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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-07 - Orange Coast Pilot• I I LOWll UITllRlll TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1984 M esan's body fourid burie.d . . U.S. waterpotolsfs' · victory over Australia todayguaranrees team an Olympic medal. Games coverage on pagesCl-3. Cout Arab Olympic athletes come to Costa Mesa for some home cooking.I A3 Newport hires attorney to defend.~lty In police brutality lawsuits.I A3 Construction crew at Irvine site found corpse tn .sewer ltne ditch By STEVE MARBLE Of .. .,.., ........ The body of a Costa Mesa man, whose disappeanancc led to his step- father's atTeSt on murder cha'lC', was found Monday afte'moon bu~cd in a Court • upsets d .eath penalty 20 county slayers ditch at an Irvine constructiOI) lite, police reported today. The body, found by constructioo workers who W(t'e prcparina to fill the shallow ditch, has been identified as that of Bradley K.aye. an 18-:ye.ar-old Enalishman who had rec:enUy moved to this country. Kaye was Liil seen alive on Aug. I ·~ I.he same dale that • handful or motorists spotted his car and what appeared to be 1 body p1.nially stuffed in a trash bqofrto the side or a roadway in Irvine. K.lye's mpfather, Bruce Bradley Ralph, S7, is beil)S bcld in connection with the youna man'sdeatb. Ralph, a • free--lance pbotO&Bober frQOI New- port B<acb. IJ 10 be amiped on murder c-Tlm!Jday. The snm~cliJCOVery Monday after- noon wu made by emokwees of Mc::<:;uire Construction Co~ who were watcrin& down tM sewer lioe ditch before fillina it, police l&id. The coJistruction sik is on SW Crest in the city's Twtle Rocle community. 1.When tbc din ~ttkd it upottd a. Mesa after bill to ain control of air's affairs New state legislation would gtve the clt)V clout with noise law found lltemtdvcs in ~ uncomfonab&e straits over tbe fair-arounds issue, espec:iaUy since tbe l'acili< Amphitbealr'e opened on the fail1rounds in 1983. C.omplaintsaboot node, traflicud BJ LU\EN E. n.EIN • nui•ncc, which 'neiahbon of Cbc Callfornla F!Jck!'taprotesfilale QI _ ·porno magaZlnes at con- venience markets./ A4 ~:;--u.;::m-A::::~:::&:-6:::::::;::%""...:.":'0:: may be retried over 'proof of Intent' rule By JEFF .IDLER Of .. Mlr........ . . As .many as 20 convicted ...,..pu1rdmcn miprnave.to~ea.Jq ~ Oranae-COU:ntras a result of a state Supreme Court deci4ion requirina that proof of intent to kill is necessary in death penalty and life-without- Ol ... Mlr........ ~ bad loD& voiced O!'O' · · In a move to gain more control ectlvtbelstapltbcre,roeetoalbriek o•er.lh<-Oraoa<Coun!Jlf~1'll<:atheampl>;!beate<~bea''9'.;~2~~ ..~-. .... ~ _,.,._ ...... _bc!OUiii.rodt-. ~ouode!ll-by the-city-of Costa Mesa, -At-emotioo-ladctt-CilY-Ccuncilf--- :Nation Federai officials battle a multlmllllon-dollar mari- juana t~ade In Hawall./B8 Two Inmates i:lalrp re- sponsiblllty for murder of 18youngwomen.IA5 ...Wor-1(1-- . parole felony murder cues dating back to 1978. , ThC Court, in two related decisions handed down.Monday, decided I.hat last ycar'~ecislon directing that murderers cannot be sentenced to death or life imprisonment without parole unless they intended to com- mit the crime must be apolied retroactively to.all cases since I §78. tbe City Council decided Moaday 10 . ...t.:n city o1liciak a- .eek stale; lqisb.tioD -. the ~that city , juNctic:tioa WU faifgrounds to comply ~b.w. ~~UK theampbitbeaterbad lf approved by the l..eaislaturc. the been built on state property 1 rrsidtnts bill would pve the city UA--became ll'lOfC and more ditpuotW precedented municipaJ authority withwbattbeyAwaslactofrapome over a state facility, Costa Mesa by the city. Mayor DonnJ{all said. But if the proposed lqislation is Hall and City Ma....,. Fred puxd, "there sbould be no q- Soru.bl.I have been workina on the that the c:it:y's noise ordin•nce •. p- lcgislatioo, which will be introduc:od era! plu and zooina ~ .. by Sen. John Seymour, R-Aoahcim, and other police ~ ~ ln .. two to three mon~" Rall s&id. apply upon activinesoccurnnaat die ln the past year, city officials have C.S.. ... llOA./A3) A f our-week lull In the so- called tanker war In the Persian Gulf Is broken aaaGreek-owned super- tankerlshlt./M ~'Ai(~:;:o;»"!=:~~..!!*~::;(.:.::::;:::::."":: -'Mind&:Bod~ In addition, the court ruled in a .S-2 vote that a reveru.I wouk1 not be granted strictly on the grounds that the. trial-judse-had failcd-to·instruct- the jury on the intent to kill_,.issue as long as both the prosecu uon and defense had had a chance to •JltJC tbc issue. ,. . ·~ -Irvinenotel crew --------.:.:_--f<i Tbe 'coun's rulina could affect as 'many as 180 murder cases statwidf. includina half oftbe 163 men now on death row, state Assistant Attorney ·General Edward O'Brien tokt the Associated Pl'CI$ after-the dccision was announced in San Francisco. · -- ~-£$a violated 'six rul~ Silver dive . For 20 million Americans a headache Is more than a nuisance, but relief Is on theway./81 About 20 cases in Oran-cc County (Pl--COURT/ill -them cautomla.,;:i=..llcC«mlek Deffonu la the Ol:rmplc women'• ftnala at ille LC!9 An&eles cou-llonday en roate to.wtnnlnc a .Unr ...,..sat In the neat. See story 1\"porta, PaCe CS. . .- A marrlage'COunselor's challenge: Spend 12 hours together without TV or booka./IU ven the rich have problems Sports .The Unll,.i States men's volleyball team loses to Brazil, but stlll gains the semlflnala./C1 El Tor o's Ruth Wysocki discovers Ille In the slow lane at the Olymplcs. /C2 Reggie Jackson powers . the Angels t o an 8-4 victory over the Seattle Marlners./C3 _ Entertalnmenf "Critic's Choice" Is a 0 true to Ille" comedy at the Irvine Community . Tbeater.183 -:~:*~~«~~~.(. .. ~ Baalnaa -Genstarforms-lnvest--- ment services company In Newport Beach./85 INDEX -To a meter maid; all the heat 1 s . . not on the .beach " . It waSa s:low daY f0i ~etU maid Deena Beck void. Sh• was heckled, ew:s<d, threatened, ycllc<l,,;j>;an.ct-~·-.:,·-~· :.:.__c:c..:--'-- flipped the middle diait · · S "'Ob, I reanx wish you'd been here TEVE the other day,• she satd drivingalona · _ -~'1-Beacb'.s canacstedScashorc--_-M _ Drive-thercnownedsummetplace QIU that attracts the kids, the can and the all-night party animals . .. Any other day," she adds. '*You should have seen it on the FoW1h (of PEOPLE IN THE NEWS July). It wu a zoo.*' , Beckvokl, a parking control officer .. If they yell at me or call me names in a city which afJuably bas th~ wont I u,suall y JUSt act like I didn't_ bear ErmalSombeck 82 parkinaprobltm in<>ranaeC®nty, is them. But 1fsomeonerea11xeetsa.n my Bridge 64 used to takina abuse. It aoes with the faceA. r .• ~! ·~'?.~ an act of BuWetln SO.d A3 territory. -.u'"- 8UIAMea BM She's had water balloons tossed at &urvival to meter ma.ids. Cattforn~ N.we A4 bet, site's been pushed, shoved and !'"I'll JO find •nother·PCO (Parkir\I Cluelfled C4-6 knQCked to the around. She's bad the control officer) or my supervisor and com.c. 64 pen jerked from bet hand u she say *You'll never believe What tome Cr099W«d Cl ~ wrote, she's bad pukin.a citations JU)' just said to me." We'U lalk about 0.th Not~ B8 ripped up in her face, she's been it. say 'don't worry about ii' u.d ao • Hell> Yourtltf 82 threatened, she's been ridiculed and ~Soto ~k. vou i"°ust need that ~ e& -incredibly -she doesn't seem 10 meumet ..,:;::-Arm landers 82 mind. brelt. you h:I 1f one men penon Mind end 8ody 81~2 "l always try to put myklf 1n the ~t you. you're So~ toaocruy. Mutual Fundl ee other ~n's ~ition. lt't not a lot . "'Bu~:~~ ..:.: very nice, Nattonal Newt A-4 of fun aettinaaS27 DIJ'ti"f ticket{:st l.Cve.-it or·l\Ol. l'_yc.e-fen bad-«Nl14- 0ptnfon \. A& becaUIC you're I tew m1nuttt-IC people think me when 1 &ivt thell'l a P-lzzl \ 91 1<ttinf,b1Ck to·llte meter'," sh< lays. ticket. l think it's probttbly ou1 of Palcolog A3 "P,nonally, I don'1 thtnlt I could habi~Howcouldoomeooetltant.you P\llJllc Not-Ill . ~o it,.. eonfides S11. Mike for h1ndl-them • Sll parlti"I 8pafta Cl-3 Mc-•ah. 1 traffic and )lltlUna 1i 7 ·• llodtMott<_M_•~--~•~-_j._h'"~prt~v~isor;;;;i·~·1~t·~·~•Jqob;;tZth~1;\~'btp;P11;~~·~ic--,,;;·~~!!ll,!~i~f~1r'.f;!•~ioratittn 83 oC" or a mother ote ®t = -delllse of --u.. ~ In ClllCagO -the -··-11-ln•dll-lftnt llglll. "'Ill• .....,.. •• --urben r11lll11D llve In the ..,._i -. .. M,_ _ _...,. 1n-.111--11o1 . Mlllolt'a • 11d11• oorrimunllll. ___ ,_Yori< -(fl•••--J A construction crew at tbe Hilton Hotel in lrvine bas been cited for a half dozn--violations that a state safety official said contributed to a spcctacuJar accident last month in wbicb one worker was injured. A loaded trash dumpster slipped from a crane and plummeted abOut 150 t<et from the 10p or the ponially built hotel on July I I. The cnne opentor sustained minor injuries in the ac::cidenL . Jim Brown, a director of the state Occupational Safety and Health Ad· ministration, said an invcstiption revealed thal the IOMk:d dumpslef weighed abo•t 16,700 J>OW!ds while the crane had a capability of hoisting only 8,900 pounds. *'The trash bin was far in excess Of what the crane could hold, .. Brown said. Additionally, Brown said state inspectaton found five other .. serious"' problems with the safety features of the rented crane. Alto, ti¥ A2 But Be<kvold, who has ~ed .. I for -'••I kid.11<1 it"" w.·,. M J>OS\1.1 e1rricr and an assi iant coun· that diMntlon and I trr to take thinp .._.....,_.,._,_ 1--... • · • th ~job -'--• catit by Cl9t.. l alwa)'I hsttn. 8ut you ~ _ c .... ,.,11ys1ts egs;a. ~sever IUIW a&i&itJ:&2:rDMllilliii!kfttl:.._,~eatt•q--...m "w~ had. • .. •• construction comP-uiy was cited tbr not bavin& a qualified person on site to inspect-the ~ the ·aue was c:arryina. The citations 1ll'Cl"C issued to Morley Construction Co. or Los An.Ides. • subcontractor wortina on tlie SSO- room hold at tbc intcncctiot\ofMain So.ct and Jamboree Rood. The Hilton is to be the ocoicrpicoe of-the Irvine C.o. 's planned Jamboree Centa. The cooslnlelioo firm can apPt8I the citations, which carry van.om fines. aa::ordin& 10 Brown. Brown said tbc rcnlCd aane. since removed from t.bC construction &itc, did not have proper safety dcvioes such as an aud.ibk sipal or-automatic stop. Such sakty ......... would have permitted the crane operator to mow the load was too much for tbc crane, Brown said. The mishap halted wort at the hotel site briefly. Newport group opposes project Neighbors complain restaurant-would · block harbor view 8tac:h arQ.i ' ,_,·me. J<&nlletle and about 60 Ne·~· .. ·-~....,,. T/.UI I . -. .. day, August 7, 1 84 MESA PUSHES s r ATE BILL ••• l'romAl uthonz Hall 10 send lt'liet to the Nedcrlandcr orgamzat1on, "1tlch op- erates lhe P cifk Ampbtlheam, de· tAllin the standards the aty expects lhc mphnhcatcr co meet. Hall ·d Ulh ~ildmoc ld be a resuitcmcnt of tandards the city h d already discu sed with Ncdcdandcr. The C<>uncil lso dirteted City Attorney Wood review a l\Je.. mcnt between the Cll) and the '2nd District gricuJtunil ~ iation, drawn up an August 1980, that mcluded proVi ion • requ1rif\& the · fairgrounds to abide by certain city ord1nan In nt months, the settlement bas come into qu tion1 etpeetally whether th Clt):'. can enforce a noi ordinance f"Hid tot e tlcm nt rid Whether the an· can hold &he wraround to its plannins and ton- ina st.andardi on future development. Wood will "review the settlement aarttment to see if they (the ir- ~und man mcnl) have com· phcd with aJI the requittmcnts (in the aircemcnt)," Hall wd. Wood wu asked to researth the q,Rtmcnt and report to the council. NEWPORT RESTAURANT OPPOSED ••• l"romAl with Anderson and his architect Joseph Lancor of·0e1 Mar at the Bo&rd of Realtor's Hall on N~wpon • Boulevard to discuss the residents' objections to the proJect. The Rosan shipyard building is 2S feet high. Jeannette said. , . .. All otthe residents In the area arc upset with the development. Our VJew wtll be blocked," said Gail Demmer of Newport Heights. "Oiff Drive Park 1s the most distinctive natural area we have m the Heights and 1t would hun the view from the park too A lot of people gather there to watch the boats parades in the harbor and for the Founh ofJuly," Demmer added. Neither Anderson nor Lancor c-0uld be reached for comment on the project this morning. _ The residents were surpri~d that the project aJrcady has gamed Plan· ning Commission and City Council approval without a fight. Demmer said more people in the NeWJ)ort Heights area should have been notified by the city that the proJect was pending. It was approved at the Ma> 29 meettnJ of the council and will the project ~JI so before the . - Coastal C-0mm1SS1on at us Aua. 21 mcetina in Marina del Rey. "As soon as we aot wind of what was going on it was 'Holy cow. we bav~ to stop this,' "Jeannenc said. Slaybaclc said the residents plan to chatter a bu~ to the Coastal Com· missum to show up in force. A letter writing· and phone· cam· pailJl to commission members wiU start this week. said Demmer. who added a second meeting by the residents opposed to the develop- ment is planned for the Board of Realtors Hall at 401 N. Newport Blvd, 7:30 p.m. Monday. COURT UPSETS DEATH PENALTY ••• Jl'romAl wouJd be "subject to this painstaking. review," according to James Enriibt, the county's chief deputy district attorney. "It leaves the situatfon with the death penalty up in the air, .. said an an;ercd Enright. "It gives them (Supreme Court Justices) the key to act on their biases to thro~t. the death penalty in a great number of cases. It's a sad situation. It's a way J.O attack. frustrate and defeat the death pe!WLY-" Enright likened Supreme Court decisions on the peath penalty to a soap opera. "You tum it on and you're right back where you started." be said. . Among county cases that would requ~ review · is that of Robert Thompson, convtcted last year (or the second time an· the stran&Ulatioo and sex-molestatton murder of Ed- ward J)renneman, an Anaheim news- boy. Also, the conviction of. Freeway Killer William Bonin sentenced to death an August 1983, and Rodney Alcala. sentenced to death in the 1979 murder !Jf' 12-year-old Ii untington Beach gJtl would be sub)ebt to such ·. revtcw, accordiOA to Enright. -()f 1he 24-dca1h--pcnalt)I and ~ without-parole cases "1till pendina in the county, only four would appear to remam clearly unaffected by the ru~ing. Enright said · He added he also docs not know ' bow jury instructions concerning premeditation and deliberation. r~u- ttnely used ID county felony murder cases, will affect the review m hgbt of the court's ruling. lf no intent to kill is demonstrated during the trial, sentencing would range from 2S-years to life imprison- ment with parole possible in l 2'h years, O'Brien said. Tbe decision applies to all defen- dant.$ sentenced for felony murder under the 1978 Brigs mitiative, which broadened tbe srounds for detth penalty sentences and life without the possibility of parole. Felony murder, \be most common type of crime punishable by death or life term sentences without parole, tnlt'olves a killing in the course of another felony suc'1 as robbery, rape or burglary. . .. ., ...... TER.MAID TAKES ABUSE IN STRIDE ••• From Al can't be a pushover." On this muggy summer day, the parking lots along the water front m Balboa are jammed despite a per- sistent layer of fog. Beckvold keeps her eyes open for the tell-talc red flag that pops up on the meters when time's run out. Thouah the meter maids arc not sworn officers, they can and do make citizen arrests. "We're so used to the nqative side of people that we can usually tell when IQl1leone's really setting out of line. h's funny, they can really scream at us but when an otllccr shows up and they sec that uniform. thetr attitude cbanaes." .. Morning eleuds, mas tly ele a F- Coutal Tides TODAY 12'4•"' 114pm ftONaaOAY 2.Hem 9 2hm 149a.m !llpm lurl MU lodty ac 7 ... p "'·· ,._ W~etlOtain and_.IOMI et1 Opm Moon f'lllM ~at 8:11 pm., Mlt tr 2:14 Lm. w~ eno rleet llOaln 11 8,13pm " 11 " n u 71 ~ 14 .. • 61 . ,. ., t1 .. 17 IO n .. 16 16 93 .. .. .. .. 1t ." to 02 .. .. 70 15 74 IO .. t1 14 to .. 17 81 u ts " 103 .. u .. .. .. ti t2 .. .. " .. It 11 .. 70 17 74 70 73 72 71 87 7T .. eo Tt • 15 12 n 47 ..... v.-70 .... tolli.Va 51 OtdlilwWN Cfty 10 om.n. .. ~"1Mlll ::~ 76 ,._.. ~~~ ... 11 ~.Or 72 Prvwtdela so lllMIOfl 79 "-'*' C.ty 71 ""1o 71=0 .. 511.ouit 72 11,.,..•Temoe 74 79 n • .. 72 .. to .. u 92 108 17 107 • .. • 71 .... 17 t1 91 .. 13 .. 17 ., tt .. .. 71 71 'PO n IT .. 75 11 " 13 &1 t) 71 " 74 n aa -" . MU 100 71 100 11 ti 71 106 74 .. 70 to 72 Extended Temps 9~~ .. 92 93 M II M .. 70 17 71 Teacher union's Basile gets job Coast Commumty College DLStrict trustees named the bead ofa teachers' union to the distnct's top personnel post Monday night. PbiUis Basile, a long-time toon· omics teacher at Orange Coast Col- leie. will be-tom c.tJna nee c}Ulncellor for human relations when Vice Chancellor William Waechter leaves in September for a new job in Arizona. Basile was expected to beaJn work- ing today as actinJ vioe cbanccllor- elect. She was required to resilJl from the American Federatton of Teachers. As president of the AFTs district chapter. she helped neaotiate contracts for full-time instructors at Orange Coast. Golden West and Coastline coUeaes. The appointment was approved, 3-l, with Trustees Conrad Nordqu11t. Armando 8uiz and Nancy Pollard votina in favor. Trustee George Rodda opposed the appointment without comment and Trustee Rich- ~ Olson was absent. CoNT INUEu S10R 1ls Nordquist., Ruiz and Pollard were suppott.ed by the teacher's union in last November's election. Last week., Nordquist and Ruiz insisted Basile's appointment ,was not a political payoff: They also said her fonner -. OBITUARIES AFT affillation would not create a conflict of interest. Basile's supporters said she is quahfied for the post. No criticism of the appointment was expressed at Monday's meeting. Services slated in Hawaii for Costa Mesa niachinist Funeral services will be held in Hawaii for floyd Benrand Dwyer of Costa Mesa. a retired machinist who died at Costa Mesa Medical Center at the aae of 78. Mr. Dwyer. who· had livCd in the city for th,.e past iO years. was a lit'e member of 'the National Rifle ~ soc1ation, and a member of St. Joachim Catholic Church in' Costa Mesa. He was born m Saainaw, Mich. He is survived by his wife, Marian, arid a daughter,1 Patricia SavlfO of Twcownine Palms. Also survivuia is · a·gJlndson, Ronald Pearson of Co~ta Mesa. Pierce Brothers Bell. Broadway Mortuary of Costa Meu was in chargeofarrangcinents. Bunal will be in Hawaiian Memorial Park ID Oahu. BODY FOU.NDIN IRVINE:·Ql'J'CH .•• .• From Al . today and homicide detectives w"ere hopeful it would pinpoint the ea use of death. • The case came to light lasL week when motorists traveling on Bonita Canyon Road told police they'd observed an oranae 1-976 Mercury" Capri parked on the road's shoulder. W1tiiesses said they saw a larJe trash baa with what appeared to be-arms and legs sticking out. · The motorists also claimed they saw a man, who they later id.eatified as Ralph, staodina at the rear of the vehicle. One motorist who said he pulled off and talked with the man, said the person bad a distinctive Enalisb accent. But tbe car. the bodv and the nian were gone by the time police amved. The missing vehicle still bas not been located, Muir said. · Ralph, who claims to be a cit.iz.en of Great Brita.in, was arrested at his residence the day after the siibting on Bonita Canyon Road. Police seareh· ed tbe man's bouae but bave t\Ot wd whether they CO!lftscated any IJems. Themurdcrsuspecta~ef­ ly in Harbor Municipal Co in Newpoi'f Beach on Monday. is bail was raised from $250,000 io SS00,000. He will be provided, a court-appointed attorney. Deputy District Attorney Richard KinJ had llJUed that Ralph be held without bail, sayina tht man had a troubled past and a history of stranae behavior.· • "This is goUling, ''lh~ says, scnbbl- in1 out the second of eiibt parlong citations she will issue within I 0 mmutes ... Some days 1t gets so bad, there really isn't time to get to all of them." Yet, despite the abuse, Beckvold fin~s. several aspect of her job to be .--------,;;.__-----------------------.-----~-----­ pos1ttve. There's no one around this time to yeti at her but.several passersby stare 10 contempt. One man shakes his head as if disgusted. "Some people think we hide wau~ ing for the meter to e~pire. But there·~ no way I would have time for that We don•t try to be sneaky In fact. I usually park the car so they can sec me comin " · A ki on a bicycle ndcs by ;lnd yells .. Hey, op." If Beckvold hears him. shed< ·n•t let on · Wlt never possible. Beckvold ~prefe to walk the beach parking lots and e streets rather than ride m the econ my Chevrolet the pohce depan- ment provides meter maids. Shop- kce rs grceJ her, others eye her •Pproach with susp1c1on. 'No. ~ don 'J feel selkon1e1ous ... Just Call 642-6086 Dally Plfot· o.ttvery _ .. GuarantMd Mondly ,...,., II yov 00 nut ...... of04JI Pl'• Oy 6ll0pm tltb•7nm she says. answerina a question. "It's my job. People 5:!Y 'What's wrong with you? Do you eDJOY this? Do you enJoy gJvrng people tickets?' "They don •t understand it's part of my JOb. If a car r~ park~ at an expired meter. the ctty's losini/money and n 's blockinf a si>aee that someone elk probably would like t9 use. "If it's bloclona the street sweeper, the &utter doesn't a't clean. If it's block1na a drivc;yvay~r the alley, then people are goma l have trouble gcttrng out to go to ork." · "l like ajving people directions. The city•s so confusina. Also if I sec people drivina around and I lcnow where there's a parkina spot, I tell them. "If it's early in the mOm.illf and I see some family pullina into a metered spot, ru tell them where there's a free spot. Little thmgs like that." Jn a way, Beck void has learned a lot about people by bcina a meter· maid . "It's really taught me not to judge people by the way they look. Not all surfers are jerks. not all bikers are bad. lt4s just that aetting a park.in.a ticket usually brings out the worst in peoP.lc. · "They may have had a real hombJc day and tbeycomeout totbeircarand there's this ticket -I can understand that." &he says. "Gettina a ticket isn't much fun." :-• . What do you like about lJae DaJly Pilot? Wlaat don't yoa lib? C.11 tlae number at left d yoar me11a1e wllJ be recorded, traascrlbed ud deU~tred to Lbe appropriate editor. Tbe same 24-boar answeriDJ service may be used to record Jecten to the editor on any topic. Coatrlbator• to our Letters col•mn mast laclade tbelr name and teJep De n11mN for verlflcatloa. No clrcalatloa taU1, please. Tell.as wbat'I OD yoar mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ,. Clrculetton 7141M2-4333 Cl111tfted adMrtlelng 714/M2-1171 AH olMf ..-iment1 M2~1 MAIN MACR 330 Wn• e.r 51 Colt• !Mu CA llO<l<ft ftoo 1 CoJt1 Mftt CA tNI ""'1 yQ/I Cop( Cle eel '"" • 9ftO v If H. l. Schw•rtz Ill Pubhsher ~ dO no1 •«-'fCAJI COPY tlJ 1 • "" al llll1,,_• lO em .,,,, ~ tq>y "' De.,...., ctrcua.tlon T•phoft Lorne Bruchet Ro Advertising Director l t•phen F. Cer.zo ,~,_~~·----t-._.... Production M n g r mary Churchman Control! r ' 1 4 . llw LoW Prlcll Vlllc.lc Pnt1,_ A~----~ror~.PlL ~-...... ~J. .. ICllnllf1ng CabMtlonl ind men. WM '1• 00 In WL JWC.11 128-1520, ..... .. - OOr Popqlar.2-Dlsk TRHCr Model 4 Computer Cut $700 . AS~,:-129900 ftlJNTH a.1011 • WM 11111.00 In Cat. ASC-11 COrntnerctlt Lwe ~ for Onty MS Per Month (Plue ~Die UMl9alM Tu) • u ... All Model Dl/4 Sottw .. • Add ~I CPIM Plue ,,.._,, to U. Thou_. of P1ogw • Two~ Diiie Drtv9i • Suitt-In Printer lnterfw • New Low Prtc. I Pcirteble Model 4P NOw '1291.00 (,.1080, ... '1791.00 In cat. RIC-11) • • 1 .. .. - BULLE TIN BOARD District plans Parent Nights ~usust Parent Njghts ~ave been planned by the Huntington Beach Union Haah School Distnct to ist partnt! to becOme_ lr.now!edseabte support pannm 1n tbe education.al planmn~ Of It Student$, I The Pf"Ot,nlrns will be held on Aua. 22and 29 from 7 to 9 .p.m. an the ~hoot auditorium, 190' Main St., Huntln~ton •Beach: Parents and studenls are invited· to attend either '?letting on the most convenient date. . Pttsentat•9"DI wdl be made by Dorothy Crutcher, director of gui4ancc, . and Jean \Ye>esner, specialist in career and colleie services. A qucstton and answer period will follow each presentation. · Society to hold luad·ralser The Society for Calh&raphy, Orange County Chapter. will hold its annual fund-raiser luncheon on Thursday, Aua. 16, at 11 a.m. at Mercury Savmp, 1095 Irvine Blvd., .. Tustin. · Special guest speaker wilt be Molly Gaylor, outgoing • president of the SFC. · C~t is $5 per person. For more anformatiott. call 979-1622. Smoklng clln~c• aanortnced · Tb~ Amenc~n Lung Association of Oranse County 1s sponsonng a senes of Freedom From Smolon& Omics beginning Au~ l~u continuing each Monday and Thursday, from 5 to 7 p.m., through Sept. 13. · · The group meets at Western Medical Center, I 025 S. Anaheim Blvd., Anw1m, in the auditbrium. Cost of the clinic is $25 per participant.. T echniqucs used by the clirucs include group therapy, the buddy system, and self-analysis. For further information on this or upcominJ Freedom From SmokinJ Oinics, call the American Lung Association of Orange County at 835-LUNG. Ant1-rables cllnlc sclJedaled A neighborhood, low cost anu-rabies vaccination clinic has been.scheduled for AUJ-I 6, from 7 to 8:30 p.m., at the Fountain Valley R,ecreauonal Center, Brookhunt and Heil, Fountain Valley. All d*' fourmonthsofageand older~art ~u1~ b> ate, county end city ordinances to be vacc~nated agaimt rabies. <l>st of tht vaccination is $3 per dog. l1cenJeS will also be available at the clinic site. For more information, call the Orange County Arumal Shelter at 634--728 7. Comic operetta at SaddJeback .. Iolanthe," a comic operetta by Gilbert and Sullivan, wall be presented by the "Not-so-Royal Opera Company of Greater Irvine" on Aug. 16, 17 and 18, at the Forum Theater of Saddleback College-North, 5500 N . Irvine Center Drive, Irvine. The group is sp<>nsored by the Yamaha Music Education Center and is directed by C.Cleste Tavera- Howansky. Tickets are $3.50 for the evening shows and $2.50 for the Saturday matinee. Children under 13 arc S2.SO for ;tll performances. Orange C<>ast DAILY PILOTIT~ ~ 7 1114 M eteS get some home cooking rab .. Amerlcans host dinner in Costa Mesa for Olympians By KAUNE.~ Of .. a._ ....... The cabouli. bummoa and autbeouc Arabic llDDllC' co dn•t have been bet1.ef. But JOfefill Haiek loOk cx~on to 4he stuffed lamb. .. 1 aokt the cook, 41 da..,-ee With ~· OG lbc IMDC uts." Haie-baid. pointinc '°\be Lambten'Cld Wida lleall1 salad and mashed ptbanzo bean :dip. He R.ewallda ;~ golden~ne nut oa bis knife and t.'dd it ~· IFl'*1,.. .$hoUJdO•a be cooked hYide-Willt IM ...... Al home, in erus&km, wrc ~ n on top, It coma out more crundl that way." Ha1ek toOt another bite of lamb after be ~ continuina co sesture. But his ~ ~ quabbti~ only added lO ~ atmolpbett .... wm at. dinner in Com Mea ho®rioa Arab Ol~ adaleta. About l 00 Arl.~Americansaueaded the ~ridaOeftailtit pthcnna 11 the ciahbotbOod Community 1er • R~'nutives of the Olympac ckkpnons frOm ~ Lebanon. Jordan, Tuni ia and Saudi Atabia et1endiiru honored cuests. Francois sa.dc, a Judo otracla.I lb lbt l.ebl.DCs(: dcleption1 basked in the attefttioo FridaT9 IU'ls posed for p1ctwa siruoa on bis lap and b1m for autographs, Jc is unlilcdy lb.at he will be Object of similar anention duri.na the competition. be said. When asked bow I.be ddq:ation bad fared a.n the pines, be said, .. Not aooct. We're doina aothina. .. Lebane•e -01,Plc athlete• (aeated) NICOie KaMOUe of Analieha, Iman All of , =t:•·--Mohammad El .. bl, a boZer, and luam S&nta "Ana and Sbadl& of VWa The lack of medall. however, didn't seem to dampen Saade'• enthusiasm. "'EvCl'Ythi?& is very, very nice bcrt," he said. Compatt.d to the 1980 MOICOW pmes, be Aid. "here is better ... Awarkl. a wretJI:• are happy to comply Park. The 4eletadoD from on WU with requests ~: kl""OI an4 •atotrapu amonc the Arab 011:;ct.ana -~ttaaded a ~~;r~w~;:n;~·;;i~Ci~;i But in MOJCOw, be said. .. eve1')"llUQa was new, built for the athletes, •• not like his qoarten at the u~ Otyiitpic ViUase. ''The other one (the UCLA villatt) it t:ieuer," tie said. A teammate, Sirop ArsW:li.an., sponed a ~ aDd held out bis Olympic identification UC. .. You're &om the • newsj)&perT" he asked. crinnina. ''Here-~ my aame ... The purpose of the dinner reception was to .. make the athletes feel at home,•• said Alex Odeh. r:e,iooal diRclar of the American-Arab Anti-DisCriminatlOD Commiuec, which h0$ted the dinner. • ate ta Mesa High School The group has also published an Arabic guide to lol Anscln and distributed it to the more than 200 Arab athletes and· officials lD So11thcm California for the By KAREN E. KLEI °' ... 0.-, .... ..,. Frid f. fol'ustno! a t6-~r employee of the H gton Beach Union High School 'ct, has been hired to replace DO amplin as principal of Costa Mff1gh School. Jnfusino, 41, wh<*ght history and was athletic difl" at Marina High School in Hu~on Beach, was selected from t oup of I 0 candidates for the last week. according to Supcnn1$ent John W. Nicoll of the Newi><Mesa School District: lnfusino rcportd work Mon- day. said an assis•nt~coll. Former princ~· I •amphn re· signed at the en oft last school year to take a po tio d1rec:t~r of ~":,~.t~e Redondo Beach A selection panel. made up Of district employees, interviewed 10 candidates and narrowed the group to four. finalists, Nicon·s assistant said. The mterview panel included: Kevin Wheeler, assistant superintendent of personnel services; Carol Berg, dircc· tor of personnel; Fred Carter, coordi- nator of student services; Michael Varalya1, Costa Mesa High teacbcr; and Nerissa Azunan, Costa Mesa student body president. Nicoll and Deputy Superintendent Norman Loats selected lnfusino from the four'finahsts. lnfusino is expected to be formally entered onto the district's payroll fCJJSler at the next school board meeung. the assistant ... :d. Olympia, Odeh said. · . lnfos1n~ rled •a ~lif ..MCIDIM:rSoObeADC!m'ehollcd.~'feejitt' and tiistory teacher at Marina Hi~ . thetr bomes, ~ ~ . . ~ . starting in 1968. He served as athletic The fDC is.a ~ll~~oipruza~on fou~ m May director and tau&ht U.S. hlStory and 1980 !<> fight diJcrimination and bisotry ~ ~ mentally gifted classes from 1974 to ~cncam and CO promote Arab cultural ber!taF._ Odeh 1979 there. said_~ IJ'OUP da.un~ 20,900 members nationwide aDd From I 979 to 1980 he was dean of 1.600 ~Southern California. . . . supervision and discipline at Ocean Haielc. owner Qf the N~ Circle Publi&bina Co. or View Htgh School and from l 980 to Glendale, ~d Southern <;al~aa bas the sec:oild Wwest 1982 be served as assistant pnncipal Araf>.~CJ'.lcan commwuty m tbc U.S. The 1arpt ism at Wcstminster'Hi&h.School. Detro1t, Mich. Most recently. fnfusino bas been __________________ .... associate principal at Westmtnster Hiff; ~ece~ved a bachelor's .or a~ -Laguna N!f. uel site degree in history from the Unaversny of Massachusetts at Amhurst and a • ,:a· & ma~ter's.of~d~fromCalState cons1uere 1or Unavers1ty. San Diego. Further lnformauon and uckets may be obta.med -------------------------------------• from the center at 1545S Jeffrey Rd .. Irvine. itness academy-. Accoua~g coW'H9 offered NB -.:-\ . . es sp€cial counsel • The Pns1den1'~ Cou.ncil on Pb)'Sic:ai Fitnc:SS uc1 More than 30 different courses in accounting will be fi offered at Orange Coast College this Fall. The FaU . or sememr classes begin Monda)'.. Aug. .20. Accountina co\f.tSCs ta· be offered include ··eoo1c- . . . lice brutality suits Spons ts looking at • 3.000..acre s~ in coastal Oraqc County foothills as one of thtte sites for 1 proposed national fitness acaQemy. Counal officials VlSJUD& So.ut.bcru CahfomiaJ"OT tbe Olympic Games last week ~ the arceobeh ~ t.aauna Ni&uel that could become the sne oft.be Untted States Fitness Academy. keeping_.''..__"Principles of Accountina." .. Basic Account-. ina." "Office Techniques," "Full.Charge Bookkeeping," Ct ~-Id--d $1 O 000 t d r d t lf "Federal lnco~Tax,"••ManagerialAcco'untina.""Cost I y cou n -. ~ e1en t se ' dnvmg under the influence near Newport Pier. Accountinc." and .. Intermediate Accounltng,.. 2 officers have left the department Registration for FaJI semester classes runs through Boone alleaedly &breatened Stravopoulos who "lost his temper md belted the IUY In the jaw," satd a police department source. . The academy would .be a trainina center: for 1th.le~ and would include tenntS couru. tracks. bicycle trails. soccer fields and other ~yins fidds, council officials said. Aug. l 7 in OCCs Adm1ss1ons Office. The office is open Newpon Beach lturcd a special Both pohce officers resigned ID Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Open counsel to defend \f apinst two May following departmental reviews regJstration on a walk-in basis, gets underway Aug. 16-24. police brutality.. lajts filed last of the incidents. Both officers had For more information about accouting courses or month in Orange tnty Supenor good records pnor to the incidents. registration procedures, call 432-5 712. Court. accordmg toty Attorney accordmg to police. An internal police investigation concluded the officer was at fault and had used exccssi ve force m the 1nc1dent Also under consideration are sites in Dallas and . Indianapolis. Preliminary architectural desi&ns have been drawn by Los Angeles archltect Ow1es LuckmAA. a member of the council's buildinJ comnuttee. CAL ENO~R Robert Burnham. Kim Nelson Boone. 