HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-15 - Orange Coast PilotHIQHl3 LOWU CUii 1111111
----
-WEONESDA Y, AUGUST 15, 1984
---Of~ANGE COUN TY l Al If (JHNIA L~ CENTS
Colombia air crash kills LB man
Second American dies, 2 others held
in incident at. isolated desert airstrip
diplomatic ~urce said.
Sadler, SS, who owned the Union
16 ps station on Nonh Coast
Highway in Laguna Beach. died when
the plane in which he was flyini
apparently crashed while tak.in& off
from a clandestine, unmarked air-
strip in a remote desVt reaion of
Guajira in the most eastern portion of
Colombia.
Central Intelligence Agency and
traveled frequently.
A CIA pokesman in Wa~hington,
D.C. would neither confirm nor deny
whether Sadler had ties with the
aiency. By DAVID BISHOP
o.IJ .... C-1191• ....
A Laguna Beach man reportedly
linked to the CIA, was killed in a
mysterious airplane crash in South
America, July 28.
Stephen Lee Sadler of LaRUna
Arson Is the only crime to
Increase In Laguna Beach
In past six months./ A3
Coastline College tells
students they can park
free In school lots./ A3
California
LAX pollce 'hero' had a
flip side, psychologist
says./ AS
Nadon
Reagan administration
trims deficit by $3.5
• billion./ A4
Mondale's getting a bit
Irritated by Jesse Jack-
son's comments./ A5
World
Soviets send formal
statement protesting Re-
agan's Joke.I Al
People
Find out how to change
one room Into two at this
weekend's Southern
California Home and Gar-
den Show./81
With wood-staining pro-
jects, paying attention to
detail saves time and
money./81
Food
Entertaining American-
style means selecting a
menu that draws on cul-
lnery traditions of many
cultures./C1
=·=·~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Sports
Beach was killed in the crash that
killed another American and left two
other men hospitalized, officials in
Colombia said. The two survivors arc
being held by Colombian govern-
ment officials on charge) relatin& to
violat!ng that country's airspace, a
Happily married
According to residents who knew
him, Sad,er had worked for the U.S.
According to sources who do not
want to be identified, Colombtan
authonties who v.erc called to the
scene found the bodies and the
injured men near the plane ~k.age,
. but no indication that plane was
,,, ......
Praldent Ronald Rea,aan and wife Nancy
poee for a weddinl pboto with daqhter
Patti Dam and lier brtdecroom, yoaa
lnatructor Paul Grilley, followinl their 11'-l
mtnute ~marrt.ace ceremony at the Bel Air
Hotel ID Loe ADCelea Tue.day. At left are
the OOGm'• parenta, Terrance and Donna
Grllley.
Supervisors spar
on developln.ent
of south county
Nestande and Riley
oppose fund delay
for animal shelter
By JEFF ADLER
OftMOelly ..... ataft
to supply government support sy~
terns an the developing south county
such as the animal shelter, "let's be
honest and not put in any more
houses down there."
Bruce lf eatande
careyaoa an)lthing other than the four
men.
The plane was rcpcmc.d to be an old twin~ng:ane Loadstar model. lu
idenufication numbers had bttn
removed. It was destroyed in the
crash and 1t isn't known who ~
piloting the aircraft.
Sadler was rci>oncd.ly till alive
when authonties found the wreckage.
He was taken to the closest town of
azarelb for medical treatment but
he died nd wa buned there by a
priest on Jul} 29, South Amen n
sources 1d. .
The mdentny of the other body
ot been detcmuncd. 1br nam of
the two Americans \\ihO were h Pl-
tali.zed an Barranqu1lla, Colombia.
have not been rcleasod.
Sadler' e -wife confirmtld er
fonncrbu banddicd1nColombiabu1
rcfu5Cd to give {urtbcf detail about
(Pleue ~ LAGtmA!f/A2)
Probe ordered
in NB athlete's oc Jail death
'Superb swimmer's'
.collapse blamed -
on heart failure
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Dlllr,.. ....
An investipllon has been ordered
into the death of Grant Richard
Coo}jng, a tall. muscular 22-year-old
alhlete from Newport Beach who
died Tuesday after bein& taken to
DtaQv CoWlty Jail.-
Cooling, a S\andout swimmer V(bo
starred at Corona del Mar Hi&h and
Oranse Coast College, was taken to
the county JI.II earty Tuesday for
failing to appear on a pair of traffic
warrants.
Twelve hours later, Cooling was
pronounced dead after collapsing in a
1ail holding area. Oranic County
beriff LL Richard Olson said.
Family members said .they ere
told lbc.ausc of death appeared to be
bean failure but the Sheriff i office
said -today n is not prepared to·
officialfy announce a cause of death.
An autopsy was to be perf onncd
and the details of Cooliog's death
eununed by the count) corona and
the district attorney's office.
"It's a real tragic~:· Olson said
today ... During the arrest and book·
i~ he was cooperative and lherC were
no incident at tll.:-We don't lmow-
what happened... ·
Family members said they are not
questioning the circumsunoes sur-
rounding the death but did note that
Coolin_g. who was studying busineu
at use. was in superb shape, swim-
ming 4,000 meters each day.
".His coacbe5 had always told him
(Plcue.ee PROBE/A.2)
Boaters!__sewage
'not to blame' for
harbor poll~tion
By IAREN E. KLEIN
Of ... o.IJ,.. ....
-While the 10.000 boats moored ttt
Newpon Harbor arc an easy ta.rJCt for
biologists invcsogaung the source of
bay contamination, the vessels arc
not the primary source of bacterial
pollution in Upper and Lower New-
port Bay. a pnvate boaung consultant
said today.
Sue Anderson. who spoke at a
Newport Harbor Arca Chamber of
Commerce breakfast. said studies
have shown that the flushing of sc.:rr from small vessels is not a si cant problem tn marinas and
harbors.
.. Time and lime again, the research
comes up with the conclusion that
boats are not a major problem,"
Anderson said ... In fact. boats have
been shown to offer enb.an~ment for
existing wetlands.•• 0
Anderson was one of four panelisb
who spoke ta 11 -pthcring of the
chambn"s manne division about
water quality 10 Newport Harbor.
lncreas1ng chemical and bacterial
pollution in Newport's waterways has
been the subject of myriad studies b)' ·
county, state and national agena~
Parts of Upper Newport Bay have
been quarantined to swimmers foi
the past decade.
In recent months. studies have
strongly linked bacterial water pol-
lution to intestinal diseases in swim·
mers.
And while some experts have
blamed the pollution on carcltss boat
owners. who flush fecal v.-aste into the
ba). Anderson said lbe real culpriu
are the pubhc sewage system and the
(Pleue .e BOA TEllS/ A2)
Cathy Mockett of New-
port Beach not only was
the medalist In the USGA
Junior championships
but also captured the title
In match plav./01
Major league baseball
owners discuss ex-
pansion at annual sum-
mer meetlngs./03 .
An Orange County supervisor.said
Tuesday that 1f the county can't
provide support services for the
burgeoning south county, It ought to
stop the building there.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande blasted
the board dunnJ its second day of
budget deltberat1ons after a 3-2 de-
cision to delay buiJdini an animal
shelter near Mission V ieJO.
In opposing construction of the
shelter Board Chairman Hamett Wiede~ noted that "our priorues arc
changin& as times decree." A!1d
Supervisor Ralph Oarlc. who m-
1t.1ated the action, pointed out that the
funding slated for the project was
desperately needed elsewhere in the
county budget.
Even though supervisors voted to
kill the project for the coming year
and delay acquiring the land, they
voted to continue with design work
for the $2.9 million animal shelter.
Aloha bandit sees red after heist
Entertainment
The madam of "The Best
Little Whorehouse In
Texas" becomes an
honest woman at the
Harlequln./84
Bualneu
A Fountain Valley "rent-
a-marketing-depart-
ment' • company Is finding
gold In computers./81
INDEX
85
A3
86
A ..
08-8
85
08
05
82
81·2
07
A8
82 ee
A.-A7
~~-at
A3
88, 05-e
01·• 87
fJ3 83-4
-A2 ~ A4
Nestande and Supervisor Thomas
Riley, who together represent the
southcm part of Orange County,
voted against the delay.
CaJling the board's dec1s1on "in-
sane," Nestande told the superv1sors
that if they feel the county can't afford
The action came as the Board of
Supervisors considered its S 13
million capital projects budget during
the second day of bearings on the
county's proposed S 1.08 billion
(Pleue eee BUDGET I A2)
. Real cop chases
not exciting, but
very dangerous
ln the movies, the cop chase is
exciting, spectacular, even 1musin3.
A few cars flip, a vehicle explodes. a
mushroom-like cloud lifts above the
wreckaac and everyone walk away
without a scratch ... Just the good ol'
boys ... "
In real life. the chase typically as a
shon-lived affatr that ends without
the pyrotechnics, the aravaty·<kfying +"
leap or the multi-car plleuP' com·
mon to the movie .
In more than one case. California
Highway Patrol officers have fol·
lowed a dm er until ht car has run
outofp hclple ly&lid1ngtoa top
STEVE
MARBLE
NEW S BA CKGROUND
"I think m t proplc have wakhtd
the 'Du e of Hlu.ard' too much,"
Newp<ln ch Lt. Jim • rson ad.
"M pu ull re _ • ""'""'~•lftf'4!'t~:
dtStance and end wnhout incident."
There arc uctption • howc tt, and
in such not everyone alwa
walu 1\\11).
On a recent f nday momma in
CW'J'()n ch, dnvuwho till ha,._-_,A
not bttn identified blasted into the
city hm1t~ with poliC'C not far behind.
The ch 'tarted out tde San
Clemente where the man roarC"d ..._... __ ~=~;:;..::;..===--•
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .... Dtlllr .........
A bank robber known for weanng
colorful Hawaiian pnnt shirts during
several recent holdups may be seeing
red today. thanks to a rigged packet of
money he packed up Tuesday an a
Fountain Valley heist.
The packet was designed to spray
tear gas and an insoluble red d}c at
the bandit minutes after be tool it
The so-a.lied ''aloha checkbook ban·
dit... who may be respon ible for
seven other holdups in the past two
weeks, escaped thanks to an ac-
complice behind the wheel of a
getaway car. pohcc said. But in-
vestigators say the stubborn red d}e
marking could lead lo the man's
arrest if he's spotted in the next few
days. It won •t wash off.
Tucsday•s holdup occurred at
about I p.m. at Fullerton Savings and
Loan Assocation, 18020 Brook.hum
c;t.
Fountain Valley Lt Rod Gillman
(Pleue .e ALOSA/ A2)
Medalists'
fans hurt
in collapse
of scaffold
NEW YORK (APl -$...:affoldina
crowded with Broadv.ay <ipccUlton
collapted today. injunna about 40
people amona the thousand who
turned out for a ticker tape paradt for
U.S. Olympic mtdal winners.
About I 00 people had crowded
onto the 12-foot-h buildina tcaf·
fol di to get a better~ icw. and m~
of t m fctl into the 'trut when • railina p\;e way.
~ parack hadn't reached the
ac:ci nt SJtC. and no athl t ~
tn,Jurcd. The parade was de~
about a halfbour u lhc uvurcd wett
N&hcd to h l or--tttattd at tilt
B•.-or~ Coat OAILV PILOT/Wed
nn1111 Tue y u a.m. R.a1nrau for lhc me ume Ian
recorded at .OS of an u\ch, wi~ the
yearly a .. "C being .O l, aceordiqa 10
Emmeu Franklin, aupervisanahydro.
grapber Y.ith Oranac County Flood Contr0I.
Franklin id the thundernorm
u spauy throughout Oranit Coun· ry.
OATERS 'CLEAN' IN BAY POLLUTION •..
'~nntAl
omeowntrswhowash rc:ruhztrsand
ticides from their lawns into
Cli'ain.:a&e channels th~timatcly ~into the coastal wa,e.J'
• "The populaton of boats an New·
Harbor today is rcla11vcl}' the
!Inc as it was 10 years aao:·
rson wd. "But the population
n the uplands has arown trcmen-
ously durina that time. 11' the
pverflow of sewage and the washina &wn of fertihzers that has in-b-cased."
To support her claims, Anderson
cited University of' Rhode bland
studies of Narrqinscn Bay; an inlet
of the Atlantic Ocean extend1na
inland from ~utbeastcm Rhode
Island. Much of the Iona-term dat.a
available on bay pollutjon has come
from studies done on the East Coast
Micha.el Wehner. an environmen-
tal health specialist for the county,
pinpointed vessel wastes as a m~or
concern in the continu1D9 efToru to Jc~p the bay and harbor open to
swimmers.
"Add1t1onal areas could be closed"·
ALOHA BANDIT SEES RED •••
From Al
said a man weanna a tan Ooral
Hawaiian shirt and a black baseball
cap approached a teller and opened a
blue checkbook contain1Dg a note that said, ·•Tbas is a robbery."
Gillman said the man demanded
bills in $SO and S20 denommauons
He said the teller handed htm two rta.cd packets of money, aJona wub
!leveral hundred dollars in cash. The
robber was walkma across the parkina
lot when at least one of the packets
ellploded.
"According to one witness, the guy
klnd of <lisappeared in a bi& orange cloud," Gillman said.
Despite the tear gas. the robber was.
able to chmb into a nearby car
apparently driven by an accomplice
The car, believed to be a tan, 1970s
Toyota sedan, was seen drivina south on the nearby San Diego Freeway.
LAGUNAN KILLED ... From Al
the CU'Curnstances. Accordina to Mrs Sadler, he was a
former mernJ>er of the U.S. Manne
Corps and worked bnefly for a
stockbroker in -the cuy of Orange
before mdVing to "6aigon in 1964
where he was a pilot for Alr Amenca
until I 974 durinit the Vietnam War.
Sadler as survived by bas children,
Stephanie Lynn, Scan, Stephen and
Michael, and a grandson, Jeremiah
Lynn, all-0flf&ut1a Beach.
Memonal services were held for
Sadler at St Cathenne's Catholic
Church in Laguna Beach on Aug. 6.
BUDGET CLASH ...
Prom Al
1984-85 budget
Later. supervisors voted unam-
mously to tentauvely appropnatc
$ 732,000 durina the com mg year to
111' condition Juvenile HaJI after the
county's chief probation officer.
Michael Schumacher, pleaded for
immedtate fundmg.
ln ma.kine his appeal, Schumacher
said temperatures inside the 1uvenaJe
holdmg facility in the city of Orange
have been pugcd as high as 98
degrees on hot ru&hts, accompanied
by high humidity
Notmg that the ·county employs
between 50 and 100 personnel at the
hall, Schumacher told the board the
oppressive heat "obviously 1s not
conducive to morale." He added that
while he docs not advocate coddling
offenders. the current snuation is not
healthy.
The budget hcanngs are scheduled
to conclude today Supervisors are
expected to formally adopt a final
budget before Aug. 30.
if the worsening pollution as not
curbed. Wehner wd. Although New·
port Bay, alona with Hununaton
Harbour and Dana Po1Dt Harbor, is
labeled "no <lischargc," meanina
boats arc outlawed from discharJina
wastes, some boat owners either art u~awa~ of the law or knowinaJy \JOlate 1t.
Jam Bennett supervising en11nccr
for the state's Santa Ana R~onal
Water Quality Contr()j Board. also
spoke at th" morning's breakfast,
along with Monica Mazur. a county
environmental health specialist.
Fountain Valley Detective Darryl
Nance said officers recovered some of
the d~d money and the robber's
black cap m the park.ang lot outside
the savings and loan. The robber
apparently made off with several
hundred dollars. pohce said.
Nance said the robber's apparel. his
blue checkbook and the holdup note
have ·led investigators to believe the
Fountain Valley holdup was com-
mitted by the same man who has
robbed at least seven other Orange
Coast financial institutions over the
past two weeks.
"We're lookmg at robbenes in
Costa Mesa, Ncwf>?,n Beach and
Huntington Beach,' Nance said. "He
loois good for these, and there arc
probably other areas he's hit.·•
The detective said the use of ri~
money packets is a decision made at
each bank or sav1ng.s and loan. The
packets are designed to explode on a
delayed basis, usually when the
robber is outside the bank.
He said the dye docs not wash off
with soap and water, but must
gradually wear off which may take
several weeks
"But 1fhe wants to turn himself in.
we'll be glad to U) to help him get it
off," Nance quipped
Depending on how the robber was
holding the packet. the red dye ma\
be on. bis face or hands, Nance said.
He said anyone "'ho sees a man dyed
red should call local police. Other-
wise. the robber \\IS descnbed as a
Caucasian or H 1sparuc man 10 his
30s. about 6 feet tall with a heavy
build and thick, dark collar-length
hair.
CHASES GOVERNED BY STRICT RULES ...
P'romAl
nounced dead at the scene. Puzzled
pohce believe the dn .. cr mtenuonally
caused the accident. But without even
a name to hang on the man, his
motives become even more elusive.
According to a study on high-speed
cases conducted 10 1982 b) the
California Highway Patrol. the
episode 1n Newport Beach was a one-
in-100 case.
The year-long stud), which focused
on JO cities including Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley and West-
minster, concludes that propcrl) ex-
ercised police chases arc a nccessar)
ri&Jc if patrolmen are to go after
1-wbreakers.
The statistics show that out of
every I 00 h1Jh-spced chases. 29 "111
cndmanacc1dentand 11 manmJUrJ
One will conclude in dea1h. When an
10jury docs occur. more than 70
percent of the time 1t will be to the
driver or occupants of the car being
chased.
prcss1Qn of v.hat happens dunng a
chase has been hopelessly bent and
twisted by telev1s1on and film .
"You don't shoot at cars," said
Carson, answenna a question that
was asked by several cittzens follow-
ing the chase that ended tragically m
Ncwpon Beach
"A bullet won't stop a car,''
Fountain Valley Capt. Bill DeN1se
added. "All ll docs 1s exacerbate the
de~ee of mstab1hty and if you k.Jll the
dnver, you end up with 3,000 pounds
of metal going out of control.
"A person who chooses to run from
a cop 1s probably a guy who 1s not
going to want to let you get the best of
him "De1'.1s1 said .
.\n} use of force to cut off a chase
tends to increase the nsk of accident
and tnJury. the CHP study concludes.
Also. pursuits by several police cars
increase the odds that the chase wtll
end v1olenth
The risks of the chase were C\ 1dent
ID 1977 when Fountain Valley police
officers chased the driver of a stolen
truck into Huntington Beach where
he ran a red hght and slammed into a
sedan on Beach Boulevard.
An I I -year-old girl ndmJ ID the
sedan with her mother and sister was
killed. The mother was cnucaJJy
injured. The girl's father, ndmg m
another car close behlDd, wttnessed
the whole thing.
"It was horrioly traeic." DcNisi
recalled. "The rear risk m the city as
that the driver could be racing down
Brookhurst Street and make a tum
almost anywhere and be nght in the
middle res1dent1al area with kids
playing out m the street. ..
The profile of the dnvcr who
attempts to outrun pohce 1s hardly
that of the hardened cnm1~I or tbe
celebrated road wamor shown m
film. the CHP study shows.
The pursued dnver most often
Clouds Will roll away Thursday
Coutal :I ..
....... leldl
,. ., u
~ .. .,
M l,N 11' 11
~ .. ,,
.... Of!MM .. '° ~y.,-.. 16
~.Va. .. " OklillOIN Oltr n 10 = n n l:t 14
,llmiclrll'Ot 101 12 I? ra
fl!IOellll 17 p
~. II .,
11' .,
Ponlalld, Ot IO .. .. ~ 12 ,,
:=J"c:ity ., 71 .. ea :::_, IO N
~~ 'ltO"'" tt n
hcrsmtt!tO .. to W•in-COIO..,... It LOIM '° 1J
Tldea 11~T""'" '3 l4 "'°"'''' Al!fl ,_,,,,., SftOW ~o ...... 8i.tlO'W'f A;p hll!MltOty .. 11
,_..,Wwfll<-..WtNOU UI 09ol Ill~• ..,, Al!tcn.-.. ..
TODAY . .,.~ ., 14
8-'4'°"" • l:lpll'L 11 ~.V\. .. ,.._... IO 61 • .,, ''"'°*° 10 .. hri Ju1t1,P A n fl
ftDMIOAY c..-811 ... Otet\1,1~1 ta IO ........ ., .. Q .. Flm "'Gii 120:la m. • ,~ac. ... 1't °' ... , .... .. .. 8-tllt • 11 17
l'lrwt IOw ,,,."' 1 1 CNtleeton.W V. ., .. Kll1f0nj .. .. 811t:f:: tO 70
.._,.higl\ 103pfll .. ~NC 17 10 ....... 17 .. aioux .., ti 10 8-'4!0# 102 pni 21 tm::-4 N .. HOftOlllAll ., 75 •l>O*-.. .. ... ... "°"''Oil to .. •1"--7t to
Sun 1111 IOCI .. •I 1 40 p m. ,_ g::: .. ., 1n1Mniea11 .. a TOjNllll ., eo
TI1ut.u1 •• • , s • '" enc1 "'' ao.., a1 IO to .Mcboft,U. ... 1a J::"' . to 71 7 )tplfl ~a.c " 10 ~ '3 73 t2 1'1
MOOll , .... lodl)' 11 10 OI p.1t1 , Mte ~°" .. ea ~ 1S 41 Wl9l'MflOIOll 13 rt
Thurtdty II t 41 I 1" encl f-110U1 11 C-d.HH Q .. KMOMIClty t2 • Wlchlll " 10 30p m ~Wonll .. 11' lMVeoa .. u wn ... ,.,,.. .. .. o.y,on ., 12 Uttielloc* .. 10 W~IOll,Oe H 11 o.n-.. to ~ ., ..
Temp OMMOlntt to .. 11 ...
Oelroll ., 17 DlllM ,, .. .. ~ .,,_ .. 13
All)tfty to 10 l..._.. .. to
MluquerQUe ., .. ,..,,.,.. .. ..
An"'1lo .. to ,._ .. ,,
Anctlotlft II 41 LOCAT10N DlmCno.I AllMlll ti TO Eztended ""1\llllGlon ~ poOf Atltnllc: City .. 'T1 ,._ Jelty, NftpOfl , .. Au9tln 17 70 '°111 Sttwt, HNpcwt Oood lalllMor• .. 72 22ndllrwl.~ '"' lirmingl\tl'n .. .... '*1Gl'ly ~ end ll'IOfnlng low ... bolW~ good IMlmtfdc to 6' .. -~ "" 00.1 •• ~ca.::: ,.,,
lolM t2 .. ~fair ':r:&,,. ll'olll •llt , .. lotton to 71 inllloTOe .... ~ INlrld W,,_ IMIO 10-1'2 lut!mlo 7t .. ~ ...... ~12to71.
.... cllr9CbOft '°""'
Teen to get year jail term
for his role in Mesa·murder
i
Youth·s .chargesreducedin..exchange '
for his testimony against prime suspect
A 17-year-old youth ori&inally
charged with murderinaa Costa Mesa
woman in May was told Tuesday that
he will be sentenced to a one-year jail
term m exchange fortestifyina•aainst
his fnend, the 16-ycar-old alleged
killer.
District Attorney Mike Maauire.
were charged with first-degree
m·urdtr and oolh wete-cenified a) •
adults for lJlliaJ purposes. However, a
subsequent investigation determined
th.at while 81ezunskl witnessed the
slaying. he was not involved.
Costa Mesan Kurt 81ezunsk1
pleaded guilty 1n OranJ.e County
Superior Court to a single count of
being an accessory after the fact of
murder. Judge James Smith said
81ezunskj will be sentenced to spend
a year in the county jail and three
)ears probauon ifhe testifies truthful-
ly 1~ the ca_se. accordina to Deputy
The youth was permitted to plead
guilty in exchange for bis testimony
-aainst his friend, I 6·ycar-old Steven
Tell es, char&cd wt th the bcatina death
of Eugenia 9aker. a ~year-old Costa
Mesa woman. last May 19.
Baker's body was found buned ma
planter at her Cedar Place home the
day after the killing is alleged to have
occurred. Baker had been caring for
Telles, the son of a close friend, but
the two had argued, accordinc to
proS«utors.
At first. both 81ezunski and Talles
"We reached the conclusion
Biczunskj didn't participate, but
helped him (Telles) afterward,"
Maguire said. "He provided him with
an aJib1 "
Telles is charged with first-degree
murder in Baker's death and the use
of a deadly weapon 10 the com-
mission of a murder. Baker was
beaten with a pipe, Maguire said. ff
convicted, he faces a sentence ranging
from 26 years to life irnpnsonment.
Pre-trial proccechngs m the case arc
scheduled for Sept 11 ID Central
Mumcapal Court in Santa Ana.
-lii.J!Ojjjl!ll)(.Dl---------------
PROBE LAUNCHED IN OC JAIL DEATH •••
From Al
he had a good chance at the Olympics
but even though he was a terrific
swimmer, swimming wasn't all that
important to him.'' explained Mar-
;onc Coohna. the youna man's
mor.ber.
"He was a man with extraordinary
athletic gifts. He was a very joyful
person to be around," said David
Grant, crew coach at OCC.
"If you had a kjd, you would have
wanted him to be Hke Grant," said
Don Watson, swtm coach at OCC.
"For him. talent wasn't an excuse for
bad manners . He was a gentle
person."
According to the sheriff's office.
Cooling was arrested at 3:07 a.m.
Tuesday as he sat 10 a Jacuzzi at a
friend's home in Laguna Hills. Mar-
;one Cooltna wd her son bad aone to
a concert Mondav evenina at Irvine
Meail<P¥S and then to his fnend's
hOU'sc-to relax and talk.
Olson said CooliDJ.. who was
booked at the county jail at 3:59 a.m.,
was allowed to eat a noon meal with
the rest of the pnsoners. He collapsed
in a holdina area at l:S7 p.m while
waiting to be assiJlled a cell.
Coolina was treated al tbe jail by
medical pe~ooel an~ later by Santa
Ana paramedics. He died at 3:22 p.m.
at Western Medical C.Cntcr m Santa
Ana where be was taken.
A strappina 6-S athlete, Coolina
swam for the Corona del Mar Htab
School swim team and was voted
swimmer of the year. He was a
member of the crew team and swim
team at Oranae Coast College. He
transfered to USC last year and was a
member of the Si&ma Nu fraternjt)'.
.. He wasa leader." bis mother said.
"He had a rresencc that commanded
a great dea of attemion.
"When he got out ofhijh school, he
was offered a scholarship to UCLA.
But hedidn'tgo because be wanted to
try crewina. His father was on a crew
team and Grant wanted to Jive 1t a
try."
During the summer months, he
had started an auto-deta1Jina business
with a friend. The business was
profitable and building, according to
Mrs. Cooling.
"He was so well orgaruzed,'' the
mother wd. 'Tm sittin& here at has
desk ri.aht now and he has all bis
appointments written up, hts cards
arranaed perfectly for his customers.
He knew what he was doing."
Funeral plans are not yet complete.
Family members said they hope to
start a scholarship in their son's
name.
While the C HP rcpon is regarded
by Orange Count~ la"'men as the
defin1t1vc test because of 1ts scope.
there have been other studies that
have reached far more drama11c
conclusions.
In Orange.Count). most cit} police
depanmcnts will not permit more
than two pohcc cars to be involved ID
a chase at an) one time
turns out to be a man 1n bis early 20s r;:==============:,-;:;;;;;:=;;;;;~:=;;;:;:=:;;;~;;;;~;;;;;:;::::;:::=:=:.:===.· with no cnminal record who 1s trymg
In 1968. Phvs1cians for .\uto-
motive Safct) reP<>rted that one out of
every five pursuits ends in death and
that half the chases result in a serious
jnJUry. The ~oup claimed that 500
Amencansd1eever) year because ofa
poltce chase.
The North Carohna H1gh"°a} Pa-
trol conducted a one-week studv that
$Ame year and Stated that one 10 e\ Cr)
inc chases ends m an accident and
that one out of every 22 results 1n
~ury. • Police say that the public ~ 1m-
"'
Just Call
642-6086
Delly Pilot
Delivery
11 GuerantMd
The helicopter and radio arc the
weapons of choice.
"There 1s ;ust nothing more ludi-
crous than hav1nae1ght or nine police
un1tschas1ngsomeone.'' DeN1s1 said. "Thcre·s no need"
Most county pohce agencies also
eitpect officers to pull back and
~imply pace the pursued driver when
the chase has traveled more than a
few Cit} blocks
"If there's a clear danger," Carson
said. "we'll d1sconunuc the pursuit. A
lot depends on where 1t is. If it's the
freewa) that's one thing. But 1f it'5
down the middle of Balboa Island an
the summer. no wav."
to get awa) because he has commited
a simple traffic violation. On the
average, the chase takes place in the
city, dunng the late afternoon or night
and ends after one mile.
"Most pohce agencies will tell you
that it's stupid to have a 100 mph
chase over a traffic offense:· DcNm
said. "lfll begins because of a scnous
cnme we'll chase them as long and
hard as possible. But we'll keep 1t as
controlled as po~s1ble too.
"We'll radio ahead and use h&J'its
and sirens to let people know that
50methm1's goma on. The watch
commander has the duty to decide ·
when to cut off a chase and the officers
damn well better obey."
Wbat do you llllt about tbt DaJly PUot'! What don't yoa Hilt? Call tht
number at ldt and yoar messaat will bt rtco~e-d, &ran1crtbtd and dtllnred to t.bt approprtatt e-dltor.
Tht H mt U ·bour ao1wutn1 strvlce may be used to record leltert to tbe
editor on aoy loptc. Coo&rlbutors to our l.f'Uers column mu11 Include their
name and teltpboae numbtr for verlflca&loa. No clrculatloo calls, pltllt.
Ttll as wbat't on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
DailjPil•
Circulation 714/IU"'333
Cit 11fled ldvertl1lf1G 714/142-5111
All oth•r department• 142~1
MAIN OFFIC!
:a30 w 1 y 81 ccsra
l.'j •aat 80• l
H. t. Schwartz Ill
Publisher
RoHmary Churchman
Controller
Slaphan E-Caraao
Production
Manng r
Donald WllUam•-t-~i.,.-.1~-t...:~·
C1rcu1a11on
MAnAg r
Gent
Talk
Bv J C HUMPHRIES
Certified Cdmoloe1st, AGS
THE DIAMOND DESERT
olN&mJbla
The unc•atlng Harch for
diamond• takM mineral explorera
Into out·of-tM-way placee au over
the world. One such plac. It the eo-
catled "diamond daert" of Namibia
In Africa. Namibia 11 OM of the neww
countr.., of Afrtca, Mtablllhed 1tter
World War II In the WMt African
deset1. The giant O.BMtl mining
Interest• hive .. tablllhed a gold-
mining town there, 8nd bMutltul
diamond tp9Cfmens ar. being dug
out of the deMrt. Where Namibia
touchel the Me. the mlneftlild• have
btefl expanc:Md In a unique way: the
tee hu actu1Uy bMt'I puehed beck
behind giant wall• of tand for u
much u ten mli.t. Thi• .,. ... the
mt,_. to get diamond• that were
once benMth the ocean bOttom. Ju1t
u the Outch have rectlln\IJCf 1ana
from tM ooe1n for rlCh fttmlng and
for cltlel, the Afrlc&M and Oe8eet1
have pulhed trte ... beck to find
diamond•. It la a dramatic tea11momy
to the high value Whleh m1nklnd
ptaca upon dlamondt. The dem1nd
for the world'• moat precloua atone.
contJnua-io wt man·1-.btJftY to nna
a growtng typpfy.
• i
Beneke' s band . in UCI concert
Tex Beneke and H11 Oreb tra with "Mu c an the Miller Mood'' wtll appear Thursday at lh.e.~Concen
Under lhc Stan" at UC Irvine.
Thia ls the founh of a five-week ooncen scnes
sponsottd by the Irvmc Co. in cooperauon with UCI, the
City of Irvine and the Musicians• Performance Trull Fund. ·
The concerts are held "on the arccn" in Aldrich Pane
.In the center of the UCJ Cam~us beiionifl& at 8 p.m.
Families are ursed to brina picnics in tfme for the 6 p.m.
pre<oncen entcnainment -this week the Jack Rcid.lina
Trio. .
lJJterlor de.f6n •emfnar •et·
A free seminar for those interested in learning about
the interiordesian field will be held Saturday, from lOa.m.
to noon, at Ron Baron's School oflnterior Design, 2915
Red HHl Ave., Suite C·IOI , Costa Mesa. -
For seatina reservations, call -'40-1210.
PJiJ-tradlng •eulon Sm1day
The currem fervor of '_pin-swappina has re-ached
Anaheim and other Orange County cities in response to
the overwhelming demand for Olympic souvenirs.
The ABC Man at 2424 W. Ball Rd., Anaheim, will
host an Olympic pin-trading session on Sunday, from 11
a.m. to 4 ~.m.
Official Olympic pins includini sponsor pins as well
as those from foreign countries are the most sought after. It
is rumored that a "Coke" pin (an Olympic Sam with torch
and U.S. flaa) will brina well into the hundreds of dollars.
The official pin of China is commandina about $200.
OrMQeCoMc DAILYPILOT/Wll&flllNt hp• 11. *4
Wet Tom Sawyer ............. _,,_.......,..
Jared Eckardt, three, of Loe Alaml~ maneann a raft 1D the Jqoon at Ail•entare Play'1'_0Q.Dd lll Bantizaiton &eaela.
CoUtJty 'maer' scheduled ·
0~~~·sa~ef;,:1i:e~~~ are~~:::ies~r:a=ti~:~ Laguna Beach cr1· me d1· ps, Coastline OKs will bold an Oranae County"mixer" on Tuesday, Aua. 211 from 6 to 9:30 p.m., at Westin SOuth Coast Plaza, 660 ~ ~ 1 f.,,i Antoo:~~ds,~~~u-be Sharon Howarth wh~ wtll -·but arson on the le ncr' ease no-1.ee para, ng
discuss when tooonsultan attorney for business decisions. in school lots For funher information, call 625.8738. :
By DAVID BISHOP press and n~1ihborhood watch were ly, from 26 to 24. ReJJabUltatJon wor~•liop•lated o.111,..c.n.,.,. • notified and the incidents ceasect Purcell wd the t.asuna &ach • ·
The Rehabditation Depanment of South Coast
Medical Center, 31872 Coast Hi4hway, South Laguna, is
hostinf a Functional Electrical Stimulation Workshop for
physic11nttnd physical and occupational therapjsts on
Fnday, Aug. 241 from 8 a.ni. to 5 p.m.
..._ _ _...,..,... Tuition_9f~5J_RCr pers~n incl es r~f~bln.mtJ.IJl~ coune materuils.
To resister or for more information, call 499·131 l,
Ext. 2808.
Free te.tJng provided
; On Saturday, Aug 25, the Healthmobile, a non.profit
community service center, will be providini free blood
pressure tesu from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Great Earth
Vitamin store, 24346 Rockfield at El Toro Road in El
Toro. A member of the Olympic water polo team will be
present to sian autographs.
free fitness testina. weight and hei&ht consultations,
free stress packets and free nutrition informauon is
offered. For more information, call 838-8120.
Small bu•ineu seminar set
Women's Opportunities Center of UC Irvine is
offerinaa workshop for men and women on small business ownership on Saturday, Aug. 25, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. in
Room 178 of UCJ Humanities Hall.
The focus will be on Marketina and Pncina.
Monetary Strategies, and Impact of New Tax Laws.
A fee of $20 includes refreshments. For pre-
reaistration and information. call 856-7128.
The Oass of 1964, Sunny Hills Hiah School, will have
1ts 20th reunion on Oct. 20, at the Newporter Inn,
Newpon Beach.
Classmates may cont.act Bonnie Hance Shields at
993-4963 after 6 p.m. for details.
CALENDAR
Wednesday. Aug. 16
• 9:30 a.m .. Oru1e Couty Board of Sa~rvl1or1, Hall of Administration, l 0 Civic Center Plaza. Santa Ana.
• 7 p.m., Lapu Beacla Park.bas. Traffic ud
CtrcalaUoD Committee, Community Center, 374 l.qion
St.
• 7 p.m., Oru1e Couty Water DlJtrtct Board of
Dlreeton, District Headquarters, l 0500 Ellis Ave.,
Fountain Valley.
• 7:30 p.m., Lapna Beacla Selamlc Safety /Dln1Cer
Prepared.net• Committee, Police Depanment conference
room, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Cout CommuJty Collqe Dlatrtct
Board of Trutea, Costa Mesa City Council Chambers,
77 Fair Drive.
Altbouah Laauna Beach saw an early in June." crime fiaures are consistent with the BJ PHIL SNEIDERM.AN
increase in arson durina the first six Nine robt?cries w_erc committed_in crime repon dcCreases .in Newport oe ... ....,,....... •
months <?f 1984 compared to the each reponu~g. penod, Purcell w~. Beach (4.6 percent) &f!d ~n Beginning with the fall semester, Coastline Colietri
same penod a year aao, the overall &!1d no h~m1etdes were reported an Oemente ( percent). C~~ in· students will no longer nave to buy a pia.itina permit 10 numberofreportedcrimesinthe city e1therpcnod.· . ·creaseswuercp0nedmthec1~esof• leave their can in off-street lots at the ~·1 four ~s .d~ Chief .Qf!gli~ Neil Purcell __ Also, no rapes were reponcd this ...Lf'V.!l!ctl~~r~_u_~:ru h ~borhood~-een • • ---t wCl·Mo~y. yea~o ert'l'ep0rt!Uial9S3. oerceiit).'"'°· . The new policy is expected to reduce bomeowacn•
In a repon covenllJ major crime Assaults decreased from 54 to 39, a Purcellal50rq>ol'1~thatthe Polkc complaintsaboutstuderitsoal't.inaoorrsidea11alstncU.\O
categories, Purcell wd eight arson C:tro_p of28 percent. emeriency response time for the fim evade the co19 parkini {ee rcqwremenL
caSC$ were reported between January Grand theft <t;ro~ped 15 percent, ~ months of l 9S.. av~ 2.8 At Coastline's sister schools, <>ran,e eo..i ud
and June this year, while none were from 278 to .23 7 incidents. . nunutes, compared with 3.1 nunutes Golden West coUqes. bowever, students mustconunue10
reponed for the same period a year Automobile thefts dropped sh&bt· for the first half of 1983. pay tbe s 10 pcuemester fee to pUk 00 campus.
ago. Elimination of the c.o&stlioe parkma fee ww
Purcell said crime in major approved Aua. 6 by Coast Commumty ColJeaia DisUicl
categories deaeased 6. 7 percent over E · g • { d tnJ.stees. who oversee the three collqses. The decisioo "81
the previous year in Laguna Beach. ffi er ency ere W C} e made afttt col&eJe officials coocludcd the Coasdine fCe Burglaries increased slightly and was too expensive to admi.a.ister and too difficult to
robberies remained the same, while ..&" · • b enforce. Io additio~ residents livina near two leamina
the number of rapes, assaults, grand 1 ~or saving young oy . centers had already complained about putina prOblcms thefts and automobile thefts decreas-to the caty councils of Hununaton Beach and Coll& Mesa:
ed. _ Coastline. which has no fonnaJ campus. bas ()S)eDed The total number of aU major A group of Newpon Beach fire. drownjngofaNewponBeachyoun,. neiahborhoodlcaminacentenbyleasinafourschoOlsthat
crimes committed between January fighters and paramedics. whose hand-ster who fell into h.lS family's swim· had been closed bcc::ausc of deClini.oa enrollme11t. lbctC
and June, 1984 was 526, compared to ling of a qear-drownina in June may ming pool on June 16 and was found are three formeT elemental)· scboots -Pctcnoa iD
564 for the similar pcnod in 1983. have sa~d the. life of an 11-month-unconscious. The toddler is doina Huntin&ton Beach, Mesa Verde ia Costa Mesa and Fialel
Most of the reported arson inci· old~· we~ honored this week by an fiM now, Thielmann said. ia Wcstminsttr -and one lenDCdia\c t&ooJ, Lmooln
dents have been brush fires set in the offic· of the Cost.a Mesa Medical Bo1,11Kewelc.'!'~cFr~~ ~~~ tn Corona dcl Mar. aanes and reailUDOG ~ ...
dry, steep hillsides of the city. No Center Hospital. fi.rem .... e~ . Param~=csai·tr offered at lbes.t sites. arTests have been made. Carl Tb1elmann, the hospital's ..... ~ ln 1982, the Coast Distnct bepn cb.atlina a ~ Purcell said the city's 7 percent director of suppon service~; read a Geddes and ul Schneider were al.So fee to students who park on campus lots at Oranse Coui
increase in burglaries is notable since commendation to the fircfishters at a included in the commendation. and Golden West. as weU as thote parking at Col.stline's
1t is the first in several )ears. He called Ne n Beach City_ Council study kar:luDl ceALerS.. Vcbicks lhat d.id r iu>Ja) a ~
May, wfth 54 reports1 the worst SCSSIOD Monday. pass could be ticketed.
month for buraJaries since March, "Because of their professional COD• Dlstrlct to create At the leamina centers, bowcvtt, some stlidenlS 0 1982. duct, they made our jobl in the did not wish to buy a permit lim~y Id\ tbetr can oo
"At least 10 oflhcsc incidents can emeraency room easier," Thielmann Sports task force residential streets near the schools.
probably be attributed to one indJv1d· sa1d. One woman rec:eotly COJ'Jlplained to Huatinaton
ua1 cat burglar," Purcell said. "The The incident 1Dvolved the near-A citizens' advisory wk force to Beach city officials that cars belonaina to studenta have
\ Work to begin again
on freeway facelift
The $6.5 million facelift for an
eiaht·mile stretch of the pothole-
scamd Santa Ana Freeway resumes
Monday niahtaftera month's layover
for the Olympic Games.
. Workers will beain the JOb of
resurfacing southbound lanes be·
tween 17th Street and the Costa Mesa
Freeway and hope to finish within
three days, accordina to Cahforrua
Department of Transponation of·
ficials.
The second phase of the proJect will
bcain on the northbound str:cicb
between Chapman and K.atella av·
enues on Aug. 24. Work on the last
southbound stretch between the Riv·
erside and Garden Grove freeways is
expected to beainthe first week of
September.
All work will be done at niaht, with
limited freeway closures from 10 p.m.
to 6 a.m. on weekdays and 10 p.m. to
10Lm. on weekends.
· th b'•" h I thlctic blocked the entrance to her home and her oei;bborS' review e ~ sc 00 1 pro-homes on Farnswonh Lane across &om the Coff1Jjne'1
Cedinb:"1::a di~: ~t Petenon center. She said one student parked in her
education. driveway without penni5'ion. ~~~~~u~tnt~:~~ts B~( O:e Buc~~J:t!:s =:etsto~:! ::;s~n:.
school district seckina to be a member that students would leave their cars in the Peterson fot, not
of the task l"orce lbould call him at on neiahborbood streeu. 49~8546. Coastline spokesman Jack Chappell wd the college
The task force results from a recent received similar complaints from the Mesa Verde
California state supreme ooun d~ neishborhood in Costa Mesa.
cision dcclarina all school fees for He said actinf Oia.ncellor Da\le Brownell told district extra~cularactivitiesunconsutu· trustees a financial anal)'SlS dctennined the Coastline
tional. Without the fees, the LBHS parlrina fee was not cost-effective, in put because students
athletic prosram faces a budicl could easily avoid it by pa.rkina on the residential streets;
reduction of about $12,0QO, Barnes "We're dnvin& students away and antqooizina
said. people in the commuruty, so whr do it?'' Brown.ell asked.
The job of the task force will be to Oiappell said the distnct s · trustees decided the
recommend a rcorpnization plan for nciahbo.rbood location of the learnin& ccnten warranted
the hi&b school spons ~m that the fee exemption.
will alfow it to operate within the new He noted that the lea.min& centers are only four Of
bwiaet constraints. Coastline's 1S teaduna s11es.
Po uc E Loe
Cops nab Huntington .teen
in baseball bat robberies
A man armed with a metal baseball
bat smashed tho windows of a car
early today io Huntinaton Beach and
then ordered two men sittifl& inside
the auto to hand over their pocket
chanac, Police reponed.
MfcJi.el Pease, 19, of Huntinaton
Be.lch was arrested on auspicion of
Lapu&eaola
Animal control officers reponcd
IClelDI stray coyotes and the remain•
of 1everal animals believed to bt cats
tn the vicinity of Hiah Ori ve Tuesday
afternoon. -...
A residential bural&rY. reported in
lbt l400block ofCapisuuoAvenuo
Tuaday momina. resulced in the loss of 1 C\illilln water punfiet wonb
$600 lftd an oriental rua worth $400. • • • Daniel Andrew McKnifht, 27, was
arrested T= niabt 1n the 300 block of 1¥1Y for alleaedlj ~objects at mo ina vctiiclcs
and raistina arrest. He wu held on s 1,000 bill.
• armed robbery about an hour after
the 12:SS a.m. hold up at the
intersection of Main Street and
Walnut A venue in the city's down·
town area. The viclims-William Geney, 23,
of Huntinaton Beach and Rodney
Heinrich. 23, of Oranic -suffered
driviDJ a )icllow p ckup truck was
dump1n1 trash behind the former
department 1tore. • • • BursJars took $2,300 wonh of
electroniC' equipment includina a
video cassette recorder and a telc.
vasion set from a raidenc:c on the
l ~ block of C&hfomia. The in·
truder entered throuah a bedroom
window. • • • About $9,400 wonh of jcwlery a
well as an antique doll worth SSOO
waa taken from a resldeftct: on the
llOOO bloc oflrookhuni '"'
,
minor ir\juriics from the flyina alass.
The stolen pocket chaqc, which
amounted to S l 2, was recovered
along with the baseball bat, police
said.
Pease is bcma held today at the city
jail on S2S,000 bail.
at US were taken from a tesJdeooe on
the 16000 block of Rhone. The
burglar entered the house throuab a
front bedroom window. • • • A cat bufllar took a $9,000 Honda
automobile arid $2,600 wonh of
stereo equipment from a.rcsidcn~ on
the llOOO bJOCk of Vallarti as the
oc:cupant 1lept. The crook entered
throuah a kitchen window.
Coetalleea
J'wo SJl,irs of ~n c:onwnina -.-aueu 11th monqo,;were stolen earl)
Tuesday :morntna fi'Om an ~man
at 1021 M1 aon :Dnvein Qilta na
91•h1le the dents ltpL lPoliOC id
cntr) to the apanm t 'WIS apperent·
ly p!ntd from the pauo lhro\llb an
unloclctd ahdina ~· dOor between t:lOa.m. Ud 7 a.m.
was valued at $75. There was no Sllfl
of forced entry to the home. • • • An unlocked car parked on the
3l00 block of Sea View Avenue was
buraJarized Monday niaht and S 1,055
wonh of valuables stolen. Amona the
items missing were an Olympic
license plate. floor mat~ scat ooven
and a set of aolf clubs. • • • There was no lo reponed after a
home on Eldorado was broken into
O\ler the weekend. Thieves pried open
a sbdina alass door at the home to
gain entry, police said. • • • A vehicle parked in a carport on the
200 block of Pearl A "enue wu
buralarized Monday and $2, 761
w<>nh of valuables 10 a purse ~
tolen. ned pieces of Jcwtlt)' and
a wallet were amona the items
reported mi ina.
J'011Dta.lD VUle7
1980 Honda Civic, par,ked in front of
her house. The loss included tcrco
equipment worth $200 and a mUTOr
worth $25. • • • Someone smashed the front alass
door to buralarize Rainbow Rotation
Moldina. 11160 Condor Ave., em·
ployces discovered Tuesday mOf'T!·
1na. Damge to the door Y."IS csu-
mated at $200. and the buralar took
tools. a calculator and a t)'J)C'Wnter. all
•Orth ab6ut S66S. • • •
A resident of the 16000 block of Mt.
Pneto Circle reponed Tuc1da) that t~o bicycles had been stolen from bis
open ~· Tbe loss included a ~
Schwinn bike \\Onh $100 and a blue
Murr&f\ cruiser wonh $200.
• • •• A Santa Ana woman rcponed that
someone stole her brown 1983
Mercur) Coup.r while she was shop-
ping in founi&in Valley at 161 7)
Harbor Blvd. The loss w estimated
at $17,000. , , ~ Huntinaton ~ch rtlidtnt re>
ported Monday that someone bur-
alarized bis blue 1984 BMW wbik u
•'IS parked 10 Fountain Valley on tb.e
I J 100 block of Warner Avenue. The
intruder used a IC'tewdriver to break
in. causina SSOO damqe. The loss also included tettO equipment wonh
St.SOO.
black. 27 old. 6
pounds
Police raid Irvin I
·arug1aborato.Y,
-,
. ....
~ N ~TIO~
-----eagan revises defic · t downward ~.s. bank failures total
Economy applies the brakes,
but industry production 's up
• •
ENGUS ALES
8
.
All FIAVORS 11 ':~ ..
-..:...-·~· 99 t
VISA and
MASTERCARD
Gt;A01:¥ ACCEPTED
STORE HOURS:
MC>f'I • Thllf 10 00 am to 9 00 pm
ft1 & Sat t 00 Im tot 00 pm
Sunday 10 00 am tn I 00 pm
_, ESTREUA
t-MEUIT SMVIUOll
SIS (S.LO.J
$3~!
t914 ORANCE COUNT1 COLD MEDAL WINNERS
BRAND1
E-& J .. ,,.., '"'* •117•
R4lll .. ,,.,., ,... .. •4u
~ .,.....,.. .. ,,.,., ..... ·7'· .. ,. ...., ,!!'.':!.. ,... .. •s••
SCOTCH Sur.., 16,,.,., I H 11r .,. 7
ow ,......, .. ,,.., '*' •6"
o • ...,.. .. ,,.., i-. •ss•
.....,.. ' ....., ",,.., ,... .. •s ..
Clae ...,...., II""' t H '* ., ..
ltEC BEER
........ ., .,,..., ... *i6 ts
Lt .. .., .. s,.cw ..., ... •25ts .,, ,, ...., 7,..,., '*'r.
N>IW IH & .._, JY, ,.., .t
CORDIALS
.,,.. ..... t4WI .,. ... SH
Dt1.,,., .... u.-,... .. *6"
... ,. • ....., .. • ,... .. •617
........................ tte• •511
GIN I VERMOUTH
..... a..
., ..... Oi•
,. ""' .. ,,., lffllr *7."
'*' ., ..
