72-21'
7S-70-74-il9 n-n -14-2., n -n -1s-21t 12-n -1s-?1• n-n -11-m
73·75-72-220 73·74·73-220
73-71-76-220
7S-74•72-221 n -76·73-221
n -7'·73-221
72-75-74-221 n-16·15-221
7 .. 71-76-221
1s--.,·n-n1
6'-1s-n-221 n-10-n-n1
74·76-72-222
1••1S-13-222
76-71-7S-222
70-76·76-222
73·76-74-223 n -n -1t-m
71-7•-Jt-?23
7t-73·73-22A
16'-15--73-nA n-n-n-n•
n -73·74-224
74 -76-74-224
74.74.7.-224
7S-7H.-n• 72·7'-7'-22S
n -7t·74-22S
74·7S-76-22S 11-n-n-ns n -1•-1s-22• n -n -1t-n6
7S·14·n-'226
7Ht•n-216 n-n·11-m
1M•·n-m
16-13-71-227
75-76·71-221 74-71·17-'l'll
13-71-n -221
76·74·7'-221 WO 00
W~11 touma~t
lAJ New.-t.JU.)
S<Mltl F_.
M1rton1 N111reh10v• <U S I dtl Goel
r trnenotr IU SI, 6·3 7·6 IN1vr1to1ove
w n1 s?t.000 Fernenoe1 win• '1• 0001
..
rib iii iOUI IUllNlll MAMI IT ATllMffT
PUil.iC NQJ1C(
Tlw fotlaWltlg ptr90fl Thf ~ ............... ~-
0 UNE 00 PU'r R G 01 T SUTO
!mMC:fS.2711 ill\ Cir• CORPORA110N·PAT10
la MeA C4, 821 ELLO, a&37 P
, tflct of ~ Counf1 AM • 217 CoQtttwy.,COrOMo.I
Turn1tOM Corporation. Roundhlll om.. HumlftQton rl09lvt ~ Qcl9. eo.ii ,,...., cant 12$25
c.11totn1a. 2ue w... Oout CA. 92648 tHdi up to o oo AM on v. CA I ~1 J , HWY .. Newpot1 IMCf\_. iTl\lt bv 11 con· 16U'I day Of , UNM, at 'Jhl1 bVslneet I COO• PromC1nt01Y Or. • t2'6a ~.cs ~ an~. *"iCl'I time .aa w111 bl dueled try en lnCIM~. pof1 a.acti. Cellf.
T"lt bUtlnat It con• Jack C 8mlirf ~~open.a Af!d rMd kif Mft P.,gg Jorge H ~ MG Pfom-OUGttd by a corpouitla.I Tnlt ttattrMnt w 11.i.d 'ROOFINQ REPAI AT~· 111 ,,..,_,, . l!led O!'l\OfY Dr. E•e. ......,,.
Patricia J&IM9, A .. 111. Wlttl tbe County Olltlt of Or-vt TY HIGH SCHOOL •• wlttt tl'le County Clef of ~· ~. catlf ntte0 Secwttary anoe counry on J4lty 12, Bid condlttont end lnatruo-ange COunty on »; '''" Thi• ~•!MM '* . con·
TNe ttatttnent nled 1~ t!Qns and btd form. mtty be 1114 dueted by: I ~
wllh tl'le Co\lnty et.I& ot Of. F2IOla obt91ned et tl'le omc. of n.. ,.UGI fMh Marquez. VIOe Pnlll-
ange Couniy on July ,,, Published Otano• Cout cal Su"'*' 8eMcee, 2Mt Publi9heet Oranoe CO&tt dent 1984 Dally PllOt July 18, 23, 30, ton Av~. lrvlM, Cell· Dally Ptot July 30, Augutt.. TIW ttaltmtnl wee flitd
1'111719 Auguet 8, 199' lomla The Olatrlel ,....,,.... 13, ~. 1914 Wllh the COUnty CWk of Or•
Publ111\ed Ottl\09 Cohl M-72 the r!Qnt to reject eny 0.-a" • M·9' wige Col.wily on JUiy 11.
Delly Pltot A110U9t &, 12. 19, bide or to wtl~ 1ny Ir• 11114 ,
21. 19~ reou1a.r111 .. or 1nk>frn1111,.. 1111DUC NOTICE ,_..,
' SU·U Mt.IC NOTICE In any blOJ or In tri. bkSdlnQ, ruu P\lb1Jlh9d Otenge CoUt
·---------· IRVINE UNIFlfD ~CHOOL rlCTmout .,...... Dally PUot JutY 23, 30,
84mt •c 11111\nt>r "C11TIOUI IUU9H OISTAICT NA• ITA~ Auouat t. 1), 19M r~ "'"'"~ MAMI ITAn.NT Rolland H. Upton ThefOliowlng l*'IOM.,. M_.1
FICTIT10US ........ The IOl!owlng perton It o.p.,ny luS*lnttindenl doing DWIMlt u . MA• ITAnMDn' doing butlnMI ... Publl&Md Orano• COltt COLL!Ge INVEST~ENT , ________ .......
TN t~ -(A} SOUtM COAST OWiy PlloJ. M 30 end PLANNER 191 'H"10JT fU1.JC NOt1C[ doing bullMM :::"'°"'.,.. MEDIA SERVICES (8) ~I e. tN4 ._.,,. 1tt08 Tustin. CA I-----..---.;.;.;--_
PACIFIC STATES TILE SOUTH COAST COM· M ti t2llO ' P'tcnnoua .......
COMPANY 2413 S fl#· MUNICATIOHS (C) COPY I( a 1th H o Im• k Y Nam ITATDmll'T . St eu't D e.AI A RIGHT (DI AIR MAIL, 4841 Biaotrrnann 14400 New-TN folloWlng peraona 11re CT' 92704 I • • • M . PNrC• •C. Huntington "8JC fl>TlC( POtt A~ ,·,9. Tuatln. CA ~ bUll,,... ..
John Leighton Oanw II a..cn. CA.12t49 112680 AMBASSADOR COM-
11oa S 8'oadw9y S ta Wllllam Brian Wld· IC·~ K • n n e I II I( y I e MUNICATIONS, 1Me ~.
Ana CA t27ot • an dingtiam, 4"61 Peerot lfC. aTATl....-T °' &eOermann 241 Avocado )Oft Blvd . Sta. 1CO, Colt• R0oer L Eden 131ft HunUngton Beacb. CA AaANDOtlllmNT CW St d5. e el.ta Mee&. CA W.... CA .t2U7
0 1mt1«1 Ln~ Tusi1n CA 92649 • ua cw 92GH RuctOIP" Jonnoo&a.; 20011 92705 • . Tl\lt buaineu II con· ACTTTIOUa Thlt bu11nn1 I• con-uweon Ln.. Huntington
This bu1lne11 II con· ~m'1~ an8~a~ad -IUIMU MAMI duet«! t>y 01MI. brolhtr ~~A..E.t2!;4..!_.. 47t1
dUC1ed by 1 tlmil9d Plf'MI'· dtnQham Th• lollowlng "raon• Ind brother F-~'·•--.. ~m ,..:.. N\ip Thb h...,. abanctoned lbe uea Of Keith Biad.,mann ... ,_,, ,.,__ , .....
J L Ottnet 11 '!._1!.';!~i.~ _.110t*' the FlctlUOul lualn .. 1 K. Kyte Bladefmann Huoh Stephttn Lync:tl, 2'a
Thll 1ta1ement WU llled wtln ,, ........... ty .,_. .. "' • N. ni• p Epp ER TA EE Thit ''"'"*'' WU !lied NoodCtMlk Aoed. w,.. .
wun the counly C..k ot Ot-~County on Juty ~~ HEIGHTS, 2e&4 Santa Ana with the County Ctenl of Ot· no. IL\.. 00000 •noe County on July 12 Publ"'"'...., 0 ,..~--Avenue, Colt• MMa, CA ange County on July 9, 198' lhla bulln .. t II ~-198<4 . • .. -.. ranoe .,.,..t 92828 ,,..., :lucied by. a llmlled p~, .
,ZIOM1 Dally Piiot J~ 18. 23. 30. TM f\c:tllloul Bu11ne11 Publllhed 0tat1Q9 CoMt !ltllp.
Publlan.d Orange CO..I August I . 19 M 74 NlllM referred 10above11111 Dally Piiot July 30. Augutl e. AudO(pl\ JOhnCOla
Dally Piiot August 8, 13, 20, • filed In Orange County on t3, 20, 198' · Thlt ltalemenl WM fifed
27 tll8C July It, 19711 FILE NO M-94 #Ith fhe County C6ertc Of Or-
, M-100 fltafC NOTICE F1J~8~ Luton, 3 t oe P\8.IC NOTICE fe1: County on Juty 10,,
P\8.IC NOTICE FICTrTIOUI IUatHlll Monroe Way, Cotta M.... AC'TtTIOUS IUSINUI • 1'110111 NAME ITATRMENT CA 92928 NAME ITATIMINT P'Ubllened Orange Cout
The followlnQ ptn()nl .,. Don w~ 2315 College The loltowing peraon 19 Delly pttot July UJ. 23. IO,
dOlnQ bustM11 u: Avenue, Cotta Mela. C.4 doing bullneee .. l.ugutl 8. 19"4
ENOINE SUPPLY ANO 92828 PAESTIGE . AUTO M·7''
E X C H A N 0 E , 3 O_.A 2 ~ Wede. 2316 Coto-SOUNDS 3929 W Wetf'M
EntarprlM , Co11a Me.a, leaa A~. Coe1a Meu. Ave., san'1a Ana. CA. 92704 --... ---Ll'-Ml\--TIC(--•'
Calrf CA. 92821 Ao'*1 Blyan JoMton ... ~ nu
Rlrnpau Company Inc., Ann Wede. 2315 College 2945 N Brlatol #1( San~---------
CaltfOtnla. 2•392 BatblWk>I. AV9nUe, Cotta Meta. CA. An• CA 927ot • Aennoua .,... ..
Dane POlnl. c.tH. 112828 Thlt bull,,_. 11 eon-NAm IJTATIMINT
Tllll tx.tllnff• ,, eon--Thia ~ WU eon-ducied by• an lndMdual The folowtng pereont .,.
ducted by • COfl)OJ'ttlon ducted by a Qef*al partner-Robert 8tyan Jol'1neon :tolng ~a:
Michael R MeDanl•I. lhlp. Thie .... t~1 ..... ,,.; ARMOR MOATGAGe. P~1 Del F. l.attOn . •• -·-· .. -3410 "J" MacAtthur Blvd ..
TNe lla*'*!t was tllad Thia statement wu flltO :':;.'=1Y ~ ~-Santa Ana. CA. t2704
with the County Cler1I ol Or-wttll the County Clat1I of Ot-198• ' Morton Aaenlc*. 5413 W. Coun on J 24. Coun on J a, 198<4 t, Senta Ana. CA. 927CM
Robert E Andatlbn, 1737 Publiahad Orange CoMt ' 3w: Anti ua Way, Newport F2St• 0.lly Piiot Juty ! • 23, 30. Dttly Ptlot July 30, Auguete, f'Naht. Sant• Ana. CA. 92704 Calif 92&e0 Publlahed Orange Cout .4uguat 6. 196' 13 20 Ill~ Amutto Herrwa, 247M
Thtl• .buslnees la ~ D ty...PllOI .)tif 29~~t 5, M-70 ' ' M·lle Ulgl1ma
2
• Miaalon Viejo. CA
ducted by a oan-• &Sat1· 1Z, 111. 1984 '252:-
n«lhlp -su-11 Plllllc Nemet PlmUClloTICE "'.,,.. Herreta, 2•1• uo. Jamee T Rountree ;rtma. M.ilalon Viejo, OA.
Thia 1tatamen1 wu riled Pl8JC NOTICE NOTICa °' NOTICl TO CONTitAC-92&92
With the County Cletll of Or-ntUtTll'I IALI • TOftt-CAUJNQ fOA INOI Thll bUll""a II eon-
ange County on July 17. FlCnT10UI llUSMll On August 27, 1N4 at 8cnool Diltrtct; NEWPORT-docted by a QtMftl part.
