HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-09-06 - Orange Coast Pilot' ,
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' I 11 111' . I l A ( ' . I I ' II M 111 11 t, I • 11\ol f >11/U4! .I I C ilH4 I 1 I Al IJ C 1ld'.tlA .'', t I t4 I .
. Attorney pro.tes~S 'whitejUry'
..
I
. ...
Black youth accused in slaying that n addiuonnl pool of Jurors be
brought an from other areas of the
tounty.
.
cultural 'hutg. Even 1 m n· nensm~ could be interpreted 4af·
of H_;inttngt:on clothing· sho owner ··out of all of them. there were only
two black : •· id Gt1mes, who 1
arauing . th.it h 1 client deserve a
••more diverse cross sccuon,"
fcrcntly."
Onm ' id tu oonccm pnn
from the fact that the case involves ii
bl Ck man WhO lS cuscd Of murder·
ing white wom n. The attorney ad
sur.·ey how th t tlfe chanca of a
auilty 'erd1ct bctn retul'J'ed against a
blac~ ~rson are haahcr'•·hen they are
JUd d by all ll·wfl.itc JU~.
By TEVE MARBLE °' .. o.111 "°' ..... An attome)' rcprescntina a you~
black mnn accu~ of murderin& a
Huntingto.n Beach clothina shop
owner: has a ked. that a panel of
Coast · ·
Corona del Mar School
comrng down to make
way for new.homes./ A3_
~ ..
A fire partially destroyea
an apartment In Costa
~esa Wednesday./ A3
Callfomla
Heat wave establishes
new mark of 104 degrees
In Los Angeles./ A4
High winds aid rash of ·.
fires In Escondido./ A4
Nation
011 company explosion In
Kansas kills two./ A4
Two klllers In Florida get
stay of executions./ A4
Typhoon Ike death toll in
Phlllpplnes continues to
mount./A4 ..:
Soviets deny Intrusion of
Swedish air space./ A4
Living
For science fiction fans,
their genre Is more than a
hobby; It's a way of life ·
and reas.on to party ./81
How many beards were
started durtngthe long
LaborDayweekend?/82
The prep football season
opens tonight as Hunt-
ington Beach faces Cor-
ona del Mar and Univer-
sity tang~s with city rival
lrvlne./Cl
The AngeJs are a half-
game behind Kansas City
and Minnesota after rip-
ping Cleveland, 11-4./C1
A wide variety of big
11ame fishing Is available
off the Southland coast
for anglers./C21
poten.tial juroB in the. case be dis.
mined becau nearly all arc white.
After interviewana more than 130
potential jurofl for the fil'5t-dcgrec
murder 1riat of Zachary Pettus. at-
torney Milton Grimes requested
..
c
•"How would you like to be-judged
by an all-black Jury?," he reponded
when asked abOul his motion. ••1t•s
po ible thcrt could be' a ,la~. a
Here comes the circus I
. .
·~oard
vote.s
school
btldget
$62·mllllon tab .
Includes revenue
from site sales
By UREN E. n.EIN
Oflleo.lr ....... C:-
:.\ $62 milhon budget, b())Ucrcii by
$8 milhon in salcsohcboobh.cs, was
approved Wcdncsda)' by the board of
education ofth( ~rt-Mesa Uni-
fied School Diltnct. -
The bu~t. S~ t minion fatter than
last ycuj rcflecscd bOt.b an inaeate
m government fund inc for the diilrict
and revenue from the sale of several
dmtd. school;.$itcs.. -
The money ~ived-from the sale
of si!.QSOtnC$ in as part of the pcnl
fund but by law 1\ must bC divened to
a restricted fund to be used for capital
improvcmcnu to the district and no1~
for salaries, att0i'ding to John Nicoll.
distnct superintendent.
TbearriftloftheRtn•Hn1Broe • .BamumuutBaUeyClrcu -Tony e&pi-at Santa Ana and llaDcbe9teT a•enuea.-'fhe
lD Anaheim le beralded by 9eTeraJ toD.9 of elepbanta,~ GreateM 8h01r on Eartla contln_. in .... dence at the
1tq>plDC off dae train under the watchful eye of trainer Ana.helm Convention Center throagb Tu'*1ay.
The $53.9 million operating
bud&ct. V.'lthout the sa mil.hon. still
represents a S3 million jncrcase over l~r·s budget. 'icotl added. The
di..stnct•s .state lundiag · increased
becau9e tt addtd se"crit m1nu1a of
(Pleuelle!l~BOOL/A2) ·
Fire station in SA
tabbed ·as shelter
for street women
Foundation's plan
faces rou h otn
from city council
By L\.REN E . KLEIN
OfllMo.lr .........
---
An old fire station on Slnta Ana's
North Sycamore Street was identified
Wednesday as the site a task force has
targeted for a YWCA. hotel for
\
homeless womf;n -a safe. inexpcn·
save, clean place for5ome ofOranac
County's estimated 600 homeless
women to stay.
The hotel concept would be an
alternative to city streets for many of
the women who had been slcepin& in
the parnni lot of the Santa Ana
YWCA until last spring, said Orange
County Supervisor Thomas Riley.
The Santa Ana City Council ordered
(Pleue eee SHEL T&R/ A2) Sapel'Ybor TbomuRlley
. Candidate vows ,. ' .
to f~gnt charges
o~ ·car ·storages
Soffer questions
validity of la_w __ _
followtn arrest-
By TONY SAAVEDRA °' .. ~ ...... ....,
Costa Mesa Caty Counc1l candidate
Sad Soffer. a.nntcd Tuesda) nidlt on
the steps of Cuy Hall. said tha
momina he would fiaht misde-
meanor charges that he 1s 1llegall)
pve her the right to place Soffer
under ~t when he did not sian the
citation - a promise to appear in
munictpal court.
Soffer was released after l>O'ti.na
$100 bail Ro~ said he had been f1Ven a)()..
day wamina and an addiuonal pxc-
penod to mo\le the three cars that
were in vio!Jltion of the ordinance.
(Pleue Me CAJlfDIDAT&/ A2)
'I' stonna cars at his house. F S Sell. ng 1 · ke hotcakes Soffer. a local gadfl). questioned Freeway crash
injures motorist an 1 1 0 ~~~n·~~d~yt~~~h~bib~~~~~~~ c~~~
h1cl~ -on an~ unpa\ed )ard area
A Corona dcl Mar m•n was
cnucally injured \\'endcsday aftu-th t • \ isible from pubhc strttt wea er COD ID ues . The outspoken &Ctl'\ilSt was taken --mm conod} TUC'Sda\ round-tt):'3(t noou when htt°-'f'tlrft'Vl!'t"htwto-¥nttr_...---=-.,...... ...
Tne hottest summer In
Hollywood history con;ies
to an end./83
Bualnua
Tax shelters paved the
waytoJamesQulgg's
successful career ./85
INDEX
Erma Bombecl<
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Butlnetl
CallfOfnl• Newt
Cl fled
Com tea
Croasword
·Death Notic..
Horoecope
Ann Lander•
LMng
Mutual Furi<11
National Newa
Opinion
Paparant
Police Log
Public Nolle
Sport a
Stoot< Marketa etmllon _, ____ _
ThJlteri
Wea\htr World News
82
EM
A3
85
A4
CS..7
B•
C7
C4 ce
82
81·2
85
• A4
A8
81
A3
C.C·5
' C1""4
Be
B3
83
A2
A4
By DA\llD BISROP-o.-, ,._. c_.,, . ._,
Power outag_es brought more mis-
ery to Oranae County on W,ednesday
as Southern California sweltered
through a heat wave that has set
records for daily hi&hs. clectncal
demand and perhaps for fan ~les.
Southern California Edi'<ln Co.
officials said scattered power outages
arc occurrina throughout Orange
County as transformers burned out
due to heat and high encray demand
....-·--p.m~ · out'l1d~ ·Cit)' Council
Approiumatcly 1.500' Edison cus-ounty. A record 2.34'2 mep\\att~ ol chambers. whm a council mectmg
tomcrs in OranJe Count) were power were con umed b)· customer-. had JU\t conclud~.
without power thas momina a 46 WedncSda). brcakana a record ~t He v.-a ary-cstc<l after refusma 10
transform rs failed. said Jam ~en-Monda). sign the cuat1on presented to him b\
ncdy. Edison area manager. The record power con umpt1on cat\ code cnforttmcnt .officer Sandi
The high demand forelectract) also caused two outqcs which left a Ro~. who said he conlronted offer
left about I· SOC> Edison Co. cu tome rs rcponcd 4.600 San Dlego Ga & at ( lt) Hall after he had warned her
in Irvine w;thout po'-'et Wcdnesda). Electnc c~tomers without po""cr "not to ~tcp foot on hi propen) ··
Wc<tncsday was a "peak' demand" The El Toro area wa e pttaall) hard fTcr i a ~ular at oouncd mtttan .
day for San Dicao Gas & Electric hat. Rose said Soffer also refu~ to
Company said Mauncc Luque. a The circuit breakdowns atkctcd show 1dcntaficaJ1on . he explained
spoke ma~ for the company which Mission Viejo. Laauna Hill and that muf,liC1pal ~ode violations art'
serves 50.370 customers in Orange (Pleue eee HltAT/A2) treated hkc traflac c1tat1on . ~h1ch
.
wa~n ~lammed mt lhe rear of .a.
tra h truck that was slowina for traffic
on the Corona del Mar F~)\
W1ll\am G. A)OUb, )I}, soutb-
bou nd on the frccwa) near the Red
Hall A\cnue otTramp when the after-
noon mishap occurred. accord1ns to
the Cahforn1a Highway Patrol.
~\oub .. a rushed to the Fountain
Valle Communit) H patal trauma
center ""here he remained tad.av.
Tflc drher of the trash truck.
•tdcnuficd as Ernest Oncp. 28, of
Rhcis1dc. ped injut).
Oil's well that ends well at HuntingtOii City Hall
City takes a gamble with ·patch ob'
on historic pumper -and tt pays off
For 60 )tars Civic Center Oil Well
No. 2 1n Huntanaton Beach ha
pumped about 18 barrt'l5 or 011 a da). day in and day out, with hardly a hllch
or interruption .
So it came a kind of a ~hock whtn 1n June the wctl that su k$ up 011
ncarl) l ,000 feet below th tmplo)tt
parkint lot on Mam trttt nonh of
City Hall bcpn to bilk.
Production from lhc h storac \\ II,
nc of 1hrcc ov.11<'d by the city, fell to
a mere five barttb a da and offi ial
hut it down to'fina out wh t " the
aner.
'lihcre med to be plcnt of hfe
lcf\ 1n the 01l·bcanna nd bclo\\,-SO
/"'"' I . · .
-
Ro BERT
BARKER
NEw s Fottowu P
•
SCHOOL BUDGET APPROVED ••• . ..
l'romAl . '
hool y r, he tn5lrutl1on to tt
upl incd. The rd Wcdne ay !so raufied
the 1984-S cont 1th the dis-
' trict'a t chen' union. ~ina on a 7.8 percent increa tn teacher ' sa.lanes. The union memben e rlier ratified the cohtract with a .. 17·24
vote. •
Ne&otiauons with the dmrict' cluaified emptoy~1· union has not
been ttlcd, '1coll 1d, Nitoll will
make recommendations 10 the board
for dministrauve and man mcnt lanes latct this month, tic 111d.
"Both (the bud.act and the teachers'
contract) arc very positi\ c this year,"
the sueeriotendent said. "For the fim
timo Ln )'Cati the bud&ct ttflcct1
p1.mina thmts back in\o tftc proaram
umcad of takina them out."
The district tliis year. With fundjna
..
from the private Ncwpon-Me
Schools Foundation, wal! rdn tate a
vocal mus c progt1m in elemental')' &C'hools, Nicoll 1d. ''That's aome-
th1n1 ir took out a Iona time aao." he
said . •
Three travclina musk tea hers will OJlllnlze \loicc cla ses and chool ~hom in . the district's tlcmentary
achoo ls. .,
CANDIDATE FIGHTS MESA CHARGES.· ••
Soffer has a total of eiaht cart parked a riaht to keep them on his propeny
on hit yard at 900 Arbor St. an<f called th_e ~rdinance vaaue.
She added many complaints have been "received from residents about
Soffer'• can. • • • • ·
Soffer said this mo,tnina that he had
He also-said there hould be a ··arandfather" provision an the law.
That provision would allow people
storina vehicles when the' law waa~
PA• d to be excluded from the ~ulationa.
'Normally thcre'uan amonizaiion C~ce) period," said Soffer. "Hey, r m arandflth~rtd. I'm just aoina to
Rlead not· 11uilty and le1 them pfead their case .. r. •
WHITE JURORS P ROTEST ED ••• From Al
I
shop, SO!hewhere In Time, bound, pged lftd tt,l1,bed.
A witneu tcatifed durina an earlier
hearlna that she aaw a man she
, believed to be Pettus atandina inside
tht shop the aame da>' Halboun '1 body was found. The wnncaaea also
claimed she heard mumcd criea
before the man hurried her out of the
1hop, located on Warner Avenue near
Huntinaton Harbour.
Police said the motive for the
kilhna ap~ars to be robbery becaute
Hazboun s wallet and her ahop cuh
box were missina. lbou&h neither
item waa found. pohc:c. invcstiP.ton
claim they turned up jewelry 1dcnt· ifled as Hazboun 'sin the house where
Pettus was 1tayin1 at the time.
-Offi«n admitted, however, they
did not find the items until they
searched Pettus' bedroom for a third
time.
Grimes said the defense la built
around the theory that police arrested
the wrona man. The attorney also
contends that the star witness, who is
white, confused Pcuu1 with other
blacks who hunaaroundthe shoppinJ center.
Pettus 11 be1n' held without bail at
Oranae County ail.
HEAT WA VE SHOWS NO LETUP •••
FJomAl ·
pans of Laauna Niauel. Miuion
Community HosaptaT in Miuion
Viejo was forced to use an emcrsenc~ • power 1y1tem for more than 2 hOun.
Wednesday's demand w11 10 all-
tlmc hiah for the Echson s91tcm, Kennedy said, which serves more
than 6SO,OOO customers in Oranae
·-County. "It looks like the heat will con-
tinue,'' said Kennedy, "10 even
thouah it ape_c:an our capacity is
, adequate, we re continuina to ask customers to · keep their air con-
ditioners no lower than 78 dc~cs."
Meanwhile Oranae Coast b'ard·
ware and app\ianc:c stores att selHna
out of fans durina the heat wave.
Joseph Vent!l_ manaaer of Budden ... Emporium in \...Oita Mesa. said onl>
three fans were left 1n his store.
Jeff Schulein. owner of Crown
Hardware in Newport Beach, was
sold out and said, "Even people with
• air conditionina are buyina fans."
Schulein said.
.. The temperature reached 104
~ in Santa Ana and 88 in
Newpon Beach Wednetday. accord·
ina to the National Weather Service
in Los Anaeles. In downtown Los· Anscles'.
Wednesday's hi&h temperature of I OS
surpassed the record 100 set Sept. s.
1882, and matched in I 9SS. The hi&h
minimum of 82 w1S JUSt two dcarees
off the hiahctt low tem~rature for
any date in Los Ana~les history-84,
set Sept. 2~ 1939.
It was 83 de~s in downtown Los
Anaelcs at 2:30 a.m. today, accordina to the National Weather Service.
National Weather Servive special·
ist Bill Hoffer told the A1socl1ted
Pttss there's "a biJ. fat old, hiah·
pressure system simna on" Southern Californta, and weather service
spokeswoman Betty Reo said "there's
notbm& to move it out of our area."
Hiahs Frida> will hn 9 .. inland and
ranae from 9 .. to 102 in the valleys
after lows toniaht from 7 S to 80.
Beaches will ttach the mid· to upper
70s wtth patchy momina low clouds
alon• the south coa t. Ovema&ht lows
will ranae from 66 to 70.
'
Eiaht firsMtaae smoa alens were
called Wednesday in the South Coast
Afr Basin, the Air Quality Manaae· ment District reported.
Wednesday marked the second
1tra11ht day power companies re·
ported record·hiah electrical uaa1e 11
cu1tomers cranked up their air con·
dldoners. causina temporary power
outaaes. At 3 p.m. Wedncsday .. cu1tomers of
Southern California Edison Com-
pany used l S, 189 meaawaua of
electricity. breakina the record set
Tuesday.
"One of the consequences or run-
nina air conditioners niaht and day is
that electncal transformers in the utility ~ystem never have a chance to
cool off, and they beain to overheat
and fail ," an Edison statcmeni said.
"We bave had to replace 173 trans·
formers since 4 p.m. )'CSterday (Tues-
da )."
{Jidel> scattered power outaacs
affected 43.000 customers lhrouah·
out the S0.000 square-mile area serviced by Edison. _.
. SHELTER FOR WOMEN EARMARKED .••
• the YWCA to stop letuna the women
•· •tay in the lot ovemi&ht, sayina that the artl WIS not zonta fou mission.
Riley led the formation of the
Provam for Women's Foundation earlier this year after the pli&ht of the
homeless women was pubfic1zed in
the Daily Pilot.
At a meetin4 Wednesday. members
of the foundatton announced that the
fire station, a h1stoncal structure owned by· Harbor Bank of Lona
Beach. had been identified as a
possible site for the hotel.
The foundation will beain neao-
, tlltions this week for the urchase of
the bulldina. said Joh armer, the
IJ'OUp's treasurer. He WO not SI)
bow much the aroup plans to er for ..
. '
the bu1ldm1. Santa Ana Mayor Robert Luxem-
bomier ~aid the City Council is
d1v1cfed on whether it would approve
the hotel c-0ncept.
"You'll have to put on a sellinfjob
and handle I\ very businesshke, • he
told the foundation members.
If the hotel is presented as a
"halfway house," some of the council
members may not appro ve it. Luxem-bourger said.
The Santa Ana Cit) Cou ncil. which
has spearheaded extensi ve down-
town redevelopment. as sensit1\e
about approvana projects for "drop.
offs," the mayor said
The hotel would be modeled after a
similar proJect operated by the
YWCA in San D1eao, where homeless women could stay for around S 1 $0 a
month. Farmer said.
The hotel would be funded in pan
by revenue from rcl\tal rates and in
pan by funds raised by the foun-
dation. The 1n1tial fund-raisina aoal is
SS00.000. Fanner said. ·
It would be up to the YWCA to
determine the extent of services to be
offered at the hotel and also whether
there would be a hmlt on the time
women could sta)
Women who could not pay to stay
at the hotel would not be tu med away
Riley said. Foundation funds could
be used 10 subs1d1ze women who
could not pay .
• ... . . ..
ds
Coaatal Ot)10n " " '*'-" eo It>. Moll* 74 H = ~: ll'lllO .. ~ 17 43 ,.. u 18
=~ :: : Harttotd 71 AO
Htl-II If HOl'IOllllli .. 71
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~.
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MPlt-lt't\14 -HUii 11 ...
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II ... --------~_.;,.------Ji S Tldea
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E 71 ... ... Ill • N " . 7t ... '"":= .. IO
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ll\lcMlof>d 71 11 tyr...,.. { -ii ...
ltorM'tlllO .:J = '°""' ~~.,. • TloOIOll ,et .. Tl~ .. 14 TlllN . la 71 1·11 Lall• City . ~ u w Oft ft :: Ml .-.11101110 WICMe ..
lan~o :: 7a w .... ..,,. .. 41 ™'•l/lcl-17 Wlll'MllllOll.Ot ft " II 40 hoond" g!I 111 p Ill
'4 SI 10 10 T'MUftlOAY 1: .. ,ltll IOw I U I 111
24 .. SuRJ Rr PORl
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•• 41 .. 11
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lwtl OittetlOft Mlllllwtll
Costa M~sa.poliee nabpair
in moneyordersfqrget:jes ~
A woman suspected of cashina of St0,-000 ball apiece for alleaedly were alleaedly attemptina Wednea-
bundttda or dollan in money orders attemptina to pu1 a foraed check and day to cash a money order imprinted
stolen durlna the past two weeks from for commercial buralary. • -with a serial number that matched
two Circle K convenience 1tore1 wat Police believe Sin&lcterry stole one of the money orden stolen in
arrested alona with a man Wednea. some money orders two weeks afo Anaheim.
day af\er they allcaedly tried to cuh a from a Costa Mesa Circle K Stott, 5 7 SinaJeterry, who had an account
stolen money order. Wilson Ave., where the had recently with the local chcclc cashina com·
Daphney Ann Sinaleterry a 2(). -been fired.-eany. was beina investipted by
year-old transient, and Ricardo And a woman flttina Sinalcterry'• Circle K offic1al1 for the Costa Mesa
Fernando Ayala, 22, of La Puente description reponedly had posed as a buraJary when the Anaheim Incident
were arrested by Coata Mesa police 1upervisor conductina a cash audit occurred, police reponed,
about 2 ~.m. at the Newport Check Tuelday niaht and stole five money Clerks at the check caahi!ll firm
Cashina Co .. 1823 Newport Blvd. orden ,ind SI 00 from the safe at the were notified Wednesday by Circle K
They were in custody this momina1 Circle K ston, 1845 Katella Ave .• in Corpora.lion in Costa Men to be on
Sinaleterry at Oranae County J1il ano Anaheim. . the lookout for the stolen mon~y Ayala at Costa Mesa City Jail, ln liel!_ Police said Sir!Jleterry and Ayala_ o.rdert; ..
Second health ·official ~ays he
will resign from col,lnty post ~ >eeond 1op Ora nae Cou:;-:::1 transm 111..i t~ 1he board lat~ rcs11r1luon nor did he deliver a le11er
Health Care Aaency official has Tuesday by Health Care Aaency to th~ board's personnel committee
announced !\is intention to resian at Director Dr. Charles Kem1, who formally announcina Wiemer's in·
the end of the year. announced his own res1anation late tention, said Miller. · last month. Kerns did indicate Weimer's de· Dr. Sanford Weimer, 1s111tanl
dittctor of the Health Care Aaency since 1982, Informed 1u~rvisors he
intends to leave his position Dec. 31,
accordina to Dan Milltr, an aide to
Supervisor Roaer Stanton ..
Milter said Wiemcr'1 resianation
Wiemer. who was m charJe of cision to r~s1an. wu made indepen·
cqunty mental health proarams was dcntly of~as, Miller added.
rccruiied for the oolt when Rems Both W1e!llcr and Kerne ~~vt been
became the aacncy'S first director two repeatedly 11naled out for cnucism by ycaruao, ·~~rvison wlto have been un~ with now tne aaency was operated
. .Ker;ns aave no reason for Weimer's durina the past year.
$10, 000 reward offered for clerk's killer
By tbt A11oclattd Pre11
An aroup that twice provided
reward money to informants in
murder cases has posted a $10,000
reward for information lcadina to the killer of an Anaheim hquor store
clerk.
Eullcnc Brown. 34. a courier for
Hansbaw's Liquor Stores, was robbed and killed March 2S as he was leavma
the chain's store on La Palma Av-
enue. Pohcc have no suspects.
Businessman Fred Brown, who is not ttfatcd to the v1cum. said the
Hanthaw cb.aandonatcd the money to
his uoup, Anaheim Citizens Ap1n1t
Violent Cnmes.
The aroup also conmbutcd ,. S l 0,000 each for lnformauon 1n the
stranalina of a 6-year-old boy three
years afo and the murder of well-
known • Bee Lady" Eliiabeth Schafer,
96, last Auaust alona with her
dauahter, Alice Schafer, 69.
~~~a1~~~:~d hol:~~ED UP IN HB •
01~ was, ~lauvely u•r maucr after · '~t SlavickS' I
up r~ther than havina to share But Signal removed the smaller that discovery. The wet was reamed ~ d d d •
royalties With a new well. they pipe in C1v1c Center Oil Well No. 2 out and new tubina and rods were oun my an a captu~e in reasoned only dov. n. to 2.550 feet. leavina the installed. And the well was soon aaain .I.~
They aot lucky. smaller pipe 1n the well from that pump1na IS before and the repair bill
It was a common practice to put -,point to the bottom of the well at was only $38,6S7. The city. also is la'' sm~~rinn~wdllin1np 1ns~ethe 2.732~e~L ~~~~~~[·~~~~ao~1~n·~~~t!h~rolw~1n~a~n~otth~e~r~SC~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~8~ --.~~~~~~~~~~~ t----tift-clttftl-entr'thcre was 110 t11nory of th ~
developed in 1924. . removal tnd no one knew~bout 1t. At system, too, but t e-~pmeru
...
~
1 ..
. .
ln this case, t.he-onaanal prod~c~rs an)' rate. the probers folind that has been planned for sometime. But 1n~rted an 8~in~h lf!ner s~eel hn1na tub1n1 and rods used to pump oil to the 011 should last another SO years or
1ns1de the l l-1nch main CISIJ'IJ. the surface broke and bent and debris so bamna an earthquake or some
But durina ·World War U, when from the sn:111ler pipeline had broken other natural calamity, accordina to material• were hard to act. man)' and blocked the hne. Wea ver. -·
companies removed the inner lin1n~s The damaae occurred, accordina to
and ustd them for new wells. That s Picard. from the banaina away of
what the SiJnal Oil and Oas Com. equipment at the Juncture whe~ the pany did when 1t developed wells laratr pipe narrowed into the smaller
atona the ocean front, accordina to one.
And $75.000 or so is a prcnr. aood
investment for somethina that s been
as faithful as Civic Center Oil Well No 2.
Just Call
642~6086
What do you like about the Dally Pilot" What don't you llkt? Call the
number at left and your meua1e will be recorded, 1ran1cribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor. ,
The 1eme U·bour an1w1rln1 ttrvlce may be used to record le tters to Ute
editor on any topic. Coatrlbutou to our Letters column mu1t lncl11d1 lbelr name and tetepbone number for vtrlflcatlon. No circulation cal11, pltlle.
Tell u1 wbat 11 on your mind.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
fi. L. Schwertz Ill
Puolls e•
Rodmary Churchm•n
Ctintroller
ttphtn P. Cerezo
Proouct on I
Manag r 1
Donald l. Wllll•m•
C1rculatlOt'I
Monag 1
•
Clrcul1tlon 714/142-4333
ClHtlfled 1dvert11lng 71C/M2·1871
All other department• 842""4321
MAIN Ol'"C! l WH1 r
IJt A~ t I • I
••
While pandas rarely flourish out ide
the wilds of China, our pandflS make a
brilliant showing in 24 karat gold. What
better way to invest in gold while
you ~njoy the beauty of finely
minted coin jewelry. ·
When you shop our gold
24 )•r•t ,old t0ht1 /rt!mfd "' 14 •ara1 yrllow told.
A. ~•oi .. $27S. 8 , ~oo:, $21S.C. l•ot ,$4•.t
En'6r td t04'1 w.dtt#ll
coin collection, yo'u'l1 sec why we've be-
come the favorite source for mvcsto~.
And when you choose your gold coins
from u , you'll receive expert attention.
A wide selection. And excellent
service. just as we've given
for generations.
c
SLAVICK.
" ,int Jtwtltn Slnct , .. ,
..
! Bu tLCTIN BoARD
~--
Coastline sets
~·lecture ser·· es
•
A four·J?ll"\ lecture ries on 1sclf·hypnos1s will be
prncnted by-C.O sthne Communuy Collea_e bei!nnt!'ll
Monday, Sept. _10, at Mesa Verde ua91ingTentcr. 2990 Mesa Verde Dnve, Co ta Mesa. • T~ught. by_ certified hypnotherap1st Richard Luther, th~ sene will inclu,de tool~ and techniques for 9roaram·
!"''"'·the subconc1ous mind. The 130-reJistratloA fee
includes a cassette tape.ReJistration itJfonnation can be
obtained by cathna 241-6186. · · . . .
Choir practice• annou·nced
The Irvine Community Choir announces that Fall
practice • spon ored b> tlie Irvine Conservatory of Music,
will be held every Tuesday at '7 p.m .. beginnina Sept. I l.
All 1ntere led sin&ers arc welcome and no auditions
arc required. For more information. call 78~12 or
Mary Wood in the ev~ningsat 786'.9143. .. .
P~ttlbone Squa~ro·n to meet
The Grampaw Penibone Squadron o~ the Associa-
tion of Naval Aviation will meet 1hursday, SCpt. 13. in the
Officers Club oft he Manne Corps Air Station (Helicopter)
in Tustin ll 11:30.a.m. with luncheon at noon.
Speaker for the day will be Cmdr. James John Tritten.
USN. who will speak on "Tht Role of the Soviet Navy in
Nuclear War .. "
Reservations aro. required and miy 'be obtained by
wnting toGP:S-ANA, P.O. Box 3182, Tustin 92681 or by calling 551-1155. .._
1
_ '
World Premiere of Opera ·
Oranae County Pacific Symphony and Newpon
Harbor Art Museum will present "The XTC of Saint
Terc~," World Premiere of Opera, on Friday. Sept. 14, at
8 p.m.!at the museum, 850 San Clemente Dnve, Newport
Beach.
St.amng Stuart Miller and ttf olly Minor, and directed
~Y lrence Connors. the ~st ~vant-g.arde opera depicts the
life of Saint Tc;~sa as 10sp1red by Bcm1n1, for singers, actors and musicians. ·
An opera P.review and cocktail reception wdl be at 6
p.m. There will also be a post-performance reception.
Tickets are $25 which-includes the preview and reception.
General admission tickets arc SI 0 and $6 . .For ticket
information and reservations, call 759-1 122
lnterConnectlon to meet
The lnterConnecuon, a national organizat\on enabl-
ing members to promote themselves and one another, will
...
Corona del Mar sell
meet on Wednesday, Sept. 19, from 6 ·to 8 p.m., in t~ Jun " Community Room of Great Western Savings and Loan. Wor en 90rt debz:ta in a partially demoU.hed clauroom at CO~na del Mar Elementary School in Newport Beach.
5392 Walnut, Irvine.
~~~~c~rdlKU~On~llbe''DoYoo~Yoo~K ~----------~---~~--~----------
~~~~~~~rs See You?" For more information. call oc Chamber of Commerce
\ "~ee health forum $Jated
A free pubhc heahh forum entitled "Medical
Advances tn the 80's" will be held Wednesday, Sept. I 9.
from 7:30 to9 p.m., atSOuth Coasl Medical Center, 31872
Coast H1ghwa) .. South Laguna.
opposing Jarvis initiative
A panel offive ph~s1c1ans w1ll lec1ure on advances in
their panicular spcc1alt1es. To regmer or for more
informa11on. call 499-1311 .
The Orange County Chamber of Com-
merce has gone on record tn opposition to
the tax-slashing Jarvis IV initiative. \\-h1ch
will appear on the Nov. 6 ballot as
Proposition 36.
The chairman of the chamber's Board of
Co r.e in tl g f~ eel Dlrectors. Peter Muth. said the organaza-U ac n 0 1.er t1on belie\e~ the measure will have seHral
Orange County lnstitu1e for Transactional Analysis harmful consequences if passed:
will present a course on .. Brcakina Into the Acllng •Taxpa)ers would end up subs1d1zing
Profession" on Wednesdays from 8 to 10 p.m .. Sept. 19 localgovcmmen1costsnowpa1dforb) fees
through Oct. 10, at 14742 Newpon Ave .. Suite 101. assessed only to those who benefit.
Tustin. , · •Property tax mequ1t1es "'ould be
. widened, resulting in higher taxes on
properties purchased since 1978.
•The .al~ady·high cost of housing 1n
California would increase and economic
growth would stow.
•Water distncts would be prevented
from raising revenues to co"er the contrac-
lual co ts of current water purcha~ from
the state and would be SC\:erelr~1:ted in
providing "'ater to new and cxiSiina
customers.
Muth said that it . would be a ··state
tragedy" if the mca urc 1s approved.
The classes, taught by Michael Robert Conrad, will > rowr~~ninpn~ent,c~drc~ingsfurana~ition. ----------------~-·--~----~--~ :i~~k~~!iec~~~ei~~~16~~~t:.10g experience worlung Children& Hospital needs volunteers
. Cost. of the ~ours. is $40 per person. For more Weekday volunteers are needed at hospital offi(i-.tS.
informatton or ft&lSlrallon. c.alL144.80hl -Ch~!drens ~osp1tal of Ora':lge C&unty to-The-hospital ~klfll ~nyone over the
Thursday, Sept. 6
• 9 a.m., Orao1c County Transit D11trlct Board of
Directors, Board Heanng Room, OCTD Administration
Bu1ldin&, 11222 Acacia Parkway, Garden Grove.
• 6:30 p.m .. Lapna Bcacll Board of Adjutmcnt.
Council Chambers. 505 Forest Ave.
· assist hospital personnel with the care of age of 1 S who WlShes to volunteer this fall
sick and injured children. according to between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m
OBITUARIES
Services planned for Harriet Heme~over
Mayflower Desccndenls.
She is survived by her son. Albert D. Last spark eztlngulshed
• 6:30 p.m .• Lapna Bcacll EdcreJ ~ EavtroDmcnt
Committee, Community Center, 374 LqionSL
• 7:30 p.m., Lapu Bcacb Ualflcd Scllool DlJtrlct
Board, D1s1nct Office. 550 Blumonl St. ·
• 7:30 p.m .. Foutain Valley Scllool Dlltrlct Board of
Tna1tcca, Education Center, · 172 I 0 Oak St., Fountain
Valley.
Pnvale ser\1ces will be held for Hameu
Idell Hemenover. who died Friday in
Mission Viejo after a long illness. She was
85. Hemenover of Irvine, and t"-O srand-
daughters. Paula Jones of Newport Beach
and Pamela Hemenover of Santa Barbara. Mrs. Hemcnover. a native Califomian.
worked for 30 ~cars as credit manager for
the Oltver farm machinery corporation lntennent will be made in hernlli\CC1ty
She served as state-chaplam for the of Santa R Local arrangemenls "-ert
Daughters of the American Revolution conducted by Pierce Brothers Bell Broad·
and was a member of the Soc1el) of way Monuary of Costa Mesa.
Ce»ta Me.a firemen apraj. down bed.room wall of Pbyllh Stam •a
apartment -at 624 Baml ton A.e. that was putially destrfJJed
Wed.De.day when fire broke out an4 apread to an apartmeat abO.e.
The blue caused $13.500 ln damace to the two UDlta. Starn'• eon and
a eecond boy who were ln the bedroom when the fire was •potted were
not injured. Jl'l.re authorldes a.re ln•es~attna the came of the blue.
PoucE Loe •••• A uuht> truck and a $2.!100
---Knifi .. e.wwiel. din -thud'_ ets-f~~:~~~:~m1!:~~~=
$ 2 5 0 f ~_..,,,__8'.__ __
8
___ -;,i¥.:rs:1' ~~ers:ilutll~i~~~l.64-l.~s rom ·woman ID were apparently stolen from the company office · between t> p.m.
Tuesda' and 6 a.m. Wcdne~a' The
A ~oman waiting in a car outside :--Woman was waiting in a car outside
Hununaton Beach fast-f<><?d ~s-while a male companion walked into
taurant was ~obbed at ~~1fepoint the restaurant. Wh ile he was inside, a ~arly today of a purse contaminf $250 man with a buck knife opened the car
in cash and valu•bles, according to d th t ed th a d police. oor, rca en e \\Oman n
Police said the incident happened demanded her purse. police said. The
shonly before I am. at the Carl's Jr. robber saw the purse in the back seat.
restaurant on Bolsa Chica Street. arabbed it and ran. officer, said.
Accord1na 10 the police rcpon, the Several men pur'5ued the robbet on
' • I
Jmne
A nude man drove U\) to Irvine
H1&h Sctiool Wednesday, Jumped out
of fus auto and cxpo~d himself to a
youna coed. Police said the naked
man auemptcd to arab the tudent by
the wnst but hc pulled awa). He then
drove off, still in the buff. • • • A sterling ilver nif\I wonh about S5.000 wa tolen from a identt on
Daybreak . Theburgl rs broke a hv1n
room \\indow to pin entry. • • • A man wi arre tcd on
Po ina heroin. He •
the intcrs«t1on ot Old
nCU)On R d. ••• tcl't'o Ytonh about $400
rcmo'ed from tocted carp rkc
18401 Von rmen. • • • • N1~ n camera "a taken from
bu in mte on th 3 00 block ot
ParkY1cw l
•
• • • • • Jewelry wonh about $3.400 "'as
stolen from a re idcncc on H1l1Jra
The houiC was equipped with .a
Realtor's lock bol and J>9hCC aid
there were no v1s1ble s11ns of forced
cntf')'. • • • red GT B~X bic)clc "orth
about $400 wa stolen from Winter·
branch.
le d (1') t I .. • v.onh about
$400 wu taken from a re 1rlenet on
wcct Ram. • • • A ara> 12.:spttd ~ugot bicycle
•'Onh about S400 was stolen from the
14000 bl of l~r Drh't. • • • woman tOJd PQli« Tu ay that
he left her pu a 1" l room at
2722 fiche! n ve. la t \\ttk and
when she ~lumcd. 140 from the
purse" m1 mg. • • • E1 meal .:1mut b krrs wonh
6.000 ~ rcpon t tol n over the
foot. but the man escaped af\er
scaling a nearby block wall. The
woman was not hurt in the incident.
polict ~id.