S.1111•'• OI• .. """ t 1S ...• ,.,
Trih .. v.,....._ ••• ,... .. •2u
hll ...... V1111Mffl ..., 1 .. .., *259
MEISTER
BEER GI.ASS
IOUMIMS sun
l..ihbt., 87~
ts u . '-'"-'
Get \Yhatever you Y#ant.
For less.
__ _,
1726 SuptrlOJ Ave., Costa . 111 • PfMtnt: 845·1808
25876 Mult11nd1, Mtssitn Vte • Pltona; 855·1437
10931 Wurm niter. Garden Grove · Pttont: 131,,1'5
413 South Euclid Annue, An tte m ·Plume: H1·6H2
14417 C&.1lver Ot1ve, trv1ne -"' ne: 551·2757
,.,..... ,... .. *2"
lM •ttilll e......,• ,... .. s4st
Wtllltl w. e-......, • nt"' *3''
r ................. c...a....... •sts ~ .......... '-.... 7'1 ..
.. ""' l1ett4I ......... .. ,,., .... elllc1 ......... .. ""' c.,ttl• ..... l""'4
TEQUILA
MIXERS
uw •6H
-~· JM .. ;J.
"'Mt •9•1
~ "' .• flMrt "' ,,.
lr.& ... T......, by• ... s40
Wu Pl .. e.M 1181 0r '149
49 for first half of 1984
CALIFORNIA
Deputies drink and rald?
WEA VER\1LLE -A grand jury in Tnnlt) County has c~ that
sherifrs depull('S drink alcohol between raids on man1uana growen and raise
their own man1uana plants. witbouta permit, fordrugeducalJoo prosrams. In
a report released Monda). the grand JUf) blasted the shenff s department and
urged that deput1escaugh1consumingalcohol or drugs wh1leon duty be strict])
disciplined. It al~ ~1d the department should destroy all man1uana plants
bclng grov.'ll at its office.
SanslJbJe bill gets 11rst test
SA FRAl'liCISCO -PropostHon K. a measure passed by city ~oters in
June designed to rcstnct new comruction that blocks sunliJht. passed its first
test as the city attorne) rejected plans fora 22-story htghnsc 1n Chinatown. Cit}'
Attorney George Agn~t told the Planntn$ Comm1ss1on Monday to tum down
a request b) developer Walter Shorcnstem bccawsc it would cut su..nlight to a
downtown park. Prop<mt1on K. passed b\ more than a J..2 margm, bans
construcuon of buildings of more than (our stones 1f the}' would cast a
.. substanual'' hadow O\'er a park. pla)'ground or open space The measure
affects some 200 parks. ~uares and pla)'grounds in the 49-squarc-mile city
Reagan nods off·~ meetings? .
--LOS A~GELES -President Reagan sometimes fias troubfc staying
awake dunng mcctmp with his Cabinet, says White House cb1ef of sulf
Michael K Dea\.er. Deaver made the comment dunngan interview broadcast
by NBC Ne~s. in which be said he had seen Reagan "when he had difficulty
~taymgawakeCincabinet meetings). but he wasn't the onl y one in the room that
was.·· A kcd whether the problem were worse 10 the afternoon than in the
morning. Deaver told NBC:""I think it has more to do with what's 1oioa on in
the mectmg than what time of day it is." .
Klsslng cop may be fJred
SAN FRANC I 0-A policeman who serves as liaison between the San
Francisco Police Department and the city's gay community may lose his JOb
because he kmcd a male fnend while m uniform dunng the city's Gay F~om
Day Par.Ide Pohcc say an internal 1nvest1gation 1s underway to determine
what punishment. if any. should be handed out to Officer Paul Seidler, a 17-
year veteran of the force. He claim~ to be the only pohce liaison 10 the country
usigned to work with gays. Seidler. 41. said the invesugation 10to the kissilli
incident .. seems dascrimmatory on the face of It ••
Jazz galtarist Breau dead
LOS ANGELES-Lenny Breau. a Jazz gu1tanst, was found dead Sunda)
in a swimming pool. He was 43. Breau made several albums under bis own
naincand played on recordsbyother)azzart1sts. At the umeofhisdeath, Breau
was workmg on an album with gu1tanst Phil Upchurch and g,vma ..-eek.ly
seminMl at Donte's, a jazz nightclub 10 Nonh Hollywood.
Hlroblto recalls •ar'• end
TOKYO -Emperor Hirohito, the last surv1v10g national leader from
World War II. mourned Japan's 3 million war dead and prayed for peace in
ceremonies today m·arking the 39th anniversary of the end of the war. "My
heart 1 filled with pain even today when I think of many of those who fell in the
ranks of the last lfe2l ...,.ar and their survivors.•• he Slld. Now 83, Hirohito was
frail and walked h~itan tly. but spoke!" firm voice. About 6,500 people, many
1n their 7Ch, who lo t family members 10 thewannd 1,000 dignitaries gathered
in the annual ccrcmonie!l to mourn the war dead at Tokyo's Nippon Budokan
Hall
Red Sea mJne clearing begm•r
CAIRO. Egypt -A multinational effon to clear Red Sea waterways of
explosives JOt under way today wub four Briti b mine·hunters and a support
sh1pswcepanatheGulfofSuciformy4ltcnous minesthathavedam~atlwt
I 6 hips in five weeks. Harbor officials at Suez. at tbc northern end of the Red
Sea, said the five shi~ began Opttationsat 7 a.m. in the autf, the nonhwest fork
of the Red Sea bordered by the Egyptian mainland to the west and the inai
pcnmsula to the east. A U.S. Embassy spokes.man said the American transport
sh~p breveport, carryina four Sea Stallion mineswccpina helicopten, was due
today at Pon Said, the northern terminus of the 100-mile·IPna Suez Canal.
which connects the Red Sea and the Mediterranean.
Slllpwreck •arvlvor re11eaed
LAS PALMAS. Canary Islands -A Canadian hap today pickC'd up the
second known urv1vor of the 2S.man crew of a panjsh fish101 trawler that
sank'"' Thursday off the C'oast of Morocco, coa t auard officials said. P«Sro
l.Opc1 Beltran, 29. of Hue Iva, Spain, said he had urvaved ix days by cli~na
to. ran he ra hioned from planks of the fishina 51\ip\ the t tamar Ill, which
operated out of the anal) Island The crew con isteo oflwo Morocanund
26 Spam td . The first urv1\or. ~ho was rctcued unday, had utd himself
and the bodies of (Our other ('rtwmcn co a pietle ornouam.
Psychologtst: Police 'hero' may have had a flip side
They become obs ssed with roving
.LO ANGELES (AP)-~tecung
the world's finest athletes is n
b gnmcnt wonh)' of envy, but
Jimmy Pcanon' ou1 tandana record
as a policeman invatcd that k1nd of
resi><>ns1b1lity.
Now psychologists and those who
know ham are tryinJ Lo explain why Pearson, a nine-year police vctcran
a!lsigncd to prot«t Olympic com.
petiton, would sc<:retly place a bomb
aboard a bus canyin1 the luaaqc of dcpartina Turkish.athletes and then
disann it so he would look like a hero.
Those who show courag~ and a
dedication 10 duly -s colleagues
grcc Pearson ha -0 .somcumes
have flip 1de," 111d Paul
Abramson. an assocaalc professor of
psycholoay at tlic Uruvcn1ty of
Califorrua at lm AngcJ9s.
"Where &here IS an trn1t1onal fear,
there's an Ul)OOnK1ous wash. Usually
these people . do actually perform
bravc acts," Abramson said. "But
they arc motivated by a fear of being
the opposite." .
Abramson said people like Pearson
often find initial utisfaction in a
chall,.nPint inh, but "!'" beCome
obsessed wnh eroving themselves
and C\cntually 'do somcth1n u-p1d ..
uch behavior somctam as
mo11v1tcd by a ··ncpuve re ponse
pattern .. de igMd to how the inda-
vaduaJ ss not a coward or a wcakli
Abramson aid.
"He came to the depanmcnt as a
hero," one unidentified police com-
m ndcr d. ''He wanted to slay
dragons and rescue damsels,"
• G~n Eastrom, a UQ:.A prof cssor
who has mown PeaJ'IOn for te.veral
years, said he "was not surprised that
Jim would perlOrm such an act of
heroism (11 carry away a hve bOmb),
bu1 I am stunned that he would do
somethi like fake that bomb. I am
Jacks·on 's vocal criticism
begins ~o irritate Mond~le .
MEMPHIS. Tenn. {AP) -Walter
F. Mondale expressed exasperation
Tuesday at the Rev. Jesse Jackson's
continued withholdinaoffull support
for his presidential campaign, but
Mondale said he would nol negotiate
to win anyone's allegiance.
Mondale was responding to re·
porters' questions about a published
mterview in which Jackson, one of
Mondale's former rivals for the
Democratic presidential nomination,
said the Mondale campaign has no
stratcaY to attract black voters.
"At this point, the campaign ha~ no
media stratqy, no cGherent regional
or national •trategy, no lhemes" to
win the black vote, Jackson told tbe
"There's no negotiauna. n~ qu~·
tion of upping (the ante or) -n} thing.
That's the approach I'm takina with
everyone, including Rev. Jackson."
Mondale. meanwhile, exhibited
some frustration with repeated ques-
tions from reporters about the situ·
ation.
"Look," he said, "I want every-
one's suppon, including Rev. Jack-
son's. I'm convinced that Rev. Jack-
son wants Walter Mondale elected
president of the United States .... I sec
these minor questions as irritations
and only minor imtations that one
docs not have solely with MI. Jack-
son. But that's inevitable in the public
process as we seek to underStand each
.
other bctttr. But I sec them as minor
matters and not troublesom~."
Mondale also said there is no
questioning his civil rights record,
which hedcscribcdas"superband it's
not JU St a modest commitment, it is a
lifetime commument"
Mondale, thouah. said it is not up
to individual supporters to win the
elecuon for him.
"Now I want the support of Rev.
Jackson, I want everyone's support.
But I have to win this on my own.
Brokers cannot deliver the presi-
dency. A candidate must either
appeal to Americans ... or lose. And I
intend to win on the basis that I wiU ~
the best president for all Americans."
rl) an 1s police carttr, Pcanon
01 in the r t. u d1 seno
mJ ury htn bis bulletproof vt5l
topped the stua.
An a v1d scuba dn er, he ved
$CYttal dro\\'Ot~ ~ns and re-
ceived lhe Prcsiden1Uil Oitauon m
former P,resident rald Ford He
t helped Start the dcpanmcnt"s
own diving UDlL
Accordill$ to his pohoc biography,
Pearson joined th Nayy LO I 96S.
SU¥ed t"--O. U>W'S.of.duly ui Yiem•m
aod once belonged to an underwater
demolition team.
.
Fashion Fabrics
and other thing
FACTORY SURPLUS
·ouTLET
-. Open To The Public
STORE HOURS:
Monday through Friday,
10:30 am -8:00 pm
Saturday, 10:00 am • 4:00 pm
COSTA MESA
743 BAKER STREET
On• Block Wnt ot Br11tOI
(714) 957-1214
••• ,,. • ••••• •ti
t I ~ .J'" . .
LosAnaelesTimes. .~~~~~~~--"-~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~..i....;~~---...;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~~--'~-'"-.....-..=---....:.-~~~
On a fli&ht from Little Rock, Ark.,
to Memphis, a reporter overheard
Mondale indicatina to his staff that
the appointment of a Jackson adviser,
Ernie Green, as a deputy dlfCClor in
the Mondale campaign still was not
brinaina forth Jackson's all-out sup-
port. "We gave him Ernie Green and
that didn't help," Mondale was heard
sa~~ '----raciSOi\nasrnt1c1~
and his runnina mate, Geraldine
Ferraro, for not appointina enough
blacks to their campaign staffs.
Asked at a news conference
whether the remarks aboard the plane
Indicated anger with Jackson, Mon-
dale said, "I certainly did not intend it
that way. I don't remember the exact
words I used."
However. Mondale made clear he
-will not nqotiate to win Jackson's
support.
"I'm not many bargam1na process
at all. I don't intend to be. I am what J
am for because I believe m it,"
Mondale said.
"I'm puthn' together the best
possible campa1an structure lQ serve
my campaiJ!l so that I can get elected
president of the Uruttd States. I'm
asking everyone to jom in that
campaign and help me get elected.
But I'm makmJ the decuions ~
on what J think is best for my
cam~gn and for my presidency and
that s the basis on which I'm ask.int
'people to join me.
45 injured
in Belfast
IRA riots
BELFAST. Northern Ireland (AP)
-American IRA supporter Martin
Galvin hinted he may a.pin defy a
British ban on his ~nce in
Non.hem Ireland, and noting broke
out in advance of today's funeral ofa
man killed when police tned to arrest
Galvin.
Police and Roman Catholic youths
clashed Tuesday niaht at a soccer
match. A spokesman at Belfast police
headquarters said 3S officers and JO
civilians were bun and I 0 people
were arrested, heiahtenina tension
before the funeral.
Galvin has been in hiding since he
urned up at a Sinn Fein rally 10 Belfast
Sunday in defiance of the ban. Sean
Downs, 2, was killed and 20 others
were hun when riot police firing
plastic bullets plunged into 2,000
people at the raJly m a bid to arrest
Galvin. The 34-year-old laW}er es-
caped in the chaos.
TOREWIDE DISPOSAL SALE STARTS THURSDAY, 'AUG. 16th, 9:30 -A.I. SHAIP!
----... .......----...!.!.THE.f:ABULOUS~.__,_...___ ........_._ . ' . FtEET~EET
ATHLETIC SHOES • CLOTHING •· ACCESSORIES
993·1 HAMIL TON (AtBrookhurst-HLJNJING.TON BEACH AlphaBetaCenter)
OFF
CLOTHING
LADIES • MENS • KIDS
NIKE! BATA! CONVERSE! PUMA!
ADIDAS! AVIA ! BROOKS! SAVCONY!
LOTTO! NEW BALANCE! ASICSTIGER!
REEBOK! CYCLE TOURING! SPOT BILT!
PAT.RICKI MITRE, ETC.!
PRICIS SACRIFICED
UPTO
AEROBIC
SUITS AN~
·ACCESSORIES
UPTO
SHOES· IAUS
CLOTHING
UPTO
75°/o
OFF'
Women's meeting
has 'firm' sUpport
' txteen 0 n Colo!~~ corpor.
at on have donated $9,000 to undc:t·
wnte c penses for the Coastline
"COmmunuy College Conference for
omen. 'Tihe conference i, scheduled
m8p.m.toSp m.onAug.18at the
•estln South C st Plua Hotel.
The donations allowed the cost of
he oonfermc:e to be ttduced 25
rccnt to the present $30 fee. The
onat1on1 also provide scholarships
for womcn'who would otherwise be
unable to attend the event. A atpacity
croWd of800 is expected.
The fund drive was started after the
1983 conference. which was
produced by an advisory comm1uee
of business and professional women.
When 1 twas over, the women decided \o fonn a suppQrt committee to raise
money to dclray mountinJ costs.
The price of the conference has
climbc<f o'er the years from S 1 S to
$.0 for the I 983 conference.
"It was our belief that many
women who would benefit from
attending the conference were beina
deterred by the price:· said Robena
Weil, Coastline's a t5tant dean.
"We wanted lo reduce the cost, but
we did not want to diminish the
quality of the conference," Weil said.
"The generosity of the public-spirited
finns allowed-us to meet that aoal."
The Conference for Women wiU
feature · 18 workshops and auest
speakers. More infonnauon on the
event can be obtained by callini
Coastline's Community Services Of·
fice, 241--6186.
Lagu·na art· school
features Johnson
Johnson hu been deecrlbed
11 a .''delver Into fantuy. a
romantic builder of lmagea.
mood8. d,..,,, wortda, • cr•tor
of Whlmalcal anJmala and
arcnttecture. orot~ ~~ halluctnatorydr~
and even contlnentl.''
Her work• wttt remiln on dft..
pl~ In the achOof'a Ettinger Gal~ tttr~ §eptember 8.
Cd;M woIDan gets award
Jo Anne Rogers has been presented Education. Rogers was president of
with an Outstandmg Contributions the Corona del Mar Hi&b School PT A
to Education Award b> Elizabeth from 1981 to 1983 and as a longtime
Parker of the Oranite Count) Board of school volunteer. .
PROTECT YOUR HOME
WITH
DOORSENTINEL
FOR SLIDING PATIO DOORS
FOR BROCHURE AND
DEALER NEAR YOU
CA~L
1,SOO..UDOORS
Bot and tire-Ing climb?
Ele:!l;ear-old Stuart Harrla, of Irri.ne, react. to a solar-
bea tire •mountain' ln Hertia,e Park. Juctatnc from the
..
apreulon on h1I face, Staart ob'riouly wun 't apec:ua,
the •un·balted behemoth• to be th.at liot.
.HB 's Myers promoted to Army sergeant
Claarln E. My~n. son of Donald G.
Bale of Hunungton Beach, has been
promoted to the rank of sergeant in
the Army. Myers is a helicopter
repairer with the 6th Cavalry Brigade
at Fort Hood, Texas. • • • • Gary A. W\ltlock, son of Donald
-·------...._. -
and Sherlene Whitlock of San Juan
Capistrano, bas completed trainina m
fundamental military skills at the
Army ROTC basic camp in Fon
Knox, Ky. Whitlock is a student at
Cal State Nonhridge and attends
ROTC at UCLA. .. . .
833-0080
2 BIO'cks
Sod of
Job• W11ne
Al~rt on
M1clrtbur llvd.
Newport leach
3-Piece
Fish· Dinner
Only$2.99 ·
Treat yourself to our 3·Pi«e F1Sh Dinner three big. crispy
fish fillets. golden fryes. fresh coleslaw and two crunchy hushpupp1es
S~ial pnce good for 11 llm1ted time only,
Special: extra ntlets. 50C apiece. Now, you can add extra fish fillets
to your meal at this 11ery jpee1al price! Good 'Nhen you buy any adult
mNI. for a limited time only. Limit 4 fillets per meal.
Good only el pe1bC1pet1n9 atioppu
Not ••lid ... 111'11riy othe1 CO\Jp<>n or d 1eoun1
Airman Ellen J. PrntoD, dauahter • • • of John E. Preston of Fountain Air Force · Reserve Airman 1st
Valley, has been assianed to Keesler Class ltevlll M. Chrbteasea, son of
Air Force Base, MISS .. after complet-Mr. and Mn. Donald Christensen of
inj basic training at . Lackland Air Seal Beach, has araduated from the
Force Base, Texas. She wiU receive Air Force aircraft maintenance
specialized mstructton in the com-· course at Sheppard Air Force Base,
puter systems field. · Texas.
..--[EllNY·'S ... c11•> 11~121
Speclall1l119
manltenance Hair
for the Active SO's
In Low
Designs
Consultation & Cutting *25
Perming & Foll
Hlghllghtlng 145
($5 OFF With Ad)
OPEN7 DAYS
Tuesday thru Saturday
9:00 AM to 6:00 PM
Sundays, Mondays &
Evenings By Special Appointment
WILLIAM P. BRACCIODIETA, M.D.
ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF A
HEADACHE AND STROKE
PREVENTION MEDICAL CLINIC
Spec:jO[lz1ng in
• Neoroiogieot dlognos.s and tr.afrMnt ol "*XIOche dllOfden
• Second opinions regarding ~ch• dlSOfdela
• Stroke puwenllon '
Wiiiiam P lraeclodl .. o, MD. FAES. DlrectOf
Dlplomo!• In Neutology Ametlcon Boofd cJ Psycnlotry and NeufOIOQY
()plomote 1n Electroence()hol()gaphy Ame!lcon Boofd cJ Quol1f1Caflon In e e G
Member ot the Am.,1con Academy of NeYrology and the Orange County Med•cot Society
Fellow Am«lcon E E G Society
Ott1ce hours bv· QP()Olntmenl 1419~1or~~•. Sulte4 -NewportBeodl CA92663 ( 714) 645·8502
,.~T-1 -1 rr 1 'f 1 •1
120 130
Leave your fat behind.
A special presentation by
Bobbe l. Somme~ Ph.ll
• Diets don't work!
They actually make you fatter!
• Find out how to obtain and
maintain your ideal weight for life.
• Learn to break the compulsive eating
cycle. •
• Switch from suffering to fun and
success in weight control.
us for a tu and entEirtainiRgc8veniog!
FREE
SEMINAR
Thursday 1\JeldaY
Augu1t 16 Augu•t 21
7:30·9:00 . M. 7:30-9:00 P.M.
3158 Rieth11J Ave., Coeta MN
(714) ·1
• NeW~Source ~-----.,---~-;---:--~~~----------~.....-e independently healthy,
Adopted Llberian thanks
Pilot for a liappy eadlag
To the Editor:
For tHe past three years you nd
your newspaper have covered my
story &om 'tan to almost a happy
e?dtnt. . A.s everybody knows, full victory 1s JUSt around the comer for
my familr. •
What I m about to say in this thank
you note is somethina I sincerely
believe. If h were not for your paper
and your dedicated staff I would hfve
been deported'lona ago. Jt has taken
years for my private bill to act a fair
heanna before the House sub-com-
mittee. That hearina would likely
never have taken place had the news
media not come to my aid The Daily
Pilot has done much to publicize my
case and l thank you.
I on~ said to one of the several
reporters. that Aroerica is like ajun&le
where ~maller an1mal1 cannot bt
heard. Without the pre many unfair
cases like mane could not come to
light. I urge the American peo_plc to
suppon you in your endea \'Or for the
small voices to be heard. Thanks so
much to your pa~r and to the many
reporters, espcc11lly Steve MitcheU
for the tremendous support for me
and my famil)·. My family has
appreciated the prayers, letters and
support that came from your readers
because of your coveraae.
SAMUEL C. WILLETT
San Juan Capistrano
An ~pbs\'Je Mine.
··from lran : The ~T Exp\os\w.
~\NO from lran:
Made la
l1S4tag
.areal
rarity
It •us an tnupcruhc. p1ast1cdtsk
.drawer orpnizcr. I ordettd it from a
catalog that appears in my mailbox as
rc,ularly as the utility bills do.
M>· dt-sk drawer has been sufTcnna
from a tcnmnal ca~ of duutr for
some months and lhc blurb an the
cataJog promised instant rdid' nd
complete rtcovcry.
1 turned the orpnizcr o~cr lO S«
where n had come from -an
automat1c rdlcx for me tbcK days.
I'm keeping score on imporU. To
date, in my household. Taiwan is
tlme sweaters ahead of Hooa K.ona:
Hona Kona is four pdgets ahead of
~apan. Of course, Japan is ~ on
cars, but I knew that without tuminl them over.
Sta¢ped on the back of this tray
'NC1'e the 14-0rds, MADE IN USA.
USA?' Wait •. mihute -I lbOttd
apin. Yes, there it was -MADE IN Reagan dicln~t7QK-·
CIA meddling in
Salvador election
___ USA.:lkn.. U> iL.in. ~ dilO'J'.t'l _
WASHINGTON -Scarcely 14
years after the CIA meddled m Chile's
national election and was properly
scolded by Congress for its bizarre
plotllnf.S. the CIA again has inter-
vened in the politics of a sovereign
nation.
The story behind the CIA 's mach1-
nat1ons in El Salvador have been
hushed up. But here are the details,
which my associate Dale Van Atta
has pieced together from sntelliaenoe
sources:
•In 1981 , President Reapn ap-
proved a covert action ••frndina" -
the secret rouune that authonzes the
dispensing of CIA funds for
clandestine ~rations. Th.is allowed
the CIA to ~nee non-communist
candidates in Latin American elec-
tions. The intent was to block
communist sympathizers from com-
ing to power, not to discriminate
between rival anti-communist can-
didates.
•Without funher . White House
authorization, the CIA slipped a
reponed $960,000 under the table to
El Salvador's Christian Democratic
Party, whose candidate, Jose
Napoleon Duarte, won the presiden-
ual Nnoff on May 6, 1984. Another
$437,000 was delivered to the moder-
ate National Conciliation Party. The
purpose was to defeat Roberto
d'Aubuisson, the riJllt-wing can-
didate, who alleacdJy is linked to the
notorious death squads.
•President Reagan didn't team
about the ClA's meddling rn the
Salvadoran election until after the
Senate lntelbience Committee was
bnefed on May 3 about the secret
payments. Five days later, Sen. Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., went public Wlth the
chafie that the CIA had "bouJht the
election" for Duane.
Press accounts reported that the
president summoned Helms to the
White House for a reprimand. Our
sources say that Reqan was furious.
not at Helms but at the CIA. He
thanked Helms for savina him from
the embalTU5ment of haihn1 the
clecuon in his May 9 television
add re as .an .example. of democracy
10 action -words he would have had
to cat when the CIA's involvement
became known,r
•After the election, the Reapn
administration chanaed its attitude
toward d'Aubuisson. The policy
makers decided that a leader who bad
won 46 percent of the vote -
regardless of his alleged bloody back-
around -could not be isnored and
that it would be wise to stan a
d1aJoauc 'Wlth him~sfdent~eaaan
wrote a personal leuer to
d'Aubui110n, co~tulatina him on
his 1tron1 showina. Secretary of State
Oeorie Shultz, wlio previously had
denied D'Aubuiuon a visa. asked
Helms pnvately to invite the riaht·
wtna leader to Wa hinaton.
Footnote: There have been other
occasions when Helms has ustd his riJbt·wina channels. He won a stun-
nina cont-ession from the Araentines
at tfle lqinnina oflhe Falk.lands War
.. because the m11i y junta trusted
liim. Th totd Helm they
would withdraw ir troops trom the
ORANGE COAST
Da,lyPilat
JACK
AIDEISOI
islands if lhe British would halt their
fleet before it reached the Falk.lands.
Unfonunately, this secret con-
cession, wt).ich could have prevented
the war, aot lost in the rush of eve nu.
Helms was also behind the nego-
uations that saved the life of Korean
dissident Kim Dae Juna. The sena-
tor's erstwhile assistant, John
CarbauJh, helped persuade Korean
leaders in late 1980 to exile rather
than execute Kim.
HYPE AND HYPOCRISY: With
much fanfare, Vermont's Republican
aovemor, Richard SneUina, recently
launched a national, bipartisan, S 10
million crusade called Proposition
Onc.z intended to force a reduction in
the tedc:ral bud&ct deficiL
The &oal, Sncllina sa1d, 1s to
"orpnized the people of this country
into I broad interest IJ'OUp that will
tell the Conaress and the president
that we understand, and reject, tbe
consequences of continuing to oper-
ate hundreds of billions of dollars m
the red each year."
The press packet that accompanied
Snellina's lrickoff of Proposition One
included a large photo oflumself. But
there was one bit of relevant infor-
mation missina from the hoopla:
Durina Snellina's eiaht years as
governor, Vermont has been awash in
deficits, including an all-time record
$30.8 million pool of red inlc in 1983.
According to the National Gov-
ernors' Association, Vermont may be
the only state with a deficit in 1985.
DIPLOMA TIC DIGEST: The
State Depanment's efforts to d1s-
couraae our allies from selhna mih-
tary aoods to Iran (while penn1tung
some questionable sales by U.S.
firms) have evident!) had some
effectr Tbe...ayatollab's 8l'lU ~
have been spotted in munitions
markets around the world tryina to
rustle up new weapons, used weapons
and spare parts for the U.S. hardware
the)'. inherited from the shah. In
addition to Soviet bloc suppliers. the
lraruans have approached South
American nfht-w1n1 regime • with
reportedly muced mulls.
•The Kremlin, meanwhile, ap-
pears to have learned a lesson m the
arms-supptyina business. :rhe flood
of Soviet arms and military ad\ isers
sent lo E&Ypt under tbe late President
Oamel Jil&sscr was so overpowerina
that Anwar Sadat unceremoniou ty
booted the Ruuians out in 1972.
Now, intClliacnce source tell me, the
Sovieuare talunf nochanocs that this
kind of overkil will cause similar
disenchantment Wlth their cumnt
Arab protcse. Syria. They're suppl)·
1111 weapons and Ru ian personnel,
but 1na to keep a muc.h lower
pro 1 •
iHS AM,,.... II • ')WkwlM ~ruitllll•t.
H. L. 8chwart1 UI
Frank Ztnt
Ml Eel; 01
Tom Tift
C y E tor
Cr•lo lh•ff
At heart, most of us are thi eves
Thirty percent of the population
not-only will steal 1f the opportunity
arises, but will create the opponunsty
whenever possible. Forty percent will
steal, if there's little danaer of gettina
caught. Ontr. 30 percent won't steal at
all. No, that s not my opinion. It's tbe
conclusion of a 20-ycar Pmkenon -
study.
Q. Wh1cb spon came first -
gymnast1cs or divma?
A. Gymnastics. Io fact. ~nasts
originated modem history s div1na
contests while practtcing their stunts
over water.
Men are far less inclined than
women to talk with members of the
opposite sex about their first signifi-
cant romantic experience. Our Love
and War man ~ot this from a
NorthWC1tem-l Jruvermy '1udy tte
says the difference is due to holdover
anitudes from yesteryear when
women recalled their vifllnlty with
wistful tenderness, the wa y they
remembered childhood dolls, while
men thought of their early innocence,
1f at all. sardonically, much as they
regarded acne.
Q. Every ume a motorC)clc gets
into a crash. ns fuel Imes leak psohnc
all over the place, riaht?
A. ln 62 percent of the accidents. that happens.
In 1928, the Texas Bankers As-
sociation tacked up this poster in
every bank in tbc state: "Reward ...
$5,000 for dead bank robbers .. Not
one cent for li\C ones "
'
Q Of all the literature ever
produced m 1h1s country. what book
best typifies the Amencan way of life?
A. The old Sears-Roebuck catalog.
I'd guess.
Rabbit 1s all white meat Might
menuon. 1f )OU hke frtnch cwsinc.
tf) rabbn. No other nationals devour
so much rabbit as do the French
Thsneen pounds per perso n per year.
to be specific.
You don't JUSt double a street's
capacJt) b) makina 1t one-way. but
triple or even quadruple 1t.
L.M. Boyd I• • 1yodlc•ted
colamalst.
Making child support law
fact, rather than fantasy
40 percent of
funds due children
-1n.l 981 unpaid_ _
ch1ldrtn who deserve suppon. ton·
arcss created the federal-st.ate child
suppon enforcement system m 1975
Under thas system. important pro-
aress has been made We''c ~t ne"'
records m collect1ons c' Cf) )Car since
£976. -
But the amount that goes un-
collected 1s still staggering. Out of the
S 10 b1lhon legally due to children
nationwide In r 981 . almost $4 b1lhon
went unpaid.
Our child support system need~
strenathenina. That's wh y l
sptarheaded a genuinely bipartisan
effort to add sharp enforcement teeth
to our eitistina law. And that's wh>
CODJttSS has just acted to update and
uJ)11'1de our child sup_~rt enforce-
ment laws.
The chanaes WC 'vc made fill in saps
an our child support S)stcm. The)
Jive the states more muscle and more
anccnti\ie to en un: that ab nt
parenl m k.e their paymenu -in
full and on time.
The law draws on a decade of
c~pcnencc. ll rtquires all tatc to usr
the pro\en. low-c t ttehnaquci that
have ~orkNi 1n lhc most dfccti\C
tate proaram . fQr uampJe:
=-·---..;.•~Watt w1thhold1 · ndcr the
ne~ law, every tate mu t use
wathholdin& whcnc,er uppqn pa •
menu fall behind.
• Ta' rerund off tr. The la
pro id -(or w1thhold1na of O\m'luc
~uppon payment from talc mrome
ta:ucfundi. ltalsopro"i ~ IR t
thhold from federal tn rcJund ror
letters were the ~ Wil~ Tool
and Manufactuiina Co .• Kearney,
N.J.
I insened the o~ into the
desk drawer and fillid ~the little·
companmenu with stamps, paper
clips and Nbber bands. I even bad a
couple of companmenu left over for
the assoruncnt of junk that bro'1&ht
on this condition in the first place.
The catalog was right: the desk
orpnizcr did brina instant relief. but
even more important. instant pri4c. I
bcpn a S)st.ematic check of the off acc.
My 10-ke) adding machine wai mw
in Japan: m)' TV was made m 1apan
and my coff eemakcr ras made m
Hong Kong. M) new electromc
typewnter was made in German).
De~ and frustiat~ 1 aop-
pcd turrung thin o~er and opened
m) desk dra er qaio for ~
assuranct. The~ n was -the desk
orpniur. made in Keame>. C\W
Jcrst>. us~ On impulse I called informanon to
set tbc phone number of Wilpet Tool
and Manufactunna Co. I wanted tc
know what othe1 p1 oducts theymmk".
Tbe operator couJdn 't find a listing..
but she d1d find Wilpak Plastics u1
Kearney, N.J.
Oosc enough, I tboughL It oouJd b<
a subsidiary; a son or crandson of th<
family that swted the original com·
pany, branchina out with his owr:
factory. carryina on the tradition. Mr musinss ~crt cut shon b> i ,
man s fnendl) voice, "Wilpa).
Plast1cs."
"Arc )OU 1SSOC1atcd in any wt)
with Witpet Tool and Manufac-
tunng?" I aslced.
"No, they're out of business," was
hJS reply.
So much for the All-American
uadJuon of the second and third
generation ~ins on the family
business. But I did have, on the line, a
representative of an American oom-
pan) manufacturina products for sale
right heTt in ourc:ountry. In a burst of
patriotism I resolved to buy whatever
the) made and encouraie my friends
to do the same. I wanted to share this
warm ~ow broij&ht on by ownina somethtna MAD( IN USA.
"I'm calhna from i...,una Beach," I
said. "and I just ~1vcd a P.lastic
desk orpn11er throu.&h the mail ... "
"Lad). ~ aot nothing to do wsth
that .. the outfit that made 'cm went
out of business."
"I kno"'. ~ou told me. I .,,-a.s try1na
to get an touch v.1th the coms-ny to
tcll them tood tt -it to buy·
\Om ethana made here in our count~
instead of Hona Kong. Tell me
somethina. about W1lpak Pla ti cs
Ho"' Iona have }'OU been in bus•·
ncss?"
"Tv.o ~cars. You're calhna from v.hert. lad)?°'
"Cahfom1a -Laguna Beach
\\hat othtr products do )OU make':'
"Plastic containers. apolhecar) J•n
and -you ltno11t -th1nas."
"How many cmplo)CCS do )OU
have?"
"Eleven -who'd you } )OU
14-ere, lady';'
"Ju ta wntcr from Laauna Beach
suddenly fcelina 'tr)' patriotic."
' Ob -v.cll, oodb}'C."
Goodb)c.··
Could ht ha\C been an 1mpon too".I
1 didn't detect an acunt. but I didn't
dciea an red·..,_ ie.and·bluc spint either.
I'll kttp tum1 tba O\'Cr and
bu) a many MAO IN · items a
\can find that I can use. and ma) a
k 1 ha~ -. h "°ill a '°' tmcnl. As -.1lh II toda ttd s~e , they wdl ~ mote ''alu-
ablc throuati th ) rs. The time will
oo wh n • made 'n the
l nitNi lit ta be d 1n &be Unned
C)t.a\ts -e''tn 1 comm t
naicr -.. ,u be I t
t DAILY PILOf/Wedn sd y, August 16, '1984
Wlfe guilty of cutting up
hubby, ba.rbecuing him
He had multiple sclerosis and she told
people she'd 'never push a wheelchair'
SAN JO E. Cahf. (AP) -A you look at 1t for a while."
woman faces life in prison after being Judge R. Donald Chapman set
convicted in the hootina death of her sentencing for Aul-27 for Fellman.
husband. who~ body prosecutors who fares a maximum entente oflife
said she Cut up and barbecued. in prison.
pausina to bite into its charred a!'"l. Gardner said Fellm~n. ~~ot . her
Dianne Fellman. 36. was convicted husband "a number of umcs •with a
by a Santa Clara County Supcnor 22-cahber automatic pistol because
Court jury Monday of first-degree he had multiple sclerosis and she
murder in the death of Elroy Fellman, d1dni.1 want to care for him.
39 who was reported missing in :._ '"''Stie told peol>le she would never Ja~uary 1983 and whose bones were push a wheelchair." he said. "But he
discovered that Februal') and March. was at that point extremdy vigorous.
The jury had deliberated 21"2 days He was in vel')· good condition."
"This is probabl> the most fascinat-Prosecutors told jurors she had
1ng cast this count) has t'\Cr had." carefully planned the murder.
prosecutor Richard Gardner said "His bod> was sa\\cd into ptC\.CS.
Tuesday. "It read like fiction after parts of the body were put into a fire
and ccording to one of the
confc scd to, '>he actually too a bite
out of h15 arm as he was being
cooked," Gardner said.
Fellman's buried head was un-
covered by relatives at the family
cabin in rural hills south of San Jose,
the prosecutor said.
Gardner $lid the woman aroused
uspicion when she burned her hus-
band's body in the family barbecue.
"A neiJhbor came up and noticed a
horrible smell.'' he said. "She said she
was burning leaves."
Another neighbor testified he saw
Fellman digging irt an area outside the
cabin where her husband's bones
were later found.
"She admitted digging. but said she
was going to the bathroom two feet
awa'i from the Wlndow to the living
room ... Gardner said.
Dunng her more than five days of
·Dianne Fellman
tt'st1mony. Fellman contended that
her husband ·~andered off to work
and she never 'i&W him again," the
prosecutor said.
. .
Soviets 'deplore'
Reagan statement
MOSCOW (AP) -The v1et
Union today iuucd form I state·
ment condemning President Re-
apn's joke about bombing Ru sia,
calling the remark .. unprecedentedly
hostile toward the U.S.S.R."
The statement, is ued through the
official Tass news agency, was an
unusually strong method of reactina
to Reagan's comment. Such Soviet
statements are issued to make public
· the policy or opinions of the htjhest
echelons of the aovernmcnt and
usually are reserved for proclama-
tions of new arms control proposals
or other similar weighty issues.
Reagan, said, in a microphone test
before taping a radio addre s Satur-
day: "My fellow Americans, I'm
pleased to tell you today that I've
signed legislation that will outlaw
Russia forever. We begin bombinJ in
five minutes." .. . .
.. Ta s i uthonzed to state th t the
Soviet Union deplores the U.S.
pres idc n l's in vec ti ve, u n-
prcccdenledly hostale toward the
U.S.S.R. and dangerous to the course
of peace," the Soviet statement said
today.
..This conduqjs incompatible with
the high rcspon~ibility borne by
leaders of states. particularly nuclear
powers, for the destinies of their own
people and . for the destinies of
mankind. : .. The peoples expect that
the leaders of the United States (will)
at Ions last start acting with awareness
of their responsibility."
The Soviet statement noted Re-
agan's remark was not intended to be
made public, adding;
"In the White HouS(, they art now
trying to make it appear that the head
of the U.S. administration just in-
dulaed in ·crackina ajo,ke;
"/AM THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE"
p1Lg~1mt; PROQRESS
c11a1sr1An aoohsroRt
9430 WARNER AVE.
AT BUSHARD ------..__ WILD WEST SHOPPING CENTER
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
HUGE DISCOUNTS THURSDAY
STOREWIDE THROUGH MONDAY, THANK YOU!
ANNIVERSARY SALE! ..
ST ARTS THURSDAY ",5 f.t&o\.f.ss
AUG. 16TH · . sf.\.E.c1'0 .
,,o\Jf\
I
I
A.M.
SHARP!
EVERYTHING IS ON SALE!!
BOOKS
~TIRE STOCK
IS ON SALE UPT075010
OFF
SHOP EARLY!
CHILDREN'S
DEPT. UPTO 500/o • 75010 OFF.
DON'T MISS
OUTI
UPTO
75°/o SALE
STARTS
THURS.
9:30 AM
4DAYS
ONLY
GIFTS
UPTO
50•75°/o
OFF
SHOP FOR ALL
HOLIDAYS .
.·
STORE HOURS
DAILY
9 :30-8
SAT. 9:30-6
CLOSED SUN.
BIBLES
UPTO .
50 °
10
• 7 5~FF
ENTIRE STOCK
IS ON SALE!
CARDS
UPTO
500/ooFF
HURRY!
With modular wall and bed eyatem• from eleeping apace. and by day the extra family
Double Space Corp .• one room cbanaee Into room you wanted. See more optlone at
two. By ntiht you have a comfortable Southern Callfomla Home• Garden Show.
~ Pillt WEON SOAY AUGU T 15 1984
Bnttowatch,
not llaten to
Bette Mldler'•
FYm.rkell"I
bualnMarente· .............. ... , ...... BO 1peclel. 83
pouble living
space at show
Or discover how to customize
· manufactured home, garden
Arc you tonging for a pla)room for the kids. a sewing
room. oraquietcorncrtocurl up with a good book, but all
the.rooms in )Our hou~ arc already in use?
Double Space C6rp .. one of the more than 600
exh1bi\ors at the 30th anniversai"y Southern California
Home and Garden Show at the Anaheim Convention
Center Saturday through Aug. 26. has the answer for )'OU.
With the use of their modular wall and bed systems,
one room can magically turn into two. By niiht you can
have a comfortable sleeping space and by day that extra
family room you've wanted.
twin, double or quec1i.s1z.e bed t ni,ght and lhen b> day
they can be raised with finge:rup pressure to allow 1he bed
swce and the room to be converted to ah ndsomc livrna
space with a selection of c~tom banet to fit an itb
your 1nd1vidual hfcst)'lc.
The wall bed is available -.ith a modular cabinet and
helfs)stem that hiC:ie the bed in s little s I niche$. also
providin& extra t()1"1.1r: pace.
The bed pivots out from the wall so )'Ou don't lecp
with your head inside the rcces and an aCQCnt lighting
option can be tucked in~de lhe header. The headboard ts
padded and slants comfortably for caung and TV
view1na..
There arc six wall units available: a threc-<Srawcr
unit, hinged &Jass display unit, puU-<Sown wntin& des
two-<Soor cab1ne1, nightstand and shehcs. :Vou can st)le
your wall system so it works for you.
The standard color is an almond tone. but you an
order other colors. The bed "face" as available in the same
finish or it can be papered, painted, or paneled t.o fit with
These beds lower from the wall to aive sleepers a your decoratina 5Cbcme.
And all this is available without expensive custom
carpentry and the long wait it sometimes involves.
How is the magic accomplished? With one of their
SICO Room Makers Modular Wall and Bed Systems.
: PERSONAL s TYLE
Double Space is just one of the exhibit.ors of I furnishings, appliances, ~-ater purification )'Stems.
--------------------------------------------home entertainment centers, room additions. anterior
decorating. kitchen cabinetry, roofin&. sccunty sync.nu •
True Grit memories: bronzed, tasty . solar hcatin&. pr<knina innovations and patio fumtturcs
who w•ll fiU the convention center's 400,000 !quare feet.
including two new exhibit balls.
A new feature this year will be the Antique Comer
offcrio& di.splays by dozens of antique dealcn.
Living with
Duke fbr more than
30 years, l neven
thought of ·him as a
celebrity I always
-thought of him as a
loving, warm. big· ·
hearted man always
Pn.~R
WAYNE
willing to 11ve, never ••••••••••••• to take. He was ter-
n bly proud of his country, has famaJy and his fri~nds. He
hvcd and loved only like the Duke could - a man all the
way
He was bag and tembl) simple in the things he
enJO)'ed He represented the Amencan sp1nt.
On May 21 . 1979 a special Congressional Gold Medal
was comm1ss1oned for John Wayne by an act of Congress
rccognmng his lifelong dedication to has country. The
medal 1s anscnbed John Wa)ne -Amencan.
On July 22. 1984. a 21-foot five-ton statue of the
Duke astnde his horse was unveiled at the Great
Western Savings Plaza in Los Angeles.
The bronze sculpture. done by Harry Jackson. took
three years of nearly 24-hour days to create and was
dedicated b) such notables as former Presidents Jimmy
Carter. Gerald Ford. Richard Nixon and Gov. George
DcukmeJian. Sen. Alan ·cranston, Sen. Peter Wilson.
Mayor Tom Bradley, Darryl Gates, Brad Gates and
Edmund G ... Pat" Brown.
PAPARAZZI
~-~~ -
President Ronald Reagan wrote thiS tribute to the
Duke and his statue: "I am espcctaJly p(oud to join ln
this t'ittmg tribute to a genuine American legend, John
Wayne .. 1
"I ca~ th1nk of no better way to ·capture the true
spirit of this larger-than-life figure than by casting his
image in bronize 21 feet high, astride his horse. For the
Duke loved the tradition of the West and he found
strength and inspiration an that pcnod of our history
when God, country and family were cherished
institutions.
"famed arlist Harry Jackson's bcauuful work
titled 'The Ho~man' will stand as a reminder to us aU
of the Duke's dedication to this pioneer trad1t1on. •
"Few men an our hfetime have influenced an entire
generation as he did dunng the dark days of World War
ll. when his appeal to valor and determinauon gave
encouragement and hope to a nation at war.
.. Once a~in, Nancy Joins me in saluting the
memof) of this outstanding pat not and dear fnend."
TRUE GRIT RECIPE
Duke came home from his locauon for .. True Gnt"
wtth this rccJpc.11ven to him h} director Henry Hathaway.
Apparently. Henry had fixed it one night and delighted
everyone with at. •
My friendship with the Hathaways goes way back.
Slop (Mrs. Hathaway) IS my son Ethan's aodmothcr and
we've been to many locations together and had a ball!
Duke won the Oscar for best actor. for his pcrf ormancc in
"TrueGrit"darccteJ, lam very h~pytosay, by Mr. Henry
Hathaway. . ·
PORK CHOPS AND SAUERKRAUT
1 tablespoon oU or batter
~ 4· pork cbops o/, IDcb tlaJct, trimmed
1 jar uaerkrawt, kllDCft, clralDed
1 teaspoon caraway seed
1 pint soar cream, room tempentare
Paprika
Preheat oven to·JSO degrees. Heat otl or butter in
large skillet over medium high heat. Add chops and
brown well, turning once, about 3 to 4 minutes each
side. Transfer to baking dish.
D1v1de sauerkraut evenly over chops and sprinkle
with caraway. Top each with 1h cup sour cream.
Spnnkle generously with papnka. Bake until topping is
golden. about 25 to 30 minutes Serve immed1ately in
four portions.
The giant show is produced b)· Georaie and K.ac •
Colouris who pioneered the home and p'rdcn show
concept in·Soutbcrn.Califom1a. They $W1ed in 19SS,
prcscn titla the first show ever .st,qed in lhe C't1r ProductS
Pa.viJion at the Orange County Fairgrounds. lo 1968, the
!.bow became the first of iu kind at Anaheim Co~ention
€enter. ·
A main attracnorf It each ow.bas been the flower
show desiped by K.ac Cotoiins and Jim Dclamore.
Thousands offresh flowers and potted plants are evident
in lhis year's "The Arts in Aowe:rs."
Visitors al.so c.a..o walJc through a large telect.ion of
manufactured homes and learn about all the newest
innovations lhat make such alternative housina more
plush and customized. And Barrat Homes wiJ be showing
a unique, furnished studio condo. especially dcsicned and
pnced for the first-time home buyer.
Plus there will be daily free stage entenainment -
··Beatlemania" on Saturday through Tuesday and the
Modemaires with Paula Kell). Jr., appcann& Aus. 22 to
26
Show hours will be 2 to 10 p.m. Monday through
. . Thursd.a), 2 to 11 p.m. Fnday, noon to H p.m . Saturda)"
Pilar Wayne 1s a res1den1 of Newport &acb and rbe and noon to9 p.m. Sunday. Ad.mi ~on i $4.75 fonduhs.
aurh_or '!f .. Pdar Wayne's Fa.vorire and Fabulous $2.~ for ages 6-16 and free for children under 6.. A $1
Recipes. &nd questions to Pilar Wa.?;ne. c/o Daily discount for ~niors over 60 will be valid Monday
Pilot. P. 0. Bo.t 1560. Cosca Mesa, 926 ... 6 through Thursday.
HIGH JINKS AFLOAT
Fashion Island concert-goers
lunching to a warm jazz beat
Calling all ships!
Members oft he Commodores Club are readying
theirwaterystagc(Newpon Harbor) for an ""American
Circus" -this year's annual Character Boat Parade. TopublicizeSunday'seven~anddrum up
enthusiasm for entries (you can enter your boat as late as
Saturdaybycalhngthe Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce at 644-8211 ), parade committee members
staged an "aquatic circus" preview part) at the Cannery
restaurant in Newport Beach.
Sartorially sptendored an a nngmaster's outfit.
parade chairman Blll Hamilton (owner of the Cannery)
hosted cocktails and appetizers on has restaurant dock
and thenJOtned guests fora harborcru1seaboard the
Cannery yacht, Isla M UJeres.
The paradt begins Sunday at 2 p.m. in the north
L1dochannclilbove the Balboa Ba> Club when more
than 30 boats will chug, sail. motor. paddle. be towed or
otherwise propelled in counter-dockwasc pattern
around Newport' Harbor.
Among those toasung what the) hope to be "the
~realest show on water" were Jim Felton. Martba and
...,,...,.....,..._.-
R1~1ter Bill Hamilton, left, Jobn Zartler In utlclpatlon of tbe aammerdm •nl ~
and Captain' Alennder Dale clown aroond 8un4a7'•.Cba:racter Boat ~de.
Pete Barre ct (he's bead of the judges), Ted hoLye, EUea
and Bob Wilcox (parade advisor). Beverly and PaaJ
Salata Wlth daughterMelanie(he's m charge of traffic
control), Jim Dale, Doa& Overby (Balboa 8a) Oub dock
master) and Harry Gase, Newport Harbor master.
• • • Big Band concerts under lhe stars at Fashion Island
have given way to noon-lime concerts.
Due to the center's renaissance (underway since
December) the performance and seating capacity for
ntgbmme concerts were unavailable. (As many as
l 0,000 sometimes showed.)
"Music will aJwa ys be part ofFasbion Island; its
ambience as so appropriate to our outdoor environ-
ment," said Barbara Roppolo,dm:ctorofFI manage-
ment, explaining the change m times. "Our first concern
is our customers' safety and next their comfort."
The noonume crowds are smaJJer(usually around
500) and more manageable under the present s1tuat1on,
Roppolo added.
hoppers have been talcingadvantage of the
s1tuat1on-enJoymga music.aJ break while resting or
lunching to a Jazz beat. The latest concert featured
saxophonist Bill Baker. To accommodate the group.
extra tables and cha a rs arc brought an. restaurants have
set up booths with box lunches. a lemonade stand offers
cold dnnks and other restaurants have carry-out
lunches.