30, of Long The ci ty was hit 1 two pohce Beach filed a suit an Orange County •brutality lawsuits it ming from Superior Co urt, askmg for $100,000 ------recent incidents in ~h the plain· m punitive damages and $4,000 tn uffs charaed they wc0istrcated by medical expenses from the ctty and form~r Newpon p<>ltfficers. from former Officer George In the second incident, Douglas L. K.Jllian of Laguna Beach charged former Officer Richard Jacobs, 30. watb eitOCSStve force dunng a Dec. 6 urest at a Corona del Mar bar. He 1s seekmg an undetermined amount ID the SUit. The fitness academy, first of iu kind m the nation. would be built to provide a "total teachina facility of Vefl substanual size" for teachers, coaches and others mvolved in t.ralntng hC'W athktes.. Luckman said. Burnham said the has retained Stravrop<>ulos. 37. Tuesday, Aug. 7 . . • 9:30 a.m., Oru1e Couty Board of Saj>ervlaon, Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana. • 1:30 p.m., Oraa1e Couty Plaanta1 Comml11lon, Haft of Admtnistration, 10 Civic Center Plaz.a. Santa Ana. • 7 p.m., Huttn1toa Beacll Ullioa HJp Sclaool Dlstrlct Board of Tnsteet, District Education Center, 10251 Yorktown Ave., Huntington Beach. Tom Feely of the l.Angeles law finn of Burke, !hams and Sorensen. Feely, wtf>cciahzes m police suits, will defi the city and both of the formerotrs. Burnham Stravropoulos allegedly punched Boone in the Jaw following a Feb. 29 verbal exchange · at Hoag Memorial Hospital m Newport Beach. Jacobs allegedly injured a hand- cuffed Killian who bad been asked to lie face down on the the tavern floor. When K:illian. 25, raised himself off the floor, Jacobs alltiedly pushed hJm down Wlth enough for to spht K.Jlhan·s chm. "We are interested m the Olympics, obviously, but we arc loobng at IS to 20 years down the road.•• Luckman wd. "As we have better coaches and teachers of physical education at all levels, 'WC will have better qualified students wbo ultimately will increase our talent for the Olympics. as well as for bfe m ,enera.l ... The Oraaa.e County location includes three potential sites near Laguna Naguel, all part of the 3,000 acres of parkland which the county · aoquirina from the Mission V1e10 Co. 10 ronoecuon with its development of a new said. "If this goes hkeber cases. it lcould cost about SI 0), .. Burnham said. Boone, a sheet metal worker. had been taken to the hospital for a test to measure bts blood-alcohol content after being 5toppcd while allegedly planned community I .. Po ucE Loe 'Fire marshal' m tifies ~~~~~!.~~~~~!. ~~~~~~~-~~. why a man posinl as a fire marshal • fire marshal. One employee told incdly then walk.ed to hi& car and co~rcd th G~at merican Chili Co. police the man had a gun strapped off. pohce said. tettauranl ID -Hunfinglon Beach onto the lo~rt-ofone leg: • • lfiorities, who \\erC unsure.what Monday afternoon. Pohce ~·d t~t when restaurant The man, dressed in casual street workers asked the cnan to produce take of the incident, said they had clothin1t toJd employees It the Beach some identification. he said he had ~1ved any other such reports. ~ Coetall- The law offices of Juagen and Wayman, 28SO Mesa Verde Drive East. were buraJarized over the wcck- tnd.and three IBM typewriters were st~n. Thieve mashed a rear win· odow 1t tl'ie office to ptn entry. poljce said. The lo wa olaced at Sj,800. • tJ • • Thicv who ev1dcntly tned to pry ope,I)., a window at Hi Tech Oraphix, I S(Y' Paularino A vc., resorted to ma hin& the window instead when they failed. They s\ol an IBM typewriter and a portable TV t. The lo was estimated at SSSO. . .. . About $1,000 wonh of plywood wu stolen last Friday from a sal sate at 3088 Bri tol St A buildil\l 11 na knocttd down at the 'tc and t so hed or I.I kcd plywood wtre stolen. 1t appears someone took the and the C3$h durina evenina .. taken to Pac1tic Hospital when he complained he'd suffered a broken that burglars had stolen gardenioa eq uipment from his unlocked garage. The loss. estimated at S488. included " • • an edger. a .wccdcr~ger and' a Burglars broke into the Restaurant leg Factory. I 5622 Computer we. and "acuum. • •• took several electnc typewriters, a · Associated Landscape Ser"1cc re- Xeroit machine and two computers poned that someone broke into a The totaJ loss was put at S 15 800. prdCller's sl\ed at l 86SO Brookhunt • St. and stole the compan 's eqw~ Fountain ValleJ A resident of the 9800 block of James R1\'tr Cirtlc reponed Sunday tnat has home had been burglanic.d over the past week. Entry was made by cutting a hole 1n a window screen and rca.china through an open Wln· dow to unlock a door. The loss, C$titnated at S8.475, tncluded tcrco and video equipment a camera. a cc;mputet and clothina. ••• Enteri(ll thro~ a soft sunroof. someone bu!llan.zed a alvcr 19 2 Renault Fucao par\ocd Monda in a dnve ay on tht 16400 block of Vernon tt-cet. The I included SI ,<MO 1n tcreo equipment and S anotheritem Dam tot . nroof timated at S • • • A ~1dcot of the 9000 block of ta C nta A\cnue rt ned und.a)1 that burglars ~ n:cd oiitn 1 kitchcft W1ndoYt to ran tlisbome. TM t included rotor tel v'sion 4iClS.1 \1d ttrorder and Jtwtlry . ••• • TW<> rs ~ burglarittd Mon > whale parked on the 17900 bl of Brookhu t 'trttL Thie~ broke a ~1nd w to teal ~tereo cquipmC'Dt worth $900 from a bl~n 198~ ment The lo included a k padc grass blower worth S32S Newport Beach A cv. Pon Bttch man rcponed the theft of a patch quill "alued at $200 from his home in w 1800 block o( · Seashore Monday. • • • A Newpon Beach woman reported the theftof$45 an potted planu from the front p<>n:h of her home in the I 00 block of Vta Genoa Monday. • • •• Hununaton Beach man reported the theft of two ··T-tops" valued at $900 each from has N1 n 280 Z parted in the 2600 block of Pacific Coast HighTt'ay Monda). • • • t'4-1'°'1 Bcach man~ the th of an auto tCftO \: lucd at $183 from l'!ef car parked an the 4800 bf I.: of H V.'l). • • • Home Fedeftl ~ automau~ teller card to a Bt h man but· the man never rttti' ed it. Ho~tt meooe u ~ card to -1l.bdra Sl,400 from h1· 11000unt at the cwpon h branch Both tht benl and th polior art 1nv 'tiptina. -... ·-,,_,.....-M )" t to I a$600 111> B. iW '.\20i. ••• mad nt of th 9500 bt \: of matiun A\cnu rt rted M oda~ Jcw'tlf) ronh appro~amatcl SS.opQ wa\ to n from a co • domtntum on Roe. ) Knoll Mon e~ m 4 .. • • • Someone burglarized a residence on Swallowtail Monday n.igbt and stole a small televUion set and two diamond rinp. The lo i estimated at Sl.000. · ..3:. ••• f' A bofs blue BMX bicycle valued at approXJmately $1 SO u wu rted stolen from a ~ on vc Monday. • • • A C"8f'Ctle m chine WU ttp<>rted tolen from a hotel otTace on Von Karman Avenue Wcdnaday. • • • Vanous paru&Dd 1 &oat &rille were taken frotp a ~ Foret Pinto on Se100 Rold Monday niahL -- Boys free in death of friend_ Games ~ most viewed • ever dance already an Olympic record with 6 days to go LOS ANGELES (AP) -Despite the 14-nation bo}COU and alJ the pr-e- Games doomsaying. the 1984 um-rner Olympics have been work.Jn& so well that organizers already arc pat- ting themselves on the back for stagina the most~watched Games in history ay, AuguSl 7, 1984 He's wired for eude An Olympic-record 3.4 million spectators have attended the Games. half the world 1s following the acuon on tclev1s1on and business is up at Southern Cahforn1a supermarkets. gymnast1cs schools. flag makers and amusement parks. TIUl. ~-led boycott has had little ' effect on ABC-TV's raongs. which have been close to le"vels projected before the teams pulled out About 20 million U.S. households with telev1s1on have been tuning an each night, according 10 the la1es1 ratio~. John Beardempbl, a beer-lo•er from Tacoma, Wuh., foand a new way to •lp •ucb Sunday during the 7-11 Freedom C hydroplane race. on Lake Wuhlnaton. With six days to go, anendan~ at the Garnes has soared past Montreal's 1976 record of3. I milhon spccUtors. according to Peter Ueberroth, presi- dent of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee. No figures were available for the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow Iranians praise mini~g _of Red -Sea's ship 18.nes "The Olympics have a magic," Ueberroth said. ··It's not us -it's the Olympic movement " He predicted the t 988 Summer Olympics tn South Kerea will hkely surpass the success ofLQs Angeles. U.S. vows to send minesweeping gear to Gulf of Suez By Tbe A11oclated Pren Iran's state-run Tehran Radio today praised the recent mine attacks on Red Sea shipping_ and said they were earned out by the same radical Islamic sroup that claimed responsi- bility for the devastating truck- bombing of the U.S. Marine post in B(mlt JJltjpll. Western and Arab governments have not said who they think is responsible for the explosions. but Tehran Radio said a mmc-laying operation had been conducted by the Islamic Jihad, or Holy War. Anonymous tclepbon~ callers to news agedcies in Loncfon last week had claimed that the organization, about which little 1s known, had laid 190 mmes in the Red Sea. The radio, m an Arabic-lanauage broadcast monitored in London, said: ''All the arrogant powers are helpless. unable to save the dozen ships facing destruction in the Gui Suez and the Red Sea every day ... Tehran R'adio hailed the terro orpnization,-saying its mine-la operation ... added to the sencs failures experienced by the arr powers in our Islamic region smce blow dealt by the Islamic Ji organization in Beirut." That was a reference to the su1 bomb1na at the U.S. Marine ba Beirut on Oct. 23 tn which American servicemen were lcilled. The 1984 Games llave been sponored by pnvate corporations and individuals. another Olympic first. and Ueberroth pred1c1ed the or- ganizers "wtlt end up with a surplus m some millions of dollars." The bot· tom line 1s important to future host cities because of the huge deficit Montreal rolled up eight years ago. Happy Summer Meanwhile. an Washington. the Pentagon today said the Uruted 1 States will send mmcsweeptng heh- cor.ters to the Gulf of Sttet rercon to he p Egypt try to clear cavily traveled-Red Sea shipping lanes of the explosives. which reponedly have damaged 13 stups 10 recent weeks. Attack breaks lul in GUif tanker wa RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY, llC. -f• The •est Of , .. lh 1922 HMD BLVD., COSTA 1DA -SQ.1156 50°/oOff ·annual 'renewal dues Go ah~d Give 1t everything you've got We'll give you everything we've got All the latest equipment, the finest fa c11tt1es and p rograms Start n<:YN, get 50% off a nnua l renewal dues and pay nothing for 30 days Ca ll or come by today tor o tree guest tour .. MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) -Iraq said its warytanes attacked a .. big naval target' south of Iran's Kharg· Island oil tenninal today, and shi~ p1na sour~ confirmed that a super- tanker was hit sn the nonhern sector .of the Persian Gulf. ii1fi Holiday spa H~lth-Elub for Men and Women features separate gyms for men and women, avalfoble 7 days a week. The missile attack broke a fi week lull in the so-called "tanker waged on neutral stripping in the by war rivals Iran and Iraq. A Dutch salvaae company 1d ified the tanker as the Greck-o Fnendsb1pl.. Henk Drenth, a spo man for the Smit lntemat1 salvage firm, said the Liberi rci.istered tanker was hit about ' miles south of Kharg Island as It ~ beading away with a full load of o·1 was the first confirmed attack ct. commercial ship 10 lhe Persian G StnCe July 9. Shipping sources in the region sa the distress signals picked up from t tanker did not indicate the extent damage the vessel sustam~. Salva tugs were d1spatched from Bahrain help the tanker, but a spokesmab Lloyds of London said a fire a the 122,945-ton vessel was u control and the ship was contin under its own power .. Jn a shore-to-ship ~lcphone .. versation with authoritjes in Bahr the second mate of the ianker sa1 crewofnine Pakistanis and IS Gr were "all right." He said the w1 the captain was aboard and also uninJured. The tanker was sa1 under its own power to the Un Arab Emirates for repairs. the said. NATION U.S .. says Olyniplc t reat. letters a prodU.ct of KGB By &la Aa~la&ed Preti CHICAGO -"Racist and d1 ,gustin&" thTCallJ>urponed to be from the Ku KJux Kl n &C1Wll1y were forscctby th Soviet KGB to keep 20 African and Allan nations away from the Summer Olympics, Attorney General William French mitb ys. The letters "were not produced or sent by the Ku Klux . Klan1 .. Smith said in an ddre~ Monttay to the American Bar Assoc1auon meettna here. "They were insttad manufactured and mailea by another organization devoted to terror. the KOQ." Smith declined after his ~peccb to amplify on the KGB cffons or say what the U.S. s<>vcmmcnt miaht do about them. Noot of the nation5 that received the letters dropped out ofihe Summer Garhes in Los AngclC5, he td. Grounded •hip rub:a• reef MIAMI -Two tugboats with combined 7,900 horsepower will try on Tuesday to free a groundea freighter that destroyed delicate coral thousands of years old and scarred one the Vt'Orld's most popular divina reefs, o~cials said Monday. An attempt to heave the 5,900-ton Wellwood loose from the north section of Molasses Reef, in the southeast comer of the Key Larao Natiqnal Marine Sanctuary, would come durinr high tide, said David Byrd of Byrd Commercial Divina and Salvage 1n Miami. SoVlet newsmen may attend coaYe.Dtlo1i WASHINGTON -The State Department says it won't bar SoViet diplomatsandjoumalasts from observinJ the RepuljlicancoiiVcnilon In UiIJii this month even though the Texas city as usually off limits to Soviet citizens. "The State Dcpanment has no intention of denyina, Soviet Journalists ll'd diplomats access to the Republican convention in Dallas," said Alan Romberg. the· department's deputy spokesman. But he made clear that the Soviets will have to get official permission to travel to the convention. which opens Aug. 20. and said that so far no one has applied. · Jack.an tour on, desplte threat. KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -Promoters of the Jack.son brothers' .. Victory" tour bnefly postponed three concens in the wake of threau against the group, then decided to go ahead with the shows with increased secunty. Typewritten letters contamillJ racial slurs and death threats apinst the Jack.sons were received or obtained Monday by the Knoxville Journal and the Knoxville News-Sentinel. "'I met with our security people and they went lhrouah them and reached the conclusion that both were hoaxes." Chuck Sullivan, president of Stadiu(ll Management Corp., the tour's national promoter, wd of the letters. Eight slJare $24 mlllloa lottery CLEVELAND -Holders of the eight winnina tickets from Ohio's Saturday lottcrydrawin.a turned in their lucky stubs Monclay,and none seemed to mind sharing the $24.6 million jackpot. "I don't know what it's like to be a million11re, but I have a feeling I'm going to find out." said John Arthur, 39, a f "ther of three. "Thif\1$ arc starting to look up, They're definitely 1wtin.a to look up." The eight who correctly guessed the six numbers drawn in the Ohio Lotto weekly game.each were eli&ible fora-Sl;Q8S.~~IJNe, to be pmd in annual payments ofS123,421.36 after taxes for the next 20 years. Alligator ~11• boy In rlv~r PORT ST. LUCIE, Aa. -A 12'h-footaltigatorgras~an I I-year-old boy in itS jaws, dragged him doWJt the St. Lucic River and killed him before _police were.able to fre.e the boy, authorities said. It was the fifth verified fatal alltptor attaclc m Aoricla since 1948, officials said. .. It was terrible, I could seethe gator with the boy's hand sttckinaoutofbis mouth, and be wasswimmingwith h1m down thenver,"saidMitchell Epstein. 26. . Med .cllool curator 11ell• bodlet1 CHAPEL HILL. N.C. - A curator for the University of North Carolina Medical School was chllfied Monday with stcalina and sellina 11 bodies tba&. were sent to a medical school in the West Indies. Lester S. Sandlin was indicted by an Ora nae County grandJuryon charsesof embezzJ10gstate property that be bad received as a state employee, said Dt&trict Attorney Wade Barber. ••state's evidence sho\vs the bodies were shipped to Aorida, and then to a medical school in the West Indies," Barber said. "They were allegedly sold by Mr. Sandlin to Aonda Mortuary Service 1n Miami.' Pet python •trangle. tot OITUMWA, Iowa -The apparent stranglin4 death of an l 1-month-old boy by a python kept as a family pct was "a tcmble accident" and no city charges will be filed apmst the parents who kept the snake, ~hce said. Matthew Uoy.d was found dead in his crib Monday momina. HtS body WaJ taken to Des Moines for an auto~y by the state medical examinerJ>Jll Ottumwa Police Chief Phil Gates wd aJI evidence pointed to stransulation by the I 0-foot snake. "lnvcstiption and evidence indicated the baby was injured by a I 0-foorpython that had apparently escaped from an enclosure that was in the upstaJrs pan of the house," ~tes said. Arm• cache •upect gem bal1 redaction LOS ANGELES -Bail for a man accused of keepina napalm, automatic rifles and armor-piercuia bullets in his home was halved Monday after bis attorney described him as a church member and former Boy Scout. Municipal Court Judge Michael Tynan reduced bail to $100,000 for Richard Cole, 26, who sat impassively at his arraignment Monday u be was cbarJed with eiabt felony counts. Last week. police foul1d what Deputy District Attorney Ronald Coen described as ·•the laracst (weapons) cache in the history of Los Anacles" in bis home in suburban Nonhridge. Cole allcgcdJy made the bombs found last we.ek 1n car driven by Richard Blackwell, who was following a bus carryina some Olympic athJetcs. He'• too ba•y to report theft LOS ANGELES -A briefcase containina $46,000 in $100 bills was snatched July 21 from a man who told police be worked for the Saudi Arabian consulate, but the crime wasn't reported until Monday because, he.Wet. "I've bcen ,too busy." Al Abdullatis, 30, said he wu meeting the Saudi Olympic continae~t at Los Angeles International Airpon when he set the briefcax down. When he looked back, the case and its valuable contents were missina. he told polfce al Uie airpon substation. · WORLD Nortb. Korea J>01"er t11uJ•fer . TOKYO -Nonh Korea's official Radio Pyonayang confirmed for the fii:st time. Monday n~ght that ~m Jona 11 will succeed his 7!-ycar-old father, Kim U Sung. as prcs1d~nt. It dtd not say when. ln a broadcast monitored here by Japan's Radio Press monitorin& aaency, Radio Pyonayana said the father- to-son power transfer -first ofits kind in a communist country-"bas been internationally acknowledJed." It said 10 a commenwy: .. The Korean Workers (Communist) Party is a. areat pany hav\na a solid assurance for continuation and completion, aeneration ami after aeneration1 of the pat revolutionary task started by the arcat leader comrade Kim II Suna. .. Beirut blut hart. four BEIRUT. Lebanon -Four soldiers. were wounded in an explOSlon Monday 11 they removed booby-trapped barricades dividina the ca~ital, and government sources said Moslem militia leaden objected to lctuna army soldiers replace. their fi&htcn in the central mountain~ A shell, exploded as cngmecnna untts of die Lebanese anny were workina to d11m.antle the remainder of the .. arcen line" that had divided Beirut into buically Christian and Mo lem sectors bcforo leaden ofth0&ereliaiou 4fOUpsq:recd to unite in a Cabinet and try to stop the nation'• njnc-year-old civil war • hince Charle. bJ lte'W Gafnea . ANAHEIM ..• (714) 952·3101. 310 So Magnolio. 1 block So of Lincoln CERRfTOSJLAKEWOOD ... (213) 924·1514, 11881 Del Amo Siva at Pioneer. 3 btocks East of 605 Freeway PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea -Tnbal warriors aD4 arw--lkir1td dancen SRCtC:d PrinccOJarlC"Jtodayu he anivcd to open ~New Guinea' new ~liament buidlina with a •~h in Pidjn En&lish. Oiapcla, em i bi~la hau1 bilon1 ol roan meri bilons Papua New Guinea.; .. he aatd in couotry·s most commonl)' poken tanauaac. In Enalis~ttiat means .. This bia fNIGlilll • house belonp to the people of Papua New Guinea." .J nc heir to lhe British throneaddrcucdaptckedchamberofd.ianiwi ancludinarcpmen\ltivaof 28 · n. Pltjflc and l~ian Oceu counuic:a. .. MISSION VIEJO •.• (714) n0-0822. 24401 Alicia Pkwy at Son Diego Freeway WESTMINSTER •.• (714) 894-3387. 6757 Westminsfer Ave. at GOiden West COSTA MESA .•• (714) 549·3368. 2300 Harbor Blvd (Behind Thntty Drug) ORANGE ... 1~~2441. 622 Ea st Katella :Av W st:of Tostfn A\19 -~- w. aenna.a detenct. receat acconi. Gov:ernor's·delta· plan is 'd.ead ill the Water' SACRAMENT:9 (AP) -Gov. George DcukmeJ1an'1 controvcr11 1 cramento-San Joaquin Delta water proposal is dead for 1984, the senator sponsoring the ball for DeukmeJian said Monday. Sen. Ruben Aya~ D:cbino, an- nounced that he was dropping the bill after opponents acored two tactical victories in parliamentary infiahtina bcto~ the Assembly Rules Commtt· tee. Ay la id the Republican gov- ernor and his aides \\'&Jltcd him to go ahead and push for n Assembly showdown on the ball, but that he didn't have the votes to pass it and that any furthe~ hearinp would be "aupcrfluous." '"The bill is de· d for this year," . Ay aid in a telephon mtetv1ew T y_ evcnina. "But the tact that the bill 11 dropped doesn't mean the i IOI ved. I wall try qain next • but next year it will be my pr~sal. This was the governor"• plan:· 2 inmates claim ~urder of 18 girls In a 1epa11tc statement, As. scmblyman Jim Costa, a supporter of the Dcukmej1an plan and chairman of Jhe Assembly committee which· wasscbeduled to hear it Tuesday. said there was no point in the Assembly votin1 on the plan because of de- termination of the Senate'Tleadcr to force a vote on the plan in June l 986. Deukmejian wanted an indirect vote this November throup voter consideration of a companion con- stitutional amendment that was tied to the main water plan. If true, officials will have solved . GreenRiv:er. case-----. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two pn otlers have claimed responsibility for killina 18 teen-aae a:irls, and polioc said-the sutemequ were beina in- vcstipted for links to the Green River killinp in Wasbinaton and Or'qon, a newspaper re~rted today. In an interview Wltb the San Francisco Chronicle, Robert Mat- thias. 2S, was quoted as sayina he killed "16 and possibly more" women. In a separate interview, inmate Richard Carbone, 32, said he killed two women alon.e and helped Matthias kill nine others. -~ Matthias described his victims as street "bustlers0 and aaid he suspected that his mother had worked as a prostitute while be was a child. The victims .. were the type of ~ple I hated the most,.. be said. •They1:0Uld have stolen your wallet if you turned )'our back on them. They bad a way ofmockina people." Bob. Keppel of the Green River . Task Force iefused to comment on the the investigation into the men's assertions. But he said Kina County, Wash., police Detcctlve Paul Smith was being sent to San Francisco to intervitw the inmates today. . ... She, GOR butllkes Geraldine ~·We'll sec what these cuys say," he sa1d. • Kin& County Sheriff Vern Thomas called the news "surprising" and added. "Wt'.Jl just have to check out their story ... San Francisco police also said they ...,ould question the men about the statemenu today. Carbone is in the city jail on rape and robbery charge . Matthias was arrested on robbery and buralary charges. Carbone, who telephoned the Chronicle to ask for the iqterview, said they decided to talk because a friend already had told police every- thina they were wiUin1 to reveal to the newspaper. • Authorities have said they believe one man committed 26 Green River murders in the Seattle area since 1982, when several bodies were discovered in the ri ver. Many of the victims were youn&JH'(fstitutes. . Like the Peripheral Canal, which votcn rejected by a 2-l marsin in 1982, Deukmejian's plan is intended to inCTCaSe the amount of water which can be diverted from its cunent flow throuah the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta into San Francisco Bay, to be transported' instead to the San Joa- quin Valley and So'!_tbem California. Utffike ille PeripliCiil Canal, wbtcll would have divcned the water around the eastern edge of the delta in a 4.S-mile-lona all-~ channel, Deu- k.mejian's p.rtSJ)Olal would widen and deepen sorrie tllisting delta cha.noels, and possibly add some shorter new channels within the delta. But like the Peripheral Canal, Deukmejian's plan has rai~ wide- spread emotional opposition in Northern California and a sliahtly different division of supporten and foes in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California. .Re11.ga_n leaving loopholes in bis 'Do tax hike' vow WASHINGTON (AP) -Prcsi-The difference between the two dent R~, who says he has no andidates, Mondale said. was that he plans to raise taxes if he wins a second was willin& to make his sand publicly term in the White House, has left while Reapn was not. himself enouah of a loophole to do Reapn responded at a news con- just that if all other attempts to cut the fcrencc that he has no plans for a tax federal deficit fail. mcrcase. He quickly added, however, He pledaed for the first time on that "you wottld have to took at the Saturday to .. veto any tax. bill that tax structure" if the deficit persists wouJd raise personal tax rates for "after all our best efforts" 10 reduce workina Americans or that would faiJ federal spend ins. to make our tax system simpler or Vice President George Bush re- more fair." peated that point white ansv.~ring But that sccminaly iron-dad vow rcportm' questions Sunday in Scat- still leaves Rcapn room to rec-~tl~e~. -=---=£-=::=~=-:~-~-"-----~~!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~!._~--==-----_...;.:__-"--~ ommend; -.-•A federal sales tax or a temporary surtax such as was in effect briefly durina the Vietnam War. •Reduction or elinuJlltion of some of the dozens of deductions and credits that ~uce 1ovcrnment tax collections. •Taxation of various-types of income that are entirely or partially exempt from tax -such as Social Security benefits, disability pay- meou, life insurance proceeds and capital pins. • HiJllcr business taxes. Any of those options would raise taxes without ruonin1 afoul of Re- agan's vow to block any increase in individual tax rates. Walter F. Mondale, the Demo- cratic nominee for president. made taxes the No. l issue of the campaian when, at the Democratic co~ vention, he declared the DCllt president will have to a!krConsress 10 raise tu.es . . American visitors ~to Leningrad given assault w<jlrnings WASHINGTON (AP}-The State Department warns that American tourists 10 uningrad have been subjected to increasinJ harassment and .. unlawful!' detenuon by Soviet authorities. ••Americans travelina to the Lcnm- pad area should be aware that their : ri&bts as forei&n tourists and the protecttons afforded them under the U.S.-USSR Consular Convention arc r: not be1na respected by the Soviet authorities," said Alan Rombera. the 1 State Department's deputy spokes- man . .. The Soviet authorities have not responded in a satisfactory manner to our ~t requests that they act , immediately to corrtct thtS situ- ation:· Rombcra said. He said the U .S. warning to ' American tourists, officially called a ' travel advisory. goes into effect immediately and 1s of indefinite duration. 1There have been.several cases in recent months involving alleacd as- ultt on.pfficial U.S. pcnonnd Jn Lcn1narad but Rombera aaid Amcri· can tourists also have been affected. • 0 Tbtte have been scveral cues of n unlawful detention of tourists by the iet teCUrity Of'llM folloWin& rl innocent contact wuh Soviet cuittns," Romberl said. · He aaid that while detained, the Americana wen1 denied their riahts to communicate with an American con- ular omcer a lkt to be visited by 1U(h an officer •"Without delay." Lcninarad's inh:i n.m\)nal 11rport," Rombcrs said. • He said that on July 28 an American professor associated with tl]e International Research and Ex- cnanaes Board ··was picked-u;p-by a plainclothesman as he was IOUll to a meeti~ with a Soviet scholar who spcciahzes in 18th century litera- ture." • • • He said the American -· he declined to identtfy him by name - was detained at a police statton for two hours and not permitted to contact the U.S. consulate in the caty. "In fact, he was told by militiamen that a new Soviet law whieh took effect on July I dld not require that foreigners be aranted accns to their consular tepTCStntative ulnle they were beina deported." "This is a danaerous attitude for the Lcninsrad authorities to takf," Rombcrasaid. "And it is ooc wbicti 1s clearly is in 1fO V1olauon of tbc US. USSR Coasular ConventJon.'' Just last w«k e spokesman for the U.S. Embasay in Moscow com plained that six Soviet poli«men auaulted a U.S. Manne usianed to the consulate in Ltninlfld while he was walkana Ilona a street, and then detained him ate poli~ station for two hours. The Marincwa attacked Thursday by ii plainclothes and unafonil'<I poh<tC! three of whom held him While the ()\hen kicked aod punched h&m, aaad~'t cm be y source who spoke on condition he not 1bt named. -lllE llUIUll lllESRll 1101111. yon top(/ the CD tn\~tnent marlct wnh American ~vtngs We're tht-n. film' I 11?· est Vi~ and loan, WIUl O\l~r x' billlOO In a ~dt That's what u take to offer you high yitl CD mvC$t1ncnt opportunities hke th1 one GARDEN GROVE lll'4l Garden Gr vc Blvd 5 '4·8690 Official embassy spQkc man Jaroalav Verner aad the Manne.whom the v1eu accused of !Mt'THMtMl-eetiMdnlM 414-IMM rtqiNSC b.OIOilil-·•-----"'r:-• lutton and 1 not thouaMJ«;J\A" • ffered pe""'nent tl\Jl'.11). YIEll ;_ I --~ lllEllDY.· -1 I-' ' • A8 . The Russlaps ... ar.e willing to lmpo elower t.andards oflJvlng In order to put motemoneylnto the arms race. WALTER BURROUOH8 qolumnl•t SEARCHLIGHl ---- - Russian ·beauty mBskS menace LA 'stough line On grades copied by otner. scho-01.s .. Photos tell surface story. not push for military superiority With the exceptions of our own Lee Payne and Dick Koehler, J know of no photographer who can tell a story with a camera so etfect1vely as my long-time friend Proctor Jones. The difference io our Daily Pilot news photographers and Proctor Jones is that unWce Dick Kochler, our chief photographer, or Lee Payne, our fonner chief photographer, Proctor Jones has the wherewithal to go far afield with his cameras and, so far as I know be has never returned without a pen~trating story. Heh.as done this in country after country and on continent aft.et continent. He has . ~ust returned from bis , second recent trip to Russia with. a collection of photographs that belie · the churlish rhetoric of the com- I '._.Jl Wben Los Angeles administrators adopted the nation'• toughest eligibility rules for high school sports and other after-school activities, there were dire forecasts of massive dropouts and depleted football -A tCSJTlS. . But 18 months later, there ~as been little negative and a lot po~u,ive to repon about the rules. which are increasingly being copied in other California school districts because 4 they apparently are accomplishing the1rpnmegoal-spurring students toward better academic performance. The Los Ante I es rules, still the toughest in California, have imposed a Caverage requirement on students in all extracumcular activities. Stu- dents with a sinate Fin one grading period also arc ineligible for the next · 10-week session. ·-----....:.=-------_.:..------------------------------Since Los Angeles acted, some otherdistricuhaveadopted theC- . • average standard and othets h.ave set ·~a no-fail rule. But no one has· copied Los Angeles and taken up both pans ofits rule . Other districts apparently are still believers in some of those early munist government of Russia .· •. ' ... ,-. "'- warnings. And. in fact, the rules at first did produce some shock wavesat the49LosAngclesh.iahschools, with some running short ot eligible stu-. dents to stock.theidootball team&.and a fewtOpJliJbt athletes tranafcrrina to neighboring school districts witli It 1s pretty obvious, of course - which Proctor is fint to admit·-that the Rµssian government was happy to h.ave him there. For they, no fools, k.now of Proctor Jones previous works and they are just plain elad to have a master craftsman take pictures showing the sweetness. kindness and ·WALTER &ualoucHs anract1veness of the people of Euro- pean Russia in the north. .. This at a time when the govern- ment of Russia 1s launching scu(- rilous attack after scurrilous attack on us as hosts of the Olympic Games in 1984 looser rules. • . · Many coachesand principals - • f!I. ,~ , protested then that the f\lle would ilA. j '1' ·~ causcsomestudentsforwhomsports or band were the main reasons for attending school a tall to drop O'Jl. f x i: 'A -· But the opposition has diminished rt€' (_, ..J· '. ~. . . . latelyas thenumberofdisqualified __ I . ) · ~ _. r 1 ,,:z e studentsgi;aduboall_ydrod~~andd ·--4 C . v · -->-1 _ j..)' -smaller neigh nn& 1stnctsa opKlU , : __ ?-tl£ .:::-si.milarrules,makingtransfersmore J.?-.