HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-14 - Orange Coast Pilot1CDIST EDITION
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TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1984 ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 2S CENTS
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Mesan rescued fro·m cliff
President Reagan
honors American
medal winners. Story
and picture on C 1.
Coa•t
Mesan accomplished his
own Olympian feat: He
bicycled across the coun-
try./ A3
How did It feel to be part
of the closing ceremonies
In the Coliseum. Our cor-
respondent tells you./ A3
California
meolan group..takes..-
credlt for pl anting bomb
on Turk bus at LAX./ AS
Nation
Rainstorms, flooding del-
uge much of eastern Unit-
ed States.I A4
A 'moderate' earthquake
shakes up area near
Anchorage, Alaska./ A4
World
Navy warns Tijuana
mayor that Baja town
might be off-limits to sail-
ors if robberies, extortion
continue./ A4
Islamic Holy War takes
credit for mining of Red
Sea./ AS
Mind Ir Body
Adults have more to fear
from gum disease than
tooth decay./81
If you try a do-It-yourself
diet formula, you prob-
ably lose weight In the
wrong places./81
Sporta
The Rams fall to 0-2 In the
pre-season after drop-
ping a 21-1 O decision to
Cleveland at Anaheim
Stadlum./C1
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's 12-meter Eagle
wlll have gold medalist
Rod Davis as skipper In
the America's Cup trials.
/C4
Entertainment
Boxer-turned-actor Tony
Danza wants to "clean
up'' In newTVroleas
housekeeper ./83
Business
Car owners face many
problems In flllng an In-
surance claim. /BS
INDEX
Joggers, Eastbluff residents heard
climber's cries for help, phoned police
By ltAREN E. &LEIN
Of"'-Dellr ..... ·~
A Costa Mc~ tnan hiking along the
Back Bay in NcwPort Beach late
Monday was rescued after becoming
stranded on the side of a 100-f oot
Slain
teen's
-auto -
found
Police to probe
car dfscOVered-::----
at Wayne Airport ----
By STEVE MARBLE
OflM ,... .....
An oran&c MerC.ulY ·,_oM...oL
e m1s5tna lfw ma gruesome Irvine
murder case, was discovered Monday
parked at John Wayne Airport where
at apparently had gone unn9ticcd
since its dnvcr was fatally shot two
wteks-ago.
The car belonged to Bradley Kaye,
the 18-year-old Newport Harbor
High School student and athlete who
was killed early this month and then
buned at a lrvme constructton site.
11'Vlne pohcc said 1t appears Kaye•s
body was taken to the construction
site in the car which the killer then
abandoned at the airport. The car was
-Obscured-from ¥1ew by &-<af-a)Yff,-
saad Sgt. Dick Bowman.
Bowman said homicide detectives
hope to get a search warrant \Oday
(Pleue eee VICTOl'S/ A2)
CM noise
ordinance
contested
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of IM 0.., Ne4 ltMf
A court challenae filed Monday on
behalf of the Pacific Amphitheatre
questions the validity of Costa Mesa's
revamped noise ordmancc.
Debra Nissct, attorne~
amphitheater owner Ncd-W nc.,
filed a demurrer in Harbor M mc1pal
Court aslung to dismiss cnminal
charges against the company relating
to a July rock concert.
cliff, Police said.
Patnck Finnerty, 20, was treated it
Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach and released after bet?in rescued by firefighters who hel
lower rum from the face of the cli .
Fmner.iy·, cnc1 for he.Ip appareatly
were heard by some joggers running
below along the Back Ba_y about 8
p.m. Monday, a ewport Be.ach Fire
Dep rtment spokeswoman· said.
Pohcc said they al$0 · rccei ved calls
from residents of the nearby Ea tblufl
community who heard Finnerty yell·
ing from across the bay.
NewJ>()n Be.Jch Firefighter Larry
Tcgel and Fire Capt. Don Gray
rappelled the steep, rocky cliff from
tbc top, n rG lax)Pnr'k. about ·SO
p.m.
When lhC) reach d ~nncrtr. they
nppcd ham into mountain chmbm
gear and lo"ercd him to the bonom
on the cl1fT. where a boat from the
Oran Countv Harbor Department
was waiung to transport him to a doc
in nearby Dover Shores.
A NewPort ~ach police hehcoptcr,
P.ilot~d by Bruce Fosttr. was u d to
illuminate the d1ffl de dunng the
rescue. poh~ 1d. Finnen) s transported to H
H pi 1, Whett he w treated in the
emergency room for n ankle lPJUfY
and ttlcased an good cond1uon.
The fircfi.ghtcn wd Finnen) had
been walking ilo the bottom of the
cliff. near the y, when be decided to
lake what he tholJgbt :w a ihOJ1 au
and scale the cliff. About half the way
up he shpped. turned h1 nklc and •
became tranded,
'Hero'
officer
planted
bomb?
Officer confesses
toLAX bus incident
aft
-LOS AtrGEW.(AP}'-A .,~lice ~
officer bailed u a hero for disarming a
bomb aboard-· a bus ~~1be---+""f 1~ of Turosb Otyri\pk alhlelc$ was anestcd toda) and accuJCd of
plantin1 the dc..tice, said Police Chief
Dar) l Gates.
Gates said OffiCCT Jam~"S Pearson
was booked for invC$tigatio11 of
possession or a destructive dev1tt..
and that invcstiptors bc'be"o ed
Pearson allegedly planted the bomb
to get attention from supcr:io".
.. This is particularly Sid. He· bad a
remarbble record. He had nurncrou
__,..~ .. _.endltio __ Wc....m_ttn --
that he has chosen to do this," Gates
said at a news conference.
Gates said in~cstiptors bcp.n
suspcctinc Pearson because of ais.-
crcpencics in his stones on bow he
disanncd the bomb.
.. He indicated. he bavana
probkms .,1th bi supcrvi.5on at
Metro (Metropolitan DivlSlon). He
'wanted to do somethtfll to a use
them to take notice. We ha'e all
noticed him at this point.~ Gates said.
Gates said mvesllptors turned
lbcir attention to Pearson becaUJC he
· .. bad some-background in ex-
plosives.. and offfccrs couJd not
discover ho• the device couJd have
been planted aboard the carefully
guarded bus.
Pearson took t•o polygraph t~ts
and confessed shonly ~fore takinf
the scrond one .. early this mominf
Gates said. "He (Pearson) says he did
not ~ It to eitplode but it "-'aS an
explosive device.''
Pear"$0n was being hdd without
bad. Gates said.
N1ssct argues that the city has no
Junsd1ction over the amphitheatre.
(Pleue eee MESA'S/A2)
Newport Beach fireman Larry Te&el (aho.e)
and Fire capt. Don Gray (rlelat) lower .
°"",... .... .., ....... hlllllw
Patrick Ftnne~ from Back Bay cllff
Monday nlCht.
Gates said Pearson planted the
dev1~ in the bus wheel well at Los
Angeles lnternatJonal A1rpon. prob-
ably conccalin&. tt bcfott then by
(Pleue eee •BERO'/ A.5)
OC board
readies for
Jarvis IV
By JEFF ADLER l
Of die Deir ..........
Orange County supervlsorl, trying
to Howard Jarvis-proof the 1984-85
county budget, set aside SIS million
on Monday to cover a Pon1on of the
tax rebates they mia)lt have to
surrender should the tax foe's latest
proposition pass m November.
With the acknowledgment that
Jarvis IV 1 a spinoff of Proposihon 13,
could tnaaer a second round of
budget hcannas m December, the
supervisors' first action m rtvicwing
the record S 1.08 balhon budget was to
(PleueeeeOC BOARD/A2) Samuel WWett
Parents of slain
I
kids bare souls
to ease grief
Adopted Liberian· finally
winning residency fight
Sam Willetes congressman gives him years to appl) for U .S "1ttien hip
Willett was adopted b) his Amen-
can parents.. Ruth and Dav1d Willett.
in Africa I 3 yean ago when the) were
Peace Co~ volunteers. Sam was an
orphan. about I 5 )ears old. but not
certain of his a c.
---framed copy of pending immigration bill
By DA V1D BISHOP
o.-, ..... c......., ......
Years of frustration seemed tar
awa} Monday for a San Juan
Capistrano man \\ho ma) finall) get
to stay m the United States with his
adopted family.
Sam Willett was visited b) Rep
Robert Badham. R-Newpon &ach
and 11vcn a framed copy of a ball
approved by the House Subcomm1t-
STEVE
tee on I mm1grat1on l he bill 1'
another step lO\\ard prt\Cnlmg the
deportation of the L1henan-boi'1'r':'
adopted son ofa pau of former Peace < orp "orle~ "
The bill net--<l<> the appro\al ot
C'ongrcS5 to end a I 0-~e.ir Willett
family 11trugk to keep Sam in th1
countf). When appro\ ed the ball '-"Ill
31\e Sam res1denq statu in the l \
but not c111zcnsh1p He mu t wait fi~e
When the W 1lletts brou&ht Sam to
the l nated State m I Q7 3. ihe' said he
\\IS 16. not knowing that llTiffilgr&•
uon officials "ould declare him t"<'
years too old to l"C lepll) brought mto
the L 5 as an adopted child.
lmost ammcdiatel) a battle
ensued bet"~" the \.\aliens the
(Pleue eee SAM/ A.2)
Reagan 'snuclear
toke no laughing
,~atter to allies
•
t
r
1 DAIL y PILOT /Tu day. AUQUlt 14, 1984
. Contractor pleads insanity
on murder for hire charge
_ow eai:ly clouds, mgstl sun
Laguna Niguel man accused of paying
$3,000 to arrange estranged wife's death
·A Laguna Niguel contractor ac-
cused of bi ring a killer to murder hi•
estranae4 wife pleaded not guilty by
rcuon of inwuly to the sinaie felony
chvaeMon~>
Frederick Edward Penneh 57. was
ordered to ta.nd trial on the charge of
solicitation to commit murder beg,in-
ninci "-'t I In 1eheduhng I.he trial date, Oranae
County Superior Court Judge James
Smnh also denied a defen~ motton to ~t b:ul for Penney. who will
contmue to be held in the councyjaH.
Penney was arnsted in early ul)
after a county Sheritrs Department
undercover 1nvestigatorallegedJ) was
paid $3,000 to amtnge the death of
Penney's estranged wife, Susan. The
couple were in the process of divorc-
ing and had not yet a.greed upon a
property settlement
A' part of the elaborate underco,·er
operation, invc:.tiptoD persu•ded
Ml"lt. Penne) to peg as 1f she were
dead on a slab 1n the coroner's office.
Makeup was applied to her face to
make u appear she died in an auto
collision. .
Later. another investigator posing
as a deputy coroner showed Penney
the p1cturcsand asked.him to 1denufy
his wife.
He was arrested a shon time after
paying the SC"Cond of two S 1.500
mstallments to the "hu man" for
~upposedly arranging her accidental
death.
MESA'S NOISE LAW QUESTIONED •..
From Al
which 1s on state property.
Moreover. Costa Mesa's noise
statute was labeled vague and am-
bif,uous. 'You can't tell b} reading the
ordinanc~ whether a violatton has
occurred or not," N isset said.
The city· and Ned-West have
battled over loud noise accosting
residents near the music arena since it
opened last year.
chief cxecuttvc Neil Pap1ano. are also
oamed in a separate misdemeanor
noase complaint filed by the city for a
recent Rod Stewart conccn. The
Stewan case carries individual fines
as weU as a jail sentence of up to six
months.
Arraignmcnr-un 1h~ Jefferson
Starship incident was postponed
Monday and a hearing on the demur-
rer was set for Aug. 29 m Harbor
Muotcipal Court in Newport Beach.
no1~ re'ulat1ons. (ailed in June aJier
a municipal courtjudae ruled the city
could not use o county ordinance to
prosecute Ned-West.
The latest complaints have en
made under a city ordinan~ re-
drafted after the court defeat using
coumy--nandants-for ~asurlng
noise. City officials have cilted the
couoty-modeled ordinance a
"tougher enforcement tool."
"' Coastal
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0 CTION
I alt =-llllf
gOOCI
flif
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The Los Angeles-based operator of
I.he 18,000-seat opeo-a1r arena faces a
maximum fine ofS 1,000 for the noise
emitted from last month's Jefferson
Starship concen. Ned-West Inc., as well as board
chairman James Nederlander and
The Starstup and Stewart cases
represent I.he second and third at-
tempts by the city to bnng crimUlal
charges against the amprutheater and
its operators.
The first attempt under county
And Costa Mesa officials are at-
tempting to bolster I.he city code 1n
the Rod Stewart case by brin~ng
criminal charges for the first time
against officers of the company.
Arrajgnment on the Stewan inci-
dent is scheduled for Aug. 27.
VICTIM'S CA.R FOUND AT AIRPORT ...
Mesan hurt in tram plunge
tum bled f ram.off-limits area
From Al A Costa Me5a woman who fcU 250 anago ovCrlJie car fi:frCliies:-He did "I ·don't believe I've ever~ met a scmdmg at the rear of the vehitre. f~t from the top of the Palm Sprinis
D'!t sayd.what police tho~ght they ~rson who was as well liked aS One motorist identified the man as iterial tramway station Sunday ap-
t fin Bradley." said Rev. Gregory ~ Ralph. parcntly bad wandered ioto a restl'lc-
ye's stepfather, Bruce Bradley nedy, who officiated the memonal Both the car and the body were ted area beyond a safety rail at tbe
Ralph, 57, has been arrested for the service. "He accomphshed much m gone by the time Irvine police u1 ... • tat c crime and is scheduled 10 be ar· his ltfe. amved. Construction \lllorkers dis-~~ 1~~~ ... ge spo-. s e ran& n
raigned Thursday on murder charges. "Though we will feel the hurt ofh1s covered Kaye's bOOy several &lys
The Newport Beach resident 1s being loss for a long lime, we should take laterwh1lcwatenngdown a sewer line Cheryl Lynn McKcndry, 24, was
held at Orange County Jail on comfon in the fact that Bradley now 1s 1 ditch in the Turtle Rock community. critically injured in the fall and bas $500,000 bail. at peace.'' Police have not detailed a mouve not regained consciousness, a nursing
CONTINUED STORIES
A murder weapon stall has not been Until the discovery of the missing for the killing, but according to court su~rviso~ at Desert Hospital in Palm
found. Capri Monday: the car was last seen I record~ Ka~e·s mother had obtained a Spnngs sa1d.
Memonal serv1ces for Kave were Aug, I when several motorists travel-rrestraining order against Ralph the The Costa Mesa woman rode the
conducted Monday afternoon at mg along Bonita Canyon Road in day before the youth was killed. · tram to the 8,()()()..foot-high observa-
Harbor Lawn Memorial Park in Irvine claimed they saw the orange Kaye, who was born in London and t1on deck on Mount San Jacinto ~osta Mesa. Fnends remembered _?r par_~ed off the _!:Oadwiry_:_ --·· ..... hve<!_~ Sout~ Africa. before mov_mg ___ _
trinnsTJ)Optrlaramtfrtend1y-yooTl'I Witnesses also fold police they saw foTh1scounTry1asrya~ !'its
who excelled in sports. a body next to the car and a man mother.
sometime before noon Sunday with a
boyfriend who appartntly was asleep
when the accident occurred, accord-
ing to Earnie Brown, a state ranger
stationed in IdyllwUd.
"The railing is about four feet high
and she-was out beyond that in an
area where she had no business
being," Brown said. "It was very a
unusual accident for us.
"The envir nment up I.here is
really very sa but the dropoff is
something else it's straight down,"
Brown noted.
A boy standi on the observation
deck reportettly saw the woman
plunge over the sheer cliff, Brown
s~ud. It took rangers nearly a9 hour to
lower themS<:lves by rope to McKcn-
~he w~1maf\ was fas~ened t~ a litter
and raised back up to the deck where
she was met by paramedics wno took
her back down to the desen floor on
the tram, said Brown.
A Riverside Sheriff's captain said
he had been told the woman was
drinking and may have been intox-
icated. He said investigators are still
not certain about what caused her to
fall.
·----.. -·-------
PARENTS OF SLAIN KIDS BARE GRIEF .•. SAM WILLETT MAY GET TO STAY .•. From Al
South Amenca and has not been
returned for prosecution
"It's a fechng that no one else can
understand. There's JUSt no "-BY to
communicate it. As time passed, tt
turned to self-pity. I didn't wanuo let
~o. It was ljke my safe little island. I
JUSl cried and felt horrible. I didn't
want anyone to take my self-pJty
away because l felt that 1t was all I had
left 10 this world."
Shelton, Amparan and Pfledderer
are member of Parents of Murdered
Children, a nationwide organization
that serves as an emotional outlet for
parents whose children have been
slain. It's a group that's hard to
describe.
Members bare their souls m painful
testimony. repeating the grim details
of how I.heir children were killed or
tortured. They talk candidly of their
feelings. Some seem filled with anger,
others with gncf. Some have become
overweight from overeating. Some
have withered from Lack of eattng.
Many arc divorced. Several have lost
their faith. others have embraced
reb~on.
L1fe has changed for all of them.
But the group's purpose 1s that ltfe
continues.
"It wasn't until l JOtned that I
realized others had suffered the same
way I had," said Coleen Da vis. whose
15-year-old son was stabbed 27 times
and then left to die 1n a canvon 1n
Whittier ·
''Someho-w. Ben chmbed out of
that canyon to the road. Some bo)S
picked him up and took him to the
hospital," she explained "When I got
the call from the hospital I was under
the impression that he was OK.
"Now that I thtnk bad. on 11, I don't
believe I could have made that dnve
to the hospital if I had known what
was going to happen When I got to
there he said 'Hi mom; I love )'OU.'
"He died that night.··
Dav1s said her husband left her
after unsuccessfully urging her to
attend therapy sessions. Other rcla-
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Deltvery
11 Ou1rantMd
uves faded into the backdrop. She
started ltfe over agam.
"Now it's as though I never had a
farmly." she said. "It just dissolved
after the murder."
Doris Tate got poliu~ after her
daughter was murdered. She was
angry that the people charged in the
killing had not been put to death as
originally sentenc~d. She was furious
that she had to lobby parole board
members to keep I.he killer locked up.
A Democrat, Tate's no~ seeking an
assembly seat in Los Angeles on a law
and order platform.
A charter member of 1>arents of
Murdered Children, Tate is viewed
with considerable respect by. other
members. She's an inspiration to
many of them. Her daughter was
Sharon Tate, who was killed m the
summer of 1969 by members of the
notorious Charles Manson family.
"I'll be fighting this the rest of my
hfe, so I might as well fight for all of
us." she said. "I want to remind
everyone up there of the pain and
gnef all of us are going through."
Tate says what's on the mind of
most group members when she
advocates capital punishment. "Who
wants them'> Who needs them?" she
says of the 162 people on death row.
"There's good and there's evil in
this world. and I believe that mad
dogs should be put to sleep," said
A.mparan, chairman of the Orange
County chaP.ter of Parents of
Murdered Chtldren.
Donna Robbins Joined the group
out of anger
Her 24-year-old son died two years
ago. Police said 1t was su1c1de. but
Robbins finds that impossible to
belteve. It doesn't add up. she said.
She paid for a to;u cology test when
pohce ms1sted her son had taken a
fatal dose of drugs. The tests showed
no trace of drugs. she said.
"It's not that I couldn't acct"pl that
he comm med suicide. tt's JUSt that I
wanted the truth I just wanted
object1v1ty4r; she said .. , JOIOed the
Dorla Tate
group to express my anger ...
Most of the members have ex-
penenced angrer. Pfledderer said she
and her husband considered traveling
to South Amenca to kill the man who
had murdered their daughter. She
said they even toyed w1 th the idea of
hiring a professional hit man.
Shelton got angry at the media.
"Dunng the tna11 thought the press
was lacking in sensiuvny or com-
passion of any kind." he said "When
I'd come out of the counroom. the
reporters looked ltke a bunch of
vultures. 1 was ready to fight. In fact. a
marshal had to hold me back once ...
Fern Schneid er's son was
murdered a year ago. "It wasn't unul I JOtned the group
that I discovered that it was all right to
hurt, to cry. to laugh. to want to be a
part of the human race again," she
said.
"You reltve the whole thing over
and over and over again and finally
)'OU undentand 11 will never be over.
It will be there every day."
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ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrc.utaUon 71.t/SU-4383
Clatalfled advartlalng 71.t/142-$171
All otMr department• 8424321
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P1JbliSMr
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• Pl••..,., ITlll~ Cl!! ~ l\CW(.~ dtlO.ol ~ p.-
Aoumary Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Carazo
Prot1uct1or
......-Mnnager
Oonatd L. Wllllam1
Circura11on
Manager -
""'"'1" ol <OO,•tQ'll t/WNl'
From Al
bureacracy and Congress.
Ten times the govcmmem issued
orders to deport Sam. At one point he
fled from an arrest warrant issued
after he failed to attend a heanng
whcr.c he was sure: he.'d be dctainN_
and deported
The Willens solicited help from
numerous California congressman,
who kept various private immigra-
tion bills for Willett alive in the
House of Representatives, but a
stubborn House Subcommittee on
Immigration wouldn't budge. Then,
in a surprise move last October, the
subcommittee considered a bill in-
troduced by Badham, and in July the
Willetts weretold that the biU had
been approved by tbe subcommittee.
Sam, who now says he's 29, has
lived in San Juan Capistrano for the
past I 0 years on a student yisa. After
passage of the bill by Ccongress, he
intends to enroll again at Saddleback
Community College. where he began
his studies before I.he fight to remain
1n the U.S. He supports himself by
working at a local McDonald's res-
taurant.
Badham, hjmself the father of two
ado]>ted dauabters, looked slightly
uncomfontbfc Monday as the
Willetts criticized the bureaucracy
and red tape of the U.S. immigration sy_stem. __
"It is frustrating when you hear the
government accuse other countries of
not caring for the family, of separ-
ating families,'' said Sam, an avid
follower of world and local news
issues.
Bad.ham denied the Willett case
was a partisan is ue. "In this case it is
just a tough committee. They have
their rules," he said.
Ruth Willett believes the commit-
tee was partially swayed by a cross.-
country bicycle trip to Washington,
D.C. that Sam•s brother, Dave, made
in 1982 to convince legislators and
immigration officials that the
Willens' are a strong. close-knit
family. "They thought we brought
him over here to be our servant," she
said.
Sam still must wait five years to
apply for ci tizenship, which he hopes
will be a smoother process than
1 ga1mng residency. "I don't wan\ lO
fight aoymorc," he said.
He finds it hard to imagrne what his
life would be like had the Wilctts not
adopted him and fought to keep him
tn tlte United States.
"I don't know what I would do. I
would be m a villaie ... hfe would be
rough," he said, sitting among his
boob, stereo and TV m I.he neatly
appointed mobile home he recently
purchased.
Despite the frustration, he 1s "very
happy" to be in Amcnca. Church
groups and many friends helped by
donating to pay his legal fees. sending
letters to congressmen and providing
moral support. The City of San Juan
Capistrano also made him an "honor-
ary citizen."
Mrs. Willett said she 11 "dis-
illusioned with the country. I mean
we couldn't even feta hearing for so
long. We're B)ad it s over but it leaves
you with a kind of sick feeling. At least•
now we're on the positive road." She
told Badham as he left, "We're very
thankful you stuck with us ... very
grateful.".
~0£~0ARDEYESJARVISIV ;·
prepare for the initiative. The in-
itiative will appear as Proposition 36
on the Nov 6 ballot.
By a 4-1 vote, board members
agreed to not only set aside SI 5
million in revenue sharing funds to
cover any revenue loss. but also to
freeze any new spending and hiring
until the fate of the measure is
determined.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande voted
against the recommendation sub-
matted by County Administrative
Officer Roben Thomas. sayina he
would prefer the flexibility of cunioa
exisung programs to beina hmiticd to
freezina only new spending.
Thomas has informed the board
that passage of Proposition 36 could
cost the county between SI 8 to $20
million in tax refunds plus about $4.3
million in administrative cosu.
The measure is intended to close
loopholes that Jarvis says •ovcm-
ments used to avoid the in-tent of
Proposition I 3, which slashed prop-
eny taxes. The measure would chan1e
how property is valued and assessed.
would require a two-thirds vote to
impose and raise fees levied by the
county and would affect virtually all
the other mechanisms by which state
and local governments fund their
operations.
By far the bigsest disavecment that
surfaced during the first <iay ofbudge:t
considerations., however, had little to
do with government financing and
Howard Jarvis. h focused on nuclear
war and a more than SI S0,000
appropriation for disaster planning.
More than a half-dozen county
residents told supervisors they ob-
jected to the S 1 S2,.S.S8 in the fire
department's Emeraency Manaae-
ment Division's bu~t for what they
contended is plannina for civil de·
fense in the event ofa nuclear war.
"We art here to say that not I
cen t ... should be used to prepare for an
emergency for which no plannang is
possible," said Jean Bernstein, a Seal
Beach resident.
Also urging that no money be spent
for nuclear war planning and asking
that language describing such plan-
ning in the bud~et be chanaed were
Laguna Beach City Councilman Roh-
en Gentry, peace activist Ellen
Severoni and 40th Congressional
District Democratic candidate Carol
Ann Bradford.
Supervisors agreed to have the
lanauage calhng for "county-wide
exercises on responses to a nuclear
incident," revu:wed, but pointed out
the lana~c also refers to planmna
for an accident at the San Onofre
Nuclear OeneratJna Station.
REAGAN NUCLEAR JO ........
But the board tentatively OK'd the
appropriation as they djd mofl others
considered during the day-Iona bear·
iog. Action on cenain supplemental
items, such as the purchase of one or
two helicopters for the sheriffs de-
partment, wu deferred until Wednes-
day so that mo~ information could be obtained. Approval of the bud&ct
will come later this month. Pro.Al
In an effort to bOlster •he county's
troubled road fund; supervitof'6 also
tentatively approved 1hiftina $1 • .S
million into a pecial road mainten-
ance fund by deleting or delayina
funds hcduelc<i for nc · road con·
lfU tion projects.
'"jDiilili-~iiiillrl The hcanri» were to ,oll.l..iiuie " today. .
Correction .....
• .
,
Mesan h_':fs his ow~ OlympiaD feat
C A fret lecture on wc1gh1 control ponsotcd by Or
Hary Rothtnbcra. will be h Id It 1 p.m. on Wednesday ai By KAREN E. KLEIN 1~1~unat<?tt Berich Caty Hall. Or. Rothcnbcrg's u t °' .. .,_,,.......,
1n we~;h~~~r~{" fgrbbe m~er, P!i?e:·3~h~~spca1 'ali1es tcvc Hansen, t , of Com Mcsu., 11 still u~. hh ankJcs · re rva ions, ~ ~.-.s I, are swollen and he's sufferin from tend n1tis. But be broupt
Cabha,,, n .IJ d . •• h home a whole lot ofmcmones . .,_.e .-ate 0.1.1 Deeb mOJD · NC?. Hansen dad not pa11k1pate in the recent Summer
A darlc·haired b ge Patch doll lookin for a Olympic Oame . moth.er, and 1 chiropractor with exercise's for co~batina But the ~ewport Harbor High hool areduate did pull anhntis will be fi d ' Th • . off n Olymp10-1zed feat. local cha ter eatu~ a~ unday.s !"cetma of.the .He rode hi bicycle from Co u Mesa to Newark.N J ..
Pe P ,,of the Amencan Association of Retired cycling about 77 miles a day from June 22 to the t--:nnina of rsons. -.. The brown Pa& l · h · ....,.; Auaust. · th v 1 • unc eon meeuna ~.,n5 at noon at Hansen said he tmincd for about three months before sched~1:d'3u~~~~/~~~I ~:~h1~·· C~s~ Mesa. Also attemptina the trip. !fc traveled lone. c1ocpt fort~c times be
Roben Badham, R·Newport Beach. ure Y onaressman met ~P with other nden "! ~opped to stay W1th fry~s ..
For information on theCabbqe PatchdoU call Rose , A 1ot ofpc~p!~ womed a~ut me and a l~!d dn.t think
\iane Jud~ at 64S..,...82. Mildred Johnston at s4s. 7988 or 1 d be ab1~ to do 1t, Ha.nscn ad. But he wasn. t _womcd. Man~ Cttrutenscn at M2""63S4 In.spite !lf heaVY. nun~ and~ traffic condiuons near: the · end of the tnp, he id things ba 1 lly went welt. Free·nlm o.n •arlla1111.~..._-ed "Atonepoint.mybag(contaminactothingandsupplics)
9 £• Hu 1 fell off and got run over," Hansen said. And rid1na Jtle
, A free film on .surfina injuries Will be shown in interstate highways was scary, he added. · .
"'c"-port Beach, at the gazebo in Peninsula Park, ··1 was riding right on the white hne. I had to listen to · fh ursday at 8 p.tn . · traffic behind me and keep an eye on the traffic an froni." be
Ken Jacobsen. Newport's chief lifeauard, will said. in troduce the film, presented by the Balboa Peninsula At night, Hansen either camped out along the road or
Point AsS()Ciation. The park is located next to the Balboa stayed in motels. "I wasn't 'able to sleep very well (an the
Pier on Balboa Peninsula. campgrounds) so I checked into motels mostly," be said.
For information, call Julia Matcha at 673-1403. His father funded the S l ,SOO trip.
''O.n t.IJe Go'' luncheon •lated
The monthly "On the Go" luncheon and lecture for
women, sponsored by St. Joseph Hospital of Orange, will
feature Sheila Aynn, R.D.. speaking on "Common
Vitamins and Mineralsand Your Health" on Wednesday.
.\ug. 22, from noon to 1 ~30p.m. tn theconferencecenterof
the County Medical Assoctalion.
The bes~part of the trip was when he hit Ohio and took
some time off to visit friends there. "I did some windsurfini
on Lake Erie.'' he said. · · ~.
Tbe·last two days were the worst pan of the trip. "Those
were the worst road conditions I ran into the whole time," he
said. "And there was traffic and 1t was rai ning really bard."
But along the way Hansen JOt a firsthand view at
Amtrica. And he got his fiu ofb1cychng-at least for a while .
• .... ........... ,. ... ._ Cost for the lunchcob/lecture is $12 and must be
prepaid by Aua. 17.
When he enters 1he University of Pucet Sound, W Ji.,
this fall, Hansen said he·11 10 in for crew, not cycling.
··1 think I can compete in crew," be said. "I've bad
enough bicycling for the ume beina."
Ste•e Baneen poeee with the bicycle be
pedaled aUOM the United State.. The
BarbOr Btib 8ebool iJadute coapleted
h.la jourDej In a little OYer a-.tla. Call 771.a040 to prc·rqister, or send a check to
Community Health Education Department.., St. Jo~b
Hospital, P.O. Box S600. Orange 92667.
Final cat vaccination• A
Tbe finll ant..rabies vacciiiltion;:rli;;;:o:;r:;;;:;:s-:;,u;::;y:::;;ca:;:r:;:i::;s=
scheduled for Wednesday, Aug. 22, from 1to8:30 p.m., at
the Oranae County Animal Shelter, S6l City Drive South.
Orange.
The vaccinations will cost $3 per cat and the
inoculation is good for three yean. Cats must be at least
lhree mooths of 14e and must be restrained in a carrier,
box or other contamer.
For funher information, call S23-0980.
Allt1-smo~g cllnlc .et
The American Luna Association of Orange County
will conduct a "Freedom From Smokioa" clinic be&in.ning
Thursday, Aug. 23, and continuina throu&h Sept 18.
Attendees will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. each Tuesday
and Thursday in tbe financial buildini across the street
-from 'thrLo 1'1amitos CeneraJ-Hosprtat;-3&-2?-iatdlr-
Ave.
The registration fee of$2S defrays material costs. For
more information or registration, call 83S·LUNG.
Better Breat.IJen Club to meet
Craig Harelson, registered respiratory therapist. will
discuss "Help Yourself to Better Brcathina" at the
Monday, Aug. 24, Better Breathers' Oub meeting at
Anaheim General Hospital, 3SSO W. Ball Rd.
The program wall be held from 3 to 4 p.m.
Refreshments will be served and ample parking is
a-veilable.
For more information caJI Harelson at 927--6700. .
Stage Door sc.IJedales party
The Stage Door Chapter of Orange County Music
Center, Inc., will hold a cocktail and potluck pany with
festive Olympic colors at the Terrace Oubbouse in
University Park on Sunday.
Elaine Delman, chairman for the I 98 .. 8S season
along with Joan Stover, hospitality chairman, will
welcome new members. Staae Door is a support goup.
with 60 active members, for the Oranae Coi.mty
Performing Arts Center.
For infoi:mauon on time of the event, call Connne
Rostolcer at 786-068S.
CALENDAR
Tuesday, Aug. 14
• 9:30 a.m., Oraqe Couty Boanl of Sapentson,
Hall of Administration, I 0 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 1 :30 p.m., Oraqe Couty Planntn1 CommbaJon.,
Hall of Adm1mstration, JO Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana
• 6:30 p.m., lrvlH City CoucU, Civic Center, 17200
Jamboree Blvd., Irvine.
• 7:30 p.m., Newport·Meta Scbool Board, Harper
Community Center, 42S East 18th St., Costa Mesa.
Al'wt4a111
Jaan Antonio Sam•ranch (left). president of
tbe International Olympic Committee.
puees tbe Olympic f1ac to Bo Byan Yam,
mayor of Seoal. South Korea, where the 1988
Olymptca will be held.
Pou cE Loe
Knife-wieldin~ bandit robs
motel in Huntington Beach
A hulkina bandit armed with a
knife held up an oceanfront motel in
Huntinaton Beach late Monday and esca~d with $467 in cash and an
undetennined number of traveler's
checks, accordina to police.
The robber entered the Huntinaton
ShorH Motel, 21002 Pacific Coast
Hi&hway. at about lO:SS p.m. and
threatened the man.a tr with the
knife, officers said. o one was
injured.
The man reportedly escaped on
foot af\cr the robbery.
The bandit was dcscnbed as be1na
abOut 6-6. heavy set and havin.gcurly.
unkempt, blond• h-brown hair.
orthe__grand finale
· exaspe~ati~g but worth it
'Star Wars' salute to Los Angeles Olympics
perfect ending to a spectacular two weeks
By ANN CONWAY
Oellr ..... Clnl I I flfl
Oying saucer -an identifiable fiyana
object. "ZOOmina ri&ht out of Wolper's
wizardry and into our space-aae Sittina in the Los Angeles Mem· hearts.
orial Coliseum waitinJ for David It blinked'. It razzled, duzJcd and
Wolper's Olympic clos1na ni&ht ex· ~ttered. was that really Uncle Sam·s travapnz.a was a little like being an 8-year-0ld on Christmas Eve_ it was 1 t &littering in the center? For a
Wait)'ou loved to hate. -----.mo~t ~vcryone thou&ht E.T1 The 96,000-strong crowd bepn 10 would descend weanna a ,old mCdal,
fidget as the marathon runnen strag-but no, the saucer just hovered there,
gled in, delaying Sunda)'s closina making us happ) to be ali\C ror an
program for at least an hour. unforgettable few minutes.
It wasn't that the fans had lost It took us a v.h1le to admit to the
interest in the athletes. Not for a cable v.bich held it lO the hehcol)1Cr
second. above. it We didu't want to at.
It was the sight of all those c1osi~ The cheers tarted apio with \be
night "&OOdics" quietly waitina-.oa -laser li&bt how. It wu nibl out of
the field that was distraeting. ... Star Wars ... The staae was equipped
For staners. there v.as a 32,400-with two IU&h-P<>••cred laser S) tems
square.foot stage flanked v.itb reflec. that created neon effects and tv.o 20-
tina pools holding pipes that looked watt argon systems at the peristyle
Ii.Ice fountains end of the C-Oliseum that formed
The four temporary hghtina towers geometric shapes with the aid of
. m1rron. All were computer cotrollcd.
Ukt bullets of~ tbtj sprayed
color around the field and crand·
sunds.
The ~orb cheers were dif-
ferent. It .. -as as if you S1arttd to
scream backwards becasue ou were
hotdioa )Our breath. Time after ume
facu looked ~ to see t.bc n
splin!mna in a zill!on Ptee:CS of gold. scem1ns to $top Just on of ,i
crowd.
· TbrouS)t it all. lhcy -wavr.d flasbli&bts -turned on uc -
makini the ~bow feet as af tt
happenina in a Joa c:omcr of outer
space.
When Lionel Richie DI .. iaht Long, .. the columns on
~ploded with smoke and fra&mcD
of&Old mylar owcred the audieocc. the--ror 1M srn2n:ontin
Wlth fountains. more smou. foa.
thousands of balloons. danciag and
t.he foot tappina ~nd swa)ing of the
athletes whose tune bad come to
celebrate .
All ni&ht Iona. capable of 1.2 million watts didn't
help to calm anyone either. Neither
did the shon , fat columns which sat
on the stqe, looking hke li ttle
volcanoes waiting to explode. And
neither did those clever flashlights the
spectators received as they came
through the P.te. The twhligbts were
equipped wath plastic ~ and red
film stnps, fituna the patriotic mood.
L9ngtime Newport· activist
Alison Loveland succumbs
The wa1t was maddening. Our
~ Day memories were inter·
ferina wt th our clos1n1 niaht ~tience.
Wolper bad done LOO Sood a Job OD US
the first time.
But nothina on the field really
prepared us for the marvels to come.
After the Olympic flame was ext·
mauishcd. the first "moment of
chc:erina" began. All of the cheers
heard clos•Df ni&bt began as the
isolated pspma discovery of a few
spectators and then built. sprcadiog
through the stadium hke the
crescendo of a tidal wave as everyone
made the same discov~.
The first moment ame down to us
out of the navy blue night. It was a
at 8800 Irvine Center Drive. The loss
was betv.een SSO and $200. • • • Someone burglanzcd a locked
BMW auto parked Saturday in an
underground lot at 19000 MacAnhur
Blvd. The loss included stertO equip-
ment wonh $400. • • • A 24"-)ear-old woman rcponCd
earl) Monda\ that her gold 1983
Chevrolet Nova was ~tolen wh1lt
parked at the II"\ 11\\: Meado~
Amphitheater. 00 In Cne Center
Drive. • • • m1dcnt1al buraJary was reported
early Monday on '1ellowwood Way.
Tools ..,ere stolen from the praae.
Han~n Beach
A 11\C:·night JO) ndcr pcd otr tr\ a
C1ly trcct ~ per that had been
parked on the Huntinaton Beach ~in". The hooUpn ttportedl)' dtovt
the y,-ccpcr an to a not and mashed
a planter box in front of Muie's
Pil.Z&.
Alison Bo v.ell Loveland. a Iona·
time resident ofNewpon Beach wbo
was dcq>l) involved in commun1t)
service. died Friday after astruaJe
Wtth cancer.
