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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-20 - Orange Coast PilotCDASJ IDITIDI -- MONDAY, AUGU~T 20, 1984 Coast • We asked local folks their reaction to the John De Lorean cocaine traff lck- lng decision./ A3 A day at Disneyland turns Into a nightmare as a small handgun In a purse accidentally discharges, Injuring a young glrl./ A3 An Orange County cou- ple, who paid $300 to bring their niece Illegally from Mexico, say the girl Is missing./ A3 California John De Lorean'sat- torneys say they don't know If they can afford to defend the automaker In futuretrlals./ AS Nation Republicans, promising a real zingy convention, get things u_nder way with temperatures topping 100degreesln Dallas./A4 Beachl3oy Brian Wilson. rs arrested at GOP con- vention, along with two companlOns, on tllarges of trespassing./ A4 World Search for Red Sea mines continues as two Soviet minesweepers steam toward South Yemen./ A4 Chinese h6n't>r their . Olympic medal winners with more medals, and Chinese fans seek auto- graphs from their athletic heroes./A4 ·Feature· J:!!r full volleyball schol- arship to Pepperdlne netted Julie Evans a sur- prise dunking In a shop- ping center fountaln./81 Party planners are get- ting 'cereus' about the benefit gala for Sherman Gardens./81 .Sports At the ripe old age of 44, Lee Trevino holds off the young guys to capture the PGA Champlonshlp./C1 It doesn't happen very often, but the Miami Dolph Ins defeated the Los Angeles Raiders -In California, no less./C1 It was a good day for both Nancy Lopez and Martina Navratllova./C2 Entertainment Soviet Jazz Is achieving detente of sorts In the Netherlands./83 Bualneas A Mesa firm has de- veloped an optical d isk- based storage system that will revolutlonlze the Industry.JBS INDEX Bridge Bulletin Board Sualn ... Callfornla Newa Cluelfled Comics Cro11word C>Mth Notlc:el Featur• HelpVourMlf H0<oecope Ann Landett Mutual Fund• National N9WI Op non PaparauJ PolloeLog Public Nottcee port• Stook Mark ta T --~= Theater• w .. thtr WOf'ld Newt 94 A3 85 "" CS-7 04 C7 C4 81·2 02 ce 82 85 A4 A8 81 A3 C4 C1-4 Be 2 83 •A2 A4 Artsy Mesa· motto asked by chamber 'City of the Arts• moniker would r:eplace ..31-year-old 'Hub of the Harbor Area sl an BJTQNY SAAVEDRA . °' ... ...., ........ Costa Mesa's crusade to pull itself from beneath the shadow of its ehte neighbor. Newport Beach, has created a dilemma for Costa Mesa officials. It may also create some 111 among its neighbors. Once known only for its proximity to the beach. C-OSta Mesa i1 quickly becoming a centerpiece for culture in Oranse County. And many local an lovers believe Costa Mesa's 31-)'car- oldmono, "Hub of the Harbor Arca." should be chan&cd to reflect ucb city hi&hli&hts as the South Coast Reper- tory Theatre, Pacific Amphitheatre, the new South Coast Symphony on:hestra and the county Perfonnina Arts Center, now underconstructioa. Ao attractive -and perhaps more marketable - new motto proposed by the <;osta Mesa Chamber of Commcroe is ··city of the Arts." -s-ucti an enthusiastic statement G other SOutllem Califomia atJn who arc equally enthused with their lf1 programs. Laauna .Beaeh. for instance. 11 home toSCOl'Q of artists. the count)'°1 old«t art museum and three summer art festivals. For more than SO )'eaf'S, lbe Pageant of the Masters, in Wbicb performm simulate palntinp, bas enticed art lovers to the cit> ~ the sea. ··An in Oranff County starled ia Laguna 8eacb, said Jim Lyon. executive d.in:ictor of the aty's chamber of oommeroe. ••1 wouldn't takt any exc:eptioa (to Costa Mesa's proposed mono)." said L)Oll ... But l would quest.ioD it's ~~ Laauna Beach. offic:W. -.bo declined to be quoted, a.id Cea.a Meaa can biD itself as uytbjna it w°tsbcs but that doesa0 t mate it IO. -• ~Y. JU~ w)Ul ~J~ure from. Nev~ \he Costa Mesa ~wMDAJA2) Clown• and balloon• broa&ht Jim Bro~ell'• craft. christened the 'rub Toy. 0.-.......... _,T ..... ._ the trophy for the SUYl.t Swab (best co.tumea) ln the Cbaracter Boat Parade. Funny floating flotilla draws flood of-fans to NB Harbor Character Boat Parade boasts 30 entries. honors Coast cartoonist Virgil Partch By KAREN E. KLEIN °' ............... Despite threatening clouds at the bcginni~ of the weekend. the 24th annual Character Boat Parade went offSunday'in Newport Harbor under blue skies, to the detiaht of thousands of boaters and onlookers. The 30 official boat parade entncs reflected this year's Amencan Circus theme with clowns, snake handJers and even ladies flying through the air on homemade trapeze. The event. sponsored by the New- port Harbor Aiq Chamber of Com- merce, was dedicated this year to Virail Partch, a ~guna Beach car- toonist who was Tiled Aua. 10 tn a car accident. said Richard Luehrs. ex- ecutive dtrcctor of the chamber. "He meant so much to this parade. especially the character boats," Luehrs said. Partch used to draw cartoons and handle publicity for the annual event, he said. The number of offietaJ entries was down this year, Luehrs said, blaming the recent Summer Olympics with t.alu"' time away from last-minute planmna for the parade. But Luehrs said there were hun- dreds of unofficial entries and a large crowd of spectators lined the route and crowded bayside restaurants for a look at the wacky gomp-on in the harbor. "There was lots of enthusiasm and tons of parties going on." be said. Jim Dale, the chamber president whose 5-year-old son owns the S.S. Michigan, "really outdid bunsclf lhis year,•• Luehrs said. The old 24-foot boat, the first to enter the annual parade some two decades before youna Alexander Dale was born, was decked out 1n cin:us prb ex- tra.ordinate, Luehrs said. with Alex outfitted as a Hon tamer and Dale's other children performina tricks on a trapeze set on board. The ••Mule," owned by the West- mark Savina Bank. woo a com- mercial sweepstakes award for its depiction of Tahitt, celebratin& a recent bank promotional contest that featured tickets to Tahiti as a prize. The mt of this year's wtnners were: (Pleue eee CBARACTSR/ A2) i a Ferliaro, husband to send IRS check for $53,459 WASHINGTO (AP) -Demo- cral!C vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro and her husband paid about 40 pcrotnt of their income tn taxes durina the last five yean, but because of an aca>untant's error in 1978 they att sddi~ the Internal Revenue Service a check for an additional SS3,4S9. accordins to financial records rtlea'Jcd today. Copies of the income-tax returns filed jointly and separately by the couple since 1978 IJSted Ferraro as having gross incom over thC»C years of$332,474 and paying $130,922 10 federal and city and state taxes in New York This amounted to 39.38 per- cent of her gross income. The tax returns showed that Zac· caro. a New York real-estate oper- ator, had aross income dunna the period of$S32. 969 and paid $220.344 m total taxes. or 41. 27 percent of bis gross income. Francis O'Brien. a spokesman for the Mondale-Ferraro campaian. said that an accountant's error in l 978 1s causing the couple to send the IRS a Pocketbookl.ssues stressed in state ballot propositions ·Jarvis tax measure. revenue f nltlatfves seek voters· a roval check for $53,459 -~presenting an underpayment in the 1978 taxes of $29,709 and interest since then of $23. 750. O'Brien said the error in- volved the undervaluation of a ~al­ estate transaction. The information was released tn Washinaton in an attempt to dispel controvttS)' about the finances of Fcmro and her husband. Ferraro also was scheduled to release toda) her linanaal di losure fonn that must be filed with the F~ral (Pleue ... PSUARO/ A2J JEFF ADLER CAMPAIGN '84 IhOi<lns-tO ligfit .. over Irvine site BJ STEVE MARBLE °' .. ~ ....... A· feud bet~een t~o Indian tribes hasrea<:hcd the boihnapoint in Irvine where city officials and dcvelopcn are unsure which tribe to consult concemina an ancient burial around in the middle of an office develop-menL · The Irvine Co.'s proposed offi~ development is near UC Irvine where it is known that at least l'lllrO bunal sites are located. Tbe exact locatiom oflndian burial sites are kept secret to prevent vandalism. • Until ~tl), city pb.nnen anct the Irvine Co. have been worm. with the Ju.anenos., an lndian tribe that is fWX>IJ>ized by the state u havinJ a claim to burial aroands and histonc sites alona the Ofanae COut. But a second tribe. k:Down as the Gabrielin.os. bas now swfaa:d cla.im- (Pleue w D'Ql•N/42) °""' .......... _, ...... " ....... Popular apota OD the On.nee Cout Collece campu tllJa mornlna were the lnformatloa mapa. It's-back to school at 3 Co&:st cOlleges MESA MULLS MOTTO ••• Al chamber, which doptcd th new 1 n bout a year qo. is continuana to ud Co ta Mesa as the "C"UJtural center of Southern Otlifornia." "It'• time we were called .omcthi else bcsidts 'Goal Hill,"' ld N lC Rea<ie, chamber executive ma , refenina to a mcl'.name given the town before it incorporated in l9S3 The uncomplimentary moniker hu tuck with the citv like a recurring nightmare. ~ru in to I de under t~ "Hub" motto. "We mr u~ With that aJ n to W(' d"anaaa.e oft~ (nearby} ibOr and ad\'eru5C' our b0atin1 trad .. Reade d. But bolt bwldina·has tallm o in Cosi.a Mcu and the city novo h more 10 boast about th&a its clo ne s to tht' harbor. "With our bia Performina Arts Center and our symphony, we are the cultural ttnter ot Southern Ii· fomia;• Rudo uid. But C1ty Man gtr Fred SorsabaJ "d ing thecu)"s past may not be as y as 1t 50unds. even \\ith 1 catchy new mono. So bal timattd it ~ould ('C)St $2°' 700 to remove the old motto from the official city seal, caf"ed in bronze plaques at public buildings around town' and printed on city tationcr:y as well a car decals. FERRARO OWES $53,459 ••• He added the city is rattly te1ctred to by iu mono an~y. "t,,·e been man&ft.r for 14 years and l don't think we ve used "Hub of the Harbor Arca," wd Sorubal, who elans to rtt0mmend to the City council toni&ht that the mouo be cha.nacd but the seal remain un- touched. Prom Al Election Commi sion. The camp:iign also released a 5tatement dei.aifingand defending the complicated ttal-cstate transfer b) which Fttraro ttpaid family loans to her 1978 campaign that had been ruled illegal by the FEC. To ttpa)' some of the loans, Ferraro $Old her half-interest in a lo"'er Manhattan buildina to Manny Urman, a business a sociate ol' Zaccaro's. Zaccaro arranie<S the sa.lc, the statement said, and, un- beknownst to Ferraro arranacd to buy the property back from Lerman later. Lerman paid Fenaro $100,000 for her half-interest -quadruple what she had paid for 1t five months before. ''This new motto can be 1dded easily to our stationery when reorder- ing and will cause less confusion than the total chan1e." be said in a memo to the council. COLLEGES OPEN EARLY ••• From Al Colleae otliciaJs an carefully ol>-~rvina ttiis fall's enrollment figures because state funding in the com10g years is to be based on a district's average daily attendance during the 1984-85 term. Average daily attend- ance is related to the number of students who enroll and the number of classes they ta.kc. Fred Garcia. dean of admtssions, records and guidance at Golden West, said the Huntington Beach campus opened its semester today with 14,88S students -down 13 percent from the opening day total last faJJ "Of course u concerns us, but it's not totally unexpected," Garcia said of the decline. "Smee the fall of 1982, enrpllment has dropped every semester at Golden WesL" He attributed much of the loss to a decline in the number of 18-to-21 - year-olds in the coastal communiues of Orange County. H~ noted that many elementary schools in the area ba.vc bcen-c~ within-the past l 0 years because of derJ.ining enrol- lment He said community colleges are now feeling that crunch. Garcia wd commu01ty coUese enrollment traditionally drops when the economy improves. He said telephone surveys have indicated the new tuition f~ is not a significant reason for the enrollment dip at Golden West. At Orange Coast, the state's laraest single-campus community collC&C, the operung day enrollment was 19,413. College spokesman Jun Carnett said that figure is 21 percent below last fall's opening day enrol- lment of 24,662. "I wouldn't say (OCC adniinis- trators) are panicking, but we a.re concerned because that's a major drop," Carnett said OCC's enrollment decline was mainly in part-time students, who may have been deterred by the new tuition, Carnett said. • One comfortina trend, however,t i.~ that the average OCC student this WI 1s enrolling in more classes than last faJJ, be sa:id:"Tbistrencrc0uldnClp the Costa Mesa college's averaJc daily attendance figure and thus its fund- ing. At Fountain Valley-base<l. Coastline, wh~otrers clasSes at 75 community oca · ns, the o ning day enrollment 10.406. ~U~c spokesman Jack Chappell said that s an 8 percent decline compared to openina day last fall. But Chappell noted that tra- ditionally, one-third of Coastline's students resister in class durina the first two weeks of the semester. He noted that Coastline is openin,a a new community teaming center th11 fall in Corona del Mar at the former Lincoln Intermediate School campus. At Oran&e Coast and Golden West. open rq:isn.tion is continuina this week. Next week. students can enroll with the permission of the class instructor. All three colleges are offerin.a additional classes that bc&in SepL 1 O, for stud en ts unable to-enroll this week because of summer vacation or job commitments. Parents who could..n9t etiioll beTore a.Cir clilldren beain . elementary schooJ classes next month also~ expected to enroll in the lat~ start.ma college courses. CHARACTER BOAT PARADE ••• From Al Mayor's Trophy· "Fascination," Jade Hester. VIP Award. "Isla Bella." Irvine Co. Commodores' Trophy (best decor- ated): "H.M.S Bacaruda," Jean Mane Sparling. Big Toot (best sound); "S.S M1ch- 1g.an." Alexander Dale Loose Screw Award (best amma- tion}: "Boat Dcck.""C.K. Weyer Suaviest Swab Trophy (best cos- tume): .. Tub Toy, .. Jim Brownell. Cruttenden Cup (theme extreme): "Resolution." A val on Paetfic Char- ters- Leakin' Timbers Trophy (best Monterey): H.M.S. Bacaruda, Jean Marie Sparling. Wheel, Steam and Bell (best steam- boat): _"Dauntless Official," Ron Powers. Dirt) Old Manifold (oldest boat): "Dauntless Offictal," Ron Powers. Bilgy Bumacle Trophy (classic yacb.l): "Betty M," J.D. and Betty Pierce. Thwaned Thwart {bay launch): "Chicken Ship," Fttd Turnbull. Drippy Stuffin& Box (work boat): .. Compass Rose," Ted Ritter. Best Theme (commercial): "Mule." Westmark: savings Bank: Best Costume (commercial): "CharTo," Balboa Bay Cub. Best Sound {commercial): "Mercedes," Jim Slemons Imports. Best Live Animation (com- mercial): "Fancy,•· The Cannery Res- taurant. Best Mechanical Animation (com- mercial): "Isla Bella," Irvine Co. commercial Sweepstakes: "Mule." Westmark Savings. BA-LLOT PROPOSITIONS DET-AILED .. From Al Other measures sure to catch the attention of voters before November 1ndude an in1t1auve that would establish a state lottery that would benefit education and one, which has Gov. DeukmeJ1an's strong support, creating an independent comm1ss1on to relive the Legislature of the Job of reapportionment. The propos1ttons. now numbered consccuti\lely for 20 years, are: •Proposition %5, authorizing is- suance of $325 m1lhon in bonds to provide funds for water polluuon control and water reclamation. •Pro~sltlon %6, authonzing a $450 million school building lease- purchase bond to provide for the construcuon or improvement of pul>- hc schools around the state. •Propo1ltloa !7, authonzing is- suance of a SI 00 mil hon hazardous substance cleanup bond. • •Proposltloa 28, authonzmg a $75 million safe drinkmg-water bond to raise money for local water systems needing improvement to meet mini- mum dnnlong water standards. •Pro~1Uion U authonzmg a $650 million bond iss ue to provide farm and home loans to Cahfom1a veterans. •ProposUJon 30, authorizing a $50 million bond issue to provide funds for the purchase, construction or renovation of senior citizen centers around the state. •Propo.ttion 31. a state eonslltu- tional amendment that would provide an excepuon for new con- struction from propert) tax reassess- ment if the construction was for the Just Call 642-6086 Oall1 Piiot ~llv911 I• QuarantMd installation of a fire sprinkler system or other fire detection system or ftre- rclated improvement. proceeds into prizes, 16 percent for expenses and at least 34 percent would be set aside for educational funding for kindergarten through the university level. •Propo1ltJoa 3%, a state constitu- tional amendment permjtting the Supreme COurt to review only parts rather than all of certain appeals court decisions it is considering. It would not apply in death penalty cases. •Propo11Uoa 33, a constitutional amendment permitting disabled people to postpone pa~g ad valor- em property taxes until the sa.le of a principal residence. •Propo1ltloa 34, a state constitu- tional amendment creating an ad- ditional exception on property tax revaluation in cases of historic struc- tures that arc dwellings occupied by ownen as pnncipa.J residences. •Propo1ltlo1 U, an initiative call- ing for the Legislature to transmit a resolution to Congress uraina the convening of a constitutional con- vention to draft a balanced buclaet amendment to the U.S. Constitution. (Pending Supreme Court review of the measure could affect its ballot status.) •Proposition H . an tmt1ative that would req utre addhional property tax rebates to homeowners require a two-thirds vote for tax or fee increases and restructure other government funding mechanisms. Drafted by tax opponent Howard Jarvis and popu- larly rcferTCd to as Jarvis rv. •Propotlt1011 37, a state constitu- tional amendment authorizing a state lottery, but not casinos. to benefit education. Lottery officials would be required lo put ~ percent of all •Proposition 31, an initiative re- quiring the /ovemor to write the president an U.S. Attorney General urgina federal law ~ amended to exclude languqts other than English from beina used on ballots or other election material. • Propocltioa at, a state constitu- tional amendment creatina a com- !11is~on of eiaht former appeals court JUSttces to draw state "Senate and Assembly as well as congressional and equalization district boundary lines in reapportionment years. The plan submitted by the commission would be subject to Supreme Court review and a voters' rcf~ndum. •Propo1ltloa 40, an initiative limitinJ campaian contributions and expenditures to candidates for state elective office. Individual contribu- tions would be limited to S 1,000 per candidate with a $10,000 muimum to aJI candidates. Some public fund- ing would be provided to candidates to match personal expenditures by opposition candidates. •Proposltlon UJ. an initiative creatina a state weharc commission to compute the state's per capita assistance costs for public aid and medical assistance proarams. Pay- ments. for such prosrams u Mcd.i- Cal and atd to families with depen- dent children, would be limited to the average national expenditure, exclud- ing California, plus 10 percent. What do you like aboat lite Dally Pilot? Wllat don't yoca Hite? Call lite number at left and your mesuse wlll be recorded, tran1crfbed ud delivered 10 &he approprtate editor. Tbe same U·bour an1wertn1 service may be cased to record leUen to tbe editor on any topic. Coatrtbaton to oar Letten column matt Include tbtlr oame and telephone number for verification. No clrcalatloa c:aJJs, please. Tell ut what'• on yoar mlDd. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Circulation 1141142-oa c1 ... 1n.ct lldvertt•lnt 714/142.aen AU other depertment. 141-4.121 MAIN OFFICI J.30 W lltf Sc C.1 U... CA t.A1 lldal• 9oa f!'leO C.11 "'-CA ... ,,.,.,.,.,.,.. " '°" a.l nol ..... ffJAll IMDf'! by !'I 30 Cl r.i U C»!ort 7 Cl m ..... "°"' ... 0. o.1i•t0 S•V OAI• A.cl ~. " \IOU 00 "Ol ' -'°"' CCJl;r O't r e IT' D<O! • H. l. Schwartz Ill Publisher 10 • "' ano i'OI•' COCI• " .,. .,.~IN7 Clrcufatton T phonH ( RoMm•ry Churchm•n Controller Stephen F. C•razo Production ManagAr Don•ld L. Wllllam1 C1rculat1on Manager I f Fair skies and continued hot , Cout&I Tldea TIIOAY . '4·~pm ~y 11MLll\. 1M&.1W. 10-4* aAI. ~ J.Hpm. ~: ~~-.,. .,, 11 IO 1& ... 11 n u I• 7't 11 .. 14 ,, ,. .. 11 a N 11 H II 80 10 ., .. 11 IT .... to 12 11 63 101 71 H 11 ,, .. " 71 71 10 H M tot " .., 14 71 10 ...... ,., 12 IO II tl '15 12 .. .. 70 76 M 71 11 Temps SURF REPORT 111:.a 14 Ml 1·2 1·2 1·2 C).1 w One Minute King robbed , another burns in Newport · Sunday wasn't a good day for the" when a suspect who had"becn tndins small Minute King chain. i.n the store approached him from a Two of its convenience markets in com~ ·o( the store. 1:'be rob~r was Newpon-&acb were StrUct-by-bad -~ IHlY.loo stockift& en hu bca;d circum5tances Sunday when one was ~d 11mulattna a weapon under his robbed and the othq burned down in Jacket. a spectacular $70.000 blaze. The man walked up to the oounter In OratlJC County, Minute King an~ told ~e cler_k b~ wowd blow his bas a store m Costa Mesa on Newport brains ~ut tfbe dido t t~m over alJ the Boulevard in addition to the two money an the cash rqister. stores in Newport Beach. The clerk compl1cd. givi1,11 the man The robbery occurred at 2 a.m. $355 1n cash. The robber ·oed out a Su~day at the Minute King o~ 3530 back door, police said. He was lmne Ave. as a cleric was closing the described as white, in his 20s. 5-10, store. ' weighing 155 pounds with blond hair Newpon Beach police reported the and a mustache. clerk bad just locked the fron t door Tbe ~nd Minute Kin& incident occurred at about 10:40 p.m. Sunday when a fire of unknown origin sparked the store on 1526 Placentia. ve.int~. There were no injunes m the blaze, a Newport Beach Fire Department spokeswoman said, but the store was gutted. The fire. which took about 33 minutes to control, caused $20,000 worth of damage to the structure of the store and $50,000 damage to the contents. Three engine companies and two Newport Beach truck com- panies responded to the scene, the spokeswoman said. The cause of the fire is still under investiption, she added. Nation'seconomy soars; inflation under control · ~WASHINGTON (AP) -The for boom and-mom," uid Jo?fn economy, beaded for what could be Albertine, president of the American J.ts...J>est perfoonance in more than__lhlsincu Conference, and an econ-three deCadcs, grew at a rapid 7.6 omist in the optlmist camp. percent annual rate last quarter while The Reapn administration, re- mflation remained in check. the sponding to the strong arowth, earlier government reported today. this month revised upward its fore- Thc Commerce Department re-casts for the year, prcdictina GNP vised its estimate of srowth from growth for all of 1984 would be 7 .2 April th.rouah June up s~t.Jy from percent -rather than an earlier an earlier 7.3 percent read.ina. forecast of 5.9 percenL The inflation rate for the entire If the 7 .2 percent forecast comes economy, as measured by the gross true, and many think it will, it would national product, was put at 3.2 make 1984 the best year since 195 l percent in the 1eCOnd quarter, down when the economy grew at an 8.3 from a 4.4 percent rate in the tint percent rate. three months of the year. Economic growth last year was 3. 7 Economists and the Rcapn ad-percent following a 2.1 percent de- ministration have called this ~r-clinein 1982uthecountrywasmircd formance the best of all possible in its wom recession since the cod of worlds - strona growth and low World War II. inflation. The Commerce Department said "Strong growth and low inflation is its O. l percent revision in IU'Owtb for all anyone could ask for at this stge of the expansion,.. said Allen Sinai, chief economist at Shearson Lehman- American Express. "It is a sterling report on the economy." 0 BITUARll S ffie 'second quarter to a 7.6 percent rate came about because a stronJer growth m personal consumption spendiof"ltld""lrosiness capn:al invest- ment offset a weaker performance in residential construction and inven- tory growth. The laner categories were both revised downward sliahtly. The 10.1 percent growth rate for the first quarter was unchanged from an upward revision last month. The inflation rate's decline to 3.2 percent -from a 4.4 percent rate in the first quarter-was attributed to a drop in food (>rices, which had nsen. sharply in the first three months of the year. President Reagan has souaht to capitalize on the briaht .economic news u he campaips ror re-clecuon. The administratton has hailed this economic expansion as the strongest since the late 1940s . Sinai predicted that economic growth would continue in the cunent quarter at a healthy clip of probably 4 percent to 5 percent with no sians that the economy is beJinnina to over- heat. Mesa's I.;eonard McDonald succumbs to cancer at 31 The economy this year has con- tinually confounded the experts, who had predicted it would slow substan- tially as the recovery from the 1981-82 recession entered its second year. Instead, the first three months of the year turned in a l 0.1 percent growth rate, the aovemmeot said today, the best quanerly performance since ApriJ.Juoe 1978. While the second quaner's 7.6 percent rate was slower, 1l was ttill an unusually rapid pace for this st.aac of the recovery and was well above what bad been predicted. "I'm tired of bearina doom and aJoom economic forccasu. It's time CoNTI NUEU S 10R1E s Memorial services for 31-year-old Leonard Roy McDonald, wbo died last week after a battle with cancer, an scheduled at JO a.m. Saturday in CitTDrive Park, Newport Beach. Mr. McDonald, who lived m Costa Mesa, was a street sweeper employed by tbe city ofNewPon Beach for five years. He worked on Balboi and 1.ido tslan.ds, accord.inf to John Fretman, a friend of the family. Mr. McDonald was born in 1953 in Pomona and ~uatcd from Upland Hiah School m 1971 . He araduated from Chaffey CoUeae in J 973. Freeman said Mr. McDonald was active in sports anC:I loved to attend baseball and football game . He surfed and was a spcetaJ fan of the Beach Boys. · A private bunal at ~a will take pla~ Wednesday, Freeman said. Tbe family requested donations be made to a fund established for McDonald's widow ai;td his youna family. Oonauons should be sent to: Tbe Freeman Trust, c/o John Freeman 2530 Sea View, Corona del Mar' 92625. ' .Mr McDonal~ is survived by his wtfe, Karen, who is ex~tina another child, an~ his son, Michael, or Costa Mesa; hts parents, Mt. and Mra Rkh1:rd . McDonald, of Alta Loma; and bu sister, c~rolyn White of Costa Mesa. INDIANS BATTLE CITY HALL •.. homAl ing thetr membefthip should rep-mcmbcn pthercd in Irvine on Sun- rucnt the sacred around in Irvine. day for a reliaious oeremony•t Turtle "Basicallyt what we have is a Rock. Some members traveled &om tenitory 1nue," 11id Ed Moore, a city Riventde and San Berrmrdino coun- • environment planner who hU re-tics to attci1d the ccremoniCJ sr-arched the tribal mauer. ..h's The rock formation, Vcla.squ 1<>mothin1 like 1 buntina Pound said, bu symbohc meaning to his di J)utc." tnbe which counts the tunic u 1 Moore said historic accounts lhow relJaaous aymbol. the 01brielino1 lived on the Oranac Several Irvine pohce officen al~ Coast, blut that untiJ reccnt.Jy1 it wa monitored the <%T'Cmonies out of fear believed no members of the triDC wert of violence. The «mnony, ho•-evu. left.. was pcacd'ul. .. for a Iona 11me, no one knew any To ttttle the d1~te, lh In 1n Co. tribe mcmbCn even c•iste<S any-ted the Califom Nauve mo ·•Moore uplajntd. "Thm \My American Ht tone Commi ion to mu ,"•---=~ =-~-Gmlftl.ce-one lbe &.riba u 1 Jim Vclaiqu 1dCnufiC'd consultant for lhe office proJCC'l in thief of the Ci1bnclinM. and ln11ne, Wh• b ts st.111 m the pl nnt R ductng stre topic of meeti Sumval group to meet The Orange County Alliance for Survival will h tits first annual conference. "Directions for Peace ·s4 Saturday and Sunday, Aug. 25-26, at University School, 4771 Campus Drive. Irvine. Saturday's prOIJ"'lm will be from 9 a.m. to S Sunday's program will be from noon to S·p.m. The public is invited and tickets are SS for eac For more inf<?rmation, call Tim Carpenter at 547-6 AiJtl-rables cllalc schedul . .. A nei&hborhood, low-cost anti-rabies vaccin ion clinic for oogs is now scheduled for the Animal Sh ter, 20612 Laguna Canyon Road, 48una Beach, on Satu y, Sept. 1, by the Southern California Veterinary M ical Association. Time of the clinic will be from l p.m. 3 p.m. The clinic is held in cooperation with 1 government a1encics and community service grou Vaccination of all dogs 4 months of age and ol required by state, county, and city ordinances. inoculations are good for 30 months, and the cost vaccinations will be $3 per dQ&. For further information, call 523-0980. Taa.tma•ten 11ehedale m ee Come blow your horn Nonhcast Santa Ana Toastmasters Morning ub will bold a "&et acquainted" meeting on ScpL s. from :30 to 7:45 a.m., at the Le Grand Cafe. Tram B. p_arry of Coeta lleu 1eta the attention of Jim Farrelly and b1a 2 -year-old HD Brian hi clcrirntown fACaDa Beach. Parry Toastmasters International is a non-profit orga tion acared toward the community which enables men and women to learn more about the many as WE ASKED . public spcakinJ. · . . - For more 1nformat1on, calt669-9282 or 531-433 8.earlng-loa workshops slat Worts.bops-designed for adult$ with bearing Joss acheduled to begin in September. The workshops will meet once a week for ci&ht w ks on Thursdays, from 2 to 3:30 p.m., beginning SepL 6 at 1301 Providence Ave., Orange, under the direction f audiologist Donna Greenfield, and speech pathol t Cynthia Wineinger. The sessions will include instruction in lipreadi g, developin& listening skills, talks on hearing aids and o r special devices, and .sroup discussions on copioi social, family, vocational and pyschological proble s arising from hearing loss. For more information, call 639-4990. 1 Teen beach party scheduled The City oflrvine Commurutr Services Dcpartme~ Youth and Family Services Section, Northwood T n Outreach, has scheduled a .. Back to School Blues-Bea Blanket Barbecue .. for Friday, Sept. 7, from 3 p.m. lo midruahL DeuOlsea,'9 salesmaaacer ADallelm M1cU1e M•ulnc, U touplft Open to teens, 13-18, in 7th-12th grades, the cost is!> per person. A van to Balboa Beach Pier will leave frofl Hentagc Park Youth Services Center. · I For more information, can 552-4352, Monda , Wednesday and Friday after 3 p.m .• and ask for T Outreach. ••IJ thi~ . the j\!(tgment was not against DCLorean. The judgment was against government surveillance." . 9ruce .. Personally, I feel he was in the wrong but he was set up. Possibly he did it be- cause of his car business." L 861Jna poets to-IJear aat.faor Author Carolyn Kizer, who was also the first direct of the National Endowment for the Arts, will read fro her works at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse on Saturda Sept 8. A reception for Kizer will follow the 8 p. performance. Advance tickets arc available from the Laguna Poe SSS A&ate SL, La&una Beach 9265 I . For information 494-8375 or 494-9.SSO. Kizer is the featured author in the Laguna Poe annual poetry festival. On Sunday, Sept. 9, Sarai Austi Gerald LockJin, Penelope Moffett and Laurel Ann Bop will rea<! at the Laguna Beach Public Library. CALENDAR Monday, Aug. 20 --· MJclaele Lama, 11 clerical David PapUU. 31 tnack driver Wlllttler • 6:30 p.m., Costa Mesa City Couell Meedng. City. Hall, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. , • 9 a.m. Oraaae Couty Trault Dtatrict Board of Dtrecton, OCTD Administration Building, I 1222 Acacia Parkway, Garden Grove. Rowland Hel&bta .. I'm &)ad he got ofT. I think he was given an offer he couldn't refuse." .. Glad he got away. Glad It happened." . • 1:30 p.m., Oruce County PlualD1 CommJ11lon, Hall of Admmistration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana. TWo killed i separate south county accidents A man chanaina a flat tire was stnack and killed early today oy a ltUck driver from Mexico who ap- parently drifted onto the shoulder of the San Diego Freeway tn south Oranae. County, accordina to authorities. · Lee Mike Evans. 40, of Oceanside wu kill~ instantly when the OMC truck swung off the freeway onto the shoulder and clipped his disabled car ~Beach SCOtt Wyeth Huber. 30, was ar- rested and charaed with driving under the innucnce of alcohol in the 20000 block of Laauna Canf.On Road an'2 ttlcastd on· Sl.SOO bltl u')day niaht. and then struck hisn, the California Highway Patrol re~rted. The truck driver was identified a Gregorio Rodri1ud' of TiJuana. ln- vcsti.ptors said Rodriguez likely will be cited in the S:4S a.m. accident at the S.n Juan Creek Road offramp in san Juan Capistrano. In a an earlier IOCident. motor- cyclist Scott 0 . Swanson, 26, of San • • • ) Clemente was lt1lled late Saturday when he lost control of rus Yamaha motorcycle and was hurled heard· first into a chain link fence, the CHP reported. Swanson was not wcarina a motor- cycle helmet and was killed instantly, officers said. The 11 :OS p.m. accident occurred on Rancho Viejo Road in San Juan Capistrano. Camera equipment worth SI .200 v.·u repof'C'd ~okn from 1 vehi le an the l 000 bloc of Thalia tn:et turday aftcmooa. • • • Erle llraeles. tl taletmu Ntwpert &ada .. I knew he was innocent; I've met him before and be didn't seem that type." Mu WIJJoa, 4l 1df employed 1'1lslill "He should not have gotten away with it; he did something wrong. I don't think people should be let loose. There are other ways to chastise the authorities then letting people off.'' I COUN TY L -----. - Mexi~an .lltl, . , ost in smqgltng BJ tH Auoclactd Presa An Orange County couple who paid $300 to have their l 1-year-old niece brousht in illegally frOfn Mexico says the airl never arrived. and authorities said she may have fallen victim to sm,ualers who arc akin to .. Slave traders:· The couple, Cyriaco and Vicenta Rojas of Santa Ana. said they decided to take Maribel Abiaoeda into their home because she had been abandoned as an infant by her pattn~. and relau"es in Mexico ..