198' NAm ITATDENT 11 00 a.m FIRST AMEAI-MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL '*1hlp. '
r291*1 The foltowing par~ 11 CAN TITL! INSURANCE DISTRICT Arnulfo Hetr.,a
Publllhed O<ange COut doing butlnetl u : COMPANY. A California Bid DNdllna: 11.00 o'cloc:k Thlt etatement wu tlled
Dally Pllol July 23, 30, AESTHETICS OF NEW· COfllO'allon • Trust•. Of .4M of tile 14th day of ""'"' IN County Cleftc of Ot·
Augult e, 13, 19!4 PORT BEACH, 240 Nawpoft Succauor TrustH or Augu1I. 198<4 ange County on June 29,
M·83 Center Or. #220, Newport Sut>t11tuted Tru:tt•. of ttlal Place of Bid Receipt· 21185-8 1984 \
8eech. Ca1H.92&e0 ~ Deed of Ttutt ex-8Mr Street. Cmt Mela ~
Albertina L. Gongora, acuttO by VEAYL PAUL (Pun:llulng Dept.) Publllhed Orange Coaet
21152 Stlaw Ln .• HunUngton DOAN, a rnwrled JNn, and Project ldenllfleatlon NM!r o.lly Piiot July UI. 23. 30,
e.acih. Ctollf 92&4e TIMOTHY WINNIN0ti.4M Aceoultk:al Spray Celling at ~uguat e. 199'
This butlneu It eon-and JOAN WINNINGHAM, Corona del Mar HS M-7t
DEATH NOTICES
MORGAN ducied by: an I~ hulbend and Wife, end ,.. P\ace Plan• .,. on Fll.-
AIMtilna L Gongora CO«ded September 25. 1979 2915-8 Beer Street, Cott• --''--------MAE LE VON NE Thtt 1ta1emen1 WM,ftled M lnttrumenl No 29358, In Meu. CA 112829 PlB.JC NOTICE MORGAN. re2ldent wlttttheCountyCWkofOr· Bo<* t3323, Page 112. of NOTICE IS HEREBY -----_;.~-of C.0.ta M-,. ~a--i anga
1
., County on Ju!Y 17, Offldal Record1 of Orange GIVEN that the abov .. NOTICE TO !LICTORI Of
...-. .,...._... 198' Coun1y. California. and named School DillrlCt of Ot-DATE Al'TD WHtCH NO away August 3, 1984 '150MI purtUllll IO ltlal cartall't No-ange County Car.fomla. act· A"OUMIMTI '0" OR She ts survived by Publtlhed Orange Cou1 lte:e Of Def.ult ttweuna. Ing by and through tt1 GO'I-AGAIMIJT her husband Wal.lacr· Daily Pilot Juty 23. 30, tecotded Aprl ~. 198<4 M == Boatd. twelnatter r"" A cm~ llAAY .. , • Augus16.13.1964-Instrument No 84-185419, toM "OISTRICT", WI IED TO 1'HI cm daughter, V1clue M-82 of C:Sttielll Records of satcS racalYe up 10, bul not lat• C1..EJU( -
Lynn Casulaa, of County, .wlll under and than the al>OY9-1taled time, NOTICE IS OIVEN lhalthe
Irvine. son Gary _JltllUC NOTICE. ~ 10 Mid Deed or aealed bids for IM award ot General Municipal EectlOn Moraan of Kentucky Tr~ ,.. .i puOQe 8'1Ct~ •oon4r~Hor thHbo••I>'• 11 nr btl-Nld trr tM Cttr of e • ACTITIOUI IUSIHIH l0t euh, llwful money of 1M )eel. ~untlngton e.oti on ~ broth era, Garriet NUIE ITATSMEN?-. United ~lat• ot America, 1 Bide lhalt be recalYed 1n "911'\bef e. 1914 at wtllct1
Bolt, Jr and Morna TN lotlowtng person 11 cuhlaf.:.e-chedc payable to IN place ldenllfled .aiow. there wtl be tubmltted to
Bolt of Iowa listers jol bullnaea u Mid Trust .. dr9Wtl on • and ltlall be °'**' and the qualified "9c:t0fl of t"9 Sh. '1 M • ' N~PORT MARKETING lt•t• Of natlonel bank, al publicly rM<S aloud at the C It Y t n • to.JI ow In 9 tr es oses an PRODUCTIONS 3015 1t11e.odederal Ctedlt union, above-elated Um~ and meuure(e);
Francis Bardltng, "'atob St NewS>ort Beactl or• 1t11e «federal umgs pltce Shall aJtlatlng City Chet't• both of Iowa· and two ;::A 92ee0 • end loan uaoclatlon doM-There ~H be • NIA de-Section 300 be amended to
d hild ' J f " · R elled In thll atate, et V. OC*I r9qul19d for Md! tet ol remove tl'le limitation ber-gran c ren e -,.. Ron Mellln~, 3015 main encrenoe· to Flrtt bid doc:umenta to guarani• rt a from -"'
frey Caaulas and CA0:2:,:o Nawpo 8Mcll, American TIU• ln9'.lrena. their return In gooO con--~. ~ eonteCU(I~
Shannon Morgan. rn11 bu11na11 II eon-Company locatacl It 11• dltlon wilhln NIA dtyt .,,.,. t""'9 •• City Counoll Services will be held :tucted by an lndlvldu.i East Aflh Str .... 1" the City the bid opening d•t• member? YES or t-to
Tu--'-l l OO' AM Ron R Melling ol Sanla Ana, Callfomla, all Each bid must conform Shall eldltlnQ City Cf\atttf". aiu.11Y at : Thia aiatement wu tllad thll right, title and lnl.,M1 and be raeponelw to fhe Section 3tO be repM!eO,
ln the Harbor La #Ith the County C..,_ of Or eonwyed 10 end now hetd oontraet doc:umema. and Sectlonl 300 and 403
Memorial Ch.Pel · t>y It under Uld Deed of Elc;tl bldOer than aubmlt, ........_ rv_ ....... ,_ -_,_._.: . ' •nge County on July t2, Trutl In 11\9 property lltu-on 11)8 form fumr.tled With """"'' ,..v•ouw ""' -· _._
with interment ser-11184 eted 1n Mid County and the ~tract docUment1, a~~~ be ""= :
vkes unmediate fol-PublllMd Or '~ State dtllc:rlt>ed a.; 1111 of lhe Pl'GPC*d IUbc:c>n-IN City ~IN City
lowana. SeTvke O.tty Piiot Jul/;r 23 30 A LEMEHOLO ESTATE Uadofs. on INI ~ rator eubjKt tcr
under the Dittdion ~ugus1 e. 11114 • • • L ::9 ~~ ~ 11 ~ ::;"'ru~':r'9ae~.,.,~ :rov., ot tbt. City Counc11.
of , Harbor Lawn M-73 Sout~eny hen of the PractlOM Act Govt Code " dutlea andord=;
M b u n t 0 1 1 v e Sou1tlw9eterty half of · Lot S.c 4100 et -ci ~ by
Mortuary 540-5554 Pta.IC NOTICE t5 t, of Tract No. 708, • Eadl bidder mutt aubmlt Shd u~ng City Cf\a.ter • ttlOWn on a Map recoided In with Md! bid. tlertlfi.d OI Section 311 be rec>aied
ACTl'TIOUI IUIMEll 8oolt 21. Pl09 25' ()f M• eutller'I c:NQ peyatMa to and Sec:t1ona 300 and 40i' HOEG NAME ITATDIENT oellaneoua ~-Recordl tl'le DISTRICT or a bid bond wt11ct1 pr<Mde I« an~ CYrfO BULL HOEG, TN toltowlng perton1 are ot Orange County, Cel~ In the l«m Mt forth In tri. City Tw•. be~
born Jul 1.. 1901 6ong buatneaa .. . lornla. cont tact Oocumenta In an to perrnit tl'le appo6nlmettt of y "· . KLASSIC EHTEAPRISE.S. TN ltr .. l add,... OI amount nol .... than JIV. of the City T,......, by tl'le Oslo, Norway Pasaed 927 w Baker. Coli. Mesa. other common deelgnatlon the maximum amount of bid City Admlnl.ltrator eubjCI away August 2, 1984, CA 92829 of said property 11 purported • • guaranlM lhat lhe bid-toapprov.,ofthecityCouno Santa Ana. Calif. Ted D Bell. 11355 Mau lobe 2022~s1ree1. der wlll enter Into the'*· with dut,.. ~ pow9t'a
S .. -.. ved by Grand-Varda, MontC!Mr. CA 917&3 San1a Ana, fomla p<()C)Oled c:on1ract If the Pf9ICl'lbed by OrcSlnela? .... • • rna Ven Dang 21111 Seid Ni. wtU be made tame 11 ewatded to flld'I V!S or NO
eon, Mark Hoeg; ais-Maple, Cot11 MaS.. CA wlthOUt cownant or wtt-bldder In tri. event of failure Shall 4'X"1tno City Chartw
ter. Tula and brother-27 ran~. upr.., Ol lmpllilld, • to enl., Into tald conlrect, Section 310. wt.ton now aeta
ln law Hadd Rinn• Tl\lt bualnaH I• con-to t tie, poe•allon Of en-IUOfl aecurlty Wiii be torflllt. out tM powet'I end dull• of , u-o• dUC1ed by: 1 general pert-c:umbtanote to aall•fy the OISTRICT r&MfVM tl'le tl'le City Otenl be~ 11.ster, Ebba Webb. ntf1hlp u:ld ballanc'A dl.fll on tl'le right to r•Ject any or all bldt to lndUde addttlonal "'6RI·
Memorial RJVices" to T9d o. BaN n • ot "°* NCUred by or to waive any lfr.,..,,U• mum quallflcatlont for 1~ be held at Good This 1tatemen1 wat flied .. Id Deed of Trutt. 14 lltff: orlnforma11t1a1nanybld1of potltlonofCltyci.tk lnollid ..
With fhe County Clefk ot Or-S2&3,283.•5. pllit tl'le loltow-II\ IM bidding. Ing tl\Ne Y'M'I Of ieleYaAt Shepherd Lutheran ange County on Juty 11>; Ing •llmated cotta. •11-Puttuant lo tri. Pf'O\lltlont wcwtc •~? YU or Church, 4800 Irvine 1084 ,,.,.._•net edvenott al tl'le of llactlon 1773 of IM Labof NO ~ Center Dr Irvine ,_ lime ot the 1n1uat publloatlOn Code of the State Of c.a. Sn.tr tOOatina City Ctw..-
Ca SPM W~ esd ' P.ubllan.d Orange Coast or 11111 Nolle• of Sale: fornl1, 111e OIST~T t1a1 oo. s.ctJon 311• wllld1 now ... .. · n ay Daily P1101 July 23, 30, 14.174 eo talned trom the Dltect0t Of out tl'le powt,. and dut ... ot August 8, 1984 . Pa-Aug119l I t3, 1934 NOTICa TO the Oe$1ertment ol lndutll1al Ille City TrHS41ttr ba ct(ic View Mortuary M.ac "'OPEn'Y Ow.R Re1a11on1 the ganerel amended to lncllide, ad·
Directont 644-2700 YOU AM It OUAUU prevailing rat• Of per diem dltlonal minimum ciuallfl· · UMOl'.R f4 DCaO CW TRUaT, wag• llld the general catlont f0t 1t1e poettlon ot .. -,c MnTICE OATIO aept•"'"' ,,, prevalllftO rate ror l\c>Uday City Tr...,,., Including '
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAM
e.n..t111Y • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
500 Pacific \/~ Df1Ye
Newport Bu~
844-?70C V
McCORMICK ~ARY
1795 L1gun1 C•nyon
Rolld
Laguna 0.M:h, Ca
02651
•94·0416
MA"IOR LAW. MT.OUVI
Mortuety • Cemetery
CrematOfY 1825 O!Mt Ave
CottaM ... ~0·5554
..
a.AL n HltGIRON
IWTH 6 TUTttl.L
WUTCUPP CMAPn!
01 E t1t'1 t
Cotta M
546-9371
,..,_, nu 1'71. UNI.Ill YOU TAK and overiltM WOftl In tl'le lo-oomblnaUon Ot education
ACTION TO 'flOTICT callty In Whlc:tl thll WOttl la to .and ~ In 1111 ., ..
K-1a11 YOUR"'°"""'· IT MA\' be perfofmed for ..:fl craft 1'91tted 10 t11Ca1 man.,
NOTICE Of .. IOlD AT A "'9UC OI type of wotlcer needed to .,,.,17 YES« HO APf'UCATM* IAU.•"®..aDAJID· &Xecute fhe contnict. Theee NOTICl IS FURTHIR .. ~c::=Of PLAMATION OP THI ,., .. .,.onftleatti.DtS-OIVf;N that P\lftullll to
ALCOMOU: :..A~~D~NO O :oA:.~~ =8 =St~ ft ~t!' =i::·~
llVIAAGa UCDtll YOU, YOU 8"0ULD Cott-M .... CA. CoplM may the $late Of Cellfoma, tM
To w~f.2i: eotroem· T~~Js~ Lf~AN TIT\.& ::::,:n-~b! !!!! 19011&all119 body of ..... Clt1,
0 C ........ · ,...... or ll'f'I member or members UO. llOfnO'-L.tn _....., I INSUAAHCI! COMPANY, a ed •t the Job 11\e. u.eof eutllotlnd by lldl
SU, Ylh a.en It ~Jo Celllornla oorporauon • It lhell be mandatcwyupon body °' tr1Y Ind~ vow tMOepantnentof~ Junnlne L. Lawrl•. theCONTRACTOAtollltw>m cw~ fide a.NOdatlOfl of
......,. Controt 1or "•1" Aull!Ottted Offqr ttla,ontr~ It ewll'dad. end o1 ii.na
ON 8~ BEER -& WINE ( DATED July 27, 19!4 upon any tubcontractor Ofl tudl' !t!: ===
PUB U. T Pl..) to ... el· 11• !al Flftl'l llrelll under IUCJtl CONTRACTOR. llON, may flltt a written W9U"
c;oflotlc b9\19r'?:. •t M10 Santa Ana. CA: t2701 to pay not 1 ... ttMIR tl'le Mid ment not to ellfMd· IOO
WllT'« Aw . ountaln Vel-(71') 558-3211 tpeellled 1111 .. to .it woflcert "°'°' In lenOt" for or
i.y . · Publllhed Ota~ coaat em~ by''*" 11'1 the ex-agalntt ttie City me..u,..
Pubtlehed Orange Co .. t Deity Piiat Augult I, 13, 20, ecutlon of me contract. NOTICE 18 ,URTHIA
09ll)' Pltot Augua.t 8. 1tl4 1 No l>I&* may •llldrllW GIVEN that beeecl upon tl'le
M-IG M... any bid lot a period Of forty-lime reuon•bly ~ l rM (C5) dayt attat tf'le data lo P!"IP"e end P«*ll v.i
Mt fot the opening of bl :,m nt1 and HM pit
1" payment bond and • 1 for the eeeotlOft the ptr'fonnenoe bond Wiii be Qty oa.1c ,_ n... ~
rtqUlted Pl'ICW to ti«!Utton 11. 111M, • • r...onable of tl'le C!Clntract Md ltl.a be oa1a pnar to ll.IC:1' .-.-
In the l'orm Mt forU't In • an.~ no ~tat
contra«i;t doeutMnta, ~ tQt1net l"* Cit)'-,,_,,.
""1uant 10 ktlon 4580 tney 1'e IUbmlneO llD l\irR tor ot the '04Mm1M11t C°'9 Of l:W1ntlng and ~ '°
tt1e ltwta o1 ~ the r. voe .... cirOIMad 1n .._
conlrect wll conteln Atilde•.Atgunwntutllilllle s>t~• Ptfmlllfnt .tri. IUbmrttad 10 u. Cit)' a.t
eucou1tul btdd•r to • u. aty Hal. HuntlntMft
tubatltutt "°""IM for 1Mty ~. Ceatoc~na~~· ~~by tlW ors-"*"' ,,.., be Of
TAICt to en1uf• per· Mltldf..n 1.1m1 ...
torlftMoe LWwter thll '*"" ~ " ...
