HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-08 - Orange Coast PilotCIAll llmll
---WEDNESDAY. AUGU!H 8, 1984 OAANGECOUNTY CAl1f.fJr~NIA /' cu ~r·-
Laguna-Laurel pl&~ OK'
U.S. water polo teams
seesgoldon the -t' •.
horizon. Story on
~~eDJ.
Orange County wlll get
more water under a new
allocation formula
adopted by the MWD./ A3
Public reaction wlll be
sought tonight on plans
to expand John Wayne
Airport./ A3
Nation
Thousands attend 'Na-
tional Night Out' to fight
after-dark crime./ A5
·a::::~::::,:!:~!>;:=::::::~:·:~:-.:·:::•:(•!•X•:,:·:--:"'.-:
('"'
World
Sky pirates release some
hostages at Rome air-
port./ A4
Home
Replacing your old.re-
frigerator with a new
energy-efficient model
saves your money and
Caltfc:>rnla's energy ./91
FOOd
Get a taste of the tropics
In cooling confections
and SJ>arkllng drink po-
tlons./C1
Sporta
A gold medal for the U.S.
women In basketball, but
American women must
settle for sllver In vol-
leybaJl./01
Angels stay close In the
American League West
race with a 7-6 come-
from-behind victory In
Seattle./01
Mission Viejo' s Greg
Louganls easily qualifies
first In the springboard
diving prellmlnarles./02
;;!«'..:·:•:-:·:-:i:,:.-;:;:~:;:;~~~;·~·~:.
Entertainment
Three local community
theaters are mounting
their 100th productions
thJssummer./83
Bu•lneu
The Inland Empire ls lur-
lng more Orange Coun-
t I ans, say two South
Coast developers./ A 7
INDEX
Bridge 85
Bulletln Board A3
BUllRMI h A7
Clllfomla Newa A4
CIUllfled 04.e
Comlca -85
Crot1w«d oe
Oteth Notleel 04
FOOd C1·8
Help YourMlf 82°
Home 81·2
H«oecope 05
Ann L.andert 82
Mutual Fundt A7
Natk>nat Newt A4
OptnlOn Ae
PaperUZI 81
Pottot Log A3
PuDMc HotiOM ee. 03
Sport• 01-3
Stock Merkett Al T*"""°" IM
ThMWI ~ ·W.ttw ---------A2
WortdNew9 Al.
Supervisors' approval means 3,204
ho~es to spring up behinc;t Art Colony
I
By JEFF ADLER
OfllleDlllJ ........ >'
With a minimum of ~omtneot, the
Orance County Board of Supervisors
today approved plans pcnnittina
development of the Irvine Co.'s
laguna·Laurel planned Community
in the hills behind Laguna Beach.
. Supervisors voted 4-0 to certify a
,Lone chanae and aeneral oJan amend·
ment for the 3.lO+.home develop-
ment after dcJaymf approval for a
Letting the gold allp away
Paula WelahOff and Suan Woodatra of the U.S. women'•
•olleyball team try to:keep the ball from lettinC put them
darln& the ftna1a aaa.1.D•t China at the Lon• Beach 8~
JWA bill
gets state
panel OK
Committee• s vote
comes despt~e effort
by Newport residents
By JERRY HIRSCH
OfllleDlllJ ........
A bill that would restrict the
number of noise-related lawsuits that
can be filed against an airpon passed
throUgh a state Senate Judiciary
Committee hearin& Tuesday after·
noon and will face a vote on the
Senate floor sometime this month. The measure, AB 3804, passed with
the bare minsmum six-vote majority
despite the testimony of Newpon
Beach residents who see the bill as a
threat to their ·efforts to hmit the
arowth of John Wayne Airport.
It would impose a limit of one
lawsuit per individual on the number
of lepl· actions residents can file
1 apinst an airport over noise unless
there is a "substantial" change in the
noise level at the airpon. said Steven
Angry
animal
badgers
officers
Pu naclous creatur~
captured In Mesa
will be released
P11aum, a special counsel rep-
rescntina the city of Newport Beach
on airport matters.
The bill, written by Assemb!yman
R1chard Robinson. ().Garden Grove,
as similar to a bilJ be introduced last
year. That bill was taracted at lim1tina
the number of.small claims lawsuits
people can file against airports and
(Pleue eee AIR.PORT/ A2)
eek while c•nty ptanncfl eck.ed growi"soutbc'rn pan oftbe couiuy.
traffic cstimat.cs and flood control ln recommend•~ approval, R!ley
plans that wcrc d1~ultd bI,e';:&una said he 1 convanced the pn.>~
Beach Oity Council mem and requires the Irvine Co. to conltruct
arearesidentsdurin.gancatherpublte Oood control channel in Lacuna
heanng. Canyon at lhe Qme umc the ckvelop-
But the bom:I stuck by tts onginaJ mcnt bqins to me 1n the now pnmoe
findings and certified the plans u hills.
recommended by Supervisor ••niis P,fOJ~ will not add to the
Thomas Riley, who reprcscnts the ·problem,' the supervisor declared.
area and ~uch of the re t of the ."Ho~f~~t ~II help resolve n.
will be DO IDOn M1Cr c:ollUlf down the canyon lhan1lhett 11 now.
Dun .Jut aui(t pUblic hc:arina,
Riley lbe pn>JClC1. a •treasonaOlc
"81ance between natural raourca
and the need for houtn ... He noted
tha& nearly 70 percent of the land 1n
the planned community abutUftfthe
LaJUna Greenbelt as dest,pateii as
open space. ·
(PleMe ... .LAGVJl.A/ A2, •
Murder
victim
shot
in chest
jy PBIL SNEIDEBMAN ...............
An auiopsy bas ~vealed that a Com ~ -~__,,,.
diseovtmf MoftdiJ~ in 112
lrvi~ CODStn.tctiOD ditch WU ltiOc once in the chest.
Arena. They weren't eucceufal, and the Chi.nae 8W'ept the
match 3-0 and won the •old medal, tea...m, the Amertcana
with the ellttr. For detalla, eee Sporta, Paee Dt.
'TM Oranae O>unty Coroner'•
office made me deiemunation after
examinina the body ofBra4Jey Kaye,
an I S.-year..old En&l,ishinat) wbo had
recently moved lo this couatry.
Kaye's 1lc1>father, Bn:ace Bradley
Ralph, S7, ofNewpon Beach, is beifta
held in conocction with the YOWi&
man's death. Ralph, a fn:e·l&nce
photop'8phcr ~bo tS also from Great
britain, u 1ebeduled to be arraiped
Tbu.nday an Harbor Mwucipal Court
in ewport Beach01l murdcrctwp.
(Pleue eee MU1lDU/ A2) . .
TV sales Up, but restaurant
business down for Olym~ics ---.
Southern Calif ornla tally shows some
merchants have nothing to cheer abOut
Fast-food restaurants report ales
are lower th.an UIUI!, accordiQI io &Jae
chamber. and better reataurants, such
as Detaney•s in Newport Beach,
report sales arc down about 20
pm:.ent. By JERRY BIRSCH
Of .. Dlllr .......
With the Olympic Games welJ into
their second week., busmesses have
1otten a ~ idea of who the
financial winnm are aoinJ to be.
The Los Angeles Arca Chamber of
Commerce, rcpresenun1 the five·
county Southern California rqjon
affected by the Olympics includina
Orange County, reports that a survey
oftbcrqJon'shotelsfoundabouta 7S
percent occupancy rate -well below
the level the hotels had anticipated.
Apparently. people are tayina at
home so that they can watch the
Olympics on television while they cat
dinner.
Electronics stores seem lo bC the ·
(Pleue ... 111tRCl{ARTS/A2) ..
LB school athletics face cutbacks
By DAVID BISHOP
...., .... C..lllJ , , I
The lquna Beach school board
must wrestle with an anticipated
defictt m alhletic dcpa.nment
budiet that threatens to eliminate
some sports propams at Laauna
Beach H1ah School.
But the board as expected to take
action Thursday nifht that would
stave off ,.ny drasuc cuts in this
comina year·s program.
The projected $12,000 de"facit is a
result of last April's state Supmne
Court decmon that declared un-
consututiooal those fees for extra-
curricular SportS.
Sporu fees ere instituted in recent
years by ntanY districts to aenerate the
extra funds needed to keep after
school proarams aoi'-" after Prop-
osition 13 was passed in 1978. Tlle
property tax cuttina measure forced
school boards to cut back their
budaets.
Superintendent Billy J. Barnes bas
recommended the board take
Sll;OOO from the aenaaJ fund out of
the $21,000 saved by an eartief'
decision lO diminate an alhletic
trainer's position. Baroes warned
however that the bailout woukt be
"on a one-time baSis only.''
Barnes also recommcnd«5 that tM
(Pleue eee ATHLETIC/ A2)
'Where ·have· all
the autos gone?'
UCI team asking·
JERRY
H1Rsc11
Fo cus ON THE News
•
A~HLETIC CUTBACKS IN LB •••
From Al
rd appoint an dvi' ory task force
to review the athletic pro ram and
draw up a reo nizatton plan for
19 S·86.
B m" said he made th~ ttc-
ontmendation because of the "im-
portant educaii nal 'alue of the
athletic prosram ... and thC ~tcnt1ally n tive response of staff, student
and parents to any adju~tments made
at this late date" for the 19 SS
school year
The athlcucs budget ta k f~rce
would be expected to prepare a ttpOn
for the bOatd by Fcbruan, l 98S.
Other opuons for the board to
con11dcr anclude an aero s·the-td
cutback of all ports tn the high
sthool. which would reduce the
coachina 1afT from 4S to 33 and
eliminate ome. f rc hm n and
sophomore-teams. A third option
would be to eliminate ceruun athletic
pf<>grams alt thcr.
Durina the · 1983·84 school )'car.
701 tudent participated on .J3
LAGUNA-LAUREL •.•
From Al
Despite the approval. however. · of the nearby project. claimina it will
construction on the de~lopmcnt areatly increase congestion in the An
cannot bcaJn befo~ 1988 because the Colon).
prO)ect site 1s now designated as an Council memberl> told supervisors
a&ncultural preserve Before con-they disapprove of the prOJCC't as 1t
struct1on can begin. the preserve now 1s configured. The proJttt should
status must first expire. uplaincd be moved farther inland, the number
Peter Herman. a Rile} aide. of homesites stlould be reduced and
Laguna Beach rcs1den1' and coun-better protection hould be afforded
cal members have been highly critical the nearby hikes, they contend.
thleuc tc-tms at total oost of
$105.816.
ProJected e~pcnditure for the
coll)m& ) r arc S94,S78 with pro-
JCCted tncomc of $82.980. Planned
cuu inclu\le the climinatton of
c hes for pnng pral1icc ;ports and
halving the annual tipend for the
athletic director.
School officials say the most ex·
pensive port on co t·ptMtudcot
ba 1s is boy' frosb·soph volleyball at
$)Si$; second is vanity football at
S323. .
Bame~ has previou ly rccommend·
ed cutting aquaucs spons, $UCh as
swimmiOf and water ~lo. because of
the com involved with mamtainina
the distnct's dilapidated, 29-year-old
pool. and cutting soccer becau~ it is
"not income-producing. causina field
overuse.''
However. school boord member
Carl Schwarz favors cutlln& the most
"injury-infested sports .. football , and
perhaps soccer That's an untenable
option for SQme board members,"
Schwarz 1d, ''but I'm sull willi~ to
look at 1t."
AIRPORT BILL PASSES PANEL •••
From Al
passed both the Senate and the neaotiaung a compromise that would
Assembly but was vetoed by-Gov:--win DeWc1nejian'n1 .
George Deukme1ian A vote by the Senate on the bill
The new bill would hm1t small must be taken soon if it is to reach the
claim su11s and lawsuits in higher 1ovemor's desk by Aug. 31 when the
courts. cumnt session of tile state Lelis.-
Ass e m b I > w o ma n Ma r 1 a n laturc ends. '
Beraeson. R-Newport Beach. said she Because the committee amended
plans to lobby Dcukmcjian to veto the btll slightly to take out a proposed
the biU for a second time if it passes definition of what a .. substantial
the Senate and reaches bis desk. increase" in noise is. the measure also
"It holds many of the same threats must return to the Assembly for a
as before but is only slightly watered vote, according to Pflaum. .
down. I don't know what negotiations Any bills that arc not passed on to
arc foma on at the governor's office Dcukmcjian by the Aug. 31 deadline but will be speak.tng wttb him," said wlll have to bcmtroduced again at the ~ Bergeson, who attended the Senate next session of the Legislature start-
bearins-• · ing in January, Beracson said.
Robinson has repeatedly said he 1s If Jhe bill becomes law, Pflaum
F rom Al
Irvine Sgt. Dick Bowman sa1d the
caliber of the weapon used to shoot
Kaye has not yet been detcrrmned.
but said 1nvesugators believe the
young man was killed with a hand-
gun.
Bowman said earl}' today that
pohce ha .. e not found the murder
weapon. And pohce declined to
discuss a possible motive m the
slaying.
J
protective of his mother. The woman
has been separated from Bruce Ralph,
but Bowman said he does not believe
the couple were divorced.
Ralph remained in Orange County
Jail today in lieu of SS00,000 bail.
ant id pates the failure to identify what
sul>sl8n11al notst 1nereasc as will
lead to legal problems for the state.
"It will be upto1hecouns to define.
They arc just mv1ting litiption,"
Pflaum said.
Com mince members votina for the
bill were Sen. Barry Keene, D-
Vallejo, Sen. Ed Davis, R-Canop
Park. Sen H.L. Richardson, •R·
Arcadia. Sen Nicholas Petns. D-
Oakland. Sen. Milton .Marks, R-San
Francisco, Sen. Bill Lockyer, D-
Alameda.
Voting apinst the bill were Sen.
Robert ~sley, ~Riverside, and
Sen. Diane Watson. D-Los Angeles.
The rtrruuning three members of the
com"1ittce were absent.
On Monday, employees of
McGuire Construction Co., who were
witering down a sewer line ditch
before fiJljng it. di~ovcted a body
that had been buncd under about 20
inches of loose sand. The construc-
uon site 15 on Star Crest in Irvine's
Tunic Rock community.
The body was identified as that of
Bradley Kaye, and the autopsy was
ordered to detenninc how he died.
Tldea
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law
Just Call
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VOL. n, NO. 221 However. published report!". based
on interviews with famil}' member..
said Ralph threatened his estranged
wife. Kaye's mother.
According to police. Kaye was last
seen alive Aug. I -the same day
several motorists reported seem&
Kaye's car and what appeared to be a
bod> partially stuffed in a trash bag
ofTto the side of Bonita Can)on Road
in lrvme.
Shortly af\erthe motorists reported
the s1gbung to pohce. Ralph was
arrested. even though a bod}' was not
1mmediatelv discovered.
Sgt. Bowman said today that of-
ficers are sttll looking for Kaye's ~=================~~==;;;================;;~ orange 1976 Mercury Capri. which I
Kaye. who has been In mg with hi s
mother 10 Costa Mesa. reportedly was
was seen b)...the Bonita Canyon Road
motorists who made the onginal
police report.
MERCHANTS WIN.NERS, LOSERS •••
From Al
wtnners in the Olympic business
games. .
Sales of video cassette recorders.
blank video tapes and television sets
skyrocketed during the week pnor to
the Games as well as the first week
"Just as the Ol)mp1cs started,.~r.f
sales ofVCRs went way up. We really
saw it just before the opening cer-
emonies. We had a lot more busmess
thati usual even on that Saturday."
said Steve Anderson, the manager of
the Federated Group Inc. home
electronics store 1n Westminster.
"It has gone back down to normal
now but our tape sales are mil very
good," he said.
The Olympics also gave color
television set sales a healthy boost.
Anderson added.
Pacific Stereo. another big home
electronics store in Westminster. has
been selling a steady stream of video
tapes-Ounng the Olympics.
The store did not sec a large spurt in
the sales oflarge-scrcen television sets
t1ut dJd sell a number of the small,
battery-operated portable televisions
nght before the Olympics," said Jeff
Grous, the assistant manager.
People were buying the telev1s1ons
to take with them to Olympic events
so they could view the television
coverage of other events going on at
the same time, he said.
Sales of video cassette recorders
have been on a steady increase !".ince
the Christmas season. Grous said he
attributed the sales to the increased
populanty of the machines as well as
people's desire to capture the Olym-
pics on tape
People also are captunng the Olym-
pies on film, reponed Cal's Cameras
Inc. ofeosta Mesa.
Sales of cameras and film "were up
nicely''. starting the week before the
Olympics, said Mark Stilley. the store
manager.
"It reall > picked up the day of the
opemngccrcmoniesand has been real
good," he said.
. Other types of businesses doing
well included grocery stores, accord-
ing to the chamber study.
Grocery stores reported that their
late July and early August business
was about 10 percent ahead of the
same period last year. Sales were
part1culary strona for snack foods, ice
cream. soft dnnks, wme. beer and
other party foods.
Department stores arc reporti!lg
sales are about normal. the chamber
said.
BADGER CAPTURED IN MESA ••.
Jl'romA1
mcl° the officer said. ''The) 've e\CO
been known to pursue someone 1f
they get mad enough."
Hyatt said she fired a tranqu1l1L1ng
pistol at the badger and then turned
and ran for fear the feast> animal
would attack her.
Officials of the California Depan·
mcnt of Fish and Game told Hyatt
bedccrs arc almost ne"cr found 10
coastal areas. "This 1s the first ume
anyone has heard of a badger betn&
found around here \.\e ha"c raccoons
and ~kunks and opo!".wms but no
ont'seversetn a tsadJ1.er." Hyatt said
She theonzed the animal may have
wandered from fields near John
Wayne Airport. throu~ a senes of
drainage channels and into the mdus-
tnaJ area. Hyatt said she 1s almost
certain that the badger could not be an
abandoned pet because of its ag-
gressive behavior.
Hyatt said Fish and Game officials
told her to keep the ammal under
obscirvat1on for 48 hours to make
certain it does not have rabies. If the
badaer appears to be acting normally
by late today. she said. she will release
it into a small wildlife area at tbe end
of V1ctona Street.
"The place is full of a.round
squirrels (the bad~er's main food
source). so he will hke that. And the
coyotes won't bother him.~~ she said.
In fact, she said no animal smaller
than a mountain lion will take on a
badger in the wild.
By the time he's released, the
badger will "probably be banaing the
cage, spittina mad. and tryina to get
out.•• she said.
Hyatt said she will probably release
the animal while standing on the roof
ofher truck.just to be on the safe side.
TRAFFIC PATTERNS UNDER STUDY ••.
From A l
conductina the stud}' with the help of
Wilfred .,Recker. director of the um-
vcrs1ty's lnst1tute of Transportlltton
The researchers were awarded an
SSJ.000 arant by the Cahfom1a
Department of Transportation to
analyze what the f rceways arc hkc
when they are pushed beyond ca-
pacity and to study the massive traffic
routing plans of local govem111cnt
aeencics and the Los Angeles Olym-
pic Org;aniztna Committee.
The efforts to encourage people to
u mass transit, car pool or Simply
stay ofT the ~oad represent ·:the most
comprehensive tran5portAt1on man-
aa.emcnt sy tcm that we know of."
said Giuliano.
"f don't think a program of the
scope that this tua been has ever been
tncd 10mtY..bcre else." he said.
When all the data is in. the
rtscartbcn w111 u computer stmu-
lations of U'llffiC flows to. "~hit
•'Oul'1 li c happened tf no one
ltstened 10 ahe ptannen." The researchers al plan 10 surve
commute to find how man eturngtd their dn tna hahm ctorin1
the OJ mpt Giuli no hopes to find
out NU cncoura~ people to make
the adjustments in their driving •Typical sumhter tounsts have
habits. gone elsewhere, leavin& a pp 1n the
The final days of the Olympics may daily traffic volume.
just live Giuliano's research team its •A la.TJC number of residents have
chance to study Southern Cahfom1a left the Southern California durina traffic at its worst. o · "The traffic level 15 bwldmg back. the lymp1cs and that means there art fewer cars on the road. so we arc assuming that people arc
goma back to their old ways," she •A Iara component of traffic is
said, adding that traffic rcporu for discretionary. It is made up of p_coplc
Monday and Tuesday of this week runnina errands they could easily put
were at near nonnal levels for typical off for several weeks. This works for a
summer work days. ~hon pcnod of time, but in the Iona
While researchers do not yet have run it catches up. Giuliano wd this
enouah data to be able to say why may be why traffic wa heavy in the
traffic was light dunna the first week, wed: prior to the Olympics. People
Giuliano said there could be a variety ""~ doina the errands early. of factors workina tot ther. he "Once all the data is in, the fun
offered a few of the foUo~na theoncs. tans. We &Ct to analyic it:'. s:ajd
but cautioned that it wiU be several Giluliano. an Irvine resident.
months before she know what has "We should &et a gOOd idea of who
truly happened: went to the pmcs and how they aot
•Many people arc following the there.·· •
advice of transit offkaal by ta.kin& The. tudy also 1hould :.J>ro\ 1dc
ma 1rans11, car poolina or stay1n1 n~dcd information for traffic man-
home. ag mcnt .•t other ~or events in
• early 7 percent of the tickets metropolitan areas. And.at could 11ve
sold for Ol)'mp1c ocnt went to • transit ~lanncrs a gd6d 1dc1 of what
SOutticrn C'alifom1an . People could ca~1ncs work tiCst an •!"P~oving the
be goma 10 the 01 mp1c inst d of cro"-dt"d uthcm Cahform tran
work · port_at1on ')Stem. hC' tondudN. •
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CELLULAR INTE RNATIONAL
1580 1 ROCKFIELD
IRVINE, CALI FORNIA
770.3363 -r
FOR MORE INFORMATION REG ROING VfRTJ.S~G JN THE.OAILY. P.ILOT....-----....--1
CONT ACT CINDY HAZZARD AT ~2·,321.
c '
~Boost l 9 ..,___...,,...._____ ..
sets f undraiSer
.. The newly.formed Booster Club for the South Coast S~ahna Team will conduct a Germaq Beerfc t f und·ra11ina
dinner at 6:30 p.m. on Aua. 11. ·
The South Coast 'hna Tum is sponsored by the
B<» Scouts of America and the Nautical Hen e Mu Kum. ·
• ~ny~nt wishina informanon on the dinner or the
organllltaon, call Erne Luchini i 76~37$6 ar Linda
MattSon a.t 661-1226.
Ba•fc CPR coune offered ·
S South Coast Medical Center, 31872 Coast Hiahway
out.h Laauna, is offcrina a basic course .~ card1opulmonary resuscitation (CPR) with Part I today
from 6-to-9 p.m. Pan II will be on Wednesday, Aua. ls'. from 6 to 10 p.m.
To reserve a space or for further information call
495-S 191 or 499-13 t l, Ext. 2718. There is no fee '
A•~• •upport groug to meet
Norm James, co-director of the Physical Perf~rmance
J>roaram at Ca.IState Fullerton, will address "Asthma and
Exercise" at th dult Asthma Supt>on Group meetina at
1717 N. Broad y, Santa Ana on Tuesday, Aug.14, from 7 to 8 p.m.
Co-sponsored by the Amencan lung Association of
Orange . County, the proaram 1s frte and all adult
asthmattcs arc welcome. To .P.~·realSter, call 83S-LUNO.
Grand PrU trip .clJeduled
The-City oflrvm~ommunity-Servtces IXpartment
has scheduled a trip to the Malibu Grand Prix in Fountain
Valley for teenaaers, 13-18, 7th to 12th aradcs; on
Tuesday, Aua. 14, from 4 to 8:30p.m.
!he JrOup will leave from Hentage Park Youth
Servtccs Center, 460 l Walnut, Irvine. The cost is S 10 and
includes transportation, supervision, a dnver's license for
the "roadrunner" cars, and six laps of racing.
For further details. call 660-3814.
Stop Smoklng cllnlc slated
The American Cancer Society's next "Stop Smokina
Chnic" wiU bqin Monday, Aug. 13, at Los Caballeros
Sports and Racquet Oub. The clasxs WJll be held on
Monday and Wednesday evenings, from 7 to 8:30 p.m., through Aug. 22.
i ltc clinic will be led by ex-smoker Jim Staunton, a
trained Amcricart'Cancer Society volunteer, who has been·
successf ull) conducun& st.op.sl)lok.ina classes-for more
'than two years. · -
The Society requests a SI 0 donation. Prc-rc,istrauon
is reqwred by calling 752-8600. . ..
Dlvorce lecture serle. set
A ltttbre series "Everything You Wanted to Know
About Divorcina" is about the emotional and lcp.I options available in Orange County.
Janeen Hahn-Cunningham, a marriaae and family
therapis1 and divorce mediator, will lead the lectures. The
first lttturc of the series entitled "Separated -Now
What(' is scheduted for Monday, AUJ. 20. from 7 to 8 p. m.
tn Bldg. F, 1801 Parkcoun Place. Suite 201. Santa Ana.
For reservations, caU 547-9078.
NAPS to meet Aug. 21
The Nat1onaJ Association for Professional Sales-
women will hold its monthly mcet1n1 on Tuesday. Aua.
21. at the new Doubletrce Hotel. I 00 City Dnve, Orange.
Dr. Mark Victor Hansen; sales trainer, wiJI be the
featured speaker and will concentrate on dynamic
prospecting methods and creative concepts for closma
sales.
Registration and networlcina from 6 to 7 p.m. with the
meeting from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The cost of S 15 includes hors
d'oeuvres. For reservauons and info""atton, call Rianah
Rhone at 380-8886.
CALEND AR
Wednesday, Aug. 8
Back to the days of
yesteryear in CM
0.-,NM(llllet .. -,~~
About 800 ~pie were on hand tbJ.a put
weekend when Coeta Meea '• •mall baal·
ndlea broqht back .. The Good Old Daya"
with a cunf•al at 1'1!J1ACer Park to benefit
Children'• Boepltal of 9rin1e Coanty. Prtcea
were kept to 25 cen• to ~ centa for all
e•enta, lDclucllna carnt•al rldea and 1amea1
ponlea, clo~ .. foodrprtra and llvc mule.
'A banl Deiil Pamer, 7 , •ot C09U lieu
(ab9Ye) ahowa off the &o14flah ahe won, while
mime Dalllelle Dodd.9 createa animal toya out
of b&Jloona (rlaht). Oraanlser Valerie Torelli
of Select Propertlea, tlie lar&eat contributor,
Aid the carnl•al, held for the aecond tlme
thla year, ralaed $769.
IMC elects president
Douglass N. Myers. chiefe.\-
ecut1ve officer of lrvme Medical
Center since its inception more than
two years ago. has been elected
president of the non-profit corpor-
ation. which 1s now developing
Irvine's first hosp•tal.
The medical center's board of
directors elected Myers to the post.
Myers succeeds C. David Baker.
who rcs1ancd from the presidency
411d the board an June followma his
eltttion to the Irvine City Council.
M)ers will continue as a member of
the board. He will continue to head
the medical cent~r's professional
planmng and development staff and
will serve as president unttl the board
selects a president and cbief cxecutive
to operate the hospital.
With hts wife Elaine, M)ers li"es in
the Tunic Rock area of Irvine. He
eamc0 a master's degree an health
administration at Duke University.
He has previously held adm1n1s-
trative pcsitions at Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach.
DAILY PIL.OTIW«tnMdiy ~I 1H4 M
Neww r
i rmulaw
benefitOC . •
Areas that use more MWD water
will get more In case of drought
Firom &aft ud tre Re;ort•
The Metropolitan aw Diltnct has cbaaerd &11
ormula for allocating ~ tet pJ)lies d~ dro~t mcanlna arus 'which u: more of ats wau:r -
1ndudina nae Count)' -uld set the most. and Los
Anaclc ould 1ct le .
Los Anacles members. who voted tptnlt the
proposal at the ajant ft1iOnal water ~' tteent
mcctipg. threatened to ask the Cit) to oppose lhe plln
When it comes before the lcaiS!atUre an Sacramento. even
thouah it m1&ht .. open . t6e doof" 10 oppqs1tion b)
orthem California. .
In the past. cmel'JCnC) supphcs rerc allocated tow
~W~Ys 27 member agencies on the basis of which wata
d1stnct prud the most 1n property taus, and Los ~naclts
witb 111 J .mil hon residents was by far the lal'l(St t.Upl)'Cr.
However. the city uses only 2th percent of MWO
water and gels neatl)' 70 percent of its water from separate.;
cuy-owned sources an the Hi&h crra.
San 01~0 County. on the other hand. acts 90 pcr«nl
..ofits water from the MWD' Colorado River ~pply -or
about 32 percent of 1WD dehvcn. The MWD serves
about J 2 mil hon midents in Southern Caltfomia.
•beoldallocalioA-method t.t:JirA'llte ~~rt---'"""
be eliaiblc to receive 28 pe~t of MWD e~ncy
upphes. and San Diego would act only 12 pctCCnL
''So we'd be affected more than anyothcr~·t,a drought)," said San Dieao MWD member Hany Gri J .
The old formula could leave Sa.n ~as much u 4S
peruent shon of its water needs dunna a drou&ht.
a.ccordina to MWD off acials
However, the new a.llocation method woold dis.-
tribute the water not only on the basis of pto~y ta1es but
oo the amount of water used, so that San Diego, like Oran~ County, would act more.
In Oranie County, cities ~rved by the couury
Municipal Water Distnct, which include Irvine. Hunt-
. m.ton Beach. Fountain Valley and pans of Cost.a Mcsa.u
eU as those ter'\led by the Coastal Water Distnct. ICl"Vina
Newpon Beach, Lacuna Beach, pans of Gost.a Mesa and
points south, stand to gain from the new allocation plan.
Also, tbe cities 'of Anaheim, Fullerton arid Sant.a ~na -
would bCri from ~~ U> ~~ spokesman Tim Skro\<e.
"These cities would be in a better position as w as
preferential riahts arc c!oncemcd.." Skrove acb~
Los Angeles MWD member Mart Laina Ubd the
board to undertake a specia] study of cmcrpcy
allocation. but members from other areas rejected it.
.. Southern California's acnuine interest in the
enactment of a water package will be questioned if we
initiate another family conflict at this time." laincr
warned. "It opens the door up to raise various is ucs."
Nonetheless. the Los Angeles members wd ~ raay
actively seek to organju opposition to the plan 10 tbc
Legjslaturc.
OCTDorders
busway study
The Orange Count\' Transit District Monday
authorized funhcr study o( pecial frttwaybus lanes as iM
main component of.a scaled-down plan to ease &eewl)
congesuon in central Orange Count)'. _
The transit board directed transponauon planners to
develop a construction plan a.nd cosustimatts-.-now put
at abOut S.00 million -by the end of the )e&r.
• 9:30 a.m., Oru1e Couty Soard of SaJ»erVtsora,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 6:30 p.m., Cotta Men Redevelopmeat Aleacy,
City Hall Council Cha.mbers, 77 Fair Dnvc, Cosu Mesa.
• 7 p.m., Lapu Beacla Plannln1 Commi11lon, city
council chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
Hearing set on JWA ·expansion
Ultimately, any project wouJd have to be approved by
the Orange County Transportation Commission, which
has authonty over all count) transponaion and trans11
projects.
The corridor slated for the study lS a heavily thveled.
six-lane-wide stretch of the Sant.a Ana Freeway lhat runs
for 40 miles bet~cen the San Gabriel Raver Frceway(60S)
in Los Anacles C.ount)' and the interscctlon of the Sant.a
Ana Freeway and \be San D1cao Freeway tn lrvtJ?C.
• 7 p.m., Oranae Couty Harbot1, Beacbes and Parka
CommJ11IOR, Hall of Administration Building, l 0 Civic
Center Plaza, Room 119, Sant.a Ana.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Beacll RecTeadoa ud Com-
mUDJ ty Servtce1 Committee, Community Center, 374 Lqion St
Residents bvma an the v1c10ty of
John Wayne Airport will get their first
chance tonight to publicly react to the
Orange Count)'. Board of Supervisors'
plans for significantly expanding the
airport and constructing a new ter-
mmal.
age.
The heannJ ts the first of five
scheduled before the project comes
before the Bo?rd of Superv1wri. for
final cert1ficat1on Oct. l
The project 1s outhned 10 a seven-
volume master plan, environmental
impact report, land use compat1biht)
program and two associated studies
detailing what economic effttts ex-
pansion would have on the airport
and the coummunity.
The county Planning Comm1ss1on.
Airport Commission and Airport
Land Use Commission will bold a 7
p.m. joint public hearing at the Costa
Mesa Nciahborhood Center, 1845 N.
Park Ave., to listen to public com-
ments concerninJ the proposed S 191
m1lhon airport improvement pack-
• 7:30 p.m .. Oruae Cou ty Saaltatton Dlttrlct1
Board• of Directors, Districts Headquarters, 10844 Ellis
Ave., Fountain Valley.
• 1 p.m. Oranae Couaty PlauJD1 Coolail11Jon,
Airport CommJ11JoJl ud AJ~rt Land Uae Comm111loa
Jolq llearln1. Costa Mesa Ne1ghborhood Center, 1845 N.
Par.C Ave., Costa Mesa.
Po ucE LoG
Supervisors are hoping to enlarae
Police up in the air over
Meadowlark plane theft.,
A heavily equipped sinaJe-cnaine
plane worth St 70,000 has been re-
ported stolen from Meadowlark Air-
pon m Hununaton Beach, police said
today.
Huntinaton ·Beach Lt. Jim Walker
said the phrnc's pilot, Jay u nnina.
discovered the plane was missma
Tuesday momina.
He said Lannina, who uses the
plane for bis unidenJified Santa Ana
business. described it as a 1983 whue
and red Cessna T2 l O cmglc-cnaine
a.ircraft.
The plane was beina leased from a
Bay City. Mich .. company, he said.
Walker said residents reported
hearina the takeoff of a powerful
plane the maht before the theft was
discovered, but police said they have
Newpbrt Beacb Tuesday, Another shoiaun valued at
A NcWJ>ort Beach man reponed the . $1,000 i.lso was .ia:e~. .
theft of S l t ,330 in household aoods A Nc:NP<>rt Beach man reported the
from b.is home in the 2100 block of theft of three 1un1 ofand S200 cuh
Vista Entrada Tuesday. The stolen from hiS borne in the 400 block of
items lncluded three auns and $9,000 luaonia Tuesday.
in fishina equipment. • • • A Newpo rt Beach woman reported Coeta 11-
the theft of $698 in camera equip-
ment from her home in the 100 block
ofBaywood Tuesday. • • • A Newport Stach man reponed the
theft of an auto tt rco nlucd at
S 1.$00 from his Me rcedes in the 1600
block of East Coast Hlahway. • • • The Balboa Bay Club repcrtcd
TueMlay tt\at meont took an cl~
tric can bclonaina to the club for 1joy
ride. The susptet crashed the can.
do1n St .SOO in damaae to it. ~--~----~--· ·-=------~~---=::;:;;:::;;;o A cwport Beach ma" repontd the theft of1n antique Bro~'l\i"'sho~·~m;;.--"'"'-"'!~
ulucd at S20,000 from has hOmc 1n
• 1tic IJOO block of West • treet
, ..
-.
been unable to locate anyone who
may have witnessed the theft.
There is no control tower at
Meadowlark and late nil.ht takeoffs
arc rare, he ~1d. •
The two-seat plane was equipped
wnh an extensive array of opttonal
equ1pment. which account~ for the
hiah loss fiaure, Walker said.
stole a stereo and assorted Jewelry.
The loss was placed at S 1,465. • • • An unlocked btdroom Window at a
home on the 500 block of' Joann Strttt
provided cntt}' Tuesda) for th1c:"~
who stole a S 150 tereo. • • • A. S«urity auard at tht Mesa West
Pct Ho,p1tal, tj70 Placentia Ave.,
told pohce two tccn·aac bo broke:
into the ho pita! Tuelda niaht and
stole a TV t Valued at S 0
Banttnaton BMc.11
A resident of the 400 blodt of 16th
trcct rfporttd earl today that
thieves b~amcd htS hom.c, tnter-in.a thro an open atldina atau
w1ndow. be l v.-as estimated at
the overcrowded airport by 1990 to
accomodate 10.2 million passengers
per year and 73 commercial jct
departures daily.
Last )ear, 2 6 million passengers
thronged the aging rerminaJ to board
one of JW A's 41 daily commemal flights.
Options to be $tUdied dunna the comina months
include using an expanded medtan stnp for bus lanes
along the center dlVlder of the Santa Ana Freeway to the
Irvine interchange and an elevated guidcway alona the
Santa Ana Frcewa)' between the Costa Mesa and Ora.nae
freeways.
The repcns also includes a con-
troversial proposal for convert mg the
residential Santa Ana Heiahts area to
1ndustnal or business parks and open
space to brina the area into com-
phancc with state noise guidelines.
The dec1s1on to study the busway a.ltemauve comes
tn the wake of Propos1tton A's defeat at the polls an June.
The penny transportauon sales ta\ measure would have
included fundma for what transpon.auon P.l.anners still S&Y.
is their prcfC'TT'ed transit -1temat1ve. a bilhon-<iollar rail
hne through the comdor.
that someone stole a copper<olored
t 974 Datsun 260Z from in front of
the home The loss "as estimated at
$6.000.
La&un• Beach
City parkina meters worth approx-
imately $250 were reported stolen
Tuesday afternoon from the 300
block of Ocean -'\Hnue Linl..no"n
su pccts tv.1Sted a doublr-headcd
meter off its post and fled "1th the
meters and an unkno" n amoun1 of
change inside. The same suspects
apparenll) 0¥1llilKN .another meter in
the area in an attempt to take 1t too.
but wc:re unsuettSsful ••• Je\\elf'\ wonh an estimated
SI S.000 ~as reported stolen Tue~'
afternoon from a residence 1n the 700
block of Balboa A "enue. The suspttt
apparent)~ entered the reSJden~
though an unlocked s1de door
Error blamed
in power outage
~JO.second blackout that left pans
of Co ta Mesa and C\l.l)Ort Beach
withoul power Tuesday afternoon
was cau.;cd by human emrr. accord-
ing to a Southern CaJifom1a Edison
Co. spokesman.
Hill Compton. t:dt~n a.rca man-
ager. said the,.-1>0wcr failure "'as
tnagertd when ~n emplo)ee thre" the
wTOng switch at an Edison ubstauon
an Costa Mesa, near Fauv1ew Road
and Newoort Boulevard.
Compton said the brief blackout
affected betVliecn 6,000 and 7 ,000
customers in a.n area from Wilson
Street on the north to the beach on the
south and from the Sant.a Ana River
on the wHt to Dover Drive on the
ea~t.
Guns seized in arrest
of five teens in Mesa
At
Sky pirates fre~~-~----
129 onjetliner
ROME (AP) -At least o men ·d tbe hi,Pckcn 1<.kntaficd them-
anned wuh a pi,tol and a ~oadc l~· s oppc)ncots Of Iranian leader
bijacktd an lran Air Jetliner carrym1 Ayatollah Rubollah l<.homcini.
284 pas~naers bound for Saudi ltahan •uthonties id the hi·
Arab1aand freed 129 of their captive • jaclcers had not identified themttlvcs.
mcludma 44 children. today at a and had only asked for food. medi·
Rome airport. It.ah.an authorillC'5 cine a.od f~l
1d. An Italian police pfficia.11 who
• An Italian airport official. who spoke on condition of anonymity,
would not idenufy himself by name. said there were 284 ~nacn on the
.aid all the freed passengers r 9ed t>l'anet>eforc1hcbiJac~ersrtlcasciJ the
in three grou~t.amna at ~ p.m. (5 first group of captives. The official a.m. PDT>. ap arcd an good health. Iranian news agency had said there
He quoted the ssenacrs a~ 5a)tng \\ierc 304 ~pie aboard when the
there were two h1J d:cr.. flight was hijacked over Iran on a
0 They arc fine . the> arc onl) flight from Tehran on Tuelday ni~t.
hungry," the airpon offic1aJ said of Allhough passengers told police
the released passengers. \\ohO v.erf the> saw only two hijackers, police
taken to 1hc airport infirmary: He sources said more sky pirates miaht
sa..id among the 44 ch1lmn were be aboard the plane. lni1ial reports
several infants, and a1rpon ¥/Orkers put the number of.hiJac.Jccrs 11 18.
were seen carrying four packs 'of Iran's official news agency said the
disposable diapers to the infirmary. passengers of the French-made Air· . . -~ .. ,
\. -
.. -..
NA TION
~----
Vietn v.ete-ran o se
Agent Orange s e ttle m.ent
By tit A"octatecl Pre
NEW YORK -V1etntm veteran• are cen.ina their diy in court to
comment on a proposed S 180 million. eettlcment · nst the makers of the
:.hctbicidc.AgentOra.nac.wilh ondo~ rviccman condcmni~e pac s ·•a inju~tice and totally ma<fequatc.'" Th1ny-one s IJCers we~ schedu~ to appear today in Brooklyn before U.S. District udJe Jack B.
Weinstein, who must IJ>prove the settl mtnt before it can take effeci, from lettt"~ to the judge and from telephone intervieWI this week. it appeared that
mOSt oppose the settlement, either because they believe it is too 5mall or
because they believe the seven comp nies that produced Agent Orange should
be forced to admit ~sponsibility for marketing a danierous product.
PoHce bribe trial wmdbJg down
PHILADELPHIA -Lawytrs for sev~o fonner policemen accused of
-takin1 bnbes to protect ille~ pmblina attacked the veracity of two
government witne s as the c1ty's bi&&e l pohcc corruption trial wound to a
close. Defense attorneys were to make closing st.atemcnts today before the case
is turned over to the jury in the fifth week the extortion trial. The seven
defendants, accused of accepting$350.000 in bribe$ from 1980 to 1984, include
a fontler deput:• commi~,ioncr •!'Id chief inspector who were the highest Police
officials e.vcr a1 custd of corrupuon here.
EPA warns of asbestos In sclJools
WASHlNv 1 ON -About 15 m1lhon pupils attend public school in
buildings comain1og potentially dangerous asbestos. accordinJ to a new
Environmental Protection Agency survey. The EPA also csumated that
somewh.e~ bet"'ecn 1-4 percent and 26 percent of lhe buildings used by the
pubhc contain asbestos wbich could be inhaled. Fine asbestos particles can
cause serious lung diseases, including cancer, that may not sho~ up for-40 years
after exposure .
Rome's Ctamp1no Airport, used bus included 280 Moslem pilgrims
mainly for chaner and military when it left Te.hran for Jidda. The
flights, was closed and surrounded by p1lgnms were en route to the Moslem
security forces shonly after the blu~oly cities of Mecca and Medin.a.
.. -~. 11nd whne plane touched down Q The plane~s 'pilot, during a two--
12:40 p.m. (3 a.m ~OT). stranding our refueling stop this momini in Soldier held In murder, rape
• • ..
hundreds of tounsts, mcludin.g about Cairo, told Egyptian authorities there
400 Amencans. No one was allowed were 18 hijackers and that they had near the hijacked plane, which was wired explosives around bis body,
parked at the end of a runway. Egypt's state-run Middle East News
The ltahan news agency ANSA Agency reported. ..
P.ertur,bect punker ·
A YOUDC ladJ, uee a broom to •weep aldewalk ln Hannover,
Wat Germany after a weekend meettna of 1,.600 punks and
•ldnbeada. Police caa,Jat 25 of the Ylalton and preaed
them Into cleant.ni ap after the weekend rtota.
Burton to·qe buried in· Swiss village
FORT HUACHUCA. Anz. -A 19-year-old Army private was arrested
for in vestigation of felony murder and rape Tuesday in the October death of
another soldier here, officials said. Pvt. Donald Thomas Kina, of Hiahland
Park. Mich .• was returned to the post from West Germany on Saturday tn
connection with the death of Pvt. Annette M. Wozni.ak, 18, said post
spokeswoman Barbara Slifer. Wozniak was last seen alive Oct. 22 and was
rcponed as absent-without-leave on Oct. 25. Her body was found Nov. 8 in an
isolated. grass-overgrown area on the Arm y post. Preliminary repons
.. indicated she had been dead for some time, apparentlyt>f strangulation.
NY lllglJ-ri'e fJre lnjurett 32 firemen
NEW YORK-A fire erupted after business hours on the seventh floor of
a 21-story commercial build1nJ, send.mg heavy smoke through the buildin1
and injuring 32 fircfiahters, officials said today. No civilians were hurt in the
fire in Lower Manhattan on Tuesday night, although some people were Jiven
oxygen at the scene. s:ud Lt. Tom McEnroe, a fire department spokesman. The
injured firefiahters suffered smoke mhalation and heat exhaustion, and were
arrt.reattd md meis$Cd from nearby hosp11als .
Actor's sister hopes
Elizabeth Taylor will
Stay away fro.m r .tes
1.000 francs ($412) I~ O\'erybody
else who wants 10 be.buried here."
