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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-13 - Orange Coast Pilot., l:UIJ 1111111 _ ORANGE COUNT V C A L If OHNIA -/~ r:f N T'~ NB .Woman~all-s .200 eet Plunge fro~ Palm Springs tram deck leaves victim in cFltical condition By STEVE MARBLE · famed Palm Sprinas aerial tramway, ot ... o..,,...~ according to reports. The woman, who had ridden the A Newpon Beach woman sutfcred tram with a friend,' reportedly was near-fatal iajuries Sunday when she sunbathinaon theou1doordeckatthe ~----.,.--------.--.;__-4 · tumbled more tl}an 200 feet'from the summit near ihc tram station when observation deck at the top of the she fell down t~ sheer hillside. She Laguna·Hllls ·areg - Louganls put aslae his fears to win second diving medal. Story on PageCl. 'Laguna Beach school board woos City Hall for funds to maintain aging poot./AS . We asked folks what th,ey think of ABC's coverage of the Olympics./ A3 California Motorist rams car Into San Francisco cable ear, killing hl~self and lnjur- lng 26./ M Nation Mandatory reading of classical books by high schoolers ls un- reasonable, educators say./A5 Mystery of holes In panty- hose exposed./ A5 lii:: World Police seek American at- torney In wake of Belfast rioting.JM Soviets, Iran say U.S. exploiting Red Sea mining Incidents./ A5 Feature Thrilled by sunken treasure? The opening of the Andrea Doria's safe will be televised Thurs- day ./81 Sporta The United States' Olym- pic diving gtant -UC Irvine product Greg Louganls -Is human after all./C1 The Rams wlll be without Eric Dickerson tonight when they play host to the Cleveland Browns./C2 Entertainment ABC follows Its OJymplc triumph with a gold medal series pilot, •'Call to Glory," tonlght./83 Baalneu The Impact of new bankruptcy laws ls dis- cussed by columnist Syl- via Porter ./85 Bridge S.. BuU.tln Board A3 Bu~,,... 86 Olymplce go oat with a bang l'treworb ezplode OYer the Loe Aneelee CollMUID.Sanday m,ht after the Olymptc flame wu eZtinpbbed during the Friends ·to host LB 'Happy Hour' for Virgil Partch No formal services ---· ·-will be held for From Staff and Wire Report• Friends of cartoonist Virgil Partch plan a "Happy Hour" cocktail party 1n his memory Tuesday night. Panch, who created the "81a George'! comic strip that •Pi>ears in The Daily Pilot and whose sin&Je panel canoons appeared in such publications as Esqu11C and the New Yorker, was killed with his wife in a freeway crash Saturday on Interstate S near Castaic, authonties said. The memorial gatherina of "dear old friends and drinking buddies" will be held at the Laguna Beach home of Partch's Iona-time friend Jerry Payne at 3SO l:CdrOit Street, bqinnina at 6 p.m. "Vi rail would have liked this," said Payne ... I know damn well he didn't want any services." "God love him, he was a sweet· heart," said Payne about his "oldest and dearest friend.·• "I have a letter he wrote to me on Friday. I can't open it up yet," Payne said. Partch and his wife were em barkina on a campioa trip through the northwest when the accident ha~ pcncd. "They were really enjoyina themselves," Payne said. "I doubt 1f he ever said an unlond word about anyone in his whole life. At times he was really shy about his cclebnty. "He would draw anythina for anybody. There is probably more free an by ViraiJ Panch Ooauna around than by anyone in the world - pcnonalized drawings -he would do them without ever liftina his pen was seen lyana face-duwn in a canyon by tram ndm hortly before noon. according lo a Rh·erside County• Sheriffs spokesman. · "She was unconscious, in a semi· comat<>K stato when the ranscrs got to her:• sheriffs Capt. Ray Kanova said, "It took them more than an hour to lift her back up to the top.•• A nursina supervi50r at Palm Desert Hospital in Palm Springs identified the woman· as Cheryl McHendry, 23 of Newport Beach. The woman's condition wu Ii led as crtucal, accor<lina to &he upervisor. tate ranpg Who rcsp0nded to the mishap refuted to comment on the accident. But Kanova said ran.gen told him that the \\Oman apparently had been drin'"king. :.,.he rangers were told she had been drinking pretty heavy.'" Kanova said. ••So it's not really clear whether U\c slipped and fell. whether she ·was pushed or JUSl w'bat ha~ .. A Palm pJ1nl' newlP9PCf • paned ahat the woman 1u"•1ned numerous broken bones ad 18oer- auons in thC fall. The ~IMd the woman was ~ IO die hospital by Sprinp AmbWaacc. It was unclear how the wodlaa wu raised baek up the Obtervation deck of the tram station. The uam rum from the dcsen floor several thousand feet up Mount San Jaciruo. Drtver in fatal crash nabbed Suspected dnmken driver discovered shopping tn store BJ STEVE MAllBLE · °' .. .., ........ Irvine woman ~· of drunken drivina was arrested at a grocery store Siinday where she apparently bad aone sboppina just moments after causi~ a fatal acci- dent that claimed the life of one man and injure(i another, police ieponcd. Dorothy Tucker, SS, was found shopping at the C&mpus Vllley Center in trvine a lhort time after tbe 6:30 p.m. accident on University Drive near Mason Regional Park. Police said she was c:arryina some .. recently purchased" alcohol when she was arrested. Tucker was arrested on SUIP·-tu._-~.._ offclony drunken dnvlog, felony hit- and-run drivin.g and vehicular mao- slau&hter, police said. She was being held at Oranat County Jail today on SS.000 bail. David Andiew. an \I-year-old Irvine man who wu a passcnlCf in the car struck ~ Tucker's vehicle: was pronounced Bead at the 1c:cne of the accident. accordina to Irvine police; The dnvcr. Kevin Cohen. 16, suffered minor injuries when his car flipped over after being rammed. He was treated at TUSlln Community Hospital. TuclceT'. was southbound on San •Joaquin and made a £W'!rl>nto Universn~ Drive, according to police. But she failed to yield the ript of way to Cohen. who was driVUlJ west on University, police said. cloelna ceremontee of the XXDint Olympiad. See Sport., Paee <fl. for all the detan. on the wl.D.D~. The collision caused Cohen's car to flio off the roadway and roll onto its (Pleue .. r AT AL/A.2) vtrl Bt&Georp off the paper. "Virgil Partch was one of the g.matest American cartoonists ever," said close friend Frank lnterland1, a syndicated cartoonist for the lo Angeles Times for 20 years. Formal funeral services will not be held, accordina to family members, who rtquest that contnbut1ons tn the memory of Helen and Viraal Panch (Pleue eee P ARTCR/ A2) Sm~ller sutf gives lifeguards a -break Giant weekend waves and riptides kept Orange Coast rescuers busy savin lives By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. o.ltJ ........ Calmer seas ·prevaded along the Orange Coast today followma a weekend of big surf that kepi life- auards bu$y rescuing hundreds of wimmers caught in strong riptides. There were no drownings Lifeguards at several local beaches said they w re forced to rescue more swimmers Saturday than on any prev1ousda) this season. At one pomt on SaturdaY. at Huntington tate Beach, l I lifeguards and two boats were rcqufred to aid about SO ~opl caught an a riptide, acconhng to lifeguard Jim McMillan. Wl11le I 0-foot waves rolled toward shore at some beaches Saturda). surf condiuons became le harsh Sunday and wttc runnina ju t a bit rougher than usual today, hfeguards said. The Wedge. a papular urfina pot on the Balboa Penin ula. was ooundcd Frida) and turday by waves as high as l 3 feet The high surf was attributed to . Humcane lscUc, ragina off the COi.$\ ofBaJa. "It certainly kept us busy, .. said Doug Bloom. lifeguard supervisor at Huntinaton City Beach. Aboua 7S.OOO people visited the city beach over weekend. rcqumng ufcauards to make 7S rescue on Saturday and about .4Q on Sunday, Bloom said. He said the water moved onto the beach by heavy surf eventually must make its way back to sea. Jn doina so, It crntcs a np current that makes it difficult for a swimmer to return to the beach. he said. Bloom said swimmers at the aty beach also faced a strong side current that swept them toward the pihngs of the Huntmaton Beach C1ty Pier. Lifeauards h d to hetp lWlmmcn back to hore before they struck the pthngs. he id. (Pl_.. ... 8URl'/A2) Callf0tnla News A4 Cl&lllfled C5-8 Comlct 84 CrOllWOf'd C7 DMth Notleel C4 County braces-for fmpactof 'Jarvis IV' tax cut FMtu,.. 81-2 Help YourMff 82 H0toecope ce Ann Lander• 82 Mutual Fund• 85 N1t10nal Newt A4 Optnlon A8 Paperazzf 81 POiice Log A3 PubMo Notlcet C4 &pone C1·4 8toek Markele Be TIWllllOn 82 ,....... 83 Weethlr A2 WOl'td NtW1 A• • JEFF AoL£1 Ncv.s PcRSP lCTl\L ----- :Att*Orange ~l DAILY PILOTIMon 'Suicide driver' still unknown More than a wtek after a driver in a oleo car cnW\ed in Ncwwn ~ach in a jarring pileup that killed one person and in,Jured sh. others, authorities still have not identified the mao. Tht driver led police on a wild cbate from an immiafalion check'- I CONTINUED STORIES ----- point outside San Clemente to Ncw- pon Beach, where he was kill«! after ram min& bead-on into two other can. Newp<>rt Beacti police brlieve the man's final maneuver was inten- tion l. The mystery driver carried no identificatton and no one ha teppcd forward to identify the man, whose • body rcJMlns at the county morgue. The dri~ers of the other two cart involved an the MacArthur Boulevard cruh wcrc seriously in- jured thouah their medical con· ditions have improved day by daY. Four childrcn ridina in ono car suffered broken bones and cuts. PARTCH FRIENDS HOST PARTY.;. Prom Al be sent to the O~ County chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation . .. He bad a genius for getting the greatest amount of humor from a minimum amount of line,,. Inter· llndi said. "He could sit down and knock out a cartoon anywhere. He was one of my true heroes." The 67·year.old Laguna Beach resident, who signed his work "VIP," had also drawn cartoons for the Saturday Evening· Post, Th.is Week. and True magazines. Partch was killed instantly about I :40 p.m. Friday when a ~rdriven by his wife, Helen, 64i, ran mto the back of a trailer towed by a pickup truck on Interstate 5, California Highway Pa- U'O~ Officer Nonnan Spraguer said Saturday. "He went through the windshield, and it appeared he wasn't wearing a scat belt,.,. ~om-cer Rick sancrers said, adding that word of the deaths was withheld until Saturday so rela- tives could be notified. Mrs. Partch died at Henry Mb:Jf. Hospital in Valencia within a - hour of the accident on the "Grapev10e" section of the freeway 1ust north of Los Angeles near Newhall, Spraguer said. The CHP did not ette the driver of the pickup, Dec Christian~65, of La Habra, who told officials he was traveling about 50 mph when the collision occurred. Christian was uninjured m the accident. Partch was known for a zany cartoon style characterized by people in . weird situations, such as one single-panel canoon for True maga- zine depicting a compf~tely soaked man carrying an umbrella on a sunny day, with rain falling only beneath the umbrella. .. His "Big George" strip -featuring an irascible, middle-<:lass protagorust railing against problems of the mod- em world such asi freeway traffic and rismg prices -was Partcb's most po_pu.lar eff on. . "Big George is my Walter Mitty release," Partch said in 1960. the year the strip began. "I am act~ly a shy, timid SOrt. f never tell W8lteTS Or cab drivers off. But, as they 53.Y, I let George do it." The strip at one time appeared in more than 300 newspapers and some publications still carry it regularly, said cartoonist Ed Nofziger, another close friend of Partch. In one of his best-known canooos. an aunt tells a nephew he's "grown a foot" since she last saw him. .. The boy, of course, bad a foot growing out of his bead," recalled William Mcintyre ofLaguna Beach, a friend who ~lped Pancb produce "Big George." Panch retired in January due to cataracts, but since be bad produced so many advance installments of"Big Geo~e," the strip will probably be in syndication for at least two more yean, Mcintyre said. Born in St. Paul Island, Alaska, Partch studied art at the University of Arizona before movin& to Southern California in 1938 to seek work as a movie·studio cartoonist. But his refusal to go along with what he perceived as the studio's dictatorial rules for producing animated cartoons kept his work for the studios brief. "I'm not a<:<>mpany man," Partch said later. ''I drew Mickey Mouse over and over qain. It got awfully old." In 1940, Walt Disney studio fired him for rejecting strict guidelines for drawings of the character, and for similar reasons in 1941, Partch quit the Walter Lantz.studio where be had been-drawin& Woody Woodpecker. What lntcrlandi called Partch 's brilliant free-lance career took off in 1942 when he sold some ~oons to the New Yorker. Partch and his wife are survived by three children, Peter, Anna and Nicholas, and three grandchildren. · SURF ON DECLINE ••• From Al ' At Huntington State Beach, about 175 rescues were made over the weekend, lifeguard McMillan said. He said it was fortunate the heavy surf occurred on the weekend when the most guards are on duty. "A lot of the tounsts really didn't enjoy it," McMillan said of the heavy surf. "They liked to watch it, but we had a lot of people who really didn't know how to handle Califorrua surf." The busiest lifeguards were at Newpon Beach. where 429 rescues were made Saturday and 255 on Sunday, according to Marine Safety Lt. Ron Johnson~ Although the waves were a bit smaller today, lifeguards were not relaxing, be said. "Sometimes when the surf gets smaller, we get busier because more people arc going in the water," he said. About 90,000 people visited New- ~n·s beaches on Sunday, with the same attendance reported Saturday. Laguna Beach lifeguard Ingrid Loos said 60,000 people visited Main Beach over the weekend. Sbe said Laguna guards rescued 200 people Saturday and 175 on Sunday. Waves occasionally reached 7 feet at Laguna, she said. Loos said several persons were injured in body surfing accidents, including one with neck and back injuries and others with dislocated shoulders. ~ · COUNTY BRACES FOR NEWT AX CUTS ••• From Al year thereafter. Besides the tax rebate for the years 1975-78, the measure would preclude the use ofbenefit assessment districts. used as an alternative to fund a variety of special services since the passage of Props1t1on 13. Thomas said. In addition. the county's chief administrative officer said the measure would change the wa y fees can be assessed by the county and would vastly complicate how prop- erty is assessed and valued. One other complication. albeit a smaller one, is the Irvine Co.· s appeal of its landholdings' reassessment. The boldinas of the county's largest landowners were revalued and re-assessed when the company was sold last year. "COunty property tax revenue has been revised downward by approx- ~ Just Call 642-6086 D•llY Piiot Dellvery 1mately S3 m1lhon due to an appeal of assessment by a major landowner. The~ funds will be reserved until the appeal has been settled," Thomas advised. Thomas also warned of problems with the county's road fund. e~ pec1ally in hght of the June defeat of Proposition A, the I percent sales tax increase that would have been dedi- cated to hlgbway and other transpor- tation improvements. He told supervisors that if present policies and the usual maintenance programs continue. the county will not .~ve spfficient road funds for fi~l'985-J6., "v~pthout Propositi9n. A fundina, contmued reduced psohne tax rev- enues, higher costs ~f labor . ~nd materials. together WJtb the ns1.n1 costs of risk management and admm- 1strative and engineering suppon have combined to place tbe county in severe jeopardy for future road pro- grams." be said. The largest.share of the new budget, 36 percent, is slated for human servtces, which includes indigent medical services and the county's welfare and other social programs. The community safet}' budget, which includes the sheriffs depart- ment, comprises 22 percent of the 1984-85 budaet, environmental man- agment accounts for 19 percent, general administration and support 12 percent and aeneral services, 11 percent. As state law requires supervisors adopted a budaet on July 1, the first day of the 1984-85 fiscal year. However, the board has until Aus. 30 to amend the final budget document. What do you like about tbe Dally Pllot? Wbat don't you like? Call the number at left and your me11a1e wUI be recorded, traoscribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same U·boar an1werln1 service may be used to record letter1 to tbe editor oa any topic. Contributors to our Letters column must include tbelr name and telephone number for verification. No clrc.alatJon calls, please. Tell u1 what's on your mind. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Circulation 11.,M2-4m • Cla1alfled edvertl1lng 7141142•1871 ·All other department• 142-4121 MAIN OFPICI 330 Wtet lay 11 Cotlt ~ CA Mti4 eddt-lo• IMO Coeta MMe CA d11 I• GuarantMd MO'IOly F"41t( I! you llO llOI ...... '°"' pepP t>y s '° p "' caf oeto-t ' " ,. 81'4 ~our c;opy .,.. cw "4 . t •O.• •nd Suncu • n "°" 41;> ""' ·-·· '°"' COPy Oy T I .., Cl!' !>PIO"• H. L. Schw•rtz Ill Publisher Coo-/!''1'11 1913 <>anot Coell l'l.Olllf'llllO ~ NO -acor.. Qa1r1t<Ol't '°'°',.. lftllllf' or ~' ~It '*ton mly lie rfC)'CldUcN wllNM lf*)lll I* 10 I 'II t(IO yW COCJ't...,il 0.~.0 • Clrcul•tlon Tefephone1 Rot•m•ry Churcht'l\lln Controller Stephen F. C•rHo Production Manager Don•td L. Wllll1m1 C1rculat1on MAnager mitM11 OI COOYT'V'll °"""' VOl. 71, NO. 221 Sunny, hazy and hot on CoaSt coaatal OnthehoUM Tl dee 10 10 " ., IO II " 74 tt M ,, '* u n 70 .. " r• 71 .. . .. IO M ,, .. .. fl IO .. " n .. ,, t2 • .. " ts t.11 .. 70 .. 71 te 70 TOOAY 79 71. ttoono 10w 4 IO p m I 0 I; ~~ a.-t lllOh 10 50 p,m. It It ea TUHDAY 91 72 ht! '°"' 11 4h m, 0 2 109 11 Flftt Noll 12 ot pm. 4.4 13 73 1tconcf IOw Hf p ni IO 102 14 hcQtlOlllgll 1U4pm 11 t 73 et '""' .... todty .i f 42 p.n1 .. ,._ 73 !! Tl*day al f 13 a.m llld Mt• 1glln at 74 ""' '41 o.n1 71 ~~ Moon n.. IOdty et f •l4 pt11., Mil H 17 Tueedty 111'1171m.llld1"'9 IOtln It : ., t40pnl WIJJtam E. e,.en, 29. of ec.ta lleM wu arreeted on auolcton of d.nmken dd'ftna after he a11eaedl1 ran hla car off tbe roe.a and onto tblj houe at 2 Cherry aw.. Lane ID Newport Beach early Satard&ymonWai. Byen wu arreeted and tben taken fo . FoantalD Valley Community Boepltal trauma center after tbe 1:20 a.m. lDcldenL lfewport Beach traffic officer Joe Thruher aald S,.en allelledlJ droye off the road, ap an embanlrment. onto a 1011 coane and onto tbe houe, where hla car balanced after rtpptna oat nameroaa tree., ahrabe and dam&finaee roof. Olympics end but LA's traumatizing traffic back LOS ANGELES (AP)-The end of the Summer Games marked the return of traffic headaches, as com- muters rushed beadlona back onto the freeways and into traffic jams today. "It looks as thouib people are retumina to their olcf habits," Cali- fornia Depanment of Transportation spokesman W.T. "Doc" Maloney said. ..Traffic is liaht to moderate (probably) buildina to normal com· mute congestion by the end of the week." The Games ended with a bang Sunday and the last chance for an Olympic traffic snarl passed with only a wimpier· despite the crash of a highway patrol helicopter on a free- way near the Coliteum just hours before the closina ceremonies. "Nada. Nothina." was bow Cali· fornia Department ofTranseonation supervisor Joe Hecker descnbed free- ways durina Sunday's fin.al sessions and p1a closina utravapnza attend· ed by 100,000 people at the Coliseum. No problems materialized when tbe crowd de~ the stadium late Sundar1 hi&bway patrol Officer Ron Hess wd early today. But the free..flowina traffic of the Olympiet twncd iluo a tnarled mw CoNTINUlo S10R1l s FATAL ••• ProQlAl I' top before buntina into· flames. Cohen was able to eacapc the flamma vehicle but Andrew wu trapped inside, said Sst. Mike White. Wh.neasa told police that Tucker drove off' aft.er the ~idcnt even thouah her car sustained modct:ate front-end damaae. Police 11id the woman oonunued on for nearly three milet before pulltn 1ht.<? the 1hopp1n1 center n~r the U Jrv1n campu . this momma on the northbound Santa Ana Freeway at the Lona Beach Freeway, where a jackknifed truck and a car were involved in a collision, Maloney said. "Typical" conaestion was also back in place on the northbound Harbor Freeway from Los Angeles Inter· national Airpon to near downtown, and on the southbound San Die10 Freeway from Culver to Centinela boulevards Maloney said. "It's building like we had antici- pated back to nonnal," Maloney said. Officials pve a last tip of the hat Sunday to the smooth traffic the Olympics mawned. "Boy, ft'ls-just been so nice" Caltrans supervisor J9C Hecker iald of closing day traffic. Olympic sign ·seekers even offering ~ribes LOS ANGELES (AP) -An spokeswoman Felicia Archer said u~mingauction ofvivtd Olym-oftbe bribery innuendoes ... As far pie freeway si~s has sparked a as we're concerned, that means crazcamona l,SOOsouvenirhunt-Jail time. and we're not interested en from as far away as New York U\ doina that for anyone." and Florida, some of whom have As ofFriday,_Caltrans received hinted at bribery. officials said more than 100 bids and 1 SOO FridaY· requests for information t'tom "We've bad people call in and people interested in buying the just beg to get one of these signs," roughly 1 SO rcmainina maa,cnta· said W.T. ..Doc.. Maloney, and·turquoise freeway and ramp ~kesman for the California sians that have not been stolen, Department of Transponation. Maloney said. "There has been more than one "The smallest (40-inch~by-30. person who sugestcd we mjaJ\t inch) one have generated the do something contrary to the . most interest because they fit in official bid process," Caltrans yourlivingroom," he said. Hazy sunshine expected in area H~ sunshine with fatc·n1aht and carly-mominacJoudine is predicted Tuesday throuJilout Southern Cali· fornia, accorihna to the National Weather Service. -:---~--Inland h1ah1 will re ch the mld·80s, while the air Wiii be about I 0 dc11ecs cooler at the beach ' Alleinuvn and (~\!Ill~ Lhu.nJcr· showcl'l are predicted to hit Southern California deserts and mountains. H•ah•· in the mountain arc11 ..-m reach into the 80s. In the n~ the hiahs will ran e from the Jow·IOOi to rt Lows from 1hc 605 to the mid· arc fo "' ' Red Cross offers class in irst aid .. The Red Cros • tandard first a d mult1mcd11 cla s 1 bein olTettd at St. JolCJ>tl Hospit.al of Oranae on turday, Auf-18, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The cost as $20 per person which includes instruction book and workbook. PrMCaistraion is required. . The clas wdt consist of film. workbook cierci~s. d1acu s1ory. demonstration and practice. The course meets the requirements for first aid ttainina under the Occupational Safety and Health Act. Call 771-8040 to register. B7e.'61Jt Rmmar .clJedaled A free ~minar on RadiaJ Kcrmatotomy, sursery for ncanightedn , will be held in the conference room of Santa Ana Ho pit.al at. 7 p.m. on Tuesday. Dr. Seymour Kem,·onc of the 200 physicians in the U.S. who perfonn the suraery. will be guest speaker. ~rvations are ttqueatcd as seatina is limiicd. Call 7Sl·lS34 for information. Clan ~t f or paren t.-to-be "Carina for Two," a class ddigned for parents-to-be. will hr held Thursday from 7 to 9 · p.m. at St. JO$Cph Hospit.al ofOransc. This one-time class includes discussion of the biby's development and complications ofp~ancy. Nutrition instruction will be pre5ented by a dictiuan. Cost of the program is St 0. Pfc.registration is required by callina 771·8266. Lup u .. Support G~oup to meet tide from Or. Stanley Stanowicz. M.O., will address the Oranae County Lupus Suppon Group, sponsored by the Orange County Branch of the'Arthritis Foundation, at its monthly meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 2 I. at 7:30 p.m. in the dinjng roomofthcGardenGrovcMedicalCentcr, 12601 Garden 'What do y ou think about ABC ·s television coverage of the Olympics?' Lagu~a schoo seek city funds to keep ,up pool Grove Blvd. . Dr. Stanowicz, a dcrmatol<>&ist. will explain the skin problems that patients with both systemic and discoid lupus encounter. • For more information. call 547·5591 . H~Ung .emfaar aanormced .. Love and the Healioa Ptocess: A Weekend with Dr. Gerald Jam pol ky, •• will be presienltd on Friday, Aus,: -4 7 from 7 to 10 p.m. and Saturday, Aue. 18., from 9 Lm. to S p.m.t...at UC Irvine. • ur. Jampolsky, psychiatrist and lecturer best known for hia innovative and inspuational work at the Center for Attitudinal Healina in Tiburon, contends that most of the relationships we fonn don't work and don't make us happy. ,.. The seminar will be held in Room F-110, Medical Sciences 1. The cost is $75 and participants are asked lo brina lunch on Saturday. Doaa Feute Dorot-y Walala. U mua1er of a trnel bvea• bouewlft To register or to obtain funher information. c:all 8S6.S414, co.ta M... Suta Aaa . .. I definitely think it is "At first I thou&ht it was Adoption cl ... annormced .. The Llfclona Issues of Adoption," an essential class or coupla who have adopted. will be aiven at ParentinJ Resources Office, Swte 288, I 6JJEFourtlfSl.-;sama-Ana- on Saturday, Aus. 18, from 1 to S p.m. biased. They show nothina biased. But they nave im· but the top U.S. com· proved and shown more pctitors. ForciJn athletes forci&n athletes. I wish the are left out of the picture coverage bad been split up unlesstbeyhappcntobcio between the three the finals with Americans. networks, rm sure it would ~ Olympics should bc_ • .a_,b...,a..,.vc been. more .fair..thai international event rm way." interested in how the Ou· . Cost of the class. tauaht by Sharon Kaplan, ~w. MS, WJth i:no~ than 20 years of experience in the field of adopuon, as.S50 ~couple or $30 ~person. For reaistr1uon or more informatton, call S42-SOOS. 'Cop and Teen Day' 11e1Jeddled Students between the ages of 13 and 18 arc invia.cd to a .. COJ! and Teen Day" at Heri&a&e Park Youth Services CCnter, 460 I Walnuf, lrvine, on Saturday, Aug. t 8, from-S to6 p.m. This free event will provide an opportunity for teens to meet police officers on an informal basis, act their bicycles rqistcred for free. inspect a police car, and shoot pool with the officers. ' For additional infonnation, call 66£).3814. • Lu Olu .eeu memben Huntinaton Beach Lu Olas ChapterofToastmistress International i Kek.ing new members to participate in its tested propam for communication trainina. Those intcresa.cd are invited lo attend a meetina on Wednesday, Aua. 22. at 7 p.m. at the Grinder Restaurant.. Goldcnwcst and WCJtminster Avenues, Westminster. There will be an insl&llation of officers and refreshments wilJ be served For more information ca1J Darlene Chadick at 842·9S69orVclma Bolin at S36-l939. nete and the Romanians a.re doina. and athletes from muntries that haven?t ~t.ed in tbe Olym· pica~ .. CaWe llu.ley, H artht Co1taMesa "I think it is peat. ABC is an American broadcastina corporation and it has to CALE NDAR ------pr its coverage to the American pubhc. Of course we arc more interested in Monday, Aug. ~3 • 6:30 P.