HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-13 - Orange Coast PilotTOMORROW:
CALIFORN I~ TUESDAY AUGUST 13 1985 25 CE N TS
nCreased off shore drilling urged
to develop tbis resource that wt 50 ·Jn his fi~t bhc vi'iil to the
desperately need." Orange County coastal area since the
-~--Of shore restrictions called nuisance -
by Dannemeyer; Coast cities disagree -Dannemeyer was one of 11 Re-plan was announced July 16, Dan-
publican congressmen who have nemeyer said the proposal by Interior
asked President Reagan to kJll a Secretary Donald Hodel wa' "an By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OflMO..,N9tlWt
011 drilling off California's
coastline 1s needed 10 help the United
States end us de~ndence on forcian
oil, said Rep. 'W1lham.Dannemeyer,
Coast
A furniture-manufac-
turing plant wlll pay
$64,000 In connection
with a paint spill that
contaminated the San
Diego Creek In Irvine./ A3
California
Chances are the long-
overdue state lottery wlll
start on Sept. 27./ A3
World
Two women and two girls
survived the jumbo jet
crash In Japan that
claimed 520 lives./ A4
Sports
Rick Honeycutt plays and
wins a ''video game'• for
Oodgers./81 ....
Ex-Tulane star John "Ho(
Rod'' Wiiiiams says he
was framed./82
Entertainment
Orange Coast College's
summer musical Is short
and sweet with a rocking
beat./ Al
Business
Dyno-Comm makes a big
splash In sports video
productlons./84
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classlfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Play Review
Pollce Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Televlson
Theaters
Weather
A9
A3
84-6
87-9
A9
89
82
88
A6
A7
A6
A8
A3
83-9
81-3
A6
A8, 10
A2
R-Fullerton, who called a proposed
drilling compromise an abomination.
Speakina Monday before a mec\ing
of the Laguna Niguel Communily
Council, DannemC¥er said, "I sec no
reason ... why we should be reluctant
..federal proposal that would open abom1nat1on. a nu1san~."
about 2 percent of California's outer tf Hodel's plan were implemented,
continental shelf off California for oil Dannemeyer said, 1t would eitclude at
exploration and drilling. I least three pnme 011 dnlbn& areas.
Dannemeyer and others want.-!he -But wh1lc Dannemeyeropposes the
entire coastltne opened. plan for being too rcstncu vc, elected
Dlllly ll'tlot pftolo bf L .. hJM
Rep. William Dannemeyer addreuea Laguna 1'1fuel Community Council on oil.
t.
Laguna schools
hit W=ith claim
Ex-athletic director
wants 550,000 over
letter from trustees
By LJSA MAHONEY
Of .,,. D.ily Not .....
Former Laguna &ach High School
Athletic Director Walt Hamera has
tiled a $550,000 claim against the
Laguna Beach school district over
"inaccuracies" he says exist in a letter
three trustees distributed among Or-
ange County educators and athletic
directors.
Trustees Jan Vickers, Carl Schwarz
and Charlene Ragau wrote a letter
rebutting a Los .khgeles Times story
about Laguna Beach athletics that
appeared last May In it, the trustres
refer to Hamera-who was quo ted in
the article -several times.
When the letter appeared in the
newspaper with references to the
former athletic director deleted, the
trustees ordered Supenntendent Billy
Barnes to distribute unexpurgated
copies to all district personnel and
high school principals and athletic
directors throughout Orange County.
Comments about him m the letter
arc untrue, Hamera said Tuesday. He
said he filed the cla1m Aug. 5 because
he fears the letter may hun his
chances of finding a teaching or
coaching1oboutside Laguna Beach m
the future.
.. , JUSt want to clear my reputation.
Who knows what effect ·1t (the letter)
had?"
One reference 10 the letter particu-
larly concerns him, Hamera said.
Trustess accuse Hamera of accepting
a $200 gift also given to each coach by
the Football Boosters while telling no
one that mo netary gifts violate Cah-
fomaa Interscholastic Federation
rules.
Hamera said he was told by
Pnncipal Robert Hughes that the gifts
were allowed, but he pursued the
matter and informed Hughes o f the
rule v1ola11on as soon as he dis-
covered 11
"They say I never told anyone
That's not true." Hamera said.
Hamera, who has worked as an
English teacher at the high school for
12 years and has been athletic director
for I I, resigned a year ago from the
extracumcular p0s11ion because ot
WaltHamera
the athleuc program'" 11nanc1al d1t~
ficult1es and d1ssa11sfacuon O\.t'r
tru'ltees' hinng a coach -former San
Francisco 49e~ player Cednck Hard-
man -without consulting him
The school board has not )Ct acted
on Hamera"• claim School officials
could not be reached for comment
thl'i morning
leaders in Orange County oppose 1t
for being too lenient.
They especially oppose the o peni n&
of S4 square miles off Orange Coun-
ty's ~thne and are asking that
those SJX tracts be preserved in a
moratorium until, at least, the year
2000.
Laguna-Beach C ny ( ounc1lman
Bob Gentry said the potenual huards
oil dnlhng would have on the local
economy arc too peat.
"We arc not opposed to offshore 0tl
ei1 ploration, we arc opposed to ncar-
shorc 011 u ploranon, .. Gentry told
the more than I SO people pthered at
Crown Valley Community Park.
~ntry said offshore drilltn& poses
problems related to poicntial spills.
air quality, boat101 and fisbins-
As an elected offic:W in Laguna
[Pleue eeo OJ'J'SHOU/ A2)
Contributions,
off shore drilling
sup-port linked
By ROBERT HYNDMA N
Of ... ~ ..... ..,,
Proposals to open ocean tracts ofl
Orange County to offshore 011 dnlhng
have divided the congressmen who
represent the county
Whtie Reps Wilham Dannemeyer
R-Fullcnon, and Bob Doman. R-
Gardcn Grove, supPQn opening the
entire coastline for oil cxplorauon
and drilhng. Reps Roben 8adham
R-Newpon Beach. and Ron Packard
R-Carlsbad, seek hmm on the
number of tracts to be opened
R uss Burkett. exccu11ve director ot
the non-profit group Orange Count)
Tom orrow, suggests the 1,;0n-
grcssmen's pohucal leanings can be
traced to contnbuuons they have
received from oil and gas companies
While Badham and Packard have
each received slightly more than
$2,000 in contnbu11ons from 011
companies. Dornan and Dan-
nemeyer hst oil company contnbu·
uons ofS 18.360 and S I0,600, rcspcc-
t1Yel}'
Burkett. a San Juan ~p1strano
resident. presented a survey Monday
night to the Laguna Niguel Com-
munit} Council that 11Sted cam~gn
receipts over the past 13 months for _
the four congressmen.
Of the four listed. Doman has
rcce1"cd the most His biggest backers
"'ere Lou1S1ana Energy ($2,000). Pet-
roleum Explorauo n PAC ($2.000)
and Tenneco ($1,500). according to
Burken's surve).
Of Dannemeyer's 29 contnbuuons
totahng $I 0;600, Bechtel p ve him
S 1,000 and El Paso Gas contnbutcd
$1,000. All o ther gifts, save a $100
donation, were either $500 or $250
contnbuuons.
Packard received five contnbu-
11ons. the h1ithest -$150 -coming
(Pleue .ee Oll./ A.2)
Transit chief Wants
gas tu: funds used
only for transport
By JEFF ADLER
Of IM Delly NM IW.
Oranlle Count) Transponauon
Commission Chairman Jam e~
Roosevelt called Monday for con-
s1dera11on of a state const1tu11onal
amendment requinng that all mone)
collected from gasoline sales taxes be
spent on transpona11on improve-
ments.
In a speech that began his year-long
term as OCTC chairman, Roosevelt
said 11 '"makes sense" that mone)
collectrd from motonsts throug.h
gasohnr taxes ··go en11rrl) into main-
taining and improving the transp0r-
tat1on system."
He said a s1gn1tican1 pon1on ul tht·
gas Laxes no"' coll •cted b' the state
are funneled into the state '> general
fund for heallh, educatio n "eltare
and other programs
.. In the past 13 )Ca~. dunng wh1lh
ume gasoline and diesel pn~ ro-.t:
d1spropon1onatel:y following the 1l1I
embargo the totaJ sales 1.1' d1\.l!.1on
has amounted to more than J tnlhon
dollars .. Roosevelt said
He al~ pointed out that while there
1s an acute shon.age of funds for state
and local transpon.auon needs_ the
state's general fund 1s running a large
surplus
Ho"c'er. Roose,elt said that the
proposed const1tuuonal amendment
would mclude cond111ons requinng
tha1 an) dec1s1ons regardmg the
e~pt>nd1turr of gas-tax dollars be
madr locaJI) 10 each of the state's 58
counues
Similar proposals 1n past years
have died at thr hands of state
leiislators But Roosevelt said thr
idea 1s onr that ··fits into the
\Omm1ss1on s dircd1on to do better
wtth "'hat ~e ha"c and to increase
transpona11on dollars" 1tho ut ra1S1ng
Ll\CS '
Consmuuonal amendments can be
pl.iced on the ballot b> the state
la" mak~. "'ho must approve a
proposed amendment b~ a twcrth1rds
ma1ont' in hoth houses. or b'
(Pleaee eee TRANSIT I A2)
Planners OK
mall expansion Blood pressure testing said inaccurate
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of IN D-"r "°4 ltalf
Costa Mesa planning com-
missioners unanimously approved
the expansion of a South Coast Plaza
department store Monday, shattenng
an earlier deadlock over whether a
pcdcstnan bridge should be required
as part ~he prOJCCt. h wa he second time in two
months at the commission re-
viewed plans to add 90,300 square
feet to the three-story Bullock's store
on the west side of the maU. The
(Pleue ... STOR&/A2
Study c<iilCludes 24-hour monitoring more
reliable than 2-minute test in doctor's office
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of!MD.ily ..........
--Tftat familiar two-minute test m a
doctor's office may not be the most
reliable way to diagno se high blood
pressure, a UC Irvine study con-
cluded.
The study indicates a 24-hour
testing period duriOJ wb1c h a ealJent
wean a computerized m onitonna
device is a better method of determ-
ing high blood pressure. the UCI
researchers said.
Thr finding, researchers said. 1s
important because-high blood f>J'ess-
ure, also called hypertension, 1s thr
lead1og cause of heart attacks and
strokes 1n the Unjted States and 1s a
major cause of death among people
older than 50.
The study was conducted by Dr.
Michael A Weber, a Newport Beach
rcs1dcnt who 1s a professor of med1-
c10e and director of the lJCl Hyper-
tension (enter at the Veterans Ad-
m101stra11on Ho1ip11al in Long Beach
The research tram, also included Dr
Jan I M Drayer. ac;soc1ate prof"essor
ofmed1one, and Oma 1' Nakamura.
a research assonatr
.. Tooa\.. lhe mrao,urcment of blood
pressure ao; 1t''i convcnt1onally ca med
out 1\ unreliable." Wrber said
"Thel"l' Jre "-3\'i ol 1mprO"lOI lls
rchabilm h' rerca11ng 1he measure-
ment'> on three or four occasion~
No"' v.e lan make a more accurate
d1agnom ol high blood pressure 10
borderline ca~'>"
He e11ed an .\mcn can Hrnn ~ .. -
T~en-ageslayer's fate,
niental state unresolved
Lawyer says Gabriel Deluca sllppfn deeper
Into self-made hell while wattln his trial --~--
Gabriel Deluca is as perplaina to
Judith Sanders today u he was 14
months qo when the ltCn--acr was
convicted o f murder.
Deluca. a dark~ycd youna ·man
with tallowy wn and dark, m.tted
hair, spends hj1 days in the county
Jairs m.tdieal ward or in a padded
isolation cell, depcndin1 on how his
mood swinas.
nckrs, a cnmat\al defen at·
tomey in nta Ana. UJd he ha
watched her client •hp deeper and
deeper into a fn&btcn1na abyss ol
non-reality -a s.clf·madt hell.
It tS bcyol\d her to e. plain what 1s
bappenin1 to htm or to do much
about 1t.
Deluca sometime crouches on the noor. rcfusana to talk or look at h11
v1sttors One obKrvcnaJd tus behav.
1or attms more lake that ofa doa than
a human.
Somctimt1 he seems to pull
h1mtc:lf toatther. mumblina about
d1fTerent thin tile bis fate. Rut
much of the time ht' appca'"' to be-in a
foa. content\(') stare at the n~)f
Occasionally he 1 covrrrd with
scratches from drauina h1'1 tinaer·
nails down hi fa~
Sandrrs u1d she 1s ne,rr sure v.hat
to Cltpttt
Deluca. 19, 1s confined to Oranac
County Jail. He 1s \hufficd back a nd
forth between the medical .. ard and
an 1 tauon ~II v.hcrc he is tnppt<I
naked ro that he Wlll not inJutt
h1m1tlf.
He h.u 1ppamltl) tn~ to loll
tum If at lea t thrte t1mn. Ona: ht
,la hcd h1i wml and wrote "(1od h
~ --~---=-;::====~c:i-------------_~~--~
soc1a11on c-s11mJtl' that b<l m1lhon
Amem:ans -more thnn '·' ol the
adult populauon -ha'r high bl()(xi pre!>~ure Despite the-health dangc"'
\\eber said onl}' c1bout h.ilf o f tho<ie
who suffer fTom h\pencns1on are
a'Wl~ -0111 ht-cause lhl' d1~rder h.i"
\.1nuall\ no noticeable S\ mptom'i
H, pt>nrn<11on can be treated ea'i11'
"'llh med1ca11on. ~said
Trad111onall\ ph~s1c1ans ha'C'
d1agno~ed high bk'Od pre 'iUre
through the familiar arm cutT te t
penormed 1n a doc1or's office \\ eb(r
said mnst doctors instruct a p:u1ent to
lOme hack on 1-wo or thr~ different
STEVE
MARBLE
NEWS F OLLOWUP
Lo' c" ~1th blood on a mirror in his
~II
\ \ear ago in June, Dtluca wu
convicted of IUIJ10j tda Jean Hu ton,
a Hunun11on Beach mail camrr who
was murdered Jan. 3. 19 4
l(a,ton. a mothc-r of two, .....
tabbed and Clubbtd v.11h a ball
ti.ton the doorstep of txluca',hou~
Deluca d,...,cd t.hf -.oman ·, bod
throush the houK and out to the
~. wMrc~ heaved her body into
her post office car •
(Pleueeee8LARR' /Ml
..
da'~ to chl'd, a high reading before
treatment is 1m·'>C'nbed
But tht l l I researlhcr said some
less CCln\C1('nt10u<> doctors may base
th('Ir d1.igno~1~ on 1us1 one readin~
He !>aid 1he ~pot-<heck method 1s
prnhahh n<)l lhe mQS\.rehablc wa) to
d1agn1lc;e h\ penens1on
f nr •'nc thing. a patient ma" bC'
m•r,ou" Jh-1u1 '1s1t1ng the doctor
rl'.'\Ulttn~ (! J n~ in blood pn'SSUre
.\nd thou~h ,,,me people u~ home
~IO<ld prr"ur~ te<;t10g dt'\. ICt'S. tht'
mt.i,urcment arc most onrn taken
at n 11-t-1 .tnJ •10 "'l't'._t'nd~ when
IPleaee Me BLOOD/A2)
Mesa'scity
aides seek
top position
8)' TO V AAVEDRA
OtlMD.ily .........
Thrtt po\Sihl) four l o ta Mesa
cit' officials hav.e applied for the JOb·
bc1n1 ' atcd th1 f: U b~ City
Man er F~ So bal. ..,..ho hai held
the adm1n1 trl\1ve rt1M for IS yea.rs.
P\Jbhl rvi cs Duutor Bnace
Matttm. Dtvelopmcnt~1 DI· ~tor Douglas Oark an A 1st.a.at
Dtvelopmcnt "'1cu tor Vi •
tor cwt.on confirmed Monday lk)
have uhmmcd rnumcs for lhCJOb of
evencct. the cit)''s 650 tmplo
1 wn City Manqer Allin
Roeder, C'On "deftd to be a hkdy
candidate. d hoed to mcnt
(Pleue ... lft9A/.U
_..._,.--
.
Al * 0Nnge COMt DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, AugUet 13, 1"5
Bolsa Chica development
foes to form human chain
Oti2c~ who arc faahtina plans for a
marina. it\ the Bolsa Chica wetlands,
will protcs• the devctopmnent on
Wed:netclay by formina a human chain on the beach where a new
navipble channel would be cut to
link the marina and ocean.
M0te than 300 people mostly
membcn of Amiaos de Boisa Chica
and the Sierra Oub, will Join hands at
6 p.m. aJona an 800 fool Stretch of
beach they claim will be wiped out by
the channel.
"This as one of the most -popular
state parks an California," ex.pl~ned
Lorraine Faber, a member of the
Bolsa Chica p~rvatJon aroup.