I<.oessler said a Welsh flag will
cover the coffin durina the funeral
Th.ursday at the 400-year-old vill~ge
. church in Cdiiny. whiCh ovecloob
lake Geneva. CELIGNY. Switzerland (AP) -At London's Heathrow Airport,
Richard Burton, a Welsh flag cover-where some of Burton's brothers aQd ma his coffi n, will be buned m a sisters were boardin~ a funht to cemetery plot he bought here years fi .,. ago, says a fnend, and not in his Switzerland to attend e uneral, his
native Wal.es as his family had hoped. brother Verdun said: "Everybody is
b h f ·d T sd very upset. We would have preferred A rot er 0 the actor sai uc ay the funeral to have been in Wales ...
that the family wished the bunal but circumstances alter." would be in Ponthrydfen, Wales.
where the actor was born Richard ''It was his wish that he should be
Jenk.tns 58 years ago, the 12th of 13 buried near his home 1n Switzerland
child ren of a coal miner. Burton's and we have to respect that," said
sister. Hilda Owen. said Sunda} that Jenk.tns.
her brother wanted to be buned in his Burton. whose heavy dnnk.tog and
oattve "1llage love affair with Ehz.abeth Taylor at
However. Edouard Koessler. a.-11mes eclipsed attentton paid to his
banker whose wife is mayor here. said superb stage acting. died from a brain
of Burton's purchase of a cemetef) hemorrhage Sunday tn a Geneva
plot 1n Cehgny· "I believe this proves hospital after becoming ul at his villa
that he wanted to be enterred here. He 1 n Cchgny.
bought the concession at our vi llage At Heathrow airport. Owen said
cemete several years ago. paying she hoped Miss Taylor will stay away
NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY
POLICY AS TO STUDENTS.
The Church of The Power of Being, "A Mission cnurch of The
Science of Mind College" admits students of any race, color,
national· and ethnic origin to all the rights, prlvlleges, programs,
and activities generally accorded or made avallable to students
at the School. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color,
national and ethnic origin In administration of Its educatlonaJ
pollcles, admissions pollcles, scholarship and loan programs,
and athletlc and other school-administered programs.
"' ..-
Early Bird Dinner
Specials 16.9S
Pri me Rib or Fresh Fish
-;-/ Complete Dinner with choice of
~ soup or salad and d~ssert
ON THE PENINSULA l D1y1 I W11k! ··~ 4to6PM
BALBO A 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726
Two Great Dinners for the Price of One!
Choice of ten fabulous entre.es including
prime rib and fresh fish .
I
Seating on first come. frrst served basis
on 2 for l nights.
• Offer good on ·Wednesdays. Thursdays, and Fridays
5 - 7 P.M. thru 8-3 1--84
833-0080
2 llOcb
Solt• of
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from the funeral "for Sally's sake,"
referrinJ to Burton's widow, Sally
Hay. Mtss Taylor, who tWlce marncd
Burton. has not announced whether
~e willattend the funcml.. · 1<.0C'ssler, wtwsc villa ts near that.of
Bunon's modest-looking "Pays de
~Iles" -French for Wales -said
the actor considered Celigny .. the best
place in the :world." ·
Bunon would stay two to three
months a year in Celigny ..
"Herc he had peace and people left
him alone and here is where he
wanted to be buried," Koessler said.
The retired vtllage pastor. the Rev.
Arnold Mobbs, ~ho will officiate at
the funeral. said Bunon considered
himself a Welshman above all.
"He loved beang here." sau:1
Mobbs. "For insfancc. when the
children went from heme to home
during the Escalade (a local festival)
he received them very generously at
home."
CALIFORNIA
''When he went to a store. people
greeted him but they re5pected that he LA traffic bac.t to 'normal'
was here to rest and they did not_ . . . . bother him verv much," Mobbs said. ~OS A~GELES-A~er hstemna for a.wee~ to official pleas for drivn~a restramt dunng the Olympics, Southern Califorrua commuters' love for their
cars seems to be prevailing. "People are feeling more comfortable, they're
getting back into their normal patterns." Joe Hecker, a traffic supervisor with
City didn 't 'bite'
on sCulptor's bid
the Califomta Department of Transportation. said Tuesday. The normal
pattern. however. ts a slow-moving mass of cars that clog freeways between
downtown and the suburbs during rush hours. Even more traffic was expected
as track and field events conunued today at the Coliseum south of downtown.
Hecker s~ud
Radlo, TV writer Klbbee succumbs t
LOS ANGE LES -Roland K.iblke, a wnter wTto won three Emm)s in a
career that spanned radio, feature films and television, died Sunday of cancer
at t~e affe of 70 Kibbee began his career writin' for radio on "The Grouch
_Clu " wrote.for the movies. "A Night tn-C1lSabianca;'~geH:>n My
Shoulder," .. The Devil's Disciple." and "Valdez Is ComiQg." For television,
Kibbee wrote and produced "The Bob Cummings Show," "The Virginian."
"The Alfred Hitchcock Hour" and "The Family HolvaCU-
Lu1 Auguet~the Town Council
endorled · the concept of the
ecutpture but voted to end tax-
payer fUn~ng of the project and
handed over a $50,000 National
Endowment of the Arts grant to a
private cftlzene group heading a
fund drive. Governor opposes 'foartlJ estate'
SACRAMENTO -California's governors llave bad a "roller skate"
residence during two decades of dispute, say backers of a bill to build a new,
permanent govemofs mansion near the downtown Capitol. The bill advanced
to its final vote in the Senate, but Republican Gov. George Dcuk.rnejian
remains opposed. His spokesman, Kevin Breu, says Dcukmejian says the state
already has three governor's residences and doesn 't need a founh.
Alth'ough the town controlled
two-thirds of the land on the
prOpc)eed eculpture lit•, the
council voted laet month to let t~
remaining prc>perty owners cMo.
cJde If they Would approve
changes In the area'• protective covenant• to e1aow the eculpture. Mass .killer suspect qulued
That prooeea wu Jutt under SAN FR.AN CISCO -An inmate who claims to have killed at least I 6 way When the counett. got"a letter young women in the Pacific Nonhwest said be is wiUing to take a lie detector
dated Jufy 24, from otcs.nburg's test to prove bis assemons, a newspaper reported today. Robert Matthias. 25.
lawyec:, Stanford Schewef of New has admitted killi,na " I 6 and possibly more" women that be described as "the
YOrk Cltj ~of people l hated the mosL" Another inmate, Richard Carbone, 32. h.as
· said he helped Matthias in the slayinp of 11 women. Washington invC$tJgators Schewel Mid Otdenburg want-questioned the pair Tuesday at the Hall of Justice to determine whether they
ed to wtthdraw from the PJ.Ojec:t. were connected to the so-called Green River slayings, in wlucb 26 young 1---------------------------. women were lcilled in the Seattle area in the summer of 1982.
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Grocery cler.ts reject contract
LOS ANGELES -Unaon leaders scheduled a new vote on a tentative
contract agreement between Sou them California supermarket clerks and 1,334
..stores fr.om San Luis Obispo to the Mexican border Tuesday after United Food
and Commercial Workers union clerks voted to reject a tentative settlement
worked out a week ago to avert a strike during the Olympics. Union officials
said the new vote 1s necessary because of"confusion" created wl)en a revised
contract proposal was made by the supermarkets midway through the initial
balloting. T
WOR LD
Brltl•h coal mlnen bJ rampage
LONDON -Police said today that about 1,650 stnktng coat miners
staged hit~nd-run raids on two pits and a reaional office of the National Coal
Board in a new outbreak of violence in the bloody 21-weck walkout Dozens of
cars wert at'3cked and scores of windbws smas.hed in the three separate
overnight attacks at Sutton-in-Ashfield and 81rcotes, bolh in the county of
Nottinghamshire, and at Donc:istcrm thcadjom1ngcounty ofYorkshittto the
nonh.
U.S. addreaes population meet
MEXICO CITY -U.S. delcaates at a U.N. conference on population
problems are trying to win suppon for the Reaaan admmistrauon's
controversial theory that free-market economies help lower birth ntes. Several
delegates from other countnes objected Tuesday to the U.S. representative •
proposal to include the theory among 85 recommendations for action by the
confereooe. Jamei Buckley. head of the U.S. dele&alion, defended lhc pro1><>s.at.
sayin$ there was "total linkage" between economic.problems and population.
He said cconomi~ was "at least half the au ts of what's beina discussed at this
conference."
Germany'• pasb tor •ccord•
BONN. Wet qcrmany -Dcspttc.Soviet criticism , Eat and West
Germany arc struii.11~to improve rtlauons. The question is whether the
Soviet Union will allow wt Germ ·~~:"aintain the momentum. In the past two wttks. both East and West any have publicly dc(endtd 1hc1r
!'PProchemcol, and a n~ou . Soviet Union hu rtpcatcdly dcnoun6'd the
idea. Now. W t Gtnnan officials and diplomats are wonderina wh1:thcr th
SOvict Union will a~t m stop the int r-0 rman flirtation -and pcrhac>' order
Pre tdent En ch Hon kcr of Communi t East Germany to caned hi planned ~ i It to We 'Germany in · ptembcr.
Sri Lan~• deatli toll 42
-
..
day, August 8, 1984 A5
Wynnewood, Pa. net&hbOra •It on porch during Tue.day'• 'National Ntiht 01lt. •
Al'ft Jt Ill
U.S. h as 'night on t n e t own '
t o combat after dark crime
'People ... didn't
have time to fight
with each other.'
By the A11oclated Press
Pohcc bands and block parties
drew thousands of Americans out of
their homes and porch hghts burned
brightly in 20 states on the "Nauonal
Night Out" to show c1uzens they can
band together to conquer "after-dark
fear of crime."
Rain and lack of parucipauon
dampened. the turnout m places, but
police U\ some communities said
crime reports seemed to decline.
Organizers said if they plan a repeat of
Tuesday night's campa1gn, they
might start earlier than 9 p.m.
·•1 think it went well, though it's
hard to· tell," said Matt Peskin of
Wynnew~ Pa., director of the
National Association of ~own
Watches, which organized the event.
Even though rain kept people indoors
in southeastern Pennsylvania. "It was
not a complete failure," he said ..
In Minnesota, the St!'Paul police
swing band played at a lcjckofT event
in Whittier Park., in a hi&h<rime area
of South Minneapolis. Poliae planned
to monitor crime during the "Ni&ht
Out"andcompa.rethedata with other
ni&hts to sec if there was a rcducuon.
Several neighborhoods also set up
spotlights and held block parties
before the appointed crime-watct\
·hour, organizers said. •
Jn Hamilton Township, N.J.,
police estimated that S,000 people sat
on their porches or walked over to
neighbor's homes between 9 p. m. and
IOp.m.
Emanuel Butera, a township police
officer. said his department usually
acts .. a lot of calls ... about rowdy
groups or domestic disputes" on a
typical Tuesday night. "And tonight
that dropped by about 7S percent. I
guess because people were out dotng
something. they didn't have time to
fight with eaeb-othcr," he said.
"Night Out is a relatively simple
and inexpensive way to get neighbors
everywhere th1olcjng cnme preven-
tion ... at least for one hour," said
police Chief Tom Hennies in Rapid
City, S.D., a community of 46,500. •
Peskin $lid the idea for "National
'Night Out" came in part from the
movie "Network." in which an aging
television newsman leads thousands
of people in sc,reaming . out their
windows, "I'm mad as bell and I'm
not going to ta.kc it anymore." Iranians accuse 1uFFELL's
UPROLSTEllY, llC. U S . . d I el. s F•ThtReslOfT•llt . . an s r a 1 IJ-=:::;1922=====HMIQ====·VD===== .. COSTA:::::::::::EA -:::::::::::::::SU.l==-1561
of 'conspiracy'
By Tile Associated Press
Iran today accused the United
States and Israel of orchffirat1oi. a
mine-laying campaign m the Red Sea
as part of a "new conspiracy.. de-
signed to d1scred1t the Tehran gov-
ernment. .
The statement by Iran's Foreign
Ministry appeared to contradict a
government radlo report Tuesday
that the extremist, anti-Western
Islamic Jihad (Islamic Holy War)
organization was responsible for the
explosions. Tehran radio applauded
the ap~nt minings and said thex
were directed against the "arrogant '
United States, Bntain and France.
reflection of the ··u.s. and Israeli
defeat" in ubanon.
"Thcrtfore. it was clear that m
order to retaliate for lbw dtfcats and
failure of their poh11cal and military
schemes in the Per'Slan Gulf. they
would resort to such a move." the
statement said. ~
At least 13 vessels have been
damaged by explosions m the Red Sea In the past month -five in the
GulfofSuez, the northern end of the
1,450-milc-long sea, 4nd the rest near
the North Yemeni coast at the
southern tip of the waterway.
At th~requcst of,Egypt. which owns
the Suez Canal and encloses the Gulf
of Suez, a U.S. squadron of min-
OUAL1TY
DRINKJNG WATER
FOR HOME OR
OFFICE.
Limit First 100 ~
Today, the Foreign Ministry said
was quoted in a dispatch by the
official Islamic Republic News Agen-
cy as saying that mternauonal or-
ganizations shouJd "expose the
agents behind these moves. so that
security wouJd return to the mter-
nauonal waterway."
eswccping helicopters and a support ~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~I
ship will arrive in the Red Sea area
The statement s'a1d the recent
explosions in the Red Sea and their
"indirect attribuuon to Iran'{ were a
within a week.
Egyptian and Western diplomatic
sources in Cairo said Iran's praise of
the explosions approached an ad-
mission of complicity. Last week. an
anonymous caller claiming to rep-
resent Islamic Jihad told London
news agencies that 190 mines had
been planted in the Red Sea.
De.Lorean jurors
get instructions
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A day
after John Z. De Lorean was
ponrayed alternately as an American
hero brought down by a devious
government and a money crazed
madman m league with the devil. the
judge today instructed the Jury on the
points of law, the last step before
dehberations be&in.
"Ladies and gentlemen. I'd Ilk~ to
thank ~ou for your diligence. your
patience and your dcvouon to the
cause of-nisucc." said. U.S 01stnct
Judge Robert Takasu11
Referring to the fact that the Jurors
had been promised a two-month trial.
which stretched to six months,
Takasu&i said. ''I'd like to t~ank_you
for the special loyalty you vc 11ven
me ... thank you very. very much.
Referring to the attorneys m the
case. he !Mild. • I \\U!> 1.nllcd upon to
rule on thousands of objections.
r~uests, motions, and with each
ruhng I am certain I made one side
unhappy. Please understand this
coun has no vested interest 1n the
outcome of this tna1."
De Lorean sat silently m a packed
counroom Tuesday as his attorney.
Howard Wciuman, lauded him as a
businessman "who signifies the
merican dream." but one who has
been stripped of his pride and
humiliated. •
The prosecutor. Assistant U.S.
Attorney James Walsh. lashed out at
De Lorean as the persomficat1on1of
evil - a &fCCdy man "who did-ihake
hands with tbe devil." ·
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Place your. baseball
bucks on the foul tip
What animal has the longest tail? Islam. Some adherents wanted 10
Men halle been kno\\:n to win bar bets • mcrae tM two. Th1 , about the time
with this qucr). Hardly anybody says, C.Olumbas was saihng his several tnps
riJhtly. it's the male 11raffe with eiaht to the New World. The mcrgerdtdn'1
feet ofaft appendage. ta~c. What they ~ot WI) Sikh1sm
Gamblers, take note: In t>Meball, Most frequently reported health
when the co unt is three-and-two. you proble~s. in dcKci:tdins order, are: I c~n waaer the batter will foul off the Overwe1aht. 2. lndiaest1on. 3 Muscle
nellt patch. Happens ~ven out of JO aches. 4. Minor c~c trouble. And 5
times If you bet even money on it Headaches. What Yo.JJ've got them
repeatedl). you'll come out ahead. all? .
Item No. 8:!23C 1n our Love and Q.Sayshercthetypicalbab)Se.tsits
War man's file labeled .. Divorce" is first tooth at seven months. Is 1t an
the last thtng one "'oman said to her upper or a lower'.>
husband before she went to court: "I A. Lower.
can'thearwhaqou'rcsaymgbccausc Youn& lady. arc ~ou interested in
what you A.RE 1s too loud." bnght youna men · Sign up for a computer camp. The boys out-
Q How did the Slkh of India get number the girls thereat 93 to 7.
started? ( L.M. Boyd l• • 1yudlc•ted
A There was Hinduism. There w~s col1m.DJ1t.J
Boozn tl1Des threaten
to pollute Laguna Beach
'•
HOW 1811-UgR •••
~IX DEBATES,
ANN
WELLS
Clothes
ha~ger:
A must
foinian
Why. they should
name a day after
the wiry thing
The man from Storer cable TV JUSt
knocked on the door and asked for
two coat hanaers. He's tJytnJ to pull
the cable through the conduit and
in to the terminal box.
To the Editor:
Al the recent meeting of the Board
of Supervisors. re$ard1ng the
proposed freewai funding or fees. or Proposition A. one supervisor argued
against th1s area's supervisor's
nyon project opened for discussion. It -
seems the Laguna Laurel pro3cct will
BUT AVE ARE ON
HON MANY DEIWES
TO HAVE ....
The wire coat hanger-ugly,
necessary 4nd unpopular-a single
length of wtre twisted into a func-
tional shape. Straightened out, it
measures 42 inches.
Who invented the hanger? And
when? And where? No one knows.
There is no mention Oftbis item 10 the
Book ofl nventions or the Book of
Tnvia. There are innumerable coat -~.opo5al.to delay thQr deo~ion from
60 to 90 -days: The gist of the ·
argument centered on ·•concern for
the ecosomic development of the
commumty." Apparently, the board
was concerned, for they voted to have
the decision take place in 60 days.
Two hearings had been sponsored
by the California Department of
Transportation and the county on the
subJCCl. Qne bad t.akcn J>lac~ the
second was to be that evening. 1 hcse
heanngs were for the public's com-
ment on the social, economic and
environmental issues for the en-
,·1ronmcntal impaC1 statement before
c:onstruction could proceed.
Heedful citizens must have won-
dered why they should comment on
this commumty's economic prob-
lems along with the social and
environmental. problems at the sec-
ond meeting.-when the supervisors
had voiced their opinion on the
commuruty's economic matters
After the economic concerns
moved on to other quenes, alarmed
citizens and city officials from
Laguna Beach voiced their ap-
prehensiveness when the Laurel Ca-
be built on Laguna Canyon Road. To
take place with no regard for what
happens to Laguna's onl)' entrance
and CAil. other than the highwa)'.
"hen the 1nhab1tants of 1M-new
suburb's vehicles contribute vastl)' to
add1t1onal traffic and emit huge
amounts of additional carbon mon-
oxide.
However. since Laguna's past and
present cit)' officials and other
ciuzens were not adhered to in any
way, and the greatest concern is
Laguna Beach's. their inhabitants
may be prone to wonder ~fr~ some
overly eager builders are copying
their city's name and usmg tt for their
new areas. Do the) tnl~nd to push
into Laguna Beach. or are the)
borrowing Laguna·s prestige'>
Should these bones of contention
~ome about, Laguna Canyon Road
and the surrounding vicinity will
soon surpass L.A.'s ratmg as our
natton 's most polluted cny. Then too.
established residents w1thin these
long-ttmc areas must also '1ew wt th
further alarm what is-al~ays in-
evitable -the bursttng of another
"boom" when encouraged b) over-
development
ELINOR DAVIS
Laguna Beach
Reminders of death unneeded
To the Edttor.
In hcu of what occurred tn San
Ysidro. I feel very angry that the Lord
could have let so many. (if even one).
innocent human lives die in such a
homblc manner. The hurt felt, was
more than I have ever known. Seeing
that young boy in the newspaper,
lying dead beside his bicycle and
thinking that th as could have been my
four-year-old son. Cory. Can we be
safe anywhere?
But the real anger and frustration
came with the continued media
coverage. Every stauon broadcast the
event and every paper ran headlines.
sometimes wtth two or three articles
per paper. Now. I realize that this 1s
what sells newspapers. because
people seem to want to learn of other
people's pain and misfortune.
However. this weekend, as my
family drove back from a vacatlon in
Ensenada. Mexico. we drove nght
past the McDonald's where the
"Massacre" happened We couldn't
have missed it 1f we tned The
buildin,a was dark and empt)' but
othctwisc. JUSt another building on a
closed Sunda)' The difference how-
ever. was the mass of people dn,ing
and parking along the street, not to
mention the people actually sloWing
to a near stop, along the freeway. to
get a glimpse of death. I was again
hurt and wondenng what compels
people to feel this desire.
There have been thousands of
tourist pictures taken throughout our
beautiful Southern Cahfom1a, and
some even get published in the
newspapers: A baby tn a swmg, on a
cool night . a beauttful sunset over
Catalina; kids playing in the
sprinklers. All these nice pictures can
go home with fam11tcs and can be
enJoyed for man)' years. But, bow
does a picture of a woman posing in
front of a "massacre"site. (Daily
Pilot. July 23). rate and how could
any.one see the need for this. I wonder
how this cou ple would feel 1f we all
posed in front of their tragic cx-
penence? -God forbid.
Please let these innocent v1ct1ms
rest tn peace and let the families
alone. to forget that hombfe day
The)' have all been through enough
and I don't fccl we should keep
reminding them of what happened.
DONNY HADLAND
Huntington Beach
Crowds were !]Ot controlled
To the Editor:
The lack of poltce control at
Fashion Island the night of July 25.
1984, was unforgivable"' People
stood for hours to see the Olympic
Torch, something many of them will
ricver see again.
They were silting on the curb,
standlQ&. holding ltttle children,
knowina that they were m the best
place. The best place unttl the pohcc
of Newport Beach allowed a select
few. rude adults to stand tn the
middle of the street at the beginning
of the Newport Center Dnve circle.
blockina the view of the many that
had stayed for so Iona to be a pan of
history.
Not only did the rude act to block
the way. but the Newpon Beach
Police department b.ad the torch go
down one sldc of the street rather than
~vina the "Rude Ones" move So
much for nt>t ~~ able to ~e an
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilot
event that I, and many others will
probabl) never sec again.
Gcttmg out of the Fashion Island
area was a 3oke. Where was the poltcc
control at all of the lights? Traffic was
backed up for two hours. You
neglected to say anylhtna about that
in )Our paper. I can onderstand the
interest for the safety of the Torch
runners and I appreciate the prob-
lems the poltce depanment may have
had. but I think that 1f there had been
more crowd control, there would not
have been as much ofa problem wtth
the safet\ of the runners.
In shon. the Torch n.innen arc to
~ commended! The Newport Beach
Poltct Department end any others
that were in charae of the mas5C' at
the Fubion Island area should be told
that the) failtd the public.
JANIGE BRYANT
Costa Mesa
H. l . 8chwart1 Ill
~0'3'11!•
Frenk Zlnl
Var\lg ng CCI IOI
· blnier~renu.~ed. but thiu1ifi
does not tell us who invented the lint
one. The International Fabric.Care
Institute in Silver Springs, Maryland
has a research library on every facet of
clothing and dry cleaning-except
for the origin of the coat banger.
I suspectbaclc in the Dark Ages a
wife with an overabundant wardrobe
said to her husband, "There isn 'ta
place for one more peg in thjs house.
We'll have to build on another
room." and the idea for the first
hanger was conce1 ved.
"All you need," Mrs. Dark Aaes
said, "is a piece of wire forty-two
inches long. Twist it into the shape of
my shoulders." Or perhaps her hus--
ban'd said, "Pox on this peg," when
·his coat developed a terminal bulge in
the middleoftbc collar, and he then
proceeded to make the first hanger.
It's too bad we don't know his
identity. We have a National Day for
everyone from bachelors to sec-
retaries, even a National Joggers Day.
The least we could do is set aside a day
in honor of this anonymous benefac-
tororbcriefactrcss to mankind. We
owe him. Or her. ·
As a result of his foresight, we
transfer our clothes from the dry
cleaners to our closets via the coat
• nanaers. We use them to open the car
door when we have locked the keys
inside. We fish objects from under the
refngerator and other inaccessible
pla<les with them. Back in the days
when we were too young to worry
abou l car keys or clean clothes we
used them to roast marshmallows
and hot dogs.
Oddly enough, the ordinary wire
hanaercannot be easily purchased by
the consumer. When was the last time
you saw wire hangers in the notions or
housewares department of a store?
At last, a winning round
for the guys in White hats
You can buy their rich relau ves-
the ones covered with vtnyl or satm or
velvet. You can buy plastic ones.
Extra large, padded ones for hang.log
furs are a vatlable, but the simple wire
hanger never makes it to the
boutique.
They arc cast aside by muttenn&
housewife and raging movie star
They areshunned by most husbands
and all teen-agers. They are a.a ven to
thnf\ shops and the Goodwill and
thrown tnto the trash-anylhma to get them out of the closet.
1 whistle blower's
harassment likely
to come to and end
associate Indy Badhwar, he cited In spueofth1s treatment, they
several example~ of harassment: remain undaunted and genial and
•Last month. two emissaries from· ubiquitous. Thcyminale-oristhe
the agency's inspector general J word tanalc? Wire hangers are not on
marched into his office to grill him as ACK the endangered species list. They
part of an investiaation that had been breed readily in dark closets. Dunn&
going on for nine months. The A .. DERSON the matinaseasona s1nale hanger
subject? Allegations that Clinkscales 1111 cann01 be removed from the closet
WASHINGTON -Somcttmcs had billed the government for $148 pole.Ilwillclinapass1onatelyto
the good guys win worth of phone calls made from bis hanaersoncitherside,andtheentu·c
A couple of years ago. 1 made a home m 1980. General Services AdmLDJstration oraiastic aroup must be removed.
random check of two dozen govern-Clinkscales polit~l~ denied any bu1ldin1duringworkinahoura. "Thia Donotthrowtbeseamorou1hana·
mcnt whistle blowers who had dared knowledae of the call".._ ijt'men pulled raises the s~ter of George Orwell's ers into a dark trash barrel. The best
to accuse th ctr superiors of wrona-out his home telephone b1lls for 1980, '1984, ... Omkscalcs wrote to Sickon. birth control method is to move them
dotng. Every last one of them, I which showed they averaaed about •A week carber, Clinkscales ex· asquicklyasposs1bletothenearest
found, had subsequently been Sl 08amonth.''Andmtheyearofour coriated the IG for investipting motelorbotelctosct. Tbeydonot
hounded and haT11ssed by the aovern-Lord 1981 , S 106. 79 was the averaae parkina lot problems at GSA. 1'1 reproduce in that environment. They
mcnt aicncy he had embarT1ssed. monthly cost •. " he said "So if that consider it incredible that you would' are more libly to sclf-<festruct. Th ta
Some of them had even been forced, S 148 was to ease the pain of my own divert cxpcnenccd auditors from the phenomenon has resulted ln hotels
Soviet-style, to submit to psychiatnc personal contract with the Bell Sys-b1llions of dolt.rs the qency bandfes andmoteluwitchinatoanother tern, I failed miserably." in the contractin' area when (other strain, the two-piece. lock-on model
cummauon · •• •The contmuina alleaattons experts) arc av&ilable to conduct This1pcciesnotonlytolera1e11hat
One of the~ gut$y heroes is a.,.inst Clink.tca.lcs now make a file parkint studies." he wrote. partkulatenvirooment. but iutcrile. Wilham Oinkscales, whose ordeal .-. t h B t Id" th TV bl wei~na close to t 0 pound ln a • n ot er memos over the years}. u 1arc:u; c ca e man as wls cited by Ronald Rc&fln in the t)'p1call~ irreverent memo to his Oinksc.ales has accused Sickon 01 still waitinaforh1s twohanacn. J'd
l980 cam paian. For tread ma on the bosses. Oinkscalei made this critique'" faihnJ to pvo G A contracts proper like toaccommcxbtc ham-I do
toes of biaher-ups '" the General of the aospettor general, Joseph scruuoy, of wqina "turf battles" want my TV connected-but wt
Services Administration, ClinkscaJes Sickon: instead of preyentinJ wron~oina. of baveonlyonewittbanaerin the
had bttn stripped of his inve uptivc .. Our IO, Inspector Ctouseau, has autti, the 10'• contract 1n1J)C<:tor house now. It's b~ the bathroom door.
duties and rclcpted to • do·nothma made a career out of 4nvcsuptina me force rom 70 to 40, and or ov~r· thcC:loor.tliitinuplicably locllt itself
JOb bcbtnd a de k stuck in a romdor or my ortanization. He hardly fin· spend1111 his budie& so badly that atthcmo t inopportun.ttime • hcan
Apanst the quiet but tub born 1shC1 one inquisition before he a tarts tnvestiptions rcqitlrina uavcl Cl· be unlocked only wnb that han er.
resi tanc:c of the •eency, C.:ltnkscales another, and only his inepme liu pcnse have been helved for the rest o{ t\nyone an the household who re.
WIS "rehabilitated• by RcaP-n. ap-prevented thf aituation from tting the year. ---;-__ mOVClilfiomthaL$POldocuoal&l
pauued a senior pahcy adv1'Cr, then totaUy out of hand.'' S1ckon'1 office dtnacd Chnktcalet' riskortiCu1.11haken otfthc ramtl
promoted to associate 1dm1n11trator. •Oinksa.Jes believes his harass-cbarses of hara mcru. But the un-tree.
La1t year he won a presidenual award ment i! the reault or his repeated nerate whistle blower'• de· lf"havttoch bftWttn 60
for savina 1hc tu payers mort than Juaaestions that i kon i not doina livcranoe m1v be at hand. \Ckon Mlnut and fa uccus to the loo, n'
--.. -llmillion. . _ .,._--hi-job ~pcd)' Last Ml. for rcsianed1fc ·da) o nocont 60Minutcsh rcrunr.. All the: "h1lc. Cltnkscalcs oun c'8mplr, Clink eale' dcnoun:::cc~===-=-=---....:..~-:-. ______ _
that h1S J)(r$CCUllOn wa COnlinUIOI it'kon f0f'm1inta1ntn& \li dco-aimc... lo
Un trd. ~In 1nltt\'IC" Y.llh ffi)' ~urvttltanct'on the fiRh noor ol th~
'-----"""--
'
Iriland Empire luring more
QC residents to new homes
Two Coast developers compare a rea
to early 4ays of Orange County boom
The Lnland Empire, an atta com·
prisinJ San Bcrnadino and Riverside
counties, 1s lurina more and mote
Oranae Couotians within its rutm. says William Lyon, ptcsident and
chief executive officer of one of the
nation's lar&est residential develop.
ment firms.
Callina this reaion .. the bull's-e¥e
fo'r the populatton increase in
Southern California," Lyon said, "It's
like Oran&e County all over aa,ain."
The same son of statistics that were
bandied about back in the early years
of Orange County's vowth are now
produced by economists studyin& the
Inland Empire.
PrlntrOnlx
settles
lawsult
Pnntronax Inc. m Irvine and Man-
nesmann Tally Corp. jointly an-
nounced a settlement of their recent
patent libption.
Ralpb Lewis, founder of Lewis
Homes, qrccs. In 60 ~ys, around
Wlll be broken for bis third project in
Cucamonga, a ttaion just nonh of
Ontario. Both Lewis and Lyon have
9,000 units api~_ goin& up in this area. Lewis has ~~acres; the Lyon Company has 2,uuu.
"It really gets my juices goins,"
Lyon says. A1 he told the Oranac
County chapter of the BuiJdina lndu -
try Association at the Airponer Inn
Monday, the risk is significant but the
potential, "tremendous."
No one should worry, he added.
that builders like himself or Ralph
Lewis have beaten them to the first
developments. "There's plenty of
business for everybody, tremendous
demands for housina. This is just the
be&inning," he told a 200.plus crowd.
One ppwerful reason for arowth is
Ontario International Airpon. It's
the only airpon, Lyon explained, that
has a chance of expandina to any
mqnitude. Already the potential for
hotels .and restaurants su.rroundina
the a~n has fueled feverish plans
for business. 1
U nder the terms of the settlement.
the M630, M660 and ·M699.J>rinters
willcaatinuew Oerflan\ifac:tWt<rana
sold by T'1ly. Tally, without adm it-
ting infrin&ement or validity of
Printronix patents, will pay Print-
ronix an undisclosed sum of money
for each printer sold. In addition,
Tally has granted Printronix a license
to certain of its patents.
Some are cynical, Lyon said, about
the desirabilit~ of this area as a livina
space. But thaf s what they said about
Anaheim. "Everybody said,
•Anaheim? Why would you want to
live in Anaheim'?' ••Now there's very
µrue land !~~it's wall-to-wall hous--
°te~s ~d his company won't
necessarily build all of its planned
inland projects alone. If a builder
comes along with expertise in an area
his company doesn1t specialize in,
like high rise developments, "then
maybe we'd sell," Lewt's said.
MUT UAL F UNOS
Iron llVn I
5':
I= lllCnv Enlhv Ii!~'" J,md
Fldlcor FIE mp FtWnFn
FINFI I FllKOCO Fort110 FrflllCt> FrankEI FrMSG Fremnl F~I & GeNtcll GnAut Gne.va
People arc witlina to drive further
and funher for homes scllina for ihree
or five times less than prices currently
paid in Oranae'County, Lewis said.
Thou&h the days. Lewis remembers arc O\tcr, days when parcels .,,.cot for
$3000 an acre, )Ou can still find land
an U p!~nd or Rancho Cucamonp for
$40,000 to $60,000 per acre and even
Realto and Fontana paf'C'Cls for
$20.000 to $.40,000 an acre.
Both Lewis and Lyon have projects
without home ownership associa·
tions. There is reluctance on the pan
of home buyers; they agreed. about pu~hasina a home in an area where
fees and maintenance costs can be
frequently lifted by an association.
Besides a I 00.acre regional sh op-
pin a area in the works, Lyon bas a
Joint venture with Donald Koll of the
Koll Company to build an industrial
complex near his nortb-<>f-Ontario
site.
His presence there shouldn't scare
new builders off. Lyon warned, nor
should rapidly increasing prices be of
loo arcat a concern ... As a youna
builder an Orange County about the
time Ralph was staning in the Inland
Empire. builders were saying that
when prices got to S3,250(pcr acre), it
was aJJ over. They really left Orange
County. and that same pr~ goes
on year after year but the business
never really changes."
Like Lewis, Lyon plans to sell
property to interested builders rather
than to develop all of his company's
land himself.
For homes in the $80.000 lo
SI 2S,OOO range, there'~ practicallye
unlimited market, be said. "There's
not an unlimited market for $300,000
housina." But people are comina off
the freeways in droves for lower
priced homes in the JJ>land Empire,
"just as they came to Q-angc County"
in its early days
COMPLE~E NYSE COMPOSITE TRANIACnoNS, Al.
Dealer of the year
Irvine
fi£m·'s
credit
boosted
Ul ems Inc. has reocivcd 1
$20 milhon unsecurid line of mdi1
throu&h 8ank of America. · AJtfiou&h w Irvine-based en.&i·
necrin& company doesn'1 have any
Jona-term debt out.slaDdins. the~
S?O million line of c:Rdit prov:ida the
corporation with additional financial resoutt~ it can use in lhc future lO
continue its growth and de\clop-
menl
. The unsecured lme or credn rt~
p(aoes the SS million KCUred line of
credit the company previously had
with the Bank of ~mcrica..
Ultrasystems is involved in hl&b·
tecbtloloSY and innovative~.
focusina primanly on t.ht desip..
construction, ownerSbip and opa-
ation of power plants. alternative
mcrgy projecu, and fQOd·~
plants. . . ..:•~ ......
DaTi4 Draper. preatdent of Can and Concepts. prH entll tbe
Rationaf Aathorbed Dealer of the Tear award to Bob
Rlcharda, preeldent of Pactflc Aato Aec n10rlea 8pecla11ata
lD Ran~D Beach, d~aoattooal meetfntofCana.n4
.Conceptll prod.act. dealen. Thh la the 9eCOild 'bie:r that Paclflc, ,ormerly called Paclflc T·Top. won ..res
award. r
Ultraystcms lS alio lDVun~ 10
numerous defense and space syst
projects, with beav)' em~. on
oomma.nd1 control commurucaUOfll
and intelligence (C31) prosra.ms. as
weU as satellite. nussile. aod around
combat sys~
You've heard the sales pitch, .. A
home personal computer can sim-
plify your letter writing, balance your
checkbook. orpni~ your reapcs -
do almost everything but wash the
windows."
Don't be misled. No one wntes that
many personal letters. Balancmg your
checkbook will probably never re-
quire anythina more than a pen and a
hand-held calculator. and recipes are .
at their best onl).' when they come in a
book with ed1ble-tookin, PIClUTCS.
When the personal computer does
windows, It may be useful ID the
home Until then. the real benefits of
personal computers he m their bUSt·
ncss applications.
Don't let the name "person at
computer" conf~ you. Certain
models are very powerful business
machines. "Personal" simply means
the comt>utcr IS small enough and
inexpensive enough. relatively speak-
ing, to be used by one person. Large
computer rooms and staffs are not
required to operate the machine.
If you have a busmess that involves
the following kinds of work, you
should consider a personal computer:
• Many repcttttons. routine tasks
A
Nelso Resear:c --·~~
RALPH
Scorr
• Lots of papc1W0rk.; i.e.. pat~~
.checks. customer billinp, pure
orders. mailing labels ·
• Lots of ccneral correspondence,
especially if muc~ of 1t is of the same
nature
• Wntten reports, contracts. news-
letters. catal0&5, brochures
•Working with large masses of data
of any kind
• Extensive research and wnllnf
Jn 1tddit1on., a computer can bnna
your business's ac:countll'\J system
mto the modem world -iivinJ you
timely, easily understood 10for-
mation for sound business man.qe--
ment.
R&lpj &:on 11 • ~rdllctl pflbJ.k •ccoa taat pnctldJll la Ne,,.,ort
B~d.
income increases
Nelson Research, & Development
Co. in lrvine reported that total
revenue for the second quarter ended
June 30 inctcased to$ l ,009,6S6 from
SS• 7 ,32S for the lite period last )'eat.
Net income for the secood quaner
of 1984 was $68,676 comperccl with
$137,193 in the like period in 1983.
Eami np per share in the first quarter
equaled I cent in both 198.4 and 1983,
aftCT adjusttn~ the 2-for-1 stock
split effective 1. 1983.
For the fi.m six moolhs·of' 1984,
Nelson repo rted revenue of
Sl,97S,60S. up from St.•S4.99S re. poned for the fim half of 1983. et
income for the first sU months of
1984 'W&S S90,SS2 compared With
S l 74.22.8 in the first six months oflut
~justin& for lhe 2-for-l stock split
of September 1983. net income per
&bare for the first six months of l 914
and t cent in I 9M compared to 2
cents tn the like penod of 1983.
Commenting on the company's
second quarter ferfonnance, Eric L.
Nelson Ph.D., Chiinnan and presi~
den~ said, u1 1llD pleased that the
company again posted an increase in
rescarc:h and development of our
research propams.
Ground broken f or nut firm 's HQ
.. It is also eocourqmg that we tiave
maintained a modest level of
1>rofitab1lity despite our continued
hiahcr level of rcan:h and develop-
ment spendina. Our racarch pro-
arams arc advancina steadily and are
OD schedule. and our financial COD·
d.ition remains healthy."
Nelson Research• Development
Co. uuhzcs its pioneerina expcnisc in drua reclC'ptor technoloSY to dcsip
and develop pharmaceuti~ orod·
ucts for license. The compan) holds
extensh e patents and ltccnsina riabts
worldwide.
Anes Development Co. tn New-
port Beach bas broken around for a
99,6•S-square-foo t manufac-
turina/warehouse and office bwldmg
for Chipper's Nut Co. in Chino.
The one-story buildins. located on
Edison Street. will become the new
corporate headquaners for Cbippcr's
UPs AND DowN s
Nut Co. Archttect Dell DeRevcre. of
DeReverc Partncrstup, ~ the
gray concrete tilt-up structu~ with
black &lass. The total value C?f the
project is estimated at $2. 9 million to
be comJ)lcted in December 1984.
D Available to individuals or busineSses ·o Initial deposit $5,
D Three check withdrawals per month
D Unlimited AlM access to yqur money ·
0 Insured to $10QOOJ by FDIC
Your deposit is backed by C ntral Bank's
reco1d of tability sin 18 2, and our
m than -billion in a ~ -
..
'
r I
_On
the. , ·•
f ...
•
------~ ----------------
- - --
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
WEDNESDAY'S CIJOSINC PIJCES
--~-
Dow JoNE s Ave RAGES
---.
-
WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORk IAPJ Aug, I
I NYSE LEADER S
----------
Name
l ~=~()Of~ $ 3 E Sntem C LIL Co pfU S AMR frorp Revco S l SwstA r1 s vlMestaMch ~anAm wt
10 aatnAlrL i owu nterRea l ~S'9YiF 11 t~~ ~,2501
1J W'tnner>aoo
lJ t~fl Ind i !J!!frGP M:r":d'1t'd wt
Nw11 ~t ~~Rt~~ll NH
NEW YORK (AP) Auo. I
AMEX LEADERS
Pct. :u ll·f lh
:1
j:j
7. ~·17 ~7. 7. 7. 6. u 6.5 '·1 tl
Prev. da~ · ~ 16
NEW YORK (AP) -Sales WednesdaY price and net ch•!lil• of the 1Cf most active Amerl<:AJn Stock Exchange lasuet, Ired ng ~•llonally at more thfi~ n. DGr P Lid 2, , 2 ~16 + I/• L.ab8 · , ~ --2Ve
llnn' m· I omrn , 1 I• lit. ono tEx 7, Ye ~··aod ,.. 2w. t :i St vdsn , ~ rt As s , 29 -tYe
unl=&rc• m: ilh t =
NASDAQ SUMMARY
GoLo QuoTES
METAL S QuorE s
---- -
That's an apt description of bqth business and ·
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
here cempanies ~egotng anti which P,eople ar · h lptng tn m get there,just watch ·credit Line' -every day in ttie
Business section of your new· Ill Pillt
• I
Handmade c rafts
humanize ·home
Wicker, wrought iron and ceramics fill
cozy nooks of famny·s living area The f umnurc. while new, consisu
Every year. it seems. crafts become wicker, wrouaJ>t iron and ceramic of carefully contri\'ed rcphca1 of
more popular -possibly as a relief article' abound. authentic I th century American
from our increastngly mechanized. The room's.color scheme is.Jl cozy piCClC).
computerized, systematized society butteflCOtch ~ ofT by touches of The Armstrong no-wax floor, ulcd
10 which the human clement $Orne· navy blue. The upllolstcry on the two throughout the mure pace a a
times tends to act lost. overstuffed love scat are those unifier. is buttct1C0tch, wtuk the
colors. hand·loomed area rug nder t As a result. people enjoy making butler's-tray ooffeuablci navy objects by hand and they enJOY The fireplace in the family room is
hava·na them around And it's true bordered with stock moldin• painted · ' ' -The no-wax oonng ts a spcaal craft items do make homes homier. navy and butterscotch. The beveled-kind. It has -inlaid Color." Most no-edge plank walls received a couple of For example, take the .. Great coats of off-white paint. wu floots hjve J.hcir colors pnntcd t.-lltnr.,,.,,..._,,,1"1'11in1'rrmt1TnTr-hrntttinl'l"ll'trnr.~~~--~~~~~---.,_.....--~__.l)fl r~noi4.hK0 ~~.;:-'.fl~hm~calie--~1
Bandcrafta from leftft1 rectou of America
enhance the decorat;tac Kheme for thU family room.;,ttntnt, area·kltchen _done lD
warm buttencotch ne with na-yy trim. /
CHICAGO -Replacing your old
refrigerator with a new enelJY-Cffi·
cient model can mean money m your
pocket and reduce California's energy
appetite as well.
If you replace your 1972-vintage
(or older) refrigerator with 1 new
model, you will save an avera&e of
$70 a year or about S 1,000 during the
next IS yean -the average length of
time before refrigerators are traded
in ..
At the same time. you'll help
California reduce its energy con-
sumption more than 12 percent by
1990 and I S percent by 1996.
Accordina to Califomja Eneray
Comm1ss1oner Geofrey Commons,
"conservation from appliances
achieves significant cost savings by
avotding costly construction of new
power plants. In this way, all Cali·
fornians benefit."
Ocsijn changes to im_prove insula-
tion, evaporators motors and con-
densers have res~ted in refrigerators
that use 38 percent less eneray than
those offered in 1972 and before.
Last year seven out of 10 refriier-
ators sold in California were boufht
to replace older, less effident units.
The most popular type -accounting
for 6S percent of alJ refngerator sales
in the state -was the top-freezer.
fully automatic defrost.
Today this reffi&erator -at an
average capacity of 17 cubic feet -
uses less energy (at l , I S6 kwh/ycar)
than a much smaller, partial auto-
matic model purchased in 1972. So
not only arc you controllin& your
electricity costs when you replace
your old refrigerator, you are also
(Pleue tee COOL/82)
PAPARAZZI
Type of •PC>liance •nd
<:aplCtty
N1tloNI •vet• COit
for electrlclty UPon which
the estimated ennu.1
-vv COit figure• --...--
beMd.
Estimated atlflUll operirtang
coat fOf the model in thte -1-
eize renge thlt coetl ,_..,
to Oc>ll'ate
Sc.le lhoWlng iow.t end
h9'*t estimated oPl'ltlng coeu f0t mocWI within
\hie llZI ,.. Theel
modell flC)f'IMllt ciff..m
bn1nd1, not"* tNlee of
the ~ny llsted ln a.
UJ!QlL~nd conw.
E•tlnvttld INlnu.I ()t*ltlng
c:c.t fof thtt model only.
t105
j
portant ~-"' o1 -• ...,, wo-• cOl\S.: ..... -cti-...
---C•2 u SC l301I
wt.. the lltinwted IMUltl
COit of thll pertlcu .. r model
fllll In~ to al
othef modell In thll •ze
range
Werning thll it ii uni.wful
to rlmO\ll i.bel
-- ----- - -..
lftll Tlaofeltof8wedea, Pre91dentofl1JllPB,
&Dd Keith Clark, pre91cleilt of the Brltlah
llodenl PelltatlalOll, cbatted at tbe laau.