--·. , ~ difficult. ~ ff•= "We'veseenadecreaseint.hc · _,. percentageOfstudentsdisqualified with each ro-weekgradin.gperiod -5incc.thc rule was ad~ted." sa.ys Barry Mostavoy, the district's chief academic statistician. At first, almost 2~ pe~tQfitlJ studentsin athletics, music,Joumahsm and other after- school programs were disqualified. · The figure was down to 18.8 percent in the first 10 weeks oftbe spring semester and Mostavoy•s preliminary f11ures on the final grading period of the spring indicate another drop. ·~Thebestevidenoeof-themotivat- THOMAS EUAS ingeffect of the rule is that more students have redeemed themselves and won their eli&ibility back each I 0:. week period than the previous one," he said. ; There'snoevidenccofmassive ~! dropouts, either. Not only is there no • dropotfin district enrollment, but the• number of students turninaout for extracunicular activities is also steady. Despite the system's apparent suc- i cesssofar in Los Aneeles, thereareno signs that other big cities will adopt similar tough plans. Chicago and New York., for exam- ple, still require only that high school athletes have passed three counes the previous semester to stay eliaible. Amoog big-city districts, only Mil- waukee, whicbrequiresa l.Sgradc- point average, mid-way between a C , and D, bas any standard 1imilar tQ the one enforced m Los Angeles. Butthatdocsn't~rrtJlCn tt!e ~~· eoChusiasmofLos~~-='!. uaton. -. _ "This is probably the best thi~ we've done in years to make the kids more conscious of academics and arades.," says Mostavoy ... Eventbe ' coaches and administrawn who op. posed it at first are at least ~ing quiet now. They sec the positive effect it's having, with kids whoneveruscd to think about grades talking about them all the time now . ., And prin~eal Robert Reiman o( Palisades High School1 whose foot- ball team lost a high scnool All- American runnin3 back to a nelgh- bOring school last year, told one ~ ~that ••1 think we're in better shapebecause o e rult. ~-­ studentsare reallyadhering to it and l think it's helped academically." Thetougtrnewru.Jectearly fo1ccd thousandsofhi&h school students into a difficult, unprecedented situ- ation. But they've adjusted well - and there's probably a fC$SOn here for other school districts. ftomH Ella1& • SutaMOlllca· -NH4col81UJ1U.•laUlullft>~. -- In contrast to the showing of the calm peacefulness of the Russian people was another analysis of Russia today. This was by another fnend of mine, Bob Long. Bob is a recently retired four-star admiral whose last assignment was Cincpac (Com- mander in Chjef Pacific). OlyJD.plali lndlvlduallsts You can bet your bottom dollar that Bob did not and will not divulge any confidential information to me. or to any civilian, or to any military person without the need to know. But under questioning, he agreed with (or at least refused to contradict) news reports which confirm tha! the Russian government is as vicious as 1t sounds. For example, the planted story that the Russians arc beh.ind in inter- continental baljst1c missiles. Fact 1s, said one reP.Ort, they have larger and neweflbisslles and more of them than the United Stales has. There are more land-based nuclear warheads in Russia. They have more ballistic missile submarines and they have more troops on active duty and more ground equipment such as tanks and personnel earners. ' • Did I tell you there were no poup contests. such as relay races, m the ancient Olympics? Much is made today about -unselfish dedication of patnotic-teams. and-that's not bad. but good. The old games., though, lionized solitary souls. Each part was greater than the whole. Each contes- tant was one only. Each athlete fell or stood alone until elimination left one individual supreme. ~ It was also President Calvin Coolidge who said, .. Nobody ever listened btmself out of a job." Either the wife kills the husband or the husband kills the wife in one out of every J 0 homicides. One horse race in three, about, is won by the favorite. Q. Was Julia Childjolcing when she said the best way to peel. a tomato is with a blowtoch? A. No, sir, 'tot of kitchen m~hanics use those little mi.ni-blowtorobes. To brown meringe. To antique wood. To singe fowl. Q. What s tlie most common crime committed by women? ' Q. Shoplifting, by far. That's the charge in seven out 10 arrests of women, in~. Q. Did Shakespeare ever mention pretzels? A. Never -did. They weren't in- vented until about the time of his d~th. . Am told the favorite food of goats ia poison ivy. The Mona Lisa is paintecl on wOod Elephants, too, act Oat feet. L.M. Boyd J1 • colrulUll1t. For the last quarter of a century. military superionty ha5 been given first pnority. They have now become superior in all fields of warfare except air, and here they are fitst catching up. The Russians don't have the prob- lems of financing readiness. Feds makinglt tough On rackets lnf orm a nt They are willing to impose lower .. standards of li ving m order to put more money into the arms race. They are cum:ntly spendmg 14 percent of gr~ss national product. In the meantime (and here the admiral dedaned to comment an any way), the decision of how to protect ourselves 1s left to the House of Representatives which can and does thwart any administrati on, tipparent- ly for political reasons alone. Don't we hsve a lead anyplace? Yes. we do: In space. Turnc9at gets 10 more years on sentence, ousted from witness protection program WASHINGTON -Four years deadly jeopardy. He was abruptly ago. Jerry Van. a convicted . ex tor-Wlthdrawn from the Justice Depart· 11on1st and muscle man forCahforn1a ment's witness protection provam racketeers, gave f('deral agencies and turned loose among ·the general crucial information that led to nearly pnson population, where he could a dozen indictments and convictions have been easy prey for the mobsters of h1s.....r6nner associates in 1he he had helped to'SCnd up. underworld When Van's dangerous situation He hoped to earn himself a break became known to Rep. Charlct. on his state sentence for unrelated Ranael, D-N.Y., cb4irman of the charges of exton1on and assault. House Select Commiuee on Russia's amung itself 1s not solely But he got nebreak from the 11tate Narcot1cs, the congressman wrote to to make war They make propaganda judge, who slapped him with a 16-Attomcy General William French use of it -most effectively year sentence--I 0 years more than Smith demand in, an explanation. Well J dtd learn a J1ttle on my ~ partner received on identical "Shonly after Mr. Van made vacation and J relaxed a lot. an case -c aracs. allegati?nS ... hew .U'IDsferrcd from you care. Worse. when Van started to .. sing•· 11T9tcct1vc cust9dy .:nto the aeneral to a conarcsrn>nal committee about pnson population. . Ranael wrote. W•lter Borrouf}l1 11 tb~ Pilot'• alleied misconduct wathin the Jusuce-"While. I do not ~ant I~ draw folUldllll pu&IJ lier. Department. the feds put him in conc~\Utons (tom tli11 .act, tt rattes ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat . . H. L. 8chw•rtz Ill Frank Zlnl IJa .ng I d11< , TomT U C t,F.'dtor 1 ' certain questions. panicularly whit conditions ha\'e chanacd that would duninisb the need for Mr. Van to be under wito protection.•• The letter got qu1clc action. Van was hastily rutottd to the safety of a fl., tcaregated cell under th€ wnn protection program. At te.J>0!1 Mopday _Van-· charg~upinst the fcikral orsana1cd· crime 1tnke forct in LM Anielcs led Rangel to a k Smilh to in\·eatiJ&lC allegations of" official corruptioh and dereliction of duty relating to narcotics enforcement in the South· west .... " The Justic~ Depanment is now conducting an invest.igation of t~e current strike force director and bas predecessor, both of whom have emphatically denied accusatioos of wronadolflg. Van believes b.e was betrayed by authorities who didn't like his cbarps ap1nst their colleagues on the stnke force. It took congressional pressure to aet the Justice Department to ioveitipte th6cha.r1Cs afteryara of delay. Tbc House comJnitlec's special investi&ator tCj)Jd my associate Indy Badhwar tha/ he believes Van was indeed treated pe>orly. Van tteciVed a punitive prison sentence after prom- , wcrcmadetointerudeforhim in return for hia cooperatibn. This is also the opinion of Assistant U.S. At· tomcy Paul Comldini, who tok1iowl- cd&Cd the valuable bdp Van pn)Vidcd in brcakina up the biaatat best orpniud and most profitab1c 1r10n rina in the count'ry. .. JACK AIDEISOI ment special proaecutor1 testified that Van had been cooperat.1111 in federal invest~tiona of arson, tmil fraud and whtte slavery. Van .. save full and complete information to the federal anmd jury:• Schlou told the judge. addiftf "A very laflC. perccniqc of that mformauod bas been cor- roborated by independent in· vestiptivc mean a." Despite all the favorable testi- mony; the CaJifomia prosecutor rec.- om mended no leniency, and 'the JU• went Ilona with.the rccommeo· ~u~. . In opposina Van'uppeal of hi 16- year senten~ tbc C..lifom11 attorney atnttal's omce arsued that .. no proma ~made to Van, talc or fecfcral. rqildin& a reduction of sentence 1n cxthanee Jbr b11 OOOptr· • alion ... In Janu.a!'Y 1980, several fc<stral The record indicatcS otherWlse. Jn aaen tcttificd 'n Va • Jxbal!:at ~-Matdt J98-2 .. GorlMini-wrote-t'O" the ~scnttnccheannaan 1he Cahfom11 itate anomey 1tneral: .. h la impon. talc coun. ant for meco demonstrate to Mr. Van Dcnm1 Scht a Ju ucc Depan-thll the •o tmmt_1lt II Nrtina the process oflivina up to its-promises." Deputy . U.S. AtlOmC>-' General Sandy Kriegler responded: .. W'e rt-· main committed to our oriaiaal ~ment and will abide by it after the conclusion of your trial." The ~ment., spelled out in the sea.led transcript of the pre-sentence beari~ called for a maximum sentence ofsix yea.rs in return for Van's cooperation. The prosecution was succcstful. But the state reneacd on its ~ment until last month. A atatcjud&e finally lopl>Cdsix)earsoff'Van's1entenct- st1U shy of the oriainal promise. UNDM THE DOME: The Fcdetal Election Commiuion hu niled that Sen. Ted Stevens, R·Alalka. Could property desianate his adult dau:,htet Beth II an "aide .. IO that her UIVCl upcnscs could lcplly be-Paid by an OfJl.Diz.ation he Mel been invited 10 ..add.re& But it iWod tii1 2 Vte~.old dauahter Lily 9t'U not an elisJbk 0 dependent" for expen.te purpota. .-Rep. Paul Simon. 0-JIJ., mcanr while, tw a iOOd word to uy for: co~ional tt1Vd in his latest book, .. The Glul Howe. .. Acknowl .. ed&inacriticum oflqislativejuokct1, Samon saya that tra~el bfOldcns a lawmuer",1 peroepuons of the world, and that not travclina would be 1 atiiiR~rth ~f>liC Jad ~ u. t'fll••illl. . Head ·thro.btJi~g? N ~W relief on way Researchers aim TYPES OF HEADACHES to treat headaches · that won 'tg_o away__._ ' ' J By PAUL l\AEBURN u ..... ,.. ~ SCOTISDALE. Ariz. -for most people. a headache is a nuisance, something that cree~. into their skulls only when they're inchina throuJh a traffic jam or trying· to balance a checkina account. · For IS many as 20 million Ameri- cans, however, headaches strike again and apin, defyina reason and rem- . tdy. The recurrent .pain can disrupt job and families and leave its victims -feeling isolated and misundetstood. I Most common h .. d.c:he marked II A d150rder of lhe by tightness 1n lhe sc•tp("h•tband temperomand1bular JO•nlt HAJJ discomfort") where lower 1aw 101ns S•dC'<; 01 th•· "Headache is not a tanaible thing like cancer, hiah blood pressure," said Dr. Seymour Diamond. -'\executive director of the American Association for the Study of Headache, at the association's meetina in Scottsdale. "Ifs always easy to explain it away as a psycho5omatic diSCJlSC ... The cause of most headaches is a mystery. In all but a-few victims, "the physical and neurological exanun- ation is perfectly normal," said Dr. Seymour Solomon. director of the nation's first headache clin.i~ at the Mont.efiore Hospital and-1Medical Center in New York City. held • .~Usually tocated near an eye. may · occur as many as eight to ten 11mesda1ty D Related to cl"l•nges 1n the-blOOd • vessels or nervous systf'm may o.• preceded by Ztgzaq pattNn~ ol hghtl ·aura, ) I Aetat1vety uncommon, deap11e 11s treq~t "*''ion 1n tetev1s1on com~rc1•ls. usually 1ecompanied by a runny nose or noMbi.e<J Take the case of one of Solomon's ·patients. Joseph Venditto, 47, of Yorktown Heiahts. N.Y. His head- Challenge f~r couple: Fill i..2 intimate hours J It ca111e strai&ht from thr mouth of their marriage coun- selor.· 1·.IDI "Spend 12 LI hours of non-sleep-a. "a'I ing tame an a room IU.wu. together ... no tele-•••••••••••-vision ~nd no-read- ina material." • "No problem," thought Bonnie and Scott, Actually, any new activity sounded better than living ~th ~e boredom which had become the rccumng theme m their marria1e. Boredom is a catch-all phrase which may include depression, restlessness. apathy or emptiness. Someti~es being bored means all of the above. As the No. J marriage-wrecker, boredom often does a sneaky job. Bonnie and Scott can't pinpoint just when theirs became a blah, ho-hum relationship. They each knew they were longina for the intimacy they once shared with each other. They didn't want to divorce; they wanted to re- connect, and so they welcomed the suggestion of their counselor. . After booking a room at the "No-Tell Motel," they checked in at I 0 o'clock in the morning, vowing to remain awake and attentive until at least I 0 o'clock that evening. j.oom service woµld provide food. Titey_bad no otbet props. After the door closed, each looked at the other and laughed nervously. PAPARAZZI Bonnie said, "Did you remember to give· your mother a medical release for the cbjldren?" "Yes." said Scott. • · ••My God," said Bonnie. ··1 forgot to remind Johnn) to take along his retainer." . Scott didn't care about Johnny's ritamer right then "Don't touch that telev1S1on," he said to Bonnie. as *made a gHtUR-\OWard Wrmng lt-On~----- ••1 forgot," she said. . It was only 10: 15 a.m. They had I J hours and 45 minutes to co. Intimate commun1cat1on can be tough, especially when you've aotten out of practice. Bonnie and Scott are not much difTeren t than the rest of us. Actually, they seem theed-Of the aamc in their willingness ta-challenge-their mental boredom and to expose their vulnerabilities. The lanauage and behavior of love do nol fall into place automatically. Interesting partnerships and cxcit- in& lives require creative problem-solving and positive action. Bonnie and Scoy survived their escapade. As the clock ucked on. their tension eased. Before the I 0 o'clock deadline had passed, they had made love twice and had indulged in hours of even greater intimacy ... talkina about the lhinas that really mattered to each of them. Dr. Algazi 1s a ps,.-chologisl and tnam'age counselor in Corona def Mar. Send questions to Linda AlgJUJ, Ph.D., c/0Da1Jy Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. PLANE TO SEE NIFTY 50 There was one surprise after another at J.J. '1.aicke0ocker'1 50th birthday pany held Mexican· tyle at his Spyalass horn~. . . . Everybody in the ne1ahborhood knew it was his bia day because Maareen Daffy. Mike Fedderly, Gary Dtal and Morrie Slu1mu arranacd for a plane to circle for 20 minutcs..withattCtinas. ~ • . Lorette Reddy, cousin of the honoree, new out from New York another surprise, and while the mariachis wcreolayinaa phoncCalkamc from a friend in Oklahoma that KnickcrbOckcr had not xcn in 20 years. · Assistina wife Betty with hostinactewls were sons anddauahter,JlmmJ,Cadl1andJ.-.,.Othen hetpina were I•••• and DeWM4 EU.1. Ff4•rt1. Dlu andfttliJa61M. In alt there were 13 KnickerbOCiera o help the honoree eat his larse sombrcto-sh1pcd birthday cake includina~ Batbara. Du, UM,&_, K!ml,BW andLettwhocamefrom icqowtthDr. WtJH · Beacfl. . Othenthcre cnjoyina the muc-1t·)ounclftaco bu and other food in the Mexican buffet and the hucc Olympio-style poOl float were Man l.aMarlu (PoSt· nana.~i Rawaiiantri toattend ,Retua~tt, --"'ne<iahl>On an at BeaviUilp,D GffrPYa~ley,Lyu1ndWally01JHr,Jollll&J~ 11ekMlaad ,N~&&eandMUcflCuJer,Hlble . Laaoru, Jou Br..,, Del1J O.rkee, Job Ferrell, Dr. Blll ltaaley and the Dea IJlllau. · KnickerbcX:ker (in'carpctioa) is affiliated with the Roostcl'I of Chanteclair and the Ritz Brothers and has been a Corona del Mar resident for nine ytars. His bi& day concluded with dancini \o music of the' 50s. • • • OalyO.wau•yi noconetomiu goodpany-. 'even if hehutohoponaplaneinNcwa.rkand tlycout t0 coastto mike it. . The former Daily Pilot editor and assistant to the publisher, who is now residina in New Jersey where. he 11 publiShcr ofa wttkl)' newspaper company, made. recorddmcfroml..AXtothcNewponBcacbTcnnu Club here a pany in h honor wu in proarcss. On Jiand towJsh hcrwcllinherncwbomc . (Victorian11ylcwithanatticandabUcmcnt)~Oa1ly f>'ilot publ11berSU11JSdwart1and hiswifc9ara, f0undi!'I pu~lishct Walttr and 1A!=1 B.,,.... ' manaainatdttor FrukZlal and wife E1alM ffa~1 (thC)'are ne Irvin~ residenu), 0. ~Ullama,circula· ti on manqer; Stt~e rue, production manaau; Lone Bi'wdtd. Mhcrti n& director; Rote..,-, Oi•rdmu,ceatnUer;dtJeilterT•m ~Ain I . to bein Papal'U?ir)Tahahd hisirifeftebtatBn Aadtl'HD, fOod td1tor: DaJtoa PterMI, cla ifi~ ad managcrand Pat ,pcrsonn ladmini lrator. aches began suddenly seven years a10, when be awoke one night witli an intense stabbina pain art his right.eye. Within minutes, he rcc.alled.-.. 1 felt I HELP YouRSELF -------- HpdB.ted facts-put fear of AIDS in perspective Thert has bccn ____ ...... .._ _____ _ extensive media cov-/ erage about Acquired Immune Deficiency BRENN-AN Syndrome (AIDS). Since it has been a cause for alarm, I c thought it mi&ht be ' ASSIDJ appropriate to ex-l•lil•••••••••I plain so~ facts about this unusual new disease. AIDS is a result of a deficienC} in the body's immune system, a complex set of orpns and cells which are the defense mechanism apinst diseases. This deficiency 1s acquired as opposed to a deficiency that onr may be born with. AJDS was recently proven to be caused by a virus as ............. ..,"-.... J. J . K.DlckerbOcker, center. appeara to be uklni Illa wife Betty and Jim Walaworth for a clue u to wbat the out amprtae will be. had been s uspected. This ;trus anack.s ccUs ID the immune system causm1 a . deficiency, in .the pro~on •inst bactena, viruses and funpJ Otp01sms which may invade the body. AIDS v1cums suffer from severe forms of infection which the normal immune system protects apmst. Even thou.ah AIDS 1s caused by a virus, 1t is not a virus which easily transmits fro,n one individual to another. It is similar to the virus wb1ch causes hepatitis in that it can only be transmitted in the body fluids. In other words. it may be transmitted only throu.&b sexual or very antimatc contact with an infected individual. In addition, AIDS as not a oommon disease. It bU been repcrted only smoe 1981 and IS of la.st February, the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta bad files on only about 3,500 cues m the entire oountry. This includes only cases which have been oonfirmcd IS AIDS and the number of cases bein1 diqnoscd is 1ncrcasina. About 8 percent of lhe cases occurrina m the Uruted States are reported from the Los An&cles aiu. As of last month, there have been SS confirmed cases m 0rantc County. ~s well u an additional 42 cases under 1nvesuaauon. One of the reasons for the fear anacbed to AIDS lS its hllh d(Jth rate. For example, in Oranae County 23 of the S8 diagnosed cases have died. On a n tional level, there is about a 4S percent fatality rate. • Because of the low contagious nature of the virua which causes AIDS, It is unhkely for it to effect the sencral population in areat numbers. In fact. nearly 95 percent of the cases in Oran County have occurred 10 persons who att py or bisexual or are users of intravenous recreational/ dru as 1s 1n hnr wtth lhc national statistics in wtuch morcthan 90j)crcentof'\he-~ibvotveiotravenousdf\ll users or p)/biscxual persons. The only other subsroups wuh a htah prevalence of AIDS arc hemophiliacs and Haitians · Man) symptoms of IDS are aeneralized and subtle and. therefore. ma) be associated ,.;th other dixua. Earl) sians of AIDS may be the same as those associated with minor illnrsses such as a cold or flu. ·· Symptoms of AIDS' include unexplained or persistent fe~er or diarrhea, naJht sweats. persistent and profound fauauc. bloody tools and wc1aht lou wb1ch is otherwase une plained Obv1ousl). most of u ha\e expcnenced similar symptoms at one umc or another. • Even prolof\led symptoms of this kind do not n~rily mean that the) a.re cause by AIDS but any prolonaed illness or similar symptoms should be evaluated b) a phy ician. AIDS 1s often only diaanoled -----. after a pcnon suffers a severe 10fCC1ion which the immuoc S)'Mem would u ually protect nst. If you have pccific qu~uons or would like funhcr information about AIDS.1ou may call the AIDS Hotline at I ·8()0..922-AIOS Or 1n Orange County you may eontaet the AIDS R~ponsc Program at S34-086l. • Dr. Brtnnan Gt idy practicn family •nd emtrJCIK) medicine rn Co ra Mesa • Ult~asound new hope for g1 ucoma victims_ Presenting round-the-cl ock bliss will ringphonyto kids NlWS EV99IB -e:oo- e UT1\! tGa OM M .... 11.l/LOIO IATT\STARGM.ACTlCA ... REPORT HUliWITIE8 TMROOOH THE ARTS DEAR ANN LANDERS. I am a 5~--0ki p-andmother who left a good posiuon to stay at home wt th my grandchildren while my daughier pursued bercJk'rcerasan attorne) She and her husband are both 38 and very successful. . Their three tecn·a~ children need superv1s1on -lhe kind provided b y a grandmotber who loYe'rlbem, not · paid help. l decided 11 was wonh the ~cc. Question· When G'rcta and John~ have a difference of opinion Greta insists that all arguments take place upstairs out of earshot of the children. I feel st wouJd.be better to permit the children to w1 tness the squabbles and alsoseethemakingup. Am I wrong about this?-GRAM IN CONN. D~ GRAM: Greta'• anempt to preseat a road·ta.e-dock blluf.Uy llarmoa.tou marrll(e to die dilclrea b tare te lhve a phDJ rta1. Sllow me a ma.a aad "1Je wllo lhve Dever bad u .,...meat ud I wlU allow yoa a paJr of _ vegetables. Disagreements hi front of cbJldreD caa be uefaJ. A controversial verbal nclluge cu tllarpa tlleir 1eue or loiJc aad ratr play. Clllldml alto aboald tee lla.at clU- ferencet cu be resolved by talkln1 tllem ou. ud mnolll1Jl'Omi1lng tw an euellent tecb.Alqae for 1eUllJlg dl111reemeat1. . Of coarse, ao obscene languge 1Jaoald be uud, ao n.ame-calltq ud A11 WDERS . certalAJy DO sbovlag or puncltlna. The ahility t•~i~t IMitng disageeabte can be a crut u1et in We. Wbere better to Jeana ft tho at ltome! It coes without aaylDg &laat yoa will Deed to be extremely d.Jplomatie ff yoa decide to commanJcate these Ideas to Greta. · • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS. 1 thmk I'm aoing nuts. I'm 20 years old (fe male). Sance the fifth grade I've bcel'l doing hideous t.tun~ to my!lelf. I know you lhink you've heard It all bul hsten to lhas· I pluck out my eyelashes and pull splat endsoff myha1r. I'm a natl-biter and sometimes I even scrape the plaque off my teeth. When people ask me wh> I have no eyelashes I say r have allergies that make tnem·ran out I'm mamed toa ~onderful, under- st.and1ng man. I have a fantasttCJOb. rm makingtwiccasmudt~s­anyone my age that I know I am in good health and I have never had a ma.iorallncss. Should I dascu~ ih1s problem with my doetor11 sec tum for annual checkups bul be has never asked me why I have nbeyelashes. Should I learn self-hypnosis? Should 1 see a . psychiatrist ora ~ycholog.ist?(l don't even know the difference.) Or, should I just kill myself! I am so ashamed. I don't know anyone wbodoes these things. Am I the only1)ne in the world who is so goofy? Ann. I read you fa1thfullland I 1ieed youtbelPill NUTSY NE LI~ fNBAKERS D DEAR BAKE: Y oa Deed to lean wut 11 prodaclq •ad compalllve , beUvtor. Yoacu'tdoltaloae.Alk yoar pbyslclu to~ recommend a psycltolop.t, someone yoa cu opeD ap toud damp oa. No, yoo •~..!~t _t)!e o~y oae.1 llear from re.a en wliO tear oat tbeir eyelHltet ud eyebrows 11 well 11 Uad1fal of llalr. Some people bite tlleir toenallt. Yoa are Dot cruy -ja1t auiety· ridden. Wltb competat cou1ellng yoa can conquer die problem. Hop to It. • • • How much do you know about pot, roaune. LSD. speed. PCP. uppers and downers. glue and heroin? Are all rh~drugsdangerous?Get A.l>n Landers' a/I.new boolcJel."·1fJe low· down on-Dope." For each book.kt ordered. send $2 plus a /of16. self. addressed envelope (J 7 cents posc- JJ8C) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box J l 995. Ch1cago. I/I. 6061 J. I CllNlWS DOCVANOVKE MOVIE . * * "A'l'I Dlyl One Slmnlr" ( 1912) 8-1 eom.y, Bltly ~. <ll)MOYIE ···~ "Glortl" (1990) 0.. Aow-llndl. John Adlnm. (O)MOVIE tt "Blul SldllAQlfn" (1983) HlflY Hll'nln~Mlml -(J) MCMl •"'¥""'.'.. ~ * * "Mr. Mom" ( 1983) Mlchlll Ke. ton. T l'1 a.r. -tao- • MACNB. I L.819 NEWSHOUR • PROJECT UNMR8E ·=Oii. -7'1»- !· == l'M A.OOll.NOW -.CWOMAN QINlWI 1HP&'8 r#lll'M't WHEEL Of FORT\JNl MOTORWEBC P Jl MAGAZINE IDMOYIE **'A "Tiit T1g1t t.IM•Ouf' 11een El Wllldl, Arrtre J8cbon. (%)MOYIE * ··~ "Thi Kmn" (1a48} 8uf1 Lln-Cllter, Ava o.dnlr. _,._ 8 2 OM TIE TOWN a a FAIA.Y FEUD I fT'8 A LNltO TOO a.oeE FOR COMFORT • P£Ofll.E'I CCU'T 9 WLD, WIU> WORLD Of TOO TH CULT EMBRACED • ...-.us G t«JYA ()) TIC T~ DOUGH -t:00- 8 i~ Repnnred b; Requesr Whatever else hrstol') ma} sa}' about this generation. It will be dul} recorded they had great teeth. I can JUSt see h1stonans digging through the ruins and observing, "Good gnef, Professor Harkins, there isn't one overbite . . one chapped ' tooth ... a single overlap. What do you suppose that means?" ERMA Bo11Ec1 What they may never know 1s that behind every successful smile stood a self-sacnficmg mother who devoted her life to her child's teeth. Braces became the status s}mbol of the '60s and even today outrank cruise control and colored sheet~ as IUXUTy Items. ( dedicated myself tO love and serve my son's mouth back in the late '60s when a dentist suggested to me that we see an orthodontist. I shrugged. "It's a little drafty sometim es from being open so much but other than that . " "Look at 1t!" he chided "Do you actually thank he can approach adulthood wtth those teeth?" "What's the matter with them?" "Nothing. ,f he's going to go lhrou&h life b1lang necks" one. "You'll make so many tnps to this office your car will come here automattcally." "You'll have to remind your son to 8 MOYIE * *. • "NotOtlcM" (1948) Cwy Gnnt~=-· i 1WlJOHT ZONE brush morning, noon and n1R.ht." EJn'ERTAINMENTTOllGHT "You'll buy 50 toothbrusbes in a MOYIE month which he will lose." pa ** ** ''The L.att ShoW" (1977) Alt "Wait until he gets into ret.amers. blfYTomln. Ht'll procastinate, complam, and ~MOYIE lose th~m every tJme you tum *** ''Supernwl llt" (1983) aw. around. lqitMr ~ Rlcfllrd Pryor "You'll find has retainer an lockers. <ll)(D)MOVIE · public restrooms. clothes hamper, ttt"Aldl" (1911) Wwrtn e.ny, I ibrary books, school buses. bleacher Dllne Keeton. scats, sleeping bags, stuck an taffy ... " Cl)PAPaQtAIE:THUEOOND One woman said her dau&hter left YtAA her retainer on the plate and 1t melted Wlth a pastrami sandWlch 1n a microwave oven. (Jl)MOVIE duodenal ul~rs nd obc 11y, re rcmn say. The ltCS5 of andcbl~ thCmsclvca to family, friend nks and bookies ala.o often lead' to deep sometimes suiadal depression, a ell insomnia, impotence and oditr tress-.n:latrd all ~u • sharing anl1eti often &hare the ills. • Why. then.do they do it? "It's oncof lhetrurest form& of psychological addiction known,'' notes Dr. Rober\ Custer. Vtttrans AdminisU'lttoo psychiatn1t. "Gamblers can become indifferent 10 eatlna. xx and tlection." Medical and dental care iets ncalectcd. Often1poly-eddicu, compufsive pmblm commonJy ,mokc-and-driftk bdvily and-GU h marijuanaandoocainc, note& Or. Valerie LorcnzofTaylor Manor Hospital in EIJfooll City, Md. ''Many 'LIY 11 the gamma tables for 48 or 72 hours, not eating at all,•• she aayi. »Others ettcompulsrvely. •• Poor nutntion isn't the only muJt. Doctors at the Atlantic City Medical C.cnterrcpon that in 1981and1982. 291 patients were rushed an directly from the boardwallc casino5 or casino-bound bu~ with heart attacks. Many had just lost or won big. ~IJSter, who 11arlcd._thLn&liim' fim t.r:calmcnt p~m foroompuls1vegamblersin 1972-thc~arenow t 2-estimates there arc 2 to 3m1lhon such gamblers in th e country. America• Healda MagulAe Service • Old buddies Actora Lorne Greene (ri«bt) and lllcbael Landon, former father aocf eon team on TV•a ··&onanza ... aet to1ether at a BeTerly Blll• reception cefebratl.Dg Landon•• new moYie "Sam'eSon ... Wiidman, Deb«lh Vin fllyn. .:..12:t0- (CMOVIE. • **** "Anlltllll" (19M) lngrld Ber~ul llr;nntt. **"Mr. Mom" (1983) Mlc:hMI K• Ion. Tl'1 Gwr -1:00- U MOYIE * *'°' "The &gll And Thi HM" ( 1933) Fl'9dric liWc::h, City Grenl (!)MOVIE t * * "Stolen Holn" ( 1983) &IMn r~ Mlctllll Craig. **'~ "CM!n Lightning" (1950) ~ 8oglrt. a.nor Plrtt• **~ ''THngl Ari T0191 Al<>-'' (1912) RldWd '-a.:tl" Marin, tommy ChonO. -1:ao- I HEAL.llf f'IEU) ATTHEMOYEI AL.UfnEFAMU Ft1#AN l MART1N'8 WJGH.IC -tm.- 11 = = NIOHTWATQ4 aTYUGHT1 -2:10- (Jl)MOYIE t ·~ "Thi~~ (1983) Wllter Metthlu, Rof)lrl Wlleml. -2:»- 9 MOYIE **~ .. ...,.. From Ood'1 ~ ~=George MontoomerY, ~ .. Do you ltke the way your son's mouth looks?" asked the onhodon· ti st. Sattmg m has office week after week reading the Bleeding Gums Journal ~h1le my son was being fitted into braces, I heard stones from the other women an the Tooth Cult. "Th as i'> only the beginning," said "The WOrst-.-1.S when you've $One through eight or nine years of straight- ening has teeth and be enters mto a maxed mamage with a &Jrl with an overbtte'" e MOVE **~''The tM:kltn" (1947)Qn I * "Goin' Al The Wr(' (19'2) Dirt • Btnu MMA _Bank ol Ameroca I 00 Caltlorn•a F11s1 Bank II 00 Crocker 11.00 Fir1t lnlf'rSlllt! II 00 Lloyd• Bank Cat1forn1a 11.00 Secu111y Bank 1.00 2um1tomo Bank Wells l'er_go_ •• u I 00 100 American Savinqs 1 ,75 Bever!}' Hills S~vtn~a 10 00 C.111orm1 Federal 1.10 STERUNG~ SAVINGS I MMA Columb11 S1vtng1 1.75 Oow"!,t S11t1ngs 1.25 Far Well S1v•ngs I.OS ~el1ty Federal 1.75 F1r11 Na11onw1de t ,00 G1bralt1r Savin 1 too Glendale Federal t .00 Greet American t.00 Greet WHltrn t 10 Home Ftdet1I Sa111n s 100 ~ ... Ing! of ~!Mr 1.00 lmp!1111 S1v1ng1 t.11 Mercu'} Savings t.D02 · S..ars Savin.as Senk l.IO Valle)' Ftdtral t 00 t .15 "Someday," said a woman who never seemed to do anyth1na but write checks and shake her head, "You'll lauoh at all this." "WhcnXriask.cd. - She looked at me W.."1 tears m h.Cr eyes ... Don't pm me down " 'Cloak & Da~er' will open Friday l NIVERSAL CITY -"Cloak & Dagger," stamng Henry Thomas and Dabney Coleman, wall open national- ly an approximately I, I 00 theaters in the Unued States and Canada Friday. An Allan Carr production, "Cloak & Dauer'' stars Thomas and Col- eman as Davey and tlis father, Hal Osborne In ddiuon 10 has role as Hal, Coleman also portrays the "'ima 1nary," Jack Flack chanaes, Friedman said, and, unlike some other headaches, can usuaUy be relieved by aspirin. ·• Head injunes and meru!'Jl\IS (an tnfec\lon of the covennp of the brain or sprnal cord) can also cause head- ache~. 8can malformation ofartenes and blood vesxl.s tn the brain. ln the elderly, a oondJtion called temporal arterills, an inflammation of arteries 10 the temples. 1s another cause. When no clear physical cause is present. doetors arc forced to experi- ment Mtb treatmenu to ICC what works. Hundreds of drugs_ are available. Americans Jpend $300 million a year . in• ex• pen• slve~ ·c1n lk apen• 8'v) not high In price; reasonable; claaalfled advertising c "ed Advettl ng 842·&878 on popular headache remedi~ ac- oordin1 to Solomon at Montefiorc. (The estimates that 12 mt.Jlion to 20 million Americans suffer from severe headaches arc based,. on sales of ~che drugs, Diamond said.) The drugs most often used to block a migraine attack arc called e,._otamincs. Druit like aspirin, co- deine, Darvon and Percodan can sometimes ttduc~ the scv~nty of attaek. but abuse or thow drugs 15 a scnous problem, said Or. Jot1 Saper. director of the private Michipn Headache and Ncurol<>sical lnstatute 1n Ano Arbor. Many desperate headache sufferers take too many or take them too often. Other drup arc utcd to try to stop headaches before they tqin. Tran- quili1.era and a.nu-depressants some- um belp, althouah doetoB don't understand why. One of the best prevenfauves for mi~ine., fiDr. James Couch, chief of neiurot at Southern Illinois Univenity, i a rug alJed meth~l'Jldc, a member of the l.SDfamUy. In the 1960s. doao u · na 1 new cla of bean dru a.lied beta bl en found the rup could roo licve mipi:nc attac ,, One of thcte dru • propranolol (brand name; lndenl), 1s now widely u o 1rut headaches. Calcium blockers. a ne-r cw of h nd.Ngs.al50lookprom11in One of them, mmodcp1nc, m ttcr than th olhcr use it m to conccn1n1te an the head, But n1modepinc is availabl onl fi r cJ1.pc-nmcntal u • Dru nre not alwayi. the , treatment, however. Cluster head· aches, for example, seem to respond well to inhaling pu~ oxygen. Some v1ct1ms of the disorder keep canisters of oxygen in their homes or work· places. Many headache expeftL rec· om mend ch~s m diet, althouah no one can explain why such thinp as cbeesc, chocolate, milk and other foods secm to tnucr or qaravate headache . "I think (diet) is a factor in 30 percent to 40 percent of the people ... said Diamond, based on practical resulu he gets with patients io b15 chmc in Chtc:qo. On the other hand. he ~ad, "my own research casts some doubt on it." "Diet is probably one of the most overstated. cau.a or miarame." aarted Dr. Arthur Elkind of Mount \'"emon Hospiw in Mount Vernon, N.Y. Vitamins have been ulCd 10 fiaht h~dich but Diamond frowns on that. ··nere't never been a lhred of evidence that vuamins help 10 prcventina headach.a, .. be said. Biofeedback -ihe uae of elec- tronic moonors to train J19Ucnt to rclu or to control body functions io wa~s that mi&ht alleviate hcadathes -11 another frequently used tool. The upcns aarce that the cor· ncntoncs of u ful beadacbt. treatment are und tandtftl and careful aucnlion. "'What a mi.yain pat nt more than II the d and all tht 1nstruct1ons 1 a doctor Wh •1 five them conunuh~ of >inmond, • tOAILYPILOTITuad .