Born July 24, 1919, in Chicago. JU .•
Mrs. Lovcl.and lhed in ·ewpon for
more than 30 )tars. Dunn& her
residence, she volunteered her time
with · the Oranae County
Philharmonic Society. National
Charit~ Leaaue. Newport Harbor Art
Museum, Hoag Hospital and Town
and Gown _of UC lrvmc.
Mrs. Loveland co-founded 1he
Irvine Coast Racquet Club and was
an executive secreury for the New-
from a blue 1984 Isuzu parked at
South Count) Motor... 1871 I &ach
Blvd. • • • A 19-anch tcle~ision set and S20 1n
cash was stolen from a re 1dcnce on
the 8200 block of T) ler. Police said
the crooks pried open a 1dc wmdo•
topin~tl). • • • AS 7.000 Ford Bronco "'I rcponed
stolen from an allt\' behind a res1 -
pon Harbor Chamber of Commerce,
The Ncwponer loo,. The Irvine Co.
and the Vicker and Ruffing ATCbilec-
ture firm.
She is survived b) her son. William
A.. Lo-.cland. of San Mateo: her
dauahtcr. Laura Smith, of Lapna
Beach: her lf"IACbudren Scon aod
1ey Smith; and her SJstcr. Mrs.
Warren Webster. of Los Angeles.
Funeral sen,ccs are scheduled for
Wcidnesday at 1 p.m. in the Paafic
View Monuary Chapel. Private
gr&\cSide services for f.amily mem·
ben will follow at Inglewood Park
Cemetary.
de nee on the-2M block of Spnn&field Poh~ later found out the ca.r bad
been borrowed without permi ion
b~ a lhend of tht" car owner.
i.a,una Beach
Michael Ed~in uderman. 20. wa.-..
•~led on \lonh \tam Beach carh
Monda) momina on a warrant for
\Usp1cion of burglary. He 111.u "'°
lta~ on $1 .000 bail.
Evicted tenants set
Mesa apartment fire?
A. tool shed bch10d an apartment
complc on Ne.,..1>0rt Boutc\ ard tn Costa Mesa..... doused with psoltne
ands.ct aflame 1onda> ni&ht m whst
maybcanactofven tancc,a<"COrdmg
to fire department oOicta~
Teen beaten in holdup
---___ ,
• At e>r.n (i()ett OAfLY P LOTIT'utlday, A
Rainstorms soak East .
for fifth straight day
By c As odate4 Pru1
H1t-1nd-run rainstorms truck the
Ea t for a fifth day today af\rr flood5
suraed throuah tile narrow valle) of
the eastern Appa h s. their
churning waters trandi hundreds
of famtlit hina out roads and
swecpina away a mother nd a ~ther
in Pennsylvania.
Tiju~na mayorget-s
w~rnlng from Ravy.
WILLIAM P. BRACCIODIETA, M.D.
ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF A EVER FEEL UK£ YOU
DON'T FIT IN?
.HEADACHE AND STROKE
PREVENTION MEDICAL CLINIC
II you've lost wei&ht.
Ref1tt1n1 1s our Specialty
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Geraldine Ferraro
Ferra~o
finance
flap tops
quiz list
SAN JOSE (AP) -Geraldine
Ferraro is stressina the need for
improved crime control, but her West
coast campaign awing has been preoo-
. · q-Uestions abo1u
her family's finances. . '
An.d" an-very event; dozen• of siJn-
waving anti-abortion demonnraton
have pickettd tbe Democratic vice
presideritiaf"nominec. •
Ferraro. who has promised a full
family financial disclosure next Mon-
day, has been met by frequent
questioning about her finances and
those of her husband, John Zaccaro,
since arriving in Cahfomia on Sun-
day on a week-long West coast tour.
She said Sunday that she would not
release her husband's tu returns, as
she bad -promised, when she makes
the required financial disclosure nellt
week. Under the Ethics in -Oovcm-
ment Act. she 1s not required--t<>-
rclease the tax returns.
Ferraro seemed.Jo show 5Cns1t1vity
on Monday to the constant questions,
however politely phrased. Asked by a
young Chula Vista police officer if she
had any discus ions wtth the Mon-
dale campaian about the pressure that
her historic nomination would put on
her personal life, she replied: .
"There was really not d iscussion
with me as much as there was
d1scuss1on between me and my
husband. We had a lot of pressure in
'78 (when she was elected to Con-
gress) in our personal life and kind of
anucipated it would happen now. I
have to tell you, not to the dearee that
It IS."
Later m the day, the Democratic
vice presidential nommec listened
intently in Los Angeles while two
cnme victims described their u-
penences of beina stabbed and raped.
Shlpsafe
contents
no b1gg1e?
Meese says he's paid back
loans that sparked probe
By th Al late4 Preti
WASHINGTON -White House counselor Edwm M 111 ys l n
th t helped prompt an invcst1.11tion of his .nnances and a dc~y in h
appointment 11 attorney ,encral have been repaid. Meae made the d11elo urcs
Monday in an fiJlancial statement filed on the tut day of a 90-day extension
pcnpittcd under the. Et~ics in Government Act. :rhc ~ocument 1how1 t~
Meese. whose nom1nauon as 1nomey eneral ti be1n1, hel~ up peodma
*completion ofa review by ind.e~ndent prosecutor Jacob A. Stein, repaid two
con trove~ Joans tnd covettd a thi~ bY, t.akina ~u.t a ~nd M0'111&C on his
home in suburban Mel.can, Va. Stem is eX;Am1n1n1 ~ICfe~nc!et .o~ p&st
financial d1sdosure forms and Mee 's financial tran ctJons with 1nd1v1duals
who later received federal pc>s1t1ons. Senate action on' Meese'• nomination has
been delayed until Stein files his rcpprt.
La•t BOelng 727 oll 11n~
SEATTLE -When the last Boeina 727 rolls out of production tOday, it
will mark the first time the Bocina Commercial Airplane Co. ha1 stoPJ)Cd
buildtnJ a commercial jctline.r model. The. 727, introduced in 1962, is beina
discontinued because newer airplanes fly wsttu 1maller crew, u .. less fuel and
are quieter The 727 is Boeina's ~nd line of jets and is the first model to be
· discontinuCd, C'ote said. A modified version of the 707, Boeina's oldest line.
still is beina produced for the mihtary. Cole said the last 727 .model lSrinas the
total sold to 1,832 since the fint craft wu produced 22 years aao.
'What happened wa• wrong ••• '
PITTSBURGH -One of two women accused of murderiq.a Turkish
11udent becau5C of "anti-male fcehnas" 51)'1 she felt morally oblipted to
sumnder even thouah the prospect of a death sentence "scares me a lot. What
happened was wrona, regardless of the reasons," said Charmaine Lynn
Pfender. lS... .. lt was wrong. and we had to come back. We bad to do the rjsbt
thins:;'" Authorities say Pfender;of Pitutrursh;and Sarl'Mae-Richardso~, 20 f?f
Imperial, fled to ViJlinia after killina Ensin Aydin, 24, and woundina h1s
friend, Suat Erdopn, 2S, durina a double date Aua. 7. .
Moderate qaa.te rattle. AJu.b
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -A moderate earthquake that rocked buildinp
and rattled dishes was felt 300 miles away from the cpiceott'f in soucb-<:ientrl1
Alaska but caused no injuries, authorities &aid. The quake, centered 60 miles
non.beast of Anchoraae m the Olupch Mountains, hit about 6:02 p.m.PDT)
Monday and measu~ S.7 on the Richter scale of ground motion, aaid Alec
Medbery, a spokesman for the Tsunami Wamina Center in Palmer.
Convict'• •on dJes of cancer
W£S-'FPeRT;:Mass. ~ 1' C011Yicttd burslv, rd~rtrftom•Priton so be could be with his cancer·strickQt son, was at 2-year-old Matthew Alfred
Manin 's side when the child died, family members wd. '"He ju:sfblin..ked OQ.CC.
dosed bis'cyes, and that was it," Linda Mello, Ma~·s aunt, said.Monday of
the child's lona~xpected passing. David Hutchins, 34, rel.eased &Om Nonolk
State Prison 12 days aao, was at the boy's side when he died at 1 :30 a.m., Mrs.
Mello said. -.
College tab climb• 8 percent
NEWYORK-Tbecostofayearatcollqejumps~averqeof6~nt
this fall, and Massachusetts Institute of Tccbnoloey will be the nation a most
expensive school for the third straiaht year with 1 tab ofS l 6, 130. The projected
6 percent avcraae cost hike for rt$ident studenu was presented in an annual
survey released Monday by The CoUeac Board. The increase in avetlJC total
student costs at 3,200 two-and four-year public and private institutions
marked a considerable eas1na frorn 1hree straiaht years of double-Oiait
mcreases.
CALIFOR NIA --
Ferraro tllpe embargo cr1tlcued
LOS ANGELES -Geraldine &rraro's campaign has set a dan_.erous
precedent by demanding loci! television stations delay broadcastma an
interview to apparently pin maximum exposure, a newsdirectorsayi. Andrew
S. Fisher. news director of KCBS in Los Angeles, said stations here and in San
Dicao were pressured to ~ to embar&.o for 24 hours an interview with the
Democrauc vice presidential nonunec. "We indicated to the Ferraro cam~
that we could not agree to embargo an on-the-record interview:• Fisher said
Monday. ••As a result. we were denied an opponunity to interview her.
Cable car '•alcJde' probed
SAN FRANCISCO -Police are still ~.n· to determine why a J6..year. old Iranian rammed his speeding automobile into a cable car packed with
tourists, killina himself and injurina 28 pa.ucnacrs. The motorist, Mohammad
Savadkouhi, was identified Monday by bis brother1 Hasan Savadkouhi. Hasan
told police bis brother, a computer operator, had ocen "deptesscd because of
bis recent divorce, and becau5C be bad not been working steadily." And
authorities, wbo said Sunday the motorist appeared to have been on a suicide
mission, questioned that same theory Monday.
Na~e beam eliminate. cl:aemlcal•?
LIVERMORE -Usina tccbnol~ borrowed from advanced nuclear
beam weapons, scientists at Lawrence I..1vermore National Laboratory plao to
irradiaic a "whole smOf'$8Sbord of California produce" to study food
preservation. "If the technigue works, we can dispense with eattna hiah·risk
foods laced watb chemicals, said lab physicist Steve Matthews. Matthews is
pan of a research team studying whether electrically generated irradiation
could someday eliminate the need for chemicals, suc6 as the now-banned
pcsttcide ethylene dibronude (EDB), in food production.
'Star Wan' defen11e auafled
STANFORD-A .. star wars" -style defense system 11 likely to destroy any
chances the U.S. has for an arms control aareement with the Soviets. aay two
weapons specialists who called President Reapn'sdefenseproaram ineffective
and impractical. "'No one knows how eff~ive defense systems trc made and
what the cost is," said Sidney Oren. co-d1l"tetor of the Stanford Center for
lntcrnauonal Security and Arms Control. "What is beina proposed is a S}'ltem
that can never be tested and yet hu to be l 00 percent effective when you tum
it on." Rea$1n bas proposed buildini an impenetrable defense shield cas-ble
of1nterctpunaand destroyin1sttatca.tc b Uisticmi siles before they reach U.S.
soil.
WORLD
-------~
'
Algllan bomb mlu1on protated
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -Pakistan's Foreign Ministry has lodaed a
protest with the Afahan diplomatic miss.ion over the allcaed bombiq of a
Pakistani villa&e by Af&han_ warpl~n~. A man was ttpO~ killed ud five
women wounded. A ·J:orcaan Muustry spoketma.n 1&1d Afahaa aircnft -
penetrated 12 mtletinto Pakistani territory on Monday."Hespokeonoonditton
he not be identified by name. h was the first Af&Jtan bomb1na of Pakistan -
where 3 million Afihans ahvc taken refuic -~poned in several months •
Relations between the nci&hoori111 countries have been tense amcc December
1979, when the Soviet 1Jnion sent troops to Af&hanistan to help the
aovemment fiaht a w1d prud in uracncy.
Tml'Jer regret. bottom-pattllJI
OTT A WA -Liberal Prime Mini1ter John Turner bas apo1asiUd for bis
bottom-paum1 cpisod hopina to put the issue to rat before a nationally
televised leaden' debate Wednesday nlaht on women'• tlluet. Turner told a
news conference Monday that he thoulht the two incidritl bid been
overplayedf and he promised it wouldn't happen apln. '"They were tettura of
friend hipt~twofotnds,polit1calequa11andJcenainly.meantDoclJ~or
offense," be aaid."lfl had offeoaed anyone I wu sorry and it ha n't happentd aaain nor v.ill tt." .
I
OtangeCo
;LAX cop '·hero' accused of planting bu bomb
From Al
h1d1n :1 in he was
catT)'UlJ.
GatC1 id the pipe bomb w s
loaded with 'mokele s 1unpowder.
"This (the arre1t of Pearson) wa
very dift'kult for us to do, but 1t
showed the thoroUS}\ness of our
inve tigators," Gates ~id
At a te ne conferenced
rcgnrdina the Olympic Game. Mayor Tom Bradley 1d1 ... m
proud ofthe work ofthe enurc Pohce
department. Our offiocn, all of them,
wen: so outstandin_1 .. that it i1 un·
f onunate that one officer could in any
way detract from the tremendous JOb
done by all the others. so it 11 with
dneu that we le m that this officer
pparcnily CfC ted hoax."
l:he announcement of the rrcst
me j Ull hours after I telephone CIJI
to the Pana bureau ofThe Associated
Pres cl 1med the Anneman Secret
Army for the liberation of Armen11
was responsible for plantina the
bomb. •
Romaniail sJ?ortswriter
s·eeking asyium-in U.S.
SAN DIEGO (AP)-A Romanian ~ournalist who helped an American
..newspaper cover the Olympic Games
has asked for political asylum in the
United States, a new paper reported
today.
Vladimir ·-Moraru •. 38. a reporter
with the Romanian SPorts daily
Sportul. was not on board the
chartered fliaht that depaned Mon-
day afternoon from Los Anaeles with
\he rest of Roma.nia's Olympic team
and deleaatJon, accordtna to todav's
editions of the San Diego Union.·
Moraru's decision to seek asylum
was tbe only known defection durina
the Olympic Games, which ended
Sunday, accordi~ to unnamed State
~rtment officials quoted by•thc
Union .
He was reportedly stayina with
friends in Los Angeles while awaiting
a dccu1on on his ~ucst for asylum.
The Union had hired Moraru as a
translator and researcher to assist its
staff coverina the summer aames.
,Islamic Ho1¥ War
takinJ the credit
·for mining of sea
The n< wapaper paid his air fare JO the
Unite< States and bis livin& expenses
durina the two-week stay in Los
An1ele •.
Moraru, however, also wrote
stories for the Romanian newspaper
durina the Olympics \
Tbe newspaper said that Moraru,
who has a wife and a 5·month-old
dauahter in Romania, declined to be
interviewed about his reasons for
defcctin1.
Union Sports Editor Barry Lorge,
who made the arrangements for
Moraru to work for the newspaper,
said he met the journalist while
coveric1 the Davis Cup. touma.ment
in Bucharest, Romania, last Febru-
ary.
"At the ttme, I was looking for·
sources of bacqround information
which is not aenerally available on
East European athletes, .. Lorge said.
"In so doini, I realized be had an
encyclopedic kn,owledge on sev~ral
Olympic sports and an understandina
of the Western idea ofa feature story
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -A group expressed hope that Iran was not that's very rare in Europe.
claJmina responsib1hty for the minina 1nvolved. "After I left Bucharest. 1t occurred
of the Red Sea has threatened to There was no official explanation to me he cquld be very helpful tow in
prove its strcnath "once !"Ore" and for his changed stance toward ~ran. our coverqe m Los Angeles if tt was
wai:ned aaamst mtc:rventton by the Mu~ brushed as!de c111ms of Possible to bring him over.•• _J@~Stal!S. B,n'fl!Lf.D4li.Ln<t£._ ..RSJtQDStbih1Y:b1 ~'-liit.l.Y~tt TM. viel Yn ·
A calf er da1m1na to represent known as Islamic Jihad. Some West-May that it was boycon~~ the Los bPa~ic Holy W~t which earlier ~d : em intdligepce soun:es have linked Anacles pmes, but Rom deoided
sa1d it was responsible for the m1runa. the aroup with Iran, but others have 10 send its team to the OlymJ)ics in
. telepboqed the French news aicn~ said more. thu one extretn.lSt aroup defianoe of the So'Vict·led boycott
A~nce France Press bureau 1n may be ustn• 11!~ name as a cov~r. Ourina the Olympics, Moraru
Beirut, Lcba~~n, on Mo!ldaY .. and The ~~non also ha~ claimed stayed at a fraternity house near the
said the .m1run1 OJ?.Crauon was responsibility for ~e b<?mbinf of the Univen1ty of Southern California
crowned with success. U.S. Embassy in Beirut m April 1983, that bad been rented by the Union
• "1:o~hosewhodoub~.ourcapabi~ity the destruction of U.S. Marine Bf!d and The San Diego Tribune.
of mm inf the Red Sea, the orpruza· French paratrooper hcadquarten 1n He stayed there until the Roma·
ti on "wit prove once more in. the very Beirut last October, and embassy nian flight departed and then was
o one IOJUrcd by the bomb,
which touched ofT a Pitt of ttle-
phoncd bomb threats and fcm:ed the
e tion of about 6 000 people
from thrte terminals of the Los
Anseles lntcmataona Airpon
At Dulle Airport outside W ab·
maton, D.C., uthonties herded U.S.
mcdah ts and thcar §Qcsu off buses as
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A DNISOI Of TA'fCY COAPOl'ATl()j PRICES /tllf't.Y AT RADIO SHACK COMPUTER CENTERS All> PART~TING STOAES AHO DEALERS
near future that it is the strongest and bombinas in Kuwait last December. interviewed by FBI officials.
it wi II remain so," the caller, who did . --liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij;iiiij;jjj;j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--not identify himself, was quoted by I
the news aaency as sayma.
Uoyd's of London Shipping Jn-
telli,ence Department says I 6 vessels
have struck mines m' lhe Red Sea in
the past month.
The caller warned Bntam, France
and the United States, which are
hclpina Eaypt search for mines in the
Red Sea, against anterfenna in the
Middle East. "It's time that the
Islamic nation secs that the fleets of
these countncs are destroyed." the
caller said. The Soviet Union. Iran and leftist
Persian gulf newspapen on Monday
accused the United States of explott-ms. the explosions to expand tts
military presence in the repon.
The caller was quoted as saying
neither Iran nor Libya had "anything
to do'' with the mine·laying. Eaypt's
President Hosni Mubarak last week
voiced suspicions against both Libya
and Iran, but said Monday he thinks
Libya laid mines tn the sea lanes and
, Freelng6
hijackers
lrksChlna
PEKJNG (AP) -China ananly
contended today that international
pacts apinst atr piracy had been
undemuned by South Korea's release
of six Chinese hiJackers and Taiwan's
decision to arant them refuge and
cash rewards.
South Korea, which has no
diplomatk relations with China,
released the hijacken Monday. The
five men and one woman flew to
Taiwan. where they collected reward
money from the Nationalist govern-
ment, which considers them heros for
fleema the Communist-run main-
land.
In Peking's first offiClal comment
on the matter, the Foreign Mm1str)
said 1n a wntten statement today that
the Chinese aovemment and pubbc
were "resentful and mdi~ant at the
South Korean authonties' con·
n1vancc at jcopardizina the safety of
mternational c1v1I aviation m viol·
a ti on of the prov1s1ons of the relevant
international conventions."
"As is known to all, the hijack.in& of
aircraft is a serious criminal act ~jeo{>lrdizin• the safety of inter· , national civd aviation and should be
punished severely under the
provision of the relevant intcmation
' oonventions;• tbe statement said.
.. , ..
PIECEMMCERS
64 J 2
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7)9 4476
ALEXANDER s
CAFE BAR & GRILL
HI 0123
ALBERTSON S MARKET
7SI ·'4270
HAMBURGER HAMLET
5'46 7 392
ICE (AP.A.DES CHALET
979·8880
MUSIC MARK ET
)'46-00)8
EDWARDS CINEM.4 CENTER
979 '41•1
MESA VERDE TRAVEL
5566)11
UPPER CUTS HAIRCUTTING
850 188<1
PHOTOGRAPH'!' B'r EHREY
S•S 6786 .
MAMSELLE. BEA 1,.. p SUPP~ y
M)2 20~s
8 lBO BAGu NS
5") 1" a
MIONE S IH ST AIJll.AN•
q1q b"35
C LPH N Ht. R rASHIO!'JS
~40 OtiOO
SV\EMEN S Cl CRE AM
S~t1 tiq37 ' .. However, the South Korean
authorities. instead of doina so, have
yielded funher to the pressure of the
Taiwan authonties and relcattd the
six cnminals before their sentences
2701 Harbor Blvd . • (Harbor and Adams) Costa Mesa, CA HJOOC!UC.t El S
H& 7518
• expirtd\ thus cnablina thei:n to escape
'1he law, ' the statement said. s The six h&Jacked a Chinese
dome tic Jetliner May s. 19 J, and
di-vcncd 1t to oul. where they were
1 ~ntcnc»d to Jlil ttrms ralltina be·
twten four and IX )'C rs On WtlCI Of
viotatma South Korean laws on
aircraf\ fcty, fire.arm• control and
aircraft nav14&tion.
Tho Nauonahsts have ruled
Taiwan inoe 1949 when the Com·
munist routed them from the main·
land followin& a c1vtl wu. Taipei hu
rcJcctcd all Communi t ovenures for
ruone11iauon. • . There v. ' no mcnuon an tho
Chinese 11tement of ttic S7SO reward
ch h&JI kcr ttcctvtd from the
Tttwan vernmcnt.
Your Family Shopping, Dining
· & Entertainment Center. ·
Mesa Verde Has It All!
I
AS
Sove1:eignty
the real issue .
in CM dispute
What do Rod Stewart, the Beach Boys, the Scorpions,
Jefferson St.arShip, Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson have in
common? · ·
Thefre all professional musicians, they've all performed at
the Pacific Amphitheatre in Costa Mesa this season and,
according to neighbors of the 18.000-~at, outdoor concen site,
they're all lawbreakers.
The law in question is a noise ordinance. But whose law -
if anyone's -was broken? And who is responsible for
enforcement?
Under the terms of a 1980 agreement, occupants of the
faJrgrounds must abide by the Oranee County noise ordinance,
which, until recently, was more stnct than Costa Mesa~s. So.
when the Beach Boys send their Good Vibrations into the homes
of people who would rather be watcbing silent movies on
television, or when Waylon keeps wailin' until almost midnight,
and especially when complaints explode across the city's
switchboard like a fireworks display on the Founh of July,
authorities might be expected to step in.
But they can't. According to a ruling by Harbor Municipal
Court Judge Selim Franlclin, the city has no business enforcing
the county ordinance cited in the agreement. And Costa Mesa's
\\\a -~a~ \~\~ ~ 't\\~ O~Y~C$,,, \$ ~1 ONC.~ \~e. GAMe.$ rl'\N ;,,
~ .. ~ ... ~H u.p~Ul ~'l
1
\~ ~\~~~~ 00 \~a C~e.t(.,,
r
~o ~~'Ja-l\.~ ~~ ~O\.ffit$ BeltlMD !
""""'--~------~~~----~r--------~ ~e:~ 'K~ Mt~ute· \ ~ • ffl\Nu1e. tfi.~l\. COl.mT
toR 1'~~ U.S .• #.
f
ordinance -which it can enforce -has, in the past, been too ------------------------------------
weak. The new version remains legally untested.
TJ!OllAS BLIA8 cola.mnlst
THOMAS
.EUIS
Jerry
Brown
has last . "
laugh?
Fonner overnor's
ideas on ene
being f mplemented
They caJJed him ··Gov. Moon-
beam" because some of bis ideas were
so futuristic and impractical. But just 20 months after his depanure from
office, ex-Gov. EdmundG. Brown Jr.
can chuckle as he watches som( ofhis
pet nouons gain wide acceptance.
Nowhere was Brown more vision-
ary than in the energy field, where he
constantly pushed for more use of
renewable resoun::es and hamessina
of waste from industry .
The county sheriff can't enforce the county ordinance
because, according to law, a violation occurs at the property line
• ,of the person who complains. That line would, of course, be in
~ta Mesa; wtrere <be sheriffdefet'! to the city:--~.-,-------;;....,...
• ·And the Ned-West Corporation, operator of the $.14 million
facility, claims neither the city nor the county nas any right to
-ttoo"-~~~~~4---~~~~~---tt-~~~~~---".f-r"1.--L1Wf...l;Wlll~·.uu~·~~~.a~ -cogeneratiM -is becomin& bi&
L
bother it, since the Amphitheatre sits on state Land.
· Yossarian would feel right at home.
beam-like of politicians, President · M~Jl business, while even that least Moon-
Rcapn, is footing around with wind,
the ultimate renewable eneTJY source.
As the Amphitheatre's second season progresses, with
parking problems and latenigbt concen-leavers compounding
the bad relations between the neighborhood and the theater
management, with civic action iroups and the city racing each to
coun to sue Ned~West, with angry Costa Mesans threatening to
throw out the elected officials who have been unable to bring
them relief, and with several rock 'n' roll dates remaining on the
schedule, the situation seemed to be teetering on the brinJC of
perpetual convolution.
But the city prescribed a stiff dose of clarity last week with a
state legislative proposal that -for the first time -defines the
real issue as local sovereignty and gives Costa Mesa the authority
to enforce its own laws within its own boundaries.
Now, turning to the Legislature for a solution may be a little
like asking the Three Stooges to discipline an unrulr. child. But
the current circumstances are so confused, the child is being
allowed to discipline itself. And its standards are becoming a
nuisance to its neighbors.
Russians wary of 'High Fron tier' clash
U.S. anti-missile missile convinces Soviets
to advocate arms cuts -but only in space
In last week's Searchhght, 1 told
you some facts which indicate that
communist Russia 1s constantly arm-
in& itself and tryine to be surely
'iUpcnor to the Uni tcd States of
Amcnca. To support this statement I
quoted some autbon11es.
Toamplffyth1sshghtl), I would
like to tell you about an Amencan
patnouc orga01zat1on called .. H 1gh
Frontier ··This 1s headed b) a reured
heutenantgeneraJ named Daniel 0 .
Graham
General Graham has related. no1
only ID letters. but 10 a book which
reveals and proves that the Untied
States has the anti-missile m1ss1lc.
what I have told you about.
Sometime back, I described what I
then knew about the ant1-m1ss1le
missile, namely that it does not bum
an mcomingcnemym1ssile, but that.
instead. 1t shoots It down by a
simulated shotgun method. 1
Accord1ng to a published descnp-
t1on. here's how the missile works:
"The interceptor locks the dum m)
missile on target and unfolds a 15-
foot Wldeumbrella-hkc fan studded
by heavy metal balls, destroylD~ the
target dunng the colhs1on ... the inter-
ceptor locks on the target by using
optical and heat sensors against the
cold backgrounds of space. A tan
approximate speed of 13,636 milec;
per hour. the interceptor meets the
target about I 00 miles above the
earth··
So there you have 11-that's the
reason the R uss1ans are willing to
d1scussehmmation of all weapons in
space. But they are unwilling to
discuss any other curtailment of
weapons-any weapons.
General Graham's "High Fron-
tier" refers to this as a shotiun
method I four CIA analysis is correcl
(and It usually 1s amaz1Dgl) correct)
}'OU ha\c the reason wb) the Russians
talk about eliminating weapons tn
space. but only weapons ID space
The Russians, as l have said before.
arc "no fools" and want 1t all their
way.
last week I said, "Russ1a'sarm1ng
WALTER .
Bu11oucHs
itsclfisnotsolelyto make war. They
make propaganda use of it-most
effectively."
How do they makt propaganda?
They put the word out through Cuba
and other controlled nations that they
are now stronger 10 weapons than the
United States. So. they suggest,
"better join up on the side of the
Russians." Well that is beginning to
fall on deaf ears. The giant guns of the
battleship New Jersey, now back ID
service. have made some oflhe
countncs they arc propagandizmg a
little doubtful.
The weak knees among us who
want to "appease" the Russians have
the wierdly unsound theory that lf we
destroy all of our attack missiles, the
Russians will want to fold up their
threat.
J know. I know. But so far the only
influence that has ever moved Mos-.
cow is proved knowledge of danger to
the Russians themselves. And I think
you will find what General Graham
and his ••Hi.&h Frontier" have
oull1ncd is the one effective way to
convince the Russians they had better
notattack.
Walter Bu.rro0,1b111 tbe Pilot'•
lo1111dbl1publl1ller.
Will Fed's Volcker swipe GOP's punch bowl?
WA~HINGTON -~Federal
Reserve Board chairman onc.c de·
sen bed htsJobas taking awa y the
punch bowl1ust as the pan) was
getunggood
Republicans gathering in Dallas are
afraid that the current Fed l ha1rman
Paul Volcker. ma) be planning1us1
such a dirt) tnck. This could spoil
1he1rclcct1on-yearpart} b) 'illfhng
the economic recover)
In fact. many GOP leaders think
Volek.er already removed the punch
bowl th ts spn ng by ugh tent na the
money supply and dn ving 1 he pn me
interest rate up to I 3 percent. its
h1ghest level ID 22 months. Onl) the
near-failure ofConunental llhno1'i
Bank persuaded the Fed that this
qsn 't the t1 me to tighten money and
ri k another recession. And though
the Ft<! haseucd crcdtt considerably
since June, i 1•s not enouah for the
Republicans, who'd hke to Stt
intert t rates back down where the>
wcrt early this year
The 1otcrcst-ratc dcbatt surfacC'd
bncfly at Prc~dcol Reapn 's last
meeting with Rcpubltcan l'On ·
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
gress1onal leaders My associate
Michael Bmstctn learned the details
of 1he pnvate meeting.
The congressional visitors sat
around the table with the pres1dcn1.
""hile Secretary of State George
Shultz. Treasuf) Secretary DonaJd
Regan. budget boss David Stockman
and other advisers sat along tht side
of the room lts1enm&.
.\I most the enttrc first hour was
de,oted to Central Amencaand the
de fen~ appropnat1ons bill pendina
1n Congress "I was s1ttana there
gelltn~ more and more frustrated,'
knowin' that the president was gomg
on 1clev1s1on that night," said one
part1c1pant, who wanted the dis-
cussion to shift to economic qucs--
tions that were sure to be brought up
at thccvemnapre conference
Finally. Rep Jack Kemp, R·N Y
broke in and said. "Mr. Pre11dent. l
know it's late, but J want tora1~an
issue that's of areat concern ...
Thequcstion Kempa kedwashow
it was po~iblc 1hat the country was
e11 penenc1 ng stron1 cconom1c growth
and. a1 that time. a falhna \lock
H. L. Schwartz Ill
r u~
Frink Zlnl
'J I :l'nQ (CJ fl)!
Tom Tan
1 r 11'..,.,.si., .,,,,.., .. "' JOw ... !i.td>
~-....,.-~~·ft-~
V f d IC'
Crafg 8herf
IA (IJt!Of
__ ......., A ?0!'(>
JACK
AIDERSON
market simultaneously. Then fl.cmp
volunteered nn answcr to his own
question.
He contended that the mvc!tt1ng
public 1 convinced that the Fed.
despite rt~ated denials. sets its
money policies with the aim of
kccpins the economy from arow1n1
too last. So investors arc wary when
the indicators show strongcconom1c
growth; they're afraid the Fed will
clampdown on credit. dnving
interest rates up and cuttmgofTthe
recovery
Sen Charles Pen:y, R-111 .. inter-
rupted to ask the president to return
10 the foreign.policy discussion. It was
another 15 minutes before Reagan got
back to Kemp and ~1d that he shared
h1sconccms. Then Reagan pas~d the
hall to Regan.
Tothcas1on1shmentMman> 1n the
room the Treasury cretary v1gor-
ouslydefendcd the Fed's cautious ,.i
money policy. Rcpn. h1theno the
ad.man1stration ·.,most ouapokcn
cnt1c ofVolcker. argued that the Fed
had bet:n accommodating theccon-
omywith adequate money growth so
far. He warned th at the economy
could not sustain double-digit growth
rates without thcdangcrof"ovcr-
heat10&."
"Maybe Volckcr 1sovcrhcatmg."
mter)ected Kemp, "but the economy
isn't " He pointed to sccond-<1uarter
figures showi na a much slower
p-owth rate and continued depression
m the pnce of ~old and other
1ntlat1on-scns1t1vecommod1t1es.
Jad And~non J1a1yndlc•led
co/R11Jal11.
British alllateurs were high class sports
Con 1dcr "amuteurism" ins.ports.
En,g11lh lords first promoted It to
pre rvc cla d1 unctions. If you
worked for a livina daily. ~ou didn't
have time to compete. You had to be.-
wealthy tnouJh to pLay without f\Ol\
Rcstan:hcr10 put a ratchcd orangt
into a full of 01cs, and said tl1C$
II died within two houn Our C:h1tf
Progno uca1or thinks orch rd1 ts
oon "'111 prl) citrus 011 all o'er the
pl ('C.
Tv.cnt\·on~ Ju,~ af unrcltcvtd b(od
r t wi!Ulgc~ow: body by 30 )'Can. Or
so say tb_e medicos now fortunately,
1t' rcveriiblc. Once up and about.
)Ou'H "youth'' apin.
(J Lot of people think of Arhnaton
CC'meter) s the bunal pl ce of
pre 1den1 • but 1n (; t, onl) t""O U
pr 1dents att buritd there-John F.
Kennedy 1nd Wilham Hov.iard Taf\.
·our__pr id~o1 b Y.<t:v~ m no1
bunc.'d on Amencan soil at all amc
th m •
A. You're 01n to Yy N11on,
------
Carter. Ford and R~aan, areo't you? .Sure, I know you.
Q. When wa at that more and more
of us stopocd drinkina colfcc and
fewer and fewtr of u SLltlcd?
A. About the time John f'. Kennedy
was as inllcd No conncct100, ~rtamly. Just a lime rcfcrcnc:e. But in
1962. the ycu before hi' death, coffee
consuption peaked. A ~ear later. II
Lo drop, nd 11 ha bttn
dropping c,.tt nee.
C.. f, 114>d I •I 'Ddl '.lf«l C'0/11
So populariscogeneration that it
now produces seven percent of
American'selectricity. That's up
sha_rply from last year's five percent
andJUSt two percent in 1981, when
Brown was widely ridiculed for
advocattna the concept.
The boom in cogeneration is
caused by sharply rising electrictt y
costs, which make it sensible for
companies to use the waste heat
produced in their normal manufac-
turing processes. That beat is now
often used to boil water, creating
steam to spin turbines and make
electricity.
Any power not usod on site by
whoever produces it is then bought by
the electnc company SCtY1n1 the area
in a process that benefits everyone
involved, including other electric
customen.
The producer actuaUy turns waste
enersy into both cash and reduced
elcctnc bills, power companies evade
theneedtofindinvestmentcapital •
for new plants and other electnc
customersavoid increased utility
bills that would result from new
power plant construction.
And it's not just waste beat that's
used 1ocogeneration. Virtually every
otherkindofwaste1salsoin use, from
almond shells and peach pits at food
packing plants in Modesto and
Fresno towoodcbipsata lumber mill
in MendocmoCounty. Where it's
available, waste material is burned to
beat water aod create steam for power
production.
"Every industry that's a major
cneray user is at least look.ingat
cogeneratioo," says New York in-
vestment banker Thomas DcPre.
Present forecasts call for IOperocnt
of Arnerica'selcctricitytocomcfrom
cogeneration by 1990, malon& the
notion a mainstream technique, not a
futuristic concept.
Similarly, where Brown was com-
pared with Don Quixote for pushing
wind eneray, scarcely an eyebrow was
raised last spring when Reaaan allow-
ed researchers to set up wind eocray
equipment on his ranch. Not even
Brown allowed his ideas that close to
home.
But the ''wind farms" that looked
so silly just a fcwycanaaoare 1n place
today, fueled partly by state and
federal tax credits.
Giant windmills now dot hillsides
outside San Bernardino.San Fran·
cisco, Bakersfield and Fresno and the
&Uson Electric Institute predicts
gusts propelling them and others will
account for about five percent of
Amenca's power 1 Oyears from now.
Dad all this come too late to help
Brown, wbonowaoesabout the
nationmalunaspccchesprop()Sina
new methods forrcvitalmna U.S.
induitry?
Probably not. As presidenai&J ~h·
tics go, Brown 1 a youna m1n.a 1tiJJ in
hisrnid-405. He may not run ror
anything 1n 1986-the only U.S.
senate Kit up forarabs here alrudy
betonis to another Dcmocra&., Alan
Cran ton.·
But in 1988, Republican Pete
Wilson willbeupfor~lcct.1on1nd
unles.s Brown is runnina for president
ap nbyth'cn,upecta~ma&cbof
lhcir 19'82 f'a(e.
And Brown woula be very hero to
beateitberan thatconttstor 1nyo1her
hecntcn. For lb veryspcecbaand
notions thatbrouabt him richculc
only two yean qo would now make
the f ormcr '°vcmor took lake a
realt ucvia1onary bosedud'falhna
w that be 11w lhe futun= t.cforc most
othet folbcoukl
•
Tony Denu 9011
from taxi driver lo
• houeek....., In
hlanewHrtM.BS
UST 14 1914
Guard gums fora healthy .smile
Keyes treatment alte~native
to costly period<?ntal surgery
BJ SUSAN MONAHAN
~ .... c.,. .....
If you're an adult. you have more to fear from aum
disease than from tooth decay. ~ .. EiMylo 9CTperoent ofl.dults liavesome form of gum
disease," said Victor M. Feld, 0 .0.S. of Irvine ... It's the
No. 1 reason adults lose their teeth: it's the No. I problem
facing den tu try."
Feld and his associate, dental hygienist Roberta
Grcenbura. offer a treatment which they say can be an
alternative to co U~nd possibly painful, periodontal
suraery. It's called the Ke)'cs treatment and in many cases
it can be earned out at home with a few inexpensive
supplies.
The culprit in aum disease is bacteria, says Feld and
the aoal of the Keyes treatment is "to cure the problem by
eliminatina the bacteria" throuah the application of anh-
bactcrial.aacn~-·-····-"· ·--···-· --.. ~ -·----
To determine bow much disease-associated bacteria is present in the patient's mouth, Feld takes a plaque
sample from under the gums and examines it under a
"phase-contrast" m1cro5COpe.
This instrument enables him to view live bacteria
rather than slides, which aids in the diaanosis because 0 the
disease-associated bacteria is a lot more active -the
health-associated bactena tends to be stationary."