Faber wd the channel will
ehm1natc up to 800 feet of Bolsa
Brea brush fire blackens 1,440 acres
8 7 dNI A.aociatd Pru1
ftt least 1,440 acres of bru h were
burned by early today as a fire
continued to evade contamment in Oranae County canyons near Brea,
authorities said. There was no esti-
mate of contaanment.
Winds spread flames through So-
qucl Canyon Monday afternoon }>ut
died down oveml&ht. Two of\hc JOO
fircfiahters on tbe Imes suff'ercd
minor inlurics earuer in the day.
The flre jumped its control line
about 4 p.m. Monday both in Soquel
Canyon and at the Gilman Truclc
Tratl. said Fare Departmen1
spokeswoman Alac1a.Dav1s.
The fire broke out Sunday in
adjacent Carbon Canyon
Chica State Beach and miaht force the
closure of the state park l>l!k for up 10
two ynrs while the d~na wotk is
beina compJe1ed.
.. We want to brina this to the
attention of beach usen who are
unaware of the impact oo their
rccreauonal opportunities," said
Faber.
The marshlands arc separated hom
the ocean by the beach and Pac:afic
Coast Hiahway. Tentative develop.
mcnt plans by SapaJ Landmatk call
for consttuction ors. 700 homes and a
1,800 slip marina.
In return for development riahts..
SignaJ would help restore 600 a~s of
the wetlands as a preserve. The
project has the beckrng of Oranae
County aovemment.
The wetlands is located on wun·
corpot"ltcd county land. but as sur-
rounded by the City of Hunlinaton
Beach.
STORE EXP ANDS WITHOUT BRIDGE ••.
P'romA2
request for a nec-essary condjtional-
use permit wall be forwarded 10 the
City Council w1th the comm1ss1on's
endorsement.
With one member ab~nt, the
commissjoners deadlocked 2-10-2 tn
July over a staff suggesuon that a
bridge be built over Bear Street m
conjunction with the Bullock's ell·
pansion. The walkway would hnk
South Coast Plaza with the mall
annex under construction across the
street.
In a report 10 the full commission
Monday, planning staffers now .dis-
couraged against taggmg the bndge
onto the Bullock's project. Planner
Reba Touw said the staffs initial
suggestion had been "rethought."
The Bullock's plan, mcluding an
undervound parking lot, 1s part of an
overall expansion project that wall
push South Coast Plaza from 1.8
million square feet to nearly 2.9
milhon during the next two years.
Also aocluded 1s the mall annex.,
which wtll feature 1wo new depart-
ment stores.
In reviewing the plans, the city
required that conceptual designs for
1wo pedestnan bndges across Bear
and Bristol streets be submitted by
mall owner C.J. Segerstrom & Sons.
However, no time frame was
established for completing the
bridges. intended to reduce the poten-
t1al nse in traffic by encouraging
people to walk to the various offic.c
and shoppans complexes.
After notifying commissioners last
month that it may be advilntageous to
link the Bullock's project with at least
one bridge, the staff backed away
from the pro posal m its la1es1 rcpon.
OIL SUPPORTERS •••
From Al
from Union Oil. Burkett said.
Of the four contnbutaons to
Badham, Chevro n PAC's S750 gJfi
was the largest.
Burkett said he hsted only those
contnbutors he was sure were tn·
volved in 011 exploration and dnlling.
Some political action committees,
which represent oil interests among
other concerns. were excluded.
Planners said developers needed to
monitor the· pedestrian traffic from
the main m~ to the annex to
determine where I.he Bear Street
bridge should be butlt. Consequently,
planners warned it · would be
premature to construct the overpass
before the annex is opened.
"It would be unfonunate to require
bridge construction now only to
discover in the future that the brid&e
has been construc&ed in the wrona
place," ac0ording to the report by
Associate Planner Willa Bouwens.
Bouwens added that it would be
··some time" before traffic on Bear
Street warrants the bridge.
TRANSIT •••
From Al
c1tlzens through the 1n1taat1ve
procedure. To place an initiative
measure OD the ballot requires the
signatures of about 630,000 registered
voters statewide. .,
Roosevelt, the eldest SOD of former
Pres1dent Franklin Roosevelt, rep-
resents the public on the OCTC
board, the county's transportation
planning agency ..
OFFSHORE OIL PROPONENT SPEAKS •.•
From Al
Beach. Gentry sa1d he was respon-
sible for protecting the economic
well-bemg of the city. which includes
protcctmg the 1ounsqi mdustry.
"but they're better now than they've
ever been."
Dannemeyer repeatedly said the
most important factor in the offshore
011 dnllin~ controversy was the Unat-
ed Sthtcs need to wean nsclf of its
dependence on foreign oil.
hmaled to moderate value to 011
companies.
Badham opposes any compromise
plan that would open areas off Orange
County to ~reiber said.
Clouds will roll away on Coast
Low ctoud• wlM move In OWtr the ooeet Ind Into the IOwer
COMtal .,.._. toniaht but 8outhem Cdtoml• wtM have a tunny aft.moon W.ctneeday end _.,.,,. temperatutee, the Nlltlonal
Wtlther a.Yide uld. Tht 'Otteell for 8 p m EOT. W9d . .Aug. 1
Tht ClOUd pattern Wbelng cauMd by a we.le Uough of tow ~ O'ltf the r9glon, but the trough It WMkentno and
moving ... twetd end thlt Win mMn clMter tklee end I tllgtlt
Iner .... In Wll'mth,
Atono the Oranee Cout there WIH M IOw Cb.Ide tonight and
W.ctMtday morning. Sunny Wedneeday attemoot\. Hight In low
70. nMr the beachee. OthetwlM hight 85 to 9S Wedneeday.
Lowe 87to14.
From Point COnoeptlon to the M..-~ BOf<Mr and out eo
mu. -lnMr wet.,., 1t9ht variable wind• tonight e.nd
Wedntlda,y morning McOMlf\9 IOU1hwett to WMt 8 to 18 knot1
W.ctneecs.y aftemoon. SOYthwtet ~ 1 to 3 feet. Cteer
W9dneeday ~Ing.
Outwwat ... Moetly variable Wind• 12 knot• 0t !ell through
W.ctneeday with combined .... 5 to 8 r..t. Cteat W.ctneectay
ewnlng.
U.S. Tempe .. Le ~ 11 •• ::=' ... • M \e .. Mallof• 61 ..,
Allen\e IO Ta Allltllle City .. '3 Auell!I t7 Tt tlilUmot• .. 12 ~ t3 70 '*'*ell 71 ... ... IS ,, eo.con 11 IO llllftlilo ,. .. =:on.111 72 11
1• 40 ~.a.c. to 7t Cfwleeton,wv " " Cllenolle,N C t2 70 = .. 13 50 .. 72 ~ .. .. ~ IO 91 ~.Oii ea 71 Conoord,NH 7t .. 0.....'1 Wonll 100 11 ~°" .. 1,. o.n .... t2 60 Dee~ t1 12 o.ttall 7t '1 °"""" ... .. Ell"-.., .. Fllr1Mlnk.t u 53 fergo .. .. ~ IO ..
°'9111 ,":f:" IO ..
57 47 Hwtt«d 12 64 Helelle ... ...
Honoll*I to ,.
"°""'°" 92 n
8CDlftU'9 1-3 ,..,
1-3 POOt 1-3 POOt
1·S POOt .1-3 poof
2-3 poot ,., poot
Tides
0
TOOAY 1 46p m
7 57 p m
ft'*llOAY
3 llam ,...,.,,,
22Spm e 38 p,,,
10) 70
70 12 1• ... .. 50
.. l;I 1• &I 70 .. ti ...
•2 61 N IO ... .,
12 11 to 15
72 66 .,.. so
to 32 17 ...
n e 1 6
0 6 4 I
2 • 14
Sun Nit lod.Y II 1 42 p m ,,_
Wedneec:tey al 8 il 11. m anO Mia agllln
at 7·4' pm l.Aoon Mt• loc:tey at 6 1e p m ,_
Wedneldey al 4 ot a m end ... llOflln
lll702Pm
Just .Call
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VOL. 71, NO. 225 --
"Last year. we had a m1lhon more
tourists an Laguna that they had in
Maui," he said. "It's a very important
industry. J don't want IQ. hear some-
one say, 'This >ear we're gomg to
Cancun 'bcQluse we set black feet m
Laguna (from the oil).'"
But Da.nnemeyer said 011 platforms
have been m place off Santa Barbara
while that city's tounsm has con-
tinued to grow. Gentry, an response.
said without the platforms, the tour·
ism could have developed even more
Danncmeyer said he would rather
explain why dnlhnJplatforms had to
be installed off Cahfornia 's coasth ne
than ex.plain 10 parents why their son
has 10 fight an the sands of the Middle
East to protect U.S. interests in those
011 fields.
Badham was mvitcd to attend
Monday'$' meeting m Laguna Nifuel,
but w8' in North Africa viatina
NA TO installations with the House
Armed Services Committee, Schreiber said. Badham is expected .-----------------------------------------
Dannemeyer also said dnllmg plat-
forms arc safer now thanks to im-
proved technology.
"I'm not suucstmg an 011 platform
wall wan a beauty contest.'' he said,
"Resources arc finite, but we have a
challenge in this country to develop
our resources to lessen our energy
dependence," Dannemeyer s~ud.
William Schreiber, an aide to Rep.
Robert Badham. said reports mdacatc
that the six. tracts off Orange County
proposed for offshore dnllitlg arc of
back next week.
The Laguna Niguel Community
Council hosted Monday's forum but
does not intend 10 take a ~sation on
the oil drilling issue unttl Aua. 26.
according to its president, Jim Krcm-
bas.
The community council is an
elected body but maintains only
advisory powers an the unm-
corporated communuy.
MESAAIDESSEEKMANAGER'S POST ..•
From Al
Monday on whether he is seeking to
fill the shoes of his mentor.
··1 don't want to see 1h1s become a
populanty contest," said Roeder, 33.
"The process could really be thrown
out of whack real quack af people start
malangJudgments."
Sorsabal. highly regarded for has
subtle yet flrm hold on Caty Hall.
announced last May that he would be
rctmng Oct 25 10 possibly serve as
potentate for the 5.000 Shnners an
Orange County.
If selected for the onc:year
Shnners' term. Sorsabal ~1d he
would postpone plans 10 stan a
management consulting firm. an
endeavor that would most hkely be
more lucrauve than has $78,800-a-
year Costa Mesa JOb.
The City Council relunctantly ac·
cepted Sorsabal's resagnataon, hinng
Ralph Anderson and Aswciates of
Sacramento to conduct a statewide
search for a new chief administrator.
Mayor Norma Hertz~ saad the
hunt was lim11ed to Cahfomaa be·
cause council members wanted a city
manager familiar with <1tatc law\
governing such 1h1ngs a~ redevelop-
ment.
Hertzog added that she was loolung
for a strong. energetic leader to wo rk
alon15ide the council.
The dcadhne for submitting re-
sumes was Au~ 5.
An unadenufied spokeswoman for
Anderson and Associates said the
number of applicants, and their
names, were being kept confidential.
Resumes forwarded to the city will be
reviewed d u ring cl osed -d oor
sessions.
Sorsabal said Monday that the
council would not receive a candidate
last until Sept. 3. He also reponed that
the applications would be separated
by the consulling firm 1n10 thr~
ca1cgo ncs: highly qualified, qualified
and unquahfled.
Sorsabal added that he would be
willing to delay his departure if a
successor is not hired by Oct. I.
Roeder, who began an Costa Mesa's
public works departrmnt befOf°C"
being promoted 10 assistant city
manager an 1979. said he had mixed
emouons about the open JOb.
"For me. it's tough because I have
such strong feelings about Fred
leaving." he said
"Aattem. 43. has Jed the city
BLOOD PRESSURE TEST ...
From Al
rcad1ng.s are trad1t1onall:r lower.
"Blood prc~sure vane\ a lot fro m
minute to m inute." Weber '81d
"People can be badly misled 1f they
depend on only one read1nJ."
The UCI .iudy involved the use of
a h1Jh-tech device developed for
medical stud1C\ of space shuttle
astronau". The instrument,
produced by lrv1ne-ba~ Del Mar
Avionics, employs conventional
blood pressure arm cuff. It as con-
nected to a four-pound rccordmg
device that can be worn on the belt or
w1th a shoulder hamcs~.
Weber said the device wa\ set to
inflate the cuff nd take a blood
pre"urc read1na every I 0 mmutcs for
a 24-hour penod -even whale the
subject was ulccp. A computer was.
ueed 10 anaJytc the rcadana., and to
help detttmine whether the subject
sufftrcd from hi&h blood prt ure.
The UCI study involved 29 men
who preVlously hl\d be~n dl&IJ'Osed
wath hH>ertcns1on and 29 male vol-
untecn who wert tested a!i having
normal blood prc~surc.
The rc1e1rchcrs found that JO
perc~nt of tho~ d11inoscd wath high
blood prenurc were probably normal
andlshould not be taking me<hcataon
for fh ypcnen11on They also found
that an equal pcrccntaie of "normal"
~ects had some readanss an the
h1 blood pre sure ranie.
cber said 1 number of phys1c1aM
arc al~dy u"na the new 24-hour
blood pres~urc tC1ttnJ technaque.
But he conceded that 1t requires a
'lub~tanual 1nve tmcnt. He said two
te'ltanadev ice and Lhc ac:comp11nymg
computer equipment could CO'll
about SI 0,000 and require a doctor to
Ch&JlC about SlOO to $300 for the
procedure •
Weber sud he cxpcctS an ut"lnce
companies to bcaJn covcnna the
pe11ent's cost bccau1t" of the poten111I
llt~lth benefits
engJneenng department for the lase
seven years and lately began entcr-
tajning the thought of stepping into a
city manager's position. He added
that for now he was not looking
o utside Costa Mesa.
"I wanted to go through the process
... at least to let the powers that be
know that r am interested," Mattern
said.
Newton. 54, has worked as a
bu1ld1ng offic1al 'for the last six yean
m Costa Mesa. Unlike the other
candidates from w11hin City Hall, he
1s not a department head. But he
figured the search would be "more or
less wide open."
"I thought I may as well throw mx
hat an the ring and sec what happens. ·
Clark, 38. would only conftrm his
application and declined to comment
o n the search. He was assistant
development director before becom-
ing head of the departmem in May
1981
Three septuplets
expected to go
home next month
By tbe A11octated Pre11
The three surv1vma Frustac1 scp.
tuplets remain 1n stable condluon
and arc ex.peeled 10 go home by about
mad-September, a spokesman for
Ctuldrcns Hospital of Orange County
said Monday.
"There has been no ch&nac." said
hospital spokesman Doua Wood.
He Slid the babies, born Ir weeks
premature on May 21 , arc expected to
remain in the ho pital's newborn
intensave-care unit until they pin
enoug.h wc1aht to leave the hospi tat by
tht middle of ne:u month
At the parents' request, no ad-
d1uonal details arc belna aiven out,
Wood 111d.
The babies, tephcn, Richaro and
Patrieta Ann, are the children of Patti
and Samuel Fruatao of Riverside.
All of the t.b1ci ufTmd from
hyahne membrane diaeue.. an ail-
ment that causes lunp to collapee
after each breath. One was stiUbom
and three died between May 24 and
J<.ane 9
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• SAUCERS • WIRE BASKETS
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Local Delivery
AM LING ' s
Newpon Nur ery and Garden Center
(e.tween MecArthur and Jambof' .. )
Open p.ton. thru 8aL a:ao-.a~. Sunday 0:()()..4 30
1500 .... ~ hlgttny. newport beech, «*ffomle. (114) loM-8510
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' ----~
•
Rape prevention
m.eeting in RB
The HuntinJton Beach Ne11hborhood Watch
in cooperation with thcc1ty'1 police department. wiil
conduct a rape prevention awareness mectina A.~
21 in the Civic Center Council Chambers, 2000
Main St., Huntington Beach.
Detective DOn Howell from the department's
sex crimes unat and Karin Lu\tecke of the ~una
Beach FreeCbnic will conduct lhe pr~a".'1.wh1ch is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Call SUlle w1Vda at
S36-S933 for more information.
Navlgatloa coane ottered
A course in coastal navigation will be offered by
Orange C~t College when fall classes begin
Monday on the Costa Mesa c.ampus. Two sections of
the three-unit course, Marine Activities 120, are on
the fall agenda, meeting Wednesdays from 4 to 7
p.m. and Mondays from 6 to 9 p.m.
The course focuses on charts1 navigatfonal
publications, plotting and advancmg positions,
compass correction, taking and eloning bcdarings,
electronic aids, determining lldes and current
sailing. Call 432-5772 for registration information.