American Ii fest) le has been the focu~ of the
Merchants Association-sponsored concerts which will
cont an ue on Friday with vocalist Stepbule Ates; Steve
Hofltelter, Aug. 24. and Tom Marcas and Al Maitlud
Wlth Questet on Aug. 31 .
Paparazzi 1s edll.ed b> Daily Pilot Style Edu or Vida
Dean withcontnbu11onsbyA.nnCon"'-a.h Bill Baker wu featured on aazophone.
'
..
Orange Coa t DAIL y PILOT /W I
'Wearing single earring significant to gays
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please
eJlplaln thesian1flcan~ofmen wear·
lnaa uwccarring.Also, what docs it
mean wfien the earring is worn tn the
leftetr!Ortherigbt? I have seen a lot
of this son ofthina ~ently and fi urc
it must have wme special meamn to
the>St who are in the know. f
Thanks for beinaaround. Ann. J
am sure a lotofpcople(like me)a..
you thinas they would never ask
anyone el1e bccau1e they're ashamed
to admit they don't k.now. -
WATERLOO. IOWA
DEAR LOO: tn1le eurto11 are
•on by atralpt as well 111ay1,
w~lela uswen tbt q atloD yn dlda 't
eomtnptootuda11lb11tl'm sare
yoa were wonderlD1 about. Tbote
WEDDING S
ANN
I.ANDERS
loaluaniD ure Joata fad -Uk ea
crewccat. •poDytaU or a Mohawk.
Wla D a mu It atral&bt, wbetber
the earrln& 11 ln tbe left ear or tbe
rlgbt ear, it bat no apeclaJ 1lplfi·
cuce. Wt ay males, bowevtr, I am
cold tbtre la 1 lpttlfic mums. AD
tarrtn1 worn lo tile left ear alplflea
llle wl1b to be tbe domlnut party In a
t.... ---=-=-------
DARLIN·ANDERSON
A July 14 ceremony at the First
Presbyterian Church of Holl)wood
united in mamage Glenna M1ne
• ..nderson of Newpon Beach and
Douglas Joseph Darhn of Anaheim
The bnde is th~ daughter of Mr
and Mrs. Roben E. Anderson of
Newpon Beach. She wore her sister's
bndal vet! tommed with AJencon
lace and fresh hly of the valley and a
formal aown of silk peau de so1e and
Alencon lace accented with tin) seed
pearls.
HoUy Bellows. her sister, was
Glenna Darlin
matron of honor. and bridal attend-
ants \\ere Meg Blakel> Kath> Can-
non. Lon Meyer... Kcll1f.' Ne\\COmb
and KJm Sterk
· The bnde~room ~u attended b\
his brother 8111 Darlin as best man.
and 8111 Anderson. Clint BellO\\-S,
Mark Kegans and 8111 Pascoe were
ushers. His parents are W1lltam
Darhn of Anaheim and Johanna
Behrins of Sarasota. Fla.
A reception after the ceremon) was
held at the Jonathan Club of Los
Angeles and attended b} 225 guests.
Stephanie A.hp of San Francisco was
m charge of the guest book.
After a wedding tnp to the
Hawauan Islands. the couple wtll live
m Chicago where she "'Ill teach fifth
grade m St. Charles. Ill . and he will
attend Loyola Stntch Medical School
m Chicago.
The new M~ Darlin attended
Corona de! Mar High School and "-IS
affiliated wtth Pa Beta Phi at San
Diego State and L SC She rec1eved
her master's degree from Long Beach
State and has 1.aught at the Stoddard
School m Anaheim for the last four
vears
· Her husband attended .\nahe1m
Hi&h School and graduated Phi Beta
Kappa from UCI
tdatioasblp. Wll Use earr 1,1 l1
oral.DI rt Ctartbem1lel1
makin1 It WD b pref en to play
tbe subml11tve rol . I 1m told tltat
tbll cod lt aJd 110 be de-ntood lay
om exu.ala all onr the world. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Tho}c of1 us who work wathchildrtn with
pecial nctd -becau~ofphr ical,
mental or de\lelopmcntal d1sabilitiei
-were plea Std to see the letter in
your column. "Musings of Parentleu
Children."
We would like to a"'sure your
readers that there arc many such
children a\lailable. Some of these
youngsters ha ye been wa1tina for
)'tars for permanent home . The
Nauonal Adoption Exchange is the
nly national resource thlt matc.h
cluldrenand fam1hes from all paru or
the country. Th11 orpn1zation has
exisled inoe October 1982, nd 1s
funded with a S3S0,000&r1nt from
the U.S. Ocpartmrnt of Health and
Human Sttvica. We arc very proud
of the wonderful wor,k they do. Can
you Imagine the di fTerences they have
made in the lives of the children they
haveplaoed?
People \\hO are interested in adopt·
inach1ldren with pedal problems
should contact the National Adop.
tion Exchanae. P.O. Box 1996, Phil•·
delph1a,Pa.1910S.-GLORIA
HOCHMANJ. DIRECTOR OF COMMUNILATIONS
DEAR GLORIA: Only ptremely
----r-.::.---
1-.erou1 IH loYlll people are wtU·
ID& co adopt 8llclrea wato laa ve
pllyalcal or emotloaal llef eet•. Jim
ave&b rem•11bl11pecl.ahea1a1
Go4'1 rtfbt bud for Q e pa ti eat and
sem 11 olka. l bope "' reapouse 11 10 b avy yoar m1Umu1e111 ltenala. • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
arandf ather pa scd away last week.
He left me some book . In one I found
"Thouahts" written in has own hand.
I'm ur.e they were his own creation.
"Thoulhts" madcabiaimpmsion ..
on me. l'm savin1then1 for when l
have children. Here they are: ..
SO me things never come back.
Make them count while you have the
chance.
·The spoken word.
The aped arrow.
Time wasted.
An opportunity lo t.
Thechancetosa)':·uovc)ou:·-
DON R (a e 14),KeJTUCKY
DEAR DON: Your 1rudfatber
ma11 bavt btea a wl11 maa. ADd you
ataat be prett11mart, too, to.,..
preclat• 1111 wisdom. • • • Drus ?Howmuchistoomuch?ls
pot OK'? ls cocaine too much? If
you 're on dope or considerilll it. 1e1
Ann Landers' •//~new booklet. "The
Lowdown on Dope." For each book·
Jet o.rdetN, stnd $2 plu 1 Joa,. ~Jf
addrcss«J. sr.im/)«Jenvelope(J7
cenrsposrqeJ toA.nn undrrs, P.O. Box 11995, Chic410, Ill. 60611.
Staining? Tips '11
save time, .µipney
If )ou'rc plannmga stainmg pro1ect semi-transparentts allow more of the
on weather-beaten siding and urcd-wood arain to show; and natural-tone
looking fences. remember to pay is the most lightly piamented which
attention to details for best results closely resembles wood colors and
. enhances the grain. To avoid wasung ume and mone>, Once the stain has been selected
follow the~ llps from Sears. and work starts, keep cenain appli· Sta~ ~th surface preparation. If cation tips in mind. Always work t~e sta!n 1s to bond pro\)'.Crly, remove carefully and methodically -don't dtn, oil. gre~sc and mildew and let be in a hurry
dry. \Y•sh with heavy duty detcrg~nt Use the beSt..quahty applicator,
and nnse. For mildew use a soluuon preferably 1 new one. Several types
of deteraent, bleach and warm water. arc acceptable, including conven-
Always wear rubber gloves, safety tional paint brushes, extenor pads
glasses and use long-handled brushes. and rouih surface brushes.
Before staining, replace rotted sid· For uniform color, intermix the
ing, fencing, shinales and trim. Never gallons of the shade cho1en.
stain over it. f""or caulking use a To avoid overlapping, follow the
stamable, wood-textured one to fill wood grain and apply stain evenly
joints, knots, holes and other open· across the entire width of the siding or
mgs. the length of fence slatting.
1 Buy enough stain for the job. Temperature and time of day <;an
Generally. a gallon will cover some have a significant effect on the sucoess
200 square feet of previously stained of the project. On warm days
surface, and about I SO square feet of (temperatures above 10 degll:Cs),
porous or rough wood. don't work in the sunlight. because
There are two types to consider -the stain and brush will dry too
acryhc latex and oil-base. Latex 1s quickly. lnstcaa, follow the sun.
Submit wedding news To avoid overlapping. follow tbe wood grain and apply
The Dail} Pilot wanrs }our wedding and engagement nt'" \ •tain evenly on the length of the fence alattlng.
-most -color-fut; dries quiddy amt ts--Oncoonlays (l:!etween &rana 70
cleaned up wtth soap and water. Oil· degrees), stain wtth the sun to speed
base provides an extended water up dryin&. Try not to stain late in the
reP.Cllency. Each should con tam a day or when the temperature is below
m1ldewc1de ta inhibit mildew growth. 60 degrees. Dew and condensation
AnothC--r aecision is selecting tone. can collect and dam.age the stain film
Solids color the surface the most. before it cures.
To help you submH rhe required informa11on forms arc J 1 .-u!Jble ar the
Daily Pilot office. JJO W. Ba) St Costa Mesa
For weddmgs. onf.~ a black and "hlle photo of the bnde 1s Jlet'ptablt-.
Snapshots. Polaroid and color photos can't be used
The phoro must be submllted no later than three weeJ.s a lier rhc
wedding. otherwtSe 111\11/ not be {Jub7ished •
Engagement mforma11on is to IX' submmed ac least se1 t•n "l'd.s he/Ore
the wedding .
. Forms and photos can bedroppt·d otTar theo/1ice or ma1kd ro rhe
Wedding Department. Dail~ Pi/or P 0 Bo' I '60. CosLa \ft•sa (a/if IJ2o:!f1
1~\'4GS
1000
\ \1l (al ""'""' 2 •04 \ht 10\\
) •U \ti \)I Oi\\1 f\\0\
I\ 1eacl \lit
'> ~""" E> \ht .....
No ;,,atter what
you re doing your
hometow n
newspaper
The Daily Pilat tits in
BEGIN YOUR TRAVEL
CAREER
SEPTEMBER 4, 1984
EVERYTHING YOU NEED
INCLUDING
COMPUTER TRAINING
CALL TODAY
(714) 835-8111
620 No Main St .. Santa Ana
TRAVll INIWSTRY TRAl'<I""(, '>INl I 1%4
~ Y«>RLD 1RA'4L ~-..!!!J --~I NSf llUf (
HELP YouRSELF
Age shouldn't influence diagnosis
DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: M\
daughter. JUSt turned 30. smokes at
\
least one pack a da). But that isn't
\\hat I'm wntmg about
Latel) she has been having chest
pains The~ come on after she has
-,moked a lot and 1s under tension m
~her JOb. She refuses to see our doctor
for a hean checkup. She ~)S she 1s too
young to have any. trouble with her
coronar) arteries But it's possible.
isn't 1t? MR. U.
DEAR MR. U.: You ma) recall a
column 1n which f suggested that
readers should not let age prevent the
true nature of a diagnosis
Man} thml. 'Tm too young to
ha.,.e cancer" -or 'Tm too old to
have asthma .. -or. a\ your daughter
thmks. "Too young to ha\e coronary
PETER
STEINCROHN
attack. During the followmg five.and-patients have this type. It's charac·
a-half years after the attack. she .. terized by a convulsion, the jaws
worked as a housewife and secretary. clamp shut and the patients fall to the
stopped smolung and had no heart ground; there may be temporary loss
symptoms. of consciousness for 2 to 5 minutes.
The pomt I want to make for your The body Jerks and there may be loss
daughter 1s that she should have a of bladder control.
checkup. It's unlikel y she has cor-Another type called "petit mal" is
onary trouble, but it's possible. Only an apparently milder form, more
tests wtll prove whether or not her common in children between <r to 14.
coronary artenes are normally In lhts there's a temporary loss of
"open" o r obstructed by consciousness (7 to 10 seconds) wtth
atherosclerosis. staring that often is caUcd day-
DEAR DR STEmCROHN· l have dreaming. Some children may have · . · , as many as 50 or more of these a 17-year-o~d cousin who has ue· seizures a day. Fonunately, many
velopcd ep~lepsy ~ill yo~ please outgrow this type of ep1lcspy.
discuss ? this cond1uon m your What causes epilepsy? Anything
column. MR. Y. • . that injures the bram -and 75
..__ ____________ 1J.._ ___ e!!:=======~ trouble." Age itself should not in-
fluence d1agnos1s. The doctor 1s
thrown off the c!1agnost1c track and
stumbles b) O\.Crlookmg the true
d1agnos1s.
Conn School of Medicine reponed
that a 34-year-old w6man. four
months pregnant, had a myocardial
infarction (heart attack). She had
sudden chest pam. sweating and a
faint feeling. The attack came on
1mmed1tely after finishing a cigarette
(she smoked a pack a day). Elcc·
trocardiograms and blood enzyme
tests confirmed the diagnosis of hean
attack. She received the usual treat-
ment and five months later gave b1nh
to a healthy bab>.
.. DE~ M~. Y .: I, m glad.y~u ~II ita percent of all epilepsy casetS begin
con.d1t1on. \hat s wbatit isi 1t as not before age 21. Weeks or years.-may
a d1~ase. It s d.ue to di~turbed elapse between the injury and the first
electncal actJvity m the bram that seizure. About 80 percent of epileptic
causes cells to overload.. About seizures can be controlled partially or
2,000,000 Amen~ans have. 1t. Most totally by medication. These drugs pe~ns have not mhented It. are called anti-convulsants. They act
FREE COLOR ANALYSIS
W1•111•1r ltr lp19ointm1nt Only Limited
• Jewelry & Accessories
• Designer Label Clothing
• Boutique Atmosphere
• Make-Up & Color Analysis
.1 ~ ,f wt' Don't mlH our ~ _. ~ .r,at FASHION SHOW ~ ~ttt.ti\•fa ~!>· Aug. 25th
> ta•S''''t.' 1:00 p.m. 4AettiND PERFORMANCE
Consignment Boutique 2119 Main St .. Unit 7
Huntington Beach Located 1n beautiful
Sea Cllff Village $h0ppmg Ctr
960-4021 -Tues ·Sat 10-6. Sun 10-3
An aged general l\hocould hardly "alk
miraculously mounted a hor~e
he could not ride.
Find out "ho gal'e hin1 a leg up.
loniJ!hl ul H:IHI ""I\( I l ( hunn~I .2.i
The legend\ ol Cl\ rl \\.,11 lithogta{>hl'rs. Th~ nd1
languagl: ol mndcm .in I he kan anguagc of
mat hem at H. '· \ nd 1 hl· Ill\ ,tt•rit 1u" d lll'h t )f \\ha ks
and man. ·
All thi' .ind .t \\orld rnn1~ ,1\.\-ait \OU tnnil.!hl in
.. peaking \Vithnut Word<' a ~mithsonian Wolld
Television sp ... ·~:1.tl fllL· ht"' i!\ .mthrn and historian
D~1vid Mt:Culloul-!h.
LO
JtllCDONN
l
Your daughter "-Ill be interested m
a recent case repon m ( onncct1cut
magazine Manin Duke. M D. of t~e
What makes this case espcc1ally
interesting 1s that funher studies
indicated that her coronary anenes
were normal. Perhaps spasm in a
coronary had initiated the hcan
Early Bird Dinner
Specials 16.95
Prime Rib or Fresh Fish
1 / Complete Dinner with choice of
-r-1 ~ soup or salad and dessen (!/Jiltnu,, 1 4 to 6 PM
1 0NrHEPENt~ l DIJl l Wiik!
BALBOA 801 [. BALBOA 673-7726
THE
REUBEN E. LEE
On The Bm
We're Hockln the Boat
With
'DEXTER
Tue .-at. from 9:00 P.M.
.With pro~r trcatme!lt· between by minimizing electrical discharge of
seizures! pat.1ents can hve normal, brain cells. The outlook for your
productive hves. Types .of seizures cousin is &ood. Mr. Y., if be bas the
vary. The most common is known as epilepsy amenable to treatment "grand mat. .. About 80 percent of ·
LENNY'S ... ''Studio I" Photo1r111hr
By Appointment (714) 975-0823
Speclall111t9 -In Head-
shots for Business Promo-
tions. Advertisements, The-
atrical & Personal Portraits
36 Exposures + Two 8x10
Prints (+ Negatives & Contact
Sheet, Color or B&W) Sitting ...
$75
(S 10 Oft with Ad)
2333 E. COAST HWY. OPEN 7 DAYS
Tues. thru Sat.
Suitt A (Ir lattH's)
Corou del lar, Ca 92625
9 AM-6 PM
(Sun., Mon. & Eves.
By SpeeiarAppolntment)
Klnd•rgarten thru 8th Grade -All Day Classes
Enroll Now
FALL SEMESTER
ST ARTS SEPT. ·10TH
Enrollment Now .. Ing Taken
' Reaeonebfe Tuition
DOM to Ooot lfl• --.~ ...,..,_ ,..,..,. -H9lt ....,_lk ,,.,,.,.. -
T..chlftfl,,.. f ,.., -,....,. (f//flM ,,,,.,..,, ..,,,,,.,,, MttlWNflco f'HdlirtHa.
A Private School of Distinction Founded In 1942
~~----=~In Fountain VatfeJ
16835 Brookhurst
714 963-7831
...
\
..
Midler pecial:
Best to watch,
but don't listen • By FRED ROTHENBERG But n faih as music, almo t piqrlt\I .,~......._..,.., i as if Midle(s r;aonp aren't good
NEW YORK -Delores de Laao cnou&h, w every number requires an
and her backup group, all decked out elaborate visual track that, at timc1, ia
in the latest tn fliP.pcred mermaid t\tn but, other timet, it c•ceuive and
costumes.j belt out • We Are Family" disttachn&-
and "l Will Survive" while zippina Only at the very end, when M1dlcr
around in unison in motorized wheel· ia siftlina .. The Rose'' from her hit
chairs. movie. does she perform without an
This unique choreoaniphy is inter-outlandish prop or costume.
rupt.ed only when De Laao and her At the beainnina of the hour, it's
troupe disembark to hop, slither -immediately evide'llt that is not a
and even 1ina-on the staae. But the conventional conccn. Midler comes
music, which includes .. Hold That h · d · J
Tiaer" on the tlCCOrd1on, is incidental ~~b a~~~~ 1 !~11:•~0~~~
to the act. Backed by the Harteues in rtd, rellow Do Lago is really the divine Bette .and bl e e• h I k h '
Midler, neNer ever to be confused been ~wnwlmo 'a: :O~~: t~t~~
with Frank Sinatra croonini at the pillow.
local supper club, who brinas her The Mick Jager of female enter·
stylized and studied outraarousness tamers, Midler enjoys struuina and
to Home Box Office this Saturday posturina on st.age, and she end~ her
ni&ht and four other times this month first number, "Pink Cadillac.", by
in "Bette Midler: Art or Bust!" slidiita on her back.side in a split.
.I
The trutli .hurta
Otano-Oout DA LY PILOT /Wedi...._ AllllUll 16 tlM
We'll
share
Doria's
secret
Filmed at tt.oo performances at the "There's nothina I won't do for my
University of Minnesota on Midler's an," she says with a huae smile. She
1982-83 nationwide De Tour, this cenainlysccnts to be enjoyin& herself. hour-Iona proaram is mo an
elonpted music video than a concen. ''With all the dr1l& queens coming
Accordina to the credjts, this ex-up," she said at the press conference,
travaaant entertainment was an apparent reference to pop sin&cr
"dreamed up and written down" by Boy Georae, "it's harder to be
Midler, amona others. Oearly it has outraieous."
her imprint: bizarre costumes, un-Early on, there's the usual asson-
usual dance sequences and an anti-ment of Midler•s sclf-deprecatina
techoolOJY theme that may act by anatomical remarks. While she sinas
most viewers. "Pretty Leas and Bia Knockers," huae
ReecUai aboat themaelne in a book
written by Corinne Williama (•tan~,
center) la a •hoc~ apertence for 0 Tlie
Sapporttna Cut" at tbe Coeta Me..· Cine
Ptayboue. Amonc the ouU.,ed are
(staDcUncl Vlckl 8b.oalden and Selene
Brta•• and (aeatec:l) Kelly S&ncta and Ted
Knorr. Tbe comedr contlJlaa Prtda,.. and
8aturdap tbroap Aa,. 25 and ticket
Information la ••iaJ.lable at 850·5289.
The only reason it was picked up breast-shapedballoonsdescendtothe
here was that Midler explained her stage.
intentionS"-at a recent press con-Those mi&ht ao over b1a at a pany,
ference. "The synthesizer has put as would some of her Halloween
some musicians out of business, and l outfits, includina one that resembles
see this frustration," she said. Darth Vader from "Star Wars" and
"People talk about floppy disks, and I another straijbt from a ~ardi Gras
can't even plua in the toaster. parade. . . .
.. This (program) i'I a reaction to She'd also cause a sur on the dance
· that, kind of showing how we're floor. When she does "My Eye On
__ o.v.emhelmed b~!Pcop!C.Jiav.e... XoU::.het mQYements ~mble JM_
forgotten about the important thina kind ~f SJ~~ ~P m1&ht make ara
-the s0na. the humanity." busy antersecllon an rush hour.
Sadly, Midler bas also foraotten The last 20 minutes has what
about the song in .. Art or Busti"' The Midlercalls"ascrioussection," and at
visuals, including clever animations offers the only emotion-tinged music.
and shockinfiy freakish getups, can While sweetly singina ''Everyone's
be entertaining and amusing. The Gone to the Moon," she's twirling
mennaids in wheelchairs are es-what appears to be a hula hoop.
pecially inspired. "Art or Bust" makes for fine
But there's hardly anything m the viewina, but not fine listenina. Maybe
hour wonh humming. audiences should watch Midler's
"An or Bust!" succeeds as visual eccentric antics with the volume
art: Midler'screauvatycan be saluted. turned down
'Ghost busters' passes
'Indiana' at box office
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -After
keeping up with the Joneses all
summer, .. Ghostbusters" brought in
$5.9 milJion over the weekend to
boost its total gross to $162. 7 million
and surpass "Indiana Jones and the
Temple of Doom."
The latter had a two-week head
stan on "Ghostbusters" but the
Columbia release boomed alona in
the No. t or No. 2 spot for 10 weeks
until it overtook the second "Indiana
Jones" thriller, which has a total of
$158. 9 million. ~ "Red Dawn," an MGMUA release
about tcenaacrs fi&htina a communist
invasion of the United States, opened
as the top box office draw last
weekend, arossina $8.2 million.
Behind "Ghostbusters," Warner
Bros.' "Purple Rain" was third at $4.8
million, and "The Revenge of the
Nerds" fourth at $4.3 million.
"The Karate Kid" huna on to fifth
DllAliet AMC Ori/IOI Mi w~ .... _ .. Ol .. tl!
QMnt --llA~Cial .... IJOJl'I
WQTllllllmA
~
with $3.18 million while .. Gremlins"
fell three notches to No. 6 with a gross
ofS3. l 5 m1lhon ... O oak and Dager"
grossed $2.8 million on tts first
weekend
Herc arc the top seven arossma
films last weekend, with d1stnbutor,
weekend gross, total gross and
number of weeks in release.
"Red Dawn," MGMUA, $8.2
million. first week .
"Ghostbusters," Columbia, $5.9
million, $162. 7 mmion, I 0 weeks.
"Purple Rain," Warner Bros., $4.8
million, $27.5 million, three weeks.
"Revenge of the Nerds.'' Fox, $4.3
million, S 12. l million, four weeks.
"The Karate Kid," Columbia,
$3.18 million, $54 million, ci&ht
weeks.
"Gremlins," Warner Bros .. $3. I 5
million, $125.5 million, 10 weeks.
..Qoak and Dauer," Universal,
$2.$ million. first week.
• NEWPORT BEACH •
N(WP'QllT 10 lit I~ 00ll1 STtMO .. _. ._.,,, ..
<tc11" TDIU • _. CNl 644 0760 -111 ••
NEWPOllT .... ~ STCllY" ·~JO ll'Cl •fll WI ITMf " tN) I l~ *""""• 100 tM
OOltt STUlO
IDOAllll" fN.IJl
'Ill M.a.u'IU
l1'mUf ftl
t !UQ DQLIT Sll•O
" t UC lODO
• Wl STMINSTCR •
AMID PIClfic Aneht1111
Or4n 179 9150 ..
UAMOm• no•o21
4'COITA IDA
Uwdt Herbof
TWiii '31 3501
..
Edward• Woodbrid&t
m-06SS
lMIN IOCH
(dnrds So Coast
Laavna 491 1711 ....
CiftMolM U.2553
' I
• tRVINl •
--~ ·-...... -..,-.r-111 ',..
CllMA wnr • oom sn•o ... -.. •• rn ..... ..-1oun HO ICI 101 m JU~ mo 11 ue
ciiiiiA wur cu1 •Dr• • _ . ., N-•
'"" .... • ..... U) m un suo lott
ClllMA WU1 .......
• t,AROI N GRm1 •
,, -..
:Hl MitU
• COSTA MESA •
COWAlOS -· ,._
~·3102
HAR80ii TWIN ........ -'31 3~01 HAHOA TWIN .,. .... ·-m J)Ot
..... ' • 97t AUi
DCllY SIUllO ............ 11)
7U UO
DOUY SrulO
OClllS Qljo\O 1*AllllC#r IPC-11)
GUil WI.DO ·111-
" .... (Pl.IJ)
• £L TORO •
SADOUBACIC "UST Sl..wcJD"' (l't) u • •• •' z n 'zc 10:11
Ii '"" '' ""111 C... SIQlr »I »JO 12 JO • n 120 tPCl
SAOOUBACIC
te. ••
I •I• ~l ~JO
SADOlCBACK
ii ••• Id
l '• • m mo
SADOl£8A('k ,,. .. , .. ...... »1 mo
QJROJ nc IODS ca1 110 Hl9'10~ U ~lt l~
O.OMIDMililll ,,.~ ,.~ 4'~
l U I 41 10 0 PG 1no ioce
.... rm Kl Ill• C1 l 0 I J!t IC~ '1~" ]OQ
"IUCllUOO BANZAI"' (PC) "Ttl MllAN II E " (K.13)
,. J Ul 1n.1•~ u UC •»' no IUI
'UlAM SW(" (PC-13)
n~ z ·~' 1q IC
la HABRA .• ~;v.~
o • ,\ I o
MISSION
WARNER
till": :JI .. 11. "'T"'"l If' I -
Orange Oout OA1LY PROTIW9doud1y, Augu1116, 1 8'
IN l £RMISSION
'-~-~--------- -
'Madam' ty-lngknot at Harlequin
=· The dy o the "hou ·• bccom~ fl tht'r, his andM>n of 9 or 10 and a rt tvlc Th tcr at ulh\'ln Com· n honesl wornan undar. ch meter ctor~ho pla) the cl of munity Center, 7631 W. Melrose
Unda McClure-who sstamnJa d th, wnh three women, one m n ve., Buena Part .... Kent John on IS
Mi Mona. the madam of .. The ~t a_nd another boy completing the d1rcctin1 and ~dl be scckina Stx men
Unle Whorehoust in Tuas" at the TOM t .... the play opens the Laguna and one worn o for the show, which
Harl quin Dinner PlayhOU$t" -will St" son pt. 28 and run~ thtouah <Xt. open• Oct. ~ .... call 523·03 I for de·
bC mamed on staac between the TITUS 21 .... c JI 494-0743 for funher infor· uuls ...
matinee and cvcnina performance mation.... Replacement audition for the
Sunday. Rcadinas for Oliver Hailcr,'!I com-Harlcqutn Dinner P1ayhou$t" pro-
The ttal weddina will occur at 4:30 cdy "For the U)e of the Hall • wall be duct ion of "Thi' Beat L.1ttlc
p.m., after Miss conducted Monday at 7:30 in the Whorehouse in Texas" will be held
Mona walks i~to Director Susan Eiden ha taken on auditorium of Turtle . Rock Com-Friday at the f.mt U~ited Methodist
the sunset with the chaJlcngc of stagina Roald Dahl's munit) Park, Sunnyh11l Road oO Church. 6817 Fran1'hn Ave .. HoUy-
Cary Pitts~ who n.,iit mto fantasy and -with a Tunic Rock Dnve tn lrv1ne .... a ca11 wood .... four male dancers ~nd Ont
plays the shtrifTin tremendous a ist from ~nic de-of four women (one elderl>) and two female singer arc needed. ... c~ll Mark
the long-running siJ!ters Howard Hunter and Michael men in their late 30s and older as Lipschutz at 979-7S50 'for infor-
musical comedy. Eiden -turned it into a most requircd for the show, which opens mation ....
The groom. how-pleasurable exoenencc. Oct. s for a four-weekend run .... for
ever. will' be a fel-La Habra's Depot Playhou5C (so detailHall ICT at 857-5496 ....
low named Steve named because it's a converted Golden West College wall hold
White and the ccr-railroad statJon) has a turntable staa,e tryouts for the World War II drama
cmony wlll be per-which figures prominently in the "Home of the Bra,e" and the com-
McC111'e formed by Judge frequent changes of scttina as Willie cd)-drama "Vanities'' Tuesda) at 7
Dave Mcnary, chief J1.LS\1cc of the Wonka auides the four httle bratsand p.m. in the ~ctor's Pla)'boll theater on
Supenor Court of Mann 'l!ounty. one good kid through his confec-the Huntington Beach campus ... the
McClure, a Mann County nauvc. tioners' Dtsncyland cast of"Home of tbc Bravt" calls for
staocd her professional career wbile l he show 1s d1v1ded into t"-O casts. si' men ranging rn a~ from 20 to 40
1n cOllt:fe and has amassed a lon,g )1st which perfonn altematel). At Sun-""'hile "Vanitte!I" consists or three
of credns in stage. screen and tcle-day·s performance Patnck C'arelh was actresses who can play an age range of
\l'\saon. She's been concentrating on a part1cularstandouus W1lhe Wonka I 8 to 15 ..
musical comedy and Michelle Miller made an es-Audallons for the musical "The
The 80 wedding guests will become pccially effective spoiled nch girl. Ian Fantasticks" wall \le held Monda)
pan of the audience for the evcn•ng Finch also was (IUite good as the poor and Tuesday at 7 p,m. b) the Buena
performance as MISS Mona returns to but forthnght Charlie
her "best little whorehouse." Five more performances of"Choc-
The musical, which opened an olate Factory" remain at the Depot.
BACKSTAGE -l he Gilbert and
Sullivan comic opercua "Iolanthe"
will be 'tagcd this weekend by the Not
So Ro)al Opera Co. with per· formanc~ Thursda) through Satur·
da\ in the Forum of Saddleback
College North, 5500 Irvine Center
Drive. Irvine ... Rack Johoson, Jeff
Smith and t.eonard Cahna head the '
'ast wtth Cath)' Mac Bride and Daria
Bearden alternallnj in the female
leading role .. curtain time as 8 p.m.
wuh a 3 p.m maunce also scheduled
for Saturday ... call 559-5440 forticket
information ..
May, has been extended through the 311 Euclid Ave., La Habra. with 8
summer and will run for another p.m. stagings Fridays and Saturdays
mouth, clos1nf Sept. 23 at the through Aug. 25 and a 2:30 matinee
Harlequin, 350 S. Harbor Blvd .. just next S"unday. Call 992-0498 for ucket
north of Costa Mesa. infonnat1on.
REMEMBER THE capuvating CALLBOARD -The Laguna
fllOvte "Willie Wonk.a and the Choe-Moulton Playhouse wtll hold aud1-
olate Factory" of a few years back? uons for its revival of "On Borrowed
There's also asiaie version, currently Time" Monday at 7·30 }>.rri. m the
beina presented by a troupe of Legion Hall on the comer of Legion
Emmy voter real
captive audience
By FRED ROTHENBERG
A'T~Wrtlet
They all had shorter programs to
watch. All that was left were two rolls
and the dregs of the cold cuts."
,.,~
All dolled up
cnthus1asuc young people at the La and Catalina streets in t.guna NEW YORK -Tom Fontana
Habra Civic Theater. Beach .... lcadin roles include a grand-now knows what u's lake to be on a ~:.:.:.:;i;::..=.:~:...:..:.:..::~°"="""""--==--="""'"'=---_.-----i:.....;;;:='9 sequestered J Uf). held hostage, or
maybe stud. in ... The Twilight Zone.
Fontana. who 1s nominated this
year for outstanding wntmg in a
dramatic sencs. has volunteered to be
a Judge again when the screening of
shows and secret balloung takts place
Aug. 27-28. The winners will. Pe
Morcan Fairchtld (seated) •tan in ABC'• new TV 8erlea
••Paper Dolle" about tbe world of hlgb fuhlon, joined br
(from left) Nicolette Sheridan, Tern Farrell and Lloyd
Brl41&ee. It'll air TuetKlaya, beiJ.nnln& nez:.t month.
. Enter a worl.d
~-:-ooyona your Wildest Imagination
...
ii' •
where goYJhing can happen.
\
Close your eyes and the ~dventure begins.
BRUCE COHN CURTIS Presents
DENNIS QUAID MAX VON S'fOOW CHRJSTOPHER PLUMMER
EOOE ALBERT and KATE CAPSHAW OAEAMSCAPE"
Co-Stamng DAVID PATRICK KELLY Music by MAURICE JARRE
Oorec:1()( o1 Photography BRIAN TUFANO Edrtad by RICHARD HALSEY
Executive Produce<s STANLEY R ZUPNIK and TOM CURTIS
. Co Produced by JERRY lOKOFSKY
Screenotav by DAVID LOUGHERY CHUCK RUSSEll. JOSEPH RUBEN
Sto<y by DAVID LOUGHERY Produped b\I BAUCE COHN CURTIS
PCMJ =::.-"":"'..:!'"~ DlrectedbyJOSEPHAUBEN 181 __ .,. ____ ,_ -........... ~.:. ... ,:mil
COSTA lllA 631 3!>01
£dw¥dS HM T ........
ll TlllO ~I WO
[dwm ' 111 ......
,.,.,.cur1 .. ll'W'"g;~ "tC ,.~ .. ,_ .... ..._.-.--...._ ....... ....,.__.._.
..... _ .. " -------
ST ARTS TODA YI
IM SSl-06SS
Ed•116' Woodtntp
a!!U"'°'Lel~
CIMlil 6l4 3' 11
UA Ctty <Ant
... c.ty .... C-
.. ,Mrs rn>AT AT UA llJWIJ. au,lli '"~ .. ""' ... ,,..
Fontana. wruer-producer on . .
NBC's "St. Elsewhere." voted 1n two
Emmy Award cat~ones las{ )ear As
a wnter he was eligible to judge his
revealed on the annual ·Emmys · . •
broadcastonCBSScpt.23. Qkl e musicals ~said. "There'll be no long fonn for f ' D W re . J>Clrs orny an the wri11~ <atcgoocs;
has group had to decide on the
outstandine-wnting award for both a
limited senes and an infonnat1onal
program.
"Btit I'll-only d<> a comedy senes:· · ·--·
But the limited senes were not so
limited. and that had Fontana and 16
Fontana must tell the Academy his thisboy" . f• d h h
current credits to avoid any conflict 1n om es ere
of interest.
other writers climbing the walls of a
"Our rules state that you can't be a
nominee in that category or have
worked on that show," said John
Leverence. awards director for the
Emmy's sponsonng Academy of
Telev1s1on Arts & Sciences. "We
want to :l\01d Judges who have
Connecticut theater revives the oldies,
poorly ventilated hotel room m Los
Angeles one sultry summer weekend
a year ago.
but also showcases pre-Broadway premieres
"f had seen all the !>ho~s 1n m)
categories before." said Fontana
"You can't belte\e my agon) \\hen l
reahLed I was going to ha' e to see four
hourc; of 'Lillie Glona . Happ} at
Last' and nine hours of 'Nicholas
"11cklcb~ · again."
Other programs in the long-fonn
bracket ~ere ··Executioner's Song"
(four hours). "Who 'Will Love M)
Children'>" (l"'o hou~) and the
eventual winner. "Special Bulletin"
(two hours)
The Acadcm~ ofTek' ISIOn .\rts &.
5c1ences has a rule forbidding d1s-
cuss1on among the \ oters. An
Academy supe~1sor, son of a
classroom monitor. was there to
ensure silence. The only activity
allo~ed was heavy TV watching. with
one break for lunch. But even that had
a cruel twist.
"After watching hours and hours of
'Nicholas Nickleby.' you get stir
crazy We all were starving," Fontana
said. "But, by the time we got
downstairs. everybody else had eaten.
_.worke(l· on the same producuon
com pan) as one of the nominees, or
ha\.e an) affihation wtth the nomi-
nees We work on the honor system "
Another Academ) rule is that
programs must be watched tn their
enttrct) That was a burden In Judging
the informational category, where the
choices v.ere the eventual winner.
··The Bod) Human." and "I.
Leonardo"
The "I. Leonardo" tape had a small
glnch. The supervisor found a dif-
ferent tape but because of the
"entirety" rule. the panel had to
watch the program from the begm-
ning again. The replacement cassette
also had a minor gap, producing a
near rebellion.
"It was like 'Mutiny on the Boun-
ty,'" said Fontana. "But this time we
convinced the supervisor that seeing
1t tw1ce should count once. I felt badly
for ·1. Leonardo.' We were so an-
tagonized that 1tJUSt had to lose."
LUXURY THf.ATHS
\&/ALK· INS * Ftnt TM Mell"" s..-i11p * YYI" ONLY S2.75 Unltv Netti
"ED DA ... (f'G-U) Show1 at 12:30
l·OO 5:30 1 :00 .. IO·lO
NltPL& RAIN (It)
AT 12:45 3:0$ 5:25 7 :45
&. IO·OS
TMELAST
STA .. P'IGHTER (PG)
At 12:20 2 40 5:00
Biii Murra)' Dan A)'kro)'CI
ONOST9USTUtS (PG)
Show1 at 12:25 2:40
4 :U 7 :25 t :S0/70 MM
QltDIUNS(PQ)
Shows at 12:30 3 :00
5 :10 1 100 .. 10:30
INDtANA JOllD • Tiiie T_... 9f 0-. (PG)
Shows at 12100 2 :30
5:00 7 30 .. 10:00 7:30 10·20/70 MM IN 70 MM
DRIVE -INS :~~~
STttDIUm t1
Ill 11711 !\tttllt !fr• Sttf,.,.
IKICKAltOO aAleZAI
(N) ""' C:O·Hlt Twlll111t Zone l"Gl
"A WOMAN
IN RED" (PG-13)
And "CLASS" (R)
QRDIUNS (PG)
N evert:nctln1 Stor)' ("0)
INOIAlllA IONU • t• TUlf'\.& Of' DOOM IN) With Sla)'lnt Alive (~0)
s
ByMJCHAELKUCHWARA
Al"Or-Wrtt.f
CHESTER. (onn. -Near the
banks of a boulder-strewn brook
called the Great Creek. new mus1cai-
comed1es are being nurtured in what
was once a knit ling needle factory.
The nation's newest incubator for
that most ong.mal of Amcncan an
forms 1s called the Good peed at
Chester. which this summer bea,an ns
first season ofuntned musicals. It has
been put together by the folks who run
the Goodspeed Opera House, a
gingerbread architectural gem across
the Conncct1cu1 River m East Had-
dam.
The phenomenally successful East
Haddam operation -whTch runs
over 90 percent of capacity -
~specializes in revivals, spruced-up
and dusted-off musicals written over
the past 75 years. This year at has
already done Rodgers and Han's
"The Boys from Syracuse" and 1s
currently running "Follow Thru," a
1929 musical by De Sylva, Brown and
Henderson through SepL 7. Bob
Merrill's "Take Mc Alona.." based on
Eu~cnc O'Nc1ll's "Ah. Wtldemcss,"
finishes off the season whtch ends
Nov. 18.
But the Goodspeed also has made
occasional forays into new temtory.
Such Broadway hus as "Annie.''
"Man of La Mancha" and "Shcnan·
doah" staned there.
Now 11 has gone into full-tame
production of new shows at its
butldiog m Chester, the Norma Terns
Theater, named after the woman who
played Magnolia in tl:ie onimal 1927
production of "Show Boat and who
as an enthusiastic supponer of
Goodspeed.
Both theaters arc run by Michael
Price, a dapper 46-year-old fonner
child actor from Chicago who eventu-
ally wound up in East Haddam after
stints at New York's Lincoln Center.
working under Richard Rodgers, and
as producer at the Valley Music Hall
an Salt Lake City
The new theater 1n Chester grew
out of necessity. according to Pncc.
ORtVE 111s c ... 1 ... u.,., 12 FREE uni.a 1101e1110-1 MM••• 7 ll Weeht1n "We were doing experimental ';:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======:::::;~theater 1n our rehearsal hall an E;m r Haddam. on a 99-sc3t basis. popping
up a new show every so oOcn," Pnce
said recently. sitting m his cluttered
office tucked off 1 n a first-floor comer
of the Good~pccd Opera House.
"BUCKAROO BANZAI IS THE VERY ODDEST
GOOD MOVIE IN MANY A FULL MOON."
-Richard Corliss, TIME MAGAZINE
Your only hope Is lucbroo lanul.
THE ADVEHTUIW OF
But the productions were do~ by
officials of the East Haddam Planning
and Zonioa Commission, as were
subsequent moves to the theater's
paint shop and then to a bam, he said.
The Goodspeed bad in its pos-
se~ion an old Ima um needle facto •
t
donated more than two years ago b)
the C.J. Bates Co .. which decided te
move to new facihues nearby.
h had :.is.."'d the propeny to store
scenery. a£rorchng to Pnce. But s
$750,000 renovatJon job turned th~
utihtanan work place. complete watt'
a vanegated brick smokestack. ante
an anracuve 200-scat theater.
The Chester theater also plans ar
adaptation of Mary Chase's corned)
"Mrs. McThing" for October. and
two months later. "A Broadwa)
Baby," which wtll combine acto~
with the puppets of Sid and Mart)
Kroffi. A founh producuon 1s sched-
uled for next spring. Each will cost
about $200,000, with Goodspeed
contributors, the Shuben Foun-
dation, the Connecticut Commission
on the Arts and the National Endow-
ment for the Ans providing financial
support.
"If we produce a turkey in Chester.
we're only committed to four or five
weeks," said Price. "If you have a
bomb at Goodspeed, you're stuck
with it for 10 to 13 weeks."
The dual operauons don't seem to
faze Pncc, despite the constant run-
ning back and forth between the two
theaters.
"In retrospect, I now think 11 was
crazy. To continue to do revivals is
important to me because nobody secs
these shows. If they don't get
produced. they don't exist," wd
Pncc. "But we also have an obhgauon
to do new plays to add to the
repenoare so that 25 years from now
we have something to revive."
J
BICbeef
Clara Peller, who became
famou for ber .. Wlaere•a tli
Beet?" commeielal•, le In
JUabland PUk, m., u part or • Cl'OM·C01lDtry trl, In •
1949 car ln HU'Cb o .. the 6iir"' u a new iil•o ln ertca'1 burier war.
G.4Rt'IELD
1'\IE 6EE.N TA~E.N! THfRE WAS
ONl.V ONE KEANEL DF POPCOJ\N IN 1'Hte. WMOLE eAG'
THE
FAMIL~
CIRCUS
"Betsy Ross sewed.the first flag ."
"Why? Was it torn?"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"I see you're trying to mall things again!"
MOO MULLINS
STIRRED UP. ..
PEA TS
T
LUCV, V04lRE THE WORST
Pl.AVER WE MAVE ! YOU'RE ~OPELESS!"f'OU'RE HO
MELP TO US /J\r ALL ! ! !
by Jim Davis
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
....
.
~
..
A
c... c...
'~ c:..
• ~ ::
' !:
~·
"Do you realize that he hasn't missed a
morning this week?"
DENNIS THE ME~ACE
. ... , ....... -....... ............. .. _..,. ...........
c __ ,_....,_..,.
· Hankketcham
by Ferd & Tom ·Johnson
by Charles M. Schulz
I LOOKED 600D IN
™E TEAM PlCTURE
w•: T
• 10983
~J94
O K972
•Q8
A
I •Q7 2
QJ063
<> J , + K J95
SOUTH
•AK 5
t> K 1% o S&J
+AlO?.C
..
Tht> bidding:
ouU1 Weat orth
l NT Paa 2 .T
3 '1' Pa11 , Pa
Opening Jud: 10 of +.
JC you think that deciding
whether or not t.o finf' e, or indeed
~ hich fine. ~e to take, i a reJath:ely weak no trump opt>ning bid . But. by
and large. the bidding plav liltle
SHOE
\
~'1' ~ Wlj'L(. Kl~L~~+i~
IN 1ME ~ELA~ ..
CllULEs
Go1£1
FOR BETrER OR FOR WORSE
-
'-.JMTS 1H~ ~.
DEM ?WHERES Yc:J$.
~MMY?
I DONNOl.1
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
DR.SMOCK
ROSE IS ROSE
NURSES
GOOCH
WI 1,,1,,
HOIS"T'°
YOU UP
WHIC...E! ~'M CH.ANG ING YOUR SHE!Ei"f"S.'
IT~ A fEW SlZES 100 etCT, eur r oor rr ~SM.£!
11 ...
•
by Tom Batiuk
'L: ~ . . ....................
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
by H.frold Le Ooux
..
..
TT Cannon names
bhmari comptroller .
Dntel W. Olimaa is the nc mptroller for Fountain Valley·bascd m
CuHD-Nortt. America. Ohman has been transfe1TCd from JTI's Royal
Electric divi. ion in Pawtucket, RI, wbe~ he had been vice president and
comptr0lltr since 1980. Ohman has been Wlth ITT since 1977. The company
manufactures connccton, interconncctJons systems and assembly tool .
FV marketing
business rents
lts sales sli.ills
• • •
Year-old company
bongs $1 OM in sales
of computer products
~ "rent-a-markeuna-depanmenf'
comi)any fonnl:Sed in Fountain Valley
a little over a year ago by two local
businessmen has runa up more than
$1 0 million in sales of micro-
computer products and expects to
triple that figure this year.
Marketina Resource Group open·
ed its doors for business with a
borrowed office and furniture in July
of 1983, when Kina R. Lee of
Huntinatoo Beach and Dale Smith of
Gary F. Parter has Joined Davoon Inc. of Irvine ~s director of ~usiness Costa Mesa left a computer manufac-
deVelopment for the aeneral contracting firm. He will be responsible for turer to try to make a go of their idea.
mrkeuna DA VCON's services in the commercial and industrial areas of the Their first client bombed out, but
buildina industry. Parker, previously ~th C & I Bal_lde~•· has more than 20 their second -Titan Technolog.ics of
~ of marketina and sales expenencc, pnmarily in the construction Ann Arbor, Mich. -was a bona fide
industry. Parker it an Irvine resident and a member of
1
the Bual.Den success story for both comparues.
De•elopmeut At1oclado1 of <nu1e Couty and Hoa1 Hoapttal 1 55! Support MRG created a total marketing plan au. . for the struuling co-processor ma nu-
, ,. • • • · facturer and sales increased by 400 Sales reprneatatlve Rick Sdlrelber has w~n specia~ recognition fro'!! percent w11h1n six. months.
S&feco Title luaruce Co. in Santa Ana for his "supenor chent service, MRG now represents a half dozen
ac:cordina to Davtd Bod1e, Safeco v.lce pres~dent and sales manager. Sohretber clients, most of which are"p1oneering
• • responsible for market development in the Newport Beach area and projects" for the company. and has
.. possesses more tha!l 1 o years of e~periencc as a title officer, searcher. examiner seen its staff grow to five full-time
and customer service representauve. employees including the pnncipals. • •. • ed Th 1..~ Newpon Beach resident Briu G. O'Toole has Joined the newly open e company woriu on a perceni.ge
.. Anaheim office ofBnlnna Properdes Brokerace Co. as'an ind ustnaJ propen > of gr~s sales that vanes depending on
specialist. O'Toole has been in the NeW}X>rt Beach office ~fBP!K for the p1t1t the chent an~ _the product.
• year, work.ins in the i~dust~ division. 8~BC spccialrzes in the sate and -Why an independent -mariceuna
leasina of commerclal, industrial, office and an vestment property. and sales ~mpany?
• • • • MaJcaby & A1soclate1 Markettn1/ Advertisl.Dg of Newport Beach 1s an
cbaflC ofadvert1sinaand promotion for the CalUornta State Fair, to be ~eld an
Sacramento Aug. 17-Sept. 3. A total of S60.000attended the 1983 state fair. The
I 984 goal is 610,000. • • • MJcrodat. Corp. has announced two promotions ai its Newport Beach
headquarters. MJcbaeJ P. Coleman bas been promoted to vice ~1dent of
North Amencan sales and William A. Schrader is vice president of U.S.
development. Coleman will be responsible for a national and incmataonal sales
and marketina orpnizauoo and a dealer and equipment manufacturer
network throughout the United States and several foreign countnes. The
Newport Beach resident has been with Microdata since 1981 and bnnas. more
than 20 years of eltpenence in the computer and electrorucs industry to ~1~ ~ev.
post. Schrader will be responsible for Microdata's Irvine e!,l&Jncenng d1v1s1on:
He bas been with Microdata for 10 years. and has mo~ than 20 years
expenence overall m hardware engineering, peripherals and systems
• • • Huter /Korobk.lll Corporate Commankatlon1 of Newport.Beach has been
chosen to aeate a consumer aW1TCncu-campa1gn for Torrance-based Toyota
Motor Sales, USA, Inc. The camp11an will focus on ICjislation pending before
the U.S. Senate. and allow consumers to express their opinion as to whether
cars sold an this country should cont.am up to 90 percent American-made parts. • • • Newport Beach-based Kray, Newmeyer, Ludrum & Dillion has
combined with the national law firm of Finley, Kumble, Waper, Rel.De,
Vnderberc. Mu.ley Ir Cuey, establishm& an Orange County office for the
national company. As a result of the move, Kray has become one of the
youngest managing partner1 in the firm and will be managrng partner of the
Newpon Beach office. Tboma1 F. Newmeyer, Dougla1 F. Landrum, Gre1ory
L. Dillion and Antbonr G. Ka.ravutee have all become associated wtth the
national firm. alona with all of Kray's staff.