Pentathlon
promoters
celebrate .
Sout h Pacific t h eme a dds
to internation a l camaraderie
By ANN CONWAY
Dellr Nel C..1 41 ... I
There isnothinglikcaGames ... nothing in the
world.
At Dick and JoanStenns' luau honoring the
UIPMB-Union lntemationalcde PcntathJoo
Modcme ct Biathlon -d11mtarics from Switzerland
and Canada did a playful hula with the Polynesian
dancers. ·
. What prompted the letwll-join-in hip wayina?
ThcGam~.
Byno cvcryoncknow that tcven a ewpon
bu sine man, hu ••pentathlon ired" Ora nae County-
bnnging thcJunior World Championships here la t
October and comma sionma the "bi& five .. Olympic
cvcntitCotodcCua.Stevcn 'dctcrmincdcnthu ' m
for the p1ri t of the Pentathlon ha promptcdcndl
volunlter houB from more than I ,OOOcountian .
To what do we owe this new found camaraderie and
unaty'?ThcGam .
The tc\cn ~ lcomtdmorcthan IOOlocaJand
lntcmationah1i&nitan and fricnd1 an to their k
home at\cr tht. •• wim .. at HcntaaC P.ark.. ( lcs.idts
wimma~ the Pentathlon an hi horxblCk nd1n,a
jumpina. fcncin pt tol hootinaand a run all of
h1chwcrestUCd1tthe otodc venue.)
W1th thctfontofthc1rrcs1dcn stru~ 'th1
~-.,..,,..~1nb0wofnags reprc nuna11l panac1patu1acountncs
ndthc1rdramauc1ntcnorandaatdet\1ttafill¢wtlh
dining area-kitchen) create by the The crafts arc what make the room. block pattern 1s bUilt up with
interior designers at a major home includina a table lamp with woven tho_usands of colorful viny111f'&Du~ furnishings company. wicker base: a wooden cliandelier which arc then fused toaether 'With
with ~fully curved wrought-iron intcnseheataodprcssure-mucbtbe To humanize this wide-open space, arms and a butterscotch, navy and WI)' Nature creates materials.
they not only filled it with com-cobalt blue quilt.. both in the dining Thouah m:ichine-made, this no-wax
fonable furnishings in warm colors area; a Shaker wall clock. Shaker floor pves the impression o( bavi
but they~accessonzed it liberally with hurricane lamps WJtb heavy iro.n wall been crafted, compared«> the print-
many kinds of crafted objets d'art; fastenings. flankina the fireplace: and ed-pattcm ones.
fWmeof~•nd
model number of the ~IMC:e on which ttiil
labll~.
All model nurnblrl .. ....,
if ttwllbel ~to lnOf9
ihltn one model.
AU brendl end mode6I
compe:9d In the~ on
this ..,.. flit within thia
CllPICi1Y nlflgl.
Eltmeted-"* oC*Sting
_,.._ co.t f()t the modll tn tt.
11ze reno-thet cosis moat
to~tl '
CMlnona ttlM the~·
cost will not NC I rily be
the ume • the coat figure
ONWI lboll'I
Sugge1t1 thlt lhl CUStCJmlr
8lll 11l11P9'11011 Of ullllty fOf
toe.I utility ratll
A gl'ld to help det9fmine
mor9 cloeely the CUltomet'I
()t*lting c:ost b..ed on
local utihty l"lta end UM
hlbltl
I PERSONAL s TY LE
'L
Calif om la cuisine
is garnished with
red salmon variety
Caviar is elepnt food which
should always be hared with some-
one you care for. It is an acquired
taste like coffee -something which
please$ you very much or it just docs
not at all!
There is a great variety of cavtars"
ranging in price from about $2 to
more than $40 an ounce. The colors
also vary a arc.at deal, from jet black
to pearly sraY to red and s<>ld.
The most reasonable arc salmon.
lumpfi.sb and whitefish caviars. The
most expensive is Sturaeon cavw.
eitbCf Belup or Scvrup, both of
which come from the Volga Ri ver
ud the Caspian Sea.
.Red salmon caviar as bcconuna
very popular with the California
cuisine vogue. Fresh or Jarred caviar
must be SCf\Ved promptly.
The tra<litional presel,ltauon of
caviar is simple and sophasticated:
Place the caviar in a crystal bowl:
imbed the bowl in a larger oowl of
cracked ice; in separate bowls hue
toast points, chopped onion.
chopped cu yolk. chopped egg
whites and lemon wedges. About a
half-ounce of caviar per guest as
ample. Herc are two more recipes;
CA VIAR 6 VODKA DIP
l cap soar cream
3 &ablespoou dlopped dllves
1 tabletpooa finely cltoppe4I onion
-PILAR
WAYIE
i tablapeo vodka "' tea.,... cruW cdery see4 i or I ~ of black er rel
cariar
Combine all ingredients · and
thorou&hly chill for at least one
hour. l>O not break caviar m
combining. Serve with crispy vca·
etable ticks, toast trian&lcs, and
plain crackers. Makes l 'h CUP$. .
CREPES WITH SMOKED
SALMON 6 CA VIAR
' to • prepar-, ~ erepet -
"' pnnd smoked u•m-. dllaly
sliced
1 cap soa:r cream
f to I OUCH of black caViar
Fres• sprlp of dill ,.,. prald
Arrange salmon in center of each
crepe, roll and plaoc seam side
down Spoon a dollop of sour cream
onto each crepe; top with a bit of
caviar sprinkled over cream; pr-
nish witba~priaoffreshdill. Best to
serve the four portions on chilled
plates.
Pilar Wayne is a resident of
Newport Bach and the 1utbor of
"Pilar Wayne 's Favorite and
Fabulous Recipes. .. Send questions
to Pilar Wayne. c/o Daily Pilot.
P.O. BoJC 1560. Cmt.1Mesa 92626.
............. _, ..... c-
KeUl Nomara and 8 . llatnOk.a of Japan,
were amoac pentathlon dlCDltarlee and
omdala wbo eq)oyed danclD& b7 Amelia
Vallaa of Rialto, at Polyaeeiaa putf.
SouthSeasexotica(flowers. flickcrioacandlesand food
forever) the Stevens shared their shinio.vnoment.
Whatcvcntcouldcausc1continuouslump-in-thc-
throat at a luau? The Gam
Alonawith berparcnt ,SaMySleveu(a VlP
b0$tCSS for the Olympici) welcomed Gea. Sv• n.feU-
ofS~cn, president ofUIPMB: EmUe Jant offrancc,
c~ccutivc vice prcsidtn~ Die• IiicAw, Federal
RcJ)\\blicofOerrnany,sccreiary tcnerall_o.1. WlW
Gm ofS'W'Cden. 9Cetttaryand C9l TW 11..tq,
ucasurcr.
hannathc potliahton thc pintofthcGam
~re I.Mt and Rlnan 8:" ... Pf'C$ident of Coto
dcCaza:VaJeneand Jl-~wasancharacof1hc
host·f&m ily proaram It Coto de u.a wherein all
countri were a 11ncd fam11i to ow them around.
ctc.)DCUfape(fenanactta1rman)CanlUM uh
B~(chall11l&nof1wimcvcnt)Beuy1nd Jlm w....._.., .. ,_,..,ndCarl y...-.,,aen n yand
HeiraH C::.O. Galland JI• Gra_y, WUtM and cart
lllt1Mwa1 (venue director f'or the Pcniathlon). ~l
Han(mayorofNc n8cac:!h)..,and lltltf _
iabd Oranaie CoUllU upcrv.ason&anttn WW.~
Jn),BrwtN IAMe(Yt1thPa•)1ndT•8JleJ( itth
Em•aJue)andsute .JM ,...,.
Reading
Healthy look adopted
to cash in on trends
Ann • an attorney fnend of ou"" h finn idea on
nutrition. When she became pttgnant. she avoided su r,
counted e'ifCrY gta.m of protein and ihunned refined flou.n
for whole vain . When she spied "honey-wheat" EnJlish
muOins that blazoned "whole wheat and no supr" on the
label, she dropPCd them into her upennarket hoppinJ
can with del~t. Perfect.
Well, maYt>e not. Anne, whose kten lcpl eye ca ily
penetrates dense contractual mumbo-jumbo, had neglect·
ed to read the fine print on the label. She had been
bamboozled by a box ofEngli h muffins. Herc's bow:
Though the wrapper bannered "made with honey,
whole wheat and bran," small print on the side showed tbe
first -and therefore most abundant -ingredient was
none of the above. It was conched wheat flour-another
way of saying white flour Whole-wheat flour took second
place, with lbran far down the li$l, sq zed between
vinegar and salt. The sugar that Anne assumed had been
replaced by honey (wluch 1s, of course, sugar in its "health
food" di guise) was there, too, under one of its many
aliases: com syrup.
Ann,. \vrec wrong on several counts, but she could
I
hardly be blamed. That label-hke all food label -is the
food's billboard. And bc~u th he hhy look II these da)". the label was made to loo a i the product t\ad taken
health to heart. But what loon he lthy on a label isn't
nCCCSW11~. -
Of course, many produl· ave lllways bttn
nutritious. And, true. man) conli0ent1ou food·mllikcrs
have chal\ged their products to st-t in tune with the new
nutrition (salt, sugar, fats and additives ·reduced or
eliminated; whole 8f1ins added). But many food with new
hcalthy-lookina labels arc still the same old foods. They
merely Oaunt such unrqulated and legally '!\e:manglC$S
words as "natural," "v.holesome" and "organic."
StJU, than.ks to ingredients listings and nutrition
labeling, a concerned shopper with a sharp eye for apte
type can learn far more at the ~upennarket today than ever
before. Just keep readina past the headlines to the ,mall
print to find what you need to know. Be particularly wary
of popular catchwords.
Government surveys indicate that 63 percent of us
believe "natural foods arc more nutritious than other
foods," and 47 percent arc willing to pay a 10 percent
premium for "natural" fare. So it would be unnatural 1f
labels didn't trumpet "natural" whenevci possible That's
why one lemonade manufacturer pr~a1ms "100 Percent
Natural Lemon Flavor" on a chemical concQCtion in
whkh 1ust about everything but the flavor is artificial.
Mental disorder analy~ed
DEARANN LANDERS:"Lcarn-
ing to Cope in Maryland" wrote in
your column hat schizophrenia is
not split pe hty, as many believe,
butadiseascca bya hemical
imbalance an the t> • further
stated that schizophrenics cannot
perceivethed1ffercnoc between fan-
tasy and reality, and counseling is of
no value.
Au
l.uDEIS
llave beeD ldentUJed lD some forms of
tM U1Deu. O..er-Ukely cotitrlhtlq
factors lDclade cbemlcal tol.ldty,
psycbolo&'eal trauna, pby1lcal
traama or a cembbt.atioa of one or
more of t•e above. .
( C) Depres1loo l1 tndeed a frequent
factor 1n 1cbhopbrtn1a ud some
mule depre11lves are mladlaposed.
Tbese dJapo1tlc errors cu be
cleared ap by a competent 1peclaU1t. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Some
terrible rumors arc floating around
this office and innocent people are
being hurt. A long time ago you
printed the enclosed. It would mean a
lot to me af yoo'd print it again.
Please? -SAD FOR THE VICTIM
DEAR SAD: It'• wortll a secoDd go-
'roa..nd. Glad to obU1e. It topples
1overnment1, wrecks marria1es.
rains career1, sa11Je1 reputations,
caases beartacbe1, nJgbtmare1, ln-r
dJgestJon -1pawn1 sa1plcloo, gener.J
et
Like the word "naturnt,•• the tenn1 "organic" and
"h th food" ha.ve n ver been definC'd by ·lhc Fooeral
Trade Com mi ion. In fact. the ncy described "health
food" a .. undefined, undefin ble and inherently decep.
uve,"
rom soup 10 de.f1 tied nuts, ••htc" i in, but that
doesn't 11 y mean lones are out. A new hte c;om chip
15 just a c lorie per chip'Under 1ts regular brother-a liafit
i;av1n1.
Other diet l~ts attl'.Nlu1rcd by the FOOd anti Orua
Administration to be. more honest. A "low-caloric" food
can't have more than 40 cal ones per scrvina or 0.'4 cal ones
per aram. and "reduC'Cd-calorit" items muS1 be reduced in
calorie by a third.
.. Hi~nCflY" now sell like "lo-cal." But thou&h it
sounds as 1fthcy'll siveyou plenty of aet-up;.and.go, alf"hi·
energy" foodswillpve you a high caloric . (FoodeneflY is
calorics.) Consumer advocates trying to persuade food
companies to explain this on labels have had low
cooperation.
Thanks to consumer pres ure 1n the '60§ and '70s,
thouah. manufacturers now put some uscf ul infonnation
<>n food packaaes. ·and the government ha~ set standards
for what they have to say. The ingrcdtents list tells you
what's m the product, and the nutntion label tells you how
it measures up in protein, vitamins and other nutrients.
Some products. unfortunately, have neither listing
. .
Tl)e FDA, which .oventt1 mo t food labclina, doc n'
~uu-e an i~1ents list on ocrtain :staples that arc mad
from standard recipes: mayonnaise, ketchup cann
veactablcs. milk. ice cream. marprin and some brc
utntion'labcls arcVtqu1rcd only on those packages tha
a!T)' health claims. However, hitf ofa11 foOd proccuo
anc;lude both inaredients lists and nutrition labels, '=vcr
when not required.
Remember that ingredients appear in order O'
abundance-the most first and ttie least last. If you'd like
to keep your u.aar intake low, don't buy a product that ha1
upr(inany ofits manyforms)uiu firat ingredient. If yo
want I 00 percent whole wheal.1 be sure no other floun
dilute the formula. •
•
4 Nutrition label must include the servinJ or portioa
size: the number of calorie$ and wci1ht per scrvirlJ ••
grams of protein, carbohydrates and fat: the ptr\.-'tntait pci
scrvina of the U.S. recommended daily allowance fo1
protein, five vitamins and two minerals: and, starting neJt'
July. sodium content per scrv1na.
Tabular infonnatton. though an improvement O\'C1
the days of none al all. is not easy forconsumm who ha~
difficulty handlinJ numbe~. In Europe. pie charts and bat
graphs have ~rftriCd, but no changes are in the offina
here. for the time being. AMe and all 'the rt$1 of us wiD
have to do the best w~.can with the fine print we've aot.
American Bealtlt Map&ilM Servke
Since you are considered a leader in
the field of mental health, will you
pleaseanswcrthescquesuons1( I) Is
there a known cause for
schizophrenia? (2) What is the best
treatment? (3) Where is the most
promisinaresearch beingdone?(4)
Since depression and schizophrenia
appear to have similar components, ........ ......-.~-:.,---..-{, ...... ,..._,........;·"·Je"thanhcdiqno$isroutd~
(%) Becaasetllerearedlfferent
types of 1cb1lopllreala, ooe cu.not
say wlalcb trutmeat 11 best wJt•oat
·bo.U.Clltf~~~
widely a.std are clnac daerapy, PIY·
claotberapy, occapational tlaf.rapy
and, rarely, alaocll treatmea .
Acapanctare U.1 some advocates bat
tk11approacb11 not widely respected.
ates ,rttf, ma.ket imlocat Det..e~~_.~,,.,,...--.-,-...-..,.
. ID tllelr]JIUOWI. Even Its D.aUle'kl.slff-lt'• called 1011lp. Office 1011lp. Sllop
1011lp. Party 1os11p. It makes bead·
llu1 and laeadacbes. Before yo"
repeat a story asll younelf, 11 It tnae7
11 It fair? II It nece11ary? U not-
be confused?
I beg you to respond. -MOTHER
OFONEINS.C.
DEAR MOTHER; r con1alted wltb
• emlnetit aatlaorlty wlao provided
dlese answers. He ii DT. Frederick
Goodwha, Sdenttflc Director of tbe
Nattoaal lmtitate of Mental Rea.Ida in
~.Md.
( 1) Tlaere II DO lht&le DOWD ca DIC
of 1dhe>pMeD1a. GeMtlc factors
COOL ...
From Bl
getting more space and added conve-
niences.
Efficient refngerators really do not
look any different from less efficient
ones. So to help (ou compare the
operatmg costs o the rcfngerato~
you see in the stores. look for the
bright yellow "EnergyGuide" labels
on every refngeraior for sale
-Each label has a big black number
-the estimated annual operating
cost for that particular model.
Tbe label also provides the range of
oeprating cost -from lowest to
high.est -for all refrigerator models
in the same capacity grouping. But, be
careful. 'Jhe models compared .in the
operating cost range include all types
of door styles and defrost systems.
You will be companng automauc
defrost with manual and single doors
with top or bottom-freezer combina-
tions or side-by-sides.
A 0 Refrigerator-Freezer Selection
Guide," published annually by the
Association of Home Appliance
Manufacturers (AHAM). lasts all
current refrigerator and freezer
models along with their door style~.
defrost systems. capac1t1es and an
nual operating costs. For a copy, send
Sl to AHAM. 20 N. Wacker Dnve.
Chicago, 111. 60606.
(3) !l'be Natloul IJUtitates of
Mental Healtb provide most of tlle
fcmCUDg for researcll ID tlae United
States. fte wort 11 belq done lD
major Divers.Ides and mecUcaJ
1cbool1 ud in tbe ID1tltates' owe
researcll program ln Betllesda ud St.
EUubetll'1 Hospital ln Wasbla&ton,
D.C.
.
HOSPERS-McCORMICK
Newport Beach resident Shirley
Krum McCormack was untted in
marriage with Neal Lines Hosper in a
J uJy 14 ceremony at St. Andrew's
Episcopal Church m Fort Worth,
Texas.
Tbe bnde wore a tea length gown of
pnnted pastel silk. She was attended
by her daughter. Melissa M. Davy, as
matron of honor, and K.athenne, Jean
and Megan McCormick, her grand-
daughters, and Suzanne Pinson. the
bridegroom's granddau_Jhter, as
flower girls. Robert Elburk.i. grandson
of the bndeiroom, was nngbearer.
The bndeiroom was attended by
Richard Gerdau of West Los Angeles
as best man, Wilham Hoyt of Bodega
Bay and Alexander Miller of Fort Worth.
The couple greeted 200 guests at a
rettpt1on at the RadgJea Country
Oub. Among the guests were the
bnde's sons and daughters-an-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. McConnack
of Newport Beach, and their daugh-
ters Kathcnnc and Jean. and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert W. McCormick of Long
Beach. and their daughter Megan,
88l"n1;, UP landers' "New Bride's
Gwde" will answer questions about
today's weddings. For a copy, send
S2. plus a long., self.addressed,
stamped envelope (37 cents postage)
to Ann unders, P.O. Box 11995,
Chicago. Ill. 60611.
and the bride's daughter and son-m-
law. Mr and Mrs. Michael Davy of
Corona del Mar, the bnde's brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Krum of Dana Point. and her
sister and her husband. Mr and Mrs.
Robert Kavanaugh of San Franc19Co.
-The couple will lave m Fort Worth
where the bridegroom heads his own
company for real estate brokerage for
hotels and restaurants.
OVEREND-SMITH
Our Lady Queen of Angels Church
in Newport Beach was the settmg for
the May 19 wedding of Tamara S.
Smith and Thomas P Overend. The
Rev James Overcnd officiated
The bnde 1s the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart A. Smith of New-
port Beach. She chose a gown by
Biachi with lace bodice and long lace
sleeves and earned a cascade of
orchids.
Traci A Smith was maid of honor
and Laun Hamson. Tammy Mann.
Lisa Dunnivan. Betsy Hartwig and
Knsu Hughes were bridesmaids.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Overend of
Newport Beach are the parents of the
bndegroom. He was attended by ..-;::::=:::=:::===----------------...... ------....-.John Overend, best man and Craig Smith. Craig Knickerbocker. Doug
Simpson. George Shmn and Clyde
3-Piece
Fish Dinner
Only&2.99
Treat yourself to our 3 Piece Fish Denner thre.-big c~py
VonDcrAhe as ushers.
After a reception at the Santa Ana
Country Club, the couple left for a
wedding tnp to the Virgin Islands.
They are Huntington Harbour resi-
dents.
The bride 1s a USC ~uate with a
master's degree in business admm1s-
trat1on, and a 1976 Children's Home
Society debutante. The bride&r00m
also 1s a USC busmcss admtnistration
graduate and a member of the
Jonathan Club.
Build a house from a kit
Little llrl'• bedroom bu Retie charm l.il new. bat old·
looking furniture, and cOQJltry acceuorta.
You may have built a lot things in
your life from a kit. . but, chances
arc, you never considered building a
~rec-bedroom prepackaged house.
A contemporary rustic Timberpq
house from a kit is precut in a factory
and then trucked to the building site
savina considerable construction
time. The basic pack.age is about
$49,000 plus lot. appliances, cabi-
nets andturface materials.
The house featured here, built by
Countryside Villas, Ltd. in
Jamestown, N.C., has a bright. airy
feelina because of its open p[an and
well-pla~ windows, sk:ylipt~ and
slidina st.ass doon. To emphasize its
suody contemporary look, the an-
terior desianers chose briaht pastels
for upholstery, rugs and accessories,
and arranaed fumiture conveniently
for multi-use. Furniture pieces arc
from Thomasville's Replicas 1800
and Country collections.
The bedrooms convey diversity.
Cathedral ceilings and triangular
windows under hiah roof peaks bring
arcbit.cctural interest to them, as do
the solid pine timbers that frame and
beam the house and give the interior
its rugaed, natural beauty.
Post-and-beam framework like
that used by master bam builders was employed here so there is no
need for interior load-bearina walls.
and rooms can be arranged to stJit
personal needs. The basic plan can be
enlarged.
Solid pine timbers arc secured by
mlerlock.ing mortise and tenon
joints i>elaed with square oak tru.n-
nets. Over this skeleton, the wall and
rooflayers of tonaue and groove pine
boards, insulation, and exterior sid"
ina combine to offer eneray con·
scrvation and low maintenance.
fish fellet.s golden fryes fresh cole slaw and two crunchy hushpuppies
Special price good for a l1m1ted time only THE
Special: extra fillets, 50C apiece. Now. you can add extra fish fillets
to your meal at this 11ery special price! Good when you buy any adult
mt"al. for a lim1tf'd tlm.-only. Limit 4 fillets per meal.
Good Qlflly at parttnp•ung '"«>pp(!'
Not .~1~1 •1th""~ othflf <<>upon OJ d1M ount
LONG]OHN SI LVEl{S.
•-~~---~~~--~~~~~EAF ~----~~~-
3095 HattK>r Blvd. In Costa M Just south oi
Safi Fr way across from Ftdco
Dme•Thru ~rvke Avallablt
•'
REUBEN E.· LEE
()n The Bav
PRESENTS
SIZZLING SUMMER NIGHTS
.
DUESLER~RA Wl'ORD
Kimberly Anne Duesler and
Charle David Crawfor(I, both of
Newport Beach, are plannina to
marry Sept. 29 in St. James Episcopal
Church. Newpon Buch.
The bride-elect 1s the dauibter of
uc Ducsler and Robert Ducsler of
Newport Beach. She araduated from
Estancia High School, Co ta Mesa,
and Cat State Lona Beach.
Her fiance is a .,.aduatc of Edison
Hiah School, Huotinaton Beach, and
Golden West Col1*. His parents are
Barbara Harris lfall and Richard
Crawford. Costa Mesa aod Santa
Ana.
ORAHAll·ADA.118
Kathy Graham of Lona Beach and
Scott R. Adlms of lrvine have
announc.ed their engagement.
The future bride. a fonner Miss
Lona Beach. is the dau&hter of Betty
Graham of LOna Beach. She aradu-
atcd from Cal State Lona 8"cach and
received her doctorate of jurispru-
dtnce from Western State Umvcrsity,
Collcae of Law.
The future bridqroom. son of
Ca~t. and Mn John B. Adams ot
lrvutt, ltlduatcd from University Htsh S"chool, Irvine. and UC
Berk ley. He JU 1975 reapient of the
lrvine·Co. Urban Planni~ Scholar-
ahip and is emPlo~ by RacbatdsOn
NII)' Manin, Arc.hhecture/Pluaing,
Newport Beach.
They ~ plan nina to marry io
November in Corona det Mar.
H owt submit your news
The 1)11/) Pilot M'lnt your ~·
din,andc~cntnca~
To help >OU ubmu thr ttqw't'td
mform1110n, forms are 1V1ilabJc ••
the D11/ 1'1/ot offlcc. JJ() W. Bly St.,
o 11 Mesi .
For-weddillJS. on_ly· • bl«i' ttd wht~~ rhoto orthc bridt Is ~bk.
n•P.5!1,0I Polaroid and COior photot
ran r be used.
Th~ 11ho10 must be ubmlrttd no •
•
,
,
p
Two local community theattr
sroups arc 11anina off the 1984-!S
sons with their IOOth prOducUons.
while a thud huJust wral>Pcd up the
100\b lhow at its present 10cation.
Reac:bina tile century mark last
weekend, with the openina of "The
Supportina. Cast." was the Costa
Meta Qv1c Pl1yhou1e -which
celebrated earlier b1 movint from the
Oranae County fairarounds to a renovated facility at the c:ity'a Rea.
Cultural center, 661 Hamilton St .. CostaMcaa.
When the Westminster Communi· ty· Theater lifts the curtain on .. A
Tomb With a View" Sept. 7, it'll be
the lOOth production for that aroup,
which aJao is obtervina the 1 oth
anntveraary of ill playboute, built In
l 97• at 7272 Maple St., Westminster.
And tho Laauna Moulton Play-
house, Oranae County's oldest com-
munity theater.Just closed the books
on its l OOth a how at the Moulton,
•·tales of Fannie Keenan.i Better
Known 11 Dora Hand.0 Or course,
the L&&una pla)l.ers have put on 1 few hundred other plays in their career,
datina back to the 1920s, before the
present facility wu l>uilt in 1969.
The Cost.a Mesa Civic Playhouse
was born in 196S and produced its.
first 98 shows in what w11, at one
time, the entertainment center of the
.
Platinum ticket
Toi
TITUS
Sant.a Ana Army Air Base duri"'
World War ti. It was founded by Pata
if ambellini, who still aerves as its
resident director and has mounted all
but 16 of the aroup's first 100
productions.
The Westminster Playen. the oria·
inat name of that aroup, were or·
pnized in 1961 and st.lied their
lhOWI in a number of roeations.
chiefly the old 17th Street
Auditorium, before roUina up meir
sleeves and buildina their own theater
a decade aao. Tiicir current • pro-
duction, number 99, is the Peanuts
musical "Snoopy," which closes Sat· urday.
It's not really known how many
shows beyond the I 00 at the Moulton
have been presented in Laauna over
the more than 60 years of that
theater's existence. If anyone has any
accurat&-information in that regard,
we'd be interested in hearin.a from them,
C.out DAILY PlLOT /W~ 4'9wt..I. 1114 -
TWO ORE LOCAL commun t)
theater poups have :announced thc11
producuon pl ns for the 19 4-S
season -the Huntin'Jton Beach Playhouse and the Ncwpon T~tcr
Ans Center.
The Huntinaton Bach plarcrs,
now on the boards with ··west Side
. tory" throuah Aua. 2S. ~ill oflkially
inauaurate the new season Sept, 7
"'1th the st.aae vcnion of a v1nt.aae movie, .. The Farmer's Oau&hter."
The mood shifts to sex farce OCt. 26
with "Natalie Needs a N~tie."
Openin1 the new rear Will be a new
thriller, "Tantalus.' adapted from a
French novel. The comedy "The Best
of Friends" bows in Feb. 22. followed
by a drama, "A Roomful of Roses," ticketed for April 12.
Into the homestretch of the seven·
play season, the comedy "No Hard
Feclinp" arrives May 3 I. Complet·
ina the schedule oft a musical note, u
has been the case for the pest two
r.ean, will be Gilbcn and Sullivan's
'The Pirates of Penzance."
. The Hunting10n Beach Playhouse
is located at Main Street and
Yorktown Avenue in the SeaclifT
Villa&e shoppina center, where per-
formances are 11vcn Fridays and
Saturdays at 8:30. Reservations and
additional Information may be ac-
quired by callina the theater at
132-140.S. •
.. Barnum," the musical bioaraphy
ofd reu VCAt P.T. mum, 'iUralae the cvruun on lhe cwpon Theater
Aru Center's son AUJ.. l• and will
be utendcd throuah Oct. 13 an anticip&t on or packed houses. Then.
on Nov. 9, NT AC wins the prize for
the lonaest-t1tltd st.ow of the ycar-.. Thc Buttcrfinscrs Anael, Mary and
Joteph, Herod the Nut and the
Slauahter of 12 Hit Carols in a Pear
Tree." The mystery musical ''Somethin,a's
Afoot" will be revived Feb. IS,
followed by the modem com Cd)'
"The Supportin1 Cast," opmj_ltJ -
April 19. The season will close with
the IJ'OUp's third mu 1cal, '°The Boy Friend," scheduled for a June 7
curtain rai~r.
The Newport Theater Arts Center
is situated at 2SOI Cliff Drive,
NewpQrt Beach, and offen per-
formances f ndi~s and Saturdays at 8
p. m. Call 631 -0288 for f unber details.
CALLBOAJ\D ~ Add1t1onal audi· tions for "Kismet" w1ll be held
Monday from 7 to 9 p.m. at Sebas-
tian's West Dtnntr Playhouse annex..
ISO Ave. PlcoJ San Clcmente .... roles
are still open tor Hajj, Maninah and
two male dancers .... those auditionina
should brina resume and music ....
Cable fitm hunts
pay-TV pirates
Soap atan at the fair
Telnlalon penonalidee Krtattan Alfouo ud Peter
Reckell -better uown u .Hope and Bo on ••.oaye of Om
LlYee" -lea•e a crowd of fu1 at the Loialallaiaa WOl'ld
£apoeltlon lD New Orleans. The apace lhuttle ltnterprl.ee la
lD the bac~4. · , . .
SAN JOSE (AP) -Thousands of Goodroe. who represents Premier
television v1e~ers suspected of pirat-and whose sianaturc is on the Bay
ina pay-television sipals arc bcma area letter called ita "simple demand
Golf er, actor 'scared'
told to dismantle thetr antennae and letter on the people who have been ... VAIL, Colo. (AP) -Jack Nicklaus pay $300 each or they will be sued -stealina the sianal for years. I tlunk and Clint Eastwood escaped injury in
a 1tratej)' backers say bas found Mr. Belli knows the pu~se of a scpa:me airplane scam co route to
·sua:ess in other cities. demand lener. :· · · the .Jerry Ford Invitational Golf Letters to the suspected pirates · Goodroe said that thouSIJ'lds: of...::.:roumarnct.
· &om.an attorney for.Premier Com-letterswerebeiJ\amaile to~or: A"prfvau)OicarryinaN'cklausanc:f
municauons N'etwork Inc. say that an four" counties in the Bay area. members of. his family skidded off a
"electronic and pbotoarapbic "We have been forced to do it." ~waySundayasit~dedinaheavy
survey" .showed. they were usina . said Goodroe. "Otherwise it (the ra.mstorm at ~ mpon near the
unauthonzed ~~crowav~ antennae atealina) is just uie 1 cancer. It is a Rocky Mounta10 to~ of E;aale. but
and may face c1V1l .pcn~ues of mote' cancer and let\ untouched. it will no one was bun, ~fficials w~. . than S 1,000 for violauna state and destroymy client." Ea&le County Airport officials said
federal l;aws. . . The attorney and the Everarcen. the do~pour apparently caused the .Premier, ofBurhnaame, 1s about 40 Colo., company assisuna in the small Jet to .hydroplane off the
miles north of San Jose •. where some crackdown installed a phone . in runway. The airport wu closed for
of the first letters arc bem1 sent. The Sunnyvale about 10 miles north of about an hour, while the plane was
compa_ny ~olds the Home Bc;>x Office San Jose, io answer questions from rct~ed to the ruJ?way. . franchise in the SaQ f ranc11co Bay letter recipients. Nicklaus, lus wife, ~d one of ~1s
area. . The letter warns that civil damages sons were a~ the aircraft, which Those suspected of steahna the m excess of s 1 ooo can result "for also also earned a crew of two.
microwave tran~mis~ions are . told even attempting 10 intercept this . The bad weather also forced a
that they can avo!d bean& named in.an pnvate co mmun1cat1on."
"A wonderful movie."
''IT'S A BLOCKBUSTER.
A LOIJ.APALOOZA, A Cl.A.WC." .......... .._,.
sm,er BWy Joel doea a dance step with &lrlfriend Cbrtaty
BrtJikley. who holda Joet•e PladDam TtCket. preeented--to
mule entertalnen who haft attracted more than 250,000
fana to !few Tork'e llad.laon ~Garden,
u~mmJ lawsuit o~ly by removma It says that a civil suit will be filed
their equipment, ma1hoa the S300 to Au1-20 in U.S O.stnct Coun and
a Sunnyvale post office box by Au1-that the "settlement offer 1s not _I s and s~an1na an a&recmc~t to stop uabl This is your only illepl microwave mterccpttons. nqo ~ ··· 1 h l · fi ihe letter calls the money an "out-opportunity ,!o sett e t ts c aim or
of-court settlement." this amount. . MW
<Juy fr•nkhn l<tB"> TV
. .
Falklands war .film
opens old w.ounds
-Argentine movie ~howtng defeat by British
'powerful, close to memories and f eeltngs •
"That's exteruon. That is Otterly Matt WannmJ. president ofT
d I 1 ·u J.. 'd San Consultants of Everareen. Colo .• an ~omp etc Y 1 ep •. w . which conducted the house-to-house f ranc1sco a~tomey Melvin Belli, wh~ survey. said similar operations have
is represtntt~a several ~~ ~ been successful in the last 30 months ~:ento residents fiahuna a s1mdar in .Minneapoh~ and St. Paul, Minn .•
The Sacramento residents sued Milwaukee. Wis .. Portland, Ore., and
California SateUite Systems after a Sacramento.
similar mailina. claimina the letter The method not only P8Y,S for t~e
amounted to ~xtortion, fraud and projec~ an~. en~s the piratina. said
misrepresentation. Wanruna •. in six d~ys af\cr ~ leave
Belli said his firm lost that court town, their subscnbers (app_hcants)
skirmish but has appealed. He said he triple. It's very very aood busmess." already has heard from more than a Goodroe 111d it was a '"fairassun:ip-
half dozen San Jose recipients of the tion" that the strat~y was be1.ng tned
~.:...... ~ .... ~ .. __
_.., ........ ._.. ................... ........ " ........ ------
1MA '°'111TAlll YAWY
.......... ~ lt'!l'y '°"' 53Ull .,13(77
COITAMllA UN-. E~cs•._ ~---~,.,.. ~S51.QW
By KEVIN NOBLET
A1111l1IUI"-'.,_
-Premier letter who want to sue. locally because of us success in other
Buenos Aires movie theater to see the ,...J..,!;O~a~k!!l•!.!:n~d~a~t~to~rn~cyL!H!:_.~W~ay~n~c~· .£C!!lt!!ies:!:·~----------t---...;~~-=-•=-====:::...ll.!:::============reaction to previews of tbe movie.
ll fOllO ffoo .. ,....... »"=-·~--·~---..~
BUENOS AIRES, Ar)enttna -
Movicaoers in this stronaJy na-
tionalistic country are aett.ina a dose
of recen~ bitter hiatory -the
Falkland Islands war and the youna
men who fouaht it.
"Cbicos de la Guerra" or "Boys of
the War," the flnt movie ever about
the conflict, made its debut Aua. 2 in
theaters across the country.
"This film is very powerful. It 11
very close to the people'• memories
and feelinp," director Bebe Kamin,
• t said in an interview.
Daniel Kon, 29, who wrote the
book on which the movie is based anq
collaborated in the filmina. asked:
.. Will the people ao and tee it? We
have our doubts."
More than two yean after its end,
the South Atlantic war remains an
unhealed wound in the Araentine
psyche. The movie's openina scenes
recreate the most painful recollection
-the surrender of the country's ttooj)I to Britilh forces who retook
the fa.lldands in June 1982 to end the
7~ywar.
The fllm then moves backward to
the childhood of its protq0ni1ts -
three fteah·faced boys, two from the
dty and one raised in the country.
They do not meet until the war, and
the movie ends with their mum to
\he mainland followina thejr ej«tlon
from tho islanda.
Ar&enline lo11es in tho fiahti~a -
712 ~illed -were nearly three umea
that of Bri-.in, which lo1t 15' fl&htcn. Many: of the ArSentine
vfc:tims were barely old eno~ to
1bave, raw youth• With few com~t akilla. They wen known by thtir
countrymen u .. the boyi."
With ill focua on thtee y4una. inerocn combatants. ··auClOI cle la ou.m •• i• unuaual ran for th•
Atpotlne movie fan.
1'be country'• own moVlo indu1uy
traditionally hat avoided con·
uoversial them , beln1 content with
romance, action and comedy. Under
the military aovcmment that ruled
for c~l ~ until Jut December,
politics u a 1ubi«t fbr movttt wu
taboo. Nowl with a dem~uc to • mnnent:m np an chanai~
Jaws dropped, they sai~. when on the
screen fluhed the UJ\llC of an
embattled Port Stanley -recreated
in a small provincial town complete
with British Land Rovers and ware-
.. LIKE NOTHING
YOU'VE SEEN SINCE
'THE WIZARD OF OZ':'
houses bearina the words "Falldand ~ ·-
Island Company." ·•-----ant
Someviewersputtheirhandsover fU" OOIM...,., --.. --o ~~R~~ING their faces and shook their heads. ~ ••· ~· · .·.::=:.~:= 1,&.;.,Y &.-WI ,u
Kon remembers the scattered ap-•Presented S.roRY rm
plaute that broke out whon the In Dotbt Edwards Woodbrld&e AIWDI LA .._ ,.;
preview ended. Kamin recalls only Stereo SS1-06SS Stadium Dr-In SRO GtlewlJ w the stunned silence. AIWIN 2 m 1
It is the ftrst South American-Stadium Or In ~ :::Y 639'8770 t 5 3-
produccd picture to recreate a con-6398770 S23·1611 • E~~da~e =:: temporary battle, and presented (or· u.... aa midable technical obstacles for a crew 8tDA rMK LA •ADA Ctnter 979-4141 Twtn ll°"nl
worlcina~ with a bud&et of about Blltn• '-rk SRO la Mirada 'fOllfTAll VAWY .-
$2S01000 -a pittance by American Ot·h'l 12I-407o Dr in m .9310 ~Jr' ~~tZ~ zm
stanoards. •com MISA llSSION VIJO
Bombs had to be made ft'om Edwards Cinema Edwards MiUIOn ~·eio ,._ -sAllTA ~
scratch. Uniforms and weapons for ~46 3102 Mall '95 6220 ~~11.bttnity =
the 100 a~ors and SOO extras had to COSTA •SA OlANGE l\A .._. llSJ191lD
be borrowed from a local military EO.ards Town UA Caty c,~ttf NC FlllliOll Ul Wei •
Ullit, which refused to aupply the Center m 4114 634-3911 $4Gltl <213) '91~33 19~ items until the civilian aovemment 'f(Q(Tlll VlllCY Olli& applied pressure. famlfy foyr AAIC Of•".11 SM w CArlSTlMO
"The military didn't like m)· 963 1307 637 0340 $$10n Vi Di lft 493 4545
book.." Kon explained. WOOt GaOV£ LAQN IOCH 497 l 111
Wu tcenes were filmed outside Edwarda Wntbfool Edwlfdl So4itll Coast l q 1111a
Tandi!, 22S miles south of Buenos I L;;=;;;;::5~1n;•:•01~;;=;====£11•=====~~~~~~ Aires on rollina rural landscape hi
similar to that of the Falklands. The
streets of Sima Bayas a tiny town
west ofTandil bcc.ame Pon Stanley.
• DCUY SlUtO
.. Theae boys (in the film) were 13
yean old when the military took over
in the coup (of I 976)," said Kon. "So
they arcw up in one of the mott terrible periods of our history."
He said he wantCd to show how the
youthi' adolctetncc wu squandered an a period of brutal political repm-
lion and intente cenaorahip. "The
tfllfc atory ends with the war, which . wu onlv the last psp of a tcmble rmme.'' --r.Chieot de la Guerra" does not
chalJenae the ge-old. claim of tOV•
etdanty bY Aracnuna over the :Falklaftdl, althoulb it appears to
condemn the tutite attempt to take
them bi' force.
Kamin and Kon are hopeful ~JODI de la Oucrrl" will blvt a
mirket in other La n American ~ntri wh ch followed tht war
with Britain clotelv.
The experiment that should ~r
have happened 41 )4ears go ..•
Is stlfl going on.
TlleP/Jiladelplliti
Eiperbaeat · ~--=
•• PUYIH
~ !IJlAflt.I MAI I
~ I '"I AllO'
laMIRAOA Q
._. DO • 1'11 tm\.I lif oocr (N)
II 10llll OOllY STl.O • 1-00 Ho uo no 10,.
1llDm fl fll IODS (J) ll JQ, UO. 410 61& t ot ltlXI
AUM:
mft'll tlll -nr IH O Jll l» 1U I ..
~mm llll. Ul l lt., lt ll
... r•u..,.•M ....... ,.._. ....
~--l na •• UC I ICJC
.._ ..... '81U. .... ..,
II OUT~ 100 UO HO I• IOJt
1010UO.-tal ~°"" IUG UO 41llOC 1000 ,,.. &00
UC lDc U0. 7tc t OC UCO
''Thi• ftlm i• really v~ unuaual for
-...t1·-... our Q&lwre," Kanun ... I'm not
sure how much peo~ want tee
thcar own ~s look1na blek at them
from the tcretn."
Kontaldlhaievc tthefilm an''• ~
hit, it had to be m d •
He and Lon n\ly vmted a
'a bclltr to remember." he 1d
.. Foracttina could be \'Cry danacrous
for 1 country like th11.'1
. I
-.J
84 o?ango Cout DAILY PILOT/W
Must Madison Avenue·
~-eat-e Our-=eand·· dat ?
Bill Moyers examines TV pac agtng
of presidential aspirants tonight
By FR.ED ROTRENBt::RG
»T......._Wttw
EW YORK -lhe ttlevi ion
commfflial implyma that pre iden·
ual candidate Barry Goldwater had
an itchy nu tear 1riager finger was
~nonce, then yanked offthe air. But
its powerful imp ct was never for·
aotten,
That infamous "daisy" adveni e-·m~t and others wtll be examined on
"The 30-Second President." another
thoughtful installment of .. A Walk
throu&h the 20th C'entul') Wlth Bill
Moyers .. tonight at 8:30 on KOCE,
Channel 50, and at 9 on KCET.
Channel 28.
lt'sa fascinauna broadcast focusing
on the best and worst presidential ads
ince they bclan 1n I 952 with Moyers
conductioa fenatby interview with
two influential commercial creators.
The onl) mis~ng perspective is ihat
of Politicians explaming their tech-
niques and concerns.
The program 1s nostal11c, recalling
· presidential politics an the earliest
days of TV advert1S1n&. and sigrufi-
cant, ra1S1n& quesuons about whether
our leaders are elected bec~use of
their quahficat1ons and views or
becau~ of their camera prescnc-e and
TV image.
"The English don't allow TV ads,"
Moyers said 1n an interview with The
Assoctated Press. "There, polit1cians
must speak directly to the voters ....
Campaigns here would be better
served by more direct appearances
With each other.
.. Now, it's where Madison A venue
begms and Pennsylvania A venue
ends. TV ads arc creating an appetite
for entertainment rather than conflict
resoluuon."
Moyers wa ~ secrttary and special assistant to Pre ident L)'ndon
Johnson in 196•. One of~· cam·
J)ai&n responsib11iti was to rve as
liaison with the d a ncy cteatina
John50n's commercial .
The, mo t memorabtc wa the "daisy" ad, in which a cute young ajrl
is counting offthe ~tals ofa flower as
lhe countdown for a nuclear blast
beJins. Then Johnson's voice. comes
on: "These arc the stake . to make a
world in which all God's children can
live or ao into 1be darkne s. Either we
must love each other or ~e must die."
Goldwater's name never "'as men-
tioned. But he complained, and the ad
was immediately pulled.
Ton> Schwanz. the medta consult·
ant who created the ad. defends it on
tonight's broadcast. "lt'madc people
aware of the basic difference," he
says, "and It really showed the
underlying fear that people had of
atomic warfare."
Moyers said he didn't feel guilty
about the daisy commercial. "It was
not as much anti-Goldwater as pro-
Johnson." he said. But he acknowl-
edged that the impact hun Gold-
water's image.
"The ad reminded people inferen-
tially that Goldwater had talked like a
warmonger," Moyers said. "Every ad
has several levels.'!
On the broadc.ast. Moyers offers a
remarkable confession that the '64
campaign didn't accurately reflect
Johnson's V&etnam views. "It haunts
me," he says. that Johnson was
pictured ··as peacemaker" and Gold-
water "as warmonger." Moyers adds
that be doesn't remember any John-
son ad touchrng on V 1etnam.
Spring~tee:n. Q.~iled
~Jl!;;~L-..r-·in NJ bomecoming
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)
-After a three-year absence from
concert stages in his home state,
Bruce Spnngsteen returned to New
Jersey and thnlled the crowd, includ-
ina his parents, Wlth songs hke "Born
ln The U .S A." and "Atlantic City"
Sunday night's concen was the first
of 10 shows by Spnngsteen and the E
Street Band at the 2 I .000-seat Bren-
dan Byrne Arena All of them have
been sold out
The 34-year-old Freehold nauve
hadn't performed 1n the Garden State
since Jul}' 3. 1981
··we finally made 1t back here. It
took us thrd years but we did it,"
Springsteen told the cheering crowd.