·m .. Coata Meaa Plauill1 Comm.b11on, City Hall Council Chamben, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. our own athJetcs. If we want a • more pluralistic coverage, we should have the Olympic Committee do its own broadcasting. .. Pol ICl Loe ) JlmBml, H clerk ID a do•pn•t 1tore Cotta Mesa "It's pretty good, but I think some of the com men· tators arc a little biased for the Americans. It shouldn't be that way, the Olympics is an international event. AJso, some commentators arc repetitive and boring. no matter what they are covcrina." Costa Mesa home looted while owner· out of town A pistol. a SO-Ounce bar of silver, camera equipment and assoncd tools were stolen from 1 Costa Mesa home ovcnhe weekend. accordint to Costa Mesa Poli~ Dc~rtmcnt tte0rds. The home, on the 2900 block of Royal Palm Drive, was vacant over the weekend. The theft was dis· covered early this momina when the resident returned from an out-of. town trip, police uid. · A residential bUral&rY reponcd in the 2600 bloCk of SOutb Coast Hiabway rcauhed in the loss of S 1,000 Sunday afternoon. ' · • • • An unknown amount of cash was rt~ly •tolen ffom a rcsidenc:e in the I 000 blOck ofi North Coast Hiabway Saturday mom•nJ. ••• Ronald Chatla Chamben1 2•. and Jeanene M. CoftftOl'lt IY. were cbltpd With ftlidefttial 'buratary and auto theft turday ~morn•na n t.hc 400blod: of'Bluebitd Canyon Drive. Tluevcs broke a window on a rear door at the home to pin entry. The loss was esumated at $2,690, the pohce repon said. An invcstip· tion into the incident is continuina. . BJDAVIDB OP ......... c.. 0 1 • While a private fund·tlJSioa poup &eeks fedetal funds for a new community ~oati<:s complex tn Lapaa Balch, scboOI board membei'i will Uk aty oftiCiall IOr money to keep the existing pool open for at tcut lime more years. Trustee Carl Schnrz of the Llgum Bcacb Unified School District said a private fund...raisina QrPDi7.ation c:alJed ~unaquatics was incorporated in 7lWy with die aoal of mS101 more than S 1 million to build a new twa. pool facility to replaCe the cxisting·oot~tcd. 2'- Ray Bill, 7t Auelle Wlbwa , year-old pool at Laguna 8eacb Hi&b ScboOL · rett.re4 ow.er of pit aop . Sd.awan also announced the pup bas UfUIDd • I.qua RW1 . Bu~ Be.aQ meetina later this month with officials ftom 1{)mp f think the coverqe has .. I \Vould like to see bow Pendleton and from South Coast Medical Caller to been absolutely excellent. I the Scandianavi.an athletes diSCUS5 the possibility of Obtainiog U.S. Defeme find no fault with it. it is are doina.J now have to Department funds to build the DC'W pool a>mpia. very detailed. I only wish write to frich.ds in Swed.en .. It ouldbethconlyrchabilitanve.~peutlcswnnt there would be more of it. to find out. The United facility in all of ~ County, .. Sdiwarz ui4. "Tk ' and no breaks for com· States is a nation of immi· xcond pOol would be utcd pnmarily by the bandic:apped mercials and soaps... nts. Even thouah we aod elderly and •Momm)' and Mc'·typc SWtm~ .. -----·J! ov~ to see the Americans Laau~uatiC5o~bopelhcmdnaryWill81ftt win. it is fwno see bow the to <ksis;rune the &cility as part ofitt ~-M1bta11 athletes from our Con~ Hoq,il&l ,mtcm for natural and military ancestor's countncs are di~ planni~ and pa)' for the major portion of 1ts Traey BaylOD, H Ha.ekeeper Cotta Mesa ··1 think the COVCTllC is excellent. The only reason the United States is setting more coverage than other countries is because we are winnina more mcdals." do1na... constnJCl1on. . TM second pool v.'OUld hive -:a unifonn lhrec- deptb and ma.int.a.in a hi&bc:r water temperature !ban tarser, com}>'.Ctitive swimming p00t to be budt next 10 at, Mary AD ftltaeJ, 24 mafJ canter C.ta ea .. Tbey are doin1 a srcat job. There are some events I wouJd have liked to see, like the sbooung. but they can't cover cvcrythJ~ If the Olympic pmes bad been held m another coun· try, the same thin& would happen~ they would have more coverage of their own athJe~." Schwarz 1d. The school board and the Lapna Beach City Couocd already have endorsed the twin-pool oonc:ep But hU. the city has commita.cd $300.00Cl·to•'tld tbe Is. the school district has committed oo money toward the estimated S 1.3'-million project. - ~ut until a new pool is built, the old pool occd.s major repairs. The sclloot board decided to ask the city of Laauna Beach to share the S~.OOO·in CJtimated costs to repa.1r the old pool, the only public swimminJ pool in the city. ··The city needs our swimmJ.Da pool.·· ·d boerd member Charlene IUptL .. If ~lhcre was ever an opportunity for them to participate in what we do, this is it'' The pool hu been doted ei&bt days SlD<'C the belinnioa of June by tbc county be.alt& official because of a dcteriorat.ina filtration S)-'Slem, ~ to 1 report by ~bool distnct business managr:F"Oyde Lo"elad)' .. Tbe closures forced the city Reaauon Deputmmt to canoc1 its summer swim program. Althouah the pool" open it needs repairs if it is to remain open ror tbc next three )"CaJ'S, Lovelady said. Board president Dan Daniels suaested the city pey half the estimated repair costs as a .. minimum ... The new pools would be constructed on the d.istnct p&rtjng tot on Park·Avenue aaw the street from the hi&b school. althouah an alt.erutivc site oca.r the biah scboOl baxball field tS still under consideration. ··ne conoept is unique because we can pull in outside fundin' from the county and fcderaJ aovcmment wt th lbc second pool." Schwarz said. .. The fact re&nain however. the money isgoina to have to come pnman1yJrom private donations." his home was burU.a.rized. .... -residcncic. Police re~rtcd die Nn~ln~ open 1 rear sl.tding .. door to pin enU). An unlocked bedroom wu\dow provided entry to thte\CS wbo ~tole S82S in valuables. including t-.'O TV sets and about$ JOO cash from a home on the 1300 block of Bri tol treet Sunda). •· ••• There "'as no fo~ entt)' apparent Friday after a buralan at a home on the 200 block of East I Sth trect. A tclcvlSion set and mterov.'lv~ O'-'Cn. valued at SSOO. v.ere ~ported stolen. ••• The Wheels and ta~ .. ere tOlm from a Toyota Cebca that bad beeil left parked outside a t th apart.me t b01kli The t1fC thid'left the auto tandingon four~ aiilk era~ ••• A bicycle •Orth SlSO was from the \aaoity of tht Ne Pier. l'fewport Beacla A \'1dco • t~ •recorder early $4,000 worth of Jewelry aod about SSOO · u ta.ken from tcre0 equipment was stolen from a Eastblufr ruidenoc. Riverside lnmates try to hang selves , Belfast r ally ends la violence blood feud bean hs current pha on A\11. 12. 1969". Sunday ~ the ISth anniversary of that date. Hamilton sa1d Sat. Malcolm White. 26. died in hosp tal from wounds be ufTc~ in an Irish Republican Army landmine ambush in County Tyrone on ·Saturday. Sunday's fatalities raised the kt\own death toll in Nonhern Ireland OV('r the past lS years to at least 2,386-~ of them th as year. . • The man slam in the police assault was named by Sinn Fein u Scan Downs, 22. was killed when a police officer fired . one of the rock-hard plastic bullets at a pf bout s feet. Thc4-mcb·lo pla ticbulletswert dcsi&ned to be fired from more than 30 feet at human Ul~ • The police moved in when Galvin appeared at the rally to ckfy a British ban on him enterina Northern Jrc- 1 nd. Galvin, 3•, is publicity dil'C('tor of the lrish Northern Aid Committee. a Bronx-bated t\Jndraisina orpniu· tion that 1uppQrts the outlawed IRA'• g\lerrilla campaian to end British rule an the two-thirds Protestant province and unite wath the Catholic Jri h Republic. Ive Marines, wife eld in kill-for-hire NA l lllr-. ' Ferraro chan ges her mind, mum on hubby's tax return Pronnlre bla•ta medJcal panel A superb paint job ... only $320! WASHINGTON -Seo. William Proxmire, D-Wis., bas fivcn b.ii latest olden Aeecc award to the Health Care Fmancina Adrrunistration for a provinf Med.ie&ld payments for what be said were chance mcetinp between •Ml .. ....__-cn,cbiatnsts and pauents at such occasions IS basketball pmes. In anoouncina the award in a statcmeot released Sunday, be said the peymeot of S.S.. for each such mcetin1 may have cost the federal·slltc health insurance prosram for the poor between $40 million and $80 million over the lut four Sctin~lf is bel~vin .. 11 .•• cowu in 11n1I see tlH c11rs j lUt JMintttl '1y Elt911n:;. Compan our 'l""li? JPith t1thers th11t c-11st miab ""1tY. Eltg11n:; tVm intl14lks a duir top co11t liltt tht e.qKmiPt imJ'!",· Tlit Ek11anz paint job is 11n anuizin9 Plllut at SJ80-but if you bring in tht coupon be/Qw _you att "" atUlitw md $60 off1 IY10Sl:WPOR1'/JOULl!VARD. < 0 1A MMA (4 /4) .'4&·7716 r---------------., Special Discount $60 off1 I l'r~nt this coupon "hc.-n \OU ordc.-r \Otlr I f.lt'(t.UU r~nt job .tnd r<'CCIH a $60 d iKount I off tru, rc~Lar '°" S380 rnct'. l.1t•11tt1I "'"' 111J'r 011r rollpM ~t-ftllfll fa'1 I GOOO .. n.-. P' ·------------' . The Balboa Beach Co. "CHECK IT OUT" BALBOA ISLAND ONLY! ~ QUIKSILViR catchit . P-lus T.o.ns Mo~ ''Blowaway'' Back To School Sale Starts Next Monday Aug. 20th, 10:00 AM Be There!! Y~;Bccausc of this stagering Freudian slip, HCFA deserves a dressin1 down," said Proxmire, who awards a neece each month for what he deems the most wasteful. ridiculoU$ or ironic use of the! taxpayers' money. Low gu prlce11 won't la•t --. WS ANGELES-A 13-weck decline in psoline prices will not last much · longerasa cut in Saudi Arabia'aoil production and incrcated fuel c.onsumption by American motorists hit the ps pumps, an oil industry analyst said. "It basn 't worked its way throuah to the pump yet," said Dan Lundbera, publisher of the Lundbeta Letter, who noted reports that Saudi Arabia, a main1Uly of the Organiz.ation o1Petroleum Exportina Countries, has reduced daily production from S.S million barrels to• million barrels. Dlablo arre11ta total 103 SAN LUlS OBISPO -Opponents of the Diablo Canyon nuclear powcrplant tried to block the gates of the twin-reactor facility durina a weekend demoDJtration that Jed to l 03 l.1TC$lS out of 600 protesters ... Diablo must be shut down before it can melt down.·· Marian Mellow, former mayor of o~ Pismo Beaeh, told demoostrators Suoday. "Our policemen must prolCCt this devil's plant, but who will protect our childreo should its radioactive cloud cross the blue property line? .. Patti Dari• wedding Tuellday LOS ANGELES -First Lady Nancy Reapo and her dauabtcr Patti Davis have been confcrrina about twice a day on wedding plans as the date of Miss Davis' marriaac to yop instructor PauJ Grilley ncan, a spokeswoman said. The ~est Ust is up to 130 for the weddin&, which is act for S p.m. Tuesday at the lavish Bel·Air Hot.el in Los Anactcs. she said. As previously announced, the wcddina will be "a private and family affair," she said, addina that was the wish of Miss Davis, 31 . Qade reg•ten 4.4 on RlclJter SACRAMENTO -:rbe IUlte Department of EmeriCncy Services rcP.Qrted a moderate earthquake oocurred early today with an epicenter five miles southeast of Moren Hill. The tilne &iven WIS 2:51 a.m. •-ncre were no reports of any damqe, ' said rpokcsman Ron Whitehead. The quake, which Whitehead said measured 4.• on the Richter Scale of quake intensity, wu reported felt 70 miles north in San Francisco by at least one person, accordina to the San Francisco police dispatcher on duty. Solidarity leader freed WARSAW, Poland-Henryk Wujcc, a leader of the disbanded workers• aroup K.OR and a Solidarity union adviser, was freed from prison today under the Communist aovernmeot's aeneral amnesty, a family member said. His release means authorities have freed au seven k~ Solidarity leaders and four KOR leaders whose detention after the imposition of martial law drew the attention of church and human ri&hu ~OUPI in the Wesl Wujec, a •J..ycar-old physicist, was amona hund~s of Sobdaritr activists &n"Clt.ed dunna the Dec. 13, J 981 mili&ary crackdown. He had been unprisoncd for 32 monthL Teen JJJJac~ •UJH.'Ct. on trial ROME. -Two anti·K.homeini Iranian tecn-aaer:a, raisina their handt in victory aians. went on trial today on cb'araes of hijacki~ an Iranian jetliner to Rome last week. Defentc attorney Rocco Ventre immed11tcly ukcd for 1 delay in the trial, 11yin1 be needed more ti.me to prepare bis cue. Tbe threc-jud&e ~el adjourned the ICISion after SO minutca and said it would rule t00n on me ~uest. Ge.rmaD ttabi ml.Up till• 3 . . HEILBRONN, West Germany -At least wee people wer;c killed and S 7 uuured. some 1et10USly, when a West Getman pusentef ltlin 1um&)ed the trlCb, police Wd today. They id all nine J)Ultnact can daai&ed and three rolled down a miep cmbenkrilcnt in ttiC ltdat.nt Sunday nialn near the talion at Httlbronn, JO mll nonh of Stuttpn. The train was canyil\l__aboul 200 ,i:>e0plc and wat nvehnaabout 2S mph when the crash occumd, 6ffiaat id. Damqe was estimated It SJ.$ million. Soviets, Iran: U.S. exploiting. mine incidents CAIRO, Egypt (AP)-Iran and the mines and seourina pa of navi· Soviet Union today accused the ption. U nitcd States or exploitina the recent Tbe sea is the hortest water route explosions in the Red Sea to eitpand bet\tfeen the Middle East oil fields and its ~aionat military presence. One the Western world. Soviet commentator said the Pen· Tho four British thips will arrive ta&on ~'1lnts to tum the sea into an . Wednesdar. at the Egyptian naval .. A.mencan lake." base of Atiba, aix milea aoutbeut of Brltain'a embassy in Cairo, mean-Suez ~ty at the aouth~m end of the while, said four British min~weepen I OO~de.lona canal, 111d the~~ busy will 10 throuah the Suez Canal on official, who spoke, on condinon ~e Tuesday and the next da~ beain n~ be named. combina the watcn for nunes. At We expect our hunters to operate least 13 sh.ips plying the Red Sea have at the bead of the Gulf of Suez, and the been damaged by explosions in the EsYJ>tian and AJnencans to o~te f\il•t month toward the southern end and an the .--. Red Sea," he said. At Emt'• request, Britain, the Diplomatic sources said. no mines United State and France have min-bad been recovered as of early today. cswccpin' equipment en route to the "Some sbipa wbich have bee,o sea and ats northwestern fork, the damaged have been inspected. but the Gulf or Suez, to join the Egyptian evidence has been inconclusive," the navy an detcctina and destroying British diplomat said. ·- Incllan mtu Amle LOaue WWey. 2&. of White Rl•er, Aris., waa choeen M1M lncU.an Amert· ca at weekend ceremonlee ID Sheridan, Wyo. • • DAILY PILOT/ Liz visits Burton's grave despite crowd of reporters WILLIAM P. BRACCIODIETA, M.D. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF A un;' drive Ctotb l,.. ____ ~11111111:====-=-====:lllll"r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,-~--.,.~~~~~ RUFFELL!$ HEADACHE AND STROKE PRE'IENTION MEDICAt CONIC Requiring -classlcal- reading criticized CHICAGO (AP) -Reqwrina all biah school students to read the same classical literature, such as the Bible -UPHOLSTERY, llC. f• n. ... , Of , .. Uf• 1922 HUD avo .• COSTA IDA -5"-11!11 Happy Summer ~ IUIITT tlSIUIC£ ~" Non·smoker .~~ Rates ~. 131-7740 Early Bird Dinner Specials 16.9S Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Complt!tt! Dinner with choice of soup or salad and desst!rt ON THE PENINSUtA BALBOA 4 to 6 PM ,1 D111 l W11kl Spedo z1nQ In • NeurOIOQic:ol di<JQnO&tS ono tremment OI NodOCf\e disaraen • ~ OP'tll~.i.egarcflng ~ dlOrCS.a • Strolr• pt~toon ' WllJtom P ltoecJodleto Mo. fA f S Oireciof £>1pl0mat• in Neurology Arn•icon loord d PsvcNO!rv and~ ()1)6amate in E1~CIPt'IY .\rr'leoc:on loord cJ ~In EEG ~ cJ the Ameneon AcocWnv ol N~Ologv and 1tie Orange County MedeO Soci8!r Fellow Amer icon E E G Sooet~ Off ic. l'lours by CJR)Oll\lment 14~ 5upef'ior A.,.,_,. Suite A -~PQtl a.oc:n CA 92663 and William Shakespeare's plays, is unrealisticanddoesnotconsiderthei--~~~~~~~~~~...._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.L--'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4t1 Old Mliwpwt mvcs. .... ,.... ...... ea. 801 E. BALBOA 673-772t, (714) 645-8502 va.ryina abilities and interests of students, three leadina educators said. The thre,e -John Maxwell. direc- tor of the National Council of Teachers or EnJlish; R. Baird Shuman, director of En&lish educa- tton at the Univenity of Illinois in Cbampaian; and James E. Miller, president of the Association of De- partments of Enalish -rc1ponded Sunday to a survey by the National Endowment for the Humanities. The survey showed that in the opinion of some scholan,journalists, teachers and aovemment and cul- tural leaden, every high school stu· dent should be required to read the works of Shakespeare, the Dcclar· ation oflndependcnce, Mule Twain's "Huckleberry Finn" and the Bible. But Maxwell sa1d the hst, which also ancluded such selccuons as Homer's "Odyssey" and John Milton's "Paradise Lost," "doesn't comport with reahty ... And Shuman said, "h's a fine list. but it's a little unrcalistJc. "They've got some pretty touah books on there for students with learnina problems." "Anyone can make up a list," added Miller. "I'm not sur,. that iny hi&h school student is ioina to read 'Paradise Lost' and understand 1t fully." Miller said riJid book lists deny teachers the rilht to choose books appropriate for their students. The NCTE believes tc quality of student readina should be improved, Maxwell said, but the works sug· acstcd were overwbclmina in length and complexity and would leave students bttle time to study anything else. "It may be that they arc not readY. for (Sbakes~'s) 'Kin' Lear' until they arc 40, • Maxwell wd. Holesln hose no mystery: ' . Our Level Pay Plan will show you how. High or low? Up or down? If you're tired of paying gas bills that go up in the winter and down in the su.n1 - n1er, maybe it's tin1e you becan1e an az'erage bill paye_r. Ot1r Level Pav Plan c~u1 -take the gues~l)rk C)Ut of pa11ing gas bills. And niake nionthlv .. budgets niuch ea5ier to plan. In faq, our Level Pay Plan can help you budget your gas bills for an entir ar. Becau .. e ,, it l1elp$ balance )<)Ur higher wint r . bills with ur lo r " -· su1i1n1er g"JS bill~. 5<) y<)U face a1111rc)xi- n1atelv the s~u11e a111<)Unt " ' C)n y<)Uf gas bill e\ e~ n1c)nth. Sun1n1er ancJ \\inter. U)C)k in y<)Ur August g~l'-i hill f()r c.ietailc.; t)n the LeYel Pav Pl~u1 . Anc.l tc) 11~u1ici11ate. just 11ay the Level Pay Pl~u1 an1t)Ul1t inLii - catec.l t)n Y< )Ur hill. 't( )ll c~u1 -c.ir<)J1 the pl~u1 at ai1y ti1~1e sin111ly }:)y 11<)ti~--ing us. If Y<>u'd like n1<)re infr)n11ati()I1 c)n the Level Pa\ , Pl~u1. just call the G~t~ C< )111J)~ll1\: Anci \\-e'll l1e ha1111v to tell YOU all al ()ll( . ~ th ad,7'mtag , ot b ing ~ a" ·rag . QC COMPANY J -· ) I REAGAN & Co. ' ------_---~ Reagan learns . that answers -a ren't so e·asy WASHINGTON -On the tu issue, Prcs1dcnt Reagan has wandered into a political swamp that Can<tidatc Reagan or Governor Re-~n before him would have eluded with ease. · Lou CANNON little knowledge 1s a dangerous thin&, and R~n knows more about ~onomic reabties now than he did when he was first running for Prest· dent. Jct alone when governor of than others. Next only to bis de- Califomia. termination not to "lo~ another In the 1966 gubernatorial cam-country to communism on his paian. R~n promised to keep taxes watch," as he has ol\en told aides, is a down and' squeeze, cut and.trim" the determination to redu~ the 1ocome- cosu of government. His approach tax rates that he personally found so ~ summed up tn a passage of bis oppressive. tnauaural speech: ··For years JlOW, Despite s1gnm1 the tax-increase bill you and I have been shushed like in California, Reagan worked after children and told there are no simple that to refund taxes and was the first answers to the complex problems to put on the ballot an tn1Uativc that which arc beyond our com-would have hmned local..govern- prcbension. Well. the truth 1s there mcnt spendmg. Had n passed, It are simple answers -there just are might have headed off the more not easy ones." destructive Proposition 13 that came A few months after he made this after him. speech, Reagan wtthdrew a budget Bccau~ofReagan"sdetermination calling for a 10 percent across-the-and success m reducing federal in- board cul.in every department of state come-tu rates. It 1s silly to suggest, as covcrnment. Con sequently, be Walter Mondale has done, that he has signed mto law what was then the a "secret" plan to raise taxes Reapn largest tax increase 10 California has no such plan. and never has had. bjstory -aJ>roaes· ive one mc1dcn-.What he wants to do as reduce wes. tally, that upped corporate and bank But ¥ondale's prediction that Re- taxes -and blamed it on deficits left • agan would wind up raising taxes. to him by the Democrats. despite his oppos1t1on to them. 1s on In 1980, running for president. target. 1f history 1s any gauge. He ma) Reagan promised to cut mcomc taxes hav~ to ~ talked into it. as his by 30 percent, increase military advisers did m 1982 when they spending and balance the federal emphasized the tax-refonn features budgeL He was undeterred by the .()} a neecssary bill that )n fact most accurate obscrvatton of the increased taxes for many Americans. campaign: John Anderson·s com-Reagan 1s not in any way apologeuc ment that the only way this could be for the economic record of his done simultaneously was "with mir-administration. In fact. he 1s proud of rors." u and believes that his insistence on a Four years later. Reagan has kept three-year mcome-tax cut con- two of three promises. while leavmg tnbuted m1ght1ly to the durab1hty of the budget hideously unbalanced. But the recovery be was not fals1fymg when he made But Reagan 1s also aware of has promises. True to the spmt of economic nuances that previous!~ "simple answers. JUSt not easy escaped him. and he has appro"cd ones:· Reagan believed what he said. ever) hedge or equ1vocat1on m the When pollster R1chard W1rthhn gen-speech drafts that have been prepared tly suggested that surveys showed for ham. What the Great Com- most Amencans wtlhng to forgo tax munacator is walhng to SI) to otherr.. reducuons rather than the other two he is likely to sa) to himself. and what goals, Reagan ignored him and con-he as ~ymg as that matters are more tmued to advocate income-tax cuts. c:om phcatcd than he believed. Giving ground on the defense In add1t1on. Reagan recognizes that budget was never really a choice for his admin1strat1on 1s not a seamless Reagan. He bcheves that the advanc~ web on tax issues. His supporters of Soviet power requires a budgetary range from ~ep. Jack Kemp (R-rc~ponse and has. on this strategic N. Y.), a punst in opposing t.ax prionty, done even more than he increases, to Senate Finance Com- promised. The real choice was be-m1ttee Chairman Bob Dole (R-Kan.), tween an mcome-tax cut and bal-a rcahst who recognizes that tax ancmg the budJet. and the way mcre<lscs as well as spending cuts will Reagan decided 1s not surpns1ng t6 be necessary m 1985. those who realize how much his Reagan is suspended somewhere penonal history governs his de-between these two posn1ons. It 1s to cisions. his credit as a president but to his Reagan has loathed taxes ever since detriment as a candidate that he the late 1940s when. as a movie actor, recogmzes that answers arc no longer be started making bis money for the either simple or easy first time dunng a bncf penod when DISCLOSURE OF THE WEEK: marginal income-tax rates reached 90 White House spokesman Larry percent and 1nd1v1duals were not Speakes. explaining 1n Santa Barbara allowed to income average. At that who was running the show while umc, while still a liberal Democrat, Reagan's top advise~ were on va- Rea$3n advocated a "'human de-catton. "Who's an charge? The Pres1- preciauon" allowance. dent's m charge. He's the pohucal Reagan takes all his promises adviser" sen ously, but some more senously Lou Canaoa Is • syadlcat~d columaist. Why do America ns litter? To the Ednor: An arucle which I JUSt read entitled "Beach cleanup: It's a dirty JOb someone has to do" prompts me to ulc., .. Why?'" Why must we have littered s~ts and beaches? Have we no pride, no concern for others?" This summer I spent several weeks 111 Switzerland ndmg trams. buses. and boats to van ous tounst areas Never did I sec paper. bottles. cans. or cartons left behind or tossed at random as we all Stt on our highways and on our beaches _ , Everyone. even tounsts. seemed to make a point of putting trash where tt belonged -1n a container provided for n. I ask -··Why can't we do that'> .. HELEN BALLARD South Laguna Columnist's a rticles. prais e d To lhe Editor I am wriuna to commend you on the continuing. valuable an1cles wnt- teo by Linda Algaz1. Ph.D. I look forward to her articles and often save them or mail them to friends who might be interested Please continue to include such interesting and relevant columns. ELLEN SPEYER Newport Beach Willy Pllot welcomes Nders' comments OAANGE COAST DailyPilai ...,..y r Cl' IN' ...... Al J30 ~'"' &, I C.O.ra.....,. ~-c I'~• ro Do• IMO ~_....,,..J,A CA ~J H. l. Schwartz Ill Putil!ttlfo• Frank Zlnl ~ n g<ng Co tor Tom Tait rr fell ' 3 2 - · 'R agan has Joa ti.led ttlXI ever Inc the late J 940 when. a movt actor, he tarted maklngbtgmoney for OJ flrst t/modurlnga. brief period when marginal tncome-taxrate m ched 90 rcent nd lndtvldual werenotallowedtolncomea1le e." · BILL HARVEY ,, '. ,.,. Having a grand time at fhefair The County Fair's been here, ,and • it's gone, and I'm rccovcrina, and I'm glad it's gone, but I'm sad it's gone too. l can hardly wait till next year. ! Wait for what? Why, the County • Fait, of course. The-fair as areallO-v.e-hate situation for me. I love lhc exc1teQ)ent but I hate the crowda. I love th~ displays, but 1 hate scan:hioa for a parkina plaoe. I Jove the row of trailer after trailer of exotic and delicious food,~­ but I bate how expensive it's become. I made a date with my two daughters, Joanne (13) and Jill (12), and we were there in line at 11 a.m. Ann couldn'tjoin us until 6 p.m .• and • by the time she did join us, my &iris were just get tin& their second wind. I, however, was another story. As ~n as the gates opened, my girls and I started by checking out all oftbe craft booths. The man with the plastic flutes was there apin. This year be bad wmdchimes as well. He makes flutes out of PVC pipe. Ann plays recorder and piano, and wanted to try one of his Outcs, so we boupt one last year. Neither of us had been able to make much music with it, but we have a friend who plays flute wbo was absolutely amazed at the thing, · she says it sounds as good as her silver flute. Then, into the flower buildina. Beautiful as always. On to the new products building. This particular buildins is my favorite pan of the fair. I'm an incurable gadgcteer and some of the stuff in there is absolutely marvelous. We paid S 12 for two o_ysters, and Joanne got a pretty good Slle pearl, while Jill got two smaller ones from her oyster. There's an awful lot to see, so we went outside. We forced ourselves to have an ioe cream, then wandered back to 1he midway pan for a few minutes. Jill, who is S feet 8 inches tall, defied the man to guess her age. He said IS. Bingo! She won a stuffed snake. Tsakos probe witnesses contradict Sen. Hatfield We wandered over to the animal~ found the .. Horse of a different oolor' and then found a lot of horses of normal colors. The girls loved that part. They're both much more mterested 111 horses than boys, but Joanne has stancd to notice that boys do exist. Hatfield's account to press. inaccurate. according to former Tsakos employees WASHINGTON -Witnesses have given the Senate Ethics Com - mittee sworn statements that con- tradict Sen. Mark Hatficld"s ac.count of his dealings with Greek arms merchant Basil Tsakos. After I raised quesuons about the Tsakos-Hatfield relationship. the Qr. egon Repubhcan asked the commit· tee to invesugatc the matter to clear his name. His request came after the committee had already taken af- fidavits from two former employees ofTsakos. According to the sworn statements, which have been obtained by my associate Corky Johnson. the ex- employecs believe Hatfield did not give the press an accurate account of the Tsakos affair. They dispute, for example. Hat- field"s explanation of the money that Tsakos paid to the senator's wife. Antoinette. They say that payments totaling about $40.000 were made \o Mrs Hatfield during the same two- year pcnod that the senator was helping T~kos promote a S 15 billion trans-Afncan pipeline project. The senator contended that the money was a "finder's fee" for his wife's work in locating a Waterptc condomiruum for Tsakos and a professional fee for her consultatton on rcmodelin& the apartment. I S1noe tt)e fonncr 'Makos employees told the Ethics Committee what they knew, Hatfield has changed his explanation of some of the payments to his wife. The senator now says she was paid for showina Tsakos properties he dad not bu)'. not the Waterpte apartment he did buy. But Tsakos' formtt emplO)l-CC, Manlyn Mangan, accused Hatfield in her sworn 5tatc:mcnt ot "IYlna about (the) money received by his wife:~ The aflidaVlt called the nator' aCC'ount ··a s1J~uficant tnn ion of public IOOd faith. of outri l bes." ~ts Manpn also said the Greek 1nn1 merc:hant tl'Qtcd Hatfield hkc ao "emndboy ... Herc arc other details from the sworn statement: It was mconcc1vable that Mrs. Hatfield could have been consulted, Ms. Stocker claims, because of the "totally Greek style" of the reno- vation. "He was making a Greek temple out of it," the affidavit says. Accordioa to Ms. Stocker, Tsakos first hired the I.ascaris Design Group, run by a Greek, Climis Lascans. Many of the furnishings were im- ported from Greece, she adds. Fran Cowan, the decorator from Lascaris who handled the job, also told my associate that Mrs. Hatfield was not involved. When Lascaris dropped out over a money dispute. the Tsakos assistant recounts. Greek architect Jason Rizos was brought over from Athens to continue the work. Dunng that ume. Ms Stocker swears, she hired all the workers and was wtth Mrs. Tsakos when the drapes and carpets were selected. She also kept the books and wrote the checks for the renovation. She issued no funds to Mrs. Hatfield, Ms. Stocker says, and the senator's wtfe was never mentioned. •Ms. Stocker also attests that she wrote a check for $5,000 to Susan Hurley, for setting up the apartment purchase. Ms. Hurley told my a$- soc11te 1t was she, not Mrs. Hatfield, who introduced the Tsakoses to the apartment sellers, David and Sarah Yerkes. •Two of the chcclcs delivered to Mrs. Hatfield were wnttcn to "the ~arer" and recorded as paid to "'A.H.," Ms. Stocker said. Tsakos often used initials or "code names" in reconUna checks whose purpose he did not want to disclose, she said •Hatfield bu said he didn't know about Tsakos' attempt to sell attack hehcopten to Iran from Tsako1' WasJunaton office. But Ms. Manpn says he deli\'ered a telex from T kos' Athens office detailing the Iranian deal to Hatfield's Georaetown home lut Apnl, with a not~. from her "'1tin tht tcnator tb.ar it was only .. the: tip of the ioebera." •Hatfield acknowlcd cd recci vina a n:port that outlined T kos·, al- l~ c:nmtnal rerord in Grttee. but 111d he aavt the report to his lawyer. Henry L.a\'ine, ho rc.r?'Cd "" that T: k<K was .. clean But Lavine We dressed the girls up as dance hall floozies and had their picture taken, and then it was 6 o'clock so we wandered over to the gate to meet Ann. J1c1 AIDEISOI Meanwhile, Greece's assistant at· tomey general, Anthony Vgontzas, confirmed by telephone the authen- ticity of the report on Tsakos. Vgontzas said TsaJcos had been convicted of six felonies. Back to the mi<lw;ly for rides! I hadn't been on a riae (other than at Disneyland) for lots of years, so 1 was • a little flabbcrpstcd to learn th.at many of the rides cost SI.SO. Anyway, the girls rode and we watched, not really so much a matter of economy as it was a matter of courage. Jact Aader1on I• a •yadlc.ted col•mal•I. L.M . Bovo Yep. I'd had my share for this year. But, I knew just as sure as I was sittina there, that come next July, I'd be there standing in line, waitina to get in for more of the same. 