A W•ttirOUgfl IM ,... ~ NOTICI GlvtH ~ ....... ff 14) IM ft* , .. de, Of to .. • tor 19M
aiaci ckte •nd lHN l11ALIOIA M. WlHTWOflTH g:""O:=-,.,. ~Qft'GM!ll' "-bl~ Or Co•tt :.~ 'CA
O.U, Piiot• Ji.Jty 30 and Publllhed Or~ OoM
AUOVti I , l _ 4 Diiiy Piiot ~-UC!'* t , • M07 fM 11
·-·-·-···-· --1100 ··---··· AlaW.S ea.--·-·----.. °'91 MIO a.-_ ....
i........-----·-... Bill GRUNDY. REALTOR
' '• • ' I, l'llttj-· -· -·-· --
. MERCHAIOS[
THE REAL
1 ESTATERS
I/; Mar.nab lr~ine
J
642-5678
'
"RI llEWPORT
lPARTNUTS
,.. •
• •
Palatlat
ll&lfllll PAllT9I.
tntlut. ft•"'· LocW ref
!pftant1, Val. 7 tab tt OWct lntal1 1114 Lnt A ,,... JIM Btlr Wu,. 1111 ltlp Wu... llM l•lr Wut.. 1100 1111 Waat.. 9100 1111 Wut.. 11
l!!J!rt ltac• UH , tit IU.n IHI 250 SF ne w 19th st Found: Whitt dog wnh t.o . jm 11-••11 -DECORATE tNTERtORS IHiUL lfflH . lllllliDi Meneo« tc.. crMm •tor• -June take 1,.,, fiome-....t1ru, C 1;.,.,. • · Newport Beach Animal " •-••" C I /d ·• PIT t p T .. _ CdM Tel9matkellng end y-..tv lg bacMl<>r, f.....,., mthly. SBr'7Ba. N• T~~t Retponslble tem to ahare M. ...,.,...275/11)$), S~ HA' . onty need llPPfY;: o Of e .. gn. .. 4 I mornlnge. _., bUe)' ~ 'Id d ;.;~. 1425 "'°" s~ •trma& lak• 4~51128 t>e9U1tfUllY ~-,,.. In Mgr. Ste-~ 851-.8928 511•8001 etart Wiii trllln,77s..54.41 MIWIM ofc 1n N8 PMM · I out • • ..,_ exp •
--7 ...&.1ii0 <:OM Frptce ITT your Bd. Cofona Del Mar 2333 E LOST: Redlah Organge DE c ~RATING I ART 'ace ~no-131'..e4ao 2 llHAWln "rou alrdbte. 11W04--8812 ~~...:-J~>574-8te9 OCEANFRONT Newport l500 .. 1/2 utll 840-4282 Coat Hwy. 2tO 1q ft, Cat, vtdnlty of CdM. ~ AUTONEHICLE SALES PIT..flT CAREEA PERSON FRIDAY needed ~~=Tug .:. Medical Biiling Clettc. Or·
c:t...Act.n,quletS650-Wlll lhare your home/apt ground leY9I '250/mo ward.&iM.-1015 MAINTENANCE OPPTY495-t754 ThlnldngFITperaonfor perlenCe K~ of angegroveHomeHeetth
lu Cllatatl tiH 11250 97s.-.teaa or mine, In C.M. or Npt CALL 645-5383 LOST: CAT, male long hair ~ulr9 ~~ i-:~ual to •111&1'111 ft.All detailed ofc wk. "'44700 Nit-fund., plana a plus. A~~~tl~e:,~• to~
28' 19.L dOM to bd'I. 6'45-4MOext 1524 tv'!'SQ mllTIYllltTll :r~~~blc: ~ :.:. WU'~ PT/FT,Wllltraln,cellJUll•. Great Lakt Orthodontic OLEll-TYPllT Medlcalbllllno&clecicat :::S-:· S: ~2~ ltatal1 ti 2-• lntall Wut trvtne, phOne anaw. r• Rftard Pit catt 873-4858 matntenanoe r9qulred. 1148-3212 Leb ha lmmed opening Mutt type &5 wpm, eome dutlH. Home Health
p 1 g C 11 11 t l .. rt ..,. oept. OQnf. rm utll M Full-time s.t9'-2All ••• tvllf/ITIOI for part.time, full-time flllng and general clerlcat agency experience re-• om•~ .. 7_7a .. 111 co •c M/F ,~ !LrlQ h._ 1 ' 2• .,, " 77• Lost: Dog M/WhHton IRMt ourchaslng & lnwnt()fY dutlet. quired. 971·24411
.... • CdMnss7o :·r..t & i'178 WU111 llllHllA11LY MCretary.aerv . ...,..., Terrier flt• bf, heir. euer1P .. try Chef for prt-Fun Time w/frlnoe ben-6'45-51112 ILDIOAL
..... esepo Mu•t.,. 7eo.«MS 3 Bedroom Home for Ex· IEW IFFIOl lllll '°'*• Ilk• B«IJJ. ~ Bk fr vat• ctub. Phone for ap-eflta. •es E. 17th St. C.M. Ill 1-••• Immediate opening• for llYEl/DllYll
ec:utlY9 Famlty of 3. Lo-Orange County Airport Npt BIVd on 8roectway, Potntment 155-1123 .... my TIYI I --eneta-tJc: pereont with Needed for FIT PIT work.
1232/mo. 111. last. depo. MALE to thr 3br h-.$325 cation lhoutd be within a area. C0"1« of RehlU & CM. 11/2 REWARD BookkHP•. r-Conatruc-Needacontultw\tt from alt Mu.thaw mlnlmurn 2 Y" goocJ flgure epptltud• 2• ytl or older Cteeneut,
M ~ ~ic:5:C· + utl-Npt,2 blk• to bCh-10 mite radius of Cotta Brlatot. Xlnt vlalblllty. 551-8458/842-4118 tton. PtYab,_ and gen-., ... toahow toys. PIT & Landtc;ape exp. ·~r:e:!; and good llt!rtlaf com· hatd wori(fng and DE-
doM to bctl 1 n/ .. 11t/lute31-0757 M .. PeraonalendBank Only 2 tult• left. 1200 Lollt.PatagonlanlChef eralledget~lenc:e,._ FIT Fun, gd S. flexlble ::c ~~ed. :~rfkcare munlCatlonet(ltla PENDABLEfJS0-13ee
128o mo-un Jnct s 100 dep Male/Female to atwe NB e!r~1714) ~~uettd IC! fl. & 1950 'Cl· ft . Wiil head Parrot•. REWARO ~~d for Newport hra. Jane 973-<>931 and hOS:Uto %.rate gar-Th•M are carHr op-Newport s.ach Lunch &
S36-1028 home. $350/mo day• an bulld to ault. Competlt1Y9 873-12111 . reetdentlal and In-111111'11 denlng equipment Call portunlllet with excellent DlnMr Rettuarant need• 642-48081873-1735 eve. leave detail• with Liu rent•. Broker Co-op. · du•trl&I ~.Salary · Mon thru Fri-km to 4 m advancement potential reaponslbte help. Muat '
CM-Poot. Ten.Ct, Jacuzzi, ,,, ___ ,_ ... r .. -·ut h ..... In ?50~2· 005n5WeekR end8 s. Call R &. H INVESTMENTS Ptnuall "Oii commetufate wllfi ex• IDlllDOll 873_2218 P · p,.... call or tend re-be 18 or over. ca.1 Daya w bath, utll pd, $220 r ..... _ ... "'99 ... v • oom · 111-HH • perlence. Seod reeume Opening, Del Mar area. for · aume to Peraonnet t>eAa. 6'48-nt1 Tlm
6'42-0328 NB, view, P901, clean'g (TO $1500 MONTHl.Yl. OMIT lfllUlll ~h-eelety NMCHY to ruff-time dom•ttc.. ff-.. 11All/P•Tlet US Benet1t1, loc. 1801--------
Fum Coeta M ... home lady seoo 845-8557 Irvin• Shopp!~ of-Call Keith 484-7721 WHtlleld Companie•. out Experienoed only. W••hnd• • Apartment Newport Center Or.. 111111 LYI .. u
$225 mo Call Chr11 alter M/F n/1 to lhr 4br HB Charming, rap. refined flee rt 7118-0SOO 1q ft. •750 I/on KllNMn . tte Laundry,lronlng, general Complex. ReferencH, Suite 270, Newport For Weight Lou Clinic,
•. 84!>-2435 HOUM w/1 $32.5 inclutlL lady dalr• to r«1t.room gen EIOllTl/llHLI 101. N9wpot1, Bueti ca bouMCJeantng, cloth.. bondatM. -s.ics ,...,mt Beadl~flteO PIT pleuant aurround-
.......... _ -, --Jacuzzi· 964-5931 Jett In •ttt>u.hed CdM home SUB-LEASE 1, 2 Of 3 OUteall ONLY 835-9199 .e2eeo I car• l llt• cooking. Call to Ad #735, Dally Piiot PH:(71•) 780-9731 lngt. s.c M1-1159
Lag. """''""""'ny pr v ma~ ref'• avt 720-<>980 n tmkr ......,..acular oc.an view c Barbara, Mon-Fri 2·•pm Boll 1560 Co•t• MHa ----------------tar BR/BA, turn, aeml prlv MIF 1hare 2 Bd 2ba a.p1 • ..._... $400 ; TOPS$$ BOOKKEEPER/SE T'Y . EOE (919)763-0339 • • lftllTHJ IUIL OLlll Nuralng
entr $300/mo •M-5550 NB 5400/mo amoker ok wanted· l BR apt .. yrty r,~~wport · f:·hl~~ Fem.._ pref. Modele and In La~fl CPA~~~~ Ca 82828 N9WPOrt each R/f ca. II. lllll
Sm rm NO TOILET.MALE 840-7297 Balboa llJand Local !•f-Island. 840-0755 El:C<>rt .. (213) Me-1884 comm w eitper.4 H-.nnD UJlllUSll Out• Include mall pick· INanted at Park Superior
WRKNG (Out early AM) M/rmm1 wanild 10 shr w/ ereocee 873•7994 . Bultder/devetoper IMk• P/~lme ';f!11w•~~':· G~ Appllcatlona now being up l dlstrlb., auppty die~ Conv Hotp f\Jll tlmt all
No smtc,dnk,Co s120 pror rem 2 br 2ba . In-Carat" fer Ct-ercial •,r•1-,.t1, . ~a.a conaultant to aall91 With ~~pref OM-~300 r. taken for s>e*tlon at Stu--trlb., ltlpg I rcvg. pro. shift• 1•45 Supe;lor mo 494-2921 CdM 5450. mo + uhts, It 1 ea1z ltatab 2111 .D. I •v.. ptannlng end expanaion. · . dlo Ave, ~3 cat mu. mtg1. Muat Av•. Newport Beach.
avail 81111 720-1729 • HI I l&Wlil 790·1341 Hml own car for etrandt. 1142·2•10 So Lag nr bctl empty n/lkr. compj;te1y end iJ le car CM/NB 17th l Newport 11 1 I w; • UlllmJlf Heavy llftlng Involved. ==---·-,,..=---..,,. J:um w/pool, utll• pd Non-amkr rem wanted. To garege Nr lalr;ioundi Newer 1000-2200 eq ft, llerk-t 0. IH. CARETAKER/YARD MGR, f~ .. ~--7B.~5 lhop. PIT, ExclullY9 Newport Salon. Exp pref. Pl .... • caJI Office peraon PIT, ...,.. &
1250+iHlpo493-3490 turn Irvine Condo lllS/mo 7514531 amplepkg.a/c,875-e900 ~&lrzJ-il fdl 2: d rMC>. CPI wLHll cont. ..,_.....,.. RentaJorWP6-27f8 ""553;cJ9'40 w1<l'rdt Persontlrt• $300/mo Including utll "~ ng n n motor home to manage HYOWIEll · w/good phone voloe Call 1tth,!1t1l1 2904 552-8223 Doub,. car garage In H.B. llWPllT IOTll TD'•Slnoe 1948 •torage yard. 859-...08 .. &J l llmll JUITll P/T 751...all22 dys. ·
•11&1 ••11&*"1 Storage only. S85/mo Ground Floor Space Robt. Sattler NH/CM AaNm.,., counter, exp. Exper h091 ..... Ap I In For Commerclaf cl .. nlng
HM.All _,.... Prof/F (25-40) ~Mnk atir 790-1713or857-1778 (+.20001qft)wtthprtvat• RE Broker Bel Realtors UlllD orwtllfraln.1142-~ee per.on 10-2 M·F.Pfhe Co ss-110 hr dependt OllllllPT
Wkly rental• now svall CdM 2br 2ba $400+ ut111 entrlee, reception, eJan-842-2171 545-0e 11 Exper. hill or part time ENGRAVER troph .,,._ BNch Hou .. 819 Sleepy on 'ex.perlenoe · ee2• 7ge7 Several people needed to
11.co1w1t & up. Color TV. 1st. IHt & d9P 875-3134 Ice lntal1 14 tng seo.ooo 1n ,,.. rm-Bel W ,.. SIOO CHhter/Receptlonta.t oraver. exP.,. ~uir Time Hollow Ln La'.ouna BNch • take order• In Marktetng
pflonM In room OR WOf1(-Satly 1151-9900 provement•I Av1llabl• I U wanted for Faahlon pr«. N~ TrQPhv l En-• •I WIYll Dept. No •lC.P necawy
227 • ~ 44 Blvd C.M Pvt entranoe. frig, micro, Im m • d I ate I y TI m &Oll•UllT I.tend retail store. Mutt graving Co., 170 t . 17th HOTEL mlll ILll lllllO/mo. For Interview
___ 848-__ 5 __ utll lncid Nr Warner & l4110/mo.11t,lat & dep Stoat/Exciutlve Agent. 15 Hour/week. Orang• ::_ 'E~e~7~ wknd St .. Sult• 117 Colla .... OltR/hlil 1 ... rt 11 Interviewing for Jr call Mr. Morrlaon ... n GW. H B 1250 842-4949 Umtted ~arl(lng, no mfg. Bullneu Prro:• Bro-Coat Qolteg¥. Perform · M... FIT, 3pm-11~ For ~pp. Pro/Jr Program Director. 892-51143
lntl11 HM Rental to 1hare, female Apply 90 w. t7th CM ;:~;s\~8011 ° m P • n Y before targecrowd•. high om.AU W&11'11. Eurclu ln•tuctora 1555 8· out High· Applicant• rnu•t be ORDER TAKERS
pref. S250 Incl utll. Jim between lam-3pm. dagr" of •klll reqd. Mature woman for Infant, $12.80/hr wlll train. wayLaouna S..Ch E.O.E. energetic, organized, lmmed opening• av1ll In .-n llOW D/6'42-3154 E/846-1004 ATTRACTIVE BLDG. near PRIME LOCATION. Ap-Cout ~7nlty, g:· pref our home E/bluft 99a,.9095 Hotel hard working. Reeumea S.A. offtc.. No exp nee.