"My mom and dad arc out there. Let's
hear it for them." •·
Springsteen made several referen-
ces to his New Jersey roots. including
how he Joined the Freehold Colontal
Little League at age 1
Kath} Kmg, a 30-year-old from
Asbury Park.. a shore community
where Springsteen often played, re-
called has past show-business names
''I remember him when he was The
Child. then The Steel Mill. so I'm glad
to see him back:· she said
In the anten icw with Th AP.
Moyers. now n a1i1JyJt for 0 65.
elaborated 0 1t was a tt\tl tion that
hit me two, thrtt )'Clrs ago." he said
''The electton of LBJ kd to a wider
·war. h's unfortunate, bul emotional
ads can defl~t people from the real
i u~." ·
The broadcut beains with ads for
then-Gen. Dwiaht Ei5enho~cr in
1952. his eyes nervously dartina from
side to side as he read the cue card .
Eisenhower's ads wouldn't sell today.
"My Mamic(hiswife)get aftcrme
about the hil,b co~t of11vina," he id.
Another Eisenhower ad was
animated. It was done by Walt
Disney, to music by Irving Scrim •Ei~nhower ·~was a singularly inept
speaker." said ad man Rosstr Reeves,
who was the · firsl to loss the
advertiser's hat into the political rina.
Reeves. who died shonly after he
was interviewed b} Moyers for this
broadcast, created the "fast, fast.
FAST relier· c.!mpaian for Anacin
and the slogan .. M&M's milk choc-
olate melts in }Our mouth. not in your
hands." Moyers calls Eisenhower one
of Reeves' ··most famous products."
Eisenhower's hard-sell ads. though
laughable by today's shcker stan·
dards. seemed four years ahead of
commercials for Dcmocrauc can-
didate Adlai Stevenson. One mind-
less mu.s1cal ad had a woman singmg,
"1 love the Gov. the Governor of
Illinois."
Tonight's broadcast covers cam-
paigns through 1976, including the
I 960 campaign between John Ken-
nedy and Richard Nixon. 1t points
out that radio listeners of the Nucon-
Keonedy debate thought Nixon won,
while TV viewers favored Kennedy.
That, said Moyers. mdehbl}
stamped the role of TV in molding
public opinion. "The day is coming
when onlr, telegenic people will run
for office, ' he said.
··we find that the pohucal parties
arc no tonger the major commumca-
taons force in poliucs. the networks
arc," saMI Schwartz. ''You mi&ht say
the three parties arc ABC. NBC and
•CBS"
Zsa Zsa entering
horse competition
MURFREESBORO. Tenn. (AP)
-Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor. an acuvc
walking horse owner and exhibitor.
wall show her style as a panic1pant in
the lntcmat1onal Grand Cham-
p1onsh1p Walk.mg Horse Show this
month, a spokeswoman for the show
5a}S.
Gabor will come from an exh1-
b1t1on nde at the 1984 Olympics 1n
Los Angeles for the last day of the
fhe-day event an Murfreesboro Sat-
urday.
· 'Ghostbusters' top flick again
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -"Purple
Rain" turned out to be less than a
delu_JC an its second weekend at the
nation's m ovie houses· as
.. Gbostbusters" knocked the new-
comer down a notch and reclaimed
the top spot as the best box office
draw.
0 Ghostbusters·· grossed S6. 5
million over the weekend to boost its
nine-week total to S 152 9 m1lhon.
The Columbia release had fallen into
second place the previous weekend
when "Purple Rain" opened as the
top draw.
.. Purple Ram," a Warner Bros.
,. release, grossed S6 2 m1lhon to ra1s.•
-its two-week total to S 18.8 m1lhon
• NEWPORT BEACH •
lASI $T MflGN1U (")
.... """' ll) t•"'" IU'ffS IW: llWNnAll C5) ... 0160 .... 11\of) .. ~ 107~
LIDO I J Cl~ l lt(.AG( IUll
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Also regaining some tround was
"Gremlins," which moved back up to
third after being edged into fourth
place last week by a re-release of
Disney's ··Jungle Book."
··Gremlins" was still well behind
the leaders with a week.end gross of
$4. I m1lhon.
.. Jungle Book" was followed by
"The Karate K.Jd," "Indiana Jones
and the Temple of Doom," and
"Ncvcrcndmg Story " "Indiana
Jones" had not ranked in the top
seven the previous week.
Herc are the top ~en grossing
films last week.end, with d1stnbutor.
weekend gross. total gross and
number of week!> in release.
"Ghostbusters." Columbia, $6.5
million, S 152.9 million, nine weeks.
"Purple Rain," Warner Bros .. $6.2
m1lhon, S 18.8 million, two weeks.
"Gremlins," Warner Bros.. $4. I
m1lhon. SI 20 million, nine weeks.
"Jungle Book." Disney, S3.8
million. $I 2.6 million. two weeks .
"The Karate Kid." Columbia. $3.6
m1lhon, $48.3 million, seven weeks.
''Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom." Paramount. $2.3 million,
SI 55.3 million. 11 weeks.
"Nevcrcnd1ng Story," Warner
Bros .. $2.2 milhon. $14 m1lhon. threc
weeks.
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Vlf JO l V'!IN ·I'll N.G1111A
\ 0 '•• It I' lJPlm;fn (PC) '" ......... utan ion, rnmo
VI( IO MAU •·.atu • "'' to•••'• ll~Ut~•~ C ... ,.,, HG.101)
o~ me _____ .,_,._,_,.._
ViiOMAll •--• Ill • •• ft • Cl) IOI) U~ HO••
IOH SHO IOCIC ....... ,
1r•· 1 'n
Comic characters come to life
Tbae are ftve memben of tbe cut of tbe
mualcal comedy .. Snoopy.'' which clo.ea
tbla weekend at the Wmtmtnater Com·
munlty Theater. From left are J:leadle
Pompa (Peppermllit Patty), Robert-Nelao
(Cbarlle Brown), Tracey O'Connell (Luc7
l>arid Blckey (Llnaa) and Nancy Del&il
(Sally). ca11995-411S for lnformadoii.
NEW8 0 UTn.E HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE . IJ/LOIO
8ATTL£9TAA GALACTICA
IU8IUS AEPORT
GI) HUliWITD lliAOUGH THE
ART8 (J)C8SNEW8
DICKYAN~ El. TON JOHN' R.EETWOOO MAC IN CONCERT
-4:30-
fD MACNBl I LStREA
NEWSHOUR
PROJECT UNIVERSE
NEW8
• THATGIAl MOVE
.... 'A "Coutege Of 8lldt 8-lty''
( 1957) John Ctawfofd, Mimi Glbl0f1.
-7~
IJC8SNEW8
BHBCNEWS rw A BIO GIAl NOW
Q BIONIC WOMAN &NEWS THt&'8 <:OMPANY
WHEEL Of FORTUNE
llllNIC Of WAT'EACOlOM
P.M.MMWINE . MOYIE
H * · StatiOn Six SINrt" (1984)
Cln'ol Biker, Peter van E)Q
®MOVIE
U "St. Htlens" {1981) Art C1mty,
David Hulfmln.
(U)MOVIE * "a."(19831Roblowt.~
llnt Blael.
(%)MOVIE **** "Open City" (1948) Anna Mlgflllll, Aldo Fabrizi.
-7:30-
112 ON THE TOWN D QI) FAMtl Y FEUD
8MOVIE .. * "Arlenlo And Old lACI"
(19-44) Cery <#Int, Jolephlrit Hui.
I ONE DAY AT A TIMl
PEOPLE'S COURT
Wll.D, Wll.D WON..O Of
A*W.8 I!> NATlOHAl GEOOAAMC
(J) T1C TAC OOUOH -eoo-1 ~~
(!) 1WIUOHT ZONE
Ht!~ ~n raised by wolves Captured by apes
Hunted by a boy e11ung uger
And adopteod by a bumbhng
bear ndmcd Baloo
Who d h~ thouqht the 1ungle
tould bt-'\O much fun!
Walt Disney ...........
ANAHEIM FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Edwards Fountain Valley
839·1500
LA MIRADA ORANQI
SAO Gateway Stadium Orlv•ln
s2J.1611 Gano
Brookhurst n2-&446
COSTA MESA Edwards Cinema Center
979-4141
IRVINE ORANGE WESTMINSTER Edwards Woodbndge
551'06b5 AMC Orange Mall UA Cinema
637-0340 893-0546
COSTA MESA
UA Cinema
LAGUNA HILLS
EdwardS/Sanboln
ORANGE UA Clty Cinema
634·3911 540.0594 Laguna Hills Mall 768-6611
..
Na..._. llAI" (a) AT 11141 )tOl J ill 1 .. .. 11101
"" &.MT 5T'"'' H'nl•CNt "' 11120 2 140. 00
l 1H S01I0/10 MM
a111 Murr•ir Den Airllroytl
OMOST9USTaa (..a)
ll'IOwl It U r2t 1 140
4 1U 71U t rl0/70 MM
ORUIUtll C'PGJ
Sl'N>w• •t t 2120 )100
t 1IO 8 100 • 1 Or)O
"avc•P10t• WTCNJ.'11 I
1140 l ctO t 100
l t10. 10120
DRIVE -INS m~c;
JTADIUm t:J
''' 1 r 'I "••rtt• "'" '''''' CUlAMDVl&W U.a.A.; s
•I fll'hit Co.Hit C:lllllOlllHI
""'" II (PO)
Wilt 01111111'1 ....,U
llOOk CG) ""'' Tron ''Ql C:l'lllO fll'tlcu
aACMtU,AHt Mn'V Ctit)
fll'hll Star 'Trell II h T I'll
lt1rc1t f' or SHek lfll'O)
eMOYtE *** "The Liit ~ .. (1 ~ Orlnt, a.Ide Aalnl.
(!)MOVIE
··~ "Fallln A/qll' (1946) tr=~ * * • ''Town WltllOut Pity'' ( 1 Kirt Douglaa, E.G. Marlhll.
-t.t0-
1 HEAllli FIELD
ATTHHICMEI
I AU. IN THUMll.Y
ROWAN l lilAATIN'S
MOVIE ** "Honf(' (1982} Clo F«nando Rey.
-2:00-
• (J) C:. NlWt NIQHTWA ••aNl'Wl (I)~~ ..
i iW"f<Jng Rong" (1971) Jeff
-.J...icalanga.
-2:30-
8MOVE ** "Cmky Scout" (1951) . Cameron, A~ Long. • MOVIE ...,./ ''** "8londle't Ludcy Dty" (1t ~on, Arthur Like.
!MOYIE .... ''V*t Girt" (1983)
Cega. Dlboflh fofemln.
-~.._
R --.
NOW 1•L"~YL1WG
':""'.......... 111:111:11
)1'Wf :"C ....
-COSJlmA
( dwlf'dS HaftlOf
631 3501
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(dwards So Coul
Ptut S46 l 711
n tOIO
"Wdleblel usao.-_.. __
,
WMY PO I PO l'T?
WMY PO I CLIM& OP TR~E~ WHEN I CAN'T
CUM& POWN?
es
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
~
"Did you see that jump? Too bod there isn't
an Olympics for cats."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
8-0
"Yea ... and Mt. St. Helens was also sleeplng
peacefully just before It erupted."
MOO MULLI S
\
I MEAA 'l'CXlRE PLAYIN6
IN THE 1' NATIONAL
DISTEMPER TOURNAMENT H
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"George, I found 'em."
DEN IS THE MENACE
Hank Ketcham
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
by Cha~les M. Schulz
I PLAY IN AtN CHARITY
TOURNAMENT FOR A
DISEASE l MtGMT 6ET !
Ot'ange Coll1 DAILY PlLOTfW....._ .... I.
fH
• 7642 A2
0 AU
+109U
t: T •:A T
• Qll5 • J 10
Q \'oid • O IOUO
0 Q J 10 9 0 K 14 %
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SOllTll
• AK3
O KQ'87' • o S
+A5Z
The bidding·
tll WMt 1'trt!i Eaat
I c:i Pa I NT Pa
J Ci:> Pa '4 Q Pu
Pa Pa
Opening lead: Colue n or o.
The nperienC'ed brid e pla) l'r ~
h<>pe for the bf-st v. t11I preparing
for the v.orst. That attitud SUt'
him thousand or PQlnl evt•ry ye&r.
south "n on the borderline of a
Jump to gam • but cho e tht con t-r
BRABBLE
~ame course of an lnvital nal
jump to t.hre ru. ortb rfihll7
d >d that two a oppo<t" a
hand that Jumped wu a fin boldln
d. 60 ht! went on to am . Note
'orth'1 decis on to rupond one no
t.rump rather than aho\li b!J aPem c
t ur card 1pad au t-a pr:lnclpl4: we
h arttly eni'torse. •
Wt t I d the qu en or d1amond1,
and we wduld wager most 1playerw
would loM" th contract by the time
the-y had played to th second (rick.
They would" m the ace of diamond
nd ca h the ace of ht>-'11!. and no•
th unlul"k)' br ak would mean they
could not score mor than n rw
trick!.
The experu.•ftttd player would
realize the and v.a laydown barr
In • 5-0 trump break T~refo~.
v.ou' 1rect bi ener(les to seeing
wlut e CO\jld do to counter that
r('mote J>OUI 1 1ty. •
Correct ttthnique 1s to " n the
are of diamond and 1mmedlatrly
FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE
r f I diiae4*1 o.c:tar. ~·
ttOUH lo lk M.e Ill lnim,. U MUI
cS.felMWn ...., '-U. "6cl
dttl&r•r almply Cira,.. t.ru9'pe alMI
ela ms Ma JO tricks
However, whea WeM •Mw• "l
oa the lint irwn,p IUd detlarer It
.till n pG9ition to make h 1 ne'rld
He> usu ihit ~ ea&ry to dummy
Lo ruff another diamond. Now de
cla~r netdt P..t one little 1liff of
luck to bnns horae hD conttart-
Ea11 mu t hold at lutl two 1pad
and one dub When thON tbree
bl&ck u1t wfnnttt live. dfidattr llu
10 tr1ck1-four fuimpt and lwo
niff • two padn aAd the mutw uat
('
H ... ,_ .... ,, ..........
.. U..W.'! Le& a.dM ~ ..... '"Bel.,.., ••J ~ &M--
e1 DOU8L£S ._. '' ilf\e• _. let
takee•t. Fw • ~•PY •I Ill•
OOU•liES ....... __. 11"5 i.
"Cwea.O..W..... • .o. ... ....
, ... ,,.. • ..'J. 19165 ....... dMd ,., ... w .-:.,...,......
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan .
by Lynn Johnston
~ ~'/f!!MS -we.VE
Be.e.N ~-AND
FOR 36 '/Eff!G &E'S
Dc>He TrlE SAME.
DF\RNEDIRING ! .
WANTME10GO
INS\OE. RN' ASK HER
lo~UP.
DR.SMOCK ·
ROSE IS HOSE
RKER
. ' J
~Pf\~
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
'
..
I
Cool confections
a -taste of tropics
£olorful, attractive presentation
doubles appeal of frozen desserts
' Embellish summer's magic these recipes.
with cooling tropical confections They are refreshing to the taste
-frozen desserts and sparklin& and dazzlina to the eye-and,·
slushy drink potions. • surpnsingly, almost as quick and
These summer1reats come in easy as opening a half gallon of
pretty pastels and lilting flavors sherbet. f.ach dish or drink can be
like pineapple, papaya, straw-prepared ahead, to emerse fresh
berry. And, for extra flavor im-and frosty from the freezer hours
pact, coconut ru~ has ~n . later. Made with natural ingre-
added. The exotic comb1na!1on of dicnts like yogurt and fruit,
rum a~~ natural cocon~t bnnp they're a healthy alternative to ice
appettzmg new d1mcns1ons to cream and perfect for light sum-
Acap'lilco Cooler a perfect refreabment.
mcrcatina.
Double the appeal of these
frozen desserts or drinks by
presenting them as prettily and
colorfully as po ible. Scoops of
frozen yogurt, for instance, arc
quite dramatic nestled in a ...
hollowed-out pineapple. The
souftlc can be garnished with
wedges of fresh papaya and a sprig
of flowers to add sunny color.
PROZENCOLADAYOGUllT
t caps vanllla flavored
yopn
14 cap coconat nm
1 cu (I oll.DCft) cn11bed
plaeapple, dratned•
3 ea Rites
Pinela cream of tartar
In medium bowl combine
YdiUrt, coconut rum and pineapple;
mix well. Pour mixture into a metal
frcczcrtray: Frcczc until partially
frozen. In a medium bowl beat cu
whites with cream of tanar until ·
stiffbut not dry. In a lafle bowl beat
pineapple mixture until smooth but
icy. Fold in qg whites. Return to
freezertray;freczeovernightor
until firm. Serve scoops in pi neap.
pie s}lell or desert dishes. Yield: 8 to
J 0 scrvinis. .
Nete:-1 cupcno~ frcsh-suaw-~
berries may be substituted for .
canned pineapple.
f'ROZEN TROPICAL SOUF-
FLE
'i'I capwa~r
'i". capsapr
7egyotb
1 cap laeavy cream, wklpped
1 medlam papaya. peeled,
pureed (1'.4 caps)
11, cap cocoaat ram
/ a.t. cap f lnely cbopped
1 walnat1, almonds or pecu1
, I~ top of double boiler combine
water and sugar. Cook over direct
hcat5 minutes until mixture is
sliahtly syrupy. C'ool S minutes. 1 n
small mixer bowl beat egg yolks
until thick. Gradually add warm
syrup:Dealana constantly.
Return mixture ro double boiler.
• Cook overbot water, stirring con-
stantly, until mixture thickens.
R.cmo.ve from beat. Placcoouble
boiler in bowl ofice water, beat
mixture with electric mixer or cu
beater until cold and thick. Fold in
whipped cream, pureed fruit and
coconut rum.
Attach a 3-inch wide strip of
waxed paper or aluminum foil
around a 1-quan souffic dish to
form a collar. Pour mixture into
Colada Yogurt. Tropical SoufOe, Coconut Strawberiyhea:e temptt.ac. ·
prepared dish and freeze overnight
or until firm. Before serving,
carefully remove collar. Press
chopped nuts around side of souf-
ne. Gamtlh topwith papaya tees.
if desired. Yield: 8~1ngs.
COCOl'fUT STRAWBERRY
f'REEZE
l envelope aaflavored
gelatlD
~ cap orange Juice
1 pint 1trawberriH, pureed
(aboat 1 ~ caps)
at, cap cocoaat nm tea wkltes
'4 cap Hgar
In a small saucepan combine
gelatinandorangejuice. Let stand I
minute. Stirovermediumtfeat
until gelatin iscompletel) dis--
solved. about 3 minuteS. Remove
from beat: stir in strawberry puree
and coconut rum.
ACAPCLCO COOLER
1 .... ena1e uenet.
softae4 dJPtly
~---·~-=-~'4.r~~~""""--~ ~cocwtnm
~~,_.,.. MIYJllmi Transfer mixture to a frec:zcr
tray. Place in freezer until pani,jlly
froun. to smllt bowl beat t]I
whites until foamy; gradUalJy add
su_gar; beat until siiffbut notdry. ln
large bowl beat straWbcrry mixture
until smooth but icy. Fold to cg
wnites,
Pour into i xup mold; return to
freezer. Freezeovernigbtoruatil
firm. Before serving. place in re-
frigerator 20 minutes or until
tempered enough to serve. Unmold
ontoscrvmad1sh. Garnish with
sliced strawberries, if desired.
Yield: 8 to J 0 servings.
1 tMMlf ••• a.e Jmce 1 MUie ('1 tace1) dlit> ' ..... .............
In small bowl of electric mixer
combint-aU i1111 ediems;mix until
well blended. Pour into mc1al ·
container« frcezet tray;Jreeze.
until fmn. When ready to serve,
remove container from freezer; let
stand at room tanperaturc S
minutes. Turn mixture mto mixer
bowl; beat until smooth but still icy.
SpoonintocoupeaJasys Garnish
with orange and lime slices, if
desired. Serve with short straw.
Yield: 6 servi~.
COOKING SCHO,OLS ABOUND
. San Diego expert
teaches home chefs
some seafood tricks
Stories by CATHY OE MA YO
•Dllr .... C...-11,1.-11
With a arowin• number of eaotic
restaurants, specialty markeu and
ethnic delicatessens expanding our
food horizons, Oranae County's love
affair with food bas ended up ri&ht
back where it started -the kitchen.
Cooks who want to eJtpaod their
own cuisine at home can choose from
a staaerin.a array of classes offered at
local cookma schools.
One _of the newest additions is The
Perfect Pan School of Cookina.
located behind The Perfect Pan
cookware shop in South Coast Plaza,
Costa Mesa.
Both the school and shop are linked
literally and figuratively to Piret•s. a
combination restaruant, caterer, deli-
catessen and aourmet shop that arew
out of Piret and George Munger's
longtime fascination with food.
Back when cookina was just a
~I pastime for Munger. he be-
came frustrated a\ not bcina able to
find the rifht cookware without
bavina to drive to Los Angeles. He
decided to open his own shop 1n San
Dieao, his home town, and later
added the school.
Five years aao. he and his wife
opened their first restautant. Piret's.
4
featuring bistro cuisine with Cali-
fornia overtones. What started as a
pan Shop IJ'CW tO SJX Piret'S, three
Perfect Pans and four Perfect Pan
cooking schools, which now have
been sold to Vicorp Spccia)ty Rn-
taurant of San D1eao.
The local cooking school is a
aJeaming, modem facility that scats
up to 24. Recently, Jim Hill was on
hand to demon tratc a d~ahead
seafood buffet that mcluded Pasta
Estivi, warm angel-hair pasta tossed
with fresh tomatoes. otl and vmcgar
dresstng •I'd pannesan cheese;
Cev1cbe, a blend of raw halibut and
bay scallops .. cooked" in fresh lemon
and lime juice and tossed with
chopped vegct;ablcs; and Pittt's Cah-
fom1a CioPPIOO, a savory fish stew.
o to hdne skills
. .
"I've designed this menu for a
summertime buffet, so you can do all
the work beforehand and enJOY your
pany," Hill cxplamed.
The chef. 37. who spent has child-
hood in Brazil and Chicago, learned
bis love off ood from hts mother. who
started him cooking. After worlong
several years as an insurance broker,
Hill dectded to follow his bean -and
his stomach -mto a new career.
Self-trained. he worked as an
aSSIStant chef at a San Diego area
restaurant and subsequently opened
his own. which he descnbcs as
"cclecuc mtemauonal .. cuisine. He
later joint Ptret's cookmg staff and
now 1s chef at the downtown San
Otego Pu-et. "A recipe 1s really only a auidc-
hnc," Hill said -.,You need to adapt it
to your parucular taste. It's really
only a stan1ng point."
One of the keys. he belie~es. is
knowt01 how to use fresh herbs. and
the following recipes feature both
fresh herbs and seafood. •
.... ........... _, ....... ..,
Gueat cbef Jlm ~ p~ aniet ba1r ~·
chopped par le> and aratcd
parmc n, Scncs 8 .
'
•
Ea~yreclpes take·· the prizes
me I-flavored
r Rn nnt and 'S8UCe'"for-frui1
have in common? ch on
S 1,000 fi t prize in the Easy Secret
logrcdientsrccipe contest, ponsor·
cd by Kraft. And both \\Crc sub-
mmta by In<liana residents.
· Caramel Pecan Cups, t'ibmitted
by Gloria Sh manoff of Fort
Wa~ne on in the Make-ahead
Treat catc ory. Yogun C reme
Sauce won top honors in the ~xns for th~ Family category for
·Janet Kochlfoger ofHuntinaton.
Y Qgun Creme Sauce was the first
and onl}' recipe Kochlingcr has ever
submitted to a contest. The mother
offourgrown children was confined
to bed followin& back suriery when
she read about the contest in the
newspaper. "Creating a recipe was
the perfect way to overcome
boredom. l'\.e always enjoyed ex-
pcnmenting in the kitchen," said
Kochlinger.
ShamanofT, an elementary schooJ
teacher, entered the 1982 contest
without winning a prize, so she
worked on recipes throughout the
year for this contest. Teaching all
day, then working on her doctorate
in education. she finds recipe
development a .. creatave outlet.''
Caramel Pecan Cups were just
what this year's judges were looking
for. The rich caramel Oavor m·
-oaOeS'W'ltll toaste pccansmJUSt the
right balance, and marshmalJow
creme insures a velvety smooth
~~~~-;::::=============================================:..~__::;_~-!~~~~~-.frozen texture.
PEOPLE ARE MORE INCLINED 10 TAKE SOME
1llAN LEAVE SOME.
YOGURT CREME SAUCE
Prosen Tortoni, Upalde DOwn Grauhopper'Ple are ftttlnt
~er deuerta.
mouaRrr·Of.. nti..PADY1Mn. .... ~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~--.
1 1-oance coatainer plaJ.D )'O(llrt
1 7-ooce Jar manlunallow
creme
1 ..., teaspoou lemoa Jaice
Combine yogun , marshmallow
creme and juice, mixing with elec-
tric mixer or wire whisk until well
blended. Chall. Serve with fruit or
ice cream. Makes 11/• cups.
Summerizing
dessert course
Nothing perks up the interest of
family and friends more than the
CARAMEL PECAN CUPS sight of new and intriguing desscns
1 cup vaallla wafer cRmbs set bc(ore them. ··
!4 ?P ~rine,melu.d Here arc two airy dessens befit-:
,_. cup milk • .... ting the summer season. Elcpncc is
1 7-oan~ Jar marshmallow made easaJy with an Upside Down
creme Grasshopper Pie; the other is a
1 cup chopped pecans, toasted frozen' tonona quite di~crcnt fro~
! cups thawed whipped topping the average garoen-vanety tortom.
wUh real cream The pie, cool minty green and
H caramels pretty asa pic:Jurc, has a rich creamy
Com bin~ crumbs and margarine; filling flavored with creme de
reserve 1/, cup for topping. Press menthc, creme de cacao, and crisp
remain ins crumb mixture onto bits of mmt cookies.
bottom off>3per-hned muffin cups. Thisconcoction is spooned mtoa
Melt caramels with milk over low pie plate. chilled in the fridge, then
heat. sttmng until smooth. Remove covered with more mint cookie
from heat: stir in marshmallow crwmbs. Later. when the pie is
creme. Cool to room temperature. upended. the crumbs fonn a dc-
Stir an pecans fold m whipped licious crust on the bottom while -.. HONE~ A "~n ONE TASTE IS AU rr TAKES! topping. Sp<>:<>n caramel into baklng the top is garnished with more 'C(ii I~ __ ,._ ....... _... cups spnnkle with remaining cookie halves and whipped cream -----:-~===========::==:=::=:==:=::;:=:=:;=:=:::==:=:=::=:=:========~c=cu~m~b=m~ix~t;;u=re::. ~F=rce==ze::·::::'::2::se::rv=:in=gs~. rosettes.
\
' Try it for the price.
You'll smoke it
for the flavor~ -
...
W1rning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
Thlt Ciiafitl mokmg Is Dangerous to Your Health. 4 11J "I
I
t 1N4 fl .J M VllOU)I ToeACCO CO
. · ... . . . . . ...
Champagne cookie add their
delicate flavor to the tortoni. The
ice cream mixture is flavored with
almond liqueur. slivered almonds.
marasehrno churies, coconut,
chocolate chips and bits of
crumbled cookie~.
FROZEN TORTONI
1 box ~7'4 OGDCff) <laampape
Cooties
1 eu wlltte
1 ~ caps lleavy cream
~cap near
14 cap almond-flavored Uqaer
~ cap touted slinred almonds
'' cup chopped marascblno
claerriH
'• cap chopped semi-sweet choc-
olate cblps
~ cap toasted coconut
1 i wllole marascblno cherries
Reserve 2 cookies for each ~r
VlDJ and coarsely chop the re-
mainder. Beat cu white with an
elcctnc beater until stiff peaks form;
set aside. Beat heavy cream with
sugar until stiff peaks form and fold
' '
into egg white with almond liqueur,
almonds. chopped cherries, choc-
olate chips, to ted coconut and
chopped cookies.
~n ipto: l Z..foil or p.1per lined
bilonf cups or mto sman;aeuen
cups. nsert remaining cookies into
cream mixture and garnish with a
whole cherry. Freeze 4 boun or
until finn. Makes 12 servings.
UPSIDE DOWN GRASSHOPPER
PIE
1 package (114 ounces) Brussels
Mint Cookies
i envelopes uflavored 1etatta
1 cap milk
i large egg yolks
~ cap green creme de motlte
a· Cdp creme cle cacao
! caps beavy cream, beaten aatil
still wltll 1h cap coDfecdoDen'
sogar
! tablespoons cookie or irUam
cracker cnmbs
Mint leaves (optloul for pr-
nish)
l1gbtl> oil a 9-inch pie plate.
Coarsely chop -10 cookies ...cut
remarning 5 an half. In a small
saucepan sprinkle eetatin over milk
and let stand 5 minutes to soften.
Heat over low heat, stirring con-
stantly untH gelatin is completely
dissolved. Beat gelatin mixture into cu yolks and stir in creme de
menthe and creme de cacao. .
Stir mixture over an ice bath unlll
it as the consistency of unbcatan egg
white. Fold in all but I cup of the
whipped cream and the chopped
cookies. Spoon into prepared pie
plate and spread flat with edge of a
spatula. Chill 4 hours or until finn
Spread cookie crumbs over pie
and unmold onto a scrvina plate.
Pipe reserved wtuppcd cream
around bottom edge of pie and
insen cookies. cut edges down, into
cream. Decorate top of pie with
more cream and the mint leaves if
desired. Makes l pie, I 0 scrvinp.
..
New Orleans·llav:or ·
' ' tops off lee· cream
One of ~e rqions demandin& attention fi its very special style of
cookina is ew Orleans. Steeped as
it is in French and Cajun cultures,
its foods arc as distinctive and
colorful u its h.istory.
ln devclopina New Orleans Ice
Creams, we ftnd the tastes that have
come to mean that southern ~ity arc
also excellent when introduced to
dairy-fresh ice cream.
·Rum Raisin Nut recalls the days
of French grandeur in a combinCl-
tion of rum-soaked raisins,
crunchy, toasted pecans and vanilla
ice cream; Cajun Coffee blends
instant espresso coffee powder,
coffee liqueur and lemon peel with
vanilla ice cream for a flavor
reminiscent of Bayou country.
The accent of Mardi Gras as
hiJhlightcd in Prahne Crunch. a
mixture of vanilla or coffee ice
cream wtth a brand)'-touched,
homemade version of the classic
pecan confection.
Serve New Orleans Ice Creams
with 1cc<old lemonade, made with
freshly-squeezed lemons. at pi e·
nics, after lunch or dinner, or any
ume you want to bring a New
ertcans at-m<>sphel~ t<> your table.
NEW ORLEANS ICE CREAMS
Rum Railla Nat:
'4 cup railla1
2 tableapoona dark rum
li'a cup toa1ted pecan1
1 quart vanma lee cream ,
Marinate raisins in rum for half
an hour or longer. Fold with nuts
into sliahtly softened ice cream.
Rcf:rcue . .Spoon additional dark
rum over ice cream before servina. .
C.JaCOffee: ~~* -
! tabletpoou 1Jl,1tut .espre110
powder"' ·
1 tabletpooD coffee Utaeur
1 teaspoon srated lemon peel
1 quart vanilla ice cream
Stir espresso powder, coffee
liqueur and lemon peel into slightly
softene 'te cream. Refreeze.
Spoon additional coffee liquc\ir
over ice cream before serving.
Praline CnmcJa:
V. cap cbopped ptc&Dt
1 cap aagar
2 tablespoon• water
% tablespoons braudy
1 quart vanilla or coffee ice
cream
Spread nuts onto greased cookie
sheet. Combine sugar and water in saucepan and cook over mcdium-
high heat without stimng until
caramel-colored (310 degrees hard·
crack stage). Remove from heat,
a<td brandy and-pour-qu1ckly over
nuts. Let cool completely.
Before serving, crack candy and
stir into ice cream, reserving some
for garnish. Spoon additional bran-
dy over ice cream and candy
topping.
For best results,
"try poaching fish
Normally, enthusiastic cooks can
lose some of their zeal with the
tbouJht of cooking an an already bot
summer kitchen. Poachin1 seafood
on the stove top can off er a
relatively quick and cool cooking
method that has tasty results,
according to the California Fish·
cries Association.
With summer at its peak, the
selection offish available both fresh
and frozen is excellent. Poaching
can be used for whole-dressed fish, .
steaks and fillets. Small whole fish
with firm meat, such as rainbow
trout, ocean perch and catfish, arc
good for poachina. Large fish also can be poached, and salmon is
always a crowd pleaser.
Use a simple large skillet for
poachtns. Allow 1/J to 1h pound of
fish fillets or steaks per person. For
the poacb1J1g liquid use equal pans
of water and dry white wine and fill
the killet about 1/J (use more if
poachina large amounts of fish).
Add lemon f'uicc from one lemon, one bay lea and chopped carrots
(o ne per. servin~) and celery (one
stalk per servina .
Combine all t c ingredients and
bnng the hqu1d to a boil for S
mmutcs. Add the fresh or, frozen
fish bring fire down to a simmer
and' cover the skillet. Small whole
fish can be wrapped in cheesecloth
to prevent them from falling apan.
Let the fish cook for 3 to S minutes,
depending on the thickness of fish
(frozen fish will take about twice the
time.) The fish is ready when at
begins to fla.ke easily with a fork.
Remove the fish acntly from the
liquid and place on a serving plate,
surrounding it with cooked veg·
etables. The sauce you choose to put
over the fish is where you add your
creative touch.
Herc arc two suggestions: Greek
Lemon-Butter Sauce or Mexican
Salsa Sauce.
GREEK·LEMON·B UTTER
SAUCE •eu• . Julee from ¥1 lemoa
1 tabletpooa melted batter (not
bot)
li'a to 11' cap poacbJ.Dg Uqald
Separate three of the cgs and put
yolks in a small mixing bowl. Add
the fourth cu to the three cu yolks,
and add the Jemonjuicc and melted
butter. Take 'h to>,-, cup of hot poachin&
liquid and drizzle into the egg
mixture, whiskina the entire time.
Whisk until the sauce is liahtJy
thickened. Pour over the platter or
plate of fish and vegetables. Gar·
nish with parsley or fresh dill and
serve.
Curry adds zest MExtcAN ALSA sAucE
! med.ltm &omatoet, peeled,
CURRY EGGS aeede4 ... coanely c~o,,ed
• lar1t ea• ·:.=:::·· re4 ._... I tablet~DI batter a I tllct4 ~ cMlet i tabletpoou all·parpote flov·--~~-, te I ....... ...._..,.,.., •wee
1 • cwps milk SaJt &o tute
a ".W..&eaapooa carry powder Combine all in&redicnu and tir.
Salt ud pep~r to tatte Let sit at room tcm~rature or 1n
"Cooked nc , wllltte or bron (4 refriamtor for l 5 10 20 minutes to
Mrvl11s> blend flavors. Makes about IV. cups
lloaltff PMl'lls UUQe.
Hard-cook cus. hel! and halve For servina with the poached
len&htwise. Malie a white uce of fish, put a bed of cbopPed lettuce on
the butter, flour. milk.. curry pow· the servina plate. ~ace the fi b on
dcr and salt and pcp~r. Am nae the top. Put 11vocado wcdacs on top of
over the rice and top with: the the fi h and 'IPQOn the lsa on top ~.-..:c~·u·rry·-=-sa~uce an the peanuts. Makes or the avotido· wcd&o. Ptacc the
4' mnas -l 'h t halve per rimed \qctable on the side or
ponion. th plate or roe parat l •
I
JAMS A TREAT
E-0 M .... -~--·~-.
AND FRIENDS
lf~ou·rc b lancsnaa food budaet
and look1n1 for new ways to
enhance momin1 bread • chp and
save this recipe fof basic frc h
Peach Jam. -
Plan to take advantaae of matkct
specials when fresh peaches are at
their peak. Add a I ¥•.ounce packaae
of powdered fruit 'pectin to tfic
• 1hoppin1 list. Jtemembcr, it•s the
powdered fruit pectin that help
capture fresh fruit flavor and .,..
sures a good "set ...
Before stanina the jam. prepare
&lasseti u ina instrucuons &Jven in
the recipe leaflet tucked inside the
package of pectin. Prepare fruit as
directed, keepina an 'mind that
correct proponions arc essential so that the frutt willjcll.
Don't double the batch; prepare
fruit for one recipe at a time. lffood
processor or blender is used for
choppina or Jrindina. use care not
to puree fruit. •
When stored in a cool, dry area,
jam should keep well for up to 12
months. Wtth that in mind, prepare
a batch of Ginger Peach Jam when
fresh peaches arc .at a good price.
Earmark jars for aift-giving With
hand printed decorative labels.
Homemade jam from your kitchen
is a wonderful gift.
PEACH JAM
4 caps ptt1tred mil (ab t I
poud1 filly ripe peacbtt)
! 11&bt 1pooa1 l moa J1tce
6 ~ CU pt t pGIDdl I OID au pr
I box powdered f ruU pec&la
fint prepare the fruit. Peel and
"Pit about 3 pounds peaches. Grind
or ch°' very fine . ea urc 4 cups in to 6-or 8-quan uccpot. Add
lemon juict.
Then make the jam. Measure
suaar nd set aside Mix fruit pectin
into fruit in sauccpot. Place over
hiJh heat and stir URtil mixture
comes to a full boil. Immediately
add all su~r and stir. Bnng to full
rolling boil and boil hard 1 minute.
stirring constantly. .
Remove from heat and skim off
foam with metal sPQOn. ladle
quick)> into hot jars, filling to
within 1/• inch of top. Co,·cr and
process in bolling water bath for S
minutes. Makes about 61h cups or
about 7 (8 fluid ounce> iars:-
GINGER PEACH JAM
4 ~ caps prepared fruit (ati'out
S1~ ~UDdl fGlJ)' ripe peacbe1)
'4 cap f lnely 1Uvered
crystaJUzed &fa1er•
I cups (t poand1 10 oancea)
1111ar•
1 l>Ox powdered fralt pecdA
ca...n. ... "'"' ........ ,....... ,. ..
Claar.._.. ,.. ..
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CO.Mt s. ... ?W•
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~ .... ~ ne .. •s••
STRAIGHTS & BLENDS
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Kealet .. ,,.., ,.. .. c5ts
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e1a1n1 a ... , .. ,..,, ne•*f4 .. .......
RUM & TEQUILA
.... Clalc1 ••• -:-~I" Ill *I"
Mfttt'• ... M. .. """" "' .. *7''
Slat T~• W•'*' .,..,. S6ff
s..-... t~.a1a -::t.t""," .. *I"
GROCERY ITEMS
s. ....... CeddeU c.,. •••• 79•
s. ....... ..., • .aJM. 79•
-
•for stronger ginaer navor, in-
crease sinaer to YJ cu9-and reduce
sugar to S'h cups (2 pounds 6
ounces}. .
Peel and pat about 3'/• pounds peaches; finely chop or IJ'ind.
Measure-4~.CUP' into 6-or ~uan
sauccpot: add gjnaer. Measure
sugar and set aside. Mix fruit pectin
into fruit in saucepot. Place over
high heat ·and stir until mixture
~
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S.... ...... ~-,. .. •JU
VODKA
S•lrMff .. ....,
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BRAND~
E & J .. ""' UU• •tt11
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Clwhffl• .,....,. .. ""' ... '1"
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Old ....
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... *36"
... *24"
AK., Is 15.I Gals. • ..w.
1&5-IOO 11 oa ..........
44 l .iqu,,r llarn I ''"·arinn"'
1121 Su riot Ave ., Costa M n • Ptlont. &45·1601
: 155·1437
: 631·4145°
:H1·Ht2
•551~157
comes to a ftill boit lmmediatel)
add all su~r and stir. Brina to a full
rolling boll and boil hard l minute,
stirring constantly. .
Remove from heat and Skim off
foam with metaJ s~ .1.adle
quickl)· into hot ;an. filli1111 IO
within V. inch of top. Cover and
process in boilin,a water bath for S
minutes. Makes about 8 cups or
about 9 (8 fluid ounce) jars.
..
C4
-..... ______ . ..,..on temporary Cae'sar Salad
tosses in rice for heartiness
Fresh produce erowcrs nd
hole lers are" hina 1n" on the
current mtercst m h Ith and nutn·
tion. ccordin to a oon umer
panel tudy conducted by Better
Homes and Gardens. consumcn
believe in .. eating their greens." In
fl ct. 90 percent say they serve
· sal ds at home, while 84 percent
serve them more than once a week.
What do con umers look for in
salad rccip«? Salads that are de-
licious, visually appcaJina. quick
and' ea y to prepare and contain a
variety of invedients. Rice salads
meet these cnteria. and they can he
0 cu tomized" to satisf)' everyone's
taste.
Simply start with a large bowl of
cooked. rice. Surround with a var-
iety of fresh vegetables fiarvcsted
from the garden or the supermarket
produce scctton. sc'eral kin<is of
cheese. hard<ookcd eggs and.
cooked meat or poultry.
CAESER'S RICE SALAD
-,, cup vegetable olJ -
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
t u•
l tabl
auce
n Wo~• rs lre
l clove 1arllc, mlncH
3 ¥. pt chilled cooked co · vertecl rice
~ Cdp &rated .Parmesan cheese
i cap1 uredded romalne leetace •
Fre1bly 1rou.ad pepper, H de·
•lred
Anc ony fillets (optional!
Combine oil. lemon juice, CIJ.
Worcestershire sauce and garlic m small bowl; beat with Witt whisk
until smooth and creamy. Combine
ricc•and cheese in large bowl. Add
dressing: mix well . Serve immedi·
ately or cover and refrigerate. Just
before serving. stir in romaine.
Sea on with . pepper and garnish
with anchovies. as desired. Makes 6
servings.
•Jf Qe~ired. I tablespoon mayon-
nai~c ma} be substituted for egg.
Prepare dressing as directed.
BEEFSTEAK TOMATO 'N RICE
SAL~D
2 l.Aa cups water
1 cup converted rice
1 ttll~ salt (option l)
~ cop red wbte vtne1ar
S tabJt1~a1 ve1etab)e Oll
l tablespoon finely elt«>s>ped
fre1b basU or 1 teaspoon dried
basllltaVH .
l YI teaspoons 111ar
Freshly 1rouod b1ack pepper, to
taste
! medium beefsteak tomatoes,
cit Into wed1e1
l 1maU red onJon, cat into rings
S tablespo111 chopped f reab
parsley
l ~ tablespoon; :~ped chives Brina wairr tn in.medium
saucepan. Stir in rice and salt.
Cover tightly and simmer 20
minutes. Remove from heat. Let
stand co,·ered until all water is
absorbed, about 5 minutes. Trans·
fer rice to large bowl.
• Combine vme8ar. oil, basil, s'upsr
and pepper. Add to hot rice. mixing
well. Cool to room temperature.
Star in tomato. onion, parsley and
chives. Cover and refneerate sev-
eral hours. Makes 6 servings.
Chuck .t.akSafeway Ouallty 99c """""'& ked •--Beef Blade Cut lb li/iJ:Mff G -...M 8 & M 55-oz 'I" Can
-
i.
11r Bone --a Safeway Ouallty • 1 •• """""-Polafoes Scotch Buy I•-•• Beef Chuck lb l/li):JJff ShoHtrtng 2 20-oz ' I 00 Pkg1
.ouncl ••-all-Safeway Ouattty • 1 ff ....., II.. Bonele11 Beef lb
Kai Kan
Dog.Food '6
Your Dog Wiii Love It
~$ ...... C•••
Sliced Beef LIY8 1ro11ed 1b 99c Chicken Franks..:.!Z~:-,9• Ch . & Pitt 8" 8 0 14"°' a.g ris S S•ue• eo1t111U •
Sii cl.. lib •••• ce COftsmok·A-Roma Pkg
Beef Brisket -s!a'-:: ~-lb 99•
M TownhouH 2• oi69 ustard Pr•P"ect J., •
Spam~ ~ 11•
1201 Corned Beef a.11k• s ... 99•
""'9 .... ,.,..
Corn Dogs 8••11<1ec1 •b 1 121
Lamb Chops .:·~b 11 ..
Fresh catfish .:=, 1b 11"
Cooked Shrimp= 11 13'1 Snapper Fiiiet~ Fres~:~ClllC lb • 1 •• Sole Fillets 0·~~;ed lb '2" Paper Plate~ • 100 99•
Charcoal~~':" 10 a:g •1 11
•Vino Blanco•Vln AoN •Burgundy 3-Lltet !299
IP••••MI . Real Italian Paala·Sldarl •llngulne•Rlgatonl, 16-oz.
2
:;:: 79• EZDtAIHHI• Taltlets
Mmr8llltr.o1~rm"8~,f ·I" .... Of ~ti~JY
111>&.or••lllo•• .. ~~~
.... .
J"
MNectarlaese·~:11~'::i0• lb 79•
MYellow Peachel u~:11~:11411b 79c
mutC.aaH•••• • ~ • 69•
c
lb ".
