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1985-08-04 - Orange Coast Pilot
KAN featurit\~ "Goocl.ol' Charlielrotun •• 61 ~c//t/LZ- - OKA\ TROOPS, TODAY WE'RE 601N6 TO LEARN ABOUT DIRECTIONS AND MAP READING .. NOW, I WANT VOU TO TAKE 1~5 MAP, A~D-·1 .... ,~~ s~ow ME WHERE · WE ARE Rt6~T NOW .. GARFIELD® 183 ~S1 'll~ . 18Z'f Z?'tJ J-s·a rT'\ 102 .. L°"1d"4e West 1or of GrRerlw1c.lv -- REMEMBER WJ.tAT I TOLD YOU ABOUT THE MOON? YOU CAN ALWAVS TELL WJ.tlC~ WAV is WE5T BECAUSE T~E MOON IS ALWAYS OVER ~OLL'r'WOOD ... PUT TJ.tE MAP ~soMErt.ACE Wr.tERE VOU CAN ALL SEE IT ... .._----" M()LP 5TILL,SPIPER,WMILE ~-- I SQOASH YOO WITM ,._. 15 WINPOW .... YOUR HDllTDll IAILY PAPll EVERVONE ~EAD't'? ~ . I IF VOU CANT SEE T~E MOON , OF COURSE, YOU ~AVE TO USE A MAP ... RATS! MtSSEP IT -NANCY Bv Ernie Bushniiller . ' DENNIS THE MENACE By Hank Ketcham Gotta hu~. Joey·s waitin'. . See ya for lunch ~ C81m down, y .. y .. Your son i9 Mr.Wilson! making a sh-sh lean nardfy SHAMBLESout understand. of my garage! . you . Expedin9 a I ittte MALE toaa~. lady~ pne of those I've been days, ~un? going ever~ .,. from son up to son do~n. . minute-. y JUDGE PARKER by Har-old. Ledoux PrtOTOS OF MR. AND MRS. SAVERN , .. AND MR. LAGRANGE ! r--.......'ft"M YES, JUDGE ! I SORT OF GOT IT ·ON THE R UN! I HAD TO GO HOME AND GET SOME PICTURES HE LOCATED THE MlDWlFE WHAT PICTURES WHO ATTENDED MY 6lRTH ! DID HE WANT? HE WA~ MEETING WITH HER AT ONE O'CLOCK! A THAT SAM WANTED ! ,~ • MEANWH,LE, ATTHE HOME OF MRS. BELLNAP, THE MIDWIFE I TOLD ARE YO U SURE THE MAN YOU, M R . AND WOMAN IN THOSE DR\VER SNAPS HOTS APtf! NOT MR. • .. I NEVER I ANO MRS. SAVERN ? SAW THEM --.... BEFORe I I I j e . . WHAT ABOUT THlS MAN ? IS H IS FACE FAMILIAR? . . . , DOONES BtJRY t CAN S4Y 10fJAY /QfTH (iJMIW'e ' C.ONFICJeNCE THAT 1Hell5'S NOT ~ A PeNNY fF UIASTE ~ FR4JJO 7D : BC FOUNO IN aR. CJJmNT ~ L % . ' • bY -(oM BATiUK \ .. IN FN:T. IF ~ /'ERC 7D GO TH"iil!JGH 7Hl5 8U06FJT l/N& 8Y LINE, AS r H/Ne, "!WO seE THAT.. 7HAT .. rL cFNli K! ~11 ~ AND CAME 10 ~ ON ~ER STOO\ACH ! ) .., by Garry Trudeau 1J£U.1 MAOAM cHAJRJQOMAN, trs HAP!) 70 S4Y exJ'CTLY. · ) Z 7HNI< 7HE IMPOl<rANT 1Hll6 IS RXIJS TO l(J(J< TO~. / ~ HOW IT. I FaJV() ANOTHE.R 8/UI~ / - cAR4 , CAN ~u · SEE WHERE IOM'S BAL.l ~DED UP ~ 1:f'S HAED fO ~k.L. FROM HERE,,, 9 f I i • ~ - <..(ES 1: CAN ••• - - srrr HE 5EE.M5 IO HAVE A PRE.Ill.,) GOOD ll E .' ! r?r-1~ .. MOON MULLIN S ~~ \@ uRRP!l ~__,I r:::-\G r. ~~I/.~ -' " -- J' l 1LL TAl<E IHAT ASA C'*PLIMENT· .. / # • ~MARMADUKE. ! I~ SIT! , w --~J " ! NJE.AN !W CXU:~ltJ6 eur~OJT a=MJ AIR~' f l I J .. \ ..J ... ·-· I ) . PIJCf' MOOSS., SCOO'f EJACK IO CAMP- 6'E:f t.J5 FIVE L-ASSOSS, ANC7 VR,AW SOME: SKINS ou-r OF Pe1'TY Pi:t:r~ •.. I. ... DrONr \ MEAN I tN MY CHA IR ' u..E t\.EED "TO CJ:/'$ UP WITH ~ ~tOIJ.AL lceA'5 ~ 40.J2 S-ruJ1 ~~I l-fSTEN jOHl'J, 11-'AT tJ..OA-O e£ A TE~FIC, ~IONAI. SlVtJT'/ 1 REALL-t.f D:f.J' T ~~ ~ST\NT"I cou..ooo 10 Fro/OTEWE. s-o.u, ::TAN I T CA N YOU Ta UST YOVrt IV .. St Tt•H are 1t ltut Ila dJt .. r. enc.. ft "tttWf"t •tall• IM-...-to, and bOttom ""'''· Hew q111cklr CH yeu jtM """'' CMck afttw.n with tl"9M ltelow. • . ....... ti 11911 ......... "..,"' ...... " ewa.dlQ t ,..,...., II "*"'90°'.,._.11 IPIOO JO dDi 'i -C-OW • "'IY 'l ~ - ~~~~~,......---&yHalKiufman~~~--~-- • KtD STUFF! Piece nemee of two IMMle M .. ••1ram 9t ttgM .. complN • Word diamond --............. ·SUCK~ TOPONDIR , Clln let you haV9 • pee cl land,. said the NlllYe. wMtl a smile. "It's • trrangurar piece. LongQt aide la 200 rodl and each of the O(hef tides measures 100 IOds. Don't know the eQCt ageage. but n ... •cheap.· ....... I thank you tor yoG IOOdnesa,. Wet f'9 vteieor:but I know you're pulling my leg." Arryo/te who draws thf property bounds wtltl peoportio11ate lines wtl ... why the otter lull doesn't measure UP-Wtfy Indeed? "" .............. r.q • ...,_,.. • IMlClf IOU op P9l9lt.,,..., 21. 19 • • . 18 ................... ... ..... ..... ec:t'QU ........ ,.. ......... the • dl .. r~ M9Ylftg the ..,,.. ......... and tar '""''I. et c•nter .,... ____ _ ........ ~ •llrtW· c..,... • .,,..., ............................... • .................. _. ___ '°"'" ........... i:t;.::4 .......... . ........... lell&T* ........... ..... • • .--t:/ IL{. -----. J' • ~~'-==e.....-,..,,.,,.,~ t • "' UllDlll '°"' ... -,. .................. dot ,......._..._ ................... , ...... etc. .. .IW-ra...--.....-,aayot•oroolol'M,....ton•• ed--• eegmenta of thle Mlltng acMe: 1-Red. 2-4.L blue. S-Ylllop. 4-Purple. S-:.Oran9e. 1-Grffn. 7-Dk. blu•. ' ' SPELLBINDER I SCORE 10 S*Att fw "''"'Ill t._. letters 1n the word ....., te ..,,,. two complete wwds. EMPH•lll .. .. . . . ,. . .. . THEN score 2 points .. ch for all words ot four lettef'I OI' "'ore found among the letteu Try to score •• lust M ,e1nts. .................. ......,,.. . For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston BE C.AREFUL- WITH THR\ . LAWNMOWER! UNPUJG-rr RIGHI NcW! • DOf\fT PUSH LAUJRE.Ne.E. UNDER WATER -DO '/OU WANT H Irv\ lo DROWN '? 0 • • -~ .. --...----·--- BLOOM COUNTY .. WHY PrJ9r 'I-510f ~7 WHY P05T" ~ Wlfff .r WllY aJ5r I PAl/56 ANP?SffHTE ?. .. ( J : . "-1 IH 1lJ 9NllPPIN6 1VlmE5, AN/? ~N!CK/N(J jfflll(K5 1 ... 70 /JOl.Pl.Y Ptve WITH 611K8le56 HIP, KtGHr 1tt10 Ml r!R5r ~ SKINNY-PIP / / NO, I f<RT11eR 1HINK, Ml PO</BrS CAME AIJ()f/r, . ff«JM 111€ CHANCE 11f6'(€ ,+1AY 86,,, \ l'M \N Ot.E.P 1~0061...E-, l 6 A1 ON THE. Re:MOi£ --f'ATR\CK ~ C.ONT"OL, \V 60~ ANO er<oK~ rr ~\ DAO, 1. \.\Avf. ~oMe 1\-\\NK ... WHl\1~ 11-\E SHOE MR. G£.t)EJMJ<EJ2, I 'M MAKING A SAf ET'( INGPECTION OF '(OUR WORKPLACE ... 1., e.~1r<E.Mf.L.'{ 6AD Nf.\US... ~61 Nf.~ 1 COULD Po~\ SL. -1 lf.L.L '100 1 I i.. .. b~ Berke Breathed . .. , .. A PAME HeKe/18()(Jr. I P05f.1/f/NK I J(J5r Mt6Hr, ex1r 511166 Kt6HT ... I ~/' . --~ ~f.M 'IOU 0Rf.AK 1"E. ~f.~ TO OAO, '1Rf.TBNO \~~\ l1''5 WOR~ ~"AN lT "f.AL.L, '{ \ S ~ 1985 United Fe•ture S~.lnc:. "OV'Rf. lN Oe.EP 'Tf<OU&.E, er<o. CAN <(OU TUINK OF AN'( . EMPLO'(EE.5 w~o MA'( ~AVE DEVMPED PROE'LEMS AS A JZfGUL. T OF SITTING AT A COMFVT~J2 TEf2M INAL.. FOR EXT~DED P~r2J005f.. 'ff.AA, 7J.llG GUY OVE~~ERE ... iUE £3ACK OF ijlG NECK K~~ GETT~ SUNBVfZNED. _I 11 ,, 1 I • AMBASSADOR 1----·---1 s ~ 50 • AZ,.......... NII NIN IU ....., ... coo·a METHOD M 'AYMINT 0 °** enc:loMd ~ ao ·Am'»r t 1 w1 gz '° OL.. c..s ,......,, .. _. _____________________ _ SlNOTO G Mra c: .... u -----~..,--------..,--~------..,----c Mr F..,. ,_,. i.-...,,. 1R21D71 .... ~ ------------------... ,,.. _ .. _ P!d ()/ ireeed FREE~N · If You Mail Your Order Within 15 Days When Jack Paar left late- night television in 1962 be- cause he said there was no one left to taJk to, Merv GrUftn was ready and waiting in the wi~. "I've continued 23 years after Jack. and I'm still finding plenty of people to taJk to," says Griffin. ''I've yer to tire of [myl show. The talk.show is the rast form of television that's freewheelinfJ." But when rela- tives ask Griffin what scrand- so is really like, he's hard put for an answer. "Honestly, I can't tell them... he says. "I don't go to the parties and balls. I've found it best to stay away from show business. How could I ask all the fun. civilian-type questions if I already knew lhe answers? The only celebrities I know are Clint Eastwood and the Gabor sisters." 0 \ aJI over again," he-says.--" No matter what you did before, after a long hiatus it takes courage to pick up again. I'm working with a wonderful teacher, but my nerves are the nerves of a novice. Yes, I get really scared. I've gone to a couple of readings for a Movie of the Week, and my sons Miguel and Rafael came with me and gave me pep talks." We hope the pep talks began with a few bars from "Hey, There." 0 'What is your fav- orite beauty secret?" A.L of Poughkeep- sie, N.Y .. writes in to ask Dynasty star · Joan Collln1. "Staying out of the sun," says Collins. "l remember my first trip to Beverly Hills in the '50s. I saw the women stretched out, trying to get a tan with the help of aluminum reflec- tors. I wanted to teil them to stop, that if they didn't they'd end up like wiinkled liz- ards. Another beau- ty aid I swear by is saturating cotton pads with witch hazel and putting them on my eyes in the morning to eli- minate any puffi- ness. I believe in taking care of one's eyes. Pretty eyes are the great- est asset a woman can have." rapher. When Queen FJRabeth heard the story. her smile lit up the state room. "My," she ex- J llESTLESS ROCKER: KNOCKOUT EMMYLOU C091flr ma sra ,..""" .... ,, CMmtJ -M1 • ..,.n,.,, .. BY TOllY SCl&IMll srnng of No. 1 coun- try singles da(ing back to 1975's "If 1 Could Only Win Your Love", the Country Music Association's 1980 Female Vocalist of the Year award; ac· ceptance by a huge mixed audjence of hard-core country, rock 'n • roU and even middle-of-the-road pop fans . With Ahem (who'd al ready produced Anne Munay's early hits) in the control room , Emmylou worked out an impec· r he roses are piling up onstage cably crafted. crystal· as one of our great American line sound. During beauties plows into her fifth the '70s, as Nashville encore. Emmylou Harris is ·grew more and more churning her big Gibson commercial. she set a gllitar, slippin' and slidin' reverse course back across the stage. Gone are her flowing to the austere heart hippie tresses. gone is the image of old· of country music. wistful and winsome Sweetheart of the Emmylou i.9-a revivcll- Rodeo, starcrossed and gamely smiling ist in the best sense; through heartbreak.. In a shon perm and she bri~ tradition to iaunty pink jacket. this lady leads her life. giving it new crack band with crisp authority. The bite: "I think my cowboys and yuppies in the audience music's always been are sending out loving whoops of a bit extreme because '"Emmy-looo!" And Emmylou Harris is of its traditional givin' it baCk. rocking through album favorites and right into The Ballad of Sally Rose. her new '"concept" album with its innocence-to-experience theme. It's been two years since Emmylou hit the road. Hard to believe. but the one- time frail. dem4fe madonna of coun- try-rock is 38 and a Nashville mom. A long, hard decade of tounng taught her how to lay aggressive claim to a stage. Lately she's been lookjng to make her· self a real home. For now, though. there's the grueling six-month Solly Rose tour. Emmylou sits m a New York hotel before her show. Though tired. she's bnght. articulate and opiruonated. Her beauty may not be as striking as It is onstage or in photos. but those aquiline features nonetheless look as if they w tre scul~ed by a ° Florenlm6 master on one or his real ~ good days &mmylou's thinking back. f "Ten years on the road -so much f water under the bridge! Those were ~ some tough years." Married to her pro- ._ ducer. Bnan Ahem, Ernmylou relent· lessly crisscrossed the country, breaking only tor recording sess)()(lS. '1 took a day off to have a baby!" (Meghann, now 5.) In the summer of 198.1. ii all got to be too much She splat wi1h Ahem and left 1he1r Los Angeles home, moving to Nashville for a sabbatical '1lunss Md gotten out of control." she says "I was on a real fa.st pace, let· ting other people make deosions for me Now I'm getting my life 1n order " She's afready gotten her career 1n order a doien best-selling aJbums, a 4 F'AMIU W WLY • 41.JCUST 4 . llSS of service families." Emmylou began singing -folk -at 16 and enrolled as a drama rTajor at the University d North Carotina's Greensboro campus But after a year and a half. she made her way t() every folkje's destination. New York's Creehwich Village. The plan? Become a professional singer The mid '60s folk boom had peaked, however. and Emmylou didn't exactly set the Apple on its ear Mer a failed early maniage and the birth of her daughter Hallie (now 15), a dejected Emmyjou moved back in with her par· ents in Washington. D.C. At 24, she didn't know what to do next. Then, into her life rocketed the un· forgettable figure of Gram Parsons. Florida orange-fortune heir. Harvard dropout. country-music visionary. A brilliant but fatally flawed charac:ler, Par· sons had already merge<1 country with rock during stints with The Byrds and The Flying Bun1to Brothers. Heading out on his own, he was in the market for a second vocalist -and found her singi~ in a Washi~n dub. Out on the ~ wenl £mm)'loU: "Ry Ttfe li3an: it ~exhilarating!" She sang du& with Parsons onstage and on his rwo classic albums. GP and Grievous Angel. In 1973 Parsons. no anaet. suffered a f ataJ heart attack probably hastened by his non.st~ fast-lane life. He was only 26. H&S protegee WM "utterly devastated It ~ very. very. very traumadc. Gmn Parsons had the influence on me. I wouldve just stayed and worked with Gram. I had no real ambitions to be a solo artist." But a solo artist she became, halting- ly at ftrsr. then with 8J'OWlng confldence. Soon she'd far outstripped in populari· ty her tragic friend -she'd blossomed into supersta.rdom. It's a tale that echoes throughout Th~ Ballad of Solly Rose, in which the naive heroine loses her wil<l- eyed rockabilly mentor, overcomes he~ loss, and graduates to a sad wisdom. Emmylou has also made a joyous discovery: the satisfaction ot being an everyday mom. "If I'm proud of one thing lately, it's that I've picked up the reins of motherhood. Before. I ~ just never there: I was on the road. It's a big regret. I try to make up for it now. I've become a pretty ~ mom, and it's an important, sta.bihzing thlng to me. "Hallie and Meghann only have one mother. no matter how many good peo- ple are taking care of them. And con- trary to popular belief. motherhood doesn't detract from your an." Hallie goes to school in Maryland. but little Meghann is the daily focus of her mom's Nashv1lle life. Mother and daufller have worked out a pretty pXI routine. During the making of Salty Rose, ''I'd get her up and set her to school. Then I'd go to the studio or go to write. I'd have a girtpicrherup from 'school and stay until I got home. when I'd fix dinner. Jlive ~n a bath, and put her to bee[ And tfie album release, the tour -everything" was planned around Meghann's scheduled time to be with her father under the joint custody a~ment. Emlnylou endeavors to work Hallie in- to her tourina schedule. too. "She's been to Australia with [the band and me) on her summer vacation. For the mosl part. though. it's not right to have kids on the road. During vacations. fine. But musi- cians who take their children on tour in- stead of leaving them in school -that's not being fair to the kids." For Emmylou. "being a single parent and a musician is really no different from being any other kind of single parent It all boils down to the tough fact that there's onty one of you. You can be a good single parent And a good single parent's a whole lot better than a bad marriage." So will Emmylou Harris settle snugly into sedate motherhood? Well ... maybe. But it's not quite that simple. Watch the lady at woric. prowling under the bluHl\d-orange stagelights. tossing back her head in delight, kicking the band into fifth &ear and into "Restless." one of her showstoppers: "Yeah, I'm j~ ~/cat.a gp!1 out d town .... ".Odds are. Emmylou will continue to live out a basic tens1on: prudent Girl Scout and born-again homebody vs. restless coon· try rocker. Even though she's discovered her domestic side. don't you go betting thas she'll ever become quite deaf to the call of the road . It's a wager that Emmy- lou herself won't make "I'm very comfortable In Nashville; I real~e says. "But I don't know if rve put down roots yet No, I can't say that I have. I'm looking to. But you know, for someone like me. putting down roots might me.an staying in one place for five years!" AV Me~·Goldwyn-Mayer in association with Franklin Heirloom Dolls presents its first doll to authentically portray VIVIEN LEIGH . SCARLETT o--BABA in Gone with the Wind Crafted in fine bisque porcelain. and arrractively priced at $195. There never has been a motion picture like Gonrwich the Wind. Or a heroine like \,---.5ca1lcct O'Hara, who so complcccly captured the hearts of millioru of movie-goers around chc world. In Vivien Leigh's brilliant. Oscar-winning performance as Scarlett. she evoked the very essence of Scarlett's indomitable spmt ... her beaucy ... her incomparable charm and v1cal1cy. Now Meno-Goldwyn-Mayer has comm1ss1oned chc creation of an authentic pore.clam collector doll portraying Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O'Hara. Lilte the cherished collcccor dolls of yesteryear. this enchanting doll is handcrafted with meticulous attention to each and cv«y detail. Her upper body 1s formed of fine bisque porcelain m one delicately sculprured piece. and her pon:clam feet and legs are sculprured with the same met1culous care. Her unforgettable htart-shapcd face 1s lovingly painted try hand. Her dress Is a thoroughly romantic creation of green crepe de chine, its voluminous skirt and fitted bodice acccing off to perfection Scarlett's southern bcaucy. The result is enchanting. A work to delight the most discerning collector . : . co c herish, to lovingly hand down from mother to daughter through the years to come. 'Vi9ien Leigh as Scarlett O'Hara' will bear the distinguishing marks of M,0-M and of Franltlin Hctrloom Dolls, idenufymg 1c as an nnamal-and exclusive-issue. It will be accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticiry, attesting to che authentic ~tailina of Scarlen's costurM and the reahstic portrayal of Vivien lc1&h. To commi.Jlion thu lovely doll fur your collcctiOn, pleue be sutt to return the encloeed commassaonma authorizatlOfl no lattr than Scpcember 10, 1985. {)nM SMu'ft lftMdl ~ tJwi a..cwl lltf fl/ tspprol!Jrnatel, 19" m lwit/tt r--------,-------1 I • Franklin Heirloom Dolls Franklin ~nter, Pennsylvania 19091 Pica~ enter my commisaion for rhe collector doll. 'Viv1m uiah as Scarlett O'Hana ' My doll will be tent to me complete-with a 1pcctal duplly aand, which will be pcovded at no add1uonal cha,. The ISM: price is St95. • I need tend no paymem now. I will be billed for my deporn of $39 • w~ my doll 11 rady to be sent to ~ Afcer ship- ment, I will be billed tn 4 monthly 1nmllmenCJ.,_ ~m ·~h ~~-~-~ .. ..., ~.,,.......,.,....., ~ Mr Mrs. M State VIVIEN LEIGH AS SC.AR.LETT O'HAR.*' P~ mail by ~ptmt~r /l1 /98'i umu. ()n~ doll Pl'T l"cllki. rm ., ..... --·~ ........ Zip ll45 l J ~tew Ctaft Pattems • • • • • • • • • • • • • 9293 ~52 9293 -Easy-sew shirt chemise. Printed Pattern, Women's Sizes 34-52. Size 36 (bust 40) takes 211e yds. 60 inch fabric ... $3.00 9366 -A shapely shirtdress with dropped shoulder. Printed Pattern. Misses Sizes ~20. S12e 12 (bust 34) takes 3 yds. 60 inch ... $3.00 697 -Embroider the flower-of~h month on 72x102" quilt. Transfer of 12 flower motifs, diagrams. color chart, directions ........ $3.00 482 -Crochet a great tabard to • 1 • '..I; wear all year. Use baby yam in ~ " mostly one color; side edges in ' 957 -Rounds of pineapples fn graduated sizes create this desi&n. Crochet 60" round cloth in bed- sp-ead cotton. Directions .. $3.00 \ . . ~ 615 -Easy-sew patchwork TV • turtle has felt eyes and frin~ed lashes. Kids love to bounce on him. Pattern ieces included ... $3.00 SIM WI fw tldl ........... 15 Cllts m ftf ,._., ....._ Tt: ...._ 1bi1 lie..,.,,.,, ... ......,, ...... . W ..... IY 11m. il.Y. mMllll ... 11111 m. 1915 llH•aalft C....,. -fllMI wMfl 158 Nsips. .. J frat ,..._ lll1ltlll In* .... S2A AM a5 Cllt1 _. far ... stlp ....... 2nd color. Sizes 8-14 incl. . $3.00 7130 -Ea~~rochet afghan in f ··-open and ~id ripple stitch. Use .,_synthetic worsted in 3 colors. Di- rections, color schemes •... $3.00 7164 -Embroider 9 pets on this crib cover about 32 x 44" in easy : -stitches. Nine transfers about 7 x : '. 11 '' each, diagram ...•.. $3.00 Now, for the first time ever, you can crochet clothes for your Cabbage Patch l<1ds '" with designs authorized by the founder of Babyland Gen- eral• himself-Xavier Roberts. This brand new book gives you all the Information you need to create 20 different pieces of clothing including sweaters. dr~sses, ~ps, jackets, pants, shortS, skirts. blouses-and even shoes. Crochet lns1ructions are written clear1y and precisely to give your Cab- bage Patch Kid"' a good fit. Full--oolor 1llustrat1ons help you choose what wtll look bes1 on your Cabbage Patch .. boy or g1r1. It's so easy to crochet! Why wait to enjoy the fun? Order your copy of CABBAGE PATCH KIDS"' CROCHETED OUTFITS today! I llM~~MwO<\I Int C-.l'llCll"-• ··~ol---1111111 ()noiNl~M'Mlla Ille ~ GA US A M,... _.,,.. __ ._ -·· -. - WHIZ QUIZ IS BFAU1Y IN THE MIND OF THE BEHOLDEN? By John E. Gibson TRUE OR, FALSE t. Your emotions have an effect on your auractiveness 2. Any woman looks more attractive to a man who has been "tu med on" by a steamy movie. 3. When 11 comes to the hair color that makes men and women most attractive to the opposite sex. blonds have the inside track. 4. How attractive a man considers his wife or girlfriend 10 be 1s likely lo de- pend on how attractive the women are where he works. 5. The more artractive a woman 1s, the less she 1 rusts men ANSWERS 1. True A man is. to some degree. as attractive as he feels -regardless of how symmetrical and well-formed his features. Similarly, a woman 1s as beautiful as she feels, regardless of how artfully she applies cosmetics or how becoming her hair style. A team of University of Illinois speciahsts con- ducted a study that explored the effect of people's moods on their physical at· 1ract1veness to others. Tests on univer· sity students showed 1hat facial expres- sion very definitely mirrors a person's inner feelings and is a determinant of physical attractiveness. Subjects who were in a pleasant mood averaaect higher f ac1aJ anractiveness ratings than those whose mental and emotional out· look was on the negative side. 2. False This question was explored in a study conducted by specialists from the Universily of California, Kansas State Universily and Oregon Health Sciences Universily. The researchers tested 120 male and 123 female university students, who rated ttie phys1cal attrac· liveness, dating desirabilily and mar- ~age desirability of slighlJY, attractive, moderately attractive aild hi~ly attrac· tive people The experiment was con· ducted under two conditions; after sub- iects had been shown slides depicting sceoes similar to those associated with a sexy movie. and after subjects were shown slides or a neutral or non· arousing nature. The sexually aroused subjects rated the moderately attractive and highly attractive people more' desirable as potential dating and mar· riage partners than did the non-aroused subjects. but they rated the slightly at· tractive people a.s less desirabfe. 3. False An Ohio State Univ'1"Slty study mvestrgated th! effects of an individual's height, weight, hair color and eye color on responses to hundreds of "lonely hearts" advertisements. This :nforma- tion was obtained through the partici~ tion of a magazine featuring a personal advertisement section in which readers submit descriptions or themselves and receive responses from individuals in· terested in dating them. The number of responses each advertisement received was recorded and made available for the study. The results revealed that adver- After men are placed in an enrJironment in which they are surrounded by beautilul women, what do they think of their wivea? hsers with red or salt-and-pepper hair received significantly more responses than blonds or brunettes. and tall male advertisers and lightweight femaJe advertisers received more responses than their shorter and heavier counterparts. 4. True. lo psychologk.aJ tests c:onducted by a team of Indiana University behav- ioral scientists. male undergraduates were placed in a situation that provid· ed continued exposure to beautiful women of various types Then -after an unrelated test on modem art that served to disguise the study's f)urpose -the subjects responded to a question- naire assessing their perception of their girlfriend or wife The same procedure was then repealed, but this lime the sub- iects were placed in a s11uat1on with unattractive women. After exposure to the beautiful women. the subjects rated their mates or girlfnends significantly lower in general attractiveness than they dfd before Jhe expenment. After ex· posure to the unattractive females. how· ever, their perceptions of their panne:rs' physical attractiveness and general ~ peal was markedly enhanced 5. True. lnvestisators from the Univer· sity or Rochester, Indiana University School of Medicine. and the College of William and Mary studied the relation· shi~ of physical attractiveness to peo- ple s social participation in everyday life and, specifically, how it affects their at- titudes and feelinss towan:I the opp<>sjte sex It was concluded from the findings that attractive males were more asser- tive and wett lower in their fear of re- jection by the ~te sex. while attrac- tive females were less assertive and lower In trust of the opposite sex IW fAMD.Y WUJo.Y • A.UQ.IST • • l 7 ORDER REMOTE CONTROL(S) HERE ,._ .... -COlmlll.4$) .... JO!lly--SU I ............. . .:JIMl2tw..tw .... ,..12.71~ M*WI ____ _ ... , .................. .,..... ...... ..____ £--..II lldllct•__,..,..,... Q9' -------9: IMMll-l'HIM.. MnlMCTll llUMAll'Tffl> e~-._ ii, IM: .... •: ~· Dlfl. 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Dnlp' Ski# FJ/«b Rft1f»l«L lt reveals the littlMnown side etrccu of over JOO of the most ofun prescribed drugs ... side effccu which are known to few people besides doctors. n.e Good meets °' 0rup Yoo cake drop pracnbed by ~r doctor for their aood dfcas like relieving pain. fighting infection. birth control aiding sleep. calmina down. fiJhting coughs. colds or allergies. or lowenna heartbeat and blood preasure. Do You Han Any Of Thest Bad Side [f'lects! f>'relcnptJ<>n drugs can caUJC diarrnea. dininess. dry mouth. sleepiness. deprcuiorf. hC'.dache. insomnia. upset stomach. blumd vision. cramps. rashes. constipation. fever. stuffy l109e. short breath. high blood pressure. fear. ri1'gil'\& sounds. poor appetite. balance. su or heart func1ion. Do You Know Th~ Answers To Thelt Qumions About PrftCription Orup! When your husy doctor gives you a prescription. what do you. or C"<len your doctor. know about 11? What'~ 1t for'? Will you be allerp: to 1t? 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It tells how to saYC money by using generic drugs instead of expensive brand names. h also explains drugcakgories. (Foreumple: a drug may he called an '"analgesic'" ... anal- gesic means '"pein relit\tef.'") How To Http Yow Doctor Tell your doctor if you have any poss1blt <Ide effects given in this book. If ht thinks hcst. he may lower your dose. stop your medicine or switch to a different drug not havins such side effecu. FREE Wltlt Order Order this 30,000 word easy-<o-under· stand book. edited by two pharmacilU. and we will send you FREE our ncwsleuer. hr-_,,.,,bt DNI N,..,._ Simply cut out and mail the coupon today. There's • no-time-Umit auanntee of satisfaction of your money Mclt. Are You Takin1 Any of TheK Drup? 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The Good Elrectl ~ Lowertnc Hip Blood Prellln You or those you love may take prescription drugt to lower blood pressure. relic\'c pain. reduce fluid build-up, regulate heartbeat or prevent strokes and heart attacks. AU docto·rs know that reversing high blood pressure is a great health benefit People have a much longer life expectancy if they don't have high blood pressure. They have far fewer hca.ltb proble~ that cause tircdncas, poor sleep, shortness of breath. hc;adache or pain. Dancerom Side £f'lect1 of ffish Blood Pr.....e Drup Unfortunauly, high blood pressure drup can cause miserable stde effects like headaches, poor appetiu, upset stomach, dry mouth, diarrhea, stuffy nose. tingling or nu.Jllbness in the hands or feet. d~ness. cramps. de-- pression. rashes. chills. fever. const ipa- tion or aching join~. Now Blood ,.._..e Cao Be Lowered Wllhoaf Drup sure rema..i~ lower than when they !"'C~ Qll drup. Cbo&esterol levcls also dropped 26%. The doctor in charge said of this program. 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FREE With Order Order this I 0,000 word, c:asy--t<>- understaAd. raearch ~ now, and we will er::nd you FREE our newslcatr. Recently, a univcnity study has Proo.,.,, Drt11 N,..,._ which i.n- provcn that mOll ca1C1 of high blood dudes periodic articla about hijh pressure can be lowered without drugs. blood pressure drutJ. 85.3% of .,.tienu with high blood Simply cut out and mail the coupon pressure were able to quit laking today. There's a no-lime-limit auaran- drup. AmazjnaJy, their blood piu-tee of satisfaction or your money blck. :-~-~:~~;.:;~;-.-;~~ .. ~~tSD ~IWL n:::~~~------------~- : and handling. Send me H/P B FUA .._...... ~ • P.reuur1 Low,,~d N.t"rolly, P.O. los 1518 •Dept. QFW4 : PLUS my FREE newsletter,,,.,.._. · PwMI• OIJ, CA. J1'2'9 l «:1 ..... D"'I Netn! : 0 Savel Send me two reportl Name : PLUS my FREE newsletter, ,,.,.._ ------------ ' .,~°"'I N.w. at S7-" + • S 1.00 lhippina and handling. (No Addraa extra shipping and handling charaes.) City Total amt. cncloeed S State ------Zip ------ __ a. __ u._t.c_ctlotl ___ ...,.. ___ •_ .. _d_or_Y_ .. __ lh_o_•_•_,_lbck __ -'I . ,.~ ~~------~~------~------------------------__.. _____________ _ MR. AUTO RICHARD SEALEY'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON CAR CARE SOUND INVESTMENT: BUYING A CAR STEREO D riving to and from work can you see a system advertise(faS being "an seem intolerable, especially awesome 100 watts." it most likely when you're caught in a tralftc means SO watts-per-side; read the small jam. While chartering a heli-print carefully! It's possible to buy a copter to take you wherever you want cheap deck with 200 watts-per-side, but to go is probably out of the question, the sound quality will leave a great deal there is a way to make the rush-hour to be desired. Inexpensive systems traffic bearable, if not downright pleas-played at high volume distort sound so ant. AJI you need to turn your car into much that you can't tell Wagner from d mobile concert hall is, you've guessed Willie Nelson. Good sound can be II. a stereo system! achieved at an affordable price if y9u Most older vehicles came equipped buy a high-quality brand-name deck wllh a radio and a ---------1119JJ with aro·und 20 tinny speaker I~ watts-per-side . cated somewhere When matched with beneath the news-compatible and effi- papers on the rear cient speakers. it'll shelf Newer cars give you terrific are often fitted with sound with little or I more sophisticated no distortion. even I "mus.ic ce.ntP~" hut whPn thp vnh1rru> A new world of misSes & large--sized fashions ... I 1~· J 0 The shopping e.xperlence fer style<onsctous women who ~er want to settle because of size or prlce.I The Sue Brett Collection features an ~ff-prlced" select.ion of the season's best ·silhouettes. identical in quality . to that found in leading PICK YOUR 11 FAVORITE ALBUMS FROM OVER 260 RECORDS AND TAPES ... Prescription Drugs1 ·Side Effects Revealed (Atlanta, GA) - FCAA, a nearby Peachtree Oty, Georgia publisher, announced today the rdc:ue of a new book for th! geocral public ... hea>tJtbt l>rvp' Side F/fecaR~ It reveals the littJe..known side effects of over JOO of the most often p~bcd drugs ... side effects wliich are known to few people besides doctors. ~ Good Efrem al Orup You l.Ue drugs prescribed by your doctor for their &ood effects like rdievina pain. fightina infection. birth control. aiding sleep. calming down. fl$hting coughs. colds or alleTgie$. or lowering heartbeat and blood pressure. Do You H•ve Any Of' Thae Bad Side [frects! Prescripcion drugs can cause diarrhea. diviness. dry mouth. sleepiness. depression. headache. insomnia. upset stomach. blurred vision. cramps. rashes. constipation. fever. stuffy 009e. short breath. high btood pressure. fear. ringing sounds. poor appetite. balance. sex or heart function. Do You know Tht Answers To Thae Questions About Pracription On.is! When your busy doctor gives you a prescription. what do you. or C"YCO your doctor. know about it? What's it for'? Will ®. TAGNllET c=- 9. v~ o. lf'l>E.RAL 0. TYLEQ./ CODEIPE High Blood Pressure Lowered Naturally Do yoa know die il••JM &ood e«ecta ... bed ... efredl ol OTll' JM peew:alpdw drup? a.cl .... m1ide fCll' &di. Latat Faces On Each Dmc Two outstandirl& phannacisu have hel~ add newly dilccwm:d side effects to the new edition. The book dCICribes more than 300 of the most-0fU'IHJted d~ 100 mott dJUIS than in last ye.an editJOn. F.cts are gjYen in euy-t<Hmderstand word.I instead of hard-to-understand medical t.emu. Easy To Read Drugs are listed in alphabetical order for ~uick. dictioriary-stylc finding. The book hsts brand names, moncy-aving generic names. good effects. side effects. warnings and interactions with ocher drugs. It tells how to save money by using generic drugs instead of expensive brand names. It also explaiM drug categories. (For example: a drug may he called an ~analgr:sic• ... ana.J.. sesic means -r-in. relic~.-) How To Help Yow Doctor Tell your doctor if you ha\l'C any possible ~Ide effcctc; given in this book. If he thinks hcst. he may lower your dose. stop your medicine or switch to a different drug not hBvine such c;idr-rlfrrt~ (Atlanta, GA) - FC cl A, a nearby Peachtree City, Georgia publisher, announced today the release of a new S3.99 research report for the general public, Hl,dr Blood Pro.wt Lowered Nlltlllwlly! It reveals a startling new discovery at a world famous medical center: the reversal of high blood pressure without prescription drup! A dis- covery unknown to most people. The Good meets ~ towertnc Hilft Blood Ple.m~ You or those you love may take prescription drugs to· lower blood pressure. relieve pain, reduce fluid build-up, regulate heartbeat or prevent strokes and heart attacks. AU doctors know that reversing high blood pressure is a great beaJth benefit. People have a much longer life expectancy if they don't have high blood pressure. They have far fewer health problems that cause tiredness. poor sleep. shortness of breath, headache or pain. 0.nft!Mtll' Side F.ffel'ft nf JOHNN'YLEE KEEP ME HANGIN' 219477 Simon & Garfunkel's !co·-1 Gf9llteSt Hits 327561 PAVAROTTI ,,_, MAM MA sure remained lower than when they were on drup. Cholesterol levels also dropped 26%. The doctor in charge said of this program, .. you lose your tiredness. You feel much more active. You have a general feeling of well being. .. How Did They Do It? How dtd the hundreds of people in this study free t.hemtehu from the miserable side effects of drugs -drugs they thought they would have to ta.kc for the rest of their lives? Why are medical doctors saying that the findings arc .. YCry exciting .. and that many patients have .. a new lease on life." -These questions arc all answered in a new research report. Hitlt Blood P1Sl&ft LowewJ N""""'1y! EMy to Raid Facts about lowering blood pres- sure without drup a.re listed in 10 easy- t~understand sections. You11 learn about the latest ~rch in nutrition. How the presence or absence of ·4 327544 Stellr Btottterl ,_, ~ILUE W1LUE NELSON City"' New <>Mens 329814 ~ ~~ 252387 lwma.I 327304 n.EJACKSONS 328182 !co·-! V.CTORY Ea mmrw -. 321237 (co·-1 327296 HAHK-WUJAMI. JA, ·-~1 1/1.AJORMIC:W!S .-n~ 332:H5 Im-I l!CMT 328997 FRANK SINATRA !i!!i!!l L.A. IS MY LAI1f MR. AUTO RICHARD SEALEY'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON CAR CARE SOUND INVESTMENT: BUYING A CAR STEREO D riving to and from work can you see a system advertised as being "an seem intolerable. especially awesome 100 watts," it most LikeJy when you 're ~tin a traffic means 50 wans-per-side; read the small jam. While chartering a heli-print carefully! It's possible to buy a copter to rake you wherever you want cheap deck with 200 wans-per-side, but to go is probably out of the question, the sound quality will leave a great deal rhere is a way to make the rush-hour to be desired. lnex.pensive systems traffic bearable, if not downright pleas-played at high volume distort sound so Jnt. All you need to tum your car into much that you can't tell Wagner from i mobile concert hall is, yo1l've guessed Willie NeJson. Good sound can be 11 a stereo system! achieved at an affordable price if you Most older vehicles came equipped buy a high-quality brand-name deck Y.1lh a radio and a -~--------w with around 20 rinny speaker lcr watts-per-side . died somewhere When matched with beneath the news--compatible and effi- papers on the rear cient speakers, it'll I shelf Newer cars give you terrific are often fitted with sound with little or I more sophisticated no distortion, even rnu£ic-centP~" hut whPn thp vnh1rru> ' · A new world of misses & large-sized fashions ... I The shopping experience for style-conscious women who never want to settle because of size orpricel The Sue Brett Collection features an "off-priced" selection of the season's best silhouettes. identical tn quality td that found tn leading PICK YOUR 11 FAVORITE ALBUMS FROM OVER 260 RECORDS AND TAPES ... ~ KEEL REBA McENT1AE OM RIDGE IOtS ~AONSlN)T l!!!-I TM fUgtM lb Roe* My Kind Of Country GREREST HITS. 2 WSHUFE 330233 --JOHN CONLEE 331157 331009$ JE1ffll£f oeeoFIE YOUNfOI 1--1 a.. Country Oum "'8lUE HIGHWM" 1-1 Cffil OON'TSTOP 3318&0 ~~ 338028 BEST OF DILE 1-1 !!i1iii!l KISS . -33801I m '9u!Ala ANIMAL/lE ~ u.. ~CW9 330225 ~ ~ __ .,,, ~ ~ ,,..,.,.,.. Prescription Drugs' Side Effects Revealed (Atlanta, GA) - FCA:A. a nearby Peachtree Oty, Georgia publisher, announced today the rdcasc of a new book for the general ~~lie ... IU:w>tJdrM Dnlp' Sida lfl/«:bR~ It reveals the little-known side eff ccu of over .JOO of the most often prescribed drugs ... side effects whlch are known to few people besides doctors. The Good Effects ~ Drup You take drugs pracribed by ~r doctor for their aood effects like reheving pain. fighting infection. birth control aiding sleep. calming down. ft$hting coushs. colds or allergies. or lowenng heartbeat and blood pressure. Do You Han Any ()(These B.d S6dt Effects! Prescription drugs can c:aute diarrhea. diuJness. dry mouth. sleepiness. depression. headache:. insomnia. upset stomach. blurred vision, cramps. rashes. constipation. fever. .. ,.,. . . . .. ' .. '. . 324996 ntE CARS 1--1 HE.ARTBEATCITY 317149 !'WO II I iCI 333817 , __ , 323444 MOTLEY CRUE leSl SHOUT M THE OEVJL 324921 --lca-1 FOOTLOOSE 328207 AMY GRANT 1-!!1!!!!1!!1 STRAIGHT AHEAD Do JOU bow tile iw• iwJed soocl eflfttl and .......... ol mer lit ... esalwA* _ a.d ... artlde lor &di.. Latest Flldl On E8Ch 0rus Two outstandina pharmacists haYC helped add newly ditcovercd side effects to the new edition. 1ne book describes more than JOO or the rnosi-0ften-utcd drup. 100 more drup than in lut years cdibon. Facts are given in euy-to-undentand words instead of hard-to-undencand medic:aJ terms. Easy To Read Drugs arc listed in alphabetical order for 9uiclc. dictionary~tyte fmding. The book hsts brand names. money-aving gmeric names. good effects. side effects. waminp and interactions with other drup. It tells how to saYC money by usinageneric B34ou-THE BEST OF ~ TONY MOTTOLA 327148 THE JACKSON 5 lwo•wwwl GR£A1ES1 HfTS High .Blood Pressure Lowered Naturally (Atlanta, GA) - FC &. A. a nearby Pcachtn:c City, yeorgia publisher. announced today the release of a new $3.99 research report for the general public. H'8/I Blood Prealltt Lo~ Nlltwtllly! It reveah a startling new discovery at a world fa mo us medical center: the reversal of high blood pressure without prescription drugs! A dis- covery unkndwn to most peopte:- Tbe Good Meets ol Lowerina Hip Blood Pre.Ire You or those you love may take prescription drugs to lower blood pressure, relieve pain. reduce fluid build-up, regulate heartbeat or prevent strokes and heart attaclc.s. AU doctors ~"""' ... ..,. __._,......,.:"flit i..;,...... ..._,,.._ .... sure rcllWned lower than when they were on drup. Cholesterol levels also dropped 26%. The doctor in charge said of this program. "'You lose your tiredness. You feel much more active. You have a general feeling of well being. .. How Did They Do Ir! How did the hundreds of people in this study fT'cc themselves fro~ the miserable side effects of drugs -drugs they thoukht they would have to take for the rest of their lives? Why arc medical doctors saying that the findings are -...Cry exciting .. and that many patienu have "'a new ka.se on life." -These questions are all answcred :_,.. __ , __ _._ __ _. LIJ-L 01--..I THE8ESTOF REBA Mc:ENTIRE MR. AUTO RICHARD SEALEY'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON CAR CARE SOUND INVESTMENT: BUYING A CAR STEREO D riving to and from work can you see a system advertised as being "an seem intolerable. especially awesome 100 watts," it most likely when you're caught in a tralfic means SO watts-per-side; read the small I jam. While chartering a heli-print carefully! It's possible to buy a copter to take you wherever you want cheap deck with 200 watts-per-side, but to go is probably out of the question. the sound quality will leave a great deal there is a way to make the rush-hour to be desired. Inexpensive systems traffic bearable, if not downright pleas-played at high volume distort sound so , .mt .Alt you need to turn your car into much that you can't tell Wagner from 1 mobile concert hall is, you've guessed Willie Nelson. Good soun~1d can be 11 a stereo system! achieved at an affordable p · e if you Most older vehicles came equipped buy a high-quality brand-ame deck ,,1th a radio and a •---------• with around 20 11nny speaker lo-watts-per-side. died somewhere When matched with beneath the news-compatible and effi- pdpers on the rear cient speakers, it'll I 'heir Newer cars give you terrific .ue often fitted with sound with little or 1 more sophisticated no distortion, even m11<;ir rPntp.,;" hut whffi thP vohtmP OHARU' McCLAIN RADIO HEART A new World of misses & large-sized fashions ... · 3333M W1UIE Na.SON Ice-I MEANDP*Jt ' --·----------- The shopping experience for &tyle.-conecious wom.en who never want. to stttle because of size or price! The Sue Brett Collection features an -Off-priced" selection of the season's best silhouettes, identical in quality to that found in leading 33335-.. ACCEPT 1--1 METAL HEART HUEY LEwis ANO THE NEWS • SPORTS THEPOUCE SYHCHRONICITY BIUYJOEL An lnl IOC:el It Man Prescription Drugs' Side Effects Revealed (Atlanta, GA) - FUlA, a nearby IUcbtrec Clty, Georgia publisher, announced today the rcleale of a new book for the general e_u_!>lic •.. lftmtidon Dnlp' Side l'Jf«:bR~ lt reveals the litt.Jc-k.nown side dfccu of over JOO of the most often pracribcd drugs ... Dde effccu which are known to few people besides doctors. The Good fJJects ~ Orup You take drugs prelCribed by ~r doctor for their aood effccu like rclicvina pain.. fighting infection. birth control.aidinglleep. calming down. fisJlting coughs. co&dJ or allergies. or towenna heartbeat a.tli blood plUSUl'C. Do You Havt Any Of These Bad Skit Effects! ~ Prcsaipuon drugs can cal.lie d" rrhca .. dizziness.. dry mouth. sleepiness.. dq> · headache. insomnia. up1t1 stomach.. blurred vision. cramps. ruhcs. constipation. fCYCT. • tt' -· • •• t...-r L .... &.. t.!-1.. L.t .-4' ®.-~- TAQNIET "'1~ @. G» l1'tDEJW... 9. 0. mDtOlJ v~ CODOE Do JOll know ...... Jed aood e«edl ............. "' cmr lll piiWilpdcw dnlp! R..t ........ for ..... Latelf F.m On F..m Drue Two oUt.Jtandina pharmacisu ha Ye heJpcd add newly dilcovered side effects to the new edition. 1bc book dCICribes more than JOO of the most-<>ften-utcd drup. 100 more drup than in. last yean edinon. Facta are JiYen in~ words instead of hard-to-uncfcnund medical ttrma. Eny To Rtad Drugs arc listed in alphabetical order for ~uick. dictionary-ctylc finding. The book lists brand names, money-saving gr!1'lCric names. good effects.. side effects.. warnings and interactions with Olhu drugs. It tc!ls how to.sa.Ye money by usinaacncric 330871 OW<A KHAN 1_,._.1 I FfEL. FOR WXJ 0 .High Blood Pressure Lowered Naturally (Atlanta, GA) - FC cl A, a nearby Peachtree City, Georgia publisher, announced today the release of a new $3.99 research report for the general public, H~ Blood Pnmltt Lowe-«I Nllbaely! It reveals a startling new discovery at a work! famous medical center. the reversal of high blood pressure without pracription drup! A dis- covery unknown. to most people. The Good meas m Lowertna Hip Blood Pre.ft You or those you love may take prescription drugs to lower blood pressure, relieYe pain. reduce fluid build-up, regulate heartbeat or prevent strokes and heart attacks. AU doctors l-nnw tturt ~n• hitrh blOllti sure rcma.incd lower than when they were on drugs. Cholesterol levels also dropped 26%. The doctor in charge said of this program. .. You lose your tiredness. You fed much more active. You have a general feeling of well being." How Did They Do Ir! How did the hundreds of people in this study f rec themselves from the miserable sKte effects of drust -drugs they thought they would have to take for the rest of their lives? Why are medical doctors saying that the findings arc "very exciting" and that many patients have .. a new lease on life." -These questions arc all llnSwercd in " new ~n::h rennrt HIM Blnnd MR. AUTO RICHARD SEALEY'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON CAR CARE SOUND INVESTMENT: BUYING A CAR STEREO D riving to and from work can you see a system advertised as being "an seem intolerable. especially awesome ·100 watts," it most liJcely when you 're caught in a lraffic means SO wans-per-side; read the small jam. While chartering a heli-print carefully! It's possible to buy a 'opter to take you wherever you want cheap deck with 200 watts-per·side. but '') qo 1s probably out of the question. the sound quality will leave a great deal itu•re is a way to make the rush-hour to be desired. Inexpensive systems lr<iffiC bearable. if not downright pleas-played at high volume distort sound so 1111 All you need to tum your car into much that you can't tell Wagner from ,, mobile concert hall is, you've guessed Willie Nelson. Good sound can be 1 d stereo syst~! achieved at an affordable price if you Most older vehicles came equipped buy a high-quality brand-name deck ·"th a radio and a MJ11m----------i111J11 with around 20 1 nv speaker lo-watts-per-sid~ 11ed somewhere When matched with l>t·11ea1h the news-compatible and effi. 1pers on the rear cient speakers, it'll llf'lf · Newer cars give you terrific 11t· often fitted with sound with little or 1ure sophisticated no distortion, even 11usic centers," but when the volume 111u can do even knob is up to I I lidter if you install It's best to check .1 quality sound out rhe various car j W'>tem purchased audio systems in a £> from a car-stereo small room and lis-i ~1iec1ahsi. Various vehicle manufacturers ten to a tape you're familiar with . That , 1ffer a "pre-wire" option for their neW way you'll get an idea of how the system models -speakers and all the wiring will sound once Installed In your car. ri•n111r,,..,j In hfYllr 11n a Qt•r ""' orct•m ff 11~ vn11r Q;ll'C: nnl vJ»U l!llVllll: wh•n IV\n. A new world of misses & large-sized fashions ... The shopplng experience for style-<oneclous women who never want to sdtle ~use of etze or price! The Sue Brett Collection features an '1 ff-priced" &d~on of the ~ason's best silhouettes. Identical in quality to that found in lead.mg department stores. spectalcy shops and fashion catalogs .. .at much lower prices A full 9~ges of s ports- wear. dresses, lmgene. shoes and more. in Mi sses sizes 10 to 24. Women's ... -.. 1· o.: • • :,41!£.~ 8t IEi!iSE!+~== ID*' ,., .. ' s -. ••• .,..._ ... , .. •·~~~T-~'1:.C:.':! I I '. ~---"" ......... ,.... ::· =========.:: I = •·2 aa•· 1 , I '--------------·---~----.I 0 . Prescription Drugs' Side Effects Revealed (Atlanta. GA) - FC.clA, a nearby .Peachtree Oty, Georgia publisher, annouooed today the release of a new book for the gmcraJ e_~~lic ... hmt>don Dr.p' Silk EJl«:O RneMd. It reveals the little<nown side effects of over JOO of the most oft.en pracribcd drugs ... side effects which~ known to few people besides doctors. Latest Fads On ~ Dnll The Good Effects of Drop Two outstandina phannacisu haYC helped You taUd~ prescribed by ~rdoctor ad~. newly discoYmd ~effects to the new for their good effects like rellC'Vin& pajn. · edition. The book dCICnbes more than 300 figh~ inl'eaion. birth control.aidingsJcep. of the ~-<>ftm-uled d~ 100 more calmin& down, lipitin& coughs. colds or d,ruat. than UJ l.ut years edibon. .Flll!tl are allergies. or lowenng heartbeat and blood aaven m easy-to-undentand words 1nstt.ad of presswe. hard-tO-Undent.aod medical tcrmL Do y H Easy To Rad OU •;e Any Of These Bad · Drup arc listed in alphabetical order for Side Etrttts. 9uick. didionary-stytc rmding. The book Prescripuon drugs can calllt diarrhea. lists brand names. money-saving gmeric di.z7jness. dry mouth. sleepiness. dcp~on. names. good effccu. side effects. waminp headache. insomnia. upset stomach. blurred and interactions with other drugs. vision. cramps. rashes. constipation. fa<er. It tel.ls how. to.saYCmoncy. .byUSl.·nggcnmc. -·"""·· --_..___ ... _.... ...: ...... ..._.,............ High· Blood Pressure Lowered Naturally (Atlanta, GA) - FC & A, a nearby Peac~trcc City, Georgia publiaher, announced today the release of a new $3.99 research report for the general public, H/dt Blood~ Lownd N"'111"'1y! It reveals a startling new discovery at a world famous medical center: the reversal of high blood pressure withoUl prescription drugs! A dis- covery unknown to most people. The Good Etreca of Lowertnc ffisbBlood~ You or those you love may take prescription drug.t to lower blood pressure, relieve pain. reduce fluid build-up, regulate heartbeat or prevent strokes and heart attacks. All doctors know that rcversirut biah blood sure remained lower than when they were on drup. Otolcsterol lcvcls also dropped 26%. The doctor in charge said of this progrJm, .. you lose your tiredness. You feel much more active. You have a generaJ f ecling of well being." How Did They Do II! How did the hundreds of people in this study free themselves from the miserable side effects of drup -drug.t they thought they would have to take for the rest of their lives? Why arc medical doctors saying that the findin~ arc '"very exciting" and that many patients have .. a new b.sc on life." -Tbcsc questions arc all answered in a new research m>Ort. Him Blood 1 .. MR. AUTO RICHARD SEALEY'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON CAR CARE SOUND INVESTMENT: BUYING A CAR STEREO D riving to and from work can you see a system advertised as being "an seem intolerable, especially awesome 100 watts," it most likely when you're caught in a traffic m~ SO wans-per-side; read the small jam. Whiie chartering a heli· print carefully! It's possible to buy a • npter to take you wherever you want cheap deck with 200 wans.per-side, but '" go is probably out of the question, the sound quality will leave a great deal ihere is a way to make the rush-hour to be desired.-Inexpensive systems 1r.:ilf1c bearable, if not downright pleas-played at· high volume distort sound so 1111 All you need to tum your car into much that you can't tell Wagner from , mobile concert hall is, you've guessed Willie Nelson. Good sound can be 1t a stereo system! achieved at M -affordable price if you \t1ost older vehicles came equipped buy a high-quality brand-name deck 1\1th a radio and a _ _. _________ .,. with around 20 ''1ny speaker lo-watts-per-side . ' ited somewhere When matched with •l'neath the news-compatible and effi. p.1pers on the rear cient speakers, it'll -.helf Newer cars give you terrific ire often fitted with sound with little or 11ore sophisticated no distortion, even music centers," but when the volume rou can do even knob is up to 11 . tii~tter if you install It's best to check ::1 o1 quality sou nd out the various car :i w-;1em purchased audio systems in a ~ from a car-stereo small room and lis-i ~peciaJist. Various vehicle manufacturers ten to a tape you're familiar with. That nfler a "pre-wire" option for their new way you'll get an idea of how the system n10dels -speakers and aJI the wiring will sound once installed in yoY.r car. •1·q u1red to hook up a stereo system. ff Use your ears, not your eyes. when con- . ou intend to invest in an after-market templating a system. It's easy to be dis- wstem, ~ou probably won't want to tracted by sharp-looking but inferior order the option when you buy a new' equipment. Heed the salesperson's ad- ' dr, unfortunately, the speaker quality vice; they have a great deal of special- 1,n't always the best. ized knowledge and know what com- A c:ar audio system consists of a com-ponents sound good together. hmatton cassette player and receiver Some manufacturers offer decks that (<ailed a ''deck" in the trade) and two slide in and out of a mount permanent- ( or rour) speakers strategically placed for ly fitted into the dash ... great for con- 1>Ptimum sound -in the doors, under vertible owners. You get the advantage ihe dash, or in the rear window shelf. --Of-being able to pull the deck and stow .Some audiophiles may want to include it in the trunk out of temptation's way. J graphic equalizer. which allows the Once you've made your choice, it's listener to boost or lower various sound time to discuss instaJJation. Pray that the lrequencies to his or her preference. dealer who sold you the goods bas a The first step in purchasing a car competent installation staff with the right ~tereo system is to decide how much tools and tuvctware for a proper job. I money you want to ~nd. Make sure that the store offers a war- Scan the ads and articles in car audio ranty on the installation as well as on magazines so that you know what pro-the system components. I ducts are available and have an idea of Some statistics relate traffic accidents th~ price range. When you go shopping, to loud in<ar music. If Van Halen is drive the vehicle you intend to wire for cranked out at top volume, it can be dif- 1 sound to avoid buyins a great system ficult to hear a truck barreling down on whose only drawback 1s that it's-toe big your bumper. It's safer to tum the music tu fit in your car. ' down in crowded, high-speed, and po- l A deck is described as having ,5() tentia11¥ dangerous situations. espedaJ. 1 many ''wata r.m.s." (root mean squaie). ly in residential areas where children This describes the total output of the dart out of nowhere in pursuit of the ice- deck under the most demanding load. cream truck. 1W The salesperson may say that a deck P.uls .?ut a certain number of "watts per side That's the amount of power fed to each of the two output channels. If f4Nfl.Y WUJ/.LY • 4UCU$1' •• ·-9 A new world of misses & large-sized fashiolls ... The shopping experience for style.-<:onscious W<>men who never want to settle because of size or price! The Sue Brett Collection features an -Off-prlcecr selection of the season's best silhouettes. identical in quality to that found in leading department stores, specialty shops and fashion catalogs ... at much Iowa prices A full 96 pages of sports- wear. dresses, lingerie. shoes and more. in Misses sizes l().to 24. Women's sizes 34 to 52. Halt sizes 12~ to34~. ~scover the off-priced sh opping experience. ORDER YOUR FREE SUE BRETI CATALOG NOW and discover all that . con~ent fashion shopping can be .. espect with your Visa. Mastet'Card or Amerlc xpress charge! Z B • YESt rd like to receive a FREE Sue Brett Fashion catalog. N8D1e ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Address __________________ ~. City ___________ State ___ Zlp __ _ . I I I I Prescription Drugs' Side Effects Revealed (Atlanta. GA) - FCAA, a nearby IUchtR:c City, Ocorsia publisher. announced today the release of a new book for the 8CJ1Cl1l) pub& ... Aau..._. Dnlp' SIM E;JfecaR~ It rcveaJa the littk>-known side effccu of over JOO of the most often pracri.bcd drugs . . . side effects which are known to few people besides doctors. 1lw Good Effttts ol Drup You take dNgS prc:scnbed by your dOC1or for their good effecu like rehevin• pain, fighting infection. birth contrOl aidingsk:q>. calming down. fi~ting coughs. colds or aUergies, or lo~ heartbeat and blood pressure. Do You Han Any Of T1Mte Bad Skit Effects! Preteripuon drugs can caux dumhea. dizziness. dry mouth. sleepiness. depression. headache. insomnia. upset stomach. blurred vision. cramps, rashes. const1petion. r~. stuffy nose. short !math. high blood ptUSUTC. fear. nnging sounds. poor appetite. balance. ICX Or heart runction. Do You Kno..-Tht Answtn To Thele Quations Abouc Pracriptlon Dnlp? When your husy doctor g1YCS you a prescription. what do you. or C'\len your doctor. know about 11" Whaf' II r~ Will you be allcrgK: to 11? Whit arc its stde effCIC'ls and danFrs? Will it affect other medicine you're iaking? Ifs up to YOll 10 keel" yourtetr informed by rcadana this book. For ex.ample. on paec IS you11 learn that a drug you take for short- ness of breath can aelually cause breathing difficulties . the YCT)' thmg it's suppoted to ptnenl. ®. ~. TAQNlllET lll()l'lllPC c::9 Q}. IN>ERAL 9. 0. TYtBeOl.J v~ c:::oooe Do ,_ bow dill "*rfel .,.,.. dleds ud a.I ... e&dl ol ,,.. • prwolpdua dniip1 Rad ... 8rtlde re. .... i..m. Fads On FMh Drue Two outstanding pharmacisu have helped add newty dite:ovend sjde effects to the new edition. the book dCIC'ribes more than 300 of the most-often-ule(:I d~. 100 more druaa than in Jut years edition. Facu are given in euy-to-undcnta.nd wordt ioscead of hard-to-undcntand medical terms. F...y To Re.d Drugs are ltStcd in alphabetical order for quick. diaionary-ityte finding. The book hsu bland names. money-aving generic names. good dfecu. side dfecu. waminp and interactions with other drup. It tells how to sa\IC money by usina generic drugs instead of expensive bnlnd names. It also explains drugcatqorics. (Foreumplc- a drug may he called an "'analgaic• ... anal- gesic means "pain rel~r.·) How To Http Yoar Doctor Tell your doctor if you ha\IC any possible ~t<k effect., given in thil hook. If he thinks -hest. he may lower your dose, stop your med.cine or switch to a different dnt& not l\avang such side effect.\. FR E£ Wldlt Order Order th.is .J0.000 word CU}'-(c:>-uoder- stand book, edited by two pharmacisu, and we will send you FRUour newaletter,P~ ~Dn11N~ Simply cut out and mail the coupon today. ~re·• a no-<ime-limit auanantee of utisfact.ion of your money back. Are You Takin& Any of These Drup? (Pan~I List of Drup in Book) --------------------c:UT Alie ...... ,._.YD----------- 1 0 l enc~ 13." + Sl.0011\ippina ~ MAIL TO: FCAA ~ 1 and lwodtin& Sead me,.,..,...,... P.O. los 2528, ~ p .. I D,., •• Sit/• 8/J•a• RnHktl, Pf&Cbtrec OfJ, c.. PLUS my FltU ncwUetter.,,,,.. ... b I 0.-.., Nftnl 0 Sawt Send mo two boob PLUS Name -------------- my F'RU ~. ?sao$dJ1 Dr., N~ at 17.tl + S 1.00 dU~ Addra. pins aod hudlins. (No cJrtra lhi~ pina and handflna dwp.) City Total amt. endoeed s 5'* 1..ip ----1---------=~-~- High Blood Pressure Lowered Naturally (Atlanta, GA) - FC A: A. a nearby Peachtree Cicy. Georgia publisher, announced today the release of a new $3.99 research report for tbe general public, Hltlt Blood Proaft Lo~ N .... ! It reveals a startling new discovery at a world famous medical center. the reversal of high blood pressure without prescription drugs! A d~ covcry unknown to most people. Tht Good E&ctl ~ Lowertns HJsb Blood Premure You or those you love may take pn=acription drup to lower blood pressure, relieve pain. reduoc fluid build-up, regulate heartbeat or prevent strokes and heart attacks. AU doctors know that reversing high blood prcuurc is a great heall h bencfrt. People have a much lonFr life expectancy if they don't have high blood pressure. They have far fewer health problems that cause tiredness.. poor sleep. shortness of breath, headache or pain. 0anserom Side Etrtcta of Hip Blood PrtMWt Drup Unfortunately, high blood pressure drugs can cause miserable sMie effects like headaches, poor appetite, upset stomach, dry mouth, diarrhea. stuffy nosc, tingling or numbness in the handl or feet. dizziness. cramps. de- prcstion, rashes. chills. fever. constjpa- tton or aching joints. Now Blood Prt9lft Can • Lowered Without Drup sure remained lower than when they were on drup. Choaterol levels also dropped 26%. The doctor in charge said of this program. "You lose your tiredness. You f ccl much more active. You have a general feeling of .well being." How Dtd They Do It? How did the hundreds of people in this ltUdy free tbcrmelves from the miserable side eff ecu of drup -drup they thought they would have to talcc for the rest of their lives? Why arc medical doctors saying that the findinp arc .. very exciting" and that many patients have .. a new lease on life." -These questions are all answered in a new research report. HIP Blood ~ Lownd Nltbln/ly! !.asy to Rad Facts about lowering blood pres- sure withoutdruparclisted in IOeuy- to-undcntand sect.ions. Y ou'U learn about the latest ~h in nutrition How the presence or absence of 4 minerals and 4 other nutriencs in your food and water can dramaticaJly chanac your blood pressure. How poi.son\ in the environment can make blood pressure skyrocket! How relaxation training can help. Why blood pressure medicine is ovcr- pracribod. FREE With Order Order this 10,000 word, easy-to- undentand, research report now. and we will eend you FREE our ncwsk:ttt::r. Recently. a university study has Aao...,.. D1111 Newi, which in- proven that moo cases of high blood eludes pc:riodic art.iclcs about high pressure can be lowered without drup. blood pressure drup. 8S.3% of si-tienta with high blood Simply cut out and mail the coupon prcaure were able to quit takin3 today. There's a ~time-limit auaran- drup. Amaz.in&Jy, their blood p~ &cc of atisfaaion or yow money beck. -~-~:;:;;~;;-.-;;~-:.M;D -L n:::;;------------~- and handling. Send me H"" ~ FCAA P'IU the ~ Pre61UTe LotHred N•t1U11lly, P.O. Bos 1!21 • Dept. Qf'W4 PLUS my FREE ncwtletter, PtY-PMdlf.t• Oft. CA. 311'9 IO~ D,., Nftd D Saver Send me two rq>OrU Name PLUS my FREE newilcttcr, ,,,.. ----------- ,., ....... 0,,,, N,_, at S7.M + Sl .00 shippina and handlini. (No Address ---------- extra 1hippina and handtina charges.) City Total amt. enc&oeed S State Zip ------! 1 .. tletectlo• a .... 11t...t or Y._. llo•ey 8-k I .... FUA ~~-------~-~--~---~-----~---~-..~--------..-..--~--~--------~ MR. AUTO RICHARD SEALEY'S MONTHLY COLUMN ON CAR CARE SOUND INVESTMENT: BUYING A CAR STEREQ D riving to and from work can you see a system advertised as being "an seem intolerable. especiaJly awesome 100 watts," it most likely ' when you're caught in a traffic means SO watts-per-5ide; read the smaJI I jam. While chartenng a heli-print' carefully! It's possible to buy a ' 11pcer to take you .wherever you want cheap deck with 200 watts-per-side, but '' 1 go is probably out of the question , the sound quality will leave a great deal th ne is a way to make the rush-hour to be desired. Inexpensive systems tr 1!11c: bearable. if not downright pleas-played at high volume distort sound so 1111 All you need to turn your car into much that you can 't tell Wagner from 1 mobile concert hall is, you've guessed Willie Nelson. Good sound can be 1 a stereo system! achieved at an affordable pr1ce if you . Most older vehicles came equipped buy a high-quaJity brand-name deck ,\ 11h a radio and a -..-----------with around 20 r1ny speaker lo-watt"s-per-side . 1lled somewhere When matched with tlt'neath the news-compatible and effi. 1•dpt'rs on the rear cient speakers, il'll .,ltt'lf Newer cars give you terrific Jre often fitted with sound with Uttle or 11ore sophisticated no distortion. even music centers." but when the volume 1u can do even knob is up to 11. ..r1er if you install It's best to check ::i quality sound out the various car 3 \~tern purchased audio systems in a j rr11m a car-stereo smaJI room and lis-• •llt'C1alist. Various vehk:le manufacturers ten to a tape you're familiar with. That •ffer a "pre-wire" option for their new way you'll get an idea of how the system 11cidels -speakers and all the wiring will sound once instaJled in your car. •··quired to hook up a stereo system. rt Use your ears. nO( your eyes, when con- •iu intend to invest in an after-market templating a system. It's easy to be dis- ·\~tern. you probably won't want to traded by sharp-looking but inferior 1rder the option when you buy a new equipment. Heed the salesperson's ad· 1r: unfortunately, the speaker quaJity vice: they have a great deal of special· ,n·1 always the best. ized knowledge and know what com· A car audio system consists of a com-ponents sound good together. liination cassette player and receiver Some manufacturers offer decks that t< ailed a "deck" in the trade) and two slide in and out of a mount permanent· wr four) speakers ~ategically placed for ly fitted into the dash ... great for con· optimum sound -in the doors. under vertible owners. You gee the advantase the dash, or in the rear window shell. of being able to pvll the deck and stow ~me audiophiles may want IQ include it in the trunk out of temptation's way. 11 graphic equalizer. which allows the Once you've made your choice, it's l1~ener to boost or lower various sound time to~ installation. Pray thal the ' frequencies to bis or her preference. dealer who sold you the goods has a The first step in purchasing a car com_petent installation staff with the right '>lereo system is to decide how much tools and hardware for a proper jot>. money you want to ~nd. Make sure that the store offers a war- Scan the ads and articles in car audio ranty on the installation as well as on magazines so that you know what pro-the system componer\tS. ducts are available and have an idea of Some statistics relate traffic accidents the price range. When you go shopping, to loud ln<ar music. If Yan HaJen is drive the vehicle you intend to wire for cranked out at top volume. it can be dif· sound to avoid buying a great system flcult to hear a truck barreling down on whose only drawback Is that it's too big your bumper. It's safer to tum the music 10 fit in your car. down in crowded, high~Spee<i. and po- A deck is described as having so tenrially dangerous situations, especiaJ. many ''watU r.m.s." (root mean square). /y in residential areas where childnm This describes the total output of the dart our of nowhere in pursuit of the ice- deck under the most demanding load. cream truck. IW The salesperson may say that a deck pu1s our a cenain number of "watts per side." That's the amount of power fed to each of the two output channels. If R1chord S«*y IS IM ocAl'IOT ol IM owartki.iMfflS How IO Keep Your Xolbwaeen Rabbit Alive. fAWll.Y Wr:DJ.Y • AUOUSf 4 • I_, 9 A new world of JD1sses ~ .large,-sized -fashions ... The shopping experience for style-conscious women who never want to settle because of st.z.e o r prtcel The Sue Brett Collection features an "bff-prlced9 selection of the season's best silhouettes, Identical 'tn quality to that found in leading department stores. specialty shops and fashion catalogs , .. at much lower prices. A full 96 pages of sports- wear. dres8es, lingerie, shoes and more. in Misses sizes 10 to 24. Women's sizes 34 to 52. Half sizes 12~ to 34\11 Discover the off-priced shopping experience. --------------------ORDER YOUR FREE SUE BRETI CATALOG NOW and discover all that con~ient fas1llon shopping can be .. especially wtth your Visa. MasterCard or American Express charge! Z EJ • YESl rd like to receive a FREE Sue Brett Fashion catalog Na.me -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Address ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ City State Zip ...,.___ __ DIETING ELIMlNATED Fast Weight Loss Guaranteed With Incredible Oriental Capsule! 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Nattonal Nutn11on Corporation thinks sol SJ9.95 -30-da11 supp/11 or SJS.95 -60-dav suppl~ Orrkr now bf/ unding a check or money order to NATIONAL NUTRITION CORPOR.Kf JON.1255() BIS- CAYNE BLVD. SUTTE 211. DEPT. B. NORTH MIAMI. FWRJD4 3318l Credit card customm.. simp/11 coll toll frtt: 1-800.-.31-9003. Operators are standma by to take your order 24 hours a day. 7 days a wn:k! If you'vt l'lirW'r bem able to low we>aht before. don't wait! You owe it to yourself to order CAPSU LJTET"' today! "IN 5 WEEKS, I LOST 41 POUNDS" BEFORE: March 15th - Weight 160 pounds AFTER: April 20th - \\eight 119 pounds \ ··1 can'/ /hank vou «nouph for Sfndlnp m• CAPSl!UTFP' Otw dlds just didn't UIOft loT me. I lo1>«d food and 11touplt1 I'd 11Jm b« thin! C4PSlJLJ71:rH has chang«I aJJ /hat! Al 119 pounds. /look and lttl VfWll ... 'J pounds /#phi' titan I um just fiw "**s qgo )f)cu product ii tru/11 amazinpr -E.K.. HlamL F74. "M11 lwsbond Is tltrll/MI ulilh tlw Tl!llll tMI J2 pounds IJOM in 4 wtth I can fil Into m11 W«idlnp 1JOU111 again!" -llC. Austin. TX .. "BoJhlng sull UGJOn ii ,... and I ean'I U10lt to hff Jlw b«xlt nt1111 lllat I'm 23 pounds thinrwr (and In )11$11/rtw 'ltolt w.k3J/" -'iH. Hal/bu. CA. .. Thac satlsfitd customm a~ only a ~ ~I.ht thou ands who haw achltwd scitCtacular raulu u1ma CAPSULIT£™ Join them and onln )OUr supply todly! •• BOOKS FOR COOKS NEW TITLES FOR THE KITCHEN For your reading and cooking pleasure, here is a sampler or lhe best new cookbooks on the shelves this season. Barbecued Ribs and Other Great Feecb (Knopf). by Jeanne Voltz. is a thoroughly entertaining book on the American barbecue phenomenon. Ala- bama-raised Voltz grew up on barbecued nbs. pit-roasted pork. fish fries and spicy- !)Weet barbecued .chicken. As a young mamed woman. she lived in central Flonda amHhen-Califomia. where she expanded her repertoire of regional and ethnic dishes. The book covers grilled items such as ribs . barbecued brisket. Key WeS. roast pig. and Armenian shiSfi kebab. It also includes plenty of mar- inade and sauce recipes plus menu go- along.s side dishes and desserts. Food for Friend.a (Harper & Row). by Barbara Kafka A lifetime of cooking and a love or entertaining are evident in this new cookbook by Barbara Kafka. !ood editor of Vogue. Kafka gives chatty descriptions of the recipes and their preparations along with comments on the beauty or plan-ahead musts for each. Lovely full<0lor photographs of Kafka's inventive. delicious foods will appeal to the cook who wants to please his or her guests. Always thinking of the now of the meal and the specific requirements for each dish. Kafka presents her menu ideas with lots of helpful tips on serv- ing and presentation. The book was a winner in the Enter- taining and Gift-Giving category in the R.T French Tastemaker Awards com- pe11t1on of 1985. The Sllver'Palate Good nme. Cookbook (Workman). by Julie Rosso and Sheila Luk.ins. After the stunning success of The Silver Pa/ale Cookbook . which sold more than 700,000 copies. authors Rosso and Lukins have com- piled another treasure. This new cook- book has the nair and style of the first. with script typeface and joyful little sketches decorating every page. This new book emphames menus and menu- planning. Silver Palate style. Included too are all kinds d ideas for almost-spon- taneous parties and planned good-time celebrations. Cooidnt With the New Amerlcml Chda (Harper & Row~ by Ellen Brown. Former food editor of USA Today, Ellen Brown has rambled all over the country sampling the great culinary creations of some of America's most innovative chefs. In this new cookbook1&own P~ sents fa.sdna!ing. detailed profiles of each chef as well as recipes from their star-studded collections. A great read and a wonderful suide to fJOOd dmina. whether you want to eat out or cook in. -Marilyn Hon.Hn f.uav Wfm.Y • AUOU9T 4 • •• I 1 Warning· The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Yoor Health. Rich/and \ R\cb\and ~~---------''C H rs ~ e' R uce Your Rates • • ot Your erv1ce . . Blue Shield's Preferred Plan cuts expenses, still gives you _ choi(E!$ __ You can control the high cost of health care without sacrificing your choice for medical services with the Preferred Plan from Blue Shield of California. That's because Blue Shield has made special arrangements with more than 36,000 Physician Members and 180 Preferred· Hospitals for lower charges. These Pref erred Hospitals and Physician Members have agreed to accept Blue Shield's payment, plus the subscnber's deductible and copayments, as payment-in-full for covered services. That way, we pay less for health care, and ·Blue Shield Preferred Plan subscribers pay less for their coverage as a result of using Preferred Hospitals and Physician Members. You get to choose the Blue Shield Physician Member or Preferred Hospital you want, get Blue Shield coverage you can count on, and save money with Blue Shield's Preferred Plan. You determine your deductible Blue Shield's Preferred Plan allows you a Remember, Blue Shield makes the difference ... that's Shield -( choice of deductit.