HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-08-21 - Orange Coast PilotCDlll 1111181
---TUESDAY, AUGUST 21 , 1984 O~<ANG ECOUNIV L ALl~U HNIA :?5 CEN'TS
Amusement parka,
stunned by low attenet-
ance durln9, Olympics,
doubt they II recover, de-
spite healthy turnout In
recent days./ A3
Convicted murderer Dr.
Jeffry MacDonald has
sued the author of a book
about the bizarre death of
his family./ A3
California .
Hollywood actors portray
Reagan as bumbling sex-
ist In 'respectful' Dallas
play that's drawing hun-
dreds of Republican del-
egates./ ~7
Nation
Some Republican
leaders are quietly hinting
Mondale might have to
dump Ferraro in the wake
f-her tax flap./ A8
Oemocn~t Jeane
KirkpalrTck, a l>emocra ,
delivers a scathing
speeoh against her owrr-
party' s foreign policy at
Republican convention In
Dallas./A7
World
American IRA sym-
pathizer who eluded Brit-
ish police In Northern
Ireland, resurfaces In
Dublin./ Al
The widow of ousted Sov-
iet leader Nikita
Khrushchev Is dead./ Al
What are the maJn
sources of Indoor a!r pol-
lution? Some answers
may surprlse./81
oo many wafer sports
too much shampooing
can lead to Infectious
"swlmmer'sear."/81
Sports
UCtrvlne assistant
basketball coach Herb
Livsey Introduced Ant-
eater-style play to
coaches In Malaysla./C1
Cad.Lewis captures the
100 In an International
meet In Budapest, Hun-
gary. /C1
Wiii the Chicago Cubs be
forced to erect lights at
Wrlgley Field for the play-
offs? /C3
Entertainment
The stage version of the
hit movie "Stalag 17" ls
heavy on Intensity at
Golden West College./83
Buaineu
New tax laws represent a
trip le threat to travel and
entertainment deduc-
tions .JM
INDEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Butlneu
Catlfornla Newt
Cluslfled
Comle1
Cronword
Death Notlcel
Help Yourself
HorOtCOpe
Ann Landeft
Mind and Body
Mutual Funds
National Newt
Opinion
p atml
P:flce L~ .. ------Publlc Notices
Sport• Stock M rket1
TMVI on Theatn
Weather
Wottd~ ..
'
82
C8
A3
84-5
A6
CS-7
C8
C7
C4
82 cs
82
81·2
85
A6
• A8
81 A3 c ..
C1·4
86
82
83
A2
A6
Botel-()ffice projectOK'd
€ounctl in marathon stx-houi-hearing
as resi~ents fight high-rise plan
By TONY SAAVEDRA .
Of .. 0.-, .........
A controversial $SOO million plan
for a hotel and a high-rise office park
in north Costa Mesa was aiven the
green light early this momina after
more than six hours of presentations
and impa ioncd testimon) before
the City Council.
The marathon public hcanna.
"hsch began around 7:30 p.m. Mon·
day. ended just before 2 a.m. today .
with the council unanimously votinJ
to cfutnge the City's ncraf plan and
lOnmg to ccommodate the lavish
• PrQ t proposed by Amel Develo~
mentCo.
..Wh t can I say?" id Ma}or
Doon Hall to the residerit.s who
plcaC:ted impa 1onately for the coun-
cil to reject the proJcct because of its
apparent threat to their home hfe.
More than 100 J>tOplc. mostly
members of tm {Or:th. Costa csa
Homeov.-ners Auoaauon. filled the
council cbambcn for the hcann_g.
Many remained in the early monung
hours as. Hall noted I.hat Com 4csa
could not afford to pass up lhc
projected $2 million a )-ear rn city
re\cnucs wt would be scncratcd
from the de\ elopmcnt -monq lhat
could be used to uPlmde detenorat·
sngsttcetsand flood control channel
I Indians
claim
Orange
Coast
'"'Rival tribes battle
over territorial
sites on coastline
BJ STEVE MABBLE
Of .. Dllr .......
A sroup of Indians is cxpcded to
pt.her at the Bolsa Chica wetlands
Frid.a,r. where a tribal leader will
sanctify the sround, symbolically
closin& it to devtJopen who have
fought for years to build on the
marshy acreage.
The ceremony is part of a con-
tinued effort on the part of an lnd.iu
leader to gel develo~ and state
authorities to recognize his tnbe as
baviaga lcplclaim to burial srounds
and other historic sites on the Oranae
Coast. .. we·n be sanctif)in' the manhcs.
the beaches, the worb. •• said Jim
V eJasq~.., ho purpons to be \be la.st . Dllr,...,......,..._......., Gabriclino tnbe member who still Jim Veluquea (left) addreaea Gabriell.no Indiana du.rlng Tartle Roell aancttncatlon ceremony IJl ll"YIJle. (Pleue eee DmlA!l9/ A2)
MacDonald w11:nts judge
to take himself·off case
Ex-Huntington Harbor physician complains
jurist's relative was on prosecution.team
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Dr.
Jeffrey MacDonald's lawyer today
asked U.S. District Court Judge
Franklin Dupree to remove himself
from the former Hunungton Harbour
physician's murder case because the
Judge's relative worked for Mac-
Donald's former prosecutor. Dupree
refused to wtthdraw.
Dupree has prcssd(d over the case
since 1975. MacDonald 1s a former
Army captain convicted in 1979 of
slaying his pregnant wife and two
youn1 dau~ters at their Fort Bragg
apartment 10 1970
MacDonald 1s seeking a new trial.
In Raleigh, attorney Wade Smith
argued that Dupree shouldn't deal
further with case because his former
son-in-law was a member of the U.S.
attorney's staff when 11 investigated
1hc case sn the early 1970s.
Smith sas~ he and other defense
lawyers were aware that James Proc-
tor had been Dupree's son-in-law
from .December 1960 until July 1972.
But Smith said durt ... onl} recently did
he learn that Proctor strongly ad-
vocated prosecuting \\iacDOnald
while a member of the U.~. attorney's
staff
Smith said Proctor's interest in the
case "was enormous." He added that
Proctor at one ume had a shouting
match with former MacDonald at-
torney Bernard Segal while the Army
was mvestsgatmg the case.
Dupree said he would not
withdraw himself from the case. ··r have made a thoroua.h stud>." he
told Smith. "I just don't believe that
m 'sew of these circumstances which
have been brought to h&ht by your
tr1vestsgat1on that my 1mpartia!ity-in
this case could be reasonably ques-
uoned."
He also said he was staysn~h the
case "with some reluctance use I
don't belie~e I've ever had a case that
caused me mort concern " He S&Jd
his J)trsonal preference would be to
relinquish the case but said he was
··duty-bound" to keep it.
Justice Ocpanmcnt lawyer Bnan
Murtagh had asked Dupree to deny
Smith's motion
Munagh said there was no
e\'1dence that the Judge had been
biased at any time before or dunng
the tnal He added that the defense
should have naised the issue earlier if
it was 1mponant.
Murtagh also said that Proctor had
no success m ocrsuadina. his supcnors
(Pleue .ee MACDONALD/ A2)
Gunmen rob NB restaurant
of $7J,OOO, bind manager
By llAREN E. ltLEIN
Of ... o.-,,... sun
Three armed men robbed a Coco's
Restaurant at 2131 Westcliff Onve sn
Newpon Beach early this morning..
bound and gagged the restaurant's
assistant manager and stoic up to
$7,000 in cash. police said.
The incident occurred about I :45
a.m. when the assistant manager.
Bnan Rowe. 23, of Orange was
clo in.a up the restaurant. according
to a Newport Beach police spokes·
man.
Rowe was approached at the rear of
the Coco's by two men. one carryma o
sawed-off shotgun and the other
brandishing a rt\ oh er.
The men were both described as
'\lcgro, 6-2 and in their m1d ... 2Qs. Both
men \I.ere \I.Caring Jlo,es and had
pulled n)'lon stockings O\er their
heads. the pokesman said.
The pair forced Rowe to reopen the
restaurant and tool him to an inssdc
office. whert the) ordered him to
open the s.afe. .
A 1h1rd suspect. also calT)mg a
small revolver. JOined the men. The
third suspect was dcscnbcd a a
Caucasian. about sn feet tall. weanng
i.lo\CS and a nylon pulled o-.cr his
head. accordsna to police report~.
The trio took Rowe into a storage
room. bound his hands with an apron
Not all downtown
Mesa merchants
ha13~y witb. change
and gagged him with a doth napkin.
The\ left him on &he floor of the
toragc room while the~ apparent!)
cleaned out the ~fe. the spolcsm.an
'ltd.
Ro\l.c strugled for about 15
mmutcs until he was able 10 free his
hands and called police. The men h d
apparently escaped out a back door.
police said
The lo was estimated at ~me
whert bctwcenS6.000andS7.000, the
poke man said. Just three wcel
pnor to this momsna's robbery. Rowe
had been robbed while clo ma
another Coco's, tht rcpon said.
An '"'e tiption into the incident
conunu1na.
KAREN
Ku1N
NEWS F OLLOWUP
....,,....,._.... ..............
Patt Ta.aibolleo bu donated her OIJ1Dpic torch to H11Dt-
lneton Beach.
Olympic keepsake
given to I-Juntington
' •
•
DOWNTOWN MESA REDEVELOPME1'T •. .-ro Al More fair weather for Coast
lX\clopment Corp , the firm admm·
1sttri ttdc\ clopment pr ms an a
1.200. ere tion of do\\ntown n
Oil" o,
All htr cxprnence and knowll'<lge
hu aone into revitalit1na the 1&in1 do~ntown cction of Costa ks.a -
not alway! to ever) one's hkin
rhe theory behind redevelopment,
Wh1. en nd id. i~ to circumvent the
natural n:al e11tutc cycle\ of cities ~nnina to decav.
"Our do~ntown area i~ declm•nf.
Most ofit i 40 or SO )ta~ old and it s
&gin& and de1enoratcd ... Whisenand
said. B~au~ of the high C'Ost of
developed land, the stumblina blocks
and the cost of cqu1rin1 buildings
that then ha' c to be demolished. she
said. the pnvatc SC'<"tor is often hard· pres~ to rtvitalize a declining area
without a boost from the pubhC' sector.
The proce~s of redevelopment an·
eludes absor~ing land into thr public
. s«tor. prtparing it for dc"elopment
• and then sellina it to dc"rlopers who
can re' italizc the area. Whisenand
said. The communit) benefits from
increased commcrtt. more jobs and
ulumatel) h11hcr propcrty values and
increased rcvcnur from sales and
property tax
Coaa~
Eztended
Temps
~
Miami
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1$ " WICMAI
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to .. Will!llllO\on,O.
SURF REPORT
---------- ---
LOCAT'IOM
Hunllnglon ~
River Jtuy, ~· 40th StrMI, Ne;o,pon Und 8trwt. Newport
Btlt>oa weog.
Laguna 8eech aan ClllMnt•
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In the ca~ of downtown Costa
Mesa redevelopment, Pacific Federal
Savin15 and Loan has become a
private sector '"partner·• for the city's
redevelopment agenC). Pacific Feder·
al built what man) cit) officials see as
the crown Je~el of the downtown area
-the d1 sunct1 \.e, Spanish--slyle Pa·
c1fic Federal Plaza building at New·
port Boulevard and 19th Street.
The latest rede\.elopment prOJect.
called the Courtyards. has been
proposed b) Pacific Federal for a
nearb} 1 l·acre Sile bordered by 19th
Street. Harbor and Newpo rt
boulevards and Par!. A venue.
Health Care Agency director quits
The S 18 million development as
planned as a 172.300-square·foot,
one and two-stof) retail center.
Shopping. dining and leisure uses.
including a health club, are to be
included in the mamly outdoor
center
The downtown pro1ect will mean
30 business ownerships have been or
will be condemned and demolished
over the a four-year time span in the
S"O-Callcd Superblock area. Wh1s·
enand sa1d
The first and only director of °""',....,...._,y.,.,uc-·Orange County's two-year-old Health
SomeofthemaficwUlbe•onelndowntown..Cat1taMeaa. Care Agency submitted bis rcsig·
nation Monday, effective in Januat)
"Over there, people used to go into 1985. store, which has 3,000 ma&JC and
novelty 1t~ms m stock, for nine years,
he said. He also owns a shop in
Hollywood.
"I hve in Corona del Mar. and I
wanted to retire m a couple of years
and keep the store here for something
to do," St. Pierre said. But now. he
said. he doesn't know what to do.
"I don't think there's anyplace I can
(relocate) m Costa Mesa." he said.
"I'm nospnngch1cken." he added. "I
can't move again."
the post office outlet or buy an Ice, ~ Dr. Charles Kerns, a 36-ycar-old
cream cone at Baskin Robbins and clinical psycholo&JSl, pve no reason
walk around the shops.·· for his decision to leave county
Shirley Monon. who has owned government in the letter he delivered
George's Steaks and Ho{lgjes for five to board offices. But Kerns recently
years, said her new location behind has been repeatedly sinJled out for
the Mesa Theater was "a last resort. criticism by both supervisors and the
"I don't think anyone's doing very arandjury.
good now. No one .. s happy," she said. Su~rv1sors have been critical of "~fter 13 years in Costa Mesa, I Kt"T'T'I -A<1mini~tratinn nf th~ ::igency
didn't want to move to a new city, but
now I wish I had."
CONTINUED STORIE S
and the documentation he submitted
to baclc up agenc)' program proposals
during. budget heanngs last week.
In fact, Kerns was onty one of two
agency top agency directors passed
over by supervisors when pay raises
were handed out last month, an
indication the board was displease<t
with· his performance. He earns
$60,840 a year.
The grand jury called for Kern's
dismissal after revicwina his aaency's
handling of inmate medical care at
the Orange County Jail, a program
still troubled by staff discontent and
lugh personnel turnover.
ihe Health Care Aacncy. created in
I 982, 1s charged with admtnistering
the county's public and mental health
programs. including drug and alcohol
services, ep1dem1ology. environmen-
tal health, animal control, em~raency
medical services, indigent medical
services and communicable disease
control.
Kerns. who first was hired by the
county in 1976 as a clinical psycho!·
ogjst. has been absent from bis post
for close to two weeks wit.h a kidney
ailment.
Beside. he said. he d~sn't sec an)
relocation poss1b1ht1es an his pnce
range locally. "Where are they gonna
put me Huntington Beach'>" he said.
Even Lee Clark., part owner of
Anuqucsofthc World. said he 1s sorry
he had to move ... I would sooner have
stayed where we were," Oark said.
despite his spacious and attractive
nc"" site on Warner A"enuc in
Huntington Beach.
INDIANS CLAIM.ORANGE COAST •.•
The Costa Mesa location has been
perfect, he added. espcctally sin~
Magic Island. a pnvate club. opened
in Balboa. "They have five to seven
magictans workJng thCf'e e\.C~f)
night." he said. "Magjaanscome out
from New York and they work there
for two ~eeks. The first thing ma-
gicians do when they're out of town 1s
to go to a magic shop -they look for
new tricks. the latest fads ...
As for relocation into the
Courtyards proJect. St. Pierre said he
is not optimistic.
------"There's a new shopping center
going in. The Superblock, they call at.
But there's three times the rent that g~s along with it." he said.
Marilyn Whbenand
One of those properties belongs to
Louis St Pierre. owner of the Holly·
\ltood Ma8JC Shop on Newport
Boulevard St Pierre's property has
not )Cl been acquired by the re·
development agency. but 1t is among
th ose targeted for demolition.
.. The) '\e alrcad) voted on taking 1t
{h1!> property)" St Pierre said. "The\
call 11 blighted. Can you imagine? 17
years old and it's blishted propen) ·•
St Pierre's shop as one of only a
ha ndful of magic shops an Orange
C ount) -and possibly the only one
of at<; kind in the Orange Coast area.
He ha\ owned the Costa Mesa
Correction
Dut• to 1nC'um:c1 info rmation su p-
plied to the Dail~ Pilot. the com pan}
that chancrcd the ''Resoluuon·· for
Su nd a) ·., Charactl'r Boat Parade in
Ne~port Harbor Y.a<; an correctl}
listed
Ka thkena t hancr~ ~as the com-
~hal l hartcred the ··Resolution ·
and-~\in 1hc ( ru ttendcn Cup a~ard
for lhl·nu C\lrt"me" 1n Sunda) s
parade fhe Dall) Pilot regret'> the
error.
St. Pierre said he has been de-
pressed and upset since he heard he
would have to move out. "It's
incredible to me that they can take
your property away and tum around
and sell 1t to a developer. If 1t was a
frecwa ) coming through . maybe I'd
understand. But Just to wipe tt out so
that a developer can put an a shopping
center .. " he paused, a baffled note in
his voice
"The} 're taking m) business away
from me. I've re.ally been down and
disappointed I though everything
was going swell. then this.''
Whisenand said owners and ten·
ants arc almost always upset by the
redevelopment agency's actions. By
the end of the process, however. she
said most propeny own~rs f~cl the)
have been fairl y compensated·
An informal survey of business
owners who were relocated b> the
agen cy because of the Superblock
development showed that most own·
ers thought 1hc) ha<J been com·
pensatcd fairl\. but most also felt
their businesses ~ere sufTenna and
~rre bitter about the move
"I got ki cked out of the Superblock
area." said Claire Brockett owner of
the Dutch Boy Paint store on Harbor
Boulevard .. h 's just not the same
here ... he said
I!' en though Brockett relocated
onl) a shon d1stancr from whrrc his
store had been. he said hi business
has suffered.
··1c~ much slo~er here," he said
"We had an established situation
there that ~e don't ha"e here. But
progress is progress, I guess," he said.
Redevelopment. and the concept
of buying and then sethng proPtn)
for what the aaency sees as the ~reatcr
good of the ci ty. is admmcdly
"difficult for people to accept:•
Whisenand said. "Especially in small
businesses. tenants find rents costl}
and some are there on a shoestnna tn
the first place."
Whisenand acknowled~ed that
there are some "casualne-s" con-
nected with redevelopment.
"We can't help everyonr. We have
a broader public purpose -hkc a
freeway. There's a price to be paid 10
individual needs for the public good, ..
she said.
Not all the downtown Costa Mesa
merchants arc unhapp) with the
rede\Clopment efforts. J .C
Hum phrics. whose Newport
Boulevard Jewesf) store. opened 38
years ago. may be the oldest existing
retail store m Costa Mesa. said he
thinks the ne~ center will be a good
thing.
"It's going to be a nice center and
1t'!\ somrthing the y've been .PJanrung
for a long ume." H umphncs said. H 1s
propeny as under cons1dcrauon for
city acqu1s1t1on. he said.
"There's kind of a cloud over you
until you know whether or not they're
going to take the property. It is quite
frustrating ... he said .
Humphries said he understands
thr relocated merchants' unhappi·
ness over being moved out "Most of
them ha ve been here a long tame." he
said.
A.nd fo r those whose stores will
remain. there are worries about traffic
c1rculat1on in the ne"° center and
parking. "We don't want to get shut
out." he said.
The ne"° center will not mean the
end of do"'ntown Costa Mesa as it has
been kno"n for so man> years.
Wh1~nand assured.
"The (Newport Boulevard) cast·
side frontage property will rem11n. A
certain pan 1s to be made available for
non-franchise. single operator bust·
ne~ses There 1s room for both the old
and the nc\\ ·
Just Call
642-6086
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Delly Piiot
o.tlvwy
11 QuarentMd
MOf'Clji, r ~ " '°' ...... ytu ,,__ !Pr
& " ot!0'•711"' ..._, '°"' coc;; -De ~
S.l#Clrl •l'IO Bunoar " YC1M 00 '10! •IC*... yCV
COPJ by 7 • m f Nliw
tO • '°"' oriy ,.
Tell u1 wb11'1 oa your ml d.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
H. L. Schwutz Ill
Pubh.sher
RoHmary Churchman
Cortr .J er
Stephen F. Cerezo
Production
Manager
Donald L. WllU1m1
C1rcula1ton
Mena
1
From Al
subscribes to trad1t1onal beliefs.
"You can't put a shovel to the
ground after that (the sanctifying of
the ground) ... he vowed.
Wayne Clark. a spokeiman for
Signal landmark, said he 1s in the
dark on the planned ceremony but
acknowlcgcd that the development
firm. by law. is obligated to consult an
archeologist or Nauvc Amencan
expert before grading property that
contains burial sites and historic
relics.
Velasques ~rformed a similar
ceremony at Turtle Rock in Irvine
Sunday by sprinkling the rock forma·
lion with seawater and spreading kelp
at its base before proclaiming 1t
sacred ground.
He said the Irvine Co. has agreed to
build a fence around the rock to keep
out trespassers. A company spokes·
man, however. said the huge rock is
being preserved simply because "it's
unique."
The Gabnchnos arc locked in a
feud wtth a nval Indian tnbe over
who has a territorial claim to the
Orange Coast, which is nch as burial
sites and other areas of cultural
1mportan.ce.
Velasques said he wants skeletal
remains and rehcs to be removed
from their resting spots at develop-
ment sites and then placed at a bunal
site. He believes developers should
pool their money to purchase land for
such a burial ground.
l he ci1spute between tnc
Gabriehnos and the Juaneno tnbes
has placed the Irvine Co. and Signal
Landmark m an touchy position
beausc both reportedly have at least
anformaJly discussed using a Juaneno
representative as a consultant.
The Irvine Co. had planned to
consult a Juaneno tnbal member bn
an office project near UC Irvine
where 1t is known that at least two
Indian bunal sites are located. Velas·
--!'fUCS now has asked the company to
•get the Juanenos out of our tern·
tory."
Velasques said he has made the
same request of Signal Landmark,
which owns much of the Bolsa Chica
marshlands
"Trutt land at Bolsa Chia is sacred
to me, and Signal Landmark wants to
hire a person who can't tell the
difference between a banana and a
pineapple," said Velasques.
"The Juanenos have been tnck-<>r·
treating on our territory and it's going
to stop now." he vowed "This 1s a
very serious situation, and 1t's goina
to get a lot worse before 1t gets any better.
A spokesperson for the Juanenos
could not be reached for comment,
but a representative of the California
Native Amencan H1stonc Com-
mission said Velasques is ovcrstatmg
the problem.
"There are about 300 Gabnelinos
that we know of, and we have no
JlmVeluqua
indication ;hat they've selected Mr.
Vela~ues as their representative or
chief,· said LoreJta Allan, a com·
mission spokeswoman. "And even if
they have. I can't do what he wants
me to do.
..He-wants me to proclaim this
Gabnelino temtory and I don't have
the legal authoritity to do that. Even
the President of the United States
can't do that.
"This is one of those things these
two tribes arc going to have to settle
themselves." she added.
HIGH-RISE COMPLEX OK'D IN MESA .•• Prom Al
president of the north Costa Mesa
association.
Developers have wrestled for more
than a decade with nonhsade res1·
dents over vanous proJCCts proposed
for the troublesome 50.acrc parcel
bordered by the San Diego Freeway.
Bear Street and San Leandro Lane.
The latest concept proposed by.the
Amel Co. and co.partner Gco11e
A11yro calls for a 16--floor hotel, sax
hi&J'l·risc office buildings and 300
apanments.
Act1n1 on a recommendation from
the Planning Commission, the coun·
c1I this momina accepted an en·
v1ronmental impact rtPort on the
project, which nearly doubles the
residential density allowed at the site,
and chan~ the zonina to provide for
commercial development.
The land was formerly earmarked
for low and mcd1um~cnsity rc~idcn·
tial use.
Each phuc of the new conmuc-
tion, tstimatcd to take up to IS years,
muat be approved by lhccitt. ''Atany
point alona the hne. the prOJttt could
be topped."' 11id Hall.
A st1pulat1on was added by the
council that eight floo~. about
160.000 square feet, be removed from
amona the last three htgh·nsc build·
1ngs planned for the project.
The action provoked a slight moan
from Amel consultant Dave Ball.
who estimated the company would
lose around SS mlllion a year in grou
revenue from office rentals because of
the cutback.
Ball. however. was not the only one
complaining
Homeowners in the Grecnbrook
residential tract abutting the Amel
proJeCt testified for several hours that
the development, de pile lush land·
scapina and other amenitie , would
brinaadelu coflrnfficandukyfulof
smoa to their community.
They also complained that the
htJh·nsc towers would invade their
pnvacy Furthermore, the 10 to IS·
year t1me tehcdule for constnictton
would subject residents to exec 1ve
dun and other nuisances associated ~ith buildmJ.
.. (The proJttt) looks nice on lide$.
It looks ircat on paper ... but 1t'
temble, temblc when you place 1t
next to homes (zoned for sin&Je·
family residences)," said Jon Paradis,
president of the homcownersusocia·
tion "The people here arc the most
important asset. None of us want to
Stt a councll with cash rcg.i_ster eyes."
· Homeowner Aoyd added:"The
homeowner had not planned on
buyin& land in a metropolis. We will
be over5hadowed by 1111e towers of
people staring down at us, entering
our lives uninvited."
Five cnginecnflg, traffic, architec·
tural and landscaping consultants
made an hourlona presentation on
the benefits of the proJect how the
arottocs. lush veaetation and other
amenities would make the project .. a
good nciahbor."
The commercial buildinp wouJd
be buffered from homes by 11 acres or
apartments and by South Coast
Drive, which would be rcalianro
down throuah the de"elopmcnt.
OLYMPIC KEEPSAKE •••
Robert Braunscbweiaer. an
architectural consultant. said th
esthetics of the proposed complc1
-.ould give pa sersby "a nse of
arrival. a sense of'hcrc ~care, this LS Co ta Mesa•··
Prom Al
home arta.
lkr ph1ht WU the SUb)ttt of looil
and rqional nev.s mcd1 coverage.
and a Mahbu man traded Tamboll h1~ <;>ran1c County kilomrtcr for the
one 1n din
On Jul 26. Tambolleo camcu the
torch 1n anta Ana bcfort chC'enn
r11.m1bJ]tcmbcri.;ind upportc~ Like
other rcla>· part1c11"3nt"· he
allowed tn kl"Cfl her torrh
I
ln an antrn iew llSt v.cd;, T m·
bollco id ~h had no dcquatc pl cc
10 di\pla> the torch in her home and
dmdtd1o hareJt Wl~c:rommum
t) b) donating 11 tot , city hhntf).
MACDONALD Prom Al
utc hcOon1fd an the
t Monda\ nip ' tl)' Council
mcmn . 1ct1n1 Ma) or John Thum•
am:pted the torch. )tn ••1t•s 1
reilll) nt\:C l for 1h 'll\i-10 h ve .... ··-=
In rttum, i homu pr\ ntl"ll l
bollco "'•th ._r to 1hr cit).
.,
--
BULL£ TIN BOAR D
Course in CPR
to begin today
The staff or HQ&& Ho pilal will teach a course in
C'ardio-pulmon ry Resuscitation (CPR) today and
Wednesday, fro~ 6 to t 0 p.m. at Jrvine High School, 4601 Walnut Ave., Irvine.
The "°'' is SI 0 per person to become proficient in mte~ncy CPR treatment. To reguter, call 660-3881 and uk for Class No. 401 .
_ Attendees are to meet at the flagpole in frant of the b11h «hoot at S:4S p.m.
Ro~ ·~1iu1 Rodeo' Srmdlly
The Rotary Oub of Dana Point is spon'°rina a chili cook-off with the theme "Chili Rodeo" on Sunday, Aua.
26, on the arounds of the <>ranee County Marine Institute at Dana Point Harbor.
, Contestant• will set up at 8:30 a.m .. with judgjna 10 take place at J p.m. Cash prizes as welt as trophies will bC awarded.
The public may purchase "laSter's ticket1 .. for SI O
from any Dana Point Rotary Oub member. Chili hot
dop and beveraaes will be available. '
· For more inf onnation and registration, call 661-1181:
Brea•t cancer dl8Cauloa set
Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian is presenting a
seminar on "Winnina the Battle Against Breast Cancer"
on Monday, Aug. 27, from 7 to 9 p.m. in Hoag COnfcrcnce Center.
Advances in the early diagnosis and treatment of
breast cancer will be discussed by a panel of specialists.
There is no admission charae but seating is limited. For more infonnation, call 760-5923.
Bumeu 11emlnar annoaaced
Anhur Groos, president of the Orange C.Ounty
SCORE/ ACE Chapter, announced that a business
semtnar will be l'leld on Monday, Aug; 27, from 8:4S 1-m.
to 4 p.m. at California Federal Savings & Loan. 1802 N.
Main St, Friendship Room, Sinta Ana.
Groos urges those people thinking of swtina a
business or who recently established a business to attend.
Topics to be discussed by the speakers will be: Personnel
problems, site location, borrowing money, record keep-
ina. increasing sales through advertising and promotion, Pw-.:;;;;;;::;.: and leaaJ procedures.
The seminar is free but there will be a donation of $5
for materials and coffee breaks. For more information or
reservation. call SCORE at 836-2709.
MembenlJlp coffee scheduled
The Huntington Beach Branch of the American
Association of University Women will hold a member-
ship coffee on Tuesday, Aua. 28, at 7:30 p.m. at the hone of
Lea Lowe, vice president of membenb1p, 10162 Cynthia
Drive, Huntinaton Bcacl}.
Membership is open to every woman who holds a
bachelor's dearce from an accredited coUqe or university.
For more information, call 968-9S88, or write AAUW,
P.O. Box 2313, Huntinaton Beach 92647.
Pacifica Community Hospital in Huntinaton Beach
is sponsonna the sixth annual free "Back to School
Immunization Oinic" on Thunday, Aug. 30, from S to4
p.m. in the Conference Cent across the street from lbe
hospital at 18819 Delaware St.
Vaccinations Will be Jiven to all children, 6 months to
16 years of aae. for polio, diptheria. tetanus, mumps,
whoopina couah, rubella and measles.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or
auardian, and past immunization records should be
brouaht to help..detennine each child'H~ needs. No
immunizations wiU be Jiven lo a sick child. ·
Charity baseball
Karen Ashton &eta ready to hit a pitch from
Jeff Aabton Sunday darlq tile~·
Coanty R•taa.ralll Worken OYer-t.be--lliie
tournament at BDD~D State Beach.
Parks regain
By tile A11oclated Press
CALENDAR
' Orange and Los Angeles county amuse-
ment parks, whose attendance hit the skids
durina the Summer Olympics, are recover-
ina some of the business lost during the
Games.
AU parks sufered declines in business
during the Ol'D'lpics as regular tourists
stayed away, a,J>UCntJy fearful ofbecom-
ina mired in th massive traffic congestion
that was expCctd but never mateiialized.
Tuesday. Aug. 2_!
• 9:30 a.m.,· Oraqe Couty Boanl of SapeniMrs,
Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza, Santa Ana.
• 1 :30 p.m., Oru1e Couty Pl .. nla1 Comm.lnloa,
Hall of AdmLnistration, 10 Civic Center P1aza, Santa Ana.
• 6 p.m., Lapaa Bu~ City Coaactl, Council
Chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7 p.m., Hutlal10• Beaclt Plaula1 Commllsloa,
C.Ouncil Chambers, 2000 Main SL
• 7:30 p.m., Mesa CollloUdated Water Dlstrtct,
Citizens' Advisory Committee, 196S Placentia Ave.,
Costa Mesa.
• 8 p.m:.:. FoutalD Valley City Conell, Council
Chambers. 10~00 Slater Ave.
PoucE Loe
But most said this week they doubt if
they can recoup au the los~ revenue. . ·
"1 wouldn't say the entire summer ts a
wnteoff," said Patty McKillop,
spokeswoman for the Universal Studios
tour. "We have started to pick up business
in the past week, and we are hop1na for the
best"'
She said the past weekend was the
attraction"• be$t this summer, with attend-
ance about I 5 percent above last year.
But she noted that attendance was still
off about 10 percent for the year lo date
because of a 25 percent decline during the
Summer Games, which ran from July 28 to
Aug. 12.
The numbct)f tourists who came to the
region were r01&hly the same as in any
year, but mo t:>t those had come for the
Olympics and fidn't spend much time at
.amusement pab.
In Anaheim crowds were rcturnina to
Disneyland, w spokesman Bob Roth.
.. The weekcld was fairly strong. but 1t
wasn't enough.I said Roth ... 1 don't thin.k
we will be ablelo recoup what we lost this
summer."
~
Roth said
hopes on the
"What WC e to hope lS that aU the
positive publi y (sun:ounding the Olym-
pics) will resu in an tncreasc m tounsm
• • •
Author a
forbooko
MacDonald
Body found in trash
dumpster identified
A woman whose body was found lb)• ~metal
scave~ 11n a trub dumpster in SanU Ana WM
identified. but the caute of death ii unknown.
lDeJ>uty Coroner Cullen Elli.,... llid MODd9y
fi..:prlnts identified the 'V'ialm u $ylvia A.DD
Rodriauez. 27, of Santa Ana. . · · ife said the autop1y wu illcondulive IDd 110ai-
cololical 1elU were ordered. Tbc body WU dilco~
Sunday at I.be rear of' ltl'UCtwe oa toulb GraDd A¥mDC.
Homicide detectives were iJlvestiptiaa the dcadl.
Services scheduled
for educator Crain
fuOeral terVices arc tehcdulc:d Wedsaeldly a
Minnie ElouiJc Crain of N,ewpon Beach. bDder Oldie'
Harbor T rinhy Ba • Church .in Cost.a Mesa. Who died
Sunday at HOii ~ Hospilal. She was II.
Mn. Crain was the fint principal and adminisrmive off'u:er of Monte Vista School in Costa Mesa. and allo..,
a Principal and teacher at LindbeJJb Elementary SdloOI ia
Oma Mesa. She retired in 19S8.
Before she came to the Oranaie Cout, Mn. Crain wu
1 teacher in sevci'll Oklihoma elerDeritary ICbooll.. ti
received her mutm dcp'CIC in administration &om the
University of Soutberu California school of adminis,
tration in 19~.
Born in Ardmore. Okla., Mn. Cn.io moved to C.osU
Mesa in 1942.
She is survived by her husband. Ernest Crain; a so~
E. Gene Crain of Luuoa Beach; and a daU<ter, Canil
Wood. ofJICbon. W'"yo.
Also survivina arc a brotba, llalpb Taylor • .J>( ,
Anaheim; and a Jistc;r, Louie Metcalf, of Latlf\Oll, Okla.
She also leaves fivesruddlildren:
Servic:a will be CODducted Wedoetd&t:: 10 L al Harbor Trinfty Baptist Church. 1230 ~ ~
Mesa. Visitation is ICheduled for' 10day from 2 w 9 p.a. =~Bell a.-dway MOnury. 110
will be iDICned at VcwJMliftl..,..~'i'ldl
N~BctKh.
next year and thereafter," be said.
Disneyland dOC$11't release attendance
fllUfCS.. but Roth said officials expected the
~ would show a .. significant" dccte&le
m business for1be entire summer season.
At Knott's Berry farm in Buena Pait.
spokesman Jim lf.a.rdiman said the ~
bad no comment on its attendance SLoce
the Olympics ended.
But previously, Knott's has said it laid
off most of its summer work.en and 100
permanent staff memben.
Two parks were doina better than last
year despite the Olympics -Marine~ m Palos Verdes and Sl.lt flags Macie
Mountain in Valencia. --·
Business in the past week is .. at least u
good if not bener tha.n last year," said
Marincland's marketing director, Linda
Malec~ . For the year to date. she said. business 11
running I 0 pcn::ent ahead of laSt year a
le~I.
.. We bad a 'ery healthy beainniDf of the
)UT, I.Ad the 20 pcrttnt drop dunna the
Olymfics just ate away at some of thoee
pins. she said.
Ma&ic Mountain's atie'DdaDcc fiprQ
showed business last .-eek -.. lliabtly
a'bo'e a year ago, iaid sp0teswomu
Sherry Baq. For 1be year to da~
attendance was 5.5 percent ahead of laa
year.
Mqic Mountain. Joeatcd about lS miles
north'NCSt of downtown Loa A•lc( suffered the least of any amU1C1De11t Put
durina the Olympics, ~ oDly 10 pcn:ient below the 1cvcl of busincis a year
earlier.
Ms. Bina credited that to the part's
agressive advcrtisina campeips whida
sought to lure visiton by promisina u
escape from Olympic crowds.
Lido lslejeWelry burglar
grabs loot wortli $25,000
Two 12-packsofbccrwerc reported
tolen Sunday afternoon from the 7-
leven market at 67S Paularino Ave.
clerk at the store w d two subjects
bbcd the beer and ran out the door
tcrcamina.
t 745 l Mt. Herrmann Circle, and
stoic tools from the unattended
woodsbop: The loss.. estimated at
$)90, included a nail a~ and a staple
where it had been parked with the k~ in the ~tion. The lou
As many IS 30 pieces of expensive
jewell)' were stolen from a home on
the 300 block of Via Lido Soud in
Newport Beach over the weekend,
police reports said.
Loss may be placed IS high as
S2S.OOO in the theft, which .occurred
Saturday niaht when the resident had
LapnaBeacb
Police are lookina for the driver of a
yellow Volkswqen bua that cra~hcd
into a business at Foreat A venue and
SOuth coast Hiah~ay eatly Tuesday
momina,. The dtiver fled on foot
before police arrived on the ~nc. • • • • Food and clothing worth an esti-
mated $400 were reported stolen
from a residence in the •JOO block of
Cypress Drive Tuetday. • • • • The buralatY of a bu ineu an the
:700 block ~of South Coast Hiahway
resulted in lhelossof'Sl,31 S Tueldly.
• • •• A residential bufl}ary in the 500
block of Catalina trttt Monday ~t ulted in the repontd IOU of
• • • Gems and other J>f9pcny valued at
S6 ISO were rcpontd tolen from a
rcStdenoe in the 1800 block of
Glenneyre trttt Monday nlJht. The ~ictun•a dQl,•lto wa thrown out ofa
.,. ... _._c~w1ndow dunna tfie bura1ary. . . " mconc rcponedly took $490
aone out to dinner with a friend.
There was no sign of foroed entry in
the bw.latY, but police said a kitchen
door that -led to the aaraae had
inadvertently been left unlocked. A
side door lcadina into the prage also
was unlocked.
When the resident returned home
Saturday about 11 p.m., she noticed
from a cash drawer at a busin in the
200 block of forest Avenue Monday
night
BDDtiniton Beach
A stereo and a tote baa filled W1th
tym clothina were stolen from a van
parked at Pacific Coast Hi&hway and
M1&0olia Street. Polit-e saia the crook used 1 wire coat hlnaer to break into
'the vehicle. 'I • • • • A woman wu rcpOncd 11umbbni
an eamna on the floor and went on to
<tiscover most ofber viluable jt9oel
was missina. Police said there was no
ransackini in the home and the
thieve ap~ to have found the
jewelry quickly.
An invcstiptfon into the c.ase is
being conducted, police said.
·around ou1Slde a~ atore near
the intcnection of Hamilton anc&---i~.
Brookhunt. Several witneues aid
the woman fell down 1evcral times
and appca,rt'd to be an 1 due. Polace.
thouah, said the woman wasf$>hertnt
enouah to recall ~here e 1Vcd and
ptded home. • !. • Jcwdry "'Ot\h ~1,000 1 stol n was an apartment on Edinger Av.
enue. lbe lhiefentcrcd the 'dcncc
throuah an unlocked bathroom wm·
do .
Coetall-
1un. • • •
A Westminster resident reported
that someone stole bis unlocked blue
me11's HuffybiC}de, wortbSIOO. The
bike bad been parked uoday evenina
outside the Albertson's IJ'W'ket..
16042 Mqnolia SL, in Fountain
Valley~
f
estunatcd at Sl.000. ~ • • • Buralan entered a p.rqe over t.be .. ukend on. the 12100 block. of Loya
River A venue and stole a red
Schwion la Tour 10.Speed bicycle
The 1 -.. estimated at $400. • • • A mi.dent of the 11500 block of Quartz A venue reponcd Saturday
that someone stole a Bnas and
Stratten power lawnmoMr wOr1h
S 168.38 from bis open prqc. • • • A retired resident of the 16)()()
block of pen Street reported that
thieves stole a $75 banery from ·
•bite 1978 Ford pic:tup over the
weekend. • • • A resident of the It 100 block of
udith A~nue rCPoncd Satmdly
that someone ent.ered..b& open 111'111 and took an air con!"pmaor Wtih J.7S
feet of hotc and a -~Y sun. The IOM
ntima'&cd at S600.
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fine tines Reg 29 00 . . . 19.99
Save.25%: All men's suits, plus sportcoats
and slacks. Selected stores. Reg . 49.00 to
395.00 . . . . . . . .. 38.75 to 298.25
SAVE 25%
All men's long-sleeved fitted dress shirts.
Your favorite makers included. Reg. 12 99
to 30.00, 9.75 to 22.50.