• • • Marketln1 Dlrectlon1, Inc., of Newport Beach, spec1ahsts an health. care
advert1S1ng and promotion, has been selected to conduct a promotional
campaign for Westcare Development Co. of Irvine. Westcare specializes in
development offrec·standina ambulatory health care facihties such as urgent
care centers. Headfoa the public relations campaign will be Mlcbael Cole,
president of Markeung Directions.
• • • ~ario Guerrero, sales production manager for Crl1py Snack1 of
Huntington Beach. has been elected vice chairman of the OruJe County
CommanJty Development CoucU. Guerrero is a Santa Ana resident. The
Orange County Community Development Council is the official anti-poverty
qency for Orange County, serving low-income residents with programs that
help them become self-sufficient.
D Available to individuals or businesses
D Initial deposit $5,000
D Three check withdrawals per month
D Unlimited ATM access to your mqney
D Insured to $100,000 by FDIC
. ¥our deposit is backed oy eentraJ Banks
record of stability since 1892, and our
more than $1 -biflion in a ts.
Says Smith, S3, a 20-year veteran of
computer and electronics marketing,
"It's Just good economics."
.. It's like being able to hire away
somebody's complete marketin' de·
partment. First of all it's hi&hly
unlikely and secondly 1t would be
extremely expeimve. Or. another
altemauve is starting from scratch
and building your own department.
but then you have the learning curve
to contend wtth and the question as
what's happening to your product
while }Our marketing department as
making au mistakes?"
MRG's chentele incl udes both
American Pacific
reports increased
profits in quarter
Amencan Pacific Corp.In Irvine
announced unaudited results of oper-
ations for the third fiscal quarter and
nme months ended June JO.
Revenues for the quarter ended
June 30 were $22,708,000, compared
wnh $9,367.000 in the third quarter
of fiscal 1983. For the nine months
ended June 30. 1984, and 1983,
revenues were $57,388,000 and
$20,SS8.000, respectively.
Net loss for the quan.er ended June
30 was $3931000, or 6 cents a share,
compared with a net loss of$27,000.
or 6 cents a share. an the year-earlier
quaner
For the nine months ended June
30, the net loss was S 1,268,000, or 21
cents a share. compared with a net
loss ofS 1.424,000, or S l cents a share,
an the year-earlier penod.
The average number of shares
outstanding dunng the quarter just
ended was 6,221,281 , compared with
~. 122,908 shares outstanding dunng
the year.earlier period.
The increase in revenues for the
quaner and nine months ended June
30 over the fiscal 1983 periods was
due primarily to increased sales at the
co~pany's C~lifomia and Florida
residential proJects.
UPs AND DowNs . -
hardware and '°ft,,. arc companies. In
addition to Titan, there is Lock·
h~dfTETEX of Atlanta, who make
the Data Sentry KC'Urity modem,
Dresselhaus Computer Products of
Glendora (Fingerprint): Metro Soft·
ware of Tucson (Oplotter), the Ritam
Corporation of Fairfield. rowa, and
Wipro, Inc., a new software company
based in Monterey
They are not an advenisinaaacncy,
althou&h pan of the tot.al marketing
plan they develop for a client· is
advenisina Every chent has an
advenisina agency chosen fo_r him by
the company. unless there 1s a pre-
ex.isnna relationship, but MRG does
its own media plannina and budget·
ina for the client, and relies on the
agency for creative input and admin-
istration.
Accordina to Dave Swaney of
Newport Beach, MR.G's communica-
tions manager, this way 1s a lot more
work but k~ps him u> touch with the
marketplace and provides better as-
surance that the client as aeu1ni die
most efficient use of his advertising
dollar.
··we have found that all too often a
manufacturer 1s spraying advertisina
a11 over the marketplace, and we like
to sec ourselves as helping him aim
his budget at exactly the segment of
the marketplace he needs to hit to
maximize sales," says Swane)' "Un-
fortunately too many companies also
try to lean on ad aa.encies fot
marketing guidance that the ad a~en· -uwtr......,
caesjust aren't equipped to &Jve.'. . Not yet too hot to haildle
They are extrem~ly opt1mast1c A worker at the Whirlpool Corp. plant In Findlay, Oblo,
about the f~ture. of high technology h 0 oYer two heater boza for ..... clryera. Wben manufactunng in Oraoae County. , c ec • th bo "We do a lot of traveling all over the completely operadonal OD a clotba drfer, e beater JC
world " said Lee. "From wl}at we've contain• a burner unit allowtna warm air to flow thrC>Ulh
seen thjs as definitely the place to be:::_ the heater box to the clothe. dryer.
•
I
• • ..
I
'
-.. . .
.. .
~
I
t
. .. . . .
f
t
..
, On
the · •
..
• '
Ota"Q9 Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wedl llMr ~ 11. 1114 ..
NIYSE CoMPos1r~ TRAN SAC fill~~ ---------
W HAT AMEX Orn
NEW YOttK CAP) A~ 1S ,
10
AM[X LE~D[R S
·. GoLo QuorEs
-----
1 M ET~Ls Quor£ s
---- - -- -----
That' anaptde Cfipttonofboth busine sand ~--
bustness p opl along the Orange Coast. Toke p tr c of
wher compantesar goingandwhlchp opl arehelpin
them get th r .ju t watch ·credit Lin ' -v ryday in th
Busln sss ctlonofyournew lllilJ Pi _
U •• <Mngo Coat OAA. "11ilOTIW-.Y, "-16. ,98-<
• NUC MJTIC[ ! MUC MJTIC[
•
J.
" •
MUCMJl1C£ Ml.IC llOl1C£ Ml.IC MJTIC[ !1aMj MJTICl
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
ON A PROPOSED ZONE CHANGE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Orange County Planning Commission
will hold a public hearing to consider an amendment to the Laguna Niguel
Planned · Community Development Plan and Supplemental Text In the
Laguna Niguel area.
DATE OF HEARING: August 29, 1984
TIME OF HEARING: 1 :30 p.m. or as soon thereafter as possible.
LOCATION:
PROPOSAL:
Planning Commission Hearing Room, Hall of Administration,
10 Civic Center Plaza (corner of Broadway and Santa Ana
Blvd.), Santa Ana.
The proposal would Introduce language Into the Laguna
Niguel Planned Community which would permit the transfer
of dwelling units within the coastal zone from one planning
unit to another within the same planning area through
amendment of the Laguna Niguel Feature Plan Statistical
Analysis rather than by a zone change process. This
procedure Is presently allowed In the non-coastal portions
of the planned community. This proposal may result In an
amendment to the Local Coastal Program Implementing
Actions phase for the Laguna Niguel and Aliso Creel<
Remainder (excluding Aliso Viejo) segments.
COMPLIANCE WITH THE CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL ACT:
The project Is covered by previously certified Final EIR 316 which serves
as a Program EIR for the proposed project.
All persons either favoring or opposing this proposal are Invited to present
their views before the Planning Commlslslon.
For further Information, persons are Invited to call the Land Planning
Section at 834-5380 or come Into the office located at 400 Civic Center
Orlve West, Room 263, Santa Ana, California 92702-4048. Please reler to
ZC No. 84-19P.
W-190 SL:mm(6) 003
-
'
Pr•••rv• the color
flavor of plume
for • winter-I~
treat. Page C2.
Fiii rour Meket
with lnorlte
picnlc1m9dw
wHh a twlet. Cl
E~tertai~i~g . AmericSn-s.tyJe.
RICh culinary traditions
draw from many cultures
. Ameri~n.cookingdrawson the rich
cuhnary trad1t1ons of many cultures, adding a
special accent all its own. What betterway to
celebrate this delicious diversity than to gather
a congenial group to dine-al fresco Qr indoors ~on a feast prepared essen \iaUy in the open
air: ' •
· -ryiis temptinga~d rather unusual menu
combines several examples of the best and
freshest fbV,edicntsAmerica offers. Each dish
is distinguished by great taste, good looks and
the grand simplicity that characterizes our
finest cuisine.
Inspired by fabled Cajun chefs, Louisiana
GriJled Salmoh is dressed with a zesty
marinade that combines the delicate flavor of
fragrant Italian olive
1
oil and the aromatic
qualities of sou them liqueur.
Steaks-salmon or any thick-cut fish-
are cookled alongside savory Yankee Squash on
a large covered barbecue preferably over a
wood·smokc fire. Justa few minutes before the
main course is ready to serve,· add skewers of
Mediterranean Herbed Bread -a brochette
variation. Sprightly and colorful Chop Chop
Salad has a West African heritage.
To cap off the meal, serve Orange Cream
Cake Deluxe that pays homage to the
scrumptious yet feathery light desserts of
France and is crowned by two specially prized
American fruits.
LOUJSIAllA GRILLED SALMON
I iot salmon stew, cat about 1-iJlcb tbJelt ~ cap cat~ap oa.lon ·
•;, cap Worcestenlllre sauce
1 large clove &atllc, c11t blio thirds
1 tableapooa cracked black pepper
%teupoon1ult
1 teaspoon dry mGttard
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon Tabuco
• ~ cap olive oil
If. cap aoatbern Uqaear
Place fish in a sin$)e layer in a glass, pottery
or stainless steel con tamer. Place onion, garlic,
Worcestershire sauce and seasonings in blender
or food processor; blend or process until onion is
pulverized. Add olive oil and blend or process a
few seconds.
Remove from container and add southern
liqueur. Pour overfish, turning steaks to coat.
Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerage 3 or 4
hours, turning fish steaks once. Remove from
marinade, brushina off excess.
GrilJ over gray-ashed coals, using cover for 6
to 8 minutes. Carefully tum, baste with sauce.
Let herbs
spice up
your food
If you are looking for ways to cut
back on sodium intake, try these
herb blends that arc flavorful
substitutcs for salt. Store them in
tightly covered jars.
HERB BLEND A
(For salads or "salt" abaken)
% teupoo1l1 tbyme leaves
% teupoona grolllld savory
1 teaspoon rubbed saae
% teaspoons bull leaves
1 tablespoon marjoram leaves
Mix all ingredients and grind
together in blender, food processor
or mortar and pestle. Less than l mg
sodium per teaspoon.
HERBBLENDB
(For 1oap1, 1tew1, poultry or pot
roast)
1 tablespoon tbyme leaves
1 teaspoon rabbed sage
%tea1poon1ro1emaryleave1
1 tablespoon morjoram leaves
Mii all ingredients together in
blender, food prqccssor or mortar
and pestle. Less than I mg sodium
per teaspoon.
HERBBLENDC
(For beef, cooked vegetables pd
added 1eaaon1D1 at .. table")
1 teaspoon celery seed
1 tableapooa marjoram leaves
1 tablespoon dlyme leaves
l tablespoo11 baall leaves
Cook another 6 to 11> minutes or until fish flakes.
Carefully remove fromgrill. Heat sauce and serve
with fish. Serves 6 to 8. The a~ount of th~
ingredients may be reduced by half, fora less spicy
flavor .
SAUCY RICE 1 1~ cap• coaverted rice
3 cups water
· ~~ teaspoon salt
a,.;· to ~ cup (Jail marinade
Ya cup cur.ruts :
Combine rice, water and salt in a 3-quart
· saucepan. Bring to a boil, stir. Cover and simmer
20 minutes. Blend in marinade and currants.
Serve with fish. Serves 6 to 8.
MEDITERRANEAN BERBED BREAD
1 pound loaf crusty ltallan-atyle bread
~ cup olive oil
1 to % teaspoons ancltovy paste
1 teaspoon chopped fresb or ~ teaspoon
cru1bed dry ore1a.no
1 teHpoon cbopped I reib of YI teaspoon
dry basil
'4 teaspoon mlnced f reab garlic or dHb of
garlic powder
Cut bread intothickslicesorlargecubes.
Beat together olive oil, anchovy paste, herbs and
garlic. Brush cut bread surfaces with herbed oil
mixture. Thread on long skewers. Toast over
gray-ashed coals until crisp and brown. Serves 6
to8.
Y ANKElt SQUASH .
3 medlwn acorn.or fbatternat lquaab. ·
YI cap olive oil'
• 1 tarrapple, pared., cored ud cat up ·
f-p'een onJou or 1.4 of a small oJton
YI cap parsley 1prt11 •
a;, cup southern Uqaear 1
1 tabletpoon packed brown aa1ar
•;, teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon crated natmeg
Cut acorn squash in balfand remove seeds or
cut each butternut squash in halflengthwisc.
Brusbcutsurfacesofsquash with olive oil. Wrap
_pieces of squash in aluminum foil. Cook over
gray...ashed coals for 30 minutes. ·
Put apple, onion and ~rsley in blender or
food processor. Blend unul finel ycho_pped. Over
medium heat, coo;. and stir the apple mixture in
remaining olive 011 until tender, about 5 minutes.
Add remaining ingredients, cooking until fla vors
blend and mixture thickens, about 3 minutes.
(This mixture maybemadcaheadoftameand
reheated on the gnll.)
Open squash packets tQ check doneness. If
squash is not yet tender. continue cooking. SPoOn
apple mixture into squuh cavities. Cook for
additional t 0 minutes. Serves 6 to 8.
(Pleue eee ENTERTAIJlf/C3)
OlllJ ..... "' .........
Mix all ingrccUents and &rind
together in blender, food processor
or monar and pestle. Less than 2 ma
sodium per teaspoon.
Carole Wllllama dbcUMea a menu with another cbef. Tom
Romano.
'
French provincial cooking
sirrtpleandeasyto prepare
. -
Catering chef learns methods
in kitchens all around France
By SUZANNE FREY
Of .... Otllly .........
Contrary to common be hef, French pro,1nc1al
cooking conslSts of simple. easy-to-prepare peasant
foods and not so much "haute cuisine."
At least that's what Carole W1lhams. chef at
Culinary Classics, a catenng service in Laguna Hi lls.
says. She ought to know. she spent a month last year
literally cooking an kuchens all around France. acquinng a feel for the .. foods of the people ..
"I love the fact th at France has so man} different
kinds of foods," W1lhams says "Each region has us
own specialty, its own flair."
Dunng her tnp. Williams stu died the art of French
provincial cooking with renowned chefs an Pans. She
says the simple countf) foods. commonl} referred to by
the French as "the cooking by the \\Omen ... require JUSt
as technical and precise methods as the gourmet menu
served ID Pans restaurants.
"French cooking differs from American in that 1t
has an almost mathematical precision t-0 u ... \\ tlhams
says. "It requires class1cal. )'et si mple technique~ that
any cook who wants to e'pand tus or her knowledge
should use."
She sa}s tha t \\ hile .\mencans ,·1ew coo k mg as the
"art of substllutton:· the French ti) to ne,cr
compromise on ingredients called fo r ID a recipe .\nd
although most French ~c1 p1escall for fre!lh angr('(f1ents.
the dashes arc not expens1,c
Noting that Southern California has a s1m1lar
climate as Southern France. and thus has the same
availability of fruits and 'e&etables. W1lhams sa}'s.
"You just have to plan ahead and bu) foods when they
arc in Stason. To c.at v.cll, you don't ha ve to spend a lot
of money." .-
Will iams· intercM 1n cooking dates back to her
early childhood when she started helping her Polish
grandmother prcpatt meals ... , was raised with pca5ant
foods and that's what I love to cook.."
After she graduated from college "'i th an under-
graduate degree in educataon and master's dqrec in
psychology. Williams decided against a career in those
areas and wanted one in the food busmess instead.
She married and spent years experimenting in her
own kitchen, cooking for her husband and two children.
Wanting a more formal cookms education. she studied
wtthJacques Pepin and Madeleine Kamman, experts of
French cookmg. and later apprenticed at Mon1ques
French restaurant in Laguna Beach.
Alth ough bcrng a chef at Culinary Oassics requires
long and hard hours, she still finds time to make and sell
chocolate truffles and white chocolate brownies at the
Pasta Machtnc in Laguna Beach. and to teach cveruni
cooking classes.
Last month. she also held a French cooking
demonstration at the Orange County Fair's Gourmet
Galler). Williams says the approumately 50 people an
the audience enjoyed her °French provinetal summer
brunch." and man)' asked for the rccipics. She says
people pan1cularl)' C'ommented on the .. delicious
smell" produced by the fresh spices used in the d1 hes.
She sha res two recipes that she demonstrated at the
fair
SUMMER SALAD
% pounds zucclllni, tlliAly ill~ on tbe dla&onal
! eaclt red, green ud yellow peppen, roasted,
peeled, affded and jallenned
l bancll watercrn1, cleaned and stems ttmoved
! oucea cltopped parsley
8 oances f nit)' olive oil
! oancea red wlDe vineaar
Salt and pepper
1 clove 1arllc, cbopped
1 cup f res la basil leaves
% to 4 onces toasted walnats
( Pleate see EASY /Cl)
EAT WELL AND BE WELL IN LATER YEARS
A balanced diet can minimize
maladie a t0e1atcd with the aging
process, such as exec weifht pin,
brittle bones and constipauon.
---Unwanted--weight pin put
undue tre on the bones and bean
and can contribute to hi&h blood
preuure, say haron Higins. a
nutntion con~ultant in Los Angele
who treats older patient .
~tJBans recommend~ a 1,200 to
l ,500 caloric diet for women and
about 2.000 calorica fo~ men past
the of 60. Th dictJ hould
incJu daily lcctions from each or the four fooo arou~ -milk,
m t, v table and fruits, and
breads and cereals. of water. milk and/or fnut JUioc To stay within the calorie daily. G •
limits, 5eniors may want to choo .. Adequate consumption of
milk and meat aroup food that are calC1um-rich foods daily i a
lower in fat, They may also want t -preventive measure for o -
limit their consumpuon of sweet • teoporo5i , the d ncrattvc bone
salty snack foods and alcohol di5ea that -tnk one in four of
use of their hiah-calonc, low-thiscountry'1cldcrlywomcn. More
nutrient propcnie . than one million bone f racturc a
To avoid con tipation, Higin year re ult from o tcoporo i " he
suuc~ts consumina complcl st).s.
carboh)drarc : food rich in fiber Dairy pro<lu t arc th be t
uch H whole gtaJn bread • ccrrah ~urtc of cal ium. Mdin to
ana frc h fruit end v tabt . Ht n . Two t<>thrtt dail~~
Fluid alM> help ward off con· from milk sroup foOd , an ludin t1~uon . H11fin recommend milk. ~oaun and chtt1t, will upply
dnnkana i ·to 1 ht .;oun~c s n adeq t nmount of cal{'tum ro
aroup '" one 1mple meal. It
supphc <akium, fiber, proten and
vttam1n C to t~ diet . .
No-Fu s Cream V etahlc Soup
i a low-calonc-way-10.~ catoum
and v1tamms and C an )our diet
.,
.
t
'
. .
lftM'S HOW •s.ve up to $2.00 .
• 159 with this coupon tor
Welch's (;tape Jelly or Jam
IUY. T •O 18 0. Of r Welch I Gripe ~ Of
Jam Mid rwo 18 o~ rger Ji! Ptinul llu11e1
•S1. one coupon tot
Frte Blea«! (value up to
85C) and foor 25C coopans
f0t a~y size J1t
MAIL• Tl!f req111rt0 "' ~ a le lllO the net •tiQlll
s1a1ements lfom 1wo 18 l>l °' tarow Welell s Gt·~ Jel4y or Jill! Ind l\lwo 18 Ol Ol larget Jil PtlllUI
81Jllff 10 Illa IOdrm beto.
MUIVE. By m.tl one t()\Jj)()n '*Ollll MC IO«llO
Ille purCllW Ol l>INCI Mid 4 25c COllflOllS !l()Od Oil
YQll1 ll«JI lour llUf ~ ol ont ~ lilt Ji
'2709 ____ _.I STOA£ COUPON
~--""'· --------------------------
1bucb tbe.beart of me ...
FREE FROM. PURINA CAT cuow· GREETING CARDS -.-c•rtooo
1
~howing your favorilt: picture
with Cat Chow weight circle~ and S 1.00 poMagc and handling
Send us the negative of your favorite photograph and we'll
put it on ten handsome greeting cards, with a per-
sonal greeting just from you. If you don 't have
a negative. send print or slide, but in-
clude an additional $1.00 for
processing.
Take a moment
to remember. Take
another to show
yow pride ••• in our
U.S. Olympic Team.
The US hoc,.ey •earn victory ,.. '980 1 llec us
wth pr ae
The tearn of col ege stuaents and teenagers
was put :ogett er n only ten months under
the leadersprp ot an inspired and aeterm ned
coach They were iust a bunch of kids but
they were dedicated and they defeated the
1nv nc1b1e Russian hockey team
Your opportunity to support ou'r
young athletes.
Now another Olympics is approaching-the
1984 Los Angeles Summer Games Its the frrst
time 1n 52 years that the Summer Games will
be held on Amer can soil
In honor of this 1moortant event the United
States Government has author zed an issue o1
extraordinary silver and gold Olymo1c com·
memorat ve co ris Its •he first t me 1n some 50
years that he US Government has I'll nteo a
Fruits ofsummer labor
delicloUs all winter long
Take advantage
of abundant
plum supply
Midseason for fresh California
plums means many varieties ftllina
produce counters and markets
aotos the country. At no time
Jurina the May throu&h September
. eason arc fresh plums aoina to be
more available and probably
reasonably priced.
The many varieties including the
· purple Simka, the bean-shaped
Kelsey and the black-skinned Friar,
make midseason a fine ttme for
making h~memade plum
preserves.
These three recipes for a plum
and combination peach jam, a
plum butter and a Citrus Plum Jelly
make ideal use of some of these
more well-known varieties.
Each recipe is processed with a
boiling water bath method in com-
phancc with current USDA rec-
ommendations to help insure con-
sumer safety. It is suggested that
conserves, preserves, butters and
marmalades all be treated with this
method of heat processing.
PLUM BUTTER
6 poand1 f resit Callfornla plam1
~cap water
Sugar
Halve plums and discard pits.
Whirl plums in small batches in an
electric blender until smooth, add-
ing ponions of the water as needed.
Puree to remove sklns. Measure
pureed fruit and add 2/,cup sugar for
each cup of puree. Stir until well
mixed. Brin& to boil. -Boil gently until it registers 220
degrees on candy thermometer,
stirring often, or until mixture
sheets from the edae of a metal
spoon (about 20 minutes). Pour
into clean, hot jars and seal accord-
ing to manufacturer's directions.
You can help them reach for
their star.
Your purchase of these magni ficent Olympic
coins wrll ensure that our athletes at the Los
Angeles Games and 1n the future will have the
traini ng they require a nd the o pportunity they
deserve
These are all magnificent proof
coins-flawless gems!
The 1983 silver one dollar coin was deSlgned
by Elizabeth Jones. the chref engraver at the
Mint Th e obverse (or front) of the coin repre·
sents a dramatic dep1ct1on of the classic Greek
discus thrower. The 1984 silver dollar coin has
been designed by Robert Graham, a Los
Angeles sculptor The obverse of the coin will
bear a representation of the Gat0'Nay to the
Olympic Coliseum
The 1984 gold ten dollar coin was designed
by John Mercantl of the US Mint engraving
staff. from a concept created by James Peed
He has captured the penetrating scene of the
Olympic torch bearers 1n detail
Process in bollmg water bath for I S
minutes. Makes 6 cups or 3 pi~.
PLUM PEACHY JAM ·
"'4 po and f resb Callf ornla plam1,
halved and pitted
It. poand fresb Callfonla
peaches, peeled, balved ud
pitted
S tableapoou lemon Jlllce
~ cap llpt corn 1ynap
i caps 111car
'i. cap water
1 packace (% oances) powdered
f rult pectiD
Puree plums in electric blender, a
few at a time. Crush peach.es with a
fork or potatp masher. Thorou&hly
mix lemon juice, com syrup and su~ into fruit; let stand 1 o.
minutes.
Mix water and pectin in a
saucepan. Bring to boil and boil 1
minute, stirring constantly. Stir
fruit mixture into the pectin and
bring to a boil. Boil, stirring. for S
minutes. Ladle "uick.ly into clean,
hot jars filling wt th jam to 1h inch
from top. Seal according to manu-
facturer's directions. Process in
boiling water bath for 15 minutes.
Makes 2 pmts.
crtJUJ8-Pb\IM.JELL Y
~ pounds f resb Callfornla plam1
S oruges, peeled and 1llced
1 lemon, 1llced
1lime,1llced
Su car
Wash plums and cover with
water in a large kettle. Add orange,
lemon and lime shccs. Brin& to a
boil, reduce heat and simmer until
plums arc cooked and pulp separ-
ates from the-pits.
Spread 4 layers of moistened
cheesecloth over a mixi ng bowl and
.secure with string or rubberbands.
Pour fruit and liquid into
cheesecloth and allow fruit juices to
drip through.
To make jelly from this juice,
return juice to kettle and boil for 20
minutes. Measure -yield and for
every S cups of juice, add 2 cups of
supr. Divide into thirds and boil
each third rapidly in its own larae
uncovered saucepan until jelly
point is reached on candy or Jelly
thermometer (220 degrees), about
I 'I• hours. Pour into clean, hot jan
and seal accordin& to manufac-
turer's directions. Process in boilin&
water bath for 1 S minutes. Makes 6
pints.
EASY •••
From Cl
Clean zucchini, slice thinly, set
aside. Roast peepers over a flame or
in the oven unul charred. Place in a
paper bag and let set until cool. Peel,
seed and julienne.
Assemble basil dressina. Use a
food processor or blender. Chop
prbc, walnuts and basil until it
resembles a coal'1C paste. Add
vinegar. Drizzle m ohve oil and
season with salt and pepper.
Dress zucchini separately from
peppers. Dress watercress sep r-
ately. Place mound of zucchini in
center of plat{er. Surround with
peppers, then watercress. Spnn.kle
chopped parsley over all. Serves•·
SOUFFLE PROVINCIAL
I tableapoou 1weet ntter
• to I 1Uce1 qullty wlal'-br..S
H oance1 Grayere ca.+.
'
rated
• ounces f roaeo 1plaacb,
tllawed, dralaed wen and
cbopped
' to e oances tan dried tomatoes, cbopped
• oaace1 exceUeat Mm (West·
plaallu), tb.lalJ aUctd u OGDCH Upt cttam
How you can own Olympic a to• •a•
commemorative coins. Herbel de Pronace Preheat oven to 350 dearcts
The US Mrnt offers four purchase options Butter a 2;{\,~souffie dish. Bunt;
the single 1983 or 1984 silver coin . a two· one aide of aliccs and place in
oo n t which includes ooth silver coins or dish so • to cover bottom. 1akc
i..-------g00-com1 •
a three-COin set which features the 1984 aimple custard with cream, h. hcrbcs and cap. SCt uidc.
god corn nd 1983 and 1984 silver coins You arc 101na to build a la)'cred
The pro' s 1rori 'he sa"e ot 'hese special
cons go towar cf the Olymo1c€ffort 1nclud 1ng
pay ng Jor tt1e tta ,, ng of our g fted athletes
tor coaching eQUlomern and rr(lv-el exoenses
to the Games
QW' SUPPORT ·~~il
THE HOME TEAM. .. ., ·~
Coins can be purchased through your local dish. Place chopped pinach layer
oost office and at part1c1pat1ng banks a nd coin over bread, then ham, then cheese
d I 0 and a layer of tomatoc in the ea ers cross the country r, write to Us . .....----· center .. RcJ>Clt. cndina ·m cheese,
M nt Olympic Coin Program PO-Box S Pour custard over all and let ser at
San Francisco CA 94 101 room temperature for 30 minute . Bake 0 to -40 minute until bubbly
and aoldcn . ~n·e 4,
' I
, Orange C
ENTERTAINING... N ' 11 ~ Is. ·':;:;,.::,~u b<~~:~Y~:"b.ne nour. oJ•way S CU .1Dary. art I.I.
I ~~pe tomatott, 1 ed ud ::?c>~ anl ~~r:1:.:rr:t~ The SCand1nav1an 1«t1on of the ~tlna labs in Oslo thoroQlhly days in the Home Economtc1 Food
l lu11 1reea pepper, cbopped yolks, beatinJ to ml it. Remove f'rom "Cultural foods" course lhll 1tan1 enjoyed thetr marveiou1 campus Lab IO~ on the OCC cam ere
I 1mall c cumun, claoppecl mixer and fold in cu whites and Auf. 22 at Oranae Coa1t Colleae ee cream and wm unted io • e previoulJy llUahl Chmnc and ~ cup clloppecl omoa oranae ~1. Pour into an unarealed wit be eapcclllly freth. champaane reception at the Ammcan ~ 1resiona1 cookJ~ and
cap olive oil 9. to IQ.inch tube pan. Bake at 325 Instructor Eleanor Widolf 1w llldtnnet (cnyh-11); t1 ---~--""~fffl>t! !he fbOCSj ?Oul"IC oullibe.
I tablt1pooa1 ln1ll lan a J•lc• dearees for JS to 40 .mlnulel. Cool. iu1t returned from the lntemationaJ Such cuhnary memories alona .. Each Miilon will feaiure films. ~ teaspooa 1aU Remove from pan. Cut cike in federation of Home Economics with recipes for open-face demontUJUOn1andactualcookina
1 tablupooa daopped lretk mlat half crouwlae to m&ke 2 layers. Conaress an Otto followed by• tour amorbrod 11ndwlches, krilmklker, of foodl 'that can be eaten there or
Combine apples, tomatoes, areen Spoon and brush Southern Syrup of,~orway, Swede~ and Denmark. hmina and Danilh putty will be 1akeD home for dinner," id
pepper, cucumber and onion in a over all cake aurfaca. Place one Our main topic waa the In· shared dunna her l 8 b of W:idolf.
Iarp bowl lined with freih p-cens. layer on .ervina plate whb cut ~uence oftechn~l~ on ~be famil· claues from I to 4 .m. Wcdnn-Widolf. whollu&btfor29yeanat Combln.oolive oil, lemonju1ce, lllt surface up. Spread Cream Toppig 1e1 of the world, 111~ Widolf, who r-------,.&..;.-.....;..;..;;.....;... ___ ~~.;..;;~;;.;;.;;,.:;.;..;;;;..:..:.::~:.....:.;.:;;;.:;::.:::.;;;;.:::;.::..:=::.:..-....:-~
and mint •• Pour dreui1_11 over over aurfaoe; amnr half the Or· • prepared for the IClllODI by rtud)'·
veae.tablea, refrj1era~. Tou before anae sepnenu an berries over tnJ the Norw~ lan1uqe an tetfdem8~-£'_™11h~Wlth8carrCilotEcur11. eream .. Place remainina cake layer Vivan ~rut' claases at Coa1Uinc cut aide down, over Denies and Com.munaty Collete: cream. Spread remainina cream on W1dolf and PatnCla Mopn:..t alao
DELUXE top of cake, amn&ina remainina of OCC; ~nted Oranae \..OUn· t tQI, Hparated OflftJC sqmentl apd berries It• ty at the 6P:nation conference,
'4 tea1oon cttam of tartar tractivcly. Refriaerate until servina ".We v111ted for a day at . ~e 1 cap au1ar time. Serve• 8 to 10. ~cultural research university 1
1 cap all·parpote floar Soatlaera Synp
1 teaapoon bakla1 powder l tablespoon• Haar
~ teaspoon •alt ·~ cup oru1e Jalce Frankly delicious 'H cap oraa1e JaJce .,, cap aoatltera 1Jq1ear
· 1 tablespoon abreddtcl oranae · Combine 1uaar and oranae juice
peel i n a small sauce~n. Brina to a boil
Hawaiian Turkey Franks taste
areal served with fresh pineapple~
1 recipe Sout.._ra Synp and' cook until aupr dissolves and
1 recipe Cream Topplll1 mixture thickens sliahtly. Add
Two days before the barbecue,
prepare a1aze by contbinina 1 jar (8
ounce5) pineapple jam, VJ cup
apricot nectar, 11> cup lemon juice
and 2 teaspoons around &inaer.
Refriaerate.
t oran1e1, cat ID 1epient1 southern liqueur.
1 pint r11pbenie1 or straw· Cream Toppla1
berrtet 1 ~ caps wlalppla1 cream
With electric mixer, beat cu I tablespoo•• powdered Hl&r whites and cream of tanar until t te11poon1 tHtlaera liqueur
fluffy. Add 1h cup supr, 2 table-1 tableapoon 1bredded oruae
Score 1 pound California turkey
franks about lf• inch deep and arill
abOut 6 inches from heat for I 0
minutes, tumina often and pastin&
with glaze. Place arilled franks in
toasted buns and serv'e.
spoons at a time, beating until stiff peel
peaks form. Beat ea yolks until Beat cream and suiar until soft thick and lemon colored; add 112 cup Dea.ks form. Beat 10 southern
su , 2 tablespoons at a time, liqueur, stir in orange peel.
SCOR£ BIG Serve HONEYBAKED r-. brand ham
for Your Game Parties
"
ITS UNIQUELY DELICIOUS
A{ld so cas) to enc. Bccau c 11 come'
full· cooked and i;p1ral·sl1ccd. So pan)·
umc. dinner-time or an) lime that onl)
the best \\ill do. make 11 HoneyBaked •
~and ham. And you>e got. II made,
ITS ONE GHAT HAM'
• Smoked & Baked for ~O Hou~ _ a Haney & Spice Glued
• Sp1ral·Sh~cd for Scl'\ing £a,C' ·
•Whole cl Half Ham • Nation~ldc Sh1ppini
• G1f1 Ccnificatc • Pan' Tra', . . .
ANAHUM • Tiie Villap Ccntar. 1222 S
lrooklwm (111 tan R.d.) • 1714) 635 2461
CoaoNA DU MA&· 3700 E Coast Hwy (714)67).9000
-b.·fOllO llortl'Tonr?IGI !ltOIUl:"l*I
llnimadWay •21• EI TCllOM I • (71'1137·3122
HUNnNCOTON llMJC-19069 lead! l l•d. I ..
Ouftcld tlnllO ltalplle) • 1714)" -1$7'
OMNC'.l 1419 N. T11na(111 KatcAll • (714) 997.9960
l'<t" ...... 1111"1 t OMO"""' I \4\1111 11111111 '1''""1111 '"' 111.:"Tl'<(,fll'll.111 .. t It '" 11\1111\ I \l<.1 l"t•tll '"1111111011 \ 'A.(100 "oau1a11x.1 011'"'' ,,111 \I Ill ,.,,,1>1,, "''t 1111
-----------------~-----....! 1•4111 .. lol lllHll\llll \\tll.A'tl'l"'''-llltl,Cl\"'10\1 \\'-I\ l"UAaA , .. ,, .. \40"''' 'I'-'-\\ \I I ICll••\'-t I I 1'1 \'-II
\ .. UNI,, 11ot ~CO~"l"'l V.1\ll \II.I \Ill \C,I l"llOl'I \'111111"
ONE TASf'E IS All IT TAKES!
OW GET ALPO.IN ntE
LARGE SIZE AND SAVE BIG!
(,_,.,.111 c 1'111• H , l!•M'4111.t,. '"'
-----------1
I
I
I
J
I
..... CellfM I
I
I A~~ -----11111!1'---- - - -
l.1000 'f 05701
ON ANY SIZE BOX OF FINJSH
THE HEAVY DUTY DtSHWASHER DETERGENT
and
SAVE
40•
'"t .
..... ..
I DAILY PILOT/Wecln
Swiss Colony makes some exciting changes
. .....---jEIRY
MEID
ly unemplo)cd ltah n nd Jr., Paetr<>'s ~nd n, as the current that currently owns Alm d n. Na, other producu. Heubl an l
wi immigrants livm in n wmcllUl tcr. tion 1 owned Colon)' for about 10 bought Beaulieu and Inglenook.
f ronc1 oat the time. It seem they The Sonoma County wiqery at yclln dunng_the '40s, and then old Tb 1 ttcr two brand prospered
weren't much interested in inv t-A ti (ju t north ofHcaldsbura) 1111 to United Vantncri an 195•. Five under Heublein promotion nd
•n&. but turned. out .io be. t tandl a d i th oldclt tasting yean later United wa bought out advertising, while Colony w s r-
cmpJoyccs. room in California. Colony also by Allied Ora~ Growers. a mitted to langui h.
1hc tint winemaker wa Pietro owns other wmcmakina fi cihties in vineyard coopcmuvc. An a nu-trust uit filed mst
Ro st1 who descendants have the San Joaquin Valley.• Ten yea later, Allied sold to Heublein could tiave foroed them to
. been involved with wincmaking at Colony wu once owned by Heublein, the g.iant di,.uller that ell off some of their wine brands,
Colony ever smoc. Edmund Rossi National Distillers, the company produces Smirnoff Vodka amona and it ~ms that Colony waa to be ------:------.-----------------....-------------.---...::.......:....---......,..-~-----------:----. the ••sacrificial lamb•' if the order
-~ .,..:_
PLAIN BROWN LABEL
ApPle
Juice
Meat Dept. Savings
Chuck Roast ~~Lm
Back Ribs .ff'
Sliced Bacon au .
..,Bib Chops ~!·'·~~··
Red Snapper r!9ZEN
True Cod :,~~,r!I
Bay Seal lops ::m1.N
Bay Shrimp ~~\"ca
l• s1.69 .nc
.• 51.49
. s1.89
B s1.39
ll S2.29
LI S2.99
LI sa.69
Compare these Low Prices
KERNS
lltrwwbel1y
Preserves
Grapefruit Juice i~:W'6~n
Pineapple Juice 001(
T OAAHGI ang J,.'l: ... ~,.
Kool-Aid rai;.NLD
Green Beans ~:¥0'"
Dressing i=~:' nnn F d "" .... ~V~ 00 ;.Af TAT
Cat Litter JC-•
Corn Pops ct~v0001
~Ol,sgc
•Ol ggc
-1-PL Y ASSORT. COLORS OR WHITE
Scot·. --rowels
c
ever came down. It took I 0 years to ·
settle the case in Heublein's favor,
and by then Colony had lost market
hare and suft'ered loss of imqe
under Heublein's decade-Iona
nCJ!ect.
Waiting in the wings were some
folks who still believed in the brand,
the history and the ability to
produce fine value.oriented wines,
It just happened to be the group that
had sold Colony to Heublein, Allied
Growers. They recently bought
their baby back, as yo~ may h~vc
• noted via TV commerculls draw1RI
attention to the fact. · ·
Many excusng thinss are happen-
ing at Colony these days.
The famous old tasting room at
Asti has been reopened (Heublein
had closed it), and extensive re·
furbishing of grounds and facility
are an ongoing project.
The current blends of the wine-
ry's generic and varietal wines arc
not only some of the best ever, but
arc probably the driest in modem
ha story. and therefore of interest to
serious wine coosumers.
Just how good are the current
Colony releases? Very good, in-
deed! As I've menuoned before,
non-vintage Colony Zinfandel won
a Four-Star gold medal at the
Orange County Faar, which means
all four judges on its panel voted for
ll to receive the high honor
At the Eldorado Western Wine
Competition, the same wine was
one oT only two Zinfandcb to
receive a gold medal. once apjn
with unanimous votes from the
judges. You can buy the wine at
most any su~nnarkct or wine shop
for around $2.50.
Colony won four other gold
medals at Oraf\ge County for
Cflenln mane, -Surgundy, Chablis
and Rhine. The winery's Lcjon
brand extra dry champagne afso
took the top award.
1 he non-vantage Colony
Cabernet only won a bronze. but at
SJ you'll look lonJaRd hard to find
something that dnnks so well, tastes
so &ood. and is true to its varietal
origins.
Getting on to other changes.
you'll ~n to note the "Italian
Swiss" starting to ap~ again on
the label in small pnnt. Heublein
had removed that portion of the
name, calling it simply .. Colon y." It
didn't work. Everyone remembered
the Italian Swiss. -11'.adc and con-
sumers alike, and everyone still
called it that even though it hadn't
appeared on a label in years.
The bisaest Colony chan~e will
come otlicially this fall, with the
release of some fine to superior
' quality varietals, vintage-dated, 4-ROLL and beariDi a proud Sonoma ap-___________________ _. ..____________________ pellatton.
Frozen Food Favorites Garden Fresh Produce
Morton Dinners •v·~ '17'to11ot sac Cantaloupes r::r'""UT La 2ac
Grapes ~~ Pizza ~~.:oNI
Grape Juice ~ElC><S
Sunny Delight ~5r
Corn on the Cob 0~£10•
Broccoli ~,.\·' v t bl IT~(lY ege a es !N.}f:N•TfO+<AL
Down flake f:~f:~·UI
Grape Nuts '°'T
Spray n Wash :~(.
Caress .. ~50••
P'·ne Sol 0<$IO,f((.,,. .. , Cl Vhf A
Final Touch ~~l.
Glass Plus ~~~..,,M
Raid ~U::
Bount~10WfLB1""-f 0(11(V•(llt0~ ~l()lt
Hefty ags ,?~f''M(H
· sses 51 .. "s~,
•oz S2.59
UOt 79'¥ Potatoes =~0 •
202 69C U.S NO l 8AOwN
•lA~ s1 .25 = 1o.oz &gc
11-0Z 51 .19 Ig LB
IOS¢Z 79'¥
PJUC.U uncnn 1 ft1LI. DAY•
... .... T99 ... ..,..,. rwt ...
... 1• 17 181
LI sgc
LI 29C
ASSORTED OOl.OAS
EXCELLENT QUAUTY
Mums
•I.9941N POT
Amons the new releases wall be a
Chardonnay, Gewurztramaner.
Pinot Noir Rose, Grcnache Rose.
Cabernet Sauvignon and another
version of Zanfandel. I've
previewed several of the wmes. and
can tell you the Gewurz is special
and the Pi not Noir Rose is good and
a good value. rm not too exC1ted
about the Grenache, but then I'm
not a fan of the grape or the wines at
produces.
These first premium releases are
very limited, and will only be
available on the West Coast. Res-
taurant distribution will be
emphasized. Production will in-
crease beginninJ with the 1984
crush, and the wane will eventually
sec national distribution.
If you haven't sampled th~ Ital-
ian Swiss Colony label 10 recent
years. now is the tame to renew your
acquaintance. I can tell you that the
wines have never been better. and
that is because the new owners arc
tryina harder than ever.
EAT WELL •.•
From Cl
NO-FUSS CREAMY VEGETABLE
· SOUP
1 medium potato, peeled ud
Clbed
~ cap tomato J•1ce or beef brotb
I nvelope (1 cup 1lie) cream of chlckeD soap Dill
'4 teaapooa prllc powder
Daala wltlte pepper
1 ~ C11pt milk
1 packa1e (lt ouce1> cooked.
f rozea ml1e4 veaetables
Combine potatoes and tomato
Juice in medium saucepin. Cook.
covered. I 0 to 1 utcs or. JUAtil -
telR!er. Bien cooked Potaioes wath
cookina liquid and soup mix, prUc
powder, white pepper and milk in
blender container until hquificd.
Return to saucepan. Add mixed
vegetable . Cook O\ er low heat
unttl thoroughly t\cated. Ma1'ea 3 cups.
Note: rrots, cautinower
broccoli ma~ be ubstitut~
"6tatoc1. tJ 'h cup tomato.Jui
bttfbroth as cooking hqu1d. U
cup milk w1th the v tabl .
'
,. ..... . . ,
T·BONE
STEAKS
•
49
OR LOIN CUT CLUB-T ABL.E KING BEEF LB
PORTERHOOSE STEAKS LB 2.59
11.99
9-99
2.00
;,;~~OFF v ~ 7?=?
BOTTLE !AFTER DISTILLER REBATE1
FRIAR PWMS OR
BARl'LETI' PEARS
BLACK FRIAR
SWEET AND RIPE
MEAT
11r I Klt'IC; I I I ' r l>"ol lt SS
Top Sirloin Steaks
m
lR 2 29
TAI' ( 1\1~ \l\IUI 111<1\ OCl~Tf() 79
Beef Back Ribs 1 a •
lARtl l'llNl..lllll RIM ... r,Qlf '''l Oll 189
Boneless Rump Roasts 111
TAl\11 I\"«, 1'«11 llll\llf() '"' 169
Fresh Lean Ground Beef, u
1 11r,1 I ~ Lil I f I -.r ,f I .., )
Boneless Rib Steaks '" 229
fl!tSH • m ' r.-.c ... 11.••itt 98
Frying Chicken Legs 1e •
Wiison's Sausage IR J98
I I HJll\ ~ Dl\1 ll J98
Center Cut Ham Slices Lil
' ' \ ' NOl'-.(1\1\ I J59
Smoked Sliced Bacon rn
SEAFOOD m
I 'I I 1t ll ~ "' 898
Shell-On Jumbo Shrf mp o
2 98
Ut
tRI • tr+.• •
Dover Sole Fillets
"1t0i:f'. ()If tfl\I I I II Ali tu 1981 J 98
Fresh Alaskan Salmon '"
•t PACflC
Buttcrflsh Fiiiet II\ 169
....
BAK.ERV • J29
,.._.99
l>J35
Vons Butter Crol nl 1as
J 39
J09
LB .•
GROCERY
600-.CC. oornr~11u11,.. J 69
Hollywood Salad Dressing
J85 1600"1Cl BO\
Cap 'N Crunch Cereal
138 22 ool'lcE eonu
Vons Coffee Creamer
IOOCCXJ!'ll PA(J\A(;( 259
Lipton Black Tea Bllgs
I lll (Al'! CHQCI\ Hill OJ l"IUT
Ground Coffee
/'I.)< t(> I
Pine·Sol Cleaner
BAA A l D \A.Ir.
Dial Bath Bar. Soap
• "l 00\
Vera Facial Tissue
l PACKAO -JO OA.Ll.01'S
Glad Trash Bags
• Frigo String Cheese • DAIRY
I P ' • :t't Imperial Mirgarine
265
219
.55
.• 71
f43
II
.85
.79
VONS JACK
CHEESE
MONTEREY JACK-FAMILY PACK
REOULAR SllE LB 2 04
LONDON BROIL J89 !J'!!Y'Ao LB
TABLE KrNO BEEF
SUNKIST
ORANGE JWCE
64 OONCE CARTON MADE FROM CONCENTRATE
GROCERY
OUNCE PACKl\Gl J 26
Sunshine Hydrox CookJes
10,')/ """·""PACK SCALIOP A.IJ r,1111n ... J69
Betty Crocker Potatoes
.94 28~E C"N
Bush Baked Beans
1POUl'!Cl eonLE l«'f!.Of") o co J 59.
Kraft B.B.Q. Sauce
1 OU"IC.t Cl\r. 69 Slim Price' Tomatoes •
t )i("'I( ,.... .·49 Del Monte Green Beans
~'ll· 11f o,()U.89
Spaghetti Sauce
::P•O: -.Ct -f
Vons Salad 011
Jl.QL I " t • •TC
Mayonnaise
FROZEN
:1<100 &-.<~.-TH!; O'I 11.t:OOf'l
Ote Ida Potato
123
148
11
129
()(Jr!([ oox-5 ILClt:D \ R OR 109
Jeno's Pepperoni Plzza Rolls
'°"CUP. w.. c~ ,. .. J "' 4 ~JOO Natural Ice Cream R
8001<t-6AllA ""' l'OffS J 25 Rich's Chocolatc·Ecl lrs
12(Xm(ECA"'I
SunkJsl Orange Juice
t.P Cf!. ' ~ V Ice Crum Sandwld\
....
D -l c. ..._,_ ~C"YW""• •
Van De K8mp f1Sh fllletS • DAIRY
J19
J19
J19
1"
II
J45
4 ~100
12·PACK
12-0UNCE CANS
STAR KIST
TUNA
6 5-00NCE CAN
CHUNK LIGHT -IN WATER OR Oil
UQUOR
' ' ..... P"IY QI.' 239 Don Miquel Chablis
999 ~ t II f f O"CV"< 11'
Gordon's Gin
~ "lll 80T"TU ->l"t'U'> 299
Taylor California Cellars
IC",tiT 279 t.?PAO' I 01 r4
Schaefer Beer
14\0,. llllTI I r •....-:0
Cella Lambrusco
I ., I '-
DoS Equis Beer
''~eon 1
Cimino Asti Spumante
169
299
]99
Black f, White Scotch 1299
Popov Vodka 699
VAN DE KAMP
ENCHILADA •-f [
THU TH U
•
l 'la·LB.· LOAF BREAD
00
~JI Q ;{1] •Ii'" II! ;
l A tV.tlf'J't M"<IOD CA 49 79
Large Papayas r:" •
'1£D Nlllf II QQ!:I I'> l I AF ()j;f 39
Romaine Lettuce t.o. •
lR .59 I RES>i ()!\!! 4 I 8. '9
Italian Squash
l "-~ tO I 6 f 100 Large Bell ~ppers ~ .
l
Brown Onions
t"' " Kiwi Fruit
.89 :
4 gJOO
4 ~100
"""'".. E_-0 "1 Pl. .... -n. -179 4-lnch Thblc f-em
.79
fOUMt Mt WAL.LIT fOUMT Ml YAU.It ~........... ,,.. ........ , ....
~-----u -----~ ... , ......... -.....
-l
..
OI Orange Oout DAILY PILOT/Wldntlday, Augutt 18, iea•
'
Picnic foods updated .
mounded with potato salad Boston Cook Book." Mary Uncoln
bedecked with slices of bard cooked recommended fryinachicken in bot cus •• ialt pork fat. Porter's, .. New
Robcn Merc.n. in hi• book Sou them Cookei)' ~k" < 1871) ____ ,.._.._ ....... ._...,._ ........ ---···cc1ebration1' wrote that at the 1uac1ted lard or fry1na.
time of the aemicentennial of TOday health-conscious Amcri·
Independence Day 1826 many cans ha~e discarded these. ol~·
Fried chicken and potato salad. Is people wanted the '0th annlvcrury fashioned wa~ in favor of' ftyina 1.n
there an}1hina that 11y1 American to be celebrated in more than &he a more hcalthtw way. One dramatic
picnic more tl'lan these two popular usual way-that ia._ with more than difference . is the use of a poly·
foods? fried chicken and fireworks. What 1&ntaturated oil rather than •
RemiJliSCinaabout atQwina up in was added were patriotic a~echcs 11t?o81ted fat. Jn addition to the use Kansas, Clementine Paddleford by the nation'• famou1 orators and of lyunsatuJlte oil, we sugest
tells in her 1960 book, "How by community leaden. the ollowina: •
America Eats.'' about a 1912 .Picnic. Fried chicken aod potato salad I -Ute a deep fat thermometer to
"Mounds of fried ch1cUn flanked lasted throuah it all. They arc still puJe tcm~rature of oil. Or use an
by baked ham, Chocolate Cake, tall with US, but nave chan~d with the electtic lkillet with I temperature
anael · cakes •.• crcam crocks times. In the 1900 eetiuon of "The control. Wait until fat reaches ______ ..,..._,,.......__,.~ ........ ----------------"-~---:-------------------....;;---...... --........ ~ ......... ...-..;........~~.:.;.;,,;;~;;.;,..;..;;.:;,.;;~~.;..;,;...;..;_~~-rcroper temperature before addiDJ .