2 & 3 Bdrmt, $300..S 1000 o c AlrJ>Ort 2327 780 Pf'OX. 1150 1q.ft . Buay leoet. 1 A atM, · · ., .. ref'• ..._ 1048 llllT lllt1H accepted 11/5/U thru Wiii train Xlnl Income. ~ly on loft the beaetl. You don't need a gun to 1012 •q t1 available Costa Mesa lhopp'g ctr. ~2-5007 Deadline 4:30 • ' F•IDYlll for raort hotel Full time 8112184. ExperJenced For AP9t call Johnthan
Prime weelc• 11111 avail "draw fut" when you Mo .... In allowln~ c • I I 9 4 2 • 8 • 0 0 . PM II/~ EOE MFH Clencal ...... HI exp. pr9f p)dc . only nd apptv. Contact Mt-~
Cati today for t>est M6ee-ptace an ed tn tr. o.uy llUT-aan 10-12noon or 2-4pm ·--ITlllOUU PU.-iUll FIT 110111•11328 mo. Nu-at 1555Southu&:l Burt C1mpbett 1111 --------tton. Plot Want Mat Call now ....._ 6 8 ......__ ....,.. Buty corporate office 10.30 AM 7.30 PM M Th t;,:: 1 _ ... _.. " In JambOrM Rd. N.B Pllllll/Yll.ITI NB REAL TY 87S-1842 / 842-59711 lll·IUI .hop/ tC¥"e/..,,,_ ~. Newport Beectl Lawtlrm need• ~ der1c • • • • ' '·-1· ..._. ..,...,. ,..dm ' . M/F FIT PIT Joba avall • llOO lq ft. lg door, ,.... needa ICCt clef'k to ...itt Witt tllndl9 ert)ploy.e ~ • AM,-4:GO PM Fr1. Exper. otc. EOE Journymn Painter needed. WOtk at the Bat Hor•. c.~ 0-2 s.&-7249 In AIP, AIR and ntlnQ. •uranc• olatma. mlac. reqd. cout Comrnuntty Hotel 5 yrs txp min req. No •x-Counlry Club• & Private
I • tri I Data Entry exp helpful. cl«teal dutlee Muat ha.... Collegee, 1370 Adame, 1...,.._ ••• 1.._1 ceptlon• 9&M701 Partya In 0 C Top Vale1 • •• I 144-8190 Kay . C.M. 432·5007 Oeadllne ""_...... ...... • i.!AJ .. ltatall 2920 office experience. WUI 4:30 PM 8115 EOE MFH Beach retort. Hrs Mon-UlllODlll Co. Angel• Vatett .. Inc.
S Utlll &WU&IT train for Potttton. Call . Wed 3pm-11Pm Sat a lntert« & Extertof rout• I• tooklng for the S..t. YD.£' 2000 SF $1000/month ulr• es t--i 831 ... IMI 9-6PM PIU/Tml PAY Sun.' 7am-.3pm. For aPP· IVlll. FulHlme. MUl1 ha.... Mutt be neat In appear-
387!1 Birch, Newport reqi ... ~.._d'"'~tt' 111a11 •-• pa .. t...-Wiii 1585 S. CoHt H...., good driving record. ance, haY9 gOod driving Beech. Agt !M1..S032 90 wpm ...... , .... , • ... ~••.we 111"' ,..., .. _ __._ E.O r -,. MM252 record, able to workdays 011.R benefltHalary open. Orange county t .. t .. t OppOf'tunltl•• evaltable Laguna......... ..... & weetcenda Good pay &
CM 3800 1q n with offlcee Contact Vlrgll, 556-3110 grownlng egency eeek• With the LOS ANGELES 11111 OLWlll UIUIY DUii room for advancement
l pll'klnQ. ·451'CI tt Aerobic Ex•cfM lnttruc both 'xperlenoe con.c-TIMES Clra.itatlon De-ITllll Woman encouraged to
••••••••••••• , Weetley N. Taytor Co. 112 50/h win val Work tort l tralneee With man-plt'tment In our door 'o AOijl'E FOREMAN I 111111 apply For 1Ppolntment IU-4110 . r. 772 a:..·1 aoement pottntlal . top door 1MW9Paper uJet F/tlm• day•. Mon·Frl, F I T 1 1 Im 0 yr call tietWMn 10am-4pm Ttlelday, Aap1t 7 . own arM. • commlttk>n• + Mlary program .. Guaranteed company van•, exper S1231/lt60l ma.Noon (7141837-0481 ·
ARJES (March 21 -Apnl 19): Y ou gctresults! lmponant people are Laguna Bch lhop :foaoe: UIWEllM lllYIOE cai1 Mr Belt. 291-8407 · hourty wao• plu. com. req. In atl typea of clean-to I Mon-Th, a..5 Fri. Exp --------
list . b d f: bl di d t d ,...a llta Industrial 330/ IC! Nation•! phone ••rvlc• mttllon. Houn: 4pm to Ing. Ctean out & bond· reqd, eo.tt Comm. Col· PUT Tiii en1na. o serving an arc avora Y spose owar s you, \Ancet, ft 494-4784 h .. Immediate Poel11on co N 8 TR u CT ION . tpm. Training 11 able. Fluent engtlth. leget, 1370 Adarnt A ..... 17.50 to •.tart with major
Capricorn persons fiaure prommently and will help you obtain aoals. ha t f« open minded tldlet. puomMfng 1gent and « provided. Potentlat to '6.50 to te.50 ctep. on C.M.•432-6007 O..S11M reg. CC>fP Alt arM1. u.s
You'll get the m o ney -a nd the love. ...,,... I xlnt Mlary & bonueee. bulldlno tuperlntendam. ..n l300 p1ua ~ weetc. •JIPer· Npt 8c:ttM2-U24 •:30 PM 8117. EOE MFH cltlrena, hlgh-•chool
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) G ood lunar aspect h1&hlt&Jlts travel, SPtRITDXL READINGS CaJI M Mon-ft1 (71•) w/B-1TleO.toWOfk forlrg For an Int.WW, c:au: ...UUIPI • l&llllUIOI grid• only Cati 3-IPM
10CiaJ activity, intellectual cu nos1ty You'll look and ~eel better, you'll ~~,:."1~:t1:,~ ~ 2so..o355 · ::n:=. 0,:1::;. 957-2391ext.120• ano care for tkSetty cou-ex.per. tn all P"U!N of Mi.ton Viejo ·•95-.3315 ~hasc weanng apparel which improves body image. Gcm1m. Camino Real, San Clem APPT SECT'Y WOf1( from reeume to P.0 Box 71182 IM ltatlH Werkera !)le. 15 Daya p/wtc, Tuee-m1lntenanc:. at hotel on Hunt Bdl "'4·2890
Sq.Juan us persons play o utstanding roles. Llc'd. •92·7289 already IOld appta. 10-2 NB 1>2eeo wanted parVtlme Mhr +. Sat. 1100. mo. Rtfa.req. the .bHch. Laguna Find whit you want In
GEMINI (May 21-J unc 20). Yo.u get facts concemina resources of .SCR •M-LETS & ...a pc1 hourty.1M-e100 COOKS. ftulbt• hra. ref'• Call Steve. 11415.5790 M.,.8421 Beaoti. 497 4074 oauy Pllqt ClaMlfledt.
othenand valucofyourown possessions. Some ideas arc revised, some n APPT-SETTERS: ' necHHry. no exp.
motives could be suspect. You will emerge v1ctonous following initial ANSl&lrDS 5pm-9pm. •100 a week. helpful. Contact Aon
setback. Scorpio plays significant role RU\ Guaranteed + comm. MPM 831-2110
• CANCER (June 2 1-July 22): Lie low, g~ sl~w. be anaTytical and Po\Ul'l-Oumpy w~~voice. .1111101111. iak.e n.oth.ina for &ranted. P uzzle pieces faff into place -me!ll~r of Ag11e . Hatvee C&ll anytime 1=. Mon-Fri. "'" time or part
opposite sex becomes valuable ally a nd proves loyalty. G emm1, Vu'IO. APPEAL time. Sandwich ahOp.
Sqjttarius persons play para mount ro les. · Cut• bumper sticker-"Old ASST MNGR WANTED. ~12 °' H0-1631
LEO (J I 2 3 A 2 2) L k beh · d r ~ b · s lawyera ne11« die tt1ev Min 3 Yfl exp In retatl. 1..,,...-=,_.,,,._,,,__,,,..,...,.,,... u y • ug. : 00 m scenes .or answers. c.mp as1 Ju•t IOM their APPEAL~' PAO Schwarz SC Plua OUNTER HELP. SANO.
OD illusion. beauty. film and romance. Yo u're due for surprise and It 75 • ...,681 WICH MAKEA. part time. oould come fro m unusual source. Domestic adjustment occurs, mi&ht •Splr1tut1 PtyCtilO, AO· Apply In peraon. Tummy
involve c:hante of rcs1derrtc due to holiday travel. .. vttOf &1 Card Aeacser• Am MlllWIYll StufferL 270 ·So Bnetol, VIRGO Auo 23-Scpt 22hc0cfine terms a void self~puon Put, preeent & Mure. Greater lrvtne Credit C.M. 7o1-3M7 .. · • • 87~2495 or 831...nM Union haa lmmed. e>pen..1..,,----..,.----coopcratc Wlth youna persons. ready for chaoac. travel. vanety and 1ng1 for part time work
commun1cat1on from relative m transit. Pisces person aids in makina Lt1t tu• Must have own trenap:
contaa with individual who could open previously c losed doon COntact Vlfgll. &56-1110
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Focus o n secunty, responsibihty, · S lllt tit IMM
inwisified relationship. You have chan~ to increase financial FOUND AD ~ull~='ca!1er , tr
benefits. Older indivtdual is on your side. helps you evaluate tlonJtt• Meded '1m::C: RE,·P:ITlnaldtMtelpoe-~ions, tncludin& propcny. Capncom plays ianificaot role. ME FREE atety. ~ ltl peraon et It.Ion, boatlnt lndu.try SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov 21): Make anqumcs, 11ve (uU play to Coete MW M1teub!lhl. ltnowttd~~. For
1ntcllectual cuno11ty. What had been m1ss1n1 will be located. Messqes Cal• 2838 Harbor ltvd. Set detaleClll ~ u.Mn arc received from those who have been look.ins ror book or an object • Mr. Nellon. 71~1172 •to 4 Olly
you requested. Anca. Libra ~ns fisure prominently MZ•llll
SAGJ'M'AaIUS (Nov. 22-Dcc. 21 ): Stre5s independence, crcativl-~~=~~~~ tf. willinane to invest in your own talents. Cycle moves up, ,...
cimJmstances favor your efforts You'll get to hcan of mancn an Found: Bladt c.1. VIC:
romance. Lunar emphasis on payme nt • collection1, invesuneou and Magnofla/Atlanta. HI ability~ locate Jost aruc.les ;;"°";;;:,::;53:::20;..=:;::::;=;:::.._~
.•.• ~RlCOJ:lN (Dec 22-Ja n. 19)· Lunar. numencaJ ~les po1_nt to F~U~D'~ io:::,.~ 1n1t1au~·c, aeatt aty, on11nahty and fresh .start. Put m1 takes will be it Htt; It Jamee "
corrccted.Jou'll meet cxciuna people and >-:Our cntitt outlook w\11 be sesr ·
ono of opumi1m. Cancer native pla~11ipuficant role. • ,OUNO; Ooton A•t•r AQ~AJUU . (Jt;n._ 20-Feb. 18): OoOd new1 will be rcccavcd an male.Vic. 8alt>oe Pen. connecuon .,th 1nd1v1dual confined to home or hospital . You'll havo t7M• 0t ...._710t
reuon to be h PV'I· you'll have more ~rluna room, many rean, FOU 0 !ASIAN wnltt
doubts and IUIJ>lctons w1lJ be era~. Uanan f~ promanenlly. O£CLAW-m !Gt_, em·
District Managers
If you enjoy working with younO boy1 &
girls and dtJk jobs are. not for you,
con11der o cor"' I• the Mwtpoper c1rculo
lion field. Thi• 11 o unique po11t1on with
doily challenge• & rewords
Our optnlng' ore 1mmed1ote. Appl1cont1
must hove o 'I.on, 1tat1onwo90n or truck.
We offar on ucelt.nt salary with o bonvt
pion and 001 ollowanc:e. We hove on
excellent benefit pion that 1ndudu hotpi·
tohiotlon lnsuronc:e, liberal va<alton ond
holidcsy1.
Cond1dott1 mu\t bove o d ne to be
tu<<eufu\ ond be w1ll1ng to w0tk hord, If
you think y-011 ho¥t t!'e qual1f1catt0n•,
pt.cne Clf>f>l'f "' penon to
the Daily Pilat
Monda,. tflru tr.day 9· l l om or ?-.. ~
330 W. Bay
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
P (Feb. 19-Marrh 20). Stand .. II for pnncipl -you att «8'CUye1. 75"'4311 ..._-==IQ!~ &0 win ou'U set what you need•• Yt'Cll as •·hat )OU rull · t t1G / mix
('oWefl Of ptfl ~ llci&lilrntC1 )'OU W11J n tii.1 en 0oaar WI
nfluencc people. TaW\I plays significant role. CM 7614387
'
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
tRu111an1M
5 Pawt11r1ty
tOVHm
1• Vocal sound
15 Plane1
I& 81<d a cr09
17 Cate au -
18 FlaYOflng
19 Patl ot a bird s
beak
20 Statul•
2 I Old Ille same H
22 Shinn
24 Ftsheogs
2& Edge
27 Edtble gram
, '8Sledchng
31 Ort
34 least good
35 LOOO period
36 Sharpen
3 7 Breton et at
3& This Sp
39 Muhammad -
40 Tranararrad
4 I MlitlC group
• 42 Made public
~ .... ''NonMnael '
• •5 ··~oanlry".
• 46 ldtolte; • S.O Juntcs
2
14
52 811dg• W()(d
S3 BelOf e now
~Enterl-
55 Wat«J)fOOI
cloths colloq
57 vanu1oa -
58 Wtngl
59 Lively
60 EngMsn county
61 Untie
62 Mint plants
63 Vintage cars
DOWN
1 Mainstay
2 Fish
3 Santa
4 lmpedtmenl
5 l<ilcM!l 11em e Hindu noble
11.11.i.11 a Common
contractlOn
9~~.ort
10 lntonaltOo
11 M~I dllap-
IClaled
12 Damage
13 Ovtnn 21 Slr .. tt>oy
~ lMn f1'lef
25 Stadium root·
2e Made 11o1e1
28 Made out OK
•
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
211 Oosuncoon
30 Mosquito Brit
31 Trout
43 Mlde IOYOUS « Men1gers
46 Sug11 source
47 Artiest
48 Arctic hOuM
49 -age eon
50 ThicUt
32 Funcilon
33 Unl;m1ted
34 Suri walk9f
3 7 P1ano1 tun
38"-P .. 1
.. 40 Teml)Ofary
51 Old Kt~ -
52 Pedan1tc per~
5e MoSletn 1111e lodg•ng
41 RO'#eft 57 Next to feO
1 •
)
C7
I Bl' l YAH::i
I '1W .PORSC 1-1E
I I B ~ • ·\(: 0 =· ·I 1 I "
·11 EL.DO 111\W. 421( mi.
Jdnt oond $12,I00/090
~72t1;E~1-1730
·a 1 SeVlle. 35K ml. ~
,.. coflCI $13.000. c..
151-1800 btwn N:30
"84 B.DOfW)()
S1tldoM'I C&oeed End-Comm1 ...... All.~\(ERS l.EASNi
(J' 14) 432. 1177
IWOS CADWC
COHN Ell
CHEVROLET
'\..~ •1 I '4 •
,.... ' ' \1 •.