The robber was descnbcd as a
Caucac1an man in his earl> 20s.. about
6 feet tall. welJhing about 140
pounds. with houlder-lcngth blond
hair.
weekend from a construction site on
E"ecutivc Park.
q oetaMe.a
Thomas Ro o Jr •• 66. of San
Cl mcnte wa med WeJ.ncsdl\ for
usp1cion of auemptina to take a S 12.99 pair of horts out of the
Bullock's dcpanment store at uth
Coa t Plau. Poh~ rrported Ro .... 'O
allcgedl) :ore the hort~ out of a
dre an room and then went \O 1 re tr m. where ht put them into 1
,1
"'chicle· was then used to to" the
compreswr. "-h1ch " mounted on
.whctls. ·
Huntln1ton Beach
.\ video rttotder wonh S42 v.a<.
l't'poned tolcn from a F1nc \m
Building room at Golden \\'c!lt <. ol-
lcge. The thef\ occurred wme11mc
between Saturda) and Wednesda~.
• • •• A tt 1dent of the 15500 block ot
Alden Lane reported that two book·
and bool.;~ wel't' tolen from a
white 1984 To)Oll 4-\\'heel-Dmc
puked at tlanta \Cnuc and Lake
Strttt. The fo w2 e timated at
$120. • • • mnl ju,cn tc w m led
Wcdnc~) ftemoon at the 1 a t
tort. 2 dams \C., on u p1~1on
of hophf\1111 Reco,enx'l mcrchan·
d1 v.-onh 141 an ludcd thrtt ''dco
movie
included a bicycle ~onh S90 and a
surfboard "onh $300 • • • ' 1976 gold Ford 4-Wh~l-Dn'l' -whic~wa ~ rt~ stcmn W~n~·
da\ from the 000 block lll lh•lland
Dfi,c. I he o was ~umat<'d •"
$4.500.
'l"cponed herS~.500 gold watch stolen
last wetk. The watch ba~ ~n m1ss1n
for more than • month. but she
thouaht africnd d.Jak.e.n1Lshe told
po1tcr.
---~-. . ~ \ ltght that broke out rnong 1.
J01en teen..agcrs last Fnda\ fbulted
10 the tht'f\ of S690 worin of cloth in
:ind 1ewclr) from _plash, 1 lad1e ·
lothinp. tort' on 11 E. Ba) \C. Tht ~1dee broke a dJ pta: window al
\p ash and e' ldentl) ~c of the
nl"" t~ns in'ohed hclpcd them·
...._·l\c' to merchandise be(orc poh c
am' ed ''" tht' '\C'C'nc ; ••• \ ''·'ear-old tsman "
1ng in:-..(." pon had a camera
lcnSC' ~tolen from undem th bis
tov.d Tue-.da} on the beach ll 24
Street The rhan lctl h1 'al 1
undrr h1~ \O"'t'I while flt went to art a
dnnk When he returned about 10
m1nut~ latcr. he said, the mcra wa.
gone lo,.., was ~limatcd al S 00.
,.
.-.
.. _nge
-blazes
under ·
control
Rains atd
Unemployment benefit
applications. decreased
By Tbe Anocla&ff Pr 11
WASHINGTON -f1l'5M1me applkations for unemployment com.
pcnsauon insurance benefit• fell by2,000 an the ~eek ende~ Aua. 2S1 t~c Llbor
Department rcponed today. lhe Employment and Ttainina A.dm1n1strat1on
111d a total of 373.000 joble Amcnc1n1 souaht be.ncfits an that w~k,
compared to ~7S,000 uch applications 1n the p~1na week. The shJ!lt ·
decline in the seasonaUy adjusted total ofoew apphcataons followe.d a week 1n
whu:h ttie number jumped by 24,000-from 35 J .000 to 37S,000 in the week
ended Aug. 18. · ~ •
Montana Town on hold a• board realgna
fireflgh ters RlOOWA Y. Co.lo. -The telephone was answered ~nd m~il ~as opened
. • m this linle western Colorado town. the lirst day of R1daway s 1nv~luntary 8~88. Mont. (AP) -Early· mom· · experiment with no town government aner most of the town board qull. Town
in' rains toda) helped SSO firdiahten affairs are on hold pending a pecial election Sept. 11 to repl~cc the board. most
bnna under control the la t of the fire1 of whom quit after recall ~titions were circulated. Who W111 count the ballots
that burned 2SO.OOO crts in Mon-remafo a bi& question. Ridgway, a towri ofobout 400 people on t~e nonh edae
tan since la t week. of the San Juan mountains an south~estem Colorado 2S mates. south of
Hundreds of ere of ara land, TMontro~:)ost 1t ,tofwn aovernment 11p an uproar following the Board of ~e, burned out of control rustee u1smmal o the town marsha . -:
in soutb~~n~:tr·~n~~~~~ri~:ls.. B.ranlff Alrllnee •laaliea fares
said. · · · . .. . DALLAS-BrantfTinc .. sa~ini "oursuccessdependson ~h!s buic cha~&c
The 3,11100-acre. Napa Peak fire. on in our philosophy," has announced 1t will become a cut-rat~ 11rhne by $IUh!n&
the Blackfeet lnd~an Re~rvauo~JUSt famand layinaoff2S percent ofitsemployee . The reorpniz~ Bra~uff, wh1~h Beach. Loe Anlelea Ht a n ew h!lh cast of Montana s Glacier National rctiumed service in March after bankruptcy procccdinas with b1&Jl-quah_ty
temperature marll on Wedneeday of 104 Park w~s declared controlled at 7 service and fares that matched existing levels, ack~owledaed Wednesday its
de&reea, top ilng the 103-dei ree mark set a.m., ~1d Forest Service spoke man strategy hadn't worked. Braniff will offer one unrestncted fare for every ~at ~n
in l 9J16. t.,.ec Skabelund. weekday Oi&hts and a lower pnce on wcckmfthts and weekends. :t'he 11rhne said iiimiiiii•;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;;:::;;;;::;;:;;;;;;;:;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;:;p!i~~~~~;;;;ii;;;;;;;;~~;,p;;::;::i Only a skeleton crew would remain its new peak.:penod one-way fare from Da as to Ntw York will be SI 29, less at the fire scene as authorifies bepn · than hal(the current standard full-coach fare ofS324 each way.
Save'90
Take the beat to the street! Records cassettes
off-the-air, or "live" with built-in mikes. Auto-
search helps find tape selections fast. Two-way
speakers. 10-watt amplifier. AC/battery opera-
tion. #14-778 Baner..s Htra
J~~~;;~ oxc;t .. ~
29°10
4995
Reg. 69.95
Check Your Phon'
6995
Just plug into AC outlets, and talk! Automatic
squelch cuts noise All three stations have Call-
tone and Talk-bar controls. volyme control and
"Lock" for hands-free monitorin9 #43-214
, -, • -, .-• -. -·1
• I C • _-, .-• -. ,
-·· ..... .....__. ·'
27°10
Off
H1/10 dimmer, 1-hour/59-min. sleep comrol.
Battery backup runs clock/alarm if AC fads.
f12·1540 Ba<:llUP l>alltry eitlll •
Compact 5" Color TV/Mpnltor
PortaV1slon'" by Radio Shack
Save•so·
29995 ~~
Reg. 349.95
Versattle set works
as a TV or a moni·
tor for CO!')P.Uter or •
VCR. Electronic
tuner, uto-color.
OC ad ter Jf!fk. earphone.11&:108
Htfl
1,JION CltllJnt It I ~ 11\M al Cu;oorp
,
to remove equipment that was used Tw ~.1·11 ...... f d to fiaht the blaze, Skabelund said. He 0 &&-. era g~ •tay 0 ezecu OD
estimated the cost of the battle at $2.S ATLANTA_ Two killers who were scheduled to die in Aorida's electric
miSllkia0t_1und 511.d wi'nds gust·,. up to c~ir today, including one who killed his 9-ycar-old dau&btcr ~nd ,7-year-old ~ ~ son, have received separate stays of execution. The I Ith 0.S. Circuit Court of
30 mph on Wednesday, but still Appeals said it would hear oral arguments today in the case of Ernest Dobbert airplane~ manaaed to drop seven Jr., who was '1'8nted a 27-bour stay of execution by the coun. Meanwhi~e1 a
loads ·or chemical · retardant on the fede~I judae an ~iami granted a 24.hour stay Wednesday to c.onvtcted kilter
blaze. and helieopten were used to · Nolhe Lee Marun, ~o faces execution for the 1977 stabb1n1 death of a
d!OP buckets of water. convenience-store clerk. Manin's stay expires at 4 a.m. PDT Friday, while
fire· boss Bob Webber said Dobben cannot be executed before 10 a.m. Friday, coun officiaJs said.
Wednesday was the most thrcatenina
day since Aua. 26, when the fire blew
out of control after having been .
contained .for two days. Hi&h winds
on Aui. 26 expanded the lire from
slightly more than 1.000 acres to its
present size.
The KJlnsas fire, which bc&an in the
afternoon and continued late
Wednesday, was fanned by southerly
winds that reached 17 mph. At one
point the fire was six miles long and
two miles wide nonh of U.S. 160
between the Comanche-Barber coun-
ty line and Sun City.
fh1ny trucks carrying firefighters
from 13 city and county dcpanmcnts
fought the blaze. No serious injuries
were reponcd and no buildings were
destroy~. said a shcntrs dispatcher.
Thick smoke led the Kansas H1ah·
way Patrol to close a stretch of U.S.
l60about4.45 p.m. Troopers allowed
one car at a tame to pass through the -
smoke-choked area about three hours
later.
Final auapect na~bed ln heist
MANORVILLE, N.Y. -Police saw throu&h the dyed hair 111d phony
name of a man stopped for dnvmg erratically to recognize the lut fugitive in
the nation's largest cash heist, an S 11.2 m1lhon job of which more than $10
million 1s still missi"-'" Polrce retnaJg baffled over what the thieves did wilh
most of the loot taken in the inside Jd!> at the Sentry Armored Councr Corp. an
the Br~n,x 20 months a10, and hope that the arrest Tuesday of Nicholas "'Ntck
the Greek" 9reaory will help solve the mystery.
High winds aid rub of fires
ESCONDIDO -A brush fire, aided by winds. swept throu&h Kit Canon
Park and into an adjacent neighborhood, damaging a home and two cars and
causing a j>Ower outage before it was brou&ht under control, J*thorities said.
The fire, first rcponed at l :OS p.m. Wednesday in a wooded nonheast section
of the park, burned Over about 100 acrd before u could be cootrolled three
hours later. Firefighters sweltered under I 08~egrce temperatures as the>
struggled against the blaze, one ofs1x brush fires m nonhem San Diego Count).
There were no repons of tnJunes.
New plea entered for juvenile jury
SAN FRANCISCO-A new pica forjuvcnileri&ht toajurytriaJ has come
from a state appeals coun seeking ~versal of one of its own rulings. It hapJ)eJled
last week when a panel considered the case of a youth who was sentenced by a
Los Angeles County Juvenile coun Judge to a m1X1mum of IS ycan and ci&ht
1 6 0 0 0 months for attempted murder. The JUdgc heard the case without a jury, as
required in Cahfomra since 1924. when a decision dctennined that Juvenile
., trials arc a protective, non-cnmmal system lO which JUI')' trial riahts do not ~apply. In the 2nd District Coun of Appeals, Justtces Earl Johnson and Leon
Cam Per S Thompson voted to uphold the sentence. But a 122-pa_gc opinion by Johnson
also urged the state Supreme Coun to reconsider the f924 decision . • · 11 ·d Re~ord heat wave hlta Loa Angeles rec a e LOS ANGELES -Scattered blackouts, fires and smog aJens broufbt
more-misery to Southern California as the ~on sweltered through-a-heat
wave that has set new records for daily hiatts and electrical demand. In
downtown-Los Angeles, Wednesday's hiah temperature of IOS surpassed the
record l 00 set Sept. S, 1882. and matched in l 9SS. The high minimum of 82
was just two degrees offthe highest low temperature for any date in Los Angeles
history-84, set Sept. 22, 1939. It was 83 degrees in downtown Los Angeles at
2:30 a.m. today, accordina to the National Weather Serv1ce.
DETROIT (AP)-Volkswagen of
America Inc. announced today it is
recalling about 16,000 1981· and
1982-model vans and campers to
correct a possible door lock problem
that could cause the vehicles' doors to
open 10 a crash.
The company said spnngs that
hold the latches of the front-door
locks in place could break, makmg 1t
possible for the locks to open.
That, an tum. could expose occu-
pants to danger in a crash "or when
extreme fore.cs arc extended against
the in tenor of the doqr," the company
, said in a statement.
No cases of lock failure have been
rcponcd in the United States. said
company spokesman Joseph Bennett.
"We were informed by VW m
Germany," Bennett said. "We have
had no problems in the United States
and we don't want to have any."
He said the company has notified
federal traffic safety officials of the recall. The defect will be repaired free
of charge, he said.
.
Cadet death
probed at
TexasA&M
COLLEGE TAT ION. Teus (AP)
-Seventeen 1uniors and seniors
have been transferred out ofa unit of
Texas A&M's mihtary cadet corps
following the death of a cadet who
was forced to exercise until he
collapsed from'hcat stroke.
All the upperclassmen in Comp01ny
F-1 were moved to other units in the
un1ve~1ty'1 cadet system because f . t
lacked ·•sufficiently trona and cffcc·
tivc leadership," corp~ commandant
Col. Donald Bunon id Wt'dncsday.
He ~id tM leadership vacancies
"-Crt filled with two ~niors and four
juni6r from Other outfits.
Four d1fTcrent invest1pt1on arc
under way. Bob Wiatt, director of
security and traffic for th unhl·rs1ty.
said he upectl to present t\ 1dcntc to
a srand JUI) Sept. 2 7.
Bruce (1oodnch, 20, a M>phomorc,
died u 30 aflcr collap in dunna
an earl) morn1n run. Un1veritty
officials 1d thm:Jun1ors 1n h1HOf'P\
unit woke him Ill 2:30 a m. and took
ham out for "mouvat1onal cxett1 :·
h1ch .:included nearl> an hour of
runn1n pu h·Ull$ nd 5at·ups,
fhc corp 1s a 2,100.mcmber
orpnua11on, wmc of hose mem·
bers re under co111rut 10 the l1
rntcd fortr
Death row inmates to getjoba
SAN QUENTIN -In a move so unusual no one can remember 1t
happenma before, San Quentm Pnson Warden Daniel Vasquez has
announced that some of the 164 men on death row will be allowed to leave their
cells to work at pnsonJobs. No one has been executed since 1967. Vasquez told
a luncheon meeting of a Mann County group lhJs week that he wanted to
discuss "this significant change ... wuh our neighbors." notins that historically
men sentenced to die in the &as chamber remain in their cells. The warden at
one of California's tou&hest pnsons added, however, that he now believes some
of the condemned men can safely be placed on work amgnmenu in the
mainline prison popul tion. .
CitJ-pays reparations to Japanese
LOS ANGELES-Checks for SS,000 and scrolls of commendauon were
presented to survivor$ and descendants of 36 Japanese-Americans fired or
forced to rcsjgn fro m their city jobs durina World War II. Twenty-two of those
formerworken-from as far off as Hawaii and the East Coast-received the
money Wednesday from Mayor Tom Bradley, who also offered an apology.
The S 180,000 was appropnatcd by the City Council. A year-long search tu med
up the 30 hvina employees and six descendants. ·
WoRiD
31 die in South Africa rlota
JOHANNESBURG.South Africa-Authomiestoday rcponed scattered
skirmishes between police and crowds of black demonstrators who stoned and
burned vehicles in several townships. Police said a total of 3 I blacks have died
in three days of riotins. "At present the ituation is tense but 9ujet,'' Lt. Henry
&ck said today from police headquarters in Pretoria. He sa1d blacks al~ set
afire a cafe and hurled a gasoline bomb at the house of a local black council
member ovtmi&ht. Police in armored pcnonncl carriers patrolled the boulder·
littered street leading into Sharpcville town hip.
Soviets deny air apace violation
STOCKHOLM, Sweden -The Soviet Union has denied Swedish
allcptions that a ovict jetfi&hter intercepted a Swedish l>' senaer plane tut
month and violated Swcd1 h 11r space. "Competent Soviet authorities have
carried out a detailed investiaation and cannot confirm that a Soviet airplane
violated ~wedish air SP,ace ~ug; 9," the Soviet Umon replied throuah falfCOY
Rymko. its charae d'afTa1rcs an tockholm . Sweden's Forcian Min11try
formally prote.~tcd the "very senQU "violation that it claimed happened Au&. 17.
TyPhoon Ike death toll mounta . .
MANILA. Ph1ltpflincs -I )phoon Ike ~hirlcd over China's Hainan
Island ~~d _lammtd into t.hc southern t"o t of China toda>". leavina behind in
the Ph1llpptne1 a mount1na d lh toll and more than 200,000 homcle .
Government offi 11lsand new reponu11d 1,011 bodies of people kdlcd in the typh~n had been rccove~ 1n 12 central and southern province but Joe.al
official an the hard t hit ll'tlS da1mcd a higher d th toll. A tanila new paper rcponcd t.842 death .,.
j
Soviet coemonauta to break record
MO OW -Three \11et co monaulJ who bla tcd into orbit in
Fcbru.ary 1 break the 211..day P34-'C enduranrt record some tame ton1Jht or
rly fna.y, but the new record wall not be ?on•idcrcct abM>lutc for several da~. a Soviet pace offic1 I id today. Deputy f11Jht 01rcctor Vaktor Blaaov
told the official news a ncy Tas th:at the m1 ion of Leonid Kb1m Vladimir
Solovyr.vandOlcgAtko\ would .. urpa 11 jgn1ficantmark .. o,cmiitlt The
11 l -da) cnduranrc rccora w s c t bh hed m I 982 by SoHct co monaut
l\~tol~ 8ert"tovo anJ Val<"nttn l cbcdcv.
• l
.. r
.
4 DAY -.BON·US SALE
.-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER ·6 THROUGH SUNDAY
SEPTEMaER 9 DISCOVER .AODITIONAL SAVINGS OFF THE
MAR.KEO PRICES ·oF HUNDREDS ·oF HOME FURNISHINGS
INCLUDING MANY ALREADY ON SALE.
4DAY
.Add1ttonal Savmgs and Examples: Orig. . BONUS Additional Savings and E•amples: Org sale PRICE
Save an additional 60.00 on Save an additional 75.00 on every "
•very matching sofa/lov,eJeat, sofa/ dining room set of five or more pieces.
ctiair and 2·piece sectional. Traditional French style 5-piece set. 1675.00 .. 999.00 75.00 924.00
Blue acrylic velvet 2-piece sectional. 1200.00 899.00 50.00 849.00 Save an additional 75.00 on every
Traditional wood-trimmed sofa loveseat . 1650.00 1148.00 -50.00 1098.00 . ....-.:. bedroom set of five or more pieces.
Save an additional 60.00 on every Hooket 5-piece oak bedroom set. 2100.00 1291.00 75.00 1224.00
matching convertible aofa/loveseat, sofa/ Save an additional 10.00 on every
chair, sofa/recliner and 2-piece sectional. ceramic table lamp in our collection.
Transitional queen convertible sofa loveseat . 1750.00 1078.00 ~.00 1028.00 31" French carafe in pastel shades. 79.99 89.99 10.00 59.99 • ---Save an additional 10.00 on ow ' 2-piece rattan arm sleeper sectional 1700.00 1199.00 50.00 1149.00 --exclusive collection of aotid br-. wall -..
Trad1t1onal quilted convertible sofa loveseat. 1590.00 1078.00 50.00 1028.00 l~ps and adjultable floor lamps. _...._ -
Adjusta.ble pharmacy floor lamps. 69 .99 59.99 10.00 49.99 Save an additional 25.00 on every ' Save an additional 24.0o to 78.00 pair of matching occasional c .. airs.
Pair of matching wing chairs . 800 .00 398.00 25.00 373.00 on Sealy and Simmons Premium and premium quality sleep sets.
Save an additional 50.00 on Sealy Perfect Comfort I:
, Twin, each piece. 239.95 119.00 12.00 107.00 any 3-piece set of occasional tables. Full , each piece . 319.95 159.00 16.00 143.00 Trans1t1onal style brags and glass 'Queen set 849.95 429.00 43.00 386.00.
cocktail, lamp and console table set. 1425.00 897.00 50.00 847.00 King set 1049.95 529.00 53 .00 476.00 --. _ _,
Save an additional 25:00 , Sealy Posturepedic Coronatron I:
on every recliner, including Twin, each piece. 289.95 179.00 18 00 161.00
Catnapper and Barca lounger. Full, each piece. 359.95 229.00 2300 206.00
Olefin velvet pub style'recliner. 525 .00 299.00 25.00 274.00 Queen set. 879.00 629.00 63.00 568.00 -.-King set. , 179.00 .m .oo 78.00 701 .00 Contemporary Leather Plus rocker ~ecliner. 1100 00 599.00 25.00 574.00 . I.-
Save· an additional 20.00 on Simmons Maxiped1c I
125.pcf Twin, each piece . 259.95 139.00 14 00 every curio cabinet in our collection. Full . each piece. 339.95 189~00 19~00 17CY.OO • Traditional style mirrored-ba~k .curio . 400 .00 299.00 20.00 219:00 Queen set. 799.95 439.00 44.00 I 395,00
Curved end breakfront curio. 850 .00 599.00 20.00 579.00 King set. 1099.95 629.00 63 .00 .00
Save an additional 150.00 on Save an additional 10% on wall-to-wall
carpeting with pad and normal installation. every 5-piece family room gFoup. L Sonata 11 QacroO.: i:io.J.vester sq ¥d ioslalled 3800 l299 L80 16.19-Cerromar sofa, loveseat, recliner, "' Monterey nylon, sq . yd. installe~ 3800 20.99 2 10 109 cocktail table and end .table by Berkline. 3500 .00 2395.00 150.00 2245.00
Monte Carlo .!:'Ylon , sq . yd. instaRed. 45.00 24.99 -2 50 22.49
Save an additional 50.00 on every Excalibur nylon. sq . yd. installed . 40.00 21 .99 2 i O 19.79 wall system of three or more units. I
Silhouette 3-piece oak wall system. 1450.00 999.00 50.00 949.00 Beverly Hills nylon, sq yd . installed. 46 .00 26.99 2.70 24.29
4-DAY ONLY ADDITIONAL SAVINGS THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY
• ..
SAVE 80.00
RCA 19" COLOR .TV
WITH REMOTE
379.00
Oog 459 00
19 · diagonal Portable with
17 fu~uon d1g1taU1tr~\Jl!:1Ji.J.i1. __
remo111 on <;Crecn channel d1<;plav and 127
channel capabtlotv Tele111s1ons 72
SAVE 80.00
WESTINGHOUSE 17 CU FT.
REFRIGERATOR
579.00 ~L
011g 659 00
Our Jro• free reJog rator
qual1 f1e for a 100 00 fili ebate 1f
you l111e 10 anv So Ca Edison service
area Found 1n M11or Appliances. 90
SAVE 40%
7-PIECE ALL AMERICAN
CUTLERY SET
. ,. .
I ,
.. .
SAVE 90 00
SONY 26" CONSOLE TV
WITH REMOTE
759~QQ_ __
0119 849 00
Tho d •o1ces1 color console
OUL 26 11!.!IVQJlilJJ:Sl!WlJLLV-Wllh
(11r~c1 ae<on remote and matchless
T 11n :ron color T ele111srons 72
SAVE 150.00
GENERAL ELECTRIC 20 CU .
FT REFRIGERATOR
599.00~~~
0 g 749 00
Our frost fro G E comea w 1tP\ a so 00 G ( reball plus I 50 00 see r bate
1f you hve 1n 1nv So Ca Ed on ... rea'
Found 1n Ma10t Appµnn 80
SAVE 100.00 TO 150.00
SANGO 45·PIECE DINNERWARE
SETS FOR EIGHT
4 .99
• SAVE 50 00
YORX COMPACT STEREO
SYSTEM
SAVE 89 00
FR1GIDAIRE WASHER
AND DRYER TEAM
-99.00 ·-----' 649.00
' Orig 149 00
An AM FM rec<J1ve1 au: SIOP
llfil S!!IDLllUUinla!.... lwfi!i!hlc
n one comoact un t W ith .: speakers
Sounds 1 at' In Stereos 88
SAVE 50 %
WEAR-EYER 5-PIECE 0 -"~~ j STICK SKILLET SP
19.99
Ge: coo ing• s 1 incl" s 8 •o
nd 12 saut pan:i. with S1lver1>1ooe
mt rl0r5 plus 8 • enc:t 10 9''" covers
Found on B c Cookwartl 143
SAVE 2~%
LOt-..GCHAMPS FULL LEAD
CRYSTAL STEMWARE
•
·~
Our 18 I ta~ ,
SAVE 32·o
OUR JS.PIECE CAPR
BEVERAGE SET
7.99
Reg 12 00
o'ur Italian opt• design !>el
nc ut:if>..s s ' beverog glasses 1uice
gtaSS(f5 no dout>t old tash1oncds
In Gla5$ Hou wnrcs 208
SAVE 70 ()f
SIX-FOOT FABRIC FICUS
TREE
-. . .
-
I
" I
' .
PARTICK BUCBAlfA
column
;AfoJD tbapks. sainarltan
!.~!;,~avlZfg h~!cd~~h:!~o~~~yo•
P,R\SON MESS HALL JACK
_Peter, you,na ~an a l age 20. swam together twck to shore. telhna
with swimmina flippers n your fttt her you had ,w1mmina flippen to
at Newport Be ch on T sday ane-r-help with the rescue We are ">O nQS>n, July 24, where yo helped my fi 1 r dau~tcr &ct back saftl to shore _ aratc u you came alona at the nghl
thank you! _ than ·")Ou! Our • lime with your help. . i
apprtc1at1on to }Ou a 1:1 your help is . God bless )OU all the da~s ol )OUr
in proportion to the :\astne s of the hfe, Peter. with safet) an whatc,cr
Pacific ~can. you do.and when }OU 5"UTl. We ~1)h
: My mu&}1ter, Mar) June Artthony, • Y<?U all the good· lh1ngs o_f. lite and
vis1tm1 from flhno1s wa taken out happiness forever Sw1mm1na guard-
too far by np Hdes and was· having ian angel Peter ~e lo'c 'ou and than~
d1fficulty and in dancer tryin110 get )Ou!
back to shore .. You came along. Peter,
and a kcd if she needed help and
Mrs ROBERT MADAY
Los Angele'>
Harvest
idea has
aspe~s.
q~alc~D~
Lumber company
to benefit from !~:!dlble, s!r~~~~~! =~~~:.,
10
-1t•s s~ wonderful to read Willy Bud /vent his anger? t hope not. goveFnmen t plan
Tu.cker tn the Daily Pilot sports page. ~t the rc-+ord looks' clear Don \\ c.o ' -
It isjus~ such a pleasure to sec how Shulaisonc Qfthewlnnangestcoaches M'I fr~l \~COLO'·"' t:ET ~uc fill Ar 1uu ' l\ll\leD '·'·" WASHINGTON-Louisiana Pa Srf!ll ,this n;ian can act. Tucker, in has in Nationat Football League history ~ l1\I. ~' l\\ia '-'\ft l ~~ cificCorp. isnuzzhnguptothcpubli
'witty aruclcs, never pas~ th~ He is a --man of class. winning or chance to classify M1am1 Dolpliin 16~ing, and has earned the res~ct of -------------"'*' ,.. ~rough hagauin, with a friendly nuda bead coach Don Shula as an over-pla)ers, coaches. fans and owners .---------.. .._...,......__...., ,_ ______________ irom t e · orcst Service. Th ratedlcade~.Onewondersastotbe alike.DonShulaisabigenouahman ITS Mt,LORD-Wrft-1Ti.-H: REV 3"ACK~OtJ SAID H~ GERALPJNf FERRARO ~YS.)HE &Jant lumber mpany buys mor
reasons behind the constant parade of to nse above his critics. Bud iucker !'.. LECfiON UPDAT~ I K~rc:.w \A"\u WAN n~ D HIM VNO'. ,/_ YOU rt>N'r "PPROVF. government-owned timbe:r1han ID) put-downs. Could the 'man of wu' onl> gets<smallcr and smaller c:. ~ l V " VV? n one else, and has a long history c
have som~ personal feelings against JIMMY ELLIS To Bf PRE.?IPENT' OF RF A~.AN ~ ~U~ET lU r· I prefercnllal treatment from the Fo1
the .Dolpbtn coach? Would be·stoop Huntanaton Be.ach est Service, whi~b happens to b headed by Louisiana Pacific's fonne
~~!.:.101r er.
At 5:45 a.m this montmg the
telephone rang. While my mind raced
through the poss1bitit1es of tllness or
accident to loved ones, I reached for
the phone, only to hear a rC<?orded
message from a health club offenng (I ·
think) a free membership under
ccnain conditions. (1 didn't listen for
long.)
The 1n,entor of the '4utomauc
telephone sales machine and the one
who set ll running in the ~ee hours of
the morning ought to be condemned
to che worsJ punishment I can thank
~f: an etemll) of listening to con-
tmous and obnoxious telephone sales
patches
, PAUL C. EKLOF
Costa Mesa
I
h ' ) I ) -
1.
)
general counsel, John Crowell.
I've reported in the past ho'
Crowell lobbied successfully for
$600 million bailout of the big tum be
companies, allowing them a1
interest-free extension on overpncei
bads that turned sour m the housana
industry recession.
Not long after this act of corporat.
\\ ~ welfare, Louisiana Pacific postcc record profits.
) The Forest Serv1ce also stalled :
( , ) congressional investigation int•
(
. "),.. ~ charges that the company fixed pnce ( \ 'J ), and ngged btds on govern men
~eturalng to the source
(\. I
~~ 1 '-li:f , ,) ..r~-:X timberinAlaska.ThcJust1ceDepart , '-ment dropped a criminal case agains. ;::===========~:-;:=========-;::=~~=======:::::=~====: the company despite a federal Judge' AND PRf~l[/£/'Jf RE.AGAN ~YS .w11A~ rY"\ L...nJ 1 l TI41Nt< 1 1'~ A60Uf finding an a civ1 l suit that Lou1sipna
0 LV"l .,... 11 n '' Y'..-' 1 vu Paci.fie and another lumber compan• To the Editor;
After rereading the coverage given
the Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce breakfast of Aug. 15, I
feel it 1s appropnate to clanf) a point
an my remarks, which I freely admn
may not have been clear an my
p~ntation . The point of-my re-
marks was not to totall} exonerate
boaters from rcspons1b1llt> for pol-
lution: lhe problem of polluuon in
Newport Bay (or any other scin1-
cncloscd body of water} 1s the result of
many inputs, including to some
extent the users of those waters, 1.e ..
the boaters and swimmers by them-
selves, without any other mputs, have
not been shown to be the cause of
major ncgatJvc poUuuonunpacts.
h appears from the available re-
search (which admittedly 1s not local)
that the pollution in scm1-cnclosed
bodies of water which have flushing
from the tides may stem pnmanJ>
from on-going runoff, drainage and
erosion from upland propenic~ Thu!.
upland dc\elopment appears to ha' e
a far greater long-ttrm cumulat1H
am pact on water quallt~ than the ha\
users.
Boaters can. however. ~ a rnn-
tnbutmg factor 1f the) are not:careful
with the handling of their boats and
sewage wastes. ~h comments ~ere
not intended to suggesi that boate~
need not Lake an) respons1b1ht\ in
maintaining or 1mpro' 1ng w·atcr
quallt> in the Ba> I JUSt feel that an all
out campaign to ··punish .. boaters for
polluting th e b~> will result 1n a lot of
hard feelings· over the unJustly
"pointed finger" and not much
1mpro' ement in water qua.J..ity!
Awareness that ever} little b11 huns
on -the other hand is valuable for both
the boaters and the upland propert)
owners'
~ l<N WJ 1 vU WAN' 10 ~£ fH/NK LORPl 1iME WE FL.OOc:>f.D "consptrcd to restrain trade and tc
l/'NDLVED IN PUBLIC ~Hen'...S> fHAT PLAHEf ~lN ~ monopolize the timber industry u . l\ND POLI nc '? t southeastern Alaska.'' T~~ latest c~ap~er in the history o
Loumana Pacific s cozy rclationshit
with the federal government 1nvolve
its ambiuous cxpans1on into •the
production ofwaferboard, a plywooc
subsutute made of wood chips bond
ed with resin. The beauty o
waferboard is that it can be made ou
of trees that arc otherwise com·
mercially worthless, and thus cheap.
One such tree . as the aspen
previously valued chiefly for iu
brilliant autumn foliage. With th<
potential boom in waferboard, aspen1
have now become well worth harvest·
ing.
SLSA~H.~NDERSON ..... ._._._.__._.._ .. _._._._._._._. .. _._._._._._. .. _._._._._._._. .. _._
\ard1fTb) the Sea
The Forest Se rvice had a modcs1
plan to harvest 2 million board feet ol
aspen an national forests in Colorado.
cut tang down mature trees that could
be a ftrc hazard.
Remember the chorus S t alin's spirit alive in Kreinlin
According to internal Forest Ser·
vice documents seen by my associate
John D1llon, the 2 million board feet
ballooned to an astounding 5C
malhon soon after Louisiana Pacific
September I marked two signifi-
Modesto in northern CaltfomiJ, than cant ann1,ersanes for Western man
Dnepropetrovsk ... v1nually all told the agency of its plan to build a
pnson mmatcs were slaughtered." wafcrboard plant near Montrose. To the Editor:
I commend the Costa Mesa Cll>
Council forapprovanga new mouo-
"Caty of the Ans" -for our cat). In
your anaclc (Dail) Pilot. August 12)
were mentioned a number of per·
forming groups headquancred in
Costa Mesa One group, howner.
was omme\:i
The All-American Boys Chorus.
founded an 1970 has had Its home in
Costa Mesa for the last 12 years,
currently at the Orange County
Fairgrounds
Th as antemauonally famous group.
made up of boy smgers from all over
Orange C ounl). as bellcr known an
BanfT. Lake Louise and Calgary.
Canada and 1n "Japa Lodt and
..
the> are an their o~n back )ard. One )Car ago, in.an attack ordered by
J be Id h the So' iet ~egame and subsequently t .... , ers me. C\Cn t ough the' defended wttb a pack of official lies. perform throughout th~ countv and have been wntten about in num.crous KAL007 was shot out of the sk). and 269 men. women and children -articles m the Dail) P1lo1 and other American. Japanese. Korean_ went
newspapers and magazine'>. that the to a hornble death.
people and bus1nc'ise!i of Orange Fort)·five years ago, 1n rnllusaon
County. on the whole do not I.. now of with the So\.1et regime. Hitler's
them, nor support them hnanually. armies attacked Poland and tn·
Jt's about tame that C\ cn one: of us auguratcd the bloodiest war an human
got behind this finc group and .b1stof)
supponcd chem an t.'H'f'\ \\a\ pos<:>_/"""-Whal the K.\L ma!isacre tells us as
ibJ.e. lf you want rnorC' anformauon quite sample and direct This regime.
about the Chorus. \\ ntc them at p O led~>· these old men is the logical and
Box 1527 Costa \k\3 ~2626 lcg1t1matc moral sucu~ssor to J V
.I \C 1-. RO\ \IRD Stalin
C. o.-.ta \.1cg In tht.• 'ear<, \anu: ~Pt ... I. 1939-. the
Dlff ering vlews of capitalism
Krcmlfii'"s uuc1al role an launching
World \\Jar II and sending Hitler off
on the road to h1!> startling successes
against the ~est. has been forgotten.
It has ~en buried an nostalgic
remembrances of the waname al-
liance. buned in a sea of propagancb
that .. w;hen the Great Red \rm) w-as
bcarm1 the brunt of Na11 power che
Western alhes ~ere hading behind the
Channel and che .\tlanuc. The great
mvth that the c;o, acts ha"c success.-full~ employed to hide their collusion
and 1>3rtnersh1p wtth H11ler. and thei r
turning \\CSt onl~ an desperation
fo the Editor.
This as an reference to the column
by 8111 Han:ey, Aug. 20. that ap-
pt"arcd an your paper. Obviously. Mr.
Harve) has a very naive under-
standing of capitalism and free
enterpnse Goods and servtccs ar~
not bought -they are M>ld. And I say
God blcs Amenca and bless the
salesmen who have made it possible
Moreover. I am sure vou would be
plea~ tu kno.,., 1ha1 I recently
subscnbed to )'Our paper because one
of}our hard-work mg sale men called
me on the phone one C\ cnang. I lind It
regrettable that you would slap that
important employee an the tat'c b>
pnntang Mr Hane'\ anacle. Whef(
1s your bat'kbone'' ·It 1s not the Mr.
Harveys of tht\ ~orld who sell )Our
newspaper 1).\Nlfl W CROSBY when Hitler doubled-<rossed ha!> '">tau nche'it all\, 1i. The M}'th of thc Ne\\pon Beach Twcflt) Million. the myth that
20.000.0<X> nt11ens of the Soviet
·Ana Well ' id ~ Union died resisting Namm and ant ote .I, org1. oom fascism On behalf of tht'tr count!"\.. and at~ herott' wanime regime. •
To tt\e Editor:
For the pHt several wc<'ks I have
cnjo)'cd your new column by Ann
Wells She wntc wtth an on1anal
slant about identifiable \Ub)et'ts and
~1th a delightful sense of humor. I
appreciate her h1ht tou.:h. In fact, l'H
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
..