Because the phase-oontrast is equipt>cd w1th a
monitor, the patient can alw observe the bactcna on a
scrttn. Feld and Greenburg say that the microscopic
examination can alert them to gum disease before there arc
any clinical symptoms.
"1 feel best about catchinJ people then. We can keep
them from ever acttina aum disease," said Feld.
Greenbura satd that patients who don't have severe
disease often don't require treatment in the office. but arc
given instructions which they can follow it home. The
Fallout after an affair
Can upset all partners
Jake admitted that Jake had broken the manta! contract and she wanted
to his wife. Leslie. nothing more to do with him.
that he had had an .. ··vou've bctr'3)ed meandlwant)outoactoutofm)
affair v.ith Sue. a I • life ..
woman With whom ulDA She saw her anome). asked her husband 10 leave the
he works. 1um_· house. and chanaed the locks on the door. Jake was
"It's over." he formally banished from his previous life and ~ felt .--......... had ~1d. askina for <fevastalci!.
forgiveness and •••lll••••••illl• Jalce had approached 40 with sraying temples.
ready to re<ommit • broken dreams and 20 extra pounds. His position as
to perpetual monogamy. ..middle manager" seemed all too permanent.
Leslie. in tum. had been far from charitable. She felt Somewhere along the way. he had lost his status as
the fair-haired comer in the company. Younger men now
seemed to be passina him by.
ln mid-life. Jake was facina his mortality.
Enter, Suzi Q. .. 28 )ur5 old with lots of spark.le.
What his wife had t>eaun to rcprd as borini in Jake, Sue
saw as stead) and dependable. She trusted him to know
all the ansv.crs to her work problems. His reliability and
her posjtive reinforcement led to lunch dates.. friendship.
1numaC} and romance.
Their affair wu enorm9usty exciting for a sbon
penod of tjme. lt soon became apparent. however, that
Sue and Jake had different needs and their relationship
bcpn to falter.
Jake wanted a playmate and an ego-booster to fill in
the cracks of dissatisfaction in bis life. •
Sue wanted more total invoJvemcnL She had aotten
carried away MLh the intoxication ofthear romance and
had manaaed to psychologjcaUy deny Leslie's existence.
Sue did not understand the extent of Jake's
commument to his marriage.
The anxiety and pressure which resulted from his
dual life finafly b«ame more painful than it was worth.
That. a pfcdictable occurrence an affairs of the hean. is
when the aaony begins to outv.eigh the ccstaC) .
..__....~;.;...;:a:o...J Jake felt tom m half and rould do neither of his Dlllr""' ,..._ ~TemK
NaDCJ Thornton. boldina llartba Knickerbocker. and
daqllter Linda welcome l>orothy Ray to celebration.
Larraine Lippold cbata with J)oUC and DoDDA Ba.nee and Flou SCbamacber wbo relation htp Justice It was at this point that hedccided to
are well-acqaalnted with the llfe-llke doll collection of their boeteea. stop seeing uc and to reveal his indiscretions to his v.ife.
l...alic s total r"CJCCUOn was une\.pected and Jake
reacted 1n panic .. Never·· he said. ·~ouJd l h.av·e gotten
ID\Ol"Cd 'A-ith uc had l bcheved I rould have lost
Leslie ... Lovable redhead was lif ~of the party
Lido birthday buffet hostess'
doll make"Sguests feel youllg
By ANN COM'AY
nubs
• • • Does e\.tra-mantal tn\Ohcment alw-a)s mean a
marriage is over'!
Thi 1 the first of a fhe pan series looking at the
elattons and d1sappo1ntmcnts of the cura-marital affair.
We hall con 1dcr the affair from the point of \'tew of
Jake. his wife ~he and of uc. the other v.oman 1n h1'i
life. '
Dr l.lgu11s • ps)chol 1st and mam e roun~/or
in Corona de/ Mar. nd all q"cstions to Dr. Linda
Al,ari. Ph.D .. ~lo Da.J/y Pl/or. P 0. Bot I 560. Cost.a Mba
926:0.
'
Kids don't enjoy waking up, smelling coffee
Scent. taste preferences
often change tn puberty
Ah. that fimcupofcotTe¢. Thcncheromaoibrewma
beans rouses milhons of American every momma.
tbe 8-y1 r"()lds
W}\11 isitaboutpubenyth t makes -C'CsmelJ
bettett'Pan ofit could be a social desire to be more adult.
But the ~hers su$pcct bonnones are another cause of
the cha nae in scent perception. It' known, for example,
• th t women' · nsiti\'.iti iood "cha kvclofth
uons that lentigincs ould not be confused ~ilh light
brown "solar kerato •• rcaso of un·thkkened in dint
are liable to tum m I' nant 1n due time. Earl)' stageS of
malianant melanoma-the wor-.t of sk:in cancers-can
also gtt lo t in the crowd ofagc ~pots. ''lfa spot is rt1scd1
crusted ot inflamed: af it bleeds or 1lS color is irtc&ular or
changes. see a dennatolo1Pst." Dr. Orcntrcich urges. hormone estrogen shift durina the menstrual cycle.
What to do about garden-variety age $pots i!. a matter
best left between the bearer and hi!. or her self-image. If you
want them gone, mo t dermatologists will freeze them
But not if you're a kid. Most children don't appreciate
thefincaromaofhotja,·a . .Likc many foods from beer to
zuc hini, coffee scemuo be a taste acquired later in life.
Out out damn ~tar
Now a group of Australian rt archers has
documented thechana;inaprcfercnces ofk1ds. They find
that the senses of taste and smell are mtertwmed. and kids'
d1et.ary hk~and dislikes often chanic at a very ~rt.am
'time: puberty. ·
Freckle) on an 8 )CU·old nose arc cut.c. Brown spot$
on the a grown.up hand are not, For those who away vinually ~inlcnly. ·
would soon rgo this bad e of maturity, there are
lotio creams anttdennatoloams
For thost' an no hurry, therc' the chemical route.
Prescription ble china cream and lotions conwn
chemical!. such a~ hydroquinone that penetrate the kin
and curt.ail piament production. Use them·\wt~ daily for
six weeks and the spots will probably get lighter G1k&rest
says.
or the most part, they threaten nothing but vanuy.
The flat ~rown areas, rarely larger than a~· that first
appearin the30sand inciusethrou&hm1 e d dage,
are usually"lentigiqes," produced wnen skm p1a t cells
-melanocytes -grow in number. They arc usually
benign -and stay that way
The researchers asked 300 Au tralia schoolbo}s in
threcaaegroups-prc-pubert) (ages8and 9). pubeny( 14)
and postpuberty (I 6)-to rate unmarked v1aJs containing
food odors.
Not surpnsangJy, everyone loved spearmint and
chocolate. And few at any age could stomach odors of
oruon or bolled fish. But a few foods changed in appeal
when horinoncsexptoded.
According to Tufts University dermatologist Barbara
Galohrest. a few decades worth of sunshine stimulate some.
But for age spots an covered areas. there's nothing to blame
but biology.
"We usually imagine that the slun slows down and
turns off as \\e age," says Dr. G11chrest. "but there's also a
growth regulation dlSlurbancc. which makes cenain cells
proliferate."
Over-the-counter louons cootain the same m~
dients but an far weaker doses. "The spots might get a httle
hahter after a few months," she says.
How to keep a1e spots away alto~ethcr or discourage
new ones? The only way, says Gilchrest, i with a
sunscreen.
Stiff joint. ThesmeJI of peanut butter. for example, rosesteadtl>
in popularit) until age 14. the m1dpo1nt of puberty, then
declined. And coffee tu med into a ventable pubert) test It
doubled 1n populanty between ages 8 and 16. perking to
favor with two-thirds of the 16-year-otds from one-thud of New York dennatologist Norman Orcntrc1cb c~u-
With a one-in-three chance of developin& o~
tcoarthritas b) age 30, and a nine-an-ten chance b> a~ 75.
it's easy to assume that stiff. sore ~omts arc an unavoidable
. Fear of flying may ground
hertravelS with husband
ToNIGH T'S TV
. -------·
EVENINCJ -8:00-
-8::00-8 (I) THE PATRICIA NEAL
• 0 D NEWS • 88TORYR_.....,uovte 8 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE ,_. 1-...;
PAAIAE D IJ I LOIO *** "Mii West" (1982} Ann
DEAR ANN LANDERS· I am
mamed to a wonderful. kind. loving
man. He was recently promoted to a
job that will reqwre a great deal of
traveling. The company has offices
on both roasts as well as 10 London.
Pans, Amsterdam. Berhn. Brussels.
Zurich.and Rome. He wants me to 'o
with him -and the compan} will
ANN
luDERS .
~-~ ~~-kl~.ai~-..-
a problem that 1s making me crazy. I
am terrified oftlymg.
When my mother was dying J had
tQ rush to her side. She laved an
Toronto. I flew from Los Angeles. It
was the most horrible expenence of
my life. A friend suggested I take a
shot of bourbon before I got on the
plane. J am not a drinker and I got
totally smashed. I was sick as a dog.
We ran into a violent storm and I
thought the plane was going to crash
When we finally landed m Toronto I
was a basket case.
I haven't been on a plane since The
thought of flyiof throws me into a
panic. And now have an add1t1onal
problem I hate to go mto an elevator
Yesterday I walked up seven flights of
stairs to v1s1t my dent 1st.
I don't want to tum into an
emotional cripple, and 1f I let these
fears get the better of me that's what
will happen I am 27 years old. was a
bnght studen1 (college graduate) and
am normal 10 ever} other'Nay Please
tell me what to do. -IN NEED OF-
HELP IN SANT A MONICA
DEAR MONICA: You bave loll of
compuy. Phobias are tbe 1ecood
most oommoa meatal dlsor~r lD tile
coutJ'}' ,I bope yoa WW Waste DO time
1D CODtactlD1 tile Phobia Society of
America. Tbl1 or1wuUon baa done
a speetaealar job for U1oasud1 of
people wbo sailer from a wide
variety of pboblas -lncladiD& tbe
fear of 1plden, 1natea, bad dreams,
lll&b places, tbe dark, elevators,
c101ed-i.a places, lar1e crowds and
flying.
Anyone w~o 11 Interested 1boald
write to Ute Pbobla Society of
America, Dept. AL, 1181 Executive
Blvd., Rockville, Md. !085%. Please
1eod a self-addressed, stamped
envelope for a qalck ttply. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: After
reading 1hat insulting letter from
"Smarter Today Than I Was Yester-
day," I had to reply. Never have I seen
such an arrogant put-Oown of Ameri-
can females. l am sull hvad. He
asserted that classy. refined young
women an their 20s need only wash
their necks regularly, keep the hair
out of their eyes and use good Engl ash
and the) wtll be swamped with suitors
-most of whom are sure to be
I VEGAS en. J1m11 Brolln
b d d al al IAmaTAR GALACTICA 0 NEWS a us1ve. cru c an most ways IUSN38AEPORT MEAVGAFFlN
unemployed. 1 AEADINO IWN80W VIETNAM: A TB.EV1S10N
Herc as my humble theory. Un-caaNEWS HISTOAV
doubtcdly there are some women ABCNEWSQ · MAASHAl..DIU.ON
among us who don't believe they QI.CHEWS MOYIE
deserve better ... aod with good e DICK VANDYKE *** "Helrt Uk• A Wheel" (1983
F h th cm MOVE Bonnie Bedllla. Belll Btidgll. · reasonu rom t e m~mhe~~ ey are **~ .. 1 Tht Jury" 119821 Armlndl (%)MOVIE
born tuey a.,: ~et wit uisappotnt· Amntt.'BltbwaClrtwa. ** "L'flolle Du Nord" (1982) PN-me~t from Cheu: fathers an~ frus-MOVIE 11ppe Mont, Simoni Signotlt.
-·~----another girl. Now we'n have to try Roll,~ e Scott. Cf) MOVIE
again." The fellows at the office. ~ * H ''Condomi1kRn" (~ 2 of 2)
lJnder the guise· of fnendly-nobing. •. MACNIEl.ILBtAEA (1980) Bii'biri"E'61n. $tu1t1 WM·
come up with lines like this: "Not NEWSHOCJR man.
man enough to father boys, huh? I aECTNCOOMPNtf (R) I~
Need some help?" NEWS TAXI -1~ Our country, supposedly the snost WHEE.OF FORTUNE 8Ql.....aroN8T'EE..E
enlightened in. the world, will not G1' TKATGIRl '1 GUI> NEWS
make a legal commitment to the (C)UOVE 8 AETURHOFTHESAlfT · ·
srmple concept that women arc equal ***~ "Ad't'lnluf• Of Shlrtodt 9cmzEN:THEPOUTICAl.UFE
to men. Does this make sense? I ask Hotn." (1939) Bull Rathbone, OFAUAADK.~
you. -FED. FED, FEC IN MACON. Nlgel Btuol. ~r A TB.EVISION
GA -71/0-. IJ CBS NEWS IOXJNO
DEAR GA.: Tradition dies hard. 1.-C NEWS 9CTV
but times arc a-changin'. Eventually, rMAllGGR.NOW MOVE
the commitment will be made. ABC~ **'A Now And Fortwt'' (1934)
Maybe not tomorrow, but eventually. D 8'0tlC SNrtty Temple, GaryCoopw.
• • • CD MIEE'S COMPNtf cm INSIDE aA8f.BAU
Ann Landers· new booklet, "&x G)WHEE.OFFORTUNE -10:30-
and rhe Teenaser," explains every ' MOTORWEEK m INDEPEHDEHT NEWS
I. al '--a. • h r PM.MAGAZINE -,t11/0-aspecr o sexu ~av1or-w ere o anan'AINUENTTONIQKT IOD (l.) ___ NEWS
draw rhe line, how to say no, the 1.0Y'ECONNECTION SATURDAv;GHT-
vanous met.hods of contracephon. m MOYIE
rhe dangers of VD, the symptoms and *'A "Bowery Al ~ .. (19421 r::~ LAUOt'.-IN
where to gel help. For a copy, ~nd $2 a.II=· Tom Niel. 80UD GOU> tlTI
and a Jons. ~If-addressed. stamped <t7,*'.4, .,~At Tht Top;' (tHO) ~GOOONEIGH80RS envelope (37 cents postage) to Ann rwuon -...~
Landers. P 0 Box 1199 5. Chicaso. L&nnce H&My, Simone Slgnorlt * * * ''The Thlrty-HN Steps"
. . IJ 2 ON THE TOWN INTIMACY RlE Ill 60611 -1:30-~978) Aober1 ~. OMS Wtm11
._...................................................................................................... O IBFAMl.YFBJO DOTTEWEST:RJUaACU '1 rr8 A UVINQ MOYIE Nonewsnotc5ood news It~=':°"' :1:,~i::_"':* .. E:J 1 = I TONIGHT
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH AIC NEWS NIOHTUNE Repnnted b> Request
It's been coming fora long ume. but
I didn't put my finger on the problem
unul the other night.
Every tame a news stor)' breaks. I
find myself knowing more about tt
than I care to know. If it's a
Washington scandal. I see the "scan-
dalec" on telev1s1on, in the news-
paper, in magazines. authonng a
paperback book. on radio talk shows.
on a poster and a few weeks later on
"Hollywood Squares."
The other night as I watched t"-O
TV reporters 1nten1cw1n~ one
another. 11 hll me. We don t have
enough maJOr news stones 10 go
around.
ERMA
Bo11Ec1
hvang ordinary, uneventful lives are
JUSt going to have to get off your
apathy and st.art supplying news to fi 11
the demand.
Heaven knows, Elizabeth Taylor,
Tip O'Neill, Sandra O'Connor,
Pnnce Charles, Princess Di, and John
McEnroe have done their share. h 's
time for all of us to pitch in and bear
our Media Burden.
The next time you feel like staying
home and doing something un-
eventful, JUSt think about the I, 769
daily newspapc!rs an this country that
arc counung on you, the t.013
television stations with 20 hours of
ume to fill every day. the thousands of
radio stations that want to hear your
questions. the hundreds of magazines
and newsletters who need to know
what you have never told· anyone
before and.hunaer for details of your
®NOT NECfJSMl.YTIENEWS ~~~TEA
-l:OO-• AAQIE IUNKER'8 PlACE
I (I) AFTEJ1MASH I 8TAEET1 Of SAN FM.NCl8CO QI ntE A-TEAM .-LATBIOHT AMERICA 9 MOYIE 700 CWI *** ''The Vlrglrlan" (1948} Joel MOVIE McCrtl. Bttln DonleYy. ** "Starltr\ldl" (1982) Jo Kenn. D III FOUL.-uPS, 8LEEPt & cty, ROii O'Donoven. ::=sWl.D ®MOVIE -11:U-
CDENTERTAIMNTTOMOHT * "The LOM1y Ledy'' (1983) Pie ~ ~--·· Pet" (1958) ~ Zadora. Uoyd Boc:hnlr.
Gab61. Doria Dey. 1 TWIJGHT-=-! = EYE ON HOUYWOOO *** "WltGlmel" (1983) Mlttti.w ~~OU. M#I" 11870) ~ = Dlbnly Cdlrnln ,,.,,., Join Hacan.. * ''Cllu'' (19831 Rob Lowe,~ ll>EPEHDEN'T NEWS
line a..t. =Of THE NIGHT ~~lhlla" (1983) Rlchlrd * "Whal'I A Nice GWt Ultt You ...
Gere. V111111 ~y. ?" (1971) Brtnda Veccero, JO
Suppose it's a slow new'! da~ and a
congressman 1s suspected of pa~1ng
S 130,000 a year to a sccretal) who
couldn't find her office.
We get to see the congreo;o;man ~1th
his head m an attache case hiding
from the cameras, lurking behind the
bhnds of his apartment and shouting
obsceniucs to the press as be runs to
the elevator After I have seen his
mother. his banhplace and the type-
wnter that was never unpacked Ln the
o ffice. we arc treated to an interview
with a psych1atnst who explains mid-
life behavior. an interview with the
head of the secretanes' association,
plus a few tabloids that will examine
the contents ot the congressman's
garbage
The answer,., <,1mplc Those of you
life.
So don't Just
something.
Cl) PAPE.A Q4A8E: THE 8ECONI) Ww~
sit there ... do YE.AA -8:30 u "Jlnudt" (1982) Bette Mldler,
8 (I) OOME8TIC LR Ken Wlhl.
~MMd.1\.1 ( 1( 1\A11.ll.ll.1.lJ.\.1.lllllll.1.k( 1.l.1( 1( lMMd~ Missed 'E.T.'?
~ ... L D4i g Try again in ~ 9.: A General ~ ~ another year ~ ConStruction Co. ~ ~ t;;. ;:;.o ' ~ Specializing in Safety around g__.
::::9 the hom e. Retrofitting Bathrooms, S:: ~ ~ ::9. Kitchens and Exteriors. ?= ~ ~ ~ .;;-_§l • Grab Bars • Ramps • Stair Chairs ~
-:::::; • Elevators ~ ~ • Custom Cabinetry for all ~ ·~ your exceptional needs. ~ ~ FREE E TIMATE
St. Lie-. 8445567 Bonded Jmured
I
Residential -Commercial
(714) 832-94 73
111 .1.f ""'' 11lh• I I 11 1111.!l I "•'"'',,.... I ·1 p·1 ...
.. ,..", .. "... "' .1.,; '""\..·"'''"" '"l'" II J I II 11111111 \ ., If I I ,1ltll lflL. (l,1L!I'"
t
UNIVERSAL CITY -"E.T. The
Extra· Terrcstnal." the h1JhC$t-&ross-
an1 film in the history of motion
pictures, will return to theaters
throu&hout the U nited States and
Canada beginning July 19, l98S, it
wa announced by Frank Price.
chairman of MCA 's Motion Picture
Group.
The Steven $p1etbera film has not
been avaiJable since June 9, 1983,
when it was taken out of rcfea.se by
Universal Ptcturcs after a full year of
reoord·bttakmJ business and ex-
traordinary cnucal and public c-
claim •
.. Once gain." said Priot. "au·
a1enccs wdl be able to bare the 'E.T.'
m111c. e look forward 10 brin1m1
'E.T.· ·k for the mlllions of all
who want to see it ap.in and for those
who may never have had the OP:
ponunitYto experience that impact.
Darcctcd b1 Sp1clbctJ and
produced br. S01clbtra and Kathleen
Kennedy. • ~t·:· fiBt opt~ June
11. 198~ and in tantly bceame • ~ortd~idc phmomcnon and on of
the most honored aod loved films of
all time.
'" t )I f. ..:I te in t Unilcd tatcs and Canada. "E. T:· citab-
li cd the rtrord bo~-<>fficc l'Q of
US9.6 7,000. and earned the b c I
dome uc and mtcm1uional thcatn~l
film rentals of any film in history.
III THE'8 OOWN<t TICT~OOUOH
NEWS
PM.MAGAZINE
•SURVIVAL
part ofaging. The canil lowly fl awa)' -leav1n,1
bones to xrapc in t ch other.
Not so. ys Dr. John Bl nd, of the Unavenity of
Vennont College of Ml"dic1ne. Cartilage may be lost to
anJury.aencticdcfi ts and di se, but normall)' tt's far too
shpl)l"l')' 10 wear out. And so lo as some healthy cart ii
remain exerci may bnn it b ck.
A dozen years ago, researchers m the Nation.at
lnstuutes of Health got rabbit cartil c to reproduC'e lowly
in lab flasks. At finit the oell wouldn't make coll~n -the
fibrous protein structure of ligaments. tendons nd bonct
Proper amounts of v1 tami n C solved the coll•n problem.
and stirrin$ thinJS up spttded arowth. Cartilage chum«!
with magnetic stir reproduced 20 to 50 tJmes futer.
Next. Bland and fellow researcher'$ at NIH tu~ to
humans and fod'nd no aros difference in reproductive
cap:ib11ity between the cartilage cells of children and those
of elders (65 to 84). With proper nu.trition and a little
"st1mng." Bland figured, old cnndage ought to rejuvenate.
Sure enough. an almost two doten cases, Bland has
shown that cartilage may grow again. In one case, after a
year of aspinn, vitamins and exercise. a bed-ridden
profasor. 8S. was able to walk again. •
Surgery might have been faster. admits Bland. "but
"nothing beats your own joints," In any case. to keep
moving late in life. keep on the move now.
Americao HeaJtla Ma1alice SerYlce •
8up1»9rdve
Dirk Boaarde plaJll Patricia Neal'• haaband, Ro&ld'~.O"ahl. who hels-the actrea recOTer'
from a .troke la-.. Tbe Patricia Neal Story"
tonlCht at 9 OD CBS. Channel 2.
ROWAN & MART1N'I LAUOH.-. LCM. AIEICAH STYLE 9P~PAOFLEI
-12:40-a (I) COlUMIO
-12:46-
(C)MOVIE * "Emanuelle In a.ngk<*" (1878)
l.a&n 0.W.., Cris Awem
-11/0-e MCME •
··~"The l<lntuckttn" (1955) lMt
Uncllttr, Ollrll Lynn.
!~LA.TODAY
···~ ''Clludla" (1943) Dorothy McGulN. Aobett Young.
eUOVE *** "$tOlln Houri" (1983) 8ulln r~lcl\lll ()Ilg.
··~ "u.nnt" (1982) Linda Otlf. -JIM Hallnn. --. . --
-1:10-®MCME
··~ .. ~The .Nr/' (1982) Armlnde Aane,Bnerl~
-1:30-
HEAl..TM FELD NEWS
AU. It THE FAUil Y
ROWAN & MARTIN'S ~lJOH.tN
MOVIE
Ht~ "AVllllJI'' (1872) Jldl Llfn..
mon, Julli Mllll.
-1:46-
CI) THE UNPAEDCTAILE PUOOYI
-~ I :SNEWINGHTWATCH
-2:10-(C}UOVE ** ·~ ''The Utt or BNn" (1979) Otlham Chlpcnen, Jchn a-.
CDUOVIE *•*°" "Giida" (1t4t) Ma Hl)'-wortll. Glenn Ford . eAMEAICA
-~
GUOVIE ·~ "Tht °"'*>'W'' (1asn Lu Bent•. Alta Menno. ~=AKJTHEMAN *** "Yt1terdty, Today And
Tomorrow" (19M) Sophia LoNn.
M8'ClllO Mllttollnnl.
-3:10-®~ JUKEIOX -a:ao-
(l) FNTH 20
-&40-
lo the pilot lor a ew ABC tel..n.ln ....._ alrf.DC AUi· 27. Tb fov po1e u urolda tnatracton for a fttneee cent r u a oo.er
. for th lr c1ancerou actlrittea.
~ t
t
• (
•
ge Coast DA L 'V PILOT ITunday Augu11 14 1814 -
+. Shagan filmland survlv
.. . .
On time producer
tumln out scripts
like ·save the Tl er·
By BOB THOMAS
Aunt 'r .,,_....,
BEVERLY HILLS -Once a
pr~~r amid !he urty-burty or Holl~. Steve haga.11ow does
his work in a square, windowless
office in a Wilshire BOulcvard butld·
mg. __ ~
The exile is self.imposed. From his
austert cloister, located in the offices
of 8atjac Productions. home of the
John Wayne empire, Shagan bu
brought forth a series of bcst-scllin&
books and award·WlMtnl movie ~ripts His latest is a Middle wt
thriller, "The Di~very." which
· William Morrow is pubhshing this
month. ·
Up and over · ..
Steve Shagan has done it all. He
came here from New York in 1958
with a wife and $500. worked as a
~tagchand in local plays (alongside a
.,.~ youthful Jack Nicholson).
"I also worked in the studios.
puUing cable out of the MGM lake at
2 a.m.," he says. After serving as a
press agent at Paramount, he began
writing scripts, then produced the
.. Tarzan" television senes in Mexico .
Stant man John Scott, b1a feet tancted lb a
man.cted bicycle, aoa airborne after b!t-ttna a picnic tabfe on the abore of the
Potomac River In Wuhlnaton. Tbeatuntla
part of a movie called .. Tbe Man With One
Red Sh~" with Jim Beluaht.
TonyDanza ~hould clean up
as the star 6f lJ.ew TV sitcom
.. My wife Bctt)'. and I took a
vacation to Madnd before I was to
start a new season of 'Tarzan,"' said
the 57-year-old Shagan, a compactly
built man with strong features and
wavy gray.hair. 7Betty urged me not
to go back to the show. ·vou can
write,' she told me. 'Let's take a
chance.'
.. A few weeks later I found myself
By FRED ROTHENBERG idea of Danza's character playing ·bassy, the show's production com-in the unemployment line, aJona with Al'T........_..._ against type. "It will be an interesting pany. "If he's senttojail, he'll have 90 actors I bad hired for 'Tarzan.' Tbev
LOS ANGELES-Tony Randall's role model for men and kids," he said. days to appeal. We'd have time to fill asked me. 'What are you doing here?'
fussy Felix Unger was television's Danza said he was aware how TV's our order of shows.'' • I wasn't $Ure myself.''
idea of a domesticated male in the images can make major imprints. Danza, 33, is divorced and the Shagan wrote a script about a
1970s. In 1984, it's a former boxer That's another reason why he's upset father of a 13-year-old sob, Marc, and bu med-out businessman, "'Save the
with an 12--3 record -all the wins about his rc<:cnt legal problems. "I a 1-year-olddaugbter,Gina. Tiger.""lsawJackLemmononevery
coming by kn~k.out -who sports a dop'twllntto bea bad role model," he One week before John Belushi died page," he rccalled ... When I showed
.
became (be Burt 1\eynolds;.QiU\Cfinc thriller no~I art sun.Ply mo m-
Dcne c mov:ie .. Husllt~'" He also vohcd and reqwre 100 muy n
produced "'The formula."' ba on pensive lbcauoos ..
hH novel about Nw German)'' The: ~ l'Olu1.1on 11 the TV mW.
synthtttc f~m. but that film rlC$. be tta.IOMd, addina :&hat aU
didn'l wort. Ufi'CCIIctW6MIWlex~1niHcll
.. As a novelist. J stem to ba..,e 11n .. The Disco cry ... Alain Shtpn
lodked m~lf into the thriller," be based hh book on fact: :ihe UDCOWr'·
'd. .. Tbrilltr fan5 demand a com· ina b)i hahan ~·su ln S~
pltl p&o~ and that defies CX>n\'Cmon O( c:uneaforml with ~ ~ntoat.~mom~Thathasbttn turaland_P.Qli l.ta~Uont. proved iWith boob b)' John -=,,;r:;rrc.;:;_;::o..--'"-''i!-Wh1leworkinc0111~Sbsp•
aad RObc:rt LAldlum. F'.ilm r<;qu1ra dceoraics &he walls ofbil oflic::c ~
rtlenlleuly Jtiaight tory lines, and .note ards o.uihn1Q1 the plot.
A&O DAWM ... 11) Sllows It 12:SO S:OO ~:SO 1:00
• 10110
IJU•fl'LR ..... (a) AT U :45 S:OS _ S:tS 7 :4$ • 10:0I
8111 Murn11 O~n AirktOllS
~-....,
SllOWl It 12:2$ 2:40
4:H 7:2S t ~S0/10 MM
o .... u•~· SllOWI It U :SO ):00
l :SO 1 100 ~ IO:lO
DRl\lE-INS ~~
STADIUm n . -"" -. .
~ C:a.oAK a OA SF
• _..,, "'" CcM4 .. ShctHn c..neMI (PCI)
_.A WOMAN
•MD"'(PO-U)
Md' "'Ct.AU· (It)
•ltGI~ ....
Neyer£nClll119 StOtll (~)
"TRUCK.IN'" tattoo. on his· right said. of a drug overdose, Belushi, Danza him the script, he said, '.Gee, kid, I'm
• ~ -'Last -JDQnth, a jury fou.n4-l)anza... and-Ma.re attended a-wedd~~-too4-eoouflr bal.lerA-·~~+-+--·---~.Wheeo.ts'tthoeny Dss~ .• -=iestanerwo~oABmedCbs guilty offlssaulting a sa:turity guard in was great with kids. He wasn't a bad acting muscles like this in 13 yea.rs,
Bo in "' a New York restaurant Danza and person," said Danza. "Marc couldn't since I did 'Days of Wine and Rosts.'
$Cries is about a man :who takes ajo another man said they thou&ht the uilcferstand h~a grea:rguy-one-on· --"-1t1ook ?Wctyea.rs to get_ 'Save the'
as house~c:e~ fora-divorced woman auard bad a gun and they acted in self-one could have so many r.robtems. I Tiger' produced. We finally mad~ it
(Judith ~t) in order to make a defense. sentencit\g on the misde-told him it was an'illness.. for Paramounl at $1 ,030,000, "Jnth
home for his young daughter. meanor assault and criminal mischief Danza also was shaken by the death Jack, the d:~or Job.n A ~~n. an~
What will they say about this in charges is set for Sept. 17. of fellow "Taxi" cast member Andy myself working at gutld muumums.
Daoza's old Brooklyn neighborhood? "I hope the judge doesn't make an Kaufman from lung cancer. Danza ummoo 's performance won his ~
.. Bobby Governale thinks it's example of Toll)' because he's an ex· recalled that be didn't like Kaufman ond Oscar, and Shagan was nom1-
gonna be a hit," said Danza, referring boxer and a celebrity," said Barbara their first two years on the show. nated for his script.
to an old schoolboy chum who's Brogliatti, a spokeswoman for Em-· Shagan's r)Ovel "City of Anaels" becomeaninstantTVcriti~ .--~:.....~;___;;..~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;_~~~~~~~~~~--i
Danza. former star of "Taxi" who
says he turned down four pilot offers
before accepting .. Who's the Boss?,"
comes by his dishpan hands nat-
urally.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY, llC.
f.-The Int Of YM lift
l
1922 HMIOl awo.; COSTA Iii.SA -SQ.1151 "My mother made-me clean all my
life," be said. "We weren't allowed
out of the hQuse on Saturday and i--------'--'-.;.;...;;..--"--------i
Sundar until the whole house was
clean.' And inspected. "My mother
used to look at something and say,
'That's surface clcanina."'
Both of Danza's parents worked.
His falher was a sanitation worker
who enjoyed his job and cookina
dinner. "My father rnade garbage
oollectina .a-great. job," sald--Danza •
.. He took pride in it."
Martin Cohan, one of the show's
executive producers, said he lilc:ed the
Vanessa set
for TV pilot
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -
Vanessa Williams, the first Miss
America to step down in the pageant's
63-year history, starts work on a TV
pilot this week and is gettina over the
Penthouse controversy, her lawyer
says.
AIWlll
Paetl!c Anahetm
Or·ln 879-9850 ..
IJA MovteS 4
990-4021
•cosTAEA
Edwards Harbor
Twin 631-3501
-COSTA EA
Edwards So. Coast
Plaza 546-2711
£1 TORO
Edwards Saddlebac•
581-5880
~T09'11ACH
Edwards Huntincton
848-0388
..
Edwatds Woodbodte
5Sl-06SS
WilNIOCH
Ed1nrds So Coast
L11una 491-1711
-owa
C1nedome
634-2553
EnMSTfl
Pacific Hiway 39
Or·ln 891·3693
ElWISTB
IJA Westmrnster
Mall 893-0M6
'm$OITU)
MotUY STOEO
118UCKAROO BANZAI IS THE VERY ODDEST
GOOD MOVIE IN MANY A FULL MOON."
-Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE
Your only h~ Is lu<broo lanul.
Williams 21, has received a
number of 'job offers despite the
controveny surround.in& the publi-~============~~=~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~=====:::!~~~ cation of nude photographs of her
that forced her to give U(> her. crown
three weeks ago, said Dennis
Dowdell, an attorney. •
"I think she is domg the right thing
by saying, 'I'm going to work in order
to prove I have talent." said Dowdell.
• NEWPORT BEACH •
10 • • TIW.ll OCUY SIUlO .._m:sa111
1m'l1 « OOIW (l'Q\
1:11. t:•
• SO COAST PLAZA •
!~ HCOAST ._ .... .,. """"'°" 1al\I Gf .... f'Sl ,., 2111 ltlS ,. Ste 7.JCI IDOi ......
• IRVINf •
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OOLl'I snu 'Im .,__. IN UI
'*"''htn ·~ • zo l'OJO
s11 Yll'C SPJI au' s .._IG. (PC)
lilllo"""' itS '00
•ntMlllO.MA rao1U1· crs1
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II>-111 ,00 100 10~
• WESTMINSTER •
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EDWA)OS _, a._
545 ll02
HAllBOR TWIN --rnm1 HARBOA fw1k ......
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OCUYSIU(O "ID ... (Pl-U)
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MCSA -11&G.1.MA ,.,,.~,, ~·· l~~IUS I.,. Alll IDT l(rtllS(• (PC!
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SADOUIAC« -UST ST_. (I'S) '' ... ;-lZS '10 ltlt 11 hlft tt ......... STGl'r mmo ll ll. '2S f20 ("I
SAOOl(BACK ·..-cw t •• , .. , 11« ... (I) ........ 110 3-Sl910~ Sil ~llO Sl~rtl•
SAOOUBACK •(U* a 11M1D"
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SADOU8ACK "IMOSi.sTllS"' IN) \0 ••••• I ••1 f 11H~ •to•~ 10»
Sil~ SZSOIOCIO
SADOI £8AC1t -.......nic1 .. ... . l 00 llS HS 110 101'
I '•• tt sn•u• ~l ~ISO
• M1SSION VIE JO •
mars wu.soAY
AUfiUSl I Siii
C-OSTA IEA &31 JSO I
£d•¥d$ ~rbor I w n _ .......
WA 990•011
I.IA Mov ts' ,, ... , ol()o,...1 ••
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(dwJrch S.SO~~
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• ETWGTO 8930S46
UA \'ttslll'ld!Sttr Mli
SC r.,. It (•I
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•STAATS FRIDAY AT MOVIES I
"Mft.£ ...... (I)
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*PACIFIC ORIVE·IN THEATRES•
* CINE·fl SOUND! At U.. symbols trllt sound direc1 to your AM CM *
rnio. " no radio witb ICCISSOry position. bnnt your own AM p0f1lllft.
All OPEN 7:30 Start D~SK ChilchnUndef 12 ALWAYS FREE
171• 11Ma51 -......... f-y 11 At l!'!M'I St fountain Volley
MISSION
-
WARNER
urr:uu1 .. ~ If'• -
GARFIELb
WMA1"5 WRONG
WfTM TMl5
PICTURE?
..
THE
FAMILI'
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"Is that RE All Y William Penn up there or is it
just a little William Penn doll?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Marmaduke likes hlm ... he heard he
couldn't be elected dogcatcher."
MOO~ .HlJLLl~S
11LL PICK
UPA NEW
BATTERY
FOR YA
PEANl"TS
T
l'VeGOT
E.Dl~~o.b-"'==~~1U-A~~T
A~PFE'/e~.
BIG GEORGE
by Gus Arriola
by Jim Davis
t MATE l'f W~EN •
L.OWER LIFE f'ORM~ ARE CON"ESCf~C'INC":t 1'0 ME
by Virgil Partch (V1P)
~
\ --------
·'·
BLI 'I> OllEDIEN .. : I ILL\' NtJ1thu 'ulnt•rahl . \\r: t de h.
CHARLES
GOREN
4'-r·J : -'
w•:sT
• Q9
~7 5
0 A 8
• 6 1
~ 41 SOlll H
•5 4;:> K Q 9 3 wit.ched to th cc of p d • o 532 cl rcr ruff d and fore d out the + K Q 7 ov r 11 of trump , nd th n cl am d th
f:A I' lhl• takt•<>11l doubt" 1 a cliS i · r~ l of the tricks for h1 contr ct.
64 2 + K J 10 '1 3 pr empt1vtt rai e. Howt'v~r. South En t wa correct in followin •
<O wa too sLrnng, bot IT dirn-ihutional-",th t h four f ~iafnttnd:!-t t
¢ 107 6' Iv und 1n high tards, t.o be ahut out. fir~t trkk. At lri~ one you don't
•5 3 2 \Vt•t>l p11 1•d hL·~nu t•ht:\\.1-;n't1mrt-how Utt prt:1ft>renct when pnr"tn\•r so Tit who e hund it was, nnd 1-~a t doub 1le ds a card that i likely to win tht•
• Void led on lhe trt•nglh of hi ace ~f1 trkk: your duty 1 to advi l him
'<"J J I064 2 tru"'p. t•:ven o, Y.e are not <1ure wh thcr or not yl>u like the uil tw o K Q J 9 we would have "'nt for five hearb hu I d. That 1s not th ttnll' n dl" + J 1098 : doubled with the W t hand-fiv mand th11t he hift thl' aLl dd
The bidding: spades "urely Y. ould not be-expen Wt• l huuld reali:zt that. incl• wl' t ·orth •:Ht 'outb sive and could even be a good save. hi partner doe n't ha\e tht• king of
1 + Obie 4 + 5 We ... t l(Ol hi'i side off to a good ditsmoni.I !he would h H' cn,.our
Pb Pall Ohle Paa• -.t.1rt "'hen he elettt>d to lt•ad the agccl with .1 high d1omond 11 hl• had
Pa1tH Pasi. acc.• o( d1.1mond. rather than n 'thl• monar<'hl, tht> only <·h.1nrt• tor '
tlpt•ninl{ lend. ,\cc o£ 0 , 'pad~. llt.> rt•;tSOlll'd that h1s partnl'r lht• dt•fonse WAS to find hi~ p1t•«ncr '
fht-re ;, nothing morl' annoving probably had five "Jlades , for his with tht• trump ace. Thcre1or1" ht•·
at •thl' bridgl' table than a partner j11mµ. so thl· 3.t't• o! 'lpades woul~n't 'hould havt' continued Y.'1lh lt dia · •.