Swimm ing lllgnaps .et
R~stration for the next series of summer
swimming lessons at the Newport-Costa Mesa
YMCA Will be held Monday and Tuesday of next
week at the Y, 2300 Univenity Drive, Newport
Beach.
Classes in swimming, movement education,
aerobics, yoga and pre-natal fitness will be offered.
Call 642-9990 for further information.
OCC of ten palntlng coane
An experimental paiting counc will be offered
this falJ by the Art Department of Orange Coast
College in Costa Mesa. The thrce·unit class will meet
Tuesday and Thursday afternoons from·l to 4 p.m.
Instructor Donna Sharkey says the course wiJJ
emphasize the creative process by utilizing a broad
range of materials and mixed media. Registration
informauon may be obtajned by calling OCC at
432-5772.
Taz workshop ln Mesa
American Te~1s ma · I, in co0peration
with the Possibliit P pie, will ho a workshop on
the impact of Presi nt Reagan's tax o sal ne
Tuesday at the Westtn South Coast Plaz 1n
Costa Mesa.
Included in the fresentation will be a discussion
of the importance o developing financial strategies
and the nccessity ofa financial coach. Tbecost isS 15
a person or $20 for a couple and further information
may be obtained by contacting Stephanie Berger at
557-S533.
Movie set for readen
Participants in the Newport Beach Public
Library's summer reading program are invited to
attend the "grand finale" film program Tuesday at
IOa.m. at the Edwards Newport Cinema in F3shion
Island. Newport Center.
A showing of"The Neverending Story" will be
presented and admission is free. The annual event is
sponsored by the Friends of the Newport Beach
Public Library."
Broadcast courses slated
Two courses providing an introduction to the
broadcasting industry will be presented this fall by
Orange Coast College's Broadcasting Arts Depart·
ment, met"ttng Wednesdays from I to 4 p.m. and
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m .
The course will focus on the history of ,
broadcasting. advertising, laws, social aspectS,
pro~mming and organization oflocal and network
stations. R~stration 1s under way and further
information 1s available at 432-5772.
Kiwani s to hear Braille talk
Diane Burkhardt, a member of tbe staff at
Braille lnst1tute's Orange County Center will speak
to the Kiwanis Club oflrv1ne Aug. 21 at Miss Lucy's
Restaurant, 14825 Jeffrey Road, Irvine, beginning at
7a.m.
Burkhardt is the coordinator of Braille ln-
stitute's Orange County Speakers Bureau and also
conducts tours of the center's facilities. The institute
provides year-round training, education and special
services without charge to the legally blind o{
Southern Califom1a.
Tuesday, Aug. 13
• 7 p.m.. Huntington Beach City School
Dl1trict, District 6ducation Center, 20451 Craimer.
e County Sheriff'• Deputy Carl Coetello atanda atop South
C t Medlcal Center ln South La&una where an elderly man jumped
to eath late Monday morn!nir. The identity of the man, whoee
body la ahown coftred ln a U,hi-colorect aheet, waa not releaaed
becaaae offlciala have not contacted bla relatives.
.
Orange COMt DAILY PfLOT/Tueeday, AugUllt 13, 1985 * .u
State's delayed
lottery games
may open soon
SAC.RAMENTO (AP) -Lottery of-·
Ilda.ls say the Jona-..overdue Cahfomia pines may conceivably open Sept. 27.
Deputy Lottery Director Chon OuucITC'l
told the As.lociated Press Monday that a
Jmall army of worktn hopes to have all
aysatms 10 t.be nation•s biaest lottery ready
lO test by Sept. 1 S.20. ·
"I fail our plans work ... and 1f everything
converses by the 20th, with a week of
testina. we're oonceivabl~ looking at the
27th .. to bcain sellina Sl uckcts, said
Gutierrez. a l>eukmejfan administration
troubleshooter assjaned to the lottery 1n
March.
The st.art-uptime is "ajudpnent that the
Lottery Commission and director (Mark
Michalko) have to ma.kc. My JOb 1s to put
the infrastructure in place and show them
what it can do," Out1errez said.
Michalko, commissioners and other
lottery officials have previously wd only
that the lottery would probably stan in late
September or early October.
The lottery commission wlll exllaust us
funding in November unl~s the games
begin provid.inJ a Oow of revenue 1n
October. Tbe rnitiative tha_t . voters ap.
proved last November proVJded the sys-
tem with a one-time. S 16.5 m1lhon state
loan.
The initiative ordered the kickoff of tbe
games by March 22 -nearly five months
ago. But Gov. George DeukmeJ1an, a
Republican who opposed the games.
adopted a cautious approach that has
slowed lottery organization.
Deuk.mejian has defended his st.an~ by
pointinJ to the monumental task of
or:ga.nizmg the lottery.I. which 1s expected to
have sales of \Ip to S'.l billion annually. In
the first instant-winner tick.ct game, "Cali-
fornia Jackpot," players will scratch spots
off tickets to find out if they have won
pnzes of up to $5,000.
In other lottery-related developments,
lobbying-disclosure reports filed with the
state show that companieslpcnt more than
$280,000 dul"lna the fint half of the) r to
mfluence lea,islaton and lottery com·
m1ss1on actions.
lntcmanonal Totahza1or Srstems pem
nearly $20 000; &1tnufic Gam~ Inc.,
nearly $86,<>00; Webcraft Games, S30,00Q,
Responte GrapruC1, more than $10.SOO:
OTECH. more than $57,000, General
Instrument Co11> , more than $36,800;
T1cke1ron1 $24.00<>. and Mult1pmc Ven-
tures Inc., S 18, 7SO.
The Sacramento operatton hail e11-
panded from a suite of offices to three
downtown locauona. with construction of
a new headquancn complex under way.
M1chalko said Monday that Cabfom1a's
lottery ucket supplier bas completed
productton of 400 million t1clteu for the
first game and is two-th1rds firushed with
tic.kcts for the second game. Tickets for the
first pme are scheduled to arrive ih the
Sacramento warehouse next week.
All the uckets were produced m Grorgia.
wtthout the use of a pnnung plant that
Sctenttfic Games secretJy built tn Gilroy,
Calif. A lcgaJ battle in the Georpa count
between th( company and 11~ printer,
Dinler Brothers. has oot disrupted ticket
production.
Meanwhile. Assemblyman Rusty
Amas. D-Satinas,'bas reported that he dad
not know about Scientific Games' $2,000
contribution to h1s campaign comminec
when he began pushins a bill to get tickets
printed at the Gilroy plant.
Lottery officials said Scientific Game'>
has secured an extension of tts $25 million
tn game insuran~ until the end of the year,
at which time the leveJ wtll ,be cut to SS
million due to a general tighteninJ of
policies in the msurancc industry. Com.
pany officials met wtth msuran~ reprcscn-
tauves again Monday regarding the prob-
lem.
However, Sc1enufic Games' parent com·
pan), BaUy Manufactunng Co.. has
pledged its resources to cover any mistakes
tn ucket pnnting. ·
Business to pay $64, 000 for paint spi ll in cr eek
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .... o.a, l'llol .....
A Tustin fumiture-manufactunng plant
will pay S64,000 in punitive and reim-
bursement costs in connection with a paint
spin that contaminated the San Diego
Creek in Irvine.
The State Regional Water Quality Con-
trol Board, which met Friday in Newport
Beach, unanimously approved the agree-
ment.
The amount of the fine was agreed upon
dunng earlier meetings between Steelcase
Inc. officials and the staff of the Water
Quality Board.
Steelcase will pay the $63,802 to local
and state agencies resi,><>nsible for the
cleanup of a May 26 pamt &pill into San
Diego Creek. The creek feeds Upper
Newport Bay.
A clogged pipe at the Steelcase plant on
Warner Avenue in Tustin forced an
estimated 13,500 gallons of paint into
storm drains and surface channels feeding
San Diego Creek.
While some paint reached the Upper
Bay, it was diluted enough to ~sc no threat
to wildlife or fish, officials said at the time.
ln bis report to the board, execuuve
officer-Jim Andersons.aid Stetlcase made
no efforts "to notify public agencies of the
discharge or take action to clean up or abate
the effects of this d1scharse."
rlf the nearly $64,000 10 fines. $40,000
wtll be paid to tile State Oeanup and
Abatement Account, as punitive costs.
4.nderson said. Those funds arc used for
the cleanup o( toxic chemical accidenu.
In add1uon. S 15, 718 will be paid to tht'
state water board for ns cosn 1n thf
cleanup.
Other agencies to receive reimburse-
ment e11penses a~ the c1ttes of Irvine and
Santa Ana, the county Environmental
Management -'\gene)_, the County Fi~
Department, the lrv10e Ranch Water
Distnct and the State Department of Fish
and Game.
SLAYER'S MENTAL CONDITION SAID DETERIORATING ...
P'romAl
The lime-green car was driven a mile or pared Deluca to an airplane without a
two away to a church parking lot in C6sta guidance system. She said he dabbled tn
Mesa. A security officer discovered the' m1nd-altenngdrugsand may have suffered
COll>SC later the same day. an alcoholic blackout from gulping tequila
Nobody even pretends that Deluca the day of the murder.
didn't kill Haxton. The evidence is over-Rogers said Deluca appeared to have
whelming; his attempts to cover up the suffered complete amnesia, but allowed
crime were sloppy and childlike. that Deluca may have flashbacks of some
Still, Supenor Coun Judge Leonard of the details and scenes of the murder.
McBride overturned Deluca's conviction Judge McBride ordered a second murder
last October, ruling that Sanders and her trial for Deluca. That was nearly a year ago
client were denied access to a single slip of and Sanders said her best bet is that it may
paper, a document scrawled by a Hunt-be at least another six months before tbe
mgton Beach jailer two days after Deluca second trial bcjins.
was arrested. The holdup 1s the state Distnct Court of
The officer made a brief observation of Appeal.
Deluca and wrote that his behavior Deputy Distnct Attorney Bryan Brown.
appeared to run the~mut from bein1lucid who prosetll.le.d.Deluca.laS.tYeat.-bas asked
to unstable. Deluca needed to be watched, the Court of Appeal to overturn McBride's
he concluded. decision for a new trial.
Sanders and John Dolan, a second The court can either sustain McBride's
defense lawyer, said the slip of paper could decision or can overrule the judge by
have been useful in defending Deluca. The .reinstating Deluca's conviction, which is
attorneys claim Deluca was out of bis mind punishable by 26 years in state prison. The
on tequila and marijuana when he killed higher court also has the power to examine
Haxton. the evidence and reduce Deluca's crime to
Sanders said Deluca appears to under-
stand his situation at times and wants. at all
costs. to avoid going to pnson.
Deluca is visited penodicaJly by a
psychiatnst or psychologJSt at Orange
County Jatl, Sanders said She said the
visits are token treatment at best, and that
in her view, ~luca's cond1t1on has
deteriorated.
She said Deluca talks with h1s parents b>
telephone on a regular baStS. but the} do
not visit their son. His onl) visitors are
lawyers, mental health experts or Jail
officials.
Brown said Deluca can receive adequate
treatment 1n state pnson
"The prison system has a number ol
builwn psyclliatric hospitals. If he has a
problem, I'm sure it would be diagnosed."
Brown said. "He wouldn't JUSt be ware-
housed."
Sanders ts doubtful that Deluca Wlll get
the sort of treatment he needs 1n pnson
nobod} 1s treaung him," the law) er sa1J
The proseuctor doe:.n't doubt 1ha1
Deluca 1s "a vel) sick .,,oung man," but
rejects the defense theol") that the tel"n~ager
"as bas1calh unconsc1ou) wht'n he killed
Ha\ton.
Dunng the tnaJ Brown told Jurors that
Deluca was S8\.\) enough tu tool his
docto~. Havmg once spent nearl) a }ear in
a pnvate ps)ch1atnc hospital Dcluca
knows how to pla) the game Brown said
Brown hasn't changed ht~ opinion O\.C'r
the months
Late last year. Sanders attemptc-d to have
Deluca moved to Patton State Hospnal so
that he could ~ treated on full ume Tht
request was denied
The defense a~ttomeHna'"e pondereo
the poss1b1ht) that Deluca ma) no longer
be competent 10 stand tnal a l:ounroom
determinauon m "'h1ch a Judge decides 1f a
ddendant 1s capable of under:.tanding thr
cnmes he 1s charged with comnmung.
Dr Martha Rogers, a clinical psycho!-second-degree murder, which carries a I 5-
.. ••••••••••••••••••--' ogist who testified for the defense, com-year sentence.
"The tragedy 1s that even assuming the
worst -that he's conVlcted -he mil
won't get treatment." Sanders said "If he
had cancer. he would get treatment He
basically has cancer of the mind and
··The wa) the laws are at'<. alm1..1s1
1mpos!>1bk to pro't' \Omeont> 1s 1mom~
tent." Sanders said .. ..\ bowl ot Jdlu "
1..ompetent enough to ~tand tnal
PoucE Loe
Mesan seized in stolen car
linked to 40 county heists
Cross bicycle worth $475 from in
front of a home in the 9400 block of
Warbler Sunday.
parked 10 the lot of the Ir. 1ne ( luh
HouSt', 17850 Sky Park. Monda\
afternoon In both incidents the car
stereos were taken
Huntington Beach
A Costa Mesa man, arrested Sun-
day for driving a S1olcn car, has been
tentatively linked to as many as 40
robberies in Orange County in the
past month including three recent
holdups in Fountain Valley.
Robert Artem Bandaruk. a 37-year-
old resident of the Co1leae Park
community, alleaedly confessed to
pulling robberies throughout the
county but told police the weapon he
Lap.na Beach
A Regatta Road resident called
police Monday evening when a
tarantula spider aJ?pcared In the
house. The officer killed 1t. • • • Two Booaie boards valued at $2SO
were stolen ~om a South Coast
Hiahway a<ldren Monday, the victim
tol<! police.
• • •• An estimated $600 wa'I stolen from
a tocked business Monday on Forest
A venue, the victim said. • • • A boy's 10-spccd bicycle valued ot
S 130 was reported stolen from a
iemple Hills Dnve home Monday. • • • Pohce arrtstt'd two motonsts Mon·
day on suspicion of dtivina under the
influence of alcohol. Gcorac Roam
Kelly, S5, wu •topped at 4:JS p.m on ~on and Glennc~ 1tn:cu. Rywan
Connery Sulh"-n. 19. was anuted u
J:OS a.m. on M tniet and South
Coast H1ahw1y.
used during the holdups was actually
a toy gun.
Bandaruk is being held on suspi-
cion of three robberies in Fountain
VaUcy, four more in Oranac and
violation of parole.
Fountain Valley Detec:tive Dann
Bean said Banda.ruk matches the
deteription of a bandit who lw been
plaguina the city since the middle of
Newport Beach
Vandals did $560 in damaac to a
satellite dish mounted on the roof of a
home 1n the 600 block of Beaonia
over the weekend. • • • Computer equipment worth
$2,0SO and a stereo wonh $200 were
stolen from a home in the 2100 block
of Yacht Oraylina Friday niaht.
According to police rcpona, the point
of entry was the upstairs bedroom
window. • • !.
Thieves stoic a J4S0 palm trte
planted in front of the restaurant at
the Newport Beach OotfCour1<\ 3100
Irvine, Sunday ni•ht. .,. ..
A Winchesttr rifle valued at S 1.000
was stolen from a home an the l 900
block of Santaqo Sunday niaht • • • A $900 aoJd oeck1ace wu olen
Monda)' &om an unk>cked blue l 98S
Ford T-Bird p&rked in a lot bcl\lnd a
business at SOl I Birth. •
July. He said police believe Bandaruk
is responsible for a string of robberies
thatendcdAua. 7wbenamanheldup
Oothcs Quarters., 181 lO Euclid St.
In most of the crimes BandaNk is
r s uspected ofbcina responsible for, the
loss was less than $200.
Bean ~id it appears the Costa Mesa
man would prey on businesses in one
city and then move onto another.
. CoetaMeu
A buralar stole a $600 typewnter, a
$69 answenna machine and more t~an SS.000 in computer equipment
from a busines! at 2900 Bristol Friday niaht. . ' . Someone stolt~wclry, cast\, oos.-
mctics and a han from a bo~e ln
tbe400blockofFair · unday. Thfloss
was estimated at Sl,405. • • • An undercover police officer ar-
rested a man for committi~ a kwd
saual act in the bathroom of Estancia
Park, 1900 Adam , Monda(. He wu booked at Costa Mesa jai pcndina
$1,,00 bltl • • • A rt5ident an lhe )100 block of
Lameriek reported lhauomeone uole
S 1. 966. l 0 in new clothina from btr
home la't week.
roontaln Vall91
Somcone •tole a Champion Mc>to-
• • • Eugene Wyatt was booked at Or·
ange County Jatl Monday on a charge
of possessmg stolen propery. Police
arrested Wyatt in the 15900 block of
Sterting after a resident tqld police of
a burglary in the area. • • • Abel and Ltnda Pcl"C'2 were booked
at Orange County jail Monday for
being in possession of a b~erm1c
syringe. A polt~ officcf'it1scovcred
the synnge af\er stopping their car for
an equipment violation. • • • A. $200 lawnmower was stokn
from a garaac of a home in the I 0800
block of of La Marquc5a Sunday.
tmne
A resident 1n the lOO block of
Lcxmaton reported Monday that she
had received 10 obscene phone call
10 one month. • • • Two cars, a Mazda and a Honda.
were burglanzed while they we~
Lagu nanwas
beaten to death
A lquna Beach man whose bod)'
was found Sunday 1n an open fleld m Lquna Halls was btud&eoned to
death, an autospy revealed' Monday
The body of Cireaof)' Mark
McOowan, 30, was fOund early
Sunday an a field at the lnter'ICCUon of
Hendon and Cumbcrwtll Sttte'1 near
the tAauna Hills PW.a.