-·
been \<> 1mpre kd wnh htt wm
column that I ha\.e rernmmcnded at
to se,;cral of m\i fru:nds asan 1n11dotc
to this t1f( omc came of hca' \.
polilll'al hoopla •
f:DITH PORTM N
S:rn Clemente
H. L. Schwart1 111
PllOQ '
''•nil Zlnl
Mll\9'11"0 ~ IOf
Tom Tttlt
C.1, [CJ !Of
Craig lh•tf
Wit Ed IOI
s N1kola1 TolstO\. writes an hi\
1nd1'\pcn\ahlt Stalin\ Secret War,"
lhc tru1h 1~ that ~rhaps JO million
people under talin's control 11 the ~'Jtnn1n of Wor1d War It perished
as consequence of the War
But ttiosc who died a~ a consc-
quc.n e of Stahn'i stup1d1t). and
murderous 1nte111 -through
ma re and starva11on -far
C\ceeded the number done tode:sth 1n
Na11 atror_attc~. or sic es, or baulci
The first 2S0.000 Rus~1an dead 1n
~ orld War ti pcmhcd dunn
Ru u1' criminalanack upon ncutra
f1nl nd 1n the ~1n1er of 1940
!Khru'\hChe' would put the: num r
al I m1ll1on ) •
The SC'C'Ond \\
\\ork or the
PAT
Bucu1u
Lithuania, Lat via, Estonia and
Bessa.rabia were dragged from their
homes and shot by the tens of
thousands or deported eastward -as
Stalin took possession of the fruits
awarded htm by Hitler in their Pact
-in exchange for which Stalin
provided Germany with ttic 011 and
raw matenals nee-dcd to make suc-
cessful war on Norway. Denmark.
8rita1n ana France. •
The third wave of wholesale k1ll-
1ngs was likewise perpetrated by the
NKVD on Stalin's orders Temfied
th.al the jails and pnsons housing the
v1cums of his countless purges would
be opened by the invading Germans,
and millions of imprisoned enemies
would come· scelcinJ "engeancc.
Stalin ordered all pnsone~ either
deported east -or executed where the~ were. Hundreds of thou~nds
pen shed.
i\s Tolstoy wntes. "In Minsk.
~molcrsk. ·.Kiev. Kharkov,
"As the Soviet 4th Armr battled Colo.
apinst all odds to save L vov. the In one internal memorandum. a
ci ty's NKVD was work.in& for a whole Forest ~rvace official cand1dly ac-
wcck with machine guns. grenades knowledged that the 25-fold increase
and high explosives in its frantic 1n the harvest was "in response to
effort .to hquidate thousands of lou1SJana Pacific's request for
Ukrainian pnsoners." aspen."
When the Germans entered on He wr~te that t.~~ cost data J~st1fy-
June 29, the "whole city stank of mg ~he ancrea~ is based on infor-
putrefyang'ncsh. and the pnsons were matton as dev~loped fr'i>m recent
surrounded by agonized relatives of contacts .bY Louisiana Pacific regard·
those suspected of bet nit held within." ing pos54ble. nc"'. mark~ts for aspen and expansion into this area w1th
. Meanwhile, whole populaJ1ons. construction of a new mill facilny.'.'
lake the Volga Germans, 400,000 of A Louisiana Pacific spokesman
them, along w1th an equal number of painted a different picture of the
Sovtet citizens of German descent, company's role in the ancrcaSed aspen
were rounded up and sent off to the harvest, saying: "The compan)' 1s in
co11cc11uanoncnnps, nevmomum. thcrnmno'11TIIXimta an asscl but to
They. too. arc among the 20,000.000 carry out an aspen management plan
laid at the feet of Adolf H ttler. for the Forest Service. We are 1n there
That Russians bore the brunt of an response to a Forest Service need."
Hitler's assaults. that millions of Two enva~onmcntal &fC?~ps . in
Russians, Ukrainians and citizens of Cflorado don t buy th1s beman vtew
the Soviet Empire sought bravely and o .~holcsalc aspen cutting.
died heroically agajn t Hitler is a By claam1na a need. to . ma~ c
&Jven. What is too oflcn foriotten as aspen, the F~rest Service 1 d1 au1san1
Tolstoy demonstrates. is that the the real Pf'OJCCt. which is to ~~ovide
greatest enemy of the Russian pcQplcs wood ~o Louisiana Pacific, they
was never 1n lkrlan, but 1n Moscow-wrote '" an appeal for a full en· as it 1 today. v1ronmcntal impact stud)'
P•lrlct Bacb•oan 11 • 1yodlc•ted J•ct Aadersoa 11 • 1yadlc•te4 columolit. colamal1t. (
•
Got th~ 'mun'chies? 'Xry termites
Thal ~tale with the lO\\t"St tl\es 1
rt.;ansa\ ..
Q. lfo-. man) cchp\C ufthc \Un J o
• we cl annually?
. our, u uall). Bui t lcnst two,
nJ someltme five.
The world'
;;... t. John
Ii rlem.
of fish comes from the Old En&lit
"scolu" meanina multitude.
To de.· end dow~11arrow nyon
mount~nn oats bounce from wall 1
II. ....
o" 1hcrt's a ccllular-syitc1
mobile tclcCJtrone that w11l 1n r 11
to ttiht calls when you're not 1n t~
rand rtCOrd the call r nurnbcn re
I • )'.QU l>rttt) JHft).•
1·· oflish?
to do• 1th Thcpmcprogrnm or uprr Bo
nov. sclh for S300 bout.
t f, B•>" 11 • •r•dlr•t• C'Ol1mal1t.
f
t .
•
r
c
e
:
:
f
r
i
1
r
l
!
•
Wargaln-e eey
Ground qomblt Center on Wednes-
day s armored vehicles camed
thousands of uoops to po lions for
today' bve-firc m neuvcra on th 932-sq_uarc-milc OJ vc De en
120 males c St o( Los Anaclcs
At Camp Roberts, an the co stal foothllla midway bttwecn Lo An· gclc and San Francisco, 528 p !\.
lrOOF.rt of the Anny'a 82nd Airborne
Divmon me med from six Aar Force
uansponjeu Wedncsd&).
One soldier &ufTcred a spral~d f 001
and t1t1.o others complained of k
ms ftenh drop, Arm> Col.J mes
trachan id
But \he major enemy was heat exhaustion, which felled at le st one
Manne as othera aought shade from tanks, trucks nd eamounaae tents in
101-dearee he J, uid Col. ~nk
t ckp0le. •· ~
.. Heai i~ lh b iwst problem ..
tackpolc la .. 1'.hc othct Pf9t>itm
web vc is mikina \Mm eat Jn tllC hot envaronmem, tbc)i don•t feel I kc e una.·· · G mant Eaale snvolvcs 50 000
troops nd the co t Just for 1ran1-
Portin&~rJOnncl and eg u1pment wa put at $33 mllhon.
"They ·are full of rcady·t~,''
M rine U. Cot. Jim Te1xe1ra 111d .of
EPA Chief eliminates 'hit list'
W A.SHINOTON (AP)-The U.S. tration had chosen Barber as acuna
Chamber or Commerce, throuah the adminiatrator while it·aouaht aome·
White House, 1uue1ted the removal one for theJ' ob eventually filled by
o( e~t Envaronmcntat Protection Mn. Burfor . After 1he'took over the ~ency omda11, but the aaency'1 aaency Barber went back to hi• job .. ch1ef-tbrew out the .. hit list," say1 a dlrcc:tor of the otnce of air q_uality
former top EPA aide. 1tandard1, which he lef\ in 1982.
The list w11 thrown out wbcrr In a telcp1lone interview from Oak
,former EPA Administrator Anne Brook, Ill: where he 11 a vi~e ·Burford fpotted the name of Wah ·president of Waste Manaacmcnt Inc ..
Barber, who had been the aaency's Barber 111d he left EPA •·t>«ause I
interim head;11id John Daniel, chler was 40, and it wa1 time to try
of staff' for Mn. Burford durina her somcthina else" after eiaht yeara 11 a tenure at tho aaency. federal bureaucrat. Barber said "11 far
The IJ1t haCS been sent to Mrs. 11 I know" he w11 not forced out or Burford In J 981 without comment by the ~ency. .
the White Houae, Daniel said "I never had any problems with
Wedncld.ay. her," he aatd of Mn. Burford. ir============!==::::::::=======-...-... --mil!-~ Existence of tho list w11 discloaed He 11td he knew "such a list wa1
in notes Daniel pve to the Housc around'' but had never seen h. Asked
EMray and Commerce ovenlaht If he knew -Who else was on It. ht aubcommlttec durina ita in'vestip. replied, "Anythina I would tell you
tlon of EPA 111t year -one of alx would be hearsay, so l better not."
conare11ion1l lnve1tiptlon1 that led Daniel 11ld he di<S not know the other to 1Mn. Burford'• re1lanation. The namet either.
notes were pan of the hcarlna record Barber said he knew -ot nothina publiahed last month. speciflc be had done to anaer bu1ine11
"Anne thou&ht the world of and thouaht the hh list w11 "pan of
(Barber)." Danfel 11id in an inter· the aeneral reaction of tho time. view. "When ahe 11w his name was "People who were around there at
rat, 1ho threw it1n the trash can. She the time were thouaht to be 'con-didn•t find the thinlcredible." taminated,"' he uJd.
The incomina eaaan •jSJnini•· Several top aaency official• who
JAMES A. LENNERTZ, M.D.
ANNOUNCES THE REOPENING OF HIS OFFICE .
FOR
PAMILY PRACTICI ·
IN ~
HUNTINGTON BEACH •
Office Hours By Appointment f714J 147·1144 .
WDEMllOVE 12111 hero Gardtft Grow, CA t2t40
( 71~) 171 ·HU . ~ .. ,,.
--------~ -·-· ---
Rob1nsms
WOOL CARPETlNG
,
33.95 s • •
YOUR CHOICE OF OUR BES'r FROM DESSO
DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN. NO PAYMENT UNTIL FEBRUARY, 1985*
•,
SKAR.A, boUclt ltnor-loolt p1/t m S colors. A]OU. &rbfr loop in 4 colors. HERM.A.-..::DA, thick &rbc-loop m J colors. -
. .
0: What is tht most importAnt quality tD
/;J;k for m carpttingl .
A: Rts1/11n~1! 71't ability to bounce or spring
baclt, to rrsumt orij1nal form afitr strrtchmg,
Q: What makts wool tasy to m11int11inf Q: H01JJ do wool's colors hold upf Q: Do )'OU prrr..idt mst.illanon?
A: Btautifully. B«•uu of uoo/'s co"!pltx. A: Absoluttl) .. ~long :...1th frtt room
chtmmil strucrurr, it irbsorln d)'t' rtad1~ wuhou1 mtasurtmtnr, tl•id frtt dupowl of you" old
fiY.Am.1t •gtnts.. And tht seal) surfacts o its fiws CArptting Comt, ftt 141 Jhtr ... vou .ill :ht
..
. btndin~ trradmg (17y Littlt ltagut IMstba/I
--u.uns}, uUshing fb> JOO:po.i.nd 1mno1rrs). __
A: Tht scaly surfaw of Ill jihfrs. ttnd to hold
dirt high in tht p1lt so that it c•n bt t11sil1
wcuumtd aw•)· F11rthtrmorr, ntitbff dirt, oily
grit, nor wattr •dhtrr wtll to this outtr skin, so
. thtst ar1 mort ta11ly rrm<Ntd. Fin11/I • l>tc1211St
wool fiws 1o't op.qui, tht-y .ttnd to hldt dirt
bttttr th•n smooth, translNctm symhttic fibtrs.
brtalt up tht light, rtsultmg an co/ol"5 t at Sttm tu•)l :..:iooi c.in ttinC'h your honrt,, no-... and
morr lus1ro1d th.n i'!_S)'!"~hmc fibtrs. A bonus: f!JLyevt lD ro_•t t~ 1'1 Robm~on '1 __ _
as "rht c•rptt •gts, tM-µ«r scaftr7/JO ~•lif£m·---Bro.utloom, 6J
Q: Wh.st u tht mo$t m1l1tnt c.irptt fibv/ _
A: Wool. And u u n•t1m1/ly so fh•vt you t'C;'"
stm • fl•t shttpf). W1th 'U}()()I, n•turr onct "B"'" dupl•~ htr 111pmority by crriw~g a fibtr of
incrrdib/1 complexity (man has, in /•ct, not ytt
bttn ibl1 to d"pl1(1ttt it}. A jibfr t~t II, at onct,
soft,• uwrm, durJb/1, U!y-to·m11mt•1.n ~n~ firr-
"t•rd.tnt •s 11Jrll f!. bdu)'•nt. (Dtctit un t tht
only rr.ison U'OIWJ ~? sbt~'s clothmglj
. . . \ ,\' Q: firr-rrt•;a!f ntl ~/tast txplam. · .
t\to A: Unliltt syn_thtt1~'Jfkvs ~hich titM-s~pport
or mtlt imdtr •~mt, wool u st/ftxtmguishing
• ' whtn tM fi.rr1s'rrmoWd. Burns, 1uch ., thost
from rigdrttttJ, do not•ptr:m4ntntly mAr 'UlOO/
c•rptt. mhtr. B«•ust the burntc/ jibm ch.tr
rathtr th.tn mtlt, ·tht broltm t11ds can bt brus/Nd
• •~.>' vm6 • blunt·ttl ft/ tool •nd tht spot
. • tsSnJt "'/ly a'"' PJ>llJ rs
THF. QUICKEST ~Yi JU T PER
THEE
Q: W?,.,1 .1bout sp1//sf .
A: Flnct rf.it.{urrtll)' sh~ 'U'•ttr to facil1t•tt
SfO•tgt·UP, Of'4 a~ ~u.,m1'd Conditions.
_ h~'"° wool 11ctu•ll)' ,_t•ms moutu" to rtsut
static tltctnW) And rrpt_I dust. Hitidtn btntfits
/tu' ptoplt 11rt 11wrr of.~ ·
. ..
r
color 10 dttptn and "lsumt the Atmd of Pif Wtti so .tp~aling to co//ttton of t1ntiqut wool c•rptts ---~----:---..,..,
.ind t.t~Stnt1
Q.: ilh.:rt makts Dtsso di/ftrrmf , ,
A: £1ero~'s l.iram c.:rrptt m.in11f!'ct11'l'tr b;md,
/it't dilftrent wools to nulrt ont :at.ii rt""•
cre.iwig " c•rptt of l•sting 111\uruinu.
Q: Wh.rt ""°"' 't:X>Ol's costf A• W1'tn bt.lanctd "g.imst tht supmor ~rjorm.r.ntt, tas)' nt1111ttnanct, unp.:ina11~'f ol
bt.aut) and d11rnbilst) dmwd, thf prict 01 WO
u ,,,, outstanding .,_,.1,,,, mdtt'd.
•
,.
\
I
Disneyland asks workers
to accept a wage decrease
--------'Magic Kingdom• faces first strike
since it was founded 29 years ago
~-.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -For the
first time in its 29-year history.
Disneyland 1s asking employees to
take a wage cut. and a union
spckesman says that could lead to a
strike at the Magic Kfogdom .
"The potentiaJ for a stnke 1s real."
Roben Tieman of the Service Em-
ployees lntemat.Jonal Union. Local
399, sajd Wednesday.
His untorrand-fourorhers represent
1,844 of the park's 5,000 employees.
ranging from food vendors to ride
operators. Their contracts expire
Sept. 15.
Bargaining talks were scheduled to
resume today_ .
Tieman said D1sne:,-is asking
umon workers to accept a 16.1
percent wage cut over three years.
beginning with a 7 percent reduction
this year.
··We're mile apart on that:·
Tieman said. "It's a stnke issue ...
Tieman said he has never heard of
Disneyland negotiators ever sugges1-
ing a pay cut or wage freeze
However. Disneyland has been
struck before. Maintenance workers
walked out for two weeks in March
1979.
Tieman s.aid lus wuon 1s see~.a
5 percent to 8 percent pay raise this
year. Hts union members now make
S 7 to SI 0 per hour Members will vote
Sept . ..l6j)l l 1 ona proposed coru.ca.cL
he added.
While sttll making a profit. Dis-
ne) land ha\ had falling attendance
the past thn.·c ~ears. v.nh the number
of' 1s1tors dc<:ltning to 10 million in
1983 from a high of 11.5 m1lhon in
1980.
In add1t1on . thl· Ol~mp1c(1amc'> in
Los .\ngelc<> rcdmcd rathl·r than
1ncrea~d tounc,m
"There '~a' ~ 11ml." "hen the
Ol'4tl1p1t·s "t.'rt>• l?Oing on v.hen 11
look.cd hkc tt v.a<; the '"~rst .,ummer
in I 0 :,-care,:· ~1d Disneyland 'ilpol.t·\·
man Robert Roth
However. Walt D1sne:,-Pro-
ductions. which operates Disneyland.
had its most succesful quarter C\ er
dunng Lhe pe.rtod that ended June '0
said · Erw10 Ok um . corporate vice
president ofpubhc relauons.
He said the c,ucccss wa<; due to
pmf ili.fcom lb.c.DJ.Sncy .film.:: S ..
and An.ida Inc .. a Flonda building
subsidiary.
Heat causes 'unnatural'
changes in aspartame
LA JOLLA. Cllhf. (AP) - A
researcher ts warning against the use
of the low-caloric sweetener
aspartame in cooking and m hot
bevera,es. saying heat causes a ··sur-
prising' structural change whose
effects have not been tested
"We're not saying that .. this 1s
101ng 10 kill you tomorro"' 1f you
drink 11 in you r coffee or when you
,,' make your sweet-sour pork or some-
' thing like that:· said Dr Jeffrey L. i Sada. ~ chemiu-at the Scnws
1
1
Institution of Oceanography at the
Univcrsll\ of Cahfom1a-San Diego.
"But 1t'~ something that should be
looked at 'ltra1ght away," he said "I
wouldn't use 1t in my coffee."
Bada. who directed the study, said
aspanamc when boiled rroduces an
"unnatural" version o the supr
substitute, which 1s marketed under
brand names Nutrasweet and
al. . .I
o one knows the potential health
consequences. 1f any. of ingesting the
altered form of the sweetener. Badll
11id. He sai,d has study, published in 1ht
ugusq sue of the Proceedings of the ~atioaill Academy of Sciences.
should have been conducted by the
Food and Drug Adnumstrataon
before the product v.ac, relea~d on the
market.
"It hterall> t>lov..s m~ mmd that
there 1s not one published paper that I
can find (on the changes of aspaname
when boiled.) This seems to be one of
the most 'obvious first things to test
and. as far as I can 1ell 1t hasn't been
done." Bada said
Officials of the f D.\ and of G D
Searle & Co which manufactures the
sv..eetener said a'lpartame underwent
"detailed le!>t1ng and repeated close
~ruHA)'n for more-than it decade
before 1t v.as marke1ed
..It has been one of the most widely
tested add111ves going back over the
)ears:· said FDA 'ipokesman Jim
C1reene "Our c' 1dence 1s that 1t is
safe for the use\ for v..h1ch It has been approved··
Bada's stud}. also conducted by
Marcus F Boehm. now of the State
l n1vers1t) of New York at Stony
Brook. found that prolonged heating
causes changes 10 aspartame's two
pnmaT) amino acids.
Under normal cond1tiops. the
ammo acids form crystals that cause
ltght to rotate to the left. hke a prism.
Tlus form of the chemical. called the
L-1somer. resembles other naturally
occurring proteins and should ~
safely metabolized by the body. he
said
'·-Good for you!
Daily Pilaf
,,...
'
class1f 1ed ads
ph9ne 642·5678
\
When aspaname 1s bolled "'re n-
t1sts found that 11s amino. acid
molccu'les change shape adopting
their mirror image Crystals of these
so-called D-1somers rotate hght to the
nght. The process. known as amino
acid racem1zau on. has been known 10
chemists for decades and 10 recent
years has been hown to occur m
proteins after an or~an1sm dies.
"The argument the rndustl") ha\
made 1s 1hat aspartame 1s not a
problem oceause once )ou-mgest ii n
is rapidly digested rn the gul," Bada
said But. he said, that might not be
true fort he altered form of aspaname.
Bada said he has . propcsed con-
ducting a series of a111mal studies al
the U.S Dcpanmen t of Agnculture
1n San Francisco. testing fat possible
to>11c effects from the altered form of
the s~eetener.
,
. Guardian named forest~te
once entrusted to.Zaccaria
NEW \'ORK (AP)-A Jud h
appointed n attorney uar urn ot
an elderly woman• en tc follow1n.g
the removal of John Zac ro, hus·
band of Democratic vice prC11dcntUtl
candidate Gertidine Ferraro, a ron-
rvator.
St. tc Supreme Court Justice (~win
. Kassoff on Wednesday appointed
Stepehcn O'Lcal)' Sr of Quc<"ns to
oversee the SI m1lhon cc,tat<" of Alice
Phelan .
Zaccaro. a real talc developer and
manager, was removed last week as
conservator because he had taken two
loans from the e<1tate totahna
S 175,000 for hts real CSUlle busin •
7.acarro paid bOlh loans b:lck with
interest and said the loans helped the
estate.
A conservator mana cs the bu i·
ness affa11"i of n estate when people
art not able to take t'Bre of the estate
thein~h·es. Guardtan!I arc 11ppqintcd
to determine. the ntt<J for a con-
servator or to mspcc1 a conservator's
work when he i 7 moved. resigns or
finishes.
Kas off appointed Zaccaro two
years ago to take care of Mr:.. Phelan.
who is in a nur mg h'ome. and her
estate. which included c; h. bond •
JCWClry. coins and ~tocks.
The Judge ,., O'Lcaf) t\\O \\eeks
to meet with 7..accaro ·and ht) at-
to1 ney, cit) Counc1lm n Monon '
Po\ man, Jo file.,& final ac ounlin& of
the est tc.
Zdccuro • has· twQ other con· •
e-rvatorshaps pending One is for
V1rgin1a 1 reacher. the widow of actor
Arthur Trcacher. SM died ·1n July
leaoQina an estate valued at less than
$100.000. The other, for Sarah
Schwiebert, ts valued at nearly
$500.000.
Controversial Nobel Prize wiriner ' .
" " t.
clai1j1s story hurt his reputation
ATLANTA (AP)-A lawyer for a
Nobel Prize-winning scientist told a
federal JUry today that his client's
reputation was damaaed by a news-
paper a111cle which compared his
theories on race and genetics to the
atroc1t1es of Nazi Germany.
Murray Silver. attorney for Wil-
liam ShQckley, said Shockley's
propcsed voluntary sterilization
bonus plan was a "\hinkmg exercise"
that had "absolutely no comparision
or reJ.cv:i~ce" to Lhe lulling of Jews b)
the Nazis in World War II
Silver's statements came dunng
opening arguments m the tnal of a
$2.5 m1lhon hbel suit filed by
Shockley against Cox Enterpnses Inc.
and wnter Roger Witherspoon in
1981..
The lawsuit alleged that Withers-
poon libeled Shockley in a article he
wrote for The Atlanta Constitution,
one of the newspapers 1n the Cox
group. The article. published in July
1980. discussed Shockley's theory
that blacks as a voup are genetically
infenor m intelligence to whites and
his proposal for a voluntary stcr-
1hzauon program for the "gc.net1cally
disadvantaged.•·
Witherspoon no longer works for
the newspaper. . M
Terrence Adamson. attorney for
Cox and Witherspoon. told the JUry
that Witherspoon's article was a
column that expressed his op101on.
L oder the law, 1t 1s not subject to libel
acuon. he argued.
Adamson said he will call scientists
to testify about the widespread dif·
ferences of op1n1on in 1he field of
genetics and intelligen(e.
He said Shockle:,-'s theories Qn race •
and genetics have bttn annually
reJected by the National Academy of
Sciences and Shockley was den.led
permission by his fellow , faculty member~ at Stanford Univel'iity t0-
teach a course in genetics.
Adamson argued that Withers-
poon's column pre'iented rhe factual
basis for Shockley's theories and his
sterilization plan. and then stated the ,
wnter's opinion about the possible
effect of that plan
Witherspoon, who 1s black. com-
pared the Shockley plan to the Nazi
atroc1t1es aaamst the Jews in Ger-
many "as a device to draw attention
to the most heinous aspects of the
plan as he saw it," the attorney said.
A jury offivc whites and one black
was selected Wedne~ay to hear the
lawsuit filed by Shockley, who won
the Nobel Pnze in 1956 for his pan in
the 1nvention of the transistor.
Shockley. 74. contended in his
lawsuit that the article was libelous
bcc.ause. amona other things. it in-
cluded a statement that his ster-
1lizat1on plan ".was tned out m
Germany dunna World War IJ, when
scientists under the direction of the
govemment experimented on Jews
and defect1ves m an effort to study
genetrc d · lop~nt."
Hi s lawsuit 'argues that "to be
false!) labeled as a 'Nazi' or of
approvmg the Nazi genocide during
World War ll 1s comparable to being
falsely labeled a mass murderer or
approving mass murder."
The jul) was selected Wednesday
from among 1 i people who were
questioned at length by U.S. D1stnct
Judge Robert Vining.
Shockley's lawyers used all thrct of
their JUry strikes to remove blacks · •
from the final six-member jury, while
lawyers for Cox and Witherspoon
used their stnkcs to excuse three
white prospective Jurors.
Before the final selections were
made. Vinina asked the pool of
potential jurors whether they
subscribed to the Atlanta newspapers,
whether they had heard of Shockley
or Witherspoon and whether they had
studied medicine or genetics.
Each potenttal Juror also was asked
individually, out of the presence of
the others. whether he beheves blacks
are mfcnor to whites. whether he has
ever been m a fir.ht or quarrel witb a
member of another race, whether he
believes blacks work as hard as whites
and whether he believes more blacks
than whites are on welfare or commit
crimes.
The prospective JUtOrs aJso were
asked their feehnas about freedom of
speech and press, about the respcnsi-
bihty of newspapers to print the truth
and about the value of a person's
reputation.
Shockley, a professor ementus of
clectncal engineering at Stanford
Un1vers1ty. has said he views the trial
1n1>3rt as a forum to air his theoncs on
race and geneucs and his propcsal for
a \Oluntal) stenhzation pla .
Oil company blast
kills 2 in Kansas
OH Explosion
KANSAS
.\NTHONY. Kan. CAP) -An
e:1;plos1on ripped through an 011
company building. damaging homes
and businesses and k1lhng two people
as 1t hurled debns two blocks away
and sent up a fireball v1s1ble for 10
miles. authorities said today.
More than a half-dozen people also
were injured, two of them seriously,
in the explosion at around 9:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Farmer's 0 11 Co. in
w.est Anthony, officials said.
The blaze that gutted thcJlwld.lllg
raged out of control for nearly three
hours. a polLce dispatcher said. Resi-
dents in a four-block area were
evacuated from their homes unul the
blaze was brought under control
about 12:30 a.m.
Harper County Attorney Phil
Unruh said today the cause of the
blast. bein~ invesuaated by a state fire
marshal's investigator. had not been
not determined.
P olice C'h1el R1 c h-
ardPduPrPtPPzPtPv.P1e of town
watching tele v1s1on v.hen the ex-
plosion shook "!he house real good."
Jeff Bogen and hrs father were
hanging a garage door at their home
next door to the bu1ld1ng.
"The bu1ld1ng wa~ there and. then,
11 was just gone." said Bogen. "There
were JUSt some beams 'ita nding there
where the building use to be. A big
force blew the door down on top of us
\).,e JU St scrambled ou1 of there as fast
as "e could.
"'The concu!>SIOn was really
great .... &nd -then thert" was JUSt a blg
hall of··name and stuff falling," he
\aid
.\ fireball that soared into the air
folloy,..,1ng the ex plo~1on. police said.
wa~ \.1s1ble more than 10 miles nonh
of .\nthon). a town of2.600 people 45
miles southwest of Wichita m south-
ccntral Kansas
The walls of the 011 company's two-
~ton bnck building. on a corner on
•
the w~t edge of downtown Anthony.
were blown out, Happ said. Bricks
were hurled up to two blocks.
A house JU St north of the explosion
scene caught fire and was extensively
damaged. Happ said. Th~ ot~cr
homes were damaged by · fl ying
debns. one extensively, he said. The
roof on a combination gasOTine
siauoo-convenience store, also
owned by Farmer's Oil across the
street ciived m and large plate glass
KANSAS
eWtchita
eAnthony
~ ""'·t~ 0011ding wc~t--t-=-~===~--=-----:t
tered. Happ added.
The 011 company building also
included an optometnst's office and
the distnct soil conservation office.
The explosion occurred as Kenneth
Ray Graves, SI . president of the oil
company, was backrng a tank truck
into a shop area of the building.
Officials said the truck had been used
to carry a load of' anhydrous am~
mon1a fert1hzer but was filled l;\-1th
water at the time of the blast.
Fire officials said barrels of anti-
freeze and diesel add1t1ves were
stored in the building.
The company is a rural co-op that
sells -wholesale and retail -a
variety of fuel c;upphes. tires, and
some farm and truck equipment.
The bodies of two males were
found at the scene Authorities
wtthheld the 1dentn1es pending
notification of relatives.
Graves was treated at the Anthon:,-
Speaker,_s nep
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
ncP.hew of state o\ssembly Speaker
Willie Brown has been sentcnecd to
two years in prison afterconfessin& to
sho.oting another man in the
shoulder.
Shawn Collins. 24. who had
pleaded gu111} to bcina an e,~felon
OKLAHOMA
Hospital and later nsferred by
helicopter ft> the bum center at St.
Francis Medical Center m Wichita.
Authorities said he was in criticaJ
condition With second-and thtrd-
degrec bums over 70 percent of his
body.
Larry Gaug. 17. iuffcred a head
tnJUry when he was struck by Oyina
debns. police said. He also was
treated at the Anthony Hospital and
later 1ransfcrred to the Harper Hospi·
tal. where he was repcrted in good
conduion.
Four people were treated at the
.\nthony Hospital for cuts and
abrasions. They were released af\er
treatment. ·
w1thagun. was sentenced Wednesday
by Supcnor Court Judge Peter Mer-
ing.
Collins said he acted in self-defense
and asked for probation, submitting a
letter fromJ his uncle promisina Brown's hcl in finding "mcaninaful
employment" for Colhns.
Ernest Tubb,
cou_n try singer,
dies at 70
throughout ht care-er.
lie sold nt kast 30 million record
and rrtordcd more &hon 2SO M>n .
tfo hits. bc,1dcs the m1lhon·selhna
"J'm Walking the Floor Over You" in
1942, tndudcd "Waltz Acroi;s
Tun ..... l.tf.s 1 urn Back th(' Yta ,"
.. R 1nbo nt hdmKl\t." .. Tomo"o" •
'C\Cr Come ..... Filipino Baby'' and..,.
.. little 01~ Band ofG Id;'
Tod • be 1 kno"'n "H nk
Tonk" 1n r 1i. Moe Bandy. The
tylc, tr'od1t1onal c.ounto mu 1 that
Jcv(loped in Tell.as U\ the I 40s.
fratun:\ uttnrs and earth I n<."
,
l t.
f
COA ..
...
·cariven tioheers revel
• • " • • t .. '
I ' in .other w .or Id liness
Jl'rlend • or foe? Maybe re-
freehln.r pauae will lmproYe
cllapoelilon of tht. alien.
Science fiction fans
~urn future passion
into p_r~sent pai:ty .
StoriH by .SUSAN MON~RAN
OelJ Hof C.n Ill I .-i11
.. FIA WOL" is a well-known acro-
nym among science ficuon faM
Spelled out. 1t reads: "Fandom Is a
Wa} of Life." And the fan spelling It
out will usually add: "It's not 1µst a
hobby." _
There's no way of proving that
there were no dilettantes among the
more flfan i,000 people at the 42nd
World Science Fiction last ~eckend.
On the other hand there was
evidence that for some fans, science
fiction 11n'l lOlpnsoncd between
book covers, but 1s incorporated into
their dress. social life and even
lifestyle.
The programs were held at the
Anaheim Convention Center, but
you were Just as apt to sec costumes 1n
the lobby of the Hilton Towers (v.hcre
out-of-town lans were stayina) as at
the Saturday night masquerade.
A 'own . inspired by a fantas)
wntcr s un1vcnc. a number from
"Conan the Barbarian" or a chain
mail bikini could be worn with
inr.ouc1ance -fans rrught admire,
but they don't pwk. · ·
. Chain mail docs seem popular this
car. The ''hucksters" room!'"whett
F nicmorab1lia was hawked, had a
·booth carrying chain mail helmets.
. Designer Randolph Markham, who
was wean ng his own creanon of chain
mail head-band. girdle, gauntletS and
vest. claimed that the items sold well.
.. That's because the) 're magic," he
explained. ·
•· Anyone who needed a sword to
complete the ensemble could b1,1y one
at the next booth and -for no extra
charge -learn how to handle it.
Less exotic, but still gOtnJ bnskly
we!e books, Jewelry (dr:a~ons and
unicorns ~re popular dCSIJflS). re-
cords. posters and. of collrse, all
souvenirs tied into "Star Wars ".
Devotees of the tnlogy -"Star
Wars," "The Empire Strikes Back"
and "The Return of the Jedi" -have
formed a sub-sub-culture wathan sci-
ence fiction fandom.
A panel stamng "Jedi" notables
Howard Kazanjian (producer), Rich-
ard Marquand (director) and Warren
Franklin (spcCJal effects) attracted a
full house even before the crov.d
knew that Carrie Fisher. the heroine
of the movies, was scheduled to
appear. · ·
"I love your outfit." Fisher
quipped to a young woman in a
Pnncess Lesa costume.
to-be-released "01:· •
In foC"t. the -casual o~ner rould .
ha\e mistaken the con enllon for a
film festival, but not all of the fan'
·were at the mo\ 1es.
••J thank we'll learn how much of
human behavior" 1s genetic and J
suspect we'll abuse' the hell out of the
lmowlcd 1" said author Octa\1a
Butler dunna a panel discu ion of
"The Next Hundred Years ··
Butler .. v.ho v.on a Hugo Award .{or
her short story "Spctch Sounds' at
this convention. is one of the many
science fiction writers whose work
mvolve social as well as scientific
cxtrapo~tion.
Fredenk Pohl. Elii.abeth Anne
Hull, Jared C. Lobdell and Richard
D Erlich talked about •• t 984 in
1984"; But1er. Gre~ Benfdrd. Julian
May, Norman Spmrad and Brad
Linawca~cr explained "·The SF Pol-
1t1cal Six-ct rum."
Meanwhile. the Outer Space Model
United Nations v.as deciding the fate
of other plaJUcs. "To vote, please
raise )Our hands or tentacles or
whatever passes for hands in )Our
universe," instructed the moderator.
·Activists could learn more about
"'Lobbying for Space'' or hov. to get
"Out (of the Clo~t) in Fandom."
Editors, publishers and wntcrs eit·
plained to aspiring science fiction
writers "How Editors Develop
Writers" and the secrets behind
(Pleue eee P ANS/82)
DlllJ Piii THURSQAY SEPTEMBER
Tax •helter•
paved the w•y to
JamH Quigg'•
aucceaa. S..85.
.............. ..,n..I._
Suford Lewl8 of Boston. dre11ed · .. the wlalte rabbit hala
.. Allee In Wonderland .. peen tJlroaCb looklae ..... u lie
watt. for muqaeraden to pan.de at ADahdili conYe:Dt:IOD. Although the fans wanted to know
how fisher felt about Pnnccss Leia
(positive) and whether the .. Star
Wars" manuscnpt an the hucksters'
room was authentic (negattve), the
burning question was: Will there be
yet another sequel'?
Marquand's "best guess" was oyes.u •
Not all "Star Wars" followers were
at the panel discussion. however:
some were already m hoc for a back-
to-back showing of the three films.
·:.Yeah. we're really fanatics." ad-
mitted Larry Etter. of Granada He
started the linc:.at 4 p.m and was
planning to stay until the marathon
began at midnight.
Best_ examples of genre
receive Hugo Awa~ds
Bev Steven• help• Janet Wllaon adjuat her costume.
. . '
fjne ancf Dandy . .I
HOW'~ UF6 WITH A
PUPPY • 06&&1 e ?
111U "6 J
Friends give-
exec-title tQ
big surprise
Mentors, sch ool chums sa'y-
'This Is Your Life-:-Bob Quff-
(By I 0:30. the line of fans -
surrounded by pizza cartons, pillov.s.
radios and other creature comforts -
stretched for blocks.)
Science fiction mo\ 1cs of CH'f')
dcscnption v.ere shown throughout
the v.cekcnd, and the dsspla) area
included a shdc show of'the upcom-
ing film "20 IO" and an elaborate
walk-through exhibition for the soon-
Movies and books
honored, will fans
get recognition, too?
.-When editor Hugo Gcrnsback d1s-
CO\ered there \\IS a market for \\.hat
v.as then called "sctentifiction'', he
probabl) didn't knov. that an award
v.ould one da) be named -although
not shaped -after h1111. ·
The troph) -appropnatelv m the
By K oty Brooks
fonn of a rocket ~ is lhe bi&}lcst
praist that science fiction fans bestow
on their artists.
The 31st Hugo A ward ceremony
was hdd at lhe 42nd World Sctencc
Fiction con~entlon.
The Anaheim Convenuon Center
.\rena didn't hold a tand1ng-room-
onl1 cro\\d, for the c~ent po s1bly
because Sunday night was also the
beginning of a marathon showinJ. of
.. Star Wars... '"The Empire Stnk~
Back .. and "The Return of the Jedi."