\\ho hlitht'ly ignort.'s·all your signuls livl'. l::asl followed Wtth tht• four or mond Ill trkk tY.O. Now 1-:it'>l t·.rn
and JlCH''i .tht•.id on hi" merry way diamond<r. and West took this to Y.in·tht' fir<1t trump and lt•od ,1 thirtl
nhlivious to t'Verythmg around him. mean his partnl'r wantt>d a hirt. cl111mond. and West' ruff will c·ut
l nil's" , ou ronsidcr ht-pJa ver who Now \\'est JtroceedecJ to undo all tit• tht• rontract
SHOE tht• good he had dont• at trick one-by Jeff MacNelly
HON~ 1ME 1 ~T ~ <iXO .... we. TI ~r w~ ~'n&M 17eur1UaJ ~ANT GOM9£t... ·· M~OIA~~ ~ ~E. ~-al 1ME. ~~ WU~ t ~ \ ~~FiEP WIUA~ €Con" 1~ c,o~? t,t~N'iO~ · ~~f'RE~M'< 1ME.CLCAJJAN1'~. ,
. ·• ~~V~~.. OOIJ2£GLIPFlt£fflOM j• ':· ----.... ,,. 1Uf.P£~~L.. \\i
•' ~
l ~
DRABBl:.E .. -"\
"George always SAID that one day he'd run
out of energy."
DE~NIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketcham
• ~ 00 liMKE MY TIODLY WINK~·
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
PICI<' UP ONE
FOR LORD P.,
700
HE SAID ~E WAS A
REAl NATURAL . I TOLD
HIM TO 6ET LOST !
by Charles M. Schulz
by Tom K. Ryan
FOR BE'ITER OR FOR WORSE
AIP. CRNADA FUGHi l\q
FROM VANC.Oc.NE:R IS
NCMl ARR\\/ ING ITT GAit=
AAPBH11HRl°s
SON ·s PlAAE -AND
a.\'ZA8€TH IS SllLL
"11S81NG!
GoMEETY~~E,
MA'AM, WE'U. FIND PER
-OON 'T WORRY
FUl\KY WINKERBEAN
DR.SMOCK
HOSE IS HOSI~
HM~ ... At,.MOS.,.-
NI Ne! O'CLOCK .. :n-4 IS HAS eee!N A l.ONG OPeRA1"'10N !
by Tom Batluk
1R<J 10 C:J£T SOME
Q..05E.-UP5
OF THE ~ 5ECOOt.l I
......... ~ ·--'---
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
,
114 1984 aa
COMPLETE NY E COMPO ITE TRANSACTIONS, Bl.
Automobile insurance claims can be a disaster .. '
If )'.ou·re among the milliom of
Americans who e ch year must
replace your car bceausc of theft or a
total lo from an accident, you're
facini a series of development that
can be µmmarized in one word~
Disaster.
From the uart of the replacement
process (being ttimbuncd by )Our
msuranoe company for the "alue of
the car) to sctthna the value of a
totaled or stolen car, all you have arc
problems. For instance: •
•Traditional auto valuauonsu1des
such as the 8cd and Blue Books often
do not accurately reflect constantly
chansina car values in the market:
The books an printed evtry three
months and can ~ome dated quick-
ly. Nor. do the guide~ show valuations
from city to city.
• The first payments on a standard
auto loan cover only interest. If your
financed car is stolen or totaJcd
durin$ your first year of pwnerslup,
you still owe almost the entire price o(
the car, but you will receive only the
depreciated value in a claim settle-
ment. This could mean a bag gap
between the amount you owe and the
amount you need to replace your
vehicle. ·
•Car damage thre holds for declar-
ing a total loss have been falling. Total
loss can be declared on damaJC to as
little as 2S percent of the car, since the
replaoement cost of all partS on a new
car often JS about four times the
onginaJ value of the car.
• And many late models are
s:.Qnstructed '2L\he urillNdy ruxlcl
methOd -one or two pieces of
matenal make up the enta.re car body
-and tend to crumple in an.accident,
10creasing repair costs.
ln response to these problems,
several states have adopted regu-
lation~ that require a close.
documented match bclwecn the mar.
kct value of a Jost car and the claim
settlement offer.
~·Regulations are tryina to ensure ·
that consumers c.an buy a car equal to
the one they lost with their insurance
settlement. no more, no le ~." say
Howard A. Tullman, president ot
Cenified Collateral Corp .. a Chica-10-ba~ company that is croviding an
independent claims sett cment refer-
ence for insqrers and policyholders
Insurers are as concerned about
accuracy and objcctivjty as you arc,
for they can be hurt hard as well. •
New York state was one of the first
to respond to consumer compla~nts
about the methods insurers use to
settle chums on stolen or totaled
vehicles. Rcgulatton 64, adopted in
I 97S, encourages insunrs to base
auto claims on current market value
by using a comparable car for sale in
the local market as the basis of a
settlement.
LastJear, the reaulation was amend to require insurance com-
panies to show consumers (you) the
facts on which the settlement was
made.
In t 983, Uhnois adopted an Unfair
Oa1ms Practices RuJe, under which
you, a motorist, can file a claim with
your insuranoe company for the
difference between a settlement and
the market prioe of a replacement.,
Under a new Minnesota law,
insurance comparues must reimburse
motorists with a settlement reflectrng
the actual cost of buvin a rom-paraole ear-:---~'J~ ..3 -
New valuation services.based 0 11
computer technology's ability to
handle continuous updating of ve-
hicle data have evolved., along with
the regulatory pressure to senle
AirCal sets passenger
boarding record in July
AirCal boarded 345,939 passengers Lyon said, "July connnucd our long
in July, more than any previous July string of record-breaking passenger
m its history, and an increase of 7.2 boardings. Like many West Coast
percent over the ltke penod in 1983. businesses, we bad anticipated even
The Newppn Beach-based a1rhne more demand during the Democratic
bas broken p~v1ous monthly board- Convenuoo and the Olympics."
ing records m 18 of the las,.t:..--.. However, the Olympic busmess
months. which we did generate was offset by When compared wtth July 1983. business travelers who deferred their
revenue passenger males m cased travel plans to avoid the cong~t1on
7.4 percent to 136,459\ whde which never occurred, or enjoyed the available scat miles d · h ,, d l 256,990,000, up 24. 9 percent for the pies at ome, sai yon.
like period. Load factor for the month "Our advance. booklnas would
was SJ. l percent. • indicate that the business travel
AirCal Chairman, President and patterns will resume once the Olym-
Ch.ief Executive Officer William pies are over," be said.
lrOll alVll I ~ ~· ElaHUCI
EIModl Emcor enocnv Enlhv Entwt1tt E•llOil FrmG Fldlcor FIE mp FtWnFn
FtHFI I FkKocb FortttO Fr1111Cp
Fr•n-E• FrMSG
Frtmnt FulHI '
SYLVIA
POITER
chums ObJCCt1\·ely and fairl).
Certified Collateral Corp. obtains 1t<,
data b ~ from auto d~akrsh1ps
(more than 600) that allo~ the
company to update its iitfo'lnatton at
least once a week. The service
pro .. 1des a free vehicle locator refer-
ence to help insured and claimants
quickly locate a ne~ or replacement
car.
But the JOb 1s far from complete.
"Most people don't know what their
car is worth and they don't really e~pect to receive retail value for it 1f
they do," says John Reiersen of New
York state's Property and Casualty
~ UP s ANO DowNs
----
NEW YORK (AP} -The followl1111 11$1 snows the Over·lhe·Counter stocks and warrants lt\at have 90ne up the most end down the most based on e>er~nt of dle"119 tor 'Monday. · No HCurllles tradino below S2 or 1000 snares are Included Nel and oercentage ch•nHS are the djH•rtf)Ce belwwn the orevlous ctosioo b d prlC. and Monda_y's last bid e>rlce. UPS Name Lasl ChO Pct. 1 Trlmd un IS,. • Up 3•,.o i Horll:Rs 21• "'2 Up IH i ¥~~.d-~ _1 _1~ Hg-'.
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1
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&ff ~8~j gg 18.J
For the first time in history the United
States Mtnt 1s issuing Olympic
commemorative coins Each beaut•·
ful gold and silver com depicts an
Olympic theme in honor of the first
Summer Olympics held on Amer1
can soil tn over 50 years the XXlll
Olympiad 1n Los Angeles
The gem·ltl<.e. proof coins will h ..
a treasure to own tor yP.ars to come
And all profits go directly to the
01v1s1on You mu t be cdu led on
what 1 a f: 1r ttlcmcn1, what to
C)(pe('t and how to dcm nd fa1(
treatment,
Illinois dmtt its regul uon Wtll
1ncrcast" the ansurer·s costs of donig
busmen But the com me •ne not
settling eltums a' oc:uratel~ as they
&hould. l'hc new rq.ulahoJ) provides
some di$Ctpline for in urers nd fair
\ 'L MUTUAL F UNOS
--=-----·=------_____ ...._____ ~
Olympic ettort
Help suppor1 our athletes and
the t<l84 Games Buy an Olympic
coin roaav
Corns can be purchased through
your local post ofl1cE> and at par
11c1oa11n9 banks rind co•n dealers
:icross the counlr-r
Or write 10 U S Mint 01,·mp1c
Coin Program PO Bo'>; 6 76b San
Francisco CA 'l410,1
BUY AN OLYMPIC COIN
one
lVEA RTERM
1Z.15" IZ.D&' 11.25% IZ.58"
'LAllll ~., ...
reat Ar-ReriGan ---...........
First i~ Bank ..... • . , •t...1:1111 1 1 ••• -----------
-------
,,
I
I .
J
On
the , •
•
0 1lw Jo NE s AvE RAGE
- --- -
WH ~l NYSE Dio . . . . . •'· -
x
NYSE LEAO £RS
'
UP s nNo DowN s
NEW YORK (AP) Auv. 1• Prev dafl
"' 1
' I
Tm
13
AM EX LEADERS . . . . -.
Colo Quor Es
, METAlS QuoTEs
' . That's an apt descrtptlon of both business and
business people along the Orang Coast. Toke p track of
wh re compa11tes ar gotngand which people ar h lplng
th mgetther .justwat h 'CreditLtne'-ev rydayinth
--=-------Bus iness s tlon of your new ilJ llDt
'· I
I
• D
9 ~ 7 ! ~ ..
J i 7
I
J
Barry Redden (SOJ and Dwayne Crutcbfteld (<'5), 1t•en the opportunity to
~lay with the lDjury to E rle Dtckenon, took adY&Dtaae With Redden
.,
P.c:trn, Br•Y•
promlM w•r'• not
ov•r In •ft•rmeth
of br•wl. C2.
..., ........................
gatn•n1101 yarda and Crutchfield KOriDC a two-yard toacladowa run tn
the Ram.8' 21-10 loea to Clneland Monday n.IC)lt at Anaheim Stadl.., 1
Ructlona V81J
from pre• around
l he world ebout
Olympk:t. C3.
3 -back
of£ense
next?
Dickerson subs
given opj:K>rtuntty
--for one ~tght
BJ CURT SEEDEN °' .. ..,""" ...
Two Ram runnin& baCb an search
of playma timeeot their wish Monda)'
ni&bL The trouble is, the} may never
have the opportunity for an encore.
Third-year ruonma baCk Barry
Redden and off-season acqwsition
Dwayne Crutchfield shared most of
the rushina responsibilities during
the first half of the Rams" 21-1 O
prescason setback to the Cleveland
Browns, but when tt was all over.
there was very little to set excited
about.
You see, the Rams have this other runnina back by the name of Eric
Dickerson. He is also referred to as
the NFL Rookie of the Year in 1983
by numerous magazines and Tbc
Associated Press.
But Dickerson was burt Monday
night, and a aowd of 41 ,882 at
Anaheim Stadium quickly bepn to
mumble ·'Eric who" after seeina
Redden and Cn.atcbfidd fill in.
• Redden picked up 101-yuc:ts OOJa:st
10 carries wbile Ctu1chfield bulled his
way for 43 yards on niOc canics
before Coach Jdhn Robiruoa ~tatted'
&Ojlll to A.J. Jones in the second half.
· (Pleue eee LUIS/CS)
1
U.S. poloistsjust couldn't buck the odds
ii11he end, all the factors pointed
to Yugoslavia winning the gold medal
I It's funny, you never hear of a Las
V cgas boolcie aomg broke, maybe it's
because they know some things that
arcn 't ordinarily pubhclZCd, at least
not unttl 1t'sover.
With all of the facts known it was
felt that a bookie would 11ve the edge
to Yuaoslavia an the aold medal water
polo showdown with the United
States last week, and, as it turned out.
the money man would hav~ been
right.
Althou$h behind by a 5-2 count.
Yugoslavia rallied to uethegame at 5
with the U.S. shut out the final 8:45.
getting off only six shots m the
, remainder, and losing possession
with 5 S seconds to ao on an offensive
foul away.from the area where Terry
Schoeder and the ball were being
manhandled.
The tie was enough to &J ve
Yugoslavia the gold and the U.S. the
silver.
~~President declares
·:' Games 'a triumph'
· R -h Ecaterina Szabo. ... . eagan on ors •Joan Benoit's tnurnph m the first ·· · · U S d 1 _t____ women's marathon. ::~· . . me a is S, •Connie C arpcnter-Phinney's
· · chides boycotters ~ ~~tafJ~~n& gold before 250·000
•Greg Lougants' acrobatics m
diving.
. . LOS ANGELES (AP) -President
Reagan, declaring the Olympic
Games "a triumph of fellowship, a
triumph of spint," honored Ameri-
can medal winners Monday while
thousands of athletes from around
the world hugcd each other and said
goodbye.
Reagan, who called the SoVJet
Union and other boycotuna nations
as "the only losers" of the Games..
told the athletes "you gave us mo-
ments we'll never foraet."
Among those moments, he said,
were Mary Lou Retton's perfect 10 in
gymnastics, C,arl Uwis four JOld
medals and wrestler Jeff Blatmck's
gold medal triumph despite once
havina suffered from cancer.
"There was Blatntck dropping to
his knees 10 thanks," Rcapn recalled.
From the wannth of the openrng
ceremonies, when Romarua was
greeted with a rousma ovation for
defying the Soviet boycott, to the
spectacular closmf show, the mo-
ments of the XXI I Olympiad were
struna together hke pearls in the
memories of those who came.
•The &Ymnastic brilliance of
Chma's Li Nini~ and Romanta's
•Gabriela Andersen-Schiess' dra-
matic, stumbling finish m the mara-
thon.
•Henry Marsh's struggle before
collapsing after the steeplechase.
•Evander Holyfield's silent diam-•
ty after he was disqualified for an
unintentional foul.
There were dozens of such mo-
ments. A record number of spectators
-5,797,923-saw the Games and a
record number of nations -140 -
participated. Americans won 174
medals -a record 83 gold plus 61
silver and 30 bronze.
But the Olympics were more than
JUSt a show of American athletic
prowess or high-tech light displays.
They were athletes gathenna after
hours m the Olympic Villages, shar-
ing songs and stones. and reporters
from all nations' working toaether in
the Convention Center.
They were a security fotct of 25,000
guarding against terronsm and ran-
dom violence. volunteers who
worked as ushers, guides and bus
dnvers. They were copP<>rations mak-
ing the Games profitable a ff er fears of
heavy losses.
Well. as U.S. Coach Monte I
N1tzkowskt says, "The ~IJlC'Was
born m Europe. It's their ~e and
it's very difficult to make inroads."
The fact as, United States water
polo 1son a par with just about
anybod)'.1ncludmg the Soviet Unton.
but there 1s no sport more totally
controlled by officiating.
Even the v1ctones over West
G ermany, Holland, Spam and Greece
were tougher than anuc1pated as the
U.S. fought off one kickout after
another, far more than the oppos1-
uon.
Nitzkowski will not publicly critt-
RocE1
CuLS01
cize the officiating and goes out oftlis
way to bend to their demands.
And the U.S. commands respect
and pretty Jood officiating-at least
when all of the marbles are not at
stake. .
But when it's for the &Old. or for a
medal, well. there are few sports
where blood is any thicker than water
polo in t.enns of'Europc:ans vs. the
world. Even Cuba has problems here.
It's been an uphill battle for the
United States in international water
polo.and itisn"tlOin& tochanse.
Nittkowski's men as national
coach is over and when~ select
another for the neitt four years this
Labor Day weekend, it's Just one of
many cballenses for the successor
(probably Newport Harbor Hiah 's
Bill Darnen).
Ni t.zkowslci has said before the
JBbcn of the U .s. Olympic team and
Preeldent and Mn. Rea&an break out In
laqhter llondaJ u Cheryl Miller (Nck to
camera), wbo helped p..lde tbe American
women'• basketball team to a &old medal.
orchestrates 'tile ~ee-tln,. dUl'lna a
tribute bftakfut OT tbe team. lluJ Lou
Retton ta In lower rtcbt corner.
·Budd-Decker, Gross,' Lewis Provided top moments
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Zola
Budd, Mary Decker, Michael Oros,
Carl Lewis and ZhuJ1anhu1 are some
of the name that will go down in
history ., the atan of the 1984 Los
AnaJe Olympia, fur one reason or
another.
Dctker's fall m the 3.000-meter
race beea.mc the most con picuous
personal tr&ICdY of th Olympia.
an Incident with a capiw "I'" that will
be debated ford des to come.
Was Occ.kcr"s fall the ~uh of Budd.
th barefoot uth Afncan runnjna
for Britain? Ottkcr and some otbcn
msi t that Budd alleplly cut Ottkcr
off. A trac:kJUry rul :din Budd's favor,
anC2 some commentators 1d Decker
wa at fault for ttytn to pa Budd on
~~t~hc insid
"Maybe I'm u'\t not me nt to win
an Olyn\~1 old med I.'" 1d
Detkcr. ho was injured at the ttmc
ofthe 197601 mp1 and m1 d the
1980 Moscow Games because of the
U.S. boycott. Budd, 18, tr}'in& to get
over the matter, went to Disneyland
the next day.
While attention focu ed on
Decker-Budd, Romania's Maricica
Puica woo the 3,000 in 8:35. 96, an
automatic Olympic record for an
event bein.J run for the fint time an
the 0l)'~IC5.
Muico s Raul Gonzalez nctded
only 3 hours, 47 m1nut and 26
second to walk SO kilometers (3 r
m11CJ), breakina the old Olympic
rccord by near!~ two minutes.
Ltwas won four sold mcehl in
track and field, duphcauna the 19 6 f cat of the kgcndary J 0 n .
Uwis won the J()(). and 200.mctcr
da and the Iona Jump and th n
anchornl the U. . team to vi t ry m-
th~ 4 'X I mettt may. The Tdal
tc m tel the only world record in 4
track and field event\ here. l.ew1s 1d
afterward: "Jesse Owens is still the
same to me - a lraend."
Australian swimmer Jon Sieben
was "just lookina foN:ard toward
euina a medal, not winning" in the
men's 200.mcter butterfly. But in a
pcctacular burst of peed in the final
second • he beat We t Gennan tar
Michael Grou and broke Gross'
world record of t::S7.0S by one
hundm:ith ofa ~nd.
WOfld." Baumann said.
The hlle of Wotld' Great t Atb~
United States must be clearly su-
-i>CQor in order to hope for the
ulumate suoccss-and therein lies
the problem. I don't think anyone can
mold an American team into a squad
that is clearly <4-S loals bell.Cr than the
Soviets. Cubans, Hungarians and
Yuioslavians. among others. The fact is. \heir procrams attD 't
toomabby.ei~. ··tt never comes easy-sa)
Nit.zk.owUi .... Wealwa)" have to
prove ourselves."
When bis club was tied by
Y ugoslavi.a. it had its chances. but
clearly if tM United Stat.es was go1na
(Pleue .ee U.8/CS)
Dodger
fans get
in the act
LA rides wave
of support to 9-2
victory over Mets
LOS ANGELES (AP) -h's not
often that Southern Califorrua &ets its
fads froth Detroit, but the New Wave
amved Monday rugbt.
And Los Angeles Dod&er Manaicr
Tom Lasorda couldn •t help but
wonder why it took so long.
.. They should have been doing that
all year," Lasordajoked followina the Dod.aen' 9-2 rout of the New Yorli.:
Mets, inspired as much as anytbin&
by a human wave of fans throughout
the multi-tiered stad.tum.
"It was unbelievable, it was
tremendous. I've never seen anythinl
hL.e that in all my years here,'
Lasorda said of the wave, that
1nvol""cd most of the 35. 726 fans..
· The wa\'C came at the seventh
inning with the score still ued 2-2. By
the end of the seventh, the Dodgers
h d scored five runs. thrtt on a home
run by Grq Brock.
"The .-ave v.-as fantastic." sa1d
wmntn& patcher Bob Welch. 10-1 1.
~ho earned his fourth straiJht vic-
tory. ·~twas one of the greatest thtn&S
l''e evtt felt. I was happl: to sec it. l
hope we stt tt tomorrow.
New York Mets Man r Dave
Johnson dismissed the wave as any
k:ind of in pt ration.
"The wave 1s no bl& deal..•• be said.
"We did that all the time at Shea
( tadium)."
Wah Temll. 9-9. who suffered the
l aarccd. saying. "It (the wave)
really had no effect. rm out there
think.inJ about the batter. The fans
art havtll.I fun, and that's soo<1:·
The M ts bad taken a 2-0 lead,
scorina in eacb of tbe fiDt two innings
OD ru.n-~ring . nal by Keith
Hcnwtdcz and Wally Badman. Los
tied the score with an
unearned run 10 \he fif\b annana and
Pedro Gucntt0's nintlr • run to
lead off the salh.
tn venth. •1lhoQCout.,Ju t lhtwave wud, o.~cAndenoo t
an mfidd '1a.&)c. After Ken Land· ruu~ naed out. Guem:ro arou rt top Rafad
iana. • o ~· wild 10 fi :t enor. Ma antwl · cd to
\0 nd n v.1th l
brftlti run. and l c
k 1n Gutrrcro ·th a '
ntct. 1htn tlo-.
12ih hOmc run lo \lie rt 1&1
-
San Diego, Brave
players vow war
~ay not be over
From AP dl patcb 1 m
Players from both team~ ~)' there
could be more trouble in the aftermath ofa
beanb.tll war betwttn the Atlanta Braves
and San D1~0 Padm th:ll r~ulted 1n 13 CJ«lton and
the arrest of five fan~ at Atlanta-Fulton County
Stadium.
"The) may have unlea.)hed a wildcat," San ()1ego·~
Bobby Brown v.amc:d. "lf they want to play b.l<1eb:lll,
that'~ fine If thev want to fight. we'll fiJht."
And, Atlanta s Bob Watson.
a former Mannt drill instructor.
said: '"The> haven't heard the end
of 11. lftht> want to, let's go."
unda} 's gamt' bct\.\ten th~
two clubs. v.ho don't meet again
until Sept :! I. stancd when
Atlanta's Pascual Perez htt Alan
Wiggins of San Diego with his
first pitch It ended 1n a 5-:l
.\tlanta \ICtOr\ that WU O\er-~hadowed b} · two mort hit
Peru batsmen, lhree bench<leanng m-
cidents-tht linal two nearl~ uncontrollable as fans got
into the fracas. Both managers. two San Diego coaches
and nine players were eJected "It took baseball down 50 }ears:· said ump1nng
crew chief John McShelT}, who sa1d he nearl> forfe1trd
the pme to San Diego m the ninth IDntng ... It wa!> tht:
worst thing J have ever seen 1n my ltfe. It was pathetic
absolutely pathetic."
McSherry said he had spoken wtth Nauonal
League President Chub Feeney, and a wntten repon
and videotapes of the game would be sent to the league
office. Feeney was in PhtladelphLa for the stan of
baseball's summer meeting Wednesd.a). and NL
spokesman Blake Cullen said the league would not
review the tapes before Thursday.
Boddie er one·hita Blue Jay,•
U1.t 8 I . r thtt" lM finit one-a hitter of ht rn or I u rt r nd hght·
httung ~DD.., l htta t\lro--run homerto
g1\c Bait more 1 2-1 \1<.tol)' over Toronto •
Mondny night. Bodd1 leer, wh<>f,Ccarettbcst had been
thm:·h1t1l'r. " s touched forJu t a le.doll double b)
Raece Mall nlk in the thtr 1nnina. FollO'-"tng the
doublC'. the .26·}c r·old riBht·hander rclimi 12 oon-
secuti"c Ja)'s until he hat Dave Colllm kad1na olT the
seventh •• , In olher American League pme$., J
Cuter singled home Broo
Jacoby \\1th one out in the 11th
inmng to ghe Cle~ct nd a 6·S
victory over the New York Yan-
kee Darryl Motley homcrtd
nd Bud Black Sl'attcred stvtn
hit_ to)nap a personal four-pmc
losing strtak as KanMts City took
a 6· I decision from Bo ton.
Black, 11-10 and winless in six
narh since the All·Star break,
struck out sill and walked one as
Boddlckcr the Royals alw ended a thrte-
game losmg '>ktd ... Kent Hrbek and Randy Ba1b hit
consccull\C home~ m Mmncsota's five-run founh
mning and Joho Batcher pitched his iitth complete
game ot thc season as Mmnesotaupanded 11s lead over
the .\ngels 10 t\\O game in the West with a 5-1 '1ctory
OH~r Mtl\\aukcc Gree Walker ._nd Roy Smalley hit
solo home runs to back \he combined SC\'en-hit
pitching of Floyd Bannister and two reheH~r<i and
Chicago snapped a four-game losing streak with a 5-:l
\ IClOI) 0\ er Tec\3S.
Mumphrey's hit lifts Houston
Jerr) Mumpbrey'11 SID&le with one out •
1n the ntnth innmg ~ve llouston a 2-1
'1ctory over the Chicago Cubs Monday
ntght to top a light sched ule of National
League games. Jost Cruz singled with one out off
('hie.ago ~tarter Scott Sanderson and stole second to set
up Mumphrey's single .. In another NL game, David
Green tnpled to touch off a four-run uprising 1n 1he fifth
inning and Bruce Satter recorded his 31st save. leading
---~ --
Lula Manuel Jimenez, a 7-year-old poten-
tial Olympic champion, demonatratea ht•
.,.., .....
prowesa •• welghlifter In front of the
Collaeam a day after the Games end~.
Cullen was in Cooperstown. N. Y . for Sunda) 's
Hall of Fame inductions and the annual Hall of Fame
game Monday, to which the Braves participated Cullen
said he did speak wnh Braves Manager Joe Torre on
Monday "to get his side of the story."
St. Louis to a 5-3 victory over C1nc1Dnat1
TtgerswtnFamegame,7-s Attendance passes 1980·
COOPER~TOWN N.Y. -Ruppen m
Jones and Chet Lemon belted two-run -
homers and Doug Baker added a !.<>lo shot More than 5 1/2 million ote Of tlie day to pow:er tht" Detroit Tigers past the Atlanta •
Braves. 7-5 Monday in the 41st annual Hall of Fame onlookers viewed Games r
..
.. "*" MOKn, ooach of tM Tampa Bay Game.
~: ..-f!otm'!Jl 19 <M4ad ® thta team. We're · Jones· home run capped a four-run ~th inning
In Our Nnth year 1 and we're not goJAg tO say, 'Ave that helped the Tigers overcome a 4-3 deficit. Barbaro
)'911'1 down the road, thlS guy '9.~otng to be a great Garbe~ and Johnn) Grubb led off wtth singles, Darrell
~.' tf-tw "-ttMil we'U geHumback 1Mtyea1t ·Evan1-CTt1ck~ 11n RBI double-and -l.any Hen'ldon 'aown tM rotd. We're not going to try to develop followed with a sacnfice n, before Jones homered
him whfte I get booed out of the stadium.'' The Detroit uprising came against Andi'('
Montana: 49er $6 million man I
ROCKLIN -The San Francisco [!]
49ers have signed quarterback Joe Mon-•II•
tana to a new six-year contract. 1t was
announced Monday at the team's training
camp
Montana. one of the "lattonal Football Leagur'\
leadtog passers the past four years. reportedly will
receive more than S6 million. with his 1984 1Dcome to
mclude S800.000 ID ..alal) and a S~00.000 signing
bonus. ----"Those figure'\ are real. real
close:· the 49ers' public relation'\
director. JerT) Walker. said. con-
firming most details of the con-
tract as reported by the San
Francisco Chronicle
Montana agreed to the con-
tract terms late last week but 1he
signing was not announced until
Monday
Later this week. the 49crs
hope to add Olympic medalist
011ta.Aa Michael Carter to the roster.
Transacttons announced Monday cut the roster to
69 players. leaving a vacancy for tht former SMtJ
football and track star who won the silver medal ID
Olympic shot put compet1t1on Saturday.
Gifford def ends TV coverage
GREENWICH, Conn -ABC-TV m
sportscaster Frank Gifford said Sunday * ~
that his network's coverage of the Summer .
Olympics gave Amencans ··"'hat they want
to sec" as he rejected cnt1c1sm that the broadcasts
overemphasized U S athletes.
Gifford echoed the statements of ABC News and
Sports President Roone ~rledge who previously
disputed the cnt1cism
··we -.-.ere cnt1c1.red for Amencan111ng the
Games,'' Gifford ~ad. refemng to a d1sapprO\ mg letter
wntten to the Los .\ngeles OJ}mp1c Organmng
Commmtec n1:arl> t"o weeks ago b} Juan Antonio
Samaranch. president ol the lnterna11onal Organmng
Commmee
"Amenca dad so well that any professional
JOUmaltst covcnng the Ol}mp1cs would have had to
show the Amencan'> .. '>atd Gifford
"I think the •\mcncan people are getung what they
want to see," hl' said "A.nd I think n·s had a profound
impact all aero<;<, the rnuntry,"
Pleasure Cay equals record
DEL M .\R -Pleasure (a\ ndden ov
Laffit Pinca> equaled a track rernrd wnh a
strong finish Monda" tol'aptun: the feature
race at Del Mar
CalT}ing ro-h1gh"'e1gh1 of I :!2 pounds Pleasure
Cay fint'>hed 111lengths1n fron1 of Bara Lass. ndden O)
Chns Mc< arron. Ccnta' os ndden b} 8111 Shoemaker.
finished third another four length!> back
The 6-5 raCl' liHontc Lm lter Linda hnio;hcd
founh and never threatened
Pleasure< a> rn'c.:rcd the 61 • furlong\ 1n I Ill to
equal the Ira<. k rcrnrd at a d1s1ance 1hat 1\ he1ng
contested for 1hc first tame 1h1s \ear The lour·H~ar-old
filly took the ~inner''> c,hare ofS.19.250 b> dekating s1>.
older fillies and mare<,. three year. old and up
Sent off the c,c,xond choice. Pleasure Ca~ paid
$7.00. S 3.80 and i :uo Bara I a\'> returned SJ ~O and
$3 00 and Centavo'> paid i' 60
Treadway \\.ho was called up from Class AA
Greenville
Dale Murph) htt a two:run homer and Brad
Kommin)k had a solo homer for the Bravts.
Russell, Bailor on disabled list
LOS .\NGELES -The Los Angeles m Dod$ers sent two more players to the
<.1dehncs Monda) placing infielder-out-
fic:ldcr Bill Russell and ut1ht> resen.e Bob
Bailor on disabled lists
RusS«:ll. a 14.-\ear veteran. wa!. placed on the 15-
da\ d1'>3bled h!.t with an 1mtat1on to the sc1a11c nene in
ha<, lower bad; Russell has been e\penencing pain in
that area for the past two weeks
Bailor. obtained from the New York Mets last
winter. suffered tom cartilage in his nght knee dunna
bat 11 ng practice before the Dodgers· 5-4 v 1ctol)· over the
~an Francisco Giants Sunda~. Bailor has been placed
on the 21-<.lay disabled list and will undergo
anhro'l(op1c surge!) toda)
He \hould be able to pla) in about three week~.
alrnrding 10 club offic1ah
lo fill one of the voids in their 25-man roster. the
Dodger'> recalled left-handed pitcher Carlo~ 01a.r from
Albuquerque.
Wulf resigns UC Irvine post
Ramer Wulf has resigned as assistant m ba~ketball coa(h at UC lrvtoe after servmg
two years with the Anteater staff
Wulf was a full-lime assistant at UCI
last season and a pan-time assistant dunng the 1982-83
season He was a two-year sµner at forward for the
Anteater'> pnor to his coaching tenure
Wulf plans 10 pursue a head coach mg JOb an the
high school ranks.
UC! head coach Bill Mulligan eitpects to name a
new as 1stant w1th1D a month.
Stanford selects assistants
5T .\NFORD -Kermit Washm~ton. m
whose nme-ycar career 1n the National
Basketball .\s!>oc1ation ended two years
ago. has been named an assistant basket-
ball coach at Stanford. Coach Tom Davis announced
Monday.
Washington. 32. played college basketball at
Amencan University He began his NBA career wtth
the Los Angeles Lakers and later played for Boston. San
Dlego and Portland.
Jack Elway, head football coach, also announced
the hinng of an assistant. Otto Kofler. The former
member of coaching staffs at Washmgton and San
Diego State w11l coach the Stanford tight ends.
Kofler. 57 and Elwa> both are graduates of
Washington State and have known each other since
college. The) also both have sons who play quanerback
in the National Football League. John Elwa) at Denver.
Matt Kofler at Buffalo.
Televtelon, radio
TELEVISION
10 p.m. -IOXING: From the Olymplc
Auditorium, Channel 68.
RADIO
2:30 p.m. -BAUBALL: Ang s at Detroit 1n
doubleheader, KMPC (710).
7:30 p.m. -IA81BALL: New York Meta at
Dodgers. KABC (790).
11 p.m. -HORSE RACING: Los Alamltos
quarttthorae champJonshlp, KNX (1070).
From AP dl1patcbes
LOS ANGELES -With the help of big crowds along
the road-cycl~ng routes and at the base~ll pai:k.
attendance at the Los .\ngelcs Olympics surpassed the
1980 Moscow 01) mp1cs by about 330.000. organizers said
Monday
The 92,655 who fillea the Coliseum for Sunday night's
closing ceremonies brought totaJ attendance to 5. 797, 923.
accord1Dg to figures released by the Los Angeles Olympic
OrgantzlDg Committee.
That was 331.602 more than saw all the events an
Moscow. the LAOOC said, and more than 2.6 million
more than saw the 1976 Games in Montreal.
The Los Angeles count 1ocludes a California Hi ghway
Patrol figure of 275.000 people who watched the road
c.,.chng events and 385.290 who saw the demonstration
si>on of baseball. which was not played in Moscow. The
n cl 1 ng count at Moscow was JU St 22, 703.
· l os .\ngeles had higher attendance for the opening
and clo)1ng ceremonies. archer). track and field, basket-
ball. d1\ ing. equestnan. gymnasucs. shoot1Dg. S'W1mm1Dg
and volleyball Moscow had higher attendance for boxing,
canoeing. fencing. soccer. handball. field hockey, Judo.
modem pentathlon. rowing. water polo. we1ghthfltng and
.wrestling.
The ~1osrow figures include 198.158 tickets d1o;-
1nbuted free of charge. the LAOOC said
Decker receives hero's welcome
EUGENE. Ore. -Mary Decker's fnends and well-
wishcrs welcomed their hero home to Euiene after
suffenng shock when Dtcker got tangled up Wlth Bnuan's
Zola Budd and fell to defeat in an event she tralDed for
years to win
Decker stepped off a plane at Mahl on Sweet Airport to
a rousing welcome from mort than 250 Eu&ene-area fans.
The crowd cheered her. applauded. and kept applaud1111 as
balloons. bouquets. letters. tears and hU&S came her .way.
Joaqu1m Cruz. the Olympic gold medal winner to the
men1s 800-meter race. amved home on the same plane to
cons1derabl) less fanfare. but drew some supporters who
had caught w1Dd of his unexpected am val Samaranch believes no boycott In • 88
LO~ .\NGELES -Juan Antonio Samaranch. Ticker· tape parade awaits Olympians
pre!>1dent of the International Olympic Committee. said
Monday he 1s sure that all Olymp1c-coumnes will attend
the 1988 Games in Seoul, South Korea .
NEW YORK -Despite dlanges wrought by the
computer on Wall Street. Amenca's Olympic champions
will be showered with genuine ticker tape as th ey parade
this Wednesday through the skyscraper canyons of New
York's financial d1stnct.
He reiterated at a news conference that the IOC will
not reverse its dec1s1on to hold the next Games to Seoul.
despite a threatened boycott by the Soviet bloc.
The $0\let Union and 16 of its fnends aod alltcs
boycotted the Los Angeles Games. Chana -which. hke
the Soviet Union, has no diplomatic relations with South
Korea -played a prominent role at the Los Angeles
Games, w1n nma 32 medals tocludiog 15 gold.
In response to an appeal bY. Mayor Edward I. Koch,
the Trans-Lux Corp has contnbuted some 250 miles of
ticker tape -enough to fill 18 60-gallon trash bags-to be
strewn ID a smart bhuard from office windows as
Amencan medal w1Dners 1n the 1984 Summer and Winter
Games dnve by.
"Let's say that makes for a lot of tape,'' sa1d Don
Hamson, public relat1onsdirectorforthe Norwalk. Conn.-
based firm that manufactures stock ttckers and other
communications hardware.
Addressing a news conference as thousands of athletes
and officials prepared to head for home. Samaranch said
"there will be no problem with China" at the Seoul
Olympics. He pomted out that Cbtnese athletes have
·competed in recent international spans events in Seoul,
and a Chinese delegation is attending a forthcoming
meeung m Seoul to select the site fo r the neitt Asian Games
-probably Pekma.