-ere unabk to provide for her. .. It's so lfa&ic," Mrs. Rojas said. .. My family is very. \:Cr} frightened. They let bcr come •itb us because they're so poor that sometimes they don't have enoua,b to cat. They knew .. c'd care for her. It's so sad. .. ··r"e had several cases like thts." Santa Ana~ice Ms. B. Rea. '5 Officer JO$C \'arps Wd. -l\ pcq~ happens freQUeml~. ~ but tt's not rcponcd bccaux they (altem) feat Ill NtwfM'\ Baell authorities. C ti\c this \CU } u the smuglcrs are ··1 wonder if be was set lave tradcn.. .. up. I fttl the powers that be . John Brcchtal. hud of the lmm~tioo and were behind him pushing NaturaJiz.aton Service. dtclined to speculate oo the fate of Sae Wllsoa, JS ~wife TutiD · .. If I was goin& to buy cocaine to turn around and sell it, 1t would be illegal. Maybe it was the way he was prosecuted. I was sur- prised. J.t!pbel. But he S&lJ that the INS has uncovered cases of smuiiJcrs kidnapping )Oung v.omen whom they sell mto proslltution in the Uruted States. Girl, 12, accidentally shot at Disneyland By Ge Assoclattd Press A double-barreled handgun inside a woman's purse went off accidcn tall) and i njurcd her l 2-year-Old i.ster white' they y.·cre at Disneyland. Anaheim police said. Owlc Oldfield of Long Beach was listed in aood cond1t1on Sunday at Western Medical Center in Anaheim, where she was taken after the Saturday night incident.. nursing supel"isor Susan Siegmund said. She was with famil) members near the .. Ifs A Small World" attraction when her sister Nancy L Melot, 20, drop~ her purse and the gun apparent}) went off, Anaheim pohcc Sgt. John Bctcag said. "Her purY contained a double-barreled. .38-caliber Ocmn1er -cau ing the gun to discharge," be said, addina that a, bullet "struck the child in the leg and l~ in her abdomen." Melot of Long Beach. was intcmewed by police and released. Beteag said. "There will be a followup mvcsugation by our detcctJves. We haven't filed any charges at this point •· the vehicle. Anthon) De Perro. was taken to South Coast Medical Center m South Laguna where he v.-as treated for lacerations of the face and re-- leased. reported m1~sang were a camera and assoned JC"'-cir). • • • ThtC\CS forced open a v.mdov. at a home on the 100 blocl of 24hh trttt and stok S 1.000 v.orth of \&luabl Fnda). The~ al~ caused SC\eral hundred dollars worth of damqr to the home b~ runninf a ho~ into the bedroom and turning 1t on. The '1ct1m's bed. carpet mg and clothan,g was "thorough!~ scaled'' h) the umc the disco\ Cf\ was made. of Cuhcr On\ie Saturday mormns. The value 1s esumated at about S l SO. • • • .\ 22-ycar-okf man •-as arrested carh unda) mornina while attempt- ing to brc.ak into the lrvinc Farmcn Market on f}fotd Road. Nothina was rcponed tolep. • • •• " pair of Bentle) hubcap c~ stolen from a car parled in a pm ate parling lot at 1600 Ea t Coa t Hwy. Saturda}. The loss wu placed at $600. • • • A v.oman told pohc:c <he wa ltt"1ng in her home on the 200 block of o\balone ""enuc turd.a) niJht v. hen a man cnte~ her home, woke hCT and made tne remar to her. When he screamed 11 the intruder. he ran out the open 1d door v.1thout hanni her. Police said. .. Fountain Valley A cat b\lrglar apparently picktd 1 l 1" 1 ng room door lode to enter ah~ turd.a) on the 18700 block of Brookhurst Strttt while the residents were a~lttp The intruder took meney. a gun, a camera and a I 6 sold Ford Ranchcro that had been parled in the garage. The I wu estimated at $5,780. • • • r i en t of the l 2200 block of Loya Rncr Avenue rcponed F'.nda) that mconc-took t~'O rontllll- ma k1 clol~ and cqulpmcnt fi m n open . The 1 v.·as ti· m led II l, 7. •••• ~ n:1tl"\."1 dent of the 10200 b >t tu · Rh'tf Court rc;poned rda) l.t at burglars ttrcd er open then t a v.'lllct m th frOot t af her unlod:cd bfOwn l 97 14mtoh1l The lo "' mated at $121. GOP hunkers down in Dallas ..........-..·Beach n thear brif.bt red ts for lhe oy singer anreste shlng convention DALLAS (AP) -epubli ns today convened th r 33rd nauon convention, with I rt tellma cion· fidcnt dcl te •·we're oing to ?mpaign 011 the t econom,Y &n three dec:ad and 1t~cn PfCSI· dents " President R~n wa1 on the campaiin trail! trad1n1 jibe with Wahn-F. Monoale. After a round of convention~ve partyina 1n this sun·beked city, <lei.. qatet pthercd todAy to hear pe.ny chairman Frank Fahrcnkopf Jr. call the convention to order will\ the ritual blast at the opposmon. He <lc$Cnbtd last month's Demo-cratic Convention as .. an om of ercuutt aroups" &nd caUed Mond&Je just a man wbo c&11't say no." Vice president G~rce Bush had kicked off the convention v.uk activities Sun- day with a call for .. four mott years." Fihrenkopf poke1us1 bounaftcr JOvemment fiaurea released in Wasb- 1n1ton shoWcd the nation's Grou National Product f1CW It an annual rate of 7.6'percent an the last quarter, m nuns ton of lcom1na 'lpe~esand bousck~itll bu in . e GOP convention program ts rolhna tonhht "ith the keynote s_pccch ~ lf.S. Trcuurcr Katherine Onct l1nd ddreucs by Sen te M rity LcaCSer Howard M. Baker Jr.. U.N. Ambauador Jeane Kirkpatrick and by Marpret Heckler, sccrctar)' of health and human rvioes. At the Republican convention, conservatives were fumly in control, draftit11 a platform that WU a fc desrces 10 the fiabt of bat the prnidcnt wanted. ,,. _______ _ White House spokesman L.any pcakes told reponers that .. in aen- eral" Reagan qreed with the plat- fonn but would .. flesh out his own specifics" durina the campaian. The platform took a tou&her stand aaainst aoy taJt increase than the White House wanted. Bu h. inierviewed this momina on NBC's .. Today" _show, said, ··1 think It'~ a ,COD!ttVIUVe platform, but . t thank the mood of the country 1s conservative. I think it's forward- lookina, but I think the mood of the country is forward-lookina. ••it does not 10 beck to the Mondale promitt-thcm<verythina, ~-.and· spend, bi&h centralized federal pro. crams ... 11' that makes it more con· servative, it is more conservative ... afterc BJIMAu t DALLAS -an Wilson, tho (al tto-voiced creative main ;prina~ the Beach Boys. found himself an unwanted aucst at th epublican National Convention when he was artt d in 1 urcd area without ·Credentials. Wil10n, 2. was charat'd with criminal ~· Sunday and leased after postina a S200 bond, said Bob Knowles. tentions commander for Dallas County. Two men wi Wilson, who listed themselves as medical employees o e Bttch Boys, also were charaed wilh misdemeanor session of narcotics after almost 270 .pith.wctt fowMlin thW pockets durini-• ICal'Cb, Knowles said. The employees -Marcus Gtttory Dahlke, 23, and C..Jos Edward Booker, lS,· both of WO.ION Malibu C..lif. -posed $400 bond each. AJI three were in custody for mo than 3y; boun. The S.ch Boys performed Saturday niaht fo~ Repub~icant a members of the newt media in town to cover the coovcnt1on, which open today. I qaJet on wqaaboro front WA YNESBORQ Ga. -Officers patrolled quiet, rain-sticked •tree tOday..undtr the sccod ovenuaht curfew imposed to quell 2• hours of urtre1 trigered by the dcadpf a black man in police custody: ~lack. leaden .an~ th • man's wife, meanwbi~. appealed for peace, and authonttes wd a prthmuwy auto~y showed the qan died of beat elthaus~ion after an un_succeufuJ~D t ------------~~~~---~----n===~=~~==~~~==~~====~=;~~*ca~re~m~h~.ThecauG~~~~~~~~n-~t . foUowinaJhe &ITe$tsCf 30 people for curfew violations Saturday and earl Early Bird Dinner Specials 16.9S : Prime Rib or Fresh Fish Compl~t~ Dln~r With cholc~ of soup or salad and d~ss~rt Oii THE PENINSULA BALBOA 4 to 6 PM 1 •• , •• WHkl 801 E. BALBOA 673-7726 Sunday. Three of the were charged with carryina conccaJed weapons, police wd. I CJJlld HZ ~aJ to begin CHASKA; Min -Prosecutors have asked ajudte to bar reporten fro~ the courtroom when ctims testify in the trial of two of 24 adults charatd witti more than 400 cou~of ~xually abusina youna children. ~i~ were scheduled to beain t ay WJth atJUments before Carver County District Judac Martin Mansur, who hearina the case on 1 change of venue, on Scott County Attorney Kathleen rris' request that the news media and public be bl.rre4 from the couruoo durina the children's testimony. Attorneys for the defendants, Robert fld Lois Bentz of Jordan, were expected to oppose the motion. The Bcntz.q are amona 2• adults and one juvenile charaed since October in an investption Morris says is continuinJ. rr=~~~~~=~=====;;:;===~ Soviet. 'do' 't .eem b:Jtere.ted' * * * * *DAILY STAGE ENTERTAINMENT***** The LA Cast of BaATLaMANIA • AUG. 1a .. 21 Th• llodernelr•• with Peula Kellr, .Jr. • AUG. 22 -26 . " ADMISSION SHOW HOURS Adults '4.75 Monday·Thursday_ ! Pl-10 Pl Senior C1t1Zens (60 & over) I I Ill ~on ·ThJrs Friday ! rll-11 PM Children (6:16·yrs) IUO Saturday 12 .... ,. rll Ch1lndr6 yrs )_ --FREt Sunday 12 ..... ,. tr? -• AIR CONDITIONED COM ESETA,.,,~L~ATE ~ E/M CONVENTION CENTER ,, NO TIME FOR LUNCH? Try Our ITAllAM lUNCN BUFFET ALL YOU $~ ·ns· ~~~ ~~!on.-Frl ., • ~ Fresh Fruit, Cold Cuts, Cheeses, WIDE Variety of home made Salads, Pizza, 2 to 3 Choices of Hot Entrees and Garlic Bread. A C ROSS F R OM OtSN EYLANO 800 W KATELLA •FOR INFO C ALL (114 t•-1900 17502 Beach Blvd. at Slater Huntington Beach (714) 142·5505 Awat• W111111 ...... ,. .. I BALBOA. BEA.CH CO. -·_BACK TO SCHOOL ''Blowa STARTS TODAY 10 AM FREE! Backpacks, Stickers, Frisbees, Beach Towels & Beach Chairs With Purchase 10 50% OFF • • L STOREWIDE 10 AM -10 PM DAILY THRU S DAY • ---- y'' "FLOW ME THE DIJ, DAD" ~ALBOAISLA DO I . . Plu Ton Mor 673-4924 , W ASHINGTO• -The Reapn administration, after nearly two months of diplomacy, is stilliiJ!lalina Moscow that 1t would like to hold arms control talks in Vienna in ptd-Septcmber. But partly fof political reasons, Soviet leaders have not~ wiUina so fl.r--to ~to tho kind of ope.n q'enda that wo\lld be acceptabl•to the United States, two key officials said here. "'Ibey seem to be havinJ econd thouahts, if they ever had first thouahts to have neiotiations:" wd one officW. "Perhaps it rcfl"ccts their rcadina of the campaip, or uncef1linty in the Soviet system, but they just don't seem very interested... l -CALIFORflA Convict--~ from CIJlao CHINO-Auhoritics were seehna a convicted butJlar who cscaJ>Cd. the California lnstitutefor Men by scalina two raz~r·t<?pped fen~ an~ flceina mto tbe hilly coun~siee. lnrinco Zubia, 19, servana tune for ~s1dcntia1 buralarY. fled the prisons Qin1mum ~rity. area Sun~y momma. Department ~f Corrections Capt. Alex MannoleJO said. H~ wa.s still at larle late Sun~y. Zubia was believed to hate fled cast from the .P"l<?Jl• apparently toward hills 10 the San Bernardino C<unty area, MannoleJO 1116. Zubia was no1considercd danaerous, Marmolejo noted. Boy, 6, ••e. mom la pool · LA CRESCE?f TA-A 6-ycar-old boy saved bas mother from droW1lirl4 in the family pool bydoUY paddlina while pullina her to the ed&e1 then ru~ina inside and callin&ln operator. "All I know is to dogy paddle,' Peter Rinaen said. "l just arabl2<l my mom and doUY paddled. She wasn't very heavy." Depvties were ab~to locate the suburban home ofMaalie Rinaen even thouab Peter pve the o rator an addrcn-·in New Jersey, where the family lived rec:en\ly before vina ~ California. "My son knows that if somethina •oes wro ~call the P>lice," she said. "I fit wasn't for him, I wouldn't be here npt • FloodJ.D.6fa Tw'entrnJne Palm• TWENTYNINE PALMS -Heavy rainfall pounded this desert city Sunday, sendina toodwatcn into several homes and creatin& a run on the Fi.re Department'• undbqs. About 40 homeowners called the city Fire Depanmcnt req\estin& sa.ndba&s, firefiahter Debbie Waddell said. "Water went into several omes," but there were no evacuations or injuries, she noted. The afternoon st>nn dropped more than 1 'h inches of rain on this city 120 miles east ofLosAnaeles, ac:cordina to fire station mcasuremenu. Deatmejlan IJb:Jt. at VP plMt DALLAS ..... OJ.ifornia Gov. Gcorac Deukmejian is 1Cndina si&nals at the Republican Natbnal Convention that he is available for the. Republican vice presidential nonination in 1988. The first-term aovemor, who bas already announced plan$ to seek re~lcction in 1986, flatly ruled out any ~bility of runnina for president in I 988 during a news conference Sunday with California rcporten. But D;ukmejian later pve broad hints that he was interested in the vice presidential nomination. WoRu Sovlet ml.aaweepen JJead to S. Yemen CAIRO, Erm>t -The Western effort to identify the 10urce of the explosions daraaama ships in the Red Sea continued today while two Soviet minesweepers !leaded south in the wateiway, apparently toward pro.Soviet South Yemen. At least 18 ships have been damaaed by mines in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Suez, the northwestern branch of the sea, since July 9, and American, British and French mine hununa units have responded to F.aYPt's request to helpsearch for the explosives. U.S. Navy officers on board theUSS Shreveport, the base of four American mineswcepina helicopters searcbina lbc Gulf of SuCZi said Sunday the oceanoaraphic ship Harkness had made 12 "contacts" WJth mine-like objects, but most were found~ be trash or coral when checked by froamen . London •abway train cra•JJ ~U& J LONDON -A subway train crashed into the rear of a seoond train in cast London today, killina the driver of one of the trains and injurin_1 about 30 ~naers, PQJ'cc and ambulance workers said. A spokesman for London Transport said two westbound trains collided at 12:S3 p.m. near the Leyton station on the Central Line in an area where the trains run above around. CJJlnae me<f«Jl•t celebrated PEKING -One week af\cr the end of the Lot Anaelcs Olympics China's athlete• arc still settina medals. More than 6,000 JUCSts crammed 'Pekina's Great HaJI of the People Sunday to conaratulate China's triumphant Olympic athletes and watch CommuniJt Pany leaders a'ritd tl\em special merit me.dab the official news aaency Xinhua said. "Youna pionccn presented flowen and red tcarves to the medalists an' othcn as the hall echoed with the IOund or d.rums and buales." Xinhua said."Prior to the mcctina. many youna people and children eaaerly aouaht their autOlflphs" VJoleace coadna• b:J BeJfut BELFAST, Nonhem Ireland-Protestant and Roman Catbobc yo11th a.tta~kcd poliot patrols wttb &110line bombt and f!Xkl in separate outbreaks of nouna car!Y today~ pohce rtPorted The street duturblln in Bttfa t and ia Strabcne, County Tyrone, re the latest in a week ofviolcnce in this sectanan divid~ Briti h provin • ... Aqam~o •tatlle IJeld Jn catom• MANILA. Philippines-Relatives ofecn·ano Aquino said tod~y monc:· will be raised .to~>' Sl, 970 in duties demanded by lirpon customs officials ro~ releate of a hfe tzc -bronze statue of the a mated op~iuon t der "It should not be ta•ed, btcausc It is a aift to the Filipino peo_ple " pror · tcd Aquino'• lister. Tessy Oreta, The atau~c arrivC'd in Manila on Su. n' Y.llld wu lo bcun tttd 1n-a>nJunc:tionWith nauonwictnnarmts'loo rallies planned on Tuesday, the first ann1vcnary of qu no' unsol~cd a inauon. I , ActreM Ella.beth Taylor. with Richard Burton'• three alaten and four brothen. Liz Taylor visits Bui-to~ kin; _greeted by 300 W.elsh singers •Elizabeth was always a welcome of roast beef with the family. Thru of Burton's sisters, Mrs. vtsttor when she came here with Richard' Owen, Cassie Thomas, 62, and Cissie James, 8<1_ and the four Jenlons brothers, urabam David. 71, Will, 7•, and Verdun, 6S, were there, PONTRHYDYFEN, Wales (AP) .-About 300 people sang a welcome 10 actress Elizabeth Taylor 10 the Welsh binbplace of her ex-husband. Richard Burton, wlien she arrived for a reuniop with the laJe act.or's·mtus .. and l>rothers. The crowd thatgreeted the 52-year- old actress Sunday nisbt in thi' tiny Welsh hamlet burst into a rendition of a favorite local tune, "We'll Keep a Welcome in the Hillsides1 We'll Keep a Welcome in the Vales.' "I feel as if I'm home," said Miss Taylor, her eyes filling with tean, as she stepped inside the three-bedroom row house of Hilda Owen, 62, a sister of Burton. The actress spent the night there after a reunion with Burton's 1even surviving brothers and sisters. Miss Taylor, who was twice mar- ned to Burton, wore a pink two-piece suit, a scarf and a tarie diamond ring 'which Burton bad given her. She arrived thru hours late after a flight from Scotland, where she stayed last week with lonatime friends, Michael and Elizabeth Smith. r t l I :> ' ( ,, c ., .., .. Ehzabeth was always a welcome viSJtor when she came here with Richard," said David, a retired police officer. f Miss Taylor was met at the airport in Swansea, Wales, by one of Burton 'a brothers, GrabarD Jenkim, 56, who drove her the 1 S miles to Pob- trhydyfen in a dark blue Ro~Royce. •• Mm.Taylor, who wulastin Wales nine years •JO on .her second honey- moon with Burton, stayed away from a memorial seni'ce ~on AUJ.: l I to -· avoid upsettina bis fourth wife and P'Y'9opeller widow, Sally Hay Burton. • i 1 Lut weekend, ahe flew to Switzer- land and visited Burton's pave. bJ Burton, one of Britain's great a p 1 ~o lf::Jjm Shakespearean s1qe actors and a i 1 t.> veteran of more than 40 movies, died of a brain hemorrhage Aua. 5 10 Celigny, Switzerland, at the age of 58. Dunng their married life, Burton and Miss Taylor frequently visited this villaae, where be was born in 192.S as Richard Walter Jenkins, the 12th of 13 children of a coa1 miner and a barmaid. After her return Sunday, sur- rounded by a crowd of inquisitive nei&hbors, fans and photographeTS, Miss Taylor smiled, waved and blew kisses before sittina down for a meal NEW YORK (AP) - A Brooklyn man who alJegedly mounted a fast- spinnina five-foot propeller on the hood of his unregistered 1971 Mercury in an _attempt to conserve ps has been Cb&!JCO with reckless endanicnnent, police say. Jose Goitia, 32, an inventor who told police be was designing the contraption for the aood of America, was arrested while making a test run alona Stillwell Avenue, accordina to police in the 60tb Precinct. Our Level Pay Plan \Vill show you how. sun1n1er ga'i bill~. So you face approxi · n1atelv the san1e an1ount on yc>ur gas bill every n1onth. Sun1n1er and winter. ) ,. I c !'l .. I 0 n n High or low? LTp or down? If you 're tired of paying gas bill'i that go up in the winter and down in the sun1 - n1er, n1aybe it's tin1e you hecan1e m1 a1 ierage bill payer. J Our Level Pay Plan can cake the gueSS\\ork out of paying gas hill'>. And n1ake n1onth~' : budget'i n1uch ,, ea'iier to plan. t> In fact, our le • ' p l· n -· , JI b Level Pay Plan can help you budget your g'~ bill~ f< >r an entire year. Be ause it helps balan e your higher \vinter ga't -bill~ witl~r lo\\ r ux>k in your August ga'i bill fr>r detail'i on the Level Pav Plan. And , to JXU1idpate, just pay the Level Pay Pl~u1 ~u11ount in<li - cmed on \'Our bill. )bu can drop the plan at any tin1e s1n1p~' hy notifying us . If you'd like n1ore infom1ation on the Le\ el Pay Pl~u1 1 just call the 1~l'i Con1pm1). 1 I \\ 'll be happ ' to tell ) ou all alx ut the advm1~1 . of I ing m , ra~·- ll'l'MllHN.• CAUFORNIA ~COM~ .. , Augutt 20. 1984 AS Can De Lorean attorneys defend hlm any longer? LO ANGELES (AP) -The 1hcy arc unCtJU1n etbtt t ey can attorneys ho ucc sfully defend¢ fTord 10 represent De Lorean 10 John Z. De Lorean pmst a maJor future hupt1on unless some of his aovemment ••stins" prosecution ts are released .• don't Imo 1f bc•11 be a le to pay the "John·s dcfcn an huie lqal bUI. but the m y prove from $300.000 to SS00.000. to 1bC theirrldnupe anyway. Weitzman. a cnmanal defi at- ... thin this will change the tomey who wa recommended 10 De structu~ of our b&As1ness, .. Howard Lorean by an anmate in federal prison Weitzman, 44, said la t week after he after lhc utomdcr"s a'tresl on drug and attorney Donald .Re won ecciuit-cbal'JCS. • uJfortheformerautomnerwbowas The most expa~1hc nem on the tried on coaunc lraffickma Charges. defense blll. Weitzman d, tht "I thank we're goinJ to have to get a purchase of" dady court transmpts 1 bigerwa1tm1room, jokedRc,37,as .---------------------------news of the JUry't decision sn their offi~ phones to ringin The acquit- tal was seen as a blow to l(>Vernmcnt .. sting" method .. Our hope: is we're oina to get involved in cases now that w11l have an effect not just on the defendant but on how the system operates," said Re. "We want to do something wortb-whil~" · In the meantime, the law;yers say MEN'S ANO WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR -- The Pros · Since 195 7 SUmmer . Clearance OUAUI'Y DRINKING WATER FOR·HOME OR- a e.- Slarts Tues., Aug~ -21 OEHCE.. · Limit First 100 ~ -_ ... --.--- 303 MAIN STREET . BALBOA, CALIF. 9Z661 The Great American Great loans. Great rates. And a great $100 cash rebate if you act now! GREAT LOANS. It's summertime. And the livin' is easier than ever with a loan from Great American. loans for cars, boats, RV's, mobile homes, even airplanes. loans for installing pools, spas, or patios. Home improvement loans, equity loans ... most any loan you need for Great American summenime living. ~ :··············· . GREAT RATES. Phone today. This COUJ>on Enr •••• to discover our low rates and 8 itJes ~are-ro,. affordabte terms. Choose a 8 competitive, fixed-rate loan. 8 Or our new Controlled 8 Variable Rate, which 8• combine the bet of 8 both fixed and variable : C A 8 rateplans, : c,.,._:SH REBATE! : • ~°'~ f'\po~~Jt • • ~ ' °'ro~" unr~~~loin 8 ~ pip. '°'". &or,14 • • 8 Phone toda"' • 8 Get det ils ,. 8 • a ~today• rates: 8 • Cut oJt this valuable I Or: "Be County 644-I coupon for your $100 8 (Call Collect) 1634 8 cash rebate! • '••• · • ••••••••• • ·······= . Great American _ . Gr --LHDH \ • Sonoma County .. I I i One-sided race could still turn i nto a close one WASHINGTON -President Rc-aa,an·, in~n illve crack about bomb- ina the Soviets sen ta shudder through hiscampaian-stratcgy team last week Contrary to what Whue House of- finals told reporters, the ~mark also caused a seismic tremor in the daily Republican survey tracking.. where Reagan's lead over Walter Mondale d1pped below 10 points for the first tame in.nearly three weeks. The down tum did not last long. but the dJp from 12 to nine points in pollster Richard Wuthbn's surveys gave the he to the White House line that no o ne really cares what Reagan says. People care, all rig.ht, but they are measunna Rcapn apmst Mon- dale, not Franklin Roosevelt. Much of Reagan's scemtng invulnerability reflects negative 'oter attitudes toward Mondale, which almost cost ham the Democratic nominatton. These Mondale negatives now in- sulate the President from the political consequences of his irrcspons1b1hty. .. If you had a significant Oemo- crauc candidate. this wouJd be a dog fi&}lt ," summed up a Reagan strategist. "Then people could vote Reagan out of office, still liking him. But they 4Jso sense the incompetency on the other 1dc. People who «now Mondale like him, but very few know him. ·To othel"$, be comes across as whiny. People think they know Reagan. If you had someone else with hero worship, the election would be a question." It could be a question anyway. altboug.h Reagan's lock on Western and Southern electoral votes makes a Mondale victory a long shot under the best circumstances. Reagan's managers agree pnvatel). however, that there arc some unusual elements tn this year's campaign which arc difficult to measure and could be "olatile This 1s a maJOr reason for the da1l) trackings. which arc designed to pick up an} sudden shift in voter scnumcnt. As seen from the 'antage point of the Reagan team. there are three mystery factors in the campaign whtch could cause the present one· sided race to become a close one. The first 1s Democratic succe.,s in enlarg.ang the electorate. or doing what Rea~n strategist Stuan Spenl:t:r calls "dnv1ng the demographics · Thi~ means increasing the turnout of solidly anti-Reagan cons11tuenc1es. blacks and other mmomies. li~rals. working-class voter5 who 1dent1fy with their union leaders. and new women voters inspired by the prh- ence of Rep Geraldtne Ferraro on the Democratic ticket Th~ demographics arc tnck) and, at this point. not pan1cularly tnspir- mg to Mondale I ncreascd black registration appears to have been offset by registration of whites who overwhelmtng favor Reagan. The Hispanic vote 1s not a sohd bloc. and Reagan has always done beuer among Hispanics than most Republican c.and1dates Reagan 1s al~ doing relatively "'-Cll among Jewish voters. some of whom rematn alienated b) the animos1t1es of the Democratic pnmary campaign. Pollsters on both sides agree that 1t 1s still too early to assess the impact, 1f an). of Ferraro. The ~·gender gap" is a reality, but it seems unlikely that Ferraro. even if she surmounts her present difficulties. can tum out millions of women who art otherwise disinchned to vote. The second mystery factor in the campaign is foreign policy. wh1c~ woiries Reapo stratcgii.ts less each passing week. There is still some concern about an "October of- fensive .. by the rebels 1n El Salvador. which the Reagan fol k have talked up much as they did the "October surpnsc" they feared in Iran four years ago. However, the first impulse of Americans 1n any foreign ~hey 1s to rally around their President, not against him. The seizure of the hostages 1n Iran may have sunk President Carter's re-election bid apinst Reagan, but 1t helped Carter dispose of the challenge from Sen Edward Kennedy A move by any foreign pe>wer to embarrass Reagan could well turn out to help him. That leaves one mystery factor which most womes the R~aganites. which is the latent, ever-present qtRStion about the Pres1den1·s healfh and age. In part because of ht!I la1d- back lifestyle, Reagan has withstood the ravages of the White House far better than many younier Presidents Most who have seen him up close arc impressed with his vigor. But even Reagan intimates ac· knowledge that his heanng has stead- ily declined. despite the assistance of a heanng aid. and his walk is noticeably slower and more de- liberate. Reagan defused the ··age 1SSue" in 1980, but no one ultimately def eats age. Hts ad v1scrs acknowledge that Reagan's rc~lcct1on prospects could dim in a hurry 1f voters reach the conclusion that be might not stay healthy through a second term. All this snould otter scant comfon to the Mondale camp. Reagan has suffered through August blunders equal to those or four years ago, he has bungled bis response on the tax issue and he has, with a sinale ill-timed .. Joke." made mincemeat of the carefully constructed invenuon of his advisern hat. be has changed hrs tune about the Soviets. But presidential elections remain a match race. On the eve of the Republican convention, a solid ma- JOnty of Amencans suit prefer Ronald Reagan when they compa re him to his Democratic opponent. REAGANISM OF THE DECADE: Warming up for his weekly paid pohucaJ radio speech on Aug. 11 at his ranch, Reagan said, ··My fellow Amencans. I'm pleased to tell you today that r ve s1pted legislation that will outlaw Russia forever We begin bombing in live minutes " Who rode first? Argument continues over wh1d1 U.S president first used an auto· mobile. This geto; tricky Wilham McKinley rodC' 1n an electric car - but only at his funeral. so he wa' no lonier president. Theo<lon: Roose- velt preferred horses to auto'>. and never drove a car W1ll1am Ho"'-ard Taft was the first a<:tuall) to get behind the wheel. Q What was the ""orst horse e"cr to run an the Kentucky Dcrb~'> A. A ttred animal named \enecas Coin ~nerally gel'> 1hat d1\Cred1t. In 1949, he slowed to a walk a quaner mile before the linish and go1 tu the paddock half an hour after a hor~ called Po nder won 11 Seven hundred mill•., ~outh of 1hc main Hawa11an group is tiny Palmyra llland Cover'> onl} ahout a mile and a h:tlf But it's oflic1ally in Hawa11. So It 's the ~uthC'rnmo'>t part of thl' United States. A traffic court judge in Edmonton. Alberta. levied a $64 pcnah) apin\t a man who id he completely m11- understood the sian where he lefi ht\ r. It read: "Fine for Park1n1 " Q What doc the hloodhound do .,.,hen 1t finall) cui:he~ up with Its q°.:'1lcks llS fi cc. U'!Uall) ORANGE COAST ( redn football coach Lou Holtz "'llhthcllne "lt'samazmghowmuch you' can accomplish when no one care'! who get., the ucd1t ·· M 1chael Jack\on h;tc; his o""n 11p code Onl\ one man ha'> hccn · C1eneral of the <\rm1cs of the l n1tcd States" Name him. No. not Georae Marshall, Douglas MacArthur Dwight Eisenhower, Hap .\rnold or Omar Bradley They were livc·star office~ all ng.ht. each a ··c 1eneral of the Arm> ol thC' l nited States of Amenca." But that General-of-Arm1e\-plural title has been held h) no other than John J Pershing. Do lad} lawyers tend to be .. too emotional and atlras1v('?" Such was 1he e:11pres~d opinion of numtrous men in the legal profo't'10n when C{Ucned 1n an Amencan Bar Auocia- t1on '!urvcy What the women think of the male attorneys was not reported. unfonunately Ninety percent oftht touri t from Finland to this country JO traiif\t· away to lake Wonh. Fla. No other C'ily nationwide has more residents of Finnish extractJon. L.M. B•Yd 11 t 1yadl~11rd tolfllDllllt. H. L. Schwett1 m Pu~ Frenk Zlnl ua rc111iw Daily Pilat ~ _.,. p Of l r .. e• JO W<•t' fta1 ' Tom Telt 1, U!lor ti AOO'-CO'• -4'.,. e.:-. 1~ Coll•AHM CA t ' REAGAN KEEPS ClWfJINO HIS S1t:Rf al TAXES. BUT MY rosrOON 15 ftl~ TiiE SAME-. When the p~one ~ec9mes an instrument of torture Sales people have the wrong number when they callhim Bear wuh me, f nends, while I blow my stack. · ··1f I had one wish" 1s a f11rl> popular fantasy engaged 10 by a multitude of people, usually when they have nothing better to do. What would you do with your wish? A million dollars? World peace? An end to sufTenng and pain? I'm afraid that my wish is very selfish. I WlSh that all telephone sohc1tors would be taken out and shot. No mercy. No appeals. Just. ··Have you ever telephoned someone you didn't know in order to try to sell something?" "Yes." BANG! This may seem a little extreme to some of you, but bear in mind that I work at home, and that my work (even though it's not readily ap- parent) requires that I do a lot of thinking. I'll be sitting there. eyes &lazed. in what Ann refers to as my .. coma mode" and the phone wlll ring. "Ha Mr. Harvey, this is Frank's Hardware and we're havi ng a sale on fini!.hing nails · It's like being a cement mason and having someone walk nght through your fresh '>1dewalk. An>wa>. on a recent Friday, mr, phone rang "Hello, Mr Harvey?· "Yes·· This 1s Barbara with the Ne1ahborhood Alert pa&Jng system, and I'm calhna because our rcpresen· BILL HARVEY tauve will be 1n your area ... " "I'm not interested." 01ck. The followina Mo nday. ··ThlS 1s Joan with the Nci&hborbood AJen paging system ... " "Listen' Someone called here Friday1 and I told her that I wasn't interestco!" 01ck. Apparently, the Netg.hborhood Alert pa11ng system didn't like being hung up on, because they called me four more times with the next 30 minute6. Each time. whoever was on the other end started into her little s~ch. I let her get as far as "Neighborhood Alert" paging sys- tem" and hung up, except for once when I let her aet all of the way through, and asked to spealc to her supervisor. "Just a moment." Click Buzz Her click. this time. Apparently. they were ha ving spon with me. What can you do? I called directory assistance, no hstang for Nc1ahborhood Alert. For lack of a better idea, I called the police. They sugested that J call the telephone company bu mcs!I office. l did. They suqcsted that I call the Better Busme Bureau I did I got a recordini. J slowly became aware that Neigh- borhood Alert WIU goina to be allowed to thumb their nose at me and there was nothing obvious and immediate that I could do about it. I felt reasonably certain that if the paging service had hired a company to do their callina for them, they'd be pretty interested in how 1t was being done. Even if they had their own people calling. I'm sure that five wasted caJls and several tons of Ill will would ra1se a few eyebrows. But, bow to get in touch Wllh Neighborhood Alert? As I cooled down, it suddenly occurred to me that these &iris had said .. Our representatives will be 1n your area .. " Howd1d they know that? How did they know where I lived? After all, I had called the phone company over a year aao and re- moved m y name from the criss-<:ross directory (The one that lists by address rather than name) solely because it's the prime tool used by phone solicitors. 