.., ••• u ... ~Ofc:,:~ 12Fo, ...
mot Gree• O.lo•I 4 bunch••' I".
ms>Recl ....... 4 bunchH' I"
...
. .
-• t
FRESH
MEAT
TAeU! KM eEEI' J79 • Bone.less Chuck Roasts L8.
T"8LE Kll'IO BEEF ~tu
Top Sirloin StQks U!. 239
T"8lf K1NO HAM fl.Ill V COOKFO
Ham Slices LB 198
USOA Cl<>ICC (Rl'!O 80l'll l8 I "9L Fll(.SH J49
Lamb Shoulder Chops l8
U!'.0<\ GllAO£ A V.HOlC CUTUP 69
Frying Chickens ta •
f'A££H WttOl.E Oft HAl r J 8 9 Louis Rich Turkey Breast ta
l:.5H TURK!Y Wll'tO! OW 49 Louis Rich Drumsticks ta •
IGMEl
Cure 81 Half Ham L8. 298
ttOllM£l. I Ul ~ f2 l8 PMO EA J..l8l J69
Black Label Sliced Baconta
FROZEN MEAT
~ N«> SUM:. aa AU ~lf.S J29
Swift Unk Sausage . EA
140d'«:E ~ 298
Steak·Umms Steaks EA
·299 Chicken Heat and Ent EA
12 \IAM 0£ ~ 239 Ash or ~ Flllets PMC
• m
l.t.fl()tft) I.CW' 79 Country Hearth Dell Rye •
Oki Fash~ DOnuts • 95
IN.CK~
Denllh Nut Rolls
10•~
• 99 . 99 I POU!'C> lD/11
KJng•s HawaJlan ~ •
JO!I 12
Ot3aetnt Cn.mb DOn
PRESH
SA.LAD
TOJllATOES
~Sil£ SOU> IN BAGS
U!..69
GROCERY rt
.49
.73
.94 .so
.69
.79
.79
lOOl. ~ Al'\EJICN4 8EMITY
Thin SpaghettJ
5.()(JMCE PACKl.ci£. M.J 8
Stuffing Plus Chicken
8-0<JNC( QOTTU.. 8WE CHEESf
Lawry's ltallan Dressing
17 <.Xl'ta: CAN ~ WJll£Tlts
Rosaiit.a Refried Beans
23-0U'<i: DO'm.E. SU"\ PlllC£.
Tomato Catsup
~(CAI'!
Oimpbell's Tomato Juk:e
:U.l5 Ol.. PKCl J PACI< ASST F'l.AYORS
Slim Price Fruit Drinks
l' ()(Jl't(f: JAA
~matlon Coffee Mate
2i. oor<£ CN'i OCCAf'°f'D'IATCD
M.J.B. Pmnfum Coffee
DELI
2~ PKO, Ku.~ l'USN:Y
Vons Thin Sliced Meats
12-0CJl'<t IW:IWJE. ~l Oft.
Vons Beef Bol~
tf()t. PKO, lllll Oii ~ CHICll.l:n
foster Fanns f l'Wlks
_,.,.,.,..._ ·""'-".-::;'VU-.1"41'~°RJ!W;
Kraft Swtss Cheese
~"OUN() CAM. 80l'4ll.CS1
Hoffy C.anned Ham
(~ it.Cl. c:nt .Utt
Pn:dous Ricotta Cheese
4«.. Cit ~
Frigo Shredded a....
rt DAIRY
J69
611
a
J89
.33
.99
.89
J39
8"
J19
.75 • .65 1••
LARGE riACHEs3' 7 OR PLUMS
Olif.NRV PEACHES LS •
• RED SIMKA ANO BLACK FRIAR PLUMS
CRISCO
SALAD OIL
32-0UNCE BOrT1..£
GROCERY • ~eornL...
C.H.B. U te Sryup
12 CXJ1CE CAP\ SUM ""9CE'"
l..un<:heon Meat
48.oc.»«:£ llOlC.. CONVERT'[O
Uncle Ben's Rice
13-0<n:E 80'. CA1SPV sum Price Rice c.ereaJ
IMXKE l90k
Post Toasties
40 CXKC BOTTLL
Ajax Liquid Cleaner
HOOUl'fCE 8Al. Pit« Olt ~HfT£
Dove Bath Bar Soap
.o~eorn.c:
F~h Start Detergent
~8()1(
Von$ Book Matches
FROZEN
IOOl. H.AA ' OtEESf. PIZZA OA
Hot Podcets BBQ Beel
12-0U'«X "* Roman Meal Waffles
•
.: J45
J19
243
120
10s
229
.54
624
.39 a
209
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gBUY 4 MUGS AT ·. I 1.00EA.&RECEIVE
· !I__~ MUG RACK ro m n111.11nnnniiii.Ri.esa
VONS DOUBLE COUPON
I Present thb coupon al<>N) with any manufacturer's .. Cleflts bfr' mupon and get I I double the AVt~s from ,.Vons. Not to ncltide retailer. -Yr Cl:>uPON-: coupons 1 I greater than vne Dollar or exceed the value of the tern;. I
I Limit one coupon pa marunctwer'• coupon and llmlt 2 ooupon1 P"' ,_.)(. 1 . Excluding liquor lllld aU cWry Pl'Oduct.s. . I Coupon good Aug. 9-Aug. 15. 1984. I ·-----·-··················--·········
LIQUOR
l'tE'*' • U1D llOf'IlL llOSE
Carlo Rossi ChabUs
~ trn. s. \'tJl ()It M8CR
Ron RJco Rum
a 399
479
NE.Ill I~ earru.. BRUT 399 Jacques Bonet Champagne
J69 ""° "'~ II 80'"""\.E 81A"'('r)
Cella Lambrusco Wine
999 I '5 l TER eon .E
Gilbey's Gin
61'!1. ll l"'!Cl "'R8 F!l:G Oii OAoll!\ 389
Heineken Beer
I .. llR C I C '°'' lt'U.O .... 61.f'
Colony Gold Chablis
~ 1 r ~~a ~
Dos Equis Lager Beer
-. rru 11arn.r
Popov Vodka
199
299
699
PRODUCE • EA .49 HAl'GO'I .aa::s :Jl.QI'. I 2t
Large Mangoes
Ollla'l'I 11CA LA 419
Large Bell Peppers 5 ~100 2:.aa ~ L~ 10 FOii I 00
Bartlett Pears
El' .99 12-0Ur«:E Pl\C'MUt
Large Blueberries
La .69 ..~
Japanese Eggplant
Sl>.o.JID FMl()llt rt. ~ all() 99
Whfte Rose Potatoes EA e
Ul .79
I~ IM.Ol.llo 4 F 100 AJI American Ptanuts ~
• .. -.: • 11\.A:'ff~ ..
Olympic: Bunch Roses 399
VONS 100% PORE 99
9J!{'NGE JOICE e
F1'0ZE'N
---..-.. ~-=-------lllT'lll• M~~----Piii~ 4711 ... ,,..... _,....
•vwe ... "'-......
l
r
• T~sty dishes redress leftovers
With a little forcthouaht and m m ll·Stztd can :i c n n.Jd· qeuililcs n ...Cbincst E.u_~l ~ta~bl:::--e-'1!-_ __;. ____ -t-
mqjnation, leftover aisbcc=-.~n -.to-,-er cooked me t into new dishe . Rolls remain nicely crisp. aria v 1ar
ctually be boon, ince most oflhe The quick and e sy recipes both dd &inaer_Jivea it just the naht flavor l tabletpooD cora star
e_rcparation has already been done. an orient 1 flavor to leftover roast nap. Buy only the mount offmh ~ teaspoon 101 aaac.
Chanaina the character for a ICC· pork or cooked chicken. Since the vqetabtes needed for this recipe, or 1Yt tc~pspoodlc~·~~C: poer rk or ond. or even a third, awcarance is cans of refriacratcd biscuits and plan ahead to sn-ve a btan sprout •
not difficult. and the time vin crescent dinner roll have a ''use and mu hroom salad the next day. clalcken
can be substanti I. by" date, the) can be kept on hand The refriaerated crescent din1ter 1 tablespoon cbopped ire pep-
Always decide beforehand what for this kind of convenaent cooki~. rolls make an excellent tand·in for ~~aapoou claoprJ: plmfenco ~ou arc going to do with what is left. For Sweet and Sour Pork the traditional eaa·roll wrappers, l k _.. b One· time-saving Possi&ility i to "Pockets, a nvory meat mixture i which are usually sold in packages l·oaace cu re r11erat-DC·
refreeze it for later use in its orismal placed betwc-cn· the flaky refii. tr· too Jarsc for a small household. termllk Oak)' bl1colt•
fonn. Otherwise: plan in advance to atcd biscuit layers. An apricot zc Since this cp roll version i1 baked Apricot pre11nn
have the in--41cnts on hand to 'and a sprtnkl1n1 or almond s 1'ces -instead o-.ncd 1't h111"""'"'1l appeal Sflced almoudt
.. ..... 111 ' _.... Heat oven to 37' d-ree · In redress leftovers for a new howina makes the hearty pocket sand· to nutridon-(onacious cooks. .. .. the next day. · wiches as attracuvc as they arc small sauc.epan, combine 1/• cup
These recipes show how refriaer• delicious. SWEET 6 sOUR PORK POCKETS preserves, vtncpr, com starch, soy
ated dough, conveniently packaged In t~pical oriental fashion. the ·~ cap apricot pruenet sauc.e and prlic powder. Cook over. ------~------------_..... __________ _;_ __ ~----~----------------------. mcdiu~ heat. ~tirrina con~tantly,._
until mixture th1ckens and 1ta~1 ~o
100-Cl
Wesson
Oil
KAL KAN, 9 VARIETIES pog -
Fooct
Schlitz
Beer
boil. Remove from hcati 1~1r an pork, arecn pepper and p1m1cnto.
Set aside. . . Separate doujh into S b1scutts;
separate each biscuit into 2 layers.
On un'1'Cased .cookie sh~t, pr:ess or rolJ s biscuit p1eccs to 4-1nch circles.
SpQOn pork mixture cven!Y . over
biscuit pieces. Press remamma S
biscuit pieces to 4-inch circles.
Place on top or pork mixture,
strctchina sli&htlY to fit. Press edaes
with fork to seal.
Bake at 375 derees for 13 to 18
minutes or unti ~olden brown.
Brush tops with apncot prescrvesj
sprinkle-with sltctd almonds. '
sartdwic.hes.
MOCK CHINESE EGG ROLU
1 Ya tea1pooa1 soy saace
'4 teaspoon atuaer .,. tea•pooa aarllc powder
'4 cap cooked, diced pork,
cb.lckea ar 1brlmp
1/4 cap sliced f re1b maabroom•
14 cap bean 1proat1, wa1bed
I tableapoou cbopped areea
onlou. tops lDcladed
I tablespoou coarsely shredded
carrot
1 Ya teaspoons claopped panley
4-oance caa refrlserated qaJck
cre~-ent dlmler rolls
-Swee~t'So~ ~~~.it dnlftd : ~
Heat oven to ·37S dearecs. In
small skillet, combine soy sauce,
linger and garlic; add pork, mush-
rooms, sprouts, onions and carrots. Cook over low heat until meat and
vegetables arc warm, stirring oc-
casionally. Remove from heat; add
parsley.
Unroll dough into 2 rectangles.
Firmly press perforations to seal.
Place meat mixture down center of
each rectangle. Brina lonJ sides of
dou'11 rectangle over tilhna. over-
lapping edges; pinch edges to seal.
Place each egg roll scam-side-down
on ungreased cookie sheet. Brush
with beaten egg.
Bake at 375 dcarees for 12 to 17
minutes or until golden brown.
Serve with sweet and sour sauce, 1f desired. 2 egg rolls.
Por-k ribs
take on
fiery flavor
By CECILY BROWNSTONE u,.......,
Now that cooks m vanous pans
of the United States have taken
Tex-Mex cooking to their hearts.
I've been asked how to barbecue
c...::_.=.:::~~~~:.:..--------!.:!.:~ 12112-0Z fresh pork spareribs with a really .__ _____ ......;., ________ _;;;;;;;;.... ______ __, '-------::c;... _____________ ~--~--' fiery sauce.
Meat Dept. Savings Frozen Food Favorites
G • a Beef l (&N'f()T 10 O CECO s1 59 n~,AT JA~l•PA• rou n S<il VN"' P•G ) 8S A Y A( •
Canned Ham ::::·· .. 0
Spencer Steak .:~: ,
Sausage Roll .~ii .. t! ,.
Cube Steak :n:.,
Fishcakes ·~~ii',~~D
Butterf ish :~~~~~ .
Shell-On Shrimp oi:.~,w
9
58.99
~ 53.29
,. 51.29
~ 52.39
u59C
~51.89
.s2.99
Cream Pies ... ~~'.?;'.ES
Cott ee Cakes ~;;u1~~ BU"£"
Orange Juice ~:.l~'fr~~~·.CJ'U•• ..
P·1zza ~~1~~ cou ..... ''° .,
Pizza Roi ls .,l~:t··.-:,
Pot Pies ~s~~·.~7 .. , ..
Onion Ringers 0·1 •
Taquitos ::::n
••Olggc
··01
52.29
.. )~ 51.29
••• oz 53.35
Compare these Low Prices Grocery Specials
REGULAR OR HOT
WITH BEANS
Laundry Detergent
Detergent ··~,~. ·
Dial Soap ~ ."
Margarine · H.1
Kraft Singles ""'" ...
Dressing .:~p·~"
7~ Kerns Nectar .,.A,.,~
''
0 "~ Millers Honey :.: ·~Ol 43 Bags r:x:J••lllO$ s1 09 lf(lllla.,1 ·~: 52:79 a· th Tissue ;•.,,.,.,
u:.ioz 51 .25
'O'Ot
51 .75 . :45C
..,,
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...
....
13
• 53.99
s1.ss
01 6SC
tOl ggc
•• l 56.79
: 51.19
1/Ql @
~oz sa.99
~, s1.45
."°' 81 .55
T-. Weill ""'-.... • 14 II .
Garden Fresh Produce
M LAllGf angos ~~ .. .,LA"°"
C t I l AIOl'if an a oupes ~t'..'p,
Potatoes ~E'o :i~
WASHINGTON FANCY
Deu AEO
eious
ApPJes
&SSO"TIO WHIT( IUfll"'LY N(~THYllS
QOlOfN POT>!C)I UClLLfNT OUALIT~
3.Y l8
Budweiser Light •m .,.l z s4.29
Almaden Wine tv•• £Ti($ ''LtTlllt S2.99
Haagen Dazs =::. ~M $14.89
Mali u Rum . 1IOM SS.89
Ancient Age •ovn1e~ I 'H •ll ll sg_99
T eq u i I a ~r:g"~·l··-'· <l ML S4.69
CANADIAN
Black
Velvet 99.99
175-LITER
.... ...
10 II ". '"", "' """"" (Miid .1111 .. -...... ' •• ,it.,.~ fit IMf1MiMllV • 1W ID•-m• lltt~ INI
t ildt .. •• "'1! b9I nl •II..,.,,,.....~ ~ • 11\1\
t IQI ._ .. 111 lwh'llN ~ ttoe .. 11!111 ilw Hl'lli.,
iMl••fllVil 1iH1 • •• """"' n 11 lln1~ •••Nltlf
"' .. hiA Mt d•'"'
. ~ 51.27
,·. u :51.25 OA WH0l£5.'Ll ... ...... .. . ..
(
0
,.] No Games ... No Gimmicks ... Everyborly Wins With Th e Lav.: Price Leader ' (_,,. ·.:
:..... ! ....
t
' • . . ) .
The sauce in the followmg rcc1pe
is so fiery that, in my opmion, you
don't need a loi of it. But 1f you
disaarec you can easily double the
recipe.
BARBECUE RIBS
4 to I pounds f resb pork
spareribs
Tex-Mex Sauce, recipe follows
Divide ribs into 2 to 21h-pound
ponions. Place each portion on a
double thickness of heavy-duty foil
adding 1/4 cup water to each packet:
Seal tightly, allowjng room for heat
circulation and expansion.
Place packets on a barbecue arill
over hot coats. Grill for 45 mmutes;
do not open packets dunng this
period. Remove packets from anll
open slightly and drain off fat. '
Now open each packet enurely
and, with ton.as, place nbs d1rcctly
on arill over medium-low coats.
Cover grill and cook until tender-
30 minutes to l hour; baste with
Tex·Mex Sauce the last I 0 minutes of grillina.
TEX-MEX SAUCE
1 small onion, finely cbopped
1 larae ca.rue clov•, finely cbopped ,
1 tea1poon dried l cra11ttc1 or-
esaao
•;. tea1~a..-oud camlD
~ c1pwater
1 \\ table1poou ve1etable oil
1 Ya tu1poo111 all-parpo floar
l lt--oaee cu kot ckllau .. ~~---~ Salt to ta1ce--~
In a small bowl thoroughly tir · toae~hcr the onion. aarlic, orcpno,
cumin and water. In 1 I ~uan
saucepan over low he t, heat the 011·
add the flour and stir until buhblini and a golden color.
Pff heat, tir in the onion
mixture. ~~k over moderately lo\\
heat, st1mnJ constant! until
lfid:cncd. t1r 1n enc 1 da ucc
and. salt. . immtr. stirring often,
unul sauce 1 rcduc-cd to abOut l cup
-:20 minute . •
Where pie .
a la mode
originated
CAMBRIDGE, N.Y. (AP) -
When the waitress at the Hotel
Cambridge returns after clearing
away the main course and asks
"May I get you something else?':
coffee or tea arc not what she has in
mind.----.-
Not here. Because it was here in
1896 that Professor Charles Watson
~o~send, ~rhaps responding to a
s1m1lar questton, ordered apple pie
with vanilla ice cream on top. At a
nearby table, Mrs. Berry Hall
noticed the combination and re-
marked that be was eating .. pie a la
mode."
To this day, no one is sure why
he chose those words, but descrip-
tion and desscn were thereby
forever joined. "A la mode," means
"in the fashion of, stylish," so
maybe she was.praising his palate.
But for whatever reason, the
name stuck and today the Hotel
CamDridac 1s Ptou 10 tflC apot
where such a savory institut1on
rcputedJ.y bilaD. ~e hotel Itself is
I 00 yea.rs old this year but still
makes ita claim to fame with boyish
pride.
Outside the l 7·table dinina room
is a sign proclaimina the culinary
significance of the room patrons are
about to enter. Beside the guest
register is a 1966 review from
"Leisure" magazine recountina the
story and givina it credence.
About the only thina current
owner Walter E. Gann can say for
sure on the subject is, "We know the
whole story about Professor
Townsend, but no one is alive from
that era anymore" ,to venfy the
story.
As fact or legend has it, shortly
after Townsend accepted Hall's
monicker for bas concoction and it
appeared on the hotel's menu, be
visited New York City. There be
dined at Delmomco's and there he
ordered apple pie a la mode.
According t<r an undated repiim
from Scaltest mapzine that is pan
of the hotel's menu, the followina
exchange occurred:
"Do you mean to tell me that ·so
famous an eatina place as
Delmonico's has never heard of pi~
a la mode, when Hotel Cambridge,
up in the village of Cambridge,
N.Y., serv~ it every day? Call the
manaier at once. I demand as good
service here as I act in Cambridge."
"Delmonico's never intends that
any other restaurant shall act ahead
of us.·: replied the manaaer. who
then ordered the desscn added to
the restaurant's considerable menu.
A rcponer from the New York Sun
overheard the exchange and the
next day the Sun ·ran an article
about it. cementing Townsend's
claim, the mapzine reported.
Independent confirmation of
such a claim is not easy to come by,
but town historian Edna Young,
said, "Well, we've always under-
stood that (to be true) here in
Cambridfte. l think we're safe in
saying it.'
The Hotel Cambridge, where
Grandma Moses, fonnerly of Eagle
Bnd-e, stayed and in whose register arc listed folks hke fonn~r governor
of Vermont Harold J. Arthur, has
seen better days. Its outside appears
rundown and the top two floors arc
closed to visitors, but it remains a
popular restaurant locally.
The current register, which goes
back to July 11 , 1950, includes
people visiuna this Washinston
County town of l 800 on summer
holidays from as far as Detroit. St.
Louis, Cleveland, Toronto and
Phoenix.
Gann, who took over the hotel
after be left the Country Club of
Troy as manaaer in 1945, offers 10
desscns on his current menu. And
what a deal the pie is. Hot,
homemade apple pie a la mode is
now $1.80. Fresh fl}lit pie is$ t.~
and ice cream alone 11 80 cents. As if
the reputation is not enough, the
economict make the choice over·
whelmina.
Townsend, accordina to Youna. wu u unique u his l~cy. ''I knew
Profeuor Townsend,· he said •.
1 "He was a music teaeher. He wu a
character-in his own WllY He
different. I can see him now. He
always wore a cape and even _in
those days he kept his hair quite
long ••. He wu very talented!'
nd had 1100d appetite as well.
ln•ex•pen•elve•
•(in ..-· tw) f\9t l'llgtl In price: reeaoneblt,
ct n.d 111111•---·
lfled Advert! Ing
642-5878
Shrimp 'S simply di
y~~. 11~. ,...,..._ BOTTLES
l 75.u-., Kentudty Straight Bourbon
lfu WOlftlONSIC ... ''2\~'@' 1~ .59
Hime 10-0z. lox
•
EARLY TIMES ..................................................... 9.89 GENMAICHA TEA ............................................ 1.11 1. 75-llter, 80-Proof Oiomond 5·Lb.
FLEISCHMANN'S GIN ....................................... 7.98 BR()\l/N RICE .................................................... 1.11
CAUl'OlllllA #RISH I .. y ......
~ FAMJLY rAac 99
• OtlOCEN I& •
......
ITAUAll MUSA•
HOT OR
MILD 1&·1.99
LONDON
BROIL
THICK CUT, BEEF ROUND
LIMIT
2 . L8. ..... ... uv..
SKINNED~ && .89
Freth ChicMn For Fricoue Cent« Cut Frozen/Defros.ted
CALIFORNIA STEWING HEN LI. .19 •• UICAN RAUllUT snAICS .................. : ................... I& 2.98
~ ... IOICICMAM ~-~ .....
•· • P~K 1.89
3-Lb. Pkg. -•
UNCLE BEN'S RICE ...................... 2.19
8lAC1( & WHIT£ I 19 LABEL • •
l5·0z. ~ Of"°'
HORMEL CHILI & BEANS .. . ........ '19
ILb.~
ARMOUR BEEF FRANKS ....... IA9
H~ lbtdom w.fght, Sharp
CHEDDAR CHEESE .......... LI ·2.a9 '
Hughet 16-0i
1000 ISLAND DRESSING .... 1.19 "°""' t20i Piie t<OlBASE ~ISH SAUSAGE l.M
~--.::::L.~
'1' r, . . ' .... . .... . ,
---.-----,..,, -.---. s-.... 11 .... 11---.u
WESSON
OIL
24-0UNQ BOITLE
29
LIMIT 2
KlllY ....
CATfOOD
3 :•1
New I-Oz. lnatont c:.oH. Ctyatots
DECAFFEINATED FOlGER'S .. 4." ,..._, ....... a•••
.-ca
WMIUICI
100~. NATURAL 79 12·0Z. CAN •
12 Oa Tub Non·OOiry 01 btro Crwamy
COOL WHIP TOPPING ... : .... 1.25
Cet.ste fl1zzo For OM
CHEESE P.lZZA .•.••• -................ M
·.~iat~~~~· ...... · ... • Q.OZ.. '1CIG
. .. ..
• .... OtUT
~I& 1.77
Col1bfto Gfown
FRESH FRYING RA881TS ...... l&. l.M
4MCK
~
1.09
65-0z Incl. "'" Off
SUNLIGHT DISH OETERGENT ... 2.79
,: ,, ~ I
I { I • •
I ( ~ ~ ~ H.l \I '
,..u:xwwt ... 1..-.-.-... L_ ------
,..,-.,-. MM
' '
'
C8 Ofang Cout DAILY PJLOTIWiCIMlday, A
. . ..
KNUDSEN
YOGURT
c
C&H
GRANULATED
SUGAR /
•LIMIT . 2 · .
EA.
~
LARGE • FRIAR
PLUMS
FAMILY PACK
FRYER DRUMSTICKS
DUBUQUE OR ARMOUR
5-LR CANNED HAM
RIPE •JUICY
HONEYDEW MELONS
~ ~1t, l
.. I .~. ·;.., " . . ~ ~:l-: •: \ j I ~ ::·,,·· • .. -:-; • ":~.# _, __ ~--.... . ® .. ,. . "~"'#:')'
. EA. H C ()ff
DISHWASHING DETERGENT
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I manuf acturtf s "cents off" coit~on
and get DOUBLE THE SAV1NGS I When you purchase tt11 Item 1 lfffl !f T Tt lllCLUll •r•iu• c ,.E 1 I f.nrr.ciRt.Ttnt • .= I
I tt ara • Ma ucu•H uou• I TOIACCl • IAllT ~l
I .......... ._ .. _ UMIT•ntaM•~· I
I C141Nl All U•T TWI ..u CIU... I PHCUIT9fl
s. 1onu1 saver Ftlw It ater• ,., ..,, ""''' •OUUAllWCI ....... TAI \. Cl~·-•-TWM .. AUi.i I n111•wa..w.11.1• ~ ..._ _______ .....
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Copyright 1184 All rights r ... "'9d. We rMerve the right to hm1t quant h Sales Tu CoU.c.ted on an Tuabl• ltem1. Beer, Win• l l quor Not Available tn All Storet
SAVINGS RELATE TO PREVIOUS WEEK'S ALPHA BETA PRfCE OR LAST OAT£ PRIOR.TO INJTIAL PRJCE REDUCTION EXCLU IVE Or' ADV RTilSf.D OR PROMOTIONAL PRJCES
' • ~ I • u
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• l l..f'l\Ck
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--Wi~· . : ' -·~ ~'"'"' a~ 5Nl!tft1 Ct1t1 I Aljllll Itta ... ,.ti) I DOUBLE SAVINllCOUPON I I Present this cou~on along with any one I
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_ and get DOUBLE THE SAVINGS I when you purchase the 1tm I OFFER MOT TO INCLUDE RUAllH .. FIU I
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TIPCCO W UtH ,_UCTI.
I 10 lllllUI flUICllUE •.ar:t ut1tt • tn• n111A1UF n
I CIUPOI AH LIMIT TWO IOUILl COUP'tH J PUICUJTO•H
\ ceur• -TIUll.. .... • ...._ n1111•1 wa .. •• 11. , .. ~--------
ov.u ... tec1
IOdetennlM
whether he'll
run 1,500. D2.
Haines
sails
to gold
Job is clear
for poloists
·' HB'sSmyth
c~~~----~~"-'-~...,____,~-appearS headed
for silver medal.
LONG BEACH (AP) · -New
1 Zealand and the Unite<! States ended
Iona dr~~ghts in Ol~mpic yachtina compcttt100 bycbncbanggold medals
Tuesday along with a team from
Spain.
The American crew headed by
Robbie Haine took the aold medal in
the Solina series with 33. 7 net points
in six races of seven races, guaran-
teeing the United States its first gold
medal in yachting since 1972. New
Zealand also clinched its first yacht·
ing gold in 20 years.
Haines• crew finished second in
Tuesday's decisive race to Brazil's
Torben Grael, who totaled 37.7 net
po inti.
The yachtina competition at Lona
Beach Harbor forma1ly ends tOday.
Spain's Luis Dorcste and crew
member Roberto Molina clinched
the iold medal in the 470 class after
pickina up 18.7 points with a ninth.
place finish that left them well ahead
of second-place Thierry Peponnet of •-11-~_France. Peponnet took a first Tues-day to earn 37. 7 net points.:
.. At the be&innina (of the· Olym-
pics) this was unex~ed," Doreste
said. .. We were hop10g for one of the .
medals, but the sold we had not
dreamed of." •
New Zealand's Rex Sellers and
crewman Christopher Timms took a
thirdintheTomadoclasstoeam 11.7
net {>Oints and clinch the sold
HunllDJlOn Beach resident Randy
Smyth 11 second after finishing first
Tuesday' and appears beaded for a.
silver medal with 21 pointsgoina into
the seventh and final race today.
.. We knew we had to fet founh or
better (to win die aold)," Sellen said
of Tuesday's race. "We felt com-
U.S. must beat
Yugoslavia Frtday
to earn gold me al
MALJBU-TimShawuysbeand
his teammates can wte the aotd, and ~ United States water polo coach
Monte Nitzkoww had an npte$sioa
that reflect~ rchcfTuesdayaftcr-
noon at Peppcrdinc Univcr51tywhcrc
the XXlllrd Olympiad is windina
down.
I t'sdown to a litwnion now wberc
the U.S., which has be(n sti.ua&l1111
for 12 long years, hAs to do just one
thina-defcatYu1osJaviafnday
night.
Oh, there's the matter ofWest
Germany Thursday momi~ but tM
fact of the matter is this:
Regardless of what transpim
Tbunday with the Germans, assum-
ina Yueosiavia can handle Spa.in. a
victory over Y \l&OSlaVLa will Jive the
United States thatclusivegold medal in water pplo.
Both are 3-0 with two pmcs lef\.
Riabt now Spain and West Gmiwiy
are 1-1-1.
l( a bookie was brouaht in from Las
Vepsandajvcn the facts. however, I think tlte Europeans would rate~
cdae-because most likely a tic
WOU)dbeto Y~a'sadvan~.
_ and beeiuse die U.S., C1esp1tc shOWllll
signs of comina out ofit, basn 't been
tbedevastatincforcc it hoped to be.
And, in thispme, you need
somethinJextra in your comer to deal
withofficialswboseem todeliabtin
puttin& the U.S. a man short.
Constant early U.S. success in these
Games has been great for this nation,
but it'snotdoinaa lot for the
American water polo team, which is
\"Outinely faced with difficult situ-
ations.caused by deck decisions.
_ Atlcastt.bat'showithasa~
fortable in third and we decided we Terry Schroeder lofta •hot oYer Au tral-
(Pleue eee 811YTB/D3) tan &oeJJe Mtcb.:el Turner to .core durlnt
Dlllr ....................
the United States' 12·7 .tetory Tueeday.
The U.S. faces West Germany Thanday.
West Germany and the Urut.ed
States meet Thursday at 8:30 a.m.,
then the finale is Friday night at 9, and
the odds an that both will enter with
4-0 marks in the medal reund.
Yugoslavia tumed~est Germany
Miller time means Olympicgold for U.S.
Overmatched Sou th Korea five blitzed-
by Americans for secood t ime, 85-55
By ROGER CARL.WN
Ol ... D.lf .........
INGLEWOOD -They did it 10
style Tuesday niaht as the United
States women's basketball team
poured it to South Korea for the
second time in the XXIUrd Olym-
piad at the Forum, this time an 85-55
decision for the cold medal.
It was expected, but Cheryl Miller
& Co. pve the 11 ,280 something to
remember. · Like the Lakers when on a ram-
U .S. team
Settle ~
for silver
By HOWARD L. HANDY
.......... Deilf ....
LONG BEACH -There was little
emotion shown on the floor when the
• U.S. women's volleyball team drop-
ped the 1old medal match to the
People's Republic of China. 3-0, in
the XXlltrd Olympiad at Lona Beach
Arena Tuesday niJ,ht.
But after years of devotion to the
sport for most of the U.S. team, those
emotions fiaurc to come privately.
Meanwhile, Westminster's Debbie
Green and Coach Arie Seti~ have
said they wdl retire, al thou~ ~linger
would only say that " .•• whoever is
the next coach doesn't have to st.an at
thebeainninalikcweclid IOyears110.
The college .level has improved and
we have a tot more youn• ptayen.
page, ~e U.S. qu_intet of Coac,!l Pat
Summitt turned it on from start to
finish to leave littJe doubt as to who
deserved the gold medal. The
Kol'Cans &Ot the silver and Canada
missed the bronze when it lost to
China, 63-57.
Exploiting a fast break, pressure
man-to-man defense and dominating
the boaf'ds by a 46-23 margin, there
was little the Korean team could do to
stem the tide.
Miller, whether driving for a three-
point play, taking a charge or tossma
the deep pass for a cripple, led the
way, and Korean Coach Seung-Youn
Cho matter..of-factly labeled her as
"probably the best woman player
who ever exited."
The affable MilJer shrugged off the
compliment. sayinJ "I don't think
I'm the best, I've JUSt been playing
with the best."
MiJlcr was the team scoring leader
with 16 points, bad 11 rebounds, 5
ass1sts and 2 steals. Once when she
went down diving for a loose ball and
skidded under the officials' table, she
reappeared and pve an umpire's safe
gesture to the crowd to let them know
she was all right.
-..... --..... ~~ ,....,
l.-----~
OQ))
That's how it's been for her since
taking Riverside Poly Hi&h to muJ-
llple CIF championships. h 's been
one bia party.
Rallis' 'Crutch' no
handicap to team
Crutch field may be
Ra m complement
to Eric Dickerson
The sponina transients can be catalogued by position, which to say
baseball bas its wandenng pitchers
and basketball its power forwards.
Football's nomads arc the runnma
backs and there 1s an example in the
encampment of the Rams. His name
1s Dwa~c Crutchfield ( .. call me
Crutch ')and he comes from the
Houston Oilers and New York Jets
and be 1s lookina for a bome.
John Robm10n. the coach. says
Crutch has a chance to pla) some·
here. The Rams would work him into
the system as part of somethinacallcd
a two-beck formation, whkb will be
used more parioaly than the Rams'
standard ol)e-back offense.
"I'm not sure that's what I want,••
Crutch say . "I think lam good
enouah to be a star."
BuD
Tuc1£1
SPORTS COLUMNIST
With the 01lns. Crutch was united
with the celebrated Earl Campbell.
his model from the neck down. Both
run on power with those bu p1ston-
type I~ Crutch and Earl ha~c 29-
incb thighs and run on two fi~ plup.
"Actually. I have a 29\"J," Crutch
says, which means the Rams' media
guide shorts him baJfan inch.
Crutchfield did not set to play very
much at Houston, butbeaottomove
around with Earl Campbell which, in
itself, is an expenenoc not invaluable.
••£art took me around Hou ton -
(Pleueeee'n1CDR/D3)
I SPORTS COL UMNIST
a~hTuesda)•.10-9. when it bdd off a
late urry b~ ~iDJ the ball wi.th two seconds left deep U11u own lemtol)'.
"I feel we're~ to ~lax.•• said
Nitzkowski, who appeared to be
relaxed.
"Let's faoc it. .. tie says, .. au the t:aa•s
in thefm. lt'sjusttbewayyouwould expcct-wc'vegottwoda)'lofput
water polo ahead."
Nitzkowski and mOl1 ofhiJ vc&eran
crew bows out Frida~ They
enter with a medal, but tbc
team bas reached tbc leYcl wbcft
aaythiaa but Sold is aoi1'I to be a very
bi& letdown.
i tzkowsti -was especially pleated
with his team ·s dfon apimt Austnl-
i.a Tuesday. a 12· 7 venfact WIUcb
sbo.ed some of tbe offensive map
expected to be exhibited apinst
Gree<%, Brazil. Span and Holland.
They were all U.S. victories, but
aoJd medal WJ..D.DCrS usually show ' more. ·
TheU S,-shoUld&hfl'NttrOer·
man~usethc~'~of
play u much like SpaiD •1; and the
Spanianls tied West Germuy be-
cao.te of their qu.ickness and speed,
irwedients the Americans ha~ a lot or. .
However, and this should be noted,
Vr/C5t Germany is an e.1.oeUcot6-on-5
team.
As for Yugoslavia.. well. the U.S.
can set itdooc bei'c,ioo. with an
effective counter auack and the best
5-on-6 defense of their lives -
because lb.at's what.it's going to take
to beat the odds.. For Terry Scbrocdcr. Gary Figu-
eroa, Joe V arps, Jon Svendsen ,J ohD
Siman. Doug Burke.~
McDonald. Shaw and pri>tiiblyetaig
(Plea. eee POLO/D2)
"first ofall, I don't thmk all of us
will quit volleyball. Some will leave
the team and some will coach but t~e 11t1--~contribution -of the playcn will
continue. . "To my knowledge, no one has uad
they are rotinna." . .
Troublei5i thcRamsalreadybavca sw. Hcis Eric; Dickerson, tbcooo-
back who iscnterina hisS«ond
~son on bis ~> tGbccomi a
dem1Jod.
Reggie faces suspen s ion
While it was a d1sappo1ntm1 loss
for the squa<l. they clid pick up the
first U.S. medal 1n WO")~n·s vol·
~bill in Otymp1c compc!JUon .•
The match was detcmuned an the
first pmc wbcn the U.S. trailed, 14-9,
then battled back to tic at 14.
Tbt Chin won1 16-14, and the
Americans appcarca to nsc 1t 1
all O'tcr. The Amencans made 3,7
m'On durina tho match to 22 for thc!r
opponent not ~una the bill to their
teller, hitt1n1 riaht at blockcn and.
W---aeMl!i&lblM11y. Alla: uw a--mc. theU .. wunev rintbcm~tchap1n.
''I think the Chinese team came out
• aQdpla~much tronacr." 1d Rose
Mqera. ''The Amcncans played rt·
(Pl ....... VOLL&YBALL/03)
..................... '-
Debbie Green of W•tmlnater (left) anct Pa1lla Wleoorr 10
a p tor ball ilutq 1'e.t&J n lCJat•e cam ac&Wt Cbloa.
••t wouldn't take anythi~ &om
Eric." Ctutch says.. "but I didn ~t come
hett1osataroundand :-aitfor "
aomebOdytotcttlunanaaoaown. I
came hereto play and to produce and
how the Rams what they acquind
from the Oilen was for pract1 It
a thi "
Prlcticatlynothin&Vi asi~th·
round draft choice. Cnnch i not
why Hou too unJ dcd him but
rtmcmbcn the Jets said IOOOb~
u tbcpla)'Cfd1d not taler
Tilth \be COi."'"'---------••• the J cts' leadi na rushcrat the
timc(I 13)but\hccoach(Joc)
Walton and l did n t have good
relationship the wa1\'cd me and
the 11 p1c cd m up"
SPORTS BR EAK
-~ -atreak at 10 ~ Status of il\!.e.tt~~Mr& BR,.11\d pm -t ii lor:s lammed two-run homen an ·a fhc-IOr 1, 500 niete•s. run Kansas ity ClJhth innint as the & 1 & 1 RoyaJs rallied to beat Milwau ~ 8-,, -
ill i bl Tuesday nigl}t, extendin the Brewers' l051ng streak to St nue. st ona e lO mcs.lo11tbehedht1fourtbhomerunandBrttth1t ~ hia ninth off reliever P ce Lad , 4-6, as the Royali won
FromAPdl ccb
LOS ANGELES -Steve Oveu, the
rugged British middle-distance sun who
won the 800..meter gold medal at the 19 0 Olympi~ was undergoing tests at a bospital he~
Tuesday to deterrntne whether he should compete in
the Olympic l,500 meters later this v.eek.
Oven was hospitalized after be colbp$td Monday
night followina his last-place finish an the 800.mcter
final,.
Steven Simon. Oven's at-
tendin& ph~ ician at Ortho\l!ledic
Ho pital, id doctors arcn t urc
what's wrong with the British star,
who holds the world record at
1.500 meters at 3 minutes, 30. 77
seconds.
The 28-year-old Ovett,
known for his scrappy tactics in rus many major track and field
victones) came down Wlth
bronchitis silt weeks ago 10 En,-
0.ett land, and doctors suspect his
current cond1t1on may be connected with that ailmenL
"We suspect he may have a vanant of astt\ma
related to his bronchitis," Simons said.
In Monday night's race. won by Joaq_uim Cruz of
Brazil. Ovett struggled to a 1:52.28 clocking -more
than nine seconds slower than the winner's Olympic
record 1:43 ume and nearly five seconds behind the
ne~t-to-last finisher.
Doctors will wait until tests arc completed to
decide whether they'll recommend Oven droP. OUl of
tbe 1.500. No announcement is expected unt1l loday,
Simon srud. Qualifying for the event begins Thursday,
with the finals set (or Saturday.
e.ote of tbe 8a7
Barber sidelined 6-10 week•
Rams tight end Mike Barber will be s·
Jost for six. to JO weeks after undergoing •II~
arthroscopic surgery Monday ..
Barber injured bis left knee during
practice Sunday at the Rams training camp.
Bar~, who was acquired from the Rams from
Houston in 1982. led the team tn catches with 55 last
season.
Budd can't publish diary
LOS ANGELES (AP) -South
African-born Zola Budd, 1he teen-ager who
became a Bnt1sh c1ttzen to qualify for the
Olympics. Tue"1ay was ordered to stop
publishing an Olympic diary m a London newspaper,
and'1 spokesman for the Bntish Olympic Association
said the matter was resolved.
"The diary will no longer be published." said Bob
Ferrier. "That, 1n effect, 1s the end of the matter. We
have been advised that the first edition of The Daily
Mai\ ... docs no\ contain \his diary."
Charles Palmer. chairman of the BOA, warned
however. ''If the Zola Budd diary appears, saying Zola
Budd did so and so. then she is out of the Games."
Ferrier said Budd's diary, published dunng the
Games by The Daily Mad, violated a British team rule
that no member act as a 1oumalist or telev1s100
commentator "for reward."
The Daily Mail footed the expenses for the Budd
family's move from South Afnca to England earlier this
year, in exchange for near-exclusive access to the 18-
year-old runner.
The first edatJon of today's Daily Mail carried a s1x-
hne item about Budd on page 34, entitled "Zola Budd's
Diary."
Flores confused by holdout
SANT A ROSA -The name of All-s
Pro tight end Todd Christensen crops up •II•
daily at the training camp of the Los
Angeles Raiders, but not as often as earlier
in his contract holdout.
While Chnstensen remains at home al El Segundo,
although under contract for the next three seasons,
Coach Tom Flores 1s using Don Hasselbcck and Dave
Casper at ught end. That'll be the rotation, W)tb rookies
Kent Jordan and Andy Parker also secmg acuon when
the Raiders play Washington Friday night in an
exh1b1t1on game.
Regarding Chnstensen's holdout, Flores remains
baffled.
"Obviously, Todd feels very strongly about what
he's doing and that he'll get results this way," said
Aores. "1 have to d1sagrtt with that."
lhe1r fifth game in a row and 15th in tbctr l 20 •.. Jn
other American Le uc action Tuesday, Toa1
BenauN.hitl in ht ~JOUS 22 at-bat • dtUvcrcd
a tie-brcatini .sinalc 10 the 1xth
inning and art1 Bodo drove in
what proved \0 be the winnlna
run with a crifi~ fly s
C1e,·d1nd defeated Batumcm,
.,-4, and ended 1 six~mc lo~ina
tmik • • G&rJ Ward kd on the
bOnom of the 10th mnina with a
triple and 1COrtd, on Oeorse
Wrtpt'1 bloop si!lllc to lift Texas
to a 7-6 victory over Toronto •••
ft• Gudrj cooled off Chi o on
Brett four singlesand struck out J , his
hilliest total in more than five years. while Brlu
Dayett and Dave WIDfleld homered as the New York Yankees blanked the White Sox, 7-0, for a split of a
doubleheader. The White Solt took th~pcncr, 6·3, as
Harold .BaJne1 smashed a dqub~e. an RBI triple and a
two-run homer and GffJ L.ilUld homered •.. Luce
Parrtsb'• two-out, 11th-inning homer. his second of the
game and third of the nit.ht, gave Detroit a 7-5 victory
over Boston and a spht of a 1w1-nigbr doubleheader. Bill
Btteber and Toay Ann'u belted grand slams in the first
two innings as the Red Sox rolled to a 12-7 victory in the
first game ... Mlcke' Hatclter got his third hit of lhe
game in the saxtb mnina and scored on a sacnficc fly by
Randy Ba1b, giv1nj Minnesota a 2-1 victory over
Oakland.
Cubs aw~ep to 3 1h-game lead
Ron Cey'1 two-run double capped a Iii
wild, five-run founh inning Tuesday to
lead the Chicago Cubs to a 8-4 victory over
the New York Mets and a doubleheader
sweep mam:d by beanbaUs and a bencb-dcanng
incident. Keitll Mottlud'1 three-run homer and a two-
~ shot by Cey keyed a six-run fifth inning to give the
Cubs an 8-6 decision in the opener. The sweep extended
the Cubs' winning streak to five games, as they opened a 3 e lead over the second place Mets m the
National League East . •
Etsewhere in the NL Tuesday,
Duey Cox allowed only three bjts
over seven inrungs and Tury
Padleton'a s1xtb-inning triple
drove in·the winnini run as SL
Louis gamed-a 2-1 tnumph over
Pinsburah. The victory was the
10th by St. Louis over the Pirates
in I J tries and the third in as
many deasions by Cox, 6-9, who
r-walked only one .. Nick Eu1ky'1
""' bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the
bottom of the ninth inruna scored Dave Parker with the
winning run and sent Cincinnati to an 8-7 vtctory over
San Diego. Tony Gwyu'1 single had tied the pme 7-7
in thetopoftheninth.,. JdfLeonanlwent 5-for-S with three RBI and Mike Knkow won his fifth straight prne
as San Francisco defeated Houston, 9-2 . . Du
Driessen doubled home one run and sin&Jed home the
game-wmner in the bottom of the ei&bth to lift
Montreal to a l-2 VlCtory and a doubleheader split with
Philadelphia. In the opener, Jau Samael stroked an
ins1de-the·park homer and Mike Sclunldt hit one out m
a four-run third inning as the Phillies woo. 6-2.