The toch-w1de paper stnps used to register stock
quotations was to be delivered to ctty employees Monday,
who Wlll d1stnbute them to offices tn buildmgs along the
parade route. Hamson said
Carl Lewis to run Angels,
in Hungary meet Detroit
play two ' BUDAPEST .. Hungary (AP) -
Quadruple gold medalist Cal'l Lewis
of the United States and ~er
Olympic champions are planning to
compete ma track meet here Monday
according to official repon s.
The Grand Pnx meet 1s not part of
the "alternauvc" compet1t1on for
athletes who bo)cotted the Los An-
geles G.ime~. out 1t could provide
So\ 1et bloc fans with a first look at
several of the new Olympic cham-
pions.
Th~ compc1111on follows meets in
Mo~o" and Prague. Czechoslo-
va~1a . ~t up for athletes kept away
from the Olympic<; because of the
'iov1et-led boycott. Panac1pat1on of
top western athletes in those meets
has not been announced.
The official new~ agen9 MTI ..aid
Lewis. a gold medali t 1n the 100
meten.. 200 metcn.. 400-mcter relay
and long JUmp, would be JOtoed by
American Edwin Moses, who took
the gold medal in the 400-meter
hurdles. He is unbeaten st nGC 1977.
Moses' compet1tton will include
Yun Arch1penkooftheSov1et Union.
the report~ said. Other Soviet bloc
compeutors are 1980 pole vault gold
medalist Wlad1slaw Koz.ak1ew1cr of
Poland and 1980 hash JUtnP cham-
pion Jacek Wszola. also of Poland.
Olaf PrenzlcrofEast Germany was
named as a start.er in the 100 or 200
meter • where he 1s likely to face
Lewis Thomas Schonlcbc 1s another
East German favorite m the 400
meters. the rcpons said.
Soviet hammer throwers Yun
Tamm and Igor N1kulto will face gold
medalist Juha T1tunen of Finland
Soviet runners Ludmilla BonsO'\la
will tart in the women's 800 metcn
and Alla Jushina in the 3.000 meter .
DET ROIT -Wtth stops tn De-
troit. Baltimore and New York, the
Angels Wlll try to stay 1n contention in
the Amencan League West race,
beginning with a twa-n11ht
doubleheader· again t the Tiget1
today.
The first game begjns at 2:30 PDT.
Anael skipper John McNamara h8'
nominated Make Wttt ( 11-9) and
Bruce K1son (2-1) to star1 against
Detroit's Juan Berenguer (5-8) and
Dave Roiema C7·3).
After ~lvaglDg one of the four
game~ against Oakland last weekend
the Angel& Mill lind them\Clvc::
within stnking distance of Minne-
E ,
'Olympic Village emptying as athletes return home
ota. 2 pme back. while Chicago (311•
behind), Kansas il) (4'h) and Oak-
land (61/1) still clo enough to make 11
intert,ttng.
The Aniels arc 1-4 aaains( Detroit
thi season, havin& spht two pmca 1n
Tiger tadium and havinJ lo t all
three in Anaheim earlier this year.
LO ANGEl [..'\ {i\P) -Ecatc::nna still p,.,,. through metal dettttor5 and The U book tore wa, till doina a
S7abo the tin~ Romanian g)mna'it have an escor1 to go Oc)ond the entry thnv1nJ bu 1ne s. havina plactd all
who capturt'd three gold\ in the I m plu.a. Ol)mp1c souvenirs on sale.
ngele <iame-.. lcf\ hl'r p:ml'I ha\cn The few thousand people m1lhng S1abo. ~hcdutcd for an afternoon
-tht" Southern Cal Olymp1 Village around tht' <"Am pus Monday had Jepanure with the Roman11n del-
-to return home Monda) clhow. room for a change DunRJ 1hc c::gatton of 1 0, al dy h d her
··The \lll~g«' wa\ my t11rnr11e C 1amc'\, throngs offnns kn tht' nearb) sou~entrs.
place.'' S1abo iJ ") lo'«I the \Cnuc\ formick and field. w1mm1ng ··rm taking home an) thins with
village bcause 1t Cl) bright and and dt\ ing and lxH:1ng nd cro~ded \tars 1n mouon on it and Ol}mp1c
full nf color 1 had a lot of tun " onto the campus to eat, bu~ symbols on itc" he saui. "I'm \t'I')'
The tJS Village. which hou!iCd \OU,t'n1r,, t011de pin'i nnd stt the fond of them ·
lmost 6.000 1thkte'i and team of-athletes. zabo h d ppcarcd on th laY.n 1n
.. ticuh from 7Q nauon~ sav. It~ Souven1rand snacbt.and • both on front of the 'ill e entran c for an
population dw1nJle napu..11> a .. dcl-campus and around the I .os An cle 1nlt'rv1 rth tlud Green n, to be'
ept1on' tx:gan returning home. ( ohscum and Sport~ Arena. "''Ch included an hi filmed doc:umcnUlr)
Security rcmamrJ 11gh1, :tnd will closed. or the Games
unJillhc '1lla1c 11 om 1:11!,\ d<1'ed on __ l,hc ha\\ kca had. alrtad\ m4'11'"--Rom n1 ht\ I tern bfoc-
Thunda' \'1,1tol"\ 10 thc-' 11ln~C' mu"tt 1hl"1f ~ill Mnsrh nall\ e~ rem, incd. natmn th a did not 101n in the So\/ict
-
Union boycott. Evcrythtnl was "'ondcrful. They
The merkan fan howro their absolutely had no problcn11.''
apprtCI tion. taning With thunder-Th dcpanurc1 rrom the village
ous applause when the Romanians be n shortly afier the colortul clos.
tnt red 1he cohscum durina. the 1111 ccrcmoniC$. with Ital)'. ~me o~nina ccrcmon1 . Canadians. Th11land and othm fta\•
·•That wa pro bly ctua!Jy one of in&_ in the middle of the niJht.
the mo t moving moments thcy·~e Cameroon'\ group of 6S lcfl at 6
h d here, Vthcn they WJI ed into the .m with n inordinate amount of
1Uld1um... 1n Mura 1d. luua c. l he • mcre>0ns ~ere mona
Mura, a Roml\tltan natl~ now the African n:auon who trained in
hvtn an the U.S.. •~si ncd by the tlanta and lo t their lu v.hcn •
Los Olymr1c nmna truck caught fire c.-n route to the
Comm11t to rvc •~ Rumania's Atlanta a1rpon,
cn"oy dunna the Game~ In the v11l.tc. dozen athlete
... loved c~try moment." Mura stood in line. t.a\ina dvanta of one t<l. "I've MYf'f v.-Qr cd thtt hant~taSl ChllnCC for free f\ 1rc It tfil'
and r~c nt'vcr hnd so much fun Vidal sson h 1r Ion.
ANOIL NOTH· Tne """" Monclev NC90 nt MYmall aN CM.-Oii lht IS dn d 'AlllH
I retroeC11Yt 10 Auo ' °"" IO I "'° ln!WY ,.,.. ,, ~""' "'°"' •n ltrltallon .. me
Cln1Cal ..... In "'' 119() ... llfotllfm ""'' N.J ~ 1!19 "''"• Off •llCI 11\.:llt "" .... •Mii• Caf'tw wH t•amtntd ti Ctntlftt&a tel In •••GM 1W ~ PftnJdan Or • ......,..
YIQM MOllOlf ano Siie '"'' a:inflr"*f 11'1•1 ltrll1l16tt•H ... "*' ToflllCartw'• NIOI Oft, ... H·man rotttr, n. "'*"' 119 .urdlaMO Cllt
C0111f1t1 Of tcNr·OUttletOlt Dttr91,.._. rrom
1 cMl'a E191nont~ •rtnlel• _. lnt '-di Cotti
\.H~ Mllltf, lllf!OM llttit CllWYt 1tO IM U.$ wonwn'• llelkt I ream lo a told m«llll letl
w , w I l•NC!ef IO loM llW A IOOIY
Munw~ OYlfittdtf ,,... Lmn. who miss~
I ., ' *11d win ovw 0 1<.laM •1111 N
t !IN, i H Id to Ill beU. 11 IM lll'ttUlt I Y
Oen ...,.... 'WM ~ m •J stoltn '" thl•
Kl\Qn. mg td. .... Jeml ...., ...,
hlMlt •!Id now 0 ... 111 Ille MCOllG bUt ... Hiil lofal
lor • AllNI or.IV -.-., ltMn wit 10 ttH
fnl!tl tna11 ... IHI In HetOll
"l'l~ lootbill i.tn.ttoa
Tbe Huau um Ch Communny Ct.J PePan~mcnt lt accepuna rqlstrauon ror youth .1uutblll lcques.
cs f~ nm lhoroush eWllh &radCrt are hedulcd with _Jlmes let Tur ~turdaya bqin·
nina ~. 19. Oam~ WIU be played at MUldy and £diton communny c:cnttrt.
For more ln(ormauon, phone 960-8895 or 960.H70. .
Bealor Olpziplc. at OCC
The I Sth annua(Scnior Ol)mpics will be held
on Saturday and Sunday, SCpt. 1·9, at Oranae
Coast Collese. The aames art beina hosted by Oranp Coait Collqe. the Coata Mesa Cbai:nbeT
ofCom"'m:e and the City of Costa Meta. Competitors from 1brouahout the United
Slltta and the ~orld are upectcd to take~ 1n
this )car's pmes RCJ1stral1on deadline JS Thurtday, Aua. 23. ·
C'ompctnive •St brackets for bolh men and women art: 20.24, 2~29, Jo.34, JS-39, 40-tS,
45 .. 9,. S0.54, SS·S9, 60-64. 6S-69, 70. 74, 75-79,80.84, 8$-89.
Men's field events will include: discus,
hammer throw, hiah JUmp. javelin. lon~jump. pole vault, shot put and tnj)lejump. Mens track
events will include: 100, 200, 400, l,SOO, S,()00.
and 10,000.meter runs; S,000 and I 01000.meter
walks; 3,000.metcr 1teeplech1se· l lu tnd 4()().
meter hurdJes; and 400 and 1.600.mettr relays.
Women'• field events include: di1eu1,Javehn,
hiah ju.mp, •hot _put and triple_ jump. Track
events include: 100, 200J aoo. l,SOO. ]l!XJ and l 0,000.mmr runs; and >,000 and I 0,uw-meter
walks. There will a1lo be a family relay.
For more information, phone the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce at 979.0536, or Oranae
Coast Collqe at 432·S 126.
OYer·tbe-LID• toarney
The flf\h annuaJ Se-a Festival Ovet·th~Line
tournament wall be held Saturday and Sunday at
Belmont Shore. Entry ftt 11 S24 per \tam, •ith all teams
auaranteed to play four pmes There will be d1vmon1 ·for both men and women. Y(ith
tournament ptar bc&innma at 9 a.m. •
OiviaiQnS wd include men'a Optft, lncn's 30
years and older, men's' novice 1nd women's
ope~ ,
For more 1nformation. phone (2 ll) 63().2298.
Newport Harbor JatnJ bo•Jl.u
The 'Newport Harbor Lawn Bowhna Club' will hold ill annuaJ men'• doubles tournament on
Tuesday and Wednesday, Aua. 21·22 at the Newport Club, ISSO Crown Dnve North,
Corona del Mar. Com~titi~n bqins at 10 a.m. both days. The compeuuon IS open to spectators. •
For more information., phone~ 138.
V ciTie<Irea ctioi 1s . .
from world pTess ·
NEW YORK (AP) -The world's
press has reacted with widely varied
views of the Los Angeles Oh~pics, with many Western news apers
raisan the games and most the ~viet \1oc contmuinJ to den unce
them for commercialism and what
some call American chauvinism.
But even some Western commen-
tators were critical of what they called
an overemphasis on Amcncan vtc-
tories by the U.S. media.
"The Los An1eles Olymp1c Games
were held to the roarof.suchj1ngo1stic
cannonade that one could thank that
those were not international competi-
tions but a protracted celebration of
Independence Day by Amenca. ·• the
Soviet Communist Pany Daily Prav-
da said Monday, the day after the
Games ended.
It said the Amencans .. should have
promoted restraint and modesty" in
assessina their medals triumph. sfnce
these were gained partly because the
Soviet Union and 1 S other nations
stayed away from the gamC$.
Press commentaries from Ctccho-
slovalcia and Poland were similar.
The official Polish news aacncy PAP
said, "All sports ex perts wee this was
the poorest Olympics since the first
post·war pm cs in London more than
30 years ago."
The French Communist Party
newspaper L'Humanitc, which often
cchocnhe Kremlin hne in East-West
affarn, called the Games "fantastic."
"The stomach knotted by emotion,
we followed tbts arut festival of
sport, the bigcst, the. most ~ion
ate. the moit thnlbna." it said. But it
also criticized the Games for the "the
obsessive presence of KinJ Dollar."
-The English-lanauaac Beirut Daily
Star said, "The flimsy pretexts Mos-
cow used to boyoolt the Games and
the sncerina tone of Soviet reports
from Los...An~lcs. wcresclf-dcmcan-ing and petty, and revcated JUSt how
small-minded and non-athletic the
ancients in the Kremlin arc."
Six penalized after
failing dope tests
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Bel&ium's
Pnnce Alexandre de Merode, chair·
man of the International Olympic
Committee's Medical Commission,
Monday said five athletes and one
masseur were disqualified after fail·
mg their dope tesu durina the Los
Anaeles Olympics while four other
cases arc still under 1nvest1ption.
Kenya was awarded the bronze.
In the wrcstlina event,
Yugoslavia's Rctik Memisevic was
moved. up from bronze to silver, and
Romania's Victor Dolipschi ad·
vanced from fourth place to a bronze
medal.
lllM1oa VI., Nt:JCer toaraer_
Tht fifth annlial Mt on Vat.Jo lnniauonal
Soa:er Toumatntnt MU bt bdd A 24-26
0 tt 1,200 pla~ rcpmtDUJll 72 ttam1 &om Anz.ona and 'II C'\-ada, 'CU playcn (tom
orthem ""lrul &>1nhem fOrn1I U
pat11C1Ptli The tournament ts 1e11up n fout diYI iOM for boys under 16, 14, 12, arid I 0 yean;auis under
t9.c.l6, 14, and 12 )UJJ.
1 oumamtnt pmn Will be plavcd at the Youth Atbldic Park and Oto Vitjo Paik. bqlni' Friday, AUJ. 2'. It l l I m. turday'1 play n1 at I 1 m., and final pmes will be
played unday afternoon, 1hc event i• belhl 1pont0rcd by M1111on Y it.io Compa~y and hosted by the Million VttJO
Soccer Club. For addnion.&I lnformauon pbone kon
Carptnter, ioumament director, t 83o.933l
Board.tallla6 compedtlOD
One week after DOtrdsailina mack 1u ckbut u
an Olympic ub1b1uon sport. the Silver BWkt
Rept&a bolrdsa1bna compeuuon offm a
chanu to watch or cake s-n m the events \his
Saturda_y and Sunday.
The Silver Bullet Reptia compttition bqins at 11 a.m. an front oftht Belmont P1lll Olympac
pooJ and IS (tee to the public. .
The event 1s open to all amateur boardtatlon
Races are held an three d1vi1ions: Men'•
liahtwci&ht (UO pounds or less). men'• hcaV)· wel&ht and a women'• open caiqory. ·
Winners in eacb amateur caiqory.(lualify (or
the final• Sunday. Reaistntion for \he competition LS btuia
accepted at \he Lona Beach Wind Siuf C.Cnttr,
4100 E. Ocean Blvd. Entry fees arc SJO 1n
advance and SIS on \he day of\heevent. · For more information, pbonc (213) 829-18-40.
Pacllfc Soutbw•t t&1a.a&
· The Pacific South9''tst Teonll Open will be
held Sept. 8'16 11 the new Los ~lei Ttnrut
Centtt at UCLA Amona thOlt scheduled to compete arc Eliot Ttluehtr and YannlCk NOah, the seveAtb-
rlnked play-er in t.M wOrld.
Tickeu arc available at ~icUtron outlets aod
Tick.ct Masttr locaUODI IS well a ibe ti Cl.A "bes
office. Foctldc1 iAformaboa pbone(213)462·2312.
RAMS •••
PmmCl .
There is no room in · the . RaQi
backfield for three tunni.na becti. -Two isoufof~uestion1 too . ...;;;::...'-f--~
The have .,bat u ca.lled•
one-back oft'enx, malllJy becaUR
that one back picked up a lequj-
leadina l,808 yards and tc0recf ll
. touchdofo'US on the srou.nd lalt
season. •
"l don't want to stir up ~
controvcny or anytbins bot with fay
damn com5·tive run.Din& .badil here. some · 's aoina to bavc
pve," admi Crutchfield. ta the Rams pided up in a uade 'Wi
Houston for a silltb·r:PUnd 1984 '---
cboace. • .. I feel rm one of the best d&m'h
fullbacks in~-lcque. "ust ned5
moit opportunity to run i llSldt. It'
just hard to do With Eric, BarTy anCt
AJ. arou~ .. Crutchfield aid.
Redden knQ11.' the so
qJCak. too. •sure. rd like a two-back< cnse .
h would mca.o rd be ta there more.
I'm more at home with a two-beckt-
Redckn admitted. As for his performance Monda),
Rcddtn said; "The line was ja. t
exocllcn1 ronishL Itju.si ma~
that much easier."
Crutchfield, ltlc.wuc. was im·
pre:sscd wilh the block.in& in front of
him Monday. ··1t?s a different block· ina scheme from what we had in New
York (be played I 'h seasons wilh the
Jets before going to Houston). These JUys (the Rams) make lhc boles ud
JUSt let }OU use your instinct."
Crutchfield's instinct is that be 1s
not going to see a lot of action Ulls
season since a healthy Dickerson
could result in another 390 carncs
from the pccding running back out of
SMU.
..It's hard to just sit back &Dd
cheerlcad and know nothina is defi· ,
rutc." Crutchfield added. Robinson. meanwhile. 1ndica.tcd
the~ was plenty of room -and need
-for bolh Redden and Crutchfield
th1s~n.
Two athletes were deprived of
silver medals when their tests dis-
closed traces of anabolic steroids, de
Merodc said. They were Thomas
Johansson of Sweden, who placed
second in the Greco-Roman wrestl-
in& bcavywei~t division, and Marta
Vainnio of Finland, who was second
in the men's 10,()()()..meler race.
Two weightlifters, Mahmoud
Tarba of Lebanon and Ahmed Tarbi
of A.lgena, failed to pass their JOC
Medical Commission dope test and
subsequently were di~uaJified from
international competition for life by
the International Weiahtliftina fed·
cration.
Brown• recetnr Oute NeW80me watcbea
tbe ball Into bl9 banda -CaiD•t tbe defenae
~ .... ...._.,Tent IC _ _,~.._
of Ram comerback Da.td Croadlp. Newa-
ome bad ftn receptiona for91 ya.rda.
"Barry LS a William An~typc
pla}er. Not a lot of flair but b.e's a very
efficient runner. He proved toni&ht
that without Eric we can continue to
progress with what we've been
doing.·• the Rams coach said.
ln Ole 10,000 meters Michael
McLeod of Britain, who finished
third initially. was advanced to
second and awarded the silver medal,
while fourth-placed Mike Musyoki of
A Greek woman javelin thrower,
Anna Verouli, also failed her dope
test. but bad not won any medal.
A Japanese masseur was barred
from the Olympics for 12 }cars for
giving a member of his volleyball
team a forbidden drua to cure a cold
U.S. POLOISTS. • • P'romCl
..
On Crutchfield; "I felt Dwayne
Crutchfield made some good inside
moves -which wc'U nttd."
Redden had pins of 2, 8. 14 and l 8
on the Rams' first series of the pmc
to set up Crutchfield's two-ya.rd
touchdown.
RAM NOTIS -~fT!tlie UN'I llf R• .,....._,
wlttt ""°"' ltle lt•rM 1119-n ,..,.,!om ,_..,.
*H a tuft! Ill ltw lll'ftl Mll ell4I • ..,. .... '-fw a .vlck ..,_,,.,, ''IO ... IO lllaY IN Mal
...,. IMleK °' ••lc:fline ..... "°'" ""' IJ.S Olvn>lli•"I W'!O Mued ue I ~ IO ... ., tor
C ..... nd NI WCIW IO .......... ame..-mi.. tor
1?!t Qrv!Nlla ·~ *"°.._...,CM Lftrls ttww '""" ~ •nd..,. .... nwnber °' lfle L.9W ••llMIMlt'ed 411 ,.,,_., wf\ICtl -Ille OOICI~ MIOM!ldoclled -. ••In~ .o •NI b ••Met• to MO ,,..,.. CllP«ll to .,,. ltacm • •'\de rtcJ CWM &l'OW. ...... hit flol ltw ..
--•I Afl&Ofll $'-MM• W liNIC:t<..,. <!JU
ler C'Oft..,._ IO ' _... r~ n.. Item' tM.,,,.. ...... Of! ........... ,_ ••• -
lllCkll I( ... u.-.. """""' llec• , .... eno ll'lfto-.,.., llNMO• Delle ..,....
T lntM -~ cat\ no4 ... ., _..,..
8atMtt ..... "*' llOI .... of ""' three .... 1.11•-14 .. _......., ....... oft·
.,.. ,, ,..,_,, .... ~·-••• ,.... ltan'I$
wll cut ~ mor. ... ....n ., "''*" trim "" rottef to 10
r
MA.JOA LIAGIJ STANOfNGS
Amet1cln L ..
o.trolt
TOl'OlllO
lellitncW• lo•IOfl
N-Von.
MJlwMM •
C:i.vtleno
W11T OWtMOtf
W L !"do 08
61 " .ll. ~· S7 Slit 2 51 St 496 )YI
~ '° ., 4\ll 5' ~ '71 •• ,
$) .. us ,.,, ·'° .. 424 12
•AST DIVISION 11 •• .....
'2 SS
" s.
" S6 Sl 4' ., " ~Y'akw9' C1t~tlllld •• New York S ( 11 IMIOOS)
lalllmore 2. l«onto 1 Clllc1911 s, Taao• J
Ke"'" City •· Bo>ton 1 ~la S. Mltweulcee I
TNIY'•G-A..-(Woll ll•t •I'd K1tot1 2 11 11
Oetrolt 18••rouer S-1 •!'Cl Ro1ame 1·3>. 2, (l•ft)
Toronto IAlekl!\de< 10-S 1"41 Leel 12·2)
•• c11 .. e11no (HtetOll • 12 •.no ,_ 2·71,
2, ll·ft)
S..1tie 1Llf19lf0f\ IO·t al'd ... ,.,, f·~I
•• Naw Yoo. IRu,,.,.,u•" 1-> .. no Cow~ 3·11. 2, (t·n)
0.kllnel (8 Ufrll 11•6) II BellotTMl'e
(F .. neoen t ·lll. In>
Tun (Tentne ll·l lJ •• Cll<IOO IS.•· var 11·7), (n)
Bolton (Nll>9fl' 4·Sl 11 ~•n&e• C•tv
(Gublc11 1·11. (n)
Mllwaul<H (Heu •·9J el Mlnnei.ota
CHodGI 3·21. lnl
WadMMav't Glrn.. AMllb 11 Detroit, In)
S..lllt II Naw York
TorOllto 11 Clevetencs, 7, (l·nl
0.kllnd 11 Belllmort , In)
Teua •• Cllkaoo, (nl Mllwau~M et Mlnneaota, In)
80tton 11 Kan&et Cltv, 1111
N8tlenal LMtue
W•ST DfVIStON
W L Pct. 08
Sin OletO " .. .5'0 Alllnt1 60 SI SC. t ,-,
DM1w'i 60 St 504 10
Houston SI 62 4*3 12tn
Clndnne11 50 " (20 10 Sen Frenctsc:o •5 ff 3'S 221'1
Chieato
New York
Pflfledalollll
SI. LOI.Ill Mofll,. .. I
P!lf '41urt/I
EAST OfVISK>N
10 •
U SI
•2 SJ
5' " 56 '° SI '7
Mendilrt'• Sc.-~ f, New York 2
Sr l.OUI• 5. Clncl nlle" l Houston 2, Cllk»oo I
TadeV-a G-New Vorll (9"9flYI 1-12) 11 o.a.rt
(H«11\1Mr 1·4), (II)
Plll1burph (Cancleierle 10-l l at Ar11n11
!C•mo S-•I, In>
Cl11Glnnelf IRusMll S· 121 ar St. Loul• (LaPolnl l ·tl, (n)
ChlC.lllO (TrOl.ll IO·Sl et Houaton (Nlelt,-o 11-9), (n)
Phllldetohl• (o.nt!V •-J) •I San Oleoo (I.otter •· 10). (n)
MofllrMt (Sc:lletrader S·3) al Sen F,-en·
CIKO (CelVlf'I 2·2), (n)
W....._'t'I Glmft
New Y0tk e l DMean. fn)
Mofltrh l at Sen Fr•11Gl1CO
P•lllburDll 11 Alflnle
Cl11Glnnelf 11 St L.oub, Cnl
Cll•GICIO •• HOl.lslon, (n)
Pl'lllldelot\ia al San O>eoo. (nl
NA.TIONAL LEAGUE Ood9w1 ,, Mef1 2
NEW YOltK" 'LOS ANGE'lH
8o.mn 21>
MWland
Hrnndt Ill
Strwbfv rl
Foster" Brool" 3b
FttrGWIO c
SenJene n
Terra•• o
HffC>ol\
GeHo
nrhbi lbrttlli
4 0 2 I A"°"" u 4 2 3 I
• 1 0 0 l.enclrk d s l 1 0
4 0 1 ' Guarrer rt S 2 3 3 4 000 MIO~rl 0 0 0 0
4 010 Me,-INltf S121
3 00 Aml\ing lf 00 0 0
3 0 0 0 Sc>0Kll c 4 I 2 I
3 1 l 0 Brock lb 3 I I 3
2 o o O 111 .. we lb 3 1 1 o
I 0 0 0 S.11 2b • 4 0 I 0
0 0 0 0 Wllctl p 1 0 0 0
SllJOOI Oh I 0 0 0
Rauno O o o O
J1 2 5 t" T..... JS t i. f
Scare trv ......
New Ye'11 ' I~ 000 000-1
LM Anealn 000 011 5211-f Geml Winning 1181 -Merihlll 191.
E--S.ntane 2 DP-New York 2.
LOB-Hew Yorll 3, Lol Anae!n 7 2B-S.x
Hit-Guerrero 191 Brock 1121
S8-MWll11on 1341 S-Welch 2 SF-Anderson
..._Ywtr
Twrell L.t ·9
Ge ff LM.,_..
H R ER 81 SO
11 7 1 2 I
3 2 2 0 0
w.tdl W, 10· 11 I 5 2 2 0 9
Rllnt I 0 0 0 0 0
91tk-Wetcn T-2;30 A-3S,n 6
Aneel •veragn
BATTING
All It H Hit lllll ll'CI.
Benloue1 134 31 t2 I 3A 350 ,,,._ 271 34 ... l 21 302
ar-n 106 14 )Cl ' 17 283
DeClnces 'CIS St 111 13 SS 274
LYM 3'2 S6 t7 14 47 2"
Scon1en t3 I I 24 3 12 251
N1rron 101 I 26 3 10 2S7
Downing 37S 4S 9S 16 63 2S3
Wiifong m 21 S7 l n 2SO Ile. JKklon 3'5 49 U 19 60 24 I
F'9111' 336 S2 79 1 28 23S
Grich 230 ll SO 9 28 217
Pl«lolo 111 14 23 I 9 207
Boone 327 2• 65 2 2• 199 SChofleld 271 JO SS l 16 19' Ito. Jackson ti s IS O s 165
,_,.., lt10 tf1 tll IOS 4.st .2SO
f'ITCHING
Ill' H Bil SO W·L ERA
Coroetl S5'l<'> so 19 33 l · I I 93
Forsch 16") 14 3 10 I I 2 20
Ae.. IS > 14 6 II 1· 1 2 3S
S.nc1111 62 60 26 44 t ·S 247
Zllln 15S' J lS2 39 •s 10·9 l 13
Romen•CI• 113 179 S2 67 10· 10 l $4
Wiii 173' ~ 161 64 143 11·9 363
JoM lSS 113 42 JI 7-t 4 01
I( lion 21t) 28 10 JS 2· I 4 OI
Keufmen •~> 41 ,. i'I 1·2 •SJ
Siiton 102L"> 132 lS 33 •·S S.JS
CUf"li• I 14 J • O· o S 6l
l.aCofle 2~ lO 12 ll 1·2 6 7S
Sw•n s I o 2 o 1 10 to
Olhln • II 16 9 S 0-I 9 00
Tl'hlls 1044 lotf ll4 Sii Sf-SJ lM
Seves !.enchei 10, Corbot'll 4 A•~ 7 Klson 2 K1ufm1n 1
I
MAJOA LEAGUE LEADERS
~nL .. gue
IATTING 1285 II behl WonfoelCI New
YO<I<, 3'1, Melltll!llY, New York. 341,
HrDe1', Minnesote, 321. E•sllf. 8ost0n,
llS, EMurr1.,, 811!1,,_e, 314
ltUNS OwEvens. Bolton, 91. Buller,
C1tvet1nd, 76, ltHand«M>n, Oeklend. 1',
Winfield. New Yor11, 7'. Armes. Boston. 7~
llBI Kl119man, Oakland. 9S. ADl 'WIS,
s..1111, 92, EMurrev, 81111,,_e, 16, Rice,
lotton, ... Armes. 8o•ton. IS
HITS Rloltan, llelfl,,_e, 144, Mllllll!llV,
New York, 143, Ee.W, 8<>1ton, U2, Ger·
era, Toronto. 140, Winfield, Naw 't'orll, 1'CI
DOVIL.E S LAP1rrlah, T11t11. 32,
DwEvalis;Toslari. "D; O.rcfe, Toronto. ?I.
, ... , Te1e11: 27, Cow""· s..1111, 11.
Melllntlv, Ntw York. 27, ltloken, I•'"
more, f7 TRIPLES Motae>Y, Toromo, I), Colllna,
TOfOl\IO, "· UoM\1w. TorOfllO, ,, KGlhon,
Detroo, I. Owtll. S..11 , a HOME RUNS Armas, 8cnton, n, Klno·
man, O.•lalld 2', L.NP9rrll"· De1r0tl, U, ~'1tr't. o.tltenCI. is. Triornron, c ....... nd,
H
STOLEN IASES RHtftden.on, Ot nd,
Q , , ........ 41 Cd!JM, TOfOfltO, )9,
l\lller. ~~. J7, G•f'C•• Toromo, l4
PITCHING C 10 loltl• OM1 0.-
trotl, 10-0. 2'7, I, Torllft•o, 12•2. J 11,
St eo, TorOl\to, 11 • 7 49, Petrv. DelrOil,
14·5 30f. l lyfr.en, Ci.vatanc1 12•S J H.
GO."lt ltUttnere, 11·5 l •S STRIKEOUTS Wlft, ,.,_., IU,
LalltllM, SoNt , Ill, $tle0. TWOlllO, IU ,
HtWI\, T t I tn, GvfdrY, NIJ'W 'f Of11, 11•
SAVES O\il~rv. II.•""• C.llv, JO,
Ceudll! Oe\land 77, ~i. DtlrOit,
JS. ~' MllweiA•, n, ltOe .. s M!Me•
.011, n
XXlll OL YMPIAO
Medal• totat
Tiie 111111 med.Ila 101115 11 Ille lfM
Su"""* Olvmolcs with counlrv, GOid, 1llvtr, bronta Ind 10111 ~I• won
0.... Sllvtt 8reiu1 Tlltal
Unllad Stein ll 61 30 '74
Wttt Ge,-mnv l1 lt 2J st
ROtNnll 20 1' 17 $)
C..nedl 10 ,, 16 ..
Gru t Brlleln 5 10 n 31
Chine IS I 9 32
llalv t• • 12 32 J1C1111 10 e 1' J1
Frlftee S 1 IS 'l1
Aintrelle 4 a 12 24
Soutl\ Koru 6 6 1 It
$W«Sen 2 11 ' " YUOOlllvle 1 4 1 11
Nell'ler1ancl• S 2 6 13
Flnllnd 4 l ' 13 Hew Z.eiano I 1 'l 11
Brull 1 S 2 I
S#lt1er1ano o • • 1
Meiclco 2 3 1 '
DeNnerll O l l ' 6
SOlln I 'l 2 S
9elglum • I 1 2 4
Aus Irle 1 1 1 l
Ponuoei 1 0 2 l JamelGI• O I i 'I
Norw av 0 I 2 l
Turllev O 0 • 3 ' VeneiueWI O O 3 3
Monxco 2 O O 2
Kann 1 o I 2
Greece O I I 2
NIQef"le 0 l I 2
Pueno IUco 0 1 I 'l
Allltrle 0 0 'l 2
Pekfalen 1 O o 1
COlombll 0 I 0 I
Egypt O l O 1
lrellnd 0 I O_+.-
l'Wory Cotti 0 I 0 1
Pwu 0 I 0 I
Svrle 0 I O I
Thellilno 0 I O 1
CamercOf\ o o 1 1
Dom. Rl.OIJblc 0 o 1 1
IC-.nd 0 0 I I
Teiw111 0 0 I I
Zombie 0 0 I I
Lfl Ai.mftos
MONDAY'S ltllSULTS ''°"' .. tl·nlltlf 41111r1artlww mtetln91 FIRST RACI. J50 v1rda
Remblln Jet (Frvdlvl 3 60 3 00 2 .o
Miio Oandn &uo !Mvte•l 11 IO • 40 OldlV Oufttlon ICrnaerl 310
Also rKad: ldllbon Two, Tu118do Lover,
ROOln Smith, lmPtrlll Son, Moon Lark Jet
Time: 11.00. n llXACTA (2·5) oeld S132 IO
SllCOfllD RAC•. :150 vard1.
Gklolo ~ (H Gerc11 1 lf .0 S IO 3 60
Rambling Sell (CruoerJ 3 20 2 IO
Law Lord (81rd) 3 llO
Aho rec:ed Showelntanuf, BU"fln M¥·
rldoc, 9oone Ctierae. Trlooll Foll
Time 17.17
TI41RD RACE. 350 Ylrdl
Molsllff RldWtl (Tr11) 25 20 I 40 6 60
Wont Oillv 0d¥ fl.ewli ) • 10 3'0
Doc Done Won (Hert> • oo
Also rle9d Commemerv. El S.oo Moro .
Minks C.llolce, A Zuramtllc, I Heve II,
Wetdl N Time, Fl'fttlO Iler Bo
Tlm1 1102 •
F'ouaTH RACE. 170 verda Redneck 8rotl\lr (Hrmn) 7 00 3 40 3 20
EHY A•• f P .. anton) 3.60 2 IO Sier lnvatment IP1u1tnel 'l IO
AIM> ,.ead Notlte HI, ClllcaOo EXO"ttS,
THH Gentlemen, Blue Pool. Fllmlna Ce!
Tlm1· •S9t
SJ EXACTA 16 SI Dl•d UI to
FIFTH RACE. 400 verat.
Moon Neoflew ICerdotal 700 490 JIO
NICe N Tidy (CreaQef") 6 00 l 60
Merk Ott Fevorita (BrOOksl 4.60
Also rec:ed 8erlimlll lllbl, O,-eam
Bunny, Two In Tiie T"*· KIH JGM An
Go, Kite M.oon M111. Pluder's Gel, Smo«1n
Print
Time: 20 ...
~ EXACTA IS·l) oeld UOfO.
SIXTit llACE. 350 verds
Ask Dolly (Mltchelll • oo 4 40 7 60
Mittie Ml1d IC1•do11l • 20 J~
Moltltr Suor-ame CH Gercl•J 3 40
Atto rec:ed WMsricll. Ftv LkkldY SDlll,
Conlaue Coov Comeh llrMie, Confe11
Time 1111
SEVENTH fltACE. 3SO verds
Eesv MIMUVI!" fl eekeY) s 40 3 40 2 40
Eesv Jue11 !Gill) '00 6 40
lltVOM Hope (Paullnel •IO
Allo recad Mr Mltrv Chick, Euv Lem,
Val Lou, Hennl Pin. Sw1ftello ... r The
Coach. e1111er Bluel
Time 11 n
SJ llXACTA 4 II INld Siii 20
EIGHTH RACE 350 v1,-lfi
Hemoeesv Go1'1 (Hert) • 40 2 •O 2 10
DH· T onv Jue111 ( L.lKka" I 2 10 1 10
DH·PeMmOlllfl eunn, (A4elf') 2 10 2 10
DH-Oeadllllt for .econct
Alto reced Cl\._, E•M On Down,
Oesllln llle1e
Time 11 10
Sl IXACTA 12 ·4) n id '"'·" IXAC· TA 12·4) Hod S7 IO
t2 f'lCK MX 1e·6+S·4•2) Ol•d lt,'31 .0
wltll six wlnnlne tld<a" ("• llOt ... ) t2
Piek SI• contolltlofl Plld '111 00 with 2" wlnnlno lldllll (llva llorws)
HINTH ltACE. 400 Ytrd• Docs Traet (Zufelt> 160 uo 3 .a ,.,., Bold Merli (Slvllte) '2t uo
Game Doll (Fr'fdeY) 3 00
Atto rKecS· Ovno Doe. Lonoorla, I.OM
Siem G1111, Ml ltMllMI, But Cel*. llt .. 4
EHY Rllllel TlfM 10.0)
TINTH RAC•. PO n rd• KOol Hell.,. (Creeaer> 1020 uo •.O
Sudden CINf CL.ackevl t40 1 ao
The ltlnt L..w (H Gerele) 4.0
AllO rec.cti Ctllcka GrNll'tl, Trtvt4 Ofl
'"'· Fie• Kint, Uno fltv1nt W . Time '6t:J
12 IJU.CTA IS·1l Mid ltll..O, ).tteflde llCe 6.M)
Ott tMr
MOffAY'I USULn et• flf U •daY .......... INltl!tel ,IUT uca. 1 turtonos
A-s IMIUll 12 IO I 01 • ..
WllaclOft 11.orOYt I lHO 7 tO lul YM Hotlor (MtCdrrClflJ 4 2t
A1aO r1<.ed WMICNllO, .._OP\' H •
WlllGt4 Inca lll*ato. ColorfUI CllUICler,
Mr • Eu ttd Tuoor
Time I U llS
HCONO RM:l
0
I I/ M ~
fM"'"81 UffUtt Our ~" (/'HUI 77 • t IO
I ATTING 1115 fl sJ GwylWI, San D•Y ef R1 • 100-~et•tl '
, 361, iV. II , J2), atld· l'lene ,:H t lS I ~ ....... -... eniu ... .Jlt '""· Hovtton, it;--Also t . c G• •• TheWillif ...
l .