SAVE 20%
All dress pants and blazers for young
men, including already reduced styles
Orig. 16.99 to 95.00, 12.99 to 69.99 · ·
fall . Find hobos, top zips, multi-
compartments and more. Orig. 12.49 to
94.9() ...•.•.•.•...........• 9.99 to 75.20
Save 20%: All 9-West. L.J. Simon Cleo and
Naughty but Nice shoes. New fall styles. Save 20%: All Ch~uvin, Ken nington, Shah
Reg . 28.00 to 78.00 ........ 22.40 to 82.40 Safari, Chams, Bnttania, Tomato and
Save 20%: All our Nina shoes. Orig. 35.00 more shirts for young men. tncludmg ~:: ~: All o~r lifest;id~· ~:Oc!~c~.20 previously reduced Styles. Orrg. 4.99 to
1. f R 32 J4.00 · · · · • · .. · .... 3.99 to 27.20 snoes or women. eg . .00 to Save 20%: Sweaters and vests for young
38.00 • • • • • . . • • . • . 25.80 to 30.40 men. Ong. 20.00 to 34.00 .18.00 to 27.20
Save 20%: All our Caressa shoes. Orig. Save 20%: All young men~ outer ar
58 00 to 68.00 ·-~ . . . 41.40 to 54.40 Ong . 30.00 to 75.00 .. . • • 24.00 to 80.00
Save 60%: Women's sunglasses by Save 20% to 42%: All Campus Le ligre
Rivi ra, Irop1c-cal and Private Eves. k
14
n1
00
t hirts for boys a to 20. Orig. 10.00 to
On 12 00 to 25 00 • 5.99 to 12.49
Save 20%: Womc.,n' belts 1n many tvles. ~ve 0
30%:
0
All bOy · • 4 • t~ 20 ~ord ·h0ft7 :•
R g. 6.00 to 60 00 . 4.80 to 48.00 Cotton and poly t r/~otton. Orig. 13 00
S.ve 20%: Ev ry .Pair of -Monet• and to 17 .00 • • • . • 9.10 10 11.90
Trifori' earrings. Reg . 6.00 to S.ve 30%: All Billy th Kid playwc r for
25.00 . 4.80 to 20.00 boy 4 to 7. R g. 10.00 to
Save 20%: Necklaces and braccl ts by 16.00 • 1 oo to 11.20
Marvella, Catherine Stein, Eva Graham. Jave 30%: All F rah· dres • • • Jor-----
C rol Dau~la1 Kremenu..._Beg bovs 8 t0""20 R g 51 to
00 to 00 . 4.00 to 40.00 54.00 . 10,50 to 37.IO
•&ROADWAY ~LAZA, DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES, OPEN I A.M. TO I P.M. WEON!IDA
ELECTIONM
'
)
I
DAILY PILOT/TUlldl , August 21. 1984 Al
JGU.ST 22ND ·. STOREWIDE SAVINGS.
Save 26%: All men's silk neckwear
tYoung men's not included). Reg. 11 .00 to
25.00 . , ..............•..... 8.25 to 18.75
Save 25%: All Neil Martin full cut, long
sleeved cotton/polyester dress shirts, Reg.
20.00 to 22 .00 . . . . . . .. 15.00 to 18.50
Save 25%: All Centura short sleeved dress
shirts. Reg. 10.99 •................ 8.24
Save 25%: All meh's robes. Reg. 19.99 to
55.00 . . . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . 14.99 to 41.25
Save 26%: Every pair of men's socks.
Reg 3.00 to 10.50 . . . . . . . • 2.25 to 7.87
Save 30%: All our men's sunglasses, belts
and small leather accessories. Reg. 9.00 to
25.00 ••.................... 8.30 to 17.50
Save 20%: All Freeman shoes ~r men..
Reg. 40.00 to 65 .00 .. ~~ .. 32.00 to 52.00
Save 20%: All men's Hush Puppies shoes.
Reg: 28.00 to 50 00 ..•.•... ~40 to 40.00
Compact drafting table set. 5-position
!Bbl~ 31 x23.'..:.._AdJustabld..J)tOOI $.wing . ..ai.J:Jl.--
lamp. Will be· 70.00 • . . .......... 49.99
.. .
Blown leaiJ crystal stemware in your
choice of goblet, wine or flute cham·
pagne. Each made in Amerrca. Orig. 20.00
set of. 4 . . . . . . . . . . . .. 9.99 set of 4
Prisms barware in black or white. Sets of
4 hi ball and double old fashioned glasses,
plus trays, ice buckets. coasters. Reg.
14.00 to 30.00 . . . . . . . . 8.99 to 14.99
Corning White lO·piece cookset. For all
. ovens. 1,2,3 and 5 quart casseroles and
2 Yz quart shallow casserole. Glass covers
for all . Open stock value,
100.00 ... • ........ ' .......... 39.99
40-piece dinnerware sets by Newcor serve
8. Three beautiful patterns-to~choose frorrr.--
Zenith, Madrid, Sculpture Lagoon. Shown
Left to right. Reg 69 99 .....•....•. 39.99
Toast-R·Oven by General Electric. The
continuous cleaning broiler that also bakes
and toasts Does 4 slices of toast at a
time. Also top browns.
Orig. 70.00 ....•....•.....•. • • • · · · 39.99
.. '
Revere 7 piece cookset. Stainless steel,
copper bottoms. With covers: .Y. quart
and 2 quart saucepans, 5 q\Jart stockpot,
8" open skillet Open stock value, 90.00 ..
39.99
Stainless steel f,latware by Oneida in
62-piece-service for 8. Made in America.
Mansfield pattern. Will be* 79.99 .•.. 59.99
·Regular price will be effective 8/23/84.
Zenith 4·head VHS video cassette
recorder. 14-day, 1-event auto timer,
wireless remote. Front loading, 14 position
electronic tuning. Orig. 599 00 .... 539.00
Sharp's video cassette recorder, front
loading with VHS format. Also. 7-day
1-event programming, 8-function wired
•emote control. Orig. 449.9Q ..•.•.. 399.00
Sharp 19" diagonal remote control color
television. 136 channel cable compatible
for a vast variety of entertainment.
Save 90.00 Ong. 429.00.
·Regular price will be effective 8 23 84.
Magnavcu. color portable television.-4~9'-"-
diagonal screen, in-line matrix picture
tube, automatic fine tuning-Just one knob.
Orig. 369.00 . . . . . . . . . . . 259.00
The perfect color portable television. A
13" diagonal screen set by Emerson with
one-button auto color, instant on picture,
sound Orig. 259 00 . . . 189.00
Emerson compact stereo Save 20%.
AM I FM receiver with 3-band graphic
equalizer. Dual cassette. recessed turn-
table, bookshelf speakers. Reg 229.00
179.00
Sanyo stereo-to-go Detachable 2-way
speakers. AM/FM stereo cassette
recorder, digital tape counter. tone con•
trol. Ong 130.00 , . . . . .. . ..... 89.99
Sansui 30 watt stereo system. Semi-
automatic turntable, digital tuner. 2-way
speakers, Dolby ,. metal capable cassette,
· glass door rack Ong 695.00.
Olympia electric typewriter with full 88
character keyboard. On sale just in time
for school use Will be· 229.00 •.••. 199.00
•Regular price will be effective 8123184
SALE 179.00
O'Keefe & Merritt compact microwave
oven. Variable power control, 35-minute
timer. and black see-through oven door.
Fits a smaller kitchen. Orig. 199.00.
Eureka adjustable upright vacuum~
Features a dust seeker headlight, edge
cleaner, 4-way dial-a-nap, plus a beater
bar and brush. Orig 69.95 . . . 59.95
Flannel sheets! Cotton or polyester cot-
ton. Solid colors plus colorful patterns
from our own European collection and
Utica., . Reg. 13.00 to 24.00, 1.50 to 12.00
Save 11)%.50%: Save on every towel.
every sheet Plus every coordinating com-
fortel'. All our famous names.
Save 50%: A big selection of blankets.
pillows and mattress pads, all by famous
makers. Many styles. all sizes Reg
13 00-230.00 6.49-114.99
Save 50%: Every item in our table linen
department Sorry, no special orders Reg
.49-300 00 . 24-150.00
Save 40%: Our entire collection of
decorator throw pillows Sorry, no special
orders. Reg 6 99-40.00 4.1t-24.00
Save 25%: Every bafhr ug, prus every
bath accessory Reg. 1.00 70.00 75-52.49
S.ve 50%: Our entire collection of
decorator comforters and bedspreads in
Curtains and Draperres No special orders,
please. Reg. 85 00-360 00 42.50-180.00
S.ve 40%: Every embroidered French
tergal sheer panel in our European collec-
tion. Ecru or white. No special orders.
59x84" panels. Reg 19 99·
44.99 . . . 11.9t-26.99
Valences also available at 40% savings.
Save 50%: Pipeline sheets and reversible
!comforters by Utica' . Sheets and cases:
re9. 12.00-26.00 . . . . . . . .... 6.00-13.00
Comforters: reg . 100.00-175.00 .50.00-17.50
. 15.91
11)1
11.99
11.
19.99
11.99
11.91
22.
SALE 19.99 EACH
Flings sturdy, spotty nylon luggage
by Samsonite. Will be* 24.99 to 34.99
each. Save 20% to 50%. •Regular price
wiU be effective August 23.
Reg. 200.00 . Save 50% on our 4x6'
handwoven Dhurrie rugs from China.
Pure wool in a variety of elegant
designs. At selected stores.
Every sofa is on sale. French style with S-
way hand tied coil spring construction.
Orig. 1600.00 ................................ 799.00
Matching pieces also on sale.
Every dining room set is on sale . 5-piece
Oriental style dining room suite. Table, 2
leaves. 4 side chairs. Orig . 1750.00 ..... 999.00
Our dark rattan swivel rocker with
reversible seat cushion in textured olefin.
Just one of our accent chairs and curios
· at 22%-40% off. Orig . 350.00.
Every convertible sofa is on sale. A wide
range of styles and colors. Shown: elegant
slate blue polyester velvet, flarea arms.
Opens to queen size. Orig. 950.00.
SALE 188.00
Ev rv uphotstefed c"'air ts on sale. Our
classic QU n Anne style with cabriole legs
.. and:taCQu rd print. Ro , sand, blue or
oyster. Ong. 400 .00 .
A8 I I
.. I
Could Ferraro get the boot?
Republican leaders dropping careful hints
that Mondale mt ht dump his runntn mate
DALL.AS (AP) -With tickers ~na .. Mondale--Eqlcton '8•" and
• Wlth public statements, Repubbcans
arc tryina to plant the notion that
Geraldine Ferraro may be forced otr
the Democratic ticket because: of the
f utot over her family's finances.
With backstage encouragement
from the Reagan campaign to keep
FCtTUO's problems an i ue, GOP
leaders carefully suaacstcd Monday
the po 'bility Walter F. Mondale
might drop her u hi vice presidential
runnina mate.
The comments came as the New
York congresswoman i ucd hun-
dreds of pages of documents on her
family's finances Monday, tryina to
put to rest the controversy that has
shadowed the Democratic ticket.
"I'm suuestina she mia.ht not
make it for the next few months," ~d
Sen. Robert Kasten. R-Wis. "She's no
longer an assta. she's a detriment. ... 1
think this is really tqinnina to htm Mondale.·•
·•rm not in to characterize what
her chances are of urvivina or not. ..
added Sen. P.aul Lu.alt, R-Ncv ••
chainnan of Re n's re-election
campaian. "I don t th.ink it'1 ap-
propriate for me to characterize
whether or no1 he is goina to survive
other than to say I hope she docs."
"I don'l think she' goina to get by
unle s 6he don a lot more explain·
ina." added Lyn Nofziger, a loftllime
Reapn advi$CI', wbosc public com·
ment over the weekend th t he
"would not be surprised if she were
not on" the ticket by Labor Day
opened this new line of GOP attack.
The stickers rccallina tbc debacle of
the 1972 Democratic viee presiden-
ttal choice appeared on the floor of the
Republican National Convention
Monday ni&ht as well. Sen. Thomas
Eagleton orMissouri was bounced
from the Democratic vice presiden-
tial spot in 1972 after it was revealed
be had underaone elcctco-shock ther-apy.
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
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ten id no one in the White
Hou has u cd him to talk ut Fcrraro·s probkm1 or thosc of er
hus nd, John Zaccaro.
There have been reports th11 Mon·
dale priv tcly h criticiied Ms.
Ferraro's bandlina of the disclosure of
her mil)' finances. But there have been no public uuestions from th
Mondale camp that any thou&ht 16
bcln~ siven to repladna the first
woman ever to run for vioe president
on a major party ticket.
Without clalmina an> pccial k.now~e of the opposinJ. J):2rty's
camp. ho vcr, Kasten said, "AU I
know is that in the Mondale camp
there's lmost a fcclina of betrayal."
Vice PJ'e5ident George Bu h, Fer-
raro's oppe>oeot. took a more
cautiou:11 line.
"We ou&ht to ju t let the facts come
out to let t6e American people decide.
... 1 don't think l can help by kind of
quip{>ina away one way or another,''
he 111d. Lautt pOrtra)'Cd the Ferraro con-
tro' eny a ncs or m take by
Mondale nd his aid .
"1 fetl the tnti re Ferraro incident 11
unfortunate," Laxalt id "She and
her people have been badl) served by
the Mondale campaign people.
They're the expcns tn the national
Politics."
Lualt said Mondale's people failed !O pre~ Ferraro for ahe .. type of
intcn5C scrutiny once ~ou cet into the national nng, ... This is not a fantasr,
land. It is hilro oold Politi~! reality.•
And he .\aid 1 failure by Ferraro to
tay on the ticket would be a .. chillina
factor" onluturc women candjdat .
"l ho~ this wom n urvives. I
hope 1t docs not become a bad
preOcdcnt for women in politics in the
foturc,"tae said."Whether she docs is
a decision that is aoi~ to have to be
made on a cold pohtical basis by
MondAle in combination with her."
.. We hope they clean it up and let's
get on with this campaign," he added.
Columnist ~ays it
with rose boµquet
•
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IRVINE ..
COAST
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('ll' Oardcin Lane Mu., Californ • 1627
Summrr off1< houn 9am• J'lm
-·~· ~
--
NAT ION
Diane Sawyer is joining
CBS's '60 Minutes' crew
le4I Pru
N W YORK -Stanmg \Oday, the term "four
Horstmen" won't be apphcablc to descnbc the l\Ul·
stingina correspondents on CB ' .. 60 Minutes." The
Associated Pren ha teamed that Diane Sawru.~ who
once worked an President Nixon' press offioe and later
helped him write hiS mcmon has bcQome the fint
female OOrTtSPondent on "60 Minutes." CBS wdl make
the announcement today, a CBS exccuu ve who ukcd not
to be identifie4, &old The AP. The source said Monday
ni&ht that Sawyer, the c04nchor of the "CBS Momin'
News•• .. would be officially, loj!'l_•na '60 Minutes
dftt1ivc immediately. She will b!t&in kint on '60
Minutes• pieces as soon as the convention is over." SAWYD .
The clecuuve said the CBS announcement won't q>ecify Sawyer's starUna
date. The ahow•g new season begins SCpt. l~. but executtv~ p~uoer Don
HeWJtt has said that SIW)ercould notappcareatheron thescnesoritsopenlnJ
credits unttl he has several storict in the bank.
Hurricane ••eeJM by atoll
HONOLULU -Hurricane Keli's 100-mph winds swept ~.st an
evacuated Pacific atoll where chemical weapons arc stored. but ··~nously
limited .. satellite imaaes made it difficult to track the !torm or aausc 1t1 eff~t.
rorccastcn said. The storm WI$ estimated to be 90 nules wes~ of remote, ttny
Johnston Island where tons of chemical weapons arc kept, said Clarence Lee,
a forecaster for the National Weather Service said Monday niaht. The weather
service said the island probably felt the impact of the storm late Monday, but
could not determine tbe extent of any damaae.
Ford heavy true.ts recalled
DETROIT -Ford Motor Co. says it will recall about 4,200 heavy trucks
produced from 1981-l 984 to correct a problem with a stecrina shaft asscmb~y
that could disconnect and cause the driver to lose control. Ford also said
Monday that it was advisina owners of29,850 dictcl·J?<?W:C"t!N!c~up truc~s to brina their vehicles to dealers for inspection and possible ins .uon of shields for their fuel water separators. No injuries have resulted from e1ther problem,
said Ford spokesman Chuck Snearly.
Satellite would beam broadca•ta
WASHINGTON -The United Statct is studyina the feasibility of
orbitinaa huae. possibly nuclear-powered satellite that would be used to beam
radio broadcasts behind the Iron Curtain, accordina to a published report. The
National Aeronautics and Space Administration. using $1.S million provided
by the U.S. Information ~ency, has contracted for early studies on the cost
and desi&n of such a sa~llite. accordina to a report in the Wuhinaton-bascd
trade publication Satellite Weck.
Cralse alJlp blaze lnjures 81
MIAMI -One woman was missina today after an elcctncal fire sent
smoke billowing tbrou&h the decks of a cruise ship, inju.rina 31 people and
causing pankked passengers to knock over others Oceina the blaze, officials
and passengers said. The fire aboard the Scandinavian Sun, which carried 738
people, was rc~rted at J 1:16 p.m. Monday and was under control by 12;20
a.m. today, said Miami Fire Department spokeswoman Christie Hick.man.
Passenaers said they first saw smoke and flames Monday as the 441-foot ship
was dockina at the end of a one-day cruise to Grand Bahama island.
Convict clJoosa ca.tratlon
ANDERSON, S.C. -One of three convicted rapists pven the choice of
castration or 30 years 1n prison says be still wants to be castrated even thouah
ajudgeruledit must by done surgically, not chemically. CircuitJudaeC. Victor
Pyle denied on Monday James Roscoe Brown's request that be be castrated
throuah use of the drug Dcpo Provera. Pyle also said Brown, not the ooun.,
must find a surgeon t01>Crl'orm-theoperation. "For1hC'1'ecord, I am standin&"bY ·-··
my original decision ol'surgical castration/' Pyle told Brown and bis attorney,
Stephen John Henry.
CALIFORNIA
Heart patlent need• new organ
LOS ANGELFS-Derrick. Gordon, who received a beut transplant with
the 11d of a $300,000 community fund-raisin& drive, is back in the hospital ind
m need of a neWtiea~is mOtbenays. Annette-6ordon-said Monday Dr. Lin
Warner reported part of her son's bean tissue is dead and the orpn was beina
rejected. Gord6n, 211 of Los Angeles, was in critical, but stable condition ~ry
today at UCLA Medical Center, said a nursina slll>CfVisor, who did not identify
herself. Mrs. Gordon said Warner hoped Gordon's condition would stabilize
enough in a couple of days to allow bis return to Stanford University for a
second heart transplant.
FBI to tmt hate mall
LOS ANGELES -Racist letters sent to Third World delegations at
Olympic Villa&es during the Summer Games will be teSt.ed to detenmne if they
arc the work of the Soviet KGB, an FBI spokesman said. The FBI will compare
the letters with hate messaaes mailed before the Games to forci111 team
officials, FBI spokesman Lane Bonner said Monday. "The second wave of
letters will be put to the same scrutiny and scientific analysis as those Attom~
General (William French) Smith exposed as beina the work of the KGB,'
Bpnner said.
Ma.a •bleids boy with body
INGLEWOOD -Nciahbors described Vincent McGowan as a quiet
man who kept to himself, loved children and never hesi tat.ed to help out one of
his tenants. Arlise 1..arkette remembers how happy her 3-ycar-<>ld son, Demone
Scott, would be when McGowan knocked on their door. Eatly Sunday
afternoon, McGo~an, a f 9-year-<>ld apartment manager in thiJ L<?s Angeles
suburb, fell dead in a stairwell of the Darby Avenue apartment buildill&, bis
body nddled with bullets. But little Ocmone Scott was alive in his arms.
McGowan had shielded the boy's body from bulleu fired by a aunman
reportedly seeki~ retaliation for a fiaht be had earlier in the day. '
WORLD
HJtler dlary trlal begin•
HAMBURG, West Gcnnany -A Nazi memorabilia dealer who forged
"Hitler's secret diaries" and the star repe>rter who persuaded his publisher to
buy them fOT S3.6 miUion went on tria~y for perpetrating fCCOrded
history's bigest literary swindle. If con vi . f fraud, fired Stem reporter
Gerd Heidem~ and Konrad Kujau, a mih ry artifacts dealer, face up to 10
years each behina bars. Both are in custody, but neither was brouahi tocoun in
handcuffs. A circus atmosphere prevailed in the Hamburg courtroom as some
JOO reporters and P.hotographen climbed on furniture and jockeyed for
position to catch a glimpse of the defendants.
BJU~t tele.cope on Hawall
TOK YO -Japan will build the world'a laracst telescope on the illand of
Hawaii by the early 1990s, accordina to an astronomers' plan submitted to the
eovemment today. Accotdina to the plan, the teleleope will be equiPoect with
a 23.S-foot reflector, lira~r th~ the wor~d's la~ teletcope, the-f 8.6-foot
reflector at Zclenchukskiya m lhe Soviet Union's Cauouaus mountains.
profcuor Keiichi Kodaira of the Tokyo National Obecrvatory Mid. Tbe
observato_ry t\ousin.a the computer-controlled telescope will be construcied
atop I 3, 796-foot M1una Kea on Hawa i bland at a cost ofabOut $82.6 millioJl,
Kodaira said.
KluuoclJev trldowr dead
MOSCOW -Nina Pctrovna Khrushchev, widow ofous led Soviet lelder
Nikita Khrushchev, died earlier thl1 month and was buried next to her
husband, a Communist Pany official taid today. She wet 14. An ofllcill 8' Ute
Ltninsky rqjon branch of MotCOW•s Communist ~ told The Allodatod
Press that Mn. Khrushchev died the niaht of Aua. 8-9. She did not alvt tbe e1use of death. but uid Mn. Khruahchev was buried three or four dlya latet
next to her husband in Moscow's Novodevichy CtmttefY, K.h5uahchev, who
became Communist Pany secrttary in 1953: was removed from power in 1964
and lived an obscunty until h...._th in 191 l.
Amencan nrlaco. la Dablla
DUBLIN. lrel n4 -i\merican IRA ~mP1thi.zer Manin Galvin, wbo cllldtd ur'i1y forocs m Northern Ireland. 1u~ at a news conference here
todl'f .• ht hair dyed, and declared hC had ref\ated to bow to Bn tish ••tcn'Onsm. ..
Aanke(I ~ ~ or '"' f11n, ht pOlnal wint f lhe ouOt~ lnlh-Rcpubhctn rmy, Galvin 111d an assault by PoliClC attemptina to arrest him 11
an Aua. J 2 ran in Bclfa 1, onhm\ Ireland, had hown Amerkans "who are ~he real terronst :· ''If events hke ih11 do an)'1hll'I 10 honcn the ume the
Bnush arc oh the In h tree then lam ha pp for 1hi1.''
..
0,.,. Ooa1t DAILY P LJOT/TUMd9)', Augutl 21, N4 A'I
'Sexist' Reagan portrayed
in 'respectful' Dallas play
Su estJon to withdraw Pershln mlsslles:
'I didn't know we had missiles in Persia.·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -President
Reqan is portrayed as a bumbli~
llCllist, more concerned about a C..h·
fomia vacation than pl'.'Cventina nu;. clear war, in a •respeCtM" play by a
Republican sroup opposed to its
party"I COOteTYat1ve platform.
A troupe of Hollywood acton was
IChdluled to pmnter ••A Day in the
Life of the Praident" today at a
Dallas theater near the site of the
Republic.an National Convention.
The anti· nuclear play was spoo.sor·
cd by the Republican Mainstream
Committee, a croup of party moder·
ates who have cntici.zed the GOP
platform as bCma too far to the ri&ht. '.fbe play. depicts a cheery, abseot-
nundcd Reapn -played by veteran
television actor Richard Masur -
tickets and ""tbcte'a no qumion aoout mtina tilt (250-teat) thcaltt" for
today's performanee.
••we·reaoinatobavetotumpeoole
away." aid Kra daimina l&at
many tictit requests came from
Republican convenuoc dclcpics.
In a summit meetina with the
Soviet premier, tbe"'Reapn eharac:lCr
depicts tho two nations· nuclear
s with Jan of jelly btans, thm
eats aome o( his and insists be be
alloWtd to keep •·w c!hooOlatcy"
ones ttprCSeDtiq MX misliles.
Later, when nudeat war 1eems
imminent he says. "NancY"s not aoina to like this one biL She b.d her
heart set on a little Santa Barbara
jaunL"
$pouon of lbe olay, ftbeaned ID
Loi Antda oa S"unaiy, aid u
IDQnt U I pOinled Ute OD
oot 1 ~tory ponraya1 of lht
praidcnt.
Scftcnwnter Paul Zim.memwa.
lht plafa main avtbOr, 11 a nuclear
ftt.ei.e acuvilt and a ~ ddeute to the GOP COGYCDUOD. !~ pet1)'. iDU uid °we don'& need
you Republicans Who ba~ lhae
views; )'OU CID lee ' (lbe y)
docsn' treat the :omident th any less rqpecl lbaD the party'bal treated
the modera&es at this convention,"
aaid Zimmcrmao. whole crediu ~
clude the motion picture "IUna of
Comedy." Zimmcnnan says be may abslaan
from the vote to nominate JKalDD
and would find it difficult IO ote for
the president in November.
-U.-~ · who stumbles throuah foreian affairs . . u ... ,..... and is coodesoendina to women.
The play also takes pokes at
PreSidcntial Counselor EdWID Mecx,
Moral Majority leader Rev. Jerry
Falwell. fint lady Nancy Reqan and
Jose Napoleon Duane. the US.·
supported praident of El Salvador.
·Ill one IOCK. Reap.n dacribcl his
female ~ of atatt as ... that Pi"ettY little firl Wbo's alwaya 'wakina
me up at cabinet meednp" When she
sugesu wilhdrawina Pmh.ina miss-iles. be says, "1 clidn 't know we bad
misules in Pam. ..
Delee•• on floor of Dallu Convention Center hold ap 'hita Basters' banner. Mainstream Committee spokes-
man Mike Kraus said Monday there
bad been a heavy demand for the fn:e GOP platform wrapped
in 'red, white and blue'
DALLAS (AP) -Republicans, in the)'latfonn failed to muster the
fired by partisan portrayals of Walter support to waac a Ooor fight. Dcl-
F. Mondale as the over·prom1s101 egates will hear the platfonn outlmed
candidate of the past, met today to at a momina session and then give
provide President Reagan with a their final approval tonight. ..The
conservative, "red. white and blue0 numbers just weren't there,.. to
re-election platform. challenge the platform, said a dis.-
The GOP national convention, senter, Sen. Lowell We1cker of Con-
dominated by the party's n&ht. wasn't necticut.
even to hear moderate dissentabouta Ford's wife, Betty, a strong backer
document that includes a "no tax of ERA, said in the interview that 1t
hike" promise and language that the was "a great disappointment" when
United States must be able to prevail · support for the amendment was
in any future war. . dropped from the platform an l 980
After the conservatives act thetr and said rcstonna it was "sometluna
views adoi>tcd toniaht. the prime we're aoin& to have to work on."
time spotli&bt wiU shift to ~Y The Platform Committee finished
moderates fed by former President work Monday and chairman. Rep.
Gerald Ford. , Trent Lott of Mississippi turned to
Dissenters from the conservative While House liaison ~w Lewis and
planks on social issues and from the said, "rve aot it all ready for you,
refusal lo include even beni&n men· Drew, wrapped in red, white and
tion of the Equal Riabts Amendment blue."
Reagan watched his party's con-
vention from the White House and
worked on the speech be will deliver
Thursday niaht when he and Vice
President Gcorae Bush accept nomi·
nauon for a second term.. The
president and the first lady arrive in
Dallas on W~ncsday.
In addition to Ford, toni&bt's
speakers include the Doles -'Sen.
Bob Dole of Kansas and bis wife,
Transportation Secretary Elizabeth
Dole.
A likely competitor for the l 988
GOP presidential nomination, Dole
has been jokina that he is pushina a
Dole and Dole ticket and Kansas
delegates were sporting Dole-Dole
buttons today. Mn. Dole often is
mentioned as a top prospect to be the
fint Republican woman on the
national ticket.
Democrat Kirkpatrick appl~uds
c:JVewport Surf_ c& Sport, Inc.
Back· To-School-Sale
NEWPOf'TS BEST & BlGODT SEL2CTION O~ BEACHWEAR
STARTS
• OUICKSL VEA
•GOTCHA
•MAUI
• BLLABONG
WED. AUG. 22nd
0 25·7·0% '11 . '11
• ST\IEES
•O.P.
• CATCHT
• T-514=n'S ~~,........,.,eagan hard-line foreign policy
1M eoundlld • thOUQh n. was u. wne . .,.,.,.. who were ,. MENS • WOMENS • BOYS • WETSUITS • ACCESSOFIES ~common cw with con-IP<>Otlble for America'• decllne SURFBOARDS ON SALE TOO $25 00 OFF PLUS FREE T SHRT ............. In the hawlnllltedthattheprllldent'• . -. -·~..., .. •· P01C111 would....... HFR•y_eMaomoo•K 222• Newport et.td. Houa ••t ... ...,_a~ whlCt\ •-..n .. M---. Miit to E ..ao a.m .. t:to p.m. wen•, Wttldt pr~ ~.··g~ l•banain °" • mult1eatlonll BAG Newport Beach. CA 92983 Y1u Ma.-C.rd
ttandard of tMog tor~ pelClk~ mllllon With the .... ,........ e1c-7974 675 7877 end amlnfinum ttandard of I~ coneent of the United Statel , ... __ " ........ _.,,... _______ ...,.. ___ • _________ •Amencan--•e.,...-----
tor ewrybody, In Which people Congr... were mui'dered In 1• C8re about Mdl other, In Which their steep. the "bl8me Amertca ...._....;..._ ______________________________ _
W9h1Miltr0ilg~ ~·did nOt blame Iba
tlonl. a Would Cllll mYMlf a kind of -~ who murdered the
a welfar• atat• Hberat on Marinel, ~ blamed th9 united
dome9tle anaars, In fact," the Stat•. ...---:
.-..-.IA • "But then they ~ Ulm, .. ~. America first
In ~ IPllch, the UN am-"When the Sovtet Unk>ll
bwldor lahed out What *'-walked out of arms conttol nego-:
called the ''blame Amertca ftr8t tr.tlona. and refuMd eve11 to
crowd" In the Democratic party dlecull the 11tuee, the &ah
and l8ld that Pf'911dent Reagan'• Frantfeco Demcoratl didn't eleCtk>n ended ... dllrMI period
of ..-.... .. t ......... .-11_ .. under tM blame Soviet lntrarWgience. TheY ••\I-•.v ~ ·-btllined the United Stat99. admlnletratlon Of former Preli-"But then, ttteY atwayt blame ~ Certer. America ftrtt ...
"In u. 3~ yeara since his In the teleYtllon lntemeW,
tnaugwauon. the United Stat• Kirkpatrick Mild Reagan .... very
h•· arCMn atronger, tafet, more welt Informed. He ta ~
c:ontrMnt. Incl we •• at peaQe, • • tm.reated In foreign anan. Any·
lhe Mid. bodY who beliewl he la not la just
''And at MCh step Of the way. tlMpty mtetaken. ••
YOU CAN WIN
A "CINDERELLA" EVENING
-WITH THE
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY
Saturday, September 8, 1984
All Ground Transportation By Gold Medal Limousines
You r Private Jet By Custom A via ti on To San Diego
binner At Tuxedo Charlies Restaurant Before the Concert
PRESENTED BY
KDCM tD!l.t
FMSIERED
"The Sounds of the Harbor»
-2nd Prize -
A "Miracle Morning"
At
Club St. Tropez
-3rd Prize -
Dinner For Two At The
ROYAL KHYBER
1--i.
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• &14 lil&ll Tt IOCM; ... ~ Or., ca. •••• """"a.c:. .... I
-M1.11t 1k 21 or °""'
-I>Mdtin A \ 27, l
-WlnMn le<'Wd
By Random Dta In.a
Rut and Re,utationa •
Available From
Contett Spocoon
. I
NAME I ------, ADORE S-----'--I
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with NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS'
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lo 5 0/ COMPOUNDED
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Free Checking · 3 Checks per month with
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Unlimited Personal or A TM Withdrawals
Insured by FSLIC to $100,000.
•• AVIMQt MONtMl.'t llAUNCI Olll0"9 •iOW ... M1NIT~lQ~C~ .,,.._t 01' tlMll
COWOUIC8 Oo1ll..,
CORONA .......
3021 EAST COAST A Y_
~-WA C.ALFOfNA
(114)176.-.0
High interest
keeps builders
in queasy state
Buildcn may be happy about this
year's resurgence in the California
houlif\4 industry, but they're still
tempenllJ any optimjsm about their
future '!Vlth rcahsm abou1 the slow
rebound o( interest rates, which
botiorncd out at about 12 percent
early this year.
California developers know they
must watch in1eres1 rates even more
closely than their colleaaues in other
states because homes cost so much
more here. ~
The same house that sold for
$90,000 in Atlanta was bringing
S 133,000 in Los Angeles and
$139.000 in the San Francisco Bay
area as or April 1.
That meant a buyer who could
afford to pay $1,050 a month could
buy the Atlanta home at the 14
percent mortgage rate which
prevailed on April I. But to buy the
same house in California he'd have to
make monthly payments of at least
SI ,SOO. Which removes thousands of
potential buyers from the housing
market.
The combination of price and
intemt is the big reason wbr. Cali-
fornia's housing recovery sull lags
behind the rest of the nation. While
other regidns have S«n housing stans
rebound 10 levels above lhe
benchmark year of 1973 -when the
nation came out of its last previous
recession -California still lags
behind.
In fact, affordability factors now
arc keeping the San Francisco area
out of the nation's top 20 mctro:-
politan areas in housing starts for the
first time in history.
By contrast, the price-interest com-
bination has thrust the Riverside-Sao
Bernardino area -whose lower
inland land values make construction
cheaper than along the coast -into
the No. 8 position nationally, with
even more buildin~ activity than
there is in boomingaties like Tampa-
St, Petersburg.. Orlando, San Antonio
and Denver.
But even builders benefitting from ~ curTCnt inland California boom
kftowthere'sa limit to bow long it can
last-unless int~! rates drop tot he
12 percent range again soon.
"'Ra1es have settled 1n at a rela-
tively high level and ... consequently,
there isa vast number of families in ...
Cahfomi.a who cannol qualify for a
THOMAS
ELIAS
new home purchase," says Peter
Sidlow, whose firm is a major
statewide builder.
The Californians' focus on interest
as the chief culprit in the housing
price spiral is backed by a new
Harvard Univenity survey which
found that while 14.6 percent of
under-JS renters could afford to buy a
home in 1979, only 6.S percent could
qualify in late 1983. -
Construction costs had nothing to
do with that major social chatigc, the
Harvard researchers found ... In the
past 10 years, declines in the real
average hourly earnings of construc-
tion worlcers and in the real prices of
concrete and wood products have
helped lo lower overall construction
costs," the rcscarchen found.
But inflation, interest and the law
of supply and demand combined to
push actual prices up until the
average new buyer must spend at leas!
40 percent of hts income on housing.
In spite of all this. the lar)c number
of young families stemming from the
postwar baby boom continues to
create demand.
But if interest begins to rise sharply
after the-presidential election, as
many forecasters predict, next year's
starts will drop precipitously, poss-
ibly spark.ing a new recession as the
reductions arc felt in lumber, ap-
pliances and the building trades.
Which explains why California
builden invariably temper their pres-
ent h~P.PY ~epons with comments on
prevailing interest rates.
"'Mos1 builders arc still suffenng
from a case of the "s horts' when it
comes to be ins able to provide buyers
an attractive interest rate," says one
Ventura County developer.
That doesn't figure to change soon
-and as long as it doesn't. 1his state's
builden can expect to remain at the
brink of financial failure.
nom.1• Elh• i• .1 Sut.t Mooic.1-
ba•ff col11moi•t oo •Ute l•••et.
Bouquet of African violets
from society to the Pilot
To the Editor:
As publicily chairman for several
African violet societies in the
Southern California area, I have sent
announcements 0£.dur mceting.1 and
shows to your publication. Your staff
has consistently supponcd our ac-
tivities, for which we arc very
grateful.
Each affihatc's scrapbook contains
cl ippings which underscore that su~
port: when new members and guests
are asked how they heard about the
affiliate or activity, the answer is
frequentl y your publication. Conse-
quently, our events arc well-attended,
sales benefit the hobbyist ~owers,
and club membership continues to
expand.
The affiliates' success has made 11
possible for the Southern California
Council to host the national African
Violet Society of America convention
in Los Angeles in 1985. We're excited,
of coune, and anticipate that it will be
one of the bes1 conventions ever
because or our large and active
mcmbcnttip base.
We'd like to express our sincere
appreciation to you and your staff for
your continued support over the past
few years. We feel 11 has made a major
conlribution 10 our growth and
success. Apparently your subscnbcrs
respond to the beauty of blooming
African violets as enthusiastically as
we promote the hobby.
LYNN LOMBARD
Publicity
Afncan V1ole1 Council of Sou1hem
California
A duty to the chorus
A dozcn beautiful girls were sun-
bathing in the nude on an island 1n
Lake Mead. A park ranger on motor-
boat patrol. gazing upon 1hem reflec-
dvely, knew it was his duty to pull
ri$hl up close and discuss the situ-
ation. He did so, and filed no official
repcrt, kind fellow. They were a Las
Vegas chorus line. they said, and had
to sunbalhc so. If they .showed up for
work with strap marks, they'd ge•
fired.
On the Seminole reservauon in
Aorida, an Indian husband with a
white wife can live on the reservation,
bul an Indian wife with a white
hutblnd cannot.
Q. What cOu~t~ has the most golf
counes per capita.
A. The Bahamas.
Oa1m is 2pearthquakcsstnke daily
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
at one place or another, bi.it only the
scns111ve scismognphs dttCCl !hem.
The 1cc pack over the North Pole is
1s big as the lower 48 Slates.
Scales on the feet of birds give them
"fingcrpnnts" as unique as thOS(' of
people.
Forty-six percent of all movie
uckets, 10 get specific, arc sold to
people under age 21 ,
In Saudi Arabia. the kingdom
passes not to the eldest son of the
king, but to the ltioa"s eldest
"'capable" bro1her. If a king's fa1her
had a lot of wives. that king isgo1 n1 to
have a lot of bn>then. don't you
know. They a~ pnnces. And cumnt-
ly, lhctt arc 4,()(X) of1hem.
L.M. Boyd 11 1 1ya'1c1td
col1m1J11.
H. L. &chw1rtz Ill ."""""
Frank Zlnl
11.•NQl'IQ (Cl•!Ot
Tom Tait
,.,, [0•10!
''Gallfornla developers know they must watch Interest rates even more
closely than thelrcolle8gue In other states because homes cost so
much more here "
•
OH. WHAT i\lQ HOCIC
0
0
THOMAS EL1A8 colamnl•t
SEARCHLIGHT
We're
feeling
good
• again
Pilot remains
In good ban s
despite changes
As most of you will remember, I
belong to an organization called
Amigos ViejOI. This orpnization
was established many years ago when
lhe late, great secretary of the New·
pon Chamber of Commerce was
distressed by the animosity between
lwo groups of citizens in Newport
Beach and by the animosity between
Newport Beach and Cos1a Mesa.
He thouaht that old friends should
set aside tfieir animosi1ics and have
an orpnization devoted ju1t lO old
friendships. Hence, the name
"AmiJOS Viejos." To you Spanish·
speak1nn scholars !hat means "old
friends.
The·prcstdent of Amigos Vicjos is
Mr. Justice Bob Gardner. A chap
named Les Stephenson, who is credi-
ted with beiOJ the bead o( the
committee which planned the re-
organization of lh,e City of Newpon
Beach, is the ·:toastmaster." Bob
Gardner is on sabbatical lca\IC while
he acts as Chief Justice of the
Supreme Coun of American Samoa.
So Les Stephenson canies on by
dishing out all the dirt and fun at each
meeting.
At the last meeting. which l
a1tcnded with my long.time pal
Harvey Somers, I got the bi& ribbing
.. because I was forced to 10 back to
work to support my family." What
Les was ialiang about is, that after a
I 7-ycan absence, I started to write
Searchlight again.
Those of you who read tfic first
revitalized ~archlighl on Tuesday,
WALTER .
BURROUGHS
Jan. 10, 1984, may remember the
-lleadline ---u-AVrandfathC?s Priac
Restored."
Yes, that is the reason I aa,reed to
start this column again. Because
Chazy Dowaliby, the editor, invited
me to do so. As I said then, I was so
pleased with the Daily Pilot under its
new ownership that I was happy to
r<spond.
But now, there has been a change at
the Daily Pilot and I want to tell you
that, aJthough I'm sure as thunder
going to miss Chazy, her leaving will
not affect the quality of the paper.
The long~time editorial secretary of
lbc Pilot, Pq McAJistcr, said it best.
When.Chazy took over she said, "It's
fun to work here now." And that it
was, I am sure. But with Chazy
leaving, all the staff arc happy for her
because her new assignment ls to be
publisher of a group of newspapers in
the east. all owned by Ingersoll
Publications, which owns the Daily
Pilot.
Tsakos' bribery attempts
also extended to Sudanese
What you may not know is that
Sandy Schwartz, the publisher, is also
a fine editorial type. For many years
he was ao Associated Press cor-
respondent and, according to some of
my old AP friends, ... damned good
one." He is being ably assisted.!>)' ~
manaaina editor named Frank Z1ni.
So, instead ofbeingadvcrsely affected
by the loss of Chazy, the Dajly Pilot
has the penonnel to continue to
improve. And one of these days, it's
my hope it will be back to the quality
it was under' the direction of Bob
Weed 11publisbcr1nd Tom Kee.vii as
editor. That is, the Qu.tlity ii was
before TUnes-Mirror put the Pilot in
charse of some housewreclters from
Dallas. Texts.
WASHI NGTON -Al about the wanted the SudanCR to grant him a
time that Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield, R· rlght-o(-way for the pipeline across
Ore .. apparently was poised to go to Sudan.
the Sudan tod1scussa proposed 1rans--According to the sources, Tsakos
African oil pipeline, the Greek arms discussed paying the two Sudanese
merchant promoting the p;pe:lioe was officials for their help in socurina 1he
making clumsy e!Tons to bribe right-of-Wly. A Tsak05 associate who
Sudanese officials here 10 support 1hc was present tried to quiet Tsakos. but
project sources have told my as. he persislcd in talking aboul payoffs.
soc1ate Corky Johnson. the tourccs said.