'Bye, Fair! See you next year! Col uud1t BHI Bvvey JJvn I• Butblltoa Buell. Don 't burn the toast Clearly. the students at Uruvcrs1tl College m Swansea, EnaJand, don t know how to make toast. Since the school installed super-sensitive smoke detectors in the donns. fire- fi,&h te.., aboard four screanung en- gmes have showed up dunna break- fast hours more titan SO tames. In l 928. Reigh Count won the Kentucky Derby. In 1943, Retah's~ son, Count Acct, won the Derby. In 195 I, Fleet's son, Counl Turf. won. This is the only grandfathcr-fathcr- son lrio to win the Run for the Roses. Sorry, our Lanauagc man cannot explain how it came to bC that tbe idiom has us park in the driveway and drive in tbc par way. Ho"' much ki in• aocs on in Oklahoma I do not know, but mistlctoci that $Lite' official nowcr. Q, What politi~I representative can vote 10 nominate presidential candid.1tei bul can't vot~ for their nitiruite an the prtSJdential cl • ti on? A. Dclcptcs f\'om Guam, the Vtf1Jn lsl.tnd , Puerto Rico and American Samoa. . Q. Only one man has been both the father and the son of a U.S. president .. Name him. ... John Scott Harrison, son of Wilham Henry, father of Benjamin. When a whale ai vcs binh. how doc$ the mothtt cut the umbilical cor'd7 That's what I asked. Oient writes: If it's done the way porpo11e1 do it; the e~pectant female at deli\'ery time emits a peculiar wbisllc. and another female hurries near to act a midwife and mo1hcr'1 helper for several weeks. . Five dogs have fleas One doa getJ sick.. Acas oo the wcU dOll qu1ckJ)'. ~ivate to the sick dot. BeCautc of th hi&het temperature, pmumably. Bui how do the fleas know? C..n ~Y n.e the heat from a distance? Or, u 10me JCtenti1u now thank, do Ocu commurucate with one another? Not every oldume movie bl.lit · kno•'I that !Kton John Wayne and Ward Bond played foot· ball on the me team at the Univcr. 1ny of Southern C..lifom1a. Pe chcs. LOO, 1tirtcc1 m China. Update: Yes. thm 1 a town m Oklahoma called Gene Autry, ~ coaniUd, UI!')' infomt1nt rq>ON. b) lbc Polt om~. the railroad the •1 sakos' fonner personal a l t•nt. Marprtt Stocker, aa1d that he wa the one who h d upcrv1scd the WatCfllte pattmcnt renovation and thll Mrs. Hatfield wa not involved. .. Mr5. If atfi kt n \ ITI h re near the ()4nment ~h n II redone:· the affid1vit 'lites MJ 11 os' attomc)' a the t.uui;.--~~_., .. _ and tic lat'1' m anrd when T o hiahway J:!!n_mcnl and-01.an1i.--Cliiu1. • rcponedly would not d1 I n11n payments ht>h d made in Eurol)t. • llllJ Piii MONDAY, AUGUST 13 1984 ANN LANDERI 112 ENTERT AIN•NT 83 BU81NE8881 Millions spen.t to fi!J.d sunken treasure · Public to find out Thursday what's in An rea Doria safe NEW YORK (AP-)-A galleon With $2 bth1on in treasure. A Roman sailboat that may have crossed the Atlantic before Columbus. A craft that dates from tho very beginning of sea travel. The Eanh•socnns, seas and lakes conceal thousands of shipwrecks. Some, such as the Lusitania, have been stripped clean, and others, like the Titanic, have not even been found. But aug,oup they contain billion. in &old, silverand artifacl~. along with an e:qually rich store of answer.s to ancient historical puzzlei On Thursday. Peter Gimbel opens the bank safe that he recovered two years ago from the wreck of the ocean liner Andrea Doria. Reprdlcss of what is found inside, Computer liBer~ting to disabled Prize-winning application gives them job ~ndependence By JOY DEE ANTHONY Gimbel -who kept the safe in a sh rk tank and plan5 to open it on hve television -already run reaped a treasure of free publicity. But the undersea discoveries of many other Ameri-cans easily ecliPiC Gimbel·s. as do the trcuul'C5 they 4ream offinding. · The most recent epidemic of treasure th er date£ back to 1937, when Art McKee found a &mgle Spanish coin dated 1721-ina shipwreck offthe coast ofAorida. After scuba scar and underwa&erdetectionequipmentwtte developed in World Wart I, treasure hunting grew asa hobby-•nd an obsesSion. In 1964 divers found 2,500 gold doubloons wonh more than SI million on the ocean floor ofTVero Beach, Aa. Then q.me two big. multi-million dollar find : the Spanish plleon Mara villas in 1972 iq the Baham'as, and the galleon Concepcion in 1979 offthe Dominican Republic. Dinnerfor4 turns inte ~ fiesta at 40 So much for promises ---about no party, de_...a"'"'"-r ............ _____ _ Newport ll1acll a~ Unnll and ~ Put, left. 1rlala Keat FieaDdt a laaPPJ .at.la. BJ VIDA DEAN .., .... ..,......, A simple'dinncroutinawtth a couple offrien<l began with i lot of problem , but turned into one bia surprise. ltnt Freudt is oot likcl>' to foraet h1140th binhday... · }fc and wife Bartlera were plannina dinner at Tona Ila Flata in Lquna Beach with Je.Aae and Gae Mis. Thcrestaurant~plewereinon wsurpn and be1J)cd all the foursome as SUC$t re pthcrin-a. They told &hem &hetablewasn·1 read> and ted them on a lower patio with lhc honorcc·s back to the othcr&u 1 thcywcntupthc &airs. Then an emcraeocy phone call came from da\llhtcr Nucy and the phone~ here he coukhakc the call upswrs.Ofcou th oth rth ntaJonaformotal uppon. orcth1n60friend man nh~mthcu . _........,. ....... _.........,.__~ Beach nciahbOn. non hand to give out Hoetw 8&ltiua Pntaadt daanke4 Scott liadmonal .. urpnsc! ... HormbJ, Marla f'rancu for keept.ac HCret. . c lint friend he ~med~ The k1ngofthettcuurchun&ersisMcl Fisher, wbohas raised more than S.SO mllUon from the plleon At.odha and Malguen ta and iuuU lookinJ for SSOO million he ys they spilled on the ocean noor. ewtrcasurc finds have been m>e>ncd this ~t. A Martha's Vineyard man dla1ms 10 have found the Whidah, ap1rateshipcarryin3goldandsilverthatsanknearCapc Cod in 1717. Last month treasure bun&ers said sonar rcadinp had located the De Bruk.a British ship laden Wtlhjewt1S, &old bars and ilver thatsunk in I 79l two milcsoffthc.coast of Delaware. · . • But the world's biggest trCUurc bunt is takina plactin Colombia. whcretheSaltJos.r.aplkon1hatsank1n 1708. isthoughttobe iuingin700to l,200ftetofwater. Wittlan estimated $2 billion m ,old aboard, the San JO$C i~ regarded by treasure divers as the world' a greatest und.iscovcttd wreck. ' Mo t galleons were blown by storms onto beaches or tt.efs. where the)' were ca.siJy vaaec:S.;But tlic n Jose nkqu1Ckly1ndcq>wa&erafietacannonballfroma Bnttm wanhiphi1 bergunppwdcr orcbouse far salvorsbavcspentmilhonsofdo 11nd more than five years in their search lftht nJoscisthcdccJ>· nche511rea urc the Titan1cts1tsm0$t famous.Milhona1reJ Gnmm &cd upCditions 1n 1980, 198 land 19 3 to lf'.Y to find lhe luxury Jineron the bottom of the Atlanuc. AnotherTitamcsearc:h le2m is scheaulcd 1lO k:a next summer from the Wood' Hole Oceanoaraphte Institution in Massachusetts attonal GeograJ)h1c·1 Emory Kiistot: tbcc~pCd1U<m photographer, id 11 will have m~ tame.a bigerboat nd ~tereqo1P11,lmtthao Grimm'spanics: · • Although the Titan ll' was rumored to ha vc a fonune in jewelry aboard, its primal'\ value is its cdebri1y. (PleueMe 8111fUK/112) Physicia_p -:. firids, solves novel crime Movie stats put in focus Census finds fewer houses ---------but big screens tncre_a_s_e __ WASHING TO ( .\P) -There arc fe~-cr theaters where Americans can watch mo~ics and mun\;h popcorn than in the past but the numbcr of moVle rccns 10 those theaters has actually increased. The Census Bureau rcporu that the number of theaters across the country dropped b} 12.S 'J)lrccnt between l 977 and l 982. But two motion picture trade &f'OUJ>' ~J)Ondcd that the number ofbig scrttns had a tuall~ chm bed dunna lhat pcnod. Ruth Gronen Qfthe auonal Assoc1auon of Theater Owncrse~plllDcd that about I 970the trend turned toward bavtna two. three or more ~parate screens 1n each theater. so at that time her sroup topped countina tbcate~ as such and bepn countina scrccn . The number of screen is the imponant st.atist~. added Robert Franklin of the fot1on Pict~ ·ation of America. sinoc that counts dle actual number of places where people can attend mo~ i . Usina the screen count there has ~n a steady increase for a number of y~ ~ra.aklin 1d. He 'd that his association counted I ,040 movie ttTCCft.S in 19 2., up from about 16 000 1n 1977. Tbe number of t.bca&er\ counted 10 the Cen of ice lndustnes dttlincd from LQ..696 lo 9,357 an t e Katll7f'uaadDaftUMILellaCarpeaterwalt pm~ronen id her mOS"t R:<"Cntoountofth ter1C1ttn for tlae laoaor. to urtft at 1"91Maaraat. acnm the nation was l 8.772, s of Apnl l 9 ). ~ F"nldin did confirm tht' Ccn~u., Bure u·s rtPon la t Tuesda f 1 inc tn the number of dmc-:in th tm. TheC oou.ntv. .2.l28dri e-· 11 l 2.d from lhe Cll't"'~· ,-""" lh Cc~n 19~~1 S6 73 mdlion from con UJ'OC$, 1lcco Of ll th t lh at drive-4 Pampering popular pastime of pet ow.oers Restaurant cuisine caterin o canln s the latest l~ry ~JO • PL (AP)-When Old Mother Hubbard t io the ciupbQud to dos• bont, she came up hair1tylcd. Theyareoutfiltina their pooches w1thclothina anda«CUOries.And, in lheend, they arc living Fido and SpotdC<lCntburi l Do&sarenolooacrlivin~91· hfe. The)"relivinain an ~ wli-ere pamperina haS me a popular pastime for many pc& o~llCrs. that niorc1ttzcn5hvina loneandh n41ta vicum1 live Ion& r if they own peui. \'et another proved that pei n be helpful to emottonall) disturbed chlldJT.n. Ac:oo1Uin1 to pct groomm in the Eas1op ~ rca. bona fidepct~~mperersd lheirdogiaara1ncbat ndrubbcr bootS be.fort braving inclement w ther. ln t, they have n en tire watdrObc ror lhcir pct. l heJr pets i1 bunal n a pet cemetery. The Kimberly Pet Cemetery offers peta the iultimlte in after· life accom moo d4lion1. • Anc:lttws. the propnetor, provtdcs for family nd fntnds io be with their belo~cd ~tone last time ata vicwinapriorto interment. At the vicwh11. the casket is di playedandapoemand~ycnarcreact • emp1toda).h'slikdyth a.ipboard i.sttockcd with ___ -1111.u.u.·ua'" oted booes. flavored biscuits and vit- ··Mx~ aremykid ;l)C9pledon'tliketoh ritbut it's true, aid l~nn An~ proprietor of the Kimberly ~tCemeteryin Foeclsville.andowneroftwod<>I$. &w.:> cataand a rabbit. 0 11•1 a nonnal human reaction to form at\lchmcnts to pets. Pets help u expre$Sa lot ofthinp in our li vc:a." \\'h t '>pc of dothingis beinasold lhcscdays?You n me i&.it'sa 1lable. Evetythingfrom tuxedos to ~am . .. . Many pct-pampcrers enjoy havina theirdop t Theentittc:ostofburyu"anav~doauS138, That incl udca the cost of a 1taDdard caJtet. a f cc fOr the lot, • c~arst for .. openi na" and .. closina•' the lot and a \ aminh:ed c:bocolatc dro~ • lfit'&JM?lt Rover inipt out foe dinner. Rc$tau.ran.t! i:at~cuistncforcaruneiattthclatestthing.Attbe Beach Reaeocy H0tel in Nice. FraN:e, for example, doss She invites those who are skeptical about the value of relationships between pcU and owners to read 1tudies on what IOcia.l scientistsbav.e termed the .. buman<ompa- ruoo..arumal bond ... -poomtd. Yet; many pct owners-even those wbo are not pampcrers-fced their do.gs table sc;raps. The atoomm · agroc thatthis is not a aood tdea. · donation to the cemetery care tund, • · Mostdop, thearoomer111n:e, wclco-metheattcouon that pct-pampcrcralavis hon them. But somcdop-lite people-arc inara~. can t 011 a tiuffct ofhot aud cold meats.: veaetables, cheeses and desserts. The meal r.~ from $3 to $9, depcndi.,. on the appetite and size of the dos. Petownerurenotjustfcedinatbeirpetsbettcttbesc days.. Theyarcmakinaappoinunentstohavetheirdop'. .,... She said one study conducted at a Lima, Ohio, prison demonstrated that pets can transform hardened prison inmates snto ""arm, lovina human bei na.s. Another found Retired 'nuisance' give~ ·plenty of spa~e to spouse DEAR ANN LANDERS. I have read several letters in your column from WlVCS who complained bitterly about retired husbands. 1t might be useful for your readers to know bow one such .. nuisance" dealt with the problem. The moment I retired my wife began to bound me to set out of the house, find a JOb, go fishing, go f.Olfins. develop a bobby and gave .her •space." All I heard was complaints without Jl1ltitude, criticism without compassion and demands without end. I took the abuse for several months but even a doormal wears out after a while. Now my wife has all the space she can possibly use -3,000 miles of tl She also has the prospect of support- ing herself or finding another mcaltickel I have discovered there are women in this world wbo ap- preciate a man and Imo'"' bow to say ""thank you" on occasion. Some even ask, '"What can I do to make you ha '/?" ff you pnnt this letter it m1ght wake up some sleeping beauties whose retired husbands arc bcina pushed to the brink and plan to announce soon that they aren't going to take it anymore. -EX IN SAN DIEGO DEAR EX: I wbla JM laad ctva me more lllformatloe. ndl •• you ace. ~r a1e, aad -.Ow loag yoa were togetlter. Wu 0e you fint wife? Did I •• lMDEIS '" laave cldldrellt ftJ mut de aow 1• to wort or tmd a aew mealtldet? AD Chse .-.u .. w"1d llave pnn a a deuer ,&ewe ud made a m.cet (or weaker) cue. At uy rate.~ meuqe II ob\'lou. 'hukl for wrtttu. ..... DEAR ANN LANDERS: A few weeks qo. my husband shot and wounded a dog that belonaed to a nei&hbor. I realize it was a stupid, impulsive thing to do. He claims be thought the dog was a stray and feared it mi&ht harm our children. Since that incident. our ncxt4oor neighbors (not the owners of the dog) have embellished the story to such a degree that almost everyone has stopped speaking to us. We cannot get a baby-sitter and our children have been treated cruelly by thetr play- mates. I haven't hurt anyone and neither have the children, but we arc suffering the most. It is all so unfair. If you print this letter, please an vent a clever signature. I am not feeling very_cute these days. -LAURA IN MISSOURI DEAR LAURA: It ts Ullfair tbat you ud y~r clilldrea dollld be 01- tnct1eCI becaue of ID act committed by yoa.r laul>Ud. I c1D iaidenta.nd, laowever, wta)' you former friends WIDt DOtbblC to do wit.II b.lm. Souda to me like die mu 11 mi111rl1 a microdllp. I ltope Ile gets coa.a1elin1 aoon. Re coald be du1er- oa1. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My mother and my aunt barely speak to each other. When I had my high school graduation party 1 decided not to invite my aul'\\. She took it upon herself to send me a graduation card anyway. Don't you think she should have sent a gift or ignored me completely? A card made her look prctt_y cheap. Or . am I wrong? -A GRAD JN GRAND RAPIDS DEAR GRAD: Soadl to me Ute dte Grad ID Grud Raplda l1 a creecty girl. It was alee of yoar ant to 1ead tbe carcl. Let it go at that. • • • CONFIDENT AL te Eajoylllg My- .ell Wit.II All Tiie Buet Covered: Doa't bet die reat. People &l'ea't as 1tapld •• yoe tllJ.U. Yoa may be able to bide tbe fire, bat wlaat are yoa golllg to do about tbe smoke? SUNKEN TREASURES SOUGHT ••• From Bl Collectors pay S 1,000 for a German U-boat periscope lens; what would they pay for a Titamc life preserve(? For historians and marine an:beologistsJ. shj ~ks are a different kind of treasure. When divers 1ound the 1864 steamer Bertrand an the M1ssoun River, they pined a window on the past-the boat wascarryioga year's supplies for a general store LD Montana. ··Any well-preserved wreck is a time capsule," saad OiveCussler, a novelistand shipwreck hunter whom 1981 raised the huge bron.z.e bell oftbe Union warship Cumberland from the James River in Virginia. Two of the most important recent discoveries were outside the United States. Robert Marx, the treasure hunter who found the Maravillasin 1972, bas discovered fragments of pottery storage Jars used on ancient Roman shipsonareefoutside Rio de Janeiro. Marx said his attempts to find the ship itselfbave been frustrated by the Brazilian government. but Harvard marine an:heologist Peter Throclcmorton called Marx's find "the most dynamite discovery" since the fint evidence ofViking settlements in North America. last year a Bronze Aae vessel that may be more than 3,000 years old was discovered off the Mediterranean coast ofTurkey. Tiussummera team led by George Bass, director of the lnstituteofNautical Archeol<>l}'in Tcxastis excavating the wreck, the oldest ever found underwater. So far the institute has revealed little about the expedition's findings, other than to say that they will shed light on man's fITTt attempts at sea trade and travel. Among the artifacts recovered: copper ingots in the shape of ox hides. For researchers, wrecks hke these are ··a dream come true," saad Derck Goodwin. a Journalist and diver. "'They can write b1storyon1l blank page." Divers also arc trying to reach a vanety ofother wrecks; the ship that chased down the Bounty muuneers before sinking on the Great Ba mer Reef off Australia; the Napoleonic fleet that Lord Nelwn sank near Alexandria, Egypt; the ship!the Briush commander Cornwallis scuttled before his surrender at Yorktown to end the Revolutionary War. "I could die a happy man 1fl found the Bonhomme Richard," John Paul Jones' flagship, which sank m the North Seam 1779, sa1d Cussler, who has spent $200,000 looking. Next April divers wtll try to reach the Hamilton and the Scourge, which sit in 290 feet of water on the floor of Lake Ontario. The armed American scooners sank in a storm in the War of 1812, lolhng53sailors. Dr. William Macinnes, who will Jead the dJVtng team. caUed them "the best preserved ships ever found m fresh water." Photographs show the wrecks to be "pnsune," according to Wilham Graves of the National Geographic Societv. "The masts arc on them, the crew's bones are std I there.'~ Runner def ends exercis.e DEARDR.STEINCRORN: Beinga that this really sums it up. The runner and reader of your column I American civilization faces a far feel that I really must comment on greater nslc of injury and illness from your nept1ve viewpoint on running PETER obes1t>-. heart disease, alcoholism and or/·Olllna. tension. than a person might face by would like to quote a very famous taking up Jogging. runner and coach when be said, "It's STElllCIOll.I People who read your column bencr to go to a doctor with a sore really ltke the comments that you kknee~~tha~~n~a~ca~rd~i~ac~d~iso~rd~e:r·~"~l~fl~ee~l:--:!!!J!~~~~~~~~~~L, have made apinst running, for many -.. ·-_ reasons. People don't want to exercise so now they have an excuse. Our enttre SOCJety has been spoiled by autos, elevators. TV sets and a host of other uerc1se-robbinJ devices. There's a risk in everything a person docs. The arcatcst risks I've fac:cd in nine years of running were in- considerate drivers of aulOJ, the polluted atr that I'm forced to breathe while I'm runnina, and broken beer bottles that hl'Vc been discarded • UPTO 80%0FF BIGGEST SALE EVER IN PROGRESS NOW AT ALL LOCATIONS #29 ASBION ISLAND 644-2652 A COU TRY, ORANGE 543-1760 alona the roadside. . Running is an exercise that costs notbina. You can do it any cime that you ...,.nt, any place that you want. I think it's 1fC3t for Sllyina healthy. lowcrin& heart rate, rcducin& wci&ht. and ~hcvina ten ion. SO many people have never ulCd the full capacity of their tunas or ever tCSlCd their body to see what 1 wonderful mechanism it is. 1 agree with you that walking is also a &oOd exercise. But why discouraae able-bodied people from IWtillJ a Nnmnaprograi:n. Thanks for read1na this. I wondCTifyou'U pnnt it in your column. MR. O. · "People think they'rcdoina their pcu a favor. but table scraps a.re not a completely balanced mea1, .. said Jo AnnSoeU, wboownsAnimalsComerin War.hinstonand · five dogs, two cats, a chinchilla and numerous ferrets. The final act of pampering that owners can provide. -7:30- 1&.°':l:= rrlAUVING EYE ON L.A. ONE DAY AT A TIME I di PEOPLES COURT WID, WILD WORLD Of A*IALI 8HfN( PAet'EW8 TIC TN; DOUGH FMOO&.E AOQ( MOYIE •••~ "Pt\entom Lady" (1944) Fr lnChol Tone, Allll Ourtll. -l:00-8 (J) MOV1E • • .. Nrwotf' ( 1984) Jln.MlchMI =:r~AHD PRACTICAL JOKES .MOYIE •• "Dodge Cfty'' (1939) Enol Flynn. 01Ma de Hftllnd. I di CALL TO GLORY JOKER'SWLD em:RTAMIENT TC»Dn eMOYIE ··~ •·c.ti McCll'' (1958) Jlnm Gamer,~ Wood. THE MEARV Wl>OW CHAT PEAFOAMANCEI MOYIE • •• "The LUt Unk:om" (1982) AnlrnNd Ve*-of Mil Fenow, AllllMin ®MOYIE ... ~ "Glorta" (1980) Gene Row- ... John Adlmll. (O)MOYIE • • • "The Winter Of Our er.mt" (1~ 1) Jutt/ Or.11. ~ Brown. Cl) FAEAIUALE ~TAE -t:aG- TIC TN; DOUOH NEWS P.M.MAGAZJNE -t.00- ll Cll MOVIE ••'~ "Riot" (1980) OM:! Soul, OneofKina'acustornmbadabinhd.aypartyforher dot and· nvitcd a half-dc»cn othet dO&t LO partake of the cake, which wu made entirely ofbantbuf1Cr .. But the finicky birthday doa turned up his nose at \he cake. He eats only steak . Under preuure Da...td 8oa1 po1t1a19 a .a offender wbo underaoee tbera_py at=lal prt.on faclllty l[rith an anuaal reb& tatlon tecbalque ID the TV mme .. ..,e .. toDJcht at 9 OD NBC. CbanDel<&. -1--~ ~BIG BrW' (1980) Jldde a...a.r.rw. -1:10- ~~'Thl WOf1d AcootdlnQ To :t~982) Aoblll WllMlt, w.y -ao-15"FElD * "8owy a.." (1944) eo..y ;r~,n.,y !=&MARTll'l LAUGMt t t "L 'ltoll Ou Noni" ( 1912) ""-_,. Nolrtt, $mcnl~ -to0-1 &':.NGHTWATQC -~ R~Stloot n. Moon'' t1~ COMPUTERS AID DISABLED ••• From Bl that many disabled P,.Crsons will wind up in homes for the ~st of their Lives 1f they aren't told of an alternative. "'Without technoloay. there's no hope for you," she said. Schwanz says that thou&}\ his Rockwell 1pace technology expertise helped him devel<>l> tools for the hand1callJ)Cd, these people arc now prov1dina program- mina ideas which can be carried into the aeneral population. With that in mind, he f'e(.1Cntly formed "Voice Prints Incorporated," a pubhc company. Since a voice print. like a thumb print, it a way to REVENGE ••• From Bl 1uarantee a peno~ identity. the lime wdl come wbcn people will approach their homes, say a password, and utter an "()pen door" command, without havina to put down their aroceries and fumble for a key, Ma.nagera will call up sales orders in a computer file without ever touChina a keyboard. Schwartz is workina on several such commercial 1pplication1 at once. Victims of cerebral~ or neck il\juries aren•t his only atudcn.tt. Schwartz. ia alao workina with Olen GOtdon, a blind radJo Wk abow boat featured on KMPC Sunday oiahts. to develop a PJ"Oll'&ID which will tell the blind pmon usin& a Braille kcyboud evaytbinf that bu ju t been typed up on the cornputcr aaccn by usu\& a macbtn simulated voice. He's allO womna with SeriC Hovey. 64. "'"° has written Broadway mu1ica}1 ana opera and tuftitra &om LOu Gehri&'• ditea1e. Founeen_yean "° be wu 10ld he had only a year to live. lb~ the aoo-ptOflt orpnaation SChwartz calls .. HopeCin~." aDd !hroufA Sdt~'t own e•lenslve musical~ Hovey 1.1 workina 011 another opera. The Ho enter technical scaff consisu entiretY·of --~,_..---~---~--dillblod pcnou. Once a penon dtoolca 10 Wott, .. lheir fund1 may be cut off. Schwaru wan ta to rnAke sure thej eat once~ become independent and wortiN. be not ot\ly 1h'cs numcrou SI .000 1tholarilil91 out ot hit own poc~ but also offm the employable bandicapptct a rqular pllllC on the Hopc.Cenla'-ltalr. •rm U')'ina io put a piece of ~u1pment on lbc a\lirtet thl\' 10ltandardlbatUY~-"nylbatb.iratbed1MbWf -W'ltba m101mum CJ.pemt-can uodltcan) sya&em lbat the have. to aive anyone the c:apebility or vo ce." lfbi1 dream comes uue, industry will to0n atan Mlttftl the potential of the hAndk:appeet u1i111 vo•ce«tWalCd compuieq. to the profit of everyone nvolved • Orange Coaa1 DAILY PILOT /Monday ~ 13, 11814 - - II REV IEW ~-=--- --- ---_ -- 'Call to Glory' earn it New ABC -erles about military In '60s boasts humanity, realistic tension ~----------~--..;...----=-~-~:-...~---9-------~.......;----.i.... ftMIOll, the UD~ of .....-ua u.uhcr lRJ and even 'lb& Be.atb' ·~ oa 1111 f.d ulli'u Show"' c~JactWt &tie UJ1C p&ay1an 1mportaa1.rolebcre. wilh IOnp IUCb U ... 1CJ10W -. ihtna Ab0u1 Love." "Slidia• -.r and .. A Summer Ailee" '•111 «k(int tbcume period. nc pmdlli•• pored ova old Ui: ::. .. IO J'.'CPf'odUCC the cra·a ..S BJ FRED ROTHENBERG "'' .............. NEW YORK -It w--.u 1962 - before the Bc~ulcs, before men on lh~ moon, before cable TV. John Ken· nedy was in the White House and Ronald Re n was in HollywOOd. America was proud beinl America, and it <hdn't nted to show at with flag pins waving in its lapels. Life ~Y or may not have been better, but the recalled perception was that at was less complicated. 11 was easier to scpar_ate heroes from vii· lains. The militaJY. was mostly riaht. and strona family values; exiMed WJtbout beang worn so openly on political sleeves. That's the spirit and setting behil)d · I ABC's "Call to Glory;• the heavily 1 'promoted senes that, for once, lives 1 1 up to network hype. h starts tonight. But if you've been watching A8Cs I Summer Olympics, you knew that, I · "'..._... havina seen promotional snippeu the ' Gettind & clo••r loo'-pa$l (WO weeks that add up tO more • -e ~ A time than ttte two-hour o~ner. ! Tommy Cboa, (left) and cohort Richai'd a promotional atant to pabllcl&e new Statedsimply,thisepisodcof"Call .. Cheech" llartn clown wttb their ''Bronze moYle comed• "Ch h d Ch • Th to Glory" is the ~t series program T " d "• eec an one 8 . e ABC has done in recent memory. The miiacoiliii~-aiiiwarilii~iiloliiiniiiaiiiLoeliiiii.Ancm.9e;l;ea;;all;d;ew;;.;alk;;.