Oods. • .
-· -. . ..
Oelklout
FRESH COCONUTS ·.: .... -...... EA. A9 SINMt, Totty • A9 ftOltlCAL LAllOI MA•.............. . ......................... EA. ···-· .... assn ------
NAl'llAll'S
-AW ......
Vitomln Rkh
HASS AVOCADOS ................. P09 'I --
AlllltlCAJI sa•LD ... PllAllllS MANKAHODLIS
12.oz. PKG. I 29 CHEESE FOOD •
J.LB. PKG.
SKINLESS 1.99 SH HUGHES SHOl'l"ING IMiS FOii Fllff TICKET OfFlll ANA~ COH\ltNTIOH Cff«al l A VOllTS All(NA 12·0UNCE A9 PACKAGE
:JO.OZ.
80T1US .79
l"·Oz Dakota Forms Rond Wt. Cheddar 'ibmoso 1-Gol.
ALEX POTATO SALAD .79 LONGHORN LB 3.2 WIO. TUH.
""· 5 ,_ SI". 11
THUH. SUN.
""· 13 -A"'. 23
Miyoko Shiiloke, l·Oz.
DRIED MUSHROOMS IA9 SOY SAUC:E .............. •AS
FRIMNRK
SHOULDIR ROAST . ~Rllf IR PICNIC 89 "JOHPI PORTION
Bun PORTION LB 1A9 && •
Foster Forms
FRESH GAME HENS.... ... . LB 1.19
FRISH START
DITIROlllT
700Z 5 99 INCL 1 00 OFF •
6'Pock "9s1. or 01•t
7-UP OR LIKE COLA ......... 1.89
•RESH PORK
.... ....,,. ••••
PORK LOIN CHOPS
91 ... IA WITH 2 29 ~ 0 ,.,. PEPPERIOGE ~RM
DRESSING && •
FRISll CINTIR CUT
Niii< LOIN ROAST
L& 1.99
Frozen A 99 SOUTH ltACIPIC ........ snau ............. ~.LI ... .
_, -
CHUNK LIGHT
TUNA
OllSHA 6.5.0Z., IN WAHR
l.ouro Scudd« 7 5-0z. log
HAWAIIAN POTATO CHIPS . .. IA9
n ,.., •••••)..:_
n ..... n
c
DOLi
PINIAPMI 'UICI
46-0Z.
CAN
JS.Oz. Cl"90!ny Of" Crunchy
JIF PEANUT BUTTER
.98
I
1
~ ......... GllAPWWUIT JUla , .89 ,. 12-0UNCE
CAN
IS·Oz. Pkg., lutterm1lk or Original
AUNT JEMIMA WAFFLES ......... H
1011\ ·Inch O.lun « '9pperonl
CHEF SALU10 PIZZA ....... EA. 2.21 ......
Ce• •• ftll COii
1.25
1 J
" I
Pock ol 300
Q-TIP
SWABS ......... .
....................
1•9
. ......
TllMI• WOAST
UNTRIMMED I 99 BEEF LOIN
TRIMMED. 2.H && L& •
Fresh Former John
PORK SPARERIBS. ...... . ..... La. 1.69
KAI. KAii
CATPOOD
~io 3~•1
-Work to maintain a constant
temperature. Too hiah a
temperature will burn the coatinJ
and leave the food undercooked~
too low a temperature cause$ food
to ab5orb oil. -Aad food to oil leaving room
between pieces. Crowdina lowers
temperature, causes more absorp-
tion of fat. . .6.lthough almost everyone has a
favorite way of preparing fried
chicken and potato salad, here are
two updated recipes each offerinJ a
twist on old favorites, The recipe
for fried chicken is adapted from
one used at Delmarva Chicken
Festival where in one summer
weekend as many as 20,000 people
picnic on fried chicken.
The unique pan of this fried
chicken recipe is that the chicken is
coated and allowed to stand in the
refrigerator for 24 hours. This helps
keep the coating on the chicken
where it stays durinf fryinJ. . The potato salad 1s mannated an
a com oil and· vinegar dressing
before being ligbty· -dressed with
mayonnaise ancf thoroughly chilled
for picnic packing.
Included with the recipes is one
for an tll-American oatmeal
cookies, stlidd~ with raisins. •
FRIED CWCJtEN
'ri cap unsifted flour
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon dry mustard
~ teupooll onion salt
'rt teaspoon salt
•J. teaspoon pepper
1 % "' to a"" pou.nd broiler-fryer
cbJckeil, cat ln parts
1 'it quaris (about) corn oil
In large plastic bag measure flour,
paprika, mustard, onion salt, salt
and pepper; close tightly. Shake
together. Moisten chicken with
water. Place chicken, l piece at a
time, into ptasuc bag.. Sha.kc to coat
thoroughly. Repeat with remaining
chicken. Place chicken on wire rack
on tray. Cover with plastic wrap.
Refrigerate 24 hours.
Pour com oil into 5--quan dutch
oven or chicken fryer. filling no
more than 113 full Heat over
medium-high heat to 375 dearecs.
Carefully add chicken, a few pieces
at a time.
Fry, turning once, 15 to 20
.minutes or -Until fork-tender and
golden brown. Drain on paper
towels. Cover; refrigerate until well
chilled. Transport to picnic in
insulated container. Mak.es 4 ser-
vings.
Tarracon Fried Chicken: Follow
recipe for Fried Chicken. Add 1h
teaspoon dried ·tarragon leaves to
flour mixture.
MARINATED POTATO SALAD
% 'rt pou.nd1 potatoes
'ri cap 1Uced green olllon
11& cup oil
'"' cap w~te wine vlDecar
3 tablespoons chopped parsley
1 teupoon salt
~ teupoon pepper
'rt cap real maroanalse ,
Place potatoes m saucepan; add
water to cover. Cover; brio& to boil.
Cook 25 to 30 minutes or until
tender; drain. When cool enouib to
handle, peel and cut into chunb.
In large bowl stir together green
onion, com oil, vinegar, parsley,
salt and pepper. Add warm
pot.a.toes~ toss to coat well. Cover;
mannate at room temperature l
hour. Add real mayonnaise; toss
hghtly. Cover; refrigerate at least 2
hours or until well chilled. Trans-
pon to picnic in insulated con-
tainer. Makes about 5 cups.
OATMEAL RAISIN COOKIES
1 cup ansUted Ooar
1 J,4, teatpoou batln1 powder
•,. teaspoon ult
leg
'4 cup cora oil
~cap 1a1ar
~ cup flrmly packed Jlpt brown
aa1ar
1 tea1poon vallllla
1 'it caps qaJck oats
"' cap rat1ln1 In small bowl stir together flour
blkina powder and salt. In Jarae
bOwl with mixer at medium speed
beat cu, corn oil. sugan and vanilla
until mtXturc is thick and smooth. R~uce sS)eed to .tow. Add flour
m1.xture; beat until well blended. W_i~ wooden spoon atir in oats and ramns.
Drop by tablespoonfuls onto
sreued cookie 1hceu 2 inches apan.Bakein375~oven IOto .12m1Jl~orwitilliabtlybrowned.
Cool lilhtly. Remove from cookie
hetts and cool completely on wire
racks. Store in ttahtly covertd
container. Makes about 3 dozen.
No matter what
you're doing, your
hometown
n w paper
WIN
•10,000
CASH
Yep Sir ····" Bene ten
Beet L •'
.... ·2~
----
WIN •••• ••oc••••• POR I YIAR
('·~).
r. ole
-,,. . Jop
-. ~~Sirloin ,
;.»>" -~eway Quality Boneless $eel Loin ··199
•
Approximately 10·14 lb. Size Ht.
Foster Fanns
~Drumsticks
Or Thighs. Family Pack
Ca1fvrrtia Grown.Frying Chicken c
.....
12 .... c •••
Hunt's, Rich And Thick
8-oz. Can ! •.
for . . .
• Pepsi Ught • Pepsi Free
• Mountain Dew
59
$ 9 -
a
lllllt VIA
o•L• a1•WAY
TOl .. O .....
llAWAI~ oa
AST TO .....
-Kiwi
·Fruit
Exotic Sub-tropical S-erries
High ~ulrot1en-atue
3~·
Boneless Round lteaksa1ew8~e9ua111v 1i; sAi•• Buffered Asp~rln Tabletss:~:,;~ :2•• mm> d 39c
Bonel•••RumpRoast-°"""' '2" Tylenol Talalets E.,, • .,, •• Olh ol&i 3•7 -GNrecteen ·.an ~!!•ry Eaclbh •• c
Beef Aouod lb HI h p I Yit I Safeway Pkg $7•• litll»>V ar ••• Plump & Juicy
.re.h Gro ... 0 .&iade Exclusively From • 1 •• g 0 ency am ns Cen.Vita of ,30 ~Pu I Pl E111tra Large 99c Uft Uftg Beel Round lb ::..1--. s.-" P• .....,, rp • Ulftl Refreshingly Sv.eet lb .ult .a.a • .-., -.t.--Camps . 12-oz • 1 •• Toothbrush C.tt--:• f•<!'. ~~~.No Aspirin ·10 "!' . 01
,,, '229 ~ • Lv Grape ...... d& Sunkist 3 'I"
•• v8 88 H-.. Frozen Pkg Dental Flosss •v: .. ~.~~·ea .:as '169 Po y Vi-Sol D•oiis ~ '6" "*¥ U&' TrulT Juicy For
Fresh
-uncl Beef . , ,
0 •·Fresh Regular
0 -rsofcffn 5·1b. Cflubs
-c
Whol H .. Safeway•Hot 1 lb • , ... • 01 Ul•l••M1ld•Med1um P.kg. ,.
•one .... Ham ~~W:.utv lb •I ..
lckrlchS:110kecl Sauta.. 12~•
CorneclBeet•rl•ket AMl~ut'"' lb •1••
lxtra Jumllo lhrlmp ,...n:.cs~K~~•s"
Pin Cha 11
Mountain Castle Assorted
Wines. •·Liter Bottles
15 $ •
MLucern• auttennllk
Di)Cottage CheeleLuctrn•
DOCreaM TopplB9 Luctrne •L•e ..... Yo9•rl-=
~ ,,.
Ouart '1'9
1~;~: • 1 ••
s·.= '2"
.......... ... .........
. ~
/ ~--~~ .. . ~-----..::_· -
heclclarCheese
$
Ot hc1oua "or S11t
IMO
Dips
-Rakr. Shop
49
.. :t ~-----.. • ,. ., ;_, Matcllll911t
i ~~~ .r Charc~I
.. ~ ... s3e9
To I A• I Out _.e-o._llliiiiii ... _ml
S · A"'f' Cl" Bt1.·, 30 01 89' Po.g J DO paghettr ac~.s ""' Pltg CIOL11nch Bags s11e .... 1y of 50 89'
M Corned Beef 1111111
1~~0; 99' II> B&M Baked Beans '~.' 1"
l1h Detergent Wheat Bread
Cascade•Aegular•Lemon Mis Wnghl"I Crushed Wheat
Scent,65·oz. Box 24-oz Loaf
$ 9 c
..
CIOSpaghett1 SQu<sh o 49'
1111 ,...~ ... •Carrots · s,..ac· 2 a;, 49'
Sh II 3C'l 89' CIO a ots ... •. P•c
CIOAed Radishes 4 a u"c"n s 1°0
DOPocket Fruit a. 3 ~ · '1 °0
Chris & Pitts
Bar-8 0 Sauce
i 4-oz Bottl e
Juicy,Rlpe and Mellow
Delicious -Snack
CIORomaine L9ttuce e.c,.49'
CIOPotatoes 11 .. su1 e 49'
•!I Ol 99c 8 0•
CIOG reen Onions 4ew"e"es'1°0
=->G rapefruit Juice G~~~ .. '221
...... y
Ch••••
• Monterey Jack • Mild
Cheddar RlndOm 'Nefght
c
. : . .
.PEPSI
COLA c
EA.
• PEPSI. DIET PEPSI. PEPSI LIGHT.
PEPSI FaEE. DIET PEPSI
FREE. MOUNTAIN DEW
• 2-UTER BOITLE
...
LB.
•WING AND
PARTIAL BACK
ATTACHE D LB. •BEEF
ROUND
LB.
LARG~ • O'HENRY
PEACHES
FAMILY PACK • CHICKEN
FRYER
BREAST QUARTERS
BONELESS
ROUND STEAK
• 8 Ol NCl
RED RIPE • WHOLE
WATERMELON
~
ROGERS· , •• , .. f loll I.-& ... ~ 5-PIECE
PLACE SETTING
• DINNER FORK
•SALAD FORK
• DINNER KN IFE
•TEASPOON
•SOUP SPOON
.... . ,•
• 18-0Z.
JAR
S MOOTH • C RUNCHY
JIF PEANUT BUTTER
.. . . .
•I.Qr. SIZE .
•ORANGE. LENONUMI!. PUNCH. LEMONADE. 1cro TEA. crraus
• 6 PACK
FUDGSICLES SUGAR FREE CRYSTAL LIGHT
POWDERED DRINK MIX .
rulSTU ....... ,
flllll IAVU
fOltU WIT• ftlOIUJ uvu covma Wln.t fllltd folder-a.• Plus r ,1.11:
Gtt tomia Siver Felder at store ror tnore dt11ll1
1. You will receive one Free Bonus Saver Coupon tor
uch S5 00 purchase made 1n our store
Z. Pastt coupon 1n Bonus Siver Folder pro1110ed
1 Wtth one fllltd saver folder you 0111 S piect piece setllno ot your choice for only 69' plus 1aa
4. Fill asmany Bonus Saver Folders H you w1a11
4'(C(S.SOA• 1Tfa.l .. AllAllA81f ,,.All PllT'fR .. \
~-,.~A!ftw-...... I ..-Covoon tood .,....;i IM Soumt1" C•hf Alp~I k•1 MMktU I DO•LEUVINISCOUPON I I Present this couP._On along with any one I
I manufacturers .. cents off" cou1>0n
· and get DOUBLE THE SAVINGS I when you purchase the Item I OFFH •OT TO llCLU0£ AETAILU OR FREE I
I COUPOU Oft COUPOH ovu Sl .00. REFUND I llAY IOT U"fO VAlUl Of ITEM. SUIJECT
I. To STOCK o• MANO. ucLuou uouoR. I TOBACCO HD DAIRY 'flODUCTl
I 110 MnltMUI 'UflCMHl fllOUlllfO u•1T OltE m• r111 •A•UFACTuMn I
I COUPOI ••• t•tT TWO OOUIU COUPONS I PHCUITOMU. .
\~COUH• MOD TMUltl .. AUG;;.-.~ .. =--,
THROUIH WlD .. lU8. 22. 1114 -..--------Copyright 1084. All right• retervtd. w e reserve the right to hmit quant1t1H Salet Tax Collected on 111 Taxebtt 1tem1. Bffr. Wine & Liquor Not A>ta1t1ble 1n All StOf
Prices Effective at all Southern Callfornla Alpha Beta Markets
Thursday, August 16 throu h Wednesday, August 22, 1984
SAVINGS RELA'T? 10 PRfVIOUS WF.EK'S ALPHA BETA PRICE OR LAST DATE PRIOR TO INITIAi. PRICI! R£0UCTION EXCLUSIVE OF ADVERTISED OR PROMOTIONAL PRICF-5
-
...
• BAC.k RI BS JOR BBQ
•I ROZlN OR
DHROSTfD
•WHILE
SUPPUES
lAST
BANANA WUNGERS _ ..... •: .........
I toupo" Qo04I ~\ 111 So\11~ ... 11 C1~1
Atp~1 e.i. MM-ftt I DOUBLE SAVINGS COUPON I I Present this coupon along with any one I
I manufacturer s "cents off" coupon
and get DOUBLE THE SAVINGS I when you purchase the item. I OFFER NOT TO IN~LUDE RETAILER OR FREE I I ~~~P8CI f :c~~~ v~Uf ~~~f~:O .~~~~' I
I TO STOCK ON MUD EXCLUDES LIQUOR. I
TOBACCO AND DAIRY 'llODUCU.
I 110 MINIMUM PURCMAIE fl(IUlllH. I LIMIT ONE ITEM 'Efl MUUFA TUllU'I
I COUPON AND LIMIT TWO DOUIL COUNIS
!lll 80S10MH
\
____ CO_U_PO_M_.8,00D THUii •• AUi. •• I
..._ TMROUIM WED .. AUi. 2Z. 1114
....... --------
' . I
•
H•aDon•hue
bullt dynaaty
with Bruin•'
f oolball team? 02.
Angels:
.· It's all
business
NQmatching
this golfer
Halos sweep Ti ers
but celebration
will have to watt
DETROIT (AP) -There is a
marked contrast bet\\een the Cali-
fomiJ Angels and the Detroit Tigers
-tw~ teams fighting for half Qf an
Amencan League pennant.
. The Angels, who arc 1112 games back
m the AL West, swept a twi-night
doubleheader Tuesday from the
Tigers, who arc 71h games in front in
the AL East.
In the respective dressing rooms
however, it was hard to tell the
winners from the losers. Both were
quiet and somber.
"That's what experience bnngs.''
said Angels' pitcher Bruce Kison, 3-1,
who scattered three hits over the first
six innings to notch the victory m the
nightcap. "We've got a lot of veterans
on th.is club. Many of us have been
through pennant races before, cuber
here or with other ballclubs "
Doug DcC.nces was the Angels'
hi.ttJ ng hero, knocking in the two
winning runs in the 6-4 opener and
drivtn& in four more with a sin&)e and
three-run homer in the 12-1 second-
game romp.
Bo~ and Claudette Mockett d.laplay plc-
~re of daUChte~ Cathy, who recently wu
°"" ........... .., ...... "-
the medellet and match play champion at
the USGA Junior cbamplonehlpe. .
Newport's Mockett
carves a niche
at USGA tourney
B1BOWARDL11.At-'DY ........... ~.... .
Cethy Mockeu or ewPoft Beach
has done somethmg no other io1fer in
history tw accomph hed.
Not only was she the medali t in
the recently completed United States
Golf Association Junior cham-
pionships but she also captured the
title in match play. There have been
several co--mcdahsts win the cham-
pionship in the past but Mockeu as
the first to ever complete a sweep.
It's the same title that Mesa Verde's
Kim Saiki (a &raduate Of Ocean V ICW
High in Huntington Beach) won a
year ~o. Beausc Saiki is ~t her
t 8th birthday, she wasn't eh&iblc to
defend her title this year.
Mockett has been away from home
for the past five weeks and be says
she can't wait to get back. She's
playing in a tournament in Seattle this
week then &OCS to West Palm Beach.
Fla. next week for the PGA Junior
championship before comma home.
.. It sure will be nice to get to sleep in
my own bed~ ... says the I ~year
old H.atbor H1&hjunior-to-bc.
Mockett will be elipblC to defend
her USGA Junior ctiampion5bip
n xt r th rtbda)i
fallan ID December.
She's been the o. J p yer on
Harbor ttigh•s boy's p:>lf team lhe
t two years and thp:e little
rompctauon 1n sight to knock ht'!' from that throne.
. "Winrung the Jut\1or cbam-
p1onsh1phauo be my:biggesl thrill an
golf." he )5. "I Wa5JU5t honored to
be there.:··
For . 1he rtCIOrd. he . defeated
Japan's Michiko Hatton in the final
match of the n attook to wiQ the title.
Htr medalist scorh ere
74-72-146.
Her first compemfon after she left
home five weeks ago was in the
California State Jwuor . cbam-
ptonsbips in Monterey where she
finished as the runner-up to Pearl
Finn of Bellflower. Next it was the
Junior World tournament in San
Dieao where she finishw sixth.
The women's open Trans ational
was next in line in Florid.a and me
made it to the &eeond round in the
first OiJbL
Perhaps her best showing. otbd.
than winnina the USGA title. came in
the Junior Amenc:a's Cup competi ...
lion 10 Boise. Idaho. Mocken was 1
mem bet of a four-cirl team tt:P:i •
rescntmg SoutherD California and
wu co-medalist with a 76-7~72-224. DuGna the compc'ti-
tion. she had back-io-6eck eagles 00 I
(PJeue eee MOCDTT{D3)
............
.. I'm not overly excited because I
know that we don't win wtth just me
or Freddy (Lynn) or Reggie (Jack-
son)," DeCinces said. "That's some-
thing I learned, because at Baltimore
(where be played nrne xears with the
Orioles), it was inbred. '
It was only the second time this
year the Tigers have1ost both ends of
a doubleheader. But othc:r. more
disturbing signs were poppmg up.
It's Golden West vs. Orange Coast for openers
For ex.ample, Detroit, which ap-
peared ·to be under a full head of
steam after winning five of eiJht
games on a recent tough road swing
through Boston and Kansas City.
now has lost seven of its past eight m
Tiger Stadium.
Players are new-:So are the conferences~
but it's still the same old intense rivalry Cu RT
Golden West won that game, inciden-
tally.28--27.
This year's pmc fiiurcs to be
mtercsting for a number of reasons:
"You alwa)s ha\'e to look ahead.''
said Lance Parrish, the muscular
Detroit catcher. "fl ~ems like we
haven't had a day ofTin an awful long
time.
"It wasn't the best da't for the
Tigers· staff But it's nice 10 get these
.doubleheaders out of 1he way. This
should pve everybcJdy a chance to
(Pleue eee ANGELS/03)
Some things never change and
Orange Coast-Golden West football
games fi1m1hat category.
Each year. Dick Tucker's Pirates
and Ra} Shackleford's Rustlers. wuh
an acftena~verflow. lock horns at
()('C's LeBard Stadium "'h1ch the
t\\O 1eams share as the d1stnct
football field
Fort he past couple of )cars. the
Rustlers and Pirates have pla)ed on Thanksgiving Day in the final pmc
of the South Coast Conference
Dodgers' wave
is just a ripple
B i 0 formed a different type of seventh-eren y t rosco inning stretch. swaying and cheenng h bl in the way of the new fad a Ve no pro em But the wave never matenahzed m shutting down LA the loss Tuesday, which dropped Los __ __ Angeles back to 500. 60-60. and 11
LOS ANGELES (A P) _ The~~ behind San Diego tn the NL
human udal wave that engulfed · Dodger Stadium on Monday night For Bereny1. a nght-hander who
was reduced to only a few ripples. and ca me to the Met~ from Cmcmnall in
there was no sign of another Los mid-June, the win was his first in a
Angeles rall> in spired by "The month.
Wave." "I've had negauve thoughts my
The New 't ork Mets' Bruce whole career," admitted Bereny1. "I Bere~y1 and Jesse Orosco saw to that. thought the worst and the worst
hm1llnJ the Dodgers to ~our singles m would happen. I don't really know
a 4-0 victory Tuesday night. why. but I had a positive attitude T~e wtn enabled New York to close tonight.
to wtthm 31h games of the first-place .. Chicago Cubs in the National League There we~ some nice plays t,>e-East. ~ind me, a~d if they're not made. I m
"It was just another game we had to in troubl~.
wm." said New York Manager Dave Bereny1. 8-12. last won a game on
Johnson. "They're all crucial now July 14 and his earned run average
and it doesn't matter what the other was cl~se to 10 runs m his next five clubs are doing." starts. in wh1c~ ~e had three losses
The Dodgers had rallied for a 9-2 and two no-dec1s1ons
H ClOI'} Monda} when the fans per-Beren)• allowed two singles over
Budd: I lost
my incentive
the first ~ven mnings and only once
allowed a runner as far as second base.
But when Mike Sc1osc1a smgled to
lead ofT the eighth and Greg Brock
wallced. Johnson quickly summoned
his bullpen ace. Orosco, who re-
corded his 24th sa\le
Orel Hershiser. 8-5. took the loss.
'
season. Fans would put the turkey an
1heoven.heado"ertoOCCandhope s not to watch another turkey on the E£0£1
football field. l'3••I Such was the case last }'ear After_--t•
Golden West had scored lopsided
defeats in three of the past four games. ace came back 10 score a 24-23
1hnller. snapping the Rustlers' four-
game win streak.
1t capped the best season b) a Pirate
football team since 1911 when OOC
was 7-3. The Bucs fimshed '83 with a
4-5-1 record and were third m the
South Coast Conference
OCC and Golden West open the
comm unity collcse foott.U season on
Saturday.Sept. l S. lfs the first opcocr
bet.,ocn the t"-O rivals smcc 1913.
•Each team has onJy a handful of
rctumangstarten. me.aningthepme
will be more of an experiment than
the world war it usually becomes
•Since it is the first gaim of the
year,itmaybeabetterdra~ ~the
past two TbanksgJV1ngpmes when
fans chose cranberry sauce and
pumpkin pie O\ltt football.
•<XX has a quarterl>ack.. Marina
High graduate Ken Laszlo, who
orgsnally intended on p\a')"lng foot
atGoldtn WCSL
•The two teams a.re now in
,,, ...........
New York lleta pitcher Brace Berenyl al-
lowed only three hlta In etiht lnnlna• In
beatiDC the Doc1Cen. 4-0, Tueaday nlCht
at DodCer Stadium.
dtfTerent conferences. meaning the ·"'
game means absolutely nothinaas ear.. ..
as the standings are concerned. • •
•Golden West is in the unusual
position ofbcing the tean1111hich is •
tryin11. to regain the coveted .. Victory Bell.',.
•The pme is beina played in
summer wealhCT rather than the
frigid (for Sou them California) late
No" em bet.
• E.ach team should be free of
injuries meaning both SbacklcfOtd •
and Tucker can play froatline pla)ers. •
Once the teams ba\-e c:omi>lcted
\heir bu ncsson 1he field Sept.. 15. ::tho"llbaveoncmorc~
(PleueeeeSAID/03)
.
Edison
product
Bell cut
•
LONDON (AP) -Zola Budd
said Tuesday that she lo t her
incentive to run for a aold medal
after colliding with Mary Decker
in the 3,000-mcter race at the Los
Angeles Olympics.
"l felt terrible because she fell ,
especially in an Olympic final,''
the 18-year-old said m a British
teJevi ion interview ... It wasn't
imponant for me any more to
race. The crowd started to boo.
and I really didn't feel like
runnina anymore."
Congress embraces Olympic heroes
The South·Af rican born Budd.
who ,.,as running for Britain,
finished seventh.
The controvcnial coths1on oc-
curred halfwa) through the race.
Budd was sJi&htly ahead when he
and OC'cker bceamc llrtlled nd
Decker tumbled to 1hc 1n1leld and
began to sob. The ct J at lhc
to A cle5 Coll um booed
Budd continued to run. Decker. of Euacnc. Ore., later
aorustd Budd of fouling. say1na
1hcd1mmuuvc runner cut in front
of her ill lly. Budd later
.. aw.,.......,, ~fbl.ltM-b Ol)m
tmc official
... _
U.S. medal wtnqers cheered by throng
numbering 25,000 at Capitol building
l
• e I 5
Baseball has caught the.Olympic spirit
Owners thrilled with Ueberroth
~-=-~--~--~------=-~.~------~~.......,,.----~----~~~-aft rsuccessofOlympicGam s
Th1!o~ncrsofma)orl uc
N ball are doing hist\ fiv in the
h II a the world out ide applaudi.
• the remarkable uccessofthe XXlll
Olympi din Los Angele .
You Stt, thc man 1n charae of the
01) mpic thing will take charge of thl'
grand old game in Octobtr. Peter
Ucberroth. the president of the Los
An clcsOlympicOrganwng( bm·
nutlcc1 wLll suetted Bowie Kuhn as
comm1 1onerotba.scball and the
propneters arc undcrstandabl)
pleased wtlh their selection.
...i
H0\\· 1t C"Omerour;nfli.YU , ~
another story altogether.
Uebtrroth dm1t1cd at the time of
his interview that he had ht1le
knowledce ofba ball but the selCC'·
tion committee said it was more
an\erested in hi ability as an or-
ganizer.
This produces the question having
1odow1th "'hat organization 1\ n~ed in the offi~ ot the corn-
missioner ofba~ball. The man at the
desl hardJ> runun empire. The
commis~ionerrule on ome mc1·
Ali's COIDpany
is charged with
bilking investors
From AP dispatches
NEW YORK -A company Muham·
mad Ah formed to tram and manage
prof ess1onal boxers was charged by the m
Securities and Exchange Comm1ss1on on Tuesday with
deceiving investors ma stock offenng.
Ali, chairman of Champion Sports Management,
Inc .• was not accused of wrongdoing. but company
president Richard Hirschfeld was named a defendant
m tbe1awsuit filed ID U.S. D1stnct Court ID Manhattan
The sun said Hirschfeld. a
36-)ear-old attorne). was barred
twice before from breaking stock
fraud laws.
SEC attorney Anne C. Flan-
nery said the suit charges that
Champion. headquartered in Vir-
ginia Beach. Va. misled investors
by overstatm~ the value of its
assets. d1sgu1S1ni a $600,000 loss
as a loan that might be collected.
The suit see.ks a eourt order
dcntsbuth1s~tockttn wen mo ti ..
••1 h1s1~a1c ucmatter." ·
The com1n1 1oner as appointed
and na1d by the owners ~ho persist in
thcamu in m}ththathei aneutral
r Howe Hr, it 1" possible th ta
comm1 s1onerundercontm t mi ht
one day a umccharge of the affair
of the me and sit in Jud emcnt of
mattcrsmvolvmgboth ides-the
owners and pla>c~. sometime re-
ferred to as management and labor.
Pete Ro1elle has managed to as-.
sumc such a tature to some eittentas
comm1s ionerofthe National foot-
ball ua,ue. lfRoztlle's fuQction can
bt descnbcd as po\\ er, it is made
pos 1ble b~ thesuppor1 ofa majority
oftht NFLorner...
Bui>
TUCKER
SPORTS COLUMNIST
Whether Peter Uebetroth hu 5uch ·
an implement-indeed whether he
wants it -is not known.
The workingaarcement btt\\ccn
the owners and pla)ers association
e:"Cpires next )'ear and it will bt
necessary for the two p3r11e~ to go to
the mtU in. The la t ume. th1s
contront.ution re uh('d ina player
w lkout which w s terribly damagin
to baseball nd it image. ·
It wa no ble that dun ng the entire
episode, com mi ioner Bowie ~uhn
w sout to lunC'h. Ueberroth's stature
antheb rp1mn "''llbeofno~mall
interest to the curiou followel'i of the
game.
It is hkely Uebtrroth will put fonh
an appearance of more ~trength than
Kuhn. Bowie was hardly a man )
without intclhgem.:e and intcgrify but
he very often camr out a total boob
who wa operated by strings in the
hands of the owner'$.
Uebtrroth is not that much more of
a d)'n mic public figurt but hew~
first In h11dealinpw1th the Olympic
fraternity nd wtth ome enc1cs
out idetheOlympicfimily. Uebcr-
roth came aero as downnsht ar·
r nt.
either Kuhn nor Uebem>th t
playanen 'naperson lityand
ccnainlynot ingresembhnaa nS4"
of humor. This in strikina contra t to
NFL Commissioner Pete Roiellc
who is an accomplished JI ad-hander.
Rozelle has rappon with the media.
T't\is is btneficial to the leaaue, to be
\ure. but it is also to th'eadvanuiacof
tl\e payina customers-the fans-
who are kept iofonncd. .
Rozelle is trusted by the rned11 as a
man ofhis word. That is to say, he
. (Pleaee tee TVCUR/Da)
Madlock sidelined for aea•on
PITTSBURGH -Pittsburgh Pirates s
third baseman 8111 Madlock, suffenn.a '. C II•
from a sort r1g.bt elbow. will be out for the
rest of the season. • · · The Pirates captain underwent surgery Tuesday to .
remove a broken bone spur m the elbow of his throwing
arm. the Pu-ates said .
"The bone Sp\lr has been bothenng him all year.
There's no date this injury happened, he's JUSt been
playing . hurt all year." s~ud · team spokesman Jim
Bowden
Madlock, 33. had been expected to accompaoy the
team to Atlanta for the opening of a three-.game series
Tuesday. Jnstc41d, he returned to P1tuburgh on Monday
to have his elbow examined by Failla.
-Madlock. who won his fourth National League
batting title with a 323 average last year, ~ been
havfoia difficult season as the Pirates plunged into the
cellar ID the Nauonal l...ea&ue East.
He batted only .2H in 103 games, has lowest
batting average since brcak.ing into the majors with the
Texas Rangers in 1973.
Dotterer waived by Raider•
SANTA ROSA -The Los Angeles m
Raiders lJSted linebacker Ted Hendricks •II• an<t tight end Todd Chnstcnscn as having
"not reporied" in panng the1r roster to the
70..pl~seaSOB HRU\'..fttcsday. ----
Chnstcnsen 1s holding out in a contract di~pute
and Hendricks has announced his -retirement, so the
hstmg does not affect the Raiders' roster limit.
stopping Hirschfeld and Cham-
pion from Vlolaung stock fraud laws. It also requests a
temporary freeze on funds collected through the. st~k
offering. estimated by the SEC at SI million. unlll at can
bt reviewed funbet.
Hirschfeld was traveling Tuesday and could not be
reached for comment. according to a woman who
answered the telephone at his office. She said no one
else was available to speak for the comp~ny.
-u~
•lte near the Coll.eum u cleanup con-
dnue. at the end of the Game..
· ll'f rcachmg the 70.man bm1t, the Raiders waived
five players, 1ndudang two draft choices, quarterback
Randy Essington. a 12th-round selection, and running
back Mike Dotterer, an 8th-round choice in 1983.
Dotterer played high school baJI at Edison and was a
college standout at Stanford.
The SEC said Ah formed the company in Ma) 1983
wuh his long-ume manager. Jab1r Herbtrt Muham·
mad. and Hirschfeld Once funds were raised through a
stock offenng. the former heav)we1ght champion was
to receive $78.000 a }'Car to de\.Ote 40 percent of his
lime to trammg pnze fighters m has camp at Deer Lalr.e.
Pa .. according to Champion's prospectus.
Quote of the day
QuJen Cheng"-f, Chlne$e basJ<etbaJI coach on
why 7·1, 29S..pound center Hu Zh~bao had
become a crowd favorite at the Olympics: 'Because
M 's cute."
Ex-pitcher McGlothen dies
DUBACH. La. -L}nn McGlothen. a whose I I -year maJOr league patch mg career
ended two seasons ago. died Tuesday ma
mobile home fire that also took the hfe of a
fncnd he was v1s1t1ng. said Joe-y Davidson of the
Lincoln Parish Shcnffs Office.
Davidson said the fire apparently started 1n the
living room of the mobile home ofGlona Reed Smith at
about 2 a.m. Tuesday morning Smith rescued her
daughters, ages 13 and 1 then went back to help
McGlothen. Davidson said
"The) were together when we found them. right at
the entrance to the btdroom:· Da\.1dson said.
McGlothen. 34. was a four-spor1 letterman at
Grambling High School. and a star at Grambling State
University.
He was drafted in 1968 b) the Boston Red Sox.
spent two years in the minor leagues. then moved up in
1972 to Boston.
He later played for the St Louis Cardinals. San
Francisco Giants. Chicago ( ubs. Chicago White Sox.
and New York Yankees 1n a major league career that
ended m 1982.
Workers •teady a group of Olympic ring•
a• they leave a 90uvenir and refreshment
Error helps Seattle nip Yanks
Al Cowens doubled and scored on a center fielder Vic Mata's throwing error to
snap a seventh-inning lie and back rookie
Mark Langston's !llX.·hll p11chmg as Seattle
cdged-.N.e». York. 2-1. Tucsda) night at Yankee Stadium. Langston struck out five and walked five
before giving wa) to Ed Vande Berg, who got the last
three outs for his sax th \a\ e . Elsewhere m t?R
t\merican League Tuesda). George Beu, who also
homered m the first pme. snapped an eighth-inn mg tie
1n the nightcap with a pmch·hll
homer that helped Toronto to a
9-5 \IClOI) and a sweep of a
doubleheader with Cleveland. In
the first game. Doyle Alexander
ga\.e up three hHS m eight mnmgs
and the Blue Jays erupted for five
runs in the third to defeat the
Indians, 8-1 ... Bruce Bocbte'1
pinch single scored Edison High
product Donnie WU with the
winning run in theninth inningas
Cowens Oakland edged Balllmorc. 4-3 ...
Wade Bosg1 had two doubles and Bill Buckner a
homer, driving in two runs apiece. to back Al Nipper's
seven-hit pitching as Boston overpowered Kansas Cit).
8-2 ... Tom Brunansky htt a solo homer and Tim
Laudner added a two-run double m a three-run second
mnmg to g.ive Minnesota a 3-2 v1ctury over Milwaukee
... Gary Ward drilled four hits. including a homer and
a tnple, and scored four runs and George Wright added
a three-run homer to lead Texas to a 9-3 victory over
Chicago. Ward hit his 12th homer in the first inning.
tnpled to dnve ma run and scored another m the third.
singled and scored m the fifth and singled to tngger a
four-run seventh
Rosy outlook for Bruins
Donahue may have created
a dynasty in the PacifiC-10
SE.\ TTLE I .\Pl -\\ hl'n last seen. Terry Donahue.,
UCLA Bruins had JUSt fint\hed gJ\ In$ highl~·touted Big
Ten Conference champwn lll1no1s a hrst-class edulatton
on how to pla> football
The 1983 Bruins capped a '>cnsat1onal cumehal k
season 1n the 70th Rose Bo"' I on .Ian 2 by demolishing the
favored llhna. 45-9
Donahue Know Ju
It was a blowout ot gagant1t proponaons -and then
some The Bruins were that ~ood that sunm Southern
California winter da'>
Mike Whne. w tio too!I. lllino1s to its first Rose Bo"'I the> JUSt m1iht be on their wa> to a national title.
since 1964. was sampl) cmharras\ed b} al CLA team that Donahue bas 47 lettermen returning. including 14
didn't wm a game m its first four stam last season who started at least half of UCLA's games last season.
Donahue, 40. a former l. C LA player and assistant The Bruins' (eatured players f11ure to be quancrback
coach, suddenly has become the bnghtest hght among Steve Bono. wicW' receiver Mac Sherrard, runrung back
Pacific-I 0 Conference football coaches He's taken the Danny Andrews l!nd linebacker Neal DcUocono.
Bruins to three consecutive Rose Bowls and they've won The Bruins also feature former area stars Duval Love,
the last two of them a 6-3. 273-pound offensive auard out of Fountain Valley.
Despite Donahue's prote<,ta11ons. the two-time de· and Lee Knowles, a 6-4, 22J..pound senior linebacker from
fcndana Pac-10 champions look read} to pick up where Marina. .
they left off The Bruins J\J'it might tum out to bt even Bono c;taned UCLA's fourih pme last season, a 42-JS
better an 1984 than they were in 1983. lou at home to Brisham Young, and passed for 399 yards
Dunng the years. Donah ur has h.ad his share of en tac! and three touchdowns. Bono will be protected by a larac
but he now " be1na rccoan11cd for doina a masterful job and upenenced offen ive Jine. in~ t.akins overfor the departed Dick Verme1I befo~ the Andrews rushed for 437 yards on 106 camcs last
l 976 scason. Under him , the Bruins have aone to six bowl season but he knows he doesn't have any guarantee as far
sames and arc 62-26-5. as ha~ ina a job i concerned. That's because U LA
last season looked hkc 11 wu gomg to be a disaster for rtcruitina coordinator Billy Rees landed two of the lop
UCLA after a dismal 0.3-1 stan. Instead. it was disaster for bluc~h1p h1ah school runnina back& in the nation; Enc Ball
Illinois. from Y~1lanu, Mich., and Gaston G~n from Oard na. ·----BecauSC"1>fthrirdreadful ~·" m,r~son: rtt? trru~-in~,.--UCLA was the only Pac-I 0 team m the AP'" Top 20 It
7-4-I. were ranked only 17th 1n the final 1983 Anoc1atcd the end of the 1983 ~son. But. on paper at lea t. there
Pre spoll.Somepeopleth1nkUfLA couldcontendforthe could be five or 1x Pac·IO club this season. 1ncludina
national champ1onsh1p this ~a\On Wa~hington. which 1s JOna 1l 1xth stra11ht bov.I bid an
The schedule certainly favorJ the Bruins. who played 19 4.
only four home pmes last sca,on. They're at home -1n OthcrTop20contendcnare Wa han&ton late. which
the Rote Bowl -for seven of their I I conte t and h cost Wa han,ton a Ro Bov.I tnp 1n tach ofthc put
Wut11n1ton. a perennial Ro Bowl contender under t"o \t&Son : Un1.,,eni ty of uthcm California, Amona
hrcwd Don Jamn, '"' ton the ,late tat~ nd Arl7ona.
The8ruinsh1vcNebr1,k11 ranked No 2bth1nd 1911' Jame. S2. den or P <'·10 football co ches.. ha
natJonal champion M1am1 of Flonda. in the Rose lk,wl 1n dm:cted the Hu~k1es to a 7.S-30 mark in his I 0 )Clfl 1ncr
their third aame on ' pt. 22. If the\ hca1 the ( ornhuskcrs. (Plcue eee ROSY /D3)
'
Astros nudge Chicago again
Terry Pabl belted two hlls. including a a triple. and drove m two runs and Jose Crn
collected three hats and scored twice to lead
Houston to a 7-6 victory over Chicago
Tuesday mght-.IHI Nauonal League game. the second
straight one-run dec1s1on by the Astros over the Cubs
Julio Solano, 1-2. notched his first maJor league victory
with one inning ofreltef. Frank Dlpino, who entered the
game an the seventh inning with Ole bases loaded and
none out and then ret1red the next three batters, picked
up his 10th save . . ln other NL
games. Darrell Porter rapped a
two-run single and David Green
followed with a two-run homer.
capping a five-run first mning and
powcnng St. Louis to an 8-2
tnumph over Cincinnati . . Rick
Camp and Donnie Moore com-
bined on a five-hitter and Glenn
Hubbard keyed two rallies to lead
Atlanta past Pittsburgh, 3-1.
Camp, 6-4, )'lelded two hits 1n the
first inning. then held the Pirates
hitless unul Dale Berra homered With two out in the
eighth ... Terry Kennedy'• two-run smgle following a
key two-base error by left fielder Jeff Stone an the first
inning star1ed San Diego to a 3-2 victory over
Philadelph1a. Eric Sbow, 12-7, pitched six inmngs to
earn the victory with relief help from Craig Leffer11,
who finished up for his e1jhth save ... Max Venable,
traded away by San Francisco in spring training, drove
m three runs including the game-winner as Montreal
downed the Giants, 7-6. Venable was recalled from the
minor leagues recently by Montreal, and the three RBI
were his first as an Expo.
'
Dotterer was injured in the 1983 traininacampand
was on the injured reserve list last season.
Also released were free agents kicker David Jacobs,
punter Mike Lyons and quarierback Greg Hopktns.
The Raiders also placed linebacker Joe Wells and
defensive hneman Quency W1lhams. both free agents,
on the injured reserve hst.
Connor.a_ added.to tournament
LOS ANGELES -Jimmy Connors, ~
the reigning U.S. 0 n champion, will
rnmpete in the Pac1frc Southwest Tennis
Open, 11 was announced Tuesday.
The event will be played forthe first tame at the new
Los Angeles TenmsCcntcron the UCL.A campus Sept.
8-16.
Connors. the third-ranked singles player in the
world. 1s a three-time winner of the Pacific Southwest
event. He w11J attempt to become on!)' the second player
to win the tournament four iimes. Frank Parker
accomplished such a feat m the 1940s.
Among others who have entered the tournament
are Yannick Noah. Johan Kriek. Eliot Teltscher and
Pat Cash.
Televlalon, radio
TnlVl8'0M
No event• tcheduted.
RADIO
•:30 p.m. -IAalaAU.: Angele at Detroit,
KMPC(710).
7:30 p.m. -aAallAU: Ntw YOt1< Mett at
Dodgers, KABC (790), · ··
11 p.m. -HOflH RACtHG: Loa Alemfto.
quarterhorH race, KNX (1070). . ·
TMUMDAY'a RADIO
10:30 a.m. -MlllALL: ~ at Detroit,
KMPC(710). .
Debble Green
volleyball
cllnlc slated
Due to facility scheduhng conflicts,
the Debbie Green Volleyball Scmna
Chnic. onSJnaJly set for Orange Coast
Colleae. has been moved to Irvine
H1&h.
ihe days for the chnic, Saturday
and ~und_ay. rtmain unchanged. The
startma tame of the morning session
has been moved back l S minutes,
from 9 a.m. to 9: l S a.m., each da}'.
The clinic is open to volleyball
players of aJI aaes who are interested
m leam1na the skill of scttma from
Westminster's Debbie Green, a mem-
ber of the 1984 U.S. women's ilvcr
medalist volleyball team. The first
day of the chn.1c is for coaches only
and features six hours of 1nten ive
instruction and demonstration. The
second day is for both players and
coaches.
The registration fee is S 100 for
coaches and S3S for players. Coaches
who wish to attend only the second
day may also enroll for SJS. For
additional information, phone
963-0Sl6.
Boating aaf ety
cla•• offered
Un~lcd tlte Cottt Guard
Aultiliary boatina safety and team·
anship clas will ~ offered at Santa
Ana Valley Hi&h School, 1801 .
Grecnvtllc St., Santa Ana. tan1a1
Aua. 29 at 7"p:m.
Futile•wlpe
The cla 1s sponsored b)' the Santa
Ana Coll Diltn~ and s>re·ttall·
lration is avaJlablo at nta Ana "------~~Coltqe for 1hc fim n1atn ortH .
Funhcr 1nform1t1on can be ob-
'aincd by phomn 962-0720 or .5 4· 1:5S9.
ontreal'• Ttm Ralnee eladee tai try bJ Saa Francllco
catcher Bob Brenly to ecore Rnt·lDDinl ran TaeedaJ.
-
l N
Jfetro ~e aU-•tar 1ame The M~ropO'(itan Baacbl.11 Lti&urAf'Qtanat.
County wtU hold n1 I Pth annual Champ on vs.
All tan aame at Anaheim ladium Sunday,
Aua 26 followina tbC Aftltls-Detron contest. The Metro Lei&ue dulmJ)lona. BHt Wntem
49eri. Mil take on the all-start from the 10COnd
thrpu&h acventh·plact teams an the lequc.
• The •ll·•tan lead the 1ene19·1 with one pme cndina an a tit.
for more tnformatton on Uie pme, phone 835°6293
Outd oor nacqaetba.11 toarne.r.
The Hunun,ton Beach Community Sav1ttt Dcpenment Wlll bold its second annual ThrH-
Wall Racquctbell Oass1c Sept. 22-23 at the
Edison Community Center, 21371 Maanola.a
Ave., Huntin11on Beach. ·.Th~ outdoo~ tournament offers eilbt d1vmons. 1nclud1na men's. women's, milled and
senior ~oublcs, men's. women's, Junior and senior miles. ·
Deadline for entry is 4 p.m., Sept. 6.
Rtaistrauon is available at the Huntinaton
Beach Civic Center, 2000 Mam St.
Each entrant will receive a T-shan. and
trophies wall be awarded to the first throuah
third-place fimshers in each d1vis1on.
Entry fetas SI Sforsin&Jeund S2S per doubles team. · •
For more information, phone 136-5486.
A d ult coed nUe7ball
Team applications for lrvme'a adult coed
vollcybell lcqUC'I are now bema ICClepted by the
Caty's Community Semces Dcpa.nmtnt.
The entry deadline js Wednesday, Aug. 29
with lcaaue action set Sept. 4 throUlh No~ The fee is Sl2S per team. The leaauc wtllofl"er
A, B and C d1 visions.
for more 1oformauon and ieam applications,
f-.-..._-PA<JIDC,J. ~na-F~!l~at 1bc Cocunuait
-: Dll!!nsnmcnt at 660-3639.
..
Hone naltJ6 .:bod ale Li1 &H F•••·~~~~-~-
' Dtlly lboro tmd all Pf"01111m bclins Tburiday, pt 13 II l 571.h il.m Anitln
Cou!)ty_ Fa r an Pomona.
HiJNiJhts locludc \he S7.S,OOO added Pomona lnv1attonal Hand1 p on Sept. JO,
S.0.000 added Pomona Derby on Sep• . .29 and
the $30,000 added Lat Madrf nu Handt p on
Sept 28
The 18-day mccuna sndudn racina tcven days week with fint post at l 2t30 p.m.•Twelve
racet will be held each day. Eucta, pick six and' daily double wqerina is 1vallable
Admas ion to tbe fatt, which includes cntl)' to
the arandstand. IS SS. CltibhOUllC ICIU arc S2.
Rcscr'\'ed aran(lstand teaB are SI .SO. Park1n_J $2, prdtmd parluna $3 aoa valet
parlunal6. .
For more 1nfonnat1on, phone 623-3111,
lAt AlamltN, •
Nipt hanicu r1c1111 bqins Fnda) and
continues throu&h Oct. '20. On the agenda arc the SJS,000 Venus Senet
final. pt. :21. SS0.000 VOYI&" sm~ final on
Sept 29and the$2.S,OOO Ris1n1SwfinaJonOct. 12 • •
fint post 11 7:30 p.m .. Tcn l"ICCS will be held
rulhtlJ. •
Pick 11x, exacta and early bird ~na are available.
Admission 1s S2.2S 111ndstand, $4 clubhouse
and an additional SJ.SO for rnerved seats. Parkm11sS1.SOwith preferred parkinapriced at
S3. For more information. phone 995-12~.
Del Mar
The finest three-year-olds in the West clash
Sunday in the 40th runni11;1 of the Del Mar Derby at IV. miles over the Jam my Durante turf
-course. The Derby traditionally decades the sophomore championship of the summer series.
The field includes Fred W. Hooper's Swift Prttasionist and Mill House Tiabts, a ton of
Ni1ansky II.
Tborouabbred racma conunues throuah Sept 12.