Pti yments by the Greek citizen, Tsakos aHcgcdly told the Im·
Bas:il Ts.akos, to Hatficld'I wire. bassador tnd the security minister he
Antoinette, totaled SSS,000 (Hatfield was prepartid to take care of "any
originally "8•d the tmount was special financial problems" they
$401000). The payment& were m1dc miglu have.
dunng the period the senator wu According to the tourtts. the
uaing his innucncc on behalf of ambassador waa offended and said,
Tukos-to &«1flgh·lcvcl U.S. suppart ·•we don't want tny or that on tbia
for 1he pipeline. 'project." Ei.Ha denied there had been
Mn. Hatfield said lts1 week that 1nyt1lkofl)lyofT1. Theamblssador't
she earned all the money she received brothtr-in-ltw i11 P1id consul tint to
from Tpkos for real estate and Tsakos' pipeline company, and
consu.hJna work she did for him and S-udan rectntly sia.ntd the riatlt-Of·
hla wift. Bui the senator admitted it WIY qrttmenL
had been t mi111kc for him to help Sourocs have also told me that
T11koa while his wife was being ptid Tsa~os offered a bribe 10 the viMtio1
by 1be Greek.. 'Tht H11ficlds htve udanese minister of enetJY, harif
donated the SSS,000 to chan1y. d-Toh1mi. The appro1c:h was made
Sources who disclosed Tsakos' at • dinner in Tsakos' Watefllte
tlltacd payoff attc.mp1s said t~re wts apanment ltst Dcct.mbcr. followina a
nocvidcncc:tbat Hatfield le new about reception ror Sudanac Pm dent
them. lkre ire the deUil • Ouftr Nimeiri 11 the Sheraton
Lts1 AU&ust. Tsakos met in Wtlh· Wa1hinaton Hok.I. The H1tfiddJ
in1ton with udanae Ambl1sador ~ rtPortcdty al the d1nn~r.
em...t1 ... and Chft.-IJnw '.Tayyi1>.--&1u:r l bc ~..the w • ..,...._
Sudan'1 minister of security. T11kot toUn:tS said, e:I· Tohami rq>0nedly
• •
'
JACK
AIDEISOll
So much for to much.
I now would like to relieve the
mitc0nocptlon that 1 write Scarch-
li&h.t in order that my ~mily can keep
the wolf from the door.
Another thing I would like to clear
complained to a Tu.kos aide in a up it tha1 lhosc of you who have
lengthy ton\lcrsation, 11yina he was complaints tgainst the city '°"ef'Oo
"furious" at the bribe tttempt, tnd• meot or Newport Beach, of 1...tauoa
calling Ttakos a ··scranac man." The Beach. or Huntinaton Beach, or of
Sudant1< offidal r<ponedly bruahed Costa M .... plwe don~ lhink laJk.
tsidc Tsakos' offer of money before ina to me is aoina 10 put the Daily
tny exact f'i.aurc was mentioned. Pilot editorially behind your prob.
Ttak.ot and eJ-Tohamj bad ao11eo lcm,
in10 an traument al 1hc earlier Let me 1n1wer two que1tion1 )'OU
reception for Nimeiri, tccord1na to htvc raised.
whneuet. T11.k01 reponcdly tried 10 One, ifl don't IC1 Ptiid aped6call)'
pin down tn exact dale *ben the for"'1'itinathiscolumn,thenhowdol
riaht-of·WIY qnie:ment would be mao.qe to tlis1? Two, why ctn't I
sianed. 1nd when el·Tohami stalled. usl&n rep()f1e:n to cover some of the
Tsakos railed hi1 voice. "I want Jt 11orlts tha1 you all feel netd to be •ilncd 9ulckly; I want it lian<d done? •
quickly.' TNkot 11id. 1CCOrdina to Allswcr one: I am one of two
1hosc pre1en1. , 1rustcc1 of the William Thoma.a
The tOUrct'I 11id it appeared \hit Jet'f'tr10n Tett1mtntary Tru1t. for
Hatfield would b.tve tone to Khlr· which I rttrive a peiymcn1 1nd also
toum if a T•kos auoci.llt. Oea.lina office •Pll« and IC\Tet.ari&I te:rVice. witb theSudanctc had notconv1n«d Answer two: 1 have noadmin11tradve
TJtk.0$ and the tenator thlt the conneaion with the Dally PiloL
timln& wu Wf'Oftl.
Jad __._,_ i. • ·~ lfall« ~ k •••· Plhlt•• C!9l•mal1t. I01111"91,.WltHr.
1 -
TUESDAY, UGUST 21. 1984
l~door pollution hurts workers
Trapped office fumes lead
to •stck buUdtng syndroµie'
he Ith huard, .. Ken Sexton, director of the indoor ir
qu lity program of the California Department of Health
Services 1s quoted 1n the Auaust issue of Science Digt'st.
La t month, he and scicnti ts from around the world
discussed the problem and pro~d.solutions at the Third
Now that we've all gra pcd the idea of outdoor air International Conference on Indoor Air Quality in
pollution, alona comes indoor an pollution, or what Stockholm.
ef)vironmental scientists call "sick building syndrome." Many contaminants con~bute to air pollution inside ~en a di vision of NB moved to a newly-renovated office , and they have a vanety of sou~ fbe w~rst
office in New York City, everyone started to complain of o!fendcr, for ,mokci:s and no!lsmoken ahke, 1s ambttnt
headaches and dizzincu. The symptoms disappeared Cigarette smo~c, which contains bcn.une, fomlaldehydc
when the employees went home, but in the office, and other camnogen~. .
productivity suffered so much the division eventually had ~ct-p~occss copiers five off odorl~ hydrocar~ns.
to be trahsfcrrcd to another building. causing fatigue ~nd kin 1mtauons. Dry-~ cop1ers
This is one of the severest examples to date of an leak ozone, an 1mtant to the eyes 'and ~~1ratory tract. · · 1 1 · · · Computer screens eitude low levels of nd1at1on. intcmationa prob cm. that 1s ancreas1!1&1Y aggravated by Othcrsourcesof~llutionaremoresurprisina. Plastic
closed ve~ts, hermetically scaled wmdows and other furniture and room dividers. and pressboard as well, emit ene~y-savina '!'casures: . . . formaldehyde and at least 100 volatile organic com-
Indoor air polluuon may be a s1gruficant pubhc pounds. Vinyl carpet -particularly when new -and
Bay Area
developing
body parts
But arttflctal organ ideas
migh t be tough to sell ---------SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-The blend of science and
technology that made the San Fnocisco Bay area a focal
point for computer chips and biological cngjnecrioa is
gu1dina researchers now to the development of artificial
body pans.
Work is under way at a handful of companies to
develop replacement parts for the human body -from
artificial skin to synthetic ligaments, blood components,,
bones and hearts.
Earlier ttus month, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration authorized Novacor Medical Corp. to
begin human tests of the first electrically powered blood
pump that can be put completely inside the body.
Workina with surgeons at Stanford Medical Center,
the privately held Novacor of Oakland wiU use its
-Pulscmalcer Heart Assist System only on patients faced '-----------------------'
with near-certain death, such as when the heart muscle Thontcc Laboratories in Berkeley raised $9 million
goes an to irreversible shock following open-heart surgery. in a 1983 public stock offering. Its product-a ventricular
A study by think-tank SRI International in Menlo assISt device -has been used on about 300 patients at
Park estimates the market foran1fic1al hearts alone to be in centers in the United States and Europe.
the billions of dollars. But Thoratec's St 3 million in revenues in the first six
Although companies must win FDA approval both to moot of this year were dwanCd by expenses th.It kid to a
conduct human tests and eventually market body parts, fint-halfloss of$3.3 m1Uion. The company as deve1opina
the tou&hest hurdle is makina the products fihancially other products to support its worlc in artificial hearts.
successful. Novacor developed its device after_ l S years of
"Doctors arc conservative by nature," said James research. It obtained S 17 million.. from the National
McCamant, analyst wath the Medical Technology Stock Institute of Health and $6.2 million from venture capital
Letter in San Francisco. 0 A lot of these bright ideas arc firms.
aoing to be touah to sclJ." The device will not replace the heart but temporarily
Thouah some products already arc commercially will be attached to its ch2mbers, taking over for the left side
available, others arc years away; and observers say some oft he heart where 80 .e_ercent of the blood-pumpina wotkis
may ne~r leave the drawins board. ---done.
"Product introduction delays can make these com-It can be used forabouttwo weeks, giving the ~tient's
panics vulnerable to competitors," said Jonathan Ziegler, heart a hcalth.-restorina rest or sustainina life until a heart
analyst for Dean Witter Reynolds Inc. in San Francisco. from a human donor can be found.
While semiconductors may take only 18 months to In San Francisco, meanwhile, Hexcel Corp. is months
move from research to marketing, radically new replace-rom formal FDA approval for its artificial ljgament,
mcnt body parts frequcntJ_y are tested on arumals for up to which has undergone more than l ,000 human tnaJs.
four years. Tbe FDA monitors human tests for at least two Hexcel also 1s conducting anunal tests on carbon
added years. composites intended to replace sections of injured bones.
In that time, a company's product may be made ~Colla&cn Corp. of Palo Alto, has produced ''Zydcrm,"
obsolete by a competitor's later development shn-like artifiCJal body protean used by doctors on more
Novacor is one of two Bay Area companies workina 100,000 patients to smooth out skin wrinkles and fill
on heart-like blood pumps. n !CafS.
: PAPARAZZI
"=--~ -------
c&eanan fluid rel sc hydrocarbons. Burned'!Out fluor-
cscent lights .,vc offPCB Oinya1r-condnio filteta n
!>reed bactena nd viru • nd these art then l>Jown
throu&hout n offi .
Irven a bu1ldm1's desigr_i c n promote pollution. If
lb ere s a basement parkin praai, carbon monoxide
up · rwaysand elevator haft . lo many bu1ld1 the ir·
inlet \lcntsarc locatcdoppositethecxhaust vents and n•t
avoid PlJlliog in contaminated air.
Most people's ymptoms from sick-bualdina syn-
drome are mild nd only temporary, but each ~ear the
Center for 01 9C Control rcceive5 hundrcdS or com-
plaints. The lon&·tcrm effects of c~posure to ofTaoe
contaminan" are not known. However. sa)'I sexton, .. my
aucss as that there·,' synerajstic effect amona lo levels of
these cMmicals and microorpnism . .. ·
Investigations have idcnttfied dozens more contami-
nants inside offices and houses than are present in w air
just outside the doors.
Still, levels of contaminants indoor'$ arc a,encrally
HELP YouRS ELF
I ~--=-~-- ------- -......ll
considered low. fall ll within the lcoJJ1m1u tel for fact ne 1 _by the Occupallo J fety and lfealth Mmmst-
tration (OSHA). But enllsts fU1Ut OSHA·, hmats are lOO
hi&b for offices. Factones generally employ meo ln IOOd
health, whale offices ml)' include ktlie and dclerty people and p:canant women. all of whom are more
·uve to the ill-effects of pollution. ·
fatt.o1tnogent limits of aa:epublen.posures ~set
11'1 J 9 l by the Amen n Society of Heatiq. ReffllttlUn&
and A1r-Condiuoni~ Eoginecn. lnc. (ASHRAE), Whieb
upportS research on indoor air quatuy. But au n&rds
arc oot law.
Even if all of the tens of thou nds ofbu1ld1~
di tricts followed them -which is doubtf1il -office
workers could sun bC in trouble. AlthoU&h ASRAE"s
auidclitts are for only ~ compounds, says Physic:'
Anthooy Nero, of the Universny ofCalifomia"s Lawrence
Bcruley Laboratory, .. there arc hundreds of chemicals
found indoOrs. many with no standards at an."
Water, water everywhere
is too much for ear to bear
Rinse with rubbing alcohol
is best remedy for swimmers
Dunna summer·------------
sw1mmers arc oc-
cas1onally affcctcd by
an infcctjon m the ear
canal which 1s com-
monly referred to as
"swimmer's car." In
Southern California,
BRENNAN
CASSIDY
the infection occurs••••••••••• almost any time be-
cause of the year-round water sports activities.
Swimmer's car (also called ntcmal otitis) is a
bacterial infection in the canal Which is on the outside of
the eardrum, although occasionaJJy a fungus may be the
culprit. Itching and pain in the ear arc the early symptoms.
There may be a discharge of pus, watery or blood-tinaed
fluid. The car canal itself may become filled with pus or
fluid and cause intermittent hearing loss.
Persistent wetness in the car canal is an environment
in which bacteria or funpl infections may develop. This is
cs~1ally likely in a warm, moist climate from swimming
or sometimes from bathina and shampooioa your hair.
lnJuncs to the skin of the ear canal from attcmp to
clean or scratch or itch the car may seed tbc infection. A
small break tn the skin from an instrument used to scratch
the ear or even a cotton-tipped applicator may predispose
to infection. ·
lnfect1ons such as swimmer's ear must be differen-
tiated from other causes of car pain and dischu&c.
Frequent use of earphones or other foreign objects in t1ic
car may. precipitate infect1on or alle~c reactions.
Dandruff in lh-e ear can l>ra ause of 1ml:auon aild
subsequent mfection.
If the infection pfOITCSSCS WJthout treatment. the ear
canal becomes completely blocked and begms to swell.
Pam may become extreme bcausc this swcllina occurs in
an area which is surrounded by bone. It 1s more painful
than swellina in other areas of the skm where more
elasticity exists. The ear may be tender to touch or to
pressure. The infection also may pfOITCSS to the skin and
underlying tissue surround1na the car.
E1ttemal otitis is usually treated WJth antib1ouc drops
with aood success. There is often a topical steroid mixed
with the an11b1ot1c drua to dccrcasc anflammauon and
swclliria -rucb may be pttlCtlt. Oocasiooally oral
aotibiotics arc necessary when tbe infection is JCVere.
However, in ordinal') circumstanca, oral antibiotica waU
not be ~te treatment.
A person bothered by rcpealtd epdodcs of swimmer's
ear can apply some measures to prevent tbe occurrmcc ol
infectioo. Titt: objectives of these preventative~
arc to keep the ear canal clean and dry. and to Pf'OUIC1 if
~m~~· :
Debris in the ear can be removed by pUy wipina
with a cotton-tipped applicator or occasionally by
irrigation. A commercial product called Debrox o&u t1
used in removina debris. The ear canal i1so can be dried
after swimming or water 11Ctivity ·britriaatioa with
uopropyl alcohol or rubbing alcohol. This will rid the ear
of water and the alcohol evaporates more rapidly leavina
the ear canal in a dry state. Ear pl~ can sometimes be \l!eful but they also may
cause debris and moisture to be pushed into the ear anal
and further qaravate the problem.
Dr. BreotWJ Qssidy practia:s Wnily and emt::f'Jencr
medicine in Cosu Meu.. .
'Magic lady'
is a catalyst,
rarelya wife
Editor's Note: This look •t the husband's viewpoint
istbesecondoffivecolumnsdeaJin6wirbrbeehtionund
diJappointmenr.s of in extn-mariw .tf.air.
R cm e m be r ------------Jake'>
He's the fellow
who, while mamed
to Leslie, bad a secret
affair with Sue.
Then, in an attempt
to rc--commit to his
l.JIDA
Aa.un
marri c. he termin-•••••••••••• atcd theaffair&ndadmittb.talJ tobiswife.Sherespoodcd,
---. unexpectedly, by bani hlng Jake from their home
permanently.
Jake perceives himself as havioa been pven a life
5entencc for jaywalk.Jn.a and he is devastated.
Sue had presented to tum an opportunity for
rornanuc rqencration. She made lum feel wonderful and
alive. Jake says that he wasn't looJang to have an atJ'air; it
just happened.
He describes Sue as being attractive enouah, "but
then apin." he says. ··so is uslie ... Her appeal had more
to do with lus response to her than with anythiQ& else.
Sue listened when Jake said the same old things
Lcshc ras tired ofhcarin&.
he asked question be was happy to an~. rclauve
to their Wred worlc experience.
The electricity between them became impo ible to
ignore
Sue ~-as not a fem~ f•talc She •-as a somewhat
ordinary youna woman ..,ho had rnponded to a
vulnerable man throU&h her own vulnerabilities. Roman-
tic illu ion and passion had prevailed. and cauiht up in
the initial stages of their relationship; be had not
con idered the possible consequences of his actions..
Belen Woo, left, cbalrmaa of CblneM lloon J'eetl•al paaeant ID ltnjo:rinMtbenewBant:LaitonBeachratau..rant wereDr.Cb.IUtop1 er ''Leslie," he said, "ncverhad tolcaow."
September; aU.. plau wltla LoCk Gee DIDI and Anita Claew. Lee hmela Lee and Robil't Woo; a a.th Dtnc eeated with Ila.late Woo. Casual affairs seldom remain ca uaJ i.s they were
• intended. Relation hipsarown and flourish or wither and
M t h k 1 b t d die, ju t like people ... and the very real relationship a c ma er ce e ra e ~~:::~;i~edmananctthc .. otherwoman .. inhi life
The cri is came when it became evident lbat uc
Chinese Culture Club to host banquet,
choose Its queen for Moon Festival
By ANN CONWAY
nccdcd '°methina from Jake other than to feel hi cao. Ja~c·s primary relation hip tood in the wa • As it is
with most men, 'Ja not ready to ave has ·re to
many hii ptfncnd. He cbOIC, i tcad, to w anot
I at hi marriage.
· tk how. that even when m med men do
leave their 1v for the other •'Omen they love.
1dom marry them. Their utra-marital lo crs art more
hkcly to fulfill. uan ·uonal runction c...J..
On offi . -ny parated from hi wife. and DQ_ om
&o wd d1 ft'C. a man is m li y to come UPo • -
··m d ." It 1 ltu worn n •ho he is more t to
MllT)' • . -J 1 e mad 1 SC"Ot.lna
mittl to th ck 1 ofh' indiscmion
He m t have an ther
1th li ut the n nt rem n " to come fim.
Popular medical beliefs don't always ~or.k
Scratching poison ivy won't
spread it can cause inf ectlon
10 od N c.•·e .... llle"ta Onler toHH l:Wound
need Oll)'SC'n to hcal1 but that doesn't mean tliey must be
uncovered. If t re adequate blood circulation to the
injured &he Oll)&en in the red co~u lcs will heal the
wound. That's why 1ntcnutl wounds. hke the uf1lcal cuts
made durin an operation, I even though then> 11 no Sttatdbaa P Ivy ead It: Not 'tNc. If you arc eiposurc to tbc out idc air.
nsitive to the irritatina subltancc in the poison ivy plant Will Bakl•c Soda Beat AW te'• Foot? We've heard
-uNshiol -you a~ likely to develop 9'c characteri tic abOut u in& bak1na .soda u 1 dcntnflcc or deodorant, but
blistery rash wherever your skin has cQme in direct contact what about 11 a cure for athlete's foot? One of our rcadefl
with this irritant. 1 suuested that a paste ofbilkinf sOd8 and water applied to
You don't have \o touch the plant iuelfto be ellposed the foot ~iaht c~ this fungal infection. Unfortunately,
to urusbiol: You could pick it up from the hair of a doa the word 1 that ll probably won't help. The fungus that
who's wandertd througti a poison ivy patch, from your causes athlete's fo~t. 5.1!YS H~ul!-l's Dr. ~arry Arnold,
own clo\ha or even from the air if poison ivy plants are ma~ actually Oouruh an the\.a.tkahne environment of a
bcina burned'. baking soda paste. • · . . . . Yoa Sleep Bt'lt la a (Cold) (Warm) Room: Talc your J~st as Iona.as your s~n is. not contamanated ~th pick, because there's no hard and fast rule. As tong as the
un.a ~101. you can t spi:ca~ poison ivy s1mp_ly by ~tchma. room isn't·so cold that your shivering shakes.you awake or
Thats because the hqu1d ans1dc the .bbstcrs as not an so wann that you are bathed in perspiration, the only
allergen. It's produced by your body m response to the "ideal"tcmpcratureforslecpingistheoneatwhichyouare
un.ashiol irritation. What looks Like spreading(new) poison most comfortable.
ivy is actually the same rash develop mg at different times More important to a good ni&ht's sleep is your internal
io different places. Scratchina'sa bad idea, though, because temperature. Each of us has a well-defined temperature
it can nt11~"' infections. f'l'Utm that rises and falls in a rqular daily cycle. We can
Gralldpa's wisdom, love
an enriching experience
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am
writing thisas I sit beside the hospital
bed of my 82-year-old gran6fathcr.
He has a tcmunal illness and won't be
around much longer.
My dad walked out on us 20 years
ago. I was just an Infant Grandpa
moved in so Mom couJd go to work
and support us. He was the most
important person in my childhood.
I turned doWDJnany dates in htgh
school sol could be wt th Gramps
when he wasn't feeling up to par.
Sometimes I just stayed at home so he
wouldn't have to eat dinner alone. I
never felt that l was making any
sacrifK:CS. He was wonderful com-
peny. I learned so much from him,
especially about history because he
saw so much ofit firsthand.
When I went to college I often came
home on weekends to be with
Gramps. My friends thought I was
crazy. Whoever heard of a college girl
choosing to be with her grandfather
when she could go out with some
nice-looking guy'!
I hope you will pnnt this lcner and
encourage young people to pay mon:
attention to the old folks: They ha vc
so much to offer and a lot oflovc to
Jive.
A1111
luDEIS
Grampsreadsyourcolurnn every
day and admires your wisdom. These
lastfcw weeks I have been reading the columns to him because his eyesight
is faiJing. It tickles me when he says,
"I sure do like the way Ann told that
four-flusher om"
It would be temfic 1fl couJd read
him this letter. Please, Ann. try to find
spaoe for it. -LUCKY TO HA VE
HAD HIM SO LONG
(SHREVEPORT, LA.)
-DEARSBREVEPORT: Yoar
vuclfatMr IOlllUl1 llke a very
1pecla) penoa -bat Dal so do yoa. Y oa1 people WH are able to brld1e
llle geaentioDS profit la to muy
Wa)'I.
Yoa were, ladttd, lacky-and 10
wa1Gramp1. • • •
DEAR ANN LANDERS: What in
the world is wron1 with a man who is a $60,000-a.year ellecutive and a<;ts
like be never heard of a bathtub or a
shower?
When Oarenoe was a boy be was
very poor. He arew up in a rural area
and his fami ly didn't have bot water,
ashowerora bathtub. Everybody
"bathed" in a basin. Well, here it is 40
years later and my husband is still
washing up in the sink.
He insists his method is much more
cffiCicnl Believe me, I have a very
keen olfactory sense and I can tell you
he'd do a lot bencrjob in a shower.
lfl couJd understand why the man
thinks like this I might not be so upset
byit.Doyouhaveanexplanation?-
SOMEWHERE IN THE CARO-
LINAS WITH STINKY
DEAR SOMEWHERE: Beuvioral
patteraa learaed • e~llood are
d.UflcalttoaJter. Yovn.bud'•
ba"l•I laabtts are probably so la-
sralaecl &Hre 11 ao dwlce tUt a.e will
clauge. Get~ tk 1troa1est IOIP
yoa cu fiDd aad utipenplrut for
clally ase aad add some 1eatle
perna11on.
Meal call feeds frustration
Repnnted by Request
In looking over a rack of greeting
cards the other day I was impressed
with the fact that there was a message
for every occasion from "Happ)'
Birthday to My First Daughtcr-m-
Law" to "Congratulations on Your
Trial Separation."
Not fi nding what I wanted, J asked
a salesperson behind-thc-ca!hrcgister,
"Do you have a card inviting your
husband to dinner?"
.. Do you mean the standard grect-
mg simply staling that dmner is on
the table and would he please drop
whatever he is doing and make an
apocarancc'?''
"That's the one," I nodded.
.. No. but we get a lot of calls for
them," she sajd.
The engraved invitation 1s
woman's last n:sort. Man's resistance
to come to the table has always been a
mystery to me. Sometimes· l say,
CAllP A1fARO-llc1'ALL Y
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Camp of
Newport Beach announced the en-
pgemcnt of their daughter, Diane
Maureen Campanaro. to Sean Patnck
McNally, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
McNally of Azusa. The an-
nouncement was made at a part)' for
70 guests at the Balboa Bay Club
The bride-elect, a 1975 graduate of
Newport Harbor High School, at-
tended USC where she affiliated with
WESTIN 80lJTH COAST PLU.A
HOTU C08'TANES~
DllUSV Sl'OllT ~:Zl
E1u
IOllECI
"Dinner's ready!" just to watch his
feet tum mechanically and go away
from the table.
You would think one would run
out of things to do while the food 1s
cooling down, but they never seem to.
They clean out the medicine cabinet,
go to the bathroom, check their faces
for growth of beard, turn television
channels, check the car to see if they
left the lights on, get the paper, have a
discussion with the children in their
rooms on "What 1s Lifer' and (this is
my favorite) change their clothes
Alpha Omicron Pt Sorority. She 1s
manager and co-owner of Aowers by
Debra m Costa Mesa.
Her fiancc is a vaduate of Azusa
High School and earned his bachelor
of arts degree in political science at
UCLA. He received his juris doc-
torate from Western State College of
Law and now 1s a deputy district
attorney for the County of San
Bernardino
The couple plan to marry next
June.
when they have been sining around 1n
them for three hours.
Also peculiar to the Deaf to Dinner
Syndrome is the n<>-response. For
years, I have stood in the doorway of
the kitchen and courted varicose
veins of the neck by yclho&.
"Dl l ll 11 NNNNN-
NAAAAAAHHHH!" When there is
no response tlic lint time, it0ecomcs
a chant.
With each n<>-responsc, I &ive it
another shot. Finally, like an appari-
tion, the husband appears and says in
a quiet voice1 "There is no need to
shout I hearo you the first time."
I frankly think greeting card com-
panies are missing the boat on this
one. There are conservatively SS
million husbands in this country just
sitting there like Scarlett on her
veranda waiting to be invited to
dinner. Multiply this by fi vc dinncfl a
week plus sii weekend meals and you
have a little moneymaker in invita-
tions there.
Until then . . . DIIlllNNNNN-
NAAAHHHHHHH!
fall atlcep any ilme-while temperature 1 ri i~& or fallina
-but wo almost always wake up when a ns1na pha ~ns. That' why ''day ~oplc" (whose risina phase tarts
earlier in the day) wake up early in the momina even when
they 10 to sJcep vny late at night.
81romet.r Dowa, Mlaralaet Up: True. And lhc same
thing is likely to happen when the barometer goes up.
Down or up, any chance in air p~surc may set on a
migraine, ys Dr. Seymour Solomon, director of the
Headache Unit at New York's Montefiore Medical Center.
But when the'wea1her remain cloudy or rainy, ·say
researchers at the Royal Infirmary in Edinbui'&h, Scotland,
there arc fewer mi~nc 11tt4cks than when the weather is
clear. The likely caU5e: Oouds block the sun and eliminate
visual llare:. a known. migraine trigger.
Never a.eave ~ Food la Ill Opened Can; TNc, ~pccially cans of acid foods such as tomatoes or orange
JUice. Many food cans are sealed with lead solder to keep
them airti&ht When you open the can, air rushes in and
produces a chemical reaction during which potcnlially
dangerous amoun ts oflead may leak out of the solder and
into the food. (The FDA is considerina a proposal to put a
warning on lead-sealed cans.)
Note that refrigerating the open can won't eliminate
-t.00-
8WCME ..... "The Siient Gun" (19$9) L.lo)'d
Bridgel, John Bedl . • fO. ANNOUNOE.D
eWCME ttt "A Senlltlvt, P..-onatt
Min" (1977) David Jenaen. At9tt OdNon. • i=OMAN
•• '"Nedil" (1984) IMlil w ...
JoNrwl Clrlo.
I em:RTAINMEHT TOHIOHT
IOI NEWHART
MAAIHAL DUON
WCME t t "POfty'1 I! The Helt Dey''
(1983) o.i Monll\ln, Wyltt l<l#l
(%)MOYIE
tt~ "Thi Plt1y'' (1988) PM
Stllrl. CleudWlt Longet.
-t.10-
• 8ECRET8 01ADESERT8EA
-t:ao-(!) MOYIE
ttt "How To Ml#der YCAJI Wile"
(19$5)Jlct L.tmmon. Vlma Lill 9 PEOPlE't COURT a IOllM a MARTWt LAUOtMN
GPETEAGUNN
-t.4&-
8!) A WALK THROUQH THE 20TH
C8f1'URV WITH al MO't'EM
CC) NCIWI> llElBt c.wGHf IN
THEN:fMWN
-10:00-
G OONNU eaeeNEWS (llTAXI a WHEEi. Of fORTUNE 6)80XING
®MOYE t t "Mr. Mom" P983) Mdllef K•
ton. Teri Gin.
(O)MOYIE
.. ~ MMother l.odt" (1982) ~
ton Heston, Nick Mancueo.
-10:15-~)MOYIE * "H.0.T.S.I" (1979) Sutan Kiger,
U..london. -mo-., CAAOl.E KNL ONE TO ONE
-10:a0-
l 20N ntETOWN
INDEP9llSfT NEW8 «I WIW IN CINCINNATI
FMILYFB.ID
-11:00-
1108(1)9QICl NEW8 8 MTUADi\Y tlBHT D IO#M & MARTltt LAUOtMN
.ntE ... ILW
IOU>OOl.D tlT8
MOTHERS: YOU tAOUOHT A
NEW KN> Of LOVE
(%)MOVIE
t "N1n1'' (1981) Katya S«ger,
JIM.Piln't Aumont.
-11:20-
• A LOW CLASS: WITH LEO
•llCNM.JA
-11:ao:-·1tiOMAAm G TONGHT
I~ NEWS NIOHTl.M ** "Arabelle" (1989) Vlma I.Ill, .... Fox. _ .. _.
1he lead problem. BeSl bet:
1
Empty ah n when you open
it and store the con ten ls in a pla uc or glass cont, inc1.
Milk a 1111 for mooo ? Milk ,oonuun I tt
aetd a naturol moisturiLcr. (M n).'. commcrcl I skin cream and lotions contain lactic Cid ~nv tiVC r 5
cosmetic chemist Michael A. lhshop ) Milk I contains
proteins and fats that m y tc{Tlpomrily make your kin feel
smoother. , h fT '"-But a milk facial can ba~kfirc; I.f Y!>U ~on t wa o hrc-milk completely. it can dry mto a.n 1mtatma film that m ) b~d ~cteria and cause your 1ktn t~ break out. . A plrtted Wart Catt: A recent item on ca tor 011 for
warts brouabt lots of letters with other home remedies
Perhaps the most imaginative wa ttus one from Bl nche
Kind of Slippery Rock, Pa:
"An old Indian who lived in our area told me to ~l ~tato, cut it in half. spit on it, rub bot~ h.alv~ t t~er, put
n back just the way it was before c~t, ~·e it with a ~tn~g and
bury it under a rainspout. Well, I did It -not bchevma for
ont second. About two weeks later, I woke up to ... no warts.
no marks, no scars." . . . Note: Foll.. Medicine explotts t~e JC1et?t1fic ev1dc1J«
for (or apinst) popul.ar medical ~liefs. 111s nC?t. mrd1C'.ll ad~·ice, which is available only from your phys1c11n
American Heallll M.a1aitae Serv!.ce
Country atyle
SlnJ(er WUlle Ket.on will praent hla .. Coun-
try ~emorlee" on KOCE, Channel 80, to-
nl.Cbt at 7 o 'clock u put of the Buntmcton
Beach •tatlon'• .. Starfe.t Summer .. .erte..
(t>MOVIE *** "Journly To The Cent• Of The Eatth" (1959) Pat Boone, J11nt1
Ma.on
-12:00-
I TWIJQHT ZOfilE
EYE ON HOUYWOOO
(f) NJEPENDENT NEWS m lllCKE Of THE tlBHT
MOYE * t "The Brothen O'T ode" ( 1972)
John Alt.In. Pat ClrrOI
MOVIE t t "Curle Of The Pink P1nth«"
(1983)TtdW•.Dt'fld~
cmJimlE -t tt "O, The Winged Serpent"
(1982) MichMI Moriltty, DtWI c:.-
rdlt.
(l)MOYIE
t "The L.onefy lldy'' ( 1983) Pia
z.dorl. Lk¥I ~.
-12';20-
9 lATBDfT Nl!E1«;A
-12:80-.. QI LATt tlOHT WITH DAVID
l.El1Sl&AH Iii AlAE> HITCHCOCI(
PAEIMS ' 8 THIEETII& 0
(I) "'1#M & tiWmN't lAuatMN UM. AMERICAN 8TY1.l
MOVIE
• t ~ "Mlglo" ( 1971) AnthOny Hopo
klnt, AM-Mairgret.
-t2'.AO-
e Cl>OOUW
-1:00-
O UOYIE *** 'Cleopatra" (19~) Claudette
Colbert. Wlrrtn Willlamt
D llESTOFLA. T~Y
Cf) MOYIE * H~ "The Big Country" (Part I of
2) ( 1958) Gregory Peck Charlton
Htslon.
e WCME
H FM (1971) Midletl Brandon.
9ttn Brennan. The diac )Oektyl of •
rock mu11C rldlo llatiOn In LOI Anv--
111 band together to prot•t the
management's dtclllon to cut down
on the lllUSIC end add more c:ommtl'-cllll •
·-1~
D HEM.TH FIB.D
D HOU.YWOOO Ct.08BJP AU It THE FAMllY
AOWAH & MARTIN'S LAUGH-IN
-1:40-(l)WCME
**~ '"Btech Girts" (1982) Debra
Blee, Vm Klint
-1:55-
®MOYIE * t '"Fndly The 13111. Part If' ( 1981)
Amy Sltll. John Furey.
-2:00-
• CJ) C8S NEWS NIOHTWATCH !~NEWS
U t "Piaf" (1973) Btigtttt Anti,
PllCllt Chnslophl
-~10-
(C)MOVE
H V. "The CMlltngt" (1982) Scoll
Glenn, T Olhro MlllN.
-2:1&-lilMOVE
**~ "Man from Cairo' (19541 George Raft. Gianna Cetla c.iatt
lloon l'•tlTal cbalnD.ao llaJ Sae Chee welcom• Pen Yen Wane, Jennle Ko, JOJce ~. Jad1 Waq, ltY& llaJ Stani,
OtlJ .......... "' ...... ~ &beryl Lynne June. Ana Toy. TnCJ LJD.D Wooi and
Sherry CJlaDC who WW compete lJl the queen paaeanl.
• &.twayaurc:Md'1 poiM Ind ....... ,..,.,_, Pfogllll'ft
of ee.ont wtCh the Internationally famoul Ice Captidte' W'1
IJlemlng l'MChod glV9I ~ Of your cN6d WholllOIN, hMlthy
.-die In oomfot1able, eupetVl8ed eunoundlngl.
NewSlln .. Welcornel
979-8880
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FOOT SURGERY
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MOON •••
l'romBl •
PrauS..(in charaeofcootc5tant
CSCX>rtl), Aanll CU.1 (cscon train· Woodstock revisited
cr),LJUV01n(chorcop'8phy), CALDWELL. N.J. (AP)-Richie
HeleaWoo(pqeantchamnan), Havens, ..,ho joined Joan Baa and
Aata.CMw(rcserv&tions). MaJ1te Donovan for a concert on the I Sth
anda.Hrt ... (owncnofl.c anniversary of the Wood tock fcsti·
Cbinoiuataurant in El Toro), val, says the pmt a.cncrated at the
Pamela and Dr.Cluia....-Lee, Bethel, N.Y., da•O' fi rm .. ne~cr left."
MlcdtnJ(conductorl"ororangc .. We're blct ajainl" said Haven
COuntyCffamberorch tra), now• srandfather .
ce1a .. hWta• and Flore.ace .. A revival ii not the nght word. A
• •Happiness Kwu'' and "'Mello
Yellow:·
The t 1-hourconcertSaturdaydrew
nearly .S.000 ~pie to• slopina lawn
at C..ldwell Collqc. Comparisons
with the Woodstock ~ tival, which
drcw400,000 people, were ancvttable.
Black cckbBtion is 1 bellet" word, a oon· i-;::::::::::::::::::::::;~::z;:;:ti=:~~==~=-===· ;::=:::;::::::::::::::::::=:::::::;i firmation even better." uid Glvt YOUI Cllll TIE DICATIOl-Yll llSI YOl'l IAI OOnovan. Whocou.Cd the crowd anto
But Baez. 43, said, .. I'm tired of the
60s. l don't want to talk 1b0u1
Wood tock. I feel 1 PAf1 of my hfe 11 to
try to dia people out of the 60s nd
ducrt them into the Because l
think the 80s arc hard tn cnnfmnt.""
.-
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II •
linfi• •Iona &o uch m 96<.ls tune.\ 11
He.• 1 ho" utlwr c lrunJtt• (.'o,1st res· a·· hh·m UM.' mak • und i• nd th lr
mnnt' m tttt• t'c 1luhni: 11:1 • • l .
•
Dramasho cased in 'Stalag 17'
Lut American tour?
Entertahier Elton John, d.reeeed In a ~D&PPJtaJI: and a atraw hat. perform.a for a IN>ld-oat crowd at Arbooa State
Unl•ent~ In Tempe. Be will appear at lrrine lleado.-tilt.
weekend on Jrbat bu been announced u bJa 1aat U.S. tOar.
One of the more mrmorablc ltones
to come out of World War 11 was
.. Stalaa 17," the saga of hfc an
German prison camp by two men
who had been there. Donald Bevan
and Edmund TrL<:mski. •
The 19S3moviebucdonthe1rplay
put an Oscar un Wilham Holden's
mantle in a year when Bun LancaSltf
and Montgomery if\ were co-
favored for their performances in that
year's tof picture ... From Here to
Eternity.' It was a masterful mixture
or outru.geous comedy and life-or·
death drama, a celebration of mental
and physical survival un<fer the most
oppreuina of circumstances. It was, in shon, one hell of a movie.
The ori~nal stqe version pain
somewhat 10 comparison. Its bum.or
is more restrained and its characters
are liven less dimension 1han those
enacted on the screen by Holden,
Robert Strauss. Peter Graves, Harvey
Lembeck. Don TayJor1 etc. Those
attending its currcn t ttv1 val by Show·
case Productions at Golden West
Toi
Tms
Colle thould not u~t the h11ant)'
of the movie -but should be
in!.P.ressed by t.he im~ct of he
drama. .
Director Alex Koba has placed the
emP.hasis on intensity in his "Stalag
17,' and bis wt, for the most part, responds admirably. Few actors arc
so capable of mezmcrizina an au-
dience with sheer emotional power as
Gary Saderup, who plays the Holden
role with a seething fury that arouses
instant resentment among his fellow
POWs. . .
One who suctttds in matching this
. stage power is Ben Miles, cast
os~ensibly ip the chief comic role of
City slickers really runningNashvi}le
8 )'. JOE EDWARDS
•1ttoltted ,,_ Wrtt.r
radio stations. didn•t make No. J on the country advanced as those on the West Coast.
The computer craze has even cbans by accident. RCA has about a "'I've edited in Los Angeles. and
caught up with "Hee Haw," the dozen country promotion staff mem-Nashville bas the equipment and
NASHVILLE -Behind the com syndicated television Jhow ponray· ben who contact... radio stations, manpower equivalent to what I've
pone jokes on "Hee Haw" and ing country bumpkins wearing over-urging them to play~CA songs such been exp<>sed to in L.A. (Nashville)
country music's zany song titles like alls while standing in oomfields. as the June chan-toppcr. companies strive to keep up with the
.. You're the Reason Our Kids Are Each segment of the show is time Helping the promotion staff and inoustry, making sure that producers
Ugly.. is a city-slick business and coded, so each show is laid out by a other RCA employees is a computer are able to be here or come m and still
technological operation that belies oomput.er according to the .minutes which can give them access to the get the quality post-production facili-the Nashville image· of,, barefoot available. record charts. ties they expect."
hillbillies. "It's like fitting pieces into a jigsaw Occasionally the stars themselves Another healthy offshoot of coun·
Supponing folksy country stars like puzzle," said DaV1d Ward, a spokes~ pitch in to plug their records. Brenda try music in Nashville is the talent
Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty -man for the country music-<:omedy Lee hopped in a Lear jet in mi<S-July agency business. The ycUow pages of
the ones who sang .. You're the show. and visited 14 radio stations in six theNashvillephoned1rettorylist 105
Reason Our Kids Arc Ugly" seven Even some of the stan on the show states during a three-day promotion such agencies.
ye,ars ago -are...miUions of dollars are not the uneducated, poor cbarac-swing. One top agency, Top Billing Inc.,
wonh of sophisticated equipment, ters they ponray. The Nashville Network. which has six agents representing 16 clients.
computers and sharp business ex-"It' sat ways amused me that Archie produces country music program-among them ent.enaioers Tom T. ~t1ves with a critical eye on the Campbell would do a com j)OOe ming on cable television. has two Hall and Johnny Rodriguez and
bottom line. segmeoton the show, then go off and iateUite dishes and master control country humorist Jerry Oower. The
. The paths of the micrO\;hip and the talk to his stockbroker:" Ward said. facilities valued at more than S 1 firm atrangtS api)roximately $4
backwoods have crossed. Joe Galante, head or RCA Records million. million in book.ings each year. ·
It may look like a simple operation in Nashville, says the music business The network also has two tape Ana ·the competition is getting
for the Oak Ridge Bor,s to step on bas grown much more sophisticated editing suites that cost about S 1 tougher. ICM -International
stage and sins "Elvira.· but it takes durinahis 11 years with thecompany. million each. "These are some of the Creative Management-announced
three buses and three .. IS-wheelers" Galante said it now-a>sts an best-in th~ country," saictspokesm~. in July that it wtlJ hep an office in
to transport the quartet and their 40 average of about $70,000, and ranges Tom Adkinson. Nashville permanently. The far-flung
tons of equipment from show to uptoSl00,000,to_produceonealbum Multimedia Entertainment, ·a talent agency, which did more than
show. -four times the figure 11 years ago. major producer of country music S 149 million worth of business in
According to Kathy McClintock, "When I came here. you could television shows, relies on post-1983, opened a Nashville office last
spokeswoman for the Oak Ridge produce an album for $20,000. It was production equipment in Nashville November.