1 even CA.lied back a month or so later and verified that we would not be in the criss-cross. · I was reassured that we would not. With a sinkina fcelina, I called the phone company business office a second time. ··why, yes, Mr. Harvey. Your name is definitely in our tree& Address Directory. The brand new one has JUSt come ou&1! Oh.JOY' And, here I'd thouaht that phone company foul-ups were limited to making you dial the number four times before connectina Jou to a wrona number. We live an learn. Anyway, I feel a lot better now. Thank'I for listening. Columaht Bm Jlarvey Jltte• i. BaatJJJ1toa Be•d. Work m akes the world go round A story 10 the paper recentl y told about a man who put all his money rn to a \talc lottery, lo~t. and killed himself. In a note. he · he would rather do anytbina than work for a hvini. I did not f ecl sorry for his death.: 1f 1ha1 i what he wanted, but I relt immensely sorry for hi wa tcd life. A man who dOH not cmoy workina of any son somethina leu than a ~non. It i cas) to undet1tand someone who dislikes the wort he 1s doing, or the JOb he 1 1n There ire m1lhon1 of 'IUC'h pcopl • who arc underemployed, or who have nol de.,,elopcd kilb that ~ould araufy them in employment, for thern~l~e or for o th¢rs. _ But not to care for any ~ork at 11115 t lhol · l~ndi&ion tn f; ~t w I we cover u ·•1c1surc" is mcaninif ul nd plC'a \Jf'lbl only m conLms& to ,, StDIEY Hu11s· work.ju ta llctp&1d h~t(ulonlya a respite from diurnal tcuvuy. TbOSC' whq do nothin& all day do not lecp 11 peacefully, or wake up a ml hcd 1 Cho who ha\ie c crtC'd themstl"ei in some purposeful pro- ject The few men \lrhO have n economic n cd &o work ucn them· Klve1 a trcnuou ly upon their hobb1c1 or '"ocauonal pursulll as olhe uo 1n tnful cmpf~mcnt: Pt)'Chol 11 lly, they make ' "" r\ .. out of a m • One of the arcu lfl&Cd1cs in lifi is never finding a niche that i1 both aatisfyina and llmulating. anU bcina condemned to robotiicd labor. In this sen 1 modem andu triahzcd civ- thzallon <-htthet c:apitah t or com• munist, n matters little in th1 contut) narrow &he "ocational op. uons for many, •ho would prefer but cannot afford a rural or ouldoor uastenu. Jt cen&ury and more o, job opportunrtics bcpn chanpna. from fi rmm and mall hopkccpen and indepcnd nt arti ns 10 omc-c nd fu&ory cmplo)cc • Wh n our nation )Oun 90 pcrcena of our e1111cn1 ~'CIC self<mploycd, today about the me pcr<ltn w rlL ri r compam , petformina function they m&y or may nm find congenial '"'" ll•rt1• ll • .,,.,ke,# r-ol•mt1111 19 84 GOP strategy calls for a replaY of 1980 campaign WASHINGTON -Walter Mon- dale's introductjon of tax increases as a major issue in the campaian threw a monkey wrench into the Re- publicans' well·platlned elccuon Strategy. From White House source and internal GOP workina papers, I've been able to get a picture of Presjdent RC8f'.ll'S re~lection stratqy. If they can Just conlaln the damage already caused by Mondale's w-increasc pmbJe -which obviously cauaht them by surprise -here's what Reagan's political professionals have charted for the campaian: •Economic issues are the voters' chief concern, iccordina to.· a con- fidential White House briefing re-- Port. "Our political success depencls on what happens to the federal bud&et deficit\ interest rates and Uflemploy- ment,' the report warned. notm& that voters arc more concerned about unemployment than inflation. •Social issues rate No. 2 in the public's mind, the GOP strat~y paper asscns. Crime is the bi.a concern here, followed by education, Social Security and race relations. •International relations -war and peace -is the third most important category of voter worries. the Republicah strateaists believe. •The campaian plannen have revetfully acknowledged that voters in ieneral seem to be less concerned about the guality of leadership and the state of the nation's morality - precisely the areas where the presi- dent is rqarded as strongest. Gaven their certainty that econ- omic issues arc what voters care about most -and history 1s ieneraJly on their side in this -how do Reagan's advisers plan to capitalize on the present heiffhy state of the economy? EssentiaUy.t they intend to replay their succcssrW 1980 campaign. According to a planning document reviewed by my associate Dale Van Ana. the president will continue to harp on the need to reduce total ~vemme.01 spending. ebm1nate 'undue and cumbersome rqulations that smother initiative" and brina pressure .. on all federal agencies to ~ucc wasre and fraud." To Democratic sugges\Jons that Rcqan has had four years to do this, the Republicans WllJ be happy to respe>nd that four yean wa n't cnoufb to clean up the mm they inhented from the Democrats. In the GOP's economic blue skies there is only one small cloud -no bigger than a man's band. But that band belongs to Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volckcr, and the dark cloud of rising interesl rates could turn into a campaign thunder- storm for the Repubhcans. The president's advisers arc worri- ed about what they refer to 11 the new "intt;~est-rate constituency" - Amencans at all economic levels who pay close attention to interest rates before buyina a hou~ or other m~or credat items If they ~t too nervous to buy because of hi&h mtercst rates, the economic recovery will shudder lo a halt -and Reagan will lose bis best camp&1an issue. White House insiders blame Vol- cker's money policies for the recent rise in intcrnt rates, and privately concede that Reapn's reappoint· ment of Volcker was a mi'ltake. All thcyaan do now, thou.ah, 1~crou their fingen and hope V"olcker doesn•t bnna on a recession before EJcction Day. Barrina 1uch a disaster, the R~ publicans arc confident they aan ride the economic issues to another four years in the Whue House. OIM.ME A BREAK: Sensele vandalism, usually constdc~ a phenomenon of bia-city blight, has reached the ruaaed ck country or Alaska. Near the awe-inspirin1 • Men.dcnh~ll Gl•cier, the National Pa~k Scry1cc put up Skaters C•bin1 in .,..h1ch h1ken co,uld find protectaon from th~1rct1cwtndswh1,tlina cro th ~ac1cr. But vandals keep brcakina the·littJe cabin' windows, 5eriou ty d1m1n1 hina the tructun:' useful· u a blme! to the b1un1 eold. A Park rvace memo notes th11 the ranien hav .. uit\J 1 vancty of producu, includ1na nutmaJ d- ai&ned for Ute tn prlJOn faC'lht ... N""one of them proved 1 match for the vandal • the rv,1cc hu come up with 1 btzarrc lutron: Hikers att 1 ucd pon.abte replacement windows thn1 thn> can 101tall lhcm '" J•rt ,._.,.... I.I • •YNJctj1ftl C.l flllla I, 'Arms-----' escape airport checks But procedures rated satisfactory after FAA screentn .. LOS ANGELES (AP) -An in· tensified check of security at Southern California airports durina the Olympics showed some "weapons" escaped detection, but overall results were satisfactory, fed- eral officials said. The federal Aviation Adminis- tration reports that the "weapons" were defused a,renades, simulated bombs or unloaded auns that FM personnel' attefl)ptcd to smuuJe. in lugpae past 1nspccton mannma mew detectors. Jack Robitaille, manager of the FM~'s ·r security branch in Los Ana,e , said extra personnel were brou t in to conduct the chd:ks on a dail 1s for a month-Iona period at the Los Anaelcs, "Burbank, Long Beach, John Wayne, Ontario and -Santa a.rt>ara aitpon.a. I He declined Friday to give specific resu~ts, "Other than to. say they ~ "satJafactory." However, the Los An&eles Times reported in Saturday's editions that an inspector at Lona Beach airport missed a arenade hidden in carry-on luaaaae. . Lona Beach airport manaaer Chris Kunze said he understood that in- spectors at all the airports missed at least one weapon. Robitaille and Milt Ferris, manqer of the FAA secunty office at Los Ana,eles International Airport, qrced that was "probably true." .. Our people try to do thinp that miibt confuse the inspectors,' Rob- itaille said ... We want to keep people on their toes." ' , ferris said a,renades are the most difficult weapons to detect, and that · miuina one durina l S smu~na attempts at Lona Beach wi-s a 'very ICCCll.table:.:JexcJ of performance. Robitaille said the checks are conducted ~ .. n. onaoina basis, but were more concentrated durin& the Olympics. • ~ PAPAR_AZZI - - Volleyball star set up, nets a farewell prank WUt .. YM ltt for Wlaalac a fall •olleytiell ldlolanldp te Peppe,.._ Ual•enlty ill Mal.UMI? Y •pt WvH d, ttaat'1 wMt. At Jeut &Mt'• wMt JaUe E•ut, a neat sradaa&e el Newport ea.-~=•&.1M&u&wee1&1,..._tn1 a .. -.~ c • ...,.v a.. E .... ,.rMdlbyearwuvelMMstatllleteatllarWIQp_. most nlwle player of dteSea Vlewt,eqw. wu taka from lier Newport llome aU a.m. by abMt 10 frleilia. AttlteFukloahWMl...,,..1cater,Evaa1wa1blllldfolded ~.ll~..._.,.~r-r-ud 111•4 by_Jl...-e 0.ma,t. (left) wl I •ra Aqer-(riCW-.-flteJ Jeftlter to •er o .. devices for a w.Ue bl tM F~OD lslud foaata!D before takl.11 t.er oa to Balboa hlud ud ~ "t to breakfut. -.-'Rte •coarptraton' ... pluJ to euow Evam mto tH bay bat ·related atier sJae pleaded to be let off lk Mot. ne tJwp wu all ID &ood fa, Evam &lfeed later u sited~ for PepperdJDe. Wade ud Jan Robert. chat with Michael Owen. Don Hukell and Gay Earl eample buffet. _Johann and Dtc.: Jonu and Dorothy Ray anticipate the Spa.rand Roee. ~--------Planners get 'cereus' at -------'Desert at Night' preytew ._.,.,.......-- about the e tem cotUl pot l---------------------..--------------~~ • t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Augu t 20, 1 84 .Pioneerputs Students in the driver's seat : :Advice: T urn down stereo . ·keep your.mind on the road By JEFF BAR E I, . II, 1 , "'-"'1hf • ~I 1 C10LLIEGE, P . ( P)-Fifty-one~ rs after &caching bis ftnt dnv1111 lesson an a 1929 Graham-Pai . and r<J dm1 "the pleasure of a hfcllme." He owiu a 1979 Llnooln. In 1933, Ncyhan, then an indu lnal en mecrina profc sor at Pcnnsylvani State College, now Penn tate Uni ity, of'Tettd his scn:1 to the local hi h hool- nen s>a)1n for the gasoline at lS cents a piton. His gesture came at\er drunken driver had lammed an to Neyhart' 1>3rked car nd wound up with 33 t1tc-hes in bas nee:\:. Dnvmg was ~rious busin Neyh n con· clu<JN, nd motori~ts needed e.llpens to t~ICh lhcrn eoouf \he rulC$ nd hazard of the ro d . "I w so ctcartyttlat the pl ce 10 t ach them wa~ high school. In hi.gh school )OU'h&\C the cl rooms and kids who arc ca r arid anxious to ltarn." he said·. • • l:ater Ne .mo~ drivcno. cae 1na potential instructors. TC4cben came from around the country to has Teacher Preparation CourM" in Driver Educ lion at Penn State an 1936. BENNER·McGII,L 'Dirty language' is for the birds- • Karol McGill of Irvine and Jerry Benner 9f Huntington Beach were united in mamage Aug. 18 m St. Mary's b» the ~a Catholic ChuRh m Huntington Beach. The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John Richard McGill of ··Westminister and Mr. and Mrs. Bill I" Benner of Garden Grove are the parents of the bndegroom. The couple met while playing the roles of an engaged couple 1n a play at the Huntington Beach Playhouse. Attendant~ \\ere 5usan Morgan, Marti D1 Giuseppe, Carolyn Mor- row. Roger Teel. David Benner and .Kurt McGill. Nancy Clements kept 1he guest book at the reception :following tht ceremony at the .Sheraton l'\ie~pon · After a wedding trip to Santa "Barbara. the couple will hve m f rvme. She 1s a hlgb school drama 'teacher an the Garden G rove school dtstnct and he 1i, catering manangcr Ka.rol llcOW • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Accord- ing to the Wall Street Journal, a parrot that isstill askanf for crackers as .. bopelesslyouto date. The modern parrot, parakeet. myna. and even crow is saying. "Frankly, I don'tgive a damn" or "Come up and see me sometime" or"Oy va~:· A11 l.uDERS It seems that a very mnovative man taught bis bird so weU it now has a 40-word vocabulary. The man M h ba d h ... _ all h decidedto0 ocommercialandputtiis Y us n sayst ey ... .uow t e • words already and it will not hurt bird-talkin& lessons on tape. They are them. we v.ould like your opinion. - selling very well M.D. lN BOSTON . I thou&ht my brother-in-law must DEAR BOSTON: Tbe only cl&Dger bavebouptthe tapes when 1 VlSited Ueaba dteposalbllltydult tlae tand 11- him a few weeks ago and heard bis year-old mlsbt tbiDk tlae parrot's parrotsaysomeveryfunnythings. rf l d dd Ja Lastniaht,however,afterattendinya pe ormuce ecuteu • t e '6" a.ndalrable words.i. &belr own party at my brother-in-law's place, vocaba.lartes. was certain the bird was not get Ung Tile prll lhoald not be cat off from such dirty language from any tape. --1r I b e d Some auests thought the bird's per-....: uc e, owever. e cu rape a formancc was hilarious. I was 50 batla towel onr tile case wbeu "11 yoaag pests arrive. Eveu tbe embarrassed I couldn't see straight. dumbest bird will not perform unle11 The problem: I Sf Your 9-and 11 -there la u audience. year.old daughters caonotvasit my . · • • • brother-in-law becau~ of the parroL DEAR.ANN LANDERS:_0ur n~rentsdivorct'dwhcn mybrolher bopelo . -... and I wereul)der 10yc:tr$Ofago. We DEAR ANN UNDERS: Myhus. live.with our mother. The coum ....-Qa._nd.) '1Ster is very competitive with decided we \CC Dad On Wedntstl3) S r mC:-:S-he IS also hostile a.nd envious and Sundays. Now that we are older becau 1 have a bcttcrfiaure. and our ~hoolwork IS har~er we have "Bet "went out and bought the· ~ut.out 1he Wednesday v 1s1u. ~d ~me cveninJdress after she saw me 1~s1sts that we spend Sundays with in mine at a family party. La t njgliut him. . a fancy charity ball, we looked like the ~am 18 and my brother 1s 16 We Gold Dust Twins. Whal can I do en)OY Dad but we_ would prefer to do about this miserable person?-thm~ wtth~urfncndson weekends BOILING IN TULSA When we tned to expl~1 n our f eeh ngs DEAR BOILING: u tlae pope cu he got a hun look on ~as face. forclve tlae mu wbo t bot blm, yoa .w~ ~to Dad ~UnDJ the.week so cu foratve yoar 1l1ter·lD·law for 1t1sn tas1fweareignonn1h1m. Yes. buylDgadre1tUkeyou.r1.Coollt, . w~ know n's nice that Dad \\>ants to be Toots. with us. but we need time for • • • . ourselves What do you suggest'?-Don't flunk yourcbem1stry test. CINDY IN CHICAGO Lo"·e 1s more than one ~l ofB!ands DEAR CINDY: It 11ed to be callm& toanothu. lfyou have trouble WedDeaday1udSuday1,bat makmgadistinct1on}ounttdAnn's Wedneaday1areoatnow 10 It'• only booklet, "Love or Set and How to Sallday1. Tith means tbere 11 oo time Tell the Difference." Send a long, ~lf. for yoar Oad. ' addressed. stamped envelope with Perbap1wbeayoa1eeyourletterin }Our request and 50c-ents to Ann cold, bani type, yoa will be able to Landers, P 0 . Box J 1995, Chicago, .vwwttaeJ>roblemmoreobJeetrvety.J Jll. 60611 at 1he Sheraton Newport Hotel. DURRE-RIEDEL An Aug. I 0 wedding ceremony m Santa Ana JOtned Patty Riedel and Scott Durre both residents of Balboa. hght blue tea-length dress wJth a nfatchmg jacket. Her husband 1s the son of John and Pat Andersson of Balboa. < Hyperthyroid: su.fierY vs.drugs The bnde 1s the daughter of Elaine Riedel of Fon Lee, NJ She wore a After a wedding tnp to San Oemente, the couple are residing an Balboa. She is employed at Burbank Lithographers and he 1s a tale setter. DEAR DR. STEJNCROHN: I am a 3S.year-old marrrled modter wltla awo small d.Udta. Lately I aoticed tlaat rve bea aervou ud very macll oo ed1e. 1 aclmJt I'•e been a dlfflcalt modter and wife to Uve wtU.. Here's how to. subinit your wedding news Last week a friend called my atteatloa to my eyes. Tlaey were larger tUD normal. Slae said tbey were "•tarry." Later my basband admJtted It too, Ht llad.D't aatd uytltlal for fear of apsettba1 me. I've alto DOtlced tllat my bands tremble and my bean rae!U. My doctor took one look at me and 1aJd I bave bypertJayroldi1m. To make cer- tain be took blood te1t1 wblcb corroborated bis first buch. The Datl) Pilot wants your weddms and ensagement news. To help }Ou~ubmlt the required information, formsareava1lableat the Dail} P1/01 oflicc. J 10 W. Bay St CosUJ Mesa. For weddings. only a black and white pbotooflhc bride is acceptable. Now tile quatioo of trutmeat comes ap. He u_y1 there are cboicea. One b operation.. Tiie otlaers are treatment wttla special medlcl..Det. Ht advises operation. However, U'1 nata- nl -lo tbtnklng U over -tllat I'd pref"r meClfcal treatment rattier t u sugery. I'm aaktllg for coa1altattoa for another oplJllon. Meuwlllle, l'Jl Snapshots. Polaroid and color photos can't be used. Thephotomusrbe submitted nolaterifian rhree weeks after the · weddJf18. otherwise 1t will not be published. Ensagement mformat1on is to be submitted at least seyen weeks before theweddmg. Forms and phoros can be dropped off ar the office or mailed to the • Weddmg Department. Dally Pilot, P 0 Box 1560, CosUJ Mesa, Cah[ 92626 II TONIGHT'S TV --8!00-fl MOYIE . u a a Cll ~ a * *. "The 1nrt11tion °' s.1t1" ~ NAT10NAL ( 1978) l(ay L.tnz, Shelley Wltltn """""""''"'" • MERV GfW'FIH 0 BJ I LOIO e STAR TAB m YEBAS (I) P.M.. MAGAZINE m BATTl.ESTAA <W.ACTICA g ENTBn'ANEIT TONIGHT m BUSINESS REPORT a 80I NEWHART . • ml IHTROOUCINO BK>l.OOY a;, MAASHAL DtU.ON '9 DD< VAH DYKE (}t) MOVIE CC MOYIE t "The L-. Lady" (19831 Pia **** 'Gal1pol" 119811 Mel G11>-Zadofa, uaYd~ son Man LM _s MOYIE 0 INSIJE 8ASEBAU t CIMI" I 1983) Rot> Lowe. ~ S MOVE line 8iueC • tt '~ Somevwtlefe In T1m1 ' (1980) z,MCME ....._, Christopher Reeve Jane Seymour. "Duck. You Sook• · ( 1971) Rod -&:26-Stelglf Jamee Coburn. ED PlEOOE BAEAK -9:30- -8:30-(!)MOYIE .· fD MACNB. /LEHRER u•~ "The Heatn' (1974) John • ~ NEWSHOUfl Forsyttie Pat H8rnngton Jr ' .. CD PHOTOGRAPHIC VISK>H CJ) nc T~ DOUOH · :· m THAT GIAl ®} P£OP\E8 COURT • ...; -71>0-Ofl ROWAN J MAATlH'S LAOOH-IN ;,:-0 motlC WOMAN m PETER GUNN ,._.CD TlfREE'SCOMPAHY 01MOVE ~·,..fl) WHEE.OfFOATUNE * "Xtro" (1983} Phlhp Sayer, Bem-•.:-:ml EV9IHG AT POPS ICI Siegers .-: m MOYIE -10'00-., * * * The Garden 01 Allah ~l 0 DONAHUE • Matllne Dielncn ChafllS Boyer 0 0 Q» fl) NEWS H DR. SEUSS ON THE LOOSE '1!) 1NGA10 0 MOVIE Cl) AUCE t t t '' 'Avan111• t 19721 Jack Lem-®)TAXI mon. Jii1le1 M:lls ~ WHEEl. Of FORTVNE Z l MOVE m CAll.INO AU 8POA'T8 * * t '~ "Dead Of Ntghl' ( 1945} Mef. C TH£ EVEAl. Y 8AOTHERS vyyi Johna MtCllMI Rtdgf M -10';30- -7-30-0 2OH1l4l TOWN • ll) NEWS NV9C>EHT NEWS :·. ONEDAYATA TIME w·A·s·H flEOfl\E'S COURT WKAP If CN:INNATI ••• Wl.D, Wll.D WOAl.D OF f,_.Y RUD ' ANIW.a IC MOYIE '. (Hl FMOOl! AOCK *'' "Tht Promllt" (1979) Kathleen -1:00-Ouenl#I. Stephen Colllnl :: ()) 1CAAECAOW AKtJ MAS. H 1 NOT NECESSAM. Y POUTICI •• utO -11:00-:: o TV'l llOOPEAS AK> o o a m NEWS .: PMCT1CAI. J0K£S UTUADAY tlGHT : ~ 0 ..OWAN I MAR11N'I LAUQK.lf . *** ·~tr1 (PA11 1 of 2) G) ntE.&ffMONS !19831 Eltiabetll T1~. Rlchatd luf. C1J IOUDGOUHITI ' Ion . (t{) MO¥ll •• CAU TOOLORY **'~ .. Sttenvt lnvtdtn" c1H21 c • I .. YMT'E PIUI Wt '· Heney Allrl f.NTBITAMIEWT TONQHT (0 INTl&ACY FU ; e ITAR TMJC MEMOMI (1 l MCMl ": • GM.A OF IT AM t8lf * * "Tr. 8'lctl ' 111791 Joan CGll!ns. •• ft.EDGE -.AK Mdllll Cot>y. ) CC) lilCJlln( -11: 1$-··: * • • ·Popt,t' I 1MOJ RObin fD POUTlCI 01 LCM wmt LEO --= Srltlliry OuviA EIUSCMl.lA - • • H IT AHDlllO l'OOM OH&. Y • ) THl UWMDICTAlll "'°°YI -&:30-CAHNON , .... IWWJNE DlltfMA .. ~ "llf70) , GOP watchers John Chancellor. Tom Brokaw and a.o.er Mudd head tbe NBC New• cOYera&e team lor the Republican National Con•endou. be81D· n1nC today ln Dall••· u h "Young Doc10f1 In LM" 8 MOYE {1982) MdlMI Mcl(eM, 8-1 Young * * ~ ...... On Fttec.o Bay" (t95S} (%)MOYIE . Aten.Ladd. Edward 0 Aob1nton u "Tr. St• Chtmbtf" (1983) . (l )UCME Mdllll Douglll. Hll HolbfOOll. t. "Trail Of The Pini! Penther" -12:00-'19821 Ptttr s.ra... Ot¥ld ~ 'IWIUGHT ZONE _ ,._ MONHOU.VWOOO cm.Nim 118 BC>BIT NEWS BT 01 L.A. TOOAY 1llCKl 01 THI NIOHT H ...aTECTOM MOYIE • MOYIE ** "TN Wr~ Cfew" (1NI) U ~ · M.intn" 1111501 EtrcHlynn. o.l MMtin, • 8ommtr. -8mftll -t2:10-(OJllllDllAIEltW. (Cl MOYIE -t:30- • With Thi Statl .. (11179) Thidl 0 = =ClOIQ#' Wbon, ~ lunOllS WOVE -'2:11-• ~ • lATENDfT Kids -12:*>-AU..,.,. 'AMIL 'f 0 lATI flOHT WITH DAVI> NJWAN I MAMW8 WOMN l..ITTEfllNil CC MC7tW 9 ALAm> tlTQtCOQ( t t * t ' Dog Dey Altemooft'' ( 1975) MEIDt'T9 • IJ POio Jotwl C.... ntflEI Tll& 0 (%) llllCME NJWNUMAMW811.AUQK.fN tt~ "The ,91) .. f19$8} er YM.NIDll:M mu . OIUdlne - •• f194-4) East ..,. -~ Cl8 HIOHTWATCIC NEwt --- Pm1 STEllCROHI be l..Dterested ID wlaat yoa tblak. MRS. B. DEAR MRS. B.: Aslong for another opinion makes good sense whenever there's a choice between surgery and medical treatment. I've treated many hyperthyroad patients with propylthaouracil (one of the medical dru_Js used in treatment). In the beginning some had good rcsulls. But after discontinued medication. the symptoms would return and surgery was necessary. According to one estimate four out of I 0 such patients have recurrence of the disease. For thts reason. man\ • physicians prefer the su~caJ route in FOR MRS. O.: Ra1S1ng false hopes managina bypenhyroidasm. But all is inexcusable. Nevertheless_, it is true cases differ. Judgment of the patient's that many apparently hopeless pa- condition will influence the type of tients thought to nave Alzheimer's treatment. disease. may improve after careful For example, some older pauents history-taking and examination. De- do well on treatment walh rad1oact1ve mentia can bedefinedasabormal loss iodine. One way or another, you can of 1n1ellecutal function due to organic expect improvement. Mrs. B . disease of the brain. But recent • • • s1ud1es have shown that 20 to 30 FOR MR. M.: For ptan} careless percent of all dementia! cases are drivers, sta11stics of people killed in "potenually treat.able." traffic accidents go unnoticed. For According to Ors. K. L. and H. uample, m 1983 -at least 42,500 Richard Tyler. writing an the JAMA. persons were killed m traffic accients. "the disorder most commonly m1$- Drunken-dnving and non-use of taken for demnet1a is severe de- seatbelts contnbuted &reatly to these press100 and this may account for 50' figures. · percent of cases of pseudodementia. Another unpleasant (histoncal) Medicaiion tox1c1ty is another im-sw: On Sept 13, 1899. Bc.ncy.J:t .ponant cau~ pgudodementia in Bliss, a real estate broker, made a 1he elderly " dubious place in history Struck down FOR MRS. c.t Scabies may be an an accidern, he became apparently the first person in the United States. transmitted through sexual relauons. whose death was caused by an However. there are Other ways. b I Scabies can spead through a family automo 1 e • • • after children have first contracted it. Floor reporters get physica~ By FRED ROTHENBERG .,, ............... NEW YORK -It takes weeks of physical training. 'intensive road- work, muscle in the clinches and the ability to dance out of tight spots m the comer. In terms of preparation and per· formance, the Job of televmon floor reporter is not unlike bemg a boxer, say l{en Bode and Chris Wallace. two NBC correspondents who wall be covering the gridlock at the Re- publican convention in Dallas this week. ABC. CBS and NBC arc sche.duled to begrn coverage of the four-night event tonight at 7 p.m. PDT . "It's very physical," said Bode. "There's an axiom that grad school is tou&h on the tail and eyes. Well. here you hOJ?C the legs1don't 10 out. I do a lot ofb1ke riding as preparation. and I wear runnina shoes. In TV reponmg you feel Jt on the feel much more after carryina around those battery packs." Wallace, whose legwork helped him break the story that George Bu h was ao1na to be on the Republican ticket four years ago. says he docs extra situps and laps 1n the pool before the conventions. .. It really is physically demand mg. .. Wallace said. "Vou•vc got to keep moving. and you can really get worn out. Another thins is rou must wear comfonable shoes. I m in awe of • Connie Chung (another NBC floor reporter) who covers the convention m h1&h heels." NBC lS the only network main- taining four floor reporters for the ReJ?ublican convention. "The job of finding news at the Republican convention wtll be harder." said Reuven Frank, NBC's uccut1ve producer for convention coverage. ABC has cut back to two floor reporters and CBS will have three . ''The Democrats had four londs of delegates and they had disagree- ments," said Joan Richman, ex- ecuuve producer of CBS' campaign coverage. "The reality of thi convention is that there won't be that ktnd of hurly- burl)' on the floor," said JefTGralnick. executive producer of pohtical pro- gramming at ABC. Besides having more floor re- porte~. NBC also makes ac;s1gnmcnts differently than CB and AHC d<J. CBS and ABC' d1v1de the floor into scctJon!.. while NS(' lets its cor- respondents go everywhere. "ff we dtv1ded the floor into quadrants, I'd lose 7S percent of my sources," said Bode. Rut if he secs an NBC colleague in one delegation. he'll gcnerall)i ~arch out news clscwllcre . .. The tor') doesn't opcra1e an quadrants," said Wallace. "Some- ·Who's who Ip Dallas Time: 7 p m. Monday thr<.t ThuRda). Ancho. I n Rlther. ommenllrnB: 8111 Mo)t'rs, Walter ronk11 Podium reporter. Bru« r 1imes it's at! an one deleption or m one aisle." Wath the conventions now mere rubber stamps for selecting the can- dida1e~. there's less chance of a floor reporter making big news. At last month's Democratic convention, the biggest plash was made by CBS' Ed Bradle). who tned to conduct a JOint interview wath Democratic rivals from Chicago, Mayor Harold Wash- ington and councilman Edward Vrdolyak. "Yo~re still looking to do som~ thing special," said Wallace, the son of Mike Wallace, a corTtSpondent for CBS' "60 Minutes." · Bode and Wallace each took pride in small coups at the Democratic ainvcnlion. Wallace tiad the first interview with Joan Mondale, and Bode asked Geraldine Fcmll'O the first question after she had bec.ome the vict presidential nominee. Walla'e set up the interview with Mrs. Mondale' p~ 1ttrctar)0 and then nailed it down with a 20.minute V1'1t to Mrs Mondale' home. It paid ofl when Wallace comci'cd Mrs. Mondale first, while k~ina CBS' ~Icy %1hl out of the picture wath move\ worthy of an offensive lineman protecuna hts quarter ck. or h1'i cxclu i\c, Bode wrangled a special undc-Mh~podium pass and lay an wait for Ferraro. He even was csconed to his spot by the secret Service. he ~id. pas ana by cor- pondents from all three nct•orks. A hrraro·wa striding by, e told Bode no interviews. .. I figured I could try and slip an one question, 'iOmeth•n• that she wouldn't mmd answmn •• he said, •'Thi~ wn!I not thC' tame to a k her hout her husband'~ real-estate hold· in . I lnc he Y.'ll cl9$C to her mother. so I kcd her ff 'she had poken to hrr moth r 1. he n wcrtd that:' • Soviet jazz achi~vmg detente in West's clubs Kadans applauded tn ·outside' debut pmsed by the arrny or talent t Ult "°when I fc hv I. musu:.'' n to undcrs d that at Dutch festtvai--·- By PAUL ROBERT • .. ...... flt ... "'*' TJiEHAGU~Nelhcrlanc11- "'When our youna auuanst Andrei Bu.k.h)'lll$ky. saw all~ wcll ... nown and anfluential black jazz mu 1cians at the hotel, he almost collapsed," ·said the •7-ycar-old bandtcadtr, who founded Kadan' in 1978. ~-----'---------------1-Soviet jazz band-Kadanrmm ts debut 1n the We t this summer, drawina cheers at the Nonh Sea Jazz Festival wtth its tradition I jazz sound flavored by classical in· Belen O'Connell flucnces. • The seven-man band, officially known as the Moscow Chamber Jan Ensemble Kadans, was the first Soviet sroup ever to play at Europe's largest weekend festival, which was held wt month. h The bandleader said he was o"er- Kadans -Rus ian for rhythm -whelmed by the size of\he f~tival, at drew a curious crowd of over 1,000 which more than 600 arou~ pcr- and received enthusiastic applause formed for tens of thousands of fans. for its technicallyprecisc,butconven-accordin& to festival officials. tional performance. -.. It's huge, tt's interesting and it's The group opened its set with chic," said Lukyanov, whose com- Tbelonius Monk's "Round About ments were translated by a Soviet Midnight," and continued with other Culture Ministry official. pieces by Monk and saxaphone legend John Coltrane. There were Kadans is one of abOut 30 pro- .. He ruins the tradition ofjazz, •• 1he Soviet bandleadtr said. "There are elem'fnts of rock in bu music, which dift'cs's from traditional jau." During iLS s>Mormance. K.adans was drew loud cheers for wett- exccutcd solos and a ttthnically perfect con~rt. The group did three encore5. - BOnd'e lateat beauties Roaer Moore, ptaytJUr Jam• 8oad la die ..., • ole .:;.2 ViewtoaKJll,' b&.dle~ofTaa~---~·= Grace Jone.. The ptctUe~ la bel•I -.s la C 11n17, Prance. O'Connell to sing at UC Irvine also works by bandleader Herman fessional jazz bands in the SOviet Lukyanov. Union, Lukyanov said, adding that official SOvact attitudes are .. very Lulcyanov's compositions shov.ed ravorable" towardjau, which is often Sinaer Helen O'Connell will appear strong classical influences, with heard on Soviet radio and television. PBS vaults Sam Neill to stardom j with Henry Brandon and his Bia rhythmic transitions more remi-. LOS ANGELES (AP)-Sam Neall Brass Band Thursday at the season nisccnt of Soviet com~rs Aram But he noted that jazz rccordiop · ·-~ that aft sc -I mov·aes finale Of the ~-"Concert Under the .,....... th So · 15 surpn~ er v ..... uQ;: Katchaturian and tsor Stravinsky are not numerous m e v1et it took a PBS miniscri" to make Stan" at UC Irvine. · than Coltrane and Dizzy GilJespie. Union, and said Kadans' only album, moviemakcrs in HolJywood sit up O'Connell will offer ~ny of the At the I OS-minute performance. "lvanushka the Fool." was issued in and notice. now-standard sonp shd helped to Lulcyanov, a classically trained stu-1981 in a limited edition of only Neill, who has been likened to a J>Ol>Ularize, including ''Qrcen EyC$," dent of Katchaturian, played the l0,000. "Ouna James Mason because of his "'ranaerine" and "I Remember da~ ..a. brood1·na loo"" sta-..a m· lhe :_lf-piano, trumpet, bird Oute and .Afterstudyingpianoatthe Moscow • .., ... 11i;u You.' Auegelhom. Conservatory under Katchaturian, Australiian movie .. My Brilliant" One of the more popular vocalists _LulcyanQv said his band was im-Lukyanov bcian playi_n&JUZ..lt 17, and was Damien in "The Fmal to pin fame during the Bia Band era, Conflict" in the "Omen" lrilogy. Helen O'Connell introduced "Green But it was the PBS "Mystery" Eyes" with the Jimmy Dol'SC}'·_:~r.====~~~~::::==~=~;====~;:=~:::::;;;:::;;:;::;..liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii~~;;;;;;;t Ocl\,estra. She has toured the world--St rt h d d d ic with such Stan IS Vic Damone, Bob ewa. . ee e a v e Hope, the Mills Brothers. Red S'kel· ton. Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. O'Connell served as host of the Miu Universe Paaeant for nine years and appeared for two years as co-host of NBC's "Today" show with Dave Garroway. She is a frequent guest on the "Tonight," Merv Griffin and Mike Doualas talk shows. Brandon and bis band have per- formed their summer concerts at Fashion Island in Newport Beach since 1968. He has served as musical director of the Oranae County Philharmonic Youth Concerts and LOS ANGELES (AP) -James Stewan, who says he teamed abOut moviema.lcing from such mentors as John For<!, Frank Capra and Alfred Hitchcock, recalls a piece of advice he once got from a slapstick comedian. He was on bts way to Muroc Dry Lake for location work on the 1936 ftlm "Speed" with comedian Ted _Healy, who had come to Hollywood with the Three Stooacs. the Lyric Opera Association, as well RUFfE1 'L'S as director of the ABC Symphony and Iii the KOST-Radio Beautiful Music UPllLSTEIY, llC. Orchestra. He also conducted the F• n. 1111 Of '• llt award-winnina KOCE-TV Youth 19ZZ .._.aw .. COSTA IESA -541-115' CoDCIC'rtscries. l==========================~ The O'Connell-Brandon concert will beain at 8 p.m . •Thursday. Famili" are encouraged to brina picnics 10 time for the 6 p.m. pre- concett entenainment -this week "You may $Cl along all n&ht; 1t'1 a stranae business," Healy told Stewart. Then Healy added: .. Just re- member. Never treat the audience as customers, always as partners." Stewart. 76, is Hollywood's senior superstar wbo is still working.. He is off to Hawaii in September for location filmiog on ··The Late Christopher Bean." also starrina Carol Burnett. Eastwood to leave mark on fllmland HOLLYWOOD -Clint East- wood, who earlier this year was voted the number-one box office sw of the year anl! who currently stars in· Warner Bros.' suspense thriller "Tiahtrope," will continue a well- known Hollywood ritual when be places his hand and footprints in the Forecourt of the Stars at Mann's Chin~ Theater Tuesday at noon. CIVE YOUI CHILD THE EDUCATIOI YOU WISI YO 'D Montessori Greenhouse Schools PllPllUIT (AClS 2~St. ~ WllEITU! (~ 1-t): llS Uln'ts (211) 43M4M ~ W. CMKI Cltft w. cano cam (114) Ul-213' 0141 nl·lW --~1an.k1 Amoss and his Miss1ssi i Enter a 'N9fld Mudders Dixieland a.roup. The summer concerts arc sponsor- ed by the Irvine Co. in cooperation with UCJ, the city of lrvine and the Musicians' Performance Trust Fund. ~MACll --,_,w_ ....... OIMlft ~'1 .. T~I Gt4110 -..... ·-~· llo"Ol\>Cft<N ... " l)Olflt •\AllAW ...... ,Ill AKI ,...... Uolollll ••.cJID ma. rcus•.-tn , ..... '5JIJ01 -beyond your wildest imagi~ation where mJY.!hing can happen. COSTA IEA '31 3501 EDWARDS HMIOR TWlf a nm sa1·sm £111WDS~ .. SSl~S EDWARDS WO<nllJGl • COSTA M£SA • lDWMOS _,. -!141·1101 HARBOit TWIN llo<W -U1 lSOI HARiiif OCt.IT STl.O ...... (IC.II) 11S t• ·"'-.... ~.,, ... W'.JO •Mno £.DWARDS llSSO' VU> CUI( '37'°340 NIC.ORMClliW.l CUI( 134-3911 UA atY CllOIAS • El TORO • SADOlllACI! "ClOll & _. <"> IOf•.,.t UW UIO tl~llP ,,,.... , ._._ .... f'I) ~· SllO 1:. ?IUlS 1015 SADOUBAOC , ...... f • ., ... ~· SAOOlCIACK \0 ... .. 11 1 .. .. UI~ SADOUBACK '' ..... I •-tf UI~ miruxries .. Reilly, Ace of Spies" that got him the most recoanition. ••t truly had no idea that the ~cs would have such an impact heTc," ht said. ..I was in Australia when it ..... 1799'50 PACITC AMIDI DI,_ IE S~U1' ..,. BllCA .. ,. UA~SI n. TC*> Sil HMUDS WClllACll Cll"t C.HIWOOCI TIGNTitOM (•I SflOWI It U :JS J 1lS 5:1'0 7:50. 10:'5 UODA-(JIQ-UJ SflOWI 11 U :lO J :OO 'S130 1:00 .. 10:30 """"-S IUU" (IU AT 1 :00 3:20 1:40 • 10:00 SHIEAK AT l,.M SAM"S 50lll (NJ SftOWI at 1 :00 3:10 5rJO 7:30 ... 40 LA _. ~n 1'11 SIO CiATCM Y S '°"°" IUCll "'4~7611 cow IEWPOlif lUlCua\' fHfMafS ~.nt, 2 145 S 110 7·40 .. 10:1~ 8111 Murra" D11t A11lro1e1 GHOST1'USTIUIS CN) SflO"'I It ft:2l 2:40 4 1SS 7:25 I JI0/70 MM ·~·" ,....;s. n.. T_..ef.,.._CN> Sflows I t 12:00 2130 S:OO 7:JO & 10:00 IN 70 MM ORDIUfS0"8) Sflow1 It U :JO 3 .00 5 :30 1 :00 6 10:JO 01'*l411 u .......... u• .. "•"-- "tOOll(f M IUDS" (I) l?JQ. l1U 1S. U~ 16 1015 MSIWIB 191 lDlWJ)S CllMA W[S'I MSIWU 191 J rAClfC .-_y 1'1111 GRGIU .. ""81 Nn•l'£"4tln9 Story (lie) ''MIU Ult' (l) ••rrmlrO t• lll tata to Lo HABRA ...... GARFIELD .. THE FAMILY CIRCUS ,i t 20, 198-4 by Gus Arrlola by Jim Davis BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) ' ~·· u jl 1! -. jf___,__ __ J "K now what crocked it? They rang it too hard ' when Rocky won his fight." "I hate Mondays." MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketcham \ I .l "Marmaduke knows that she's o~ a diet!" MOO~ JIULLINS PEANUTS '(OV COULD MAVE CAV6MT TMAT LAST FLY BALL .. 