OCputits tatd they att invesupt· 1n~t\c dea. th u a homicide but ba\.e
fe ./uds
• • • ..\ \Oung. suntanned man "-:t\
amsted for tndccent exposu~ Mon
da) 1n the 3700 bloc~ of Pad. Vu:"
.\ccording to police rt' ports. when the
officer stopped him ht was holding
his underwear. • • • ..\ woman's gold ~atc h worth
S2.400 was stolen from a home on
Pcbblestone Monda) • • • ( onstruct1on equipment wonh
S;!.000 was stolen from a ~He on
Holland over the weekend • • • 5omeone stole SJOO in l'OIM frum
1ht-video machines of a business at
F1<,hing rt)(h \\Cr<" 'ttOlln lrum a
hoat at .! dcxt.. tn the \lc1n1t\ ol
Da,enport and Baruna \.t und.1't I ht
lo~.\ \A.&sesumated at S..,t~l • • • t a'h totaling S I UO \A.a<, takrn Imm
the rt>g1stt'r of a Shop ~n hcn.i <.tore
I ~4'10 Bcalh \.tonda\ • • • \ • I ()1, )() .... a 14.:h was rt'p~1nnl '\tnkn
tn1m J room at the Hunt1ni tnn fkach
Inn ~11 I ~ P:tllfiC { oa,1 111(1,h"-3\
o'er tlw "l'l'kt'nd • • • \onw ,nl \ltllC' S <.40 111 u1111\ h orn
El Don ' l 11.iunr 41 ~ P.H 1t11 <. ooi~t
H1ghw:n "mirllmt· in the p.l\t two
v.cel~
SWAT team d iscovers
suicide vict im in HB
'\ 54-year-old Hunungton Beach
woman apparently kallcd he~lf late
Monday u police officers surrounded
her apartment. apparently under the
bchefthat an armed intruder might be
lurktna 1ns1de
i\ Hunt1n1ton Beach f>olicc SW.\ T
team secured the apartment build1n1
and caut1oncd neighbors to sta\
tndoors. Police went into thC'
woman's up$tt1" bedroom more
than an hour later
The bod) of the woman. dead fmm
two appa"""tl) "'f·tnfltcted aunsho\
wound to the chest, ~s found 1n the
bedroom of the 1663S At1onqu1n St apartment. aocord1na to Lt Metlt-
Sd1neblin.
'\ "-t'm.&n l'tlll<"d pohl·t a1 11 p.m
and reponcd that ~he'dJu't httn .. hot.
Schnetil1n said The fint offiC<'f' at
the ~('n( heard • sanale aunshot and
TTQuested tht 5'W T team.
<\t I 20 a m toda\. mt'm~rs ot the:
\\AT 1ram climbed the 'itaH'\ to the
saond Ooor of the apanment and
found the woman's body in tht-
~droom ~ 3S7-cahbcr M -anum
pistol wu found neJt\ \o her bNly,
utd Schnebhn
The ~oman's 1dcnut) wa\ not·
~lea~ bttauscherrclau\nhad not
b«n notified ohhc death.
Pohtt said numcnnu 'lu1od nolcs ---c~ found an~td.t tht aranment
..
Four survive JAL jet crash
KIT A-AlKJMURA, Japan (AP)-
Sc:arcb and rtSCue teams found four
survivon and recovered the bodies of
~ people &om tho wreckqe of a
Japan Air Unes jumbo jet that
craahed on a wOOdcd mountain ridp
with S24 people aboard, officials saad
today.
The crash of the Boe1na 747 on
Monday was believed to be the worst
sin&Je-plane commercial air disaster
ever. Airline officials SI.id that amona
the pauenaen were six Americans.
lbe aircnft'a pilot reponed a
broken cabin door and that he was
losina control as the jetliner turned
north from iu normal course and
cruhcd in Japan's ruged central
mountains.
Ooeoftheaurv1vorsofAiJht 123. a
12-ycar-old &irl, was reported found
in the branches of a tree. One woman
was puUed from the crushed f usclaac
of the aircraft.
Airline spokesman Geoffrey Tudor
told NBC's ''Toda( that the
survivon were seated 'fairly close to
the tail. How they survived is a
miracle."
Helicopter-borne rescue teams
suspended the search for the night
Games'
tokens
stored
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A tame
capsule filled with memorabilia was
buried and six bronz.e plaques un-
veiled in a tint anniversary cel-
ebration of the closing of the 1984
Summer Games at Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum.
Peter Ueberroth, former president
oftbe Los Angeles Olympic Organiz-
ing Committee, made an unexpected
appearance, addina an autographed
baseball to the capsule's contents.
The speaker's list of dignitaries
mcluded LAOOC Chairman Paul
Zifiren, Executive Vice President
Harry Usher and decathlon _gold-
mcdalist Rafer Johnson, who ht the
torch at lhe Opening Ceremonies on
July 28, 1984.
The plaques were unveiled by 1984
medal winners Peter Vidmar. Tracie
Rujz, Terry Schroeder, Shem and
Dcncan Howard, Nancy Hogshead,
Candy Cost1e-Burke. Curt Aemmg,
Doug Burke, Julianne McNamara
and Steve Lundquist.
Buried an concrete below the pla-
ques and planned for opening Aug.
12, 2034, the capsule included a
gymnastics leotard that belonged to
McNamara, a swimming towel from
Lundquist and a copy of the contract
that turned over the games to the
LAOOC, the pnvate orpn1zers.
Ketld Kawalr•mt, 12, la lifted from Ja&:;•• moaataln alte
where jambo jet craahed Monday, lrll 520.
and reported no sign of other
survivon. Shinji Watari, general
manager of JAL's public relations,
told a news conference the cause of
the crash remained a mystery.
A piece of debris believed to be
from the front of a plant"' 111il fin wa'i
Proteetlng apartheid
recovered today at sea along the route
the JAL jumbo was flying way from
Tokyo to (){aka before it veered
sharply off course. Masao litake of the Japan's
Maritime Safety Agency said
authoriues were trying to confum
U 1 I ,.111
Actor Paul Newman and the Rn. J eue Jack.Mn led cl.ti
rtchta leaden an~ _•a1on Monday put the WublJICton
Monument lD Wu~. D.C. They callecl on the Reaau
a dmtnlatration to lmpoee eanctiona on South Africa.
Singer hospitalized
WASHINGTON (A P) -Jau
singer Ella Fitzgerald, hospitalized
for an apparent respiratory problem,
was listed in good condition today at
George Washington University Hos-
pital.
The nursing supervisor said, how-
ever, that she did not know when the
67-ycar-old singer, who had to mter-
rupt a concert schedule, would leave
the hos pit.al.
A performance scheduled for
~ Wednesday ntght 1n Chicago was
canceled. said Fitzierald's personal
secretary. Willetta Clark.
"It happened very suddenly. It
doesn't seem to be anythmg serious.
but t~e doctors thought she should ,
remam so they can take care of her
properly," Clarie said.
Earlier. a hospital spokeswoman
said Fitzgerald had arrived late
Su nday via ambulance at the hospital
after complaining of shortness of
breath, and "the breathing problem
was apparentl y due to fluid 10 the
lungs."
Fitzgerald, who began pcformang at
Harlem's ApoHo Theater at a~c 15
and later became known as the ' First
Lady-0f5ona.." had come to Washing-
ton for a Fnday performance with
Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson at Wolf
Trap Farm Park.
CONVERSAT IONAL J APANESE
whether it was from the doomed
plane.
The piece or wreck• bia&er than
a door. wu found ofi the Miura
Peninsula south of Yokohama. As
shown on television, it appcated to
have JAL matkinp.
Watbout the vertical pieoc of the
fin, the jetliner' direction cannot be
controlled, said JAL public affain
official Ryo Sliji. He wd the altitude
of the plane could be controlled by
varyina the thrust of the cnaine.
JAL'• Tudor said about an hour
after the c:nsh, "We had a call from
someone who identified himself as 11
member of a revolutionary Manist
faction and claimed responsibility for
detroyina the plane."
fudor said the anforrnauon was ~ on to police. but added:
'Tbctt's some feeltni it may have
been a hoax."
Airline spokesmen, U.S. Embassy
officials and relatives uid the Amcn-
can pusenaen included two Colo-
rado men, a 26-year-old araduate
student from the Los Angeles area
and three members of a Korean-
Americ:an family.
Fuming
eaters
sought
MOFFETT FIELD (AP) -The
Navy is looking for a few good
microbes, the kind that tum deadly
industrial chemicals that con-
taminate groundwater into harmless
ps.
If an experiment this week by
Stanford University civil engineers
and the Environmental Protection
Aacncy at the Naval Air Station is
successful, it could mean vast savings
in toxic leak cleanup costs for indus-
try and the military, officials sajd.
In the first field test of a process
developed b~ EPA researchers, the
engineers will try to tum toxic
trichloroethylcne, or TCE, into
carbon dioxide by exposing it to a
bacteria found naturally in so11.
The engineers will encourage
millions of the bacteria -called
methylotrophs -to multiply more
than a thousandfold by feeding them
water, methane and nutrients. Then
the engfoeers will intentionally leak
TCE. an industrial solvent used to
remove grease from metal and other
matenals. into the 40-foot square test
site .
EPA scientists believe an enzyme
produced by the bactena will break
down the TCE an~ release barrnless
carbon di oiude.
Fuss over
shooting
dies out
Mexican boy, 12, shot
by border patrolman
fad es from spotlt t
.TIJUANA, Meluco (AP) -Four
months after his shooting by a U.S.
Border Patrol agent., 12-ycar-old
Humberto Carrillo is no longer a
celebrity to the Mexican aovernmenl
Attention heaped on the boy and
his family after the April 18 inetdent
A1m1ng co cultivate the student's l1stEfning and speaking ab1lit1es for has died out. Promises of help for
personal or professional needs, a course in Practical ConverS.ltional Humberto's impoverished family arc
Japanese will start ac Japan Cultural Association at 2130 N. Grand still promises.
Ave., S.A. (Norths1de Church of Christ) In the days following the shooung,
Cla11 atarta Aua-uat 15, and will meet every Thunday. the Carrillo family's two-bedroom
To reciater and for further information call S..7-7733. tarpaper and wooden shack in a slum -=-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~H~a~m~be~rt~o~Canil~~~l~o'.__ ___ ~ four miles east of the U.S.-Mcxico -: border crossing at San Ysidro was
As of July 26, 1985
I regret to inform y ou that
is no longer associated
with Baby Carter.
Sincerely ,
"-. f ~ (J{l,£~'
'
" -
I
besieged by Mexican political of-
ficials l'ltd news reporters.
The FederaJ Electricity Com-
mission ran a power line out to the
shack but the family is without li&ht
because the line docs nol reach to the
house. The Baja California state
aovernment said it would remodel
the shack, o{even build a new one. So
far, only an outside foundation wall
and statrway arc completed.
"Everyone has foraottcn him,"
Humberto's mother, Maria Elena
Estrada said Monday. "I don't feel
bitter because we have never had
anythina. We've always been poor.
But he's the one who's sad because he
feels nobody takes notice ofhim."
Humberto was shot by P!atrolman
Edward D. "Ned" Cole on the
afternoon of April 18 dQrlna an
ancident in which patrol aaenu were
arrestina Humbeno's older brother
who was attcmptina to scale the fence
bf.ck into Mexico.
Humberto says he was an innocent
bystander while the Border Patrol
'-~ Humberto WIS peltin& aaents
wnh rocks at the time Cole fired his
service revolver three times throu&h
the fence.
One of the bullts hn Humberto 1n
the back and struck a nb, which
prevented tbe bullet from b1tun1 any
of the boy's vital orpns.
Cole was absolved of wronadoina
in the case and bas s nee been
tratlsfcrred by the Bottler Patrol to
Buffalo, N Y.. near the U.S.-C&n-
ad11n border
Humbeno said he hasn't fOtWOtten
the shootina, ova which a LOI
Anaelcs attorney has filed a SJ
ma.Ilion cl11m with the federal aovcm·
ment.
"Al times I wake uf erytna -and
fetl just like the day was shot." he
11id
Chem.teal leak accidents
rout hundreds in 3 states
By 1'e AtMctated Preti
A derailed tram. a leaky tanker, and a fork.lift plOWll\& into • pipeline
spilled haz.ardous chemicals 1n Arizona, Washinaton, and New !ency, rouuna
more than 6~ ttsjdcnts from their homes. Near Kingman, Anz., 27 cars of a
Sante Fe train flipped early Monday, causing a series o~ explosions that
enaulfed 11 cars in flames and rocked neatby bou~s. The t.ram was haulina 46
containers filled with about 30 hazardous chemicals, said Tom Buckley, a
spokesman for the railroad, addlna that ~nzine probably caused the fire. In
Washinaton, a 5,000-pllon tat\ker caa:rY•na hazardou$. materials leaked one-
tenth of its contents on the busy Capitol Beltway dunnJ evcnlna rush·hour
traffic. Police closed a two-mile stretch and evacuated 300 people. A 2,500-
pllon toxic spill at a chemical plant in Camden, N.J., was cleaned ~P Monday
after a forltlin ruptured a pipe to a storage tank. Mo~c than 100 ~1dents were
evacuated for about six hours. The substance, which poured m~o a sewage
system culvert. was aniline. which can be extremely dangerous 1fanhalcd.
CubJde often medlcal payment.
INSTITUTE, W.Va. -Union Carbide Corp. has offered to. pay the
medic.I expenses of the 135 people inJured an a poison gas leak. but disput_cd a
company memo that said the chemical 1s as dangerous as.the gas that killed
more than 2.000 people in India. Company officials admitted Mon.day that
workers initially thought the leak at the Institute plant was not senous and
delayed notifyina authorities. And Senate Minority Leader R~bcrt _Byrd • .O-
W.Va., arranged for a delegation of top federal regulatory of!icials. ancludang
Environmental Protection Agency Director Lee Thomas, to U\spcct the plant
today.
R""6an rat., alde11 map ba•y agenda
SANT A BARBARA -With Presi dent Reagan out of sight at his rcm?tc
ranch, bis staff aides arc planning a rigorous autumn round of speeches. tnps
and TV appearances for him, confident he will be in top phys~cal shape._ "'fhe
doctors have assured us he should be (in) normal heal th, that 1s health s1m1lar
to what it was last spring." White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan told
reporters Monday. The president, who underwent colon cancer surgery July
13. is spendjng three weeks al his mountaintop ranch. _
lltMton man •UJTe.Dden In •laying•
BOSTON -A man who told police he had k1Ued two elderly women was
released when he couldn't take officers to the cnme scene, authonties said, but
he surrendered in response to his sisters· pleas a day after the victims' bodies
were finally found. Ronald A. Guest, 37, turned himself in Monday nidit.
police said. He faces arraignment on two counts of murder. said police
spokesmen. Warrants were issued Monday. one day after Guest was let go and
the victims' bodies were found.
Beat en.an blamed tor •hattle •hatdowm
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -Problems that nearly aborted Lhe flight of
the space shuttle Challen.er were caused by three brittle. broken thermal
sensors sending out false stgnals of overheaung fuel pumps, an official says.
The belief that 1tie sensors miJ!it be faulty had prompted flight director Cleon
Lacefield to overrule the rcadinas and order the mission to continue.
ll IJart In 7-veldcle wreck on 1-80
RICHMOND (AP) -Eleven people were hurt in a spectacular series of
East San Francisco Bay crashes that involved seven vehicles and closed
Interstate 80 in both dfrections, the California Highway Patrol reported. A
truck driver was arrested. A CHP dispatcher said shortly after 9 p.m. Monday
a big traiJer rig driven by Raghu Singh rolled onto the eastbound on-ramp near
Cutting Boolevard, went out Of control on a ramp curve and roared across the
lanes of traffic, collidmg with two cars. The dispatcher said Singh's truclc then
crossed the center dj v1der into westbound traffic and smashed into a third car.
That car crashed into a fo urth car, which then collided with ~t another. Then
the fifth car was smacked by a second trailer rig.