Harris in contract dispute
LATROBE, Pa. -Franco Hams 1s [!]
prepared to Sll out the 1984 National c Ill• Football League season m a contract
dispute even though he ts JUSt 362 yards
away from breaking Jim Brown's careerrushtng record.
his agent said.
Agent Bart Beier says Hams can afford to hold out
on his final dcc1S1on because be needs "less ume than
anybody else" to prepare for the season.
The 13-scason Pittsburgh Steelers veteran hasn't
talked with the team for two weeks.
Beier says Harris, a veteran of 13 season with the
Ptttsburgb Steelers. wants to play at least two more
seasons but is prepared to sn out this one 1f he can't
agree to a contract with the Steelers.
1'eleftaloa, radio
Monte NltakowakJ
POLO •• ;
FromDl
Wilson and Chri Dorst, too, this is
their final hurrah.
They.and Kevin Robcnsonaod
Peter Campbell have paid the pri~.
Only time will tell if they get what
they've paid for.
* * * Ashe did prior to Tuesday's game,
Nllzkowski will brin&hissquad to the
Pepperc:line Univennyton1jht to
prepare for Thursday morning's
game _.Posters featufUlJ the water
polo team and ~roedtr have be-
come a demand item across the
nation. Posters can be ordered by
calling818-915-1851. The team post-
ensin 1tsthird prin1ingoflO.OOOand
sold out the first day of water polo al SS each. Over6,000ofSchroedeT•s
poster was sold in the first two days ..
. The wives, fianoccs and girl friends
of the players decided to respond in ,
kind and posed for their own swim
suit poster in the exact same spot on
the Pepperdinedeclc.. The print is still
to come ... S1mu'1 Snicker Bars
commercial was so popular the candy
company rushed to put another
together ... The rub,ap_parcntly, is
that Simao isin<!eed a Snickers Bar
freak.
CAGE •..
FromDl
Asked her Lhoughts how this team
would do against the Soviet Union.
she said ··r haven't really thought
about the Russians. No one will ever
know. But 1 have a lot of confidence
in this team."
Other standouts for the U.S. in-
cluded Janice Lawwrcncc ( 14) and
Cindy Noble (10) among a squad
which had all 12 shanng in the
sconng.
The Koreans were bumped off by
37 during round-robin play by the
U.S and its coach said he didn't use
all oftus best m order to save them for
the big game.
But the results were basically the
same.
"No matter the plan," said the
Korean coach throu.J!l an interpreter,
"it would have ended the same,"
when asked tf he felt somethmg other
than the Korean game pl4n might
have worked better ... I've never seen
girls play so much hke men.'' be
continued.
u.S. boxers
go--6-f or-6
LOS AJ'.JGELES lAP) -Jerry
Pa$e. who got a controversial de-
cision and five other U.S. boxers
advanced to the semifinals Tuesday
and assured themselves Olympic
bronze medals.
Advancmg with Page were Evander
Holyfield. 178. Pernell Whitaker._ the
132-pound class world champion.
Paul Gonzales, 106, Virgil Hall, 165,
and Steve McCrory, 112.
Holyfcld, of Atlanta, was the last
U.S. boxer to figbt on the 24-bout,
day-nigbt card, and there certainly
wasn't anytbin& controversial about
his victory.
He knocked out Syivaus Okello of
Kenya with a left hook to the jaw.
Americans fall in baseball final, 6-3
Japan's eighth-inning blast proves The United States had taken a 1-0
lead on a homer by ~hane Mack in the
third innmg. Japanjw~ad to stay
with two runs in the fourth on walks
to Kozo Shoda and Terumatsu
Kumano and singles by Yuklo Arai
and Harosawa.
tagged out. The next two U.S. batters
walked but Japan brought in sidearm
throwing pitcher Yukio Yoshida,
who proceeded to strike o~t Mack the difference; Taiwan earns third place
LOS ANGELES <AP) -K.atsum1
Hirosawa's three-run homer 1n the
elghth ionmg powered Japan to a 6-3
upset over the United States in the
champ1onsbip game of the Olympic
bateball tournament at Dodger
Stadium.
Baseball was a demonstration sport
at lbese pmes, and Japan ~1ved a
JOld medal similar to those awarded
m sports that are part of the Olympic
competition
U.S. kayakers
enjoy success
LAKE CASITAS -Four
American men wtte successful 1n Tue.daf1 kayakina competition
at the XXfllrd O lympiad -wuh Orea Barton, Bruce Mcmu and
the team ofTerT)' Kent and Terry
Wbjtc movina on after Monday's
\CSU.
Barton wa ~ond an ha heat of
lhe K·ls, with a time of 3:52.08.
while Mcmn wa' third rn the
Canadian ''· goana 4 22.S9 ror I
tcmifinaJs berth
&nd Whi1 wcnll~llo
fini h ~ond 10 their heat orih-e
-ls.
The U.S. team, the heavy favonte
for the gold aoing into the eight-team
round robin tournament, settled for
the silver medal while Taiwan took
the bronze with a 3..0 win over South
Korea an I~ annmas earlier Tuesday.
Japan scored all of its runs off
pitcher John Hoover, who recently
signed a professional baseball con·
tract with the Baltimore Orioles after
bcin& selected an the first round of the
draft in June.
Japan made 1t l-1 tn the fiflb when
Shoda walked and 5eored on
Munchiko Shlmada's double down
the left-field line. H1rosawa's homer
eave Japan a 6-1 lead.
The Americans ran themselves out
of a potenual baa 1nnin& in the
seventh when Chris Gwynn, who had
walked. overran third bate follow1ni
a sin&Je by Mule McOwirc and was
with the bases loaded. -
Lrn Hua·We1 tnpled home a run
and Yan& Chm1 Lona hit a two-run
homer 1n the top of the 14th innina to
give Ta1wan the win over South
Korea.
The third-place pme was a pitch-
ing duel throuih lJ innings. but Li
Chih Chun opened the top of the 14th
with a 11ngle and scored on Lln'1
triple. Yona foUowcd with the two-
run shot into tho left-field bullpen.
Louganis qualifies easily -
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Grq Louaanis of Mi_.,___ ualifiera for today's final. If Lou ntl had kipped his lut
Vic)O dominated the qualifvina Tucaday for the Olympic • be would have finished with 666,27 J)91nu, ttill more
spnnaboard divina final u he C.tme W1thin 3.12 poanu of than thcs.ccond·~tqualificr, RonMemonof Ano Arbor,
his all-time scorina ~rd. Mich .. whose I I-dive total wa 628.47.
Loupni,, 24, who hopes to tfttome the lint man to Two Chinese divcr1. u Honapin and Tan Liana.de,
wm twodivanaaold medaJsinoneOlympics. wasawan:ttd finished lhird and fourth, rcs_.,.ttvcly, Wlth 611.SS and five perfect 10.-0 5COres durina the 11-dave p~liminaries. 600 99 _ ..
He accumulated 752.37 J)Oints. just shon of the record · Fi~h?~~ fif\b and iltb were Chris nod of Britain
755.49 he had last year at the USA lnternauonaJ meet. with 592.68 and Pacro Jtahana of Italy~ th 573.69. After . ··1 don•t !hink that muc~=bout int_ totals, bu~ my nine wvcs, Loupnis had 574.20.
ultimate io J as 800 in the spn -• "satd lqypnJS ... , Other final qualif aen were rlo Oimn of Mcxiro
will have to Pt"tform tomorrow u I was cauuou.s •nd ~ith S49.7-', AJb1n 1Cilla1 of W t Germany WJlh 549.39. made some mistakes." s
A kcd if he knew he wu cl---to the world -ord, trl>Mn Foley of Au tralia with _,.3.17. Jorar Mondrgon u.... ·~" or Mcllico with SJ7.03, Dieter· OOcrr of West Oennany Louprm said, "f knew l ... u close lo ont or the hiahtst wuh ,33.61 andidha Ova k&incn off inland with 532.17. scorcs rhav~C"YCr~vtd~."'------~~~_,_~---------.--..._
So JrlCeful and powerful was Loua.ani1 thal he could l..ougan1s never wu out of Ont pl oc aficr any of the
l\ave skipped his la~t 1~0 dives completeJy and 1111 havt' fivt rounds ot oomr>uls.orv d1\cs or the 1' mo~ round of
had • scorr hi1d1 enough to f1njjb 1lllb amona the 12 opuonal comoemion •
• r
MAJOR LIAGUE STANDINGS
~~
M/nflaotl .... (h!CallO
KensuCllv
0.11.lend S..1111 TUil .
Delroll
Toronto
e1n1more
'°''°" ...WVOf't, CllYNnd
Mllw•uktt
win otVUIC* W L 51 S1 51 $J ,. ~
" M !2 &1 '° ... ....
•AST OIVlllON ,. ..,
6J .,
~ Sl SI 53
S1 Sl .....
0 " ,......~,_...
l'ct. ..m .W' J05 ,~
'" 3Ya 06 • ..,, 10 ..m 11 ..,_
13 ' IS~ lA~
lS
Jj
2612
Miift 1. S..tlle' ao.1on 12-5, o.rron 1·7 tMCOllCI Mme.
11 lnnlntt)
ChlceOO •·O, lffw Yorll N C ..... elend 5, BllllmoH 4
ltenus C11V I. Ml1••1A" 5 TuH 7, Toronto 6 (10 l!IAJnosJ
MlllMIOll 2, O.illelld 1
, Tedll~sGlmM •
Al'lflfs <Wiii 11·1) er S..lllt (l..lneston ,_,,
Chlc100 lleMialer t•7) et, Ntw VOtk
INlekro 13·5!
MiMHOle (8\>tclw t-4) 11 O&ll&ftd (Burris 10-6>
ltltlrnott <IOdcllOer 12-11 at Oev nd
(Comer 7·6l, (n)
o.trotr (AbbOll S-3) et '°'10ll !lovd
6-1), (II)
Mllwaullft <Sutton 10-tl el r<ensu Cllv
(Ill.Kit 11>'.9), (n)
TOt0/110 (Clencv 1·111 el Tt•et (01flllin
._.,,,In)
Tlwnda'l's OlfMS
0.kland el AnMI*. {n) &1111~ •I Oev.,.nd, <n>
ClllCHO al New YOf'll, (n)
aos1on el T••••· (n) Mllw•utl" at Kanses C1tv. (Ill
MiMesol• al S..llle, (n)
Naftenll l.eHue
WHTDMSK>N
W L Pd. 01 s.n oi.eo fl .,. '* At .. ,,,. • s. .511 ..... .,..,.. 56 51 A7 13
Houston S2 61 "° 16 Cloclnnell C7 65 •20 20 ....
S.n Francltco 6' 65 • ..w 22
RAST DfVtSIOH • Cnlc.aOo 67 •S .stl New Y«lt 62 U ..56t :J\.'J Pnl~le 60 51 .S.1 6\41
SI, Louis 56 S6 • .SOO 11
Monlrul SJ JI .A77 UY! Pllhburtll a 65 '25 lJ,,,
T.-Y'tSC... ~ 2. Allenle 1 (11 lnnlnes)
Cllla9o 1-1, N.w YCIB 6-4
Piii~ 6-7. Mocllr•l t-J ~T. -S. Dlior1 St. LOCJIS 2, ft111sbUr'illh l
Sen FrandlCO t. Houston 2
-
...:-.~
TUIHOAY'S ••SUL n
(lnl .. '2•111tM ... ""1Mne "*"'-> Fl.ST llACI. lSO yl(cb. '
Gl90to Doo (H. Gercle) UO 120 2 40
H•Prf' Hooter (Fryday) 2 IO UO
N•lllle R.-.Ctlon (Mv19SI uo
A.IM rec.ct: Maul ~eudlf', S.mutl
PM, Yldt v.o. Some Thvmus. Jelllk*.
Tl!M; 111,.
S2 IXACTA (W) Hid S2t.OO.
s•c:OND at.ca. 350 vwds.
Mims S.1u (Bentlev) n.40 l'l.20 7'10
Tlnv Cerl (Flores) 9 20 •.40
Ultlt Pod (B&rd) 2.AO Abo rteet1· Ac:nlnthtNl!e, Sl>V In The Sllv. HollYWOOd Hor, Jet EldorNC>, A lure D•ndV. Town Senwllon, Genuine ltodlet.
Tlme: 114.
TH•D RACE. 400 yards •
r<lc:t Chrom. Of. Gerda) 4 60 2 60 iAD
Iv 8eduJno <Ptutlne l 2.10 7 60
Romen E~e (8rookt) l.JO .. Mio ~ ~In ~ .,,.,.....,
Ooc ...... Time. 20.11. '{MIV'I~
~ !Welch 1-11) al
(8rluollre 0-0) A.ttenta • :. "'OUltl'H RACE • ..., Vln:b. · Jelllrw Joe (8rOOlls) :MAO l•AO UO
lffw Vork (Terrell 9·1) at
(Tn>UI 10-5)
Chqoo KIU Jotlfl A11 Go (ltul1) U.60 1360
Procier Oltroeel (P•ullntl •.20
Ptllledelf'hla (KOOSl'l\ln 12·1) 11 Mon· tr111 (Gull~ 6•7>, (n)
Sin Di.tlO (Show 11·71 el Clrldnnell
<Soto 11-Sl, <n> · PlllUM.rGll (C.lldeierla 9•1) al St. Loul1
(Horton 6-1), (II)
kn Frenc:hco tDevb 3·'21 et Houston
(ltv-n t-7). (n)
,.....,..~
~el Allenle S.n oi.o al Clnclnnetl, (11)
ChlcaeO al Monlr .. 1. (n)
Plll.ourofl 1t Hew vn, <n> SI. Louis •I ~ ... (n)
Sin Frenclsco et Houston. (nl
AMERICAN LEAGUE
A"911s 7, Mlrlners 6
CALll"~NIA SEATTLE
1brlll:ll
Pettis cf • 1 1 0 Narron oh I O O O
Sconlrs lb 5 1 1 o
Lyftll r1 2 2 I I
O.CncUb • I 2 • Oownlno" • 0 1 0 lteJklll dh • 0 1 0
Wllfono 2b 4 1 I 0
8oonec • 0 1 l
Sc:llOfll<I H 3 0 1 0
Cerew oh I O I O Plcclolo n 0 I 0 0
~121>
OwenH
AOavis lb
~ ...
CowtNr1 OHechnd
SHendsnlf P8redlylf
.Milborn lb
Ramos lb
K .. rMVC
Mlfhbl
5 l 1 1 s 0 1 0 • 0 l 1
• 0 1 0 s 1 1 0
' 1 1 0 2 3 2 1
0 0 0 0
• 0 I 0
0 0 0 0 • 0 3 3
T.tab J6 1-tl 6 T...., 17 '11 ' Sc .... llV~
Callftr'ftNI 011 oat 002-7
S..nte 010 112 100-' Geme Winning RBI -Lvnn (I).
E-MMoo<e, COfl>ell, KHrntv.
01>-<enfCKnle 1 LOB-<allfornl1 '· S.ellle
' 21-AD•vls, Scollllr\. Hlt-$H41nd«IOl'I
(I), 0.Clncft (13). SB-Pettla (40!
S-OHendll'son. SF-0.Clncfl, Lvnn
c;....,,.
Sia Ion
COfl>ell
MsaW,t-t
S.nte
~ H ltlllalSO
5
2
2
' 5 5 2 l 3 I I 2 0
0 0 0 0 I
MMoor• 7 ' s • 2 5 Stanron L.3·7 2 1 2 0 O 2
Slelon Pllehld 10 2 t>erters In 61tl.
W~lon T-7~5. A-"295. '
NATIONAL LEAGUE Ded99n 2, Br•VH I
LOS ANGRLH ATLANTA
Sl112b WhltfllCI r1
Lanc:tnd ~rstlel r1
~c "....,."" aroca lb
lallorlO
Amllll'OPll
lleullP Guerrroh Ho,.lho
Andelll H
APl"-P
HoolonP
Stubba P11
RIV11'"13b T.._
•rlltll alHlllll
SOIO f>trrvlt •OIO
S I 3 0 AArnn u 5 0 0 0
5 I 1 I Wlholn rf • 1 2 0
5000 Munlflvcf 4011
3 0 0 0 Chmbls lb • t O 0 20tl Komnlklf lOOO
3 0 1 0 Oberilft 3t> I 0 0 0
2000 Johnlnoh 7010
1 0 0 0 HUbCird 2b S 0 0 0
0000 BeMdlcf c •040 1 0 1 0 AHd pr 0 0 0 0
1,0 0 0 T~noc I 0 1 0 c O O o PPtrtz o 3 O o o
2 0 0 0 Walson oh 1 O O 0 o o o o Forster • o o o o 1000 /iNJIHIP 0000
I 0 0 0 •1 1 f 2 ,.__ )t 1 It I kwt by.,...
IM,.,_... - -•t It-2 ....... •1tt•1t-1
Game Wlnnino ltll -v...-<•>. E-Scloscte. Ollerillal. DP-Ut A.llMIH
I, A.tlanle I. LOB-LO$ A,,.._ I, Allenla
lO 2&-S.ic, M41tPl'tv. kwdlct. Trevino
HR-LalldrffU1t (7). S&-Perrv 3 (131
LnAltlllH
APtn• Hooton
lteuu
HOwtOW,2•2
Alantll
11' H R llR aa SO
' )
2
2
s l 1 ' s I 0 0 0 1
1 0 0 2 0
3 0 0 0 ,
PPerti 'C1115 Fon!• 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Moore L,N 1 2-l i 1 I 1 2
T--311 A-2U7S
MAJOR LEAGUE LIAOlllH American ~..,.
aATIING (265 al blltl: WlnflllO, New van, ..J46; ~tllnolV. New Yon, .JJ71
Hrbell, Mtnntsot1, .tts; lMurrav, I Ill• mor1, .J17; Co111ns, Toronto, .JIJ; lltlok1n,
.. ttlmofe, .)13
ltUNS OwEvens, lloalon, H ;
ltHandlnon, 0.klancl, 7•; Am\lt, IOSIOft, n. '°"'t lot!Ofl, 11; lutllf, CleVelend, 711 MoMe>v, oronio.11; fltloMI\, hltlrnon, 11
fltll1 IClnemen. C>Mltlld, •· A01wl1, 5"1119, M, Atl'Mt lo&ton, .. ,_iCI,
... ten .... EMiifrav, Wlrnciti. 11 HITl: Oetda. TOl'OlllO. ........
lllllmre. lM; ~lllMtv, New Yet11,, ll5;
l1w. ao.ron, lll: lolft, e.ton, 121;
OW 'faM, lo\IOll, 1•. ~. New Yotll 121
OOUILEI LAParrtan, Teu., •· ..... Tun. 77, OW£v1nt, a°'tOlll. V ; GltCltl,
T4"1\IO, 27, Mlllill9tf, tww Yor\, 'f7
TltlPLSS Mo.MW, T....,.o, ll; c.lllM,
TONnte, HJ UP4111•, TOJonto, 9, KG""°"-
Otl,.it, I. Owen, IHttte. I
HOM& RUNS ANNI, I0110I', ll: Kint•
rMn, 0.ltltnd. 2'; LNia.rrlSll. OttrOff, I
IClltW, C:hlcaeo, 2•, M~y, Oialllen4, 2>. Ttiotnton, Ctevetelld, n
STOL H I IS: tt~• Oialltelld,
'7, ...... ,...._ •• Collft\, Tor911to, )1, Butter, O.W I ,., Garde, ToonMUO, ,,
flltTCH MG tlO dtehlOMI '-"'• Ttronto, tt•t, l tl, GO.fl•. lalllmcn1 ""'· ,.,, $lll4t Tlf'OfYIO 12'4, 1 9', Plefry, 0.trOlt,
:I• I UO Hlw.,. New Y~ U-t. 1.11.
STllK OUlS WM, ANltl, IJt,
Lenin , Ille, 1211 Stieb, TorontO, 121. Houo1IJ Te IS, Ito, Gu!Orv. Ntw Yen, HS
MV I CNllMlaltrt, KaelM Clfv, IO ~ 0.~11 .... 14~ ~t.
14 ~ltlCJtrt, M I\._, '3 ltOtYlt M!nnt• I '°''· n
'
AIM recec:t: Rovel llllV 811111 Piss Em
01•. The Kist, Moot! NICINW, lrellMwav
'9eron, V191s COUtlrrv. Frldllon Touon Girt.
Tlmr. 2U7.
S) IXACT A t.7· 101 Hid S91t 50
f"I"" ltACL 3'41 VWA
SC.ts Soets (Crlfftf') uo 3.00 240
Htt• Natl-le aw <T,...-.) uo s eo
Sc>ICle<I Dice !Hartl 2A
Also rac:ec:t. Im. Tinv Welch, Zll;ons,
Pev The 8111\.
Time· 17.'7. u IXACTA n-•> oeld S50 .eo.
SIXTH •ACE. )SO verds
Fickle Soul (8rooll.sl 3.IO 2.IO 2'10 Gustoso Awl (MllCMllL 3 IO ;uo
PluncMn Besl (Lewis) 3.20
Also raced: A•retv So, Quick Flldl,
Oendv Aoas, ltMCh FOf' A Sier. Afrlcane.
Tlnv A lure, l(lrtv Do II
Timi. 1110.
sevENTH uca. 350 vents
Sound N Fur/ (tur1l 2UO lUO S.00
MlehlV Niie (Rub) ,, 40 I I 40
Showe1ntenuf (M'ltftl UO
Also rKec:t P1u N Run, 81ezln S.ble,
Flash O.rar, Eetv .. m. Reftdlsll
Tlme: 11.12
'3 EXACTA (1·21 oekl MtS.60
ltGHTH RACE. S50 varos •
Eaav Demenc:t !Frv~vl 15.60 7.20 uo Easy. ~u R9QIMt (Cerdou l 13.00 "20
Short Wini\(~) 00
~150 raced: Truly A Trip, El SUNrmen,
Oh Sn11, MKhtnlcll Doll, Vllla9t Gold.
Time: 2.7.07.
U f'tCK SIX (3,.·2·2·1· Ml peld
S10,A+t.l0 wllll IWO wlnnlfto llcketl Ohl
horMI). n Pktl SA• consolllllon "Id SS23 40
wllll 40 wlMlne llcMta (five llCH'wsl
NtNTH ltACE. 350 vards
Ouratron (Sardi S.00 S.40 2 .cl
Trvdl.11 F•ll' cer .... 1 uo soo Mffele Motion (Mitchell) J.20 Atso rlOld: Lady LIM Two, Jammlfl,
8rtoht "' A Flath, ...., Turn. Tlme. tl.O•. n EXACTA (t-2) Ollkl mAO.
All~s.21'.
U.S. Qey c.tt ttumemtftt ,., ........... , ,,_,. sec.. ..... Slllllll
.... nl Gunlt\lrclt (5wll1"11nc:t) dlf. Jolln
Ross (U.S.>. .. ,. 7·6· P•blo Arr1v1, (Peru)
def. Jon Levine (U.S.\, 7-6, •-•; Mlrlln Jelle
(Areentlntl dlf. Chris Lewis (New z..-
ltnd), 6-2. 6-4; JoM HIGu«U (SOlln) def.
Alberto Tous (SOllnl, 6-1, 6·7, 6·4) H1ns
GlldemelllW (Chile) def. MM Puroelt IU.S).
6-2, 6-2; Thlerrv Tulesne (France) def.
Frencesco C~lll Ul•tv). •-6, 6-C, •-4;
Mlrll Olcllson (U.S.) dlf. Jltnmv Browt!
(U.S.), 7·5. H , •·2.
o... .........
OAVIY'S LOaC•• (Ne.._. ... di) -117 enoltra. 2 blrrec:~. 4'l DOllllo. 2C yellowtell, 13 roca fist\, )I celk'O blln, 2'
aelld blu, 175 11'\Kkerel, s ~. 1 ~ N•W~T 1.ANDaMO (New"rt
IMdlJ -51 •1'911n. tn 11on110. 35 MM. SO ~.,..,, 10 shMosllttd. 3 ,.. fbtl.
,.
·Olympics schedule
XXlll OL VWIAO ,.... .....
""'"'-IOll'-tlvMfl T"91dtY'• rNOel lvetllt II IM lfW ~ Otvmola Wllll
COUll1r'Y, IOW, tltvtr, brOflll Incl 10111 "*''" won: . Otlllllww.,_T ....
.. .0 17 lOS ·1• 12 I M
10 12 " .. ,. ' . ,.
J • 11 t•
1 • 1 n • I 10 ti
1 • ' • 10 J . ' " ~ 2 I 11 '" > 4 II
0 • • '
1 2 ' I
C.Meint
(If Ulll Cetftat)
Mllwt N•UMS K·l
(H11t. I) 1. IOcUfa C"r•nce), J SUI; t. E l1t Clwedfn), l.M.... J. Olk nla), U7.tt. 4. Dt lttuwtr
.... him>. l:ff.11; I,· Altff• (lfftn). l!ff."' 6. Ttlol'Mon (Canida), •:<g.at{ 6. t.
Harlotl l"'ntand), ·~·'°• I. Tao! Hont Kont), 4MM. CHiii I) 1. TllOmOtOn !NW
Z..ltfld), J:JU11 2. JatklQft (Or .. t
•
lrltel11), IAlt; J. 0'"4trt (Auttr•lltl),
:ajJ; " WOif (Wfft cwmanv>. 4:00.21; &. ftrllltlt (lrfland), •:OUl1 ., AclotOn (Ivory
Coffl), 4:22.JOJ (HMI a) l. JI/lie
CVUIOlllvla), >:11.n 1 2. larton 1un111<1 ''''">· 1:12.011 1. •11muaatn <Notw•v>. l!SJ.711 •· Clrrero UlaM, 4:00.11; I. V11•
llllft (Arttntlna), 4:0U6. •
TOda
ARCH IA~ ,.,Ullt .... ,
'°Ill\• IHI •.rn. -Wom9"'• 1om •net '°'"· 1!1141'• '°"' "'° 10m 2J)H 1.m. -WOIMn'• 1om eno '°"'-men'• tom •llcl 10ITI
IASK•TIALL· ·
• (It .. ''"""' ........ , • ta.m. -fllflh PIKt a.m1t1nt1 IUl'Wlillv
"' A.-trla), 11 1.m. -'"'h l'llCI SernHlnal <Wn ! · Oermanv ., .. Italy), ,
I •·"" -Champlontlll• ltft'tlflnal CVutoMvla vt. SNlft),
7 t.m. -Cl\llNIOMnlp :stmlflntl
CUnltld ltllff 111 ClnMI).
IOXINO
(atLAIMrtl.,_.) 11 1 ITl.•2 1>.m. -Qufirttf'flnal•
MO 1.m. -Quertlt'flnata
CAMOllNO 2 I I 6 1 2 1 ••
1 1 2 4
ClllHIM' (HNI ,, I. Itek• (Witt OtrlnallY), (It"'""'") • 7:30· IOJO I .I'll. -mttl'I Ind WOl'ftlln'a
• 1 I 2 4 0 t 2 •
2 0 1 3
I I I 3 0 1 2 ,
0 1 2 3
0 I I 2
0 • 1 I 2 0 1 0 I
0 1 0 ' 0 1 0 I
0 0 I 1
0 0 I 1
0 0 I I
0 0 1 '
w.-.....
. UnnM ..._ 12, Altttrtlll 7 ac.,. IW Quertln
AutlrtJll 2 1 I >-7
Unllld Stet.. 3 4 I +-12
Unlllcl Sitt• acorlne: ltobertton 3,
ldlroldlr J, J. Ctrnoo.11 J, P. CtmtlMll 2, ""'*'"· . Au1tr1lla tcorlne: WvtKow 3, C. Tul'1*' >. Ktrr I.
°"*' T....-y ac....t _... ......
Yueotllvlt 10, W•t OtrmtnY f 5P91n I, Holllnd 4 ~ ......
Oreect 14, JIPlll 1
lltlY 11, China I
Caned• 10, Iraan 10
Medal lllUllll .,.,....
Taem
Unlltd Sltllt
Yueoelrtla W•I Germlnv Spain
Hollend
Austrtlfa
W L T P" PA 1't1
300J0226
300RJ06
. 1 1 I Tl 2• l
1112'223
03016UO
0 3 0 "31, 0
'nlul'NIY'• ldlMuel l:JO a.m. -Unlllcl Stalll n. W1tt
Gwmany
10 1.m. -Clllne vt. l,..111
1:10 p.m. -Auatralla vs. HOlllnd
.., p.m. -Ctlleda "'· JIHI\ 7:30 p,m. -llatv va. Gteect f P.tn. -YueoataYll v1. IPtln
''*Y'• ldlMuel 1:30 e.m. -Wat Germanv "'· HOiiand 10 Lm. -J6Hn va. ar11n
1:30 1>.m. -SPlln vt. Auatralfl 3 1>.m. -Canada vt. ll•tv
7:30 p.m. -China "'· Gr11e1
t o.m. -Unltld Statea "'· Yuoo&111111
/ ~-)\.. ........
(It DM9lr ltHIUm)
'9NALI
JIMft 6, UNtecl ..... J
ac....iw ...... ....... OI021tO.-• I 1 unn.t1 Stain 001 tOO 002-1 7 I
no. Mlulmoto (7), Yotllldt m and
Slllmad.IJ ttoovar. Aid~ (I) Mid Martano.
W-llo. l..~Vtl'. Hll~J•oan,
Hlrowawa. Unllld St11u; ~. Snvw.
TM•D PUCI Taiwan 3. Soultl KOl'tl 0 (14 IMlnt•>
.....
(at LA s.tl Annal QUAllTlll'9NAU , .........
Paul Gon11111, L..ol Aft9llff die. JOM
L. yon (lrlteln). •· 1 m...,....
Steve McCrorv, o.trolt, dee. Petti'
Avttu, Mlllwt, 5•0 In ......
Pwn111 Wllltllker, Norfolk, Ve. die.
llllntr Gin, Wttt Germany, 5·0 ,,,,.......
Jerry P191, Columbus, Ohio, die. Dono
Kii Kim, KorM, •· 1 , .........
VtroU Hiii, Grand Fork•, N.D.. dK.
Damlr Sklro, YutO&llYll. •·' 171 ....... Evandlr HolYfllld. Atlante, KO'd
Sulvaus Okllle, Kenya, at 2:57 et tint
round.
•:10.lOL> t. Celn (Clnlclt), •:20.10; a.
Oroftluncl <"Inland), 4:20.H; •. Tr•ln (Gr"t lrlleln)t 4:2l,1Ji I. L.0111 <IHln>r •~ ••: (H .. 1 21 1. J1k00..1)'(0tnrn1rl(J, 4t:IUf; 2.
Olaru !ltomenll), •!1$.M; a. /Mrrlll (Unltlcl 1111 .. ), •12.ff1 ., lnout (Jaoan), 41'.0S; 5.
laalullCI <lwlcllft), 4:2U l.
IM (Ht•! I) 1. Cane<11. >:2"211 t. Untteo.
St1111 (Kent. White), 3:80.171 3. Auttrla,
311.11: '· ,,.nc•t 1:3UO; s. Norw1Y. NUO; 6. Chine, b2."1 (MUI 2) I. Wiii owmeny, uuo: 2. Auatrana. 1:21.731 3.
Italy, 1:2U2; • 1Mln1 J:Jo.t3; S. 9tom1nl1, 3:U25; 6, Jaoan, ~:•t.6.1, (H11t a> 1.
Swldtft, J:31.n1 2. Holland, 3:>4.0ot; 3 OrMI
lrlleln, 3:3S.'3: .. New 1 .. 1t11d, 3'3Uf; 5.
ltltlum, ):37.'2.
CMHlt11 I (Heel 1) 1. ltomanta, 1:47.40; 2. or .. ,
lrll1ln1, a:Sf.70; I. Wt&t Gtrl'lllnY, •:01.n:
.. MelCICO. ·~.751 5. JapenL •.05.261 (HH I 2) 'l. Vu~11la, 3:S0.7t; t. nine.. J:SJ.711
I. Unltld SttlH (PlanttlMOrn, McCllln>,
J:SUI; •· Cane<la. UUO; 5. ll>eln, 3:56.70. K·• IM"t I) I. New Z11land, l:OS."· 2.
1toman11. a:ou1; 1. WHt Gtrmany, >m.ao1 •. Canaclt, 3:01.07; s. lttlY, a1A.f01 6.
Norwav. J:l0.'3; 7. Greet lrllaln, 3:21.05; 1.
Hono Kone, 3:Al.17· <H111 2> 1. Frtnet,
3:0U7; 2. Au11ra1la, 3:0U2; 3.lwlclln,
3:0U31 4. Soaln, 3:1U11 S. Sw1t1tf'\alld,
3:12.n ; 6. Flnltnd, 3:13.17; 7. Unlllcl Siii"
Uklllntlllm. Oiiman, scnurrtntllfttr,
SMllUS), 3:15.77. ~
MIN'S lllPICHAOI
1(.1
(lltct I) 1. Thomoaon (C1n1dl), 3:56 ... ;
2. Carraro Ut11v>b 3:$7.25, ~· Pr!noll (Ire· 111\d), •:07.a.; •· 1 lreuwar lltltlum),
4:1UO; s. Tao! (HonG Kone), 4:J.U5; (lt•c•
2) 1. Wolf (WHI G«manv). 4:G3,C7; 2.
VHouea (ArttnllM), 4.-0...42; " Htrlola (Finland), 4:1f • .O; .. Allllr• (Sl>llln), •:1'.'8; S. A<loton (Ivory ~11), •:20.11. ~ K·2
(ltace I) I.France, 3:AUI; 2. ltomanla,
3;A l.°'; a., hltl\M'n, 3:52.201 •· China, 3:SU2; CJlece 2) t. SNln, 3~1.20; ~ Norwl'lr
3'.A3.t1; 3. New 1111'alld, 3:As.t7; t Jeoan.
•:OO.o2.
K•4
(llace ll 1. Clllldl, 1:16.52; 2. Swll1er·
land, 3:17.70; r. Norway, >:11 .. 0ot; •· Unltld
Stetn (ltlUnttltm, GRman. SCl'lnur· rtnblrttr, Sl>llllut), 3:1'.72; 5. Hone Kone,
3:'6.'2; (!lac. 2) 1. Gr111 lrllaln, 3:1U7; 2.
SPlln, 3:2U713. FlnfallCI, J:2U7; .. lttlY, did
not flnl1h.
'-i-
/)
TNm handbl.I
Cat Cal s ... ''*'°""> WOMIN Clllne 21. Auatrla 16
Y ugo11avl1 2t, Soutll Koree 23
Witt Germeny lt. Untied Slates 11
. ,leld ..bocllev
<at Int Lit Metlltl MllN
Pakistan 0, Grut lrllaln 0
New Z~ 2, Ctntdl 2 Hollalld 3, Kenya O WOMIN Au1tralla 3, Unltld St1t1t 1
Canadl 2. Holland 2
'-Cl .~.
/)
flendnl
(at&Aftl ... dl)
WOMaWS T~AM FOfL
(l.eWICllN .. )
llmlllMI• Romania def. France, 7·1.
W11t Gtrmanv def. lletv, l·I.
.,...Medal
France def. llalv, T·t.
OeN Midi!
West Germany def. llom.nle, S·t. """Place Chine def. Ul\lllcl SltlM (Vincent Ired·
lord, San Antonio, TuH; Sharon
MonP4alw, Wood$1dt, N.Y.; Sunn a.d·
din, ... vtrton. Ort.; OW• WtPllS.
auvwton. Ore.>. 5·f.
'°°"' Wl\lfl!lllt DIVING
(It UIC) I
•:30~6:30 P.m. -Men'• 10rt11tb0erd fine It
aQUllTIUAN
( •• Arcatll)
2•6 1>.m. -T"m dr" .. "! flr11 d•Y
P•NCING
<•t....,. ... di) f 1.m. ·• 1.m. -Mtn'• 1 .. m 11br1 ortllma.
2:30-S P.M. -Mtn'a lndMcNll ION
ortllma.
I· 11 p.m. -Men'• tndM<IUal IHI
fln111.
HANCllALL
(It Cll lfllt9 "Ulltmfl)
II 1.m.-(mtn) Swltlll'ltlld va. IM'tll
t2:JO p.m.-<men> Yueo11111t1 .,,
llomanla
I 1>.m.-<menl Dllllnlrk v1. W1tt Olrm.nv
UO o.m.-<men> Jeoan va. Altltl• I o.m.-(men) Swldtft va. SHln
9:30 p,m,-(mtn) Unltld St1111 "'·
Kor11
fll•LD HOCKIY
C1tl11t ..... ~)
7 o.m. -Ninth Place wmltln11 tame
' J.m. -Nlntl\ •l•ct MmlflMI """
JUDO
(atCll S ... LAJ •·I J.m. -Ml<ldi.w•lot1t1 socc•• <•• PatNena) 6 P.m. -Stm"lnal l'llltdl <France v1.
Yutoalavlal
1.30 o.m. -Semlflnal matc:ll <arern "'· 1t11Y>
T•NMll
(at UCLA>
t e.m.·5:30 11.m. -16 matdlll
TRACK AND flllLD
(It LA c.llMum)
9:30 un.• I it.m. -Decathlon event1,
men't dllcua CNatltvlne,-women't 200 Md)rMI
f'9l,Uld, women's l.500 first round.
4·1:.30 -Dlcttl'llOn "''"''· men'• 200 Mmlflnal1, POii vault flnal, women'• 400
meter hurdle 'flnal, man'• 400 mettr flnal, men's 5,000 !Miii' ffrtl round, woman'• lone
lumo GUallfvlne, men'• 200 metar n1111. women's 3,000 meter·Mmlflnal. 3,000 meter
ateeolldll11 11mttlna1.
anortlCI event1
VOLLEYIALL
Min
Cat Llftt ... di)
9 e.m. -Fifth olaca Mmlflnal
11 a.m. -Fifth Place semlflnal
1 o.m. -Etmtl va. T1111l1la 6:.30 -Cllamolon&tllo 11mlflnat
1:30 -ClltmlllonahlP aamlflnal
W•IGHTUFTING
(at LIV ... ·Mlrvmeunt, Wfttdllafw)
6·1 o.m. -Supeffllav'(Wlfgl'tts .
WltlSTLING
(It Alllltlllm)
Noon·3 o.m. -Fr ... tylt oretlms and
11mlfln•I• Jn acme welthl
ClaHH
6·1;JO o.m. -FrMStvl• orlllms and
Ttmls
(It UCL.A) ,,,,..,. ,lrst lleund
Jlmmv Ari•• (U.S.) c:i.t. Jelme l11ga
(Peru), 6·1, 6·4; Paolo Cine (ll1M Olf. Pal
CUl't (Austrella), 6·3. 7·6; Emilio Sanchlt
(SNln) dlf. Mlclllll Fiorini (llaM ...... 6·1;
JakoO Hleaek <Swllzerland) def. l..olc
Courteau (FrtllCI), 6·0, 4·6, 6•4.
Wamen't '"'t lllUlld R•n•I• Sasak <Yuooslnlal def. L.aure
Arrt'/I (Peru), 1·6, 6-1, 6·1.
EQUeStrllin
(It S... Afttl9) TIAMJ~NG
1. UnlllCI Slatn (Joe Fargl1, Pettraburg,
Ve.; l.ealfl Burr, WntPOl"I, Conn.; Conrad
Homf.id. Petenburt, V1.; Mtllnlt Smith,
L.ltctlfl.id, Conn.), 12.00 P0tnt1; 2. Great
Britain, 36.75; 1 West Gtrmany, 3U5; ..
Cenadl, .0.00; 5. Swttaerland, 41.00; 6.
France. •t.7S; 1. Speln, 52.00, I. llety. 75.25; • t. Auatralla, '2.00; 10. lrezll, ll3.50; 11.
J1oan, 137.25; 12. Mexico. rttlred from
COmPtllllon.
·SMYTH CLOSING IN ON SILVE~ MEDAL •.• ~mDl
didn't want to dogfi&ht so we stayed
~ere." I Haines and teammates Ed
'f'rc\'.Clyan and Rod Davis, who vew
up sailing toaether in San D1eao,
made the 1980 U.S. team that
boycotted the Olympics in Moscow. l In the Flying Dutchman class,
American Jonathan McKee and Can-
ada's Terry Mcl..auahlin will battle
for the gold medal today. Mcl..aul.hlin
took a first Tuesday for 8. 7 net points.
~
McKee, who needed to finish first
Tuesday to clinch the aold, was founh
and is now in second place.
Bill Buchan of the U.S. placed first
in the Star class and moved up from
fo"nh to first in the overall ttandinas
but. boats from Sweden, West Ger-
many, Italy, and the Netherlands
remain in contention for medals
aoina into the final race.
Tbe top three boau aoina into the
last race of the Finn class are only four
points apart. American John
Bertrand is the leader, followed by
New Zealand's Russell Coutts and
Canada•s Ter:ry Neilson.
Stephen Van Den Berg of the
Netherlands took over the lead in the
Wind&lider class after finishing sec·
ond in Tuesday's race. Scott Steele of
the United States dropped from first
to second with a ninth place finish Tuesday. New Zealand's Bruce Kim-
ball was in third place overall.
Protests were pendina in each of the
seven classes. )
Gable asked TUCKER ·s COLUMN •••
to resign l'romDl
infactquitealotofrexas-and ''No,"hesays."W~reditferent
Introduced metto a lot ofimportant types, obviously. Dickerson relies on
pcoplc1" Crutch says. ''He thou&ht I his quickness and speed. I just use my
would oe there with him this season." lqs because they are my triu tassel
Wishful thinkina. perhaps. Earl and make me a Strol'll inside runner.
1o1rn1 n~w• nt •111
YACHT:ING
(If '--a.cal i:JiH:M .. m. -'""'alW
MYtft CltlMI
ThUnday
A•CHlllY
(It Wiit a..ci.1
10 • m.·1 •.m. -W°"*''• rom end tOm, 1'11111'• ~ •l'ld 1'0m
tJ0-1:11 •.rn. -'N8"Wn'• 1om •!!Cl
.-,,,, ~·· '°"8 IM ,_, • IAll<STaA'-"
(et .. """"* ......,..., 10 •'"· -1111\ J11C11 ~ (,rranc. v& 11~0.
Noon -Nlntll IMICI 11118" llr11JI ..... China>.
7 I.I'll. -Tlllrd OllCI final
aoxtNG
(II LA...,,. Anftl)
1 t e.m.•2 p.m. -Stmlflna11 •·t P.m. -1tmlf1na11
CANOliNO
( ., "tllfVf•)
7:30-lo:lO a.m -~·· 1,000m 11mlllnal• end women'• 500l'!I
Mmlflntll
DlVINO
(at US()'
10 a.m.·noon -Women•a ialltform Df'lllmlntrlll
•:30·6.lO It m. -Women•• tlatform
i>reltmtnarla•
IQUHTltlAN
(It Ara•> 2•6 lt.m. -TMM ClfllHtl
f'INCING
CatUfle ... di) Noon·• 11.m. -Mln'1 111m .. l>fl
oretlma; men'• teem Hiit• nna••
I· 11 1.m. -Mtn'a tttm Mllr• Prlllmt i men'• t11m llbra flnalt
fll&1.D HOC.KIY
(tt laat L" A'*'"> 1·11:15 1.m. -Two · men't
aemfflnal o•m•• 1:15·6:15 p.m. -One women'&
round·rOC>ln oame end one men••
umlfln11 oame
GYMNAITfCS
(It UCLA)
6:.30-10-.30 o.m. -women•a rvthmk or.tlmlnarl11
HAHDBALL
<•t Cll St9tl '""'*> 6:30 P.m.-(Womtn) Unllld $11111 \II,
Aus tr It
I o.m.-(women> Kor.. "'· w111 Gtrmanv
9'.30 o.m.-<women) Yuoo111vl1 "' Clllna
JUDO
(It Cll St9tl LA) •·I o.m. -Half '*"~°"" SYNCHRONIZ•D SWIMMING
. 11t USC) • -1:30--2:20 v.m. -:"Flnals, <luet routine
T•NNIS .
(If UCL.A) t e.m.·6:30 p.m. -Eltllt matdlll
TRACK AND flllLO
(et LA Ceblum)
f:30 1.m. ·I p.m. -*°"4 elev Of
Otcathlon, women'• lon9 lumo fl1'191, flnt
round of JOO-met• 11un1i... womtn'• ll'9tl fump ou111tvtne. women'• 200 Mmlflnal, flfll
round ot "*''' 1,500, women'• 1,500 wmlflntl, worntn1t 200 flnal, S,000 semtflnal
WAT•R~LO
(It PIU ir••• MlllllU) 1:30 1.m.-Unltad States vt. Wnl
Gtrmany
10 1.m.---clllna 11$. 6raall
1:.30 o.m.-Au1tralla vs. Holland
3 p.m.-<allldl vs. J11>1n
7:30 o.m.-llatv on. Gl'MQI
t P.m.-YUllOS!avla "'· Sl>lln WRESTLING
(It AftlMtm)
Noon·l o.m. -Frff\IVll i>rellms 11\d Hmlllnala
6·1:30 o.m. -Fr .. stvll or Ima and flnall •
• '"'" I\
W.._lfflln9
(II L ..... •MIN'"*"") HIAVVWllGHT1
1. Norberto Otllrtiuroer. llalv. 159
:x>Undl; 2. Stefan Tunadl, Romanle. 137; 3. ~uy C1rtton, Colorado Sl>rt1191, COio., 131,
t. Frenk S.11>111, W11t Gtrmany, 909; 5.
t.111«1 SClulras, C.nadl. ICM; 6. Goren Pelleruon, Sweden. 7'3; 7 Rldlaro Eaton.