Bcs1d'es, c nt10 attendees had
aJrcady done their rt by voting for
the winners And producer Howard
Kaz.lA}lall. who ~pted the Hugn
awarded to "Jedi" for Besa Dramatic
Prescotatioo, seemed JUSt as happy
that the mo' 1c marathon was such a
drav.;.
"I'm going out to thank the fans:·
he said not.Jng that this back-to-back
shov.1ng "as a first. "It's our way of
thanking the fans for supportJnl us all
these )Cars ...
Both fans and v.ritcl"!. supported
··Starttdc Rising." David Bnn who
had alrcad)' received a Nebula Award
(voted b} the Science F1ct1on Writers
of Amcna) for the book also T>On lhe
Hugo for Best Novel.
Gf"ll Bear. 'll>hosc "Blood Music"
captu~ the Hugo for Best No\elette.
also won a Nebula for: hts story
"Hardfought ··
T oastmastcr Robert Bloch (best
known for bis sc:reenpla~ "Ps)cho")
suggested there should be a Hugo
presented to all science ficuon fans
Hts idea wasn't carried out this )Car.
but some fans did act reco&1ut1on for
their work.
AlcxlS Gilhland v.-as \be U\Dttt m
the BcSt Fan '-rtist catqOry. Wbik
Mike Gl)cr received a Huao for BeS\
Fanzine ( .. File 170") and Bes1 Fan
Writer. .
Science fiction has tradiuooall
been dominated by male readcn and
wnten.. but Y.:Omm are bcgjnnina to
1nnuence the genre. Shawna
McCanh), o(ls.aac Asimov sScitnce
Fiction Magazine. won as Best Pro-
fessional Ednor.
Octavia E. Butler. Huao Mnncr for
Best Short Story ( .. Speech Sounds").
said, "One of. the reasons sci nee
fiction has become more accessibl to
women is that more v.·omen are
writing it." .
The other Hugo wtnncn ftrc
Timothy Zahn ( .. C,ascade Point";
Best Novella), Donald Tuik ("'Encyc-
lopedia of Science ficuon and Fan-
tas)" Vol. Ill: Best Non-Fiction
Book) ... Locus" Map.zinc (EditoT
Charles • . Brown, Dpt Professional
Magazme) and M1chicl Whelan (Best
Professional Artist).
The John W. Campbell Award for
Best New Writer also .,~nt to a
v.oman.
R.A. MacAvoy may have 11vcn a
clue to what makes an award-winnina
v.nter when she said "I don•t thiAk
that John W. Campbell ~ould like
what I v.ntc. but I spent 12 )ear&.
..... nung ~hat I thouabt he ~ould. ~ke
and 1t didn't v.ork. Now rm wntmC
v.hat l want to write -and 1 think
that John W Campbell would at least
hke that."
~ .......... L.9...,.
Scott Biddle and Rich May Duff greet a sia..rprUed Bob Duft. Friends Mary and Ken Alton ud Clndl Zelln er remln ..
•
\ .
..
p
l ~n
1
1
~ i:-
i .-
. . ..
Science fiction fan• Georte Fl~n and Kenneth Knabbe
were ln .. Allee In Wonderland •contingent from Boston.
,, .
oe:f e J)ocberty of Rivenlde tallea a breather from playing Er .• rltualguardfrommovle .. Dark Crystal." .
FANS, SALUTE CHARACTERS IN PA~ADE •••
FromBl • · · ~ .. ..
"Getting, Keeping, and Freeing On-
esc1£.of Agents." ·
If you massed a favorite ·author
(editor. publisher, arusr or friend)
during the day, there was a chance
thait you'd run mto him or her in
course of the evening.. A $ood chance.
There were panics to btd on the site
of the 1986 World Convention.
parties to honor new wnters. parties
given by members of various SF clubs
and parties held for no apparent .
reason. Fans from 28 countries
seemed determined to meet each
o_tbu or to renew friendships.
of"open" part1\''
"Becau~ tandom I'> al'o ~our
social life. } lHl meet a lot ol pro-
fessional v.ntc~ ... said Ted White.
6-VhO has had 16 books published and
wall be "fan Guest of Honor .. nt next
}ear's convention an Australia. "So. 1f
you have an} taknt or anchnat1on tor
wnung. well. your conta<.·ts arc
already made."
Nowada)) 7.000 fans get togcthl't
and the) )tall all seem to l..now each
other Pegg) -Rae Pa' let. who)C fatht.•1
designed th e original Hugo Award.
)atd that her children an.· "th11 d
generation tans" :
Pa' let In C) in Man land. but her
circle . of science fi.ct1on lnl'nd'
doesn't '>lop at the.line.
''At one point. nl) daughtl·r com-
plaaned about being chaperoned too
closcl~ at conventions:· <;he recalled
"She finall) said. 'What arc \ ou
~orn~l:I about'l You know that 1fi do
anything~ rnnc X!l IX opk' w11I k.•11 you
ahout 11.' ..
· I ocal fan'i did not nm., thl' chance
to J ttcnd a Worltl C 'on .. cntwn an thC'tr
o\.\n neighborhood.
Chm Ocross1 and ( hns Monahan
of I ounta1n Valle\. \\ho wC'nt to the
last rnrncnt1on 1n Ault1morc. plan to
go to next >ear's a!> well.
"You mct·t a lot of people with the
'>amt• ~ntcr~st\ ... c>.pla 1ncd D<-rossa.
.. .\nd )OU meet a lot of fnendl)
~oplc." added Monahan. "lt's-
almo.,1 ltkc a famtl) reunion."
Growing bea--rd?
It's a close· shave
My sonv1a-.c Martc.-d more mus-
tache) and beurds than all the Ru\s1an
<.'7ars put together.
They never finish them .\nd they
never grow them in front of stranger'>
Thcywa1t unul therc'sa threNla)
weekend, a week's vacation ora su1111m·1
.at home before they hc'1n the disgusting
ERMA
BoMBECK·
ritual. 1•••••••••1!11•• I wouldn't Lare af th<.'ycame home .
some weekend with Tom Selleck mustache or a Burt Reynolds mouth framed
in hiur, but th as 1s not the case. As their mother. I must stand b)· and:.vau:h lhe
day-by-day struggle. It's about as pretty as wutch1ngan akoholicdryout.
Day One: There's somethangdaffercnt abou~ them. but you c:an't put your
finger on 1t They look like the sun has gone down on them no rnattcrwhcre
they stand.
Da> Two: For no apparent reason you '13) at hrcal.fasl "1 wonMr
whatevcrbecameofthe(ro-Magnon mc.n''" ·
Day Three: The} 're begmnang to !ltroke something. hut you're not sure
what.
Da} Four. Even with a necktie and$ I 20camcl bl;uer. the} still look lake
winos.
Oa)s fl\c. 'i1x and Sevt•n: Nothang1'> growingexn~pt resentment.
Day Eight. Otsgyst-t>u.ild~ as this 1~ the day for reJOll'lng. One of thcci1 got
a p1eccofcoftagccheesecaught ma haarabovc: his lip. · ·
On the day when thearfaces lookllke ii thrcadbarecarpc.·t. l wondl•rifthc:
mothers ofSigmund Freud. Santa Claus, and Matthew. Mark. Lut...e and John
also suffered through the binh ofa beard:
This summer, It was threeweeksofbeard-grow1ng-beardsw1th no
d1rect1on. no pruning. no shapangand nocltpping. On the last day home. tht'y
appeared at breakfast w11.h faces as soft and smooth and glowingasa bab) 's
bottom.
"What happened to the beards and mustaches''" I ast...cd.
"Shaved 'em off. ..
"Why?"
"You don't th 1 nk we could go back 10 work looking lil..c that! Maybe we'll
stan growing one during the Chmtmas holidays while we're home."
Why me. God'!
''When you find out there are other
people like you ... who've read all the
same books, who can talk about all
the same things, you say, 'Hey, th is as
where I belong; " explained Pete
Heck, from New York, who writes a
science fiction newsletter.
And manv science tk t1on pros also
find a ready:made mart...cl among the
fans. Not onh do science fiction
enthusiasts bu) the hooks and the
movie uckets. they're apparently
willing to spend substantial sums on
an work.
Convention acu' 1ues included an
an exhibition and aucuon. While 11
was possible to bu) someth ing for
under $100. one painung had .t
$12,000 minimum bid. and bidding
that started 1n four figures· was not
unusual.
Sleeping arrangement a nightmare
The Science Fiction Wnters of
America had a "closed" party but
most of them also attended a number
Power short?
NEW YORK (AP) -Unless
personal computer owners take
special precaut1011s. ordinary power
supply problems could be disastrous.
according to an anicle in Professional
Computi ng magazine.
The article bv Dr. Harold J.
Highland claims that "typical power
supply problems pose danger to a
personal computer S) stem four to fi' c
times daily." He says electncal dis-
turbances hke snow on a telev1s1on
screen and "brownouts" can cause
damage to a computer's operating
S)Stem and erase 1nformat1on ·)iles.
-.111 ... ......
....
....
\t
' I ... ,
It
~ fl
According to a sun c~ conductl'd
by "Locus". a scacnl·c fiction mag.a-
zine. the average SF fan rnn aflord a
few indulgences.
He (75 percent of ~f· readership "
male) as about 33 ~ears old. earns
more than $40.000 per )ear hJ'>
completed colle~e. o"' ns a home Jnd
is not necessanl> a computer pro-
grammer. but ma) be em plo)ed 1n
business. blue collar work. the arts or
an y number of other fields.
"People who arc interested in
science fiction tend to ha' e a v. 1dl·
variety of other interests," remarked
author Poul ..\nderson. "(om en-
tions used to be small affair<;: all thc'
wanted to do was get together and
discuss scacnce fiction Nowada~" ..
1{11,d(.1
\ o Pll1bill•lh&1J1 Ill
, um tort .ind 'I\ J, 111
th1:, l'I \I l'"ptd.ll
mid 111'\'I dr"" ... rnd.il
\:,1\\ t.111pl' "r bl.1~ \., "'It
'lm1l,ir 'I\],• 111 bJ,1< \., p.1kt1I
~
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 'our
assessment of children being pcr-
mmed to sleep with a parent of the
opposite sex 1s absolute!) ndiculous
Your phrase "borderline ince .. tuou-.·
burned me up.
Peopk' like ~ou who are obsc\st·d
wtth 'e' and see !>omethang dtrt\
around e\Cf)' corner caust.· all the
probkm'>. You should either dean up
\OOr mind or retire.
I am a 29-\car-old d1,on:cc v.tth a
one-bedroom apartment. 'V1y "l-)ear-
old son and I '>kep in a douhlc bed
The clost•ne\s we share 1s so far abo' l'
thl' rl·alm llf \Our ohscem· 1magina-
t1on that \ou lould nc' cr undt·rs1and
11. Ju'>t sign me -NO H .\NG-l 'P'-,
11\.\T ·\MFORO CONN .
DEAR STAM: Thank '}ou for \Our
-6pinion. Here's another t\cil' -•••
ANN
LANDERS
DE'\R ANN LANDERS· When I
v.a'> a <;mall child I had nightmares.
M) divorced mothi:r used to take me
an lo hcr bed to mm fort me. Th as went
on . until I was 12 I completely·
'>Upport \our theory that children do
not belong 1n the bed ofa parent pf the
uppu!>ttc '>n and .11n 11'.ing proof1hat
}etu are nght
I or \l'ars I camcd the secret shame
cauwd bv rn\ confused sexual feel-
ing' It wastmposstblc for me to relate
an,, normal way to the girls I dan.>d in ..---------------------------rr-----
PALM READING
TAROT CARD. READER
AND ADVISOR
MADAME MARIA
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1922 HARBOR Bl.VD COSTA MESA -S41-11!>6
a
I AMERICAN
~CANCER ~SOCIETY
Sept. 8
high school. The problem per..isted cestuous." You were 100 percent
well into adulthood. nght. After several years of therapy I When I was youn~ my father
realize how sexually suppressed I was w9old clamh mto. bed wt th me an the
-and why This year I finally was middle of the night. He never dad
able to enJOY the freedom of a love" anything, but he al~ays made m.c affair · sleep right up next to htm. I knew It
I f~h tremendous compassion for wasn't right. but I was too young to
that son 'in Buzzard's Bay. Mass., figure out. W~). I fi!'ally told my
whose mother said he frequently mother I dadn t want him to get m bed
sleeps in her bed and that you are full wath mt.• anymore aod she made htm
of hooey. stop.
For him. and countless others I am 18 yea r.. old...now. and. r bate
whose unresolved scxu ualt will my father. I talk to him. as httle as
haunt them well past pu 'Y· I hope J>!.>SStble and avoid go1n.g mto a room
they can find the courage to face their 1f he !s there. I haven t fig1;1red out
deepest. darkest shame. rcahze that how I m going to prevent him f~om
they are wuhout blame and free gavmg me awa) when I get mamed.
themselves from the ove,'.whelm ing. but I'm determ1~ed that he not be a
shackhng guilt. -FINA LLY VIC-pan of my wedding. .
TORIOUS IN L.A. You were nght. Ann. Fathers and
· DEAR F.L.A.: Tha@s _(.or _!be 'daughiers don_'t belong in bed
documentation. Here's aDOiller leUer t0ðl'r, good-intentions or not. It
do the same subiect. can mess up a girl's whole life. -
i • • JACKSON. MISS. DEAR ANN LANDERS. I am sick DEAR MISS: I recommend that
and tared of all the flack you·re getting you get professional help and rid
for ..aymg the relationship between yourself of the anger and bostlllty.
the father and his daughter w~o sl~pt Not (or your father's sake, bat for
in his bed was "bordcrhne in-ourowo .
OPINING!
•{
ORANGE COUNT.Y'S MOST UN IQUE
lHRIFT SHOP
t .CORONA DEl MAR
10 AM
TO
4PM
c:.:~
* 9:45 RIBBON CUTTING
* LIVE AUCTIONS/PRIZES
* ENTERTAINMENT
AND LIVE MUSIC
~LLlj~ SHOES ---1 •• t ,
540-8491
'" ; , l ntr
LOCATED BEHIND COCO'S AT 2301 E-: COAST HWY
UNIQUE ATMOSPHERE • UNIQUE GOODS
•
South Coast Plaza
Mon fr 9 1r:-9 1·rr S.lt 9 am 6 pm AD DONATED BY FRIENDS OF THE COAST LEAGUE
~MREE DAY
SHOWOPE~TO
THE PUBLIC
Here 1s your opp.octun1ty to see actual rooms
designed and decorated by leadlng intenor de-
signers It's a chance to discuss your needs with
designers on a one to one basis It's also a great
opportunity co meet craftsmen and get a glimpse at
their latest products and accessories Attend tree
--i-+-+--fl---_s_e_m_1_n_a_rs_o_n_cotor, design and ~ew products _
$238 42' +'nix per mo.
"'1w tN4 300ZJC. Loaded with T·bar A1r·cond1t1onmo
stereo cassette power windows. and many other features
60 mo clOsed end lease. ~P 00$1 S15.742 down pay-
ment S1372 72 cash or tr1do.·(Ser 023661)
All Cllfl IUbject to prior ,.,.
N I B B A , N
Ml Dow. Street. Newport a..ch • 1'14·833·1300
"
~ . l.,.~
•
SEPTEMBER 7, 8, & 9
FRI . 1 I am -9 pm .
SAT. 1 I am -9 pm
Tickets S4.00
Senior Cttiuns
(65 & over)
S2 00
SUN . f I am -5 pm
THE
COMMERCE
BUILDING G
Or1111tt~ Count~ f'aiqErnurul-
Kll felt l>r .. C1i 111 \lc•:\a
I 111n .;rr \rlin1111111 ..,,
111 I .1tt P 'i I or furtl11o.r
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,!.N.!t~tlt _ _2!,.S,!.C~!tS_
+;
I
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.
•
Ban~• MMA D1Jwner. Saving& 925
Ban~ ot America 9.00 f 11 WN>I Saving~ 9 05
Ca1tto1'l,'1t F u~I Oanh 9.00 f 1oc1tty F Odem I 900
C10,he1 9.00 F irsl N.111onw11l• 9.10
F11st 1n1e1s1ate 9.00 Gibraltar Savings 908
Llol•1~ BAnk Cat1lorn1a 8.00 Glen<Jale FedP.ral I 10
Secu•••y Barik 900 Great Amern en 9.00
Sum•lomo Bank 1.00 Great Weslf'rn 9.10
Wella Far.110 1.00 Home federal Sa.o1ng~ 900
s. Lt HomP sa;1ng, ot Amer • 00
Beverly Hilla S11~ngs 1000 lm~11a1 Sav~s 9.00
Ce1tt<>rrN1 Feu1t111I 9.10 Meorcury Stv•"i' t.oo
Central SavinJl! 9.15 Sear• Sav1~s Bani! 1.00
Clllcorp Sa111ngs 9.00 Valley Fe~l.!ral ··~ Coast Savings -Wor19 Sav•!2Q•
Cotum1>111 Savings 900
"""' 1"19() ••• '•11 Q t ' STERLING ~ SAVINGS
MMA
STE RUNG
S AVINGS
AND LOAN A5SOCIATICN
197 2 ~hmi\rthur HI\ l , If\ ine Sl·R.00
~ *''• ..... ll: '
I
'·
By YARD· A ARAR
-~"'-W.U.
's Diggest summer
U>S N EL£? -Su pen ,
uµern lural htgh JlnA anll A donu·
nate<l the final \\l'Ckcnd or" hnt IS J he fCVIC\\ In the traJ pubhCDllQn
h Ptnl up l'i the b1 t summer in 1>:111) Vanet) tx-gan· "There' re I
film tndu try htSlOr\, £,ooJ • CUrtOOO ftl the lfOll)"\\000
( lim Eastwood's ''1 i&htrope'' held Padtic this wed; 1n which 11 ho~
first place for a third tr.u1ht wcc"t"nd doc funn) lhings w 1th Wood)
even though its iro of ~7. I m1lhon. Woodpecker. followed b' 'Bolero' 1n
for lhc four-da) Labor 0A) hohda\ which Bo D\:rck doc IUnn} thtn
was slia.htly down from the prev1ou; with a hone. her hatrlnd a coup.le ~r
three-day wcdend. • ·men. Judging from the alld1cm-c
But feisty "Gho\tbu~tcrs .. almust • r~ct1on, the ainoon will be ~rouod rt&~uned the top pot hy sc:mn& Up longer." '
$6.8 m111ion, nearly $2 million more fhc weekend' other newcomer. than~ weekend earlier. Tn-SHtr' .... Flashpoint'' s~amna
"BOlcro."a xuallyc!tplicnadH~n treat Williams and Kn Kmtof-
ture starring Bo Derck. scored S4 6 f~~n, "-aS unable to crad: lht top I 0
million m its maiden outing to with a take ofS 1.9 m1Jhon.
replace .. Red Dawn" at third _place. fJrfal fiaurcs for thc\ummcr aren't
But critt~ predicted a short th~trical )Ct m, but m o\t ob'>crvers t'1'J)Cct that
10181 h Cl
: TONIGH T'S TV
-----=--=---"-~ --~-~ --!_-~'.lo-
-l:00-
0 COUNTRYUNE . CD~ATflOP9
CDZOOWON..DI
~ • * •., 'The AcMlnturt Of SheflQc_k
Holmes Smlner Brottltr • 11975)
Gent Wlidlf. Mlr1y F~mln
Cristina.launeheS TV career
11 MAOHUM, P.L I WME.GaM. A BREN<
* * * ~Dall S.t" t 1957) Spenctr T ,.;y, Kalhlfine Hepburn
0 JOKEA'8 WILD
TWIJOHT ZONE I :=rAl*OO TONIGHT
· t t t 1..\ 'Thi Death Of Richtt '
( 1977) Ben Gazz#a, Robby Benion.
WltD AMENCA-
MYSTOM m 12 O'ClOQ( HOH •
(C)MOYIE * •. ,., Savannah Smilll ' ( 1982)
MMI Miier, Oclno'fan Scot1
(H)MCME
t t "Night Of The Juggler" ( 1980)
Jamel BtOlln, CWt Gorman (Sl ~
t t t•~ "The VerdlC1" (198~ Paul
Newman. Cllltlottt Rampling
-a:ao-0 FAIAYTU 0 TIC TAC OOUOH
CAHHOH P.M.MAGAZJNE
WALTER CAONl<IT'FS
lNVEASE
-t.o0-
1) Ci> SlilOtf & s..o.. 1:GflmN ewmum G1> MASTERPIECE THEA TAE
BnERTAIMHT TOMGH'T m ALRED HrTCHOOCK
PfEStN18 <Z>MCMi
t t •.; 'Daniel" (19831 Twnothy Hui·
Ion Mandy P111nkWI
-t.15-u20ao
-9:10--a NIGHT COURT
MOYIE * t t t "Hatptr (19661 Paul ~
"*1, JIM Hems.
PEOPLE'S COURT
-10:00-IJ MIKE~
0 .-..&. STET BLUES OCDCDNEWS
1944 -1984
TAXI
C)IOXINO
CCIMOVIE . * * * •friendly PtrtuUtOn ' I 1956) Gity Cooper. Dorothy MeGwt
(tt) IN8llE TltE NF\.
0 MOYIE
t t ·o.1 Of Tiit Century" I 19831
Chevy Chase. Sigourney Wt1ver.
~§)MOTHERS: FEAR Of Fl YING
Q-
-10:15-
U THAT'J HOU YWOOO
-10'JO-
(I) llJEJl9IDENT NEWS
WMP .. QNCINNATI
~)111.AMEQ
-10:46-8 NEWS
-11:00-
IJD())@J C)NfWS
OTAXI CD THE Bf.,_,..EMOHS_,,,._ e aouoGOl.D tlB ED THE 0000 NEIGHIOA8
OU MCME * t t •.; 'Tiit WOtld AccOfdflQ To
<*'p ( 1t121 Roblll Wllllms Mtty
Betti Hurt
CAT OH A HOT Tit Roof
-11:30-
fJ ()) U.S. OP9t T9NS ~ II TONGH'T
OODOOCDU 8 9 MC NEWS NIOHTUHE CD VEGAS
G) m&TS Of SAN FM.HaSCO 9 LATBIQHT NllEJID. m100ru.e MOVE
• "Pnvate School'' (19831 r11oet>t
cates Betsy Ruutl
-11:46-
lWlJOHT ZONE
THAE!T'Hf&O
0 ROWAN & MARTIN'S LAUOtMN
llllEPEND9fT NEWS MOYIE
•••,;"The Sad Sack" 11957) Jerry
L•is DI~ Wayne
-12::25-
(¢ MOVIE ** 'S.y Amen Somebody' ( 1983)
Ttlomls A Oorsly, MOt Stt!ith
-12:30-D LATE NIGHT WITH OAVIO
LETTENIAN 0 ALfRED HrTCHCOCK
PfBf.NT1 a:ieOfl.A. TODAY
t t h •Night MUil f11" 119641
Nb1t1 Finney, Shella Hll'ICOdl
(!) ROWAN & MARTWS LAUGH-IN' Q)MOVIE .
t t F.. Of The Go6dlrl GOOM
( 1969) y~ Brynn9r. Charlll Gtay
., LOVE. AMENCAH mu
eV<:JtAOE
-1:00-
D MOYIE -t t * "Sword Of LlnCllot" I 1963)
I LOS A:--.;GELES ( Pl - ( m.11na
t'errure De l orcan. launch mg a 1 \'
l'Drcer 1n 1he "'ake of her hu~band')
acquittal on cocaine traffid.ing
charge~, dropped her mamcd na ml'
for her bubbl) debut as a tall \ho"
hostess Tucsda) and made no men·
tton of her automaker hui.band.
"I wa') going to ask you 11' an) thing
unu~ual happened in the lctsl couple
of month:.:· said co-host Ste' e Ed-
wards who alluded bricfl) to the tact
viewers had come to know her from
pubhCll) surroundintr''thc trial.''
Ferrare laughed but said nothing
about the rccentl) conduded ti., e-
month counroom ordeal. John Z De
Lorean was acqunted Au 16
··we·re going to get to kno" th1c;
Get, trivial
inthePilot
Do -.ou remerober Jud\ Gar-
Comel Wiidt. Jean Wtfllce land's ia~t name in "The \\'1zard ·~ of Oz'>'
***"Thi UntnY1ted ' l1~ Ray Ho"' about Bing Crosb)'s
Mllllnd. Ruth Hus.wy theme song? e MOYE .\nd do \OU know "'hat former •*''I Fhght To Tang.er · I 1953) TV star 1s ·the ma}or of a cit} on
Join foot•ne. Jacll Patance the Orange Coast" QlMOVIE f I • MlfY' Maty• (1977) John LIN I ~OU do. )OU'll "ant lO pay ~ance Money Tm1a m the Dail} Pilot, starting
'%MOYIE Saturda). Those are three of the • * • • ·Gandhi 119821 Ben K1ng1-first I 0 questions 1 n the nc"
Illy Candice 8trgen Tm 1a column.
-1:25-You can match "us against
1H>MOVIE other tm 1add1c1s along the Coast
OJ MOVE • * · B<eatl\leSs • I 19831 Richard each "eek as T n' 1a returns to lhe * "Centtfsptud Girts . 119821 Gert V11tnt K.....,,_•y. 0a I P I l k fi . Sa Annette HMn. veronica Hlt1 ::-
1
:30·-_ 1 } 1 Ol. oo or It in tur-
12:00 day's entertainment section.
---~~~IJ~HEAL~~TH~FlEU>~~---=--_J~!l!l!l!l!l!l~!l!l~!ll!ll!!!l!!!!!I!!£:~ 6 MOVIE .-
''Many layered
and funny,
A tan Rudolph s Choose Me
s an L A • ower 41 neon orch1d-
n1p outr.,geous t>edutlful .. '•" "" ...... ,. ...
IN MEMORIUM to Sharon Tyr~ Waterbury
Reynolds Worsman Euper, D.A.R., Native Cali-
fornian, on her 40th birthday at her respective
domiciles:
"·c~oose M~' s m"r~lous
e'Hert.,.nment Am.,zing'
ek,,,:;--Ht
Warsaw, Poland; ·Sierra Madre,
Newport Beach and Las Vegas,
from her many casual and in-
timate acquaintances.
•Paid tor by The Smith!.
COSTA MESA
£d1t ·~ Tohn Ctn1e1
·~· .. l ~
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
[ 1 • i ·11 Va e,
839 1.,.,J
IRVINE
f(h\a·ll~ Unwers•tv
8'>4 88' 1
UHAIRA
AMC f 1· tiioo SQ11a1e
691 (X'.,)J
UMIRAOA
SRO C'wltw.iy ~
~23 1611
..
MISSION VIEJO Eotr.11as vel(l
tl 495 ~20
ORANGE
C ty Ct I
6J.4 2553
1r1· ll11if H
IUENA PARK
P.JOl!C s Buena Pail.
Ofive lo
821 070 .
ORANGE St.l(l.um Or ve 111
639 8770
St ARTS
FRl>AY
a " serious comedy
Genevieve Keith Lesley Ann
BuJold Carradine Warren
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
edwards TOWN CENTER
SO Ill• IT •~'OI l l~Tnll751 4184 c~~ •to.Is c ,., 111 ..:iru •
COSTA MU A
DAil Y I 20
3 30 s 45
800 1000
------·-----
and an
II ti 1on and
~Oman Ill d11fcrtnl W~l)S," said
Edward\: w hu to6k 1he dom1nan1 role
in rhc pamn on KABC"s •• M. Los
Anict~:· a onc·hour 10<.'h ~how
which follow the net\loork' 1milar ,....:.:.L:..:::...-----------
"Good Mom1na '\mcm-a ...
Ferrarc Jolo:cd that 'icwe~ would
~~~.a~ ... reg\llar au~ .. and za great
cook . •
She prom1'Jet! to ttadtthem 1«ttts
ot Italian cooking :and other cumn~
in a fe:aturc to be known as ··cnsuna's
Kitchen.".
··110\c food," she dcdaTCd. -111,c
for food!''
The first guest chef to J01n Ferrarc "a" Wolfgang Puc ... owner of the
trend~ Holl)wood rntauranl, Spago,
where the De Lorrans celebrated the
automakcr's acquittal un the charge).
Puck showed ho._ to make pizza
and Ferrarc hailed him as "the hottest !)-'
chef to town."
.,,~ .. The man who hired the former high
fashion model, K.ABC 'ice presidenl
and general manager Tom Van Am·
burg. has said her qualifications were
that she was "a ~ .,.ife. a &ood
8rta Pim
S2' S339 ... ,.
°"~~ '514993
R TOIO TREA -r: YO R F A~UL Y
TO \ "(,llT AT THE \IO\ I
Eo iasds s.ldltbld. •
. !111 ~ 6l42SSl
FOR ONLY 5e EACH
call 720-9266
tufTICT<ll IOCtt A W
Ediraub liuot111(tot Et.am 8riml
&4&0311 ~7«4
~~!?.!~ lJKMU llS1-
AMC r ab1o11 $4ua•e Edw¥dS Cmrml
(213) '9Hl633 West gg1 3'3S
'\E~'PORT CEi'iTER
lUXU#Y fHIATafS
Fnt T-Mil,.. SM.i• * ONlY S2.1S U._ ••iN
~!~~,l~ Slftl'i[lft{)l :itmfi'
s 113 fil31!eJ11!16J ~2Hl~:'f!. )
litOlt Lowe
OXllORO auMS
CN-t• Al t.10 l 1S
Si ll 1 JO & t .ll
RED DAWN (PG-U)
Shows at l 2•JO l 00 S•JO I 00
& 10·30
,...,.P'LK ""'" ,., AT U :4S l Ol
S•2S 7 14 5
c11n1 ant*••• TICHT•ON (R)
Siio•• •• 121>1 2 .ls . 1 •20 l :SO & IOiU
••II Mu"•Y Dan Aykroya
CHOST9UST1[RS fPG)
Sflows •• 12:21 2 •40
4 :SS l :2S t .10/70 MM
INCMAllA ..0 6 Tiie T ..... ef~(Nl) Siio,... al l V1tO 2:l0 r.ff '1-ff-* ..,... .. • 11J:05 IN 70 MM
DRIVE-lNS :~~
.ilil•lQJuW•I
U! 11!1 Mr!!t !r $t!f,,.,
frutSI "'°"" ,., l"lus Co.Kn Oud Zone (II')
•£Va.cor T.-NE•os CIQ ~, .. ~rtl)''S (lit)
Cllt£mU• <NJ
~lu1 The ,....,.,&"411ftl
SIOf1' ll'G)
IUUlAT1l IUO P'G) ~lu1 Co-Hit
Cloak ~ D••er (f'G)
.. LAS.-01..,. ,., J:1 0 7:20 l"ootlOOH aACHCl.OR PASTY (IQ K "1 Krt1toff•~on I CUUU•U.S Cf'C)
12 :1~~~,~~.~\'00. '"'°)&1~~~551S .. :~~I~~~.:.:.,
i>lllVl 1-.s Clot ... U.• tl JIUE Uft'-l'lt1t4 o-IM Mi11v1 1 JI Ww'ff'OI
"lillOl.1'5" (f'S)
"IQ.tt m•o
D
11• r !ii~ 1 ~.-' .. ~-----...
laMIRADA (;, 114 tte 1 ... If CliL ... -1.~ .... ---
•Mft.[ (I)
ll$ 0
o.; ) 600 l lO 10•
lltll Mf (PS U )
1730 300 ~30 soo 10 .10
"M LAST STUJQfTEI" (Plil
44 ••
"$lM 188 M
SEuttt ra. SPOCI" lf'S)
•o ltt'I
(V(llY t MUNDA Y 2 AOUL TS
FU THE "''CE Of ONlt
lh"'' '" S,.Mh """"'· ~ Dn.l•&.._...E ........ ta.
Fountain Valley
I 1411 S 0-1.., •I• •i..m l
* •QIJSJIUSltJS" "'l
fttn ll(" ,.,
la HABRA ... ~,
s
TME.~E A IN''f NO&O~Y MERE 0 LJT LJ5
C.MICKEN5
-
by Jim' Davis
I
I WILL MOT-SPUK 'TO YOUI'
9'U89M CMtCKIH l --...--.
TMINK OF
5'TRE.TC.M "5 MV SOCIAL.
Sf.C~f'T A"'-Y ,
THE
f'A111L\'
CIRCUS
BIG GEORGE py Virgil Partch (VIP)
by Bil Keane
~~~~ : !
-___.
"Borfy! You hove 't rocious floor ma nners!" ··so that's how he jogs ten miles a day."
MARMADl'KE by Brad Anderson DE:\~IS THE.11E~ACE
"Have you been talking baby talk
to him again?"
.'100-'i 11l"LLl:\S
... . ... -........ . ....,..~, ....
PEt\:\L'TS
'(QU'~E 5'TTIN6 IN
MV DESK, KID ... ~ow
.\BOUT MOVING ?
TUMBLEWEEDS
•
OH YOU RE TME DUMB
ONE WMO FAILED LAST
YEAR ARENT 'f'OU 1
. '
Hank Ketcham
'Sa\'1E600Y WANTS ME TO ACCEPT THE ~E5 6UT
™EY WONT "Tt:LLM£ WAAT J"\E J~\.€
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
WATCM FOR YOO AMO
ME ON TV, KID ...
by Charles M. Schulz
~E PR06RAM
, 15 CALLEO ''BOWL
A PUPIL"!
by Tom K. Ayan
..___ __ ...___.__ -
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t'OR BETTER OR FOR .ft'ORSE
DR. S110CK
ROSI·: IS Hos•:
JUDGE PARKER
,.
51 HCX.>RSa= M1SER'/ 1
52.. HOU~50F DE.NIAL!
eRAce
YOLJRSe L.-V E!S
POR 1'"HIS I ONE!, GANG .
~ ...
If •t'ilh1•r North or South had
1 h1N1n w b..•llC'Vt' lhl' oppon1•n1 • hl'
('Ou hl h.,v, pulll'd lu •wvt•n no
trump. }o;q•n though tht-rt' ur.-onl.v
I~ lop t rit'ks, d1•d11rl't t•an 1·lulm t lw
1.•11nlrur1 . W~l·n d1•rll\rt•r run ·his
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11n· 'P·•tle\ Jnd ont.-dub: but tht•
1.1,t rc•d 1-.1rd 1111ut't'tt•oi him unml'r
c·9'ull.L Ill' mo,l 1•1th1•r ~lulf .a 'lpadt>
.ind promolt• J third '>P•l~t· tru·k for
ti1•1•l<1rn. or t•l'lt' pnrl with a l"iuh
.1 nd u lloM t h1· lU bf,. lo '>l'Ort t tw
1utr1lhn1< tri1·k "1th lht• third rluh. ·
·for information · abou( l'harl••
• Gortri'11 n•w ·n .. w1ltiter for brkl1t
player11, w rite Goren Brida• Letter.
1909 ("innaminson Ave. flnHmln·
w n, \.J. 0807?.
by Jef! MacNelly
by Kevin Fagan
by Tom Batiuk
by George Lemont
by Pat Brady
by H arpld Le Dow•
I •
I
.j
I I
• I I
I •'
. .
'Ta~ s~eltefs ._p·Cl:ved Way ~9 .c areei~, indepe11de ~c e
I James Quigg has achieved his go'a ls . . .Ouigg ·~Is that the ent rgy I th . aftd~nergy: If the mo~ey not P"id OUl Reno frequc rttl) ~ti('rt a t~ur wlittl .
. • • . • ,. credits which arc scheduled to e~p1rc ,n tans · 1' ~ot goina to be spent drtv(' i~ rtad) to truck on dowQ to the' now. he•s·helplng other do the same thing on thcfcde~llevcl in 1986aodon tbc anyway,. QuJg ' tells .them ·0Wh~ Trucktt k i¥Cr. lfc find~\he hfe the~ · · state lc.vel l'n 1988 bould bt ex-bother with a·sn,cltcr?" ~rl!ne and mJu> "klbuu1n& with the
By JOY DEE ANTHONY 1 been shackled with restrictions that tended. These arc perceived as ju$t The 1984 tax taw· f'\.>quu'C\ that local_peoplc: • .