Detective. lra•trated In hunt for tiller
LOS ANGELES -A police task force searching for the man who killed at
least six people has been frustrated an its effons to detect a pattern of behavior
that would lead to an arrest, the county shenff said. Tbe man who has temfied
neighborhoods in the San Fernando and San Gabriel valleys has baffied
investigators who depend o'n discovering a killer's pattern to discover clues.
County Sheriff Sherman Block said Monday even in cases where victims have
been shot, a different gun apparently has been used.
Mayor Bradley toan Watu riot area
LOS ANGELES -Acknowledging that things remain to be done in
Watts. Mayor Tom Bradley nonetheless stressed positive developments of the
past 20 ycan as he took a walking tour of streets devastated dunng the Wans
riots of 1965. The biggest problem still facing Watts is unemployment, Bradley
said Monday, noting that while 1,000 jobs had been added to the area. the
percentage of people out of work is as high as it was 20 years ago.
RUlan '•performance IJJ.glJly rated
SAN FRANCISCO -A statewide survey today dicloscd that 56 percent
of the]>ubtrcvicw President Reagan•sjob p;erfonn~nce tavorab1y. wh1Jc only 18
percent think of him negatively marking t\is best ratings to date. The
California Poll released today also found that onl y a small portion of the pubhc
believed Reagan would be unable to meet the demands of presidency as a result
of his cancer operation last month. Only 12 percent of the public thought the
country would be harmed a great deal if the Rcaaan 's condition worsened and
he had to reduce his presidential activities by half. the poll reported.
l•raeJu reJeue 101 prl80nen
ATLl'1', Israel -Authorities today freed IOI prisoners, most of them
Shiite Moslell}s captured during the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon,
the military command announced. The detainees were driven in three buses
from the Atlit prison across the Lebanese border, and turned over to
representatives of the International Red Cross. the command said. They were
amona hundreds whose release had been demanded by Lebanese Shiites who
hijacked a TWA jct on June 14. killed one American serviceman, and held
other Americans hosi.ge for 17 days.
Rlotl.IJ6 anonJ•,. nu leader'• home
JOHANNESBURG. South Africa -Unidentified arsonists rued the
home ofWrnnic Mandela, wife of South Africa's top imprisoned black lca~e • police said today. S~lation that her husband would be released soon s
dampened by the wtiitc-minority aovernment. Meanwhile, the death 10 an
nearly a year of racial u~s~ an So~th Africa reached ~. accordin
computataons based on statJstJcs provided by the South Afncan Institute of
Race Relations, an independent group. Police said four blacks were killed an
ovemiaht riotina in the Eastern Cape.
Pope tell• African yoatlJ to hn laltll
DOUALA, Cameroon -Pope John Paul II delivered mcs~es today for
both sides of a~ African aencration _.p, tclling youth t~ ~~vc faith m the church
and admoruslunaparents never to &JVe up the responsibility foreducatina their
children. His comments came midway throuah his 12-day tour of seven
African nations. durina which he has also pressed his campaian for better
relations between Christiani and Moslems.
4S die u ltJdlan te.aemeat con.,_,. ..
BOMBAY India -A three-story tenement house collapsed under heavy
rain ~n ccn~ral ~mbay early today, killinf at least 43 people and ittjunna ss.
offioals saad. Fire dcpenmeot r'C$Cuera said the feared more bodies would be
found under the rubble of the d1l~idated buildina. located in a conacsted
Moakm-dominated arcaofocnt:ral Bomb&y. Most oflhc victims "'Cre a.lccprna
when 12 rooms of the house collapsed during the monsoon rainstorm, they
said.
2J k.UJed m Mn.a mlne blut
SECUNDA, South Africa -An undcrsround explosion of methane p s
kllled 21 minen and in.iurcd 27 at tho state-owned Middclbuh coal mine
officials 11id today. Rescue tams that worked ovtmi&ht were still tryina to
reach theara ofthcciplosion whCTe an IClC'Umula4_on o1p and dust has bu th
up.. A mine pok:nman said the blast ripped thro~ a" undcraround work area
Monday, d troyina ventilation ahif\.i. •
• 'I . ~ .. -
Retail sa-les up
slightly in July
Department stores·
activity offsets slu mp
in automobile sales-
By Tile A11oela&ed Prea1
Retail sales climbed a modest 0.4
percent in July, the first increase in
three months. the aovemment re-
ported today.
The Commerce Department said
retail sales rose to a seasonally
adjusted $113. 7 billion as a jump in
activity at department stores offset a
big slump in car sales last month.
The 0.4 percent sales pin was the
first increase since a bia 3.1 percent
advance in April.
my opinion is not an indicallon of
any nsina trend, .. sai4 Franz Pnce,
an analyst with Chase Econometncs
1n Bala Cynwyd, Pa.
Kathleen Cooper, senior financial
economist for Secunty Pacific Na-
tional Banlc in Los Anaeles, said:
"Inflation is still very, very tame
with no rtal problems yet in siibt.
When you took at raw prices for food
prices in particular. they continue to
look weak."
July's increase would translate to a
3. 7 percent annual rate if extended
for 12 straight months.
Revised Labor Department fig-
ures issued Monday showed whole-
sale prices fell 0.2 percent in June,
after having been reported originally
as holding steady.
Pre.end.DI a rarity
On Monday, the government re-
ported that wholesale prices in July
rose 0.3 percent, but analysts said
they don't see inflation as a major
economic problem for at least the
remainder of this year.
The July tise was fueled by the
sharpest increase in food costs in a
year, the Labor Department said.
The 1.3 percent spurt in food costs
offset the second straight monthly
decline in energy costs.
Ralph Parlett, a USDA food
economist, said the higher crop
estimates are "not JOina to change
things. to speak of, m terms of food
prices."
He said retail food prices arc
estimated to rise an average of 2
percent to 4 percent this year.
Proud mother Radba ucnn off 90-pound Chandra at the
Loe ~el• Zoo Monday. The etahth Indian rhlnoceroe
born ln captl.tty ln the United 8tatee wu dell•ered Sunday
after a record precnanc1of516 4aya.
In other economic news:
-Steel production rose 1.6 per-
cent to 1.591 million tons in the week
ended Aug. 10. the American Iron
and Steel Institute reported. Pro-
Record harvests due
Food and energy are the major
com ponents of the Labor Depart-
ment's Producer Price Index and
their movement typically sets the
tone for the wholesale inflation
figure.
Gasoline prices were off 1.4 per-
cent last month, fuel 011 costs fell 5.4
percent and natural gas pnces slip-
ped 0.7 percent
"Even among food products, the
increase was not widespread and m
duction amounted to 62.4 percent of w ASH ING TON (AP) _ A record
capacity, compared with 61.4 per-com harvest is in the works, along
cent in the previous week. with bumper crops of soybeans.
-Yields on short-term Treasury sorghum, wheat and cotton, accord-
securities fell sharply from a week ing to the Agriculture Department's
ago. The Treasury Department sold first overall estimates of the 1985
$7.2 billion in three-month bills at an season.
average discount rate of 7.14 per-The de~rtment's Crop Reporung
cent, down from last week's 7.3 Board said Monday tm com crop
percent. Another $7.3 billion was could produce nearly 8.27 b1lhon
sold in six-month bills at an average bushels-, ~percent more than last
discount rate of 7.36 percent. year's output and shghtJy more than -;::::========================================
REPORT
MLL '85:
JUXTAPOsmON
The winning
news at Anne Klein II
, starts w1th silhouette· last
•
season's big over small
mod11ied to a new streamlined
body sense And then there are the
prints. echoing through every collection.
here a neat toulmd. a lavish paisley
Making it all work· the sumptuousness
of knit merino wool_ Cardlgan. tottee/1vory.
Sl56 Shil11cill lee. toffee/ivory. Sl36 Stirrup
pant. tot1ee. Sl 16 S-M-L sizes Get the full
r Report in Robinson's Viewpoint Collections.
114. selected stores To order.call
toll-free 1-800-345-8501. 24 hours a day
lllOWTIMl1
See the 7\nne Klein 11 Collection
tntormally modeled Wednesday,
August 14 1n NEWPORT. Thursday,
AUgust 15, 1n HORTON PLAZA (wtlh
representattve Treva Baird). and f)'tday,
August 16. BEVERLY HlLLS (wtth
representative Fay Fotopolls) Showtt.me
each day, I p m
nsons
the old mark set three years ago.
Officials said the estimates were
based on surveys taken Aug. I and
will be updated during the rest of the
growing season.
The bia crops arc expected to
funher dampen pnces at the fann
gate andj>ut add1t1onal pressure on
Congress 10 come up with new farm
lcg1slat1on that w11l help protect
producer tnCQmcs.
.
SHOP MONDAY-RIDAY 10-9.
Newport fashion Island• ~er Mall
,J' t
• ,.
-
Ormnge CoMI OAJLY PlLOT/Tueectay, Auguat 13, 1885
..... ....iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiii.
National Night Out
designed to Indicate
how neighbors care
ly TM Attedai.tl Prea1
By m&Min& their front stoops or
marcbina in Oashliibt parades to-·
night, residents acros$ the country
hope to reclaim their nc1ahborboods
at least symbolically from mu~rs
and thieves in the second annual
Natioul Ni&ht Out.
"The whole idea 1s each neighbor
knows that other neighbors care,"
said so. Robert Lassahn of the poll~
crime resistance unit 1n Baltimore,
where 8.000 homes were expected to
participete in the ant1-cnme effon
from 8 t0 9 p.m.
"Niaht Out is a symbolic demon-
stration that will let cnmmals know
that we're mad and fiahttn&. back,"
said Matt Peskin of the NauonaJ
Association ofTown Watch, based ln
Wynnewood. Pa., which orgamzed
the effort.
He said 23 st.ates panic1pated in
last year's Night Out, and he expects
communities in 45 states to plan
activities this evenmg.. from ttny
towns to metropolises.
New York will part1c1pa tc for the
first time, with community groups ·
holding flashlight parades and prayer
vigils, Police Commissioner Ben-
jamin Ward called on residents to
"take back their community them-
selves."
In Republic, Mich., population
1,500, "We may not have the prot>-
lcmstbe biagerciucs have, but we sttll
have crime," said Manon lssacson.
treasurer of the ne1ghbood crime
watch program. ··we have kids run·
ning around, wild parties ... some
-
houte bufllarics ...
Minnetota will mark 1ta secood
year of panic~petion ~tl! a ~loon'
rt&ease. A Mlnneapolil JU:Z 11qer
wrote a Ntaht Out IOnJ. lO be 1Wt4 at
a park kickoff. with crime prevcnuon
speeches by lbt mayor aod po~
offic1.111.
Seattle pohcc will monitor the
number of calls made tO the 911
cmcrscncy number duriq the Night
Out period to sec if crime 11 deterred.
In Detroit, PoliceCh1cfW1Uram L
Han wrote 41 citizen's band radio
patrol 11oups and S,000 block dubs,
as~na mcmbcn to join the sit-out asa .., w of solidarity against crime."
ew Jersey police will be visiung
cnmc watch croups in several com-
munities to how support. A block
assoctauon as returning the favor by
an vlltnl officen to a N tght Out ptcn1c.
"It's a very sample thi1l4 to do,
sitting out on yow porch with your
neighbors, but the fact 1s it's a very
strona deterrent to crime because
when there arc people on the street
and more eyes watching. cnme can-
not happen," said Margot Friedman,
assistant director of the Justice Re-
source Institute Neighborhood
Crime Prevention Network m Bos.-
ton. Members of about 100 com-
munity cnmc watch groups were
expected to paruc1patc there.
In Albany, N.Y .• Police Chief John
Dale said the program is a reminder
that average citizens are "the eyes and
ears of the Police Department."
And one activist points out a bonus
for residents to man their porches.
"One of the major reasons that gets
an area mvolved is simply that
neighbors want to get to know their
neighbors," said Ardys Eserhut. who
was helping coordinate the effon
from a neighborhood center in Okla-
homa City.
~·
• L
-·
kACK..., IQUADAON ILV~
JiFMNOHI
IUCKN>QIM wmMPORT
Aaft'UC PAICTING WTTl4 IWO.AY IH!N(I
'.M. MAQAZIN( MJ#AIOY
PRAii! ntE LOAD
MOVE ... "Suoer Cent A'#;" 111141 Det='lft\Ut, Garry Cedtnlt
* • • '" Thi Llttlt Foxes · I 1~ ti 19ttt Dem Herbert Matsllall
(C JitOVIE
It ·To S. ()f Not To Be" (19'31
Mli BrOOlla, All(ll Blrlcf oft
lAlMOVlf. • •"' "Gutog' (19851 David Keith,
Mal«llm McOowtll
'MOVIE
I *'t 'Mother Lode' (1982) Clllfl·
ton Heaton. N1ek Mancuso
-Uo-·
EVENl«l AT POPS z=llfl90END
lMO'M .... "The 39Sttpe' (1935) Rob-
ert Donat. Madetelnt Carroll
( S PAPEJll CHASl
-10:16-m AEUOIOU9 PN>GIWMNO
(HI PHILIP MARLOWE: PAIVA Tl m
Cancer League's Debut V models
a'nnounced at waterfront party
CllNlwt
MICN!WS
I tc8IETH HAGIN
HOT lfAT HOTUNl
MOVE
t t "WindWlltcer' \ 198-4) T revot
Howlld, Nick Remus
-1:30-•
GMICNl'WS 9 HN'PV DAYS AGAIN
I ONE DAY AT A TIME MACNEl. I LEHAEA
NlWIHOUR
GD CAUFONIA DREAMS
NlWI 0 IWINEY MIL.ID
-7:30-
12 ON THE TOWN 8 FMIL Y FEUD
OIASEIAU
DMONU. • w•A•S•H mt .MJIAPIJY 9 WILD, WILD WORLD Of ~ ID AlM FAOM Off CEMTt.R
SAN DIEGO AT lAAGE '
P£OPl.£ S COURT
QD MOVIE
t • •., The StOfm 11938) Clllfles
81Ckl0td 81r1on MICllnl C PAUl Sa.t0M: HEARTS ANO
IONES
WHEEL Of FORTUNE -a:OO-AHIW£R 8 (I) MOVIE •
VUOZOO t •• ., "Two Ci A Kind' 119821
( 8AAAY MANI.OW: THE George Bums. Robby Benson
CONCERT AT 81..ENHEIM PALACE e a A· TEAM
-7:00-D <1J) WHO'S THE BOSS?
8 C88 NEWS C> JOKER'S WllO
II ™"6'.S A CAOWO
• T1C TAC DOUGH CAHHOH tD P.M. MAGAZINE
-9:00-
8 18 RIPTIOE
D 91 MOOHUOHTING
C>NEWS G) MERV ORIFFlN
!~Al m PRAISE THE LOAD
mBAAETTA
..Q,MOVIE
I I ' Vtmpong (19841 Patndt Dul·
ty C1the11111 Hyland
Z MOVIE v , . Stra~ lnv,<*s ( 1982)
Paul LeMat. N111cy Allen
-9:30-
tf J MOVI£
• • • , The Heart Is A Lonely
Huntef ( 1968) Alan Arkin Sondra
Loeke
-~ CD IHOEJl£HDENT NEWS • CD WAVES Of PRAISE
MOVIE
H * 'LOYI On Tl\I Aun" (1979)
Jean-P11a1 L..00, Mar ... Frano. Pl·
$11(
-11:00-• ea (I) a:1 a NEWS 8TAXI
C>llZAIW
G) ARCHIE IUHK£A'S PLACE
G) BAAHEY MIU.Ell tD THE IOtMDE.A
Cli>CNOSTA~
a) MIU.ER'S COURT COlMOVIE
• 'Everything Goel Wf'4" (198lll
c11ar111 Shreiner, Erika COOi
~S>BAOTHERS
-11:15-
HlMOVIE
8 9 ootRTAINMENT TONIGHT Cf) TWIUOHT ZONE
D HAPPY DAYS AOAIH m NEWS -10:00-
G A8C ~ CD MOY1£ fJ WEST 5TTH
• •'• O<awl" (1984) Klfk Oouglu,
James Cobufn -11:30-
fJ MAGNUM, P.1.
G TONIGHT G llOflC t 'Cheaper To Keep Her I 1980) G ~ REMtNOTON STEELE
NEWS MIC DIVIS Tovih Feldshuh "m (I) NEWS
THl&'S COMPANY &a NOVA D (JD) MACGRUOEJI l LOUD .., WHEE.°' FOAT1JNE m Uf'EllH£ a FANTASY ISLAND
D SATURDAY NIGHT
0 Q]l ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE
G LOUOAANT -''11>"-• _IUSN88 ___ AEPORT _______ PAA1SE __ THE_L_ORO _____ fD~·-OISAPPEARIHG WORLD
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P.S .... If you can't begin in A ugust, "late-starting" classes
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By VIDA DEAN
Dally ..._. 1"'9 ldllet
Forty women had already paraded
be fort four Judges.. 18 of them were
selected u models for the Huntington
Harbour Cancer League's Oct. 19
Debut V being hdd at the Anaheim
Hilton. The big news at th15 party being
held at the waterfront home of
Bobbitt and Bill William• would be
. the announcement of the members
choi.cn to be male models at the
fa h1on show/aucllon/dance .