Sloekton, n6.
Judo
(et Cll s ... Lit Metllt)
HALll-MlDDLIWltGHTS GM..,
Frenk Wl-'te, Weal Germany Olf Nell
Adema, Bl'Heln
ar.ue Madll Mlcflell Nowak, France 6lf L.11etk
MlrcM Fratlca. Romanle def. Tekano
NOTE: l ron11 mldtll Wtl'I IWtrdlcl to
Nowek and FratfCI.
LOS ANGELES -Dan Oable,
coach of tbe U.S. Olympic wrestlina
team has been iskcd to reti&n after
the Games by Steve Combs, . e"·
ecutivc director o! USA Wra~
the Los An&eles Times reported
tOday.
Campbcllisthe Houston otrenseand .. He will do bis thinaandJ will do
M-doetnottttthetmU(hR&t mino:· --,!,I• "Thatcowdha~beenaburdcnon In short, thoup, 0\\-..ync I .. _.,
me," Crutch aays. ·1 mea~ beina Crutchfield docs not consider himself
known aa the second Ea.rt umpbcU a caddy for Eric Oidenon. t t said Gable would not confirm be and bcinaeitpectcd to ntni1uce like r. c h 1 had been aake'd to resian. but q_uote'd Earl and live likeEarl.r.·-"Like lsaid bc1ore," natc says~·· · "I .•--:--1 by the · am not tikinaanythinaaawayftom h.lm as sa)'Jn&. wau ... .,._ Liviqhkc Earl·miJhtnotbelll Dickerson. Heisasupcr· upcrback.
n11tincS1 of the letter." thlt uopleasanL Remember th eom· But 1 am here to play and I can act tho
The COntroversy stems &om mercial with Earl on the beach ,. ob done en my own way. I'm not a
f r 1tudyinabikinis? Gable's testimony on behal o Randy .. Yeah.'' Crutch SIVll .. It in ?'inter but I can lftl you 30 or 40 LcWis. the team member at 136.5 · ~.. yard.sand that'swnas rm her for:· ~unds'. it an arbitration he.arina c:omphmentto be compared to a at\~• match qainst 1.0e Roy Smith superbacklikeCampbcllbutl would lnothcrwords.efthewortdcom
ott-tkOl mp' trial-. ratherbcmyownman.lcanbca.. tofofll'tEarlCam ~l:..:l•~n::d.:Eri:.;.;':..:.c....___~IGMi... -~·-------."'""...-..=n::ctnaq oo .......... ___ -1rll('l~tmr,~it. .
Lewis won th arbitration and tisnotliktlyCrutchficldv.allbc .. \'cab."sa) Cnnch.. mcth
knocked mithoffthetcam. com~toD1 rrsonhcrt. likttha ••
•
1 DAIE.V PIL-OTi/WMnelCNy. -
UnllMSt11• Ired
KOf'll
Arttnl!N TU1'1tllt
JIN!I
Cl~
1111\'
ClllN
ltvPI
SROUPe
:
,.,.
)>'-
w ..
J I
) ' > 1 l 3 .
0 •
> I > I
i I
-1 J
0 •
WOM•ws 8ASKITBALL U.S. IS, s.uth K.,... SS
Cat ... ftwum>
GOLD MIDAL
"' • 4 4 t 0
4 ' • • t c
UNIT8D STATll -lldw1rd1 M H 2, Hlllrv 2-3 O·O 4, Woodard l·f .., 1,
Doftovan 3·7 0-0 6, loawtll 2·) H •· Mllllr 7·10 2•J 16, lAWrlllCI 6·11 2-2 14, HOOll
3-S •·S 10, N\IJlllrt 2·4 2·2 4, Curry 2·5 2·2 6, McGM 2•7 2-2 6, Manktn·Sdlll.ldl 2•2
O•O .. Toftll: 35-61 15-1' 15
IOUT'4 KORaA -A Chol 9-lS M 20, E. Kirn 0-.l H 0, Lee 2-• 2·2 6. K. CllOI l·I 0-0 O, LAI 0-1 0-0 0, Moon 0-0 H O, H. Kim
HJ 3·5 15, Jaont 0-2 CH 0, Y. Kim 0-1 0-0
0, Sune 5-10 H 11, C. Park HO H 3
Totall: D-51 Ml SS. Htlftl~nltld Slalft 4 . South Koree V . Fouled out-Hone. ftlbound.....Unlt.O
Stetn ..._ (Uwrtncl 12), Soum·Kor .. 20
{SI.lot J> • .t.Mll~ hPll 2r CM1llir' s; Sou.th l(qr• 1' U.• 6) Total foul~nlled Stalll l2, SOlitll Kof'ee tt
lllOMU MIDAL
Cl\lna 63, Cina.di S7,
,RIDAY'S SC.H~DULE
Arc:IMrt
, (at Uftl lead!)
10 a.m. • 12:.45 o.m. -Women's 70m •nd
IMn'I tom
2J0-5 o.m. -Women'• 60m eoct men'1
70m
<•t .. ''"""· .,.•IN> 10 a.m.·l:30 o.m. -Two men•a final
oamea, Stfl through Ith ollcas
7•1:0 P ITI. -Mltl't cf'tamolonll!IP M.ITle CUllfnt
('It Ventura)
· 1·10-301.m -Mttl's and women·1 SOOtn
nnall
DMfte
(•t ute> ·~ p.m.-~· 111•u.rrri flfle•• EQUfttNn
(at ArcMle)
2·S om. -Individual dresMtl competi-
tion Fenclnt
(et'&Aftl a.di)
10 LIT\. ·4 o.m. -MllA'• -or~lmlnarlH
. '"'d Hedrl't
(It lad .... ANlitt)
I· 11-15 a.m -MMl'I Mtn1 lo declOI
11111 alld 12111 l>laee, women'• round·roOln
1.15-6:15 o.m -lfwo men'• Mmes to
OKIOI 7th lllrouth 10th ollcas, women•1
round-robin game GvmMlfta
Cat UCL.A)
6:30-10:30 o.m. -Women'• rv111m1c
Pfellmlnart11 H• ....
(at Cll Stafll ft ....... )
11 a.m.·2 o.m. -MM!'• fl118J$, 9111 tllroutll 1211'1 o4ICes
6:30-9'!30 p,m -~ final$, Sth
llln>UClll Ith PllCI$ Judo
(et Cit Stafll I.A)
4·1 o.m. -HMVVWtlohtl Soccw
(et Pa .. -.)
7·10 o.m -Final matc:l'l ~ oec:IOe 3rd '"° 411'1 Places Tennis
(If UCLA)
9 1.m.-S:lO o.m -Four a.mlfinal
melchas Trade end F1eld
(et I.AC.._)
I 1.m.· 12.30 o.rn. Ind 4·7:415 o.m. -15
1\191111. lnctUdlno fln flntts Ill flnt ""'°" Vllew.I
(et a... leedl)
6:JC>-I0:30 o.m. -Two men's flnll
met~ 10 dKlc» 5tfl ttvouen Ith DlaC9
Eqµe t
,gOldmedal
for U.S.
AJlCADJA (AP) -Tbe Uaiied
Cllft hU ~ iiD ......... Ol~Jric eq'*"1&D lam ~
Jumptn1 aoJd medal iJl • C"Om~
marted b) m)'l!erlou1 breW :,f!: cathcr tiflb of OM of lbe I
hortet. Oftidal1 of the Italian acam lhat CIUed to win a med&J -.id ~Y
there ~-m ~ "''"' .. m·
1tanc:a"' abou\ a do\l'ble-brcat IA the
llnb. FormctOJym~ and wodd cham· pion Ra1mondO D'lnzeo, who now
uains the Italian riders. Mid at .u
"very JU'IDIC" that a brand ntW
leathefi P~POO M0)1CJ'IOnl'I
Brilish-ttained hone Adam :ll -broke
10 two plaee1 in I.he fim of the ~wo beau, c.ausiq Moycrsoen to be
eliminated.
The hone and rider were not
injW'td 11 a rtiult of lhe 1ncldent,
Italian otficW1 Aid.
An inspection.of me Jinh showed
two clean breaks on the suap wnh a scra~ maJk ruMina bonzonWl~ straiaht across the 1leathct cltarly
vi1ible whe~ the lltaP broke. But D'lnuo wd hC "-'OUld not protest or demand an anvenption o!
the incident.
The United Sta to ~ the
Olympic championship ~ v:i.!'ue of
faultless rides by ;Joe F&IJIS1 ~«ind Homfeld and Mdan1e Smtih on
·Tuesday. The America.o team, rounded out
by Leslie Burr, eolleaed ouly 12 ~Ult .
poinu. Brita.in took the ailver with 36.7S
points, and West Germany won tbe
bronze with 39.2S points. ' Canada finilhed fou.nh; miuiq
out on a medaJ by th.rec~uanen of a
point. Switzerland wu fifth.
After the four riders from each of
the l S countries c.ompkted thtit ft.rsl·
roUnd rideS, the American1 held a
eommandina 16--point lead ovet
West GenriaDy. commmina one Ault
while the West Germam bad five.
F~~ 3.S JOt the Americans oft' to
a tnedal·wtonina a;i:an J:iY 1ni'iQI Touch of a.ass around tbe IUD·
drenched, l .S-obsiacle coune without
a fault in l:S2.94.
Bwr. 27, of Westp0rt,.COnn... on
Albany had one rail down in the fint
round and two io the iecond while
completina the course 10 l:•O 22.
Each knockdown counu four points.
The ride of Homfeld. 32. and hi
mount Abdullah -two faulu and a
l:S2.31 clocking-was eliminated by
the American team wben Smith. 34.
of Litchfield, Conn., went clean for
the tint round on Calypso in I :S0.68.
She skipped the second round after
the gold wa.s assured to save her ho~
for the individual competition
IJnorina the public address an.
nouncer"s pleas for quiet, the capaal)
crowd of almost 30.000 at Santa Anita
race track roared when competitors.
particularly the Americans, com-
pleted a difficult set of jumps.
T cam manaacn bave been cntic:al of crO'Wd.s at 01)-mpic equestrian
events for their loud rcacuons in a
sport where murmurs of aPl>J'OVal -
and polite applause usually suffice.
VOLLEYBALL·
FromDl
I.axed. The first game took a lot out of
us but we we~ worlcina bard to the
end. Sometimes. like tonight. the first
pme determines a match. .. M> emotions right now are of
happiness. This is history for us. The U.S. has never won a medal 10
volleyball. h's great to win that first
one," said Magers.
"I don't rcafiy feel like the team is
brcak:ing up." Ao Hyman said. "We
wish each other well but there arc
those of us who plan to work. We arc
a very close team and we all love each
other.
••1t•s always been my goal to ao out
m style. I think rm very complete
with myself. rm looking forward very
much to my future. In taJana the silv~r medal, we are very proud ...
Hyman says she will continue to contribute to volleyball by helping
others for the next year or so and
Green has wd she would like to help
train a setter as her replacement.
Landreaux hits ·one
they can't catch
ATLANTA (~Pl -Ken Land-
rcaux finally hit one where nobod>
could catch it.
The Los A~clcs center fielder had
been complaining about ma.kl~ ,.ood
contact but bittina the bell rifnt at
somebody. But wtth two outs m the
top of the mnth inruna and Atlanta's
Pascual Pet'C7 wor~OJ on a two-htt
shutout Tuesday ni&ht. Landrcaux
hit his seventh home.run of the season
to tic the game at 1-1.
The Dod&crs won 2-l on Steve
Y eqcr•s RBl sinaJe 10 the 11th.
"The fll'Sl pitch be threw me; he was
U')'ina to ta> •~"&>"T like be bad pitched to me the. v.bole pme."
Landreauit said, "Then he threw mca
lider on the anner half of the plate.
"I bad bttn makina &ood contact all the time," said Landrcaux, "'but I
t
I
l
•
•
•
•
HARBOR LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Monuary • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 G!sler Ave.
Costa Mesa
540-555'4
ptfRCE BROTHERS
HLL aftOADWAY
MOOITUAJIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
<
PUBLIC NOTICE
'tcT1TIOUI ......... N ..... STATl"mNT
The folkRmg per90l'I 1M
doing buelnne .. :
LEADED VISIONS CUS-
TOM STAINED GLASS
WORKS, 515'Ao PolnMtlMi,
CorOtl• de! Mw, c.111. 12'25
Thomu CllftOtl SM!ton,
5151'1 PolnMttla, Coron. HI
M.,, c.Hf. 12625
Thia bulllneN I• ton·
ducted by: at! lndfvldulll
ThOmu C. SM!lon
T,_~ -fled tM County a.. ol OJ. :C County on .,,._ '21, ,,_,
Putllllhed 0rat'IQ9 Coal lilly Pllol July 11, 25,
ugut1 1. 1. 111'
W·1111
IHlltlEI
Lovely large and spacious family
home. Remodeled with all new
kitchen, built in w~t bar in sunny
family room. 3 large bedrooms, spa
in patio. Outstanding assumeable
financing on fee land.
tN NEWPORT CENTER
6449060
BAL T2 BERGERON
SMITH & TUTHIU
WE8TCLtFF CHAPEL
437 E.. 17th St.
Marvelous 6 Br bayfront 78' on bay, pool,
spa. 100' boat space. Xlnt Fin. $4.850,000.
Costa MM&
s-46-9371 Pl6UC NOTtCE Channing Spanish 3 Br 2 Ba on 45' lot. lrg
FICTITIOUllM*NEll deck, courtyard, pier & slip. ll,100.000.
N.U.ITATtMl!:NT PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetary • Mortuary
Chapel • Cremalory
The following perton 11 Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom, fireplace, cl~ 'T:eTEA~~/ALONG beam ceilings. Xlnt financing. $420.000.
THE ORANGE COAST,
23582 LO<lh Lom ond, l&Yll9' lllYl llYflllT Olllt 3500 Pacific View Dfl\'e
Newport Beach
644-2700
i...aun1 Niguel, Cdf. i2ll77 Jetty & ..Bay view, newly d~rated Mai Auti.n. M. Worthlng1on, 23582 Loch Lo mond , Kai , 2 Br. 2 Ba."40' patio. Now $645,000.
Lagun1 Niguel. Callf. 92877
fhl1 bu1ln111 11 con-PElllSIU IHI ICUlflllT
McMORMICK
MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon
Road
ducted by: an lndMdu.i Ocean & Jetty views, marine room. 4 Br.
BYt1en9 M Worthlligton Ba m. 1111em<tnt w .. flied 3 . 3700 sq. fl .• car parking. Sl,285,000.
Laguna beach. Ca
92651
494-94 15
wtlh the Count) Cletll ot Or-= eoun1y "" Juty 1J. UYSllE PUOE UYFlllT
F250m Spectacular bayfront dplx. 2 Br. 2 Ba up,
Publl.rted Or.oge COU1 2 Br. 2 Ba down. 2 boat spaces. $1 .250.000.
c Dilly P!lo1 July 18, 25, A~t I, 8, 1118' Wiii IUOI llLLSlll
W·112
DIMES
A-
LINE
WANT ADS
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES
s.J1 your ltetM for $50 or lea In
fHJf lamoua DIMES-A-LINES pub-.,,_, MCh S•turd•y Jn tM Dally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE •d• mu•t be ,,,_..p_ald eo meJI or bt'lng them Into
,,,. o.Jty PHot -· S. wre to ~ ~' phOM number or •d-
-In your Ml, h•ve • pr/co on #Cl'I tMm & no •bbtwvl•tlon•.
aotrf, no"""""""'"""' g_,.
-,,,_ p/Mlto 0< onlm.i. ---·
I •
DEADLINE:
I p.m. TIKndey
COeta ..... Ofllce ...... .., ..... ,
L CL t:19211_
,. --.
Panoramic ocean & city vlew. 5 Br 3 Ba,
spacious entertaining home. $1 ,100,000.
let Us Help 'I ou
Sell 'I 01r Propertyl
TM Daily Plot otttfl you this e11ct size ad
on Ol.I' "l'ictll't Pa1e" weNends for just
'25 per day, or 2 dayS for 145.
Subnlt I pt<ll#t, ,. wt'I pllolOIJlflh II IOf
you at a ~ CharJt.
My 11..-no OOl'wl I C:l ts
~ "'9 lll""""lt llW WI+. IO
~ ""'-"--'"'° ~-----~!Of IWO 10 HIWI • l'lf --I ACT~A Y I ' I I I I 1 0
' "''•I' '"'~~" ' . •s •
~--v ~. i•yO r I 'I •
' t' •• Id~
llllAl·Lmlot ......
• •
-, ............
tr,J'l'l'I
I
-...
..
~Macnab·lrvme
PlltlWllO YIEW
UIOUllEITI
Unique cu1tom home with
1pect•c:ul•r un •
ob9tructed ocean view.
Spac:lou9 4 Bdrm or In·
11w QUWt•• with MPW· ate entrance, remlty
room. 3 Jlreplaou and In-
door pool. S4t7,500.
Owner wilt con1lder
!MM/option, Call Sally
Shipley or Joyo. Dabolt.
GE 159.9100 -------
l
•
I
•
-·
'
·642-5678
' •
J
Aattpn t=,=~d= D1t lnlaiat "'s.•e~.lm~.~1or--•'""XA.-..tiQ-uee--1 e>oora-.tc ~Ho Mwy oooaf 116'.i15
& Paint1ngt. Publle whole t tt (GROOMING SCHOOq
aa1e prie.. 873-9235 n er • r..enar. 21 Y"'9 aq:i --------oriVfteya, patios, patha, 548-2&41
Art• I Cra klca ::U~J>~ ~-Dtlltltic iadn
arm:. C $. eoneme driveway '"'• extcUflV~tstlCS Ad1, ate. ConetptlOn to walk•. ttucc:o& brtCk. Hm Reduced,.., CUltom par-
Compte\lon • 831-8092 repair. FrM•t 7st:1229 IOl'lnalMMcaa855-720I
Tll1lrff1S.111
t..ewn-thNb-t~
Tr• trimming & Removal,
Rototilllng-Lawn rnaAnt.
F,..Mt. ~5
...... ,.... •• .,__...,.,,___. .... c+ .. ..
DOI 11080 RewXRb Loai e.auty ._. ... .--.--..-..-.-. p y ... •mm 111 • NftPOrt Shoree. OCNno-Hta: 1ba. -M/_F_2_S.._35_"Pf_of_HB __ pvt ~ .. PUf'M conta.inlng 3 •l&llmun 1111-11n--Part-t..-f'IT ,. ....... ....,
1 mite to bNch frpt end View 2 BA, 2 ea. frplc, 2 secJQ/rno. No pett: Poof. eomm. 2 ~to betl. P,_g, d•Miood nnoa 6 • ft: •........., · PL ..... ....._ Cllk In .._ ,._,.
IPllTIUTI gar., d/W, b1t'..ina.' 81Nt :~~·1~75. &42·7851 3Br 3Be. trp1e, Jae, poo1, =·~~~ie~t5185 c11ent•notnee.~be B~ec::.•::. = . 'ltyp1nt.a1_...
S.utllul gar<Mn 8'>1•. gar-:':'m· balcony, W11tet pd. or NU, ooeen vu, at beh, lg :::; ~2f 931 ~lful • ..,.. REWARD LOST .,.. -.per. Wiii ~employee ir.. =· ~ ' .,. .._. Gr..s LAU OiitOCIOl1ric; aga, pool, BBQ. No peta. ...so. 53&-38-49 aft 5pm Bay, OcMn l SUMeta, 3bf, 2ba, '**· gtl(, ldr,· • • ....,. • : ._.. • UlllTllT auranc:. c:tauna, mile. · 1• P9't Leb • ._ ......., ~ ·
1 Bdrm $5104520 I It U I I beautlfvlly fum!IMd by yrty S 1150. &42-2423 vtf Grey P«ll•n Cat. ¥IC. Richard ouea.tte Salon datleal du\'-~ Niie .ma . ._, ~ .,.. for P111-ame MMlme
2 8drm/18e S630 !!J!!1 I prof .. alonal dealgner. Wat....__. 2Br 1n. "'"'d lntals Waat .. not Hloh ~°'9~ !_!-9ceeta. Lag. 200 Newport c.ntar 0r: omc. eXl)«.:.nc.. Wit omc.. &46-2411 ourdlMlnl a' .....,,tut,.
301 Avoeado &42-9850 11800. mo. 873-0896 .... ""'.. -·-• BCh ... --NB train kW poalUOn. Cell DENTAL AECEPTIOHIST ' . ~182
241 W. Wllaon 831.oteO Cleen ~ 2Br 1Ba. =~~1l::f: 1150 yrtY Wll'fD -.&TILT . . 831-49<11 l-6PM ANO ASSISTANT
Ht. luc~ 274 ~. gar, w/d. Xlnt loe 3 Bedroom Home for Ex· .-.tt91rta c o N s TA u c T to N • Ea~len.c. necnaary. _..._
S800 LM. 876-4912 Agt t• IUllYI m ecutlw Family of 3 Lo-s ....-1;n.-purchallng ag1r1t and or l-ouna ... 710-4275 "°"' -
poot, ..,.,:, c:"ec rm, 1 y; IN NEWPORT BEACH Gated Vlllege, ~luxury. c.t~ ahquld be wtthln • f OlJND AD PIT 1>20/Vdc •t *=' building auperlntendant. Biii: ::-~ ::::=, .._ $"*"
INM. S tOSO mo. plua A or•t ~to 11ve on the 3 Br 2 ~ 8 • Condo. 10 mite r81d!ua of Coeta a.eh law office. -.,1 a-nae.'° wcwtdor lrg aee. dep. Avall , Sept. 1, Upper Bay. Private Elegant IMna By At>$)t. Meu. P.-.onaland Benk AR£ fREf· enc•• required. Call apt buJlder good 181 + llllPlll•D
eall 53e-8093 elubhou•H & hHlth Only. 831-54!9 refer~ upon~ 41e-101e ~ m.a ap & ~ eapa11enced, llll'm
.,,..,...,,--..,........,,---apa, 8 tennis eourts, 7 ) 'f cafJ (714) &42..t321 and c n raaurna top 0 Boa 7892 W9r'm, ""°"' oflce poa.-Elcper. t I ' ,._,In se50/mo 2 8d 2ba apt. pools. cioM to bualneN, .... tf leave datatts With U.. 3 : BOOKKEEPER/SECT'Y. NB928e0 ltionforgenaralprectlea. pweGft. 10-2 M-F. T1w
Ind gar, y8fd, patio. New-OC Airport. Faahlon Gray. On Weakandl. Call t•Z·llll 1n Lag Bd'I CPA firm Sal South~ 151-1442 a..:tt..,..., 11' 8'alpJ
port Beadl Raelty 875-Island. eonvanlent ~ 650-2055, Room 8 comm w/-.per 497-6saa CONSTRUCTION EurelH tnatuetor• Holowl.n. LAll'Nee.:ft
1&42 dyt 980-4614..,. on light. r-r. gar $850. 225 la (TO S1~ MONTHLY). Builder/da¥atoper Maki Fr~~:=--S t2.50/hr wlll traln.'~HOMl.,..-.------
$950 4 Br 1'Aba townhome a oma consultant to ..mt with 181 1016 ~ mna
w/raerm. W/dllkkp,erpt. Sing.lea 1 & 2 Bdrm Apart-w.,,ted-1 BR apt yrly planning and axpanaion 0. (.JlflHM) ,....,. tor .-or\ hcMt Ail..,.
Prtv ptl w/eh11d p&ay er• men ta & T ownhouMa FURNISHED or Belboe IMlnd LC>CM ref-FOUND Blk eat big yellow 780-1388 Denner tot 1 1*W 4 ot s • Elcper pref Pie. up •
pool.b-bell.CIOMtOall from seao (Ask •bout UNFURNISHED Femai: Newport s,... etane.s873-7"4 ey9S Whtapotonneiek& CA~ETAKER/YAROa.cGR. 1meu..-lnpvth0me. WlllBI p11c..l 1mSoulhC.O.. TS~9~5:N~::,.T ~~~~=·&T.:'.:. End g111, pool, nr ~ Qu_,..t.c c:healtc5-t700 r.ap ~ .,.,..., cont =n~~aO::•:. <>:.,.~:'..:= ttwf~ ~ ~
642·1003 mustberen1edforlhott HEALTH $400.Aftteell850-5"45' a..t ltlt fOUND 81 l:&b mix. mOliOr hOma ~ Ms-6000'~3-4~ lag9. -~~ eoe.,_-. _______ ,.
term or longer). On Jam.-CLUBS TENNIS Furn ea.ta M... home 10X30" garage 175/mo mate Vic Central Pat1t, •tortlQ• Ywd -Community ColleQM, -WITll
EJccal 3 BR 2ba, gar, frplc, borea Rd et San Joaqu n SWIMMING plu) $255 mo c.it CMuttet 20x30• garage $150/mo H.B .. 842,7040 llUSIU EP 1370 ~ A"' C.M. -
patio, no pet• $725/mo Hiiia Rd, much more' Sorn. 4, &45-2435 Storege onty 848-4152 FC>Uffd· Bl /white male k11, OAlllll Mon-Ff1 Ml time or pert 432-5007 EOE MFM .,_ ILll te0-3521 •. 4UI 1100 ., N time, San~ ahop. la 1nt~g tor Jr
SUWllD
••• no pets Model~ Room/ba $250/mo + 14 Completely enc:1 alngle c:ar ten. In M... orth ., ... Expar. tutl or part llmtl &e0-4312 or aso-1531 Fa.LJ1m NY Pro/.Jt Pwool.,. °"'*"
open daily 9 to 6 utll. Laguna Niguel. Fem. garage. Nr fairground• 546-8310 Cuhler/Recaptlon111 Piil/im-A pUcanta muat b~
VILUIE 2Br aipt & gar. $750/yrly.
New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury 113 112 29th St. No pe-tt. apta In 14 plane. 1 Bdrm. Reta raq. (213)433..()502
2 Bdrm and Townhom .. --.,.--,=-=-c-=~~~..,.. + poola, tennla, water-•BALBOA PENINSULA*
fall•. pond• Gu paid. 3Br 2Ba. ftreplaee. patio,
From San Diego Frwy garage. Vr1y $900 Pet
drtva North on 8eaeh to OK. 875-4912 Bier
d 495-5843att8:30pm $85/mo 751-3531 F~"ndLat""'whltarabblL wanted for F11shlon COUNTERHELP-SAN.D-,.._.._ If ..... _.,_... P ._.., .. or~anlnd · """ • ..-ltiand retaJI store. Must WlCH MAKER. pert tJma ..... .,...,.,un -•·-.... e ener..,... ... • l1ttl1)1!t!ls Bit Completely encl llngle ear Nr Santa Ana Country be avail for eve. & Wknd Af11*1 In per90n. Tummy wtth U'9 LOS A.NOEL.ES twd ~. •• ••
-arege $65. 399 W Bay Club., .. S48-5357 hra EOE &44-5070 · Stuffer. 270 So. Btiatol, TIMES ~door°: ~~ ~ Ap•rtmtnts MU 111 llTIL _,. it.. C.M. 850--8357 Found: Whitt dog With 1.0. CHART HOUSE RH· C.M. 751-35e7 . ~ ow .......... ....., nd ·-. ConlllCt Wkly rental• now av-. Newport a..c:ti Anlmel ........ newtpeper -__ , """'"'7· Ntwport Buch So. t1401Wk a up. Color TV, Double ear gartige In H.B Sheltet 644 ~ taurant In o.na Point HUYDY mft1 program. Guaranteed &!rt CampbeU. 1171 1700 16th St t phonee In room. Storage ooty. '85/mo . Meda permW*tt part-cie.n reQOfd, Bmg. M.V.R hOul1y -. s>M oom-~AO.. N.8 ree 2274 Newpoft Blvd.C.M. 7to-1713 or 857-tne Loat: 11418'4 Bk mate c.t. ume bookkeeper. FM reed out to Coeta Meaa mlaalon. 1-bn· 4pm to
MeFad<Mn and w .. t on $550/mo 1 8d apt. Encl
MeFaddel't to Seawlnd gar, etoM to beech, ntc.
(at Oovtr) 84-74-45 Ii It •·•· 4 Some whit• on pawa, appt call 493-1183 BluepMt, tpm. Training I• C.-.. eo Go.c...
642-511) ct a...-c::Met & noM Vic: Ca----ff90 Plec:entia. CM provided. Potwltlal 10 ~:• Ole Fed
Vlttege. (714)893-5198 qui.t loeatlon. Newport BtKh No.
880 Irvine Avenut
(at 16th)
645-1104
... ., 250 sF. tta w 16tfi st. nyonNl<:tort• CM c1er1c1typ1at PIT. Attar-· · ..,., S300 s>M per..... ACll '-Off ... ,,.,.... lntah 2111 CM S225-S275/mo. s.. REWARD 85()..8190 noona HB.,.. 647-35e3 llJITU.UlllTUT For an inwv..w. Clll. W1ltl. 0 I r..i Ad
Walk to bMctl bachelor 1480 .. onrovta
Stove, refrlg $425 Incl TIL IUIAIEmlT
•---at• Mgr. Ste Q 851-8928 LOST CAT male long hair Pediatric: Dental ome. 957..a3t1eKt,1204 Cell Nowt 142~ ~ RUii-E. ci /blue ..-kl lndlVtd Ual With
2 ' 3 Bdrma. '30041000 ~ Dal Mfto 2333 " ~~~ Old ~ •••••n p!Want frtenctty '*-. · ' . 1·1y Pilli' _· ·.·.,, ... ,,. .. .,. ··.:. Wkly on l off the beech t Hwy. aq • '· : knocks ofttn wtwl llONllltY ~ to team. -Pr1ma WMlta still avail. groaner.....,_ S250lm0 Rewwd Pt.calf 17~ u.. raaun~t1ng Oalty needa X-rey le AM for
Call today tor beat Mlec>-CALL &45-53e3 Lo•t·aprtnger apantal Pilot Ct-.ltled Ada to a.tsy, 541 5511
gu & water 53M&37 M2· 11U
tk>n mmm lllTIS llvet/wtltt•. Federal •t raac:h the ONnga Coat ---· UT NB REALTY 175-1&42 lrvlna ....._ answ r• CM·rewwd 650-5309 mar118C. _,.,_
SYDIEY _ou..
' ..,..,.... . Phone 642 5178 8uay N 8 . prac:tk:la ...U Mltift capt .. oonf. rm. utU pd, LOST: ~ loYed W•t -anttu6Mtle A.O.A. 40
lntab 2907 aecrataty earv. 2so...o2n Hlghtand whit• Tamar. ~~~~~~=~~hr~/wtt.~~13~1~_..~238~:::i:iiiiii:i; fetn, on mecheauon, muat ocEXAFRoAf N:WPOft .. IFFlll 11.111 c:oma home v1c:. 1rv1na
etaM A dean, quiet MSG-Orange County Airport (Rancho S•n Joaquin Clerks
$125017Maa. .,.., corner of Rahtl & ar .. ). Large r-award.
•................... tt Brlatol. Xlnt Vlalblllty. 78&-0745 or 898-3458 ... Only 2 euttea left. 1200
Tbarsday August t lbrt IHI aq. tt. & 1950 aq. ft Win Ptt ... all 12
ARW (March 21-April 19): Steps become clear. aoal IS within 38d tUm. POCtJae. 01A pa ~:. t~,~-=tlllW DMIT lYllUIU
si&ht and you'll know what to do to achieve it. Focu~ on revis.ina, lrvlne S295 up 851· R & H INVESTMENTS can Keith 494-7721
reviewing. rebuilding -career gets boost as puzzle p1ece~ fall into 1848'548-4741·Mlaacacty lll-1111 ESOlm/MllELI
place. Scorpio Taurus natives li~ure prominently. MIF, nllkr ahr IQ II• In
TAURUS .(A 'I 20-M 20. You recover from initial setback. CdM $370 + lut & $170 SUS.LEASE 1, 2 or 3 Outcalt ONLY 835-9199 • pn ~y . . . dapo Muat ... 7eo-eo43 apec:teeular ocean Vtew ••• what appears to be a loss will boomerang n~ your favor .. Open Imes of · offlc:ea. $400. par. of~ TOP ...
communication, read and write, communtcate and bnrtg long-ranae Male/Female to lhar• NB fleaHawport Faahlon F~ '(::3=8:d
oats into s1gtit. Gemini Virgo, Sagjttarius persons play key roles. home. S350/mo esey. Island. 8AO-<l755 ___ . ___ ,,,...,....,,-r
GEMlNI (May 21-iunc 20): Domestic adjustment is necessary. 842-48081873-17" ...... C-.ttd.al lelr Waal.. 9100
Di& deep. l'CjCCt uperfic1al explanations. You'll fr'~ access to "e~tra M:• rmm~ NB = Int.la n11 &IOllm• CUii
CIRCLE K·MARllnS
IOW HIRING
Interviews Fridays 9:00-11 :00
A.M. at 1390 North Pacific
Coast Hwy • Laguna Beach
(on PCH & Vielo)
111111111 Mlll-.t •••t•n
~'H' ~th·~ tel~pbo11~
aalff penoD for retail ad'f'Ulis
p room. penilory •
m •· Top dollar -a.-pJ
boa Send ~ to:
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
330 West Bav Strttt
Cos11 lea. C.~ 9Zo27 EOE information.'.' Focus on diplomacy. improve amtly relat1onsh1ps. An~,::.B!tt s~.:31 CMJNB 17th i Am N9wpOr1 Bwh Lawflrm Call (714) 494 9233 tot more into Money quc tion will be settled. Taurus. t1bra persons arc IJl picture. Newer 1000.2200 n need• ac:ct dark to .-11 C~~RU~~214uly2~~~~1~~~rcfuscwbc~~~r~~~ ~-~V~ ~~.~andh-~~~=========~~~~-··_·_·_·_··_·_··_··_·_··_·_··_·L;·_·_·_··_··_·_·_··_·_··_·_··_·_ int~. nap deci ions. T.imc 1~ on your side~ )'OU ean afford to pl~y &acfy, MOO. &45-W7 g llW•llT 111111 ~9 ~~ exp Mlpful.
w11tm1 pmc Pisces mdtv1dual docs care. will prove 1t and )OU 11 -----------
benefit as result Contract ofTcr could be a hiablight. MIF ahlA 2 8d 21>a IPt Ground Ftoor Sp•~ ASST MNGR WANTED LEO(Julyi3-.Au&-22):Timcforplayinuam~isovcr-actdo".Vfl NB '400~;;*., ok ~=:C~~~~~ ~:0 ,s::,:~ =
to serious work rcahLc you do have more rcpons1b1tity and potcnual 1ng seo.ooo In new Im-75'i1se1 for money and love has muluplicd. Focus on sencral health, MIF to w 3 Id. 1 8*' to provamental Available --------
cmplo"mcnt dependents and contact with those who hue )Our beh.$2751tt. t&$130 lmmadtattly. Ttm htt•ttlYtOaMtf 1 d • 1 depoalt . ....,200 Sloat/Exelutlve Agent . Full tima c;.aaNer, recap. concern~. 1 a '· . , 8u9iMat PropettlM Bto-ooni.t needed lmmedl, VIRGO (Aug: 23 pt. 22): Reach beyond currt~t ~~pcctataons. N&-~k tr 8ch-41at '315 ltarage~ Company 11.iy ~"'parson at
Chance for UC'CCSS have increased -: focus on ~t1v1ty, roman«. = ';:t~ =~,~W1 714-752-t011 C4at• M ... M•tau~.
variety, travel and fame. You'll fimsh ampon.ant project. AnC$, L1bra . PRIME LOCATION ""°" 2133 Harbor BMI. s..
natives tiaurc in cxctt1n1 scenano. Road block to progr WJll be NB M/F tow 3 id. 1 • pro• 850 aq.tt. Buty w. ~
removed. . . . to bd\. •215 1"· tMt & Coat• MMe ahOpp'g ctr • ..:.,BA_B_Y_S_ITT_E_R_for_ln_'-n_t,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Study Virao message for valuable btnt. 1130 dtpotlt, f4t..8200 ca 11 e 4 2 • t 4 o o. my c .M. home. Mon-Fr1.
Brcakthrou&h indicated red tape 1s les of a W\a,le and you really can NQn1mkr '-"· wented. To 10..12noon or 2...cpm tuft time M . 450-3721
e li&ht at end of tunnei. Focus on <:~~tivity, new Stan, romance and ~~· i:k:ino~ ShOpl$tOR/Offtoa 11*18· 8&kar/P = '°' pri·
veatcr independence. Avoid.heavy hf\1na! . 162·1223 eoo eq .ft. IG door,,._ vata dub '°' ep. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21). Otlcmma could be solved with Pvt ant.ranee mk:rO C.Meea C-2 64-72,._ Poitltmei\t95S.1123
l1\tu1t1vc flash. You'll know which counc to take, you'll make decision ull lnCld Ni~'* & •CdM-d&xauttaAC.;t 8'tlk~
Wh ch enhan~ ~our ttput.ation 1~d cou!d mean atcatcr financial ow. H 1 .1250. ta-4Mt ~ Z S:l:= TELLERS cunt~. hon tnp is pen of setnano. ro"1"' relative also plays key AOOMMAfl '*"' ..,.,, ----· __ ,......_
rote. . 1nWMC i bClrm uia ~. • 8AGITTARIUS(Nov.l2·Dtt.2l):Moonncaryour aanhi&hhshts hM .,.,,,.., 1111 mo. ....... nM tmmed l•~on:
charisma pecsonatity, Yt'll~~lo take chance .on )'OUf-OWft lateftlS 411 .. 271 0t MM104 1886 § i16661moniK n a L.ka For· It ml) be nC<lCUlry to ~,·1se plan bul your: timll'I ~II be sharp •nd KL Lm,. y.a at76 81rcf\, Nawpon eettor pen T....,. 24
rou'U be it n&ht place at auaal moment. Sccrp10 native ftautt Ill I ?nl leech. Aat 141-acm hc!UfVWMll
promanen_tl) lllV• a11 OM aq ft whtl GlftQaa ~ or 8 & l CAPIUCO.RN (0ec. .22'1.1an. 19)• d le .. "!!~1.~ up., loft&-dlSIADCC GAIN COM,OlllTAlll • ,.r4lt"9. "rleq "eo ~icept ... ild Ex·
eommuniC'ltton could relate to trav: or ~YW1ttona opponunuy. MNT & THI MCI PUv ~ N tMor .._,. CMl'I • • Ulnar position hilhli&hU individuality, onainth'Y end oillin,jness to INQ °' FINOINO A NEW lt4 •11 ~ bt QQD:
P10neer 1 pro. cci;laurus niuvc docs have our welfare 11 bean ind FNENOt 11 lkSer.ct Cont •11 L. • ment A•p· (11 ou .no .. "· *OC'• ._ eoencYt IMTUXC MiX6iA8i 1u..cooo , :1 AQUAIUU (Jnan.2().fcb L8}R:fOCUS<?l\.~',f~~m~1,~t,r.to MOit t"Jf 'Dlftlll ""' AcMoa "' All ~ ' Y1tnfncndsand1n ucnoepeq omanucanien~<K:Jtvl_..-.... IK Pl ~'"' ~.,.,.,... CowNillnf 1815 8o itircrca=1v:e u et Yo\l'Uibealcn.1w1reand u1J tmpnnt youro m •w. -..w 111 att.1 tn °"'*'° Alel. a.m.
\)le Vi la~ 1Jnifirant role. OCf*Clt*ICMrlnd.,,. UC'd. •12·ntl
p (I cb. 19-March 20) Focus on crnth11y, abthty to ~1Q r" ,.. Cl** In •8PltttUlll Ad•
)our way thro\llh diplomacy. lndt\lidual who wu 1ochfrcttnt could ,... mew ... ~~~~~~ no be:co111t1ncnthu ia rtcr Kn<>w Lb«'Onfldcnttnd Miim/ '"'
lhal ou can also be \cntlttlc. n pla Stpuflcant role. N141M 17 ' or 131
• t
FllELITT FEIEIAL
........ LM9 ......
Oppt~F
•
District Managers
If you erlfOY wof\.mg with young bot' &
1Jtrl1 and de1k job1 ore not for ~,
conWder o corMr '"th.~ <1rcvlo
ttOfl l .. ld fh11 tl 0 unique potohO•\ w.ti\
do•ly chol~ & ,._,d\,
Ouf openfl\9' Of• u""'ecf•ote A.pplt<OO'lt\ mv" ho.,. o "°" atGtionwo;on or tru<k
We offer on aac l.ent tolofy ~ o bonu'
ploft ond om ollo.....ont•. w. h~ on
ncellent b.Mfit pion lhOt 1Mkldt' ho'P'
toltt~ lf\.Wrant•, t.'berol llO<otlott cmd
holidoy\
the
330 w. Bay
Costa itesa. CA 92626
.....
AGES 11-14
I EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WED<.
Wt no• have 15 openinp lor younc e•r
beawm ID securr rtldtrs lot The Oranee Coast
Dally l'llot Our crews surt at 3 30 P m and , "°'• until 8 JO p m .effdays Oii Sitiuday. *'
!"°"a le• more hours You win um many tnps
and pnm. lfol1I with w111nc Jl>ur own money
IM!t is no debenna 0< cokcllOfl inwolwed 1H you arr interested. pluse call Ml' [art
(714) 548-7058
ACROSS 5:? Buy.,
5• ConduCl()l'S
SltCk'S
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
6 l111trum!'nl
10 t>Oy'
14 M11deme11no1
1~ lOvl! tlf!<ty
16 Asoan 1ann
17 em .. ,
18 Grlln \OrQtovm
19 lr1tnQ110l•I~ io Aito
RtSI!•
?2 0•SP9fllUP
2• Wound "'" 2f GrHt*<l 21 0 • ., .. ,,.,,.,.,,.0
JI L•U•~
32 Hetlr-
\lfKlnwtt!
33 l ""'t SUPO<l•I
35 vouno M!ll •
38 VHICut
3ii l>tKo<•• ...
'"'"' •O Young MlmO<
41 Aapui..
•2 ThtNd
o Oal\Ce
44Meu coi~
•S L•~• a tlllo
41 Ac~••hon
SI Wed~ btHt
, ..
11
!>8 FrftnCn ,,._.
59 And Othen
61 Rasion
87 Eic1rc1ae ol ''9"'
83 Nom1n•1e
8• AClrlH
VerdUQO
&S Hnrdy girl
116 8hnd r1o<t
6' MO< .. ""'' blP
DOWN
Q y U Wd'f1
J i<tt O! Otl$
'lf .. ~•1tm
• O•tct>•r(IP
~ ·~'"''"" 6 Poor attu.
7 Amooo
I! Part§
\I 0.1'•dld prQOO<
ltO<'JAl8ir
10 BB1noot.,
11 Pay tf\f> tit>
12 ~IKll ...
ttev0<ol
13 Pul rn '"°P'
21 Snrew
23 Sm@lty
250,,Uhl6
'1 Luooa<
28 Epoc p~lry
19 Vfl~
30~001)¥1'
3• Food lllM
3 s SudOln palf1
'.l6 F0<ceonwwd
37 Jal>
J9 Ptlehel
•O Ct0••
42 8M(.llrMOt1
•3 H8'11ngUN
•• Langlll unota
•8 Steal trorn
•7 ~onne>otlf
48 Prtre rnon.y
49A ·S 11-
50 F!Ow« pen
!>3 V1tnnu lnC.Wll9•
''°" SS -'U9U'Y
st Unit I un<t
$7 Pr...,.,tnenl
80 H•t9 out
12 TRAlt NOW FOR EXAMS FOR
JOBS
in U.S. Postal Service
No Experience, No High School,
AUen residents with Green pard
a~tabte.
Postal Clerks/Carriers
Start II
Itch ..
Keep Your Present Job White
Training. For Appt CaJt O C. Of-
floea Mr. Jackson UAQE! L!CTION OF
NEW & U8£0 IMW'SI ....... _
VOLUME IAU.8 EAVICI I L!A8fNG
70H a.JyAw
LON08f.ACH
(No Ctteny ult...OS)
'Cl1t) llAlll 1rlC»-nW~ ctPE.H& 0AY8
...
•..• ,.
llU lcl£11A'S SOUTI co11n
IOTOIS
@
1114 UlllT SUI* M (SUI 7095) .......
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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1984 ORANGE COUNTY C ALI~ OHNIA :is CE ~n ~,
U.S. waterpoloteams
sees gold on the
horizon. Story on
Page Dl. '
Orange County will get
more water under a new
allocation formula
·adopted by the MWD./ A3
Public reaction wlll be
sought tonight on plans
to expand John Wayne
Airport.I A3
Callfomli
Wealthy businessman
awarded $6 mllllon from
:eetrangecJ wife./ M · . ::::;:;s..~s::s:o!O';x::::;.;i:::::>.!::»s::~::;
Nation
Thousands attend 'Na-
tional Night Out' to fight
after-dark crime./ A5
World
Sky pirates release some
hostages at Rome air-
port./ A4
Home
Replacing your old re-
frigerator with a new
energy-efficient model
saves your money and
Calif ornla' s energy. /81
FoOd
Get a taste of the tropics
In cooling confections
and sparkling drink po-
tlons./C1
Sports
A gold medal for the U.S.
women In basketball, but
American women must
settle for sllver In vol-
leyball./D1
Angels stay close In the
American League West
race with a 7-6 come-
from-behind victory In
Seattle./D1
Mission Viejo' s Greg
Louganls easily quallfles
first In the springboard
diving prellmlnarles./D2
~:'!-:-:-:-.:.:·:-:·:~·:-:·~!':':'.;:::::::;::?.>.:::::?.