Fint post as 2 p.m. Racina 1s held Wednesday
throUlh Monday. Dark Tuesday.
S2 Pick Six, exacta and daily double waamna available.
Admmion is S2.2S for ,,andnand, SJ for
reserved acats, $4 clubhouse (Sl reserved).
Sarti.al tournament
The 19"4 Stubbies Pro fntcma11onal Surfina Tou.mamtnt will be held Sept. 2S..30. bqinnana
116:30 a.m each ~
The event will be held at Lowcr~restlCJ, located m San Onofre State Parle tn San Clemente.
A field of 188 or the v.orld's finest surfen,
rcprcscntana 11 nations, will be on hand. Tbc field IS the larJctt O( an) Ultcm&UonaJ prO-
fess1onal event an 1984
Amons those compt1.1n1 arc 1984 v.orld champion Tom CatTOfl of Australia; four·lime
world chame1on Mark Richards of Aunraha.
South Africa s Shaun Tomson and Marie Potter,
and top U.S DCTf'onncrs JOC) Buran of Vista. Tom Cuntn ol'Santa ijarbara and Wes Laine of VirJinia Beach. ,...
The trials compcuuon. to be held Sept. 25-28, will ftature 168 surfers com~iq an four-man
heats for 21 quaJJf'y1na pos,iuons m the m110 event.
For more an formation. phone Jim Wauon or '---'~..--~~~~--~~~-..--.Bo._.;..;.b_~~e_h_Lin~•~•-•~<6~19~)_4_34-...,.......30~2~6•··~·---•·c:::::z=:m:oi=::t
Baseball Conduct of Pad:res, Braves simply a disgraC~
to discuss Brawling ballplayers fansmayhaveset bodies-hunled like missiles from COMll:ENT backthcpme."Alllhcwa,IO . • ~ttemi comen of the stands -and _ Dark Ages. expansion game a ll the way back to the Dark Ages It ~,e::;~m~t~o :~:pflrst pitch of cleared lplll ID uncontrollable fury. wi~!~·~~ ~v.-ay ~~A::.
By JOHN NELSON Leaaue look like renaissance men. Sunday's game when Atlanta pitcher Even Bob Homer, wbo IS on the calling bcpn. It i'SSD't much ptttU. .,.__.....,..., _--1 was bad enou&h when t~o Pascual Perez hit Alan~ Bra, cs' disabled list .,,th a broken than the scene on the field. •
. manaiers. two coaches and nme back. A '™'take::~. ibe Padres -njht wnst. wu on the field in the Bra'cs Manaaer Joe Torre cat
The Atlanta Brav~s and San Diego players were eJected for their pans in didn't bcheve h1'm. ninth inning. wearing his cast and an Padres M&nqet" Diet Williams
Padres were playing a pme of a beanball war and series of bench-Three San D1qo pncbers then took ._tlanta uniform afterstan101 tbe da) idiot ·~ith a capital ·r" and lit
baseball, and a hockey pme broke clcarin1 fiabts. but then the fans at four tnes at Perez unul Craig Leff ens in the-pins box weanna street th~ .San Diego ski~r to HitlcC.
out. . Atlanta also became involved. result-finally hit him 1n the eighth inning. clothes \\ 1lliamsaccu5ied Torre ofo~ It was as tasteless a display of mg in five civihan arrests. spumna the fint of two nots. An~ J~hn McS~en;. chief of lhc · of "nlimida1~bul
prepubescent petulance ~ ever has Invcct1vcs were burl~ beu were when Atlanta's Donnie Moore hit bcs1~ umpinn.g Cre"W. could not can"\ lin11-ri4Mei'. • ... ~
been witnessed on a bait field. h made wielded beer mus.s and beer were Grai' Nctlks on hi• bmdme»t por· ba-. e a5'CUCd. the ~ more mumida&cd. ... ill IOUnded likr
the thugs of the National Hockey thrown. arms and fists were swung. tion m the ninth inning. the benches rucetnCtly when he said: .. It really sc• (Ple&M ... 00 /D!9}
MOCKETT •••
FromDl
the front nine and had another ea.ale
on the back side. But a triple bo&cy
and two other bogeys bun here
chances.
"My iron game is work.ina quite
well nabt now," Mockett says about
her play ... I'm also hitung the ball
good off the tee. When I had those
three eaaies in one round, two were on
par-S boles and one on a par-4."
Mockctt had another eaaJc on
Monday this week durina quaH fyina
for the USGA Women's Seruor
championship at Broadmoor Coun-
try a ub, also in the Seattle area ... ,
made the green in two on a 424-ya.rd,
par-5 hole," she says. "J had a 2•13.foot
putt for the eaale and I made it."
Mockett's older sister Nancy was
also the No. I player on the boy's
team at Newport and later a starred at
UCLA. She is now playing on the
mini-tour. Both have played many
rounds at Irvine Coast Country Club,
their home course.
"I couldn't have done what I did
last week wi thout the support I have
had at Irvine Coast," Mockctt says.
"They supponjunior aolf all the way
and they arc really aood about the
juniors."
So after a summer filled with golf.
what don Mockctt plan to da when
she gets back to Newport Beach?
"Ob, I'll 10 out to the course to stan
getting ready for next year:· she sa)s ..
ANGELS •••
FromDl
rqroup. I'm not worried ...
Dceinccs' •otlc in the niabtc.a_p
supponed the combined seven-hit
(>it.chins ofKison and reheven Do"8
Corbett and John Curu.s.
ln the first inning of the tce4JOd
pmc, Rob Wilfong doubled. t
third on Lynn's &rounder and
on an infield single by DcCi.ncn.
•
The An&els chased Dave Ro~ 7~. with foursua:essivesingleut
start of their sc~·run third innina.;
Tbe Ttgers broke the shutout LD
eiibth on I>arnll Evans' RBI 5.iagk
but Bobby Gricb·s twO--ND homer ·
the ninth added t•o for the AlllCls.
With the score tied 4-4 in the fint
pmc, Bob Boone and Juan Bcniqua.
who had four biu in five at·bats (and
five for ciiht for the niJ!lt), sin&Jcd
and move<lup on a s:acnfioe bunt b
pinch-hitter Grich. W ilhe
Hernandez. 6-2, walked Lynn to load
the baScs. DeCinccs followed with a
soft sin.ale to lef\, scorina Boone and
Beniquu. •·
Don .... ~. 2-1. pitched I 2-3
inn1nas to cam the \ictory. Luis
Sanchez pitched the ninth for his I Ith
s.a~e.
SAME OLD RIVALRY ••• DoUC Deel.Dea follow. throach with •wiDI which dell•ered ba.ea-loaded
.,. ,, ¢1 llt
•tnale .cortnc two nlnth-lDn':fn ran• and
Four T1atrs -Lou WhitakeT . .\.Ian
Trammell. Parrish and Howard
Johnson -hn solo homers to
account for Dctr0ifs runs. Whit·
aker' and Trammclrs wcrt htt con-
sccut1~el) in the third. FromDl
pme before panina for their re pee·
tive new leaaues.
a•rina ~eta opentnc-came .
th1 t m ' m ture c
,.
•
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/W
I FOR THE RE CORO
-----
~ I I . ' . ..
MAJOR LE.AGUE STANDINGS AmencM~
ftST OMSION
W L Pc1. 01
•1 IS .»O
" y '517 '""
$1 '° ..m ·~ S1 61 ..., 5....,
51 U 47S • ...., St '6 .4SO ,...,
$1 6' ,41' It
o.rron
TOtOlllO laltlmort
Botton
New York
Mllwaufltt
Cleveland
•AST OIVtSIC* n 43
: tt u 5' ,, S1
51 " 4f 70
T~aSC
...... •·12, Dtl(,OJI •·1 T0tonlO l •t, Cle'iellind 1·5
0.ktand •. 8ettlmore 3
S..ttle 2, N-York 1
TtaH t. Ctllc:Mo )
'°''on I, IC.anMs CllY 'l • Mlrtner.ota 3, Mllweuk• 2
Teda'l'a CPA"'"
.6'l
.Sil S2S
.SU .Sl1
ell
11
7~
14 1• 15
26
21\"J
Anellt (JOIW! 7 f ) et Detroit (Petrv
14·SI. In)
S..ttle (eHttle 9·12l el New York
(Cowlev 1·1)
TOf'OlllO (Stiel> 12·4 end Goll 6·Sl et
Clevelend (5chulte 1·4 end Ferr 2-t l. 7. II·
'1)
Oall .. nd (V01Jne S·l l a1 8alllmort ID
Marllntl •·6). (11)
Texas (HOUOll 12·10l el Chicago 10o1r.o11
12·f), (n)
MllweukM (C110wetl S· 10) al Mlnneso11
<Schrom •·SI. In> 8oSIOll (Olede t· 10) et KanMS City
(.JOllft 1-2), (II)
T!luncllly's co.-
Antllb 11 Dttro!t · T C)(Ollfo et Clev111nct, tn>
O.ktand at 8111tlmore, Cn)
Seattle II New York, (II)
Kenns Cllv 11 Ttus. (11)
Natl4IMI LHtue
WEST DfVl.StON
W L ·ll'rt. GI
San D~ 10 41 .593
Atltnla 61 SI .Sl3 91"2
Ded9ln 60 60 .500 11
Housloo S9 62 ·* 12111 C111tlnnall SO 70 .Cl7 21
San Francisco •S 70 391 2311'
CNca9o
New Yortt
Phlladt!Plll•
SI Louis
Montreal
Plltst>urlll1
EAST DIVISION 10 ..,
6S SI
•2 S4 S9 S9
5' 61
SI 61
Tunda¥'s ScM'tt
· N-Vorit 4, Ded9lrs 0
Alllnle 3, PlllsburVh I
JliJ 6....,
IO'l'.1
13
19
s• 1 oids 1, c111c'""1~ ----c
Houston 7, CNc;ago 6
•• ~Oleoo 3, ~ 1
Montreat 7, Sen Franclaco 6
TMIY"t co.mes • New York (Fernandet 3· 1) a r Dod9lf'I
IVjlltnluele 9· 13), lnl
Montreal ISmlll'I 9· 10) et San FrtnellCO
(Calvert 2·21
Plllsburoh IRhodln 10·1) al Atll11l1
(a.droslan 1-6)
Cltlc:l!Wlttl (T1bbs 2-0) al SI Louis
<Kel>Shlre 3·2), Cnl
Chlcaoo IECkertlev 6·'1 at Houstoo
(I(-11·1), (n)
Phllldele>hla <R1wrev S-31 11 San Dle9o (LOiier 9· 10), (n)
TtlundaY"s CPa"'"
PhllldtfPnla et San Dle9o
Plllsburllh at Atllnl1, In)
Monrraat at San Frendsco, 1111
AMERICAN LEAGUE
AntMllS 6, Ti9erS 4
(First CO.mt)
o.ETROIT CAUF.oAHt
abrllbl s 3 4 0
3 0 I 0
0 0 0 0
2 I 0 I s 0 2 2
• 0 \ 2
\ 0 0 0 )000
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
4 2 2 I
w1111.-r2b
Tr1ml0h
KG1bsonr1
lNPersll c
OeEv111 ID
8«91'Nt lb
IU-lf Lemond
HJhnsn 31>
Baker u
Grut>O Ph
Brokll1 Pr
ail rllbl
A 1 2 I
4 I 2 1
S 0 I 0 s 1 2 1
• 0 1 0
0 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0
2000
4 I I I
3 0 0 0
I 0 t 0
0 0 0 0
Btnkluz rt
WlHono 21>
Grk:l'l 21>
LYM cf
O.Cnoll> Oownl1191f
Petlls ct R.aJll\n dl'I
N11ron lb
Scl'loflld u
MCBrnPh
Plcclolo u
Boontc T.,_,s >4 610 6 Tee.ts
5ctA by lnllin9I
35 4 10 •
~. 200 010 102-•
Detrelt 002 001 100-•
G1me Wlnnmo RBI -DeClnces (10).
OP-<:alllornl1 1, Dtrroll I
LOB--<:atlforn11 I, Ottroll 9 28-6eo1Qutz
HR-Whll1ker (10). Tremmtll 111),
LNParrlSh (27), Boone (3), HJoh11son (11)
SB-OtClnces (4) S-Wllfono. Grk:l'I
Trammell IP H R ER BB SO
Cellflrnll
Wiii
AaseW,2·1
L.Sancntz S, 11
6 1-3 a
1 2·3 2
I 0
4 • 2 •
0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
°"'"' Bertnour 6 S 3
Lopez I 2 1
Hernandz L,6·2 2 3 2
WP-6eret\llutr 2 T -2:.SJ
AntMll• 12. TI9er1 1
(saceftd Game)
CALIF<HtNIA OETitOIT
8enfQuz r1
Pettis cf
WlHong 21>
Lvnn cf
MC8roo rt
O.Cncs lt>
Grlcll 3b
Oow11ln11 ll
DMllltr H
ReJks11 dll
Nerron lb
SCl\oflld u
Boonec
1b r II bl
3 I I 0 l I 0 0
S 2 3 I
3 I I 2
I I 1 0
3 I 2 4
I I 1 3
' 1 1 0 0 0 0 0
S I 3 1
' 0 0 0 5 0 0 0
• 2 2 0
Wllltakr 2b
BrOlln• 2b
Tremldl'I
KGlbsonrt
GarbtvH
LNP1rsh c MCastlllc
01Evns lt>
RJontJlf
Lemon cf
Grut>O rt
HJhnsn 3t>
Beker u
Her!>d11 Ph
T9'1tl l9 11 IS 11 Tvta11
Score t>v 11"*'91
3
I
2
3
1
I
6
0
0
1brllbl
2 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 3 I 1 0
2 0 I 0
I 0 1 0
2 0 I 0
2 0 0 0
A 0 1 I
• 0 1 0
2 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
3 0 t 0
) 0 0 0
l 0 0 0
33 1 1 I
Callfomll 107 002 002-12
Ottrelt 000 000 010-I
G1me'WillllH'lll RBI --DtClllCfl 1111.
OP-Calltornla l, Otlroll 2
LOB-Celilornle S. Oelroll a
38-R1Jackson HR OaClncts 110 , Grlcl'I
(10) SF --Grlcri
IP H Ill ER 88 SO
Ceflfonlla
I( Ison W ,3· I
Cort>tt1
Curtis
Detrott
6
2
I
3 • 0
0
I
0
0 2
I 0
0 0
s
1
0
Rozema L,7 ' 2 7 0 2 Bair 3 1· 3 S 3 2
•Mo<tge 32·3 3 1 2 I S
Rozema pllclltO 10 lour t>alleri 1n Jro
HBP-HJOhnson tt>v Cort>ett)
WP-6alr T-2.33 A-31,597
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS Al'Mt1can Leaeue
BATTING 12aS el bell) Wlnfltld, New
York, .346, Malllnglv, New York, 331,
Hrt>eil, MlnMSOt1, 324, Eesle<. Boston,
.llS, RIDllen. Baltlrnor•. 315
RUNS DwE ons, Bos Ion, 91
RHtnderson. 0.kland, 77, Arrnas, Botton,
76; 8ulllr Clevlland, 7'. WllW1tld, New
York, 76
RBI l(lngman. 01kland, fS, AOevls,
Seattle, '2. Armas, Boston. N; EMufrav.
tlmcft, M, Mic.,~°"' ..
tCITS RIPl\.tll. ltlmot•. 1 ... C:.wc a, Teronto. 14'1 MatttnolY, IWw Y0tk, 143,
Mier, '°''°"· 1'1, Wl11! , NN York, ltO
DO\JILES \.A,._..tl&fl, Toes, )2, C:..r•
tie, Torvmo. 2t; Cowens, $telllt,
OwE\'aM, ltcMton, 21, Rl'*-tn, Btlllmort,
T•IPL.ES· MotlOY, 'Toron19, 13. C:Olllnt,
Toromo, II, UCIWw. Toronto, t. 1C.G!Ot.0n.
Dtlroll ••• C)weft, S.lllt ••
HOME ltUNS· Art'llta, '°''°"·st; ICJno• men, O.klalld, 2t; 1..NParrl&ll, Ottrolt, 21. MurtlhV, 0.kland, 25, Thornton, Cleveland, u.
STOlEN IMU• ttHendtnOt'I, O.ltltnd, '1, ......_ .,,..,.. 42; Colllns, Toronto, ..Oi
eutllt. Ciev.tand. JI, Garcia, TOt"onto, ~.
ll'tTCHING (10 elect OnJ)' LONI. ~
troll, tO-O, 2.S3, Uat, Toronto. 12·2, J I I;
SI'-· Torottto, 12-c. ~t. Petrv. Detroit, 14•S. J Ot, etv1even, Ctevelend, l:l·S. 3.15: G0avf$, httlmoft, 12·S. US
STRIKEOUTS· WM, ........ 147; lel!Oltoft, Sffttte, 1.-01 Stieb, Toronto, 117,
Mouon, TticM. m : Gulilfv. Ntw York, n•
SAVES: Qu!Mnbtrrv. K•n• .. Cllv, )0,
Caw••. O.kland, 27; Hernanot1, O.trolt. 25; Ftnwi. MffWllullM, 23; ROavll, Minne·
tota. tt ·
NatliMll LMtUe
9ATTING (:185 al ball); Gwvnn, S.n
Dltoo. uo. Cru1. Ho\111on, .m: litlv.
PllllburOll •. m ; S.ndbtfo. ClllCllOO, .319;
9rtnlv, San Francisco, .lOt.
RUNS· Sandblr11. Chlu110. 13, Wl1111l111,
San Dlffo. IO; S.rT!utl, Phlladflf)hl1, 71;
Gwvnn. San Oitoo. 1•. Cruz. Houaton. 7S
R81 GCtrltr, Montreat, 14;' JD1v1s,
ChlcHO, rt; Schmidt, Phllao.lohla, n ,
..._,nal\cl«l, '"w York, 70; Muln1>hrev,
1-fouston, 70
HITS. Gwvnn. San Oltoo ... ,, Sandl>ero,
Cllleago, 15t; Samuel, · Phlladelllflla . 147, Cruz, HOIJ.,Oll, 1'5; Wynne, Pllls1>1.1r1111. 140.
OOU91..ES: Hubbard. Ali.t'lla, 26; Rain-
"· M0111r .. 1, 26, Sanctberv, Cllk;aoo. 2••
Durllam, Chlea90, 2S; Hendrick, St Louis.
25; Samutt. Plllledtll>hla. u. TRIPI.ES: Sandblfo, ClllCllOO, 16,
Samuel, Phlladelohla. 14; Cruz. Houiton.
10, CRevnolds. HOU51on. t ; Dorin, Houston.
t, ~. SIL.ouls, 9.
HOME ~UNS: Murohv, Allanta, 27,
GCarter, Montrffl, 73; SC'1mldt, Phlledel-
P111•, 22; MlnNll, OMeen, JO; Cev,
Ch!Qoo. 11.
STOLEN BASES: Samuel, Plllladelphla,
5', Wloolns, San Dlffo, Sl; Reints. Mon·
rreat, 45, R9dus, ClnctMatl, 41; Dernier,
Ch!Qoo, 3S; MWllM>n, N-York, 3S.
PITCHING (10 dlc:lslofts)· Sutc:llfft, Clll· caoo, 10-1, 2.93, PPerez, Ati.nta, 11·4, 3.76.
OrOKO. N-YOt"k, •·3. 2.06; CarltOll,
PhllaOllPflla , 11·5, 3.01; OarllnO, New York,
IH, 3.7'.
STRIKEOUTS: Gooden, New York, 111; V~, ~ 171; Rv1n, Houston, 1.,, Soto, Clnclnn1l1, 136; Cartton, Ptllladel·
e>hla, m.
SAVES; Sultw, SI Louis, 31; Holland,
Ptlli.delc>llla , 2S, L1Smllh, Clllc490. 25,
Orosco, N-vor11. 2•. Gouaoe. Sen
Oleoo. 22.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
M9tl 4, Dodeln 0
NliW YOAK. LOS ANGELES up111 •rbhl &Clkmn 16 4 0 0 Andesll SS 3 0 0 0
Chl>mn 21> 1 0 0 0 LandrK cf 4 o,o 0
MWllSll cf s I 1 0 Gut<rar rt • 0 2 0
Hmnd1 lb • 1 2 O Mllrstin If 4 O 0 0
Slrwl>N rt S O 3 1 SclOKla c 3 0 1 0
Fos ltr H 4 I 0 0 Broek It> 2 0 1 0
Brooi<1 3t> S 1 2 I Rivera 3b 2 O O O
Santena u 4 O 2 0 Whltlld e>h 0 0 0 0
Hodoesc 3 0 I I Mldndo3b I 0 0 0
Bert11vl P 4 o 1 o S.11 21> l o o o
Oroteo p O O O O Heottlar P 1 O O O
Amluno Pll I o O o
Zacllrv p o O o O
CDl11 P 0 0 0 0
erewer Pll I O O O
Reuss P o O O O
TOfals 3' 4 12 J T...is 2' 0 4 0
ktnbY ......
New Yen 001 100 010-4
LM AIMMles 000 000 000-0
Geme Wln11lng RBI -Strawt>errv C1l
E-Rlvera. S.K DP-N-York 2, Los
Anoetfl 1 LOB-New York 11, Los AnQelfl
4, 2B-S.ntana. Her11an<M1 SB-MWl!son
(JS), Strewoerrv (72)
IP H R ER BB SO
New Ytnr
BerenvlW,1·12 1 3 o o 2 S
Orosco S,24 2 I O O o 2
LftA,.....
Herltllstr l ,l ·S 6 I 2 2 1 1
l.acllrv I 2·3 3 2 I 2 0
CDla1 1·) 0 0 0 0 0 R~u . 1 1 0 0 0 I
lltrenvl otlcM<I to 2 t>ellers In tile 1111
WP.-Zacllrv T-2:l6 A-3S,929
Los Alamlm
TUHDAY'S RESULTS
(Jlst tf 92 • ...,.. ~ rMetlnl>
FIAST ltACE. 3.SO verds. .
Jonnv Go Raclno (Cror) 21 20 9.20 S.60
N1Ulll'llY Marie (Cardoza) S.00 3.20
Ariolt Blue (Harmon) 3.20
Alto reced: Pollcv Minx, Sorttv A Cal,
Main Mamt, Lets KMper, Easv NIQl'lt, G1v
~lie, Rodi.at Edith
Tl~ 11.23.
Sl EXACTA (S-9) paid $107 20
SECONO RACE. 400 varcls
C.Pf'I T~ (E, Garcl1) 13.20 S.60 3.40
Soul Of An Oldle (lKkevl 1.40 4.20
SCIMd Doctor (Cardoze) 2.10
Also rac:td: TIPl>Y Jell. Sawtooth, Wlgglt
And Remote. Tlme: 2016.
THIAD lltACE. 3SO verds
Joh11nv Charoer CWerdl 140 soo 300
Hor Stoek (Adair) '60 3.00
Armen Joo (Berd) 3.00
Also reet<I Rising Lklllt, Set To Burn,
Alamllos Sunshlrtt, Gol11 F'or 11, LISI Art,
All Host.
Time: 11.n
FOURTH RACE. 3SO vtrds.
Tile Gold Sc>lk• (E Gree) 1100 • 00 6 20
WellOl'll Secret (8rooks) UO 4 40
Turtlo TldV (FrvdaV) 4 40
Alto ra<:ld· Ctlmson Peogv, Macho
Pate. HOid TM Gold, Elavs Dlsll, Andatur,
F•t>ulous Fortune, Swift Flow
Time: 11.30.
'3 •XACTA C7·S) paid l 12S4IO.
F1nH ltACll. S.SO vards
Raise BouQuel CH Gree > 13 60 S 20 S.40
Maoeruls Coe>v (Berd) 4 00 J.IO
Ret> A Jll (Rull) 660
Also raced Ml11111v Polk v. Skvt>o, Welk
On Air, Arrnab4tt
Time: 2720
'3 llXACTA (3·4) P•ld $t7.60.
SIXTH lllAC•. JSO v1rd'
Reoal Tu (Htr1) 16 40 6 60 S.20
Ftrst NII• Out ITrH•ur•l s 40 4 20
Espera11t1 Junior (Giii) • 40
Also reced Bet I\ VerHllles, Tl11v Nicole, RH Factor. Off Limits Remt>ltr.
Htzeturk, 0 So4o Mio, Satin Red Time: 11.JI ~
SEV•NTH aACS. 170 vards
Lost lndl1n (Harmon) S.00 l.20 2.IO
PVtblO Cinder (Pauline> S 00 • 00
Doctor Smart IPllll.111too> S '°
Alto raced: Khellds KOC>v, Rtfle• Ac·
tlon, MlltouofltOQO, Saven Ot VIiie. Corne.
WatCll ,,,.. Flv -·
Time: .. OI
~ EXACTA ( 1-6) paid IA7 70
&IGHTH llACll. «JO Vtrds
C11eCk Tiit Cllar1s (Hart) 4 20 1 to 2 40
lord Lark <Craaoer> 3 00 2,60 Olclctv\ Blue Denim (Adelrl UO
..
Angel, Dodger schedules
Angela on Radio
Dod&en on Radio
KMPC (710)
KABC(790)
Angeli on TV
Dod1er1 on TV
• o.t'M>ffl TV Game
Channel 6
Channel 11
Monday Tueadey Thurtday Friday
19 20
..... t()iole$.2
Pllillles at Dodltn. 1
28
T1ceis at Arlads. I
-c>odaen at Phllltts, 10 30
Yanllm at Aflcth, 12.30
eOodpn It bpos. lO
•At(• at CtltCq o. 4
Reds at Ood1en. l
2
9
18
Chteaco at Meets. 12 05
•Ood(tt1 at Reds. 11 15
23
•Anctb at Yankees, S upos at~. 7"30
27 \
Ot!Oles et tn,.n. 7.30 Oodttn It Mets, 430
•qtll at lnduns. 4
Pach es at Dedcm. 5 30
3
17
Royals at Alie•. 730 Dodcwt al Brevu. 4:40
21
•Anc• It Yri s, 5 upos at °'4111l, 7:30
.
28
Ortotn at Anc•. 7;~ Doclttn at Mets. 4 30
4
11
lndtans al Ancets 7 30 Dode•• al Ped1es, 7
18
Roya.ls II .... 7 30
.,.._.. al 8rawts, 4 40
25
Aug.15
~ ·~ 111er1. 4 30
Meh ·•t '*""'· 1 30
•Af1• at Yanl 5 hpos at OMpra, l
Of!Olts •l Alie• 1 °'41~ at Mtts. 4.30
Ana1b at lndt111S. 4
Bram at OM1en. 7 30
5
12
Indians at Anceb.' 730
Oodi•n at fltdres. 7
19
Royals at qtk, 1.30 Dodctn at Astros. S.30
23
30
8
T11ttn at Alli•. 730
Oodttn at flhrllte$, S
24
31
7
11
...lut Oriole,, 11 20
f'Mhtt It Otdctn. 8
T111n II Anftls, 7
Dodien at Pntttttt. t
25
Sept.1
•
• Anctes ar Clllca&O s 20 • Anceb •l Ch1010. 11 20 era~es at o.ctcen. 7 30 Reds at Dodi•'· 7 JO Reds al Oodatn. 1
Royals at Ans•. 1 30 Dode•• •t Asbos. 4
13
20
14
Ch1Ca10 al Meth. 7:30
Ood1•u at Reds, 4'30
hm at Ancell. 7.30
•Dodten at Giants. 8
21
28
Clllcat~ al Milli. 1
•Ood1.., at Re(h. 4
tms at Ans.ts. l
Oodcen al Giants. I
15 ·
22
Texas at Alie•. 12.05 •Oodatrs at Giants. l
2A
All(1h at Royals (2). 2.30
Aslros at DMcen. 7 .30
Alie• II Royals. S:JO Astros at Oodieri. 7:30
Af1• at Royals, 530
Asltos at Ood&tn. 7:30
Anatb at T exu, 5 JO Ana• at Tms 5:30
Grants at Oodcen. 7 .30
Allct4s 11 Texas, 12 50
G11nls at Oodten I
Aa(els at Teus. 11 OS
Giants at Dode'"· I
30
Alto ra<:9d: Mr Moonlatk, Sir
Cashanova, Ouohttrdo Good, P1v Tiie
Biiis, Private Pen•lon.
Time: IU2.
IJ IXACTA'(H) Nici $1740.
$2 ll'ICK SlX (7-7-3-3-1-11 Plld "62.'°
wlltl 31 winning tlektls (five horses)
Cerrvover POOi· s26,741.21.
NINTH ltACli. "° vards.
Rise N Hlvh <Tr .. wr•) 6.40 4.00 3.60
SCOll L.1wls (Berd) • '° 3.'°
.wJndY..J2.Ut)..(lf1ttl - -7.tO-. Also raced: Devit Who, SunMI John,
Hert'IP8i1$ Jet, llle Block AMII~ Rt·
t>aoaln, Face tn Tiie Crowd, Sl'llrlev B
Gavit
Tlmt: 2146
TENTH ltACE. 870 vards.
8ot>bv Oh Oh (H Garcia) I 00
Montved Gr-CE. Garcia)
Arcl'll• Ann ( PllktlllOll) •
4.00 uo
160 •AO
3 00
HOime Also raced. MlghlV Marcus,
ease, Josego, Borolltw.
Time.: CS.7S. 12 IXACTA (6·2) paid MUO
Att1nda11Ca: 7 .S94
\tOVA8tf1_YC
&OGART SElltlES
(Fw PHlt~ vac:tm)
~turdav's rece (No. S):
CLASS A - 1 Toboooa11, Paul Qveyrel,
vvc. 2. Mas RePldo, JOhn Fraotr.ln. BYC. 3
Vort1JI, B~uce Tw1c111n, VYC.
CLASS e -1 Amoore. Jtrrv Moore,
VYC; 2. Le Boe• Don L• 8••u. Ballla Corlnt11l1n YC; l . Ftvlng Circus, Nlttr.
TOiman, Balboa VC.
CLASS C -I. Flrecrest, Pal and De«>t>v
Glider, vvc. 2. Ooeulon. Phil APP\, VYC,
3 Avantl II, Fred Masini>. VYC
Sundav's reu (No 6)·
CLASS A -1. TobOQoan; 2. llOl'111t, 3
Nklhl Moves. IJllr ancr Judy H•Sl•ll. BCVC
CLASS 8 - 1 Nuole Too, Jim and Karen
Nugent, BVC, 2 Tsv~ml, Dave Grav.
llYC, 3 Ftvlno Circus.
CLASS C -1. Puuvca1, John Sral1v,
VYC; 2. F lrec:rest; 3. Just Pl1l11 Cr11v. Don
KrokN·Dave Buehanan, VYC
Ballla Cortnthlaft YC
OtNCPHY DlillBY
TrOPhv winners.
LIDO 14 - 1 Mark G1udlo, 8ahl1
Cortnlhla11 YC; 2, Rov Wootsev, Lklo tile
YC; 3. Gib Marshan, Alamitos 81v YC.
LASER -1. Lewis Rowe, ave. 2 Mark
Aoevedo. Pomona V111tv Salllng Assn.; 3
Rod Turner, BCVC.
SABOT A .. B -1. Eric Prout, a ve. 2.
CarOlfne Ulander. BYC. 3. JUiie Norman.
BCYC.
SABOT C·l -RlndY C"-o, BCYC; 1 Jaco«> u11man. eve; 3. ce1estt Shot,,.,.ker.
8alt>Oa Island YC SABOT C·2 -I. Trevor Btrt>er, 8YC, 2.
Forrnt Cuti«. BCYC; 3· Jose Pa11a110, eve.
Women's tournament
(1t Mlllwefl, N..1)
flint ROUNS SlnllM
Steffi Grel (W Germanv) dtf Marv Lou
P11lell (US ), 0-6, 6·0, 6· 1.
~ Relolftd S'""" Marline Navratitova (U.S l def P1sc;a1t
P1radls, 6·2, 6·2, Pim Shriver (US.) dtl
Penul Louie cu S.). 6-2. 6·2. C1l11in1
LlnCIQvl't <Sweden) def Jo Durie (8rll1l11).
6·•. 6·3, Ive Budarova IC1e<l\oslovakl1>
def lto~tvn F1lrt>ank (SOUtll Alrlc1), 6•2,
6·2; Helena Sukov1 ICIKhoJlovaklal def
Terrv Plltto• IU S.l, •·3, •·•. 6·0; Zlne
G•rrl50ft (U.S ) def. SuHn Mateerln (U.S.),
6-1 6·3; Svlvla H1nlk (W. Germa11vl def
Gigi Fernandl't ~Puerto Rico>. 6·4, 3·6. 6·3
Men's tournament
(at Torentit)
Sac.nd ltCHlnd ~
VIias Gerufaltls CU S > dtf Tim Wiikison
(U.~.) 6·7, 6·1, 7·6
Men's tournament
Cat Gr~ CltVl.i=)
''"' Revftd Terrv Moot CU.SJ def. 8rlen Gollfrled
CU S >. 6·4, •·•1 Sal'M'lv Glammatve (U.S.>
def Tom Gutllk!.on (U.S.), 6·3, 6·2, Brian
Ttlcl'ltr (U.S) Clef P1ul Anna'°"' (U.S.),
6·3, .... 3, arad GPDtrl (US.} def Mall
Mllehall (US.), .... , 6·1
NFL PNMllOft "'
NATIOM•LCOH,aRENC1!"-
NewOrlea11s
S.n FranclKO
Ram.1
Atta111a
hmPaBav
Cllka.llO
Ott roll
GratnBev
Mlnntsol1
Deti.s
SI. LOIJIS
NV Gl.,,li
Waslllnoton Ptilladtk>hla
West
W I.. T
2 0 0
' I 0 0 2 0 0 2 0
Ctllfnll
ll'ct. ll'F ll'A
1.000 6S 41 .soo ' 33 31 .000 20 29
.000 27 61
2 I 0 667 SI
11050020
I I 0 .SOO 41
I I 0 ..SOO:U
I 1 0 .500 " IEHI
1 0 0 I 000 SS 30
2 0 0 1.000 33 20
1105006146
1105003'~
0 2 0 000 31 37
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Wnt
S.alllt
Oellver
Raldln
3 0 0 I 000 13 27
1 I 0 500 34 36
1 1 0 500 31 33
San Dlt90
KansasCllv
1 1 0 .soo 30 3A
020 0003041
Pitrsburol'I
Cl11tlnnell
Housl0t1
c•1vel1nd
Ctntrll
1 0 0
I 1 0
I I 0
1 I 0
EHt
1.000 SI 31 soo 34 21 soo S3 .,
.SOO 3S 41
M1eml
Bult1lo
2 0 0 1 000 S3 10
1116 a11apolls
N1w Enollnct
NV Jets
110 5002620
110500?944
0 , 0 000 33 71
0 2 0 000 32 S7
11111rsdaY's Game
Pittsburgh 11 011las (Cll1nnel l •• S
P.ITI.)
Frld9Y'• Games
New Enolancl aLW.ulllnoton tc.hanlllll • 11S1>.m )
St. Louis 11 S.11tle
SatvrdlY's (pa"'"
Green 8av al 11t11m1 (7 p.m >
Clnclnnall 11 Chlcaoo
Cleveland 1t K1nsas Cllv
tndlanal>Olls a t Denver
0.1roll II 8uftalo
N-Orleans 11 Houston
N-York Jets II New York GlalllS
Phlladelf)hl1 al MlllMSOll
S.11 Francisco 11 San Dle9o <Channel ?
al 6 P.m)
Temoa Bev 11 Allant1
~Y'IGlmt
Miami 11 ltaidtn
Cole9e toofba•
1"4 PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE SCHEO·
ULE
SaturdaV I $tslt. l
W1sn1no1on s11te at TannesJM
Sa'NrdaY, Stslt. I
Utah Stall 11 USC
UCLA at Sen Oleoo Stall, II
Lono a.1e11 S••ll at Oreoon
Callfornl1 11 Arizona
Nortllwestern 11 wu111no1or1
Utah at Waanlngton s111a
Oldahoma Sltlt at Arl10111 Sl1t1 Dreoon Sl•t• •I Ohio St•••
Stanford 11 Olllallome
saturCllV, Sept, IS
Long Bueh Slat• It UCl.A
use. Idle
Arizona 11 Oreoon s111e
S.11 Jose Slate at Arl1ona Stitt. n
ColortdO al Or"°n P1cHlc 11 Callfornlt
IHlllOIS •• Stenford
Wa,hlf\OIOll a t Mlehl111n
Waslllnoton Siii• II Ohio Slllt
Stt1m11v, Slot. 2J
NlbrHlte •I UCLA, n
USC at Arlzone Stale. n
Sen JoM s11111 er Stanford
Oreoon al Celflornla
Houston 11 Wul'llnglon
Ben Stett et Wasnlngroo State
Wvom1no 11 Ortoon Stale
Artiona at UU
Sttllf'dlY, Slot. 2'
LSU 11 USC
UCLA el COIOrado
lono et.di Slett 11 Arlrone
Arl1ona State at Stenford
Ml1m1 (0.) at W1snlntton
Pacific at~
San Jow S1111 al C1Jlforn1a
OretOll St•lt at Idaho
s.tM'dlV, Oct. 6
Stanlord al UCLA
USC •• Wa&lllnoton Stefa
W•.nlnttOll at Oreoon $lal1
Ortoon al Atltont c1111orn1a al Arltona Stat•
S.turdav, Oct. 13
Wasl'lll'QIOll SI••• •• UCLA use at Oregon
Washlnotoo al Stanford
C1Utornla 11 Oreoon Stele
Frt5110 Sllll 11 Arltona
Seturoav, Oct. 10
Arltona al USC
UCLA 11 CaUlornle
Oreoon 11 W1snlngton
WUlditQIOli~lle-ef ~'i>'O' ... d--Oreoon State at Ar11one Stete
S.tuf'dly, Oct. 21
California ar USC
UCLA al Arltona Stitt, n
Arizona 11 W111\lnoton
wasnlnotQO s1111 111 Oregon
Stanford at Oreoon State
S.turci.v, Ne't. J
Oreoon ti UCLA use at s1anfO(d
Callfornla at Wnlllngton
Oregon Still at Wasl'llngton State
Ut•h Statt at.Ariton•
Ftorlda Stele al Arizona Stele
Saturday, Nov. 10
Oreoon Stale I I UCLA
WashlllOIOll al USC •
W1Shlngtoo s1111 1t California
St1nfO!"d 11 Arllont
Arlzone Slate 11 Oregon
S.turdtv, Nov. 11
USC v' UCLA 11 Rose Bowl Weslll110lon al W1"1lngton S1et1
Oreoon a1 Oreoon s111e
StanfO!"d 11 Catlfornle
Colorado 11 Arlzone Stilt
S.turd.lv, Nev. 2'
Arizona Slllt at Arlron1
Notre Demt 11 USC
PGA O\amPlonthlP
(It BlnNnlJNm, AM.)
FACTS AHO FIGURES
At 1t1ke. American na11ont1 Cham·
olonsnlp of tile PGA
Dates: Au0. 16·" Format; 72 ~ str0111 Olav.
Ptavoff (H necauarv): Sudden death.
Siii: Sl'loal Crtel< CluO, 7, 1•5 vards, Hr
36·3'--n.
Purse: S700,000
Winner's sllare; $125,000
Fftfd: ISO Pf'OS
Defandlng dlamolon: H•I Sutton.
Fortner ellamolont In field: Deve Stoel!·
Ion, 8o0bv Nichols. Hal Sutton. LM
TrevlllO, JKk Nlckllus, Rav Flovd, Oow
Flnsterwald, Garv Plavtr. Al Gtiberotr.
John Mlh1ttev, l.Anllv W1dlllns. Lerrv
Nel\oft, David Graham
TV· CllaMll ,. Sat,, 1:30·• o.m . (POT),
Sun., 12J0.4 P.m (POT>
0..., '" fllhlno OAV•Y'S LOCKElll (Ne~ 8Hc:hl
-204 anoltra. •10 bOnllo, 34 1111d bass, S7
callcO bell, 11 v11lowt1l1, 4 rock flail. 5'S
madleret, • SllMOShHd, I Kuloln, 2
sklOllC'k
NEWl'OltT LANDING (Newpert
8Heh) -11 enolers. 66 bonllo, 32 t>au, 32
vellowtall, 291 mackeret
.Ii
aowflnt
~·· TOUlll Cat IUflltt I ,IND
GeofOt PaPH• Otf a r1a11 Von, iS)·no
(Paooe• wins JIS,0001
0..k«H
Ptooe• def lot> Cllamoerlaln, U7·lf•;
Pa1198t cfff. ROtl lall, 231 2U; Ptooes def Mark •oth, 22rln.
TUfldaV's traniaeflON
---·&Al51~LL
Amtf'lcan LM9Ut
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-An110Ut1Cld
lhtt ROii Jack19n. flrsl blMmall, has bffl\
lsloned to a cootract wltll. Rod\tSl!lf" of ltlf
• lnterna11ona1 L11oue. NEW VORK YANKEES-Rnctlvalld
D1i. MAJrrav, pitcher, trom the 21·dav
dlHt>ltd list Ootlonld J~ Otill1ltt, pllcll·
tr. 10 COiumbus of Ille tnrernetM>nal Leuue "''** L.ae9U8 PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Announced
lhat 81" Madtock, third baseman, wil( miss
Ille rerMlndtf of IM MtSOll. Ctli.d uo Hldl
Vargas, first t>aMtman·oulfltlder from
Hawaii of tile PacHlc Coast Leooue. ~UT9All
NalMMI 8aA .... Auecla!Mn
DETROIT PISTONS-Signed Tonv
Camc>bllf. forward al\G Erle Turner, guerd
INDIANA PACERs-Rele ... eo Dirk
MIMlfltld, gyarO
FOOT8ALL
Nll""'91 ,..._. LMtut
BUFFALO 811..Ls-<ut Jim Gallerv.
llldltf" 1nct-e'tfr...u&marlon, wide receiver
PleC9d Jeff Nixon. Mltlv Ind Reo11lt
Gloson, running l>lek, on the lnlurec
reterVI lfst Ptaet<I Jerrv 8uti. ano Rot>efl
Holt. wide recelven. tnd Biil Hurltv
saflllV, on tile e>hnlcalfY unable 10 P1rforrr
rtSenll ""· CLEVELAND BROWNs-<ur Davt
Pleokorn and MeMn Tueller, 1ae111es enc
Rick Trocano, QUarl•bKk
DENVER 8RONCOS-W1lveo Jefl
Relkb. wide reoelver Ind Vernon GHr·
rfno, COl'lllrOack. N1mld Ricard Urleh er
ea.slstlflf coadl. Nemld John Jagger 10 the
IHm's t>Oard of d1rldor,.
INOIANAPOLIS COL TS---Slon911 Benr
Musoreve, t•ckte.
LO$, ~NGELES RAMS-Waived Chrt'
w11111ms. saletv Cut Georoe Revnolds ountar, Joe Oooln', canler, end Dw1vnt
lov1, ru1111lno back. R1feesad Kerwl" Bell.
running t>ack, Todd Brlldford, ouard, Kerr~
Ford, llnet>adler. Steve Martinez wide
~•Iver, Tonv Massaglf, k!Gller Davlo
Prvor, ountar, Jim Tsaroflkl, 110se taCki.,
Chris ScllHfer. Quartert>ack, and Ke11
Peltr$111ohl a'1d
NEW ENGLAND PATR1on-w11veo
David a rown, rUMlno beek, Harper How·
Ill, llohl 9"<1. James K1v1on. offtlltlve
tackle, Jerome Lev. deftnalve end. Waller
Martin, ounter, Hertle Menl\ardt, otace·
klclter and leaf Palmer. nose tecklt
Ptac:ect Crtlo Wllllam•, on the lnlurld
reMrVt list. Placed Georgi Crump end
Darrv11 Wiison on 1111 Pl'lv1tceuv unebll to
oertorl\'I ll•t.
NEW YORK JETS-Waived JoM
Wtlktr, wide rtetl'ier. Placed ROllllv COiie,
r1JMlne baCk. Blllv Grloo•. llohC 1nc:t. JO/Ill
Merril, dtfen'1ve end, Vincent Murr1v.
defensive ~. Clw D•vldSOll and G-
Gli.•, wide receive,., on lnlurld reserve "'' . PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Acquired
Bot> Holfv. Quartert>ack, from Ille Washing·
ton Redskin• for 1n undlscloted 19tS drefl
olcf\. Cut M1nnv Mlltsai.11, P4ace·ktcker, Bot> Olndak and Herrv F'lahertv
llntbecken. Stec>htn .Jones, wldl receiver,
HerOld Smith and Ron G1vnor. -r·
tert>ad\1, and Tom SCl'leltr, centtr Placed
CONld Cove, Bob O'Connor. Wllll• Toll>lft,
Sam Slaler Ind TOdd Thoma1 on the lnlured
rfftrvt flat. ANIOUnc~ lhat SCOll Rtrldon,
ottenslve ouard, hes left trtlnlr19 """° PITTS&URGH STEELERS-Pt1ctd .,,.,.nco Harrl1, ru1111lng bectt, Oii lht did not
rePOr1 list. Pieced Pett Rostoskv. olfen"v•
tackle, OeCarlos Cleveland ind Kirk
Mc.Junkin, guard. Ind Robert Wiiiiam•.
safety, on the lnlured re1erved 1111.Walvld
Ted Peterun. teckle
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-W11lvtd
Andv Btrk and John GrMn, wldt re· eleven. Robert Allicanw al\d Mll\t
PltaHnl, runnlno becka, end Lerrv Gr1t11,
end.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Slonld
M1cllfft Carter, l'leftnslvt llnem.n, 10 • thr1t·vt1r contrect
SEATTLE SEAHAWK$-W1lvtd kellv
Powtll, ciuar1er~11. Mark IC.revls, ouerd. Tim 81llev, off111slv• reckte, Brien Gutltr•
r•z, .fullback, Arctilt C•flt', ~nto.cker,
Gtnt UnderwOOd, cornert>ack, and Cr11lg
SC.hkler, ounter Placed Jot Nortnen, Mark
H1Ck1 and £uotne Wllllarn1, llntt>eeker,, on
tllt unablt·to·l>trlorm list Placed OwlOht
SCllle1. wlc:ll rectever, and CNrlts Butler,
llnebaektr. Oft 11\t tnlureo r•Hf'Vt llsl
WASHINGTON lllEOSICINS-Wtlvld Stu
SC'hltlenberoer. "II.I", koll Darrow. kk:tl • tr. t nd ~ Sotlotll, 111c111e Pl.tcect Gr" Jonts, 1rumlnq blek, tno Wllllt Herrl1,
.. tttv, on the rtMrvt non•fGott>a• 11111eu
lltt ~ Sttvt Parker, wide""'""· on Ille ln1urecf rnerva Ast.
First shot ever:
A hole-in-one Olympics m!Jy be shot i~ the arm for Los ADgeles
GROTON. Conn. (AP) -It
was Karen D1Sabc1Ja's first shot
in her first outina on a aolf count
-and sbc made the most of it.
The 23-year-old sccrttary hit
lltr.D"rive on (fie lUf.yaro paf-J
first hole a1 1he Trumbull Golf
Course and Driving Range and
5tarcd 1n disbelief wtlh her hus-
Carl, as n rolkd slight!)' to
the left and into the cup.
"Well, the shot went pretty
atrataht. I guc . "she said."··1 )uM
kept wa1ch1na 11 roll. I thoucnt it
had itoppcd rolJtng. but then ~ saw 11 keel) aoin1 until it wcnr in
1hc hole."
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Much of
the tangible lcpcy of the Olymp1cs-
props, tents, acaffoldint and banncn
-already is disappeanna,
But officials hope what will ttmajn
tf more-itnf)Ot1erH long-tef'm ben~
efits that arc harder to pu c - a
spruced-up im• for the fCJion, 'a bt&
help for the toumt mduury. and new
ideas about commutin1 that just may
alter Southern CaUfomia's tegtndary
rush·hour traffic jams.
"Tbe fact the Los Anaclr.s was the center of world atttnuon -wnb 2 .S
b11lion_p_c;o1>lc watchina the city for t 6
<tay1 -is aoina ro cau n>coi>I urscc Io~ An&CICS and..SOuthem Cahfom1a
as a vcat travel destination and a
place of ~upcrb ho1p1tal1ty." a
jubilant Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bra.die)' said.
"Thett's abo something tbal's vcey
hard 10 analyze but a definite plus,
and ttiat is 1he ~p1ri1 and sense of pndc of tbepcoplo •·Bradley added, .. IC wtll
have an upl' ting cfToct lh:u will wash
over many area.~ for Iona to come."
And tmnj aoon ~tanners from
the city. s1.a1e anCfC'ommutcr Com·
putcr -a privacc gcncy lb.al
11T1n cs car-and V11n·pools -arc
hoping 1ha1 at least aomeofthe ptaplc
who changod &hear wor schedul
durina the Olympic won't r vcrt 10
otd patttt that dad):.Jl\Om· 1na and evening rituals of traffic
\na!Jng 1n 1nd out of the cay. ··rt WIL\ a real ~tud) in sodoloa~ ...
1d W.T. Doc Maloney, a spoke~
man for the Cahfomia Department of
Transportation, rcrcrrina to ch•"IU
in work and oommuu.na patterns that
people made amid wam•ngs that ihc
Olympi m1~t tum 1 biJ chunk-0f
Southern C1hfom1a roadsin1oag1ant
park.in& lot.
The massive inO\L\ of J)C<)ple and
vch1cles never occurred, and high·
wa~s and 1rttts have rarely seen
traffic mo~e a 1moo1hly day in ind
dax out. ·We may be fooled," Maloney
J&Jd, "But• we think !<>me people
cnjoycdJl (1hc..conwtton· dm·-
in } and w11l want tO" chan J>Ct-
mancntly. ,'
Onl) thrtt new. ~1111c1urcs were
built tor the Olympics: the swim
stadium, vclodromc for b1eyclc me·
ina anct a shootina factlity. Tho
were p;iad for ~Y pnvale-busin ponsorc and will rcmam for the
pubh c to u
01hct spons used cx.1 ting foc11i-
ties, and thlt1cs were housed in
dormaloncnt UCLA. the Umvcrstl)
of Southern Cahfom1a and the Uni·
"cn1tyof 1lifom1a11Santa Barbara
bai 11 of IJlilal c.xpcnse kt Los
Anarlca emerge from the Oamcs d bt
fn:c -<'O ' fttt, in ra~1. sancc they
were pnvatrl)' funded Thai ('Qffi·
~re to hu debt UlCurrc:d b 'olhet
Olmpch6
A ,.mall rmy nf up to 2 000
conMruc&lon workcn non ton·
...