~;ln;;;.;-;;Go;.;nt_;;e~:a;n;;;;B;r;o;the;;;;"·; .. ;;;;;;;;;.;;;.;;;;;;;-tiow about-a-test pilot-and hirlamity in the 1960s is not about the military; What if studios' first choices thadtaken big screen roles? By BOB THOMAS 'llllhllf"-Wrtter LOS ANGELES -It could be a sub<atcgory for players of the im- mellsely popular parlor game, Trivial Punuit: what stars were originally cast or considered for famous mo..Oe roles? · "Born Yesterday" on Broadway and in the film, winnina the Oscar. a deal together. His son Michael did, and be cast Jack Nicholson. .. I shall always be grateful to Georse Seaal,.. says Dudley Moore with compfctc sincerity. Moore was a last-minute replacement after Segal . abandoned "1 O" before t.be start of filming. · it's about humanity with a miliwy backdrop. Torti&ht's storyline believably inte· grates the real Cuban missile crisis of 1962. Col. Raynor Samac (Craig T. Nelso,n) commands a squadron of pilots who fly reconnaissance missions over Cuba to ~e detailed pictures of sus~ted Soviet-built offensive missiles there. The show is packed with rcahst1c tension, breathtaking aerial footage (most of it real Afr Force flying)1 and 1t explores au facets of the emotional rollercoastcr ext>Crienccd by an always ready-to-air flyboy's family. The series will t\ave five more episodes this summc!; .then rctwn How about this? Errol Aynn as Rhett Butler and Bette Davis as Scarlett O'Hira in ''Gone with the Wind.'' It could have happened, except that Jack Warner was mad at David 0. Selznick and wouldn't lend The possibilities of such a "what if?" pmc are endless. For instance, William Holden. He won bis first bjg dramatic role when Mon~omery · Oift dro~pcd out of ' Sunset Boulevard, • won his Oscar when Charlton Heston was unavailable for "StaJaa 17." Holdell also was tl)e second choice after Henry Fonda-for "Executive Suite" and Humphrey Bogart for "The Bridge over the River Kwai." Willie Nelson OK his two valuable stan. plans for Nelson's "Picnic and Coun· try Jamboree." Promoters said the ei&ht·hour concert would draw ' ·ilb stvcn ~ore s a ~acemcnt for one of ABC'5 inevitable canoclla· tions. . ~l!J.~~xly bccaule llus~. created by filmmakers Jon Avnet and Steve Tasch ( .. Rim.Business .. ), as so unhlcABC1 standard fare ofaJ.inc'r, car chases and fanwy that the network isworidnahardcointere lll& regular audience by plaCi111 ... Call lo Glory-.. apinst rerun competition right after the extraordinary promo- tional e.xposurc of the Olympics. ··ABC.. u leuinJ us ao on the air preservina the pint and heart of the eilot (first episode)," said Tisch. •They hann 'ta ked us to ~ve them • jeep crash or plane crash every 20 mmutd." . Nd~n will remmd viewers of Gary Cooi>cr -.strong, solid and stoic. He's a character worthy of respect for his beliefs and values, not because he can fly a plane at daredevil speeds. Nelson remembers being ··anti· everything" in the 60s. "I was a drama major," be saad. Sarnac·~ family includes wife Yap. bainnylcs. • TWO lhows WJtb a milnary...,. NBCs .. for Love and Honor _.llld OBS' .. f.merald Pomt. N .A.$, .. &Did last leaJOll. but ""CaU to GIOr(' bu much more aou,, for JL Huma bCmas actually are undcmcatb ._ um forms. ·The dnl> .. mihW)"' :lhoW mat succeeded R«.ntly :wu .. M-A-5-H. .. wh1d1, of c:oune, laJnbMlcd IM ·•nn)"s macho mentality &om illotafc pcrspccti vc of the pre· V aetnam ''°'- ' h .the nation ready for allOllwf military sei:Ies. 6-pecialJy one &hat treats · the military Knou•I>. scnstfivcly and. so far. 1)'m- pe thclicallf? Yes -as Iona as '""C&JI to GIOQ .. continues to manifest warmth.~ bility and compelUnadnuna, while •at military ponta)'al IS reamtic,Jue .. p and not too heavy on hardware. C$Sl (Cindy Pickett), utrong-rrunded ~nd supportive woman, and three~==~===::------~ ...... -chitdrcn. Sixteen-year-old Jackie (Elisabeth Shue) is in that limbo period between silly adolescent and serious teen-aier. She wants her grandfather (Keenan Wynn) to teach her to fly, but her mother forbids it. Wesley (David Hollander) is 12, a bit brat!)'. ~d very interested in G~J.. R-L-S. Eight-year-old R.H . has stop- ped talkina, apparently because be•s seen pilots go down and fean for his father's life. Also, paranoia was tn the air. School air-raid drills were bi& back then . Events of the ~60s. supported by newsreel footage like tonight'& speeches by Kennedy on Cuba and U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson's famous "bell freezes -onr" remark to. the SOvicu, will provide emotional and historical contexL Tisch said some future stories will involve reactions to Kenned 's as- "BUCKAROO BANZAI IS THE VERY ODDEST GOOD MOVIE IN MANY ~ FULL MOON." This could have been the Academy race for best actress of 1950: Mac West io "Sunset Boulevard .. ; Claudette Colbert in "All About Eve"; Jean Arthur in "Born Yester- da ." But then, Holden missed an Oscar- winning role in "Network" when Peter Finch decided he wanted to switch roles and play the demented a.nchor man Howard Beale instead of news executive Max Schumacher. FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - Selectmen who turned down a Michael Jackson concert earlier this summer have given the JreCn light to a show by country music star Willie Nelson, and even granted permission for Nclson•s fans to drink beer at Jhe daylon& event Sept 8. -Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE 35,000 people. Just over half of .L---------------------------------~ Sullivan Stadium s ca1>:3-city. ~est was the first choice for Norma Desmond, but she refused to play a has.-been star. Mary Pickford was willing. but she asked for script changes. Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett decided on Gloria Swanson. Colben was ready to play Margo Channinc when she broke an ankle. Bette Davis inherited one of the great roles of her career. t Garson Kanin hadWrittfR.:tbe role of Billie Dawn for Jean Arttlur, but t. !he dropped out of the play du'rina the tryout Judy Holliday starred in r .. Many an Oscar would have gone to other actors if oriainal_cutings had prevailed. Billy Wilder originally wanted Jose Ferrer for .. The Lost Weekend.'' not Rar. Milland. Robert Mitchum declined 'The French Con- nection," to the everlasting gratitude of Gene Hackman. Jack Benny died just before starting "The SuMhinc Boys,•• and George Burns won the Oscar and a )Vbolc new career. · Lee Marvin declined "Patton," and the film won George C. Scott an Oscar he didn't want. Kirk Dou.&las had long wan tea to star in "One flew over the Cuckoo's Nest." but couldn't put . Lawford in hospital LOS ANGELES (AP) -Peter Lawford. hls health weakened by surgery last month for a gastric ulcer, is baclc in the hospital for "Jood nutrition and careful monitonng." the actor's wife said. "Helostagooddealofweight when he suffered from the ufcer, .. Patricia ., Lawford, 26, said. The couple were married July S, while Lawford was in UCLA Medical Center for the sur-gery. Im° • MISSION ViEO UA MOYles 990-.tOZZ EOwan1s ~ Mall •C:OSt'lMW ~ Edwards Cinema OIWtQ£ 54$-3102 Clnedome 63HS;a:J ti COSTA MW OiWiaE UA ClntrN Cen~ Pidftc s or.noe !M0-059ot Dnw·fn634 ·9361 •lRRI *WESlMINSn:A Edwards UotverSlt)' F.dwlrds Cinema 85-4·8! 11 West 81'1 ·3935 * WJUNA H1U.S WESTMl'N!ftR F.dwltd.S/ Sanborn Padflc's HI-Way Ulgutll Hills Miii 39 Or·ln 718.e811 81)1 ·3603 * Ptllf.SENTU> IN .,_ ...... PK1flc Anllleim DI' Ill 871 HSO .... UAMom4 990 4021 -ldwards WOOdbfidlt m06SS LMUIAECH [Mfds So Coast tacuna '911111 .... CINllOmt -~- 63' 2553 Lawford·s "spirits arc good.·· said his wife. ..He bad a visit from Elizabeth Taylor last week which cheered him a great dcaJ:'f' But she added that he "hasn't been that well for the past year," noting that he entered the Betty Ford Center in Rancho Mirage in December for treatment of alcoholism. Lawford is e'tpected to be released in a few days. Mrs. Lawford said. • NEWPORT 8£ACH • f(WP<>Rl ,. •' IUCll CIOllV sn•o ..._, ._..msan1 c.... Tml\.[ • _. (I'll. '44·07'0 7:1$, ta fl. WPoa' ....... -SlQIY" ""-' '4S ltlO (PGI t,.... ·M USf itllflMlll" l'Cl '44 07'0 I :lS UDO acu.-.-a ~--.... ,., •n.n rn.t» • SO COAST PLAZA • There was little discussion before selectmen unanimously approved The selectmen angered niany rcsi· dents when they turned down th Jacksons' .. Victory" concert because of possible traffic snarls. LUX&UIY THIATlfS F111t TM M9tiMe ~ * ONLY $2.15 Ulltm Netlf VISll 0 R ·~"S ~ FOii flllll Slflf'l[Jfl[)I (' ·-1· IAIUlO~S KCHJH S 113r1ij•X•1url '¥' 1~t"i:-,-!, ) llED DA-....... ) Shows at 12:30 3 :00 5 :30 1:00 8111 Murray Dan Aylrroyd 8HGSTWUSTIUIS (PO) Shows 1t 12:26 2 :40 ':IS 7:25 t :I0/70 MM • 10:30 PUii ..... RAIN fll) AT 12:'5 3tOS 5:25 ,,,, ... DllUlllS(Nt Sftows et 12:31 S:OO S:JO l 100 lo 10:JO .. 10:05 THIE LAST lf!IDIAleA M>llD a ..,.... STAllPl8Hftlt (PO) T_.. l1f 0-.. "'9J At 12:20 2 :,0 5 100 $hOWI •t 12:00 2:SO 7:30 10:20/70 MM 5:o~k~: ~~O:OO 13 i , •• n ;12) =A~u ~ ~•r!rtn ) "tff2~:\~, I ~~~~o Top Sec:ret(,G) 2:10 h40 3:50 t :OO 1:00 t. t :SO 1:10 lo 10:20 OOllY $1(1(0 ... DA. lfS..U) ....,.._, ·~ 120 lOlO SU\'fN Sl'lll lfll; S ....... ,.., ....., r11oot1 ••s •oo •f11M~ Ol'OIUI" f"I t l~ OOI." Slt•O .. fll uo •• 1000 • WESTMINSTER • • COSl A M£SA • EDWARDS -· -S46 3102 HARBOR TWIN 631~ HAR lWIN ~~ ... -611 3501 ...... , .... '1' •t•lln CMMA CIR ...... ,,, 041 CKMA CTR ....... , -,,, 1141 DOllY sn lllO "ID DllW' CPS-IJ) I IS tlO IAl'" IMCOIO lllUIAltlV <") ... n..o. llS tJO DRIVE-INS m~ 11 il;l•lQlul61 ill llll1Jlt11ft• Nf!! S11f..,,. MH:KAAOO aAl!eZAI s Cl'Q)_lll111 Co-HJt Twll19ht Zone (tlO) CLOAK 6 DAeGSll (PO) flhlt CO·Htt Sl11teen C.ndl•s ("°) Wilt Olmey't IU"C'' • 80QK (8) l'tu1 Tron ('G) Cftlld "Ices GllDllU•(PO) NenrEndlnt Story <'G) e.uwov1aw u.s.A. (ll) Phis Co·Hlt •est Oefet1t1 (It) u.MANA JO...s 6 ... TDll'\.a CW DOOM CPQJ Wltft Stlyln1 Alln (JIG) • £l TORO • SAOOU:BACll "WT SlWl8llO" CPCI \0 ... .. us 520 1010 II '"'' If "ll1D -STlllY'" !>ll !>llO 11 )0 4 ~ I 20 IPGI SAOOlCUCll \0 ..... I '••'' s.11 ~uo SAOOlCBACK " ... ~ fl I I• ~II~ SAOOUBACll \0 •• , •• I I• l l ~II ~10 SAOOlCBACk \0 ••• •' ,,, .... !>II ~llO 'QOll l ...... 11 '5 H\ US '·~ • u 10(5 \") SHOlOOD SAOO! lBACll .....-"'I \~1.,,. IOOJl\\OllG.1010 I ... , iut•M »t ~ .. • MISSION VIEJO • "IUCWOO IAml" (PS) l.O HI ,. 115 IOS$ Your only hope Is ludulroo l.lnul. Ml nrm llSO HO IOl'S .. M M1Wl" (PS) H1 ""-....... ~-• ..... , __ _ "ET OERJIS(" (l) IDa.• Ut "«IY C» SD" (I) Mt.Ul 1~10 "M Wt fhfiriii" (R> 11n.u •~ "1TM1BtM SlMQt FOi 1") Ul '' tt~ THEATRES• * CINE·FI SOU. NOi At tllal symbols ... , S011nd lltttct to yotat AM ct1 * f1dio. If no r1dio with accessory potmon, k int y~r own AM pwtlllllt. ALL OPEN 7:30 Start DUSK ChikhnUnc* 12 Al•YS FREE Fountain Volley (PC) fl US "M ........ -lWT---· .. (fC) laHABRA .. ~M" MISSION WARNER t.U.11 :JI .. if .. "'rl.. r.1 . .., I ' I \ M ~ COU1 DAILY PILOT/Monda)'. August 13, 19M by Jim Davis ~E'flN\£,~EWMf.Rf, WMfN YOO ARf LEA~1' f.XPf;C11NG rr ... MONPAY S'fRIKE~ THE FAMILY CIRCUS BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) by Bit Kear\e "I hate Mondaya." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE "I don't know about you, but I'm tired of sleeping on the sofal" MOON MULLINS INTER L.Al.J<&HIN<q ... t>U> You KNOW FR,ANKf:NSTEIN WORE: A Dl<11T,AL W,ATCH? P.EANUTS T MBLEWEED YeH ! M,ADe WITH RfAL Dl<&ITS ·' wactl\1E 1l> 1HE SVMPOSttfM OrJ 1* MllJlll! v.tx.JL.P ~E­oNa L.l~"C Of'eJ O&Jft PISCC.S~ AllOOT 1He. N'Jl()W? b Hank Ketcham by Ferd & Tom Johnson WHAT'SA MATTE:R? . DON'T L.IKE: LIT Er<,ARY /-tUMoR? by Charles M. Schulz MY 6LOYE ISN'T "USER FRIENDLY 11 by Tom K. Ryan _h _____ _ :: BRIDGE ~---=---=-----~-------- AN 0 EEKLY EQUIZ ' CHARLES GOREN Q.l-A1 South. vulnerable, you Q.S-As SO\lth. vuln rebl , with 00 hold: on acoro, you bold: •K87 ~KQ98S OAU +Kt •KJ1076 ~W 0 7Z +9~ Partner opens the blddlnr with ori Partner open• the bidding with one heart. What do you respond? diamond. What action do you take? A.-An awkward tiand...,You are too A.-Only beeaun of the partial, we atrong for a jump raiae but do not would venture a ono 1pade rt· have quite enough for a jump ahift. eponae. That i1 partly t.o keep the Nevertheless, you mutt choose be· opp0oeota out or the auction. if tween these two <Q>lions-any at· poasl~le, and partly an effort. to Im· tf'mpt to be "clever ' could land you prove the contract. No great harm in trouble. fo view or )'OUr tremen· CID befall UI, since Wt intend pall dou1 . trump aupport and prime ing 1nythin1 other than a jump thift values. ·we sursest the more ag· from partner. gres iv! course of a jump shift to Q.4-Neither vulnerable, u South thr" di.amond1. Thereafter, you in-· you hold· tend doinc no more than quietly +7S ~A9S OIU07 +AKQ94 auppe>rting hearts at every oppor· The bidding: tunat.y. Soutla Weit Nortla Eaat 1 • 1 • l NT Pu1 1 ' . Q.!-Both vulnerable, aa South you . +KQJ What action do you take? h~d: • + AJM c;:;i AKNS O 1 The bidding: Soutla West North Eut J c;:;> Pue 1 + Pue ? What do you b{d now? A. -This is a test of whetb~r you underataod the meaning of part· ner's one no trump responn after the overcall. It is not a weak bid. Rather, it ehows a hand of some 9-11 points with a stopper In the op· 2 • 1 (:1 1 • 7 W at do you bid now? A.-Any beart rebid by you would show a elx-card 1ult. T leaves you with the o~tlon o waiting bid of two clubs o~ .a jum two no trump. We feel the jumR no trump describes your 1hape etrength accurately, so that wo be our cbolco. Q,6-Neither vulnerable, u So yOli! hold: •QS ~J5 The bidding: No.U Eaet ..... 1 • Pa.. l O 1 • Pau 2 + 2 NT Pua 1 What do you bid now? A.-Oespite the taet that you really shown very little, partne striving to reach game. Actu you have a useful hand -five support for partner'• clubl honor• in every euit. The leut. could do is cooperate by bidd game in no trump. ' A. -In eupport of spades, your band revalues to 21 points. Even if pa.rt· ner hu a minimum of 6-7. iou wan'C to be in · game. The way to gu&r· anlee that is to jump to four spades -anything else is an underbid. Ob- viously, if you use splinter bids, then four diamonds (showing a singlet.on in that suit) would get the nod. _ponents' suit: Since you have 16 and _ ,_. a fine five-card suit, you should not - SHOE . BRABBLE set.tit for less than three no trump. Q.5-Both vulnerable, as South you hold: •65 c;:;>AK76S OA93 •AKJ The bidding: Soutb Weet Norda Eaet FOB BE'ITER OB FOB WORSE RN')bNe. SE~~ R untE.GfRL AGe '1-, WE:MING f\ ye~ "T-SHIR'f. .. DR: SMOCK L.ASrseeNoN MRl\/FlS F~ ... f1NSweRl~1b1He Nf\~e. OF ELtzf\6e11-t ~-· For lDfermadoa deat C Gena'• ......... tter , .. playen, wrtt. Gere• Bi'Wp IA 1909 Cl .. ••'••• Ave., C MD. N.J. 08077 •. by Kevin Fag .. by George Lem RE!AL:. L.IFe! I~ SO MUC 9APPI!! "f'HAN FIC"T"ION . I L-r-- ... MEETINGS ----- Co11:struction women Sales host NB clTchitect methQds MlchJI• Pe nit. project architect and manaaer ofMcCallod AnSJtects in Newwrt Bcaeb, was keynote speaker an<l guest presented at a n:icent meeting of the Loi AnJC!es chapter. of the NatlOul AUoditMll ef WtmH ta C4utned•. Pemt. who r~avcd a NA WIC acholanhip herself dunna her ct>U• y~n at Caty Poly San Luis 9bispo, spoke on the importance of women parucapatana an prof; 1onal orpn1zations. -... Ma~ • ~· ~ join~ .MCS Aasoelatet, a management cons~uluna finn. serving ftnanc11l ansutut1ons. Dennis will serve the mortpge bankinaconsuluna practice rn the finn's Newpon Beach office. Author of four real-estate textbooks, Dennis has been associate director of the Monp1e 8.Uen Astoeiatet of America and director of the Sdlool of Mortp1e 8 191rtn1.MCS bas offices in California and Washington, D.C. • • • Ju SulOD bas taken a post as interior designer with Saamte Roberts btertor Deslp of Corona del Mar. Susson, who formerly owned a design business of her own, will be respo.nsible for the company's model home division. She will also be involved tn the firm's srowina custom home interior · desi&n services. J " •••• Fountain Valley rtsident Sd•yler "'Skip" Jae)loa is the project manager for MUJ*y BUl, a Wbjttier condominium development bein& planned by Cout Coutracttoa Co., lac. of Brea. The project, to consist of 126 units, is due to bru.k ground in Octobtr. Jackson will provide overall project management services, cost proj~on, and coordination with architects, land planners, engineers. city staff and consultants. Jack.son has been with Coast for the past year. • • • Bunes TalvlD1 Rare Cola 1Dvestmeat1 bas moved to a new S,300..squarc- foot office suite at SOOO Birch St. in Newport Beach. The new headquarters is equipped with state-of-the-an computer facilities, a meetingroom/audifOnum and expanded executive offices. The move is a result of the company's ifowth over the past few years, accordina to founder and president llaaet TUviD1 Jr. •••• Ted bo1ye, audit panner with Alexader Grant It Co., has been elected Orange County/Lona Beach chapter president of the Callforala Sodety of Certlfled Pabllc: Ac:coututa. As presldeat, be will abo sene oath 1tatewtde boaN of dlrecton. 1Do1ye Is put ptttldot of tJte Sol~ C.Ut YMCA and the -Lepu 8eaa UAlted Way. ••• Gresory R. Bollman has joined Amertcu Dl•enlfled CapltaJ Core. of Costa Mesa as director of corporate systems. A.DCC is an affiliate of Amencao Diversified, a financial services. real estate development and tu&h tccbno1oay production/services company. A5 corporate director, the Costa Mesa resident is responsible for development, integration and efficiency of. American Oiversified's planning, accounting and operational control systems. He was formerly with Price WaterMue in Newoon Beach. • • • Lawrence S. Jordu ha~ been appointed vice president of sales for PUe~et Corp., a Costa Mesa manufacturer of advanoed optical disk-based S)'Stems,. In his new post, Jordan is responsible for sales lhrouahoufthe United States and is presently recuritina area management and sales candidates for New York City, Washington, D.C., Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles and San Francisco. He was formerly director of western and international operations for bra1eo S11tem1 Corp. • • • M&detiJal Directions, lac., a Newpon Beach agency that specializes in health care advertising aod promotion, has been selected to develof. a promotional campaign for the therapeutic division ofCooperblomedlca.I, c. of PaJo Alto. The campaign will deal with intemati~nal marlcetina for ProtamJde, used in the treatment of herpes zoster and pam syndromes. ••• Assodate4 Pror.rty Mua1emeatofSanta Ana and PMS ofHuntmaton Beach have consolidated to form APM Services, lac., a division of Trta Profeuloaal Muqeme11t Services; Inc. in Huntington Beach. The firm oversees residential, commercial and industrial community "'ssociations throughout Oranae. Los An&eles, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties. • • • • bl Adverttslaa fr PabllC: Relattou, ~·bas expanded its semccs by formina a separate co~rauon and affibate aaency. Batel.Mnt/b1 CommuJcatlona, lac. Kina specializes in real estate and buildina-related aooounu· the new agency has taken over the company's non-real estate accountAnd added severaJ of its own. The firms share offices in Newport Beach. • • • talk Aug. 21 Method on closing sales will be explained at the National Association for Professionat Saleswomen monthly meetin& Aug. 21 at ttfe new Doubletrce Hotel, 100 C1ty Drive, Orange. t~ Dr. Mark Victor Hansen will discuss prospectina methods and · creative concepts for closing sales. Dr. Hansen presents a nuts..and- boltsseminar backed with humor and excitement that communicates in~ spiration to his audience. Regjstratioo and social hour is from 6 to 1 J>.m. and the meeting 7 to 8:30 p.m. Cost is S l S includinJ hors d'ocu~. For reservations and information phone 38().:8886, RiaQab Rhone. Denclt RedacdoJJ Act talk The Deficit Reduction Act of 1984 and its effect on investment real estate will be the topic Wednesday at the Southern California Chapter of C.Cttified Commetcial Investment Memben (CClM) of the Realtors National Marketing Institute meet- ing. Guest speaker will be Eileen War- si&. CPA. Wanig ~ an . a~~ve practice in Laguna Hills specialwn.g m the fields of ta.X ~untmg and financial planning. The meeting will provide an op- ponuoity for real estate professionals and investors to become familiar with 1984 Tax Act provisions that will have the greatest impact on real estate investment. The meeting will begin with break- fast at 8:30a.m. at theA.irporterlnn in Irvine. The cost is SIS and the public 1s welcome. For further informauon contact Jim Slavik at 834-9393. . Architect admlnl•trator• The Orange County Chapter oflhe Society of Architectural Adminis- trators, an affiliate of The American 1oslitute of Architects (AIM._ wiU meet at the office of The American Institute of Architects, 3840 South Plaza Drive (South Coast Village), Santa Ana, Thursday from l 1:30a.m. to 1 p.m. Ptesident Betsy Nickless, office manager of Carl McClarand & As- sociates, Costa Mesa, invites alJ members to bring 3Smm color sJides of their firms' architectural design examples. The shdes to be presented folJow a bring-your-own lunch program and brief business meeting. There is a suaaested $1 donation toward beverages, according to Dorothy Jean of Jean.Paul Jean, A1A of the JPJ Corp., in Santa Ana. The program is open to all support personnel in the A/E fields: sec- retaries, admmistrators, office man- agers, book:keepen, and aJJ non- technical positions . Jo CalbertH• of New Bomet laterton in Irvine recently attended a one- day course in interior decoratina for employees of Anmtroq Floor FaslUOD For more mfonnation about SAA, Ceater stores. The seminar was held in Newpon Beach. call Betsy Nickless, 549-2207. NEW YORK (APJ -;';'f, ~wino llst ar:'~ it'll ~ H: 1•. 3\'J ~ l i showa the v~-1 •-ounter 1 I '' • ,,. ~' end wa'd:nts t t have oone uo v. Hg r· ~ 1 most •; wi the most baMd on JecoEI ~ ~ -1 'NUenl-of c ~ ~ ~8'/. l ' lOOO ~ S-16 Uo '"" \;a 1 No MQ.lfll rad no w s or 11. 8p "• ~ l wres ·~ \ICMd. uebOt 2\lt 14 r· Net e ~·~ cne:, •rToJhe le r.q YJ u: ~ 1 =er~ be he Pt'Jcl I C no ., ..., Up \"J YJ 1 . or c. •nd r u;\ lest orb. ,~, 11. Up :[ -1 . t~ YI H: .._ H . } ~, L°j~ cl fltj ,:,ti 1~ p,,. -3-VJ ¥; Up , -''• lb v. UP -~ i~t Vi H• -'• DO ~S v. -1 l.1 ~ -. Up . u: -'• P:j ~ ta 1 lh Uo ''• -. .,. h~ ,m I~ u~ If N:me t Ur C~ ,t. -H4 lU j ~·~ -l"2 ~t· 1 -t~ 1U 2 11-16 -S-16 1 eo rft \'J Up ·' Vf' " 6'1l .. I OAILV PfLOTIMoneliy, ~ f3 ill4 • - \ COMPLETE NYSE COMP0811E 1llANSACTION8, a . Wortd•a blggeet laser /: A technician worb on the Lawrence . LlYe11Dore National Laboratorr•• ROVA luer faclllty, ca~le of dell'ftlina 120 trllllon watta of enero power, which ... anftiled lutweek. n.ei• e ••· wM&Atlll9 e romn u loa& • a OodMIJI flllld ... another fin: .mrre. Jal&1l. wm ... -4 bl Gperlmenta aimed~~ ..... .,. New-law aimed at trtpp1rig,_ bankruptcy power abusers Early in October, only a few weeks from now, a ffi!lJOr new bankruptcy law goes into effect in our land that will .. close in" on individuals who have tncd to abuse bankru{>tcy for their own goals -and which wdl make it extremely difficult for cou- ples who have been trying to use bankruptcy as a fmanciaJ planning tool. This law was signed tiy i>ieslclent Reagan July I 0, but most of the publicity )Ou've heard about t\ so far bas centered around the nghts of bankruptcy ooun judges. Lost in this argument has been what the signifi- cant chanacs in the bankruptcy law mean to us. To back up: Behind these new changes is a two-year effon to amend the bankruptcy law that itself grew out of the Bankruptcy Refonn Act of 1978. Cntics of that carher law claimed it made bankruptcy too attractive to hard-pressed debtors and led to an explosion in the number of filings. Moreover, the critics claimed that many who filed for bankruptcy actually bad sufficient assets to pay at least part of thcu- debts. SnVIA Po1m (In 1978. bankruptcy filings totaled 172,423: filings peaked in 198\ at 452.145: then dropped to 439.&68 in 1983.) The colics are wrona. ar1ue con· sumer activists. A study prepared by the General Accounuoa Offi~. cited last year by the consumer forces, concluded that the 1978 law dJd not bear the full re$p0nsibility for the increased number of filinp. The deterioratin1 economy of that penod had to share the blame. The new law represents a com-- promise between these two views. "We didn't get all we wanted. but this represents a Jood compromise," says Frances Smath. a spokeswoman . - for American t-1nancial Services A> sociation. a trade lfOUP of crectitotS. ... Credi\ors are more protected aad coo.sumen will be m~ informed. .. ··we don't think it Will affecl the averqe ~ who ioes beDkruplo but it will catch cl.hose who abulcd banlcruptcy," says Louise S. Gn:cn- field. a staff attorney at Coaarcss Watch. --We ca.a live with tL-; The broad -outlines of tbc bankruP.lC)' law don't . Yo • as u \odividual, c:aa ckdare buWv.pU:y in oat Ol t-.o ways. • ~ 7 buknaptcy, m whidl dcbton ajve up most of their asscu, whic.b a t.n&Stee then sells to pay creditors' clalms and aft.et that then frees the debtor from ciliting obli· pboM;and • Oiapter I l . which pcmuts debt- ors to retain their assets if they qn:e to rep£ydebts withinl:be next lhn:e to five years. aocordina to a pla.n approved by the court. After that. all debts are disclwpd. The bankruptcy law is actually "closing in" on fake bankruptcies. All of these actions benefit us, the tax1>9yen. bn the --, ·• ' • • MONDAY'S CLOSING PRICES Dow JoNlS AVERAGES WHAT AMEX D1 0 NEW YORK (API Aug. 13 Tod~ 'i AMEX LEADERS ij\ . .l -· . II 't. •• NASDAQ SuMMARV • ' " GoLo QuoT ES ME TALS Quons That's an aptdeScrlptlon of both business and business people along the Orange Coast To .keep track of where companies are gotngand which p opleare helping them get there, just watch •credit Line' -everyday in the Business section of your new llilJ Pilllt- • • • • •• :1J ackson, Pettis . I use some power i n s _lugfest win · Reggie one step ----closer to 500; road show next ! T By RICHARD DUNN • 0.., "9t C.r 1111 I ••t • · An altered brand of baseball helped keep the Angels l Y, games out ~f first ,, place Sunday afternoon. ~ · This time 1he defense didn't hurt ' them like it had the previous two nights. Instead they pounded four Oakland pitchers on their way to winning a 10-9 slugfest. And of all people, it was Rob • Wilfoni who brought in the game- winner with two outs 1n the eighth inning. In a pme which exchanged leads Jix times, it came down to Oakland topper Bill Caudill and Angel lcad- off man Gary Pettis, who rip~ a ·two-out, two-run triple to tie it. Wilfong's one-hopper just past sec-Regte J ack8on ood. baseman :rony Ph11l1ps ~red "l know Caudill is a fastball PettlS from third, but by that tame pitcher, and when he got behtnd me, I most of the 24, 72~ fans ~d ~dy -knew he bad to come in with bis best ~fhcd the Ana~eam Stadium exits. stuff and 1 got my bat around on it.·• , .Today w~ ~d of. ltke a heavy-Pettis said. weight ~ght, wd Pettis, who eartaer Wilfong was appreciative of tht . ft_ole bis 42nd base, the ~nd infield surface for his first game- . highest Ansel total ever. They winning RBI of the season. "I just hit iumpcd out and we came back. The~ one that made the hole," he said. "It :We cauP,tt th.em and they cam~ back. was a bad bop _ the field was ., . Pettts tnple proved to be the atrocious today." , bta&~t blow Lt;' a game that had many, The Angels now rut the road. and at coul~ t have come at a more "We know we're going lo go on the opportune tune. road and play well," said Reagje Jackson. ·Dodgers' fli~ht: Engine trouble CHICAGO ~AP) -The Los An- geles Dodgers chartered flight ex- penenced ename trouble shortly after takeoff from San Francisco on Sun- day evenin~ United Airlines spoker •man Joe Hopkms said early Monday. The en&ine was shut down and the Bocina 727, ~in& 61 passcnaers 'and crew members. returned to San Francisco International Airport «round S:30 p.m. The team left for Los ~ele International Airport aboard another plane, Hopkin said. The en~e suffered "a compressor st.all," saad Ralph Bnck, United's operations manager in Chicago. Among the Angels' offensive high- lights was Reggie's 497th career home run, a two-run blasl in the second inning. and Juan Be01qucz' 4-for-4 afternoon that included two homers and four RBI. But the pitching. once known for keeping the Angels afloat. was at fault Sunday. Saturday niaht. stopper Luis Sanc- hez walked Lead-Off hitter Dwayne Murphy in the 10th mnma and it eventually led to Oakland's wanning run. A walk to Joe Morgan Sunday by starter Jim Slaton hel{>Cd the A's to an early lead an the first mruna. Dave K.in,man then dropped one between a tno of Angels in shallow left-center, scoring Morgan, who was moving on the 3-2 two-out pitch, from first base. , Dlckeraon out, Ferragamo In ••Rama face Browna. C2. No losers in t hese Game Q: How o you follow an act like that? A: There's nowa .;;;;> :.c LOSANGELES..