The 120 league members had
nominated males to get the five
honored roles and 1hey were selected
by secret ballot
Shirley Stltilnger (male model
chairman) came forward and re-
vealed ... the host was one of the
chosen. He is CEO for Clayton
Wilham~ Sherwood Co. Others were
Huntington Beach dentist Robert
Clou1e. Jim Harrison. sales rep for
Vanity Fair; importer Irv Wieder.
and Coart Prowell. owner of Amen·
can Camper Shells.
Three of the ti ve were applauded by
the group ... Clouse had an emerg-
ency call and Wieder was at a funcuon
with his wife, Hamel ("She's in
politics," said Stttzinger.)
"Debut V will really be exciting,"
said Joanna Chase. chairman along
wtth Jerry Railey "We arc having an
art deco theme and Du Collins 1s
choreographing the event. He has
arranged to have $reat fashions .. the
Dynasty cotlect1ons and Escada
fashions," she added as committee
members and models mingled on the
patio. (Member George Maguire was
the fnendly bartender.)
Cindy Harrison was chatting about
the third set of models tn the show.
Later she announced the non-mem-
ber guest models. . the) are Eva
Schnelder. president of the OC
Philharmonic Society, Dr. Fred Fire·
stone, past president of the OC
Amencan Cancer Soc1ety; (those two
attended) Nikki Sabagen, Broadway
actress/dancer and daughter of HH
residents Joyce and Nick Sahagen
{who were there) and pttcher Ron
Romanick, who was not there.
(Number 10 of the C'ahforn1a Angels
was at the time engaged with the
Oakland As.)
"If the Angels make the World
Series. he wouldn't be available for
Debut V, etther Also. actor Martinet
who pla)S on "Santa Barbara" was
suppose 10 be a modJ:I . but he pulled
ligaments tn his leg on a tclcv1<>1on
\hov. and won't be a le 10 make.' It "
Others there were Missy Prowell
(she 1s In charge of the auctions),
daughter Julie Prowell (one of the 18
models). Lou and Jean Zimmerman
(she's l.::ague president) Joan and
I Jobo Foote, Sally and Roser Fenton
(she started the Debuts), Pat and Otto
S~reblow, Yvonne Kelley (HH
Ph1lharmon1c chairman) Don and
Jeannie Barnett, Oolore1 and Ed
Ollvaret, Bev Maguire, Bob and Vicki
Walker.
''Debut ts the biggest single event
mor\eymaker for the ACS in Orange
founty. We turned over $59,000 plus
1n 1984," said Bobbitt Williams.
More is the goal for '85.
A.lso, at the party were Jessica and
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. .. -
OM1J"""' ,...._ ltr Tent IC-
JO&DD& Cbue and Jerry Railey. above from left. plan to
make Debut V a hit. Below are model• BUI William•, Court
Prowell and Jlm Harri80D.
8111 Unlack . another of her
affihat1ons 1n the Harbour area 1s
Family Serv1ce A'ssoc1at1on "Since
nobodyhkestoget upaftera b1gsoc1al
event and make breakfast. our
chapter 1s planntng a big brunch the
morning after Debut. We can accom-
modate 300 Evel")'body can get
together and talk abou1 the part)' ..
she said
She needs help after
Caesarean section
DEAR ANN LANDERS· We hear a
lot of horror stones about the pain of
childbirth, especially when the labor is
tong, but hardly anyone talks about what
it islike todetivera child by Caesarean
scct1on. IJust went through it so please
hear me out.
A1111
lo DEIS A Caesarean 1s ma,,or surgery. It let\.
me totally exhausted. When I went home ••••••••••••• lwaswomoutandweakasakitten. l am
nursmg my newborn which means I am up half the ntght.
Mydoctortold me to take 1teasy for stx weeks: How can I when my
husband doesn't know how to tum on a vacuum cleaner. much less use one'l
Running the dishwasher and the washer-dryer as "too com pltcated." yet he can
take his car apart and put it back together again.
lfmy friends want to do something nice for me they can offer to pick up my
aroceries. (I can't lift more than I q pounds for another month.) Or better yet.
come over and watch the baby whale I take a nap. That would be the best aift of
all. Sign me-I NEED A REST NO MATTER HOW GOOD I LOOK
DEAR l.N.R.: Yoa need more &ban rest. Yoo need to teach yoar ba1bud
bow to do a few tb1D11 around tbe boaae. Start lnatnctlon lmmedJately. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter from the guy who resented his co-
workers forfrcetoadina by reading his morning paper reminded me of a s1m1lar
expenencc ycarnao. A fellow I worked with used to bnng the Wilmington
Morning News to the office and read it dun OJ lunch. (The pn~ was then IO
cents.) When he fin ished with it, he tossed at 1n the wastebasket. l would fish 11
out and read my favoritescct1ons.
One day he said, "I think you ouaht to pay me a nickel a day for reading my
paper. After all. it costs me a dam e and you areaettinaas much pleasure out of
at as 1 am.'' l wd, "OK." and gave him a nickel every day for about a month.
Finally he said, "h's embamssina to accept & l)rtkel a day from you.
Would you mind pay1n1 meaquanera week?' I told him it would be Just fine
and handed him a quanerevery Friday, but I stoJ>ped bnnaina him baas of
peaches. peppers, tomatoes. rad1 hes and beets from my~overloaded prden l'd
say he made a bum deal. What would yousar.-L01'fGTIME FAN
DEAR LT.: I'd 1ay tUt bird revealed It 1 tnae cbracter wben be cltlrped
abou tlle DlclleL Cla ap, chap, cMlp. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: How do parents who ha vc worked hard alt the a r
lives teach their children unselflshneuand a sense ofrcspons1bility?
My hu band and I had nothrna when we married. The years of hard work
and planning paid on: We are upper-middle·clas • comfortable but not
wealthy, proud that we could aiveourcbildreo advantaacswc dtdn't have. Theaarlsaredemand1~andselfish. Theboyaareirrcs~nsible. Nothina
iureasurcdorcared for. Ifit 1ruinedorto1tthcsolution 11, 'We cao buy
another." How wm they 1urvi ve with that atmude? Can we help them or as u
toolate?-MPLS. WOES
DEAR MPI.& s.adt 1jt 7owrtsdl ltd tM dlaadvaat.a1e of tM maa7
ad .. a&qet. 8aH lMJ tVtf went4? U Ml, tMJ .....W. lufst lkJ Ml'll tklr
allowuc • Aad 1&op k ytq tkm •Mte•tr u.., aak for. lllds •Mare
overladlllaed wlacl ap nmottnted a.M ml rabl •
i'
I
..
Ju·stice taking
back seat to ego
in local courts
When Municipal Coun Judge Russell Bostrom and
Newport Beach Police Chief Pete Gross took opposite
sides -publicly -over the dismissal of charges against
three men arrested in a $10 million drug seizure, we had
a real controversy. Now, we seem to have a power
struaglc; and justice is getting bruised while egos shove
back and forth.
On one side -strict law and order folks might
suggest it's the left side -stood Judge Bostrom and bis
opinion that the police search of the boat upon which six
tons of marijuana were found was illegal. The judge
decided the police violated the Fourth Amendment of
the Constitution by conducting a search without
probable cause.
On the other side was Chief Gross, who defended
his men, defended their procedures and moved the issue
well into the realm of a spitting match when he accused
Bostrom of harboring a bias against the Newport Beach
Police Department.
The United States Constitution and all~tions of
judicial prejudice arc worthy of serious consideration.
They arc likely to get it when this matter goes before the
Grand Jury, as Judge Christopher Strople has asked.
A public debate of the Constitution would be
instructive for all of us, giving us the opportunity to test
our principles and our commitment to them while
weighing them against the uncomfortable possibility
that three drug smugglers have been allowed to go free.
Instead, we're getting what appears to be justice by
competition, with Bostrom and the Newpdrt Beach
Police Department playing tug of war with their cases.
Consider the Luis Gamboa incident
Gamboa is a former car dealer who faces 14 counts
of grand theft. He fled to England, apparently to avoid
prosecution. After eight m onths out of the country, be
agreed to return on the condition that his bail be reduced
so he could remain free. Gamboa surrendered at-LAX on
July 30 and was taken before Bostrom, who"reduced bail
to $50,000 and ordered Newport Beach police to book
Gamboa and release him without delay.
But there were delays. Nothing serious, but
Gamboa was detained 3112 hours while bail details were
worked out. The discussions reportedly included an
evening phone call by police to Bostrom 's home.
The principals aren't talking about the specifics, but
the police officers involved claim they have been asked
to sign letters to Bostrom in which they admit contempt
of court because they couldn't or wouldn't free Garn boa
instantly.
It seems clear that the court and the police are doing
more than enforcing the law these days. They're using it
to exClt their will upon each other. They are, in effect,
playing games with our j ustice system.
Both Judge Bostrom and Chief Gross must realize
they are playing with fire. If they use the law for their own
purposes instead of the community's, then there is no
law.
And without law, there is no community.
Freeway congestlon lsn 't
fault of CM Clty Council
To the Editor:
A recent letter pnntcd on this page
complained of heavy traffic on the
Costa Mesa Freeway during rush
hours, and blamed it on the Costa
Mesa C1tyCounc1l. The reason fo r the
traffic, it said, was the increased office
development 1n the Brastol-
Sunflowcr area.
I personally checked with Caltrans
on the amount of traffic from Bnstol
Street to the freeway. There is no
direct connection for southbound
Bristol traffic to enter northbound on
the Costa Mesa Freeway. Nor1h-
bound traffic on Bristol docs not
originate m the Sunflower area.
Southbound Bristol traffic in-
creases the load on the San Diego
Freeway by no more than I 0 percent.
Southbound Bristol traffic incrcaJCS
L.M . Bovo
the Costa Mesa Freewa) 's south-
bound load by 18 percent, and thts 1s
not really the frct>way but 1 the old
Newport A venue road. None of this
can be said to overload the Costa
Mesa Frcewa).
Many people are deluded by tht>
general m1sinfonnat1on circulated
about the cause and effect of auto
traffic. But the complaining wnter
appears to pro1cct the gross d1sin·
formation currently being circulated
by a group seeking control of the
Costa Mesa City Council. It would be
difficult to refute all falsataes pres-
ented by misinformed people. but the
obvious falsehoods emanating from
the dissidents need to be refuted.
CHESTER KING
Costa Mesa
Russians cream U.S.
Russian ace cream aeoerally 1s not l outnumbered the Amcncan~ nonh of
1ust bcuer but much better than the Rio Grande by about 14 to one.
American ice cream, the com:spon·
dents claim.
The first Amcncan1 croned tbe
Bcnna Sea durina lhc Ice Age. it's
believed. And they sa.ld then what so
many sa_y now: "How I wish we lived
in the Sun Belt." Or words to lhat
effect. They, too, went south. By the
ume the Europeans showed up, the
Americans south of the Rio Grande
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPilat
This also can be rcPortcd about Los
Anacles: In no other city In the world
do more men buy hand lotions.. body
creams and hair sprays.
·• hccna" 1 the $tot's version of
.. Jeanne."
L.M. B•1' 11 • •Y•'J~tff
col•IJUl.l•f.
,, ... °"
loetor
T_.falt
......... (II .,.,...,
Olly...,
~~
Orano-CoU1 DAILY PILOTITueectey. AtJguat 11, 1985 A1
··thing once taken for granted Jn the afflrmatlve action neld are now
little more than SOC/ologlcal dinosaurs. "
RESUME
SPEED
• . • •
Latest educational quota
idea shot down instantly
Race, sex quotas
won •t be required
of academic teams THOMAS
ELIAS The quick, almost instantaneous,
shooting down of the latest notton 1 n
educational quotas 1s a sure sign that
tames have changed -and for the
more conservative. reason forthe sudden declarauon that
Educators around California had a the school distnct would enforce ats 6-
fcw nervous days last month. when year-old quota policy. one that states
administrators in the state's largest that each team must reflect "the
school dastnct ordered "academic ethnic and sex.ual" male.cup of the school's student body decathlon" teams to observe stnct "We want compliance with that
race and sex quotas. pohc} no""." !.a1d Paul Possemato,
If those ancreasangl} competlll\e director of the dastnct's 49·!>ehool
and important teams could be forced senior high division
into a quota system, how far behind Posscmato claimed that since two
could spons and other activitaes be'> members of each team must be A
For pohcaes of the Los Angele~ students. two must be B students and
d1stnct. from antegrataon plans to a C· two must have C averages. racial and
average standard for students an after-sexual balance shouldn't be hard to
school act1v111es, have often be.:n ach1e\C. Decathlon coache~ usually
duplicated by other d1~tncts around choose the ~\udents within each grade
the state and nauon category partly on the basis of scores
That's ""h> the sigh of relief was so on the national Scholastic Aptitude
~•despread when public ridicule and Test, which some dperts claim puts
poltt1cal reahty forced the 550.000-blacks and H1span1 cs at a dasad..,an-
'itudent distra ct to backtrack. tage
The lirs1 to prote'it against the "I want us to go after the ver) best
quotas was the coach of the cat) 's le.ids,'' Possemato said. ··in academics
champion academic team, Rose (,1J-)OU can do 1t and sull have the same
bert. whose Palisades High School ma>. as the overall student body
team has won all four annual com-because the requirement for.\. B and
peutton~ C students provides more balance
"I field the best team I can get," '>he than an 'ars1t) sports"
said. "I don't look at an) I.id b) lhear Then he strained his h'teners'
race or color." Her team last year creduht\ b\ claiming most high
featured .five .white.. boy.s and .one. ~oo4 ~~iy fi~propcrh· re.p-
wh1te girl from a school that's on ly 50 resentat1ve mixes·· -1f hght~e1ght
percent whale and1un1onars1t) team!>are induded
That team makeup was the hleh 'The' ars1t1es are for the' en best.
comparable to the A students on the
academic decathlon team,"
Posscmato said. "But 1f )Ou look at
the B and C teams, the)' reflect the
male.cup of each school, so we don't
need a fonnaJ policy there."
And Posscmato showccj some pol·
aucal smans by noung that the
academic decathlon controversy
would not affect intra~astnct transfCT
rules, which' now facilitate frequent
recruiting of top black. athletes for
football and baslc.etball tcams at some
mostlv·wh1te schools. ·
A. few years ago, before school
busing controversies caused more
conservauve forces to tJalc.c cha.JJC of
California schools, the quota du·ec-
me probabl) would have gone v1r·
tuall) unnoticed and might have bttn
put into effect ln fact, there was no
flap when the policy was hud out six
years ago; 11 was 1ust regarded as
irrelevant an subsequent years.
But this )Car there was a flap
"Turning the academic decathlon
into an affirmative action program as
nd1culous," said Roberta Weintraub
a former school board president
And current president John Green·
wood said he had "both pracucal and
ph1losoph1cal problems" wnh 11. This
from the most liberal current board
member
No ~ondcr. then that Posscma10'\
boss. Schools Supt HafT) Handler -
himself the author of the onginal
policy -stepped in and 'etoed the
new enforcement d1rcct1' e
Just another sign of the tames .\nd
an ind1ca11on that things once taken
~or granted in the affirmatt'e acuon field arc now little more tba[l_SDC10·
logical dinosaurs
Tbomas Ellu Is • Sao&a MooiC'•·
b.t1fil colu1JJJJISI OJI stat~ lsHH.
State Debris Commission
finally heads for trash heap
Relic offirovefCleveland · s presidency
regulated hydraulic mining industry
WASHINGTON -Quesuon
Name three creatures that have
defied the natural extinction process.
Answer The Horseshoe Crab, the
Galapagos Tortoise and the Cali·
fom1a Debn Comm1s~1on
Learned people can explain why
the Horseshoe Crab and the Gal·
apagos Tortoise have survived. but
the lonievtt) of the Cahfornta ~bns
Comm1ss1on is a puzzle. It as a
government entity and. as wtth $0
many other creatures of that specie,,
1t docs not expire eual> Lake the
snakes down South. you have to cut
off its head and beat at wuh a stack.
and it sttll won't die unul the 5un iOC'
down.
A bu~aucrauc adjunct of the Ann)
Corps of Enaincers.. the Cahfom1a
Debns Com mi aon wa.s ctt~tcd dur·
inf Grover Cleveland's second d·
mlnistt1tion to rqulatc the hydraulic
&old maruna industry.
Miners. havin1 araduatcd from
pans., packs and shovels, wett un·
carth1'.'14 veins or aold b> wash1oa
down htlls1des with trams of water.