>fes and rates so you can help control your out-of-pocket health care expenses. Your choice lets you take more control of your health care dollar without sac.rificing services. Start saving now Preferred Plan protection from Blue Shield rs available to individuals under age 65, families, and business groups of four or more. Oip the roupon today and learn how you can start saving on Blue Shield protection with the Preferred Plan . .. ., . • IN AMERICA BASEBALL'S AGELESS SLUGGER By Lonnie Wheeler The game that we treasure for its traditions has never really understood this about itself. Baseball has become. to a large degree. a game c:A broken traditions. For 1nS1ance, baseball was made to be played on dirt and grass. but the big leagues surrendered this cus- 10 m when the dubs realized that nylon doesn't have to be <ieeded every season. It used lo be that every ball park had ' t1 place where the sun goc m. Win ners of the leagues used 1<1 go directJy to the Wor1d \f>nes, which the New York Yankees used to sweep. The maprs were confined to the l nited Stales. Kids got into the bleachers for two bits, or peeked through the knotholes in the • lence for nothifl8. Pitchers used to \a)te their turns at the plate for better or worse. 'The owner ol the learn used to make more money than the shortslop. Of course, to its credit, baseball has 111s1sted that some things remain the o;.1me Three stri)<.es are still an out. Three outs an inning. Catchers still '<lUat Hitters still spit. Umpires are still bums. The Indians still have no hope. the Red Sox will never have a decent pitch ing staff, Cubs fans continue 10 punish themselves. And the bats are still made of white "-'>h by Louisville ~ugger. Th is last fact is a pleasant example of ,, r~ition holdjng out against the grain of things, because white ash bats are not nearly as ef6cient -in produ<1ion at the plant or at the plate -as those made ol modem aJuminum alloys Uttle League teams use al u mi nu m bats be- cause they make the ball go farther High school and coli¥ teams use them because they last longer. But the major and minor leaeues still make their players use the same earth· Qrown dubs that Babe Ruth and Nap La- 101e and Ducky Medwick belted with They requi~ wood bats for two reasons -because that's the way bats have always been, and because Hillerich & Bradsby is still willing to make them. "If we got out ol the wood bat busi- ne$. they'd probably have ro change lhe rules of baseball," says H&B Vice President of Advertising Bill Williams 'Ifs not a money-maxing proposition Many companjes would have gotten oul of ti long 9 ." Just a decade back -1n more pros- perous times, when business was lum- benng along'° steadily th3t H&B de- cided to build a 6~-acre plant across lhe Ohio River in Jeffersonville. r,nd. (Its cor- porate offices are still in Loul.SVille) - the company was turning out more than 6 million wood bats every year Now, the figure is around a million 'ihe Harvard Busi~ School would probabty say we're foolish. but we don't · foresee ~ng out of the wood bat business. · says Williams. "We all feeJ rather nostalgic about it. Pro baseball £.och bat nwa k1' a pwlewonal ~ l "°' Hillmch & Brodlby is hantJ.loole1. a gave us our start. We wouldn't be here ~ today without it." ~ The start was in 1884. when Pete !. Browning of the LouisviJle f.dipse (an ! Amencan Association team that sphn· rered off from the original National Le.ague) broke his favorite bat in a game at which young Bud HiUerich happened to be in attendance. Browning. one of 1he ablest batsmen of his time, was despondent over losing his trusty dub. and Hillerich. noting this, invited the player over to htS father's woockummg shop. The eider HiJJench, J F by uubaJ. was a German immigrant who had fashioned a proud family busi~ making bed posts. tenpins, roUer skids and a hol new item called a swinging butter chum. J F Hillerich had no time tor baseball l*s, but Bud and Browning rep&Jred to~ ~and s1ayEd ~late tnto ~ ~ turning a stic.k ol whtte ash tnto a ~ ty bat that Brownins used the next day in a three-for-three perfonnance. Browning's teammates soon V\Slted lhe Hillerich shop for custom-made bats.. followed by the players from O(Mf teams. and just Uke that the Hilleriches were in lhe bat business. They had been making bats with some renown for 27 when they hiftld St. Louisan Frank ~in 1911 and put him in charge Of saJes. Bradsby's work was so inOuen- tial that he became a partner The Hillerkhes. however. have been the la.stins family m the company Bud H1llench was active with H&B unul he was 80. The current presadent. John A. (Jack) Hillerich m. marb the famtly's fourth generation in wood-turning '"""1nuftl on ~ t SJ F .u& ... 'Wf:Dl,LY • AUOJlf • • ·-13 G'N£ -----===-oc==::;i "The End of the 'Dall" by James Ear1e Fraser ------,,, ....... • An ouuandlng llW9eUm quaUty rqwoduction ol James t...r1c rr.u'• gratat ~ • lndMduaRy bancM'lnJehed fh the gre8t tndftion of classk bronait KUJptul'e. • Aw.a.Me In e ~ Umlted edidon ~ ol juR ~ serially num.baed KUlprures. Ont cl l!ir "'°" CdlMld .., aa:Jalt1oed ~ ., Amcrlart habJr) illt r.nd ol ttlt n.I" Is ...l9N:s r.-tr t'rw:r's wrtd m iOMe:I otur to ~ Arnertc.an Inclan. Thr b oilling btomr ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ IU noiir dlis ~ 113 * mmmm ~ ~ is ~ for Ok e«J4Ab1* otlmng pr1cr ol )111tl~CX>prr9CUlipbft.. n. emawdll•t) ~ .., ~ ~ ha bea't ~ .-ier' .. dla:1 Sii4AJ•Mo(• cl "" ondllr ~ -farmer Dftclar cl Chr ~ ~cl Giie ~""-'-cl Art. f.adt "!'nS cl Giie ,..... 9CUlpb;ft .. ~ mdkl.,..,., mftled cl ~ bronK -• ~ ,...._ °"" .... ~ ~ .., mcft lnlnaier d!lMI thar'I b••ewf hat~ bn:lrs.. CiiaJ ~ .. lw lrw'W'...,. Cllll "°"'. ~ l.*s1d d pwdtitd ialra md a.iar.. °"" ....,,..,cd ~ • c::r..c --..... ., dlt .... fa "!'nS cl dlt l'QI"' .. br l'IAiwtied .., .,...., ~ " Co6:a d Adho•• ., .. M #I , • ., ~ IOlilpaft. T1:lr a9b'.t .. ~ trrtdly ...., ID )Ill BX> pBz:s .. kliob! _., ~ INC.. .al ,...,. .. lw dt•iftid bDe. To ..-rw -anpootae ~ r.dbon ~ ' ..... !CSlnn ~ ~ Chr RSU ..... IPC*"'m below l'licQ~ nttd • c .... ., JOU' orda' • -dm£.: 1 "7ht! 0tt1 of the nau- 1 GNE == ~°':::.-:" I ... -.: s •• (l " I .... ._., _.__, &lltf# .. fllll' 0:.-. • ClllfGll __.•~ill• 13 IXI • ~ .. ..._. I ,......,,_,..·~-! ,.._,_ 0 _ _,_. _ _,.__, ........ ~.-11M~n.• I ~ • .._ ..... __ Msr_. I o ,~_.,.._.,.._.di11191 .,,..crd=-• o o ~ a -.atM DPllS.S I o..c.i .... I s.-------- 1 ·----·--1 .... ________ _ I ..._ _______ _ I °' r. __ • I ._ __ ,_ •• _ .. L_tl~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~=-~-_J & ANDA COUGI, TO BOOT f Dallas' M~ Ellie told him once. she told him a mil· lion times: "J.R.. you keep those dirty boots off my coffee table, you hear!" The folks at Lorimar Licensing Co. got the message. and so can y'all. The Los Angeles-based firm is gushing about the J.R. Ewing Foot Couch, just the place to park your hobnails while you draw up that big oil deal or watch the Dallas Cowboys on TV. The "mini-Ottoman" rests on top of a desk or coffee table and is rushioned, presumably, to ease tfle pressure of high finance It is a foot long and three inches high The leatherette-covered top is hinged, opening up to reveal a secret compartment perfect for stashing those bills of sale The Foot Couch is part of the new Southfork "Dallas" collec· 11on and is available in stores throughout the country. It is touted as being "the perfect gift for the executive who has everything." Including boot· prints on his desk, we'd guess. I f\I 1\f \I \\ I •f\I\ rt A RIOllT Of i THI IMAGINATION I ~ ~ or the more active exec· u11ve. we suggest The Ultimate Paper Airplane, a mighty nying machine that has two U.S. patents and whose design has been tested by NASA and the Anny. The plane was designed by Richard Kline, a New York advertising exefutive, for his then 6-year-0ld son. "We took ii outside, and. boy, did that baby flyl." Kline recalls of that momentous occasion. The plane's secret: a small notch on the wing'.s bottom -"a whole new concept in aerodynam- ics," asserts Kline. ~line and partner Floyd Fogleman have told the whole story in their just-published saga. The Ultimate Paper Air- plane. The book also includes step-by-step instructions for building seven differeot Ul- timate models. Kline views his accomplish- ment in a historical context: "You know. the Wright brothers weren't par! of the escablish- ment. They were the ones who new first, not the anny or pro- fessors. Often the theoreticians and scientists are trying to keep up with bicycle mechanics. Now they're talking about us- ing [my design] on real air· craft . . . Isn't it greai that it all came from a paper airplane?" Yes, but we'd rather ny in a metal one. HOW TOBIA PAftlNT TllA VILlll nd finally, for the truly adventurous executive. a little preventive med- icine. Before trekking to places like Timbuktu. check in with Vincenzo Marcolongo. Not only has Dr. Marcolongo diagnosed a deficiency or good medical care for werld travel- ers, he has also come up with a remedy. He founded the non- profit International Association for Medical Assistance for Travelers (lAMAn. which. ac- cording to Marcolongo. enables him (or his proxy docs} to make house calls anywhere. !AMAT provides acces.s to medical treatment by English· speaking doctors in more than 140 countries. It also makes available up-to-the-minute in· formation for the traveler re- garding the rnedkal dangers in I ,440 major cities around the globe. Marcoionso's network of physicians, all highly trained, agree to attend to the illnesses of travelers for set fees that are generally far lower than those charged by private practi· tioners. If you're interested in this kind of worldwide protection. write 736 Center St., Lewiston. N.Y. 14092. CIUaRAftNG AMDICA Why do people choose to live where they do? Here are two reports: • Laura Welle, grand· daucJiter of Brigham Young, Salt Lake City, Utah What I love best about Utah is the mountains, the incredible. beautiful moun- tains. Long ago, I remember a minister saying. "I cannot look at the mountains with- out believing in a higher be- ing." we11. 111 go atona with that. We have the Rocky Mountains on the east and the Ochre Mountains on the west. Everybody is protected by those mountains. The earliest Monnon pioneers chose Utah in part for that - it was an isolated, desolate place. where they could no longer be~. Of course. belonging as I do to Bri!Vlam Young's fam· ily, the historical sense is very strong for me. Even to- day, you cannot escape the fact that wresting a living from country like this was not an easy thing to have done. I think some of the special feeling of Utah comes from this quality of thinss coming hard. Marie <>.mond, alnaer and co-ho9t ol Rlpley'• Blll'l'llDAYI Sunday: John Huston 79. Loni Anderson 39, Neil Armstrong 55. Tuesday: Lucille Ball 74, Robert Mitchum 68. Wednes- day: Dustin Hoffman 48. Esther Williams 62. Friday: Eddie Fisher 57. Jimmy Dean 57, Rhonda Fleming 62. Saturday: Mike Douglas 60, Jeny-FalweU 52. ~It cw Not, Provo, Utah One of the reasons I love Utah is because we enjoy all four seasons to the maxi- mum here. My favorite time here is m winter. because I'm an avid skier, and Utah boasts the best snow on earth. But I also love when the countryside is coming out of a very long and cold winter. There's new li:fe in all of the hills and valleys. But the most important thing about Utah is its pee; pie. People really care about you here and do their very best to rhake you feel wel- COl.JJe and needed. It's all for o~ and one fOr all. So it's my place. And while I look at other places I work in -like ~ Angeles and Nashville -as places to have apartments, Utah will always be my home. . .... . •'• . '• ' 'I • ~ _, "'*"'- PalrlCk M LtNlkey Vloe~...-~~ GeralO Wroe vie. ~ .,... Ad otrectw James P w111n Ylee ,.~ end Oeftl 1119' Jona than Tl'lomQilott Edilo-ThQr>'la\ Platfl 14 fAMllY WtOU.Y • AOOUST 4 • lteS • EMtutM f;dilOr. #WI TllWW ManaolnO Edltof. Tim~ M Ol!Klor, Alc:a 9*11,..,.,, !OltOll, Miiiy Din llnA 0...0 GtlrlOW rrOOd Ed.. ..... .,.,....,_ "MOC Editor, eom.. ~ 0opJ C..W, ACOe °""'l'f'IWI Al9I Ed10t. ......... ....._, ~ T:d., ~ ei.. Alt~ OIMctOt, Aldwd v..it M ~. ""*' _.., M , Oo-lllO I(,.._ 0ortt ~ Rabetl ~ ~ I( OolllMwl ......,_ De Mon .-W-. i<M'Ntl JllNI ~ MU .,_ Aallttl ~ ~ LOllil f'M)lldl 11 P ..,.to. & °" o1 ec-auone. Aichllo Mllln, Ptoo Dtt. no-....,... ~ OpmnitloM Olt . ~ ~ fl'IMnHIO. MictW *'"-"'° M-.ur> Mot, w..,.. l<9IYIY r~uno Mo• ..... o.c>omenooo Y P ·AMoc Ad DlrL. .... 81-. Joe ~·-Jr ,.._ YO<'! Mor~ ~ J ,,_.'Y Dif ol ...... ~ ~ K CWfdl ~Ot Of AQency !Ind cii.n1 IWaltone, _._ 8 ~ DettOl1 Mgr. Aorl ~ c.111 "'-"'--5petlwio "°" Clft u.t\ ftl ..... ~Mor~ l<.w 0' I Fl IOO ~ Mgr. CerGI ICMnef~ Metdleld91ne Mgr Donne 0.- ''-~ AM V.,. ~ Etlle Y P ,.....,~ ~ Aallet1 J o.n.... NH..-.>« Rel. Mgra.. ..--Cl ...... Aon ~ ..m90t1 C Wiie 0onwNr 9'a.., lJl'IOI MD1n Admln. -'Ml , Rl1' Slncf'N 0..11 Mgr.Jflnllndel e>p.,.at-. Jdltt "-• Conl?Oller, ..._ T ~ Jf. Spec. ~.Mgr. L.1'IN Jwltl/w LOUllVILLI aueen (conlinU«l from~ 13} At Slugger Park -the Jeffersonville. Ind .. plant -the small museum and ac- companying tour dwell almost entirety on this tradition, on the lore that Louisville Slugger has created out of Nonhern lumber. There is a 42-ounce bat (R43) that Babe Ruth used in 1927 -the year he hit 60 nome runs -un- til he broke it, with 21 notches cirdlng the trademark where Babe made a mark for every homer he hit with it. There is the bat that Hank Aaron used -very HciB maltes o million wood bots a ymr. si milar to Ruth's -for his 700th home run. Vinually every HaJI of Farner has done his hitting with a Louisville Slu8: ger. Today, more than 90 percent of the major leaguers use SIU88'rs. one notable exception being Pete Rose, who switched to the Japanese Mizuno model for promotional purposes. The most popular models are the Ml JO. first requested by the forgett~e Eddie Malone. who played two partial seasons after World War II with the Chicago White Sox. and the KSS, orig- inally ordered by Chuck KJein. a Hall of Farner who spent most of a long career with the Philadelphia Phillies. The S2. made for Roy Sievers of the Washington Senators. has a legacy that includes led Williams, Al Kaline and Ernie Banks. George Brett spreads his pine tar on .a T85 model from ~e mold first cut for -Marv~ -- Nearty all of the major-and minor- 1eague Louisville s'fUggers come from five or six basic models. but every ba1 ordered by a professional is still hand- tu med by craftsmen who are members of the United SteeJworkers Union. To custom-make these bats, H&B keeps a file on f:.lery profesional dienl The files can provide the specifications of the bat Ty c.obb used in 1918, or Honus Wlfltef in 1912. (Wagner. in fact . was the first player to put his signatute to a bat.) And every prototype ever made is still stored alph.abetically in an unceremonious room where bat orders are processed. That hoary stack of bats -)'Ot.I can pick Ruth's ~ht out of the pile of R's -Is 111 arduve unto iUelf and a re- minder that at leMt something.tin blse- F.um.v WWJJ.v • •UOOST • • •• 15 ba1J have held to tradition, despite the times. The Louisville Slugger is a living retie. "I gu~ we realized how much things have changed awhile back when Pee • I • .. I I. l-a. Wee Reese. our man in the field, asked a 21-yev-old prospect whar modet baa he used." says Wlllian)s. 'This was a kid who has played ball all the way through college. He· said, 'I don't know. I've never picked up a wood bal in my life.' .. IW Lonn~ Whttln is a wmn uJho /11JeS in Cinan- nat1. °"'° rJwiRM ol. Tl.id~~ Q//,t, Ehfit!Rd U> ... THESE LOW VITA IN. PRIGI So very low they're amazing! And right at your ,finger- tips. These are the power vitamins and minerals you want for yourself and your family. Order today-don't miss outl _ .... LOVELY 14K GOLDTON PENDANT ON CHAIN Imagine getting this beautifully de-of compliments on it from your signed .. Carefree Hearts" 14K friends when you wear it. goldtone Pendant FREE and-as a Just check .the. bm in the order gift! It comes with an 18-inch fo~. Return at w1th your .?rder and goldtone cable-link chain-goes we II send your lovely Carefree with both dressy and casual clothes. Hearts" Pendant Free. vo will love 't and you'll get plenty Free offer ends Aug. 19, 1985 1' u 1 • May never be repeatedl -------------------------------MAIL ORDER COlJPOH 1 v1TlM1Nc 0 ::9· •, WITH ROH HIPS 0 500 fOf l .t N703 E..-. "19'16 0 1000 for 7.1 ~--------------· DIC LO* 1111 j Gl.UCOMAI -~-100 ~-torut ttOJI Enj_Oy 3 Nutrttlou• M•• .. on 1 GRAPEFRUIT DIET Pit Pl.AN AND LOSE WEIGHT FAST ,flJ ... , • .~, .u. ---.. SUPPLY I Ullll o. I ~:!7-=t 1M I 1.21 I :~-... ·--.. 7$1 ........ • ::~• . ..:.~ INAN MO di.II - he .L 2.98 1.00 .... "fOR ~r).:.;.* ::08.49 •Aug. 4 -Aug. 10 Daily Pilat Knighthood In flower AnthOD.1 ~drewa plaJ'8 the title role of the Rowena ln .. IY&nhoe. ·• rebroadcut Saturday at auon Julliht and LyMtte Anthony .. Lady 9 OD CBS. Channel~. ~~--------------------· ...... Illy Pilat MAIN OFFICE 330 WHt ,., It., Co••• M•H, Ca. Miii •ddr•H: 8o• 15e0, C09 .. M•H, Ce., t2t2' T.l•phon.: '42·4321 • Pro11rnm inform"'"'" I\ pruvided b_y the networks and ~tal1nm .md 1s 'ubr·t to change without notice. J\ Spons ............................................................. PIJle 2 Networks........................................................ P.,e J Daytime Drama............................................. Pa.,e 4 Tube Toppers ................................................. l'qe 5 Daytime Schedule ......................................... Pase 6 Evenmg Sl;hedulc ........................................... Page 9 TV Puzzle .................................................... Page JI -Channels _ ........ (21 Krn~ CB\, ti 121 W Sunset Blvd .. Lot Ansctcs 90028 14) KNBC N U<, 1000 W Alameda Ave., Burbank 91.SO.S (7) K !\ H< .\R\ 41 SI Pro pcct Ave.: Los Ansctes 90027 · (Ill Kf MR <HS. 7677 En&Jnecr Road, San Diea<> 92111 (Ill) KC if V AB< lli1hway 94 and 47th St, San Olcao 92113 ( 'Q) i..c \I NOC HHO fn1111t<'r Road. San Dieao 92111 _._.,,._.,a,. ( \) K 11 !\ ~800 W ~un'i<'I lilvd . l O'I An&clcs 90028 (9) k.llJ ~'I\ M1•lrot.e -\vt' .. l os Ansdcs 90038 ( 11) K 1 I V ~ Mh W Sun'l<'I 81vd . Lo' Anselcs 90028 (I \) lol.C Ill' 111' N l,o Bro 4 vt . I os Anaelcs 90038 I'M "-no< I 710 C lt•men11nr l\1111he1m 92802 _ .. (2Kl M"f 1 4401 Sunkt Rlvd . l.o• Anadcs 90027 t ~01 KCK l I ~ 744 Ooldtn W"1 St . Huntmston ~<'h 92647 -l'llyTV- (0) ON/Stltc:t TV, 11 W Ori1od C'c-ntral Ave., Olend1lc 91201 (/) I TV, 2919 Ncbm~a AJ(c , Santa M on if a 9(M()4 (II) H<mlr eo~ OffiC't', f1111c I 1fc 8u1ldana, Rocktfellcr Center, New York. N Y I 0020 ([) f.WN, Bmwt. ( onn. 0(10 10 ( ~ 'llhO\\ llmt' (( ) Cable New• Nr1work . .\llanta, (,a 30300 _ ......... «~t \Hll\. New Yor~ C'll)'. NY 10000 11 l \\ rRS .\tlunU\, G11 lOWO -Sports Cosell's return cheered By LORENZO CARCATERRA Without him. nothing's the same. Wtthout him, 1t'~ just a paycheck, a wu1ck. easy 9-to-5 day. The an- nouncers went through the motions as did home 1ewers. II wa'i JUSt a game. no needlO get exc11cd or get angry. · Then Howard Cosell came hack and ABC's Monday N1gh1 Aascball was given a .. thanks. I needed that" ~lap in the face. The main ac11on of the veen1ng was now up in the broadcast booth Cosell was at the mikt.'. swinging away. He has been a fixture longer than his worst enem- ies care to remember. He has "told it hke it is" enou&h times that many of us now take his <1poken word as fact. He is loud. controven1al, spo n- taneous. alive. Dcsp11c his spoken de- sire!. lo remain outside the news. C'osc ll will again be at the center of a con- troversial storm His book. .. , Nt'vcr Pill Y''d tl\c Game," 1s due in Octo1lcr Within the pages Coscll co- wrote with his "Sports- Bea t" producer Peter Bonaventrc, the man goes after former colleague ~r'ilnk Oifford. Don Meredith, John Madden, O.J. Simp on and a doLen other known names. Coscll left Monday Night football last scson and the results ,were disastrous. It was similar 10 being m a bad marrriage and missing 11 -you may be quiet ond alone, but there"s no one len 10 araue with. The announctrs lost season wett dull. with Simpson the poore t of the tno. The add1t1onal of Joe Namath may help, but thll how needs a C'oscll. Who r lK but Costll would havr peoplt talkina about foo tball onnounccrs it\ the middle of ummel1 At lc:ut there·~ .. omeonc in TV poru not f rn1d to ltt _ ... 8Y ____ _ Afi&UOCll ·1==CSllAL .. .. .... W N•lll a.. AA 11111 D 1 dgut .. MlmMI .... CJ In.; ..... , ~ -'9CM.LmAU.8'Cml -Tuesclq .,, ,. .. --·-·1:---N':&-..:r.::r-•CM- .. 1:~-ML a..,.,.... llD•lflll•INe .. 9rw.CI~• ..... > .._ -·-_ .. ,... ..... llY ...... --rrw.y---- 2 Sunday, August 4', 1985 ______ thtnas ~.Ja hu hot ----- • ~-Networks She's TV's 'Dirty Harriet' Jamie Rose packing heavy iron in ABC's --n ew show 'La dy Blue' By JERRY BUCK .,, ................ LOS ANGELES -Jamie Ro~·s ponrayal of the the Magnum-toting detec- tive in ABC's .. Lady Blue" has earned her the nickname "Dirty Harriet." Rose. who has worked several times with C'hnt Eastwood, admits she used ''Dirty Harry" ~ _a.n_ inspiration for Ka\y Mahoney. After she ~ot the role she rented all the "Dirty Harry' movies. Like Harry Callahan, Katy Mahoney packs a .357-<:aliber Magnum with a four- jnch barrel. "I watched the tapes and emulated the f un moves so II would look real," she says. When I told Chnt what I was doing, he tave me some gun pointers. "The gun 1s very heavy, but I handled 11 very well. I shot at a police range in Chicago. I was a good shot 1mmed1ately, even though I'd ne\C~r handled a gun before." The movie pilot for "Lad\. Blue" \\a'> telecast on A.BC last ~pnl 11 n'tUrn'> as a sene'> in ~plcmbcr and ..-. 111 run until "Dynasty II: Thi• Colo-..,·· lnm.:' on in October. All seven segmC'nts ol "Lad) Blue" will be filmed 1n Ch1l·ago by D.n 1d ( rrrbcr Produc11ons. whKh turned out .. Police Story" and "Police Woman." Rose appe•m·d \\Ith f ,l\t..-.ood in '"Tightrope" and \\ac, in a segment of "Amazing Stones" d1rectcd h~ him "A.mazing Stone~" 1s a nc\\ an 1hology senc'i for NB< produced h~ '>te\ien Spielberg. Rose S.1}S shl· doec; not th1nl.. then·' too much \.1olcnce 1n "Lad\ Hluc · "We hvc in 3 VCI) violent world." !>he sa) s .. There was" 1olcnlc b> 'el) bad suys and I dealt with 1hcm in as deadly a way a .. they dealt with the puhltc. I approve of what she did In C"l.CI) instanc(' where she used deadly force 11 was warranted. For instance. she k1ll 'i a man \\ho ha.-. ~11led a family of four in cold blood ··eut the nice th1np,about the '>hov. is that 1l had other levels. I think she's been hurt b) losing the men 1 n her life. Her father and brother were policemen and killed in the hnc of duty She's not eager to jump into another relationship after her boyfnend 1s killed. She cnes. She's a well-rounded person .. Ro...e w11h long. curly. fiery red hair. gn·cn eves and freckles. was a child actress from age 6 to 13 Her father. Stew~ Rose, had been a musical comedy actor until he decided he was spendin$ too much time awa} from home and decided to an vest in a buc,iness The family settled 1n Los An- gele" 'iht• appeared in commercials and such series as "Family Affair" and "Green '\ere'>." "It wa!I something my fa mily did," she say'i. "It didn't seem hke anything special. My mother had also been a dancer.' Rose a11ended C'al State Northndge but found she couldn't get any roles. 'Tm not a si nger and I was getting rejected because t~C} did mostly musi- cal<;," she says. "So I figured if I was going to gel reJCCted. I might as well do it in the real \\Orld I'd auended four colleges but I (Plea.e eee JAMIE/Pace 5) Kirk Jewelers Watcl"i&JeWeiry D Pn0IT. Jess BaJisacao, Watchmaker, on 1'.L f-" • premises for your convenience. Mmt Battery Replacement~ SJ. 95 Chain Soldering SS.SO Ring Sizing from S l 0.00 . . Klr~ Jeweler<; h~ the \Cf'Vl1.'CS you need the mos1 for the least. All work is done quickly Md effiocntly. \\Ori.. Like prong replacement. stone SC1· ting, for \\h1ch we al'IO hlM a large ~lection of moun1in~ to choose from. or 1..hnm shortening. Bnng In your fa'V'Ol'lte ~ ror frtt dearung and chccl.mg anytime.. It\ a onc-Slop convenience for you. from us. Kirk Jeweler\ expert watch and JCWClry rq>air. Count on iL CoMu \.1ou J11CllflOfl has a Hbtt htn.1A6 on tlw ~ KIRK LV\flERS A ~mlv ''' {11 ~ Slllt'f' 1917 O)ta M e\ll H.irbm C..cnicr (71.41 ~S-9435 C..anopa Pm k • l a111t' Rod, • M.111ha11an Re.lch R1\er"Jc • 1 hclu .. and o .. ~, .. rtt < 1111 \\111rcltnll < h.tlrsc A.:,;•11n1• \\,-k,,.IW' Q(kl1y oo 1n1tft"1fir1a.kr • _, tll llfl" Ml\IHdl•flr. v, .. and Rl('tlOn [:~, All •lml\ arc 'Ub~I 10 ~•1bt>tl11y l'"'du.1 pM>11 .. •phi.:.tlly mlatt<'d 1a \hew> lktatl AMC made it plain to Jane Actress found out s h e w as off the show by looking at the script By LYNDA HIRSCH Ja ne Elliot, !tttn as thnkv1ou~ < }nthr:t on .. All My Children." ha~ been wnttl·n out of the show. We understand that flhot learm·d 1ha1 he wa!> no longer going 10 appear 011 .. All My Children" hy reading a line 1n" ~npt F.11101 went upstairs to ask producer!> what 11 meant and was hluntly told rt· mranl "you're firc.d .. Elliot. a pro of not only day11mc hul pnmc-t1mt TV i.incc she wai. a 1ccnagc1 . ha~ nol decided whe1hcr IO sta} 1n New -TVQaA ' 111 i.. or nioH h.tt k t11 l .\ l'nor tn \lgnrng on w11h "!\II M)' ( hlldrl·n ' \hi· wa1i ~l"n on· fh<' (1u1d1ng L1gh1 ·in 1he mk Clf< arm~ .ind llffon.· that she was rrac)' Q11.1nt•rn1a1nc un "( 1cm·ral Ho'lpllal •· • • • Oon Scardino ha' rd11rr11:ll to the d;t\-ltmc wor1<11n lull lort l' .tltt·r mud1 loo loriK an ah'K.'nlc Y1•;11\ h1Hk Srnrtltno playl"d the lrouhlcd Johnn> r lctlht•r on "Thl· ( iutding l 1ght I k thl'll lrft day11mc for \!age <H 11ng ..tnd 111v1. 1cv1cwi. a-. an oll - Broadwa )' 1Jm·l't<>r I hen th" H'Jf \4.Jrd111nw1.·nf halk 1111hc "'orlcJ ot d,1\-ttml. ptlll h h11t111g for Lurry Lau when h1.· tool.. a lcav~· ot ah\Cnlt' from Im role of< 1r~·i on .. .\II M} ( hrl<lrt·n " for 1hc la!lt month \<.•mJ1no ha' h~1d lhl roh-ol tlw )Hung Pin~· V.ilft') ~1dow1.·1 Now ~~Jrdtrw "1111 an111hn '>OUP 1n .1 mk ;ill hi\ ""'ti :1\ hr pla>' .1 rncd1u1 1n Actors not supposed to change lines, but. .. By LYNDA HIRSc:u Q Do th~· ;11:1or'> on !>oap 111x·rJ\ get to change their line very much \trKc the)' know their chal'3<.'tt'I"\ 50 well'' -M W Buffalo. N Y. A: To hear some acion talk, they •hould also 1et paid for wrltln1 llte 11tow, but In tnadt, It'• not all tbat ta1y to change a llnc I• a aoap. Some actors pride tlaemtelvet on not d0La1 It. For example, James Mitchell, oeet 11alD ao1PlDated for ao Emmy In tbt role of Palmer on "All My Clllldren," 11y1, "I'm ao 1ctor. I'm paid to malu! whatever llae1 are wrlUen work. TUt11 my job. Tit, wrtter1 write aad I act." OU.er actorr, laowever, •Ill tell you tbat tll•Y 1pend IHI nl1llt1 rewrltlna 1cenea. Bat to aet a Ila cltu1e one muat bave perml11lon from th prod11eer. U11tally lite prod•cen are oot tlaat ea1y to tonvlace, a1tltoa1b one head writer we know 11y1 "•'be batea to w1kll th 1bow1 be write• McHH 1oap 1ctor1 b ve a WI Y or c1tan1tn1 tile line• et Ute all-lmr.rtent ftHI taphr1 wlaen llaere't oot enoaa 1tudlo time for Ute 41rtttor to 1ay, 0 Read It tbt way It w11 written." So la aa1wer to your question, actors ar n 't 111ppottd to chnat tbe llatt, hut • muy of t~em do It wltea t~y bow lltere 11 Uule time for pl'M•Cf rt or director• lo JI•• llttm m.elt Oak. • Sunday, August•. 1985 I) < .111 1111 pk.1~ tdl me wh>. ~hcrr) M.llhl\ kll "'K·.m Ii lot I omw 1 ow "1Wu'i1t hn.w1,1· thnl \ ,, nl'W producer on the ,hu~·· -R 1 c m tJ Ml''.;1, c alir A. Ab11olutt l)' not After a 1tv~·)'Hr nan as LlH, Shn ry decided it WH time to look Into olbt r a1pe<'l1 of her rareer. Alway• proft11lon11I, •ht bH gotten alon1 wl\b t'Vt'r)' productr and waa ttpeclally de-l~bted by working with Bud Nlr hol1on, w o took the helm tarllt r tbl1 year. . O Ho.,,. man>' JC trc\!>C\ have plnyed Wt'nd)' on "\earc:h for f omorrow'"l l 1h1nk the ¥.•rl whn play~ htr now 1s ah'iolutely \tunn1na -D.L . Ral11more, Md. A: Lt11 Pela10 b•• played Wendy rrom the day that cbaracter w11 hUrocluced. In the be11nnln1, Wendy wa1 • •weet cblld cru tJnll problem• for no oae. Now 11te ml1llt 11 well be called Wlllfol Weody1 Liu HY• 1hf lovee to play the eltar1cter either way Accordln1 to bt r, "It'• fun to be t weet 1nd tben 1111 fUft to bf a little bit wlld " O I lo~ Ion& 1\ M ctor on the <;C"t when hl··~ 111p1ng a 'oap'' kl·tently I wa .. 11ut 1n ( 4lhforn1.i ;incl I \I ~ of\l' ol tht' actor' drive into th, ... l>J)'\ or0111 l 1Vl'\" \tUdlCI I huni .111111nd Im hour\ nncl hourt Wl:lllln, rnr my f.l\ ur11c 10 come 0 111 Ten hour atcr he w,1, '"II in the .. 1udto WM he h1dina 01 "'ort..1na'' 'I v "'ht. bula, Ohio A: Wt doubt that be ••• llldlna. Somt o•p art done In pl1y·llkt f atblon -In oiMr wordt, •• actor c-om oo &lite tet, H4 (PlcaM eee 80A P /Pate 30) · i\nothl't World" Scard1110. who'><' parent'i arc ja11 mu· \tc1an\, ha~ been in show bu~1nc!is for 25 ycar!I. Thar ~cm'i nearly 1mpou1blc be- cau!IC he hardly looks older than 25, but it's true. In real lift: he's married to actress Pam Blair, lnM \Cen as Rita Mac on .. Loving." I le and Blnrr married last year. f hey have a ranfic turm 1n Connecticut and art planninl( on \lart1ng a fam ily for you I .arry Lau fons He $hould he fl'lllrn1ng 10 lhc role of Greg on "All My < 'h1ldrcn" momentanly. ••• fhrcc Pl.'rlormcr' play1n& dual wap roles tht'\I.' days arc doioi wonderfully. trlca Sleuk a .. N1ck1/V1ck1 ("One Life to Live") " doing a fine JOb of ucltng. Tht onl}' prohlt·m ·~ the cm111nH· dcpartllll'nt and lhe wn11.•t., haven'! \lone u gO<>d a JOb as her .tl'ttng dc!ICrVc\ For citam ple, N1ck1. ~e:inng a \traggl) red Wti, doesn't look all that murh J 1ffl·rt·nt from Vicki 1n her neat rnn\trva11ve hlondc locks. And when last N1d.1 np(ll.·arcd. 'ihe wun't the demure 1r11uhkd girl !>h<.· t\ 10<.lay bul a rabble-11H1\1ng helium Ovl'' on · Anuthi·1 World "Hien Wheel l'f ''doing a hanp. up Joh playing V1c1onn Jncl M<1tlc}', tw1n1i ~paraied from b1nh - \u 'leparatecJ. 1n fac t. that \heir mother didn't tvcn know \he pvc btnh to twins' At fir\t we thou&ht perhap!> the ever~ wtet Marky was JO•na to be dropped. Then her twin Victoria was introduced so Whcele.; rould play a sp1c1cr character. As of th1~ wn11na. both characters Slay. Wheeler'• done nn intnau1na job and the edit1na of one actre ~ playmg two character 1n a ~enc ha~ been supcrh. • • • A thou'iand hurrah$ for "All My Chil- dren's" touch1na tnbute to Key Campbell, who ployed Katt Ma nin for IS years. ft was done br1ut1fully. especiall y the flashbacks, and It'' doubtful that anyone who has watched that show for years wasn't moved tfi 1ear$ -pan ic ularly in the la.t scene, when Kate wa setn at the door, soft music pla}'1na under, blowi n&a kiss. It wa' a k111 caught by her many fans and • wonderful tribute to an actress. , We understand that many of the tears shed dunn& those 'ICcncs were real: C ompbtll wa• beloved by manr. cast member) II w1\ nice to ~ tht hkcs of Haab Franklln htought b. ck a~ Dr. Charle 1 yler and Nancy Franjllone rcpriaina the rule of Tara (No 1'.ancy'\ not rctumlna. ihe'' rnntcnt with an orrn,1onal fill-in role hkc the one she did on ·one tifc to Live" whon Andrea Ev•n• 11111k tllll<' off from her role 0\ f1nu due IC! tllnl''I\ ) One member ol th~· Man in clan who . c:imr to the func:rn l will be seen In a rccurnna role -Pllllfp (Cllarllf) Brent will ~rc1urn1n1 tu Pinc: Vollcy tobcpan of the ctiy'' youna cmwd, __ ..... ay ___ _ ... UW.•MOlll C.Ul·IA·I et ..... ··-···· ....... .., ..... ,,. = Ml11'1,..,... 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U..-tor Loe At.m• duri"O the -.. U I Ip rneM ef the atclfn"' bofttb -•Friday ____ _ lluna•n), ua.e. c..e ( .. "'-· _, ......... -...... .......... ...., ........... _ ..... .., -· {fWt. oll) (R)Q ' Ali ltlOlt -· -·-· AGlr•• A .._ .. • ,._ ...,_.._.... .. c ••• ,,.,... .. ..... .,. c... .......... , .... .......... , •• ''I: Hiia -~ -•t I ti .. ha' I lhl ........ C..t .. .... Verfr'e .. , ,,., s It 1• .. Alt, .................... --.......... _ ..... ,, ...... ,, ... .. c.-. ...... u.a. 6!) IOlD WIT 0.-..... w11l11 .. .. ,, ..................... .. ..... ........ ,., ... ...... ...... ... 111 •1 wmaiwlr-.(tlW.) ... nmn 'tlAll 10 M11C1 no....., .. , ........ ..,.., ................ •· ,.uan•1ssl..._._..._.,_.,. -........ UWt ••• sAlt& '"" • ................... -. --, •• ~ PUYUCa: A UUH min A cslwantala ..... 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From Paces "-J' '''" a h~H1cml''>tcr ~phomor~ I lod that I ~ nuld write m y own hand nook to C a Ii tor n1a collel(\" '-h• "-B~ ~oon ~upponina herself do1n1 \ un1111cn tJI\ She cvc-ntuJ11) landed a lead rnl1 1n the nHwtc "Just Before Dawn," "h11 It 'he dc-!>C'rthc\ O\ 11 tcc-n-aac "De· II' 1·1 o111~1· .. , "ol'I •• 1,111n .. ,~·11al ~Jllcd Th<·\\ 3\-C' 111 whll'h I plarcd one of the student\" ~he .,.,,, I l m·d .1 lot \o thcv put the c mcra o n rr11• n111n• I hl'n I dtd Tw11l I wa the 1w1rl1·1tc who ~1cJ 11 nw.t.irtttl&C' dunna the 1111H.ld1n~ Jllll~ '>l.'i. lton h wa' ia ~al t.1\lt lul prndu,tton '-lh1 .tl\o uppc-:trcd tn a numhc'r of oahl·r l11fm und TV cr,t~l'' .rnd w.i\ ~ rl'1&ul. r on · I a lrnn ( rt°'l ' Sunday.August•. 1985 5 -llonalng ~ ---• IODlll • llOT10I =A&. YA•OVIC: lMI CC191.•AT A&. •mllTIWOMOUT -IA-(llOM-TMU) [=:"'.:::. IOZO llMI IOOll P'OllD~) .. &.n'nl ... Ole lMI NAm ..... ..... ,.~ -~YCUWCI( ...,...~ ::-J:';::;.. WINll) UU GP nt1 C8fNIY ~ ~-(TUI) ...-umlMATN9 AU.• THI PAm. Y MCMl(llON) llOVll ,...IWLOWl:,_ATI m(WID) • •Ava,.,..... (llON) QMTWe MPo. CHURCH: PAITM • I LMIQ WAY (TUI) DAYmMU. -.0551= mc:llUICAL W I ClaA&. toCIO DAY U. (WID) ,. I VOYAGl'11M =°'~("') 1'11 llATIOUL 9Cln'l "'1WAL (llON) ,,. PIAIOWI-~ ... .,. ==s: IWDI ... iam>(TUI) lllOOA ...... ...,_,, .,..,.. MCMl('TMU) MOTIEUIA& TMI ... (WID) ....,.~ llOVll (TUI. THU) .. :::.;:: ···--.. CMOl _,.., MD.-ml (lUI) ... IDA& na -Cl)MCI•~ ... lwmtYOU --..a.POllN9 Cl) llDN•lll lilllliCM LCMIOAT ...,IWMIMT :n... 9 MC ... Tlll ... atllQ cee•••11 ... 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August4, 1985 ~~ AMC-JEEP ORANGE COAST AMC-JEEP-RENAULT 2524 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -549-8023 CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. 1st St. Santa Ana -835-3171 CADILLAC NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9100 ALLEN CADILLAC· GMC- OLDSMOBILE 28332 Camino Capistrano San Diego Freeway Wfft of Avery Pkwy Extt 131-'MIOO 495-0800 CHEVROLET CONNELL CHEVROLET 2800 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -548-1200 Daily Pilat · CHRYSLER-PLYM TH ATLAS CHRYSLER-Pl YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -548-1934 FORD THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 642-0010 -540-8211 HONDA UNIVl!ASITY HONDA 2860 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-0713 PONTIAC BOB LO~GPRE PONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd. Westminster 892-6651 -636-2500 STADIUM PONTIAC 2225 E. Katella Ave Anaheim -385-1919 ~cross from The Btg A PORSCHE-AUDI CHICK IVERSON, INC. / 445 E. Coast Hwy Newport Beach -673-0900 TOYOTA EARLE IKE TOYOTA 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -648-9303 VOLVO EARLE IKE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa -646-9303 Sunday,August4, 1985 7 Coal. ~. -Afternoon---• -- •w w WI w .. 8 .. .... , .... ,..,. .. ,.., ._ ..... (Wm, IE:~ Sunday. August 4'. 1985 .. .. .. - .. .. .. •• .. • -l)aytiaae C:onl. -lanclay -Morning----.. ,=-~\' M.YlltMOW I CMDI If ATOIMUUIWl.U. • AUTO RACllG Formula I Germ.ln Or.ind PrlK five from NurburQrtng Wec;t (;Nma11y 2 hra. 10 min) .. TOOAnW ... DUL~ ~ICMllU.D .. ...VMDflMJl)t • OUl .... MOTI .. QMTOPteQ.Oll~ .. FOii M tml "Our nrothers· Koep e1s" Host Douglas fdw1udq 11ls1t\ Partw~r ship for lhe Homf'llM!I an PC11mPn1< Al con sorhum m NPw VOik ft1,11 wo1~<; with city agenG~ to p10111~ <.hl"lh•r Ir o<l iiOd compan1<>n~.ti1p (A/ AmlCU&.Nm u.u. ..C MD 1MI lflOllN WORD .-0-YIAlll TW LOOI.I 4T LVJl•lla Yount MD 1'HI _, tumAYllAM .... ,.Mom ._.IOOM UV.• tOI Corr~poMPnt fdw1n Newman exam1nf"' Pllorl' by Soull'l""n Bapllsl mtt1sior1arlf!'> and AmPrK.dn volun leers 10 provide 1~d1J~1lhonaf .1c."o;tonc11 and food for the underpr1111fl"QPr1 fl"Opl11 of Hatll(1 hr) 1110t1a1ra ... ._..-.... -AllC ..... YOICI "( ) MDVII "My~tery Man'\1or1 pq8J Suspensel Oalfac, McKPnnon Orr1g ,~~-- W nne ( 1 hr . 36 min ) 118 TOOA.-SW .... ~ ...... ...,....,,.. LIT,,_.UMf ........ CllCAOOI MD CIUICM _, rr•wn. ... ..,. .,_ .. Raiders 01 The Lost Ark' ( 1981, Adveorure) Hamsoo FOfd Karen Anen (1 hr • 55 ITlln ) (SJ MMTIOUI AMa · How Sharper Than A Setpenl's Tooth" Neck's friend Snoolly Is IOfn between his desue 10 be- come an Apple and his fathet's wish that he prepar~ for the m1nls1ry (l) .,_ "Deal Of The CAtntury .. ( 1983. Comedy) Chevy Chase. Sigourney Weaver ( 1 hr • 38 min ) M.Ml_MD_waMA .. ,.,.,-..nt ,.. ccmw ...,.., --ll090T '°"" ....... WOIUOI~ ca.ollUP W.Y.9Mn CllCOlm • WQ&D"11T_,..,. __ _ MClaMI =:n~Q ----1MMIMWlm OI ML •I ITOlt HOUll A $ChOOlglrl returns home for a hOllday to find strange things happening at her la ther's holel ( 1 hr ) 191.mlOCIO ... IRr-p _ITIOUI..._. . .... ,.llAL. . ~1:'lT .,.. , ... ,,,,, ... M.•MD1NI Cl .. •t u.. a •• .. WLll..u••~OIM.IJU'J LI ii LAMY~ ...... ~ LLOYD0..¥11 ..., .. MUIT CA99t IOIQWYOUI ... ",,. '°"' mTOWCCI MOOD»c.IA8C*CI DAVll CUP~ US V5 West Ger many In singleS from Hamburg Wesl Ger many ( 1 hr • 30 min I GWAYOlnunt 1:11 «l) MDVII "The Guns Of Navar one" ( 19e 1. Adventure) Gregory Peck, David Niven (3 hrs. 30 min) ... Cl) tumAY llDSHlll Scheduled a rf' pet1 on Congresstonal ell0tts 10 re\llse tne Clean Waters Act 11 hr 30 min I lll0...0 IUCCU-1 LLOYDOll.¥11 u .... ...,,M. .... 11u11•0-cma ----· , PACll OI CM. nm ( .,_ "Red Dawn· ( 198• ~dven 1u1e) Pa111cr.. Swayze. C Thomas Howf'tl .-(1 hr • 5• mm ) (SJ llCMI "The Black Sti!lllOt'I Rerurns ( 1983, Adventure) Kelly Reno Ten Garr l hr . 33mln) -.W TOWN MAU ... , IOI011 The Guard1an1 battle to save Earth from the du011cate lods unleashed TE WAY TO AN EARLY GRAVE :J. 5. 7. 9. \'our joh 1'0"11"" (i,...1; rW"rlmtutl t>on11ideroliom1 arf' ~f'roncl11r). On f'vt-nin~111 whf'n you 11011'1 ~o to th .. offlc•f', takf' thf' bru•(r9 .. c• ho mf' with y<ou. i\N••·pl 1111 i11~11u1ion" lo m1• .. 1mw-. banqu .. 1-., C'olll· millt't'!li, 1411'. Ut·~ar•i (h1hi111(, hun1l111e, f(«1tf. bowlintc, hllllard14, c'urtl•, 1enr1l .. 11lnl( "" " wu111tf' cl( t imt' 111nd mont'y. ~ •• ., .. ,. dt·IC'1Ci•h• rt-1>4111"il1llhy 10 othr~1 earry thf' f'nlirt• loAd yuunel~ 111 1111 tlm t' • 2. Go 10 tht' oftief' t"v .. nlnj(.,, ~ttturday111, ~undit y~. holl· day1. 4. 6. Orivf' f1u11 ~auiw you'rt' latf'. rlQn't P81 8 rf'fltful, rt'lfl~lfl" mf'af; a lw&)'ll plan 8 t"onfrr(l'nC:(I' for your lun<'h ho ur. 8. 84'1inf' 11•1 poor policy lo l•kf' all the> "8Ulion a llowed •you . 10. If ynur work cell for lra"t'lif\8, work all day and drlvf' all night lo kt'•p thr "'"'' morninA'• •ppolntment. , Pr111tf"l \ \ l'11ltl11 ~r1111 f' I larbor [,awn · Mount Oliw ~lcn1<>rial Pt1rk ·Mortuary· Crematory 1825 Gltler Ave. Costa M••• {<Meler Ave. at HarbOr Blvd.) Ph. 540-5554 Sunday, Auguat4, 1985 9 -lanclay Cont. Cy-Kilt (Pert 5 ol 51 -MOOD _,.Tm AT CM.Yllf'( ..-CIK.f.cl ,..... ~ •aca,,, ca nm M ..... tJI .... tJI 1'MI LOIT •Viewers are taken behind the sceoes duung the making of George Lucas end Steven Splelbefg's $peetacutar movie "Raiders Of The Lost Ark" fora IOol< at how the aaventure him came together ( 1 ht) CM--~mlTMIPIMa..a ........ _ .. _..,_,. IWP'f DAYI MAM Mm..IOcm OU&.Wll ~ SU MAI / IATllM I AQllMl.Uf IUL~ ...-MC«-fAClltJI Ql.1'\m ~ftC8nll (OJ llCMI "Moonlighllng" ( 1982. [)fa. rN) Jefemy Irons. Eugene L1pms.lu ( 1 hr .. 35mm.) (l) DAI IOOT After days without a maj<>t stoke at the enemy. the Gefman subme· nne gets its chance· when It's ordered to shp through the Strait ol G1bfallar wtllCh rs filled with enemy destroyers Stars Jurgen Prochnow Her bert Gronemeyer Dubbed) (Part 2 of 2) (3 hrs I fAnBllllllli .. (I) fACI TMI IATOI ......... *""'DAYIMAm ... ,,,,~ DI lllTM CON.Am ,_.11 lllM.I .. ,.,. ADMlmnrt~~ ~-... fM:ll OJI CULT\lm llOWW "Coney Island · ( 1943. Musi cal) Betty Grable Cesar Aomefo I t h1 36mm) NTI ROii ITOllY: Mm. ...U MID llUIT I ......... ""''°~ -... .... ..,.,,...,. llCMI "At War With The Army" ( 1951, Comedy) Dean Martm. Jerry Lew· I~ 51:'.": ~tc:lllU. tamnlm . N&WM .TOl't ..,_., M)C-..:L Historian ChancellOf Wiiiiams ("The Destruction of 91acll CMllraflon"J discusses hrS r• search on ancient Altican empires (RI l ., ..... wr DAY0/119CDumt --· . UTIOllM. .a.Tl llllTIVAL Synchro- nized Swimming. team competition five from 88ton Rouge. La (2 hrs ) ( A wmtY -..cATI IM1'191 A teen-age gttl has a hard time facing her boyfrlef\d alter en Intimate encounter with enother young man results 1n het oontrecung a venereal d~a59 C$1 .,_ "Cloak And 011gger" ( 198-4, S~M) Henry Thomas. Dabney Cole man (lht.•llTlll'I ) m war.,.......,M. 10 Sunda~August4, 1985 -l'"NJ. .... M1-.U -.comuat.mnm • .,.,11\'am ...... --C811'1M. ... mo.au. C#ft'GL ••Al --~ ~N-'I OCl'-,.., NI. .... -_.. ...... tW .,. "The Solid Gold CadlHac" ( 1956. Comedy) Judy Holliday. Paul Douglas (2 ....,. ) BO MMW I.a.Tl fOCUI AT M .,_. Sotiedoled r8't'lews "Hie Black Cevldroo" (Disney. animal· ed} "The Heavenly Ktd", "'The Man Wtth One ·Red Shoe" (Jim Belushi. Tom Hanks) (I) llOW9 "Chlldren Of Divorce" ( 1980. Orama) Barbara Feldon. Lance Kerwin l'NJn 1 IOUATll ll ... .. .. .., .... , .,. "The Master Of Baflantrae" ( 1953. AdveolVfe) Errol Flynn, Beat nee Cempbe1~2 hrs.) I w1-•c1 TNUTM .,.. "The Pride Of The Yankees" ( HM2. Blogtaphy) Gary Cooper, Teresa Wngt1t (2 hrs • 30 mrn ) l ._,_TODAY OCUll• .,.. "Roman11e Comedy" ( 1983. Romance) Dudley MOOfe, Mary SteenbVI'- ~ .ii hr •3 min ) W (DJ llCMI "Mission Hill" ( 1962. Ora- ma) Bnan Burke. Ahce Barrett ( 1 hr . 27 min) . tW ({lJ •••ML San Francisco Giants at At· lanta Braves (3 hts ) '1:11. U•ALL Los Angeles Oodgenl at Cincinnati RedS (2 hfs. 50 min I tt:11(J) IA•ML New YOO< Mets at Chicago ,.1~===.:. .. 1m'fCCUmrTMll nll-wmlDAYID~ a.Ta..:M a•• .,.. "Streets Of Fire" ( 198'. Of•· ma) Michie! Pere. Olene Lane (I hr . 3• mtn) e;) YQUTMMIDIUUTYwnM•--M -....... ____ _ .. , ... CMS Cl ,_ma• ,.-...... -~ ...... .. llMfl "Reilly A~ Of Spies" Reily eoovlncet Kremlin guardl that their coun- try will be ltbwated H they tum Lenin OY9f to him. but the Cheka and others thfeaten the pjan (Part 8 of 12} (R) Q ( 1 ht ) I ..... _ '113 .,._ ......... MlfO .._ CAAT ProWnl V• 200 rive from Efkhan Lue. w.._ (2 hn . 30 n) ... -A boy'a IOytlty to hit lawless end vlOltnt father II pu1 10 the test by hit own lnStlnctt to !Ne a more peece- ru1 o'ust~ ( 1 hf ) ..,.. • The Ad\19ntur Of Budcwoo Ban.ta1 Aetosa l h9 8th Ownentlon" 'f- (1984. Scieooe Action) Peter We(ler, John lllhgow ( 1 ht .. -43 C"'l MllCAICCllTl•n• -llltM.L .,_ .. m ... •lftla•-WO&DT._,. ··~· •TOUCM ....• ,._ ........... W (I) NA .., Westem Open, final rOUnd ~ from Bvtlet Natiooal Golf Club ;,o;::~<g,'J~ "Space" An overview of space flight t"81 Includes a took at an astronaut's training and the prospect$ of ITUOll1Q 1n space Ho5t Keir Dullea Guests Aay Bradbv~ lsaa<: Asi· mov ( 1 hr) I ~n In Acapvtco" ( 1963, Mv- slcal) EtvlS Presley. Ufsuta Andress (2 hrs) e ,, • ...., m.um 9 .,. "The AdvenlVfe<I" ( 1970, Ora- ma) Be+\im FetimiU, Charles Aznavour (3 hfS . 30 "*OJ l :oa~c11 ~.--........... .,.. "Eddie Macon's Run" ( 1983, Drama) John Schnelder. Kirk Douglas. ( 1 hr., 35 rr11n) 1••AU Mtnnesota Twins at Catlfor- mp Angels ( 4 hr& ) Cl)) .... Ml Minnesota Twins 81 Cellfor· n1& Angel$ (3 hrs ) _,."$Ions Ahoy" ( 1952. Comedy) Esther W1U1ams,. VMen Blanne ( 1 hr •9 min) ...... AUC'ne* 1:11 CC) llCMI "Hanover Street" (1979. Ro- mance) Hamson Ford Lesley-Anne Down ( 1 ht • 49 mm.) •11L11IOOP 90llTIWOMO Scheduled World Mixed Patrs Body Building from Toronto. NHRA World F1nats of Crag ~ from Pomona. Caltl (1 hr . 30 min.) 1--lcml '•&•T.-Wlmli\Wll w ......... , .,. a. ... Cllftl-Indy Car Racing Stars The 1965 winner ol the Indy 500. Danny Sullivan explains whet JI takes to be a winne< 1n auto racing 1:"M1tchell" (.1975. Orama) Joe Don Baker. Martin Ba~ (2 hrt ) e .,. "White Feather" ( 1955. West· em) Robert Wagner. Jotin Lund (2 hrs) e IGLa -.0 Ho.ts Leort Branigan. Ray Parket Jr GV861t Billy Ocean, John Call8fly and the Beaver Brown Band. Howard Jones. T G Shepperd. Graham Nasti. Sha·Na-Na. comedian Arsenlo Hall • Tina Turner (inteNlew) ( 1 hr ) e WAIOll~ Featured dev"l()pmeft1t I ..°"~ (1 hr) ..... IC*l '*OIY ... "South Pecillc' ( 1956, MUSI· cal) M11l1 Gaynor, R05S8no B1aui (2 hi•. 51 min) • _. "Undertow" ( 1950 ()lama) Scott Brldy~f:eooY Dow ( t hr 30 min.) • G1'-CllANMM. •• um.1-.n11w1•nu:u The blOgelt niOnafer machin.t ever crMted ere br'OUQhl together tor an 1wesome ex- hibition o1 truck pulllng ( 1 hr ) !: .. Tho rrog~" (1951. A<Nen- tuta) RM:.hard w~. Dana Andlewt 'haj ··-- ' ... -lunclay Cont • ., llTIOCIUCm...., CE) DAN ~ ,_ U S vs. West Ger- many 1n slngles trom ~amburg, West Ger many (R) ( 1 hr . 30 min ) CID llOVll "W1ndwalker" ( 1984. D<ama) Trevot Howard, Nick Ramus ( 1 hr., 44 min) .. • Cll "°"" INCIAI.: WOlrrt -OUf A close-up look at spor1s from the ~spective of young people D 90¥ll "Caught In The Draft .. ( 1941 Comedy) Bob Hope. Dorothy Lamour (2 hrs.) . D UM: tlAlfT'I Of TMI 1119 The 1nhabtt- an1s of the waters ott the coast of Ba1a Calilotnl8 -· 1nc1Ud1ng a two-ton devil ltsh, a 60-foot whale Shark and schools ot hammerheads are studied (() ........ Cl) llOVll "Seme. Time. Nei<t Year' ( 1978, Comedy) Alan Alda. Ellen Burs· 11!' (2 hrs I UB WOVllt TM1 WOll.D Of ICllllCI F ea lured· an FAA les1 of new airliner salety features sleep deprivation laser eye sur gery, monkey language, computer X-rays ~rpetual motion machine Q ( 1 hr l ~ I moLOGT .,. ··champions·· ( 1984, B1ogra phy) John Hurt, Edward WoOdward (I hr . 5Smtn) (SJ TMI HAIM'llQ OI HAlmltTOll HOUll A schoolgirl returns home for a holiday to find strange things happening at her la ther's hOlel (I hr ) • 1w.o--.o"' ""a•~ui..• 11:9 Mnt9QPOR...V lflOICllWO&D Scheduled World Mixed Pairs Bady Bu11d1ng from Torooto. NHRA World Finals of Drag Racing from Pomona, Calif ( 1 hr • 30 min ) D TMI PAm AWAllDI Bob Barker hOsls this awards program h0n<>r1ng the beSI petlotmances In motlOn pictures and tele- v1S1on by animals I ...outTIOltTO Ll'I ._ICMmol.OQY llOVll "Undercover Girr ( 1951, Ora ma) AIOxlS Smllh, Gladys George ( 1 hr 30 rrun > •1WMM.11..,NOT • &.ommmn .. ......., ........ ..,_Ale PAl&Y A per sonal view of the Mandrell sisters al work and at play that Includes 1nterv1ews with the1r husbands and parents. and music i s from concerts ( t hr ) lfM1111( llOVll ·'The Beast In The Cellar" (1970. Horror) Flora Robson. Beryl Re>1d {2 hrs) a» llOVll ·-with Six '(ou Get Eggrolr· ( 1968. Comedy) Dons Day Brion Keith 1? hrs) f.D WAlL ~ WID Guest Thomas W I. Cameron. d1rec1or. HoPper Soliday & Co, Inc m U•IU San Diego Padres at Hou~ i~'. ~ M 1111.,., flO&MD ATUlml Youn1.1 EngliSh llelrl d1ve<1 bee~ lnvOlved In Pf8S4HVlng ttwt threatened eioat•~ ol en underMft ciVlhlllton lrlhabtted by children Cl) llCMI "Star Trek Ill The Search For $pock" ( 11~8• Science FICll()(I) Wllll8m Shetner, 0.ForMI Kelley It hr , 45 min) =~~ (15 .,. "No Higt111tay In The Sky" ( t9S t . [)1rna) Je~ Stewart Marlene Dietrich (2 hrl ) I TMmlllfAllT .. WAll-IGl-•MYWWQ a.•comee _,,,,.. A survey ol new ap- proaches 10 insect contr<>l 1nctud1ng the use ol na1u1al enemleS and chem1eals that P<evttnl reprOdocllon ) llOWll The Stone Boy' ( 1984 Ora- ma) Robert Duvall, Jason Presson ( t hr 33min) · (ZJ90¥il "Apocalypse Now" ( 1979 D<a- ma) Marlon Brando. Martin Sheen (2 ·1""~:- ROCOON> Pl.II .-e Lm ··A Loo!I Bec1c At Water- gate·· Guests Richard Ktemd1enst former attorney geneial. Richard Brookh1se1 sen· 1or editor nf Na1tona1 Review I 1 nr ) «Ii) lmAION TO lleQ a;) LAITCMMICIUAAQI Brad Sears 111s1ts the Shop of an engine rebuild& (C) MOVll ··suspicion" ( 194 t. Suspense) Cery Grant, Joan Fontaine Otrec.ted by Alfred Hitchcock ( 1 hr . 39 min J (f> IMTIOIW. IPCMTI FllTIYAL. Women's Gymnas11cs. Ice Hoclcey. Water Polo and Bo~mg finals. five from Baton Rouge La (3 his J ILH OJllCMI ·Phar lap·· f t983 Orama) Tom Burhnson, Martin Vaughdn ( 1 hr 48 min> --ml .. ftM.DATWAlt .. Cll ... -=--... MOCWr1.-1 .... Q CA'fMOUC GOOD ... • WCTOWf QARDIN .Jim W1t<;on checks progress at Victoty Garden Soutn Bob ThOmson tours Chicago's Ao1an1Ccll Gar dens e;)-KAYOHALL -1ven1ng .. ,a ... liill -... .,.....,. AT TNl llOVlll Scheduled reviews 'Frtght NJOhl" (Roddy McOowaltl Real Genius" (Val Kilmer) (J)Cll ... Q CM"IA19 Ale TMI UtQI Armagh (Richard Jordan) pur~ his dream of having his son Rory (Ptttry King) Plf'Cted t1S the first Catholic preStdent {Parr 4 ot ~~ ii ,. Chrl=~rs that lame brings its shire of problemco alter he 11nd OAnny's comedy act turn~ out to ~ a i:uccess I 1 hr) m llOVll "Semi· Tough" ( 1977, Come- dy) Burt Reynold$. t<ris 1<11stolte1son Two football-playing budd~ compete for the hand of the team owner's ~eu11tu1 and excep11onally wealthy daughter (2 hrs ) I AU.CMANU~T Am...-&.1 I DA llCMI "The Block Stnll1011 Returns" ( 1983. Adventure) l<etty R•no Ter1 Garr A boy !revels 10 the Sahara Oeteft 10 l1nd h11 bolOved Arabian stelhon. whlCh was re- c111med by lta pr•1ous owner 'PG' ( 1 hr 33 min) •111)..U AT WM "CR) llCMI ··Myste1v Men1mm" 11983. Suspense} Dallas McKennon, Greg Wynr.e White v1s111ng t~r aunt and uncle In Oregon. a gttl and her younger brother stumble upon a tallered map and become mvolYed 1n a ha1r-ra1S1ng treasvre hunt ·pa· ( t hr . 36 min ) m ... ut8 ntmliiiiiW Featured Kathy Gat- tagher, L A. entreP<eneur, Jennifer Letgh Rice, model-actress 8 MGU.YWOOD CU>llUP Scheduled Tim Reid ("Simon & Simon') and w11e Daphne Maxwell. actress Jacqueline Bis· lset m~ake your child a star •llMCMOl-U.cm> Oii.Vii M MGUYWOOD 91 _.,.. 1" (I) • _,,., Rebroadcasts profile of Jackie Gleason, a Colorado business- man· s ballle with the Justice "'Department over tax shelters report on a 22-year-old prostitute (Rl ( 1 hr ) D ti) PWSY •WllD Alra1d that Henry can no longer altord to take care of her. Punky starts a dog-grooming business to raise some extra cash (R) B T81lf llD Ale MOWll IHOI @) IWUY'I MlJIVI n' Oii MOTi A den ot loxes C31Ches the interest of BntlSh TV viewers, a v1s1t to Absalom's tomb 1n Jerusalem and to a t400-year old mum- ~ {A) O 11 nr I • -::r:. IURCM • Star Sea<ch Junior" Guests Marion Ross. Michael Gross !Al I I hr) tD ""1 CClfTACT This award winning l11m includes footage from the 50-year-old movie ol a New Gumea t11be's first en· counter with three white men and teatures 1ntt>Mews with 1wo of them and with Pa- puans who recall tne event ( 1 hr ) EXCLUSIVE TV PREMIERE! This clos1tr. anlmllrd itHmpte Into ti\., boyllood nf Kin~ Arthur weavl's ..... a ~ti of tincll.lntmen1 eacl'I llml" 11 •~ tnld Copley/Colony CA6lEVtSION COSTA MESA SUNDAY AUGUSl • IPM 549:-3500 Sunday. August 4, 1985 11 :... I m 1 mCOflB.Mm ~ AT '°'9 F li>loget Joor Baez's periomw~~ her owr• CtJmPOS.fllOOS. [)l~..,._IO\n and Rust" and Rec.emty as will as tradotional and i:oo tempcwary 11 ht J rcJ ,,. OI ..... OI TMI LOIT • Vte#f!fs a1e tallen betwld IM ~ during the rnak!Og ol Georoe Lucar. ar.o Ste;en Sptelberg s ~uw:1J1a1 mo-.• Ra.def Of Ttle Lost Ari< IOf a ~ A• ro<1.., 1t e ao~turtt f11m omie tnget~ 1 • t" I l.J 'OJ .,_ Am1ty11.ite The [)emo;, 11983 Houor) Tony Roberts f f!"• Harpe< A ~eptlC.8J JOUfnallsl buys the l.t ~~ ~tne•••••9sotot" efS about po.verlUI forces 11'\81 ~ontinoe • lut .. I0 115 basement 'PG 11 hr 45 "'"' I l mamro••A• 19 ..rtPMI 719 e a• ~ Alt• a1guoog N•th ht5 lather RJcl< runs awe'( from home aria moves into a Cheap hotel (Pait ~ ot ~) 'lJ .,_ Revenge 0 1 The Nei os 11984 Come<J)-1 Robert Ca11adine. /1 11 thony Ed'#aros Fed up wrltl wlfeong inteun•nable hum'llahons mastetll'llf•de<l by an uppercta~ lratem11y of macho ath lete5. a group of freshman boo6<w<>fm-oot c.asts decides to set the ~·s va~ straight R' 11 tu 30 1T11n I 19 al) NY OI w:owB1't ... (I) -. -wmTI .JeUIC.41 tnl ... '" a l<ey pe1cen1age of a P<OIE!!.s•o•a:.1 tootbell team and hn<JS tieisell p.Jrs•11ro~ the owne< s killer (R) Q ( t hr ) o a ~ .,. Mte.hae1 oecO<T embtoded Ill a spy plot being "81C.h.-•O "' the lrten()ly CtJnflfle!' of a health ~ •Vf • , a beautiful woman (RJ Q I 1 hr J I CGUITUUODYmY (fl) llOWll "The 81~ Bro 1t11>r ( 1980 Comedy) John &oi\r.h. 9ef1 Ay ~royd Two blutts slflQPfs miJSt <.OlllPnO ..-1tti thP ChtG&QO p()llCI' tt>P CIA nP<1 "1 ''' ;irtd lhn U S Auny lo pul 1099Jt.1 • .i beneht cooc.erl lo raM l'll<·•Wy I< r lh(>•r " ~a.Ar.~r) 11hrr. 1 "'TAA.a ... TMI D.--* ... Wilt S" (04.J 1-;et fggro" ( 1968. Comedy) OofrS Day Anar l<f:tlt DHpite the fact Iha! 1hei1 ctuldrPn dr>t1'1 gel along a widow a(lfj a wtdowP• 1Je<;1de 10 maHy (2 hfS ) e wunLll OI TMI .a4 NIJ ,MICMll Inter-news With LICtyd Br~ c:.&i11r· Frill Cit Rebecca HOiden ( 1 hi ) • --AT ..... FvlkG•l)Qt'' JtW t BNZ'i pe<lormance includes ,.,.., owr c.ompo51llOl"'.I OtanlOfld~ aod Rust 1r•t1 Aeceolly a9 well as lrAdillOOd ind '~-=-(lhf) •11M1aae1num '!j ... "R.11Qer'i Of The L()!t A•k (1981, "dventUte) Harri'°" fl)fd, l'•1•t'r Allen In 1936 a globe--l1othng arch~IO o·~t ed11@rltu1a1 I&<;(>" Ne11 .... 1lt1ol:!f\ Im a fpgenda1y rt11ig!Ou< art1l11ct of 1•nv1mr,.1< pow9', narrowly tt'leaplttg dcl1Ms ol d"<i't traps en route PO fJ f t hr r,~ ri ,,, I r .. ,..,. R MO'lll Rf!d Down I 198A Advf'o 1u1e) Patrte.k Sw1ty1,. C Thoma Ht>wr ll When Communt111 par at1oopcr\ invade d moll U S lown end ~10 10 ~htVQhtPr II< lllhebttanls. a g1oup ol high 'Chool ~111 def11t despofalely loQhl• oec~ Prl • '.l t) (I hi 5't "'"' ) ($) ... "Cloak And 0ttOUl"r (191!4 12 Sunday August 4 1985 • ..,, ~ l "°""' 0.bo{-y Cole- , • v 1 ,. 1t 11n ~•zealous "' ~ ' -t•'Q»'O 1n a 1eal· • "' " , ~ ho witnesses a • :J( ._-1131 m l•lary :)v C l Oj C'.)lllmfll90ll! .. 17 ...,,Al .. I' LOU CIWlf1 m.,..,'lJJI •O a· cam &Af a r.o1 •'<11•r ~arcrt>• f • .. " 1 /. " r b•o t• ,... • 1 -. l; nllPrllf.. ltrtq ,. n , , ,,, > 0 flJ 119 19 Sc• I (ff P;;il Borg J I 1)1 r;flJ")I Nt)f\Q I '")'-htS N1ff' S , • t o• '.IJrv1vo1s , , tr, .. I tl<Jfld91•• n I ,., uJ ,':it•<• f 198J ( I I /1 Ill ••1 81001<1? 1 • • o c.r,o.a a shy I """ IU lore·~ ,...._,,,.,. R 11 l llOft 11-llii !Jfamaj ~ • 11.h Alte1 :.hs "'"'•tr •IPceeSf'd 1 111 .. , 11arna11 1 •mg•-j S•ng~ 1 .~~1 ' .. ,, Ptu:~•vE ,,, I I I II I I ,,, Jr: 'D IOWlllQ HI t 7 lllOIO'T V-"UU..IJI t:il 0 Ir.MOO! l(Al I• ''I •• .,,. W• 111 , , 1 1q411 AdvPn '''""ditll "' • f IA iNhf!I t11,! 11t •J by an lnlf)IV~ • I • 'Aan ~ Basll ettempts to con· .e11 Fawlty Towers 1n10 a goutmet's para "'~ 'S) mAm Sl<etches a pOoi tamily wins S40 ITlllhoo an alcohollc family, baldnfl'sc CUfes 1 seoa1or enters the boxing rrng O I'll .. P\Jber1y Bloes' (1981. Come oy 1 Nell Schofield Jad C<tpelja T w11 c.om1ng-01 age girls are eagef tor ellpe11 e0t.e and acteptarice by the popula1 crowd R 11 ht 27 mm l .. 1~'9IOITI,.. ,.,. oaCI>a e ... TAf,I~~ TMI DAM-Heedjng th" advice ol tellef, a woman lrom a sm.tll t NO set&..oul to find lhe..Sao11 tal'lllTl of he! dreams ·==-• A&ll1W cm Lm1'I Jofvly Aodnguer smgs 'Fool1n" and "How Could t Lo111• He1 So Much. and David "Kan Coe per 1ttl 1t:11 11:11 lorrns The Ride I I hr I 'MTllm IPOIT..,. IMAT'-CMl~...U '_,.,. 'They C<tl Me Bruce?" ( 1981' Comedy) Johnny Yune Malgau11 Hern ingway A West coast "saan cooto. • mis 1ake11 IOI ti.atata axpaf-1 Br-uc. LM and . 1uns alout ot Italian gangster ~ 'PG (I hr 30 min) S .,. 'Mother Lode 11982 Orama) Ct\drltOl"I ~too NICk Mancuso A Scot hsh mioer ltlt'S 10 pio1ec1 his gokJ hO!l u11">C1upu10us 11easu1e huntefs ·po· 11 hr 41 min) . _,~ .. u.TMml ue.\Y "°'"1 NW. (l)C81 ... , ...... ,,. ....... 9IOITI l11IOl'M: 1111•ms·· CC11DU1 Tiii -• CCMn'IY -.C Perlorn• .lrlGef. The Kendalls George Jolies ll"lte1 .,,~ws r G ShAp d Roy Clartt Lacy J 0dll0fl 9 8n'BT~ -lnt@llltf'W with Ctos~. Seti and Nash 11 hi ) 1 5.~l::...... 1tll CMLD•INe ,,. ~~.,=-z--11 Comed1 an Harry Shearer per<>dies the achvllies al 8 sates COOVel"lll()rl f()( lelevtsion p!<>gf&m ~)\o. Eddie Macon·• Run' ( 1983. Orama) John Schnelde!. Kirk Douglas An escaped c11mtnal becomes the quarry of o !Ulh~ law Ollteef 'PG ( 1 tu 35 m.n ) 1Wll llO¥W Chukn 11967 Westem) Rod TaylOf E1nes1 &H\jntne A gunllgl'lttlf s w.irn1ogs ul llfl 1m~1ng Indian attack 8Hr loolishfy e oo (2 his 15 min l l m.Y .. &M .... Q LmTOtJQt .... ... • .......... 9IOITI ... am • 1'1Cf.UI MCllUWOCID~ Ill II FT ... ..-.o.T1•11•cw U'1U ~ A \IJl"G>' ol the gr&dUal C.hllngt>t In OUtlooil llnd • ~f llT~Qe amqng dw111fs. featuring lntefv111w-11nd e look at the annuol COf"IV90110n ol t.111 Peopi. or AmeflCll (R) 1 hf ) ...... ,,. . (IJ M.,.._ 9GITI lllmWM. Women'• Gymoaa1a,...1o. Hoclley. Water POIO tnd Boiono t.n l'I ltom Bftlon Aougo, La (R) 13 hfl) Cont. (Z)MOWW "Apocalypse Now" ( t979. Ora- ma) Marton Brando, Martin Sheen An in 1elhgence agent embarks on a mlSSIOrl up river Into the Vietnamese Jungle to find and krll a renegade AWOL Army ottlcer who has foiled ell prev1oes attempts a1 h1<, capture 'R' (2 hrs • 30 min ) .. @ tlfmMT ttrtl ~ MO¥ll "This Is Spinal Tap" I 1984. Comedy) Rob Remer MIChael McKean In !his satire on lhe conlemporory rock mu sic c;cene an Amencan documenlary film maker exam1oes Ule pbenomenon of a 1 7 year-old heavy metal band lrom England 'R' ( 1 hr 22 mm ) -1*• MCMI "The Glass Sphinx" ( 1967 Ofama) Roben Taylor Antta Ekbefg A noled archaeologist sets out 1n searc.h of a magic ell~lf thought to be encaiftd 1n the tomb of a glass sphmx. (2 hrs ) GW.Y.~ (!) M1ll' Git TW tlTI Gr and llnat t 1p synced rend111ons of "I Feel for You • Did You See Me?," "Say. Say, Say," "Beauty ISc~~~~-r Girl· CNlml•TMIMOm WOIU ... ,.,...,..., .. WOIUATLAMI .. ..-.o llCMI "Joy 01 Flying" ( 1979, AdvM lure) CQf1nne Comer Gianni Carko A woman IS liberated from her lear ol se> alter she becomes 1n~olved with the inter nat=t set 'R' {I hr • 20 min ) W (J) "Dangerous Cross1ns1" ( 19~3 Mys1ery) Jeanne Crain MIChael Re11rnr> While on a honeymoon cruise. n yr 1unq husband myster1ously dlsapl)f'ars, cau .. 1ng lhe othef passengers 10 douht IN' b111to • claim thal he ever existed ( t hr .lO min.) l =:ka...NI) MllCUl.1\1111 U..l.A. -•nclaY -llondlig Movies- .. (%)"Love Letters" ( 1983 Ofam1) Jaml11 Lee Curtis. Jame• Keech ( t hr • 36 min I •OO "Whore The Boys Are '84" ( 1984, Cornedy) Lisa Hortman Russell Todd ( 1 hr . 37 min) •CS> "Tale Of Two Cnies" ( 1971, D1arnn) Animated ( I hi 12 mtn l 1111 CC) ·· Rattles" ( 1940. Comedy) Ollv1n dt• Hav1lland. David N1von ( 1 hr • 1? mtn ) (l) ,,Sh.ing.ha1 fcc~ec;s I 193~. f'>tumd) Ma~ne Oietrtch. Clrve Brnc>k I I hr ?0 min) · 19!11) "Oncfl> More. With reetmg• 11%0. Comedy) Yul Brynnf!'r, Kay Kondsll (2 • hf•) 1111($) 'Nev('r Say Never Ago1n" ( t9A'.l, A1J · ..,.ntute) Sean Corn~y Kl,;u• Mnrnt 81 r~1 (2 hrt I 7 mtn ) •<Cl fom Sawye1 • ( IG73. Mu.,1c.1lJ John .ny Wh1lnktr Joditl F' otlt r I I 111 44 Oilfl l (H) "Zohg" ( 1983 Comedy) Woody Al len Mta rarrow (I hr 24 min ) ( Z> "Sovth Pacific" I 19!>8. Mus1e"1) M1111 G1;ynor Ro no Bra1z1 (i hrs 5 t min) •COl "Whert1 Tt10 Boys Aro ·9,· t 1984. eom.c:Jy) LINH 1tman. RUCl'lllll Todd u._ hf . 37 mtn) -· 'It A11fl Hnv ( 1043 Comedy I Bud Oil MM MOM°" cen'B Special effec1s accompany playwright Sam Shepard'<; monologue ·Tono·~ CJlamng Joseph Cha1k1n Eli) "'Ml THI LORD 1:11 llf) llCMI fhe Soldier' (1982. Adven lure) Ken Wahl Wilham Prrnce A ruthless LIA dQenl 1'> 'ief1t 10 ne1;1raflze a Soviet tJac.kfld lr>rrcmst µlol In hold lhe M1di>as1 hostag" with 11uc1n111 01µtoc:1ves R' ( t hr. 30m1n I t.980> ... llOVW C..h111a ( 1943 (lrnm.1) L n1P1 Iii Young. Alari l add In 1'44 1 " rr11r1o drtve1 turned p1ol1IP1>r rull11•>< "1 1t1ro <.h1 ne~ t..i'IU!>e ( 1 hr JO 111111 I • ~ lllfTOft Diii rrtYOURW•ll 1M J llO¥ll Curtains" (1983 Horro•) John Vernon, Samanlhn Egg.or A corrupt film director schedules c;1x aud111ons for a mo111(' JI an eene and 1~aled mansion .111d hi!. wife entf'1S an ac;ylum 10 prepare lor the part OI a mad wom1Jr1 R 11 hi .?9m1r1 I w acom ue1. 1tcma HI Cll ........ AT'CM ............. AU.• TMI PAI& Y ·----. ~11 Cll ... ..n'WAT'CM I ...,.. MOGIU?SFIQ ( l llOYll "Stai T1ek Ill The '.>eur•.h ro1 Spock " ( tll84 Science F1c.t1011) W1ll1am •,ria1ner Def orP.SI KPlley Adm Kirk rea"I s .. mhlc>!J lhf• crP.w nl the 'ltAr«h1p Fn ll'!Jm<.f> lo• >flP luql 11oyaqP tn try a11d ll'IS<;Uf' Mr· Spock whl)Sf' !>p1111 rmnr1111s air~ ... ',,, tho' taptdly r:IA!}"ner ,J1111q '~llll<''il' tll ~pl~~= 4' ""' I I l CIWUt ~Gel M N.lltclm M ( 1110Vll fhP Pnrwi 111 Crm>nw1rh Vil l<1Qf' 1111~4 [Jra11•al fm: nl)t>Prl<. Mid Aht111ll I Oii C.O!tlPllo (I hr IO n11n ) H · U H.111 ., W•fP" ( 1'l8::> 1>1Rm11) [\J w.trtl A<.nr.r M;1r err. It trtlt'y ( 1 hr ? 1 llllll) .. <C Tr 111 .~1l1tnl ( 1<l/'l Or.miil) Kevm Oob uri Maltn111 l)ll<•n ( 1 hr JB mm I {$1 lt1tf1,.. ( 11140. ('p111t•1ly) Olivia di' t fo1r11lnr <1 {"l.1v1d N1vP1 · t 1 t11 I? rn111 I -(1}') ~.111 Wine In .J;iv 1 ( 19"1:;> AdvPr1 t11r1•) I •"d M.1cM11t1 l~ Vn1,1 n.il<;lop I? hrlt tt•tOl '111bml Art•I Ttl..i [ye 0 1 The ligelf ( 1'H I f 111IO'l.t I r llht<.k Wnyne Jan1> Seyrriour t I h1 '> l • rnn l Z 1 \.ur•.1• ()! 1 Mr• F 1r1~ f';inthf'lr ( I '18 1 (on 1-tlyl '"'1 W 1 I> Ht11J N1vt'" I I tu 40 ITllll) 1':11 G T hf' I ,,,.,,.,,~., 119'>!> Wro•,1r111) Cl11y11" M•IC.H" litv S1111,,1h l!I 11 h• lO 1n111 I -ternoon Movlu- U.m) ·< ilf' \ 110•11(1 I 1111~ W,. II fl\) frt I r !Y1111 Al1n1s Sn111h (7. lllS ) Cl f>h111 l11p t198J OrnrM) Tm11 Bw 1111 1< n M,rr un V iughan fl ht 48 min I (H T11t> t 11111• f 011e~" I 1941 Ornm") ~111'1 0.MS H•r~I Mnr h11ll ( 1 hf !>6 min I tSt Cftflnoflbttll nun II . C 1984 C.~Uy) 0 irl r!~ ynoltl I lorn 0. .. I I hr •A ey Rourke Ofeams of escape from~ drum Manhattan Jo~ l\arbofed by dtSlanlly related bUddle$ •••~rdlzed by an 1IH:<>ncel'led salecracklng JOb that gels lhem Into hOt water with 11 IOcal crime lc1nop1n 'R' (2 NS ) . AllOTT -COl1'B.LO :'nu' ., TO•ftJllO-.. -,ITllON:TMl ...... coernMI ( J llO¥ll "The Adventures 01 Buckaroo Banzai A cross The 8th O.menSIOn" I 1984, Science F1etion) Pe1M Welter, John LHhgow A band of adventurers bat· tlf> enemy aliens who are accldentalfy re- limsed from !he 8th ~ as a result ot d researcher's experiments 'PG' ( I hr 4Jm1n) W t¢) llCMI "HISLory Of The WOfld •· Part I" I t98 I Comedy) Met Brooks. Madeline Kahn Man's illustrious h1s1ory •• from Neanderthal cavemen 10 the Spanish In· qu1s111on 1s e11amlned 'A ( 1 hr 33 min) a. PARM• ..,.. lt1'I w MWCA:c:anw •cw .....,. W ) _,,_ Oonak:l is pursued by an overambltlOUS vice cop O .. ,1-t'TOW I LM*• MTM TMI LOii> .. IUr'lll .. W ) U. -A boy's IOyatty 10 his tnwtess and vl()lent fathef is put to the test by his own 1nstlnc1s to hve a m<><e peace tut flxrsteoce ( 1 hr ) 4111IC1 llOVll "Susp.ct0n ( t 94 1 Suspense) C..dry Urant Joan Fontaine Directed by Allred Hitchcock unse11hno c1rcum stances force a woman 10 sucipect her husband of planntna a murder I t hr • J9 min) H l ¥IDIO MllOI m1nJ ~!OJ "My TutOf' (1983. Romance) Caren Kaye Mall Lattanzi ( 1 hr • 37 mln ) l · Th.-Happy Ending · ( 1969, Oraml!f) Jean Simmons. John Forsythe ( t. fir'7"52 rn1n) HllC) "Unfallhlully Vovrs· I t984. Comedy) Oudley MOOfe Nastass~ Kln!>kl ( 1 hr Jbm1n J (HI R1gh1 Qt Wey' ( 1983 Orama) Betta Oav1~ JamM Stewart ( 1 hf • 45 mm l SI 'Young Bess" ( 1953. Ofama) Jean :;1rn111un~. Stewart Grange< ( 1 hr . 5? mir•) M (Ol Wherf' The Boys Are 84' (1984. t.ome<1y) Lisa Httrtm&n Russell Todd ( 1 hr J7 ri11n I ... f 2 l "The Mon Who Loved Women" ( l'H I COO*ly) ChAr!H 0..1net I esi.. < .1100 ( I hr • !>q min I W !Cl "Tom Sawyer' ( t973, Musical) .Jonn- "Y Whtlake1. J()d;e FOSlef (I hr "" llltn ) $) Tale 01 Two Cities' P9 71 OtamaJ Antn tied ( I ht t 2 min ) .. (0 ) ··sugm Cone Alley" I 198'4. Ofama) ( t h1 43 l'IWI ) I ' 'Puberty Bluff.. ( t98 t C°"*'Yl Nell Schctield J1d C11pelja ( 1 hr 27 min I 13-- -Mo-clay Coal. -lve•ing ----• ·1••a--I .... ,,.... c:. ... aACI .., .. IMIOll LfllnUI <:. M ... Me PMICMJI lnleMeWS with Lloyd BrldgK. Gen.e F1ar l~·::r.=.-:: (1NJ .... U,_l'WP,Al&Y .. urmucT! All lf'rlClllUCTlOI TO ~ (CJ llON '°Transplant" ( 1979. D<ama1 Kevin Dot>son Melinda ()!Ion Based on 1ne true s1ory of a hard-drMng young ,,,. ec:vuve who undergoes a ru;l!y near1 trans· plan1 ( 1 hr 38 m.n I ... 'Raflles' ( 1~. C.omedyJ Oil via de Hav1lland, David Nrven An ama1e1Jr 1hief makes Spo<t of Scotland 'l'ard and falls 1n lave w11t1 on,. of hi$ vi<:llms n.ec.es 1 hr , 12m1n) MOT IUT M01Um -.... 1WPY DAYI MAii ... .....,&Lm IMClm../~ ....... ...... ~ IMOCOAftlf:. ...,..0. ,....,.. .,. S1range Brew' ( 1983 Com .. dy) Dave Thomas. Rick Moran1s Twr, beer·IOWlg men become tnvOlved in a ptv• to kidnap a bfew1ng heires!> and make rt"' wOl'ld addK:1ed to a newly spll<ed t>ever a_ge PG' ( 1 hr 30 mm) ZJ 90W11 ·shanghai E1press I 191? D<ama) Marlene Ole1nch. ~hve Broot Passengers on a train 1nc1Gd1ng a O<x 101 and Qn 8°"entur'°" run IMO renegad!':; l hr , 20m1n) VlllOZOO 19 c:. ... aJ 9"8TllJ•FfTWT A profile of Marilyn Mooroe Including trim Clops and 1n1erviews 11111th John Huston Rot>er1 -~~~=II and Rory Calhoon Cl)~~ John Ritter an Os-tQe ll~~l~h·~•''"'~ • n••..-r Mn'ORAC:m Formula I German Grand Prht from Nvrburortng. West GPrmany IB> t 1 t1r • 30 min J (I) (0) .,.. "Stnbad And The Fye Of The Tiger" ( 1977. Fantasy) Patric~ Wayr.e Jane Seymooi S1nb8d bBll dangerous creatures to ;emove the c.urf>i> that keeps a young prnice from his 11gtilh1I place on the thfone 'G' ( 1 hr 53 min I -~--"The Great N0tthl~. Mtnne'° ta Raid" ( 1972. W•tem) Cltff Aot>eil· ton, Aobef1 Duvall The COie Younger and Jamet gangs decode I? rob the biog t banll in the Wnt (2 hrs ) M8 t•MTOWll Featured B•ttx Oce•n wno't making waves 1n the rock worhj nanny "hOOI· tale!l from W0tld Wnr 11 $ remate f eGes lltmP YNUD fMA'l'l•IWAlol 14 Sunday, August 4, 1985 0 m Cll LA. FeatUted a l•p syncing <.<Jf •e-;t a loOI< a1 the strange sP<>fl of wh11tyDall. m11t1onaires who made tt>elr for tune eatly r 'le tell their s10<ies a loOo< at ido•as.,.. I OS Angeies • tM DllOO AT LMGI "'°"" CGmT .. , ..... .,,,.,., . ~..., WCM.11"' MmM.I •mum ' , llO'lll · Never Sa / Nevet Again 1 J83 ACver.t..ireJ Sear Connl-fy Klauc; Mafia Bran11auer Atter a world thrPaten 1ng '·"'J'Jn•Zahon s1ea1-, two U S mtSS-le<' .ina annovr c.es ol win det~ate the war t.;.a<:h 1t a rar-.~·,, not met Bnt!Sh agent J:t"'"" hood is c.i111ed 1n to sa11e the world P'J t,, l nr!> I 7 m.r 1 m mY11 Ur.e1pectPd Father ' ( 19• 1 rorre.J11 Mose.ha AVf>r Denn1s O'KeefP A oar~er strugQleS ~t•lfi•t 10 main· fi'J·• \I' ;ird1ansh•P ot his dead partner's t' lr.l 1 ' hr 30 min ) .. f) 'J ICAMCROW ,,., -. KM Wher Am;ino<1 wins a t11n 10 Munich she gfJI~ en.ou •Pd "o ar· A11f!t1'y plan to help a tor met A 1 o>r<.4r rd\Jl(..31 ~ar,.e from h•~ 1111 ,, " I s::a~1IOh tR1 (I hr ) D lz rn aooNM Me MAC11CAl. *11 1<.rn F~ ~ l!!d to beoeve that tier 1fonl1s1 n.ar' gtJI her 1n11ot11ed,tn a spy mis • ~ f,y lr>P re1 T 0<1y Oanra finds our ~ ~ I lir d lliile 1~ 1<1 I' a PJO~ rocker (R) I 1 t1 I U llOYll '~• Ha ,r ! ng 0' Juha I 1977 u,p.-' P1 ,,1 , 1 Farrow Keir Dullea AftPr ·~'<-"'""''Y lrrJm an emohonal c.ns1s ;:i ,,.. ""a" C"'fJ'' r 1~ i hou..,. thar tums out • t, .. r 1 Jr r~ (2 hrs J 0 ~ HAllDCUTU,,., ~-Cl Marl< ,, ' It ud<J' 1 ,., c1 ne.ght>orhood water. 1r-;irr 1t .Jt 1;1-. u<r>e'> 1111otv1>d in 1nternlj 11 •tnlP• p1vr~ IRJ QI I Ir J ~=u. -~ B•.1(~ Surrjay" 11977 ',u~p .. n ... , RCJtierl 5haN Mar1h4> t<Plle1 A 1ll!ran1,1•+d V1e1nam v,.tefan io•n<; an Arab ll'rrC1~1 on .t plol ro n urrJer 80 000 un • uspi>r.t1rig Sul)(>r RfJwl Ian~ I? hrs 30 nolfl) EL) lllAUtQ Of A COln'WT fhe great tiHs1n md lav.t plain• of Nnvaoa. Idaho .111d Wyom111 l .1rl•as N•lt a ~1o4ent geo nr,117t 11 ~h"i ,I ,l'ld p lrr•lktlly' v10IMl tu lur" [) I I h•) CID ..W. THI L.om '1:) ~ 90'IL.o A 1001< ;it ways tt.al 1-Jl•Ople h1t11e U!M'd !'.<.•r,nc.e IHI and lf'Chnt•IOfJy t.J ('Ol'IQV r d ~lance-1nctudf"d ts ir 1t1tr.rv c"" w1ttl Anoe Morrow Lind ti<•rtJt. 1tr1d v1,.,1I• 10 the PanAmll Canal and S.1110111 h~;ii~ Trarr """Y IRJ Q (I hr I C llO'lll l>trar Lttp I 1983. Oram;i) T<lm B1irlin•.rlfl Maritn Vaughan The $IOty of Phl\1 Lap it "°Qf'n¢try Austraban 10 trt11 1 " ""hO'·" b'•"1ant c11ree1 ended fthrtJptly w1!lt t11s rnr t~llOU!I rSeath in Calf, ll)!1U1t 1rt 1932 PG' C;> t t tu 48 mtn ) H1110"111 ··Tt,,. f1n111 Option" ( 1982, D<a· m.'IJ Judy fJr1111<., lt1-...s COllln~ An anll· mx.w. .. , (JIOtJfl 0<1~ contr~ ol the AmNt , 111 • "'~"''>' lf1 l ondon And .wnrM th&t y vN1 "'1on1 110• I.tty will ~ mu1dered If ,, Jt<m.11)1j~ ilrf! riot n.,_t R 1::1 hts , • r 'I z DAI IOOT In ltu11 Gl'tfm~n teokw1sion r-r 1 ~' '''°'' n )'WllfJ U belat c.rew leaves 0011 111 19• I trom OGcup,f'ld France 1tnd 11 ~ mon<>ll')fl(>u\ dAY' t "'-'!\ in1err1.1ptf1<1 _.tJ1 si.1mu~t .. •11 w1tt1 thft enemy lirara Jur n ,. Pr1X,t1nOW Hortmft Gromtmeytr '10l,,tJ~ll IP,irt I ol :>) t'l h") ..,ncT~~ P&•t•-....,...,. .. (I) U111 AU.m Afte< Alhe sends Ct 10 hlS room f()( being a nwsance. he QE into even more trouble (R) D .,_ "The Collenant" (Premier D<ama) Jose Ferret. Mechelle Phtlltps powerlul San FranclSCo tamily whose ,., pire ~ bOll1 w ith NaZl gold pres.r11es • ancient fltual of evil wtllle maintaining cc lrOI of a dea<Jly supernatural power O hr . 30m1n) D 9 MO¥W "Command 5" (Prem1F" Adventure) John Matuuak, W1r., Hauser Renowned IOt 1he1r unot1h0d< wme ftghhng tac11cs a specially tra ~_. task force os called 1n IOf the most d•ff c cases Q (2 hrs ) u ... m _,. _,.. Scheduled acrre Joanna CaSSldy. Bernie Kopel! f 'Tti Love Boat") authot Oomtnick Ou" ( The Two Mrs Grenvtlles'') (1 hr ) fl!) DllCOY8t THI.....,. WI FP lured electronic mplants to aid the Clea Mount Saint Helen revlllted. a new thgt SJmulator baby talk O ( 1 hr ) 6:) llO'lll "The Covenant'' (Prem.eu D<ama) Jose Fe<ret Michelle Ph1lftps • powerful San Francisco family whose £-rT' pire was bu~I ""1th Naz; gold preserves 1 ancient ritual of evil while ma1nta1n1ng cc-• 1ro1 of a deadly supernatural powe1 Q 1 hrS) al)NMITMILOll> '1!> l&IMVM. R!Chard Kiley nartates tt !.ludy ot lhe mtgra11on of ~ minion whit• eared kob antelope across the Bo,., plains of the Sudan and ll'le hunting tr1t .. • ""hose h11es are govetned t>y the hArd movements (A) Q ( 1 hr) E NTI 9'Qlll ITOIY: tlT'I, MUIT\I ... t9MT CL) fQ) llO'lll · Cheech ~11~ Ch~·s Tt" C()(si<:an Brothers" ( ~· Corned, Ctieeeh Mann. Tommy Chong Tv. offbeat and oH·key Paris street muS1c1an mPet 11 Gypsy who tells them the accour I 01 lhetr noble 11neage PG' (1 hr • 'il min) mu.na t:a ttll .,.. "L1l1th (196•. Orama) Warrer Beatty, Jean Seberg An employee at mental rnstttution lalle 1n lolle with one c 1 the patients (2 hrs . 25 min ) Wf) (I) ..wMMT George's latest g111fr1en I 15 1ootong to gel married and he's lookir 1 ltx aw;;J.out (R) "The Put>11<: Enemy" ( 193 t Orama) Jamet Cagney Donald Cook A rdcketeor raised tn a tenement 1.ses fl ;int.I JnlK from tho t\elghta of power 1 t' hrS) t UncllM. IPOIT't ....,..Al. MV11W -(I) ~I LACIY CMs end Mary Beth in11e511gate a 1est1 of 1obbeoes 1n thf' city's Catholic churches 1he1 result In ttit bf\1181 s;a>w7 of a nun (RI O ( 1 ht ) I L • .., llA,_ 0. n.. Featured the Monn iguana, an int.,..,...,. with oocteer pnysic1s1 Pti1•t.==~ . lnmlrlnoe&AL nwno. r .. "Ro.Jtrig Of The N.,ds t9M, Comedy) Roben C.riad1ne. An thony Coward Fed vp with autfer1ng lt1t1trm1nnble humt11ahont l'n4stermlndtd by an ~clan lrelemity o4 moeho oth ••t~. n g1oup of 11~tt bookworm-out· C:Hls decl<Hll to .,., tt\t COiiege's VI~ 11a1Qht R O (I hr , 30 man l ! A } " ,.. I , s , j Monday Conl. lS)llCMI "Murder In Space" (1985 Mys- tery) Wltfred Brimley, Martin Balsam Our ing the return voyage of ttie first manned m1SS10n to Mara, membe~ of the lnterna tt0nal crew, whlcil 1nctudes US and Sov1 et scien11s11. are systemaocally murdered Ian unknown killer ( 1 hr . 30 min ) CAU.M M.l IPCllTI .. .....,...,.. 711 llCMI "Blackoot" · ( 1985. Mystery) Richard Widmark, KeHh Carradine A rP tired detectrve, &1111 haunted by an un sOlved 7-year·old murder, encounters an accident victim who. posslbly holds thP key to the mystery. O ( 1 hr , 40 min ) .. 