.CONDUCT
romD3 • • • ~ CoLLECE FoorBAH
'----------------=--=----_.._______.
ool tun~
Perez 1d the puch th t hat
ns lapped o\ll of his hand ... h
OU d be 6tup1d lO rut the first ll~r ... he 1d.
Miami f a ces 6
It s only the fint of uc ion
of tup1d ts that da,.t. ,.md Braves
o ner Ted rn r lialfnls .,upcr· talion camcra1 tnuncd on the whole
me'
demanding __ .... ____ 4
schedule 2 We "" n Diego's Champ Sum· mer,, who already h d been CJCCltd,
char onto the field like a madman i~ the !'inth mnmJ. only to wind up
nght in Homer arms as beer showered from the stands.
We witne cd a fan tryina to pob a·
bat out of the. hand of one of the
Atlanta players, presumably to use as a weapon. and another speaator
hiutnaSan Dicao's Kun Bevacqua in
the head with a ~ mug.
Al least Bevacqua, a seldom-used
restrvc, was able to maintain a scnst
of humor ... That's the lon$CSt I've
been on the field in a Iona 11me." he
said.
\nd wa there ever a more ndicu-
lou sight than Leff ens, who had been
• ejected. standing in tilt an Dieao
dugout, bare-chested aod bug~yed,
hollering and acsturing as playcn
from both teams rolled tn the din?
Summers and LclTcns could~ m
bia trouble Wlth the National League
for returning to the field af\er being
ejected. and even 1f they're fined or
suspended, the incident miaht not be
over.
"Ther haven't heard the end of I\,"
Atlanta s Bob Watson said. "If they
want to, let's go."
''If they want to play baseball, that's
fine," San Diego•, Bobby Brown said.
"If they want to fight, we'll fight."
Haven't we heard this at recess on
the schoolyard?
McSherry called It "the worst thm&
I've ever seen in my life. It was
pathetic." It was that. but even
"pethetic" doesn't seem like a strona
cnouah word.
Travesty would be a &ood word.
Mockery isn't bad. Insulting mir.ht be
better yet. And some even. better
words might be best lefi unsaid.
t wt 1 be hard for umcane
to repeat as national champs
CORAL GABL~. Fla. (APl-A number of lhi!lP
made the University of aama f'ootbaJJ coach JOb
attractive to Jimmy Johnson. one of them, ho~C\'Cf, s
a dcm"ndina cdule that will make it difficult for the
Humcanes to rcpcJSt as nation l cham1>1ons 1hi1 f.all.
Citma his dcSart to ln-c in South Florid.a as well a lht
state•s reputation as ha"cn for rccruntrS1 Johnson left
Oklahoma t.ate for Miami on June S ano stepped into
.,..._ ........ _,_.what some people feel is a "no-win" 11tuat1on -at least in
1984. .
• The 41-yea.r-old r ch. who s~nt the pa.st five )~n
bu1ldina a Big Eight contender. isn't one of them.
··1 thtnk it's a wtnnma s1tuat1on." he say • ~ru na
olT u lions that produ~mg anything short of another
national cha01p1onsh1p will be akan to talung a ~tc:p dc>WJ\.
.. We're not looJcma at tt for one year. but rather for years to
come:•
The Humcane'> face a schedule that inclucks eight
teams that made bowl appearances last acason and launch
tht campa11n on the ro d with three pmC$ in 12 days
against highly reprded Auburn. Aonda and Michigan.
Dates with Flonda State, Notre Dame, P1tl$buri,h.
Maryland and Boston College: will follow.
·•it may be the most difficult $Chedule in college:
football this ycaran<t one of the most difficult J have~v~r
seen," Johnson says. "lfl was looking fora lot ofaccolades
this year, I probably came to the wrong place.
"There's no question in my mind that if it had been a
one or two-year deal that I wouldn't have given it a second
thought," says Johnson, who accepted a five-year contract
to replace Howard Schnellenberger.
"l have already pined a areat deaJ of momentum
from tht previous year's success," Johnson adds ... Now it
,, .......... is up to the people here to learn from that success and to
continue to develop on cvtty level."
Schnellenbericr. who guided the team to an I J-1
finish a year ago includinaa 31-30 upset ofNebrask.a in the New York Yankee. third btl11eman Toby Barrab 1oee into Oranae Bowl, fled for a lucrative contract in the United
the atanda to reach for a pop foal Tuaday DICbt lD New States Football League. But he dJdn·t, leave Johnson
Yor k. But Barrab came up empty empty-handed.
Foul play
• Third-year sophomore quarterback Bernie Kosar
--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiliiliilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiillliiiiiiiiiiiillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii:-fe\WFA& ig A.IA tbc f:lumcancs' pm-style offense and 11i0hd
Fumbled punt cost title corp of veterans are back from a c:kfensc that was one.of the
nation's best m· 1983. ~·from what l've' seen on film and from talk1n& to
staff. we should be explosive offeosi~~~;· Johnson offers. ·•0cfcns1vcly, Miami bas been outs iog in recent )ears
and we expect to be similar." But Texas figu res to have it tough er
with several Southwest teams stronger
defense tum to concrete bchmd the
leadership of All-SWC defensive end
Ray Childress, could sweep right into
the Cotton Bowl unbeaten.
. A&M's weak non-conference
schedule includes Teus-El Paso,
Iowa State and Arkansas St.ate, giving
sophomore quarterback Kevin Mur-
ray plenty of time to get ready.
DALLAS (AP) -The Texas
Longhorns came within a fumbled
punt of the national football utlc last
year.
They were ranked No. 2 but lost to
Geo~a 10-9 in the Cotton Bowl on a
touchdown late m the game thanks to
the miscue, wbich.Jhc..alen Bllll~
cashed mto their only touchdown of
the game.
Hours later. M1am1 upset No. I
Nebraska tn the Orange Bowl and
The Associated Press pollsters made
the Humcanes the No. I team in the
countf).
It will be much tougher for the
Longhorns to make it as fugh as No. 2
this year. but there ar.! scvtral
Southwest Conference teams who·
could be dangerous.
Texas bu a iehedule which in-
cludes ruged Auburn· in the opener,
Penn State and Oklahoma before the
SWC schedule begins.
CarlLeWls'
ap,artment
burglarlZed
The Longhorns lost seven starters
from a defense which was ranked as
the best in the school's history.
There also arc some unsettled
questions at quarterback.
The Longhorns were co-cham-
pions with Southern Methochst, and
the Mustangs Will apm be salty,
feeding on an easy non-<anferencc
schedule while new quarterback Don
James learns the ropes. SMU meets
Louisville, North Texas State and
Nevada-Las Vegas on the mter-
sccuonal fronL
The Mustanas have a 1.000 yard
rusher in Reggie Dupard and 927-
yard producer Jeff Atklns, and a
muscular offensive hoc that wiU 11ve
them openings to run through.
SMU's defense lost such stalwarts
as All-Aimrica def cnsi ve back ~ussell Caner, but the Mustangs will
certainly be more than adequate.
Texas A&M. should its weak
However. it's not the A&gics' of-
fense that worries Coach Jackie
Shemll. Has pnmary worry 1s a
defense Lbat had ltS moments last year
but allowed over SO points in the
season finale aaamst the Longhorns.
"I beltcve ~e'll be much better
defensively." said Sherrill. "ChJldrcss
just may be the best in the country at
his position. I behevcwe'll be ~und."
The Baylor Bears will be hard to
stop because of thetr quarterback
tandem of Cody Carlson and Tom
Muecke.Carlson led the SWC m
passing efficiency last season and was
third nationally.
Muecke was second behind
Carlson in accuracy. Tne Bears must
replacie Gerald McNeill and Bruce
Davis, two of the swtftest wide
receivers in the country.
However, Baylor has a runnmg
game wt should be adequate and a
swannin~ive defense. The open with Brigham
YounJ. and OkJaboma and could be
good tf they Jet past those two early
sea.son tough1cs.
Houston. Arkansas. Texas Tech
and Texas Christaan all have enour.h
talent to cause some problems in tile
SWCrace.
TUCKER •••
FromD2
docs not always reveal what 1s go mg
on but neither docs be abuse the truth
and this 1s vital.
Bowie Kuhn is also a man of
straiJht answers but the trouble was
that m IS years in office, he only aave
one or two. Kuhn did not understand
anything about the media.
Of the people he appointed to deal
with the Olympic medfa. Ucberroth
bad no understanding o(the gcntk·
men of the workJn& prcss -or he did
notcare. lfitcaniesoverto baseball.
thescribcsofthegamcwiU be oo
better off than they were with Kuhn.
There is still a rumble on the
boulevard that Ueberroth will pre' ail
upon Kuhn to stay on as son of an
au1stantcommiss1oner, at least until
the new man learns the basics as the Al _.,.... ball is round. This will unfold Ez-Cardhlal dtee __ bet~eeonow~ndOctober.
8 a... ca ~•-at Meanwhile, bascball th1nh tt ha Former t. LOu.. • • rv.ua , • madea sound move. This remains to c atcher Vtrall Spud bedetC111lioed.
0.Yla, 79. died Tueeday. In mattersofthecommiuioncr.
Da Yi• wu a member of the baseball owners &ot the reputation of 1934 .. Gae HoGM G&DC" blundcringthchardway-tbC)'
which WOD the World sertea. earned it.
Sports writergr:anted asylum in U.S.
.. I wa ~urpnStd," said Lo~ who met Moraru in
Fcbnlary while covenna lhe Davit Cup tcnni tournament
in Romania. ••rve teen him twitt in Romani• and 1 tc.now
how thnllcd he was al the titnh of hi dal}lhtcr."
Lorac u1d Moraru -who also wa aranttd • wor~
prnrut lllowina him '° ctnl)IOy,ment 1n"IM nitcd
States -want1 \o be1'Ublted with bis wife. 5-m n&.h-old
daUlhter and brothettmfta1n Romama
Althou.&h Mom» declined to be 1ntc:t"YicWtd for a
tory T'Ucsdly,_1.-911C id thf Romaruan hid told him b rca for ckf«11n&, ,..but I fctl 't' conr.ckntial."
Bctluardo would not divu
Kosar completed 61.4 percent of his passes-201 of
327 -for 2,329 yards and IS touchdowns as a red-shirt
freshman and has speedy taraeu in senior wide receivers
Eddje Brown and Stanley ShakC$pcarc.
The offensive hne returns int.act. but Johnson will
have to find replacements for light end Glenn Dennison
and runners Keith Gnffin. Albert Bentley and Speed)
Neal.
Sophomore Wilhe Smith is the projected starter at
tight end, while sophomores Darryl Oliver and Alonzo
Highsmith and Melvin Bratton, rtd-sharted tn 1983 -
couldJOIO Kosar tn the backfield.
Johnson. whose assistant coach1~ ~nee lD· eludes stints as defensive coordinator at Iowa State,
Arkansas and Pltt. plans few. tf any. changes m the
Humcancs' offense. He may. however. add a few wnnklcs
on defense where assistant Bill Trout has been promoted to
coordinator. ''Basically, we will be the same as tn the past because
the pla)cn and the auistant coaches arc already famil!ar
with the sy tem ... Johnsan sa)s .. We will institute somr
chanacs in both areas, btt the main input will be from the
assistant coaches.
.. It is a lea mm& process for me to evaluate and find out
what was done tn the past:• he adds ... No football team
that i&goina to be successful stays totaHy the same."
,
ROSY OUTLOOK ..•
fTomDS
records. He holds virtually every NCAA k1clun1 record
and 1s expected to break the remaini~ ones this season.
Anzona has 40 lettermen. includmg 12 starters. back
from a 7-3-l team. Sophomore Alfred Jenlaos wiU take
over for head Coach Lan)' Smith for the departed Tom
Tunnicliffe at quanerback and Smith has eight starters
back from the 1983 Pac-I O's second-best defense. f o the San Francisco Bay area. Joe Kapp is back for a
third stason as the California head coach and Jack Elwa).
father of fonncr Stanford All-America John Elway. takes
over as Stanford's head coach 10 place of Paul Wiagin.
Kapp wtll be desperately trymg to give quarterback
Gale Gilbert a httle rushing help this season. G1lbcn
passed for 2. 769 yards last year. ha tung 59 percent of his
passes. But the Golden Bears averaged only SS yards on the
ground, worst rustung offense tn the nation tn 1983.
Elway, who was 35-20-l in five seasons as San Jose
State's head coach. takes over a Stanford club that was 1-10
last season.
Among the Cardinals to watch 1s former Fountain
Valley star Emile Harry. a S-11 . 166-pound spht end
capablt of the b1a play.
At Oregon State. Joe Avezzano wtll be under severe
p~ure af\cr narrowing!)' avoid mg d1sm1ssal at the end of
last season. A vezzano has a four-) ear head coach mg record
of 4-38·2 wtth the Beavers and hts finng was recommend-
ed by the Oregon State Board of Intercollegiate -\thletics
after last )ear's :?-8-1 campaign. But. with the suppon of Athlettc Director Ott
-\ndro Orqon State President Roben MacV1carallo""~
Avcznno to comr back for the remaining \ear on his
contract At Oregon. head Coach Rich Brool s return!> mne
defensive taners from last sta~n·!> 4-6-1 campaign . But
the Ducks' olTenst remains a maJOr ronccrn
•
p
I
L
0
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D
"FAST
atsULT"
llVIC:I
-OlllCTORY
I-' ult
~ II
642-5671 .Ju----1
~LAWNllT. OLIVE
Mortuary• Cemetar;
Crematory
1825 Gi81er Ave Costa Meaa
S.0.-SSS4
PERCE MOllfDI !IELL 8"0ADWAY
MORTUAA't
110 Broedw1y
Costa Mesa
'42·9150
aM. TZ UJltQERON
UllTM a TVTMILL
ITCUFP CMAPE.L
437 E. 17,h St
Co.taMeaa
546-8371
rta.IC NOTIC[
PlCTmOUa .,... ..
U.STATWmNT
The follOwlnQ perton II
doing buelneel ..
M.t .P. SERVICES, 34114-e CoMt Htway, Dena Point,
c.llf. t292t
Mllcolm E P'«oe, 8 Mita
LM 0.... Safi C6arMnle,
c.llf.t2t72
Thia bullMM II con·
ducted by: an lndl'tldull
• Malcolm E PIWoe
Tiiie statement wee hied ~ tM County a.r1I of Or· Z Coiilnty on August 2, ......
. PubllaMd OrWIQe Cout
Ody Piiot Augutt l . 1&. 22,
n .1M4
W-180
rt.a.IC NOTICE
BeauufuJ 3 Br. 2 Ba. playroom, fireplace,
beam ceilings. Xlnt fmancmg. $420.000
lllUll tlllft llYHDIT 0011 .
Jetty & Bay view. newly decorated Miu
Kai. 2 J3r 2 Ba. 40' patio Nov. $645.000
NllC NOTICE PElllHU HIE OGUIFIHT
PlCTITtOUI .UAlllll Ocean & Jetty views. marine room. 4 Br
NAM! STAT'OlaNT 3 Ba. 3700 sq . ft . car parking $1 ,285,000
'1~:: t!':i'=.ng .. ~ton 11 UJllH PUCE UYFROIT
SOUTH COAST ART S"""taCular bayfront dplx 2 Br. 2 Ba up CENTER, 283 EM1 SeYen-r--
wenth St., Ca.ta Meaa. CA 2 Br. 2 Ba down 2 boat spaces $1 .250.000
82927
A691ber1o Alicandro, 1591 UllU IUCll lllLLlllE
Gr911t St .. Chino. CA 81110 Panoramic ocean & CJty view 5 Br 3 Ba Thlt bualneu 11 c:on-· ·
ducted by an Individual spacious entertal11lng home S l, I 00,000
Adalber1o Alicandro
Thia statement .... t11ed
wtth the County Cler1! of Or-
llnQe County on Aug &, 1884
fltlllC NOTICE .
W·l72
rueuc NOTICE
PlCTmOUI 9UltNHI ...,_ITATIMINT
The fotlowlng pWton ii
do4ng bl.llineaa ..
AfJ INTERNATIONAL
1000 Oud Streat, Suite 180,
~ IMc:tl. Caul 828&0
Ao~ ThomN Jon•• 2t50 VIN Ornada. Newport lleeetl.Cefff 828&0
TNa bullne11 11 c:on
~ad by: 111 lndlvl01111
RoNrt T Jonea
Thie 1tatement wu filed
wHrl the Col.lnty Clerk of Or·
enge County on Avgull 9,
1114 '212111
Publiahad Or•nQe Coalt
09lly ""°' Augull f5, 22, 2t, 9lptM'lber 4, 1884
W1H
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
•I. H· .,.~,.1. lJ• • "" B t>J', f,lbl
.. .. ~
LOOKINC FOi
CR£ENEI PlSTUIES?
UniQur Homfs has cul
r1va!td numerous helds
'h;i! ar' now croducme
h 1~1urns A liberal com
miss on sphl a walut tom
..,and cenrer a <!ts;aner
en stall ;ind a consistent
•eouiation •or Qua 1ty
" r• ~•~e 01od11ted 1
Ou'"'~' c•op c• sa '~and
r.st:~ tt J011 rn
~·e•M!'.1l nip P•n£ 111111
·~, • ar~est ~~ast ca~ ltm
~'°4l 67'> 6000 'or a~
U~I UI: t1()Mt:i
A EAL TORS', 675 6000
2443 East Coast H1ghwav. Corona dol Mar
O •• • 0"9• • • • c• ·•• K 0"'b •.t •a•dt ~.,. .,. 0 I ,_ Jo l ~if' ~ ·~
TUGSUA
I I I' r I
U 0 E L £
I ~ta A G ' I 1· I
642-5678
'.;llM~cn~~-lrvme ~ 'I
•
'
$2.17 per day
That's A'-L you pay tor
3 llnM, 30 day,
In the
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
· plU9 the IRVINE MIRROR
and the HUNTINGTON
BEACHCOMBER eyery
Wedneeday at
no .xtra Cflarget
CALLTOOAYll
lllHILlll
YOUf Dally Piiot a.Moe DtT.ctory ~tatlve
• h l-4121 t it. IOI
'
er l•r
Office latala UH AaHuc•tah H02 Lett A Pnd 31M laftl .... t 19 Wu... SIM leli ....... 1111 •11 Waateil II• ltlf Wu... 91• Wu ... SlM l!lt w.-. 11•
Ellll11YI nnn 1!t LIRDX Rolf -tt FouNo M• 8lactc Lab Otteduldtt 4111 • KU1111a.1r...... usm1 llLMlt GEHEAAL HELP wAHf. •nMr9•i •m... tto' ..
lrvlne, phone ..... r• cd-Uz Reinders Whit• on c:MIU31-1030 wmm balfiQ P:::-& oen«• ledoer aper. tul Of '*' tkne FUI Um9 fOf local -dt: EO-.. Jaca 1"Thl Box,... WUIUl•M iWh IHTIR ... cepl., conf. rm, ut• pd', JMPOAlAHTI . 10r Mlell bVlln•• no . requlr9d for Nft. Cunlerl,.•c•ptlonlat ~~ ,. t..-.nt Ml-lmm.cll1t1 a.al ri*1diO ii1111...., leldl reeort Hn M~-~· _..SPIRITUAL.REAOlNGS. EOlJ.I:W_..tmalLDoG..___bfk ..!!!!J14)713-1114 want•d for h1hlon OQ(d _. N9Wpoft ...oQtt'tlQQI toe . IUllY needldtor~oftc. WMo ~UP"!•_....._ __ ....,.._.,,,.,..~
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiilAdvtce In ·All Mettert & w/brn mrltiiige.-vrc: ltlJ Wu:::; llll trial ~-tery Iii~ StillOi*i IU=f2DO PIOCll• t MN• our .......... ~~ e.tn. 1~ For tPP---..:.-..;..w CounMllt'IQ. 1815 So. EJ a..cn & Slater, K.8 . -... commtnlUflt• W/Uf*. ti. &VIII for we. & wtcnd ~ cfepl. ou-ta. Full end pert eoma -'V· ,..__ -1555 • eo-1 Hwy,
..... ~-~ 11111 CemlUcno'd~ S79!J'-':' &47·7324 llllSSIM mt ~ rMUmew--"!!,.ulary hra. EOE ~70 DENTAL ASSISTANT ~.· ~!:'!0-!."!=" ..!!! --.. ~.&~:'· Lape Bwtl. E..O.E. w Vi.wt ... H. '"'"" Found Sml blk poodl9, CIRCl£ K hM tmmed. fWI ,,..,ory to _.,,_, Um' Ortho . ....._,t pett/tul ...... .. • .,_, ...-.... .,.. ~ "*' ~ •Sptrttual P8ycNc AO-1.,._ on both ~ time poeltlon ~ Compani... 4750 Von PIT .,...,._ time 07·2484 or fteldble '*"' .. ..._ GOUfiiiT ffOOOi .,._tot.,.....,,...,... .. ~~~cin~~~ vtlOr & Catd ~* :aonoua1Slat•. HB/FV Bute knowt1ctg9 of 10 KN~~1:2~ F~ a.i~. OU: 487-4f24Kat!ly .::·=~= 11().$15/tw.Cel~ youcencoo*~ Sult•200 Put. p,...,..t & futUfe. &4T-3320 keyamust.YournusUk• Port hOurs to ti. arranQed. lllllLUl1/lml ~3pm..epmat-IM-133ttotlnt•n• r~ 10" CM wn
144 4411 875-24Hore31-1"4 F 0 u n d ! TI n y t::::w:..nrr ... Foct' BOOKKEEPEAup'd,F/C AwtY In pereon. l(erm U-.llAll . OtoMftQftnandllw'W:m up\0$2SOperwtl. --------ILttt tui Yorkahl,./Sllky Terrier ~2•7702• hm~ ~_> for local CPA firm Rima HatdWa,.. 2eee OUr buty fwnlty _,tal of· . .l&CI II f Ir m .. • k • u c • U.. In end..,. It
AM::: 6,._ Vic Ntewland & Ellla HB lntereedng & chalenglng H.,bot 8',CM nee le MWdlltlQ for • fl.In, rtlllryloflce ,......, '°' NEWPORT DOMESTICS
.,,.,_ ... __... ~74 Al.ARMS dllnt mbt. ~ to: c.hllr ted Prefer bttaht tnerg9tlc TIE IOI &ecuttve OftlCe. hMde ~
on ~rtstol, fOlJND ADS ~ Oper/tnst .rnngr qu~ &AC, 111 Dowr Dr. NB CollOI ':"~i 4 "" wltfi dent9J llllllt:;: 127~Pacdlceo.t...._ to._. at.rone ~ & 142~1•2 '-"Y LOS"f. whit• cat W/gtMtl .-xper req"ulred. Xlnt op-92MS deity Call 8arb«a tor S*1encl ROA ~ 0 -1 detlcel ..... lhOf'tl>and. lnMnnOe ~ Wor11.-
tt..a .1 c:ollat. In the Y1c of CdM portunltyMM111 BOOK KEEPER wanted ..... ; 540-3280 lmmectlai. ,..,_.._ fOf Sun.t..._., good telephoM p,_. ::1i ... p/tw/bon119
IW9I AR£ fRE£ nr Goldenrod & Harbor el ~ _,..,. • ....-•"'lf "'°' ~t peoole ,.. lt•talJ n tl Vl•w Or. REWARD fOf atchttectur .._n CHIROPRACTIC ...eatant qu.llfled penon. ,,..._ Equel~ ••eontact&atbereor ..... ...,w\cUyt CM/NB 17th' m fS«.135e;752·M&4 1111 ..... ~~ 11:1..~~r,rienc. no up n•c•uuy. cal Robin 494-t7t1 ~M/F Petti lor Information --.,-
Newer 1000-2200 eq rt, C I LOST Blu• & Gold WJ:: ~O:,:. ~e:: 650-2273 1111 aDI &1 W•• 47•2128 -""'
amptepkg,a/c,97M900 8 : MeCaw Reward Vic PORT TIRE CENTER, u.lf,..a.Fa mDIUl ~·~irrn..-= 130ToNoon ..... adUI MllWlllULll .......
OFFICE SPACE tor rent, MJ·Hll HwplSc;b/C.M. 973-1211 3000 E. Cout Hwy, CdM lfflll ut gr~-co. ln O.C. Bl~CM .. ~-. ~.. moment In bulV ~ FIT taper. pref ~In ia tnteni.w1ng for Jr We need a -...., che«ful _.."' • .._...,. _,, · Mlndly NB ..... of'rlce. ---... Pro/.# Pr0Qr9m Olrec:tof. Ideal location for retail°' Lott. Dog, Germ•n '"'w...,..an-tect-q....,--,uat_,lty,--baby-.,..-cafl-• at "'"'"wtth Airport at11 nMCll a tuff ....,.. AM'• kW now maybe full .,...on. K•m.....,. . .,... Appflcanta must b•
omc.. GrMt frontage on ~~~~~~~~ Sheptl«d mix, 18 yr mll, a mo baby. T/W Lag HUis m 11 u~ to~ time CLERICAL/OFC ttlM i.t•. Lota of~ .... 2118 Harbor 81,CM •n•ro•tlc, organized. Baker •t Brtatol. High FOUND a amall blt/wht nda rM<llcatlon. Univ .• exp and ,.,. required " t ,;:f"'• .,..... penon Mu.t type 55 llPll... & numbers 131......, Help wented lmrnld tor hard ~ ,_nee
trattlc .,..._ 5-i0-3eee long haired dog VIC Mag· Prtt, Irv 7M-4&48 830-7117 942·7950 ~~,phone .. ~ wpm and ha-.. ~ Opening. Del Mar.,.., kw hlN ~ MMOe ~ed 116114 &!'IN
PRIME LOCATION As>· nolla/Talbert 9&8·2308 l.oet· o.m Shep Mt-. Bebysltt., needed my customennd a•umen'a =-~~ 114 ~.tlmlex:::--~· !;. ll"'M ... 0..-..._. 14-.oM\ c!:':· ~
prox 850 aq.ft. , Busy Found Cockatl•l·Gr•y Fem• 5 ~.old Muttl home. meturelownnn. maillnQa, Nn the COCl!ef, 1!1.o511 NICMRe \..lundly. troNng ........ TYl*IQ, '9no comciuMt HOSTiiiWANTED 1171 Cotta M ... lhOCl9 9 ctr. wlyet tece wt• wnga Vic cir Thur 8/t pm VIC IPk eng. PIT-eome wee ete 'If•.,. .n .,.,_. houwt.anlng, ctotheil data IMfY, &A.M-3PM. Fn 1 UO AM--2'30 PM. 8ut1 c . 11 e. 2. 9 • 0 0 • 2400 E . PCH COM AVOC8do. CdM 875-fe.42 I wtcn<fa. 20 hrt .-· ~anutacturlng·MI.. CLERIS tat• ' .... c:c>c*lng. Cell 185041000. mo. ~ H°""Y ... -Thi JM\~ Ad N.
10-12noon or 2-4pm 944.5490° . REWARD for content• of ·Side 85Q..5077 In Costa ....... Bafbara. Mon-Frt 2~ emok• ptef. 640-1813 Ou'9t Woman~ GIRL FRJOAY AIWWftl ..
ShoP/Stor•/Offlce apla. FOUND Kitt.,, Blk/Wtlt 7 Ian bf ... caM taken from BABYSITTER WANTED Salary le/HA to ltart. ,.99 11111 EOE (l19}75S-033t General Office 640-7440 Tonl/BattMn pttone, hi dUa.. '°"" r>~~~54~2:;u· wtta free 2 gooc1 home drtv.wayt>etwn7tot:30 ITmyhome.Owntr.,,.. ~~~i~ .,.,. llnll/a11P181 11&.fWf(l /f) Hotel =~~
· 850-0189 .we e: on Thuta.119. At 93S portatlon GRANDMA SON FlOA'rATION INC. tmlll&TI lfl.UTll Con1tructlon otrlu <tfUIWI Uf .. 'fr
*CdMdtuult•.AC.M\Pl FOUND: M ... rn«lllwht a~~;,os~.s cA~K~ PREFERRED 751-"24 AHi •y.v ••• •• IPEW w111 train. Ful time. Nied =t~\:.~_,•: f .......... L At.;,,.,,&. FIT.~~ Good
pttcg,.?: 1225 21155 E. Aust sh.P mix & • ma blk (7t4)2A1~ 1002 497-2871 IUYllTTlll 111111 ........ _ .. ~ own-ar. ~ ~· IOI ~row Homee, n .... ...... ltart pay 175-UM Coeat~. 975-6900 Terr ... rab!M tag 5473. Sm blonde/wt.I,.,,, poo-F/P-trn~wtcnds UUT H•IHW :~ .. -.. 10 Calf494-22eo( 4921 Birch St, Sult9110 • 0.V wo.1t .-FIT. ------.,..--·~ltriil e«-3858 b ~· I Chartott•'• Sitt .. AllC'I SELL CABLE T.V. worlc ~:i. al· 111ft1 Newport BHch, CA .,_ c:f-* inlout. Poel j 11&111 W&ITD __..... dlltrtm twn 2082ndSt NB &45-374e IN NEWPORT BEACH -· ' Na---Ful t2MO Ot ..wt r-..rne c:Mtgee to computw •• s.clff woe.I. 1911 8o. lntalJ 2920 FOUND M Blk mixed lab, Banning H2·1 • I W ..... Ty tending ectlOOI ort~wn or • ,,..._ --· or •7361 TYS*'CI .a wpm. com-I c.c Hwy, Laa. I ~
0001 h nulMl'OUI cata and kit· , ... _ .... :c u 1• .......... , .. , I U1ta lncofM. L°'. of PIT, 145-7846 752 -----. ~ In -. 414-1717 2000 SF 11 mont tens avallable '°' edop-..... -.a. .. • ... ,_. 11 loOklng tor a few good customer contact. --......---~
3975 Birch. Newport tlon Newport 8Hch w Mdld for ~achald• direct .. 1.. P•OPI•. .. nm IUll lllDM ... ,... • .,. I ••-..n Beach. Agt 541-5032 Animal Shelter 64A--3l!e EIOllft/Mllll hot .. tn l.11guna Bch. ApPly. 901 W 18th St. Appfy In per.on 1..-m P/tlme. V.n.d tn. bCtl fOr Newpon ..._., ct. PIT n.xi. hrs M-.F cww .ft --.. Mk.
CM 3800 eq "with offtcel FOUND·. Rabbit, ""•n/wht, Outcalt ONLY 135-1191 Mul1 bl flu.Ible to worlc N.B. 11 to Spm. E.O.E ~deya or 1-4prn S.t· aree&44-7575, 12to2pm ~at' Muat !'-~ O.Oler I hach .,;;''i d•Y•·
IPW1clng, 45/eqft Vic. oomer St Andrewt TOPS$$ =nl~t~ ~~ CAMPANION urdeyandSunday UllltM l•Pt• -·~.p;;:.;';; PITT~..-orlly. 973-721tort41S450
Weetley N. Teytor Co Rd I C I• y St N. B . Fematee Pf'.t Modefe .. ~ ~ .. Admln. ofe. for app. ~ fOt well educated FEIOl llO, on an •tablehed REGIS. AIR A/P and 10 Uy. Exp ..._,.. be famlllw w/tlltec. Marlrte W.Chanlc, ex· M4-4f11 642-311! &corta.(213)W-1-EOE eldlfty cous>M. Prime, 3030Hwbor8'vcl TEA euto '°"'9 In Hunt w/ IBM/PRC • ptua regiew, In food & be't. peneooed. AW'/ 7-hm -==:;;;=====-F=~==:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;11iii[iiii•iliimii-1UMY 2 Br NB condo CA Bch, eo.ta Mllaa &. Npt 975-4815 enWonlMrt1. Mon-Fn f1Wi37 -111111 I 1700/mo 87M181 CO.ta Mela, 8ch ar-. Must ti. ove1 I• 1111nt,111
artttm.Mlpnnted.Ca&I c--1« & catpenter'a Equal Opportunity 11 yr, have t9llable car, For Olaallfted Ad Mon--Fri~ IAlllT9l ID1. Bob (Only) 875-1191 ,;rp; wanted Must do emptoyer for more Info. cell ACTION 5 Pef'80M to take Otden
......... ec:cut•I• ~ & have --'->Ill .._.. ~542e(7.,,...11am) Call• HOTEL tor mn•ttng depart• S ....._..._ eom_ ...... w"t• ·-"'P-Deity ptlot ... llett/......... ment. No eiicper. nK w. YDIEY N. B Law Firm Mek• ~. own toots 646-3433 1ng 1n ucnange tor prtv ELECTRICIAN ~clal AD-VlSOA FIT. ~ l lpm For Al1P lrM\. >ant """°°"" M-btlkpr, 2Q.25 hrs per room w!TV prtv beth. I raeldentlal ~a 642-.5171 1555 s Coest High-vw~ 11 ~·
O.ARR
W.-to hand" b4lllno.. -tav• you read today'• NMr IMch. Mature, NC1111ry 142..0782 wayl..IOUnl a-ctl E.0 E caa Rick, 8412·5&44
Pl)'ablel, ~ i. Clualfled Ad•? If not, must •doge. 53&-0921 Escrow OHie., 0 . quartty ta'C returns. you•,. ~ the bl9t
•••••••••••• 152--2522 barg9':".-In townl OlllTllOTlll ;:=::= man-
Tluanday, Aupat 11 .
ARIES (March 2 l-Apnl 19) Syothestze material-~~le hi&h ~d
you can come up with complete story. Focus on i.ruuativc, darina.
ability to make most of data at hand. T1m1ng is ri&ht, you'll make
contact with individual capable of "pullina strings" for yo~. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What seemed a rcstnctton, loss or
delay is due to boomerana in yo~r _favor. LI?~~-dis~n~.e call could mean
invitauon to travel and to soc1ahze wtlh b1a·~as. Be con~ou~ of
appearance, wearing apparel and keep resolutions concerruna diet,
nutrition and weight. · GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20): Roadblock is removed, wish is
fulfilled Study Taurus message for valid hint. You arc goina to be
popular.and you will "go pla.cts." Gain andica~ed as rc~ult of career or
business maneuver. Dynamic 10d1v1dual aids 1n futfilhna poteoual
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Change. travel, vanety and romance
hi&hliaht exc1unascenano. You'll have more responsibility, you'll pin
throufh wntten word and mem~ of opposite sex Wlll help you to sec
the "ri&ht people." Vira6 nauvc figures promanentl.y.
Lf!O (July 23-Aua. 22): Emphasis on distance. tanauqe.
publish1na and financ11l reward as result of crtative efforts. Loved one
tallts abOut movina. decoratina. rcmode.lna a~d poss1ble P,.urch.ase of
major luxury item. Be d1ptomattc. make 1ntella&Cnt concn ions. Libra
plays key role. ~ . ~ . ~RGO (AuJ. 23-Sept .. 22): Define terms, dta deep 1or in1orma.uon.
rcaJ12e u 1s ~ 1bte to strike paY. din. P!sccs native docs have secret and
will share it 1fyou are d1plomat1c. You II learn more about resources of
others and you'll be more rtth uc about 0 fundina." UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2~): Empha ~s on law, contractual
obliption po ible pa11ncrsh1p or mam~. Prusure of •!idcd
responsibithy is evident. Older individual lends benefit of el'pcJtcncc
and does upcct something in return. Capricorn native rl(Ures
prominently. . b·i· SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 2p: Empha 1son employment. a uty !O
finish what you stan. Recent m1scalculauon will be conut.cd -)'OU II
recoup lo . Be wilHna to ff!odemue p~um.. to let ao or ~st
burden. Anc • Leo. Libra nauves fiaurc prominently. 1
SAOITI' AlUUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): L.Ove domanat ~you pt to
heart of maners,emotions rule l<>Jic and ~enario wdl h lhl~~ f'Ul and
viaor tress independence, crcauvaty, p1oneenna piriL l mpnnt •Ylt, folio~ throu&h on hunch, realize ~ou a.re c.apablc now of wmnma at
pmes of chance. . CAPRICORN (Otc. 22·Jan. 19 : Collect 1nfonn1uoo, butld
towards future, realize that omc delays are n~ry and to ~r
&dvan Focus on propeny. home, famdy. KCuntY, a~d safel).
. Defend ltmtorial riahts. how that you &rt not easily 1nt1m1dattd.
AQUAIUU (Jan. 20.Feb. 18); y,ou have more room , fOU ~o lonaer
wtllbccro clcdoutofyourown pace. Focusoncommun1cat1on,call~. mes v1s111 pou1ble hon Journey. Member of oppo 1te sc~ helps
make Wt h come \NC. Gemini plap kc> role. •
p (Feb. 19-Mar. 20):. <..ycle 11 hi&h de p1tc apparent lo .
You'll recover, you'll locate arucl that had been ma Of Of tolcn. some rev1 1on11ren Sir) and lfyou m kc them lhm will be profit.
Tauru Scorpio nattvct arc acMc and will pl&)• ) rol h
u tmcnts are concerned.
Clerks
CIRCLE K-MAIKETS
~ ~ llOW HIRlllC
'-1 OAUIEll I GlEllll
Interviews dally from 11 :00
a.m.·12 noon' at 1390
c: North Pacific Coast Hwy ..
Laguna Beach (.on..PCH &
Vtejo)
Call ( 7141 494 9233 tor mm info
lllllTUT Newport BHCh OHie• s..ina mouvated MM040 Mrs. ~
lndlvlcfual w/nc•ll•nt E 1 1 typing lkllle. ShclttMnd a x.,c u n1tuctor1
piu., hMyY phone con-112.50/hr wlll treln.
tact w/vendort 54t-29U 8tl-I09&
Counter help p/1, Mon-Fri f1U.l1m PIT
SUPER SANOWlCH 175 HIT!Tlm-
Paularlno, CM 54MM7 Oppot1unltlff avellable
Count• help pert-time wM the LOS ANGEL.ES
tulHlme. GARY'S DELI TlMES ClraNtton De-
752·540 t Plrt"*" In our door to door n~ ..-progrem GuarantMd
hourlY WllO' plue com-
mlaaion. Kourt: 4pn to tvm . Tratnt--+-11-+--
provtded. Potential 10 DELI COUNTER HELP Mm 13()() ptua per week.
8:30am-2:30pm. Daye. For an lnteMew. cal
642·52171839'-9170 ewe 957·2'81 ut 1204 .
District Managers
If you enioy worlu~ w1ttl you~ boy. l
g1rla ond de•lt tob• 0<1 ft<>f fot you,
con,1der o <Or"' 1n the newipo~ Cttculo
tion f .. td Th11 1s o unique po"toon ..,.It\
doily choll~i & rewords.
°"' O~tng· Of• 1m!Md~ App!Kcrnh
muO ho.,.. o ~ ... ,o,o0nw090f' or tf\K!.
We of~ on e11celi.tlt .alory wilt\ o bon\is
pion and go• ollo..ance. We ho.,.. on
eactli.nf befwfrt plan d!at inc~ ho~
tolucrtiOl'I lnwronc•. 11~ ~Cl1toft O"d
hoUdcry\
the ..., flilDt
9 1l
330 W. Bay
Cost• Men, CA 92626
l
DOING
BUSINESS
UNDER A
Fl TITIOUS
NAME?
All new bualnettea using • flctttloua
name. must by law be registered with
the County Clerk. The DAILY PILOT
provide• the form• and ng Hrvtcea
for our e-uatomera. If you •re 1tartlng a
new bualneH can the DAILY PILOT for
lntormatton and forms
The tatement la req red by law
and 11 nece11ary In protecting ycNr
bualn••• name. Moat banka require
proof of flllng to open com erclal
account•.
The DAIL y PILOT pro de• both
tnlng and· publication erv cea. We
have all the necea11r1 forma and
maintain a CS.Uy erv c• to the Orange
County Covrthouae. Either top by one
of our connn ent ottlcea or phOn• l •
LEGAL DEPARTME NT 642-4321, Elt.
332 tor more formation 1nd orm1.
""--)
(
-
IMMEDIATE lllAIEIEIT
OPPORTUMln
1.-t .. phonf'
-.al,.., JWr .. 011 for rf>lail ud,.t"rli-.m~
p ho111• room. "'uiwn i"'41n "'"ill., a
mu-.1. Top dollar -bu ... · plu.-..
l)H \\<A< <l\"I
I> \LI ) I'll 'MT
1n \\~,.., B.n ;;;,r,.,.,
1 .. -1a \l•·NJ r .\ ri~r.2-t.nt
Newspaper
KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES!
AGES 11-14
EARN lW TO $75.00 PER WEEK
Wt oow hne I~ opemncs 101 yount eaatt
beams lo wcurr readt<s lot The Orane• Coast ~Y Pilot Our crtws start at 3 30 p m and
1wor\ unlll 8 30 11 m wttkd~ys On Saturday. wt
IWC)I'\.'" 11\0fl hcMlrs YCMI .. Ulll INllY lr'I)$ I llld llfllts.. a1o111 Wit!\ w 11!!11 ro11r own lllOPel
• theft •s no delo~tfll'C 04' ~tion 1nvo1Vfd
11 you art 101rrnled 11•u~ c.iill Mr Carl
MCA
COO£ (714) 548-7058
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Measvreo
6 Locate
10 Prospered
14 H1g~ than
15 HttCh
16 Suppucate
t7 Mushroom
18 Not relaxed
20 Cool•ded
22 Having hved
1onger
23 Discharge
24 Hues
25 Pet
28 Kmd ot bag
29 Mine runnels
30 Vital Sl81rSltC
35 Lawmaker
abbr
36 Pe•• pins
37 -popul1
36 Fttendty
gr.eltnQ
• 1 Rl!TIP
43 Jungle souno
u G111e111ght
45 LP
48 Kett'• oart
50 Ex11t1ng
51 Sol1·soaof'O
2 3
17
I
55 He111enly
57 Tllreesome
58 S1udt VIP
59 Hankeflng
60 Weapon
61 Es1u1nes
62 Good Queen
63 Presb'(1er
DOWN
' B>Q Broadwly ,,,,
2 Dark poel
3 Trespass e g
4 H19hes1 oeak
S Flood.s
6 Blackouu.
7 Creek
8 1nlormed
.9 Greek tettl'lr
10 School book
11 MadrtO musevm
12 Comloner
13 Colo• pro~
19 C•n·~ e g
21 ~erden
24 ~oUaways
25 Money
26 01d rheatri.s
27 -Fein lrt&h
~oc•ely
28 Palm or ll'a~
30 MalP 11n1m111
3 l Annoy
32 OnP ol lll•!lf' u~
s
•
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
rivers
33 Guule
.)4 Former spooMa
36 African 11ke
39 Ca111e neroeu
40 Tender spots
• 1 Loom parl
42 Word tor ..,ord
44 Tosspol
45 Indy 500 parttci.
pan I
•6 Tree resin
47 Eyelashes
48 ScOl'IH
49 LOMICOlot
51 Vigor
52 Ovter coal
53 Noun end1no
54 Elli
56 Bllh
l
•
'll aom 111.HO Mutt -.-(53*> --
ttl 140l S 10 IOO a..1ni• one (;Ela t)
'lll•StlOO Top Condition (!575A)
'IO IOOOl 111 100 Fl,,. Drtvlt'IO (40 fo3)
JlllLIMR
llNIYI 1001 Quall S1r .. t
Newp<>rt 0.ad'I
IU-HIO
•
BRJm>L Kl !DINGER
DI BA.HTA .ulA
Ml-0110 ·~
WEOIRE
hwlt11•
BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
"'·• r. I JJ r1 1 ,, ,. ~' • 1 •,
837-4800 493-4S I I
NABERS
CADILLAC
COMMELL
CHEVROLET
''\.~It"'"'' Ill. ,
11r-.l\\1I-"-\
546-1200
'15 Plc*...\Jp. RUM good
Need• btek• 1700 080
5'8-8077 Mk '°' Alclt
'73 MUSTANG GRANDE
1owner.88K, ~I mllee
S2400.84M817
'73 Pinto nu Irena, ad cond
11000 obo 831-7552
'7& M......nck lo ml,
a/c,pwr ttlbk•,emlfm.
tape.oir-t 2nd car S3000
Ma.54Q Aft• IPM
'SA GT Muatang COlw 5.0
Blk-aJI xtraa-e.ooo ml $18,000-Pem ~29
'77 Bobcat. .. tpd, look• ' run._ good. S785/obo,
Cell 5"1-1158 att 5pm
• •
' \
~---WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1984 0 p A NG E c 0 u NT v c A L I ~ (1 ~ N I A L 5 c E NT ~
Aloha bandit sees red after, heist
Robber grabs booby-trapped cash,
may· have received dye. gas surprise
weeks, Heaped thanks to an ac-
complice behind the wheel of a
getaway car, police said. But in· vesti~tors say the stubborn red d)e
mark1n, could lead to the man's
arrest i he's spotted in the next few
days. It won't wash off.
.s~ud a man w'4rio a tan florar
Hawaiian shin and a black ba ball
cap approached a teller ancl opened a
blue ch~kbook containina a note
that said, .. , hi is a robbery;•
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. ~,...'""' A bank robber known for wearing
colorful Hawaiian print 5hins during
· several recent holdup may be seeing
red today. thanks to a rigged packet of
money he picked up Tuesday in a
Coast
Arson Is the only crime to
Increase In Laguna Beach
In past six months.I A3
Coastline College tells
students they oan park
free In school lots./ A3
California
LAX police 'hero' had a
flip side, psychologist
says.I AS
Nation
Reagan administration
trims defJclt bv ~-:a .5 · liilllon]l4-~ --:-~
'Mondale's getting a bit
Irritated by Jesse Jack·
son'scommentsJAS
World
Soviets send formal
statement protesting Re-
agan' s Joke./ A8
People
Find out how to change
one room Into two at this
weekend's Southern
Callfornla Home and Gar·
den Show.18 1
With wood-staining pro-
jects, paying attention to
detail saves time and
money./81
Food
Entertaining American·
style means select Ing a
menu that draws on cul·
I nary traditions of many
cultures.IC1
Sports
Founulin Valley heist.
The packet was designed to spray
tear-gas and an insoluble red dye at
the bandit minutes after he took it1 The so-<:alled ''aloha checkbook ban·
dit.''_ who may be re~pons1ble for
5even other holdups in the past two
Happily married
Tuesday~s holdup occurred at
about I p.m. at Fullerton Savinp and
Loan A socation, 18020 Brook.burst
St.
Fountain Valley Lt. Rod Gillman
Gillman said the m n demanded
bills in SSO and $20 denommauon
He 'l&td the teller handed him two
riged packets of monC)·, alon wuh
5everal huoared doUars m ca h. The
robber was walkinaacross the parking
lot when at least one-of the packtts
,, .........
Pralcleiit Ronald R~an and wife Haney
poee for a weddlna plioto with daqhter
Patti Dam ancl lier brtdeiroom. yoaa
lnatructor Paul Grilley. follcnrt.na their l ?-
minute marriage ceremon y at the Bel Air
Hotel ln Loe Anaelea Taeaday. At left are
the &room 'a parenta, Terrance and Donna
Grtlley.
SU.pervisors spar
on developmenf
of south county
Nestande and Riley
oppose fund delay
for animal shelter
By JEFF ADLER
Ofti.o.IJNat .....
to supply government suppon sys-
tems 10 the developmg south county
such as the animal shelter. "let's be
honest and not put in any more
houses down there."
-Brace Reatande
-.
nplodcd
•• ccording to one WJtn s. the guy
kind of disappeared in a bia ora
cloud,°' Gillman id.
Dc-lpite 1be tear gas, the robber,,, s
able to climb into a nearb) •
apparently dn' en by an coomphcc.
The (ar, believed to t>e a tan, 19705
To) Ota Kdan, was seen driving south
on the nearby San Diego Frecwa).
Fountain Valley Detecthe Darryl
ancc sa1d officns reco\ ercd some of . .
Irvine council
shuns support
of new corridor
·why do we have
to lead the charge
for this freeway?'
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of ...............
lrvinc City Council members
backed off supportina the proposed
~ian--:li'llAftUin --+lia T~
__ <.J2D~2L1.1WltUJ:lllU cou.ruy official
that raises environmental conocms .
overthe proposed freeway.
As proposed. the letter to Murray
Storm of Oranae County's En-
vironmental Management A&cncy,
began: "The City of Irvine suppons
the Sao Joaquin Hills Transponauon
Corridor as a major link in the tate
and county highway network .... "
But lt Tuesday's council mccti~
that cxpl'C$Sion of suppon was
challenged b) several tesidcnu o
complained about noise. air pollution
and other potential problems. as-
sociated with the pro~ freeway.
The residcnu also chat'Jed 1be city
v.'IS surrcnderins its bargainina
pov.er by voicing unmediate.suppc;>n
for the project.
The San Joaquin Hills Frccwa)
would be a 1.._mdc linlr> between the
Corona del Mar Freeway and the San
DIPlm F~ near San Juan ~heeou.IA+-·-~
foothills.
Mayor David Sills pomted out that
the City Council is on record as
supporting tbe San ~ HillS
freeway.
But Councilman Larry Aarao said
that vote of support was taken in
1978, before most of the current
council membcn were elc<:ted. He
argued the city should not express 1t.s
(Pleue eee IRVIKB/ A2)
Myste ci;ash
in Colombia
kills Lagunan
Second American dies. 2 others in custody·
after incident at isolated desert airstrip
By DAVID BISHOP
o.11 .... c.. $ •• t
A Laguna Beach man reportedly
linked to the CIA. was killed in a
mysterious airplane crash in South
America, July 28.
Stephen Lee Sadler of Laauna
Beach was killed m the crash thai
killed another Amencan and left t~d'
othtt men hospitalized, officials in
Colol'Jlbta said. The two surv1vors arc
being held by Colombian govern-
ment offiaals on charges relating to
violattn& th.at countt)'s airspace. a
d1plo mat1c source said.
Sadler. SS, who owned the Unfon
76 p s station on North Coast
Highwa} in Laguna Beach, died when
the plane in v.bich be was Oyin&
apparcntl} era.shed ~bile takina off
from a clandestine. unmarked llr·
smp 10 a remote desert rqjon o(
GuaJ1ra m the most eastern portton oI
Colombia:
.\ccording to rcsidenu who knew
him. Sadler had worked for the U.