Dellf,..... co"~' make them unwise investments~ ano~~er w.ay for the . rich to avoid starting. this month. au tall. shelter\ B!Ck in Nc-wpon. ht de' ot~ time
These include gol4 and silver. re· paying their .share1 Quigg says, but he mu,st be rcJl ~ered wuh the IRS. during slaclt; penod 10 ",Olunteef
The president of Quigg & Com-search and development, movies and feels that sumul~tlon of alternative Qu1gg says h~ 1s glad of.this change work for a suicide PfC\itnuon center
pany walks to work.from his home on tape recordi1\&S, Quigg sa ys.' energy sources is a ~ealthy gov-bccau~ 1t wdl cause the unsavory hotline in We t Oranf.C County.
the Balboa peninsula whe1e cus.-· Quigg'~ company emphasizes cmmental BO'al._ type of ta~ shelter con,,ullanuo drop Though man~ people 'llthocaJI are JUSt
tomers can park when ·Seach traffic is energy-related tax sh~lters. His cu~ , Most pe9ple Paring taxes anyWhere out of busin~i or shape up. lone I" Quigg sa~ she has helped some
'heavy. He' collects Mcrced'cs and so·s tomers range from·school t.eachers to !n the fi-"'.C figurc=-rang,e-sh.ouftl look_ _ A.J.i!cd~ bache.lo" Qu1u ll)$ l~ f+t'la-:a-~Ki offenng a sym-
. convertibles. Four years ago he c,Orpoflle presidcntf •and big name mt<? t~x · afleher~. Quigg feels. Ille pathetic o.:fr w., other'S:'"Or the fecltng
achieved his goal of financial iode· athletes. He and his partner .. Michael · m~Jon.tr ofthose in Orang~C?unt~m · )OU get when )OU .helR, he eitplai n~
. J)endtm:e. Nowhehelpsotherstlo the• AIYe'y; a.lso.advise,~l~inThe area t~s ,category a~. ~ot n<>w tapp)ng .sem:J·n·. BT 'OC* ~s . ''11's lik~go1ng tO<'hurch."' . · .. ·sam,e. James.R. Quigg is aux shelter · of equipment ·teasing and con-ex1st10gopportun1t1es. he adds.enhtr l t u , Quigg Stilrt~ ~orlong 1n a men s cons~ltant. . . dominium buying on low or prac. ~cause. of fear of the IRS or out of' haberdasher)' \\.h ale sull an ccon-~1th va!"OUS fl~t-tax proposals tially non-existent down payments. tn~ufficient knowledge of potential on Jn vestment, om1cs student at the UnlVCr\ll) of
being bandied about, la! loopholes , He says it's possible to ·rnvest $1000 gain. ' W1~onsin. Upon graduaunf he dc-
may one day close up. Already, onahomeina 12-monthperiodand Buttaxshcltcrsareeeveryon~. :tax.sfratelfies c1dcdto take HoraccG~elc> sadv1cc
however. many areas that were once to eliminate $20.000 from tax.able Those with deeply-1 gram d ·spend-, E:J• and go West. There he became a
coniidered profitable shelters ha ve income. inghabits may aswe lsave the time Learn proven in vestment model for "Esquire" and "Gende-
strategies that can help you reduce man's · Quartt..'1'1~:· After tryrng
your taxes. while generat ing more ---------------.. ---1111111-•1111111-miililllil• income. during a three-hoar seminar
at--()range. Geast CoUqe September
15. -SeahaWk Ott=d:ec U .es · -Bifference betwee-n emp oyee and -
~i-ndependent contractoris fine l i ne
Titled "Use the Federal Govern-
ment 'lo l~creasc Your Wealth." the
seminar 1r from-9-a:m:-to-noon m
OCC's Stienoe Lecture HaJI I. Ad·
mission is $1 5.
a 5 uercent ~iVideD<l-·-------
>
Many employers seem to feel that
individuals hired on a short term
basis can be paid as casual labor and
thereby eliminate the payroll taxes.
There is no provision in the payroll
tax laws for casual labor, mis-
cellaneous labor, or 'pan-time labor.
An individual is either an employee
or an independent contractor. If the
employee is an independent contrac-
tor, you can pay a dontraeted flat rate
and ha.Yo. no additional payroll t~
obligations.
If the person is an employee. you're
subject to the normal payroll taxes to
federal and state agencies.
Some employers. in eliminating
the payroll taxes, have also failed to
cover their help . with industrial
accident insurance. There is substan-
tial financial risk in having people
MUTUAL FUNDS
OVER THE Co uNHR
1Veetem DWftaJ Ml• rlP
RALPH -
-stotT
~~on your premise· or JOb Seminar lecturer Allen Klosowski
site, with you Is and equipment. is a financial adviser with 15 years of
that person 1s mos ~el y go!ng ~o be experience tn counseling-eorpora1e ---an~mployec. ~e. or will be an executives. business owners and -emp ee even 1f they wor ~Iv ot~cr prof('5,$ionaJs in areas o(tax and
part o day. , · · inves~ent.pl.anningr
Seaha"".k 011 International. Inc. an .
independent oil .and gas produ~r tn
Newpon Beach, has declared a 5
percent stock dividend payabk Oct.
I. 19~4. to sharehoJders of record oo
Sept. 10.
Western OW.tal Corp. oflrvine has
announced diat net sales (or tbe
founh quarter ended June 30 totaled
S4 I. 7 ·million, up 138 perc.cn.t from
net sales in the fouith quarter of ftSCal
1983.
work for you without proper coverage
under industrial accident insurance.
Employee health policies and th~
company's gencraJ iability insurance
are not substitutes for industrial
accident insurance.
The facts and circumstances de-
termine who shall be an employee
and who is an independent contrac-
tor. If an individual works under your
lode dent contractors Jy Registration for the program •!I
0 as they please, they USC bein$ COnd~Cted in OCC's ~Om·
their owrt. quipment, and regularly • murut~ Service Office, located .in the,
perform t~ same type of work for colleges ~udcnt Center Building.
people 'Olh than you. T~e office 1s open Monday through
Smee the fine line between em-Fnd.ay from 9 a.m. to· 7 p.m.
Roben . Fnt>denberg. president of
Seahawk, stated that this js the first
d1v1dend ever ·paid b) the company
and that the board of directors
intends to follo\\o a pohC) of declann&
annual di"1dends whene\er possible.·
Net income from oontipuiQJ oper·
ations totaled $2.8 million rep-
resented a 101 ·percent profia im·
provemcnt from net income from
continuing operationsofS 1.4 millio.n.
ployee and independent contractor _.---
can be difficult to · distinguish and
since the financial exposure to the
employer can be signifieant. it's
worth seeking professional assistarce
befo re you hire "casual labor." ·
Ralpb Scott 11 a cer (jfled public
accoualJUJI practiciDg ia Newport
Beacb. .._
'
·,-
I
Tokai ,Bank
Announces
~~'~' Numerex BarbGr Auxton S.ref' un ~rd is mpcp
11•01 HaleSy tmunex Im~ lnrr el ~ ·ra ~t Bart 1.1!.1 __ ~-cl I 11· LfeScl s
•
J -...,
S'A -~ JV, -,..,
S"2 -;\la ' ~ 1 -
lo9 4 . ..,
2 '"" , l/4
6 ~ ~ ~ 'Ill 3 lit • '"2 k-"" -1 ~ 10h -11. .. '14 -'h l ' -• ~ ii.! ::: a ,,.. -• !4
Bonus #1 We I give you , % of your ·1-
Stallme()t loan amount 'bs a bonus '1t>u
can apply 1t toward your first payrlC'n·
Bar ... 1.. "'eC• '.~s Ck Count
or take 1t 1n cash Say, tor e~arnple, vOl•
borrow $15,000 R19N away your $ IS
aheadl Free and clear'
s110001P9 for a car. home improvement
or l'~ rsona' ... Jn? Tokd1 Bank has all the
r1gh• answers Compet1t1ve rates Personal
attcnt101" Quiet: oecis1ons Terms tailored
to your budget And our Double Bonus
Bonu• #t W~'IJ 91ve you a rate thats
11\'% below our regular 1n~tallment
loan rate when you arrange tor
automatic payments from a T~=it
a T~a1 Bank exc lus1ve Come to us for the
IOVv·cost loan vou re 1001<in9 for C~
soon, though Our Double Bonus'
offer ends on Sept 30, 1984
,~~··
lOKAI BANK
LA-Downtown
(213) 972-0900
Alhembr1f Glrftctd
(818) 570-6378
AlhM\bra est Valley
(818) 5 7().6.417 -
' Htrmosa kach
c21J> m 1826
'
0 CALIFORNIA ~(Ml FO.C-
• !I.in· r
Huntington kach
''4 963 ~51
Ing~
(91) t '4 4.:
Newport Beech
t 1~ (H6·~
Paadcna
• B 8 5 O·o3QO
. ' ,
• "'YI Del Rey
'213) 823-9281
RcdondokKh
~ 913) 373.QS()q
5-\ Fr.ic.tsco «• 5) 546--64-«
Ttmplc"Ctty
(818) 570-6.130
1u • ·r . l :1
11.1 .. 111
n:i
i 1 1
' l
<
-·
On
the
-t--
,.
•
~-----
-
Dow JoNE S AvERAGES
-- -- ----
-
1' WHA T NYSE Om
[~---=---=-==-~ -=----- - -
N WYO IC CAPl<S.P 6
I NYSE LEADERS
I _
--~ " -. -----; --. ---: - -
•nd ntt chenoi of lht. 11r,'"~ • "'°'' active N•w Tork StQ<k EKch•noe luuo. tredlno netlonellv at. mor~1111n st. f:ld UI ·n'· ~'I• -j~ 0 I Inc; I I -~
mfdcst • • ~ , ~· t \'II Am xpren :t. ~ ~ atMto ,.., h
fgllalEQ <1\'11 -\.'e
bll '• t ~ C6l:alm di 'Iii
18 l t"· ~ aU Ulh $ f;u1~o~o ~~;..
•lr;nf'ur I In ~m ~
AM Cotp ' -'I•
UP s AND OowN s
NEW YOStK (AP> -The followlno 11$1 shows the New Yort( Stock E1tcha~ stockr. and warrant• that have ~ up th• mor.t Jnd dOwn the most bas.d on perc1111 of cheno• reoerdten. of voi.mt
fOI' Thursdev. No r.t<:urltlts lredlno blloW S2 ere ln<:I· ·1,1dld Ntl and per«nt•oe changes er11 !Pll dltftrtnGt bllw"n the P<SVIO\ls dos no
price and Thursd•"(;J.l pm Price.
Name Last c'\ Pct ~ ~11rciScpf~· 1~.~ i 1Y"i 8~ i~':l 3 ~IL Co ofW ""'-1112 Uo I . ~ Pan,Sr.f P~tde ft : ~g l : ' Cl•vtPak Wh Ht Uo . 7 LIL Co• ofT 1• 1''9 UP
I Prt1l1v ,.~ 1 UP I i 9 SafegrdScl 7\9 + 1 , Up .
.,, 10 e.,f Air pf 7~ I '1 Up . 1· lj LIL o ofU 171.4 1"11 UP l LIL o ofV l• ~, Uo
1 StenreyWks 27 1~ rUo • 1• ICN Pharm I~ '-'J Up 6.~ l~ ~::=Lai ,,.,~ + ~ ~: t 1
17 A.~ellca ~ ''• + 114 rl ··~ 18 ~ ghNa~oti''0
1 ~ I ~ u: 1·;
H
L L Co pf P 1 lt "t ~P . lnttollh~ 1111, 1 p Union Coro 1 ~ o 5.7 Ensource ,~ \'I UP 5' 2• MuaOtf'h n \t ~ UP S' 25 Rollins · ~ + .,, Uo S 6 DOWNS
I Tr1n~&m~ln Las~ • _c~t ofc'iH
~ ~J~f31~~· ~J" = ~~: l' • ~NC Res t51'lf -~ • S B lnd 8''• -1'1 . 6 ev~oOS 30' • -1>1. S 7 PSv ol I •of I 161 -"' ·2 I Tull M n l -~ ·i 9 HR Ind n '• -• •. 10 Marqde '°9 -I I .. 11 FlowGtnl ~ -• • <I 12 HtllmBr 17' • -J-. ' 13 Tiger Int s i... -• •· l<I ClnG 7 ••of •3'. -1>4 l~ ~~~:~mot 1\i.-::_ '~t 1, avlnCP '/-; -•
II ltv l11vest 39:\9 -I') 9 levCllff 20'1• -\• 20 ckerdJk 231.4 -1• 21 onson 3\t -• ,. :6
H
WnUn l•of 13' • -., .S
Ramada Inn 7 -• ' WHn Unit 7 • 4 5 KalsrAlum l<l'n -~) .3
WHAT AMEX Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Seo. 6
AM£X LEADERS
NEW YORK (A.Pl· So'-'· <I p.m orlce and net change of ll~e ten sl ectlve American Stock itchanoe . ~uu , tradlno • n1t1one Iv at "ro~~~(~t'& 'l m·1 2~1· i .,., BAT Ind J· ~ :+ ~ ~., Pe.tent 'I ' I' o~Plrl l • -• lza Coro • I ,,... Gu1Tcan o 1 l, f 111• i ,,.. ~vR•srcs 'R' i~ + :1
• cfl Gtl'!I • d t.... =... '• N amp BB . -"' --.
NASDAQ SUMMARY
CuLo Quo TES
--- - - ------
METALS QuoTES
,__ --~-----
That •s an apt description ofbotlJ bl)_ trtess nd
bu si ~ess peopl along the Orange Coast. T~ keep track of
\vh er ecompaniesaregotngandwhl hp o~l ar h lpln
t h m get ther .just watch 'Credit I.An · -v ry day in th
Busin ess section of your new DlllJ m.lat
•
llilJ NII THUR.SOA Y. SEPTE~BER 6 1
Big ,aame tlah
etlll ev•llable
for salt water
anglera. C2.
PrH~-::r: Cube
otmlreclM
coming an.. Cl.
_Angel~-get
a .breather,
I ~
. ~rail by 1/2
~-Halos.'romp. '1-1-4 ·, ~heWUd,9{UdW..t
over Cleveland;
-~---take today off
• CLEVELAND (AP) -Cleveland .
Indians Manager. Pat Corrales was
more . than a little upset with the
team's 114 loss to the An~ls but he
wasn't totalt;'. unhapJ?.Y with pitcher
Jose Roman s major league debut
"He proeably tried tO' overthrow a
little," said Corrales after Wednesday
night's game ... He's iot a heck of an
arm though. He's going to be in the
rotauon and might make four or five
more starts."
The 20.year-<>ld Roman sur·
rendered five runs in 3 1-3 inninp to
take the loss. lk tiad three scoreless
innings but m the fourth inninJ the
AngclS"Scored five runs against him to
knock him out.
Roman said he didn't feel as loose
after a 37-minute rain delay in the
bottom of the second.
AL .. STST~S ' W LPCL ..
Kel!SH City 70 ff .. -
Mu!nnot• " .. ... -. M9ltl • ,, .. ... ¥.I
Oeklllnd '5 1S • ..-~~
OliQ9o " 74 ..... 5¥1 . .............
ANG&Uli4l-Homt CU> s-t U, 12. 13 C~; l4, 15, lf ClllQ9o, U, 1t. It,
20 1(-CltY, 21. 22. 23 T-.~A
(11). *' 7 ••• ' OiiQeo, ,. Q), ~ • ..,. ICliM.n Cltv, %7. 2'. 2'. • Tn-. ..._.SOTA (DJ-HofM (ll)· s.t 1,
I. 9 T •~. 10, 11, 121'rllftM' , , •
1•. 20 Ch!Q9o; n. 22. n c~ •••• 00)• s.t. 14, 15. 1' T...a, M, H. 16
Chlcno. 27. '21. 2'. lltfOlwlMO UltSAS QTY (ZI -Home ( ll). s.t
1. •· 9-S.ttt. 21, 22, 1J O.a.M; UCIJ.-2'. 2' ......,., Awrt (Jl). s.t. to, II, 12
MlmltlOle: l4, IS, '6 S..lttll; 17, ll •• tf, JI ... ,,..; •• 2',. ~. .
OAKLANO (2Jl -Home (12): s.t II,
11, l2 c:Ncaeo; u, ts, 1' Clftellind: 11. 11. lf T.us; 29, ·2', » K .... CllY; AWM'
(10): s. .• CNQeo. 7, •• '~; J\, U 1J K.,...t Cit¥, 2A, 25, 2t TtAL
CMC.AOO (>l) -Home ClOl: s.t. 6
OlllJIN. 1. 1, • ...,....: 11, n. a s.tt11tt 24. 2S, 2' Mlflnllota. A #ft' (14): Seel, IO,
11, l109k!Md, 14, IS. 1' A..-; i7, .. 1',
• MinnnOI•; fl, 2'., 2' •• s.ttll.
Dlilf ................ ~
Ouartetback Andy Miller plclea UnlTenlty lltp touJcbt in the 1984 prep football opener .,almt arch-rtftl lnine. . .
"Before the rain delaf· I felt real
good,"· said Roman. •• had good
concentration and knew what I was
doing...Aftcr the nlin delay, I felt like
another pitcher -real different ...
Ang,els outfieldet Fred Lynn. who
went for 4 for '4 and tied a California
record by drivina in at least one run in
.ciaht consecutive games, agreed with
(Pleue eee AlfGELS/C2)
HBfaces
CdM: Uni
takes on .
Vaqueros
By ROGER" CARLSON
Of Ille o.117 Not ....
Contenders in the Sea View,
Sunset, South Coast and Century
leagues put their wares on the lint on
three fronts. tonight in non-league
play as the 1984 prep football season
gets under way.
The first kickoff fur each game is
7:30. Here's a capsule look at each:
Hunttngton Beach vs. CdM
·Corona del Mar's reputation as a
scrambling. quarterback-<>riented of-
fense. is featured with senior Bobby
Hatfield at· the controls, backed by
running-back Robert Tomichek--and-
host of juniors. Hunlington Beach
counters with a lot of new face!t but
the same Delaware Win ed-T onense
which has cam o wo
straight successful seasons. Game
site: Newport Harbor High.
University vs. Irvine
It's the first day of school in the city
of Irvine and these two cross-town
rivals figure to make things plenty hot
tonight with quality depth at both
schools. Jeff Dielman, a two-year
starter. leads the way at quarterback
for Irvine, which bas switched to the
South Coast League this season.
Andy . Miller returns at quarterback
for University. Game site: Irvine
HiJh (Irvine is the home team).
Saddleback vs. Santa Ana VaUey
Saddlcback High's Roadrunners,
considered the early favorites in the Sea View (along with University).
with its lethal backfield speed (Earl
Jones, Teddy Baker & Co.), tanaJe
with Century league toughie Santa
Ana Valley in a cross-town skirmish.
Game site: Santa Ana Bowl.
Other Orange County games: San
Die o Morse at Mission Vi~ec.O:.i.,'.;..f.::.ul;,:..1·_1~...:...-....,.~
erton vs. Ana e1m at r:aPi ma ar ;
Rancho Alamitos at Tustin; South
Hills vs. EJ Dorado at Valencia High.
.,.., ............ """""'u,111
Steve Frank and hU lrri.ne Hlgll teammates take on Uni.
-------
,i ANAl.YSIS
~·~ -=---"'-~~---~-=-----1 ••
·Saga: of th~ ~ild, Mild West
'A division where . 500 record
iriight earn ticket to playoffS
By CURT BROWN u.,.. ....
· The American Leasue's Mild, Mild W(St may be won
by default.
The An$els. Minnesota Twins, Kansas City Royals.
Chicago White Sox and Oakland A's all have a chance to
challenge an infamous baseball record by w1nnm1 the
division with the fewest victories.
The 1973 New York Mets won the National Leaaue
• East with 83 victones. four more pmes than they lost
That record is in danger, and It's hkcly the AL West winner
1 will be the only team in the division W1th a record better
: than .~00. a Chicago wa last year.
,. Through Labor Oiy weekend even last·plac~ Seattle
• wa only91/iptnc out,andnoonewastakingcharac.Only
• 'nnh·placc Texas, with a 6-4 P\lrk, had won more pmcs
than 1t had lo"t over the previous 10 pm .
• 'p1c1ng th race 1 a schedule that ha the four top
contenders finishina on the road -Minnesota at
Cleveland, Kansas City at Oak.land, the An I at Tcus
"' and Chic go at Seaulr.
h1caao and Kan Ctty have the (ouah t pt m·
her hcdu1c . The ire the only contenders who aon t pla
Tcxu nd Cle\ eland. .
lhc West champion probolhly would ftn1 h 1n the
. .
..
bottom half ot the AL Easr, · butlrtSSll\I New York
Yankees' owner George Steinbrenner's comment that the
AL West 1 &Joke. 1
But before baseball fan tan lau&hina. they ouaht to
thank the West for prov1dina what's tote to be the mo t
amusing race '" t>aseball"j final month, and possibly tbt
only one.
The Twin haven't been in contentiOI\ this late an the
n inccthcywonthetitl m 1970 Onlytwoyrarsaao.
tht:y lot 102 pmcs, and ta t yta.r they were 22 .-mes
be.lo .500. They bcpn this year as 2S0.1 hqt to wm the
AL pennant.
Rchcfa Ron D 'is. one of the f4 w Twin who' been •n a pcnnanuacc. ~id. .. We weren't Clprctcd 'o be in fint
f Pl M ... AllSRJCAN/C2)
( .
Turribull: A·quiet achiever
She makes very little noise.
--·~t reaches semis with win
seeded Jimmy Connors takin.& on John Uoyd. ·
It was pluck more than luck that &Ot Turnbull past
Shriver. whom most had ooDcedcd to be Navratilova's
opponent in Friday's semis.
"Pam has a very &ood serve and it•s tough to 11tt any
NEW YORK (AP)-While Martina Navratilova and rhythm on )Out ground stroke retui'ns," Turnbull said ....
Chris Evert Lloyd have been making bi& noises in the U.S. kept han&in& in there and She had one sl~ service pme
Open tennis tournament, the venerable Wendy Turnbull in the second set, which enabled me to tKUk. I think .she
has bccom~. in her own words. "a quiet achiever." JOt nervous after thaL The preuurc is on her now that she
"I've just gone ~long quietly in my matches and won is ranked No. 4 in ~woMand-slte.ftftted lo set into lbe
them," said the spunky 31-year-<>ld Australian after a 2-6, semis," .
6-3, 6-3 upset of fourth-seeded Pam Shriver Wednesday. Turnbull wu ~inded of her \ictory over
"We have ao ad in Australia that sars something about Navrat.Uova seven ~rugo.-;bicb &Other into the fiAalsof
beingaqu1etachiever,andthat'swbat thinkl'vebeentbis the U.S. Ope-n.
week." · -A lot of water has flowed und.erth.ebri .. and I think
The upset was one of 'three in Wednesday's I've aaed." Turnbull said with a smile ... rm like cheese; or
quarterfipals, as I 4th-seCded Carling Bassett of Canada wine, I set better with age ...
shocked third-seeded Hana Mandlikova-6-4, 6-3 in Bassen had a relatively easy time handling Man-
women 's play and 15th-seeded Pat Cash of Australia dlikova. .
trimmed fourth-seeded Mats Wilander of Sweden 7-6 .. I knew that Hana was having some touah matches
(7-3), 6-4, 2-6, 6-3 in men's play. tbts week, and I went in there not thi.nki.oa it was the
In other women's singles matches, ~avratiJo.va and quartCrfinals,.-.nd fvc been playing well aU week" said
Lloyd breezed ase~~~did Ivan Lend! in.lltc .... m .... e~n'.-s_..Bas ..... sc_tt..i,.hubblina. blonde 'tJt"!Ht.Vf .. And I didn't stan -
dlv1s1on. The top-seeded Navratilova rolled past Helena playin& too fast, I just kept really low-key, and I dido•t
Sukova of Czechoslovakia 6-3, 6-3, and the second-set'ded really think too much."
Lloyd defeated West Germany's Sylvia Hanika 6-2, 6-3. Bassen added: ... th.ouabt my passing shots were very
Lcndl, seeded No. 2. defeated No. 5 Andres Gomez 6-4, good today and I was wrong-footin& her. She would IO one
6-4, 6-1. way~ and she would tum. and I worild bit it down the same
The results set up the women's semifinals Friday way.ldon'ttbinklmissedtoomanypassinasbotsandmy
matchina Navratilova against Tum~ull, seeded 13th, and lob was a lbt better."·
Lloyd against Bassett. Cash found Wilander to be "a bit below his best. He's
The men's quarterfinals continued today with top-coming off an injury and I think I was lucky to act him
seeded John McEnroe meeting Gene Mayer and second· when he's off his pme."
Flores
recalls
~ollapse
Seattle, Harris
. . agree to terms
Seahawks hoping
to fill gap created
by loss of Warner
for the contract just two days after the
Seahawks lost Warner for the 1914
season with a severe knee injury.
The annou~oement was made at a
hastily called news confcrtnoe at the
Seahawks' offices in K.irk.Jand, at\cr
Harris flew into Seattle with his agent.,
Bart Beier, a Pitt.sburih lawyer. · · SEATTLE(AP)-FrancoHams.a The Seattle sports media were on .,..,..--=~e'f payer m llie~IR5" nan<! to arcct ibe H~po~un~--+-·-ti
&)onous past, reached l&J'CCment for a fonner Penn S~te standout .
' I
one·y~r contract with Seattle .. This was the worst~keet secret in Wedn~y to ttplacc the Seahawlcs' football:· MCCormack said in mak-
1ojured , star runnina back. Cun 1r.a the annouoccmenL
Warner. ..We're JUSt real happy to ha\ie
"Harris 1s only 363 yards. sh> of francobcre ... satdScaulchcadCoa.ch
breaking Jim Brown's Nattonal Foot· Chuck Knox. "l'vebeenab1aadm1rer
ball League career ru.sh1na record of of his for many years."
12.312 yards. · "I hope f 1ook good in blue:· a
"Franco didn't oome cheap." ad· smilina Hams said.
mitted Mike McCormack, Seahawks Asked whether he would be able to
president and acnetal manq~ He pla) Sundayapmstthe 1-0San Diqo
· said the Seabawks and then newest Cbal'gt1'5 in Seattle's second rcaular
player would officially Sl&D a contract season pme. Harris replied,
Thursday. "HopefuUy. I ftcl aood. I feel in good
No terms of Harris' contract were hape and ready to ao:•
announced but there was_ s~ulation Hams. a first-round drtft choice in
• t was in the $500.000-$600.000 I 972. played all l 2 ofhis NFL seasons
ranae, includina bonuses and inccn-in Pmsbuflh, where he ,massed
tivcs. 11,950 yards rushina and 91 'touch·
Harris. 34. rcachcd an ureement downs"on 2. I cam in 16S pmcs
Thomas suingRams, Raiders·
Ra1
i\h \h
, l
Presl_dent• faith
in miracles being
r.estor-ed. by eubs
CHICAOO-Prwdtnt R n )'S ·111 he's alwa)t believed Jn m ra l and tbat
his f1 1th 1 bcinJ fe'\\lrdcd by 1he Chi o
Cubs no~ closma an o a ch nee 10 W1n
their fir1t National uc champton hip title 1inet .·194S. ' . •
"All m) hfe I've bthe~cd tn miracle ... And now,
after 39 )'ean ofwamna. tb lraclc 1s happening.'' the
president told 'the EConom1c Club of Chu:qo on
Wednesda • • The Cubl ~ on ihtir way to a National
Lcque pennant.
•
0 1 have to tell you what that means to me personally." Reapn
said, ''I was bro•dcastlna the Cubs in l 93S when the only
mathe·muical chance they had to
win the pennant was to win the
last 21 aam« of the season. And 01.hey did."
· He added that "if you· shar.c
· tnY belie( that all thinas come .... __.__, toaether for &bod, then how can •"'an · we not believe the success of the
Cubs bodes well for our nation's heanland?"
Ourina an addrcs focusina on economic issues,
the president drew several round of lau&hter with
references to the Cubs' patchy history o-vcr the past half
century, since the da)'I when ·~eapn wu a radio
announcer in Des Mo1ne1 rccrcauna 1he play·~·play
rrom Western Union ticker tape.
The Cubs' history includes pennant11n I 93S. 1938 and 194S
Rcapn said-their 21.pme 1treak an l93S "still
stands today as an unequalled record."
"When I'm in the presence ofauch arcatness. how
can I feel intimidated by a litUe diillen&e like runnlna
for president:'
r
Soviet runner refu•e• ·te•t .
LOS ANGE S -Tatiana K.uankina, the Sovt orld record-holder lll'C'a
1n the l ,SOO and 3, .meters, refused to fM
take a random drua tCSf. af\er wmnina the
5.000-meter race at the 'lntemauonal Track and Field
meet in Pans. the Los Anaeles Times reported.
But the newspaper quoted the aeneral secretary of
the lntemauonal Amateur Athleuc Federation as
sayina that no immedi~te penalties ap1nst Kaunk1na
would be fonhcominj "We don't want t make a snap dec1s1on." said
IAAF General Sccrcta John Holt of Great Bntaan.
"You've seen m e last 10 to 15 da s how the
performances of Socia 1st athletes have en~anced the
presuac and quality of intemauonal permit mcct1np,"
Holl sa1d.
Cyclist recovera lost medal
ASPEN. Colo. -Alexi Orewal. the •
Olympic cyclina champion who lost his 1 •
gold medal on a plane before he returned
home from the Games, has the medal back.
"The medal and the box 1n which 1t was contained
amved on Fnday," said Jas11t Grewal. Alexi's father.
.. It was returned by the Southland Corp"
The Southland Corp. was sponsor of a tour made
by Grewal and other Olympians after their v1ctone1 at
Los Anaeles last month. .
Grewal won the aotd medal in the I I 8-mne road
race in the Olympic Games at Mission VieJo. Dunng
the ensuina tour. Grewal lost his b1C)cle, the medal and
his lugpae JaSJ1t Grewal said the bike was returned about two
weeks aao "All hi·s· lu~ac still is missina,~ the mci:!al
winner's rather said Wednesday
Swoope deniea aelllng cocaine
SPRll'livFlELD;lll. ~ Un1vers1t) of [!]
Ilhno1s football star Cra11 Swoope denied • •
Wednesday that he wa1 part of a conspiracy
to sell cocaine. and said he once scolded his
alleged accomplice for mak1n1 a drug de~I in his
pre~ncc . Swoope taking the witness &tand for the first ume.
contrad1cted' te\t1mony flvcn hours earlier by Herbert
Lorenzo Siler. an admitted drua dealer who 1s the
government's star. witness.
Swoope, 20, denied Siler's assertion~ that he i.tored
cocaine and moi'ley received from Saler's dru& sales He
also told the U.S Distnct Counjury that he never used
cocaine, despite Saler's claim that he and Swoope had
used the drua toaether.
USFL loat bundle, paper say1
NEW YORK -United States Foot· [!]
ball Lcaaue owners lost an estimated $63 •II• million last season and face arow1na
skept1c1\m amona fans about the leaaue's
ab1ht} to survive, USA Today reponed Wednesda)
The newspaper, c111n1 a confidential prel imanan
report released to USFL owners last month. said 6~
percent of 3,000 rans 1urveyed concluded that "with a
l 'SFL team. you never know 1f they'll be here nc,.t
year "
Jim Byrne. a USFL spokesman. \liOthe 69 percent
fiaure was "totally erroneous." •
He uid he could not confirm the $63 million Ion
ftaure. "So many fiaures ha-ve been bounced around I
can't say. l've"Seen different fi1ures all o'er the place,"
Bymesaad.
He said he thouaht the USA Today storycont11ned
material "selectively taken out of the report"
Cuba' pennant march slowed
The Ch1ca10 Cubs" dnve to the m
National Lea4ue East 11tle hit a roadblock
Wednesda) ni&ht in the form of Montreal
patcher David Palmer. The Expos' hurler.
taluna over from starter Dae Scbatieder, who ~n with
an inflamed left elbow af\er pitcb1n1 the first innina.
pitched six scoreless snninas of three-hit relief and
s1nJled home it fourth-inn1na run as Montreal ended
Chacaao's fout-pme winnina streak by bcatina the
Cubs. 3-1 .. The New York Mets took adnntaae.
movina to within six games of the
Cubs, with a ._2 victory in
P1ttsbuf'lh. Ra1 Knlpt'a sixth·
innina infield smJle c:fro-ve 1n one
run and another aco~ when
Pirates' shonstop l\on · Wot111
threw wildly on the play to help
the Mets oven um a 2· l deficit ...
Philadelphia remained IOI/, back
as WUUe McGee went S·for·S and
sin&)ed home the w1nn1n1 run
witn two outs in the bottom of the
Palmer nmlh, cappinj a four-run rally
that lifted St Louis over the Phalhes, 6-S ... Raaht·
hander Nolan Ryan pitched ciaht strona 1nninp and
struck out eiaht to repin the all-time major leaaue
strikeout lead as Houston downed San Francisco. 4-1
Kevlll McReyoold1 went S-for·S and Steve Garvey
h1ahhahted a SC\Cn-run, seventh 1nn1n& with a three·
run double as San Diego outsluged Cincinnati. I S-11 .
in the hi&hcst sconna game an the ma1or lea,ues thl~
season. fhe Padres trailed 7-0 after two innings and
were behind 8-a going into the the sixth, but sent 10
baners to the plate while scorma five runs. San Dic:ao
paraded I 2 more batten to t >late an the seventh
Jeta test old nemesis Steelera
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. -The [!]
New York Jets arc I· 12 against the · •II t
P1ttsburah Steeler!I -0-7 in regular season
games But when the new-look Jets meet
the ne\\·look Steelers tonight (Channel 7 at 6), the> 're
not ao1n4 to let that bother them "Trus 1s the 1984 Jet football team and it's the 1984
Steelers," t.11d New York center Joe Fields. one of the
few veterans to survive a general housccleanina after
last )car's 7-9 ~eason that concluded with a 34-7 loss to
P1ttsburah. Nt"w York 1s comma off a 23-14 vi~t-Ory over the
lnd1anapohs Colts 1n the season opener last Sunda) -
a game that v.as the first National Football Leaauc
regular-season contest in the Hoosier Dome Pit-
tsburgh, meanv.h1le. lost its opener at home. 37-20 10
the Kansas Cit) Chiefs. and quanerback David
Woodley. obtained from M1am1 in the off-season, was
knocked out of the game in the third quarter with a
concussion.
Team USA gaining respect
BL; FF ALO. :-J Y -After years of ~
being second<lass citizens whose v1ctones '
an the 1nterna11onal ice hockey arena were
~cen a~ "miracle~ ... Team USA is serving
notice that America no longer needs heavenly
1nten ent1on.
"If the\ ha ven't realized 1t yet, they w11l 1n a couple
ot v.eek~,',. said goalie Tom Barrasso. "I think we're
considered one of the top hocke)' teams 1n the world."
Team USA. comprised ofN111onal Hockey Lcaaue
pla}cn. hopes to fun her close the pp between the U.S.
1ind the international elite with a victory toniJ}\t apmst
a trad111onal power. Czechoslovakia, at Memorial
\ud1tonum It 1s the only game m the six-nation
( andda Cup ~ries to be plJ)cd outside of Canada.
"It's ni ce to act back where we're aoina to have
~ome people )elhna for us." said Coach Bob
Joh n!lon .. And l thank the player\ w1ll l'cally appreciate
ti ~au~ t-hey'vcwer-k~ hard."
Televlalon, rad.lo
• TaLIYlltON e p.m. -MO ,00,.AU: Pfttlburgh 11 NeW
York Jett, Channel 7.
10 p.m -IOXltG: From . the otymplc
Auditorium (taptd), Channette. ~-l-. 11:30 p.m. -TINIU: U.8. Open NQhNQftll,
Channet 2.
MOK>
1 0 p m. -IAllMU: AUenta at C>Qdgert,.
KA8C(780).
PRIDAY'ITV
10·11a.m., 11:30em . .,.prn -'liltlll:U.S.
Open, Ch.annet 2. ·
lt water n hngotT'th()Southland
c st'' m full swana with a wide
-vanet> 0Th1111mcfish in thcoflina.
, Albacore. ycllowfin. blucfin and
---
OurooORS
bi e~c tun , dorado, ycttowtail and
k PJ ckarcbeanacauahtd ·1yby rctum IOthedockwithanCAccllent
ponfish1n1 bolu. catch.
P 55cngrr loadure ha}11 but fl h1n1 Anakrs \\ho wan Ho rcall)' enjo)
is red hot fort hose who are takina fishinaand come home with tun •nd
ad-vantaae of the .. Indian 'um mer" dorado in the cold chest, should make
fishina. lt appears that come Labor plans on fishina the "Prowler" thi1
Day many an4ler11tore their tackle month to aample the 100<1 Oshma. ·
awa)' and don t brina it out hi the For informauon, r'e ervations and -tr ~ * following March. . departure time, ph<>ne the landlnaat
Th1s)ear,ash11becn thecasefor . (619)222~1.
mannean,somcofthebestfl hana This)'e r e"in1idc"fl1hmah11
of1he)'car takes place durina thc curl) beencons1 tent for those analeri who
fall months. Outtr waters remain -have aon.t to the liaht 11ufT. With the
calm while larae 5thool1 offi1h arc warm water and lots ofb6it, the
found 1n almost an)' direction a ralbics, tuna and dorado appear to
sJ)Ortflshercould head out of port. . pttfcra livelyarichovic, smaller hook.
The paM_y boat "Prowler." operat· and haht line. •
1 na out ofFisherman 's Lindina in Tht tnck appears to be to act on the
For tho e who want to act an early
tart on the upland aame bird huntina
season, Linc Ruhauac'1 Phea,ant
Hun11n1 Club in Norco wiJI open ita
flolda to pub he huntina Saturday at
6:4S 1. m. The dailyhuntina pack.ta~
includea an all-daY. hunt, three
phca11nt released fo open fields With
excellent cover.
San 01eao. is one of the hotte1t day SPot when the (lsh Charae the boat.
boats fish1n1m the larae neel Fcnwick•s new Paciflc:suk Ro~aleas
H'Untinaat Ruhauac• i1arc11 f1 r
the whole family or brtaluna in a new
huntinapanner. For reservations and
more an formation phone (714) S~apper-owner Buu Snscndine one of the newest rods to come on the
knows where to find fish and always market and hauained respect from
Bone raclJJI •t LA Countr ,.alr
The Los Anaelei County Fair race mettina in
Pomona will open next Thunclay and continue unttl Sept. 30. and a wide vanel)' or exotic Wl&erin& possib11it1el Wiii be Qpen tO tho h01'1Cplayer. ---.,
S1l or the 12 d11~y rac~s will feature SS eucll waacnna. Horse pla)era may also bet a S2 daily double on the founh and flf\h r1ces uch day "-hu:h arc the fim two thoroupbrtd events on
the prosram . Re1um1na for a accond m11&ht year 11 the S2 p1ek 1111 Jn which fans will attempt to pack
w1nnm in the flf\h throuah 10th J"ICICI, In addiuon , fana will ha-ve \be opponunity to waaer on the Woodward Stakes from Btlmont Park Sept. IS, the Super Derby from Louiaiana Downs on Sept 22: and the Marlboro C\lp from Btlmont Park on Sep~. 29. First post 1s at 12.lO p.m. daily ind then wall
be one appaloosa. t"-O quanerhorac and nine 1horouahbrtd r1ccs each da) For more 1nformauon, phone 623--3111.