11 ICm OP 1111 -=-In "Murder On The Half Shelf," a fitness guru (Michelle Phllhps) IS murdered after putltng her health spa up tor sale (A) ... NULml flo. TODAY I CAlffal ICMJMM. tw GGWdlCI ... TAD lllMm ......... PUa umfa&m MM MOii <WI C8l1'8 Highlights from new danoe.s perforrried outdoors m· elude excerpts trom Dan Waggoner'!! Window Dance," Karole Armitage and Charles Atlas' "A'1lust 27. Coney Island" and Marta Renzi s "You Little Wild Heart " G!ltmlTAGl- r; CD MCMI "The Dancers" ( 1981 Drema) John Leslie. Richard Pacheco Four hand some exotic dancers 1ra11ef 10 the small town of Key City and entertain women ( 1 hr. 30m1n) (O)llCMI "Lady Lust" (1984. Adult) Edy Wtlliams, f<lmberly Carson Two sitters. one a 1e1-set1er and the other a home- body trade place5 and dlscov.er Jntunate secrets about each other's lives ( t hr . JO min) l ) llCMI "The Happy Ending ( 1969 Drama) Jean Simmons. Jotv1 Forsythe After being married tor 16 years a woman laces disappoin1ments. challenges heal! bleak and h'!m111a11on when she attempts to recapture her romantic drean1 'PG' ( 1 hr .~.~ 1tlt I (I) ..:':'-A woman from Rick's past lnvOlves the Simon brothers 1n o balfhng murder 11Westiga11on (A) < t hr , 1o ::J D OD t/11 CMIOll Host Johnny Car son Guests Sammy Oa\/1$ Jr Chrirtes Nel:'=tW1hr.) I (!I MIC ... ~ Commemora ttOn of tht .COth ann!Vtfsary of the Hlro<Sh1 ma ~:Jrrl 1 hr) 1:..--~ ....... U..-r .-:A Scheduled Robln Leach. hOlt of ··utestyle$ of tho Alch and Fomout " ~ht ) t ·=-= ~ mWll "Cennonbell Run If" ( 198• CorM<tyJ Burt Reynolds. Dom O.l u1se fh~ sequel features ono1her cot1oc11on ot crn11es In en torts of motorized vehlCle'l racing cross-country ror cun. Mnny ~St·St r carneot. lncloclng Frank Sina tr~). Shirley MacL01nt 'PG' Q ( 1 hr , 48 ;'J.....,. tW(-e) mWll "Unl11th1Ylly Yourl" (198A. Comedy) Dud y Moore. Na ta•sia Kin • 9k1 An orcheStra conductor 1hlnk1 that his wile may have had an affair With a viOlinlsl while he was away on tour and conspires to murder her 'PG' ( 1 hr , 36 min.) tb9 (ll) llCMI "The Owl And The Pussycat" ( 1970. Comedy) Barbra Streisand. George Segal An Intellectual becomes In· votved with a parH1me prostitute ( 1 hr , 45 m1n,) ·U.(])MDllBW ... IJ) Uno.AL IPCllTI fllTIVM. Women's Gymnastics. Ice Hockey, Water Poo and Bo.(1ng hMls, from Baton Rouge, La (R) (3 hrs I H; llOYll "O'Hara's Wife" ( 1982. Ora ma) Edward Asner. Ma11e11e Hartley An attorney decides to pull the plug on the lite supporting equipment on which his wife is surv1v1no and eventually receives cooMf"llng lrom het' ghost 'PG' ( 1 tv .--2.7 mm) '1l'MCUll • tt:a D G) &.All MIQHf wnM DAWID LITT9mM Guests Andy Rooney comedian Franklyn i ~(~ 1'-,_ 0 Featured· Phyllls Oilier gtves fashion reporter Pam ROberta a tour ot her 1nt.amous closer; Jeffrey Osborne ;~==~-.. ~ ....... .,_ "All Quiet On The Western Front" I 1930, Ofama) Lew Ayres, LOUts Wolhelm A German youth eagerly enters World War I but soon loses his enchant· men1 as he gets a l11athand view of its ho<- ror and destruction (2 hrs .. 5 mln.) ••••w ... fl) PAWLn TOW9I While Sybil la 1n the hospital for a minor aperatton, Basil con· ducts a fire drlll at the hOtel and muddles fi!!rou of German tourists ' MU. ( ) lllO'lll "Where The Boys Ara '84" ( 1q54 Comedy) Lisa Hartman, Rossell Todd Four college women travel to Fort 1 .111r3erdale 101 some fun and romance but run 11110 p101>1erns of the heart 'A' ( I hr . 37 llltn l tOl llOYll "The House By The Cemetery" (t981. Suspense) Catriona MacCoO Pnota Meleo A man moves w11h his wife ;ino <;011 into 11 secluded mansion fat a six· 111onth working vacation, unaware that the basement IS occupied by a klller ( 1 hr 18 1n1n) ttitl t) C0U.0 A power hungry man (Oskar Werner) plans to murder his mother 1n·law 11'.1 order to maintain his po- -;1t1on as head of the famlly-run electronics firm (Al ( t hr . 20 min ) WD,Ma.Y B lllO'lll "The Family Jewels" ( 1965. Comeoy) Jerry Lewis Sebastian CabOt A 9·year·old orphan VISlt1 hef six uncles to decide whiCh one she want• to live with ~hrs, 5 min J (!) llCMI "Btve Steel" (1934, Western) John Wayne. Eleanor Hunt A ditguised U S mershat convlnoes o town not to ' y.eld In.tr gold-rich land 10 a pt•turlog "band (1 ht • 30 min ) (fO) 91mr~ tCllWf A ptOllfe OI M;mtyn Monroe lflCIUdlng film CftPI and tn 11rvttwl wtth John H\lston, Robert Mitchum. Tony Rondlll and R0ty CalhOun «D~mAll_.,. 21 llCMI "Otal Of The CenlVfY" ( 1983 Com11Cly) Chevy cn .. e. Stgourn•y '-Wea1191 When a high ltchootogy ultr .. *Ml)Qn turns out to bt defectiv., ltt men- ufecfur8f Nrn en l!mt nuallef to di$pOee of 11 ·re· 11 hf 38 min I m-.ozoo t11CC)llO¥W "Cheech And Ctiong's The COf SJcan Brothers" ( 198.4 Comedy) Cheech Marin, Tommy Chong Two offbeat and off-key Paris street music1a11s meet a Gyp sy who tells them the account ot their noble lineage 'PG' ( 1 hr . 27 min J ,.,g ... l f:u;::_. ...... ,...,.LOii) )llO¥W "Strange lrwaders" ( t98:? Sci· ence-Fiction) P ... LeMa1 Nanc.'r Allen Super-mlelhgent bemgs trom space mate· 11ahze 1n a small m1dwes1ern town and as sume the t>oo.es ol tis residents PG O l 1 hr , 29 min.) llCMI "Raffles" (HMO. ComPdyj Oli vta de Hav1lland. Davtd N111Pn Ar• r1matevr thief makes sport ol Scotland 'f .Jrd and falls 1n Jove with one of his 111c11ms nieces (1 hf 12mtnl ·1 (() ..... .-n'WATat .cam-.. "The Un1n1111Pd' ( 1944 Mys lery) Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey A young couple buy the perfect home 1n r nqtand and find to lhe1r horror ,, 1<; hauntP<:l oy evtl and vtOlence (2 hrs J e llCMI "Sabrina" ( 1954, CornAdy) Audrey Hepburn Humphrey Bogart The daugf'ller of the !amity ch8ullevr 1s v""9ht alter by two wealthy SOG•al1te oruthers (2 hrs 15 min) ~ML•M,Al&Y • IS= "White Savage 11943. Adven· lure) Ma11a Montez Jon Hall Alter an earthquake. a ~hark hunter d ides to mar~ a princess in spite of her wP.alth ( 1 ·1h'L ... -~ --ace.a Ml ..._.MWtfl IQ • llO¥W "Four Friends" (198~ Drama) Craig Wasson. Jodi Thelen Thrf'e high school budd1~ take sepitrate roads to adulthood ofter graduation but c.onllnvP to be united by friendsh1J and 1t1e11 1 1vA ,:m·~)~~~.::·m'"' t "The M11n Who l OW'd Women" ( 1 Comedy) Charles Denner Leslie Caron A man IS so Obsessed with beautt tut women that he finds 11 dlfflcull to rl! main satisfied with any mdfllldti.11 relation st'l1p (Sut>trlled) ( I hr . 59 min ) • llCMI "The nnol Option" ( 1982 Ofa ma) My Oev.s Lewis COiii"' An anti nuclear groop setzes contrOI of the Amert can Embassy 1n London and warns that gove<nment hostages Wilt he murdered 11 11$ demands are not met R (2 hrs 4 •inJAntt .. ~r.'Murdt .. In SPA"• I 1qar, Mv«· tery) Wilfred Brimley ._.,HI n S.ISl.!111 l)ir 1ng the retvrn voyage ot ltl41 f11st "'nncttJ m1uion 10 Marl'. l'TIMnl:>erl of thft 1nterna tionul crew which 1nc:ludet U S •nd Sovi- et KIOllliSta. 1tre s~tema11c1lly mtndered ~en unknown klAer ( 1 hr 30 mm I .., ... CMI~ Sunday,August4, 1985 15 --iaasday -llonaing Movies- .. (%)"St°')' Of A Love St0<y' 11973 l>a· ma1 Alan Bates QomoroiQUjO Sar.aa 11 tv, 50m•n J •G:J "Ad\lentlJfes Of J.tarco POIO 11938 Ofama) Garr Cooper, BaSll Ratht>One 11 hf •O m<n l M Ill) ·The Naked Jungle I 195-'4 A<tve<"• lufe) Charlton Heston EleanOt Par1ter 12 ~S) -CSJ Ooc.tOfs And Nvrse-s" I 1983 Come- dy) Rebecc.a Rigg OfeN FO<S)'1he I I hr 30min 1 19 "l 'el()j\e Ou Nord" ( 1982 Orama) PMppe Noifet Sotoone Sognoret (2 h•S I .. f'CJ ''Soovr Bollom US A ' I 1981 Con>· edy) Seo Johnson. LC>fS Nellleton 11 h• ©i ''ThP Muppels Jake Manhattan ' 1198• Comedy) Voices ol Jtm Henson Frank Oz ( 1 hr . 3-4 m.n I tt:aO · ShP t Ha~ To Go. 11962. l>ama1 Anna l<artO& Bob Mookhouse ( 1 hr •• 30 min I '}., 5<>.Jth Pac.he I 1958 Mus.cal) M1t1 Gaynor Rossano Bram 12 hrs 51 m.n 1 -JUtemooa 11ov1es-- a.a> 'No Time F°' Sergeants·· 11958 Comedy) Andy Griffrth Niet< Ada~ 2 hrs I "Curse Of The Pini< Pal'lthe• ' t 198:? Comedy J T "!Cl Was~ DaY'd N·~ 11 tir 40 mm) 37m.nj ~-- 'D, 'Rattles' 119<40 Comedy/ ()11v1a ~ Havrll.and...Oa'lidbli..ven. 'l hf_, 12 min I 'W1ndwall<e<" ( 1984 Ofama1 Trev0< Howard Nick Ramus ( I hr . U mm I w ~ "Butet Harvesl' (1981 O<amai Ror Howard Ari Carney ( 1 hr 40 m•n 119(11 "Scarface" f 1932 l>ama) Pau1 Muni Geofge Ratt ( 1 hr 33 m.n I "Fnendly Persuas.on" ( 1956 l>ama) Gary Coope• Oototny McGwe 12 nrs 19m1n I .. OJ "/'ltce The en.mp 11976 Comedy) Lynne M<Xgan 0elf1er Fletc~ I 1 hr 27 min) ... 'H tl Tne Ice' ( 19<43. Comedy) Ao bOtt ano Cosreno Ginny Simms I 1 hr 30 moo I CZ) 'Th41 Ad.,,entures 0 1 Buckaroo Banzai Ac.toss The 8th ~ ( 198'4 Ser ence Fictl()('IJ Pet8f Weller John L1lh1J~ U hr 43min) -CC., "South Pac1hc ( 1958 Mus.ica11 M•tt• Gaynoi, Rossano Brau1 12 hrs 51 min l ,_I; The Gang Thal Coul<Jn I Sl'\001 Straight' 11971 Comedy) Jerry Orbacr Leigh Tayk>f Young I 1 hr 36 m.n I -Ill) "McHa11> s. Na'V Joins Th41 A11 Force· ( 1965, Comedy) Tim Conway Joe Fl/nrt ~hfs I -<HJ "Slapstick. Of Anolher Kind 11984 Come<Jyl Jerry LewrS Madel ne Kahn ( 1 hi 27 m.n I In the mountains ,_,,,, "'",.._ .. ShaN b Joy. of low •nd edwnturl' "4th Heidi, en •,te-old C'lallelr •••• - ~I IO be k>ld. . ln Pit"-· ---~ ftetdileeenllO ~111tfd1hfof" gr.ndlldltt h!W>ln cbe Alpe. EXQ.USMI Copley/Colony Cua..avtlle* C08TA MCI A TVUOAY AUOU81 1 '"' Mt-3500 ... ..,,.. ........ •""""-'· .. ---- 16 Sunday, Auguat 4, 1985 !'.ii Lost And Found' (1979 Co~dy) I George Segal Glenda Jac1rson ( 1 hr •6 mtn' i'.1J 'Revenge Of The Nerds' I 1984 Comedy> Robef1 Cartedlne Antharrf Ed Nards { 1 hr . 30 min ) 1111 ft SO®y Bou om U S A ( 198 1 Com edy1 Ben Jonnson LOtS Nettl~llon. 11 r1r 37 min J O The B"l1 Ch• 1' ( 1983 O<ama) l'i>vir• Klint> Glf'nn C1ose ( 1 hr 44 min 1 •--S Ooct()(f> And N.Jrses 11983 CvMP oo Ret>ecca Riog. l>ew Forsythe ( 1·hr 30m1n ) i Shangl'la• Express ( 193? l>arna) Marlene 01e1nch Ch11e BrOOk ( 1 hr 20 mtn 41:9 Somt>..vhere Tomorrow 11984 Ora· maJ Sarah JesSICa Parkef Nancy Add• son ( 1 hr 30 min ) .. (CJ "South Pac11tc" (1958 Musical) M1tz• Gaynor ~no Brau.1 (2 hr~. 51 min 1 J., \.OJ 'The Muppets Take ManMuan 11984 Comedy) V01Ces of Jim Heno;o1 Frank Oz f 1 hr 34 min I _ 1c'9 (2) · The Adventures Qt Bucl\aroo Bania• Across The 81h Otmensoon 1198• Set ence FectlOn) Peter Weller, John Lllh9ow I I t11 43m•n ) -lvening ----• -== c:.e ... a.ACl ... IQUM** ---• II Ill l90llT .... ," ..... .. U'9W:T: M ~ TO comurm TOP...,..,_ John "The Beast' Mug.bl vs Bill Bradley ITT a mtddlewe1ht t:>ovt scheduled for 10 1ovnds live from At- lanl= N J (2 hts 30 mm ) ) "The T8fry Foi1 Story" ( 1983. Biography) Robert Duvall, Eric Fryet S.secl on the 1rue 1taty of a young llhlete wt'lo det;p.te ha11tng !OSI a leg to the d• • ease 1uns a Ma1a1non of Hape' across Canada In a succeul\JI bld to ra15e money IOI C.ncet reMatch Q ( I ht , 35 mtn ) IDT llAT teemm •me ... ....... .. " .. ... .-.Y~ ~,~ .. ··- --....,. A CAii Oii &.a. EdWard Astw stars an allomey wtlO takes oo a Pulitzflf Pn wmnong eolumntSI (Daniel J Travanh) an emott0nally chatged libel SOit brou, by a war conespondent (Gofd<>n F &enl) p hf. 32 ITWI , l wm>ZDO NI C:. ... a .,..,11n•rr 1W vine• Price tlosts a k>otl at the t975 horror I "Jaws" a probe Into Martyn Monroo 1962~th -~DAYIMMI ~ =. '::&.. Identical twin bfq.lht #t\o 5ef'lle as prom escorts. a L.-lflf Er land res-dent wt1l'I a untqUe whlstl.ng 1. ~nr I ...... .... OllNmm .. ..... Lam • II IM l9QllT cm .,. 'Gandhi" ( 1982. Blogr phy) Ben KingSley, Ceflda Be<gen AIC ard Allenbclfougl'l's epic tracing the 111e MOtlandas K <landhl. f1om his early c. reer as a lawytH thfoogh his demonstr 11ons ot paSSMt t9$1$tance to gain Ind< ~nee lor lndta 'PG' (3 hrs . 8 min I J'9@ TO•A._. .. 19 8 I 0. lMI TOW Featured "2001" DI comes a reakty with the ~ tor the hr· space stahon, sculptor 10 the rich and '' movs country comes to L A via an 8 · acre_garden I GHAl&Y ... TMAT'lmt--.i nl Cit LA. Featured a look at the 191r ics ot crematlOn. meet a ~ sc:hoOI &I oen1 wtio IS the only girl on her scl'lc>o. too, ball leem. new exefcise fashions IMDllQOAT .... "°""CCUT ....... .,,,,,,,, wu, 111.D~O/I ••tu I ALM ... °" C8ma H1ghhgh· trom new dances pef1ormed outdoors 11 elude exC8f PIS from Oen Waggoner W1nd0w Dance,.. Karole Armitage anc Charles Alias · August 27, Coney Island and Marta Renzl's "You Utlle Wile Heart " i lMX'IUl:INCIALDTm awua~.,.,.._ llOWll ' Under The Gun" (1 a51, Of a· ma) A.chard Conte, Audrey Toner /4 gangstet guilty ol murcltw uees othef in- mates '" his plan tor • P9rd0n eoo a b<eak·ovl ( 1 hr . 30 min ) M (11) llOWll "Death Of A Gunfigtlte<'" I 1969, Westem) Richard Wldtnarlc, lena Horne A small-town maf'lhel ttllbbotnty retu:.e~ to retITTquistl his posltlOO even lhovOh the town no IOngef needs him (l hrs S min I •II Cl) llOWll · Ttwl Wall" ( t982, Orama) Tom Conti LIM Eichhorn Faced With the threat of extermtnatton, Jews lf'I the Wat· saw Ghello c:sesp.,ately sttuggle to de- lend t~ agalf'lst the Nazi reign ot tetrOf (R)J;l (3 hra I D GD ~lUf .The team pul'S4M "'9no· sters WhO forced a refom\4td g.ambfef to l40fl Ol/9f 1 he l'lonle wtlef e he and his daugtltflf care '°' Iott• chll<hn. (R) Q i_1 ht ) •.,,."The Sentinef' (19n. Hottorl Crrttine Ralnet. ctwll SatandOn. Two young Plople are C*lght In a tertttyfne rll· val •h8f they IQrn a deY s1attng teeret about 1he tenants ot • bfownatone ac>tf1· nt m t -Tuesclay Conl~ ment ~ (2 hrs.) 8 9 'IMllOlltTony chaperones Samantha ori her first date at a school dance but he tu a lot of expla1n1ng 10 do when he's caught necking w11h an artrac ttve teacher (R) c:;> 1 .... 111.D • ':. "The Island ' (1980 Adven lure) Michael Caine, David Warner While 1rwestigat1ng a rash of ship d1S8ppear ances In lhe BermUda Tnangle, a )ournal· 1st discovers an Isolated. 400-year-old col- ony of pirates. (2 hrs ) El G ._ • .,, 7 MD T"1s com· memoratlon of the 40th anniversary of the Hiroshima bOrnblng features the docu- mentary "The Oay After Trinity· J Rober! Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb." the JapaneM &oadc:asttng Corporation's ftlm "H1r0Shima The People's Legacy" and same-day satelltte loolage of ceremonies 1n J=.r<i,;~ U. ~ .,_ "F~Apache, The Bronx (t98t. Orama) Paul Newman. Ed Asner A tough cop ballles crime and corrupllOO tn New York City's South Bronx neighbOr' hood 'R' (2 hrs . 5 11r1m) ®.,.,. "LC>Ye Lelters" ( 1983. Orama) Jamie Lee Cunis. James Keach After dis covenng Iha! he< recently deceased mother had been Involved 1n an extramar1 tal affair throughout her marriage. a single woman becomes Involved in an obsessive aHalr w11h a married man. 'R' (I h1 . 36 mtn) llO¥ll "W1ndwalker" ( 1984 Orama) Trevor Howard, Nici< Ramus W1s"1ng 10 die In peace, an aged Cheyenne war~1or embarks on a iourney lo resolve an Old conflict w11h a Crow enemy 'PO' (I hr « mtn.) (%) DAa IOOT Alter days without a ma1or strllle at the enemy, the German subma'· rtne gets Us chance when 11 s ordered 10 slip through the Strait ot Gibraltar Which IS hlled with enemy destroyers Stars Jurgen Prochnow, Herbert · Gronemeyer (Dubbed) (Pan 2 of 2) (3 hrs ) lcllD 0 ~A CllOWD When Mr Brad ford 1s charged with being a publtc nu1 9ance. Jack tries to come to his defense but only c™es mauers (A) Q ... ITICTAC P& llMllUlll ..,..,.. ... CID 9TIDI Boz 1s k1dnapPf'd after ac· ceptlng a position wllh a high-tech elec· Ironies firm (A) ( t hr ) 8 tll ~A reprise of lhe se- ries premlefe In which a glartiorous model (Cybtll Shepherd) and a p<1vete 1nvest1ga- 1or (Bruce W1lhs) team up for adllenture l and:w;ince (R) Q (2 hrs ) ....... ...... Loe ~ UMTTA • .,.,. "The Roartng TwentieS" ( 1939 ama) James Cagney. Humphrey Bo· gart Throt men friends during World War I. batlle over d1flerences ol opinion about the ='~Ing racket (2 hrs 15 mtn) i ,., :,'r., ~ mnw A look at seductive TV ad '>'tftitemenll, both old and new !hat are carefully detigMd to capture the oonsum tt's attentton •@.,. "Dollars" (197t SuspenM) Warren O..tty, GOidie Hawn Two cu1prns ire chased ell over Ge1m11ny follOWlnQ • bank robbery In Hamburg (2 hrs.. 35 min) -a fl) tmllCAI M.UIUC (Premiere) Roger Mudd and Connie Chung present topical news stories. Scheduled segments include ComrnemOfatlon of the 40th anni- versary of the H1roshlma bombing, and llhe~;;:~·s ~!Nng s-----_. "Bitter Harvest" (1981, Ora· ma) Ron Howard, Art Carney. A young m•dwestern dairy farmer tries to prevent the spread of a deadly disease which has already aHected his family and cattle ( 1 hr . 40 min ) . ([) AUITUIJMu.a POOTUU. <H.l .... IM&Oll: fllWATI m Marlowe Is the prime suspect -when-a ho03 he was htred ro bod~rd Is found dead. c:;> (Ii ,.,. When the source of 1n- crlmlnallng evidence against a judge re- fuses to be identified. Kingsfleld tries to keep the story ovt of the Law Review ( I hr) .. •=. .... II a3 cm ... "Rattles" < 1940. Comedy) Ohvla de Havilland, David Niven An ama- 181Jf thief makes sport of Scotland Yard and falls tn love with one of his vlcttms' nieces, ( 1 hr .. 12 mln.) -.... w ... WAVDOPNAm 1w DD(l)«IGD ... TAii ........ AIClll ..... PLACI ...,~ Tm •-Howard's purchase ot en expenslve bracelet tor Laura leads to hlS dlscOllefy tl\at he doeSn't unde<stand women as m~~~'=t G)C..ITA CH> .,_ "Curse Of The Pink Panther" ( t983, Comedy) Ted Wass. David Niven. A bumbling New Vork Cl1y cop lnlervtews a hos! of suspicious characters In his in- vestigation of the theft of the fabulous Pink Panther diamond 'PG' ( 1 hr . 40 min) •wwrm1111•••1111 Donald 15 pursued by an 011erambittous vice yop. Q .. "Story Of A Love Story" ( 1973. Orama) Alan Bates. OomlntqUe Sanda A British wrller nvtng near Paris begins an eAtramar1tal attatr with a brOOdlng. seosu al Frenchwoman. and tentasy inte<lwines with r .. lity as he reflects on their ro ma;:,J.:: .. SO min.) tts11 I Cl> .,.T,~ The arrival of a hurri- cane forces en unusual trio to ~ refuge at Robin Masters' estate during a glamo- rous social event. (R) ( 1 hr .. 10 min) 0 Cl mT OPCAMOI HO$t: Johnny Car aon. Gue111· Tony Randall, Steven Wright, Paul Marr. (R)~r.) 1;1:''*-..mm LOU~ ... ......... LAW U&l LA Sched\Jted Or Stuart Finch ot Rutgers Medical SchOOI. a torme< VS Army chief ot medicine. talk• about Hirostllma. (1 h<.) .... ,. ... .. , .... ... "Mlsb9f'llllln' " ( 1979, Come- dy) Leslie BoivM. Glofle l90nerd. Alttt a Mftet of dNorc.t. a WOl1'lat\ usn l'ltf tut>- st•ntlal eltmony paymentJ to lndlJfoe her sensual desires ( 1 hr . 25 min.) ©) _,.,. "Total Rapture" ( 1980, Adult) Martine Grimaud. Brigette LahaN! Three wrves llfed of t>elng treated like seJ< ob- 1ects 1um the tables on theu husbands ( t hr . 18mln) mz.--"Best of Bizarre" Sketches John Byne< as sw11chboard operator Er- tleStine; President Nixon (Byner) laces lhe p<ess. romance In the elevator. the World News team. Super Oave mUSIC vi· deo.Q GHULllYAI "'9(C) .,.,. "Flashpoint" ( 1984, Orama) Kris Knstolferson, Treat Willlams Two border patrolmen unoove< a 20-year-old mystery when they unearth a jeep con- ta1n1ng a skeleton and $800.000 bur~ 1n lhe TeKas desert 'R' Q ( 1 hr 34 min) 1WI (f) MO¥llTOlll ... -· IYI C* MOLLYWOOO A 100!<. ar UFOs and NASA's role 1n researching th!S ph~ nomena (R) ~ llllPIJllllfT ... .. MM."'°""' fllA IOWLM Hammer Open from Wa~n, Ill. (R) (2 hrs ) Uil A·-0¥8 YU tmAO Gallagher brings htS zany inventions and lively obser· varlons lo an audience In Beaumont, Te•· as (th<) G111CWI ml 0 tm LATI ...r Wl1M DAVD L.11'1- Guesrs "Dear Abby" columnist Abtga1t Van Buren. former foolball player I actor John Matuszak (R) ( t hr) B 1WJMT ZGlll nm! nml 0 Featured Laker Girls and Dancing Barry a new wave potka band (1 hr) OOoeeGlllOW (!) llCMI 'flight 01 The Phoenu1 f P.ttt 1 ot 2) ( 1966 Adventure) Jamt'ls Siewert Peter Finch When conlacl w11h rescuer!. Copfey/Colony CAllUVtltON MCOUA .. A TUllOAY AUOUITt ..... SG-S500 •we••• .. ----. Sunday,August 4, 1985 17 / ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- = = -Tuesday Coal. becOmes 1mposS1ble, crash SUrVIVOIS be- gin repa1nng an old airplane forced dOwn 1ti 1he deseft 12 t11s ) 0 anaTMWTWT Vlt'C;en1 Price hOSls A loo!< aJ lhe l!H5 h<xror film · Ja~ . a probe into Marilyn Monroe's 1962 dea1h • .,_ 'The Private War 01 M&JOI Ben aon" ( 1955. Lomedy) Charltoo Heston Julie AcJ.Jms A tough Almy man rs sol leoed by a ~(11.,jjf) OOCIQ( alter he IS tran!>- lerred lo a m h!dry scllOOI i2 hrs ) • LCM. ..UCM 11'YU @ .,_ 'Finger Of Guilt" I 1956. Suspeose) Rlchatd Sa$.ehar1, Mary Mur ( phy A him director 1n England is haunted by rhe cooslant amval of myste11ou::. 1e1 lers ( 1 hr. 45 mon) ft) 'AWlTYTOWIM Ba!.!1atlempts10 coo vert Faw1tr Towers into a gOYrmel.'::. pata drse 8!).....,....LOll> tlli9 8 ()) MCCLOUD McCloud s al1a1r wrlh a lest11on model !Leigh Taylor-Young) leads 10 hrs t>etng implicated as an acces sory to mu•der (R) ( 1 hr • 20 min ) 1tt1 WMOOf'I GCM.D11M o.ICT AlOll mlOAOWAY Whoop Goldberg ac1ress and com1e. crea1es lrve characlers ranging from a streetwise thlel to a Galtforn1a surle1 1n a spec1.ir taped at New Y0<k's l ceom Theater 111 March 1985 ( 1 hr ) w , ... , .:Ml A New Kind 01 Love" (1963 Comedy) Paul Newman, Joanne WOOd- ward A buyer lor a department stcxe and a newspaperman ran 1n IOVe after meeltng on ~ne (2 hrs. 20 mm) I .,_, Dear Heart' ( 1965, Ro- mance) Glenn FOid GeralcMe Page A soon-to-be-maHled salesman becomes lhe OOJt:el of affec11on for a sp1ns1er post- mistress V1s111ng New York (2 hrs ) LJ l0J ll0¥9 "The Btg Chill" ( 1983, Ora ma) Kevin Kline Glenn Cl06e When e man commits su1C1de. M · closest friends from college dayl> oathef !Of the funetal and 1Ptlec.t o 1 how their hves have ct111nged Slrl<..C tM 196()<; 'fl' ( 1 h• 1\4 n11n) llO¥ll · Spa .. ms · ( 1981 Su~pense1 Oltver Reed, PelPr F"o<tda A demontC.: snake 11ansported to the U S tor rf's,,ard1 purpo&e$ wreak' havoc; and terror on 1 com~ 'R' ( 1 hr 29 mm I (1) "Revenge Of The Ne1ds ( t9~. Comedy} Robert CarradtOe. An· -Weclnesclay ... "Manny'• Orphans" (1980. Orama) Jim Baker. Malaehy Mccourt ( 1 hr 31 min) •(Cl "S1nbad The Sa11o1 ' I 19-'7. AdvPn tuu•) Oouqli15 r irt.iink~ Jr M.-11roon ti1r Ill• 57,., l H ""' W11!1 f'1 y r 1'18{/ Atlvt1otmft) ~II .;n I iytil)I .. '"' H nctlC f 1 hr. 28 111111 I 21 'Tho M .. n Wtoo I 0"9d Women' 11977 ~y) CharlOs Oenneof, Lt'$he Caron ( 1 ht !>9 m.n J 19@ "The Nutty ProfesM>f (1963 ~· ~ Jerry Lewis, Stello St~s (? h~) •OO "8'edy'I Escape" ( 198A Actventur•) John Savaoe Kf'llv Aono I 1 hr 36 """ I 18 Sunday August•. 1985 thOOy Edwards. Fed up with suffering mterl'Tll08b6e humdiahons masterminded by an uppefclass fraternity of macho ath· letes. a group of fr~·OUt· casls decides 10 set the colleg4l's values stra~R' ( 1 hr . 30 min ) 1:11 ~.,.,.~he Big Chill" ( 1983, Orama) Krwin Kline Glenn Close When a man commits SUIC!de. his cloMS1 lnenos from college days gather for the fi.Jnefal and re fleer on hoW their rrves have changed t:ltlsince~ 1960s. 'R' O (1hr,44 min) MILL 'NQOD a.om• au. • .,., ... , ....... LG9 HI .... ....,,.Atat --~ Okt MOOterey" 11~ West•n~ Gene Autry ( l·N ) ! IJ:'::C.. We><ld Endurance Hock- enhelm 1000 lrom t-lockenhelm. West Germany (R) ( 1 hr ) CID llOWll "Love Letters!' ( 1983, Drama) Jamie Lee CurtlS. James Keach After drs- coverlng lhat her recently deceased rnother had been involved 1n an e1etrama11- 1a1 afla11 lhrougt'lout hef marriage. a smgle woman becomes involved In an obsessive alta11 w11h a mamed man 'A' ( 1 hr . 36 min) m--"Trail Of The Vigllentes" ( 1940 Wes19<n) Franch01 Tone. Bfoderick Craw· ford A man from rti. Eaat It brough1 West to tame a rowdy bunch of ovtlaws ( t hr • 30mjn) 1:111 ... ATU.. a. -..r• ... .,. "Anzio"' (1968. Drama) Rober! ~rtctiom, Peter Falk An over-cau11ous and itvbborn genetel nearly !urns the An- ZIO 10Vaslon lnlo a cftSasler (2 hrs . 30 min) 1-..wn ---.,.,. ''The Happy Ending"' ( 1969 Drama) Jean-Sfmmc:Jns. John Forsythe After be<ng married for 16 years. a woman lac~ disappomtments, challenges, heart break and humiliation When She attempts 10 recapture her romantic dream 'PG' { 1 hi 52 mm ) 2:9 SJ mYll "Scarface" ( 1932. Orama) Paul Munt, G.orge Raft A &mall-llme hoodlum rises to tM top of the heep dur· 1t'lQ Pronlblhoo 'PG' ( 1 l'lr . 33 min.) .. CC) "Silent M<Me" (1 976. Comedy) Mel Broo6cs. Matty Feldman. ( 1 hr . 26 min ) •cm "Psycno 11" (1983. Mystery) Anthony Perlllns. Meg Tilty ( \ hr . S3 min ) (t) "The Happy tndlno'" ( 1969. Drema) Jean S1mmom John ~orsythe ( 1 hr . 52 m+n) -· "lo SOc:IOty" ( 19«, Comedy) Abbolt and CostellO, K11by Grant ( 1 hr . 30 mm ) -rCJ 'Tr~ Of A Sutnm'W" (1976 Ora· n .!lj AKI ud Holl Jod.e r~fllf ( 1 hr Jq min I 'H> ri, MuppN• Tnk Manhattan ( 198-i, Comedy) VOICet of Jim Henson Frank Oz ( 1 hr , 3-C min ) (S) 'Pro50flef Of Wat" ( 19$4, Orama) Ron11ld ~n. O.W.y Mer11n < 1 ht 20 nW'I) -@ "Ootott LegW>n" ( 1963, Advenlvro) A'-OUdd. Arteneo.N (ttn) 1ttl 0 'S1.11IN'!'I Cand!M" (198-i ~I MIW. .... ' II .. ITllGN:.,. mmMM CC*TIUt MIOTt Ml> COITILLO .,_ • Pals Of The Saddle" ( 1938 Wesrmn) John WayM, Ray Comgan A GOwboy encounters a pretty lemale agent nn an underco .. er mission 10 11wes11gatf' lhe illegal lranSC)Ofl of a dangerous chem• CAii = camouflaged as salt ( 1 hr l ~---llto•A1910tlaD •L) (OJ -Ml)~ 1MI co. caT • TMI '* Paul Simon and Art Gar fvnkel perform old favomes 1n thetr f11s1 1oint concert 1n 11 years. taped du11ng 1~ f.Vmmer of 81 1n New Yori\ City's Cent•al Park ( t hr 30 min ) .. (CJ llO¥ll Summer SCbOol r NC.her&. rf975. Comedy! Cano1ce Rtalson. Pot Anderson Three M1dwe<>1ern women stu dent teaching 1n Cnhforn1a encovnler trO\J ltll,~ ¥i' "m<0 ) . .-c•-.a.a all 'llOVS "The Terry Fol! Story I 1983 Biography) Robert Dvvall, Enc Fry~r Based on lhe true story or a younu athlet,. who dfasp11e having lost a leg to the dis- ease. runs a 'Maralhon of Hope" across Canada in a successful btd 10 raise money IOI cancet research ~ ( 1 hr . 3S min ) -AIWCA: COllT1mr. cw llllflTI WMAT'lllYLM 4111 ACAllo.'Lm& Edward Asnet 11ars as an attorney who tak8' on a Pulitzer Prize- w1nn1ng columnist (Dante! J Travantil 1n 1n emollOflaHy charged 11~1 suit brought by a w1ir corre'Sponoent (Gordon P1" sen!) ( t hr . 32 mt!)) • -~~OClll • CMD ITATOll·-WIJJ/ llOYll Curse Of The P1~ Panttter ( 1983. Comedy} Ted WBU. David Niven A bumbling N"e'"\11 York City cop tnlf'Mewt a hOSI of susp1c;ous char Ciers In his 1n ~ vestigation ot the their of lhe fabulous Pink P,mther djamond ·po• ( 1 hr 40 min) m WMAT't llY LM 41::11('C") llOYll "Adventures 0 1 Moreo Polo" I 1938. Ornma} Gary Cooper Snail ~atti bOne The !ravels ol 13th century a1eplorer Marco Polo bnng h1m to China ( 1 hr •O min) Molly Ringwald Anthc'>ny Mlchftel Hllll { I nr. 33m1n) IZ "Pubt>rly RIUM' ( 1981 Comody) Nflll Schuhnld Jed Ct1pelj11 ( 1 hr , ?1 mu1) ' tt:ll 8 "High Hell ( 1958. Drtima) John Derek Elame Sleworl (I hr . 30 min) -a.1.nooa Movies- G9G> "Tii. Val 1y Ot Gwongr· (1969. ra"· tasy) Jo FranclllCUS, Oita Golori (2 hrs) <C) 'The 3q Steps" ( 193!>. S~""'"' Robert Donal, Mod 1c1ne Cmroll ( 1 hr 2& min ) ( ·~ Dawn" ( 1984, AdvtlnlUfe) Pa trick Swayl• C Thome Howett ( t hr !>•min) ($) ··s11~1\ or ri.n" f 1qR• Drama> Ml· -Wednesday Coal. chael Pare. °'8ne lane ( 1 hf • 34 mm ) 11::9 "The AdVentures Ot Buckaroo Ban.ze1 Across The 8th OlmenSton" ( 1984. So ence Ftetlon) Peter Weller, John Uthgow t 1 hr .. 43 min.) W (0) "Flesht>urn" ( 1984 Drema) Steve Kanaly, Karen Carlson ( 1 hr . 30 min ) a.CC) "S1nbad The Sailor" ( 1947, Adven- ture) Douglas Fairbanks Jr . Maureen O'Hara (lhr., 57 mtn) (ti) "W1ndwalker" ( 1984. Drama) Trevor Howard. Nrck Ramus ( 1 hr , 44 min ) SJ "Reunion In Vienna· ( 1933 Orama) John Barrymore, Olana Wynyard ( I hr 40 mrn) ~r.%) "L'eto1le Ou NCfd" ( 1982. Drama) Phtltppe Noiret. Simone Signoret (2 hrs I .. CO) "PsychO II" ( 1983. Mystery) Anthony Perkin~ MOQ Tilly { l hr , 53 min ) W (t) "Silent Movte" ( 1976, Comedy) Mel Brooks. Marry Feldman. ( 1 hr . 26 min ) ( "Manny's Orphans" ( 1980. ()fama) Jim Baker Malachy McCourt ( 1 hr . J 1 min) W CZJ "South Pacific" ( 1958. Musrcal) M1111 ·Gaynor. Rossano Brall• (2 hrs • 51 """ I W IJ7) "Spencer's Mountain ( 1963 Ota ma) Henry Fonda Maureen o·Hara 12 his . 30 min) • (0) "Meatballs Part II" ( 1983 Come- dy) Archie Hahn. JOhn Mengath (I hr 36 min) .. oea ... .... PYIA.m C81 ... ILACa ... IQllAmOlf .,.....cow,., IUCa.,_ II.I I 11• 90lltT .... .. &.119ACY! • lmllODUCTIOlt TO ~ CC)llOVtl "Echoes Of A Summer" ( 1976 Drama) Rtchard Hams JO<lte Foster A terminally Ill 12-year·old g1tl gives her 1llu s1on-f1iled lather and her blindly deter mined molher the courage to accept her late 'PG' ( 1 hr • 39 min ) ([) ~ IOWLm Molson Golden Chai· lenge trve trom WlndSor OntarlO (2 hrs I r LI llOWll 'Seven Magnificent GladtatOfs ( 1983. Adventure) Lou Ferrigno. Sybll Denning A woman flees 10 Rome with an enctianted sword 1n search of the one true warr!Or who can save her village from de structlOn 'PG' ( 1 hf 23 min ) ($)llCWll "Sk111s Ahoy" ( t952, Comedy) Esther Wiiiiams. Vivian Blaine A Irk> of Navy women shore a series of m1sadven 1trres and problf!ms ol the hear1 ( 1 hr 49 min) MOT IUT HOTLM ...... IWPYDAYI~ ... umY...U. Gii DAY AT A Tm IMC:m./~WIW ___ ..,... •MU.OIM ... ...,.. ..,., ,_ C81WWI .,.....,~ f09IMT' On roca· llOl'l In 1..onc:son with the et111 of "Family Tiet", • proftte of actrHI Jayne M1ns- lletd ....,.,DAYIMMI --0 '.&Mft..-The crew that pttlnta the .oro-Washington BrrdQ•. St nlty . Marcus of the Neiman-Marcus department store 1 ...... &I 1a. ..... O/IPOrMm .. ,,.,., ..... L.OllD ..... 9GIT (0) llOWll "Sixteen Candles" ( 1984 Comedy) Molly Rtngwald, Anthooy M1· chaet Hatt. An insecure Midwestern teen- ager's 16th blrthday goes unremembeted 1ust anothef ~ptom of the pain of ado- lescence and growing Ui> tn a mtddte-class lam1ly 'PG ( 1 hr . 33 mm.) ClJ MO¥ll "The Man Who loved Women" ( 1977. Comedy) Charles Denner, Leslie Caron A man 1s !'>O obsessed with beau11- tu1 women that he hnds it d1fficult to re- main satisfied with any indlv1CRJal relafion- sh1p. (Sut>llt16d) ( 1 hr . 59 min J 1'::11 (1l) llOVll "Shark!" (1968, Adventure) Bur1 R~ynolds. Arthur Kennedy A huge white. 'hark attacks a diving party search-'!:!9 for sunken treasure (2 hrs.) 1'::11U I 0. 1M1 TOW Featured Otd Town Pasadena gets a tace-lltt. art1hclal eyes. helicopter-hopping ,.through the Grand Ca~n. sea hons who can save lives I UIHAl&Y flUD YMAnltC-.U m 0. L.A. Featured e special 8 par1 series begins featuring travels around the world 1n search of the best vacation spol6 Tonight Japan. where we vt5jt the new Tokyo Disneyland. the Imperial Palace l and.:=ATU. · "°"" COWIT rA .. "lt atl#Mm WU. WILD WOll.D Oii AmAL1 ...,... 1 llCMI "The Muppets Take Manhat ran· ( 1984 Comedy) Voices of Jim Hen son FrAnk Ol Whtie Kermit ar1d company try ro rake the11 college va11ety show to Broadwdy Miss Piggy's iealousy of a friendly waitress threatens her weddtng plans for the frog 'G' Q ( 1 hr • 34 min ) u;) llOVW ' Thal Night With You" ( 1945) rranchot Tone ( t hr . 30 min ) • 11 ()) rrm. COUM llAll An andr()jd, de Signed IOt military use. escapes from the laboratOfy .and gels invotved in a number ot wacky ~dventures 1n the real wOfld Stars Charles Rocket. Oo<ian Lopinto Chuck COf'IOOfs ( I hr ) D e ._..AY TO tllAVBI Jonathan and Mark make an effort to spark a roma~ between a Thoroughbfed trainer's daugh ter (Helen Hunt) and the son (JOhn Ham mond) ot IJ £lass conscious man (Part t of :>) (A) 0-11 hr) 8 ilO¥li "The Haunttng" ( 1963. Horror) Richard Johnson, Juhe Hams Fow d•si>arate people Investigate a house with an infamous reputation '°' 'Wpernarural Q21ngs on (2 "" ) u ..ac:r ... IOU. -Mme* Host Chrlttopher Atkins MUSICal gVMI~ the Assoc1a11on. Cheap Trick and Stephenie Mins ( 1 t\t > 1 ....... =MUI --11()11 "11 llllTIVAL In this 1985 concett 1n Montre1.11t. Switzer land, fentur•d perlormtr• include Mt1n At Work. Pointer S111er1, Ditty Oce11n. Kenny Loggins. Culture Cl\Jb, REO Speedwagon nd othera (2 h<I ) •.,.... ..... "Time And Light" Hott 0.Yld McCullough eQmlnet old lt(ld new teihcopes and • varitty of tookl and met~ IC>f meatot1nQ time Q ( 1 hr ) Qi) ..... Lo. ~ ~---Oe\lld Mee~ lough narrates this survey of two centuries of Shaker hie, featuring Interviews and ar- Chl\181 matenal Q (I hr.) (C1 llOVll "Hopscotch" ( 1980. Comedy) Waller Matthau. Glenda Jacl<son A fOf- • mer 1n1elltgence crgent ts aided by an old flame 111 dodging the KGB and the CIA. whO are trying to J)fevent htm from pub- hstung hlS me1T101rs 'A' ( 1 hr .« min) () ... ICWI IM.TWAm _,....,_ · (.s.J Wiii) AL YMmCMC: 1111 C(9UAT AL Weird Al Yank0\l1C bl'1ngs his rock paro- dies to thlS special that features his sooos .. , Lost on Jeopardy," "Eat It," "I Love Rocky Road" and "Dare to Be Stupid " (I hr) ,.IWWlm ...,.ICBfTD 11::9111CT~DOUQH ...... • ()) llOVll "The Cradle Will Fall" I 1983, Suspense) Lauren Hutton. Ben Murphy S1range happenings at a llospttal where She is detained following an auto m1snap lead an aSS1stant 0 A tnto a web of h0mic1oa11ntngue (A) Q (2 hrs ) D m FA.CTI OI LR Blalf'S romance IS )00Pard1zed when rier boyfriend spenos too much llme and money on drugs (R) 0 ®> DYMAlrt Luke and Daniel clash when Krystle refuses a reconc11ta1too otter. Ste\le11 attacks Adam's role in Claudia's d•\IOrce proceedings. Alex1s's maichmak- ing fOf Amanda and Prince Michael sutlers a setback (fi) O ( 1 hr ) I ... _,_... ~ 1ILl'v.IC* Da\ltd McCur- ~h mWl'ltes thtS survey of two centu11es or Shaker lt1e fea1u11ng 1nter\118WS and ar- chival material Q ( I hr I • m,.... LOii> '1.i) MT10ML QIO.•...C Hal Holbrook narrates the story ot four Amencarui now 1tv1ng 1n China a stUdent a j()Urnallst. a b11!>1fll''>Sman and a reacher (A) Q ( I hr) l>IPOlmLOOIC ll.J COJ llOVll "The Stone Boy" ( 19a4, Dfama) R()bert Duvall. Jason Presson A r111dwestern farm fam1ty must face emo- l•Onill ddrustment ofter a membe< acc•- dentalfy l\1lls his older brother 'PG' ( t hr . 33m1n) $) MO¥ll ·s1reers Of Fir•" ( 1964. Ora- ma I Michael Pare, Diane Lane A "roctc ·n· roll table" about a rock linger kid- napped by an <>Yllaw gang and hef rescue by a dashing ex·bOyfriend and a tougn-gitl adventurer 'PG' O ( 1 hr . 34 min.) %, MO¥ll "The AdVenture5 Of Buckaroo Banzai ACfOSS The 8th Dlmenslon" ( 1984, Science f1t;t1or1) Peter Weller. John l 11hgow A band ot adventurers bat- flt> enemy ahens whO era accldentaHy r• leAsed lrom the 8th dtmention as a result Of a rCSC!'archer's exf)ftriment• PG' (I ht 43 min) UMTTA • .,_ "Rio"· ( 196& Orama) Gene H c;kmM Jim Brown lnmal• tn a state pr1">00 !.tag It Mt 10 cov., up an eaeape atr•~t (2 hfs ) 11:9 D GJ ANYTMlll ,_LOW A 0.yton. Ohio beauty shop becomes the local point In 1o110 ha1rdrM~or~ perpetual search'°' Mr R1~ht Star~ Vtc:lo Lnwrence and L.Uraf\ rewes mYll 13 Rue ~ dtltlno" ( 184 Orama) James Cegney, Annatlllt. A . Sund ay.August 4, 1985 19 Natt spy iS ousted from Secfet Sennce School In the us (211<5.) ---· 9GllTll'OCUI .,., ....... ., .... -GD IT ... ii_ Westphal! s old friend. now a White Hou~ physician, makes SI EllQiUS the welcoming hospital !Of the F11s1 Lady''> Vl'ilt 10 Boc;ton (Fil 11 hr) 11 W A Bttl<VI trade att~che is lfflM!igated !Of drug dealing, a :(OUng woman falls 1n love wllh a mysteflous ben- efeclOf Julie learns She's the ob1ec1 of a bet by lwO SU•I~ (A) Q I I hr ) I ""'"'-.All> ~ AT '°'9 Foll<stnget Joart Baez s per1C>fmance includes her own c.omposttl()OS DlamoocJs and Rust and ·_Recently.· as well a~ tradiltOnal ano con- -=-~~r J I ~ _.., MZZ Jazz p.anists George Sheanng. Maflan McParlland and Adam MakowlCl play solOs duets and e grand finale trio before an audience ot 120.000 tn Jacksonville fla ( 1 hr } (.t.J llOVll "Streets 0 1 Fire · ( 1984, Ora- ma) Michael Pare Diane Lane A "rock 'n' roll fable at>out a rock singer lod· napped by an oullaw gang and hef rescue by a da~1ng e1 b<>ylriend and a tough-g1r1 adventuref ·pc, Q I 1 hr 34 min ) MITO MCllO IHRA MntOfcratl NO<lh ern NetK>na~ from Milan MICh IA) (I hr) llOVll Ri?vf'l>Qt! nr The Netds'' ( 1984. Comedy) Rnbl>rl Carradine. An • thony Edward'> re<J up with suffering 1nterm1nat>le hum1hal100S masterminded by an upperctass lra1ern11y "' macho ath· letes. a group ot freshman b<>okworm out casts decides to c;el the collf>ge's 11111.,ps 5lratght A' Q ( I hr 30 ""'" I ..oua....-rAM .. .....,....,.. 7113 -... ..., ... eooo ... tW •• (!§l G) ... TAJD mMm ......... llUCI ..-Ym.1111 119 W Whtie bmwc;1ng m a de partmenl stOfe, Howard runs into a lormet puson roommate wll<>'t ""°phft•ng ~-"""Ma -lMINAnMI .,. · l Amour !Nb Dote. AdUll) Hhr, 30m1n) (IJ) .,_ "I like ro Watch' ( 1983. Adu\l) Don Harl Brldgtlle Mone! Voyeu· rl$m at>Ounds 1n the suburban ~ of a ~"' designer ( t hr ?0 miri ) (SJ .,_ ffe-sht>v111 · I •984 Orama) Slew l<anefy, Karen C tl90n A Nav"IO In dlan .scapes from • menlal 1ns111u11on and WYeaks havoc upan lhi-~ople who tesh· f..cj tMI him R I t hr 10 mrn I Cl> 'LCM' I .,.tiers I tq8J 011ma1 Jorn .. Lee Curtis. Jern~ Keach Allet dis· COV9flng thel her recently de<:eated mother hao bef'f• n~OfVAd in an ••tramar1· tal affaw thrOIJVl'looit I Pr m •rr111ge, I llflgle woman~~"° m m1 ot:r.;r. Ml alfalf oN1th • maflied man R ( I hr :l6 tntn I ...... courr n11 .,_ .. Th8Eut'W8y (19S2.C~ otl C.ry Grant, Belly [)fi:.~!t l ovtng pet· ents of ttvM OC*l thett tiomo to Mvet1t I loti• c.htldren (2 IYI ) "98 ..,.. ··Tlct!et to Hfi11V1'l'I" I 1981 I 20 Suodey. August ~ 1985 Olama) NICk Mancuso. Saul Rubinek On the heels of a romantic breakup. a young man visits friends In San Fr&ncisco and 1s 90wly drawn tnto joining their reltglOUS cult JI hr. 30mtn) D GD lllTOfCMIOlt H06t: Joonny Car· son Guests Nadja Salerno-S<nieflberg Pele Barb\.1111, Irving W Cohen. al<5o. an I • Edge~~~ segment {A) ( 1 hr ) 1; .... ~ LGUtlMT IUlllllf .... ~ ..... LAW AMSCA Scheduled ps~ cnotogist JOyce Brothers discusses mar riage (1 hr) .... .,. ... MllllCIMa Wf NII& 2L HOtT1 TMI 'fW ~ INCW.. Asptrtng co- medl8ns per!Ofm el Dangerlleld's tn New YOfk. (lhr) ll)PAULllYM tW(.cJ .,.,. "The Hollywood Knights ( 1980. Comedy) Ro~t Wuhl. Tony Dan za On Halloween eve tn 1965. a rowdy high schoOI gang wreak havoc In Bevefty Hills lo avenge the Clos.tog of their han QQUI. 'A' ( 1 hr . 39 mtn.) att• mO.MOLL'fWOOD A look. al summer swimwear. buying Cal:>b&Oe Patch dOlls L A 's most eJCpensive hotel suites IAJ '1 asrw ... .......... ) MIATU .... Lucky Str"'e Ftllet5 ClasSIC, from las Vegas. Nev (R) ( 1 hr J 1111CU'9 1t9 fD LA11 _,. Mnl DAVID~ GUf'Sts advert1smg e•ecutrve DaVld Ogd vy. smger·songwttter Graham Parke1 alc;o. a stupid pel tttcks segment IAI 11 hr) · l tWanm9 ,_ ,,_ 0 reaturi-d come1da11s Arsent0 Hall and Stev~ Birnbaum ( I hr l • DAW• DOTTO INOW .,_"Flight 0 1 The Phoen1~" {Part 2 "' 21 I t966 Adventure) James Stewart Peter F"<" When corotact wilh rescuer~ becomes 1mp0Ss1ble. crash survivors be g•n repaKlnt an old a11plane forced down 1n the desefl (2 hrs ) a . 8"81'TA1•n ~ On local ton • M l ondon with the cast of "Famlty Ties" ~olole of ac11ess Jayne Mansftekt • .,. "Three GOdfettlers" ( 1949. Western) JOOn Wayne. Ward Bond A tuo of balldlts put their livee on the hne when they att.mpt to delNet an Ofpt\an they found 1n the deSerl to the nearest lown (2 "'' ) . I LOWI,' I Mrml • .._ ..wllWI Neal Gab!ef and .lfll trey Lyons lootl at Hollywood s using stars ollCIUdlng John MaMIO\llch Michellfl Ptttlfer and Matthew Moc:ttne IA) ....... L.a. llOVll "PriVa1e School'' ( 1983. Come· dy) Phoebe Cates Belly AU'8ell lffn- ~ boys YfSlt the alf gttl Ch.ryvale Atade111y fOf some tun and ndv@nfure R' p ht 37 min.) · '\.l re)• .,. • P-lycho II ( 1983 Mys· lltfy) Anthony P9'klr4, Meg Tiiiy FOfmet psychotlC kll'9r Nofm11n 8etet •• released •ltet a ?O year 111y In a mental ln&lltUllOf'I nd Del " htmMlf cured uni~ • mystef• ovs rash of murdetS t>egoos 'R' ( 1 hr !13 mlf1) ( _. ''South Pec.tltc" ( 19~ I) Mitlf Ollynor. ~nn Bram An A~ican worMn faft9 111 kwe with o Frenchman while stationed 111 a Navy nurse m the South Pacllk: during WOftd War II (2 hrs . 51 min.) -.,_"A lypse Now" (1979. Ora· ma) Marlon ~ndo. Martin Sheen. An ln- telhgence agent embarks on a mission up rrver into the Vietnamese ~ to find end kill a renegade AWOL Army offteer who has fOlled au. previous attempts al his capture 'A' (2 hrs .. 30 min ) tt18 (;) .. Ai'lll-An experimental vegetable-growth formula that was washed down the drain creates a panle when 11 appears 10 be tust as effective on animal hfe (RJ (I hr ) 1 ...... :. "Hell IS FOf Hef~" (1962. Olama) Steve McOueen. Bobby De11n A squ8d ot American Ots IS ornered to hOld ibac=-a~a~(~hrs) WlllOZDO 1:11 .,. "Vldeodrome" ( 1983, Fantasy) James Woods, Deborah Harry A co- owner of a Toronto UHF s1a11on th81 spe· c1&11zes tn adult entertainment Searches for the people behind a bizarre satellite broadcast 'A ( t hr . 30 min J ttl I WOM.D AT &.Mm ttl ... AT TMI llO¥lll Scheduled reviews "The Black CaUldron" (Disney. anlmat· ed) "The Heavenly Kid". "The Man Wl1h One Red Shoe" (Jim Belushi, Tom Hantis) 8 .WW "Carry On Cleo" ( 1965, C<>rM- dy) Amanda Barrie, Sidney James. Marc Antony and Cleopatra lel the slaves l<><>M. and Julius Caesar gets hlS JUSt reward on lhe Ides of March ( 1 hr • 30 rnln ) -~ MJ.•M,M&'f ..... ,..&.-.. G:_,,,ATCM , .. , .... MJ. • .,. ..... 'f J.,.,. "Red Dawn" ( 1984 Adven· ture) Patrick Swayze. C Thomas Howett When CommyQlat paratroopers invade a small u s town ind begin to slaughtef Ill inhabtlants a g1ovp or htgh school Siu dents deSpefately tights back 'PG·13' O {1hr ,54rntn ) (D .,. "Ricochet Romance" ( 1955. Comedy) Martorle Main. CNM Wills. The head cootc at a dude ranch tnes hef luck .. f b~nd~:~:. ~ ... : Olame) !Oney POltlef. Qaudla McNeil Based on the play by L<>fralne Ht'*>efry Allemptlng to breetl away from the!! crowned apartment In en~. • bl&eil tern.ly move to an all whir. neighborhood i lVI , 30 min ) ••::wrr ...... ...,._ ..,_ 8'enctll Cup lntema 1iona1 Tour~t from C<>Mni>'8. Mo R) ) (Q) .,. "Flesllbum" ( 1984, Ofa me) S•~e Klinaty. Karen Cef1lon A ~ vafO lndi.m ..cap.a trom • tneotet 1nt111u- 11on end WfMk• ti.voe upon the ~ Who tethfie<I egelnst Nm 'A' ( 1 hf 30 min) .............. I (C.) _. "Emenut"-On Tlboo !$land" {1977, Of•mt) Law• a.a-. "" ~ rMn is cast 8$h0re on • troptoet lelend and ,,.,,,.,, a ~ young ""°""'" 'R' (1 h1 25 min) .. 8 m¥ll "The light That Failed ( 1939. Drama) Ronald Collll8n Waller Huston A painter w11h la1hng 519ht attempts to lmish h1r mas1e1p1ece only 10 c;oo his rnooot de <.troy 11 (2 his ) (!) A90TT MD COlftllO Cl> m¥ll Pa!i!dtSI' r:a,,yr•n 11935 WP5teml John Wa..-ne. Marion Bums A teoerAI agent tracks down a gang of cNn- tPrle1tPr'i ope1at1ng atong the ~e•1can i5~.~ tFi CM!Alt CHAM.II CM THI,.,._ a. I SJ llO¥ll 'Revenoe Of The Nin la" 11983, -Thursday -llondnv Movies-• .. (%) l t>tOtlf' Ou Noid' I 1982 Drama) Ph11tppe Nooet Simone SignOfet (2 hrs I tcaOO "A~ve"1)e 01 The Nerds ( 1984 Comedy) Robe1t ( .111ad1ne Anthony Fd wards I I hr 30 rn111 ) .. Cl 'Broadway o.wny Rose I 1984 Comedy) Woo<1y Allt>n Mlil r;mow I I h1 ?6 rr1111 I 7a({7) fl..inuPrr>U'l 1193~>. rJ1ama1 BPllP Da"1s Fram hot l<•t•P t I 1.r 30 min l ~rc1 F•rnny lA.1y (1975 M11qt<alJ B..ir br11 StrPl"And JAn>t>'i C...l>111 I? ht'i 10 min I I z 0<>dl t 11 fhe <,t111t111 y" I 198J C<1m+i dyl ChNy r h.1SP StQ011rr ev Weaver 11 , hr 1jl 111111 I .. ,H · 0 HArd , W1tp ( 1982 O..;ma) E:d· Wllr•l A<.r1d1 M.wettP Harlif'y 'I ht ?.7 '"'"'' .. 10 ) lhr> l>Pno /om• t 19tiJ -,uspe11!1t1/ (,t111~t\•j.)h{lr Waikfll1 . lirOOkf! l\dAmS (I hr , 4:! 111111 I ' . t:aCI) Gom111 H11vnd lhe Mountain ( 1% 1 Cunw<1y) Abboll and Costello Duwthy Shay ( I n1 10 m111 I CH rtldtF· Mill or•<. Hun I 1983. Drama) John St.hne1der Kuk Douqtas 11 hr 35 rn1n) (%) 'Apocatyp!ie Now ( 1Q79 Otama) Marton Brando Ma111n She.-n 12 his JO mtt1) -C"l Red Q..iwn' ( 1984 AdventureJ Pa trt<.k ~wllyte, i: Thomas Howell (I hr !>4 n11t• I \$/ the w .. s1erne1 · I 19'40 Westt11nl Cary < "''I'~ Wallfl• Brenr•art ( t hr 40 min) -@ DraQoon Wt>ll" MRs..acre 11957 WK lern) IU11v Sullivan Denms 0 Keele (7 hrt) tta(O Tti;• P•ttl(I!'• And The Ptri.ltt' t 1945 Comttdyt Hoti Hc•pe v1tg111111 M•l'fO I 1 hr 34 mm I tWU r 111 ot fht• Huu$e 0 1 UV18' < 19~8 Ho11or) Tom Tryon. Milr<:Mlt fhCHflPIO" I I hr lOnM I _., ....... Movle9- -· Tow111d The Unknown' ( 1956 NJ von1111e) w u11am Holden I IOyd Nolan (2 hrl) <C> HArry And Son· ( t98A. Drama) Pnul N~wmen R,)t)bV ~n ( 1 hr • 51 min i • Henl.y J'an~y" ( 11~8i Come<IYI C n W•lrl•" r.••rt 1 R If r I I hr -50 Adventure) Sho Kosugl. ArthUr Roberts A Japanese gallery OWtlef denies his VIO- ient N1nia he11tage unfit American drug trathckers kidnap his young son 'A' ( 1 hr 28 min) -~= '6 m % m¥ll 'Pubefty Blues" 11981 Come· dy) -Nell Schofield Jad Ca.pelja TWO com1ng·ol-age gtrls are eager fOf experi ence and acceptance by the popular crowd R' (I hr 27 min) l .... CMl-.UR .. lllftT1 llO¥ll "The Soldier" ( 1982, Adve1'· ture) Ken Wahl, Wilham Prince A ruthless CIA aQent is sent 10 neiJtrattze a Soviet· min I l Sl The SwOfd 0 1 The Valiant" (1980 . rantasy) Sean Connery Miles O'Keele l1 hr 42 min) Z) "Shanghar Express ( 1932, Orama) Marlene Otet11ch, Chve Brook ( I hr 20 mint W 0) Purple Rain I 1984 Musicel) Pml(.e Apolloma Kotero ( I hi 5 I min ) •IC Mr And Mrs Smith" ( 19~ I Com+> dy) t,arole Lombard Robert Montgom _ e1y ( 1 hr 35 mm) Cl Dear 01 The Century I 1983 Come- dy1 Chevy Cha!.~. Sigourney WeAvPr (I hr 38 min I .. CH Romantic Cornedy ( 1983 Ro rnanr..e) Dudley Moore Mary StPenbor ~n ( I hr 43 min I CO ThP Dt-r1d /ooP I 1983 Suspense) Chro51opht>r W.11~ en Broot<e Adam5 ( 1 hr 4;> non I •lCl 'B1vddwr1y Danny Aoc;e' ( 1984 CornedyJ-Woody-Allen, M ia f~rrow (I hr 2f> mrn) 1 %J 'Puber ty Blues ( 198 t Comedy) Nell Schol1eld lad Capel1a (I hr 27 mrn I t9@ The War Lover" ( 1962 Drama) Steve Mc;OuH>n Robert Wagner (?hrs 10mm) .. (I,. l (0' "Nale And Hayes' ( 1983 Advrm lure) Tommy lee Jones M1c.hat>l O'Keele ( 1 hr. 40 mu I 1111 (C) "Funny Lady ( 1975 Musical) Bar b1a Streisand. James Caan I? hrs 70 mrn I 'Z (;ur"4t Ot The Pink Panther ( 1983 Comedy) Ted Wa">... David Niven 1 I nr 40 fTllll , -Evening -&12 ... aACI .... ,... •. ,_..CO.Mlf .a.- IUH••9GllT ... ....r11<n...,•-a'°"iiil .. ~Yi Ml lmlODUCTIOll TO .. ~ {j) ... "Cloak And Dagg«' '( 198A. Suspense) Henry fhomat, Dabney Cote man An I I ·year·Old with 1n oven eatoua 1magtnat1<1n b<tcomtt ont1trigtod 1n a r,111~ hie spy 1dvtnlu1t when ht witnesses • murdor and tht theft ot too secret mihfary documents 'PG' Q (I ht , 41 ltlin ) '9 MOT IUT MOTLM backed 1e11onst plot to hold the Mideast hOstage with nuclear e>ep!oslv91 'A' ( 1 hr. 30 rrnn ) mWMAn•... · d (CJ llO¥ll 'Hopscotch" ( 1980, Comedy) Watter Matthau Glenda Jackson A '°' mer intelligence agent rs aided by an old tlame 1n dodging rhe KGB and the CIA. who are 1ry1ng ro p1event him l1om pub- hsh1fi:s memoirs A' ( 1 J;ir ~ min ) ·1 "°°"' ·~ ""'""' .... 41:9 fUITITOID .. U. li.t•ll A boy's loyalty lo his lawless and violent lather ts put to the test by his own instincts 10 ttve a more peeoe- ful e.1ustence ( 1 hr ) .. me ... ... u.Ylal.ml Gm DAY AT A 1'm llM:lm. / .._..,..,. ..... Of POIT\lm I IUMITM ) GOU PGA Champ1onsh1p hfst round trom Cherry Hills Country Ctvb In Engte- wOOd. ColO (R) (2 hrs ) Ff llO¥ll · The Front' ( 1976 Comedy) WOOdy Allen. Zero Mcrslel A scheming bungler becomes the pseudO aulhOt lor 1tie work or o;everal blacklisted triendS PG (1 hr 34 rmn ) NI Cll ... 1¥ml0100 ~ .-TAI-IT nmlllT tnt8'VleW with Linda Evans. a J>fOfrle ol actress- turned·Wfl!er CarrOll Bake1 ..... Q ()) PA ...... A gym whe1e body- bvttder5 leam lo be profes&l<>f\81 wrest~s. Ann Chwatsky, a photographet whose sub~re coostruc;tlon wo1k:ers .,...._ &lmdOlll ..... OfPOIT\lm llOVll "The Orovnd!ta1 Conspiracy'' I 1972. Mystery) George Peppard. Mi- chael Sarrtw n The sabo18Qe of a secret sp11ce p1oiec1 sets ott a ruthless lnvestlga- i 5-.:. ~ 01 llCMI The Princess And The Pi- rate I 194!> Comedy! Bob Hope, Vlr~ 1.J Ma)'O Buccaneers capture en enter- ld•ner and a princess Ind hold them n,,.,,,,oe on the Spantsh Main (I hr , 34 min) 1:11 fJ I CM M TOW FealUJed 1 profMI of ''""' Billy Dee Wiiiiams meet en 80-YMJ· old 11ud art o;choo4 model tamUiel who have dropped andlOI 10 llve 1boerd t>oats .1!\1t to a warehouae«;tztd elrline 1111ct1Gn 8 m ,..._ u1UD Iii Olll U. F-e11r· Jr '9ftn of trav· "' c:onhf'\Ve<J with E.h,1.J "' Japan IOf 1 "'"'e 01 the-art bullet 1r.11n and Austr11ia ror 11 IOC>M "t the country'• wl~ Md the town ot M lt)OIJrne .... ,.,~ .alftco.T .. , .... ... ,.,, Sunday, August 4, 1985 21 1-... ..... a.~• ...uL. IOllrmf Jeff Smith ptepares chicken plcatta. stuffed chicken thighs and pan fried chlolten strips (%) ... "Revenge 01 The Nefds" ( 198-4. Comedy) Robert Carradine. A~ lhony Eowa1dS Fed up with suffering 1nterm1nable hummatlOOS masterminded by an upperclass traterni1y ot macho ath- letes. a group of freshman b<>Ol<worm-oul- casts decides to set the college's vatues stralgl'lt 'R' ( 1 hr , 30 mtn ) CD.,. "Running Wiid" ( 1956, Ofama) Wlll111m Campbell. Mamie Ven OOfen A stale policeman goes undercover to catch the leader of a car-sreahng gang ( 1 hr 30 ITWl) - • 9 Cll ••• P.L A psychlC (Samantha Eggar) clams that Magnum wiU be 1n- votv.d in her 9\lentual murder (R) ( 1 hr ) 8 e co.Y lllOW Vanessa has recur- riog nightmares eher seeing a hotter mov- ~ (R) . 8 0 llOY11 'Venom" ( 1982 Suspense) NICOi W1lhamson, Klaus Kmsk1 Ktdna~s hold a young AmerlC8n boy hostage 1n his parents' London home, at- temately contending wrth the pollCe out- side and a deadly mamba snake in the bUlldlng's "90hlauon system (Viewer Ots- cretlOfl Advised) c:;i (2 hrs ) I ..... -:.. "The Master Gunfighter · (1975. Western) Tom Laughlln, Ron O'Neel A ounhghler haunted by a shame- ful deed sets out 10 redeem his honor with l istel and a samurai sword. (2 hrs.) ....... " liiAmTNIU. .,. "Red Dawn" ( 198-4. Adveo ture) Patrick Swa~e. C Thomes Howell When Commurns1 paratroopers Invade a small U S town and begin to slaughter lls inhabitants. a group of high school stu dents despefatefy tlgflts back 'PG-t3' c:;i lhr ,5"min) ... "Eddie Macon's Run' ( 1983. Orama) John Schneldef. K11k Douglas An escaped criminal becomes the quarry of a ru1hless law otticer 'PG' (I hr . 35 mm ) (I) llCMI "The SWOfd Of The Vakant" ( 1980, Fantasy) Sean Connefy, Miles O'Keefe. A young squire from King Ar- thur's oourt rs given one year to either IOlve a mysterious Green r<night 's rlddle Of forfeit his 111e 'PG' ( 1 hr 4:<> min ) •Be,.._, Tm Mallory and Skippy are eocldentally locked uP In the Keaton bes.men! together (A) 8 .. "Beyond The Befmuda Trlari- gle" ( 1975. Mystery) Fred MacMurray. Donne Miits A retired bvSlneSlman loses his fascination with the Betmude Triangle wtleti his flanc.e and friends van.eh wtll4e oo 11 pleasure crul&e 1n the erea ( I hr 30 mln;l.c l :'i:~= .. , ... -(I) -·-A.J arid Rici< try to help a high ael'lool 1tudenl who ~s qull dtVQI and lhtn rUM e:Ey aftet t>oing framed by hel IOu~ c (R) 0 If • hr) B e ~ Sam and ch decide to go beck to tchool to get their high school dlpk>mas, bv1 each soon t>e<:omes e tucher's pet for v.-, d1ffrefent reasons i ' ... mf ..... 22 Sunday,Auguat•. 1985 all llCMI "Wateooo" ( 1971. OfamaJ Rod Sl91Q9f. Christopher Plummer Napo- leon Bonaparte retur,ns lo France follOW· Ing his exile 10 Elba and h!S crushing de- feat by Wellt!"Qlorfs troops al Waterloo (?hrs .• 35 mlf)) e ,_o Blanche's plans '°' escaping fall miserably when she and Debbie are captured and Ued to &takes ( t h1 I ,._TNIU. w1w c1num NA M.L. CGrfACT IMAll (R) mw9 "2010" (1984. Science Frc hon) Roy Scheider, John L1thgow De- spite vOlatlle polltleal tenslOnS. U.S and Russian scientists launch 11 IOllow-up spece mtss.on to investigate the fate o1 a failed voyage to Jupt1er 'PG' (Pay-Per View) ( 1 hr . 54 min ) (0 ) llCMI "2010" (198-4. Science FIC· !Ion) (Pay-Per-View) Roy Scheide<, John L11hgow Oesplle volatile pollllcal tens.iort& U S and RusS1an soentists launch a fOI· IOw-up space m1SS100 10 1nvesttgate the tare ol a failed voyage to Jup1l8f 'PG' I 1 hr . 54 min) llCMI "Apocalypse Now" ( 1979, Ota ma) Marlon Brando Martin Sheen An 1n telligence ageot embarlts on a mrss10n up river "110 the Vietnamese 1ungle to find and krll a renegade AWOL Army oHlcer who has lolled all p<eVIOUS attempts at his capture 'R' 12 hrs 30 min ) Gltu.TTA t:aD CZ~ Sam's masculine smug ness ottends 11 Boston repott&f when she VrSlts the bar to do a story oo the singles scene (R) Cl) .,_ What Price Glof)'?" ( 1952 Comeoy) James Cagney. Dan Dailey A hot·tempefed captain and• loud sergeant clast'I during World War I (2 hrs . 30 min) CH)~ "O'Hara·s Wife" ( 1982, Ota· ma) Edward AS/lef, Manetta Hartle~ An attorney decides 10 pull tt!e plug on the hle·suppcx11ng equipment on whrch his wile 1s survtv1ng and eventually receives counsehng from her gtiost 'PG' ( 1 hr . 27 m1nL -· Cl) DOTI ~ Ruth wants Abby to make LaiJra jealclu$ by staoing an allarr with Greg Ben dlscove<s tNt Joshua rs undermining vars sell-confidence (A) c:;i ,t_I hr) U GD NU ~ IU8 Goldblume saves a young woman's hfe duf1ng an in· vestigallOfl 91 International w .. pons sales Fay risks petjVry 1n an at>vse ease. (R) It hr) 11 t ~Scheduled Bob Brown re potls oo the sexuaAy·tranamttted dlSease chlamydia. an essay on baseball c:;i ( 1 hr, I ,,...., ... ~ Liited by the Chrrstmas sp1r1t. the women pr~ put their tlOf\I toward • ho41day o.lebfat100 I dren (1 tw) 1---CMml&.W .,.. "Harry And Son" ( t984, Ora me) Paul Ntwmen. Robby Benson R4'- c.nlly fifed l1om hie job.• man laces frv" tration eno trres ro get hit son to eriter • respectable PfOfeuion 'PG' ( I hr . S 7 min~ Cl)~-On hii 2Sth birthday, Chlf gailna a boyfr~ bu1 1°"89 an lnl'Mlf• I·~ .. ........ -11a 11n ... .._., II 'DWI,_., -UC.WBl.Y mu.. "Best of Bizarre" Sketches John Byner as switchbdard operator Er nesltne. President Nixon (Byner) laces the press. romance in the elevator. the World News team Super Dave music v1 deo c:;i '*l•a ooo m ... TAii mMm MCMl ...... PUCI .... lala 1111 ICM._ Revolting food and a stack of dirty dishes forces Laura 10 help ~ward 81\d T re1101 while Mary ~way ..... ·=·= llCMI "Vk:e Squad" I 1982. OfamaJ Season Hubley, Gary Swanson A p0llce detectrve and a streetwalker team up ro trap a p.mp responsible for murdering one ot hrS women A ( 1 hr . 35 min ) llCMI "Wild Dallas Honoy" 11982 Adult} Honey Wilder. Sharon Mitchell A wealthy Texas businessman must decide between staying with his w1lf! or his mis tress ( I hr . 30 mrn I (Q) llCMI "Between Lover.. ( 1983. [)fa ma} Jesie Sr James. John Leslie A sue· cesslul tash1on designer discovers her husband having an affair and leaves him to find another man whom she also mar rses ( 1 hr 30 min ) J;llCMI Revenge 01 The N1n1a' ( 1983 Adventure} Sho Kosug1. Arthur Robefts A Jepenese gallery owner denteS his vlo· lf!nt Nln1e heritage until American drug trafltCJ!eta k1dnoip hif, young son 'R' ( 1 hr 28 min) l ....... COCMT ffill CJ) .. Avaml Sia.id Purdey and Gambit travel to Canada 10 tackle a case tnvOlwig a nearly impregnable bUNdlng that kills its intruders (R) ( 1 hr , 10 min ) a GD IUT °' CAMOlt HO'>t Johnny Car son Guests Sett Convy, Shelley Long. lc~~a;>:.:nRay (A) (I hr) O MC ... ~ LOU--.. ... ~ ..... U~ AmllCA Scheduled CllnlC:BI ecologist Debtn Lynn Dadd on tOKIC dan s of everyday prOducts Ct hr ) .... MLOllD t lflOI I 9C&Tllt ... "l '810lle Du NOt<J ' ( t982. Ofa ma) Phll1ppe N01re1, Simone Signoret A oenn1less young man from Brussels robs and mu1oers a wealthy diamond merchan1 whole on a train to PArrs and lat01 seellt refuge 11'1 o boilrdlng ~ PG' (2 hrs ) 81),Ml.llYM ttlll <ll) llCMI "Thia Kiiier Who WQ11ldn't Die" ( 1976. Mystery) Mike ConnOf& Saman- tha Eggar The search fOf the killer of en undelcover agent leads Ohanian 1n10 a • network of intrigue which elmott coat• h1111 hl!I Mt (2 twa , 5 min ) 1198 l'tl Git MOU.NOOD A r~pon locUSlng on tht eitperltnces of bette>r~ women R) , • llJT ... .. 19#. ..... ) .,.. ~Mr Arid Mrs Smith • ( t9JI l Comedy) Corole Lombard, Robert Mont gomery A couple d1scov.r by .-lluke tnet ltttv man~ II •legal (I ht 35 min ) --~1...,.POCUI •cu. -e UTIWwmtOAVIHlllU •I Gueats talk &ho"" hott M.rv Orlltin, C.p- u11n e .. ftlt9rt, •tso .• Vlewtlf l'N•I -0- men~~ 1,_ ,_ 0 Featured· Joe Penny. the Mr. Perteet Dal'lCflfs ( 1 hr ) ....... Cf) .. "The Bottom 01 The Bottle' ( 1956. Ofama) Van Johnson. Joseph Cotten. A lawyer relusea to admt1 that an alcoholic ex-con Is his brother. but he tat- . er risks his reputation 1n ou:ler to help him t2 hrs.) 0 81T91T.-T TcmGHT Interview with Unda Evans, a profile ot actress 1ur11ed writet Carroll Baker m .,. "The Barbary Coast' I 1 97~ Adventure) Wiiiiam Shatner Oem11s Cole A man assumes a vanely ot 1dent1hes n order toe:= evildoers (2 hrs I I LM,• CMmu M .... WM0 QPT A •CMT Tht> story of Qofo1hy McKlbbm. the gale keeper fOf Los Alamos during 1he devel i ment of the atomlC t>omb ..... LOii) Mn'O UC. NASCAR Summer 500 lrom Pocono. Pa (R) (2 hfS) .,.. "Purple Ram" ( 1984 Musical) Pnnce, Apolloola KOllfO A young Minne &polis singer's SO<dld famlly bacl<ground proYldes the Impetus for his rtse to the lop ot the contemporary music world and en ableS him 10 find love wllh a winsome rock prtnoess 'R' ( I hr . 51 min ) (0).,. "L'Amour" (1984. Adull) Har ry Reems. Angel Domestic sparks fly be tWflen a ma n and hts new wile when his tarlure 10 make a11mo'D' payments Ptompts hrs ex-wile and their lusty teen· aged aon to move In with them ( 1 hr 25 min.) · • (I)._, llAlaOW: 1'MI COllC8IT AT ..... ... PAUCI Old hill and new songs 1n eluding "We'll Meet Again" 1n an open-air concert held 1n Oxtordsh11e. England I 1 hr ,30mtn) .... (J) .,. "Manbeas11 Myth Or Mon ster" ( 1977. Orama) Peter Byrne Oram allled StghttngS of the legendery Bigfoot the man·monater allegedly seen In the Pa clfte Northwest. the Louisiana oeyou country, and In Nepal aa the Aoom1nable Snowman (~ ~ t ht . 20 min ) -OMt flOUt TU ITO.I Adults who have dlseppeared wllhoul a trace and the deYastaling ef1ects on 1he11 families. ( 1 hf ) •111.ccmu.u. .,. "No Men QI He1 Own· t 1950. Orama) Barbara Stanwyck. John Lund A woman is blackmatled 111ter ossumlnQ Ille _,..Way __ .._...11ov1es- "CC> "Aepo Man" (1984. Comedy) fmrho Es1evez. Harry Oean Stanton ( 1 hr 33 rn1n) ' • "The Black Stallion Returns' ( t983 Ad¥enture) Kelly ~. T lfl Garr ( t hr 33 n)l(I ) • · "Grand Bnby'' I 1981. Drema) ~stoor Rolle, Larry 8. Scott ( 1 hr , 68 min ) J'91Jl) "The Rat Race" ( 1960, Comedy) Tony Cuttls, Debbie Roynotds (2 hrs ) •(%) "Strange Invader•" (1982. Science ACllOn) Pevt LeMat, Nancy Allen ( 1 hr 2il min ) •CC> "Chompt0nt" < 1984, Bioot•phyl John Hott. fd'#ard Woodward ( f ht ~5 """ ) C "The T11ry Fo• Story" f 1983 9!()0rl'I identity of a dead passenger following a train crash (2 hrs , 5 min.) I= "The Hasty Heart" ( 1950, Ora- ma) Ronald Reagan, Patricia Neal A ter- minally Ill SOidier linds peace when he Is befriended by ltYe wounded soldiers In a ~~rs) .~I=· --IOOM't CGU..IC1IOM t/11 LOft ... ~ AU.•TMl,Al&Y. ,... THI Loe I ) DAI IOOT lt1 this Getman-lelevtsiOO presentation. a young U·boat crew leaves port m 194 t from Occupied France and laces monotonous days at sea 1n1errup1ed by skirmishes wtth the enemy. Stars Jur· gen Prochnow Herbert Gronemeyer ~~=.r~o12) (3hrsi {t)llOWll "Oelidly Force" ( t983 Orama) Wings Hauser Joyce Ingalls A lorme1 cop sets out to llnd the psychopath who carved a fatal X on a woman s forehead A' { I hr , JS mm ) Uil llO¥ll "Hanky Panky" ( 1982, Come- dy) Gene Wilder. Gilda Radner An 1nno- cen1 architect who was framed tor a mur- der and a woman whose b101her comm1lled SUIClde are thrown together 1n a dange<ous game ol 1ntngue ·pa· ( 1 hr . .. ,50 00~ ... 9MTWATQC ---.... AU.• TMI 'Al& y llO¥ll "Purple Rain" ( 1984. Mustcal) Prince. Apollonla Kotero A young MinM- apohs singer's sordid fa mily background provides lhe 1mpe1us for hlS rrse to the top of lhe contemporary music world and en· ables him to find love w1lh a winsome rock princess R ( 1 hr 5 t min ) '1) llO¥ll "The Night Runner' ( 1957 Orama) Ray Danton. Merry Andefs A mental patient on leave from an asylum e.11plodes in rage over a remark made by hts grrlfnend's father ( t hr , 30 min ) Hl(S) llO¥ll Ctoak And Dagget" ( 1984 Suspense) Henry Thomas. Dabney C<>lf>- man An t t ·year-old with en OVefZealous 11nag1nal1011 beeomes entangled 1n a real· hie spy adventure when he witnesses a murder and the !hell of lop-secret m1111ary docu=s 'PG' Q ( 1 hr • 4 t min ) tllfl "The Story 0 1 Dr Wassell" t 1944, Orama) Gary Coooe1 l ora1ne phy) Robert Ouvnn Eric Ftyet ( 1 hr , 35 min) CSJ "Sl&r Trek Ill The Search f'or Spock" ( 1984. ScierlCe r1et1onJ Wllh&m Shatl\ef, DeForest Kelley ( 1 hr 45 min ) •<CJJ "Beyond Ttw Unlit" ( 1983 Drama) Mich&t!I C81ne, Rtchard Gefe ( t hr 43 mrnJ Cl l The Club· ( 1980 Orama) J&etc Thomp'i()n <>rnh.1m Kennedy ( 1 hf 39 mm ) we "Abboll And Costello Meet The Kiiier, 80!'1S Karloff" ( t949, Comedy) 9()(19 l<ar- tolf. Garry MOOfe ( I hr . 30 min ) -(C) "SV'\PICIOO" ( 1941, Suspenae) Cary Gu.tnt . .io.tn Fontaine 0t1ocfed by Alfr9d H1tche0Ck ( t hr 39 min ) (ti) "Otill 01 The C.ntury" ( 1913, Come dyl Cl'ltvy Chase, SlgOUmty w~. I 1 ht 38m1n.) Day Or. RoydOn M Wassell, a he10IC Navy man. rescues Amerlean troops lrom the Japanese (2 his . 30 rnln ) Cf) lllMITOMI ... m .,_ "The Human Comedy' ( 1!M3, Orama) MICkey Rooney, James Craig An adaptation of W1111am Saroyan's portrait ot a smaH-town California lamily during . Wor1d War II, '" whtch the eldest soo goes to war ·f)nd hlr. you11ge1 brolhe1 takei. charge of support111u 11r.., 1,,, 111y (/ tirs 30mln) IOllmWMMJ ---ecmt MM WI "10llTI J'OCUI .,. "'The Deai1 l oop ( 198J Suspense) Chr1s1ophf'1 Walkf'n Brool<f' Adams Alte1 coming out ot a c..oma, a shy schoolteacher has tht> powfl1 to 1ore">ttP and change c.a1as1rcpt11r e~erils R 1 t hr , 42 min I .. ,..w,.,.•; lrl .. AmOTT .. cotTILLO m¥ll 'Randy Ride'> AIOr>e' t 1934 Westetn) John Wayne Alberta Vaugh11 A cowboy 1nliltrates a11 011llAv. gang l•J gather evtderice agau1s1 th•f'lvP who r<rn1 l ed -r~omptlllY otf.1.u ( 1 h1 I latOOllLR TO• *lllOllllCID lltl .,_ "Hardcore' ( 1979 Orama) Geo<ge C Scott Season Hubley A con cerned lather leaves me peaceful sur round1ngs ot his home lown 10 Sllarch tor his daughte< who has become heavlly 1n volved in a b4g·Clly pornogrJphy rncket 'R' ( I hr . 46 min ) -·1,MTM• ..... "" .. ca. -.&.Ill 118 .... llAll.OWI: MVATI m Marlowe rs the prime suspect when fl t100d he was hued to bodyguard 1s found de11d (.,l .. llOWll 'The Westemer 11940 We~1 ern) Gary Cooper Wa1t11r 81Ann11n A dntter attempls to put '"' t•l'lc1 10 lu(.k)• Roy Bean's 1eig11 of lt:'m 1 111 ""' w, . .,,, ( 1 .. 1hr.:LM • r•nOOMI m 11mt tcA-. WMA"llYLm llOWll "\/~e SQuad.. ( 1987 CJu 111111) Seeson Hubley. Gary Sw1Jnwn A Pollet> delect1ve and i\ streetwnll.Qf fp.1111 up ,,. lrap a pimp respons1bll' tor murr1.,111u..1 0111 ot his women R I 1 111 J"i "'"' ) (I) "01\ffl A CM A 91rnlt I 19•,.c Mu'.I col) Marg,. .mo <lowPr I 11o1111pk><•, ln·t>t•u Reynold!. ( 1 hr ?? 111111 I -Ill) 'ThP Atg MO\Jlh" ( 1 ~6T l.urn~OyJ Jerry Lew•~ Hdrold J Stoi~ (<' tus I tW(0)' Raldf\ri; Ot Tt11 I otl Ark" { 19M I All venture) H<H11.on r llfd K"'"" Allon 1 1 h<.~51111n) CZ>. S11 t~ Ot r 11e' ( t9tl• °'""' 1) M1 chott'll P ,,. 0.at'lf> Lat c I hr 3• mtn ) tWG "Denttst Ort Tht! Job" (1961, c~ dy) Sob Monkhouse ft hf , 30 mtn I -at1ernooa 11ovte.- -· 'The lion And Tht! Hof911" ( 1952, W•tern) Stew Cochren. Shefrv .i.ci..son Sunday Augus1 4, 1985 23 ~.hrs) (C) "The Buddy System" (1984. Come- dy) Richard Dreyfuss. Susan Sarandon I 1 hr , 50 min ) ' Brady's Escape" ( 1984, AdVeOture) John Savage. Kelly Reno ( 1 hr • 36 min ) (S) "Mother lode" (1982, Drama) Chari ion Heston. Nick Mancuso ( 1 hr , 4 1 min) W (O) "The Oevonsv1lle Terror" (1981. Hor- ror) Sµzanna love, Robert Welker ( 1 hr 22 min) 'Red Dawn ( 1984. Advenlure) Pa Irick Swayze, C Thomas Howell ( 1 hr , 54 m1n) t:ll "Zehg" ( 1983 Comedy) Woody Al len, Mia Farrow ( 1 hr , 24 min ) -~'Coney ISiand" (1943. J;4usical) Betty Grable, Cesar Romero ( 1 hr . 36 min ) (I) "The PrOdigar· (1955. Drama) Lana Turner. Edmund Purdom ( 1 hr , 52 min) .. (0) "Beyond The L1m1t" ( 1983, Drama) Michael Caine. Atehard Gere ( 1 hr , 43 min) 19(%) "Strange Invaders" ( t982, Science Ftellon) Paul LeMat. Nancy Allen ( t hr 29 min) -~ "Champions' (1984, Biography) John Hurt, Edward Woodward ( 1 hr . 55 min) (_SJ "The Black Stalhon Returns" (1983 Adventure) Kelly Reno. Ten Garr ( 1 hr . 33mln) UI® "Grand Baby I 1981 Drama) Esther Rolle, Larry B Scou ( 1 hr . 58 min ) .. CO) "Cheech And Chong's The Corsi can Brothers" ( 1984 Comedy) Cheec.h Mann. Tommy Chong ( 1 hr . 27 min) (%.) "The L1t1le Fo~es" ( 1941, Drama) Belle D11v1s, Herber! Marshall ( 1 hr 56 min) .. dl> "Oestry Rodes Again · ( 1939. West em) James Srewart, Marlene Dietrich (2 hrs) -Evening----.. ••<11 ... Cll ... aM*..., IQUMIRQlle ,....~.,,, IUCI.,_ • lllllmiollT .... P--=allMCI WCTOlt'f ~ Jim Wilson checks progress at Victory Garden South; Bob ThOmson tours Chlcauo's Botanical Gar dens CC) PMI. -HIMT1 MD IOml Paul Simon perlorms select100s from his album 'Hearts and Bones" and discusses his music car~ (HJ .,. "Curse 0 1 The Pink Panlhor" ( 1983, Comedy) Ted Wass. David Niven ·A bum~1ng New York. City ce>p 1nteN1ews a host ol susp1C1ous characters 10 his 1n- v1tst1Q11t1on of ttm lhefl of the fabulous Pink Panther diamond ·po· ( 1 hf • 40 flllll ) ($)mvtl 'Morher lode" ( 1982. Drama) Cha11ton Heston Nick Mancuso A Scot fish m1ne1 t11eS to piotect his gold 11om vn~rupulous tree,ure hunters PO' ( 1 -1~5:7= •DAYATA119 W /~WIW _tlll..._ 2• Sunday. August 4. 1985 .. Ill ADAm .... ..,WClllLD (C) ... "Cheech And Cl"long's The Co1 sican Brothers" ( 1984. Comedy) Cheech Marin, Tommy Chong Two offbeat and off-key Pans street ll'lU$IClans meet a Gyp- sy who rens them lhe accO'Jnt or their lnobl=iSO 'PG' (1 hr 27 min I ,.. Cll ... ®) BnlRTAlllllNf TOllGH'r Ben1nd lhe scenes of the John Lennon Yoko 0110 movie biography, an mte1vHlw with 50s actress AOlla Ekberg I ~':,"'~ Tom Jones demoh1t6r1 ~ts Mork and Doug Lo1zeau>< ..:'"*NI · &5540. George bets w11h l""Jor ence that he can accomphsh 1n thr~ l"""E-4i:::··do·oa•ay Q ., ..... ..aRT ) (0) mcMI "Raiders Of The Lost Ark" {1981, Adventure) Hamson r ord Karen Allen In t936 a globf> trotting arc.heolo· g1st-adventure1 races Nazi evildoers for a legendary religious art1lac1 of enormous power narrowly esc11p1ng dOZP.ns ol death traps en route PG ( 1 hr 5C, min ) 'l l MOVll "Doctor Dttlro11" (1983, ComP- dy) Dan Aykroyd Donna Otl(On A t11111d college piofessor 1s rPG1ut1ed to takP th• place ol a pimp and soon finds h1mc;e1t en1oymg h•S new occupahon 'r:l' I 1 hr 31 min) 7llt Ill) '°"1UIT tJll AlmlCA: DILAWAM 1:118 I Oii THI TOWN Featured how lormnr heavyweight contender Ken Norton 1s 1111< 1ng a snot at acrong rt.e soulful succ.e« ol the Nt>w Edrhon· smgmg group a 111s1t tu a training farm tor miniature horses 8 G.HAl&Y FIUD IYI Oii LA. Fealured p.1rl three 111 tM travel series v1s11s a real-hie ·orogtoeda' on lhe Auslrahan Outbac.k the Glen Isla Homestead 10 talk woh A1J',ltltllan cow bOys (rovers) also tx>omt'lr;mg throw1111,1 and a catamaran ndt-A<:rosr Sydney h111 bor l :::O~uam rA•t ... IMllAlllY UWllQ DCMa.I LMI Colleen Dewh111<-1 is joined by psych1atr1st Robert Jay l 1fton and residents of Charlottesvllle Va 1n this e11aminot100 ol the psychologK"11I ellec.rs ol the threat of nuclear war 6i) .... TOii ... • IWYllW Q m llCMI "Shak~wn" C.1950 Drema) Howard Dull. Brian Oonlevy In an •ttempt 10 promore his pho~rftphy Ol!8e', a m1tn becomes Involved 'with rac:kel&ers, rob befy and blackmall ( I hr 30 min ) .. I) Cl> DUCll tJll NAZUN> A pnir ot wily escaped convie1s lorco Bo and t uke to help them ovoid the police' (R) ( 1 hr I DOD~-KITT ~ foice<J1'1tn .m acid pit dlJrn~ Michael'!.! 111ve-.11i:111110t1 of .1 commercial dump&lle su!lpectnd or µullut the area (R) t;J ( 1 hr ) 0 WT'li Webster and C>eorQe c.J vOfl in bear costumes. hOJllr1g to cur" Kalher1no ol h4)1 Cf\J'J1 on 11 COll!"QtJ prol.-; sor ~...., . l~Recl Line 7000' t l'l65 O<a- ma) Jft~ C.1n I riura Devon Thtt tive<s and k>v~ ol lhree rnc•ng e11mu-.111sts re floct the IOl'l'JIOns 1n11ofvf"d with tn. -ipo1t !? hrt} aa w1.a.A1911111o•.-T'"Olf'lll -·~0 Gl),._.TMILOM '1i) WM.L ,,_., -Guest. David Holt president. 1 L Commumcatloos, Inc CCJ mcMI ·The Omen" ( 11H6, Horror} Gregory Peel\. Lee Remick A mysteuous 5 year-old boy e•erc1ses deadly powers to dfl-.11oy those who become suspicious ot h • s11ange b111h11ght A' ( 1 hr . 51 min ) !H MOYIE Tha Adventures Of Buckaroo B11nza1 Across The 8th Otmens1on" 11984 Science F1Ct10n) Peter Weller Jottn L11h<,)ow A band ot adventurers bar llP enemy aliens who are accidentally re IPllS~ from the 8th dimension as a result ol .1 rewarcher's expernnents 'PG' ( 1 hr 43 mm J tSI llOVll "Siar Trek 111· The Search For Spock" I 1984. Science Flelion) William Shatner DeForesr Kelley Adm Ktrk reas semble!> lhe crew ol the starship En IPrpnse for one fine! voyage ·10 try and re-.cue Mr Spock whose spml remains .Jhve on lhe r.ip1dly degenerating Genesis planet PG Q ( 1 hr . 45 min ) .. (f1) MmALL Allanla Braves at Sar;! Frar c1sco Giants (2 hrs 45 ~ t:tlO IMTW I NIMn T PCM THI Alm:M:AI Santana and Heart Join togeth- er 1n 1h1s Anos de Chavon, Dominican At> 1 ul)hc concer1 that lttatures lhe songs Crary on You. · All I Eve' Wanled, • Ma2.1._c Man" and · Search1n· " ( 1 hr ) 0 ®) co.DY 'ACT°"' "Fast Food" A worker at a last loOd 1oint lrequel)1ed by c.tillege students runs into personal and proless1011al d1ll1cullies Guest i lar Avery Schr1>1be1 0 nc TAJ; DOUGH G)P.M.M.ACWm m WM.L l1MIT WllK Guest David Holl piestdent. TL CommuntCattons. Inc '1i> • COOPa I GRAW Ccun'Y · Jun101 l Pague Of Newpott Harbor" A IOOk ar rhe developrnenl ot Proiect SEAL -Sale. Edu c. 1IPl:l !\warp and Loved. a"ch1ld ~xual rlbll'lfl pro1ect and llS I~ term lutuft 88 8 l.ommun1t~vice EJ__,. 18 • • 'Z) at•IUI CMAM.lf1* ,,..0. tea. .. I) (I) MON "Zorro The Gay Blade' f 1q01. Comedy) George Hamilton. Lau rPn Hullon The herOIC son of Old Calllor nm s 1amou!, 1us11ce fighter 111 1ncapaclta1 1>d by .1n in1ury. forcing his foppish bro ther to 00f1 the cape and mask (R) (2 hrs ) 0 &> llOTOWllMWI (Prem1ere) Come d1nn Arsemo Hall and actor Leo O'Brien Jrnn host Smokey Robinson as regulars 1n this ~So<; comedy S8f leatUf1ng per tnfmances from some of lhe rop recording 1irtoc;1s and comedians Tonight's guests Slev•e Wond6r OeBarge and Vanity {I hr) 8 ®I ~ Bflnson and Clayton diS cover KAllO and Mr cousin 1n a bar w1lh a pBtr OI COiiege m n (R) Q .... ten Skf•tche"l late niQht toll( show hO"~I Sammy M•udlln (Joe r1ahe1ty) we1 c~ Rob Hope (Dave ThOmnt) and Ao~1~(ugene I ~vy) l .UT•m-....:O ..... '"' "°"' ,_.Lim "Tho Trouble With Law· y-.1s" Guests U S Court of Ap~ats Judge Rot>Prt Bork a1101ney HaHlet Pol Pf'I, Benrl(') Schmidt. Dean of C(')lumblll Un1==chool (I hr ) Cf1 CO) MOVll "E~tric Dreams" (1 98•. (;orotdy) Loony Von Oohlen. Virginia Madsen An unu"Ual love rrlangle ~°"' when a bumt>flng San Frendsco er Chllf'C1 pr()gflt'l\S hit J)ftl'M>l'lll compv1•r -l'riclay Cont. to compose love songs f()( a captivallng celltSI whO moves into hie; .\partment t>o1ldlng 'PG' ( t hr 35 min I ZJ MO'Wll "Slleets Or F11e" ( 1984 Ord ma) Mlchael Pare. Diane I ane A r(l('k 'n' roo fable' about a tock singer lud napped by an outlaw gang and her rescue by a dashing ex-boyfriend and a tough-g11I ad'lentur9f 'PG' ( 1 hr 34 min ) -1=--a OflP THI AAClt A brusque loud mouth and his late business partner's w1d ow become the reluctant co owners of a nearly bankrupt Los ~elec; garme'lt c~any (RJ Q (!).,.'While Heal' ( 1949 DramdJ James Cagney, Vrrg1n1a Mayo A rutl">I(" k1llef turf\$ out to have an OHl•JJUS co•,, piex (2 hrs . 30 min.) (£),..um IOxm John The Bea!>I~ Mugabi vs BUI Bre<ltey tn d m10dlf>we1hl bout scheduled 10< tO rounds from Allan hcC~. N J (A) (2hrs) .. D m llAlmVICI Crocltetl and Tubbs are assigned to protect the Ille ol a mobs1e1 long enough !Of him to testily aga1ns1 d rival crime boss (R) I 1 hr ) 1 •1:.. llOtT U.AM.UllMO ••nt In this eeghlh edlllOO StEWe Al len takes • loolc at film oullakes leaturo1.y Madeline Kahn, Susan Saint James and Jane Curlin, al'IO. Jamie Farr show-. so111e loul-ups from "M·A•S·H ' (R) "j ( t hf) ,,,,,..,~ -THllCml .,.. ......... C THI 000. DMD Oii ,_ llO¥ll "Making The GradP ( 1984 Comedy) Judd Nelson. Dana Olsen A SPotled rich kid otte1s S tO 000 to d s.tret!t wise teen· ager to lintSh out h~ las.I year .;it e!_~P school !Of him 'A' { t hr 4~ min ) £)MOWll The LonelY. Guy ( 1984 Com edy) Steve Martin. Charles Gr0d1n Alter his g111frteod leaves him a young man faces a lonely kle and writes a best-sel1t11n book that serves as a guide lor other lone some men 'A' ( 1 hr . 30 min ) .... 1t1I ...,.,. ..,.,?ESIQ .... ..,, ... ....... C8ft'a DM.LM .... WGM.DOICMTOOl•IQ -~TIACU tW D•CllO flDIDI TAii vmo• MClll..._..PUCI .-..-.a.a THI ICM-Trevor and Howard con !root the lntur•nce ml'ln wno ran away Wt th~~ MOWll "New York NIQhts" ( t~ ~ Adull) COf1nne Alphen George Ay,.r The amo..ous adventures of nine New Yo1k so coafit~. Including an lnternallonal rock star and• Untied Natl()('IS d1plom11t 'A' ( 1 hr. ,3 mtn ) Cl.) IUYIOn CAllllD CMBA (OJ MOWll "Wild oana<i Honey· ( 1982 Adull) Honey Wtlder. Sharon M11cht!ll A wealthy Te11aa bostnessman mus1 d1.>ci<1e btlween 1tay1ng w11h hi' w1f1t 01 h15 m1< lrf!U ( I hr . 30 min ) (Z)llCMI 'Slrange Invaders·· ( 198?. 5<;1 ~•f:"iction) Paul LeMat Nt1ncy Allen Supet-1111~1 belngt from 'P<K• "'•t• 1111ll1e 1n • r.m II m1dwe ttrn town and a~ iumo the bOd Ol tlS rtS•dMt!J 'PG' (I hr ?