-Thoseonce-in- a-lifetime moments weren't/' ust for gold medals dunng the past 6 days at the X XIII rd Olympiad-they were once-in-a-lifetime realities for the fans, too. Critics will sayitwas tool:'om- merical, not competitive enough with the Soviet bloc absent and too Americanized, thanks Lo television's customary job of overkill, exploiting· every American success, ignoring many tremendous efforts by others. But if you had any doubts as to how the fans felt about these Games, a good tipoff was the reception which Peter Ueberroth received from the 90,000-plus Sunday night during closing ceremonies at the Coliseum. ·Ueberrothcouldhavegiven Presi- dent Romlld ReApnagooo run for his money, at least if that momeot were in November. · There were a few rough spots. but thett's no doubt, the XXlllrd Olym- piad was a rou ing success. What kind ofimpact have these Games had on the world? Well, the Chinese people were astounded by the reception their athletes rccci vcd at the opcnma ceremonies by the American fans. What a terrific way to com- municate. . It never rained on the parade. the smoa was insignificant, traffic was more than bearable, 83 gold me<Ws kept the home fans happy, there were no TV timeouts, there wett no bombs. And, maybe some of the spirit of these Games will have stuck wub everyone -that just may be there is something tocompettng. to have fought well, to havcbeen a pan oflt. As thewavesofathletesentercd the Coliseum runway Sunday ntght those thoughts seemed to have a great - - - SPOR TS COLUMNIST impact on lhe spectators. · They had cheered wild~· a~ a . sttugghng Bohvian marathon runner ended his uphill climb, fini bing 38th. Later a Somalian runnercntertd, obviously in pain and truu11Dg. but he made It around the tracr-and finished, with the help of90.000 cheering fans .. Athletes went a little goofy for a while after entering, running around with their nation's flags, a product of the spontaneous moments where pope 1n one's nation is so over- wbelmm£ Great Britain's Daley Thompson; a tw<>-timedccathloncold medal win- Athletes r ef u s e t o lea ve ' Competitors enjoy their final hurrah at c~ostng cerempnies. There alsh v.ett more earthly entertainments. LOS ANIJELES (AP) -It was a • science fiction-inspired, raµle-4azzle climax to the Los Angeles Olympics. wilb the athletes providing the human touch. Each of the 92,000 spectators bad· been issued a blue-lensed flashJi&bt. and the effect was a dark sea filled with glimmering blue jewels. Lionel Richie,Jhe .. human" star of the show, sang a song he'd compo9Cd (or the occasion,..... There were dozens of brcak-<lanccrs. At the end. there were the athletes, saying goodbye to their new-found friends, huggin• and trading momen- tos, and dancing joyously to the music . When the XXJII Olympiad ended Sunday night, the long-standing ritual of tbe closing ceremony had been honored, and the athletes bad en- joyed their rousing post-<:ompetition party. They enjoyed it so much, in fact. the public address announcer had Lo plead with them to leave the Col- iseum floor, some four hours after the ceremony had begun. Earlier m the evening, in a display of sp<>ntancous glee, the athletes had disrupted the fonnal portion of the ceremony wtth playful pan- demonium. As many of the athletes from the 140 competing nations raced around the track with their national flags and other banners such as .. Tham LA - Great Britain," and "Costa Rica Loves You," the announcer asked them to go onto the infield so the program could continue. They kept running, waving to the cheering crowd. Finally, white-dad security guards gently herded the athletes to where they were supposed to be. and the , fonnal ceremony contmued. Then the show began .. During the earlier formal.ities, Peter Ueberroth, president of the host committee, said that if the Games had brought the world a bttle closer together ... Then we have suocecded." With the Coliseum lights darkened, the "star" of the sound-and-light spcctaculu was a huge flying saucer, welcomed b) lazers beaminJ off into space. Tbecraft. complete with multi- colored flashing lights, was accom-Juan Antoruo Samaranch. presi- pamed by the music from the moVles dent of the lntemauonal Olympic ··200 I: A Space Odyssc}" and "Close Committee, in turn thanked the host Encounters of the Third Kmd." for the "'perfect staging of these Suspended from a darkened bell-Games." copter, the ccnly realistic space ship Samaranch . then "dee~ the hovered and "communicated" with Games formal!Y clc~scl(l, Wl~ the the Cohseum via other-worldly C!Owd almost tn uruson uttcnn& a sounds. then an impoSJn$ space si8h of regreL . . traveler suddenly appeared h1gfi atop ~ The Ol)'t11PJC flame. which ~d the archway of the stadium. Saymg he been earned tho_usands of miles found the Olympics mspmng. he acr~ss _Amenca 10 a relay. was promised a show ID reward. extmgu1shed. Then there were symphonies. and Daley Thompson. the two-time fireworks, and more symphonies and decathlon gold medalist from Great more fireworks -probably too many Britain, seemed to sum up the mood fireworks -to pay tribute to the of the cfosing ceremony with the T- cities that hosted the Games ID the shirt be wore. The message was, past. .. Thanks I.A. See You in Seoul." Talk with teddy b e ar relieved t he ten sion Louganis admits he was 'scared' prior to 9th dive By ROGER CARLSON OfhDellJ ......... He may be the king of div1Dg with as many admirers as any athlete who came to these 1984 Olympic Games . but Greg Louganis proved every bit as human as the next in the XXlllrd Oympiad. He crushed the field in platfonn diving to win his second gold medal Sunday, and he led virtually from start ot fimsh in a world record perfonnance of 7 I0.91 points, the first time the 700.point barrier has ever been surpassed. But as he prepared for his ninth dave, wath a bi& lead. be said he was more than simpl) besieged wath competattve nervousness. "l was scared," he admitted after- ward. "I needed a distraction." So the 24-year-old Laguna Hills resident and product of OC Irvine, who has trained with the Mission VieJO Nad.adorcs for several lea.rs. turned to a little teddy bear an said, "No matter what happens, my mother still loves me." The divin1 &iant admitted hu one-way conversation sheepishly, but added, .. He doesn't tall back and it felt good talk.ang to him. "I wasdmngwelland It was k.indof scary. I didn't want to screw up." "You're up there Wltb not much on and seven Judges watching you. You're very vulnerable." His performance was not only consistent from the begmning at the Umversity of Southern C'.alifomia campU$ before some 12,000 wit- nesses, it was topped by two re- markable di.Yes at the finish, and be knew it before the judges displayed their opinions that tbinp were right, laulhing as he left the pool after bis back 31h somersault with a tuck (3.3 degree of difficulty). His finale was a reverse 31/i somer- sault with a tuck (3.4 dCgrce of difficulty and he was mobbed by well- washers as he got out of the pool "I saved my most difficult dives for the last." explained loupnis. "They are not always my best. but in the clutch you can vartually pull it out." There was.. however. nothina to "pull out." Louprus was in a class by himself Bruce Kimball. the American diver who rallied from a severe auto accidentto qualify as an Olympian. rallied apin to take the silver medal, ahcadofChtna's Li Konpheni. Kimball's final dive, a 2Y, back '*>mcrsault witb pike (2.9 d~ of difficulty). pulled b1m past his oppo- nent for a total of 643.SO. a 5.22 (Pleue 11ee LOUGAftIS/CS) pt " There~ agreatdealmore,of course, with the spcctaCUlarcd- ebration follo ling the formal dosilllo but that was the show biz uuff. It w peaacular. but rcalJy, tbele Games were a great deal more than laursand ?CC vehicles and fi~ wOrb. ThC}'. PfO' idcd the platfonn for dn uGrcgLo~1s. swimmer Mike O'Bnen and rowcr'Brad Lc1rris, •· amonaolhcr.s, winncrsof gold medals. The) 'NCTC the backdrop for such s1l ver medalists as water polo stars Kevm Robertson and Peter Campbell, and the rest of their team ma ta. along with swimmer Amy White and rowers Bruce Ib- betson and Greg Springer, among ot~. And, they wrote new chapters or the book of the ones thatgic>t away- the John Moffcts, Dwight Stones and (PleueMeGAID8/CS) Torre: DiCk Williams is an idiot - ATLANTA (AP) -Joe 7 om five al"l'C$ts after the pme. The day • called Dick Williams an idiot. Wil· ended with pohcemen on top of both 1ams said the Braves st.arted 11. dugouts and the benches clcartd by Pascual Pcn:z didn't hk th<' finl\h, Order of the umpires. and umpire crew chief John-M ·her-·· '·That wa n't t~ way I wouJd'likc ry con tdercd cnd1°' lt himself for 1t to end,•• Pcrc.r said. • E':tllbod)'wa 1u1IJyorcverybody M hen')' tlad bani htd all non· ~ innocent, dependin& on who ~ou pa.rtacipahAt olaycn from tht la ttn~ to. Pcrci w the centra d outs and ullpc~ after th t of f11ure an _bru hbac~ ·~cidcnts that the bra••l 1n the ninth innin ulted 1n \he (Jcction of four , .. . pitchtn, both managers, five other -We S!-'rt~ '<'OfTYt~ ~bout ~w"d playen and two replacement man· control, 1 hcrry ~id. That• why n 11 th raves dtfc.ted the n deattd the. bench. We .':' re ~ 0 Padres S-3 on unday. con 1dcnn1 forfcatana the sam !ftc brawls also mvolved fi n . Each manager blamed th othC[ IQr v ot whom \\ led off Jn lbUii "The~ causrd /lllll ndcum by pohoc, who conltrmcd was. Du:1' W1Ui1ms," 1d lorn:. I l Olympics: Two weeks of gold medal efficiency • Athletes. fans, vo unteersand pollc hke. complaints. hould be~ tcrcJ. Somct1mc:sonc\\Ondt'r:5why uch \'oluntocrwo11'crl pcntcounllc tick.cu for the doublc~r were sold ' an advance ind there Y.'Cl'e ''! e~cessof 40.000forthe U.S. Vl. pom1n1 ll Rcpublicconle$t1t l01n the mom· all made for one rery smooth operation people a coll~e~tudcntsdrcsstd in hourspreparinaforthcGamcs nd liPJ tbro\\nunaforms ndwcanna H lhcnrcmainedatthcirpe>s throu&Jl- htrcb stood at every venue and OWAID out competition, manf 11mesrunn1n1 looked an evt"ry bag. When they ~c:nt f rorp IO to 16 h0ur1 daily. ing. A Dod&erofficialadmitted it • Amencans rT proud of their athletes and everywhere on~ went during th~ XXIJlrd OlymJ)Uld lh rt ts added evidence. the 100-meterda<;h, tothccltlremt' ndas~dtolookinas H Ihe uri1yblankctlhrownovcr A non-spectator cycling C'vent on a media pen.on kft a venue. one had AllDY the Games worked to pcrfecuon. lhc91 f~cwayawcekagodrcv. a towondc:r1f1t was~cunty oranothcr Perha~somcofthchUlethinpare would be bani for the Dodaers 10 ~ drawthatkindofacrowd ~that hour, The ath leteurc proud of America and the Jand in which 1hcy live. Thi~ ' wa also evidcnttn '1nuall)' every venucofthe 1984 ummerGam~ crowdcstimatedat 75,000at vanoull n:a~n But then, the1rvtrypre~nc:c , unncoessarybutall·in-all, thcknowl· points along the way from the Har r and the ability to ge1 law cnforct'ment avenues for varyina dea,rccs of edge that these people ~re there far Unfonunately for&hosc lrYlna•o • make bueball an official OJyms;nc spon thccrowddwindtedconsadcr-• ably for the sec:ond pmc. More than Fittway to \he San Diego Frttway officer} on the scene at the slightest workers. teeurity people and the news outwt1ghsany 1nwnvcn1enoc auf· In the stands at the finish line were: provoc'1tion also made one f~I media to 1 vet toiet their job force' by those !"ho came an wntact 1wo-tbird1 of the fans had deoaf:ted • a number ofother cyclists indud :c;:m2.g-..-l!"''Ll ~-'----,.-.--~--:-:----accom;lrthtd. EactrwaJt'hinm:Ue<t -with them<tunfll-l I 6da) -0f the ---~lt'!ft~~htt.~hmrrlJi!~[Jf~---sitverlneJaTwThner NCTson Vi'iT~ When ~ome foreign journalists i 0 ad 1 fferent direction. XX l'lrd Olympi1 d lh~stadium~.fo~ly-and. 'r.aioei started. American flags wa v1naat every event who was carrying a small Amenran entered an arena. it was with a in which the U. had a part and those nag. different attitude than that of their Americ:anjournah$ts, radio and Fan support was unreal at almo t naas were also tbe 1ignal of tnumph Modem ptntathkt6cam~ flag!> u.s counterp.1ns. And the reason~ television N'Ople are spoiled by the every venue including some that W1lb officials.1uardsand an the 01hen 1t has taken to ataat the Summer0lympicsoft984in lh.eLot Anseleund Orange County area. the success and efficiency of the entire operation has been outstanding. fortheathletes. atthe victory ~~mon)·andeven. fi · h · · ,._ -~ wouldncvcrdrawuecondlookfrom • J or ug t sccunt) were again pro1e 1onalte.ams in th11 counlt)'. At manyif n wc-n't for the Olympic Carl~w1stookalapofthe timcanAmenaandid50mcthmgma c:mbtlli hedinyourmind. theOlympicGamothcrcwasno '" Coliseum track carrying a la,_e finaJ event. the flag was present 1 n lhl· fh<-re were fence:!> around al most food available for the more than Games label. Amencan fl.ta followm& h1 victory in hands of the fans and the athlete\ l'VCI"\ , enut" that were temporary 7.(JXJ news media personnel. No Al Dod£Cr Stadium a week go, all Budd speaks out, clainis she's not responsible party Ranger strand 18 runners Dwl&bt Eva.ot' ~entice fl> drov~ in an iii unearned" run in the top of the I I th inning u. s. gold medal total ~-83 From AP cli1palcltes LONDON -Britain's Zola Budd has ii disclaimed responsibility for a clash oo the ·~ ~· track wtth America ·s Mary Decker that coded their respective hopes for gold at the Los Angeles Olympics Sunda)' nt&ht and gave the Boston Red Sox a 3-2 v1cto11 over the Tclas Rangers. who stranded 18 ba!>Crunncrs Texas outfielder George Wrlgbt lied an American League record !.Ct in 1907 by stranding l I baserunners while he was at bat:-l 8 nmnw left an ba~ by th.e Rangers was two.shon.of the_ ma1or-lcague record for an I I-inning game . . . El~where in the Amcncan League, Joe Carter drove an Olympic farewell sees United States fare very Wen LOS ANGELES (AP)-Amenca's Olympic pany ended Sunday -. bathed 1n ~lebrat1on, &<>Id medals for the United States and gold in the coffers of the Los Angeles Olympic Oraanizin& Committee. Olympics in sychonrized swimmina. adding the individual tJtle to the &old she woo in the duet. •The last American .J.Old medal was won by Joe Farais of Petersburg.: Va .• in -equestrian show JUrnpin& on, Touch of Glass. Conrad Homfeld, also of Petersburg. took the silver, on: Abdullah. . . The gold and silver in cquestnan pvc the United States a total of 17-4 ~ medals, mclud.ing 83 sold~ 31 silvm- and 60 bronze. West Germany was second with 59 medals, includina l 7 ··All I want to say about the whole thing is that I am convmccd I didn't do anyth10g wrong.." the South Afncan-bom athlete said in a copynght articl& today ID the Daily Mail. The London newspaper has been mstrumcntal m helpmg l 8- .year-0ld Budd obta10 Bnt1sh c111zensb1p. and has been senahzing her Olympic diary. si' runs with homers in con- secutive mnmgs-a two-run shot and a grand slam -and Bert Blyleven fired a five-hitter as the Cleveland lodtans beat the New York Yankees for the first ume m 12 games this season 6-0 Darrell Evllll, Rappert Joaes and Alu Trammell each drove m two runs as Detroit defeated Kansas City 8-4 to sweep a thrce- game senes and avenge last Trammell weelendts four~game sweep by It was fareweU to an Olympics where Americans fared very well, amassing a record 83 gold medals in 1 S days of competition. The United States won three more gold medals on the final day of the XXHI Olympiad, m diving, eques- tnan and sychronized swimming. country champion but running in only bis third marathon, was half a lap ahead of his closest rival as he ran. through the tunnel and completed the final lap inside the Coliseum, where a boisterous, cheering crowd greeted him. sold, I 9 sHver and 23 bronze. · Romania, the only Eastern bloc • country.attendmg the Games. was in • third plaoc with 53 medats-20 aold, 16 silver and 17 bronze. C.anada was fourth with 43 medals, includ1na I Oi gold, J7 silver and 16 bronze. "There's no point m Lrying to apportjOll blame but f cAn UJtder- stand Mary's frustr'auon and anger." Budd wrote. "She says it's my fault. I'm not saying it's her fault.•• the Royals ... Eddie Marray slammed a game-ty10g three-run triple· and Mlke Voa.og added -a two-run pomer as Balnrnore rained for five runs 1n i.he .e1pth inning and defeated Toronto, 5-4 Beti O&J.lvie rapped a homer and two sin~les dnving m two runs. and Bob McClure checked Chicago on three hits 1n eight innings to lead Milwaukee to an 8-1 victory over the Chicago White So~ and a sv.-cep of their three-game senes . Frank Viola scattered sax hits in hurling his fourth shutout of the season as Mmnesota beat Seattle, 3-0. The 1984 Olympics offie1ally ended with a bash on the green c.arpcted floor of the Coliseum -to the music of Lionel Richie and the finish of the meo's marathon. America's Pelc Pfitzinger was 1 I th. while teammate AJbeno Salazar fin- ished 15th. The silver medal in the 26-:mile, 365-yard race went to John Treacy o Irland, with Charles Speddina of• Britain taking the bronz~. · 1 After utktng tbe lead 1n the The day saw: •A 37-year-old runner from Pongual win the marathon in an upset, beating the previous Olympic best by 35 seconds. •Greg Lougan1s, a UC Irvine product., broke a diving barrier of 700 points and became the first man in 56 years to win two Olympic diving gold medals. The Games of the XXIU Olympiad were America's Games. built on free enterprise and showcasing the na· tion's best. It even was expected to tum a handsome profit, accordiOJ to LAOOC president Peter V. Uebcr· Badd 3,000-mcter final Friday. Budd said she was thrown off balance by a sudden "bump" from behmd. "I think 1t was Mary's knee on my left leg. Thrown offbalan~. I lurcbed a httle and felt pain as spikes raked down the ba.ck of my left heel I fought for balance and suddenly I sensed Mary falling .. :· Budd said. Cey's blast sinks Montreal Carlos Lopes, the world cross-{( Hts gold put the United States over the all-time gold-medal mark of 80. ·i•Tmcie Ruiz,. of Bothell, Wash .• won her second sold medal of the roth. ··1 couldn't believe ll. It was temble. I wanted to stop. I wanted 1t all to end. And. m truth. the race for me was already over." Afterwards, she s:ud Decker shouted at her and refused to accept her apologies ··she looked at me and she said.,. ·Get out of here Get out. Just go I won't tal~ to )'O . .. 1 just stood there. I was fri ened .. I was CT) mg ·and 1 just stood there:· ··1 saw Comeli2 Bucrkh (of Switzerland) go up to her and I heard her sa) ·1t wasn't Zola's fault Mat) Not her fa uh ·Mary Decker answered, 'Yes. ll ~as I ~now It waJ It was · " Quote of the day a.. Ki.In, uked after eetttng the San Otego ~ wn.ther the new owner. Alex-Spano., would move the team: "Why WOUid anyoM want to ... ve San Diego? Thta la not Dk• Green Bay.'' Tourney record for Watson Roa Cey broke a s1xth-1nnrng uc w1th a iii t"'o-run homer and Rick Sutcliffe, I 0-1. won his eighth dec1s1on in a row while stnkmgout 12 as the Chicago C11bs beat the Montreal Expos 7-' Sunda) to highlight action in the National League ( C) 's 18th homer of the season dro' e 10 Keith Moreland, who had doubled with two out m 1he mning. C h1cago then added two runs m the ninth. Tom Veryier doubled m Jody Davis, who had singled . Sutch ff e's double drove m V eryzer •.. Elsewhere m the . Rams, Browns meet tonight; Dickerson out Ferragamo expected to see much more playing time Nauonal League. Nolan Ryan struck out 11 . combmmg with Frank OiPiDo on a fhe-huter as Houston overwhelmed Cmcin- nat16· I R)an. 10-7.struckout 11 to lie his season high and put him 10 double figures for the l 54th ume 1n his career. He allowed By CURT SEEDEN four hns and walked four batters. 011Mo.llJ,....,..., A cut on the middle finger of his Shortly after the Rams dropped their 1984 prescuon right hand forced Ryan to leave opener to the San Diego Chargers, Coach John Robinson the game with two outs in the 1 -"' "I • 1 ·11 h I k d ·• Cey seventh mning. DiPmo pitched apt y not..u: t sc earwesu avca otmorewor to o. Under normal circumstances, the words "more work" one-hit relief, stnk1ng out two. A three·run homer by would be the cue for Eric Dickerson to display bis NFL Joie Cruz and a two-run shot by Terry Publ supplied the power for the Astros GeorJe Foster's two-run Offensive Rookie of the Year style by zig-zagging all over South Afncan Denis Watson fired a 4-n homer helped Ron Darling to hts first victory since the the place whenever asked. under-par 68 and set a tournament record All-Star break and sparked the New York Mets to a 6-3 But Dickerson is hun and the Rams have a date with with a 17-under-par 271 to edie Payne tnumph ·over Pittsburgh. the Oeveland Browns tonight (7) at Anaheim Stadium. Stewu1 by one stroke m the ~utck Optn, • So. you can expect quanerback Vince Ferragamo to earnmg his first PGA tour victory Sunday. Watson, 28, I Gonzales named top bozer see more playing time than he saw last week in the 17-10 was bom and educated in Rhodesia before moving lo loss at San DieJO - a pme in which he threw just seven South Africa m 1976. He began pla)ing out of Venice.1 LOS ANGELES_ Paul Gonzales of m limes. compleuna four. Fla.,shortlpfterJoiningthetourm 1981 His 17-under the Umted States. the I06-pound-dass With Dickerson out with a neck injury, ferragamo score on the 7.--014-yard. par-72 WaN1ck Hills Golf & champion. was awareded the Val Barker can be expected to put the ball in the air often this everuna. Counlt)' Club course broke the Buick Open record of Cup as the outstaning boxer m the Olympic and the Browns will be waiting for him. l 6-under set last year b) Wayne Levi, who fatled to Games by the faecutivc Committee of the Inter-··Vince Fcrragamo is a Su~r Bowl quarterback.," saJd ma.kc the cut this year ... Patty Sbeebu ralhc.d from a national Amateur Boxing Associauon Cleveland Coach Sam Rut11hano. "His outstanding disastrous double bogey to sink an 8-foot b1rd1e putt on ab1hty 1s to throw deep and the Rams like to do that." the 18th hole to win her second straight Henredon Tele...a-1on radio The Rams. who have lost six players for the sea'°n Oassic LPGA championship Shtchan collected s1it Y~ -• alrcad~, used 66 playcn m the11 opener with the Chargers. b1rd1es on the way to a final·round 68 and a four-day "h was our plan to play a lot of people," said -total of 277 It was her fourth victory this season and TEL!V1810N Robinson. third since she took a five-week layoff last spnn&-10p.m.-ot.YMPICGAM!8:Hlghllghtaofthe In tonight's case. Robinson plans on using more Joaue Carner, who dueled Sheehan and finished XXlllrd Ol~pfad, Channel 7. regulars, if he can find enough healthy ones. second last ~ear reclaimed that spot this year with a Mldn ht -PftO FOOTBALL: Ramt vt. "Like most preseason games, we saw things we liked final-round 71 and a 278 total. Match mg Carner was Cleveland rowns (delayed). Channel 2. and some things we watl corTCCt," Robinson continued. Dot Germain, whose G reensboro ho me 1s 30 minutes RADIO "We accomplished what we wanted to. We got the away from the tournament site Germain fired a final-7:30 p.m. -IA8E8AU: New York Mets at opponunity to play a lot of people for significant amounts round 6 7 Dodgera, KABC (7~). of time and that's very important m the development of ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••r-.... our football team." Big day for 'BigD' and Aparicio Killebrew, Reese, Ferrell also join Hall of Fame -I COOPERSTOWN N.Y. (AP)-Luis Apanc10. who came to the-t ·nited States .. wuh not much in my pockets but full of dreams, .. and Don Drysdale -two players that bcpn their maJor league baseball careers on 1he same day 28 ycan ago -received the pme•s highest honor Sunday when they were inducted into the Half of Fame. They were Joined by Harmon Killebrew. Pee Wee Reese and Rick Ferrell while a crowd of 5,000. indudina 28 rctum1n1 HaJI of Famers. made the trek to baseball's birthplace for the annual Ct'remon1cs. An early-afirmoon shower threatened to wash out the fe tJv1t1cs. but the nun ~lopped and the nart was delayed JUSt 1 half hour. :19nc10. th! first VenC7.Uclan-bom player to be clccto the Hall, said he did not know what to expect when he fir&t traveled to America 30 years ago. He made h1 rnajor lca&ue debut with the Ch1caao White SQ.Jl on April 17. 19S6. became the American Leaauef'* lloolioof the V earand finished has career in I 97l af\cr le dina l~C' shortstop m ficld1n& per ntage for ciaht s i&ht K&sons. "I th nk all of the people 1n th1 attat nat1on.- Apencio 11 d, flanl>ed by the Venezuelan and U . flags on t c &rmporat)' dais tct up on the Jtt'PI of the Han of funl: Library. One of th~ app udina Apancio wu Carlos Andrc1 Perc7. the former president ofVeneiucla. "It as very inumidau beheve me, to stand here ... said the 6-6 Onyd&le, who bror'l1e plaque that wdl h1n1 rn the Hall o f Fame praised h1 "lnum1daun1 t}le." Drysdale, w1nncrof209 pmc1 With the Brooklyn and LOs An les Dod en tn the I 9SOs and 1960s, said tht mctt lh f }>l1Ytn 1n th 11."a u w s -o ple'c fanll yland , vmen he WU ~wans Ufl IO Cahfomta ThC' I . . The Browns. meanwhile. fell to the Pinsbur&h Steelers 31 -14 last week after ef\joyin& a 14-3 halftime fcad. They arc team e.itpcctlng to 1m{>rovc on their finish last year "You're always moving to get better and we do expect to be a better team than we were a year ago when we were the only njne and seven team not to make the playoffi ," ~1d Rut1aliano. " While the Rams were easing their starters 1nto pla)'ina time. the Browns went wtth rqulars for half of the first pmc and Rut111tano plans to repeat that pmc plan. Dodgelis: Is it too late for run? ... The other sid~~ of water· polo ii From APdi1paCCbes ~i fl • LOS ANGELES-You m1ghtsayJonJokela10erha • the best scat in the house for Olympic water polo. • Jokelajner. wcanng scuba gear and submerged in th ; Pcppcrdine University pool, operated ABC's underwatet• TV -'lamera for the matches. : The view, she reports, was both breathtaking an4: appalling. ,• "We sec everythmg that is 11legal, thmg.s that you'd never spot from the st.ands," she said. "They kick eac• other in the stomach. m the face and wherever ... I d1dn'J realize it was such a rough game." • Thia judo hold l• a real yawner •• ·: ·= LOS ANGELES -It's got a diabolical name, bUl Amencan JUdo team manager Dr. Jim Wolley says th~. spon's notorious "choke hold.' is no more eitcitina than good night's steep. The hold. he explains, involves grabbing an opponent by the lapels of his "gi," or Judo uniform, and puttint pressure on the carotid artery at tbc side of his neck. :·You're d~c~sina the tlow of bl~ to the bra1~ causing a phys1ol0&1cal state of sleep, which isn't all thaC unpleasant," he said. "The referees are alert to what•_. happen mg. though. and 1f they see the feet go lamp, 1hcy stop the match." Wooley, a former O lympic competitor, says he's bttt>:-~e v1ct1m of such a hold a numbtr of times. "Most of~ have. You ~n to snore. then to dream. Colorful dreamt• rt•s amazmg. : LOS ANGELES-Word has It that UCLA is tryina recruit a youna Dutch ~hot putter who was a finalist i Saturday's Olympic event at the Coliseum. School officials seem to think he'd be a natural campus . Hts name? Enk de Bruin. Gymnut •Ul"ri~ea aoUDd of allence I LOS ANGELES-It wasoneofthost.p,.nksthat fa ~meu~c1 plays, and It resulted in a umque display o · 1otemat1onal harmony. • Sw!tzerl1nd'1 Gruia Verusloni waJ perfonnin• h tbythm1c 1Ymnut1cs routine 11 Pauley Pavilion Fn niaht when the tape plati"S her music broke. .. A1 Vc~lon1 continued in aJfeOCJC, Eu n Fili who plays piano for West <krmany'• &Ymn.uts. ru cd her keyboard and bqan i.mprovisina. lr)'ina to capture rhythm. Did he know Verz.asloni? "No, I did not." W he famahar "ith her roU11ne? "No, 1 wa n'1.'" I 1984 Summer Olympics medal winners .. lie .... MaN GOLD-United Stat.a SILVl!lt-SHln lltO~tl!-VUOO.