The rcsuJllna debm poumi into
stream' and nvn'I and inundated
fanns. Followir\I t01Ttnt1al rain
stonns in t 862. ect0rdma to lus-
torians. the San Joaquin Vallty
btcame an ocean of mud and JrlVel.
After th~ d.tcldcs o( lobb)lf\I. rumen and hippcn Ywho wanted to
lfttc1"Ve the na"1pbilny of Call·
fbmia•a nven won a ooun bltdt that
bl.ti.nee! h d,.ulic mint Within 10
.,
)Cars the nation's gold rcsencs
dipped below the SI 00 million mark.
and the "Panic of 1893" ensued.
Railroads ""cnt into recc1versh1p; 600
banks-folded . and 15,000 other com·
mcmal houses went broke.
Congrcs~ leaped to the rescue and
created tht> C'ahfom1a Debns Com-
mission to resuscitate and regulate
the gold mimna tndustr;. The three
comm1ss1oners. all h•ah·nnkana of-
ficct'1 from the .~nny Corps of
Ena.inc-er;, bcjan 11,uma 11\Jn1na per·
mit nnd requinng the construcuon
of dams and stone walls to contain the
debn" The cornm1ss1oners aot no \8lal')
(other than their Army pay), ~w~d
no naff, had no office and no
stationery In 92 yttr.\. their expen
dtturt totaled only SJ malhon. or
about $80 milhon, dcpcndmg on how
the fiaurt arc 1nterl)rtted
But hydrauhc 1old m1mna 1s a
practJoc of tbe past and ha bct'n for
JO )C4.n or more The commas ion's
powers were considerably
d1m1m hed by flood control and
clean water ltaaslatton. Dunna the
1970.. It had only one miruna pcmut
on fUc The wordina of ats annu.t.1 ~pon h& n't chanacd sip.ificantl)' sin~ 1962 It ha n•t pent a dame for
20 )_Cl.fl .. 11•1 kind of uniQl.lt," wd Make
Helm, chief of operauons for the
Sacrameoto dntncl of the Army
flllnt' rs. "that )'OU've JO' a rom·
mi 1 n that 1s no burden on the
tusi-ycrs wbatc' er.··
JACK
AIDEISOI
and JOSEPH SP£AR
When Gen Paul K.a'anaugh be·
cnme c.:h1d Cnjl nctr for the Sacra·
mento dastnct 1n I 9N. hC' automata·
call\ became a comma~!.loner
·"omeboch tnformcd me I ~as a
member of the CaJ1forn1a Dtbns
Comm1ss1on " he told our reponer
Ke nneth Read. "and I thoufiht I wa'I
goana to be a glonfied JUnk man "
.\ v.1st perwn, Ka~anaugh con·
'enw the romm1ss1on and rt\·
om mended 1t 'ote to da \ol'e 1t~ll
The nouon earned. and a h11tonan.
Joseph Hagwood.. wa'I cho~n to
chronicle the comm1 ion'\ achae'e
menu
The recommcndat1on for abolish·
ment slowly chm bed the Arm) cha an
of ~ommand and flnallv. 1n Fcbnum
19 5. the ""' asked Conares\ to
clOK the coffin ltd o'er the com·
ma aon.
The ~uis1te la~sc ..... inserted
tnto a ma 1"e ~-.ter bl.11, which was
appro,·ed b)' the Houtc Public Works
and Transporuuon Comll\Jttct \_tn"
month. A Conarcwonal ~urcic Y•d
i1 bas to ~ ronudtttd b) four other
comm1rtcct before at h1b the Houte
floor, somt d.a) this fall .
Even thm. the cnttcr probabl)
~n't die untd tht sun Sot' do1Jtn.
J•tt .. b•nM Utl JN.,,. r
•rw t)Uletttfl r.I• ..
THOMA.a &l.LU
oalmaat.t
Su\RCHLIGHT
WALTEI
Bu11oucas
We need
S. Africa
as trade
partner
Now that the baseball stnke hu
been settled, at least for several years,
the bleeding beans can go back to
agJtataog about apanhe1d and South
Africa.
I, probably the same as you. do not
approve of apartheid. Maybe, how-
ever, l have a little more current
1nformauon on the whole problem
than you do. The reason 11 that in my
old age I can't spend all my ume at my
hfclong profession -newspaperina.
1 have to spend considerable ume
studyina worldwide economics.
For example. one of the trusts we
manage at my officc in ORION
Management Corp. makes us stay
informed on the worldwide economic
picture.
One point ID particular as of
extraordinary interest That as the
availability of stratcaic metals. And
that reads nght on to the bia
telev1s1on news story these days -
apanbctd Regardless of how mucb
you dtshke apartheid -as I do - I
nevcnheless am more concerned
about the United StateS of America
and its protection. At the moment, we
can't do without ~in stntcaic
metals, wtucb arc av1.1lable to us m
the quanuucs needed only from
South Afnca.
Ruma is such a b1g place tha~
somewhere ID their vast area of
mounwns and oceans. the Russi.ans
have all that they need Unltke World
War II, when the Russ1ansd«1ded we
were on their side and we -stupidly
as usual -decided the Russians were
on our side. we could 1mpon all the
lugh grade chromium. for cumple,
~ needed. Not so now •
From and1v1duals who have access
to far better 1nformauon than I do, I
learned that the Russums arc con-
' meed v.e are prepanng to attack
them A.nd wh)'" V..ell. the experts 11
the London Metal Exchange are
constant!~ offenng to bu) suateiic
metals from the Russians So the
Russ1aMconclude \o\e're plannangnot
for defense but to attack. them. Of
course. the Russians refuse to sell.
One of the men I know who keeps
the closest possible contact wath
anfonna ta on sources f("e lS that the
Russians are htertll'.t hckang their
chops C\ er) lime the) read the report
of the London "letal Exchange
The man I refer to 1s Henry Marks
of'a compan' called \fercanttle Inc
He tallc.s to/ me frequent)) about the
world satua\.aon as he SttS 1t and u I
see it, too M'r aclc!i hmttnhat ~
s1mpl;. must have a stockpile of
strategil. metals. I guess 1t would be
more proper to call them defensive
metals
~II of ""h1ch will 10d1cate to you
why n 1\ that the most profit.able
stocks and bonds ""ere based upon
companies doing business 1n South
>\fnca lf. for example a company asa
manufacturer of Jet engines or tnerttal
navigation wstcms. at the present
time It must ha\C both chromium
and cobalt So naturall'. th as com·
pan' goe) after 11 ~ hercver 1t c~n be
found. ~me of 11 1c; an Third World
countnc~ v.h o-;e go,emments arc
doubtful These art" cCluntnes where a
rC'' olutwn ''ould ha' e a substatiual pa, on
In th<' case llf ,hrom1um and
co~alt tor C'"l(ample 1f vou arc a
manufacturer of Jct engmes or inertial
na,~auon 'i\Stems \OU've got to
ha,ell fhat'strueforotherproduct)
3, "C'll -t11an1um, for example.
T11an1um 1~ a major factorenabhng
the Sl '1et na , . .,. to operate the world's
ta,test Jee~c;1-d1" ing submannes.
The metal 1!! used instead of\tecl to
(<)0•.trUl l prcs~ure hulls for I fleet Of
.madi. ~'ate. 1..no\\n u the Alpha
< la"' '' ,11her n.itaon hu fabncated
a full·s11c o~rational tatanaum bull
~ubm•nne lt't alone developed and
produc<'d llO t'nllrt' dass of titanium
\UbS
.\lph.1 'ubmanne~ achieve C'Ombet
dt'pth' llt'lou. 3,000 feet and run at
rt'p<>Mt'd n~1eNater !opccdl of 40 to 4S
knots The best pcrfomuna steel
hullC'd ooah -whether Ru tan Of
Free \\ orld -t\pK&ll) submeqe to
depth le~' th.In •. 000 fttt and reach
~pttd~ ot m 10 3~ knot
"t e~ the '°'1ets att wa\ ahead ofu
and. a1 the moment, nothina pleun
them Quite \0 much u the dcmoo·
~trat1on., of wcll-mc:anina "bleedina
hans" calhna for d1'1estmcnL ~s I ha-.ie mcnnoncd ~fore, \be colleae profcuor& v.ho encourqe or
e\~n snmulate tb1 ton of' K\ion an
not ~•ll}' left-v.l.aatrt l'Mf re just
uninformed
lf)OU art tntcttsud lD \be IU'l'llJC
metals story, rn try lo cncou111t
pubhcanon of the comp&eto 1~ in
the newspeper Let me mo. . lut l
cton•t proll\llt
OtMQ9 CO.. DAILY PILOT /Tu.day. August 13. 1885
l~HRMISSION
-----
A dazzling 'Dream Coat.' at Orange CoaSt
If the words "summer mu icaJ at Oranac Coast Collqe'' bnng to mind
im., of sittina m a hot, stuOy
auditorium about 20 rows back and stra.1nin1 to make out what's bappen-
1 on' • ou'll be happy 10 know
therc'vc been some~~ made dltJoned fac1hty -and your only freakY. rock-opera s&ylc or "000.
This year's offenn'7 • Joseph and v11ual comphcat1on1 will be attempt· spell, • which at closely resembles.
the Amuing Technicolor Dream ana to catch all that's happcnina except that there's no spoken
Coat," ha.5 been moved lO the simultaneously 1n director Bill dialogue here. Composers Andrew
ad)acent Drama Lab Theater - a Purkiss' panoramic productfon. Lloyd Webber anfi Tim Race (of
newer. more intimate, air-con· "Jose h" comes at ou in the wild, ·•Jesus C'hri t, u rstar,•· "Evita"
Anthony's orche~tl'I and Janet Mall·
er' creati ve chottoaraph1c efTec1' 11'
a true musical ''happcnina."
~__..;;...;;..:;~.;._---~----~ and "Cats") sock 11 II to you 10 song,
and With lhe pulsatm& beat or David
---
The story line IS the btbhcal tale or
Joseph, the favored son of has father's
brood of a do1en, who's endowed
witb the &Jfi of interpreting dreams.
The "Technic-olor Dream Coat" is the ' t l( I ,\ : !' .. '\ 1', : t'
, ~ I jf : rt 'I t ' 1 ! 't ' t" 1 ' ,
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EXCLUSIVE · ENGAGEMENT
STARTS TOMORR·OW
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95241
"****'Real GenJus' is a genuine comk
gem and a jolly 2ood time!'
-Mlkt Cha~. llSA "fODAY
REALilBNIUS
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coat of many colors bestowed upon
hJm by a dotm& dad. Rice and Weber afTord the 11
outsiders ample motivation for gang-
ina up on Joseph and selling him mto
slavery, making the title character a
bit of a spoiled brat, a sort of Sidney to
the others' Tom Sawyer. When his
fonune take a downturn, however.
the character pins a measure ot
humanity along with humility and we
enjoy watching him make the other!>
squmn when the tides arc turned
ap.m. Jack Challender plays the central
fiaurc of Joseph with a winning,
expressive nature and enough youth-
ful enthusiasm to capture his au-
dience's sympathies. Sharing the
spoth&ht as the narrator is the
sparkfinJ Lisa Spell, wbo blends in
nicely with the action when not taking
a solo tum.
Tha1 Joseph's father (Curtis Brown
Jr.) and one of his brothers as black 1s
mitjaJly startling but not. gi ven the
show's presentational nature, a defi-
cit to enjoyment: On the contrary, it
underscores the overaJI appeal for
brotherhood.
Having glimpsed an earlier pro-
duction or ''Joseph" m Ncwpon
Beach. we're not surprised when the
Pharoah turns out to be a pre-
ancamation of Elvis Presley. Ken
Perkins docs a standout impression
an th as cameo highlight. one of several
components of the musical's stylistic
potpourri which also includes
Calypso anct Jacques Brel-styk
French anterprctations.
Jn the latter, entitled "Those
Caanan Days." keep your eye on the
dow~stage nght comer -(from the
audience's viewpoint) where R1ck
T1gen and Judy Cifarelli put on an
energeuc Apache dance number.
Cifarclh's facial contonions arc price-
less -and hilanous.
The show is bnef -less than an
hour and a half and played without
intermission -but packs a plethora
of entertainment into its running
time. Performances continue
1 bursdays through Saturdays at 7:30
p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 until Aug.
25 in the Drama Lab on the Costa
Mesa campus. Call 432-5880 for
ticket information.
Burt to direct
on 'Hitchcockt
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Burt
Reynolds, who starred in an episode
of" Alf~ Hitchcock Presents" in the
1960s, will direct an episode for the
revival of the series by NBC.
Reynolds aJso will direct an
episode of NBC's ··Amazing Stones,"
the new anthology series created by
Steven Spielberg. Both of 1he NBC
anthol08JeS and CBS' ''Twth$ht
Zone" arc makang wide use of maJor
film directors and actors.
He will direct a show caJled
"Method Actor" for the new "Alfred
Hitchcock Presents." It is adapted
from "Bad Actor," originally telecast
on the first Hitchcock series in 1962.
The original starred Robert Duvall.
LIFE I~ A 0£.A(H
JUHN c ANDY · f\ICHAROr!\ENNA
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For a..ariec1 Ad
ACTION a
4 DAIU PM.OT
AO.YtSOI ..U.1'11
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THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
"I'm makin' a list of all the states
we see on license plates. I've
got 49 to go."
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"' .,_, .........
"Keep patting him on the head ... great way
to cool ottl"
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
FULL co~~ESSION ... f</>.Yo! I HERt: WA'S
JUDGE PARKER
..
H,ALFA CHoCOl..ATE
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BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) SHOE oy' Jeff MacNally
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DENNIS THE MENACE
by Hank Ketcham
'f{N TH IS~ AT ()(E !' . I GUESS MY VOICE ISN'T DEEP OOl6M . I
by Kevin Fagan
1 ~~l);f 10 ~~
ON i~E GROVM~ i!AAT
IT M\6~1
llilef<IMIAAi£
Mf.
by Jim Davis
PEA.NUTS
I KNOW EVERVBOCN IN
™IS FAMILY HATES ME !
l'M 60HNA 60 WHERE
l'M APPRECIATED!
at'AY (ll(AY
~Y-1"1" <:IJIVJfJ
~ ,.-
;{
" 1f} ~
114ERE MUST BE A
PLAGf IN ™15 WORLD
WHERE 1'V BE AmECIATED
FOR BETTER OR FOR ~OR$E
WHAT IS ~ MIKE--
~IN& wroNG~
by Berke Breathed
,.,. <Y ~ i//t/lllff5.7) ~
W'H JOY MP 11E r:mg fltl(f
MKr5 'tJ 5£r MM M MrH
TIE~ /!Iii' 6() ~ 1tJ
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by Lynn Johnston
~ Coio ~
IN Wlifi
US II
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by Tom K. Ayan
V~ .. JU )f nill'J~ AU. 'Tl'E
CASKf'T t.tPS EJEll'J' St.AMMEP
SHllf ~ VAMPI rtes !
TUMBLEWEEDS
-~
ROSE IS ROSE
BRIDGE
' 1 ~ ;
J
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by Pat Brady
RI GHT GADGET FOR THE OCC ASIOS
-.,;.;;;;.;;.;.;.;;.;..-;.;~;.;....;.----__. East Weal vulnerable. Nortb deals. Goren Learning lindge Made
Euy ·· Ont> of has 1d1o!lyncrasiea is
thal. when not vulnerable, he liltl'S
to play that an opening bid or two
no trump shows a weak manor two
su1tl'r Aht'r who knows how many
years. the chance to ual' thl' bad
run club-. and claim lhl' l{Tand ~htm
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
IHERE
STI L.L IS ...
by Harold Le Doux
NORTH
• 10
<:;) 76
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•QJ86S
WEST EAST
• QJ954
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+ K81
c;:;1 Jtsa
0 85
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0 1062
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SOUTH + A71J
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OAKQ
•AK
The blddln1:
N~ Eu& 8eedt Wett
2 NT P... 7 0 Put
Put P ...
Openinff lead: Qu n of +.
Llke do,.. evtr7 conveot100 hat
It.a day. No matter how unu1ual 1l
ma7 ti., eooner or later a hand will
corn. alo that ll u Uor made fo r
that putieular method. uch wu
the cue •1th toda7'1 hand. which
cropped up ln a tournament 10 Ntw
Eo1~nd.
lltl n1 North wu Harold
h.ld m of New Haven, Cou ..
•bo dad th prorrammln for lht
CBS compui.r Pl"Off•m ··chu ltt
OMAR
SHARIFF
fiM lly ca~ up and, what 11 mo,.., tl
hat th• Jackpot
The o~n1ng two no trump bid
wu wl'lk even hy Feldhfl lm't ~tan
dards Howevtr, hia partnf'r'
holding more than compenut4"d.