S46-1200
•
&
•
q;~ ~
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY
_,
0
...
~ ~
m SANTA
ANA
EDINGER
• G WARNER
~
0 CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441 E. O.ast hJ., ..... rt leaell
111-0IOO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 H()USE OF IMPORTS
DIAL MERCEDES
7141637-2333
Alongside the Santa Ana Fwy.
In Buena Park
0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA
#11 bte Otlftr Ir., lnl1e
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7800
Complete Sales, Service & Lessing
G OIANG£'tOAST J££P!Rmut. T -
· # 1 /1 1111 Wist For
#• }Hp Sills For I Yun
r Q • S~LES •[jlOj?~ • SERVICE coast • LEASING
··~ ~-· m~,;:::.-=.~LVD ' • ACCESSORIES DEPT
I ,
(D
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. SefvlCI, P~Body. ~
Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
20IO 1.n.r lh• .. Oetta le11
142-0010 " M0-1211 .
0 . SOUTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 842-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
Ol•nc• Countyi LM&at Volkswapn/lsuzu Dealer
Wt Will Not Be Undersold
PARTS DEl'ARTMENT OP£N SA'T\JftMY
RAY FLADEBOE
VOLKSWAGEN
m
# 20 late 0.lfer Ir., lm11
In The Irvine Auto Center
830-7300
Orantt Countys Ntwest Volkswagen Ota/tr
• Comp/tit Salts, Sfrv1u & ltaSlffl
& ~ALEI ~ •• ~!Ef!~!l-PAM:-1R
Overseas Delivery Specialists
PARTI DE'AJITMEWT OPE,.
•ATURDAY MORNINGI
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach 840-8444
22 FRWY
• -<' MARINE CORPS AIR STATION
~. ELTORO
IRVINE
j
MISSION
VIEJO/i
v.u()
llllUIOil
VIEJO
SAN
JUAN
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W•'r• N•w -W•',.. O.•llng
Acroaa from the Big A on Katella Jmt WHt
of the (17) Orenge Fr ... ey '-
Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises
0 RAY FLADEBOE
Ulllll ID•IY .llUll lllD
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In The lrvtne Auto Center
liilltl• 2221 E. l1t1ll1 lll-llll
830-7000
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. YIUIWllD • .... I • PlllllT
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE ·
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Corner of Br09dway • 1tt St. CIOMct Sund9)'1
'
SITY OLDSMOBU:E OJIM Sl:EMONS-IMPOR
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
1!01 Ou.II Bl. --. New CM Loc.llon ·
1001 Quall St -R...,_ OW#elon .
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3 Blocka So. of •OS Fwy.
IT\ World'• Latoat &wet/on of .0 \Cl Mercedes Benz """
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Classifie9 advertising 1s your best -
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POtential buyers who live 1n th11 area.
Call tC)day.
. I
7
Daily Pililt
c'aSStfHKt ads
phon 642·5678
. •
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.. .. caum IDITIOI
MONDAY. AUGUST 6, 1984 ORANGE COIJN TY CAL i<ORN!A 25 Cf NTS
Laguna Hllls 'Edwin
Moses keeps his Win:
ning streak glittering. .
Page Cl
Coast r1
Cable television firm
wants franchise ex-
tension. / A3
Drugs blamed In )all
death.IA3 ·
California
There's more than one
waytowatch Olympic
GamesonTV./M
World
Vietnam says children of
American Gia should be
allowed Into U.S./ A5 ·
• Japanese remember
Hiroshima bombing on
39th anniversary.IM
------
·OCro carnage claims 7
· BOdies 'oftwo more roadway victims
ays a ter crash on t e Ortega
By STEVE MARBLE .,. ... o.w: ........
In onC of Oranae County's wont
wec.kends for fiiJhway camaae; seven
people were killed in traffic ao:idents
and two more weft discovered dead
in a remote ravine where their car
·-
apparently crashed late lalt week,
authoriti9 reported.
The dead included a 3-year-old
San11 Ana airl who ran into movinc
traff.c, a l~year-ola moped paucn-
ger from Huntinaton Beach, a I 9-
year-old man ~bo reporudly was a
p1:11enaer in a car ao•na the wro41
way on 1he Colla Mesa Freeway and a
man who apparen11}'. feU alkcp while drivin1op lbe.San Diqo·Frccway.
Oranae County Sheriffs deputies
recovered the bodies of two men
Sunday in a e1:oyon below the
windina On:ep Hi&hway less than. a
milt from the Rivmidt County liM,
according to California Hi&hway
t Patrol Officer Ken Daily.
The lwo m~n rep<>rtedly were
drivi.D& into lht aeVcland Nat.ion.al
Fomt last Tbundoy J0< a day of
pract.acc ahootina. OfflCal aaid ll appean the striver lolt coftttol of \ht.
car on the twislinl roadway.
The dri vcr or red Chevrolet El
c.atninowasidcntlfiedas Tbomat W .
Home. 25, of Miuion Viejo. ff.is
~was Mart John Cano. 20,
of San Juan Capistrano, accordina to
authorities. .
· ... It appeain their car left . the
roedway It I b..iab ri1e Q( spaid, weal
au11om<. lllNCk • rock --t and wmbkd in.to the ravane, .. Duly
Nid. ""The car landed on 11S top and wu way-hrmebruoh.....,.,...,.
traffw: couJ4,n.'t 11e il. -laid Daily.
... ,., vayeasy tod-=out i• that
area. Wc'~alwaytfi stolen can
out there that have been millirc for
montbl." !Pl.--CAll.R.&011:/AS)
·Coast' s~Lewis .
. shared the gold
~with-his-family
'His sister had told
him to stand up very
straight. and he did.·
By PRU. SNl!IDERMAN
... ai.., .... ~·
· David Lewis, an insurance sales-
man from Newport. 8eKh, said he
and bis family acted oa faith when
'
'-!::"l~~"::"'! --· 1""":~1!>eY oot-dpwn-<luring 1111-etym~ ·mwtng iveni 'SUnday afternoon at ·
LakeCuitas. .
_ His son, Brad Alan Lewis, WU
competi.oa.Jn the double scu.11 l'90t iii.vol~ two-man bol.u at the lake near Ojai.
"We took a chance and pu.t our
foldina.chain right in front of \he
medals in the 2.0CIO-mctcr rw::e in
medal awards platform," David wbicb each man 1'0WI with two oan.
Lewis said I.Oday ... We'd bate to be a Boats ~presentin& sil. natioN com-
jinx, but we bad a fcclina he'd do pe1.C:d in the event. .
well... ..It was very dote," recalled the
-Tb.at hunch wu an accurate one. medalist's father. ""They itaned Out
Brad Lewls. 29, and panner Paul in siJ.tb pbce. At t,000 me\C:B. they
EnquistofSclttle, cdetd put a team were in third "1acc. A\'·'°°~
from Bclaium to wil>-Olym~aold-(Pieue-unnB/AS)
Sto1111 on .__...victory
mnd11Mrmed1l1waiby
twoUClproduellonC1.
Haitians moving Into the
Bahamas create big
worries for offlclals./ A5
~~~:::"<.ZS:~·~~=
Airport foes gird
for battleonoill 1
Feature
Wiii fancy footstrlngs that
dress up bare feet tie up
the shoe market? ./81
The new Incentive for
high grades al a southern
church college Is free
travel abroad./B5
Sports
The U.S. women's vol·
leyball team needs one
more victory to win the
QOld medal./C1
Joan Benoit's victory In
1hewomen's Olympic
marathon was a Sunday
stroll In the park.IC1
The U.S. women's Olym-
pic basketball team Is
within a game of clinching
thegold.IC2
~&:X:>.:~~
Entertainment
Director, producer
Jam~ Komack's out for
Richard Burton dead at 68
Actor IUcllard Barton. llllcnnl lier,. wltb Illa
former wife, 11:11.abetb Taylor, darlq
tbelr toar of .. Prlftte Lt..,.•• lut re&r• bu
cllecfat tile 1&e of 158 •. -atory OD J'aCe A4.
Robinson plan would
limit noise claims
to 1 per· homeowner
By JERAY HU1SCH °' .. Dmlr"" ....
A showdown Tuesday in Sacra-
mento may determine whet.her New-
port Beach residents are restricted in
their court ~ts apinst John Wayne:
Airport and its owner Orange Coun-
ty. A state Assembly bill authored by
Assemblyman Richard Robinson, 0-
Gardcn Grove, that would 1imit
airport lawsuits is scheduled to be
beard by the state Senate Judiciary
Committee. ·
Robinson will present the bill to the
committee penonally in an effort to
move the measure to the Senate floor,
according to Jack Germain. a spok~
man for state Sen. Ollie S~w. R-
Newport Beach.
Speraw opposes .the bill and bu
written lett(rs to each of the oommit-
tee members u.raing the mcasutt's
defeat. Germain said.
A similar bill introdU4;tld by Ro~
in son last year passed botb the Senate
and the Assembly but wu velocd by
Gov. George Ocukmejian.
The earlier version would have
prohibited peoe'e from filing small
claims suits qa1nst the airport.
Oppooeats oC Robimon'1 bill are
F'tina .....iy r., a fiaht ..
Despite a series nf amendments,
lbc bill '"is DO better than it ever was,.,
said Barbara Lichman of N
Beach. Liebman is the din:ctorc:ri:
Airport womna ~P1 a coali~ ~fbomeowner orpruza11oos fi&b11a1
C•J>.Usion at the airport. ~1
Liebman and Steve ·flOa.u.a:l.,.. an
(Pl--AillPORT/A2)
Smashup
victim
suspect,in
car theft
Police bclicw the driver of a stolen
econ·omy car \bat crashed-in a
Newport Beach pileup. killina one
and inju.rin& six, may have been
wanted in a rash of San Diqo car
lhcfU.
The unidentified driver was killed
in tM "SpeciacuJar car accident which
followed a hiah·soeed cbue throuah
much of south 0ran&e' County Fri-
•(Pl--PATAJ./A2)
~A::::~~·t~IP~M'&;;;~;~;~;.;~;1[---,..,..,..,..,..,..,.. ... ,....,.,..,..,..~~"""·~·11'!!~~~-!'!!!!!.!!!~!!!'!!~~-"""-~-~~~~~-:;~~!!!!'~!!!!'~:=:====:!·::::·:::-:::::~~!!!!''!""''!"!'..,"!'l!!l!!!!!!I!!!!!,.. .. ._
eua1neu Romanian's escape realizes FV council
PEOPLE IN THE News
IRSzeroeslnontax · lluEll to COilSider ~=~=~~-·15-yea. r dream of freedom KLE111 terni limit INDEX
h Id behl d dtfect ~main behind in Bucharest. &': ele ti n BrtdQo B-4 Engineer left wife and c I rcn n He .. ld he wrote them • lcltCt' and l 0 r c 0
BuHetln Board A3 h U S sent it in care of iriends at &OOlber
'
•
~ es to flee oppression and come to t e . . a.im.ss.. .
C.llf I -A4 "My family will be sm, physk:ally, · partlci1'9tc in collective farmina and By PRU. SNEIDEIUUN l
Cl,.;:.: Cs-a Penccution. Oppression. Secret of met.ais.. He decided he had lived at least." be said. "I'm not e~pcctina was jailed in 1959. He remained in ... .._,.... ...
Comtcl EM etCape ptans.. Terror. lonaenou.ah with tbedi.sappointmcnt them to be really penecutcc! but_~r prison unuJ J964.. A bAHot mcasun: that would limit
CrOMWOni .. ~'°• .. '"' •· 1-·-CT Octavian Dumitrascu'.--tife 1_tory and the disadvan.-of aociety may~ some haiassmenL Re -.id ~ llbdina of bis parent.I u founiain Valky City Council mem ..
"""""th Notk*I C4 aounds like a Cold War spy novel. behind the I ton Curtain. that JudJin& from cases be knew of in .. intellcctu.ats .. -citizus wbo ques-ben w. two fbvr..year terms will be
::::., YourMlf 82 Dumitrucu, who pa b)' ''Paul,.. Nowstayinaat the homeof1Colll. Romarua, when a family member tioned or miJtrUSted \hf: Commllailt considerod Tuetday by the council. H=-.nn. ce arrived In Costa Mcu 'last Weck after Meu woman who co-spontored hi(Yl lives abroad lhe rest bf the famdy aovmunent and its policies-would wbicb mgs\ decide whe\btt '° adopc ... :-_w;-::=:_ 82 defectina from hit uti.ve Romania in thtouah the C»na Mctia-bued Ban "ICU very carefully... ~ play heavily inte tM rat of me P"oocmi Qr put it'° voten ia the ~Mi-"'..i ~~..::..., a 1_2 C&iro1 EcYJ>L, in May. His nearly. two. the SOvieu Coalition °'""itrucu His lift in Romania has.been a '°"I DumitrUCU's life. .' November emera1 e&oc\ion.
"""'•""_...,. dayf\iahttofrecOom-fromCairoto detcribed in hiltina 'bUt e:xcclk:nt strugle apin1t' iJ\ju1ti<le and ,oqa .. At lhlt time, the official pohcy The council meeta a& I p.m. Nat~ New. A4 Athena, New York, Minneapoli Ena.Ii.ah fljaht to freedom. prasion Dumh.rucu said. It ts preven\Cd cbiktren to~na from Tuttday 1n FouoWn. Valley 'City
Opinion A8 Phoeoix and°"'""' Coun1y -was -0.mitru<u cbooe to come to the clillkul~· he oald. to dcacribc the bacl;poundswithintcllo<lllalpattntt Hal~ l0200S1Altf Ave. • PP=~ fi the Cldmin1tion of .1 I S-)'9r d,..m. United St.ates. he said, becayte M eve: nu \hit Jed up to his dccis.ion to to enter the u.nlvmitY ... he u.id. So. at Raidcnu who wanted \be limit
....,. The 43-ytar"'Okt mechanical en&i· ••felt safe" here. "The U.nitedStaia is fOl"llkc his home.I.and. least ini1ially, he wu refu.tod envy adopted wett required 10 ptber-
PubMC_HottcH cfJ nttrsaidittookh.imlS.)'eallltOfind1 acountrywbichwilldcfmdfteedom .. ltlJbardtOSl,Y.Whati.s~ .. M into~univcnit)'. ,..natures ftom 10 ~t 0( the :r:'; way to escape the stnct control of better than any other counlr)'." be llid. .. My wbok hfe b.a C®tnbuted ... 811;1 in 1962. wbt.n btwu2J. be was at)''• reaistered votera. SuJ.'PC)!lel't
8ockMarke11 ~ Rom1nian1ulhoritieslonaenouah10 added. . ' to(mydeci ion)... . · • finaJly~tolC)~thc'!aiwrsity. submined l .321 lipatu 'fhex_ _ ~... · 83 dcdawcs• re hit inicntion .to defect to the And ytt, ltavinJ Romania 11 bit-OumitrUcv lft'W" up tn Romarua It was 1 t tune in ~ ~asl Valid . w '° "°"'-"'#-..