~ult7 1N4 81 Lavin's . l~aving '~oice' eo!medyer.•t. access 'Alice' •• in 1985 By JACKIE HYMAN ~..-.tM Pt ... Wrl* , LOS ANGELES -When Linda La~in reu~ms to tapina her hit CBS acnes "Ahce" this month, it will be -'-her nin~-season· in the situauon comedy.and, she says, her last. "There's comfort in playina the 1ame character and mak.ina her grow," the actress said, but after filmina 16 more episodes she plans to Linda LaYID move on to other TV projects. Dunn a her annual break from "You don't gctthat much chince to taping. Lavin has been perfonning spread out aie-wise or character-wist with _the prestiJious Boston-based i{t telcv1sio1_1 or film." . -""' , --..::Amencan R~,,... , , . , '.Fbcre. pany she's worked with on and off . something 1 very special about this since 1966. because the dan~er (of failina) is Leaming scripts, rehearsma and aJways there. You re on a tiahtrope in ~en pe[fonnin& plays ~n altcmatina the th~~uer." . nights isn't easy, Lavin said in an Lavtn says there WJIJ be TV life interview. after "Alice." • "l 1uess the gears that are hardest to . She has starred in four TV movie • switch (arc) that in 'Alice' I can learn including two she developed and _ ... ,the lines on my feet in two days" she produced for CBS, as well as her own 1 id. "Also, they're not rhrroed musical special last year. •: -couplets from another century.• · Her own production company is :: In addition to a spring enaa~ment developing four films for CBS, in : in Boston and a July stopover m Ann• which she will star, as well as specials • Arbor, Mich., the company has and a series. : played at two festivals this summer: Lavin, who has directed two the Quebec 1,!!.tgmationaJ Festival "Alice" episodes each_ year, is c:>nc of a and tlre Olympic Ans Festival. handful of women directors an tele- laVltl an·d her colleaaues played to vision. She plans to direct some of her packed houses in Los Angeles, per· future productions and serves on the forming two contrastina works: the women's committee of the Directors 18th century comedy "The School for Guild, w~~b is work.in& to unprove Scandal," and Pi.randello's thought-opportwµtJes for women. provoking "Six Charactcn in Search .. It is bard 'if you don't have some of An Author." clout, and clout l1l television is havin& _ "The theater Jives me a chance to a series," La~ said. "There are very stretch my range," said Lavin, who few .women directors wh? have a plays a gnevma old woman in "Six ~nunl!um of work. I don t know af -Gharacters.''-1l'i!getb.nga~ " 'Metropolis' sounds ·•real' LOS ANGELES (AP) -The West Mororder oversaw the reconstruc- Coast premiere of Giorgio Moroder's tion of the Fritz Lang film and wrote a reconstructed version of the 1926 new rock score. classical film "Metropolis" will mark . Dave Concon, technical director the first time that a feature film has of "Metropolis," said Mororder's ever been presented with a digi~I driving rock score would have a JTC8t sound track impact because oftbe digital system's The revolutionary new technology superb stereo imaging and transient provides the closest depiction of Live response. BJ CHR CRA WPORD °"'""C.11••• f 1 ~ Twenty-four ytars aso, after a youna GI watchtd Henry Fonda play the lead in the oriJinat Broadway · production of "Orittc'a Choice," he was inspi~ to pursue a career as a drama critic or an actor himstlf. Ultimately, he Qchieved both. And now life has come full -circle as veteran drama critic Tom Titus (also managioa director of the Jrviri~ ~omn;~n~~1 .~~a~~~ll~e lead Ira Levin comedy. ~ Celebratina h1s 80tb community theater a isnment with a rote he has coveted for 24 years, Titus gives a very convincina. highly entcrtainina portrayal of Parker 8allaotine, a New York drama critic compelled by con1Cienee to rniew a play written by his wife .• eol'ntittentatly. 'tus' Wife Beth, associate director of JCT, also bas written a play-the musical .. Visions of Sugar Plums.") During the course lJf the marital/professional conflict that de- velops 1n the comedy, Titus skillfully chaqes his physical and emotional demeanor from affable to anpY to drunkenly slurred and stumbhng by midpoint in the play, and then articulate and eloquent m the final act .,, Cosby show finds true kids' hu111or r With all of the lran11Uons carried out n a well-paced, belle blc man .. net. · In furthcrmtcnnil'Winaofdrama and real life, the role o~the I01l. John Ballanune, i1 admirably pla~cd by Titus'· own aon, Ttm. an actor io his own right ,who hat appeared in three JCT productions :ind awo for the C-0st.a Mesa Civic Playhouse. Besides havin1 practiCcd bi C\l!TCDt role at home for 11 yeart, the younaer Titus also studies actina with South Coast Re~~p·• Young Coostrvato . iimpr6fiV • in r ro as Angclallantine, wife and novice ptaywriaht, is Renee Surran. who is making btr Orangt County debut in this production. Surratt effectively delivers her point as tht wife who wants to make her own mark in the world but abo wanu her husb&nd'1 emotional support u she IOC$ about it. Both deliahtful and \\ itty in their "SUpJ)ortinf roles are Marcia Bertholf as Ballantine'' fliahtY ex-wife and Olive Harris as bis outspoken -mother-in-law. Well cast as Ballantine's romantic competition is Ed Rtder as Dton K.apakos, the youna director of An1ela's play. Reder recently pcr- fonned in the Newport Beach pro- duction. of "Days of Wine and Roses." After havins played a number of leading roles on the JCT stasc, veteran Orange County actor and director Art Winslow is maki!lf his directorial debut at JCT with "Cntic's Cboice1" an entertainina comedy for the enurc family. The play runs three more weekends "A wonderful movie." Guy Fr•nklon K(85 TV •ALL NEW•ALL NEW•ALL NEW• 1MA fOllWTAll WAW'f lllWPOllT Ila ,.,. ... ,... ,.......,,"" r--.,._,,c."" S29 5J39 lll-1 'JIR ..,. ano COSTA lllf&A llMll wm.llU !-CS&-!111111 , f,,....WOOdllnll9f EoooftaON..,.WHI ~,.... c.-!61~ ., 31315 n TOM~s.-..o 511,_ sound yet. A special digital sound -------------...... system has been an stalled for this one-------------------Pr"l!ft''ft'lrn'l~r------- t1me presentation at the Aug. 16 Hes bttfl rc11sed by wolYes Captured by apes premiere for the Academy of Motion Hunied by a boy.titting 11ger. Picture Arts & Sciences. 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MISSION WARNER .. tit . .'~ : ll : : u. -:-t::r.I_ t T H E FA'1.ILY CIR CUS by Bil Keane 11Are you helping him think?" .. MARMADUK E by Brad Anderson c .... ~, ....... .,.._.. .... "You big, overgrown, good-for-n'Othing mutt!" MOON M ULLl ~S PEA~llTS T UMBLE WEED I BROUGHT SOME OF MV VACATION PICTURES FOR YOO TO SEE SCHROEPER. BUT I GUESS 'r'OORE eosv. '. • I BIG G EORGE -I by Gus Arrlola by Jim Davis by Virgil Partch (VIP) ) f "Here comes another tall. fish stC!,fY· "1 D ENNI S T H E ME~ACE Hank Ketcham ·' i ' j , OH SOT' I l'M 1HE FIRST ONE IN , • I by Ferd & Tom Johnson WMV DON1T I JUST LEAVE TMEM H~. AND VOU CAN LOOK AT THEM LATER? • by Charles M. Schulz \ ----- -1 BRIDGE -- ~DUCK 1 TIME Nf'1tht-r vulnuabl • Norch dtal• NOftTH •Kl O KH OIH •AKQJ9 Wf:ST EAST + 7532 • Q10t4 9818 <:>5U ~AU O IOU •sl •GH OUTH iAa <:?AQIO OKQH • 1087 } The b1ddinic. North · EHt South WHt I + Pata 3 NT PUI ti NT PHe Pase Pa11 llpt•n1ng lead : Nine or 0. To prov<" that no di1·tum in ]bridge '' s11rred\ last ~eek Wt' (eatured a hand "4 ht'rf' 1t ~as right to rtfOSt' to 1·apturl' .1 kang lo avoid an end play. SHOE rr~ =~~CHAILES GOREN -010 SHARIF Jfpre'a anoth r n1 or when a dud1 would havci n mad nith r taa might prove! pror1ublc. 1ly. Onr-e th• kin or d\a.mond lo t Th11 b1ddini waa rout nc. outh' lo thf' ac , dt-clatt•r could not makt leap to three AO trump over his a C<'Ond fnt track In the auh. 10 h~ partnu'1 openin~ bad how d 16 t would havf' had to tall back on the point and prl'cl 1•ly •"3 3·3 di1tribu tpade finr1u for hit contract. tion, North, who rr.ally ahould have Unfortunatt'ly for thf' otren,., · opened onf' no trump, 111nply add~ West wu • braVf' defender. With hit 1'7 pornh to what ~outh had an out a flinch, h allow d declarer's nounced, anU bid what.<ht' thought king or diamond• to win U1e tmk. hit ldt! would makt. Now decla~r wu raced with a w .. ~t led lht' top of his heart "' choice or pla11 for hls 12th trick. He quenct', and when dummy came-l'ventoally dec1did that Wt•l pro down det'larer could count 10 fut bitbly would not have ducked thf' t~icks -rave t'lub 'three hearts and diamond since it might have been two spiaes. An tltli trick could ~ declarer's ~ttllhnr U'Tck, 10 E'ast utabll1hed in diamonds by force. was more hkely lo have thf! ace The fulfilling track would have to than West. Ra,ther than try the come either from a second diamond spade finesse, South ran hit clults trick or from a spade fines •· and then tried 1 diamond to his Ot'clarel" won the openinf lead 1n queen. Down one! • dummy and immediately led a daa For laforaatloo el>fft Claarlea mond to h1 king. Had W.Ht follow Corn'• aew n.ewaletc.tr for b~ ed the advice espoused in lhll col pla1e,., write C..-.a Brfclse Lett.r, umn and elsewhere that ace wert' 1909 Clnnam.IAIOD Ave., Cla ... I•· made to capture k1ng1 , the slam too. N.J . 08077. it can help~ reach it . by Jeff MacNelly " ~~ 6·1 'fOU&f.~ '<OUµ)()( e&t"\U -~~ t.WR'~ Gf.TI'I ·rnu-l~ :OR BE1TER OB FOB WORSE by Lynn .Johnston '/e?. IT WASNT HIS OWN t'bNe{, BUT IT WRS HIS OWN IDEA DR.SMOCK PON 1"f"' "f'E!l-L. Mt: OUR NURSI NG PAYS ARE!N'"f"' N u.M.eeRec:> ..• ROSE I S ROS I: J UDGE P~RKER His S<J{1NG-PR~ lb lf\~ 10 e'JERYONE ~HOME. tbuJ SWeEI ! WAS rr HI e, OWN I.Pa=\'? \ NOW SOME! N 1-f"Wl"f"' H AS INVeN "T'l!c:> "T"H~ AU"f"'O.MA"T'IC Pl L-L.OW FL.UFFE!R.' ONE oqTE , N¥:> 1ME.N ••. SAM ! ... !>IX t,JEAR~ ~ ... -byG eorge· Lemont , I by Pat Brady by Harold Le Doux ' ·Kastner merges with Pi;iee, Brand & Ge>;---. ' . ' . ~ F. K. ... taert-C~cd Public i\oeountant. hasm~ his Irvine firm Wllb P~~· B~ud ud Co. of~ewpon Beach. The merger wtll consolidate the CO!ft~n1es clients and RfOVld_e a wider base of services. Kastner offers experuse an manaaement consultmg·and business valuations fot mergers, : acquisitions and divestitures. Price, Brand and Co. specializes in individual taxes and financial planning, general accountinJ and taxes for small· to medium-sized busines:ses. lrvineTCSident Kastner 1s a member of the board of directors of the lrvtDe Harvest Festival. The new company -Price, K.aataer, · Brud ud Co. -is located in Newpon Beach. • • • • 1 Dr. Tomas Glatt has joined CIE Sy1tem1, 1Dc. of Irvine as a director of '.product dev~l~pment while Fr~. W. Lee has been hired as program 1 product specialist for the firm, a subsidiary ofC. ltolt Electrollica, hac. Glass is prosram director for CIE's entry into the Pick operating system market and brillJS 25 years of computer application experience to his new post. Befru::c~ joirun1 CIE Systems, Glass was vice president of research and development for CAPRO, Ille. of Garden Grove. lee will be responsible for {>rogr&m support and customer service of CIE's MED/680, a medical-practice management software package. Costa Mesa resident Lee was formerly with Blue Cro11 ud Blae Skleld of Tennessee. • • • Huntinaton Beach resident David Scb•~rtll has been appointed vice • Otango Oout OAtLV PILOT/Tueeday, August 7, 1984 .. COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANIACTIONI, 87. eannell & Chaffin sie:ns five new.tlesigh projects Five new projects totalinJ '7.000 quarters •peMton and remodel at square feet have been signed by 1020 Prost>ect, La Jolla. Completion Cannell &. Chaffin Commercial In-is planned for Match of 198S and the teriors, Inc. in Newport Beach, it wa.s interiors win tie hiahlightcd by tran· announced by Jim H3aard. senior sitional desiirl. vice president and general mana&er. K.adison, Pfaeller, Woodard. They include: the Huntinaton Sea-Quinn cl Rossi, a l.o$ Angeles cliff Country Oub in Huntinaton headquartcttd I.aw firm plan to move Beach; Intcrmark, Inc., a con·' its Newport Beach offtCCS to a new alomorate at 1020 Prospect, La Jolla;· enlarJcd 8.~ squart f~t. locatJon. faw ofllccs for Kadison. Pfae.1.zer, · Intenors wJll blei:d traditional and Woodard, Quinn~ Rossi in Newport contemporary des1gn and compleuon Beach; headquarters for I..aventhol &. is.set for Janua'ry 1985. aocordina to Horwath, an accounting firm, New-Haggard, the project_e~~uve. pon Beach; and corporate-head-NcwNe~BeacbtqJonal~ quanen for Lavcntbol A orwath. ' lbe nation's IOtb luwcst aoc:ounl!Jl& rum, are tet for :1 NC'WJ)011 PlaoC, Newport Beaeh, aoo Win~comprts;t.__,...- 7,000 square !cct of~-Interior . desip will be contemporary aooofd. ina to Pollatd. and sdtedu~ to open in Augusi ofl984. LAne/](uhn Pacific devtl®CR • plan to open us N~ Beach corsiorate fadQuanen in Scgtember of tC/8.4 at '18 C.orporatc Plaza. The firm ba1 taken 6,000 1quare feet of space and will feature a contemporary loo~ ---·--~~--~~~-~~- Gens tar forms investment company quarters for Lane/Kuhn Pacific, Newp<?rt Beach developers of resi-I dentta1 and commercial properties. • F uor to develop oil field lD Qatar Bill Pollard. Cannell &. Chaffin senior project executive will oversee Fluor bas been chosen by Qatar four projects including the Hunt· General Petroleum C.Orp. to provi~ ington Seacliff Country Oub that will detailed facilities definition andflan- be a 25,000.square.foot remodel in a ning for the development o the contemporary mediterranean look. · North Field in Qatar in the Middle- C.Ompletion is scheduled for October· EasL November l 984. lntcrmark., Inc., has scheduled a The North Field is on~ of the 10,5()().square-foot corporate bead-world's lar&est·natural ps deposits. OvER THE CouNTER Gcnstar Corp. bas formed Genstar Investment Services Corp., according to Glenn C. Myers, president"bf the newly established company_. Nrro~vo:!..\~ 15! wilJGen~delovestm~ntServif -~Corp. ~~ ~ I pt'OVI a vanety o ·~ estate INl'll•Hnebnuot• services throughout tlte ill.Dbelt areas :"-"°'~ ":= of the United States witli emphasis on mriuP nwkdown or om California, Arizona, Texas and COio-c~~1:!0n s ~ rado. 1n ~'IVa t~ ~ n This first pbast, wtudl will be • mmpl,.ttdf'Uiv1n t<>R~ invo1v"the initial desWl of facilitie5 to prodUQC natural las liqwdsaod coodensatc for expott sale. · Auor Engineers Jae. will provide enpneering pet1011ncl for tbc project from its Irvine and Houston divisions. president of mongage banking for l~ine·based Ctttzeu Gro,A a subsidiary of Western IDtentate Baacorp an ltic mortpge banking affiliate of Ct1keu nrtft ud Lou Aatodattoa. Schubert.b h;ts spent more than 12 years in the banking and financial industry, including experience as senior vice president with Merritt Flnandal of Santa Ana. • • • Five employees and franchisees from Orange Coast 7-Elevea stores arc Scrvicca the company will provide · ~ ~ ~ include the syndication of income ,,.. • . 1fJt properties; commercial brokerage • .. consistinf primarily of the sale and ,· ijizt leasing o office, industrial and retail . --· . =& -14 propertles; ·~ estate investment ~GtW1 31~ • attending Olympic events and staying aboa(d the Pacific Princess luxury liner (the "Love Boat") as winners in an incentive contest sponsored by Tiie. Soll~ Corp., 7-Eleven 's parent company. Winners include energy manager Job.l1uat1 of HuntinJton Beach, and field representative Mike Polo of Fountain Valley. Franchi~ winners include Dorta C11rt11, whose franchise is at 25758 La Paz Rd. in Laguna Hills and Seaag Woo ud Ciao Soon, with a franchise at 28933 Crown Valley Parkwav, Laguna Niguel. ••• •. Sb:lrley Rama, a real estate professional with Coldwell Buker Residential Real Estate Senlcea, was the Top June Salesperson of the Month at the firm's • Newpon Beach office. The award is based on a combination of top sales and outstanding service to clients. · · • • • Costa Mesa-based American Diversified has added three employees to its operation. Robert A. Landry, former owner of a Los Angeles consulting firm, bas_joined American Dlvenlfled Ca Ital Ctrp. as_ national director ...of. maintenance and acilittes; JI.I.I'd S. Orleu has joined Amertca.n Dtvenlfled • , SavJDJ• Bank as senior systems analyst; and Geo~e E. Grenier bas joined the l chen11cal and agricultural group of American D1versified's tech divi.,&on as director of marketing/sales. Orlean comes to ADSB from Pacmc Dealt~ Resoareea of Los Angeles, where he was project manager. Grenier wu previously associated with Ameron, lac. in Brea. • • • • hl»lu·McLaqblha-Dlu of San Francisco-ru,s been chosen to design lrvlae Medical Ceiiter; a etanned 450-bcd acute care h.ospital scheduled to open in 1987 on a 15-acre site donated by Tbe lnfDe ec-. at the intenection of Alton Parkway and Sand Canyon Road. Kaplan-Mclaughlin Diaz reeently ~mple~ dCSJgns for Brtdwn Womu•a Hospital at Harvard-Med.lcalSc.H_ql 10 Cambndge, Mass, and Tor Su Dleco Hospital; ( . . . ' Tiie G1alld, Ille., parent company of the Antfqae G.Ud and Galld Drac Stores, has negotiated a 10-year lease on a facility in ~n. a move that ' represents a partial consolidation of the compan)."s corporafe offices, its Guild Drug warehouse operation and the Antiaue Gulld warehouse. · · , ... Elvira G. Miller of Costa Mesa has been promoted to vice prcident of ' consumer finance for the San Juan office ofCaplatruo Natlonl Bank. Miller will handle the centralized consumer portfolio of the ban~'s four offices. She · bas been with Capistrano for nearly five veats. . . ' Lapna HW1 resident P~p Bartltolomew has been appointed WesJ • Coast sales represe tative for Border Steel MW., lac., of Texas. Bartholomew was fi erly engineer with Allvac. a division of Teledyne. ~ ' ' i t t I· ' ( • • banking consisting of mortp.ge bro-~~I& 6314 ~ kerlfC and investment services; resi-"''1 1·1• 1 l·J! deoual and commercial develo~ ~Nun:,· 24~ 211 M ment; property management; and ! .I~ li~ 1 investment portfolio management. w; 9 14 ·•The formation ofGenstar Invest-~ i I lor 1 ment Services Corp. will enable us to f:*"-lv1ill.t ~ v. :-0' operate as a comprehebsive real ;itli; ~ estate service organizalia6," stated U C2 ~ " Mr.en. ..w.~ .... '.~ .. 1 ............ .. 'The new company is already ,------,~-----...:......---------------:. managing a number or rea1 estate Health Maintenance project~ and _joint V~A~ure invest· leases offices in HB men ts, m~Judmg J>!OVld.mg ~vel~~ California Health Maintenance~ !Dent serV1ces, ~nd is activ~ly seeking sociation Adnunistnu.o~ 1nc... ..has ~co~~roducmg piopc:mes forsyn: taken a three-year lease on 7,304 dicat10~. The C0;'11merc1al broke~ge .square' feet of office space in Hunt- and real estate investment banking . i"°'Ol\ Beach rc~rts the Newpon segments are scheduled to beco!ll~ .,.. ffi · • f · · ful!.Y operational by the end of J 984," · Beach 0 1ce 0 usmess Properties he added. Brokeraj~ q:>. (BPBC). Genstar Investment Services·Cor· The tiuildmg at 17191 Jamestown · · 1 Lane was leased from the Hood Corp: por~t1.on is a whol Y·0 !"ned ofWbittierforatotalconsideratiooof subs~diary of Genstar Co~raoon, a s 1OS,l82. . pubh~ly traded compa1_1y_ with annual Tod Newman of BP BC represented sales m excess ofSl.5 billion. the1essee in the transaction. 6MONTHTERM • \1El.0 ~~._... _ _..,.....t _____ ,.__ .... __ D Available to individuals or businesses D Initial deposit $5,00J . D Three check withdrawals per month D Unlimited AlM access to your money D Insured to $10QCXXJ by FDIC · YQur deRQSit is backed by Cenh:al Banks rec;ord of stability since.1892, and our n1ote than $1-billion in assets. Central Bank. IUST llGHT Kl& VDU '\v.11l~ble only at South Coast Plau Branch, on Anton Blv<l .. Costa Mtu. CA Q2626. Phon~ 960-3100 . 1 YEAR TERM 1QJ 12 50~nt 1315% .To open your account, Current L. er1can • Y~d• • Yield• call the toll-free ., --- )(IJ 1183~m 12.41~· fina~ial Line now: s! .. Great American 1------= first Savinnc~<::1inv------ The Great New 'M!y to Bank • . bte l.atun• IMch Monltd\.., UCUM. .. uet San Juan Ca, C• San a'"*"• (800) 272-9000. Neh~ "' .. ' • ......... I' . -~Coat DAILY PILOT/Tu ay, August'· 1 Law protects investc,rs from _tb.eir awn folly ElhlaratCda ut tc .... nturcio ch they been o ercd a chance· \0 p&r\iCt ~ a Y9Ufll coupl re kno decided to nu the funds • n~ed for thetr paruclptt1on by tak.1 out a sct0nd in c m5t their own home collatcm or the loan. That cvenina they invited a group of us over to t'Clcbrate their pendin• chan&c of lifestyle -but the more they explained the dcuuls to us. the coolct they themselves became. SYLVIA Po1111 By midni&ht. they had agreed to cancel out.1'he next momma. they cxcrci ed their leaal riaht of rcsci ion, lUatant~ to them under the Federal Truth in Lendina Act (in- and-out within 24 hours). This right of rcsciss1on (a coohng- off .i>enOd C!esian~ to protect you ap1n t your own folly) 1~ potentially ofattat importance to you-but how many of you under1tand 1t? CouJd have used it in the past? Or will be able to use it in the future? NEW LOW PRICE! MODEL 100 IS s200 LESS THAN LAST YEAR! ~ . SK Memory 599!!1 Was $799.00 In Cat. RSC-11 AS LOW AS --'35PER MONTH ... ~ TM Mod4tl 100 repr9-. eenta the mtte ot t.he art In ~rformence. quellty end price brffktJnougfl. •Five Bullt-ln Programs Help You Take Notes, Schedule Meetings, Keep Up with "To-Do's" and More • Bultt-ln Modem Allows Access to Information Services By Phone • Flta Easily Into Your Briefcase or Oaypack-Welgha Leu Than 4 Pounds • Full-Size Typewrtter Keyboard and ' 8-Llne by ~O-Character Display • Operates Anywhere on Batteries or Optional AC Adapter . • 24K TRS-80 Model 100 Computer Now o:z $799.00 (#26-3802, Wu S .00 In C.t. RSC-11) Westmark Savings Bank announces the ''Two-Four-Six-Great Tahiti Giveaway'' TWO W(,..,tma rk Savings Bank 1s giving dway a dream vacation tor TVv'O to Tah1t1' f QU R In FOUR months, you. could be walking cllo ng. th~ bedut1ful beaches of Moorea for seven days and c;1x nights, with alcommodat1ons at the Captain Cook Hotc>I tomr>liments of Ted Cook's Is lands in the Sun. SIX Wh~n you < ome in to We~tmark Savings Bank to register lor th(• drawing, ask a savings c oumeror about a 180-day ( D Ac ((>unt. (Minimum deposit required, rate and y1Pld '>ubwtt to change.) In just SIX months, you < ould b(' on your v..av to taking another lantast1c tnp on the high intt"rest vou've earn ed. GREAT THERE 'S NO OBLIGATION Drop 1n befor~ Auguc;l 10, 1984 to fill out a registration form Tah1t1 (,1vt>a~·W rules available at Westmark Savings Bank, your nev.. ... ourtP for financ ial .. servile'> savings, banking and mortgage loans. WESTMARK SAVINGS BANK Oneo Corpordte P~azd, N(?wport Ct>nter Newport Beach. C allfom1a 92b60. 1714> 720 1082 .i ~<Ompan\ N't"l P\1t. ,1,.,;,N; f, th·r.il ~ ... m.ie-1 ,\ 111.in tn'"""", ' "'" "1C•mt>fo1 '"°""'' ttom loAn II.In~ 'V'tl'm ,.,.. -""" ·~·· -nouce of rcsot ion, the creditor must to speed up the p ood. retum all the money or propcn) you &1'' over, and also must relcue the security inter t in your home. Retain any upplics or money l'ou migtu have retti ved from the cfcdnor until )OU re ctruin )our house is no lo er held as collateral and you get bac · aoy money you·~e already paid out. Onl) then hould you return lh~ crcdit~s pro~n>'• But f \' not claimed within 20da)'I, you n keep it. NOTE: Thh important nght docs not pply to all ut tions in which • )Our ttome is collate l. uppo , though, th t )'OU h \ C an cmc ency repair and 111mply cannot wait tl\rce busmc s da~ bcfort work is started on 1t. In that e&$C, you can elect to waive your nght of rt$Ci s1on Meanwhile, be on g(ifrd. U your home as coll tcral with the utmost of,. re! It's almost surely the · bi t a set of your entire hfe. MUTUAL F UNOS Seven ~sons whY. this could be the lastloan you II ever need. Commercial Credit Thrift's Home Equity Management Account proves that all lines of credit are not the same. Ours is better. Why? You can get up to $100,000. The Home Equity Management Account is based on the equity in your home . So it can make a substan- tial amoupt of cash avail-able to you any time you need it . Affordable Interest. Our interest rate is just 2% over the prime rate for lines of$20,000 or more.'* On July I, 1984 the prime rate was 13.00%, making an annual percentage rate of 15.00%. • No Application Fees. Compared to other institutions, our Home Equity Manag~ment Account cowd save you hundreds of dottm"S. 4I"l\ii's because there are no points, no application fees, and no annual fees. Payment Protection. Interest rate increases will not change the amount of your monthly payment. lt~s Easy. Once your account is open, getting a loan is as easy as writing a check. 10 Minute Application. Take ten minutes to apply for your Home Equity Management Account. Call us . We'll take your application over the phone or we can send you an applica- tion. Or stop by Commercial Credit today. One Day Credit A.,Proval. In most cases, we offer approvals in 24 hours, subject to verification and appraisal. The Home Equity Manage- ment Account .. .it could be the last loan you'll ever need. <:ommercial Credit. From first apd second mortgages to personal loans and more, we've got as many financial solutions as there are financial needs. • ___ _,_ ___ -_______ ..._ __ ~ ~~--=~-~--.,...,. OD the. ., • - W H~1 NYSE D:L1 I NYSE L t~DER~ NEW YORK lAP) AUG. 7 a:it::r Tl ~. ti NewlO~ 16 AMEX LEADERS ' .. NASDAQ SUMMARY GoLD QuorEs METALS QuorEs That's an a pt desert ptton of both business and . business peopl~ along the Prange Coast. To ~~ep track of wherecompaniesaregoin~andwhichp OP-lear h lping them get ther ,just watch. Credit Line' -every day in th Busin ss s ctlon of your n. w laily ,. ... .. I - Pot: HaWaiian island bonanza I NI.JC !JUC[ MUC NOTICE Pta1C MJTIC[ PlllJC MOTia 1NJ111:NOft COU..T NOTtCI Of 7'4~1ll02 A1TEHTIOH c-- 0. C~ TMllTH'IUL& AHECAHflL Ofc~' ~°' . &41117 oncz OF DEATH COUHTY°' ~~~ 1,~•nd cw. COUllTYOI'~ TIIUITlftUU ,,_~·~ F MARGA.ft.ET In the~ otot the TO flfM)PJRf't 0o4rts. bpenaee Md~ .of .t.. "°'..,.... ........... ... L DDY alto Dow. II ~v YH oWMb \IMOMcS.-CllPPt~ttty>· App ttcoot .a«?MfT~ ~Mn•o11C9 ARET DDlE AGIA, l ~ ::,. :; YOU AAE DEFAULT '3U5U3 (REV I CAAL MICHAEL TOMONltTYOW'Nlftl 10"°"*'tY LEDDY AND OP -.. di GAIL "'UNOIAAot!fDOfTAUIT, TOTAl~17.t1U2 OtCt< I OU Ml IN~" ~--'"' 0 c1.n.:.&..-7~ :·,._.._ DATEOAVG22.1180,UN 0AT'EDJul.Y111N4 torChll\OIOI~ Uile»SRADHDOl'TllUeT, YOUAMINDlf'AUlT u,, n • ...... _°'LOI YOU TAkfl ACTION AMEAICAH HOM M~T; No.A 1t4017 DATID 111111. UMLhl UNOUADUDOf'TNMT, MINISTER ~Ti Name No A 124211 TOPAOTICTYOURPf'O"· OAOETAUSTOEED FOA~~~ ~~ ACT10N TO DATIONeu•n'M.tm. NO.AIUlll OAOIA TO lRTYITMAY8EIOlOATA 8EAY1C!OORJIOAATIOH "rnv'"""'' YOU.. "'°""" ~U 'YOU TAKI ~ T t I h :I 'UILtC IALe . ., YOU •Cellfottlhac_otporatlon (84io.a.1 UTY,nMAYMIO&.DAT TlOM TO MOTICT YOUR 0 I ti ra, :~~~~ NUO AN EXPl.ANATIOH ly. O.WV.I ~er. CAEV.J CAN. MICHAEL A PUeLIC hU!, • VOU flRONJtTY, fl MAY 11 benefldarlel. a"edltora HIOO. Hav. u-Tbtbroad, unnyflank ofthcwor1d'~mo tlctivt OF H ME ~THE NAT\JRI OF THE Aeonltn!ta11on Truet.. DICK l\aa tlJtd. ptlltlett In MUD AN llXJIUMATION IOlD AT A llWl.IC •ALL and cunUneent Cft!di,. ol noes prov1~ a perfect ICttina for su .. r cane fields. quaint houses !Sec ~) PAOCHDINO AOAIN8T Pulil~ Oraoga Cout ttlllc:oun fOt 81\ Ol'det lllOw Df 119 NATVM OP THI • YOU ... D AN DJILA• tore of MAROAAET and lhc lta.D~uil. rural lifcs~lt lhal Hawaii lsla.od re idtnts chtnsh. Oall " Jaeobaol\ 01\ YOU, YOU IHOULD CON· Dally Piiot JulY 24, 3t, ::,,:u::;: ~!ni~~, pv"ou°Cy1!.~1!:!!-~C!·••IT NATM* OP TNI NATUM EDDIE LEDDY UI) .,,.. r. • • l b f · **1f1M O.OV LYNN NEW TACT A LAWVER A~t 7, 11&4 CA • .::J.. .,.. --Coef. OP THI PltOCllDUtO me 1Crt1 c lrtt ti a so c omt"O I multimilhon-dollar man1uana KROE.A.. "*'°' ,_ ..d .NOTIC( IS H!AHY 1'"122 (AIR.;, M~:LE\.MICH~I!~ TA~• A LAWYllL AOAINIT YOUl YOU n 0 w n •• trade. a lpot where some oft he nation '!I most potent pot i! ll'OWn. • p.cnton 'In tNa ~ toran GIVEN ttlat the...., PfOpef'ly AIOHA .. On := u. 1164, .. IHOULO CONTACT A MARGARET ED~ · While manjuana is found all around the state, Ha•'lli I land i order allowlnO pe11t1oMr to =~=a~.~~=~-PtaJC llOTJC£ IT' 18 HEREBY OADEA£D l::.:. eor:O~· ::!:.~ ~~ 11, 1*· •• LEDDY And pendhi pe111cularly uucd for marijuana cultivation. It rich volcanic soil, ':::J.,• L;: ~~~o: knotm ., n 32 a. DeltNw .,,,.,,,.,COUNTY thalell f*tOl'l81n1weetacs 1n du~ n.med or 1111>e11tutacs 10.00 A.M .. CAL COAll who ma)' be~ abundance ofland and year-round unihmc help to produ~ a uperior WtndY t. J~ Su.t, Santa A"-California MUHte•AL couwr the mat• •fateu!d appear T"'"" undal' aino puuuan1 MORTGA<J!_ IHC ... ~ interea~ tn th WW product, ~WttS say, IT 18 ~eY ORD MO and cMacrtbad u IOl!owa· MOMTEMY OM..oN .,..°t9:' ~ ~00~~ 10 the Dead°' Trutt d1t.ci appolni.ct T"'''" und•' and/or •~tr. The l land's mu;iu.ana socs'-• names uch as •·Puna Butter" and tllet al per10t11In...__,1n l'AAC!LNO 1: "~Ho •...,.. ..._ C:.., 0nve ~.., tan J~· 25· 1118 --..tacs and SIU!'llUlf'lt 10 OMd or A ..-1"°" 'hU beeft .. ., G Jd •• N -v . . ti"' . s 000 $ "* matw atoreMid ~ 5 In CM Clly. or Sant. Ana. II' 0 ... ?It • by GEOAO D. WEST AND Tnllt reaotOed Deoaml>af _ .. A.Olla 0 • cw lr&J.OS rctatl or up to 3. lO 4.000 per pound, ~·WI coun In o.,en. county of orano-. II •• °' ,......,, CA.... :;-. ,~ °!' ~uauet IJHDA I<. WEST. HUSIAHD 13, 1H4. .. '"''· Ho. flJed by DONALD c. accotdina to Michael LllJ~, first deputy state anomey scneral. IMl'lt N :s t 700 c:Mc C&llfOMla. • ehoWn °" • "P111nt11t; MARK 1"9TARR • aiWl •• ... 1 .. ododl ANO WIFI! l'9COrdad Febnr a.M&m. of omc.ai ,... LEDDY In the Su~ "Wllen watctcrc w ol• .. •le l'.or onl" 1 ... 1 -n•s a pound, on"" can Cent• L_ ~-•~ta pero.1m11>.Ned°"Jun.21. O.f1ncran1. JAMEi D AM • ttien and t'*9 arv a. 1111. In 800k UNa. 00tde In the ome. of the _._ ,._ ·-f ~-~-'' ' -. ' ~ .... ....., ---~· 1t18lnbook 111,pege11to STENE · ahowoe&M,lfa{'IYlMVh•ve Pao• 1021, ln1truman1 CcMltyReoO"dllt'lotOranoe peour"41U.n0 "'_,.... easily see how small &rowen can be ccticed into this illicittradc," be said. :,a:, C~~~~· ~e7C:: 13 iock.llM of Parcal Mapa, c ... "°· 371&4 .. why ••Id .,.uuon for Numbtf ues of Offl<>lal "-" Coun1Y, s1118 or ca11foml• County r•queatl"Jl Li~ly recently told a conares i'onal committee so Washi~on that AM ·and tt.i Md •tiert 1n 111ot omc. of the ~ aUMMONa :~of name lhoutd not eorde. In tlw offlat of ttia ••90Uf.cS 1>y t,cAALENI! ED-that DONALD C". Ha..,.•11s the nat1'on•s No I produ--r of1ll-•l m&nlJ"·•na. st.J'f ·~ ........!.-. ...... " -.. ~ COuntyAecofdat. HOTICIJ YM IMtft ....._ r•ntad. ~ofOfatl041County, WAAOS WILL BELL AT LEDDY ......_a ....., ....... ,....., . -. --... t' )'I .. ~~d ~titlO:,';~or PAACEt. NO. 2. An un-....... l'e.oeurtflMIJdaolda ... ~t IS fU~~~~ed ., .... atpubleauctiOnto /l'UILIC AUCTION TO _.. .. ~-!=-~fore t~e Hous.e Set~ Commm~ on Nare.otta Abu~ and CC?pltO , ~ °' ....... Mould d~ 2 483 perc9nt ,_ ....,., ,_ • ......,. ,... .... a oopy .... ,,_ ... .._ to u. hlQMlt b'dd« ror CUii HIOHl!ST llDD!A ,0 ,. .-~--.... ,...._ •• \A• Ully 1aud that Hawau accounted for more than half the m&nJuana ~r1nted t\atM not 11mp1e1n1..iu11anen11n ...._. hNtd ..._,...,.~ca.a~ s-ibllehad In IPeY•ble at the time of Nie CASH (P41Ywble 11 1im. of tlve '° adrnln!sttr coofi led in the five Pacific states hm year. 1 1s FVRTHEA ordered common 1n and to Ill of that "*"' wttMn• dari.-... • lnl9Coat!>a"YPtlot. In lawful1nOMYofthtllnlt.o ..i. In reWful ~of tttt eftace of MARGARIT Federal officials admit that conventional search-and-destroy that• copy ot thl1 Ofd« to portion of th• common dta klf9nnatlon Mfow. e1 ~ 0' 0.,,.1 Ji'' Stat•>'""'~ Av-Untied St•t .. ) •1 Front E LEDDY aka .. . ha l I I'. • • 11\ow ctwM ~ . bltatlad I .,.... wtlic:tl .,. loc&lect on If )'OU wt•h to .... lhe ed-r on, publtlhad n " .nu. lntrlnC9 to IM ~vlo LObbY Of Oftloel Of HUNT a .... ,.· ... "' l mtSSlons ve arge y 1aaled in Hawa.i~. They arc now using less theOf"'OaC ':"oa11yPrtor PlfQtll No. 22 .. lhown on 11io. of 911 attorney In thla oounty a11eut onca • "8lt Center sutk21fl0, 300 eat ffNSTEAMAKlA. " Pro-.ll'UU\GARET EDDII convenllonal methods. such as morutonna post offices for packages • ,..,,.~OMof arai 111d peroe1 ~. lndudng tMtter, ~ lhoU!d dO ao '°'tour eonMCuttve ..-. Ctl@man A*"'8, In 111e flMional ~atlon, e20 OY:(undtrthtlri· oonta.ining marijuana. and spraying suspected fields with d1~I oil. And drc:ulation. publl~ thil without 11m11a11on tne Im-J>fdmptJy ao thar your yrtt· ~lot '01t1a .d•Y or Mid,,..._ City or ~anoa. Cellfomla all NIWPOft Clr!t• °'"·tuft• deperutcmt Adin.lnl • such measures arc meeting wuh •-•ter SUCCCS$.. officials say county at taut onQI • w.-pr~te tllateon • ltn rMC>OnM, If any, may be "l>a1ec1Ju"'11 , ... ~ rlgf)t, 11 ... nd lnterwt con 211• l'WwPOrt ~. CA. tration of F.ai.ata Att . .. -• tor IOUf' CONecutlYI ..-a fined In tN Daclatatlon • nlad on tlma •r • '"" llWYad to and now held by IHeO al right, 11tle Md . Earlier this year authontics used dogs to sniff out packages being P''°' 10 the day of Mid'*'· tctlbed below AVtaOIUlted tia tldo o. ~NK OOMENICHINI aald TN•t• under Mid lnl•• cah\09Yad 10 and The petitiCll'l is •t qr mailed from island post offices. The program was named "Operation Ing EXCEPT from Parcel• No manclacs. El trlbum¥, i.s. .... 0-1~ eouthe Dead Of Truat '"and to !hat now helcl by It Und« Mid h=ln Depc. No. s P I .. ft h I odd d h b V !t-d M L D A au 1andNo.2 at>ove, on.-1\alf dlclldlr OOfllrl Ud. tin.. ...,.,.,"'\ r1 certain pr09«ty lltualed In DMClofTMtlnlhept~ 700 ,.,_ c e a er t e vo cano g ess sa1 tom a 111'Juauea an auna oa F~-:K ~~E~INI of 811 olt, ;u. mtnarata, dlencle • "*'" .,_ Ud. J•mn A SchmlulnQ, th• lttt• or Cillfornla. lltuated In Mid County tlnd at vicvcnterlll"I, volcanoes. Jud of the hydroearbona, 1nd 11• rMpOndadentr•••cMM. Etq .. SCHMIESING&. llLIED County of Orange. d•· Stat• deler1bed u : West. Santa Ana, CA Operallon Pele netted more than 400 packages containing ~Court aocl11acs aubltanc. 