''· Hot Guatd, Gcl;DOdl'I\. Ge M Fr dOM, !!Odom It er rt 'f fAS.. 1 OAtLV ooune c:·n ,.,,
U CO SO&.A TIOH DOUI I (H I
' TH 0 RACll. 1 tunom»
Ovma!ld .:lour!MY ll1Y) It 00 4
V mo (Ptclro111 UO
N r All lOti.ttl
Aho raced: Sir Meek.
Grenlt• Mount1ll!, t;llOlllltl Jtfry, L.lotlt ,..,..,,.,
Time 1 » )11.
U l.XACTA ($·2) Nkl
"°4MTH RAU. • ~-•
Wtnnint Golct IMCC.tnlll) HO ' 20 2 to Zoom AIOne IFM"Nnclea> f .0 HO
l.HV lt1410t tLOIOYll 'to
AttO roted M1' Lltntnlne 10111 Jut I tor llUe. l!tepnt Jade, S.n<h''t Trio, s1u1w ne
SQrf, la1t111r~. ~ler'• GOid, Park tndv. Tetlee
Time 1;12 1/$
Pl1'TH llAC&. • 1ur1on1u
Cecile ll"1n<;evl 17 40 1.0 •to Mbs Deborah (OllV1,...I I) to s .O I °"P UI flsl\lftt
NIW..OllT &.ANOCNO (flltWMrt flair An111 IVallnlutlll > 40
Alto tee.cl Ned Cornn Love, 0040ln Ban._, TvrOMMlf, Joni U lat, AMll!l\1 ,
ChOrtlta Qulef!, ltalM n Stev. Sl'lot o' Luck Time 111
.S aXACTA IHI H •d _...00
MXTH llAClli. I 1116 mllft
P..-~Ide IVll9n1yej1) 1660 l .lO S 'Cl
&rOOklnea IL1me""I 100 0 0
Lord GOiOeft l OttQedlllO I 6 40
A•to ,-ec.o· vi. veneto, Orvflln·1 Nitnt.
C..!!Mtv, HaNJvmen. Chlo S.v«, C1fl't
lllt Clle~. Pttn« llooett, $!r He(IUe Tlm1 1 '5 .,S ,
saVllNTI4 ••ct. One mile on •urf
TH Tl$!« IMc<:erro11). u o H O 220
Ster Metetlal (Delenouuevwl 7 IO uo
Ame11ne s-1 tMeial 2 to
AllO rec:e<I Tiki I ltaat, SIV lloQb«v,
Muell Fina Gold. •
Time 1:36 2/S
SS llXACTA 12·•1 n ld 126 50.
U l"ICK stX 17·S~6•1·3·2l oeld S7,1JUO
with 20 wlnntne t1ci.e11 ((Iva 11ooe1)
C1rrvo11er POOi~ SS., 767 91
••GHTH lltACE •• .,,, furlonila
Pt .. aure C•v (Pinc.IV) 100 'IO l 20
4' Bero LAu (McClrro"> 3.20 3 oo
Cantevos lsnoem.ker) l 60
Ala.o rec.cl: Lovller Linde, NeUOhly
Midi, So Moclht, Rele 81be hbv
Timi 1;16.
U IXACTA 1>·41 oeld '5050
NtfllTH llACa. 1 1116 mllft
Nuciftr (Plnc:ey) 3.60 'l IO 'l 'lO
Fllat Paul AlltlOll !McC..,ron) • 00 2 60
Pr-ec»rltlt lL!pt\em) 3 00
U llXACTA (7;) INld '35.SO
Allefldanc.: 14, 1• Timi l ,4? 3/S.
NFL PRESl:ASON
Browns 21; R•m• 10
sc.r..w~-C.ltvelend 0 1 l• C>-21
Los Anaet.I 10 0 0 C>-10
'1r1tOU1'19r .
LA-Crutchf~ 2 run (Lan1lord kick),
)Q
L,t.-FG Lansfol'd 27. ,..56 s.c;..,. ou.mr
Ctev-Walker 1t oou from McOoneld
lll•hr kictt). S:lt
Tlllrtl Quar11r
Clav-flllWIOtM ) PIH from McOoneld
1e111r klCk), 4:1•
CleY-Holl I"" from McOonlld (lalll' klekl • ._,,
A-41,1'2
TeAM STATISTICS
Ort LA
First doWns 17 16
RldlleS·vtrO. 33·9t 27· 11•
Paulng Ytrds n7 200
lteturn verdi 13 10
Peua 11·27· I 17-ll· 1
Seda Bv 0-0 S·.O
Punts 7·'3 6·3t FumO•eHost 2· 1 1-1 ,,_ ...... .,.,.d, t-50 J-20
Timi of Pou.anion 32"2• l7J6 IMDCVlOUAL STATtSTICI
ltUSHI~. Graen 13·4'. Pruitt 10·2S. McOot\lld :H• Hlr'rll>Gton rll, I
Devi• 1·4 Los AtlMIH, Reddin 10•101,
Crulelllietd t ·'3, A..J Jones 6· 1',
CPirtateMetl l·f , tCwno 1-s PASSIN~tevellnd. McOOl'llld
IS-22-1-245, Fllck l+o-n Lot Anollllff.
Farreaamo •· 13-0·47, Kll"Nl 7· 13·0-'3, Chrl1lana.n ._ 12· 1·90
ltECEIVIN~ .... alend, N-IOl"lle
S-fl, Welker S·"4,'Feldlar 2·3', Holl 2·2', Brennen 2'l7,-'iua4. l·S, SlrKM i..s. ~
Anae••· G,...111 S-'1, Gumen 3-75, f'telers
3·23, Or. HIH 1·2S. 01 Hiii 2·24, Kamen•
1·9, Ellerd 1-t, G. Jonu l·S.
MISSED flELO GOAL-Loa Anoalh,
Lensford 2S
NFL PN&MMn
NATIONAL. CONf'EltENCI
W11t w L T ht. ,., ,..
New Or'leln1 2 0 0 1000 6S
Sen Ft111GIK O 1 1 0 .500 33 ...,,,, 0 2 0 000 20 Atlante 0 2 0 000 f7
Centr.i
Tempe Bev 2 1 0 -'61 Sl
Chlc:a9o I 1 0 500 'lO
OetrOll I 1 0 soo .,
Gr...,&ey 1 1 0 soo 34
M•"'*Oll 1 1 0 .lOO 44
last
Dene a 2 0 0 1000 SS
SI Louil 2 0 0 '000 33 NYGflnls ) 1 0 • JOO .. WeshlnQIOl'I I 1 0 SCIO l6
Pll'lldelOflia 0 2 0 000 '1
AMlillJCAN CONFEltllNCll
West
S..11 .. 3 0 0 I 000 13
oenver I 1 0 500 34 ••Iden 1 I 0 SCIO 31
Sen Oleao 1 1 0 SCIO JO
Kanwa City 0 2 0 000 JO
Clmt-11
PlllM>urgl\ 2 0 0 I 000 Sl
ClllGIMlll 1 1 0 500 34
Hoo1ton 1 I 0 .soo S3
Cleveland 1 I 0 SCIO JS East
Mf1ml , 0 0 1000 S3
8uffelo 1 I 0 soo 2' lndfeneOOllS 1 1 0 500 ,.
New Enoiend ~ 'l 0 000 33
NY Jet1 0 2 0 000 32
MIMllY's ken Ctevlllnd 2\, ltlltnl 10
T1wndtV's Gll'M
Plll•burllf'I •I O•llls ""*V'• GWntt New E"Gllnd ., Weall•llGIOf\
SI. LOY•l e l S..llte
"91Urdn"• ~
GrMn Bev et lttm1
ClllCtMlll el Clllcloo
Oev•lld .. x.n..1 cu ..
tndllnaPOI•• 11 o.nver
o.tt'Otl I I Buffelo
H9w Or1Mn1 et Hou11on
New Yorll Jets al N-Y«k Gt.nla ~· •• Minnesota San f"renosco 11 Sin DieOo
Temoe hv at Atlante
141M111"• Gll'M
Mlll!'ll •• "'*"
Min's,.,...,.,.,,, C11t 'r.,_.., ,.,,.., ....... ,......
'1 )1
21
" " u ., .,
»
JO
20
4' 34
37
21
3'
33
34 ..
31
21 ,,
" 10
20 ..
71
S7
S11fe11 SimOnswi <Swao.nl 41t't Tim
Mlvotte IU S ), 7•6, 7•6, Aftdy KeNIMtt
IU.$, 4lf St~ne lol'lnMl.I CCenadll.
l ... • 4, .... i-a1 c..111 (U s I 4lf Hetem
Meo.di rcaneo.1 ..... •·•. M1111 Ect· mondton IAu&trella ) def. Marti"
W..1.nriolrnl I~). 6•4, •·3" Joalllm HnfTOl'rl ('$-.dtftl Cllf ~tnl CO!IMI !C111•
), 6'• ..-i, ll•v1n Curr CSoulft AtrlUI
Min 00"'9 tU.S:J, .. ,, H ,_,_,,, ...,...,,.,.,
(llt Gtwl Cft, ON91 , ..... _. .....
'« CU.SJ 4llel Miiia lal*
CU.$.l, ....... ~ °""' 1U S I t.f Jltrl °""""' (U.S ), 7•S ... l . Y AIM'lel Cmcn.) .r lt!AMI $1rr1o1on I New Zea !'411,
6'l, ..:, #Hrlf!IMft IOtntnifkl dtf
Jett K CU.SJ, 1-.. 6-J Cillo H
(1J;SJ nt tlandle N Oii (U.S.,!, 7 •'41
W'""'9's tlurNtnMnt
'" MMwatl, .U.J ,Jnt .......... ~~-lenllmlll IUS J dff VltO
)
~) -111 ·~ 3'7 IK!rtllo, '1 vellowtell, '1 ca co ben, 1' Hiid beu, 460
m.od.«tl
DANA W"Aa' -2lt •~• 2'> ba&a, 114 llllOnllO, 1 hlUbut, 50 ~•ta•, l Tedi
11111, 2'2 machr•, 6 ~ l ~In
~Y'• tr•Mlctloftl
IASllAL.L
AIMf'lcan Laeeue
ANGELS-Pieced Rod Ctraw, firit
1>1semen, on 1111 IS·dav d•itbled llst
rllroaCtlv• 10 AUG 9. PurcllHed Ille
conlreCI of Otrrtll Miiler. GllChlr·oul·
fleldtr, lrom ~dmonron of 1111 P1eH1c C011t LMOUI .
NEW VORK YANKEES-Acoutrtd
Kevin Hlcll•V Ind Oouo Dr•btll. Otlchefi,
lrom Ille Chle•oo Whitt SOll 10 COfl'llllfl• an
H fli.< trldl wl\ICll atnl Rov Smlllev 10
ClllGlllO '
N1tleftll L.11.u.
OOOGERS-PlaQO 1 111 Ru1M11, lnfleldtf
on 1111 IS·dev dl11bled 1111 and 8ob aenor.
lnfleldef, on 1111 2l·d1v dt.abltd "'' It~ Gllle<I Certot Diez, ollchlr. from Albu·
ou«o111 of tile Paclflc Cout LMOue.
CINCINNA Tl REOS.-Catltd uo Ron
Rot>IMOn, oltdl«. from Wichita of Hie
Amerleln ,t.uocletion..
IASKlr'TaALL
N•1'9nal .. Ur .... ~ CLIVEl.AND CAVALIER~llMMd
Tony Guv, D•rr .. SMce end Elliott &eard.
Dutrds
INOIANA PACEltS>-<ul Jorn Mall«
elld Tico er-own, GUUdl, Ernttl Grelllm,
Tom Helli, and Gerv Carv« lorwerdl,
and•&rla'I MantnJ ctnl«
,OOTIALL.
....._~,, =.!.
NFL-Ham9d Mel Blot.Inf dlr-tdor of
OilYlf' relallonl
ATL.ANTA FALCOHs-Tradld John
Herper, •nabldtar, to 1111 SI Lou••
Ctrdlnala IOI' an l.HldlKIGMd d,.ft C'llolce. Waived O«rlcll franldln, Oonlld TllOme,,
end Ctvda ltlotlM, ctet.nslva bldtt, ancl
Jeff Haun. tlttll and
BUFFALO llLLS.-Welvtd J1m11 Oun·
c:en, Bruce McGee, Merk SflwSOl'I, Keith WlMllmi, Ind Owlgllt Wrlgllt, wldl ra·
atlvtrs, Scott Hu1cnln10n, noM Guard, l.Mrv Wl\tle, defan•lva Ind, Morty Berrell,
QYlrterbaclt, Alfred Mofllmmed, Offtn$1.,,.
IKkte, D•rrlll P•ll«IOn, lllMOeeker. and C1tvln Whtlfleld, cornwt>eck
CINCINNATI llENG,t.LS-Walved
Aaron JtcklOn Ind Merhn E'WaM,
ltnetlldl«•. Stec>llln Benton end Jonn Rico.
wide recefvar1, Benn MulGt1ve tedlle,
Ind Larry AteKltldar. oetamiva lldlte
DALLAS COW&OYS.-Walved Paul~
dr,. end JOflnnle s.11ws. runnlnQ bec:ka,
Robert Durti.m •nd Jeff Mettar,
llneblck1t1. Wandel Gieoem. klcket,
Oen"' Hunllr end ltodllev Mo«•. de·
lllll•YI beckl, Kun K11><lctlk• Ind Nell
Mal.>M, 9"1rdl, 1111 ~. ~.
1.0.i.. Peul PlllrMtl, _,,~ elld
Michie! ThomPtOn, wide racetvw. PIKld John FIUoetrlcll, center. ..._,, Matoft,
selatv, Owarnt Meuev, teckte and PIUI OltOl'I, ouerd. on 1"9 tnlured rnerva lost.
DENVER BRONCOS-Traded !kl.on
MlttO< ~Iva encl, 10 Iha Temoe Bev
IUCC•'*" for •n Und<adOMd drift Pl(:ll.
Welvad Cllerl9l G1lna1 •noel Rick Naylor,
lltlebec:ker1, Jon Poote, kicker, Ernie
C1r1wa11 and J~ Tevtor. ut.lfff, Ptlll
Sullon, COfMI"~. Guy Tllunton,~,
end llerrv YOl.lnG, running l>ecll. PIKtd Joe
A1111llar, dafanllva tedtlt, Bobl>V Mlcho •net
EHon 1tamM>11, tlohl tndl, Jim Jovce,
defensive and. end Trant Collin,, cor·
nertllc:k, on 1111 lnlurad rn«ve lltt.
OETltOfT LIONS-Wotvecs Kan 81nk5 •nd Wiibur Orr, llneoedten, 0-llllH
~lll'litle, GUiid. Mltle Wtlillnt, cleftntlve
O.Ck, and Aml\OnV Reed, f~ INDIANAPOLIS COL Ts-Alced Oulna
G•llowav •nd Gree Lont. dafeflslva becka,
•nd Ill Stallflenot, off9Mlve 9Ulfd, on Ille
lnlured rnerve Hsi, Waived Kl'\'ln Ramwv,
Howerd L.-1•, Herold WOOd$ and Rlcherd
Oukft, ~llve beclli, Man/In Oumu
and Petr~ Snow, wide r9Clllven, IOI>
Fa.tcb, llGhl end, Derek Kelv, Mike YICUllo
and L.Mrv Warh, IMMckera, ltoberl
Poln, det.mlva 1.0.19, and °"'1el
Thomes, runnlntl Daca. .
KANS,t.$ CITV CHIEF~ Rev
YakeVOftlt, ~Ive and, Scott El1et.
centw, Owevne JohnM>n and lllndv YOUll,
wldl rec.Iver•, Otto K9'1Y lrfd loobv
Jollll.on, r unnlno bactl s, knller Montoula,
llnetledlar, •nd tn11 Purl, deflnllve badl.
on the 11\iured rff#Va llst Waived Elfis
Gtrclnef, ott.tislve llnamen, Tom Grooen. -rterbedl, DW•vne Olicon, wide ra-
cel11w , Wes Howll, 119ht encl, Jim K1tef11, llneblcker end OHll Wetan, uni«.
NEW YORK JETS-Waived &rten
' O'NalM, RoOe<I La11\1rt Ind Mike ~Ill,
11f111t1, Joe PIPKVn•kl, canter, Jotln ICanl,
;uerd, Tom 8ertoldl, ouert~. Merk
Jenn, PU11ter. •nd Ruu Caroen11er1. 111c1111.
PITTSIURGH STEELt;RS-W1lv1d
Cr•111 O\mlwov. lloht Ind. Merk Mllltetto,
wide rac:alvw, Georoe Atlveh Ind lret
Schuoert•. def9f11lve ends, Keith Cethton,
runn1119 back, and Lance Plckena, cor•
narbeck
SAN DIEGO CHARGEllS-PllGe<I
8obbv Crelfll\ffd, rUMtno beck, •nd R•v
Woodlrd, clefen1lve and, Ofl the 11\lured
rewv1 llat. Waived Gwrv Oldlan1, de·
fanslll• back, Joe Coooer, kic:ktf', Han<v
Wllll1m1, CCN'na<beck, Vine. Mltstll•. 119hl
and, Oarrvt Wone. ouarlarblclt, Ervltl
Peril«, ltnablCMr, •nd er-ow111on l.Ant •nd TOlf\t Bellar, widl rac .. vtu
SAN FRANCISCO «RS-Slenect Joe
Monl•n•. Guarta<bedt, 10 • ll•·VMr con·
trect Plec9d Guv 8ellllmon, OUlrlarllKk,
Tim Coo tr, dff9n1lve beck, Mark Bonnet.
offena•ve namen. 01nt1v Fulton, wide
receiver, Ind Mlurlet Porl«, *'-iv• linemen. on the lnlurld ,......,. lbt. ~
Jff11 Slpolu, Ql.llrd, ef\d Jom Honv,
dettnM .. • "'*"'"· on ,.,. onnlc:allv unebla 'O MrtOl'm hi. We eel P11A lelluomlnl,
canter, RUidV ca" ... '*· ouenerbacll. Oerlua Durlllm Ind Devi Morll1, woda recel~s. Jon Hwvev Ind Miiie w .. 1. 11th! encn. •1.t•IV Kel'raktr, ttunttr, flton Kiiien
enc1 er.nr Muroflv. no11 1ac:11111, Lee
M · , cornerbert, •on Molten, t1U1rd,
lttffl• Yount, runnlno beck. and .>oeouln
ltnOltls, kli:ller.
TAMPA IAY 8UCCAN&l!1tS-Wa1ved Jonn Courtney. llOM ledlle, Ind Wlddefl
l(dy, runntne blc:k. ~ Ancira TYlar. Wide r~,,.,, an lhl lnlur9CI ,.....,.,, tlat.
WASHINOTON REOSKINS-Wal11ed
Curlllnd Thomla, Wida r.cef.,.,, CltMll
lnino!Ot9, ''-"' tn4, JamH ttatterson, Rfan•lvt tackle. H_.y McClovn, CM·
nerMdl, JofWI Mick, PUnler, •nd "1111
IUPMI, kld!tr. f'laeN ,_OY SllTWTIOM, ~11¥e an.man, fltoctn.v Geof6y, wide
f~~' Dot.18 HerfMM, dtfel!MVI Ind, 1111 G.teld liifil • llMbed« Oii ,.,. ll!lur'M
l'WlolNe 1111 ""<:90 Hie~ CMeautlll , ~
.. ' Oft !Tie ,.,.,,,, aid not report "''
tff)C:U'f .......,HeanU...
CHICAGO 61..ACK l'IAW "J-H*"*' ......... MtMt-<Md\
to<caflt
Mitter ....... lecc• U.91111 \.AS V GAS I.Al R Gett WlecttB~. a.twnotr .... ·~ CONreu
--- ----- - --
I
-
1
1 BoA 11~c
------ --
Gold medalist
to sail for NHYC
.87 ALMON LOC ABEY
0..,"'4 ........ W'*t
Win or lose (there are Jdom draws
in yj cht ncanf) Newpon Harbor
Yacht Oub's 2-metcr Eaalc will
have an Olympic &Old medalist in the
coekpit when the America's .Cup
trials get under way in 1987.
NHYCs EWe Syndit-atc has an·
nounced that R"od Davi • JOld medal
crewman for Olympic Sohn& skipper
Robbie H&Jncs. has been 't'lectcd a
the skipper for NHYCs bid to bnna
the Amcnca' Cop back to the U S.
from AU1tralin in 1987.
Bill Crispin. ·project manager for
the ugle Syndicate. said the dcci5ion
to recruit Davis was made at an Au1-
I board mcctina but was not an-
nounced earlier for fear of putting
pressure on Haines and his crew in
the Olympic Yachting Games.
Davis, a sail maker with North Sails
El Squndo loft, was the 1981 winner
of theConJteSs1onal Cup at Lona
Beach and has been involved in three
Amenca's Cup campaigns.
Davis was a crewman aboard
Enterprise ln the 1977 Cup campaign,
was an advisor and coach of the
Australian effon in 1980, and was a
crewman in the unsuooessf ul [)e.
fendcr-Couraacous Cup campaisn in
1983
Davis, 29,and hiswiferesideinSan
Diego. Durina the past four yean be
bas been seriously involved with
Hames and his other crewman Ed
Trevelyan to win the Olympics jn the
Sohn,1Cla . • Cn1pin did Davia w\JI conhnue at
North ~ails until nc)t summer when
he will leave to select 1 crew and aian
uiling tbc 12·metet Mask unt1l the
new yacht hu been built. Dav11 wdl
be aiven full rnponsibility for aclect-
ina his crew for the America's Cup
bid. The Eagle Syndicate is headed by
Oto11c looby of Ncwpon Beach.
Fnnk. Mallory is iencral counsel and
Bill Ficker, winner of the t 970
Amenca·seuP., isadvisorycbairman.
Johan Valentun has been selected as
lhe dcsiancr of the n~ 12-meter
which will probably be built in
Newport. R.J in t'arly 198, •..
Cnapin said the Eaale Synd1 te's
S6 million budget forthecampaian 11
already about 2' percent funded. The
budiet · includes the des1anmg and
b1.t1ldm& of ·the new 12-metcr plus
travel expenses for the crew and other
incidentals.
The syndicate has already
purchased the Valentijo..desianCd 12-
mcter Magic whichwas rejected by
Dennis Conner e.arly in the 1983
campaign. Magic will be used u a
practice vessel and trial bone for the
new Eagle, Crispin said.
Cri pin said be and other member
of the syndicate b.ave made 1everal
trips to Perth, Australia to annqe for
such thinJS as crew h.ouain~ a sail loft
and dockina, Doclcina facilities have
been arranged for at the Freemantle
Saling Oub, Suoccss Harbor in Free-
mantle. .
News of the selection of Davis as
skipper follows other America'' Cup
developmeni. includio& the decision
of John Bertrand of Anaheim Hilla to
join skip~ John Kolius as crewman
aboard lhe New York Yacht Club's
Cup contender.
"-Stokes . cajJtf1res--
Laser class.event
Jay S&okes of Balboa Yacht Club
captured the Laser Class Western
Regional Championship an a seven-
racc regatta sailed in the ocean off
Newport Beach Saturday and Sun-
day. The event was hosted by New-
port Harbor Yacht Club.
Stokes posted a low score of 18
points m defeating 18 sailors from
throughout Sou&hem C~lifomii who
turned out for the replta.
Trophy for the fim a.irt to finish
went to Chri )' Gillette of Lido Isle
Yacht Club w11h 75 point!. .
Top five trophy winners: l . Jay
Stokes, BYC. 18 points; 2. John
Pem1d.. Bah1a Corinthian Yacht
Cl ub, 2611., 3. Michael Marangola,
Cahfom1a YC. 38: 4. Bruce Cooper,
Transat
race lures
area sailors
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dellr .......... Wftlllr
Two local crewmen wdl be aboard
the 65-foot catamaran Double Bullet
when the Transat race from Quebec
City. Canada to SL Malo, France gel!
under way Sunday.
Double Bullet. owned by Bob
Hanel ofCabnllo Beach Yach& Club.
1s considered the fastest mutlt1hull
sailing yacht in the world and will be
favored to win the race 1f she holds
together.
On board as nav1gator will be John
Conser of Newport Beach. Crewmen
will include Bob Baker. Costa Mesa. and Eric Whille, Capistrano Bay.
Other crewmen will be Randy
Bishop, D<t\Wfley, and Cree Partridge,
San Mateo.
Double Bullet is the holder of the
elapsed time record of7 days, 7 hours
and 30 minute in the 1983 Los
Anieles· to Honolulu MuluhuJI
Tronspac. She also set an elapsed tjme
record of 10 hours Dnd 30 mmutcs in
the 1983 Nc\W]>Ort to Enaenada race.
A total ofS275,000 in purses arc at
stake in the upcomina Transat race.
Hanel and his crew on Double Bullet
wilt be aimina for the prize of
SI 00,000 for the first boat to fini h.
There are also prizes of $20,000 for
the fint l>Oat around desianated
mar1cs of the course.
Hanel' crew took Double Bwlet
throU&h the Panama Canal and on
around to Quebec following the 1984
Ensenada race in which he was fint
to finish but 5hon of her own record.
cipis&rano ~y YC. 49; Steve Dodd,
Capo BYC, 50¥4.
MORC ..Uora tuntoa ap
Midget Ocean Racing Cass sailors
in Southern California are tunina up
for the 'Vest Coast MORC Cham-
pionship at Coronado Y-cbt Oub,
San Diego, Aug. 24-26.
Sponsored by MORC Station 76,
the six-race. ooe throwout sencs will
be sailed over modified Gold Cup
councs wh.icb would indicate smooth
water and consistent S.-15 knot
breezes.
A large contJngent 1s expected from
Southern Cabfomaa clubs. The rcpt·
ta willbe divided into two fleets with
the ratina split at 24.5 feet.
Five trophies Yiill be awardrid m
each class Wltn oiie perpetual trophy
going to the overall winner.
Racina will be under Catqory B
safety requirements and each yacht
must have a current MOR.C measu~
ment certificate. f.Quipment and
baUast inspections will be made.
Entry fee for the championshjp
rqatta is $35 for early rq.istrations
until today and $40 thereafter until
the mornina of the regatta.
Adamson wins
Dana Point race
Ban& Bang Ma.well, skippered by
Tom Adamson of the host club was
the Oass A winner Sunday in the fifth
race of Dana Pomt Yacht Oub's
Dana Point Series for Performance
Handicap Racing Aeet yachts.
Oass B winner was Redline, wlcd
by Fred Pertt. CapiStrano Bay Yacht
Oub1 and the Oass C winner was
Ecstacy, with Al Johnson ofDPYCat
the helm.
Winner in the Catati.na-27 OaJS
was Condor. sk.ippertd by Willy
Luzio, OPYC.
Swnmary of results:
CLASS A -r. Bana Bans Bana
Maxwell, Tom Adamson, DPYC; 2
Tinder Box, Bob Burkhardt, DPYC;
3 Jataperut, Mike Bentley. DPYC. C~ B-I . Redline, F~ Perez,
CaptJtrano Bay YC~ 2. Tsunami.
Doua Danielson. DPYC; 3. White
Winp. Bill Jones, DPYC
CLASS C -l. Entacy, Al John-son. DPYC; 2. No y No. Cbarlct Bcfii DPYC; 3. Oairc de Lune, Paul
Frauer, DPYC.
CATALINA 27 -I. Condor,
Willy Luz10, OPYC~ 2. Touch N Go,
Uoyd FonYtb. Ctpo 8YC; J. Day-
break, Bob Gates, C..po BYC.
Area softball team
seeks national title
t
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/642-5678
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DAILY
PILOT
-SERVICE
DIEC TORY
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at I re... 300t llelt WaatM SIM llelt.WutM · 1100 lelt Wu.--11• itlt W..... 0
111119.Watiil
FOUND: Rabbit, bm/wtlt, 1 llJllT mDfJL 6£NTAL RECEPTIONIST lneur11nee~WOt1l-No Hwpott awtt Lundt & Pllt1'9
Vic. ~ St. Mchft · -...... · ANO ASSISTANT UL fllllf (I /fl eellnQt $4 pltw/1:iom8 D111W ...,._ ,... 17.50 1o *" ,...,m --.-••• ~
Rd/Clay St. N.8 . w Med .__._1 ~ EJCperlenc• n.c:Htary. C t ti i(I 6*-T751~ relpOI,... tlllp. MLllt t9Q. CCWl). Al-. u rtllllliiiiiiiiiil~--,SYDIEY &42-3M6 ~ture :.;:;·with QM-LIQune H•na nc>-4275 on• rue on o ce .-wam be 11 °' owr. c.a o.,. dlu.na. h6Qh-ec:ltoot
FOUND emd Dog. bit ., .. offtce ... to type •no!ILIEPl9T ~ \::.. .,:. '46-7711 llm .r:::n Ol'ly. c.11 WPM.
0MARR w/brn mrklnga. Vic:. eccurat• i.n ... , .,,..., IPEUTll tor Woodrow Homea, 18 In=~°' Jr NOW TAKING APPL!· Hunt.., vteto ~-=
8Mctl & Slater, H.B. so-100 phof'9 can.. do wm train Full ume NMd •921 Btrct\ St, SUit• 110. -·Jr Pfwn onctor. CATIONS kw Newport --------
847-732• c:ua1omer tind .....,,...,.. • Salwy mr1age N_ewport BHch, CA ;·;puc:anti muat b• Ctl9dc ~ Store. PUT TIIE
-.-.... LOST white cat w/green malllz. run the C09*, g:' 4c:::2290 (a'..5 M.f) • ;~~3: Mnd reaume. energ~r=~ Must be bondeblie & wll-• Weclnesday, Augaatl5 --collar. In the vie of CdM etc. •.,.an engineer-hard tno-W wu a-::rr;:" -.rra llLD ~ (March 21-April 19): Do what you do best toda) -that nr Goldenrod & HatbOf ~.:man~tac~~= lllYD GOURMET FOODS accepted 115/M thru ~.1~..,.P¥ ~ Conaci.nt1oi1• P«•Oft
means take the lead! Focus on love, creattvity, onginahty. ab1Hty to View Dr. REWARD Salary WHR to start forN.BttoweraN>p Fuitor 110-$15/tv C.UAncty 111~18•. EllP«t.nced -•-,..,_, 10 ~ .....
pioneer a new project. Stress directness, mdependcncc and couiagc of &4-4-13se:752-Ma.. ,,..._ ca11 SMt Mon-'. PfT, 845-7845 iM-1339 fOf In~ ontf nc1 apply COntact RISll lmll "'°"'for~~
convictions. Leo, Aquarius persons figure prominently. Sm bk>ndelWht fem, poo. Frt 8amo-5pm ~OMP· MM ITllE OUU Growing flnandel ..w:. Bun Cam9t>.it. 1171 74· 3 _ 11·30pm Muntlft01on .Beed\.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20): You arc in excellent posltlon -~tr1mbtwnMr& SON FLOATATION INC. P/time. Varied hra, bct'I firm H•k• UC· Jemt>cneRd.N.B i~~Goodweft.. S..exper.pNl.c.ttor
means you have a choice and can choose quahty. Know it. be confident Bannmg 982-18 CAMPAHIOH ., .. M._7575. 12 to 2Pm retary/ofb ~ GIRL FRIDAY ~ the ng oondltlona. lmd ~
and act accordingly. Career gets boost, supenor says, "Okay, y~u·rc Pmtaab 301 2 LIW--ln tor wetl educated EUIMIO-IOIP/ll :::~~t~typlng & =·~:'·tome Com-el•oent .Hoepit.,, .......... ..,
going to get green hghtr• Cancer native plays ~ey role. . toPiii elderty couple. Prim•, on an •ttbllthed REGIS. c1er1ca1 llktti.. ahor1htind. 2025News>ort~: J:..0c!i~~111llllii~iiiii1i1ili1iiii GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You could win a populanty contest! F11rn.,.. pref Moesela and :;"~~ 6~~~81condd TEA auto route In Hunt. good telephone pr-.. ----------------11
Focus on hidden resources, sex appeal. heightened powers. of &cotta. (213) 886-t964 -• Bch, eo.t• Meaa & Npt enc:e, e.xcellent peopl9 111111 WlllD NunlnO PART-TIME. vlltecl howa
persuasion. You'll get invitation to travel, >:ou'U also have wtdcr Cerpent• & carpent•• Bet\.,... Muat be Oll9f *" ContactBatt>enor s.cllft Motel. 1881 So. 1911 co include ..-ty A..M. a dJence for~our "words and music "Sao1ttanan'l)lavs key role laaiam 0.f. 4.014 helper wanted. Mu.t do 18 'Yf. have r•ll•ble car, Patti tor Information c.t Hwy. Ua. 8ct\. Appy FfT PM & Night CHA ....unda. MuM ._ ~ u . · II>" ( • __ accunrt• wortt & haw tor more Into. call 478-282& In perllOft .. 4M-ell1 or WS*11iiooe aw 1· .,...--W.. (ilMI CANCE (June 21-July 22). Emphasis on ab1llt) to. co.nvincc I~ IOllLUll own toola M& ~ M&-5"429(7atn-11am) _ Cot'IV "-> ... b 111 tt uucti.. ,,. ... •taU o n
others that _you arc smccrc. dedicated and talented. Scorp10 tndav1dual PRODUCTS ELECTRICtAN commere181 UllWAll IALD M•~ad tHct'l~7...:._ MMMI.. & IMCI-._...., co _.... ,....
docs have f~ith. wtll help y~u ~n alhes and ultimately to achieve SC?at OUllD & realdentlaJ axper1enoe FfT .._~.,~~ ~ f:n.Frt 175-2837 oat IMl.nftCa; M2-eo44 pepet ....., "' WW.