11-... terswcc:t lbr Oum1truaa u it~s for durint the 19SO., tht tc><allcd Oum1trucu's·h . ~~~~~_;~~~~~~~~~~~ WMther A2 Dumltrasc:u, who taUJht himself 1n_yontw I catbcjrbome Also. SWiftitttl .. llisfi:~1 .&PiltS11ftlM Int 60i; tfii1 ~~ ID Q Oet1t £vdya odoa
,Wortd Newt iiilAr4:f-~~·; h, b--.-wdl•pubtishtd till'lltti 0Um1lf'llCU s wife 1od thm: youna Eattcm Onhodox_ ch\arcb, critioKCi Romania • was chanpftl. l hoped m>OCttd that her staff' dc$ell toed
who spu_i1Jiza in the ha\ treatment rhUdren. who knew of his i>t&nt to the aovemmenl for f~i.nacit1zrns to (Pleue ... aOllAJll'lAJle:/ A2) (Pl ...... V ALL&T / A2)
• \,
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Al• Cr-.nge Coul OAIL.Y PILOT/Monda)>. A
B>• U E. .&&..r.&"
0 .. 091J .......
Ota Gountfs Po9f and ~ tutc. for whom med1 1 care i an oft· i&nored ex • wall gc1 me help
soon from hare Our Sch C ta M ~ or:pn1zat1on that has
concentrated in~ 1969 on providina
food, dotbina and helter for the
poor.
Sometime this fall, a free com· ~unity medical clini tU o~n on
lti around of Rt'a C.Ommunity
Center. where the OS offi~s are
located .
.. People can't get adequate medical
care," td1ean Forbath, the S4-ycar-
old Colla Meu mother of seven ~ho
CARNAGE ON COUNTY HIGHWAYS •.•
Prom Al
The arim da&eovery was made
Sunday afternoon by fnends of the
two men who retraced the route
tryina to locate the two men, officers
said. . .-
Santa Ana -was arrested on su p1-
cion of drunken drivma. officers Slld.
The motorcyclist suffered moderate
injuries
normal rate of speed when it suddenly
Jerked off the road, npl>Cd thiouah
200 feet of iccplant and sfammcd into
a tree.
Eztended
~c Colul!llM,.Of\ Conoercl.NH
0..-FlWOtVll
Da1'0f\ o.n-.
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Temps OlltfOll
OUMll BP-~ .. &.. , ..... .. M Fargo
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92 • l.11111 Mill :: : t::r
to·~ 82 .. Mlllllll lleeOll
t1 71 ........ u. ~,., n• ........
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14 11 '"""Yew\ MU Ne111De1.Va
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82 .. °"*'* llN~
.. 74 Ptllld ..... 81 II l'lltll~ 71 17 ,,,_,..
92 1' Pltt9Clutgh
U 71 Portland.Me :: ro '°'1ttnd.°'
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t1 71 el ..
16 70
M 170 88 II .. 14 81 12 .. . 87 11 11 n
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12 .. " .. 71 ..
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TOOAV
'149•"' 8J2p111
TUUOAY 1Ma111 • I .3t &.M
1164•"' ! 14plll
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Elsewhere, 3-year-old Scina }(jm
wu ktlled Saturday noon near her
home when she ran in front of a pas 1na car on South Shawnee Drive
in Santa Ana. police said. The 11rl
died from in1emal injuries abou1 30
minutes later at Fountain Valley#
Community Hosp1.~uma center.
David Norman. 18, was klllcd
Saturday afternoon when the Navy-
rqistercd van he was drivina rolled
off the San Diego Freeway near the
Brookhurst Street offramp in Foun-
tain Valley.
Three other people were killed in
separate traffic misbaps over the
weelmld. Matthew Carols, I 9, was
killed Saturday in a traffic accident in
the Sitverado Canyon area. a woman
identified as Peay Ann Floyd. 23, of
Fullerton was killed Sunday in Buena
Park, an an unidentified motorist was
killed early today in Cypress.
u 13 "8gett4I
ti t7 Ottind ftaplclt
... 17 ~,-.. 72 ~ •
... 10 Helena
10 ...
to 72 t2 11 _
a 81
.. 12 11 78 .. 74
81 17 .. 10
12 78
78 N
82 1'
' SURF R£PORT
An&el Esquivel of Huntington
CHP officers said they believe the
driver may have &llen asleep. Wit-
nesses said the van was traveled at a
• •1 76 HonolYIU .... ..__ •• , 17 " ......... .. ::= 1112~
... .. ICaneee Olly ........
•
104 71
'Beach di~ late Friday at the Foun-.,
tain Valley hospital after the moped
he was a p&SSengcr on collided with a
car on $prin&dafeStrcct. The 10-year-
old suffered internal inJuries in the
wre<:k.
Kevtn Hackett, 19, of Santa Ana
died Saturday morning when the car
he was ridir:ig in crashed mto a
'motorcycle whlJe travehn1 the wrooi
way on the Costa Mesa Freeway,
acco~nl to authorities.
FAT AL CRASH VICTIM •••
homAl
day. He earned. no utentifi ·on,
pohce said. San Dicao officers were
enroute to the COUDD' mo11ue today
in an effort to identify the man.
.. They think they may know who be
is," N~rt Beach Officer Tom .
Little said. "He may be a man they've
been look.Jog for in relation to several
.aimes~"
an bJS early 20s and quite tall, WI$
chased by police from a U.S. Border
Patrol checkpomt near San Clemente
to Newport Beach where he crashed
into two other cars traveuna in the
opposite direction. •
Police suspect the man intentional-
Mesan seized in mo~estif!_g
of boy, 8, at Estancia pool
• TliCcmvcroftbcwrona-aycar..,..
identified as K.evm Jordan. 20. of ~ '"'rhc(unidentificd driver. said io be
VALLEY ELECTIONS •••
l'romAl
2 9S2 si&naturcs were valid -exactly terms. He also said the law, as 100 more than needed. . proposed, contain an a~:~uity th~t
City Attomex Alan Burns has could eventually be c nged 10
informed council members they have court. .
two choices. They can either: The proposed term hmatauon
•Approve the proposed term limit would not ~ppJy to anyone scrvma on
ordinance without change; or the council before Apnl I , 1984.
•Submit the ordinance without Backers say the measure would
alteration to local voters 1n the Nov. 6 eliminate some of the advantage
electJon. pven to incumbents and encourage
Bums also said he believes the more part1capat1on an local pohttcs.
proposed ordinance confhcu with Critics say a council member faces a
stale law. which be wd doe$ not aive term hm1t.ation each time he or she
c1ues the power to lurut counol rurui2r.l'e':Cktllo.n
LEWIS SHARES llISUOLD .•. ·
Jl'romAl
they were in second. And dunng the
last I 00 meters. they took over the
lead and fintshed half-a·boat ahead of
&tgjum."
The crowd of about 10,000 was
cheering wildly for the Amencan
oarsmen, the proud father said.
For the family, the greatest thnll
came dunng the medal awards cer-
emony.
"Brad led the way up the platform,"
·Lewis saad. "His sister had told him to
sl&Dd up very straight, and he did.
Then after the ceremony, he handed
the flow~-t&-h+s sister Valene and
put the gold· medal around his
mother's neck
"She (Brad's mother &e Lewis)
was standing nsht there, marvelously
proud. Hundreds of people took her
pbo«>araph with the medal."
Asked the reason for this gesture.
the m-edalis~s father saia, .. Fourteen
years ofhard work culminated in this.
and I think he wanted the whole
family to share in the joy of victory."
That preparation penod began in
1970, when Brad Lewis rowed on the
Corona Del Mar Hial\ School team
that lasted just one year. The school
didn't even award sports letters to the
participanu.
Later Brad considered attendina
Orange Coast CoUeae to continue
rowtng, but was persuaded to attend
UC Irvine and row for Coach Bob
ErnsL After coUcge, he continued
rowing, m.akina that I 980 Olympic
team. Brad was disappointed by the
boycott of the Moscow Olympics, bis
father said.
Earher this year, Lewis' partoer,
Enqu1st, was cut from a team of
Olympic rowing prospects, and Lewts
ly rammed the other vehicles, one By KAREN£. KLEIN identify Ward from the l2'year-old's
dn\ten by Susan E. McArunch..3S, of. Otho.Ir...,...., desaiption .
Anaheim and the other by .Barry B. · 1b o .. ··:..r..a Hermanson, 41, of South 1..quna.. A 20-ycar-old Cost.a Mesa man e o-ycar"'*' victim, who laves
· h ked co n J for near Ward'a home, was located Both wtre taken by behcol?ter to the w o wor as a camp u sc or Friday afternoon, Cappuccilli said.
FountaJn Valley Community Hospi-the Orange Coast YMc;A was ar-The po_ol staff members knew tat trauma center. re1ted after he alleicdly molC11ed art
Hermanson underwent emergency 8-year-old Costa Mesa boy at the Ward ~ sisbt and said he ia a
surgery Friday and remains in serious Estancia Hiah School swimming frequent visitor to the J>OPI. which is a
but stable condition. McAni~cb, pool popoJar banaout for children on
headed LQwatd the beach at the time Dennis James Ward was taken into summer afternoons.
of the iccident, is listed in fat~ custody Friday at the Costa Mesa Cappuccilli said he contacted Ward
condition. . . police station on suspicion of child Frida)' and asked him to come in to
four ch a Id r,e n rs d t n a 1 n morcstation and oral copulation the police department to talk about
McAnincb's Pontiac station wagon accordina to Costa Mesa Detective the 1ncidenL After the detective had
suffered broken bones, lacerations Paul CappucciUi. interviewed Ward, be booked him
and bruises. All had ~ released Ward was observed Thursday mto·the Police department jaif.
from Costa Mesa Medical Center afternoon allqedly copulating tbe 8-Ward, who said he is a carpet layer,
Hospital by Saturday. year-old victim in the men's locker denied the alleptions. Cappuccilli
The Ford P1n.to s~tion wag~n room at the pool, 2323 Placcntta said.
dnven by the umdentJfied mot<?nst Ave., a police spokesman said. The Jim DcBoom.«ccutived1rettorof
was reported stolen from a San Diego city's leisure services de~ment the Oranse Coast YMCA. said Ward
woman last week. opens thc_pool to the. public durina went along as a counselor last sum-
the summer. mer on a one-week tnp to Camp
A 12·ycar-old boy, who walked into Osceola, a Y camp near Bil Bear.
lhc-locker TI>Om tnd 'll~y-aaw----il"tr-tltttl ~Sood jott for-' ..
· Ward and the victim, noufied staff DeBoom said. ··we had no indication
members at the pool about 2 p.m. ofany problem. I .don't know what to
They were unable to locate either the think at this point... ·
himsclt quit. fhe two pract1c.ed on
their own and evennmllrbeat the
Olympiccoach'schoicc in achallensc
race, thus wmning a place on lbe
Olympic team.
According to his father, the interest
in rowing runs in the family. David
Lewis rowed for UCLA 'in 1941, and
Brad's brother Tracy rowed for Or-
anie Coast CoUcgc m 1970.
David Lewis said his son pMpaied
for the OlympiC1 with two. or three-
hour rowing workouu in 1:.ido Chan·
nel each morning and running or
wei&ht traininc each afternoon. The
atbfete is employed by Wells ·Far&o
Bank at Fashion Island.
The medalist's father wd the
enure family was at Lake Casitas on
Su9c1ay, pullina for Brad::"'" ·
4Tiaureonc-63d a good chance,"
DaVld Lewis saad. "But you never
know."
victim or the suspect but were able to Another YMCA employee told --
CoNTIN UEO SroR1E s
ROMANIAN DEFECTOR •• ~·
FmmAl
thinas would be aood for Romania's
f'uture."
But in Auaust I 968, when the ·
Soviet Union invaded Czechoslo.
vaba. a heavy blow was dealt to
Romanians who hoped for some
freedom from tbe control of the
Soviets. ·
In the 1970s, Dumitrascu said, the
Romanian sovemment 0 took sys-
tematic steps to keep intellectoal.1
away from the political process ...
Citizens who were not memben of
the state's official Communist Party
had "sccunty files" kept on them that
AIRPORT BILL FACES OPPOSITION ••• restncted them from rising to the
upper echelon of social or political
life.
"It was peoplecomina from the old
intellectual (families) mainlyt:. who attorney hired by the city of Newport claims ~uits an individual can file are figured there would have to be got held back. he said ... Sicp oy step
Beach to fisht a1rpon expansion. both against an airport to only one. about a 40 percent increase in fl1Jhts and year by year t saw thinp gettins
From Al
· plan to attend the Sacramento hear· Small claims suits now can be filed at an airport before a new suJl could worse." tn~ and testify against Robinson's every 100 days. Airport operators be ftlcd. Then, two personal downfalls im·
bi · such as Orange County and other • "The basic pomt we wtll araue us pressed the restrictions of Romanian
.. The bill 15 JU~t a way to tie the backers of Robanson'~ill cLaimthaf 1hatiti1notfairtogettosueonlyonce hfeonbimevenmoreatron&ly ... I was noose tishter around our necks," f 1 la d tt h t h ted fi fi · h Ph O Lichman said. ·;we think we have 3 the multiple fihnJ o smal c 1m~ an no ma er w a appens you prcven rom m1s ma my . .
1 su1ts apJmt an airport constitute .a can'tsue apin," Pflaum said .• addtni de&ree in 197~," he ~id,,. .. aood shot at deieatin1 it ·· · n usisance and financial drain . that the standard for being able lO Jjle Problems cited an his secunty file Robinwn plan~ to introduce a d t b t h ..... I ed h fro i..-: JJ Th bul 1 Id 1 · h a sccon sua 1s muc oo 1.,.... a so prevent im m ~lna a ow·. variety of amendments to make the bee f a so wou1 1m1t t e .. That 40 ~rcent 15 an enonnous ed to come to tbe United Scates in
ball more palatable to the committee num r o munic1pa . or supenor .. h.,.. d J h W 1976 when his company wanted to but Lichman think~ the amendments courts suns apanst an airport to one increase, e sat · At o n ayne d h. h d
will only make the measure more unless there 1s a dramatic chance in .. AifP9rt a 40.pei:f 16ce~.~urhp would _be -se~l ~~0~;J.~~JO~ even tau&ht cumbcfsome ~ _the..._a~ yea# oiR· lev l _g( an 10crease o w. ts. At a.mqor -1 • ~ii S,Qroc of the cha~gcs Tobmson h '11iahts . C01T!tng from the 11rpon. ·~,~Sarr:/\ ranCl~O Toter.-~~ ~~~se?.c~! ~t~rbcd~t!~ hr-
. -wckl'Ul.lf...a~cor<h111-lf>-1.Khme, ~ 5aid.-nattona J,J.•c 'l\Lpcrcentiru:reasc. l&Tcl Then-with ~e 19srdeewon
would bt to hmll the numberofsmall Pflaum said the way noi~ tatisJics would represent 400 fh&hts,ne said. f · .• 1 •1 p 1 d h b o martl.llJ aw 1n o an b 11 opes
were da bed for the urponin1
democratic refonna in Romania.