7 by Ferd & Tom Johnson Wt=L-L..., !1M SIX Yc.ARS OL.DE"R IH,AN SHE IS .. 'COURSt=, W~t=N W~ AH ... PRo&,ABL.'t WER~ IN ~RADE SCHOOL HAS SOMETHIN<J l~ETH~R , WE Wf:RE io t:>o WITH TH' SAME: _......,, E:INSTetN'S NoW YOO CCWLD 1-tAVE LEAPED INTO TME AIR. CRASMED IHTO TME FENCE. MIT VOUR HEAD, 6ROl<Et4 80TM VOUR Al.MS, KNOCKED YOURSELF OUT AND MAPE A SPECTACULARCATCM~ ~~· REL.,ATIVITY. by Charles M. Schulz l·lO .. :: BRIOG[ ~-~--------=--- THE TALE OF THE TWO OF 'PAOES CHARLES GOREN DEAR READERS: W have IMad lll&Dy ,..qDft&U over lite JMl'I for tlaote laud tut we toa lder to be our favoritH. That malt 1 qulto a lltt. For the U e being, U. ,..fore, we an d•votia1 ~e Sa day eoluma to a nnea of famou1 baad1. At the end •f tb M • ,. wW p badl ~ oar weekly quution and auwer column. "Jr I were to tell yo" that 1 'II'& in· hut th l wa lo ha trangu r p r· ttrument 1 in winnitlg a maJor cu ion lat r In the pl y. championship," said the Two of "'l'he king ace of diamond fetch· Spad'-8, '"you probably would laugh d the queen, and the last trump me right out of the pll<'k. And If I was drawn. ~cit r.:r r.uhed the were to insist that I did It not by ace king of clubs and, arter my wi ru.1ng a trick. but by giving owner dropped the Q·lO, ran tht' dttlattr a track that he would not eigbt \K.'f .. ruuy. H n4i>w t up otherwise. have won. you woijld :-a_ummy's la t club with •~r---"u_.rl_. _,_.___.. probably think that I was losing my ··But now, \\hen dl'clarer led a Neither vulne'rable. North deal . NORTH + VoJd '\J K932 O K953 •AK 873 sen M But bear with m~ hurt and my ma ter played Jow "On lhe hand in 11ut'Stlon, !. was smoothly. dec·larer was Cued ~ ith a · , held by one ot the world'-. grea~ choice oC plays. He thought long and players. The bidding went u hard before rising with the king, shown. Our opponent~ were not shy ~nd our <side took two henrt trick in the auction. artd certainly tht! dia· tl() defut the conlract. WEST EAST + K 10 8 2 + 9 7 6 4 3 '\J Q865 . '\J A7 0 1082 .. O Q7 +QiO +965~ "' SOUTH +AQJS '\J J104 0 AJ64 •JZ The bidding: North Eatt South Wett l • Patt 1 0 Patt 1 '\J Pa1t l + Pait 3 0 Pait 3 '\J Pa1t 4 0 Pa1t 4 NT Put 6 0 Pa11 Past Pu1 Opening lead: Two of +. SHOE BRABBLE mond slam that. they reached was "Not urpri ingly. our teammate-. not the world's best. However. if were not as optimistic. They played you study the diagram you will see three no trump and cored the game that, left to his own devices, without any difficulty. This hund declarer will almost surely make his was enough to win the title." contract. He wall be forced to take the heart and the diamond fine ses, and a ruffing Cinesse for tht1 nine of clubs. Since both royal ladies and the nine are well placed, declarer's only loser will.be the ace of hearts. "My expert did not know all this. He threw me into the fray at trick one, and the audience gasped when they saw that he had given the declarer an extra trick in pades. Decla.rer took advantage of this to discard two hearts from dummy. rod u7 q11utlon1 l•r Uaf• toluma to Charlu Goren and Omar laarlf, cue of thJ1 new1pa~r. E:uh we.k a prtze of a topy of the uew .. Goree'• Complete Bridse," a 19.95 value, wlll be awarded for th quutloa jucfsed to be Uae but l'fftl\led. Cltarlfl Goru aad Omar Sharlf ~r- 110GAlly raaaot 1111dertak• to aa1wer all quuUoa1 1ubmltteod. by Jeff MacNelly by Kevin Fagan 'fOO'~ NoT PRf.~~T, ~--b>'Qf M'Jt~1AN'f ~A'fE\1£.e. l.£1'~ f1MD 1K~ ~~! 1~~~~ FOR BEfTER OR FOR WORSE I (MT THl~K Of A NIC€.R PLACE 10 HAVE A PIC..NIC. 'TMAN CAP£ COD ! DR.SMOCK c.vrrrour. FARLEY- Sf"oP UCKING- Me.! !'M GL.AD 40l..> UKE. IT! JI by George Lemont .. TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan .llJDGE PARKER • • COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE 1iRAN8AClilON8, 81. ·Phillip Rowe named to GFI nsioH board PbUllp 0. Rowe, p~ ident of Affiliated Plauen, ~. ortrv1nc7 hu been appointed to the board of directors of CPI Peulff Services and ats wholly owned tru5t« bank, the latenaaUoaal Centre) BW ... ·Tral Rowe is a 1 member of lhe haterutlonal AllOdatioa of F1u.adat Plauen and the Ntwpo~ B cb/lrvlne E1tate Pl~ Coadl. His own fii;m offers peoonal and bu m planning, and he will bnng 2'4 )'e&ts of financial consultina and markctin& expericna: to the CPI board. CPI 1s a subsidiary of TH eo.u.nta1 Corp. and oOeB admm1 trativc and self-directed trust aervices to businesses. Oltlla Ber1 has Joi ncd Genon Baur Ir ~Jates of San Francisco as vice president in charge of residential properties, with mponsibility for managing OBA developments th.rou&hout California. including Park Newport io Ncwpon Beach. Berg was fonncrly chief d~puty director of Housing and Community Development for the state of California and coordinated the state's housrng policy as assistant to the sccrcuary of the state's Business and Transponatton Agency. • • • Bria.a 0 . Starr is the new vice president of marketing for the lmne-based Califonala Avocado Commhalon. Io addition to merchandising. Starr will Fllel'fet Corporation In ea.ta lie.a bU de•eloped the tint direct consumer advcrtisinR and retail sal«?S promotion prosrarns and non-eaatomlsed --aca1 ct.Uk ato-de and retrlYal Ub--coordsnate the commsssio~s promotional budget. Starr comes to the "t"l.&1 ·---i • comm1ss1on from a post as product manager of the pet foods division ofStat- ~~~1~ment Kl1t Foods, I.De. Commission president Ralr' PlDkenoa said the aroup purposely went outside the;_ produce industry in selecting_ Starr to ftll the newly J TNI9IT' -create<t"'positiotrin1ro~-hrwou~bridfnew4'aeas 10~ pro<rUcc-cJ-:.a:J~ promotion. • • • • Huntington Beach resident Maareea bttoa bas been named director of customer services at Crown/BBK, lDc. in Bell Gardens. In her new post, Tunon is responsible for all order processing at the food brokerage company. She bas been with C.rown/BBK since 1982. • • • Paula M. Byroe of Fountain Vallcy has joined the sales staff of Bubaftt Environment ~lallJta, a Pasadena-based commercial interior, offioc furniture planmna and procurement company. Byrne, who will cover Oranac County for the firm, previously worked as a sales representative for Syttemt Furulture Co. of Torrance. . . . ~ Trade C. Taylor, founder and former chairman of Encsno-bascd Electrolllc Memories Ir Mapetics, has been elected to the board of director's ofMJcroventare of Irvine. Taylor. who served as chairman of chief executive officer of Memories nd Magnetics until 1982, continues to serve the company as a dtrCctor. He 1s also on the board of Wespercorp of Tustin, Specialty Restaaruta, I.De. of Long Beach, PJantroaics., lac. of San Jose and Family Entertammcnt Centers of Maryland. ••• Lawrence A. MW1 of lrvine is the new vice president for professional hability marketing for R.O. Crowell ha1aruee A&eacy of Costa Mesa. Mills, who brings more than 20 )ears of hability experieooc to his J>O$l. will specilizc m risk management •nd loss prevention for the com pan), which specializes in liability insurance for archltccts and engineers. ...... Irvine-based Allen Ir McGarvey, hac. will handle financial and corporate public relations duties for Western Waite IJubatries of Carson, a publicly held waste ~~"!agcment firm Allen & McGarvcy personnel with pnmary pons1b1hty for the account are Jo1epb Alla, SJaane SmUti and Robert McGarvey. • • • •• The Wacmtng1onlla!Unt1.t Groa~of Costa Mesa.hM..QrQ!llOted Man D. Panoas to executive vice president of forward planning, with-responsibility for land development efforts for 2J..f!YJ apartment units in process for 1984. Warmington has plans for some w million in apartment construction for 1984-85. • • • Associates CorporatJon of No~ America has leased space in NCW\)On Beach to com bi oe and relocate two ofits divisions in Orange mto one locallon. the new offices arc located at 4141 MacArthur Blvd. Representing Associates and the K.etcbam Co., the lessor, were David Bat and Sudy BUI of the OarlH Dama Co.'1 Oranae County office. seeks reorganization UNlOIL management announced that the company had filed with the Unite<l States Bankruptcy Coun in Denver a petition for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the BanktuptcY. Code. 1 UNlOIL recently reponed in 1ts Form 10-Q financial statements as of Marth 31 , 1984, that it had total assets of approximately $12,200,000 and total hab1lit1cs of approximately $8,000,000. Tbe company also re- ported proved oil and gas rcscrv~ in the amount of approximately $21 ,000.000asofits year end Dec. 31. 1983. Management ofUNJOIL indicated the principle reason for the petition for protection undcrChaptcr 11 of the bankruptcy laws is that the company bas a lack of working capital and insufficient cash flow to meet current obligat1ons as they come due. The company also attributes cenain of these problems to the time and expense involved in defending recent lawsuits which-have bceft-ftied- against the company by stockholders. As a pan of these financial pro~ lems many of the persons working on and supplyin& materials to weUs in which the company is involved have filed liens and commenced proceed- ings with regard to said wells. Man- agement of the company is con vi need that with sufficient time, and with i UPs AND DowNs FUeNct Corporauoo of :ta h develoJ)C(l an opucal d1n~oiaS11:0 toragc and rc1ncvnl S)'ltern u be· lieves w1U ~voluuoniLe the way large orpnizallons handle mu he amounts of 1maies. te I and data. The technological brtakthroU,gh. called an optical di · storage and retrieval (OS,R) hbtary. makes 1t possible for the first time to 5tore 128 billion bytcS. approximately I billion charactcrc;, of information on·line for high speed random accn~ Aocordiog to oompan) founder and president Ted Smith, the econ· omic advantages or the new equip- ment arc an ··ordu of magnstudc ·improvement over existing methods for dealing with extremely larsr quantities of data." A fully con~IJured OSAR usina dual-sided media can provide the storage capability equivalent to over 200 five-drawer file cabineu. The OSARs will be sold toonginal equipment manufacturers who will incorporate them into high tech· not~ producu in areas such as mcdicaJ imaging, seismic rccordin& and computer information storage. "Hosp1tals arc an exoclleot eum- ple of how s1gnificant this technology Will be," Smith said. .. The average h'ospital spends a half million dolbrS ayeartobu¥X4'a.)'~--~=~--docsn •t inclttde using. processing. or ~ ~ ue».lop, says st_Oring the film. UsiD_J an OSAR with . Fa le Ne~ _ _ disks ttiat uscooth sades. the cost of Acco:rdina to a jast-~leaied study stonna the X-rays can be reduced to 7 by Freeman AsM:>ciates.. Inc., in Santa ocnts an X-ray.". . . Barbara. worldwide shipments of Another ~Ospital apphc:atao~. for optical disk drives are expected to the OSAR as record keeptna, O~ number 600 units this year, and research shows that a 450-bed hosp1-dramatically ioaease to 2.4 million tal typicaJly has 3 million images on by 1990. The •• 1934 Optic.al Data file. Mo~ver, with ~l the. fon:ns Storage Ou\Jook'" report says rev- related to insuranoc clauru., libranes en~ will proponionally expand like the OSAR can crcatly reduce the from $9 million this year to$ I billion cost of the paperworlc in places like in 1987 and $7 billion in 1990. hospitals.." Smith said. Aocordmg to Smith. the per- manent. tamper-proof storaie made possible wrtb oj)t1c.al disk may lead to optically stored documents such as W-2 fonns being accepted as legal evidence. Just like the original docu- menL ln addition to tbe pnce/performancc brcaktbrou&h. Smith said the OSAR can start, locate and retrieve mformauon fasteT than any other mass storage S}Stcm avad- able today. A sophisticated robotic mechanism m9erts or ttmoves each disk cartndge from its storaic slot and inserts it in any one of up to four opucaJ disk dhves ~nside each unit. The a¥erage access-time for; data stored on a disk already mollnt.ed mside the system is 200 millisecbnds. Fewer than eight unmounted disk cartridges. The U>AR is the first product fiom FileNet. an early aurant into ibc rapidly growin& optical disk field. Pacific Telesis forms -suhsidi-ary Pacific Telesis Group 10 Costa Mesa has formed a new subsidwy, PacTel Mobile Servu:u. to .,bolesale In addtt1on to speed. the OSAR cellular mobile telephone equipment aptn is cheaper than most other h storage formats. For example, with across t e country. the OSAR it is possible to sto~ the The new corporation will also resell equivalent of over I .000 reels of cellular set"Vioc m certain markets. magnetic tape for less than 30 cents The move expands PM:Tel's interest per megabyte in cellular beyond it.s carrier oom- h l bra h 64 ._1 pany. PacTet Mobile Acx:c:ss. Eac i n. can ousc ou~ . . disk cartridges. Each canridge Pac Tel Mobile S:etvlCCS .. ill market pro" ides I billion bytes or 20,000 ·-the tcmunal eq.wpmcnt to deakn 1maf5es of paper documents on a ~hrougbout the UrutedStates.acoord- sin c-s1ded disk or 2 billion bytes, mg to 'Ric~ D. Lane. ~ho bas been 40. pages on a double-sided disk. named pres1dent and chief cxccull"·e officer of the company. '"Opucal disk technology 1s go1 "g to have the same impact on office automatic that microcomputers had "We will also retail ocllular 9C'rvioc and tcnn1nal equipment m Cahforuia and Nevada markets where PacTcl Mobile Access is not the operator of the cellular system and in selected markets outside the Pacific region." said Lane. Up Uo UP UP uo Pct l:_z~ The Costa Mesa-based company 7 has started operations in New Jersey and has recctved authoriz.auon to sell cellular sen-ice in New York.. said 'U a fl ~1 •1 " ll Lane. ··we arc e'\aluating a number of c1t1~ and will enter those '-'hh the ~at~t market potential." he said ~PacTcl Mobile Services ~as for- med to broaden PacTcrs op- ponunities tn the growu1a field of «lhdar rommunicati.om.."" he said. California's first cellular mobile telephone SCl"'\tcc w~ introduced m Lo .\ngclcs m June 19 4 b) PtcTel tobile Acee and several thousand customers att now u ina the xrvicc. Cellular is expected to· be in use in almost 30 major cities by the end of 19 •• ,. _,__.,, __ " MONDAY'S CLOSING PllCES I Dow JoNES AvERAGES - NYSE LEAD ERS I~ - --- NEW YORK. <AP) -Sein, Moftd6y Pf'ICt _tnd n1r cti1ru1• of the 11l i tn0$f •C:11vt Nt:fc York S OCk EXCht I U~:t. fr•OlnO ~i:l~n~I more 1~1· j :t 11? ~merT&Tn , , tt + ~ a~ECp , • I -'4 omtOtool , ~ -! xon O, '" + ~~~L.I I' 5 -• t 01 I\ , ..... IR orp , ~ ~ •IS.mis • -~ pj ltttPk , "~"'" : f +.!.: Gen Motors , 7'1,., -!Al UPS ANO DOWN S AMEX LEADERS NASDAQ SUMMARY -------- Due to tranamlsalon prob- lems 1n New York, today'a llstlng Wiii not appear In the Cally Pllot. GoLD Qu oTES ME TALS Quon s ------- That's an apt descriptt0n ofiboth business and ---~usiness people.along the Ora11g Coa t. To keep track of where companies are going and which p ople are helping them get there.just watch 'Cr dlt Line' -v ry day in th Bu t lesss cttonofyourn w Dlil Plllt -~-ngels stagger • --again ' BALTIMORE(AP)-Jt may have been the first laugher for the Balti- more Orioles 1n weeks, but pitcher ~iite Flanapo had aone even lonaer Without so much a a derisive smirk. Backed by a 15-hit attack that included two homers by Rick Dempsey and a three-run blast by Gary Roenicke, Flanagan snapped his five-P,me losing streak with a 10-4 victory over the Angels on Sunday. The loss was the fifth in a row for the Angels, who fell below the .500 mark for the first time since April 18 and had an on-field intramural squabble between second baseman Bobby Grieb and reliever Luis Sanc- hez. "I felt a httle stranJe." said Flanapn. 10-11 after winning forthe ftrSt time since JuJy 7. "I had gone about a month or so with not too many runs to work with. "I felt more pressure with a 5-1 lead, it had been so long since I'd been m that position ... Indeed, the Orioles had scored two or fewer runs in I 0 of Flanagan's last 20 starts, mcluding six of his 10 previous appearances. Flanagan left the game with a strain an his lower back after Grieb clouted a two-run homer in the ei~. his xth of the season. Grich aJso rapped an RBI double in the.third to put the Angels ahead, but BaJtnnorc raJlicd for five in "the bottom of the inning against Bruce Klson, 3-2. UGUST 20 1 Uptllll INlttle: Kenr•wln• S•n Fr8ncleco m•r•thon. C2. -·+he yeuagKids can't keep· tip with T revirio Atthe ripeoldageof 44, -----h e earns inevitable victory BIRMINGHAM. Ala. (AP) -l..tt Trevino, the old "Merry Mex" him~lf.answered the questions that were in his own mind with his 4-stroke victory Sunda)' in the 66th PGA National Championship. "When you're youna, )'OU think it's inevitable lhat you'r.e going to win," the 44-year-old Trevino said after he'd outlasted the dangerous Lanny Wadkins an a storm delayed final round. ''Whey you're old, the inevitable is ver Trevino contmued. ''You never know if you're goioa to win a ' -And Trevino, a non-winner for three Iona ye and once on the brink of retirment, gave credit to his wife Claudia. Pal mer gets ezemptlon BIRMINGHAM1 Ala. (AP)-Arnold Palmer ha~ been .Jivcn a lifetime excmptton to f>!aY m lhe PGA NauonaJ Championship, PGA President Mart Kiiziar announced Sunday. ··nis unanimous decision by lht PGA of A mean Board of Directon underscores ,Arnold· a u ralteledandon..goiogoontributionstothepme d to the PGA," K.iniar said. Palmer. 54. competed in the 66tb IPGA championship, which ended Sunday, u llhe PCA Seniors champion. He has ~on four Masten, two Bntisti ()pens. but his be$t finishes in the PGA arc tics for sctond in 1964, 1968 and 1970. "She's the one kept whipping me, kept telling me I could win. She kept telling me 'those clubs of yours don't There wasa divorce, a pajrofbeck operations. a career have any idea how old you are, Bubba'." that seemed to be windiQ& down to a.o end and prompted Trevino, the oldest wmner on the Tour since Don himtocutdownbisplayingtirnetoseeka.o&ltanat.ccarccr January took the Tournament of Champions in 1976. said as a teJevision commentator. he is well aware of his age. But he was tbe Trevino ofold this bot, humid day that ··rube 45 m December," he said. "I'm not suppo$ed producedablue-jl'lyhaz.ein t.heforestofpioea.adoek that to beat these ).'.Oung kids." line all the fairways and the deep; wiry, wet rousb oa the Then he flashed that infectlous gnn and added: hilly, 7,145-yard Sboal Creek IOif Oubcoune. "But I sot them this week." He was striding quickly over the ram-'Slick bills. He got them with four rounds in the 60s, includinJ a gcstunna broadly, twirling the putter with that familiar. hard-won final of 69 and acquire the sixth maJor ncrvol,lS habit, Nlking each putt from four aq1ea.. cbarnpionsh1pofhislcgcndAry.raas-to-ncbescarccrwitha He had lhc lead. lost it, then repined it apin a.od 273 total. IS strokes under par on the Sh6aJ Creek Oub nailcditdownwitha 10-12footbirdieputtontbe 14th bole course. aad preserved it with a critical, IS-11 foot par-savina p utt He had not woo a major tournament in ten years. on the 16th. And -with a typic:al flair a.od tlounsb - Trevino, who tagged himself with the nickname cappeditoffwitha tS-18footbirdicputtontbefiiW bole. "Merry Mex" during ~s pory day~ of t}le lat~ t960's and _W..adkins._J.hc l977-.PGA. champion who boldl) earl¥ 1971Js. added this tttJe to the U.S. Opens he won in attacked the flags at c'¥Cl'y-~nitYr&PPliocl-4»aADl.:...-.--n 1968 and 1971, the Brituh Open (jf()wnsof 197 l-72 and the prcisurt, was only one back wtth two holes to play but bad PGA.NaliQriat Q\agpionshipof 1974.--·--------settltfof.a tjc fouccond with Gary flayer' it 271 aft.era This one was worth S 125,000 from the total purse of bogey--boaey finish compkted a round 'o( par 72. $700,000 and enabled Trevino to JOm Jack Nicklaus and ~ l>Iayer, the 48.-ycar-old little SOuth African .. tw Tom Wat.son as the only men to go beyond $3 mtllion in played with Wadkins and Trevino and joined them in the career earninp. Trevino now has $3,003,842. shelter of a garage When the violent tbUndeniorm swept Dempsey, who wai ().for-17 before getting a san&le and a homer agamst the Angels F"riday ruaht, clouted his first homer after th1rdbaseman Doug DeCinces made a throwing error on leadofTbatter Rich Dauer. Five of the next SUt batters sinaJed, with Eddie Murray, Wayne Gross and Joe Nolan gettmJ RBI. Dempsey's sixth homer. tus fourth against California this season, came in the sixth off Curt Kaufman. For Trevino, grim-faced in concentration in his 5-over the course, ground out a 71 , including a last-bole _ hour test, the victory marked a personaJ triumph in his birdie. · "'••1n.--..-.. comeback from varied triaJs, both personaJ and pro-Calv10 Peete. the most successful black pla)CT t.bc Lee TreTino ldua bla patter after capturtna the 1984 PGA r fcssional that, as recently as l 'lz years ago had him thinking game bas known. came OD with a 68 and was fourth It 278 Cbamplonahlp 81ll1da)' with a ICOre of 15-ander-i-r 273. seriously of retirement. despite an uncooperative P'ltler. Reliever John Curtis allowed a walk and a pinch single to Benny Alaya in the seventh, and Rocnickc greeted Doug Corbett with his ninth homer. Ro'cnicke got his fourth RBI on a bases-loaded walk m thee~· th. "When I went up m the ei th," Dempsey said. "the guys on the nch told me to try and act in the books with the biJ guys by hitting three homers. I toed." Asked if that might be his last such chance, Dempsey cracked: "Most likely. The last time I had two was in 1980. In four more years, I'll be watch mg from the bull~." Sanchez ilared an Grielt's"Chrection in the eighth when Murray bounced a single up the. middle, following a leadoff smglc by Cal Ripkcn Jr. "I thought he looked at me like I wasn't trying." Gnch said, "and I didn't appreciate 1t. I'm not d<>IJing 1t. I told him to tum around and patch. · "The reason I didn't get to the baJI," Grich said, "is that I was trying to make an exceptional play the other way. I was anticipating to my left on a cbanac-up and took a step in that direction. If Murray hits a change-up through the middle, what can I do?" 3,030 miles to go Cyclists 1>reak records CycU.ta left the B11J1u.n.ton Beach pier Sanday ID the Race Acrou America wblcb will take them to Atlantic City. a marathon trip tbat takee rou&hly 10 daya. MOSCOW(AP)-Thraecydl1ts Mt World Indoor record• S\.lnday and thr• rMmmert bMt medal· ~~u.n.~ffom the t.oa An- DOLPHINS GAIN 'RARE' VICTORY . gelei OfymplCa u Eastern bloc eport.smen continued to domfnlte the Frlendlhlp 'M Q..,.... ~ ganlzed by the Soviet Union. Bernd Otttttt of Eut Germany Mt a world record of 4 four mlnut•. 36.47 MCOndt In qumlfy- Ml mi com shack to def eat Raiders on t h eir own turf lng for the quarterflnall of the LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe •.GOO-meter lndlvtduat purault Miami Dolphins have found 1t 1m- cyctlng rec.. po sible to beat the Los Angelts Alto bettering ye ofd mark of Raiders in Cahfom11 over the yea~. "4:37.88 Mt In Mb'icow tut year by They finally were able to accomplish 80Ytet Vlktor Kupoveta, waa p0 • such a feat on Sunday. although in land't Ryazatd Oavldovlcz. reality, it didn't mean much. He ck>cked 4:38.97 only mtnutee That's because Mtami's 29-23 tri-~"Dlttert (Nflghted a capedty umph over the Raiders at the Los ,__._.. of e,000 et the na..w."""' Anaeles Coliseum came in a National "'vwv ..,..,, "~ Football Ltaaue prescason pmc. Sportt ~ Center In the Mos-first-ever between the teams. ~ eubutb of Krytatllt0)1I by Nevertheless, Miami Coach Don go&ng even feater. Shula was pleased with the outcome TM world record In the 4,000· oflhe nationally televised affair. met• lndtvlduel purtUlt can only "The Raiders don't lose a lot," said be Mt tra ~ ._ rldeta Miami Coach Don hula. "Their fint perform tndtvkluelb' ~ the unit is strong and so is their second. otoolt. TherM'*'tMYrw8GllMt Defcn ivclythcirNo I tcamandlhetr e.ctt other. wtth two cycllta ctrcl· ckups att citccllcnt.'' ... N ''** togethir. The .-.t The Do~hins att ().9 in ~ular-~on ~. st.&\On an pla)·oty games payed In the 50CknettJr m1n•1 cycee agajnst the Raiders m Cahfom11 and -. e .. 1 QermM k:h..e ~ IJ· l overall aaain1t the Raiders HUMMW ctoceced 21.470 l90Qride, •nee the teams fint m tin 1966. belt of 27 Ael Resef\'c qu.artctbac Jam Jenttn bMtlntthe~ red on a 3-~rd rollout w1th 8:.SI Ne by ScMIC cydltt A......_ rcmaimna to tughliaht 1 comcNck: b PMtlkW. the Dolphin *" the womeo'• 1,000 .,,...... .. I like the way we pla)cd in the CYdl .wnt, Erlea SelumyM of tM ond half," Shula said. ••t wa BcMet Unton Mt I wortd "*"' of di,.ppointcd in the fint half." • 1•.24, bllltlng '* ~ _. The Dolphin now .l-0 in tho of 1 OI 07. •AA e.w.a prcscason, trailed 20.6 t haJf\1mc but going offensively 10 the third quar- ter," Shula said. "He's a rookie but is our leadif\J rusher to date." The defendina Super Bowl cham- pion Raiders. playrng at the Los Angeles Coliseum for the first time since trouncina Seattle 30-14 to win the Amencan Football Confcrcnce title last Jan. 8. fell to 1-2 . The Raiders reached the Miami 7- yard line an the final minute but quarterback Marc WJ.!son was sacked at the 13 and \ then threw two incomplete~ t)le second as tlmc expired. "No question, we did not play W'Cll m the second half," said Los An&eles Coach Tom Floru "At tlus point., in the thJl'd pre-.season pme, we should have played better, but we dado 't. We just have to play better." Los Anaclcs had established its lead on field aoaJs of 31 and 43 yards b) Chris Bahr, a I-yard scortna run by Frank Hawkin and a JS-yard inttt· ccption return b)' defen11ve end Howie Lona. Miami, which sot I 2-)ard touch- down run from fullback Andra Frank· Jin late in the fint quarter. drove 84 yards on ci&ht plays for the winnin& touchdown. The Dolphins were aided by a 40-'&rd~ 1ntcrfcrence pcnalt in" Jam Davis of.the Raidc w icb mo' cd the ball to the Lo Anactcs 8-yard hnc. Jen n·ssoonn nan m ll 26-20. puuina the Dolptun ahad to uy. Carter raced 6 yards on the first scrimm play of the nd half to t up b1 • II.rd . NO, A 4' • Stall does no good, Phlls steal lt away Dodgers continue w rong-way slide with 6-3 def eat- ...LOS ~GELES (A~J -The Philadelphia Ph11l1cs, irked o"er a stalling ploy by Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda. surprisingly executed a double steal as a key play in their four- run seventh innmg that gave them a 6-3 victory at Dodger Stadium. .. The) y,.eren't expecttng it on the first pitch," Phtladelphta Manager Paul Owens said. "It Y..IS my fault." said Los Angeles left-hander Jerry Reuss. "l shouldn't have let them get awa) wt th 1t ... After Von Ha)es stole third while Mike Schmidt was steaJmg second. Ozzie VirgJI knocked in the go-ahead runs with a sinaJe throu$h the middle off Burt Hooton. the third patcher m the seventh. The victory kept Philadelphta six games behind first-place Chicago in the National League East while the Dodgers tumbled deeper mto fourth place, o ud on~pma bebiDd Houston. The Phillies' rally came aft.er Gtta Brock had slammed ~ three-run homer to IJVe Los An lcs tu onJy lead of the day, 3-2. in the sixth innma. .. Brock knoclc.s th-e ball out of the pan-ana puts us~ .. Dodgers starter Bob-Wett1rmd, ''then I go out and mess up. r made some bad pitches." AfterBrock'sbomer, Welch, 1().12, gave up one-out sinJles in the seventh to Greg Gross and Hayes, putting runners at first and third. Welch then wild-pitched lhe tyina run 10 and walked Schmidt inten- tionally to put runners at first and second. La.sorda. rcahnng hts bullpen was not ready. took his time in pulling Welch "The umpun Just stood thcrc and watched." 0..-cns oomplaincd after no one emerged from the bullpen while Lasorda was on the mound. When Reuss finally appeared, the Phillies arceted him with the double steal With first base open, Reuss walked John Wockenfu.ss intentionally to fill the bases, then left for Hooton, who gave up VirsiJ's two-run single. ··No wonder be (Hooton) couldn't get us out." Owens said smugly ... He was tired out from all that warnina up." Shane Rawley, 6-3. went the dis- tance for his first complete pmc in the National League. The Philadel- phia left-hander scattered seven hits and struck out four. After Vif'lil's two-run single, the Ptuls added another run in the innint on 'lo error b) third baseman Rafael Landes toy. CdM polois ts cla im c row n J o\CKSO VlLLE. Fla -Jeff Ocdana ~mi ei&ht of his team's nine 1oals unda) to lead Corooa dcl Mar High School's ummer water polo team to a 9-6 victory over Marin here in the cham- pion hips of. the 17-and-undcr Ju01orOl)mp1cs. "The CdM team, coached John Va~ completed mpeU· tion .,.,th a 4-0-l record. Ocd1n1 srored four oa 10 an 8-6 \ii tor) o~er Con rd on Saturday. Gary T 1ch) had the other oal fl r lhe C4M polo1 . y. whtle oahc Dave V1staun t um -nt 10 another im -·,, pcr- 11 rmantt. °'<tin and T1ch} J 1ncd m· lnatn • te' c hrocder and Jeff Tomlin on the first-team Junior 11 merican uad v.Me Ty Tn li, ~lee.\ n and tu Lill ond team TM 8ovtet UiiOft •"' ~· came It on a .yard touchdown G«rneny ..0. won two .-.ti • run by rookie Joe Caner thrtt field __ Ju.._ .... .,. •. ~ ..... lfl'll•it1•11t11111M111111ftWt,..A8jt,-p1 rrd Jc n i pnnt roun ard field by Uwe Von h m nn late in the thn~ ~nod and~~-L--....=~:t.-.:..........:o~..;;;;,.-..__......,iO::!,..........,._ __ ~~~~-:;'~ a S·)1lrdcr liy Nl Ortto ~a 'I 1n the fourth quartet drtw the Dolphin1 under way at MoicoW• °'1'ftPk: nght end. "Joe <'Iner Tn.t in and t u wtthan on point. • =-~\ ) Player, Wadkin dlff er on their runnerup finish tc BIRMINGHAM. Ala. -Gaf) Pl:s)lcr aid he w hAPP) to fi.nllh ~"'t'ond but nn) Wadkin~ said he wa\ tm.'d ofgcttin the ilver. Each fini\hcd the 66th annual rGA Golf Ch m. p1onsh1p on Sunday at 277. tour woke-. behind the wanner, ue Trevino .. J f~l del~ted at m) age, to finish ~nd an a cham ion tii , said the 48-}ear-old Pla>er, v.ho~ hut big )tar was 1978 when he won thn:e toumamenh, 1ndud1ng the Master-.. Wadkm\ "'ho'>(' S6~.500 check $'l\C ham S-188,45:? for the year, ucd Trevino at the 6th hole but then a thunderstorm del3\cd pla\ for an hour. · ·'"I v.as C.\l.ing1ng good ~fo~ the rain," said tht' 3 :\-,car-old Wadlms. ··but I "'as not as sharp aftt'rward." 4 _arlnen tame the Tigers t v II noa hnd three h111 nd dro\ an two run wh le Im t nd Ed V 8 r1 oombincd on our· hiuer 1hc Ille M nners brat the Ottro11 Tlitr .t-1 Sunda)· to h1g.hliaht ction in tb Ame n Le uc ••. In other pmn, Biil 8 _ rand Eddie Jarak mgleJ home c1g.hth·innin1 runi that paced the Bo ton tkd ~ past the Minnesota Twm1 S-A. ~ Griffey'• thri."C·run homer capped a five-run ~' ~th innin le dinJ the New York Yank~ past Oalctand "9·6 ••• D ve Oollta1• two.run triple ~parked a four-run ninth inning a\ Toronto. Blue downed the C hicaao White So" 7""4 ••• The C::1eveland Indians swept e double-h~ from Mil· wauktt, &"'6 11nd 2·1. In the opener, Mel Hall belted a tw<rrun homer wath one out in the bottom of the ninth inning to win it. Jn the niahtcap, Hall sin&led in the ninth and scored on Pat Tabler'• two- Vude Berl out triple . . . Geor&e npt homered and, along with Ned Yo1t and Gary ard, dro"c in t~o run'> to lead Texas to a 6-4 victory over Kansa'> ( it) Frank Tuau, I J..11, pitched 6.1/, inninp ~hilt" gn ang up three runs on nine hits. walkin& none and \tnling out one. Dave Sc•mldt picked up hi~ ninth o,;a\c oft he sc:sson for Jeus. Kansas City startt'r Larry Gara, 11-9, got the loss, Golden moment forKigen SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -t· meon. Kigcn of Ktnya had a much easier time geuina around th1 ctty than the thouunds of motorists who -· vtntured into 'town during the n Francisco Marathon. . Kigcn, a coll*. student who wu rrcid from the' recent Ol)'mpi.c. Game ~ his co~nsry becau1e !1e 1raiDed an lhe.-Unated ta~ caaaly won the event Sunci.y in a record· breakina 2:10:17.l Motorists who tritd to set around the winding. 26-mile race route reported standina 1till in traffic a Iona as a half hour waitina for runnen to pus. K.igen smashed the race ~rd by more than four minutes and fini hed more than two minutes ahead of his nearest rival, Sca1tle'1 Dave Gordon, who ran in 2:12:22.2. • •~ Wadl1ns' \l.1fo Penn). ~ad he told her after the round, "I'm tm:d ol getting the silver. I want to go tor the gold." Rose hot. but Cubs are hotter .. Katy Schilly of Atlanta won the ., .-.. .,..... women's division. bratin, Karen ' Sl 1e1.r l rt t yt to Dunn by more than I 1h minutes. Kenya • meon --.en rece •es auppo on way 0 c rt Gordon's 1ime was also well under Wadkins, v.ho has won over SI.~ million in his career, finished third. founh and filth an LOurnamenu earlier this )ear. Player, who~ best previous finish this year was a tic for 20th in the *'iamm) Davis-Greater Hartford ~n. put togctherrounds of68. 69. 68and par 72 in the .A. RonCeyandTbadB01leybcltcdthrcc-• In Sunday'• San Francl.eco marathon, run lD 2:10.16. the record of 2:14:31 ~t two yean run homers ~unda) to rally the Chicago aio. The 26.2-mile coune wa Cubs past tbe ( 1ncmnati Reds 9-6. Pete changed this year from previous years ::.