~
Entertainment
Three local community
theaters are mounting
their 100th productions
this summer./83
Bualneu
The Inland Empire Is lur-
ing more Orange Coun-
tlans, say two South
Coast developers./ A7
INDEX
Bridge 85
Bulletin Board A3
SualneN A7
California News A4
Clasalned [).4-8
Com lea 85
Crooword oe
Otath Nottces D4
Food • C1-8
HetpYourMlf 92
Home 81·2
Horot®Pe 05
Ann Lander• 82
Mutual Funds A7
Netlonal N A4
Oplnton A8
P:ctru.zl 81
p ~Log A3
PubUc Nottcee 86,03
Spor11 014
Stock Marketa A8
.MYfalon 84
Theatere 83..;.,4
WMthef A2
Wortd NeW9 A4
l
Closed-campus r~le OK'd
Irvine trustee' s say students 'tooo students at the d1s•nct's four high schools. arc a change from the
t g t t t 1 open campus poliC') that h d been m ffiUS C IlO C 0 eave Campus place since 1974, Under that pohcy,
--~--="------'--.;....;.-...,...;.---,....---=--,..---=----'---.--JUnion seniors at Univcmty.
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN campus fot lunch. Woodbridge, ELF Altemauvc and °' .. .,..,......... The new policy was approvtd Irvine htJh . hoots re aUo~ to ~ning in the fall, hiJh school unanimously Tuclday night by the leave school at lu'\Ch, while freshmen
students in Irvine will cany special Irvine Unified School District Board and JOphomorcs were rtqu1mi to
identification cards and will need of Education. have parental pcnniH1on to leave. writt~n parental ~rmission to leave The new rules. which affect about The pohC} came under.review after
Lettlilg the gold allp away
10 University High students wert
injured when a p1ckupdrivcn by a l6-
year.o0ld ent out of control and
slammed into acurbsidc1trec on Y c
Avmur dunng a lunch break: ln
February. Only two of the in.hared
)Ouths had pemu on to be off the
campus. The crash pa ned several
lawsuit$ and claims inst the d1s--
tnct by victims oh e acrident Undcr1~ new poh<."'),,.a form will
Paula We:lahoff and Suaa WOOCS.tra of·the U.S. womeit"'•
Yolleyball team try to k~ tbe ball frOm. &ettlng put tbem
· dmlDC the ftna.la .. am.t Cbin.a at the Lon& Beach Spora
A,tena. They weren't au.cceMfal. and the Cblnae nrept tbe
match 3-0 and won the &old medal, leaYln& tbe Americana
with the aU.-er. For detalla, aee Spom, Page Dl. -
be dJstnbuwt to all bWt ac:hool udenu m ~e fall. The (orm mutt be
returned with the 111Mture of a
parent and lhe 1udent. On the :fonn,
lhc parent must indicate a'hctbcr the
udcnt bas J)tt.D\1 ion lO leave the
campus at lunch.
For the first ttme. school ofticial1
said. all students will bet ucd photo
identification cards that musi M
(Pleue eee CL08SD/A2J
Murder
victim
shot .
in chest
Mesan·s stepfather
still in jail: wea~n.
auto sought by cops
By PHIL SNEIDEIUllAN °' .............
AA • bu aee:ealed that a
O>sta Mesa l'natl t.ltiosc bOC!y
discovered Monday aftcmOOll in u
Irvine CQnstnaction ditch was sbOI
once in the chest.
. The Oraue County C.oroner"1
office made the determination after
eu.minina the body of Bradley Kaye,
an 18-ycar-old Enalishman who bad
rettnlly moved to this cou"Dtry.
Kaye's stepfather, Bruce BradleY
Ralph, S7, ofNewpon Bca(:h, lS beina
held in connection with the young
man's death. RaJph, a free..lanoe
photographer who is also from Great
Britain. is scheduled to bC arrai&ned
Thursday i11 Harbor Munici~l C::OUrt
1n NCYtJ>Ort Beach on murder dw'ltS.
(Pleue eee llUIU>ft/A2)
dWAbill
gets. state
panelE>K
TV sales up;but re taui;arit
bu~iness down for Olym pi Cs
Committee· s vote
comes despite effort
by Newport residents
By JERRY BIRSCB
Ol .. 0.-, .........
A bill that would restrict the
number of noise-related lawsuits that
c.an be filed against an airpon passed
through a state Senate Judacaary
Committee hearina Tuesday after·
noon and will face a vote on the
Senate floor JOmetime this month.
The rneasu:rc, AB 3804, passed with
the bare minimum six-vote majority
despite the testimony of Newport
Beach residents who sec th~ ball as a
threat to their efforts to limit the crowth of John Wayne Airport.
It would impose a limit of one
lawsuit per individual on the number
of legal actions residents can file
apinst an airport over noise unless
there is a .. substantial" change in the
noise level at the airport, said Steven
·A_ngry
_ariimal
badgers
officers
Pugnacious .creature
captured In Mesa
will be released
Ptlaum, a spcctal counsel rep-
resenting the cty of Newport Beach
on airport matten.
The bill. written by Assemblyman
Richard Robinson, 0-Gardcn Grove,
is similar to a bill he introduced last
year. That bill was targeted at limiting
the number of small claims lawsuits
people can file against airports and
(Pleue eee AIR.PORT I A2)
~
Southern Califomi_a_t_a-=""ll_y_s-:-h-o_w_s some · Fast-food restaurants rei)on silcs
arc lower than usual, accordina to the
chamber, and beUCT restaurants. such
as Delaney's in Newport &ach.
repon sales a.re down about 20
pcrcenL
merchants have nothin to cheer about
By JERRY HIRSCH
Olllle.,_., ..........
Wath the Olympac Games wcll mto
their second week, businesses have
gotten a JObd idea of who the
financial Wlnners arc aoang to be.
The Los Anseles Arca Chamber of
........... " .........
Commerce, representing .,he five-
county Southern California region
affected by the Olympics includina
Orange County, rcporu that a survey
of the region's hotels found abouta 7 S
pel'tent occupancy rate -welJ belo-..
the level the hotels had anticipated.
Apparently, people are sta>ina at
home so that they can watch the
Olympics on television while they cat
djnner. ,
Electronics stores seem to be the bi&
(Pleue -llERCBAJn'8/A2)
'Where have all
the autos gone?'
UCI team asking
JERRY
HIRSCH
Focus ON THE NEws
Yoawoaldn'twanttlalafellowforaho pet.
•
..
• •••'"-•I .......
' J
A2 * Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, AUguat 8, l98o1
Saddle back N·orth campus
A fire in a temporary warehouse
buildina 11 Saddlebock Con ... ·,
Irvine campus caused about $22,000
wonh of damqe to supplies. 1udi°"
visual materials and maintenance
equipment Tuesday night, a campus
s~kesman said. ~ Oranac County firefi&)\tcrs, who
dousrd the flames in about 15
carricddurinaschool hours. The card
will be marked to indicate whether
the student has pemussion to leave
school grounds. ·
Schopl officials. poh~ officers and
merchants ·will be encouraged to
check the cards if a 'student is away
from campus during lunch.
One adult "'campus con1rol ass1s·
tant" will be enlisted at each high
school to help enfortt the new
lunchtime pohcy. according to Fran
minute1. aid they.-have not ~
termincd whit caused the bl.au. No
injuries were reponed.
The bulldi~c•uaht rire about 8:30
p.m .• accord.in& 10 Bill SchreHxr.
txecutive assistant to the ehanctllot
at Saddlebock. ~ .. 11 (the warehouse) is no r·
manent structure. It was built o
Monon, a district spokeswoman. She
said new camera equipment will also
be instilled to assisi in enforcement.
District·widc expenses for the new
policy arc about 547,()((), she said.
An orientation will tk conducted at
the beginning of the new school year
to acquaint students with the revised
lunch rules. The policy states that
violatiDns wiU bt treated as ··11 serious
infraction... -
r Punishmcnt for a first offense
handle our -lhippini. ttttivina and stqrase for the campus." Schi'eiber
Slid. Much of the material stored in the
warthouse was destroyed or damaaed
by smoke and heat. "We have office
supplie1kaudio-vi1ual materials and
grounds eepiniequipment in there,"
Schrtibtr said.
could involve dct.cnhon, Saturday
class or lou of campus parking
privil~cs. Additional offenses could
result 1n suspension from school for
one or mott days. District official1
said all offenses will be rcponed to
parents.
School administrators will be ex·
peeled to kecp~record of violations
at each high sthool, with a repon
P:~nted 10 the school bpi.rd in
February Ind June.
AIRPORT BILL PASSES PANEL •••
From Al
passed both the Senate and the
Assembly but was vetoed by Gov.
George Dcukn1eJian. ·
The new bill would limit small ,
claim suits and lawsuits in higher
courts.
Asse mblywoman Marian
Bergeson. R-Ncwport Beach, said she
plans to lobby Deukmejian to veto
the bill for a second time if it passes
the Senate and reaches his desk.
'"It holds many of the same threats
as before but is only slightly watered
down. I don't know what negotiations
arc foinf on at the governor's office
but wil be speaking with him," said
Bergeson. who attended the-Senate
~?On has rcpea1cdty said h~ is
negotiating a compromise thai wouJd
win Dcukmejian's signature.
A vote by the Sena1e on the bill
must be taken soon if it is to reach the
govcrnoi:'s desk by Aug. 3 I when the
currtnt session of the state Legis.
laturc ends.
Because the committee amended
the bill slightly to take out a proposed
definition of what a '"substantiaJ
increase .. in noise is., the measure also
must return to the Assembly for a
vote. according to Pflaum.
Any bills that are not passed on to
Dcukmejian by the Aug. 31 deadline
will have tobe1ntroducedagainat the
next session of the Lqislaturc stan-
jng in...Janyan;,_Bergeson said.
-tf th& Oilt beoomu' law. Pflaurn
anticipatn the failure to identify what a substantial noise incn:ase is will
lead to leg.al problems for the state. -·
"'It will be up fo the courts to defioe-.-
They arc jllst inviting litigation,"
Pflaum said. ·
Commi1tec members voting for the
bill were Sen. Barry Keene, [).
Vallejo. Sen: Ed Da~is. R~anTPark, Sen. H. L. Rjchardson, -
Arcadia. Sen Nicllolas Pctrill, [).
Oakland, Seo. Milton Maries, R·San
Francisco. Stn. Bill Lockyer, D-
Alamcda.
Voting against the bill were Sen.
Robcn PrcsleY; 0-Rivenide, and
Sen. Diane Watson, 0.1.os Angeles.
Thue.malning thrcC members of.th'c
comm1ttc.t were absent ·-
MURDER VICTIM WAS SHOT •••
From Al
Irvine S&t. Dick Bowman said the protcctiveofhismother. The woman On MonOay, employees ·of '
caJibcr of the weapon used to shoo1 has been separated from Bruce Ralph, McGuire Construct.ion Co., who were
Kaye has not yet been determined, but Bowquan said he docs not believe watering down a .sewer line ditch
but said investigators ~l1evc the the couple were divorced. before fillina it, disoovcrcd a body
young man was killed with a hand-Ralph remained in Orange County thal...ha.d .been buried.under.about 20...
gun. Jail today in lieu ofSS00.000 bail. inches of loose sand. The construc-
Bowman said early today 1ha1 According 10 police. Kaye was last tion si1e is on Star Crest in trvine's
police fiave not found the murder seen alive Aug. I -the same day Turtle Rock community.
weapon. And police declined to several motorists reported seeing The body was identified as 1ha1 of
discuss a possible motive 1n the Kayc·s car and what appeared 10 be a Bradley Kaye. and the autopsy was
slaying. body pan1ally stuffed in a trash bag ordered 10 determine how he died.
However, published reports bast'<! off10 1hc side o r Bonita Canyon Road Sgt. Bowman said 1oday tha1 or.
...--··--
-
,I
-Coastalfo~wilLburn away · ·
Coutal
Tides
TOOA'I' ._. ... 1:4t .. m • ._..,. T:Mpm, -·· -.. 2111 .. 111. ::.::-.. t:u ...... z-.n .. m . ........ 1:31 P,fll .
Temps =-
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.,..... ..... ~.Or.
1'¥1oldai0U
=~ ,, ,, Ald-.cl
" 11. a.cw~ M 17 SI LOI.tit
II Jt Sl~T....-11 71 a.llL-..~ .. ,. ...............
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.. IT Ila .IUllll.I" .fl., .. " .. 17 11 ....... " .. .. ,. -.. " .. • mw::1 .. " " II,...... ... .. .. .. .. __ .. .. .. ,,.,._ " .. ... 17 Toplk• 11. " "' .. ,_ .. " " 1& Tl,llM. " " .. IO WMNnglOll .. " .. 75 Wlcllll• " " .. 71 w ........ .. .. .. .. _ . .. ,.
~=· Alllnllc City ..... " .. .. ,.
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Just Call
642-6086
WU.I do you Uke ab01lt the Daily Pilot? What don't you llke1 CaU tbe
aumber at Ith ucl yow mtt111e wfll be record ff, trans~rlbed and delivered
to Ute appropriate ffltor. ·
The aame !f·laoar a111weriag 1ervice may be used to record letters to tH
editor on any topic. Coatrlbu10r1 to our Letters column must lnchade llleir
name and lf:lepiloae namber for verification. Na circulation calls, please.
Tell •• ... hat's!• yoar mlad. ~ ·
MGA0111 ""°Ir II JOI! 00
not '-l'OUt ~ UV S.30p 111. ;a1~1 o.m
-'l'OUI oopy ... bll _,,
S..Woey ....i s...wy, •
j'OUODnol-'l'OUI ~ ii, 1 • Ill ' C9ll bltOfw 1 0 • Ill .,_, l'(ll# OOCl'I" ...
~-..
Circulation
Telephonff
' ORANGE COAST DiiiyPilat
__ .,...., lrcul8Uon l1UM2-4333
Clno--litftv 1M/M2-5171
AH ot!* departmen~• ~1
MAIN OFFICE
H. L. Schwartz HI
Publisher
Lorne Bruchet
Advertising Director
Stephen f . Carazo
Production
Manager
AoHmary C~urchman
Controller
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330 W... Bly SL. Colla ..... CA.
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COoy<ogh! 1913 o..,.. CoUI Publill*"ll COrnolot· No
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-....... lllly bll ~ WllhOul IPllClll I*• ~ol~-
VOL. n, NO. 221
ori interviews with family members in Irvine. ficers are still looking for Kaye's ~=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::=:::====== said Ralph threatened his estranged Shonly after the motorists reported orange 1976 Mercury Capri, which r
wife, Kaye's mo1hcr. th~ sigh11ng 10 police, Ralph was was seen by the Bonita Canyon Road
Kaye. who has been hv1ng with his arrested, even though a body was not motorists who made the original
mother in Costa Mesa. renoncd.ly was _·ilnJ~<li'!lll1 !hcd!t>~sco~v~ere~d.!,_ ____ _.l'l>O~lic<:>•'.:"''!J!l>O!'_n~. --------+.-./-?"""""' D MERCHANTS WINNERS, LOSERS ...
From Al
winners in the Olympic business
games.
Sales of video cassclle recorders.
blank video tapes and television sets
skyrocketed during 1he week prior to
the Games as well as 1he first week.
"'Just as the Olympics st.artcd. our
sales ofVCRs went way up. We really
saw ii just before the opening cer-
emonies. We had a lot more business
than usual even on that Saturday ...
said Steve Anderson. the manager or
the Federated Group lnc. home
electronics store in Westminster.
"lt has gone back down to normal
now but our tape sales arc still very
good," he said.
The Olympics also gave color
television set sales a healthy boost,
Anderson added.
Pacific Stereo. anolhcr big home
electronics store in Westminster. has
been selling a steady stream of video
tapes during the Olympics.
Thcs1ored1d not sec a large spurt 1n
the sales orlarge-iCreen television sets
but did sell a number of the small,
bat1cry-0pcra1cd portable televisions
right before the Olympics." said Jeff
Grous, 1he assistant manager.
People were buying the televisions
to take with them to Olympic events
so they could view 1he television
coverage of other events going on al
the same time. he said.
Sales of video cassette recorders
have been on a s1cady increase since
the Chrisunas season. Grous said he
attributed the sales to the increased
popularity of the machines as well as
people's desire to capture the Olym-
pics on tape.
People also are cap1uri ng !he Olym-
pies on lilm. reported Cal's l.ameras
Inc. or Costa Mesa.
Sales or cameras and film ··were up
nicely" staning the week before 1hc
Olympics. said Mark Stilley. the store
manager.
.. It really picked up the day of the
opening ceremonies and has been real
good," he said.
Other types of businesses doing
well included grocery stores, accord-
ing to the chamber sludy.
Grocery stores reported that their
late July and early August business
was about 10 percent ahead or the
same period last year. Sales were
particulary strong for snack foods, ice
cream, soft drinks. wine, beer and
other part)' roods.
Department stores arc reponing
sales arc about normal. the chamber
said.
BADGER CAPTURED IN MESA ...
From Al
me:· the officer said. ''They've even
been known to pursue someone 1f
they get mad enough."
Hyatt said she fired a 1ranqu1liz1ng
pistol at the badger and then 1urned
and ran for rear the re1sty animal
would attack her.
Officials of the California Depart-
ment of Fish and Game told Hya11
badgers are almost never round 1n
coastal areas. ··This 1s the first tame
anyone has heard of a badger being
found around here. We have raccoons
and skunks and opossums but no
one's ever seen a badaer. ··Hyatt said.
She theorized the animal may have
wandered from fields near John
Wayne Airport. throu~ a scncs of
drainage channels and into the 1ndus-
1nat'-arca. Hyatt s.a1d she rs almost
certain that the badger could not bean
abandoned pct because of 11s ag-
gressive behavior.
Hyatt said Fish and Game officials
told her to keep the animal under
observation for 48 hours to make
certain 11 does no1 have rabies. If the
badger appears to be acung normally
by late today. she said. she will release
it into a small wil~lifc area at the end
ofVic1or1a Street
"The place is full or ground
squirrels (the bad$er's main food
wurcc). so he will hkc that. And the
coyotes won't bother him." shes.aid.
In fact. she said no animal smaller
than a mountain lion will take on a
badger in the wild.
By the time he's released. the
badger will "probably be banJing the
cage, spitting mad, and trying to get
out," she said.
Hyatt said she will probably release
the animal while standing on the roor
ofhcrtruck.just to be on the safe side.
TRAFFIC PATTERNS UNDER STUDY •••
PTomAl
conductin& the study with the help of
WilfTCd Recker. director of the uni-
versity's Institute of Transportatio n.
the ad)Ustmcnts in their dnv1ng
habits.
The final days of the Olympics may
JUSt give Giuliano's research team its
chance to study Southern California
traffic a1 ils worst.
•Typical summer tounsts have
gone elsewhere, leaving a pp in the
daily traffic volume.
•A large numJ>er of residents have
left the Southern California durina
the Olympics and that means there
art fewer cars on the road.
•A larae companent of traffic is
discretionary. It is made up of 1?,COple
runnina emnds they could eastly put
._____. ...... ])
our best advertising investment ...
the Daily Pi~ot.
"In 6 Je1t ods THE DAILY
PILOT consi1ttntly Oi,!t·
pulled the Register ond the
Los An~,"
T he ,cellulor telephone industry is one of. the toughest, most competitive
there is . We offer outstonding products ond services at the best prices
avoiloble. We demand a lot out of equipment ond no less from our ,
advertising . We have tested all the mojor medio in Orange County and find
thotthe ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT to be our best value. In 6test ods,
The Doily Pilot consistently out,pulled the Register ond the Los Angeles Times.
And when you consider its low cost ond its home town appeal, it cleorly is . ' . your and my best odvertising investment.
I
I
I
!
I
The researchers were awarded an
$83.000 grant by the Ca1.1rom1a
Qtpanmcnt or Transportation to
anaJyu whaf the freeways arc hkc
when they arc pUlhed ·beyond ca-
i-dty and to study the massive traffic
routing p~ns of local government
•ncics and the Los Angeles Olym-
PlC Orpnizina Committee.
The effom to encourage people to
use mass 1ransit, car PoOI or simply t---mri~Jtc-t'Oltd re:presenl "1he mos1
comptebcnsivc tra.nsponat1on man·
qemtnt system lhlt WC know of:'
said Giuliano.
'"The traffic level is buildina back,
so we are assumina that ptople arc
going back to their old ways," she
said, addina that traffic reports for
Monday and Tuesday of this week
were at near normal levels for typical
summer work days.
While researchers do not yet have
~ data-to-« able-to-say why
traffic was liaht during the fint we.tie,
Giuliano said there could be a variety
of factors working t0$Clher. he
otTercda rewoflhe followtnatheories •
but cautioned 1hat 11 wil l be severe.I
months before she knows what has
truly happened:
offfortcveral weeks. Th.is works fort
1hort period of tirnct bu1 in 1he Ion&
tun it caiches up~ Giuliano said this y be. why ttaff~ was hc&-vy in the
week prior to the Olympics. People
were doi.na the ena.nds earl)'.
"Onct all the data is in, lbe fun
sians. We act to anal~ it,"! wd
G1Juliano. an ln'ine resident.
J~ r~<L~.~-----· ~-----41
.. I don't think 1 program of the
.tCOpt tl\a1 this has bce.n has ever bttn
trled.somew.hcrc el5C."' sh~ said.
When alJ the data IS 1n. the
rtt11.rt:hen wiU ust' computer s1mu·
latlOflS of 1raffic Oowt 10 set ''what
"AlQuld have happened 1( no one
1 .... ncd.IO..lhc .. The rcKarthtn also plan to survey
C'•mtnutert 10 find ho.w man) ~hanacd 1hc1r dnv1n1 habits durin1
tht O"lymp1n G1uhano hOPC's 10 f,nd
ou1 what CMOU pcoole to mal<c
•Many people arc following the
advice of transit officials by tak1n1
mass transit. car poohn1 or stay1n1
·homt ... •N'·.-.~,i-y~1~3 prITTn t OT t e 11cket1
sold ror 01r,mp1c eve nts wtnl 10
Soulhtm a 1rorn1ans P('ople could
be 101ng 10 tllC" ()!, mp1c\ 1ns1c1d of
~ork
l
··we should,et aaood idea of Who
went to the pmes and how they ao1
lhtrt.'"
CELLULAR INTERNATIONAL
158"01 ROCKFIELO
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA
no-3363 The study also should provide
needed 1nformat1cin for traffic man·
aatmen1 at other major even1.s 1n
mCll'Opolllan artii A1ld It coons llV1M----:FOR MORE INFORMATION REGARDING ADVERTISING IN THE DA ILY PILOT, transit planners a aood idea of what
mcasurts work bcSI in improvin1 tbc CONTACT CINDY HAUARD AT 6'2·"321 ,
crowded Southern C1hronna 1rans.-
'pof'11111on 'IY'I~. shc."t'On<'luded.
j • -·-~~~~---~~~~
I
•• LOWIS
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1984 ..
U.S. waterpoJoteams
S(!esgoldon the
horizon. Story on
Page DI.. ,
' OrangeCountywill get
more water under a new
allocation formula
adopted by the MWD./ A3
Public reaction will be
sought tonight on plans
to expand John Wayne
Airport./ A3
California
Wealthy businessman
awarded $6 million from
estrang'!_d wife./ A<t_, ___ 1~
"':=:::~m:::*~::~:o::?.;~::.~:w.:~~
Nation
Thousands attend 'Na-
tional Night Out' to fight
alter-dark crime./ A5
World·
---·---
.
Sky pirates release some
hostages at Rome air~
port./A4
Letting the gold slip away
Paula Weillhoff and Suaan Woodlltra of the U.S. women•o
Yolleyball team try to keep the ball from ietttna put them
durlnl the flnalo .,a1not China at the Loni -ch Sporto
Home <.
Replacing your old re-
frigerator with a new
energy-efficient modfJI _
saves your money and
California's energy ./81
Food
Get a taste olthe tropics
In cooling confections
and sparkling drink po-
tlons./C1
Sports
A gold medal for the U.S.
women In basketball, but
American women must
settle for sliver In vol-
leyball./D1
Angels stay close In the
American League West
race with a 7-6 come-
from-behind viciory In
Seattle./D1
Mission Vlejo's Greg
Louganls easily qualifies
first In the springboard ·
diving prellmlnarles./D2
-?:-!•:O!o»»~l:~::>:::;;~:;:;~:'-::O::::n::;:
Entertainment
Three local community
theaters are mounting
their 100th productions
thlssummer.183
:·:·:·:-=·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.:·:·:::-:::;;.;;:.:::~
Business
The Inland Empire ls lur-
ing more Orange Coun-
tlans, say two South
Coast developers./ A7
INDEX
JWAbill
gets state
panel OK-
Committee's vote
comes despite effort
by Newport residents
By JERRY HIRSCH or""' o.i.r ~ _....
A bill that would restrict the
number of noise.related lawsuits that
can be filed aaainst an.airport passed
throu&h a state Senate Judiciary
Committee bearing Tuesday after·
noon and will face a vote on the
Senate floor sometime this month.
The measure, AB 3804, passed with
the bare minimum six·vote majority
despite the testimony of Newpon
Beach residents who sec the bill as a
threat to their efforts lO limit the
growth of John Wayne Airpon.
lt would impose a limit of one
lawsuil per individual on the number
of legal actions residents can file
against an airpon over: noise unless
there is a .. substantial" change in the "~ise level at the airport, said Steven
Angry
animal
badgers
officers
Pu naclous creature
captured In Mesa
will be released Brklge 85
Buli.tln Board ~ B.Y KAREN E. KLEIN
Business . °' .. _.,,......., ,
Callfomlf. NMI A-4 An Omcty. pinkd and tick-in-CCol~: ~ festcd hldacr was discovered in a --Costa Mesa industrial complex Tues.
CrONWOfd ~ day and 1rapp<d by 1be Cosia Mesa
Oteth Notk:el ~ Animal Control Depanrnent.
Food C.1-8 The tcratcblna and spittina
Hetp YourHH B2 camivore,ame:mbcrofthewolvcrine
J:IJ""''-------'4:~1-'!.Mf,.O«>'J.""fiuni'ty-andarariljOlltftt --O<anae c..... ...W.• obout JO Ann Llinder9 92 pounch. It wu found in a dr1i Mutu.1 Fund• A7 channel on the 2900 block-,onT.,,....~;J-
Natlonal.lffWI A4' A venue. saUS Animal Control Officer
Opinion A8 Kellene Hyan.
Pap•tazzl B 1 "He iJ very petWCriul andtxtn:mcly
Potk:it Log A3 ~ve, ... Hyatt said. When Hyatt
Publk: Notk:el Bl, 03 amvcd Tuaday momina after bcina
SPorta '01-3 calledbysomeoffie<e01ployceswho
Stock Martir;eta Al had spotted the , the said the: IM , ·~..i
hMtera between the front door and• planter.
Marian ee,.,eoon • ,,
Pflaum, a s~I counsel recr
resenting the city of Newpon Beach
on airpon matters.
The bill, written by Asscmblyman
Richard Robinson, o.Garden Grove,
is similar to a bill he introduced last
year. That bill passed both the Senate
and the A$Sembly but was vetoed by
Gov. George Dcukmejian.
1PleueaeeAIRPORT/A21
\
•
f IRST 1011111
OH ANGE COUNT V CALIFORNIA I'• CE N '~
'
ervicti
est •
ad remains
injail: weapon, ~~~~~~~~,,---(j auto still missing
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. ..., ........
An autopsy has revealed that a
Costa-Mesa man whole body was
discovered Monday afternoon in an
Irvine con,truction diicb was shot
once in the cheJt,
The -Ora1* Coun1l1 Coroner's
office made t1'c detcnnination .Rer
cr.aminina the body of Bradley Kaye,
an 18-ycar-old Enlldhman "ho bad
-recently moved to thiscounuy. •
~., steofalh<r, Bruce Bradley
Ra! , 57. orNewpon Bcacb, is bcina
be in connection with the youna
man's death. Ralph. a free..la.nct
photographer who is also fr.om Grat
Britain, is scheduled to be arniancd
Thursday in Harbor Municipal Coun
in Ncwpon Beach on inUTder c ~ ~-... -~~mi.a..·
........ calibec of the weapon. used to shoot
Kaye bas not .,.. .... detennined, -· -
but said invcstiptors believe the
young man was killed with a hand-
gun. . Bowman said early today U\at
police have not found the murder
weapon. And police dcc:liaed &o
discuss a possibae: motive in the
slaying.
However. published reports based
on interviews with family mcmben
said RaJph threatened bis estranaed
wife. Kaye's mother.
Arena. Tbey weren•t aucceuful. and tbe Cblnae awept the
match 3-0 and won the iold medal, lea..U., the American•
with the ollYer. For detallo, -Sporto, Pale Dl.
Kaye, who has been livina wilt his
mother in Costa Mesa, rcportcdly was
protective of his mother. The woman
(Pleaoe -llUJU>ltR/ A2)
TV sales up, but r-estaurant
business dowri for Olympics
·southern California fiilly shows some Fasl·food rcsuurants rcpon saJes
arc lower than usual, aocordina to the
chamber, and-better restaurants, such
as Delaney'~ in Ntwpon ·Beach. merchants have nothin to cheer about
By JERRY HIRSCH °' .. °"" ........
With the Olympic Games well into
their second week. businesses have
gotten a Jood idea of who the
financial winners are going to be.
The Los Angcics Area Chamber of
report sales arc down about 20
Commerce, representing the 6vc-perttnt.
county Southern CaJifomia region Apparently, people arc stayina at
affected by the Olympics including jome so that they can watch the
Orange County, reports that a survey Olympics on television while they cat
of the rqion ·s hotels found about a 7 S dinner.
pciunt occuc~z rate-well below Electronics stotts seem to be lhc big the !eve.I the. _ _ had anticipated. (Pleue Me llERCllAJllTS/ A2J
Moscow warns of jeans rash'
Where have all
th~ autos gone?,
UCI team asking
The XXlllrd Olympiad ha.s turned
all of Southern California into a
laboratory for a team of UC Irvine
researchers hoping 10 d1scovet wha1
traffic. will be like by tM end of the
century. JERRY
HIRSCH
'
They arc busy counun.acars.. buses.
passc:nacrs. car pools. accidents. Lraf·
f.c jams and comm uteri.
Althouah it wi.11 be next summtr
be.fore their report is completed. the
researchers have found out some
Focus ON THE Nrws
surprisina thinp about Olympic tr1f· cart.er and JCNn&_homc earlier, so the
tic. satd Ocnev.cvc Gtuliano, one of volume of tra.11\o 11 sprctd out. ..
two Ph.Os head1na the study. Giuliano said.
Fint. trafftc i lifbtc.r than *bat "There JCCms to be mDR cat
cv n ~Mi5c.K'.-pl&Qncrs pool•Rt-totneon. We.d.Kl.'9f'M.C<Wn1
bad c~pccted lhrouah the tint -.veclc. of on the Harbor and the Santa Mona
the Olymptcs. That bas htndcrtd freeways and we found an avcrqc o)f
efforts to sice how the frttway system 1.29 people per vchlclc. The nonna
..-01i1ld bt atfccttd by the extra traffic. ·~"I .I 5 fora rc&Ylarworkdly.
Gluhano •Kl. Th11 1s 1 very lartt difference. even
"But on the other hand. the fact t~ 1t doesn't toul'd hke much,"
that so many peop&c: '#ho live Mtt Gtuhano said.
havt cha~ \heir bth.lv1or 1s very "'The freeway sys~m tS to ck>le \0 tntctmi~ • ht edf.ltd. . captcit)' 1n LOl Anacln 11\at an)'.
'
Accord1na '° s\lbSUC:S ptbcftod ~ chanac makes a b\ad1ffmntt.~ven 1f
the .rcw.an: Ulhm\ .C.h· GV" ~ fttll.L ~--om1 ns are unc artcttnJticall'~y-'•°',..~Pttl 10 • c •nat 1n tra
chanaina their dnvina habi · he added.
WMthor • A2 "H<1iantd powli11f and snarlina.
Worid N9WI A4 Then he m•dc 1 couple of rvshcs at
~-llAOO&R/A2)
........ ,...., ...... .-
Too-1dn'twantthillfellowfor&._pet.
"Traffic: 1.s up carllCf 1n tht mom· G1uhano. hortcetvtcShcrPti.Din
1na. ll 1 fairly hea\')' at 6 a.m. ThcrT ~1al setcn« at UC lmne. lS
""'a lot ofpcoplt leav1na for.,.rl< l~--TltAFnC/A2l
•• .=------I ..
'
A2 Or
Saddle back North camptis
warehoµ.se damaged by fire
A fire in •"'tempo ry w reh u
bllald1na at ddle ck Collcge•s
Irvine campus caustJ about $22,000
wonh of dam tt' to upplies, audio-
v11ual matenal$ nd tnaintcnancc
equipment Tuesday ni&Jtt, a campus
poke man id. . ·
Orancc; County firtfiahtc-rs, who
douKd the flames in about 15
minute • id they have not de-
tennined' what caused the blaze. No
Utjuries were reported.
The buildina caught fire about 8:30
p.m.. according to Bill Schreiber.
. .
cx~nve assmant to 1he chancellor
at ddle ck.
"It (the warehou ) i not a per·
manent tructorc. It w built to
handle our shipping. rtttivina and
torage for the "3mpus." &hrtiber
said.
Much of the mat~ri41 ~sored in the
warehouse was destroyed or damaged
by smoke and heat. "We have office
~upplics. audio-visual materials and
aroundskecpingcquipqu~nt in there,"
Schn:1ber said.
A c<;>mputer terminal, u cd to
m 1nta10 a upplyinvcntory;el ow
in 1de the warehou , he 1d.
Onl> $«Unty auard 1md Janitors
wen~ on campus when the blaze broke
out, about half an hour aner Saddle·
b:ick's first day of fall rt'gl'itration
C'nded. SChrcabcr said.
The cost of the blaze may escalate
as officials detrrmine whether any of
the buidlina's conlent.. can be
salvaged. he addcd
The cause of the fire is under
invest1gat1on. a fire department
spokesman s~ud.
Car crash victim unknown
The 1dcntll) of a man "ho killed
himself and 10Jured six in a crushing
car ctash 1n Newpon &a.ch last
Friday rem ns a m)stcry.
San O tego ounty Sheriffs depu-
ties traveled o the Oran1e Count)
morgue tbis week think.mg the un-
identified man might be a car theft
suspect they had been chasing.
They were wrong.
.. We're going to have to work with
fi ngerprints now," Newport Beach
~
Officer Tom Lanie said Tue-.da) Th~
pnnts w1JI be sent to a state clear-·
ina.house an Sacramento. he s~ud.
ihe dnvcr. a )Oung Caucasian
wearing shorts and terrnis hoes was
chased by patrolmen from an 1mm1-
gration checkpoint an San Clemente
to Newport Beach, where the stolen
Ford Pinto he was dnvmg slammed
into two cars heading in the opposite
direction .
Little said police believe the man
mtent1onall) .. ecred into the oppos-
ing lane!> on MacAnhur Boulevard.
but the) can't e:\plaln wh) the dnvcr
would have made such a maneuver.
The other two dnvers were
seriously injured and four children
riding in one of the cars suffered
moderate mjunes. None of the 1n-
junes was hfe-thrcatentog. . ...
The unidentified driver was pro-
nounced dead at the scene.
MURDER VICTIM WAS SHOT •..•
From Al
has been.5CJ1atated from Bruce Ralph,
but Bowman said be does not behcve
the couple were divorced. ..
Ralph remained in Orange County
Jail today in tieu ofS.S00,000 bad.
Ac:cordin& to pohce, Kaye was last
seen allvc Aua. J -the same day
several motorists reponed seeing
~ye·s car and what appear~ to be a
body partially stuff c<t m a trash bag
off to the side of Bonita Canyon Road
ID Irvine.
ShonJy after the motonsts reported
the sighting to police, Ralph was
arrested, even though a body was not
immediately discovered.
On Monday, employees of
McGuire Construction'Co .• wlto were
watering down a sewer hne ditch
before filling it. discovered a body
that had been buned under about 20
inches of loose sand. The construe-
MERCHANTS WINNERS, LOSERS •••
From Al
winners in the Olympic business
pm cs.
Sales of VJdeo cassette recorders.
blank video tapes and telev1S1on sets
skyrocketed d uring the week pnor to
the Games as well as the first week.
been selling a steady stream of video
tapes dunng the Olympics.
The store did not see a large spun in
the saJcs oflarge-scrccn telcv1s1on sets
but did sell a number of the small,
battery-operated poruble telev1s1ons
right before the Olympics." said Jeff
Grous. the assistant manager
pies on film, reported Cal's Cameras
Inc. of Costa Mesa.
Sales of cameras and film "were up
nicely" ~tanmg the week before the
Olympics. said Mark Stilley. the store
manager .
Tides
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Production
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"Just as the Olympics started, our
sales ofVCRs went way up. We rcall)
saw it just before the operung cer-
emorucs. We had a lot more business m.n usual even on that Saturda)."
said Steve Anderson. the manager of
the Federated Group Inc. home
electronics 1torc in Westminster.
People were bu)tng the teleHs1ons
to take with them to Olympic e .. cnts
so the) could Hew the telcHs1on
coverage of other events going on at
the same time, he said .
··Jt rcall) picked up the da) of the
opening ceremonies and has been real
good," he said.
Other t)'pe!> of businesses doing ~========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=:=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=;;~ well included grocer) stores. accord· r
.. It has ionc back down to normal
now b ut our tape sales are still very
good." he said.
The Olympics also gave color
television set sales a healthy boost.
A~derson added.
Pacific Stereo, another big home
electronics store m Westminster. has
Sales of video cauctte recorders
have been on a steady increase smce
the Chnstmas season. Grous said he
attributed the sales to the increased
populanty of the machines as well as
people's desire to capture the Olym-
pics on tape.
People also are caotunng the Olym-
1ng to the chamber stud). _
Grocery stores reponed that their
late July and early August busmess
was about 10 percent ahead of the
same period last year. Sales were
particulary strong for snack foods, ice
cream. soft dnnks, wine. beer and
other pany foods.
Depanmcl)t stores are repot1ting
sales are about normal. the chamber
said.
AIRPORT BILL PASSES PANEL •..
Jl'romAl
A ssemblywoman Marian governor'sdeskbyAug.31 when the Comn'uttee members voting for the
bill were Sen. Barry Keene, D·
ValleJO, Sen. Ed Davis. R-Canoga
Park. Sen. H.L. Richardson, R-
Arcad1a, Sen Nicholas Petns. D-
OakJand, Sen. Milton Marks, R-San
Francisco. Sen. Bill Lockyer. D-
Alamcda.
Beracson, R-Ncwpon Beach, said she current session of the state Lcgi.s-
plans to lobby Dcukmejian to veto lature ends.
the bill for a second time tf It passes The committee amended the bill
the Senate and rea~ has desk. shghtl)' to take out a proposed
.. It holds many of the same threats , dcfimtion of what a "substantial
as before but 1s only slightly watered increase" 1n noise as so the measure
down.idon'tknowwhatncgollallons also must go for a vote by the
arc f oing on at the governor's office Assembly again, according to Pflaum.
but will be speaking with him," said Any bills that arc not passed on to
Bergeson, who attended the Senate DeukmeJian by the Aug. 31 deadhne
hearing. will have to be introduced again ~t the
A vote by the Senate on the bill next session of the Legislature stan-
must be taken soon 1f1t 1s to reach the mg in January, Bergeson said.
Yotmg against the bill were Sen
Roben Presley, D-R1vcrs1de. and
Sen. Diane Watson, D-Los Angeles
The remaanmg three members of the
committee were absent.
BADGER CAPTURED IN MESA •.•
From Al .
me," the officer said. "They've even
been known to pursue ~omeone 1f
they get mad enough."
H yatt said she fired a tranquil111ng
p istol at the badger and then turned
and ran for fear the fe1st) animal
would attack her
O fficials of the C alifom1a Depart·
ment of Fish and Game told Hyatt
bed&ers arc almost never found an
coastal areas. "'This 1s the fir!>l tame
anyone has heard of a badger being
found around here. We have raccoons
and skunks and opossums but no
one's ever seen a bad~er." Hyatt said.
She theonzed the animal may have
wandered from fields near John
Wayne Aarpon, throu~ a sencs of
drainage channels and into the indus-
tnar area. Hyatt said she 1s almost
ceruin that the badger could not be an
abandoned pet because of its ag-
gressive behavior.
Hyatt said Fish and Game officials
t91d her to keep the animal under
obsen at1on for 48 hours to make
ceruin 1t docs not ha .. e rabies. If the
badger appears to be acting normall)
b)' late today. she said. she will release
at into a small wlldltfc area at the end
of V 1ctona Street.
"'The place is full of ground
squirrels (the ba~r·s main food
source). so he will hke that. And the
coyotes won't bother him," she said.
Jn fact. she said no animal smaller
than a mountain hon will take on a
badger in the wild.
By the ume he's released. the
badger will "probably be banging the
cage, sp1tt1ng mad. and tf)1ng to get
out," she smd
Hyatt s:ud she will probabl)' release
the animal while standing on the roof
of: her truck.just to be on the safe side
TRAFFIC PATTERNS UNDER STUDY ...
From Al
• coaductin& the.stud) with the help of
Wilfred Recker, d irector of the uni-
versity's Institute ofTransponat1on
The researchers were awarded an
$83,000 arant by the Ca~ifornta
Department of Transp0rtat1on to
anatyu what Jhe freeways are like
when they arc p ushed beyond ca-~ty and to study the massive traffic routiq plans of local government
afCl.!CJCS"alld tne.-Los Angeles Olym-
pie Qraanizina ommittcc. "
The eff ons to encourage people to
UIC mus transit, r pool or imply
.uy oft' &.be road represent .. the mo t
compreheftsive tran portat1on man·
.,ement sy tem that we know of."
aid Giuliano. ··1 don'l thmk a prosram of the
ICOpe that thts ha been has ever been
tried somewhere else, .. she id.
When all the data is in. the
reiearchett will use computer ~1mu·
1ation1 of traffic nows to. ~c "what
would have h ppcncd 1f 1\0 one
li*DCd to he ~lannen:· i---~--, The rescarchen also pla ~urve)
commutm to fi nd ho man)
chaMCd lhdr driv1n1 h bits dunn1
the Otym~. Oiull4no hopes to find
out what mroura ed people to makt·
the adjustments m their dnving •Typical summer tounsts have
habits. gone elsewhere, leaving a gap in the
The final days of the Olympics may daalv traffic volume
JUSl gjve G1uliano·s research team its •A large number of residents have
chance to study Southern Cahfomia left the Southern California during traffic at its worst. "The traffic level 15 building back, the Olympics and that means there arc fewer cars on the road. so we arc assuming that people arc
going back to their old ways." ~he •A large component of traffic is . said. adding that traffic reports for discretionary. It is made up of people
Monday and Tucsda) of thii week runnini cmnds they could easily put
were at near normal levels for, typical olTforscvcral weeks. This works for a
summer work days. hon period of timet but io the Iona
While researchers do not yet have run 1t catches up~ Giuliano said tht
enough data to be able to y why may bit why traffic was heavy an the
traffic was light during the first wttk, week pnor to the Olympics. People
Giuliano said there could be a vancty were doin& the errands early .
of factors working t ether. he .. Once all the data is tn, the fun
offered a few of the followma theone , tan . We get to analyic it,'' 1d
but cautioned that 1t will be ~vcral G1luliano, an Irvine resident.
months before she knows what h ··we 'hould et I ood idea of who
trul) happened: · went to the pmc and how they 10\
•Many people arc followma the there."
advice of tran\1t official by tak1n The tud)' al~ should provide
ma"" tran\1t, car poolins or tayina needed information for traffic man-
homc cmcnt at other maJor event in
•Nearl)' 7~ percent o the tickets tmpotltarrtTa1. • ;nditt'oold"Jjvc
'told for Ol}mp1c t'venu went to tran it planner a ood ide:i of what ~ouiht•rn \ahforn1anll. People could mcasutt: work best m•mprovmg the ~ going to th<' Olvmp1cs anste d of c1owdrd . outhem Cal1fonna 1ran
"ork · portat1on ~tem. he condud d
' l ..
oo, aero . . . -~ our a., ert1"'mg inv~tment. ..
the daily pilot.
"In 6 test ads THE DAILY
PILOT consistontly out·
pulled the Register ond the
lo' Angei., Times."
The cellular telephone industry is one of :e toughest, most competitive
there is. We offer outstanding produds and services at the best prices
available. We demand a lot out of equipment and no less from our
odv.ertising. We hove tested all the major media in Orange County and find
that the ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT to be our best value . In 6 test ads,
Th& Doily Pilot consistantly out-pulled the Register and tho Los Angeles :J:imes.
And when you consider its low cost and its home town appeal, it clearly is
your and niy best advertis\ng investment.
CELLULAR INTERNATIONAL
15801 ROCKFIELD
IRVINE, CA LtFORNIA
'770·3363
•• .. ....
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' FOR MORE INFORMATION REGARDING A OVER
•• CONTACT Ci NDV HAUARD AT 642·4321.
THE D7'rtY PILOT,------
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