Detective Ca_wucciUi that Ward was
to leave Saturday or years wee~
long trip to Camp Osceola, where be
would have been a counselor for a
group of boys.
Cappuccilli said be has has not
discovered any additional victtmf.
His invcstiption is ongoing, he said.
Ward remained in the Costa Mesa
Police Dcpanment Jail this morning
in lieu of$2SO,OOO bail.
Woman abducted
and raped in Irvine
A 39-ycar-old woman was ab-
ducted from an Irvine shopping
complex Sunday and driven to a
deserted industrial area where she
was drqaed to a parked van and •
raped, pobce reported today. ·
The woman told. authorities she '
had been sb:opprog ata rttaih:enterin
the Woodbridge community when a
man forced his way into her car and
drove to an industrial area at Von
KJtrman Avenue and Barranca Roa<!
............ .., .......... Just Call
.642-6086
What do yoa Ille aboat tilt Dally Pilot? Whal don't yoa llke? Call the
oumber at leh and yoar me11a1e will be recordedl tra.01crlbed aad delivered
to &he approprlate edJtor.
· The t1me U ·boar ao1wer1n11trvlce may be uatd to record lettert to tbe
editor oa any topic. Con&rtbutore to our Lets.ti ccllumo maet Include tbelr
name aad telepbone aamber for vtrtflcatlon. No circulation calla, pleaee.
There had been a miners' strike
that year which some took u a aian
that conceu1on1 to worker's demands
m1~t be made. But when the Soli·
danty labor movement in Poland was
crushed by manial law, Romania was
"plunged into despair about the
future." he 111d
OctaYia.D Dmaltruca (left) rela.ae In Colta II-wltll antl-
lcrttet leacler O.Yld .... .,er after b.19 defection from
'"'0.' .-.a s..ncs.v '' ti" 00 l"OI ~ '!°"'
CQCJ9 't 7 a •" c.-. ~
10 a M tlCI r"tU COOY ••
"'" .a
Circulation
T phone•
Tell p1 wbat'• OD yoar mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat -.
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Publt her
Lorn• Bruchet
Advert1s1ng D1rec1or
AOMmary Churchman
ControllOf
Clrculatlon 7141M2-a33._
Cta111fa... edverUelng 71UM2·M71
All other department• 142-4321
MAtH O'"CI »0 Ill ... •r '4 Colt• MIU c.-. t.u aOOr !)of 1 Costa 1o1Aa CA
Dum1ttascu tnd others who be-
llevcd 11 he did followed the newt of
Poland'• pli&Jn, ~hicb w11 not re-
ported by olticial Romanian news
sourct1. by clotcly monitorina of
f orciin radio rtpona, he Mid.
"We tqan to fttl, wont ofall, that
nobody 10 tbe Wcatrealiz.ed what wa1
happenin1 to u1 dun that period,"
tle 1d "Wt were a fot1Qttco
people."
It was this flnaJ deprusion com·
bincd w11h the chance of a lifetime,
that pu hcd Dum1trascu into action
when he bed Cairo, reatil.cd be
was in a relauvely fRe soacty and wa
not aocomptnicd by 11uant
Romania. ~
htlpful. very cooperative," he 111d. •
A former colteaauc o
Dumitrascu'a, cnaineer Boria Land·
au, had emiaratcd to the United
lites in l 97S and mumtd td
Romania twice to vit1t. He now l ~u
1n Hunti~ton Beach and wOfbltU
enaaneerina firm in trv:ine
On his wt v11it, an 1978, landau
dctcribcd America 10 Dumatt'UC\l
and told him he could call him fot
bdp ... anytime and anywbert" be
could manqe his defection.
Dumjtratcu made aoocs on that
promise a coupl of days after ht
declart<1 his intent to def~ l"el(htnt Landau from Ctiro. landau tncbd
I
Stephen F. Cara10 ----· ................. ~ ~H-....-.. -.-. OCTfi""'--~
Donald l . Wllllam1
C1rcut tion
Manag r
The la thoun btforc rus dcfecuon, -wttrn he knew tmchanrc for flcc&m
down David Bal itrf, of w Bin the
SoY.aeta.G>elall n whom M_...'leftl ........ -..-
on cclc 1 on tome month• ~n. Manag r
, ...
,.-.-~----l
VOL. 17, 0. 219
. (
dmc, c~ I and friahtcmna. .. It wa hell,., DumlltaS('U id "'E\'cryonc wa1 Ym" helpful. I am
1lad 10 be here." Dumhmcu •kl.
)
...
f 1111 1111111
-
MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1984 ( H~ AN(., f C () lJ N 1 1 (.AL I~ r.) HNI A ~' 'i Cl N T '-, -- - -
~una Hills' Edwin
Moses keeps his win-
ning streak In the gold.
. PageCJ
Cout
Cable television firm
wants franchise ex-
tension. / A3
Drugs blamed In Jafl
death./A3
California
There's more than one
way to watch Olympic
Games on TV./ A4
Connecticut shootout
sees cqnvlct killed,
another wounded./ M ·
Ban on leaded gas will
send prices sky-
rocketing? IM
World
Vietnam says children of
American Gia should be
allowed Into U.S./ A5
Japanese remember
-Hlroahlma bombing on
39th anniversary .I A4
Haitians moving Into the
Bahamas create big--
worries for official•./ A5
Feature
Wiii fancy footstrlngs that
dress up bare feet tie up
the shoe market? ./81 •
The new Incentive for
high o;"adea at a southern
church college la free
travel abroad./85
Sporta
The U.S. women's vol-
leyball team needs one
more victory to win the
gold medal./C1
Joan Benoit's victory In
the women'• Otymplc
marathon was a Sunday
stroll In the park./C1
The U.S. women'• Olym-
pic basketball team la
within a game of cllnchlng
thegold./C2
Entertainment
.·
Richard Barton dead at 158 I ·
. earn a
e e 1ves1n
Bodies of two more roadway victims
found days after crash on the Ort~a
By STEVE M.AllBLE
Of .. ..., ........
In one of Oranao County•a worst
weekends for hiah~Y camase, seven
people were killed in traffic accidents
and two more were discovered dead
in a remote ravine where their car
apparently crashed late last week,
authorities reported.
The dead included a 3--year-old •
Santa Ana lirl who ran into moviDa
traffic. a l~year-old moped p&Slen-aer from Huntington Be.acb. a 19-
year-old man whQ reportedly was a
passengtr in a car &<>ina lhe wrona
way on the Costa MCA Freeway and a
man who apparently fdl u1cq> while
dnvina on the San Dieao Freeway.
Orange County Sheriffs depU1\CI
recovered the bodies of two men
Sunday ia a Cl:DYOn beJoW !he
windina Ortega Hiabway less than a
mtle from the IUvenide Q>unty line,
according_ to California ffilbway
Patrol Officer Ken.Daily.
The ~o men reporledJy were
dnvina into the Cleveland Natioaal
(Pleue .ee CAUAGlt/A.2)
Coast's Lewis
s crFe tn~o tt ·
with his. family
Father says. ·we
hadafeelln
he'd do well.'
By Pen. SNEIDEILMAN
Of .. ..., ......
David Lewis, an insurance ~
man from Newport Beach.. said be
and llis family acted on fa.Jib when
they sat C!Own durlna an OlymPK
rowin&. event Sunday afternoon at
Lake Cuitas.
-Ba SOll. Brad Alih UWis;
oompeti.na ia the double JCUll race
involviDf two-rMn boats at the lake
nearOj&J. .. We took=-a-dwicic and puc 4Ur
foldina chain riaht in front of the
medal awards platfonn," ·David
Lewis said today. "We'd bate to be a
jinx, but we bad a feehna he'd do
well."
That bunch was an accurate one.
'Brad Lewis, 29, and partner Paul
Enquist of Seattle, edaed past a team
from Belgium to win Olympic gold
medals in the 2,~meter race in
which each man rows with two oars.
Boats representina 5ix natioas oom-
petCd in the evenL ·
.. It was very clox," recaJJed the
medalist's father. 11ley started out
in sixth place. At J,000 meters, they
were in third place. At 1,500 m~
they were in second. And durina the
last l 00 meters, they took over the
lead and finished half-a-bOat ahead of
Bel&iu •• n:11crowd of about 10,000
cheerin& wildly for the American
oarsmen, the proud father said.
(Pleue MC LBWJS/ A21'.
Airport foes gird
for battle on bill
By JERRY HIRSCH accordina to Jack Germain, a 'spokea.-°' .. ...,,....... man for state Sen. Ollie Speraw, R-.. Newport Beach.
A showdown Tues<!Ay in Sacra-Speraw opposes the btll and has
mento may determine whether New-written letters to c:aeh of the commit-..port Beach residents are restricted in their court f~ts apinst John Wayne tee members UJ'lln& the measure's
Airport and ats owner Oranae Coun-defeat Germain said.
ty. A imalar ball introduced by Rob-
A state Assembly ball au tho~ by inson last year passed both the Senate
Assemblyman Richard Robinson, ~ and the Assembly but was vclOed by
Garden Grove, that would limit Gov George Dcuk.mtji.ao.
&Jrport lawsurts is scheduled to be The wher "crsion would have
heacs1 by the state Senate Jud1caar) ~habit~ J>COJ?lc from ..filin small
Committee. · cla~m, ~wts inst the airport.
Director, prodwcer . · ActorRlcbardBmton,ebowaberewttb·bla .·. ·-th~~ .. Prlnte LI••' tut~·~ aamest<omack•.,cutt.or~ fCll'IDel'-::wtfe;-•stua11etlrTaylOW ~-atat111eapOfM. t6tyod e 4 .
Robanson willJ?restDt the bill to th~ ~pponents of Rob~n·s bill ~re
.com.!Jlt l)Cnonilij in an eObrt. LO. • 1emn1 rndfftU'. • t. .:_ •
move the measure to th nale noor: --(Pleue eee AntPORT / A.2) •
'Revenge.' /In
Baahieu
IRS zeroes In on tax
cheatera./85
INDEX
84
A3
85
A4 cw
IM
C7
C4
82 ce
82
81·2
A4 At
82
A3
C4
C~o.3 ee ______ ..._....,.....,92
83 A2
A4
.
Romanian' S escape reci.Uzes . .
15-y~ar dream of freedom
Engineer left wlf e and children behlqd
~--,....---. to flee oppression anq come to the U·.S.
----,_ ..
KAREN
KLEIN
PEOPLE IN THl NlWS
Medical
facility
for poor
in Mesa
...
0rMge Oou1 DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu 16, 1984
DllJ,... .... ..,.,_,~
,. . ...a..: .. ...:;:llo,,-~V~lCkl ~ter and Joan. TWotaon look at p1ana for new 808 ecUca1 center.
MEDICAL CLINIC FOR POOR ••• Prom Al
founded SOS. 'We've been seeing a
lot of people in the last year who need
prescriptions but can't afford them,··
she said.
Those who don't have insurance
and can't afford private medical care
must have pre-payment deposits to
be admitted at county medical clinics.
Forbatb added.
A 10.member SOS commmce has
worked on the idea of opening a
medical clinic since an anonymous
couple donated $10,000 to SOS for a
.. special project'' more than a year
aao.
The medical cltmc wtll be housed
in an old Bank of America building
that was relocated to the Rea Center.
Forbath said the clinic will be
desianed to provide medical help that
is not already beina provided through
other free programs.
"You can get pre~I care. drug
treatment and VD ~~ pregnancy
testing elsewhere." ~he said. "We'
\\;ant to have a chnic for sick people
who can't afford medicine or treat-
ment."
Costa Mesa Dr Don Drake. who·
c;aid he will serve as medical director
of the new clinic, said the need for
medical care m Cosla Mesa alone as
"larger than I ever ant1c1pated."
He said staff doctors and nurses
from Costa Mesa Medical Center
Hospital and Hoag Hospital in New-
port Beach will be asked to volunteer
their time at the new clime.
"There will be no dearth of volun-
teers," Drake predicted. ··A lot of
people sull feel that <1nve to give of
themselves."
Forbalh said she secs about 160
fam1hcs a da).' at the SOS food and
clQ.thtlli distnbution offices. Many of
them desperately need medical care,
she said.
"So many things arc not covered by
Medicare, .. she said. "Also many of
the programs have been cut. Scruors
have to pay a larger share of their
com or find they are aneliiiblc."
Other programs that provide
subsidized medical care arc hard to
understand and hard to qualify for,
she said. "Many of them are not really
used well or else you have to be really
persistent to use them."
The Costa Mesa Plannina Com-
m1ss1on witr consider a condiltonal
use permit for the new chnic this
month. Forbath said.
CARNAGE ON C OUNTY HIGHWAYS ••.
FromAl -·. ...
•
C ·ntinued fair aBd waFmer
Temps.
. .
t1 IO LilU. _.
:::~ IO .. M.inptllt 12 ... ~ ...
11 71 MhlllMe .. 13 .. .......,,..,. a"..,,.,_ ... 10 .... ~ -• 14 17 ""YOt1l U 12 Norlolk,Ve
N 71 Olia.hOIM Clly
12 .. ()INN
.. ti °""'°° ... 14~
17 16 PlliTI 5"'"91 1• 6 7 "'-'Ill .
112 71 P1lt90urgll
II 71 Porti.nc!.M9 ts 64 POrtland.~ Ill 70 TO ..
., 71 a .. Ill 70
18 70 .. u .. 74
17 72 ... .. 17 7t
71 71
• "IO 7~ .. 7t ... 72.. 12 74 ... t7 lot 71
t03 17
12 .. ., 18 73 ..
IO 72 12., _
83 .,
.. t2 : SuRF REPOR T
111 78 .. 74
11 17
.. 70 12 7t 71 61
12 71 104 1t
,;~
=:1'011 17 A9l1o • hctemento ea
•• L.euit 12 n
l1~Ttq1a ,, ,.
=~ H .,,
H 71
hnOllGO 11 • 8M f'rlt!CleCO .. H a.n Juen.fl Pl .. 71
,.,. ... 11 1t " IMIUt • ..
''":1.: t2 71
810ui!; i.) 70
~ .. ..
9YfllCllM u u
'~· 12 71
'"°'°" 17 14
TlllM 11 71
WuhlnglOll .. 10
Wldllll .. 71 w.,..._..,,. 14 ..