(!min) m•PQIU.WB 119 (.U') llQMT ftACU tt:il IJ <Il MO¥ll Man lr1 • e W11de11·~·· ( 1911. Adventure) Richard Harris. John I lust on L ell tor dead alter being mauled oy a grizzly bear. a fur trapper-manages to survive and seelts revenge on his expedl- hon companions who abandoned him 1R1 (2 hrs. fO min.) 0 ('Ii) IDT OI CAMOlt H~t Johnny Car- SO<l Guests Liberace, 8111 Mahef, Ctlo Gotdsm11h, also. a mOfon movies seg· ment (R) ( 1 hr ) U Ul\lllDAYllGMT 13 NACMAMCllll•r•a.rt LOUIMNT YIQAS m ROCDOM> PU1 fZ) UTIJlmfT ~A Scheduled· author David J G1zesiek ("Flnancial lndepen<J- enc.e Through Buying and Investing 1n Sin- ~ Faintly Homes") ( t hr) W flllMI THI LON> E lfalT'ICllf1'8 [,llCMI Between lovers' (1983. Ora- maJ Jes1e St James, John Leslie A suc- cesstut 1ash1on designer discOYeT"S he< nusband h<1111ng an aflair and leaves him t ' find another man w h()m she also mar roes (1 hr 30mm) m PAUL.RYAN ,,,_, S1llCMI Murder In Space · ( 1985. Mys- tAry) Wilfred B11mley. Martin Balsam Our- 111g the return voyage of the flrst manned 1111ss1on lo Mars, members of the 1nterna- 1ooat c1ew wtncri includes U S and Sovi- et ~1ent1i.ts are systematically murdered l!y an unl\nown li.1lle< ( t hr 30 mm.) ,,. H MOW Where The Boys Are '84" ( t984. Comedy) usa Hartman, Russell T uOd Four college women travel to Fort l audl'r<1ale lor wme tun and romance t>ut run into problems of the hear1 'R' Q ( t tor 37 min) ml l OJ) MC IHI_,,,_ . mMm ••• w ... I PIA* THI LON) ( !DAVllCW-._ US vs West Ger many m dec1d1ng match lrom HambUrg West Germany (R) ( t hr 30 min) m111c:w1 ml (JZ).., TMCll 1!:110 fl) fllmAY .-.T V'1D101 VideOs by 011e Straits ("Money lor Nothing"), Rick James ("Glow"). Sung ("If You Love Somebody"). the Motels ("Shame"), Michael McDooald ("No l~tn' Back") t 1 hr 30 min) 0 TAUS,_ THI D.WC-Heeding lhe ad111ce or a fortune teller. • woman from a smd11 19.Wa town &els out to find the Saoit taw1n ol her dreams QOOCIW L.A.: VtDIOI MO'W11 "The Navy Vs The Night Mon sters ( 1966, Science Fiction) Mamie Vdn Ooreo Pamela MalOI\ A beau11lut 111us.P end a Na11al officer encouoter mAn ea1t~g underwater 11egetahon (2 hrs ) OJ .. YOM NOT llM*I Scheduled. v1-ooos by Rockwell, New Edition, AshfOfd A S1mp'IOO MadonOa laura Branigan (I hr) CD llCMI tt()udln1" ( t9!>3 BtOQr lphy) Tony Cu1t1 ... Janet Leigh TM ~ta ol t~ world s greatest e~pe erus1 is fictt0n4'll lllld ( 2 ht$ ) m LOW. MmlCAM mu &;) CA&..,... THl-..CU. .... Cart Sog ,, dltclr. nucttor winter the ltt "10! j'..IMtlC 1esults that, lottowing nuc:tttnr att.,1.k. WOUid t>l<Y~ 1he eetth a9Ufll!Qht O .,_ "l el\ hlk S.w~" ( 1983. Adu·tl fi1111g tr. Mr1nc.ot O.w 1d nnnon Opt;r.i tr1r• 11t • 11111Qtl" I t\.!1049 c iwny S~t I· ize '" making daydreams come true ( l hr . 20mln) MOWll "Red pawn" ( 1984. Adven- rure) Patrick Swayze. C Thomas Howell When Communist paratroopers invade a small U S town and begin 10 Sia~ 1ta tnhabltanls. a group of high schoOI stu- dents desperately fights becit 'PG-13' ( 1 hr ,5'mln ) tl9CC) mWll "Angel" ( 1984. Orama) Clllf Gorman. Susan Tyrrell An Intelligent stu- dent turns to prostitution 90 that she can pay lhe tuition at an ewctuSive high school 'A' ( 1 hr , 32 min ) "'I'll&' .WW 'The Sins Of Rachel Cade" ( 1961 Orama) Angle Dickinson. Peter Finch A m.ssionary loses lhe respect of the natives after she succumbs to temptd hon (2 hrs) • ..__.LON> MOWll ''The Devonsvtlle Terror ( 198 t Horror) Suzanna love. Robert Walke1 A mooem-day witch wreaks oe s1ruc11on and terror tn a small town to seek revenge IOf the deaths ot her ances- tors (I hr .. 22 min I w•::::CU tit(]) MOWll "Joysticks ( 1983 Comeoy) Joe Don Baker A successful t>usmessman attempts to shut d<>wn a v1de0 arcade that he belie11es 1s harmful to the mental health of children 'R' ( 1 rir 28 min ) 1=11a-.1NOW (() AUTO UC. CART Prov1m1 Veal 200 from Elkhart Lake WIS IA! (I hr 30 min) WNOOPt GOU>IOQ DmCT AK>ll -...AY WhOOP• Goldberg, actress and comic, creates hve characters ranging from a streetwise thief 10 a CahfOfma surfer 1n a special taped at New Y0<k's ~cevm Theater 1n March 1985 ( 1 hr ) Ml B MOWll Alvarez Kelly ( 1966. West em) w1n1am HOiden. Richard Widmark An aoventurer b"ng1ng a herd of 2500 cattle to the Union Army •S abducted by Contedera::.h'rtllas (2 hrs . 20 min ) •111 "The Glass Key· (1942 Mys tery) Ata n Ladd. V9fontea Lake Based on the SIO<Y by DashteU Hammett Crooked polltk:s and gangsters make a dangerous mu1ture tor a tough private eye. ~hr . 4~m1n) D 90Wll "Hong Kong" (1951, Actven ture) Ronald Reagan. Rhonda Fleming A mercenary hndS his conscience tested when he en<:QUJllers an Ofphan girl who has access to a IOltune 1n Jewel$ (2 hrs ) a!> ,..__ TMI U*> , CO') llO¥ll "The De11onsvtue Terr<" (1 981. Horror) Suzanne Lrve R<:•t'P't Walket A modern 1a) witch .... reakt. ». 'tructlOI' arid 1err0 1n a >IT\aM town lo •Nik re~trtUtt for th4 Oedthl ot he< ances ::i~ i ... "[)amond H .. d" 11963 Ora !'Na) Charlton Heaton. Vvetr• M.mewt A we !thy Hawail8n prttetces • dOUbl4l ti n Oard when he~ his !;1919''1 ptaM to mar1y a hall breed Ha~alion wnlle he tum s.e11 hat e Pfeonant m1Strns. (2 hra 30 '1"Hn ) ·-THl--l~)--''~lnSt All Od<D" ( t984. DIA ma) Raehltl Ward, Jeff Bndges A ladtng pr~ 1004beN P'a'f9' I in IO¥e with lhfl 0trlt11end of am II time hOOd Sunday,August4. 1985 25 -l'riclay Coal. and becomes involved with shady, hlgh- etake& real estate dealings 'A' O (2 hrs .• 8m1n) CH) llCMI "The F1nal Option" ( 1982, Ora ma 1 Judy Davis Lawis Collins An anti· nuclear group seizes control of the Amtrl· can Embassy In London and warM tN!t government hostages wlU be murdered II rt& demands are not met 'R' (2 hrs.. 4 min) llCMI "Beyond The Limit" ( 1983, Orama) MICl'll.lel Caine. RICl'll.lrd Gere. An English physic1en acts to 1eeure the re- lease of Britain's hOn<xary eontul In Ar· gen11na kidnapped by revOWtlonarles 'R' p tv , 43m1n ) (Z'J llCMI "Plan 9 From OVter Space" ( 1959 Horror) Beta LUQ051. Mona McKln- noo UFOs con1a1n1ng strange lnl'll.lbllants from an unknown planet 1n118de Eanh. ( t hr . 19m1n l Ma'!) M!UQIOUI NOQll• Ill .. Cf) AllOTT Ml> COITB.LO Cl) llCMI "Red River Range" ( t938, WP"'.tern) John Wayne Ray Corrtgan The 1 hlee Me.,qu11eeu. S'll out 10 nab a gang t <,.Jttk' thtf!llPS OPflrallng along the Red ' t~~r fl t.r ) t~ ... Ell>FOllDtWJI • f ) AUTO UCllQ IHRA Molorcralt North ·rn Nal1<..n11is from M11an Mtch (R) ( t lalurclay hr) • 1111(1) m¥ll "Spdsms" (1983, Suspense) Oliver Reed, Peter Fonda A demonic snake transported to the U.S. for research purposes wreaks havoc and tenor In a _1comzMli~~·'ft. 29 min J U_,_,,Al&Y ... "Beyond The Limit" (1983, Drama) Michael Caine, Richard Gere An Englllh physlelan &ell to MCU<• the re- lease of Britain'• honorary contol In Ar· gentlna, kidnapped by revolutionaries 'R' * hr , 43mln) -MISC1'MILW .. llOWm "Hopplt Goes To Town" 941, M~I) Animated A vlllaln threatens the peaceful resldeota of Buo· vllle~r . 45 mm.t •9 T'Oarlng Cleme" (1968. Drama) Lloyd Bridges, Nico Mlnardos A man searches a Larin American ISiand 10< the ht..Sband and daughter of a formet girl Irle~ i :.=.. .... P001ULL (R) f-E .,. "Psycho II" ( 1983. Myst8fy) Anthony Perkins, Meg Tiiiy. Fomier psy· chohc l<Hler Norman BatM Is released at ter a 20-year stay 1n a mental Institution and believes hims.elf cured until a myater1 ous rash of murdefs begins 'A' ( t hr 51 '9IOMllOI ... OIWAU ITMIT ~ -.m &.-:=.. ... •U-.DMYMRR ..,. tiANa\YllOAIDll ..... CM"MmO _._.. . .,.. ~~:.P:Q lll•.UTllT ••ITI .,. "Stopatlck Ot Another Ktnd" ( 198", Comedy) Jerry Lewi., Madeline Kahn ( I hr • 27 min I ... "Smokey And The Bandit Part 3" ( 1983. Comedy) Jackie Oleasoo, .i.r c ~hr. 25mln) ,... wnM ....., -'" ·uM.-Mll ... ,..,. ... ~ma• I YWftt:::= Lll81Mf ... NMITONM.I ,__ ..a&L -·--· .... MWDT 119 ... "Band 0t Angela" ( t957. Ad· vefllurt) Cllrk G11>'8. Sidney P01titf (2 ,.., •.• 45 min. .. t=::•--IUNfuml 0_..,a.oTI ftillTU .... UCllTOICMOCl.'AUDI ----~ .... lm1n'9.an llY Lie -··-tu.l&llCN .. .,.,..,.. • Mm ICOM / ccm11n C#tL8eM llCMI "Cheech And Cnong'a The Cor· S1Can Sfethela" ( 1984, Comedy) Cheech Mar1n. Tommy Chong Two ottbeet 1nd oll-key Perla street musician• meet a Gyp- ay who tells them the account of their noble lineage 'PG' (1 hr, 27 mn.) I WMAftllYLle • m...r llCMI "Cheech And Chong's The Cor· SK:an Brothera" ( 1984, Comedy) Cheech Marin, Tommy Chong Two offbeat and oll·kity Pans street musicians meet 1 Gyp- sy who lltlls lhem the account of their ~~. 'P-G' ( 1 hr....,-27 min.) 419® llOVll "The Terry Fox Story" ( 1983, B10graphy) Robert Duvall. Eric Fryer Based on the true story ol a young athlete who, deSPlle havtng lost a leg to the dis· eabe. runs a "Marathon of Hope" ecrosa Canada in a successful bid 10 ratSe money 10r cancer research O ( 1 hr , 35 min ) .. Cf) CMTOOlll f!>llOVll "The Lonely Guy" ( 1984. Com· edy) Sreve Martin. CherleS Grodin Af18f his glrlfnend leaves him, a yoong man laces a lonely Ille and writes a best-telling book that serves as a gUlde for other fon4t. ~men 'R' (t hr , ~min) l mrwwca.o lflt...,,.. •May '1CllTUIT .,. "Tommy' ( t976 M~I) Roger Oallrey, Ann Morgret ( 1 hr 50 min.) l ....... -.ATiit ••• ,.. CMUUI ~OITtllflUI IC9 .,. _.CCUf'IWY __ 1::11 (I) Dnt•M I •AIM 9 11190TC OICA9UI ~-:.:!!· -~ ,Al&, - llCMI "Strange lnvadeta" ( 1982, Sci· ence·FlctlOn) Paul LeMat. Nancy Allen (lhr ,29mlfl) • CS> llOVll "Ra Illes' (t 940. COmedYI Oii vtn de Havilland. David Niven ( 1 fir • 12 min) llOVll "The Lillie Foxes" (HM 1, Or•· ma) Bette Oavts, Herbert M1rlhlll ( 1 hr • -15•t:== ITMT OP talm't• • llOWm "Almo11 Summer" (1978. Comedy) Oldl Conn, Tim Mat~ I' hrl) ·-----~ ... .,,... UW'UflUI .. "Pickwick P1per1" ( 19!12, Comedy J&mes Heyter. JAmea Oonlld) (~ hra) fO) .. "Pickwick PaJ:rt" ( 1962. i~mes Ha'(ler. ""*Donald .......... u a:l ICOOIY.eoo ffti IWi Q --au. -lalurclay Cont. l mMflM'fllft ALV.•nt1aM1•1 C..WAYGAm ,,_ Volvo lnterna1.ona1 sem1l1nal marches. live from Stratton Mountain. VI tJ hrs) ... (I) Cll ITCMYRAK 'Arnold Of The Ducks" Animated Host Bob KeesMn narrates this story about a lost t>oy who 1s resc~d reared by a lam11y of oucks (R) Q D 0) IAmALL Reg1on11I coverage ot Ch1cayo Cubs at New York Mets or Call tornia Angels at Minnesota Twins (3 l""E:~..= ..... aulmmff "tGUAMPOOTURCmmlG 111..lM ITATIC* • COONlll'I ~COUNTY ''Junior league Of Newport H1rbo1" A look at the oevelOpment of Pro,ect SEAL • Sate Edu cared. Aware and Loved a chtld sexual at>use proiect and its long term future as a communlly servlCe ~ llCMI 'Phar Lap" ( 1983, Drama) Tom 8 urltn60n. Martin Vaughan I 1 hr . 48 mm) <H> llCMI 'Mystery Mansion' ( 1983 Suspem .. e) Dallas McKennon Grep Wynnu ( 1 hr 36 mtn I '$) llOVll "Yovng Bess · ( 1953 Orama) Jean Simmons StewArl Granger ( 1 hr 52m1n) · fUYIAU. ,,-cm. ... .,. -Cll UllD Oii ntl LOIT VIOIOllAT o um.a•o IUllQfU VICTOIYU...... • WWROllAM ........ } llCMI "ChAmp1oni, c 1!184 010gra phy) John Hurt Edward Wooctward I 1 lhr '=hucno. 1W Cll --~ /ROAD.._,. .-:A'ITOPm I!) AIC ill tllm Rew. 'The W1ng1'd C'Alll lJnltkf' Char~ !Ike Eisen rnarm) Uncle Cool (Shrn Ptekens) re !us.es 10 bolteve that 1he11 11uwly acquired hor'J(J Caf\ acfll811Y fly (Pdtl ? ot i) CR) I c SAN PR•MCllCO UTNY't llTCMD PIOl•lll .. .....,.. l l.} tOJllCMI ··P1in1 L .1p" ( 1983. Oritm'1) Torn BurltnSOr1. M;arttn Vnu11h1m ( 1 hr 48 1dlrn1n .J..~y U'8CAlll "'""oet 1MI ..,.. .-:M IAllDIT.Alm Festured Btlly Ocenn ("Suddenly " "Myr;1e1y I ~dy 1 soventh wet>k of 11'19 8nnual 1111rlG" r.onln•.t Arttlhll rmnkhn'11 ·rree w"y of l ovci v1dt10 I I hr I 11CM1 ".l•llf)fb\J9·. I Hl4'.l Com0<1yl Laur I and Hardy, V1V1t1r1 RI ••r'"' I I hr JO mu1) I WAllQll TAILI IGLOACT IUlll'Tm -Alternoon ---• Weste•n> Rlcha•o w1cfmark. Frederic For- rnt (2 hrs J I ONDmolt DAMQD ICM TMIH MT1M wuon ~·• cooar Preparat on "JI bacon pot1110 salad. quell 1n peac.11 brandy r.auc&. and leftover stewed okra •::=o ~ llO¥ll "Biiier Harvest" ( 1981. Of•· ma) Ron Howard. Ari Carney ( 1 hr , 40 min) (8) llCMI "Gandhi" ( 1982, Biography} Ben Kingsley, Candlee Bergen (3 hrs , 8 mtn) Cl) .,._.,Red Dawn" ( 1984. Adven- ture) P1tr1Ck Swayze, C Thomas Howetl t_1 hr 54 mm) m llCMI "Stage Door Canteen" ( UM3, =iMuii-,;;:= Hayd ITOOlll @) OOLP PGA Championship thtrd round. llve from Cherry Hilts Country Club rn E=ood. COio (3 hrs ) • "Countdown" ( 1967, AdVen· lure) Las.sle. Robert Bray ( 1 hr . 30 min) 111-lftlTlllOl-.a••• m.ADOWIAM~ .. &.naAC\'1 Alf llT'llODUCTloet TO ~ <EJ AllfO Uc.I F0tmula I German Grand Prhi from Nurborgrlng, West Germany (RJ (1 ht 30 min I ZJ .,_ "0oct0f DetrOlt" (1983. Cotne- dyl Dan Aykroyd, Donna Dixon ( 1 hr ~ 31 min) 11::11 (ll) MOTOll• l.&.UITM• Wll La. 11_.I .. WU••• Wild hof&eS In Nevada search for food and wa· ter on the plains at lhe risk ol being cap lured and SOid D ~TICON Dayton lntemahonat A11show A kaletdO&cope of aerospace ve- h1c1es old and new. tncludlng the U S. Alr Force Thunderbnds. the Wing Walkers, Balloon Rattya and the Mini-Jets ( 1 hr ) ••mr• ()) llO¥ll "The Wild And The FrM" ( t980, Adventure) Gran\lllle Van Dusen, Linda Gray (2 tws ) (!) um c..• '°',... q) IOUD tol.D Hosts Gi.n Camp~I. Na- talie Cole Guests Howard Jones, Kool & the Geng John Denver. Al C«ley. Greg Phlll1nganes Beach Boys (Interview) CR)~ I Tlll--=MWMl , TCOAY•ml ... l•CY .. UT9'AC'll Ml lf'llOGUCTIOll TO ~ (&._) (0) llO¥ll "Take Thlt Job And Shove II · ( 198 t. Comedy) Robert Heys, Barbe rn Hershey c I hr . 40 min) W t11) H•M&. Atlanta BravM 11 Sin f:ron <;1$CO Giants (3 hr' ) t.118 llCMI "Tho Elger Sanction" (1975, SuspeoM) Cltnl Enstw00<1. Jack Caasldy 2 h11 , 30 min I '""'°°' ICM TUlt ..... ·---_. .. ~-~TO 1-.r MmYIOft / UllC'f-MifE I llCMI "Devil Dog: TM Hound Of Helt" ( 1978, Horror) Richard Crenne, Yvene Mlm=ow.J2 hrl.) e "The Sliver Chetloe" (1965, Or1rn1) Paul Newman, Virginia Mayo (2 hrt) 1 .. ,,...,, WoetmODY..,,• .. umYCY1 Ml llTIODUC1ICll TO ~ CC) .,_ "Raiders Of The Loef Ark" ( 1981, Ad\lenture) Harrison Ford, Karen Allen ( I hr , 55 mlfl.) (() "' .... Motion Golden Qw}-~from WindSOf. Ontario (R) (2 hra.) llCMI "Smokey And The Bandit Part 3" ( 1983, CQffiedy) J~kie _Glnson. Jer- r~ ~ 1 hr . 25 min ) [ZJ "Blonde Vef\Us" (1932, ~ manoe) Marlene Dietrich. Cary Grant ( 1 hr . 20 min) I mlON:M•rnu•~ .. ..r K.comMCl,IOTm WWIOIN.,.,.. How radar W<>fkl; a look at talking machines and voice syn- lt~Why skin wrinkles with age ocmm••n••M ... us c••••r 1 1 -......... ..,..°',. .... llO¥ll "Allack Of The Puppet People" ( 1958, Horror) John Agar, John Hoyt (2 hrs) · Cll lTAlnB CiJ llO¥ll "Ofagon's Inferno" (1 981, Ad- venture) Ofagon LM. Pearl Lin (2 tvs ) (!)um.a ... oet 1MI .... 8 WIWY _,,.... A look at a re- cently bull1 aquarium oo Cannety ~ow In Monterey. Calif and the processes ln- vollled In stocklf'lg It I,.,,.., .. LUIM...-rG ,.UCMto\fm•rT (Q) llCMI "On GOiden Pond' ( 198 1 Ofama) Katharine Hepborn, Henry Fon- do (I hr . 49 min /.i I M111CA1 OC11T1 "•mm -llWP -WT YMUllll fU'91 The pHI season's bell player• from MCh dM- Slon of the Natlot'lll F"ootbell Leegue •r• ~fifed • 9 NA CIU9l CllllS IOU COl'nl- ... U.. rt11t fllm ctocuments rhe ins111111tion of the AltOf Court at New YOfk's Melr()90lttan MUMUm of M , tM hrsl permanent _cultl.lfl l eirohenge ~ tween the People's Republk or °"'"8 Ind the US l .......... w:T'OlfCl'Mmlt IOLD WIT Orson Welles narrates thll account ol a ni<>dern gold rush In 8'azll, whefe 1housand9 of WOfk9'$ battle to ~ C.Ot'IWI mllllot\llt• ( 1 ht ) A V9'I Daaft .,,. A tMn-agt glfl hal a herd time teeing her bOytrlend altttr 11n 1ntlrnete encounter with enothlf young man results In he< COf'ltra<;tlng • vene<eat diSease IS) llCMI ··eannonben Run II" ( 19M. Comedy) Bon A.yn<*ls. Dom DeluilM l1hr .48 mln) (l) llCMI "StrHtl Of Ftre'' ( 1~ Or• ma) Mlch.NI Pere, Diane t AM ( 1 ht , 34 min. ... c:ee ...n ....... lnltmellOnel ~of Champions (IAOC) AAJto Alc:lng from MICNgan lntemattonel Speedway In Rt~n Mich t 1 ht I Sunday,August 4, 1985 27 • cou.m '°°"""" ....... Ta. ... A look at the top ten colleglate teams as selected by lhe FootbaM Wrlle<s Associa· flon • .UTllT "°"" Ll•l>I (!) M1ll C* TMI "" Songs: "Cen· tlpede." ''What The World Needs Now," "MaglC," "Proud Mary," "Burning Love" and "She Loves Me." Judges: Robbie Kreiget, Missy Gold, Brian O'Neal 0 IUlll OP MlWI) • llOWll "The Amazing Oobermans' ( 1976. Comedy) James Franciscus. Fted Astaire (2 hrs ) e.,. 'Ode To Billy Joe" ( 1976. Ore· ma) Robby Benson, Glynnls O'Conno1 (2hrs) I =""--Olt THI PUlm .._ . .,. llOWll "Streets 01 Fire" (1984. Ora ma) Michael Perl!. Diane Lane ( 1 hr . 34 min) l=.•-r .. ec:.-na""• -_,...... -LA11tlmio ., V-. OP.,_ An updaled 11e1slon of actor Paul Newman's auto ractng ex· ~'· (!) AT 1MI MO¥lll Roger Ebert and Genf' StSkel talk abou1 muscles 1n the movies. with a look at "Pumping Iron II" arid "Rashdance." (R) l ..OVA11C* llMIC .... OP GAIT ..... .,.,. "Friendly Pe<suaslon" ( 1956 Orama) Gary Coopef, Dorothy McGUtte s .. 19m1n.) -au.... m .UTllT An.- L! hr) A profile of tennis star Bjorn Borg D -ITAM Scheduled. Big B11d from "Sesame Street" diSCUSses his up· coming movie. "Follow That Bird" Pee- wee Herman talks aboUt his new moVl8, "Pe&·wee's Big Adventure " • C: WOM.O OI U'OITI Scheduled ~ Long Course Swimming Champion ships from Mission Vle10. Calif ( 1 hr I 1 ....... ........ ~ llOWll "El Condor' ( 1970, Wes1e1n) IJim i& Van Cleef (2 hrs ) llnaMmO LA la&& ... '°°' .. •••1 Q -...... , ... (0) llOlll "The Muppeta Take Qan hettan" ( 1984, Comedy) Vo+cea of Jim i180fl. Frank Oz.(1hr .. 34 min) -.,Mae .. • • .,.,. "War Wag<>fl " ( 1967, Western) John Wayne Klrk Oouol•• (2 hrs ) ·1:::..--"'"' UCIJwmt N¥1D PDIOWITZ rea· tured· furniture poh h, home safety, neigh 28 bO<hood 1ustlct • 1mn YUM TO M1ICI Tho story of renc:hert' 30-year battle with the U S gov er0f1l4lnl 11ltet the deathS of numefous sh"P 1n Utah following opeo-e11 nvcll'ar IE~: llOWll • Never Say NNOr Au.un' (1Ql3, Aoventure) S an Conne<y l<litu M.,11 Brendauef (2 hrs 17 rr·1n l ---"Aft€" The Rehear 1 • ( 1984 Drama) Erland Josephson -~ --lvenlng •1(1)Cll ... .... llCMI "The Crater Lake Monstef" ( 1977. Sctenee F1ctton) Glenn Rooons. Mark Siegel A prehlstonc monster em· erges from the depths of a lake to terror- ize lhe 1nhabflan1s of a peaceful mountain resort (2 hrs ) D AT 1MI llCMll Scheduled reviews "The Black Cauldfon" (Oi$ney, animat- ed). 'The Heavenly Kid" "The Man With One Red Shoe' (Jim Belushi, Tom Hanks) 8 .UTUT MmlCMtBO Ol l9l. ,. •AIOI POOTUlL Cleveland Browns at Safi OtegO Chargers (3 hrs ) I = "The Adventures Of Young Ro bin Hood" ( 1983, Adventure) Peter Den· Im, Amanda Jones Ll\l1ng tn the lorest with his band of Intrepid youths. young Robin Hood searches for supplles to com· bat an evil emperor (2 hrs ) e _. ,... Neal Gabler and Jef. Irey Lyoos review "St Elmo's nre," "Pale Rider" and '~d." (R) l =IClllU8 .. TICH ,_ A compoter-alded teaching system: high-tech cattle ranch· 1!'i1: Korea enters the VCR market (CJ llCMI "To Be Or Not To Be" ( t983 Comedy) Mel Broolls Anne Bancroh A theater group 1n oocupied Warsaw saves Itself and the Poltsh undefgrovnd from the Nazis by impersonating SS omcers 'PG' l1hr.,47 min) (E) MITO uc.I IMSA GT Series lrom Portland, Ore ( t hr l 11CllUIOtM111F l•1 ... (1) ... ... _._ O.NYATATm ,_ M .-CM N.M l9lnM'I "The Sllence" Timothy Van Palten atars tn this story ol a wounded US SOldler 1n Iv~·== a vietnamesa 19 10.TMITo. ...., Mell wmtNVID MOICNITI Fea- tured a household cleanser challenge ntWMI security devtca. chOOelng e fire ext1~r, imprQ\led auto safety glass. 8 U.WOOD ~Scheduled Jen· nlfer Beall dlscu .... h9r upc<lmlng movie "The Bride," a remake of "The Bride of Frenkenslel~ •• (I) TOO CUii NI ~ Henry dl&- cove<a the true value of friendship and la~ly tn the daya following hit lalher'a deelh ~::CC.MY I .-o IUYIACC: A UIAM ITOIY A chronlclct of the teonomlc and cultural changes OY9f the past 16 yeats In the tor mer 8'111sh colony of Sabah, Malaysia. teatUfing the reactions of three ganera· 11ons 1n one famlly ( 1 hr ) GD ••-....... Featured world body boarding champlOfl David Cunlft. an internatlOOal model en oceanside NI& l ard and NCAA Swltnl'l'ler wmtLM..,.,_ ...W The fov tNI So(lh1a r"1C\IM and sneak<. '"''" 11 •If" d' u1 i..1111· , I 1-~ 0' 1t ,,,, I llOTOCWI 500cc Spanish Grand Pnx from Guadela1ara. Spain Ct hr ) ICIJlll9 Jose LUIS Rall'llf6Z (92-'. 77 KOs) \IS. Hectoi "Macho" Cnmacho (27 0 16 KOS} for the WBC. l lghtwe1ght champ1oosh1p !Ille 9Cheduled lor 12 rounds ttve from Las Vegas Nev 11 hr 30 min) CO) llOWll 'The Phtladelphla Experi- ment" ( 198• Science F1Ct1on) Mtchael Pare. Nancy Allen. In 1943. a top secret radar test aboard a naval doc;t•oyer goes haywtre and two sailors are propelled. •1111 a ltme·warp, tnto a s1mllar experiment tak 1~ place 1n 1984 'PG' p hr 42 min) (ZJ llCMI 'Champions" (1984 810g1a phy) Jotin Hurt Fdward Wooaward The true story of successful Engllsh IOCkey ' Bob Champton who stnc.kerr wllh cance1 1n 1979, came back 10 win the Grdnd Na· llOl1al Steeplechase two years later 'PG' l hr S5min) ..... llOMATOO NI Vllnu. TMI '181 TMOUIAllD DAT WAil 19 DAll:I Plva Celeb11ty ludOM Tom Poston, Cindy Gibb, Jon·Ertk Heicum Per- formances by Jenny Burton And Patric!\ Jude D MIMI•• Git TMA&. I ~ police and battet1ng rams 8 moetL.A. Featured parl lour looks al Austraha's Great Ba111e1 Reel then oo 10 China lor a v1&1t 10 Hong Kong And Can ion. the rare Panda t>ear (I) Cl.Oii.., COWfTY Ml.I Fea1ured She11ll Jotin Duffy conlron1s the lawyer wno sued him. and oth&I county ott1e1a1s ovo1 the issue of cr01Nded CNnty ·J11ts m TOO Cl.Oii FOR C090lt'r Henry dis COVtlfS the true ·value of friendship ana lam1ly tn the days foltow111g his lather's death (A) GD IM D9GO ZOO'S MmAI. DNla rea tu1ed the sea horse courtship displays ol exohc. btrdS ... (I) llCMI tvanh()e ,..,( 1982 Adven ture) Anthony Andrew~ James Ma&<>n Based oo the novel by Su W111te1 Scott In tho 12th-century. a swasttbuckling Sa•Of'I knight re1urns from the Crusades and be· comes enmestied 1n po1111ca1 and romanuc lnlt~ (R) O (3 hrs } D llD OUll llm HO<!tts Kor Osmond and Karen Valentine Guests F'rank Bank ("Leave 11 To Beaver"!, Dwayne Hick- man ("Dobie Gillis") 8 llOWll "The Haunttng 01 Julie" ( 1977, Suspense) Mia Farrow Ket. Dullea Aller 1ecovenng trom an emottonal Crtl>IS. a woman porcha&es a house that turns out to be ha~2 hrs) e T.l Hooker 1e1' oll to Las Vegas with en attr•cttve companion. lend· fng credence to the corruption charge that led 10 his wspen ion from the police f0<ee (R) c:;> c 1 hr ) G .,.,. "When Legend& Die" l 1972 Western) Rtehard Widmark F=reoerte For rest An 0<phened Indian boy encountttre a series of adventures while growing up In lhO Old West~rs ) i '="OI IOmft• M Host Steve Allen look• at how successful people and popular things got started Thi$ week Al bert Finney. Lloyd BndgPs, Brooke Shields. Raquel Welch. Humphrey Bogert. lhe BerDle doll, .champagf'e. animal crackers (A) ( t l'lr ) e .,.. "Flf'lal Eyt" ( t977. Sc1onc Fiction) Suaan George Oonalo Pteasenee A pnvate 1nvesttgator lites 10 tor tan A dilboltc•I plOI by member• of a lutvr11tte ~ (2 hrs ) e ..., AJ:r This 11w11d·wlnnlng ' . -lalurclay Cont. film Includes footage from the SO-year-old movie of a New Guinea tribe's first en- counter Wlth three white men and features Interviews wilh two of them and with Pa- ~ns woo recall lhe event 11 hr ) 11.MtNCIM. .. ,,. 0-..llCU .,. "Phar Lap" ( 1983. Orama) Tom Burl1nson, Martin Vaughan,Ib$1. story of Phar Lap, a legendary Australian ra- cehofse whose bnlllant caree< ended abfuptty wfth his mysterious death In Cali= forrwa in 1932. 'PG' Q ( 1 hr .• 48 min ) CE.-T.._ Cl) ,.,. CMAll When the soorce of 1n· crlminating evidence against a 1udge re- fuses to be identified, Klngsfield tries 10 keep the s10<y out of the Law Review ( 1 hr) G _,CAIN DOWN MllTllG •(IZ)-.rrtuea•~ .. D GD lrt YOUlt llOVI Norman pretends to have rejected a marriage proposal lo make a Jilted Eileen feel better (Fl) Cf) llOWll "A Uon Is In The Streets" ( 1953, Orama) James Cagney. Barbara Hale A rvral Southern demagogue gains the support ot poor dirt farmers and hes his way to poktical power (2 hrs ) CID flmT I m This adult comedy series opens with the owner of a professional football team as she laces a new season coPtng with a mobster for a general mana- ge<. an aging qoarterbeck and a chauv1n· JSt ~dcoach I JUYUU. • e -A IMAI A llOOd threatens Glenlawn and Simpson's out there l~1ng for his cat (A) e 9 LOWI IOAT A TV comme<c1al pro ducef casts Judy tn a s1ng1ng role, una ware she can't sing. a husband 1s attract- ed to his estranged wile's best lriend, a daughter rears her lather 1s getting senile (A) 0 ( t hr) • llTY-coer:BJI David Giimour per1e><ms "Until We Sleep," "All LOlll!lfS Are Deranged.'' "Aun Like Hell." "Blue Light," "Murder" and "Comfortably Numb" at London's Hammersmith ~lhr) I .at• 11• TMI mlAm "1ZZ Jau pianists 90fQe Shearing. Marltin McPartland and Adam Makowtcz play sol<>S. duets and a grand finale trio before en audience of l20.000 In JacksonvHle, Fla I 1 hr ) ~= "Midnight f)(press" ( 1978, Dfama) Bfad Devis, Jc*in Hurt Based on the true story of Bitty Hayes. a young American arrested In turkey fO< 11tempt- lng to tmuggll out halh11h, who auffer& a grueflng incatCtrlflOO In a tortU<OUS prt. on 'A' (2 hre.. 1 min J CD (01 .,_ "The La5t St•rfigntef" ( 1~. Science Fiction) Lance Ouest Robert Pt•ton A likable teen-ager who's a wtm at deltroying 'Meo-gltme alien ln-- vaders It recruited aa an lnteratallar flgtite< pilot by an emltsary from a leeguo of plan- ttl 'PG' ( 1 hr , 40 min ) Cl)-. "Rtd Dawn" (1984, Advtn· lure) P•triek Sw•yt•. C Thomas Howell. When Communist peralrooper$ invade a amall U.S town and begin 10 &laughter Its lnhabitenta. a group of Ngh school stu· ~11 desperately fights bacl\. 'PG-13' ( i hr .. 5= l ~-w...~ -~llMlll -• _,. , ... , Bel..-Mg ahe}an do • be1tar IOb thin the current ""Yor. Mtrnt ci.cldes to run for the cllv'$ highest pollflcal office A~ 1 of 2) (R) I TOtmm IK 'I mA111T••1Tt -fl) ...,_ Hunter and McCall comb the city 1n search ol a maniacal vigilante who uses high-tech equipmen1 to kill sus- pected crtminals CR) ( 1 hr ) I I':. OI Lott LO¥a Cary helps an old fqend search lor the only woman he ever truly loved. a clergyman wants to locate the woman who bore their child lR) 0 (1 hr) tJ .,_ "Come Back, Little Sheba' ( 1953, Orama) Shirley Booth, Burt Lan- castet The frustrated emotions ol a cheap, shoddy couple break loose when they rent e room to a college g1r1 ( t hr SO min) e LRfm.11 Of TMI lllCH MD JAMCMM Interviews. with Raquel Welch, Biiiy Dee W•lhams and Casey Kasem, also, a tour of businesses owned by Hollywood stars in- cluding Oltvla Newton-John. Dudley Moore and Sonny Bono (A) ( t hr ) fD llOWll "The Immortal Battahon· ( 1944, Adventure) David Niven. Ray mond Huntley Courageous men struggle toward victory 1n North Africa during World War II (2 hrs ) c.. m lmDOM.AM ~ ~ 'ICMelTMI Angela BoMl's perform· ance includes .. ~.oo Tough" and ·song for a Rlllny Day' Peabo B<yson's per formance 1riclodes 'Feel the Fire • and ·song lor"You " ( t hr ) t_c) m¥W "Tommy· ( 1975, MvSteal) Roger Daltrey, Ann Margret Based on the tock opera by The WhO A young boy struck deal. dumb and blind by the sight ol his lather s murder becomes a rnodefn day messiah explolled by a grffdy uncle and a w0<sh1pp1ng publie 'PG' ( t hr . 50 min) I AMCA:CO.W•CW -earfTMCQ -TAL.D ... ftllDAM" .. 100 Cl.Oii NI cc.ol1' Henry dis covers the lru& value of lrtendsh1p and tamlly 1n the days lollow1ng his lather's death (R) G)MCIBI (I) CYC:lm Cores1ate U S Pro Champ1 onsh1p from P=hla (R) .. llAn.AY PMI 1W &fllWO e ... WALL.._., aclll•l\L ..a.T ITM llMCM "Star S..1ch Jun10(' Guests Marton Ross. Michael Gr0$S (RI !_I hr ) ·-----....... M. In this 1986 ccnct<I In Montreuil, Swfrz.,. land. featured perfOfmera include M9"1 At Wonc, POll"llet Sistefs Biiiy OcMn. Kanoy Loggins, CUiture Clllb, RE:O SpMdwagon and others (2 hrs ) .... ~ ..,.... lllMI "81 kout" ( t98S. Mystery) Richard Wfdrnark, Ketth C.rradlne A re- 11rect c:i.ttct!Ye. still haunt.cl by an un- SO!wld 7 year·old murder, encounterR an accfdl}nt v'Ctlm whO pouibly holds the ~1e{~=i0:=.I (I hr , 4() mto) CBS .,. ''Between The Shffts" ( 19B3. rento,y) John Leslie Seka. A new mat • tress meets an old bed and it mid some "h1&t0fteal" tocta ( t ht , 30 ni1n ) C lllMI "Joy Of Flying" ( t979. A<Mn- lure) Corinne C.rtier, Gianni Ga1ko A WOIMn tS Ubereted trom her teer of se11 alter She becomot 1nvolv9d with the tntef- nallOnal 1et set 'R' ( t hr .. 20 min I ' - (%) .,_ 'The Hunger" ( 1983, Fantuy) Cathenne J;Jenevve. l'dav1d Bowie A phvs'- cian wor~1ng iii a life-extension research lnstitu1e becomes lnvOllled wtth a female =l"E.~ 37 m'" J IK ... m• POOTUU San Fran- CISCO ~9ers at Los Angeles Aalde<s (3 hrs) • D MTW Oii lMI ""1 SC>n0$ "Cen- tipede," "What The World Needs Now," 'Magic .. "Proud Mary ... "Buming Love" and ·She LOI/es Me " Judges: Robbie Kre.gEH. Missy Gold, Bnan O'NMI UAIC ... Q (J) .,_ "The Mummy's Shroud" ( 1967, Horror) Edie Powell. Andre Morell An early-20th-century expedition breaks 1n10 an ancient Egyptian to/nb, awakenlng the centu11es-Old mummy of a Slave ( 1 hr. 50m1n) (fJ llllTOft .. ®l ~ "The Klan&man" ( 1974, Ora- ma) Lee Marvin, Richard Burton. The sherill ot a Sourhern town 1s caught be- tween the Ku Klux Klan and VIOient racial tenstOl'ls when a black man is accused of r~ (2 hrs ) W IATWl)AY llQHT LM Host Christ~ pher Reeve Guests Santana r·say 11 Again ) , Comedl8n Steven Wrtght (A) lhr 30mtn) • A1A .alTt llAQU!m -.rm .,_ "Laura's Desires ( t980, Ora- ma) Siegrun Thell Ins Stern A woman laces a dtlficun dec1S10n when she must choose which ot her pre1110Us lovefs she likes best ( 1 hr 15 min) n.a .o¥tl . OB VII' (Part 1 of 21 ( 197•. Orama) Ben Gazzara, Anthony Hoptons An Amer.can author accuses a Po11sh- b<>rn doctor or being a war criminal (2 hrs . 30 min) 1WGWMl1\M 1W CC) .,_ "Fleshburn" ( 1984, Orama) Steve Kanaly, Karen Carlson A NavajO In- dian escapes lrom a mental Institution and wreak& havoc upon the people whO testi- fied against hlm 'A' (1hr.,30 min) -1 · -CA'ITOPT81 WlllW' ... lllMI "Challeoge Of The NlnJa" ( 1980, Adventure) Lui Chia-Hut. Kurata Yasua~1 Conlliettng martial arts disci- plines cause marital discord ror a Chlne1e kung lu eKpefl and his iu~tau-tratned Jap- a~ bride (2 hra) • DAW»·--Sch9duled t()()IO dal· ing and mating thrOugh ~I 1cts 11 lhr)===-mP -_,. 'rlACat -... OIMU. UITMA I NUllT: ~caaa!Wf"~f ,_ .... ' •cu Santana and t-Man JOtt11oge1h- .. In this Altos de Chavon. Oomlniean Re- pubhc concf!fr that features the IOl9 "Crazy on You." "An I EV9f Went.cl.'' "M•=n" and "Search1n' " ( 1 ht ) (fl The Stranger" ( 1972. ~ ence-F1Ctt0n) Glenn Corbett, eam.ron Mitchell After crashtng on an unf'*'dty plane1. an astronaut 15 pursued by Its leader (2 ht&) Ill ...,..... Mr ~~ Competi- tion from New VOfk CO)-. "Ardent Lovers" ( 1980, Adult) !<'ren Gambler. Guy Royer Separated tot °"" • Y"' • cOUOle communlcet• lhelt Sunday,August4, 1985 29 -Saturday COnl. numerovs romantic escapades through cards and letters. (I hr .. 16 min ) (I) uu..A•• O¥lll YOWi tmAO Gallagher bllngs his zany Inventions and llvely obMr· vatlOos to an audience 1n ~aumont. Tex as ( 1 hr ) Ira llCMI "The Black Raven" ( 19-'3. Mystery) George Zucco. Wanda McKay. A young couple elope to an inn where a gang of crooks are seelung e cache of $50.000 (2 hrs ) OllllDT.catAM.YTMI ... tl:9 CtMTWI CMUMWI NI> ,. •••man ... . °'9-llOWI "Honky Tonk" ( t9-' I, West ern) Clarl< Gable Lana Turner An unlike· ly love match occurs between a gambler and a well-bfed lady from Boston (2 hrs) a!) mWI> MOGUi (D llCMI "They Can Me Bruce?" ( 1982 Comedy) Johnny Yune. Margaux Hem· ingway ·A West coast Asian cook Is ITlls· taken for karate eicpert Bruce Lee and runs afoul of Italian gangste~ bosses 'PG' l' hr . 30 min ) (.1) llCMI "Psycho II' -t1983. Mystery) Anthony P&f1(1ns Meg Tilly Former psy- chotic klllef Norman Bates 1s released at ter a 20-year slay 1n a mental 1nst1tut1on and believes himself cured until a mysteri· ous rash of murdefS beg1hs A' ( I hr . 53 min) ,. (Ill ..rtMatt t:11(B)llOVW 'Love Letters (1983. Drama) Jamie. Lee Curtis. James Keach After dis- covering that her recently deceased mother had been 1n11bllied in an eictraman- tal attair throughout her marriage. a Slngle woman be<:omes 1nvotved 1n an obsesSlve otfoir with a married man 'A' ( t hr 36 min) ., .. YOM NOTTMCKI M!C ... Q .,_"The Bad Seed" ( 1956 Ora ma) Nancy Kelly Patty McCormack A series ol 1nc1den1s forces a mother to real- ize that her 6-year-old daughter Is a cold· blooded murderess (2 hrs) (CJ llOVW "Streets 0 1 Fire" ( 1984. Oro ma) Michael Pare. Diane Lane A "rock 'n' roll table" about a rock singer kid- napped by an outlaw gang and her rescue by a dashing ex-boyfriend and a tough-girl advenfUfef. 'PG' Q ( 1 hr • 34 mtn ) (I.).,_ "Cannonban Run II" I 1984. Comedy) Burt Reynold$, Dom Deluise. This sequel featur" another colleCllOf'I of crazies In all sorts of motorized vehicles raclng cross-country for caah Many guest-star cameos. lncludlng Frank Sina· Ira. Shirley MacLalne 'PG' Q ( 1 hr .. 43 min) • .9 .,_ "The Counterfeit Green" --(1971, Mystery) Oa11ld Janssen. Norman Lloyd A U.S Treasury agent pursue' an lek.lsl.-;:;:r counterfeiter (2 hrs ) IUT DAY Oil YO. LR llOVW "They Call Me Bruce?" ( 1982, Comedy) Johnny Yune. Margaux Hem- ingway A West coast ASl8n <:<><* ia mis- taken lor karate expert Bruce Lee and runs afoul of ltallan gangster bosses 'PG' ; hr . 30 m•"r( " ~ U.:YlllOI !:II llOVWTO. ... M1A1.m1 POil TODAY MOWll "Take This Job And Shove It" ( t981, Comedy) Robert Hays. ~rbara Hershey A young corporate eKecutlve runs Into resistance when he returns to his hometown to revitalize a company b{e~PG' (I h1 . 40 mtn ) lD "Death Kiss" ( 1933, Mystery) Bela Lugosi. David Manners A movie ex travaganza 1s the selllng 101 a series of murders committed by a psychopathk: killer ( 1 hr . 30 min ) t9 MO¥ll "Neighbors" ( 1981 Comedy) John ~lvshl. Dan Aykroyd A mtddle- class suburban couple 1s subjected to the strangest 24·hou1 period of their lives alt9f bizarre new neighbors move in next dOOr A' ( 1 hr . ~ min.) •• MO¥ll "The Mad Doctor" {19-' 1, Ora· ma) Basil Rathbone. Ellen Draw A di• turbed psychiatrist mames women and then kills them for their money CD llOWll "Blood And Sand" ( 1941, Dra- ma) Tyrone Power Rita Hayworth A buff- hghler causes his own destructlOn when he abandons hrS wile tor anothe1 woman i hrs .. 45 min) ... --1MllCMI ) MO¥ll "Streets 01 Ftre" ( 19~ Ora ma) Mlcheel Pare. Otane Lane A "rock 'n roll fable" about a rock singer kid· napped by an outlaw gang and her rescue by a dashing ex-boyfriend and a tough-girl adventurer 'PO' ( 1 hr . 34 min) 1r11<CJ llOWll "Summer SchOOI Teachers" SOAP QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS l'rom Pafe 4 tJ Illa first sctnf' l• uiped at I 0 ln tbe moralD1 .nd bit 1 .. a 1cene Isn't done untll 11 at nlclla, be'• as.ck for t11e wbole day. Otlter 1bow1 are done out of sequence; for uample, U a particular actor 11 In 1cenf OM, tc:ene four &lld tc:ene el1bt, all hi• tc:.aet are done to1etber 10 be can k free alaerward1. "Day• of Ovr Live." usually tapa "t of aeqaeoce, but darla1 1peclal oceuS.U. aod1 u llJp·actlon scene day1, &.IM!1,. I& la play-lllle f111llon. ~Q: The actress who as playina the nun on ··~ta Barbara" looks familiar. Who •~she and what ocher soaps h:u she done? - f .R. Houston, Tex. k Hari.y Keull recuU~ appeared u A-W~ OD "Th GtJdln• Ll,bt." Koulc 30 Sunday, August 4, 1985 was wrltlm out of the ebow wbea kr cattmate Greg Beecroft decided not to renew In tbt role of Tony. It 1eem1 tbe 1wosomt'11toryll.ne llad beta on Ute back burner 10 long &bat llitey botll felt It Wat llme lo *o. Koull also appearecl on tbe soap "Tex11 In the role of Brette Wlleeler. Tlalt 11 cbe first tlmt Kouk llat dole a Wett Coast soap. We uadersta.od ber "Sota Barbara" 1toryllne wlll ~ clouly tlecl lo wUb Mason Capwell, tbt cbanc ter played by Lant Davies. Q' How many ona1nal cast mcmbcrure \1111 on "As the World Tum!"" -E.P .. Ft L:iudcrdale, Fla. A: "At tile World Turns" debated on AprtJ i , ltH, ud of tbe Day One caJt membera, Helen Waper 11 Noey ff •«lltt and Don MacLauglllla 11 Cllrls Rul)9e1 are ( 1975, Comedy) Candice Rialton, Pat Anderson. Three Mldwest81'n women stu· dent teaching In Callfornla encounter trou- ble ~r .. 25 min.) -,~,.,., II • llOWll "Riders Of Destiny" ( 1933, Western) John Wayne. Gabby Hayes A government agent tries to help a group of ranchers regarn their water rights ( 1 hr ) GDUllOICIMT <m .,_ "Take Thts Job And Shove It" (1981. Comedy) Robert Hays. Barbara Hershey A young corporate executive runs into resistance when he returns to his hometown to revltallze a company .. b{~'PG' (1 hr ,-'Omm) I llOWll "Never Say Never Again" . ( 1983, Adventure) Sean Connery. Klaus Marla Brandauer. After a world-threaten· Ing orgemzatlon steals two U S m1$SlleS and announces It will detonate the war- heads if a ransom ts not met. Britlah agent James Bond Is called In to save the world 'PG' Q (2 hrs., 17 min ) we_. "Heat 01 Anger" (1971. Ora· ma) Susan Hayward lee J Cobb A keen-witted lady lawyer defends an eKec· utive charged wilh the murder of a con- struction worker ( 1 hr • 30 min ) IDUM-.CW. G llOWll "The Splrtt 01 Culver" ( 1939. Orama) Jaekle Cooper. Freddte Bartholo- mew A rebelltous boy reoelves a schOlar- snlp to a mllita1y academy and gradually conforms to the dt&clpllne Imposed at the sch~2 hrs) W CD "The House By The Cemetery" ( 1981, Suspense) catrlona MacColl. Paola Meleo A man moves with htS wife and son into a secluded manst0n lor a six- month working vacation, unaware that the basement Is occupied by a killer ( 1 hr . 18 min) W(B)WlllO~ W (C)MOWll "The Big Chill" (1983, Drama) Kevin Kline. Glenn Close When a man commlta suicide, his closest friends lrom college days gather tor the funeral and re- llect on how their lives have changed SlnCe the 1960s 'R' Q ( 1 hr ."-' min) W CZ) .,_ "Alter The Rehearsal" ( 1984, Drama) Ertand Josephson. Ingrid Thulin An account of llluslO(llsl director Ingmar Bergman's career and his struggles In 11 reali"ic world 'R' (Dubbed) If hr 14 min) 1tUI wldl tbe 1.bow. Otlaer perform~r• wbo bave appeared for at leaa& U yean Include Patricia Bncter at Ellea, Elle-en FaJ&oa 11 Uta, ud Headeraoe Forsythe •• David Stewart. Orl11Dal cast member• wllo are no lon1er wltb the allow laclade Ruth Warrick, wlao w11 seea 11 EdJe; Roaemary Priat (Penny Ha11tn); Wiiiiam Job1toee (Judie IAwell), and Jo)'~ Vao Patten, wllo WH Hen as JuJce Ha1tie1. 0 : I am a longt ime watcher of "Search for Tomorrow." I've noticed that they've introduced a granddauahtcr for Joann( Who are her p11rents'f -K.N . New Orlean , La. A: Paul, Joanne'• dauallter, w11 mar· rted to Len WllltJas-Pdr a lone time Paul WHUlbM to bear• c~ld,ud llODt J»!IDt wood •P 1doptt111 a lltlle boy wi.o was Lea't clllld by Illa mhtreu. played h' JIU Claybtarp. Several )'tan later, Paul ~11ttJved u4 pn blrtb a.o daq)iter Sara. -TV Puzzle 2 3 .. 5 6 7 13 15 58 ACROSS 1,8 Shown Or Annie Cavanoro on "SI Elsewhe<e" 13 Audrey or Judy 14 Singer Ford 15 10 for Pac1no 16 Steve Forrest series 17 Median abbr 18 He was Mr Spock 1nrt 19 Greek IP1ter 21 IS..tAC 23 Teachi>r s tavonte 24 "Whtie Shadow" star 25 Terminate 26 She's Boss Hogg's wife 27 G<1rr or Copley 30 'High -. 1 ··Webster · star 2 Actor Kollo / 3 ID tor Nolte 4 Grid scores , 5 Uses an ax 6 Teed off 7 Ragin on "Outncy" • 8 Actor Connery 9 -Kupclnel 10 Sign off for Nelligan t I "My Stster -.. 12 Actress Berger 20 tndlVldual 22 tns1gne ICJr Duvall 23 Big Leaguer .,6 Daly of "Walking T11ll" 29 Electees 30 'Neither rain 31 Grand -Opry 34 " fo1 Tomorrow' 3b " -a Uv1ng" 37 "Not - -Stranger .. 38 "Evita" .iar 39 She'& Chrrs Cllg'J! 32 Arltcte 33 tntts tor Levant 34 Caesar and Catlell 36 Authentic 39 Ob1a1n 40 'Hee -" 43 Have a bite 45 " Vegas Lady 46 Allera11ons 48 M1m1c 49 Ser1es tor Gould 50 Iron symbol 51 Cap 53 Bible bk 54 Gia - 56 "The Blue Anger· star 58 Madge Sinclair role 59 Rod DOWN 40 That man 4 1 Maud or Don 42 He's Luke Duke 44 James Brolln role 46 Harvest 47 Regal ltlle 50 Polly Holliday role 52 Actor Wallach ., 55 Famed markswoman 1n1t 57 -Marshall SOLUTION SPORTS ..• P'romPa&e2 , i~COUmoTOICWINIAU · IUYU&.L '*. WMm. AlllWWW -· 0 IOU NA Ctut pl1-..... ......_ .,. .,_ Qerrr ... C!eus•' a.It lie ....... " c.... (I lwe.) .... aiml!lla .... .U1UT , ..... LfnlA ...... el ........ .... .... (11tr.) U lllDI WOIU t# 90IT1 1"61juf1 f u.a.u.wew1wk ...,..e ''' 1n1Up1 _..,_ ...... Vlefe. Ce& (t ... , .... -IANl»AY lflORTI ,._ .. lk.AYU&.L 1t.ll IA Pl•·tl.AIOle POOIULL a. ,,__ olloo ..... Loe,........ ........ (1 1-i.. 90ITlllAW 1W WMm. ... (I) C81 IPOllTI INCW.11: .......... ....... C.....,1•• (IROC) ,..... ..... ... .,.... = ........ ..... 1·~ ~1~191 ,. ...................... .._ • ulutld bf "'9 P11lll,.~ ,.._ ........... .UTUTlflORTILI ... IOmG 4111 VW t# .... AA upd1l1f ~ ....... ,.... ................ ,... .......... AUTOMATIC GAR~GI DOOR OPINIRI SALES & SERVICE • WE CARRY STANLEY ON1 DtOfTAl TIANSMfTTD Sunday,August4, 1985 31 i· For scriovs home use. · .'~ For education use. For small business use. Still America's most popular choices. * on selected Apple lie, and lie systems you can receive a $150 Schwinn bicycle. · Come itt for details I Ncwpon Beach Located Behind "Royal Khyber" Reslaurant in Plaza Newport .. Hours 10·7 daily, ...... ---' Saturday l 0-S ,. • FORECASTI ON A2 ORANGF: COUN TY - CALIFORNIA SUNDAY. AUGUST 4. 1985 '1IJ Cf NT <, . Stay away, says oil mop-up crew Beach goers requ ested t o k eep Balboa Boulevard clear as cleanup continues By STEVE MARBLE Of .,. Oellr .......... In the aftermath of one of the worst 011 disas\ers in Newport Beach his- Coast Authorities are stlll searching for a missing Insurance broker con- victed of Investment fraud last year./ A2 Twefve UCI under- graduates have received research grants up to $1 ,000./A4 California Two escaped primates wandering the streets of San Francisco seem to be making a monkey out of a biologist hired to track them./A3 The U.S. Patent Office is blamed for Inaccurately recording women's con- tributions to science./ A7 Nation Treasure hunters have been on a streak lately, but finding gold beneath the seas lsn 't always as quick or as easy as may appear./A7 Schools across the na- tion are amassing com- puters, but there's a gap between the rich and poor In this latest classroom revolutlon..LA8 World The operations manager of ABC News In Beirut was kidnapped by gun- men Saturday on his way to the Beirut Airport .I A3 A passenger train and an "autorail" train collided head-on Saturday near a rural railroad station, kill- ing 2 1 people./ AS Sports A look at what area her- oes from the 1984 Olym- pic Games are doing one year later./01 tory, police and fire officials have asleed tounsts and beachgoen to stay away from city beaches today so that massive cleanup operations can con- tinue. Oil foes can'tstir up still waters By STEVE MARBLE A rally 11'1 Laguna Beach to protest new oil explorations off the Orange Coast drew only a handful ·of SUP: poners Saturday and organizers said they must step up their fight 1f they eApect to hold off the U.S. govern· ment About 35 people JOtned an the hasuly called rally at Mam Beach Saturday mommg. where speakers denounced a government proposal that includes opening 54 square mJles off Orange County's coasthne for oil exploration and dnlhng. "It wasn't a very good turnout," admitted Roberta Salver. a spokeswoman for a citizens group calhng itself Save Our Shores. "But 11. was put together pretty quickl y." The preservation group 1s collect- ing petitions 11 plans to tum over to (Pleue .ee RALLY /A2) O fficer in s hooting id entified A 20-)ear pohce veteran was 1den1- 1fied Saturday as the officer who rwice fired at and killed a kmfe-wielding Huntington Beach man Thursday evening. Hunungton Beach Policeman Ran-.f. dall Toburen. 42, has been placed on adm1nistrat1ve leave with pay wh..ile fhe 1nc1dent 1s being 1nves11gated. No charges arc expected to be filed 1n the incident. one investigator noted.· Pohce have been reluctant to release details on the shooting. and on Fnday had declined to 1den11fy Toburen Toburen and a second officer. Tames Dowllng. 38. were summoned to a residence on 17162 Wildrose Lane in nothern Hunungton Beach early Thursday evening by a woman (Pleue He POLICE/ A2) An 011 well that had been dormant for decades exploded Fnday after- noon while be1n1 fitted for a new cap, anJunna a worker, scorchana one house and coaling an entire oC1&h· borhood with 011, mud and water Balboa Boulevard was scaled off to traffic at Pacific Coast Highway. The closure 1s expected to last unttl Monda)'.. though police said one lane of the hCavllytravelcd road may open today to accommodate area rcsJ- dents. The street closure however, ap- pured to have little effect on beach crowds Saturday. Lifeguards esti- mated more than 80,000 people jammed onto city beaches. weaving their way around the se.alcd-ofl meet. Balboa Boulevard, a main thoroughfare fpr beach traffic and tounsts, 1s pot-holed from the blast and shll coated an a sticky, oil residue, an officiaJ 1atd A I JO.foot-high crane that had been used by workers trying to ret.ap the 011 well Fnday afternoon was .. Oellr ............ "' ,..,,, De ,,.... Joee La.ram of Clean Coutal Waten Co. blaata oil off aldewalk with hot water. >-.. finally removed lrom the' 1c1n1t). Until its removal, pohcc h~ cauuoncd res1dcnu to bl' "al) of 1 charred and soot)' crane !>«au"° 1t had been paniall) und<"rmtncd by scep1ns water and 011. Authonues feared 11 could tumble onto the trcet. Sidewalks 10 the nei&hhorhood (Pleue eee CLEANUP/ A.2) Victims'- families flown to Texas Tustin man among 132 k illed.in crash of Delta Airlines jet vRAPEVINE. Te\ClS(.\P)-Rc:la- 11ves carT)1ng dental charts photo- JtllPM and other dues to the 1dent· mesoflo,ed onesamved Saturda) to help officials son1 ng tht' remain., from tht' fief) crash of a Delta ~ir L1nes1umboJet that lulled 1l1 people aboard the plane and one on the:' ground l\mong the dead was Tustin resi- dent Ramone Roben Hooke. a Toyota Motor Sales employtt who was retummg from a busant"Ss tnp Twenty~1ght pas~ngers and three flight attendant~ among 16:! peoplt' aboard Flight 191 surv1"ed. some Related story. photos~eA3 wuh JU'it scratches and bruises Mo t ~uf"i1vors t\_ad been seated in tht-back of the w1de·bod1ed l ock he«! L-1011 TnStar when 1t nosc:-<11\ed to earth dunng a ~torm near Dalla\-Fon Worth lntcmation.il \1rpon. official\ said . .. I'm amved an\(IOt" -.un ''ed." \31d Dr. James .\tl1n'> an cml'rgc:'nc~ room ph\s1c1an at Parlland \.km- onal Hosp11al and among the fir<.1 doctors on the scene \ h<l' atx1u1 a _ \ear old was talen w a ho,p1tal hut dic~d later Officials said I 21 "'xi•c:' CO\ c:rcd with hca' > blad plasll\. v.crt t.ilen tn ~fngerator trucks Ciarurda~ 10 1hc: forensic lab in do""n1ov.n Dalla\ offioal\ said Onl' I ti h.1d hn·n 1den111ic:d h' ~turda\ altcrnl1on One: \\a<, 1dc.-n111ied thrnu~h a hrJl~l·k1 anJ fi\t' through Jn,er·, hll'O'< phot~raph\ .,;ud Dr < harle~ Pcm Dalla\< ount' mC"d1cal C\11n11nl·r · \\ c ma~ gel It> 1he Jl<'l'nt "hl'fl there will he c.omc hcld•c:' that \\Ill neH'r be 1dt."1tt1'hed-Pl'll\ ...-i1d 111 one la-.C ht: ...aid h1\ ofli,l· hJJ he1..·n gl\en ,\ <le<,cnp11on nf a wedding nng and hJd found 11 on J hand that "':1' '>e\l'rl'd (Please .ee VlCTIMS' / A2 I The Angels nip Minne- sota, 5-4, on ninth-Inning home run by Doug DeCl- nces. /01 The United States D~v Cup team stays alive Ith a doubles win over t Germany./04 Housing project snags on pay plan China's Christians , want_ to go it alone E n t ertainment Two musicals, one a local original, open this week In Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.181 CBS and "The Young and Restless .. are tops In the competition for daytime Emmy awards./84 · Ba•lneu Home sweet home can be your best Investment. See Money Sense. I DS IN'DEX Erma Bombeck Bridge Buafness Cluamed Crossword Death Notices entertainment Horoscope Ann Landers Opinion Publlc Notices AMI Eatete Spocta 8tyte Tetevtslon w .. th« A4 A4 05 C2·7 84 C8 84-8 C7 A4 A8 C8 C1 01·• 81-3 TVlog · A2 Di strict declines to a ccept lette r of credit on ou t-of-state bank The future of low-mcome senior housing at the former Aliso School m South Laguna remains tn JCOpardy as a cnt1cal deadline on the proJect draws near. A week before an unsigned purchase agreement for the school site reportedly must be dehvqs<i to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the proposal has slipped out of the frying pan and into the fire The continually bcleagered project championed by St. Mary's Church 10 Laguna Beach encountered a m~or hitch late this week when the Laguna Beach school board met to consider the sale or ii surplus hool site. Boord members told the church's consultant, Reed Aory, they could not accept a letter of credit he presented unna one third of 1hc $2. 7 m1lhon purchase pncc because it wa not 1' ucd by an acceptable bank Unless F1ory as able to convince a bank the d1stnct knows 1 reputable to i ue ·another $900.000 promise to pay, the school d1stnct will not h nd over the We Icy Drive school site. u]>Cnntcndcnt Bally Bame 1d. The new letter mu t come from a Cahfom11 baok that came a I A rating. h said. The Stein·Rner Group of Laguna iaucl ~red th ~ccted letter or credit from W rn Sav1np Loan of Utah, id Gl) lo\cl dy. d1 tnct busin s man -t. Thcd Hlopcr u invol~cd with tht ;\ LISA MAHONEY FOCUS ON THE NEW S sc hool purcha~ to the eittent that 1t 1s ..b~na housing credits from t. Mal')' ·s Church that will~ applied to its Monarch Beach planned com- mun1t) The credits rehe"e the de- veloper from ha, mg to provide lov.- CO'it housing 1n its pro1cct ~t Mary·, will tum the firm's $900.000 payment over to the school d1,tnc1 a~ partial compensation for the 6 7-acrt school sne C omphl--at1ons arose la t month when the ~hool board QU<' t1oned how tcin-Bncf planned to man c payment, to the church. ~hool officials u1d <;mn·Bnel 1~ reluctant to Pl> for the crrott\ before the prom1~ hous- 1n1 1 hu1IL hut the school board 1 rqually nervou, about ~"''"I tdt· quatc.1uarnntCCS that It Wiii l<'t tht monc~ tt ha comana. The parties involved aiJttd that &he developer would secure a letttr of ct't'dll from one of ~veral 1n1-' 1n t1tut1on\ cho n by d1\tn t ot- fi 1al a a mraM of sculm the cnnfltct In tcad. St in-Bntf Jlft'Cnted a letter from an out-<>f· tatc banli; that doc' ·not appear to be top.rated. (Pl 1eeBOU J.MO/A.2) ,, ................ a.-. ....... lrriDe ~tor Ballk Jona. returned from a two-w k trip to China. •ya Clllaeec cluarcll leaden want to u - • rt tla Ir Ind pen dence from the West. "It'• a new day for the cburcb In China ... h notes. By JEFF KLANSKY Of -Dlllfr ,... ..... When lcadt'rs of the Chme!lt' ( hm- uan Church rttcntl) told In int' pastor Hank Jones the>·' t' had enouah of \\e\tem interference hl' ~tcd the nt'ws with a smile 'The> 1A.Cre saymg 10 ~ :\ ou an: our brotht'r and we arc one in C hrl\t But recoanize u as } our equal .rnJ that wt' are capable of leading thl' church 1n China· That wa' thl' unspol..en me sage," said Jone' th1' v.cek He recently return«! from .1 two-week \1S1t brhind the Bamtl<x1 C'urtatn w1th other .\mencan lkn\.·al leaders Ju'it J\ the l hinl ~ I hlmh rt'· newed m lm:nd<,h1r' "11h 1 '\\e\tem coun1erpan'i .it tht• nat1tm.il "m· pm1um 11 rcaffirmnl 1t\ del('rmina lion to l ut the umh1l11.:al ,ord th:ll ha txlund ( hn\llanll\ in ( hma to 1h1 \\e\I 'ilOCC: II\ \Cf).be&tnninit T ht-.. 0 < h~ C hurt.it ~ "ho 'ihOw('d up for the t:\C~nt. the flr,t ol m ktnd, \.\-ant nn mort' of \\oc\t<'m d11m10a11on "nd unhl..c man\ of hi\ l 1111ntc:rpart<; tn the l nncd "-tatc and rl-...·" hl•ft'. Jon~ 1s more than h:spp\ Ill 11hll[1.l' 1 hl';,n1h appro'e ot thC'1r 1ndl'· (P1eaee tee CHINESS/ A2l Parents treat t eens to nlght of cruising By ROBERT RVND\t Of .. Oellr ......... Corona dcl Mar parent\ art' m inii to con,mcc their tttn-age \On\ and <Uu1htef\ that 1f\ po ... s1hlc ~ ha\ c a pan) v.1thout druJ.' and akohol - nd till ha\t' fun To pro\e their point a <:o mmun1t\ lfOUP c31lcd Part'nt Who < arc \ponwtTd a "'iev.port Harbor ho~t c ru1~e abo.ud thl" ( ormoront Wcdnc~y night f\)f atl<lut I 0 high thlOI tud1 nts. Th tt'tn\ 'IA.h<' purcha'><'d s ~ 11d,;ct lor the e'm1. wcrr 1re11C'J tl" na . ~o d nn a mod: mhltn"' C1\1no •nJ h\(' c1an • mu\a b th-l' Ton -a roo nd from ( omna <kl Mar lh h hnol "Our fl'a'°n tor ,101na &hi\ "' ' "' otkr ~n C\C'nt 1ha1 " al,ohol· nnd Jrua lrl-,; • ..aid l'.1m llo"a"1 t.1un dcr Cll Parent\ W h1) < arr "\\ ~ lnund that thl· l.:"'' all "antr<I 10 ht Ir 1u1 and thl'' c·nJt'\! Ul'l h;I\ in 11 NII A2 Orange CoM1 DAILY PILOT/Sunday, August .t, 1985 PoliCe ~till searching for broker ly U.. Auoclatff P Hom1Cide ·ln"Ut1 .. tor1 were till se.vcbina Saturday for a.n insurance broktr who was convicted ofbilkini in\Citors out of millions of dollars ~_!_}tar and has not bttn ~n for M.iii) a wee Anhur Lee Evans, ~. of C-0wao Hei&hti. was last seen Monda)'. Authonues bepn their search after fnends reported him missing Wednesday. authorities sald. Evans• home in Santa Ana's Cowan Hciahts, which houses his investment and loan business.a was apparently stripped of half its 1um1turc. The disappearance is bema 10- vestig:ued u bom1ctdc becaust deputies found cvidenC!C in id the home ind1catfoa foul play. 1d Lt. Dick Olson, who declined to elaborate. An un1drntificd pttSC>n wa .,... tcd fot qucsdorun1 hul"$day m connec1ion' with the invcstipt1on, Olson s:ud. If charges art' not filed b) Monday, the person must be released, he said. henrr~ deputies, backed by E\- plo~r Scouts. blood hound) and a helicopter, hl'lve been searching the bn.ash<overed hills around Evans' home. Evans was placed on five years probation an January, sentenced to a year 1n Jlll and ordered to pay restitution to people who lost up to S 10 million an various investment schemes. He pleaded &uilty to two pand theft -rovms-in conn~on-with lhc toss of nearly $2 mtlhon from the accounts of Republic Insurance Broken lnc. The money belonacd to insurance companies doina bu tness with the brokcraae fif11l. He also pleaded guilty to two ·counts of arand theft. Evans' Jail term had been post- poned several times and he was scllcduJcd to appear in court Stpt. 30. CLEANUP CONTINUES IN NEWPORT ..• From Al were scrubbed down Saturday by crews armed with fire hoses squ1rt1ng blasts of hot water. A four-block stretch of sidewalk . aJong B~lboa Boulevard was covered in the crude. ' City officials estimated that about 420 gallons of crude oil escaped from the well before it was finally recapped. Some of the crude oil washed mio storm channels and flowed into Lower Newport Bay at the cxtremr western end of the harbor near the tumutJ basin. A state Fish and Game offiCJal said Saturda)' that most of the oil that washed into the bay was apparently trapped b)' a floating boom lowered into the water by a Long Beach toxic cleanup crew. There was no indica- tion that the oil spill endangered wildlife. More than 200 residents along Balboa Boulevard near 44th Street were evacuated when flames belched from the long-dorman\ well. which workers were attempting to recap as pan of standard maintenance procedure. Residrnts were pennmed to return to the neighborhood by 8 p.m. Fnday. more than five hours af\er the explosion. Gas and waler. ho~ever. remained off in the nciJhbomood until Saturday. The Red Cross had es&abli.sbed an evacaution ccnterat a ~elemen tary school in Newport HeiahU. but reported that nobody needed emoi- ency shelter for the niaht City worker Geofl!C Murdock injured in Friday's blast ands~ second-degree bums over 20 pm:cnt of bis body, accordina to a spokeswoman at the UO Medical Center bum ward in Oran~ MUTdock was initially taken to Hoaa HOUSING PROJECT SNAG .•. P'1"0mAl Bamessa1d. Stein-Brief spokesman Chris Townsend said Friday that company offic1aJs were reVlewing the school RALLY .•. From Al lntenor Secretary DonaJd Hodel when he and his entourage visit Ne~rt Beach Aug. 31 to gather pubhc opinion on the oil leasing plan. Elected city leaders in Laguna Beach, San Oemente, Newport Beach and Huntington Beach have spoken out against the proposal and arc requesting that the tracts off the county's shoreline be dropped from the gov.cmment's proposal. In aJl , the proposal calls for opening 1.350 square miles off California's coast. Each tract cpvers about nine square miles. . Presently there are several drilling platforms off the coast of Huntington Beach where City leaders have histori- cally endorsed oil operations. But this time, Huntington council members have agreed to oppose addluonaJ offshore exploration. Silver, an advemstng exe<:ut1ve, said she believes that oil explorations and offshore drilling platforms would ruin the economy of Laguna Beach. "Aside from the fact that 1t just wouldn't Jook good, we worry about the chance of an oil spill," she sajd. "The coast here 1s very sensitive. with tidepools and all kinds of sea an1maJs. Mosl of the people in Laguna know what's at stake here." Save Our Shores will hold weekly rallies leading up to Hodel's V1s1t, Silver said. The group intends to put l0$ether a more v1s1ble raJly to co1nc1de with Hodel's arrival. "We've discussed forming a human chain along the coast or something hke that. But that might turn out to be a nightmare," said Silver. "So maybe we'Tljust meet him at the airpon " board's decision and deciding how to respond. Townsend said be could not comment further on the situation. If SL Mary's is to build 71 units of .,.., ..... ,...._, ......... Barbara lletzaer of Lapila Beach a eta another •lCnature on oil d.rUlln& petition. Memorial Hospital m Newpon Beach for treatment. The only house damafed by the curling flames from the oi well was a two-story residonce located at 204 44th St. The hoOJe, unoccupied atthe time of the explosion, s1.1stained only minor damage. It remamed unclear Saturday what ignited the met.bane gas seeping from thr 011 well. One witness reportedly told a lif"uard he saw a worker toss a ~rctte tnto the well, but officials ~dany numberofthin~could have touched off the hissing gas. Thr oil wclJ. has not been in production since 1929, said a fll'C department spokesman. Oil drillina bas not been pennitted within city limits for several decades. Tk well. explained Fireman Gene Bctndl. was being fitted for a new pl~ senior housing at Aliso School. it must close escro\f on the ~ and be ready to break $!.OUDd by Sept 30 or lose S3.8 mtllion in U.S. Housing and Urban Development funds. Although Aory has been un- available for comment on recent developments, Barnes said the con- sultant 10ld him he must have a purchase ..,.eement by Friday to sbow HUD officials the project will be ready to go. Whether Stein-Brief can meet the school board's demand will be settled by Monday, Barnes~ That's '!when the tcbool district's attorney will meet with the developer. Several lesaer issues still have not been resolved, Barnes said. But, if the stumbtin& block of the letter of credit can be passed, the superintendent predicted the school sale would. go through. At the same time that the school -~a.rd-raised objections to Stein· -(iefr-letter "of credit. it also voted to p.t a reduced price foT the school site. St. Mary's came up about $75,000 short or the $2. 7 million demanded by the school board a year's effort to raise the funds. For several months it appeared that the shortfall would kill the project and Orange County of- ficials assisting with the purchase .concluded a reduction in the sale price would be the only way to get the proposal through. Board members voted 4-1 with Jan Vickers disscntins to accept a S2.625 million offer for the school Aliso School was closed because of declining enrollment and declared ,. surplus by the school district about two years ago. The district rents the property to a daycare center and a number of artists. HUD wilJ pay for relocating the artists while the daycare center will remain ifthe church is successful in purchasing the property. ,...._,.._ ..... lllranda Dcmpeey. J .J . Macedo of Corona del Illar B.ICJa aboard tlae Cormorant. TEENS GO CRUISING IN THE BAY ••• P'romAl residents to help find other act1v1t1rs Newport Beach teen-aacrs can be· come involved with. "There's a lot of interest in find1na thmas that teen-aim can do, and I thmk we're aemns closer to womoa toward some real solutions " Howatd SI.Id. Wtwle Pa1tna Who (arc had orpniud the harbor cruise 1wicc now, Howard said 1t take a mammoth plannina effort on the pan of volun- teers. She says the group would like to see other orpnizat1ons, or local bu i- nc ses, help support and fund ac· ttv1t1es for local teen-a en "The nice thilla i the kids arc al~•ys w11l1na to help out," ihc said. "This event was putt ether with the leadership class (at Corona dcl Mar Hi&h School)." But even the beat plan doc$ not always en ure success. And for sev- eral minutes Wednesday, the tttn· aaers stood on the dock., unsure whether a chaperoned pany without alcohol was rcaUy aoina to be that much fun. Howard &aid. BuMncc the airl 1tcj)P_(d aboard, the boys were close behind. -a 4 Mom ng low CIOUd• wtff oet tOday ott to • drMtY ttart along the Orenge Cout, bu1 ttw National W•tMt 8ttVIOI ~lcta iwnattlne lor the rttt of the day Along the coatt, •r'Y morning ctoud• wlff give way to ct.ar -lki. -.id Nghe of 72 to 74. Inland, hight wlK rMCh the upper 80t ~moat~--- -Mountain r..ott l\lght wll1 ran;. from 77 to 85, with lowt In the 50e. • The deMtt• are expected to~ 92 to 107. with wind• bf up to 25 mph btuttllng the northern .,. ... In the afternoon. From Pofnt Conception to tht Mexleln border: lruwr watet'I' -LIQht \Nlable wtnda through tonfght except wett to touthwMt a to fa knota In the afternoon Md evening. Sooth to tout~t ew.llt t to 2 fMt. Night and morning low cloud•. Othetwlte ftlr. OUttr water•: Mostly wetl to northwtet wind• 5 to 15 knot• through tonJght -'th combined .... 3 to 5 feet. Conllderable low cloudlne11 meetly c;tM.rtng by afternoon. LaeVegM Utlle !Ioctl .. 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MlwllukM 12 N NwYort! 1781 II Nar10lll,V9" 12 Olrl.tlloma City " n Ome/\a 12 51 Otlenclo 14 72 ~ u 93 "'-'I• ~ :: Ptt111>uton 12 5 1 ::::::' Olly IO 51 ~ 13 70 81 LIMe 16 5e 8\.._..T~ IO 80 Seit Lake Ctty 19 64 ..,, Alltonlo 11 50 S11n .Nen,P Pl 83 N ... , .. ~~ ~ t:::" 92 50 ·~ " n Topel!• 12 56 TUCeon ~ :: TulM 13 56 :::O'°" 78 57 t3 17 78 55 11 17 IO 51 13 51 78 541 12 $S 79 541 .. 74 e4 71 IO 541 .. 17 ... 75 Extended 101 .. :; 17 79 11 n .. 14 .. 12 ICM 11 ... .. 83 83 91 ... 95 IO 7t tl 13 IO 71 .. ... 83 H s.n1eBetllM• a.ni. c.w Sent• Mn 8.nteM~ lltoc:klOll TenoeVelley Torrence \' OMnllte Vly Surf report LOCATION Zum• lleech Ser\11 MonlCe ~&MUI s.,, OleOO County Weter temp T t Tl dee ftrll IOw ~IOw TOOAY 123e.m. 1254pm I 19p.m MOM>AY 12 N 12 " 79 53 12 ea " ,, 17 37 : :g DA SW llW SW SW 02 45 u F11e1 n1g11 12-Clt • m • 9 Flnlt IOW e 51 a-m o 7 SeconOJliOll 12llpm 45 ~IOW 7 lllpm. 22 SUf1 .... 1octey et T 51 pm., ,_ Molld•Y •• e oe • m lllld •• eige111 et 751pm ~11-lodey91102tpm,191••1 9 .. • m lllld t1Me ~ at 10-N pm VICTIMS' FAMILIES FLY TO TEXAS ... From Al At the crash &ite, on the prairieland between Dallas and Fort Worth1 workers wearina rubber gloves siftca debris as they searched for human remains thought to be buried in the mud. Other workers used a large crane to lift pieces of the jet. Gov. Mark White'visttcd the site on bis way to a aovemors• conference in Idaho, and praised emergency officials' handlin& of the situation. More than 160 family memben arrived at the airport Saturday from Los Angeles, Atlanta and Fort l..1luderdale. Aa., where the flight to Los Angeles originated. They were ushered into a private room, said Delta spokesman Man Guilfoyle. Delta is Oyingand payinacxpenses for all family members and has rounded up martetina repracnta- ti vcs and assiped one to every v1ctJm family, said Clint G. Swazea, a Delta assistant vice president in Atlanta. Scars, hair, clothes, P.hotographs and other information Wlll be used to help identify bodies. Petty .. wants to leave the VJcwing of remains as the last option," Guilfoyle said. Flight 191 was making its final approach to the airport during a heavy storm Friday when it went down near the airport's nonhern boundary and exploded shortly after 6 p.m. The plane bounced across the highway and a field, clipped one or two water tanks and skidded across tarmac, witnesses said. A man in a car hit by the plane was decapitated on Texas 114, witnesses said. The cause of the crash was not known, but the flight and cockpit CHINESE CHURCH ••• From Al pcndence," said Jones, the founder and president of Spiritual Oveneers Semce, which trams church leaders in 80 countries around the world. "I was very pleased with the church and agreed with their determination to establish the new church in China." New, that is, in style more than in substance. The "Three Self-Help Movement," as the Chinese Church calls itself, encompasses all Prot- estant denominations within the People's Republic of China, with a faith and a belief system vinually identical to that of Western Chris.. tianity. But more and more, Chinese Christianity is carving out its own -uni~1:1ely Chinese -cultural and soq4J niche, Jones said . "In the 19th and 20th centuries, we have made the horrible mistake of letting missionaries make the church (in China) a transplanted, Western church," he explained. "We went in with a colonial attitude that we were superior. "The Christians (in China) were not related to the Cbjnese pcople ... they were aJienated from the Chinese population." Today, the Chinese clergy is busily trying to make up for centuries of leaning on the West for guidance and direction. A new church opens every day in mainland China, Jones sajd, for a total of 3,465 new churches between 1959 and I 984. One hundred thousand Chinese Bibles~ being printed for distribu- tfon in China, and in two years the church there will have a printing press caP.ablc of producing another 2 mtllion holy books. Most notably, the Chinese Church is trying to be JUSt that - a Chinese church, rather than a Western church with a Chinese following. And Jones said the plan is working. "The new church has been rec- onciled to the population," he said. "I believe it's flowering and bearing fruit" POLICE NAME OFFICER ••• F1"0mAl who said her brother had armed himself with a kitchen knife and was trying to kill her. Thinh Li Ngo. 34. reportedly confronted and threatened Toburen inside the Wildrose residence. An investiaator said the officer fired and Ngo was struck twice. Ngo was pronounced dead at the scene. The shootin.a incident is being investigated by the Ora!\&e County District Attorney's office. Loren DuChesne, the investiptor m cha11e of the probe, said it will be as Iona as six weeks before a report on the shooting is completed. Toburen has been a police officer for 20 years, the last 13 years with the Huntington Beach Police Depart- ment DowUng also has been with the Huntinpon police force for 13 years. A neigbbor said Ngo was aaitatcd because his sister wanted to have him placed in an institution. The neighbor said Ngo appeared to have mental problems. recorders, which keep infonnauon about the flight, were recovered, officials said. Investigators who listened to the plane's voi~ recorder detected no alarm by the cockpit crew just before tbejet crashed, said Patrick Bursley, a Natipnal Transportation Safety Board spokesman in Dallas. Jack Barker, a spokcsmarr-for the Federal Aviation Administration in Atlanta. said it wasn't kn'bwn whether wind shear -an abrupt change in wind direct1on and speed -played a role. Some witnesses said lightning hit the jet; others disputed that. "I saw a ball ofname go into the air just as the explosion hit, and black smoke came out." said Wendell Harrison, who saw the crash through a window at an airport terminal. But Swazea said he was almost certain wind shear had caused the crash, and that the plane was not hit by lightning. "h's my personal opinion there's a 95 percent chance it was wind shear," Swa.zea satd. "We know definitely from the tower 1t was not hit by lightnmg as 1t was earlier reponed." It was the first major air disaster 1n the history of the 10-year-old airpon. and Delta's first fatal accident since 1973. when 89 people died in a crash in Boston. The plane was carrying 151 passen- gers and 11 crew members, accordina to Guilfoyle. He said three ~ members and 28 passengers survived. Wrong-way driver hits wrong car A 20-year-oJd Costa Mesa woman was arrested on suspiClon of drunken driving early Saturday morning after she apparently turned the wrong way and smashed into a police car, authorities reported. Police said Kathy McGoniale turn- ed the wrong way onto 19th Street from Orange Avenue and drove straight into a Costa Mesa squad car beina dnven by Officer Robert Durham. . Neither driver was seriously in- JUrc<l although both vehicles sus-- taincd moderate damage, police said. A sobriety test revealed the woman had a blood alcohol tcvel of 0.19, nearly double the limit at whfoh a motonst is presumed too drunk to be driving, according to police. The woman was on probation from a previous drunken driving citation, they said. Ju11t Call 642-6086 Wut do yoo Ukt aboat t•e Daily PUot? What doa't yoD like? Call die aamber at left ud your me1111e wlll be recorded, traasertbff ud delivered to die appropriate editor. D=-1acau.r .. teed ....,.,..,~. ~ clo nol Ill.