Boys, it costs the flashy group mailed and you bad two promotion to syndicate programs like "Music RCA's Galante, who lacks just six
between $7,500 and $9,000 per con-men call around. We've fOne from a City USA" and specials stanina credits of having a master's d~ in
cert for sound and lights. Each bus is staff of eight or JO to 30,' be said. Louise Mandrel!J. the Statler marketing, says the business side has
valued at $375,000 and the big "'There used to be four-<:0Jor fronts Brothers, Conway l witty and Janie kept pace with the growing sophisti-
tractor-trailer rigs att leased ftJr on albums and no glossies. Today we Fricke. cation ofNashviJle•s music industry.
approximately $60,000 ~r year per use four-<:0lor on the front and back Steve Womack, senior executive "Now we have batteries of at-
o an f: a ts crup•fl pnm ry nt m L His,
~rfonnancc as tough nd uncom·
prom a mg., as 1s th t of G G1rlidl
the no.nonsense rrncb I er, 1
bit )Oun look-in for lhc role but
quite stro~ ncvcnh J •
D3v1d \\ l i somewhat mi tin
the Lem beck role of1he wtsecraCki
Jewi prisoner. iacki both the
pby i I ppca nee n 1hc a>mte tim1 required Aip K:Qbler docs a
fine, mcticulou JOb the POW •
security officer, bi.It Greg ~)Jinone
needs more 1easonini for his role a.s
the rid\ GI from BO&ton.
Of the foreign assi_snmcnt\, .Ron
Moeller is highly effective as the
jocular but danetrous Corporal
Shultz~ Bill Gruencbera makes a
deadly ominous camp commandant,
an(f Pierre Alexander lacks clanty as
the Oenc~a man. Robert Coker tum1
in some impr~vc work as Banone's
buddy, a Rich Little-type im-
pressionist, while ~etcr Modaffati
hu some good moments as the lly
young airman. · · \
Showcase Productions has been
Kobe's personal project for the past
several yea!l and now, after being
evicted fiom the soon-to-be-rued
Wntminster Auditorium, the group
hopefully has found a home at
Golden West College. h's a tempor-
ary arrangement at best. since pro-
duction time must be shared with the
college drama depanmcnt... but 1t
keeps the group alive.
"Stalag l T' will be on the boards
for one more weekend, with pcr:-
formances at 8 p.m. Thursday
through Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday
in the main Golden West theater. Call
895-8378 for ticket information. •
AU.BOARD -The rcvaved
n Vttjo Pla)houlC WI I hokS
aud1uo for Tcnnettee Wilham •
drama -eat ona Hoa Tut Roor· Sept
2 from 2 to S ip;m. at La Paz SdloOI.
:2S U 1 radtta Drive, Muuon
V1e,o .... lhOSiC U)'UlJ out Should brina a p1c:ture arid resume. accotdaDJ &o
director Robert M1chael 'Con·
•.• the how opms Oct. 9 and
f urtbcr rnfonnauon s available a1
1-4245 ....
Rtadi n~ for the Rodlers and H mmcrstcJn musical ~ne-K.ina
and I" '1>111 be bdd unday It l p.m.
and Monday at 7:30 by tbC FUUen.on
C1v1c Ught Opera al 218 W. Com·
mon ealth, Fullerton ••.• singc~
5hould come ~red v.;Jtb an ap-
propriaie mu tca1 lccllon .... aJI rolei
arc open for lhe ow, wtuch opens
Oct. 19 in R1ummu Auditorium ....
The Brea The-atcr ~ue win bold
tryouts Mooday and Ti.lada ofna1
week for the m uskal top the
World, I Want 10 Get Otr: ... ttadinp
are scheduled for 7 p.m. for Pioneer
Hall at Elm :and Madrona 1iq
Brea-. call 996-068S for furthc:r in or-:
mauon. ...
CASTING -lihe Huntintrtnl
Beach Playbou has annou~iht
cast of its DCll production, '"The
Farmer's Daughter." openin1 Sept. '1
form ..... ceuods~ .. !f ini Aman and Ed Ha)'~· all play the leadina roles. witb
Charles Taylo1, A'leoe Hxau.
Kathleen Mahoney, 'aclc Will •
bacher. Manny S~ Ruth Sqall,
Stan Scott and :Ernest Bf'.OWG.i_na
completing thC cast. ... petformances
wdl be Jiven throU&h Oct: 13 and
fun.her mfonnation i$ avajlablc at
832-l40S ....
lUJCurt fHfARfS
WALK· INS * ~~J;_:r:.:. ~ *
:~~~~~ SlflN[)fl[)I :tM~
S 113til3•X•211tl6)'34 2H3~C..C-F!. )
Cllnt 1.utwood
TlGKTIIOf'E <•\ ShOws at 12:JS 2! 5
5 :10 7:50 • 10:15
llEO OA-...... S) s11ows It12:31J
3:00 5:30 1 :00 .. 10:10
8fll Murray Dali Aytlroyd
GffOS1'WUSftD O"G)
SllOWI at 12:21 2:40
4 :5$ 1 :25 t ;S0/70 MM
flUllP'l.JE 1UUJ11 (1Q lNDUUIA ~ a ..,....
AT I :00 3 :20 5 :40 TS~:: :--2:00 2(~ .. 10 :00 ·--· SNEAI< AT IPM 1 :00 1:JO • 10:00 tN 70 MM
EiW4u0;12J r:1.5:1 ~=. ..... )
Sttow11t 1:00 Sttows at 12:30 3:10 5:20 7:30 3:005:301:00
.. 1 :40 .. 10:30
DRIVE -INS
JTADIUm a
Alt mu 11ct11 Irr Slftd
.,...-.,. ... MD s
"'8-11> "his C•Hlt
CIMs (R)
attEMUMS ~
N9"r£1HSl119 Story(~)
vebicle, not including fuel. with a special inner sleeve." producer-programs for Multimedfa, tomeys and accountants," he said.
Besides a 25-pcrson road crew, SS r_.!.Al~a~bam~~a~'s:_"~W!.h!!e~n:!.W~e:.!M~ak~e:_Lo~v~e:_'_' lisaiyisiithieiiNiasijjhiviilljeiifa~cili'jiuesj'iiiarciiiaijsjij'ij'Wiie~·rejiiniiaicoinitieimipoiiraryiiiwiioirlid.l"iirlir--~~;::OR=IV~E=•=lllS=Clol=l·=·=u.=w=1Z=f=A=E=E=U.=-= .. =·=,l()=-=·=·=·=ll8v\==1=ll=W=·= ..... =~~:..-; other employees work io other oper-
ations. As sideline businesses, the
group · owns two publishing com-
panies, a recording studio and two
SAM"S5°" Cf'C) I CRON ... ..,.,
Wagner seeks
movie work --~
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Robert
Wagner. whose series "Hart to Hart"
has been canceled by ABC, is looking
for movie roles. • CIOllA .-sii -(_ ...... (--"" 541... 1S1a11
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First up is .. The Late Willy Com-
oerford," which Wagner's Rona II Co.
will co-produce. He is discuss.in&
more ideas with Columbia Pictures.
.. It seems top me we're getting
funher and further away from what
Hollywood set out to do -which is to
malce people pictures," Wapier said.
"Look at how few are being made
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Far West Savings
forms land service
Far estSavbap and Lou A11oclatJon ofNcwport Beach has announced
the formation of Far West RH! Eatate Servicea, Inc., a "holly owned
subsidiary created to provide real e~tate developers with sales and marketing
servaccs for subdivision sales and to assist institutions with the ~les of REO
proJ)crtie . Heading the new subsidiary w1ll be William J. Plsttsky, president.
Pisetsky has been vice president for residential real estate sales with far West
for the past two years. • ••• Doagla1 Elmer has Joined AdverU1tn1 Group Services Inc. of lnine as
director of client serv1ccs. The new post treamunes the agency's in-house servicu. according to firm president Darrel Favrhow, ii' iEs cl\ents a single
person they can turn to when they need spcc1ah:z.cd assistance. Elmer will also
be in charge of new bus1ricss development effons tn the electronic and
communications field. Most recently, he was executive vice president for
Lonclt Co., a Los Angeles-based advertising agency. • • • Shtr Call-Kolvlsto has Joined Marketing Dlrtttloos, Inc. of Newport
Beach as copy specialist, expanding the health care advenising specialist's
creative department. Call-Koivisto comes to Marketing Directions from Face
Up Profttslonal Still Cart of Newpon Beach, where she was director of
marketing and pablic relations and developed a telemarketing depanment and
non-profit educational research mstitute. She worked.independently for two
years as an advertising and marketing consuJtant wt th her own firm. Sber Call
Creative, to Oklahoma City, Ole.la. ••• Linda L. Gllbow of Newport Beach -treasurer for Ponderosa Homtt -
has been promoted to vice president and treasurer for the Irvine-based firm.
Gilbow has been wtth Ponderosa smcc 1978 and her duties will remain the
same. She is a certified public accountant, active in the California Society or
CP.At, the American Institute of CPAs, Orange Cou.aty Performing Arts
Ceater and the Newport Barbor Art Mastom. • • • ScveraJ Orange Coast property managers have received the designation of
Certified Property Manager from the Institute of Real Estate Management.
Included arc: ~ra Bentich and KeDDeth Teske with Aaia Mua,ement of
Irvine: Kimberly Boward wtth EqaJdon lnvestmeat Bailders of lrvme. Sasu
Fusucbt of Eageae Barger, Newport Beach: and Lawrence Scllley of Sun
Growth Investments and Century %1 Tarf Realty, Huntington Beach The
CPM des1gnat1on 1s awarded to md1\.iduals m the field of propcn}
management who meet requirements tn education. eltpenence and commit-
ment to a code of ethics. • • • . Jadltlt Pierpoint of Balboa Island has been selected ~crctary of the
Porcb.aln& Maugement Association of Orange County and Ted Martin of
Costa Mesa is a member of the board of directors for the 1984-85 year. The
orpnization is a local affihate of the National Association of Purcbaslng
Mua1tment, aimed at improving skills through contmumg education and
prov1dmg opponun1ues for the ex~hange of ideas among professionals The
Orange County group cooperates with Coastline College and Fullerton College
to offer a certificate m purchasing and matenals management. • • • Karen Lippe of Karen Lippe Advertising & Public RtlatJons ofln me has
been chosen to administer a SI m1lhon advenismg and public relauons
campaign for Consam~r Health/Consa.m.er DeAiaJ Netwwk'• l4 Southern
California dental offices. • • • Pltssey SoUd State of lrvme has appotnted Mar,1aret "Marflt" England
to the post of product markettng mana~er for professional and m1lttal) d1g1tal
products. England is responsible for d1rectmg and planning marketing of the
company's high-speed d1v1ders. synthesizer c1rcu1ts, comparators. data
convers1on and ECL logic products. She has been with Plesse) for four )ears • • • the Mtdla Departmeat, a Newpon Beach media plannini and placement
business, has been selected by Hllex Poly Co. ofLos Angeles to implement a 12-
month plan 1t recently completed for the manufacturer of h1gh-dcns1t) pol)
bags. d1rect1ng advert1smg to the paper d1stnbu1ion and grocery industl') ••• A Costa Mesa Stop N Go Market 1s one of four Southern Cahfortua Stop N
Go's purchased by Joseph Bess of Mill Valley for mvestment purposes. Tom
Rice of the Newpon Beach office of Buslness Properties Brokerage Co.
represented both buyer and seller tn the transaction. The seller was Prudential
Life Insurance Co. • • • Nucy McKee of McKu & Assoclattt, located on Balboa Island, has
received two national Top five awards from the Socctts Motivation lnstltate
{or outstanding performance tn marketing and sen.1cmg SMI mOll\ational
programs in Ma) and June. McKee repr~nts SMI locally • • • The father and son team of Robert C. "Bob" Gibbs and Robert L "Rob"
Gibbs have formed Tbe Gibbs Co. at 5100 Birch SL in Newpon Beach to
undertake rcs1den11al de\elopment m Southern Cahforn1a The elder Gibbs
has been an execuuve in de,elop1ng. marketing. construction and ..ales for
such firms as Ponderosa Homes and Broodmoor Homes. The younger Gibbs
has been a project manager. supenntendent and builder of his own projects m
Central California. The company's initial project is Country View Estates, a
Laguna Niguel development slated to be'un sales this month. • • ;r B.J. Stewart Advertising and Public Relations, Inc. of Newport Beach has
been selected to handle ad\en1c;1ng and pubhc relattons services for Toocb-
Plate lnttnaational, lnc., an cnerg) managing hgh11ng control compan) and
part ofln1ersoll-Rand. ••• Costa Mesa-based Yeiser-Garland & Associates has been commm1oned
to design two mod(') homcc, at the Mesquite Greens condominium rcs1dent'3I
community m Palm Spnngc; "Our 1ac,k 1s to present the indoor-outdoor
ambience of the two floor plans at \'1c~u1te Greens ma wa)' that prospective
homebuyers can picture thcm\clH'\ living 10 the .homes." said Pat Yeiser,
principal of the firm. • • • Lee D. Feldman ol Earle Ike Imports of Costa Me~ has earned
membership m the Volvo Diamond Plus Sales League by selhng 750 new
Volvos. The Huntington Beach re1dcnt received the Volvo Diamond League
ptn 1n 1982. The next level tn the career rccogniuon program 1s the Volvo Hall
ef Fame for 1,000 or more lifetime \' olvo sales.
I
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 18.
Young entrepreneurs
Rather than the traditional etreet comer Jemonade eta.nd,
Ron Thompson. 14. and hia brother. Mark, 13, of
Huntington Beach haYe aet themaeJYett in the eldewalk t-
•hlrt bUtneu.
Big changes in travel deductions
New tax legislation -represents
triple threat to T&E writeoffs
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This 1s the
third part of a ~IA·part senes on the
consequences to taxpayers of the new
ta\ leg1s/at1on passed into law on Jul}
18.)
The biggest changes in travel and
entertainment deductions in 22 years
have been made by the 1984 tax law.
In fact. the new law actually rep-
resents a trt pie threat to T &£ deduc-
tions.
• One change ma) hm1t the tax
benefits 1f a business car 1s used for
personal travel;
• Another change imposes mew
dollar cap on the annual write-off for
a business car. even 1f 11 is used 100
percent for business:
• And ~he new law sets up much
more stnngent recordlc.eepmg re-
quirements for T&E deducuonc;
be for the convenience of your
employer; and
• the car must be required to do
your JOb properly.
If you do not meet both tests, you
automatically fail the 50 percent test.
Say you flunk the 50 percent test.
Are )'OU out of luck? No. In some
areas -for instance. the business
entertainment deductfon for countr')'.
club dues -you get no deduction 1f
you fall shon of the 50 percent
business use test. That 1s not the case
here.
If yoltt'-business use does not
exceed 50 percent, the write-off must
be over five years on a straight-line
basis
But -there are moves you can
make to help you minimize the
business use problem -or even
eliminate 1t entirely. You can, say,
meet the 50 percent test even if you
use your car e".tensively for family
travel. The only taxpayers who can't
use this strategy are employees who
own 5 percent or more of their
employer's company.
IDEA NO. I: If your employer is
not already doing so, have the
company treat your personal use as
taxable compensation. The company
withholds income tax and reports the
compensation on your W-2.
Result: There is a trade-off. You
have more taxable compensation but
your company 1s once again entitled
to an investment credit and threo-
year write-off.
;i\n a:hcmat1ve avoids the 50per-
cent test completely.
IDEA NO. 2: Join the growi.na
trend of usina outside independent
contractors to supply transportation
to meetings, airports, seminars, etc.
SnVIA
PORTER
Using a ltmousme with a driver,
writing room and dictating setup can
make you more productive. You, an
executive or professional, can
provide the crucial miles yoµ need to
go over the 50 percent mark merely by
ta.krng a customer in your car to
lunch
IDEA NO 3· Combine a vacation
with a tnp taken primarily for
business. As long as you are going
anyway for busmcss, take your family
along. Your trip counts as business
travel for the more-than-50 percent
test-
On the personal use of business
cars. for instance. for years the self.
employed. panners and owners of
closel) held corporations have
treated the company car as a valuable
fnnge benefit. But the new test 1s that
1f the car isn't used more than 50
percent for business, the car owner
gets no investment tax credit and no
fast wnte-off either.
Say that early tn '84 your company
provided you with a car you use 40
percent for busmess. The company
claims a 6 percent 10ves1ment credll
- a dollar-for-dollar re<f uction in its
tax bill -for 1984, the year the car is
put mto service. It writes off the car
under the accelerated cost recovery
S)Stem (AC"RS). deductmg 25 percent
the first Jear. 38 percent the second
year. an the remainmg 37 percent
the third year.
Power of goals seminar
at Orange Coast College
All this changes under the new law
1f a car 1s placed tn service after June
I 8. 1984. Your company cannot
claim the investment credit or use the
three-)ear wnte-ofT setup. Reason:
The car 1s used only 40 percent for
business. Your compan)' docs not
meet the new law's 50 percent
busmess use test.
Special rule for employee-owned
cars· If you use your own car on
company business. you must also
meet the 50 percent test to claim fast
deprectat1on and an mvestment
credit on your tax return. You, as an
employee. must also meet two other
new requirements:
•The bu4;iness use of your car must
Orange Coast College locks off its
Busmess Managep'lent Development
Program Saturday, Sept 8, with the
seminar, "Power of Goals."
The pr~m runs from 9 a.m. to
noon tn OCCs Fine Arts Hall, room
119. Adm1ss1on fee 1s $5.
Busmess experts will make presen-
tations on a variety of topics, tnclud-
ing how to start a business, mail
order, public speaking. motivation
and success, and self-improvement.
Richan Han will moderate the
scmmar. A former member of OCC's
faculty. Han now coordinates the ~ollege's Busmess Manaaement De-
velopment Program under Com-
munity Services.
He 1s past chairman of the Board at
the Orange County Chamber of
Commerce, and a Presidential Ap-
pointee to chair the National Alliance
of Business, Orange County Metro.
Registration for "Power of Goals"
is underway in OCCs Community
Services Office, located in the Student
C~nter Butldina.
Tickets, if available, will also be
sold at the door.
For more mformat1on,
432-5880.
Monday through Thursday from 9
call a.m. to6r.m. Begjnningl\.ug. 13. the
office wil be open on Fridays.
For more information, call
432-5880. Redrement bubJeaes
"Home-Based Business for Retire·
ment and Senior Adults," a three·
hour lecture that explains how to
operate a successful business from
your home, will be presented at
Orange Coast College on Friday,
Sept. 14.
The procram. led by Patncia
McNau&hton. wiU meet from 2-S
p.m. m OCCs Forum. Admission fee
1s $10 which includes hand-out
matenals.
"In this fast-paced workshop, you
choose the best business for your
sk11ls and goals," said McNaughton.
"We'll discu s licenses and lcpl
protections you need to maximize
profit and enjoyment."
Registration for the proaram is
under way in OCCs Community
Services Office, located in the Student
Center Buildin The office is ODCft
Art bu management
The USC Orange County C.enter
will hold a wine and cheese reception
for its new program, ''C.enific.ate 10
Business Management for the Arts ..
Thursday 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
The course wlll be conducted m
nine Saturday sessions. It will
provide cumnt teehniques, prncn-
tations and projects related to the
management of arts institutions.
Also, interactive labs and workshops,
one-to-one contact with active and
expenenccd arts mana1crs, and infor·
mation for employment op-
ponunilles arc featured.
The USC Orange County Center is
located at 2361 Campus Drive in
Irvine, few blocks from the John
Wayne Airport For further infor·
mation and R.S. V.P. call 752-SSOS. --------
one
IZ.15" IZ.O&" · 1J.Z5" IZ.50"
Curr~ lare • Curttnt YJfld• Current ht•
Great American
Fi
•
I
r
Disney PTodu.ctions drops plans
to purchase Gibson Greetings
The board of directors of Walt 0Jsney Produchons voted Monday
to tenninate its previously n·
nounccd asre mcnt to aoqu1re
Oibson Grce1ina,s Inc.
Ray L. Wat on, chairman, stated:
"We ubjcctcd the Gib$on tran action to the most intense rutiny
po 1ble. Dtsncy"s mana mcnt nnd
advi 011 behc\Cd that the cqu1 1t1on
of Gibson made eminent good n
to the company' Ion ·term growth
nd development.
.. G.~n i a fine compan). with cx~llcnt managcmc01 and out tan<l-
ing pro pecu for the f uturc. It would
ensued m de u hkely that the rom-
f)<lny would not be blc to denvc he
Ion term benefit' that Gibson intended 10 chicvc.
"Mt r-full (X)nSJd ratton. we
eluded I.hat the mo 1 rcspon tble
course was to rccom mend 110 the
rd that the propoScd 1raM1Ct1on
, UP s AND DowNs ~-~--
NEW YORK {AP> -The fol!QWlno llst 1how1 the Over-the-Counter 1IOCkS and warrants that have oone up the most and clowrt the most ~Md on percent of change for Monday, No securltie$ tradlno below u or 1000 sharff are Included. Net and P4tf'cenla9f c:ha"9e$ are the difference between the ortvlous clo$lno bid price and Monday's i.st bid prlce.
Name GnSvwtB EnvrTst HVbrd un
KelvJn i=:,s
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oflwtch Ml2'°1J gT~ns
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wedlw lrd'IW s hmfx un
u..s ust 1~:
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UP. Hg
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...
w11b Giblotl ht 1enrunawl, and the:
rd~our mme1lda1ion.
"'We will an the futv~ conunuc to
m e thote cite 1om and commit• menu that 'A-'C lieve ICfVC the company·, t mteresu and re oonsi ent wath our,. ~hOlden"
lank.I llMA
Bank.of Amenca 1.00
Cahforrua First Bank 1.00
Crocil., 1.00
F1t1t lnteratate 1.00
Lloyds Bank Cahfomte 9.00
Secur.ty Bank t.00
Sumitomo Bank t .00
Wells Fat510 1.00
s a La
American SaY!!:!Sal 10.00
Beveny Hills Sa"'!:!ia' 10.00
Cehfom1a Federsl 1.10
Central Sav1n51s ' 1.15
ClttCOre Sav1n0s 1.ao
Coast Savl~S 1.00
STERUNG~ SAVINGS
MMA
1.1$
t.21 ....
Fidetil~ federal U5
First Na1tonw1de UID
Gibraltar Savings ••
Glendale Federal I.GO
Great Amencan I.GO
Great Western 1.10
Home F~al Savi 1.80
Home Sav1~s of Amer 1.00
lme!r .. 1 Savt!:!SaS I.GO
Me1cu~ S.111~1 t.DG2
Sears Sa!!!$1S Baok LOO
Va!!!x r=.oeral uo
t .15
SIERUNG
SAVINGS
A ~I DAN ASSOCIMJ ION tSb:
~.. 19752 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine 752-8200 -~=
. .
---
-THE-AT&T PERSORll COM PUTER IS RUDY FOR USllESS.
&•
It's here. The new AT&T Personal Computer
has everything you need to help put your busi-
ness ahead of the game.
Because it runs the MS DOS* operating
system, you'll be able to run the most popular
off-the-shelf software for a wide range of busi-
ness applications. Budgeting. Forecasting.
Inventory. Word processing.
You'll ertjoy working on this high-perform-
ance machine. Its fast procesffing and high·
resolution screen will make any computer task
a computing pleasure.
There's more to the AT&T PC. More st.an·
dard features. More expansion slots to add
extra printers, extra memory and other com·
munications options. Its flexibility will make
your computer growing pains painless. All
designed to make this one of tfie most user·
friendly machines you can buy.
Think about it. Then make your ~ve-to
the new AT&T Personal Computer, from
AT&T Information Systems.
1 WHENYOu'YE GOr 10 a llGHT.
'
The AT&T Personal Computer is available
at the follO\\ing stores:'* For the location
nearest you, call 1 800 24 7-1212.
I\~., ...... ,,,. .... ,... ... , •·•:)'-'"" ,_,, ••• • •• •••
CaMPUSHaP r
Computelt.Gnel t
THE =GEN AA
GROUP
Micro.Ager
SEARS •S"BfRJJWIMfM
ATl.T
f
On
the '
'
•
, •
,
NYS_E COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
JUESDArs CLOSING PRICES
Dow JoN£ s AvERAGES
---
WHn T NYSE DID
NEW YORK fAP) Aug 21
Advencld Oectrned ¥nch,nged 0111 UUff N•w hlglU New low•
NYSE LEADER S
- - - -
UP s ANO DowN s
NEW 90RK (APl -Tht fonowl09 llat 'howr tht New York Stodt !!xchenQt Jtocks end werrents lhet ri.Yt gone up the most 1nd doWn tri. moat blMd on perctn! of dlanoe regardlt'Ss of volume ror Tuewev. No ~rllles trldlrnJ below 12 art Ind· -udtd, Net end pere»nt1ge cri.n~ ere Jht difference between Jht previous dos ne orlct end TUISdavaPS P.m. Price.
Nllme LHJ Cl'IO Pct
1 Kerr Glass 1 'h t 1"' Up t ·J 2 ~tltl WI ~ '~ Up . 3 t 7'" :\t4 Uo .
4 s~tA 61h ~ UC> 1 s Kentf0n n " ~ UP 1 Llmllld 2 VJ I Up . C w 2.50Pr l -,_ We UP f w~rimsEI ~''• i v. Ho . I R111lSd I~ lV. p l 0 Am t rl ~ P , 1 o Ws ~n 1 1 Up .
2 gn~ 3.71pr l \It } ''l UP ·t 3 MACOM 2111. l'h UP 4 Trlcentrl 5,._ ltl Up .
5 NBI Inc 20 1~ Up .4 l; VelltY Ind 3~ t 11• UP i·~~ut~ s m~ i"' u: G~t~G. 711'1 VJ Hp ~ MaryKay ff '.I. 34 \Jo SML.lnd n '-l~ Up Unit mum 'II h Uo 2)-Grll • .ekelnt 30"2 + 2 Up 24 KtrrGls 1 70of 23'-"l + j't'.l Uo 25 OvernTr 23'9 + \"> Up DOWNl Name Lui Cha 1911'1 -1'1;; ct. l P~!'Yftc'°
! Fg B~fn ' 4 ormar. S arah Mfg
6 ~mpbRs pf 1 vans Pd I bll Hoim 9 FlnCoAm
10 Wt~n UJlll 1l Cyt 2Pf 2 Wh tehall
3 ~amoobR'c o
1
4 ~i~rt
Mesabi r I PentryPr de
I iluett Pea ~ rlll1hLnd ~ fer ~Inc ~fv~~1 Fngy
astnA rL. euton co
14~ -\~
\;! -1 ~ -\'41
'• -1/4 \It -\'41 ~ -v .. l4 -'A 14"'1 -~ 24:\lt -1
di/• -''• ,,. -~
~, -1 ~-~ 7•• -'• l 1h -.... 25~ -~ Jllo -..... I~-~ 151/t -\"> 32 -I 4 -~. . -,,.
NEW YORK (AP) Auo. 21
AM£X LEADER S
7.J h 4J
2: ... 2·
4.
NEW YORK (AP) -Sales. T~y Price and et Chano• of the 10 most ec "' American ~tock ExcllanQe lssu~. Ira lno
n•tlonaltv et more thrin n. Wal}gL.ebB 1, 281/i 1 Intl Bnknot , 3 Yt
AHflhCre n 4J, 11 11. I ~ ~mdthl ~· 'i 1,. elaPrOd • 2 ~ 11,. 11!!1).tte $ I 2 l/41 ~ 'lch'"8mm , 1~1. M,~loft~, l : 10~ :t :~ V'erb'a11m 1 , 1 + •.4
NASDAQ SUMMARY
NEW VORK (AP) -Motl active ov.r· -the-counter stocks SUJ>Plltd by NASO
Namt llu Bit AJ•ked Che llbsnG 1 , 11. 2\.\ -2 nRsv , 14 3 -16 Cl , ~ 7'--.,._ x:~ . 71' t +lltl
s1'8u1 ,; ~ut ls~ -t ~
Maxcre m· 2m 2m.4 lh rSwtch , ~ vfood , 1 h -§onvtl , 1 l VJ + 2:
Go Lo QuoTES
M£TAL S Quo as
-------
~
That's an apt description of both business and
business people along the Orange Coast. To keep track of
where companies are going and which people are helping
_ them get t~ere,Just watch 'Credit Line' -every day in tli
Business e tionofyourn w llily Pilat_-=
-. ..
lat TUESDAY AUGUST 21, 1984 [I
Soviet bloc;
athlete• bitter
Olymplc mark•
In Moacow. C2.
We're back
UCLA expect•
•notherblp
loRoMlloWI
thla aenon. C2.
Aa C.O.cb Ted Tollner (aboTe) 1oob oa.
lt wu a bomecom.tna ot wts for ee•enl Unt..-enlty of Southern California foot-
ball playen workln& oat at UCI ~J
lncb:adl.ll.r. from left. clockwiM:
Boyer (rfo. 86. ez·Ed.1801l 3! Jeff
8emoJl (Ko. 67. ez-Edl9on ) and
Da..td C.dl&an (Jfo. 88J ex-ewport
Barbor HICti). Tbe Trojau ba.e been
transplanted became their bome tuf la
8tl11 belnl reta.rnecl to normal after the
swim competition of the Olympic
Ga.ma on the Southern cat campaa.
Ollllf Nm1 ...... tlf TWTt ._
They learned the language of basketball
UCI' s Herb Livsey teaches the sport,
Anteater-style, to coach es in Malaysia
ByCURTSEEDEN
OfllleO.., ..........
It was-jusc last month that UC
Irvine assistant basketball coach
Herb Livsey traveled to Malaysia to
try to explain some of the intracas1es
of the spon to 35 Sou:hcast Asian
coaches -few of whom understand
Entiish __
ut in just two weeks, those
coaches thoroughly understood such
terms as breakdowns in the fast break
and passing to the post -irregardless
of the language bamer.
Livsey and Gonzaga Coach Jay
Hillock brought their basketball
knowled$e to the city of Kuala
Lumpur in mid-July -at.the request
Lewis
breezes
to victory
BUDAPES't. Hungary (AP) -
Carl Lewis, who won four gold
medals at the Summer Olymp1cs,
breezed to victory m the I 00 meters
and Soviet-bloc athletes dominated
their traditional events Monday at
the Budapest Grand Prix inter-
national track and field meet.
Lewis was clocked at I 0.05 sec-
onds, 22-hundredths of a second
ahead of Hungary's Attila Kovacs but
well short of American Calvin
Smith's 1983 world record of 9.93.
Lewis was mobbed shortly after his
victory by photographers and auto-
graph-seeking children.
The 23-)'ear-old Houston nauve's
time was .06 seconds slower than the
time that brought him the Olympic
gold in Los Angeles. H~rformance
was indicative of those of other
favorites at the meet, who won with
results well below their best. •
Unhke the rash of quickly arranged
pmes beina staged m several other
Soviet-bloc countries to 11ve Olympic
boycottcrs mtemallonal competi-
tion, the BudaP,C~t Grand Pnx has a
seven-year tradiuon.
of_ the International Olympic Com-
mittee.
Their job was to teach the coaches
--ffom Burma. Brunei. Thailand.
Philippines. Singapore, Indonesia
and Malaysia -well, how to teach
basketball.
"This was the first ttme I've ever
been out of the country," admitted Llvse~ho 1s one ofUCI Coach Bill
Mulligan's right-hanomen on the
coun. "It was fantastic."
At Livsey's disposal was the
Malaysian national basketball team,
two arenas, including a 15,000-scat
stadium, and the help of the
Malaysian government.
"They have a $1 million-plus
budget for the national basketball
tf'am over there," Livsey said.
With that m mind, Livsc> and
Hillock had a tall order before them
-send their pupils back to their
respective countnes with a better
knowledge of the pme so that they
could, in tum, teach their pupils.
"All I tried to get them to do was to
think about what they were doing I
had to play the devil's advocate as ""e
got to know one another but It turned
out to be a very warm eitpcrience.''
Livsey r«ounted
The JOb was difficult for several
reasons, the most notable being the
language problem. BuCLivscy and
Hillock also had to merge their
basketball ph1losoph1es -in a short
two-day span -having never met
until amv1ng m Kuala Lumpur
"We spent t""o days outlining the
course. We knew what we wanted to
do generally but we really didn't know
each other," Livsey said. "As It
turned out, his approach to the game
was far from my approach to the
game, which, of course, is much closer
to Bill's (Mulligan).
"So Jay worked on a S-on-5
concept, both offensively and de-
fensively and l dealt much more with
fundamentals and instruction. My
forte is teaching," Livsey added.
Livsey. who coached at Orange
Coast College from 1969-76. 1s an
associate professor of English at
OCC. But he dtscovered a new
language dunna his two-week stay in
Kuala Lumpur -basketball.
-"tgot to rcahzethatevcn though al~
of us come from different countries
and we all look different, if you cut us
all open. we're all pretty much the
same," Livsey said. "We had a
common bond that brought us all
together and 1t was very easy to
commumcate after sharing an each
other's emotions and intellects."
Hulki ng Soviet hammer thrower
Yuri Sedfkh's best performance wns
278 feet I inches -four feet, four
inches below bis world record.
American Carl Lewi•. left. outlec• a cut
of lntematlon.al opponent. Monday on
11# ........
way to a Yictory in the 100-meter race at
the Budapest International track meet.
A typical day in the class consisted
of sessions from 9 a.m.-noon and 2:~5. Then the young coaches
would get together at 1 p.m. to work
on assignments given by Livsey and
Hillock. ..A lot of what we t l
new. npecialty the teac
L1vse) explained. " ey ha not
been exposed to an) of the ple~-
1ues that arc arc necessar) for tcach-
mg the game soundly."
Basketball an countries such as
Malaysia is big -but not with the
youngsters.
.. They don '-t teach it m school but.
n's very big on the state level here,"
Livsey eitplained "We wanted io get
these st.ate coaches to be able to work
wuh the luds fundamentally and get
them to understand the game more."
While m Kuala Lumpur, Llvscy
watched an eith1b1non game between
(Pl~ eee ucrs/CS) Herb Llney
Reeling Angels
pray for change
They·n try again
to reverse streak
in TV game at NY
NEV. YOR"-. ( .\P) -Joe C O"-le)
said 1t sttmed strange to be standing
on the pitcher's mound weanng 'le"'
Yorl Yankee pinstnpes in the midst
of the most overpo\lrenng per-
formance of his maJor league can.--er
listening 10 a smattenng of boo<> from
the homt' crowd
··1 knt'" they didn't "ant me to
""all him. 'iO I had to tn to thro"' him
a stnke ... Co"" le} eAplained.
He was talking about pitching to a
player whose c.xplo1ts he had follov.ed
all of his ba'iCball hfe. The count had
reached 3-0 on Reggie Jackson. three
home runs short ofbecomma the I 3th
pla)er e"er to hit SOO. and the cro"d
wanted some action
So Co" le" threv. a stnkc. and then
another and another. In the end. he
had fanned Jackson thrtt ttmes and
added 10 more Mo nday naght a the
hot-hitting Yanktts to an 8-4 "ictory
over the slumping .\ngel .
The .\ngel \lrho ha"·e now I t ~1x
in a row and are 4'12 game behind
M1nnC"SOta and tied ,.,th "-ansas Cat~
an second place in the American
League West, will try again tonight in
the second of three televtsed (Chan-
nel S) games from New York.
Ron Romaruck ( l 0.10) will try to
set the Angels back on track. Oppos-
ing him 1s the Yankees' Phil Niekro
t 14-7).
"He thre"' thedevd out of the ball,"
Jackson said afterward. -11 "''&S an
1mpress1vc performance 'by an) stan-dards •.
"Where has he bct"n?" asked losing
patcher Tommy John. "I'd never
heard of him "
(Pleue eee AMGltLS/C2)
GrewalstUI
minus medal
$100 .bargain . Gullikson solves a problem, 3-1
PITTSBURG H (AP)-Franco Harris may have cxtendtd hi 12·
year pro football career by frequently runnina out of bounds to avoid
punishing tac"KT .
But when the 34-year-old running back -almost ccnain to be
named one day to the Pro Football Hall of Fame -prolonied tris
contract talks and missed a month of trainin camp, the Pittsburah
tcclers ran out of patience. .
In a tunnina move. the Steelers put Hams on waive~ Monday.
Any other Nfl team can now claim Ham (or a mcrt SIOO -or
$38•.900 le s th n Harris would have been raid 1n 198• under the
option )tar clau of his contra t
.. , don't think thC)' really wanted me;• Ham 1d at hi h me
onda nip.ht. floodlight~ from TV C"amc h1tht1n up a ncigh-
(Plea $100/CS)
.
LO ANuELES( P)-You can't
qut\tlon 8111 Gulli l'°n' ten city.
The 1ontre I fupo ' nght-hander
v.on 17 pm lao;t year and 12 thr
)Car before, but he had never bntcn
the Dodge rs.
Gullicl$on d imbl"d that hurdle by ~attcrin seven hit over eight in·
nings Monda) night in the E~ro '.3· I
victory.
"It took me the> an.. but I finally
be-at them." ~1d Oulh n, ~ho h d
lo t i' \tra1ght dttt ions to the
Dod er\, plu!i tvoo more in the l 9 l
-Natton l l:e-e ~hamp10JU.h141
"" "l'\C pitC'hl-d o;omc bid me' nJ
lo t. but I've al'° pitched nmc aood
pm and sttll lo t," said Gullick~n.
who ot rch f help from Gary Luca
•ho earned h~e1a,hth save.
Gullick n, 9-7. has \\On three 10 a
rov. nd nine of ha la'-t 12 tan c;1n~
opcn1n1 the a on Q.-4.
Orel Her h1scr, -6. took the lo~
for LO& n cl • wh1('h has drop~
lhrtt lfl. t.
"The l1.1d loo good," Montmtl
Mllna r 8111 Vardon qtad ol
Hc~h• • "He: onl m de one m1s-
takr the whok pme. thro'<'1n1 that
..b.an&inacun:c to (Dan) On n ••
That-"I\ "ith two out m t r
fourth innint "hen Drit'i!.t'n. 1th
runnc~ on srcond and third after •
wtld pitch, s10 led to sco~ fax
Venable and ar) Caner to put
tontrcal on t p to ta~. 2-0 -
In the two prev1ou games, Dodier
1an r Tom t.asorda clrctcd to
issue mtcnttorr.ll "'all to three bat·
ten in im1 lar 'ituation • and U three
of them red kc\ runs
••) Oe\iCf tho ht about :-al tnl
him in that ~tuataon." _ 1d s.orda.
&frnd1n the '-trat • to pit h to
Orie" n . "Yo d n't "'ant to I d the
for (Tim) \\all h. , ... ou t 103
him and vnu'rt 1tall 1n troubl ...
•
.·
ay, August 21. 1 84
·Friendship swimmers better Olympic times
Eastern Europeans continue to improve
on AOlymptcsmedal-winntngmarks
Friend hip Oames, which re bc1n1
st cd s1muhanl'ously in scvcrul
Communist cap1tah, to allow athlttc
from So' iet bloc countnes to com·
pttc after thrir nations pulled out of
the Lo Angel« Olympics. .
of the near.ca city crowd at the
Olympic pool m downtown Moscow.
His time of ,.: 18.29 would have
earned him a silver medm at Los
Angeles behind Alex Raumann of
Can da.
bronze at Los A les.
The st Germ n did not do quite
as wcll 10 cyclin wh re Bernd Oittert
was u~t 1n the finaliofthe 400.meter
individual pursuit Havina sma hed
the world record ualify1ng, he
found him5elffaci 'G1ntAutas Um·
ura$, a 21-ycar-<) Sov ict spons
student.
wh rca Mon~y' cc s held
indoors on a wooden urfl ce.
The sprint oompetition h ded for
a sho~down between Ea.st Germany''
Lutz Hes lich and Se~i Kopylov of
the Soviet Union, both two-ume
world champions. MOSCOW (AP) -Eastern Euro-
pean wimmers, lcd by Soviet Larissa
Belokon, continued to better Olym-
pic mcdal·winnina times Monday
and cyclists, hockey players,
yacht. men and hooters from War-.
saw Pact nations crushed all opp<;>si·
tion on the founh day of compcution
at the Friend hip '84 Games.
Five medal-winnin& times at Los
Angeles were beaten m the pool.
Bclokon and Sylvia Oerasch of East
Oermany both bettered the Olympic
winnina time in the women's 200-
metcr breaststroke, but failed to break
the 5-year-old world record.
Bclokon clocked 2 minutes, 29.13
se<:0nds. and Gerasch was timed m
2:29.62. The Los An&elcs gold med I
went to Canadian Ann Ottenbnte in a
time of2:30.38
In Olomouc. Cl.eocho Jovakia1 Yuri
Balabanov scored a perfect 10 1n the
rings to lead the Soviet Union into
first pla~ after the men's team
compulsories in gymna tic . U.S.
men won the team competition in Los
Angeles.
The gymnastics Spanaliad opened·
in OlomQuc on Monday as part of the
In Mo ow, Easl German Kristin
Otto failed in her goal to lower brr
world record in the 200-meter frtt-
style women's swimmin& event, but
he swam n time that would have
Jiven her a silver medal at Los
An_seles,
She was almost two seconds <Jlower
than her own world record of I :57. 7S,
but her time would have placed her
second at the Olympics behind
American Mary Waytc
Jens-Peter Berndt of East Germany
set a Euro~n record in the men's
-4()().meter individual medley in front
Parseghian sees
eventual playoff
for national title
Torre returns and gets victory
From AP dJspatcbes
RADNOR, Pa. -Arguments against
a post-season college football playoff on
grounds that it would hurt tradittonal bowl
games and force athletes to m1SS too much school arc
not vahd, accordmg to former Notre Dame football
Coach Ara Parscgh1an .