You are goma places and m1ttal del~y should not cause discourage-g~:,:.-:::=t~og FfTorPfT,mullbeableto neoesaary "42-0782 =:."2HeHarbOrBl.CM lllllltm11P1'. .U/UIWlll1m :::i..~t:t "<f::;·
ment. out of your home? work Sat & sun. Other Eacrow Officer u-ed lmmed r 5 Pwaona t tM dlra grewlY'd •no. F/Pt H)'deMondtyttwu Fttdflr LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be analytical, discern mottves. ~hze It 1nter•tlngproduc1. hOura to be an-=. pertenc:ed ao wi..t man-~ •::!rn ~ fOf matti.:fin; ·~-exp pref. $40.1in · .._... 9-30 ano 10.30
may be necessary to do some: personal detectt ~e '"".Ork. Read, wnt~, get uc.Clent pronta, and low r ~· ~ ager In ~lgloue Own traMPO ~1 . ment. No aper. nee. W11 -9J &JI\.. only· "'2-421
ideas on paper and opcrr--tines of communaeatmn. Oemm1. Vrrgo. ..t-up()OSt. Hmcttoot ~ 81 CM.,._ Newport 9..ch office OSTESS w NTB> Mon-tnln. >Ont tncofne. M-S.VW.. iltiw 1" order,~~=-===='! Sagittarius persons figure in scenano. akUl9Wllbeneeded. • &40..eo.w Mrs. Penney H . A . vaocieme11t II qwllfted ~ nee. t
VIRGO (Auo 2"1 Sept 22)· Money spent beauttfk·ng surround-VRNEWPORT8414182 Ca"11er wanted. Prefer EXERCISE INSTRUC Frt 1130 Mt-~~ ~ can fUc:tl, 882-584-4 ~ ~.;._. .... ,._ ..... . • o-;r · . · · la Colege atudent • hta Hourty W9G9 ~ ....-.,,. _,.,.._,,. .,_, __ ,. IJ?-Alaza•JQ ~ ap9r, mgs, obtaining art obJectS or lux~ry items ~ be wel -spent. Family ftlt ... t deity. Cal1 Barber• fof S 12 .50 hr wlll train oui.i woman Ae9teurant IOIUL USISTAIT coma. Allpld ~•ic»-fta tn. H.B. 7eo.aos
harmony will be restored and you ti be happier, more secure as result. O,~ltt_n 4011 appt. 540-3280 850-0302 640-7440 TonVBarber• F0/80 Optho. Trana. nwtl C.. Mr Webber Phototr..,._. AllllltanL
Taurus, Libra, Scorpio individuals play significant roles. . wanfea:nn;;;c;raJ 6adClng CHIROPRACTIC mlstant EurclH lnatuctora akllla. Call Bobbi 882~ Earn atr9 Income fOr
LIBB.A (Scpl. 23-0ct. 22): Study Virgo message for valuable bin~. tor amall buslneu-no no exp necHHry. $12.50/hr wlll train. Hotel 972-8.432 Part-um.~ Oooo ~ ~ .,tor
Look behind scenes, define terms, encourage a~ra of glamour. Don t rtak. 714) 77~181• a5C).2273 ff8...8085 <trUlllA IAJ aO-tc-MEDICAL ASSISTANT, W'*'O potent.Ill Nill. for WOftca'lg w/echool cf\lo.
tell all 1ou kn<!w -realize that fl'!Y&tery and 1ntng~c arc twtn aJhcs for lltlrJ!ut.. SHI KDIUL RU/TIM PAY F If lesl llen ~ c-::.-' d:Jc,& bee* =~Gall ~1 =:*'*'~.:t
you. Pisces. v irgo nauvcs figure tn unusual scenano. . A;;Ot>1c rm )nstruo. FU1 growing co. In o.c. PUT /Tml... ,. job for ho.Al h. --SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No~. 21 ): Define terms. accent production, $12.50/hr will train. Wont Atrpor1 ••Meda• full Opportunltl" avellabi. • Dey WOftt week ;IT. Medic.I Front omc. Full ~ °' ~· eide eocouragememberofoppos1tescxwhoconfid.essecrct~.Ac_ccnt~on ~.,.._ 772~7 time CLERICAL/OFC with the LOS ANGEl.ES =-~ '"~tC:. ~ :"~exi Sept 15 to O.c 1.
health, employment, care of pets. and rcsoluttons.conccmmg diet and m---••1t peraon. Mua1 type 55 TIMES c1rcu1at1on o.. Typing .o wpm, com-M'.di-Cit tnaur.noe ... S35/day. "Wt~ our of.
nutrition Cancer Capricorn natives figure prominently. I •5.-wpm and have toocl partment rn our door to puter ·~ pr9f. .-rtlal P9a~ bllllnO ftcie .Augwlt 15 a. 18 SA~iTl'ARIUS (~ov. 22-Dec. 21): Lunar, numerical cycles w~~~~o:!.br:"e:~ :::.~~1 j,4 ~~r•n~8!::'an= Fiii Clerk portable X-ray offlce'. ~~·~~:!it~
emphasize love. Open lines_ ~f com':',lun1catt~n. make trave.l plans and PORT TIRE CENTER. 851-05t7 Mlc:helte hOul'ly WflQ9 ptua com-PfT n.xlble hr• M·F Newpor1Beect1917.-00 Coeta .._
realize that ··special relat1onsh1p 1s scnous. ~mphas1s also on 3000 E. eo..t Hwy. CdM mlakln. Houra: •pm to Oasltler Me a Eda Pt:z:za Pwtor now --------
children, vanety. change and games of chance. Aries plays important AUTONEHICLE URGEIT 9pm. Training la PfT Tuee-Sat ...,.. only accepting applleatlona • • A
role . ~AINTENANCf provided. Potential . to Muat be tem!llat w/fMlc fp°'rr~~. ~ ~ Daily P1la1 ..... -
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):, Breakthrough mdJcat~ -Requh =Individual to WI qn... ;:" !3:=r'ca11..._ reglat•. 1n food & beY EY9nl;;g;·~ 71o E. •
restrictions are removed and you'll gam access to areas prcV1ously maintain of Co. can. Tl UTll Jiil llJW 957-2381ext.'1~ enWonrnent. 17th st CM :
..
prohibited. G~t estimate on property value. Remove safety hazards, :=r:.·.n:Xce &,::. IT UI NIFll If Yll Full time aecretary tor 141·~:,,s'· 121 ...____. e..cti CPA ftnn •• ·
improve secunty measures. Leo plays unusual ro.le. . . Full-time 5o4C..2988 W &Y&• llU 1 prestlgloua Newport Mon-~ ·;;--~1.... for S*· . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Foc~s. on tnps, visits. dcc1S1ons -Center Offtoe. Solid akllla HOT£L v,.-. · ... •
concerning home and family. Cancer tnd1v1dual wh<? aided you m past ~~~/W ~ = WHI Tl 1 JUI, lLL required MUii be a-.... lhtt/ltlt hMft ~; ":i!C::rrec::= :
1sapin available and wailing for you ti> call. Know it. actaccordJngJy · .exp ~ ~,. '*1'Jlred. lllf11. Mrtlve & peraon•bl•. FIT. 3prn-11pm For App. penence on nttchbOWd. :
lllUllTE lllUEIEIT ••n•n m
Don't permit faJsc pnde to deter progress. 830-7M7 842-7950 • IHrttwltt Bonua po.l:'J~ 1555 S. Cout High-Ptnsan1 ~Ing at-•
PISCES (Feb. t 9-March. 20): ~oney comes f~m surpnsc source. Babyaluer needed my • • .,.,, ... ...,. lent. Cell &U-42•2 waylagune BMd\ E.O.E. =• Z, ~ ~ ~hf' t-rHtin t~lf'phonf'
Emphasis on increased SOCJal acttv1t~. commumcallon. travel ~d home. mature/own t...,,.. • 111 IJilt• 1..,,..., Hotel ttalMd on • Ro&rn cax. : Mil~ ~rsoo for r.-tail adH•rti in~
arcater awareness of body 1maae. You II be concerned about weann aptt eng. PfT ..ome ...,.. • lltl ~ lat ltafftl Wtrt•n Punatuellty. front omce : apparel about your weight, about how you appear to those who mean & wtcnd .. 20 hta wtc • Oltlt wanted part/time setir -+-. IWl10111111 lfll. appea.rance & ~,... • phonf' room. Su~f""i&0r~ lilh •
' E-Slde 850-6077 Call Steve &CS-57eo a.ad\ ~. Hra Mon-latlona ultll.,. moat Im-: ,mus.t. Top dollar -ha"" plu"'
most to you. BABYSITTER WANTED • ........... ..... =· 1~~ FotSa.!;! pottant. ExmOent Mlary : . FIT my home Own tran. H Inter.tad, ~ call &1 WMIMT -_.___.... .,..... c 0 m m • n 1 u r a t e : bonu ... ~nd l"'f' umf' to:
OlllH latah ztlf Otllet ltatala 2914 Lett I''°' 3004 portatlon .. GRANDMA =I.Ct (8=8•7790 8 30 To Noon. Ne¥ar. dull ~ s~~o ~wy, w/expertence. ablit 258 SF 771 w 16th St omc; m PREFERRED. 751-982• bar• or s moment In ~ amall. • . Call°' ac>PtY In'*"'°"'° CM WM275/mo ... ~ on Baker & Brtatol IELLJ SOYIOE friendly. NB _.. offtcie. HMk~Houae Men COLEMAN & GRANT
u,J St 0 851.;&92S $40-3&88 • FOUND •os . lllTDlll 28570 Matguetft• Prlcwy. AM·a for now, maybe full Super joba reedy now! II 5020 Cempw Dr. Newpor1 ~ · • ft N"ded for beachald• ,'208, Mlaalon vi.Jo, ea time later Lota of phonea you can cook~ e.ach 752-41818 lllPllT AIU Ctaatrelal hotel In LAQun• Bet\. EOE M/F/H & numbers. e31-'480 ret.drtw. you can earn -
Two 150 eq ft prof otca ltatalt 2tll ARE fRE£ Muat be '*<Ible to WOfk uo to 1250 per wtc. c.cs11aCa to Go-cena
w/wndw view 2381 Cam-CM/NS mfi' N-days/nit• Stop by 1555 Companion/lit• heekeep-IOWL lfflOI Live In and..._.. $1. What.wt the Fad · ._,, __ Cor ,.._.....,, South ,. ___ t ~· •.,.. Ing In exchange tor prtv Comp•ny wttt train NEWPORT DOMESTICS .._. ...... ...._ ---6.-..... Dr 1211 ""'... • ... _ 1000-2200 .,, "· ....... .._ ITV ...... ... h -tt1·-·--1e ......,.,.. ·-·GENCY ....... em .... u .... _ .. _ ....... ,__ -.. Cal ·. Bch .• Admln. ofc. or 9PP· room w p.... ...t .. . ........ ....-~·· ..... .. With a-fted Ad ner C~ ~ K~ ample pkg, ale:. 875-eeOO EOE Hur Beach. Mature. ottte9 clerk poaltlon M2-81•2 Patty Cell ~ 842•5171 :Can. Cont Rm & Cott.. OFFICE SPACE for rent, l4Z-llll must Ilk• doga. 53$-0921 ~eroa copying. filing, --...001 .. 752·2~ ldMI loc:allon fot retail or 1&11111111111 CONSTRUCTION· light typing and general otncea. Gr•tfrontage on Pan tlrM help w.nted Call For CoWf1nOa, 8undeetla offtce MMCal. Newpor1
Cofone o.t Mar 2333 E. Bakel' at Brll1ot. High Bob (Only) 8754191 a Batconye 846-9:.5& Ptlarmeoeutlcala
Cout Hwy. 290 eq ft, trarflc erN ~·3M& FOUND a amall btk/Wht e.auty 897 W. 18th St. N 8 ground leYtl t.250/mo. 1ong haJ ed doQ Vic M11go-• Count.-help pit, Mon--Ftt 842·7511
CALL &&s;.5383 PRIME 1L2_CATIOftN. 8A¥>-nolfalT~bef1 Ml-2308 •llllmUIT SUPER SANDWICH 975 IEHUL IFFIOI
------Pf'OlC. rr.I eq uay * ~ Peutartno CM ~187 ~~ ~~~go ~r: F~8N~l1~en ;!':~ c::!r ... not nee., muat be eonnter ~A~·~ T~, en~' e~':. unn .. n,1.1.
2 pvt oa a 1rg setty1Rc:p1
t700/mo. Bkr ~
UUlllWI UITll
Irvine, ptione anew. re-
oept.. cont. rm. urn pd. ~ary ..,..,. 250-0277
10-12noon ot 2-4prn 850-0189 wea •lllirrllT tu ·t tne752_5401 saso.s1000 mo ~
Shop/Store/Office apeoe" FOUND M.-~t Atchard ~ $a6on, amoti• Pf'tl. &40-1113 eoc> eq ft. tg door, ...... Au.1 Shep mid a ma b1k 200 Newport Cent• Dr, llUYllY
C.Meea C.2 W.72o49 Terrie, rablea tao 5473. N 8 . Full time fof IOCal cte. 1D1UL 1ff101
•CdMdl>eeult•.AO,ampt ~ .-mu ::,•,.::!c,~ for Newpof'1 ~ a.
pf't(g, ft()m •225· 2855 E. Loet: a.rm Shep. Mix. NI Law Arm aMkt aper, Station.t. toe;. 163-1200 =r:·t~ ~..::
Coat Hwy. l76-UOO Female 5 mot okS. Multi :· 20-25 hrs f* penoMal dept ~and uperteia In
Wanted hoWalbldi1 2000 ~-Thur ,,, PM· Vlo -to --:""\ DENTAL ASSISTANT AIR A/P ~ 10 key. lbp ~ ~ ~ ~ Avocado, CdM '7M142 ~~•rt~ te~r.::na . Parl·tlme. ,UN otnce. w/ M/PRC I plua. REWARD for contan of ..... 2 .. 842·7911 '7$-4915
tan brWCeM taktlf1 "°"' ------------drMIWI~ 7 to I 30 lllPl/liall ..... =.::,. at. ·~:.· m h711*1 • Q9Mf .. *'oet
QUEST IONS ASKED. .cperict-~ :r.:
(714)241-1002 •97-2971 = ~. ...,,
SCRAM-Lm ~ :~: hlltory to W-"8ld l~WER-S ComPMi.e. 47&0 Yon NW KanMI\. ate tot • .._.
~ leldt Ca t2elO
~CIRCLE K·MARK£TS
oR "<,f r o \~l
0-\11 \ PILOT
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . .
District· Managers
If yov en1oy woflong ....,.It\ ~ boy~ &
9ork and dctil job' 01e not fOf yov
(Of'I~ 0 COfttr ift h M~f (1f(\AQ
"°" ·~· nu, n 0 uintque po\ltion """" doOty ~ & rn;orct,
Ol.ir opening' 01• inmiedocn. Applicant
nw't ho.. o lf'O"I 11Vtt0nwovc>n or truclt
W• offer on excellent 10lor, witl\ o botw•
pion ond oo• l won<• w ~ ~-.
e c.clent bmel~ ~ lt1d udet ~
toli.tatlon inMKOMt, I. rol llOtot.on ond
ho~'
c~ """" ho-. o
"""'if11l Ofld M vAll•no
you W. you ho,,. h
pa.os. opp y In penon to
' t•
..
..
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Ca :
12 TRAIN NOW FOR EXAMS FOR
.JOBS
in U.S. Postal Service
No Experience. No High School,
Allen residents with Green card
acceotable
Postal Clerks/Carriers
Start as
tich as
Keep .,, our Present Job While
Training For Appt Call 0 C. Of-
fices Mr. Jackson
WESTMINSTER (714) 891-6723
. Tratn with the LARGEST C1v1l Service
Jtam1ng institute 1n the West
Newapaper
IEPllTEI
With ~ )1Mlr't dally U · .,_.ice, tor en lmmed*-
at• opening on • So.
Caltf ~ s.nct
,.....,"" llnd cffpt to: Box
#203. C/O Delly Piiot.
P.O. Box 1580. eo.ta Meaa, CA 12&28 E.O.E.
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
I EARN ti» TO $75.00 PER WEEK
We now have 15 ~ lor JOUQC UCtf
bultfs to setore rtlllltn for The 9rlftlt tout
Dally Not Our Clew$ SUit at 3'30 p..• Md
1-' Ullbl 130 p Ill ~J$.. Oii Sailltdiy, M
/
won I few lllOft hooll Yov w1ll earn many lnps
Ind pnzes. llol1 "'111 ur111,. your °"" lllOMJ
thtrt IS no cleheftnl Of coGecboft lllYOIYed
If roci are 1nterrsled pluse ull Mr E1r1
Ma
COOl
-
(714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
AC AO SS
I A of USA
5 T urkosh VIP
9 Of I church
leader
14 Pollery
15 Observed
16 Fiddle make•
17 Before IOf19
18 Coney's lion
19 ·No way•
20 Flowers
22 Facial feature
24 Dr1f1eo
26 HaV11l9 I
vaulted roof
27 In lined
up
29 -Vlctoroan
3-0 Spano1h lord
53 Tourist gu•d~
57 COior
58 Eouovoclle
59 Plenty arch
61 Speaker
62 Opera boxes
63 Greet<
promenade
64 Allu or Milo
65 ~ndezvous
66 Croon
67 la voe'
DOWN
I Bestow upon
2 Laroe nou~
3 Uneven
4 Restorabte
S Tree
6 Auto parl
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOL YEO
33 Sutferl1l9 lallpes
37 Set Ulde
38Mesas
311 Aodenl
7 Judean kong
8 Wind g1uge
g CrtllCIZed
tO Rec11ly
1 1 The Peacock
12s .... tsop
3 1 Conctuded
32 TV program
33 Gossip
H Old Persians
•8 Hundred prel
SO Sp0<r1n
40 Propeller
41 Skin problem
42 Utlllf'S
'~ Light repast
45 "-' Hum1>o91
46 Unuwat
• 7 "Old 811Ck -
49Co0dle
2 3
17
•1
..
12 ....
l
13 Asif c0tnt
2 1 Rodes wives
23 Tr11ouollou1
25 Nanko -
Mot.ado role
28 Merit
30 Venturi'
e
,,
7
3• Parasites
35 Arm bont'
36 Def•le
37 Worir'Q diagram
•O S. oH'
42 Starcn
•3 Pipe l1ll1ng
•5 S1mp1es1
8
5 t Corrupt10ns
52 Repos111on
53 H•ghlandef
5• ComPOSer -
Novello
SS Shrewd 1r1r
56 Shor11y
60 Com.cat one
10 11 12 13
IEDlnUY
T 9mP AN!gnment avau-
able top O.C. nrm. Exp.
on 1.8. M. 85 Memory
TypWr, a must. Pleue
COml In and -.pply.
VICTOR
TEMPORARIES
4341 Birch. # 105, N.8 .
556-8520
ananUYTl•RI lmDIATI.,._
Full TllM. Stock bro-
kerape ••P. h.iptul,
good geMtal MCr.tarfal
1klll1. Call Jackie
957-e500
1111nuY to wottt With the s....
Dept. of a 6-dlno New-
port a.ct\ firm. Call Mr
Clarke or Mr. McKay
(71') 476-teOO
SERVICEHA TION at·
tencwttt. F/P Tlmt. No
Smtcrs. Ute mectt helpful
FalrMw at Fllr Or.
SERVICE Station Attlnd-ent: ~ p...._.
w/rwl.-.nce. Day 9hlfl l'A
days. 1236 wk Mlety ..
commlaalon . ...._7151.
1DY.1Ta.1nm.
P.,, °" full 11m1. ev.,
wknd• & oraveyarda.
..... ~f. ' hand-wrtttno on"1 Mid ~· 2590 Newport 8'¥d, C M.
181.IT&.-·•
fUll time, neat llPPMf. A«A'f.,.. ~. 2'90
Nftport BMt, C.M • ..,, .............
..,,.... 31 to 41 hrl
~lhlft~Ut
IHIPPEA Mto0ttoor Yedlta, 1831
,,_,,la, ec.e. w.a
I LAA IN8TALLiA.
esp'd lrnlMd6ate open-
lnO-"""' ,...,.. own '°* ar1d tlllCHcle, a.1oeo
Cedtlai:» IO Oo-Cir'8 ~thlFad
'Im°" 1ftll ~
Wit" a C!Mllled Ad
Call Nowt 142.ae7t
DIMES
A-
LINE
WANT ADS
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO
PRIVATE PARTIES .
&NI your Item• for $50 or lea In
our femoua DIMES-A·LINES pub-/ltht#J NCI> Saturday In the Dally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ad• mu•t b•
P,.f>llld M) mall or bring them Into
the Dally Piiot office. S. w,. to
lnclud• your phone numbw or •d·
drea In yoor ad, ,,.,.. • prlc. on
Nch It.,,, a no •bbr•vf•tlon..
Sorry, no eotnm«'C/111 lld. 08Tll(1fl ..,_, produo., plant• ex .,,,,,,_ .. ,.,,,..
DEADLINE:
S p.m.Th~
Coe .. Meeaotllot
-~~-------~·~---=---
..
bunka-2hp Johnaon-
trafler, S 1500 831· 1878 11 78 320! auto a/o(S7SVCX)
18' Hobie Cat. Ult• "'"· 711320l 4tpd a/r(~XU8)
race rMdy. S 1700/obO eo 320l 5ap air( 1JWB 1S3)
&'2·11558 80 320l 5ap a/r(1BEN7N)
'79 SANT ANA 525. Alt U · 81 3201~a/r(OOO 1")
Ir a I . mu It • •II 81 3201 a/~10AG"4)
$9950/0bo, No 873-3630 • 1 320l 5ap al 1dge2.25) Y'' 81320l6tpa/ 1cydel3)
'80 SEA RAY 30FT 81320l5ap '8'(1doaMO)
$42,500, allp IVlll&ble 12 3201Sapa/~10ZJ:145)
'7641'8 c1cY9 827331AIT L' 1!VJ484)
Coronedo 30' Inboard 83 3201 Sep a/r 010243> 83 320l 6tp t1rt1rmvttn q . ~ equ pped. 83320l 51P ·s· <3'5805> 1xln1 allp avaU S 18750 83 528! 5ap L'd ("'441)
&40-t2U .8352U&md11tMOMl
EnMnada 20 Sloop, alpt ~ M, I Hp O·B. port+
~cra1o~~~17Jr1r. (714 11•1171
LASER 2. Full rigged 208 w. 11t, 81nt1 Ana
w/troley. With Extru. CLOSED8UNOAY8
'2900. Cell 87Ml49
t.aiur, >tint cond. 2 8elta. 2 &oona.$1000.7~
Udo 14 wtth ~ trdr"~·
oompl9t• 836-2303
MIKE MclEMNA'S
SOUTH couren
MOTORS
®
1984 RABBIT
Sul* Molt.lgel (Stk 70951
'99 down
114.0ll •• +tu
48 mo CEL. TOP
~ 15 84·AellCI 3131 15
CAP 8180-lncep IHI 372112
11111
BRJSTOL A'J !DlHGIR
IN 8ANtA AMA • •
Hl·OllO
.'7.u&tLYSlNCE '153"
WE CARE ....... ~
BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHl:
""1H I 1.111 1 •I '.
337·4800 49 ).45 I I
LARGEST SELECTION
of lat• model. low mllelgil
Cad111ta In Southern
Cellfomlal s.. U8 today!
-1•1-1110--
'78 Mavertck IO mt,
llc,pwr aVbka,Mt/tm, t=.g= 2nd cer l3000 AftwePM
·n Bobcat. 4 IPd, look.a ~
rune QOOd. 1795/obo,
Cd 5'M151 aft 5pm
'78 Monarch loeded, .....
Whit look.a rune grt MUST
SELL 12,200. "2-4824
1'1.UU1 '12 6Uftx88 COUPE A/C, Tltt, Crvlae, FM AMIO
(313114)
""' •• 18401 Beectl Hunt 8dl
147·1707
r
--·
COUNTY 1011181
--TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 198A -ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA :;>~, CENTS
Athlete's death s ·tuns team
• • .IF
Alleged drunken driver in f at.ality
freed from county jail on ·$5~00-:--0-ba_i_l _
On Sunday evening. hi • was a
passenger in a friend's 1984 Chev-
rolet Blazer when it was struck by a
car driven by a women later arrested
on suspicion of felony drunken
. .
to attend a memorial service for the
o ng lcvine athlete. The service
ns at l p.m. at Waverly Church,
Fairhaven Ave .• Santa Aoa.
President Reagan
honors American
medal winner~. Story
an~ picture on C 1.
Coast
Mesan accomplished his
own Olympian feat: He
blcycled1lCross the coun·
try./A3
How did it feel to be part -,
of the closing ceremon
In the Coliseum. Our cor-'
respondent tells you./ A3 ·
Callfomla
Sl&in
·teen's
auto
found
Police to probe
car discovered
at Wayne Airport
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Deir ..... ...,,
Armenian group take$
redlmrptarttlngoomo
on Turk bus at LAX./ AS
An orange Mercury Capri, one of
--thenrtsStngtinb"bns gnl90~
murder case, was discovered Monday · ----· .. --•!Y:•;:-:·:::!:::~:::!~!:!:!Z!:....;!:!:~:!::~!;.Z!:::!~:::~:!:::
Nation
Rainstorms, flooding del-
uge much of eastern Unit·
ed States.I A4
A 'moderate' earthquake
shakes up area near
Anchorage, Alaska.I A4
.-par.kcd:at.John. Wa)'.llcAi.rport where ·
It apparently bad gone unnoticed
since its driver was fatally shot two
weeks ago.
The car belonged to Bradley Kaye,
the l 8-year-old Newp0rt Harbor
Higl) &hool stu~nt and athlete who
was 'killed early this month and then
buried at a lrvme construction site.
Irvine police said it appears Kaye's
body was taken to the construction
site in the car which the killer then
abandoned at the airport. The car was
obscured from view by a car cover, world said Sgt. Dick Bowman. r-----------------'·---&wmae-said-homk-ide-<teicctives-
Navywarns Tijuana hope to get a search warrant today
mayor that Baja town and go over the car for clues. He did
might be off-limits to sail-not say what police thought they mig)u find. ors if robberies, extortion Kaye's stepfather, Bruce Bradley ~ontlnue./ A4 Ralph, 57, has been arrested for the
Islamic Holy War takes
credit for mining of Red
Sea./ AS
crime a.nd is scheduled to be ar~
raigned Thursday on murder charges.
The Newport Beach resident is being
held at Orange County Jail on
.:;:;:::;~;:;::::::5:::::::::(::::=::~::~::::::::::::;:::::::::; 55~~~d~~;eapon still has not been
Mind & Body foM:~oriaJ services for Kaye were
Adults havemore to fear
from gum disease than
tooth decay./81
condu~ MQ.Pday afternoon at
Harbor Lawn Memorial Park in
Costa Mesa. Friends remembered
him as a popular and friendly youth·
who excelled ih sports. If you try a do-It-yourself .. I don't believe I've ever met a
diet formula, you prob-person who was as well liked as
ably lose weight In the Bradley," said Rev. Gregory Ken-:::~:~~~:~:!:~:~:~::~::~:::::::::!:::::::::::: ~~'ce~~~e0~~~:li~~d m~:hri~
Sports
his life.
"Though we will feel the hurt of his
loss for a long time, we should take
comfort in the fact that Bradley now is
(Pleue 1ee VICTDl'S/ A2)
time starter on the Woodbridge team
during his junior year. His coach says
there is little doubt he would have
~n a starter this fall.
But Andrew's life was cut short this~
week before fall football ·practice
could begin. :
driving. ;
According to police. Andrew was
. thrown from the vehicle and suffered
massive head injuries. He was pro-
nounced dead at the scene.
On Wednesday, Andrew's team·
mates and other friends arc e.l(pected
Andrew's aunt. Barbara Harris,
said the family has rcce1ved ·many
visits of condolence from Wood.
bridge football players.
·:T.hcy'rc all shocke~ about it,"
Han:u sat~ today. ··1 imagine (the
service) will be ~eked with his
tcam~at_es an4 his othtr. friends. He
Cliff rescue
NewportBeacbf1remanLarryT~el(aboYe)
and Fire Capt. Don Gray (riCht) lower
Patrick Finnerty from Back Bay c1Uf
Monday nJabt after be got atranded while
hlldn& along the aide of the 100-foot cliff.
See atory on Pa&e A2.
wu very wcU ilk~"
.. He lived and ate Cootball,~ She
said ... That was his first love -lhal
and prls. rm not urc which he liked more.
"He also loved 1he ocean. He was
always do.-n at the beach. He enJOyed
surfing and the beach."
Woodbridge Hilb football coaeh
9cne Noji said AndrcW .. ttally m·
Joyed footbalJ. It ~-as orw.of IM m011
' (Pleue eee ATllL&TS/.A2) ' .
'Hero'
officer
'
pl~nted
bomb?
Officer coruesses
to LAX bus incident
after second lie test
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A police ~Cdn~llJ'm.tJ\(1 .... .--
bomb aboard ·~ bus ~--the Iuuaac·otT~~YJQIW: ~. '* ·v..as arrested today and accused of
~~~device. said Po~ Chief
Gates said Officer James Pcanon was booked for investigation of
possession of a =ve device. -and that invcs · ~~
Pearson allegedly p led the bomb
• to get lttention from superiors. .. This is particulatly sad. He had a
remarlc.able record. He had numerous
commendations. We are very sad
that he has chosen to do this. .. Gates
said at a news conference.
__Ga_tn. sai<L..tnYCSli&al~
suspecting Pearson because of Cfu.-
crepancics in bis stories on how be
disarmed the bomb.
..He indicated be was having
prOblems with his su~son at Metro (Metropolitan Division). He
wan\ed to do some\hina to C&VK
them to take notice. We have all
nouced him at thtS point. "GatcS said.
Gates said rnvestiptors turned
their attenuon to Pcanoo because be
.. had some back&round m ex-
plosives" and oftfa:rs could not
discover bow the device could have
been ~ted aboard the ~fully
guarded bus.
Pearson took two polygraph tests
and confessed shortly before ~
the second one "early this mominJ
Gates said. "He (Pearson) says be did
not rig it to explode ... but it was an
explosive device."
Pearson was being held.. without
bail, Gates said.
Gates said Pearson planted the
device in 1.be bus wheel well at Los
Angeles lnternational Airport, prob-
ably concealing it before then by
(Pleue .ee 'BERO'/ A5) The Rams fall to 0-2 In the
pre-season after drop·
ping a21-10 decision to
Cleveland at Anaheim
Stadlum./C1
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's 12-meter Eagle
will have gold medalist
Rod Davis as skipper In
the America's Cup trlaJs.
/C4
QC board
readies for
Jarvis IV
Adopted Liberian finally
winning residency fight
Entertainment
Boxer-turned-actor Tony
Danza wants to "clean
up" In new TV role as
housekeeper ./83
Bualneu
Car owners face many
problems In filing an ln-
surance clatm. /85
INDEX
Erma Bombeck B2
Bridge B4
Bulletin Board A3
Bu1lnet1 85
California Newt A4
Claalfled C6-8
Comic. 84
Croasword ce
Death Notices CS
Help Your.elf 82
HorotCOPe C7
Ann Landers 82
Mind and Body 81·2
Mutual Fund• BS
Nattonat Hewa A4
Opinion Ae
Paparazzi 81
Polloe Log A3
Publle Notices C5
Sport• C1·4
Stock Market• Be
Televllk>n 82
ThMtera 83
WMther A2
Wortd Nftt A4
By JEFF ADLER
Of1MO.-,NM8tllft Sam Willett's congressman gives him
Orange County supervisors, trying
to Howard Jarvis-proof the 1984-85
county budget, set aside S 15 million
on Monday to cover a portion of the
tax rc:bates they might have to
surrender should the tax foe's latest
proposition pass in November.
--__
fr-amed copy of pending immigration bill
With the acknowledgment that
Jarvis JV, a spinoff of Proposition 13,
could trigger a second round of
budget hearings in December, the
supervisors'1irst action in reviewing
the record S 1.08 billion budget was to
By DAVID BISHOP
Delly "'4 C.11 "I FMIM!t
Years of frustration seemed far
away Monda} for a San Juan
Capist~no man who may finally get
to stay m the Unit~ States with his
adopted famil}.
Sam Willett was visited by Rep.
(Pleue eee.OC 80ARD/A2) Samuel Willett
Roben Badham. R-Newpon Beach.
and given a framed copy of a b1ll
approved by the House Subcommtt·
STEVE
_MARBLE
Focus ON THE NEws
Parents of slain
kids bare souls
to ease grief
murdered ncarl} two yean aao. Ju t
after disappearing from a Garden days after his 20th birthday. "My son was murdered five years aao. •• said Don Shelton, his eyes flAed
strai&ht ahead, unblinkin& and dry.
.. People want to know how lon1 1t
\des to bounce back.
"Bounce bad'? You ,don't bounce
back. Vou never bounce back."
Shelton. like more than two dozen
others assembled in a crowded Hunt-
inaton Reach meetana room on a
tteent v.ukday afternoon. is a mem·
ber of a aroup that is obs(ene in it
unfonunate site. New mcmbtrs
come an weekly. new chapters are
formed continually.
All arc pa.rcnu of murdered chit·
d~n Cihelton~s ~n was l:itl
Grove bowling aJJey. He was the first .. I don't even ha\C the same set of
victim of the Frttway Killer. It took friends as before." said the Fount.atn
police nearly nine months to find the Valley woman. "I only sot call from
body and then two )ears to pro ute tvoo people after it h:apptntd and \Ou
the kill r . ._ n"t im111ne ho~ I cra,·e<t attcnuo°'
But it took Shelton and his wife I wantid to taJk about •L 1 needed to
longer than that to find someone who talk about at
would listen to them. Someone who .. Nowit'sli etbatVtholcpanofmy
undcntood the anacr, th sorrov.. th life has bcc11.closcd." said. "M.)
horror. and the absolute isolation of life has been forever altcttd."
hav1na a child murdettd. Val POcddcrer's •·}car-old
''I'd try to tell the tory, 1 f1 lt hke 1 dauahter was found murdered •hrtt
h d to ttll the story. But people-m> y~ aao. Rcltli"e had to break anto
friend -w uldjust walkav.ay like 1 the )OUl'll woman'upanm nt ~h tt
had a d1 a hke I would con· the: found the bod)'. h had been ~mtn tc: them,· 1d Shelton. stabbnt 102 tim The kallcr ON to
Bl'l ml)ITiln on~~..-~-, (P P I il)
tee on lmm1grauon. The bill 1s
another step toward preventing the
deponauon of the L1berian-bom.
adopted son of a pair of formC'r Peace
Corps workers.
The bill needs the approval of
Congress to end a 10-year Willett
famtty struggle to keep Sam in this
countf) When approved. the bill wtll
gt\'e Sam res1denc} status in the U.S.
but not c1t1zensh1p. He must \\lat five
years to apply for U .S. citllensbip.
Willett was adopted by hts Amcri·
an parents. Ruth and David Willett,
in Africa 13 years ago when they were
Peace Corps volunteers. Sam was an
orphan. about 15 years old, but not
certain oftus ~e.
When the Willetts brought Sam to
the United States an 1973, they saidJl1
was 16, not knowing that imm~
tion officials would declare b~~ two
years too old to be legally ~ugbt into
the U.S. as an adopted child.
Almost immediately a battle
ensued between the Willeus. the
(Pleue eee SAM/ A2)
-
Contractor pleads insanity
on murder for hire charge
Laguna Niguel man accused of paytng 1>3n of the cl borate underco,·er
operauon, 1n,eitiptors pcnuaded
M~. Penney to Pose :a 1f .5he w<"rc
dead on a Jab m the coroner's office. 3,000 to arrange estranged wife's death
· Makeup was apphtd to her face to
Smith also dented a defrna.e\ mouon make it apf)far she died in act auto.
to set bail for Pt"nney. who will col11)iOJ\.
A t..aauna Ni,uel contractor ac--
cuscd of hirina a killer to murder hi~
mranaed wif~ plcaaed no1 fUlh}' b)
reason of in.unity to the )inaJe felon>
cbarac Monday.
Frecknck Edward Penney, S7. wa~
ordered to stand trial on the charge of
sotcitauon to commit murder begin·
ni Ot-1 1
ii scheduhng the 1nal date, Orange
County Supenor Coun Jud&e James
continue to be held m thccountyj'ait. t..Ater. an.other inv~stigator ppsmg
Penney was arrested in early uly as a dcputv coroner $howed Penney
after a couf!tY Sh~ntrs Ocpanmcnt the pictures and asked him to identity
undtrcovertnvesuptor allegedl> wa'I his wife.
paid $3.000 to arranac the death of He wa arrested a shon time after
Penney's estranged w1fe. Susan. fhe paying the econd of two SI .SOO
couple were in the proces ofdivorc· installments to the "hit man" for
mg and. had not }tt agreed upon a )uppo~edl> arranging her accidental
property ~ttlement. death.
VICTIM'S CAR F OUND AT A I RPORT" ....
From Al ...>
ttpeace."
Until the discovery of the missing
Capri Monday, the car was last seen
Aua. l when several motonsts travel·
m' alona Bomta Canyon Road in
Irvine claimed they saw the orange
car parked off the roadway.
Witnesses also told police they saw a body next to the car and a man
!>tandmg at the rear of the vehicle
One motonst identified the man as
Ralph
Both the car and the body were
gone b) the time Irvine police
arrived. Construction workers dis·
covered Kaye's bbdy several days
latcrwhde watenngdown a sewer line
ditch in the Turtle Rock community.
Police have not detailed a mouve
for the kslhng, but' according to court
records Kaye's mother had obtained a
restraining order against Ralph the
day before the youth was killed.
Kaye, who was born in London and
hved tn South Afnca before moving
to this country last year, lived with his ·
mother.
. --ATHLETE RECALLED BY FRIENDS •••
From Al
1mponant things m his hfe. He was Tucker was southbound on San
really looking forward to this coming 1oaqu10 Road and alleaedly failed to
sea.son.•· yield the right of way to Cohen, Wbne
"There were other players compel· saJd.
mg for the P<>ssuon (defensive back). The impact caused the Blazer to
. but there was no doubt he was going flip over and burst into flames.
to be a starter," NOJI said ·Andrew was thrown from the vehicle
----Md.rew-_,"9ttf'Vt¥e<i-by ~1 -mot.her. -toheo, wbe-managed-to ~tawi out.
Marcla Andrew, hss brother, James. received minor injuries m the crash.
, and hiss.i.stcrs, Theresa and Chn.s.JJllC,.. .• pal.ice sajd .
. ,.._"""-+--.-all c>nrvine. -Wbilef said Tucker ~i1ed Jo stop
..
While family and fnends are after the colhston and drove her
moummg the loss. lrvme police arc damaged car to a nearby shopping
conuouing their mvest1gat1on ofSun-center. where she was arrested on
day's traffic accident. suspicion of felony drunken driving,
Sgt. Mike Whnc said Andrew's felony btt aod run, and vehicular
friend Kcvtn Cohen. a I 6·ycar·old manslaughter. Woodbndge High student, was be-Police said Tucker was carryrng
hind the wheel of the Blazer, heading some "recently purchased'' alcoholic
west on Un1vers1ty Dnve at about beverage when she was arrested.
6:30 p.m. _ Tucker was srullally held at Oranee
White said their \Chicle was struck County Women's Jail on $5,000 bast.
by 1974 Datsun 300SX dnven b> but a Jai1 spokeswoman said early
Doroth)' L Tucker. 55. also of In-me today Tucker bas been released. DaYldAnclrew
PARENTS OF SLAIN KIDS BARE GRIEF ..•
From Al
South Amenca and has not b«n
returned for prosecution.
"It's a feeling that no one else can
understand There's JUSt no way 10
communicate 1t As ume passed, 1t
turned to self·plly. r didn't want to let
~o. It was hke my safe little island. I
JUSt cned and felt homble I didn't
want anyone to take my self·plly
away because I felt that 1t was all I had
left m this world•·
Shelton. Amparan and Pfledderer
~ member of Parents of Murdered
Children. a nationwide organizauon
that serves as an emotional outlet for
parents whose children have been
slam. It's a group that's bard to
descnbe.
Members bare their souls m painful
testimony. re~aung the gnm details
of how their children were killed or
tortured They talk cand1dl) of their
feelings Some seem filled with anger.
othC'rS with gnef Some have become
overweight from o"ercaung. Some
have withered from lad: of eaung.
Manv arc divorced Se"eral have lost
their fatth. others ha' e embraced
rehapon.
Life has changed for all of them
But the group'c; purpose 1s that life
conunucs.
"ll wasn't until I JOined that I
reahzed others had suffered the same
way I had," said Coleen Da\ 1s, whose
15-year-0ld son was \tabbed 27 times
and then left to die in a canrnn in
Whittier. "Somehow. Ben chmhed ou1 or
that canyon to the road <iome bo~ s
picked him up and took him to the
hosp1ta1:· she explained "When I got
the call from the hospital I "as under
the 1mprcss1on that he was OK
"Now that I think back on 1t I don ·i
·eve I could ha'e made that dmc
to hospital 1f I had kn o"n "hat
was ''&.}<? happen \\hen I got to
there he~ 'Hs mom; I lo'c \OU.'
.. He died \hat night "
Davis said her huo;,band left her
after unsuccessfully urging her to
attend therapy SC'sssons Other rela-
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Oellwery
I• OuerentMd
tives faded into the backdrop. She
started hfc over again. -
"Now it's as thou&h I never had a
famil}," she said. "It JUSt dmolved·
after the murder."
Dons Tate got pohucal after her
daughter was murdered. She was
angry that the people charged in the
killing had not been put to deat~ as
orig!_oally sentenced. She was funous
that slle had to lobby parole board
members to keep the killer locked up.
A Democrat, Tate's now seekmgan
assembly scat in Los Angeles on a law
and order platform.
A chaner member of Parents of Murd~d Children, Tate ts viewed
wtth considerable respect by other
members. She's an tnsp1rat1on to
many of them Her dau&hter was
Sharon Tate, who was k11Ted in the
summer of 1969 by members of the
notonous Charles Manson famil).
''I'll be fighung this the rest of my
life. so I might as well fight for all of
us." she said. "I want to remind
evef)one up there of the pain and
gnef all of us are going through."
Tate sa\S what's on the mmd of
most gro.up members when she
advocates capital punishment. "Who
wants them? Who needs them?" she
sa)'s of the 162 ixople on death ro"'.
"There's good and there's evil in
this world, and I bchcve that mad
dogs should be put to sleep." said
~mparan. chairman of the Orange
County chapter of Parents of
Murdered Children.
Donna Robbins JOtned the group
out of anger
Her 24--.ear-old son died two )ears
ago. Police said 11 was su1c1de. but
Robbins finds that 1mposs1ble to
behe .. e It doesn't add up. she said
She paid for a tox1colog)' test when
pohce 1ns1sted her son had taken a
fatal dose of drugs. The tests showed
no trace of drugs. she said
"It's not that I couldn't accept that
he commstted su1c1de. it's JUSt that I
wanted the truth. 1 JUSt wanted
objects' m:· she said "l JOtned 1he
Doria Tate
g.roup to express m} anger
Most of the members ha\e ex-
penenced angrer. Ptledderer said she
and her husband considered travchng
to South A.menca to ksll the man who
had murdered their daughter. She
said the-. even toved witb the idea of
hinng a ·profess10.nal hit man.
Shelton got angry at the media.
"Dunng the tnal l thought the press
was lacking in sensitivity or com·
passion of any kind," he said. "When
I'd come out of the courtroom. th.e
reporters looked hke a bunch of
'ultures I was read~ to fight. In fact. a
marshal had to hold me back once ..