-vlr ·- • WOMaN GOL.D-Unlled $l1te. SILVl!lt-ioultl K0t• HONll-Chllla .. I(. LIGHT fl\..YWllOHTt-GOL.~ul Gont1l11, Lot ~ SILVllt~a'W1 Tod\6Co, lletv llt0Mll!-K11tf1 Mw , llmella, l&d JOM Wvw, VtNZU9111 PLYWllGHTS GOLl>-$tn. McCrory, Detroit SILVE1t-lt1duo lt1d1tPOUkl, Yuooallvla IRONZl!-«vUP can. Turkey, Ind itw•lllM aw. Kenv1 IANTAMWllOHTS GOl.D-MaUflllo SllCCI, """ SIL.VElt-+Mctor LONI, Mtxlco lltONZl-Dell Wiiien, C11111dl, and ~o H*.co, Oomlnlcln ltetlUbllc ,.ATHlaWllGHT1 GOL.~ Ta~. l"tllladllof'lla SILVElt-Pttw KonYttWldlle, NfOlf'll BltONZE-<>mer Pw-111, v-2Ulll, and TUfJUf AYk.IC. TI.Rev UOHTWalGHTS GOLD-fttr-MI WhltlMr, Norlolk, VL SIL. VE~s OrtiJ, Puerto ltlco lltONZf-Martln NdonoO EOlnoe, Camereon, Ind Cl\ll·SUno Olllft, • .soutfl Kotte u.HT WILT'WltWllOH'TS GOLO-Jwry PIOI, ColumM, ONo SILVElt-c>Nwee lJmNnrnatla, Tllel· lalld HONZI~ Putovlc, YUIOlllvll, .,_.Mire. Fultlr. ltornanl1 WILT'WltfttOHTl GOL.D-Mark Ir.lend, lrooldvn. N.Y. SILVElt-Yount1·SU All, Soulll KM• lltONZE-Jonl Hvmen, F.lnland, encl Luciano Bruno, llalY LIGHT MfODUWltGHTI GOL.D-f"rri Tele, Detroit SIL VElt-stlawn O'Mlv.,,, C1n141 HOHll_,,,..,.,,,.ect Zleiol*:a, Wnf Ger· many, and Clw1ttoPNI Tlouo, France MIOOLIWllOHTI GOl.0-J-·SuP Shin, Soutll KMn $1L.VElt-Vlrol Hm, Grind Forlls, N.O HOH11!-Mohlmld z.a.,i. AIOlf'll, Wld Anllldll Gon1*2, Puerto ltleo LIGHT HIAVVWllGHTI GOLO-Anton Jos~. Yll90llrM SIL VElt-t<evln aarrv. New l•llnd HOHIE-MIJ1taona Mouul, Alffrlt , and evendlr Holyfltld, Atlante HIAVYWllOHTS GOL.D-+iellN Tiiiman, LM A,...tn SILVElt-wllll dlWll, Clnacle HOHU-Amold Vandlrtlldl, '"'lier· landl, •I'd A"9llO ~. """ ~It HIAVVWllOHT1 GOU>-Tvr .. llNS, Pflllldelllftll SILVElt-FreneetCO Oltl'llanl, ll1tv BltOHil!-ttooert Wetls, OrMI lrlleln, lftd S.llflu Alla, Yueos11vi. • ,_ ~ GOLC>-4t81Y StLVE!t-tlnlted Stet• lltOHIE-f'renc:e lNotVlDUAL GOLO-Oll\lell Maull, lla!Y SIL. VElt-Sv.,,re ltftlTIUIOn, Sw4ldln lllOHIE-Glt'lot Mtt_., lla!Y GYfftMSkl MIM Mlfl Al·ANUl!d GOl.D-«oll Gu$h!Qll, Japen SIL.VEll-flettt Vidmar. L.oa Moe1a HOHZE-U Nlflt, Olif\e Tl9f'I GOLO-Unlled Sli t• SIL. VElt-Cfllnl lltONIE-J1pen flteerllC.lf'Cltet GOLD-LI Nine, Chine • SIL VEll---t.ov Yun, Ollne lltOHZE-«ol Sot-•· JIHll, and ,,_,... V1tuone, Frence ........ .., GOL.D-Sfllnll Mor1IUt Juoen SILVER-Tone Fii, CNN HOHZE-t<Oll Gushiken, Jaoan .. If ......... GOL.~C""'*'· MortOll O<.w. 11. SILVER Kdtanl. JaMn BltOHZ -Mileti G1vtord, VM Nun SlaHWM 00LD-U Jlltlns, CNN llOd Peter Vici· '""•LOI ..... IRONZE-Tltn 011Mtl, W•t $9(1~ lleld, ""-"· ..... ~oll Gush!Un, Jaoen, encl u Ntne,ClllM lltOHZ.E-Mlldl Gevtord, Van Nuv• VNt GOLD-UY Yun, Clllna SILVER-Koll GuatllMn, JaMn; Shinn N\orfwe, Japen; LI Nine. J1pen; Incl MllCll Oa~d. Ven Nuva WOMIM "-' •Ul'dlel GOLD-Ecat11'11\a SubO, ltomanll SIL. VEll-JUlllMe McHel'nlra, San lt1mon HONZE-Matv Lou ll.tton, Fairmont, wv1. ....llClleem OOLO--Slmona Pauca. ltomal'lll, and lcaltt'lnl SIMO, Romania ~ lltOH1.E·K1thy JobnsOn, H\llltlnllton IMCll VMtt GOLD-EcaMrina Sueo, ltomanla SIL.VElt-Marv Lou ltefton, Fetnnom. W.Va. HONZE-Lavlnle ANCM, ltomenll UMiwlt ............ GOU>-Me YMhOnte, Ctllne, and JUl!lme McNamara. S.n 1tamo11 lltONZE~,., Lou lletton, Falrrnoftt, w .va. ........... GOLD-Merv Lou ltetton, FalrmoM. w.v •. SIL Vl!flt-Ecallt'lna Stabo, ltomanla lllONZE-Slmona Pe\ICI, llOl"Mnll Tllllm OOLo-ttomanll SIL.VE!t-Ulltted Stetet lltONZl!-Clllna ·""""'* OOLD-Lort I'~. Canada SILVElt-<>olna $t1lallftcu. llomanll lltONIE-lt"lna WlbW. WMI G«· menv GI "*""• MIN AlrR .. GOL~ HHettl, F,ence llLV!lt-AndrMI KrOl)lllallr, Austria lltOHte-eerrv Oeooer, Greet lr1t1ln CllVT.,....T,_. OOLD-LueieM Olo11e....it1, ltalY SILVEll-f'rlflClaco loll. Pwu lllOHU-<>On Cefllllt, Fort tenn!N. .... Imel ........ GOt..C>-l!d EIUll, Moreentown, w. Ve 'ILVElt-Mlc'-' IUN. Frence lltONZE-MICllHI Sullivan, Grnt lrllaln Seccer GOU>-Franu SILVElt-8nal lltOHIE-YUllMlavla DMnt MllN ....... ,~ GOLD-Gr" L.ouMNt. MiUioll V llLVElt-Tet1 UMlecle. 0*'9 lllONZE-llOft Mwrtott, AM Art>er, Mlcll GOLC>-GAo ~=~~a. Mlulon V141io SILVElt-eruc. Klm«lell, AM Arbor, Midi. HONIE-4..1 Koflttl'lene, Ct11119 WOMaN s.:••11-t GOLC>-$¥Wle a..ntw, Cenedl SILVER-KelY McCormlO, COll.lmlMn, Ohio lltONZE-Cflrlttlne Seufert. Ann AfttO( I Mfdl. ~ GOl.0-VloU J.,_., Chine SILVEll-Mlc:rltll Mltdlell, VlelO lltOHZE-WendV Wvta"lt, Vlelo. SYndw Miecl 1wtmm1nt SOU) --GOU>-T~ecle ltllla, ...W. Wetl'I SILVER-<atotvn WllOO, Cllledl UONlE-MlwaAO MotOYOlftl. JIMll DUITS ~nilldSt1t-. SIL. VE R-C.ftldl lltOHZE-_,.Mn Water .... GOLO-YUIOllllvle SILVElt~ed St1fft lllONlll...,W•t ~ • • • Kim put on a lalbcr •mlri• pcrfonnux:e hlmtdf Md die .. • encans ~ tha1 IMy "" SoOd tor each Oiher. "1'imc after ume. after ame. be ~me lOdo motediflic:W.l cti~" "d =:.o~,':;~mi•maiJ,.....,~-".....-He ___ """ As for the 70().point tamer, Loupru1 said: Mil tdt siJOd 10 r~ put ,it toatthct. I on the ¥"1C,,. d01na that and it'1 a dream come crue because you want your bat per· formance at the Olympics To brak. the record lS tana on the cake." Loupnis. close lO mttttneat after divina since he was rune ~ okl, won•t qu1J quite yet -opuQI lot the nauonals an about I 0 days. ~ he ihopcs 10 equal ·9[ bttat ~Wa Pottds i-Ccord of.18 national aatlel. "rm at 26 no~t he said.. So, the Iona road for Loupn11 is neartyover .. He ~ theadvsce that thii spon 11 like pOdty, con- tinued under Dr. Sammy Let.. wbtre be 1NU 101d ... -If you want•= ai.;" and has finished up under Ron O'Brien. Who Loupnas labdt 11 the ••technician.." ··1 did my bomcwor.k," added the double-.old medalist ... 11'• the bat fcclina I could pos11bly bave." He took ccnu:r ~for the second time in these Games to~ hi1 l9ld medal, a ranty in diviaaafte:r wtnnina the sprinaboard competition emtier. and you oould mec· him breathe lilbs of relief betv.u;n dn~llQI the Cans and &CCePtiDI lbc ~· As fo'i the reipini ~ u ht has be.en for 1CVeral yean; it Would appear Loupnis bas ever'Ylhln& be • wants io th.is sport. But be diacouiaied the theory that bis performance Sundly establisbed him u the aIJ.. · tlme No. I. . ..r.m lhe ~ bUt · fer riabt DOW," he aald,'· -~ -. GAMES. • • hOmCl MaryDeckm. • They all entered as wiDDm on JUl) 28.\D thisColiieum. and~ thq retumcdSunday Di&bt.. they '1ill were. It was a c:debratioa af ~and if there were any lOICf1 around, at was very difficult to pick them out. Maybeooonecame away from these Gama witbout some son of complainL Security, obviously necessary, provided some of rt, ttlt- visioo overkill tome. ticket prices and a vailabilty soine. and maybe traffic, too. • FusWbo pw1:balCd ~ lO tbc buketbell sCmifinals. for inslanet. ~~ioseebotbpmesas orisinaJJY advertised. found a messaic at tbcdoor. <>De same. Lake it orleavciL But from openiq lO dosiaa. the Games of the XXlllrd Olympjad • •'et'C&n-C\o"CD.t chat probabJ-y1111ill oever be duplicated in this nation. · The voJWltec:r wait.en, too, came out biawinnerainthisone. There's no doubt that sip said it all: .. Bra vol LA. Olymptca." Chances are the Olympic Games will not retwn to the Uruted States for many decades-and probably it's justuwcll Politics, such as they arc. surely . dictate these Games must be s1qed tn an area other than the super powers. What a shame the Soviets. East Germans and Cu bus wereo 'there. What a shame we wcrcn 'tat tbc l 980Gamcs in Moscow. So,1t1sover-andnowwccanall bcpn a wtthdrawal from this OC'IY of spon. . . b d fi 11 ThequesUOOlS, 0 O)'OU 0 0 that? " The answer's easy-you don 'L 0 • • . 0 -l'I ,, MAJOft ~E•OUI STANDINGS A"*1c.lla LMlllM W&IT OMMON • L: ~ 01 ~ • SS .m &.-. r, 51 tlo\ ChJQGO .. , 3~ Kat!U,CIJy " '° Al 4'1'1 OI ltllCI ,. 63 A7l ' SMtllt u-.. .. s • , .... ao •7 .A27 I\ •AST .DIY1MON Detroit 11 ., 6Sl Toriillld .. .. 51' ' a.tttrnor. ., SS ..S2• IS &o.lall " SS .S2• IS Nfti Yortl 61 SS .s1• ts MflwwutlW ti • C)t 16 Clev.._. .. .. 41' n s..1111¥"1 kww .,.. 10. Otlt.tand ' .. lll'l'IOre S, TorOf'IO 4 Ci.welllnd 6 New Yotll 0 MJtw~ .... Ollcweo ' Otrrolt I. KlftMt Cllv 4 ~la3,SMtt»O Boston J, Taxu 2 1\1 tnn11•1"1 TNIY'•Gamn ,.....,, Vort. Ct>KMiel •n •• c11wa1anc1 ISmdll 4•4), Cl\l lattlmOA lloOdO.~ 13-11 at Totonto (Qency 9·'1), (II) Tua• CDarwln • 7> •• Clllcaoe> (Ban-nlstar 10-7). 1111 lotlon (loyd 7·11 at Kens.• C1tv IBlack 10 10), (II) Mlt-ault• (SullOll 11·•1 at MIMffOta (BUICIW t -1), In) ()nty Oal'l'IH $d\t0Uled TvttOIV"• G41mes Afllllb at Detroit, 2. 11-111 Toronto at Clewland, 2, Cl·nl Californla at Oel(olt, 2, (t-nl O.llla.ncl at Balllmort, (n) s..111a at N-Yen. <n> Tues at Chk:•to. <n> l0tlon ti KeMll City, (n) Mllwaukel at Mlnnaola, (II) Ndonal Leaeue WHT DMSION w L ~ct. GI SallC>teeo ., .. 590 Atlanta '° 51 SOI ,.,., ~ " " .500 10\.'J Houslon 57 62 47' 13 ClndMell so " '24 """ Sen FrallCIKO 45 " .J9S 22"2 I.AST DfVWOM CNcaoo 70 17 59' NewYorll .. 50 561 4'"> PtllladtlPna. 62 SJ 5't 7 SI. Loult 57 Sf .,, 12'h Montrnl 5' '° 413 13\.'J PlttiDur9'1 51 67 432 19' .... ~Y's SC.. DedWI 5. San Franel~ 4 ChlQoo 7, Mofftr..i 3 ,,._ Yort. 6, Pltttburoll 3 Attenla S. San Oteeo 3 i Houlton 6, Clnclnnat• l St. LOlm al ~. DOCI., rain TedllY'tO- New York (Terrll t -1) •• ~ (Weldt t -11), (n) Cincinnati (Solo 17-Sl •• St Louis. (Horton ..,,), (nl Cltlc-..o IS.ndenon ... 21 al Hou$!0fl (LaCou 6-l), In> Onlv .. ,,,.. Kf*klled T""4111Y't ~ New Yori\ at Dedlln. (n) PllllburVI\ at Ati.nta, (n) Cincinnati II St. L.oult, (11) ClllcffO at Houston, (n) P!\lladefpl\la at San Di.oc>, (11) Montrnt it San Francisco, lnl AMERfCAN LEAGUE Aneeb 10, A's t OAKLAND CALll'O.NIA RHncltn If Lantfrd 3D Moroen 2b w..,.u KntfMdll MAJUWIY ct 8odlte 1b ~Ille MDa.nsrt PMll~ u alHltbl IOrll 111 4 0 0 0 ,,.,,.,ct • 1 2 3 4 0 1 0 W1rfOtl9 1b S 0 I I 2 2 O o Sc:on•n 1D S o o o I 0 0 0 DICncs 3tl 4 1 1 0 Silt OowlV'Orf 4 120 S 2 3 4 ReJksn dll 3 2 1 2 ,1\0 8en.QUlr1 •l•4 4000 loonec . 2100 3 2 2 1 Narron c I 0 0 0 3 I I 3 Sc:nofllch• 2 o 1 o MCBl'n DI\ O 1 O O PlcclOlo u O o O O :16 t ' t T...U l4 10 12 IO ken bV.,.... O.kland J02 Oil tlO-t c;....,,... 040 QI 03•-IO G•me WIMlne RBI -Wilfong (I) O~kland 1 LO~llllnd 6. Call· fornla S 2&-eoc:llle, Pettit, Downing 38-Lan.ford, Pettis HR-Murphy 2 12Sl, MDavls (6), PhilhPI 12), ReJadlM>n I 191. Benklut'Z 2 ca>. S&-NIOlvTs 02>. Pettis 1•21 r-SCN>fleld IP' H R ER IB SO O.ldMd McCatty n > • l 2 Sorenstn 2 2 3 2 0 1 AtMrton 1·3 0 1 0 CaudlltL,l·S 1-3 2 0 0 ~ si.ton 3 • s s • 2 !Yutman 21·3 2 3 3 I I COl"bell I 2·J 2 0 0 0 2 L.Sanchl1 w.a-s 2 I I I I 2 Slaton Pitched to I Dalllf In 4111 T-3• A-24722 HATK>NAL LEAGUE DodterS S Giants 4 LOS ANGELS SAH FRAN Al'Ottn II L..andnl cf Guerrer rf Mldndort Merlhll If Sclc>Ka.c Brodi lb Rlv«1 3't Se• 21> APene o lbrllbl nrllbl 2100 Gladdenct 5220 4 100 Trtll02b SOIO 4 I I 1 DB1klf rl S 0 I I 1 1 I I Laonara II • I 2 0 S 0 0 0 Ohvtr ID 4 I 2 I 3 I I 3 8re111v c • 0 I 0 4 0 I 0 Yngbld lb 4 0 0 0 40 10 Wetlmnu 3000 4 0 0 0 Ku10lf 111'1 I 0 I 1 • 0 I 0 LeMilr u 0 0 0 0 Krukow o 2 O 0 0 LavltllD 0 0 0 0 Rldlrd• ol't I 0 I 0 FWlllm• o 0 0 0 0 STho•nDfl 1000 MD1vla o 0 0 0 0 U S 6 S T9hllt lt 4 11 l Sc.,. bY lnnlnlrs Les A...-S 000 JOO 010 I-S SM ,rlllld1ca IOI 000 002 0-4 Game Winning RBI -Maldonado (4) 0 E-SCloKla.'Rlver1 DP-Sen Franct1<0 1. LOl-LCK AllQeles S, San Francl1eo S 3&-()111111' HR-ScloKla 13), GuerrlfO II). Mlldonado 141 SB--G••dden I 1'> I~ H R &R 19 SO ..... .,..... A"'9nll W.12·6 10 11 • 0 ,_,nftds<. Kruk-71-3 s • 4 s 3 L.avell 1-l 0 0 0 0 0 '"" 1 0 0 0 0 1 N\Oavll L.l-13 I I I 1 0 0 • T-2 46 A-2• SOl XXlll OL YMPtAO MIMts,..... TM final m.da IOfl II tr. i-. ~ OIY~ willl covntrv, "611, ,,~.,.. OfOIU• 1no 10111 mtdalt •on G4'd WWW ii.ae 'fetil Unlltd stattt U 6\ lO 114 - Wnt Gem\ny 17 19 » St R OIT\enle 20 14 17 SJ C."9de 10 11 16 44 " ..... " Gr•I ltllelll S 10 tt S1 ClllM' tS t f llal'; -14 ' 12 Jepan 10 I 14 Fra'-S 7 IS Aut1r1lla 4 I 12 Soutn ICorH 6 6 7 Swtdall 2 11 6 Yuooallvia 1 4 1 '""*11"<*' s 2 ' F lllllnd 4 3 6 New ZMlahd I I 2 lr•zll-I S' 7 Swllllrland 0 4 ' Me•~ 2 J 1 OtlWnark 0 ) 3 SH in I 2 1 Balolum I I 2 AUSlrll I 1 1 Por1uoa1 1 O 1 J1mala O 1 2 Norwav 0 I 2 Turkey 0 0 3 V-luela 0 0 J Morocco 2 o 0 Kenva 1 o 1 Gr-. 0 1 1 Niver fa 0 1 l Puerto Rico O 1 1 A~a 0 0 2 Paklitan I 0 0 Colombla Q I 0. EOYPI 0 1 0 Ireland O 1 0 lvorv Cout 0 1 0 Pef'U 0 I 0 svri. o 1 o Tilalland 0 1 0 Ca"*'Oon 0 O· I Dorn. R eoutllc 0 0 1 Iceland 0 0 l T1lwan 0 0 1 Zambia 0 0 ' J'l J2 f7 ..... 24 1t Sv~9d-iwlnvnlnt " Cat'.11SC) II WOMUf'S SOLO 1113 t. Tracie Ruiz. '°''*'· wun . 1914'7 11 .oint•, 2. Carotyll Waldo, Canedl, lt5 300 ) Mlwlko MolovOUll. Jafllllll, 117 OSO, 4 I !t'larlh EnoeMl'I. N•tharlandJ, lltm, S • Gudrufl Ha111scn, Wnt Germany, ttt.017. 6 •6 CarQjint HOlnward. Gr-Ml lrlleln, 112 QOO, S 1. Murftl Hermtne, France, llO Sl4. a Karin 4 Sinew. Sw1t1enalld. 171.ltl l Men's clW1nt ) (at USCI ) P'LAT,ORM FINAU 3 I c;,.. Lovvanls Mtulon Voeto, 710 ti ~ oolnt•, 2 Bruce Klmbeft, AM ArllOt, Mien. , KUO, 3 LI Konvzneno. China, 63121, 4. Tong Hui, Cnlna, 6CM n , S Albin K.JIQll, ~ Wnt Germany, S'1 '7, 6. Ollter C>ottr, W••I Garmanv, 536 07, 1 CIVl•tOPtllf ~ Snode, GrHI 9r11aln, S2UQ, I. David '*'*rel, C.111da, Sll 13, t Slepllan Foley, ~ Australla. 47U3, 10 Mlovtl Anoe! Zavala, 1 MHlco, 47U2, 11. .JOn Gl'\lnde Veoercl. I Norway, Ut.SS, 12. Mat1t Room; CaMOI, I 434 13 1 1 I I I I 1 I I ECIUestrtM <at Santa Alltta) INDIV1DUAL JUMlt!NG 1 11-Joe FMolt .... ltrlburo. Va . •.OO oolnts, I Conrad Homleld, Pfler.aiuro. Va., 4.00, 3 v-Heldl RobOlanl, Swlt1"1and, • oo. 3 MarlO o.Naurlen, Catlacta. I 00; 3 Bruno ~rlen, SwltJlt1and 1.00, 6. Luis C«var•. Sc>aln, • 50; SUNDAY'S RESULTS ,,:,•so· 7 .Mlilllit Smllll, LllCf1fllld, Conn~ M9n-'1 mar111htn 11 dlnotu won lumCloff for VOid. v· CArtos L~. Portuoat, two hours, dlnoln -on lumPoff tor Drontt GwvM, San Di990, 7'; Crw, Houston, n RBI: GCarllf', MonlrHI, ... JOavb, Chk:-..o. 75; Schmklt, Ptllladlloha., 71, Crut, Houaton. 69; H1f'"4ndt-1. ,...w Yorll, " HITS Gwvnn, Sen 019eo, 1"· Sandbtrll, Chlc.oo, 154; Samuel, Ptllladele>hla, 1 ... Cruz, Houston, 140; Wvnn1, Plttabur11h. 140 DOUBLES: Hubbard, Atlanta, 26, Sand· t>ero. Chboo. 26; Raines, Mofltreal, 2S; Samuel, Ptllladelol'tla, 2S; Hendrk:ll, StLoub, 24. TRIPLES Sandblfo, Clllcago, 16, Samu.I. PnlladelPl'lla, 14; Cru1, HOUtlon, 10, CReynold•. Ho1,.1on, 9; Doran. Houston. I, Gwynn, S.n Dleoo. I, Mc:<iet, StLoul\, I HOME RUNS ~rrifly, Atlanta, 77. GCerter, MonlrHt, 23, Sctvn1cll, PnlllcMll· o111a, 22, ~r\llall, Lo• Anoelff, 20. Cev. Cn•c.oo. 11 STOLEN BASES Saml.lel, Pt11ladelohia. SS, Wioolns, Sen Di199. 4', Raine., Mon· trnl. C3, Redus, Oncfinnall, 41. Dern..,, cnicaoo. 35. ~ -PITCHING I 10 dec:Non•I: SU\Clifft, Chi· cavo. 10-1. 2.n. PPIA1. Atllola, 11 •4, 376, Ot'OICO, New York, 1·3, 2 12, SOto, Clncln· nett, 12-s. :112, canton, ~ ... 11-s. 3 01, DartlllO, ,._ Yorio, 11-s. 376 STRIKEOUTS Gooden. N-Yor1<, 1'1, V~. o..een, 171, Ryan, Houston, 147, Soto, Cincinnati, 131, Carlton, Ptlllaclet· Diii•. 126. SAVES· SUit er, SI, Loult, lO, Ho41and, Pnlladelonla, 25; LtSmltn, c111caoo. 2s. Orosco. N-YOf'k, 23, GoU•IMI. S.n Dlevo. 22. Angel averatH IATTING Al R H HR Beniquez 234 ll 12 a Car-278 34 '4 3 Brown 106 14 30 6 DeClnces 40S S9 111 13 L vnn 362 S6 '7 14 Sconiers 93 11 24 3 N1rron 101 I 26 l Downing 37S 45 9S 16 wtlfono m 21 57 3 Rt Jeckson 3'S 49 • 19 Pettis 336 52 79 'l GrK:tt 230 31 50 9 PICcldo 111 14 23 I Boone 327 24 6S 'l ScllOfleld 271 30 SS 3 Ro JKkson 91 S IS 0 Tetab 1'» 491 '" 1115 ~CHING Ral Pct. ,, 350 28 302 17 213 SS 274 ,, 261 12 2SI 10 257 63 253 22 250 '° 241 21 .23S 28 217 9 207 'l• 19' 16 IM s 165 451 .2SO I~ H II SO W-LIERA C0<1>1t1 SS\o'l 50 19 33 3· l I '3 F0<K11 1''"> 14 3 10 1-1 2.20 AHe IS'l'J 14 6 11 1-1 1.lS s.nc11e1 62 '° 26 " 1-s 247 l.11111 ISS\':I 152 39 4S 10-9 3.13 RomeniCk Ill 179 52 67 10-10 3 S4 Wiii 173.., 161 '4 IQ 11·t 363 Jotin ISS 1'3 42 31 7·9 4 01 KiM>n 2l:lf) 21 10 3S 2·1 4111 Kaufman 49".I 41 14 21 1·2 453 Slaton I~ 132 JS l3 •·S S 35 Curll• I IA 3 4 0-0 S 63 L.aCO<tt 26\'J 30 12 13 I ·2 67S Swan S I 0 2 0-1 10 IO Otners 11 16 9 s 0.-1 9 00 Teflb 10M IOlt Dt S1I Sf.SJ UO Saves. SancNn 10, Corbett '· Aase 2. t<iton 2. Kaufman 1 u.s. <>pen aav C9'1rt ( 111 INillftllNlfl\) ,,_.,, ~ FINI ""ndrts Gome1 IE~> ~ Ba'8U Teroczv t Hu~rvl, 6·0 7·• CGom11a wins sso 000 Taroctv wins S11 SOOI Wett.,-n Open (et 0..UM) SMllel 'INf TefrY Moor IU S) ~ Marty Dawl\ IU S qJ-6. 1·6, 6·2 (Moor WIM JIS.0001 Alt.o raced· Rova1 Concf11or, ""~icy, Not AW Bad, Rlnoinv Martvr Time 1'10 l/S FlnH RAC&. 1 I/ 16 miles Alp1no (Garci.1 5.40 3.60 UO Andr-'N Me (Oelahouuv•l UO ).40 Qulero Dlnero (Ptdrozal 3.00 Al10 raced: Haclll, Intention, EmOlfador, Affiance, LVPl\ard'1 Pride. Time· "42 3/S SS EXACTA (6·11 oald Ito.SO SIXTH RACE. 6'"> turlonll'- Prlvate Junola IVlnzll l .40 2.IO Air Alert (Lozoy1) S IO FaDutou• Selection 2.40 3.10 3 60 Also raced Jeff Gout<. Go RIHall, GaylO<O Anlhonv, A~. Accu Back. Regal Tl~ 117 3 S SEVENTH RACE. 6 "> fur1on05 Proof IVaienzuetal 12 20 UO • oe 6IO 3 40 Dedlcal• (Mell) 1260 Nobel Fury (Shoemalllf'I Also reced G«nm• Dreamer. Pu In Biiio, Che, FIVlnll Lil>hllv Time 11' 115 S.S aXACTA 17·6) Dltd l300 SO st f"tOt sot 1 3r•+s-+t·7l oald st 3' I oo wlln 11 "1Wlnn1no tldttl5 Ill~ i-sn> S2 Pick She con~I'°" paid '76 20 wlln I 4SS w1nn1ng ticlo.ets (five i-se5) . .. GHTH RACE. II• mitn on turf Ten Below (Prl!CAlll) 32 20 9 60 l.IO Sllvevv11tt (McCarron) S 40 3 20 0.Mrl Wint IOetahouUYtl 2 60 Also rKlcl: Vlgorou5 Vlgora, Pair of Deuces. Bet Bolldt Time 141 1/S SS EXACTA (3·2) oald S1S4 00 NINTH RACE. I 1116 mli.t. Doll Drum (McCarron) UO S.00 3..40 Upllfflno (l.oZOYI) 1.00 4 60 Rov11 Siiier CDetehOUHYI) 3.00 Also raced· Sin AdlOs, Minne Haw Haw. Swiss Oluv, Ca11111e, Crlsltln 'N Merl, True Tolav Time 144 l/S S.S IXACTA (3·9) paid 1176 00 Alttndanc:t 23 .. 7' 0..., ... fishing DAVEY'S LOCKllt (Newllert Beedl) -257 aneltrs St Don1to, 32 vtle>wtalt, 1 nahDut, Ill calico n.u. SI sand ban, m rnadllt'll, S IC\lloln, I ca1>a1on. NEW~ORT LANDING INeWINl'I a..ctll -'5 .,,...,.., l3 bas.s, 10 vet1ow1a11. II Donllo, 63 madlerel, 3 rock fJSl'I. PGA toumMMnt lat Gnnd •nc. Mid\.) 271 o ... ,, w111on. sn.ooo 10-10-63-61 272 Pavne Stewart, Ul.200 69·6S-'9·tt 273 5<oll Hodl. '27 200 V• Lff Trtv•no Sl5,7SO Dive 8arr. 115 750 laao Aoki, SIS 750 Rtx C11dwe•. 115.750 'l7S Mark O'Me¥a, S 12.G Lennv Wtdkll'ls. $12.000 276 ClloO a.ck, S 10.000 Jacti Renner. 110 000 D A. WelbrlnG, t 10.000 U7 Tom Kitt. M,*57 Peter OolHlmul•. M,157 Dan Pohl, 16.157 G1rv Hellbtro. M,'57 Run Cochren, U.IS7 1111 GllS.\Oll, 16AS7 Allen Miiier, M.IS? m v1c1or lttoetadn M.t27 OIMY Edwardt, M .. 77 Jonn Cooll, MA77 279 Woody 91ackb\irn, SJMO loO sn.tr.,. '3MO DOI.It Ttw ... '3,..0 I Kralzarl, tJ.4IO -.... .,~.U,7IO lc*bv ~t. U ,7'0 sie .... ,,.,.,, n.no D1v'1cl Ck tn, 12,1t0 Huber1 Green, n.no Lon Hlrlklt, n .110 70-65·'9·'9 70-'4·'9·71 11-10-.. ·61 61·61-61-71 71-71·66·66 69-ff-M,73 69-67-71·61 , •• ., ... ~70 61·71-6+·" .. -71·67·70 66·1'2·70-6' 72-6Mt-ff ff .... 10-n ... .,.,,.71 ...... , ...... 72·'4·11-70 7Nt·'9·67 69-70-?o-ff 72-70-6'·67 "6'-72·61 7H0·6N1 70-ff-to-70 n_.,.,._., 6a .,.,, • ., •• 69-11>-77 6'•71 " 71 """1-n-11 1•10-n .... 71•#•71 .. ff·11·7l-# .. ~-'°"" ..... ·?MS wrv ZltVIW. ""° kuti Co•. \MO Gerv I( rueow, ll4'0 Lindy Mllltr I Sl40 Jim Tll()(pe, U40 - TC CN!l. ltAO LIMie Ctementt, n40 ., Jav Cucso, ., .. Forrest Flllef, '711 .,..,.., s,,..; .•• -~-~- 11.it Uoott, 17M s•-L.l«litr,., Bot> Eest•OOd, 1111 . ., L Of9I\ Robllftt, 11 Cl Gr" Powtn, 11• Dav Cl Ootlll, 17 .. Marti Ca1Ceve«hi1, 17• ,.. L-rd Tl'lornPtOn, 1720 Tom L1more. 1120 Jim Hallet, 1720 . .2'1 Jim Gaflagn«. Uff J.it MJICllell, UH The>ma• Gr..,, $6'6 JMM! 10 n -n 11 tl"l1J ... ,, LPGA tot.lmam«tt lat Hlltl P'elnt, N.C.) 277 Pettv Shffnan. 121.000 '7·70· 12·61 271 Dot Germain, 113,950 70-6'·72·•7 JoAnneCerntr, s ll,tSO 71·67 69·71 219 Vlekl Alvarez. 19,900 7(),-6'·73·'7 111 BonnleLauer.M.100 • 71·71-72-61 UJ Bevertev Davis, 16,750 73-71 71 ·61 ,.. Julie Pvnt, IS,400 ZIS ~ls.e Strlt>lo. 13,701 Donna Caoonl, '3,702 M. Floueru·Dottl, U,702 lecky Peenon. '3,701 Jull lnkller, 13,701 .. MB Zlmmet"rnan. 12.s.e2 Patti Rluo. l2,S42 l(alllY WMworlh.12,SU ltobon Watton, 12.s.e1 111 VIClll Sll\Olllon, Sl, 113 KalhY Hiii, l2, 1 l2 -Lauri Petenon, 11,622 Jan StlPhenaon, 11..622 Martha Naus.. sl,.612 . Lort G111>acz, 11,622 Debole Massey, 11,622 8etsv tclno, sl,622 Jene Geddn, '1.621 Allee Ritzman, st,'21 ,., Jerllvn Britz, 11,323 '" Mindy Moor•, I\, 19t Barbra Mlu1hle, s 1, 199 Avako Okamoto, I I, 199 Debbie ~sltrlln, I 1, 199 Laurie R lnll'tr, s 1, 199 Jtl Kay Kennedy, Sl,046 P11tv HavM. s l,046 c lndY Pteoer. 11.046 M Soencer·Oevlfn Sl,04S 2'2 Vicki Feroon. 1961 l(atlly Bak~. st61 ttl BarD Thoma•. SNS Jane ea.tock, sl6S Su•i• Mc.All•••· 5165 Alaxandra ltennrdt, INS Pam Gietzen. 116S Lenore Muraolla, IMS 8-tll Dantt4, SMS 2'4 Katnrvn YCKlllG, mt Judy Ell•, 1n1 Lynn s1r-... snt 8arD 8un"ow•1tv, snt its Debbi• Austin, t 717 Connie Cllillarnl, 171• Jovce Katmlen"I· S716 Kathy Postlawalt, 111• Ali1on sneard, s71• IH 81vwty Kleu, Ul3 Allot Miiier, "'2 'lf7 S.Uy Llttte. "" Cathef'lne Panton. "6S 1tl Clndv Llncoln, 1631 Ruin Jenen. '63' Marla Wennerlten, 1637 Nor"" Frltt, "37 ,,. Bein SOiomon, SS49 Sancva Palmer. sS49 Cindy HIN, SS41 Heitner Drew, sS41 JOI Amvlem,'461 M.J Smltll, $461 LHM Cas.MdaV, M61 Marv Dwvtr, Mll Nancv Ru1>4n, SJl6 Cvnthia FIH, 13'2 L Rusll·Sewd. '337 Don January Lff Elder Miiter Barber Howle Johnson Peter T110mso11 8111 Collin• Blltv Ma11we1t Gene Llttltr lob Stone lertWHver OrvllleMoodv RodFuna1th Cllarlts Sifford Gordon Joni\ Bol>Goalby G.ol'O-Baver Mike FetclliCk Jack Flee.Ii Moe Norman Frank Aruln Jim Cocnran JimFlf'rft Jonn Kallnka Al lald1no JMTlft .. rblf' Jim Hatfield Jerrv larbet Art Sllvettront 1111 Jotvuton Ket Naolt Fred H1wllll\s loD Erldr.son OouoBru1on Ho•ard lrown HutenCOklf' Pet• Heuam« AllnMl•nk Bil MawlllMtY Ill E1111lckl Oouo Ford lob McCallllltf Ted !Croll fom lartolec: lobG11da Mar1v llurool Frank Fowler JoM HllW'fcll EdFuroot Ooue Send«$ Jack ll•MOOet ltaul H•fnff Sam"*'d JO'l .. J05 70·71-71-72 74· .. ·73-70 ... n -n-10-n 69-70-74·12 ff-72-71-735 69-71-71-74 71-73-71-71 71·73·69-73 n-70-ff•7S 10-n °"'" 7S 70-74-71-72 ... 73.71.75 U-70-7'·6' 74·75·69-70 70-74·7•·70 :11-75.70-72 70-72·74"'72 75·70-70-73 10·75-70·73 7\ ·71-72·74 73·•7-71-7' 73·74·74•6' 73·73·74·70 72·71-76-71 74·73·70·73 ff-7HHS 73·73·71·67 72-76-72·71 71-75-73·72 72-73-'3·73 74·12·7S·71 7S·73·7Hl 75·73·73·72 7'-70-72-75 7'·70·72·7S 73·73·72·75 72-74-72-75 7o-1S·73·75 73•74·70.-76 74·73·74-73 61·71·7S·73 74-73-73•74 74·71-75·7• 74 7S· 7'·70 74·74·75-n 7'-n-73-74 70· 7'·7S·74 70-72·71·7S 73·7'·77·7S 74-72-74-7' 11-n·TS-14 72·73·n·7S 75-14·76·73 73-75-73-n 72·7S·74·n 10-14-n -n 16-n -n-74 1s-n-n -1s 73-76-73-n 74-74·74-n 74 75-77-75 7'·n-7'·76 70-.,._ 76-7' 73·75-7 ... 7' 73-76-73·12 14-1s-1J-n 76·73·77·11-307 n-•~n·n ~~===•1· 1'.:il=..,..,._,~ 11•6'-12-6' ,..,_n 70-71·67•14 "•11 •74 .. 7Ml-11·ff 10-n·10-10 11 •71 61ff·n-n 11·u·11 n ntt •·n 10-12•1'•10 6' 1MO 73 .. ff·1011 HARIJOA LAWN- MT. OUVE Mortuary • Cemetary Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave. Coate M ... S.0-SSS<t ftlERCI 8ROTHERI HLLMOAOWAV MORTUARY 110 Broadway Coate Meaa S.2-9150 IAL T'Z 8UIOIRON IMfTH & TUTHILL WllTCLIPP CHAPIL ~7 E. 17th St. Co91tMtN 64 9371 • .. ... .. :o;u aurda' Sunrla~ · Sul. \tou. Tut"'" \\ t·cl. Tht1r .... Frida\ Fri. . DE \DU~E 11 ::m ll.m. a::m p.rn . t:ao p.m . a::~o p.m. l::w p .ru. :\:00 1•.m. :i:OO p .ru. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR • ' • • • lo<! ,, • j ' ,., '::~::' s~ \t~ ~ -q, t.~s· :::: '"'"' ., (\Af • ~ _____ -.......; 0 -.o...,,... ""-" el .... /-~~ .... ... .. ... "' '"'" .. -d• - THE REAL ESTATERS $2.17 per day 1lwt'1 ALI. you pey let , ... 30dayl In the DAlY PILOT SERVICE DIEC TORY & Plllntlnga. PubMc wtlOte .... prtoee. 873-9235 er 1·•• llr••l•r For Claldlled Ad ACTION c..u A DAii. Y Pi&.OT AD--vtSOI Ml-1619 r A .. Schools a · JnstructiOns ltl1 Wu... 9100 8111 Waat.. 1100 1111 Wut.. SIM ti Wut.. llM ltl1 Wut.. 1!11 WutM llM 111111 aliiaa I CAMPANION. CONSTRUCTION: HOTEL . Marin• Mechanic, H- . 642-4321 ·Lois ext~ 309 Pacific Travel School .6i0 E. i 7dl S1 .. S.nta Ana. C&. 92701 r::fj 5-i! OltANGE COUNTY'1 ONLY PltWAT! lfCCltEDITED TltAVEL AGENCY SCHOOL ~ AJttlne Sabre Compyter Training MOANING, AFTERNOON, EVENING CLASSES Call (714) 543-9495 ~------- School opn s,,,1. 1 oth 0 U!It r ~airmont &c~ool OllANGC COlllfTY'S OLDEST I FllEST PRIVATE SCHOOL Grades-K-8 T ransportatlon•Cafet8f'ta•Extended Day P1t1 time help wanted. Call ~In tot .... educated F,.=,.~e..u~ ,nu..rm1UT,._-•JY .... lltrt/MIMrt ~:= Y-ttm 8ol7{0ntyrer$-1111 elderly cou~. Prim., , .... FIT 3 f1 For APP ----.-.....=~=~ tuMy 2 Bt NB condo 1111 Opportun1t1 .. ava111bl• 15057 ~ut High~ IUlll!m.,.,, a..ucy 1700/mo 87M181 Dinner for 1J*90I'4 or a with the LOS ANGELES nyLaigun• a.oh e.o.E. a Penont to tlk• Otdett • UlllnUl1 tim.a •.-in pvt hom41. TIMES Clroutatkm o.. tor manctttno cMc>att- • IUWlll1 OUllD abte =n~ Lo:::I ~ .• ~ =:'*"~:U:. ~ nn........... =· ~~ = Client• not nee .. mutt be FIT or PIT, m~.~ Ot to · &45-5000 btwn M :30pm program. Guarant"d ~ rllOl't. Htl Mon-VMOe!Mnt If gullllflad. exper. wonc Sat & own. '* hourly wegt plut com-Wed. 3pm-11pm. Sat. & ean llUdc MM&44 • UIJITlft h<X.tra to be arrlnaed. Counter help pit, Mon-Fri mlMIOn. Koure: 4pm to Sun. 7am-3pm For epp MEC ANIC-Oattun Rlctlard Ouellette Salon N>Pt~tn per90n. Kerm SUPER SANDWICH 875 lpm. Training I• 1585 a. Coa1t Hwy: r--· ~lndpnt lfM>P 200 Newport Center 0r: Rlri'u Hard~r~. 2888 Paulattno. CM IMMH7 PtOVlded. Potential to i..guna Beech. E.O.E. mon:Frl, ben'etlfa N.8. Har Bl,C MllTU PD• wn '300 plut per~· ..__,~ ~ 131·2883 For 11n lnt.rvtew, call. .....--_..... ...__.. lft--=:=":"=:~~:-=::::=-llllEIPll .. Ot.DJUa. Food arH, Newport 957.2311 ext. 1204 ~Joo. r-, ""'"" -fiRll •- N B Law Firm Mek1 exper. Penn. patt-tlme, flntbte =:,,~~:2J~3 :r· ... ~-w-~ :'~~ 01n Mr H~ BWrl ~ l*kpr, 20-25 tin per hra. • IJarled c:tuttee tor .,..... .,..en up to '250 par .tc.. • 8hOO nt week to handle bllllng growing lnauranc:. or-111.IYDY II.IOI wltlted part/time Mt1t +. L.M In and Mvt II. qualfled gm & ~en-payablea, recaMble a gantz.atloo. Accutatt Pol-Clean record. Bnng. M.V.R Call Steve. 145-5780 NEWPORT OOME8TIC8 gin• mecl'lentct fwltl'I quartly tax return1. ICy a. general typlat At-ffed out to Cotta MIU ...... .,A119 AGENCY minimum I Yf'I ~· 752·2522 tentlYe to detailt. QOOd BluePtlnt, ..,.,.... • 842-8142 Patty Must ha"9 Ollllft tooll. P~ with flgurH. ~lght 18IOPlecentla..C.M. 8:30ToNooft.Newradull ~wttti .-. pt1onee eontact Betsy moment In bu9Y 11'1'1&11, in.urance Phone WOf'k &aper. Oroup Medlcll & lllPl/o.atrutlH 556-2M5 ' MUYlll frilndfY, NB MIM ottlee. Mlllngl 1-4 pltltl u.. 1ne, Vacation pey, Payab6ea I. gener81 leOQW FuK time tor local ct.-AM't b now. ~full 64&-77M Md«Yt Paid l'lolldeya & llelc pey, exper, requir.d tor New-URIEl1 l!Yerla Xlm dttvtng r• Umelat«. Lot10fphonae Proftt IMr1nQ pt1n. llnd port 8ch Nlld. a. lndue. oonf required. · Newpof1 & num~. 8314480 r.ume wttti ,.,. a .-., trial dewloper. Satwy WIUYIWIU Station.. lnc.183-1200 • IDIULIFFIOI .amWAYll requlre me ntt to: ~= ~= TlllTllJ•lllW per.onnetdept. Company wlll train 1'11111.. ~~~~N:_.i.og:: hlltory to W•tfteld IT 111 lllfU If Jll DENTAL ASSISTANT enttlullutlc pereon for 11 lntetvlewlng for Jr Hw1' Ne t2te3 tttn• CompantH. 4750 Von All If ... ~·u 1 Part-time. FUN office. oltlc• clerk poeltlon. Pro/Jr Program Director. M.,Y · · ' · Karman. Ste 101, New· -....,.__ &42-7898 XtrOJt copying, filin g, Appllcent1 mu1t be ______ .......,........,....,..._ port Beectl ca 92880 WED Tl 1 YUi, ILL OENT~l ~ECEPTIONIST I~~ generet energetle, ory::,i~. ....._ lllllTAIT lllUEEPO •m. AND .<SSISTAHT o ~t~ =p=""'a/84 tt: F~~.,~. og~w· :~·::j PIT 15-20/Wk at N.wport • lettltlryl l!llperlence neoet1ary. 897 w. 11th 8t. N.I . 8112114. b perlenoed 172-6432 a..ch law office. Ref•-• • .,...,, .... ..,. Laguna Hiii• 77()..4275 &42-7611 only ncl apply. Contact .,...........,_..,...,,,..___,_,,,,,.._...,.,.....,, 1557 W. Mable, Anahffn Phone 774-1052 enc•• required. Call • .. 1:r.:•1 Jft., ORIVER/A88'T Reo-l lllE•••lfflOI Burt Campbell. 1171 Medloaf Front omoe. ~ ~~===~~~~m••••~~-------~-~----~~ro1~ • • ~~Dl~~~u ~ ~~M~ ~or ~-~·~ "'II • =ltl PIT Rlnaldl Childcare per1enOI In Medlcart l .... I,.... 3004 ..... a r.... 3004 t.lt I,.... 3004 Lest I ,.... 3004 lllllT OIHlflL • ~, . 