1y1ng Lee la lnfennecleft ..-~~11 Von IWman, Ma tcrtbed • rotiow.: A l.eaNftold Int._. ~ 92701on8122/84 at ttp m&n.Juana wonh approximate!)' $1 7 million and quant1l1es of cocaine JOHN c NIUOH HQ i.tow • "-Pfh of 500 feet tty,• !MM CA. 92714 The Southeattarty 41.00 and to Lot 11 of Tr9Ct 1231 A.M and methaq~onc aJso were seued. ' 1•1 oft. 81rMt. 'wte'm :=:,.,!.~'::of ~rl~ ~:,~.:: Publlaned Orang• Coat ~-:J.oo~.!t~f 1~~~~ ~36 ~~t:Souci':! IF. YOU OBJECT • In add1ttoo to choklns off a maJor method ofshtpment to the U .S. ~aJ41~ CA...., witry ot aub1Urfao. entry me"•· '°" "'°'*' • .. Dally Piiot J~ 24, 31. Lot 121 of T~ Ho. 300. In 31 lndl.lllYe ot Mapa 1n u.. the ~tina of \be mainland..federaJ authorities used the selZures to confiscate a number of Pub IMO orange CoHt •bO~ • depth of 500 1..i P"OtnP'tJ ao that rour writ· Auguat 7· 14• 18 T 113 ~.City 1 of Cotta M..., Ottlca of 111a County n.. petition, you ahcM.ttd vchtclcs. Autos were se12cd by agents of the U S Drug Enforcement o.i1y Pl+ot Augu11 7 14 2 t from the 14.frf~ Of Mid tan f'HpoftM, lhn1, fNl1 be • • ~nty 0 Or1nga, $tel• of oorder of Ofano-County. either apnAAr at ,,,.. . -·~ · 21 1914 ' • 'land ... 1J1cepted and r• lledontlme. 11111»1IC NOTICE ..... lfoml.a. a per map re-T"4J 1tr..i addr ... Ind ..--~ Admumtrauoo uoaer a federal statute aJlowrng confiscation of "'eh1cles • T-141 MrYad 1n the.,.., from Ja 1t U•ted -... ..aactt. f"UUL OOt'dad In Booti 14, PaQM 11 ottlar common ~tlon, he.rtn& and state you used lO transport drugs. . TOMllU Sllclc*a It II, r• el 00Meto de Uft aMlado NOTICI OP AYAI QI fTY and 12 Of Mllcallanaoul If any, of the r.al P'°'*'Y objections or file wfl Man1uana growers often conceal thell' crop in su°"r cane fields lo P\llJC NOTICE ,x)tdect Augull "· 1* In '" Nte a.nto. de6efta tW ..UAL RE"°"1' Mape. In •he omca of the ducrlb•d •boo 1• ~n ob~tions with the la e b H '-I d 1· _. · bOotc 15115, page 800, Of• 1taoerto lnm9dlatatMnt., I County Racotd« of Mid SMil'P0'1ed to N 7 Whit. te .i;-e ~ary. awau '°an ~ 1~ and the Mauna Kea Supr Co. began 'ICTtTIOUI 8UIMU ftc:lal Aecotd•, affecting alt de Ht• man.,• •u Pur1uani t County, dMctlbed .. fol-YrOOd Wty. lrvtne. CA C()urt fore the heir· u.smg helicopters to spray d1escl oil on suspected manJuana plants " MAMI ITATl•NT parc.i. axe.pt the HonMrly ,...,_.._ ~ ;f haJ 11104(d) or'"" 1~1.,~c~ lowl: TM und«llQM<I Trvat• ing. Your ap~ arowing in company canefields near Hilo. 1t1a foltowtng PlttOn•.,.. 20 feet Of Patcei Ho. 22 and "9Una. ,....-.. ,..a.. """ cocs. noUoe 1, her• Beginning 11 the point of dltclatmuny lfablllty lot any may be In pet110n or D" It tJ th fi f h cal · dol"CI butlMel u. a portion of Parot11 No 16 ltada a tliamM. ........._ th • lnt.....ctlon of IN extencled lneorrec1nea1 of the atreet :;1 . apparen Y was e U'St use o a c emi spray against the tllegal LANDSCAPE DESIGN and No 111 1·TO TMf DSRNDANT· "nf'Y-• •1 the annual ,... NorthWlltetty tine of Mid addr .. and other common your attorney. crop lD Hawau . .said Hawau County Deputy Police Ch.tef Wayne SERVICES. 428'>t Begonia ALSO EXCEPT from &-cMI ........ lft1 ,_ ~ :-1~~"':',,1!"~':! Lot 121 with the oant• line daaignatlon, If any, ~ IF YOU ARB A Carvalho. Whtie the spray poses no evident health hazard to humans, it ~~Corona del Mar, CA Patctt. No 1 ancr No 2 NM IW-. ,._,.., aaatnat founctetlon. 11 avdable 11 of Mon11Y1111 A....,.. • heraln. CREDITOR or a cont-cau~ the plants to shnvel up and become unsalable be said 92825 aoow, alk>ll. o11 ngni., min-"""-tf,... ..._.. .. ~ lhefound•tlon'•~of· lhown on Mid map of Tract 8ald..,.wt11~meoa. ~ lnpnt creditor of t.)Wo Th -d ~ • . ' Mr. Gordon Jama Kurt19, .,..,., mlneral rlght1, nll1ural th.. leweutt, pou ''u•tl nee fOf lnlpec::tlon durl Ho. 300, thenoe Horth :st• wtthOut cov.nent « war-..a~--......1 e su~ c-0m~ny pat 1or ~e 011 and the pnv_ate h~hcopter used 428'A Beooala Avenue, Cot· ga, natural gu rlghtl Ind wtttlln ao d1y9 after 1ftl9 regular bulllneet hours fr ng 41' 45" Eat 11&.00 fe.t to ranty,911pt ... «lmpllad,,... "'4CIUC'-.t, you mUlt file for the spraying, while county poh.ce flew along to identtfy planu and on• def Mar. CA 112825 other hydrocarbon• by Mnmona It WYad on YoU. 8 • m 10 5 Pm by :::; INmcm Northerly com.at oardtng tlti., ra1111tlon. or your clahn wtth the provide protection Thlt bveln ... I• con-wnatl09Ver name known Ille with thl• court a writt1n Cllllut\wtio r.qUa.; It within ttla land deaorlbed In thot ancumbfancet, lncludlng rourt or pre8enl It to The company proposed the spraymg to curb losses from manjuana du:o,~ ~':'lvldual \'(:::: ~=.= r::~0d!he come 18() dayuftw lhe dat•of thlt ::1r~-= ~etx\i~ ~ ~i.°"r,:' .. and and~ the penonal reprwn- growers who often hack out sections of sugar cane to plant their crops .. So Thi• 1tatwnent wu flied Mid land, t~her wttti the .., ~ .,,~ ~ pu:::::::csatlon'• ~ 1Me In t>ootc 13811, PI08 1o4 tru1ta CtMted by Mid Dead tative appointed by the far the program has not been extended to public lands. with the County C1et1l of or-perpet\Jal "Oht of drllll"CI, eat!ofyor the plalnlltr, ancr offlct 11 toc:ated •t 17471 of Oflldal. ~c:tt; ..t'** of Ttwt. to P9Y the,.,..,.. court within to9r ucb new enforcement 1e<:bn1qucs are seen u extend.in& the state's r.i: County on July 10• mining, exploring and C>PW· lhll c6un may enter• Judoa-. Fitch, lrvtne. CA. 82714 South 50 11 45 EMt Int prlnclpel tutnt of the months from the dai.. long battle against the marijuana industry, which many residents 1 Pul>tlatled 0r'11Qe ~ tl'le~~ ~rw::;": :r~~ ';. ":,:; 1 n.;-prtnc1pa1 """:rn' ot =':. ~.=1~ => 0M::t ~~ ':.~ of Jim laUIJice ora-i; complam has made some back<ountry areas unsafe for hikina and o.11y Piiot July 11, 24, 31, y other land, lncludlnQ the plaint, which could r-.rlt 1n ~ =~~ n M. the ITlj)lt Eatter1y oomer 140,500-00 ·with 1ntar11t ten u provided In SeC-= recreation. · • Auou9t 7. 1H4 right to wtllpttoetc Of dlflC>. ~t of W9QM, tM· 11871 flttc:h °"''°'i. thence ~ 31' ttMnon trom Januaty IS, tion 7000! the Probate lo 1976. the state~ its "Green Harvest" search..and-d.cstroy T-121 ~=th~=,!: ~~r~~:-:U: l~,CA.82714 ::,,.;~=== ~~ii~n::.f-Code of Calltomla. proparn. Under lhat conunuina ~rogram, county, state and National PmUC NOTICE bed, o11 °' 0 .. ......, complaint. Delly~~,~ of Mid land of Doell to• coa11 Ind ww actvanoea or The time for ~ Guard pe~nnel penod1cally raid manjuana fields, uproot.in& and '1CTmOU8 IUltNlll tunnel• and theft• Into, Dated:~ 14, 18IJll • T.142 Point In the oent« line of Ian amount to H d .. clal.ml will not eX)ilr! destroyma plants NA• Sf•T11M... through or acron _ th1 WILLIA,,. J SfAHFOAD. Rid Monlevteta AY9nu.; tarmtnad It tlfM or .... with prior to fOW' ....,_thi ... • -.. "' 1Nb9urfac. 01 the land,.,.. Clerk PlB..JC NOTIC£ thance North so• 11' 45'' Int..... • ....... _.:; _________________________ dol The~= :::eona at• In daaerlbed, and to bottom By. SHIRLEY EARNEST, W•t 330.00 , ... along Mid TMbeneftc:Jatyunder.uld from the! date of \h~ M"Ba.o TUNE UP CEHTER IUCh .mipetodced Of dJrac-~ ~ COUNTY oenter Hne to the Point of Dead of TNl1 heretOf01'41 U• hearina noticed abOve. Japanese in.U.S. to honor Steinbeck 3201 Hatbor Blvd, ~ ~~=";.!::,"': p,o ... ~~AM IUNNOACOUlllT ~~~and =:'~~t~INE YYOOthtJ MAf11'! ~- M .... CA 92m Mith °'beyond !he exterior Cer!Mf, CA. ....., .,.. CMo Mtimal• of Cotta, aicpenaea taratlon of esatautt and a.. e ~ -pt by 1 Hanna Oeorgea ,..Jam, llmlt• thereof, end to r.crrtu, <•> as.2MI ..!:':'1 °C:::O, and acsvanoe1 u of J46ot 11, tnand k>f Sale, and a wrmen the court. U you are 80~~ HOftt, Meaia, CA retunnel, IQUlp, m1Jnteln, Publltned Ottnge CoHt MAAAIAOE~· 1811-4 It M~.12; Mid Notice of ~ and EJeo. inieretted in the M· Slmaan/ Auto Supply Inc repair. deepell and °'*•" Dally Piiot July 24, 31, pat 1tI 0n1 r": c 0 8 A A amount WUI .... untN tlon lo s.n. The und«'llgnad tile you ma.y eerve 15110.. Lakewood Blvd' any such w.111 °' mlnee, Augult 7, 14, 1884 ROUSHANZAMIA data or.... C8'IMd Mid NoUoe or 0.-' •L-Bellflower CA 80708 · wlttlou1, however. the right T-118 AHpondent: CAMBIZ TM 1tr•I eddr .. or f11Ult and a.ctlon to hit to upon w1e executor or K111 .. ; AFtF 15804 to don. mine. •"plor9 and .. _IC NOTICE ROUSHANZAMIR' common daigNtlon, If an,. N tllCOrdect In Ula county adm1nlatrator, or upon SALINA.S-\\'tththetheme,"FromSahnastolheWorld,"agroup Lakewood 8IVCI S..mower 09W8t•llw:fotNeurlece '"~ C...No.0231022 °' the rMI property c»-wti,r•"" rell ptoper1y It the attorney fort.he Of Japanese scbola~ and their fam1he~ have come to discuss and honor CA 80708 . . :'.,~= 1: = ~':. 8-MN7 ltWO... fAJl!lit.Y LAW) :"~ ~ ~T"~ =~.My 17, 1814 eQCUt.or or admin.la- autbor John Stctnbeck tn the landscape he loved. ~. bullne: ~ con:,ctect In dMctlbed ... t-.rved In NOTICI °' ..:1:."oo:;.::;-..= Ave .. Cott• M•H. CA. CAL COAST MOATOAOE. trator. and file wtth "This is the green he must have seen. This lS the air he must have Han'1:':.i!, nw P ~n=~~= May 3 °' :~~~T· .._. ~ou without row ~¥~ unO«algnad Truatee :Ce..ci Tn.iatee the court with. proof ot breathed," !>aid Professor Yasuo Hashiguguchi as he and another Tt111 11atement wu flied 138 Offk:lal A.cord• ·.C:: 1 · Mfftl Nini ""'"8 JCMI ,.. dllCHlm• any llabllf1Y tor any e20 ~ Center Drive ~. a wntten re-profes~or gazed out a ~ond-Ooor window at the Salinas Community With the County Ci.rk of Of· Ing the Nonhetty 20' r... of Pureuaot to Section :::'.::.'::~,.... tncorrectneaa of the tttwt 8ult• 211 ' quest •tatina lb.at you Center. :X: County on ~1~~· P•rcel No 22 and • portion I 104(d) of the Internal Rev· If you wlah to aeak t"9 ad· add,.. and other 00f1\mon Newport a..dl, CA. 112880 desire special notice of The Japanese make up about a thJrd of the 34 paruc1pants at the Pul>IW!ed 0r eoa.t 01 P•otlt 16 ancr 111' 1CMH1 Coda. notice 1',.,... vtc:e of an •ttO<M¥ In thla ~tJOn. If any, anown 7l4-IM-2411 t.M fllin8 of an inv~- Second International Steinbeck Congress. They are outnumbered only Delly Pik>t July ~24, 31, m:,~!2EJ~P~:::J::-~"::t~;i!':;:':'~! ::,-ii r: t~ov~wrft> ~.t:iutewlllNINde,bul ~E~STER~A=E~ w tory andapprahlement by the 18 Americans~ _ Allguat 7• l884 _ 011. petroleum, otha; l>W 31, 1tl3 of The Fluor ten r~N. If an~. miy ~ •llhout covenent or war-PublllMd Orange CoHt of estate Uleta or ot "Steinbeck's literature ?s mseparable from Salinas and the T 103 liydrocarbon aub1tanc1a Foundation, • private lovn-flied on ltma. ranty,IXl>f'IU or lmpll«I, re-Dally Piiot July 24. 31, the petiUODJ or IC· ,..._1. ~ ba ~ d .. T fltaJC NOTICE and all underground Wiier in d1tlon, 11 evallable at the AYllOIUstad he lldo cs.. gwdlng lltle, Poe••llon, or Augutt 7, t864 ti _ _.. tn '-4 11om1a c oun • said etsumaro H~yash1. an Enghsh professor or under °' wnloh may ~ toundatlon'• prlnc:ipal otfloa mandade El ttlbum . ancumbtanoea, 10 pey the T.111 oounta men Oncv from Ball State m versity 10 Muncie. lnd .. who o rganized the eight-day '1CT1110UI 9UltNlll produced trom Mid 1anCf fOf lor lnepectton ct.urJng regular deddlr contre Ud. !i,. ':!! r.,,.Jnlng J>flncfpal tum of Section 1200 and 1200 ~ conference. MAW ITATl•NT the l>Ufl>OM of J>foep9Ctlng bullneaa hOura from 1:00 11encta 1 _.. .,. U& the Mid not• MOUfad by PlllJC llOTICE of the California He said Steinbeck's themes and philosophy appeal to the Japanese d TM=~·.,. ~tet°'oa!:t~ :• ~~en towt!;o;'ecfU:t 1~~ ,.,,.,.deftt,.•• .... =.on°'::"'~·~-.:: Prot.te c.ode. "Hedcalswithun1v·en.Jlrutbsandbcauty.Andh1selcgantstylei~ ~E MEN~E LSON traction Mel tul"CI of·..:ci l80day11ttartNdat1of1h1t !: .... lftforinaoloft 4'tNI Note, advance•. If any. '~~:A~u B 0 RT 0 N , approachab)e for us," Hayashi said. FRAMEANDOAUERYCO .. m1nera11, 011, gH, pet· pubUc•llon. , lf r'041...,. ._ aea11 the under the term• of Mid The followlng petaon 11 PETRINI• CONRON The Japanese esumate they spent about$ I 800 each to travel lo the 301 Pun. Bal~ CA 112ee1 '~T.:~"* hydrocarbon orJ:: '::"'~~ 1 ~1~ w.eo.ef • attomer In w. Dead; ':-t:'f~ ~ .. ~ dOlna bu.in.. u Westclleater Corpor· Con~ss aftei th I'. __ _. ~ h 8 th Ortgor Trltcttkov. 11152 .,.,....,,._ and W11tw from 1 m.etef r.u ~ • .. pet'9llt t NI .. •"'"' THE ltUILOTRON 130 E ate Plua o--er cir government re1U::K:U to pay 10rt e tnp. ut ou~ts Play• or , Hunting ion Mid land bymMneof mlnee, Mlchellon OrlYI, trvtna, CA. prom,C., .. tlMtC,..., wrle• lhe Truett ~ .. ted by Nld l7th St, St•. T, eo.t. ..._.; llOO St .. S of money qu1ckly became lost in discussion and study of their favonte a.en. CA 82648 W9111. defridl• and other 82730 .,..,,....,lf.,,,tMJ_ Dead. CA. 1m1 · t. tree&, topic. the Life and works of John Steinbeck. Alica Trltchkov, 8152 aqulpment from 1&1rfece lo-TM Pflndpet maMQer or ,.... ... """'-TM a.n.flclary und•r Alctn Seanol, 2881 Dr· Foartll Flo.r "The m ore local he is the more universal he becomes .. Hayashi Play• Dr . Huntington cation• on •dJotnlng or ~he~atJon Is Lawrence If u..M ..._. ....,_ ~Dead daf~ ~ :'tJ =Ave., Coate ..... CA. Baltettfleld, CA. HH1 said. "Wh~n he talks about 1 Salinas, and its problems and glories. we see a.::· Cb~:,~:~ 11 con-=:~ii° t:!nd.~ ly:: ~ublllhed Orange coat !:. O:.:!''.::..: !::c't: C:~n•Of MCUred tl\ateby, 1 Th~ butlnae• 11 con· (805) Hl·S051 ounelves. ducted by· • general pan· tcnbed tend, without the Dally Piiot Augu11 7. 1"" ....,.. hHMdlatam.._ .. , ofor9all*Mtad and a.. ductad &y: an lncllYlduel Publlahed Orange. '*INp right of 1urf1c1 or T-140 1111• HI• nitanera 911 ~totheTNlt .. written Akin hdnol C.out Daily Pilot July Grlgof TrltdUcOY aublUf'fece entry at>ove • fltB.JC NOTICE ,.., -. _..., 91 '-Notice Of Oefeutl and.£lec. Thll 1tatement wu filed 31 Auiust l 7 1984 AllcaTrttcnkov dep1h of 500 feet fN>m the .......,= .. ,...._ tton to c:auM the under· wfththeCountyC1etilofOr· ' ' ~~ ... Thlt atalement -.u filed aurfece of Mid land. WllT OltANCM "..._a ajgtled to ... Mid P'°'*'Y ange County on July 16 'w-ltJV with the County Ci.ti of Or· PARCEL NO. 3. NON-EX· COUNTY 1·TOTNI UONDIMTt 'o •tllfy Mid OOllgafk>nt 1884 ' ange County on July 10, CLUSIVE EASEMENTS fOf MUNICl'Al COURT TIMt lfl9tfttof• lllla NM 1 end thet'Mftw on stptem-,__ "8.IC NOTICE HOEG CAR~N . 1884 fl2I0141 acc.N, 1ngrH1. •or•N, 1141 ,. tn.t pat!"-~ 'lfNtl l>W '· 18113 the Ul\darli9nad Publllhad OtMge eo..1 Memorial 1ervlce Publl9hed Orange Cout maintenance, repair , ... ....,...,ca.-. INlrft .. • lfJWtallla•• CaueadNldnotlOaOfbrekfl Dallyl'llotJuty31.Auguat7 ITATaWOf' OTTO BULL HOEG, ST AN LEY M 1 lAM. Wednesday Dally ~llot July 11. 24, 31. drainage, encroactlment, PlatnUU! SOUTHERN rHpenee wtlNft • ...,_., and alectlon to M rtoOrdad 14, 21. 1914 • · AaANDOtMllNT OP UM born July is. 1901, CARLSON, pa.saed August 8, PACIF1C A&Jgutt 7, 1934 aupport and for other CALIFORNIA EDllON thedlltethat ... WMI H lnttru1Mnt Number T-1s1 PICTITIOU Of' Oslo, Norway Pused away Aua11•t 5, 1984. VIEW MEMORIAL I· lot purpoaee, 111 u deact1bed In COMPANY, a COtpentlon II ..-.,_ pu, ,_, _. 13-314908 of Mid Offlc:lal .. ~..!UtlN111 i:.-the Dactaratlon of Co'4-Defendant· DANIELL! ....,. ...., -... ..., .., A9cotdl -away August 2. 1984, Formerly of Rock-CHAPEL Entomb-flt&.IC NOTICE nant1, Condlllone, and .. ANNE MYEM •minor ltldl-u.._...-.., _.., 8,...... o.ted: Thia 17th Dey of July • rtllUC NOT1C£ .,_™ foll= P4'''°"' Sant.a Ana, Call f ford, ILL Survived ment to follow Pa-llrlctlon• and Aatarvatton of Ylduel· JULIE i. MYERS an ment......,.. ~ 1914 , .. ¥'8 aband CM Ullf of Swvived by Grand-by wife, Dorothy; cit. I y · M rt' 'ICTITIOUl IUStMlll Covenan11. Condlllont, and lndlvlduil MiCHAEL' J or ottw ..... Wfttftt FlASl LOS ANOELE~COR-PICTn'lOUt IU ... U ~tha "ottlloua Bualn .. 1 IOn, Mark H,,..,, J.is. children, Fran Hale, c iew o uary, NAMI aTATUtENT R11trlcllon1 and R ... r. MYERS 'an lndlvldual: dMalu •f pr•perlJ i-<>AATIOH NAli9 8TATIMINT : INl"OMEX. 21121 l.a ·-r. Tula and b~ro.•L-r-DI.rectors. 644-2700 TN followl"CI '*'°"'are Villon of EaMmenta '°' I.AURIE 'wAAD In .~ .,... .. , tuppert Sftlld Trutt.. The followlng pet90ll ,. .. Ad . lult• c. l.aguM ""' wn: V1rgin1a Bradley, doing bualneN u · Amberwood Offlca Pat'k r• ~ DO!S 1 th' ... _., II 1 -.todJ cNld ....... el ly Joe Tanttchar't·TNet• doing bualntel u: Nlaual, CA. 128n in law, Hadd run,. Mary Miller James MORGAN ATHLETES INTER-corded on Saptember. 25 ~ r....., .. n-IWNJ ........ ta. .d a .... omoar ARTISAN PLUMBING 'the Flctltlou• IUll1*8 lister. Ebba Webb C l ' d MAE LE VONNE NATIONAL, 3901 MacAtthur 111711, u tnatrumenl No' c ... No 92807 IUCf\ ..,_........ -Publ"'*' 0'9fl0il Coat SYSTEMS. 177-F AMnk» ~ed to 00....,.. a r 1 0 n • an Boulevard, Sult• 211, ~ 31817Inbook12154 paoea aU.-0.. tellll ltr ..._ °°""'~ OIUY Piiot Jvty 2•. 11. Av.., Newport 9Mctl, CA. In Or1nge County on Memorial tel'VlCeS to Christina Carlton. , MORGAN, resident port BMch, California 82880 1717 to 1M5. tncruaiv.. u NOTICll YOtt .!-. .... ~PM 1 .,=tall· A~tt 7. 1"'4 92883 ~ 23. tte2 Fii.£ NO. be held at Good Also aurvieedby step-of CostA Meu puaed Lani Hugh, 2624 W•t~ amended In Arlt ArMnd· luM TIMtoeurtmardaolda .. .......,., · · ., T-121 Brad Altl'I Davia, II Ima F 178M Shepherd Lutheran daughter Barbara away August 3 1984 mln•ter, Coeta Meu, CA menttoDecffntlonofeo..... ....,;., rw wm.it JM r ... "1 i.-~ -~.c.J .. NwponllMel\,CA. '•••r Nlgel ChHll•. Ch h ... 800 T--.:. C • • -92828 nantt Condlllont Reetric> "'-'-...,.. ~ ..,.0,, .. _ .. "8JC NOTICE H_, 1 Cultu Pl 8llp L7 urc . ., u-vui.e arr, eight grand-She 15 •urvived by Thia bu1tn ... 11 con-uone 'and ~tlon of ;;;;:,wtWit•.J."~ ;;< ¥-mar ,,... Thi• butlnMt 11 oon. 'oklt, Maf!n.. CA'. Center Dr., Irvine, c h1ldr~n. brother her huaband, ducted~lndMdual EawnentafOf Arnbtfwood tMlntormden..._ DMacllllleyJ71tM '1CnnGUllUIMH ductedby.WllndMduel. 28at Ca. 5PM Wedne.day AlanC.Ulson.andaia· Wallace. d'ughter. i:'1111emen1 WU flied ra p~·1;~ on lf~wtlhtoaaaltt~ad-LDA.IMMC~Claftl The~ITATIMIWT ='!:"atn1n1 ... fltad Thie :=-~oon- Auauat 8, 1984. Pa-ter Helen Eklund. Mr Vickie Lynn Cuulaa, #Ith the County c.1c of Of. ,:.,,~ 2so21 ~ "= Yloe of an attClf'M)' In Ulla Ir. M. L. HATIU. ~ dOinD = ~ are with fhe County Ctar1l of Or-Thie ltltatnent waa Ned dflc View Mortuary C.Ulson was a put of Irvine; ton Gary ln08 County on July t7, 24, 13508. ~ 135<>, Offlclal ~~~t/: ::U~ ~: =-=., "':.:;r M. -;• A.C.'8 OH THE PENIH-ano-County on July 30, h the County CWtc of or. Dlrec\on;, 844-2700 member of Jonathan Morgan of Kentucky; 3l, Augu1t,. 11164 ,210t41 Record1, (Th• "D•clu-ten,_,, .... 11 ...., ..................... 1 .... 1.,. ' SULA. 2'13 VIiia Wrt • ..__ 1N4 County on July 17, HARBOR LAWN· MT. OUYE Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1825 Giiier Av• Coate Mesa 540-5554 PtlRCI POTH~Ra HLLPOADWAY MOftTUARY 110 Broadway Coate M ... &.42·9150 •AL TZ aERGERON IMmt&TUTHfU WEITC\:I,. CHANt. 437 E' 17th St Coat• M•aa 548-9371 ,ACIFIC VlaW titeMOAJAL 'ARK Cetnewy • Mon1.11ry Chaptf • Cr.matOfY 3500 PIC.ltle View Drive Newport a.ch 844-2700 McMORMICK ~TUARV 1795 LIQune Cenyon Road l9QVn• bUCh. Ca 82651 .. •· •15 G Publlthed or eo atlon") ................ _,,. .. _, ... --• .., port IMcll CA eaes-,.~ 1 Club, past-president bro thers, arrlet Dally Piiot Juty 7, 24, ~t and wi11 be IOld at public macs on time T•1tl Rldlllrd ·~ -.. Pubfltllad Otat1Q8 Coast Publtthed Oranoe COllt of Advertising -Golf Bolt, Jr. and ~orris Augutl 7, 1884 tuctJon on the front 1tep .. 1 m==~~.:: Pta.JC llOTJCE 431 Allto, ~ 9Mch, °"'Y Piiot July 31, ~t 7, tr Piiot JUfY 24, 31, Association and mem· Bolt, of Iowa, 111tera, T·JOO the eo.11 Meaa City Hall, n deoWlr """9 u.. etn .., CA. t2e83 14. ~1. 1"4 ugusi 7, 14, 11M ber the Loe Angelee Shlrles MC>lel and. 111111 .. 'IC NOTICE FalrDrfve,CoataMeaa,Cell· ctt.ncle a"*'"...,_ Ud. P'IC1TTtOUSllU8MH Keith Morrleon, 1133 T·138 T·111 AD CJ F I B dll rUIK. omlLon Augu1t 15, 1884, ,..,_....,,,. •• ....._ NMm aTATIMl.NT OoldolNod Aw., Corona cM1 .. _ C 1.1b, he was alao ~~ncf t. ·~ ng, ,ICTITIOUI aUatNall at 10:00 a.m .. to the hlQhelt Lee la lntormeo• 4'W The to110wtt1g l*'80l1 la Mat, CA.12625 n1Ut..I NOTICE Pta.JC NOllC( a member Newport-t o owa; two NAMR ITATIMINT bidder for ealh In lawflif cur· elctue. dolnO ....,,_ u: . o.nnla Leo Of9*1, 35711 '1CTITIOUt Harbor Lawn Bowl-grandchildren Jet-The folloWlng .,..on•.,. rency ot the United Stat.. -lf ,_ wtif1 1• Mall tt. PAOl IHTEM>RI, 21170 Braoh Ad., Capo 8Md\; CA. NAMll aTA~M PICTmOUa IUH•1I ing Club, and Jolly frey Caaulaa and dolngbullnw • .. ~~co'::t~':. MVioa.,M....,_,IRINa ~~lt• '~wy 1202, 1~ bualnw 11 coo-The foftowtng peraon,. NAmtTATW Boys of the lrvtne Shannon Morgan. VENTANA OAOWTH ranty regarding title. "°"" !Mtwtt,""' ....,-• .. w ..... ~~ t2~~ ducted bY • ~ P8t1 dolnobullnetl• The fOllCMtnt l*W It Country Club. Viaita· Services will be held ~:>;ko"1~:'°c;~~r,~· ....,o;n...._or .... ancum~ ~:.,~....,": »111 MllQ4lllan, Lag~i ~·M · • ~"ttofflv ~~1~ ~1~s': IOUTH tion Tuesday 3-9PM Tue.day at 11 :00 AM Ventani Hold...,.. L p 10 ~ ... b, ,,,. dobl~..!~ ~ ftted on .-. N!Qual, CA. t2677 .. ~!,hit ~~ Attno Orlllt 1 ~ ••• --... 1000 ~ lclenoe ftd.' ' In th u-~ • -"'ll ' • ' cur..., r .,, unu ... u,. It U.IM..... ....... Thia bu1lne11 It COi\• ,.,,. a-._,t WM fltad • _ ... _,, .1. .... C ....... ' a.ll day Wedne9day e nAU uur wt1wn 18800 Fairchild, SUit• tSO. POW« 0 late confarNd In el ......,. • ducted by an lndlvtdual With the County C1et1l of Of· CA 12851 ".....,• M , A, •• , .. Rec1tat1on of the Memo/lal Chapel, '"1:,. C~";~ 11 con 111e o..cr of Trvat •J<acutad _,. .... ..un;-::CS: w 11a1n L..nuno · . f.1: County on JUiy 27, 20':f" l; 9r'~'· ~~a.i?:~ Rosary Wednesday with Interment .er-ctuc:tad by.• general pert: ~J.,,,.., c.atdy,c'=~.......,.. llNMdta .. wte Tiile atamenl ..,. macs 1 Laoun•~ ~ot~~·· CA 92711 " • • 7 30 PM, Pacific View V1Ces lmmediace fol-nerlhlp · True~ csat:':.: 30 117 1111• Ht• ... .,..,.. ,.; wtttl tha County :-1' °'Or-P\ibliahecl Or 1111C: fhl• bul.lnt.. '11 con· Thll bualnee.a la co11· Memorial Chapel lowing. Service. VenttnaHolellnga.L.P. aa TN1tor to ArMrloM :::,•ta...-.,.,~ r.J: County Jvly H, 0.UVP11ot.A.ltyl~uguat7 ductadbr.anlndMdu•. ductadO'f:"'lndl'Mwll Maa1 of Chrlatian under the Direction P~ .. Gephart, Oenaral Home Mortgage Trwt o..d lrMa • ~ .., 1"111411 t4, 21, 1"4 ' ' ~ ~ Carniadlowld =u .~:=,t ,... ....., Burial Thursday of Harbor Lawn Thi• atatetnent wu filed ~~at~. •Call· 1·TO n'C""DVIMDMm Publllhad OrMQ4l Ooatt T-132 wtthtt..'t::::'::,;:eof~ wtthft,tCountyo.kofOr· 1 lAM ~t Our Lady M o u n t 0 11 v e .tth the County a.ti of Of. T~!.. f;rt;.:':!.:ft _: :._.-:,-::=:.=-...,. ~: ::0: 7, 14• 21• z County on Juty t7: = ~CoilMY on JUiy 11. Queen of Angela Mortuary, 5'60-55!M raK: COunty on ~ teourtty ol AMenean Homa ..,. ., r• wtM .. Z:: _j_ T-144 Pt.Bl: fl)JU ' . ,.,. 1 ,_, Church. Pacific V~ .. _.,. ltW\TJC( Pvottehed 0rano-eo.at ~= =•uon. • .,_.. ...-.. ,.. ..n, MJC NOTICE ~ or-. COM4 l'ubWled 0r._ c:wt Mortuary Directon, r~"" Dally Piiot JulY 11. 24, 31. laMflaary daie1t"':o:....,. • deya •fl• Ulil -PICnTIOUelUWU Dllify/l'tlotJutr,,,Auouf17 o.ii, ~ 'Jvtol' 14, If, 3500 Pacific View Ilr, ...cnnoua .,..... AUO\dl 1. 1M" 2~. 1HO, ind 1'9COfdell on ::":'8 .,.! ::' ~· ...cnnout .,..... MAim ITATWWT t4; 21, 1964 · ~ '• 14, 1164 1 N•wport Beach C. MAim tTATIMINT Augy" 21, 1tl0 In 10011 reeponte ,0 tM C:i:,-:! The MAim ITAft~ II The~ pnon1.,. •.. !·Jill l •tl 644-2700 Dona'Uo~ d The :::::'4ia: ::'°"'.,.. NlJC NOTIC[ ,:,~~0~f.t:; ':1~ Untw rou :.r; · = ~.,.. ~=~ t111 NlJC ll)l)C( " maybe amt to Ameri· ~LANE. 11 Aect" aid PICT'l'hOUt....... flc:6el Aloord• of tM County wtll " an on ~ ~~OU 0880LITE. Mata Dr . ••nta Ana PICTmOUI PllUCli>TICl can Heart A9oda-TreeLW,lmne,CA 12115 NMtltrA4=T Oii or..;, lat .. o oaa. ~~m-=:rn:r~ =~.'r,:r""•JOO. ~~~ 2 I • NAlm9TA=.~-FICllhuUllUH•• tion •• Maner l . Toro•. 111 Thi fo10wtno penon i. fomlol. ment ~-.. tot tN • · ~· ' '"" The fOloMrlt l*W aa ium ITAr If --------NcfwoOd Tt#Lane, IMM. bUe!M9•• Not~ of o.1&111 and.., ~in the O:. Chari:,_~ lrahmt, M111 r,, lan1a Ana dOltlO~... Ttw......,. .,.... a ROSS CA 12711 .UT EAL COATING. tlletlontoMlthedWl'IW p19int, Wflld\ OOUld talllft In 1612" ~. D-1. ~-·CA t17o7 ftAOO"llllVE tM· _... ...... MARIE C·· ROSS T kbara J. oaw, 2182.aCEI 283 PMAfi. IC, C0tt1 ~ prOPefty unelar the ~arnlahment of_.,.. -tall• P';8~· ~~°'= Mat~' ~ "::nt!'tl I!. POMI, 111 ..,..,._A~. •M.""1A OMIOA fllWN- ... ---1 • A • ~. Mllelon to. A ....... CA t2t21 -of 1'ruet ... '900'0ed Of money Ot ~ °' 22 ~ cA.'•n 7 na ~ INactl CA tMU TIHANCI:. 12121 ANto '1J. ..--v away ~ 12111 TllOmea Wlllton Hu.i, 81 ln1trumenC Num,ar ra1af ~ed 1f1 Ille cl~~ • Th~ &Ml~ II luunM A A;;d UO L Oer* OfOvt.. CA. at40 3. l&l84. SW"VlVed by Tl'lla bullM • COft-a Pedflc •C, Coate '4--1172a.4. on Ap(tl "· ~ i CkiC:tad -.. eon-ntd ••• ~ 1 IMdl, "°"" fltatrtoti ltHrM. IQnl £dwln ft.a. a.nd dllC1.cS ~ 00o1*1Mfl • CA. t2t21 , ..... ot Offldal Aeoordt Oii Dated AOftl. 11U I oon• .,,, • .... .... CA 12tl0 1WI MdO .... ~ KeMeth S. Rou: =::,. }Z, ™' :,"~~con· ~er.,., llala :CHAAD J WACK, an = w, 1 .,_.. '*" ,....,,,., P ,....., ~ •,.... • con-°': ~ ta _,.. dauahtet, Harriett Thie ettrt«ftel\t ., .. m.d Tnom.WlllonHllHll ni.-..-w~ .~~ .... '::"&.... CtlatWJef•*"-,_.Dallt'*l ~~~· duc•nr.111MM•• Che1ette an<J the latt' ....,.tn.Ctwlryci.rtt.-Of· nM ....,,..,,,..,.. fllad ~o-~~llU0.., .CT~ .. HOME c..,_, Wi~:w-:=-J:-or":: .,,'::',_~~=of~ Thia llat«Mnt •N Ned John.__ Marlo p atte· .. i~t-. Countr on M 11, tMCountya.tlofOr· "'-""' n..,.T OHO ,,o,.... Ooun 'I • CWI,.. ........ • wttlltheC4Untytwt.OfOr· T1'll .... .,,,.,,. ... filled ~hH3 ~ ...... ~ ,... Coun11 on June 21, • AVICE COAPOMT'tOH, ...... 11~C4.t1m ;'11: '1 Oft ""'1 II.= ., Ol'I --:F lO, r.c Cowlty .. Ni 11, .ml .. ~ClltlltdfOP· ,,-eat an=~· PutllltMd -";; 1 ~ onnoa"'=! ~r~':":.=o"" ~~~ 'a:= Oteitbt,...' ,.,.. "'~°"""1.;-~ -Vt.rt.llon ·3·9PM. ~ t,~. 1 4• 1 l'UOl .t\11. ~ .t =:~.~~mta ~. -,,_ M9.it.~ ~ 1 ...cmtl 'J'uesda)I A~t 7. vgi.ie ' ' 7• 14• ttM 121H P,,one Humbef 14' Aupi I 7. 1914 1 , .. ~ 1• l, '"·--• T 14 • • r.1u T·1Ct1 ' ~ .. _..... ' ' t' .. A dluppolntlng daJ •t Olymplca tor Ruth Wraockl of El 'ioro.~ Lewis s kips chance at mark He wins gold, · then passes up attempt at record By BOWARD L. BANDY ......... ...,,.. !LOS ANGELES -Cart Lewi1 predicted to perfection liis per- formance in the ,.men's Iona jump finals at ·the Los .Afllelc:a Memorial Coliseum Monday . .. My straiqy will be the same as always," be wd after q~ at 27·2¥• Monday. ··ru try 10 pop a very bi& jump early to make everyo..e clwe after me. l doubt very teriouSly ·that I will take more than three jumps... • • All it took was onejumpfor Lewis to win his KCOnd aold medal. He leaped 2S..CW. then fouled on his second jump and guit for the cveni,._ He had qualified for the semifinals m tbe 200 earlier in the day and ,now ,eu· a day oft • Thouih. Lewis stayed oo IChcdtile wtth a dream of~ four .,ids in track. a dream ihat ao .mah·~_....---.. fPleae .. ....,,.JCS) ·u.s~·poloists win today; medal guarantee'1; Americans crush Australia, 12 -7 , after ·Monday's 8-7 victory over Holla n d gold medal we're going to have to start playi!lf, like a gold medal team. and wed.id.' · Tim Shaw, one of the the U.S. dnvers, said: "We can taste it (the 8y RoGER CARUON °' ... .,..,,... ..... MAUBU -With three players scoring three apiece, mcludmg six aoals from the two-meter men, Unit- • ed States rolled to a 12-7 victory over Australia this morning at Peppcrdine University in water polo competttion at the XXIJlro Olympiad. . Coupled w1th Spain's S-8 tie with West Germany Monday, it guaran- tees the U n1ted States a medal at these Games. :Conover must face repechage Special to ~e DaUy Piiot LAKE CASIT AS -Sheila Con- over of Costa Mesa finished founh in her beat of the women's Kayalc-1 canoe race on Lake Ca iW Monday to move into Wednesday's repecha&e competition as the second week of rowing action of the XXlllrd Olym- piad got under way. Conover posted the seventh fastest time of the day With a 2:06.89 effort over the SOO-metcr course under sunny skies. Aaneta Andersson of Sweden won her heat race in 2:03.99 with Barbara Scbuttpelz of West Germany winning the other in 2:02.14. . Conover will also compete in the Kayak-4 race later in the week. Conover is a Newport Harbor H iah and Oranac Coast Co11ege graduate. Althouah he tied for the lead in points to gain herp0sition on the U.S. OlyOJpic team, she didn't measure up to her forcian competitors Monday. 1 The SOO-mcter kayak races are- comparatively new to the Olympics. They were added in 1976. · Conover was tentatively set to row apin Monday to the K-2 race but was replaced when she was forced into a -repechage to continue in K-1 action. Only the top thtte from each heat race advanced to the final . West Germany is now 1-0-1 goina gold medal) now. I don't know how into this afternoon's game with Monte couldn't be satisfied with our Yugoslavia (2-0-0). The U.S. is 3--0-0 S-On-6 defcruc today. It was a great in the medal round With West asset for us. Germany(Thursdaymontingat8:30) c-. I and Yugoslavta (Friday night at 9) "for whatever reason, we ice we're remaining on the schedule. gomg to be playing ~n-6 more than Assistant Coach Ken Lindgren, 1 others. and we take a great deal of Huntington Beach resident. speakina pnde in that defense." said Shaw. in lhe absent% of Coach Monte "We got up at 4:30 this4'moming Niu:kowsk.i, called it "a real strong • and we were ready to swim. The effort. difference was that we were monng "We IUJized if we want to win the and they couldn't keep up WJth. us," . .,.., .......... -u. ...... Co9ta 1109& •a Shella CcnioTer ftnlabed foartb lD llonctay•a · ay0 beat and now maat'compete ln a repecb&Ce Wednes-day. . said Jody Campbell, who scored three times. The U S. was up by a 3-2 margin after one period. thanks to Terry Schroeder's goal from ms1de, Kevm Robertson'sdeepgoal to tie it at 2 and Peter Campbell's 1oaJ, an extension in.side of a pass from Jody Campbell in a 6-on-5 situation with l :SS left in the quarter. The U.S. blew it open in the secood .stanza. as Schroeder btt apin (hi second of three goals), Jody Campbell scored from a pass from "Drew McDonald, Robertson nailed a pen- alty shot and Robertson scored his third goal with 47 seconds kf\. Today's vactory follows Monday's escape apinst Holland. ao 8-7 de- c1s1on that saw the Dutch threatened to tie the pme in the wanini moments. Motivation key for Brazilians u .s. still gains volleybalf sem_i_s_; - faces Canada nexf By ROGER CARUON °' .. .,..,,... .... LONG BEACH -Motivation. don't ever underrate it. Monday night the Brazilian men's volleyball team had it, the Umted States dad not. And as a result the South Amen- cans dad what no one had done m "a long ttme," as U .S. Coach Doug Beal put it follow1ng a I 5-10, 15-11 , 15-2 rout before a stunned pro-Amencan crowd at Lona Beach Arena, snapping a 28-match winnm• streak. "For us, this~as tt!' sa1d Brazilian Coach Paulo Freitas. "It was die or keep gomg. The United States had no pressure. we had to play." The verd ict ~nds Brazil into Wednesday's semifinals agamst Italy, whale the Unitt"d States.. which fell to No. 2 in itsaroup. pla)'. Canada an the other htlf of the semifinals. · ''That's true." admmed Beal, "in . terms of a gold medal ~e didn't lose a thing.•· . The only thin& the U S lo l was the pressure of a winning suuk as it enters the semifinals. Each of the four finalists finish~ 3-1 after the first round, with Wednesday's hneup sig- nificant by the abscn~ of Japan, which failed to make the medal round for the first ume ever. Japan and Korea were also 3-1. but were elimmated b> tot.al games won and lost. John Bartctt led the Canadians and Beal says he'll be finna away in the same manner as the Brazilians with a jump serve that bad the Americans on their heels from start to finish Monday ruabL . "B)' Seoul tn 1988 aJI the teams will be usang1t.." says Beal. "lt'scertainly a new Strong weapon in the emc. It puts a lot of pressure on you. · As if 1t really mattered, Beal explained the plight of the U.S. Monday night -keyed by two Iona matches. "There were 96 rotauons m those first two ~cs," he said, .. which is about the equivalent of four games. There were a lot of s1dcouts and you have to mamtain yQµr composure. We lost so mt patJence toward the end of both of the first two games "They JUSl outpla)ed us We pa~sed poorl) and ~e dtdn 't bloc~ very well ·· • The L S didn't. as t'\tdenct"d ~y (Pleue eee VOLLEYBALL/CS) Steve Ovett hospitalized _ ·Knight uses a secret weapon -Alford Indiana guard pumps home 1 7 pqtnts as Americans get past West Germany In the end it was Wilson •ho turned back an inside shot by Holland's Tony Buunk with 42 seconds left, then blocked a perimeter shot by Stan Van BeUcum with 20 seconds t'Cmaining. to praerve ~ victory. It allowed Wilson to become a udd.cn hero, thus-•"oidiq itzkowski's do&bouse for his in- ability to make the Americans. saa-cina dcfeme as effective as it should have been. •·Too) did a VCJ)' n.ioejob ~ bim apart. .. noted Nitzkowski. What saved the U.S. in its bid to rem.am perfect throuib fourpmcs tVaS stroa, field and .S~n-6 defense, accord.in& to N itzkowsk.i:! 0 t DAIL y PIL.OT /Tuesday, Auguat7. 