-..... ... "" tl0pm611~7pm .,.. .,W OOPY Wll be dlllMreO .. Mdey WIG lut'°9y " 'IV<' clo llOI ~ ~ oopy "" 1 • IT\ • Clll IM!Oft 10 ."' lftd ~ oopy Wll O.CleoMlled ClroulMlon T1t1~ ..... =:-~ ...... ~~ ....... ne ume U·tanr u1werlD1 aervlce may be aaed to record letter1 to tM editor 01 uy topic. Co11trlbatort to oar Letten col1m11 mast htclade "'elr aame ud telep19oae Hmber for verification. No clrculatlon ca111 pleaae. Tell 111 wlaat'1 oa your mind. • ~~~~E DlilJ Pilat FreM Zlnl !:dltOr Robett L Centrell Production M1nager Howatd •••MIJ ActYtftlling Dlrtctor fltoMmery Churchmen ConrrOllef Donald L. WINlema Clrcule lion MaNget VOL. 71, NO. 211 •. --_,,. . .. ION /WORIJJ======== Showman 'splal:ntlve cr-y: Wants hls mummy back SANT A ROSA -For yean, John Strona had hll mummy by hit aide. Now thinp may never be the aame ap..ln. Strona, the Sonoma County Fair'• master a bowman, bad hia l OOayear-old mummy hauled away Thuraday by a deputy aberiff. Strona, the proprietor of the World ofWonden 1ldc1how, aaid he"<•• told the mumm_y con11ituted the illcpl desecration of human remaina. '11 am di1trc1aed," said StroQJ. .. We miss him terribly. He's like a member of the family. He'• educational, too." The mummy wu the centerpiece of the amall travelina show, said Strona, who charsed SI to ace it and tne other SO auraetJona. DUe ponden 5 Supreme Coart nominee. SACRAMENTO -Oov. Oeorae Deukmeiian ann.ounced Saturday he would select a replacement for resiinina atate Supreme Court Juatice Otto Kaua from a list offi ve male appeals counjud&el and a woman federal judae. The six are: Justice John Arauenesi S7, of the 1nd Oiauict Coun of Appeal In Los Anaeles: Justice Hollis Best, 59, of the 5th Diatrict Coun of Appeal in Frcsno;Juatice Marcus Kaufman, 56, of the 4th DistrictCoun of Appeal in San Bernardino; Juttice Edward Panelli, 53, presidin& justice of the 6th Dlatrict Court of Appeal in San Jose; Juatice James Scott, 37. of the lst District Court of Apeal in San Franci1eo: Judie Pamela Ann Rymer, 44, of the U.S. District Court m Los Anaeles. Group IJOJ>N poll can ave c01Utal panel LOS ANGELES-A aroup of environmentalists hopes a public opinion poll aueuina concerns about coastal protection will help shape a strateay t9 save the embattled California Coastal Commission. The commission's budaet has been cut by Oov. Georse Deukmejian. "We miaht as well find out where the weak spots were.'' said Melvin une1 the commission's ftnt chairman. "Somehow, we have to distinauish what 1t is people don't like, what they're concerned about on the coast. There may be other ways to protect it." Court won •t IJalt Hetf6ecoc1' retrlal SAN DIEGO-The California Supreme Court h.as refused to stop Mayor Roaer H~daccock's retriaJ on perjury and conspiracy charaes while.it considers Rtiins yield a bit of life GRAPEVINE, Texas (AP) -For federal mvestiptor Armond Ed- wards. who was tr;inJ to understand how a Delta Air Lines jumbo Jet crashed nose-first onto a rush-hour freeway, there was a bit of JOY when hfe -two d<>as -Jumped out from the wm:kqc. Dozens of yellow and black plastic body baas marked death m the sticky mudJUlt shon of Runway l 7R, where Fliaht 191 crashed carryina IS I passcnaers Friday. But as Edwards and other in- vestiptors picked apan the fire- blackened debris they· came upon what they saw as a small reminder of the pme of chance that was played out in the crash. "Two live doas came out of the tail when we aot the fliaht recorder out," Edwards said. "We were startled, to say the least.'' More than two dozen passcnacn also survived the fiery crash. some walkina away with good luck and minor scratches. Cruh nniYOr Jay 81aaher i..... St. Paul'• hoepltal S.tmd.ay wttb bJa wile, Rebecca, wbile Darryl Pndtt b1ICI a.._ that aJ.o n.ntftd hfday'• a1r CftlAIL. "The ones 11tt101 1n the t11l tad a chance. The reat didn't," said Jerry Fenske, a maintenance worker at an 11r carao operation. On Saturday, investlpton search- ed for the few missrna bodies thouaht to be buried in the mud beneath thousands of shards of debris from the Lockheed L-1011, which had let\ Fon LauderdaJe, Fla.. and was to continue to Los Angeles af\er the Dallas stop .. One man was killed when the plane skippctd across busy Texas H11J\way 114 at 6:0S p.m. Fnday and flattened his black Toyota to a 4-foot·h•ah heap of steel. Another man's car was struck by . what he thouJtlt was landma acar. He was unir\jured. Fenske, who works JU St I 00 > ard• from the plane's final resuna area. saw some hvc and some die. "I haven't had any sleep;· he said Saturday. "J went to bed and every time I closed myeyes. l'dsee the same thina." "Pcopl~ were hollerinJ 'Save me! Save me!' We aot to as many as we could," he said. . Fenske saw a man. his lea cut. lyma atop another man's severed head and pleading for help. "I found out his name was Ron Hams and he was from Oklahoma City," Fenske wd. "He shook m) hand when we ao1 tum 1n t.bc ambulance and he said 'JCTry. thank you for savina my life:·• Jerry Mwmofr: a co-wot'Ur of Fenske at Zantop international Air. hoes. said ~e saw a man cmette from the tail leCtion and run towani the Dalla .. Fort Wonh International Air- port. "All he had was some scntchcs on his back." MaximofT said. "It was 1ncred1ble " Witnnsei said an infant over- looked by reacue workers wu ~icked up by a priest. the Rev. Richard Brown. and taken to an ambulance. Most never ~ad a chance. k.tlled with their seat belts still buckled. three defense petitions. Attorney Charles M. Sevilla said he filed a motion to halt the trial, currently in the j ury selection phase,Fnday afternoon. The hi&h J; • coun immedittely rejected the ucst. The thret motions seek to reduce tfle 14 fclooy perjury counts aaains~edaccock to misdemcanon and to remove· · · ···Ta 1 n S Distnct Attorney Edwin Miller as the prosecutor and Todd as thcJudae. collide head-on in France Senate panel vote. a6aln•t Impeachment JUNEAU, Alaska -A state Senate committee Saturday all but guaranteed that Gov. Bill Sheffield will not be impeachCd for allegedly steering a lucrative state lease to a political supporter and lying about it to a grand jury. The five-member, Republican-dominated Senate Rules Committee by a 4-1 vote sent to the Senate floor· a rcpon sharply critical of the first-term Democrat's actions but did not recommend his impeachment. Repubhcan Senate President Don Benncu said the report could be amended into an impeachment motion Monday on the Senate floor, but the veteran lawmaker said he was certain such an amendment would not succeed. "I think ultimately the people will be the judge in the 1986 elections," Bennett said. Dead me.a •tlll burled 1n train wrec1'86e WESTMINSTER, Colo. -Crews worked Saturday to remove the bodies of five trainmen from the smoldering wreckage of locomotives, railroad cars and a highway bndge lef\ when two frciaht trains collided head-on at a combined speed of 90 mph. Others worked to reroute a major four-lane highway around the site. The column ofblack smoke from the crash site, visible 60milesaway, was still bumingat midday Saturday. Two conductors survived the crash. Hometown prepare.for Schroeder'• return JASPER. Ind. -Residents of this southwest Indiana town bung signs Saturday to welcome their famous neighbor, William Schroeder, who will make his first trip home since receiving an artificial heart e1ght months ago. About 12.000 people arc expected to fine Jasper's streets Sunday to watch Schroeder lead the annual Strassenfcst parade in his specially equipped van carrying the Utahdri ve pump that powers the plastic Jarvik-7 heart. "It's all everybody was ta I kin$ about at the festival last night," said Sarah Wagner. "It's so neat that he's comma back.'' Folk le•t'• bac.t after l 6 yeais NEWPORT. R.I. -Thousands of folk music devotees returned to the ~ys of tic-dyeing and anti~stabhshment activism Saturday at the openmg of ~vtved Newport Folk Festival. The lawn of Fon Adams State Park was covered with blankets, beach chairs and enthusiastic fans who came to Newport 16 years after the last fest. Most were old enough to rccaJI the glory da)'.S of folk music and the festival. but the crowd also was sprinkled with young children and representatives of a generauon weaned on amplified rock music. Headliner Joan Baez bcpn her set by paymg tribute to the return of the festival to NC9wport. To the tune of"Please Come To Boston," Saez sang. "Plea~ come to Newport in the summer .... Flnt of four face11 trial In •PY caae NORFOLK. Va. -Trial begins Monday for the first of four men accused of selling Navy secrets to the Soviet Union in an espionage case that has been called the Navy's worst ever. Selection of a U.S. District Court jury is to begin at I Oun. in the trial on seven espionaaecountsof Arthur James Walker, 50. of Virainia Beach. Walker. a defense contractor engineer, is a ~etired Navy lieutenant commander and the older brother of the spy nng s alle&ed mastermind, retired Navy Chief Warrant Officer John A. Walker Jr. of Norfolk. Funeral delfant but re11tralned JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -Thousands of chanting mourners defied on Saturday a new ,aovcmmcnt emeTgcncy dee.rec bannin1 mas.s funerals, and buned 11 victJms of black riotin1 tn the tense eastern Cape township of Zwidc. Reporters said 1,500 mourners »mrncd inside the Old Apostohc Church in Zwide, near Port Elizabeth. In a miAture of defiance and restraint, mourners stayed inside the church through the service, as stipulated in the decree. But they chanted political slopns, gave 'black power' salu~ and unfurled a banner dcclarina. "Brutality killina is not a solution"1b our grievances." Later. they JOlned hundreds of other people in an illegal march to the cemetery. Typhoon reportedly nood• S0,000 IJome. -PEKING -A typhoon pounded Shanghai for 24 hours, floodina S0,000 homes. felhna 400 trees and causina three traffic deaths. newspapers reponed Saturday. Thu~ay's storm pounded China's largest commen:i~I city, inundattng f actoi;ies, warthC?uses, ~rks, farmland ~nd ma~y streets wath four inches of ram. said the offictal Enghsh-lanauage China Daily. Lebanon plan• to boycott Arab •ummlt BEi RUT Lel>O\non -Prime Minister Rashid KAram1 sajd Saturday that Lcbanon will' boycott the emcrsency Arab Ltaaue summit oooferencc 10 Morocco because of the lack of a unified Arab position. "How couJd Anlb solidarity bt achieved from what stems from Arab difTercncesr' Karanu a kcd io comments broadcast by the Lebanon state radio. Syna. Lebanon's po~nuJ netahbor and acknowlcdaed power broker in l..tbanon, has already sa1d 1t W111 not attend the Wednesday summit in Casablanca, which 1s a1med mato1)' at scek1n1 endorsment of move by Jordan's K.ma Hussein and PLO chauman Vasstr Arafat for a pcact settlement with Israel. £Jye Ald Dnance IJad file. to Sadan LONDON -The financial director of the Live Aid aPi>eal flew to Khartoum Saturday to set up a truckl~ operation to take food to the ~t1rv1n1 millions ln famine-rava&cd Sudan PHthp Ru ted said the Band A1d Tru~t. wtudi lS handlina the million of dollan raised by last month's Live Atd rock concerts in London and Philadelphia. hu bouaht 40 trUeks for SI milh~n and they arc alrtady in udan. The tru$t also ha' put a deposit of SI m1lhon on another CM trucks that re~hcduled toamvr in ·udan from Kuwait nt•t v.cck. he sa1J. The tot1l cost ohll 134 vehicle w1U be SS 2 m1lhon. he added. r- 21 killed, 145 tnjured as passenger train, local autoratl. collide near rural rail station FLAUJAC GARE. France (AP)- A passcnaer train and a two-air "autorail" train collided head-on Saturday near a rural railroad station lolhna 21 people and injuring at least 145, officials reported. Boches of the victims, S'Omc dis- membered, were hurled up to 50 yards by the impact. Police mittally said some 180 people were iOJured. But Martin Malvy, the mayor ,al.. nearby Figcac and France's energy minister, told The Assoc11ted Press that 21 people were known dead. 95 were hospital- 1zed and about 50 others were treated and released from regional hospitals. Two of the most seriously lfWU red were flown by helicopter to the hospital in Toulouse, he said. It was not immediately known if any foreigners were among the vic- tims. Malvy said the identities of those who pcnshed would not be released until their familie~ had been contacted. The passcnaer tram and local autora1I colhded outside the httlc used station at FlauJac Gare, between Bnvc-la-Gaillardc and Figcac ABC newsman seized in Beirut BElRUT, Lebanon (A P) -Gun- men kidnapped the operations man- ager of ABC News in Be1rµt on Saturday despite a Synan-sponsored security plan to end rampant law- lessness and m1ht1a rule 10 the Moslem western half of the capital. A spokeswoman for the U.S. tele- vision network said four men with nfles seized the ABC exccutt\C, Shak1b Hme1dan, 50, a l..cbanesc. while he was on his wa) to Beirut a1rpon 1n a chaufTcur-dnvcn car. She said he was gomg to catch a flight to the United States for a routine medical check-up. The men ordered Hme1dan out of the car into their blue Peugeot sedan at gunpoint, took the keys and warned the dnver not to follow The spokeswoman, who insisted on anonymity, said A.BC contacted Moslem milit1.-leadcrs in west Beirut trying to locate Hmcidan, a network employee for 17 years. Hours later. there was no clue who kidnapped htm or why. But an ABC colleague sa1d the network has received assurances from unidentified m1ht1a officials that Hme1dan could be released soon There was no claborauon ' The kidnapping on crowded Rouche roadway m we t Beirut occurred 200 yards from a police chcckpomt. undcrsconng the fragiht) of the Synan sccunty plan Hmcadan became the frfth em- ployee of Western news orgamzauons m Beirut to be kidnapped Witnesses said the first car of the autoratl caught fire. It was France's worst tram aa:1dent since June 16, 1972, when a tunnel collapsed on a train in Vierzy 1n the Aisne reaion northeast of Pans, killing 108 people and injurina 11 L "It was unbearable. There were pieces of flesh and beads stuck on the branches of trees in an area of SO meters (yards),'' said Pie1TC Pt!lquic, a farmer in the village ofFlauJac Gare in the Lot region. Police, firemen. ambul,nccs and helicopters made their wa)' to the crash scdle 300 mtlcs south of Pans. Rescue worken uSJni blow torches spent two hours removmg bodtcs from the tWlstcd metal of the can. the Let police ctuef said. Shaklb Bmeldan There 1s only one set of ttacks at FlaujaC Gare, I villaae of about so people. and the Railroad Authonty said trams usually pau each other on the dou bit track at AsslCT, JUI\ ou ts1dc F1aujac Oare. Lt was not 1mmed.lately known why the tra10s were on the same anck. The Pans train, added to handle the extra peuenaer1 in the bciabt of the vacauon season, was runnin1 IS minutes late, accord1n1 to the Rail- road A1.1thorit)' It was France's scc.ond tnun aCC't· dent m less than a month. On July 8, a tra1n travchng from Le Havre to Paris ran into a truck stalled on the track. k.tlhng e1&ht people and tnJuring 55. 15-mile peace ribbon planned WASHINGTON (AP) Thousands of peace demonstrators from across .\menca pra)ed Saturday at the Nauonal Cathedral an prcp- aranon for Sunda' 's effort to encircle centers of go' eminent wnb a "peace nbbon" beanng s)mools of hope for an end to the arms race Organizers np«tcd tens of thousands to Join ma human cham to display '1v1dl) colored. hand- st1tched t.apestnes around the Pen- tagon. the Lincoln Mcmonaland the v.S Cap1tol at 2 p.m. Sunday. The demonstration was umed to comc1dt with \he 40th anniversary ol Forest fire expected to yield clues about nuclear winter the atomic bomb blasts that leveled the Ja1>3nese c1t1cs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. endm& World War 11 in the Pacific .\bout 24.000 thrtt·foot tapestn~ -many sutched with unmistakable 1ma11nation and flair -have bttn brought to Washington to form a l 5- CHAPLEAU. Ontano (AP) - With invited sc1ent1sts looking on. forc5'ry officials set fire Saturda)' to a tract of diseased woods an a "prescribed bum" that could help answer questions about the thcor) of "nuclear Wlnter.'' The carefully plal'lned "convection column fire" was set from a helicop- ter that dropped naming jellied psohne m spiral pancme, through l .600 qcres of downed pines, bull- dozed last year m preparation tor the bum. The trees. killed by a spruce budworm mfcstauon, were burned to allov. replantmg nc'tt spnna on the publicly owned acreage. But the Li and Canadian scientific observer~ said the fire could also be a step toward better unde~tand1na of the threat of nuclear wtnter .. h\ not hke a cit'. but all the ba!lt\ m1lc -peace nbbon," organizers said. physics should be s1m1lar:· 'Mltd .. We brought ov.er 1,300 from atmosphcnc scientist Richard Turco llhno1$," declared Shem~ Lowe. of Los Angeles, one of the co-author') 41 . of Flossmoor. 111., among some v. 1th Cul Sagan and others of a 3.000 people who massed at the pioneering study on nuclear v.1nter cathedral for a demonstrauon-cve The theoi) proposes that a maJor ~f' ice."\\ e didn't ~no~ that church nuclear attack could blast smoke. )()()t JrOups and Brownies would be sew-1n1 lt'5 1nacd1blc " and debris .. ~igh-mtobe the atmosph('f( Dunna the mtcrdenominauonal -too hta.a• to washed out in ~rv1~ Fum1maro Maruoka.. a rainstorms -"'here ll could ~·k -~un 1vor of the Hiroshima bomb1na. the sun·~ rays for month ch1lhn@. lht' declared "This 1s lhe people's strua- eanh glc for peace and ap1nsl nuclear weapon\" They're making a monkey of her ;\nother atomic bomb1na surv1,·or T t-ru Monmoto from Napsalo, lold tht" ('onarept1on throu&h an inter- preter, "let u, work togelher to .lhohr.,h nuclear weapons " SAN FRA~C'ISCO (AP) -.\ biolo~st who spent th~e years studyma pnmates in the wilds of Kenya has been brought m 10 track two escaped pata~ monkey!> wandering the wild streets of San FranC1sco. So far. the vent monke\ hunt has turned up only two d<>&.!I. a <:al. a hawk and a aophcr. Both the b1oloaist. Jan1ct Chism. and the furry fuaiuves - a 12-pound patas monkey and her bab)' -arc out of their clements. but thll hasn't Sttmcd to bothtr the monkc)'S much. The 've sue-« sfully cros d d1n1erous trttts and dot-filled ne1Jtl- borhoods to dine in lush prden spou and rest 1n wooded dells Mn. Ch1~m. who on Fnday wu in her third di) on the trail. "A-1 ha' ma a bit more d1flkul\y The t pmf"wr. from Memtt and Laney collqcs aero the bey iii ' 0 kland. was on yct-untam1har turf In a garden on Mount utrn. M~ Chism pointed to a euC'alyp- tus lt'tC where !'.ht had wotted the mother monkey the da)' before Bui she m1 takenly c~lltd the trtt an acacia. a common trtt m the tropical anas lands of Mnca "1 till thin~ I'm 10 Mm:a. ·· 'ihc e'pla1ntd She pointed out a alad.J olue, plant that s.hc bel1eved had bttn uproottd by tbc mother monkey and Wt ihe ba I\ Of htr thCOr. that the animal v.-crc t>tamnani to ~tabh ha ''('lrtUll pattern:· or tcmtory "It'!. not a cat. not a dog. ma~be a lad," ,ht ~1d. .\ ncarb> tom to plant udden· It di ppcartd ~ sopher, per- h pf' "\ SOpher Could hl\e done It, .. !'.ht mused. a\ 11 pcrplt\Cd "The v.1ldhfc ol the garden I don't kn ov.-Nonh ;\mcnca n animal., That's not m) thin&" The monke) hunt bepn v.hcn the mother pata'i monkey !raped from a trt"C 1n the loo's new S 7 m1lhon monkey hou~ on July I I The zoo hi\ rccc1"'ed do1eM of lBll'i from rc~1dcnt'i "'ho ha\(' \potted the animal ae, tht'\ mo't'd lrom bac~\ard 10 NJ{k}1>rd. from park to Nark Patas arc amona the y,,orld'<. lastc!>t pnmat~ v. 1th a \f'lnnt ol \5 mph • Therc'e, an I" ful lot ol v.-00\1· land 1n the ~·11' :· Ch1\m ..a1J '\he appear'\ to he hopping from one to anoth<'r C h1sm v.-'lls h1tt:d h\ th<' n Fran\1 o Zoolog1cal "x1t'h a., \OR)ultant ta the zoo\ COO"tf\ll· t1on program , v.h1ch 1\ conJu~t · mg the \Unn"C to 'unst\ IC'arch (l~v.here. a a.roup led b\ Denver .tn10,1 Barbara Donachy-placed on fht' "1all. near the mnhsonian lne,t11ut1on'\ '\1r and Spa~ Museum. H O<X) kiln-fired clay models of m10,.,1h~r., and warheads m the US. nuclear a~nal · M".t hope a that people will Stt 1l and ~ ratht'r e,hocked and homticd b\ the num~r'\ and be moved to ..Orne '°rt of acuon. · e,hc said That dt<ipla) "'as c-omc1dcnl!ll to th(' nhbon dcmon.,trat1on Dcmon.,tmtors -1n larae part "'omen -declartd th t thtir t: ~tn~cnablcd them to 'ent 1n the open their fear" of nuclear ·war "It bnn the modem &J,t dov.n to lhc pt1'(1n~I lt"t'I ," Qld 1'b1 11 Jone~ 26, of <~ambndat. Ma . amona demon \Taton a.athcrcd earhet 1n the da' at the-. '"'t • Conarq.attonat < hurch .. h bnn n dov.n to thl" \e\Cl of children and no '("T'\, jtlh<'d df1u1hnut\ and tnp.. \0 lhe ~ich -l'." t'~thm1 "'e'd lo<;e 1n a n\l lc-ar wtr -· .....,_________ ---------------------------------------------~~~---'"-~~ _ __.__.,..__...--..,_....,._ __ _ .~ .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Sunday. August 4. 1985 -> lmp:lig~ant says · U )S. is the best ... UCI students get research·grants . the El Toro Marine Corps Air WDEIS Twelve undl'rvnduate Student II Oranae County campus st . he lS currently enrolled 1n the Un1vcn1ty of Califom1a, lrVJnt' Pnor to Joining National lJniver-~~~~ting and finance coutt5 at Dear Ann Landers. Somc\h1na aovcmmcntand he does not get were awarded fund dunna the s1ty, Froehner worked as a ruep-a 1 Universny 1984-85 academic year to pursue tion1st for the Family Services Center Nationa · happened la t n1&ht that 1 sh II never arrested. I can sttanything I want on ro.rsn. ! knew, when I read your TV end tn th~mov · Nabody ~I year-ola jfrb. rm spcakina or the splendid rt5ponse to the man who me what to loolc at. Nobody report younaer non-vi rains. I am 14. was knockina the Umtcd State!!, that I me. had toshart this with you. "There are so manythmas to buy 10 Pleascdon'tassume rm a 11-amp AflcryourU.S.-hatina reader stotes af 8 person has money. I can live because I'm only 14 and I've already blasted this country and rcelcdoffit~ anywhere 1 want ifl pay rent. Nobody had sex. I'm not a tramp. I bav~ad faults, J loved your recitation oft he tell me what kind of Job to take. r can only one sexual partl!er. but r vc had joysoffreedomand the la.st line: "I'm do work I like or quit ifl don't lake. I sex more than once. What I want to alad m y parents didn't mis the boat'" can talk against my boss ifl want and say is that my ~rents have always Last night I was at a barbav1nau even say, "The hell with Ptes1dem been very upttahtabout sex. few drinks when 1"$an approached Reapn ... and no soldiers will come The reason J had sex with my 16- meand in haltina E'nghsh id, "lstt for me an the night In my country year-old boyfnend was to spite them. here, please'!" He seemed courteous they would drag me away and I would (They think he 1~ too old for me.) and obviously wanted to talk so I be dead in one hour. Amencans are rephcd, "ftne." He ordered a dnnk the luckiest people m the world." I have no regrets. In fact, one day I for himself and thjs 1s wnat hesa1d: plan togtve my parents a heart attack I asked. '"Where did you come h I t II th hat · be n "l'm 1n Amencaoney"""r.You · .. w en e emw we ve e .... from?He rephed, "Vietnam -d born here. Lucky. I wait many years RRT In NYC oang. ID Bangkok forCathohcChant1cs to I want to ~II all parents to talk get pau>crs so I come to your ereat Our RRT: Wbau grea& letler. freely to their teenagers about sex. If country. When I fly to Amen ca 11 was Tbaak yon for remlndlnl ai llow good you don't they'll expcnment without research prOJCClS wtthtn thc:sr academic departments The students wen~ recip1enti. of University of California Pre~ident's Undergraduate Research Fellow- ship'> of up to $1 ,000. The winners were selected by faculty members on the UCI Under- graduate Committee on Scholar- sh1pi., Honors and financtal Aid. Students from this area include: Shahnar Alikhan1, Laguna Be;i.ch, David P. Berschauer. La~una Hills; Helen 81rlman. Fountam Valley; Deborah Daniloff, Fountam Valley; Nana De V1lmonn. Irvine. Enc- Robm Hartshorn. lrvme. Mohamad A. Jazayen. Irvine, Howard Lynn Kim. Irvine, Marc F Mathias, Balboa. Joyce E. Spinella, lrvme; Moise Tahery, Irvine. and 'Ramm Tayyan1pour, Irvine like heaven. I go first to M1am1, then we kavelt.Sometlme• we forge&. the slightest 1deaofwhat they might New York Ctty. Wonderful places • • • be getting into. -Young But Ex-Out9tandlng 9taff you have here. You have so many perienced freedoms. I no understand at first. Dear Ann Landers: Recently in Julie Froehner of Huntington "I read any book or paper I want. your column I've seen a lot ofletters DearYoan1: Yoaud your folkl B each was rec:en t I y na m ed The papers wnte against the 'overn-from tecnaeers. wriungabout sex. I need joint cou1ellng. Yoar concept• "Outstandmg Staff Member of the ment and nobody puts them 1n Jail. A hope you will pnnt mine bccau~ the aboatopaa commanlcatJoa1 are good Quarter" for Nauonal University's man on a street can talk.against the others l've seen arc fro m 16-and 17-but yoar b01tlllty la frlptealllg. Orange County locations. =~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fr~hne~anacadem1c-adm1ssions ;; counselor at National University El Toro was nominated by summer graduates as bemg most helpful to THE BEST-MILEAGE -. . /NCALIFORNIA!4ZJ/£. !if' 1~uw~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ·ISACHEVY IMPORl $5341~* them during their studies at NU. She was honored dunne NU's Quarterly Graduation recepuon held at the . She's waiting • ,, EPA EST MPG uie for com~rison Your mile~~ ~y differ •• m•nur.crurru's su99f.'stf.'d rf.'r•1I p11cf.' for• Sprint 1nclud~ dflt1n<1t1on ch•r9f.'i •nd dulf.'r prf.'p T•a. l1cf.'ns~ •nd oth~r options •ddlftOf\41 O.phne, a 5-yeu-old terrier mh, la at the Orange County Humane Society •helter while wal~ for a new home. She 18 noa.e broken afid good with children. - - Term Rate Yield Syear 10.00% 10.38% I . -" 2year g.00% 9.30% 1 year I 8.60% 8.88 % 6months 8.20% 8.45% Yes. I m in1crcs1ed 1n 11 6 mo --· I yr:---· 2 yr. money mar~n11e\lmen1 ccrtificall' an:nunl Ple."t' ,t-.111 nil' me more infnrma11on. . .., yr or wnd I 'Namr A.ddrt"~---- C11"------"r ---- Telt'phone_ Bt'~I Tim<' li• \all L~' ~·~a~tn)!~n~ (~11 '\HIX~o~.'..:_ Mc~ r A 42h2X -_p~ For rates on other short-and long-term accounts or further information. please call 1-800-PACIFIC. Tht' 1nlC'l'l'\I lOmpul•hon ",al,uhllC'd on a .V.S or~"' Jt11 hJ\I\ .md ~.in llt' 1,;11,1 m•mthl) 11u1r1rrl11 .1nnu11ll)' nr II ma1un111 cJC'pen•hn1 •ln lht' m11ur11,. klt't:lt'd lntt're\I c.in he cred11ed w tht' account p111d hy ~hC'c k or .:red11cd It• •nlllht'r 111.:.uun1 Ratt'' 11re \uhtt'•·t 1t1 Pt'rlod1<: l'hanirc Fcdrrul rPll11l"t1nn' rcqu•~ • ~""''~""•I 1ntt'l'C\I l"C'n.1hy fM r;HI\' ""''h'l"'"""I \l ~I minimum dC'PI'"' PAOFIC 5'\VINGS BANK FSLIC HOL.LY WOOO 001 ll1\lly~•,.i<l R111d H111ly'4'••td <A 9Cll2X.121"1 ·U\ '-4141 llOLLY\\<X>O VI R~O~T. 11111 North '*rm•~nl AW! Lo~ AnjtC'le,, CA 'l<il71 t21\I M \ 1202 U>li FELi/ 111M Nonh Wf\lrrn A~ ~Angeles.(' Yll>n 121114f.7 1121 MAR Vl\TA . 12H'1 Wn1l·t Blvd L°' Anll"IC\ CA qf)(JM 121'1 NI X211 TOLi CA I AKf. 1\1 Pa\' .\11enue Buth.ink CA '11"<1" 121H1446 6AAO ANAllHM ll'llHI ~I K11ell1 A'c . Anaheim CA '12Hl4, 1714r 7711 47flt C O\TA MJ. \A 2\4 f•~• 17th \trt'et. C1"-f11 M~ tA 421,71 1"141 hll-<IKXI HlJNTINC1TON HARBOUR tHnt Al11onqu1n \t Hunlln1ftnn Ht t:h C.A ">~. 17141 ~""' INDIO -16-02'1 Monn>l' \tr~et ln<.110, CA 92201 111191 '47 TTM PALM \PRINr.\ 'lfl) \uu1h P.alm C1n~·on l>r . Piilm ~pnn11<1. C'A 112.ln2 tflllJ1 '2..'I 7471 C ALIMF\A '4fm t nunl~ Line Rc""t.I Yuu1r;a CA 92W9, 17141 'N\.2"21 0£-L RO\o\ lh04 £ H1ahland A'" \an Bcm.1rd11m, CA l.)24CM , 17141IUN02.ll r \TRr FT 701 !forth (' \ttcet ')an ~mard1no. CA '12AO.T.17141 AAll-02.11 4'YTH \TRf-n. Ill \ [ 1 '40lh \tl'ftl \an Bf.murchno, CA ll2A04, 171.tl HXIJ 02 \I NFF-OLH 111111 Bn146dwll) Needle'!, CA 412.'61. 161<>1 llt>· .. ~I O~TA R 10 One S.:wth EueliJ Aw Ontario CA Ql7fll .17141 'iXn t..nl PLA/ >\ \'lfl Norrh n S1noe1 \an lkm;ud1nn,CA <>2401.171'41 NN02'1 RIA L:IO, 201 f-.a.,t lb°"' Line K111hn (A '12J7n,t7141 "7 .. 0411 Vil iOR\lll LI 142"CI Sew-nth \1rec1 V1c1onr1lle. ~A <>2.W2. lhl9124'-77c,7 Yl CAIJ)A, .'~144 Y11 ·a1pn OlvJ Vlk. 1p..i C •Jl.'l-N.171417117·11'11 CAIU..\81\D fff.I Cnind A11r C trl\had. \.A 9~W( 1ti1Q1 7N W26 FALLBROOK l<H'i ~th M11n \trcct. fall""1nk . C'A 11202~. tflllll 72~ lt\'I 0( f:A!llA ~7 V1~1 ~Ila , Ou•an,1<le. CA<>~ ffll9l 4U.17Q.4 ~AN MARC O<i. 740 \ Rancho \nnttt Fe Rd San Mam11. (A. Q~. 1f111)1 717 .&MJI \OI ANA 81 /\( U '12 \ l.nm1' \11n11 Ft-Ort~ \olani ~1<:h. CA 11207\ ltillll 7~'1 M 71 Vt\lA 24CJ \nu11f lndt~na l\\.'l' • V1 11 ( ..\ lllOM.\, fflllll 71f,. ~I Vl'1'A lfA\11. 'Jlt\ l·.a\I V1\la Way. V1\l11, CA 112fW\l thllfl 7"'4 \C,~ ' . • Hero honored 12-year-old Joey McNabb of eo.ta Ilea wu atven a certificate of appreclatton and a $20 award bf the Coeta Meaa Police Department and the local Klwanla Clab for helping police nab a pair of robben Jaly 4. Police Captain Bob Green, left, and f>r. Bob Nord of the Klwanla Club JM>9e with Joey who •nuked away from robben holclinC ap hl8 father and four frlend8 at a flreworb •tand and ran acrou a vacant field to alert the police. First impressions are only skin deep ERMA 8011Ec1 My husband and I we nt to ~urope recently and found what we thought was probably the last remote beach an the world. There were no boats bobbing around on the blue waters of the Mediterranean. No aircraft on its final approach to Barcelona. No houses nearby that rumbled with the sounds of music. No highways carrying cars that belched pollutants. And no people. . I chose a rock on the rugged coastline and began to needlepoint. My hus-- band got his pole, put a piece of raw shrimp on a hook. and we sat there m silence. When we heard someone crawling over the rocks. we both turned. A bather, totally nude, was making her way toward the water. Fora full five minutes. my husband and I turned to salt statues. She resumed her way to the water, searching the shoreline for rocks. At o ne poi~t. my husband cleared his throat and I thought he wasgoang to say somelhlng.but.hcdidn't ~ . Finally. she entered the water and swam out toa rock about 50 feet away and stretched out to catch some rays. My husband turned to me and said, "Did you sec that? She wasn't wearing shoes. She coukl have cut her feet to nbbons on these rocks ... "You really are certifiable, arcn 't you? Herc's a tramp who invades our space and the only thing you see are her tender fect1" "How do you knowshe'sa tramp?" he asked. "She looks hke she has a nice personality ... ~she has the intclhgence of a food processor." "You don't know that either ... he snapped. "When you leave an ankJe bracelet on ID salt water, you're not too bright." "Well, she obviously comes from a good family. Possibly military ... "How can you possibly arrive at a revelation hke that!" "Her posture," he said "It's superb.'' ..... "I cannot believe how naive you arc. Would you want your son to marry someone with a tattoo of a duck on her hip?" "It was not a duck. It was a family crest of some kind.'' "Right, and Prince Pruliphas two hons tattooed on his bicep. Why are you so stubborn about this Woodstoek dropout?" "And why are you so vindictiveandJudgmcntalabouta person you haven't seen ... fully clothed . Frankty, I'd like to see her in our family." ''She comes into this family and I go out," l said.jamming my needlepoint tn the bag. "ls this an ultimatum?'' "You bet your sweet bird it 1s. I hope you and Dr. Ruth out there will be very happy." At that point a maJe nude bather wcanngonly a weddmg nngJumped mto the water and joined our nymph fnend on the rock. My husband said. "Now he's slime." It's funny. Hestruckm eassomeonc who would be very nice toh1s mother. DEAR MR. GOREN Q. -la "Goren'• Bridie Complete" you 1&y that, to make a cue·blcl In the enemy suit. yoa mast have fir.t- or tteeond-rouad control. However, In your column l frequently tee cue· bld1 made with two or three low card1 In the enemy 1Ult. Why thJa anomaly? -J .H .R .• Detroit, M lch. A. -I presume you are re (erring to auctions such as: North East South l 'V 2 0 3 0 A typical hand for this auction could be.: +A763 ~K106 0 83 +AQ105 Obviously, South has enough to force the auction to game, yet he has no convenient bid. He doesn't want t.o jump raise opener's suit with only three-card support or in troduce a four-card suit at the two or thr~e-level. The only convenient way to tell partner that he has sufri eient values for game, while at the same time asking partner to define his hand further is to cue bid the overcaller's suit. Don't confustl this auction with the following: Ealt South 1 <:::I 2 ~ Unless you have a conventional agreement for this cue bid, it is a •trong takeout double. The rut hidder should havl' close to iame In hand and he guarantees rirst or 5econd round control in OJ)f'ner's 'uit. Q. -W • had an tHnl••• c11...., ... meat over tlae • aal .. of a bid le th auctleo bel•w. W • were vuloerable "'tit 90 oe 1e.,..: Nortb htla I + ! + 3 . 3 . We wHt clowo OH at thl'ff •,..IM a.it eve1tull1 IMt tile rd· CHARLES GOREN ber. Soutll bad 1b polnta ud four a pad ea. N ortb felt that SouU. needed Hll'a vaJue1 to ralse at &Jaat ICOre, but Mtla dJMsree4. Wluat'• your optaioa?-C.H .• Briclaeport, Conn. A.-Usually. when you bid over game you are showing ext.ra values. However, the one time that tbis does not apply is in the situation you describe -where you have a partseore and the opening bid com pletes the game. Here. a raise of OJ>f!ner's suit or a new suit bid has exactly the same meaning as if there was no part score. It is the duty of responder to m1tke it aa dlrfioult as possibl.-for t he opponent.a lo enter the auction and to make il easier for your aide to deride what to do should the op ponc-nts compete. Aa a matter of curiotity, I would like to knQw what North held to pro- i>t-1 your side one level too high. Op po"IC' a 11mple raise, North should havt-a powf'rhouH to even contem plate 1lam notwlthst.andinr any agreement. he might have thought you had, ao I can't tonatruct • 1ngl hand where thr .. 1padt1 would be In J opardy. t-.I H1q...U.a1fwc.Mtce1 .. a1.a c111ara.. H. o..-.. ... 0a.v liarff, 1a t ...... , ...... .,.,.,. ( llatle1 o ..... 1-.I O•u , ....... ~ ... a11,, er thlr Malta,~ ........... . ........ ,.u........_ ..... ltW. -' .f,.- ., ·- I \ . Stytea featured are repreaentatiw of the edveftiMd The ce>mpaf11bM pricee .,. in ~omp"ence with FTC compM- group end occa-..onaUy specific stytea may not be '°" guicWinea. which ttate "of ~ grade and quality" « evebble In every store. ''eaMntiaMv limiler quality and obtainable in the .... ·: -...---...----~------- Exceptional ... the quality, the selection; the Value . . . famous name SU-ITS 99 comparable in guality at $195 • Finely tailored 2-pc. suits • Year-round welght.55°/o wool/45°/o polyester .. • In strf pes and solids • Erom famoue makers • Sizes 36 to 46 reg ., 36. to 40 short, 38 to 46 long. .. ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sunday, August ... 1985 M '' . • • \ \ f ..----~--- " . Judge, Pilot both off base about NB JJJarlJuana-bust To the Editor: This 11 in ~rd to the editorial on July 24on theJudae'1 rulina1tink1 but it ia the correct one. J would like to remind the Daily Pilot that the Fourth Amendment ia nol meant to protect criminals. Yes. it is here to protect us citizens who do not want unteasonable search and ac1zure a111 protected under the Fourth Amend- ment. J also would hke to remind 'he Daily Pilot that unless its eduors have stood in front oftheJudaesofOranae County. th ey probably do not have enou&h authonty to say that allJudaes arc correct and that all Newport Beach policemen should be con· demned for their actions. Most certainly a sailboat parked in front of a no parkina sian and the hea vy smell of marijuana would have been enouah for any prudent law officer to institute a search without a warrant. The judae may or may not. bave issued a warrant, even thouah ui the editorial you state that Judae Bos- trum most probably would have mued a search warrant in this case. He decided to judac in favor of the criminal aaain, which is typical of Oranac County judacs -not only Orange County, we're not pickina on them particularly. But the,Y arc the most abundant in their op1nlon1 for the crimiAal a.nd qain11 the cititcn. • We are citizens who are tryina to keep our Ncweort Beach, our Southern California a place where we can all live in quiet contentment. Judie• lik~ Juctae Bostrum handin1 down an opinion fully in fa vor of the criminal and weiahina apinst and tellina a Newport Beach policeman that he is unbelievable 11 uncons- cionable. Then to have the editor of the Daily Pilot put in an editorial lh11 says, "I'm sorry, folks, but we cannot have law and order we must rule in favor of the criminal in order to uphold the Fourth Amendment." Believe me, I think you are both off base. The Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable search and seizure without warrant issued upon prob- able cause supported by cause or •ffirmation and specifyinJ the purpose for which the).' ate issued. Most certainly we should be able to count on our judacs when there is evidence to weiah on behalf of the police. It is certainly the police who should be g.iven the benefit, rather than the criminal. K.CLARY Fountain Valley cw" Crltlc judges Judge Bostrum To the Editor. The other niaht 1 was appalled to read your aniclc rcgardina the acquit· tal of the three men who brouaht into Newport Beach I 0 tons of marijuana. rm sure we all believe in our constitution, specifically the Fourth Amendment. However, when Judge Bostrum blatantly disregards a cnme. something needs to happen. Yes, we have rules to follow and, in this particular case, my hat goes off to Police Chief Gross and the men in his department. They are aware of the search and seizure laws, in fact they bent over backward to follow cvery- thina required by law and did so. Probable cause? How about the smell of 10 tons of pot? Yet Judge BOstrum found a way to acquit three men who admittedly brought into Newport Harbor a boat loaded with I 0 tons of marijuana. What can we, the citizens. do? Very li ttle in this case. However. when Judge Bostrum is up for election. that's when we can let our voice be known. RALPH RODHEIM Newport Beach Chief Gross badly ~reated To the Ednor: On July I 0, 1985. Chief Gross .addressed the Speak Up N~wport mectina and discussed the new curfew going into effect the followmg Friday. His talk was well-received and all attending left feeling our city was an aood hands with our Pohcc Dcpan- ment. Chief Gross exJ)fesscd ha pleasure at now being able to take charae and prevent our yo ung people from aeuing into troubl~ The chief did ask the adult com- munity not to be intimidated and stay inside on these lovely evenings. "Go out together and enJOY your city" was his requesL As has been seen by the results of the curfew. the young people (in the maJority) arc law abiding and. although they grumble a bit, they are dispersing when, or even before, 1t as requested. I was at the meeting when Chief Gross spoke and feel the an1cle published by the Pilot was. m the headline and the first pan of the anicle supposedly quoting the chief. a complete misinterpretation of the facts. Chief Gross deserves an apology from you, which I hope you are graciow enough to submit. DOROTHY HARDCASTLE Ncwpo11 Beach Pilot unf alr to Chief Gross To the Editor Your recent article and ednonal regarding Police Chief Pete Gross' remarks toa recent meetangofSpeak Up Newport badly mmepresent the tenor of Pete's remarks, and unfairly portray them as inflammatory 1n a situation he himself recogmzed as volatile. At the SUN metting, Pete ex- plained his department's approach as one oftelhng t~n-agers subject to the curfew what the rules arc and urging voluntary compliance with the rcgu- l~i1on, wHh detention action to deliver any teens not in compliance to their homes only as a last reson . Pete arso said that he felt the maJonty of the teens i_nvolved would respect the curfew rulh -and other reasonable rules -but that society must be ready to <>late its rules for behavior to young people. who may be at a stage in their laves where they arc testing to determine what so- c1ety's rules arc. The chief also urged m1dcn~ oft he areas where late-night gathenngs of teen-agers are prevalent to make their own presence apparent -to be seen on the sidewalks and in public areas, and to not leave a vacuum for gatherings of people from out of the area. Pete's remarks were temperate and explained an approach by hJS depart- ment that is well-balanced between the; need lo enforce the rules, and the desirability of obtirninit voru ntary compliance while avoiding confron- tation. Chief Gross should be commended for the thoughtful approach he 1s taking to this problem. DARRYL R. WOLD President, Speak Up Newport Seabrldge glven -b.um· rap To the Editor· This is 1n rebuttal to an article published July 16 on the Scabndge Village project. I Jave m the Seabndge Villa.at project. The homeowners bordenna the Scabridae Village proJect complained about the undesirables who enter the complex, but they have only them- selves to blame. • These so--called undemables do not enter from or throuah Scabndge. but from 1he homes that surround the complex. Afler readina Mr. Barker·~ an1de, I walked the back fence line to sec the problem m~self. The state of dm-cpa1 r of some of the fences of the 1ndiv1dual homeownen is horren· do us. Lack of personal pnde 1n home owntrsh1p as eAh1bited by some of the 1nd1v1duals explains why there is ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat problem an the fi~t place The bikcn I .saw were teen-age boys on bicycles. the packs of dogs were being walked by adult homeowners. wtth drinlcs in hand. All of the individuals I approached were from the homes, not from Seabndae or from 04',.of the area The residents of Seabndge V 1lla&c think 1t as unfair that not only do they have to put up with trc'\passing but that the homeowner' want Mola Ot-velopment to build a wall to replace their aaina fences All the~ vctbal attacks against Mola Develop.. ment by a minority of Huntmaton Beach residents 1s a clear case of haves and ha vc nots The haves do not want the have nots to have GEORGE ~HIMROCK Hununaton BuC'h ,,.,. ZJftl lt111or Tom Tett ... .,.,...,_ Don, .. , Qty tdrlor c, ......... '"'19 tdllOt ''If courts had the power to rule against racial and sexual th cJvtl di crJmlnatlon, whydldwebotherdurtngthe •60stopass e rights acts?'· Reagan's only the latest to pickjustices by policy Roosevelt was 1st to ensure court reflected his ideas WASHINGTON -A few oijhts ago I listened to a pair of liberal law professors on television warning about Ronald Reaaan's attempts to "1dcolog.izc" thc Supreme Court. The short answer is that the court was 1deolog.ized a long time ago -by Franklin Roosevelt. As Mr. Reagan once noted (only lo be ac.cused of a "gaffe"), much New Deal legisla tion was modeled on Mussolini's fascist program of econ- omic centralization. Roosevelt is best understood as one of several dema- gogue-dictators of the period, along with Mussolini, Hitler and Huey Long. Mussolini and Hitler ran their course; Long was assassinated. Roosevelt casne up against the U.S. Constitution. When the Supreme Court struck down the National Industrial Re- covery Act, Rooscvell was enraged. He tried to get Congress to pass legislation enabling him to appoint enough pro-New Deal justices to offset those who had frustrated him. This was an almost revolutionary step, an open threat to tbe indepen- dence of the judiciary. Even the compliant Dcmocratk Congress rebelled. Such leading lib- erals as Walter Lippmann, Raymond Moley and Dorothy Thompson de- nounced Roosevelt's aggression against the court. Roosevelt backed off. but be had mad(Jlt clear that his main criterion for Supreme Court justices was agr~ment with his policies. not Jud1cial competence. His record of appointmentl was to prove this. Only one of his coun appointees had significant judicial experience. Most JOSEPH SOBRAN Detroit. His hot temper led one waa to predict that as a Supreme Court justice he would render "j usu~ tempered with Murphy." James F. Byrnes, a congressman and senator. served as a budaetary expert for the New Deal. He had no judicial experience. In later years, he came to object to the Coun's new activism. Robert H. Jackson had neither of them were Roosevelt's political judicial experience nor a law degree. cronies. All were supporters of the He nonetheless was admitted to the New Deal. Consider them: • bar in New Yorlc and came to Hugo Black was a zealous Senate Washington during the New Deal as investigator of big business. {He general counsel for the Internal would later denounce, from the High Revenue Bureau, where he made an Court. congressional investigations extraordinary ruling that enabled of communist espionage and Eleanor Roosevelt to claim a huge tax subversion.) A former member of the deduction. Tb is bit of sagacity Ku Klux Klan, h1sjudicialexperiencc evidently recommended him to consisted of 18 months as a police Frankljo D. court j udge an Alabama. He was, of Wiley Rutledge was a law ~rofessor course, an avid New Dealer. who did have some judicial ex- Stanley Recd was a New Deal pcrien~. of sorts: Hts support of bureaucrat wbo, as solicttor general. Roosevelt's Coun-paclong scheme argued the NRA case before the had earned him a Roosevelt appoint- Supreme Court and lost. He lacked ment to the U.S. Court of Appeals for not only j udicial experience but even the District of Columbia. a law degree. · For a generation, the Supreme Felix Frankfurter had no Judicial Court, dominated by Roosevelt's experience. though he had been a appointees, produced a contradictory Harvard law professor. He was most legacy. Sometimes it swept important as a behind-the-scenes procedural niceties aside to get the operator. described by one admirer as substantive results it wanted (as in the "a Jiminy Cricket to Franklin Roose-segregation cases); somettmes it veil's Pinocchi o.'' 'adept at landing elevated procedural niceties to a jobs for such protcgcs as Dean · fantutic degree (as in cases involving Acheson and Alger Hiss, among criminals and communists). The manr, others. common denominator of these con- W1lham 0. Douglas was a lawyer, a tradictions is that the interests of the law professor at Yale, and a chairman Left were regularly advanced by of the Securities and Exchange Com-judicial !Ugh-handedness. mission. He was unembarrassed by Since Roosevelt, it has become his lack of judicial expenencc and commonplace for presidents to ap- unashamed of his lefl-wing point j udges with open reference to philosophy; he said frankly that he their pohcy predilections. h's a little "would rather create a prccedentthan late in the game to treat this as a find one." Reagan innovation. Frank Murphy was a pohttcal hack with no Judicial cxpenencc except a Jo•epb Sobran I• a 1yndJc•ttd bnef stint on Recorder's Court m co/11maJ1t. Charges surround scramble to secure foreign-aid project At stake: A 5 million, 5-year program training foreigners to sell items to U.S. ·o~ASHINOTON -Behind-the· scenes scramblina for a relatively modest fore1an-a1H contract hu already entanaJed tlNo U.S. senators. a former ambassador and an inspec- tor-general an a thicket ofac.cusat1ons -crony1sm. u11propcr influence, malfeasance -and the contract ha n'\'even been awarded yet. Some of the charges were made anonymously. and have been neither disproved nor confirmed. One key participant refused to comment on the record. Our associate Vicki War- ren h"' '°ned out the confusina tanale. Herc' what she learned: The contract at stake 1s for a SS m1lhon, five-year proaram modeled after the lntemattonal Execuuve Development Project, which tramed you na Costa Rican and oiher rorcisn bu11ntumcn an the fine an of sellina their products JO Amenc~n "com- panies The provam would involve workJna with the youna ex.ecut1ves both m their countnes and 1n the Untted State1. The PTOJCCt WIS thou.aht up by the Wa hangton, D.C .. consultina firm of Keene, Monk and Associates. which 'old the 1dc1 to the Aacncy for I ntcrnnttonal ~velopmcn& in 1982. Kenne. Monk wa\ awarded a SI million contract by Af D to run the program fs>r lhrce )'Cars David Keene. a panrier in the firm, 1s a close f pend of Sen. Robert Kasten, R-W1s .. chanman of the Appropriation<> subcommittee that funds AID But an late l 983l Keene. Monk was told by AID aam1nistrator Peter McPherson that fut ure contracts for executive trainina would be put out for compct1tJ vc 6ids. The followina sprin&. AID evaluators stl.ldied the Keene, Monk project and concluded that "tanaiblc results ... have been relatively hm1ted to date" and "the cost per participant does appear to be hiaher than that of comparable pro- arams" Keene. Monk cont.acted then-Am· bassador Curtin Winsor 1n Costa Rica. but he was far from cncouraa· 1na. He wrote the firm that AID intended to award the contract for any utens1on of the development project to 1 non-profit aroup in Costa Rica. which would subcontract the work to be done in the United tatcs It looked a. if Keene. Monk would be out in the cold · It wasabout then. A ID sou~s told us.. that they were told by staff 11de on Kasten'• subcommittee, that un- leu Kttne, Monk .. Sot somcthina" 1n the way ofa conlrlct, money for other AID proarams would be held up Ka,ten ha" refu~d to comment on the record JACK AIDEISOI and JOSEPH SPEAR In July 1984, Keene. Monk officials told the AID inspector general they had been told by an anonymous caller that their firm had been "unfairly written out" of consideration for the SS million cxteruion of the develop- ment proaram. They also tep_orted that the anonymous ca ller said that the AID chief m Costa Rica may have offered to cut an aaency evaluator in on pan of th e project by subcontract· ina work to him. The 10 reponed fi ndina no hanky· panky. Meanwhile. Winsor wrote to Kasten to complain about what he viewed •as Keene. Monk•s pteuurc tacucs. At about the same tame. Senate MaJority Leader Robert Dole, R- Kan , also wrote a letter to AID, aslona about Keene, Mook. He said he was interested only it1 the "substance of the proaram ... not an the stlect1on or a contractor or the com~tJtJvc b1dd1na proce " Keene. Monk now uys it w1nts the rnti~ project put out for oom ptt1t1ve bidding. Jact AINltnM u4 JoHpt .pnr an 1yedlcatt4 r.111Ul1i. WILLIAM aucnsY . cola.mollt ON THE RIGHT W1tLIAM F. Bue KLEY Courts assu-me extra powers Exceed authority in decisions about homosexual rights The ruling of the Court of ~ppc~ls in the case of Georgetown University vs. the gays an Washington, D.~ .• marvelously and scandalously in- s1ructs us on how it is that the rules we hve by are beina made these days - not by legislatures but by the courts. Listen. and shake your head. Last year. Mayor Edward Koch of New York told Cardinal John J. O'Connor that the Catholic enterprises over which he presides must formally affirm the rights of homosexuals. The cardinal replied most politely t~at in _fact he did. not knowingly d1scnm1nate against homosexuals, but that he would make no such affirmation because if one is a priest, one's attitude toward homosexuality as guided by reliaious precepts, and the First Amendment to the Constitution, dear Edward, forbids any legislature from intcr- ferina with the practice of religion. Mayor Koch said he would need to refer the matter to the courts, both gentlemen smiled at each other, and waited for the court lo act. Last June, New York's highest court sided with the cardinal: Mayor Koch did not have the power to set hiring standards for Cardinal O'Connor. At about the same time, a group of gay activists in Georgetown asked for university recognition. Georgetown, which 1s a Catholic univer$ity, said no, sorry. but the Catholic Church formal ly disapproves of homosex- uality and 1t would not therefore be plausible to ex1end the university's hospitality to a homosexual organiza- tion. So off we JO. once again, to the couns. The tnal judge ruled with Georgetown, and the gays appealed. On Tuesday, a three-judge panel of the Co un of Appeals ruled l-1 against Georgetown, in favor of the p ys. But -wait: The entire nine-man court advi~d the parties that it would consider the quesrion en bane, i .c., the whole of the court assembled, so that until that happens. the ruling of the 1niti«I trial Judge stands, and Georgetown can conunuc to malce its own rules over what groups to recognize. So that we have here a court in New York ruhng one way, a court 1n Washington ruling the same way, a h,gher court in Washington divided on the question, but with a majority vouna in favor, and the whole court announcing that it would address the question m full session. So that what Georgetown can do, and by extension what Cardinal O'Connor can do, is being decided by men appointed not to make laws1 but to interpret laws.. No federal laws have ever been passed respecting homosexual rights. Reacting to the favorable decision of the D.C. P,ancl, the lawyer forthc gays said jubilantly, "This is the fint dec1s1on anywhere that says that the chmmation of discrimination against homosexuals is to be accorded the same status as elimination of racial and sexual discrimination." Riaht. And that of course is the point: A court is undcnaking to pass what ism effect lcgislat1on. If courts had the '1>Q._wer to rule agamst racial and sexual discrimina- tion. why did we bother durina the '60s to pass the CIVil riahts acts'! The court in Washmaton 1s in effect saying, Never mind what Congress says on the subje<:t, just ask us whether Georgetown has to recognU:e a PY riahts lobby among its students. To be sure. Georactown has an important reserve case. It is the same First . Ame~dment adduced by Cardinal. 0 Connor. It will not neccssanly work: Bob Jones Uni ver- sity reads the Bible as proscrib1na m1sccgenation, which may be a screwy way to rud the Bible, but it was presumably a part of the F1r$t Amen~ment to pe!'"lit people to read the Bible accord1na to their own hahts. Perh1ps one day soon the Supreme Coun .will rule that those who read t~e Bible IS proscribma onanism 11mply aot 1t wrona somehow, so that the coun wall relieve thtt Vatican of respons1b1ltty for refin1na Catholic doctnne. If the above is confusana. con- at•!ulate yourstlf: It should be con· fUs1n1 that ..-e have amved at a point where JUdJC in Washinaton tell pnc•t? who run a un1veriity 1n Wuhmaton ..,hat practices students 1n that un1vt-rs1ty can be permitted to pro~ly111c Wllllam B11dlty /1 • iyadlcaiM col•m•l.11. l ~--~·------:-..:..--~------------~--------...;....._ .. _______ !; Beauty and the beut Of.nge Cout DAILV PILOT/Sunday, Aaaguet 4, 1985 A7 Monet's failing eyesight exp ore Painter's cataracts may have Influenced ' Impressionist work TOLEDO. Ohio (AP) -The artisuc trends rdlccted an Oaude Mone1's lmprcss1onist p&inti.np may ha vc been Wluenced by the artist's cawacu, an eye doctor sugesu. Opb\halmolocist James 0 . JUvio. wnhna in the Journal oft.be Ameri- can Medical Asloci.a1ion, said newly publiciz.edktten between Monet and his docton ind.tcate that the aitilt't ' later works were bea vlly anfiueoc:ed by his fatltna eyesiaht. • Rory Spaid. 20 (abo•e) 11eeb eome ,watery relief from 100 ctearee h•t ID ;the Sacramento RJ•er •wfm area ehe •apeniaee near Redcllq. At rtpt, Herbert Kraft from Weet Germany. emllee with pleuare after wtnn•na tlie Srd annaal Face-m•lrtna Conteat ID lloncrabeau, 90athweatern France. Monet was born an I S40 and died • an 1926 after pa.intin& (or more than ~yean. -H.is unpresstonistic st)'.le was based on imprecision of detail. That style hid Monet's cataract problem until about 190&, when hit pain~ bepn to show a blurrina of distant detail, said Ravin. who bas studied Monet as part of IOJll-ttandin& reteareh in an and mcdidoc. Jour.nalists strike after program canceled Cata.racu result in a cloudin& of the eye's lens that reduces the amount of l~t enterina the eye and intefcres wtth vision. By LARRY THORSON A 1111 .. 1•"-Wrtlef LONOON (AP) -Journahsts at Independent Television voted Friday to join a strike called by rival reporters at the British Broadcasting Corp. after the BBC canc.eled a program on the Irish Republican Anny. The BBC had been urged by the government not to broadcast the film, a.od there is growing concern that the canc.eUation has damaged the BBC's credibility. The local chapter of the National Union of Journalists at Independent Television, and BBC radio JOUrnal- ists voted Friday to join BBC tele- vision journalists in blacking out news broadcasts next Wednesday, the day the program bad been sch~duled for broadcast. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Home Secretary Leon Brittan had urged the BBC to drop the documentary, saying it would have boosted terrorists. On Tuesday the BBC's I 2-membcr board of gov- ernors canceled the program. Both Thatcher and Brittan natTow- ly escaped death in an IRA hotel bombing last October. The banned program featured two extremists in Northern Ireland wbo advocate violence -Martin McGu10ness, an elected local official from Sinn Fein, the legal political arm of the outlawed IRA -and Gregory Campbell, a hardline Protestant. The BBC monitors forei~ broad- casts as well as reaching out in English and 36 other languages to a world audience claimed to number 120 million listeners. The BBC acknowl-Nonetheless. anybody who wants to ed&ed Friday that countries such as criticize us now finds 1t a great deal Li6ya, the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia more easy ~o do so." and Czechoslovakia were using the The BBC is supported by lic.ense incident to cast doubt on BBC fees paid by the public,. though the credibility. external services arc funded separ- Austen K.ark, managing director of ately through the government's BBC External Services, said in a BBC budact. ·1. 11 h BBC b radio interview that he doubted the Tlie stn-..e ca at t e 15 su ~cct to raufication by an emergency incident would have much impact on committee mccung of the National his service's believability in the long Union of Journalists next Tuesday. run. At Independent Telev1s1on, union government is f.Omg to interfere with the free media. ' Independent Television manaae- ment called the planned stnke "mis.- guided." The BBC is guaranteed cditorlal mdependenc.e undcT its 1922 chamr. There have been many conflicts over' the years between government and BBC. The government bas power to ban programs, but has never used 1t. Thatcher insists that her eovcm- ment has not censored the BBC. Monet's later works were for years considered infenor to his earlier ones, but Ravin said be DOW ICCS a ~vcrsal of that vi~int. with critics P.~ greater Slll'ificancc on the pa.munp he did when he bad a severe visual handicap. His later works now arc considered a hnk to the abstract an of the 20th century, Ravan satd. But, Kark said, "it has made it very chairman Giles Smith said BBC difficult for us in the short run." Some journalists appealed for support at an l":::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!i~forci~ radios already were saying the Independent Tel vision union mcct- BBC 'is a tool of the government." he ing and "1t sort of grew ... and there said. was a feeling we should make some Kark went on: "( do profoundly sort ofa protest.'' believe that it is not what other people " Smith told The AsSOCtalCd Press, say about us, but what we say -the "I Us a fundamental issue affecting all truth we tell -that w111 prevail. 1ournaltsts m this country if the FOR SALE Approximate 6000 Grape Vines List of women inventors distorted ' Mission variety. Nearly 100 ye(Jrs old-large trunks, roots and branches. Suitable for manufacturer of furniture, candelabras, and o1her decorative items. Available as of October .1, 1985. Offen accepted immediately. Must be purthased in minmium Ion of 100. Will be sold for best offer. Buyer must arrange transportation. BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -The contributions of women in science history have been grossly distorted in textbooks, and the U.S. Patent Office is largely to blame, sa1d a Stanford University historian. -Autumn Stanley, a scholar at Stanford's Center for Research on Women, says three lists of women inventors prepared by the U.S. Patent Office at the request of feminists in 1890 were significantly inaccurate. Stanley, who will pn:scnt her research at a nine-day conference on science history at University of California-Berkeley, has not de- cided whether the omissions were unconscious oversights, or de- liberate exclusions. "That's up for question.'' said Stanley. "I think they took women's work so much for granted that ignorin' it was kind ofunconscaous, which as the worst kind of dis.- crimination there is." She said the lists, which rcponed patents received by women from 1790 to July I, 1888, ignored such Nudists may bare brunt of skeeters -MIAMI (AP) -Members of the Sunny Palms Nudist Lod&e planning to establish a co-op on a SO-acre island may end up wcarina clothes, a local ex pen says. because th~asland 1s infested with mosquitos. The Sunny Palms Lodge for nudists closed Sept. 20, 1984. when the DuPont Chemical Co. purchased their spot four miles south of Florida City to build a paiol testtng labora- tory. For the next nme months, mem- bers of the former lodae searched for a secluded cranny where they planned to c~te Dade Coun1y's fint nudast co.op. The pot they picked, at the southern tip of the county, east of U.S. l, 1s shrouded with trees and dotted with m1narove and pines. But, warns Dade County mo1qu1to control e~~n Marlon Helms, "If the nudists ire aoi!'J out there, they mi&ht ouaht.a thmk about putting lhtlr clothes on." The nud11u remain undaunwl. "It hat a 900-foot-lona beach, it bis JOmt wetland which we arc 101na to maint.ain, and a lot of bird " said Tonianne Wyner, 1 unny Palms patron. "It" esn'tt.ake much tom1ke a nudist hi)\. . Havina a e••cc to ao and t.ake their clothe on without attttn& 1n trouble with tht law 1s all they want." significant discoveries as Martha 1876 were not mentioned on the list. said. Coston's night-Sijllaling devices, "Tbis means that clerk-compilers She added, "I think it's important which l)!volutionizcd naval com-omitted roughly one woman's in-that women have role models and munication and are still used today. vention for every four they re-one of the places they get them is c.ordcd," she said. "The total textbooks. Scienct and technology "HowcouldCoston's dev1cehave number of women's patents for are the roads to power in this been forgotten? It was famous at the 1$76 should be almost 27 percent society. If women are ever going to time the lists were compiled," higher." have access, they are going to get No guarantees as to exact siu or condition of vines or suitability of porticulor purpows. LEWIS HOMES (714) 985-0971 ext: 508 Stanley asked. Patented in 1859, the The significance is not that the an to these fields." night-signaling device was shown at ratio of women patents is higher, she l"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii••••••••••••••-.i••••••••••••• the Philadelphia Centennial ID said. With the omissions added, 1876, at Paris in 1878, and at women stm only account for 1.3 Chicago's Columbian Exposition ID percent of all patents during that 1893. · period, she said. The lists also wrong})'. classified The significance is that women discovtries by women fiom techni-have not been given cnilii Tor. cal categories to more traditional important mechanical discoveries, female fields, Stanley said. For Stanley said. example, Harriet Strong's dam and "If this achievement in mechan- reservoir system was listed with ical innovation is hidden, then the pots and pans in the culinary picture of women's overall inven- utensils category, she said. tive achievement is distorted. as are the inferences drawn from it about Le Concierge A personal desk diary which offers o wide range of informative services, as well as interesting information, fr om the bosic to the esoteric. Le Concierge is on on-going process in which we invite your por11c1pot1on. Now at its fourth week deadline before publicat1Qn, we osk if we hove overlooked your unique service, gourmet shop, restaurant, hotel, night club, florist, etc., please feel free to call 17141 720-0837 Other inventions omitted were women's inventive capacity," she Henrietta H. Cole's "Pony" fluting .-------------1~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!~ machine, Mary P. Carpenter's self- thrcading and self-setting needle for sewing machines, and Geneva Armstrong's improvement in live- stock cars, she said. Stanley has found that 33 out of 157 women who earned patents 1n RUFFELL'S UPllOUTERY Ftr n. led " ,_ lit 1112 -llll., CISTI IW -SQ.UH < ***FORECLOSURE SALE*** 10 Second• From Your Home To Your Boat! PRIME-NEWPORT BEACH HOME -40' BOAT DOCK 5 BEDROOMS + MAID'S QUARTERS -60' WATERFRONT LOT 401 NORTH STAR LANE, NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA TO BE AUCTIONED ON SUNDAY, AUG. 4, at 3:00 P.M. 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HereS a book wrth information every ~ needs. .. the Better Bustness Bureau Consumer Resource Book. Its packed wtth t1mety buying tips. sug- gestJons and articles to help protect you and your money. "llus 1nformat1on can help you be a better consumer . and best of all, its tree! "But you have to use 1t to get the help you need!'' ... And Its Easy to Use 2 .......... "°""°' A •ing rl .. ~~In'°"'.,.. 911""9 OI ~IOI\,_.. tSf I, .. ~~ .. ~ FREI DELIVERY SOON TO HOllEI AND •UatNIUll IN SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY. LOOK FOR m _____ ,_ I . .. -----~ A8 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Sunday, August 4, 1985 -" Most U.S._ schools have computers DRUlll DRIVING ~··Th1r1 Ir Stlll Hope For Your Future. Call Citizens Leoal Council to hel p you with an experienced attorney who has met CLC's r1g1d quallficat1ons tor D.U.I. Law. Citizen s Legal Cou.nciT A Non-Profit <::orporation ---+- 714-539-0403 lCt'ep th" number handy But survey shows wfdenln ap with poorer s chools owntngfewer t h a n wealthy schools NEW YORK (AP) -A n • ttonw1de stu1noforttasts that tchools will own a m1 ion or more computen nc•t hool )'eat, but it also provides fre h evidence that the poor aren't sharing equally in the 1 classroom computer rcvoluuo'\.. . America's public, pfivatc and Catholic schools owned 630,000 1984-85, A Cotnprehcn 1vc Survey and Analysts," conducted by Market Data Retrieval, a priVale, Westpon, Conn., l'C'SCarch firm. More than 85 percent of Amencu'll public schools had at least one computer, the survey found. Four yeors ago, only 18 percent had them. Schools in we lthy dinricu had an average of 10.6 microcomputers in 1984-SS, while those 1n the poorest district had only 6.8. The number of computers at nch schools incrcnscd by more than 47 percent last year, but onl~ ~l at 1mpoveoshed schools. ...:.....:...._ _______________________ --t microcomputen in 1984-85, up 75 percent from lhe 1983-84 school year, acoordina to a SO-state telephone survey, ''MicrocOfllputers in Schools But the repon also offered data showing an evcr·widening gap be· tween the number of computers available to rich school children and' those in poorer districts. .. Not only does there appear to be a gap, but the gap appears to be widening as the richer schools add computers at a faster rate (and at a faster growth rate) than the poor schools." the repon said. Educational computer sales have surged despite the overall slowdown in the computer industry. Schools S~.I\ t• mom•\ !->hopping \ ahtt•.., adn·1·tiM•d m tht.• - Diiiy Pilat .. 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Our convon1ent Wicket Revolving Charge, American Express Card, M11terCa~d or Visa ANAHEIM· Santa Ana Ftwy and Magnolia Phon 714 821 ·8550 VAN HUYS: San Diego Frwy and Sopulv da Blvd between Burbank nd Victory Phone 818-780-2244 ( WEST COVINA San Bernardino Frwy and Vmcent Phone 818·919 1971 COSTA MESA· San Diego Frwy and Harbor Blvd Phone 714 -5.C0-8242 \ \ Opon Monday thru Frld1y 10 9, Saturday 10-6. Sunday 12·6 ' have n=malned m.,or purchl5trs of computer equipment larstl)' because manufacturers have adopted the strategy of scllina terminalt to schools at deep ditcounts to create markets for cduca11onal sof\ware. Tbe coounuina bu}'inJ spree 1s all themott remarkable ~use no hard p~f exist yet that children lea~ better with computers. Th~ main im~tus has been the en~us1asm of schoolchildren and the fechna among parents that comP.uter literacy wa.ii a key 10 their children's future JOb prospects. . Among other survey findmp: •The number of pnvate non- Catholic schools with at least one microcomputer more than doubl~ last year and nearly tripled at Catholic schools. About 46 percent of !10n· Catholic pnvate schools u~ micro. computers in 1984-85, whale 63.4 percent of Catholic schools had them • compared with more than 85 percent of public schools. • Pnvate, non-Catholic schools that had at least one computer averaged one com~ter for every 40.5 students. Public schools averaged o~e for every 63.5 st udents, and Catholic schools one per 73.5 pupals. •The most populous states had the most computers in their public schools. California had 50,356, New York 38,524, Texas 36, I 34 and tlli no is 25,65 1. But smaller and rural states led the way in providing the largest .num~r of computers per student an their_ public schools. Alaska had one per 24.1 students, South Dakota had one per 33.2 pupils. Minnesota one per 35.8 students and \\(yoming one per 37 I students. •Apple Computer· Inc. had the largest share of the kmdergarten· 12th grade market with 50. 9 percent. Radio Shack was second with near!) 10 percent, followed by Commodore with 15.2 percent. Others accounted for the rest. Grads: Forget all you learned Ha rvard prof claims studen ts notgettin job su rvival training By SUZANNE WETLAUFER BOSTON (AP) -Congratula- uon!>. graduate You've survived high school. college and maybe even graduate school. What a lovely diploma. Now, forget everything you've learned. l_t's wonhless in the real world. Or so says Harvard Business School Profe~r John P. Kotter, who rcceqtly wrote an open letter to the nation's graduates with the dire message that the implicit lessons of the classroom can rum a career. "School teaches you some lessons about work that are JUSl wrong for survival on 1he JOb," said Kotter, author of seven books on organiza- uonal behavior "Be prepared for some shocks." For example. school teaches stu· dents that success comes from pass- ing obJecUve tests and 11 emphasizes the md1v1dual mstead of the group, Kotter said School rarely requires students to lead or direct others, and 11 enforces the message that a promo. 11on 1s due every year. Success m sc hool work comes from focusing on books and lectures, Kotter said, and students can get top grades without ever talking with a professor or a classmate. In fact, work in the real world is something altogether different, said Kotter. "Getting others to cooperate, lead· 1ng others, coping with complex power and influence and people problems-well, that'sat the heart of a lotofJobs today, especially the kind of well-paying Jobs that I know you'd like to have someday," Kotter wrote 1n his open letter, sent to newspapers across the country "This 1s not to suggest that the world of work is a bad place " he added. "It is Just different from'what you are used to, and therefore, there are a whole new set of slulls you need 10 learn" Kotter said the first new lesson to learn 1s that work means "o~rating (in a web of rclat1onsh1ps" with your peers, your boss. and the people who work under you. ' "Pay attention Who arc the people above me? What arc their concerns and pressures? Who are the people below me? What arc they trying to achieve? :·For some, thinking about these th1nP, com~s naturally. It's a per· sonahty trait that goes way back to early childhood development," Kot· ter said in a telephone interview fro m his Cambndge office. "For others of us that isn't easy." Kotter said &raduates also must learn how to develop a "power base " "That w11l .JC>und U> a lot of youna people fairly nefanou ,"he said ... but to be able to &Ct lhinp done, yo~ need a power bese to help you 1nnucnce others A power base of kr\owlcdat about thccompenyand ttscustomers. A power brue that comes from a aoo<S rc:putat1on, a aood tnick ret-ord and clear-cut achievement •• Kotter u1d mo tan. duatc1 p1(k up the le son~ of the workplace lhe hard way. throu&h upericnet. But some never team, and b<-come bitter and un,uccnsful ORANGE 0 A T Elegant linens, stylish wool knits and fabulous velvets can be found in fashions by Flora Kung. But, the fabric getting top billing is silk. Dazzling colors and abstract and floral prints mark the garments with her Jabel. She designs her own silks, using thread from the Orient that are transformed into IJER R ON~ .. jacq uardS; crepes, satins, chiffons and silk knits. Kung descends from one of China 's oldest, most illustrious families-he1i grandfather was governor of Shantung Province. She was raised in Taiwan and was encouraged to be an artistic free spirit. , "When I was six, my mother sent me to studyChinesecaJlivaphy, which I loved, then watercolor, oJJ painting and ballet. It became vezy natural for me to associate with color and shapes and beauty." After coming to New York she went to Parson's School of Design on a full scholarship for fashion design. Later she felt the lure of Paris where she worked as head assistant to Emmanuelle Kanh designing and sketching Kanh 's style of mystery and drama. . Kung returned to the United States in the/ate 70sandin the spring of 1982and .. r Style section is edited by Vada Dean established hercomp;lny where fabrics are woven, dyed and printed and the garments are cut and sewn all under one roof. Bold vivid prints, hundreds of color combinations are designed and hand-painted first by Kung, then printed.an fine silks. The other fabrics creatt the backdrop for her exclusive style. Six times a year Kung shows and ships a whole new collection. Each season is treated as importantly as the other, therefore the stores are always able to maintain a flow of new merchandise, revitalizing the remain- ing stock, and showing how the consumer may collect pieces from the various seasons and build onto their own Kung wardrobe. The collections may be categorized in to sportswear, dresses, petite dresses and her new couture dresses and loungewear. .. The sportswear collection swings from carefree fun through glamourous chic, to drop.dead seductive elegance with an abundance of mix and match possibilities. Prices range from $56 to $300. Big roses, vivid pinks and oranges, con trastingjades and fuchsias are found in her sleek and body-defining dresses. Prices range From $160 to $260. Petite dresses are designed for the smaller woman with herown special proportions. A new groupi ns of polyester or "Silkimage., dresses was added earlier this , year. Silks retail from $150 to $220 and · polyester from $96 to$ I 30. · The new loungewear reflects fl more relaxed, but still dramatic and sleek sil- houette. The average price is $200. "'' I r:! SUND" • AUGlJST •. 985 w ~i"'il'! Finger •tlpe' •nd the 't•n comm•ndmenta.' 82 Conaul•r Corpa t!'9•ted to• •hOPplng •Pf"· 113 Kung fashions are available in abou t 2,000 better stores in the U.S. and exported to Canada and Europe.· Carefree fun ordressvchic fashions. Rora Kung makes her mark on them . For fall. she dots in white a three-piece black silk outfit-jacket and sarong skirt with blouse in solid white. Other styles (clockwise) a 7 /8 coat in black wool hown withjade silk knit top and black wool knit sarong; big hi rt and -matching pant in floral print silk charmeuse from th e portswear collection ;jacket and sarong in black wool knit with blouse in white silk print with sarong. and black velvet jacket to wear over silk ~riwinkle f>OPPY overblouseand matching sarong. l • . ! I .J ~ COMt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, August•. 1985 • LooKIN G Gooo -. Summer fingef 'tips' and the 't8.n 'commandments . \ Dunna the summer months when fashaonsarc more revealln&. nails, .