C•ean Pal•c• Ol'lllJd PrU Rick Mca" can btcome the first Atnmcan • driver In history to cam S L-nulhon in pnzc money n a s1n1lc season 1fhe 1uucctuf'uT1t the
Nov. 11 Caetars Palace Orand Prix 1n Las Yeps, the final event in this ye1r's Indy Car World Series. The 32-year-c>ld 81ker1ne1d driver la on the
brink of re1china th•t mileatone. and wlnnlna lhe n11tootctt1mplonlhfpwitt bnhe key to h1s
succcu Wtt" 10 of the 16 r~• complc.tcd,
Mears has won 5636.266, ineludina a record payoff for the lnd11napoht SOO which he won
w11h his Pcnn1oll Z· 7 Special. Sull 1v11lable to him 11 priic money from the
six rema1n1n1 race• on the '84 achedule plus a $300,000 bonus from the CART point fund. earmarked for this year's national champion. Tickets for the season-endlna Caesars Palace
Grand Pnx arc ava1labl~ by calhna the ncket hotline at (213) 31 S.1621 or by writlna Caesars Pal1cc Or1nd Pnx. 135 Hopkins Way. Suite 412.
Redondo Beach. 90277, A praic pass for the event, valued at SIO. will be _atven free wnh each reserved seat ordered
before Monday ·
735-2361. .
RJ.-enlde on·Ro.d ratJhJI Walker Evana and Rod Hall will rematch In
the Heavy Metal ChaJlen1e durina the Off· Road World Champ1onsh1p Sept. 16 ll Riverside
I nternauonal Raceway. The Evans·Hall matchupis ono of the htab·
haht• of the 1pect11or-<tes11ncd off-road rac:t, 6u1 bOth E•an1 and Hall will have to contend with an added starter 1n this yur'a rtce -Roacr
Mtara. T1eket1 for lhe event are on aale at SlOIU. Jotema.tional.. 313$6 V11 Colin&L suite. 111, West like Vlllaae. Ctl .. 91362, or at the R1vcn1de lntemation•I Raceway and aU Tick~ Master
locations. for mort informauon, phone (811) 189-9216 or(714) 653-1161.
Slow-pltcb .altball · -The Ciiy of l.quna Bach Recreation· and Social Service OCpanment 11 now acccpuna
team cntnes for 1he 1984 fall softball season. · Lcaa.u« include men's and women's 12-inch slow-pitch and men's I 6-1nch slow-puch. A coed
lcasue may be formed if11 ltaS1 four Jcam.s ahow
an interest. Teams compased of local players who rc11de with the lquna Beach Unified School Di"nct ~undanes (Irvine Co\'e to Three Atth Bal) or pla)en who hold bonafide employment within thecny hmiuofl...quna Beach ha\'efint pnonty
1( proper!) f'tlJStercd by the dud line or Fnday, Scp1. 14 for .the men's 1 l·inch leaJact and by Friday. Sept. 21 for the men's 16-inch leaaues and the women's 12-lneh leques. For funhcr 1nformat1on. phone 497-3311. ext
:?OJ
KelrbJ racbJ6 •t Velodrome . A post·Wol'ld War U bicycle racina phenomenon that has rolled throu&h Jaj)ln will make its Amencan debut It me Olympic
Velodrome at C1l lite Dominauei Hills durina the Chnstian Dior Cahfom11 Coa11 Clau1c 1h11 month. The teries will be held at 4 p.m. ca.ch Sunday 1n
September. Trad1t1onal Japanese Kelnn r1cini 11 com-pascd of nmc racen and one "rabbit or paet· aetttr. the nine nderi dr1w for their po11t1on1
behind the paee-scuina cych11 In 1dd1uon 10 thll style of racina. the Chnstlan Dior Cahfom11 Classic w11l 1nclude a vancty of
Ol)mpic and non-Olympic events. Tickets will
10 on sale at 2 pm. r1c_r daya at the Vclodrome boK office and will coat $4 on all datca except
Sept. 30 when they will be priced II $5
Park1n111 tree. .:
-
..
Murphy's rare error
gives Doq.gers a win
ANGELS .••
From Cl
(omtes' asse sment of Roman's
performance.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Not often
arc fans accustomed to sec1na the
Atlanta Bra-ves' Dale Murphy. the
National Leaaue's Most Valuable
rla)er tht last two seasons, make a
crucial mistake that costs hia team a
"He had dttcru slu1cr but he's
youna. When he aot 1n trouble I .
aatne 1n the e1ahth innina.'' Murphy thouaht he started to ovenhrow, but
u1d. that's natural for a )'ouna auy 1n that
W1th the score tied 3·3. Pedro situation," 111d Lynn.
Guerrero led off the eaahth with a Winnina pitcher Bruce Kison. 4-3,
s1nale to center. Murphy came up yielded 10 hlta and four runs while
with the ball and then, surprisinaJy. striltjn' out five and walkina five in
threw to first base to try · to act seven anninas. The Af\tel• evened
Guerrero in1tead of' throwina to 1he1r record at 69-69 an6 closed to
win.
But It happened Wednesday niJht
when Murphy's throwlna ccror In the
eiahth innina 5et up the winnanJ run
as the Los Anaeles Dodacrs def cated
the Bravei. 4-3.
"There 1s 1 card anal rule, )'OU don't
ever throw behind the runner," id
Muo>hy. who did just that an the
botfom of the eiahth innina. ·•tt' wasn't a very aman play.
f heic's only one chance in a hundred
to act 1he runner and you just can't
take that chance. c pcc1ally in a tie
second. within a half pme of flrat-place ,
The throw was off taraet and the Kansas City and Minnesota in the ball skidded into the duaout, enabhna Amencan Leaaue Wes\, K.anw
Guerrero to 10 all the way to third. City'swinovettheTwins Wednesday
Orea Brock then sliced a sinJlt to nil.ht put the two team1 In a tic in the
lef\ to score Guerrero with the • Amcncan Ltaaue West. •·
winnlnJ run, Brock's third run· Today tho Anael1 arc off, as arc
batted•m of the niaht. Kan11 City and Minnesota. ·The
For Brock, it was h11 bia.est pme naeb open a three aame aeries with
since returnma from the minors in tbe Chlcaao White Sox Friday nlpt.
late July. Lynn doubled home Juan Beni·
"I've been hluina the ball fairly quez, who had been hit by a teve
well. but they're not falhna in for Farr pitch, an the 1~th. 11-vina the
hitt," Brock said ... But l'IT\ t!')'ina not An eta a 9·l 1ead.
lO &Ct discourqcd." leYCland took a l..() lead in the
AMERICAN LEAGUE WEST RACE •.• As for hta onc·month exile to 11nt innina on RBl 1inaJes by Make
Albuquerque 1n July, Brock uid. Hararovc and Joe Caner. ln the
. .. _____ .__ ---
Prom Cl
at the end of Auaust, so ~e have nothina to lose. There's no
pre\surc 'cause no one tbouaht we'd be here an))\'I)'."
The Twin,. 5tarttrs include two rookies and. vcn
pla>m wath three yean' uptncncc or le s.
"Th,t pres ure as bound 10 build up We're only
human/' p1tchtr Mike mnhson ad dunna the Tw1nl'
recent 9·for-1 I lo11n.1 streak "Th .at umo moil of us
were in 1his ktnd of thlatton was LIU Le auc. and that'~
a ~hole CSiffercnt th1n1."
The T•1ns have a aood. 1ftyour. • st.a. ·Ina rotation of
Frank V1ol1 . Ken Sc:hrom tQd1'cwcomen mhhson and
John Butcher. both acquired fcbm TCli . Arst b sem n
Kent Hrbek 1s .\11nneM>1a·s c rid1d le for Most V luahle
Pll) ('r Tom flrunansh I~ fut II) 1u n • and roo r~
"Ma)'be I'll ace some aoOd come out founh. L~nn led off with a ln&Ie and
of It. vratks to .Bnan Downina and "Rcsaie qucauon mark. U via has blown more than a dozen -ve "I was able to work with people 1n Jackaon loaded the se w th none
opponun1ues th11 season the minon. tryma to act back into the out. Lynn scored on Bobby Gnch-'s
The TYW1n1 p eked up two vettr1na-shonst0p Chns me rouunc. t1n1n11 mpl) With the mficc fly before Jerry Narron ~aer nd lef\·handcd hmer Pat Putnam -for the stretch. way I "-'IS 1tand1n1 at the plate,·· 1in&Jcd home the ty1nJ run . Dack
But pc1cr bn11sed ha heel 1n the first 1nn1n1 ofa rained-Brock 1d .. . hofield walked, rcto dint the ba
out ame nd I ndcd on the dt bled h t. Relic\ er Bun Hooto('. 2"4, tamed and Mike ~effcoat came in' for
hcTwinsattlthavctoplayKans.asC!tY•ndCh1cqo the '/JCtory. his first 1nc:cJunc 21. ~ ·Roman .•
but 13 of their last 2S mes art·aptnll Texas and • ·hedulcd taner Bob Welch wu l::)'nn walked In tho ca&hth•and
Cleveland. • ratched becau of 1 &Ort hOulder came horn hen Do nina crack d l.:1kc &he Tw1nt, the Ro)alu.crcn't u~ d to be In . that l 1n b I he 11 tak na his h1119th homer.'
this cc. th11 belna a rebultdint )'car aner c«11ne • warm ups, leav1na rook c Lany White "The flnt Ka1r o th aM>n
su pensions and tra c . ll> make hb fint ntaJOr I uc tart. dldn~t hu wtll et 1 • ntn ni
Royals 1 n r Dick Ho ser h s patched t _ ether n • .. , found out onl) 1 minutes "We're s11ll 1tU 1 to put cvet')·
atil t nm crcv..1nclud1n11 ud 81 k. M r Gu icu and befol't' the pme th t J wu tanina.. thina to ther ltl u t\ lll'Q hkt
u ccnicr fielder Kirby Puckeu deb d n defen • Hl'~1dcs 1ncxpenence. 11nn 1a'1 bullpen
C.:h.arhc Lei nandt. all of whom can rely on ttl C\tr 0 n 1d \\ hlte, who had pitched onh today rcaU) helps lnC'f ever)lbody
• <}u1 nbctcy 1n the late 1nn1n thrtc nn1 1n the moJO th s )~r. contnbutrd,"
!'
,,
"
MAJOR LIAOUI STANDINGS
Amtrtc.n Ltltue
WWIT OlVftlON
W L f"ct. oa
'O •t SO.
70 •• ·'°' .. .. .JOO Ya
H 1' *' S'h u 14 ..... jVJ
63 77 00 11-1
ti 11 44! 1¥1
• AIT DIV llON
o.trolt " SI .u Toronto eo n .fl• 11'1
a. 11\'\0tt 71 63 ~ \)
N-Yori! 74 64 53' i. '"'°" 74 61 2 14~ Cltvttaoo •2 7t ..eo 27~
Mllw•ul&• S7 12 410 31~ WMMtderaac.... .._.. H, Clevnno •
Kt"*U City 4, M!Mttolo I
0. llM S. ~llboo 4
lellflt 6, Tf!IH I (10 Wllftol)
OelrOll I, lo llmort 0
Now Yon. 4 T«onto 'J 110 lnnlilt•l
Mltw•uk• 7, '°''°" s TNIY't 9eme 0.-letld (YOVl\t 7•)1 ot Cll!Ueo (Hoyt
11· ISi, (II) ,,....,,,,~
...... •I Clllcqo, (II) ••
S.01110 11 KtMtl City, 1111
Tt&11 11 Mlnneao11, Cn>
OIMlllNI 01 C!ntl11\d, (n)
DotrOll 11 Toronto, In>
Now York ti IOalOll, (II) ~walll!tt at l1~llm0ro, In)
SanOltilO
Houaton Allonto
Oofwl
N1n..r L.Mtut
WllT DMSION
W L l"cf, Ga
IO .0 .S71 70 70 .500
" 71 "' .. " 471 San f:renctaco
Cincinnati 51 " 417 SI '2 414
IAIT OtVIStON
Ch1<090 14 SS .0. ~!:""York 71 '1 561 • .-ni~phj1 1l 65 ,s2t lO'n
SI. Loula 11 U 51' 12
Motltreat " 10-4'3 IS'IJ PHI lbuf 114'1 .0 7' 432 24 w.._...,., 1<_
DNelr'I 4, AllOl\lo ) ~lrHI ), Chl(MO 1 Nn Yon! 4, Pllllbultl'I 2
St. Lou a 6, Pl'lllecMI~ S
San Ditto 1S, ClnclnnaH 11
Houtloll 4, S.11 F re11ehco I
TNIY'a 0.-
AllOllll (Mahler t ·t) 11 ~
IV-*'1"*' I HS>. In> Houttoo IKMPP« IJ·t l 11 Sen ken·
C•KO (UllitOY 7·11)
Cll'ldnNtf (PriCO 6· 111 11 Se" Oie90
(S.-INI
Cl'llceoo (l!ckoniov lt7l 01 MonlrMI
(LIO IS--t). (n) I
New York (Scl'l"•IOI 0·0) II Plll~;l'I
(ltnodtn 11-t), (n'
PModolllnlo <Huchon 1·10) 11 St. Loul• (Keptl'llrt 4•4). (n) ,,.....,., oamn
ClncfMOll ol DMeon, (11)
Phfloclelllfll• 11 MontrHI, In)
SI. LOUii II Pflltbul'tn, (n)
Cl'llctoo 11 N-York, en>
Houston 11 Sin Dleoo, (n)
Atlante 11 San Froncftco. tnl
AMI RICAN LIAGUE
Antell "I lftdlans 4 CALIPORNIA CLllV•LAND
Wllfono 2b cor-lb
~onifl lb
-.oniclu? r1 '-"••d LYM cf
Downing II
MCaronlf
lttJkSl!I Clh
GrlCll 31>
NINOll C
SdlofllcJ H
•rlllll ltlrhlll
S 0 I 1 lutlot cf 3 I 0 0
3 O O I Franco u 4 o I o
I 0 0 0 H1rtN lb S I I I
31)0 H1ldrl 4010
1 0 0 0 Morontr. Pft I 0 0 0
• 3 4 I C..rlw II 4 I 2 1
4 3 2 2 Vukvctl rf 4 O 1 0
0 0 0 0 CCHlil llfl I 0 1 0
2 2 0 0 Tobltr JO 2 I I 0
200 I llncloc ltl 1
S 1 I 2 Willfltd c I 0 I I
• I I 0 k11u·c121> 3 0 I 0
PtnllM Ph I t 0 0
Nollol 21> 0 0 0 0 T ... 14 11 tt t T...->6 • H 4 kMoltV .....
Caltltn&I ... "' t»-11 ~ • ••1100-4
G1mo Wlllnlnt Rll -Wllfont (2),
l:.&...Fronco DP-Clovtllnd 1
LOl-C1llforno1 f , Clovlllr\CI 11
2&-eer11111<d, Lynn, CCetllllO
31-Tobltr. Hlt-OOwnino llf>. SI-Buller
(43) SF~rlcl'I, Cerow
IP H •1• II SO c.tfWHo Klaon W;C•l 1 10 4 4 S S
Jolln 2 10001
Qewloftd
liom1n i.:,o.;1 3 M 4 S f s 1
JlffcOll 2•3 3 J I I 0
Ferr 2 1 I 1 1 2
RSmill'I 2 1 1 1 2 I
WadcMlll I 0 0 0 0 2
Jeffcoat o<tchod to 3 1>o111or' In Stl'I
H8P-T1blef (by Kfaonl, 90fllCIUel (by
Ferr). WP-ttoman Pl-111\dd T-2..St.
A ....... us
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Oede9rs 4, Br.ves 3
ATLANTA LOI ANGILll
• MTIWnpef
ltltmn as Wahtln rf
~vet ,..,.., lb
Johntonlo
ltunM2b
a.n.otCI c ,,..,,,.... Pf'I
C.mo1>
HerHrDfl
o.dlTlon 0
Llnor11 Ph
AH1nor
obrlllll •trttlll
3 1 20 Alldftnn 4110
4 I 2 0 ltltntcla d 4 I 1 O
JOO I ltlvttolo 0000
• 0 1 0 LAlldrll r1 4 I 2 1
4 I I O Guorrtr a 3 I I I
4 0 1 I lfodl Ill 4 0 2 1
4010 Marahlll 4010
3000 Howeh 0000
1000 SClotcllc 1000
1 0 O 0 lltuul 1b 1 O O O
I 0 0 0 l..andllY 7b 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Whlto It I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Sf~s Dfl I 0 1 0
0000 llcl'lrV• 0000
lrHm Pll I o o o
Hooton• o o o O
Mldndo If 0 0 0 0
U J t 2 Ttblb 2t 4 t 4 kwo 11¥ ...._
Allntl --IOO-l LM........ -... Olx-4
Gome WIMlnt "" -lroc:tl (J). E-MurDfly. L•ndrHUll, White
OP-Allenll 1 L08-Allont1 '· Lot An· NIH 6 21-fttfry, L1ndrooux, 8roek,
Morll'lll Sl-MTllomotoft 2 (2), AllCMrsOn 111>. MutPllv 111> S-.ltuuou.
SF-Woal'llnolon, Guon'lfO
~ ..... ••-te> Atllflta
Como • Dedmon L.J·) 2
LMMellls wtll•• 4 lactrt 1
Hooton W,2·4 2
HowolS.6 1 w,._~lt, '-ITllt
7 3 3 3 I
7 I 0 0 2
s l 1 I 4
I 0 • 0 1
. J 0 0 0 I
0 0 0 I 0 T-1 JL:A-n. m
Prep fbotball schedules
SUNS T LEAGU
IDtJON 51-Wnt t (11 H I
1 lt-cotlotl (11 OCC>
121-811111'.no (II OCCt ~I J lolco (ti H9) O~I Notrt Dtmt
Olt~utmlnUet (0C(I
Olf-Oc:Hn Vlow Col Hll
02J-Htft 8o1C11 0f OCC> N~rn Vt •Y {tlg A)
~MerlM l•' OCCI'•
POUNTAIN VAi.UY
U-Meler Ott (ti OCC> flf-111 T"• C11 MVl
1-.1 MiulOn v olo S2'-SM"'11 ISA lowll
~· ~ (II Wttr) 0'2-<>efffl vi.. (el W&tr)
Ott-Merine (11 OCCI OU-Wnlmlnatot (II HI)
N2-EOlion (lie Al
N,_.I Huntltl91on ... di
HUNT...OTOH llACH
U-CCSM 111 NOi H.,DOr)
COSTA M91A
11-1 IOlu Ofol!Oe
S)f-kntillO C11 NHI S70-LAtamttot IWMl.,n)
S21~tolNH>
ot-91 l..aOU«ll leaCJI D12-CdM ltl OCCI .
O,,_HOf1 Htrw Ill OCCI
02~ersJly <II If-. Ml N)-WoldlltldM WI OCCl
Nt-ell nClo <at OCCt
WOODUtDOa S~H (olMV)
s ...,_., Otmlt!I
S21..._I ~POtl HatbOt S~aWboll
06-Mettr Do <11 OCCI
Ol1-Maflfto • Ol9'l1t -..nfmlMtet
, 02t-Edlton lot OCC>
N2-0ceo!I V-N,_F111 V111ty (11 Wal
ISTANCIA •
'7-0CHll Ylow (II NH)
Sl>-Ut H1llt (el MVI
521-et s.<t CIOmlllto S2t--Unlver11ly (II OCCI
05-11 Newport Htr-.or 012-W~ lat NHI
Oft-StdoloOKk 111 NH) D2~dM 111 OCC)
N2-tl l.1911111 111C11 Nt-<;~11 MtM (11 OCC)
Sl>-Tuatin Ill "YiJW) sn-.1 Son M••co. sa-1 ...... "°"~** Ot-<dM C11 wvllltl '012-Eill"IC•O (II NH)
01,.._..." ta\. tat lrvlntl
01...,..,.ddlthcll ISA ._ll
.Hr.<ootlo Mete tol OCCl
Nf-unlvtr••f'I (et lrvtnt>
SOUTH COAST L•AGU•
MAJtfNA
St-E1110f11111 IV1ltnell) Sl.-s.rvllt 111 Witt> SU~ooll'llM (II Tuilln)
S2t-L1 Quint• (ti w .. tm"r)
OS-.t MJHlll1n
CAPlSTitANO VAU.•Y S7-FOOlllOI
Sl.,_.1 Euor1'lll
S21-C4M Ill N1>I Herl>otl
S2t-San CIOl'notlte
OS-Otn1 H'"' Ol1-frvlnt Ol>--91 HUlllll!QIOll hecfl
Ol~tn Volle'I' ltl OCCI 026-0c"n Vf1w 111 Wair)
Nl-11 W11tmt1111tr
Nt-EdiWn let OCCI
LAGUNA ••ACH
st-11 auCIMI Park Sl .... lflllnoro
S!l-01n1 Hllli
01._.I Minion ViOIO
02t-l..a9, Hflft (II Mii)' ---
N2-t>ye
SAN CLIMSNT•
ll-S1nt!l80 (II GG) s lol-COl'on• dtf ,,,,_.,
S1t-Ett111Cl1
Stt--11 CIPO V 11Jey 0.-.t lrvlt\o
OCIAN VllW
s1-e111ncl1 (II NH)
Sl .... Lt Quinto (II HI)
!21-el CVPC'OU >~I Geroone • Ot-Wn•ern (ti Hll
012-Flll "''" (II Wmllr) Olf-Ed•IOll (II HI>
026-Marilla (II W .. tmstr)
S2t-CdM (II NH)
OJ-Coste MtM
012-Unl•ortlty (01 trvlno)
01..-WoodtltlclOo (ti lrvlnol OU-.t NtwPOrl Hatl>O( -
N,_.tlencll
Nt-Se#oblCk
• N~I Tor• (11 MV) ·
DANA HILLS S7-SON>rl
S14-TorrtY Pines
S21-t L19UM IMCtl UJ-Mfulon ViOio
OS-El TOl'o
N,_., Hulllll'9ton 8MCl'I • -
N,._t Wt1tm!nstor
WISTIWNITI•
S7-U Quint• Sl~KlllCI tot 8G)
S21-Sor.,;llt
S27-Meter Oti CSA low1l o.-L.ono e..cn Wlilon
ltUNS Sandberg, Chleeeo, 102, Samual,
"""9del1>1'110, '2. W19olna, San Dl090. t2, MlllMws, Chic.Igo, to, lt1iMS, Montroo1,
" "": Corter, Montrool, ": SChmldt, Prlllo~. n , en. Clllc.090, •· Htrnendez, New York. "; Cru1. Houston,
es. oumom, cntceeo, IS, Davis, cn1c1eo. es.
HITS; Gwynn, San Olo90, lfl, Sondber1, Cl'llc100. 17', Samuel, Phllodolol'lla, 165;
Cruz. Houston, 163, Rtlnos, MonlrHf, 160
DOUBLES: R1i1111, MonlrOll, :n; Slmutl, Ph1ileltlohl1, 31, Slndbtre, Chl-cuo. 31, Rav, PlllU>urgl'I, 2t, HaMrfck, SI.
Louis, 21 •
TRIPLES S.n«11r9, Cl'llCleo, 17,
Sornuet, Pn0e4ofol'lll, IS, cru1, Houiron,
13; Dor9n. Houston, 11, Gwynn, S.11 Dlffo.
10, McG•. SI. lOYIS, 10 HOME ltUN~ ~!l>fly, Allonla, 30.
Scnmlclt, ~. 29, en.~. 2f: Corter, Montrtll, 24, Ourhem, Chla9o. 21.
Leot11rd, San Frenci1CO, 21
STOLEN BASES Samuel, ~. ... R11nn, Molltrtol, '1. wi.eo11s. Son
D•ooo. !19, Rldln. Cindnna1t, "· W11t.Ot1
N-Yortt. 41. -p~fNG (12 dods.ont). Sutcfltto, (1\1· ueo. 13-,. 2 ts; Honoll, SI. Loult, t·3,) ll.
..... o.deln. 12·•· 2MI o .... ...,. 11out. Ion, •• ,, 2 oo. Soro, ClnelMlll. 14·7. UO,
Trout. Ctllelgo, 12·6. > 42
STRtl(EOUTS Goodlft, N.-VOl'll, 224,
v~. ~. 21>1 Rnl\. Houlron,
llS. Soto, Clrldnnetl, 14t. Caruon, Ptlll•c1t•-
P1110 . HI
SAVES· Sullor, St, LOYlt , 31. Stn.11'1,
ClllCIOO. 2', °"oKo, New v~. 2', HOl!ond, Pnllade!Phl1, 21, GoH•oe, Son
Oii9o, 2S
ftENNANT RACES
Arnericaft L .. 9"
I 012-tt Caoo VoMY
01Hrvltlo
026-ol Se" Clemtl!lte N~ Hlls tel MV)
Hf-SO Holla
EL TIMO
St-<UllO PIR Ill MV)
Sl.-.Ftn..VlltV (II Miil
521-et V110ndt S:t-frvtno let MY) ~H 11~ (al MV)
Les AJilmltM
WI DNISQAY'l llHULTS ( Utll of M·lllllM "°"'8Ss ~)
".UT •ACE. Ono mlll ~.
Ftvl111 Tr11nor (Mrcl'lnd) ".00 4S.IO 710 Timtrons Sh.Mow (L.oc:Jr.ev) 4 00 2.20
Rtwt!'lm Ace lKllCIO*) ue Also rKld '"'1Chor' hY, 'TeJ)!llO RIRMr,
Primo, Lhel O.Vll, Tl'lermll 1.,'lt, JICklts
Jtl •
Tlmt 2'CIS
U EX.ACTA (2·S) Ni4 t51,.0
SICOND •ACL Ono mle trot.
DeYid S..lflonond (Hll) U0 2.20 2. lO
lnln vu<no Siar ICflfl) 2 .0 2 40
FreKll C'°"""*1Y IV ... nd1fllflam) 2.IO
AIM r~ c .. Frost, R~ancss Star,
H~ ,,,_ F"'°'" Flr1t, ai9 Va1111Mo,
H '9fllallcl F ovr J.
Time 203
U •XACTA CS-101 N'd Sll 20
TKaD •ACE. Ono mile NCI
1t1cn SutllilCt (M<sll ) 220 2 10 2 \0
1t1rtn E "'' K C L.aQn > HO 2 10' My Aunt ltoo (Mir~) 2 \0
Al$o rlCOCI. CUI " °"'· Oeton9 WIY H~. C""'-td Time 200 llS
U •XACTA 15-21 Hid 5690
fOUltTH llACI. Ono m.'to NCI Sti" 81tlln (CrOel'lenl UO 440 320
1"6Y 1ov (F ~1111) 4..20 2 IO
Afmtl(O Follo CPerkor) • uo
012'-ol Ml Ml9Uel (SDI
Olt-i..atulll Hlh
016-01111 Hiiis N)-£1 Toro
~ Mltsloft v
ANGE LUS L•AGUR
MAT•• 091 S7-fln. II y lel OCC)
S'>-$.t. VolleY tSA ..._,) S21-S.nlo AM (SA ._.,
S27~11T1iftalpr (SA aGw1)
06-+ilft. l..cft (If OCCI
012-el l•M!OP Arnet 01.,_.~ Mont (SA llowll
OU--.1 PM X HI-St Paul CSA low!) ..-~ ,. ($,\ ....,,
flPTH •ACL I 1116 rnllot Oii turf
Gwcb11 (McClrron> •.20 J 00 2 IO O~ <Htwll'YI 7.20 SIO Mltofao <Sllllllo) 610
AllO rac.d Good •• Dllmonct:s, Corusailt, OfrlU s..tcor. D•itriettlnf, HIX Powtr, Andrtw •n ,,,., Dom Orlon<to, C~ Hiii, NOOll Alf, Time. UI )IS
SS IX.ACTA (1•31 ooid s'7.SO
SIXTH ltACa. 61'> furlonoa , venety e • ., ... (McC.rn> 7.20 4 oo 3 40
Aft Altrl I L.otOYt) 360 340
Quattrini lo.loadlllol 14.00
AIM rKld A~. $liver Str••· PotnlY, ltemombor My F1thor, Rot>'I
Goldmlno, JYSI °"9 """"1'0, El ~O
Tlmo; I 1t l/5
HVIMTH •Aca. One
Potll'H (8IOCk) 7 to
LOUlsv Summit IP ncay) Prool (McClrrOll)
AIM rlCOd Potra McFil
Clrdt Of $1oo4, T'*I Ftvtt Tltne, I JS 4 IS
U llXACT A ( 1-Sl dtld Stl..50
''° 3ot ... 3.20 uo
Momeftto,
n PtCK SIX (11·3·1017•1•2·1) 11eld .
S2,3' 40 •In \Cll w\nlwloe Ikuta ls/JI
,_.., s2 Pktl s.x CQMeMtion N'd sn •
w 111 I .... Wllllllnl 1.0.alt lfNo ftonell
I IGHT'H It ACI . 6 f""°"9S
KllfMr Co IVl!tnzwelol 10 60 6.. UO
Mellntw T. Pwt.er IOhv) 1S.20 lO 40
MatrOllOl'l'lic (1'\cCarronl . 4 IO
Also rKOCt MlcMd , Somolfliloe
GorlOCMIS. Finl Norman, 8.; 6ric.
PrOUOHI 0-. letmecfllrliO, O.all'I Trao,
luill to Leal.
Timi I.II 4 S
NINTH llACI. I 1116 mltta
WllT DfVISfOM
AIM> rcteod. Worm Wl'11a. HHI 81111, Suoer Pride, Mounteln em, Oh so Fast.
Pil>el l1ndll ' • 811111 <G1rct11 .suo 2080 '0'°
K1n11s CllY 70 .. 504
IWMHOll 70 it 504
~ .. " .500 l;'j 0.kllno-'' U 75 "4 SY>
Cl'l•Cll9CI 64 74 C'4 SY>
• ...,. .... GamM
ANGELS 124)-Homo 113). Sel>t 11, 12,
,. 1l CllYOlancl; 1', IS. 16 CllicMO, 17, 1', 1'.
20 KOllMIS CllY, 21, 22, 23 Ttll\; Aw.iv 111) 5-1 7, I , f Ch.ago, 24 (2), 2S. 26
KIMlt (llY; 77. 21. Jt, lO TOJllS.
KANSAS CITY (2'31 -Homo (10): $01>t
1. 1. • s..1111. 21. 22. 2'l Oak'-"'· 24 m. 25.
26 •noe1s. Awov (13). Seo! 10, 11, 12
Minnnota, 14, 1s. 16 s .. 111t, 17, 11 It, 20
Angols, 21. 2'. JO Otkloncl
MINNESOTA 1231 -Homo (13) Stell 7,
I, f Tue1, \0, 11, 12 KIMll CllY. 17, 11,
It, 20 Cl'llcl9o; 21. 22. t3 CIOYtllnd, A•IY
0 01 SePI 14, IS, •• Tout; 24. 2S, 26
Cl'llcl",77,21.Jt,lOCllVellnd OAKLAND (22) -Homo (12): S.I 10.
IT 12 Ol!QoO; ,,, 1S, 16 Cle'l'llllid, 17, Tl,
" Tues, 21, 2'. JO KlllN• CllY, A••Y (10) Seii>I. 6 Chlcl90. 7, I, t C~. 71,
22 n k61'1MS City, 2c. 2S, 26 Tuts
CHICAGO (14) -Homo (10) SOOI. 6
Oellltnd, 7, I, t AlllM. 21. 22, 23 S.olllo, 24, 2S, 26 Minnosot1, Awn (14) Soot 10,
11, 12 Oaklond, 14, IS, 16 Aneoll, 17, 11, 1', 20 Mlnneao11; 27, n . 2', lO Setlllt
IAIT OtvtlJOH
W L Pct. GI
Ottroll It SI 636
TOl'Onlo IO St .576 1"1
•emallfto.Mtt
DETROIT 112) -Homo If): Soot 14, IS,
16 T«onto. 17, 11, 1' Mllw1uk ... 21, 22, 23
No-# YOrlit, Awn (131 S.I. 1, I. t Toronto,
10. 11. 12 8111.mtt•. 24, 25. 2' Mhtulllt.
11, 21, 2t, J9 N-Yor1l TC>ft~TO (13) -H01M tW -s.ot 7.
l . 'YlJolrilT;TD;-iT,-,rN'tw'Torl.; T7, 11 1Y
loston; 20, 21, 22. 13 Mhr1uti•. Awo.,; <')
Sot>t. 1', IS, 16 Oetro11, 24, 2S, 26 lotlon, 21
Jt, lO Milw1Ullff
llln\aln!N °'°"* CHICAGO (7)) -Hotno (I)). Seof, 10, 11 ~·•· 12. 13 Montt..,, I• IS. 16 Now Yol'k; 11, It, 20 P l"burt'I; 21, 2t, lO
SI lOUil, Away (101. ill>I 6 N\olllrool, 7, I,
t New Y0tk; ti, n, 2) $1 L0\14 24, tS, U
P1t11buf'9ll NIW 'YOltK C2)1 -Homo (IJI S.01 7,
I, t ChlC.I•: lO, 11 St LOUl6. 12, IJ
PtllaburtllJ 2l, 22, 2> MontrMI, 24, H . U
Pllllltdo'tlfll AWOY (101. 5-1. 6 ll'lllM:lurth/
"· 15, 16 "· 17, "· "PTl~la; 21, 2t, lO MOnltHL
PHlt..ADILltHIA 124> -Homo 1111
Stol 12 (2), 1l SI LNal )4. IS, 16 MOntrMI, 17, 11, 1' New YOO, 1', 2', M
PlfllbUf911, Awn 112> seol 6 SI L:Wb, 7,
•• ' MonltMI. 10 11 ("'<HO. 21. n. n Pitts~. 2• U 2' ,..... Yon
:r1me;. 1.00 U.l'-----
PIPTI4 •ACIJ. Ono mllo Mee.
Hlllb'"y Dr1wf (Olmr) 7 40 S 00 2 IO
El Toronto (Wlllloms) S.IO 3 20 Fire And 1t11n (F. Sherron! l 20
Also rlC*I. HowdV Mon, Anctv'I PwMr, T~al'I Ootlen, Mon Arni M1111tie, Rich N
soicov Time HO U •XACTA (1·7) N•d SAUO
SIXTH •ACa. Ono milt NCO. JIMI .• Jo'/ IMlskell 7 20 4 00 420
Mdvs lt•lOll (Goularte) uo 4 to
CIOUdbulltr < V llloncf '"91'11ml 4 IO
Also l'KM: JIUY Star, ltd'(, Polluhon
SoiullOll, Mtlltow Folow Law of 1111 Lind.
Time: 2'03 )/ S U IX.ACTA (7-1) N•d 17UO
llV•NTH llACL Ono mile oece
LOVO Callforlllo (Parklrl SHO 41 40 "'°
Ll9fll FlfllllY IGruncJY) 13.. 6 40 ~ lav IP.atal UM
AIW rlCOd HOV Tool"9. Monterey
Smooth... Dune Yd¥, GI GI ltortot,
Oet1noY, LOVllY ltl'l'/lllm
Tlmt ,., 4/S
U IX.ACTA (f·l) oold U.37.SO
llGHTH llACI. Ono mllo trot.
1(11'"'°"" (F. ~ron) 25.10 ,0.20 4IO
OIO SMOCfY IGf"UlldV I UO 2 60
It E TOdd (Oeaomorl UO
Also re<ld Too•. Al Alw•Y•. Sctrrloft
County, Dffr Sir. MIXHI Cloud.
Time 2,0 I 41 S
U Ix.ACTA ( l·Cl POld S\76.10
NINTM •AC•. Ono mill HCa Tilt Comoonv• GOid Ckt>lf) 4.00 uo uo
Slrlkln; PTICt ICr"tlonl 4 00 2 IO
$.lilpperi LMclor (Por"lne) S.IO AIM raced Ftv Mell FIV, Wllilo S'-
LOUIO, Tfel'lf Querier~. Slllpperairi., H-dY •
Ool>. 1tno11o•ooco.
T1rnT:tt' m SJ EX.ACTA 12-11 Nd St370
S2 PtCK SIX ()·l-7-f-1-2) N ld 11.34t 40
with 11 w\Mlne tJO,els lffvt ttorwsl Total
corrvovor oool S26.6to '1
TINTM •ACS, Ono m,;-.-..
Alllt Gold (Croeflanl 6 201 t.00 2 IO
WTld PrlnU (Short> 6 40 ue
Soveroi911 Stor tOlFr~o> S.00
Also recoct Korr Hanover. Scoo!VI
Loefl. JoMn'I' Mac. Lovll LM, D V Miii,
Jon 9VlTer Time H7
U UtACT~ IM l Plld S5UO All~t US6 -
I Dfl Mir
WIDMISOA'f"I lllSU&.TI
(11" .. Q •• , ............ .,,......