1 84 SPORTS BRf ~;\ Davi• po1'en Cuba patt Meta Robinson la1ne&-·-_..;;'ody oam dro~c 1n rour run~s ~,h w~,,. omer. oublt nu 1 en ice )' Ozark' 3 Plau~rs 1onday, lcad1qg the fint-placc Chi J bs to a 9 .J Victory over &he sccond..placc tor his reDlov-al New York Mets in lhc opener of their four-pme senc to hiahli&ht acuon in the National Lequc . . . Elsewhere. Kevta Melle)190ld1 doubled with two out in the top of the nan th and soorcd on Lal1 Salu:ar'• single. ndina n Dieao to a 1-0 viC'lory over Cmcinnau. AN FRANCISCO -Frank Rob- inson, ou tcd as manager bf the San Francisco Giants. say' he knows who cost Ma'* narmoed and Goeae Gotsqt blanked the Red on three hill to give the National Lea~e West leaders their third straight victory and I I th in 13 pmes . . Jua Samaet end V• Haye. stroked run-1COrin• sin&les io a three-run eighth inn1na that ...-rried Philadelphia to a 4--1 victory overMontteal •.. Jobay Ray's cighth·innina dQuble scortd MarweJl Wyue from KC· ond and lifted Pittsburgh to a 3·2 triumph over St. Loui the him hi job, but he'll kttp 11 a secret unJes.s pt.c>pJe start "throwina stones." • • "As soon as people start throwina stones. I'll stan throwina back -names. places. times and date , I'll aoceP.t the blame, but I'm not goina 10 be a whipping · boy .• Robinson. who talked with reporters in_ .Atlanta aftcr-hi1- dismissal, md1cated he believes that Danny Ozarlc, who took over the team from his position as third base coach, and three play· ers who he declined to name undercut his position with owner Bob Lune and team v1oe presi- dent Tom Haller. • Pirates' first victory over the Cardinals in l 0 tries this season . . . Bob &.epper scattered six hits for bjs third shutout of the season and the third NL shutout of the nighL He also capped Houston'ssiit·run siittb inruna witb~a two-run double a$ the Astros pounded the San Francisco Giants. 8..0. Robinson, fired late Satur· ..._.~--~---..-..day, JUSt shook bis head when Jlobta.oo asked afhe believed it when Ozark told him more than a month ago that he wasn't after Robinson's job. Ram•• Barber Injures knee The players -Johnme Le Master. Jack Clark and Gary Lavelle-met with Lurie and Haller late in May Several players told reporters the sa111c story after the Giants beat the Braves 74 on Sunday. Veteran tight end Mike Barber injured EiJ hrs left knee in practice Monday and was to c II• undergo arthroscopic surgery today. Barber, who led the Rams in catches last season with SS, wdl be lost for an undetermined amount of time, the spokesman said. Tfie Rams acquired Barber from Houston in 1982. Tbe Rams also announced Monday they waived three free aients,_ former Arizona State wide rccievers Roger Huff and ~tevenson Morpn and former UCLA comerback Lyndon Crawford. French import wine feature DEL MAR -Odds-on favorite Jeu ~ De Paille, a French-imported colt, took command enterina the stretch and coasted to a threc-len&lh victory Monday in the $24,000 feature race at Del Mar. Tlgera snap streak but spilt The victory was the first on American soil for Jeu De Paille, ridden by Laffit Pincay and sent to the gate at 4--S odds bf a crowd of 13,809. The WlDller, who finished second in his U.S. debut la$t month at Hollywood Park, ran the mile and siitccnth on the grass in 1.43 4-S. Luce Parrish, ~et Lemoa and Tom • Brookeu keyed a l S.bit Detroit attack • with home runs and the Ti snapped a four-game losing streak ~t~ 9~ 1 vu:tocy · . . O¥er the "Boston Red Sox m t~ fiist game of a tWJ-ni.lht doubleheader Monday n1ghL Bill BDCber, 1lfii Hice and Rieb Gedmu keyed a 16-hit Boston attack with home runs. Boston rebounded in the nightcap with an easy 10-2 triumph as Wade.Bow drilled two homers. a double and a -sinJ)e to back rookie Roger Clemens' Debonair Her'C angled out entering the stretch but still Cd&edBertocclli by a neck for ~in..ilitlO or six lbree-year-olds.. . . Tel~on. tailli stronc pitching . . . . In other Amenxcan Lcaaue action, Storm Davis pitched a siit·hitter for bis sixth consecutive victory since the All-Star break and Wa)'lle Gros1 homered as Baltimore beat Oeveland, 4-2 ... Chicago's Gree Walker belted a three-run homer and Harold Balaet ripped two doubles and two singles to power the streaking White So-x past the struuling Milwaukee Brewers, Parrtah 5-3. The White Sox have won five straight games and seven of their last eight while Mtlwa~cc has dropped a season-bi~ nine in a row. Greg Lalill1kl drove in a run for the moth consecutive game, JUSt four behind the AL record ... Boddy Bell singled home Mickey Riven with two out m the bottom of the ninth inning to give Texas a 5-4 come-from- behmd victory over Toronto and ended the Blue Jays' five-game winning streak ... Gary Gaetti'• three-run homer in the sixth inning wiped out an Oaklind lead an(i paced a 16-hit Minnesota attack that powered the Twms to a 74 victory oyer the A's. No outside.chance for Wysocki EIToro runner's lane position may have hurt in 800 87 HOWARD L. HANDY ......... ._o.llyNM LOS ANGELES -Starting tn the outside lane didn't help the con- fidence of Ruth Wysocki of El Toro an the finals of the women's 800.meter run at the XXllJrd Olympic Games in the Coliseum Monday. Wysoclu's early trouble was com- pounded early m the race when she fell back to last place m the field of eight ant could pick up only two places iff"the run for the finish line. "I just fell like I never &ot int<>' the race tonight." Wysoclo said after· wards. "Being m the outside lane may have had something to do with it. 0 1 was running along fast and 1t wasn't fast enough but down the stretch I didn't want to give up and said to myself 'kfs catch some people.' "I hope to make as good a shpwing in the 1,500 as in-the 800-getting to the finals, I mean. Hopefully, I will do better in the end J.h_an I did today." Ooina Melintc of Romania set a fast pace and held the lead thrqughout the race, winning in l :S7.60with Kim Gallagher of the U.S. 10 second at 1:58.63 and Fita Lovin of Romania third at l :58.83. Wysock.i's time for sixth place was a creditable 2:00.03. ··1 virtually have nil expcnence an international competition," Wysocki added. ·•rm &lad I ran the 800 because 1f ( hadn't r would always wonder what I could have done. 1 don't know if I could have gone any faster but I could have gone farther. "I learned a lot in the beats about mtcmational competition. In the pack there is lots of shoving and pushing. I am really pleased I made the finals. "In preparing for the 1.soo I will have an easy day tomorrow and have my chiropractor check me out" Heat races in the l,500 are on Wednesday with semifinals Thursday and the finals on Saturday. "I am pleased with my race," Gallagher said. "I'd rather have the gold 6ut I'm pleased. She took my kick away from me and I was very disappointed not to have it at the end. The start of the race was too fast. But Ooina set the pace and made us go after her." LEWIS CAPTURES GOLD ••• From Cl · realistic than ever. it was not crowd. pleasing because he passed up his last four jumps and settled for victory. . Lewis defended his decision. "If someone had jumped funher, I would not have come back. I was 1<>rc after the second Jump," he said an comments released by officials. "I am not too surprised that thinas have been going so well bccauseofmx expcnencc at the 1983 TAC meet. · Lewis said ··1t was a very difficult three days for me as I wasn't prepared for it. This year I was much bener prepared physically for this lti'Dd of competition." There were ei&ht events completed Monday night and in four there were Olympic re.cords set. Valerie Brisco-Hooks capture<t the gold medal in the women's 400 with a mark of 48.83 ... r ran my normal race and aoin& across the finish line was the ultimate.'' she uid. "It was like all tbe bard work had finally paid off. .. After havina my child, it took a while for me to rqain a belief in mysclC I took a ycar.and4-half off and started runnins again lut season. 1 didn·1 hive a &ood year." Britain' Sc6estiao Coe had to settle for second in the men'• 800 behind another recora pcrfonnanoe by Brant's JOllquim Cru1 at 1:43.00 wnh Earl Jones ofthe U.S. third. "It obviou ly • ve7 com· pttthve race." Coe id. .. h ci 1 dear, uncluttncd run and I have no rm complainu. I '<>fd Steve (Oveu) that wc'ft!CJ'e too old to bo playina with furti~"that rm hlPl'f 1 UJe ''Iver medal 1n Ythit wu a put 800 field . This was obviou ly my aa t chance for a m•J<>r 00 mle ... Roger K•Qadom of PittsbVrah upset U~ Foster in winning the 110 -meter high hurdles in record time of 13.20. Foster was second to gjve the U.S. the silver medal as well. . Another Olympic recofd.was set in the women's 400-meter hurdle semi- finals by Ann Louise Skoglund of Sweden. Sbe ran SS.17 while the second and third finishers also broke the previous record. ttaly's Alberto Cova won tbe 10,000-metcr run in 27:47.S4 and Finland's Juha Tiainen captured the hammer throw with a heave of 2S6-2. 81U Green of the U.S. was sixth at 248-0. Tessa Sanderson of Great Britain upset world champion Tiil\a Lillak of f1nla_nd in thewomen'sjavelin witba toss of 228-2. U.S. (0-4) falls In team handball Fnm AP d11,.~ea Romania, Yugoslavia, Denmark and We t Germany scored crucial victories Monday tn the Olympic Games men's team handball com· petition al Cal State Fullcnoo. Yuao lavia, 2-0-1, tuned up for i&J Group A title match with Romania, 3-01 on Wednesday ni&ht by routina w1tz.crland 2~11. Romania earhcr bat· Japan 28·22. while Denman trounced~ wedcn 26-19 behind Erik VCJc Rasmu 'uii ~IOal and West Germany OVU1)09t'ttccl winksi South Ktftl 37· . The winleu Uniacd States &eam suffered its founh I droppma a 17· I 6 dtc:ilion lO pain whale Iceland bnt I na a~u. t MA.IOR t.•AGU• STANDI GS Amtrk.n LMtue WIST 0.V1$JOM w L: ~-.. p u .m S1 I) ..Sll \t u ,. .sos 2 IM M '" J"" a •• "° 1 M '3 Ma t •7 ._. m II llAST DIVISION Detroll 1J 3' U2 Toronto 6J 4t S1t I V. B•n~ tt 11 .536 13 80sl0ft Sl S2 323 141>\ Ntw Ven 56 U 519 15 MhtUk• 47 u 420 2' Cir.elend <4S ._. A 13 26 .... .,..1c .... ~·· S.ttle. 0..rolt '· ~ 1 •..... ,,,. ... tan lO, o.lroil 2, 2nd o.me hlllttlort •• Clevtl.tnd 2 CNaloo S, MllwtullM l TnH '· TorOll!O • MIMMOI• 1, O.ll•lld 4 ~ Mn'Mlt KNOllled T .. V', o.nw. A119111 (satlon •·Sl el *",. (~e S·IO), (11) • 0.~I (M«rla 1•·1 •I'd Wik:H 11·7) ti Bollon !Hunl 10-7 •ftd JollnMlll 0•1), 2. (I• n> Ctlke90 (Hovi t • ll end Sollln4tr t·SI •I Ntw York (Guldrv t ·I end Dnhelff 0--0), 2, O•n) .. ltlmort (McGreoc>f 12• 10) •I Cleveland cetvlt"tn 10-S>. tnl Mllw•llllH (McC•~· 1-S) el Kan-..1 Cllv (Gure 11 ·II. (n) Toronto (Stieb 12·•> ti Tuu !Noles 1-1). <n> Mlnnnot• !Viola 11-10) et o.i.iencs CMc:C.ttv 7·1>. (n) WtdM&dtv'I Gem. Aneels •• Sffllle Chlceto •I New York MIMttOlt el Ollklend Btlllmor• el Clt" ... nd• (n) o.troll •I Boston, (n) Mltweukte •• Ktl\$1• Cllv, <n> Toronto ti Te11u. Cn) ....... , Leetue WUT OMs.oH W L ~. Ga Sen Dltoo 67 43 Hit Allenle 51. 53 S23 '~'> Dedllt'I s. 51 "2 14 Hous!Ofl S2 60 ...... 1• Clnc!Mall .. '5 •1• 21"" Sen F rellClsco c '5 .3'I 23 llAST~ ChlQeo 6S 45 5t 1 PMw Von 62 '5 .519 11.'J Ptll~le 5t 50 ..$41 SY! SI. Louis SS 5' m lO'h Mon1ree1 u S7 .. n 12.,., PlllUlurQll a '4 A29 11 ......... ~ Allalllt 2, ~ 0 Clikaoo t, New YQfk 3 Pt\~ 4, Monl..-..1 I Sen Dltoo 1. Clnclnnell o Pllllbor9'1 3, SI. Louis 2 Housloa I, San FrtnclllCXI 0 T ... Y's °'"'" ' ~ (Ptne ll"*t-•I Allent• (Peret 10-4). (n) Hew York (Oartlno 10-4 end Lvnch .,,,, el Cl'llceoo ISvlcllfft •·I and.-. Stnclenon 6-21. 2, . • Ptllltdelclflla (R•wtev 4·3 and K.Grou 6-5) •I Monlr••I ISmlll'I ,.., •nd Rover• 3-111. 2. Sen Dleoo (WtlllMlll 12•5) ti ClncJnnell (McGttfloen 3·4), Cnl Pllllburoh (Delton 6·71 el SI LoulJ !Cox 5-t), (nl Sen Francisco (Krukow ,_,, el Houslon (Scoll ••• ,, (If) W ...... y'1 Gemet ~alAlttnlt New York et Chicago ~al MonlrHI, (n) San Dltoo el ClnclnNll, Cnl Plltlburvtl al SI. Louil, (n) Sen Frenclsco el Houston, (nl AMERICAN LEAGUE A,. ••• MartMn 4 CAUl'OllltNIA SllATTLE .. ,._... . Pe1111•cr s 7 o rt ~conl 70 C.rtw lb 3 IO O Owenu Sconln lb I o I o ADavls lb Lynn rf ) 1 I I Cowen a rf MC Bron rt 1 en o DHtdin cf O.Cnca 3b 6 O 0 I SHndsn dll Downlno If 3 2 2 2 8onntll If ReJkMI dll 5 1 3 3 Prtlltv 3t> Wllfonp 2t> 5 0 0 0 Mllborn l>h Narron c • o 2 o MMuoo c Sdloflld u s 0 2 0 Pntlos Ph ••>r "Iii 4 0 7 T 5 0 1 0 4 1 I 0 4000 • 0-0 0 • 1 3 1 4 2 3 0 J 0 1 2. 1 0 0 0 3000 I 0 0 0 Tttlb 41112 7 T.,._ l14114 SC..bV ....... c.... -., .,._. *"' • • au-• Game Winnlno Ital -Lvnn <n E-o.tn, ADt"la LO&-CAlllfon1'a 14, • $Miiie 7. 29-LYM, SHtnd«son, ftrwslly, AO.vis, SCOnitn, lonnd. Hlt-Oownlne 2 O•l. RtJec:ktofl (II). S........1111 (JtJ. "' HRERHSO c...rNa JofWIW,1_, l.Sanc:heJ 1 , 1 2 2 I 0 • 2 J 0 0 ..... ..,_,L,7·4 S 6 5 J ~ 12-3 a 2 2 a.rd 2 1'3 3 l l T-2 0 . A-12,0IS NATIONAL LEAGUE """"" 2. D1•11r1 t &.OS AMOllU ATLANTA • 2 3 l 1 l '*'"Ill llHllM SH 211 5 0 2 0 RRmn H • 1 2 0 Amlunt rf , 0 1 0 JOhMon 311' • 0 2 0 Lancllrx d 4 O 1 O Wlt\etn rf 4 O O 1 ~" •ooo Muronvcf 2010 Scloada c • O 2 0 Welaon lb 1 o 1 o Brock tb 3 0 0 I P.,-,Y lb 2 0 I 0 hllor3b ·2 0 0 0 KOl'Mlklf 3 0 0 0 Wllltfld l>ll 1 0 0 0 Hubbrd 211 2 0 0 0 11Yere3b 0 0 0 0 Trt'llnoc; J 0 0 0 MldndOllfl 1 O'O 0 Mallltr 1> • 3 1 I 0 Andetnu •020 Hontvcll I> 2 0 I 0 ZKtlfyp 0000 ·Guerrr on 1 o o o Hootonp 0000 Sl~Pfl l 0 0 0 T.-JS t t t T.... 11 2 I 1 larebV..... • Lea..... ----· AtlaMt I• tlO 19x-2 Geme Wlnnlll9 HI -.._. 8-JohMon. OP-t.0t Motlea 2, Alltnlt I L.Ol-Lot A~ 10, Atlente 6. 2.,.Sclo1de. 3~ry, ~Y Clll. HoMvcull (1), Andlrtoti (7) . .. " ..... so Lea..... , Hoftevdl L,t-1 'l·J • 2 • 2 , 1 la(fn 124 J I 0 I ~ Hooton 2 1 o o O 2 ...... - MthltrW.1·6 t 9 0 0 2 4 • T-2.:M A-.1U17. MAJOR LEAGUE L&AO&RS .. Amtrkaft L .. tut IA TTINO (265 el ti.fl)-Wlnfltld, Ntw York, .U.; Melllnelv. N-Yvk •. 337; Hrbek, MlnntSOlt, .329; IMurrtY, aattl· INlrt, 317; RIPktn, hlllmore, ~12 RUNS OwEnna, loston, H . RH'"4e<lOft, • 0.kltnd, 74, lullar, Cit~. 71; .,.,,.,, h.iOll, 70; lk>oet. loalon, 70; MoMOv, Toronto, 10 Rll. Klnemen, 0.klencl, II, AOevla, S.lllt, ll, E~rrn, 9tlllmore, Q , aiq,, lollon, 13; Armes, lolton, 1t HITS: Gercta, Toronto, US, Mattlnetv. Ntw Vortt. 1U1 ltlollen, lellllTlore, ll4; EHltf, ltOtlclfl, lal1 f.Murrev, ltll~. 116 OOUtLU L.APetrl.ii. Tt»•· 30; OwEvena. eo.ton, t1; Gar&, Toronto, 711 Malllngly, MN Yon, t7, ..... Tnn, M; eow.M. *",., '6, t..emon. o.tr.lt, J6 TRlfll.U MoMlw, Toronto. lJ; CollM, T orento. H 1 U.Ww, 1' er onto, t, k Glbton. C>tlfelt. I, Owen. kllttlt, I HOME lltUNS Att'Mt, toltoft. IO; Kint• men, Oiakl9N 2', Kittle, C:flk:.eo, U , Munlt't. OIM._llftd. tl, ThOmtoft, °""""'· D • S TOUlN aASllS: R...,..._, OUJilftd, "'......,, ~ "· tolRM. roronto, is: lvttlr, a.v.tencl,,.. Oercle. loromo, n PITCHING C 10 4llebloftl). Leal, Tortnte. '2_,, 2 13, GOtm, .... ttnon, '2·•, 241; ltlleJ, Taranto, 11•4, 2.JI P9ttY, Ottrolt. 1'••. J.a. N19kre, Ntw YMt;, 12 5, "U1 ITRIK&OUTS Wiii, ........ 1Jt4 ~'°"' a..111e. ne. Houtn. T.,;n, uo, ,..., Tortnto, 117, H....,.., .... YCM'k, ttl. "'Vl!!S GulMn1ltrrv, l{tiflM' OlY, 1', -!lllll. Q9'.JIM •• l_:•!1 ':.l~·•u!ltt. .~1; o........ ~.Minne• '°''· n .............. IA T11NO CMS at 1118) G....vnn., M11 Loa Alamit. MONDAY'S ltHULTS Mttl af '2·"'9M _.,..,._... mMtlnt) "11tST aACfi. 400 va<dt So"erlon E lllhl llu"-11 7.IO S.20 3.60 SC.ts Clat>Oer IGercle) 7710 1UO FIVlno Peutm (MVIH) . 3 60 Abo rectd: Ful Fleme. Ovo Chick, W•Yloft Awn, Chrlaloohtr Slv, lamlft Juo, Ont wav Rider. Tlmr 2014. U IXACTA (2·3) Ptld '302 00 SllCOMD RACll. 350 Varda > COPltd NIQlv (Crte9tr) 12IO 5'0 HO ltldl I.au <Peullnt) UO 3 60 Chieno (Bardl 4.00 Allo recect. Miu Ludlv ~. PolV Rock, Erins Ludt.. Time 17 '3. nc•o RACll. 350 verd" TIPov Jtn IFrvdevl • 1 00 uo UO MldlHI Hunt t8r00kl) 6.20 00 Hotv Mall (lufltt) i.60 • Also rtcllCt eurnem. Run EddJt Jon, Limited RtQUftt, ~· • Hnven, Decatm Saini, ~Mltllc Jetta, Women of SUMI ante. Tlmt· 17'7 l'OURTH RACll. 350 vwcn. HerdtObehumboll (DlmO) 4 IO •.OO 3.AO Our Cher91no ladV CMllChtlll 10.60 10.00 Lii Soohlt llvon (Berd) S.60 Allo rec.cl: Johnft'll No Go. Arc Ell Cltl, Nena BAbv, VlrQl11 ttlt. Douos Buo. Pink DlemondM, lme Ezv Gel. Time. ll.06. 13 EXACTA (4·7) peld M3.f0 ""7H llACI[. lSO yerds. Fiiiy BumCIO (Ruiz) 12.60 UO 2 IO sw .. 1 Llttie eo <Edwerdsl :uo 2.AO Siar SCleneled Ledv (Leck~ s.oo Also read: Dr Cernlt, s.m, Lllllt FlllV, HO Rome Jon, Merri Pel, 00111 DcM~v. Mertvs Mouse, Cut To Fii to Time: 1U4. 13 IXACTA (1-6) paid 5'200 sut1'M llACL JSO verdl A110010n1us (Ledte\I) 4M llO 320 Azurt Glfano CCarCIOu). 7 60 s oo Lord W1llln (Werd) 3 IO Abo rac9d: Stlltb RtQUnl, SI°""' II, OtMY Moo!\ Buo. Paris Two. EctlPM Awerd. Clnet Doc,~ Ohl Tlme 11 OI. SllVllNTH 9lAC&. 350 verds, Llses Euv Stot (Harl) -.oo 2.60 UO Mbler Hulen (CttcloH) 3.60 3.20 Mrrll Pot OfJ;old {Orooka) IUO Also recect· er.111Hn. Leu e. Current, Adsi.r Men, I Will NtYer T ... Boon 8oont, Chanl.-, Cllern0t9nt TMal Time· 17.". 13 IXACTA 17·1> Ptld 11710 IUGHTH RACll .• vard1. EllHOS Express (Trar) •.ao 3.IO 2.IO A ~ (Mvtts) 1.20 S.00 DrlP91n ChOcOlelt (Giii) 3.20 Also rte9d: Jet Old II, .Mlcroweve Plut, Chads Charoer Ber, lnfllrelt, MM e.ron, Lents Rov•I Azure, La LA Lucy Time, 1US. n f"tcK sax (7+1-7+7) oeld .....,.60 wllll •1 wtnntno tldlets (1h1horltsl.12 Pick Six consoltlloc'i Mid '30 00 '-1111 '32 wlnnlne llcktll (flv• horMS). NtNTH UCL i50 vw~ Six N Six (Ward) 00 2.IO 2.10 Moo11 blm (Hert) 3 00 2M MM:e OOnovan (Harmon> 6.20 -Abo rec:ed: FonstladOWlno, Lile Jt1, FOl'fl Half Moon, Atolll Wiid, Tm Wind· ottn. W1kcld Ole Wilcft. Tlmr 11.ll. SJ IXACTA (3•1) oeld SISM. Al~5,2.S Oii Mar MONDAY'S RISULTS 0211tfU-41V'*""••N ........ ) .. llST RACI. 6 lurlontJL MtsMet To Gtrele (Vll\11) i.«I uo 2.AO Wlttl Ubtrtv (DeloadlJIO) 4.20 lM Lone Ll11t The k~ (C..lanedt) •• Also r~: 'ltnotl. I'm A BMtnltr., Jet ~. U1K Rldslt, a.rt« Gold, Good Tensions, C.e>l'n Anlfty. Time; l:IO •1$. SllCOND ••ca .• furlonllJ. Slllln' Hlth (PlncaY) UO UO 3.IO Ktle!llt (Vttenwtlel S.AO .iOO Kt.o Cller91no (McGurn> 12.20 Alao raced: cozv corner. Envov•a son.. GoMIOclln. RUii To ,,_., HalldVMtn, W••I• ..Utl, Snow Mollon, Sulit Tlllrlttn, Don Sen MltrCOI. • T1mll: u1. 12 OAI\. Y OOV1H.8 (7-41 Nici SZUO. TI4•D RACL t 1/16 mllet. PH De Chtvtl CMcCrn> tM 4 .0 1AO Ooodlestdl tPtlcav} 4 OI i 20 • A ftlOhl ldM IO•houiw1eJ $.00 Also raetd $06o 0'1111, Tlmlll, Ftmald PW!t, NatlO!'lll Gu9rd, Via "-'°· Ea· dusl.,. Art&. Time• I~ l/S. S.S lllCACTA 16•., Mid 117.JO l"OUllTH •AC•. • iurlOftOL' enuaro COtNn <011v•te1) 7.IO uo 4'0 • Tne IUSll IOotMleuitt) 35.10 t 60 Clttr Cini .. <Ce•ltftede) '10 AIM factd C.llOllO. DM4 LNIW, Chit s..,,.Old You S.v Wll'I, Ab\Olula Clnell, si....-~ Dev TlrN: 1:10 .,S """" RAC•. 6 turlont• YIJllOll'I Star (SM\l<f) 17 60 1100 S60 8owtf' Sono (Hewltvl >IO 3 oo Oon'a co·~ CMtHl s 20 AbO r~· Holmlsn, H.Ckntv, Conl•· QUOI, Sllvtredo Chtme>, JOllY Writer. LO!her, Ptll 8tla K•~• Time 1:10 215 u IXACTA 11a.11 oelO m•oo Sl>Cnt aACL Ont milt. Full of WIMSOm (McCrll) JOO 2.IO UO Hawall1111 Min (Merel 2J 70 '00 Siik Clllffon COllvtrH) J.60 AbO rec.ct, Har• Comts Lo~. Tiit "''*'· tot si.aw, a1aztne Ga,,,., oann. Oowtflt.•~ Time 1:11 1/S s•v•NTH ltACL 6\'I fur!MI• L..tlilltlltlo h\'. (McCetrOll) 4 00 1 IO IAI Emllelldtft (0r""9 t • 00 J IO Gelanl :5"dtl (Sllotf'MILtt) 4 IO AIM r.c.cs: Mott AC110n. Stand Pet, -ltlvela flleclor, Hortltt Tlmt Ill. II •XACTA (Wl -111 W ... SJ PfCtC sax C• •• ,..IN .. ) Mid M,615.to wltfl IO wlnnlnit tlcbla Ill• "°"'"' u ~ Stx coneo11ttl0ft "" an • Witt! tJS w1Mfnt I ttt (ftl't f!OrMI) alOMTM AACI. 1 111• m1ltt GCI furl Jtu De ..... (Plr!c.ty) _, ....... ' .. ~ Herc <Ger I • aM IM • ..,, CMtze) :a.GD AKO ntt:90. 0.-AC:aflt, Rt Act., l«f'MIY Ttmt 4J •I. Iii IXACTA Cl•') NICI Qt NJtlfT1t RAC .. t tunont1 ovat~..lf!lnQYl~..,.f,, __ ~ e'MM!I Cilnt C~ ~cttawtnJ TTmt 111 U IXACTA CHI ... d 1112.0ll ·~ u .. NFLtl~ NATIONAL COHtt RINCI New Of na hnFr9nchCD a.rm At11nlt Oetroll Mlnnetol• Ttmll6a.v C:nla110 Green••v Witt W L T ,Cf. '"if "4 1 0 0 1000 20 I 0 0 1.000 10 • I 0 000 1 17 810.000 37 Ctn1ral I 0 0 1 0 • I 1 0 0 I 0 0 1 0 ••at I 000 11 ICIOO '1 JOO '° .eoo 10 .000 17 o..... I 0 0 1.000 l1 MY Glen11 I 0 0 l.000 4' SI. 1.0UI• I 0 0 I 000 1' Wt"'1nttoll I 0 • 0 1.000 tt Prllledllo!'lla 0 ' 0 . 000 •• AMlltlCAN CON .. llRllNC& Clnetnnell P1t1aourst1 Clntlnd Haullon Wftt 2 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 , 0 ~ I 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 l 0 l!eit 1IOO 0 1.000 17 .000 10 000 13 000 20 1000 21 1000 Jl 000 w. .008 17 Miami Buffalo lnctlenel>Olil Hew Enoland NY Jets 1 0 0 1000 2• 0 I 0 000 >, 0 I .o .000 3 0 I 0 .00020 01••1~ irncar• etmtt .,_.. ti Wa1tltnelon KtnMS Cllv ., $1. L~I· Se1vntlY'• GM* Plllltdetphla al Pltlsburotl Mtw Enollllld al 8ufftl0 Alltnl• ti Ntw Orlttna Cl'llCl9() vs Grffn Bev et MllW•uk .. Clnclnnall at Tempe 8tv Sfflllt •I Dtlroil Miami el Minnesota New York Glen~ at lndleneooUs Ntw VOl"ll. Jtll el HOUllOll Sen Frend.co ti Denver Dalles el Sen OltOO Mtl*r• Game Cltvetencl 11 RllM NewPott Hart.or YC ONE·OIMGN REGATTA Tl-eliftv W..... ETCHELL.S·22 -I. Jim 8udlln9ham. NHYC:, 2 Artllur RobintOll, NHYC; 2 Rlcrlerd le"tlllL NHVC. ' THISTL£' -I. eruct Gout, Mlulon 8W YC::t; lloD9"t. Vwt'Htlel, ...... YC; 3. P9UI K91Y, ~nla~a YC. SABOT A -I. Pal.II Nwlno Hunllneton Harbour vc. 2. Marla Coon, NHYC; l. W1111e Frederickson, eve. • SABOT 8 end C -1. Scoll Quen, San , 01e90 YC; 2. David kllocll, NHYC; J. J Febltn Roussel, NHYC. 1 LI00-14 -1 Merk Gtudlo, hl\la 1 CQl'lnll'llen YC; 2. Miii• PlndUl.V. BCVC; 3 •. s Peut Blank, SOIJll'I Short YC. .. LASER -I Cllrlnv Giiiette, Udo Isle • YC; 2. Rod Turner, BCYC. OEFENDER·12-Jonn Oenlel, NHYC; • 2. JoM Altunder. NHYC;). ~ Grttn· leaf, NHYC. HOLOER·t -Erle Proul, eve, 2. Tom S Toole, eve. 3 Jory TWiii. NHVC. .. ,,.., Am Clltll*' ..... , .. ..........., ....... , OVERALL -1. Chtc:kroatt, Mon .. ,. LMneslon, o.c Rev YC, 2. Totnellewtl, 1 JoM Ar-. ealbot YC; 3. S«art, Jac:M Woo4, Callfomia YC. CLASS A -1 Sorcery; 2. Nnane. .: Mltrvlll G""'1 Jr .• Ntw Y~ 3. l(leloe, Jim ., Kllrov. Cellfomle VC. CLASS • B -I Chtdu'nelt; 2. t TomaheWl, 3. Otlenda, AlelAndro Pl"••· •: llllV Cl.ASS C -I. Shock Wt.,., Ntvlllt • Crldlton. New z..tend: 2 Vlctorv, tlt°""'1 Bulkus, Cebrlllo Beed! YC1 3. Chtllenlll llf, L-Abr•hlml, Ausnlle . ~LASS 0-1 S.ndlhan, Dwnfl ~ Au•lrtlla; 2 Rrtenoe, Wavne Wlltn«ltre, PltrPOlnl e.v VC, 3. Or!Nmt, Yewo Furukawa, Japell.-- CLASS E -1 Exa1'0r,T;llt. Miceli, New • leeltnd; 2 lndien Glbtltr, 611 Farris, • Aualr•ll•. 3. General HO$Pllal, Tom Wellnsl(I, W•lklkl YC. SuftdeV'S .... OVERALL -l. Clleckmalt; 2. Euclor; 3. • Tomehewk. • CLASS A -1. Sorc:ery; 2. 8oomtreno, GtorGt Covmentar11, Ntw York; 3. Mlrvene. , CLA~ 8 -1. Cfltdll'Nlt; 2. T omtMWll., J. Orlallda. CLASS c -I. Vletorv, 2. eravun. lrvlnt Loutlt, St. Francis YC; ). Shoc:a • Weve. : CLASS D -1. lkndllrem; 2. Rtw11te; 3. .. Toeo VIII, Toeo Yamela, ~Mn. • CLASS E -l, Exaclor; 2. Sundenot, : Arlflur Stewert, Aualrelle; 3. Gtntrll Hos· pllel - .,.. ........ DAVIV'S LOCKllt (New!Mft 11..o) : -1SS •nelln. l wrecuoa, 1'3 111on11o. ,. • Yellow! .. , • rock f.&ai. 21 clllct llMa, 71 send bell, 71 mecttertl, i thteo&Mecl, 2 : KU!llln. • • NllWf'OtlT I.ANDING (New"" ~) -Q tnoltn 1' 9omlO, t vel!Owta«, • JS tMUS, 62 me<...,... t JCXUI OLYWIAO ,..... ,.... ~ totn lt!rOlltll Moc\M,~... • • , "" 1"' htM1W Otvr'llob wllll COUtllfY ... lll¥9r. INl\Jt end '°'ti ,,.,.,... WOii .... ......, .,.._ T• United Stat.. 4' 39 16 101 ltOl'Mnla 16 10 ' ,, Wt1t Oermnv I 12 n ,, Clint la 6 5 'U c.nadl 7 • 1 22 Oral lrltaln ) 4 15 22 Auelrt... I I 10 21 JI Mn 7 4 I If 11•1-f t , 6 ,. ,116N • , 4 11 Franct I 2 6 11 . SwttMn 0 4 I t Neltlertend1 2 2 • • louttl ICMM 2 2 l S Mtlleo 1 2 1 4 ~ 1 1 2 • 'V\lf0Wv1e 1 1 2 4 lwltttnend 0 t 2 4 Ntw flelalld 2 0 1 3 lrat 1 1 1 3 Dtnmart 0 1 2 3 NorWat 0 4 2 3 Aullt"le • l 1 • 2 Greec;e 0 .1 1 t c..,.... .. 1 0 l Ptru 0 1 0 1 INln o 1 o 1 Jemalca 0 0 1 I .-wtU191 a 1 1 1 Taiwan o o 1 1 V111t1Ulla t 0 • 1 I Mll*'f'I medlll Winnen TilACK AND fflllD Wemtft'• ---. O.OLO -Velefle lrlacoe-H90t11, Unlltd Slates SILVElt -Cllalldre ClleeNb<WOUQtl. United Sttlta ••ONIE -Klillll'Yn Coott1. GrMI lrllatn ....... --.... O.OLD -Joequlm CruJ, GrMI lrllaln SILVlll -Setle1ti.n Coe. Grt1t lrtt1ln lltOHH -1111 JoMt. United Sltlel ....... -Miiin G.oLO -Doltll Mellnte, ltomenle SILVlll -Kim G....._, United Slaltt IROHZE -Flta ~In. ltomenll ,,,_,, ....,.,., .,,.... OOL.O -.JuN Tlalnln, F""-nd SILVE• -Kart·Hant Rlltm, Wtat 4ermeny • aaOHIE -Ktaua ~. West Ger- men¥ MM'•Mt-1MIW ....... OOL.O -llow Klnldomt. Ut'll!td "'* SILVElt -Gr .. Foatw, United Stata lllOHIE -Ario lrvo.tre. Fln!Md ,,,_,, u..-. OOL.O -can LAwla, United Stalel llL.VEll-Gerv Honev, ~ UOH2I -OlovMnl ............. 11411¥ 1t,lil.,...,. Nit GOLD -Albtr1o Co¥1, llllv SILVEll -Marttl Vainio, Flnland lltOHll -Mike McLeod, lrttaln W.,,...aJ9"9t G.oLO -Tttll Sandenon, lrltaln SILVllt -Tllna Ll .. k. Flnllnd lltOHZE' -Fellma Wlllllnad. lrllell'I DMMO w.m..'• _.. • • •N G.oLO -SYIVll letnlw, Canade SILVEll -IClllV McCCll"mlCk, United Sltlta ·lllOHZE -Ctlrllt!LW Sevfert, Unlltd Stat• JUOO IU.S,.... G.oLO -AAn lveont Ktun1 Souttl KorM SILV£1t -l!alo GamtNI, ltatv lltONZE -Kwrfttl lrown, Britain ~ m,_... OOL.O -ltolf MAMt, Wnt Oermanv SllVElt -V .... Grwe, ltomanle lllOHZE -~ Niemi, Finland TrMll _,...., (If~) M.IN IOO -1. JOIQUlm Cruz. lrllll, l:G.00, (OtvmPfc record, old record, lia.50, Alber· lo Juanlor9111, Cutia, 1'76'; 2. Sebettlan c... Great lrlleln, 110 ... ; i. ·~ "°'*• lnkltw, lt\k:ll., 1:AU3; 4. llllV Konc:Nlllll, Kanya, 1:AUI; 5. Oontto lablt, ltalY. 1*53; '· ldWln l(oecfl, Kenva, 1~1 7. Jofwly Grav, s.nta Monlct, 1:A7M; I. Sll'tt Ov91t, Gr9et lrltelft, 1:52.21. llOHH -1. ltoeer Klnodom. Plttstiuroll, lut, (Ol'rmole record, Old recoril, 13.24, Mid by tnall'l)I 2. Gr.. Fo&IW, l..OI MMn. 1U3; 3. Ario lrv9oert, Finland, llAO; 4. MMti. Md<w, Cena41. ll.AS. s ... Tonie C.,.,._., Ceraon. 1S.SS; 6. Si.nant c.mt111, France, 1>.71; 7. Cettot Sale, SNlft, 13.IO; I. Jeff Gla11, C.""9, 14.15. 1UOO-1. A1Mrio c..-.. ltatv. 27:A7.S.; 2. "Meritt Velmo, Flneend, 27~ 1.10; I. MldlMI Mcleod. Great lrtt1ln, 2U6.22 ... Mike Ml.llYOlll. l(enye, 21:16M; 5. SalVetCll"I Alltltlo, llllY, 21:06.50; 6. Owtalotlh Htttt, Wiii Oermetiv ftM.21; 1. SoattlMta II•. Kenva, a:OJ.tt1 I. Yut.U ICeMI, Jatietl, ~.06; f . Stew '*'-• Great lrltaln, 21:21.0I, 10. JoM Treacy, lr•nd, 2t:21M. AiaO: 16. .... .-wtw. Alw'noM, a:M.B. Lone J~ 1. Cart Uwlt. Houlton, 21-tl,to; 2. 0WV Honey, A111lrallt, 27-0"'; J. Glo¥ennl £•"*"'"· llllY. 27"°"; 4. LMrv Mvrtdla, Ollfto, ,._,.,.; S. Uu Y\dluene, 1 CMM. H-™; 6. Joey Wtlla, .. Nlmes. u.-1-.; 1. Junk:lll UtUI. JINI\, 25-lO; .. Jone--11 Kim, loutll Koree, 25-7~; f . Yutuf All!, N19Wle, 2H\4i; 10. Antonio Cor#ot, SNl~1 25-2~; 11. Miiie NlcltM, Fr«n0nt, 2S-011t; 12. J~ravt Kio. Nlotrle, 2A•10. Hamnw Throw -1. Jllhl Tlalnen, Flnllnd, 256-2; 2. ICarl•HllM lllthm, w .. 1 Otrmally, 25S·l0; 3. Kr.us PlotllaUa, w .. 1 · Oermeny, tsM1 4. GletnHolo Urtando, llelY 24'-2; s. Orlando llenctllnl. ltelY, ,.2, " 1111 o~. S4.IMY¥11t. 241-0; 1. Herr! HuNala, Flnlend, 247-0; •. Waller ClofMI, Frl/Q, Ul-0, t. lotl Weir, Great lrltlln, IJl·J; 10. Mat1Jn Olr¥111, Gr•t - lrllaln, fV·J; 11. CllrlstOllll Salww, Wnt Oermanv. fou!M; 11. Matt Mlltllam, Ol'MI lrltaln. ~ IAIK•TIALL (It tfll '"""" ........ ) S 111.m, -Thltd 111Ke {C'rllna "' C.llHI) 1 •.rn -CNltllP!Onll\lo 1u.1 vt. 1ou111 Kof'tia) IOXJNO (tt LA ,..,._ AftM) .u a..m.•J 111 in. -"'"tmt ,.t:30 o.m. -,..tllmt •GUHTlttAN Cat A.NMll) 10 a.rn.•S """ -Tllll'll JUl'l'IPIN COl'nlllltllloft ..., • l'•NClHO (lt ...... '-dl) \ t a.rn. • s o.m. -Men'• ,..,,, foll Of'tlltnl; "*"' llldlvtdulll ... ~r men·a~..-.~. 1·11 111.m. -Meft'a t"m 1oll lll'tlltnt, men•• lncllvtduai aatwe ,.,..,.,.,.,; tNn'a lndMduel .. lite fltlela ,..LD HOCK•Y , ...... Wt~) I • m.-{mttt) _.tldafan n Grut lrheln 9'45 t.rn.-(womtn) H•nd VI Ctf\edl 1:'5 o.m.-<women> Auatratte.,. u.s A !:JO 111.m.-{"*I) H*°d ¥L KtMICIV HANDBALL {It Cll Stitt ,,.,..,,..,, 6:30 111.m.-{womtn) Clllnt n. Autlrla I 111.m.-<womtnl Yueosltvle va. KorH t:30 111.m.-Cwomen> Unlled Slatu va. w .. 1 Oermeny JUDO (It Cll 11111 LA) •·• p.m,-Half m~w.lollt• TINNIS (It UCLA) f e.m.·UO P.m. -16 matcnea VOLLIYIALL Wtm111 (If L ... a.dl) 10 Lm. -Se\<enltl ~ (Caneda Vi. lrad) Noon -Flftll Pfec:. (W..I Germany vs. Soutll Koru) 4 o.m. -Bron11 medllt Nl'lll (Jaoan n . Pwu) ~ P.m.-Gold med9I Nmt (U.S. vt. Ollnal WAT•tt POLO , ....... ., ... ~, -l ~ -United Stat" VI. Autlrtlla 10 -Gratct va. JIHll 1:31-YU90tllm vs. Wat Gwmeny ' -fta!V .,. '"Ina 7:30 -lrun vs. Cenade . t -Hollend "" SHiii W•IGHTLll'TING • {tit~ Mii •1 I I, WwtdOlfl'W) 2 .. """' -Htewvwtltflh H o.m. -Htevvwelollta Wit.STUN~ Cat AlllMlln) Noon-3 P.m. -Fretltvft Pttllmt 6-1:30 p.m.-FrenlVll trtllmt . YACHTING Cat LAN IMdl) l~ p,m. ""'.' Shcttl rec:e Wednesday ARCHIRY Cat LAN leNfl) 10 a.m.·12'AS p.m. -Womtfl'• 70m and '°"'· men•• '°"' and 7Gwn Wllttiwa. Kenn. 51.56. IOO -1. OOlna Milliite, •omanla, 1:5UO; 2. Kim Gdeglw, Sante Monkl, 1:SU3; 1 Flta Lo.In, ltomanla. 1:5UJ; 4 G*1elle Dorio, ltltY, 1:5U5. S. Lorraine BMW, GrHI lrlt•ln. 2:tOJO; .. lltyfll WVsodtl, El TCll"O, HU4; 1. Martrll Kllnoer. w .. 1 OtrmanY, HUS. t. Cerotl111 O'SMt, trelend. 2:00.n. Jevtlln -l. T .... Sandlnon, Gr•I lrttaln, Jn.2, {Qtvmplc record, Old record, -2N-5. Maril eo.on. evoe. "90); 1 Tllna llllak, Flllland, 226-4; 3. Fatlmt WNIDrMd, Great 8r1taln, 220-'; 4, Tuull L.Mtlaelo, Flnllnd, 217·10; 5. Trine Soller9. Norwav. .tll-1; .4. Jnodd. :TbdMft. Wnl-~. 207-6; 7. 8"1• Pet••· Wnl Germany, 2M·•;• t. KMln Stnlttl, San I.A.Ill Oblapo, 203·7; J. Sharon Glalloft, Great Brittin, 1"·f; 10. C.ttly Sul!Mlll, SOYtll sen Fren· claco, 1'1-6; 11. Htllne Lalnl, Flnlend, 1to-10. 12. Pett'a ltlvera. Auatralle. 114·4. United Statn lraal Kor11 "'""""' Tuntall Jaoan Caneda llllY Chine EeYDt ...... Y'•"*- W L ll'tl , 1 6 > I 6 J I 6 I 3 2 0 4 0 J l 3 1 3 I 1 , 0 4 6 ' • 2 0 . Cenade def. Jepen, 15-10,lS•I, U.·t Ital';' def. EeYDt, 15-4, 15-7, 15-6 Brull def. United Stites, 1S·10, 15-11, 15-2 Soutll korM def. Aroet\tlna, 1H. 14·16, IJ•1S, lS-7, 15·12 OMnt ~J Sorltl9tMMtd -I. SvMt lernler, Cen· Ide, SJG.70 1110lnl1, 2. KlllY McCorm!Q, Co!UmlM, ONo. 521-... J. Ctlrlttlna Saufert. Ann Artlot~ Mldl,~17.62: 4. U Yltlut, Ctllne, 906.52; S. LI Qlao~~tna, "1M; 6. ~Ill T tllOrlo, Mtxlco. · 7. L.1111'1 lmllll, 1~, 4SlM: I. Del*ll '""'·Cell· .. ecll, GI."; l . :JIMl9et OoMlt, A111lrelle, ""U; lO. ~ ~. Nt1'*1Mtt, GUO; 11. Mita ltoaatnt, S'"1dtll, 424 NJ 12. vwonic. •"*· "'9tntlne, m .a . DIVING (If U$C) •.:JIH;JO 111.rn. -Nlefl't 1«'""°4irel llnM •QUHTltlAN (It~) 2•6 P.m. -T•m ....... l'•NCtNO (at LARI lleadl) t t.ITI ·S 111.m -MMf'a 1tam 1111te ortllma. men•• 1nc1111~ .... tw mt; women•a ._m fol 11111111 I• 11 Ill m. -M«i'S t9am Ubtl Ottliml1 l'Nl'I'• lndlvldull .... ~a; WOl'Nft'a team fOll "-• HANDIALL (et Cll Stall ,...,., 11 1 m.-{"*'l S""'lfter'lend ¥L IUMI 12:30 p.m -{rntll) Y"'°"9vla VI bmenla -· 2 P.tn.~l'IWI) OIMwi 'l'L Wt&I Oermenv 6:30 111.m.-{"*') Japan va. Alotrlt I 111 m.-<men> Sweden v1. SNln t-30 o.m.-{men) Unlltd SI•* vi. ICCll"M > ,..LD HOCK•Y (.t ••st Los A!WIM) 7·10:301.m. -Two Mmlflnll Nma JUDO Ctt Cll State LA) •·I 11.m. -Mlddltwtlthts socc•• , ........... , 6·1 p,m. -Stmlflnal matdl (al Palo Alto) 1:30-10-.lO p.m. -s.mtflnel metdl T•NNIS {It UCLA) ' 1.m. ·5:30 t .m. -16 matdlft TRACK AND ,IBLO (.t LA C4illeum) - f:30 1.m.·1 o.m. ~ O.C.ltllon ....,, ... ,.,.....,,,, Mmlllnals and flNI•. asaorted ewntt 4-l:JO -OtcalNofl evenn, orellrnt •. awnlftnala and flnlll. · UIOt1ed ewnta VOLL•YaALL (ltU.~> t-.m.·3111.m. -TWo Mmlflllal maim. · and ,.,...., flnets, "" tnrOUllll 10tll Nc:ta ~ 11.m. -,_ ..,,_mn.t t"Nllc.'Ma Ind "*"'' ~ '"' lllrOUOll 10ttl ~ W•tGHTLll'TING Cat L.9¥*-M91 ""'' .... ........,, 2·4 OJl"I. -Suotr1*vvwe191\tt 6-t P.m. -SUNmel¥YW119M1 wtlUTLING (ltMIMllm) Noon·3 o.m. -FrMStvft Pf'tllms and Mmlflnall In Mlnlt wel9M dis'" . , 6·1:30 P.m. -Frantvte orlllml ano semlflnets In tome welGht ~ YACHTING CJ!. LAN 9Mdl) 1~6:30 T"· -Seventll Md final na w ... ..... ~ ............. 7 SC.. IW Querten Unllect Sltttt 2 3 3 o-t Holland 2 2 2 1-7 United ~-ac:orlng: Schroeder >. McOolltld 2. ltotlti'laon I, J. CemoOtll I. Slmen 1. Holland ICOl'lnor au.u!* 5, Heiden I, Noordloratt l. MllMllY'• OtllW sar. Medel ltound YU90llavle '· Auatrallt 6 W•t Germanv I, SNln I C...tltitllt .... G~ 11, Cllllde I CNnt 10. Jeiien 4 ltttv U, lraall • ~ .............. W L T !'ff l'A ,._ 2 0 0 1' IS I 2001111• 1 0 I 11 14 3 01116111 a 2 o 12 11 o 0 2 0 12 " 0 TNeY'a ScMIMI UO a.m. -United St1tu VI. Austra!le 10 a.m. -Greece vs. Japan 1:30 111.tn. -YUIO'llm vs. Wnt Ger· manv 3 11.m. -llatv vi. C"lna 7:30 11.tn. -lra1I n. Clllldl ' 111.m. -+.Ollend ""' $Nin ..........,... SdlMll9t l:JO a.m. -United Slat• vi. Wnt e>ennenv . 10 •.m. -ClllM YI. lrul 1 :30 P.m. -Au&trellt vs. Holland 3 P.tn. -Cel\ld9 VI. JINll 7:31 111.m. -""" va. Gr..c. t 111.m. -YUIOlleVle va. SNl/1 ftrllllY'•~ UO a.m. -Wiit Gtr!Tlany vs. Holland 10 a.m. -J1Nt1 vs. Iraan 1:30 111.m. -Spain va. Aultrllle J p,m, -Canecla VI. llaJy •• 1 1:30 O.IT\. -Clllnt va. GrMC» f p.m. -Unlled Stales vt. YU90lllvta s.cc..- MmaY"• ~ (It ,..,,...,., lrtlll s. Cenaclt, .. C1tllt119"') Yueot11Vle S, WMI Gln'neny t .. <. ~v ~ <•1 LM• C.. ... KIYu • 1 t• lftllenl Cltt« I> I J.mc CY via), 1 At, 2 M v (bf .. O, 1 SU6; J lllttO (Sllalnl, l:Sl.'2, 4 IYW CSW!ttertandl, 1:$$.J9, S Pt'lllflt Ortleflcl), to I to. 6. WPl!lt I UlA I, 2.:CM 12, 1 Na (HonlJ KOflt), 7 1',a llleee 2> 1. Motllft (&wtclttl>, 1:51.JSI 2. • SClloll cw ... Oerrntlly), 1Jl-"; , k'M'lta (lt1ty), 1J:U2, 4 UOtOn (Gr"t lrltalnl, UUS, l N·Getna 11\<Cll"Y Coa1U1 2:01.l6 <1teu ii. 1. ou. CttOtNnle), t•a 2 ,.,.."'°" (NI,. ~), ll4JJ2, J. lrlOIOf'I (Frel\C:itl, lM23; 4. Oidliftflew IClnaoe>, t JS.lt, l. ltasmuaaen CNw\ltJ11>. 1'"'51,, 6. Ol lrauw• ( .... """'>. 1Rl0, 7, Vtleuet IArllftflne), 1.5' II ....... (ltact 1) 1. Wllllt IUSAI, 1:50..tf, l...r IS10r1htt1tftd), l:S)M, J. Ve~ <A,..._ 11na>, 1:5.J n. 4 ~-cc--.1. l:lSJl, S. N'Gema llYON C..tU. l;tJAIJ (ltau 2): I lt1vnu1M11 INorw•v>. Ut IO, 2 IJPIOtl CGl'•t lrltain;J, 1.54 11; J OI lrauw (aetglurn), l:S1.02, 4 Pt'ltlolt UrtllndJ, u1.n , s. Ht, <Hone Kone>. 