• Iona or hort, need to well ~med, properly treated nd beauiifullycol- orcd. A professional-look ina manicure is not difficult to obtain at fiome, if it is done slowly and carefully. Although nails are affected by heredity, occupation, diet, seasonal chanacs and lifestyle, these guidelines sent along by Chanel may increase the beauty and health of nails. The company's "finger ups" in- c1ude: •Keep hands out of water as much as possible and wear gloves for household chores (and prdening). •Neverclip, cut or bite cuticles- they grow back thicker, harder. •A void using metal oianicure in- struments; use emery boards for filing, onnge sticks for hftina cuticles and cotton swabs for cleamna nail ups. VIDA Dw •Moisturize the hands nail sand cuticles often, always before retirina. •Don't use nails to open packqei, letters, etc. They won't take the strain. •Dial the phone with theeraserend ofa pencil ratbttlhan the~eofthe nail. ' •Don't hesitate to use a facial mask on hands and feet. It makes them softer, smoother; can even improve color. •For thoae wno prefer a natural nail, use a colorless base coat for added support. •Removeallenamel from nails every few week and let your ruuls "breathe." Chanel has a nail strenathen~r that they say helps fortify the nails and provide eittra support. It suuests two coats be applied after the nails have been cleaned and shaped and the cuticles have been aently pushed back. Also, for probltm nails, there is a ridge filli~ bue coat that will even out nailriattsandassurca smooth manicure. For best result&, two coats of color aoesonafterthe bue{alloweach one timetodry,and then finish off with a topcoat.) Enjoy beautif\ll nails this summer and IU year lona.~nd don't foraet toes -summer sandals and barefoot beaches make pedicures a mu.SL v Andrea has come out with nail colors that would make a bi& sr:>lash on the beach. Calls them New \vave Aussie Colors. Claim they'll stop a kanproo in has tracks ... or a surter on his wave. A blue to match the sky ... tu1"9uoise and arcen from the roarina Pacific ... outback aold ... or maybe koala {>in.ks are more your cup of tea. (The bnaht colors of Australia can be found at chain, dru&and vanety stores.} v Irma Shorell off en these "tan commandments" to summer sun lovers: I .Thou shalt avoid sun exposure between 11 a.m. and 2 pm. 2. Thou shalt carefully time sun exposure (IS minutes daily u a starter). 3. Thou shalt not be fooled by a cloudyday(1un's rays can penetrate a liahl overcast or a haze and cause a bad bum. · 4. Thou shalt not feel protected by a beach umbrella. (Reflected sunliaht from water or sand is frequently as stronaudirect rays). . S. Thou shalt not (eel immune to sunburn whilesr\orklina. (RaysaJso penetrate throuan water depth.) 6.Thou shalt not mix medication and sunex~re.(The Pill can cause photosenSJtlvity which cause brown spots and other re1ttions. Other aroups of photosensitizers are tran-quilizers, sulphanamades, diuretics, etc.) 7. Thou shalt never be fooled by a coolina breeze. (You may feel cool but as breeze sometimes may Increase thebuminaeffectofthe sun's rays- the-ultraviolet rays which cause all the trouble.) 8. Thou shalt rely on on su.otan lotions which moistwi.zeartdremain on the akin lD and Ht of the water if aun-sen~itiv~ ... otherwiaere..apply after swimm1na. 9.Thouahaltrememberthatsee- throuahclothiqisnoprotcction. (If tbesu~raysc:an penetrate, it's no protection). I U.1 hou shalt never be beauilcd by 11 deep tan fortoday at the sacrifice of aaoodskin forever and a day. LUI ume }'Ou.washe(i}'illlr naar, did you brush at first? Did ~ou apply hampoototheha1rwh1le11 was dry, then wet the hair and mas~ the scalp? Did you rinse your ha tr fint with warm water and then tum down the water temperature until it was cold? . Each of these hair~leansina steps is prescribed by Ocorae Carroll u pan ofhis Hairobics physical fitness system forthehairand scalp. ··Just llke the tS~ malhon Amencans who take care of their bodies with a reaularphysic:al fitneuresime," C8roll, a hair fitnesaex~ oIToluca Lak~ explains, "the bait &l;ld IF&1P need coonmtent and conunwna propam of care and exercise in order to maintain a hiah level of'health and beauty." . From left: JOH Lula AY&loe eerenadee Leslie Vanldentlne ua4 llartba Green; &baron Pence treeta Dick and CUmea Krata; Diana Emley with CUI and Barbara Metaler. No shovels or trowels for this exclusive garden club . Spyglass Hill Garden Oub limits its membership to ... 60. There's 25 on the waiting list hoping to get into the group. "Some have been on the list for four years," said member Sharon Peace adding, "We are not really a garden club. We started out that way, but now we arc into others things. We have programs on travel, jewelry and perfume, and meet in homes. We are an unique club .. : it's a casual place for neighbors to get together. That's why it's so popular." The group's latest get together was strictly social - a Mex1can- themed summer social at the Linda Isle bayfront home of Carmen and Dr. Richard Kratz. Cathy and Paal Schroeder came -they had been in LA earlier for the Olympics an- niversary celebration (she was on the Olympics Committee); Marnie and Jlm Friable there on the heels of a bridal shower in honor of their daughter Sllaroo who is marrying Bill Mac- Doaald (be is the play by play broadcaster for the LA Lazer soccer team) on Sept. 14; just- back-from-England Doag and 30·50% oll all Summer Merchandise ' ,...... I• II('\, • IJl•IA A ,1 W11Me Iii-• /} ., ....... ... . ·~.:::-.. .. ~ ~ . .. .... . • c:. .. .n fl# z ..... .. i,~ _, I..,. I \. .. ,.. .. , . ........ WHTPOll'T aQUAal •7JJ w ... cuff lht. ".-,.ft ...... fO-JJ'J ~•IC' WOODllalDGI Ota a.we-. hw7. ....... '""'°" "', • • ti Sllella CHlter and Pat and Fruk Bealldlamp, who recent- ly arrived home from British Columbia and the Olympic Peninsula. · Others there enoying the buf- f ct of enchiladas, Mexican quiche and beef Cortez and trying the guacamole were Marilyn and Bill Fales (back from Europe), LU and Joe Carney (wearing his serape), Susan and David Kapoff, Leslie .and Pete V an.ldenteln (recently returned from a high school reunion trip back East), Rodney and Marie Deremld 20% OFF French Bra• by 2 weelc• only Style #196 Styl~ #103 U06 Via Llclo Newf10t1 Beach 673·7710 (wearing a pretty orange dress), Mar1lla and Malcolm Green (both in white) and Carl and Barbara Menier. (Founding president Paala Ba1tlalmse and husband Genld were Q,o-shows. They were partying in Mexico.) ••• Mexican quiche was also popular with the Little Mermaid Guild (CHOC) members and guests at the group's dinner party held in the Huntington Beach home of president Sudy and Reier SmJtll. Bcsicfes the Mexican buffet, the attendees were interested in Christmas-looking at catalogs of greeting cards and placing orders with. a 20 per- centdiscount "We had orders for$ 700 worth of CJJ:ds and they will be avaiJable through the first week of December," said Belen Malloy ( with husband Fruclt). Proceeds go to the hospitaf. (She and Carolyn Tobin can be reached at 840-3581 for orders): Sberri Basbore is in charge of the card sales (she did such a. great job last year they gave it to her again.) Bashore, vacationing in the desse~ missed the party, but Judy Seay, a member who now lives in Taiwan and was vacationing here, filled in for her. Others partying were Carolyn Ridenour, Manb Willis, Jody and Bill McAdams, JUDe and Ray McGraw,-Lota• Williams, Pat Calderoae, Apollonla Eisel and Muriel-and John Farren. • • • A John Zlmmeruum mem- orial dinner has been planned for6 p.m. Thursday at the Irvine Marriott Ho"tel with a silent auction during the cocktail hour (Pleue He PARTY /Pate 3) Fublona on dlaplay . Photoe, clocllwlee from top left: Amen Wardy at•ea Katherine Abercrombie (left) and Roeella Herbert a cloeer look at one of Bob llacllte'• new fall •own•. Others lune~ and 'riewln.a the collectron in Wardy'• Fubton laland Venetian a.tlroom were CerlH Jadwln-Feeley, Kit Totlrand JoAnne Mtz; Joan Stn'ena and Sharon Tl8dale Stout; Joyce Reaame, lluy Sabatueo and Ann PaJlte. o/~ LINGEP\IE lnformMtivt. in·drpth future11 on I •1 p·111 nr11hborhood people. pll(tl and ~:;:;~ ur• rnund on •.h• t'..,urin1 • II J I . ,. I _,. .. . °"" .......... _, .......... -"' rom •n• mtmma Jane Riley. &va P'otelund and UrmU Da.a In 'The Perfect Pan.• Wives of Consular Corps go off on a shopping spree By BETTY PORTER o.iiy,...c_,,,,,...,.. Emma Jue Rllty, wife of Chair- man of the Oranae County Board of Supervisors Tlloma1 F. Riley, warm- ly welcomed Urmll D111, wife of India's Deputy Consul General R. P. Du. The two women were meetina for the first ume last week at the South Coast Plaza, Cost.a Mesa. Immediately, Riley's and Dua's conversation was animated and SJ?rinkled with laughter. They seemed hke "old friends" as they walked side by side throuah the large covered shoppina center. "Women all over the world love to shop," said Dua (who lives in San Francisco) in precise English. "This 1s the very first time we have entenained the wtves of the Consular Corps," explained Schumacher. They took the auests shoppina and then to a luncheon (dilled salmon, asparqus, tomatoes, blackberries with vanilla ice cream and white wine) at the Laauna Beach Museum of Art satel- hte, located in the plaza. (Table favors were Godiva chocolates and Cartier perfume). While the wives were aettina ac- quainted, their husbands and other members (SO) of the Consular Corps were being briefed on Orange Coun- ty's economy by nearly 400 local business leaders at the nearby Wesun South Coast Plaza Hotel. (wife of Actma Consul Generai Pan· teleo Dimitri of Italy), Lucy lraboia (wife of Consul General Dr. Rene Charles lralaola of Bolivia, Janina Cebnaa1ka1 of Lithuania (wife of Consul Vytaata1 Ceka.naatku) and other honored Consular Corps wives. "How many children do you have?" the women asked each other. "I love the weather here in Oranae County" was an oft-repeated sentence. At the luncheon. Dr. William Otton . director of the Laguna Beach Museum of Art, welcomed guests and gave a brief history of the museum. Harpist JanJce Duldey played inter- nauonaJ music dunni an informal fashion show. including selections from Bullocks, I. Magnin, Jaeger and Orange pout DAILY PILOT/Sunday, Augutt 4, 1985 PARTY WRAP •.• rrom..,.2 and a live auction followina dinner. John. the l S.year-old Foun· tain Valley boy who died in January of mu5CUlar dystrophy, captured attention when Presi- dent.. Rcapn aranted his fioaJ wish to be made an honorary Marine and be buried in the Punchbowl National Cemetery oftbe Pacific near Honolulu. · All proceeds from the event will be made in John's name to the Oranac County Muscular Dystrophy Association Sum- mer Camp and pauent care propama. Amona those expected to attend are Saator Pete WU~ Olympic Cliampioo Bob Matkta1 and the Rama cheerleaders. The benefit ii bcina coordi- nated by local 7-Eleven atom and the SSO (each) tickets may be reserved by caJlina 63$-7711. • • • F ASBION NMES: Makeup art· iat Pablo Muiolll, a Coty award winner and 20..~r vcteTaD of a leadina cosmet1c com~y. will be offerina makeoven and rwo- hour lecturts Monday throuah Sa~ Neimaii-Martm.. No tonier bo'a'im by lo)'<y to one.Jnnd, Manzoni dispema-~ beauty advice while chOO&ina producu from a wide spectrum of available brancll. Makeoven are $300 and a lecture is SSOO. Reservations may be made by callina the cosmetics del)l!'t- ment of the Fashion ·laland ~ore. · FINAL CLEARANCE Simmlee '7""""'"" Select '7all '7aJ"'"" • Jon .. New York • Joanie Char • J.0 . HOOk • Barry Brlcken • Nlpon BOYtlque • New Hero • Uml Or..... • Maggy London 170 E, 17th St. Cotta Me1a Stt. 21 (uP9talrt at>ow Noeotl Trophy) s1z .. 2-1 2 ...... ~'°·· ...,, ... ~ ....... .. ..... August Super Saver Sale 2for1 Shop Early for best Selection! Something Special feminine fas hions We Spec/ii/re In Fuhlons for the M luy F11ure Sizes 4· 11 250 E. 17th Costa Mesa Hilgren Sq uare • 645-5711 "Is there something specific for which you would like to shop today?" asked hostess Riley. A bnght. new red carpet had been rolled out for the honored Consular Wives' amval (by bus), promptly at 10 a.m. at the Plaza's Bear Street entrance.~ Bea~onPans 1-j~~~~~~~;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "Thank you," said Dua; "Thank I I "No, lead us as you wish," re- sponded honored guest Dua. The pair of polite women seemed unaware that some of the center's shoppers (at stores, including Saks Fifth A venue, Ralph Lauren's Polo Lounge and The Perfect Pan) stopped to stare at the tall American lady so obviously engrossed with the tiny, dark exotic woman wrapped· in a beautiful blue sari, the official-dress of the women of Ind ta, Walking with Riley and Dua were Betty Silver and Eva Forslund, wife of the Consul General from Sweden. who chatted amicably. The Orange County Office of Protocol Hostess Committee, headed by the conscientious F lou Scllamacller, were practicing their best diplomacy. noc }'WJt a ~lry UOtY •• t4K GOLO FREE COBRA C HAIN BRACELET •hh t7' pur<h-whh thlt Id • ~ader In wholesale prlcina to the public • Deslaned .and m1nuf1cturcd on premise• • Cuatom diamond 1ett1n5( • Jew~lry repair • Rina shlna 7 l-t/650-3111 1836 Nc-wport Blvd. CMtt Me ("'""" 9med11G) o .,J Nn. pnrc I A.,.,,11 p..rtli111i 111 ,.,n Inside the Orange County Protocol Hostess Committee waited. "OK. ladies, line up over here by the front door and let's not look rushed; relax and don't forget to smile." we~ Schumacher's last-sec- on9 instructions. Dua came through the door first. Then came Forslund, R1e Labucbape (wife of Consul General Leslie B. Labuschagne of South Afnca), Wendy Fletcber (wife of Acting Consul General Richard Fletcher of Australia), SbarJpab KhaUa (wife of Acting Consul Gen- eral Mohamad halls of Malaysia), Antonia Garcia-Lope1 (wife of Con- sul General Aupatha Garcl1-Lope1 S. of Mexico), Marla Teresa Dimitri you," said Riley. They shook hands and smiled and then, spontaneously, they embraced ... .. It was a aood day," proclaimed Schumacher. "You were nice and friendly," she said to her protocol Hostess Committee after the honored guests had left (wtth a single rose presented by Director of South Coast Plaza Community Relauons Werner E1eller) promptly at 2 p.m. In addiuon to those already men- tioned above, members of the Host- ess Committee include Sopllle Geo· del, Pat Nel11er, ElaJoe Redfield, Martel Reynold•, Betty RoblD100, Carol DIStulllao, Letitia Curiel, Sally Eacller, Martita Flaor, Carole GerkJD, Mary Lou HopkiD1:UorD.1by, Manly Nlel1ea and Elinor Ween. w CLll&'fJ,RAY W Signature Line 1/3 Off Shorts, Tops & Swimsuits Up to 70°/o Off a ... ss.-Maillot NOW $19• .... .,. .. Bikinis NOW $12 .. ,., ''-" Lido Marino Vllloge, Newport leach 673-3735 ~ Seiko, Jules, Jurgensen, Belair, and Othen SPECIAL BUY! MEN'S LADIES QUARTZ WATCHES '3495 ·2 FOR '60 LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER llcount ~ CMlANCf ~~ 441 Nofdt TUltln Aw . GAal>IN Caovl 534 4'53 •JO.U .......,, ...-Vaid HUNTINGTON MACH M2·'49'l 16612 leld ~Ml LAGUNA HIW 153 4':SS ENTIRE INVENTORY · REDUCED FOR SALE!! HURRY!! 8 CARAT ·~· DIAMOND ~~~):)_;, " BRACELET >~j . RetaJI: 19()()() I' ,J ~ ~ • 3500 ~~~~~~,1 · -·JEWELRY MAR >1271 AWfticta . la C.rtata e VISA e MASTHCAlO • AMfltlCAN EO"lt: -O•MIMIC_..,. .............. LAY-AWAY ....... -.. . ... , .... ... --------.... ·---~:~ ----------------------------~ .. IM Orange Cout DA<Lv PILOT/Sunday. August •• 1985 CBS tops field in daytime Emmys , By LYNDA IDJ\SCH When the 12th annual Daytlme Emmy Awards were doled out on Thursday, Aug. I. C'BS came out the big winner with seven major awards ABC carried home two of the mo 1 coveted statuettes and poor NBC went home with vinuaJly nothing. It was almost a clean sweep for CBS, whose "Young and the Rest· less" won forbestshow. KJm Zimmer woo for best actress in the role of Reva on "The Gujding Light": Larry G1ltes woo as best support.in~ actor (H.B.. "Guiding Lt~t"); Brian Bloom won as best Juvenile lead (Dusty, .. As tht' World Tums"), Tracey E. Bregman won as best mgC'llue (Lauren, "'(oung and the Restless"), and Beth Maitland won as best supporting actress (Tracy, ··voung and the Restless"). C BS and "Guiding Light" aJso picked up the statuette for best direcuon. Finally, ABC managed to cop the best-writing award for ·· All My Ch1l· drcn," which has had nine previous nominations and no wins, and Darnell Williams, a surprise pick, won as best actor on a daytime drama (Jesse, "All My Children"). As for NBC, their only award in daytime was a technical one for best opening scenic design (for "Santa Barbara"). One of the most touching moments was when the late C'hanta Bauer (Ben Bauer on "Guiding Light") won a posthumous award and her real-life son Mic hael Crawford accepted. say- ing that the show was his mother's "refuge in illness and her JO) in h~lth." We understand that NBC 1s going to watch the numbers on the sbow - televised for the first time m two years -to sec 1f it's a big enough ratmg.s hn to be televised next year." "'~· Kim Zimmer. Darnell Williama celebrate their .. beat a cting" n ctorles at the Daytime E mmy Award.a. 'Rambo' hot pinup for poster cOllectors LO ..\NGELl (AP) .. Rambo:' this summer's hottest m ovie. is also heating up the poster. button and bumper sticker market 'There hasn't been anythini this hot in the business since Michael Jackson." said Joe Angard. execuuve vice president of One Sto p Posters. The movie. "Rambo. First Blood Part II," starring S}lve'lter Stallone, to date has pulled in more than $96.8 million Angard said 1t takes sales of 50.000 posters for a company 10 break even . So far more" than 600.000 Rambo posters have been sold. "That's better than Madonna," he said. "We thought she did fantastic by selling 300,000." There are 11 kinds of "Rambo" buttons. with sales so far of 300.000. Next. bumper stickers. Among them: "Need an Army? H ire Rambo"; .. Rambo -Amen ca's Newest Weapon"; .. Beware -This Vehicle Protected by Rambo." Angard declined to say what his company paid for the licensing nghts A s for what the company is making. he said. ·•1t•s a real gold mine." I TODAY'S SUNDA y PUZZLE I ACROSS 70 Social insect 124 Australian bird 20 Removed 88 Speechify 7 1 Is on lire 125 Donkey 31 Coyote's cry 87 Kind of racehorse 1 Pieces 72 Hurries 126 Touches 33 Has debts 88 Tale 6 Mllltary rank 73 Thick soup 12? Defeated one 35 Obliterates 90 Pale 11 Shitty one 74 Bothered 129 Use oars 38 Spoor 91 Picture border 16 Destined 76 Swallows' kin 130 Kind of beet' 40 L:arge bundles 21 Montana's 77 Tender toucn 132 Current fashion 41 Blackbird 94 Lofty structures neighbor 7 8 Difficult 134 Siiiy 42 FJl!t cap 95 Curtaln 22 Wear away 79 Least bright 136 Actress Dunne 44 Reverent wonder 96 Examinations 23 Ward 80 Actress Turne!' 138 Chicago airport 46 British noblemen 98 Our sun 24 Over 81 Orwes too 18.51 139 Aphid 47 Obvious 100 Masterpieces 25 Sweetheart 64 Loftiest 140 Fermented 48 Martini Ingredient 101 In favor of 26 Preferences 85 Evolves beverage 49 Thong 103 Articie: Sp. 'J.7 Conscious 89 Eye droplets 141 Cale 50 Wading bird 28 Gold or copper 90 Roams 142 Goods 51 Dwarfs 104 Devoured 29 Miner's goal 91 Circuit breakef'S 143 Amshed 52 Charred 105 Make aldlgb 30 The ones there 92 Rodent 144 Sleighs 54 Tooth doctor 107 Impulse 32 Carries 93 COmfort 145 Shadowboxes 56 African country 109 Piiier cattle 348om 94 DartbOards. for 57 Queues 110 Obeyed 36 Fruit drink Instance DOWN 58 Borders 111 Hummed 3 7 Gamper's shelter 95 Woman's garment 61 Fruit peel 113 Beneath 39 [)ojlaf bill 96 Mexican 1 Airman 62 Party giver 40 Arbor ''$3ndwlch' 2Worstup 63 Affirmative 114 City In Nebraska 41 Gas· comb. form 97 High card 3 Craw's cousin 66 Cat sounds 115 Sweetener 42 Ran away 98 Male olfspnng 4 Definite arucle 67 Tiiiers of the s0tl 117 Uptight 43 Uncooked 99 Curved lett« S Classify 68 Us: Ger. 119 Employers 45 Approached 100 Shipping box 6 Cantaloupe 69 In the country 121 Combat area 47 Infuriate 101 Act~alk of 7 Ascended 71 Rosaries 122 Singleton 49 Scribbles "Columbo'' 8 Jest 72 Small villages 123 Wide-mouthed 53 Pub drinks t02 Mature 9 Lyne poem 73 Window panels 54 Roman S06 104 Skill 10 Made llke new 75 In that place pitchers 55 Fry 105 Shut. noisily 11 Was -took 76 Gentlest 125 Greek god of war 59 Armtsoce 106 Children's room a chair 77 Spelunker's 126 Quarrel 60 Made mistakes 108 Warns 12 More recent Interests 127 Take on cargo 62 Hawaii game 110 Plied 13 Historic periods 79 Pef'llS 128 Frees {of) 63 Japanese currency 112 Decay 14 Ventilate 80 Decrease 131 Before 64 Help 113 Head honcno 15 Sharper 8 1 Water vapor 133 President Reagan. 65 Rate 116 Regret 16 Renown 82 Tranquility 66 Buckets 117 Pick on 17 Mr L1nco4n 83 Artist's stand to friends 67 Cheese dishes 118 Carpet 18Sum 84 Paving material 135 Nothing 69 Chime 120 Store event 19 Elude 85 Pair 137 Tear ~ : SoAP SuMMARY ~----- Anna Calliope rescued fromhciremon 'Days' By :l'NDA Hl.RSCH ALL MY CHILDREN: Pllmer's It• tempts 10 att Nina to ••an paprn for d1von;e procecd1ngarc fo1lc<! Erica, aware Adam PoSil\i as Stuart, decicks to rid hcrsclr of Adam by m k1n1 him believe he and Jeremy havina ning. When Adam learns Erica plouma lo take o.ver Tempo mapz.ine. he 01'C1 her Adam then tells Enct the only way for her to reclaim her tob is to sleep wuh him. When Joe rcahzcs Euitne was beaten by a man. not a woman. police 10 after Jesse. An&Je decides to prove Jesse WI$ baited by Eugene. Euaene djuppcars. Mark jealous ofG1les's interest in Brooke. Jcs1'C aarees to 10 unde~ovcr. Tad and Dottie share a kill. • • • ANOTHER WORLD: Mtchoud otTfo Sally JOb at Lt Sole1I wuhout rcveaJina she 1s 10 be Le Sole1I lady. Meanwhile, Cass ccnain Kathleen w11J be Le Solcil lady. Thomasina's doctor tells her she's far enough into her p~~nancy not to be threatened by miscamagc. M11rley would love to switch places with the adventurous Victoria. Brittany helps the drugged Dale. • • • AS THE WORLD TURNS: Rcahzang has car struck Dusty. Craig dashes for help. Craig calls for ambulance and st.arts to head back to Dusty, but as shocked when his car won't stan. When he arrives on the site. he secs Stetrc standing over Dusty. Steve vows to kill whoever struck the child and drove off. While Dusty lies in coma, tevc becomes suspect in accident. Just al\er Stuan dcclatts his love for Ma~1e, he leaves town on business matter. Barbara ends romance wtth Brian. • • • CAPITOL: Mark. Jealous of a11ent1on Clanssa paying Jarrct1 vows to learn has true identity. Zed oners to tell Sloane reason he hates Trey if she comes to his apartment. After Zed and Sloane make love, he tells her Trey framed him for 1hcl\ }'cars ago. Sloane believes Zed has deeper motives for hatred. Thomas loans Wally mone}. Wally males first payment on casino debt. Myrna hires Ronni a!> her personal secretary. Paula learns publisher backing out of book deal for fear content~ will cause uproar and lawsuits. Paula offers Ronni a million bucks 10 spy on Myrna. Sam and Myrna's gift of scholar· ~hip to e"clusave pnvatc school for baby Allison ~ates fnct1on at chnstening when the McCandlesscs realize this is .,_., _.,., (I ) 11141,1141, ... , .... "" 11111 aom1 to mattAlhson a "snooty" Cl • • • • d DAYS OF f>ult lJVES: Pete an Melt hide in truck as McBnck stalks them. Pete contacts Ivy to tell of his troubles. When Savannah learns Pete and Melissa arc in LA, she orders Patch to find them. Tony and Eugene rt"5CUe Anno and \alliopc from Bibi'• harem. Liz fearful of havana a.nother child on the chance 11 could be diabetic hke Noel. Dcprcs~ by kidnapping. Anna unable to relate to Tony. • • • GENERAL HOSPITAL: Admrttrna to Scorpio he took pan of treasure, Grant agrees to help out. Ceha and Jimmy 4c unha1,>PY that 01'1lnt will be p~nt at train festivities which will be scene of their wcddina. Holly's attempts to escape arc once again thwaned Everyone buoyed when Tony walks into hospital uoaaded. A stall impotent T-ony cannot hide his anaer Ginny and Rick stunned when they learn Derck plans to tell Mike that he 1s has natural father when Mike turris 18. Buzz fearful that Jimmy Lee too enamort'<I of money and wams Celia that Jimmy Lee is a true innocent. ••• GUIDING U GHT: Charlotte calls Maureen and Fletcher's talk show with problem wh1ch m1rron Ed. Claire, Fletcher and Maureen's situation. Later the hospital 1s filled with gossip about Claire's pregnancy. Rick tells Mindy Kurt's green card 1s phony and Kun only interested in her because offamily money. Beth considers Suzette's suggestion that Beth is holding back LuJack's career. Reva and Kyle wander off together at Billy's Cross Creek birthday celebration. • • • LOVLllilG: Jim upset when ··Keith" sugcsts Noreen and Mike slept together. Jack tells Ava she etther takes care of'baby or he'll file for divorce and custody. A gun· ·toting Ava Confronts Stacy. Later. Ava tells Jack she had no idea where she was or what she was doing. Loma retraces way to dungeon where Jonathan has Keith ensconced. Just as Loma prcpattS to 11d the desperately ill Keith. Jonathan amvcs. Showing Loma mirror, Jonathan threat- ens to ruin her looks unless she rem ams has ally. A fe.arful Loma complies. • • • ONE LIFE TO LIVE: Tina believes Pete will be able to prove that Mitch, not she, rtSponsible for Harry's murder. When Carla falls ill. Herb becomes prosecutor at Tina's trial. Mitch has Grover. man he had .unpctSOoale tunt in 1-lorida. beaten. 10 1 ulp and rcplactd an movie Bo admtt' to ~oody be'' \UJI interested '" M1m1. but Woody rcruxs 10 step astck since he alto has an inte~I. Bo learn• 01uletll 1S really '21 but has no idea she's 1nt~rt!ttcd 1n him RITUAU : Luck•y :nd Julia decide to ao ahead with their romance rcp~leu or,tfte effect it m1aht have on her ft.lher s pc~cal career Mi~e bealnnan1 to luspcct . n· dra to be surroptc mother for his and Lacey's child Brady unable lo rcpan his losses. Chnsuna cons1dcn return to her ex-husbond as way to rum lum perso1U1lly and professionally. • • • RYAN'S HOPE: Gabriell~ &OCS to Patnck, claamin' to be Chess1e. She tell!> Patrick the accident has kn9Cked out much of her memory aj)d asks ham to fill in the gaps. Patnck 1s charmed b> .. Chcssie's" vulnerab1hty. Chantelle and Chcssie realize Gabnelle now an Ne~ York Jack wntes column staung he ha> inside information on theft nnl. • • • Ch . SANTA BARBARA: After nstae r(- fuscs to recant her story that he raped her. Ted heads for La.ken·s house and the twosome make love. Relieved of her drui dependency. Gina comes home. Amy reunited with her infant son. CC. refuses to seek help for h15 aneurysm. Cruz fon:cd to arrest Ted on rape charges. After fall, Gina loses baby and is told she can never bear another child. Mason plans to ~II Mary as defense witness in Sophia's tnaJ . . . ~ SEARCH FOR TOMORROW: Danny tells Liza to marry Uoyd. Bela stunned when he cannot find his JOld. Wendy tells Stephanie she loves Quinn. Cb~sc steals Quinn's adea for show. Uoyd hares detective to learn 1denllty of Liza's boyfriend. Rider upset when he; spots T:R ,1n Danny's arms. Whale Liza 1s sprnd1ng night of lovcmalun' with Hogan, baby Toumeur becomes 111 and 1s rushed to hospital. • • • YOUNG AND THE R~: Netl readily accepts 11 when Gina ~turns has engagement nng. Grant takes Tracy to expensive restaurant and 1s dumbfoun.ded at the bill. He as charmed when a grac1ou~ Tracy agrees to take care of op. 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"M&m 1'11l .... (1) , .... ,,., .. , .... , ..... ... . ... .. ..., .... 11) I llW edward ... ,i. ,····-CAS' A·,.•.:. ·l'H 1711 _, ' A .'. I. •• :. I\:. , • •,;. I A • ..... '-"' ..... <•> 1!11ii 1111, .... , ...... 11 .. ,.,_, 1 .. N MA ·. '•·• ~ ""A ... ,.... ~C lJllAtllll ~¥Al l . .., ___ ...... ,.. ... __ ·--_,_ .. ,. .. 'liir' .... ,_ NIM ... _..(I ) ._. ... • &~ "'::.l~ .. ------ Gos~ett plays the desel"f Oscar-wlnnlngactorplays ngflghterptlot In 'Iron E le' on his way back to Broadway By MOOLAS 8. TATRO tip ofthe Sinai Peninsula. •• ,, 1 • ..._.,.., ..&..-route, be stoooed-io-pey m1 TELAVIV-Wath a LosAnselee unannounced Fowth-orJu.ly vi11t to Laken' cap snuJ on hia bead and 1 the 1.500 U.S. t0lda wbo are part or diamond stud aieam1na from bU nr the multi-national peac:ek.cepina ~obe1 Louis Oossen Jr: bounced into force in Sinai. He told jokes, &hoot the oreakfast room of a beachfront hands and S\IDcd au~{>bs. hotel as if he were maki"/. a cameo While pickina up bis Vita. he met · v Hassan Issa, the £&yptian countel. in appearance on a daytime show. the lsraeli reson town of Eilat and He wowed thestaff'withsmilesand pve him a command perfomtanceof handshakes and posed for pictures his version of Anwar Sadat. with tourists. And in betweenJ. he After .. The Iron Ea&lc," Gossett manqed to chat up members 01 the plans to do 1 staat play be hopes will film crew that surrounded him. take him back to his roots on The Academy Award-winnina Broadway where be scored bis fint actor who ponrayed the late f..cypuan · n-. · lb o-..ident Anwar Sadat on a tclc-major success LO "A ...... s1n in e ..-.~ Sun." vision miruserics was an Tel Aviv to Retiree. appeartn,i In the moTle ''Cocoon•• lnclade (fiom le'lt) w ee· Brltt, Lorene Landry, Jamee Dison, Dorothy o.twalt, Ethel Mitton and Gay llltton. fil m the movie, "The Iron Eaalc." He His aoal, be said. 1s to do plays an aaina fiahter pilot w6o helPt Shakespeare. He'd hke to play Kins rescue a fellow aviator from the Lear, Richard Ill and Macbeth - clutches gf a · Libya-like Arab die-"most of all Macbeth." talorship:' -Gossett bepn bis act.ins career Gossett laoded in Israel after literally by accident. The 6-foot...- spendini the winter in West Ger-actor suffered a lea injury and bad to many where be completed a role aun forqo the basketball season at extraterrestrial in a movie called Abraham Lin<:oln Hi&b School in "Enemy Mind," a $35 million pro-Brooklyn,N.Y.Hejoinedthestudent duction scheduled for release in theater to fiU bis time and so December. He just can't seem to keep impressed his English teacher that he himself from actina. was rcoommended to the producers Florida seniors become stars to their neighbors in 'Cocoon ' "A lot of people ask me what the of the 1953 Broadway show, "Tak~ a key to my success is. I say it's simple: Giant Step.•• Weill's "Lost "' the Stan.. and "Tambourines to Glory." His film credits. have included .. The Landlord," ~River Niger," "The Deep," "Jaws J.D" and .. An Officer and a Gentleman." for which be won the best supponina actor Oscar ID 1983. By PAT LEISNER .......... PNM Wl'ltef ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -When Hollywood came courting at a retire- ment home, Wes Britt wasn't interested in "Cocoon." At aie 83, he didn't care about male.in& his movie debut. Then he heard there would be a boat ride. "I love boats. I figured 11 would be a nice, one-day thmg," he said. So he signed up. "That was my first. And m y last," said the retJred builder from Lynn, Mass. "We were three nights in the Gulf of Mexico aboard a boat. But filming lasted eight, nine weeks." Britt and a handful of other elderly residents from Sunny Shores Villas appear 1n crowd scenes. "Cocoon," which stars a cast of seniors led by 77- year-old Don Amcche, was shot an part at th"e-'life care facility on the edge of Tampa Bay. It's a whimsical movie about oldsters, benevolent aliens. a pool that becomes a magical Fountain of Youth transforming the geriatrics set into cavoning adolescents. With new youth comes a choice: Ii ve for eons on a stran.ge planet or live o ut remaining days in a humdrum earthly home. Ethel and Guy Mitton. both 75, were paid $75 each to Jump into the mapcal pool with their clothes on. Neither felt lake a kJd again. "I don't think at had that effect on our crowd,'' said Mrs. Mitton. "Rej uvenated? I was exhausted," said M itton. "We were in and out. in and out. sometimes 1t was 12 to 14 tames to do the same scene," added the retired Boston bank executive. "I only felt wet and soggy;· said Dorothy Ostwalt, 74. a transplant from Charlotte, N.C. Without exception, the retirees liked the movie, had praise for the film crew, and enjoyed flirtation with fame. Cabbies now call their place "cocoon village." llERICl'S #1 llOYIE &ETSIORE EICITll& EICH TIME YOU SEE IT! : I tlH •. iQf;DPAR'I' ~~·-·» ... ,WVISIOl ' l •UH1A""'l.'ll .. ...,..._ • IUllll\ ,,_ l'llWrAll Yloll.IY ..... !'!.':. ... ~ ~°""" e»tnO u.-.... [_,_v..., 15l.. 131 1500 CIDSTAmlla ·-~ca-,_~ C..WPMm ...... W(ITlllllfTlll ,_, .. wty. ~ .. eQllTA •&A ""1WTIJI UAO.-UAMll ~ ....... •. ., a flllll E-.a!lln M• llOO ~'SPECTACULAR ... ~ 0......, Mt\19 °' hum<>f, • 'Malt' It tn..ntfbfe. II -K l'./fW '!'()Al( IMS. JoNI MOIW> "AN INCREDlllE, EXCITING ANO ORtGfNAl EPIC that I think It one of the Mtt fltmt "'the .,.or ... -N THE MOWS. AiclQ9I Ebet! NOW IL ,_ SADOUIACI O>WMDI SHOWING! Ml·Yll ----D!W19SllSU .,. .. ~ EO-.L --~ ..me -um • ~ u.mmni ~ Ml-1 ... N IH ,_ ---~ mt•t.Jm -iDIE '8 ST-•· PACR•Y ll IJt..lnt ... ,,., ·. Moviegoers -young and old alike -have been turning out in the Tampa Bay area. Even weekday matinees are playing to near-full houses. "The Fountain of Youth? I don't employment. There is nothing mys-He earned the Donaldson Award know if I want to go through all of it tical about it," said Gossett, who was for best newcomer of the year and be again," mused James Dixon. a 73-to be fi lmed in the cockpit ofan F16 also ~on a scholarship to New York year-old retired state worker from fighter plane. University. Cleveland. Ohio. He took a break from filminJ in Since then, Gossett has had an He Slid .. An Officer and A Gentle- man" was a sua:ess without .. one cent bean,& spent on publicity .. because it reflected reality. "People saicl. 'thank you, at last.' But we still have so far to 10 to reflect what the audience looks "I thought it was great. I'm an old lady and I know how these peOple felt," said Aide Priede as she left the theater. Caridad Rodriguez, had mixed feelings. "The romance was beautiful, but we live long enough." Neil Mcfadden, who at 102 re-Israel and crossed the border 11\lO impressive career, playing on Broad- members an era that predates even Egypt to go scuba diving an the Red way in "The Desk Set" with Shirley silent screen, was cast m a scene that Sea town of Sharm al-Sheikh, at the Booth. "A Raisin in the Sun.". Kun was cut. _;:..:....;....;....~~~~~~~~.:._~~~~..;....~~~~~~~~..:.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ like." ~~TCIUA "They'd have to pay me to sit and .._ ___ o..-r'"'--11•11- watch it again. My hearing is poor and m y vision is worse," said the native of Grafton, Neb. "I recognized our place and some ofour fellas. But I couldn't find myself." T illie and Carl Isley, operators of Sunny Shores Villas, took a bus load to the local premier, and a few nights later took another group from the 389-rcsident home. Although Phoebe Ward, an 86- year-old widow originally from Yorkshire, England, has no urge to fly off an a spaceship, she's ready for another movie part. "It's about tame they gave us a break. It's a family show, no violence, no murders. no bombinJtS." she said. Mrs. Ostwalt found it distracting to watch the film. "I paid too much attention to the people, watching for all of us.." she said. "I have to go back and see it again to get the story. But I know I wouldn't go off with aliens in real life. Pd stay at Sunny Shores." CITY cenTER 0 Nl8twlll81WPQ SHOWS AT 1:11 f :fl 1 :31 7:4 5 .. t :ll ~ ........... .... aOQ AT 1140 J :40 1:4l) 1 :40 .. t :40 U4 U53 / Jll1 ORAllGf L T .T• b"9Tw1WllM(N) SHOWS AT 11141 3:00 1:117:30 .. 1 :41 POU.OW THAT .... D ('8) SHOWS AT U :OO l rOO 4 :00 1:00 l tOO a. tO:OO cEnTuAY cineoome C;J UWS5JIC1111- l S..11 AMF WE•D SClllllCll (N-111 SHOWS AT 1 •3• J :40 l tll l :Oa a. 10:11 MAD~-.... TI 2 •••t "'°'Sl AT 1•05 3:20 l :H 7 :110 • 10:10/l n 70 MM AllAHflM Pl/Ck l ANl>e.m 0-!nl7'99950 llillllAPAllll •COITUIUA UAl.I<-(°"1r0>.C---1 N 111'}2 C...t!'t 919 .,., • rtlESOtTTI> '" SLYllllADO ....... tt :JO l rtl 1 100 7:41 a. 10:20. In 70MM THIS YEAR, THE RJNNIEST FAMILY IN AMERICA. .. INVADES EUROPE ! .,. ~---~·wu ----~-~ --.,.,.. ·a -sa1.• PACR ......... a.a smlUCll -S29-WI fmT•tMUYD-l• ~fOllft•YIWl -.UPW.A -NMtsz-'ttl -··--m.-.SI -·-u wa m14.:.ew .., ... Ml-3101 .,_ClllM .,. .... .nama w.un Ll -IZJ.1111 _..SO COUT PW.A PACRCAmtAY DRIVE -INS m~ STADIUm ~ m m gr1111t"• "'" s1u ....... S ..... Dsetaeca (fla.' • "Ill Oun• <'°·13) POU.OW THAT auto fQ) Tiie ...... , Rndlnt Story (PO) COCOCHl"'8-t .. ~us Co-Hit ti(o m1ncln1 TIM Stone (l'O) -. ' IMO llAX ~ · T .. &.I •1 I tJI lh mllo ,.,,.., lood ~art I (R) Walt Disney•, · MACK CAULIM'O" pi8) Bally (POI f'UTCH .... ) ll'luJ Co •klt Benrty HlllJ Cop (R) ~--·1·11ll ~ant en.ITU.. -m m> CllO&m . ... •• lll·Jal PM:R.-n»•• IDI •• 8).1.W llAIU~.U "THE GOONIES' IS AWESOME ADVENTUREI" &1W WT&ll& Ell.a n T<llO EDWMDS mTOl 511 ... s.eo. 7&.W •IMA '''WEIRD SCENCE• •A RJNNY AND ENTEAT......a MOVIE.'' %1 ~ ''ATTHI MDVma'' •COSTA lllUA •LANUM .... .-J•t&UT -MannBru Plm Eowards Hal1>0f T WWI NICFmon~ Stldiunl DnwHI ~rclllfTMI MIC OIMlil Ml 529-5339 631·3501 etl«.13 53M770 tM.lCf t.lt-1 sot m-Utt IUDIA'AM f1 TIMO LA~Pmflcs .... II& Pactflc s Buena Par1t Eowards Sadcllebldc GltewiyS ~1611 e..dlQ.-Wlll -..... 0nve In 821-4070 581-5880 .... VlfJO etl-3115 OIW-.s WOOlml>Cl UA cm com:I IU(MA,Mll •llMM Edwards Vi110 T.., 551-tm '34-3'11 UA Movies EOWlfds UIWe11lly 83C>S90 952-4992 854-8811 THE STORY OF A REBEL AND HIS BIKE. PEE-WEE HERMAN ,,. P11-w11:r t•G ADV1~Tull ~" ASl"EN FILM It H f1n'c1Ntl11"' l'EE W ff: Hf R\1~~111 PU \H 8IC AC'1.; lSl URl <P-iL1n £ll1.AM'TH ~ILY •MARI< HOtT • Ol~l'liE SALi -lR • llJOO 0\,[N lflfNi 11imi"""'1 ~°"SM H fMA.N 1f"fl1v (f i1f V TOR I EMrE.R,.t\ C """""' ,...d,.. \VIL l IMA f Ml[ tJE..N """"" lilt1 f't-OL Hi\RTM~N (.flit.UL IU U (, MICH.t\l l V~RHO ,.o.l11ud f\i RT stMPIRO lfftd RK:Hi\RO GILBERT 4.8R"'Wlll.1N JiMIM 1 TIM BURTO°'ll oo~.._,l fa 'llt~aNlaP ~•,•••O (l"..,..,,,,..l'I ....,,.,, . ._._ .................... ........ REGULAR ENGAGEM ENT STARTS FRIDAY. AUGUST 9TH 1 I .1. I I • ·~rrow, , 'I)reamcoat' musicals open A pairofh.istoncal mu ·cats-one of them a locally created world premiere -joln a children's adven- ture show and a one-man Shakespearean presentauon 1n the la t bi& week of summer theatncal openings. Toi TITUS The world premiere is "ne WatJte Arrow," wnncn by Kent Johnson and Tim Nelson for a special thrce- w~kend engagement at the Newp<>n Theater Arts Center, opcnin' Thurs- day. harina that opcnina night will be Orange Coast College's 30th annual summer musical," Josepla ud ~e Am111.. T~lmlcolor Drea.m- coat.'' also t1cJce\ed for three week- ends. Begjnnma Friday. the Fountain Valley Community launches a two- weekend run of "Tom Sawyer," also in a muskaJ version. m Golden West College's Forum 11. And the Grove Shakespeare Festival will be offenng a special show called "Sllaketpeare, 1'14 -Alive" at the Gem Theater 1n "YOU'RE GOlllA LOVE 'BACK TO THE FUTURE! THIS MOVIE IS THE BIG ONE. tt•s a wonderful MOVle." -Sototl GOOIHolOA~AMfRICA ABC.IV * * * * ,ttGl1(S1 AAlll<G IXCLUSIVI INGAGIMINT DAILY 12:30, 2:45, 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 edwards TOWN CENTER .. . .. , .. "751 4184 • •.. I' t I .. • CO\IA Ml\A "SKIP THE BEACH AND GO SEE 'COCOON' ... A movie to buoy your spirts for the whole summer.' -Pa t Collins, CBS Morning News, CBS TV 11 • I TUCI MlJY STmO MU PAii t52 ... H3 El Tea Sll·tSM U IOYl£S I EIWAllS El TOIO lllTl mil 545-2711 WUIWID lts-53J3 EIWAllS sotTI EIWAllS UIMI nr11 CMST PLAZA 11Mml39-117t ST ..... H·ll IMAttMt21 UA IOYIU 4 ~a mu Ht·lstt EIWAllS UINI Tiii llNl551.fl55 EIWAllS WOOllllKE llllll 137.f340 UC OUICE llll llllll ll-4-ltl l UCITTCUTEI NIU Plll 121 ... 071 UUAHllll.fl • lS• MUI Sf(l(O SOllY, 10 PASS£S ~~m• *PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES * BARGAIN MATINEES I FIRST 2 Perforrnenca Mon•y Tbru S.tur•v (Except Holi•ys & Spec. Ent1ttmtnt1) LAKEWOOD Center .P12u1u1""''!C!!JJ1. c-·1 IACK TO THI PU1UU1N! .. ....., ,,.., IWIWll ...... 1 .. THI ll.ACK CAUUMlOH '"' .. ,....,,,,.., IMfMfWl..UMllMI THI OOONU 1Nt ........ ,_ IXPlO.IU'"' -·· PLITCHCN! , .. _ ... THI &UAKJAIT CLUl 1111 _,_ .. _ LAKE WO Cenle• South 11111134 IHl/F-l!y I Dal A- l. T. THI IXftA. nuu-nw .... •••u• ... •11 1 .... MAO MAX llYOND THUNDIADOMI i-111 ,,.. NI ..,. ,,., t•u ••NMn NtOHT llO .. IOUT lll9IO ,,.. ............. ,, ... LA MIRADA ' .. IUVlltADO i-111 ,,.. a.le ....... 11• THI 11&.ACK CAULDIOH cNt IMla.al ..... 11 .... fdl ...... ,,_. NlllM9 POlLOW THAT Ila> te1 IWI WI wt ...... , .. IX,LOUUi... ........... , ........... Tll llAD.Y m,..1• ,.. ,. 11 11 ... , •• ,., .. P•tOHT NMMfT .., .. .,,ftm6 INl :ttM .... Wl ... lloll GATEWAY (2Ult21 1111/Jwy 5 t1 Vl!!!ey .,,_p IUltOfJIAH VACATION ,_ .. , , ... ,. ... , .... , .. IT. ILMO'I JIU .-i ·---'"' llUAKfAIT ClUa Cit __,_ THI IMllALO POUIT Cit --,AU •ID1•1111 . ....... ,_ IACK TO nt1 nnuu.,... ..'°"'_ , __ .,._,_ Wll•D ICllNCI ...,, .. .. IOUT.,_ , .. Ma ....... , .. *PACIFIC DRIVE·IN THEATRES• * CINE·FI SOUND! At thtst symbols p11t sound direct to your AM ur * ,.dio. If no radio with tccmory poatron, lwint your own AM •ortalllt. N -111 Stort Dusk Children~ 12 ALWAYS FREE ANAHEIM C114!11t !!ltflmn I"• Pm * ---.·~ • IUIOf'IM VMATIOM .... ," -'90TOCOI. .... e:1m~·m 1m1n1 >tu~M' ,.,,. t NAnoNAl W1100W1°t- IUIOfllAN VACAnotf 1-.11. -NOfOCOl'"' IACK 'tO TMI PUTUU IN! -TMIWTlfMf .... .,.. PIJGNT NIOMT "' ~ TMI NIW IOOI 111 BUENA PARK 111•1121 •111/\ ...... ~ •• , ... " t,c * COCOON"'''' -IT AaMAH cN. PAU •1Dta.., -llLVlaAD0-111 . . ~ Garden Grove. p.m and Sundays at 2:30 upt1I Aua. " he White Arrow," d1r«ted by }Sin the air-conditioned Drama Lab ... co-author Johnson. 1s a new musical Theater on the Costa Mesa campus. based~~Robin Hood 1*00-aod Call 432-S f~ticket-t. stars George Champion and Tnc1a The Fountain Valley Commumty Gnffin as Robin Hood and Maid Theater is coll boruuna with Golden Marian. Other featured performers West College for its summer pro- are Johnny Moreno, Mary Sullivan duction, a musical version of "Tom Slack, Steve Sloan. Jeff Holland, Sawyer." Karen C"3roe 1s direcung a Scott Ratner, Tim Johnson, Bob cast or23 youngsters wllh mu ic by Cady. Enk Contreras, Jeff Schlichter Barbara Burnham adapted by Sara and Mitchell Nunn -Spencer. Roben McMurphy stars as Performances of "The White Tom with Chad Evans as Huc:klebcr- Arrow" will be g1 ven Thursdays ry Finn, LlJi Lewis as Becky Thatcher, through Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Jenny Wens as Aunt Polly and Chris Sundays at :uo unlll Aug. 25 at the Perry as lnjun J~. Arts Center, 250 I C'hff Dnvc. New-The show will be staged Friday at pon Beach Call 631-0288 for ticket 7:30 p.m. with matinees at 2:30 p.m. mformat1on Saturday, Sunday and Aug. 16-18 in 8111 Purk1s?> 1s direcung "Joseph Forum II on the Huoungton Beach and the Amazrng Technicolor campus. Call the college bookstore at Dreamcoat" at Orange Coa5'College 891-3991 for ucket information. with Jack Challender in the utle role "Shakespeare. 1614 -Alive" of the biblical youth sold into \la very opens Friday as a ~ial project by d th ,. _ •-"' who becomes the pharoah's right-Donald Freed and Geoffrey forward Lia Spell, Jack Challender in "Joeeph an e ~ua.ua hand man. Bruce Brown, Ken Perkins at the Gem Theater, 18262 Mam St., Technicolor Dreamcoat" at Oran•~ Coa8t Collete. "' and Lisa Spell t.ake other pn nc1pal Garden Grove. PeTfonnarttes will be 636. 7213. •"Grea1e"' at the Harlequin Din- assignments. given Wednesdays throulth Saturdays A half-dozen other stage pro-ner Playhouse. 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., The musical ~111 be staged at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 7:30 through ductions _three of them at Saddle-Santa Ana (979-SS 11). night!Y e~cept ~T;;h;;u;;rsda==ys=t=h=ro=u=g=h=Sa==t=ur=da==y=s =at=7=:=30===A==ug=·=3=1=w=i=th==in:fo:rm:;::a:t:io;n;a;v;a;1:::;la;b;le:a:t;i back Coliege _ complete their en-Mondays at varying cun.am times I gagements this weekend. through Sept. 15. ' ... ~ J!!!!lll ~-~-~ -~--· ·---·--......... ____ ...... ' -... ---- NOW PLAYING TheSaddlebackshowsace"Flddler •"A Chorus Line" at the Grand oa tile Roof" and "Harvey," running Dinner Theater. I Hotel Way. in repcnory in the main McKinney Anaheim (772-7710). n1ghll.Y e~cept Theater, and "Slardust," a muStcal Mondays at varying curtain umes revue playins in the adJacent Studio through the end of the year. Theater. "fiddler" gives its final •"La1t of tile Red Hot Loven" at performances Friday at 8 p.m., Satur-Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. day at 3 and 8 p.m.; ''Harvey" plays 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente Thursday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 (492-99SO). WednesdaysthroughSat- p.m.; '"Siardust" goes on Thursay urdays at 8 p.m .. Sundays at I and 7 through Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday p.m. through Sept. 22. at 3:30.Call 831-4656 forinformation •"Oliver " at the Cun.aio Call on all three productions. Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real, Also wrnding up this weekend will Tustin (838-1540,, nightl~ e~ccpt be: Mondays at varying curt.am umes •"Beaven Cu Wait" by Coastline through Oct. 27. Community College at Peterson •"Everythla1 La lite Gardea" at the Leaming Center, 20661 Farnsworth Irvine Community Theater, Turtle Lane, Huntington Beach (241-6186). Rock Community Park, Sunnyhill closing performances Friday and Road off Tunic Rock Dnvc. Irvine Saturday at 8 p.m. (857-5496), Fridays and Saturda~s at •"Allee" by the Saddlcback Ch1I-8 p.m. through Aug. 24 with a matinee drcn's Theater at Irvine Valley Col-at 2 p.m. Aug. 18. /OMM ·~~·. OO [cm1~~~~ lege, 5500 Irvine Center Dnve, Irvine •"Tbe Pirates of PemaDce" at the (559-1313), playing Friday at 7 p.m.. Huntington Beach Playhouse, Mam Saturday at 3 and 7 p.m., today and. Street at Yorktown Avenue, Hunt-~:;:~~,:Ef!n ;'ci!:,~INSTER next Sunday at 3 p.m. ington Beach (832-1405), Fridays and COSTA MESA IRVINE ORA,.GE~ 113().8990 c..-Wes• •''Two Yean Before tbe Ma1t" Saturdays at 8:30 through Aug. 24 EO..d1 Town.c.nc. Ed.wal'ds ijpl••MIY C•ne<llllM ORANGE 891 3935 aboard the PiJgrim in Dana Point with matinees at 2:30 today and next (1 751-41&4 SS4-881t 634 2553 _ \ S•ao1um 01111~-tn &39 8770 ~' Harbor ( 496-2274 ). final per-Sunday. IREA auEHA PARK El TORO formances Friday and Saturday at •"AnythlD1 GOH" at the Buena MannllleaPlala UAMovoa Eo .. ~1a•EIT0t• [CAL.Lr11UT11UF011Sl40WTM.sl • .. .....,,\ 6:30and9p.m. ParkCivicTheater,8150KnottAve., t ·-S~S339 ~-4993 581 9500 C.Ontinumg their summer runs Buena Park (821-IOIO). Fndays and _________ ....,,Disneyland , _________ , around the county are: Saturdays at 8 p.m. through Aug. 31 . THE MAN WITH QNE RED SHOE If the shoe fits ... beware it' t~:\. PGJ~ llEU Pllll 952·4993 UA~I otsT& •EU 979 .. 141 EDWAltDS CINEMA WCTER n '"' sa1.saao EDWARDS SA.OOUBACK IOW llOWllll IAIHI HIVE ~·4401 mwMDS WESTBROOK llYlll IM·Ull EDWARDS INVOSITY 111111 '37·0340 AMC OllMGI: MALL • .. ,, I .. , .. , .it • • IUlll 634·3911 UA cm CDmJ ,. UITA W 540-7444' D>WAIDS MISta wurwm nJ.oS46 UA WESTIMSTtR MAU JOHN CANDY IS AOOUT TO FACE THE NOST DEVASTATING EXPffilENCE KNOWN TO MAN-THE FAMILY VACATION. ~mar~ t tf£ I~ A Dt:KH N.11.AMOIJn rlCTURM, .,,. ... llflUIIS IA1'1.lA'1'111• PlllODOCTIO•. A CAN. ll.lfm nui .iotllf CAlfOT • IUlQOll\ QlflAJ. • llJCl'LAJJ) OUJrlfA IX1ICVTJT11 'MIOOCI" ll'Utl IJUl.J.ATlfl WIU'M'Slf llY .TSMVY crrw.1111 • WAM ~ • PROl'JQC'lt) IY 0.IOllOI 18.AJ"IN) "°---DflUCTSI) IT CAIU. Mtna A "'MW01TllT PlC'TUU ' _ ...... -.--. -·----..., STARTS FRIDAY AT A THEAT~E OR DRIVE-IN NEAR YOU. . Nicholson takes over role LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jack Nicholson will star with Meryl Strcep in Mtke Nichols' film "Heanbum" for Paramount Pictures. to Robert Greenhut, who 1s co- producmg wnh Nichols. Nichols 1s directing from a sen pt by Nora Ephron, from on her novel "Heanbum." The story is loosely based on Epbron's marriage to Carl Bernstein. the Pulitzer Prize-winning Nicholson replaces Mandy Patinkin, who lefi the picture because of an1stic differences over the inler- pretation of the character, according reporter of Watergate'-'11..;;;;am=e.:.... __ _ "ROUSINC ENTERTAINMENT WITH EASTWOOD AT HIS BEST." -T~Y. NBC·TV. Ciene Shallt HllAPlll 121-4070 IUJllA ,,. o ... , Dlltl 1111 979-4141 EDWUOS CllllA COOD n 'l1M sa 1-MOO EDWAIDS El TOllO Fe.TAii Yl&.LEl 963-1307 U lllUIA 523-1111 FMa.Y F<U PACflC GABAY -• UA CITT COOD 534-3911 Fa1llTll • FOX FW.OTON 525-4747 "Chikftn wtl ~ It A rooYle pa-etlts wtl want to take their kids to." IMA tt0-4021 .... 4 _,.H2-4ttJ IM.,_, I -.TA ml S40-0SM UA IGITM COAST I .. Ml.MM --IOOl..r umaau7a.au mwmssoCJL l.Mllll ltiS IMll -Qt.ZMJ mncrncono ..,. .. --W.tlll LAllUOAD*.a Wlll&Sf& • CDWMOS CRIM Im ftl.JID ' Full-scale 1nodel displays variety Of vinyl products Anaheim show to feature an exhibit ' of some 30 items The Vinyl Institute will feature more than 30 construction and furnishing products made with this durable material In three full- scale rooms and an outdoor living area on display at the upcoming 31st Annual Southern California Home & Garden Show fn Anaheim. shakes, vlnyl siding, and a variety of window products. The exhibit will feature a bay window, patio doors, roof windows, skylights and rolling shutters that control sun and ventilation while provid- ing security and privacy. The display house also fea- tures a complete gutter and downspout system and mainten- ance-free vinyl fence. Moving Inside, the versatile vinyl products are thin and flex- ible for use as wall coverings In a variety of colors and patterns, while flooring can stand up to the heaviest traffic. South Shores honored Landscaping firm· s work at 2 sites wins industry rec~gnition South Shores. a Mission Viejo landscape contracting and main- . tenance firm, has been honored by the Long Beach-Orange COunty Chapt8' of the California Landscaping Contractors As- sociation -the organization's largest chapter. South Shores received the President's Award. which 1s given The show is slated for the Anaheim Convention Center Aug. 17-25. Vinyl Is a versatile product that can be used In all areas of home Improvement and furnishing - from the roof to the fence line. The kitchen In the display home exemplifies vinyl's ver- satility. It is rigid and tough enough for appliance compo- nents and plumbing as well as assorted containers. The Vinyl ln•dtate'• product d.leplay home, The Vinyl Bouee, feataree more than SO vinyl prodacta, r&naln.C from rooflne and f encl.ng to wall and Door co•ertnc•. . to the best entry in any landscape Installation category, for the firm's work at Peppef'Wood Apartments I n Ranc ho Cucamonga. The full-scale model displays the latest exterior building prod- ucts made with weatherable rigid vinyl, Including a roof of vlnvl clad In the bathroom, tubs, showers, and water closets come In preferred colors and are easily Installed and cared for. The family room Is also enhanced with vinyl flooring, wall covering, furnishings and ac- cessories and outdoors. The weather-resistant casual out- door deck furniture provides the finishing touch. Other features of the show Include Antique ~ow, stage shows featuring Helen O'Connell and a flower show. The Home & Garden Show is open Monday through Thursday from 2-10 p.m., Friday 2-11 p.m .. Saturday from noon to 11 p.m. and Sunday noon to 9 p.m. For further information, call 635-8330. ' ,. The company was also re- cognized for Best Unlimited Commercial Maintenance at Sea Cliff on the Greens In Huntington Beach and for tts work In Small Landscape Renovation for a Westwood residence Ocean views luring-buyers to Dana By The Sea "We're very pleased to have our work recognized by the California Landscape Contrac- tor's Association," sa1d Dick. Developer touts location fortts 'panoramic and white water view' of Southland coast The ocean view has been luring hundreds of Orange County homebuyers to Dana By The Sea, a new townhome community in the hills overlooking the marina In Dana Point, according to the developer. "This location was selected prlmarlfy for its panoramic and white water view of the Southern California coast," said Earl Welk, partner of K & W Development Korp., Huntington Beach-based developers of the 21 -u'nit project. "The locale, coupled with quality construction and conve- nience of townhome living make Dana By The Sea a very appeaJ- lng option,." he said. The townhomes, design,ed by Mark Singer and Associates of Laguna Beach, feature Cape Cod architecture, with Interiors by Mariel Rae Interiors. These two-story townhomes range In size from 2,030 to 2,260 square feet and offer three two- and three-bedroom floor plans. Each of the units features either · an attached garage or a suhter-- ranean garage, upper and lower patio decks and a master bedroom with sitting area. The common area includes a swimming pool and spa, a barbecue area and a small clubhouse. Priced from $249,900, Dana By The Sea homes off er such amenities as custom.designed wood-burning fireplaces with gas logllghters, solid oak handrails and built-in bookcases. sky- lights, and · ceramic tile or wood entries. Each townhome has also been equipped with an alarm system. Financing options Include an 1 Pl• percent, 30-year fixed rate (12.25 annual percentage rate) Gebhard, company pr~dent for a limited time. Judges in the compet1t1on To reach Dana By The Sea, were Gerald M Robbins. Costa take the Pacific Coast Highway Mesa; William J Cathcart and exit from the San Diego freeway ·•Dan Mikkelsen, both of Orange, and go north to Golden Lantern. and Keith A French, San Turn right and go to Selva. Take Clemente. Selva north to Blue Lantern and South Shores has previously then turn right. Proceed right to received several awards from Alta Vista and follow the signs to thje CLCA. including statewide the sales office. Dana By The Sea first place honors in the models are open daily from 10 categories of Large Commercial a.m. to 6 p.m. Maintenance, Custom Res1den- For further information call tial Installation and Small Reno- 240-9503. vat1on. Trio of I Joor plans judged goo.d as gold · as Mission Viejo CO. garpers aCcolades A trio of floor plans from the Mission Viejo Co.'s existing neighborhoods received honors at the 22nd annual Pacific Coast Builders Conference In San Fran- cisco. The Gold Nugget Grand Award, the Industry's highest accolade for design and architec- ture, was presented to the de- veloper's Wildflower floor plan In the Eastbrook Home Serles. Awards of Merit were presented to homes In both Aspen Creek and Stoneybrook. 1 ne WllOflower (Plan two). honored for "best slngle family detached house under 1,200 square feet," was designed by the firm of Richardson, Nagy and Martin and built by Mission Viejo Co. The contemporary plan In- corporates a spacious, airy In- terior. Eastbrook's Wiidfiower -de- lsgned for young couples and families -offers dual master bedrooms, double bath and country kitchen. Earning the Award of Merit were both Stoneybrook 's Heatherglen (Plan four) as "best single-family detached home of 2,201 to 2,800 square feet," and Aspen Creek's Columbine (Plan three). ~toneybook, designed by the Berkus Group and built by Mission Viejo Co., represents Is located within the Canyon Crest area, a private, guard-gated neighborhood. The traditional two-story de- sign showcases generous living areas and a formal dining room, separated by a dual-faced fire- place under a 17-foot vaulted celling. A country kitchen with windowed nook and half bath complete the first floor. Upstairs. a secluded master suite with corner fireplace, prl- -Vate balcony., tuu bath and welk- in closet Is separated from the famlty sleeping quarters by an open-bridge hallway, which over- looks the downstairs living areas. Two bedrooms and a bonus room, for conversion Into an upstairs den or optional bedroom, share a full bath. Aspen Creek, one of the new- est neighborhoods In the Laguna Hills area. combines the latest advances In building materra1s with time-tested construction technology. Jhe Columbine offers space and efficiency throughout Its three bedrooms, two baths and country kitchen beneath ca- thedral cemngs, . For Information about these developments, call the Stone- ybrook sales office at 581-9200. Eastbrook sales office at 830-0790 or the Aspen Creek sales office at 855-6224. Brtaht, airy lnterton helped the Mluton Viejo Co. win a Oofcl Nu&aet Grand Award for lta Wlld1lower floor plan. $15,000 furniture bonus offer open to buyers at Lake Shores ' a.Jee mai»aier Sandy Connor (~lat) ta.lb aboat fainlture bonueee wttla Ille.bard r Guillen, ma~er of Callnell a ClaalOD, and u1ee repraeo dn Vlckl Marten•. Irvine Pacific Is offering a Homes are available in three $15,000 furniture bonus to floor-plf!nS. ranging from 1,930 buyers of Woodbridge Lake to 2,669 square feet The Shore luxury single-family at-architecture, heavlly-mfluenced teched homes. by Scandinavian design, features The offer applies to buyers who multi-level Interiors and ex- close escrow before Sept 30. tensive use of glass. said Candy Shepard, lrvtne Pa -The A~borg offers two clflc's director of $ales and bedrooms. two baths, library and marketing. sunken living room. The Stock- "Woodbrldge Lake Shore holm features three bedrooms buyers who take advantage of with a retreat off lhe master this special program may select bedroom, 21~ baths, atrium and a thetr own furnishings from Can-breakfast nook The Copen- nell & Chaffin of Newport Beach," hagen has four bedrooms, 2'.-4t she said. ''Buyers will receive a baths. formal dining and living certificate at the close of escrow rooms plus a family room that wlll allow them to purchase The two-stoey, multi-level the furniture wltNn a six-month homes f ture costom hand- period. ~· troweled oethngs. skylights, air The special furniture offer BP-conditioning, ceramic ttle pll to the nine homes -priced countertops, antique brass fix- from the $200.000s -corrently tures, SOiid oak entry doors and available. six p nel raised lntertor door9, "Woodbridge Lake Shore Is Shepard d designed tor cereer-mtnded Other standard amen1t1e tn· working couple.$, established elude master bedrooms with oval famil nd profesalonals who tub and aep rate shower. hard- are rudy to move up to luxury WOOd handrails, wet bar nd two homes," Shepard Id I wood-burning flrept w th o•s stub-out and oak cabinets 1n the kitchen and bath Woodb ndge Lake Shore resi- dents automatically become members o f the Woodbridge Shore Community Assoc1at1on which maintains the home e>c- teriors and neighborhood com- mon areas · Residents also become mem- bers of the Woodbridge VIiiage ASsoc1at1on. whtch ma nta1ns recreation fac1ht1es and com- munity common areas Each association 1s f1nanc1ally sup ported through homeowners monthly dues Woodbridge Lake Shore 1s located between the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways Take Culver Drive to the Alton Parkway entrance to W.ood bridge Tum right on West Y le Loop. left on Blu Lake North nd continue past th4t Woodbridge South Lake Be ch Club to t mod s. open daily from io a m to6p m For dd1tlonal lntOfmatlon cell 786-3159 - I l f ·, Onnol CoMt DAILY PILOT/Sunday, August 4, 1085 ' • 4 UnM~ya. ~ Dallt . •Adi mav tanct'I nrh. bu1 rw>)iirtion of pilv~1 "re(undlilie. •Hf' r1 .... l!lt.1 be pwcbued for U 00 rach. • rncn m\llt be included an 1ht ad. • (kin oot apph 10 1ht' rnl t'tla111, rt'ntal, or http wanttd ~tionl ot •u1omobiie. pnced ovtr t 2000 Call 642-5678 • • • Avai~bko onh 10 priv•lt arlv tchf'rllMr• Ml!Uit rnerchullille. NEW LISTINGS ... 1111,IM Rrat time offered. Bright and clean 2 BR condo with oool, shady backyard to ·enjoy summer barbecues. Near shopping. pools, tennis. OUYll OlllT 1111,IOO Lovely, apactobs 3 BA+ den end unit townhome In great location & condition. Tennis, pool & security gated. Price !ncludes land. nmft-ttH,IOO 2 BR + den. -Owner paid $225,000 new, then spent $60,000 on extensive upgrades. Gorgeous. Immaculate & ready to selll 111111 TllUOE 1111,000 Outstanding family home on enormous lot with spacious pool & spa. Brand new beautifully appointed kitchen. 5 BR plus am8':'1tles. smwa llLL tut• Ocean, bay & city lights view, 4 BA home In prestigious area. French doors plus upgraded detalls. 4 car garage. M l&YFlllT 11,111,118 100' on bay. Pier and slip. Huge sandy beach, brick patios! Cape Cod, 4 BR, large family room. 'ormal dining & country kitchen. I: I \j'J ~ 1J i) I : 1 #!ta : 16 1 l 41 Tll ILIFR 1211,000 Excellent Trina plan on corner greenbelt. 3 BR. 2 BA. two level condo with large patio overlooking park-like setting. Near community pooll ILIFFS SZll,000 3 BR up and 1 BR down with separate bath, wood and beam ceilings throughout. over- looking lovely greenbelt. Land Included. l&YOlllT IZH,IOO Price reflects seller Intent, not the condition of this 3 BR, large famlly home. Wave your magic wand and bring this home Into 1985. Liii iSLE llU,000 Charming 3 BR home on large Lido lot. This home has just been painted and recarpeted In best of ta&te. Perfect for first h~Ome or retirement couple. WEITCUFF 1111,000 Simply beautlful 3 BR or 2 + den. Open beam celllngs. spa in gorgeous garden. A very speclal street. llll•IUHLIU 1410,GOI Featured In Orange County MagazJ,ne, this home Is ultra charming. 3 BR, FR and DR. Located on corner. the patio and yard are reminiscent of Carmel. 111 OAIYll SMl,000 4 BR with sparkling pool, 2 fireplaces, gated area New paint and landscaping. Price dropped $110,000, now lowest priced home In one of our mos! elegant communities. Ill OUYH 1111,llO Like country tMngt Private and secluded, thTs 4 BR + family room Is located on the best Broad- moor lot In all of Big Canyon. SPTIUIS llU 1111,000 Best priced custom home In area. Traditional with 5 BR, 2 family rooms, unique upside-down floor plan with a complete children's wing. A MEMBER OF THE SEARSRNANCIALNETWORK REAi. ESTATE OPEN HOUSES ' 11111UY 1·1 • Mlllll .U ........ ..., 2 BR, Den • S287,500 S. MARVIN MlllFI .... 11""' 3 BR, FR *325,000 C.McMAHAN ........... 1142hrt ...... 5 BR, FR $334,000 G. ANDERSON UITILI" . .,...,. 4 BR, View $449,000 R. KURTZ UllllYllW.U nn......., 4 BR, FR $499,700 C. BALDtKOSKI ......... 4Ul....., 4 BR, FR, Pool, Spa $575,000 E. CORKETT s.uoum ......... ...,.. 4 BR. FR, View $759,000 J. CAMPBELL PmUIU 11Hl. .... Frtet 3 BR + Study $799,000 C. EADIE MllYHllT .... ..,....., 4 BR, FR, Pier $995.000 T. BOLAND 1111111·1 f. OISTl IU1 2111..., It. 3 BA $139,000 E. BOWtJ: Ullll YlfW lltUI JllllllYln 2 BR, Oen $229,000 R. BOLAND UT11.1 llllll ISUll 211AWHt 1 -1 BR $310,000 T. BOLAND IHllE TllUOE ........ 3 BR, Pool $324,000 M. MATTHEWS .l&Salll OUll 11Httr 3 SR, FR $325,000 C.McMAHAN UllllYllWIHH 1141 ,.,. ltlrlle1 5 BR, FR $334,000 L. WHITE UI .. YllW IJLU 2lMUa•...._. 4 BR. FR $340,000 0 . VALENTINE Ull llU 2H Y\I Ltt'H 3 BR $345,000 C. RUMSFELD •tullllUllS CHhW.Temtt 2 BR, View $385,000 L. SHAW Ml-OllU .......... ., 3 BR, FR $429,500 S. MARVIN UITllllF 2"1 .. ,. 4 BR, View $449,000 G.ANDERSON l&YIHIH _-in1 ..,...,, lrJ 3 BR. FR $495,000 0. BIBB 1&1111 YllW llLLI nn WIMtt•r 4 BR, FR $499,700 G. LIVINGSTON ...... u Cl11.,,..... 2 BR, Study, Fee $529,000 K.PARKER IPYIWI 111e4ec•laJ 3 BR, FR. Pool, Spa $565,000 C.McMAHAN lnll&llllU 21 ........ 6 BR, FR. View $650,000 B.AEEDY IHUIUfFI IHller .... ...,., 4 BR, FA. View $759,000 J. CAMPBELL ... umllT lllllapWtlr 4 BR, FR, Pier $995,000 E. CORKETT 644-9060 ~ lllffl IJlt,IOI View! View! Vlewt Courtyard entrance IMda to spacious 3 BA plus famlly room home wfth lovety back bay and city lights view. Price Includes the land. Ullll lUlll IHl,000 Beautiful 2 bedroom condo, gate guarded. Large brick patio, city llghts & mountain view. Exceptionally private locatlol'). Customized throughout. 4'Almll lllD IHl,000 Big ocean vtew plus. 3 BA, f amlly room home decorated In soft paatela, aecluded spa off master bedroom\ Resort llvlng with guard gated security, pools and tennis. lnlWI IMt_. 5 BA plus bonus room In medley of color & llghf. '" '- Forever view, pool & spa. Hardwood, trench doors, compelllng combination of taste, room, tocatlon, view & price. IMUOUFn 1111,000 Imagine yourself In Shorecllffs with a good ocean view from LA and OR plus 3 BR and 3 BA . Call for appointment. IPYIWI IHl,IOO Beat localtlon In Spyglass and the most magnifi- cent 5 BR + office home the area has to offer. Lovety pool, spa and gorgeous custom decor. IPYILAll llU 11,111,000 Enchanting stone "castle" high on hlll with ocean/bay view. 5 BR, famlly room, wine cellar, music room, 5 fireplaces. pool + spa. Perfect for entertaining and elegant living. ......... 11,111,HO Fabulous with sensational view of Little Corona, waves crashing on rocks & the jetty. Large famlly room with retractable roof, 5 BR, 5 BA. ILll Oii• 111 UI S1,1H,IOO Breathtaking haTbor and ocean views. Newly remodeled 3 BR, 31/1 BA, den, game room, dining room. Used brick and mahogany hlghllte sophisticated decor. WATERFRONT Wiil llWHIT 1111,llO QualJty oceanfront duplex. Lower 3 BR has huge patio & bonus room. 2 guest parking spots. Fireplaces. Completely refurbished. •tu Ill UI l&YFlllT SMl,IOO Perfect setting for viewing harbor boat activity. 50' of bay. 4 BR. 3~ BA. long ~rlveway leading to 3 car garage, dock space for 3 boats. Land Included. UH llU 12,111,000 With dock facllltles for 4 or more boats on LldQ's tip, this 6 BR home enjoys lovely sunsets! Wine cooler, off street parking, asaumable loan. OTHER AREAS UllU lllllL 1411,IOO Whitewater view, bright and cheerful, beautifully decorated 4 ·BR or 3 BR + den home. Covered patio Includes spa. INTI UHU 1111,000 Blufftop "whitewater'' view of rugged coast and llghts. Huge llvlng areas with elegant llght oak floors. 3 extra large BR. Interior courtyard patio. 2161 SAii JOAQUIN HILLS RD., NEWPORT BEACH CLASSIFIED INDEX 642-5678 REAL ESTATE ~~ Pf()C)efty FOR SALE tndutl•*"'°'*'' lOlt fo• Sele HOUSES ~HomeP .. ~ 0.,,.,ar •DO) ~t.,,1°"4"1 ~.,, A..--tOOA o.enoe Co ""-'• lla'Oall _,,, ·~ °"' •Co"'-· Sa'-"-"'°' °"' a4 6•••• p,_.,, c_.,""°a..." •0•8 Rtnc:""''•"""1c;.n. .. Go<O'W .,. "'*' •071 R....,.,p,,_,, Coat• ,.,..._ 1074 r.,,,.Sht•"'O 0..-.POor" 1\),6 R[[o~ DEADLINES THE DAILY PILOT PVllllCATl()N Monday Tuelday OEAOUNE fro 4 JO pm 11on 4 30 pm r ..... 4 30pm weo 4 JO pm T""'' 4 JO pm w-• T""''°"' rr.oe, Satut'lr.lr S.."'°"' ll!.q 137\ 1400 ,.,~ 1450 •!>QC) 1'2S ·~'>') ·~1s 1!>81) •!>90 •f;OO '' lOOpm r. lOOpm HOUSES UNFURNISHED ,.,.,,..., ''°' An•"""' H• 2104 Ra'l>C>e .. no 1206 a.oone "-•• nor C.-t•ano 11oo .. 1 n11 Gotont.,.. "'"' nn Ce»tau.w 11:14 °""" """'' 2229 (I TOIO nl:l ,.,.,. .• .,,v.... 11.lA CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS T....,._S-- Moftdey·l't'ldity IOOAM·SaGl'M a.-Counter MonNy-f'.fiNY I 00 A M .5 00 P.M 642-5678 Baiooe...,_ C.0.l•IWIO 8eac;ll CO<ont <lei Mar eo. ........ OeNIPoon1 fl fQIO lount .... Valley ~:.n8-~ Hunl"'QIOll H••!Xlu< "-lllgU"ll lhKfl ~H- CHECK YOUR AD THE FIRST DAY n.,. Delly l'llol 11""91 IOI ~ and KOU<IO'I' ~. -llOnd\I .,,~ do OCCUt ....... ,,,... ..... 10 ..... -. '(OIJl 11<1 • reed b9clC 10 >'°" and IO ct>ed< '(OIJI lld Cl9ll)' ~ ett(ft .......... 1 ..... 10 M 1 5e71 The o.iy 1'111>1 ~no .. _., lor .,..., "'°' "' .,, ---··· IOI ""'Cl\~ rney be t~ •.cepl IOI 1~ coe1 oA tne -ectuely oc:ioup1ec:1 Dy 1ne err0< Cr-can Ollly be •llowecl IOr lhe ..... lnM<tlon 2907 l .... •f-2el8 M-Vleje> 2822 HtwPOtl a..cl\ 2924 s.n ci.n-1e ,f,,., 2e29 .... ,,._ Cepiae 2132 a...11A..,. 163-4 Se"ie AN Helgihll 2MO loulh Coul M<H•o ~' a..ia-. '644 Soull\ Laguna ~ Sur-' e.eci't nso Tlllltn N'fo/ --...., """"" 30 deya • r~eo,....,. ~110 11111 -....,,eel 10, ~ CIWQ91 oon.putlld 91 I~~ oA Ille~ --I* montll ... oohc· ltOne coata IM tf'4y ,...IOrlllble a110<,....,.a - 27$6 S.-Oppor1un1U• 2797 "'*'-W8111e0 2719 _.....,. ()ppor1\Jnll• 2718 "-1-WWed 2771 MoneyfOLC*> 27IO MoneyW.,...., 2712 ~ro ·• 2716 27 ... EMPlOYM!NT 27te 27111 Hell>Wented 27to Jatlt Wllnled/°'"9f91 MMwim*t &lboe llllind. ._...,._ c.p.it-teed> Coron.a cit! Met Cotta ...... Dlll>l l'olrll El Toro ~v...,, Hutlt"'GIOll ._,. HuMltlQIOllHetl>OUI """" UtglN ll4Mld1 Leguna-. ~Hlgllel Lak•'°'-..._,,,Viejo 4014 "°'' .io19 4022 4024 4028 4()21 ~9Mdl Ban Ciemln1• Ban -'-Cepiaer*'I> Santtlt/lta lanlt AN Htlglllt lolAh C-MeltO .... '-"' kulh~~ .,,_~ Tullill 6100 ••ot w.. ....... OPEN Slll>AY 1-5 I View ........... $369,000 ......... 912 Slftdcastte 3 BdrJll, ocean view, pool.. .......................... V. S1ncla1r Y0aU•uo"'""''"'"«l499_.000 .... , . ., ............ 11 TblrGn Bdrm, master suite, ereat view ............ 8. Barrinaton View ............... $3'5,000 ............. UOl Kttl Bdrm. 2'h Ba, view. spotless ................... It Granitn View ....... $349.000 ....... 1806 Pon WntiMunt Bdrm portofmo. shutters, spa ................... M. Gr}m aJM. ................ $457,000 ................. 401.,... Oen. two Bdrm. see rt all view ...................... R. Sietz Cl:tM: ............ saso.000 ............. 3300 0c11n llvd 3 Bdrm, see 1t all v1ew ................................... R. Jaaner Olde Cl* ............. $259,500 ............. 2320 2nd .. .... Charmin& 2 Bdrm, 2 ba ................................ A Johll$0n Olde COM .... From $229,500 .... JasmN Ave at 4th St. New 2 & 3 Bdrm condomm1ums ............... M. Rousselot ............... $259,500 ............... 2441 VbtJ ..... ZI l sty, 3 Bdrm, end unit.. ............... ~ ........... P. lane U~l()lJI: ti()Ml:S REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 £Ht Coaet Hl9hway, Corona del Mar OPEN HOUSES SUNDAY 231 VII l.Wo SMll, I.Wt Isle (11·1) .... -$1,315,NI 2 sty Bayfront w/ elevator, 5 Bdrm. boat slip. 331 Vial.NI Ion, UM Isle (1-4)._.$1,251,111 Bayfront 60" lot + 3 Bdrm 2 ba, apt w/vu. 1330 C11uJ Ir, h"' hrs II (1-4)-.... $Hl,lll Fantastic floor plan & pool, spa & view. 343 VII I.Wt SIM, I.Wt lilt (1-4) .. --.. Sl,151,111 . Pnce reduced , Bayt ront with shp for lg yacht 145 Via .... (1-4) ............ _ ................. $311,511 Completely remodeled 3 Bdrm. 40' wide . 12H 1ttW11rt LHt, 11 (1-4)-............. $251,111 Westclitf family home on pool size lol 2H Via lltlttlt, I.Wt lilt (1-4) ............. $111,111 5 Bdrm, 3 ba on 67' lot + pool, patio. liA» f17]-.73~0 I 1do Rf•alty r,, "'· · , . . . · -=~=· S~\\.dlµ-~t,~s· ::: Wilo4 ~. Cl.\T a -.i,uo ---- • ,_,_ "'-6 1cr0Mbled -· below IO ...... 6 tlMp.. WOtdJ '""' t.n ... o4 ...ch '" ltt ..... ol -··· I GROUHE I I 11 I I I VEESIR 1 I I I' I I I HUBJEL I I' I I I' I THRUCC I I I I I' I HO OT IL I I ulted my ton If he waa nervoue wh ite taking hie I dtiv.r'• l•t. "I WU at nm ... he r~. "but tMr! I luet prltend.o the Offlo9f WU Oad I I I I' I' __ .. .. ..... --I TULIED ' I 11 I I I I •;..1 I I 111 •11.1 llUIMJTI .....,. ............. ""- 8104 ·~er-9030 81oe Tn.o.a 9036 1107 v-'°"° 8111 An.__ CIMtlca 9046 8122 L""°'** 9060 8124 9121 AUTOS, IMPORTED 9132 8134 -...~ 1106 11.0 Audi 1107 8142 A..tlr\ 1108 81(4 8MW 1112 614' Ctt1oen 1114 8160 0111-1117 11112 <>«.or_, 1111 1156 ,.,..,. 1121 8117 ,-.., tl23 8119 Hor>Oa 11:16 •118 '-""' ') 8127 e119 Jtouet ''" l 1IO ..._ 1131 8111 ~()Ille ••» t1'6 .__~ 1133 8!14 unoe ll)f IUl9 l-1137 81N Melda 1141 9180 .......... •141 81M ~...., 11"6 ,..._ 1147 £1 fQlo 1012 RE Wllt'le<I '"" •Ol4 ~~ 2652 w ........ 17tl Jobt W ..... /DofllMllC lf07 l-• Foret! ;>6!.S ....... "'II'"" a.. ,, 1:140 HurM'ljlM H4I t'°" 242 lltANIPOffT ATION t.I() ""' Op.i 1111 F<V"..,. Va .... RENTALS """'"'II«>" 8eec." •040 Hunt'"Vlon H.,b<V 104 .. HOUSES FURNISHED ,.....,.. • i0•4 (,M.-1'1 • t 1~· 1"111""'8-<'" 1048 ~nrt,,,.....,. H I•,. I~ .... 10~ &oOn<I...,_,,,, Jtf>, l~,..... (I. a.t«>a~ ~·01 , ... ~ I~ c. ......... e..w:~ ... -v-' I en ...... .,,,.., itn .......,,.,,, S-C:ll •OllQ C.ool•~ 141• 5w1c;.....,,. •078 °""• """'' 2•:;i ""' ,,._, ,_ ........ •Oii [I ltlfO -11 J1 WI•~ •lllO FouM_V_, ~1'4 ....... ,.,.....,. .. •ll"I' _"'II,.,,."-' ''-<l '°""' c:oe.. -·o IOI\ """""'or~ tt•t>aa• 7u2 ~ 9liacll •oe.t ..._ 71&4 Jlo<llfl l,.-IOM l~~ .. 11411 &...-ilfft" •DN lMQUM Hillt '•'>() , ........ tot() l llll'""'"Y'" l •!>. ~ .. tl)Qll UtllefOO"I ,, ~ -"' 'llll MlSCELlANEOUS ~"-"" ''" -110CI ~C-•• ''" AcrtlOll 112) San .,._ C-1<1r.o ,.,. Aftafl-llllO s.i>le Ane 111'1() lleldl~.., 117~ ~· ,. .... -"" ,,., ..,_,.......,,. ''°° Still~ 21 ... ~l01a/Ctt11•• int ,..,..,.f.'ll!om ...... ., , .. ~ ~~ 1150 ....... l ..... 1• c.--ins "'-~ 21u ....... ,IM!O 1300 r...i .. 7190 .__, ........ 1ua w.u..-• .., ;>•OI ANIMALS M-V•IO 2$e7 MISCELLANEOUS ~8Mcf\ *' ....,.,_ '"'""'*' c... l606 S...C.--.le 7876 OI Ufl"""""9d 2800 0. 6610 S.....NanCAl"'lllM 1t78 Roorra 2tOO ~ ~ S-1 Ane <'690 "'-"I loetO 2t02 l""91110dl IUO Sen•• """ IWoOM• Ml tl()tl!t Mottlt 2904 ... ... ~C....1.1 1'0 "4$ °'*'"°"'" 1906 $Ml8-.ll }W .._ ...... ~ ..e-.CHANDlll Soulfl ...... nes 11-IOI Atll4•'-2907 r.un.1 0.Vh lOlll ...... to ...... ~ MtlQua. .. IOIO futhn ~ Aln!llllW-"°' ~ toll .... _ ... ~ o..eo-ror,..,,. "'' Alla-tcm ()lllQee ....... ,.,. ~-to•• APARTMENTS ._,_,. ... 