WllmlnglOOl.0. .., •
Tides
TOOAY 21 8ec0t!dl0w tt .... "' ~ .. IUpm • 81
TUl..oA•
""" io-111•"'-O.t
~:'ow 13'•m u
12.,.&m 27
'--'119'. 7,14pM .,
8uft Nit IOCta:I al 7 41 P.11'1, .....
Tileek:I al .ot a Ill end _. aoeln al
7 41pm Moon rte. lode)' et 4 tll p.m .. l*tt 11
1 27a m. Tu.di~ at)CI r~ eoaln al 15 11
pm
Mesan seized in molesting
of boy, 8, at Estancia pool
Forest last Thursday for a day of two men who retraced the route
practice shooti.na. Officers said 1t trying to locate the tY.O men. offiurs
-~-....-:a~rs the anver lost control of th=:-..e _.;;.sa;;;,;1.-,d"'". =-->._ .car OD the-iwistin way~ . ere, -year-old Se1.na KJm
Santa Ana -was arrested on suspi-
cion of drunken dnvmg, officers said.
The motorcyclist .suffered moderate
Injuries. . ~
David Norman, 18, was killed
Saturday afternoon when the Navy-
rcgistercd van he was dnvmg rolled
off the San Diego Freeway near the
Brook.burst Street offramp in Foun-
tain Valley_.
Carpet la~er. 20,, denies charge~ aftf:r_ .
arrest on police Up from. 12-year-old youtli
the ancd.enLA.ftcr-the.~ve naAoi-~,,.. ·,nte.rviewed Ward. ne bOOU>d him
into the. police department jail. The dnver Of red Chevrolet El was lolled Saturday noon near her
home when she ran an front of a Camino was identified as Thomas W. pasIDlg car on South Shawnee Dnve
Horne, 25, of Mission VieJO. Has 10 Santa Ana. pohce saJd. The girl
passenger was Mark John Cano, 20. died from mtemal inJunes about 30
of San Juan Capistrano. according to minutes later at Fountain Valley
authorities. Community Hospital trauma center
"It appears · their car left the Angel Esquivel of Hunttngton
roadway at a high rate of speed. went Beach died late Fnda> at the Foun-
airbome, struck a rock embanlment tam Valle) hospital after the moped
and tumbled into the ravine." Daily he was·a passenger on collided with a
'd car on ~n ngdale Street The I 0-year-sal . h old su ered internal mJunes 1n t e "The car landed on its top and -was wreck.
way_down in the brush where passrng KeHn Hackett. 19. of Santa Ana
traffic couldn't sec it." said Dail) died Saturday morning when the car
"It's very easy to disappear out in that h"c was nd1ng . m crashed into a
area. We're always finding stolen cars motorcvclc wb1le traveling the wrong
out there that have been missing for wa" on the Costa Mesa Frcewa)'. months." / accordm$ to authonues
The gnm d1~overy was made Ih.c dri\ er oflh.c. wrong.-~car -
Sunday afternoon l)y fnends of the 1dent1fied as Kevm Jordan. 20. of
LEWIS s ffARES HIS GOLD ...
From A l
For the family, the greatest thnll
came dunng the medal awards cer-
emony.
''Brad led the way up the. platform.··
leWls said. "His smer had told him to
stand up very straight. and he d.Jd
Then after the ceremony, he handed
the flowers to his sister Valene and
put .the gold medal around has
mother's neck.
1970. Y.hen Brad Lewis rowed on the
Corona Del \.far High School team
that lasted JUSt one year The school
didn't even award sport, letters lo the
paruc1pants,
CHP officers said theY. believe the
dnver may have fallen asleep. Wit-
nesses said the van was traveled at a
normal rate of speed when tt suddenly
JCrked off the road, ripped thro.ugh
200 feet of iceplant and sfammed into
a tree.
Three other people were lc.illed 1n
separate traffic mishaps ·over the
weekend. Matthew Carols. 19, was
killed Saturday in a traffic occident in
the Silvcrado Canyon area, a womao
idenufied as PCUY Ann Ao)'d, 23. of
Fullerton Wlls killed Sunday io BueAa
park, an an unidctitified motorist was
killed earl~ today m ~yp'rcss.
race. thus winning a place. on 1 the
Ol)mpac team.
Accordingto his father, the 1ntc1*st
in rowing runs in the family. DaVi~
Lewis rowed for UCLA in 1941, aqct
Brad's brother Tracy .rowed for Or-
·ange Coast CoUcac an 1970.
By KAREN E. KLEIN the locker room and aJJ~y saw
otlMo.,,...._. Ward and the victim, nottfied staff
A 20-year-old Costa Mesa man members at the pool about 2 p.m.
who may have been a counselor with They were unable to locate either the
1 local youth group was arrested after victim or the suspect but were able to
he aJl-...Aly molested an 8-ycar-old identify Ward from the 12-year-old's
"f'... description. Costa M boy at the Estancia High The pool staff members knew
School swimmmg pool. .Ward by sight and said he is a
Dennis James Ward was taken into frequent visitor to the pool,.which is a
custody Friday at the Costa Mesa ·popular banaout for children on
pobce station en susp1~ _of. child .summer a~09ns. -·
Ward, who said be is a carpet layer,
dcnjed the alleptions, Cappuccilh
said .
Parents of one oftbe children who
lives in Ward's neighborhood said the
suspect worked at a local youth
organization part-time and bad
planned to take a group of children on
a week-Iona camp.mg trip startina
Saturday.
Cappucc111i said he has has not
discovered any additionaJ victims.
Kis investigation is ongoing. he said.
Ward remained in the Costa Mesa
Police Department Jail this mornins
in lieu of S2SO,OOO bail. -.
molc$tation, aed ora~ · )};lllation. ~ppuccilh sa1dl'a~cont.acted \Yard
accordina to ·costa Mc · Ir Detective Fnday ~nd asked bun to come in to
Paul Cappuccilli. the _polrce. d;_i_>artmen! to talk obout
War Ylas obserVed '1nursday --·---•. -------------------•• ;~;;?:,;nvr~~4~ ~f~~*'1i 11:: 8-· oman a l?dUc t ed.,.-and-r.ap ed in Ir-vine
room · 1· the pool, '2323 Placentia 39-year--old -w:bman was ab-l he woman told authorittcs she
Ave .... a pohcc spokesman .said. The ed from · an Irvine shopping hadbecnshoppmgataretailcenterin
c1ty:S . lelsv~ ser:v1ces de~ment co lex Sunday and driven to. a the Woodbndgc commuruty when a
opens th4 pool to the p\.lblic during desc ed industnal area where she .man forced his way into her car and
the sumQlcr. \ ·. was tagged to a ~rked van and drove to an indusJ.ti&l ...area--at Von
A i-?-)Ur-old boy, 'VhO wallced jnto raped, ~lice! reported tooay. ·Karman Avenue and Barranca Road.
. ·-
-ii.Oiil!UI'• ' I . .·
!,~!fANI~~.D~FEf.TOR.;. ·.
things would beg for Romania' \
future." • , .. She (Brad's mother Bee Lewis)
was standing nght there. marvelous!}
proud. Hundreds of people took. her
photograph with the medal."
Later Brad considered attending
Orange Coast College to contmue
rowing, but was persuaded to attend
UC Irvine and row for Coach Bob
Ernst. ·After college, he continued
rowing, making that 1980 Olympic
team. Brad was d1sappomted by the
boycolt oft.he Moscow Olympics, his
father said.
David Lewis said his son prepare4
tor the Olympics with two-dr threcr
hour rowing workouts in Lido Chan•
net each moroina ~d running or
weight training each afternoon. Tbe
athlete is employed by Wells ~o
Bank at Fash1on Island. '
·But in Aucust J 968, w,hen the
Soviet Union· inv~dcd Ciccboslo-
vakia. ·a hc-.avy blow was dealt to
Romanians who hoped for same
freedom from the control of the Asked the reason for this gesture.
the medalist's father sa1d ... Fourteen
yea.rs of hard work culminated m lh1s.
and I think he wanted the whole
family to share 1n the joy of victory ...
That p~parat1on period began m
Earlier lhas year. Lewis' partner,
EnqulSl, wa~ cut from a team of
Ol)mp1c rowing prospects. and Lewis
himself qlijl. The two practtced on
their own and eventually beat the
Olympic coach's choice ma challenge
The medalist's • father said the
cnttre family was at Lake Casitas on
Sunday, puling for Brad.
.. I figured he~ad a good chance,"
David Lewis said. ''But you never
know."
.AIRPORT BILL F ACES OP OSITION.: •
F rom A l
. Soviets.
In the 1970s, Dumitrascu said, the
Romanian aovcrnment "took sys-
tematic sieps' to keep intellectuals
away from the political process ...
Citizens who were not members of
" the state's official Communist Pany
had "security files" kept on them that
restricted them from risina to the
upper echelon of.social or political
hfe. • Despite a scnes of amendments. but L1chman thinks the amen men ts flights comma from the airport, ···1t was people comina from the old
the bill "is no better than 1t ever was,.. will only make the measure more Lach man said, intellectual (families) mainly," who
said Barbara Liebman of Newport cumbersome Pflaum said the way noise statistics got held back. he said "Step by step
Beach. Liebman as the director of the Some of the changes Robin n as are figured there would have to be and year by ycatl saw thinas gettina
Airport Worlcma Group. a coaht1on cons1denng, according to Lie man, about a 40 ptrccnt increase 10 flights worse."
of homeowner orgal'l,tz.attons fighlmg would be to hm1t the number o small at o.n airport before a new SlUt. could Then, twd persbnal downfalls im-
eJtpansion at the airport. da1ms suits an tnd1v1dual can file be tiled. pressed the restrictions of Romanian
, tichman and Steve Pflaum. an agamst an airport to only one. "The basic point we wall argue us lifeonbimevcnmorcstronaly. ••1wu
attorney hir:cd by the cit) of Newport $mall claims suits now can be filed that at 1s not fair to get to sue only once prevented from finishing my Ph.D.
Beach tofighta1rportexpans1 on. both every 100 days. Airport 0~1ors and no matter what happens y0u degree in 1974,"'lie siid. • ~ plan to attend the Sacramento hear-such as Orange County and other can't sue again," Pflaum said. adding Problems cited in his"security c"
1nfi and tcsttfy agamst Robinson·\ backers of Robinson's biU cla1mth~t th4t the standard for being able to file also prevented him from bel.Jl8 all W•
bi . . the mu1t1plc filini of small c1Ain1s a second suit is much too high. . ed to come' to' the United State$ in
.. The bill as JUSt a wa) to tac the suits against an airport constttute a "That 40 percent as an enormous 1976 when his company wanted to
· noose 1i&hJ;tr afOund -OUr necks " -. nus~ncc and fioanci.ald.rai.n. . -4nCRasc," he 5!-'d. A.t Jotln .Wayne send bun here to .st.u~y. , ~;,. uetiman 5aid. ·:we tru¥. v;e...ha\l<Hl The bill also would limit the A1rpor1-a 40 perccntJ~P would .be .. I pecformed my Job, even tau&ht
aoOd hot at defeating it.'' number of municipal or supenor an 11\crea~ of 16 fh ts. :4-t a maJOr some classes ~the university, 6ut
Robin£On plans t.9 Jntroduce a cauns ~1ts agamst a.n a1rport to one -a1rf)&'l1· ltk 5an casco Inter· •tnosc two ficts arstuibcd me:-b~
·-·;aricty of amendments to make the unless there 1s a dramauc cha nae 1n national the same 40 percent mer~ said. Then, with the' 1982 declaration
bill more palatable to the commatt<'e the average \early noise level of would rcpreSt"nt 400 Otghts, he said. of martial law tn Poland, bis ho~.
were dashed for the buraconina
dcmoc.ratic reforms in Rorania.
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There had been a miners' strike
that year which some took u a ign
that concessions io worker's demands
mi4ht be made. But when the Soli·
danty labor mo~ement in Pola~d ~as
crushed by martial law, Romana wu
"plunacd into d pair about the
Mir ................. ~
Octa'ilan Damltruca (left) rel.U• ln Coet&ll-With anti-
So.Set leader DaYld Balatcer after Ida 4efectioa from aomama. future, .. he said.
Oumitrascu and otllers who be· He analyzed every detail of rut helpful. very cooperative:· he aaid.
11.eved as be did followed the news of pla'n1 for a trip to Sudan, where he was A form c r co 11ca1 u e 0 f
sent OJU as a consultant on a Dumitrascu·~. en&inctr Boris Land· Poland'• pli&ht.. which ."'~ not ~ government pctrochmiical contract. •au, had cm1arated to the Unned
Ported by olfic1al Romana&D news ··As u1Ual 1 expected to be aocom· States in l 97~ and M urned to
sources.; by .cJosely l!'onitorina of panicd by unty people from the Romama tWicc to v11it. He now li¥et
foreign radio rcpon1, he said. Romanian colony an udan:: in Hunllnaton BeaCh and worb at IQ
"We bqan to f~J. wont ohll. that DumitralC'U said. He had bad to get cn&inettina firm in Irvine.,
nobody in the West realized what wa tlearance and some 14 li&natura Oo bis last vi lit, in 1978. U8ndau
• happentfll to us dunna that period," cnsunna he would not defeci be ore descnbed America to DUmitralCU
he said. "We were a foraottcn he wu allowed to leave the tountr) in and told him be could can ham Jor people... th· first pla"~. he said. h l . a b .. ..._ .. -e p, "anytime an anyw ere ,~ It was this final deprcuionA com· A ICCUrity auard accompanied him could manqe his derea on.
bintd with the chance or a liietime. to the airpon, .. ue to the Jl10mcnt I Dumitrascu made tood on lhlt
that pushed Dum1ttt1N into acuon 101 on the plane.• but DUmatrascu promise a oouple of days after be
when he r hed C ro, ruhud he ad he .. manaaed no1 10 meet doclartd his intent tOdefcct. rcachl
wa it\artl~~i•':.~~and~ nybody" a1 the a1rpon in Cairo, Landau from_\.;! ir .Jdodlu notuc:om .--...... ,..me-pt1n~l'Ofi(j:-'y""'o...;vc,._r ..... .....-;:==;;., v1a Ba l& r. of the Ben lbc
The I t urs bC ore his defection, He took a 1ul from lhe.e1rpon an "'ct oalitton, whom he had *"
when he knc ha chance fotfrce<Wm C:11ro to the merican cmbusY and on tel va ion some months earlier,
cloie, ere ten and OiJhtcm told offictals there or his ntcntfon to "facoonc ..... very helpful I am
"It was hell.'' Dumatrascu 1d. derect ... Th pcopJ 11\m re \'Cl')' M> &lad 10 bC here;' Dumhrucu uid.
I ,. •
'