2JU7. • litaYM·2 C•.'""'9n> "(It~ 11:'1. JM!# Zee nd. l:Ul2. 1 Swtden, 1:37.12, J lton'leftle, l:l7 '4, • A1111r11, l:llOO, S Norwev, UUO. • Au.Ira .. , 1 •l24; 1, HOlll KOllO. l:At 7 • {ltact 2) 1. Cenada. 1:36 lO. 2 tta .,, 1'36.72~ J. Wut Oermll!Vr 1:&12, 4 UN1.- S11tn (Hllllltm, Kent), 1;3ff4;S 19191um, UU7; 6. Gao (Ctl!N ), 1'Uf; 7. Ivory Coast. Ut 12, lt.-cN .. (ltace 1): 1. Austrle,'1.A0.12; 2 F\tMnd, l:.O.n; 3 Blill•um. 141 '7; • Auatr1n1, UUS; s Jaoen, 1.AH2; ' 1¥Cll"Y Coatt. 1;47 .... {lltace 2): 1. soa1n, 1;3'60; 2. Norwev. UO.IO: J Unll'td Sl1tn, 1:.0t7; 4 Swllur· lend, 1:41.35; s. c111na, 145.74; 6. Hone Kone. 1:51.21. CeftMIM I <• "'""*) (ltact I): 1. J1kobMn (OIM'lwk), toJ.O•: 2. GronlUod IFlnSend), 2~11; l Inoue {JaPtnl. 2:0U1; •· •-ud <Frwa>. 2:07.fO, s Tretn (GrMt Brlt11n>. 2·.ouo. 6. ltozentlll (Honwav>. 2:1UI • (llt«;t 2): 1. Olaru (ltomanle), 2:G.••. 2. Celn CCIMCll), 2~ 30. 3. Favat (WHI Germenvl, 2:0US; 4 ~ <USA>, 2.'07.20; s. l.Aoel (Stein) • ..,.. 01; .. hckluNI cs .... tdln>. 2.U..12, 1. Y"" (ICorH ), 240t2. llt9"dleet {llece 1); 1. ltouttskl (H«wav>. 2'CIUO. 2. l.Aoe1 ($09ill), Hf.12; 3 ltenelid (Frll'C:t), 2:10 44, 4 YI.Ill (Ker•>• 2:51.JI · (ltace 2>: \. Train (Gr. lrlt >. 2;1Uf; PllllMMorn {USA), 2'13 II. l kckJund ISwtdtn>. 2:21.11. c-.... 2 (Sit nwlen) • Utece l ): 1. YUIOlll\<la, UUI; 2. France, 1:51.0.; ). SNln. 1:50.14; 4. West Germanv. 1:51.0I; 5. United Statta {Youno, ,..,..,t),., J'Sa. •_;_-··~~~·-· (llact 2): 1. llomanla. 1:'1.11. 2. c.n.o.. l:SU7; 3. Great lr111111, 1:52..221 '-JINfl, 1:$).AI; !. Mexico. 1:51.IO; 6. Kew•, 2:25.20. WOMSN l(ayalr 1 (5'0 ,...,.., (ltact I); I. AndtrllOn {Sweden), 2:Gl."; 2. •ttncow• {Australle), 2:05.51; 3. Miar1nncu (ltomanle), 2:05.n, 4. Cono¥W (United Sletn), 2:0Uf; s. Smltntr (GrN I• lrtl1lnl, ~I0.11, 6. Ho (Mono Kont), 2~.M. (ltace 2): 1. Sclluttottr IW•t G«met1Yl. 2:02.14; 2. IMHon (Franca), 2:0U1: 3. Owdut {Holend), HUS; 4. Guay (Cen· Ida), 2:06.,., s llt11mu1Mn (Norw1v>. KIYM 2 {Sit mtllWS) (lt1C9 1) 1 Cenade, Ul.41; 1 Ftana, l:Sl.61; 3. G,..I 8rllaln. l:SUI; • 9t!elutn, l;.56.17; S. Hono Kone, 2 12.27. ' (ltlCll 2); 1, Sweden, 14712; 2. llomal'lle, UUS; l Wnt Germe11v. 1:5111 .. • Unli.d Slates IOIN, Klt!n), l.S..41, S Nofwav, l;.56.1' MEN'S IASKmTaALL · UnHed Sta ... 71, West Gennariy '1 (at ... hnlm) """90 STATSS -Alford 1-12 :J·nT. Wood 2·S 3·4 7, Ewlnt 2·4 3-4 7, Atm1nt 1·2 0-0 2, ltotienaon 2,.t 0-0 4, Jor., •· 14 6• 10 H, Kleine 1-1 0-0 2, Koncak H 0-0 O, T11d911 •·6 i·s 11. Mullln S· 12 o-o 10, Perttlns 1·3 2·2 4, T~ 0-:1 0-0 o. Total• 2H2 20-21 71. WISTGIRMANY-l(orner 1-3 l-2 3, Kadlec 0-0 0-0 0, Sauer 0-1 4·• 4, Pettn 0--f 0-0 0, .z.nder f·S 0-0 4, PltlPlrl 2·5 0-0 4, Sowa 1-1 4·S 6, Scllr....,,,, 6· ll 4·4 16, Blab 4-12·2 10, Mendel 2·4 4-6 I, Wtto M 4·6 6. Totals 2.2·SO 23·2' 67. Htlfllml-<Jnlttd Sl1ttt 46, Wnt Ger· m111Y 32. Fouled out-Ttfdelt, Schrtn\Clf, Bleb. llt&loundt-Unlted Statn 27 (Tladelt ll, Wwt OW-manv 2' {Mendll 71 Al· llats-Unlttd Statel 1• (Alford, Jorden 3), W•t Germany 11 !Komer, Sawr, SchrtmPf 2). Tote! ~nlted Stttes 30, Wnt G4lrmanv 27. / ~· )\.. ...... Cat~ StMlllm) United Stain S, Souttl KorH 2 Soutll ICCll"M 000 110 OC»-2 10 0 • United Stein Gen 003 OOx-S 6 3 Oii, N. Parll 16) and Y .S Kim, lenkllead, Aueutl (5) I nd SurflOff W-AutNll L.-otl. Hlta-Soulll KONI. S L.M. United Sl11M, Mc0owt41 °"*' ker9 JtNll 2, Ollneae T1INI 1 110 lnlllnet) Mids Teem H.aftObal MtMIY'\ ll""'91 (at Cll Sllfll """""" > SN n 17, U led St11t1 16 wear G«n'\e1'Y l7. s.u111 Korn 25 Oanmer1l 161 SwtOtll 1' ICNl'd 1', Al9tril lS ltOl'\I · 21 Jeoen 22 American bids for gold.medal today 1 LONG BEACH (AP) -New Zea.land tkipper Rex Sellen and American Robbie Hainet can clinch Olympic yachtina told medal• today but an unreaolved controvmy could prevent the United States &om ca~rina tunber told in the •oon. lotb Selleri and Hainet ttmlltb.enod their leldinl o~l pc)Utfon1 by winnjq race No. 'off &.be Lore ae.cb breakwater. Sellen ii a IOlid leeder in th Tomldo elm with ix nett ~lnts. compared to lt!C'Ond ~ American Ranay Sm~'I ~I Mi polnu.; Stnyth ii &om Hununaion Beeeb. Hainet lw u. 7 ~ ~inu id the ....... -f ......... S0~""11111..,,... b\&tlbtro &bOWill .be. a. bettle for the'Silver medal with Du Halidan U11enid of Norway cumntly llCXmd with 27.7 net p0int1, wid\..only au. l'Qint• paralin& the iecona lhroµ&b fil\h ~tions .. ... , American Stephan Be!l,jamin crourcS the 470 line fint, fl)'ina • erotttt n.,. and New Zealand's Peter Evans was tttond. • After thtttan. the raet committee raited the flap ofltaly, Sweden, New l.ealUwl and the Ucited States. silni· fylf\I that tbOIC boa\& SW\Cd etrly but the American and New Ztelami boeia wen oot n rctumina for a raw1. . tr Bel\i1m1n loses bis protett IP nil the nee committee, bt prob-- ably lotea bis chance r'or tbe &Old IS bi1 teore atOpa to 27 net Points compued with Oomlc'• 8.7. , Reggieclo. QnDOOhome EA 1TbE (AP)-After a dtffic\lh otr~son, the A!l&Cll' Rcgie Jack· 10n is provina to himself that ht can still otay. "I ~t a· very 'Unoomfonablc winter. Jackson said Monday ~t after be cracked three hill, 1nclud1Jll birl%tb oo ee1 homCJ'. and drove m three runs in the An s• M victoey over the Seattle Manners ... J felt l bad to do well th11 seuon and Produce some decent numbers or y u's over.'' Jacbon, v.·ho hit only • l94 lalt year, drilled his 18th homer and cracked a two-run ba~loaded SlDsle as ~ helped send the Manners 10 their fillli ·straight defeat. Brian Downing socked two solo homers for lhe Angels. who rema.med one-half game behind the first-place Minne- sota Twins in the Amcncan League West. . "My confidenoc and oonocntrauon arc better than last year, .. Jack.son 1&1.d. • We bit well ui ~Dril. bus a ttUy. lune and July ec c ..... ~ e·"~IODlft brua no but die offeUe lt.u 69 ""'" l!lbnMMeAl "' The lona balls from~ ..S Jackson helped mak.e lhejobof ~ pitdlcrS T.ommy John and Lilil Sancht'z a rdativelY ~ ... ~ bUI ttle Manger Del .~~ cd out lbat tlie : an.ncn wtre ~ cbari table. . "We Sot bout many bi&s as they did. but WC bdped ,.:t &bar) eiltlt l'Ulll with bases on:b&Us.anderrOn.W.e.bad • I terrible first lnnlQI." be said. Two t1le erron 11\ that umiN ~ producie t o unearned nms. tile p1tcben issued apt wl1b. Do-...'Dm& nd JacbOn bit con- secutive home runs in 1* lhild inn\ng for a S-0 lead after ithe ~ ,. scored thrte times in the first. lacbon drilled hlS l\\'CHUD s.iqttm the mtb ·and .. Downing. hn his scCood home run lt*lina off thf Cl,shth. John, 7·9. tooi a Sliu ul anto IM seventh before Seattle rookie Jim Prclley drilled a two-run dOubJc. Sanchez was nicked for a run in each of the last two anni.._. on .RBI~ b)· Steve Henderson an the eiahlh and Jack PCJCOnte in the ninth. Two runs plenty for Braves' Mahler· Atlanta pitcher ·given support to beat .Dodgers ATLANTA ~ -Tbert have ~ lilncs t.hU seuon wticn ~ Mahler almost bad to pitch a shutout to have a chance to win. Monday niaht. in a 2.0 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Atlanta ri&ht- hander felt he had an a.buridance of runs. ~ : "J felt prct!}' &ood when we a<>t that secqnd run,' said Mahler, whose teammates have pven b.im a total of only seven runs 1D the sill pmes he has lost. Asit turned out, Mahler, 8-6,didn't need the second run. Althou&b he gave up three bits in the first mnina and rune ovenll. be held on for bis first shutout sinoc openina the 1982 season with tvoo. ~That's not the best way 10 pitch, baVIn& men on base all the ume;• Mahler said. "But when I bad to make the pitcll to set the man oui. I did .... Mahler's most serious latc>pmC jam came iJl the eevent.b when be yielded • leadoff sinsle to Daft · Anderson and, aD out later, a walk to EdAmduna. . . The walk brouiht A.twua Ma.Daeu. Joc,Ioae.to the moWML .. Helt it was.,U.S to.be mypme ill the way." Mahler said. .. t dido 't think Joe would take me out with a shutout aoing... ,... . He was rigbL Rafael Ramirez opened the Atlanta fint with a sinlle, -raced 10 third oa a sini)e by Randy J_phnson and sand as Claudell Wuhi.naton bounced into a double play. The Braves Sot their other run in the fifth .after ,loading the bases oo sin&)cs by Mahler, Ramirel and Johnson. --After Mahler scored on Wasb.ina- too's pound.er, Los An•les starter Rick Honeycutt, S. 7 ,-was rdieved by Pat Zachry. bchry prevented uy further sconng,.. hen Washin&toa was thrown out stcalioa and Dale Murphy poppedouL B-reland, Tillman in quarterfinal LOS ANGELES (AP) -Wel- .terwci&bt Mark Breland and heavy· wight Henry Tillman boxed thett way into the Olympic quarterfinals Mon- day~ Breland to a chorus of boos and Tillman to rous1n.a checn. • Breland, the world 147-pound champion from Brooklyn, N.Y., was content to Jab his way to a S.O victory over Rudel Obreja of Romania. Tillman knocked down K.altq S1nah of India and stopped him 10 the first round of a 20 1-pound class match. On the day card. Frank Tate of the United Sta_tes and powcr-punchina Shawn O'Sulbvafl of Canada each Note~s fordlv:er McCormick . VOLLEVBALU From Cl 8razi1'1 come-lhroua.h Victory. Brazil showed better bloc\ina, better ~­&ina. better servina. better motiva-uon ·and better result&. But, it all boiled down to imple mathcmatict.. The U.S. was already in the medal rouiMl A. win meant .. ., ·~ -··. THE DAILY PILO' CLA IFIED 01-'FICE Hot•R ·:::S Telephone 'enic : Monda)-Friday . 8:00 .M.-5:30 P. 1. • • • * Bu ine" Counter: Chemung Spanish 3 8r2 Ba-oh-45' lot, lrg 1onday·Frida) de<"k, counyant. pier &•lip. $1,100,000. 8:00 A .M.-.=i:30 P.M. Beautiful 3.Br. 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace. OEADl...INES ~am cellinp. Xlnt f~g. $420,000. Pl Bl IC\TfO'.'i l>E\l>l.l~E UYlllllMIUYFlllTOMN \lo1ula' • :\at. I l ::m u.111. Jetty & Bay view. newly decorated Mai '('111.,fi,., \Ion l::rn p.m. Kat, 2 Br, '2 Ba, 40' pauo Now $645.00~ \\ t•cl11t·~cl•;, Tutt-. l :w p.111. PU U l•E IOUIFlllT l'hur-.dJ' \\<'<I. J :io i•.rn . Ocean & Jetty views, ~ine room, 4 Br . Friel.I\ Thur-.. i.:m p.m . 3 Ba, 3700 sq ft , car parking. $1 ,285.000. "lalunli" Frida' :i :OO p.rn . l&flaH PUOE UYFlllT "'umf;n Fri. :~:00 p.m . •Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up, 2 Br". 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1.250.000. C;\NCELLATION & UllU IUOl llLLllll CORRECTIONS: Panoramic ocean & city view, s Br 3 Ba. ( a11c·Pllationi, and correc·tions ma~ spacious entertaining home. $1,100,000 ._ bt-made on ~ame deadline!t as abov~. Plt'ai,t• a!>k for a can<'e-ll a tion number "'h~n t·an(·ellin~ ~o ur ad. ERRORS: Check your ad dail) and report e rror immediaaeh. The DAILY PILOT a sume~ liabilit) for the fir t in<'orrecl insertion ooh . CLASSIFIED 642-5678 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR I 1 tJ t ! 1 • • , • k f, 0 • • 'f'~ PlllUllOllll 3 Bd 2~ be, dbl gar, com- munity pool 1127,500 ._LITll11ll with good 3 BR. 1 ~ be home 1199,500. ••111ebr•1t•ttr . Nl-llH Daily Pilat 642-5678 YOUR AD · IN THIS SECTION IS REACHING 108,777 HOUSEHOLDS 261,064 READERS COMPARE* OUR CLASSIFIED RATES. Daffy 108,777 25C Plot C1rculat1on per thousand Santa Ana Rerister 49,000 C1rculat1on N~ew:,.:i:..;;.;....;_t _.,,....,,.,t,000 Ensi&n -C1rculat1on The Pemysaver 80,000 C1rculat1on 63C per thousand soc per thousand 49C per thousand Rates Ba'sed On 3 Lines - •Ba d On Competing Clrcutatlon In Piiot ~arket ' .am1111 nm SHl,IOO Cathedral calllng1, muetYe brk* frplc, wet bar, cu1tom llghtlng walk:overlng1 and Noor· Ing, 2 Br & ~ home In gated community of orona def Mar. Lowee1 pric. ,.._.IOIO let U1 Help You Sell ~ 011 Propertrl The Daly Piot off en you this t1act size ad on cu "f>ttwe Pace" w11bnds for just '25 per day, or 2 days fw '45. Subnit 1 plctwe, or we'I photorraph it for you at a mi1inal ctw11. THE REAL ESTATERS I 642-5678 .. plus the IRVINE MIRROR Ind the HUl'n'INOTON BEACHCOMBER.,.,,., ~at no ••r• c:Nrael CALL TODAYll lllFllLlll •• Oty • Ultl¥t 142 1tlf.lll . Elegant 925 tit 18' condo edj. Hunt. Hrbr, 1or2 n-trnkrt, no pett, pOOt/J.e, nr bet! l850mo ~7Ut LARGE bachelor Iott w/frplc. Walk to bch. 1525 utlJs Ind ~7 Wlllk to bWfl becttetOt. StOYe, retna ... 25 Ind ;u &watat~7 • ..,... ..... 2'111 • • Newport Shor•. OOIM-vttw 2 BR. 2 Ba, frplc, 2 pattoa, new cerpet. •76. 1411844 "'646-3121 . FURNISHED or UNFURNISHED HEALTH CLUBS. TENNIS. SWIMMING. plus much ~· Sorry. no pets Models optn daily 9 to 6. ~ Newport Bt~ So • 1700 16th Street (at Dover) 642-5113 Ntwpot1 Bt Mta No. 880 IMM Avenut (at 16th) 645-1104 -0ranoe ., IOW HllllG CISllOS I II.DIS Interviews Fridaya 9:00-11;00 A.M. at 1390 North Paaflc Coast Hwy .. Laguna Beach (on PCH & Vlelol Ca.II (714) 494 9233 tor more info . District Managers If yov MfOY w<H 1n9 -.nth young boY" & 9.rlt oftd deU. tol» ona not fOf you, con~r o career m the ~r circulo "°" field. "'" ., 0 vmque pol.lftotl w.lh doily chat~ & r9WOfdt. Ovt o~ -. imlMd . AppSicontl mll\t ho'4 o "'°""·~or tn.K\. We off.,°" eu eli.nt W>Jory w\ft. o bonut pb\ ond goa ol1owonce. W• ha¥O on H cellenl benefit pton that '-hotpi• tolm:st1on inw~e. liberot Ond hOUdoyt. Immediate opening exist tor a peopte oriented, 9'- ftclent Individual who po,...... good com- munlcalton lkllta. Maln dut... lnc:tudee running ~· repona and ... =.-:o~=:·-n.-,-.. -os.....__w_llTD __ er al office. phone • Remodel aper nee. anaw.rlng, filing and • Medical Benefits I E"-.--epectal proJec1a. CRT • '8-S1l hr depending "'"' •w..-1 uper. & personn•I on upeiler10e. call for atlonal Exec Suite,_.. exper. are preferred. lntarvtew, 842-7358 Ing company looking '°' au.Hfled applicant t energetic parson to be at1t1 to wortt f':;. Pll•m• handle busy phone •Y9'- lncdudlng Saturday.-UOllll IHP tem, Ill• typing, & prev. hu lmmed opening• for exper. nee Call Georgia. • !xcellnt opportunity tull & part-tln'le mechlne ,__15_2_-1_1_6_1 ____ _ • &dtlng environment operators, no •xPW· nee, taurant • Qood c:ompeny beMflt.I wlff train. Prefer 1&-25 yre WllEll olds TARAS CORP., AWi In peBOn. No phone 16591 Mllllk•n Ave. HmU =.s:: l':·~~.r ~ 863-9077 or flllll Noori18000 Von Karman. i--..,.--79_____ U.W'POSll lrAne . -Pl'· EARN $1200/MO. pref. Evee & wtcndS equ.l()pportunlty 6 hrs/wk Call Tina Spagettl Bander ~ MFH (10am-~2pm) 7-40-2053 &45-0651 Newspaper KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! AGES 11-14 ·EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK . 'Wt now llJtt 15 • o0tlllf1CS 10< younc e11tr buwtf\ lo secure readers for The Oranct Coast ,Dail, Piiot Our crews start 11 330 p 111 ind 1wor• 11nbl 8 30 p 111 wtt•daf\ On Slturday, we jWlri a few more hours You d tarn many lr1P$ and prizes. 11o,. witll 111111111 rour own mo11ty 1 I .. lhtft IS no dell'ftflllC Of tollection involved " you '" intrrnted please tall Mt Eart ·= (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROll 1 8arbef '1 need 8 Fruit 11 MOl'H unit 14 Woody vine 15 100 centavos 18 High pr .. st 17 Subway 19 Lettglh Uni! 20 Yecht part 21 Art worka 22 Lof AWOL 24 Fiim 11worker 211s1wb~k 27 Latling up 30 Brought on 32Generll d•rlCflOf'I :J3 Foot sores 34 " -to worry 37 RUQgjtd rock 31 Sit -Cey1on 39 -·in-hand 40 "Thlm 11 41 Gooda "42 8•11"9 43Makn ..,..Clle5 '5M09t win 41 S. the bOSS 41 Ql.«;O\'efY 411 Type tlze 50 Incision 52 Formerl~ 56 Pen part 57 Ob1ect 60 House wing 6 t D•S<:harge 62 Greek region 63 Learn 64 Scare oll 65 Lew•s&nd DOWN ·Skid ro"' 2 Short tor Chrtsltna 3 Radiation Cln'if'! units <I -after another S Equality 6 Caustic 7 Common lunct 8 increased b• 9 Mr Chaney •O Eterna1 1 I Loan paper 12 Grttn stta11P 13 Floo• layer 18 Meal summon~ 23 Chem1ca1 ending 25 As well as 26 Salad h"\" 27 Engr•ve 28 lndl'led1 Ir 29 Opportunr 2 3 • 5 t4 20 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 30 01111 y treats I F!atDOats 33 S011c1tudt' 35 Ori 1n.. ""''h J6 rr.1n!>111t1on 38 81'n1nr:tt and 19 NonSl'fl'iP 41 ae1 42 Human being 44 H"" µad A'1 ( (til1f!t•P'S e 9 10 41> Nape gro .. 111 111 Spry 48 l<Mnet 50Sloe1olil"S !i ! Or!' <WOO!>tt SJ r1o0 g~u$ S4 Commoto•m SS Harri wond '18 UK r1vl"• mnhon 12 t3 ECRETARV QA DEPART- MENT COLDWeLL BANl(eRO RIY. ITl. lrtDI. art or full time, tlV9I. wknda & graveyard•. Neet appear. & hanO- wrltlng only need apply 2590Newport81vd,C.M SOY. IT&; llECUllO H time. neat appea1. Apply In pereon. 2590 Newport Blvd, C.M. IUY. ITA. lllCIUIO ull time, neat appear. Calaonlc Inc. la • major Apply In peraon. 2590 1UPPller of automoblll air Newport Blvd, C.M. conditioner• ror NISSAN. 11-11-,-,-1-Tl-lU--Y-H_U_I We need • Mlf-motlvated Individual Who " capable 'TELEMll flll of Juggling a variety of QA ou think you are wor1h tttt•t•~ ••er•tarlal MOK • year! So lws'• re$ponslblllttee With mini-~ dlance to prow ltt mal 10parvlaon In our Advertising apeclallty Production area, from publlcatlons 'S-47-0565 7 :00 AM 10 3:30 PM. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Naw GlaH top dHk w /braH baH, Paid $8500 Mii $-4000. New ebonY c;recltnlL..1 - ported from Italy. Pala $7800 NII 13500. New WlllY GLUIOUS UITlllll COM MELL CHEVROLET .X." ll.11 t •. , Iii'. : ' r"., ' \ ·,~ I " ' 541>-I 200 tide ct\alra lrnpot1ed from WE llY Italy, blac:lc lacquer USEDCARSl TRUCKS WllTIRllS/Wllter ~~~=ery~~~ ;= COME IN ORCALL FQA Over 18 with ex'*1enoa .. Hll 11 ooo .. . FIEE IPPIAIUI. '-80 (laet year mad•) 450SLC, 33K ml. orig. owner, lmmac. cond. P.P. 873-3355,548-2333 '83 3eOSL lllce new. Sand beige loaded, 21 K ml 854-2023 1768 S. Newport Bl. C.M. 65 t-1M5 Corrnl9f-0.Lll1o • 500 SEC, (no mlleeae>. 'wanted' SAXON COPIER $300. Ind 182 ~VO. anthr.clte gray/bltt Tthr IGTlll paper etc. 84&-0838 HUNTINGTON BEACH "48,t50. 840-2776 Earn 11500 +per week." Comp wm train. s.... IUI ••• Ml..aoat1Mt-IH1 •xp Mlptut. 751-2382 awry • "G&n w WE WAIT,.. '11 al IR 'Pi .,... 5511 ~t =·~,fa OLU1 aa Ult .,~i.ii.~o.Jo ~OOltarspanlejPUP1 Xkc 1 rtla Getii 1230 S..AonaldDace S..thl9one(4'>11f :1~~~~~-=:sable E sa!. U!O, ammo, '~!~,Jo~ German Shepatd P pa Mml-auto '"'"· new, '711111It100 Champion bloodlf~aa: ARt5• Mini 14• 673-8347 TopCOf\dltlOn(h75A) parents lmPOflld. 175-Wlndairfer, ~ ~. .Pll HIOI S.1LMI $3~ ~ 17()0. oeo. ~2884 . ir1M~C.i0"13f Pett 1139 n Wit, J~ MB ·tJI 1111111 ~ Parrot yg ;ellow nape. 6tuit IUZ 1W Jeep cAEAOkee A a..uty <551 > V•ry tam•. talks, if" SONY coloR W. 5 ap, AC Prep. P/S, .1m 1Lm1a Some Ot the duties In- clude: tranacrlblng dicta- tion; Httlng·up and mal!'talnlng rlCOfdl and flies; answering phone; compKlng and typing technlcal reports and charta; CRT data entry, report gen«allon; and r~tlon rlli.t alnol,w/t>Mu cage. Must Xlntc:ond$150,~ AM/FM Ster•o CHI, •••ll STUDEllTS NCl S475 673-3e00 BJo Screen 50" Mltaublshl Tinted 01 ... (7924) 1001 ~Street llTYlll French Lopeer bunnyS20 xlnt cond. S290 0 '. 110,111 Newporta••·llBeechlO obo 67~ 673--8347 5-4W221 ORANGE COA~T • •• ~~!8=:.·~~' Aa•ten ..,,~ era& 1 2s24~e;:c;j~~~M "WIRlllllll" t>oys & glrla betWMn Kenmore 22d fril1 Ilka new tad K;yait-gOOd shape (714) &49'-8023 PrtvatllyMlffng your e.r 12-16 yeara old worl<lng S50053&-&49e S325oboS73-1833 S cant>ehaurdou.toyour evenlnga & Saturday.. Rare chlldren'a4-k llU ... .a 2 nC wealth! HOUM Of lmPOftl Earn money. trip• & Uttfe Houle on Pralril.. .... , ti •vi 165 Ford atm Rebuilt offlr'lhlgheetv9Nefor bonow. Call $250, Call 650--2168 181 dlanpar bOat on chromt e cyt eng, 3 apd. your'*"'*ld We require 1-3 yHra Ma.~n AJplluc ll trailer. NeldtTLC. $1200 Crag11r1. ,'760 98.2-9715 Mwcect.. :iU::~ ~.r~~ Mon.-Frt. 1oatn-3pm --n OBO. 845-1691 --'66 FORD ¥.ton, 6 cyt, gd W fir Peter/~ work experienoe, mini-·------• I llT APPUUIOU 25-41' power boata. Call cond. $950. 960-2514 OtAL2131714MERC S BRISTOL AT.l.llOrolH tlSAmAAlfA He-0110 "TAMtt.Y Jllr;Ol '63• _ MIKE McKENNA'S SOUTH cou•n MOTORS ® 1984 RllBIT Sul* M1~ag•' !Siii 70951 •99 clown 11•.0ll •• -+ tu ... mo c EL T 0 p 547' 8<1·Resid ~ 138 1[; CAP 8180 lnCtP ltH j7292 f.'1 1984 SCIROCCO Sul'lfOOI Maga IStk 591111 199 down H2.H /•t + t11 IET IACI 1101.001111 •8 mo C E L . l O P 13 829·AH1CS S4S3 70 CAP 12.390 1984 IMPULSE SE 221.111•• ...... 00 mo CEL TOP 13.629-Resid S0'8 80 CAP 12 617 Ask1801> 1n Lea~mg 187 11 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach (11•) 142-2000 WECIRE ...... 811 l YATE:S VW.PORSCHE ' I'•' 8 )7 · 48 0 0 4 ~ ) . 4 c; I I mum of 60 wpm typing, t---------LES 957-8133 fOf low ct\ar1ar c:tub ratee. '69 OMC 1'.i ton atlclc bed HOUSE OF lto4POATS, Inc and ablllty to record and *TW IFF Yan TII Kenmore [)ry«'Wht, work• 673-197-4 or H-4-7222 dump, atMf bid, aood ft•JMI 99 trascrlbe dictation. r sales peoptl wear perfect $100 6-45-2-484 30 ftSEARAY '77, twin FB. rubber, 13750. 1-45-1691 t •7f5Q, 4ap tfr, diJ, Gd =""'.-------..,r=-:::- Calaonlc offea you a 37-'h blue ~· ~~ lob & Refrfg Sean 2 yrs old so. brlatof clean. Nu cust '71 DODGE 1 Ton Pk:k-end. 8 11 cHh ofr . Vtl" 19 hour work week, com-:;. m ~. P~ti!: Frostleu $425. &45-2203 Int. Sllp avail. Must MCtl-Up, doub.. cab, good 673-19'43ev/dy 553-1115 '70 td s. MW P8itlt. rldt petlllve Hlary, paid d t f~. purct\U. nu boat cond$1675650-&&470fl ala, •h••P•kln1.Xtnt medical, dental and llfe =~~ WANTEDLM99GAS~ S«.000-.PP752-0196 &46-1613 •7&504d,....,4-apd,1nrt, cond.$1925.786-«)37 1 1 week rrtoerator by 8115. UR-• air, xtra tank, loec*f. ~~~~er 6 month• e":.: the largest growing Soler Gi:NT 8-C&-1096 aft &pm 30C!!lchltmadrl'°"nn T1 wnoo 1g09al '18 OMC Cabatlero nu c:er-t>eauty 13250 499--1097 A•tN, hlultit Power Co. In the wond -, -pet klt/lheH cru1 .. $4200 p • 117 ployment end 1 week ve-Lead• provided, drew· + Wards Uprlghl 16 elf fru. 35 ~al wtr-llps 6-obo &45-3098/~29'4 tllC I ::i •:;.erdt >'C:i~·.~ commission 751-3008 xlnt. 1 yr okf, 2 YT'9 warr. ~ atv-lclVh~~ti •79 F d Plc;k u Cour !'!,63'Pl3568'-l'IP.·new-"'60"""h•p•eng-. laid 1317 shlJtdown and mOfel EACHER. c:hlld care $300, Sam SS&-3879 ~-==~ 5 .;:, wit~. pxtnt ~ brka, paint. (allver ·7! Sta Wgn s;g;J;ooa center, Immediate open-w..n. & Gu Dry9r. Xlnt atp-palntlbot 12/83-S2695 080 754-1879 metallic). Like new trim t1500 Obo Jdnt conct For Immediate conllder-Ing, Full time, oomplet• 1175/both '4M-2'475 DESPERATE 19 250 obo S 1 5 . 0 0 0 0 8 0 runs great! 631-1049 auon. pleue come to our benefits. Chlidren center· 983_1677 • '81 Ply Arrow PU clean. nu (714)929-0866 Employment Ofllcl from permit required. W•t-·····" radlals. mao• '3850 C.M. '70 911T blk/blk beauty s Uac 9•1f AM or 2-3:30 PM minister area, call Osborn• f Computer '73 25ft TOlLYCRAFT CC. 20-49 Harbor 81 MMt1'4 apd, 68 000 orlo ml, 5 it-t117ii5iiiiiio;--•mg,...·ance-..;, •MW-- dally and ·complete an 531-4881 w/dot matrix printer and Twin votvo. VHF. refrig, Aaii .. n loya. Plretlla, Blaupunkt, Mk:Mllntlree,aheepakln applicallon. Or, forwatd 19" monitor and atan-loaded. lk new, new tr1r, Cl t' aa..s fresh motor, 2nd owner, covwa, 17 mpg 845-1691 you retMJme to. TRAINEE , dard software S1000 MAKE OFFER. 963-1198 UI Ct ~ flawlMa In/out, $9500 .• 81 ELOO atrwt 42K ml M~'!onc;:-'1 lMITIOI 845-1060 EARAY 2-4' fully 1M COfVaJr. ldnt c:ond 631-5324 itlnt cond $12.'900/0eO Admlntstrator IPNITllm Fualtue 9 equlP91d, Incl NB lllp In/out. BHl offer· '72 914 SHARPI Red-muat Oye4S-7261;E"931-1730 TUJllll·IEllJITI 2 B0y; c;:p, l)d; wlmat $13K. Oys~_..173 546-7529 wt 13,795 2AM0749 '84 ELDORADO CAL SONIC INC ff you heve recently left S65 .. H0-10IM E..... l•tt1 l•p!!tM 527-9094 S109down your Job. or 9Chool I»-er ... Bldtrama.dbl$485. ti 1 1 14 '77 911 Tarva 52,000 ml CloeldEnd-Comm'I cauaerwerenotNti.-Obi Matt Set 1150. ng h 10 1111 yellow/tan Int, Im-Leae :1ng. ! =~";: =: 845-2203 sail kit $400 M 548-2888 174 2062 Gr•at cond macutat• $19,000 obo ALL..sAVERS LEASIN9 going, and " you're not COUCH & LOVESEAT ft SABOT -complete AM/FM, lnatde Ilk• new'. 673-71St196&-1333 8.W. (71'4)432-1tn aure 'What you would Ilk• w/MATCHING CHA & 1395 6-4-4_...579 Mu11 ... 1 Mt-126-4 'M 911 c.,.,.,.. Cabrtolet. NABERS 9 Holland lrvlne, Ca. 927 tll (Directions· Take 1-5 Fwy to Lake For•t exit. turn Inland on Lake F« .. t. left at Mulrtanda. and right on Marconi to Holland) EOE to do, then consider thla OTTOMAN $1200 new, QUA-CAT boat & tr.tier. '74 2002 Immaculate lo 81k/bfk, $43,500. DaYI our company wlll preper• must NII $450 6-42-1885 Gd cond. $500. OBO mllage 15300 obo 835-6-45-4_ 800 Of evea~ CADILLAC you for a new oat..,~ ' 771-5013 aft 5:30 3888 x30 dy/831--8353 842 7251 ltlon and • deflnat• op-Early Amar. round tbl w/ '7'" 2002 I XI .......,. ""'94-..,,..91_1 ___ c._,_-.-C-;01-11)e-. portunlty to advanc... axt/peda A hutch, 4 cpt'n AT ALINA 38. Con-.. -1 , nt .....,...,, aun Blu/blU Snrf/alr/atereo ment Into management. ctn. l200, MS-1389 e:::ra1 cup retOe/cr, roof, xtru. Muat Mlt $41.200 Deya 545 4800 Call ~~-0690 from 9-3 I llT FllllTlll se8K 551-1682 $5000. 644-5687 Evhldtnd t\12~7251 Mon-,_ LES 957-8133 onldo 15 gd cond.all '79 7331 Full alplna, blue ttiiiii\I KiJceUaa" .. DIMES -A LINE WANT ADS IMPORTANT NOTICE TO PRIVATE PARTIES . ' s.11 your ltflm• for $50 or lfltSll In fHJr famout DIMES·A·LINES pub- 11.n.d .actJ S•turday In the Dally Piiot. DIMES-A-LINE •d• mutt tH ,,,./)aid«> IN/I or bring them Into ,,,. Dally Piiot Off/ce. &I WfW to lnclUIM your phoM numt»r or «1- drea In your ad, have • ~ on NCll Item 4 no abbftWfatloM. • ~.no com~ ad•.~ ,.,_, Pf'OdUCtt, t*nt. or anlmalt 819 ac:t»pt•bM. ecc '900: 8'boe.t •100: print eno. lmmac. malnt.11 '°' $300 213-790-7302 blk w/tan lntr 953--0-440 daya 759-1M5 9¥91 LARGE SELfCTION OF NEW & USED 8MW'81 LIMIUllllW VOLUME SAL.ES SERVICE l LEASING 3f70 N.~Aw LONG RA~ (No. ChenY•llt--405) ll14)11M111 fr.CS.tne Wtkome OPEN llVDI DAYS LARGEST SELECTION of tat• model, low mu.g. CedlU.C. In SoutMm Calilomlal S.. UI todayt &•0-1110 2800 Herbor Blvd COSTA MESA 115 co;;;, co;;; tur60 charged. Auna well. I 12.eoo 675-3680 '78 c.p,1ee, 4dr, 12000. nrm. 1~ leave meeuoe '13 Ctmaro Z281 loaded 20,000 ml, no down pey-ment req.12n.01 p/mo (Uc 2AAK218) Call Bob ror detalla, 845-5271 or •ft tn -492-1742 COMM Ell I CHEVROLET i • ... ~ !l.1r/11 11 J\ ' ' ' .... : \ ,, t . 54~ I 200 . ' , I • I -- TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1984 o HAN c-; f < o u N l v c A L 1 f <J H N 1 A ~) ', c E N T ·- ------- Council.backs reroute .foes U.S. water pololsts • victory over Australia Huntington homeowners win support; but they sttll have a long way to go BJ PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of ... Dllr ........ AnJrY homeowners who formtd an overflow crowd at Huntington Beach City Council chamben Monday niJht had just one coat in mind: keepmg Pacific Coast ~i&hv.:ay away from their door1teps. The homeowners eventually lef\ the chambers with what they had demanded. The council, with Coun- cilman Ron Pattinson absent, voted 6-0 to suppart a resolutioC) opposina the proposed reroutioa of Pacific C.O.St Hi&hway as ~ of a com· promise plan for development of the Bolsa Chica mal'lhlands. The West Hunt1n1ton Beach resi· dents claim the inland rrrouting would brina the six-lane h•&hway within I 7Sfeet of some l,2SOexistina homes and create noise and polluti~n problems in the quiet residential neighborhood. Speakers for the homeowners said rcroutin& could cause the value of homes an the ... atTec&edarea to drop bY uptoSS0,000. Today, leaderl of the homeowners SJYUP ~ praisina the council's '\l.Olc. .. It's a tint JteP, 1 small tep in the bit battle we have ahead of us .... said Don Troy, rna:irman of Citizens Mainst Rc-routi PCH ... But it's sood to know the council ii behind us.•• But Trox acknowledged the City Council has little contrOJ over do- velopment of the 8o1u OUca area. which lSCOWlty territory. He said I.he sn>UP'il next illeP lS to meet with representatives Of me Cl()Wlc major Balsa Chica landowntt Sipal Landrnatt Co.) and 1he Conservancy, a tate paocJ wt bdpa resolve Q)Utal dc~elopment ~ putes. Troy said there is little room for compromise over the rcroutina (Pl,._ eee COORCIL/ A2) today guarantees t-eam Court an Olympic medal. Games cove~ageon •P--l~pagi_e_sc_i-3 __ . -~-=-U--==-RSets death penalty Mesan' s body ~-----~-----aoo -tlf. ea_..___.__~ Arab Olympic athletes come to Costa Mesa for some home cooking./ A3 Newport hires attorney to defend city In police · brutality lawsuits./ AS · Ptekets protest sale of porno magazt~ at con- venience markets./ M Na don Federal officials battle a multlmll11on-dollar mari- juana trade In H~wall./81 Two Inmates claim re- sponsJblllty for murder of 18 young women./ A5 World A four-week lull In the so- called tanker war In the · Persian Gulf la broken asa Greek-owned ~r­ ~anker Is hit./ A4 Mhid a: Body For 20 mllllon Americans a headache is more than a nuisance, but relief Is on theway./81 A marriage counselor's challenge: Spend 12 hours together without TV or books./81 Sporta .The United States men's volleyball team loses to BrazH, but still gains the semlflnals./C1 El Toro's Ruth Wysocki discovers life In the stow lane at the Olymplcs. /C2 Reggie Jackson powers the Angels to an 8-4 victory over the Seattle Marlners./C3 Entertainment "Critic's Choice" ls a "true to life" comidy at the lrvlne Community Theater ./83 !luahleu Genstar forms Invest- ment services company In Newport Beach./85 INDEX 20 county slayers may be retried over •proof of Intent' rul BJ JEFF ADCER Of .. Dllr........ ' As many as 20 convicted murderm m,iahUiavc lolle mne<Hn Orange County as a result of a state Supreme Court decision requiring that proof of intent to kill is necessary in death penalty and life-without- parQle felony murder cases dating back to 1978. The court. in two related decisions banded ~own Monday, decided that last year's decision directin& that murdcren cannot be sentenced to death or life 1mprisonrncnt.. without parole unless they intended to com- mit the crime must be applied retroactively to all cases since 1978. In addition, the court ruled in a S-2 vote that a reversal would not be granted strictly on the atounds that the trial judge had fajled to instruct the jury on the intent to kill issue as Iona as both the prosecution and defense had had a chance to araue the issue. , Sllverdl•e The coun•s ntlina could affect as many as 180 murder cases statwide· including ha.lfofthe 163 men now on death row. st.ate Assistant Attorney General Edward O'Brien told the Associated ·Press after the decision was annouooed in-San Francisco.- About 20 cases in Oranac County (Pleue eee COURT/ A2) Soatbem Callforma •a Kelly llcConlllck performa ta the Ol~pte women'• ap~ flnala at dae · L09 Aaaelee COllMam MODday ea roatie to wfonfiil a eilYer mecr.t tD the e.ent. See~ ill~ ...... ca. I TO a meter mil.id, all the heat's not on ~the beach lt was· a slow day for meter maid Deena ~kvotd. She was b.ccklcd. cursed, thratcned. yelled at and-fliP.s>ed the middle d111t. 'Ob, l really wish you'd been here the other day," she said drivma along Newport Beach's congested Seashore Drive-the renowned summCT place that attracts the kids, the can and the .STEVE MAIBLE all-niaht pany animals. "Any other day;· he adds. "You should have seen it on the Fourth (of PEOPLE IN TH£ NEW S July). It was a zoo." • call Bcckvold, a parkina control officer ''If they yell at me or me names in a city which ~bly has the worst I u uaUy ~ust act like t didn't. b&r parkinaproblem tn OnngcCountyiis them. But 1faomeone raUracts m my .;.;;.a ·-L: ..... It 'th t.n face, I take a stress break.' UJKV to ULLlna auuse. aocs W1 c . A ··s·-· break" is an act of territory. ""'-She's had water balloons tOSKd at urvival to meter maids. ··1·n •n find IDOti.cr PCO ,,,...r1.·;~ bcr, she's bce1l pushed; shoved and -v--~ knocked to the around. She's had the control offioer) or my supcrv1t0r an pen jerked from her hand as she say 'You'll never believe what some wro~ she's had parkina citations suy just said to me.' We'll talk abOut ripped up ao her face. she's been 1t, say 'don't wony ab6ut it' and to threatened, lhc•s btcn ridiculed and beck to worlt. -innedibly-she d~n·t seem to .. Sometimes you just need daat ·-.a bleak, you feel if one more penoa mt""'. II • . "} always tty to put myself in llhe yc1 sat you, you re IO'• 10 IO crazy, other pcnon' ~1tton. It's not 1 Jot Some dlys •~really bid. • offun1ettmaaS271>1rkinttickct ·ust .. But usually people are very n1oe, bcdu1e you're a few m1nuttS believe it or not. I've even bad some ~t•na beck to the meter." she 11ys. l)cople 1hank me when I afvc tbCm a .. Personally, I don't think I could tiCtet. I ttunk it'1 probe~y out of do it," conTictea . 11. Mik~ habiLHowcoukhonMOne*8krou McDono· .. "· a traffic and _..._,._ for h&nduw tht'tn a Sl7 plttina ...... .:..... ......... !..;. Uctct?. .. tu pct •itor. 'l t•s •""" that the puum; ''Somcumes af 11·1 a 9lmior' citlttn ha?.• completely nepuve im~n or 1 mother Wh0te bttn out loolti But Bttkvol<l who hu:Work--ed-....._.a _,..torhat'd1f!!-tiauon 1!;. ~~· ~!~, ... :w postal caniet and an 1 isant roun -·--"' ·~ clerk, u u's..the JOb w· ever· by • 1 llwa • But )ICM& bad. (PllMI .. IDTD/ASl • . in Irvine ditch Construction crew .. was about to fill shallow hole By STEVE MARBLE Of .. Dllr ...... The body of a Costa Mesa man, whox disappearance led to his ste~ father's arrest on mutdcr~ was found MQpday ~~oonbUriCd in a ,-~- .ditch at an lrVinc ~on site. police reported today. The body, found by construction workers who were preparlna to fill the shallow ditch, has been identified IS that of Bradley Kaye, an 18-year-old Englishman who had recently moved to this country. Kaye was last seen alive on Aua. l -the same date that a handful of motorists spotted bis car and what appeared to be a bod1 partially stuffed in a trash bag off to the side of (P1eue eee BODY I A2) Brace Bn.d.191 Jlalpll Irvine hotel Crew violated six rules A construction crew at the HillOD cooatructioo comP-GY was cited for Hotel an lrvinc has been ci1ed for a not bavinc a qvalified ~a oo site half dozen violations that a state · to inspect the load the crane was s&fety offici'al said contributed to a c:arrri!t&. · s~ acddent ~ month in lbecitationswereissuedtoMortey which one worker was tnJund. Construction C.o. of Los A!