2'11 C--..&(~ 8011 UNFURNISHED ecw.w-·~ ,.,. ~ toll 0.....114 171» ~ ........ "20 ,_to 'l'OU eon ~-2104 "°'• nu '""""'" ~· IMDO<I_,., nno ... ....... :>t>\ ~a-'112 ...,.,.,, __ 17'01 .....,,,., U14 .,.. .. _"9sf\ 7'11 ANNOUNCEMENTI .__., "" c:.w0na .. ~ .. 112? ~· ~ ettct.._. .,,. Col•aMtU 17:>4 LIM A,_ 300.t M19c. Wlltllecl RIO OMio "'1lnt 21?1 ,.._.. 3017 ..,.....,..,~ 1a2• rt TOIO nu .... toNI ........ IO" Qlllcill~ '°""'""" v • ..., 11~ .._ ~ "-"lcliO'I lO•t ·~ .... ~ _..,._ .... , ~7,j() ,,_ ~,. ~•Or....-U2t _,,,.M_• 11'1 ~00... tlJO .._ 77M 8UllNllll TV ~ Hl'l.lll'90 tr> L...,.,. e....~ n 41 FINANCIAL OARAO•IAUI l .... -nso l eQINNyJOll n~ .,..._,,, ... 4011 ~ ••oz It-/1U l..,,,,. llHr" 1741 l "VU'•• ... ~l'>O '"II'"'•~ U~? l .... ,00.... 17\~ -V••• • llt1 ~· Beac• 2'9'1 San c-..,,., ,,,~ Soro.,._ c;..pe,1....... 7118 Ser-•. ,,,,. 211!() ., •• ""• Heo\11'1• ,,., 5Nfh Cc>to• .,.ta u~ SHllH<t, 77M $WWI ~.,.. 72te ........ f'IH(r n .. ,...,,., 11'!0 w ,..,...,,,. 2:>".le MISCELLANEOUS ... ~ .. .,.,~ )JOO ,_ ,.,,_ 'ol()O c:....,.,,,.,__""' .,...,..., S'410 r,_..~,..,-J~XI T ·--lk·°"'-lW& l)JCllt•" ,.,,,_., 2UO •ur>-~ APARTMENTS FURNISHED BOATS '-· .. ., .... °*"' /Aefll 7010 .....,. 1116 bit GtM<ll 701! PorlCtt9 1117 aoei. .._ 1011 """"" l1M toet ... 7014 llllllt~ t•ll lpted/8111 1011 ~ tlN ......,.,..,_ 7011 IMli 11• ....._,......_ 70:!0 tut-i .,.., -"Oocat 1021 T~a 11• llGfeOe 102• fllltn'l)ll t171 ....,.,...,~-'°" VCll!N~ .. ,, ..._. 7011 VOlltO 117' .. llJJ MISCELLANEOUS AIPOl•ft tt010 AUTOS, DOMESTIC kvc• IOlt 0..-el t300 ~ '°" ~ ..... IOlt AMC g)I ~'l'CIMJ----'°'' Wet. N07 .....,,~ '°'° c:..... .. ..Vt. 1012 °"""-UIO ,,...,. ,,..,.. •• ci,,.,.. '311 Trellra,Ullly • • IOH ci.ooe. ~If fOrO t111 AUTOMOTIVE ........ 1321 ~ tW /!NH ....... eooe ~ t»I AlllO\.-..i to10 ~ .. nn ""'° ...,..,Pw\ • '°" ,._... Aul•W-9020 l'lymNf\ ..,,. .--'°'2 ""-1ecJ ~""-"' "'.C:S toll .,,t • { • • I f , . BrubhGEllis ft ID NT14L BROKER4Cf. CROl P anu1111 ...... , ........ Belcourt "Manor'' Home -offerina • blend of rich tradition and cia..fc contemporary dealan. ~our t>Mrooma, 3'1i batba, family rt;Kml pJUJ d n and it.ate of the '1'1.1 kitchen. Loads of extra.., a mUJt 11ee. Sandie Fix llAlllllllUI lllT YllW 1111,000 180° panoramic view from thia beautiful single.Jtory home situated on one of Cameo Shores largeet Iota. Four bdnna., 4 batha, formal dining room, family room, library, living room with beam ceilinga plua pool secluded in private courtyard. Se- curity system and many amenities. lncld. land. Donna Godshall Pllll UllOTill 1111,000 A best buy -Eastside Cos~ Mesa. Outstanding Spanilh style home on · large comer lot. Three bedrooms, 3 baths, dining area, single story. Re- modeled kitchen plus many amenities R.V. accea. Donna God- shall lllT IH • ..... ,..... 1111,000 Just reduced -owner motivated! Beautifully decorated and im- maculate. Nesteled among the trees in the Heart of Newport. Two BR., 2 BA., upgraded kitchen. Communi- ty pool, spa & tennis. MUST SELL. Micki Cooper IUffl&Yll , ....... Tl 1211,000 Darling 3 bdrm., home on ~ acre. Minutes to Newport Harbor High School. Recently remodeled with great potential for additions or ??? Assumable financing. Owner motivated. Martha Macnab lllUU """ Ill UIYll 11,111,000 Prime location overlooking fair- ways, lake and night lights. Five BR., 4 fireplaces, library, billiard rm, family rm. Attention to every detail in thia custom Valentine Built Home. Tom Allinson II. UHU am. · ... 11,000 Pride of ownership cottage apta. perfectly maintained. Zero vac. fac- tor. New paint, new landacaping, long-term tenants. Drive by 292 Cypress Dr. Do not disturb tenants. Call Paula Bailey for brochure. HIOM U1 'IA4••n 11n,to1 Your own 2 BR. penthouse with vieWI from all rooms over golf course, moun~ and city Ughta. Many upgrades -a must aee! Marilyn Bulkley .. llU ..... 1211,IOO South of the highway on lovely street with expensive homes. Com- pletely remodeled with light & airy feel. Ueed brick fireplace. French doors, lovely patio add to its charm. Linda Oeth llllPllll PIOUlll tH4,000 Beyond the quiet, dignified facade lies a gorgeous Victorian styled fam- ily room and bil.llard room where beautiful woods abound. Four bdrm., and a newly styled kitchen, and for loven of expansive viltas there la an unobltructed view of back bay, mountains and lights. Coby Ward UJllTIO mm1ww 11,111,000 Beautifully appointed home in Big Canyon with views from every room -mountains, lakes, night lights and 4 fairways. Decks and patioe grace each room. Pool, spa and gazebo enhance a large enter- taining area. $1,695,000. Carolyn Muon uum11111 OllTlllNUIY IAYHllT tl,ll0,000 Santa Maria Stone-white oak and glaaa. create an unbelievable feel- ing-on one of the finst locations in Newport Harbor. Three bdrm., elegant den and bar. U you are into perfection call Barbara Aune. Total- ly tumiahed. Fee. llTIT&lltll YILll 11 Ill OlllH 1111.000 Located on a quiet cul-de-sac in Big Canyon, this exquiaitely remodeled • expanded 3 bdrm. townhome of- fers the ultimate in quality & de- atgn. Private poof and spa, extensive ~ of French windoWI & hard- wood !loon. Good assumable financing. Truly a belt buy! Owners will trade. Danny Blbb/Stephanle Grody ,.IT lfflltH 1171,IOI De1trable aingle atory. . four bedroom residence in Harbor View Homes. Situated on a wonderfuJ pie •haped lot with room for pool, 1])9, R.1/. and 1t1lJ apece for playyard and entertalnini· Well pr1cicd & anc1- ttady for lrnmed!attt occupancy. Susan ScanlAn THE :REAL ESTATE:RS ... ...... t/1111-1 C1H l11 OPt 881·8177 R11I E1t1t1 PNflnllllll "If we don't sell your home we'll buy It." Get an equity advance of up to $100,000 ·on the sale of your old home. ... ,. ... 94 Wert Call Jim Santarchangelo for Details 1•1-1111 IU ltar Ital lttatt Ot ... r FlllLOll UITSllE HOIE COi l1p1ll1 Oest11111 Open Saturday 1-5 You must see thlsl 3 BR 2 ba. In-law qrtrs In rear. Refreshing spa. Large lmmac. yard. 2 covered patio sur- rounded by lush vegetation. Lots of brick & stone. Addition has lge mstr bdrm, ba & closets. $219,000. Ast fir '-11 ltJfantr 11114. IU-1141 OILIWILL 1&1111 UMIOI DON'T MISS OUT BUYS FOR THE BUDGET ~WISE II NEWPORT BUCH Lowest price, Peak-a-boo view harnung light & bright. Comer with Contemporary flair reat patio. OFFER OFFER Large bedrooms, Green belt View A quick sale-1~ down. $149,000 Jackpot! P.mthouae Locauon' rporate Sale. Huge Penthouse, Wrap around V i w patio er financing. $239.~00 Full Bay & Ocean View-eophisticaced Stained glaa--lse opt or sale. $325,000 A PETE BARRE fr . RE.ALTY Cl FOASALE LEASED INVESTMENT Tu8tln ofQ btda >.elcJng u .aoo.ooo t•"'~e 11nenc· g c.11 -714/913-5301 UMllllAll Unique commerdal buld- lng on hlQ~. ~ ~ ft 133 ft tront-oe. ~ • OUpm ... behind "' beeutttut gwden Mttlng Ore11 owner / u1•r Owner wtll ftnenoe • , 2 mlllton o.y., •'4-1m. ...... •t4-'401 "'1\11 Ml t«>'1 HO"ll~ '-· Al Al n u n a1-1• ., •5 Touton, Harbor Ridge, Nwpt Bch 644-2609 $559,000 Sunday 1--5 1715 Tradewtnds, Baycrest, NB 650-' 131 $248,000 Sunday 2-5 I •••6304'~W. Oceanfront. Newport Beach 631-8775 $625,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 4 BEDROOM •• 1195 Augusta, C.M. 546-2313 141,600 Sun 1·4 2607 Bunya, Eaatbluff. Newport Beach 644-9060 $449,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 • 1913 E. Bay Ave, Balboa Peninsula 644-9060$1,700.000 Sunday 1-5 HOMES f OR 8Al.E • 3280 Michigan. C.M. 546-2313 149,900 Sun 1-4 ' 17 43 New Hampshire, Costa Mesa I 546-2313 $165,900 Sunday 1-4 3 BR plua FAM AM or DEN 601 Gary Place. Newport Helgh1s 2519 16th Street, Newport Beach 681-0167 $215,000. Sat/Sun 12-6 646-5100 $188,000. Sat/Sun 1- 1 BA pfue FAM AM or DEN 1'336 22nd St .. Costa Mesa ***2525 Ocean Blvd., Channel Reef 645-2249 $229,000 631-1400 $375,000 Sun 1 -5 28EDROOM Sun 1-1844 Port Charles, Harbor View NB 760-8333 $299,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2345 Aralla. Eulbluff, Nwpt Bch 642-5200 $249,500 Sunday 1-*301 Roblnhood Lane, Coate Mesa 546-2313 $250,000 Sunday 1-5 Jasmine Ave at 4th St, Olde COM *""'•6 Atoll, Jasmine Creek, CdM 675-6000 from $299.500 Sat/Sun 1-5 759-0344 $359,000 Sunday 1-•• 1863 Samar, Costa Mesa v 16 Napoli, Harbor Ridge NB 76()..8333 $1, 196,000 * •9 Muir ~ach Circle, Spyglasa NB Sun 1-5 780-8333 $1,450,000 Sun 1-5 • v 4 Narbonne, Harbor Ridge NB * • v 17 Rldgellne Or, Harbor Ridge 760-8333 $995,000 Sun 1-5 760-1851 $3,400,000 Sat/Sun 12-5 *4527 Orrington (Cameo Shores) COM *h"25 Rldgetlne, Harbor Ridge NB 631 -1266 $699,000 Sunday 1-5 760-8333 $4,375,000 Sun 1-5 426 Plazza Udo, Udo Isle, N.B e v 14 Trafalgar, Harbor Ridge NB 631-7300 $595,000 Sat/Sun t -5 760-8333 $1,395,000 Sun 1-5 I -•• **239 Via Lido Soud, Udo Isle NB 1218 Polarts, C.M. 673-7300 $1,375,opo Sat.11-5/Sun 11·1 546-2313 $499,000 Sun 1-5 *iOO Via Mentone, Udo Isle NB 1966 Port Lockslelgh, HVH NB 673-7300 $680,000 759-9100 $283,000 Sun 12-4 e BEDROOM Sun 1-4 • 1806 Port Westbourne, Harbor View NB * * 1120 E. Balboa, Peninsula Point 875-8000 $349,000 Sun 1-5 631 -1400 $1,750,000 Sunday 1-5 31 Rockingham. ~lcourt NB **330 Via Udo Nord Lido Isle NB 644-6200 $825,000 Sun 1-5 673-7300 $1,250,oOo Sat/Sun 1-4 1130 Highland Or, westcllff NB 644-6200 $299,500 Sun 2-5 8 BR plu• FAM RM or DEN 2582 Vista Or, Bayahore NB 644-8200 $669,500 Sun 1-5 ••54 Royal St George, Big Cyn NB 644-6200 $1,800,000turn Sat/Sun 1-5 * 1806 Sandalwood, Baycrest NB 644-6200 $315,000 Sun 12-6 *8 Cypress P1, Big Cyn NB 644-6200 $995,000 7BEDAOOM Sat/Sun 1-5 * • v 17 Napoli, Harbor Ridge NB 760-8333 $1 ,696,000 ••260Cagney #114, VIiia Balboa NB 2964 Bimini (Mesa Verde)C.M. 546-2313 $249,000 Sun 1-4 CONDOS FOR SALE 1 BEDAOOM .:. ..... 6 00 $ 0 s 5 S 1148 Santiago Drive, Dover Shra, N.B v--2 21 .ooo un 1-' 45-5128 139,600. Sat/Sun 1-•• 1330 Galaxy Or. Dover Shores NB 631-7300 $560,000 Sun 1-5 ••437 Byaon Springs, Costa Mesa 321 Dahlia. Corona del Mar ••31 Bodega Bay, ~pyglaas, COM 673-7300 $600,000 Sun 1-4 ~ 645-0303 $74,900 Sunday 1-5 675-4144 $285,000 Sunday Noon to 5 644-9060 $565,000 Sunday 1-*1849 Sea Drift, Irv Terr COM 2 BEDROOM **627 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach 720-0280 $399,500 Sun 12-4 •83 Jasmine Creek, Jasmine Creek COM • 178 Brandywyne, Costa Mna 644-9060 $1,595,000 Sunday 2-5 ••2168 Blacayne Springe, C.M $3 1216 Somerset Lane, Westcllff, N.B 845 0303 $108 ooo s 1-4 675-6000 07,500 Sat 1-5 546-2313 $146,500 Sunday 1-4 4 BR plua FAM RM or DEN 631 _7300 s4so,OOO Sun 1_5 -• un 521 San Bernardino (Newport Heights) NB * * 209 Canal, Newport Shores 15362 Montpelller, lrvfne 631-1266 $169,900 Sat/Sun 1-5 631-1400 $260,000 Sunday 1-5 751-3191 $178,500 Sunday 1-5 11 Tiburon Bay, Spyglass NB 675-6000 $499,000 Sunday 1-5 ••75 Sea Island, McClain NB 2953 C. Club, C.M. 2767 Albatross, Mesa Verde, Costa Mesa 759-9100 $247,000 Sun 1-5 546-2313 167,500 Sun 1-' 645-0303 $198,500 Sunday 12-4 2320 Second Ave, Olde CdM 2137 Channel Ad, Peninsula Point **29 Balboa Coves Newpon Beach 675-6000 $259,500 Sun 1-5 631-1400 s595,ooo Sunday l-5 631-1400 $475,ooO Sunday 1-5 3408 Summerset. Costa Mesa 390 E. 22nd St. Newport Beach **601 Bayside Newport Beach 645-0303 s118,500 Sunday 2_5 646-7171 $233,000 Sunday 2-6 640•9060 s8s0,ooo Sat/Sun 1_5 •• 1 Twin Lakes. Spyglass NB 759-1445 $670,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2 BR plua FAM RM or DEN • 1730 Galaxy Dr. Dover Shores, N.B *2768 Bluebird Circle, Costa Mesa v2 Torrey Pines, Big Canyon, NB 759-8477 $52,?,000 Sunday 1-5 * • 14 Torrey Pines, Big Cyn NB 644-6200 $795,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * 136 Clearbrook, lrvlne 645-0303 $99,500 Sunday 1-' ••601-B San Mlehael,Coata Mesa 645--0303 $127,900 Sunday 1-4 700 W. Victoria, A 1, Costa Mesa 645-0303 $115,000 Sunday 1-' 2 BR plua FAM RM or DEN fl/ 1 Montanaa Este, lrvlne 854-9139 $172.500 3 BEDROOM Sat/Sun 10-5 -.631-7300 $825,000 Sat/Sun 1·5 546-2313 $29ft 900 Sunday 1·4 133 Vie Havre, Lido Isle, N.B * * *973 Bayside Cove. Bayside Coves 17 ' 631-1400 $650.000 Sun 1-5 ••4615 Hampden (Cameo Shores) COM * 64S-03o3 S369·500 Sunday 1•4 ••509 Avenlde Campana. The Bluff1, N.8 645-0303 $206,000 Sunday 1-5 *401 "_,.onla COM 631-1266 $510,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 2768 Bluebird Cr .. C.M 125 Via Koron, Lido Isle, N.B --v · 546 2313 310 000 s n 1 -4 631·7300 $510,000 Sun 1-5 675-6000 $457 000 , Sun 1-5 1717 Iowa. Costa Mesa • • u • 1777 Mltchell #2, Tustin · 546-2313 $142,500 Sunday 1-4 2507 Buckeye (E/blutt) NB ** 111 Via Lido Soud, Lido Isle, Nwpt Bch 645-0303 $67,000 Saturday 12-' 2816 Cllff Or, Newport Heights NB 640-7015 $380,000 Sal/Sj 1-5 548-6333 $1,495,000 Sunday 1·5 ' 644-6200 $359,500 Sun 1-5 •432 Isabella Terr, Corona Highlands NB * 15 OdyNey Coun, Npt Crest, N.B 644~8200 $649,990 Sun 1-' 1121 Debora, Costa Mesa **343 Via Lido Soud, Udo Ille NB 645-0303 $225,000 Sat 11-2:30/Sun 1-5 ••19 Curl Or(Jasmlne Creek)Ocean View 540-1838 $239,000 Sot/Sun 10·5 673 7300 $1 650 ooo s t/S n 1-4 640-1 515 or (619)728-5151 Sat/Sun 1·5 V-16 Jetty, Jasmine Creek, COM • ' • • u 3 BR plua FAM AM or DEN 644-9060 $325,000 Sel/Sun 1-5 1310 Estelle Ln, Weatcllff, NwP\ Bch •40 Vienna (Harbor Ridge) NewPort Beach •5 Malnaall or, Jumlne Creek COM •••37 Hartford (Bayrldge) N.B. 548-5133 $269,000 Sunday 1-5 760-8659 $469,900 Sunday 1-4 759-9100 a.49 1 111\1\ Sat/S•·n 1_ 760-6286 $239,500 Sun 12-5 1301 Keel HV Hiiia NB vvv .. 675-6000 $385,000 Sun 1·5 ••24 12 Francisco, Newport Beach 1915 Windward, Baycrest, Newport ~aoh 221 Nata, Bluffs NB 2727 Windover, H.V Hllls • .N B 631-1266 $3.45,000 Sunday 1-S 631-1762 $279,500 Sat/Sun 1-' 759-9100 s289,111V1 644-9060 $499,700 Sat/Sun t-5 v • 11 Malnsall, Jasmine Creek COM ilVV 644-6200 $325,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 1366 Galaxy Or, Dover Shores. Nwpt Bch Sun 1- 3 BEDROOM 842-5200 $795,000 Sunday 1-5 39 Monteclto, Spyglass COM 5 BEDAQOM 1633 Bayllde Or, Corona -del Mar 2262 Avalon (College Park) C.M. 873-1181 $535 ooo 645-3217 $145,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 • Sun 1-5 * 1700 Galaxy Or, Dover Sheree NB 644-9060 $995,000 Sunday 1·6:30 **26 Balboa Coves NB 850-0881 $425.000 1200 ~rkahlre Lane, NB 673-7300 $259,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 759-1501 $600,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 •8 Morro Bay Or, Spyglass NB 644-6200 $52&.000 Sun 1-5 46 Mia.Ion Bay, Spyglua COM *49 Goleta Pt Or, Spyglua NB 759-1601 $559,000 Sat/Sun 1·30-5:30 759-9 100 $839,000 Sun 1-4:30 1528 Orange Ave,(Corn Palmer)Colta M 873-1600 $215,000 Sunday 11-4 *34 Morro Bey. Spyglaae COM 1842 Port Stirling. H.V Hm1, Newport Bch Sun 1-4 759-1 501 $659,000 Sat/Sun 1:30-5.30 644-9060 ~.000 Sat/Sun 1-5 Sun 1•5 ••""25 Aue Grand Ducat. Big Canyon 759-0862 $860,000 Sunday 1·6 609 Carnation. Corona def Mar * • 1218 Parnell Pl, Hiiicrest, CM * 706 Malabar, Irv Terr, COM 644-6200 $289,500 Sat/Sun 1·5 546-5880 '127·500 Sunday 1• 759-1501 $-447,000 •2012 Diana Lane, Harbor Highland NB * * 11"6 Polaris Dr. Dover Sh0<u NB 1441 Galaxy Orie, Dover ShorM, N.B 644-6200 $210,000 Sun 1-5 6"44-6200 $420,000 Sun 1-548-6647 $295,000 Sat/Sun 1-4:30 1620 Kings Rd, Cllffhaven, Nwpt Bch 1982 Port Alblnt, Hrbr View Hornet, N.B. *212 Haief Or. (Oceanfront). CdM 842-5200 $515,000 Sunday 1-5 492-0890 Sat/Sun 1 759-9070 $1, 136,000 Sat/Sun 10-6 3300 ~an Blvd, Olde COM 1982 Port Albina, Hrbr View Hornet, N.B. • 17 Hlllaborough, Harbor Hiii, N B 675-eOOO $850,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 492-0890 $2'45,000 Sat/Sun 1 631-7300 1599,950 Sat/Sun i-5 2210 Pacific Ave, CM Bluffs, Costa Mesa 1956 Port ~...igh, HV Homn NB *2127 tndtan Sptlngs Rd, Newport Beech 648-9293 $159.000 Sat/Sun 1-5 844--6200 $259,500 Sun 1-631-1400 $305,000 Sat/Sun 10-5 1690 RhOde lltand Cr, Cotta Mesa 7 R~ Chateau Royal, Big Cyn NB 1985 Komet. M ... Verde, CM 546-2313 $154,500 Sunday 1-4 644-6200 Mi5.ooo Sun 1•5 845-0304 $218,500 Sunday 1-5 818 Via Lido Soud. Lido Ille. Nwpt Bch 1807 Sabrina T..-r, COM Sat/Sun 1 5 602 K. St, Penln*Ala Point, Balboa e.te-5680 $339,000 Set/Sun MS 759-ttOO se7s.ooo • 631-1400 ...... 500 Sat/Sun 1·5 145 Via Undlne. Udo Ille NB *982 Sandcutle, Harbor Vlew, NB 2207 Laurel Place Newport Heights 673-7300 $389,500 Sun 1-4 676-8000 S399.ooo Sun 1-5 631·7300 1289:900 Sunday 1·6 •2033 Viste C.J<>n, Btuffl NB 1945 Santiago Or, 8ayct .. t 33371 Marina VJsta. Dane Potnt &«..o488 '215,000 Sunday 1·5 83l·7300 $2'0,000 Sun 1-5 496-4987 $174,900 Sunday 1·5 1803 YICht CamJfta, Newport Bad\ 2~1~7~8YS~t ~ .. t. N.OSet/Sun 1•5 14 Mooo B8Y Dr, 8pyglu Hiit, N.B 131-1400 $335,000 Sonday ,,.. ~ ' -300 ~ 000 -··- 5 BR pfua P:AM RM or DEN 1437 Antigua Way, Baycr•t, N.B 831-7300 $415,000 Sunday 1-5 1615 Bay Cliff, Spyglata Ridge NB &<U..e200 $560,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 * •4 Cherry Hiiis, Big Cyn NB 644-.6200 $1 ,499,000 Sun 1·5 ••51 Goleta POlnt {Spyglata) Nwpt Bch 6-«-e200 $795,000 Sunday 1·5 * • 51 Goleta Point (Spyglau) Nwpt Bch 844--6200 1795,000 Sunday 1·5 618 Hltbor llland Orlv., Newport Bach 780·5000 $1.275,000 Sun 11:30-4 ••70 Hlllcr .. t, 1Q Cyn NB 844-6200 t1.070,000 220 Jatmlne Ave, COM s.«-7211 1409,000 Sat/Sun 1-5 Sat/Son 1-a !•675 Vista Bonita, Bluffs NB 759-1501 $280,000 Sun 1·5 4BEDROOM 428 Vista Roma, Bluffs NB 759-9100 $216,000 Sun 1-5 TOWNHOU81!8 FOR 8ALE 2 IA plua FAM RM or DEN * • 2071 Meadawvlew Ln Sea Bluff CM 645-6895 $149,000 4·.. Sat/Sun 12-5 DUPLEXES 1 I 1 2 Br pfua 3 Br 200 Diamond, Balboa Island NB 759-1601 '415,000 Sun 1·5 2511 SNvlew Ave, Corona del Mat 631-7300 $830,000 Sun 1-6 Al!NTALI 3 BR HOUSEi • 2001 High land (WQtcllff)N 8 846-4511 S1400 mo · 'savaun l-6 3 8R APTI • +Poot * * Wetertfont '* * * Wettrll'oftt & ftOOI "" Ol'wl lddr-st OUWd Git• - DAIEI llllllWll OlllU IEL 11111 Well situated. custom 3 bdrm, den & 2 bath. Spacious living areas, new carpets. On quiet cul-de-sac. Ocean & Catalina views. New shake roof. ~ aa;e lot suitable for tennis court and/or poob Private beaches. .... 1211,000 MZ-atn ., UZ.ot11 OCUIFROIT COIDO Unsurpassed views of Catalina, SuNets, Custom built unit has dumbwaiter, 3 balconies, oak cabinets, french doors. $590,000 JACOBS REIL n Hl•llAL UUlll &T .. , .. The ~boa Fun Zone area la under· oina roo~velopm nt. By the nd oC 1986 the area will bttome the next Lido Vitu.g Th prune commerdal propcny at 207 Palm la now avad- abl . I .000 assumable first; in· come $1 ,800/yr. Co Jd rati0n to k l"I. lll-tMI lsHt llM,111. Move up to this elegant 4 Bdrm, 2111 1 Bath home w/atrium entrance, fam- ily room w/Cireplace. Beautifully re- decorated inside & out w/luxur1ous new carpeting. Well landscaped, pool size lot on quiet street. ?2aau ~11, ?2eattt1e 548-5199 1111•'11 llAIT IUI TIE IUllll 1121,000 Gorgeous spacious executive (Warm- ington Built). Adjacent to Kunt- ington Strand. French country decor Stained glass, separate breakfast room. Formal dining. Master auate with spa-tub. Covel'ed patio over- loo I and spa. A must see! .......... . JUST LISTED TODAY! IUlllTll ....., •" .......... 111 l&Zll • .... Th" uruqu hom or. Bdrm, 3 Ba & FR w/h h Ulng;a & windoWI framc11 th l'll09t dramauc vi WI dM hu to ofr r. $1,135,000. IPllUT/ .. 1M .... tlftllMllll _ lll-1111 ICW VIEW Best priced view property in New- port Beach Walking distance to beaches. Rare opportumty to live m this exclUSlve locauon with a ll the amenities offered Call for showing A Touch of Class and ocean view. 3 Bdrm, 2 balhs, new oak kitchen, oak floors. imported tile used thru-out, a Frplc, wooded blinds, mirrored wardrobes, a veranda plus a large pnvate yard JUSl 4 Blka from Creeent Beach Low down Low down $225.300 ble Asktn1 only~ .. $289.000 • , IPPlllmllT tN-1111 l I 1 I I ie ~t<.. \~1rm~ k l't.'u ll)~ lrK.;. ULlllllll• .................... .,. .... 1a11t • .......,. ""' • 11, ..., ay, 1a. ....... ,,....,,., .. • ,, ... •11 .... , .. LIDO ISLE IAYFRllT 111 VIA Liii SOii OPEi Sii 1-1 Magnificent 4Br. 41 ~Ba Bavs1dP Villa with 60 ft boat dock One of Lido's lc:t.rgest and finest homes A.!.kmg s 1.495.000' Ill lllTTlllUll, IW. Tiil Ml-IHI WITERFROIT llOME lll0,000 40' Boat Dock. 3 bednn, 2 ~ b: th, u'l;:~ed, prof derorated Ifft• s.1 • ..su an 1 .... , • ..... ..-.. ......... ..,..., In/Act (211) 111 .. ... .., ...r man llT Corona del Mar, Shorecilffa area with private beach. This rolllrig lot has approved plan . for 50000., sq ft. home and pool/spa ovenook1ng the beach Onve by 211 Ev nlng C nyon. $950,000 F b terms. ~~...., MW ffllf Cllf cliiii lllltlll ov ........ 11111 f ... J ' Om• of the Country Club's top kX'atlon... ovt.>rloolong the 15th fa1~a' Bt>auufullv dl'C'Oratt'd 4 Bd ml h1>mt' "1th custom pool & -.~ b:Xu a.w 1de lot Better see Uus CIUU 111. UI llft.ll urutPLUS3BR uon. VPry pn· THE REAL ESTATERS I I -- Ot ... Cout DAILY PILOTISundaf, August•. 1985 A I• ltll Wy!!f llM ltl1 Wap... It• l lM Ith Wyt!4 119 ltl Wut.. 9111 ltlt W1al.. 9111 ltlt Wu W 1111 ltl Waat.. 1100 !!It Wut.. ll~ C111'1t•r•·lnao• lat. IAll'f,.TUT Qer~r-a MITILIYW:l . llllULlfflll&M ......,... .... ,.... MAINTENANCE IUl.llTATIULU _..11111HTll IEGn/lll OPT AfJill/ty I~ ettw.ln llllJ '91 f • The ,..,.., ~t In-fOf LAlclUnt hicii\ oet*tll Hout1y to ltll't. P*9 WOttc ..... fllllt * MtCMd In Newport IMCh: 'd l'MtahDOerd, trOtll ThMW ''°' w. Kt11.n ....... ,_ ,._~ 0 ptec1Toe •• Wedadaya. ... Xlnt Q9POf'lunltv fOf Ptt· to follow. Contect aoou. J lnnllanc 1uoceHlu1 ao•nt wl1h WMkend9 only. 2&.27 detlc. type SO ptua, oom· ONnQt. Aft9t 8:30PM ......... f ~ f;.,ni. dttka. ~ dutlee not nee. =:~~It=:: 8"1dalman 142-M55 "t't"'. 8 ='~~t ~w:c,g U llbo•tl pu~MrJ~n. ' ""llTl&B To QUallfV you l'l\Ul1 he¥e .... HSI thelt WOttl. ™-pef'IOl'I lnMMOe aittenance lf ... .flnt" to gulo. • HI.. -Lydll 250-4114 T"*-. oPPOftUn. tty for llU: IY 2 Yl'9 UI*· In ~· .or1· Oel'lt.U0t1ho AeOePt Wiii ..... , In the d9Y to &nHY •rt h!Ghly pro111abte ~ ....., llAU ~ tn loe n..t 11L .... Hll ino' °'**Ina• tonn• e.nenta ... ._. DY' l!xp dtvrou11neot•'Wlf"/butv P·t,,,,.~-tlfa weeltcl'/. FOf Technk:'1an Mlllng,.., eet•t•. Con· Toy 8tON ac P1aa ,rr. IEOlllITT ot*•tlon. 11 ~Of Oller. v• of d~tatlon l!Jq)er. ~'d. NI 142·2t28 o~ Dullee ~II lnctud9& ap~t. "3-5647 H.I llnuou• IUPC>!V of bu)WI PIT EJcper 754-158 t. 538-~2 Mr Pwtler ™-04l4 In• benk • "* cteot. la a Dentel ,,,_ IUootv -= and di ectton provided a.y ..... PfT °" ,rr, Cttotoe of plua. The ,,0.1.c. on.rt a I.I· 6 kWentOfi, · flllnottogo / tnaurence !xoellent carHr op· Stlary ~ oomm. ~ UUI •-1 •-• 1 llOlll1Y tffllll AUTOMAtNT'f.NAHCE houf91eyoura.~T H. g,..t ~ l**llG9 .. w.,..ouatng mat.,laa, 111.TlllllLDI pOftunlty available now to: P•trtolc Tenore, o/o 0..9!.!!n•r .. ~.,~aceC:..~ 119Jfem.ovw2t.no•xP Pett-time nMt v.hlol\le Auool •tu Tele-fneNdlngOental&VlalOn fOfoe«*M~ lnC.M. mellroomecttvttlel,llle The !MM oftlca of the tor akOled •PPllflnce ~.2S4E 17th8t .. lilV\LW6ut• ...,.,,. '*'·Mull new~ a malnteneno•. poatlonl matleetlng. 953-tfTO oovet~ P..... cell Som9 JrQnt. olftce °'*· kllohen dutlH, and F•d•r•I D•Ro•lt In· tectWclln. Ste 117, Coeta M.... Ptua 549· 1225 t~ Full a pert elql'd ll'idMctull ,.qulreo UIPllTll per•onnel, 975-1400 Of>pty t~w/prect. photOOQP)'inO. !mploy9e Mino. Corp. h .. Im-INtne-Pectno the rMlden· t2827 SALES· TWo AMI !ltate time, Starting pay $8 kw wtlllh, .._ & '**91 wt EOE .iao NtWe aa • oouner medlett °'*'Ing.a In our tl•I deve1o'pment and Saie.peraon• needed for p/hr. Call for appt. ~: ~ ~t ·=~uet \':. ~= 11. TYPIST DOMESTIC POSITIO~ ualng ~· vehlole. lnaurance D•pt. The management dMalon of ioc.i AE ofl\Ce. a.n«oua 1530-1230 btwn 10-5 8~ 1125. N'wpt ldl ptena OWn INdl & toole kw the legtl dept to UllllSt F~. drlYlnQ, ahop g, Velld c.llf .. drlYWI llO. entry i.¥91 INSURANCE The lrvln• Company rMll.X bleok logo CommlMl<>n apltta. Coast 0m ...... 8~170t · Work In Org. & '-·A· In typing, flllng 9nd olhw cooking, running er-reqd. Oood btneflta CL!AK requlree the fol· aneget and mtint Ina Proper11ea 87'-5410 Ill ""'" CountlH. Call btwn cterlcel dutlel, In the randa. 5 d..., wk. Mu.I be peottege. ApPty In'*'°" ~ •XPtt: m al epart t a ,.. I ls.25 p/hf. am.... 7·8:30'"1 Of 5~7pm only. claaam.d publlo notice ave.II. to Illy owmlt~ • .,.., .. pm, • TyPlng '°wpm =I lrvlne "= I:: 1111n I..... uoanuY /OLIH natmed otnoert kw~ Wheel Alignment. Btek•. QM~17 dept. TYt>tno eo wpm~. when ~. '°' Mid I lll •U 11111 •· • Famllfartty with pollclel pon ~.we.,..-. 11.10 II T~~ =·~:, ~ .,~~n mlllt•~ Tune Up Newport Tire c t Rom Att d 1 aome ·Word prooeMlng pay. '!!11~~ ... open. 1lM2111ttttlte. &pr~ Ing tectlnlctlll with 1-3 Answet phonel, type & ~ •• _ ... 1..,. ___ .. 111ont.. ..., 1 ..... -toroemenl •)(p. cir, 3000 E. CoMt Hwy, ar 0 •n en axpet. ct.lrable, bYI not .,.,.. _.. trvtne 714/250-0331 e >Ont Y9tt>al' yeera In appliance repelr rii.. Metu,.., take dlreo-g ........ WVf" "• "''"" "" ... ..,, • Cerone del Mat ne.ded. Private Country nee Own ..., 11 al80 _._....... munloetlon aldH1 and r•**'1ent, alee-Ilona. U.S. Citizen. Call float., Shannon pref. Retlt9cl peraona en Club. Wiii lfaln. 4M-5787 n e ~ e 111 r y . c 1 I I llW' ,.... GENERAL OFFIO! • Muet be oontC1enok>ua Inc.I, plumbing and ,._ Sun•et IHoh UH 8«-5885 coureged to IC>Pl'f. Applyl Auto DAlllll •lllWUU 142-4321 at 318 kw NMc*:IF/TtwP/TkwEJeo Type Ind en.wet~ &att.nt!Yatodetella lat9d ekHla. A nMt epo OMEGA~3 ln pet90n.PedU.8eourty lll•UWTD FIT PI T Permanent. eppt. • . ~~ :rr.z1oc for llNll bYl6neN In A.a a T~CHNICIAN In our ~anoe. your •bl1tty to CrNlt .. you~~ct!.uny ln Servleu. 228 So Opportunity for lndustri-Crown Hardwtre Cofone llAlll NUT . l'IOme, 50 wpm. Tempor-lnauranoe Dept. you wilt meet the publlc and a llOlmllllT S GIHaell, Orange, Ca. oue young Ptl90fl In U · del Mer 173-2e0o ••u y - -NIVll.-ull ary/ part· time. NH r be reeponal~ tor: good Job rlCC)(d .,. alao O.C. Alrpot1 er.. Ad. Newport 8Hch ffl ee· lllP, I 110. OLlll plndlng auto fleet • . .... .,._, for mall atore Or & M .. dowtett(~ H.8. • Vertflcetlon o4 lnturenoe Important. Agenoy need• reeep· ~~~r~~:O,:..rl:i II time, muat h•ve good partment. Rapid ad· O&llDI ... • -• L A ~ H .. ~llft. U .00/hf, 74. on 1M reel tetate toena , tlontat. Pl .. Hnt pro· akllla _,,,. FfT or PfT. drl'~"" ....... Enthulfutle vanoement mutt ha..,. p 1 t7W&ao ....,..,_. ·• •Piecing oompr~ W•/#111proVlde111 •xoel• feNlonal phone volel/ . ...., "'"• ·-vatld drl~ lie .,, t me F.O.t.C. la ..-lf'G full tll'M Ing, QOOd drMng record. UllUL lff1ll llablllty lnauranoe on i.nt aa1ary end bentnt• Muat be 0 NHd ded1c1t1d per· & wtlllng to learn. Growth Mr. Hunt !S3"-o484 CHILDCARE: NANNY collect0t9 In tne lrvtne Cell 142.&818 for appt. PIMMnt phone .manner, F.D.l.C. owned P'09*1Y pect<1ge, unlforrna and =~~rite ..J,: former to maintain pr... potantlal. beMftl• avail. --------M•tU<e, 9clucmt9cl ,,,..amkr .,.. to perform contlnu-MIYllllU. FLllllT flllng, varloue office • Aevtew of ptoperty tor m09t tooi.. PIMM appty atantr. Type es wpm. enl ollent• a Mtabllat\ Ruby'• Din«. Biibo• Banking to car• tor 1 yr okl In So oue collec11on effOtU on • dutlee. FfT, non-amoktr. edequet• covttege In PtllOn or call (71'*) c 0 n t 1 ct Ang• 1 new onee. Shorthand. 875-t021 lllllT lllllT&IT i..gunL Live out Ex.per& deflnquant ICCOUnta.. A.a fl.Ill Of p.tlme 845-7145 On Sight Pl'IOto-Graphloe • Melntalnlnga tlokler9 720•2'77. tem-Spm, 65e..o.480 ' dlct1phont, bkkpg, ITATIOlllY 1 .. lllATlll rera requlr9d. ee 1-8081 pert of our tlquldatton you ORY CLEANING 3303 Ftarbor BIYd, 1!·5, In • current atetu. wOfd-ptoog, ohnt pro. ..._._,... wlll be lnvo!Wd with con-COUNTER full time Of pV1 Coet1 MeM. ~ • Pf9C)fltlon o4 monthly THE IRVINE COMPANY llllPTlllllT pecta, multl·eompeny tore In CdM ~· S .... Tl.--Clerical . taotlng borro..,a by \lm• •. Bergetroma 11_ .. -rwpona lrvtne PIClf\c OMeton fOf Rell &late firm. exper. art all a bonua for Peraon. Fff. 5 Deya. Xlnt A Mlt4tarttr to a.alat In OWi 1YPllT phone to rteOtve delln-ci..n.r., CclM .......... 22 -.., .. ._ • Comput• Input 810 Newpon c.nt., Or. Light tvPtnd and flllng. you. Send rt•um• & r1clng cond1. Eap9clally the deYelopment & con-tt you•,. a Mlt·•tarter and quency ptol>*na. You L .. dlng looel P.et Control Candld•t• mutt htlve ep-&lite 800 9 AM ·to .. PM. contao1 qu.i1neatlon1 to: Suun'• In• cti.nt•. 875-1010 trol of budget for own9cl llexlbl9 about Job aaalgn-Wiii r~ borrowera ntee enolneeflng Co. needa Full-time Qefl-proprlate exa;rlence. ~ a..ch, CA 928e0 Jennl1• 11975-1822 Office s.tvlcu, 3737 RMI Eetat• propentea. ment1, the F.0.1.C. hu a & recoml'Mnd action .. ... ..... eral office peraonnel. Banking la a . Max!-Birch St, SUit• 200, N.w· IT101 Plllll Needa to lndependWltty JOb for you. Our dlvlelon nec1nery. You poeew 111111 I lumll ~utred. Ofno. mum aa11ry 118,000. Equal Opp«tunlty ltM,elttht Pert Tl•• l>Ort BMch, Ca. 92890 arehoull atocl( peraon. ,.....,ch & complll d•tL of bank liquidation cur-kno'MedQe of contumer • helpful. Clll p/yr. The F.D.l.C. ott.11 Employer Hom1ownera Anoe. mutt ba abl9 to lllt up to Vou'tt.taobereeponalbl9 rentty hat oper1lnga ror credit ~Ion prllCttce Fo:g~:S~~~=~:k1c Mr. Taylor AM at gr .. t ~ta peolt8Q9. 1&1111 Wknd1 lneldg Mon & llUnUY 50 lb• Of more. Hard for Mt•bllat\tng tlctlllr & ~al ci.rk typlat who & ptooeduree U watt • .,_... t . 979-8021 rnclUdlng Dental & Vltk>n I ulllty brlek TuH. te. p/hr. Call Entry level poaltlon for r• WOfltlr, 30 twa p/wtt min, ftllng ayatem• for the a¥9fege typing apeeda twnlllertty with c:ol*ltlon --'"'. r91Ume o. OOY91'8Q9. If you would per. n q 873-1170 9am·5pm cent grad/ 1tudent w/ 14 p/hr c M 55&-2030 budget dept. 60WPM. The F".0.1.c. of· tawa. Thll poeltlon ,._ UMA Englneenng lno.. lllllAL""" Ilk• more Information. wonc, needed lmm9cl. typing •kill•. WOf'd pro-· · · · • Minimum 2 )'Mrt b111k-fera • great benefit• qul,..-xtnt verbal & writ· 17782 Cowin, lrWle, Ca. Credit Union In Tultln hu PINM cell peraonnet •I forSo. Org. Cty. MHon· llOIPTlll c;eulng. helpful. lnt'I oll 4 SUMMER Ing axpertence In a note package rnc:ludlng dental tan UC.Illa. Prevloua benk~ 9271'* lmlMdl•t• openlf109 kw C.75-5400 EOE ' lfY firm. 493-1123 aft. 5 Of Com=Compeny. gu co LOC9t9cl Newport dept. or loll\ dept. & vlllon oovwege. If you Ing or finance axpet. a -am two full-time cMttcal poe-Mature ledy to help Good t manner. Center. Part llme poee.. JOBS • Muet be conaclentloua' would Hk• more lnfor· plua. 8alety wit! not .... 5a&-UH ltlona. lndMdull muet be INTERIOR DESIGNER wl,,,..I• & It hawonc for typing ' generll I b I•. c •II 0 ebb I•. attentive to detail. maUon call P4QOnnel. at cHd S 19,000. p/yr. 7':~AL ,tLANNl:G~. well orgenlnd with good Education, good akllla. elderly lady. 13.89 p/hr. offloe, wlll train. 15. p/hr. 75M222 EARN • s1rong Y9rbal & wrtttan 975-5400 EOE PIMM aend your reeume ,.!..:., :......!...,.!.., an, n~ .. 11 • attention to ~I. Excel-exper neoceeaary, tend eo.1• M ... 548-7189 C.M. 845-4971 communication lklll•. to F.0.1.c .. attn: Pwaon-......., _. ... .,,. -• lent t\Mlth & dentll In-reeume.11378eyaldeOr, llOlnUY • Expertenceln fl.ling. aort· CLERICAL net, P.O. Box 7549, New-helpful. OrganlZatlonal aurance beMftta. APC>fV Cofone Del Mer, t2t25. lllllUL UlllTllT llaPT11111T Exper. w/mlth & cak:u-MONEY Ing & gathering lnfOf'· p 0 rt e •a ch. c •. lkllta • ITIU9t lntUr. baetl· In peraon at lnduatrtel 1 ... _.._ With llmlt9cl X·RIY Permit an. ofo for bu'l com· latlng akllla, computer matton I•. mu1t. CLERK nPIST 92858-7549 EOE ground deelred. lrvln• l.MgueofOrmngeCounty -.-...... allllmlT for buay Orthopedic Of-piny, It typing nung. knowledge for civil engl- • Good typing lkllla. loo. Actual uJaty com-Credit Union, t 5801 Hied In 111\decipe arch. flee fulltlme. 14wa24 Non lmOker pr.t. Nr O.C. neerlng & aurwytng nrm. PRIZES ,or more Information Greet Waatern Sevtnga Dia1t1NffNWener menaurat• w1arc111a & RedhlU, Ste. 101, Tuetln, pt.,,nlng &graptik».2Yr. Airport, 851·0617 S•nd reaume to: Mr ptMMClll FOICP~ oneofCallfornla'•IMd ' Rooflngexpptef,Skytlght :rs;·Sendreeumeto: Ca.(714)259-4844 min. exp. Reaume to IUl&MU Mlchalle. NEWPORT Fuente atRobert8eln. TRIPS net (714)975--5400 Ing flnmnclml lnatltutlon; Spedaltlel M~ -A 312, DlllY Piiot, P.O. OENEAAL OFFICE/SOME FORMA, 180 Npt Ctr Or., ••• •• II WESTERN CORP. Wllllam Froat & Al· I _ _...1 Box 1580, Cotta M ... , Nwpt Boh, Ca. t 2eeo ·-'·t .. 1401 au·•1 St Bankl hu an mn-.. ate open. c 92828 DRIVING for Auto NC)llr Call Ben)lmln 546-4333 llaPTlllllT ..,.... ' .. · THIS ng Ing for • Clar1c Typlet In OOlllELlll L ahop. CM. M&-n31 LUil IAIAIP ' or bua Co1t1 MH• Newport BHch. CA L.Mlltl&Till our Coeta M ... bf'ancti. Pert time earner counMI-Ollllll y Street lmporte, quMI-NurMty wen• tor CM1-CHIRO:,>'RACTIC OFFICE 92eee> s•R TINllOWI o-want..... H ..... ri iv.... , .. ---. ... IN/•L ,.., fled applloanta only nMd t 1 • n church . • x . Mutt ~ herd wortcl~ & uoanuY The lrvtne ottloe or the Thi• I• an antry leV9I pos-• • ..... .. -1· -· .. _ ..... Growing lrvlne Co. ..... I c Id d petlenoed. Sun AM/PM & Feder•I Oepoalt In-ltlon. You wtll lelrn the •nd glrll aollo t new $12.50-$22.50 p/hr. Wiii meture FfT P9f'IOl'I with =p y. u ~.rov~ W9cl PM. Harbor Trinity good w/people 850-2 73 Exp«. aecretaryfor maga-hUffrfll ttlt aurance Corp nu vwioua typea of loane, aubac:rlpllon• on their lreln. W~ own .,..., ~pg. gen'I ofc ekllll, lh :Z.0,,negotMon-Frl. btwn Bapti.t Church. ContlCt llMFTillllT ::cr.bllahlr. Mutt have UILY "llT lmmed. oper1lnga 1or per. ~:U~t~~::rn ': =~out~ti M~~ 1~~ 772 5147 typing, PhJn••· ~o:i t-5. 845-5287 Marttvn Pierce 6•9..:s211 Frr, phone ordeta, diet•-lklll• ~h:;:ty' ,'Jffu~ hws ' ;:With the lollowlng ptrtment 11111 u well u olda. Eerly evening hOU'9 P&lllll ULll OUll ~:!'·%,';t~= · 111111 &IHI tlon, type ~'1.;19Jg k9Y ture 'growth. Attractive If you .,. :l~t~ e)(lra •Min 2 yra banking •lCP9' other general dutlH. WOftl day-a/ fleJtlble hra. K~ of MWlng. Call • If It's got 7.3 & 11-7 certified or touch. ·7 olflefl In lrvlna. Call apendlng money or Ilk• In a not• dept or loan Typing of 50 wpm la r• Commlallon only. Leona. ~ome Febric Ctr, HAIADAE88ER8 want9cl train.... MM• Verde Dien• or Marilyn 752-1474 to go placea llke Meglo dept quired. car1eruoeem= 145-51200fepptyln~-toMl'lftHllt'8tudto tn e handles Conv.Hoep.,M1Center llOPT/lfO•I llOlnUYI Mountain Knott• Berry ·w~~lty to type min. 40 jwe offer comp•t1t1ve 542--4321 a)(I. 2 eon •t 17th & lrvtne, .a. ~ s~~~~~d too.~ • you'll grab st. Coat• M ... ~t-5535 Bu1y phonee, It typing, 10 Mo:poaltlon need9d by ~11md or ~~r Pr:!i ~ • St """ ..., ... 1 &. written M11tlee, and eitoellent IUlll Ol&IT p /0 .. IUPll 75Ml833/E'f9 497-e272 • a sale MIU &1111 p /T prOOIMl1 dngll mall. 8mtn30 •5• Huntlnton Beech City h= .!w,11 ~I In r-... ·-~-beneflta. FOf Interview AJP, payroll, r•teuran1 faster in 11·S0.7·30AM geral u ea. : • • Sehool Olalrlct TyPe 90 .._..'T. communlcat_, •111• appointment plelM call 1&11.Y PU.IT exper. nee. Avall. lmmed. lair lt7l1t/l1al11rtlt • Dally Piiot Apply. NewPori VIiia. Mon-Fri. $12,000, p/yr, :e. Tlk• dk:tatlon at ~~~·8 • or · v · Bankl~ expet. 11 r~lr9cl Leticia Tamp'• at· 875-1577 with aome otlentele fOf 842-S881 Call Chrla, 720-9870 !'PPJYm. 11352. p/mo. 1 __ • ------.,--~~h ~~~fi'not ':~: (l14)lll-4~lo 0Hm111u nuuu ~~~~fT~on • classlfled •moua1 11on111m ~~e. ~~:ui~: T~E~~R=~· ceed '20,000 p/yr Ind (l11\ lit •tt1 C'EST SI BON Blkery, Part time, filing & oopylng • ads. call oountw & phone fOf dri ft· fOf INIM Markltlng or· C>Mdllne for applying la Top Pay (714) M&-~71 wlll be baaed atrlctty on .. , .,. Wine & Cheaee Shope doc:umenta for CPA ftrm HOUSECLEAN!AS. full or • 642-5678 Ing & graphic auppllea. ganlzatlon. Muat have on Of before Auguat I ---·----- prior exper. a 9clueatlon. need ruu a s>V1 time In Nwpt BQh. 850-2771. ~art time. Own trenap. &$>.not nee. WIMlngne. proftlllonal phOnt mill· , Ttle,HHt e,.nten ~~l:!':,.ott_::a1_~~ud .. ~ GREAT WESTERN counter help. Energetic, A.ak for Sandy t-6 Engl. apkg. 846-8079 to i..rn lmpor1ent. Start ner. front office appMt· SECRETARY: Net I firm No uper needed, w. Wiii .__, .. ..---.-'"" veraatlle & frtendly. llllallPll khr ApPty Matter 81u9-MCt, type 55wpm eo-nHr airport. mature. train Apply In peraon Ing o.n1e1' Vi.ton peck· s•v1NGS Frenett ape&klng MlpfUI, print: 2~ FllChtr Ave. curatety, xlnt btn.flta. non-tmkr, 20 flex. Mon '111r Thura 9-12 noon. •· If you would Ilk• n but not nee. Call Jaqul, FllAIOIAL PUT• ml ~Oita M ... 540-9373 551-4781 l\r•. le hr. 541· 1771 Marty Peraonnel. Newporter ::r~si~•~l~,:i~ Equal Opportunity 873-2754 Mon-Fri. UYIRTillll Eacell•nt opportunity. PAU•&TTllUITI llOPT/llm lllUTllY RM«t. 1107 Jambcnl 875-EOE OUll/TYPllT OHml nlMI &OOHn molTIYI BMutlful Nftpor1 ~ •thletlc glrla ~ to lmmed. opening, lull time, Non A~. 1 Girt Ofc. Lt ""IT·llOIPTlllllT 1111 ._ IUlll P/T Cotta M ... bued elec· Brll!ld ·MW dell In !Nina home. General clter11ng. valet for upbeat Newport typing, genl ore dutlll, typing, Al , AIR, all pay~ MEDICAL OFFICE _._ tronlcl co hu oper1lng nMcl• good help rut. It Run •rr•nda. Drlvera e..ctl Reeteurant Good bkkpg e)(p. helpful. roll. local .,. .. comp111y. 20 HOURS Looklngforcomputerwti for an entry level pay-atoealluanrat.Appty NHd•d for d l aplly lloenMMQCUlary.Eng· pey Qt'M tweyto 'atayln MORNING SUN SHIRT 754-8122 84&-5073 tor our fut p.cad New· cllrk/typlat. OutlM In-lo '*'°"• 5&9...-51o Al. . ~='dlfr:'= '1:,Y llat\ ~,!;i.!..eqult9cl. ah~. Call Kim, cf~ CO. 831-.3494 Ulln&IY WAITER, WAITRESSES r,;1 =~~~~d ~ludeaaeem~llnglnl11~--llTA lmY new~. AQor...ive, 714-6(1.'.Mlo. 84 ·f9~~_.:r Bet • RMtaurant P•rtTlme.Noexp.req'd. (15.50 hr). buaboya 10 k-V a muet. Pleuant ~ltC:at~=~u~~·lngmaqu"~ Full time, muat type Nlf·dlaclpllnecf-lndlvld· 9¥9f· lllll&L llLP relll ble, hra flex. 751-7ff7 ('4.50 hr), experience. working condition a tatlona, lettk, tetexei. 50wpm, •JtPet. helpful. u•I• may Ml'n excellent D •1 ,.111 Pllll IALU Perry'• plna nH d• lllln••y;p Tl Private club. Varied day Houra &-1. 752-7400 Non amoker pref Nr Income ( .. lary + com-II r I G t-"' •• lh XI t lmmed .. full & plt1 time. 1111 • .. and evening lhltta lnelu· ~!,.!n~rl~j o.c .· Alrpon'. as1.:0s11 mlNlon), ben•flt• and e •••••••• t =~~~ ah"orf :V. ~ Muat ba 18 y,. old. 2108 MHu•t b:oc,•~r'•:~~· Ing W9Menda. 4M-5787 Full Tl~~=tlng, eandltdet• mu1t be Ible Mlch•ll•. NEWPORT 1dv1noement opportunl· • Sat. AM.lhlfta. W• tr8in. 3/4 Ooeanfront, Npl. Bet\ a!~able ~ h.:. W&ll Plllll )ournala. ledgera' Bank to type llOCUrttety and WESTERN CORP. ~ ::ci:· ·= : ..... ,. ma . . I au.Illy people wit! hive R9\all nice appMranOe. 15 day-a forfleetofprlv•l•vehlclee. ree. Long term eareer op-P01MM ' neat IPPM'· llU •ITll llLP neeeaH ry. No phOn• mu~,. a._ *' • op~ty for advanoement. UIWlll ULU per Week (11AM to 2PM) PIT & FIT poettlona avail. portunlty with active =~r=~h~! Full and Pert Time. WM«· ce11a. hnd rMUme to: Will. Liii • Pllftlll • Ca •ft ~·7~3339 or lull time. a.. s1 ...... H.W. Cell Linda 975-2311 Call 10...-pm 281-<l74e ferg• Co In Newport diu hlndllng reoec>tlon enda, Wiii train. APpty at: Attn: Howard Mullenary. • -• 1• w8 rlg,ti:._ 128 Rochllter 9 to 5 WEEKDAYS a.ech. hnd reeume to .,-:. , telephonel •t 2e&1 trvtne Ave., Colt• • u are in High School or Jr. High• PllTI t .. .,.,..,. M... llOlln&IY'I MOf• 1am111ea .,. getting PO Box 11391 CM 92827 luncn time. Send reeume M .... 9 to ... lrvtne Aancl\ HAlll ll&IT • and would. like to earn $25.00 to : 2 poeltlona evell. Pltlrne. Retail Salee In plulh offloe, QOOd pay, the camping "bug" Ihle ... -111 to Ad 200, OaltPllot Box Fll'TMta Market •61LY "UT •. *M 0 in commilltona and more each • 1. Photo Lab 842·2172 UIZ 11rcond. (714) 07Mff3 yur · If you have 1• raR , • ...,,. "~t C" -• . 2. Wll9houll 898-0280 Clll'lptor that'• not getting aooeptlng applleetlona for ...,.,, ........ • .... ,. lllTA.L llA now • .., ltrfft • week-give UI a call. You can work . Muat be depend•~. • •&11• llUll ,,nd wh•t you want In uaed, .... It now with • Ftr bul peteon. Ana din-92828 t Ctr P~o 844-0811 o..t1 ...., Oa. tltll : PART TIME in the afternoons and : tall minded. Hunt. Bch. Ull •llTlllT Dtlly Piiot CIUllfleda. CllA!fled Ad. '~.,:..~, :ms.bl': Cl~''' •evenings and still have time to enjoy• High Sohl atudenta pref. la looklng fOf 1 full time r-R-.. •t-au_r_an_t_-===:~===:z:::===~ H a 11 o t r o P • C d M • your aummer We offer complete • PU.,.._ Salt• ,,.,.on/ ANl•t. 873-0910 fUIAL&llllT&IT • · e , ... .,_ Mgr. Oppty for ldvanca, PIT aome driving req. • training apd provide tranaporation • llfllYllll good houra. fun •t· ln·N·Oui Burger Now Hiring WITlllllWlllD 15.18/hr 945-0093 • plua great prizel, tripe, and plenty of • aummerlfull, fall/p1r1 moaphere. Selary + oom- Plt1 time, 3 hr min Qood promotl onal OP· portunltlH. Nawporl· M ... Sctloola, Food Set· vlcM. 2985 Bear St .. CM. 558-3273 EOE FOi' CltNlfled Ad ACTION Call. D•llY Piiot AO.VISOR 942.se1a $2.17 per day Th1t'1 ALL you PIY tor 3 llMI, 30 day-a In the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DRECTORY CALL TOOAYll WPllLlll y 04/f D.ity Pilot Service Directory Rep! ...,,tlt!Va M2-4al1•it·• NOW HIRING OAlllERI AllllTAIT lllAIERI lnterv1ew1 WednHday 9· 11 A M at 2588 Newport Blvd . Cotta Mesa (on Newport Blvd et Del Mar) Call (714) 537-4840 for more into EOE • MONEY• Thia la not a paper route • time. Xlnt w1gee, lmmed. mlMlon. Pl .... oome In PILL n• PAY • · • emolowment continuing to app1y. PUT Tm! Wiii : . and it ii not eeven days a week. Come: t"' e~1ee eot11 yr. c.M. 1--1-n-&1_L_UL_l......,l-- opportun111 .. evellable e help U1 aet new customers for our e 5-5171 The Orwt Amenoen Shor1 With the LOS ANGEL!8 • newspaper and have a good time e p IT 1frt hlltr a1ttr Story, clothing collec- TIMES Ctrculatton 0.-• while you're doing it. Come out and: Hlndout Promotional M._ tton• fof WOl\'*15'3" and partmem In our door to : 1ee what we are talking about and • terlal. Newport Pier und .. , hat lmmed. open-~~,a~~'J>::an:;: • you'll be glad you did. ~ today and • Slloon on pl«. e7M208 ~~~.~c:io~~. 117': r,: hourly wege plua com-• atllrt tomorrow! Call Mr. Earl • .... Tllm Mall & TM Ctty Shopping mt..,on .. Koura: 4PM to : M8-7058 or 241-8432. • knoot11 often When you Cent• In Orange. If )'OU 9 PM. T'r •In In 8 I a : u .. reeult~tlng D•lly are maturt, flexlble, provld9cl. Potentlel to : ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • Piiot Claaalfletl Ada to agr...iv. & enjoy ... ling, earn '300. plua per W9M. • ~ w. ~ 81~ c:o.. .-.. CA 12921 • rllc:h the Orenge Cout cell BrM , t90-3181 Of FOt .,, Interview. c.11: '. AN I~ L OP RTUNITY EMl"LOYIJll • rnar1clt. Oreng•. 834-3730 or H7·2381 ext. '204 1.9••••••••••••••• ••••••••• Ptlor1e 142·&e7e epptyln Ptl90fl· Immediate full-time opening• exltt for enthuet .. ue tmployen. O•y and evening ahlfta. GrNt opportunltlM for •dva~ent with our rapidly growing company. Excellent ulary end ben•flta. PINN IPPly at. Our Ntwett Storti ~OITAMllA 541 W. 11th It. or LAGUNA NfQUl l 2'112 Cimino Ceplatreno ln~n: Auguet f.10 ... ,.,..,. aoo p.m.-6:00 p.m. THEODORE ROBINS FORD JCJf',(_I ... AeenA t\lVD (0\TA M l\A '•~.' ,1010 Oranoe Coalt DAILY PILOT/~, Au,guet •. 1Ma SYDNEY OMUI R R S I Orange Coast OAILV PILOT /Sunday, August 4, 1985 flCTmOU•..,...•• NAm ITATHIEfT The tollowlng peraon• .,. jolng t>u9lneN ae: CHIAPPE'S CATERINO, 1017 El Camino. Ca.11 ~. Cam. 112829 JOH lul1 Barregan, 10322 Tyhuret, Garden Grove, CA 112942 Thi• t>utlneea ta con- ducted by: an lndMdual JOM Lult Barragan Thi• 1t1tement WU nled ,otlth Ille County Cleflc of Or- ange County on July 30, 1985 -,282111 Put>llthed Orange Cout Dally Piiot AUQUll 4. 11. 18, 25, 1985 Su-&&& CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY Consolidated Report of Condition of .. The Bank of Orange County" ol Foonta1n Valley. Orange County, and Domestic (None) Subs1d1aries at the close of buS1ness on June 30. 1985 St.t• benk No. 1275 ASSETS Cash and due frorn banks Investment securities (Market value $196.000) Non-Investment securities Trading account securities . . . . . Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell In domestic otttces. Loans. Total (excluding unearned Income) Less: Allowance for posslble loan tosses Loans. nel ... . Bank premises, FF. & E. elc Real ettate owned other than bank premises . . Investments In unconsolldated subsldfaries and associated companies Customer's llablllty to this bank on aooeptances oulslanding Other as5ets (lncludlng $-0· lntanglblesl TOT AL ASSETS TOT AL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC OFFICES Total demand deposits Total tame and savings depoSlts TOT AL OE POSITS IN FOREIGN OFFICES TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC ANO FOREIGN OFFICES federal funds Qurchued end aecurittes OoOar Amount• In Thou .. nde 4.008 196 0 0 3 200 31,658 475 31 ,093 1.542 1.537 0 0 830 42 . .406 39,798 17,095 22 703 0 39 798 sold under llgreementa to repurchue m domestic ott1ces Other ttabtllues for borrowed money. Including note balances ol U S Treasury 0 0 0 Mortgage Indebtedness Acc.plances executed by Of for account of this bank and outstanding Other llabilltles . . . TOTAL LIABlllllES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) Subordinated notee and debentures . Preferred atocl< No 11harea eulhortted Common atock No sh8ret authortred No sharn 8HAREHOl.0£R8EOUITY 2.000.000 ou111andlOQ 1,598.000 Surplua . TOTAL CONTRIBUTED CAPITAL Retained MtnlngJ. . ~ fOf eonUngencioe and other capltal reeerv• TOT Al SHAREHOLDERS EQUl'T't' TOT AL LIABILITIES ANO Amount o. Amount 3.38 1 ?00 0 230 .t0.028 0 3.531 ( 1,203) 0 1379 SHAAEHOLOEAS EQUITY .42 .-oe The underalQMd, !dwatd H DowMr President end CE 0 and Sherry L Findlay, Senlof 'Vic. P~t and C F 0 of the a~ bank, eectl decl••. tor hlmMH •~and not fQr the other. t have petlOt'lal If~~ of the """"" contatn-' In this report end I believe lhat each atatetMtrt tn aald l'9pet1 11 true. l.ec;h Of CM undefatgned, for h mMlf alone and not fOf tM other. cen1flee uno.r pen tty of perjllry that the fOfegOlnQ r. trw end correct E.Mc:uted on Jufy 28 1985. at Fountain \(ati.y. Coftfornle E<fWWd H 00-ntr Sherry L Andlay Pubflthed Orange Coast Dally Pilot Augus1 • 985 Su-650 r Nil.IC NOTICE Ml.IC NOTIC£ MUC MOT1CE Umba for Parnes-Feinstein Collection Prominent Destgner Pettem-M393, Sizes 8·18 •umt>I Ql•O 10;;• ''"'°'''· tl'lt,,dtett ,,,.,, lfl'IPICI with. llCy tllll)tl •nd aohd c.01or c.otnt>llllhon 1h11 1 1rery "'ef'Y ''"""uno 11 00 1•.0 -YO;; t ll'I l ltO H"' Ml93 In 111 tlf1pet Noll Ille '"lc>ed lll'ldl",9 COi ,., l>LiltOmld lrOl'll 1>11'd l l'ld HIY ••• No .... , .. Hlm-l'IO '''""O compi.c11ton, Sl'lon "''"•• •4tfl•Ofl 100 CN>oe• reyon o• '''~ tt•~ •oo• ., ..... c.!'l1lht POPiin 01 hnen •Pt•MltO Pettt•I' Ml93 II l wllllble 11'1 M ..... Sire• • 10 11 •PIH .. Hild S3 50 '°' •AC!I P11tern 10 1N1me or J'OUI ........ Pio.ti RHIJer ... .,, p 0 l o •., Woodt~ N•-Yoo I l;J17 (AOO t$ cent• l()t H eh Pllll'll lo• P<>"•Qe end llll'lelllng I Pi-int p111111, VOUA NAM( ADmlE$.'l l lP 5TVLI NUMllE" SIZE IH Q_OllS t ClOfllU O" l'All.\Ot 111 SWUTlll PASM Old l)A -14 ouu;11 MACH• OUIUI Ut OUIU " lAIY ru111sms UI "'°' •·l lOClt OUllfS an PVnON l'AfCllWOU OUllTS 8oo•1 S2 ~ 100 '5 e8"11 NCI'! IOI OOtlaQ• Ind ll1111J1tno 'lffl ··---·Mr I mi ----tf,.... • ......, flCTmOUS 9U ... U NAME IT A fta.NT The followlng P«10n9 are dolnQ~U: CHIAP,>E'S CATERING, 1017 11 Camino, Costa M .... Callf 92928 JOH Lui• Barragan. 10322 Tyhur1t, Garden rOY9, CA 92942 Thi• t>u1ln"' 11 con- ducted by: .,, lndMdulll JOM l.Ull 81rregan Thi• ltat--.1 w• nled with the County Cl«'lc of Or-•noe County on JUiy 30. 1085 ,_. Put>lllhed Orange Cout Dally Piiot AUQUl1 •, 11. 19, 25. 1965 .. JltRIC MJ11C( ACTTTIOUl~U .. ,,,_ ITA'rW....-r The loloWlnQ pertOM .,. ~-HILES CONSTRUCTION, 212 Co11tlnental Ave., 01ta MeH, Cellfornla 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 y · • c L A s s I F I E D HARBOR LAWN* MT.OUVI Morluary • Cemetery Crematory 1825 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5~555• PleRCI 8ROTHIA& 8BLL a.-OADWAY ~A.RY 1 f o Broedway Co1t1M .. e.2·9150 4 IJlilyPllit SUNDAY. AUGUST~. 1ee5 hllpla,.,. making .,a.na In the event of• atrlk• Tu11d8J. Da. The U.8 .... ,. allve In D•YI• Cup.,.., n. WHI Germmr. 04. . '84 Olympics 1honor roll: one year later For area heroes, memories remain from LA Games By ROGER CARLSON Of-.0..., .......... They wetc sights and sounds that will never be forgotten ... •Corona del Mar's Brad Alan Lewis. who had fought back for a berth on the United States' team in dramatic fashion, leapmg into a crowd to hug his father and give him his gold medal at the rowing competi- tion at Lake Casitas. ·•Costa Mesa's Mike O'Brien, squashing the competition with his 6-51/J frame in the 1.500-meter free- style for a ~old medal in swimming. • lrvine s Amy White, a httJe 15- ycar-old holding back the tears as she clutched her silver medal in the 200- metcr backstroke while her coach, Mark Schuben, put has arms around her and told her ofh1s pnde for her. medal and most comang away suc- c.cssfully. The American men's volleyball team, including former Newport Harbor High star Steve Timmons and Laguna Beach H1gh's Dusty Dvorak. won 1t aJI, and the women's volleyball team, includmg West- minster's Debbie Green, got the silver. Among Nitzkowsk1's sslver- medaJist water polo team were for- mer Newport Harbor star Kevin Robertson and University High product Peter Campbell, in addition to ex-UC Irvine ace Gary Figueroa. UCI product Greg Springer shared a silver in the four with cox at Lake Casitas and among the successful U.S. contingent were assistant coaches Dave Grant (rowing) and Tom McK.ibbon (women's sculls). Curtis Fleming and David DcRufT took their shots in rowing and Irvine's Ruth Wysoclu gave 1t a shot - in the women's 800 and 1,500 meters in track and field. Gymnastics fortunes included a silver and bronze for Huntmgton Beach's Kathy Johnson, a silver for Marina High graduate Julie McNamara and a silver for Hunt- ington Beach's Pam Bielek. •Tears of another sort, as Costa Mesa's John Moffet tned to maintain bis composure after losing a shot at three 'old medaJs Wlth a groin injury knocking out the world's No. I breaststroke swimmer on the first day's competiuon. There was Gr~ Lougan1s' double- gold act in diving. the drama of Irvine's Dwight Stones in the high Jump, the Edwin Moses show in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles and the near-miss of Costa Mesa's Sheila Conover in lc.ayakJng (fourth in K-4, sixth in K-1 ). o..r ......... _, ............... U.S. water polo coach Monte Kltzkowskl (third from leftl and aide Ken Ltnqren react to loal on way to .UYer medal. •Monte Nitzkowski, the nauon's No. I water polo ambassador. coaching the United States to its finest record in Olympic Games history with an unbeaten mark -but unbeaten wasn't good enough as gold slipped through the water polo team's fingers. •Bruce Ibbetson, a member of the U.S. eight rowing team. takin_g his final run with a silver medal finish to Canada in men's competition which found no nation able to secure more than one gold medal. There were many others from the Orange Coast area involved -v1r- tually everyone in the hum for a Those and many, many other memorable moments remain for athletes and fans of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games -12 short months ago. Here is what the Olympics meant to some of those athletes and what they are doing a year later: Mike O'Brien "The 1mi)act is there even outside of the pool formc. .. People look· at that (the gold medal) and feel you'll work hard for something. It's created contacts with important people and a lot of social events have materiaJized. "I was involved with the political eampa1gn for President Reagan and 1 gained a lot of practical experience for things that I want to shoot for in ttrms of career goals." O'Brien, a resident of Costa Mesa who prepped at Newpon Christian High and never swam a competitive ra~ on the high school level, will beg.in his sophomore season at the University of Southern California in tho fall. . Next up arc lhc U .S: .t.ona course Nationals at M1ss1on VieJo, begin- ning Monday, with O'Bnen entered in the 200, 400 and 1,500 meters. Down the road, the t 988 Olympics at Seoul are definitely in his plans. ''I'd hlce to make that team," says O'Bnen. "And possibly in ntPre than one event." O'Bn~n has beefed up on the weights at USC and is up to 17 5 pounds on his 6-51/J-inch frame. Amy White ... The only thing I've really noticed is that people expect a lot more out of me. .. If I &el touched out or semeboOy ... beats me it's like a big thmg in the paper that I got bcaL It's the onl} thing I've noticed that I don't like .. There's a little bit of pressure every time out and it's hard for some to understand. They can get earned awaybecause-they can beat me. But 1t does.',l't matter what you do until the ~nd. White will be a sensor 1n the fall al University High in lrv1ne and is an obvious candidate for the '88 Games "I think about it (the Games at Los Angeles) aJmost every day," says White. "It really ke.cps.me going." So the Seoul Games 1n 1988 are 1n the plans. "Yeah. definiteTy;--sne sa)'s "That was m} goaJ all aJong. The 1984 Games was a surpnsc." White, too, 1s aw.uung Monday's start of the Long Course Nauonals at Mission V1eJO and will be competing 1 o the t 00 and 200 back.stroke and the 200 and 400-meter-individual medleys. .., really don't think I'll come close to my best limes ID the backstroke events." she says. "But I would hlc.e to makeJhe Japan tnp in the 200 back." The Pan-Pac1fic and World Stu- dent Games att scheduled for Japan lrus month. ·Tm JUSt going to take the events da) b): day and~_!o'hat_J_ ~.Qo I (Plea.e 11ee 1984 /D3) DeCinces puts capperon dramatic night Douc DeClncea Ninth-inning homer overturns deficit; Angels beat old nemesis Blyleven, 5-4 By CHRIS MONAHAN 0.., ..... c-.. ,,,...., There was a lot of excitement generated Saturday night by the arrival of the ~hree ne~est Angels: John Candelana, Al Holland and George Hendrick. But most of the drama of the evening was provided by a new face for the Minnesota TWlnS, and an old nemesis for the Angels. That famiUar face who was grab- bing aJI the glory was pitcher Bert Blyleven. whom the Angels had sought in trades the entire year before the Twins re-acquired him JUSt five days ago. Slyleven had given up just three its entenng the ninth and, with a 4-3 lead. was heading for has I 0th win and his 11th complete game in his last 12 stans. As 11 turned out, he did com plete the game. but not before his Villa Park neighbor, Doug DeCinces. took him over the left-field wall for a two- run home run and a dramatic 5-4 Angel victory before 40,290 at Anaheim Sta.chum. The win gives the Angels their 23rd one-run wm this year (against eight losses). one more that they had alf of last year It also increased their lead in the Amencan Lcaaue West to three games over Kansas City, which was a 5-4 loser to Boston. "That's just how we ltlce them. We like to make them exciting." said DeCinces. "J'U take that for sure. "My main job was just to get Brian Downin$ home (Downing had doubled JUSt ahead orDeCinces). but as soon as the ball left my bat I went into my (home run) trot. "In my opinion, Bert 1s one of the best pitchers in the game and he 1s extremely tough on us, especially in this ballpark. ih1s 1s coming home for him. He lives just around the comer from me." Illustrating JUSt how tough Blyleven 1s on the Angels. this was the first time the Angels have beaten him since June I 0, 1981. Blyleven had been 5-0 agamst them since. Today,_ a.me -utnnelOta (VTota 10-9) at Mgele (Candeletla 0-0). Time: 1 p.m. TV: None. RadiO: KMPC (710). "Tlus typeofw1n never gets old and maybe it will help us recapture the fun we were havin$ nght before the .\II· Star break." said Downing. DeCinces' home run made a win· ner out of Stu Ch bum. who p1tcl\ed a perfect ninth 10 gain his fifth win against two losses. But whale Cliburn got the win. much of the cr~1t mu<;t be gi~en to Luis Sarchez Land lhl' newl)-acqu1rcd Holland. S3nchez pitched 1wo innings ol one-hit relief. while Holland d1dn '1 UeberrotlJ Welch outdllels Soto, beats Reds, 2-0 nronnsals D-d h 1 d t i was hitless in four at-bats, summed It up when he "" • -~· r~1 0 gers pus ea 0 s x said, "c;iood p11ch1ng dominates g<_>Od ~itting. Toda.7'• Game ~fto1•ed g-' 11 i g i t Both pitchers were good but tonight It was 4A ~ I .ameS !0 OW n V C Ory Welch's tum." o.diUI (V*1zueM 12·8) at cmdnnatl --Welch matched his career-high victory (Browning M). stnng a1 six straight. Time: 11:15 a.m. "Things were working well tonight," he said. TV: Channel 11. "It sure helped that this was a low-scoring game Radio: KABC (790). because that keeps me up on edge." It was the 16th shutout for the Dodgers, baseball's highest total. and Welch commented, "We've got umpteen JU}S throwing shutouts and It was my night tonight. I had a good fastball although 1t was a little wild, but when 1t counted at the end I had good stufT" "Welch was super'good tonight," Sc1osc1a said. "He's probably the most under-rated natcher in baseball. He has JUSt never had the numbers to place him with the superstars." Rose entered the game hitting Welch better than any other patcher and was 20 for41 With .488 a"crage in his career against Welch. He had a chance todnve in a run 1n the sixth inning. but his dnve to the warning track 1n center lield \\.BS caught. "I hit the ball hard, · said Ro~ Rut \OU have to put 11 where the)' don't have their glO\ t" Against some teamc; that \\.Ould ha' e been a gappcr .. Welch . "'·I. surrendered a single to l>aH' Concepcion 1n the fifth inning. a double tl\ fdd1c Milner 1n the 51\th and thrtt wall~ to notl h hi\ Sl)llh consecut1"e victory Soto. I 0.11. alloW't'd onl) four hits 1n delc.11 -the home~ by 1osc1a and Guerrero a double b} ~1ke Ma~hall and a c;initlc to te\.e \.1' give up an)' O\.er I 1 inning.s 1n his >\mencan League debut. "I wa!> lind of ·nervous until I figured out the umpires and.got lhe ball o"er." Holland said "lt teels good Clo be with the An$CIS' 1 haven't been on a team that wins games hl..e that I could gel used 10 1t real fast though ." "This team JUSl lnows how 10 pla) 1n the late innings." said Manager Gene Mauch .. The bullpen kept us 1n the game and 11's not the first J1me .. While most of the post-game e"11emen1 was over 1he ~ngels dramatic 1A<in, some of 1t was focu4'ed on one Rodne) ( hne Carew Carew blooped a single to kft in tht• fourth inning to move 10 within one h11 ofh1'> magic '\.OOOth He would ha~e gonen the hit were (Ple&M: .eeA.PfGELS/02) Bob Welcb Robinson trying to make do without Dickers~n • He may not have his star running back, but coach excited about riew QB Brock On the day head coach John Robtnson took over as the Rams' ofTensivec:oordfoator. he wH in- formed that 9S percent of his ofTen<JC was holdjnaout. uperrunninaback Enc Dickerson .\lolOUld not rcpon toe.at tate Full- enon for preseason nctt'1 on advice ofhis lqion of aa_enu Com- mander of the fe&Jon of flesh-pcd· dlers, formcrbo~trKcn Nonon, had call~• nc conftrcntt to an noun~ the deftttion. In summonin1 the aentlemcn oflht' working press toa LosAn~les hotel. Nonon had strCslcd that• pms IO" wouldbcrcqu1rcd Noneofmy collequ knew what ··press 10" meant but, pre umably. Nonon had spent so much ume 1n the spolles ly clean fiaht pme. he wanted to be ure everyone was lea>umate Anyway.herewa John Robinson coordinating an ofTen without Enc Dickerson fhe Dickerson camp want~torenqo111te. The Rams id such a th1na violates their policy and that a -v1olauon -.ould not be toler- ated e"~ 1n the ca!t of tbc man who brokcO.J 1mpson' inaJc· ason ru hinarccord "That 1 not my busjness.'' ld Robin n ... Mybu tntSSisto&tt ready to pla) pmes. So wt praet1« ind act ready to play pmC't WJlhoat 1ngabout who" 1n camp and 1 m1 ,,na" 1nwn would 1uc;tn soon nol IUD T1m1 SPORJS COLUMNIST have to start playin pme, wtthout Dlckcrson.ofcourR. "Of'courw."thecoach s.1d "The point 1 -.t h&\tlO JO on hvina On play -.titn it woutd ht Dlcker'IOn. tt 1 som~Mebccarry11'\1 the II " For all oftl'le inconven1enct cau~ by the Otckcnon a nee. Rob1n\On t uncommonlyenthu 11 ti abouta ma,n hchauecn ~yonlyon film . This 9'0Uld ht Dieter Brock, the qu. rtcrbad whocamr to thr Ram\ , lrom the Canadian Football League. Brock was entirely ad('Quate asa quanerback in theCFL but that nation did not e\h1b1t national de- spair at thcdepanu~ofOicter Robinson nonc1helC\ • th1nkc; Brock can take ht team to tht \upcr Bowl "l made a dmuc dC\. is.on ha~ 0n thot belief.'' Robinson \11d. "and I llll ~hcvc 11 " Thccoach's"drut1c · mo'e v.a\ ._.a1v1ng Yintt Fernpmo and C'Sta~ h h1na Brock a his "numbtr one·· befortcampe"en opentJ 1n f-ull- enon Robin ln tHckntl ~ ~mc th1ng rcscmbhn ,n-atM"> in this man "Thtrt has bttn '°mething m1 c;. "'I in our quanerback -.11uauon.·· Robinson u1d. "I think Rm.;k v.111 11\ic1ttou Whatlmtan1;,.an ofTen wtuch ta ~ tht hall and is a~lu~I ' Utt 11 t\f(llOI lo JlUlll ID 11'K'end 1on1.::· In othcrwords. [)1(tcr Brod.; has lcade~h1pquaht1e(, .. , <'"\ •• '>J1d the coach. 'but this in 1l~lf1snotcnough Jock\ oungblood 'A'tiuld nnt ht> a ieader 1fhe witsn "ta good pla"c' Dieter Brock is a good player tht'f'('lort he could bet~ leader v.c JI"(' lool1ng for I am almo,1 \Un he I'>·· Rohin\On ..a 'i Brod tu" a \troni am1 and u~' It v.llh IK'\'uran Hl' sa~' Rroc:k "-Ill wm no foot ra~ hut mo\ rsand rca t\ wt"ll 1n thr pockt't "Moc;t important," thccoa1.h \Rid "ht'v. nt'ltupla) wt-II Hc1 1.on, crn<'<i thllt c'm pa \ 1Hah:h1blt and want\ 111cl h( \:luah1 " C1can.. l\r<x~ 1\ Rob1n~n s man ··for urt,'' ..ay\tht>coach '"lo ~uanC't~dt oontro' ~"~ hcl"C' That" ne' n It t'thrnnic 1n th( Ram, atm'o~pht'tt ·ontrtw~n} " comumc and c-e1mc' 'o hf( at\tt aM bldpmt I I - .1 ,, 1· 11 •, ii I I I --.......--------------~----------------.. -,...._, • DI 0renQe Cout DAILY PILOT /Sunday: Auguat 4 , 1985 I SPORTS BRE ~K ------""------=---- 'World's Worst golf er hasn't let ft get hhn down ,..,... .,..,.tdtet !1- DA WSON, Pa. -Anerto pepok>. the brio of'b<>PcleU baekcn. ~nts to play aoH:in &ht wont way. And t;,ea:rually docs. Tbc arocery store ma butchered the Tour- na1Mnt of Pia~~ Club coune with a 2S7, the worst ICOft in Golf ~t m..-zine' recent Worst Avid Goller toumamenL Still, It's a pme he loves. .. Just beeause you play bad docsn 't mean you can't laa~ run:· Spipolo said. .. , don'1 remember lbe 250 bad shots l had dunna that round. r remember tho .even that were good. Otherwise, it's too niahtmarish. Everythina is relative. Ooe man's oeilina i another man's noor." SDl&Dolo. 31, has become a celebrity 1n the lovabfe.foter mold, son of a Cbarhe Brown m doubte knits. . He's in such demand, he's hired an agent, and his awful play has been chromcled by newspapers here and abroad and network television. ·"It's funny that tomethin1 so &OOd can come out of something so bad," Spaanolo said But the question remains: How can anvbody be that horrible without tryins to mess up? Watchina S~nolo in action, however, ~s witnessing a true klutz with a clul?. . . . During a recent round. his first drive flew ngbt at an impossjble angle aero~ a road. On lbe secon~ bole, be duck-hooked his drive to lbe left, findms an unplayable lie behind a tree. .. People have told me that it's bard to believe anyone could be so bad. But it kind of makes me bristle when people think rm sandbagging. .. said the pud&y, bespectacled father of two. .. I want to play Jood. I give it every ounce I got, Why try to do anything the wrong way?" he asked. Quote of the day Rocky BrW1e1, a coach for tbe San Francisco Giants. when asked if the players would vote for a strike: ~'You'd have a bard time convincins our coaching staff that they haven't already gone on strike." · Prakaa takea Rambletonlan EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. -~ Prakas, driven by Bill O'Donnell, won the S 1,272,000 Hambletonian for 3-year-old trotters in straight heats Saturday at the Meadowlands and set a stakes record in doing iL It was a big day for O'Donnell, who also drove Nihilator, a 3-ycar-old pacer, to a world race record of 1:49 3/5 in winning a $50,000 invitatiol}al pace that preceded the second heat of the Hambletonian. - TfCen o•erpowe r Milwaukee Verplank an•wera challeJlle Lu~ Parrltll hat 1wo home runs and Ill Arnatt:ur kott V"flW answered !I gtr1r GlblOll and Darrell E\'u1 hit 9nt Jim no,.,.·• challcnae with a couple oflate apiece aturda¥ to lead Det~o1t to a~ 9-3 birdie and retained a two-shot lead victory over M1~waukee at TJJCr tad1llm. . turday in the third round of the Western Pamsh, who m15'lcd 13 pmes last m~nth ~ath a ~re Open solftournam~n\lt Oa.k Brook1 111. Verplonk, 21 , back. lamm~ a two-run shotto the third ~nruo1to11vc the cum:nt national amateur champion and the leader tht Ti~ a 4-3 lead ~nd conncctrd for ~1s I Sth of the all the way 1n this profe"ional event, birdied the 16th year in the fifth to increase the maJ'lln to 6-3 . • . and t 7tb holes on the way to a 3-under-par _69. Elsewhere in tht American Leaaue Saturday, Gary_ Verplank, bi'ddingto become the first amateur to win a 'at o-run two-out Cfou~le hiahliahtC'd a tbrtt· protes ional tournament 11oce 1956, completed 54 run suuh inning that earned hol"overthe Butler National Golf Club course in 205. Toronto to a record 10th tttaJ&ht 11 shots und~r par. Thorpe, who now bas played 37 home victory, 4-1 over over consecutive hole without a bos_ey on one of the tour's Texa The Bl rat Jays have now toughest courses, had a second ~under-par 66 and was won 13 of their last 14 aames and second alone at 207, nine under par. No one else was remained 91.h,aamesahead of New close. It was five shots back to Brace Lletue, Seott Yorlund 10 in front of Detroit in Sim,... and Corey Pavla, tied for third ·at 212 ... the Ea t Oiv1s1on ... At Yankee Meanwhile, Laarn Hewe shot a )..under par 69 and Stadium, rookie Du P-.. and Nue)' t..pei shot 70 to share the lead after three rounds Roe Ru.., hit consecutive home of the LPGA Toledo Clas.sic with 211 s. A shot back at runs.in the first innina and Doll · 212 were IArl Garbact, who compiled seven birdies MatdqJJ hit bis third in two durina her round of 4-uoder 68, and Mall of Farner pmes a.s New York snapped a &.Illy WMtw~. wbo came in with a '2-under 70. four-pme losing streak by defeatina the Chicaao White Lopez. the LPOA tour's second leading money-winner, Soit, 8-4 ... Gormaa 'boma1 hat his 24th home run and started the day a shot back of second-round co-leaders Mike Moore pitched bis third complete-pme victory in Colleea Walker and Laarl Peterson. But a 2-under 34 his last four starts lo help Seattle defeat the A's in on the front side and a consistent performance on the Oakland. 6-2. Thomas now has 10 homers and 20 runs beck nine pvc her a 54-hole total of 5-under 21 t. baned in his last 13 pines ... At Royals Stadium, Roser Ckmeu and Steve Crawford pitched a combined ftve- hiner and Bill BKber, followtn& a double error on a double-play grounder, hit a three-run home run to propel Boston to a 5-4 victory over Kansas City ... Brett BwUer keyed a 16-hit Cleveland attack by goina 4 for 4, scoring three times and driving in another a.nd JaUo F ruco was 3 for 5 and drove in five runs u the host Indians crushed Baltimore, 10-4. Pactra fall •lz behind J>odlen · Maril Balley'• two-run single capped a Ill three-run rally with no o.uts in the 'ninth inning that gave Houston a 4-3 victory over San Diego in tbe Astrodome Saturday night. The loss dropped the Padres six games behind the Dodscn in the Nauonal Leque WC1t ... In other NL gam~ pinch-bitter Derrel nomu doubled home Glen WU1oa and OuJe Vlrlll with two outs in the 10th inning, powerina Pbil&aelphla to a 6-4 victory over St. Louis at Busch Stadium. Tbomu' double to left center on·a 1--0 count came off SL Louis relief act Jeff LUil, 1-1 ... ln Atlanta, rookie CUl1 Brown hit a p-and slam homer in the third mningand San Francisco went on to post a 7-5 vktory over the Braves ... Hable Broou and Mike Flt11erald each drove in two runs as Montreal held on for a 6-5 victory over Pittsburgh at Three Rivers Stadium. Brooks hit his eighth homer of the season and Tllomu drove in a first-inning run with an infield grounder as tbe Pirates lost for the 10th time in 11 games ... At Wrigley Field. Boward J~10D'1 home run with two outs in the top of the 10th innins powered the New York Mets to a wtld 5-4 victory. PETE ROSE COUNTDOWN Cla.bJ6 bJ O.D Ty Cobb What Rose did Saturday: He was hitless in four at-bats, just missina a home run in the sixth when his drive was cauJbt on the wamms track in center field, as the Reds lost to Bob Welch and the Dodgers, 2--0. ' Staak accepm·w ak e Foratjob CINC!NNA Tl -Xavier Universi~ m basketball Coach 8ob Swk submitted has resjanation Saturday to accept the htad coa<'hinajob at Wakt Forest. The choaocs had been narrowed to S.taak, Belmont Abbey Coach Eddie Payne and Qh10 ~ruvcrstty Coach Danny Nee. The three were mtervtewcd by Wa~e Forest Athletic Director Gene Hoou and the school s scrttnina commitcc this week. . In a prepared statement, taak said: "It 1s with mixed emotions that I submit my rcs1pat1on as basketball coach at Xavier Unive~1ty _to accept a similar position at Wake Forest Umvers1ty: l_t wu a difficult decision that was emotionally. dra1mna and extremely difficult to make." . . Xavier Athletic Dtrector Jeff Fogelson said in the same prepared.'1.atemeot, "We are sa~ to~ Bob I~· He built the Xavier program to where 1t CO.JOYS national rccOllni1ion. . -r'While J don't feel good about losing ,Bo~. I must say that the legacy he has left has put Xavier in a very favorable position to find a repl~ce.ment." . Fogelson said lbe confidenuahty of all candidates for Staak's replacemenl "wilJ be stnctly mainta.Jned." Carl Tacy res1sned as head coach al Wake Forest about three weeks ago. ..Cllpper• to train in Pomona LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles m Clippers will hold their annual training camp on the campus of Cal Poly Pomona next fall, the National Basketball Associa- tion team announced. General Manager Carl Scheer said that the Clippers., who will play their second seaso!' in ~ Angeles in 1985-86 after moving from San Diego, wd two-a~y workouts at Cal Poly Pomona will begin Sept. 28 . Cal Poly Pomona will also serve as the site of an NBA pre.season same between the Clippers and the Portland Trail Blazers on Oct. 6. Scheer said. The NBA season begins for the Oippers on Oct. 25 . "We are dehahted to be associated with such a fine facility as Cal Pofy Pomona," Scheer said. "We are all looking forward to our association with the Univer- sity." Televialon, radlo TELEVISION 11 :15 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Cincinnati, Channel 11. I p.m. -GOLF: Western Open, Channel 4. 3:30 p .m. -SPORTSWORLD: Body build- ing -World mixed P&irs championsb1p from Toronto (tape); Drag racins -NHRA world finals from Pomona (tape), Channel 4. RADIO 11: 15 a.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at Cincinnati, KABC (790). I p.m. -BASEBALL: Minnesota at Anaels, KMPC(710). Bollin~er signs pact with Rams l~utledge passes New York to win New Angels react with relief,joy Offe n sive lineman joins team after stint in USFL last year From AP dl1patcllea Veteran offensive lineman Russ Bollinger, who has been playing football almost non-stop for the past year, signed a contract with the Rams Saturday. Bollinger (6-5, 255) played for the Rams last sea.son, then immediately signed a one-year contract to play for the Memphis Showboats of1he United States footbalJ League. The Showboats' season ended in late June, giving Bollinger about six weeks off prior to his first workout with the Rams Saturday at Cal State Fullerton. Bollinger had been expected to rejoin the Rams all along. Because he's bttn so active the past year, however, the Rams were not concerned that he reported su days after the veterans were required 10 report to training camp. BollinJer. 30, has been a valuable reserve linemen for the Rams since being acquired from Detroit prior to the '83 season. He can play guard or tackle equally well. * Raiders' Allen In Dickerson's corner Standout running back Marcus Allen, who rcc,ently signed a four-year contract y.