9&4-4223 . ~· flllng, -~pter Kenntl Att•n4•n•• Medl.-Cel lnlurlnOt .. -.,,, IOI .,.... u.w entry, ._......, M. needed, 2 Pit ~~ eentlel. '9aboard Ming, Lott: Germ Shep. Mix. LOST: very lowd W•t Male Getman Shepard, Woman'1 aotd ring w/dla e .,,. llJYll/ILllPIJIT '85041000. mo. Non-PrlOt Hoepttal~ =le X,.ray offtce. Femete 5 moe. old. Multl Highland wntte Terrier, mix w1111wr. Lott on io.t 819 al Newlend Cntr. We need a bright cheerful If lnt«llttd, ~ cell IPIUTll emolcer pref, l40-1e13 pretor rod. Interview• a.ctl •1..noo dr. Thur Ill pm. Vie fem, on medication, must Babb St. CM 540-7244 REWARD te1-t633 mature pereon with gen-collect (811)08-7710 Wiii _... ""'"' ••-..... Need Generll omoe from 3-&PM Tu.-Frt. A~.CdM876-8&42 come home. Vic. Irvine enlofftce~.totyi>e a.rt.aorUnda t .... , ........... ,... 111.flllAJ(ll/fl 125 MtMOf,COttaMeel ..... .,.. LOST trNll M/Shelty m1x (Rancho San Joaquin Rt~=:;.~!:'~ of Pmalli 3112 ::tc:r:;,.--c:,:w: llLLY llllYIOU g::; 4c:l=a":I)· conttructton office U M030 tor2ecflo0tgltti.2to8Pfn, ~ looU Ilk• • fo1t) vie •rH~. Large reward. drlWway bttwn 7 to 8~ EIOiifi/liHLi customer and ...n.,..., 21570 Marguerite Prtcwy, located In L.aauna Nlauel. 11a... ........ 5 dlYt. good ~Own t dlnger/BolH Chica. 7~ 745 °' 898-345e pm on ThurL 8/t. At 835 call ONLY 135-1119 malllna9, run the C0911f, #208, Mlaaton VlefO, Ca. lllYll Ctll Joyce WT111tme, lay--. _,..., tranaportatlon. ona H.B. REWARD 146-8812 Lott Wht lg-tialred male Victoria St. C.M. NO Out etc. We .. an englnelf-EOE M/F/H for NB ftOWlf lhop. Fu.II OC' lor Woodrow Hom,e, ~M~.' .:e~ ~M~ Wm• a: ~· Find what you want In Cet.Blue/green 9)9. QUESTIONS ASKED. TOPUS Ing-manufacturing-MIN PIT, 645-7845 4121 8'rch St. Suitt 110, In peraoft. 414-tJfr Newport 8dl ca.. t2te0' ~ Pttot Clealfteds. $100 REWARD &48-3417 (714)241-1002 417-2178 Femalee pref. MOdele and Office In Cotta MeM. panlon/Ute ,,_...,._ •H• ••• IOI P/M Newport Beach, CA · • • .,..7 e.corta (213) M&-1914 S.i.ty WHR to ttart. Ing In Uct\anoe tor pnv .,,.... ' 92880 Of Mnd ,.,,,_ •1 ,., A •••• 1a ... 0n. ttlt ~=~~~ ~~ ;~h.~.~::: ~==:= 152·1383 Daly I DI ................... . I' llllll• SON FLOA ATION INC. mult lltle dogt. 53&--0921 =· ~ M~~ = for =Cl ct.-: : SYDllEY Oia11 PRODUCTS 18 yr, hive rellable car. V910per. Mu.t be prof!-: ' ; Ar• you lnt•eeted In• Clerks CIRCLE K-MARK£TS tor more Info. call ci.nt al typing, Mng,.,.. : lllElllTE llAlllEIEIT : good~ opera11og 558-5428(7~ 11em) phOne, and experlel.oe In : . out of your home? ELECTRICIAN oommerdal AIR AIP and 10 key. Exp : DPNITllln : lntereetlng product, l reektenti.I experlef ICI w/ IBM/PRO I plut. ; excellent Ptoflta. and low neoeeaary. 642-4782 _8_7..,,.M~t1.,,...5.....,,.,.,....,,..,.......,,..,,_- llt-up coat. HW tool NOW HIRING EXERCISE INSTAUC. GOURMET FOODS : Aggreulve creative telephone lkltt1Wlllbeneeded. I 11()..$15/ht. Oalt ArKty ; Tuesday, August U VRNEWPORT841-t111' au.5o 1~~ tr• n tee-1339for tnt«vlft ; n let ~non for retail advertiting ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): What seemed a defeat will tum into a · h s rousinJ victory. Many have underestimated you -some thought you laftltatat OASlllERS I CLERll eurolH ln1tuotora 0,r~ng ~".~~ ~ : P ont' room. u~noiaory •kill• • were giving up. or injured oqust plajn discouraged. Those persons arc Ontrtaaltin 4011 Interviews dally from 11 :00 • 12.50/hr wlll train. ,.tary/offlot manager for : must. Top dollar -baae plu1 going to be startled, surpnscd and will hold you in awe. wlllt:CtffnanclaJ bliCklng a.m -12 noon at 1390 898-t095 Exec:utlw Otfloe. Heidi : b d T for 1mall bu11,,..~o Florllt needed fmmecn-to hive ttrong fYPlne a · onus. t'n resume lo: AURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Stress independence. '-et ready for rlek. 714) n3-1114 cNorth Pacific Coast Hwy., etety,aomuxpet"htlpful. clerlcal aldlla, lhorthand,: new start, realize romance 1s on a smoother road and you II be happier r:--------i Laguna Besch (on PCH & Call 4-t •7&-2335 good te4ephone pr ...... as result. Powers of persuasion are emphasized. You win important trtfHtl, VI jo) enoa, excellent people : debate, you ga in added terntory. your views are vindicated. T.D.'i 4011 e ' Futl time MCretuy for lklllt. eonttct Batbenor : GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Intuition hltS target. Supenor says. I.I llMlll Call (71 4) 494 9233 for more info ~~~=· ::;~~~ Patti t:7r. ~'lt2o1rmatlon : Advf'rtlsing Oir"lor ORANCE COAST DAILY PILOT "How m the world did you know 1t would happen'"? Get to heart of ,.quired Mutt be ... -----------• matters, deal with Leo ind1v1dual who does have your best interests 1n =••It. lie. aertlve l peraonabl•. UllWlll llLll : 330 Wcat Bay Street mind. Aquanan will surpnsc you with unique. unorthodox suggestion. S TD'•S{!!! ~~_.'12nd IOnue potentlal ~ FIT uper. pm IP9tY In : Coet• Mcaa. CA 92627 EOE • · CANCER (Junc 21-Jul) 22) D1"ers1fy,scnd messages.makecalls. Robt s.11..;-•NH/CM 12 TRAIN NOW FOR EXAMS FOR lent. Cell Jeff Can«Wlto peraon KermRlmatultd·: · be "in touch .. with relau"e in transit Focus on philosophy, rehjlon. RE Ek<*• Bet Aeattora 9"-4242 ware.1eee Hart>or Bl.CM "· ............ : ......................... •· readioa,pubhsh1ng.disscm1nauonofmformat1on.Gemmi,Sagma.nus 842-2111 a...a.ot11 J 1 BS persons play paramount roles Long-distance call could be 6ieatured. 1 W .. ', LEO(July 23-Aug.22): Plans subject to sudden change Individual ....,•1!111!1~•~•".!"t~'!"!!'!'~- .fiho cwmed to "have money" may actually ~ financ11lly ...,.&llllTllT 'embarrassed. Protect assscts. refuse to gi ve up somelhm.a of value for ~ulr• es wpm typeng, nothina, Focus on interest in the occul1' concern with actual resources ben:ri:!t::r.'~p.":. of others. · COntact virou. 558-3110 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Be ready for chanaeA.. travel. vanety and Aero~ EurcfN lnetruc. dealinp with persons knowledge~ble about leaal ana.irs. You could be a12.50/hr. Wiii trlln. wcwtc offered a partnership, you might be concerned with cooperation from own.,.... n2-aM1 one whose vtews do not coincide with your own. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22): Major domestic adjustment could A~-=~blfd ::- mean actual change of residence or mantaJ status. Focus on basic c.M. &4S-ias7 ..,. · services. purchase of v1tam1ns. grneral nutriuon and health. You receive Jitt, you learn more about music, you also learn that a "1uitor0 w,,_.~~l'e'.-. Is sincere. 0wn l'lend aoou. NEW-SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov.2 l ): Define terms. see others u they are, POAT TIAI CENT!A look behind scenes for actual answers.. Moon position bi&hliabts 3000 !. eout Hwy. CclM ipeculati~n. phys~c~l auracuon. variety aod pop~larity wi~h mem6ers wanted~ b6bf on of opposite sex. Pisces native plays unusual role m setnaryo. Imo baby, TfW Lllg HIM SAGm A.RAJU (Nov. 22-0c:c. 21 ); Thts can be a power-play dayl -Exp and ,... IWQUlred. You act flrm foothold. you JCl back1n1 oflaw and from people v. ho can 830·7117 M2·1MO · upply money. Love life 1ntcn_1fies.. you'll be .more confident and 8AIY&mEA '°' Intent, secu~. Cancer. Capncom pttWns play outst.tndina roles.. my C.M. twtio-.a Mon-Ftt, ~APRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19,: Be nex1ble. rcahzc your pl ii not "" W 111 only in siJbt but Wlthtn reach. Get nd of unocc:es1ary upcnst, refuse to BABY m '*"""tor 2 be a ·•cryina towel" for one ,,.,bo constantly complains. Lona-distance OOJl 4 a.•. S*VM call could mun invitation which includes uu·tl. mature rattdma tnl9 AQUAJUU (Jan. 2();.feb. I 8): Ciel rady for new st.an, be wdhna to ""°"'' 1~4 faceflaau t.beyu.ut-«peciatly whcreroma iscooc:crn .M~ 11111 B polition also highli&hts money, savinas. invesuncnt1. abtlity to contact N-4M fOf t>e Mlde people who can aid your c.au No heavy lif\1 nJ! l'lot., ,! ~~ ktl '-~-c P ISCES (Feb, 19·Marth 20)'; ~foon in 7001 s1111 hi&hliJhtt d~"'* toP: 1 individuality, pc~nahl). co~rage ofconv1ct1oru. C1rcumstance1 tum South ~ Hwy, l..fO m your favor. you'll bt at nght place at naht lime. Judgment and kl!, .Ad ofc. fonpp intuition nn~ bell oflcruraC). Aquanan play key role. £0 -• t--•_:_~---~~-l:::::::::=::::::::::::::i=:::::.J... ... ' in U.S. Postal Service No Experience, No High School, All n resident• with Green c rd acceptable. Postal Clerks/Carriers Start as tl&h H Keep Vour Prnent Job Wtt fe Tralnlng.,For Appt Call O.C. Of· f cet M~JacKaon . ,. District Managers tf you enjoy working w1ltl young boyt & ;iris and dflk job• ore not for you, con11der a cor"r In ~ new.paper circulo· tion field, This It o uni~ po•ltlon wittl dolly choll~QM & reword•. Our Of*!ing1 ore lmtnfdlote. Appliconh mulf have o von, atotlonwOQOn or trud:. We offer on eKcellent salary with o l>Onut pion and OOt ollowance. We hove on ••c•ll•nt benefit plan ltlot io<h.1de\ hOtpi• t01lzotlon tniuranca, liberal vocation and holiday•. Cond1dotet """' ho"• o cksire to be tu<<ff•f11I ond bt willin; to wo.k hard, U )'O\I think Y°" ho-... ltle quolificoti'on,, pi.oM epply n perM>n to1 I ........... UMl@1h ... AGES 11-14 EARN lP TO $75.00 PER WEIK Wt now hilt 15 ~ IOl JOV• acer oawers to setu1• rtldtls tor Tht ~ Cont Dally Nol Olf crews Wit It 330 p.11 _, won u~ a 30 p "'· wMdlyS. °" Sat111dly ... won 1 ltw lllOft llolws. Yew Wll um NllJ ~ tnd PtlltS. -. wrttl rarn111 rour own 1110MJ U.e IS llO dtlrm-. Of coktion wt¥Ohtd f rou are iClttrested. please ult Mr. btl (714) 548-7058 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC .. OH 1 Autos 5 QuahOg 9 OrOfMdary 14 Felhef Arab IS llalien HI re8()(1 111 Mertlm Item 17 Gambol 18 Hemmed In by 111 Length un1t1 20 A Gabor 21 Hit llerd 22 Lebofers 23 Playing cerd 25 eo.npour 27 Tllel women 28 Indigo plenl 29 Dendy 32Grut ,.., 35 FBI concern 37 Noblemen 38 Boetd g..,,. 39 Allan C()jrt 40 Breiny 42 Oeme 0< Ledy 43 SMmvl 44 Volcano 45 Piii "'141 46A.-nble 47 t933 Kern· Hetbactl M 14 - 17 J1 eo S 1 H()t)ele&t one 54 Bleck 5e Chetged atom 57 Hamn up 58 Cre-Ang 59 Partner eo Body Otgen 81 Nottredemua 82 oc1 .. ·s pal 63 Enter1emment gr .. 11 64 "land me VOtM DOWN 11nvenadV 2 -t>oard 3 NOH type 4 Eel lltt 5 Hubbub ;~•tremll 8 NeOtype 9 Put loge! tO Outlflndet t1AegMnl ... t2Smoolll 13 Not u much 2t HUtenad • 24 W1ll'I kin 28 ObjeetlYN 21 ColltN'll 29 -ecCCf'n911 30 RoM Bowl. e g. • 7 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 31 eoamo. gr .. t 32 Amount owed 33 l/nplentt1ul 34 -Hoffer 35Song u ... 3&CompoM 3a Enumerate 41 SlyQ&nfl 42Mug 45 Htrmll 48 Mellie unit • 47 Jolly- 41 Lanet 49 ThOroughgOlng 50 In,.. 51 Seta 52 Futo11y 53 -Scotie 55 Aelln-yie!Oong tr .. 59 Handwf1tten WQ1111 lbbf 13 ~--· -~ ~-- TYPIST ' . '71 C...-4dr.12DOO . .Tn. 7"""340 ....... JP 11 JP --C~NHL CHEVROLET 1 -.. • r--\ ._ •• I S4f>..11or; I ' I ) t ' f f r !) • J ' :j ' ' a 0 j t .t ,, I\ 0 > ll ,f r. '1 e •> • I a iS d BUENA PARK 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. least ..,,, • ..,.,. .... ~ lll-OIOO Highest Quality Sales & Service . 0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS DIAL MERCEDES 1141631-2333 Alongside the Santa Ana Fwy. In Buena Park 0 RAY FLADEBOE HONDA # 11 Alt• C11ter Ir., lni1e In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7800 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT #111 Tt1 Wist for #• lHP Slll1 for I Y11TS / -(T orcn~e • SALES Oa t • SERVICE •LEASING 1 ··-.-. m;~~-=:Lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT . ' 549-8023 _J 0 81 FWY. ~ a: m SANTA ANA EDINGER FOUNTAIN VALLEY WARNER 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A.'s # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales. Servic~. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Depts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Dally Rentals 20IO lar .. r llttl., O.st1 lesa 142-0010 ., 140-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Orqe Collntys lalsest Vo!Uwacen/lsuzu Oultf We W1I Not Be Undersold PARTS DEPARMNT ()f[N SATURDAY G RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN m #20 Alt• C.lter Ir., lni11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 Orange Countys Ntwest Volkswaten Dealer Complete Sales. Serv1ee & Leasing 22 FRWY IRVINE I' LAGUNA HILLS 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2121 ...... , ..... , Cetta .... Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sates • Service • Leasing 54•-1200 s,ec111 Parts u.. 541-9411 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:00. AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC We're New -W•'re Dealing Aero.a from the Big A on Katell• Juat'Weat of the (57) Orange FrMway Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises l11h1lm 2221 E. l1t1ll1 311· 1111 G BILL YATES YILllWAIEI • NllCIE • PEllEIT SALES• LEASING• PARTS • SERVICE 12112 , .................. l••htr•• 411-4111 Ill-GOO MISSION VIEJO ft 1.ME0 MISSJON VIE.K) SAN I. I JUAN CAPIST RANO 0 BAUER MOTORS BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Complete Automotive Needs SALES • SERVICE • LEASING Ane Selection of Quality u.d Vehictee # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2925 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA 971-2500 0 RAY FLADEBOE LllCIU IEIUIY .IAllll 11111 # 11 llte hlhr Ir., lnl1e In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7000 CD CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING Where Professions/ Attitude Preval/s" Wng In Europeen Dell"'J. lxc.llent Mlectlon of e«efully pnpeted UMd ISMW'e alW.yt In atock. 835-3171 208 W. 1at St., Santa Ana Comer of Bro•dw•y & lat St. CIOMd Sundaya $ ..... G ..,!,J.E~~~"~<L,. jR 4D UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 4DJl':'30~:~~~~~ c~~!_~,!'TS Overseas Delivery Specialists HONDA 1001 Ou•ll Bl. -R.,.,. Dlvl•lon PAlffa DEPARTMENT OPEN 2880 Harbor Blvd. ® world's Largest Select/on of 0 .ATURDAYMORNIN08 u ·-A o ... BMW -ROLLS ROYCE Costa Meaa 540-0713 mer"9Un J;IVnz 1540 Jamboree Rd. 3 Blocks So. of -405 Fwy. 833·9300 Newport Beach 840-8444 S11u • 1.us1q · Pw · Stnlct • w, s.., Class1f1ed advertising 1s your best 1 choice for help m selling the items you no longer need . It's Quick and 1nexpens1ve, and the Pilot reaches. potential buyers who hve 1n this area. Call today. Daily Pilat class1f 1ed ds phon 642·5678 ' I LOW81 MONDAY, AUGUST 13, 1984 Laguna Hills' Greg . Louganls put aslcfe his fears to win second diving medal. Story on PageCl. Coa~t Laguna Beach school board woos City Hall for funds to maintain aging pool./A3 We asked folks what they think of ABC's coverage of the Olympics./ A3 Callf oml& Motorist rams car Into San Francisco cable car, kllllng himself and lnjur- lng 26./ M - Nation Mandatory reading of classical books by high schoolers ls un- reasonable, educators say./A5 Mystery of holes In panty- hose exposed./ A5 World Police seek American at- torney In wake of Belfast rioting./ A4 Soviets, Iran say U.S. exploltlng Red Sea mining lncldentsJA5 Feature· Thrilled by sunken treasure? The opening of the Andrea Doria's safe wlll be televised Thurs- day ./81 Sports The United States' Olym- pic diving giant -UC Irvine product Greg Louganls -Is human after all./C1 The Rams wlll be without Eric Dickerson tonight when they play host to the Cleveland Browns./C2 Entertainment ABC follows Its Olympic triumph with a gold medal series pilot, •'Call to Glory," tonlght./83 Bualp.eu The lm~act of new bankruptcy laws Is dis- cussed by columnist Syl- via Porter ./85 INDEX Bridge 84 Bulletln Board A3 &utJnen BS Calltomla New• A4 Claulfted CS.8 Cornlea 84 Crouword C7 OMtl'I Notic.t C4 FMtur• 81·2 Hetp Y ourMlt 82 HorOICOP9 C8 Ann Land«• 82 Mutu .. Fund• 85 ~National~ A4 l()pff'llOn · A8 Peperazzi 8 1 •Pottce Log ' A3 PubllC Notleee C4 8porta C1·'4 Stock Marketa Be TMvt91on 82 ThMtett 83 WNtl'ler• A2 Wor1d News A4 • . Irvine motorist f o~nd snopptng in store f ollowtng collision that killed teen-ager By STEVE MARBLE OtlMo.tr ........ An· Irvine woman suspected of drunken driving was arrested al a grocery store Sunday where she apparently had &one to shop iust moments after causins a fatal acci~ dent that claimed the hfe of one man and injured another, police reported. Dorothy Tucker, SS, was found shoppina at the Campus Valle¥ Center in Irvine a short time after the Olymplca &o out with •·bang l'lreworb ezplode OYer the Loe An&eles eou.eam Sunday iµcllt after the Olympic Dame wu eZt:loplahed darlq the Friends to host -. JiB 'Happy Hour' (or Virgil Partch No formal services- wtll be held for ----cartoonist, wtf e ---FroPJ StaU and Wire Reports Fneods of cartoonist Vtr"11l Partch plan a .. Happy Hour" cocktail pany m his memory 1J'uesdiy night. Pjnch, who crcatc<l chc "Bia Geoqc'.: comic strip that appears tn Thel Daily Pilot and whose sioaJc panfl cartoons appearld in such publicauoos as Esquire and the New Yorker. was kiUed with his wife in a frcc~y cmsh Saturday on Interstate S near Casl&lc, authorities saj~ lfhe memorial gatherina of ''dear old lfriends and drinltinJ buddies" wiU ! be held at the Uauna Beach holl'\C of PanCh•s Iona-time friend JCfTJ Payne at 3SO Lcdroit Street, be&if\ningat 6 p.m. "Virgil wouJd have liked this," said Payne, "I know damn well he didn't want any services." "God love him, he was a S\\ett· heart," said Payne about his '"oldest and dearest fnend." ''I have a letter he wrote to me on Friday I can't open tt up yet," Payne laid. · Panch and his wife were embarluna on a campina tnp tbrouah the northwest when the lcttdcnt hap- pened. "They were really cnjoyina themselves," Payne said. "I doubt if he ever said an unkind v.ord about anyone in his whole life. At time he was really shy about his celebrity. "ti~ would _draw anytbina for anybody. There 1s probably more free an b Virgil Panch Ooatma around than by anyone in tbe world - personalized drawinas -he would do them without ever lit\ina his pen COUNTY IDITIDI ORANGECOUN TV CALIFORN IA 2~ CFNT~ 6:30 p.m. accident on Universny Drive near M son Region I Park. Tucker was rrcsted on suspicion of felony drunken drivi~ felony hit· and-run driv1na and vehu-ular man· slaughlC'r, police id. She was being hel<f.at Oranse County Jail today on SS,000 bail. D vid Andrcv.', n l 8-year-old Irvine man who wu-a pas-smger in the car struck by Tucker's vehicle. was pronounced dead at lhc scene of the acadcnt. aocordina to lmne police. The driver. Kevin C'.oben. 16, sustained minor injunCJwhen h1 car llipPcd over after being rammed Tucker .. as southbound on n Joaqum aDd made a ~um onto Uni\crsaty Drive, according 10 police. But s~ failed to yseld the nJ.ht of way to CoMn, Who was 4nv1ng on Univcmty, police said. Witnesses lold pdlioe that Tucker drove otr after lhe accidcftt even though her car apparently..._ damll- ed. Police said the woman coaunued on for nearly three miles before pulling mto the oppins cent& near lhe UC Irvine campus. Officers did not say what the woman was~ 1ng when they arrested~· Coast woman falls 200feet Victim plunges from deck atop Palm Springs tram 81 STEVE MARBLE °' ... ..., ........ A Newport Beach woman suffered oear-taw UiJuncs Suaday ·whee :.sa.e · fell nearly 200 feet from the oblCrva= tion deck.at the top of the famed Palm Spno~ tram, ICCOrdina to reports. The woman reponcdly wu sun- bathina with a friend on the outdoor deck at the summit of the tram when she fell down the sheer balkide Authorities a\ the ranger station ~ the 'ummit refused to provide details oflhc mishap. A nun.inc SUpcl'YlSOr at Palm Desert Hospital LD '"Palm s identified the woman as I McHendry. 23 of Newport . The woman's condition was liSUd u critical. acoordmg to the supervisor. A Palm Spnnp newspaper re-- (Pleue eee PLUJllGS/ A2) -2 seek FV school board post One man who was nearly dectcd to the Fountain Valley School District Board ofTrustecs and another whose appointment was wiped out by a petition will vie for a sin&le vacancy on the board this Novcm&er. cloelu4 ceremonies of the XXIDnt Olympiad. See Sports. Pale et• for all the detalla OD the 1fi:noera. Friday was the deadline for filina papen to run io the special school district election, Nov. 6. A spokes.- man for the Otangc Couuty Registrar (Pleue eee POUJlfT Allf/ A.2) VIP'• BJ& Geor&e off the paper. "Virgil Pane~ was one of the areatesl Amcncan cartoonists ever." said close friend Frank lnterlandi. a syndicated cartoonist for the Lo Angeles Times for 20 )ears. Formal funeral services will not be held, accordina to family members. who request that contributions in the memory of Helen and V1,.II Partch (Pl-..eMePARTCB/A2) Smaller sur-f gives lifeguards a break Giant weekend waves and riptides kept Orange Coast rescuers busy saving lives ByPHILSNEIDERMAN oe .. ~,......., Calmer seas prevailed alona the Orange Coast today following . a weekend of b11 surf that ~cpt life- guards busy rcscuina hundreds of swimmers caught 1n strong nptidcs There \\."Cte no dro""ninp. Lifeguards at se\Cral local be hes said thr) were forced to rescue more swimmers Saturda} than on any previousda) th1s~n. M one po.nt on Saturda> at Hununaton tat.c Beach. 11 hfeauard and l\\O boats were rcqu1n.-d to aid about SO people caught 1n a riptide. accord1na to lifeguard Jim M~Millan. While l ~foot v.a'C) rolled tov.-ard shore at some beaches Saturday. urf cond1l1ons became less harsh unda\ and were ruonina JU t a 1t rou e'r than usual toda), hfcguards said. The Wedge, a popular urfin& pot on the Balboa Peninsula, wa oounded Fnday and Saturday by • JEFF ADLER - NEws PcRSPEcnvc W'IVes as high IS 13 feel The high surf was attributed to Humcane lselle, raging off the coast of Baja. "It ccn:ainl) kept us busy," wd Doug Bloom. hfcsuard supervisor at Hununiton Clty Beach. About 75.000 people ",sited the city beach o"er weekend, requiring lifeauards to make 75 rescues on Satwda)' and about 40 on Sunday, Bloom w<1 He said the water moved onto the bcach.b) heavy surf e'\entualJy mu t make its WI) back lo sea. In doma so. it ettates a rip current that makes it difficult for a S\\immer to return to the beach. he sai<1 Bloom SAid swimmers at the city beach also faced a strona side cWTCnt that swtpt tbcm toward the p1hngs of the Huntington Bea.ch Cit)' Pltr. Lifcauard had to help ~immcrs back lo horc before they struck lhe pilin he said: (Pl-..e eee SUU/A.2) A2 * Orange COUt DAILY PILOT/Mond y, Auguat 13, 1 4 Suicide driver' still u n k n own Moret na uli: fter dn\:-cr1na tolen car era hcd '° Newport & h 1n Jarrin& pileup that 'lulled one penon and injurtd ax othm. authonhe still ha\:t not idenuficd thtman. The dn\:c:r led pohee on wild chase from an imm1sratton check· CoNTINuro S10R1Es ~""--~--1: • - point outside San Oementc to NC\\• pon Beach, where t\e killed fier rammmgh d-on into l\\O other cars. Ne ~rt Beach pohce believe the man's final maneuver " tnten· tional. Them stery dri,er arried no identification and no one h tepptd forward to identify the man, who bod)' rem ins at the county mor,sue. The dnvcrs of the other two involved an the MacArthur Boulc\-ard crHh \\'CTe sc-riou J)' in· jured though their medical con- ditions have improved day by day. Four children ridina an one car uffmd broken bones and cuts P A RTCH FRIENDS HOST PARTY •.• From Al be sent to the Orange Count)· chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundauon . .. He had a genius for getting the arcatcsl amount of humor from a minimum amount of line," lnter- landt ~1d "He could s11 down and knock oul a cartoon anywhere. He was one of my true beroe ." The 6J-year.old Laguna .Beach resident, who signed has work ··VIP," had al o drawn cartoons for the Saturday Evening Post, This Week, and True magazines. Partch was killed instantly about I :40 p.m. Friday when a car dn ven by his wtfe, Helen, 64, ran into the back ofa trailer towed by a pickup truck on Interstate 5, Cahfomia Highway Pa- trol Officer Norman Spraguer said Saturday. .. He went through the windsh1cl<L and al ap~ared he wasn't wearing a seat belt,' CHP Officer Rick Sanders satd. adding that word of the deaths was withheld unlll Saturday so rela- tives could be notified. Mrs. Partch died at Henry Mayo Hospital in Valencia wtthan a half. hour of the accident on the .. Grapevine" secllon of lhe freeway JUSt north of Los Angeles near Newhall. Spraguer said. The CHP did not cite the dnver of the pickup. Dee Christian, 65. of La Habra, who told officials be was travehng about 50 mph when the collision occurred. Christian was uruojured m the acc1d~nt. . Partch was known for a zany cartoon style t haractenzcd by people in weird situauons. such as one smgle-panel cartoon for True maga- zine depictina a completely soaked man carrying an umbrella on a sunny day, with rain falhngonly beneath the umbrella. His .. Big George" slnp-fea tunng an irascible. middle-class protagonist railing aaamst problems of the mod- ern world such as freeway traffic and nsmg pnces -was Partch's most popular effort .. Big George as my Walter Mitt) release,'' Partch said in 1960. the year the strip began .. l am actual!)' a sh) timid sort. r never tell wailers or cab dnvers off. But. as they sa). I let George do it ... The strip at one time appeared m more than 300 newspapers and some publications still carry 1t regularly. said cartoonist Ed Nofziger. another close fnend of Partch In one of his best-known cartoons. Vlr&ll Partch at autograph party ln 1978 an aunt tells a nephew he's "grown a foot" since she last saw him. "The boy. of course, had a foot growing out of his head," recalled William Mdntyre of Laguna Beach, a fnend who helped Partch produce "Big George." Partch retired in January due to cataracts. but since be had produced so many advance installments af"Big George,-the strip Wlll probably be m s:rnd1cat1on for at least two more \.Cars. Mcintyre said. Born in St. Paul Island. Alaska, Panch studied art at the University of Anzona before movmg to Southern Cahfomia in 1938 to seek wor\; as a mov1e-stud10 cartoonist. But his refu!Wll to go along with v.hat he perceived as the studio's d ictatorial rules for producing animated cartoons kept his work for the stuaios brief. "I'm not a company man," Partch said later. ·~1 drew Mickey Mouse over and over again. h got awfully old." lo 1940. Walt Disney studio fired htm for reJCCling strict guidelines for drawings of the character, and for similar reasons in 1941. Partch quit the Walter Lantz studio where he had b(en drawtng Woody Woodpecker. What lnterlandi ca.lied Partch's bnlhant free-lance careet took off an 1942 when be sold some cartoons to the New Yorker. Partch and his wife are survtved by three children, Peter, Anna and Nicholas, and three grandchildren. SURF ON DECLINE ... From Al At Huntington State Beach, about l 75 rescues were made over the weekend, lifeguard McMillan said. He said it was fortunate the hea" y surf occurred on the weekend when the most guards arc on dut:r "A lot of the tounsts realh didn't enjoy it," McMillan said of the heav} surf. "They liked to watch 1t. but we had a lot of people who reall~ d1dn 't know how to handle Calt fom1a surf." The busiest lifeguards were at Newport Beach. where 429 rescues were made Saturday and 255 on Sunday. according to Marine Safety Lt. Ron Johnson. Although the waves were a bat smaller today. hfeguards were not relaxing. he said. .. Someumes v,,hen the surf gets smaller. we get busier b(cause more people are going m the water," he said .\bout 90.000 people VISlted New- port's b(aches on Sunday, wtth the same attendance reported Saturday Laguna Beach lifeguard lngnd Loos said 60,000 people visited M'lin Beach over the weekend. She said L.a1una guards rescued 200 people Saturday and 175 on Sunday. Waves occasionally reached 7 feet at Laguna, she said. ... Loos said several persons were tnJurcd an bodv surfing accidents, including one with neck and back 1nJunes and others with dislocated shoulders COUNTY BRACES F OR NEWT AX CUTS .