~~ ~:~~g t~I~ ~~~~.s~~lfc'r~~~~:;~ewent 3-~or-5 e1· ggest paycheck r:~h~vci~~~ some of the steeper hill1 and has eight htts m 15 at-bats Wltb five RBI since Three other runners also beat the returning to Cancinnau. A crowd of 38,404, lured by L previous record; Massimo Magnani Quote of tbe clay .lee*~ Canada'• Otymplc basketball coach, noting the~·· refatrve IOW stature ln that country: "We lost and a Cenadlan official N.ld, Don't worry, Jack, 1twasn't your fault. The kids Just couldn't put the puck In the ne1. "' Rose's return and a post·game concen by the Beach fior Nancy opez ofltaly(2:13:44.0),Martyn8rewerof Boys. helped tht' Red\ draw more than l 00,000 for a Great Britain (2: 14:06.6) and Dou&las weekend sen cs for the fi~t time smce 1981. Georce Avrit of San Luis Obispo, (2: 14:2 f.O). Frazier, 3-2. blanked Cmcannat1 K.ia.en was kept off K.enya•s Olym- on four hits over the last five She needs a rally Carner,oncoftOHaJloffamersin pie team by officials of that country innings for the victory. Loser Jeff the 1port, closed with • )..under-par who decided last month 10 punish Ra11ell, 5-14, cracked a three-run to def eat Carner 69 for a total of 282. She earned athletes who trained in the United double during the Reds' five-run S3S,OOO, pushing her record career States. He came to na1ional promi· Moses dizzy, drops out of meet fifth ... Elsewhere m the National b t gl troke bankrolJ past S l , 787,000. nencc in this country when he ran the Le~gue, David Qreen cracked an y S n e S Patty Sheehan, this year's leading faste1t m~t1!on debut in history, inside-the-park homer and drove money winner, shot a 71 for third placina third. ut the Chicqo Mara· HANOVER West German\ -tn three runs to lead SL Louis ~t SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio (AP) place with 284. She collected $23._000 th?.n last falJ m 2:10:5?,. . Amenca's world record holder Edwin m the Atlanta 8•5 ..... Pllll Ganaer. -Nang Lopci lost SIJl shots to and now has won $241 .622 this year. I wa~ ereuy upset, K:taen UJd Of· f1i e<fi d ' 1 fi solo home run in the e1'1'th • th fi .. 1' h 1 the dcc1s1on to keep him off the Moses su er !a 1L~Y spel and let the inn ans lifted Houston to its ninth JoAnne amer 1n e 1~t ei.,.t o cs Betsy KJna. the 36-hole leader, was Olympic team "Bui . there wu _track s~only _before hts 40<~n'_lcter hurdles r.-_ straight vtetory a 4-) triu~ Sunday1 then ralhed 10 w1~ the World fourth and earned $16,-SOO with bu notlnn! to do.' 1 am happy rat.e:Sullday..in.a p().l;t-Olympac.&r~~-t--at Hano\'Cr-=:L ~ "' '-c~ T .u:::: -ChatftjMOOsh~'Ool!and-roamtofttforr2~ ....----.::R very_ plagued by dropouts and no-show'>. over the Pittsburgh rtr~tes . . "ooiu~ .,oe nes .e $6S,OOO-the biaaest paycheck in the . W1nn1.n1.tti1s, but at d~ n~!"make up Evd)'n Mhford of the Unued_State!>.. who won allowed .five hits over 7 Vi tnnn:igs for his fU'St rtUJOr· sport. . _ _ Juli Inkster finished fifth wi1h for f'!'.USStnJ the Olympics. Olympic gold at Los Angeles, also backed ou1 of leagut' victory and Andre Dawson horn~ and drove Lopez lost the lead to Carner o n the 69-236 over the 6,225--yard SbaJc~r Kia.en. who wo~ ~~ S 1_0,000 top compc11t1on in the women·s I 00 meters spnnt becau~ an three run'> a~ Montreal bJanked San Diego 3-0 ···~be eiahth hole. She regained it with a Heights Country Club coune in pnze, aue.n~ed .M1mssapp1 State but of a ullcd muscle Officials said she had mJured It at San F rancasco Gtants and the New York Mets spht a birdie on No. 12 and finished with a I· suburban Cleveland. has been lmng In Bould~r. Colo., the another post-Olympic track and double-header1 the Giants wanning the_ opener 7-6 on over-par 73 for 8 tournament record Pat Bradley and Amy Alcott were pas~ few. months. He w!ll atttno the field meet 1n Berlin Fnda) Brad Wellman 1 two-run homer m the ninth mmng and 72-hole total of 281, 7 strokes below next at 290, Ayako Okamoto had 292, Univ~rs1ty of C-0l~rado 1~ the fall. Nine Olympfc winners had the Mt'ts taking the nightcap 4-2 as Bruce Berenyl r. Donna Horton White 296, Laurie Sc~1lly, who finuhed third he~ last been upccted al the meet bu1 pitcht'd eight strong innings and went 3-for-4 at the pa The previous 72-hole mark for this Rinker and Hollis Stacy 298 and Ahc.e year lD her m?lralhon debut with a only sax showed and two of1hcm. plate five-year-old event was 282, set by M.iller, lhe first-round co-leader w11h personal best 11.me of2:39:44, shayed Ashford and "10-.cs did not Beth Daniel in 1980 and Carner last King. was last at 300. almost four manutes from that tame compete 150 000 root Laudato victory year Lopez, 27, the w1fe of Houston Sunday at ~:3S:SS.9 .. She also won The 2!<-\ear-old Mo'>C'\, a ' Lopez's performance was good Astros' infielder Ray Knight, strug-SI0,000, w~1cb.she wdl pulln a trust Laguna Hills' resident who ha'> /1:.1 1 WHi. Austna _Austria's Nilu II enou&h for a one-stroke v1ctory and gled to a 37 on the front nine, but her fund to matntaan her amateur statu1. won I 05 '>lra1gh1 racl·'> dating Lauda cheered on by an ovcryoyed foiled Camer's bid to become the 6-foot putt for btrd1e on the 472-yard, back to 1977, madt' a coupJe of pana\an croY.d. Sunda> drove has Mclaren second player an LPGA history to win 12th hole gave her the lead a~in. She tnal \tans. but a fev. mtnutt.'~ Porschl' to victor\ m the Austnan Grand a tournament three straight years. held It the rest of 1he way apjnst Ii oeea before the race he left the track. PrL\ and captured the lead 10 World Formula One Kathy Wh11wonh won the S&H Carner. playing in the tWCHOme in Sul van The race was postponed for fhe minute~. but ht' did not Champaon~hap standings wtth four of I 6 races 10 go Classic in 1968-70. from of her. - return Lauda'\ \I.In, before what organizers claimed was a i dicate Official\ said he \UO't'rCd from intesunal nu. record attendance of 150,000. was the first for an v n s ~~h:.~e~~=~~.of difficult) adJU!tltng to the ch mate ta~~t~~~n~ed~it~a~/rossed the finish line. Jubilant Navratil 0 va is c1 es er in v· ictory L.auda. won the race in one Big day for Chinese athletes hour and 21:12.851 minutes. to E"l'r.ert 's win Iiecol~d ahead of reigning world cham-V 1 ~ ~ PEK IN(, -More than 6.000 guest'> • pion Nel5<>n Paquet of Brazil, who LONG POND, Pa. (AP) -Wm- nina the Dom.in~ Pizza Pocono $00 Indy-car race was a vindication of sorts for Danny Sullivan. crammed Pckang'!.C1reat Hall of the People -.,._._._. controlled thc...compet~taon up to Sunda)' to con,ratulatt ( h1na·s m the 39th of 52 laps when Lauda umphant Olympic athlete\ and Y.atch ovenook him. Lauda was as far Communist Panr katre"rs award them special ment back as sixth after cntn"w slart. medals, 1he official new~ ag'enq X1nhua said Wath his win. Lauda took the "Young pioneers presented 09-Wers and red lead for the world Formula I title scarves to the medalists and others as the hall echoed wtth 48 points, ahead of team- w1th the sound of drums and bugle\," '<anhua \Sid mate Alam Prost, who was forced "Pnor to tht' meeun~ man> young people and Lallda to drop out Sunday. Prost has children eagerly soughtthe1r autographs." X mhua said. 4 3 5 points, Italian Lotus-Renault driver Eho de It dad not elaborate on who was '"' ued to attend the Angells. 26.5 and Ferran pilot Rene Arnoux of France. gathcnng 24.5 paint'> Party leader\ also threw a banquet for the team ~aturday night and consoled world-record high Jumper Zhu J1anhua who mis~d a chance to win a gold medal and came home with a bronze. PhotOlfaphs on the front page of the Pam• organ People's Daily and other nt'wspapcrs showed Premier Zhao Z1yanJ. and part) ~naors Deng Yingchao and Ulanhu sm1hng and clapping for 1he team at the banquet, also held an the Great Hall of tht' People. "The) caught sight of high Jumper Zhu J1anhua and stepped forward to warmly shake hands with him," said an account by the official press agency Xmhua. Telemlon, radio TILIYISION 5 p.m. -IAllBAU.: Angell et New York Yankees, Channel 6 . RADIO 5 p .m. -IAlllALI.; Angell at New York Yankees, KMPC (710). 7:30 p.m. -•AauAU: Montreal at Oodgera. KABC(790). A superb paint job ... only $320! :'frr"~IT "btluvm11 .. rtmu"' nm{ Jrr thr can just pninttd /1y F.lt/flmr-< ""'/""' our 1mrl11v with <1thrn tbnt aut muc/J "'""'· f.1t111111r. fl'fll mrludri n rim,. t11p wtrt liltr tllr r¥pnmn ""P!'rtl. 1r,,1-. legnn: pnrnt )fib 111111 nmnzmq l'n/ut nt S.1RO-but i[w>u lwi1~11 ;,, thr ro11pn11 brlon• .vo11 .11r'1 n11 ndtfitumn/ f60 ojj! MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) -Marttna NavratHova outlasted her doubles partner, P•m Shriver. M, 4-6, 7.5 Sundey to capture her 48th con- MCUtlve "ngles match and win the United J•MY Bank Ctuek) teon11 tournam.nt. The triumph .. rMd NavretlJova $27,500 Ind moved her to wtthln etght matchea of Chrl• Evert LIOyd'• modern rKOrd of 66 con- eecutlve ~ victories, Mt In 197 4. NavratlloY• hu won 138 of her latt 1.CO matchea. But the YlctOty In the 2-hour, 15. minute match before a crowd of 4,728 at ~ CoUege did not come eully for Nawettk>Va. the toumement•a t~ Med. Shriver, who hat beaten Navratllova Jutt thr .. tlmee In 22 matchel, moat recently In the 1982 r---------------~ 1/1238411 +1lu,,., mo. Special Discount $60 off! I l'u ""' 1hu •"llf">O "hn1 '"" •lf•kr ''"" I I a. ~dnl ('Jllll 1>.h •llJ " .. ,,. a \lt<) ,11-cuunr I .. n 1hr "lt"t..' '"" :0111 ~"' f "'"''" """ •Jin ( lur '""f"" f'i'' f"lll/ Jbll ~ l.lfl{Jf) 9 I p ----------- .. -. ·~· f ,,._-.. aoo.rx. Load«! w;th r. bar. NI con<J(f}o(llno. terto c:aaune. fXW'l'l1' windows. •11'1 1Nn1 o!Mr ~ ture1 ec mo cJoNd #t4 , CIP t:M •15,7,2: dawn t>rl· ment 11312 72 auh "'trlJ(# r. 02;,~f) All c.rt wtJ}eet to IOf ,.,. ·. U.8. Open, r.w.d from• 2-5 c:tef~t In the third Mt to 118 the match 5-5 end hed a br-9< pQtnt egalnet her ~In the 11th gtme. Howewr. HavratMova wNPP9d a backMnd ~,,... 8hnv. and won the next two polntl to hold htt WYe. TheMcond 111d9d Shmer took • ~ ...., In the 12th game, but Newatlova reeled off the next four ~ta to win the matC:h. The lM1 point ceme on• bed<hlnd _... retumthat~ undtr 8'wtwr·• recqwt. Nawatba captured the open- ing eet. breektng 8hrtver In the 10th ~ aft• fafftng behtnd k>Ye-40. She took • 3-1 leld In the MCOnd Mt but Shrlv. won the next four Gamet and ctli\ched the Mt wtth a fOniihend votteY In the 10th game. -.!fhe-14-year-old racer from Louisville, Ky., had built a reputation as a fine road racer, but his credentials on the oval tracks were in doubt until Sunday's 500-mile event on the three· tum oval at Pocono International Raceway. ..Everybody said I was a road- racina specialist and I wanted to prove otherwise," Sullivan said after bcatins Rick Mears and Bobby Rabal by leu than one second. ''I auess J put a couple of cntacs to sleep with this one. They said I couldn't dnve on an oval, but I proved I could.•• It was a long day for the 33 drivers and the crowd estimated at 4S,000, with the start delayed two boun and eight minutes by rain and the action interrupted by caution flags a rccord- tying 10 times. Tsunami Slew atones for eai:Iy Del Mar loss ' DEL MAR (AP) -Tsunami Slew, a son of Seattle Slew, atoned for a loss two weeks ago by wmrung the $167,-400 Del Mar Derby an record time Sunday to cla1m the title of top three-year-old of this year's Del Mar meetina. Tsunami Slew, onl)' the fourth favontc of the crowd of 26,..S47, won the l 'Jt..m1le race on the tun course by three lcnJths over Prince True. With JOCkey Eddie Delahoussaye urging him at the end, Tsunami Slew covered the distance In 1.48, breakm& the previous Del Mar Dcrb~ record of 1.48 2-S set by Montespan 1n 1976. Tsunami Slew, !Qtich lost an the one-mile La Jolla feature two w~ks aao at 2-3 odds, took the lead m the stretch and had to ward off Prince True, which closed in a 1print after trailing by ci&hl lcn&thJ 1n the attclCb. Prince T'ruc, ridden by Pat Valenzuela und c..11)111¥, u vuuod5, the same as the wtnner finished a nose in front of Majestic Shore, which edJed Tiahts by almcnt a lcn&th for third. The victory was worth $99 6SO to Tsunami Slew, which paid Sl4.60, $8.80 and $7.20. Prince True, whose final raJJy st.aned along the ra1I as he was in 12th place at the th~-<1uarter pole, paid SS.80 and $4.40. Majestic Shore, ridden by Sandy Hawley and carryjng 11 S pounds. paid $9.80. Predsionist, the S-2 favorite set the early pace with Chris McCarron aboard and carryins a hi&h·wcight of 124 pounds, but faded to seventh in the stretch drive. Ocean View finished fifth, lmp Society suth atid Refueled ciah1h Rounding out the field were Bllnd Spot, Milord, Ctru ite and Bolina. Baldwin victorious SONOMA (AP) -Mike Baldwin tilbtcned h11 grip on the Amcnc.n Motort)cli t A soc1ation Formula One tand1np as he led all but one lap on h1s Honda to win the Honda Sonoma eta ic unday at ., an Point lntcmattonal Rt<' way. Baldwin, of Stamford, Conn , I~ four othtr Hondas 10 thr chctkcrcJ naa. bul tht only u pen ... the battle f'or-9Ct0nd plarc.c-=----- Randy Renfrow. Falmouth, Vir., tndcd a ra ·Iona battle by edgina R1<'harJ hlll'htcr, 01\1 Lyme, Conn , w11h Wn ool y, Ramon , fin1 h1na founh 1nd l>ou Chandler, I t. I , I .. 65 • N " 44a 10 IAIT 01.J:til'll~O ~S 11~ .,.,-... "' ff S1 wt tO --ft()m " JI ...sa ,, ... ,. .'20 " " .. 11' """ H70MOM st n '" n ..... V'.~· .. ltnor• 10 ........ c,in "" 1, Mltllr•uti• '· 111 """' ltYeltl'IO 2, MllwellkM 1, 2nd llmt ... tilt 4, Detroit 1 Ntw York f, 0.1111114 6 lot.Ion 5, Mlnt1U01a • T«Ol'llO '· Clllcuo 4 Tt.ICH 61 Klnllt City 4 Ttdlra Oamn AllNtt (JoM 7·10) 11 Ntw York (C-· ltV ••1), In) IC•IWI• Cltv (Ou~a l ·f l ti lotlOfl (lrown 1·5), In> Oa llfld (Yount 6·11 t1 Detroit 1Morr1' ls-I), (II) IMlllt ( ... IUI f ·l)) at 11 ltnore CO.Mart111et 4·7). (11) Cl'llcl90 IDotaon 12•101 ti THH (Hovtll IMO), (11) O!ltv Mmtt IClleclUled TUWdlY't 0.!MI ~ II Ntw Ym, (n) Cltvllalld 11 Toronto, (n) K1n111 City el locton, In> S..llle ti l1lttll'IOl'e, (n) Oatdand 11 Detroit, (n) Mlnnnote al Mlhwallk .. , lnl c111c1oo 11 Ttua. Cnl Na"-'11~• WIST ONWON W L S.oDi... 71 SI A ttenta 63 61 HouilOll 6J u .,....,... 6 I 63 ClnclMatl S2 n San P:renclleo 47 7• IAST DMSIOH CllleffO NtwYOtk n 51 ses . Ptil .. delPhl• ·Montreal SI. Louis Pt111ue11 61 S3 .SU 3 '5 5' .517 6 61 .., .504 10 61 61 JOO 10\.'J » n .,, 20V> knilllY'• ac.... Ptilledelohle 6, .,._,. J Houston •. Plttsburttl J Ollcffo '. ClnciMetl 6 St. Lowla..I,~ 1 rancrvo 1 New Y""' • 'ti oame New Y«ll A, Sen Frtl'ICllCO 2, 2nd .. ,,._ Montrul 3, Sen 0+... 0 TMeY'I ~ MentrMI <GVl!c:k1on t-71 et 0...... IH«~ l·S>, <n> HouslOft -(Kneoper 12•1} ti Ctllcffo (Trout 10-S) Allaftfe (Mehler l·I) ti ,.lllabUrtll (Rhodtft 10-t), (n) SI. lout• CLaPofflt f·f) et ClnclMell <11* 2·0), In) N-York (Fwnende1 •· n et Sen Dleeo csnow IM>. <n> PNI~ (DeMy S-3) •I Sen Fren· clsc:o ICalv«t 2·J}, (n} ,..._Y'I Oemtl MonlrMI 11 DM91n, In) Houston el ClllQ90 A1i.n11 .. 1 ,.ll!Ulur9t1, (n) SI Louil 11 ClnclMetl, (n) New Yen et Seti Dleeo, en> Ptllledeloflla II kn Fr1ncisco. (II) AMIRICAN LIAGUI Ort•s 10, Alt9llt 4 CALll"OttNIA -aAL. TIMOAI or fl tat a•rflbl llJtttla cf-4 I 1 0 MKYno rt S 1 2 0 Grlcll tb 4 t 2 J $1\ttbv Cf S 1 3 O LYM r1 3 0 1 0 Rlok~ 11 S 1 1 0 0.Cl'CI 3'I S 0 0 I EMurrv lt> 4 1 2 1 Downltl9 If J o o o Gross Mt J o 1 I RaJMll~ J 0 0 0 TCnnllt \ 1 0 0 DMll!tr lt> J 1 IO ~on J 0 21 SCllOflld H 2 0 I 0 Avale dh 1 1 1 0 Sconlrs Oii • I 0 1 0 Silltlltn dh 0 0 0 0 '°°"' c J 0 0 0 Gltondl If l 1 I 4 """on llfl 0 0 t 0 Deuer 211 5 1 I O ~ITC • t~., Jl 4 7 4 T..... n It It 1t Scere ......... (alfwnla •1 •1 no-• ..,.,,_. OOS •1 JIX-10 G1mt Wlnnlno RBI -DemMev (JI E-0.Clnces, TCru1 D~allfornla I, lalllrnore 2. LOl-Callfornla I . lelllmore 10. 28-<0rldl, Lvnn. SM!bl'. HR-DemtlMY 2 (6), GRMnlcke (fl, Ortell (11), $-$cllofltld ... c;....,.,... Klaon L.3·2 Ceufman Curtis COl'Mtf LS.l'CMI laltlmer9 2 l-l 3M 0 ' 1 " ..... so 6 5 • 5 1 I ' 2 2 2 ' 1 2 I I 1 3 1 1 I 0 0 1 2 0 p:jan.on W, 10-11 1 6 4 4 A 2 ssi.war1 2 1 o o a 2 Curtis pllehed to 2 tlellen In 1111, ''-"""' lllltc'*I to 3 tlelltra In 8111 T-l:Ol. A-2S,t2J. NATIONAL LBAGUI Pt\9let ,, Dedeln J fl'HILA Atu1102b GGrM•lf VHaY9& rf SC!lmdt 311 Malllk 111 Wcknfa 1111 GWll$OllK Vtr9A c Maddo•c:f DtJtau•u lt1wltYP TttlD .. ., lltlt s 1 2 t 5 ' 4 0 s I I 0 2 I 2 0 2 0 0 0 0000 1 I 0 0 5 0 22 5 1 I 0 5 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 LOI ANOILI alt, 11 IM Su2» •010 A"°""u 4 0 0 0 G11«rw r1 4 1 3 O MarallU • 0 1 0 MldNoc:f 4000 YtlMH 3 1 0 0 lrock It> 4 I I 3 RIVtrlJ9 J 0 1 0 Rt111111 0 0 0 0 Hooton 11 o o o o lreww f)fl 1 o o o w.tcll p 2 0 0 0 Llndtlv J«I 2 0 0 0 n 6 12 4 T..... JS ) 1 J ac...n.,... ...• --' L"~ -ta M-J Gamt Wltwte Rll -Vlrtll 16), l!-0..Jtw\, La~IOY LOl~Dflla 11, Loa Al'Mltl 6 21--0Grou. Vire• Hlt-A9111vo ()), lrock (1)) SI-VHtVft (Jl), 5c.llmkit c.I IP HRIRllSO ........... 1t1wltf w ... 3 ' 1 3 l • L"Mellltl WllCll L.1°'12 6 M 10 S 5 2 S lttuU 0 0 1 0 1 0 HOOIOl'I 22·3 2 0 0 1 1 Reuu oltc:fltd to 1 bttter In 7111 Hl~tunltl (l>v Wttcll) T-2 u A-».OIS Nf'L pre .... ._, NATIONAL CON,HIHCll New Orlten• ltam• Atlante San Fra!IClsco o.troll Tan'IN In Grtenlev MlnnttOll CllQeo Watt W L T ,ct. "" l'A l o o teoo " '° 1 2 o m •1 " I 2 0 .3337'" 120:W•'6 c .... 2 1 0 , 2 • I 2 0 ' 2 • 0 > 0 hit '47 JI SI JOO n 120 .m ... . m SI U 000 31 61 Dtks 210"16550 NY Giants 2 1 O M7 ti 60 St. LOYll 2 I 0 6'7 40 31 Phfladelpf\la I 2 O 333 '2 a Walfllnoton t 2 o .333 '3 ts AMHICAN CON"IRllNCI Miami luff alo lndlan9Nlf• N-Enollnd NY Jata WHf • 0 0 1000 '° 34 2 ' 0 ... , '5 )6 2 I 0 U7 '5 .., 120.l335''2 I 2 0 .333 61 '1 c.Mr9 - a • • •• 11 ~• 2 I O,M7St '5 1 2 o m . • n 121~127' ... , 3 0 0 1000 12 33 120333 3131 1 2 • m 1t 75 120.333 .... 030 .0004'n lul'llllY"a ken Miami 2', Raldln 23 T'llurMIY'• ~ Clevelend at Ptilladt!Pflla, (n) Sen Diego 11 Rams, (n) ,.,...Y'.~ Denver 11 Atlanta, In> Detroit at Cltlclnnall, <n> Kansas CllV at NH li,,...lld, (n) Mleml at T•mM lay, (Ill Mk1Msot1 et SI L~s. Cnl NY Jets 11 ........ (n) S.111• ti Sell I' r ll'ICllCe, In> ktuNaraoamn W11t1lnoton 11 N-Or1Hns lndlanuoll1 11 Gr1e11 lav. tnJ Plllsburell el NY Glents, tnl Houlton •• 01n11. (nl SUMIY't Oeme Chtc.oo vs. lvffalo at lndl1neoe>111 Def~ SUNDAY'S AISUL Tl (tlnl ef Q·dlY ...,,., ..... ,,_..., PtaST RACL 6~ 1urtonn 5-IY CO!otne (UPllam) 17 t0 6 to UO Lucky Key It (McCarron) • 00 UO Intentional (/Nta) lf 00 Alto rac.d: MtlrOPO'• UH, CanclY'• Vtlenllnt, Petite P11r1ce, Ttrrnto's P11an, StUfflt Tufflt. 11J1noc111. Com· prtflend, Plquanllv Tlrnl-l·ll 2/S. . laCOMO AACI. I 111' m11ti Edlt'a ltUllll« (HIWltV) -4.60 ).20 UO 1Ce¥1n's Trldls (Mceetron> 4 00 UO LYMwouNI (l.oloya) UO JICW tRlid !hWdl'OriiMllVMA, AIMllft, Maac,rlCIO, L.o'IW lov Mlc:Uv, Doclat Jim Ted, Eutwn. Ju, Haw19v Nl9-PW, Clesay Monte, Wl\alclleno T1mt' 144 J/S. n DAIL. y DOUILI Ct·•> Niel m 00 TM•D RACI. I 111' rnllea. Pr..,.lnt (LIP!lem) 4.60 3M UO Hatamoto IV11tn1utla) SAO UO P1tecno (Drt11ter> I• Afto rac«I· P:emlly Fok, Tree Runner, A Faat Pela, Home Courl Rufino. Rondon. Cerro "'"*°· Dalaky, Fortv Etont Facet&. T~lG. U IXACTA (5-1) Pllld 166.SO "OURTH llACI. t'l'J fur'lonn, Ouecll• Darlin' CMcent> UO 5..11 4.20 Lal Of Stan (Haw1ty) 6.60 HO kt1oo1 "'1nats CSlbUlt > > 20 Aleo rac.d· PoalllOnld, Sheer Eniov-ment. Sinai Arnot, LaC1V C1ontetf, Ctn Velo, Mimi leklf, Concorcte Cllu. F«· .,. ""-niM. Timi 117 •tS """ llACL I l l U milt$ on turf SUO"dlll CMcCarron) 1060 J IO 2 IO Lofty (llJlncav) uo 2 AO loltl Ench turning (Torol 4 00 Alto raced· lenoeo, Counlv Seit, Tom COmollllOf. LOUlsv!l!e Summit. SCllY Stevtft, Afl'Wlcaft St1tlele'O. ~ 2', ....,_ 2l TlfN 142 JIS (k#e IPt QMttan) U IKACTA Cl-ti Niel 151.50 6 o 10 t>-29 SIXTH A.Ace. ' 1urionn. l 17 I >-23 Cr.Oun.en IC11teMCSa) 6.20 '00 lOO f'ht ,..... Pro loWltt IVt*llutll) IUO 6 • LA-f'G laht ll, 6• vwoe1m·1 Prlelt CPftlc.ay) 3.20 MIA~~ 1 run (lllQ. ~. AIA-raaGC Or. ltl'ia,--socJ1111nf Show, IJ 46 F«avttie lov, Staff Decision. ..,., Than • •-f:G .. ~,~ lollt, Dr Kumecrou. Time Df Tiit Fu. ...,.. '" -· .-"Sonnv tartcll, Krll\lly, LA-H-kln• I run llallr kldt). ,._.S Timt..111 kk:.~one""l!Tnllfi:i91TOn teturn·i-.erif --llVSNTH A.ACI. 1 1116 m!llS. ""*-,..,.... J IMll lff IMcCarron> 6.60 UO uo MIA-Caner 3 run CDtl Greco k!Q) G,..y Mlullt (LOloYI) l600 5.60 3:.53 ' Forlunt'a Klnffom IPlncev> 2..IO MJA-FG Von kllemann 4'. 10:36 Alto rlClld. Our Larrv. N tro. Idol, ~II• "1U1111,.... Cloud. EmtrMnCY Fund. :::~~ ~'-:. 35jv~1 Sct1atMM :S'7xl~l't2·l> Hid SJ1' SO 111c111. 6M n fl'tCK sut <•·St .. •+•·t> .. 111 LA-FG 1t11r 45, 10'.SI IS,f40.IO wlltl fl wlmlng liekela Ctlx MIA-FG Ott Greco, 13.24 llOran). u Pldl SI• cOMolarlon Mid 112100 A-40,.,, w1tt1 1.m wlnnlne tlctllla cnve llorMsl TIAM STATISTIC$ llGMTH AACI. 1'-rnn.t on IUtf Mlt . LA Taunaml Slew tDlmv) 100 Ito 7.20 Flratdown• •• ,!! 22 Prince True (VatenrUlll) SIO 4.40 RuUltl·vardl ---26·" Maiflltc snor. CHawWI) t IO Paasl119 nrCll 1'1 2tf Alto racad. Tiollt,, Ocean View. lrnp lttturn Yards 11 JS Soclttv. Prec111on111, Rlfuated. l llnd *'· Pa1MS 16·i2·2 ll·Jl• 1 Milord, CtruHlll, 80111111. Sadia DY 4•27 H Time: b ... Pl.Int• 0-0 2·40 P:umoit1·loll •o 2·1 NINTH AACI. n .. mrin on lurf. Ptnalflts•yarlh 7·• 1 .. 12' a.ran (Toro) , . 5300 1' . .0 1060 TllN .. PMMUloil 30'.J2 2':21 llld!Mark.llttr•(Llollem) 760 •.O t•U>MOUAL STATISTICS Rd\Mn (~) lOI RUSHING-Miami, Cart« 1·11. Frel1klfl Also raced Tiii JandV Matt. I .. , 14•4', Helllan S-U. May 2·13, JtftM11 2·1J, Dtltnlt, Deley, Oalllnt Mllldtd, AIAlllTI, lannttl 1-12. H• ,.. Lot A""'", Kine ··~~· 3~r Ot ltol, Candllat>fo •·17, Hawklna .. 21, Pruitt. MO. Allen S-1'. IS IXACTA ( 12·11 Mid lflt so. ~~ 3·t. M. Wlltoft I··· Plunltell 1-"'~ 2'.5'7. PASSING-Mleml, Slroek f-lt-2-fO. MIY ••l-0-lS, JenMll :1-6-0•" Los An-...... """*•II 1·12·0-152, M. Wll$Oll 10-21+1 .. ltECEIVING-Mlaml, ClltlleV 3·34, lennett J-1', c.ftto 2·50, Clayton 2·31. ROA 2•1t, JlflMll 2-16, Hdln MS, Nathan Hf. Loe~. Wiiiiama .. Ill,..,,.... S-H. Monftemerv 2·'2. Halftllns 2· 1A, IUne l•t, ...,..., 1-6, JOI Mee.a 1-4. FIELD GOAU MISSU>-Mlamf, Von ScllallWltl •• Del Greco C7. Loa ~. none. ,,.. ltllftl ~ ........ Tlluri • Aue n -Sell Ol9t0 '"°'"' 1• "m.). - LeetutlMltll Mort., ltpt J-OtUaa (lloml 600 lltn ), Sun, $ff!, f -CllVtland ll!Omt); Sun . Stpf, 16 -at PilllMotl, lufl , SHI. 2l-at Cincinnati (10'00 am >; Sun • S.01 30 -N•• Yorll Glet11\ CllOmtll Sul\., OCI 7-AU11111 lllOIM); Sun~ Oct. 14 -at '-ttw Ot'ltlM <10t0 a "' >. Motl • Oct n -•• A111n1e cu• •"' h s....,. oc1 2' -S.11 P:rencJKo lllen'le). Sloi Mov. 4 -II St LAI.lb CIHt a.m.). SUI!, Nov 11-Cllboo (llOrNI. Suri. Nov 11 11 Orllft ltv (ti ,,..., M 1HO a.m.I, Sun... Nov. U-ti TllTIM Clt'IO 1.tn ), SWfl , Dec. 2 -,..._ OrtlMi (l!Omt) I Sun... Oec ' -Houtltft '"""''· l'rt., o.c.. 14 -ti Ian flrtnclld CHI •m >.A• tamet a11rt II 1.0 11.m.. ,OT Ulllna oltltnirifot noted .. o... ... ~ DAVIT'S \.OaCIA (....,._, ...0) -Ut lllfltt't 570 llOfWtt, 6 ~111. 20 rtCtl ""'-l.t c.tllco DIU, 31 MN IMIU, 5'° rnaclllf9f t Pia.Kii. 10 wi.t tUl'll 10 aaii..n. 4 '*· 1 ""'"''-d NIWllJ<NtT LANDING (N••"'1 leadl) -l2l lnt*I 469 "'""1.. .. Mnd oeu .... macklfat. 2 rodt ti~ TN1 wMfl'I treut llla«lts LOS ANOILIS -loiloutt Ca11von C,_, SAN alRNAaottto -tie e..r Lalla, G(eeft ..,. LI •• <>,...,.., Lelle, S.!lfe Ana It ., , Senta Ml It twet ( *'"' ten.J KIRN -Kem •lww (kel ,.._.,. ,.,.. .. Oerrleertl 0.1'1\, !Cal~ It L..-e , ...... ,, ~I -Klfll IU.., C'anlew Oe<l'll te KltJ ,......,,_...,Jet ....... .,._ te Felrf\9W Datn), T\1111 11\oer OOul?I '-" ef ,,,. .. ..,., MADlaA -Sell JoeUt\ lt"w (middle fonl), ltlfkwM!Mr ~at.t •YO -....., (rwll, 119 l"llle Cr•. llMolt C,_ llOW«, tnl#ll, IMNU\ _,.. llltatlt II), l~a Cr•. LOftt ~ Cr•, Ron Creek Lille, SOutn Ullt, Ta!IOOM Ct , T~ CrM, Tu1tll ~-MOftO -artOllDOrt It-volt. IYC!L • tW en." COftYttt c..-, CenY1C1 Liiie, 0Mdme11 c,..." • ..,. ~t. ~ t . °"' LI t , G' . \.Me .. 11 ~tf·7• ,.,. .... n •·n•7Nl Andvleen.s7,IOO • .., S-10-70 DoMie Hammend, .,, .. l't-ff•1M4 2IJ 70·12·72·11 • ~eter Jaeot>san. 0.050 Cr1l9 Steclltr, ,, 050 11-1>-n .. ..... l'rld~.u.-n·n·7S-'7 C0ttt PaVll\, 1U30 7>·72·7•·'7 ~l<k , ..... u.ao H •7J•7NO Kalttl Fartua, U.GO 12·n·n·n JOM MaMfftv, .... n·n-n·n ., Jeck Nickle~ M..SO. •• n •70+7M• Jun cot11trt. w.ON , 11·11·74·10 Ctilll atc:k, a.Utt ••·n-10-11 Dollt T-11. M.0'6 n·11-11·n •nC11dw .N.05' 71-71-7•·11 HI e trw.n, W,056 71-70·7•·12 Mafll O'Mfffa, M,056 1H•·n-n.. Tim Sitnl110tl. 14.05' n·10-n-n -Otnls Wtl$Oll, UAOO n-6'·7H'J -Tom Kiie, '3,311 U •n·U·ff oon PooltY. 11.:m 70•1J•7S-11 ROMle l!IC*, 13.J 11 7"70·74·71 .. loO Gild«, Q,G50 10-1 ... n-n Dal!W Ed*uch, Sl,05' 72-71·72·7$ 2'1 Tom WtllOI\. JUOf 74·72-74-71 Denny Edwuch, 12,!0S n-16-n-11 Grit Norman. S2.!0S 1s-n-n-11 ~ .. Cadle, Sl.505 1H1-n-n O.vt Stockton, U.SOS n-u-n-n AldWd lollol, U ,SOS 74-74-70-1] J•Y HM•. n.sos 7o-6f·1s-n Allen Miiie(. 12.SOS 72·72·71-76 Dan Pollf. 12,sos 11-10-n·n 2'2 L.tOllWCI ThomPt.n, '1,m 70-71·71·to Jadl R-., 11,m n-tf-n-n Man McC.umllar. 11.m 71-74-73-72 Scott Hodl, 11.m 1s-n-10-u Mlle Donald, 11,m 76-72-75-71 0.vld GfaNm, Sl,'77 ll-72·• .. Gert Kedl, 11,m 7•·n-~" Mattl Lye, ,1,m 74·74•7J-72 Nldr flrb. 11m .,,_,. • 71-75 o.,.., McC«d, s1.m 73·7l-7 .. 71 1M Dave twr. 11,710 6'-1'-n-n 2" Joe Inman, 11M2 n·n-n·7' Jim T"'°'111, Sl,462 74·n-1s-n Larry Rlnluw. 11.462 7S-7J·7•·7J 2H Scott Beu. llACIO ff-7 .. 76-75 JGe'I' llnctllalr. 11.-n·7'·73·75 T °"" Siiia. ll AGO 1H4-n·15 2f7 truca Ueftlle, 11,$42 n-1s-n-7' Jim Altlul. 11,5'2 75-71-74-n ltOMr Meltllle. Sl.542 72·75-7 .. 74 Mike SYll!nn, 11,542 1t-n-n-10 2'I D.A. WliWlnO. '1,510 , .. 72·7'"7• "' Lon Hlnklt,.11,500 u -n-n-11 LKA teumament (et ,._ RedliMI, N. Y.) .. Slllv ~ 1 IS..297 ., JIM GtOdff, If, 172 2" AJHendra ltnllrdl, $6,67' m K tlhy Wllltwortll. 13.tt 1 '" 0..-. Lasker, 12.1112 Donna Ca.Ponl. Sl,1(12 m ..... trty KIIii, 12 ... larwa Mlirallie. S2,01t Coltell Well«, 12.07' "' COlll'tl Clllllml, 11 ,513 ~ Davia, 11.SD O.wn Coe. 11.512 L0tl G1rtlecl ..... !Nrv o.i.. ut7 P1ll'f Hevta M1' A•lson F''""'Y, 1'19 C•fOIVI\ Hll, M If A YlllS....r4.M1' Sue Er Mii .. -Olllor' -.Wlul. 1"2 LYM Adema ISU -Ceffllrtllt Pt1'110ft.. sSlt SuWMc ,..,, Ult 1W1rtt t rttr, ISlf Mer .. ~ Ult ., n-n-n-n n·7•·7•·1' 7J·73-72·7' 1l·75·7'·72 1Hs-n -n 11-7S•to-n U-1'--12-1) 72·71·17·13 1J·7'·71·13 1l·7MHS M·7 .. 6t·n 7"7s-74·7' 74-75-73·7' 73·•75-74 74·7'·7l-76 74·7'·7)·7' 7t·n·n-n 80·72·7'·72 71-76-7'·74 n-11·11·n 7'M6·72·71 7HMS-71 7Jo7'·71·n 1'·1'·13·7' 74·7'·7'·7' 77·7t-7•·7t 7'•77•11·7t 7t 72·7'·7' 76·11·74·116 7S•7l•1t-1t 1i-11 .... 1. '2·7S•7N6 ,. 1"1 .. 17 11·71 17•7J .,. ..... ,, 11·1' .,. .. , ... Jt" •17•1$>1' n-1• ·1• n • Fn. ..... GMWI (at Mtec.w) ( Dtltarlc:e """' Jn mdlr'IJ MllN 100 llt ... I -1 Dmitri VOi ov, USStt, l:<O n. 2 Roe.rt ZNIM. USSll. l«U7, l Slourd Henllt, lest Germanv. l:OS 1' 200 fret -1. S.tn Lodl'-'111. E111 G«menv. I 4U3, 2 Vladlrnlr Shamllov, USSR. uon. > ser-911 KrasM. USSlt, Hlot. WOMIN 100 !rte -1 Klrttlft Ono. Eaat G«· mtf?Y, ilS1, 2 111'9t ,,.,.~.Ent Ger· mMY. ss 7', > s....,_ KIOdl -us.s.a. SU> • tnoo -1 Y...,.. Oelloefwova USS., 4.0 71, 2. ICetteM ~. Eut GerrnMv. •.., "· 3 sen,a --.on. •"' Nt'll. U2U cana...o... (tt , ..... , ....... ,.. WI!\ MtEine IU .SJ _, ' G«\1111 <t IU $), H 6 J tM<l'.IWOt wlnl .-ooo Gar , ... ., •• , Wem.n't~li.I (et~N..J) ,......, ... ~·ne Nnrelllo•1 <US I dtf. Pem Sllti,,.r IU SI, 6•4 4•6, 7•S (N1wt1tlon -11!1 127 ,., SMlf't~ , ........ ....... ,.... Ken Ill OMw a Olf loY I menOll, 6· i. 6~2 flt......,e w1nt 17 SOO (,,,.,._ win\ SJ 7501 11N Cl BYe's Ulander takes honori lllkeWblte 1 Illinois in.hunf for title NCAA probation c ali'f cancel out a Big Ten crown- CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) -There wtll be oo encore in the Rose Bowl for Jll1no1s thls season, but NCAA proba· tion has not stopped talk about another conference championship. ''I just want to ao out there and wm the Bt& Teo championship aaam," said ofT~s1ve aua.rd Rick Schulte ·•This year, we have a lot more potenllal than people think." Coach Mike Whnc, assembling his fifth Illini squad, agrees and says h.is team again ma.Y be underrated ___ .31leir..phys1al preparation - kids thank-as bencr than at any lime since we've been he~." White said. "I think their concentratJon 1s very good.•' White came in 1980 to take Illinois from the bottom of the league to its first Bia Ten championship and Rose Bowl bjd m 20 years m 1983. The llhni worked hard at Orange Coast College pnor to the bid for the roses But UCLA popped llhnots' bubble 45-9 t.n Pasadena. This season, the mcentt vc of a bowl game ts gone after a lengthy mvestiga· lion by the National Colleiaate Ath- letic AssociatJon. The mvest1gat1on asultedin .sanctions that include no postseason play this season and no television next season. "Ofooursc tt buns not bem,ablc-to go to a bowl pmc, but l m just looking for my ~t season ever because I want to play m the pros" !k!td senior center Bob Miller ... We can s till be 81~ Ten champs, and we can still be national champs." There arc some obstacles. Pro beacb -rolle;,lM.ll .chedale ~c Pro lk'ach Volle.>ball Tour 11r11l conclude tts ninth sca\On w11h four Southern C.1trom1a tournaments this month and tn September. Tht San Dicao Open will be held at Ocean Beach this wttlc.t'nd. The follow1ni weekend Sept. 1-2. the Miller High Life OranJC County O~n will bt held at the Se.al Beach pier Redondo Beach will host the third tour- nament Sept. 14-16 followed by the T ou.mamcnt of Champions Stpl. 29 in Santa Barbara Among those compeuna are membtn of the Unttcd States Olymp1c volleyball team, includ- ing Dus~y Dvorak (.x-1..aguna Beach High), and Steve Timmons out ofHuntinaton Beach Mort 1nformalJon on these tournaments 1s avt1!ablc by phonina (213) 379-3636 Forum ~tourney Hclll) .. The Lovable One .. ~ca.mi will meet James W1lhams in • scheduled 10-round chm1na1ton bout on Monday, Aua. 27. 7 p.m at the Forum as the Stroh's Cruiserwc1ght Boiung Tournament conunuc~ Heam>, of Lancasttt. 11 presently nmk.cd No 1 .-b; bolb the ...wBC:_aruL.RuJ.a· Mapzmr W1lhams. of Pon.land, Ore . will be making h.11 r orum debut In another cru1scrwet&ht ehminallon fight. Darrell Hackel! of Anaheim 'will face Grover "Torpedo" Robinson of Fremont Tickets for the card arc now on sale a1 1hc Fort1m box office and all Ticlcetmaster outlets including May Co .• Music Plus and Sponman stores. For ticket 1nformat1on. phonc(2 I 3) 480-3232. Mt.IC NOTICE C411 ......... ...... ... ~ ... = roA DADOMlil..J>STEETITRIO ' ~:'a'° ~-~22134 * tf Y tot '" UIWWf U1e ..,,,.., bi In 8uPtf10I' Court ot a1 11e cit t _.be '°' TATE 'O. A·ltOH ........,...._..~ .... ttw siate of CallWhla f Jotwi n. Ed\atlon a1 trvtne To h l r 1 , ._ m1 ... .,........, • tN Counb' ot OrM09 Uot S. a.dM)' tJ MeN Unified Di1trtct Dlltnc\ Of· I crcd \OJ'I ...... ...... 1iM ..._ In "'9 Matl9 of IM • CA. llJOe of OrllllOI Coun.ty ,... 841 Alton AYlll'IW. t __., MllM '°' ... .....,. ... ef "'VManrll a StaekhcJUM l. • ,31 I ~Wied bidt up &o 11.IOO 1Mn9 C,.., trom ~21th m"" .....,_ .................. OU IS Glmbtl1 Lii .. T • CA AM on the 28th y of to Auautt 3t -fGM ~ tors (Jf EWLEY ......... ,.. w........ Hota twtl)yotYenlf!At '210! I atlhePurchU-.._.,, U.riour.of t 00 AM AL nd ~ .. M ....... the ~ Mii at o tiu MM •• con· 1r19 ot Hid 8choCf o... end .a::so p M ho be thetwiaie __.... • IM•M• 11 Pflva1e ..i., to the hlgheat dUc*'by.allmhCldpartner• trlet. tocatec1 t ~ DeW The pWllC ~°"the wln'~'!.J I o .... _ ill IMWftJI "'•••• CG4a atid batlonbld~. ~-~•·· ltllO Strwt ColU MtM. Cell-propoHd 1>udge1 for Wl'3"'--u n v..:: w ._ -...,. ,....., c:ooflfmat .... --.. ...,. ,J L. GatNt II tomla. .. ~ llme Mid tit.a.as be held ., and/or I.I • ~-o ... ., ~ peJIOf eoun. on Ot •"• Thil stattrn•nt w !lied bldt wtll be !>'lbtlcly °'**' Laenlde M~ &cnool. s A ,_,;lion has been Aw.t 11, 1tl4. T1tM fll 23rd d•r of AllQllll 'ltl<l. Wllh the County Clerk Of°'" end,.. for. WAAE.HOUSe lMnOngf • ltvioe. CA on --..-: 11QO ........... ., u. offloe of ~ H ~ Col!!\t)' on Jvly 11, T'fM:KS . s.ptitn1Dtr 4• ilP 1.t 1~ f 11 ed b )I J 0 KN ••I uooo AYU• ftd., Klmff, •OOO Mac:Ar1tlwr 1914 All bid• .,.. to be tn ec-o'4*W:* P M BEWLEY ALLEN Ill LlllUN ......._ CA. mn. at..s . ~ IMGh. CA. ~1 00td•ocie With Cofldl\ICW, Publ!Mted Oren~ COa1t the Superior Court of ,.......,..one,tewrteM. 82800 Ccunly of Ofenge, P\lbCllhJd Of ecest In lt\IC!loht ar1d ep.cm. D.llt, Pltot.Auoual 20, 19M Oran County re-ttll• ud ldl•r••• -of Stal• of C.Ut0fn11, al rtgrll OeMy Nol ~yguaa 13, 20, coeltont.tildurenowonfll9 M·102 · ... A JOHN 8dMlytot w, ..._...,_Md ttti. end tmotOlt of Mid 27. 1914 In lhl otlloa of the ~ctl q1 ng .. ._..t '° n. lllt'Ol*tf .. M fll. ~ 11 the tJmo of dMlh ----~--...,M"'!!!·~100'!!!! tno Dlreci1or ot Ulcf Sohool ..,_ .... Mt\nM" BEWLEY ALLEN be ..,... * ... If 11 qmled, aM all tr. tfo'I'-&Itta end T DlilflCt. 2911 ...,. $1taet, ruuu" """'"~ annn1n\ed ..,_1 ... llfta.m.I ......._ ~ lnt ... l that IM -111-Of PlBJC "° JC( Colla MtM. CA. 12821 LaQA.l M011U -.-..--· ..... ,,_.to -·· •* wtn hlmt•fl ll'ifw• laid ffHMld ... ~ A "*1onnanot Bond IN'f repreeen-wve ~· lftdM ...... , ,....... ... by °'*'•llOn ol lew °' oth91· AC'1'mOUt MIUeU be~ at tllo ~ ~ _.. p\ln ter the es\a~ of ... 11nno1a. _.... INJ IM .._ other thin or In lld- N.Um STATEMDIT oftne0tstrtc1. --~~ BEWLEY ALLEN......,. In..........,...... dJIJon to ht of Mid._ The tolowlnO '*'°" ii No~ may lhdrew _. ·-( nde h In& veluo of.,...,..._. ...... CMMd.111nellmeof•1h. dOit'G b1.1e1MU u nia lld for • period of fOf'tf· e-... .0Mb1c1 u r l pen· .old. owa1p1Mt of ,,.... In end to el tM Olrtein real, COMPVTER WAITINGS, 0¥9 (451 da)'I .n .. IN d«• The OoMn view 8c1lool dmt AdministnUon of .,.,. 1f71 Ctt11•••r L• ptopsty lltuatad In tM Qty 21301 PtnetrM Lane. Hunl· .. , fOf the~ ttweof Olttrtct'P'"oe>OMd :=for F.ltates Act). The peti· ~T.wn6Ceuftt1' .... ofTutun. County of Ofenge. •not°!' .. ~.:.?'!' •. ~~.. The Boefd of l!°""tlon of ~~ ~.C:-a: oc:J. tion la let for h~ uo11 •••"• Callfer11la St.at• of Clllfofni.. Plf1 Rum ..,.._, ,......,.._ • the Newport·.,._. Unlfl9d .... ,.._, u..n.. I~ cs.crtbed .. folJOWI, l1301 Plnelt• Lane. Hunt· khOOI o..1r1e1 ,~ th9 View~ Dlltnct Otl'lcl, in Dept. No. 3 at 7 1 a 0 ", 1 1 • v t N to-wit: "Oton e.ch. Calll 9264e nghl 10 r•iect lr1Y or .. 8ld1 1040 8 Street. Hunt-Ctvie Center Dr., West, l'MUMI01"541, auc••t Lot 43 of TrilCt Ho IOU 'rtli9 t>ualneu 11 con· and not~ eccopt lngton 8Nch. from ~ucual San\a Ana CA 92701 ...... A....,M c .. Mtt4J uperm•uocordedlnbook dueled by. an lndMdUal ,,... lowest I'd end to ""'9 271tl to August 31st, f914 • ""'° _.0 _ WlftdOW9 320 pagee 1 toe tndulNe Of Ruth McOougle any 1ntorm...Y °' •rreoui.tt· ~ the houn ot 8 oo on 9-~-84 at 9:30 A.M. crvt..: Coftttot. ~ M..0..lan.ou• Mapt, , .. Thia ltatement wu liled 1y.,, any Bid r.e.