\Vlcs. a A loaded trash dumpster slipped subcontractor work.in& on the SSO- from 1 crane and plumme1ed ~ut room hotel at the rotersection ofMain 1 ~ (eet from the tdp of the pe.rtially Street and Jamboree ROid. The built hotel o~ July .11. ~e ~ Hilton tS to be the oenlerplece of the operat<?f sustained mmor uuunes an Irvine Co.'s planned Jamboree the .acadeot. . c.entcr. Jtm Bf<>wn. a director of the state .The constntction firm can apPQI ~pall~ Safety ~ Heal.th ~d-the citations, which carry vanous mlDlstratton, said an mvesugauon fines, aocordina to Brown. revealed that the loaded dumpster . . weiahed about 16, 700 pounds while Brown sa.ad the rcn1ed ~~ ~ the crane had a capability ofhoistina n:movcd from the construcUon 11te. onl 8,900 pounds. did oot have .proper safety ~ ... ~ trash bin was fat in excess of such as an audible signal or automattc what the crane oould bold," Brown stop. S~ safety measures would said. have pcnrutted the crane operator to Additionally, Brown said state know the load~ too much for the iospectators found five other crane, Brown wd. .. serious" problems with the safety The .~ halted work at the features of the rented crane. Also, the hotel SJte briefly. Teacher union's B~sile ·gets job Coast College· s board names her to ~rsonnel post A2 * OranQf COMt DAILY PILOT IT C o~11~LJtt1 S10R1ls I OUND.IN IRV NE DITCH~ •.. ~---~ a WI)' an lrvme. Kaye"a ~ther. Bruce Bradley ~~-S7 .. ubeiaahdd.m coan.ccuo 1 lhe;youaaman·sdcath. kalph. free-lance photographer from New· pon heh. as to be arraigned on mwder'ChalJ!t'S 11hursday. The &nm discovery Monday after· noon wn made by employee of c:Guarc Construction o. who "-Crc watering_ down the sewer: line d1tch before Jillin1 it, politt said. The construction site is on Star Cmt in the C'lt)'s Turtle Rod.: community. ~·When the din settled It c-xposcd a . band, a wrist and a partial view of an anu,·• Irvine LL Al Muir said, ''The Police _ id tht body h d bttn buned under about 20 inches of!~ nd. An autoJ»y was scheduled tOday and homicide detectives we.re bopcru1 it would pinpoint the cause of death. The case came to light last week when motonsts travehna on Bomta Canyon Road told police they'd ooserved an oranae I 976 Mercury Capri parked on the road's boulder. Witnesses sa1d they saw a large trash BASILE APPOINTED •• ~ homAl Nordquist and Rwz insisted Basile's appointment was not a political payoff. They also sa1d her former AFT affilianon wOuld not create a conflict of i.ntcresL Basile's supponers said she is . . qualified for the po'>l. No criticism of the appointment was expressed at Monda) 's mectma. Representatives of the Orange Coast and Golden West faculty senates pnuscd the board for the appointment. bu with what p ttd to be mms ana legs 1dckjna out. ~~~ The motorist lso eta.am they w a man, who they later 1dcn11ficd u Ralph, tand1n1 at the ~ar of the vehicle. One motorist who id he.. pulled off and talked with the man, id the person had a distinctive English ~nl. But the car, the body and the man were aone by the time police arrived. The missina vehicle still has not been located. Muir said. .Ralph, who claims to be a citizen of Gre.at Britain, was IJTCSted at. bis residence the day after the siabtina oo Bonita Canyon Road. Police ~b­ ed the man's house but have not UJd whether they confiscated any items. The murder suspect appeared brief- ly in Harbor Murucipal Court m Newport Beach on Monday. His bail was rai'scd from $250,000 to $500,000. He will be provided a • court.appointed attorney. Deputy District Attorney Richard K.tna bad argued that Ralph be held without bad, saying the man had a troubled past and a history of stranae behavior. GOURT UPSETS-DEATH PENALTY ••• Prom Al would be .. subject to thjs painstaking review.'' according to James Ennght, the county's chief deputy district attorney. · "It leaves the situation with the death peDalty op in the air ... said an angered Enright "ft Jives them (S\lpreme Court justices) the key to act on their biases to throw out the · death penalty. in a great number of cases.: It's a sad situation. It's a way to attack, frUstrate and defeat the death penalty." Enright likenc0 Supreme Cqyrt dtcisions on the death penalty to a soap opera. .. You-turn it on and you're right back where you started," be said ~ Amona county cases that would require review is that of Robert Thompson, convicted last year for the second llme m the strangulation and sex-molestauon mllrder of Ed- ward Brenneman, an Anaheim new~ boy. . Also, the conviction of Freeway Killer WiJllam Bonih sentenced to death 1rv6ugust 1983, and Rodney Alcala, N enced to death in the 1979 murder of a 12-year-old Huntington Beach girl would be sub)ect to such review. accordinR to Ennght. · {)f ,:the 24 death-penalty and hfe- without-parolc cases. still pending -in tliecounty. only four would appear to remain clearly unaffected by thf r:uJing, Enright said. He added he also does not know how jury instructions concerning premeditation and deliberauon. rou- 1980f9'ree. tincly used in county felony murder cases, will affect the review m lipt of the coun 's ruling. If no intent to k.ill 1s demonstrated during the trial, sentencing would range from 25--yean to life imprison- ment with parole possible m 121/J years, O'Brien said. The decision applies to all defen- dants sentenced for felony murder under the 1978 Briggs mitiative, which broadened the grounds for death penalty ~nces and life Wtlhout the possibility of pa.role. • Felony murder, the most<:ommon type of crime punishable by death or life tenn sentences without parole, involves a killing in the course of another felony such as robbery, rape or buralary. METER MAID T AKES A BUSE IN ST RIDE •.• From Al CouW Tides TOOAY 1254t..m 7:1•pm WD*llOAY ._ 2••m t.21 •111 1.41 a.m 75tpm Temps .." 111 72 ... 12 13 N II M .. 70 17 71 r el ear • 11 llltuu~ .. 78 .... AlltOftlo ... 71 llnDleoo 16 11 Sen FrllnCll90o 112 14 s.n J\lln,P.A IOI 77 ltllt*" 11 11 ... ni. 107'4~ le 70 8IOu.I ;.,.. .. 17 tP«*ent Tl M lyr- 17 • TOC*<t '1 72 T-'1 U TIMa 11 11 w~ fl 72 WlcMe M ., wa .. ...,.. __ _ t7 I W'"*'VlOll.Oe. 11 71 n • .. n 1t 70 n 11 .. 11 ti ., 11 67 N 71 .. 7' 71 11 u .. " 71 100 71 100 11 •1 n 1CM 74 u 70 '° n Group opposes coast project By JERRY HIRSCH Of""' D4lllr,... ~ A group of Newport Heights rcsj- dents is P.lam:ii~ rear guard ~et!on at a Califorru4 sta.1 Comm1ss1on meeting tater this month in in effort to reduce the$~ of a mtiTti-millioo dollar West Coast Highway office and restaurant development already ap- proved by the Newport Beach City Co u ocil. """- The residents are w()tried the 35- foot tall complex will ruin the views of Newport Harbor from their homes and from nearby Cliff Ori ve Park, according Carrie Slayback, one of the residents organizing the fight. Board of Realtor's Hall on Newport Boulevard to discuss the residents' objections to the project. The Rosan shipyard building is 25 feet high, Jeannette said "All of the residents in the area are upset with the devel~ent. Our Y'ICW Will be. bloeked,0 said Gail Demmer of Newport Heights. "Cliff Drive Park is the most distinctive natural area we have in the Heights and it would bun the view from the park too. A Jot of people I OBITUARIES gather there to watch the boats parades in the harbor and for the Fourth of July." Demmer added. Neither Anderson nor Lancor could be reached for comment oo the project this morning. The residents were -surprised lhat the proJCCt already bas pined Plan- ning Commission and City Council approval without a fight. • Demmer said more people in the Newport Heights area s.bouJd have been notified by ihe city. The S 1,463-square-foot develop- ment is planned for 1.2-acre site at 2901 W. Coast Highway, the site of the Rosan Inc. shipyard. A parlc.ing lot on the development will be built on a .42-acre site about a block away at Avon Street and Riverside Drive. Services slated in Hawaii for Costa Mesa machinist- Whitney•• Andy" Anderson, a state senator from Hawaii recently purchased the parcels and is planning the development, said Newport Beach architect Brion Jeannette. . Jeannette and about 60 Newpon Heights residents met Monday niaJtt with Anderson and bis archltect Joseph Laocor of Del Mar at the Funeral services will be· held in Hawaii for Aoyd Bertrand Dwyer of Costa Mesa, a retired machinist who died at Costa Mesa Medical Center at the age of78. Mr. Dwyer, who had lived in the city for the past 20 years, was a life member of the National Rifle As- sociation and a member of SL Joachim Catholic Chwch in Costa proposal. visor Harriett Wieder, whose distnct "There's only about a thousand includes Huntington Beach, has yards between us and the ocean. and asked the slate panel to delay its Mesa. He was born m Saginaw, Mich. He is survived by his wife, Marian. and a daughter; Patricia SavlfO of Twentynine Palms. Also survivma is ~dson, Ronald Pearson of Cost.a Pierce Brothers BclJ Broadway Mortuary of Cosu""Mesa was in charac of arrangements. Burial will be 10 Hawaiian Memorial Park in Oahu. can•t be a pushover." On this muggy summer day. the parking lots along the water front in Balboa are jammed despite a per- sistent layer of fog. Beckvold keeps her eyes open for the tell-tale red flag that pops up on the meters when time's run out. we don't see bow any kind of a review until September. Thou&ti the meter maids are not compromise can be ptactical," he Meanwhile, a series of local work- swom officers, they can and do make said. "It just dones't make sense to shops will be held with the conservan- At Monday's meetiog. CARP re~ rescntatives said homeowners had been embarrassed at an ea.rher Coastal Conservancy hearina when they had been asked their council's view on the proposed reroutiOJ. In an earlier vote, the council bad dead- locked 2-2 on the matter. "This is nothing," she says. scnbbl- ina out the second of eight parlong citations she will ISSUC within I 0 r1Unutes. "Some days it gets so bad. there really isn't time to get to all of them.•• There's no one around this time to yell at her but several passersby stare m contempt. One man shakes his head as if disgusted. .. Some people think we hide wait- ing for the meter to expire. But there's no way I would have time for that. We don't try to be sneaky. In fact. I usually park the car so they can see me coming." A ktd on a bicycle ndcs by and yells "Hey, cop." If Beckvold hears him. she doesn•t let on. Whenever possible. Beckvold prefen to walk the beach parking lots and the streets rather than ride in the . economy ChevrQlet the police depart- ment provides meter majds. Sbop- keepen greet her. ~thcrs eye her ap~h wtt~susp1etoo. •No. I don t feel self <onSCtous." she says, answering a question. "It's my job. -'People say 'What's wrong with you? Do you enJOY this? Do you enJOY g.i vmg people ticketsr "They don't understand it's part of my job. lf a car 1s parked at an expired meter, the city's losing money and it's blocking a space that someone else probably would like to use. "If it's bloclon~ the street sweeper, the gutter doesn t get clean. If it't blocking a dn veway or the alley, then people a~ goma to have trouble getting out to go to work." citizeo arrests. move (the b.iahway) at all." cy staff and the concerned home- "Wc're so used to the negative side Tbe'PCH reroutino was pan of a owners, according to Bob Love, an of people that we can usually tell ....,. aide to Wieder. when someone's really gettin& out of revised Bolsa Chica development After the conservancy's review, the line. h's funny, they can rCallyscream plan approved last month by the Bolsa Chica 9.lan must be approved at us but when an officer shows up Coastal Conservancy. by the California Coastal Com- and they see that uniform. their The Coastal Conservancy is sched-mission. The com.mission will not attitude changes." uled to consider the plan again thls consi~er the plan until October or Councilman Don MacAllistcr said Monday be was changing his vote to go on record against the reroutinf. He said other traffic problems &SSOCllted with .Bolsa Chica development will Yet, despite the abuse, Beckvold month, but Orange County Su~r-November, Love said. finds several aspect of her job to be .---..;..._ ___ ..:..._ __ _;__;::....:....:__....:;..:;;;.._ __ .;.._ __________ ---'-----------'i'---~ rem am. pos1t1ve. "I like giving people directions. . The city's so confu5ing. Also if I sec people drivina around and I know where there's a parking spot, I tell them . "If it's early in the mOmiDJ and I see some family pullina mto a metered spot, I'll tell them where there•s a free spot. Little things like that." In a way, Beckvold has learned a lot about people by being a meter ma1d. "It's really tauaJtt me not to judge people by the way they look. Not all surfers are jerks, not all bikers are bad. It's just that getting a parkina ticket usually brinp out the worit in peoP.le. PRICE BREAKTHROUGH! "They may have had a real homble day and they come out to their car and there's this tjcket -1 can understand that," she says. "Getttn&a ticket isn't much fun." ........ .,_. _ .... Dar Popular 2·Dlsk TRHlr Model 4 Computer C~ S700 AS= 1299!!1 ' Just Call What do you llkt aboat tbe Daily Piiot? Wbat don't you like? Call tht number at left and your meaa11t wlll be recorded, transcribed and dtUvered co the appropriate editor. Wu '1199.00 In Cet. ASC-11 Cominerd81 a....='" tor Only 145 ,., . 642-6086 Tbe 11me 24-bour an1wertng service may be used to record leltere to the editor on any topic. Contributors to our Lettere column mutt loclude their name and telepboae number for verification. No clrc•latloa cant. please. Tell,us wlaat'1 on your mlod. OeflJ Piiot O.ltvery 11 Querant.-d ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat H. l . Schwertz Ill Publisher Lorne Bruchet Ad"ert1s1ng Orroctor Ro .. mary Churchman ControU.r Stephen F. Cerezo roductro,~n,_ __ Manager " (Plue Appllceble ~ Tu) • u.. All Model Inl• lottwse • Add Optlot• CPlll Plua &ymm to U. ThOuwtdl of Ptogrw • Two Doubt• Denlfty 0.-Dr'"9 .... In Printer lnterfw ..... Low ltrtoel ,..... Model 4P NDw '1211.00 (nt-10IO, ... 11711.00 In c.t. MC-11) I 1.- J -- TUESDAY. AUGUST 7. 1984 Carl Lewis jumps to . another gold medal 1 while records are shat- tered In four Olympic track events. Games covereageon pages" Cl-3. Cout Arab Olymplc athtetei come to Costa Mesa for some home cooking./ A3 · Newport hires attorney to defend city In police brutality lawsuits./ A3 California e -sa Court upsets death penalty 20 county slayers may be retried over ·proof of intent' rule By JEFF ADLER °' .. ~ ......... As many as 20 convicted 0 H A N GE C 0 U N T Y C A l I 1 <_ • i · N 1 A .' '1 C ~ N T ~ · oun e · e Irv1nes1te Construction crew spots hand, wrist in sewer ditch By STEVE MARBLE Of .. Dllllr ........ The bOdy of a Costa Mesa man. whose disappearance led to bis step- father's arrest on murder c~. was found Monday afternoon buried in a ditch at an Irvine con truction site. police reported today. The body, found by construction worken who were preparing to fill the shallow ditch, bas been identified as that of Bradley Kaye, an 18-ycar~ld Engli*.man who bad recently moved to this country. Kaye was last seen alive on Aug. 1 .. -the same date that a handful of motorists spotted his car and what appeared to be a body partially stuffed in a trash baa off'to the side of a roadway in Irvine. construction site is .on Star Crest in Pickets protest sate of porno magazines at con- venience markets./ M murderers might have to be retficd in Orange County as a resull of a state Supreme Court . decision requiring that proof ofinTent to kill is l\eetssaty . in death penalty and life-without- parole felony murder cases dating back to 1978. Kaye's stepfather, Bruce Bradley Ralph.57, is &ciua bdd in coanectioa with the YOUDI man'• deattcJW~ a free-lance photographer from New- port Beach, is to be an'l.1glled OD murdercbarles Thursday. the city's :rttnJe Rock community •. =~~ ~en the dirt SeU1ed at expoled a hand. a wrist and a partial view of an arm, .. Irvine Lt. Al Muir said ... Tbe construction workC'f5 stopped wbat they were doi.na and called t.be police. Nation Federal officials battle a multlnillllon-doUar mari- juana trade In Hawall./81 Two Inmates clalm re- aponslblllty for murder of 18 young women./ AS World A four-week lull In theso- called tanker war In the Persian Gulf Is broken asa Greek-owned super- tanker Is hit./ A4 MlndA:Body For 20 milllon Americans -ahead ache ls more than a nulsan~. but relief Is on theway./81 A marriage counselor's challenge: Spend 12 hours together without TV or books./81 Sports .The United States men's volleyball team loses to Brazil, but still gains the aemlflnaJs:/C1 El Toro's Ruth Wysocki discovers fife In the slow .lane at the Olymp1cs. /C2 Reggie Jackson powers the Angefs to an 8-4 victory over the Seattle Marlners./C3 Entertainment "Critic's Choice" ls a "true to life" com8$.1y at the Irvine Community Theater./83 Bualneu Genatar forms Invest- ment services company In Newport Beactl./85 INDEX 82 EM A3 BM A4 ~ 84 C8 88 82 cs 82 81·2 86 A4 A8 81 A3 88 C1-3 87 82 83 A2 A4 The court, in two related decisions ... handed down Monday, decided that . last year's decision directing that murderers cannot be sentenced to death or life imprisonment wtthout parole unless they int.ended to com- mit the cnme must be applied retroactively to all cases since 1978. In addition, the court ruled in a S-2 vote that a reversal would n·ot be panted strictly on the....groun.ds that the trial Judge had failed to instruct the jury on the intent to kill issue as long ~ both the prosecuuon a~ defense bad had a chance to argue tl:ie issue. The grim dtscovery Monday after- noon '.WAS made by· employees of McGuire Construction CO. who were watering down the sewer line ditch before filling it, police said. The ·*'lf'theyhad.o•t W8tcn'ld it down11Dd -- had filled in the ditch. we never "'°uld have folV'd the body, .. Muir added. (Pleue eee BODY I A2) Mesa·pushes bill to ain CoQtrol of air's affairs The coun's ruling could affect as many as 180 murder <:a$C$ statwidc including half of the 163 men now on death row, state Assistlnt Attorney General f.dward O'Brien told the Associated Press after the decision was announced in San Francisco. . Sliver ·dive --------DT-UllEN E. u.EJN------~9nft·~. Jrbicb DCi&hbOrs OFthC °' .. Dllllr,....... fairpounds had long voiced over About 20 cases in Orange County (Pleue eee COURT/ A2) Soathern cautorma •• Kelly llcCormtck performa 11' the Olympic women•• ~ fbaaJa at the Loe Aqela Cotuea.m llo.nday en roate to wtnntni a dlTer med"al In_ the eTe:Dt. See etory In spon.. Pate a. T-o a-meter-ma-id, all the heat's . . . ~ . nbt on the beach P£0PLE IN THE NEWS In a move to pin more control activities staged there, rose to a sh.riet over tbc Orange County Fair&rounds. when the amphitheater hosted beavy- a J so.acre. state-owned i.siand sur-metal bands and punk rock lfOUPL rounded by the city of Costa Mesa, At emotion-laden City CouDcil t.bc City Council decided Monday to ~ when tiry ofliCi ex- seek state legislation requiring the plained that city jurisdiction ,ns fairp'O\lnds to comply with city law. limitedbccausetbtt.rftprutheata-bad If approved by the Lesislature, the been built on state property, residents bill would 11ve the city un-became more and more diflJ'UD.tled precedented mWUClpal authonty with what thcysawaslactofrcspome over a tatc facili.ty, Costa Mesa by the city. Mayor Donn Hall said. But if the proposed legislation is Hall and City Manager Fred passed. "there should be no question Sorsabal have been working on the that the city's noise ordmanoc, gen- lqislation, which will be introduced cral plan and zonin& requircmenu by Sen. John Seymour, R·Anahcim, and other police-pov.er fCJUlations in .. two to three months," Hall said. apply upon activitiesoocumn&at the In the past year, city officials have fairgrounds.," City Attorney Tom found themselves in· m~y Wood said. uncomfonable straits over the fair-The leaislation specifically ex- grounds issue, especially since the. emptstheannualQranaeCountyFair Pacific Amphitheatre opened on the from city control because the fair is a fairgrounds in 1983. state-constituted activity, Hall said. Complaints about noise. traffic and (Pleue eee llltSA/ A2) Ne~port group opposes project. Restaurant would block harbor view. neighbors co~plat~ I -f;.:........-_.;..;.;.~;;;;....;..~.:..--,._-~----------:--~--"'--_,_...,_~---...,....-----t.r---- the llmPhithcatcr to mee . 11id IW oome into question, espeaatly" such ~orrespondenoc would be a wltether the C"ltY. can enforce a noise re tatcment of standards the city had ordinance specdlcd in the settlement already discu std wtth Nede,laoder. and whether the aty can hold. the libe eounC"il also directed ·City ·tiiriroundt to 1u plannina and zon· Attorney Wood to review a scttl.C. iri1ttandard1on future development. ment between the c1tr and the 32nd WOOd Will "review the tettlemcnt Di trict Agricuhura Association, ~meot to see if. they, (the fair· <Ira wn up in Auaust 1980, that around manaaement) -have com· included provsslons requirina the plied with all tbc requirements (in the faiwounds to abide by certain city qrecmcnt)."' Hall wd. Wood was ordinance . asJced to research the aarocment and In recent months. the settlemen1 report to the council. · COURT UPSETS DEATH PENALTY ••• l'romAl would be .. subJcct to this p.imstakang review." acx:ordins to James Ennght', the county•s chief deputy district attorney. ' 0 It leaves the situation with the death ptnalty up in the air,'' said an .anaered lmri&ht "lt Jives them (Supreme Court justices} the key to act on their biases to throw out the ~th penalty in a areat num~r of ----CUC:S. lt'u sad-Situalion.-lt'saway to a ttack, frustrate and qefcat the death penalty." . Enright likened Supreme Court decisions on the death penalty to a soap opera .. You tum "it on-•nd you're rilbt back where you started," he said. · Amon& county cases that would require review is that of Robert Thompson, convicted tut year (or the second time in the strangulation and sex-molestation murder of Ed- ward Brenneman, an ,\naheim news- boy. Also. the conviction of Freeway Killer Willi'm BoniQ sentenced to death 1n Auaust 1983, and Rodney Alcala. sentenced to death in the 1979 murder of a 12-yeai-oJd Huntinaton Beach girl would be -subject to ~IJ(h review. accordina to Enn&ht. Of the 24 death-penalty and life- without-parole cases stall pending in the county, only four would appear to 1'Cmain--dearly unaffected by the ruling, Enright said. He· added he also docs not know how jury instructions concemina premeditation and deliberation. rou- >I tinely used 1n county felony murder cases. will affect the review m light of the court's rulina. lfno intent to kill is demons~ted durina the trial, sentencin& would range from 2S-ycars to life impnsqn- ment with parole p<>ssible in I 21h years, O'B · said. The decision applies to all defen- dants sentenced for felony murder under the 1978 Briags initiative, which broadened the srounds for death penalty sentences and 1ife without the possibility of parole. Felony murder, the most common type of crime punishable by death or life i&rm sentences without parole, involVcs a killing in the course of another felony sµch as robbery, rape or burglary. NEWPORT RESTAURANT OPPOSED •••. -. : · (. From Al with Anderson and his architect gather there to watch the 'boats Coastal Commission at 1ts Aug. 2 Joseph Lancor of Del Mar at the parades m the harbor and for the meeting in Marina del Rey. Board of Realtor's Hall on Newport Fourth of JuJy," Demmer added. ..As soon as we sot wind of what Boulevard to discuss the residents' Neither Anderson nor Lancor was goin& on it was 'Holy cow, we objections to the project. The Rosan could be reached for comment on the have tO stop this.' " Jeannette said. TOOAY 12.64811\ 7:14p m , ftDNHOAY Amlow 13tam Aret lliar. t·21 a.m. '-'cf" low t 4t • m a-v:t lllQtl 7.&t p m Temps .. .. ~ ,, 72 ... 82 t3 N N M .. 70 17 78 Eztended Patchy l'UOfl' Md rnomtrtO ~ low douda wltll moatl'y MWly dayt. Hlgtla lrOl'll lhe mld-70. ,_the~ lo tht IC>. llllmnd ~ Low. In IN eo. to low 70.. t2 .. 71 1t .. .,. .,, IS ... 77 85 .. 100 100 11 104 .. to ft 70 " 76 ., 67 71 74 N .. 71 • .,. 7t 1a 74 70 12 Homeowners prevail ove~ proposal to_ re~route PCH shipyard bwlding is 25 9.fcet high, project.th.is,mor'nin_g. _ Slaybaclc said the residents plan to Jeannette said. The residents were surprised that charter a ous to the Coastal Com-By PHIL SNEIDERMAN _ the project already has gained Plan-n,ission to show up in force. °' 111e Nlr,......., _ vote. velopment of the Bolsa Chica area, .. It's a first step, a small step in the which is county territory. He' said the bi& battJ.,.,w.t q~ahead-of..ut;:"aid ,J©QP~ ntxf ~ o1lc.tt ~ _ Don Troy, ehalnnan of Citizens '"' representatives of the county, the "All of the ~idents 10 the area are 01111 Comll)ission and Cjt)' ~.n~I -~ letter·writi!lS. and .PJlon~~-. · -Angrybom~WJICl'Sw~o(opncdan lJFt wi1!J: -me devd~L ~-approvtlwi~uta.figbt. . l)&tgn. ~ oothm~memf>fu Wlll i>verfloweroWdatHununaton.Beacb view will be bfocked,' said Gair Demmer ~1d more people in the start this w~k, said ~mer, who CityCouncilchambersMondaynisht Against Re-routing PCH. ''But it's major Bolsa Chica landowner (Sianal Demmer of Newport Heights. Newport .Heights area ~hould have a~ed a second meeting by the had just one goal in mind: keeping "Oift' Drive Park 1s the most been noufied . by the caty that the residents opposed to the develop-Pacific Coast Highway away from distinctiveoaturaJ area we have in the project was pending. It was approved ment is planned for the Board of their doorsteps good to know the council is behind Landmark Co.) and the Coast.al us." Conservancy, a state panel that helps But Troy acknowledged the City resolve coastal development di.- Heiabts and it would hurt the view at the .May 29 ~ectinJ. of the council Realtors Hall at 401 N. Newport The homeo~ers eventually left from the park too. A lot of people and will the project will go before the Blvd, 7:30 p.m. Monday. the chambers with what they had Ccouncil has little control over de-putes. 0BIT UARl£S demanded. The council, with Coun- cilman Ron Pattinson absent, voted 6-0 to support a resolution opposing the proposed re-routing of Pacific Coast Hi&hway as pan of a com- promise plan for development of the BolsA Chica marshlands. The West Huntington Beach resi- dents claim the inland re-routing Services slated in Hawaii for Costa Mesa machinist would bring the six-lane highway Funeral services will be held in within 17S feet of some J,2SOeXisting Hawaii for Aoyd Bertrand Dwyer of homes and create noise and pollution Costa Mesa, a retired machinist who problems in the quiet residential died at Costa Mesa Medical Center at neiahborhood. Speakers for the the age of 78. homeowners said re-routing could Mr. Dwyer, who had Jived in the cause the vaJue of homes· in the city for the past 20 yean, was a life aft'ectedareatodropbyuptoSS0,000. member of the National Rifle As~ Today, leaders of the homeowners sociation and a member of St. group 31ere praisiQg the council's J~chim Catholic Church in Costa Mesa. He was born m Saginaw, Mich. He is survived by bis wife, Marian, and .a daughter, Patricia SavlfO of Twentynine Palms. Also surviving is ~~~n, Ro~ld Pearson of Costa Pierce Brothers Bell Broadway Mortuary ot: Costa Mesa was in charge of arrangements. Burial will be in Hawaiian Memorial Park in Oahu. -liiil---"'----------:--...;.__------ BODY FOUND IN IRVINE DITC.H ••• From Al METER MAID TAKES !\BUSE IN STRIDE ••. Police said the body had been The motorists also claimed they Bonita Canyon Road, Police search· buried under about 20 inches ofloose saw a man, who they lAtcr identified ed the man's house but have not said Prom Al can't be a pushover." On tbis muggy summer day, the parkiag lots along the water front in Balboa are jammed despi~ a per- s nt layer of fog. Bcckvold keeps bet eyes open for the tell-tale red flag that pops up on the meters when · ' sand. An autopsy was scheduled as Ralph, standina 1;t the rear ~f the whether they confiscated any items. ••llii~•Si:"""l oda ""h · ·de ...... _.... vehicle. One motonst who satd he Themurdcrsuspectappearcdbrief-_.::[bough the meter maids are not t Y Mu-omaet ""~dvcs were ly in Harbor Municipal Court in sworn officers, they can and do makedea hopethful it would pinpoint the cause of :r!h~ft' ~n~~~ ~·~~~n~fv1~ Newport Beach on Monday. His bail citizen arrests. · w:as .,.;scd from $250,000 to "We're so used to the neptive side The case came to lisht last week Enalish accent. .... .11 be 'ded of people that we can usually tell when motorists travelins on Bonita S ut the car, the b<>dy and the man SS00,000. He wi proVl a when someone's really all"ttina out of Canyon Road told police they'd were gone by the time _police arrived. court~appointed attorney. _1_ time's tun out. _ -b ed an ra 011" 1976 Mercury The mlssins vehicle still has not been Deputy District Attomc.r Richard line. It's funny, they can really scream 0 SCI'¥ 0 0-located Muir said. · King had argued that Ralph be held at us but when an officer shows up Capri parked on the road's shoulder. 1 h · be · · f without bail, sa"'nt the man bad a ''This is nothing,·· she says. scribbl· U;lJ out the second of eight parking citations she will issue within 10 minutes ... Some days at gets so bad, there really isn't time to get to all of them." and they see that uniform, thetr Witnesses said they ~w a large trash Ralpn, ~ ~claims to a ctttUn ~ ". f attitude chanaes." baa with what appeared to be arms Great Bnta1n was arrested at ·rusbe trohua~vlcd1.0r.past and a istory o 1ttanae Yet, despite the abuse, Bcckvold _an_d_lcss..:..._•_ti_cki_._na_ou_t_. ---------rcs-'"'"""ide"""-nc:e_th_e_da_y_a .... f\_cr_th_e_sil_h_ll_· n_1_o_n _____ _,,..._..._..,....."':-'-~...-.:..- There's no one around this time to yell at her but several passersby stare m contempt. One man shakes his bead as 1f disgusted. .. Some people think we hide wait· ina for themetertoexpire. But the<re's no way I would have time forthat. We don't try to be sneaky. In fact, I usuaUy park the car so they can see me comina." A kid on a bi~cle rides by and yells .. Hey cop." If tJeckvold hears him. she d0esn't let on. Whenever possible. Beckvold ~fers to walk tho beach parkjng lots and the streets rather than nde in the economy Chevrolet the police depart- ment provides meter maids. Shop- ~rt arcet her, others eye her approach with suspicion. .. No, l don't feel self-conscious." Just Call 642-6086 D .. ty Piiot 0.flV.f'J ft OuetantMd she says, answerina a question. "It's my job. People say 'What's wrons with you? Do you enjoy th.is? Do you enjoy living people tickets?' "They don't understand it's part of my job. If a car is parked at an expired meter, the city's losing money and it's block.mg a space that someone else probably would like to use. • "If it's blockin~ the street sweeper, the gutter doesn t get clean. If it's blocking a driveway or the alley, then people are going to have trouble getting out to go to work." finds severaJ aspect of her job to be ·- positive. "I like aivins people directions. The city's so confusing. Also if I sec people drivina around and I know where there's a parkin.g spot, I tell them . "If it's early in the momins and I see some family pullint mto a metered spot, rn tell them where there's a free. spot Little thinas like that." In a way, Beckvold bas learned a lot about people by beina a meter maid. "It's really taught me not to judae people by the way they look. Not aJI surfers are jerks, not all bikers are bad. It's just that acttina a parkina ticket \Jsually brinp out the worst in J>COP.le. "They may have had a realhomble day and they come out to their car and there's this ticket -1 can understand that," she says. "Oettin1a ticket isn't much fun." Wbat do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't yoo like? Call lite number at left and your me1aa1e wlll be recorded, tratlffrlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same U·boar answering service may be ased to record let&etl co tbe editor on any topic. Coatrlbator1 so oar Leu.era colum11 1DHI btclade &J9elr name and telepbone aamber for vertficatlon. No clrcwla tloD calla, please. TeU,us wbat'1 on yoor mind. ORANOE COAST Daily Pilat ' Clrcutatton 714/M2-4AJ C ... elfled Mf¥eftlelng 714/M2·M7t All otMr ...,.ment1 ..U..Q21, MAIN OfflCI! JJO Wts! .. y 51 CON CA .,._.~...,.,~ Oma H. L Schwtrtl tu Pubhshcr C!iPt•!gP!I lfl8) ()111'9t CIMM ~ Ctl!!v:illlJ No -°''"' tilfll!CW ~l !Nllfl fll .,,..,,. ll'lfmt Nolll'l ""Y ~ r ~~ Wll?!OIA K..a.I S)« "*'°"(If~-. Lorne Bruchet Ad't'efh&ing D1roctor RoNm•ry Churchm•n Con1roll r -.....- Donald L. Wllllam1 . CtrcuJnt1on Stephen F. Carazo Pr0d1Jctton .Managei. ---"""'Manauci------ PRICE · BREAKTHROUGH! In Low Prtcel VlllCllc Program A~~ pn>grem fOt budaldric), P&L PfoildfOrw .... lorec ............. ~ Ind more. W'M "" oo 1n c.i. MC-1t 121-1sao. "'·" Our Popu'-r 2·Dlsk TRS-BCr ·Model 4 Comput• Cut $700 = 1299~!1 W• 11191.00 In c.t. RIC-11 .. Commet'Otat LeeM ....... tot Only 141 ,., Month (Plu• Appllcebte ~ Tu) • u .. All Model lll/4 loftw.,. •Add~ CPIM Plue 8~ to U• ThouMnde of Prag,... • Two Dou~'*"' DrtvM • Bullt-ln Prtnter lnterfece • New Low Prtoel Porteble Model 4P Now 11211.00 (f21.10IO, w.. t111t.oo m c.t. AIC-11) , -