•. From Al year thereafter Besides the tax rebate tor the years 1975-78. the measure would preclude the use ofbcnefit assessment d1stncts. used as an alternative to fund a variety of special ~rv1ccs '>tnCe the passage of Prop'>ll1on I 3. fhomas said. In addition the count)·, chief admin1stratl\e officer said the measure would change the "a) foes can be asscs~d b} the count) and would vastl:r comphcate ho" prop- erty is assessed and valued One other complication. alhc11 a smaller one. 1s the In ine < o ·,appeal of its landholdings' n:a'>'•"!l<.mcnt The holdings of the count\·~ large<,t landowners v,,ere rc"alueJ and re- assessed "hen the com pan) "a' !luld last year. "Count)' pro~rt~ tax re\enuc h;,is been reva~d downward b\ appro11- Just Call 642-6086 Dally Piiot Oellvery 11 Guaranteed 1mateh $3 m1l11on due to an appeal of assessment by a major landowner. The~ funds will be reserved until the appeal has been settled." Thomas advised Thomas also warned of problems wnh the count' 's road fund. es- pcc1all) an hght of the June defeat of Propos111on .\,the I percent sales tax increase that would have been dedi- cated to haghwa) and other transpor- ta11on 1mpro"ements He told su~n 1sors that 1f present policies and the usual maintenance programs conunue. the count;. v,,11l not ha"e sufficient road funds for li~cal 1985-86. V.1thout Propo!>1t1on A funding. l.Ont1nued reduced psohne tax rev- enues higher costs of labor and matenals together wath the nsang cow; ot nsk manallement and adman- 1strauve and engineenng support have combined to place the county m severe Jeooardy for future road pro- grams." he said. The largest share of the new budget. 36 percent. 1s slated for human services, which includes indigent medical services and the county's welfare and other social programs. ·The community safety budget which includes the sheriffs depart- ment. composes 22 percent of the 1984-85 budget, environmental man- agment accounts for 19 percent. general admm1strauon and support 12 percent and general services. I I percent. ~s state law requires. supervisors adopted a budget on July I. the first day of the 1984-85 fiscal year. However, the board has until Aug. 30 to amend the final budget document What do you like about tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe number at left and yoor me11a1e will be recorded, trao1crlbed and delivered to lhe appropriate editor. The same 24-bour an1werln1 service may be used to record lettert to tbe l'dltor oo any topic. Contributors to our Letters cohamn must laclude tbelr name and telephone number for verlflcatl<'?\. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's on your mind. ORANGE COASl Daily Pilat Clrcul•tlon 71'1M2-4m Cl•11lfled edvertlalng 114/8'2-5171 All otfMr ct.pertmenta M2-4321 MAIN Of"CI! 3)) """' Bar S1 Coli. ..._.. CA ..... • '4-15!JO Coll.I 'J lll'OJ ' .. ~ H. L. Schw•rU Ill Publisher I '• MJ .UJ I ..... • Roeem•ry Churchman Conuoller Stephen F. CerHO P10d\JCI r Monager Oon•ld L. Wllll•m• Circulation ManAg r VOL. n, NO. 228 ' r- Sunny, hazy and hot on Coast Coutal Columbia.SC to 70 H4M0<*"9 l'llat!y .. ,. fll0h1 end ~ IOw Columbua.Oh 13 I 3 H4M Yoril ClloUd end too -U'le -· ..,._ Concord.NH to 87 N:.r10il,Va Tides .. 70 ,. 73 .. 1' TODAY 410pm ~IOpm .. 10 fl tr '° • .. 74 ., tr n ta 1J 10 M .. u ,. 41 .. .. to .. ., .. .. 52 eo .. " 57 t5 71 t2 .. .. 71 es .,. .. 70 .. ,, to 51 wlM fw Hle'll r~ from ltlll mid 0..-Ft Wont> .. .. OkllholN 04y ., tr 10aat.,_bMcllllelO Int,,.~ •• .. ~-IOtorO Oaylon o.n-O..M- Oe110ll Oulu1h EJP- HI Le Fwbllnkl """*"' 13 ... F.,go .. 96 FleQS\811 • Albuquerque Grend Aapj<la ~ll!O II ., Mdtot-O-71 •• O....F• Atlenta ,. 70 Hwtlonl Adlfl!IC City as 11 ~ Al.le\lf'I .. 72 HonolUlu 8allwnot• .. 74 HOUllon ktnlngll.lltl .. 70 '~ 111111.,0t .. ... .lae*eon. Mt 9olM 17 to Jacl<eon..- 8oeton 74 .. ~ ... "., 71 .. l<Alnlat City r 8urlllg1on, VI 12 17 LMVeg:u c..., to II Uttle"odc ~on.I C. 8ct 71 t:.:r-CNIW1on. w. v 71 .. CMrlo4111.N C. 13 71 ~It g::;,. .. 52 Miami 8Ndl IO·M ~-Cincinnati 12 .. M.,...StPN ci-land 13 70 ... ~ Onthehouee 7t to Omellll .. .. OftandO tr ttPllm~ .. .. ~ rt .,~. 17 72 ~::".!.: ... ., .Mt 101 70 l'ot19*nd' Ot 82 In l'fOY!dencA IO 57= t5 56 City 71 70 Al!t>o t2 51 17 72 ., .. as 12 92 73 t3 12 55 •• .. M LOCAnoN 102 113 HUntlnQlon 8Mcll to .. Alwr Jelly,~ ., " :r," att':!i HeWpo11 IT 17 net Sir • N9WP011 90 15 == 17 ti 11 13 SMICWnent• 85 .. Wetw t.mp·70-7' .. .. ..... dlr9Ctloft '°"'*' ., '°' 13 102 13 ,, • r4 7t 15 t5 '° 72 ., 1' .. M .. H 70 71 17 11 TUaaOAY 1143•"' 02 t2~pm 44 5 27p m 20 s-inct Ng11 1124 p "' II I &If! Nt• lodrf ., 1 42 p "' • ,_ Tl*dlly at I 13 a.,m Ind llotl -oM\ 111 7411>"' Moon,_ toellly 11 .. ,. pm, tell Tl*dlly 14 7 57 ._,,. and,_ I09ill al 140pm Wllllam It. Dyen. 29. of ea.ta Meea wu arrested on •up!Clon of clrunken clrl'Ylna after be anecedly ran bb car off the roaa and onto thlj boue at 2 Cherry mu. Lane ln Newport Beach early Saturday mombu[ . Byen wu arrested and then taken to Fountain Valley Communlty Boepltal traam.a center after the 1 :20 a.m. Incident. Newport Beach traffic officer Joe Tbruber Ald Dyen alleiedlJ d.rne off the road. up an embankment, onto • aolf coane and onto the home. where bb car balancecl after rtppln& out numerou trees, •brubs and dam••tnC the roof. Olympics end but LA 's traumatizing traffic back LOS ANGELES (AP)-The end of the Summer Games marked the return of traffic headaches, as com- muters rushed headlong back onto the freeways and into traffic jams today. "It looks as though people are returning to their old habits." Cali- fornia Department of Transportation spokesman W.T ''Doc" Maloney said. "Traffic is hght to moderate {probabl¥) bu1ldtng to normal com- mute congestion by the end of the week." The Games ended wtth a bang Sunday and the last chance for an p1ymp1c traffic snarl passed with only a wamper despite the crash of a h1Jhway patrol helicopter on a free- way near the Coliseum JUSt hours before the closina ceremonies. -••Nada. Nothina." was how Cali- fornia Oepanment ofTransP.OrtaUon supervisor Joe Heckerdescnbed free· ways dunna Sunday's Gnat sessions and pla clo1ina extravaaanza attend- ed by l 00,000 people at the Cobseum. No problems materialized when the crowd d.ep~rtcd the stadium late Sunday, hi&hWIY patrol Officer Ron Hess &atd early today. But the frce-flowtna &raffic of the Ol)mpics turned anto a narlcd me this morning on the northbound Santa Ana Freeway at the Lona Beach Freeway, where a jackknifed truck and a car were involved in a collts1on. Maloney said. "Typical" congestion was also back m place on the northbound Harbor Freeway from Los Angeles Inter- national Airport to near downtown. and on the southbound San Diego Freeway from Culver lo C..entmela boulevards Maloney said. "It's building like we had antici- pated back to normal," Maloney said'. OffiC1als gave a last tip of the hat Sunday to the smooth traffic the Olympics sp_awned. "Boy, its JUSt been so nice," Caltrans supervisor Joe Hecker said of closing day traffic. Olympic sign seekers even offering bribes LO!ANGELES (AP) -An spokesman for the Cahfomta u~ 'ngauction ofvavtd Olym· Dcpanment of Transportation. pie fi way signs has sparked a craze among l,SOOsouvenirhunt· "There has been more than one ers from as far away as New York person who suggested we might and Aorida, some of whom have do something contrary to the hinted at bribery, officials said official bid process," Caltrans Friday. spokeswoman Felicia Archer said of the bribery innuendoes ... As far as we're concerned, that mean jail time, and we're not interested 1n:doin• that for anyone." "We've had people call in and just bca to get one ofthC$C sip :• said W.T. 0 Doc0 Maloney, FOUNTAIN VALLEY ••• PLUNGE ••• From Pace Al of Vote"' ofTtet said Jam Knapp and Rabbi Stephen Em,tein were the only cand1datt who filed by &he deadline. Knapp is a ttlccommun.ications uperv110r who ha bctn acuve on a num r of ~hool board comnuuee He ran for a 1ehool boarJ t in November 1983. lo ana by onl) 70 votes. t:inste1n ti a local rabbi who'f children 111cnd d1~inct K"hools. He .. was appointed la t May to fill the remain<kr of Board Pre tdcnt Jamct WOC$t•t term. W~t resiancd be· c~usc of a Job transfer to Pucno Rico. Rcstdcnts who wantt'd the a.cat filled by a pt"Cial cl tion coll tcd cnouJh ignaturc to nullify the appomtmntt n force an clectiDn. F.tnstcin then dc~1ded 10 run for &he ~at. Prom A l ported that the woman suitained numerous broken bones and lacer· 11ion1 in the fill. Tbe new paper 1d the woman \\H transported 10 the ho pual by a local ambulance rom· pany. It 1us uncle r hov. the woman wa rescued and b what means wu lowcmt to the SC' of tht tnmowhi<'h runs from the de rt floor to th mountaans above. ; '-bol -·.Y " ' f IRSJ IDITION MONDAY, Al l GU~ T 13. 19f\4 ORANGECOUNTY C ALIFORNIA ?~ CfNTS Lag1,1na Hills· Grt:f{ Lougants put aside his . fears to win second dtvtngmedal. Story on Page VI. Cout Laguna Beach school board woos City Hall.for funds to maintain aging pool./A3 We asked folk a what they think of ABC's coverage of the Olympics./ A3 ::::;:-~~/.;:-..:;.:=:=:~:;x:x;:;:~ Callfomla Motorist rams car Into San Francisco cable car, killing hlmsalf and lnjue:_., Ing 26./ M .f' :-;•;>»;·~-::-=-;·;·;·;···;·:·:-:-::.-.;.:·:·:· .. ;· r•• ro • o·o __ •• ,·~~· ,!', • r~'·•~• ,/'. • Nation Mandatory reading of classical books by high schoolers Is un- raasonable, educators say./A5 Mystery of holes In panty- hosa exposad./ AS World Ponce aeek American at- torney In wake of Bet last rioting./ A4 Soviets, Iran say U.S. exploiting Red Sea nilnlnglnctclenfs./ A5 Feature Thrilled by sunken treasure? The opening of the Andrea Doria's sale will be televlsad Thurs- day./81 Sports The United States' Olym- pic diving giant -UC Irvine product Greg Louganls -Is human after all.IC1 The Rams will be without Eric Dickerson tonight when they play host to the Cleveland Browns./C2 Entertainment ABC follows Its Olympic triumph with a gold medal sarles pilot, "Call to Glory," tonlght./83 Bualneaa The Impact of new bankruptcy laws ls dis- cussed by columnist Syl- via Porter ./BS INDEX Brld~ B-4 Bulletin Board A3 BUii,_. BS Celllomla News A4 Cl-fled CS-8 COmlcl B-4 Croaw«d C7 DMtll Not-C4 FMtu.... 81·2 tM!p y ""'""" 82 Horoooopo • ca Ann Lander• 82 MutOll Funds 85 N1tlonll -A4 Opinion Al Pap1tuzl 81 Police Log A3 Publlo Not-C4 Spo<1t Ct~ Stoek M1rkat1 Be T-82 n.tort 83 -w A2 WO<td-A4 -lie in fatal Irvine crash " Ol~plcs go out with a bang Flriowj.ru '!l'Plode o•er the Loe Angelee Colbe!un Sanday nJcht after !be Olympic flame wu eirtlnplahed durint the Fri~nds f()j{ost LB 'Happy Hour' for Virgil Pa~ch No formal services will be hel for , cartoonist, wife From Staff ud Wire Reports Friends of cartoonist Vi~I Partch plan a "Happy Hour" cocktail party , 1n his fncmory Tue9day .ni&ht. Pi.rtdJ.· who created the "Bia Gco~t' ~cstrip and whose single panel carioons appeared in such publications as Esquire and the New Yorker, was killed with his wife in a freeway crash flturday on Interstate 5 near Castaic. authonties said. . The memorial pthcrina of "dear ' 'old frien,ds and drinkina buddies" will b< bdd at the 1..tauna Beach home of Partcb 's lor\liime friend Jerry l'lyn< ,•t 330 Lodl<>it Street, bqinning 11 o p.m. "Vi.~l would have liked this. .. said Payne. ···1 know dalwcll he didn't wanl any services." "God love him, c was a sweet- heart," said Payne a ut his "oldest and dearest friend." "1 have a letter he wrote to me on Friday. I can't open it up yct,'~aync said. I Panch and his wifqwcre embarking on a camping trip through the northwest when the accident hap.. pened. "They were1 really enjoying themselves." Payne Jlid. "I doubt if be cvcl' said an·unkind word about anronc in bis whole life. At times he was really shy about his celebrity. ''He would draw anything for anybody. There is probably more free an by Virgil Partch floaung around than t>y anyone in the world - personalized dnwings -he would do them without ever liftina his pen off the paper. -, Driver found in grocery store following Incident By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,., ....... An lrvinc woman suspected of "ltrun:te:n-drivins'"-wu---am:sted at--. ~-;,­ aroccry ston Sunday wl;lerc sbe apparently had aone 10 shop just niomenu after causina a fatal aoci+ deot that claimed the life of oae man and injured another, police repor1td. Dorothy TLICker, SS, .... - (PlaM-JaVJIU/A2) Newport _· woman falls 200 feet By STEVE MARBLE °' .. .,., ........ A Newport 8cacb woman suffered near-fatal injuries Sunday when she fell off the observation deck at tbetop of Ill< famed Palm Sprinp tram and topjjlea il<il'ly"ZOO-f«t, accordina to n:poru. Tilt woman reportedly was sun~ bathin& with a friend on the outdoor dctk at the summit of the tram when she feU down !he sbccr hillside. Authorities at the rat\ltl" aatioa. &lop the summit refused 10 prov\de dc\aik of I.be mishap. A nursing supervisor at Palm · Desert H ·w in PaJm S · ideotified °:J::: woman ts ~ McHendry, 23 of Newport ~~ The woman's condition wulis&cd u critical, aaDrdin& 10 the su~sor. A Palm Springs newspaper ~ ported that the woman sustained numerous broken bones and lacer- ations in the fall. The newspaper said the woman was transp6rtcd to the hospi 1al by a locaJ am bulancc com- pany. • cloelni! ce<emonlee of the llIIIrd Qlymplad. See Sporta, P&Ce C'l, for all the detail• on the wtnnen. · It was unclear bow the woman was rescued and by what mcan.s she was lowered to the base oflhc tram, wbicb runs from the desert floor to the mountains above. VIP'o DIC Georce .. Virgil Partch was one of the greatest American cartoonists ever," said close friend Frank lntertandi. "1: syndicated cartoonis1 for the l:.os Anaeles Times for 20 years. Formal funeral services will not be held. according to family mcmbcn. who request that contribu11ons in the memory of Helen and Vif&il' Panch be 5ent to the Oranae County chapter (Pleue ooe PARTCB/ A3) Smaller surf gives lifeguards a break Giant weekend waves and riptides kept Oran e Coast rescuers busy savtn lives By PHIL SNEIDERMAN °' .. .,..., ...... Calmer seas prevailed along the Orange Coast today following a ~·cekend of big surf that kept life- guards busy rcscuina hundreds of swi mmers caught 1n strona nptidn. There were no drov.11ings. Lifeguards at several local beaches said they were forced to rescue m,ore swimmers Saturday than on any previous day thisscuon. At one point on Saturdax at Hil.ntin&ton State Beach. I l hfquards ahd two boats were required to aid about SO people caua.t11 1n a np1idc. accord1na to tifcward Jim McM illan. While.JO.foot waves rolled tov.·ard short at some beaches Saturday. surf conditions became less harsh Sunday and were running just a bh rouahcr than usual today. hfqu.ardsaid. The Wedge, a popular surfing spot on the Balboa Peninsula. was pounded Friday and Saturday by waves as hiah as 13 feet. The high s\irf WU attributed 10 Hurricane lsclk, raaina off the cout of Baja. "It certainly kept us busy," said Doug Bloom. lifeguard supervisor at Huntinaton City Beach. About 7S.000 pcopk visited the city bcac:b over weekend. requiring lifepwds to make 75 rcscucs on Saturdar and abou1 40 on Sunday, Bloom said. He said the water moved onto tbc beach by heavy surf eventually must make its way back to sea. In doing so, 11 creates a rip current that makes it difficuh for a swimmer to return to tbe beach. be IM. Bloom said swimmers at the city beach also faced a strona side currcot that swept them toward the pilinas of the Huntinaton Beach City Pier. Lifeguards bad 10 help sW1mmcrs back to shore before they struck the pilinp. he said. (PIMM-BURJI' I A21, County brace~ for.impact of' Jarvis IV' tax cut ~ It woukfbe 1ppr0pli1R if a likeness or 1111'. Ht>Wltd Jarvis wm: buns thin siJ..ht of Oranaie County supervison lh11 ~k because that's who thc~·n be thinking about when they bt&in 1CN.tini.z:inc. the county's recordfl billion 1984-ISbudlet. FICCd with the J)OUibihty that yet another Proposition .1 l-li.ke tlx<ut- ti!!l.iniilalh't. lhis time Cjli«l_ ltmj ·, IV or more properly Propollt1on 6, will pua tb1s November, tht five supe.rvltort arc v1ew1na the new scratch' ls wee budsct ..;th !he 1mo .. 1cc1ee !hat lh<y may have to nan from 1Cr1.tch if the meawrc-it approved. "lt a~rs county ICf'Vices can be mainu1ned at levels provided thi year,'' said board Owrman Harriett Wieder when th• otXned the budatt tCSsions last week. - '1bt Wieder~ that if Proposition 36 is apPrOved , closina what tu 1uthor views u loopholes 1n the onsinal mea urt. "thi counly \ _.;11 faoe the l)l>Qibile loss Ol $20 ntillton. .. Amon& the provisionl of rtop. oUt.ion 36 is a rollback of anmtd property values to 197.S..76 levcls and a 2 pertCDI per )'_Cl[' •d.uutmgt for 1nftatioa. The Appellate Court has ruled that the 2 percent acljustmcnt sboukj bt rttroactive to 19-76. As suptT"Yison embart. on Utt bvda<t S{i' th<y foce a Si.08 bdhon that ttnta11 vdy 1s bl.lanced an leaves $3.3 m1lhon that Cou]iAdmini U'ltive-Offtcn" Rob-cn. nmaa .~cnds for tht purch1tc of new equipment. to (und new P'OIRm• and add pmonn<I. The 19&4-IS bu41<ttbom1rks th< JEFF ADLER News PERSPECTIVE supervisors IPJ!*rt"dY are planni,_ to proceed wanly. ... We want to kpcp ipcndina in check until after tile elec&ioa., .. Mid Wtcdcr 1n proposifta a hiri.na frecze- thal would last throUah Decem;-..Obetrlz.. dJ cw posatioos would""be auui ~ in Ill< bu¥ but hirino would be fnmn unul !he late of Ill< Prop. OllUOll l6 is ck&erm.inecl Another who advited IUpervUon ofhil"roncem aboul tk meeaure wu fi.'i't umc Orancc CO\ltl.ty's btlaftOC . Ht told tM boerd \el1 ~1 tops the btllion-doUar mark. that it (the measure) will cost at leall TM COUOl 's 1983-84 budrct rana 1n Sll m1Uion In \b. ~fUDds tn Ill first It S9JVm1 n. -.,., --,..rand wdl - Bui. w1\h Jan--is and the VO\Cr-rcqu.1nQ1 i La.ft' for every appeal of another \ax cut 1n mind. (Pl ... MeCOOHll/Aa) - 'Suicide driver' still.unknown CON TINUED STOR IES ------ -- point out:i1de San emcrue to New· port Beach. \\be~ he wias killed fter rnmmingh d-onintotwoothcr rs. Ne~pon Beach pol.Ct' ti~vc the m n· final maneuver was anten· tionul. T!-c m}'Uct) dnver camed oo 1dentifiC'1lt1on and no one ha tepped fOf\\ rd to identify the man. who body remains t the county moraue. The dmcl'5 of the other t"o rs involved in the MacArthur Boulevard crash were seriou51 1n· jurcd though their medical • co9· d1tion have improved day by d . , Four cbaldrtn ndin1 in one car ~uffrTC:d broken bo~ 1lnd C't.lts. PARTCH FRIENDS HOST PARTY .•• ·-PrOmAl of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundauon. "He bad a genius for getting the ~test amount of bumor from a minimum amount of line," lnter- 1.andi ·d. "He could sit down and knock 'Out a cartoon anywhere. He wu one of my true heroes." Th~ 67-ycar-old Laauna Beach resident. who signed his wor~ ''VIP." twl also drawn cartoons for the Saturday Evenina Post, Tb.is Week. and Tnte mapzincs. Partch was kilJed instant1¥ about l:40p.m. Friday when a cardnven by his wife, Helen, 64, ran into the bad. of a trailer towed by a pickup truck on lntentate 5, CaJiforma Highway Pa- trol Officer Norman Spraguer said • Saturday. "He went through the windshield, and it ap~red he wasn't weanng a seat belt,• CHP Officer Rick Sanders said. adding that wor6 of the deaths was withheld until Saturday so rela- tives could be notified. Mrs. Partch died at Henry Mayo Hospital in Valencia Wlthin a half- hour of the accident on the .. Grapevine" section of the freeway just north of Los Angeles near Newball, Spraguer said. The CHP did not cite the dnver of the pickup, Dec Chnsuan. 65, of La Habra, who told officials he was travelin& about SO mph when the collision occurred. Chnstian was · ·ured LD the accident. h was kriown for a zany cartOon style cba.ractenzed by people in weird s1tuauons, such as one Jinale-panel (;4rtoon for True maga- zine depicting a complttrly soaked man carryina an umbrella on a sunny day1 with rain fallina only beneath the umDrclla. His "Big George" stnp -featuring an irascible, middle-class protagonist railina against problems of the mod,{ em world such as freeway traffic and rising prices -was Partch's most po~lar effort. Big George is my Walter Mitty release," Partch said in 1960, the year the strip began. "I am actually a sh)'. timid sort. r never tell wailers or cab drivers off. But., as they sa>. I let George do it." The stnp at one ume appeared JO more than 300 newspapers and some ~ons suU carry it regular!}'. said cartoonist Ed Nofziger. another close fnend of Partch. In one of bis best-known canoons. an aunt tells a nephew he's .. grown a foot" stnce she last saw him ----- "The boy, of cour.sc. had a foot growing out of rus head:' recalled WiJham Mcintyre of Laguna Beach, a friend who helped Partch produce ·•sig George." Partch rcllred in January due to cataracts, but since he bad produced so man)' advance installments of"B1g George," the stnp wilJ probably be JO syndicarioo for at least two more )'Cars. Mcintyre said. Born JO St Paul Island. Alaska. Panch st!i1ed an at the U nivers1ty of ,\nzona before moving to Southern California m 1938 to seek work as a mov1e-stud10 canoomst. But his refusal to go along with what he perceived as-lbc-stud1o's dictatonal rules for producing SURF ON DECLINE •.. From Al At Huntmgton State Beach. about 175 rescues were made over the weekend. lifeguard McMillan said. He said it was fortunate the heavy surf occurred on the weekend when the most guards arc on duty .. A lot of the tounsts really didn't enjoy it," McMillan said of the heavy surf. "They liked to watch 1t, but we bad a lot of people who reall) d1dn 't know bow to handle California surf" The busiest hfeguards were at Newpon Beach. where 429 rescues were made Saturday and 255 on Sunday, according to Marine Safety LL Ron Johnson. Although the waves were a bit smaller today. lifeguards were not relaxing. he said. "Sometimes when the surf gets smaller we get busier because more people are gomg m the water." he said .\bout 90.000 people v1s1ted New- port's beaches on Sunday with the same attendance reported Saturda)' animated cartoons kept rus work for the studios brief. • "I'm not a company man." Partch said later. "I drew Mickey Mouse over and over again. It got awfully old." In 1940, Walt Disney studio fired him for rejecting stnct guidelines for drawmis of the character, and for s1m1lar reasons in I 94f. Partcnquit the Walter Lantz studio where he had been drawina Woody Woodpecker. What lnterlandi caJled Panch's bnlhant free-lance career took off in 1942 when he sold some cartoons to the New Yorker. Panch and hts wife arc survjved by three children, Peter. Anna and Nicholas. and three grandchildren. Laguna Beach lifeguard lngnd Loos said 60,000 people visited Main Beach over the weekend. She said Laguna guards rescued 200 people Saturday and 175 on Sunday. Waves occas1onally reached 7 feet at Laauna, she said. Loos said several persons were mJured m bodv surfing accidents, mcludmg one with neck and back mJuncs and others with dislocated shoulders =~:TY BRAC ~~~~~.~~:,: ~ ~~~~~~.: sup~n Besides the tax rebate for the years assessment b) a major landowner have combined to place the county in 1975-78, the measure would preclude The.,e funds will be reserved until the severe ),eopardy for future road pro- the use: ofbenefit assessment d1stnc1s. appeal has been ~ttled." Thomas grams. ' he said. u~ as an alternative to fund a advised The largestshare of the new budget, vanety of special services since the Thomas also warned of problems 36 percent, is slated for human passage of Props1tion I 3. Thomas with the count)·., road fund. es-services, which includes indigent said. . pec1all~ ~hght of the June defeat of medical services and the county's In addition. the count)' s chief Propos1t n .\.the I percent sales tax welfare and other social programs. adm101strat1ve officer 'iaid the increase th Id have been ded1- measurc would change the wa} fees cated to highwa)' and othl'r transpor-The community safety budget, can be assessed b)' the count} and iatwn impro.,.ement<, which includes the sheriffs depart- would vastly complicate ho"" prop-mcnt compnscs 22 percent of the erty 1s uscssed and valued. He told '>Upel"' 1s<>r., that 11 present 1984-85 budget. environmental man- One other comphcauon. albeit a poltc1e'i and the usual maintenance agment accounts for 19 percent, smaller one. is the In.me Co.'s appeal program-; continue. the county will general adm101strat1on and supPort of JtS landholdings' reasses<;mcnt not ha\e <;uffic1enl road funds for 12 percent and general services, 11 The holdings of the count)'S largc\1 fi\cal 19M5-86. percent. landowners were re.,.alued and re-"\\ nhout Propos1t1on ,\ lunding. >\s state law requires, supervisors assessed when the com pan~ '-"3'> •,old conunued reduced gasohne tn re" -adopted a budget on July 1. the first last year. cnues. higher costs of labor and da} of the 1984-85 fiscal year. "County propem. ta\ re.,.enue has matenals. together with the ns1ng However. the board has until Aug. 30 been revised doY..nward h) appro\· costs of mlr. manatlement and admJO-to amend the final budgft document. I Just Call 642-6086 \\'hat do you likt> about tbe Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call tbe number a t left and your me11a1e wlll be recorded. transcribed and delivered tot.be appropriate editor. The samt' 24-bout an1werln1 service may be used to record let&ers to tbe t dltor on any topic. Contributors to our IAtten column must lnclude their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's on your mind. Detty Pilot Deflvwy la Guaranteed ~ Fnoe, " '°" 00 no4 ,.... YO<I ~ Dy 5 JO om Cal o.to<t 7 o m .. ..... .. --tel l"'Oey anO Suncla1 II '°" Oo no4 -=-f0'.11 CGPr ~ 1 • m ~or• 10 I "' ll'CI '(0.11 cu;>, ... DI td Clrculatlon Tet.pftonM ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ( _, H:'i.:.SehWlftFtn~~=== Publisher Lorne Bruchet Aavert1s1ng Director Stephen F. Cerezo Proouc11on Manager Rosemary Churchman Controller Donald l . Wllll•m• CtrcUl§liOn Manager ' Clrculatlon 714/142-4333 Cta1tlfled advertlalng 714/142-5171 Atl other department• '42-4321 MAIN OFFICE 3.30 Nttt IMtf 64 CoMe Mell CA b tMiO Golte .._ CA ~ • Sunny, hazy and hot on Coast Eztend~d Tides COlunltllll s c 80 10 111-0r..-Pttcny latt niOhl •no mor~ iow Colum""-Oh 13 8 3 New Yorll CICMll MCI log,.., ll>e ~ 1*• Conc:ofCI H H IO 70 TOOAY 7t 73 Soc:ONI 10w 4 SO p1n 19 73 ..._ 20 51 eo -* 11# Htgf\t rq;:r_ from lllt ll'licl o.llu-FI W0tth ae 70. e1111t MecNI to in t"9 \ldey1 Deytoo 19 l-80to70 o.n--94 0.MOOMS 87 Temps 0.trOll ~ Duluth 76 El Peto 87 HI lo FM~a 6(i AlNty 13 " '""° 101 AllluQ.-qut .. M ~·•If' 12 AINrlllo 11 8'1 dr1nd RtOtCll eo Anchor• 71 •e 0-F $ 9!> Allalltt 7t 70 Herlt.n 7t Auantic City ., 7t l'lelel\• t2 ""91!1\ ... 12 HOl10lllki 17 a.ltll'llOl't .. 74 Houston 87 •""*'Oh-" 10 lndlMapohe •:. ~ " a. Ject<eon M1 92 llotM t7 llO Jeclctonvillt al loeton 74 .. ""-66 llutflllO 71 .. KtnM1C11, .. &wt.-igton, Vt 12 81 LuVegaa 102 Cell* to ., · uni. Rock 80 Cllal1Mlon.I C to 78 Loe~ 81 CNneelon.W V Tt .. Lov4•vt 87 Cllel'lotle,N C. 13 7 1 M_,,pha to ~ .. 52 MIM!I 8Nc;h 87 QI~ 80 58 M1i.a..1<M 71 Clnc:Wlaff 12 M MpM-St Ptoll 86 ~ 13 70 ...... ~-.. On the house William E. Byera, 29, of Coata Mesa wu &rre8ted on aaaplclon of drunken dri'ring after he alle&edlJ ran hta car off the roaa and onto thJj houe at 2 Cherry Hill• Lane in Newport Beach early Saturday momJ.na. Byera wu arrested and then ta.ken to Fountain Valley Community Boapltal CONTINU ED STORIES 11 H~ .VI .. Okl&homt Oft) $0 O!rnlllll 6t OrttndO &6 P111m prlrl01 &4 Ptltl~le I I Pfloenbl • 7:1Pll~ 43 ~ Ml 70 Poflltl!CI Or '" Pr()lllQence 67 Ralo\otl H Rmpld O!ty 70 "-SI 72 " ea 13 71 49 84 LOCATIOH 83 Hun11no1on l!INdl 68 RI-Jetty, Newpoft It 4°'11Street.N~I ,, 22nd 61reel. lttrwoort 71 Belt>otW~ 11 ~unelMKh u Sin CMoliltiWI .. Wet• temp 70-73 .. &-a Cllr«11on IOUt/I 113 11 econo._. t~SOpm 99 ~ T IOAY ti '1rttlooo S4le.m 02 109 e I Fltll 1!!ot! I 2 OI p ll\. 44 83' 73 S«Olld to. 5 27 p Ill. 2 0 102 64 8ec:on<I Ng!! 1 , 24 p Ill 5 1 73 GE Sun MU 1ooa1 et 7 42 pm, ,_ ~! ~ TUHd•t "' e t:S • m Ind ..,, 11ga111 al 76 70 1 41 pm • • t~ 7l Moon,_ !Odey .r 9 Ill pm, NU 8~ 97 1'....oty •• 7 S7 • m and,,.. &IJeln et 90 81 -940pm Deity ""°' pllote "' IUcfw'le I( ..... trauma center after the 1 :20 a.m. incident. Newport Beach traffic officer Joe TlllaaHr aald Byera allegedly drove off the roaCl;"'ap an embankment. onto • aolf coune and onto the house, where hla car balanced after ripping out numerous treea, ahrub• and dama&lng the roof. Dllltr .... ,._....~·-­C011Atycoroner'•depaty wrtte. report beaJdevlctlm~tveblclclnlrvtn . Da' 1d ndrcw, an I S·)ear-old In inc man who was a pa "' ..