\19d AM. and 4:30 P,M, lF YOU OBJECT co IM1 aM lnllpectad at: teoot e«d9 Of Mid ~'Yi u with IM County Cletll of Or· NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED The public hearing on Iha the granting of the Awh M., LlitUN ..._.. mote partlOIHrly ~bed Ange County on August 14. SCHOOL DISTRICT P~Hd . l ·1dg•I lor Ution .ta hould CA 12177; V'"""9 .. 11tlt. In Elctliblt "A'", oonlllt!ng of 198-4 of Orange County. California 1 5 .. ~II be held at pe ' yo 1 ~!Mf't tentte: "Pull per-one pege. auad* lleteto F'252IU Dorothy HtrY•'f Flehlf 18940 B Su.. Hunt-either ap~ar at the IMftt ~on .....,_ lnd.rnadeapertottleiroofll Publlahed Orange eo..1 c .P M. ' tngton Beech. CA on Sep-hearing and state you t8ftOO of bid. fonn t~h contained,...,..,,, Da1ty Pilot August 20. 27. Pvrehatlng Dlrec1M l~t>er 4, 19M 11 7 30 objections or tile writ-°'. hymen • Al ,..,,._... PARCEL 1; t.ot "3 ofTract September 3. 10. 1984 (714) 556.J217 0 clodt P.M. . mu.I ·a...,, CMh, Mltlflod 8028. City Of TU9ttn, .. M·t 12 PublllMd Orang• Coul Publlthed Orang• Coaa1 ~n objectJons with the ttoll c uttler'• er thOWn on 1 map tec«dad In ---------o.lly Piiot Augult 13, 20, Dally Ptlot August 20. 1984 court before the hear-~·• chNk °' b1 • boOk 320. pagoe t lo e ln-rtaJC NOTICE 1984 M·101 ing. Your appearanee UnHecl llat" pMtal. llenk. c:lu1l11• of Mlecallaneou1 FlCTTTtOUI .,.,.... M· 105 may be in penon or by •• ,,.,., or ••••erap" Mape. r~• of Mid~ .._._ tTAl'l:•NT ·-·c NOTICE rta.IC ll>TICE your attorney :--' ·~ ~.::= ty.EXCEPT THEREFROM a11 The loltowlnQ '*'°" Is r-~ LIQAL NOTICe IF YOU ARE A ...._ ":~ ""9n.ue ..,._ Oii gas. mlnerall end other dol"CJ bu91MM ... ,,_ h ' b b I MICROMASTER SYS· NO-()fl PROPOIED 1.. CREDrI'OR or a cont-.-T. "· DI ..... ..... ydrocar on•. • ow • nic"'lioN .. auDQET '°" Ing cttdi f th ..-omoor cfepttl of 600 feet. wttttout ~~1 ~Carlc:r NOTICE IS HEREBY ,ountalft v..., ent tor 0 e .... Awtla M.., ~the right ofautfaceantry ... g2625 ona . GIVEN lh•I • Gener8' Mu-kMof otmtct deoea.sed, you ~Ult file gm CA. reterlled In lnttrumentt of l0t• Colby 221 Morning nlcls>al Election win be held Ttl• Fovnt11n Vall•Y yo~ claim with the ) 111-402ID recotd. Canyon Rd . .' Corona det 1n1heC1tyofCo9t•M ... on ~. ,Dl•~'o':.a'S~ oourt or preiient it to ~-'':... a::~tE•Ln~n~n~ Mar, Callf 92925 Tueactey. the 8th day of No-or'°' bllc l"'99C-the penonal represen-Dair"°' Autl-C JO, 1914 L.aurolwood Homeown•r• ~'::':'Ti:~ con-~~·•or lhe follow-fi:.n at Fo!n':a1n Valloy tative appomted by the •1,. Mlodalton end l.AU91WOod s1 .... M Colby or 1tv..; ,31 Memtien of Sdlool Dlatnc1onic..11210 court within four TowMoual ~IOn. -n.-.. ....:. n._.. c "-·--"" Fut I Olk StrMl. Fountain Valley ths f .... _ da PARCEL 3: An tKdulNe • ·-• .-ement .., ....... the tty......,._ ( t•m o CA f Augutt 24th t mon rom un: te Pta.JC ll)TJC( """*" IPl)Uf1anant to w1111 tti. Coun1Y Clertt 01 Or· tour '(eaf'SI A··..:...~~ 198-4 ~ of first laauance of let-said Lot IOI UM• a cowrect ange County on~ 14, The pollt .. 11 be oS*1 boo-uw-< • -.i~_.i NOTICI TO CMOl'T'OtU 19&4 tW09fl Iha hou,. of 7 00 a.m. the houri of 8:00 A,M end ten U I"'""......., l1l Sec-Of' 9UUC TlllANIFUl ~Ing .... ahOWn and ct. nsmo and e oo pm 5:00 P.M. t.aon 700 of Utt! Probate l"'~ •101 •101 u cc) ICrlbed • 43-4 ftet tnac> cs. The publlc Meting on Iha · ...... v -• • • tcribad In Parcel 1 aboW PubllllNd Orange -COUt EILEEN P. PHINNEY propoHd budg•I for Code of California. Notk:e ii tw9by given to PARCEL 4 An •c:Nttw Deily Piiot AUQU9t 20. 21. City Oerk of IM 19&4-85 will be Mid at The lime for fi.lina the c:radltors of the wlttlln eeMfMnt ~t 10 Sept.-nber 3• 10· 19~. 113 City ~~a Meu 11210 Oek Sir ... Foumeln claims will not expire named transferor(•) that • Mid Lot 11 a trMtl 1tor119 .... Calif ... ,_ c .._.:. 8 bulk tren*' It abOUt to be ahoWrl end dOlctl.._. 4 Ir..;~.;...;...---===~ Datad:..A&.lgull ta. J984 v~. A. on :-'t~bef • prior to. lour moni.ba tnect. -~ pt ._. as -armrnrunT1rr-~ ~~Coaei--1Rh!._7;30ododi..fM._ ..&.-...... of O p«-ll'lllP ~ 1n r-uuu" """~ n..ttu Piiot A I 20 198-4 Pubtt~• COatt wuc · ---------~-, ugua • Dally P1101 August 20 1914 hearing noticed above TM name(•) end~ • more commonly kncMn FlCTmOUI 8UllNEU M-121 -..'..w-103 YOU MA y EXAM. addr.. of the Intended ... 2241 Temerac ~ NAME ITAft•NT -: tranaferor(t) ere. PAUL EM· TueUn Ca. • The loltowl"O per.on la PlaJC fl>TICE P\B.IC ll>TICE INE the file kept by EASON, 82 ts Wiidwood ~of 1a19 cdl l.n iaw- d()lng bualnese .. ; the court U you are °'Ive, Huntl"Olon Beach, 1u1 money of tM Unltect A u T 0 A A M A D I s . NOTICI cw NOTICE interested ln the Callfomla 92648 on confirmation 01 T A I B u T 0 R s 3 5 "'Utftl'I IAU INVITING M>I a-TM looatlOn In Callfomla .... Of part cuh and bal- StlarW•ter. lrvln•,' Call! On Augvtl 27, 19"' al Notloa la hereby gl\len that \ate, you may 1erve or the chief exocut111e ottloa ance 9VldenCad by not. ... 92714 t 1 00 e.m FIRST AMERI-the Boerd of Trull ... of the upon the executor or or prlnclpal ~ ofllco cured by MOttgooe or Trutt J•llrey Klrthon. 35 CAN TITLE INSURANCE Coast Community College administrator, or upon Of1helntendedtran91erofl•: Deed on the property to Sllearwater. Irvine, Call! COMPANY, A Calllornl• '*1rlct of Orange County. the attom...u for the ..,,,. u aboYe IOld Tan per CMtl of amounl --------------------~1 9271<4 C«POfatlon u Tnial•. or C4'111omla. Wiil recelW ..... ~J Al 01'* t>ualneU namet bldtobedepo9119dWlthbld Thia butlneu 11 con-Succ•uor TruttH or ed bide up to bul no taler executor or admin.is-end tlddr ..... uled by the ercstoroffentobelnwrtl· !ducted. by an Individual Subltltuled Trvtl•. of thal 111an 11 oo a.m .. TUMday, trator, and file with Intended traMMlor within l"O end w111 be ,...,_, 11 J K~ -certain Deed of Trult u -AugUS1 28, 1984 al Ille the oourt with roof f tllr• ,..,.. last put '° far tile aforeNld otlloe at any Tiiis sfalement WU tiled ecuted by VERYL PAUL PurchUl"CJ Oe9ertment of rvioe ften ° .. known lo the Intended time after tM flrs1 publl· wtUI the County Clef1t ol Or-DOAN, • married man, and l8'd college d1S1rlct located ae • a . wn ~-tranlfer-.. ar• n<>n9. cl11on hereof end befor. M'G9 County on August 14. TIMOTHY WINNINGHAM at 1370 Adams AYenue, quest lt.alinl that you Tho name end butlneu dat• of ... 1984 and JOAN WINNINGHAM, Coeta MOM. Callfomle at desire •pecial not!L'e of addreM Of the Int""'~ Oalecl l!Ma 1 Uh day Of Slow pitch ·-fitL-'1 •o ...... e·v '2IZIN huaband and wife. and re-wtllch time Mid bids w111 be th filln f in traneteree(•I ., .. MICHAEL "'"' 198-4 -I.HU. .., .... loA .T Publlahed Ofange Coell corded Seplember 25, 1979 publt.>tu opened and read e a 0 an ven-T. VIETII. 21 183 Lycoming, Ad~iatrilrlx Janet ~ TM-~ annual 8ttd L1&hl Slow Pitch Daily Pl&ot August 20. 27. 81 lnatrvmenl No 2t35S, In for _, '°'Y·.and.a Walnut. Califom4a 917at. Biii _ softball tournament will bt held Sept 1.S-16 tn s.ptemtier 3. 10. 198<4 Book 13323. P• 112. of PURCHASE OF AUDIO-of estate Ult'ts or of Thai:.::. pr= pert~ ot the 111&t• of laid Santa Fe Spnnss M-109 Ono.I Record• of Orange VISUAL EOUPMEHT. OR--the petitiom or ac-nent .. bed Oeolldent Teams from throu&hovt Southern Ca.ltfomta Counly. Ctlllornla, and ANGE COAST COLLEGE counts menuoned in __.. aa: .. lumitUl"9, lbt· .._,..,, .. H.. Kl!INo arc currently bt1nt rr&lUCred for the two-Oay. pureuant to thet C*1M1 No-Al bid• .,. to be 1n ac-turH and equipment «IOd MacArtttur 9tYd double chm1nat1on tournament. Div1s1ons in-lloe ol Default tt•9Under C«danc9 wtUI ttw Bid Oocu· Sectaon 1200 and l200.5 together Wlltl the goodwtll, Mew1IOft 9eecfl, CA.,_ clU<kmcn'sCand D.cocdC1nd D•nd-..omen's rM:Ofded NH• 23. 108"., ment1 wNch.,. now In flle of the California 1 .. tehold lmprovementt PubliaMd Orange Coal B and c lnelrurnertl No 84-185<419. and may be MCUred 1n lhe Proba.~ Code end Int••• ot that cenlln Delly Pl60I Augutt 13 14 20 n.. cd " h of Ottldal Record• of Nkl office of tM Dlr9C1or o1 · tioet mwwtactunno butll· 1084 · • • rr<>ec s 1rom t e tourney will go to the Cit~ BUTLER County, wlll vnd•r and Purchaalng of said COl!eg9 NORMAN J. HOFF-MM and 19 localed at 2931 MT·l04 ofHope Med1cal CentcrtnDuan.e iDAVID NELSON pur11t1an1 to uid Deed of dtstnc. MAN Gretl9 Lane. Coale Mesa.--------- For morr mformauon, phone 521-5802 BUT Trutt Mii e1 publfc auction Eact1 bidder must eubmlt MURPHY HOFF· CA 92827 Pla.IC NOTICE ------------------.-~ LER, age 32, l0<CMh,lawfulmoM)'ofthe With hit bid a cutiler't ' Tiie bu91neee name uMd __ --....--...--..;..;.;;..;;..._ passed away August United St11 .. of America • ch9ck certified chedc or MAN & RUPARD by the Mid lranaf•ort•l •t DEPARTMENT Of ...................... ..J, -i-S,--1984-. He ,, Clllll«'• check ~•bleto l>ldoW·1bondmaclepayable uos Lankerabim tald locatton la: SPLASH THE TREASURY Eight starters arc gone from the defense that led Illinois to a pcrfec conference record in 1983. The re----fll!lll-----------.. --... • sponsibility for a quick 'tan rests with SW'VlVed by his lovmg aaJd Trvttee drawn on a to the orcwonn.--cout 1\-d;; S.Jte Ht CRAFT. _ _ INl:E.AHAL REVENUE.. tlala Of neuonaJ bank. ..a Community Coltege..otatrlct North HoJlv.rood CA That Nld bulk transfer II SERVICE parents James & S1al• or lederel credit union, Board Of Tniateet In an 1 ~ ' • lntended lo lSi" -contmn· NOTICE Oft flUIUC- an experienced offense guided by quarterback Jack Trudeau. .. We'll st.art off with the offense being the focus. when last year it was the defense," said White. He even promises some flashy new plays. including a two-quarterback offense that will &ive scmor Ken Cruz a ch.aocc to show pro scouts his talent, and an occasional shotaun formatJon. Trudeau. a Sl&J1af-<:aller a year ago, l.Jkely will be throwing often to David Willia.ms -llhno 1s' leading ~ catcher m 1983. And the runnjng game wtll depend heavily on fullback Thomas Rooks -the top ground- gafoer last season. An cxpencnccd and deep offensive hnc will be another plus. White hu eight returning all- conferencc players, and new recruits like defensive tackle Guy Tcafatillcr and tight end Jerrold Reese -two of the best Junior college players in the nation. Aside from rebu1ld1ng the defense, White is concerned about punt and kicko.tl'rctums llhno1s was one of the worst in the conferenc(' 1n tho~ cateiorics. . He also 1s wa1t1ng to find out 1f • '8fety Cra1a Swoope. a key to last year's toug)l defense will be available to play. Swoope 1s to go on tnal o n federal drua charges Aug. 29 -three days before the season opener against Northwestern in Memorial Stadium. Sockersput away on ice by Blizzard TORON10 (AP) -The Toronto Bhzzard. helped l?Y an own goal. improved its playoff chances Sunda)" behind the shutout goalkecp•n8 o f Paul Hammond to defeat ~n Diego Sockcrs 2-0 1n a Nonh AmcnC'nn League Soccer pmc. Toronto's third SUC<'tn1H· win inc~ the club·s record to 10-8 and 87 Point\, third in the East, w11h 'x p.mc rcmamina in th.c rqular- son schedule. San Oiejo which is third 1n the Wes lost Ill fifth game in a row on the tOatt to drop to a 9· I 0 mark. with 15 points. h was also their founh 10\\ an the la l fiwc pmcs. Both teams a.re 1ng one of two ld-card berths an th ur' pl.1~ ofT sy tem, which h only lour cluh' 'aMana to the rn1fin1ls -ta h dj\111ion I der and the ne~I 1~0 be 1 squad tn point total Veteran defender Paulo f oura t own Lat J:JD.on lhr n DiC19n t. Toronto forWlrd v1d ll)rne h d n th forv. ril 10 har Mout11 . Cuba's Juantorena calls it a career HAVANA,'. CUt>e (AP)-The retirement Of track star Alberto JUantorena wa front page newa In the C\Jbe.n capital Sunday. Juantorena, Wfrvier of gofd 'Mdele In the 400 and 800 metera In the 1978 Otymplct In Montreal, made the retirement announcement In MOIOOW Saturday at the Fri.od9h.lp Gamet, .. ymg he would not run again In lnternatlonal oompetl1Jon after the ourrent European tour. - The 33-year-otd Cot>an runner flnlthed In a dead heat for flrtt tn the ~-race Saturday with Richard OstrCMlkt of Poland tn 1.45:68. Both men were awarded the gold medel. Juantorerua's declaration that he ft r.tlrlng from tompeutJ~ athl.ta wu c8rrled on the front page of Coba'• only new.paper publlltMtd on Sunday, Juwntud Aebelde. The nftl occupted the most prominent P8l'.t of the front page. with the a.tory enctreled with a red b9r Md U.. blue headline reading: "Juantor~ Mys goodbye to the tr.ck.' Juantorena la g!Wn IUCtt attention not only t>ecaute he ts a wonc:t~ athlilte, bUt l>ecauN n. la a product of the Sovlet-ctyte sport• ·syetem implanted In Cuba after th9 1959 revofutlon. That fact was reflected In what Juantorena tofd a Cuban reporter In M08COW after Saturday'• race. "The one reeponlit»e for the aporta care« of Alberto Juantoren& ii the Cuben revotutlon. And tn the same manner, the OM eiquelly reepomlibte la the comander~n<hlef. Fidel ca.tr.a.•• _ He told the~ tMt hewu r«lrlng now, officially, "becaUM this ia the race I really prepated for," Implying that the up.cofnlng European races won't have the same ~lflcancie. "Sporte Is my life.' ne Mid When uked abOut the future. "I wm not IMW H." The athlete aakf he woutd continue to work for sports development u a mem~ of the natJonal committee of ttie Y04.llh CommuntSt Untori. Cram: Olympic Games are too cumbersome BUDAPEST. Hunga~(AP)-AmcncanOlympic arcat Carl Lewi~ prai~d the LO Angeles Games as probably 1hc "mo t ucce fut.. ever. but silver mcdali~t Stc\c ram of Britain id they hlH' become 100 cumbersome. Lewis. an a Jolma comment about the Sovitt boyc~tt of the Summer G ames, qui~~ 100..y: .. The Rus tan know ~ha1 ~c can do. ttun s ""hy they stayrd at homt'. "I fttl 'oo<l aoout these Olympic ;• id l~wi '>pcakma to rcportcl"i bdott the tan o~an lDlttllll1onal trar~ and field event ptlttn Oh mpi n in t some Soviet bloc greats fort't'd to tay awa) from l.)os J • rhc> "Ct~ probahl) 1he m t uccc ful nd mo 1 h1ghl) \ JC:"-ed .. Cram , \I.ho ""on the thcr in .the l,.SOO mctel5, called for le:\\ c"cn1~ ... We've JU t ot '° itrcamhM th1nas a little bit," he .said The Aodlrpnt C.Jrand Pm i n nnuat n-cnt. ft 1 not formall) related 10 a ne of h suly o ni1td meet' 1n '1ct bloc rounmes ettatriJ to com pen le athlc•~ '1ct1mi1cd by 1hc I> mp bo)toll I Dorothy Butler of or a •tat• or federal M\ljng1 emovn1 not teaa Ulan five tllOZ-JIU meted at the oNlce of: AUCTION tAU New por l Be~c h and loan ueoelatlon domj. P9f'C«ll (6%) of Ille eum bid (811) 180-UZO SllHraon/Am•rlcen Ex-Under ett. eutttotltr In B the J Kevin. c4lecl In tilt. •••t•, 11 tile 11 a guan1nt .. that the bid-Publi.ahed Orange pr .. Etcrow Co., 1013 E. ... ..._......_.c....., ro r, ames main en1r1nce lo Flrll der wlll enter Into th• C D p · 17th St., doft tsl1 tM ,,,....,,,,._ Buller, Cua htng American Tille 1naur1nc. ptopoMd Contract " the oatt ally &lot 214, Santa Ana. Call· ectlMd be... haw -.i Island, Maine, aunt Company located 11 114 NIM I• owarded to him. In Auguat 13, 14, 20, 1984 IMnla. 9'2701 on or •fl• ~ .., ... .., ... , ef Marian Hill of San Eut Fifth Street. in the City the ....,,t of failure to.,,., MT-106 Septemw 8, 1914 1ntemet,....... ..._ ._ •. of Santa Ana. Callfoml1, ell Into auell contract, the Thia bulk trantfer It aut>-'""' ldWtn H. ,...... n. Juan Cap 1st ran o, ttla.t rigt'll, title and lnter..i proceed• of tl'le Chedl win be Jeet to CallfOlnla Uniform '"'*" wW M ..., ., Catherine Hoegee, of eon\!Oyed to and now held f°"91ted, Of In the cue of 1 CornlMfClel Code Section ,-.o IWCdoft .. Pf°'WM San Juan Capistrano by II under Mid Deed of bod, tM tun tum thereof wilt DllDI ti' W\Tll'C 81~-__ .. _ .. d of a., .........., ,.., .. ._ Cede and u-1 n..~11 t' Trust In the ptopeny lltu-be forleitad lo uid coU9oe r~ """~ •••Mme.,...., ,... ~ Im llftlll ......... ~ en c un. .. ~ o aled In Mid County and di.trlct. lh• p1t1on with wllom ,........... Olllla el ~ Huntington Beach . Slat• cs.cnbed., No bidder may Wllhdraw C--4211 Claim• may be fll-' 11 AualM 11 1-. n. ., many other relatives A LEASEHOLD ESTATE N9btc:tfof 1 per1od IOI forty. KEM COUNTY Sh .. rton/Amerlean E.x-.. u.i A.II.. ,._. el and fnends Mr But-The Soultloaterty l'lalf Of 11"'8 (461 cs.ye oft• tM da.t• IWEJUOR COURT Pf ... Elcrow Co • 1013 E. a.le: M4IOO Aflla 9'd. · Lo I 1 5 2 and the Mt tor tho opening !Mreof 1411 Tnatun A._. 17th St. LaeuM ....... CA. _,,• ler was born and Sovtheut•ly half ol lhe The8oerdofTN9' ... ni.-~CAtmrl 214, Santa Ana. CA Tltle..._..OnlJtM,._\ raised m Newport Sovthwelterly half of lot ..w. the~ of,.. Plalntltl KATHYRN VITT. 92701, Ann KC Sinor, tft1e .W ....... of a4Wtft Beach au.en"'·.... & 1& 1. of Tract No 708. aa )eetlr'9 any and a1 ~or to a minor by her Gu.-dlan Ad Eletow No. <&851-kc, and tne H. ,_.. i. lftd .. .._. ..,.. ' • '""16 ltlOWn on 1 Mep recorded In w8tYe any lrregularttlet 0< in-Utern. AH'TOHIA J. TROYER lael day for Mng delma by _., .. M ....... tw ... graduat1.ng from Book 21. P9ge 25 of M• formal.ilea In any bid or tn ANO ANTONIA J. TROVER • .,,Y creditor~ be Sep-w ,........, ..._ ........, Harbor High School, cellaneoua Mapa, Record• the bidding. BRENDA BART, a minor by t9mber 5, 1984. Which II the ....... .,. ..,.,.. •Ill was recently em-of 0Jan99 County, Call· COARELLAN J THOMP-her Guardian Ad Llt11m, bullneet day before the ..,... .,...,. •••R ....,. Ployed by New-M lornta SON LINDA BART ANO LINDA eoneummatlon dat• aped-,......_ 9Muatbr•ft09t ar The 11r .. 1 addr"' or EJ10C Vice Chancellor BuaJ-BART fled abolle wNctt IM_...., In.,: C.orp. MemoriaJ aer-ottler common dellgnatlon ""'Affairs ' O.lendlnl CHARLEY Mlchael T. Vietti ........ .::' tM ..... h vices will be held of Mid property 11 purported Cout Community Co11eg9 MACK CAMPBELL, JR.. tn19nded Tranaferee(t) In--Mlftt MAttJ. of 0.- Tuesday at lOAM to be 20221 Cypr.., Street, District MARV ELLEN BURKE ANO Dated: AvguS116, 198-4 ecftplton of Pfot*'t t• Aum"'t 21 1984 St S1nta Ant. California Publllhed Orange Cout DOES 1 thfough 30, in-Publllhed Oreng41 Cout ,, .. , C.l·l C.uJ~,1111 o-• • Said Ml9 wlll be made Delly Piiot Augu.t 13, 20. elutlW Delly Piiot August 20, 1984 L.lc9niM ' Andrewa Preaby-wllhout COYOnant or Wat· 1984 c ... No178181 M-117 1COYlll VIN terlan Church, New-ranty, •Mpreee or Implied,• M· 107 IUMMOMI .IOMllRCOllOtZZ, '4 ....,.. port Beach In ll f to 1lue. po .... lon or.,. MOTICll You heft IM9n ........ RolaWa~ · . eu 0 cvmbrancet to Mtllfy tile Pla.IC ll>TICE auect. TMoourtm.,ct.ctde PlBUC ll)TIC£ ...... -.. ,_. flowers farruly re-~Id belanc9 due on the · 111a1Mt pu wm..t JOU' ::;', ..,........., quest donations be not• or not9 MCUf.cl by fJCTITtoUl~11Uuma1 ~ hMnl ..._ , •• ,,.. flCTITIOUa au .... 1 M40o-Z~ •n1~ d l Al h I said Deed of Tru1t, to wit· N4MI ITATEMEN'T ipiM"iuffWn • deJt."llMd NAM& ITA~ --.. ..... CA M.. -----m a e 0 c 0 ic S283,283.45,p4ua111efottow-TM toltowtng portOnS .,. die lnfwmadoft Mfow. The following l*"lon 18 .__.. an;~ Anonymous, Orange Ing •tlmaled eo.tt ••· dol"O butlneae U If~ ~ to aeetc the ad· doing ~ 81 r ... 10l:IO. ::r= ~ County Gentral Of-penMa and 11ctYanCM at tti. PARTS PURSUIT. e26 Vice ol 1n 1t1omey in thll 0~ LINE COMPUTER P91fMn ,._.... Oft face, 2112 South time of lhe lnlliel publlcatlon 18th St., Huntington e.ch, matter, you ltloYld do IO SERVICES, 277e Tern Cir· C:'r~~ '*'; Grand A e Santa of thl1 Nolle• ol Sal• cam. 128<48 promptly 10 that your writ· c:to. Coate Meaa. CA. 92828 IMftte ....e .._ _ C:: v ·• "4, 174 llO Mont• Gaustad, 825 181h t.,, t91POf*, If eny, may be Bott>eta Ann '-Og. 2178 oertllM ...._. ..., An.a, Ca 92705 NOTtCa TO 81 , Huntinoton Bead!, C&lll ''*'on limo Totn Clrei.. ea.ta , MOia. ., ., .. "~~· HAR80R LAWM-MT. OUVI Mortuaty • Cetnetary C~tory 1625GltJer Ave CostaMeaa S40-5554 . PftflC& llAOTMERI aEU.MOADWAY • MORTUARY 110 &roadway Coat• M.N . 642·9160 8AL TZ llOGIROM SMITH & TVTHLL waaTCUFF CHAPl.L 437 E. 17t~ St. Colla M 646-1371 c PROfllEWTY OWNO ~848 AVtlOI Utted he lidO ff-CA. 92e2t -or...,• YOU AM IN OU AUL' e.m..t Oougtu Long, 825 rnandade El trltluma; pu9de Th•• bl.llln"• 11 con· UNtN ................... ~-.A OIID Oft TlttllT, 18th St .. Huntlnglon Buc:tl, dtddlt contra Ud tin au· dUcted by. &r1 lndMd4.lal H1tr•11• or t•l .. r•'" OKTID 19'temtt.r 1t, Calif. 92844 dlwltia 1 menoa que Ud r• Barblira Ann P9Qo :-'°' ClfW. llllb .._. 1m. UM.Ill YOU TAK8 Th11 bullneu I• eon-tC>Ond• cttnfro d• 30 d•• Tlt18 atatUFl*lt WN t"9d "*"'.,.. ...,.._ .. ACTION TO "'OTICT ducted by a ganer9I part. l .. la lnf0<m1Clon que WfittilheCoufltyChnofOr· =--~Of"-.::;:~-YOUlll NONIWTY, ff MAY northip t1oue lfl09 Courily on July 23. ' ' ....,. .. toU> Al A "'9UC Doug long 1f ~ wtlh to 1Mk Iha ed· 1M4 = OfttDef IAU.. YOU ..-.0 AN ax. Thia tlatement WU fi!M Ylca Of In ltl()(My In thil '21110I -g:n A... ...... ~ PLANATION 0, TH! wlttltneCovntyClerkofOr· me\tar. you thould do eo Publlefted °'.,.Co• CA. N A TU fll a 0 , TH I lfl09 County on Augua1 14, promptly to Ulal yoiur Wfll• Dlity Pilot Jl.lly 30, A.UgUat I, ) = 1' _.. PlllOCllDINO AOAINIT 198-4 t.,, r~. If 9'!Y· may be 1'. 20. 1tlM ~Ult•hod 0r-,,..~ YOU YOU tHOlU CON-,.... Iliad on tlrM M-1$ --.--TACT A LAWftlll. Publ111'111d Of-anae Coul 81 UMd ._. IOllclit. et Dair,...~~ 1'M ~ FIRST AME.RICAN TITLE 0My Plot Avautf 20, 27, eonMlO cfe un lt>Ogeclo _.. •tW INSUAANCE COMPA'fr, • Septomw 3.' ;o. 108.4 •t• MUnto. deborle tiee."io MJC ll)TIC£ Catllornle c;orporatlon • M·110 lnmadl1tarMnto. dt .. ,.,_ ..... ..-.--. ..... --.;;.;.;;;..-..-..;1 NI.IC NQYM'r J•on1tln• L. Lewrle, man•re. tu tHPl.IHll '9CTinOUa .,..... -----=-~.;.:.:::•n.c.:__ AulhOf"llecl Offloer Plll.JC NOTICE :; MC'lta. ti h9Y eiouna. fM'de NA• 8TAW MO•&a 'Git DATED: July 27, 1084 ..,. reglsl!llde • tlempo. The foMowlnQ ~.,.. PWlAC Off1tC1 11<&Eat1'1f1h8tr.-t PIC1mOU8W...._ll 1-TOT'H!O£F[N0ANT:A d01119bullneeau: HOTICl 18 HEAEIY Santi Anl, CA. 9210 t NAllm ITATW......, cMI complaint h• bMf\ filed COLLEG INVESTMENT GMN that the IOlowtna (114) &51-321 t Tl'la foltowtng pertona .,. by the painttff ageinat yOu. " PLANHIA. 1e 1 Faal'llon P9r90l'I lle\l9 ..., ·~ ltubltehad Otano• cout dOl"O bullMN u · you wlah &o defend ~· llw· Lane t 1ot. Tu1tln, CA. netect fot 1M omo.. ~ Oa1ty pot AUOl.ltl t , 1~ 20, CALIFORNIA TREATS. ut, you mutt. Within M 12MO • lft• menttoned to be Mid tta.4 3~7 lit'"' 8t , Bullo I 210, dty1 1n• 1i. tunWnOM It K e I t ti H o I m 1 Ir. y at "'8 0..M M""6olpel M Nftpor1 a.ch, C II, 12MO -* Oft you, tao Wllth tl'lle Bled«rnann, 14400 ~ EMc:tlon to b9 held tn thil Cynltila OI Matteo. 509 COlltt a wrttten ""POfltO IO pott A... • ... T~t CA Cl1J Of Co«a ..... Oft,.,_. 1--.. ---"'-Mft_TIC£ __ _. CetNlllon Ave. Coron• dtt ,,,. ~ Un'-YoU t2MO d9Y tho 8'tl day °' No¥tin r"UUU'-"" ,,._, c.m 92625 do, your o.rwi wU4 be K o n n o t It I< 'J I e ber • 1914 • , __ _.. ........ -.... ....... ....,___._ Clue Aw..u1tln• en--on~oH ....aertMr'lli. t 41 All'OCato ' F'at~Cillh9 RomMUS, sot e.,,,•llon plaintiff, and ithll coui"1 may 81 129 ~ ~ CA Cft'J Cowcl Aw . Corona d.i Mar, Callf .nl• • Judoernont agelntt 12821 ' Vote 90r nw- The t~ "'10ft 12W you for tt"t. Nlief ~ Thia bVilnff1 Ii con. oe¥t ~ dOllla bUllMM -Tlt tiuslnMI it «>n· "' . tha complalflt, whletl ctucteo by: otMr bfotNs MafY HombUd{le p 1fj • T I 0 A u T 0 OUdecl by ~ .,.. t-..ult In oarrtWiment Md lwottiw I Dann Mell IOUNOS. W Warnot Cy!\tnla OI Mat190 ot "80M• WJnQ Of n'IOM'J or K•th l!Modtrmann Dom Allcltl AV9 • • AM, CA 92704 T aattment WU mtd pt6por1y Of oth9r ,.... ,.. I( Kyt. ~ Harty a Gtien Aobtlt1 .,,_. Joh • '919Covnfr Ollirk Of Or· quendln thoc:ot14*lld Tnte .. "'*"' •• flNd ErteC ~ 294$ H «II f t. at'09 Court_tJ on Auguat l~. o.t9d ~ t , 11 ""'~ ce.tt. Of Or· QW1o1 ....._.. AM.CA t270t 1914 OALEG TAO '"OfeountJon.MYt ltM Sid aon.-19 000• p...a aertl ._ .. II ~ 00MC Pubbhlicl o;...... ... ................. ~ .. _, Ctv11100f* aw'9 tMI , ..... _~ ~...... ........., __ ...,~ :~ f:>ouDIMA Yatel ""'"...,., DallY PllOC 20, 27, D y Piiot t 20, 17, Da11Y Piiot ~ 90, AUgUtt t Clar9nce •·CNc .. ~. Thit ,..,.,.._..,.,, I . 10, ltM c. . 10, t084 13, IO, ttlt ' ' Elloift p ~ Che Oounl~ ~ of Or• t.M H ~MOI M .. 4 City ~ ct Ille roe eoumr on JUIY ~eo.t. ..... l'fttal Dllltild ''· .... Dilly Pllil = Noc A-:n U, • M·1 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS •UIYll F .. IYLIUTm 4 Bd, 4 ba. famlfy room. ~d room piu. a 2 bd guest de. A prtvate pool enn.no. thle ~ tlge property. OwT'9r le very motivated . t 1,295,000 Denny Bibb ~ ~Macnab-Irvine THE REAL ESTAT&:RS DJ.:\Ul.11 E I l ::m u.m. t::m p.m. · t::m p.ni . t::Jo 1 •• m . 1:30 p.m. :i:oo p.rn . rJn NIGll llAIL[Y 6, ASSUDATES Beautiful 3 Br, 2 Ba, playroom. fireplace, beam ceilings. Xlnt flnancing. 1420,000. UYll• UIYI UYnMT _.. Jetty & Bay view. newly decorated Mai Kai. 2 Br, 2 Ba, 40' patio Now $645,000. KlllllU .. I IOUIFlllT ~an & Jetty views, marine room, 4 Br. 3 B:a. 3700 sq ft . car parkina. Sl,285,000 unm PUii UYHllt S~t.acular bayfront dplx. 2 Br, 2 Ba up, 2 Br. 2 & down. 2 boat spaces. Sl.250.000. unu 1U01 11u11• Panoramic ocean & city view. 5 Br: 3 Ba, ~·ous entertaaruna home $1 ,100,000. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR • • • , . r THE REAL ESTATERS 642-5678 ' QI - I \ oe $2.17 per day '"'6l • AU you ~ fOf S.,_,SOdayt In u. DAlY PILOT SERVICE DIEC TORY ler 1•• llrelllar _1e_1,_w_u_IM _ __.1 ... 1 ... •.,.• ... • ... lr._W_u_1t4 __ s_100...,. &tit Wutt4 9100 •••• ...... 1100 Heir...... SI Btlt Wu... 1100 Btlt ...... 1100 Bt lr ...... t 1100 Btlr Wu tt4 SI Belt Waat .. 9100 ATTEHDANT U--tn. BANKINU BOOKKEEPER el(p'd, F/C ,........ ........ 1m&L AllllT&IT lllEUL OPFIOE UUL llllDllY IUllOllJIT 111111 &110 Plltt-tlme 9Y9nlnaa. Good ~-PITtNGtl« ..... .._2Lg7 CM TELLERS for local CPA firm. 110/hr pd dally NEWPOAT BEACH a.tall mfncl9d Nlhtartw PITevtr\lnol, from5:30 u &per. In llCl'Yllc nalla. Certified or up er. eatnlng potenti.1. Mk for ._,.. 35~ Interesting & chaltenglng 1815 N.French et #2038 Ar• you looking '°' a needed tor 1 eon offc Meded. Non-.molcf only. BHch area 3 dayt 11pm-7am tutt or part ROM or Qall 813-IM21 AUTO ~~~ ::o:::i;;, ~~ SA 542-7211 10-2 ctiallenglng career op-Duttel Incl. ::. phonee; WOid p~ng (Word-873•7219 or &48-3450 . time M ... V«de Conv. afttr 3pm llfYD/mL TUil FULL TllE 92683 IUllCW. Funlty? we.,.. loOk-aotM bkkng. FlnatJdel &. .,_., t191ptut>. Newport MARKETINO ~ra·~ ~~9;85st.,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii To ctellv•r •«•market • BOOK .KEE.PER. wani.d 8Ul'J Newpert ~ Xg'u.!t~~~ .ma!~ legal beck&round hefpful, ~-54e-3733 .S.verll, per.on• to 1MI• PART-TIME. VllMd hour• Mite pert• 10-L;A-f. o.c 1-PART TIME for architectural dMlgn lnsuranc.-Ct&lm• ottlet perleneed &Ulatant to e45:43 110-2pm umuan order• In Marketing Firm. Nur1lng . to lnelud• .. r~ A.M. '---=-o~. rev'ng exper California Federal, a mufti· ~·11:~5-~~r,rt.n typlat. ~~net':: _,,,!~r =;:,,-: -Part tllM, !o''f!' lW1!. 1~fr.'tt !:~ plhr. -=.,~IA i•.:u~ Ffl PM Uilght thin, CHA =~u:i. ~.,,6; Mus1 ha'4 Jdnt suite flnanc:lal organtza.. computer" entry. ltght Typing phonN at.at• be able to atart lmmedl-of experience neoeuary. truck, van, at•tlon dftve record&. be at leut tlon, hH Immediate CDU T.Y. ULEI typing. fifing, etc ment entty. ~ eon-LIQUOR CLERK ately. Cell Luk• 882·5'43 Conv H()fp NB Excellent wagon) lo ...iat ,...... 21Yl'9 M .50 to atart. operung. for Telten at ExperlenCle prefwred. l mlL lllJ/IEln tact. ~2282 (9-5) FIT, Exper Pref. Good beneflta, dental & medl-~ dNler In IMne 843--9237 for 8tuce the branchH llited llUT 11011111111 Call Mr Durbin 553-1133 Wiii IUOI IDWL IFflll ltart pay 87&-&eM I DfOlL lllllTAIT cal lneur~. &42-8044 .,.., Mutt be ~ Baby1ltt•r n .. d•d my ::o;.f~ore ~·iro·1 IN 8Ji~;~~fEB~CH OUllOIL Our bu•Y taml!y dentst Of-Pt-time, Ill• typing &. MAINTAINANCE MAN full FO/BO Optho. Trana. . ~~~· ... ~:v·~.:. f~ hOl'ne.mature/owntrana.-year CHhlerlng ex-., ••• w Oa"I• T.Y Fut growtng co. In o.c. flcelu .. rctllngforefun, phonet, M·W-Frl 10-2 ae time eome •lCP preferred •klll• C•ll Bobbi lfFIOIOLDI between t:ao Md 10:30 epk eng. PIT-acme ewe r • Airport ..... need• a full bright, energetic: perlOn p/tlr. catt Tuee or Thur In apt malnt. 1$-8/tv. • 972~2 Progreulvt community am ontx M2-'321 . & wtcnct.. 20 hrs wtc perlence or prevlou1 la looking for a few good time CLERICAL/CFC wttfl dental Utlltlng ex-83l-44e3 ' nl ll&lllUllJT mental health, 1trong l'li'liil·ill ••.••••• E-Slde 860-SOn Teti«~ P..... direct HI.. people. pereon. Mua1 type 55 perienOe. RDA pref«red. Ml· 1IOI MEDICAL ASSISTANT, telephone reception, 1••---------1top by the Brandl and Apply: 901 w 18th St. wpm and have good Immediate opening for Gent ofc pit flnl btna • FIT, exper., front & bectc twlng, clertcal, organize· PBX ANSWERINO SER-UITlmlll llEllH complete an appllcellon · N.8. ·a to 5pm. E O.E phone penonallty. Non-qual1fled pereon. P..... llr• matu,_ penonable otc C.M. 645-9700 tfOf\af Milllt. 18. p/hr. A.-VICE OPERATOR. Plltt F/P·t~wtcnda or call tor an Interview OIFmlUJ amolter pref. Cell 714 call Robin 40.-9788 ~ wte:PO~l~P't~ llJITIUllGI Newport Beach CPA firm tum.Connie Sell, 132 E. time 1hlf11 avallable. Chat1ott•'• Slttera Agcy aw<>lntment. 851-0517 Michelle IEITIL flllT IUI Irvine, eeo-o_ 289 _ •iri _ hu 0.,.nlng for .,.r. 18th St .. Coeta M... Pref. exper, but wlll train. 420 82nd St, NB 645-3748 PUT '1111 (1) llUlll CLERICAL· -on.nted _ ....,.~ manent tutt-ttme l'WClp-. ---.s.mo<1 welcome. Pd Baby1ltter wanted-my Contect·J-OANN~EfAEA 1143941873 mo Orange -'111TliOllPml ;~~~atant to 1111.flJUY L=~n~,lg~,:lv~ tlonllt wl prlor u -lfFIOINla.ll va<: .. dent. ~an Call home. Nwpt Bd\. Twtna e 1222 Edinger Avenue ~~t ~~~J:~ 1_.UTIHI wOf1C m bulY quality csen-for merlne ea1e1 omce. pendable full time lndl-peri.nc;. on IWltchbOatd. Part time weekend• and Jerry, 94s-25 moe. Mon-Fri 7am-4pm Huntington Beach, CA Co 0 Pl" ta! practice. 4 day '#Mk, Good tefephoM pr... vtdual to ullst In ,..,_.el Plea .. nt working at· evenlnge. Good phone Pin OlflllL ftlL tor echool -$125 Wk 92~7 llegee. 137 Adami, Entry level CRT Operetor1 H beneft•• ........... ,,......, Mice, -iypin... eftll .... malntenan--of.-c~om-mc>IPMt• In• buay, pro-voloa. Call 751-8822 ol ,. C.M. "3.2-5007 ..Deadline With actvancemwnt poten· ... -7 .........-· 645 5570 • ..,.. f...,onal orta. Wiii be L .. dlng pest contr com-E~l•fl 1pHklngl ref1 (7 14)M8-011t 4.30 PM 8/23 EOE MFH tlaJ to euitomer s.vtce 493-9311 • munlty. Some know1tdge trained on a ROlm CBX Opening for Man~t pany Medi route tech· 67 7954 f HT·TIMl(I) CarbldeSew&ToolGrtnd-Rep .. In an Insur~/ lllllmG GroceryMerc:NndlNrs of butc plumbing, Punctu.Jlty, front offloi position & Qraveyard. nlclanforstNdyjob,we -er. RELIABLE GRIND-banking r.tated Industry. --•--o Approx. 20 utty houri carpentry, eleetrlcal appearance & people r• S .... e~~ train Call Charley, BanttlnQ faL,.lm (1) ING, San Bernerdlno Rai>td growth neceaal-_,.-~ w.kdaya. cat necea.-technkiuee or eome prior latlonukftlaare moat Im-ary Cell John or eam--11am 97e.eo21 "LL Ill Contact. 8111 Reimer (714)884-72~ tat.. energetic caretr Opening, Del Mar., ... for ary. Ideal fO< College ttu-exper. helpNI but nor r.. porttnt EJtoellerlt Nlary Bematdo 875-4434 Tl oriented lndl~ldua11 fuoutll-tl~~~· l!Ye-1 dentl.. $5 + perhouf. Pro-quired Pttt0nal 1n1ur.s c o m m e n 1 u r a t e PllllllU TELW 695 Town Center Or 011110 GrNI t>enet111. Salary to . ........,......,......, on y. ject 11for2 month p«lod. vehicle UM on the lob w/experlence I abllltlee. PART TIME Experienced AB Dick Exoellen CoetaM .... CA Exper. full Of part time $1000 depending on ex-Laundry, Ironing, gen«al 641..0718 mandatory. (MllH9e Callorappl lnper10nto· • pre11man needed lor topportunttylor (714)540-4088 Cuhler/Recepllonllt .,.rlence. Day and eve-houeecleanlng. cloth.. (213)877-1138 plld)EntryleV91PQ91tlOn COLEM~&GRANT . 1n&1LllLll amellprlntlhop.18.plhr. ~ro:=o FIU·TI•l(H wanted for Fuhlon nlng lhlf11openlnga. care & 111' cootclr1. Call UllWIU-IWTPIY a1 ae. p/hr With good 5020Ctrnput0r,Newport Con1clent1ou1 pereon 18512 Burle• Ln. H 8 e.ch office tuU time. Contact: JOHN JUNE llland retail 1tore Mu1t Contact Betay at. :0J(e~)~~9 -4pm For ,..,...,. look._ ..,...,. I ~· 1f,11ca~ ri Beec:h 752-te 11 needed to work fleJClbte Prlvatt Day School needl Mutt ha'4•t teat 1 yeer 2700 H bor 8Mf be avail for eve. & wtlnd (71 4) 558-2845 btwn 9-4 _..... ""' •-·-cep a Y on-r hour1 for Maternity Shop tuc:Mt. Out of State exttntMt caef'I t!Mdllng Co.te ~CA 92828 hre. EOE 644-5070 OllmlmH llfYD glrtt who are motivated btwn 1am-tP:; et Niguel NEWSPAPER STUFFER In Huntington Beach credentall1 acceptable ~ eantclngor (71 4)548-2300 Need exp'd oab)'ltt• my uoanm For 1oca.1 def!Vttlee. NMt ::' :9!i::!t ~~ =~.· 338°5';m~~~ 8~a"i:-~~m m~fnpro~nt& sa1 ... xper. pref. ca111~ '46-1444 _Savtngl&Loan -home3daya-ew.ek.Refl-SMktnalnollvated appear.anc:e. good-dU¥-cu~from hnF1 SlnJrH Or., --u-ouna P111r-:-548-!'44 -app'" -IUlntlll,.... -=*.;::1~~c}~~ OAUFOlllA ceq..engapk~ tndtvufua1 'Wf nc:ellent ~!,.~~~ ~74 Ntguaf. No phone-~ NEWYOUCOMESTICS ...... .,.~ Typing. phonee, Alk fOf mechlne. Good FEIEUL chlldc:are: typing lkffla. Shorthand• Blue Print 234 Flacher H«t2 cat Rentar detk et-pleale. M•nagement minded 114-1 lll Kathy or Mtr• 845-7811. organtzat1onel 1tim1 and Equal 0ppty Empk>yer GRANDMA, we need you. ptua, heavy phone con-CM 540-9373 ' tendant at Nft Rtt.z-people who would Ilk• to Reoaptlonlat f cNatva commun~ 1ldfll are P1MM take cate ol UI tact w/vendora 549--2998 . Cetfton Hotal. Call for ll&IAIO/UllYllAll be independ«tt, needed PART· TI M E W 0 R K Private Club ~.: han- mandatory. Excellent BARBER Y<>Y can ha\19 your own OIPf ILEll HM ITlll OlDI app1 Mr. Brown499-3242 lOC81 rettted pet'IOn for for nationwide coemetlc AVAILABLE! NMCI a tittle die phonet. flNng & lalaryandt>eneflti. or BEAUTICIAN room and IOfM lper\dlng xerox 9400 or KolcaJt 100 P/tlme. Varied hrl, bch . PIT Malntenence for company. Part time work extra money? Wor1' for other rnlac*laneoua ottlce Contact: DEBRA •=~~~°t.~ ~f.,,. area money, too. We are e, 3, Operator. ••per. pref. area644-757S. 12to2pm ~n.mt Costa M ... Shopping ean .. rn you 113-18 the 1rv1,,. Unified School dult ... Call 875-0900 .,._ BUGARIN (213 540-4887 ulon. 545-1892 and 1 yr1 old. P,.... &ii'/ lrvlne eopy lhop Expr d lntetlor mllnten~ c.ntet. Outlet lnelucte p/hr.Fulllpt time. Call for D111rtct-Food a.Moe o.