Parseghian. now a football commentator for CBS-
TV, proposed a single, post-bowl title game between the
top two teams as choi,cn by a consensus of polls,
conferences and coaches.
, The playoff format could be
gradually expanded to four, eight.
and eventually I 6 teams. with
bowls used as elimination games.
The championship game would
be played the week after New
Year's Dar.
He said such a format would
extend the season by just one
week, noting that most schools do
. .._ __ , ... _ not beg.an the spring semester
• -......--u until the second week of January.
Some playoff money could go for tutoring players, be
proposed.
A playoff would "take the 'mythical' out of the
phrase 'national champion,"' he wrote.
ln the four-team format, the top four teams would
play an the major bowls, alternating Rose and Orange
one year, Sugar and Cotton the next. The winners
would face off in the title game the next week. he said.
An eight-team format could also be developed,
Parsegh1an said. The consensus top.eight teams would
play m the Gator, Fiesta, Cotton and Sugar bowls in late
December, with the latter three games being moved
forward one week from New Year's Day.
The four winners would play m the Orange and
Rose bowls, Wlth wrnners of those games playing in the
Super Bowl. he said.
Quote of the day
Srookt lloblMola. Halt Of Famethlrd t>ueman,
aaked ff the .... of ofdttmer games that ended
with the Nataon.I League edging the American
Leegue 13· 12 fn tndlanapotls could " expanded
Into aomethtng Ilk• golf 1 Mnlor tour: ''Who's gotng
to come ... us? We can't pl_ay a IJck."
Riley impressed with Jones
LOS ANGELES -Lakers Coach Pat
Riley sars Earl Jones, the team's first-m
round pick in the National Basketball
Assoc1at1on draft, "does a lot of things that
impress you 1mmed1ately.
. Brad ltommlas~'s two--0ut, 10th-in-ii ,
nin.a dou. ble broke a tie and lined Atlanta to
a ~l victory over Pittsburgh to h1ghhght
action tn the National League Monday.
The game marked the return of Manager Joe Torr~ who
was suspended for three games because of a bcanball
incident. Alex Trevlno had a two-run stngle in the 10th
as Pittsburgh lost its eighth in nine games.Torre's
suspension stemmed from a game with San Diego in
Atlanta on Aug. 12, during which there were three
bench-clearing brawls. The
Braves were 1-2 without Torre ...
In other NL action, pitcher Dave
LaPoint drove in three runs and
Darren Porter had a two-run
homer to power St. Louis to a 9-7
dcc1S1on over Cincinnati ... Ron
Cey blasted a three-run homer
and Keltla Moreland drove an
three runs Wlth a pair of smgles to
lead the Chicago Cubs to a 6-1
victory that snapped Houston's
Torre nine-p.me winning streak. It was
the third straight victory for the first-place Cubs who
were swept in a three-game series at Houston last week
. . Alu Wlghl1 bit a solo homer and scored twice and
Eric saiow and Rid! Gossage combined oo a five-hitter
as Sao Otego defeated the Mets 3-1 ... Jau Samael and
newly acquired Al Oliver each drilled two-run doubles
dunng a five-run second-inning that carried Philadel-
phia to a 6-4 victory over San Francisco.
Tigers trample Oakland, 14-1
fhe Detroit Tigers unloaded on •
Oak.land 14-1 as Lance Parrish and Cbet
Lemon each blasted two-run homers and
Darrell Evans had a solo shot Monday
night. The Detroit power display was so awesome that
the A's used infielder Mark Waper to pitch the final I 'f>
innings. The Tigers banged out a season-high 20 hits,
sconng four runs in the third and five m the fifth. Kirk
Gibson staned the third with a walk and rode home on
Parrish's 28th homer. Larry Herndon tnpled and
scored ahead of Lemon's 16th
home run. Jack Morris ( 16-8) got
back on the winning trad. after
wmning onl)' once in the last
seven stans for the Tigers.
Moms, a nght-hander, allowed
three hits and struck out six in
.n seven innmgs of work ... Jn other ,.~ Amencan League ames Monday,
George Brett belted a three-run
single but pulled a hamstnng on
the play as Kansas City beat
Boston 8-5. Brett left the game
and his return was listed on a day-to-day basis ...
Rookie Mlke Young slammed two solo homers to lead
Baltimore past Seattle 5-4, the founh-straig:ht win for
1he defending World Champions, their longest winning
streak smce May ... Greg Walker hit a three-run home
run and JaUo Craz had two doubles and two runs batted
in to lead Chicago to a 7-5 victory over Texas. Walker
-who was ejected in the eighth for arguing a ~trike call
-hit his 17th homer of the season.
CFA may negotiate
on television rights
UCLA's, USC's
crossover games
problem at issue
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -The
COllCJe Football Association. which
1s beans sued by the Big Ten and
Pacific-I 0 over television rights, said
Monday 1t is willin& to negot1ate the
problem of crossover games but
charged lhe two conferences ··rep-
resented to CBS that they could
dehver games over which they do not
have complete control."
The Big Ten and Pac-I 0, along with
UCLA and the Umverslt) of
Southern Cahfomta, filed suit in a
Los Anaeles federal court last week
against the CFA. ABC-TV. ESPN
(which 1s owned by ABC) and the
Un1vers1t1es of Nebraska and Notre
Dame
The suit charged that in refusing to
Shoemaker
rides to win
allow CBS to lelev1se the Nebraska-
at-UCLA game on Sept. 22 and the
Notre Dame-at-Southern Cal game
on Nov. 24, the CFA violated
antitrust laws and was in breach of
contract. The suit asks for
preliminary and permanent inJunc-
tions against the CFA's television
agreement with its 63 member
schools, who include all the major
powers except the Big Ten and
Pac-I 0. Nebraska and Notre Dame
arc CFA members while UCLA and
Southern Cal belong to the Pac-I 0.
In announcing the suit last Fnday.
UCLA ChancelJor Charles E. Young.
said negot1at1ons Wlth the CFA broke
down on Thursday. "'The practice has
always been that the home team
arranges for tclev1s1on coverage.
makinJ the best arransement 1t can
and sharing the receipts with the
v1S1ting team," Youn& said.
The CFA has sold its games to
ABC. with ESPN ac:quirina a sup-
plemen~ package.
In replyan& to the suit, Charles M.
Ne1nas, executive director of the
CF A. said Monday:
,
"~very race is different and 1t doc
not matter what 1 said before or
aner." Berndt said of the Olympic
compari on. adding he probably
would have finished quicker if the
field had been stronger. ·
"Overall, I am very happy and
content with my victory in the
Friend hip G mes. and I wall aJm for
more," he said. ·
, The East German team had a
strona last leg in the men's 800-meter
freestyle relay, edgjng out ttie host
country and clock in& 7:20. 78, a time
that would have earned the team a
U marai. was aaven little chan~. but
timed his late surge to perfection and
completed the 12 lap of the track in
4:33.63 at the Olympic cydina center
in Krylatskoyc in )Uburban Moscow.
Dinen was more than a second
behind in 4:34.68.
In the quanerfinab, Hesslich, the
1980 Olympic champion, def'eated
ZOhan Liptak of Hunpry 2-0, u1ina
the same patient waiting game each
time.
Kopylov also won 2-0 against
Fernando Mayo of Colombia,. fiho
was lead.in& in the fint race untJI the
last 200 meters.
In the me event at Los Angele$,
Steve Heu of the United States· took
tbe gold medal in 4:39.3S. But that ~s on a concrete outdoor track.
The other two quarterfinals were
won by Andreij Mikhlak of Poland
and Vrati Jav Sustr of Cucllo lo-
vakia.
Noway
Montreal'• Andre Dawaon Is taaed out
by DodCer catcher Mike SclMCli Mon-
Cllppera algn Michael Cage
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los ·m Angeles Clippers on Monday signed for-
ward Michael Cage, one of their two first-
round draft choices, after convincing the
former San Diego State star not to play professional
basketball in Italy.
C.arl Scheer, general manager of the National
Basketball Association club, said Cage gjves the
Clippers "&real fl~xibility0 and represents a major
move 1n "building a sohd foundation in a club that will
be competitive very shonJy."
Two weeks ago, the 6-9 Cage, who played forward
and center at San Diego State, signed a one-year
contract worth $180,000 with Ri mini of the Italian First
Div1s1on basketball league after oegotiat1ons stalled
wtth the Clippers.
Cage, the Western Athletic Conference's Player of
the Year this past season, said he was free to SIJJl with
the Clippers because terms of the contract with the
Italian team "were not consummated."
He did no elaborate.
.. It's been a dream of mme to play in the NBA, to
wear an NBA uniform," said Cage. "It's finally come
together for me."
Cage averaged 24.5 points and 12.6 rebounds per
game this past season.
Scheer declined to specify terms of the contract.
Cage, the l 4tll player takenln tlie NBA draft last
J uS2e and the second first-round pick by the Clippers, is
the second major signing by the Clippers in the past
month. Earlier Los Angeles matched an offer sheet
tendered by the Denver Nuggets for free agent auard
Derek Smith. The Clippers selected Louisville's
Lancaster Gordon with the eighth pick in the draft.
day night on a cloee play In the fourth
lnnlni at Doct&er Stadium. Meta won.
Giants send-Oliver to Phillies
SAN FRANCISCO -Al Oliver, who •
said recently he would ask the San
Francisco Giants to trade him after the
season, was sent to the Philadelphia
Phillies in a trade Monday and said, "It's fine with me."
He only had to go a few yards from the Giants'
clubhouse to get his new uniform, since the Phillies
came into Candlestick Park Monday night to open a
three-game series.
"It's soing to help him, revitalize him, .. Giants
Manaaer Danny Ozark predicted. "He'll love playing
fora conttnding team. and they're only six games out of
first place." ·
Ohver. who has not been playing on a full-time
basis Wlth the Last-place Gtants lately, said ... AU I want
to do 1s play ball."
Oliver was batting .298 but had no home runs and
only 34 runs batted in for the Giants. He was traded
along with a minor league player .
Televl.alon, radio
m.mllON
5 p.m. -IAIUAU.: Angele at New York
Yankeee, Channel s.
_......_. RADIO-·-----~
5 p.m. -IA-AU:: ~ at New York
Yank ... , KMPC~~ 7:30 p.m. -AU.~ Montteet at Oodgere,
KABC(190).
WID•IOAY'8 RAIMO
1 p.m. -IA-ALI;.: Montt .... at Dodgers,
KA8Cfl90).
ANGELS ••.
Prom Cl
Not many aside from the most
devoted of baseball. followers 'have.
Cowley is a graduate of the game's
school of bard knocks, a nine-year
veteran of the minor leagues.
"You stay down there long enou&h
you learn a few things," said the 26-
ycar-old right-hander, who raised bis
record to 5-1 . "One is respect.
Anybody with a stick in his hands can
·bun you."
It didn't take long for that theory to
manifest itself Monda_y nl&ht. After
hitting leadoff batter Gary Pettis, be
served up Bobby Grich's 12th home
run ofthescison and was behind 2-0
before he aot an out.
But the Yankees, who have scored
25 runs in their last three pmes, JOt
even on a run-scorina,._ first-inn1ns
triple by Dave Winfield and a
botched fielder's choice arounder.
.. After we aot those two runs,
(Y ankec catcher) Butcbd ~Wynepr)
came out and said, 'That s all they
get,'" Cowley noted.
It wasn't, but by the time the
Anaels' Rob Wilfong homered to start
a two-run ninth, it hardly mattered.
They added another on a run-scorina
double by Jerry Narron.
.,.___
An&el pitcher Tommy Jolln o•erruna ball hit by
Yan.keea• Don llattl~J
ID fifth lnnlnt Monday.
Ironically, Cowley, who walked no
one, wa a sinate batter shon ofbeina
reheved when he pleased a.n applaud-
ina crowd of27,741 by fannina pinch
hitter Mike Brown for the pme's
final out.
"If he doesn't get Brown he's out of
there," uid Yankee Ma.naaer Yoti
Bem. DEL MAR (AP) -Bill Shoe-
maker drove Wayward Pirate
past Doon's Baby in the stretch to
claim a balf-lenath v1ctory Mon-
day 10 the SSl,SSO Sorttnto
StakC1 for 2-ycar-old fillies a\ Del
Mar.
"It appears that the Big Ten and
Pacific-10 represented to CBS that
they could deliver games over which
they do not have complete control. In
so doing. they faded to re pect the
property nJhts of their opponent .
They al50 fa1led to obtcrve the
resolution proposed by the B11 Teo
and adopted last month by the NCAA
membership that 1tatc both team
mu t aatte to their aame beina
tclevtsed. lntertstin&Jy, the po ition
of the two conferences that the home
team prtva.ils with rrgard to t lc-
vi ion did not hold true even 10 ~st
NCAA TV plan There as no P~·
dent to suppon their tand.
Bruins confident they c~n repeat in 1984
The victory was the second in
thrtt staru for Wayward Pirate.
trained by Jimmy Ma)er. and
brou&ht her a winmna pu~ of S31 ,J50.
The wtnner was timed 1n l.37
1-S m the mile-Iona Som:nto
Stakes. the la t stcp_pma tont to
the rich Dtl Mar Dcbutantt on
Sept. 2.
Wayward P1r1te, the 9-S
favontc of the crowd of l4,l8S,
was a s1ancd 114 pounds ... 1x
more than Ooon's Baby. which
WIS ridden by Eddie De·
lahouuayc. ,
. '1'he Cf A approach to its tele·
v1 ion contract ia a pack:qc concept
that benefits all its members. There·
fore. it entered intot~clu 1vcarran •
mcnts with both A and ESP ,
Such. arrangements arc an ac~p\cd
PTICllCC ID tht broadc. '1odu try D
evidtnctd by the fatt tha& A had t.lthw.~c TV righ tt ch
Olympic Game~.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -ln a
Pac-I 0 conference "as well-balanced
u if cva been," any Cdac could
prove to be the difference in the race
for a RMC Bowl berth and the UCLA
Bruin think thty have one.
Tbe Bruin have won two Pac-IO
champion hips in the last tw yea.rs,
topping each with a victoriou Ro
Bowl appearance. and they believe
that uccc will help them in th
upcomina on. "h hdpt a lot," 1d quaner k
tne Rono. who ha\ hccn tabbed th
Bruin ' 1 ncr this )Cai by Coach
1 my-f>onaliu .
.. 'fhat clpcr1cnre
what it's hke to t (to the Rose Bowl),
I think will help u . I think it htlpcd u
la t )Ur." Bono added. La~t year, after a 10.1-1 susbn
which was capped by a 24-1 <4 victory o~cr M1ch1pn in the Rose Bowl,
U LA tumbled early. droppina to
0.3·1 tftetfour m 8utthc BNms
rallied to win siJt of il I t seven
confcren<'e pmcs to win the Pac-I 0
title. • . Th Bruin then th,. hro llhno1s
4S.9 in ihc Ro Bowl, Much annual-
1)' pt lhC Ytll'IOCT of &he p c-10
champion apan t tht Uia tO cham·
on " lot of membc of the ' 4 team
were members of the '82 and '83
teams That's a plus," id Donahue
at the team• media day pres pther-
ina. "They unde"tand the commit·
ment, the work ethic. what it takes to
win a confi rcnce champion hip,"
Two con utive tript to th Rote
Bowl could be a seed for O\icr-
confidcn but Ool'\lhuc doc n't
think that will be the ca with the
Bruins.
"Winn1n a ronfertnc-e cham·
pion$hip t the 11andard for other
you~r r.11ym or new teams to
hoot for ' 1 Donahue "ll' •
or the prosram.
nd lhc n con·
ferencc chamf.ion hip, and a trip to
the Rose Bow , apin this season.
"That's our team aoal, .. sa1d W1de
n:cciver Mike Shcrivd who la t year ,
set a school l"CC(>rd 9.'ith 41 recci>taon ,
&ood for 709 yard and two touch-
downs
.. We're still hufllTY even thoujb
we've won two titl . We want that
third one:·
SitC1 Bono, .. No that we·, e sonc
to two Ro Bowl1 tNt's all the au t111nk ahout!'
. The Bruin began tw -day prao-
u s Mond.a.y. .and n •Mi 1984
ason 1n n f)irgo a.panst
01 o tateon pt .•
MAJOR LaAGUtl STANO.NOS
AnMrkafl LMiut
Detroit
Toronto aantmort
NftYork
'°''*' CllVlllftd
Mlllrr•l,ll•
win DtY111C*
W L ftd. GI
6S II 2'
.. 6J '2 4\lt
6l 63 At2 •in .. ~ ... s .. " .,. 6'11 .M )O .464 10\'J ~ 11 432 11 IAST DIVISION
t2 .. .451 70 5oJ 1S6t 10\lt
" • .m 1s ., Sf .J24 " .. 6l .!Sii 17\"t 5S 10 MO 2'\lt '1 n Alt 2t M-.V-. Scierw N9w York I, ~ 4
K911NI City I, lloalOll S Detr•o 141 O.liltftd I .. ltlmot1 5. S.ltte • CNcaoo 7, Tues 5
Onlv NMlt IChlduitd
TMllY'1 GllnMI
AIW• Utomanlek 10-W) II New York (Nletv'O 14•7), (nl •
Cllvllaltd (Smlltl •·•l 11 TotOl'llo (Stieb 12•4), (n)
KtltMt Otv (Lelbrandf 7·51 al loston
(Olmtna 7•4). Cn> •
S.rtle ,..,..._, 1·•1 It .. ltimor1 (Ot•lt U·•I. <n>
oui.ftd (Sorei\Mn Ml) 11 0.lroU (Wiicox 13·7), (nl
Mlnnaot1 (Sdlrom 4·•) 11 MllwlukM (H .. t 6-10), (n)
Cl\l(ff9 (Nelson 2·5) 11 Tllll$ (Molton l•lO), (n) w ...... r•G11mn Anelli 11 New York, (n)
C11v•nc111 Toronto, <n>
KIMI• Cllv 11 lloalon1 (n)
Otld•nd •f O.trolf, (n1
S..1111 11 Baltlmof'1, (n)
MIMMOtl •I MllwaUkM, (nl Chlcaeo It T11CU, (n)
...-... LMeue
WIST DfYlllON
W L Pct. Ga
San Dileo 72 S 1 •s Al!M!ft M '1 512 f
Houtlon 63 '3 .500 10\IJ .,...,_ •1 " ·• n ClnclMltl 52 7S .416 21
San Frenclsco a 75 JIS 2•.,.,
CNcaoo NIW Yor11
PlllladllPhl• MontrMI St,Loula
PllllllWtll
EAST OIVtllON n s1 .m
.. S4 .557 4
" ,. .Stl • '2 '° ,. 10 '2 .. .JIM 10',A) 52 ~ 73 .A1' 21\\ MIMaV"• tar. Montreal 3, OMillrt 1
Clllctoo •· Hoc.llton 1 Atlente •· P1111Nah I (10 lnnlnp) St. lolJla f, Cincinnati 1
San Diieo-J, Hew Yor11 1
PMNllPrlla 6, Sin. Franci.co 4 T.....,,10..S
MonlrMI (SdlaltldW 6-3) al .,...,_
(Vallnluele f-1•l, (n)
Hoc.llton (Scott S-10) 11 Ollal9o (l!dltrlleY 6-7)
Atlante (Pwez 11-5) al Plll1bur9h (Tudor HI, <nl St. 1..0Ult (KIPWWa 3-21 at Clnclnnatf (Prlc:e 5-f or MeGafflotn 3-5), (nl New Yark (Lvndl 1-7) al Sin DllOO
(LAllllr t-10), (n)
~ (Canton 11-61 at San Fran-dac:o (ICrukow 1Hl. (n)
W ....... V"lhmll Montreel ., .,...,.
~ al San Frandscxl Houlton 11 Cl'llatto
Atlanta 11 PltttOUrtlh, <n>
St Leula at Cincinnati, (n)
New Ylt1l 11 S.n C>Moo, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUa
Ya'*MS I. M91b 4
CALlflOtlNIA NIW YOtlK .. ,.... .., .....
3 I 0 0 ltndllltl2b 4 0 11 e 1 l 2 Foll 2tl l 0 I 0 4010 Mec:!Wnu 3100
2 0 0 0 Wlntle6drt 2. 2 1 I
2 1 t 1 aavior dh • 1 1 1 4010 Harr.t!Jb 1112 e 0 I 0 M'"91Y lb 4 I 1 1 4 120 OtV'lftlf 4 OI 1
4 0 t 1 Mal• cf 4 1 J 0
3000 W'fneoarc •111
1000 JS e f e T...._ D 110 I ac...w""*"'
Clillli... --tot-4 NewYn 2IOMI •-t Gime WlMlne RI -WvMllll" w. -DP-Celffor~la 2, New Yotk I. LO..-Callfornla 5, New Yortl S. 21-0ownlno, Narron,~. Randolofl, Dtvttl, Mate. ~. Harrah. Hlt-Gf'ldl (12),
Wllfont (4).
• " 1111111 •• so c..,11•
JolWI L,1-11 4 2·3 I I I J 1
Curtll 3 M 2 0 0 1 3
NewY-11
Cowtev W,S-1 t f 4 e 0 • I)
HIP-f19111s by COWiey, T-2:11. A-27,741.
NATIONAL LliAGU•
exPOS 2, Dedlers 1
MONTRIAL LOS ANOIU
llletnes cf """*" D•.-irf
OC.rlerc
Orllltn 1b
Walledl3b
Tllomaa SI
GcNulaM FIYM211 ~· LllCISP
allrlli.t •rllbl
4 0 1 0 Andnn 11 • 0 1 0 •110 Landrxcf 4000
4111 Guerrwrf 4121
2100 MlnfllW •010 .. 0 1 2. lrOdl lb • 0 2 I
3011 Scloldac 2000
3 0 0 0 Mldndollfl 1 0 0 0 0000 S.x2b 4000
3 0 0 0 1111\lw• 3b 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 Harthlv 0 1 0 0 0
0000 AmlunePh 1000
ZICIW'YP 0 0 0 0 at 2 S 2 T..... n 1 1 I 1anw...._
~ ••1--1 &.a•'**' -,. --1 Oemo Wlnnlnt Rll -Drlttsan (6), E~lvlln. DP--MonfrMI 2, LOI Anoellt
I. LOl-MonlrMI 2, Lot A"9111s 6. 21-
Dawaon. HR--<#uerrero (11). s-Hartlllstr.
IP H RllllHSO ~· ~ W,f•7 I 7 1 1 1 S
LllUIU 1 O O 0 0 1 LM ........ Hanhlw L.t-. 1 S .3 2 1 5 z.cnrv 2 00013 GullcJlaon Ditched to 1 blllar In the ~h .. WP-+4-nNw J, Olllllcli.aon 2 llC-
L11Ca1 pe-;-.~ T-HI. A-lUOI.
(
o..•r MONDAY'S llllSULn 114111 lf4l·•· ............... , 'IRST lltACI. 6 furlontt Fen Ctub (S/bllle) I 20 4 00 3 20
tlAle L (Garcia) J 00 3 00 Vldtl11 (OtJvtrM) U0
AlsO racld: L• Femme N1tur11, lntrtov-
lng told, NOOlell R•I $ , GvMv Autumn, AMroa, Tur Pad, Time To ,,, PrOUd,
E119llVI Rovelly, MIKI M.P G. Tl"* l:Of 415
S•COND RAC•. 6 furlonn LUC'ky IUddV (P9dro11) t 40 S 20 3 60
Wln4Y Scott (Fox) lUO •to
ltonl SI. Georot (Hawtev> 2 '°
AISo racad· Envoy D1ncer, Glanc9 AIM>ut, Pat1111'1 lt1tl, Jam Min, Ona
Moister, Art'I L.udlv So\', Uraoold. I'm A leatnlll.
Time: 1:10 l /S.
t2 DAlL.Y DOUall (4·6) Nici MOOO
THaD AACI. I 111• mlllL
She'• Got SIVll (Toro> 14 oo uo •.oo Potlv Hllll'I (Vallnzutlt) 3.IO 3 .0
Llldlv Melen (Pedroza) UO Also racld: Twlot'a TrM1ur1, Miko
Ml An Offtt, lttla'• Crom Lover, L'EnlOul, Tue.kid lntldo. Timi: 1 :U l/ s.
55 UtACTA (1•5) Paid $121.50.
,<KllltTH UCL• fur1onet
Taaaaot IL.oz.ova> "00 3.IO 2..00
Gouer (P9dfOll) '-00 J.40
Mailltlc Tobin ILIMtm) SJO
Also rK*I; PrtMnl A Toast, Doonatw,
Gll"a lov, Pomrnerd, Huon Kid, ltld O\nrv,
Kine Mol:Ms, C Jam ltua.
Tlml: 1:12.
l'ff'TH llACL 1 111• mllet on tllt'f.
Wlmlft'I~ ,,, Mlftnlt)
,lrlt ...... ~
len ~ (West c;.rmanv1 Ott Clm hn min (U.SJ. S•7, 1•i, .. 1, J 1Utharln91on CCI > dtf Anne IU.S ), ,.6, 7•5, ,.,., i&a&lrtnt Goin
<YWOMavta) def Mlllue Brown (U.S.I, 6·2, ,. ,, S.ncty COlllll$ cu ) dlf YIU.I
Ht!ton, •:21 ) 0, rel!rlf .AnNllll Croft
ClrJlalnl atT Ell•• lurmln (US), • 4, ' 11 Laur• Atr.va I Per11I o.f Annt Hotibt (lrltal11), 6-•. 1 6, 7 J; Pttta Hutllr (AIA•
trit) dtf YYOtlM V1tmHk (South Africa>.
•·1. • 6, 6•1, Tlom ~ Wtltl (Souftl
A.."1al o.f ·-Un <SOU1h Atrb>, 7•6. ,.,
DMP Ml fhhlne
OAV•Y'I LOCKER I"""" itadt) -1'7 •"919n A2 lllalncucSI, t~ bonito,..,
vlllowtall, • rOCll ""'· ~ QllcO MU, 5' 1tlld baH, l20 rned!anc, J ~. J
$Qlf,plft. 1 MtOO, 100 llulllt tuna
NIWP'OaT LANDING CN1w"rt
lead\) -n •nolef's m "°"''O· 32 ban. 2 vt11ow111t, 62 bullet tUM, 5'7 medlerll
DANA WHAlllf' -25' 11'191.en 294 ban,
50I bonito, 3 v1t1owt11t, o roa fish, 247
mldlerll, t• IMeMtlMC. I ~. 25 bUllll 11.1111.
Thi$ WMk'I fr.u1 •rm
LOS ANOILIS -80U11U9t C.Von CrMk,
SAN taRNAJlDCNO -619 her Lake, Gr-..n vaaev La 1, Greoorv Lau, s.1111
Ant ltlvlr, S.olt Ant River (toultl fork),
KlltN -Kern Rf'ler (Borel Po.er·
llouM to Democrat Dam, l(RJ Po.lrtlOuH
to l..1k1 lstbellll.
TULAllll -Katn River (Fairview O.rn
to Kltl PowerllouM, JoMsondate lrld9t to
Fairview Oaml, Tiiie River (IOUlh I~ Of main for11).
MAD•lltA -San .Joaqulll lllvar (mlcklll
fortt), St1rtlw111Nr Lake.
MJla9rOI (~kif') 37.20 lt.40 uo Etoll• Ou HUit (OtlellOIMVI) 7.20 uo Mena¥'• tnnaacnona
lllohl .... <Mcetrron) 2.20 IAHIALL
Alto r~ Cheerful Sandi, Politi Ill• AfMl1cM Lletut tMf, ~lit, TrlflYCe<ll. CLEVELAND INOIA~ Brook
Tlml: 1:A3 •ts. JICOOv, third bllJlmln, ct1 ltll 21-cflv
$5 IXACTA (5-1) Paid Slf1.50. dlt.Ulld lltt.
SUtTH UCL • f\Jr1ol!es. NEW YOftK Y ANKEE$-Annouf1Ced ~v (Ma&a) 11.20 s '° uo ltlll Murrev Cook, Vk.t"9f'11ld0nt ind
8u&lneu School (Stbllll) 1e oo 7 '° director of scoutinO, hH r"'9nlf.
Nordic Sono (lrnwlll 760 ......., ...._.
A110 ~ E11v E11v, Inland Otl'CW, ATUNTA lltAVEs-Placed Steve
MlcnMI Nat11txb, Mono, Pulhlne Daisie&, "*°'*'· p11cn., on mo 15-4av dlstr.cl Ctrdl Round, Hlth Vl(:torv. Ill Racalecl Mika Pavne, l>ild!W, from Tlml: 1: 10 3/S ltldlrnond of l!lt lnllmlllonal l..ll9UI
SIYINTH llACL 6 ... ......._. Mo'ild Tarry Fontar, pitcher, from Ille 15· '"' --dav to Ille 21·dtv dlstblld lltl. FIMI 'N lrW\ (Plncay) S.00 J.20 2.AO SAN FltANCISCO GIANTS-TrlOecl Al Crim.on C.mao (Lo1ov1) 3.00 UO OllV«, flnl bllMmln, and a minor 1M9UO Wllon (Pedroza) 2AO .... to ..._ •·t ...... .... _ rK*t: Ital T..._ "'um, Kio ........ • .... ver ... n.mld .. " 10 .... Pl\lladl\phla ...._ , ..... , ,_.. f'tlllllM tor two minor laa9uo e>ltcnan lo bt Kutll. P91Mta Quffn, Yollnd1. namld later.
Tlmt: l:Of 4/S I .... ., -$5 •XACTA (1•7) '"'"'Id S5100 ...... 1' vALL ,... N......_. ........ ASMdellen
$2 Pte:K SUt (2·H/4•5-l•l) Nld PORTLAND TRAIL ILAZEltS-Sloned
sl•.IO w1th 5' wlnalfte llcllll• (tlve lemard ~. 9U*fd, to a lftlAll-.,.., w .. ). Carrvover ,oo1 Wl,19' ll comrld.
tlGMTH RACI. Ona mat. LO$ ANGELES CLIPPERS-~
Wavward Pirate (Shmkrl uo uo 3.00 M.ict1at1 '"°· fofward Doon'I lebY (~ye) 4M 4 00 ,OOT8ALL TIVl'ol lSllllll) 4.00 Nallnll , ..... l.-.ue
A1So reced: Fiesta LadY, C.Ui Fancv, IUFFALO llLL.s.-<A;t David. K"'°"
Delaware Glnnv. and Stacy lll1vfllld, 1tflllol, Neel Muutr,
Time: l:l7 11s. llNCl9ckar, Tonv SlttOft, contar, Miil•
$5 IXACTA (2·11 paid $11 00. Mo<'lnl, ladOe, Cecil lll1lllff, wide recli""·
NINTH lllACI. I 111• mlln. Ind Vito Wlllltrnt, NMinO bllCIL Placed
lfl&h 8altter (Pincav) 6 00 3.60 UO Mall Vandlnaoorn, dlf9llslw badt, on lhl
Vttt!IM-(Lotov•> 3.IO 3.,w---lnlurld '"""' 1111• Youne Mmlr•I (Shoemaker) 4.20 CLEVEt.:ANo-8ROWNS--w.tv90 WaOI Also racied: Shot In, North Line, First Mannine, wide r9Cltvar, Thomas •r-n
Si.de, Wlnners T-n, Chuckv 8abv, and Kent TownMl!d, clof9Nlve Inda, James Bliek, rlMUlll!t bedt, Dwavne .. mes. Pllesant Native, SOn of Clllef, N1vleando, taclllt, Mike aoren and Vernon
Tott Entertainer. Hertrltvet, •nebec:tteri, Atttrlony ltecdll1, Tlmt: hW PUlltw, and John Vamuco, QUlrfll"bldL S.S IXACTA (S-12) Plfd 16.UO. DENVElll 81tONCO$--ACCIUlrad lutch
'Allllldanc:e: 1UIS. JohNon, wide~. from the Houston
NflL .,... .... sen
NATIONAL CON,.llllMCI --WLTftd."' PA
NlwOrtMn• 3 0 0 1009 H '° ..... 1 2 0 .333 47 '2
AlliNltl ' 2 0 m n " 5-11 F ranclsco 1 2 0 .333 .. " c..111
O.trOlt 2 ' I U1 • 54 Tt1T1$19 .. ., 2 2 0 .soo 72 120
Gr_,aav ' 2 0 m • 61
MIMnOll ' t 0 .m St " Ctllaleo 0 3 0 .000 31 ., ... ,
D1lll1 2 ' 0 667 65 50 NYOlllllt 2 1 0 • 667 .. '° $1 LOUii 2 1 0 667 .. 37 PtlllldelPflle ' 2 0 m 62 •1
W1sNMton 1 2 0 .333 .a '5
AMlllltcAN cott'lllllMCI
Wiit
S..1111 4 0 0 HIOI '° ,.
Danvw 2 1 0 "1 ., l6
San Olt9o 2 ' 0 "1 '5 ...., ....... 1 2 0 m St'-62
KansatCllY 1 2 0 m 61 •1 CMlrlll Plll&l)urllf'I 3 • 0 1000 71 41
ClllClnnell 2 1 0 ... , Sf 45
Ctavetand 1 2 0 m 31 72
Houiton 1 2 0 .m 72 71 I Ht MlllYll 3 0 0 1 OIO 12 al 8Uffal0 1 2 0 .ll3 30 37
lncllanallOll• 1 2 0 m 2' 75
NlwEnellnd 1 2 0 .m .. ,.
NY-'-'' 0 3 0 000 .. n
'TtlwMl'l't 0..... Cllv ... nd at~. (n)
S.n oi... 11 lllfM. (nl ,,...V"•OM*
o.nver 11 Atlll\ll, (n) 0.trolf 11 ClnetftNll, (II) KtnNt Cit'( II New EncNM, (II) iw.mt 11 TamM hy, (n) Mlnnelola al SI LOU!&, (II)
NY Jtt• at ......... In)
S.ttlt •• S.n Fr111eltco. Cnl .............. We~on 11 New OrlMna lndla~ at Of"" aav, tn> Plttlburtfl et NY Olenta, tn)
~ ,, a.let, (ft) ..............
C"1C9to "'· luff ... •• ~ne
Olen tor an UIMfildoMd craft dtoice.
Traded LUkt Pratrlclet, llUllll(, to t1'1t
New Enetand Patrtot• for en undbdoMd
dr.tt cnoa. W•tved lton Eeloff, ttetlt and,
Nllhen ~. rUMIAO beck, GtnY Diorio, offel~neman, Scott Stanllavaoe, C!UaC'· I~, ldla9I Wedo, wide rac:elver,
RUN H IV, llMOacller, and ·Dile
T c:omart>Kk.
DETRO LIONs-<ut Don VIII Wte,
kicker, Kon Watkins, dlf9Nlv• beck, Jon
ltoahlk, euard, Renw!Q Alkins, olfMl!vt
llnlman, and Tom end Jim VIMne. PltC9d
AUIN'I CuritY, llnltlec:ker, and C.11 litnd, ~ i.ctl., on the lnlUrld ros.ene fist.
GltEEN IA Y PACKElls-<ut David
WN!ftnt, euanarbeck. John 01r111ot1t1W. PUntar, w1vne Jona, ~ve bldl, Diii
FIAW, Calvin Favron Ind Martt El'!'llM, llnaOac:t.an. llld Clllrfte Johnson, nose llQll.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-W1lvtd t>utwood lllocauemora, dlfenliv• Mc:k,
Mark Kirchner, offans!Yt lineman, lt1nc!Y Cll,_, llfety, Mw'lt. Sdliecflt, ~ler, and
Phll o.m..d, lltllt Ind.
MIAMI OOLPHINS-Announcld 11111 c~ Stuclltv, dlfonslve coord11111or, ht• bell'I 11ou1111111d Sent Terry T111to1o,
l'inlblckor, to IN OotrOll Lions to comoltla
Ill Mrller lrlcll.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Asllld tor
roster 1xtm11tlon tor OCKit Mll1!n, dl-
ftMl•• lt!emln. Cut OCKit Howard, ~rd. ...,.,... lllotnpson, offensive llneman, Jiff
F191n, rwinUit Mc.k, •I'd Pal.ti Mtverctlldt, 9'111ter•aafetv.
NEW OlllLIEANS SAINTs-<ut v.,._..
Pwrv. Mtttv, ltlch Ma11H, w10t rec.tYw, Mac FttOefl, 1191\t INS, Paul Dav\1 Grav,
llnoMcker, A/l99IO Flalds, ltdtll, Ind Cllf~ ford lfo-#11, kicker.
PITTSIUROH STEELElltS-W1lvtd Franco Harri• and Hanry Oclor!I, runnlnt
bedls, Gr" 8Ht, Mlltv, JC. Pt~sl. noM llCl\te, CNl6 Martir, offensi,,. tacklo, 1111
Lawrance, 9\llfd, •M Gr" Hllrdl, lllWt»Cker. •
SAN DIEGO CHAlltGU$-Trldod
Kemv N dliftnllva and, to IN St"
Franci.ce ...,. for "' VftditdoMd *lfl dlol<e Cut Jim '1/u"onv. tlneOed!er. 1nc1
KltfV Tavtor, cornerbldl. PlacM o.rri.
Naltoft, llntOlcllar. on 111e ~ ,...,.,. '· SAN FltANCISCO etrrts-;-cui Jam.
SCofl Ind 'Tl ~ wldt ~Vin
ltlcflt(d liecatnore. defentlve ... Paul 8tloumlnf, onttr, Jtmoa OUrlllm, cor·
nero.ck. 1nc1 Jemt1 ~ llNMc.t.er.
TAMl'A IAY IUCCANaHS-W veci
()on ltllt'( Ind llllch luttna.1, lffentlVI
llMman, Tl!OfNt Mortlt INS $el'ICly l.t'-ix., 41eftfttivt bad" Vl"9fll\ '"'4·
na• •!Id Mlc:Nel Golnar, """"1le 1. Tonv C~Qlo •1141 FrM Ill~ cit~
flnlfYe llnlmeft. a1M1 cam a.nton. W10e
recefWt. ~ -l(ort*, 4IUWt
.. -lnlurtid ,....,... "" WASHINGTON •IDS rNS-<>cte
ltld\ OoflMloy, ~·~. from ~ '*""" s....-. for 911 ,,. cMb. WahW ...... l! • rUMlne
MO, HlfrY VtnN , It, tlO F
McOfttl, ttltrt lftd ,.... Stow He
!Oft. .-u. Md lfutl lllldford ~tMll-. ~. en JM lnlurM '°""'" IOCCH --~lecciw ....... MINNISOT A ST I llU-lo!o Pttwt O.llfel. mtdtllldW, .. ~
CIUll Gf l9!t KllNncr' t F \I OMlloll fer _,.
UNIKtolM ~I Of Call\. cou .....
P'Alltl..•tGH DtCKINJ11;m-..,._rnH 0WU
....... llMIMMt ~ a.d\: IOWA-NM!M .........
LIHMA tn.a "°"*''' ~ lkntldl ..... '°"°' °" mtcl I 8YTM, UMdttl
t I hC;90t Of CWGn'lll
•™-' °'
Bad aeat
San Dleco Padrea Manaier Dlck Wllllama
doe.an •t appear bappy With bJa .at wbllo he Ida oat Illa ~ foUOwbur hrt
week"• bean-ball war staced 1at Atliuata.
Networks ~o see the light?
Future looks dark
should Cubs make
playoffs, Series
By JOUN NEL.WN ,,....,..,,...,
-----
Those nocturnal beasts of baseba.ll
-owners with black ink in their
veins -arc on the prowl again. Their
intended prey: the day-feeding Chi-
cago Cubs.
With the Cubs holding a four-game
lead in the National Lea1ue wt,
baseball stands to lose a bundle as it
faces the prospect of midweek pla)Off
and World Series games in dayh&l!t
for the first time in a decade.
Some rtj)Orts place the figure at as
much as $700,000 per team in lost
television revenues should that hap-
pen.
It's a sad story, but it wa.s written by
ba~ball. This time, the networks
seem to be getting too much of the
blame for exenin$ pressure on the
Cubs that is commg. in fact, from ba~ball's ownership.
h seems that baseball's S \ billion
contracts with NBC and ~. true
last )Car, contain rebate clauses.
Baseball must return some of the
money if playoff and World Scnes
games normally played in pnme tJme
arc moved to daytime. Thus. owners
have begun a campaign to get tho~
games played al mg.ht.
:"The influence is money itscl~ ..
said one source. ''They (the owners)
struck this deal, and now they realize
what's at stake."
Since the Cubs do not have li&bts at
WriaJey Field. as ma.n)' as five playoff'
and sjit World Series pm.es could be
held d~ the day. Under the m-
year tcleVJsion contract. ABC MU
telecast the playoff' this year and
NBC the World Series. .
The baseball commissioner's office
admits that alternatives arc being
studied in ~se the Cu~ JO all the
wa)'. Such alternatives ml&ht include
the installation of temporary lights at
Wrigley Field or transferring the
games to another site, like Comultcy
Park, where the White Sox play, or
Milwaukee County Stadium. if the
White Sox should get into the playoffs.
The simplest alternative, if one
becomes necessary. mi&ht be to &Jtcr
the schedule to allow the playoffs and
Series to bqin outside of Cbicago.
thusehmmatinasomeoftheweek.day
games at Wrigler Field.
..Obviously it s a bit of a different
situation as far as Chicqo is con-
cerned," Sl)S Chuck Adams of the commissioner·~ office. ..We're n.-
aminlng aU scbedulina altuna\i.
Nothing is final at this point, and so
far there is no copdu ion."
Temporary Hlhuna m.ia,ht present a
logistical problem, iDC'C Wri&fc)
Field is located in a residential area
and there isn•t a lot of room for light
to~ers. But representatives of both
Trump to propose
USFL switch to fall
Move would put ---league up against
part of NFL season
NEW YORK (AP) -Donald
Trump, owner of the New Jersey
Generals. said Monday he will
propose that the United StatC$ Foot-
ball Lea&ue switch at least partiaJJy to
a fall sc6edule in 1986 at this week's
lcaaue meetings.