Fern Schneider's son "as
murdered a ~ear ago. "It wasn't unul I JOmed the group
that I disco' ered that 1t was all nght to
hun. to en. to laugh, to want to ~ a
pan of the human race again." she
~Id. "You reh'e the whole thing O\Cr
and O\Cr and o'er again and fioall}
you understand It \\-111 never be over.
It will be there C\ cf) da} ..
What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Whal don't yo u like? Call the
number at left and your me1111e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
Tbe ume U-bour aa1••erlag acrvlce may be used to record letters to tbe
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters column mu•t lncludt their
name and telepbone number for ve rlflcatloo. No clrtulatloo calls, pleaac.
Tell us what'• on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilai
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Circulation 7141"42""333
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330 'flint ' 81 Cos! I l.!ftll CA "'• ·~· ' ecs:. ~ C..t. on.'
Clrculetlon
T•l•phonet
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Controller
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Pr oduction
M:tnager
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Circutat1on
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t
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Ttdea
TOOAY
127 p"' II 2• pm
ftO.IOAY tot1m 123S11 m
• 12 p"'
M MU locllr II f 41 p.m ,,_
~eclMldty II I 1•1 m Ind Nit efMI
117•0pm Moon ,._ 1o0ar 11 9 40 p m • 1111
Weclneedey 11 I &2 I m Ind r-telln 11100& pm
Temps
.,. ·ro t' ,, ,.
11 H
1' " ., .. ..
u " ., :rs
.. 74 ta ,, .. es
92 71 tot u .. 10
" 1' " .. 12 .. n to
" 11 :: u .. ..
.. 71 .. " .. .. t2 11 '° .. 92 70 IO 11
.. 61 90 74 ., ~
72 12
t3 .. 92 tO 71 49 ., .. .. '° ti .. 12 11 ... 11
13 .. .... .....
HI Lo
13 .. 17 63 13 81
73 61 II II 82 74
.. 74
12 1'
Pa11111r la1Mllgh1 and rnotnlnQ low
Clouelt and log nMf Ille COUI Olll«· wlee ltlr HIQlle ranotno lrom IM
INd• 70. at tlle bMCtMe to eoa In IN ~·Lowa. eo to 10
Firemen pluck Mesa hiker
from steep Back· Bay cliff
Joggers, resident$ tn E'&Stl>ltiff.commumty
heard c.rJesJor ]lelp. tel~honed pol_ice
A Newport Beach police b.elicop1er.
P.ilbtedoy Bruce Foster, was used To
illuminate the. clitfside during the
U5CUe po1.lce"3.aid::-_--:.-. -~ '":': .. • °"" ..
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of tM Diiiy P'lM4 ltllft
·· Department spokeswoman said. Finnen> was transponed to Hoaa Police said they also received calls Hospital. where be was treated in the
from residents of the nearby Eastbluff emergency r~m for an ai;ik.le mJury
community who heard Finneny yell· and released in good ~on<µtton. A Costa Mesa man hikmg along the
Back Ba-y m Newport Beach late
Monday was rescued after becoming_
stranded on the side of a l ()()..foot
cliff, police said.
Patrick Finnerty, 20, was treated at
Hoag Memonal Hospital tn Newport
&ach and released after being
rescued by firefighters who helped
lower him from the face of the cliff.
Fmneny's cnes for help apparently
were heard b) some JoUCf'S running
below along tbe Back Bay about 8
pm. Monday, a Ncwpon Beach Fire
CoNTINUlO S10R1£s
ing from across the bay. The firefighters said Ftnnen y had
Newport Beach Firefighter Larry been walking along the botto~ of the
Tegel and Fire Capt. Don Gray cliff. near the bay. when he decided to
rappelled the steep, rocky chff from take what he thought was a shon cut
the top oear Galaxy Park. about 8:50 and scale the chff. About half the way
p.m. • up he slipped, turned bis ankle and
When they reached Finneny. they became stranded _
strapped him into mountain chmbmg Fmneny had no idea bow bs&h he
gear and lowered him to the bottom had clin1bc::d unul the helicopter's
on the cli ff. where a boat from the h&hts illuminated the face of the cliff
Orange County Harbor Department and he was able to see down to the
was wailing to transport hsm to a dock ba}. a fire dcpanment spokeswoman
10 nearby Dover Shores. said.
SAM WllJLETT MAY GET TO STAY •••
From Al
bureacracy and Congress.
Ten times the government issued
orders to deport Sam. A1 one point.b.c
fled from an arrest warrant issued
after he failed to attend a hearing
where he was sure he'd be detained
and deponed.
The Willetts solicited help from
numerous c.alifomta conaressman,
who kept various private imm1gra·
tion bills for WilJcn alive in the
House of Representatives, but a
stubborn House Subcommittee on
lmm1grauon wouldn't budg.e. Then~
in a surprise move last October, the
subcommittee considered a bill tn·
troduced by Bad.ham, and in July the
Willetts wer~told that the bill had
been approved by the subcommittee.
Sam. who now says he's 29, has
hved ID San Juan Capistrano for the
past I 0 )'Cars on a student visa. After
passage of the bill by Ccongress, he
mtend.s to enroll again at Saddleback
Commumty College, where he began
hts studies before the fight to remain
ID the U.S. He supports himself by
working at a local McDonald's res-
taurant.
Badham, himself the father of two
adopted dau&hters, looked slightly
uncomfortabfe Monday as the
Willetts criticized the bureaucracy
and red tape of the U.S. immigration
system. "It is frustrating when you hear the
government accuse other countnes of
not caring for the family, of scpar·
ating families," said Sam, an avid
follower of world and local news
issues.
Badham derued the Willett case
was a parusan issue. "In this case 1t is
just a tou~ committee. They have
their rules. • he said.
Ruth Willett believes the commit-
tee was partially swayed by a cross·
country bicycle trip to Washmgton.
D.C. that Sam's brother, Dave. made
10 1982 to convince legislators and
immigration officials that the
Willetts' are a strong, close-knit
family. "They thought we brought
him over here to be our servant," she
said.
Sam still must wait fi ve years to
apply for citizenship, which he hopes
will be a smoother process than
OC BOARD EYES JARVIS IV ...
From Al
prepare for the m1t1ativc The m·
1t1at1ve will ap~ar as Proposition 36
on the Nov. 6 ballot.
Bv a 4· I vote. board members
asreed 10 not only set aside s l5
m1lhon sn revenue shanna funds to
cover an> revenue lo s. but also to
freeze an)' new spending and hiring
unul the fate of the measure is
determined. Su~rv1sor Bruce Nestande voted
against the recommendation sub-
mitted by County Administrative
Officer Robert Thomas. saying be
would prefer the flexib1Lity of cutting
e~ssuna programs to being hmillcd to
freezing only new spend.in&.
Thomas has informed the boa.rd
that pa!>saae of Proposnion 36 could
cost the county between S 18 to $20
million tn tax refunds plusabout $4.3
million in admimstrauve costs.
The meuure is intended to close
loopholes that Jarvis aays aovem·
ments u$Cd to avoid the intent or
Propo ition 13, which lashed prop.
eny taus. The measure would change
how oropeny is valued and asseucd,
would require a two-thirds vote to
impose and ra1se fees levied by the
county and would affect vinually all
the other mechanisms by which slate
and local aovemments fund their
operations.
By far the b1gest disagreement that
surfaced durina the firs\ day of budget
consideration~. however. bad lmle to
do with government financsna and
Howard Jarvis. It focused on nuclear
wa.r and a more than $ l S0,000
appropriation for disaster planning.
More than a half-dozen county
residents told supervisors they ob-
jected to the S l 52,S58 in the fire
department'' Emergency Manage.
ment Division's budJet fer what they
contended is plannm1 for civil de·
fense m the event of a nuclear war. .. We arc here to aay that not· I
cent ... should be used to pttpare foran emergen~ for which no planninJ is
pOSS1ble,'. said Jean Bernstein, a Seal
Beach resident.
Also ursina that no money be spent
for nuclear war plannina and ask.ina
that tanauaae dcsetib1na such plan·
gasmng residency. "I don't want to
fight anymore," he said.
He finds 1t hard to imagine what his
life wouldbc filc.e naathe Wiletts not
adopted him and fought to keep him
in the United States.
"I don't know what I would do. I
would be m a vill .... hfe would be
rough," he said. SJttinJ amona his
boo\s, stereo and TV m the neatly
appotnted mobile home he recently
purchased.
Despite the frustration, he 1s "very
happy'' to be m America. Church
groups and many friends helped by
donating to pay his legal fees, sending
letters to congressmen and providing
moral support. The Cit) of San Juan
Capistrano also made him a.n "honor·
ary c1t1zcn."
Mrs. Willett said she i!> "dts·
1llus1oned with the country I mean
we couldn't even feta hcanng for so
long. We're Jlad its over but st leaves
you with akmdofsick feeling. At least
now we're on the pos1t1ve road." She
told Badham as be left, "We're very
thankful you stuck with us ... very
grateful."
ning m the bud~et be changed were
~guna Beach Ctt)l'Oruncslman Rob-
ert Gentry. peace acuvtSt Ellen
Scveroni and 40th Conartssional
01stnct Democratic candidate Carol
Ann Bradfo rd.
Supervisors agreed to have the
language calling for .. count)'·wide
citemses on responses to a nuclear
incident," reviewed, but pointed out
the languaie also refers to planning
for an accident at the San Onofre
Nuclear Generatina Stallon
But the boa.rd tcnt.at1vely OK'd the
appropnatson as they did most others
considered durina the day.Iona hear· ina. Acuon on certain supple.mental
1tems. such u the purchase of one or
two helicopters for the sheriffs de·
partment, was deferred until Wedne •
day so that more information oould
be obtained. Approval of the budaet
will come later this month. In an effort to bolster the county•s
troubled road fund. supervisors also
tentatively approved shifUna S l.S
million into a pedal road mainten·
ancc fund by deleting or delaym
fund ~heduelcd for new road con·
trUCllOn projects.
I The hearinp were to continue I today.
Correction
In an article putih hcd ' tu y
conctmin& nd1datcs filina to run
for city coun<"tl ~ts tl\c namt' of a
Hununaton Beach aind1dltc ~ i
mi' ~lied. The rom-ct name of the
od1da1t 1 Ela ne Craft The P1lo1 ~--•l'H~~tHhe-~fl
--·
. . .. _.._.,,.
i
,
LOW70
TUESDAY. AUGUST 14, 1984
. e . ,
Firemen ree
.. .
romBaC· Ba
President Reagan ·.
honors American
medal winners. Story
and plcture on C 1.
Coa•t
Mesan accomplished his
own Olympian feat: He
bicycled across the coun-
try./ A3
How did It feel to be part
of the closing ceremonies
lntheCollseum. Our cor-
respondent tells you./ A3
Youth's
friends
recall
athlete
Irvine teen killed
when tossed from --truck in crash
Calif omla By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
----- -oc .. ~~---Armenlan group takes David Andrew, 18, ,..as prepanng
cc.ed.ltloip~~~~~=---l=:~~~~~~?ns~!v~~~ba~ck~.th~is~&~~~l9~n~th~e on Tuntbus afLAXJU -. OIS fuotbalF
Nation
Rainstorms, flooding del-
uge much of eastern Unit-
ed States./ A4
A 'moderate' earthquake
shakes up area near
Anchorage, Alaska./ M
World
Navy warns Tijuana
mayor that Baja town
might be off-llmlts to sail-
ors If robberies, extortion
continue./ A4
Islamic Holy War ta1<8$
credit for mining of Red
Sea./ AS
Mlnd&Body
Adults have more to fear
from gum disease than
tooth decay./81
If you t!'Y a do-It-yourself
diet fdtmula, you prob-
ably lose weight In the
wrong places./81
team in Irvine. He had played
sophomore f ootbaU and was a pan-
time starter on the Woodbridge team
during bis junior year. His coach says
there is little doubt be would have
been a staner this fall.
But Andrew's life was cut shon this
week before faJl football p'ractice
couJd begin.
On Sunday evening, he was a
passenger in a friend's 1984 Chev-
rolet Blazer when it was struck by a
car driven by a women later arrested
on suspicion of felony drunken
driving.
According to police, Andrew was
thrown from the veh1cle and suffered
massive head inJuries. He ~as pro-
nounced dead at the scene. •
On Wednesday, Andrew's team-
mates and other friends are expected
t~ attend a memorial..1eivice fol' the
o ng Irvine athlete. The service
ns at l p.m. at Waverly Church,
Fairhaven Ave., Santa Ana.
Andrew's aunt, Barbara Harris,
said the family has received many
visits of condolence from Wood-
bridge football players.
"They're all shocked about it."
Harris said today. "I imagine (the
service) will be packed with his
teammates and his other friends. He
was very well liked."
"He lived and ate footbaJJ," she
said. "That was his first love -that
and girls. I'm not sure which he hked
more.
"He also loved the ocean He was
aJwaysdown at the beach. He enJO}ed
surfing and the beach."
Mesa man's cries ·
heard by residents
in Eastbluff area
By KAREN E. KLEIN
OflMO.., ..... t.lt
AC ~ta Mesa man ht km& along the
Back Bay jn Newpon Beach late '
Monda) was rescued after becoming
tranded on the side of a l 00.f oot
cliff. police said.'
Patnck Finneny. 20. was treated
and released from Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach after
being mcucd by firefighters who
helped lower him from the face of the
cliff.
Finncny·s aies for help appattntl~
were heard by a jogger ruoruna alon&
the Back Ba): lbOut 8 p.m. Monday, a
·ewport Beach Fire Department
.spnkcsman said...P.olicua.id they · •
ttetived calls from residents of the
~rb) Eastb~ commu~. wbo,,,,_=-,,.. ~ Fmncny }elffila frriiii;across
the bay.
Newport Beach Firefighter Larry
T cgel and Fire Capt. Don Gray scaled
down the steep, rocky cliff from the
top, near Galax) Park. about 8:50
p.m.
When they reached Finnerty, they
strapped him into mountain climbin&
gear and lowered rum to the bonom
on the cuff, where a boat from the
Orange County Harbor Ocpartment
was wa1ung to transpon him to a dock
in nearb} Dover Shores.
Finnerty ••as transported to Hoq
Hospital, where he~ treated 10 the
emergency room for an ankle injury
and released in good condition.
Slaying
victim's
C&rfound
By STEVE MARBLE
Of lM~Nlte ..... An orange Mercul) Capn, one. of
the missjng links in a gruesome lrvme
murder case. was discovered Monday
parked at John Wayne Airport where
1t appa~ntl) had gone unnoticed
sinct its dn~er was fatally shot two
w~ksago
Sports
The Rams fall to 0-2 In the
pre-season after drop-
ping a 21-10 decision to
Cleveland at Anaheim
Stadlum./C1
Woodbridge High football coach
Gene Noji said Andrew "really en·
ioved football. It was one of the most
(Pleue mee ATHLETE/ A2)
Newport Beach fireman Larry Tegel (abo'f'e)
and Fire Capt. Don Gray (rlgllt) lower
DellJ ........... .., ....__ K....._
Patrick Finnerty from Back Bay cliff
rescue Monday night.
The car belonged to Bradley Ka}e.
the I -year-old Newport Harbor
High School student and athlete who
was lilied earl\ this month and then
buned at a Ir' Inc construction slle.
(Pleue eee VICTDf'S/ A.2)
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's 12-meter Eagle
will have gold medalist
Rod Davis as skipper In
the America's Cup trials.
/C4
Entertainment
Boxer-turned-actor Tony
Danza wants to .. clean
up" lnnewTVroleas
housekeeper ./83
Ba•lneu
Car owners face many
problems In flllng an ln-
aurance clalm. /BS
INDEX
Erma Bombeck 82
Brld09 EM
Bull•tln Board A3
Bualneu 85
Catlfomla N.w. A4
Ctualfled C8-8
Com tea 84
Crouword ca
Death Notlcel C5
Help YourMlf 82
Hor0K01>9 C7
Ann landera 82
Mind and B0aY 81-2
Mutuil FuMI 85
NatlonaJ Newt A4
Opinion Al
PaperU:zl 81
PobLog A3
Publle Notlcea C5
Sporta C1-4
Stock Marketa 88
TeteVtllon 82
Theater• 83
WM th« A2.
World Newt A4
QC board
readies for
Jarvis IV
By JEFF ADLER
Of .. ~ .........
Oranac County supcrv1sors, trying to Howard Jarvts-proof the 1984-85
county budget, set aside S 15 million
on Monday to cover a portion of the
tax rebates they m1ght have to
surrender should the tax foe's latest
proposition pass in November.
With the acknowledamcnt that
Jarvis IV, a spinoff of Propos1uo n 13.
could trigger a second round of
bud&et hearinp 10 December, the
supervisors' first achoo in reviewma
tht record $1.08 billion budget was to
(Pleue Me OC BOARD/ A2) Samuel Willett
Parents of Slain
kids bare souls
· to ease grief
"My son was murdered fi"c )Car'S ago,·· said Don Shelton. bil eye fixed
straight ahead, unblinkma and ~·
.. People want to Imo how I at
likes to bounce baCk..
"Bounce back? You don't bounce
back. You never bounce bad:.."
Sbdton, like more than two dozen
others assembled in a crowded Hunt·
tJlllOD BeaCb mectina room on J
recent weekday afternoon. t a mcm·
~r of a croup that is o nc in It uofonunatc ·ie. New mcmbe
come in wcek.ly, w chaptcn re
formed continually.
AU ~-partnU of""ftfur<f mt chtl·
dttn.
Shelton· lOlled f n 19
Adopted Liberian finally
gets assurance he'll stay
Sam Wtlle tt's congressman gives him
fra med copy of appr oved immigration bill
in \tm·a I J ~ears ago "hen they "ere
Pc:acl' ( orps \ olunteers Sam was an
orphan. ~bout 15 years old but not
certain ol his lij?C'.
By DA \'ID BISHOP
Oell!y "°' Cor•~'
'I l'.lf\ ol lru<,trallon cndc:d \tonda'
for a C\an Juan api.,trano man \\lio It
appc.-a ' "111 tinall~ gl.'t 10 'ta' in the
Un11 d \tale'> "1th hi\ adopted tam-
11\
'-.Jm \\ 1llc11 ''a' '1:.11ed "' (on-
re\c,mnn Robert BaJham. R-:Sl'\\-
~1n lkal h. and''' en a Ira med cop~
ol a bill apprO\ l'O h' the Uouw
STEVE
MARBLE
Focus ON THE NEws
-..utxomm1lll'(' l'" lmn11srat1on th,11
"ill pre' cnt dcpona1mn ol thl· l 1
hcnan-hom n~optcd ~in of :i pair l''
lom1er Pt•a 1.: orp "or c~
The-bill no" nc"·d onh lh(
C'\pt'("tcd ru~hcr 'tamp .1ppro~ al of
l ongrl''" to C'nd a 10-vcu \\ 1llc11
fam1h \lruggk to lcep ihc1r brother
and <.on in 1h1 .. C'ountr'\
\\ 1lktt "a' adop1rd b' h" \men·
can parent' Ruth nd Da' 1d \\ 1llct1
\\hen the \\ 1lletis brought Sam to
thd n1ll·d <;131~ m I Q7 J. the\ said he ,3, It-. not L.no"mg 1ha1 1mm1gra·
-itUtl otl'h.lal~~ htm tWO
'cal' t 1 ojd to be lepll~ brought into
the l \ 3\ an adopted child
"'' '\ .,t 1mmed1atel) 1 battk
c.-n.,ucd ~Ten the \\ iUem. the
hurea ra'-·) and Congress. ,
Ten umes the go\emment murd
(Pleue eee SAM/ A2)
Reagan's nuclear . I
joke .no lq.ughing
matter to a 1ies
I
A2 I DAILY PILOT /Tu
Gold medal weather to continue
81 * AnJ.J'!Cldl•~
Post-01) mpic bl'lei ma> be covcr-
i~ utbcm Cal1fom' but clear
ki and warm temperatures wtll
bathe mo t of the are inchmattc&Qld
Wed y, the .N tion l Weathtr
Senace id.
Early momina low cloudi. over the
mctropohtan are will 11 .. c 'Ii\ :) to
sunny k1es lattr 1n 1he day hen
high~ ill ru b 1bc mid· Os . Similar ~ thcr will pre.. 1 Ion
the coa t, where histµ in the nud·70s
and ovemi&ht lows in 1n the 60s and
70s an: prcdictcd.
Afternoon and C't'cnma thunder· lilio~en 'A·dl hit Southern Cahfom11
OC BOARD EYES JARVIS IV •.. FTomAl .
prepare for the 1niuatl\·e. Thl" an·
mahve will appeaa a\ Propos1t1on 36
on the Nov. 6 ballot.
B> t 4-1 vote, board member. aarttd to not on I) set aside S 15
million in revenue sharing funds to
rover any revenue los • but also 10
freeu any ne¥> pendina and hmng
untal the fate of the measur~ 1s
determined.
Supervisor Bruce "1,estande \'Oted
against lh~ rccommendauon sub-
mitted by County Admmistrall ve
Offiett Roben Thomas, saying he
would prefer the flex1b1ht) of cu tung
ex1stin& programs 10 bemg ltm111ed 10
freczina onl>' new spending.
Thomas bas informed the board
that passage of Proposiuon 3~ could
cost the county between $18 to $20
malliort 1n tax refunds plus about $4.3
mlllio.n ln admulistrative costs.
The measure is intended to close
loopholes that Jarvis says govern-
ments used to avoid the tntent of
Proposition 13, which slashed prop-
erty taxes. The measure would change
how propat) 1s valued and assessed.
would require a two-thirds vote to
impose and raise fee~ le' 1ed b~ the
county and would affect v1nually all
the other mechanisms by which state
and local governments fund their
operation~.
By far the b1gcst disagreement that
surfaced dunng the fi~t day of budget
considerations. however, had ~ltlle to
do "tth government tinancmg and
Howard Jarvis. lt focuSt'd .on nuclear
"ar and a more than S 150.000
. appropnatibn for disaster planning
More than a halfadozen count)
residents told supervisors the) ob-
JCCted to the $152,558 in the fire
department's Emcrgenc) Manage-
ment DivlS1on's budget for what they
contended 1s planning for civil de-
fense to the event of a nuclear war.
"We arc here to say that not I
cent. .. sbould be used to prepare for an
emergency for which no plann1na as
possible." said Jean lkrnstein. a Seal
Beach resident.
Also urging that no money be spent
for nuclear war plannma and asking
that language describing such plan-
ning m the bu~ct be changed were
Laguna Beach City Councilman Rob-
mountaan~ nd dcM!M$ Wcdnc ).
Mountnm resort high!> m the IO\\ lo
mid· and lo" in lhc SO lo
m1J-6 CXpectt'd •
In the desttb, mo l oflhl' dn\ "all
be hot and sunny \\Ith tcmperi.turc)
tt rh1n1105 in the upperdt-semanJ
I 08 m the lo\\ er drserts.
ert Gent'), pean actl\1st Ellen
Scveron1 and 4Uth ConJress10naJ
Dastnct lkmocratic candidate ('"arol
Ann Bradford ..
Su pen aso~ agittd to ha Vt' the
language calling for •·count)-wadc
exercises on responses to a nuclear
incident." re' icwed, but pointed out
the language also refen. to planning
!Or an accident at the San Onofre
uclear Generaung Stauon
But the board 1entall\.el) OK'd the
appropnauon as they did most others
considered during the da)-long hear-
ina. Acllon on certain supplemental
llems. such as the purchase of ont' or
two hehcoptcrs for the sheriff's de·
panment, was deterred unul \\ednes-
day so that more information could
be obtamed Approval of the budget
will come later this month.
In an effon to bolster the county's
troubled road fund, supervisors also
1entauvcly approved shafting SI 5
m1lhon anto a special road mainten-
ance fund b> deleung or delaying
funds schedueled for ne"' road con-
struction projects.
The hearings were to c:ontmuc
tOday.
VICTIM'SCARFOUNDAT AIRPORT ...
From A l
Both the car and the body were wd Sgt. Dick Bowman
gone by the ume Irvine pohce Bowman said bom1c1de detectl\es
amved. Construction workers d ts. hope to get a search warrant toda)
COll_aed Ka.ye:S body sevc.ral da.>£--~ go-Q~r lhe car for clues. He did
laterwh1lewatenngdownasewerhne not say wbat pohce thou&bt the>
ditch in the Tunic Rock community. . might find. ~-=--· -~ --~~ .. s stepfilther.·Brocc Bradter
Police have not detailed a mouve · Ralph. 57, has been arrested for the
for the kJUtn~ but according to court crime and is scheduled to be ar-
rccords ~ye smother had obtamed a raagned Thursday on murder charges.
restrainm& order agamst ~alph the The Newport Beach resident 1s being
day before the youth was kJlled. held at Orange County Jail on
Kaye, who was born m London and $500,000 bail.
lived in South Africa before movmg A murder weapon sull has not been
to this country last year. lived wnh his found.
mother. Memonal services for Kaye were
Irvine police saad 1t appears Kaye's conducted Monday afternoon at
body was taken to the construction Harbor Lawn Memonal Park in
site an the car which the killer then Costa Mesa. Fnends remembered
abandoned at the a1rpon. The car was him as a popular and fnendly )Ou th
obscured from view by a car CO\. er. who ex~lled in sports.
"I don't behe'e l''e e'er met a
person who wa~ as well liked a~
Bradle~;· said Re'. Gregor) Ken-
ned) who officiated the memonal
service. "He accomplished much an
has hfe
-ThO"llglrwe will tal-mt!"hurt ofni:s
loss for -a long time. we should lake
comfon m the fact that Bradley nO\\ 1~
at peace."
Until the discovery of the m1ss1ng
Capn Monday, the car was last sei:n
Aug. I when several motonst~ tra\.el-
ang along Bonita Can)on Road an
Irvine claimed they saw the orange
car parked off the roadwa)
\\ 11nesses also told police the) sa"
a bod) next to the car and a man
standing at the rear of the 'ehacle.
One motonst 1denufieo ffie man as
Ralph.
PARENTS OF SLAIN BARE GRIEF ...
From A l
South Amenca and has not ~n
returned for prosecution
"h's a feeling .that no one else can
understand. There's Just no way \O
communicate at. As 11me passed. 11
turned to self-pat). I didn't want to let
~o. It was like m) safe little island. I
JUSt cned and felt homble. I didn't
want anyone to take m) self-pit)
away because I felt that 1t was all I had
left in this world."
Shelton, Amparan and POedderer
are member of Parents of Murdered
Children. a nat1onw1de orga01zat1on
that serves as an emollonal outlet for
parents whose children have been
slain. It's a group that'~ hard to
dcscnbe.
Members bare the1rsouls in painful
tesumony. repeaung the gnm details
of how their children were kallcd or
tortured. They talk candid!~ of their
feelings. Some seem filled w11h anger
others with gnef. Some have become
overwei&bt from overeating Some
have withered from lack of eating.
Many arc divorced Several ha\.e lqst
their faith. otherc; ha' e embrac~d
reli~on.
Life has changed for all of them
But the group's purpose 1o; that life
continues.
••1t wasn't until I Joined that I
realized others had suffered the same
way I had," said Coleen Davis. whose
l S-ycar-old son was stabbed 27 tames
and then left to die an a can)on in
Whittler
·•Somehow. lkn climbed out ol
that canyon to the road Some bo)~
picked him up and took him tu the
hospital "she explained ··when I go1
the call from the hospital I was under
the impression that he "'as OK
"Now that I think bac k on 1l I don't
Ucve 1 could have made that dnve
to the hospttal if I had kno"n .... hat
MLS go1na to happen When I got 10
there be said 'H1 mom. I lo'e )ou.'
''He died that ntght ··
Davis said her husband left her
after unsuccessfully urging her to
attend therapy sessions Other rela-
t1ves faded into the backdrop She
started hfe O\.er again.
"Now it's as though I never had a
family," she sa1d. "ft JUSt dissolved
after the murder."
Doris Tate got pohllcal after her
daughter was murdered She was
angry that the people charged 1n the
killing had not been put to death as
originally sentenced. She was funous
that she had to lobby parole board
members to keep the killer locked up.
A Democrat. Tate's now seeking an
assembly seat in Los Angeles on a law
and order platform.
A chaner member of Parents of
Murdered Children. Tate 1s viewed
wtth considerable respect b) other
members. She's an anspirat1on to
many of them. Her daughter was
Sharon Tate. who was killed 1n the
summer of 1969 b) members of the
notonous Charles Manson family.
"I'll be fightang this the rest of m)
hfe. so I might as well fight for all of
us .. she said. "I want to remind
e\.enone up there of the pain and
gne( all of us are going through ·
Tate sa)S what's on the mind ol
most group members when-she
advocates capital pumshment. "Who
wants them" Who needs them?" she
says of the 162 people on de.a th rov.:
"There's good and theres evil in
this world. and I behevc that mad
dogs should be put to sleep," said
Amparan. chairman of the Orange
Count) chapter of Parents of
Murdered Children
Donna Robhms Joined the group
out of anger
Her 24-year-old son daed two )ears
ago. Police said 11 was su1c1de. but
Robbins finds that 1mposs1ble to
belane It doesn't add up. she said.
She paTd for a toncology te1t when
police insisted her son had taken a
fatal dose of drugs. The tests showed
no trace of drugs, she ~1d.
· It's not that I couldn't accept that
he committed su1c1de, it's JUSt that I
wanted the truth I JUSt wanted
ObJCCti\.11)." she said. "I JOlned the
Dorl•Tate
group to e\pn:ss m) anger:·
Most ol the members ha'e C\·
penenccd angrer Plleddercr c;a1d she
and her husba11d considered tra' ehng
to South Amenca to kill the man "'ho
had murdered their daughter. Shl'
said the) even toyed wath the idea of
hinng a professional hn man.
Shelton got angry at the media
'Dunng the trial l thought the pre,.,
was lacking in sensati\.1ty or com-
parnon of an) kind ... he saad. "\.\hen
I'd come out of the courtroom. the
reporters looked like a bunch of
'ulturec; I was rea<l' to fight. In fact. a
marshal had 10 hold me hack once."
f)ern Sch ne1der·' son "a'
murdered a ~ear ago.
"It wasn't until I Joined the group
that I d1r;co\.ereJ that n ~as all nght to
hun, to Cr). to laugh, to want to be a
pan o l the human race again:· c;he
said
"You rell\t~ 1he whole thing over
and OHT and o'er again and finall)'
\'OU understand 11 '-"Ill ne,er be O\~r. it '-"111 be there C\.CIJ da)'"
Just Call
642-6086
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number at left and your mH11ge will be recorded, traniicribed and delivered
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The same 24-bour an1wertn11ervlee may be u1ed to record letters to thr
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"" ' , •io., " :fO'l "°' ,.. ... """ """" t 6AIW•"' ~"o-~ "°"' °"' ,, l'.W •·.0
Clrculatfon
Te~
Tell us what's on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwertz fll
P Jb ;,he•
RoHmlfy Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Carazo
P.roduct•on
Manager
Doneld L. Wltllama
C11cu1at1on
Manager VOL. n, NO. 227
Lo~ early clouds, mos ly sunny
LOi .... 70 .. ..
MemiiNI If ,,
Mcam! 17 t1
Milwtuk• 17 u ... PW 17 ..
Nun¥tDe " ..
NNOrtunt ,,
.._VOite l n
NQffolll,Va. .. 74 °"""°""' Ot1y
t2 71
~ , .. ..
Ollando . t2 11
,. ... 8tltingt 101 12
f!N~ . " 10
PllOenlx •• u
":::=:t. II .. ,. ... 72 .. ,.on and.Ot r, .. ,,O'MenOm 11
=:=ir..ty 16 " Ci~~~ F"0Nl5 " ..
w .. m_ r: 11o1:.,.. ~ .. ..
"'""'°""' .. u .
Sh<.•w•• • A ..... f ""''°~ Snow Ol;c1o. . ..i .. <1 -~1.11"" ,,., a..,. 8-~110 .. " lltt.OUlt .. ..
Tldea
TODAY SecondlOw 527pm 20
Second tilGll 11 24 p"' SI
WIONHOAY
"'"I(." toe•"' 07
F~ll 12 3l p n 4 4 s IOw a 12pm 2 1
Sun .. " IOOly II , 4 1 pm ·-
W.OnetOly 11 I '' I Ill illlCI NII 9411'"
11740prn Moon .. .., IOOay II • 40 pm NII
WtdnMdly 1111 52 I m lnll tit .. 9Qllfl
II 10 06 p rn
Temps
Albany
Alb;;Qu .. (I ...
Amlrolo
AllCl>o< ega
All.,.ta
AllltlllC Clly
Au111n
B1•1omot1
HI 1.o
13 et 17 63
13 II
73 51 It II
112 74 94 74
62 72
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Contractor pleads insanity
on murder for hire charge
LagunC} Ntgucl man accused of paying·
$3.000 to_arrange estrange!lwife~s-d_,;;e;;;....a_th __
A Laguna Niguel contractor ac-
cused of hanng a killer to murder his
estranged wife pleaded not guilty by
reason of insanity to the single felony
charge Monday
Frederick Edward Penney. 57, was
ordered to ~1.and tnal on the charge of
<iolac1tat1on to commit murder bcgm-
nmg Oct I
In Sl heduhng the trial date . .Orange
( ountv Supenor Coun Judge James
l CONTIN UED STORIES
------------= ----
Smith also denied a defense mot1on
to set bail for Penney, who will
continue to be held in the countyjail.
Penney was arrested in early uly
after a county Sheritrs Depanment
undercoverinvcstagatorallegedly was
paid $3,000 to arrange the death of
Penney's estranged wife, Susan. The
couple were 10 the process of divorc-
ing and had not yet agreed upon a
propeny settlement
As part of the elaborate undercover
operation. investigators persuaded
Mrs. Penney to pose as if she were ~
-dead 0fl-a slab.in..t~er'5--0fficc ..•
Makeup was applied to her face to
make it appear she died in an auto
collis1on.
Later, another investigator posina
as a deputy coroner showed Penney
the pictures and asked him to identify
his wife.
He was arrested a shon time after
paying the second of two S 1,500
mstallments to the "hit man" for
supposed]) arraniJn& her ac(:idental
death
ATHLETE RECALLED BY FRIENDS ••.
From Al
important thmgs an h1~ life. He \\aS
reall) looking forward to this com1n2
'>Cason."
"There were other pla)ers com pet·
ing tor the pos111on (defensive back).
but there wa., no doubt he was going
10 be a starter." NoJt said.
A.ndrew 1s ~urv1ved by his mother,
Marcia Andrew. his brother. James:
and his sister'>. Theresa and Chnst1ne.
all of Irvine.
Whtie lam1ly and fnends are
mourning the los~. lrvane police are
con11nuin& their invcmgauon ofSun-
day's traffic accident
S'-l Mike White ~Id Andrew's
fnend Kevin Cohen. a 16-year-old
Woodbndge High student was be-
hind the wheel ol'the Blazer. heading
west on U01vcrs1ty Dnve at about
6:30 p.m.
White said their vehicle was struck
by-1974 Datsun 300SX dnven by
Dorothy L. Tucker, 55, also oflrvme.
Tucker was southbound on San
Joaquin Road and allegedly failed to
yield the right of way to Cohen. White
said.
The impact caused the Blazer to
flip over and burst into flames
Andrew was thrown from the vehicle.
Cohen, who managed to crawl out,
received minor tnJunes 10 the crash.
police said.
White said Tucker fatled to stop
after the collision and drove her
damaged car to a nearby shopping
center, where she was. .arrested on
suspicion of felony drunken dnving.
felony hit and run, and vehicular
manslaughter.
Police said Tucker was carrying
some "recently purchased" alcoholic
beverage when she was arrested.
Tucker was initiaUr held at OranJe
County Women's Jai on $5,000 bail,
but a jail spokeswoman said early
today Tucker bas been released.
S A M WILLETT GETS TO STAY •••
From Al
orders to <lepon Sam. At one point he
Ocd from an arrest warrant issued
after h<.> failed to attend a heanng
~here he was \Ure he'd be detained
and deponc.-d. r he Willetts solacned help from
num<.>rous Cahfom1a congressman.
who kept \.3nous pnvate immigra-
tion bill~ tor Willett alive in the
House of Representatives. but a
'tubbom H ou~e Subcommittee on
lmm1g.rat1on wouldn't budge. T hen,
in a )Urpnse move last October, the
'>Ubcommntee considered a bill in·
troduced b-. Badham. and 1n July the
Willem wcretold that the bill had
been approved by the subcommittee.
Sam. who now says he's 29. has
lived in San Juan Capistrano for the
past 10 years on a student visa Afler
passage of the ball by Crongress, he
intends to enroll again at Saddleback
Community College, where he began
his studies before the fight to remain
tn the U.S. He supports himself by
working at a local McDonald's res-
taurant.
Badham. himself the father of two
adopted dau&hters, looked slightly
uncomfortabfe Monday , as the
Willens criticized the bureaucracy
and red tape of the U.S. immigration
system.
"It is frustrating when you hear the
government accuse other countnes of
not caring for the family, of separ-
aung families." said Sam, an avid
follower of world and local news
issues.
Badham denied the Willett case
was a partisan issue. "lo this case it is
JUSt a tough committee. They have
their rules, .. be said.
Ruth Willett believes the commit·
tee was partially swayed by a cross-
country bicycle trip to Washinaton,
D.C. that Sam's brother, Dave, made
in 1982 to convince leaislators and
immijrat1on officials that the
Willetts' are a strona. closc-knn
family. "They thought we brought
ham over here to be our servant," she
said.
Sam still must wait five years to
apply for citizenship, which he hope
w1U be a smoother oroccss than
p1nan& residency. "l don't want to
fight anymore," he said.
He finds it hard to imaame what his
life would be like had the Wiletts not
adopted him and fought to keep hun
1n the United States.
"I don't tnow what I would do. I
would be in a vlll&JC .. .life would be
rou&h." he said. StttinJ amona bis
books, stereo and TV 1n the neatly
appomted mobile home he recently
purchased. De pitc the frustrauon .. he is "very
happy" to be tn Amcnca. Church
1roup and many friends helped by
donating 10 pay his Jepl fees, tendina
tcucra to conaressmen and proviclina
moral suppart. The Cit,Y of Sao Juan
Capistranoal50 made him a n "honor·
ary citizen."
Mn. Willett said she is "das-
illu ioncd with the country. I mean · ~e couldn't even ~ta beann& for IO-
lona. We're ~d it s over but it lcav
you with a kind of ickfcelina. At least
now we·rc on the positive road." he
told Badham 1.$ he left, .. We're \Cry
Uwikful )'QU tu.ck with UL.~Ctl
sratcfut:•
Correction
• •