-r.-n 1oam-1pm come IOOn. 848-0890 Meda bright, flexlble, anoe. Daf>endable trana.-gardenl.ng and mlnot,... appt. 751"'9335 partment part-time and -------- •POW.SI L Equ81 Opportunity Employer M/F/H BARTENDER Dinner hM & CHIROPRACTIC Ullltenl energetic clerk. '850. mOITIYI llOllTUf por1atlon MC. 478-7022 pelrt. cell Kathy Mon.-atln enloY other actlvltlee llOlmtlllJ active cantlna lmmed no up nec euary mo. p lu1 b•neflu. F~ growing lntlm9tlonal Hotel OllllDU l'hura. (213) 881~207 llllEI AllEI for the ba1anoe Of the Vet Hoap In H.B-FIT WIU- openlog. 99S-4803 850-2273 752-0481 ncorporatk>n nNdt wet! 7~:30pm 3pm-11:30pm dsy. Apply 2941 Alton Ing to train bright mature • x p • r I• n c • d 1 •II tor reeort hotel. Mu11 be What • Wonderful Wortd 3:30-7:30pm. Good wor11-Ave, lrvlne, 788-2009 peraon, exp a plui. Counter help .. ~-time, motivated non--emolcet, neet In~-Ablll-of Shopping, right at Ing condlllona. Small EOE 898-0588 12·3pm Patty full-time. GAnY S DELI with phone pett0nallty ty to communicate etfec-your flnQMlpt everyday! Convaleacent Hotpltal 752-S..01 and appHranc•. Bii-11Vely, OOOd organization Dally P"llot Cla11lfl•d near o c Fair ounda'. SYDNEY 0MARR OllTHIAI l ~uat preferred. 1klll1 Publlc relatlon1 Ada. To~ your ed, Pl .... eano.5 ~9.3oe1 C 0, 0 n a de I M a r. 7 14't0 wtcndalew Ts· helpful. Stop by c:a11 &42· 8 llnd ltt a · 2PM-11PM M-F, exper 1 5 So. Cout Hwy, Clatlfled Ad-"'*>r help a.ti thlngl fut wtth Dally teq. 11231-$1801 mo. EXERCISE INSTRUCTOR ~una e.ch for app. you. Pilot Want Adi. Cout Community Col-112.50 hr wlll train __ M_IF _____ , leQet, 1370 Adame, C.M. 850-0302 •IUUPU 432-5007 0 .. dllne Exp'd HOUM CIHner1 For actlv9 family. 2pm lo 4:30PM 8128 EOE MFH nHded II/hr. Muit 7pmw.ekdays. Cleanlng, Tu1day, Aagatt 21 OllTlllAI apealc E~ & have own cooking. thopplng, eome ARIES (March 21-AJ?ril J 9) What appears to be a loss 1s mercl) a days. 40 hra/wtc. $5.72 transpo a.«>79 ~ ,:?:'=~'. "technicality.'' Delay will actually work an your favor. You'll get plhr plu• benefit•. Pict( EXP. HOUSEKEEPER 759-3&88 w.kdey1. m essage which proves encouraging might be invitation to prest1o•ous up applleatlon at St An-car. for newt>om and 5 u-ir-1119 UUI · I affi · p· y · fi. · o-drew Prubyterlan yr Old girt. Coote dinner, '"'5,..,.., soc1a air. 1sces. 1rgo natives 1gure m sccnano. . Church, eoo St. Andrewt clean and Iron. MUST PITH ,._ &4M553 TAURUS (Apnl 20-Ma) 20): Focus on productton. prestJJC, Ad. N..8, 831-2880 have exS>«l•nce and ,,__,.. _ _,,_·---- 10tcns1fied rela11onsh1p and chance to increase income. You'll learn CIONI 8121 good refeten~a.-Drlve ''=1~ ;:one Wortc-No more about money. you'll receive valid investment information. Older OllTlllAJI and~ englllh. l200 64s-'1i5awtccfa';:/bonua 1nd1vtdual 1s on your side. will lend benefit of cxpcncncc. Private Chr11tlan School ~ and0~vat~ ~~ ~n .,,..,.,,,=,..,,.,,,,.....,,...,..,....,,._ __ GEMINI(Ma> 21-~un~ 20): People-.~ill be ~ested in what you Appty: 18136Brootchuret: 7514foe r · 1~J~Rb~ror~~:~dl~~! d o and say -populanty increases, ~ou II have wider a~d1encc and F.V 082-3312 Fun time llcenMd RN for commerclal/r .. ldentlal rewards will be greater. Cycle ht&h. JUdg~ent and 1ntu1t1on arc o n DECORATE INTERIORS buiy Newport Beach wall decor. Pit, Flt Wiii ~rvt. Malec personal appearances, wear bnght colors and refuse to be Color/dHlgn PIT 10 ptutlc aurgeon With OR tr.in CaU 841-977• ant1m1datcd by a "loud mouth." 11811 Wlll ttlln. 775-5447 e>Cperience In clrculatlng 'RI WAfll CANCER (J une 21-July 22): Get ready for new Stan in new DELI COUNTER HELP & .crubblng. Prevlou• d1recuon: Focus also on solitude. meditauon , spmtual values. 8:30am-2:30pm Daye. Ul ·240n • c • 11 ar Y • 11 ln~~~~~gLIPor Jr commun1cat1on w11h one confined to home or ho~p1tal. Love 1s major 842·52971839-9170 ev• 1 __ 1______ Pro/Jr Program Director. pan of sunano -could involve Leo or Aquarius individuals mmay PIUll IDIUl .,,. Appllc:ent• mu1t b• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Follow through on hunch. Your feclln&S For NB. Flower Shop FfT for Newpor1 B.ech CS... energetic, or;anlHd, arc correct concernana career. business. romantic relationship. You'll 875-°'84 ~oper. ·Must be proff-hi.rd 1WOt'tclOQ. Returnee ~what you ":~nt. powers of persuasion are involved and you'll be DENTAL RECEPTIONIST =::.1:::~i!!': =~~i~ t~!1en~~~ very popular. Cancer. Capncorn. Aquanus persons figure prom1-AND ASSISTANT A/A AIP and 10 key. exp only nd appty. Contact oently. Experlenoe neceHary. wl IBM/PAO a plut. 8urt Campbell. 1171 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scp t. 22): You'll travel. you'll communicate L.eguna Hiii• 770-4275 875-4915 Jamt>or• Rd.NB ideas, you could receive pubhsh1na ass1,nment Social activities lii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil increase, you'll be more concerned with diet. nutnt1on and aeneral Newspaper ~~1Jd·~~~~-Y member make rcquc t -which deserve~ serious KIDS -EARN GREAT TRIPS AND PRIZES! UBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 22): Get ready to revise. review and PoSstbly to. ~n rebuildina proces!. Lunar cmphasi~ on travel. educatio n, spmtuaJ values and pubhshins. You'll encounter member of oppo itc sex who 1 intcn~. romantic. sentimental a nd sen ual. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21) You'll rnh1e pen is m1&hu er than the sword Means you pin throu&h \\rittcn word. Legal matter could be tettled 1n your favor. & ready for swift chanaes. quick decisions and an unusual response from member of OPPoSite ~x. AGITTARJlJS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ). Empha~1 on ~cunty, corrttt deasionsaffeellnalepl mat1.ers. panncrsh1~ rt idcnccand maniaac. Moaey comes from urprisc sou~. \'O&t'll realize )OU are wanted need~. apprtCJatcd and loved. Taurus. Libt11. orp10 person' fiaurt promincn tly. CAPIUCORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19). lk 'urt you ndtify those who Shatt your basic conC'Cms -C'lll wntc, communicate in connection wnh mccuna or conferenct. Dcflne temu. avoid ~If-deception ~ olhcn tn rcah tic li&hr. Shon tnp i pan or aec."nda and ma) he n l'Y·' AQ ARI (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18>· o\rcept challcnac. rcali1c more responsibility could also mean promotion. chance to incrta e income aod'accunty. Focu, also on chari ma. \anetY. phy 1cal 1nract1on and inltn ificd romanuc rtlatioMhip Capncorn' pla) kc> rote. (714) .548-7058 Clerks CIRCLE K·MARKETS NOW HIRING OASRIERl I GLERIS Interview• Frldayt 9:00-11 :00 A.M at 1390 North Pacific Coaat Hwy.. Laguna Beach (on PCH & Vte10) Call (714) 494 9233 for more 1nlo ~aily Pilot .. PART Tiii Of FIDE OLElll Very busy circulation office needs part time help answertng heavy phone traffic. We have nice cus- tomers! Applicants must be nea\, re- sponsible, and have a pleasant tele- phone personality. Some light office work also. Hours are M on -Fri, 9:00 AM to 2:00 PM, Starting salary Ls $100.00 per week. Apply in person, Mon-Thura, 2:00 to 4:00 PM. Ask for Eileen. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT J t( W 84V ST • COStA MESA CA 9'616 •. f ( ' It .. ... t l\ltt 1 f I 9 . . . . . . . . .. . . ... .... .:. ... District Managers If you en1oy worlun9 with young boy' & girls ond deu 1obl ore not for you, tonslder o corMr 1n the new,poper (lf(UIO· tion field. Ttut " a unique po51tton with doily chollenges & ,..words Our openlnQl Of• 1mrnediote Appl1conb mu5t hove o 1tan, ttohonwogon or tnKk. We offer on e"eellent salary with o bonu, pion ond gos ollowonct. We ho1te on uceli.nt benefit pion thot nclud t ho1p; 10IL1otion iniuronce. l1berol \ICKOt1on Of\d holiday' Cond1dot muU have o d Mrt ro be tuueofu1 ond be w•lling lo wor~ hord II yow thlftk y<>u • hove fht qvol ft<otlOnt, pleow opply IM''°" to the llilJ Pilat Mondoy t ru f 1dor 9 \ 1 a ar 2 4 pm 330 W. Bay Costa Mesa, CA 92626 on I : P (Feb. 19-March 20> Transat"t1on 1~ finished' Kno" 1\, don't st.a)' too long al the fair. Mean knov. "hen to t o fTi ta c, when people are IHI 1pplaud1n1 and not bored Mc~ will bc'comc --t---...:..;UK'ttasan..&! clear. nc , Libra pcoon ligurc prom1ncn1~---------- I ; lllMEDJIIEJIOAIEIEIT OPPORTUIITT Agreuive creative telephone salet person for retail advertising phone room. Supervisory 1kill1 a mu t. Top dollar -ba.e plus bonus. Send tt&llme to: Ad vertising Director ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT l30. West 83.f Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 EOE ACROU 1GMI SStllk•money 9 -foot 52 Slight 55 Dllprow 57 Old hlghroed· 51 French dty 80 -bene PREVIOU8 PUZZLE IOI.YEO 14 WMtthy one 15 lndMduel 1e 1nr....w 17 Edenl1• 18 Poel!Ne 19 PotMllum nitrate 20 OllpenM 21 Ambulate 23&..nlne 24 Barren 28 Pa enlmal 28 Belonger: tuft. 2tCWgymM 33 Lowetl 36 ..._t-tr•ted 37 Down Under denizen 31 Selntly 3t ~klng 40 RecompenMc:I 41 Cwltlde 42 Anlmet• 43 Wiid land 44 Fated 44 Golf .acor• 47 Al th9 peldl 48 Fabric 1 a 14 t1 • e 1 Spenlth "yea" 82 Secret 83 F-.lled 84 AlhMllCe e50flmport ee BIUndet'9 87 Tulles DOWN 1Hou:• 2 Younger ton -· 3 EGQ-ehepec:I 4 Audacity 5Commollon e Acdtm•t•. var. 7GrowwieNy 8Pr9Met 9 Brig lnmlt• 10C011Mcet 11 sone 12Sher't*• 13 Sufe thing: •ano 22 o.ert hllll 25 " -Amo<•" 27COverlng 29 Pl'OdUCed ote 308oMland IOUChonO 31 Give off • ., 32 Churllth 33 Weertng Pt!CS 34 Mlner91 vein 35Potablea 38 British money 39 Trilling 40 SUpportlve 42 Kindled •3 P.,amn 45Loanoe 46 AO'W9I' Patti • 48 IMtructor 49 Functlonel • 50 ReQltbf•t• 51 S.Vndand Ambltr 52 Negligible 53Nlleem $4 For.arm bOne 5e Bumpkin 58 A cof~lon ol: IUtf , 1111 lklUIA'S Slltl CMl11 IOTOIS ® 1984 RllllT 5'.iper Moi.egel (Sfl\ 7095) -., ..... 12Ul/•+tu < \I HI I \( 41 mo c E L. T 0 p 16401 8eech Munt &di "'21 36-Alleid 3 13815. ·~1 1707 CAP 6550-lne.c> t ... '---=-----· -..,..,.....-- 372 92 @ ·n~Ncwe ~\:"' Xtt11 "('~IS. A/C 11~ 1984 BIUMAXEYlbYOTA SCI ROCCO 19202 a..d\ '62-0828. Sunroot Mi.gsJStll 59811 "l3P/SEJ~/B :.~· •99 ... S220o * 1M-'2212 · 2U.ll/ • + tu 'M camaro. no down Pll>'-m l&CI "*1t rec:a. 1211.00 p1mo, New. c.. Bob for~ 1101.00!11! &45""5287 or att h,. 41 mo C E L . T 0 P ,.....,, 17"" 13.62t·RM•c:I 5453 70. l~,.---·------­CAP 12.390 m 118C IMPULSE SE "" CH$•U•'. Ma11s. Cru.1M Till AUIOl'nSlloC 1 111 ... 221.11/• -+ tu ' COMMEll CHEVROLET '-~~'.···· . ' "' ' ,, ..... S4b-I 200 eo mo c EL . T o P ,.. I '3 629-Ae11c:1 St •& 80 11....,,.__,,__.,.---,_-=----, CA~ 1UH •72 Courier O!'fY 4TIC Ml Ask Bo«> " Leas&ng 18711 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach (114) 142-2000 .,., '*"' $1475 .... potter 11 Mtra 842..0785 deye 54-1823.,.. ·13 MUSTANG G RANDE 1 owner, &IK. caNful ma. $2400.64&-1817 ('./I GARDEN GROVE 91 FWY. 22 FRWY 22 FRW'{ -' a> ..J 0 ~ Ir en SANTA ANA EDINGER O X WARNER . u ~ 0 CHICK IVERSON Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi 441 E. C.ast hJ., 11.,trt haoll 111-0100 Highest Quality Sales & Service 0 NABERS CADILLAC a 2100 11111011 ILVD., COSTA IESI (114) 140-1100 (213) &11-1211 •Best Prices •Convenient Location • Great Location • Super Service •Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People a> 0 RAY FLADEBO~ HONDA # 11 lift C11ter Ir., lni11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7600 Complete Sales, Service & Leasing G ORANGE COAST JEEP /RENAULT # 1 /11 Tt1 W11t For . flirt }Hp S1/11 For ·a Yim O~n~e. sALEs t •SERVICE ..-'----oa • LEASING 111~~":::,.~Lvo • ACCESSORIES DEPT 549-8023 0 THEODORE ROBINS FORD U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer Modern Sales, Service. Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts. Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals 2010 •• , • ., ...... Otsta ltSI 1•2-0010" ••0-1211 0 SOUTH COUNTY VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU 18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach (714) 842-2000 SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE Orance Countys l1r1est Volkswapn/lsuzu Outer m We WtU Not Be Undersold PARTS DEPARTMENT OPEN SATURDAY · RAY FLADEBOE VOLKSWAGEN # 20 lite C.attr Ir., lni11 In The Irvine Auto Center 830-7300 Orange Countys Newest Volbwagen Dealer Complete Sales, Semce & Leasing $ ~us ~J!RL:.?_ PUTS IR Overseas Delivery Specialists PARTI DEPARTMENT OPEN SATURDAY MORNINGS BMW -ROLLS ROYCE 1540 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach 840-8444 IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS MISSION VIEJO SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS 2121 • .,.., ...... C.sta ltSI Over 23 Years Serving Orange County Sales • Service • Leasing 548-1200 Special Parts Ult 546-1400 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM SATURDAY 8:30 AM -8:00 PM SUNDAY 10:0C>AM -5:00 PM 0 STADIUM PONTIAC W•',. New -We're De•llng Acrou from the Big A on Ketelle Juat Weat of the (57) Oreng• Fr•w•r Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Premises l11h1i• 2221 E. litelli 311-1111 G BILL YATES YILllWllEI • PlllOIE • PEllEIT SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE 12112 , ................. •••lstr••• ••1-•111 111-aoo BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU Complete Automotive Needa SALE$ • SERVICE • LEASING Ane Selectlon of Quallty U88d Vehldee # 1 BUICK DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 2125 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 171-2500 0 RAY. FLADEBOE LllOILI IEIOllY .111111 lllZI 1111 a.ft Otlftr Ir"' lni11 In The lrvlne Auto Center 830-7000 G CREVIER BMW SALES • SERVICE • LEASING "Where Professions/ Attitude Preval/s" lpecWlzlng In Europeen Dehwy. Excellent l1l1ctton of New end mtutl1pNplllMUeec1811W'1 atways In 1toctc. 835-3171 208 W. 1•t St., Santa Ana Corner of Broadway & 11t St. Closed Sundays G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE GJIM SLEMONS IMPORTS HONDA 2880 Harbor Blvd. 1S01 Quall Bl. -INw C•r Loe.lion 1001 Quall Bl. -R ... 1-Ol~l•lon ata Me1a 540-0713 3 Blocks So. of •os Fwy. IT\ World'• Largest Select/on of © \CJ Mercedes Benz /'-.. 833-9300 Wea · uu111 · Pw . Senkt • w, s.., Classified advertising 1s your best choice for help in selling the items.you no longer need. It's Quick and inexpensive, and the Pilot reaches potential buyers who live in this area Call today. Daily Pilat cla 1f1ed d ohone 642-5678 LOW73 MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1984 We asked local folks their reaction to the John De torean cocaine traffick- ing decision./ A3 A day at Disneyland turns Into a nightmare as a small handgun.In a purse accidentally discharges, Injuring a young girl./ A3 An Orange County cou- ple, who paid $300 to bring their niece Illegally from Mexico, say the glrl Is missing./ A3 California John De Lorean'sat- torneys say they don't know If they can afford to defend the automaker In future trials./ AS Nation Republlcans, promising a real zingy convention, get things under way with temperatures topping 100 degrees In Dattas./ M ---. . Beach Boy Brian Wilson Jute§ -tn: em1~ along wl Mwe - companions, on charges of trespassing./ A4 World - - GOUNIY 1011101 - ORANGE COUN T V C A LIFORN IA 2S CENTS Indians id for fight over Irvine site rribes claim burial ground el; Irvine Co., city caught in the middle By STEVE MARBLE Ot ... OelJ,... .... ·A feud bet"'eoi t¥.O Indian tnbes has rcachtd the boiling po ant 1n Irvine where city officials and developcn arc unsure which tribe to consult concerning an ancient burial sround in the middle of an office develop- ment. The Irvine Co.'s proposed office development is near UC Irvine where it is known that at least two burial sites arc located. The exact locations oflndian burial sites arc kept sccrct to prevent vandalism. Until recently, city planners and the Irvine Co. have been -orkina with the Juanenos, an Indian tribe that is recognized by the state as ~viDJ a ~lairn to burial srounds and histonc sit.cs aloos the Oranac Coast. But a second tribe, known as the Gabrielinos., has now surfaced claim- ing their membership should rep. resent the sacred ground in lrvioc. "Basically, what we have is a territory issue.'" id Ed Moore, a aty environment planner who bat ~ searched the tribal matter. .. ... , somctbin& like a buntina around dispute:· Moore said historic accounts show the Gabrielinos lived on the Ora.nee Coast, but that until recently. it wu believed no members of the tnbe were left. .. For a Jona time, oo one knew any tribe members even exis&ed any- more," Moore explained. ··11ben they resurfaced.·• Jim Vcla.sques, ideotifm u tbe chief of the GabridiDos, IDd 30 tribe mcmben pthered in Irvine Oil Sun- day for a rcligiouscd'emonyat ifwtle Rock.. Some mC:mben traveled from Riverside and San Benwdioo coun- ties to att.cnd the oeremooicl. The rock formation.. Vdaques said. bas symbolic meamna io bis tribe which oou.nu the twtle as a reti&ious symbol (Pleueeee Dm~/A2J Economy soaring; inflation checked , -... =-<-.< Search for Red Sea mines continues as two Soviet minesweepers steam toward South Yemen./ A4 Chinese horwrthelr Olympic meaal winners with more medals, and Chinese fans seek auto- WASHINGTON (AP) -The economy, as measured by the poa economy, beaded for what could be national product. was put at 3.2 its best performance in more than percent in the ICClOnd quarter. down three decades, crew at a rapid 7.6 from a 4.4 percent rate in the first ~t annual ~tc l~t quarter while three moo~ of~ year. ______ ,. -inflauon rcawncd TD ~ --EcolR>m1s aD011ielrcapn id- · graphs from their athletic heroes./A4 Feature Her full volleyball schol- arship to Pepperdlne netted Julie Evans a sur- prise dunking In a shop- ping center fountaln./81 Party planners are get- ting 'cereus' about the benefit gala for Sherman Gardens./81 Sports At the ripe old age of 44, Lee T revlno holds off the young guys to capture the PGA Champlonshlp./C1 It doesn't happen very often, but the Miami Dolphins defeated the Los Angeles Raiders -In California, no less./C1 It was a good day for both Nancy Lopez and Martina Navratllova./C2 Entertainment Soviet jazz ls achieving detente of sorts In the Netherlands./83 Bualnesa A Mesa firm has de- veloped an optical disk- based storage system that will revolutionize the Industry.JBS INDEX Clown• and balloon• broaabt Jim Brownell'• craft. cbrlsteDed the 'rab Toy. Dllllr ........ .,,T_.._ the trophy for the Saa.ten Swab (best C09tmll•) bl the Cbaiacter Boat Parade. ·Funny floating flotilla draws · flood of-fanS-to NB Harber Character Boat Parade boasts 30 entries, honors Coast cartoonist Vtr II Partch By KAREN E. KLEIN Of .. .,..,,.. ..... Despite threatening clouds at the beginning of the weekend, the 24th annual Character Boat Parade went off Sunday in Newpon Harbor under blue skies, to the deli&ht of thousands of boaters and onlookers. The 30 official boat parade entnes reflected this year's American Circus theme with clowns, snake handlers and even ladies flying throuah the air on homemade trapeze. The event, sponsol"Cd by the New- pon Harbor Area Chamber of Com- merce, was dedicated this year to Virgil Partch, -Laguna Beach car-toonist whowaskilledAug. lOin a car accident., said Richard Luehrs, ex- ecutive director of the chamber. "He meant so much to this parade, especially the character boats," Luehrs said. Partch used to draw cartoons and handle publicity for the annual event, be said. The number of official entnes was down this year, Luehrs said, blanung the recent Summer Olympics with talun~ tJme away from last-minute planning for the parade. But Luehrs said there were bun· dreds of unofficial entriennd a large crowd of spectators lined the route and crowded bayside restaurants for a look at the wacky goingH>n in the harbor. "There was lots of enthusiasm and tons of parties &oing on,·· he said. Jim DaJe, the chamber president whose S-ycar-old son owns the S.S. Michipn, "really outdid himself this year," Luehrs said. The old 24-foot boat., the first to enter the annual parade some two decades before young Alexander Dale was born, was decked out in circus p.rb ex- traordinart, Luehrs said. with Alex outfitted as a lion tamer and Dale's other children pcrfonning tricks on a trapeze set on board. The "Mule," owned by the West- mark Saving Bank. won a com- mercial sweepstakes award for its depiction of Tahtll, celebrating a recent bank promooonal contest that featured tickets to Tahiti as a prize. The rest of this year's winners were: (Pleue eee CHARACTER/ A2) F~raro, husband to send IR a check for $53,459 W ASHI GTON (AP) -Demo- cratic vict pre 1dentiaf cahdidate Gcraldtne crraro and her bu band paid about40 percent of their income in taxes during the last five )Cars, but because o an accountant's error in 1978 they arc sending the Internal Revenue Service a check for an additJonaJ $53,459, according to financial records released today. Copies of the income-tax returns filed jointly and separately by the couple since 1978 bsted Ferraro as having aross income over those years of $332,474 and paying $130,922 10 federal andc1tyandstatetaJtes in New York. This amounted to 39.38 per- cent of her gross income. The tax returns showed that Zac- caro, a New York real~tatc oper- ator, had gross income durini the period ofSS32,969 and paid $220,344 m total tncs, or 41.27 percent of bis gross income. Franc1s O'Bnen. a spokesman for the Mondale-Ferraro campaign, said that an accountant's error in 1978 is causina the couple to send the IRS a check for $53,459 -represcntmg an underpayment in the 1978 _J.Ucs of $29,709 and interest since~en of $23,750. O'Brien said the error in- volved the undCT\'alu.auon of a reaJ. cstate transaction. The information was released in Washinaton in an au.empt to di pel controversy about the finances of Ferraro and her husband. Ferraro also ~as scheduled to rel~ today her financial dlsclosure form that must be filed with the federal (Pleue eee PERR.ARO/ A2) =~~:neoard ~:-~Pocketbook issues Buslneu 85 • JEFF ADLER g::~:News C~ stressed in state EE:~cea 8~8-221 ballot propositions HelpYourMff HMOICOpe ce Ann Lander• 82 Mutual Fuflda 85 Natlonal Newt A4 Opinion A6 Paparaut 81 Police Log A3 Public Notlc:.t C4 Sporta C1-4 Stoe Marketa .,. B8 Tetevt~on 82 Theater• 83 WNthtr A2 WOfld Newa----~M measure, revenue lntttatlves seek voters' a prov al CAMP ~I GN '84 tothc~I ) govcmmeot reponed today. ministration bave c:al1ed this ~- The Commerce Depanment re-fomaoc:e the best of all pomble vised its cstJmatc of 11owtb from worlds -strong growth and low April through June up ~tly from inflation. an earlier 7. s percent readmc,.. tron& &rowth ad low mftalioa iii The inflation rate for the cnti~ (Pl:1n1-om-/AS) ........... .,, ............ Popular apota on the Ora.nee Cout Colle&e campaa tJala momln& were the information mape. It's .back to school· at 3 Coast colleges Elecuon Comm1 on. The mpai~ al$0 rel scd a t1temcnt detaihn and defcndi the comph tcd rral-cstate uan fc1 b) whtth Fmaro repaid family loan to hc1 l 978 campa11n that had been ruled illcpl by the FEC. Tott~)' omc of the Joan\, f crraro -·-····-wtd· bu half-inte~t m a lower Manhattan buildina to Manny Ltrma.n, bu 1n Price " s -.en bclo" the propett) '1 Zaccaro's. Zaccaro a v uc," the Ntemen& said. the l\atemcnt said. and, un· btknownst to Fermro arran to bU)' Zaccaro paid the same amount, the propeny back from Ltrman later. $100,000, to buy back a b&lf·interesi Lerman paid Ferraro S 100,000 for 1n the propeny. The statement said her half-interest -qUJdruple what Zaccaro and Lerman sold the prop- she had paid for it five months before. crty in November. l 980, for ''Thi -w. -coo i•t nt wi*h tbeir-Sl7S,000, -confirmini-·di".ir hijh r belief that the May, 1978, purchase · valuation than th~ 1978 price. INDIANS BATTLE CITY HALL ••• From Al Several lrvinc .POlicc officen also monitored the ceremonies out of fear of violence. The ceremony, however, wa peaceful. To settle tbt dispute. the lf"\ inc Co. has asked the California Native American Historic Comm1ss1on to desi&naic one of the tribes as a consultant for the office project in Irvine. which is still in the planning stages. But accordma to Moore, the state commission is rcluctant to get in· volved and, thcrcin, lici the problem. "If you go ahead with the Juaneno , the Gabrielinos could sue the city and the Irvine Co. If you ao with the Gabriehnos. the Juaneno could sue," Moore explained. law requires developers to not disiurb Jndian remains or to remove them undenhe supervision of a tribal representative. · The quarrel is exacerbated because members of the two tribes do not ae1 alona and do not aartt on how the remains at the burial sue should be treated, said Moore. He suagested the state commission has a responsibility to like a stand. COLLEGES OPEN EARLY .•• From Al Colleae otlic1als arc carefully ob-Garcia said community colleae scrvina this fall's enrollment figures enrollment traditionally drops when bee.awe state fundina 1n the comina the economy improves. He said years 1s to be based on a district's telephone surveys have mdicated the average daily attendance during the new tuition fee 1s not a sianificant 1984-85 term. Average daily attend· reason for the enrollment d1p at ancc is related to the number of Golden West. At Fountain Valley-based Coastline, which offers classes at 75 community locations, the opening day· enrollment was 10,406. Coll~ spokesman Jack Chappell said tMt 1 an 8 percent decline compared to opensna day last fall. students who enroll and the number At Orange Coast, the state's Largest of classes they take single-campus community college, But Chappell ·noted that tra· ditionally, one-third of Coastline's students resister in class durina the fint two weeks of the semester. He noted that Coastline is opcnin,J a new community lcarninacenterth1s fall in Corona def Mar at the former Lincoln Intermediate School campus. Fred Garcia, dean of adm1ss1ons, . the opening day enrollment was records and au1dancc at Golden West. 19,413. ColJege spokesman Jam said the Hununaton Beach -campus 1 Carnett said that figure as 21 percent opened its semester today Wlth below last fall's operuna day enrol- 14,885 students -down 13 percent lment of 24,662. from the opemngday total last fall. "I wouldn't say (OCC adminis· "Of course It concerns us. but it's trators) arc panicluna, but we arc not totally unexpected." Garcia said concerned because that's a major of the decline. "Smee the fall of 1982, drop." Carnett S8ld enrollment bas dropped every OCC's enrollment decline was At Oranie Coast and Golden West, open re&lStT'ation LS continuin& this week. Next week, students can enroll Wlth the permission of the cl.us instructor. semester at Golden West.·· mainly in part-ume students who He attributed much of the loss to a may have been deterred by th~ new d«hne an the number of 18· to-21 · tuition, Carncn said. }tar-olds an the coastal communities One comfort1n,J_lrend. however,. 1s of Orange County. He noted thai that-the.average OCC student tb1s rail many elementary schools sn the area 1s enrolling in more classes than last have been closed within the past I 0 fall, be said. This trend could help the years because of dcchnmg enrol· Costa Mesa college·s averaae daily lment. He said community colleges attendance figure and thus its fund. are now feeling that crunch. ing. All three coUeacs are offcrina additional classes that begin Sept. 10, for students unable to enroll this week because of summer vacation or job commitments. Parents who could not enroll before their children begin elementary school classes next month also arc expected to enroll in the latc- startina college courses. CHARACTER BOAT PARADE ••• From Al Mayor's Trophy: "fascmauon," Jack Hester. -¥WAwar<J. "lsl&Bella," In 1ne-Co. Commodores' Trophy (best decor- ated): "H.M.S. Bacaruda," Jean Mane Sparhna,. 81~ Toot (best sound) ··s.s. Mich- igan, ' Alexander Dale. Loose Screw Award (best annn.a· tion); "Boat Deck," C.K. Weyer. Suaviest Swab Trophy (best cos- tume): .. Tub Toy." Jam Brownell Cruttendcn Cup (theme extreme)· .. Resolullo!1•" Avalon Paclfic Chaf'· ters. Lcakin' Timbers Trophy (best Monterey): H M.S. Bacaruda. Jean Mane-Sparling. Wheel. Steam and Bell (best steam- boat): "Dauntless Official," Ron Powers. Dirt) Old Manifold (oldest boat): "Dauntless Official;' Ron Powcn. Bil&Y Binnacle Trophy (classic yacht): "Betty M," J.D. and Betty Plcrcc. Thwaned Thwart (bay launch): "C™cken Slup," Fred Turnbull . Drippy Stuffin& Box (work boat): "Compass Rose," Ted Ritter. Best Theme (commercial): ''Mule," Westmark Savinas Bank. Best Costume (commercial): "Charro." Balboa Bay Club. Best Sound (commercial): "Merced~" Jim Slemons Imports. Best Lave Animation (com· mercial): "Fancy,'' The Cannery Res. tau rant. Best Mechanical Animation (com- mercial): "Isla Bella," Irvine Co. Commercial Sweepstakes: "Mule," Westmark Savings. BALLOT PROPOSITIONS DETAILED ••• From Al Other measures sure to catch the attention of voters before November mclude an mitiative that would establish a state lottery that would benefit educallon and one, which has Gov. DeukmeJtan's strong sul>port, creating an independent commission to relive the Lca:islature of the job of rcapporuonment. The pr,opos1t1ons, now numbered consecuuvely for 20 years, arc: ~ro~Ulon %$, authonzmg is- suance of $325 milhon in bonds to provide funds for water . pollution control and water reclamation •Pro~11tion ZI. authonzmg a S4SO million school building lease· purchase bond to provide for the construction or improvement of pub- lic schools around the state • Propo1itlon Z7. authonzsng IS· suancc of a $100 million hazardous substance cleanup bond. •Proposition %8, authonzana a S 7 5 million safe drinking-water bond to raise money for local water systems necdina improvement to meet mini- mum drinkma water standards. •Pro~sltlon H , authonzmg a_ $6SO mlllion bond issue to provid~ farm and home loans to California veterans. •Proposition ao. authonzsng a SSO million bond issue to provide funds for the purchase, construction or renovation of senior citizen centers around the state. •Propo1ldoo 31. a state constitu· tional amendment that would provide an exception for new con- struction from property ta~ reassess- ment 1f the constructson was for the Just Call 642-6086 OaUy Piiot 0.11"'1 I• Guaranteed installation of a fire spnnlder system proceeds into prizes, I 6 percent for or other tire detection system qU\re· expenses and at least 34 percent related improvement. .l.:~ would be set aside for educational •PropoaJtJon 3%, a state constitu-fundin& for kindergarten throu&h the tional amendment permittin& the university level. Supreme Court to review only ~rts •Proposltloa 31, an initiative re- rather than all of certain appeals court quirin1 the !ovcrnor to write the decisions it is co!Wdenna. It would president an U.S. Attorney General not apply in death penalty cases urain& federal law be amended to •Proposldoa 13, a constitutional exclude ~s other than Enabsh amendment pcrmittina disabled from being used on ballots or other people to postpone pa~ ad valor· election material. cm property taxes until the sale of a •Propo1idoa It, a state constitu- prinetpal residence. tion&l amendment creating a com- • Propotltloa J4, a state consutu· mission of eight former appeals court tional amendment creatin& an ad-Justices tq draw state Senate and ditional exception on {)l'Operty tax Assembly as well as conaressionaJ revaluation in cases of historic struc--and cqualizauon district boundary tures that aTC dwellinas occupied by lines m reapportionment yean. The owners as principal residences. plan submitted by the commission • Propo1itloa SS, an irutiative caJJ-would be subject to Supreme Coun ing for the Le&islature to transmit a review and a voten' referendum. resolution to Conaress uraina the •Propo1ltton 40, an initiative convening of a constitutional con· limitin1 campaian contributions and vent1on to draft a balanced budict expenditures to candidates for state amendment to the U.S. Constitution. elective office. Individual contribu· (Pcndina Supreme Coun review of tions would be limited to $1,000 per the measure could affect its ballot candidate with a $I 0,000 maximum status.) . to all candidates. Some public fund· •Propo1ltloo H , an snit1at1ve that in& would be provided to candidates would require additional property tax to match personal expenditures by rebates to homeowners require a opposition candidates. two-thirds vote for tax or fee increases • Propo1ltton UJ. an snitlative and restructure other aovemment creauna a state weltare oomm1Ssion fundin& mechanisms. Drafted by tax to compute the state's per capita opponent Howard Jarvis and popu-assistanc.e costs for pubhc aid and larly referred to as Jarvis JV. medical assistance proarams. Pay- •.Propo1ltlon 37, a state conslltu· ments, for such programs as Medi- tional amendment authonZJna a state Cal and aid to families with depen· lottery, but not casinos. to benefit dent children, would be limited to the educauon Lottery officials would be average national expenditure, exclud- requ1red to put SO percent of all in& California. plus I 0 percent. What do you Uh abo1t tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you lllte? Call tile number at left and your me1111e will be recorded, tran1crtbed and delivered tot.be appropriate editor. The 1ame U·boar an1werla1 service may bt used to record tet&er1 10 tbt editor on any topic. Contrtbator1 to our Leuen colWD.D mast ladadt tbtlr name and telephone numNr for vtttflcatJoo. No circulation cal11, pte11e. Tell DI what'• oo your mlDd. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Ctrcvtatton 71•1142-Ga cliMlfled ~ rwea.n An other depttrtment.142~1 MAIN °'"Cl S30 W•I r $! COila .,_... CA ..-1 lea 1llO C:-1 ..._. CA Nat H. L. Schwartz tH Pu bit sher Ao1emary Churchman Controller Stephen F. Cera&o Production Manager ~·~~~ Donald L. Wltllam1 C1rculat1on Manage_r __ VOL. T7, NO. 233 Fair skies and continued hot 14 a COa•tal Tides UI .. 10 ~ 1t 73 Miami tt u .. 