The move would put the 2-year-old
league in direct competihon with the
National Football Lca1ue for pert of
both leaaues' seasons.
The New York Times reported m
today's editions that Trump's
proposal is e~pccted to meet with the
approval of fellow o~ ners at the
meetings. which begin Wedn~y in
Chicqo.
The newspaper reported that
ltague operations director Peter
Hadhuy upc<:ts ratification b> the
USFL's 18 owners, two-thirds of
whom must suppon the move to
approve it.
Trump has been said to be Sttkitl&
~uch a schC'dule change ~in~ he
bou ht the General la t year.
•• c're f.Oing to a k for the s~Hch
to the fall, • he was quoted as saying.
"and I think we'll &ct 1t."
Accotd.ina to the proposal. the
switch could be achitvC'd by phltll'\I
the 1986 ~son. The schedule ~ould
$100 ...
From Cl
-begin 10 March, but the I~ would
go on hiatus over the summer and
finish in the fall.
The split would be made to avoid a
year without USFl. activity, wlucb
would occur 1f the leque pla)'cd a
complete spring schedule and
switched to a fall schedule the next
)Car.
The move was sugcsted by a
market research survey com-
missioned by the leaaue and com-
pleted recently The survey advised
that the usn schedule avoid the
month of July. when man) fans go on
vacatton.
The surve) found little current
interest among television net~ork.s 1n
USFL fall teleasts. The NFL's TV
contract, howc,·cr, expires 1n 1986,
and the USFL hopes network interest
will then increase .
Telev1S1on ratinp for USFl. tele-
casts fell m the lcque's second year.
But average attendance at the games
rose sliahtl)', from 24,824 to 27. I 26.
Each USFt team rettives S l. 9
milhon from contracts with ABC-TV
and ESPN, compared to $14 2
mil hon rccel\·ed by NFL teams under
their tcle\i51on contracts.
A fall schedule ~ould necessitate
stadium chanae b> several teams as
the)' competed mo"' dircctlv v.ith
NFL franchises. mona th0sc arc
Trump's Generals. .,.ho miaht be
forced to moH out of Giants
Stadium, cumntly the home of the
older laauc·s Jea and Giants
a lot of
networks said u !WOuld be pouable -
that it ~ been done in cones
football. for example. OM hunDe
cleared. there's alsolhe probkm of an
lUinois state law and a ell> on:hnance
effectively banning lights at WrialeY
fJeld.
A ciliun·s poup call OUBS
(Citizens United for 8uCbalJ in the
Sunshine} lobbied vehemently for the
1ocaJ tatutes apjmt liabts and CU·
tainJy ould also ~y qppo1e
moVUlg the Cubs for poasealOJl play.
A shift in venues seems the least litdJ
of all alternatives. It would be unfaar
not only to the team but also to fans
wbo have waited since 194S tosce.tbe
Cubs win a pennant.
Local efforts to keep OYt"DerS from
tinkering with the schedule have
drawn wide-ra.aging support.
lltioois Rep, Blis Lc"in, O-Orl-caao, said efforts to install temporary
li&bli set a bad examPlc for dilldm:a
because baseball owners 11o"Ctt .. sayiQJ
they c:an;violate the la with impunr-..
ty. This is arropnoc and n sea a bad
ex.ample."
An NBC spokesman, Tom Memu,
says his network .. will abide b
whatever decision major ~
baseball ~ .. 'While 11drrutu1a1
\hat woWd JFCfc! to mate its
Wortd ScrieS tel«asss ounna pnmc
time on •eek oiibts to ta.kc ad\'&Dtaae
oftbe hiabcr ratiop.
Jim Spence of ABC l'>CS ooc step
farther.
~0ur position 'ocs bcJODd abidiq
by baseball's decision. be Sl)'l.
UCI'SLIVSEY
From Cl
the
•
t DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, August
-
I COLLEGE FOOTBALL tiOnC9 W AC11nOU1 lllWN IMJ111 NOl'ICa OP IUPPIOlt COUltf '"--~--~--~ -
Alft.ICATION MAIM ITA,......,. Nanci OP Oft, TNJeTU .. ~at ~OMIA,;
TOllLL The~~ ~ ,100 am TAM lllU.MattarOI ~ ~~~IT OE THOUaa:Aa CAN 'TITlE INSURANCE AOCJl!Ola'v!Of'I Lot .. N"' H Ta 'MIOln It &JO 1287 Ml Of.. AND °' "ii UOM COMPANY •• c.llfomlj ClOf• we Ha • .. ....,. eonc.n ~CA 80830 TO~ poratlon Tnm•. or £RQ • tiA'i ... ;Fi.owt:RS,PeulO lllP-l<M!Pat•tc:Uotoore, 87 llTATIHO.A·'llMZI cu1or J1u1t•• or al ., 'c I R ~IO the Dlpaf1111•1t of Mt...., Dr,. Cyptw. CA Tod ....... ~ tltut9d Tl'UltM, Of ol
Old Dogs are missing
Doo ey ts looking
for' cent' year
for young Georgia
Auburn 1 a sohd fav ri1e 10 ~ t
and Aurida figures to be the mo t
scriou challenger. 0cotglll hould be
in the b11tlc for third p c.-e, probably
with Alabama and Tc.nn •
Alicofiollc a. ••• Oontral 90830 credltort and contl 9111 oertelti OMd of Tnm M. " I 42Clt
fOt: O.V.aciotl ~ TM crtdlton, Md pertont WtiO tCIUled by PHILIP oRDER TO "~I" ~Dr,.~. CA rneybeothlrw\M HORAN and DONNA J SHOWCAUS OH A lft the wlll .oo/or ..tlta of. HOfWf, flulband end wttt,
& Wt Trilt butll'ed 1 con-JEROM THOMAS lAKf and t9COtded Junt I, 1'80 FOft CHAHQ to •hloaholle bewuig• ..., aw: ~ a/Illa J THOMU u Instrument No. 4548. In °" H=.)
Ill KIM'I P. M00te BERGIJHZf llOotl 13&M. hoe 155, of Ui
1902 HatbOr INd :nite atat.,.,.,. wa f'lllld A petition hat beelt fllld omctW Rec:oOU of Oranoe Oall ft •co~on on
Cotta Meil. CA 121H tht County C:Wk ot Or· by JEROME av.Kl. JR. In County, Calllornla, a11d ~E~EN~ YH:.. NEW.
ATHEN • Ga (AP) - C h
Vince Dooley1; ) Geo!lia "am have
a dettnt fooat>all.t m .. an l i<4. Doolcy'sid~ofadettntt mi 0'1
one peblc of ma1chtna lh brilliant
t'Xl)IQ1ts of the last c row-Bulldot
outfits t.hal (Omposed 1 43-4-1 re--
cord, be t in 1M nation durina that
time and by far them 1 uccessful in
lhc bool'1 football history.
Any s~ mwu well depend on
the winnina auituae developed in the
four years ancc Herschel Walker blouam~ o.n the scene and u1dcd
the ~ to the national ch m-
pionship in 1980. OtoratA finished
Pubtllh90 OrllnQt Cout County on August 15, tN 8up«10f Court of Or• puf'IUWll 10 that oartAln ~ B ._.::Ulla..:.__ lot Delly Plot AugutU1, 1.... 1 ange~ County ~ting ttlal 1'°9 of o.tt&ll1 ttier.uod« • .-i11..... _..,,
T·112 na1• JEAOM BLAKE. JA ~ ap. r.col'dtd May 2, itM •In· Ofdat dOYrlnO peUtton.r lo Pu**I Or1ng9 Cout po1nt9d aa .,.,.onal rep-ttniment Ho. 14-180218, of oh•nv• fl•r nat11• from rtaJC NOTICE DallyPllotAugust21,H teMr1ta1twtofldmlnlat«thl Official A900f'dt of tlld Wettd'I L~ ~Olf to ___ :=:• Septemws. 10, 19M •tata of Ul9 dtcedtflt Thi County, will undef and WeNt-/IT 1 ~Al~ R 0 ix th in the final A socia ted P~ poll
in 1981 and founh in 1982.
........ ovv. T·1t5 1>9t1t1on requaet.t 111.1tl'Klf1ty punlUatlt lo .. Id o.d of IT 18 ,.
U.ITA . 1---------IO ldmlf1lt1" tti. •t1ta Tn.t Mil It publlo IUOtlon lti.C .. penorlllln1--1tdln ni. followlno penot'll .. PlBUC fl)TIC[ undat uie ~t M-lor cMfl, lawful moMy ol tti. the mtnar llfOt..ald mppew ~~-·INTER · FIClmOUaMJ ... 11 ~=~~·::~ :::::,~i::=·,: :n~:.o~r::~~
NATIONAL. 1I021 Sky Park MAim •TATlmN'J IWll be MIO on &.pl«nbet ..id Ttutt• drllWl'I on • c.ntat Dl'IYa w-... ~·· Clrolt. SUit• U , !Mn9, CA The lollowrlnQ pet'80na.,.. 12 10M at • 30 AM In ".,. Ot natlotUll bank, • AN. C.atomla. Oft ~am. 12714 dolna bullr'9et ea; o.Cit No a at 700 CMc '1att Ot tees.at cr.dtt ~. wt, tta.. IC t·tS o Clodl
. "It' will be kmd of a touah )ear. f
believe," Doolti SI.id.
The Bulldogs have only three
offcnslve starters returnina. and only
one of those will be in a familiar spot.
There arc ix defensive st.arten back,
but one of those has been moved in an
cffon to bolster a J1"3duation-
depletcd o~n ive line.
Walker, 1 three-time All-Ameri·
n1 turned profc ionat after bis
junior campaign, but (ieorgi was
abJe to fini h founh n tionally last
)'ear bc<:ause of a touah def en and
an offense that seemed to do ju t
enough to act the job done durina
critical moments.
CARS, ETC. 1I021 8lry El/AO IMPORT, 14too Ctntw Dl'IYa Wtat Santa or t ltatt cw t.derll aalltngl AM .• _., then IW'lf there
,..,. CArcle, Suitt EJ, ,,....,., Goldtn Wett. Wt9t,,..tar, Ana CA 12702 ' and toen ueoaatlOn doml-tlflOW _..., W any thty have
CA 12714 OA 12183 If YOU oeJECT to Iha a11eCf In ..thlt ttate. at the , wtly aakt p.t1ltlon IOt Richard J11nlor Hen· GerMrd Holtc:tltt, 170l1 gnintlng Of thl petition. YoU rnaln entrane• 10 Flret dlanOt Of nema ""°"Id not -.on, 13227 Aooro Piece, a ma 8tr•t. H11ntlno1on ltlould e1ti. appeat al '"' Am«tc:en r111t 1naurance be OtMttd
Herman A.tcbie. a wide receiver, is
the only offensive returnee back at the
$1ffie l>O$l. Dooley has shifted center
Keith Johnson, stdelined during the
spnng with a back injury, to tackle
and wide receiver Kevtn Harris to the
secondarv on defense
Mike Weaver, a 280.pound de-
fensive guard, has sw1tcned to of-
fensive guard
"The Dogs may be fOing throupi
some stonny weather,· Dooley said.
"We may have to batten down the
batches, pnmarily because we've got
less returning starters on offense than
in the 21 years rve been here ...
Georgia has dominated the
Southeastern Conference for the last
four years. claiming three con·
scculJve utles before Auburn ended
the championship run last year.
The major lo scs from the 1983
team were 1982 All-American rover
Terry Hoage, lineb:lcker Tomm)'
Thurson and scoond team All-Amen. can end Freddie Gilbert from the defe~. and quarterback John Last-
inger and linemen a~nce Kay, Guy
Mcintyre and Warren Gray from the offe~
"We can't replace a Hoage, but the
defense has a chance to be solid, and
it's got tO be,'' Dooley said. "This
team won't have the experience in the
offenS1vc line. We'll be looking at
some freshmen. There'll be some
freshman opportunities."
Lasti~er's backup, Todd WiJ.
Iiams, will handle the quarterback
chores, and generally is considered a
stronJer passer than Lastinser.
Archie beads a strong rtcle'ivinf corps
that includes Fred Lane and immy
Hockaday.
The top running backs could be
freshmen, WJth a tno of celebrated
tailbacks fightina for a start.ina berth
along with some journeymen vet-
cran . The freshmep with excellent
h.iJ&h school credential$ are Lars rtate
ollndianap0lis, CJcveland Gary of
Stuan. Aa., and Grea Williams of
Metter. who brotcc Walker's Geo~
bi&h school career rushing mark with 6,920 yards.
The defense wiU feature hnemen
Calvin Robinson. Donald Chumley
and Ktn.ny Sims. All·SEC linebacker
Knox Culpepper, two-year st.anma
cornerback Tony Aack and free
safety Jeff Sanchez, an all-<X>nfercnce
performer in J 982 who sat out last
year with an injury.
P1aoelclcker Kevin Butler bas 54
career field goals, two shy of the SEC
record, and he has scored 26 J points,
eight less than the conference ·mark.
Punter Chip Andrews averaged 40.2
yards per kick last year.
c.rrttoe.CAto10t 8aectl,CA92&49 heati-andttateYoUE Compllny tocat9d at 114 IT .IS FUATHE,. °"*9d MICtlaitll T. HW'dman, 4027 Tllta bullnMe It oon. tlont~';, f11t -.tt!tn E.8111 Fifth Street, In the City ttlal a coPY Of tNa Otdtr to
Robtm Dr .. lent.a""-· CA duc1'td by: an lndMduM tlont with the QOUft ore ot Santa Ma. canromi.. al tlflOW Cllllne be publlahed In 12702 Oertwd HOllldlar the hMltng Yout apPf9f· that rigtlt, tit» and lnttr9at the Orange COMl o.ly ~I TNa ~lneea ta con-"* at.terMnt wee flled anc. may be In par-eon« by COft~ 1o and now ,_, a newepape, ,of .,.._., ducttd w: • oanarw '*'· wtttt ""'County ~ of 0r-~ attorney. by 11 un0er Mid DMd of c1rou1111on. P"Dlilhael 1n thle
ner'INp • .,. ~ on Augutt 14• IF YOU ARE A CREOITOA TM! ,,, ""' proptfty altlr county at ..... once. --Rlc:tlard J . ._._, '* °' a cont111gant cndttor of attd In Mid COunl)I and tor lout ~ """"
TNt •~temMt ... fllllct F2l8Q 11"1 d9cHnd. you mutt ltlt State deaarlbeJd •: prior tO ft day of Mid'*'· With ti.County Clark°' Or-Publlthld Orange Coa.t ~ a.n with ""'c:oun "' PARCEL 1: Loi,. otTflCt &no. -. County on ~ 23, Deny Pilot August 21, 28 ~· It to IN .,.,..,,,.. No 10097 a:s lhOWn on a bcitd ~. 2 1814 1914 '211111 September 3, 10. 1084 l'9PltMOtatlW appointtd by ,.,,_,, ttc:«ded In Book .. ,, Ff\AHl(l)OM NICHINI
' Publlthed Orange Coat T • 180 the court wn111n four montl\t PIQel 29 to :M. both in. Judg9 of lht
o.11)' Plot~ 21, !II •-IC lilftTil"r from the date of ""' ... cl11alve of Ml~ellaneou1 ~C. ~.~I"''"' hpttmber s. 10, 1tl4 ,.._ ""'~ auenoeotleU..11pt"OlllcMd Mape, r9e0rd1 of Oranot ---,._...._ ____ ... T·-183-. LIGA&:NOTIC9 111 Sec:tlon 700 of th• County,and .. cortec:tedb)' =2J010.W.~~
••.,. Mft'llM' PROPOND 1.. Probeta Codil of c:atlfOtnla. lt\et oanlln ctftlllc:ate of --:::""--"'~ ""'"" .. IUDGIT '~ Tllt lllM few nJlftO c:lllmt .tll corrtctJon t9COl'dtd In Book (114 a..a.., CoaetMM......., not eicpire p(for to lour 12941 Paoa 14114 of Oftlc:lal P11bllahed Ofano-Cout fllC~:A~' ~·..._, Prottllm monthl 1tom the d•t• of the R.cord. of Mid C>fano-~[:" Auom 7. 1.-. 2 t,
The followlng P9l'IOnl ate The CO.tllnt ~lonal hMrina notlot a~ CC>unty. ' T 141 doing bualnetl u ccupatlonat Program YOU MAY EXAMINE the £lcoeptlng t'*9from d · PA'OFES810HAL IEA· •:ru•d blldget for Ille kept by the COlW1. If you on. oil nghlt. mlnerll rigtlll, ..... .,. ...... ~
VICES 311\4i ow-32nd 1 wtll be avalleblt for are a Ptt90f'I ln..,_ttd In ;u, naturll OM rlghll and .--"'""" BtrMt' ~ a..cn CA blc 1n1pect1on at Olltnat the .We, you mtY NtW other hydrocarbon i--FIC11TIOU8----IU-l•_M_
92913' ' file• 1001 PrHldlo 11P«1theeicecut«or9dmi.... tub9tanctd by wtla~ NAl98TA,.......,
Tony G«atd CMlltfotte. ' CGeta M9M. CA., tstrator, 0t uPOI\ the at· natnit known, tQ09thet wtth ...._ ,..-....... 311~ ~ 32nd su. om Auowt 27th to Auguat t04'Ny tor tht tQCIUt0t or II 090thtnnel steem and ..... _..,......"' par90nt.,.
Hewpof1 '-"' CA t2M3 ' 1tt 1914 ~ 11"1 9dmlnlstrator, and Ille with .,..,.,, power below a depth ~& ~=TMENTS.
TNI bu91-It con· °' 11:00 A.M. and 4;30 =.cc:::: = .:: ~~Met~~ 10103 Bloomflatd St., Loa ~~:'er~ P.~ publlc "-1ng on the Ing itiat YoU ~ apedel tWtthout IN right to drll, Alamltoe, CA 82710 d
321 Thlt 9taternent ... flltd t:f::•d t>udg•t for no11oe of"" fUlna cf an in-mint. ~ cw oe-att H='Dr •·~o91 Mar w1t'1 the County a.ii of Qr. 1 wt11 be he6d at 1001 wntory and 9'>P'~t of ltwough °'on Cha U'lace Ot " • ,
tngt County on AIOMt t reafdlo Square, Coate Mtate ..... Ot of the pet1-upper 500 fMI ol the CA .,::5 R. ... ----.. 219 1914 · ' CA. on s.tember e tlonl or ticcow11• mtntlontd 1Ubtutteoe of Mid !Md, • ,,, __ .,
Alabama a waits dividends ,__ 1N4 .. UO o'Clodt P.M • In Section 1200 and !200.5 of ~ In the o.d from Od, Menhattan a.di, CA Pubhhed 0rtngt eoett Publlahed Orano-eo..1 the Calfomla Pn>bat• Codt. L.aut91 Point Town Hornet. • S6dney MendlcMtL 32:15
Deify Plot Augu1tt 21 28 Piiot AUQ111t 21 19114 Jolwl II. O.taf1111 joint wntur., reconted MaY Ceraon St., Llk..000,
Sep1emberS, 10, 1"4 • T-145 =-~--~1:'of~~ CAJ:.!! E. M;t\ard, 828
T·1M "8.IC NOTICE 1ntM, CA t::r711 PARCEL 2: Hon-4Xc:l\.llM Haal, Corona Del Mar, CA
Perkins optimistic
after'83 finale
and good spring
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) -
Coach Rat, Perk.ins· 8-4 record m bis
first season as Bear Bryant's successor
as the Alabama football coach did not
please him, he said, but he looks for a
better payoff this fall.
After faltering against Penn State,
Tennessee, Boston College and
Auburn, Ala~ma played iLS best
game m defeating fifth-ranked
Southern Methodist 28-7 io the Sun
Bowl.
"We arc very cxctted and pleased
wtth the way it wound up and the way
we started this year," Perkins said. "l
trunk we made a lot of stndes agam
this spnng and dunni the off.season
that WJJI pay dJv1deods."
Three of I S returning lettermen
drew special praise from Perkins -
fullback Ricky Moore, who gained
946 yards a year ago, and linebackers
Emanuel King and Cornelius Ben-
nett.
Moore, a 235-pound senior, is the
best fullback m the country, Perkins
said. "J think he's a pro player right
now.''
Baltimore
new home
for Stars?
BALTIMORE (AP) -Since r•
oelvtng a eurveyon the featlbUlty of
aht~ the 1Untted Statea FootbaU
1 -..:• spring ech«fule to tne
tWt. the owner of the Phdldete>nta Star. II dOWnptaytng talk of mov-~ng htl teem to Betttmore aa Part of • ...on IWttch.
Myles Tanenbaum wu quot.ed
latt week aa saytng there wu a
•• .,.., than 5()..50'Ch~" of a fall
~.and that Baltfmorewaa a
Hkefy home for hit USFl cham-PiOMhlp team under a fall MUOn.
8(lt Whef't he WU asked about
tltuatton ~n ttll1 week by the
a.tttmoreSun, Tenenbaum aald, •·1
don't think tt'1 fair to play with the
lmOttone of the people of 8altJ..
~.··
Mlwyland football fa~ are
l*l*'G for a team to reptac. the L_., ___ of the NatJonaJ Football
L.e9gl•, WhO moved to ln-
dlMmpoll a..t Match. But Mayor
W.am Donald Schaefer ha Mid
,. woutd not eonlkSer :putting a
U8FL...,... ,n ~orlaJ Stadium If
It COfllllcta wtth ttle bueball eeuon
iOf a. a.namore Orf°*· "'~la. meanwttue, both 9*aand~ Eagteeot the NFC
.-, et v .. .,.,,. Stadium. An
IUM'nn USFL echedute wciutd
fora. 1M St .. to loOk for new
~. Al 18 08Fl. ownera are 9CMcj.. .ct to meet Wedneeday and
TlMndliy In ~lo ditC:oU ttMi
pall~ .. llMon ChMQe. ~
pl'apoftenta "VU9 would t>Oost ..........
And. he sa1d, no other team bas
heller outside linebackers than Kln&,
a 232-pound senior witb 84 tackles a
year ago, and Bennett, a 225-paund
sophomore who had 73 as a
freshman.
Alabama opens Sept. 8 in Birm·
ingham against Boston College, and
its Hcisman Trophy candidate, quar-
terback Doug Autie_ but who will call
signals for Alabama stiJJ is to be
decided.
Paul Fields, retumioi under the
red.shirt reciprocal ruJe, and Mike
Shula, recovered from a small leg
fracture suffered m spnn.t trarnmg.
will battle for the quarterback spot.
Three youngsters arc ready to try 11
1f neither Fields nor Shula takes
cha11e. They are Vince Sutton, Gene
Newberry and Angelo Stafford.
Perkins said. however. he IS more
womed about his defensive second·
ary. which surrendered several long
passes a year ago and then lost one of
its members, Sammy Hood, because
of injuries in a traffic accident.
Kerry Goode ran for 693 yards as a
freshman and will start at halfback in
Alabama·s multiple-set offense.
Paul Ott Carruth missed.J98.l with
a knee injury but is back and "is going
to add a lot to our team in terms of
winnin$ this fall," Perkins said.
Spelling Moore will be Craig Turn-
Ray Perk.In.a
er, who scored 12 touchdowns as a
sophomore but carried the ball only 8
times.last fiill due-to i-njwie.
Alabama has to replace receivers
Joey Jones and Jesse Bendross, but
Perk.ins said that will not be a
problem.
' DEATH NOTICES •--------Pubtlltled Orange Co.et 11P9Uttet1ant 1111 ntott for 2S LaGAL NOTIC• Dally Piiot Augul1 21, 22 1ngr.., aor-a. uae and ep-Tht. t>utln.aa 11 con-"'~ 1tM 28, 19M IOVl'Mnt In and 10 the "Rec> ducted by: a Olf*ll part· CRAIN .. IUOUT '°" TW· tit reetlonel Common ANa" of IW9tllp MINNIE ELOUISE ..... l:!!f ~~ 1111<1 Tract No. 10097. •Mt Joan 8. Prtchard
CRAIN, pwed away The ~-MMe Uni-MUC"Pl1£E ~::-c=r:.,: .mi'"':.~'":g;:aof~ A~t 19 1984 in fled School Dlttrlc:t R8T ottAMG• Re11rlc:tl0nt lor Laurel POlnt =County on Augutt 14,
Newport' Bu.ch. ~~:~ .,:~~~·;~~ .,...g:=nCOURT ==·a,:::=:,urr,: 19 J ,__
Beloved wife of s>Ublc: 1napect1on at Dlatrlc:t t1411ath ttrMt Book 131n. Pagt 18t5 ot Publlthed °"""*Coat Ernest Crain; mother Offlc•. 1101 81¥tMnth WM'"""9tw.z. Ca. a.a Offldal Aeoordl. Delly Piiot Augutt 21, 2' of E. Gene Crain of Stlwt, Nwport 8aectl CA., Plaintiff: ~OUT HEAN The .. ,... add..... or September 3, 10, 19114
' ........... D---h; and fl'otn AUQWt 27th to Auguat CALIFORNIA EDISON °"* common d9algnatlon T-151 ~--,_,.;: 31tt, 10114 bet'#e9n the COMPANY, a COl'J)O(atlon DI Mid property It purported i--------Carol A. Wood, of tioun of 7;30 A.M. and 4:30 Defendant: DANIELLE &o be: 111 ~ Lane, rtaJC NOTICE Jacbon WyomJna· P.M. ANNE MYERS,. minor Incl-Cotta Meal, CA. 92827 _,_._ t' Ralph Ta ' The pubic l"Mlal1ng on the ~. JUUe'L MYERS, an Said tale will bt 11*'9 ACTmOUI llUtMM ~ 0 ;t_· pe::~:ed bud;et lor lndMdual; MICHAl!L J without oownant or WW· MAim ITAT'lmMT toe, of Anaheim, '--; 1 wUC be held at MYERS. an Individual; rwtty, ~or lmpllf>d, u The lolowlng penont.,.
and Lottie Metcalf, of Harper Community C.,tar, LAURIE WARD, an lndMd· lo title, pa11111lon or -doing~ ...
Lawton Okla Alto 425 E 18th St. Cotta ...... uat. DOES 1 through •• In-cumbrMCM tC) aatltfy the Al/ACOM and AVACOM surviv~d by. five == ~ ;'-1::6 '*=No. 92907 ~Ot ~ ::: ~ COMPUTER SERVICES.
trandchildttn Mn o'dodl P.M. 9'WONI Mid o.d of TM!, to wit: ~ ~i:· Way, Crain WU the flnt PubltaNO Orange Coat NOTICE y_, ..... ...._ tt7.23t.71, plut lM follow-M Melldl 8 Shah·
Principal and Adml.n-Delly Plot Augutt 21, ~~7 =... n.,..,~~ ~-::-'~it:; ttoei.k.t. 3700 PIG. Drl'4.
Lstrative Officer at -.... ....,... .._ ,_, ,... IWM of the lnltlal publlcatton Senta Ana. CA 12704
Monte Vla\a School in "8.JC NOTICE _.........,. .-......_. or ttllt ~otlce of Sate: 37~ '=-~~
C M f et.~...-. te5220 • osta eea, rom LIGAL N011CE If you wtah to ... the.... NOTICI TO Ana. CA 82704
whk:h she retired in '9tOflOUD 1tM vtot of an ettorrwy In we "'°""TY Thia l>Ualnnt It con· 1958. She was the .. IUDGIT '°" manw. you lhOl.dd do eo OWNIA · duct9d Dr • oenarat Pll'f·
pr Incl p. 1 • n d c~ .=. promptly 80 ~at Y'OI" wrft· YOU AM .. DVAULT '*:t Sf'lal'l·HOIMlnf
Teacher at Lindbergh The HllntlnQton BMch ::C, ~ any, may be =: ~ ~""":: TN. ·ltltarntnt ... ftltd
• School in Colt.a Mela, City School Olatrlc:t AVllOfUt1ed ha llldo. Lan YOU TAJCI ACTION wfth ~~ty °*!.! ~from 194-4. Previous pe:f :Hd b11dget tor rnandtde. El ttlbuma; ... TO "'°TICT YOUR~ ral:_ .......... , on ~, '
to thJ.a, she taught at 1 5 wtll be ·~ lot ~ oentre tlll D'IY, f'HIAY • IOlO AT '2111•
varfous elementary on Beadl City School~..=-.~,::=-~~-= PubtlhdOrangeeo.t achooll ln Oklahoma . ., •1rlct Office, 20•&1 Lee la Inform.._ '" 011 THI MATUM 011 THI Delly Pilot August 21, 21
Founder-of Harbor Cratmet Lane, Huntington Ila•. ,ROCllDtNQ AQAINIT September '3. 10• 1914
BMc:h from August 27th to 1f,.., ..... to ...... YOU YOU IHOULD co. T-111 Trinity Baptiat ~t 311t, 1N4 between ..._of•ettomeirlftlMt TACT A uwva. Church ln Costa th9 riour. of 7:30 A.M. and matter, ,.... .......,. • eo DATED: AUCIUlt e. 1084
Mesa, and member 4:30 P.M. ..........., .. ttMlt ,_,Witt· FlRST AMEJUCAH TITLE rta.JC fl)TIC[
Houston trades
Butch Johnson
Womena Ml.aionary pr-Z-:.~ =r :~ =..~:.:::·.,,, . ..., ... INSURANCE COMPANY, RCnTIOUa .......
Fellowshlp. She waa 18:!:: Wiii be held at It u... .._ ...,.._ ~f::'91'°" MAlmlTATDmfT
ectlw thna-out the 20451 Ctalmer Lane. Hunt· If ....,... • un '=: AuttlOttUd omo. The tolo'#ll1g peraon It ynninmanyde~ :::,~1::-: ~::.=.:::it'"*' ... ~~~1=1 ~T~~:UMBINO menta, includina Ille o'doc* P.M. tit HI• ...... ,. eu (714)551-32t1 SYSTEMS, 177-F ~ Missionary eervice of Publlahed Orange Coat tlliJYUta ...... ;i _, Publllhed Orange CoMt ...... Newpot1 Bwtl, CA.
the Harboc Tr1n1ty DallyPllotAugu912t, }~ ~~ W ....... =PltotAuguat14,21,2', ~Alan O.W. II Ima
Baptist OlW"Cb. M1"I 1 .. TO ilir'DVDIDAMTr T·t50 LoaCI., Hewpor1 a.c:ti, CA. Crain received her 11_.,. lilftTJCE A eMI .. .., .. ,,. ._ ...._ t2tll3
NFL teams pare
rosters to 60
to beat deadline
From AP dlapatcbes
Butch Johnson, who got his wish
last spring when he was traded by the
Dallas Cowboys, was traded again
Monday -this time right out of the
state of Texas.
The Houston Otlers, who had
acquired the d1s&runtled receiver
from Dallas. shipped b1m off to the
Denver Broncos for a third-round
draft choice in next year•s National
FootbaU league draft.
Houston General Manager Ladd
Herzeg sa.Jd Johnson, who com-
plained about lack of playing time m
Dallas. had been made expendable by
the trainin& .camp performances of
rookie Eric Mullins and veteran SteH
tJryant.
The Broncos. in fact, bad a busy
day as NFL teams began cutttna
down rosters to reach 60 by the
deadline of 4 p.m. today.
In addition to aoquinna Johnson.
they dealt punter Luke Prestridge for
a draft choice to New En&land, which
lost Its own punter, R1cfi Camanllo •
to a knee mju~ in Fnday ni&ht's
game with Wa.s.hmgton. Denver also
waived two veterans, right end Ron
Egloff and runntna back Natha.n
Poole alona with five free qenLS.
The Green Bay Packers, mean-
while. dropped veteran quarterback
David Wlntehurst, a 10mctime·
startuduring hiuevcn ycan with the
Packers They aJso cut nose tack.le
Mutera dqree from ,._,,, "" lltd bf-.,._...,.... Pt8JC fl)TIC( TNt bu. tlneea 1$ con. Charlie Johnson. a four-year veteran, th u s c o-L.~1 f ,... • ,_ .w. " .._, duc:ttd by: an ~ d Cal . F r. S • -. e . . . ~ o UGAL NO-nc. .,... ..._.. t FICTITIOUI 8UIMSI Bred o.'111 • an vin avron.a aonner t. i...vuis AdmlnietraUon In .:=. = wttNn • ~':ft.r ... ':i ~ ITA,......, Thia ttat.-nant .. filed
Cardinal who bad joined them as a l954. Vili\at.lon Tuea-........ ..._ IUfl'WTICW 19 MIWd on you, Tllt lolloWlng WtOn 11 weth the County C'-11°'0r~
free agent day from 2·9PM at ~.,.. NI wfttl tNa court • written ~ u: MGt County on .Ntf '°·
Pierce Bros Bell ..... Dtelrtct reeponaa to the oomc>lalnt. p OGAESSIV£. IM-19M Safety Vernon Perry, a one-time n--~ M · The Hunt~ a..cti ~you do, your dtfautt PORTS. 181 ~Ave., ,.,.. playoff hero for Houston, was let JO ~way Mortuary. Union High Olattict Wiii bt tnteted on app11-8-oh, CA. ~ Publllhtd Orange eo.t ~ his old Houston coach, Bum Funeral Servicea will propoHd bud;et tor c:etlon of the p&alntl", and luuinnt A. Reed, 370 E. Delly Pilot JUiy 31, AuQuft 7,
P 1·111·ps, at New Orleans. The Saints beheldWedneedayat 1984-15wtll beawllabltfor lhlteou'1mayat1tarallldoe-d St. Newport Beach, 14· 2t, 19114
0 00 AM 22 publlc i-tton at Hunt· ment agalnet you f0t ttlt r. CA. t2MO T • 131 also cut special teams standout Rieb 1 : • Auau-t , Inc on ·~· union Hlah 11et derMnd9d In the oom-Thia l>U•lneu '' con-Mauti -who had asked to be 1984 at Harbor Trfni· ~ Dlttrtet Ottlct, 10211 plaint, wtllch Clould raault In duc1td by. an lndMdual. t-----------
released -as well as three free a~nts ty Baptl.at Church, Yort11own Av.nue. Hunt· am.lltlm9nt of wagea, talc.· 9'.unna A. Aaed
P Da 'd Cost.a M-· Offid.at· lnaton Beach, trom AUQ1.1M of moMY °' Pf'Ot*1Y or Thi• 1tatamtn1 wu tiled and linebacker aul v1 ray, '""" 0 __ -Bill.. ... _.__ 21th to Auguat 31_., ftt4 relief ,.queettd lft tti. .i1ri the Collnty Cltrtc of Or· their I 0th round draft pick. .... .ncv · na.:wn betwetn tti. riour. of 8:00 complalnt. anoe County on JUiy 21,
and Dr. Connie Salim. 4.M. and 4:30 P.M. Oatad: Aoflf 11 1913 191.i 0
The Washington Redskins waived Interment Paclflc Tllt publlc: Martno on the RICrt,!> ~~CK. a.rte Pllbllahed Orange~
three players. including runnipg back Vtew Memorial Park. ~•:t:=•:..,. b~o~0 '~~ ~" c.....,.~ 0a11y Piiot JUiy 31, Auouat 1. Reggie Evans, tint member of last Pierce Broa. Bell 10251 Yortltown A*"'9, c ... C' 14, 21. 19M
season's StJper Bowl team to be cut. Broadway Mortuary, Huntington a.c:ti, CA. on p,o. • T·t33
Guard Steve Hamilton, their second· Dlrectors. 842-9150 Septembet "· 1084 at 7:00 lht•1•• CA;ttm
round draft choice, was placed on t-:::::::::=====:::::::-lo'doc* PM. (211) m.... rtaJC NOTIC( injured reserve after brcalciDJ his PubliaMd Or•noe Coast Put>liahed oranoe Coat ,_.. _ __,......_ ........ o..;,,.;..;;'---
ankle in last Friday's New Enaland DallyPltOIAugutUl, f~ ~~f."f'914Jul)''1,A~t 7• ~A~ ...
HARllOft LAWN· T 1,. game. llT. OLIY£ Ml.JC NOTICE • c;J:: = ~ ..
The Pittsburgh Steelers cut si~ MOrtuary. c.m.tary . Uf;ilTEO CALIFORNIA
d Crematory HCllllOUI .,..... '11CT1-----·· AfAL UTATE SERVICES, players 1nclu ing two veterans -1625 G..., Ave MAim aTATDmfr MAai.ITA'iiii'NT 2u.2 huth Pointe, M. running back Henry Odom and safety Co.ta Men The followtnO PtteOnt.,. The fOllowtr!o '*'°"'.,.. LIOUna H CA l2W
Gres Best. Odom played in all 16 540-5554 cso:s ~~· EQUIP· olng bu9ll'98a .. : Alc:hatd Dale ltrffd, games last season, retumina 39 kicks E ..... co 7 Pr ._..... (JMM LEMtHO co~ 1• iw2 Paa.o Diena. 8an
for an average of 19.4 yards and Bc$t ~CA t2f~5 omer-. romenede, Irvin•. CA Jl.ltn ~trano, CA 921175
returned a fumble 94 yards for a ,.,.er "'OTHERI Mich.al c . McMullen. 74 2115 Thtt .. ,,... con-
touchdown apinst Cleveland last NLL 9"0ADtiAV =~~~•n•d•, lrvln•. CA Pl~=d~: ~~·J! ~~~~.,fl
year MORTUARY Thlt l>Wln.aa la con-715 mlt eta1tmant wu led 110 Broadway dllcted by: an lndMdUal TIMI twtln 11 con-with the County a.ti of Or· The Clevcland Browns ttlcased Colta M... MICtlaitll c . Mc:MutlM duc:ttld bYl"' lndMdUal z County on Aogya115,
nine players, includins League vet-&42-9150 wt!.-, ••. .'~~,..!..•_,~ ~a~~= filed 1 Pub"-...... ,..,__~ er&n wide reoeiver Wade Mannina '" .............. 1 ~" ... "" wttn C<lun a.t of Of . _ _, ...... _...,.. .......,,
and defensive end Thomas Brown, Z Couflty on ~ 14• -.'~ty Z Auautt 1.-: <>ally Piiot AUQllet 21, a . who played lhn"C seasons for the IAL TZ UJltGaRON • ,_.. 118' ,_ lt!C)tember t. 10, 11M
Philadelphia Eagles. The other seven .. Tc~ '=L = = ~ ~~ = ~ MM
were au free aients. 437 E. 17th St. •*"'-'· 10, 11M a..>temtier i. to. 1"4 .. _ .. lilftnl'r
The Tampa Ba)' Buccancc~ placcJ Cotta Meea T-111 Mtt •-"-f"VllU\>----""--'~ ......... --rcscrve quanerback Jeff Komlo on 646-937 t M.JC llJTICE PWUC fl)TIC[
inJured nerve and waived mne other
playen. includina former Ohio State
running bad: VaU&hn Broadnax.
-· :s
• -a
CD :s • • -· < CD
*
Navratilova, Shriver team. for Yictory
MAHWAH, NJ. {AP) -Martina
Navratilova and Pim Shnvtt cap.
t~ the ram-dcla)ed l'nitcd Jersey
Bank Cla 1c doubles tcnnt\ title
Monday, dcfcaunaJo Dunc and Ann
K1y"omura·H&Jash1 7-6. 3·6. 6-2.
The victory came JU tone day af\cr
Navratilova dcfcatt'd btr doubles
partn r 6-<4, 4-6. 7-S to c:aplurt" the
in le till and oosl hct A8th con.
sccu11vt inJ}cs tnumph.
It was the 6-4lh traiaftt doubles
triumph for Navratilova and hri\'cr
and 104 in IOS matches. The top.
~ed team had won the fint set.
t.tkina the 1ie--breakcr, 7-J. Th ttams
wm."ticd2-2 1nthc ond 1 unday
when rain forced SJ'Oilponcmcnt of
tht macch until Monda).
Durie.of En nd nd i m
Ha)'Uhi, seeded second, broke
Navratdova's rvc on their way to
wtnn1na the ond t, but the
favorites broke Duric's ~c in the
1.ih pmt,_ of the final I and K11omura~Raya ht'' JC1'\iC tn the
cignih pmc to "'in the maim.
r, l>une won the doubt
turon Wltsh.
••
•
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ...
PRIVATE PARTIES
s.11 your ltetM for $50 or ,... In
.9UJ' I.mow DIMES-A-LINES pub-
llMHld each Saturday In the Dally
Piiot.
DIMES-A-LINE ad• mu•t ,,.
~ 90 mall or bring them Into ,,,.. C»!IY Piiot offloe. &I .ure to
I~ )IOllr phOM numbw or ad·
d,... In your 'ad, h•~ a pnc. on
MClt ,,.,,., & no •bbrevfatlOM.
DEADLINE:
s p.m. Thuredef eoeta ..... orno.
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Traditional
Realty
6.'U -7370
•
642:..5678
__....._._ I -. ~.1.
~ ~ .. ' "'. _.,. dl.
1"6~'N["T·
ce arano. Coalt DAIL PILOT/Tuesday. AUgu 21, 11HM
!:h!rtbbt latn
$2.17 per day
TNl't AU. )IQl.I pey tot
:Slnel.30days
In
DA Y
Pl OT
SERVICE
Dlt£CTORY
er
•
I•• llr l•r
lntall.. Otffct lutab 2114 Ltlt I,.... UM 1111 1tl1 Wu... SIM wu·iii-1111 ------...... ---· llM IW. 290I Xvon type n1bbW dG;1Q &mM trMI w llM :::IN;:;:,s,..;W;,;a;;;;om ... -.._. ..... ,._. .... --._....__..,.. .... ....., ..... ...., __ ...._._ mOITIYI lllTU founcfa/13 Nwprt Hrbr. companion WWlted-t'm 31 TIENDA.NT UYH\. •t-15111 full tlm9 lloeneed RN foi ...... ,
COion• del Mtr. F«n. non-lrvlne, phone answ. ,. c.ii ' !dent 548-4718 yr•·•lngl•·m•I• (11ood t9eCher. La CM ....__ ......... I • I N.w 1-. 0 hom•• In Newport buty Newport 8ttch or ----... ---•moker to thare 38r e»pt., cont. rm, utM pd, looklng) SSdutchU home. PIT. 64&-236'7 MWfW ftnwH MI ..__, bued air BHch 3·30am-l·•m p1M11o turgt0n With OR oolid-t=.,. .. hone "::'.