,.U T U CI.' f\lttoftOI
ltoyel St GIOftO (Hw!Y) 160 S• UO
K 011e Hlllt ( LOIOYll I 1 .0 UO
Oanc•nt tlftlOI <~1> JO 00 AIM rectd Ftlnt Im .... lold n' a.11.,,
WWi'I Scott, Adler, OMclv L.,..._.,
l'ltollfll Nlll'fe, ·a Dtoll\'I, Ur.....,,
Goi.en !nit Timi l 10 .,)
llCOMO •Aca. 6 tunonia.
Ml-Lltf\fMlt ... !HWWI ll60 6. JJO , .... >.• fJO
ry, LI L • S.-tJn
Oeftc1rll (~VOi ktltrmtft ( • .,,
AIM ftetd Ul!ltna~
• SY'• Ot'eam, La .... L.uet., ..._., ~· •
. y.
Wollh L'9111 (PlneaV) 720 ''° 80I\ Null CUl.mencoJ J:lllf
Also recad ltto1.11111on Miu. Domltllnl
LIO, Picture lal'ldt, SwlH Dilly, Ooft onim.
Ecdl'lbumo T1mo .... 215.
U IXACTA 14·1) N'<J Sl,Cl'Jl.SO
Al~ ISIOI
°"" ... ftsNnt DAVIY'I l.OCKI• (.......,, e.dl)
-11't ~ 136 "°"'to. s l"lllOwllll. 14
roca fllh. t caueo Doan, 7 1111d Doi"· n
Sklo.tdt, 10 buliol 111'\1, I wl\oto l•lh, 6
il'lte"'-d, )ti~.,.
NaWPOAT LANDING IHow"rt
e..dl) -ll C1119IOl'S 134 Donllo. 2S Doll\ 1
y...,,.,11n, 4 ~I tune, 212 mact.ertt. I
rodl flstl
TNs .,....,, treut IAntl
LOS ANGKLH -louQutf Canyon
Crfflt
SAN alltNAltDIMO -81e 8-L1kt,
SilV-ood L11lt
KERN -Korn lt1vor t'°'t! Po•orl\OUM
10 0omocro1 o.m. Kltl Pvwwnouw 10
Lill• hoClt!ll)
TULAJtE -KOMI It or tF1.rYIO• Oen\
fll itn ~-llOUH, Ju111101101• 81 ICI .. let F,.,..,.,. Ooml. Turo •••« howlTI forll of
me111 ton.)
MAC>altA -S.11 JoocNo1' lt1vw (ITIIOdie
tor11). Sorcntr L.-1, Steft1w .. l!lor LI 0
INYO -•·•'-Cr_. (tnlddlt, Mlli!l'I
it!ltllt Ill. ltoell CrMk L1llo, Souff'I Liile
MOMO -COllviCI Crotll. C-1c1 L11<0
ElitrY LIU. G.-.. L•llt. Grlf't Loo. ~ C,..., GUI LI••· HAton Cr•. AIM .
LIAt, LU.o $alWll\t L• V"""8 C,_., '-.•
V"""I Cr.-(Mlill'I fer~I. LlttlO W1 or
Lo o, Llli'd'f Le e MelTllt LeU Mam-
mo• C,_., MefY '--'· NcGeo C,..., Oirtl't It....,. Cltnlttl C,......,., lit
Sefrnnl. It~ CrOOk, ttao Crwoll
(POl'ICllM C.,,,_ to T wn·s fl'lil<.t, TOlft't
F'llCO l.IOtlrtllTI 10 ltOdl (r ... U O), lt\lll\
Crooll, S.cNltMt Cr...._, ~· L.IAt, """"' C,..._, M1W L.Po Sw1111Mt Cre.11, Tlott LeU. Tr~ Lallo Tw1n
LU.ft tf~I (UNOf, IOwW), Twin L-U Mernmol , Vlr I Cr.-(_.,,
IOw«), V1t9W1 le K ("'811f, '°*")•
W1 or tl!YOt ICIYll , .. , ~ le '°""" .. w ., • 1. ..... 11 ~ c.,.,... "°""" .. s.Nt• •r1e11t>
Ml W L T
1 0 0
'KO 1 0 0 t I 0 ~o
• o ·o , 0
0 ' 0 0 I 0 0 , 0
llnt
I 0 I
1 0 0 OI~ t I 0
SI L.eUlt 0 I 0
W•UllMlOO 0 1 0
AMl.IUC.Mf '°"'U
Doll...,
Kl!l\h City .......
Sl110lt9o Sootnt
·C~! Houiton ~stlurfft' , ...
w t '
I 0 0
I f 0
I ill 0
' 0 • I 0 0 ~· 0 1 0 0 , I t •
' 0 I 0
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r .
f7 f)
l4
Mooml ,.,,.. El!lio!ICI 1 t 0 l 000 H 17
) 0 01.00071 11
HY Hit
Bl.lffeio ~fllOOllt
I 0 01.00013 • 0 I 0 '1 21
0 I 0 ODt r4 2'J '
T ..... s Gan'9
P111s1>ur9!! 1t N-Vora Jell (Cne-7
ti 6 om.I
Odda
"''-•NY Jots I ovw Pl.ff.our.II (
~ ' over Oevfilnd xtl..-n7-Gr .... y
•C'hica9o S ov• Dol!vor lCSI. Louil 1 ...., lutt
JIAllO~I 3 OY'tf Oetroll ~6~~NewEMlllefld
xPNIM1lot!ll 5 ..,.. .wiw..oto
xClnclnaeU 4 ... .,. KltlM~ CllY
xHow on.ii. 7 ovtr Twneie .,,
01 11 s over aNY Glenn
S.n Qjfgo I °"" 115etttnt •Housten Sl'J OYW k\dll t
xSt.11 FrellCIKo l -Woilllnt'Oft (~y) coi.u:oa
JtM;otnl, Flt. ,...., -~
XNWIW YL Wyomlfte, /IO IOdt
ClomM>n 1' Ovtl' lVlr.W.
UCLA vs lt$ea~St.MMlll
TtlllS la Idle
llOtlicl S1111 vs OJ-SI , f'8 Na
Notrt 0.,,,. lt O'ltir P\l(M 11 llr
dllnuoils ·~ 6 -lo&loll Cdlo9lt •tow• .. , .... $1 • llO ..
llPonn Statt vs lt.Ufllt'I. 110 NIM
xArlz-St l!f> -<>*JI...,.,,. Sta ""~ 6.., ..... ...., ~ I undllf Miami. flt
•Otuelloml 11 -$1Wlf0rd llMloft Colote 6 ~ ·~
IW""'"""°"' ""' ~ no ...
c ............
TILEVISIOM 1tCHl.DU1.IS AIC oN1 CIS ,_.,.,;we leitv~ Kf*I·
uift lor colleo toolkD .. (ol lmn
POT>
5-1 I -~-Collelo 11 ~ • om.. AIC
So01. IS -We~Oll el ~ t
1 m. Cl.S, Ok llOf'llt e1 Pi lUO 1>in., AIC
Sept 22 -Nnr1saa 11 UCLA ~ lo-..
ONo St11t IUO o.m •• CIS s.1 2' -.._ ot io-1 t 1 m,,, cas • Notre 0emt el Mis-.rl, 12'.lO 11>.m.. AK
Oct 1} -lllnOIS II OfliO Ste I~
.Wa"""'lon II Si.ttlord. ttmOS to M on-~. Nt41t net!CINOV. CIS.
Oct. 20-MJctijpn ., tow• '. m., C8S1
UCLA 01 Co~lornil, 12 JO om., Cas
Ocl. f7 -lllfflo<s II Mlcrlitle'I or OfllO
• '' IJC-t e.m., ol'!tlf Uet.:A • Ari-s111t, 3 o.m. Ulil nollonall'I', CaS. NoY l -IWd\!Ol'I II Pur-. tll w_,.,, al lo'#1, t 1m.. °"' USC 11
s1eM)rc1. J •""-· Mlftt ,..,~, cas Nov 10 -Wul!lflliOl'I ,, use. IUD o.m.., 'C8So ,
_ Nov. 17 -MiCtween ol OflMI S11t1, t
•"'-cas. Southtnl C1 fomi• ., UCLA,
1u• 1>m.. CIS
Nov tJ-B°''°" CD0a90 ol MOeml, Fie 1 uo 1.m • ces
NOV 24 -To M IMOufteod 17JO 11>"'
CIS
Die I -Army n NOVY 11 '""llldNlflil
'am. ces.
w.-....v-s trMMdl9M
a ASSIALL
~L.-... CHICAGO WHITE SOX-ltocanoct
Randy NitrN"", !l>l!CW, Ind Joel SkltW'Or, COIC'-, fr'om Doll.., of IN A~
As.IOClalton MILWAUKEE HEWEltS-Mdecl ,._ul
Ho.!'lttl. l>llefler. to ,,,. totter Orooood
Bruce w• ...,.. pllcflef. from IN ro.tw Nt....,LMtUt
CHICAGO CUU-Tr~ ttloot Cta» A
MlclweM LMllUO tom1 CIUO, ftlo Quocl Clliot CIM to fl'lo C.iilortiio A,,._ In HCtloftM
for ll'lo Pooril ~ OI ~ MiOwost L....,_
_O_l'fCINNATI ltE09-<.~ UC> ,re.I
T~. ~. DIM . ce•cner.
Ind WIOI It°"'*" S!IOrli .... lf.-n Wlcf\."11
of Ille Amofle.I'\ AuodlllOll. fl'l.RNMCI ~
t <ll!'tectt ol TOfft ~. aodlor, lrMI
ft ttlltCltl'I'. ~-flrtl .. ""*' frOl'PI
Widli. MQNTltE~ EXPOS-Hamad Munn COOll ..,_,. ml!lffW
NEW YOltK ¥ET~lleMd 1N1
COfttrlCt ti Jof'lll CIW 1 'eMlft. alk1IOf. tram
T...-019' OI .,._ lnterNlloflll L....,.
Oulrlefltod IN ~ OI It~ Pia.ii
• , ,_ T ..... .,. tt9l'ft JedlMlfl of IM
TelfULeHUO
llASICITI ALL .....................
ATLANTA "AWi(.~ Aritolno
Carr. '°""' erd .. I l'IM1 I•-~ C10fllf IC I HOUSTON jtO(KlTI-~ Jof'trl
L~as ~d, It I tflrW-~ ..,., .,_.
PHOENIX SUN~~ 1 ..,_,
mtft1 • Al I , a I COKll. Oil I
._.~ QM11t0(1
'°°TaALL .......................
CL!VELANO l•OWNS-Sll"td
P'r"toft 1tow11, ... roceo..er· let. rt •
~. OEHVll UOHCO$-SllmN Scef1 ., ........ ~ .........
Oflt ' ~ ~ PIK.CS JnM MV'M,
NMlftt llK'. II! l'M '""".. t 0 TltOCT Oeti LO\IOf, .,. ' .. KAHSA$ CITY C:Htl!J:l.-1$*-Mi
If~
' • Oft
\10 n Yac t Club '°J: the Oranaie t 1~uoa Clkn r &h
kcnd 'Ith trJttt; .rcp1ta1 •
Women wlors will 'like the IPO'·
I t ln the Jane SChod~ MemOrial
1'8.ce. the fourtti in d\e Oian.tt Counw
Wurncn's ()(ean Radna Sena on
turda>'; Wdm-16 Ot1 wDJ com-
• tc on tutday for the Um
Campbell tropl)y, and Pet:formancz
H :nditap Racina fleet yachts u
an i'CI the l\lttlna ~ for t K\cnth raceof,tbe Humi>hrey 8opt1
Senes undl>· Liao ble Y1 t Cub will host lcain
rDttn turda) and unday for the
William oms tropl!.). and
Capi1ttano &> Yadlt Out> U
~oduct,a diiisl1> nptta tui'day.
' In other Southern califonua
Y huna A JOCdU atQS:
IM Mjdft.~ Inda
al Buth Yacht Oub -Pornt ttrmm 'ight race (all classes), tw-
dar. CabrilloBcaCh \'achtOub-~
Pointand Retum(CabrilloSttin o.
4-S). Saturday. unday.
Suta MoaJea Bay
Calafom&a Yacht Oub -Squirrel
Bank race (Harri Scnes 'o. I),
Saturd&)'.
Del Re) Yacht Oub -Sunday
Sk1ppenracc(TannenburaScriesNo.
S), Sunda).
. Wmd.iammen Yacbt Cub -
Ul!16 SabOl Rep~ SUndl •
Coronado ~~b. Dix Brow
Series (SOHF) Saturday: All La4ics
race (invitational ha.Ddicap). Sunday.
Cortez Racina Alsociation -
Around Coronad°' Island! race ·
(handicap), Sunday.
Coronado Cays Yacht Oub -Fall
Classic Series. Saturday •
Santa Oara Reina Association -
Summer Series ·o. 3, SatUrday.
San Dieao Yacht CWb -Buoy
Series 1(MORq, Saturda)-: Jack
Wood Senior Sabot Rcptta. SUnday:
Carousel Series (IOR). Saturday. South~cm Handi<:ap A«t -
Fall Seriri. Sunday.
Mission Bay Yacht Oub-Crown
Point Powder Pu1f and After Shave
race (all classes), Sunday.
Ooeansidc Yacht Oub -Jeuup
SCnalPHRf), Sun~y. . ·
S1hcr Gate Yadlt Oub-Ronson
Series (SOHF). Sund.a)".
. ·~-.... Channel Islands Yacht Ou.b
Junior Sabot Day, Saturday.
AnacaJ»:-Ventura YICht Oubs -
Scripps.-KcuenbwJ Scnes. Saturday.
Sunda). -
2 baseball
players hurt
in accident
SA fRA CISCO (AP) -Out-
fielder Chdt Davis of the Saa Fnm-
cuco Giants and infielder Eoos
Cabell of the Houston Astros ~re
treated and ·released early Thursday
from Mission Emageucy Hosrc;w
after a frec-qy auto accident fol~wina a n~r pme at Candlestick Park, the ho· paw said. • Nun1na Supervisor Leonard Jones
said Davi sand CabcU were ''just fine ..
and needed nothing bc$ides treat-
ment for thctr minor injuries.
Davis suffered facial cuu and
abrasions and CabcU a bead injW).
Jones said. A third player, Giants' •
utilit) man John Rabb. complained
ofneck pains but was not taken to the
hospital.
The accident OCCWTedon U.S. 101
near the Army Street turnoff about
Jlh miles nonb of Cand1estic Part.
'"the rep~>n said.
Cahfomia KiJilv.-ay Patrol officer
Juhus Patassy said Davis, CabcU and
Rabb. with Rabb driving, were bcad-
ina tov.-ard San Francisco after tbc
game at lcpJ speed when a car in the
fast lane suddenly chan&td lines and
d1stracted Rabb. Rabb then plowed
into the rear of another car that had
stop~ 1n the middle of the freeway.
Davis' head shot fo,...vd and bit the
\\tnd hied. inJurinaan eye, the repon
said.
"We're stunned." said CabcU at the
ho~ilAt ··~s 's:acktld ~nd
sh1eld and almost .,.cnt throu&h it.
(but) I'm pla)lftJ tomorrow (11u.tn.-
da' land Ch1h will also." ba'" ~rtedl) planned to hi\~ a
ph) 11.'l&n check bis e)e today.
Kerber Co.
wins Del Mar
takes race
Swedesou t
McEnroe ..
in doubles ·
DEATH NOTICES ~ ---
McCORMICK
MORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon
Aoad
Laguna Beach, Ca
92851
.. 94-9415
HARIOR LAWN·
MT. OLIVE
Mor1uary •Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gialer Ave.
Costa Mesa 540 55~
PlERCE UOTH Ra
HUUOADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Bro dway
COttl Meta
842·9150
IAL TZ HROIRON
IMfTH a TUTH1LL
W ITCUF' CHA' L
427 E • 1711'1 St
Coata M ...
848·9371
,ACt,rc VllW
M llORIAL ,ANC
c.tno1.1ry • Mor1uary
Chapet • Cftmllory
SOO Pacific View Or1vt
N port Be&'h
84•·2700
I
...
..
'642-56
• -
j
ntE VICTORIAN
2 8d 1'M>a w/gar, cpta, ""'*· bltlns. tncd ywd wtttl petlo, .. ,., ~.
e3&--4120 call 1·5PM M-F
887 Vlctoria'J' '595/mo
ftlfflll--
Went • ..iec:tJon of great
llYlng? We can offer 8ny·
thing from • 1md iapt to e 4 Sci houM, If looking In
C M, NB, °' HB think of ua
nm '°' th8t Chok:e of lduJ living,
TSL MANAGEMENT
&42-1803
NB REAL TY 875-1&42
New studio w/ldtcnen &
r.trlQ. utll pd, $<&50 +
MC.962-4880
WWlll
·YIWIE
New 1 & 2 Bdrm luxury
iapta In 14,pl.,. 1 Bdrm,
2 Bdrm end Townhomel + pool•. ttnnls, water-
tells, pond&... Gu peld.
From 681\ Ol9go Frwy
dr1ve North on 8Hch to
McFedden end W• on
McFedden to SMwlnd
VIU8ge.. (714>893-51N
IJ'riU tl44
WMtalde C.M 2BR lb&. ~ ;;cJOUI 1Bd
ell utll pd. New q>Vdrpa. ~ w/slt up-
$850/mo, $300 MC c.u grade8. New W/O & '9frig
a.th It 131-5230 Incl. Pn-tlke Mttl •
WOOOLAHE VILLAGE pm patio. A/C & pool."ar
2Br w.e.. crpta, drpa, bll, t owncen ter I r vln•.
cerport 1545 +'500 dep. $800/mo Sec dep neg.
No pet.a 640-44&4 EY911 8334238
People who need ~
Th9t'• wh8t tM
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Is all abOU11
~ROSCO_~E __ SYDNEY
0MARR
..
•
District Managers -----If you ~ wot,klnt wittl ~ ~ '
girls ond deP 1ob• or• not for you,
conalcl~ o cor .. r 1n ~ news~r <ttculo
tlon field. This ia a unique position with
dolly cholleft9ea & rewords.
Our opan1ngi ore lml'Mdiote. ~pplkonts
mu&t hOYe o von, 'lotiOnwogon or truck.
We offer on nc.11.nt aolory wilt! o bonua
plol'I and Q01 ollOwonc•. We hove on
h(tl!.nt benefit pion lflot 1nclud.t hotpl·
toll1otion 'uronce. ltberol VO<otlon o~
holldoya.
Condid0'9• mu't h~ o detire to be
~< fwl ond be w1ll1nt to work hord, If
)'OU lh.nk rov ha¥e the qvcM1<otiON
pi.a,. opply in p.r.on to1 '
330 W. B~y
Costa Mesa. CA 92626
an equ .1 e>ppominity , ~r
\ \
Newspaper
· KIDS-EARN GREAT TRIPS. AND PRIZES!
TODAY'S
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACltON
1 Wound
5L-l'ltlly
10 Obt11UCt1
t4 Yen
19 °'**'Y
11 llnglle thing
11 Decorticate
11 _.u.
20 Denud•t•
• 22 TtalpM
14 a.t. up camp
61 ActlOnof
ltopplfll
11 8.ctdtf .. t
12Felllfter
13 Uf'IMOll-
14 llcdycrty
IS 1etsoown
M Non-rMCtMI
lf~lj---
DOWN
23 lnlCfibe 1 ., ... , • 24 AelltY90 ..... .
21 SS*flno -2 :,:"' allow· 1 21 "llUl'e 3 Mllqutno aoent
: 30 Canoei"• ON' 4 Deem•
• M Withdraw I Poueh
: 35 COpk)u• • l'lnnaelf . sa Land bOOY' ,,, 1 Cwr9"1 unn
• $1 M0ttyt I Modin.cf
PRIVIOUI
ltUZZLI IOLVIO
: sa Aelatlw or;anllm
• 40 Qc11t,,.· "'_.=·---~ Unll«=::--,.ran11IMC..---;i1T111~1'1'l'I• 41 ltowe g.r1 relUetMOI
42 Ten milll 10 ~led
43 leanly 11 M.o tubl
45 Roundabou'll 12 DJ'a ~
47 Two--. ttrono 13 UK money
• btldOt ll&ndl 11 l'oorl)' kept .
• 41 Attempt 21 ~ltded
• 4t Alt1'*I 21 ., ... -
: IO DolM 21 ,.,nlOIOut
• 63 8of1 rnei.J ~ 27 "9 IOI\
. . • .
t. 1 . . .
..
'/
I • .,
30 OcMn: abbr.
Stlt.-cttut u mo oompOMt
33cacMtt
H Got tcoetMr
31 ei.ct-40 Mumbled
42 "9tMdiee
44 OitOto.r
•
•thgtMnl
IQ o.nc.
51 ZooloOICel IUffi•
52 8aNer
63 us govt llgl
55 Not>oOy
54 lonito
• ST lhootlng -5t Ttvtce pm.
to "~tl''
... ..
@
111• ICll ,,.. MOil
61 11'\0C!.l \ S:H • l!IO
TOIJ 112 0 t 20 c.u ll2 000
7MOI
tomoCEI.. I
12~ ....... .,.. ll'IO
TOIJ 1'4 ut 80
CA'S 4 t.1000 C.t.P reouct
l)
COHN Ell
C HEVROLET '"'' ... /(
r-. I ' "I · •
!'>4~ 1200
I
.. _ -
91 FWY.
GARDEN GROVE
22 FRWY
22 FRW'i
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
..J CD
·~
CHICK IVERSON
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
441E.0.ast hJ., 11.,.rt 111011
111-0tOO
Highest Quality Sales & Service
0 NABERS CADILLAC ~
2100 HIRIOR ILYI., COSTA IESI
(114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1218
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
•Great Location •Super Service
• Courteous & KnowlecJQeable Sales People
w CD
WARNER
..J •
E "' a:
CD SANTA
ANA
EDINGER
THEODORE ROBINS
FORD ..
U.S.A.'s #1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales, Ser.vice, Parts, Body, Paint & Tire Oepts.
Competitive Rates On Lease & Daily Rentals
20IO larMr Jhel., o.sta ....
142-0010 "140-1211
0 SOOTH COUNTY
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU
18711 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach
(714) 842-2000
SALES • LEASING • PARTS • SERVICE
Or •nee Co1mtys lMtat Volksflltll/lsuzv 1>ulef
We Wil Not Be Undenold
PARTS OEPARTMEHT OPEH SATURMY m
IRVINE
LAGUNA
HILLS
• I
MISSION
VIEJO/)
1.M<Eu
MIS&ON
vtEJO
SAN ,..
JUAN
CAPISTRANO .
•
. .
I •
0 CONNELL CHEVROLET 0 BAUER MOTORS
2121 laner lhll., 0.sta 1111
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200 S,.clal Plrts U1t 546-9400
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 AM -9:00 PM
SATURDAY 8:30 AM -e:oo PM
SUNDAY 10:00 AM -5:00 PM
0 STADIUM PONTIAC
' .
W•'r• N•w -W•'r• D•allng
Acro11 from the Big A on Ketella juat Weat
of the (57) Orange FrMwey
Sales • Service • Parts • Body Shop on Prerrnses
·l••h•I• 2221 E. l1t1U1 311•1111
BUICK -JAGUAR -ISUZU
Complete Automotive fMedt
SALES • SERVICE • LEASING AM Selection of Quality UMd Vehlclee
# 1 BUICK DEALER IN OAANGE COUNTY
2125 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 171-2500 ,
0 RAY FLADEBOE
UICOLI IEIOllY .11110 lllZI
#11 llte Gener. Ir., lnl11
In The lrvlne Auto Center
830-7000
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COUNTY 1011101 .
ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
A
i\_tte>rn .ey .. pro~ests 'wJiite jury' . . . -.,
Black youth accused in slaying ~~~~\ ai~di~:~~I :~!~r~?t~
of Huntin gton clothing shop owner 00~o'Jioranorthem.there"ercont>.'
By STEVE MARBLE °' ._ o.a, ,.,... •tan
· An attorney representing a )Oung
black man accused of murdering a
untmgton Beach clolhina shop
owner has asked that a panel of
Coast
Corona del Mar School
coming down to make
way for new homes./ A3
A fire partially destroyed
an apartment In Costa
Mesa Wednesday./ A3
California
~ ~ .
Heat wave establishes
new mark of 104 degrees
In Los Angeles./ A4
High winds aid rash of
fires In Escondido./ A4
Nation
011 company explosion In
Kansas kllls two./ A4
Two kllJers In Florida re-
ceive stay of executions.
/A4
-World
Typhoon Ike death toll In
Philippines continues to
mount./A4 ·
So viets deny Intrusion of
Swedish air space.I A4
Living
..
• two blacks.'' said Gnmes. who is
potential jurors in the case be dis-arguing that his client descncs .a
missed because neatly all are white. "more div~ro ~tion:·
After interviewing more than 130 • "How would ~ou like to be judged
potential juro~ for the first-degree ·by an all· black jury?." he rcponcled
murder trial of Zachary Pettus, at·. when a~kcd about his motion. ••it•
to(Oey . Milton C. Grimes ~ucsted pos ible there could be a lapse, a . .
Here comes the circus
The &niftl of the IUDgllill Broe. Barinun and Bdley Clicua
in ADab\run la heralded by eevetal ton• of elepbanta.
.Attepp~ off the tra1n under the watchful eye of tralneJ'
For science fiction fans,
their genre Is more than a
hobby; It's a-way ofllfe
and reason to party./81
· How many beards wert:t
started during the long
LaborDayweet<en~?/82
Sports
Flre· Station in SA
-raODeO .as sfielter
for street women ·
The prep football season
opens tonight as Hunt-
ington Beach faces Cor-
-0na del Mer and Univer-
sity tangles with city rival
lrvlne./C1
Foundation's plan
faces rough going
from' city council
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of .. De!IJ ........
homeless women - a safe. inexpen-
sive, clean place for some of Orange
County's estimated 600 homeJess
women to stay.
The hotel concept would be an
alternative to city strcclS for many of
the women who had been sleeping in
the parking lot of the Sant.a Ana
YWCA until last spnng, said Orange
County Supervisor Thomas Riley.
The Santa Ana City Council ordered
.
cultural than Even baste man-
nensms could be 11uerpreted dif-
ferently."
Gnmes said his concerns pnn
from th fi ct that the case mvolves
black man who is accused of murder-
ing a white woman. :rhe auOmC) srud
survc)s show that the cha es of
aualty vtrchctbe1n rctumtd in ta
black person are higher when thev re
Judecd by all all-white 1urv. " ·
A
.. lrs m) fechng th t person
e pccillll> someone fl cing the{ d th penah>. asentitled to &Jury composed
of a cial mix. Thett should be proper ratio '"
Pat Geacy. 1he deput) a1stnct
attome) prosccuung 1he sc. id he
did not obJcCt to Gnmcsl mouon
"C><h1 ·b will lbc ruled on by upcnor
Coun Judge LeOn~rd 1clJnde next week.
Child
sucked
into
hot tub
6-year-old u nder
for 10 minutes ,
saved by father .
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .. Olllr ........
A 6-)ear-old Fountain Valley boy
rcponedly ts "innina his fight for life
toda) after being sucked to tM
bottom of the family spa and trapped
under water for about I 0 minutes.
police said.
Officials at Fountain Valley Com-
munity Hosf>it.al said Adam Walters
sun l '" 5Crious condition but is
ho.,..;ni ampro,~ment ~hilc beu,.
mainuuned on hfe c;uppon system .
··The ors say m -00tto0k 1~
r.ood and ihit he' going to ~c i ..
hospital pokeswoman Sheila Loh~troh said toda). -Hi 'ital ·ens
an: st.able ...
dam and h1s year.old brother
Enc •"CtC j)la) 1 m the hot tub
=-.; __ ---"...--======:::i-Tucsdi) C\ienina aftCT .spcndmg lhc
1 ..,Lo.~ my at tht bca.dl. ccordmg to
Tony Cappa at Santa Ana and llancbester avenues. The
Greateet Show on Earth continua in reaJd~ at the
Anaheim Con•endon Center thi'Oa.gb Tuesday. ·
Fount.am V \le) Lt Rod Gillman.
"'Their pattftts were 11n and out of
t~ house and Eric apparcull') got out
of the hot tub nd the motoo CR.Obin l
(Pleue MC BOT I A2)
• • • I '
/
Acupressure site
latieleif massage
parlor, shut down
Valley city council takes action after
~s imony rom _!Iunttngton police office~
By PHIL Si-r.'EIDERMAN
OfhDllly ........
cuHeallh was a health food store
when itsbusmc s permJt wa 1 ucd.
Whcn officials discovered it was not.
the owner. Louise Fail. was nollficd
that she. needed a conditional use
permit to continue operatin ·
The Angels are a half-
game behind Kansas City
and Minnesota after rip-
ping Cleveland, 11-4./C1
.An old fire station on Santa Ana's
Nonh Sycamore Street was identified
Wednesday as the site a task force has
targeted for a YWCA hotel for (Pleae He SHELTER/ A2) Superriaor_Thomu Riley
Fount.am Valle) Cit) Council
members voted to clo~ a local
acupressure center after dccidmg the
sitc is a massage busines'i that "ma-.:
be conduc1 .. c to 1llepl sexual acu' •·
tv"
On Juh ~S. the Fountain Vall "
Planning Commission dt n1cd ~cuHealth's requ~t for such a per-
mit. Tuesda) '!> heanogcame aftcrthe
bus1ncss appealed the Plannina Com-
ma ion's action to the City Council.
A wide variety of big
game fishing Is avallable
off the Southlan~oast
for anglers./C2
Entertainment
Fans Selling like hotc~kes
as torrid weather continues
The hottest summer In ___ --B-y DAVID_B_IS_H_OP Appro,1mately 1.soo Edison cus-
Hollywood history comes D111J l'Wc:.n11,1 .-.1 •tomcrs in Oranic Count) were
to an end./83 Power outages brought more mis-without po"er this morning as 46
cry to Orange County on Wcdncsday transformers failed. said Jim Keo:
as Southern California sweltered nedy. Edison area manaicr '
through a heat wave that has set The high demand forclectn<'t) also
rteords for daily hi&hs. electrical · lcffibout 1.500 Edison Co. customcrs Bualneu
Tax shelters paved the
way to James Qulgg's
successful career 85
INDEX . ·
..
demand and pcrha~ for fan sat~. in In me without power Wednesday.
. SOuth~m Calif•rilia Edison Co. WcdnesJa) was a ''J>C?k demand"
officials said scaue~ P<>v.er outale day for San Diego Gas . Electric
arc occurring throughout Orange Company, said Maurice Luque. a
County as transformer.. burned out 'ipokcsman for the compan) which
due to heat and high energy demand. serves S0.370 cusfomers in Oran c
Count)'. record 2.3.42 mcp"ans ol
po"'er v.en-con urned by customers
Wednesda). breaking a record set
Monday. : The record power con umpllon
caustd t"'o outage "'h1ch left a
reported 4.600 San Diego Ga
El«tnc CU\tomers "ithout power.
The El Toro area wa~ e pcc1all) hard
hit.
The c1n:un breakdowns affected
Mis ion \i1e10. lquna Hall and
(Pleue Me HEAT/A2)
··CH) .\uome) ~Ian Bums said no
pubhc complaints were madc about
the business at a council hcahn&
Tucsda) night and said no arrc~tc;
have been made at lhc center.
But Bums said a Huntina1on Bca\:h
poh~officertestified thau ma.,seu~
cmplo)ed b) the ccntcr allc&edl)
perfonned a SC\ act on ham "'h1k -.he
was cmplo) cd h) a Huntmg1on &.1Ch
ma~ c bysm~!t.
Bums ~ad the "oman "'ils not
arrcstN but a a re ult ol thl' otli~r·,
report. a hcanng "'a held and hl'r
Huntington Beach cat) ma'i<.,C'U~
het"nse was 'IU pcndC'd tor thfl't'
fnonth .
The Fountain Valle\ busme,.,
under con iderataon •'3s· \.--UH\'.'alth
.\cuP.,rnsure. \\h1ch ha'i operated for
more than a )Car m a BrookhuN
"itrttt ~hopping center.
Bum ~•d a Cit~ offic1JI ~lic,l'd
8) a 4--0 vote. the council upheld
th~ commission's dccmon and d~
dancd to grant ~cu Health a permit.
Bum said thl' · busines cannot
lepll} co~tanue to opcrntc w!thout a
pcrD111 li lLdOC' the •'JI\~
said. it v.ould be al nm 1nal " auon
of th~ cit) ·stoning ta" puru habk
h\ a a ma'.\amum $500 fine or 1x
month' in 11111 for ea h da)'· offc.m .
The anornl'' tor the bus1ne~ w
una' a1lable for comment on hcthcr
the rounc1r.. dect 1on v.ould
appealed an roun.
Ho"'' er. documents· filed 1n 1.UP-
pon ol the bu,me m<>med 1liat
D\:Upf"t'S.)uf'C' ,., 3n ant1ent Ith
tf'C'atmcnt stall pracl1n"d b\ m11l1on
(Pleaee .ee CITY I A2)
Erma Bombeck 82
Bridge 84
Buntttn Board A3
95
Oil's wellthat ends well at Huntington City Hall
Puslnesa
Callfornla News
Classified
Com lea
Croaaword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Landett
Living
Mutual Funds
National N wt
Opinion
Paparazzi
Pollce Log
Publ c Not1c Sports
Stock Market•
Telivt n Th tat
WHther
Wortd N WI
---
A4
C5-7
84
C7
C4 ce
9 2
81·2
85
A4
AG
8 1 • AS
C4·5 C1.,,. ee
83
83
A2
A4
City takes a amble with 'patch ob'
oohistoric pumper -and 1t pays'o f ·-
~~~~~~--~~-=-~~--·~~ ......... ..::.--..:.--~~--~~-..
For 60 }ears Cavil: Center 011 Well
No 2 in Huntington Bca<'h ha
.. pumped about 18 barrel of 011 a day.
day in and day out. with hardly a hitch
or 1ntcrrupt1on.
n came as kind ofa hock when
1n June the well that suck up 011
nearly 3.000 feet bclo"' the cmploytc
Jl(lnan lot 6n M 1n trc-ct north of
Cny Hall began to hk.
Produ tion from the hi tone ~ II.
one of three owned bf the cah. II to
m re five barttl 1 d ) and ofhc1al
• hut it down to find out "hat was the
matter.
Th n: ~m d to be plcnt ot 1hfc
left in 1hc oil-htant\f . nd bclo\lt•,
IL
ROBERT
BARKER
--
NEWS f oLLOWUP
/
WHAITE JURORS PROTESTED ••• From l
venue near
Police said the mou'e for the
k1lhng !.'P.C 1"$ to be robber) beau
,H zboun wallet nd her bop h
box ~crt miss1ni. Thouah neither item was found. po1ace 1n\t1UptoD
daun they turned up jewelry 1dcnl·
1fied as Huboun' tn the house where
Peuus wai. ta>ina 11 the t11nc.
Officers admitted, howc,·er. they
did not find the item~ until the)
searched Ptnus' bedro0m for ''third
..
ume.
Gnmes said the defense i buah
round the theory that police arrested
the wrona man. The attorney also
contends thll the aiar witness. who is
white. confutee Pettus "ith other
blacks who hunaaround the shoppuia
center.
Pettus is being held wnhout bllil at
Oranac County Jail.
BOY SUCKED INTO FAMILY SPA •.• JI' omAl ·
called one 'of 1he bo> and got no
ansv.er." 011Jman ~id. ·
"She went out 10 look and found
Adam stuck to the bonom of the hot
tub," Gallman said.
Adam's father, Jame , ttt~ to pull
the bo> free bu1 was unable to do so unul he turned off the pump because
~he suction apparently was too great.
The fattier administered mouth-to-
mouth resuscitation to .~dam who
wasn't bceathing. Paramedics coll-
tinued the emeraencycffons unul·has
arrival in the hospital
The force of the pump was so artat
that it left large suction marls oh
Adam's stomach and chest.
Investieators speculated that
Adam may have been diving to the •
bottom of the hot tub when he was
pulled to the bottom by the force of
the pump that investiptorS ·esti·
mated was ~wered b> • a. 2-hol'SC'-
power motor.
CITY TO CLOSE CENTER ••.
From Al '
of Japanese people. It 1s descnbed as
'"an accepted form ofhealth-mduc1og
muscle manipulation. using pressure
points · on the body. akm lo 1
acupuncture."
Tht documents asserted that the
business .. docs not adverscl> affect
the health, peace, comfon or welfare
of persons rcsidin~ or working in the
surroundin11. area.'
But Burns u1d the council. in
denying the permit. decided the
business "will have an adverse effect
on abutting property and the city as a
wliole."
He said Huntinaton Beach Officer
Greg Moore testified Tuesday that
when he worked on his department's
vice squad, a woman employed a1 a
Huntanf.1on Beach massage parlor
allCJlcd y performed a sex act on him.
The woman now works fo r
AcuHeahh. Bums said.
The city attorney said the council
determined the operation is .. not
desirable for the public welfare in that
the business may be conducive to
illepl sexual activity.''
HEAT WAVE SHOWS NO LETUP ••. ·
P'romAl -
parts of Laguna ~1guel M1ss10n
Community Hos1ptal an Mission
Viejo was forced to u~ an emergcnC)
power system for more than 2 hours
Wednesda)•'s demand was an all·
tnne high for the Edison system .