Central Intelligence .\gene) and
(Pleue eee LAGtnrAJlf/ A2)
Cathy Mockett of New·
port Beach not only was
the medalist In the USGA
Junior championships
but also captured the title
In match plav./D1
Major league baseball
owners discuss ex-
pansion at annual sum-
mer meetings.IDS
An Orange County supervisor said
Tuesday that 1f the county can't
provide suppon servtces for the
burgeoning south county, It ought to
stop the buildmg there.
Sui>erv1sor Bruce Ncstande blasted
the board durin$ lts second day of
budget deliberations after a 3-2 de-
cision to delay buildin$ an animal
shelter near Mission VieJO.
In opposina construcuon of the
shelter, Board Chairman Hamett
Wieder noted that "our prion1es arc
changing as times dccrcc." A~d
Supervisor Ralph Clark. who tn·
1uatcd the action, pointed out that the
funding slated for the project was
desperately needed elsewhere in the
county budget. .
Even though supervisors voted to
lull the prOJCCt for the coming year
and delay acquiring the land, they
voted to continue with design work
for the $2.9 million animal shelter.
Slick roa ds cause Coast crashes
Entertainment
The madam of ''The Best
Little Whorehouse In
Texas" becomes an
honest woman at the
Harlequln.184
Bualneu
A Fountain Valley "rent-
a-marketlng·depart-
ment" company Is finding
gold In computers./88
INDEX
Bridge 85
Bulletln Board A3
Bualneu 86
C.lltornla New• A4
Claultted 06-8
Comics 85
Crossword 08
Deeth Notlc• 05
H91p YourMlf 82
Hom 814
Horoaeope 07
In tM Service A6
Ann l.iildj(•-~----~2 06 Mutual Funds
National Newt A4
Oplnon A7
Paparazzi 81
Pollce Log A3
Public NotlOM 88. OM
Sport• 01-4
Stock M1~et1 8
83
7
T.i.vlalon
Tl'IMter1 83-<4
W.-ther A2
WorldN A4
Ncstande and Supervisor Thomas
Riley, who together represent the
southern part of Orange County,
voted against the delay.
Calling the board's decision "m-
sane." Nestande told the supervisors
that if they feel the county can't afford
The action came as the Board of
Supervisors considered its S 13
million capital projects budget dunng
the second day of bearings on the
county's proposed $1 .08 bilhon
(Pleue Me BUDGET I A2)
Real cop chases
not exciting, but
very dangerous
STEVE
MARBLE
NEW S BACKGROUND
ByTONYSAAVEDR~
Of .... o.IJ Nat .....
The Oranae Coast's fi rst measur-
able rain this season brought a flood
of fender-benders this morning to
local stretches of the Santa Ana. San
Dicao and Newpon frcewa)s.
The Cahforn1a H1ghwa) Patrol
rcponcd at least eight colhs1ons.
mostly mmor. on the frttways. com-
poundmg the usual morning traffic
rush between 6:30 a.m . and 8 a.m.
Minor flooding was also reported m
the fast lanes of the northbound Santa
Ana Freeway. south of 17th trcct
"for about an hour. ll was re.all) a
mess out there." CHP Officer Rid .
Stevens said. "It was the usual thtog.
People just drive a litlle too fast."
Street traffic was also snarled by the
thundersto rm which scattered ' -
showers across Southern C.ahfomia.
giv1ng some areas their first recorded
ram fall of the season. The rain seasoa
officiall) begins July I .
Rainfall this morning at the Orange
(Pleue .ee R.A.Df I A2)
Medalists'
fans hurt
in collapse
of scaffold
e Lorean jury still deliberating
~ A GEL.ES (APJ -The iur)· talks today, ndina no me or Ocl1bernt ons resumed 1 minute Clouds will roll away Thursday .-}the John Z. De Lorea!' cocaine-fCQUests and ~miun1n1 ilent bou1 late tod y a rain torm tied up ~kinaca cntercch xth da> of at PTOaJ'CU. • l ffic and dcl )'ed the jurors.
-
Co~ 11NuE o STORIE S
CouW .. .. u n ., u ., ,, ., " .. 71
• VINE SHUNS ROUTE SUPPORT •••
... 10 .. 16 .. 11
• 70 ti 71 ti 14 1'1'1DmAl
l"J;>l)()n to tbc count).
'hy do we have to be up front.
'na the charae for this freeway?" hewed
Councilwoman Sally Anne Miller
IQllCSted deletion or the finn para.
Ph of the letter, thus ehmmatina
e.xpre ion of support for the way.
The remainder of the letter is a
neutral reque t that con~ms raised
by lt'\ inc cny officials be ad.dressed in
tht' environmental rcVlew conducted
for the proposed frttway.
Deletion of the expression of
'iupport w s approved in a 4-1 vote,
with A&ra,n, Miller and council mem-
ber1 Barbara Wiener and Da' id
Baker in fa'\'or, and S1llr. oppo~ina.
Council members ~1<1 they would
conunue their discu aon of f rctway
concem$ in September when a count):
. plan to finan~ new frttway§ throu&h
developer f«s is cons1d~d. County
supervisors have delayed their own
consideration of the road f tt plan
until Oct. 3. Tl dee
TOOA\'
'°' 12 11 11 11 a a .,
11 11 IO .. a 11 ,, 71 ., a
IO M 11 71 ,. eo
LAG UN AN KILLED IN COLOMBIA ••• 64ltionO IO• I 12 pm 2 1 ~on,Vl.
W'll»9toAV ~
'1rt1 hivll 12 02 1111. 4 I CllerMIOl\.I C
90 72 ~ 14
.. 71 M II
11 74
70 M u 71 83 .. ,. 17 Prom Al
traveled frequently.
A CIA spokesman m Washington.
D.C would nt'1lher confirm nor dens· ~hcther Sadler , had ttes with the
aaency ·
According to sources who do not
want to be identified, Colombian
authonties who were called to the
ne found the bodies and the
uuured men near the plane "-tcekage,
but no indication that plant' was
carrying anything other than the four
men.
The plane was reported to be an old
twin~n11ne Loadsw model Its
1denuticat1on numben. had ~n
removed. It was destroyed 1n the
crash apd 1t isn't known "'ho was
p1loung the aircraft.
adler was reportedly ~tttl alt\C
when authonues found tht' wreckage
He was taken to the closest town of
Nazareth for medical treatment but
he died and was buned there b> a
pnest on Jul) 29. South Amencan
sources said
The identity of the other body has
not been deterrmned. The names of
the two Amencans who were bosp1-
tahzed m Barranquilla, Colombia.
ALOHA BANDIT ••.
Prom Al
Coast financial institutions over the gradually wear off, which may take
past two weeks. several weeks .
.. We're loo Iona at robberies m "But 1f he wants to tum hunsetf m.
Costa Mesa, Ne~n Beach and we'll be glad to try to help htm get ll
Huntington Beach,' Nan~ sa1d. "He off," Nance quipped.
looks good for these, and there are Depending on how the robber was
probably other areas he's hit." holding the packet, the red dye may
Jbe detective srud the use of naacd be on his face or hands. Nance said.
money pacR\$ tS a deasion made at He said anyone who sees a man dyed
each bank or savings and loan.•Thc_ .r.ed s.hQ.uld .cal,l:.lociiT p0lrce.-othCT-
, patkt!ts are designed 10 n-ptode--on-a--wi~ r"6bber-was-4esc-Rbed as a
delayed basis, usually when the Caucasian or Hisparuc man ;n his
robber ts outside the bank. 30s, about 6 feet tall wah a heavy
He said the dye does not wash off build and thick, dark collar-length
with soap and water. but must hair.
BUDGET CLASH ••.
From Al
1984-85 budget
Later, supervisors voted unani-
mously to tentatively appropnate
$732,000 during the corning year to
air condition Juvenile Hall after the
county's chief probation ·officer.
Micl'Ulfl 5aiul1mciler:-pleaded for
1mmed11te fundmg.
In making his appeaJ, Schumacher
said temperatures inside the Juvenile
holdina facility m the city of Orange
have been puged as ln&h as 98
degreC1 on hot nights, accompanled
by high hum1dtty.
Noung that the county cmplo}s
between 50 and I 00 personnel at the
hall. Schumacher told the board the
oppressive heat "obviouslv is not
conducive to moraJe." He added that
while he docs not advocate coddling
offenders. the current s1tuat1on 1s not
healthy.
The budget hearings are scheduled
to conclude today. Supervisors arc
expected to formally adopt a final
budget before Aua. 30.
have not been relea)ed
Sadler's ex-wife confirmed h~r
former hu!)band died in Colombia but
refused to give further detail~ about
the circumstances. _ .
According to M~. Sadler. he was a
former member of the U.S. Manne
Corps and worked bncfly for a
stockbroker in the city of Orange
before moving to Saigon in 1964
where he was a pilot for Atr Amenca
untll 1974 dunn~ the Vietnam War.
Sadler 1s survived by his children,
Stephanie Lynn, Sean, Stephen and
Michael, and a grandson, Jeremiah
Lynn, alt of Laguna Beach.
Memorial services were held for
SadJcr at St. C~thennc's atholtc
Church in Laguna Beach on . ug. 6.
Fltetio. 131 .. m I 1 ~W.V
SecOllO lliOf' 1 03 p 111 4 I CllitlotW H C
8.-.otow 702pm 2 1 =~
Sun .... IO<lly 11 740 pm. 1i.e g:
Tr.u1tc11y 11 I 16 • m and Ml• 41Qlln et Colufnl)j• a c 7.tt pm Colum · Moon,_ todty 11 10 06 pm.•• ~~
fl'>Ufeo.y 11 I 4 7 I m MO r-ID Ill l>.i ... l'l W01111
10 '°I> Ill. ~Oft
~ Temps °""'111
.. ~l!I ..... to 70 ( ........ ., .... ~
.. 10 FeftO
71 •• ----------a~ Extended
.. 72 . ..
to 14 " .. 10 71
71 ..
10 70 ., 70 ....
1t to ., '°
10 71
t2 71 u 71 " .. 14 ..
.. 11
Boaters 'not to blame' RAIN ••.
From Al
~r~Ti~r~~~~~ I~~.~~E~~~ car pa· llut1· on 1· n harbor Rainfall for the same llme last )Car l ~ "
was recorded at .05 of an mch, while
-the ycartr average 1s .Ol, accordu1g to
_Em_rnett Ft;ankli~. supcrvtsmg-~_t_~ ~W ~ft Ca '1!: p!;Pb1e-m;
grapher w1th Orange County FloOO---• --· con trot. pesticides f ram homes said more1sertous
ptllpo1ntcd v~s.sel wasrcs JS a m3.J9r _._ co~ln...~~tfuWna....e[Qru t.2.._, __ .,..._
~eep iliC"Day anoliifbor opento
swimmers. · Prec1pitatton uf Huntington Beach
was recorded at .10 of an inch, By KAREN &-KLEIN--_ Anderson said ... But the population
bringmg the season-to-date fiaure to °' 1t1e o..,,... • ..,, in the uplands bas arown tremcn-
.17 of an inch. Local weather watcher dous!_y durina that time. It's the J. Sherman Denny said Huntington Whtie the 10,000 boats moored in overflow of sewage and the wuhina
Beach had a small shower on July 27. Newport Harborarc an easy taraetfor down of ferulizers that bas m-
Laguna Beach received . t 2 of an biologists invest1ptina the source of creased."
inch this morning, pushing the season bay contamination, the vessels arc To support her claims. Anderson
rainfall to 14, according to amatucr not the primary souroe of bacterial cited University of Rhode Island
weatherman Joe Jahraus. pollution in Upper and Lower New-studies of Narragansett Bay, an inlet
Hydrographcr Franklin said the port Bay. a pnvate boattna consultant of the Allan tic Ocean extendina
thunderstorm was spott) throughout satd today. inland fr6m southeastern Rhode
Orange County, with some areas Sue Anderson, who spoke at a Island. Much of the tona•term data
reporting htllc or no rain. Newport Harbor Area Chamber of available on bay pollution has come
Continued heav) cloudiness with Commerce breakfast, satd studies from studies done on the East Coast.
scattered sho\\ers ts predicted for ilavc-"hewn that the flushing of Michael Wehner. an cnvironmcn·
Southern California through Thurs-sewage from small vessels ts not a tal health specialist for the county,
day, according to the National significant problem in marinas and
"Additional areas could be closed"
if the worscnina poUutJon is not
curbed, Wehner sa.id. AJthoujh New-
port Bay, atona with Huntington
Harbour and Dana Point Harbor, is
labeled "no dischafiC,'' meanma
boats arc outlawed from discharaina
wastes, some boat owners either arc unaw~ of the law or knowingly
violate 1t
Jim Bennett, supervisina engineer
for the state's Santa Ana Regional
Water Quality Control Board, also
spoke at this morning's breakfast..
along with Monaca Mazur, a county
envlronmentaJ 'health speaaJist.
Weather Service. harbors. ---------------------------· Beach temperatures arc expected to "Time and time again, the research
reach the high 7th, up from the comes up with the conclusion that
mid""60s to tow 70s tonu1h1 boats arc not a major problem,"
-----------------------------------------· Anderson said. "In fact, boats have
Teen to get year term
for Mesa murder role been shown to offer enhancement for
c>.1su ng wetlands."
Anderson was one of four panelists CHASES GOVERNED BY STRICT RULES •••
From Al
oounced dead at the scene. Puzzled
pohce believe the driver mtent1onaJly
caused the accident. But without even a name to hang on the man, his
motives become even more elusive.
According to a stud} on high-speed
cases conducted m 1982 by the
Cahfom1a Highway Patrol, the
episode m Newport Beach was a onc-
in-100 case.
The Y.ear-long study. which focused
on 10 cities including Hunungton
Beach, Fount.am Valley and West·
minster. concludes that properly ex-
ercised poltce chases are a necessary
risk 1f patrolmen are to go after
lawbreakers.
The stat1st1cs show that out of
every 100 ht~-spttd chases. 29 wilt
end tn an accident and I I in an 1nJUI).
One will conclude in death. When an
injury does occur more than 70
percent of the ume Jt will be to the
driver or occupants of the car being
chased.
'\.1 Whtie the C HP report 1s regarded
by Orange Countv lawmen as the
definitive test because of its scope.
there have been other studies that
have reached far more dramatic
conclusions.
In 1968, Phys1c1ans for Auto-
motive Safety reported that one out of
·every five pursuits ends m death and
tbat haJf the chases re!lult ma ~nous
1njury. The JrOUP clauned that 500
Americans die evcrv year because of a
, 'police c~.
The North Carolina H1ghwa) Pa-
trol conducted a one-week stud> that
same year and stated that one 1n e"cl)
.nine ch~ ends m an accident and
that one out of even-22 results m
injury.
Police say that the publtc's 1m-
Just Call
642-6086
OettY PUot
OeOvety
11 Ou.rantMd
prcsston of what happens dunng a ·
chase bas been hopelessly bent and
twisted by tclev1s1on and film.
"You don't shoot at cars," said
Carson, answcnng a question that
was asked by several citizens follow-
ing the chase that ended tragicall} m
Newport Beach
"A bullet won't stop a car:·
Fountain Valley Capt. Bill DcN1sc
added. "All tt does 1s exacerbate the
dCJr« of mst.abihty and if you kill the
dnvcr. you end up with 3,000 pounds
of metal going out of control.
"A person who chooses to run from
a cop 1s probably a guy who 1s not
goto' to want to let you get the best of
him, ' DcN1s1 said.
Any use of force to cut off a chase
tends to increase the nsk of accident
and IOJUry, the CHP study concludes.
Also, pursuits by several poltce cars
increase the odds that the chase wilt
end v1olcntly.
In Orange Count}, most ctty pohce
departments wdl not permit more
than two pohce cars to be involved m
a chase at any one time
The helicopter and radio arc the
weapons of choice.
"There 1s JUSt nothtni more ludi-
crous than having eight or nine pohce
un1ts chasmg someone," DcN1s1 said
"There's no need "
\ifost count> pohcc agencies also
CXP,CCt officcl"S to pull back and
~imply pace the pursued dnver when
the chase has traveled more than a
few Cit} blocks.
"ff there's a clear danger." Carson
said. "we'll dJsconllnue the pursuit A
lot depends on where it 1s. lf it's the
freeway. that's one thing. But 1f it's
down the m1ddk of Balboa Island m
tht summer. no wa\."
who spoke to a gathenna of the A I 7-year-old youth onajnalty occurred. Baker had been canng for
The nsks of the c.hase were evident chamber's marine division about charged with murdcnnga Costa Mesa Telles, the son of a close friend, but
m I 977 when Fountain Valle> police water quaHty in Newport Harbor. womp.n in May was told Tuesday that the two had argued, according to
officers chased the dnvcr of a stolen Increasing chemical and bactenal be wilt be sentenced to a one-year Jail prosecutors.
truck int.o Huntington Beach where pollutton in Newport's waterways has term in exchange fortcstifyingapmst At first, both 81czuoslc.i and Telles
he ran a red hght and slammed into a been the subject of mynad studies by bis friend, the 16-ycar-old alleged were charged with first-degree
sedan on Beach Boulevard. county, state and national aaencies. killer. murder and both were cenified as
An I I -year-old girl mitn~ in the Parts of Upper Newport Bay have Costa Mcsan Kurt Biczunski adults for trial purposes. However, a
sedan wtth her mother and sister was been quarantined to swimmers for pleaded iuilty 10 OranJC County subsequent investiption determined
killed. The mother was cnt1caJI) the past decade. Superior Court to a sing.le count of that wb.ilc Biczunski wttnessed the
m1ured. The girl's father. ndmg m In recent months, studies have being an accessory after the fact of slavina. he was not involved.
another car close behind. witnessed stron&Jy linked bacterial water pol-murdCT. Jud&e James Smith said .twe reached the conclusion
the whole thing. lution to intestinal diseases in swim-Biezunski will be sentenced to spend Biczunski didn't participate, but
"It was horrioly tragic," DcNis1 mcrs. a year in the county jail and three helped him (Telles) afterward,"
recalled "The real nsk in the City ts And while some eitperts have years probation ifbc testifies truthful-Mquirc wd. "He provided him with
that the dnvcr could be racm& down blamed the poltuuon on careless boat ly in the case, according to Deputy an alibi."
Brookhurst Street and make a tum owners, who flush fecal waste into the District Attorney Mike Maguire. Telles is charged with first-degree
almost anywhere and be nght in the bay. Andenon said the real culprits The youth was permitted to plead murder in Baker's death and "the use
middle res1dent1al area with kids arc the public sewage system and the auilry in exchange for bis testimony of a deadly weapon in the corn·
pla) mg out in the street " homeowners who wasb fcnilizen and against his friend1 16-year-oJd Steven m1ss1on of a murder. Baker was
The profile of the dnver "'ho pesttctdes from their lawns mto Telles, charicd with the beating death beaten with a pipe, Maauirc said. If
attempts to outrun police 1s hardly drainage channels that ultimately of Eugenia .Baker, a 60-ycar-old Costa CQnvictcd, be faocsa sentence ranging
that of the hardened cnm1nal or the flow into the coastal waters. Mesa woman, last May 19. from 26 years to life imprisonment.
celebrated road wamor sho"' n m "The populaton of boats m New-Baker's body was found buried in a Pre-trial prooccd.ings 10 the case a.tt
film, the CHP stud) shows port Harbor today is relatively the planter at her Cedar Place home the scltcduled for SepL 11 in Central
The pursued dnver most often same as it was I 0 ycan a&o," day after the kilting is allqed to have Mun~ipal Court in Santa Ana.
turns out to be a man m his early 20s rr===============:;-;:;;;;;;;:=:=:=~;:;;;;;;;:~;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;:;;::::::;:::;:==~ with no cnminal record who is trymg
to get awa} because he has commitcd
a simple traffic "iolauon On the
average. the chase takes place 1n the
city, during the late afternoon or night
and ends after one mile
.. Most police agencies will tell you
that 11's stupid to have a 100 mph
chase O\er a traffic offense." DeN1s1
said. "If 1t begins because of a senous
crime we'll chase them as long and
hard as possible But we'll keep 1t as
controlltd as poss1ble too.
"We'll radio ahead and use liahts
and sirens to let people know that
somethmg's going on The watch
commander has the dut) to decide
when to cut off a chase and 1hcofficers
damn well better obey."
Gem
Talk
Bv 1 C HVMPHRTES ·
Cnt1fiecJ C#!moJotm. ACS
THE DIAMOND DESERT
of Namibia
What do yoo lib about tbe Dally Atot'> Wbat don't yoo like~ Call tbe
number at ldt and your me11a1e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to tbt appropriate edhor.
The unceasing Hatch for
diamond• tekea mineral explorer•
Into out·of·the-way placea all over
the wortd One auch place I• the eo-
called "diamond deeert" of Namibia
In Africa. Namibia I• one of the nner
countrl" of Africa, Mtabllthed after
World War II In the W•t African
deMrt. The giant O.S... mining
lnterett• have Mt•blllhed • gold·
mining town there, and bMutlful
diamond •P9Clmen1 are befng dug
out or the duert. W~lbla
touc:Mt the .... the mt hive
been expanded In a unique way: the Ha hu actuaJty been puahed btlCk
behind giant wall• of eand '°' u
much u ten mll• Thi• enabfel the
miner• to get diamond• that were
Tbt same !4-bour H •ertn1 service may bt used to record leUera to tbe
editor on any topic. Contributors to oar Leuers column most lncludt tbtlr
name and ltlepbone nambu for venflcatlon. No clrcululon rails, please.
Ttll os wbat'• 011 your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Circulation 71ot/Ml-4m
Claulfled advartlalng 714/M2·W1t
All other d partment• M2~21
MAIN OFFICE
2:10 w °', St CCII I lolell CA IU a • 1 Cosll l,lfM CA m2t
H. L. Schwertz Ill
Publisher
~beneeth ·~ boUom.:Juet at the Outeh have recfalmed land
from the ooetn for rich farmlnl:.n~
Roeemery Churchmen
Controller
Stephen F. Cerezo
Production
.ManagP-r
Oon1ld L. Wllll1m1
Circu 1lon
Manag 1
VOl. T7, NO. 221
•
Jor eltlel, the Africant and 0. h•~· puahed the ... beck to nnd
diamond•. It 111 dramatic t•tlmomy
to the high value 'wtileh mankind
plac:ea upon diamond•. The demand
ror the orJd'a moat pradout 11on11
contln to t•t mart'• abfllly to find
a growtng auppty.
MEM8 AMERICAN OF.M SOCIETY~-t'-.&'~"""
\809 NEWPORT 8LVO , COST A ME A '
INC 1048
r1c1td-Matter Crtarge
J
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1984 --
e .a1rcras
Coast
Arson Is the only crime to
Increase In Laguna Beach
In last six months./ A3
Coastline College tells
students they can park
free In school lots./ A3
California
LAX police 'hero' had a
flip side, psychologist
says./A5
Nation
f 1111 111111 . ,
_ ORANGECOUNTY CALIFO~NtA -::>5 CEN'!S
-I an
Second American died. 2 others beld·
in incident at isolated desert airstrip 1
By DAVID BISHOP
o.IJ ..... C.11111 ....
. A Laauna Bttch man rtportedly
hnked to the CIA, was killed in a
mysterious airplane era h in South
America, Jw)' 28.
Stephen Lee Sadler of Laguna
Beach was killed m the crash that
killed another Amcncan and left two
other men hospitalized, officials in
Colombia said. The two survivors are
being held by Colombian eovem-
mcnt officials on cha~ relatina to
violating that country s airspace. a
diplomatic source $aid.
Sadler. SS, who owned the Union
76 gas station on North Coast
Highway in Laguna Beach, died when
the pl'ane in which he was flying
apparently crashed while tak.ing off
. fro.m .a dandcstin~..1t u~k~ air-stnp· m a rcmotc-OCSCA-rqron 111'
Guajira in the most east.cm porUon of
Colombia.
According to rcsldcnts who kMW
him, Sadler had worked for the U.S.
Central lnteltipcc A,ency and
traveled freqUtntly.
A OA spokesman in Wasbingtoa,
D.C. would neither confirm nor denY
whether Sadler bad ties with the
aaency.
Accordina 10 sou.rca who do not
want 10 be uicntific.d. Colombian
authorities who were called to the
scent found the bodies and the
injured men near the plane Wftickage,
but oo indication that Plane was
c:arryuig anything other than the four
men.
The plane was reported to be an old
twin-eocine Load.star model. Its
identification numbicts · bad been
LAGtJJllA1'/ A2)-Reagan administration
trims deficit by $3.5 -~m-....rtmrUA4 -
Probe ordered
I
Mondale's geftlng a bit
Irritated by Jesse Jack-
son's comments./ AS
World
Soviets send formal
statement protesting Re-
agan 's joke./ Al
People
Find out how to change
one room Into two at this
weekend's Southern
CaJlfornla Home and Gar-
den Show./81
With wood-staining pro-
jects, paying attention to
detail saves time and
money./81
Food
Entertaining American-
style means select Ing a
menu that draws on cul-
inary traditions of many
cultures./C1
:::·:~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Sports
Cathy Mockett of New-
port Beach not only was
the medalist In the USGA
Junior championships
but also captured the title
In match olav ./D1
Major league baseball
owners discuss ex-
pansion at annual sum-
mer meetlngs./D3
Entertainment
The madam of "The Best
little Whorehouse In
Texas" becomes an
honest woman at the
Harlequln./84
Buaineu
A Fountain Valley "rent-
a-marketing-depart-
ment'1 company ls finding
gold In computers.Jae
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletln Board
8ualnesa
Callfornla News
Claaslfled
ComlC8
Crossword
DMth Notloea
HelpYouraelf
Home
HotOICO~
lnthes.Mce
Ann Lander• -uatOIJ fUnU'·-----'-'--
Natlonat News
Opinion
Paperazzl
Police Log
Publfc Not
Sporta
85
A3
86
A4
08-8
85
08
05
82
91·2
07
A8
82
Stock Market•
TiiiYl~on------~--
Theatert
WMthet
Wor1d Newt
Happily married
President Ronald Rea,ran and wUe ?fancy
poee for a wed~ plaoto with daqhter
Patti Dam and · 6er brlde8J'OC>m, Yot•
~tor Paul Grilley, folloWlnC their l"?-
U'M14l1 ..
minute ma.rrtaae ceremony at the Bel Air
Hotel lo L09 Aneelea TueH&y. At left are
the o-oom'• parent., Terrance and Donna
GrUley.
. .
in NB athlete' S
OC Jail death
'Superb swimmer's'
collapse blamed -
on heart failure -----
By STEVE MARBLE
eumincd by the county coroner and
t.bc district attorney's office. '"It"s a real tragic case ... Olson said
toda)'. ~DWing the arrest a.od book-
ina he was coopcn.ti"e and thCrc were
no incidents at all We don•t k:no -.mat bapPcnCd."
..................................................................... ml!!!~ ... --.-. .. ~~~...::.:~ .. n.111 ...... An rnvestigatJon bu been ordered
Fam.ill embers said tbey arc
qunuom \he &.alb but did
Superviso~S-Spa -
on development
of south county
Nestande and Riley
oppose fund delay
for animal shelter
By JEFF ADLER
Of ho.llJ ..... ""'
An Oranic County supervisor said
Tuesday that 1f the county can't
provtde support services for the
burgeoning south county, it ought to
stop the buildmg there.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande blasted
the board dunns its second day of
budget deliberations after a 3-2 de-
cision to delay buildin$ an animal
shelter near Mission VieJO.
Nestande and Supervisor Thomas
Riley, who together represent the
southern part of Orange County,
voted against the delay.
Calling the board's dec1s1on "in-
sane," Nestande told the supety1sors
that if they feel the county can't afford
to supply government support sys-
tems m the developing south county
such as the animal shelter, "let's be
honest and not put m any more
houses down there.''
In opposing construction of the
shelter. Board Chairman Hamett
Wieder noted that "our pnorttes arc
chang.ang as times decree." And
Supervisor Ralph Clark, who m-
1ttated the action. pointed out that the
fundmg slated for the project was
desperately needed elsewhere in the
COU(lty budget.
Even though supen'1sors voted to
kill the project for the comma year
and delay acquiring the land, they
voted to continue with design work
for the $2. 9 milhon animal shelter.
The action came as the Board of
Supervisors considered its $I 3
mil hon capital projects bud&et dunng
the second day of hearings on the
county's proposed $1.08 bilhon
(Pleue .ee BUDGET/A2)
Real cop chases
not exciting, bllt
very dangerous
STEVE
MARBLE
NEWS BACKGROUND
Bruce Neatande
into the death of Grant Richard
Cooling. a tall. muscular 22->ear-<>ld ~ Beec-b--who
died Tuesday after being taken to
Orange County Jail.
Cooling. a standout swimmer who
starred at Corona del Mar High and
Orange Coast College. ~as taken to
the county jail ~ .. Tuesday for
failing to appear on a p3tr of traffic
warrants.
Twelve hours later, Coolin& was
JX:C?Aounced dead aft.er collaps1na in a
Jail bold101 area. C?r'anic County
Sbenff Lt. Richard Olson sa1d.
Family members said they were
told the cause of death appeared to be
heart failure but the sheriffs office
said toda> it is not prepared to
officiall> announce a cause of death.
An autopsy was to be performed
and the details of Cootina's death
CoolinJ, .,.'JK> was studyiq busiDeU
It USC, W'ti in supurb s.bapc,~11:!':. m1~,000 R*USada 4a) io..a..pooJ
.. ·s coaches bad always told bi.Di
be had a good chance at the OfyrzJpiq
but even though be was a terrific
swimmer. swimming wasn't all that
important to him." explained Mar-
jone Cooling. lbe youna man·s
mother.
According to the sheriff's office,
Cooling was IJTCSted at 3:07 Lm.
Tuesday as be sat m a Jacuzzi at a
'friend's home in l..quna Hills. Ma-
jorie Coolin& said her son had gooe to
a friend's house after at~ a
Monday evening concert at lrvia
Meadows. •.
Olson sa.td Coo~ who waa
booked at the county jail at 3:59 a.m ...
qs allov.'Cd to eat a noon meal with
tpleue eee PRO / A2)
Slick roads cause Coast crashes ·
The ~ason's first rain in the
Orange Coast this mornmg brought a
flood offender-benders to stretches of
the Santa Ana, San Diego and
Newport freeways.
The California H.gllwa) Patrol
reported e1aht colhs1ons. mostly
minor. on the freeways. compound·
mg the usual morning traffic rush
between 6:30 a.m. and 8 a.m.
"For about an hour. it was really a
mess out there," said CHP Officer
Rick Stevens ... It was the usual thmg.
people just dnve a httle too fast"
Street traffic was also snarled by the
first ratn recorded in the Southland
for the season bc&Jnmna July I
Rainfall this momma at the Ora nae
County Fairgrounds was reponcd 11
. IS of an inch for the 24-bour period
bqJnmng Tuesday at 8 Lal. Rainfall
for the same tune last year was
recorded at .OS of an inch, with the
yearly average bein& .01. ac:cordina io
Emmct1 Frankhn. supcrvtsina hydro-
p-apher with Orange County Aood
Control.
Aloha
bandit
sees red
a(terjob
@¥
Orange Co111 DAILY PIL.OTIWldnuday, Au,gult 1G, 1984
e Lor eanjur)r still deliberating
w ay Thursday traffic nd delayed the JUrors o
d"'c as many 1 miles co 1 to d ntown l.OsA l
The six men and six women left 1he
courthouse Tuesday a.ncr a total of22
hours of talks incc they ~ivtd the case a Wetk o.
U, S Omnct Judac Rohen
l'.abs¥1i id he licvtd they were "worldna h res·· bua h d 001 b rd
ny v.ord rom the unusually qu1e1
JW'Y on ho~ they were doina.
The JUron have whh th m tn the
jury room hundreds of ~ or
transcnpt of video and audio tapes
wbtth arc the key evidence.
Coutal
Nwe>nMm ..... NGl'f~.v. ~~ Omllfla
Orlando Ptlrnlptlnot ~
u " n 7 el 17
17 ,, .. ,, ... 10
It 7t .. 7t
" r. H 92 , ..
tOJ t2
17 72
ROBE LAUNCHED IN OC JAIL DEATH ••• ll'lloem 1 u ""= u 11 77 t7 ~.: to homAl
re t of the pnsoners and tllen
llapsed in holding ~rca at 1:57
School swim team and was a member or the CttW team at Orana,c Coau
Collqe. He transfercd to USC last
year and was a member of the Sigma
Nu fraternity.
"He was a l~dcr, ••his mother said.
"He had a presence that commanded
a great deal of attention."
During the summer months. he
had started an auto-detailing business
with a friend.
"He was so well orpnited," the
mother said. ''l'm sinina here at his
desk ri&ht now and he has all bis
appointments wntten up. his cards
arranged perfcctl). He knew what he
was doing."
Funeral plans arc n.ot yet complete.
Family members said the)' hope to
start a scholarship in thett son's
name.
Tldea
TOOAY lt~Yi
IOAY ~
Fitlll NO" 12 ~2 a."' 4 t Clwtllloft.l.C ,.,.. 10w t )1 am 1 1 CllMMlon.W V
'-Id hf9o!\ 1 ~ , m 4 I Chattone.H C ~...., 702pm 21 ~.,_.
I 12p"'
HttGNI W..-~· ..au VS 0.. OI C~t .. • ~~ IO u .. .. ... 7t G,...,,..,.. .. ., .. H9ttlOtCI u
17 70 ....... ,,
a M Honoi\1111 91 ... .. Hollt!Oft IO .. ., ll'ICMnllpolle ..
IO IO Jad<llOtl Ma ..
~~ ea ,,
==rCtty ., 1t .. .,
""'° tO • Ald!l'llOll4 ti 13 ·-19 ... IO
111.oula IO 12
8t ..... Tal\!Cll9 ll ,.
·-~Cny .. 11
8111 AntonlO .. .. • .,. Olaoe ., 1r
M . .,.,.,_,_ 70 M
hn.Jual\ .. " 7t to SI Sta lotttla et M &Miiia 11 17 .. = tO 70 .. ., '° 71 Spolltllt .. M .. Syracuee 7t IO t3 Tooek• tt IO 13 71 EAGUNAN KILLED IN COLOMBIA •..
tuft••• lod•r at 740 pm, na. = ~at t ta• m llNI M(91Qain 114 ,. .... _...,. • c 1Upm . ~-9 •
MOOft , .... IOOty al 10 05 Pm , MU =~
fftutlday at• 47 am Ind,_ li8Aln at Dalle6-#t Wonll
It IS u
70 ,.lllelltoflv tl U •"'-73 tt KMMICl!y n
TlletOfl IO ~ TutU 92 71 ..,
W-'llflOlon 13 71 .. WICMa ts .. Prom A l • '
removed. It was destroyed 1n the
crash and tt isn't known who was
J)1lotm1 the aircraft.
Sadler was reponedly sull alive
when authonues found the wreckage.
He was taken to the closest town of
Nazareth for medical treatment but
he died and was buned there by a
priest on July 29. South American
sources said. .
The identity of the other body bas
not been determined. The names of
the two Amencans who were hosp1·
t.alizcd in BarranquiUa, Colombia.
have not been released.
Sadler's ex-wife confirmed her
former husband died in Colombia but
refused to give further details about
the circumsLanccs,
According to Mrs. Sadler, he was a
former member of the U.S. Marine
Corps and worked briefly for a
nockbrokcr 1n the city of Orange
before movmg to Saigon in 1964
where he was a pilot for Air America
unttl l 974 dunnJ the Vietnam War.
Sadler 1s survived by his children,
Stephanie Lynn. Sean, Stephen and
Michael, and a grandson, Jeremiah
Lynn, all of Laguna Beach.
Memorial services were held for
Sadler at St. C,athenne's Catholic
Church in Laauna Beach on Aug. 6.
10 ~ p"' • °'Y'Oft
Temps '*'-0..~ OettOlt
Dl.*itfl
.. Le llPMO r,: J= .. to ,.,.,
.H 17 LUVeoat
3 u I.Attia Aodoc 10 L::r to tt L 17 IT
t7 .. .. 73
" eo
" ... ea .,
71 .. ----------.. 70 :; fa Extended
"'n .... IO '4
t2 ..
IO 71 ,. 84.
.. ., w ............ .. • " 10 W~ton.De 15 71 t3 • 11 ...
ALOHA BANDIT SEES RED? •.•
hOmAl
Hawaiian shin and a black baseball
cap approached a teller and opened a
blue checkbook cont.amma a note
that said. "This is a robbery."
GiJlman said the man demanded
btlls in $50 and $20 dcnominatJons.
He said the teller handed him two
riged packets of money, along with
several hundred dollars in cash. The
robber was walking across th~ parlung
lot when al least one of the packe~
exr.loded.
'According to one witness, the guy
kind of disappeared m a big orange
cloud," Gillman said.
Despite the tear gas, the robber was
able to climb Ulto a nearby car,
apparently dnven by an accomplice.
The car, believed to be a tan, 1970s
Toyota scda.n, was seen dnvrna south
on the nearby San Otego Freeway.
Fountain Valley Detective Darryl
Nance said officers recovered some of
the dyed money and the robber's
black cap in the parking lot outside
the-savings and oen. The robbeF
apparently made off with several
hundred dollars, police said.
Nance said the robber's apparel. his
blue checkbook and the holdup note
BUDGET CLASH ...
From Al
t 984-85 budget
Later. supervisors voted unani-
mously to tentauvely appropnate
$732,000 dunng the coming year to
air cond1tJon Juvenile Hall after the
coun1)"s chief proballon officer,
Michael Schumacher. pleaded for
immediate funding.
In malcmg his appeal. Schumacher
said temperatures inside the JUvcnile
hold1D1 faC1ltty m \he c1\y of Orancc
have been gauged as high as 98
degrees on hot ni&hts. accompanied
by high humid1t}
Nollng that the county employs
between 50 and 100 personnel at the
hall, Schumacher told the board the
oppressive heat .. obviously 1s not
conducive to morale." He added that
whtle he does not advocate coddhn&
offenders, the current sttuauon is not
healthy.
The budget hcanngs arc scheduled
10 conclude today. Supervuors are
ellpected to formally adopt a final
budget before Aug. 30.
have I~ investigators to beheve the . Olymp1· c Games wrap up Fountam Valley holdup was com-
mitted by the same man who hau
robbed at least seven other Orange
Coast financial institutions over the • d ~ b th t · :~~;·b:!~~~~;!,,r0~ciesand lll a war. S, EJOffi rea S
Huntiniton Beach," Nance said "He
looks good for these, and there arc
• ..probabb'.oth.er areas he's hit.:: __
The detective said tht use of ri&ged
money packets is a decision made at
each bank or savin~ and loan. The
packets arc designed to explode on a
delayed basis, usually when the
robber is outside the bank.
He said the dye does not wash off
with soap and water, but must
gradually wear off. which may take
several weeks.
"But 1f he wants to tum h1m~lf m.
we'll be glad to tr) to help him get 1t
off," Nance quipped.
Depending on how the robber was
holding 1he packet. the red dye ma}
be on h1s face or hands, Nance said.
He said an)'one who secs a man dyed
red should call local police. Other·
wise. the robber was descnbed as a
Caucasian or H1spamc man JD his
30s, about 6 feet tall with a heavy
build and thick, dark collar-len&th
hair.
Telephon ed bomb hoax d elays three fligh ts
as IOC prestdent presents final awar
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The long
pany called the Olympics wound
down in a welter of awards, banners
and bomb threats.
Olympic Villages emptied of ath-
letes Tuesday. but security was "at
peak levels until the athletes leave1 which is tomorrow (Wednesday),'
said Los Angeles Olympic Orpruzing
Committee General Manager Harry
Usher.
Los Angeles announced 1hat 1t was
keeping up the lavender, chrome
yellow and turquoise Olympic ban·
ncrs. -
And police searched three Jets at
Los Angeles lntemallonal A1rpon
after a telephoned bomb hoax -the
latest m a senes that began Monday
with a real bomb.
targets had left Southern Caltforma
·by Tuesday morning. Usher said.
But a telephoned bomb hoax -that
night delayed three Eastern Airlines
flights for SOO people at LAX. among
them the Nigcriart Olympic dcl·
eption. Tbe all-clear was finally
given around midnight.
A day earlier police OffJCCr James
Pearson found and disarmed a bomb
on a bus at LAX. But on Tuesday
Police Chief Daryl Gates said
Pearson admitted plantm& the bomb
himself, apparently to appear a hero
to his superiors.
Pearson was held in heu ofS60.000
bail after bis arrest.for investiption
of possessimt a dcstructi ve devtce .
0Iymp£Teve( liiiget&I and ban-
ners affixed to lampposts on 12S
males of Los Angcld city streets flew
on. unless they were stolen.
"We intend to keep lhose banners
on the standards where they arc, and J
hope they'll stay up there for a very
long time," Mayor Tom Bradley said
after Usher announced the donation
of 10.000 banners to the city.
Some communities prepared to sell
some of the 30,000 banners and other
Olympic-related items whose "fes·
ttve feder:llism .. color scheme graced
Southern California from Sant.a
-Barbara to San-01cgG duAaa-t ... be~-·~
Games
CHASES GOVERNED BY STRICT RULES ...
ABC-TV estimated that 180
m1lhon people saw all or part of its 16-
da} Games coverage. compared to
140 million for the minisencs
"Roots" in January 1977, and 130
Teen gets year's term
for Mesa murder role
From Al
nounced dead at the scene .. Puzzled pression of what happens during a
police believe the driver intentionally chase has been hopelessly bent and
caused the accident. But without even twisted by television and film.
a name· to hang on the man, his ''You don't shoot at cars," said
motives become even more elusive. Carson, answenng a question that
According to a study on high-speed was asked by ~veral c1t1zens follow.
cases conducted in 1982 by the JDg the chase that ended tragically m
California Highway Patrol. the Newpon Beach.
episode in Newpon Beach was a one-"A bullet won't stop a car."
in-IOOcase Fountain Valley Capt Bill DeNisc
Theyear-longstudy. which focused added. "All It docs 1s exacerbate the
on 10 c1t1es including Huntington" dCFCC of inst.ability and if you kill the
Beach, Fountain Valle} and West-dnver, you end up with 3.000 pounds
minster. concludes that properly ex=-' of metal going out of control.
creiscd police chases are a necessary "A person who chooses to run from
nsk if patrolmen are to go after a cop 1s probabl} a guy who 1s not
lawbreakers · gom& 10 want to let you get the best of
The statistics sho"A that out of him." DeNis1 said
every I 00 h1pi-speed chases. 29 will Any use of force to cul off a chase
end in an accident and 11 in an tnJUr) tends to increase the nsk of accident
One will conclude m death When an and IDJUI), the CHP stud} concludes
lDJut)' does occur more than 70 Also. pursuits by several police cars
percent of the time 1t will be to the increase the odds that the chase will
driver or occupants of the car bemg end violently.
chased. In Orange County, most city police
While the CHP report 1s regarded departments will not permit more
by Orange County lawmen as the than two police cars to be mvolved m
dcfimtJve lest because of its scope. a chase al any one ume.
there have been other studies that The hehcopter and radio arc the
have reached far more dramatic weapons of choice.
conclusions. "There is just nothing more lud1·
In t 968. Ph}s1c1an~ for Auto· crous than having eight or mne ~hce
motive Safety reported that one out of units chasing someone." DeN1s1 said.
rvery five pursum ends in death and "There's no need."
-~--------mrllion -for-the-i976 Mno1m1tl'ntC'""art-t----~ Games. A 17-year-old you1h oriJinally occumd. Baker bad been canng for
The risks of the chase were evident The network hasn't decided charged with murdering a Costa Mesa Telles, the son of a close friend, but
in 1977 when Fountain Valley police whether to pay the LAOOC a final woman in May was told Tuesday that the two had argued. according to
officers chased the driver of a stolen $I 5 million owed by Sept. 1 or seek a he will be sentenced to a one-year jail prosecutors.
truck into Huntington Beach where reduction due 10 a 14-nation boycott term in exchange for testifyinaagamst At first, both Biezunsk.i and Telles
he ran a red light and slammed mto a led by the Soviet Union. bis friend, the 16-year-old alleged were charged with first-degree
sedan on Beach Boulevard. · · killer murder and both were certified as
An II Id I di h "Myguessisthatwc'renotgo1Dgto Cos.ta Mesan Kurt B1czunski d 1 fi 'al H -year-o gir n n~ m t c seek any reduction, .. ABC News and a u ts or tn purposes. owcver. a
sedan with her mother and sister was Spons President Roone Arlcdac told pleaded iutlty m OranJt County subsequent investigation determined
kilJed. The mother was critically The Los Angeles Times. "Technically Superior Court to a single count of that while Biezunsld witnessed the
tnJUred. The girl's father. nding m speaking. we're entitled to a reducuon bemg an accessory after the fact of slaying, he was not mvolved.
another car close behmd. witnessed .. butldon'ttbJnkanybody'scoinato murder. Judge James Smith said .. We reached the conclusion
the whole thmg. press anything." Biezunski will be sentenced to spend Biezunskt didn't participate, but
"It was homoly tra$}c." DeNis1 Meanwhile. three offiaals received a year in the county jail and three helped him (Telles) afterward."
recalled. "The real nsk m the city is Olympic Order awards Tuesday from years probation 1fhe tcsufies trutbfuJ. Maguire said. "He provided him with
that the dnver could be racing down lntemationaJ Olympic Committee ly in the case, accordina to Deputy an alibi."
Brookhurst Street and make a turn President Juan Antonio Samaranch. Distnct Attorney Mike Mquire. Telles 1s charged with first-degree
almost anywhere and be nght 10 the Th IOC' htnh h The youth was permitted to plead murder in Baker's death and the use middle res1dentJal area w11h kids e 5 .,.est onor went to guilty in exchange for bJs testimony of a deadly weapon in the com·
pll!(img out in the street." ~todc ~~~~:mJ~~au~~i~o ~:~ against bis friend, 16-year-old Steven mission of a murder. Baker was ~ profile of the dnver who presentation ceremony that was TelJes, charged with the beatinadeath beaten with a pipe, Maguire said. If
attempts to outrun police is hardly Samaranch's last duty before leaving of Eugenia Balcer, a 6().year-old Costa convicted, he faces a sentence rangmg
that of the hardened cnmmal or the Los Angeles. Mesa wo~an1 last May 19. from 26 years to life imprisonment.
celebrated road warrior shown JD Also leavin~ were the athletes. All Baker's oooy was found buned in a Pre-trial proceedinp 1n the case arc film. the CHP study shows. · planter at her Cedar Place home the scheduled for Sept. l l in Central
The pursued dnver most often teams consi ercd likely terronst day after the killing is alleged to have Municipal Court in Santa Ana.
turns out to be a man m has early 20s r;:===============:::;-;:;~:;=::=:::;:!:~:==::5:;:;;;;;=:;;;~;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:::;:;:::=~ with no cnmmal record who is trying
to get away because he has commited
a simple traffic violation. On the
average, the chase takes place in the
city. dunng the late afternoon or night
and ends after one mile.
Gem
Talk
that half the cha~s result ma senous Most county police agencies also
mjury The JfOup claimed that 500 e~pcct officers to pull back and
Amtncans die ever) vear b«ausc ofa simply pace the pursued dnver when
•poll~ chase the chase has traveled more than a
The Nonh Carolina H1ghwa) Pa-few Cit)' blocks.
"Most police agencies will tell you
that it's stupid to have a 100 mph
chase over a traffic offense." DeNisi
said "lfit begins because of a serious
cnme we'll chase them as long and
hard as possible. But we·u keep 1t as
controlled as possible too.
Br J.C HUMPHRIES
c~rt1fied ~molOBtJt, .4GS
'
trol conducted a one-week stud) that "If there's a clear danger;· Carson
me year and stated that one in e"e" said. "we'll discontinue the pursun. A
nine chases ends m an accident and lot depends on where It 1s. If 1i's ffie
lb.at one out of eve!) 22 results m freeway. 1hat's one thing. But 1f 11's
tnjury down the middle of Balboa Island m
Police say 1hat the public's 1m-the summer. no wav"
WE 'RE LISTENING
"We·11 radio ahead and use lights
and sirens to let people know that
somethtng's ao1ng on. The watch
commander has the duty to decide
when to cut off a chase and the officers
damn well better obey."
Just Call
642-6086
What do you llke about tbe Dally Pllot? What don't you llkt? Call tbe
number at left and your me11a1e wUI be recorded, transcrlb d and delivered
to t.be appropriate editor.
Tbe same 24-bour ao1werln1 service may be used to rf'cord letters to the
editor on any topic. Contributors lo our Lettus column must Include tbelr
name and telephone aumbu for verlflcatlon. No clttulaclon tails, please.
Tell us what's on you mlad. ..
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwartz tit
Pub 1sher
Roaemary Churchman
Controller
8t•pM.n F. Cataz.o
Pro~1ct1on
Man g r
Donald l. Wuta.mt
Crrculat on
Manag r
Circulation 714/"2-.4333
Cteaatfted adYertlllng 114/142-5111
AJI ottwtr department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
VOL. 171 NO. 228
(
THE DIAMOND DESERT
o~Nunlbl.
Th• unceHlng Har ch for
diamond• tak81 mineral explorer•
Into out-of-the-way ptaea a.If over
the world. One auch place 11 the eo-
called "diamond deMrt" of Namibia
In Africa. Namibia 11 one of the newer
countrlea of Africa, 81tabll9hed after
World War II In the Wut African
deMrt. The giant O.Beera mining
lnter"ta ha"9 Mtabttahed a gold·
mining town there, and bet.utlful
diamond epeclmena are ~ng dug
out of the d...n. Where Namibia
touchel the .... the mlnen.tda have
~ expanded In a unJque way: the
... hu actually ~ pulhed beck
beh nd g ant wall• of und for u
much u t., mllM. Thie enablM the
mlneta to get diamond• that were
once beneeth the ocean bottom. Just
• ootCll fiaw ~ litM1 from ooean for rich farming and
for cftl•, the Atttcane and 0.Se•r•
have pulhld the ... back to flnd
dlamonda. II la a dram Uc t•Umomy
to tM high value Which mankind
plaoM upon diamond• T"-demand
for the wortd'a mOlt p'9Ctou111on11
contlnuea to t•t man'• abUlty to f nd
a growing upPtj.
I
..
r