71 .. Mplloo&t PW 12 11 ~ ~ HllSOrle&M to 14 ,..._y°"' n e3 H<)rlOlll,'111 a 11 ()kWlonla <:tty h 11 Onlllle .. II Oftando to ,. Pelln IPttnol .. ,. ""*'-'""141 17 12 P'-'111 .. 7f / Pill.II= 71 .. Pot1 ,M1 ,. 11 Potllafld,()f. 7t II ~~ 71 ta :=t'c..t .u 17 H u "91111 IO ~ u .. leQ-""""to It 17 61LelM .. .. It P.i T lft)pe '° u WLllktClty ., u TOOAr'""" 8-ncll'llgt\ l SOpfft 41 ~~ ... ·· &e!IAlllONO 101 11 SallOlefO 71 7S fUHOAY ... ~Vl. 11",.•"' to =...se 7.411.m p1 c:;Ntlelloft.W v. 10 -'> • m " Chertoltl,H C 9-ldlllgll 11111111 11.2 ~ ""' It'll loeley ... 7,.. p"' ..... ~ T~ at I ti I Ill MCI llfta IOafll 11 Qeweland 7Upm ~~•e ~ eela IOOey el 2 S5 P 11'1 , ,._ Colul'IM Ol'I T'*41y et I 11 I"' ""' IMa IOllll 11 C-d.N H ,,.Pfft ~WOf111 ------------Oe)10ft '*'-0.Moin. II A aan frenollleo et II 71 11 Stwl ""*'.,. " ,, 71 17 ... ,.,.__.., .. 71 60 71 "' ~ 74 .. u ...... ~Oft 102 17 " n SIOUllf ... u .. .. 71 • .,..,. 71 60 IO N lyf-es 44 " 14 TOI*• 11 12 .. '1'3 T-' to .. .. 64 TulM 85 76 .. II Wuf*IOlon · 82 .. 13 .. Wlcllull " 70 13 7a Wllc...eaM 76 " 13 13 ~llfnillOtClfl,OI 11 &I Temps DetrOll ..... Dululll .. 61~ to 12 F~ SuRF REPORT :g = Pwgo \r 11 70 ,~ ~ Extended 11 82 17 70 to .. a " 71 12 70 47 I _ _..a.,__. .... ,.,. .., IJldl«"S a..... NewportBeacb flreO,bter entera bumtnc lllnute Kin& market ln Newport Beacb. Orie .Minute King rob bed, another bums in Newport Sund&)' wasn't a &ood day for the small Minute Kina chain. Two of its convcpience markets in Newport Beach were struck by bad circumstances Sunday when one was robbed and the other burned down in a spectacular $70.000 blaze. In OranJe County, Minute Kin& has a store m Costa Mesa on Newport Boulevard in addition to the two stores in Newport Beach. The robbery occurred at 2 a.m. Sunday at the Minute Kina on 3530 Irvine Ave. as a clerk was closina the store. Newport Beach police reported the clerk had just locked the front door when a suspect who bad been bJdmg in the store approached him from a corner of the store. The robber was wearina a nylon stoclrina on his bead and simulatina a weapon under his jacket. The man walked up to tbe counter and told the clerk be would blow hts brains outitbedidn 't tum over all the money in the cash resister. The clerk complied. pvinJ the man $3S5 in cash. The robber fled out a back door, police said. He was described as white, in his 20s, S-10, wei&hin& 155 pounds with blond hair and a mustache. The second Minute Kina incident. occurred at about 10:40 p.m. Sunday when a fire of unknown ongin sparked the store on l 526 Placentia Ave. into flames. There were no injuries m the blaze, a Newport Beach Fire Department spokeiwoman said, but the store was auttcd. The fire, which took about 33 minutes to control, caused $20,000 worth of damage to the structure of the store and SS0,000 damaae to the contents. Three enaine companies and two Newport Beach truck com- panies responded to the scene, the spokeswoman said. The cause of the fire is still under investigation, she added. Murdered woman's parents learn nightmare isn't over By &be Aa1ocl1ted Pre11 Vera Scott says she wanu the niahtmarish phone calls from the man she believes killed her daughter to atop. Even more, she wants the caller captured and punished. .. He took a life that loved life. I feel 1n my heart that he deserves some son of punishment,.. the Santa Ana woman said. For four years, she said. she and her CoNTINUEO SroR1E s ---- husband Jacob were "tonured" by calls from a man claimina he killed theirdauahtcr, Dorothy. 32. For three months, there were no dll5, but after her remains were identified lut week, the calls bepn 111111. They behcve the caller i1 the st.me pcnon who harassed their daughter for months before she vani bed in May 1980. "Dorothy 1ot one call just before she disappeared that upset her bor- nbly," Mrs. Scott said. "The VOICC said, 'OK, now, )'OU arc aosn& to come my way and when I act you alone, I wdl cut you u~ into bits so no one will ever find you, ' Mrs. Scott said. last wetk, a set of bones unearthed on Aug. 6 at a remote construction site was identified as those of Dorothy Scott. Her funeral is scheduled for Wednctdav. GNPGROWSAT 7.6PERCENT ••• From Al an anyone could as.Jc font thiu&ge'of the upansion," said Allen Sinai, chicfcc:onom11tat heanon Lthman· American Expres • "It is 1 sterlina rcpon on the economy." Sinai predicted that economic powth would continue 10 thecurrenl quancrat 1 healthyclipofproblbly4 perunt to S pcrctnt with no ilJlS that the economy 1 bcaJnnma to over- heat. The economy this ytar has con· tinually confounded the e"pcrti, ~bo had pl'tdiatd 11 woUJd slo 1ubSun- t1atly as the recovery from th 1981..Sl rc«ssion entered Ill second year. IQJ.lt.ld.. the fint thrtt moruh1 of the .,ur tu med m a I 0.1 pcrcc1u .. poWth rate, the aovemment id today, the best quarterly perfonnan~ since April-June 1978. While the 1CCOnd quarter's 7.6 pcrocnt rate wu slower, at wa still an unusually rapid pace for tb11 stqt of the ruovery and was well above,. hat had been prtdictcd. "I'm tired of hearina doom and &loom economic forecast Jt'1 tim for boom and zoom," aid John Albertme, president of the Amcncan Busin Conrercncc, and an econ· omist tn the phm1Jt camp. The Rcqan admim trauon, re. spondi"I to the atrona tt0•i.h, urtier this month revated upwa~ h1 fore· casll for lhc r. pmhcuna ONP 1rowth for all of 1984 would be 7.2 pcrcena -rather than an carh r forecast of 5.9 percent lf the 7.2 pcrctnt forecast come true, and many t~ink il ill, t •ould make 1984 the bcn year net 1951.i when the economy arc t an 8,,, perunt rate. Economic powth last y r • 7 percent folio •nR a 2.1 om:ent d cllne an 1982. The Commerce DC~nment d all O. l percent tc\ i11on in aro 1h for lhe ICt'ond quaner to • 1.6 percent rate came about liCCiiu a tron 1 sro-.1h an pemnal con1umpt1on pcndinJ and bu in capnal Jn\ t• ment om ta kM pctformance an rntdcnllAI con1trw:tlon and ln~cn· tory g.rov.1h. J .. f IRST f 011101 MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1984------ ---- OHANGE COIJNT'r' C A LIFORN I A 25 CENTS Coast We asked local folks their reaction to the John De Lorean cocaine trafflck-I Ing decision./ A3 A day at Dlsney1and turns Into a nightmare as a small handgun In a purse accidentally discharges, 1njurlng a young girl./ A3 An Orange County cou-·· pie, who paid $300 to bring their niece Illegally from Mexico, say the glrl Is missing./ A3 - California John De Loreen's at- torneys say they don't know if they can afford to defend the automaker In future trials./ AS Nation Republicans, promising a real zingy convention, get things under way with temperatures topping 100 degrees In Dallas./ A4 Be~ch Boy Brian Wilson Is a rested at GO~con­ on, along with two ·d· anlens;<>n charges oUr.espasslng.I~ World Search for Red Sea mines continues as two Soviet minesweepers steam toward South Yemen./ A4 Chinese honor their Olympic medal winners with mQCe medals. and Chinese tans seek auto- graphs from their athletic heroes./A4 Feature Her full volleyball schol- arship to Pepperdlne ed Jutte Evans a sur- prise dunking in a shop- ping center fountaln./81 Party' planners are get- ting 'cereus' about the benefit gala for Sherman Gardens./81 Sports At the ripe old age of 44, Lee Trevino holds off the young guys to capture the PGA Champlonshlp./C1 It doesn't happen very often, but the Miami .Dolphins-defeated the Los Angeles Raiders -In California, no less./C1 It was a good day for both Nancy Lopez and Martina Navratllova./C2 Entertainment Soviet jazz is achieving detente of sorts in the Netherlands./83 Business- A Mesa firm has de- veloped an optical disk- based storage system that will revolutionize the Industry.JBS EX Bridge Bulletin Board Business California News Classified Comics Cronword Death Notices Featurea Help V ourself Horoaco~ Ann Landers Mutual Funds National News Opinion Paparazzi Police Log Public Notices Sports Stock Marl<et1 Te vtslon Th atert Weathe~r -- Wot1d New• 84 A3 B5 A4 CS-7 84 C7 C4 81-2 B2 ce 82 85 A4 A8 81 A3 C4 C1""4 88 82 83 ~2 A4 Clown• and .• balloon• brought Jim Brownell'• craft, cbrlatened the 'rub Toy, ..., ....... llirT.,,.C- the trophy for the Saa.ts Swab (best coatamea) in the Character Boat Parade. Eunn~ floating_flotilla draws flood .off ans to Ns·· Harbor Character Boat Parade boats 3.0 entries; honors Coast cartoonist Virgil Partch By KAREN E. KLEIN Of tM DalY ...... ...,. Despite threatening clouds at the beginninJ of the weekend. the 24th annual Character Boat Parade went off Sunday fo Newport Harbor under blue skies, to the delight of thousands of boaters and onlookers. The 30 official boat parade entries reflected this year's American Circus theme with clowns, snake handlers and even ladies flying through the air on homemade trapeze. The event, sponsored by the New- port Harbor Area Chamber of Com- merce, was dedicated this year to Virgil Partch, a Laguna Beach car- toonist who was killed Aug. I 0 in a car accident, said Richard Luehrs, ex- ecutive director of the chamber. .. He meant so much to this parade, especially the character boats," Luehrs said. Partch used to draw cartoons and handle publicity for the annual event, he said. The number of official entries was down this year, Luehrs said, blaming the recent Summer Olympics with taking time away from last-minute planning for the parade. But Luehrs said there were hun- dreds of unofficial entries and a large crowd of spectators lined the route and crowded bayside restaurants for a loolC at the wacky goings-on in the harbor. .. There was lots of enthusiasm and tons of parties going on." he said. Jim Dal~ the chamber president whose 5-year-old son owns the S.S. Michigan, "really outdid himself this year," Luehrs said. The old 2-4-foot boat, the first to enter the annual parade some two decades before young AJexander Dale was born, was dFCked out in circus garb ex- traordinare, Luehrs said. with Alex outfitted as a lion tamer and Dale's other children performing tricks on a trapeze set on board. The .. Mule," owned by the West- mark Saving Bank. won a com- mercial sweepstakes award for its depiction of Tahiti, celebrating a recent bank promotional contest that featured tickets to Tahiti asap~- The rest of this year's winners were: (Pleue eee CHARACTER/ A.2) Mesa's $20,000 question: How to ch~ange its image? ......... By TONY SAAVEDRA such city highlights as the South Sorsabal estimated it would cost Ofho.trNoutMt Coast Repertory theater, Pacific $20,700 to remove the old motto The crusade by Costa Mesa to pull Amphitheatre, the new South Coast from the official city seal, carved in itself from beneath the shadow of its Symphony orchestra and the county bronze plaques at public buildinas elite neighbor, Newport Beach, has Performing Arts Center, now under around . town and printed on city created a dUemma for Costa Mesa construction. .stationery as wcllas car .decals. officials. . An attractive -and perhaps more He added the city is rarely referTCd Once known only for its proximity marketable -new motto proposed to by its motto anyway. to the beach, Costa Mesa 1s quickly by . the Costa Mesa Chamber of "I've been man~er for 14 years becoming a hotbed for culture in Commerce is .. City of the Arts." and 1 don't think we vc used "Hub of Orange County. And many local an While the phrase is admittcdl~ the Harbor Arca." said Sorsabal, who lovers believe the Costa Mesa's 31 -catchy, City Manager Fred Sorsabal plans to recommend to the City year-old motto, "Hub of the Harbor said erasing Costa Mesa's past may Council toniaht that the motto be Area," should be changed to reflect not be as easy as it sounds. ,. (Pleue eee MESA •s1 A2) Pocketbook issues sfresseO in state .ballot propositions JEFF ADLER CAMPAIGN '84 U.S. str~ng GNP hailed WASHINGTON (AP) -The economy, headed for what could be GNP its best perfonnance m more than ·Adjusted three decades. grew at a rapid 7.6 percent annual rate last quarter whlle anflation remained 1n check. the government reported today. The Commerce Department re- vised its estimate of growth from April through June up sliJhtly from an earlier 7.5 percent reading. The inflation rate for the entire economy, as measured by the grou national product, was put at 3.2 percent in the second quarter, down from a 4.4 peroent rate in the first three months of the year. Economists and the Reapn ad- ministration have called this ecr- formanoe the best of all possible worlds -strong growth and low inflation. "Strong growth and low inflation is all anyone could ask for at this~ of the expansion," said Allen Smai. chief economist at Sbearson Lebman- American Express. "It is a sterling report on the economy.•• Sinai predicted that economic growth would continue in the current .... , GNP lncrea .. d •w $30 auuon AHer Aewlaloft 8°/o 4°10 3°10 2 °10 1°10 0°10 quartcratabealthychpofprobably4 Business Conference. and an econ- percent to S woent with no signs that omist in the optimist camp. - the economy is begjnning to over-The Reagan adolinistration, re- heat. · spondin.g to the stro[\I powth,. earlier The economy this year has oon-this month revised upward 1u forc- Jinualtyronfoonded tbe e~o -cam fQr. tbt ~ Dmtietina:GNP- had predicted it would slow substan-growth for all of l984 would be 72 tially as the recovery from the percent -rather than an earlier 1981-82 recession entcmiits second fon:cast ofS.9 percent . year. If the 7.2 percent forecast comes Instead, the first thrtt months of true, and tnJDY thin.kit will, it would the year turned in a 10.1 percent make 1984 the best year since 1951, growth rate, the gov~ment said when the economy pcw at an 8.3 today, the best quarterly perfonnanoe percent rate. since April-June 1978. · Economic growth last year was 3. 7 While the second quarter's 7 .6 percent following' a 2.1 percent de- peroent rate was slower, at was still an clinein l 982asthecountrywa.smired unusually rapid paoe for this st.age of in its worst recession since the end of the recovery and was well above what World War II. bad been predicted. The Commerce Department said "I'm tired of hearing doom and its 0. l pm.-cnt revision in crowth for &loom economic fo~ts. lt~s time the second quat'lCflo 1 7.6 percent for boom and zoom," said John rate came about because a stronaier AJbettinc. president of the American · (Pleue .ee GJICP / A2t ..., .................... ...... Popular 8}>0ta on the OraQge Cout College campu tllla morning were the information maps. It's back to school a~ Coast colleges By PHIL SNElDERMAN Ot .. Dlllf ......... Jarvis tax measure. revenue Initiatives seek voters' approval ProPo ition 36. wall appear alonasidc vcral mea urcs intended to crutc additional c.-.::ccptions to its more famou 1?rede«SM>r, Jarvis' ona.mal tax ta ·h1na Propo ition 13. um mer 'acation came to an earl} end for thousandi of rommumt) send a 1milar m to the (td ral . collecc tudcnt who tttumtd to JO' cmmcnt. cla today at Oran c Coa t Gold· Allhouah pre idcnual politics will be the tickci.toppll'\&ll\TI\C'tion on the November ballot, 17 t4lc prop- o ition ranaillf from the much· bal~hoocd Jarvis JV Ul•<uttina in· lliauve to ' pate of revenue oona i ue al o wall be decided by vote • lroni II). the Jarvis anittati\.c. The irony 1 that this nc t initiative 1s • intcndtd to c;lo~ loopholes in the onainal m ure that Jarv11 bche~cs have been used by government to cirtumvcnt Prop. ition 13' aim . . If ahfom1a,otcrs1rc1nt mood 1 n<t another tax me to lhriT local go,cmmcnt I dcrs )' mijht al o want lo t kc the opf)Onun1t)' to ( Proposition 35 would rcqu1tt the en We t and Coa tllbe c ll Lqislaturc to tran mit a resolution to Earl) enrollment ti u~ bowed Con~ uraina the convening of a attendance was down compared to consututional oon,-ention to draft a previou )"Ca~ attend that may affect con titutional amendment ttquin future fun<hna of the coll a belanttd bud&el. Today marked an earl) tan for the . However, the measure mu!U fint fall :mntcr. which tntdJtlon~ll> ha sul'\ive a cballc • in the tatc tqun 1n ptem~r at the three upttme Coun before ats po ition on hool~ •h• h arc part of tht Cout the ballot isa ured. A hcannaon the Communtt Collc&e Da met. ; •"I ,.t9'd n i ( Commw:W)· Coll ltedultd Tuesday. whtch ha rn mJ'u N'I Irvine and (Pl ... BALLOT/A.2) M1 ion V1cJo. ~~ oonunu11\ n .. 0 l • ! GNPGROWSAT 7.6PERCENT ••• homAl Jf'Owtb in personal c:onsumpUOl\ spendina and bu.sines capital inv~1-menl ofTSct a weaker perfonnanoe an residtndal consuuction aJ\d invn- tory arowth. The latter ca-..oo were both reviled downward slishtly. The 10.1 pcrctntarowtb nteforlhc fint quartt'.r was unchanaed from an upward revision llist month. The inflation rate's decline to 3.2 percent -from a '·' petteot rttc in -,:be tlml:IUACW'-wa1""'11Ci'ibutcd to a drop in rood prices, which had riseo sharply in the tint W.. moo tilt of the year. Pmident RcqJl1 . bu souaht to t"apit1liie on the bri&bt economic news as be campai,ps for re-c~oa. The ldmini trauon bas bailed thi1 economic expansion as tht stronant since lbe late 1940s with economic arowth dllrina the fim 11 months of the recovery put at 10.9 pen:eni. the btstpeeformancesinoea l7.3~nt jump durina • similar tlme period end1na in December 1949. One of the keys to ll'Owtb. aa:oJ"d.. ins 10 the admini11ration, hu bocn a strona surac in busin invcstmeai. which the admlnJstra1ion anributes to the larae w. cuts for capltll aood• approved by c...,... in 1981. ln today's ~n. theannua.l rttco( increase in bus1net1 fi~ed invcs1men1 was put at 22.9 percent, even stro.,,er than 1he 20.6 percenl pace turned in durina the first three, months of the y.ear. The depenment also reported today that afttr-w: corporate profits were up 1.5 percent. CHARACTER BOAT PARADE ••• hom Al Mayor's Trophy: "Fucina1ion," Jack: Hester.· VIP Award: .. Isla Bella," Irvine Co. Commodores' Trophy (best decor- ated): "H.M.S. Bacaruda," Jean Mane Sparlin.a. 8j4 Toot (best sound): "S.S. Mich- igan, ' Alexander Dale. Lootc Screw Award (best anima- tio.n): "Boat Deck," C.K.. Weyer.· Suaviest Swab Trophy (best cos- tume):."Tub Toy," Jim Brownell. Cruttendcn Cup (theme extreme): "Resolution." Avalbn Pacific Char- ters. Lctk.in' Timben Trophy (best Monterey): H.M.S. Bacaruda, Jean Marie Sparlin&. Wheel, Steam and Bell (best steam- boat): "Dauntless Official," Ron Powers. Diny Old Manifold (oldest boat): ··Dauntless Official," Ron Powers. Bilp Binnacle Trophy (classic y~ht): .. Betty M," J,D. and Betty · Pierce. Thwarted Thwan (bay launch): "Chicken Ship," Frid Turnbull. Drippy Stuffing Box (work boat): "Compass Rose," Ted Ritter. Best Theme (commercial); "Mule." Westmark Savings Bank. Best Costume (commercial); "Charro," Balboa Bay Club: 8e11 Sound (commercial): ·•Mercedes," Jim Slemons lmpons. Best Live Animation (com- mercial): •·fancy," The Cannery Res--_ taunnt. Best Mechanical Animation (com- mercial): '"Isla Bella," Irvine Co. Commercial Sweepstakes: "'Mule ... Westmark Savings. COLLEGES OPEN EARLY ••• From Al because state funding in the coming years is to be based on a district's average daily attendance during the 1984-8S term. Avcraae daily attend- ance is relal.Cd to the number of students wbd enroll and the number of classes they ta.kc. Fred Garcia, dean of admissions, rccordsandguidanccatGolden West, said the Huntington Beach campus opened its semester today with 14,88S students -down 13 percent from the opening day total last fall. '"Of course it concerns us, bu1 it's not 1otaUy ll,Dexpected, .. Garcia said of the decline. "Sihcc the fall of 1982, enrollment has dropped every. semester at Golden West." He attribuled much of the loss to a decline in the number of 18-to-21- ycar-old residents in the coastal communities of Oranae County: He noted that many elementary schools 1n the area have been clolCd within 1he past 10 years because of declining enrollment. He said community col- leges arc now feeling the effect of this same declining youth population. Garcia said community college officials in Los Anaelcs and San DieJ.O counlies have observed a si li}dardeclinc !his semester. He said conimunity college enrollment tra- ~itionaJly drops when the economy improves. Garcia said telephone surveys have indicated the new tuition fee 1s not a siJltlficant reason for the enrollment dip at Golden West. At Orange Coast, described as the state's largest sin&le-campus com- munity college, tne openioa day enrollment was 19,413. Collcsc spokesman Jim Carnett said that figure is 21 percent below last faU's opening day enrollment of 24,662. .. I wouldn't sal,~ adminis-trat01'1) arc panic · but we are concerned because at's a major drop," Carnett said. One comfortina_trend, however: is that the average OCC student this till is enroUing in more classes than.Jut- fall. he said. This trend could help the Costa Mesa college's avera.ge daily attt'ttaan~et"fiiure and thus 1u fund- ina. MESA'S MOTTO ••• At Fountain Valley-based Coastline, which offers classes at 7S community locations, the openin& day enrollment was 10,406. College spokesman Jack Chappell said that's an 8 percent decline compared to o~nina day last fall. From Al changed but the seal remain un- (Ouched. '"This new motto can be added easily 10 our stationery when reorder- ing and will cause less confusion thao the total change," he said in a memo to the council. Meanwhile, the chamber, which adopted the new slogan about a year ago. is continuing to laud Costa Mesa as lhc "cultural center of Southern California." ··ti's time we were called 50mcthi.n1 else besides "Goat Hill,'" said Nate Reade. chamber executive manaaer. rcferrina to a nickname given the town before it was incorporated in 19~3. The uncomplimentary moniker has stuck with the city like a recurring ni&htmarc, refusing to fade under the .. Hub" motto. "We came up with that slogan to take advantage of the (nearby) harbor and advertise our boating trades, .. Reade said. But boat build in& has fallen off in Costa Mesa and the city now has more to boast about than its closeness to the barboi:. "With our big Pcrformina Arts Cent.er and oursym_phony, we are the culturaJ center of Southern Cali- fornia," Reade said. But Chappell noted that tra- ditionally, one-third of Coastline's students register in class durin1 the first two weeks of the semester. At Orange Coast and Golden West, open registration is continuina this week. Next week, studenta can enroll with the permission of the class instructor. All three colleges are offering additional classes that begin Sept. 10, for students unable to enroll this wC1tk because of summer vacation or JOb comm1ttmcnt's. BALLOT PROPOSITIONS DETAILED ..• From Al Other measures sure to catch the attention of voters before November include an initiative that would establish a state lottery that would benefit education and one, which has Gov. Dcukmejian's strona suppon. creating an independent commission to relive the Lqislatun: of the job of reapportionment The propositions, now numbered consecutively for 20 years, are: •Proposition !5, authorizing is- suance of SJ2S million in bonds to provide funds for water pollution control and water reclamation. •Pro~slllon ZI , authorizing a $450 million school building Jease- purchasc bond to provide for the construction or improvement of pub- lic schools around the state. •P roposition 17, authorizing is- suance of a SI 00 million hazardous substance cleanup bond. •Proposition ti, authorizina a S 7 5 million safe drinking-water bond to raise money for local water systems needing improvement to meet mini- mum drinking water standards. •Pro~ltton tt, authorizing a S6SO million bond issue to provide farm and home loans to California veterans. •Proposition 30, authorizing a $50 million bond issue to provide funds for the purchase, construction or renovation of senior citizen centers around the state. •P roposition 31 , a state consti1u- 1ional amendment that would provide an exception for new con- struction from propeny tax reassess- ment if the construction was for the Just Call 642-6086 - D=I I• Qu.rantMCI ........ , 'lllMY • '°"' 00 llOI ,...., "°"" oeotl' or ~fl_ll!cMl~7Dlft .... ,_ COPr' ... t.. -.. ,~-~II yOV • ""' ...... ,,,,.., ~ ., t a_lft • Qlll WOftl installation ofa fire sprinkler system or other fire detection system or fire- related improvement. •Proposition 3!, a state constitu- tional amendment permitting the Supreme Coun to review only pan s rather than all of certain appeals coun decisions it is considering. It would not apply in death penaJty cases. •Proposition 31, a constitutional amendment permitting disabled people to postpone par.in& ad valor- cm property taxes until the sale of a principal residence. •Proposition 34, a state constitu- tional amefldment creatina an ad· ditional exception on property tu revaluation in O"'\CS of historic struc- tures that are Cl,..ellinp occupied by ownen as principal residences. •Propc>tltlon 35, an initiative call- in& for the Legislature to trtnsmit a resolution to Conaress urging the convcnina of a constitutional con· vention to draft a balanced bud&et amendment to the U.S. Constitution, (Pending Supreme Coun review of the measure could affect its ballot status.) •Proposition JI, an initiative that would require additional property tax rebates to homeowners require a two-thirds vote for tax or fee increases and restructure other aovernmcnt funding mechanisms. Draftc.d by tax opponent Howard Jarvis and popu- larly referred to as Jarvis rv. •Proposition 37, a state constiW· 1ional amendment authorizing a state lottery, but not casinos, to benefit education. Loucry officials would be required to put SO percent of all proceeds inlo prizes, f6 percenl for expenses and at least 34 percent would be set aside for educational fundina for kindergarten through I.he university level. •Propo1IUon 31, an initiative rc- quirin& the governor to write the president and U.S. Attorney General urJing federal law be amendc.d to exclude languagt::s other than English from being used on ballots or other election material. •Proposition SI, a state constitu- tional amendment creating a com- mission of eight former appeals coun justices to draw state Senate and Assembly as well as congressional and equalization district boundary lines in reapportionment years. 'Fhe plan subm1ned by I.he commission would be subject to Supreme Coun review and a voten' referendum. •Proposltlon 48, an initiative limitini campaip contributions and expenditures to candidates for state elective office. Individual contribu· lions would be limited to Sl,000 per candidate with a SJ0,000 max.imum to all candidates. Some public fund- ing would be provided to candidates to match personal expenditures by opposition candidates. •Propo1lU011 41 an initiative creating a state wcltare commission to compute the state's per capita assistance costs for pubhc aid and medical assistance programs. Pt)'· ments, for such proarams as Medi- Cal and aid to families with dcpcn· dent children, would belimited to the average national eJtpenditurc, exclud- ing California. plus 10 percent. Wbat do you like about tile Dally Piiot? Wtaat don't you like? Call tilt number at left and your me111.1e will be rtcQrded, tr1n1crlbtd and delivered to the appropriate editor. Tiie same tf.ffar an1werl•1 nrvlct may be 11ed to record letten to the editor on any topic. ContrlbatOrt to oar Le1ter1 cohamo mast Include their name and telepb1;1ne a•mber for verification. No clrculallo1 calls, pleatt. Tell as wUt's OD your nthld. • Clrculetlon 714/M2...Q3.a ORANGECO~l Daily Pilat CIHtlflld ICIH<llllnt 7WIU..fl11 All othlf dlpofimonll IU-1 MAIN OFFICE JJO w.ti -.,. 11 0.. IMlll e" '-1111"°41-loo IMO COel1 ""-CA l2UI H. L. 8chwert1 Ill ~f9U ~e-i ,....... °"'""""" "'°' Pllbttsher ---··If-............... ~ ~ ,_,_ .,_,. Cit ~ ""'*" "*"'91 W • """"'°" .. ~ - 10 ."' ...... JOlr coo, ... ·-RoHmary Churc hm1n llcOllO CttM ~· Plllll at Cm!• MfM ~ tuPI l"-'001 .. bl IOIO• t1'1' '*"" .. 71 ""*"'"" ~ INf 11 IO~ Controller Clrcllletlon Ttot~~ Wlf!IWl1C11•co1161tWTN°t T•l•pttone• , .... "':t•........., tl'I' !'-Or.,...cwi~ 8tephon F. Ceruo Donald L.. Wllllemo ~ ,.,.. d-= ::;::,. llW -~~•IOIONI •Pidltlld NrOl)'t =~ ...... Production Circu11t1on """ "'~~--····-..., ..... 0 loo' ea.i ....... Ctlb .... ~ ---Manager Manager VOL. n 0 NO. zaa -~---. I . . I ~ I t.. . '" --• . Fair skies and continued hot .--.. .. TM F-t8 p111. EDT,T....,,)ugull21 ._ .. " ~toll " " .. :: Coutal ·-~ Tide• TOOAY _,..,,, •:JO P rn. .. Temp• SuR r REPORT -------_,,.. ~.\la. -°"' = --,. ........ -::=r .. """"'·°' '•O•ld•IDI =°"' ----· ....... Sl.._,.T....,. 1M Lek• Cll)o ........... ... _ S-Fr~ ltn JuM,P.!t 8t IM Mwlt ... o .. ::::~= ::;*.:: ·-· ·~ , .... WlilNnglOll -· 'Mii ..... ,. _ ... .... 04 04 "' ,_, ,.. ~' 24 ,. .. .. .. .. .. " ,, .. " " .. " .. .. .. " .. " " .. .. " " .. " ll " " .. .. " " .. .. .. .. .. " " .. .. .. .. " .. "" " " " " .. " " " .. " .. 001 tl .. .. " .. .. .. " .. .. .. .. " .. .. .. " " .. " .. _..,,.. .. "" -"" -:::: DfllfNlt,........, ............. • Newport Beach firefighter en ten bnrnlnl Min ate Kina mar II: et In Newpcjrt Beach. One-MinuteKingro bbed,_ another burns in Newport Sunday wasn't a good day for the small Minute King chain. Two of its convenience markets in Newport Beach were struck by bad circumstances Sunday when one was robbed and the other burned down in a spectacular $70.000 blaze. ln OranJC County, Minute Kina has a store 10 Costa Mesa on Ncwpon Boulevard in addition to the two stores in Newpon Beach, The robbery occurred at 2 a.m. Sunday at the Minute King on 3S30 Irvine Ave. as a clerk was closing the store. Newport Beach police reported the clerk had just locked the front door when a suspect who had been hiding in the store approachc.d him from a comer of the store. The robber was wearina a nylon stocking on his head and simulatina a weapon under his jacket. The man walked up to the counter and told the clerk he would blow his brains o ut ifhedidn't turn over all the money in the cash register. The clerk complied, givina the man S3SS in cash. The robber fled out a back door, police said. He was described as white, in his 20s, 5·10, wei&h-ina I SS pounds with blond hair and a mustache. The second Minute Kina incident occurred al about 10:40 p.m. Sunday when a fire of unknown ori&in sparked tht' store on I S26 Placentia Ave. into flames. There were no injuries in the blaze, a Newport Beach Fire Department spokeswoman said, but the store was gutted. The fii:c, which took about 33 minutes to control, caused S20,000 worth of d.ami&e to the structu.rc of the store and s~.ooo damqe to the contents. Three engine companies and two Newpon Beach truck com· panies responded to the scene, the spokeswoman said. The cause of the fire is stiU under investigation, she added. Murdered woman's parents learn night~are isn't over By lhe A11oc:lated Pre11 Vera Scott says she wants the ni&hunarish phone calls from the man she believes killed her daua,hter to stop. Even more, she wants the caller captured and punished. "He tOok a life that loved life. I feel 1n myhcan that hedctervcssomesort of punishment," the Santa Ana woman said. For four years. she said, she and her husband Jacob were "tonurcd .. by caUs ftom • mao cltimina he killed theirdaua,ht.er, Dorothy, 32. For three months, there were no calls, but af\er her remains were identified last week, t,he calls tqan qain. They believe the caller is the same who harassed their daughter nths before she vanished in 980. • ro:non or mo rothy aot one call just before stppcl;red that upset her hor- Mn. Scott said. . M~r,:; she di ribl~" .. h e voice 11id. 'OK. now, you are ocomemy•·ayand when 1 &el ne11 will cut )'OU ueintObiUIO wi I ever find you, Mn. Scott aolna t youalo no one 11id Las ~set of bones uncanhcd ~;"6~'1 •i rt mote cons1ructlon u jdcntificdas 1hosc ofDcnothy Hfir-fu is tcheduled for. .,.Uy. on Au sitcw Scott Wedn ~ks after her dluahter Two ppa , Mn. Scott receivea the II m a man who said. "Att atcd 10 Dorothy Scott? Wt.11. di.II fint ca Lb •• . zo· ,., 've.ao I - The Caller's knowledge "of things no one else could have known, like what color her scarf was and where she was and what she was doing," convinced Mn. Scott that she was speakina to her daughter's kidnapper. "She was m y love," a man 11id shonly afterward in a telephone call to an Orange Count)' newspaper in Santa. Ana. '"l cauaht her cheatln& with another man .... I killed her:• OBITUAR IES .. For four years, (the caller) has tonurcd us," Mn. Scott said. The cou~le didn"t chanac their number, hoping that if the man had their daughter, he would allow her to speak to them. - The calls stopped 1bout three months aao. when Jacob Scott answered the phone for the first time. But they bqan again last week after reports the djscovery of the bones. / Mesa's Leonard McDonald succumbs to cancer at 31 Memorial servica for Jt-year~ld Leonard Roy McDonald. who died last week af\cr1 a battle witb C1.11ccr. are tcheduled at 10 a.m. Saturday in OitTDrive Pait, Newpon Beac~. Mr. McDonald., who lived in Cotta Mesa.wua11rtt1._employed by the city of Newport Beach for five ~rs. He worked on Balboaand Udo 1slarld , ac:conlinttoJobn Frttman, a friend of the family. _Mr.McDonald Ul.bol'll.in liuln Pomona and vad1111ed from Upland Hiah School m 1971. He pad1111ed from CbatTey eon ... in 197 J. Fretman uid Mr. McDonald waJ active In sporu and loved to attend bloeboll ond ...football es. Ho '"• I 1wfed and was a speciaf fan of the ae.cl>Boys, A private burial at aea wiJJ take pl.Ice Wednesday, Flffman said. The family requested donations be made to 1 f\Jnd established for McDonald'• widow and his youn1 famil)'. Donations should be 1tnt to: The Frttman Truat, c/o John Fretman, 2SJO Sea View, Corona dtl M.ar, 9262l. M~McOonaldiL.1.uwrv""l'iYUed"-lb)l))Cl..._ __ -lcl wilt Xiftn1 ..-hOls C.lpectin1 another child.and hl1 IOn, Michael, of Costa Mesa: his parenL&i Mr. and Mrs. Richard McDonald, of Alta Loma· and hiis.i tcr, Carolyn WhlteofCos~ Mesa.