Kennedy said. which serves more
than 650,000 customers in Oran1e
County
"It looks hke the .heat will con-tmue," s~ud Kennedy, ··so even
though 1t ap~rs our capac11> 1s
adequate, we re continuing to ask
customers to keep their air con-
diuoners no lower than 78 degrees.··
Meanwhile, Orange Coast hard-
ware aod apphan~ stores are ~elhng
out of fans dunng the heat wave.
Joseph Yentl, manager of Builders
Emponum in Costa Mesa !>aid onl)
1hree fans were left 1n has store
Jeff Schulein owner of Crov.n
Hardware m ~ewpan Beach. was
sold out and said · £,en people wnh
air condiuoning arc bu~ mg fans."
Schulein said ·
The temperaturt" reached 104
degrees m Santa ..\na and 88 in
' Newport Beach Wednesda)'. accord-Eieht first-stage smog alens were
ang to the National Weattter Service called Wednesday in the South Coast
m Los Angeles. Air Basin, the Air Quality Manaae·
In downtown Los Angeles, ment Distnct reported.
Wednesday's high temperJturc of I 05 Wednesday marked the second
surpassed the record I 00 5et Sept. 5, stratght day power companies re·
1882. and matched m 1955. The btgh ported record-high electncal usage as
minimum of 82 was just two degrees customers cranked up their air con·
off the highest low temperature for ditioners, causing temporary power
any date in Los Angeles history-84,-· outaaes.
set Sept. 22, 1939. At 3 p.m. W.ednesday, customers of
lt was 83 degrttS in downtown Los Southern California Edison Com·
Angeles at 2:30 a.m. todli\Y. according pany used 15.189 mepwatts of
to the National Weather Service. electricity, breaking the record set
NauonaJ Weather Servive spcc1al· Tuesday.
1st Bill Hoffer told the Associated ''One of the consequences of run-
Press there's "a blJ. fat old. high-nma air cond111oncrs night and day 1s
eressure S)Stem sttt111~on" Sou~m that electrical trlln.sformers in the
C'ahforn1a. and weather service uultty ~ystem never have a chance to
spokeswoman Betty Reosaid "there's cool off, and they ~10 to overheat
notbmg to move 1t out of our area.' and fail ," an Edison statement said.
Highs Frida) will hit 94 inland and ·We have had to replace 173 trans·
range from 94 to 102 in the valle~s formers smce 4 p.m. }CSterda} (Tue~
after lows tonight from 75 to 80. cla l"
Beaches will reach the mid· to upP.C:r ~idely scauered power outages
70s wtth patchy morning low clouds affected •3.000 customers through-
along the south coast. Overnight lows -out the 50.000 square-mile area
will range from 66 to 70 serviced by Edison.
SHELTER FOR WOMEN EARMARKE;I> •••
From Al
the YWCA to stop letting the women
stay in lhe lot overnight. saying that
the area was not zoned for a ID..lSSlOn.
Riley led the formation of lhe
Program for Women's Foundation
earlier this >ear after the ph~t of lhe
homele s women was publicized in
the Daily Pilot
Ala meeting Wednesday. members
of the foundation announ.oed that the
fire station. a h1stoncal structure
owned b} Harbor Bank of Long
Beach. had been 1dent1fied as a
possible site for lhe hotel
The founda11on v.ill begin ncgo-
11at1ons this v.et"k for lhe purchase of
lhe building. said John Farmer the
group's treasurer He would not sa~
how much the group plans to offer for
the building.
Santa Ana Mayor Robcn Luxem-
bourger said the City Council 1s
d1v1ded on whether 1t would approve
the hotel concept.
"You'll have to put on a scll1n4job
and hClDdle at very businesslike, • he
told the founda ti on members.
If the hotel 1s presented as a
· halfwa> house.'' some of the council
members ma} not approve ll. Luxem·
bourger said
The Santa Ana Cat} Council. which
has spearheaded extensive down-
town redevelopment. 1s scns1t1ve
about approving prOj~ts for .. drop-
ofTs," the mayor said
The hotel would be modeled after a
s1m1lar proJect operated b\ the
YWCA in San Diego, where.Jtomeless
women could sta~ for arou-n~ 150 a
month. Farmer sakL
The hotel would be funded in part
by revenue from rental rates and in
part by funds raised by the foun·
dauon. The initial fund:raisingaoaJ is
$500,000. Farmer said.
It would be up to the YWCA to
determine the extent of services to be
off crcd at the hotel and-al$() whether
1here would be a Umit on the time
women could stay.
Women who could not pay to stay
at the hotel would not be turned away.
Raley said. Foundation funds could
be used to subs1d12e women who
could not pay
OIL WELLPA1"CHEDUPINHB .••
From Al
and take a chance that 1t v.ould hold
up rather than having to share
ro\alues wnh a new well . the\ reasoned .
The\ go1 luck}.
It was a {Ommon practic e to put
\mailer inner well linings ans1de the
main casing when the 'oloell was
developed 1n 1924
In this case. the ong1nal producers
inscned an 8'11-mch anncr steel lining
an~1de the 11-anch main casing.
But during World \\ar II . when
matenals were hard to get, man\
·comparues remo\ed the inner1101n~s
and used them for new wells. That s
what the Signal Oil and Gas Com-
pan} did when 1t de\eloped wells
along the oct"an front. according to
Just.Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
Oellvery
I• Guerantffd
Weaver
But Si~nal removed the smaller
pipe in CIVIC Center 0 11 Well No. 2
only down to 2.550 feet, leaving the
smaller pipe in the well from that
point 10 the bottom of the well at
2.732 feet.
Onl~ there was no h1stor; of 1he
removal and no one kne\L abOut u. At
an> rate. the probers found that
lubing and rods used to pump 011 to
the surface broke and bent and debns
from the smaJler pipeline had broken
and blocked the line.
The damage occurred. accord1na to
Picard. from the banarn& awa} of
equipment at the juncture where the
larger pa pc narrowed into the smaller
Ont'.
It was a relauvely easy matter after
that discovery. The well was reamed
out and new tubing and rods were
installed. And the well was soon apm
pumping as before and the rcpa1r bill
was only $38,657. The city also as
aoinf to throw in another $40,000 to
put 1n new pumping and vacuum
system. too. but l~ltipment
has been planned for sometime. But
the oil should Ja54 a.noltlen6"years or
so bamna an earthquake or some
other natural calamity. according to
Weaver
And $75.000 or so is a preur aood
1nves1ment for somcthina thats been
as faithful as C1v1c Center Oil Well
No. 2.
What do )OU llkto •bou1 &be Dally Pilot? Wt..t don't you Uke? Call the
number at left and yoor me11a1e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered
to the appropriate editor.
Tbe same U·bour HS"trln1 service may be used to record "tters to tbt
editor on any topic. Ccmtrlbutors to our Leners column must Include their
name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, ple11t.
Tell us what's on your mind.
RANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Clrcul1t1on 714/_.2-4333
CIHtlfled 1dvettl1lng 7141142-5171
'All other departm nit M2""321
MAIN OFFK:I l30 • ,,,
'4 OOlnt •I
H. L. Schwartz Ill
Pub 1st r
••
Clrculetton
Telephones
Rosemary Churchman
Contro ler
Stephen F. Caruo
PtOducr•o ' Manag1 r
Don.aid L. Wllllam1
Circul t1on
Man yer
'. . -
-
VOL. 77, NO. 250 . . ...
...
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*ttef~ W~ ••"ttll t IO I '-' Jeoll-.Mt 14 u ~.wea•t•tfMI c-JIQk IO<lvlllt " a l'fld~bl.tt NtCllt IOw Aovdt ,'141y Juntt\I ..
ITIOf' ~ -tiern ••14n K-C41t u Outei •• ,.,. tltllll ..., ld\Oleoty In I.at Veg .. 101 15 efltot lfOf'!I POlnt eor,_1100t 10 t111t1 l.J1t .. lloc:ll .. 1$
jlloea i.t~ M 10 not1l\illetl .tlOt o1 t:.."r 101 '° IO to ao knoll l'r~. OoltltM!led-. t fl 12 to 10 1 .. 1... kutll of lent• ,... lllltld ~· u «I _, 10 ~ wtnO• 1210 u llnot• Mlt/'nl IMCh n u l'rlcltY ~-ltOt'-Mwlllll• 16 •• ..... , ""' •• 63
Temperatures NW! ..... 11 6A
HewOtteant .. , ,,
~YOtll ,, 63 .. H0tto11 .. v1 ?6 eo .. Le Oklal\OtN c:av .n .. Allleft)' • .. " Om41N • 74 .,
Ai~q ... .. II Ofla!ldo 15 73 Al!Wlllo u ., li'altlt~ IOt u ~. u .. PlllladllpNa n St
Al*'i. 71 ., PllMni, IOI lt A ttantoo C!ly 71 SI Ptll~Oh .. '' Au9Un ., .. c.~""" t 14 l'tdes .. ...... .,. ,, IO ... .. A . TOOAY ao.1on 75 62 ~low I &4011'1 2•
Sl\Owtrt
l'Of111Nt • ..-e 7J 0 San "·"' • 71
l'OIUt!IO. Or 70 52 81811M-to 14 Pr~ 1a •• S..t\le ., 12 =rClty 77 ... Sl'lr ... IP!lt1 .. .,
tO .. Slov>i , ... ra ...
IWIO .. ... Spot.ent ., ..
PllCtlmOnd 11 111 8'tf-u 44 aecr-10 " to. T~ .. u
It LOU-t to u TllOtOft " ,.,
St l'11 .. Tlmo1 .. 74 T 12 n
l llltCltf ti .. w~ 1• ...
s~ .. A111on1o .. IO ~1111• " .. Ian Ole6o ., 11 ... a..,. .. 411
8111Fr~ .. " WllmlnOton.O.. ,. 41
11.olfeio 11 40 9-dll'Qll 7 It p I'll SI ll#tlflgton, Vt .. St c..., IO IO ·THUfllOAY
Cf\ttteeton.I 0 7S .. Fifi! 10w 25311'11 03 SURF REPORT
Oftetl•lon.W.V ,. 13
01\eriotte.NC n H ~ 17 st CllaOO .. 42 Clncltnn1U .. 11 Citwland u 12 COl\lflll>la.I C ., 112 Columbue,Otl •• 40 ~.NH. TO " Otn..Ft WOf111 t2 ..
:=Jl'ow t2Um. 4.5
230p.m 2 1
Second lltOll lltpm 59
Sun Mii lodly 11 7.12 pm. ti-Frl41y11e 30 a.m. andMUIOlillll 7, I I o rn • Moon rl-todey 11 S ~2 11.m • "" 'l'ld9Y et 2'SS am. ano-nsa IOCll'I It e·11pm ·
llZt 1-2
I ,
1
1
14
1·2
8well dlteCtlOll '°""'--'
s ·hortage of parking snags
hospital expansion-plaris
Plans for expansion at Humana
Hospital Huntinston Beach have run
into a roadbfock because the
proposed two-story structure came
up shor1 in parkin& spaces.
parkingbeeauschismedical building, . But Ron Paninson, the lone coun·
Humana Hospital, and another four-cit official su{>porting the hospital
story office building share private expansion, said the benefits that
drivewa)is. causing a shared parkina would be reaped from the new offices
situation. would outweiJh the need for full
A aroup of doctors is seeking to
build a 56, 772-square-foot medical
office buildina on hospital grounds at
Beach Boulevard and Newman
Street. But they ran afoul of Dr. Neil
A. Fnedman. the director of the
Outpatient Surgery Center adjacent
to hospital arounds.
Th scd b ·id· Id parking compliance. e propo new uJ 1na wou • "Something hke this never stopped provide 276 parking spaces on ·the ground level of the '1ructure. about 47 expansion at Hoag Hospital ('New-
t.: 1 h d b port Beach)." he said. ..Sometime, parr..1ng spaces ess t an require Y theb probably will have to build a city code. ~r ng structure at the hospital. But
The majority of the City Council at's not economically feasible at this
held this week that parkina spaces are ume," he said.
becoming more and more critical m Hospital officials are continuing to
the city, requiring. perhaps. the hold negot1at1ons on the proposal, a Through an attorney. Friedman
expressed concerns over a shorta~e of construction of par~ina structures. spokesman said.
Mesa police nab pair in forgery
A v.oman ~uspcctcd of cashinS" · of-S 10.000 bail apiece for allegedly
hundreds of dollars in money orders attempting to pass a foraed check and
stolen dun.ng the past two weeks from for commercial burglary.
two Circle K convenience stores was · Police believe SinglelerT) stole
arrested alona with a man Wednes· some money orders two weeks ago
day after they allegedly tncd to cash a from a Costa Mesa Circle K Store. 517
stolen money order. Wilson Ave .. where she had recentl)
Daphney Ann Singleterry, a 20. been fired.
year-old transient, and R1ci[Qo And a woman fitting SmgleterT) 's
Fernando Ayala, 22. of La Pu~te description rcponedly had posed as a
were arrested by Costa Mesa police supervisor conductma a cash audn
about 2 p.m. at the Newpon Check Tuesday night and stole five money
Cashina Co .. 1823 Newport Blvd. orders and SI 00 from the safe at the
. They were in custody this mo~ning. C'U'Cle K store, 1845 Kate.Ila Ave .. 1n
SinKleterry at Orange County Jail and Anaheim:
Ayala at Costa Mesa City Jail. in lieu Police said Singleterry and Ayala
were allege<ilyaheiiiplina Wedrtes;;
day to cash a money order impriotcd
with a \enaJ number that matched
one of the money orders stolen in
Anaheim. •
Singleterry who had an account
wnh the local check cashing com-
pan>. was being investtpted bY,
Circle K officials fdr the Cost.a Mesa
burglary when the Anaheim inctdent
occurred. police repaned
Clerks at the check cash1~ firm
were notified Wednesday by CLrCle K
Corporation in Costa Mesa to be on
the lookout for the ~tolen money
orders.
$10,000 reward offered for clerk's killer
By tile A11oclated Press
An aroup that twice provided
reward money to informants an
murder cases has posted a SI 0.000
reward for information lcadmg to the
killer of an Anaheim ltquor store
clerk.
Eoaene Brown. 34. a couner for
Hanshaw's Liquor Stores. was robbed
.and killed March 2S as he was leaving
the chain's store on La Palma Av·
enue. Pohcc have no suspects.
Businessman Fred Brown. who is
not related to the v1cum. said the
Hanshaw chain donated the money to
his group. Anaheim C1uzens Apinst
Violent Cnmes.
The group also contributed
$10.000 each for informauon 1n the
strangling of a 6-year-old boy three
years ago and the murder of welJ-
known "Bee Lady" Ehz.abeth Schafer.
96. last August along with her
daughter. Alice Sch~fer. 69.
/
'1\tSiavickS, I
found my panda captured in
24~at golCI!'
While pandas rarely flourish outside . coin collection, you'll see why we've be-
t~e wilds of China, our pandas make a come the favortte source for investors.
bnlhant showing in 24 karat gold. What And when'you choose your gold coin
better way to mvest in gold while from us, you'll receive e pert attention.
you enjoy the beauty of finely A 'fide lecuon . And excellent
minted com jewelry. t1Gl!ID~~-· servic:e. Just as we've given
When you hop our gold·.1111 for gcneranon .
2' •.sr•t told'°'"' fr11m1J '" 1'4 Ufllt y1//aui iald. A.~ o: .• U7~. 8, Vi o: .. Sll .. C. I• o:., .S.f•H
f.Jtl.ir ed to show dtt4JI, r
outh Co t PJ t only
' 556-4460
.. -' •
... . . ..
I
l
I
.-
1·
.0
• I D
Coast ·
-Corona del Mar School
coming down to make 1
way for new homes.I A3
. A fire partially destroyed
an apartment in Costa
Mesa Wednesday./ A3
California
Heat wave establishes
new"n'.ark of 104 degrees·
in Lo~Angeles./ A4
Jlgh winds aid rash of
brush fires In Escondido.
/A4
Nation
'-011 company explosion In
Kansas kills two./ A4
Two killers In Florida re·
celve stay of executions.
/A4
World
Typhoon Ike Q.eath toll In
Philippines continues to
mount./A4
Sov_i_e!~ de~yjptruslon of
Swedish aJr space./ A4
Living
For science fiction fans,
their genre is more than a
hobby; it's a way of life
anct reason to party./81
How many beards wer:e
started during the long
tabor Da¥ weekend? /82
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·!·!·!·!•!•!•!•!•!-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
Sports -The prep football season
opens tonight as Hunt-
ington Beach faces Cor-
ona del Mar and Univer-
sity tangles with city rival
lrvlne./C1
The Angels are a half-
game behind Kansas City
and Minnesota after rip·
ping Cleveland, 11-4./C1 . ~
A wide variety of big
game fishing Is available
off the Southland coast
for anglers./C2
Entertainment
I
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. f 1111 111111
<H~AN C I L<JlJN IV < A l If OH N IA ;•, (~f NI·. •
c
ro ns .
e
1
,. . . s .
. ,,,...
L
Here comes the circus
6-year-old under
for 10 minutes,
saveq by rather
By ROBERT BAUER Of ___ ... _
_ A 6-)"Qr.:old f OUDtml Va:lky1'oy
· rqJOncdl)' is Ytinnina his fllht for.Ii'=
lOday after bcina Sltted '° me
bottom of the family spa and~
under water for about JO miHtel.,
police said.
Officials at fountain Valley c.om.
munity Hospital Aid Adam Wahen
still is in scnous coadition but ii
showing improvement while ~
maintatned on life suppon S}'l1elDI.
.. The doctors say bis outloOk is
&OOd and that ~·, Pn& to ma.U ;~ ..
6ospital spokeswoman Sh,l'ila
Lohstroh said todav-»lis vital lips are stabk." ~ · -
Adam ancfbis I-year-old brotber
Eric were pbyina in tbe bot tUb
Tuesday evenina aft.er spendiq the
day at the beacb, accordina 10
Fountain Valley LL Rod Gillman.
.. Their parents WCJ"e in and out of
the house and Eric aJ)llumtly Sot out
oftbc hot tublDd the motber(Robin)
called one of the boys and tot no
answer," Gillman said.
.. She went out to loot and found
Adam stuck to tbe bOttom of tbe bot
tub," Gillman said.
Adam's father, James., tried to pW1
the boy free but was unable tb do so
uatil he turned ofTtbe pump brclme
the suctioa apparently was too pe:aL
The father adm1oiS1Cr'ed mou~
mouth ttSUSCttation to Adam who
wasn't breathiOJ.. ·
Tbc fOt""Ce of the pump was so IR"l
Wt it Id\ \aJs suction marts OD ia.-. .... ,...._,.._...,_. Adam's~ abd cbat.
Tbe arrlYal of tbe RJ.nallnC BrO.. Barnum and Balley Clrcua
in Anaheim b heralded by aeYeral ton.a of elephant.,
atepplnl off ~el~ ~der tbe wa~hful eye of trainer
Tony Cappa at Santa Ana-lUld -..cheater ayenuea. Tbe
Greate.t Show on Buth contlaaea la residence at tlae·
Anahdlii Con•entfon center~ T1ie.da'J.
Investigators specW.\ed lbat
Adam may have been clivina 10 De
bottom of·mt hot tub when bit -
pulled to \be bottom by tbe forte al
the pump,
-Fire .station in SA
t abbed as shelter
for street women
County's project
faces rough got_n_g ~
from city council
By KAREN E. KLEIN
Of .. .,.., ..... ..,,
An old fire station on Santa Ana's
North Sycamore Street was identified
Wednesday as the site a task force has
targeted for a YWCA hotel for
homeless women - a safe, inexpen-
sive. clean plaee for some of Oran
County's estimated 600 homeless
women to stay.
The hotel concept would be an
alternative to city strcclS for many of
the women who had been sleeping in
the park-in' lot of the Santa Ana
YWCA until last spring. said Orange
County Superv1st>r Thomas Riley.
The Santa Ana City Council ordered
~ . (Pleue llee SHELTER/ A2) Superriaor Tbomaa Riley
Fans selling like ~otcakes
as torrid ·weather continues
Sl_aying Suspect's
lawyer protests
mostly white jury
Black youth accused in robbery. murder
of Huntingt9n Beach clothing shop owner
By STEVE MARBLE b~ck narc hishcr •hcn they are , .°' .. .,..,,......,. j by all all-whiiejury.
An attorney representing a )OUJl& " t's my feclin& that a penon.
black man accused of murdcrina a espcciaD) someone faciaa the deatb
Hunungton Beach clothina sbop penalty. 1s entitled to a jury compoeed
owner has asked that a· panel of of a racial mix. There should be a
potential jurors in the case be dis--proper ratio."
missed ~use nearly all arc white. Pat Geary, the deputy distric:t
After inter\-iewint mo~ than t 30 attorney prosecuting thC case, said be
potential jurors for the first..<fcgrcc did not object to Grimes' motion
murder trial of Zachat) Pettus, at-which will be ruled on by Superior
tome) Milton C. Gnmcs requested Court Judie Leonard McBride ne~t
that an additional ppol of Jurors be week. • ·
brought in from offier areas of the Jury selection for the trial t?ePn in
count). mid-July and 1t now is antiapaled
"Out of an of them. there were only that the first witness in thcmyinawill
two black • " said Grimes, who 1s not take the stand until Novcmbcr-
argwng that his chent descn.~ a more than a year after the crime.
"mo"' dhcrsc ~t " _._ Pcttu a 19=$:1r:<lld .... fo .... rm ........ cr~----.; The hottest summer In _...__.. roau~ff ud wlrecrepwt --....,,...-"WI ...... -ronrom-ed by-cu tomers
Rollywooahlstory comes Scattered blackouts, fires and smoa Wednesda>. brcakina a record ·set
Thenigll <Jemandfor elcctncty a so
lcfi about l ,500 Southern California
Edison Co. customers 1n Irvine
without p<>wcr Wednesday.
"Ho~ v.ould) u like t be Jud&cd Manna Hi&h School studcn" is
by an all-black Jury.,," reponded accused of [a tally stabb1na boutiq*
when bked about his ouon. "It's owner Darleen Hazboun. 37. lastOct. to an end./83 alerts brought more misery to Monday.
Southern California as the region ·The record power consumptidn
sweltered lhrouah a heal wave that caused t'\O outa&es which left 4.600
has set records for daily highs and San Diego Gas & Elcctnc cii tomers
elcctncat-demand and perhaps for fan without po\\ er. The circuit brcak-
sales. downs affected Mission VieJO,
possible there could a lapse. a IQ hewasfound in hersccond-Ooor
Business
Tax ~halters paved the
way to James Qulgg's
successful career ./BS
IN DEX
Erma Bombeck
Bridge
Bulletin Board
9ualnna
California News
c1ass1hed
Com lea
Crossword
Death Notlcel
Horoscope
Ann Landera
Living
Mutual Fund
NatlonalN
Opln on
Papatazzl
Polle L.og
Public NotieeS
SPorts
Stock M rktt
T VI on
Th tera
Weather,
World N
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B'4
A3
85
A4
C5·7
94
C7 c.. ce
92
81-2
BS
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81
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83
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Wednesday was a "peak demand" Laguna H~ and parts of Laauna
da) for San Diego Gas and Electric N.,ucl. M1ss1on Communit) Ho 1p-
Compan). 1d Maurice luque, a tat m Miuion VieJo was forced to use
pokcsman for the ompany. A an cmeraenc) power system for more
record 2.342 megawatts of power than two hours.
Mcanwtulc. Orange Coast hard-
ware and apphancc stores are scllin1
out of fans durina the h~at wave.
Joseph Venti, manager of'Builder..
Emponum in Costa M~. said only
three fans were left m his tore.
Jeff Schulcin, owner of Crown
Hardware m Newport Beach. was
(PleueeeeBJtAT/A2)
cultural thtn~. E" baStc man-shop. Som~ in Time. bowtd.
,nens could be 1 terprttcd dtf-pged and stabbed.
fcrentl)." A witnc tcst1fed dunna an earlier
Gnme 'said g con~ms spnng hearing that he saw a man sbe
from the fact that the ca~ in"olvcs a believed to be Pettus tandina inSidc
black man v.ho is accused of murder-the shop the same day Hubc>UD~s
ing a"' hite v.oman. Tilt attome) said bod) was found. The witnesses alto su~c> show that the chanttS of a claimed she heard muffled a-.a
guilt} Hrdict twina returned aptnst a (Ple&M..., J11Roa8/ A2)
Oil's well t!-Jat erids-wen at Huntirigtoll City Hall
City takes a gamble with •patch job'
onhtstorlc pumper -and1t pay,,_s_o_,f:-::"f _ __;.__
for 60 )cars Civic Center Oil Well
o. 2 in Huntington BCich has
pumpN about 18 barrel ofoil a d:i).
day in and da> out, with hi rd I> a hitch
or interruption.
So 1t came a kmd ofa ~hock when
in June the well that ucb up 011
nearly 3.000 feet below the cmplo)cc decided on
parking lot on Main Street north ot
C 1ty H II tqan to balk.
Production from the ha ton '-\ ll,
one of thrte owned by the ctt). fell lo
1 mere five bam:ls a '11 nd otlic1 I
hut n down to find out wh t wa the
matter.
Th rt mro to be plcnt) of h c
lei 111 the 011-beann
'
ROB ERT
BARKER
New s FoLLO WUP
• Acup e stu:=e een ~r abe l ed..,___..
,
'massage parlor,' shutdown
Walley counctl takes action aft r
testimony from Huntington policeman
By PHIL EIDERMAN
Of .. hllr"" .....
Fountain Valley City Council
mcmbcl'I have voted to clost a local
acupressure center, deciding that the
site ls a massqc business that .. may
~ conducive to 1llepl ~xual activi-
ty." I
Acupressure, which has been 1n
operation for more th n a year 1n a
Bfookhul'SJ Street 'hopp1ng.ccntcr.
Bums 1d a city official believed
.Acu·Hcalth wa~ a health-food storic when iu bu3iine» permit was issued.
When offic1ats discovered it was a
ma5saae busines), the owner, Lo~use
Fail, was notified that she needed a
conditional use permit to con11nue
opcratina.
City Attome)JAlan Bums said no
public compla1hb were made con·
C(mina the busine s at a council
hcarina Tuesday ntaht and ~1d no . On July 2S, the Fountain Valley
anbts ha\e been made at the center. Plannina Commission denied Acu·
But Bums said a Huntinaton'Beach Health's requC$t for such a penn1t.
police officer test" 1ed that a masseuse Tuesday's heanna was to allow the
curttntly emplo b) the center business to appeal the plannina
perf9nned a ~x act on him while she , commission's action to the city
was employed bya Huntington Beach ·council.
. massa e busincu. · Sy a 4"0 vote. the council upheld
The Fountain Valle) .business the comm1ssiol'l''s decision and de-•
under c.on ideration was Acu..Health clined tQ irant Acu-Heal\h a permit.
Hums id the bus1ne cannot tJ II conunuc to operate without a pemm. If u docs. the citl uomey
id. at would be a cnmana violation
or the cuy's tonina laws. punishable
by aSSOO fine or six months in jail for
c ch da)'"s offense.
• The attorney for the business was
unav ilablc for coplinent on whether
the courfc1l'1 de.ci11on would be
appealt.d 1n coun.
However, documents filed in sup-
pon of the 'business insisted that
acupre ure is an ancient health
treatment still practiced by million of
Japtnesc people. It is dc:scribcd as .. an
accepted fonn of health!induci311 ·
mu!.ele manipulation, usina pressure
points on the body. akin
acupuncture."
fhe documents as~ned that the
business "4ocs not adversely 'affect ·.
the health. ptace. comfort or welfare ;
"of penons res1drn~ or workina in the
surroundina area.' · .
HEAT WAVE SHOWS NO LETUP •••
From A l
sold out and 5aid, "Even people with-
a1r conditioning are buying fans."
Schulein said
The temperature reached I 04
deirees in. Santa Ana and 88 in
Newport Beach Wednesday. accord·
ins to the National Weather Service
in Los Anaeles.
In downtown Los Anaeles.
Wednesday's hiJh temperature of I OS
J,Urpassed the record 100 set Sept. S,
1882, and matched in 1955 The high
minimum of 82 was just t"'o dearccs
off the biJhest low temperature for
. any date in Los Angeles history -84,
set Sept. 22. J 939. h was 83 dearees in downtown Los
Anaeles at 2:30 a.m. today, according
to the National Weather Service.
NWS sp:cc1ahst Bill Hoffer said
there's "a big, fat old, high-pressure
system s1tung on" Southern Cah·
forn1a, and weather service
spokeswoman Betty Reo said "there's
nothina to move it out of our area."
Hiahs Friday will hit 94 inlandand
ranac •from 94 to 102 in the valleys
after lows tonight from 75 to 80.
Beaches wtll reach the mad to upper
70s with patchy mornina low clouds
aTong the soutn coast. Ovema&ht To-ws
WIJI ranse from 66 tO 70.
Wednesday marked the second
straight C:tay power companies re.
ported rccord-biah electrical usaae u
customers cranked up their air con-
ditioners, causina temporary power
outages.
The 1 ()()..degree heat only made
thinas worse for ftttfiJhters battlina a
series of scattered brush and structure
fires.
The taraest was a 225--acre brush
fire that was contained after bumina
four hours Wednesday in Texas
Canyon near Sauaus. 40 miles north
of downtown in the Anaeles National
Forest. said U.S. Forest Service
spokesman Bob Brady.
Fire in a Van Nuys industrial
complex caused $2 l 5.000 damaae
before 1t was contained around 3:30
p.m., said Los Angeles fire spokes-
man Jim Wells. An afternoon blaze in
a praae spread to two Lincoln
Heights homes and caused an esti-
mated $25,000 d.amaae.
Three small fires in Oranae County
were contatned with minimal dam·
-age.
Eiaht first-stage smoa alerts were
called Wedncsdar in the Soul!\ Coast
Air Basin, the Air Quality Manaie·
ment District reported.
The hcaLDtams:tted the Los Anaelcs Unified School District to' shonen
school days students in room without
air conditioning. while stores re·
ported bnsk business of air con-
ditioners and fal'ls.
About 500,000 people flocked to
Los Anaeles County beaches Wednes..
day.
At 3 p.m. Wednesday, customers of
Southern Cahfom1a Edison Com-
pany used 15, t 89 . mepwatts of
electricity. breaJcin.a the record set
Tuesday.
"One of tbe consequences of run·
n1na air conditioners night and day is
that electrical transformers in th9,.
utilny system never have a chance to
cool off, and they be&in to overheat .
and fail," an Edison statement said.
"We have had to replace 173 trans-
formers since 4 p.m. yesterday (Tues-
da )." ~idely scattered power outages
affected 43,000 customers throuah· out the 50,000-square-mile area.
SHELTER FOR WOMEN EARMARKED •••
From A l
the YWCA to stop letttng the women
stay in the lot ovem.iJht. sayina !hat the area was not zoned for a m1ss1on.
Riley led the formation of the
Pr~m for Women's Foundation
earher this year after the plight of the
homeless women was pubhc1zed an
the Daily Pilot
At a meetin4 Wednesday, members
of the foundation.announced that the
fire sutson, a h1stoncal structure
owned' by Harbor Bank of Lona
Beach, had been 1dent1fied as a
possible s1te for the hotel. . The foundation will beain nego-
uauons this week for the purchase of
the bu1ld1ng. said John Fatmcr, the
group's treasurer. He would not say
ho"' much the group plans to offer for
the bu1ld1ng.
Santa Ana Mayor Robcn Luxem-
bourger said the City Council 1s
divided on whether 1t would approve
the hotel concept
"You'll have to put on a selliouob
JURORS PROTESTED •••
From Al
before the man humed her out of the
shop, located on Warner A venue near
Hununaton Harbour.
· did not find the ttems until they
searched Pettus' bedroom for a third
time
and handle it very 'businesslike." he
\Old the-foundation memben. · · ·· ·
If the hotel. is prestnted as a
.. halfway house," some of the council
members may not approve i~ Luxcm-
bouraer said. The Santa Ana City Council, which
has spearheaded extensive down-
town redevelopment. is sensitive
about approving projects for "drop-
. offs," the mayor said.
f he hotel would be modeled after a
similar project operated by the
YWCA in San Diego. where homeless
women could stay for around S l SO a
month, Farmer said.
The hotel would be funded in part
by revenue from rental rates and in
part by funds raised by the foun-
dauon. The initial fund-raisinaioal is SS00.000, Farmer said.
Clear skies and patch y cloud
Coa•tal
NI .. .. .. 113 71 • 11 ,,
• 74
I
'* 42 'TO OJ n ... n .. to .. .. '4 11 17 .. to IO a .. , ..
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SLIRF REPOR T
• 70
12
'
Cooling off at the beach
The hot weather hu bro~t many people
to the beach at the end of the day for a
aunaet apuh In the aurf. The heat la
upected to atay a little loqer.
Second health official resigning
Tuesday by Health Care Aaency
Director Dr. Charles Kem1, who
announced his own resignation late last month. •
to the board's personnel committee
formally announcing Wiemer's in·
tent1on. said Miller. Police said the motive for the
k1llina ap~ars to be robbery because Huboun s wallet and her shop cash
bo~ "'ere m~ng. Though neither
item "'as found, pchce invest1ptors
claim they tumed up Jewelry 1dent·
1fied as Hazboun's in the house where
Pettus was sta ying at the time.
Gnmes said the defense is built
around the theory that police arrested
the wrong man. The attorney also
contends that the star witness, who is
whne. confused Pettus with other
blacks who hung around the shopping
center
Pettus 1s being held without bail at
Orange Count y Jail
It would be up to the YWCA to
detenn1ne the extent ofscrviocs to be
offered at the hotel and also whether
there would be a hmit on the tune
women could stay.
Women who could not pay to stay
at the hotel would not be turned away,
Riley sa1d. Foundation funds could
be used to subsidize women who
could not pay.
A se<:ond top Oranae County
Health Care Agency official has
announced his intention to resign at
lhe end of the year
Dr. Sanford Weimer, assistant
director of the Health Care Ascncy
since 1982, informed supervisors he
intends to leave his pos1t1on Dec. 31.
1tcord1n1 to Dan Miller, an aide to
Supervisor Roger Stanton.
Miller said W1emer's rcsianataon
was transmttted to the board late
Wiemer, who was in charac of
county mental health provams, was
recruited for the post when Kerns
became the aaency's first director two
years ago.
Kerns pvt no reason for We1mer's
resignation nor dad he dehver a letter
Kerns did indicate Weimer's de-
c1s1on to resign was made indepen-
dently of his, MiJler added. •
Both Wiemer and Kerns have been
repeatedly singled out forcnticism by
supervisors who have been unhappy
with how the agency was operated
auring the past year. Officers admitted. however. the~
OIL WE.LL PATCHED UP IN HB •••
From At
and take a chance that 11 would hold
up rather than ha\.tng to '>hare
royalties w11h a new well the~
reasoned
They got luck)
It was a common practice to put
smaller inner well hning'i 1ns1dc the
main casing when the "'ell was
devetopcd tn 192<4
In this case. the ongmal producers
inserted an Sh-inch inner 'iteel hn1ng
inside the 1 1-i nch main casing
But dunng World War U. "'hen
materials were hard to get. many
companies removed the inner linings
and used them for ne" "'ells. That"s
what the Sianal 011 and Gas €"om-
pany did 1when 11 develo ped wells
along the ocean front. accordin1 to
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
DtlJv•rr I• Ou1r1ntffd
Weaver.
But Si&nal removed the smaller
pipe 1n C1v1c Center 011 Well No. 2
only down to 2,550 feet, lca~ing the
smaller pipe in the well from that
point to the bottom of the well at
2.732 feet
Onl) there was no history of the
rrnroval and no om: knew atxn:n n >\1
any rate. the probers found that
tubing and rods used to pump oil to
the surface broke and bent and debns
from the smaller pipehne had broken
and blocked the hne.
The damaae occurred. according to
Picard. from the baniing awa) of
equipment at the Juncture where the
larger pipe narrowed into the sn+.aller
ont.
ft was a relauvely easy matter after
that discovery. The well was reamed
out and new tubing and rods were
installed. And the well was soon apin
pumping as before and the repair bill
was only $38,657. The city also i5
goin' to throw in another $40,000 to
put an new pump1na and vacuum
S)'1tem. too. bunhc new C<(Utpment
has been planned for sometime. But
the 011 should last another SO years or
so bamna an earthqualcc or some
other natural calamity, accordina to
Weaver.
And $75.000 or so is a prcttr Jood investment for somethina that s been
as faithful as Civic Center 011 Well
No. 2.
Wbl do you like' •bout lbe Dally Piiot? Wbat don't you like? Call tbe
number al left aad your m•111ae wlll bt r corded, tru1ctlbed u d delivered
to tbt appropriate \drtor.
Tbt same t4-bour ao1wtr1n11ervl•• ••Y be llHd to record letters to tbe
editor on any topic. Contributors to our Ltuera cohama m11t include tbelr
name ud telephone number for vtrlflcatlon. No clrcalatlon calla. plHst.
Tell u1 what'• on your mind.
ORANGE COAS.T
Daily Pilat
Ctrcul1Uon 7141142~
CtHtlfled 1dv•rt11lng 7141'42·5'71
All other department• Ma-4321
MAIN OFFICE
H. L. 8chw1rt1 Ill
PubltSher
R0Hm1ry Churchm1n
Controller
Stephen F. C1rezo
Proouct1on
,.. ManAg r
Oon1ld L. Wllll1m1
Circu 01ton
Mnn g r VOL. 71, NO. 250
I
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