2'M>a. Cell 760-8043 eecr•tatY MN. 250-0277 841-9900,-...1333 Pat UTO .... llH IH•}lll ~:~yht 1.~:f'P:~:ltl:~: MOO p/mri. 5"4M44°1 . ~a In clroulttlng enct, tYPtng efilit.
F lhr Lo CM Home seo mo FOUND ADS TOPiii lllYll/Fal..,. ~ ~· = openlna 1n our Laguna & tctUbblng. Pmtoua 145-5570 + mlnlmal .... et. for ~ nu 1J,EI-llm ~ ptet. Mod9e and o detlver etttrmarket Padftc Coett ~ N 8ch HI ... offloe tor a fulf..tlrne lllTAI. Allllt&lf • x P • n • c I I• Ir 'f · i-,,--------
tbled tellOMr ~257 r•... •-AR£ FR£E Eloof1a. auto pwta to LA & O.C .... ,. · c:Mrtcal poeltlon In our NEWPORT BEACH 144-1240 Gtocery20~-
Male Prof. 2~ share ~r::,, v:::' <213> Hf.1984 from Laguna Nlguel. llATW&ml/P~ AIR dept. Ar• you. loc*lng for a fti/tm NT Approx. ~ ,.....,..
i.rge ~'home, non-YHE EXECUTIVE OFFICE Cal.• nlam ff 14 Shipping, rc:v'ng aper Outlel: Preptratlon ot ct>anenging cat9er op-~.::.'tor ooltQt nee:= emoker 84.,~,.2 1 0 ,.._ ,. __ t Dr ~. Mu.t ~ mt AtJtPtt In penon. 2200 w. dalY eut1 recelptt f<>f PQf1unlty? we .. took-PllT/tm-... _.... .._ Diena. . ~ 1 ,_,.._..,.,_,., . 142 llll Extra Income L..,.,... dftvereoord&t.tti..t PecltlcCetH'fWY,NB. caehlC)pleatJOns lngf0tafl1endtymati.n Opportunm .. avallab .. ._, ...... +perhout . .-rv-•S::•.~IJ • WOttd teat.1·111 14331 2Wn $1.50 to etat1. BOOKKEEPEAup'd F/C KnowledgeofbUICbook· enthuelutlc, O• with the LOS ANGELES Jecilaf°61~~perl0d.
M/F to lhr 28' 2Ba apt 1 -•• ••-. • ~7 tor &Noe for local CPA jlrm. keeping, CAT & edd ng perlecad wi.1ant to TIMES CWculatlon 0... 1213)11n.1131 bltl:frombchlnC<IM$400 lat11mat .,.. tnt...ung a cti•••nolno mflClhlne ~I. We.,. Join ourtetm. Non-pettment In our door to, _____ _;... __ +~ uttta 1173-1419 Offloe epace f0t ...... LOST: White Coc:kati.t, ~rtUJti• ffll lllflltiiU.... c11ent mix. Aeune to: Wiiting to train. For Info tmdlw. &U-0595 door ~ aa1ee
M/F to lhr 3Br h ... AH Cannery VIiiage Lo-Vic. Fa!Mew & Bak•. F/P·tm-d• 9"M "Mende SAC, 111 Dower Dr, NB call Jutle (714)859-0211 program. QuerantMd or ~"'°Qa!!A?,
convenlencet '250 + 'h cation 850 eq ft F,..._ C.M. Reward. 5"&-4714 Want financial beetling Charlott•'• sm .. AacY 92183 lllTIL &llT /Uln hourly ~ plul com-.,...... --~
uttta. Pet ok 14e-9882 etandl~g. alngl• · story llWWm ::C ;T,.)1~~1~~-no 420 82nd St, NB 145474' BOOK KEEPER wanted u.&.t UllU... m1ee1on9 · 1 out1:1 ·14pn1 t,o ~ ,.=. ::u,ave own bulldlng Im med Oc-LOST vto Lid ._ all . 8 t archtttlet\nl .c-i.. or_,,. aldee. fUll & ~ OU ..__, f .... dental of Pm. r • n n 9 • t dellwr luncheon NB 2nd hM fr aand. Fem cupanc·y HOO mo : o em I I W ~ SIM aby11tter wanttd·my °' .._n tim.. Good pay Cati t .,_, am .. , • provided. Pottntl•l to ~ .... ..'!.. __ 1..__1 ...... Bdrm w/awn bath. Xtre 87µ918 d.c:law9dneut.Abyekllen I u-home,Nwpt8dl.Nnet firm. PIT. Exe>«ltnOe G 147-3516 · floele...,chlngforatun, _.,.t300p1utperweek --"""" ..... ,. ... nice S40C) &47-0715 Cat, Jan w/blk Uc*ed fir, *llAT mw* m<19, Mon-Ft1 71nMpm r9q. 71.....,.S.-17t1 raoe. btlaht, enero-tlc peraon FOt an lntttWIW, eel: · Mono-Frt. '60-1075
Small otnoe ap90e. 215 blk tip on tall, wNte on tot act1oo1 yr 1125 Wk Aaa1 R J wttfl cMntal ... ting U· 157 23e1 ut 1204 IHQmi;;;;:a·1-0o.yiVca...aM;-ii;i191;;;,. ~.:i': ~ :~~ In~ Rlveralde, NB. 1150/mo chin, require• medl· :~~~temp Englleh ep .. klnglr•f• w .Y.111.11 petl«a. ROA~. • • now . °"*Y dttv·
t>Mot. 28' *· ~ 8.40-5557; &40-3178 cation. 875-1469 help. Cu.hi.re. ticket 173-795" MDT Ill 11111•1 .untll =~"~': ' ...... .. .,.. & cowrt• penoM.
cell Meil dys 957-3507. C...trtiAI Found; 8u4l dog, male, tak .... pnt attendantt, BANKING SEU CA8LE T.V. n1 catl Robin .. ....,;ea Part time AM'a. IUtt at Apply In pereon. 1000 N.
ewa 831 .... 125 Int b nll found In CorOM d9I Mar: etc. Apply In penon M-F IN NEWPORT B!ACH Expet1e11Ced In -~ S3 50 p/tw cal 545"-.,.70 Coest Hwy. •f.4..4044
Ntce Room Good Ar• a IM0-78&4, &40-5131. btwn 2·5:30pm at 1780 TELLERS lrt" W OaMt T.Y Coltectlona lllTAL flllT 1111 . .
Super ciM,, Fun Prtve. CMINB 17th' Newport F 0 u ND D 0 b. rm. n MonroYla Ave, Ste 02• Is loc*lng tor • fw good . .,,., le catW onented llmAL.... ••TlllLTlll
1285 957-3955 . N9wef' 1~2200 tq ft, Pincher~ Shoree C2 ·5~30· For !.!'!~ ~5~ direct eal.. people. Excellant opportunity to tron'r' office aulltant to fOt N9wport Beech ct.-Expr'd Interior malnten· ample pkg, ale, 875-8900 • -:aopm ........,..., · ,.._. FULL•TllE AoPIY: 901 w 18th st manage cohctlon d• -"-. Mutt t. pron-anoe. Dependable uac.-Prot/F lhr C<IM apt 2br PI eat e e 1 c r I be· f0t o.bl. N:e. -; t ~ E 0 e partm«'lt with • IUQCea• work tn buty quality den-~typing filing t• pottatlon neo. .. 71-7022 t~be ,..p/neat MOO PRl~E LOCATION. Af>-850-2916 I PART TllE · · 0 _.... · • ful cornpwiy In the fMw· tat Pf'llCtlce, 4 day wee!(, phone. and~ In
859-0999• 221144-281; Pf'Oll. 850 eq.tt .• Buey FOUND: Male metlelwtlt ••&111111• C.bldeSew& ToolGmd-pott Beech erea. tun beMfltt, eaJary open. AIR AIP end 10 key. Exp Hotel
Roommate wwit9d '350 ~~ M~~4g0~r. Auat8hepmbt&amablk &t1y ~Ing bl'MkfMt C&llfomlafed91'91,amult .... RELIABLE QRIND-1 493-1311 w/ IBM/PRC • plu•. .. .. ...
28r "-·gar In CM. 8'ke 10-12noon Of 2-4pm . Terrle. rablee tag 5"73. ~ =· ~2~ ttat• ftnanclel °'~ (71"'~w.~.nstmardtno Orgeniiatlonalabllltya DENTAL RECEPTIONIST 175-4111 reeort hOt ... M..t ~ to beech 6-45-3658 1544-315e Marine Balboe i...iid tlon, hH lmmedl•t• ,..,_.. muat. · ANO ASSISTANT '*9tffU1pp•nw~.AblD-,..,-----.,-....,.----•C<IMdbteult• AC,ampl FOUND: Part Come mix • open1nge for T...,.. at Ullml Contact Experl•nc• n•ce11ary. IERllLIFflOI tytooommunlcate.n.o.
Young outgoing lady to lhr Pf1(g, from 1225. 2855 E. coff•. cotof/l>'k ,,..· 1111111 UI Ol..DI th• branch.. ll•t•d tufi OF time at· Roger 8lmonMn l.aguoa Hiit no-q75 Detal n*'ded ., ltatt« tMCy. ~ organization
: ~n ~::11=· Coast Hwy 87~ About 1 "'otd w .... 2 HOSPfTAL EXPER. PREF. below. For .. Potltlona. ~hler/Rec:.1onl•t . (714)653-83e1 ' needed for,'*"°" one. tkll Public '*1100•
tennis raquetball · Aaaeunaatl teg1 54$-0887 Good wtttten and verbal we fnf• e monttia to 1 wanted tor Fatl'llon Dlllttee Ind. ane. pnon.. :-· helpfUI. Sta,> by lJIQOtwic l39S 4f p..T! l'OUNO RINQ-tl.-CST l eommuolcaUon UU1 JHr CHhlerll!Q ex· feSand ...... etcn. Mutt aome bltkng. Anandal 6. 1 So. Cout Hwy, 7sMO&r: Advice In AH Matten & 17th/~ 81Yd ~~I ~~~beneflta. =n~~ ~ ·~e'~~~ wtcnd llllTlllMI Opening, Del M•.,.., for ~2~ful. ~/Flwfl for app.
ct lntal n14 CounMllng. 1815 So. El toldentlfy545-0227 . Ito,> by the Branch and . •mt•Y fun.time~---·--------·--------tiiiiiiiiiiiiiioii...iiiliiiiiiOiiiiii~·------Camino,_., San Clem. LOST8/15whtP....,,cat IDIMll•lllTIY complete an llPPffca11on Chlld~tthekS)J.fltfnlo Seel<Jnamoctvated out. Expttlenctd only. MllUI... ~ lllNIT UD Llc'd. 492·728e ·eor11· In Top of tti. le.i r.t.te lettl'.t or call for an lnt...-Mw care for 1 yr owi. mom lndlvlcfual w/Hcellent =· lr'rng, :':'*' Pt·tlrM, Ute typing & for acttw famlly. 2pm to
Two 150 tq ft prof ofcl •SptrUu.I P-vchlc. Ad-World, ZJI Dr In Laa Bch Challenging Potltlon fOt appointment. 9~so-1:30. Approx. 1 hr typing Miiia. Shorthend a car• & ~n ~Ina~ c: phonte, M·W·Frt io-2 .. 7pm weel(deya. Cleaning, w/Wndw view. 2381 Cam-vl90r & Card AMcMr• 494--4711 AEWAADl highly •xper lndlvtdu.I hekpg dally. Wkday• pi..,. hee-wy phOM coni-Barbar Mon-Ft1 }-4ptft p/hr. Call Tuee or Thur. cooklnQ, lhopplng, tome
put Dr #211 lrvtne. Cor-Put, pr...nt & Mure. w T th a 11 •• r 0 u n d Con·t~. JO· l!!IN'nA only. Meelt lndd. T1me tllCt 'w/WndOrt 549-2988 EOE (1~)7~ 131-44e3 cNld eupeNtaloti. Ellptr .. ner Campue & Von Khar· 1175-2,.95 or 831-8914 SCRAM-LETS MC retartal MIU. Muat ..,, "'" ~ ElAe for *'-'bathlngl . • beokyard _.. ..... cet, ,.,.._ 144-2052 ...... man. Incl Recept, Ant Include In depth com-7222 Edlngar Avenue p 0 0 I. 10 0 . p I wk .n ILlll 75e-3IN waekdayt. &&f:'~5~ .. ~ Coffee. Lett I FnU JIM ANSWERS ~ ~· wtth &gie 9~~on Bwh. CA 142·2294 dayl/eve ~~or KokM 1: For local~.-. Neat M.;~ ~ •.:;.: ......,Ill.II
Balboellland ottlce LOST Female blk Cock• and ~i~n!\t'a: (714)$48-0111 94,,_/:V.,.. up«. ~ ..,.,..,.,.., C'° dl'tv• '4Ma11 PIT Hrtfttlt.14M553
1450/mo. ~~5028 ~c':',;;Z~col~~ =:= c:ountlngtoftweN,Lotue PllT·Tlm(J) OllGIUTlll neecSt bf1ght~lt>i.. ~~:nJ11 = OEN'L OFFICE. Friday. lrwurenotPhofl9Wcn-Mo °' 5"5-sa..e. 1 t R.w d 14M139 F!JLINGS 123, and abMlty to er.et• llOIER P/T enetoetlc cl«k. 1150. Print ~ ~ only, t toe. U.. M>lnG Mllnal 14 plhr/bonue 0 ., aturedldn'tmak•~per-proforma and flnlndm -.&.·Tm(1) • mo. plu• benefit•. • • andphonateo-2451 -~175ewtufl)'I Ult 17 .. U, I.& LOST lrg male Gold9"I Ret, feet, but et 1eut aM fcncMtlng. Thlt poeltlon TM Delly Plot hM lmmed 762-0481 CM. 540-8373
2 pvt ofc:I & lrg SCtry/Rc:pt 10 yr old In the Weetcllff ~made ue totally lgnOrant repc>f11 directly to the ContllCt: 8111 Atkner QP«'lng tor weekend ~ nter help p.n time EXERCISE INSTRUCTOR
t700/mo. Bkr 845-8288 arN. REWARD 845-3973 Of our FAILINGS. P~. s.lary open 196 Town c.nwr Or. trlct menagere. Mutt tuU-tlme. GARV'S. D£U t12.50 hr wlll train , ..:===========l===----==::=;;;;;;;;;::~iiiiiiii~~~~~I With gen.-ou1 beneftte. Coeta ~ have a van ttatlon . -.152-5401 85()..0302 All r .. umH Wiii be (71") wagon or· otCkup. call EXP. HOUSEKEEPER
trMted oonfld9ntlally. fKL nm (1) 142-4'333. .... fOt Mr. llllTI PHPLI c .... for newborn and 6 WerAI lnllt,•llf Contac:t:.JOHNlU'NE Elneley. To hand·mak• YflfY ell· yr old Qlrt. Cook dinner. 3151:=AV9Q3 2700 clualw ~ble & gift C'-' and Iron. MUST
SYDll£Y COSTAM A.9282e Cotta~~ •• .......... It.,,.. Bwlttful belta. have exper1en~ and n Ml-IHJ (714)546-2300 110/tw pd A..U.. balloona. CN1etrnaa dee--Oood ttfeteno.-Drlv• ~, oratlont end omarnenta. and ~ engbth. S200
O.l.R ADMIN ASST/SECTY OWF•ll 1115 N.Frenoh et #2038 f/tMon-ft11-5om.S41Hr wk. and pttYN room In
Laguna N~ FEIEllL SA 5"2·7211 10-\ to atart 5"5-52'7 N • w ft 0 rt e •a ch ..
•••••••••••• ~ng ~~ aa1111. .. ,.... 151.5 ea , a k 111 t . 0Iver1 e EqualOpptyEmployw 8uty ~ ~ Prtvtte CMttlan 8d\ool. •---'-------
Wednesclay, Aup1t U r .. ponelbllltlff. Salary BARTENOEAOlnnerhM& tnauranoeetalm10fflct Apply:18835Brookhum, fUIAL• .... ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19): Desire for sccunty can now be negot. s.nd reeume to: 3 ect.lve cantlna. lmmed Med• a full time dwk r::v. 062-3312 Experlenc.ct full time.
fi lfjll d L 1 I h·gh~ h . od . Monarch Bay Plaza. St• open11i9 99M803 typllt. OuU.. wit Include aoolY In peraon. vi..... u 1. e . u!lar, ~umenca eye es ~ 1 tac 1eve~ent, pr uctl.on, 210, Lao Nlg 92177 · computer entry, llght DELI COUNTER HELP FIOtlite. 101 w. LlnQoln,
spcctal relattonsh1p and financial gaan. ou'll be deahna wtth praellcal BaakJn ~ pit help typing, ftttng, etc. 8:30•m·2:30pm. D•y•, Anaheim.
penonswhounderstandrealestate,interestratesandpoteotialvalues. ADMIN /SEC Tuetln. w•nted. Call Bob EJCP9f'-'OeprtMlr9d. 142·5297/83M170evee ,,
. TAURUS {April 20-May 20): What ~med elusive _is ~ow :':'~~1~57°~~ 875-9111 Call M~. Durt>ln 553-1133 Ill.MIT PlllM ':Hi:.:
available. Make requests, ask questions, realize your appeal lS wtder For N.B. Aow9r Shop FIT. FUlt !mt. EJcp _...
th.Ari originally antmpate~. Accent versatility. bu~or an~ sense of Clerks ~ 175-~ • m~=~ Pa c~
fitness. Short tnp may be involved an coonectton wttb relative. UllT llTll CIRCLE ·K·llARKETS SELL Idle Item• with a menturate w1tblllty GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) Focus on independence, oriainality, llm o.ity Piiot Ci....fled Ad. t.ooat.t C.M. 5494142
lit U1 Help Y ••
Sen v .. p,,,.,.,1
The Daly Plot off en you this euct lizt ad
• cu ''Plctia't P11•" wHltltds for Just •25 per day, or 2 days for '45.
WMtit 1 pictwe, or wt1 photoeraph It for
t!t at 1 miinal charce. ·r-
willin1ncss to bank on your own talents, abilities. C'ycle is s\lcb that you IYAIUILI IM2-5171. Mk f0t Julie. ~~oo~~~~.thM ~u ~ncon~uandt~troman~~~~~ . =======~====~==~=~~~~~~~~~~~~
nourishes. Leo, Aquanus natives figure prominently =:.nda::" Ctr. Witt NOW HIRING
CANCER(June 21-July 22): You will beat ri&htplaceat "special" train. ~a hetptul
time. You•11 be drawn to familiar ground, you'll correct past errors and Earn 400-500 1$ ,,.t
intuition will be on tafjct. Stress optimism wear bri&ht colon and month. Cell 842.,..333
realize clement of surpnse wtll work in your favor. 10!'!'--~.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll have more "workina room." IUllE Ol&IT
Additional demands will be made on your time. Aura of atamour lllLY PILIT
exists. member of opposite sex will find you a stimulatina cbaUenic.
Keep promise made to individual who currently is confined 10 home, !•------•
hospital. Aerobic EMrdee VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Check details, study mall print. Lunar 112 50/hr _,. ~~
poeition hial)lia.hu friend hip, aspirations, ability to win others to your o..m .,.e, n2·6147
011111111 OLElll
lntervlewa Fridays 9:00-11 :00
A.M. at 1390 North Pacific
Coast Hwy., Laguna Seach
(on PCH & Vlelo)
Call (714) 494 9233 for more info
point ofview. Money comes fro.m surpme source Career or bus1ness ALARMS
chanac proves favorable. Aquanus plays key role. Oper/tnet mngr Qutllfted
LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. ~2): Be ~cady for chanJC. travcl1 variety and ~ required. Xlnl op-''aood news connected with bu rness, professional enaeavon. Get PQf1unlty Mt-1111
ideas on pa~r. rcalJ1e you ca~ fl.!n by writmg. ~eek calls, messqes AN8WEA1~a HAVICE and your daily calendar. Gemini figures an ICCoano ttlephoo operator•.
~aily Pilllt ··~ .... : ........... ,
SOORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Focus on family atf&in. trnel, Iona-Verlow ahffte. H2 3rd St
rPF plao • Hiahliaht diplomacy. open lines of communication and tulle C ~ ~ •
brina 1p1ritual values into focus. It is likely that you will locate anicte APP&.IANCI TECHS :
that had been lost. mi sina or stolen. Taurus plays key role. "'91eded. M\let "'9¥9 own •
AGmARIVS.(Nov. 22·0cc. 21): Define terms. dia deep for tndandtoola. Topper.
al'otm.ation, realize that your instincts arc on urget. You ·u Jea.m more 143--2830 .
about money! you'll pin added information conctmma raouteet of ASSISTA~T 'l'o IVEft·
one who wou d be a "1>3nner:· Libra ftsures in scenario. ONI~ ~~namto emau
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2~·Jan. 19): More rnPC?n5ibility.11 ~dica1ed ~·.:!t'.*~
-lqal matters could dor~Hnatc. Focus on. cxpe.n~ncc, relt~b1lity, p11t Full tlmt poaltlon. J!,
ttcotds and souru matenal. Accent public: rclattons, rtahrc )OU can tltlid Mllil lndudt· HIQh
win af pcrsi ttnt, diplomatic and dcdtcatcd. Another Cepric:om plays tnltV'f, PC••nl apeil·
key role. tno. outgoing petlOnlltty, ..-t~UA.R~U (Jan. 20.Fcbhc. •,•>b: Finahl ... bat )'OU 1tan, .ii:utiatc =:.r~ a,::
.,.......... semcc. Accent on a t • cmp oyment, pets, bility to Clllllent tor rtQtlt
overcome obsiaclC$ lndivtdual who arcs your ideals wilJ be ~ni. ~. Int ....,. ' :
will offer 1d and wtlJ be val b ally. Anes fi ures promanenOy. ~ IO! OUAHTUM •
lllEllATI llllHlllT
1PP11T11m
~·e ereau. telepltoae
.. penoa for retail •~bertWaa
p.hone room. apenlt0ry tktllt •
mutt. Top clollar bate plu1
boo nd UID tOJ
___ p: FcU.9-mh 2 ~·Your natu 1 bi.lhi en WIC 10 '"" llOX 110t-4S4 • ....,. !
fortfronr. Ohansma as pre nt an abundance. fOCU$ on n wu. "'1 1 "'1• noe --...... ~~~=--
speculation, rom:ancc and umina. Populanty incrc you could in I hop ., "om•. I hop ~
a conte t and member of o 1tc i confides 'i-ltUe r. la " auslfttd, 142·7•7 •
r
District Managers
If you enjoy worklt19 with young boy• &
girls anCf desk jobs ore not for you,
con11der o cc,, .. , in the newipoper circulo·
t.on field. Thit it o ~ position with
doily cholfen9et & reword1.
OVr openifto1 ore 1mm.diot•. Applicant'
mu•t haff o von, atotionwo90t1 or truck.
W• off•r on 111celleftt iOIOl_'Y with o bonua
pion ond ;en ollowonu. We have on
uullent bentflf pion thot incl1,1des hotp1·
toli1otlon in11,1ronce. liberal vocohon and
holidoys.
Condid0tt1 "'"'' hove o detire to ~
1ucceMf1.1I ar\d be wllffno to work hOfd. If
y0Y thlM )'OU hCMI the quolifKotioni,
p'"'9 oppty Sn penon to1
the 1111J Plat
Mondoy fhN Mdoy 9 l l om or 2-4 pm
330 w. Bay
Coste Mesa, CA 92626
..
• AGES 11-14 ! EARN lP TO $75.00 PEJl WEEX
Wt "°" llm l!> Ol*l"IS lot YNll tlPf bmm to secwe radtrs tor The Or1111t Coat
o..ty P1'ol o.t crews start at 330 p ra. ltllll
lwor• un~ 130 pm ~ On Satllfdly. w
woR I tn lllOfl hours YOll .a Ufl 1111ny ~
and pr11es. -. Willi u.11111 ,.,., own lllOlllJ ,
1 ltltfe is no Mm1111 Of collecbon 111.olwed.
11f you 11e 1nltttslld, please C1ll Ml. b rt
(714) 548-7058
1111111 .....
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
1T~
• Blemllhee
11 Kleng
14 Entemln
15Vw.ncla
11 Mwt>te
17~
18 Crent<y
20 Staw1 eoa1n
22 Honor eatd
23 UK native
25 Slgnl1icMcle
28 Oltlconttnue
290r .. up
30 Hand motion
32 Pe>paar
34 Most e>etlte
39 ....
42~
43 More lfytlllh
45 Atne.n
4t~ln
··~ 50"-91 ....
54 F1oMr
56 8lt9e
5e Oec:Ofout
51Upe eo L«WIOfect,
l°'"*'Y
13 Doot cateMI
2
e& Cotnc>ul pl
17 AM Of bess
M Freoctl rlwr
&t E11t country
70 -beewr
7 1 FretlCtl wine
DOWN
1 Scx>tc:h name
prefix
2 Rat••• t>Wd
3 Oeruty
4 eart11111em
5 Ca1r.hel on
IVl1<~mud1
1 Mom and Pop
8 - -rempage
11 Lc>Mon thanll·
y®'I ..
10 fndl'lpOMd
11 Tlml1I - -
~···· 12 Bunt ol cMers
13 LOtl'WY
111~ ...
21 Etnploymenl
23 End!n
24 Dyostuff
21 °'*''Pl' 270f 1 IMM
30 8'11'1
31 Antelope
338ed pref.
7
PREVIOUS
PUZZLE SOLVED
35 Ftaudulenee
31 Rapt
37 Flncll
31 Figure of
~ "° Cotumbua' Y9INI
41 Collee110M
44 Go bec:tc 0'4f
4 7 SChoOI bOok
4t SilkWOfm
• • 10
50 Ski teaort
51 Natrow pref.
52Yortt~1
53 Tttle
55 Ctlar1•
57P..:.lovw
59 Lewllng pleee
81 Part Of fndla
82 Ac>t*•tv.
64 Paid attliete es Ory, of...,_..
1111
WEClRE .......
C7
BILL YATES
VW-PORSCHE
"" ~' 1
J ~1 r 1 ,I ~ • I
8l7·480049l-4S I I
G RFIELD
... , .,. , ...
h ..... ..,. -·-
THE
FA!tllL l'
CIRCUS
by Bil Keane
"Mommy! Look! In the City ~{ Brotherly Love!"
.MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"Great! Now all you have to do is teach him
how to read"
PEAl\t:TS
TUMBLEWEED
THE HARDER YOU
WORK TME MORE MONEY
YOU SMOULD MAKE !
by Jim Davis
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"Sore feet."
DE:\~IS THE .ME~i\CE
Hank Ketcham
• (M().J JOE'< 'IJHEN SHES CN THE f't()NE, \OE
CAN ro A/'.IY'THI NG WE WANT
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
~ALWAYS
W,ATCH HIM
LIKE ,A MAWK·
l
by Charles M. Schulz
I 6Et1EVE IN TME
ALLOWANCE ETHIC ~
by Tom K. Ryan
FOR SAL.E: WAl-NLJ'f CHIFR'.>NIEJ?.
MltJ1' CON'11ilON1MIRF{OR1S1)(
C7MWEft5.ASKll\JGA PAl-~f50.
..
1"AKE TH ~ E 1 HA CHANC•:
CHARLES
GOREN
lfolh vulnerahl •. ~outh deal •.
WEST
• 72
Oil r11
•Qt0~4
t> 705
0 4
• K953
EAST
+J5
~ KQ9842
0 3
c::i J 10
0 Ql097 5
•J864 • <U072
SOUTH
•A K863
c::7 A3
O AKJ862
•Vold
'l'ht• bidding:
South Weat North £ut
2 0 PaH 3 • Pu
3 • Pa11 6 + PaH
7 + l'a11 PaH Pas
Opening Jud: .Jack of <:'.
We all tend to make plays instinc-
ttvely A?> a re!'>ult, when this hand
wa~ d1•alt in a tournament that in·
BRABBLE
duded a liberal prinkling or U •
pert • not one m n g d to nulke 13
trick a.
SIAms In pade1 wore rife, with
several pairs reaching grand Jam
on an auction uch aa th above.
Not«-that it doe.-not require any
godgf't to get to a grand slam-
jusL good 'common aenae bidding.
The jack or heart was a popular
lead. and lht• declarers were all
relif'ved to find, after winning the
ace of hearls, that they were able lo
draw trumps in two rounds Now it
i natural to try to set up the-suit.in
which you have the most card . o
to n man the declarers continued
with the ace king or diamonds.
When E:u.t showed out on the
second round or diamonds, the de-
clarers found they did not have the
entries to set up and run the long
diamonds.
All the dt'clarers overlooked an
additional chance for their grand
1""£ f'a.£C.AT L.O(X,f.
~AM~O "'M 5f.WHO
A~l!>TAMT 1R ~
5£.l~f.IMN ~
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
OMAR
SHARIF
lam. After winninr the h rt Jcad
and drawing trump nding on th
board, declarer hould first tath th
acc kine of dubs, discard a diamond
from band, and then ruCf a elub.
Now declarer trie. two round• of
diamonds, aod ff both defender
follow, i\ L'I an easy task to aet up
and run the diamonds.
But when East show 'out on tht-•
second diamond, declarer can atill
try t.o establish fl long club on the
table. He continues with a dlamond
rurr on the board and a club rutr in
hand. When both defenders follow ,
declarer has just enough trick•-
five spades in hand, a heart and two
diamonds. and three dubs and two
ruffs on the table.
fo'or lnformatfoa aboat Cbarlea
Coren'• new newsletter for bridse
playen, write Goren Bridse Letter,
1909 Cbuwnmton Ave .. Chmamla·
aon, N .J. 08077.
by Jeff MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
HoM IH~ Ot.Jf YO$. o.: BATMRN CRPE
\.tJHILE YOO WERE.
GoNE., MICHAEL
SHe: "THREW OUT f\ RED
CPR, A PAtNISEr,
$Q.\E CHALK, SOME.
~ICS, LOTSR Pf>t~
RAAGH Ill NOT~
PRINTS! NOT MY Cff'E I
LEMME SEe.!
DR. SMOCK
HOSE IS HOSE
f
J DGEP RKER
........ 4.,, ... ... ........ ~, ....... -, ...
IF 'fHf:Y r?O, 1"RY "f"O S"f"IFt..S YOUR SCReAMS! ~ r?ON'1' WANNA ~e c:>t51"URe>eP
r?URIN<3 -r'HS t..A1"'e SHOW I
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
by Harold Le Ooux
ca1m111n11
------
TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1984 OHAN G£COU N TY CAllfOf1NIA ~··) Cf-_NT~
Coa•t
Amusement parks,
stunned by low attend-
ance durln9, Olymplcs,
doubt they II recover, de-
spite heal!hY turnout In
recent days./ A3 •
J
Convicted murderer Or.
Jeffry MacDonald has
sued the author of a book
about the bizarre death of
hlsfamlly./A3
Nation
Some Republican
leaders are quietly hinting
Mondale might have to
dump Ferraro In the wake
of her tax flap./ A8
Democrat Jeane
Kirkpatrick, a Democrat,
delivers a scathing
speech against her own
party's foreign policy at
Republican convention In
Oallas./A7
World
American IRA sym-
pathizer who eluded Brit-
ish police In Northern
Ireland, resurfaces In
Dublin.IA&
The widow of ousted Sov-
iet leader Nikita
Khrushchev Is dead./ Al
Mlnd&Body
What are the main
sources of Indoor air pol-
lution? Some answers
may surprlse./81
Too many water sports or
too much shampooing
can lead to Infectious
"swimmer's ear." /81
Sports
UC Irvine assistant
basketball coach Herb
Livsey Introduced Ant-
eater-style play to
coaches In Malaysla./C1
Carl Lewis captures the
100 In an International
meet In Budapest, Hun-
gary. /C1
Wiii the Chicago Cubs be
forced to erect lights at
Wrigley Field for the play-
offs?/C3
Entertainment
The stage version of the
hit movie "Stalag 17" Is
heavy on Intensity at
Golden West Coliege./83
Business
New tax laws represent a
trip le threat to travel and
entertainment deduc-
tlons ./84
INDEX
Erma 9ombeck 82
Bridge C8
Bulletin Board A3
Butlneu 84-5
California New• A8
Cluslfled CS-7 eom1e1 ce
Crot1word C7
Death Notlcel C.
Help Yourself 82
Horoec:ope CS
Ann Landtra B2
Mind and Body B 1·2
Mutual Funds 85
Natk>nal Newt A8
Oplnon A8
PaparazZi 81 Pot~Log A3
Publlc Not C.
Sport1 C1·4
Stod< M rkett
T tltVlllon
Theater• w .. thef
WorldNNa
Indians claiQi·Orange Coast
~olsa Chica developers say they're
puzzled by burial grounds ceremonies
By STEVE.MARBLE OTiii. 0..., ..........
A group of Indians as expected to
gather at the Bolsa Chica wetlands
. Fnday where a tnbal leader will
--sanctify the ground, symbolically
closing it to developers who have
fought for years to build on the
marshy aettage.
The ceremony is pan of a con-
tinued effort on the part of an Indian
leader to p:t devel~rs and state
authorities to ~12~ his tribe 1>
having a legal claim to bitrial sround
and other ha tone sites on the Orange c t.
"We' l..bc ~tifyina the marshes,
ttie beaches, the works," said Jim
Velasques, who purporu to be the last
Gabrielino tribe member ..,ho still
subscribes to traditional belief,,
"You can'l put a shovel to the
around .after lbat (the 11m:ufYl of
the End)," be vowed.
\\aync Clark. a spokwnan for
Signal Landmark. said be iJ an lhc
dark on ahe planned ceremony but
acknowlttcd that tbe dcvd~-sln!!!lh!l'Dlrnd
finn, by la_w. isoblipu;ct to consult an He said the Irvine Co. tln!edto
archcol<>11st or Native Amencan build a fence around the rod to tccP
expert before pdjng propeny that out trespass.en. A company spc>t:cs.
concains burial sites and h1 toric man. however. said the h'* rode
relics. (PleMe eee nn>IAJllS/A2) __________________________ ...... __________ ... imlll]i __ ~-----------------
H·earing
asked
onHB
landfill .
Council stymied
. on law overntng
city's dump sites
BJ PHIL SNEIDER.MAN °' ...............
U nabk to agree on a new law
aovem.inJ dump sites. Huotinpoo
Beach City Council members have
requested a public hearina oo coo-
tinuation of the existinJ moratorium
that prevents excavation of the con-
troversial Ase.on Landfill.
The landfill, located neat Edison
High School at Maanolia Street and
Hamilton A venue, 6as bceri a 111bject
of conocm to residents livina near iL
The residents have expressed fean
that excavation of the dump site
could release hazardous substaDOCJ
into the community.
At Monday's meetina. Huntiqtoll
Beach council memben were pres-
ented with xveral venioo.s of -o..r,..,._..,..._.._._ . ~ ordinanca govenWa& ~-Jim Veluqaes (left) addreues Gabriellno lncllan.a dart.na T111'tle Rock N.Dctiflcatlon ceremony In Imne. · (Pleue eee LAKDrlLL/A2)
MacDonald wants judge
to take himself off case
Ex-Huntin on Harbor physician complains
-jurist's-relative was on prosecution team
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Dr.
Jeffrey MacDonald's lawyer today
asked U.S. Distnct Court Judge
Franklin Dupree to remove himself
from the fonner Huntington Harbour
physician's murder case because the
Judge's relative worked for Mac-
Donald's fonner prosecutor Dupree
refused to withdraw
Dupree has presided over the case
stn~ 1975. MacDonald as a fonner
Army captain convicted in J 979 of
slaying his pregnant wife and two
young dau$hters at their Fort Bragg
apartment in 1970.
MacDonald 1s seekrng a new trial.
In Raleigh, attorney Wade Smith
argued that Dupree shouldn't deal
funher with case because his former
son-in-law was a member of the U S.
attorney's staff when it investigated
the case in the early 1970s.
Smith said he and other defense
lawyers were aware that James Proc-
tor had been Dupree's son-in-law
from December 1960 until J uJy 1972.
But Smith said that only recently did
he learn that Proctor strongly ad-
"ocated prosecuting MacDOnald
while a member of the U.S. attorney's
staff
Smith ~1d Proctor's mterest in the
case "was enormous." He added that
Proctor at one time bad a shouting
match with former MacDonald at-
torney Bernard Segal while the Anny
was 1nves11gat1ng the case.
Dupree said he would not
withdraw himself from the case.
"I have made a thorouJ!.h study," he
told Smith "I JU St don 'i beheve that
10 view of these circumstan~s which
have. been brought I~ !ight by y
investigation that my impartiality in
this case could be reasonably qu~
uoned."
He also said he was staying with the
case "with some reluctan~ because I
don't believe I've ever had a case that
caused me more concern ... He said
his personal preference would be to
rchnqu1sh the case but said he was
"duty-bound" to keep It.
Justice Department laW)er Bnan
Munagh had asked Dupree to deny
Smith's motion
Murtagh said there was no
evidence that the Judge had been
biased at any time before or during
the tnal. He added that the defense
should have raised the issue earher af
it was important.
Murtagh also said that Proctor had
no success in ocrsuadinit has superiors
(Pleue see llACDONALD/A2)
Gunmen rob NB restaurant
of$ 7, 000, bind manager
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of .. 0.-, .........
Three armed men robbed a Coco's
Restaurantat 2131 WestchffDnve in
Newport Beach early this morning.
bound and gagged the restaurant's
assistant manager and stole up to
$7,000 in cash, police said.
The incident occulTCd about I 45
a.m. when the as 1stant manager
Brian Rowe, 23, of Orange was
closing up the restaurant, according
to a Newport Beach police spokes-
man.
Rowe was approached at the rear of
the Coco's by two men, one carrying a
sawed-off shotgun and the other
brandish mg a re volver.
The men were both descnbed as
Negro. 6-2 and m their m1d·20s Both
men were v.eanng ~oves and had
pulled nylon stockin&S over their
heads. the spokesman said.
The pair forced Rowe to reopen the
restaurant and took him to an inside
office. where the) ordered him to
open the safe.
A third suspect. also cal'l")ing a
~mall revolver. joined the men The
third suspect was descnbed as a
Caucasian, about s1:ot feet tall. weanng
&loves and a nylon pulled over his
head. ac\:'ord1ng to pohcc rcpons.
The 1no took Rowe into a storage
room. bound his hands with an apron
Not· all downtown
J
Mesa merchants
happy with change
When Manlyn Wh11enand joined
the Co la M111 Red \clopmcnl
A&cncy as executive dirtttor in Apnl
J 9"82, he knew heh tt a b11job to do.
The attractive bl nde. con 1d f'C'd a
prati ou addition to the cily taff,
h d to take over 1 2()0..a re dcclinina
downtown 1rt1 that n drd new
busin , new blood and a nev.i 1m
In tW-O the M not n
much S'lh)' 1cal. f'ro re to which
-....
Wh1 nand can point as e\ 1dcnce of
her hard work. But behind the en .
he 11 h lpina to ~• th e for 1
1wttp1na nd (ontro\Cl"51al ( ccJjft
that w1ll "°mroa) change the look of a
downtown that ha remained \Ir·
tuall) change\ for 0 an.
t an annual lary (not 1ncluJma
t;cncfit ) of SS8.8 I 2, Wh1'Cnand I\
the n<l-h1g . itl Offi\:1al ti\
Co"ta Mc a (It;;-Ha I She 1\ ~ond
l
and gagged him with a cloth napkin.
Thev kfi him on the floor of the
storige room v.h1le they apparcntl}
cleaned out the safe. the spokesman
said
Rov.e strua.led for about 15
mmutes unul h-e was able to free his
hands and called police. The men bad
apparcntl~ ~ped out a back door.
police said.
The lo~ was estimated at som~
where bet"'een $6,000 and S 7.000. the
spoke man said. Just three v.uks
pnor to this morning's robbery. Rowe
had been robbed while closing
another Coco's. the report said.
An mve ligation into the incident
ts continuing.
KAREN
KLEIN
NEws Fouow uP
in pl)' onl to tt) Man er Fred
bal and cam more t an tbe
cat 's poli ch1cr. <'It attorney or
plann1na dir«tor.
Wha nand ptnt 11 )taf'l workin 1n municipal &<ncmmcnts 1n the
artt of d \Clopmcnt. rtlocatt<ln and
pml)('rt) man m nt before \ht
came to Coe.ta Mcu. 1 or five )Can,
.iic " ,, ~ pr nt of Cent.re Cit>
(Pl M ... DOWlCTOWlt/ A2)
o..r .......... ~ ..............
Patt Tambolleo hu donated her Olympic torcb to Hant-
m,ton ee.ch.
Olympic keepsake
given to ·Huntington
Pan Tam lko, the O.)nr-old
Hunti ton Beech grandmother who
attn tcd Ytiddrttad commumty
!.upport .,hen she pan1cipatcd 1n the
Ol)mp1c torch relay, ha d cd to
let communuy hart tht pnn 1pal
ket kc from her run.
On 1onday night, Tam llco
donated the torch uSC'd 1n h r relay
k1lomttcr to the Cit) of Hunlln ton ~ach, for d1 .. play at the city"" Central
Librar). •
Tamhollco decided la't l'o:o\'caibct
thaJ o;hC" w"'anttd tn take pon 1n the . .