-ith the Los Angeles Rajders, says he hopes holdout Eric Dickerson gets what he's worth from the Rams. Dickerson hasn't reported to the Rams' camp because, his advisers say, the team promised to discuss extending his guaranteed contract for three years past the cu,rrent 1986 commitment, theq, .. renegcd." . ..uobviously, Eric is doing what he feels is right, .. Allen said at the Raiders' summer training camp ... He bas accomplished an awful lot, .he's an integral part of that organization." · Dickerson set a National Football League rushing record of2,105 yards last season, his second professional campaian. u ........... Gian ts edge Oilers in opener of NFL preseason, 2 1-2 0 CANTON, Ohio (AP) -Jeff Rutledge, takin& over for injured starter Phil Simms, completed bis .firsua passes inclu.dini touchdowns to Joe Morris and Mark Bavaro to lead the New York Giantl to a 21-20 victory over the Houston Oilers in the annual AFC-NFC Hall of Fame game Saturday. Simms suffered a cut on bis ri&ht hand late in tbe first quarter of the National Football league's fint exhi- bition game, and Rutledge came on to finish off an 80-yard scoring drive with an l 8-yard pass to Morris that put the Giants abcad for sood at 7-3. Rutledge did not play again until midway through the third quarter after the Giants' George Martin forced a fumble by Oiler quarterback Oliver Luck at Houston's 24-yard line. After a·penalty moved the ball to the 19, Rutledge passed 16 yards to Don Hasselbeck and then connected with Bavaro. a rookie ti&ht end from Notre Dame, on a 3-yarcf scorioa pass for a 21-6 lead. George Adams. a roolae runnina back from Kentucky, had scored on a I-yard run for New York earlier in the period. .. I don't know if holding out is the nght answer in li~t of what's happened, .. Allen said, refemng to the htgh salanes commanded by athletes and the possible baseball strike. Bouton'• Batch Woolfolk brea.ka Gary Reuon• attempted tackle Saturday. The victory gave the NFC an 8-6-1 lead in the annual pme. The Giants were 9· 7 last year and the Oilers were 3-13. Simms suffered a cut between the little finger and ring finger of his riaht 'B OATING Hogan keeps Etchells lead By ALMON LOCKABEY o..,,.........,..,_ Tim Hogan of the host Newport Harbor Yacht Club hung on to his lead m the Etchells-22 Pacific Coast Champ1onsh1p Sa1urday despite a I 4th-place finish in the fourth race Hogan has had finishes of 4-1-1 -14 for a total of 28 points under the Olympic sconng system Saturday's races were sailed in 11-15 knol southwesterly wind~ off the Santa Ana Ri ver Jetty. Second an the standings is the team of Dave Ullman and Jack Jakosky. also of Newport Harbor Yacht Club. with -44 points. Third 1s Wilham Barton. San Francisco Yacht Club. 45: fourth is John Kostcclo. St Francis Yacht Club, 50. 7, and fifth is Dave Curtis, !Eastern Yacht Club. New York. Wff1' .S6 4 Cunis. a former world champion tn the cla b d a premature ~tan 1n the fourth raot, account1n1 for his poor showina on the seoreboard After a week's respite. the E-2 2 team, will 'tart action AuJ 14 1n 1he world championship for the class Seven medals for B&bcock Gymnast ties S ports Festival mark, earns three m~re golds BA TON ROUGE. La. (AP) -Bnan Babcock. America's foremost men's gymnast, won three aold medals and two bronze Saturday night to equal the National Sports Festival record of seven, fa1lins to medal only m the vault in his attempt to establish a new mark Babcock, 23. of Garden Ctty, Kan .. camed ~old from the all-around and silver from team competition into Saturday's events. then picked up victones Saturday ni&h1 m the parallel bars. honzontal bars and pommel horse. Coupled with bronzes in floor exercises and still rings, he wound up wuh seven medal , 1y1ns the festival record held by symnast Scott Johnson (I 983)and swimmer ippy Woodhead (I 979). "1 had that as my goal, to break Scott's'tecord or at least tic it," he said. "The cards JUSt didn't fall (for brcalcina It)." Billy Paul of Millbrae picked up a pair of gold medals Saturday niaht, winn1ns the floor exercise and tyina for fi~t in the vaull. He wound up with 1x medals overall. A crowd of 6.500 attended the 1ymnHt1cs, and $0me 3,500 attended the wild event~ hockey game. But turnouts rema1 ned low at wrc1tlina 1.425 for two 1ess1ons) nnd we1&hthfiana (350) and the a ternoon hockey pme drew on ft I. 700. The East moved into the aold medal hockey matchup with the North by beatina the South 4-3 in the afternoon despite 44 sa~ by aoafie Chns Terrcn of ?ro\i1denct College John C'artet"t shorthanded goal and Randy Wood's power play score in the fin.t penod tnucrcd the East victor; fhat wa~ a calm conte\t compared wtth the We~t'' ~ l win over the North at night Brian Hannon and Tom Chorske scortd two minutes apart late in the second period to spur the West in a pme filled with controversy. With 2: 11 remaanina, the North's Kevin Miller of Mi~higan State scored to tic the score 4-4. But it wu d1sa1Jowed because Miller was on the ice iUeptly. He was given a double minor penalty and a game misconduct with 8:03 left when a brawl erupted at the West soaJ after West goaltender Alan Perry was whacked by the North's Scott Johnson. Miller remained on the Nonh bench, and when his two minor penalties expired, he came back onto the ice. .. , wouldn't kec17Miller on the bench ifl k.new be was out of the game," said North Coach Frank Anz.aJone of Lake Superior State. "It's like havins cancer and not setting treated .. Miller said ht was not involved in the brawl, which resulted 1n both btnches emptyina, But 1t wu annoonced that he was Jiven the misconduct for betn,S the third man into the fight. When the penalttcs were assessed. Anzalone said he requested referee Mike O'Brien come to the bench to nplain the ttuat1on. . "I asked him 19 llm~ ... satd Anzalone, "but he never came over." Dan Severn wr,estlcd h1t war, into the aold medal round. then discovered he wouldn t bave to nen himself any further to collect the 220-pound crown. Severn, of Mesa. Am., became the ICCOnd aold medalist 1n frcntyle wrcsthna followina a 6-t dccilion over Phil l..anutclla of Rochester, N. Y. Soon after that victory, he wattold that his final-round opponent. James Johnson of l..c.unaton, Ky .. had wtthdrawn Wtlh a aroin IOJUty. •·t haven't compe1ed in ea&ht wctb and I wrt1tJed hard the past two da)'I," ia1d a tired St\iem. who teemed aratcful for the 11n of •old. hand as he completed an 11-yard pass to Zeke Mowatt late in tbe tirst quarter. Rutledge then hit three straight passes including a 36-yarder to Byron Williams to set up lbe touchdown to Morris. Houston's Joe Cooper kicked an IS-yard field goal in the first quarter and Florian Kempf added a 39-yarder one minute before halftime to pull the lJUers within7-6 arlhe hall. .. "'h 's wonderful. l t's a difference of 30 games in the standings over a two- game period." Th.at was the reaction Saturday night of John Candelaria, the newest Ansel on his move to Anaheim from Pittsburgh. Candelaria. along with Al HOlland and George Hendrick joined the Ansets in a deal that saw the Anaels send eat Oements, Mike B.rown_and a player to be named later to tbe Pirat.es. "I want to put the first half of 1985 behind me. It hasn't been very productive, partly because of the team I was on," satd Holland. "Candy got what he wanted and it's a great deal to go to a ftrst-placc team. "I'm excited to be in the American League, f've never been here before. And it's good to be back in the heart of a pennant race." Candelaria, who has asked to be traded since last year, wasn't sure when he'd ever get out of Pittsburgh. "I was starting to worry, but Mr. Brown (Pittsburgh GeneraJ Manager Joe L. Brown) was accomodatin&," said Candelaria. "I'm relieved. It's been a tough couple of years, but Pittsburgh IS history and I wish them well." Although he had been a starter throu&hout bis l 0 years in the majors, this year Candelaria hu appeared strictly in relief, another fact that "'l u~t him about the situation in Pitsburgh. With fhe Angels, he W11Ibe returned to the starting rotation and will start todal apfost Minnesota. .. I feel that s where I belona (as a staner), said C..ndelaria ... I want 10 try to so five or six inninas and build mr, endurance back up. 'I'm really happy. I've always enjoyed coming to LA I've heard that Mr. Autry (Ansels' owner Gene Autry) is a wonderful man and I want to help him set a (World Series) ring on his finaer." -Chrl1 Monaltaa ANGELS ••• J'romDl 11 not for two outstandin1 over-the· shoulder catches by the Twins' Kirby Puckett and Ron Washinaton. "I'm staruna to feel it. I started to feel it when I aot my first hit on the last day in Oakland," said Carew. * ANOIL NOTU -At UNCied 11\e Anoe1s Ol>llOMd *"--LWlt anc1 •'*"t ~ to l!clmonlon IO ll'ltkt room lor Ille retum of .._ ZIM t nd to OMn IDOtl tot Ille ltlr• MW .,.._ .. CtilMl*lrtll, "' ........ Md ........... *lcll u. ""llttf'I ,., """". ,., lltA"" 16 .. .,,.., IO of wl!IOI lie ll9d tltti..t l.lnerft l'9d NOMred la Oftlv five Mtn9t fvr lie A,_., llMll lllt two '*M runs, botll ot Wlllcll ..,. eeme- wlnMl'I. "I'm ..,.,., tl'ti.t\14 tot l.llOO cllcl Ind lle'M lit bedl ... In," Mid Mallfftt .... -. "AR fOur of t'*t tws (Lueo, l.tnwn , ,_,. .,.... Md ~ .. °"'*"') INd9 • COlltrlltulltn Md -~ rtflfV OOfllrftlulloft "'-" Mede .. • • • ~~td 0.... ........ ,"f'ONU ""•vs rlM • ooflcy of ,.. , ... ..,. to 1111 madlll, w • eotYllllW 11\al Ill All9flalm Hi. 0111Y comment IO r..,.,.ltn wet· "I'm not toiflt 10 Cft9fltt mv flC.llley/' • • Ill Ille wake of "" ...._,.. '*M rvn ,,_., llltht, Wflldl llMllY llMI IN A,_., M•udl Mid, "We Coiuldrt't lie tll't UOMr W wt weft fattier tlld *· ----.... llMll ""°""' ........... (~ ~ SINllev MliMttotl), llut I •I •Ml 1111'1\ 10 lleai tM. Mt ~ aN tl\ltl' .. t uo .,_,, Ill !fie "Meh a.W Wiiii ¥91"\t Mtl't IO ... 1M Win, tllA lflty went to ... llltn 00 wtll, too!' ~. of COWM, .. MIUtlt'I ,,...,.... ••• Ill "'' 14Ht llart Ill'*° IO SltUl'deY nlel'lt, ._, ..... 11941 lltltd tl~ IMlnes aealMI IN v-.... w.llflt Ith 6Wltle e4 10 C~ ..,,_ 0y luM ant<lfllNI of tn IMint ~ IM4' Ille ~If\ Leewut Wi lS C'ClfN*te HMt\ I t tter ... • - OU·toad ncbut Two vanehes of od!"'road raccn Wiii meet Aua. 16-18 at the 13th annual ORE Off Road World Cbamp1onthip at R1ver11de lnter-nallonaJ ~way. Dcten t'ICC9'. the •taple of 1hc ss)ort, and 1hon<0urw t'l«rs who compete in 11.1d1ums wtll ~kc Lhe I $.mtlc wurw 10 decide which dJv111on will act tbc title. ~rly en1nes have come from both aroups. T1cket1 for the championship arc on sa111.•1t SCORE l~temational, 313$6 Via Collnas, S• 111 , W~stlaJce Villaae. CA. 92$08; Riverdde l~temational Raceway, 222~S"!\Jcalyptus Ave , Rtvenlde, CA. 92$08, and all Ticket Master outlets. For more information, phone 6H-l 161 or (818) 889-9216. S-oa-S buketball SaddlebacJc Collqe will host a J..on-3 basket· ball to~mament Aua. 24-2S 1n Lhe Gauchos' 1Ymnu1um. There will be an open d1v1Ston a 6-3 and under division, and 6-foot and under, and )(). years-old and older division. The toumtment is bein& put on by the Saddleback basketball proaram, with proceeds aolna to the Saddleback basketball program. Cost of the tournament is $3$ per team and no team can carry more than four players. All entriea must~ recieved by Friday, AUJ. 23. The tournament bc&ins at 9 a.m. Aua. 24, Anyone interested should phone 831-4$4$. Jletro all-•tar baHIHIJJ 1lhe Metropolitan Ltque All· tar battball ~me, matctuna the lcaauc champions apinil the All· wt rrom the ot6er tcaaue team•. Will~ playtd 1oday 11 Anaheim lld1um foUowtna the ~Iwmspme 1'he Metro~ of Ora nae County 1s a non. profcu1onal lcquc ror men n throuaJl ll )'can old For more 1nforma11on. phone 83$-6293. Marriott f161Jt •lated lrlets "Cuban1to" Perc2 of Santa Ana wtll box lnsh Paul Barton of Port.land Orqon, 1n a 10. round hahtwciabt bout Aua. l6 at the Mamon Hotel in lrvinc. Pcm, who bas a 27-1 rcrordhsuffertd bi• only jetbaclc ap1ns1 Hector Camac o two years aao. Banon has a 17-2 record and 11 bolder of tbe Pacific Northwest liabtwe11t11 utle. Tomas Perez, the younaer brother or lrle1s, will box Toriy Tbomas of Ponland in a 1uppo11in1 IQ.rounder. WW'D Bowl.LJJ6 toama.ment On Friday, the Newpon Har~r Lawn Bowhni Oub will bos1 a Coast waue Tour-nament. Eiaht local lawn bowljni clubs. members of the Coast Lca1ue, will compete-Casta Del Sol, Lona Beach, Meadows-Irvine, Newport Harbor Rccrcation Park. Saddlebaclc, Santa Ana and the Orovca. Compe111ion wtll beam at 10 a.m. and -run throuah the aftrmoon. · It is open to the public for spectator viewtna.. For more informauon, phone Bob Htek.s at 644-4138. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Sund , Auguat 4, 1985 DI lntae eoftball lf1111U• ' Tiit' Cll) of lt\'lne CommunJt) ScrvlCC1 wul ofl'eT an adul& IOft.baU J2tOlt&m bqinn1na 1n September. TM fall pr~m l'qiat1'tlons are cumntl) bcu\f&e«ptcd 1n four cateaonn; men'• (upper. middle, low") and a new Muttn l..tqut (JS and oldt"r) Tc1m1 wtll play one n1aht a 1o1o~lc bcalnn11lJ Sept. S Deadline to tttlater and J>IY th.c f)JO fee ••Tuesday.A. Aua. 20, at lrvtne City Hall, 17200 Jambottt KOMI. A point syttem will ~ uuhzed for 1e«pt1nor into the kaaue Three points will be awarded for an Irvine sponsor. two for Irvine rnidentl. and one for wortu111 in Irvine To rccc1vu team apphcauon and 1nd1v1du1h w1shJna to J01n the lcque should phone 66().)851. lrYUJe buketball Ja,ae. Th.e City of Irvine Commun11y Services 1s offenna an adult basketball proaram The fall Proaram l"CJlStrauons arc currently bcinJ ac-cepted for men' (upper, middle and lower) and Muten (3S and older). as well as a women't leaaue. nams will play two ntahts • week bejinn1n1 ~pl. 9. Deadline to f'C1JStcr and pay the SHO f~ 1s Thursday, Aua. 22 11 Irvine Cll)' Hall, 17200 Jamboree Road. .T~rece1vea tcam apphcauon and 1nd1Vlduals wtsb1n1 lo J01n the leaaue should phone 66().)8$1. Coed ft>llq1'i1J , ..... Tam applicauPns an currently be ac- cept.od for the uptorrun1 lrvt0e Fall A.dull oed Volleyball Lc:l1uc. Teams will play one ntabt a Mitk tn akill le"clJ raftlint from uP1)Ct to lower. lndJvid1.l&lJ wuluna to joUl a ieam lhould call \he Irvine Community Serv1cct Ofpenment ~ lave their name and phone numbrt. Ocldhnc lO re&Jllef It Wednnday, Au,. 21 ll S p.m. Apphcauon.a and fee ahould be turned in at lrvmc City Hall, 17200 Jamboree ROid, lrv1nc For more 1nfonnation, pbo~ 660-)1$1 . Bobby Sos toanu.meat The Bobby Sox Softball Nauonal Tow· nament ofChampaon1 will be held at Bellis Par\. loc.ated 11 8th and Knott Sueeu lll Buena Part. bellnnsn1 Saturday at 9 a.m the learnt involved tn tournament CQmpcu- uon will all ha"e qualified by wuimna a local dastnct tournament Th11 year. the mmor Nauonal Tournament, cons11unt of 24 teams repretentina the western states and Hawaii, will be held Au,. I~ 16. · - The m•Jor National Tournament will be held Aua.17-23witbopenin1cercmon1csAua. l71t9 a.m. Most players can well afford strike However, there are others who would have to find work By ANNE S. CROWLEY ,...,.,...,..., ...., Detroit Tiaen shortstop Alan TrammelJ has an appotntment to have h11 wisdom teeth rcffi9ved Thursday momina. He hopes to cancel, but that's the decision of the M~or Leque Players Association and the baseball team owners. The union bas set a Tuesday strike deadline. "I fiaure if there's a strike, 1 miaht as wcfJ have them pulled," said Trammell,. who as the T1aers' union rcpresentauve. "Otherwtse, I'll put It offuntiJ the end of the season." W1nn said. "If there's a stnke, 1 bave to 10 home and bail bay ... Garth loraofthe Toronto Blue Jays worked Ln a brick factory m 1981 and says he'd have to rustle up a similar JOb tf there's a Iona walkouL Mark Salas of the Minnesota Twins hu a JOb in La Puente Han electrician, "so thert wouldn't be too much problem with money." o.lrl'W' ........ '1obn Moffet wu the retantat world record bolder In tbe 100 breut. bat a poln 1.$.ry In tbe prellma ended hopt19. .. , Fer many bt1 leque pl&~ another walkout ltke the one that wiped out the middle of the 1981 season would mean rest. rclua1lon and a chan~ to spend time with the fa~ily. Some want to rehabilitate uuunes. . "I sure don't want to 10 to any 9-5 JOb," wd 1nfickier Steve KJefer, JUSt called up to the ma1on by the Oakland A's. "I'd probably JUst plan on play10& W'Ul1eC ball t1ua year to make some money." The Cubs' Richie Hebner and Baltimore Manaaer Earl Weaver say they'll hit the aorf courses, and other manaacrs are thinlona about tourina their farm clubs. 1984 OLYMPIC HEROES-A YEAR LATER ••. Most can afford the layoff in these days of six·ft&Urc averaae salaries. Fiaures compiled by the owners' Playen Relations Committee and published 1n Friday's USA Today show that 70 percent of players currently 1n the ~ors make salines of SI 00,000 or more, wnh 30 ta.king home paychecks of S I mtllton or hi&her. FromDl used to set a time aoal for every meet, but I'm just aoina to hana back and see what happens ... The 16-year-old says Stanford, SMU or possibly UC Berkeley fiaure in her oollcae plans. John Moffet "I learned a lot, a lot more than by winnina a aold medal." Moffe~~ the former Newport Harbor 11i&h swim sensation who'll be Stanforcfs team captain durina his senior season, was the hard·luck swimmer of the l..Os An.acles Games, settina a world's n:cord of I :02.13 in the 1 ~meter breaststroke in the momina on the first day's competi- tion, but a aroin i!lJury cost him any chance ofa medaT in tlie afternoon's finals. He finished fifth in the finals, strualina thro~ without much lea movement to a ume of 1:03.29. It also cost him a chance for aold medals in the 200 breast and the men's medley relay team -and he was a solid fa vorite to collect in all th~cvonts. ''I remember when it really hit home," recalls Moffet from his Clare- mont residence, a recent move from Costa Mesa. "I was talkina to a friend who won a aold medal in swimminJ and she was expcctina everytbina to be just great and peachy. But it wasn't that way at all, it was just a m~l. "It's not a devine truth and she was upset that she didn't learn much from it. I know I've definitely learned somethina. and not just in swim- mlna." Moffet, too, will be competina at the Mi111on Viejo on Monday with hopes of qualifyina for a trip to Japan for the W-0rld Student Games and the Pan·PaciOc Games. He uys be'U ait down and f1lllkC a decision about Seoul after his senior season at Stanford. which would be some two years away. MJ.ke O'Brien Am'/ftlte stunnina performance. "It reminds you you're capable of arcat things, .. Lewis said by telephone from the Cornell boathouse in Ithaca. New York. "Thafs ..th¢ aood thina. m and outside of rowina." The aold medal brou&ht no money with it, but it bas been a sprinaboard to monetary gains for Lewis into a speak.in& career on mottvation. vf'm ~oing to expand on the speaking, · conunues Lewis. "It's an offsprina of winnina the aold medal because the subject 1s aoal-onented and achievements, and it's very applicable to buuness." " At 30. the former Corona del Mar High athlete says he's takina his competitive life on a step-by-step process with only his current endeavor on his mind. "Nothing past this." says Lewis. "It's one stroke at a time." He and 1984 Olympian John Biglow. the man who edged him out to rcpr~nt the United States in smales sculls, have combined ma bid for the World Games. They ao for It today. "1 think we can tum a few heads here," he adds. "We're in aood shape." As far ts 1988 is concerned, he says: "l'd be 33 then. that's on the very o\ltcr cdae of 1oa1c." Monte Nltskowakl "It wiU JUlt come down to the fact that I hive to want it," says Moffet. a "No, there's no substitute for dct1an ~or at Stanford wuh film aold," sa)'s N1tzkow ii, mpondtna 1Chdol poulbly in the future, to the question of baclona up his There were very few positives that efforts on behalf of water polo with came out of Moffet's bean break at the concrete results. USC facility. and about the only ttem "'Everythina would have betn eas- MofTet felt was worth mentionina was ier with ·a.old in cvet)1hina we do." the tKi M was' a subject for the Bud continues the Huntinaton Beach rc11-0reenspan movie, ''Sixteen Qays of dent, wht\ ba returned to his OIOf)'.' , coachina duucs at Looa Be\ch City Collqe, 1n add1tlon to runn1na his Bra4 Alan Lewi.a eaitry. "Vtc's at the Beach" adJaccnt to the Hununaton Beach pier. Lewi . currently trainina tor G bcnh at the World C'hamp1onsf\1ps 1n BCIJium lattt this month, 1s able to find a lot or positives from ht "Evtrythioa is 200 Pl'~nt beucr now, at lea't we did a t an identity. but there's no ub ti lute for aold." Al1hou1b Niukow ki has rcllrtd Tho~ who can afford at SI)' they'U 10 to their off-season homes tf it looks hke the stnke will be prolonaed. Most SI) they would work out and Sta) in shape Peter Campbell Knill Robert8on Brace lbbetlton Brad IAwta ~ut the figures also sho~ 71 players, 10 percent of the total, making the minimum of $40,000 a year. and some players quesnoned tn an Associated Press surve) wd they would have to find other work to pa) the bills. "I don't want to stnke, I want to keep pla~,na." Ptttsburah pitcher Jim A stnke of a week or so would &1ve outfielders Tony Gwynn of San D1eao and John Shelby of Baltimore a chance to sec their babies born. Storm Davts of the Orioles could help his wife with their 5-wcek-old baby and, 1fthe walkout aoes on a month. attend a f1m1l} wcddina. ·-r11 keep acuve," Gwynn wd. from deck duues, he's sun very much in the tiauonaJ scheme as chairman of a strateaic planning committee geared to improving college water polo -specifically to mcreasc the number of colleae teams from 11 to the magic number of 57. and more. The NationaJ Colle11ate Athletic Association requires at least 5 I par- ticipating schools to allow an NCAA tournament. and at least 57 to gain travelina expenses for teams entered 1n the finaJs. His two-year tour deals mainl> with directina coaching clinics and the salesmanship of the spon His assist.ant, Ken Lindgren. also a rest· dent of Hununaton Beach. has re- turned to his duues at Long Beach State. where he's added the duucs of aquatics director N1tzkowsk1 was an assistant coach at the 1968 Ol)'mp1cs m Mexico C'1t) and the head coach of the '7 2 bronze medalists 1n Munich. His 1980 team lost a chance to compete in Mosco~ No one m water polo got nch from the Olympic spoils. Standout Terry Schroeder and goahe Craia Wt Ison were involved tn television commcrc1als and most of the 13 team member rcce1 ved rou&hly $1 ,SOO for hvma expenses durin& a 3-4 month penod m the spnna and early summer of'84 Bruce lbbetaon For Ibbetson h1\ \ll"cr medal will alwa)'s reprnent the aold that hpped throu~ his and the rt"St of the United States e1g.hf1 finJCrs. but b) the same token,"SJlver represents a ireat deal of sa11sfac11on. "I fttl ronfident we definnely earned the silver medal." Sl)5 Ib- betson ··we had a couple of problems 1n our boat nrly in the Bet which created tension, but onct ""~ ~ttlw 1n we almo,t pulled 1t out "It was one of the bc-\t ever field of e\ahts eHn thoug.h the Ru""1aM and Ean Germans "-Crtn't there. The fastt1t ttahts 1n th~ world ~ut thcrt 'TU ilways wnh 1\ wu old. because we had 1t mus, but not in that pan1cular race." "It's hard for me to JUSt Sil" Retired from compeut1ve rowina at age 32. Ibbetson aot mto bank1na throu&h an Olympics proaram and has moved from Finttntcnta1e Bank as a loan officer to the real estate industries area of Wells Fa.rao·Bank. The Costa Mesa resident says monies ~ere available had he applied for a "broken ume payment' for reimbursement for lost time while training. but because of tus JOb w11h First Interstate Bank. he didn't feel 1t would be a vahd reason. Neither side gets sympathy Of fans "'a 11 ~onh 11~ Reactions vary f rorl!_ disappointment to outra e about strike ''Oh \eah, definitely," conunues Ibbetson. "There arc aood and bad umes. hke an> job. some ups and By KEN RAPPOPORT downs. But overall, my row1na career ., apo.19 ...... culminated on an excellent note. .. <\II I could really ask for is four ~ ~ a1t1ng outside of .\tlanla-Fulto,n more feet. to win the aold. ha' ing the'. 1... ount) Stadium for Dale Murph\ s best boat will always suck in m) autograph. a Jouna fin was aslcd mind But looking back 1 ...,.ouldn't ... ho~ she woul feel about a baseball h h 1 • stnlc c ange anr,t •na. t was a a.re•t "I'll k.. \e~ d1••ppo1nted .. sc· "'n C'<pcnence • "" ': -"" · In add1t1on to his banktnl duties. \ear-0ld Annie Lord of Chattanooga. Ibbetson is a member of the Men's 'ren!' .. reyhed wf\Jy Olympic Ro'Wln& Committee. which It s one of the few mild reacuons has been characd wtth developing from bastball fans throughout the proarams and selection process for country over the threatened srnkc b)' comma yean mlJor leaauc pla)ers on Tuesda). The outraae over a po s1bk stnkc -the sttond 1n five seasons for the nauonal pa ume -appears to be d1r«tcd at both stdt1 1n the dispute, accorchna to a random \urvey of fan STRIKE. • • rro.01 I'>> The A llted ~~ Oav1d Padilla. 41 . " lawytr from Furfu Count). Va . called for a "poll. on both the hou~" of the owncn and pla)'ers who art involved in the cumnt contract dispute "l plan not to JO to &ame for I yt'&r or Jwo " Re"51~ed to 1 stnkc, Pad11l:a \a1d. ··1 think 1t s101n~ to happen, and l th1nk tt'S dl'l\l~tma. ' 1d Frank Jackson1 •8. a self· emplo>cd laborer in Phtladelr>hta' "A spon should be fun. The ~hole 1h1nah.,1ottcnoutofhand. I uppon the owners 1n thl\ d1\pute bttaust '-Omcwhert •Iona the line. enoug.h has ta he enou&h - C\and) Pt>ratc. S . a ~taurant hostess 1n Philadelphia. felt a "pl•>- crs· walkout would sunk Owners have to make somet.h1na.. too, and no player 1s worth all that money the> fet. lftherearc no morcpmetoon TV, ·11 feel someth1na 1s mus1na." For Rich Johnson. a 38-year-old bustnes man from Philadelphia, .. Baseball has lost much of its puu.z:z. The game has been taken over by unions tnkes really cnpple sports, and the\ don't do soc1el> any aood." me fan said that a stnkc wouJd tum them off to baseball "I realh won't watch an)'more," ~1d Boh F1hpp1 of Parlcvdlc. Md "1 stoppe'd watch1na bHcball for that whole season (after the 198 l stnke )" Ron Gre)' of Baltimore said he usuall) purchases 12 box seats for the Onoles for his trud..ing finn. "but ~ discussed not ctt1na these 9C&ts qaJn (1f a stnltc OCt'urs)" A fcv. u1d they ~oukln•t m1 m"or lequc haicball But 1f there ~• a path\. there wa' ccru1nl> httk \~mpath\ for either ~•de 1n the dl'.>pUte · "nother '1nke ,.,.ouldn't bother me .. \ltd Thomu McCullum. an O kland A' season-ucket holdtt "Ounna the last strike, I *Cnt to San J and .,otchcd minor lcquc pmcs (C'ahfomta Leque, Oass ) If thcrt'$ another \tnke. I'll v.atch cable TV. The) 'II probebl) ba"c mmor lca~ue pmei · Another stnkc won't bother me. lf there ts a stnke, I'd JUI\ as !OOn have them ~y out the rest of the , bcauSt 1 have no sympathy at all wuh the playcn The) all make 11 Inst S40.000. Hev, 1 could do a \ot with $.0,000.. . MAJQll_ UlAGUa ST~NOfNGS AIMrteaft LMeue WIST DtVIStOH AMlb KanMI CllV Oak lend Cllleago W L ,.rt GI Sf u ~ SJ4' so 3 S4 4f S24 S SI 4t SlO 6\, *" .. Mlnnetolt TtUI Toronro Pffw York Oetroll eo"on 9tlllmor• MllWeukM Cle,,.._nd .. S4 .476 10 4655 45.SI? 3' ~ .l7' 20 e aST DfVts.c>H 67 3' S6 46 SS 46 S4 ., S2 50 ... 5' )4 " 631 S.9 S4.S S24 510 "° J30 ,,,, 10 17 131'l 20''> 32 St1W8v'• ~· ..... s. Mlnnttola 4 lffw Yon I CllktOO 4 Toronto 4 Ttxat l O.lrOil t. MllwaUl<M 3 5-Jlle 6 0.11.lencl' OIYNnd 10. l!lallin-a 4 eosron s Ktnw• Cllv 4 T9daY'1 GamM Mlnntiota (Viola IO·t l al ANlfl (Canci.i.rlt 0-0) MllWtUkM (Hleuwa 8 6 ano Burri• S·ll al O.trOlt (Mom• I? 6 and O'Ntal ~·ll 2 &.lhmort IFlt,,.11tn 1 11 ti Cleveland IHtalon s-m Ttxal tHOUQll 9·11) al Toron10 tSlleO 10-.) Chk.ee>o (S,tVef ll·IJ •• Ntw Yoo (Cowle\I 9·4) &oslon (lloyd 11·91 ti Kanwa C11v ILtlbrandl 10·6) Stalllt ('(ouno 7 111 el Oakland tSunon 9·6) MelldtV'i G•me• Setlllt el A,,...., n Chicago el New York, n O.troll et Kanw1 Cllv. n Mlnoesota al Otll,.ncl, n N•tloMI LHgue W&ST DIVISION W L .. c;t. Ge ~ 60 •7 Sii ClnclM"I S4 4 S29 6 San DleQo SS 49 S29 6 ~SIOll 48 56 •62 13 Allente 4$ S7 441 lS Sen FretM:llCO 41 63 .394 20 EAST DfVIMOH Sl.l .. oub 61 40 ll04 New vor11. 60 42 see 1 •n MontrHI SI 46 SSI 4 '> OllceQo S4 41 S29 1 ., ~ •1 SS 461 U , Plllll>urlll'I 32 '9 317 30 SetvnllY'• Sew" Dedew'I 7 Clnc1n,,.lt 0 New York s. ClllclQO • 110 1nn1n11sl Monlr HI •• Ptl "l>ul'Oh S Sen FrencllCO 7, Alltnta S Houslon •. San Oleoo 3 PllltedllPlllt '-St LOUii • ( 10 'nnlf>Ql TedlY's Gemn Delller'I (Vtltlltutte 12-8) 11 C1nclnn111 (l!lrownl1111 9·1) Monrree l (Gullicicson 10-71 II P111,1>ur9n ( R lloden S· 121 San FrencltcO (Blue S·4l 11 Allenle (Perei l·I) Pl'llledelonle IGros1 10-1) •• SI LO\llS (Anduler l?-S) New Yon (Gooden 16·3) al Chicago tFonltnol •·S) S.n Dleoo <Dreveckv 1·6) •• HOu•lon (Scoll IO·Sl, n MMdlY's Gemn ~elAllenla,n New York t i Clllct QO MonlrMI 11 Pllht>urgh, n S.n Olevo 11 Clnctnn1tl. n PlllleOetonl• ti SI LOUIS. n Sen Frencl1eo el Hou"°" n AMERICAN LEA<;UE A,_s S, Twins 4 MINNESOTA CALIFOttNIA Puckelld RWlllln u Hrbtlt lb l!lrMikY r1 Enoiedl'I Get!llll> Leuoner c Teufel 21> ~If ttt rll tll eor "bl S 0 0 0 Carew It> 4 l I 0 S I 2 0 Btn•QUI cf ) I 0 0 2 7 2 2 Oownno 111 3 1 1 O • I I 0 OeCnc1 3t> 4 1 1 2 2 O 1 2 R.Jonti Ofl 3 1 1 2 • o o O Jackson r1 3 O o o • O 1 O Grlell 2t> 3 O 1 0 • 0 0 0 Pellll Of' 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 WlltOl\9?11 0 0 0 0 NarrOl'I c 3 0 0 0 Sclloflld Sl 2 0 0 0 Hndrell Ph 1 0 0 0 Gert>er u o o o a Jl 4 I 4 T...., 1' S S 4 ~bY'"'*'9t ~ 201 010 000-4 CallfenN 000 JOO 002-s One oul wllen wlnnrn11 run scored Geme Wlnnlne RBI -O.Clnces 111 E-ScllOfleld DP-Ml11neso1e 1, l.811· lornle 2 LOB-Mln,,.IOlt 7, Calltornle I 28-El\Qle, M41er, Oownlno HR-Hrbek tW. Jones (18). DeClncH (131 S&-Wu hl1111tn 141 I,. H R l'R 88 SO MlnneMtl 8 1vltvtn L.•·>2 8 1·) CelHw'rM Zehn I.Sanchez Hoffenc:I 4 1)1 4. 2 I 0 0 1130 0 0 Cliburn w.s 2 WP-Z.lln ' 0 0 0 T-2 36 A-40.1'0 3 I 1 0 Miiler 8enloue1 Jone\ JKksoo Sconlen Cartw Pelll• DeC•ntll Grich Boone Oownlr>U G-erl>ef Nerron Wllfonv Sdlofletd HendrlCIC Tet.I' Aft9lll •ver•ees BATTING A8 R H HR 2S S 9 O 294 37 .. s 247 47 69 II 1'7397'11 " 10 11 1 7643170 1 731 36 61 )01 36 76 l03 ., 75 219 21 11 316 " n 63 5 IS 100 9 73 117 11 JS 274 28 SI I 0 0 lAS7 444 15' f"f'TCHING I 13 s • 11 0 s • 1 0 " R81 ,.ct. 0 3'20 27 216 so 279 SI 167 6 266 21 26S 13 1S7 S2 2S7 30 , .. 32 246 ., 74' 3 ?JI 12 230 II 111 75 116 0 000 414 .241 ,,. H ee so W·L ERA CanOtlaria 0 0 0 0 0·0 0 00 Holland 14'> 0 1 ? O O 000 Moort 67 52 17 44 7·4 I 45 Cllt>urn 59~ 1 57 1• n S·7 7 II Zehn 7ll > 29 10 9 7-0 2 St Romen1c1< 146 1•7 4l •7 13 • l 07 Wiii 16S 1•2 '1 111 8·7 3 16 Corbell Wo"t 40 IS 19 'l 1 l93 Slaton 1 ln'l 122 S? 40 •·9 431 McCHkll 112~ 115 39 SS 1·1 09 Sencl>ez 3l , 40 17 11 1 O 6 '8 T M111l tl41 ) '10 :MJ 4J3 St· '4 :UO Sevn Moort 20 O t>urn 7 Cllmenrs NATIONAL LEA<;UE C>od9lf's 2. Reds 0 LOS ANGELES CINCINNATI Ouncenn Cel>ell ll> Bailor Jb L.Mldrx d Guerrero If MlclndOll l!lroek ID Merll'leM r1 SclolClt c S.11 lb Wttch P ltlrhlll llbrlllll • 0 0 0 Munt< Cl l 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 Ros. Ill 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Perktr rt 4 0 0 0 •OOO htl lt> 2000 4 I 1 1 E1ts11v If 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cncpen u 3 0 1 0 l O O O Onltr 21> 3 O O 0 J 0 I 0 811rdeto c 2 0 0 0 l 1 I 1 Vena~ Oii I O O O 3 0 1 0 VanGrdrc O 0 O O 7 0 0 0 Soro o 7 0 0 0 KrCllck i>" I 0 0 0 JO 2 4 t TMeh V 0 2 0 Sc-by tnninv. let..,...... 001 000 001-, CllldMall 000 000 000-0 Geme WlnnlM R81 -SClo~e (3) DP-Los AnoetH 1 L08-Los Anoelel l, Clnclnntll 3 78 Mer•h1M. Mltoar HR-SClo.cle (S). Guerrero t26l S-Wttcll tfl H R ER 81 SO LMAAe*I WetellW 7•1 t 0 0 ClftelnM• klo L 10 11 f T-2 07 A-ll.47' ~ LBAGU8 LE ADERS ~L-.W (T'llt'eWfl "'*Y"• 0Mntt) 8A TTIHG 1140 •• belt~son ~-York lSI &rtll l(aftt411 CllY, lSO 1oto1 loston .la Mullnlli•, Toronto m . lecv, ltlllfnOl't, .m, WMaUr, 0. rroo1. m ltUN~rson, N-York. " ltiOl>en. lallln\Ol'I', 7S WMaker. 0.lrOll 1' ~lor, Mllwevll" tt. l)tYI' Oaklencl, " Wlflfltld, Nt# Yori! 6' ltll-MtllllltlY, Ne;/ VClf'k , I) Muf'r,y lattlf'llOrt, to, •lltktn. teillf'l'IOl'e, 71 Fk.11. Cl\laf0.6' ..... Toronto.tf Hltt-aoet\, iao.ton 119, Wlllleller O.ttOlt. 1'6. WllJOll, KtnN• Cllv '"· ~ell T«onlo ltS Mtltlnvtv, N-York. 17' OOUl!ILE$-Mtll1ll(jly, ~ Yor ... ». lklOner, lolron. lO ~. klton. It We tr, ClllcffO, U. COOHf'. M t\111 ... 24. GHlll, Minftftole 74, Otvli. 0.-lend 24. TRIF'l.E~Wll.on. Kel\Mt Cllv. I), P\i( ...... Mllfietole, 10, lull« c~~. t COOtltf. MUweUllH. I lredlev. Sfflllt, 6 HOME RUNs-Fllk ChlCae>o. n. 1.h11maa. s..1111. 23. Preu.v,, S..llle, 2l -Evans, O.lroll, 21. ICl~n. Oakland. tt. STOt.EN l!IASEs--Henoenon. New York, •· llutler, Clevettnd, ll, ""'*' Anelh. )I/ Wilson. IC.•n•H CllY, JI, Colfl111, Oakltlld. 2S, Gercle, T oronro, ?S, Mot.et>v. Toronro, 2S. PITCHING II decl1lon1)-l!llfl1a1, Olk· lend, 7·2. 3.29, Guldf'v, N-Yori\., ll·• • 3 09, It~. AM'h. 13·•• 1.02' S.t>t<~. KtnsH Cllv. 11·5, 2 IS. Cow 1ty, New York. t·•· 3 ... Howell, 0.klancl, "'· 199, Kev. Toronto. •·•· 2 69 STRllCEOOTS-81vleven. Clevelend, 12'. Morris, Oelroll, 126, l!lurna, Chlc;ellO. 119, 8en111s1er, Chic~. 119, Witt, A!t91b. 111. SAVE$~1ltflbe<rv, Ktnws Cltv, 24, HKnencteJ, Oelrolr. 21. Howwll, O.klencl. 21. ~. Antets. 201 Ri911t111, New York, II N•tloMI LMtue rn'""'"' Fr1c1tY'• GwMtl BATTING (240 el l>els)-McGee St LOUIS :MO, c;_,...,., Ded91n, .)111 Herr St Lour,, 31'. Gwvnn. Sen OleOO 303. Parker. Clnclnnetl, 291 RUNS-Munlhv Alltnle 13, Colemen. $1 LOUIS 7• Gutf"N1'41, Dedefn, 1JJ Reines. MOntrtal 71 Sanc:toer11 Chicago, " RBI-Clerk SI Loul•, 7', M>Jronv Atlante. "· Herr. SI LOUIS 7S. Perkef, Clncl~ll. 7S. W1tton. P"1"°8lclhle 66. ' HITs-McGH. $1 Loul1. 12.S, Gwvnn. San DitllO. 172. Herr. SI LOUii. 119, Pert.er Clncln,,.11. 117, Gervev. San OleQo, 114, Murr>nv. Al,.nla, 114 • OOU8LES-Wellech. Monlrtal, 11, Gwvnn. San Dleoo 23. Her,,.n<ler, New York. 13. Herr SI Louil, 23, Clerk SI Louis, 23. TRIPLES,-McGff, St Loul1, 12. Cot· emen, Sl Loul1, ~ Reines. Monlrtel. I, Samuel. Pnlledelpnla, 8 Gled<Mn. San Francisco, 6 HOME RUNS-Mure>hv Allenla, 27, Guen'.,., Dodean. 2S1 Horner. Alltnla, 20. Cl11r11., SI Louis, 20, Parker, Cinclnn11I, It STOLEN BASES--Cotem.n, $1 Lours, 14, L09fl Chicago •1. McGee. SI LOUii. 41, Redus. Clnctnnell, 39 Reines MonlrHI, 31 PITCHING te dK•SIOn,>-Frenco Cln· clnnall, 9· 1, 2 19 GOO<ltll. New York, 16-l. 1 6S. Hewluns S..n DleQo l'Z• 1 '2 HtrVllMr, Qode9n, 12·l, 1.42; AnOuier, SI Louis. 11·.S. :L4'. STRIKEOUTs-<iooden. N•w Vork 173 Solo, Clnc.lnnall, 149, Rva11. Hou1lon • 146. Velenlue&I, Oeclelr•. 1•1 Deleon Po IU>u<lll\, 116. SA.VE5-flearoon. Monrreal 26 Smllh. C1"ceoo. 73. Go118Qt. Sar1 Oiego. 71 Power. Clnclnnan. 11 Sullet Atler1la 17 Chrondo9v of strike A cllrotl010ov of 1119oll111ons Dttween metor leeQUe t>e..0.11 e>leVtr\ 1nd owners on e 11tw cottl!cllve 1>arg11inln11 a11reemtf'll Jutv 31, 1911 -Alter 11 M!Ytn·wffk slri~t. MObllelors tor melOI lffllut t>a$el>e~ Plaven &DO owners work out a new 8ulc Agrtemefll Tile e1reemen1 is rt&C'hed dUrlno a 12·1\our meeting lnvotvlflQ execurlve dlrtcior Marvin Miller er>d gen eral couni.el Don Fehr ot 1118 Merot LHllut Plevers Auoclerlon._ Rev Grtbev. dlreclor of ll'le ow11trs' Playtr Relallons Commllltt end Lee MacPehll. Of'e1ldent of the Amert· c;an League. A1>111Jil 1911 -Plavtrs and owner\ retlfy the new e11reemtnl, which wlll IHI 11irouon Dec 31, 1914 Nov u. 1914 -NeQOtlalor• for P111ver\ and owner\ llOld ll'lelr first 1>ar11eln1nQ seulon on a new conlrecl MtcPllell rec>taceo ~•l>eY IS heed of the PRC, While Fehr has t>eCOme 1<tl1111 uecutl11e dlreclor of rne union Miiter l\H rellreci, t>ut Is worklllll IS consuttenl to Ille union Dec s. "" -Mac;Plleil c:elk lht !Qvers~ lMmlJllCI for onrttilro ot l>ntCett'• ll•·veer, s 1. 1 t>ilhon net ... ork leltvlslon oeci..age for ll>eir pension fund the "moil trout>lesome" 1uue 1n tht nt90llallons MacPllell etso 1nCl1Calts lhel Ille two •lcles wer.1 10 llllvt a new 1grttmenl l>Y Ille 1t1r1 of sPl'lno 1raln•no nor neo1wrllY t>v ll'lt Dec 31 exe>irallon oere Deceml>e1' 1914 -Hou11on Altro• ownet Jonn McMu•ien san t>ese«>aM Is fecin11 ser IOU\ financial Of'Ol>lems Ht etso sevs Plaver' ere ruled t>v Fehr encl Mlllef Jen 2S, 191S -Tiit Los Anoe4t>s Oodoers Clelett 1 con1roven 1al dnxi·1e1111111 clause trom Mike Mersllall'• con1rec1 The lnue of m11n0e1orv dru11 1ei11no, ooe>ose<J t>v 1"4 union, crHled a OW.Ult el • lime wnen no oe~nlno session• were l'ltld Jen. 29 -Neoollaton lor owners and PlaYtri egrN 10 liar manclatorv drUQ· tttllno < • Fet> 1 -Tile two 1ldtl Ml Fell 19 es e 1arge1 0e1e IOf \ut>mllllno dtlelleo tHtrgeln· lnQ Of'OPOHIS Ftt> 27 -Tile PRC CllH l>asel>l ll'S "oreve economic conctf'ni" Feotrel law re<iulrH the owners 10 prove ll'lelr slelt· men!\, end Uet>errolh 58VS ne wlll order ownen to oe>en their flnancl•I t>ook• 10 1"4 union Fell 28 -MecPll•ll MIVI lht owners will ooen inelr l>ooks Marc;h 21 -Owners P<'Ol>OW eapenCllno the 1t111ut cham1>1on1hlp Plevoth from t>H•·of·Ovt 10 l>flt·of·wvtn Ae>rit l -Aoreemen1 11 reeelled 10 UPanCI "" Pltvoth IO l>esl·of·'8vln The ex1r11 st m1111on 1n 1e1evts1011 rtvenue for two more gemes ·• PUI 1n10 en e1erow eccounl unfit lht \l<lei dtetde llow lo tlllll the monev Mav 13 -Tile PRC HkS for I lrHH on Plaver t>tneflls seltrle• encl pen1lons •' 191S lcvtl• Tl'lt union rtltCtl Ille Of'OPOWI Mtv 16 -MacPllall sen be'9t>IM ICKI U6 minion in 1914, t>aM<I on flne~lal 1niorme11011 from 24 ltam• Houlton encl M1nnew1a are ncluded May 72 -The necullvt t>oerd ot '"e unlOll eutt>or•ze• • i,trlke Tiit 26 Item• ere Hked to lake Slrikt 1utt>orl1111on VOIH Mav 31 -Tiie union hinls lhel Plavers mev t>ovcotl lhf! All·Sler C.eme If neoo· 11ellons do not Pl'OCMd sw11t1v June 17 -The MO!'treel Elll>OI end Plll•burgh Plrt11$ Heh VOit IO give •lrlke 1utl'IOrl111tlon All 26 1eam1 lollow 'ull JUIY 9 -Geor11t Sorltr, • New York Unlveri.Jtv e>roleuor hired t>v lbe ownen to review llnanclel lniormellon from ell 26 reams, savs owners mev havt IOsl SV mllllo11. not 11'18 $43 mllllon llltv cltlmed, In 1914 July IS -Executive t>oerd ol Ille union lofls lht AuQ 6 strlkt detdllne Julv 18 -ROOtf' Noll, a StenfOfd Unlver11tv 11<ottssor hlfed Dy Ille unlOll 10 review lhl owner1· llntnclel lnfOf'metlOll, uivs t>awt>ell IS "cerlelntv not • •POf'1 In rrout>le" encl sen owner• mev have made H much •• SlO mllllon In 1914 Julv 22 -Thi PRC revlaes Its Of'oiecltd iot~ t>¥ 1• trom s ISS mlWlon down 10 186 m1111on Jutv 73 -Mac:Pbell MIVS nt90lltll"9 mev "oo oown lo Ille IHI COUPie of days t>efore the slrlkt deadline Ftllr ltYt MecPllall 'I• P<'~l>IV r'9ht JUIV 26 -The lwo 1ld8' rteeh •Qr"· menl on 22 "m.nor luun mosllv non ~ onei. re1111no 10 • new c011tr1c1 ueoetroth MIYI "I 1usl rtallv cen'l ellOw 11111'1 to lie 11 strike· encl edch lie wrn tekt tPPt'oe>rlete ecnon 1owerd en e greement Julv 29 -Tht 1wo ••dtl rtedl ltnletlvt u111eme111 on lht 20 remalnlno "ml,_. 1uuH cleenng lht wev lor t>eru lnlno on the m110< POlnls Julv 30 -Tllfl owntfs Of'OOOM lncrtes- 1no tl>elr 1nnue1 COfltrll>ullon 10 the Cllever•' pension olen trom '15 S mllllon 10 ,75 mlllloo, en 11moun1 11111 would lie lied to esca11111,,11 PllYe<' 1tlertn Tiie owneh MY thet 10 reach a l>tHk·tven oolnl l>Y I"' e>laver 1tlerte• c11nno1 lncrtHt mort lllan s 13 m1lllon etch veer For tverv ~1 ml"loo over '11 million 1he1 selerltl lncttese. '1 million would lie oeoucttd lrom the US mllllO<i conlrll>Yllon Fehr. whO ""' Ille PRIYtf'I stilt want S60 mlltlOll •nnutllY, ~11• ,,,. PrOOOHI "cr11v ' Jutv l 1 -Ft"r torm11tv relecli Ille ownera Pfoc>o1tl No turt~ mtellllOI belWffl' Ille PRC and Iha Clll'ftrt' unloll .,. schl'dultd AU9 1 U•l>trrolh offtfS -·' oroc>o1t•\ " II" l'ttOf't •o tncl Ille d1U1Ult octud1!111 M!ll•l\9 MIOI Ill .. A~ 6 •lrlke dtedlont #fl•lt neoo111tl0nl conllnue Aull 1 -Tr.t •-·mernl>ef PltC ex· e<:uhv• t>oerd Is called 10 N..., York 10 t><>Q•n ••v•-·"9 Uebetrol" 1 P<OPOl•~ , ... WUT COAST UAGUR TOURN•Y lat UC lfWW) S.tllr*IV'• Sctns Wllwlef"s lreutt A"enelm A., 10. South COHI Metf01 • H-1 Ea11 10 F'1111e1"1on ~""'' 0 TldlY't G- LtMr's ~ell" • • m -Fu-ton Horlltl• v\ Onltf .. PlliU!H 12 ;IO Om -r:tfll Hmt Willfllf' Vi Tri• CllY ltonts Hall"of Fame inductees Added Saturday to the Pro Football Hall of Fame were from left: Frank Oat.Id, Joe Namath, Pete Rozelle, O.J. SlmJJ90n and Roger Staabacb. Los Alamltos SATURDAY'S RESULTS cnno tf ti ·NtM ..,.....,..,... mMtlfle) • FIRST RA(,,E. 350 v•rd~ Fl11111 Of Fetfllon ICrcttl 14 20 Sassem P .. IOlderlc:kwnl Tl,,. 09ni'8 (Muflekll Tu·ne 1100 Sl EXACT A 16·., oalo ~-'° SECOND RACE. 350 vards. Wlnclv lllew ( Leckev l 3 60 GOOd N F•rnou• (Mufield) Queen Cltv IEOWerd$) Time 1800. $2 I XACTA (4·6) 1>1ld S17.IO THIRD RACE. '70 veros KIP Deluxe IWllll•m•> r.l6o lllctorv Hand CH Garcia) Ruueh ROUQhneck (Mutlek:ll Time 4636. FOURTH RACE. 400 varos Ou9hl1do (Mvle•l 13 40 Produ<.er (Wlm1ms) Souno N Furv (Cerooial Time 20.30 n EXACT A t7·3l otld SS2 00 FIFTH RACE. 350 verds. SP!'lllQ APOllO (L.wtsl IUO Nunnerv (Pauline) Pert1C1 LOOk IDlderlek .. n) Time 11.23 u EXACTA (,.11 otld sn.oo SIXTH RACE. 400 vero~ SWIM Piss tOIOe<lclo.wnl 360 Ml.ld<IV Rae>lds tBrooll.$1 Tll>OV Jel (Maxfleld) Time 20.AO S1 EXACT A (4·9) 1>810 "° 60 SEVENTH RACE. 350 veros uo soo S.IO 410 360 2 60 2.20 310 340 300 940 SIO S.40 4 20 900 S.00 4 40 4.20 4.00 6.00 1.60 4 20 u o 370 uo 2IO UO 11 40 6.00 2.10 Cul N Run (l!lerdl 100 l.40 7 40 L•" Ari tBrOOk•l l 00 2 60 Snow Htre (Arm11rOl'l9l 3 00 Time 11.11 U IXACTA 16·9) Paid 516.40 e!G-HTH RACE. JSO v11rd1. Bend Of Dice I Hartl 6 00 $1 Wlllt (Ward) 01.n II (Treuure) Time: 17.st. . n IXACTA t1·2l paid S17.IO. 3.60 2.60 3.20 2.iO 2.60 n .. ICI( SIX (4·7-9-4-6-1) oald Sl.20420 10 24 wlnnlno llckels (five hOl'.es). Car· rvover PQOl· 128.903 29. NINTH RACE. 400 vard1 Prluy Fein (Cretgerl l .20 Win APOiio I Bard) Ellee>o• E11Pl'HS (TrHsure) Time 19.73 , '2 llXACTA tS· 11 Ptld S17 00 TENTH RACE. 870 vardi. Roger Youno IDrcksnl 6.00 Welk On Air tS.vllltl Sha ke Em Loo'8 tCemPl>etll Time 4599 U EX.ACTA (7·41 paid SlUO Allenoence 1l,72S l.00 3 00 620 S40 540 3.40 2 '° 3.00 2.20 2 60 Del Mar SATURDAY'S RESULTS I lotll ef 4l·dlY ~ IMdne) FIRST RAU. 6'h turlono~ Mv Merv M IOl1ve rn> 4140 u 00 S 60 Harver-IMV•l 400 260 l!I ln11lnclble <Pinc.av) 3 00 Time I II l !S SECOND RACE. 6 lur!Orlll\ GOOd F111I"' (Sit>lllel 16 00 I 00 ~ 60 WooO• L•k• IGercial 1020 660 Maso BIUe IMeze> uo Time 110 2/S n DAIL y DOUBl.E (3· 10) paid $540 00 THltlD RACE. One mflt. Kinde Be1u IStevensl 4.iO 3.20 2 IO Rtlecled Love (Metal 6.20 U O Rec1t1tu Miu (Ollvern) 6.40 Time: 1;37 4/S. U SXACTa TJ·'TT'156ia S13S30-- FOURTH RACI!. 6 turl0n91. Kin Vour Sister (Plncav) 3.IO Time For • Siem (llelenzuete) CH" Cow (Stevens) Time 111 P'lf"TH RACE. l' e miles 3.~ 2.60 840 S60 S.20 Nonno IMcH1r11utl 11.20 S.IO • 00 A11ulle (lltltnzuelel IU O 7.20 APOiio Fllghl f Plnc.evl 3 IO Time 148 4/S SS I XACTA 11·3) paid 'S41 SO SIXTH RACE. 6 l1.1tlonQ1 Doon1POl't tV•leflruele) 3160 10 40 00 Cllarlle Beu (Soll•) 3 40 2 60 Prtu On (Pinc.av> 2.IO Time 112 1/S SEVENTH RACE. 1 1116 mllti Lllllt Ml110Vrl IDth\Yl 10 40 6 00 UO Sllcktfl• (Stevens) t.IO S IO Fl.cel Win ISll>lllel 6 60 Time 1 '2 1/S SS llXACTA (l ·7) paid Sll7.00 s1 Jll'tCK SIX t 10-1· 12· 1·9·3) paid 563 t7S 00 to 1lx wlnntne llcitelt (ti• l\Ot'MI) S2 Pick SIX COllM>lt llon paid SM 60 lo 212 wlnntne rlct.eli (five horM5l EIGHTH RAC&. 6 fur101191 Mv Fvrl Momeni (Dt"•vl 4160 1280 640 Rotle's KT (Vei.nzu.iel t.00 4 20 Ft11y Six tne !tow (Ptnc•vl 2 IO Time 1:09 4/S NINTH RACE. 1 lurtonoi. Privet• Ju1111le (Vlnrl) 6 20 Leeoue Hllter (Plncev> LudLy ·n Gr.-(~lredel Time 1:.21 "S. • oo no • 00 4.00 7 40 U a XACTA 112·11) Ptld '51 SO " DAIL y DOU•L• (6 1') oe ld $14S 20 AlltMllllCI 1',079 o.. .... ft ....... NI Wll'OtlT LAMOIMO (MewHf't leedll -263 .,_....~ 14S llerrtKllde, ll DOntto l. 11 v.nowtell. "' Ot». 1tS "'-Clttr111. I wflllt Mt "'' DAVIY'S LOCKU (........, leedtl -162 .a,,.itft lOI Miid btH, 111 bit• r \iod41, 7 vtlOwttn, I bolllto. I NllW, 12 rOC11 flSl'I, 47'f INUtrll Westwn 0.-n (et Oetl -.... a ) e ·Scoll VtrCllellk 61·61·6.,_205 Jl~horPe 7S-66-6tr-207 e'tuct Lietzke 14·70-,._212 Cortv Pevln 7.S-67·70-212 Scott s1ml>$Oll n-10-10-212 Gerv KOCll 76·61·6..-213 Tim S1mPton 73·70•71>-213 Craig SI.Oler 71·71·71-213 JoOle Mudd 74·69·71-21• Sieve l!lowmen 75·61·71-114 BIH 1Crel1erl 74·74·67-21.S Kan GrHll n-n·71-21S Danny Edwerd• 69·74·n-21s P11er JecoO~ n -71·72-115 Save l!lelleileros 75·61·72-21S Jim Colt>erl 12•74·71>-216 Andv Nonh 71·74·71-216 • Lennie Clemtnh 71·72·7)-216 Dave Serr 74·67·7S-216 Howard Twlllv 1S·73·6~17 Larrv Nelson 7S·72·7C>-217 Dan Pohl 11·76·71>-217 Hut>ert Gteen 7S·n·71>-217 Ktn 8rown 74·72·71-217 Din Hel\Oorson 13·73-71-211 Booov Clampett 73•73·71-211 Larry Mize 71·73·13-211 Mlk• Donald n-n-n-'111 Steve Pere 73·71·71-211 Ern1t Gonzelez 6t·13·7S-211 Wiiiie Wood 7'3·70-n -217 Joev Sif\Oe4ar 7 S-73· 71>-211 S1t111 Jones 72·67·7t-211 Victor RtQtlaOO 74·14·71>-211 Mike N~111 n -76·71-219 Merk Ptell 70-76·13-219 Jim Simons 70-76-7>-219 Retllh L.ell<lf'um 74-n -73-219 Keith Ftf'PIJ\ 7l·72·7.,._219 Ron Streck 72·73·74-219 LOftn RObtf"lt 74·70-7S-219 8ot> GllOer 75-n· 7>-220 Berrv JHCkel 76·70-74-220 Ronnie &leek 72·73·7S-220 l!lol>Murllhv n-n-1.-220 Ruu COCNe n 75·69·76-220 O.A Welbrlng 7•·74·1'>-221 c11r11 Perrt n-1s-n-221 Ed Flori 7'·1•·n-221 Sco11 Hoell 1s-n-1t-221 Tom Kiie 72·75·74-221 Lenee Teti Broeck 70-76·7S-221 Wtvne Gradv 14·72·7S-221 Pal LlndMY 73·73·7S-221 J.C. Sneed 74·71-76-221 Dave Oorln 69·76·76-221 Nick Price 73·70-71-nt Jad Nicklaus 76·12·74-m Frenk Conner 12·16·74-222 8111 Crenshaw n·16·14-m JOh'n COOll 74·7l·7S-722 Rov 81a ncelene n-n-n-722 l!luddv Gtrdner 73·72·n-m &ot>«>v Wadkins 13.71.,._m 8o1> LOflr 73·71-1'1-722 Nick FelOo n -7HS-223 Clarence Ro'8 7S·73·7S-223 Jey 0etsl1111 76-n·7S-223 ICennv Kno11 74·6t·IC>-223 TOiiy SIHi 7S·73·76-?24 Tom Welson 7•-n ·,._224 ROC>ert Wrenn 73·73·79-22S Mick Soll 73·73·1<>-226 Mark Lv• n-76·~7 Mike l!larnl>lell ?1· 7S·IC>-277 AndY 8een 72·16·1C>-22t lven Smith 77·7.S-11-721 -•me1eor LPGA Toe.cto O.u lc Nancv L-1 14-11·71>-211 Lauren Howe 70·n·69-211 KelhY Wllllworl" 73-69·71>-212 Lori Gert>acz 77·72·61-212 Pennv Hemme4 n-69·72-213 COiieen Wtlker 70·70·73-213 Clndv Hitt ~ 13·70·71-214 Lsun l'"wtwnOn n -11-7...-214 l.1ure 81u11l'I 72·72·71-71S Jen SttOlltn'on 74·7HC>-215 Vel Sklnntf' 73·61·74-215 Sherri Turner 72·73·71-216 Kelhv Hit• 73·75·6'-?16 Dlenne Delley 1HS·71>-216 Merci 8o11rlh 72·70·74-216 Patlv ShMllen 76·71·~717 Htelller Drtw 13·76-..-211 Pt llY H'Ytl 77·7•·11-211 Sendre P11mer 17·70·7S-2l7 Jenel COIH 7.S-71·71-211 cnerv1 S•ecv n -n -1>-211 Robin W•lton 71·74-67-219 Vldtl Fwoon 74·74·7?-710 a.ckv Pterson 7S·73·7?-210 Oebor•h Sklnnet 1.s-n-n-120 Deedee Lesker 11·76·13-720 Caroline Gow•a 7•· 12· 1-no NanCY Screnton 7•-72·71-221 LeAM CHWdn 71·74·6t-221 ClnclY FIQQ 75·71·..-nl susen SanOers 13·7•-1-221 Marlene Heooe 13·7rn-221 8-rt>are Mo•llt'lt 72·16·1>-221 Altundre Rtlnl'l•rdl 71=73·71>-221 J ene Lock 76-71·7-221 CerOlvn Hiii 74·n ·7t--m D•1t E9"iln11 n-11-n-m l!lelh SOiomon 7S•76·11-m Jlf'llvn 8rll1 n -n-n-m Lvnn Slronev 76·73·7>-m Keren Perme11t n-n·n-m eevertv Kleu 73 n 73-213 LvM Adems 74·71·7t-113 Julie Pvne 7S 1S·7r-21l l!lart>re Mlzretllt 79·11·7>-173 Mlndv Moort 7l· 76·74-nl ceuw Mant n -n -1.-m B•rber• Pender91\I 73-71·12-nl Nencv Wtlff .. l!lrewer 76-n·7.....n4 Mtule McG_.oe 77·7J·7.-tt4 C1lh'I' ltlVllOICls 7S· 76-7>-H4 C•tlly MorM 76·1S·13-tt4 S.11<1re $ourlc" 1s-n·n-n• Mtrlef!e 1=10vd 11 1S·12-n• o.anle wooo 11-1s-n-ns 00nnt Wlllte 71-12 7S-225 Merv 0.1.0<'IO 1S 7'3 n-n~ ........ (al kr ......... , Ml ........ " JOMllY Ct411"' IClllCttOI 1(0'0 Merl Holmel IPMad•loNel •• tti ol ""lKOl>CI rovnd IO win 11eu111 Unlltcl St•lft eo•lnt Auocltllon llllt COIUll& ,, J>-1-1 Wllll " ltnocllout1, Holmu 11 32 ·1. Soorts F.-1'¥11 (at a.• R-.e, La.I Wiit.STUNG 220 POUnds -Oen Severn (~.a. Arlt.I o.t Pl'lh Lenzete41e (Roehnter. NY) Sellffn wtM OOIO medal wllen Rnel·round oooonenl, Jamn JOMson (LHIM!on. Kvl wllhOrtW wit" lnlurY ICE HOCkl!Y EHi 4, Soulll l Wt1I S, Norlh 3 FIELD HOCKEY Eut 3, South 2 (EHi wins qold medal) DUET SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING I, Laura Fowler (Stnlt Clare)-Rulll Welnt>erQ (Mercer Ii.lend, Weill J, 17US Points. ROLLER SKATING 1. Skip Cllnton (Ntwerk, Del.I KAYAKING Min 1,000·rneler •lnQIH -1 Greo Berton (Homer, Mic.II.) 1,000-rneter OOut>te5 -1 T errv Wllllt (Peru. VU. Terry Kenl (Roc:llester, Vt) 1,000-metw foun -1. Terrv White (Peru, VI.), Terry Kent (Rodlester, VI.), Grev Berton (Homer, Mich), Norman B~l!l9tlem (Roct"'llle, Md ) w-Sinolfl -1. Lntle Klein tLexlnQIOll. Kv) Ooul>le5 -l LHU• Klein (Le1llno1on, l{y ), Tllerew Heuo111 (Crownsvflle, Md.) CANOEING Mell 1,000-meter 1ll\Q1M -1 l!ln1ee Merrill (Rl(loe, Md.I 1,000-rnettf' doul>les -I Bruce Merritt IRl<loe. Md l, l!larrv Merritt IRIOoe, Md) GYMHASTICS Men Perallel liars -1 Brien 8t t>cod( (Gerden City, Ken.); Horlzonit l bers -1 Brien &lbcock (Gerden City, IC111.), Pom- met horse -1 8 rlen Bet>cocll. (Garden City, t(an.); FIOOr uerclw -1 l!llttv Peut (MllttwH , Cal.), 1. Va ult -8111\1 Peut (Mllbr'ee, C1I.) WllGHTLll"TING ll1.7S l>OUnd d en -1 Arn Krlrskv (Vienna, Vt.I. 611 POUnds; 302 s POUnc:IS In snelcll and 379.Si PC>Unds In cteen and ltrk 16S POUnd clan -1. MlcllHl JKQutl (Werner Robin•, G• ) • 632.S POUndS 1•7 POUnCIS -1 S1e11e Gembon (GelnesvlU.. G•.), sss.s POUnds SOCCER WWMll EHi 4, North 2 (EHi win' QOIO medal) WHI 2. South I IWesl wins t>ronze me<lel). Davtt Cup QUAltTH .. INALS <e t ~ Wnt Germenvl Wnt GennenV 2. Unt'9d Ste'" 1 De4Mel Rot>erl StOuto·Ken Fleel'I (U.S.) def Boris Beckw·Anc:lrte• Meurtr (WHI Ger· rnanvl. 6·t , 6-1. 6• I, 4-6. 7·S (et Gueyaqul, Ecuedlr) CiedHllN¥•1tll J, lcuedlr o --~~~~-~ lven LendJ·TomH Smid ICJectlOSIO- vakle) def. RlclrdO Yceta·Mertln A11ulrr1 (Ecuador), 7·S, •·•. 6·4. (It ~. lftdle) SwMll!J, lndllO '**" Ander1 Jerrvd·Sltf•n Edt>erg (Sweden) def lllla v·Anand Amrltrel. tHt, 7·6, 6·l , 6·4. (It S'(dllrt, Av•" ... ) hre ... y 2. Au•" ... 1 D4llllllM ... Victor Pecct·Frenclsco Gon1eler (Pere· 11uavl o.f. Peul McNemte·Mtrk Ed· mond$Oll (Au,trelle), 6-3. I· 10. 6·i . 1-6, 6·3 l"HLMNARY !!~MOS Remlftle ), I-0 0.-... Ftorln Seoerceenu·Andrew Olnu IRomanle) o.f Tertlt At Set.ke·Allmlld El MeMrm" tco~PO. ,.,, ,_,, t·1, 6·3. (81 ••• ....,,.. ............ ...... J, SwtmrtlMI I ~ Johll LIOYO·Colln Oowdliwetl (Enoltnd) def Helnr Guentllardl·JekoO Hle\111 ($wll11f1tncll, 7·!, 3-6, 4-6, •». 6•2 SMlltS Jeremv 1!11ln (Enotlln<I) def Gut11tllerdt tSwllterlenc:I). 6-0, 6-3, 2·6, 6· I (tt HINW'e. Av11N) IVMI 2. Av1"11 1 ~ Sheller Perktu ·SNomo Gllcktleln (11· rttll def. Peter F'tloh~IU•ndtr Antonltsch t Auslrle). 7 S. 1 S, 1·6 """"' Gllekattln UwetO def. l lf'nllard Pita (Austria >, 7•f, 6•4, t·6, 6•4, 6·1 CCOl'llPlltloll ot Friday'' metd't). W'"*"•~ d 1t --. ... a.di) ~SMeltt Cleudle KOfl<ll-Kllldl (Wt" GtfiNllYI def Clf1lne 9t~t IC•lltdl>. 6•4, 6-4, Pam SNIYtf (U S ) def %14\t GerrllOft IUS!.16, N , Doubles win keeps u.s. alive Bu est Germans still cling to 2 -1 leadinDciVTsCup HAMBURG, West Germany (AP) -Robert Segu~ an~ K~n Flach kel?t the United States ahve 1n the Davis C'up tennis quarterfinals Saturday, outduelina 1hc West Genna'.' doubl~s tea m of Wimbledon champion Bons Becker and Andreas Maurer. 6-2, 6-8. 6-1. 4-6, 7-5. f The Germans sttll led the best-o • five sencs 2-1 after sweeping the Americans in singles on Friday. Left for today arc the reverse single~ 1n which Becker takes on Aaron Rricks- tei n and HansJOCr& Schwaicr faces Eliot Teltschcr. The United States would have been eliminated if Seguso and Flach, tea mmates at Southern lllinois. had lost the rain-plasued match. ·•w e believe in ourselves. We have a shot at winning this thing!" Flach said jubilantly. The winJling squad advances to the semifinal in ~tober agai'nst Czecho- slovakia. which took an unbeatable 3-0 ad vantage over Ecuador Saturday in Guayaquil as Ivan Lcndl and Tomas Smid beat R.iCardo Ycazaand Martin Aguirre, 7~. 6-4, 6-4. Americans John McEnroe. ranked No. I, and Jimmy Connors. No. 4. decided to skip the Davis Cup this year after refusi ng to sign a good behavior pledge required by the United States Tennis Association. At the Rothenbaum Tennis Club 1n Hamb~ many of the 11,000 chccr- mg, whistling fans assumed the Germans would win when they took a 4-3 lead in the fifth set. But the tough, aggressive play of Segu~ and Flach stunned the crowdz and the collegians prevailed 7-5 by orcaking MaW"Cr's serve. "I thought we could win, but we lost," said Becker, who last month became the youngest Wimbledon championeveratagc 17. Hewascalm and insisted that be n.evcrgot nervous during the tight match. The start of the match was delayed by rain, and Scguso and Aach, ranked No. 4 and No. 5 in the world, respectively, in doubles, led the third set 1-0 when another downpour forced a dela_y of an hour and 20 minutes. -' KilsCh, Shriver in finals ~ MANHAITAN BEACH (AP) - Fifth«:eded O audia Kohde-Kilsch of West Germany defea ted Car.ling Bassett of Canada, 6-4. 6-4 in a semif'inaJ match at the Virginia Slims of Los Angeles women's tennis tour- nament. With the victory. Kohde-Ki lsch advances into today s finaJ, where she will meet second-seeded Pam Shriver ofLutherville, Md., who defeated No. 4 seed Zina Garrison. 7-6 (7-2). 6-4 in the second semifinal Saturday night. The winner of today's fin al will earn $40.000, while the runnerup will take home $20,000. After splitting first six games of the match, Kohdc-Kilsch broke Bassett's service in the seventh game. and then served out the set. The West German won set pomt with an ace, her third of the last game and fourth of the first set. Kohde-Kilsch gained control early m the second set, breaking Bassett in the third and fifth game to take a commanding 4-1 lead. The Canadian, however, rallied to take the next three games, breaking Kohde-Kilsch's serve twice, and squared the second set 4-4. In-the-ninth game of the second set, Kohde·Kilsch broke Bassett again after the game went to deuce twice. She then served out the match. In the second semifinal. Shri ver broke Garrison's service in the eighth game, but Garrison rcwmed the favor in the next game at\d both held serve the rest of the set. setting up the tiebreaker. Shriver jumped to a 3-0 lead in the first-set tiebreaker. but gave up two straight points while scrvin~ She then rattled off the next four pomts to wt n the opening set, the last two comma on an ace and a service leader. The two ttadcd btuk:s in the third and fourth game of the second set. Shriver broke Garrison's serve in the seventh game and then served out the match. Tearful Namath accepts honor CANTON. Ohio (AP) -An emo- tional Joe Namath dropl)Cd his "Broadwal' Joe" image for 1 few moments Saturday and had to fiaht back tears durina his induction into 1he Pro Football Hall of Fame. Namath, inducted alona with one of the most illu trious classes ao Ha.II of Fame history, peuscd to compox h.amstlf as he thanked his college coach, the late Paul "Bear .. Bryant of Ala bama ··coach Bryant and Mrs. B11,1:nt. wbcn:vtr )OU are, we miss you..' the former New York Jcu' quartnback said wt1h a ca h in h1s voice. Entering the Hall wi th Namaah we.re f o..ner DaJlas Cowboys qu.u- terbeck R r taubach, Buffalo Bill and n Franctsco 49crs nu\n1n1 back 0.J. impson, Cleveland ero-n and Detroit Uons JU8rd Frank Oatsti and current National FootbtU u aau Commi ioner Pete Rozelle. _.,,... ___ _ • Accounting flrni names new marketing manager 0 Car~ J. South has been named marlcetina manaacr for the ranje oun~y office of the aocountina and consultina finn of Delo1tt~ Haskins & Sells. The Irvine resident will be responsible for mfliar.ket~na as well as coordinatina public relations. and community a 11rs 1or the compa!ly's Costa Mesa office. Sout~ was J?res1dent of South Associates, a Newport Beach ·community re!at1ons consulting firm . Sbc was the first woman to serve as president of tbe Newport Harbor Arca Chamber of Commerce. Soutb also is president of the Volunteer Center of South O~nge County ~nd was ~ founding bQard director of People for an lt'Vine Community Hospital. -· • • • Jolla ~yu ba~ been ~ppointed president and Brace F. RJcli has been appomted reaionaJ director ofMcCartlty construction company SOUTH FLYNN RICH of Newport ~ch. Both men come t9 the Newport Beach branch fr<;>m the fJrm sco~rate headquarters in St. Louis. Flynn isa Laguna Niguel resident, Rich as resident of Tustin. • • • Gary Watta has Joined Gnbb • EW1 ReaJdential Broken e Services ~s saJes manager for the Saddleback Valley office in ~e Laguna H1Us. The real estate economist is former broker/owner of lDcle~~t IDveatm!Dt Systems and a lecturer, author and a~ued instructor ~th the Departmeat of Real Estate. Grubb and Elhs recently honored its top producers for tbe fourth quarter of 1984 and the first quarter of 1985. Among the honorees were: Glen Fl~ ... o(Laguna ~ch for both quarters; Rod Daley of Newport Beach for his efforts in the final quarter; and Barbara Aane for Newport Beach, Lorrallle P. Reyes for Irvine and Gilda Fl1lier for Saddleback Valley, all f.or the first quarter. Fishbach was also named top. producer in the ~acific Southwest R_egon for the first quarter, while several people tied for most transacuon honors: Irvine's Reyes. Llllda Glu1anlella of Dana Niguel, Debbie Ridgway of San Oemente and QaenliD SmltJa of Solana Beach. ._, . Svle CakmJk of Olde Towae Morca1e bas been recognized for her outstandin~rformancc by Ken Machen, Old Towne president. ~km~k is processing $3 mil!ion in loa!ls with builders from Orange, Riverside and San Bemardmo counnes. Macben hjmself recently completed a course covering secondary marketing of residential loans Chat he plans to put to use in the Orange County marketplace. ... Bunch of beds Orange Coast OAILT PILOT/Sund , Auguat •1 1985 Irvine Company· closes corral on cattle operation After 100 years of - ranching. It's the last roundup for: cowb0Y9 From staff ud wlte reports It was the las1 roundup for three remaining cowboys as the (rvme Co. closed its cattle operation after nearly I 00 years on the range to make way for residential and commercial de- velopment. . "I've been around cattle nearly alJ of m y life," said cowboy Leroy Homan. 50. ''I'd probably miss it a little." Homan and two other cowboys. The spnawhnJ Irvine Ranch coven temtory from Santa Ana Canyon on the oonh to Pacific Coest H1sbway on the south. At the hetaht of the compeny's ranchina operation, cow- boys tended 6,000 to 7,000 bead ol cattle. Tbe cowboys spent six \O 12 hours a day tending the herd, , sometimes remov101 foxtails from a cow's eyes or treat ma them for pinkeye, the acu~ and cootq:ious 1011ammation of the eyeball and linina of the eyelid . Trucks carried horses needed for the day to the company's pastures, said Bob EldCT. 6 7, chief of the Irvine Co. cattle division. "If you rode to the north end ... it'd take you three hours,•• Elder said. Jlm Manton, &eneral m•naaer of The Newport Re80rt, d~n·t ba•e a ''cuhy" job npel'!latnC tbe reno .... tlon of tbe 26-acre l11ln1JY re.ort. IDcladed lia tbe multimillion dollar facelift u project to pat new mattreuea in each room. Gary Robyn and Steve Beverlin, were the last Irvine Ranch cowboys to nde horseback on the ranch, herdin& cattle and mending fences. until ll closed this week. The cattle wiJI be sold or trans- ferred to other ranchers and the cowboys must decide what to do next Homan said he may work on a small ranch near Stoclctoo or do construc- tion work. The cauJe business became less profitable in recent years as beef consumption decreased and ranchers overproduced, Elder said. addina that other ~ of the company's agriculture divulon such as citrus aroves are more profitable. But. the bulk of the ranch Wlll be developed into residenllal neigh- borhoods and commercial ccnt.cts. Daum named leasing agent Traveling from Nevada to Utah to Oregon to Callfonua, Homan has kept a watchful eye over herds smcc the 1950s as a relic ofa dymg breed m Western folklore. "We are really a bokling operation for a development company," said Elder, who plans to retire in one or two years after he ovenees the C'nd of his operation. The Newport Beach brokerage firm of Daum Business Properties bas been named as the leasing agent for the first phase of the Rancho Penas- quitos Towne Centre in San Diego County, the company announced recently. The 97,000 square-foot develop- ment phase will include a Vons Value Ceoter and Pharmacy along witb shops and other retail operations. • • • VU Corporation, the Irvine com- pany which manufactures the only commerdally marketed contracep- tjve sponge, has.announced-sales for the second quarter of the 1985 fiscal year of$4,047,538. The company also announced a net loss ofS386,965, or S.03 per share. "We are pleased to reJ)Ort that tbe Today sponge has further increased its number one position within the category (of vaginal contraceptives} by achieving nearly a .25 percent market share," said VU President Robert Elliott • • • lrvme'sCodercard. lnc .. has signed an Original Equipment Manufactur~r agreement with TRW lnfonnat1on Networks Division for Codercard·s "security acess and authentication technologJes,'' Codercard has an· nounced. • • • Paddock & Flair Architects of Irvine has moved to 17780 Fitch St .. and expanded its offices. "(fl stay in cattle, rube leaving the area.," he said. So will his wife. Linda, and dog, Buff, who has retired from helping bis master tend the pasture. "I've been m this business all my hfe, and It saddens me to sec any cattle operation (end).... Changes come down the road." he said. ORANGE COAST STOCKS Here are the stock market actlvltlea of publicly traclecl Orange County firms for the week ended Friday, Aug. 2 . Data providedby Newport Securities Corp. SOURCE: NEWPOft'J HCUN'TlU CORP. 1115T·fllll ----------------·-------------------------------------····-------------------·-··-----------------·--··-- '11111. IC COOl,.llU naooaUtltlD II OUIU COOITY P~•P•r•• 01 ••-.or\ S•••rl t ~•• ~or,era\l•• ]t\1 i trwa1 •••·, S••·•-' .. ~•t• "-•"• Ca ltto .. ,,,, -.li1ti I .----------------i··--·;---·--·---------; .. ----------------------;------;11;·--i~j-----------·----;----;---------,----------;-------: I 'fl(( .,, .. I •ft,"\') &'t:ThS I '"0:>i :·;i 1 •t •1£· , ..... '"'' • ' lP.J I I •tt•• no ' ilf~•JI 1tf1 i•·, • • • ~oc•r101 • .. ;-., •.1 e1&111 • , • rt••,,,: • • tl\ ~• ... , I•••·····••••••••••• .. 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J ,. . ., . ~•.IS t• 0 I. 00 I .~0 • • DO •. 6 l I SO 1,SO -~... ' ,,,z B ·• ' l'.I• • •.] .•f io:· :': ac ~i, .. ··-~ .•. J , . • J • ' • •I .. • • '.oo .. • '~. f ·~ 0 • Ol •O.J 1.,1.•. .• . -1•-. .. , .... • 30 ••• . ..... '·Ji ... _, -·-.. _,_ ·B··• ._JC • • ,. ! ••• 9. ! •• •>· J -... ' -, '·J' ..... . • 1 ) •• l J•: .• ot > '" c ·' .... 11 ••• ., .. '· .. · ·"'· .1v .......... , ... ,._ w. t -'i J •I!" ... ! ,1>00 1 ,100 ?O• ,i, •c1 .. .... ••• 4 .t.JO -..... , .. ,•OO I )o • • ) j• I ·l 00,000thRollsrollsoff line ,,, 91""itJ4rorJ r.i . 11t10• •• •~•••rr111~ 111• II =•'• ~n\, ·or t• C1,.•~•rJt tlllll t) C~,., C•raiu· ·4"1.• lO Ct ra11u• ·t1 ~ ii Ce rLron Co~~. ~·•• t n t ntlt ...... ')r •n•• 91n\a &n, ••• ,... 1 • 1 t "\t.1 Afl 111 &n•~•ta ' t. I. 101121.,1 )OeP•'IJ .. .., .. t lo,: '•at .tthl ft.\\ l ........ .. ,,t ,.,.4, ~•r••lt •~-~•P•~• '-'IA•l.!~ L.aP• pt'd.s.. "'"'~ 'USDA; &H U!H~ •U DU U 3D&l U JD4' •.oo 1 .oo , l. '' • l .41 •6.l~ • ~. i• ' .... ~ •.oo '.oo • l. ,. 1 I.• t I~,• II • \ 'J l.H l •• .. •• 0 u J • Cf l, G .. )1-•• Ci-.,.O'-.. ' lO ~ 1,l.jL.•• ~ • '.JO-• t '. • .. 1•-•ii. .... i • J • J CREWE, England (AP) -Rolls- Royce. builder of the world's most luxurious automobiles, rolled out 1ts I 00,000th motorcar Friday -a royal blue Silver Spur sedan that hves up to its name. It has silver engraved door sills and MONEY SENSE --. -- silver picnic tables that fold down for passengers in the rear. Between the front seats is a compartment contain- ing two silver whiskey flasks and four crystal glasses. The car sports the license number CIOO 000 beneath its handmade stainless steel radiator grille. · The car 1s to go on ~nnanent display at the factory beside a 1904 two-cylinder open tourer built in the year that racing driver Charles Rolls and electrical engineer Henry Royce fonncd their partnership. Invest~in home $weet home Home is where the heart is, and that is why so many of us choose to improve rather than move from our homes. Americans annually spend more than $3 billion fixing, remodelinf. maintainina and ·addina to their nests. For homeowners, improve- ments and repairs fall into two catcaories: The kind you have to do (clean the gutters, fix the furnace) and the lind yo u want to do (install a Jacuzzi. add a second bathroom.) No one can dispute the merits of needed repairs and maintenance. A shabby house can drop in value faster than a termite can chew wood. But are optional home improvements worth the money? When you sell a home, ..you can recover the con of some improvements. b\,lt not au. Of course, if you feel the improvement will pve you no end of pleasure, you plan to .stay in your home indefinitely and you can afford the improvement, the issue of enhancina your home's value becomes much less important. Let's assume, however, that you may want to sell your "improved" home at some future date. As a rule, the more a particular improvement reflects your personal taste, the less it is likely to appeal to prospective home buyers. So don't expect buih·in trophy c.ases or mu~like stairways to increase your home's price. More practical improvement - a second bethroom, for instance -can increuc a home's value, but only up to a pomt. The _k_ey: Don't over- 1mprovc. A $60.000 faethft on a $80,000 house doesn't auarantce a S l ~.000 sale. espcc1ally 1f the ottu:r homes in ~our nci&hborhood tell ror no more than SI00.000 If you keep impro\'cmcnts to wuhin 20 percent of the avcrqc value of homes in your aru, you should recover mo t of your investment. Con idcnna the needs of potent11I b\.lyers, a wtll as your own, will U"anslate into a hllhct pnce when it comes ume to sell your home. Home nwnc" hn adct" ~M hathmnm GLORIA WIENER or remodel their kitchens. for exam- ple, often recoup the entire cost - and sometjmes more -because these conveniences are in demand, and the buyer is glad to avoid the inconvenience of remodeling. Buyer demand also makes fireplaces. porches. sun decks and patios cost- effective _additions..,N~t .as hi&h on buyers' "must have ' hsts arc swim- ming pools and hot tubs. The reason: added maintenance expenses and potential danger to small children. Add-on rooms cannot always be counted on to pay for themselves, mainly because add-on construction costs arc about double the square-foot cost of buildina a new home. A third bedroom with a bath and dens usually prove to be the most cost-effective additions. lfyou·re considenna these additions, make sure the llrChitcct's or contractor's dcsiln blends with the rest of the house. Also check the plan to sec that the new room(s) docs not obstruct nonnaJ household patterns. The harder it 1s to detect that 1t is an additJon, the more valuable it will be. EnerJY-savina improvements arc a tood idea, too, even tbouab 011 pnccs arc down from their a1l·lime biahs. A properly msulatcd house can dttrcasc your enetJY bill 25 pc~nt; caulked and wcathcntripped 1ndowi aod doon, 2• percent. Morco~ou can take I d11U1 federal w It of IS much as $300 for cncf1Y-s&Y1n1 equipmeot 1nsullcd before the end or 1985. The crcdi twill bt dropped from the ta~ rode in 1986. for maU improvement , ll u uall) makes senSt to save on intc~ t c pcnsc by foouna the bill out ohour own pocket. To pay for major improvement and repairs, however, you will more than likely need to borrow. The first place home owners usually tum for home improvement loans arc local banks, credit unions. savings and loans and finance com- panies, Rates on unsecured home improvements and second mortages vary widely. so it pays to shop around. The cash value built up in a whole lift insurance policy and the value of stocks and bonds in brokerage ac- counts are two often overlooked sources of inexpensive funds. Also popular with homeowners-are home equity plans. These accounts offer you a revolving hne of credit based on the equity (lhe current value of your home ress the amount owed on a mortgage) you have m your home. After you decide what horn(' 1m· provements to make and figure out how to finance them. your next dee1s1on concerns who will handle lhe job-you or a professional. Even 1f you are handy with a hammer. it s usuall¥ bes1 to hire a professional for complicated JObs ~use even c;mall mistakes can substract from 1he resale value of the improvement. ttelorc you sign a contract. ask tor reference from satisfied customers or find out what contractor did a JOb you have seen and admired nd be ure you have an understanding of what will be done and the matenals ustd. It can jive you lot of anguish later Remember. the le.a.st e\pens1ve conll'DCtor i rarely the btst You can help trim the co t ofb1gger ~obs by do1na some of the labor- 1J!tens1' e work )ourself f or\e\am· pie.· knock1na do"'n non-~nna II and rcmovina old apphancn from the kitchen before the rt'- modele~ ani"e. ~l ':-.eat P•n • ll ClL!l tn" !'h .. ~· ~t.,tH• r• •• r• '' ·,,t..a•>1 • 11w .... , 11 -:;~,•""C '• lfl • ••l r(f .. ,, 1p,... ... ... ,,,.. 1 : .,,~ •,fQ ~PSV ·"" t\11 l ~} J ." I I :>l 't'°\ .. 'J'L j •1l'l' ., ., "'I t• \' \ I 't • 11 \ •I '' h • .., ... t,,11! ll.'f J t·•l,1 5,,~o~ IN11 j l L>>""" r""•"· 1.Al~ S~ !.,,, ... .,, t .,,.,ii 1.A 'I' j') t.,t l\al"'lJ .~L • • t,U '..i! ••~ .,.~ ~ ,.,. ~' .... :,., . .,,, .... , Gl .,._ .. c, .. , '"'" , '! H•t: •"' "' •·•~• (i• • O,., 1"" ... r )rt '1 " "'J •tt C '*"'II "" , .. ,.~'\0..\1 ' • .,,. 61 •tt 'OHi .. , , t'"'' • •• ,t\' lduCtL £ " , . .,,, '" ,,, ..... , r~ ~a;; • ..uH .Ju.• ., )-1" \f ,. 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't: l•I • t •I J \ ' •• J J •I• • ~.oo '' ... ,061 1,0U .. ... • 'II+ U • '" .,. .\IO -•,fH '·• s• t,et& 11,HO .•. '°' ., .. , .. ·'" ·"···· '·' ,_ ..... .... ,,, .. ,.,,,, I I 'I \.• • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Sunday; Augult "· 1085 I a E A -] . - A SEVEN NIGHT PRINCESS CRUISE FOR TWO ON· THE OFFICIAL RULES \ Win a vacation that goes b~yond your wildest dreams. Win passa_ge into a worl~ of unmatched elegance. )Vin a f-9--~~age-toihe-exutic-Mexic·....-an- -POrts oLcall on_a Princess cruise at the Daily Pilot's expense. A Princess cruise is dif- ferent from any other vacation you've ever taken. It's a dif- ference you will feel from the moment you step aboard. The always warm, welcoming spirit aboard a Princess ship will be especially festive this year, as the cruise line celebrates its twentieth anniversary. Charm ~ ing British officers will greet you and skillful European chefs and an Italian dining staff will tempt you with out-of-this- world, award-winning cuisine. You '11 be dazzled by big, Broad- way-style entertainment. The Daily Pilot is sure our winner will return to the Orange Coast refreshed, dazzled and with an understanding of why the Princess difference has be- come the first choice o(passen- gers and travel agents Mike. Enter today and good luck. r·---------------··••••••••••••••••••••••1 I ENTRY FORM I I i\/lsubscnberswhoscsubscnpt1onsarepa1dthru 12·31-85areel1g1blefordrawrng. : DAILY PILOT 7 NIGHT MEXICAN RIVIERA CRUISE I 2 Entu b} mBllutg the entry form on this page to. DAILY PIWT I To enter your account in the Mexican Riviera Cruile for Two, complete this entry form 1.nd ~nd ·1 'tJ~x.}JiJ!j :J~1f::EET I it along with your subscription payment. (Payment must pay through 12-31-85 to be entered mto I COSTA MESA, CA 92626 I contest.) I or by cal/in& Orculat1on at 642-4333 Mon.-Fn ., 8:J()AM·5PM. I NAME I I ..... __,, I J Payments may be made by check. money order or ch•tJcd to VISA or Mastercard Please do not send auh Charge orders can be made by phone I ADDRESS APT. # I 4. The winner wrll be no11ficd by mail. Taxes are the role responsib1/J ty of winner, trivel dates ire I CITY PHONE I subject to 1vS.Jlab1l1ty. The winner may be asked to si111 and return a statement of clijlbi/Jty. I I Winner's name and likeness may be used for pub/Jcity purposes. En tnes are the sole property of I 'iub.<-r1ptJ011 prtee for 1he O.J1 'Pdot ;, IS.25 ~'month I the 0rafl6e Coast Daily Pilot. I Amount Of Payment 0 l mo. -I 5.25 . 0 CHECK I 5 Wmner tv1ll be determined by the Daily Pilot whose decmon JS final I a I - 6 All Da1ly Pilot employee' and the1r families. dealers and subcontractors are proh1b1ted from Q 2 mos. I 10.50 3 ma1. -15. 75 ENCLOSED I cnten,,.. 1 1 0 4 mos. -121 .00 0 5 mos. -126.25 I 7 A/1 entnes must be rN:e1vcd by 9-15-85. Drawrn1 to be held •nd winner announced 9-30-85. I a 6 mOI. -131 .50 al year -163.00 I 8. ~; ~:. nc.::;~o~~:,~(~e;262: a stamped. self-addressed envelope to the Daily Pilot. 330 West I PLEASE CHARGE TO MY 0 VISA a MASTERCA RD I 9 All current or new subscnbers that ire paid in adv1nce throulh 12-31-85, wrll ~ 1utom111cally I ACCOUNT # __ EXP. DATE I entered m the drawm1 I 10 Wmner m1ychoose • 7 day Canbbean cru1~ for two, nor to include'" fare or •ir transporu111on I SUBSCRIBER SIGNATURE 11 m place of the Mc~1can Riviera. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~--------~-----------------------------~~