•
DOWNTOWN MESA REDEVELOPMENT •••
From Al
Oe'c1opmcnt Corp., tht finn dmin· i tm tCde\ clopment programs in a
1,200-acrc i n of downtown n
Diego.
All her Olpc"nencc and knowledge
bu aone into revitaliLina the aaina
downtown Stttion of Costa Me
not lway to everyone's lik1ni.
The theory behind redevelopment.
Whisenand id, is to circumvent ~he
natural real e•tate cycles of cities
bcainnin& to decay.
••O\lr downtown aru is dedinint-M~t of it is 40 or SO years old and it s
as.ins and detenorated, .. Whi~nand
said. Because of the hi.ah co t of
developed land, the stumbling blocks
and the cost of acqumna t>uildinas ~t thea have to bo d.cmoJi.s.bcd, she
said. the private-sector is often hard·-
prnsed to revitalize a dcclinina area
without a boost from 'the public seaor.
The proceu of redevelopment in-
cludes absorbina land into the public
sector. pieparinll it for development
and then stDina tt to developers who
. can revitalize the area, Whisenand
said. The community benefits from
increased commerce, more jobs and
ultimately hlJher property values and
increased rtvenue from sales and
property tax.
In the case of downtown Costa
Mesa redevelopment, Pacific Federal
Savings and Loan has become a
private sector .. partner" for the city's
redevelopment aacncy. Pacific Feder-
al built what many city officials see as
the crown jewel of the downtown area
-the distincuve, Spanish-style Pa-
cific Federal Plaza building at New-
port Boulevard and 19th Street
The latest redevelopment project.
called the Courtyards, bas been
proposed by Pacific Fcdtral for a
nearby 1 l-a~ site bordered by t 9th,..
Street, Harbor and Newport
boulevards and Park A venue.
Tbe $I 8 milhon development 1s
planned as a 172,300.squarc-foot,
one and two-story retail center.
Shopping, dm1ng and leisure uses,
ancludina a health club, arc to be
mcluded in the mainly outdoor
center.
The downtown project will mean
30 business ownerships have been or
will be condemned and demolished
over the a four-year time span in the
so-called Superblock area, Whis-
enand said.
Marilyn WhUenand
One of those properties belongs to
Louis SL Pierre, owner of the Holly-
wood Magic Shop on Newport
Boulevard. St. Pierre's property has
not yet been acquired by the re-
development agency, but it is among
those targeted for demolition.
"They've already voted on taking tt
(hls propcny)," St. Pierre said. "They
call it blighted. Can you imagine? 17
years old and it's bliJhted property.''
SL Pierre's shop 1s one of only a
handful of magic shops in Orange
County -and possibly the only one
of its kind ID the Orange Coast area
He has owned the Costa Mesa
Correction
Due to incorrect information sup-
phed to the Daily Pilot. the company
that chartered the "Rtsolut1on" for
Sunday's Character Boat Parade 10
Newport Harbor was incorrectly
listed.
Katbleena Charters was the com-
pany that chartered the "Resolution"
and won the CMtcnden Cup award
for "theme extreme" 10 Sunday's
parade. The Daily Pilot regrets the
error.
Just Call
642-6086
Dllr .... ,..... .. TemlC-
8ome of tbe maitc will be tone ln downtown Coetallesa.
store, which has 3,000 magJc and
novelty 1tems ID stock, for nine years,
he said. He also owns a shop .in
Hollywood.
"I live in Corona del Mar, and J
wanted to rctue in a couple of years
and keep the store here for something
to do," St. Pierre said. But now, he
said. he doesn't know what to do.
"I don't think there's anypl~ I C1'ln
(relocate) in Costa Mesa;• he said.
'Tm no spring chicken," he added. "I
can't move agam."
Beside, he said, he doesn't see any
relocation possibilities an his pnce
range locally. "Where are they gonna
put me. Huntington Beach?" he said.
The Costa Mesa location has been
perfect, be added, cspcc1ally since
Magic Island, a pnvat.c club, opened
in Balboa. "They have five to seven
~ci:ans work.in& there every
night.." he w d. "Mapcianscomc out
from New Y orlc and they worlc there
f<?r.. two weeks. The first thing ma-
gicians do when they're out of town 1s
to go to a magic shop -they look for
new tricks, the latest fads."
As for relocation into the
Courtyards prOJcct, St. Pierre s~ud he
is not optimistic.
"There'-s-a--0ew shopping center
going in. The Supcrblock, they call it.
But there's three times the rent that
goes along with it," he said.
St. Pierre said he has been de-
pressed and upset since he heard he
would have to move out. "It's
10crediblc to me that they Qin take
your property away and turn around
and sell it to a developer. If 1t was a
freeway coating through, maybe I'd
understand. But Just to wipe it out so
that a developer Qin put in a shopping
center .. " he paused, a baffled note 10
his voice.
''They're taking my business awa>
from me. I've really been down and
disappointed I though everything
was going swell, then tfi1s "
Wh1senand said owners and ten-
ants are almost always upset by the
redevelopment agency's actions. By
the end of the process, however, she
said most property owners feel they
have been fairly compensated.
An informal survey of business
owners who were relocated by the
agency because of the Supcrblock
development showed that most own-
ers thought they had been com-
pensated fairly, but most also felt
their businesses were sufTermg and
were batter about the move.
"I ~ot kicked out of the Superblock
area, ' said Claire Brockett, owner of
the Dutch Boy Paint store on Harbor
Boulevard "It's JUSt not the same
here.'' he said.
Even though Brockett relocated
onl) a short d1stance from where his
store had been. he said his business
has suffered.
"It's much slower here," he said
"Over there people used to go into
the post office outlet or buy an ice
cream cone at Baslcin Robbins and
walk around the shops."
Shirley Morton, who bas owned
George's Steaks and Hoa~cs for five
years, said her new location behind
the Mesa Theater was "a last resort.
"J don't think anyone•s doing very
§ood now. No one's happy," she said.
'After 13 years in Costa Mesa I
didn't want to move toa new city, but
now J wish I had.··
Even Lee Clark, part owner of
Antiques of the World, said he 1s sorry
he had to move. "I would sooner have
stayed where we were," Oark said,
despite his spacious and attractive
ne" site on Warner Avenue in
Huntington Beach:
·•we had an established situation
there that we don't have here. But
pr<>&ress is progress, l guess," he said.
Redevelopment. and the concept
of buying and then sellina propcrt)'
for what the agency sees as the greater
good of the ctty, tS adm1nedlr,
"difficult for people to ac.ccpt, •
Whisenand said ... Especially in small
bus10esses, tenants find rents costly
and some arc there on a shoestring 10
the first place."
Whisenand acknowledttcd that
there arc some "casualties" con-
nected with redevelopment.
"We can't help everyone. We have
a broader public purpose -like a
freeway There's a price to be paid ID
1nd1vidual needs for the public good,"
she said.
Not all the downtown Costa Mesa
merchanu are unhappy with the
redevelopment efforts. J .C.
Humphries. whose Newport
Boulevard Jewcil) store, opened 38
years ago. ma)' be the oldest existing
retail store tn Costa Mesa, said he
th10ks the ne" center will be a good
thing. ·
"It's gomg to be a nice center and
it's something they've been planning
fora long time." Humphncs said. His
propeny 1s under cons1derat1on for
city acqu1stt1on, he said.
"There's k10d of a cloud over you
unul you know whether or not they're
go10g to take the propert)'. It is quite
frustrating," he said.
Humphncs said he understands
the relocated merchants' unhappi-
ness over being moved out. "Most of
them have been here a long time," he
said.
And for those whose stores will
remain. there are worries about traffic
circulation tn the nc:w center and
parkmg. "We don't want to get shut
out," he said
The new center will not mean the
end of downtown Costa Mesa as 1 t has
been known for so man)' years,
Whisenand' assured
''The (Newport Boulevard) cast-
side front.age property Wlll remain. A
certain part 1s to be made available for
non-franchise, single operator busi-
nesses. There 1s room for both the old
and the new."
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Tell us what'• on your mind
ORANGE COAST Circulation 7U/M2..u33
Cla .. ffl9d ed~ertlalng 71"M2·5'71
All other depjltmenla "2;..a21
, fnolr I! ,au oo
,..,. ,_ yOUI ~ "' $J011"' wei.kl'• 1 P"' -'°" CC>r'Y ... ~ ~
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cor>r Oy 1 • m ~"'" •0 • "' llnd ""' • .. ..
Clrcu1atkm
T .. epftOMe
Dally Pilat
H. l. Schwartz Ill
Pubhsher
Rotemery Churchman
Controller
Stephen F. Cara.to
Production
~anag r
Donald l . Wllllam•
Circulation
Man11ger
•
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7t II
Health Care Agency director quits
-rhe first and only director of
Orange County's two-year-old Health
Care Agency submitted his resig-
nation Monday, effective in January
198S. Dr. Charles Kerns, a 36-ycar-old
clinic.al psychologist, gave no reason
for his decision to leave county
government in the letter be delivered
to board offices. But Kerns recently
bas been repeatedly sin.aJed out for
criticism by both supervisors and the
grand jury. Su~rv1sors have been critical of
Kem s administration of the agency
and the documentauon be submnted
to back up agency program proposals
during budaet bearinas last week.
Jn fact, Kerns was only one of two
a&ency top agency directors passed
over by supervisors when pay rajses
were handed out last month, an
indication the board was displeased
with his performance. He cams
$60,840 a year.
The grand jury called for-Kcrn·s
dismissal after reviewing his agency's
handling of inmate medical care at
the Orange County Jail, a program
still troubled by staff discontent and
. ~ ht&h personnel turnover.
ibc Health Care Agency, created m
1982, is charged with administcrin1
the county's public and mcntaJ health
programs, including drua and alcohol services~ epidemiolOI)', environmen-
tal health, animal control, emeraency
medical services, indiaent medical
services and communicable disease
control.
Kerns, who first was hired by the
county in 1976 as a clinical psychol-
ogist, has been absent from h is post
for close to two weeks with a lcidncy
ailment.
FV to consider parking meters
Fountain Valley City Council to-
ni'11t wtll consider installing parlun&
meters at the Recreation Center to
replace the "honor" ticket dispensing
system
The counci1 decided last year to
CON TINUED STORIES
~n charging users for parkmg at the
Mile Square Park Recreation Center!
located on Brookhurst Street at Hci
A venue. The fees are dcsipled to
offset continuing O(lCTatma losses at
the center.
Bu' city <1tafT members say the
ticket' ·mspcnser system, in which
motorists must insert money to
obta10 a window pass, has generated
complamts. and bas required ex-
tensive ma10tcnance.
The meeting begins at 8 p.m. in
council chambers. I 0200 Slater Ave.
INDIANS CLAIM ORANGE COAST •••
From Al
being preserved simply because "it's
unique."
The Gabnelinos are locked in a
feud with a rival Indian tribe over
who has a territorial claim to the
Orange Coast, which is rich is burial
sites and other areas of cultural
importance. ,
Velasques said he wants skeletal
rema10s and relics to be removed
from their resting spots at develop-
ment sites and then placed at a burial
sne. He bebe~-developers should
pool their money to purchase land for
such a bunal ground.
The dispute between the
Gabnchnos and the Juaneno tnbes
has placed the Irvine Co. and Signal
landmark in an touchy positiOIJ
because both reportedly nave at least
anfonnally discussed using a Juaneno
representative as a consultant.
The Jrvine Co. had planned to
consult a Juancno tribal member on
an office project near UC Irvine
where it 1s known that at least two
Indian bunal sites are located. Velas-
ques now has asked the company to
"get the Juancnos out of our terri-
tory."
Velasques said be nas made the
same request of Signal Landmark,
which owns much of the Bolsa Chica
marshlands.
"That land at Bolsa Chica 1s sacred
to me, and Siinal Landmark wants to
hire a person who can't tell the
difference between a banana and a
pineapple," said Velasques.
"The Juancnos have been tnck-or-
treating on our temtory and it's aoina
to stop now," he vowed. "This is a
very senous situation,, and it's goina
to get a lot worse berorc It gets any
better.
A spokesperson for the Juanenos
could not be reached for comment,
but a representative of the California
Native American Historic Com-
mission said Velasques is overstatma
the problem.
"There are about 300 Gabn elmos
that we know of, and we have no
indication that they've selected Mr.
Velasques as their representative or
chief," said Loretta Allan, a com-
mission spokeswoman. "And even if
they have, I can't do what he wants
me to do.
"He wants me to proclaim this
Jim Veluquea
Gabrielino territory and I don't have
the legal authoritity to do that. Even
the President of the United States
can't do that.
"This is one of those things these
two tribes arc goina to have to scttJe
themselves," she added.
LANDFILL LAW MORATORIUM •.•
From Al
Qlvauon oflandfills and land disposal
sites. The proposals required that a
city penntt be obtained before u -
cavation of such .sites could bq:tn.
Caty planoina staff members rec-
ommended approval of a version that
would eitcmpt the drillina of holes for
utility poles or for aas or oil wells.
This version also would allow the city
to exempt other cxcavauon activity
"which has been determined to pose
an insignificant risk."
A second version of the new
ordinance did not include these
exemptions This second venion was
endorsed by the city's Planruna
Commission.
Councilman Don MacAlli tcr says
he could not uppon the vc1"11on
backed by the Plann1na Commiuion.
He described u as too broad and
predicted at would require even
residents digging backyard pools or
flower gardens to obtain a penn1t. He
also predicted it would increase costs
and delay reconstruction in the
downtown area.
Councilwoman Ruth Bailey said
today she supported the comm1 s1on-
backed proposal, behevina it would
not place an undue hard 1h ip on oil
companies.
Councilwoman Ruth Finley also
said local 011 companies have op-
posed the mort stnngcnt ordinance
because they do not want to face the
additional permit prO<lt for some of
,their ucavation. She said the ve ion
exemptina oil and Yt'ell would
"take tne teeth out of the ordinance."
Attempts to pass versions of the
ordinance with the 011 well cxemp-
uons were defeated in J.to-3 votes.
Councilmen MacAllistcr, Ron Pat·
tinson and Bob Mandie voted in
favor, while council memben Bailey,
Finley and John Thomas oppoted.
Then, by a 6-0 vote, the council
apecd to schedule a public hcarina to
consider extension of the mora-
torium that prevents excavation at
the A$Con dump.
The current moratorium expires
Sept. ...
·Councilwoman Finley said it.ate
health officials have not completed
their review of the ASiCOn dump
material to detcnnine whether it ••(
ha11rdous
OLYMPIC KEEPSAKE •.• MACDONALD P'romAl
homettU
Her pli&ht was the ubJ«l of local
and rq1onal news media covcrqc.
and a Malibu man traded Tambolleo h1~ Qranae County ldlomctcr for the
one 1n din.
On July 26. Tambollco carried the
torch 1n nta n before ch rina
family mcmbcn and uppancrs. l.:1kc
other relay pantc1 nt • he was
•ll~'N 10 l'N'~cr t<>rth,
··--~-
From Al
ln an interview la 1 week, Tam·
bollco s.a d she had no adt'Quatc place
to di pla)' the \Orth an her home and
dccidtdto harc1t rlththcrommun1·
ty b)' don tina il to lhc r aty library.
At Monda) ni&ht' 1ty Counal
mecuna. tana Mayor John 1bom
acoepicd the 1lort~ )'1 "h's a really ni t fi r 1 cny 10 ha\ c.•·
In rttum , T homa Prcst'nted lam· bot With k '"f01 ttty. ~-_,.,.-,.-
utc M c00n8Jd in the rly
..
I
" (
)
•
HIOHIO LOWN flRIT 1111111
TUESDAY, AUGUST ?1, 1984 ()f~AN <.ECOUNTY lAllf'Jr•N:A ... rt~~r·
Cout
Amuaementpark•,o---t·--"'
etunned by low attend-
ance durln~ Olymplca,
doubt they II recover, dt.
spite healthy turnout In
recent days./ AJ
Convicted murderer Dr.
Jeffry MacDonald has
sued the author of a book
about the bizarre death of
his family./ A3
California
Hollywood actors portray
Reagan as bumbling sex-
ist In 'respectful' Dallas
play that's drawing hun-
dreds of Republican del-
egates./ A7
Nation
Some Republican
leaders are quietly hinting
Mondale might have to
dump Ferraro In the wake
of her tax llap./Ae
Democrat Jeane
Kirkpatrick, a Democrat,
delivers a scathing
speech against her own
party's foreign policy at
Republican convention In
Dallas./A7
World
American IRA sym-
pathizer who eluded Brit-
ish police In Northern
Ireland, resurfaces In
Dublln.IA9
to ran
...
oast-
Developers say
they're puzz e
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .............
A &rOUP or Indians iJ eq)CCted IO
plller at the Boba OUai wel1anda
FridaY. where a tribal leader° will
sancufy the around, symboti<ally
dosinc it to devdopen who have
fought for ycan to b\lild oo the
-manhy-.
The ceremony is pan of a con-
tinued efl'on oo the put of an Indian
leader to 1tf. dcve~ and state
authorities to reoop112e his tribe u
ha . • lepJ claim 10 burial pounda and~ biJLOric si~ oo ttie 0....,.:
CoasL
"We'll be aanctifyins the m>nhes.
the beaches, the -• gjd Jim
Velasques, whopurpcxts10 be the last
Gabriclino tribe member who mu
subscribel 10 tradilional belie&.
.. You can't put a ihoVel to ilie
around after that (the sancUfyina of
the aroundt" he vowed.
. Wayne Clarlt, a ..,.,.._.... &w
Si&nal l.andmarl<, ..;.i he ia in the
dart on the planned ceremony but
aoknowiClcd that the devdopmcnt
firm. by law, isoblip.kd to oonsu.Jtan
~ or NaUve American
expert before lflldina .........,. that
contains burial si1e1 ~hlstoric
relics.
Velasques performed a similar
ceremony at 'turtle Rock in Irvine
Sunday by sprinklina the rock forma-
tion wt th tca'Wllter and spadiDJI kelp
The widow of ousted Sov-
iet leader Nikita
Khrushchev Is dead./ Al
...,,........,..,.-...R ........ at iu base before proclaimma .•t
Jim Veluquea (left) a~ G~briellno Indiana d1llinC Turtle Rock 11&Dctlficatlon ceremony Jn lrt1.ne. (Pleue-lllDlAlal/ A2J
Mlnd&:Body
What aie the main
sources of Indoor air pol-
lution? Some answers
may surprlse./B1
Too many water sports or
-tOO"mui:trtnampoolng -
can lead to Infectious
"swlmmer'sear." /81
Sports
UC Irvine assistant
basketball coach Herb
Livsey Introduced Ant-
eater-style play to
coaches In Malaysla./C1
Carl Lewis captures the
100 In an International
meet In Budapest, Hun-
gary. /C1
Wiii the Chicago Cubs be
forced to erect tights at
Wrigley Field for the play-
offs? /C3
Entertainment
The stage version of the
hit movle"Staleg 17" ls
heavy on Intensity at
Golden West College./B3
New tax laws re1>resent a
triple threat to!ravel and
entertainment deduc-
tlons ./B4
INDEX
EnneBom-82
Bridge ca
Bulletin Board A3
Bull.-114-5
Clillomla -Al Cl-fled C5-7
Com1co ca
C.-d C7
Ooolll Not-,J C4
Help YourMtf 82
HOf'OIOOP9 C5 Ann~ 82
Mind Ind Body 81-2
Mutu .. Fundti 85
NatloMll-AS
Opinion Al
P-azzl 81
PolioaLog A3
Public-C4 Sport• C1-4
Stoel< Martceta Bl
Tet.AlkJn 82
Thaat-B3
Woathar A2
World-Al
Mesa residents lose fight;
$500 million project OK' d
Council chambers filled for six-hour hearing
as homeowners protest high-rise comp!~
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .............
A controveniaJ $500 million plan
for a hotel and a hi&Jl~rise office park
in north-CO.Sta Meta was given the
green li&ht early this morning after
more than six houn of presentations
and impassioned testimony before
the City Council.
The marathon public hearing,
which bepn around 7:30 p.m. Mon-
day, ended just before 2 a.m. today
with the council unanimously voting
to chanac the city's aeneral plan and
zonin& to accommodate the lavish
project proposed by Amel Develop-
ment Co.
"What can I sayT' said Mayor
Donn Hall to the residents who
pleaded impassionatelv for the ooun-
cil to reject the project. because of its
apparent threat to their home life.
More than I 00 people, mostly
membe~ of the North Costa Mesa
Homcownen Association, filled the
council chambers for the hearing.
Many remained in the early morning
hours as Hall noted that Costa Mesa
could not afford to pass up the
projected $2 million a year in city
revenues that would be generated
from the development -money that
could be used to upgrade detenorat·
ing streets and tlo001:oiitrol channels.
Hall and Councilman Eric John-
son, both seeking to rcta.in their scats
in the upc:omin& municipal elections.
were not swayed by the political
pressure brought by the association.
which is part of a coalition of resident
groups representing hundreds of
homcownen..
.::J'm.disappointed.but-1-expcctcd ·
anyway," said Bobbi Floyd, vice
president of the north Costa Mesa
association.
Developers have WttStled for more
than a decade with non.hsidc resi-
dents over various projects proposed
for the troublesome SO-acre parcel
bordered by the San Diego freeway,
Bear Street and San Leandro Laoc.
The latest concept proposal by the
Amel Co. and ccrpartner Gcorie
Argyros calls for a 16-floor hotel, 11x
high-rise office buildings and 300
apartments.
Acting on a recommendation from
the Planning Commission, the coun-
cil this morning aca:pted an en-
vironmental impact report on the
· project, which nearly doubles the
residential density allowed at the site,
(Pleue aee BIGR-RISE/A2)
Gunmen rob NB restaurant
of $7 ,000, bind manager
By KAREN E. K.LElN brandishing a revolver.
The men were both described as Ol .. 0.-. ........ Negro, 6-2 and in their mid-20s. Both
Three armed men robbed a Coco's men were wearing Jloves and had
Rcstaunntat 2131 WestcliffDrivein pulled nylon stock.ings over their
Newport Beach early this morning. heads, the spokesman said.
bound and pged the restaurant's The pair forced Rowe to reopen the
assistant manager and stole up to restaurant and took him to an inside
S7.t!!OO in cash, police said. office, where they ordered him to
tne incident occurred about 1:4S open the safe.
a.m. when the assistant manqer, A third suspect, also carrying a
Brian Rowe, 23, of Orange was small revolver, joined the mtn. The
cl01in& up the ratauran!, 1ccordina third suspect wu described as a
to 1 Newport Beach pobce spoke5"' Cauc.asian. about six feet tall, wearing
man. &loves and a nylon pulled over his
Rowe was approached 11 the rear of head, accordina to police reports.
theCoc:o'1bytwomcn,ooecanyiqa The trio took Rowe into a storqe
aawed..off shotaun and the otbU--room, bound his bands with an apron
Not all downtown
Mesa merchants
·happy.with change
and aaucd him with a cloth nark.in.
Thef left him on the floor o the
storaac room while they apparently
cleaned out the safe, the spokesman
said.
Rowe strualcd for about 1 S
minutes until hC was able to free his
hands and called police. The men had
apparently escaped out a back door.
pol ice sa.id.
The loss was estimated at some--
where between $6,0CX> and S 7 ,OCX>, the
spokesman said. Just three weeks
prior to this momina'srobbery, Rowe
had been robbed while ck>Sina
another Coco's. the report said.
An investigation into the incident
is continuina.
KAREN
KLEIN
Nlws FoLLowuP
When Marilyn Whi1en.1nd joined
lbe eo.oa Mesa Redevelopment
Asncy u necutive dlredOr in April
1982, the knew she had a biajob to do.
Whisenand can Point as evKteoce of in pay only to City Man11tt Frtd
her hard work. But behind the.tct.nes., Sonat.I and cams more than the
TheattrlCtiveblonde,consid~a
prutiak>us lddilioa to the city 11atf,
had to take over a 200-aa'e"declinina
downtown area that needed new bu inns., new blood and a new imqe.
In two years. Ihm has not been
much phytj<lal progiess to-..!rich
she it hc.lp\na to Kt the s1.11t for a dty'1 Pohce chief, city attorney or
swttpina and controversial facelift pl1nn1nad1rector.
thatwiUootntdaycila"P'theiool<ora Wlllseoandspenl 18ycar>wOO<.ina
downtown that hu ttma1ntd vir.. in munias-1 aovemme:nu in the
tually chan&cbs for j() ya.rs. area of development. relocation and
At an. annual salary (not 1ncludin& propeny manqcment before she
benefits) of S~S.812, Wluttnand is came to Costa Mesa. For fivt yun,
the ll«Ond-hJ&h<st-~id fllcial i'!--_.,..,wa,.._v.~Cen · y
Costa-,;rcsa-oty~all: e 1s second (Pl-...eeeDO'WlfTOP/il)
Ollr ... ,.... ........... ._
Patt Tambolleo bu donated her OJ7111plc torch to Bilal-' inCtoD Beach.
Olympic keepsake
given to Huntington
Pitt Tambolko.. the7().yea.r-okl cross country torch relay. She ~m
Huntinston Bcacb an.ndmother who shoP-tO-Shop to ~sc the Sl,000
attracted wtdtspread community neCcssary to participate. (Them~
suppon when she partiape.ted ln lhe went to youtb aroups.) Even 1 mild
Olympic torch ttlly, has ckdckd. to heart attack in January did not detct
tet lhecommunity shaft the pnnea.pe.1 her.
tee_pu.ke from her Nn. But in June, Tambolleo learned
On Monday nil)\~ Tambollco 1ha1 all local kdometm had boC1l
dona ltd tht torch vied tn her relay aUocated, and lhe was auaaned to run
tikKnetcr to the aty of Hunllnaton in the llny Non.hem California town
Beach. fordi!pl.1y11 thea1y'1C'entn.J of Adin. She-wu roncerned about Litmuy. tnlll~tioa __ n
amboladccidut bist Na,e111m-at{i{ SbialiOWan nan in her
th1t she wanted to lake Pl" in the ,.._.. eee OL TlllPIC/ A2)
a........,_...-.....,..,i ..,,-----,-.---"" -I •-~ --• •
J .
•
DOWNTOWN MESA REDEVELOPMENT ••• Fro Al
All her e~perience and kno~k e
has one into revitali~ina the ·na
downtown section of Costa Mesa -
not alwa)'5 to everyone's ht.in
lJle theory behJnd ttdevclopmcnt, Wh1~nand said, 1s to circumvent the
natural real ~talc cycle$ of citic ~nn1n1 to d gu•..._--~-·--
"Out downtown area '' dcchninf_.
Mostofit is40or SO )'Call old·~ it ·na and detenoratcd," Whisenand
d. use of the high co t of
develoJ)cd land, the stumblina block
d the cost of acquiring buildinas
that then have to be dcmoli hcd, he
id, the private sector is often hard-~ to revitalize a declining area
without a boost from thC' public
sector.
The process of redevelopment in·
dudes absorbing land into the public
sector, preparing it for dev~opmcnt
and then sellina it to developers who
can rcvitaJize the area, Whisenand
said. The community benefits from
ancrcased commerce. more jobs and
ultimately higher property values and
mcrused revenue from sales and
property tax.
In the case of downtown Costa'
Mesa redevelopment, Pacific Federal
Savings and Loan has become a
private sector "partner" for the city's
redevelopment agency. Pacific Feder-
al built what many city officials see as
the crown jewel of the downtown area
-the distinctive. Spanish·stvlc Pa-
cific FederaJ Plaza building at New-
pon Boulevard and 19th Street
0.-, ............ .,, ......
The latest redevelopment project.
called the Courtyard~. has been
proposed by Pac1fic Federal for a
nearby I I -acre sue bordered by 19th
Street, Harbor and Newport
boulevards and Park A venue. Some of the ma&lc will be •one lD downtown eo.ta Mesa.
The S 18 million development 1s
planned as a I 72.300-squarc-foot.
one and two-story retail center.
Shoppina, dining and leisure uses.
including a health club. arc to be
included in the masnl~ ou1door
center.
The downtown project will mean
30 business ownerships have been or
will be condemned and demolished
over the a four-year ume span in the
so-called Superblock area Whis-
enand said.
lla.rilTD WhbeD&.Dd
One of those properties belongs to
Lows St. Pierre, owner of the Holly-
wood Mapc Shop on NC'wport
Boulevard St. P1erre·s property has
not yet been acquired by the re-
development agency. but 1t is among
those targeted for demolst1on .
~'They've already voted on taking 1t
(his property) ... St. Pierre <>aid. "The'
call It bb&hted. Can vou 1magme'! 1 '7
yean old and it's bhJhtcd property "
St. Pierre's shop 1s one of onl} a
handful of magic shops 10 Orange
County -and possibly the only one
of its k.tnd in the Orange Coast area.
He has owned the Costa Mesa
Correction
Due to incorrect information c;up-
phed to the Daily Pilot. the com pan~
that chartered the "Resolution" for
•Sunday's Character Boat Paradc 10
Newport Harbor wac; 1ncorrc:,tl}
listed
Kathlcena Charters wac; the c.·om-
pany that chartered the ''Re\olut1on ..
and won the Cruttcndcn Cup award
• for "theme extreme·· 1n ~unday 's
• perade. The Dail~ Pilot regflh the error.
J ust Call
642-6086
Dall) Piiot
DeUHry
.. Ouerantffd
MO'!Olr rr r ' t '°'°' "".. ,_,,,., "41r•• "' ti 30 p m Gell bfo!Ot• 1 Cl ,.
store. which has 3,000 magic and
no,.elt) items in stock. for nine years.
he said. He also owns a shop in
Holl~wood .
.. I hve in Corona del Mar, and J
wanted to ret1rC' in a couple of years
and keep the ~tore here for something
to do," St Pierre said But now, he
said. he d~sn't know what to do.
.. I don't think there's anyplace Jean
(relocate) in Costa Mesa." he said.
"I'm n9 spnng chicken." he added. "I
can't mo\.e again."
Beside. he said. he d~sn't sec an}
rclocauon poss1b1ltt1e~ in his price
range locall). ''Where are they gonna
put me. Huntington Beach?" he said
The < ost.a Mesa location has been
perfect he added. especially since
~1ag.1c Island, a pnva3e club. opened
sn Balboa. "l hey have five to seven
magicians working there every
nigh"" he said. "Magicians come out
from New York and they work there
for two weeks. The first thing ma-
gicians do when they're out of town is
to go to a magic shop -they look for
new tricks, the latest fads "
As for relocation into 1be
Courtyards project. St. P1erre'said he
15 no.toptuntsuc
"There's a nC'w shopping center
going sn The Superblock they call 11.
But there's thr~ times the rent that
goes along with 1t," he said.
St Pierre said he has been de-
pressed and upset since he heard he
wouJd have to mo"e out. "It's
1ncred1ble to me that they can take
your property away and tum around
and sell 1t to a developer. If 1t was a
frecwa} coming through. maybe I'd
understand. But just to wipe 1t out so
that a developer can put 10 a shopping
center ... " he paused. a baffied note in
ht\ \Olt"e.
"They're taking my business away
from me. I've really been down and
disappointed I though everything
\\as going swell, 1hen this"
Whisenand said ·owners an"d ten-
ants are almost always upset by the
redevelopment agency's actions. By
the end of the process. however, she
said most property owners feel they
have been fairly compensated.
An informal survey of business
owners who were relocated by the
agency because of the Superblock
devolopment showed that most own-
ers thought they had been com-
pen-.aled fairly. but most also felt
their busme~ses were suffenng and
were bitter about the move.
.. I got kicked out of 1he Superblock
area.·· said Oaire Brockett. owner of
the Dutch Boy Paint store on Harbor
Boulevard "It's Just not the same
here ... he said.
Even though Brockett relocated
only a short distance from where his
!>lore had been. he qjd his business
ha\ suffered.
"'It'~ much ~lower here," he said.
.. Over the~ people used to ao into
the post omce outlet or buy an ice
cream cone at Baskin Robbins and
walk around the shops ...
Shirley Morton. who has owned
George's Steaks and Hoa~es for five
years, saJd her new locauon behind
the Mesa Theater was "a last resort.
"I don't think anyone•s doing very
good now. No one's happy," she ta.id.
"After I 3 years in Costa Mesa, I
didn't want to move to a new city, but
now I wish I had."
Even Lee Clark, part owner of
Anuquesofthc World, said he is sorry
he had to move. "I would sooner have
stayed where we were," Oark sa1d,
despi1e his spacious and attractive
new site on Warner A venue 1n
Huntmgton Beach.
"We had an cstabhshed s1tuat1on
there that we don't have here. But
progress is progress, I guess, .. he said.
Redevelopment, and the concept
of buymg and then sellina property
for what the agency sees as the ~ter
good of the city, i1 adrmtted.lr,
"difficult for people to accept, •
Whisenand said. "Espec1a1ly m small
businesses, tenants find rents costly
and some are there on a shoestnna m
the first place."
Whisenand a.ck.n.owledJed that
there arc some "casualties" con-
nected with redevelopment.
"We can't help everyone. We have
a broader public purpose -like a
freeway. There's a price to be paid in
1nd1v1dual needs for the pubhcgood,"
she said.
Not all the downtown C.osta Mesa
merchants are unhappy Wlth the
redevelopment efforts. J.C.
Humphnes, whose Newport
Boulevard Jcweiry store, opened 38
years ago, may be the oldest ex.istina
retail store 1n Costa Mesa, said he
thinks the new center will be a good
th mg.
"It's going to be a nice center and
it's somethmg they've been plannma
for a long ume," Humphries said. His
property 1s under consideration for
city ac~uis1t1on, he said.
"There's kind of a cloud over you
until you know whether or not they're
going to take the property. It 1s quite
frustrating." he said.
Humphries said he understands
the relocated merchants' unhappi-
ness over being moved out. "Most of
them have been here a long time," he
said.
And for those whose stores will
remain, there arc womes about traffic
circulauon m the new center and
parking. "We don't want to set shut
out," he said
The new center will not mean the
end of downtown Costa Mesa as 1t has
been known for so many yean,
Whisenand assured.
"The (Newport Boulevard) east-
side frontage property will remain. A
certam part is to be made available for
non-franchise, single operator busi-
nesses There 1s room for both the old
and the new"
What do )'OU like aboat tbe Dally Pilot? Wbat don't you llkt? Call tbe
numbf'r at left and your message wlll be recorded, tran1crlffd and dellnred
to Ult appropriate editor.
Tbt samt 24-boor ao1werlog service may bt uMcl to record letters'° tlte
ditor on any topic. Contributors to our Letters colamo mu.t tnclud tbelr
name-Wod ttlcpbone number for vtrlflcatlon. No circulation calls, pl te.
Tell aa wlaat'1 OD your ml.ad.
ORAr~GE COAST
Daily Pilat
CltculaUon 7141142...uat
Cle llfled adYettl1lng 11'il42-M11
All other depar1menta la-4121
MAIN OFFIC!
ea.ta-..-c" I'* MeM."'
MIO yOUI '°' y .,,. IH'
Cllliv...n H. L. Schw•rtz Ill
P1Jbhsher
. -----
Rotemuy Churchman
ConlrOllP.r
Staphen F. C•razo
Prod 1ct1on
M nager
Oon1ld L. Wllll1m•
C1rcula11on
Mmmg r
•
. •
VOL. 17, NO. 2M
More fair weather for Coast
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11 11
He_alth Care Agen cy d irector quits
The fint and only director of
Ora nae County'• two-year-old Health
Care A&ency submitted his resig-
nation Monday, effective in January
198S. Dr. Charles Kerns, a 36-year-old
clinical psycbol<>sin. pve no reason
for bis decision to leave county
sovemment in the letter be delivered
to board offices. But Kerns rec:ently
has been repeatedly sinJled out for
criticism by both supervisors and the
arandjwy. Su~rv1sors have been critical of
Kem s administration of the aaency
and the documentation be aubmjtted
to back up agency proaram proposals
duriOJ budaet hearinas lut week.
lo tact, Kerns was only one of two
aaency tol) aaency directon passed
over by supervisors when pay raises
were handed out last month, an
mdJcation the board was displeased
with his · performance. He earns
$60,840 a year.
The grand jury called for Kern's
dismissal after reviewin1 bis agency's
handling of inmai.-medical care at
the Orange Cou.nty J&µ, a program
still troubled by staff discontent and
hi&b penonncl tumover. ·
medical services, indipmt mediail
services and communicable disease
control.
The Health Care A&cncy; created in
1982. is ctwaed with administeri~ Kerns, who first was hired by the
the county's public and mental bt4) county in 1976 as a clinical psychol·
prosrams. includin1 drua and alcoh oaist has been absent from his post
services, epidemiolOI)'; environmen· · for dose to two weeks with a kidney
ta1 health. animal control. emersency ailment.
Meter s m ay be installed
Fountain Valley Oty Council 10-
ni&ht will consider installing patkina
meters at the Recreation Center to
replace the ••bonor" ticket dispensina
system.
The council decided last year to
be&in charaina users for parking at the
Mile Square Part Recreation Center,
located on Brookhunt Street at Heil
A venue. The fees are designed to
offset conttnu10g operating losses at
the center.
But city staff members say the
ucket dispenser system, 10 which
motorisb must insert money to
obtain a window pass, has a.enerated
complaints. and has required ex-.'--
tensive mamtenance.
The mectina begins at 8 p.m. in
council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave.
HIGH-RISE COMPLEX OK'D IN MESA •.•
From Al
and changed the zoning to provide for
commercial development.
The land wu formerly earmarked
for low and medium-density residen-
tial use.
A stipulation was added by the
council that eiaht floors, about
160,000 square feet, be removed from
among the last three hi4h-rise build-
inas planned for the prOJect..
The action provoked a slight moan
from Amel consultant Dave Ball,
who estimated the company would
lose around SS million a year in aross
revenue from office rentals because of
the cutback. -
Ball, however, was not the only one -
complaining.
Homeowners in the Greenbrook
residential tract abuttina the Amel
project testified for several houn that
the development, despite lush land·
scapina and other amenities. would
bring a de I Ute of traffic and a skyful of
1moa to their community.
They also complained that the
hip-nae towers would invade their
pnvacy. Furthermore; the 10 to 15-
year wnc schedule for COtlltruction
would subject residenU to excessive
dust and other nui11pc:es asaoc:iated
with buildinj.
"(The proJect) looks nice on slides.
It looks arcat on paper ... but it's
terrible, terrible when you plaoc it
next to homes (zoned for ain&le-
family residences)," said Jon Paradis,
president of the bomeownera associa-
1ion ... The people here are the mott
important asset. None of us want to
see a council with cash resister e~"
Homeowner Floyd added: 'The
homeownen had not planned on
INDIANS CLAIM COAST ••• From Al
sacred around.
He said the Irvine Co. has aareecf to
build a fence around the rock to keep
out tres~rs. A company spokes-
man, however, said the huae rock is
beina preserved simply becaute nit's
unique."
The Gabrielinos arc locked in a
feud with a rival Indian tribe over
who bas a territorial claim to the Orancc Coast, which is rich is burial
sites and other areas of cultural
importance. ...
Velasques said be waou skeletal
remains and relics to be removed
from their restina apou at develOJ>:
ment sitet and lben placed at a bunal
site. He believes developen should
pool their money to purchase land for
such a burial around.
The dispute between the
Oabrielinos and the J uaneno tribes
hu placed the Irvine Co. and Si&nal
Landmark in an touchy pc>tauon
bccaute both ttpOl"\Cdly have at ICast
informally~ usina a Juaneno
representative 11 a consultant.
The Irvine Co. had planned to
consult a Juaneno tribal member on
an office .Project near UC Irvine
where it i1 known that at least two
Indian burial shes are located. Vclu-
9ues now has asked the company ~
set the Juanenos out of our terri-
tory."
Velasques said he has made the
same request of SiPal Landmark.
•bicll owns much o(the 8ol5' Chica
manhlands.
''That land at Bol11 Chica is sacred
to me, and SianaJ Landmark wants to
hire a penon who can't tell tho
difference between a banana and 1
pineapple,•• said VelatqUes.
0 The Juaneno. hive been tnck-or·
t.reatinaon our territory and it'aaoina
to Slop now." be vowed ''This ia 1
very serious ituati!>~.c Ind it'• aoiq
to act a lot worre onore il tcU any btu.cr.
OLYMPIC KEEPSAKE •••
ProlDAl
homca.ru.
Her pliaht was the aub)ect of local
and rqional ntwt media COVCflle.
and 1 Malibu man tradtd Tambollco
hit Oran&c County kilomc r for the
o ·in Adin.
On Jul 26, TambiOlleo carried the
iorch an nta Ana before chtcrina
farnaly memberhnd svpponm e
other relay pan1 'ptnt e s
allo cd to keep er torth .
In an intnvie'f" lall week. Tam·
bolleo llid lhe had no ldeauate p&ace
to display the corm in lher'borne and
decided to lhaR it with I.be comm uni·
ty by donatina h to 1he dty hbfao'.
At Monday niabt'1 City Counal mecuna. 1Ct1 Mi)'Or JObn Tho
a pted the IOfCb, Urfftl. "lt'I I
rctUy nitt.-tfordledtyto bl e."
In re1um, Tbomaspmerned Ttm·
bOllco with a key to the cit)'.
buyina land m a metropola. We will
be overshadowed by larse towen of
people 1tarin1 down at us, entering
our lives uninvited."
Five ensineerina. traffic, arcbitec.-
tutal and landsc:apina consultanu
made an hourlona presentation on
the benefits of the project. bow the
aronoes, lush vegetation and other
amenities would make the project "a a.ood nei&hbor."
The commercial buildinas would
be buffered from homes by 11 acres of
apart.menu and by South Coast
Drive, which \"1ould be realianed
down throuah tbt development.
Robert Brau11cbwci1er, 111
arcbiteciural consultant. said the
csthetics of the proposed complex
would aive passenby "a sense of
arrival,~ sense of'herc we are; this ti
Costa Meta.'''
Jlm Velalquea
..