Sane• North promi1td at ltut fiv•
car dt 1n u ch minor. Sout h wa ted
no t1mt In. b1ddin1 a rrand lam 1n
di.amond . NaturaUy, the con,lract
wu a laydown. Not •ven ' 4 1
lnlmp division would ha Vt' d1aturb
ed declarer.
l>Ktarn won th• open1n1 pe.cM
I ad, dr.w trunips and u.hed the
ace·k•nt of clube. Whea both
a.fenden ronowid, dttlaf't'r CJ'
ed to the board with a JMd r~lf to
What appeaf'I to us about lhf'
hand is not t ha., ont· 'tranl{t> rt>coult .
but t hl' fact that onh onl' othl'r ron
tract -.a'\ pl.lyt•d at thl' rl''t o( t hi'
ta bl~' In l'H'r' ot hl'r ra ~f 'out h
df'clarl'd I hn•t: nu trump and marlr.
CHARLES
GOREN
t ht' ohv 1011 11tht t.r•<'k for dow4
ctnl'' I
,., taloraaU.. a'*9t • .,..... ... ... .. .........
play•n.•ri G...lrWp
llOI C .. A-•·· C:laJUlllll
..... ,J. 77 •
Illa.bode'• amonater
Rock atnaer Sttr&i u Dr.
Prankenaleln 1raba bl•
torteoa.a creation, Jennifer
Be.la, in a meene from the
moYie "The Bride:• a re·
make of "The Bride of Frankenatetn.•• to be re-
leued tbl• week.
Theater 'shopping center
being built in Los Angeles
__J_4 1 -h 1 construct an underground theater of the l()..year-otd Los Angeles Actors -p ay OUSe COmp ex and dressma rooms. Theater. . -f--I I di trl t Plant three more theaters a The result 1s the Los Angeles In Inane a S C number of restauran•s ind Theater Center, sc~edul~ t.o.ope~ in will open next month audiovisual facilities sujtable for mid-September with an 1nal1al yield __ small.scale recording and even tele-of four plaY,S. two concerts and a
vision production. poc:try reading by Lawrence Ferl-
By JACKIE HYMAN Fertilize with S 16 million in funds anff.etta. . . , '°'ttMA~..,_ from the Los Angeles Community Los Angeles 1s hke a ~aid W~st
LOS A~GELES -Take one Redevelopment Agency and dozens town," Bushnell said, leaninaacross a
empty but very grand 1916 bank of other sources, including private table at Irwin's restaurant next door
building in the crumbling downtown and corporate investors and spon-to the almost<0mpleted. coml?le~.
financial district. sors. "Anythina goes. The aud1ence 1sn t
Dig up one parking lot next door, Put the hoc in the hands of Bill Jaded. Art is perhaps 25 years old in
lll!~~~~~~======~=======~~~~~==~~=~'.__b::u::.:rr::.o::,:w:;i~n.!g...:40:.::..fi::ec::t:...:..:.in:.:to:....:.t:.:he:_:ea::.:rt..:.:h:....::.to:_...::B:.:u::s:::h:.:.n~~·...:•:..:rt=is:.:.t1::· c...!p:.:.r.:od::u::c:.:.in:.:!g:'....:.d 1:.:.' rcc=to::.:r~ Los Angeles.' . --------The complex, which merges a -----~ ........ .,....,.... dream of Bushnell's with the city's
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4 WAYS TO CHARGE: Our convenient Wickes Revofvtng Charge, Amencan Express Card. MaaterCa~d or Visa
ANAHEIM. Santa Ana Frwy and Magnolia Phone 714-821 -8550 VAN NUYS: San Diego Frwy and Sepulveda Blvd between Burbank and Victory Phone 818-780-2244
W!ST COV1NA: San Bernardino Frwy and Vincent Phone 818-919-1971 COSTA MESA: San Diego Frwy and Harbor Blvd Phone 71,-5,0-82'2
Open Monday thru Friday 10-9. Saturday 10-6. Sunday 12-6
plans for revitalizing its downtown, 1s
an intriguina mixture of classic and
hi&h-tcch design.
ihere'll be a sidewalk cafe, too -
protected from the noise and exhaust
fumes by curved Plexiglas and a
"wall" of water. Architect for the
center 1s John Se~o Fisher.
Inside, the facilities include the
499-seat Theater One, where a pro-
duction of Chekhov's "Three Sisters"
in a new translation by Michael Frayn
will open Sept. 19. Sam Shepard's "Fool For Love"
will have its Los Angeles premiere in
the 295-seat Theater Two on Sept. 26.
Perhaps the most unusual of the
playing areas is the 32()..seat Theater
Three, an underground hal f-
amphitheater of Greek classical in-
spiration. "Nanawatai," a drama by
William Mastrosimone with a cast
including Adam Arkin, opens Sept.
19. In Theater Four, a 99·scat flexible
space, Sept. 19 will also mark · the
world premiere of "It's a Man's
World," a multimedia ensemble
piece.
Two opening concerts are sched-
uled for Theater One -on Sept. 22, rcgae music, and on Sept. 29, South
and Central American folk music.
One of Bushnell's goals 1s to establish
a vaned cultural audience for the
theater complex, which is located
near large Hispanic, Oriental and
black communities.
Diane White, the center's
producer, said the 1984 Olympic Arts
Frstival "proved to us that there is a
need for theater other than what is
(usually) done in LA'' by selling out
performances by unknown groups
from around the world.
The center is bringing in artists
from other countries -such as
"Three Sisters" director Stein Winge
from Norway -and discussing-ce>-
producuons wit.h other groups, tn·
eluding Luis Valdez' El Teatro
Campesino.
It also hopes to participate in the
1987 Los Angeles Festival being
planned by Robert Fitzpatnck. who
directed the 1984 Olympic Arts Fesu-
val.
"I know It 1s not possible to create a
great theater unless it is of, by and for
the time and place for which you are
creating it," Bushnell said.
Tickets are priced from $5 to $20,
there will be free parking, and free
child care will be provided for
subscribers, of which the complex so
far has 21,000. LA Actors Theater
a so maintains atneater education
program that brings in high school
andjuni_or high school students to see
productions.
Restaurants and bars will remain
open during the day, and art will be on
exhibit to the public.
"Hopefully the whole thing will
generate as a meeting place for artists
and the general public," said design
head Timian Alsaker, who has also
worked in design at the National
Theater of Great Bntain and the
National Theater in Bergen. Norway.
"That's very much the philosophy of
the theater, that the theater's here for
all people, not any exclusive range."
At its previous 178-seat and 40-scat
theaters in cast Hollywood, the LA
Actors Theater won awards from the
Los Angeles Orama-Logue, as well as
the prestigious Margo Jones Award
for presenting new plays.
Bushnell said he doesn't intend to
modify his commitment to in-
novauve productions.
"We actually made a conscious
decision that we were growing up and
therefore you become a greater part of
what might be referred to as the
Establishment," he said. "The con-
scious decision was that instead of
being more conservative in our
programming, we would become
more radical in our programming
during the first year to make a
statement."
But the temptation to thank Holly-
wood isn't faraway. As Bushnell exits
the restaurant. he passes a chalkboard
sign noting that Irwin's will close
early today to allow filming of a scene
for the TV series "Cagney and
Lacey."
Big bucks
for Hoffman
and Beatty
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Warren
Beatty and Du tin Hoffman will
collect a nice slice of the pie from their
new comedy movie for Columbia
Pictures.
Beatty and Hoffman reportedly
will each 1et SS million, plus a share of
the aross profits, probably S percent.
Elaine May, who W1JI wnte and
direct the as-yet unidentified film , 1s
said to be setting $2 million. She
hasn't directed a movie 'incc .. Mikey
and Nicky~· in 1976, which fatled at
the box office.
Total budaet for the movie. which
will be filmed in Morooco 1s expected
to run sliJhtly mo~ than SlO million.
AdvertlSln& and marketina would
bnna it to about S4S million. That
munslt would havetodoaboutStOO
miUion at the box office to tum a
pr:ofit.
-,l __ _
I
'
-
TU OAY,AUGUST13. 1985
Two •rN ueketbltll at•r• ere hNded for Fer Eeat. 82.
Ar•• eocc.er tNm• find euccen •t D•nlah Gemea. 82.
Slaton shows
old form as
·Angels split
SEA TILE (AP). • Jam Slaton
couldn't remember what it felt hke to
pitch, but he got an import.ant wtn to
give the Angels a split of their
Monday night double-header with
the Seattle Mariners.
"I felt strange there in the first
inning because I hadn't faced anyone
in so long." said Slaton. who won his
first ballgame since May 19 and wa.,
making his first appearance smcc July
25.
The Angels, behind a two-run
homer by Brian Downmg, defeated
the Mariners 4-3 an the second game
Slaton, 5-9, worked the first six
innings, giving up seven hus and
three runs as he snapped a sait-game
losinastreak.
Seattle won the first game 6-5 when
Phil Bradley belted a two-out ninth·
inning homer off the Angels' ace
reliever Donnie Moore.
"I felt good warming up. but facing
a real hitter can pump up the
adrenaline and throw off your
rhythm," said Slaton. The Angels
right-handCT was dropped from the
rotation on July 22 and had made Just
one relicfappearancc in 22 days
ToaJ6bt'• 6¥-e
A"9,M(Roman~k 1~)atSeat-
tle (Langston 5-9),
Time: 7.:30 p.m.
TV: Channef 5.
Radio: KMPC (710).
only other mistake he made was
giving up Gorman Thomas' 25th
homer in the fifth inmng.
The Angels got a run back in the
third on an RBI single by Rod Carew
in the third.
Carew had a busy double-header.
He collected four hats. gi ving him a
career total of 3,009, which moved
him ahead of Al KaJine and into 14th
place on the all-ume hit hst. He also
Slaned a bench-deanng scuffie when
he tried to g_o after Seattle reliever Ed
Vandc Berg, who had brushed him
back on one pitch.
The Angels scored three more 1n
the founh. Jerry Narron doubled to
dnve in Doug Dec1nces. and Down-
ing connected for his 12th homer.
which gave the Angels a 4-2 lead.
~-~
Rod Carew la out u Mariner Spike Owene aoee for twin kill.
Slaton yielded a two-run double to
AJvin Davis in the first, but then
struck out the next three hitters. The
Luis Sanchez held Seattle hitless for
the final three innings to cam his first
save. Jim Lewts. 0-1. took the loss Regie Jackaon ala.ma No. 521 in flnt lnni.DC llonday ntiJit.
Honeycutt plays a Video game Streaks
come, go
·in minots
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dodger
pitcher Rick Honeycutt has joined
the video revolution. He says watch·
ing himself on television helped him
correct mechanical flaws that led to
three straight losses.
For the lirst time in four starts the
left-hander survived past his third
inning Monday night, combining
with reliever Tom Niedcnfucr on a
3-0 shutout over the Atlanta Braves.
AJthough he didn't complete the
game, Honeycutt aJlowed just two
singles in six tnnings before retiring
for a pinch hitter. He improved his
record to 7-10.
Honeycutt said be took h me three
videotapes and studied them, notic-
ing he had been "speeding things up
too much, along with some other
mechamcal problems with my de-
livery." ,
After discussing the problems with
pitching coach Ron Pcrranoski, the
pitcher said he got his rhythm back ....
was ahead of the hitters tonight, and it
made all my pitches work better," he
satd after Monday's game.
"It's funny. When you get your
mechaniGS together it takes the strain
off."
Smiling broadly, Honeycutt said he
feels like be has won back a benh on
what ba.s become baseball's stingiest
patching staff.
"It's been real tough not to be able
to come in and help the club with
everyone else doing so well," said
Honeycutt.
The Dodgen' bullpen has allowed
Tonf.IJat'• Game
Atlanta (BedroeJan 5-10) at
DadgHa (...,.,._. 12-3).
Time: 7:30 p.m.
TV:None.
Radio: KA8C (790).
o nly one earned run in the last 34
inmngs, lowcriog the team earned run
average to 2.88. Monday night's
shutout was the Dodgers' 18th of the
year, tops in the National League, and
left the Dodgers seven games ahead of
their nearest N.L. West nval. Cinc1n-
nau Reds.
Enos Cabell continued his s1zzhng
httllng. dnving in the only runS'
Honeycutt needed with a two-out,
two-run sing]e in the fifth inning.
Right-handed hitter Cabell lined
his 10th hit in ~ 9 at-bats down the
right-field hnc to bnng home Steve
Sax and Manano Duncan.
It was o nly the third hit of the game
offloscr Rick Mahler, 16-10, who said
afterward. "I knew Cabell was look-
mg for something to go to the
opposite field wt th. You JUSt have to
make a good pttch. and I didn't"
Dodger catcher Mike Scioscaa
singled tn the final run off Mahler in
the sixth. Pedro Guerrero and Greg
Brock had opened the inning with
singles before Sciosc1a hit a ball up the
middle to score Guerrero from sec-
o nd base. Rick Honeycutt
Brock answering
the starting call
But some are still
questioning his -
ability to play here
It's still too early to be sure, yet
Coach John Robmson of the Rams
believes that his team's new-old
quarterback 1s going to work out JUSI
fine.
It's been almost five months since
the Rams made the danng dec1s1on to
sign Dieter Brock. the all-star quar-
terback from the Canadian Football
League.
Although the strong-armed Brock
threw for 34,830 yaras· 'and 2 10
touchdowns during tl-is I I-year CFL
career questions abounded.
"'hat "'e'redo1ngdoesn'1 me\<. him up
at all
"His vear.i of pla}ing against I~
guys 1n Canada g1-.e him a real ab1l11"
to see the secondan and ~e th1:
lO\erage" ·
Dunng dnlls at camp. the 6-1 I Q'i.
pound Brock has not been troubled
b\ the Rams big defensl\ e linemen
'He's a courageous gu\ ·· Rob-
inson said "He has an atuht'. 11
seems 10 me 10 stand in the pockt'I
and e\en \I.hen he's about to he hll
look do"nfield and find a rete1.,.er
"Dieter's no scrambler hut his
ab1ht) 10 escape. to shulTie lrom
trouble. 1s qu11e good He does a "I~~
good JOb of sta\ 1ng ah"-e "
.\t 'anous times dunng the past
fe" weeks. thc pla\er-. haH• made 1t
clear the) ·re 1mpres~d b) Brod.~s
strong, accuratr arm
Losing ones seem
to stick around a -
lot longer. though-
Note: Tnals and tnbu1auons of a
minor league ~ball player are
documented b> R1chvd Dunn. o ne
oft he Daily Pilot's Angers wnters and
a correspondent for ·che past three
}t'ars He's trying 10ma.kt'1110 tht' 8'8
Lea8ues and begins w11h Idaho Falls
in Clas.s -\ The sei en th of a ~llkl)
~nes
ID.\HO F.\LLll. Idaho -The
modest four-game winning streak we
\\ere on ended abrupt!} last week in
Great Falls. \font . where we staned
our lUrrent ~1\-game losing streak
treak!. of an) ktnd 1n this gaml' at
this le .. el. are as normaJ as waking up
e' Cr) da} lo go to the ballpark
But thr most danng ~treal last
v.eei.. pro' ed to be the near-frcc11ng
temperatures. which we fought and
lo<.t to dunng a couple gam~ 1n (ireat
Falls
.\nd although m~ perwnal four·
game 'ol.tnning •.treai.. was hailed. I fl'lt
honored and complimented on Fn
da~ ntght when I \l.3S bumped up a
da\ 1n the rotation because the front
otlice v.anted mr to stan
I 1 v. as our fir'it night bad in town in
a w~k and also a promouonal mght
SinlC I had ht~n our club's ho ttest
pitcher the brass requested I pit( h in
front ot the e>.pected larger-than-
usual cro"d That ofcourst'. was fine
v.1th me
Dellr ,... ...... &tr ""' 0. ,n.co
Dieter Brock pltchee to a tralUna back in Bame' ezhlbltlon opener .,.1net Hoaaton.
Could Brock, at age 34, drop habits
he picked up dunng more than a
decade on Canada's larger fields?
Could he adJust to the smaller end
zones and one less defender?
Could he adjust to the Nauonal
Football League's vanous pass de·
fenscs. manned by bigger and faster
athletes? Could he ignore the rush of
bagger and. taller men?
"I think our player. kno" he's
good." Robm\on said. "'\nybod}
who ha!> e'er ~n him thro" a pass
goes 'oooh ..
In Brod.:'s first e\h1b1t1on game
Saturda\ night against the Houston
Oilers he l·ompleted JUSt five of I~
passes for 49 ~ards. but both coaches
v.cre 1mpn·,~d
I JUSt wish I would ha\-e had 'iome
-;lerp that da' and known I was going
to throw I didn't find out I was
pill hing unul I got to the ballpari.. that
da' lt°s not an ahb1 1t'-; JUSt that
some pitchers hl.e to mentalh
prepare themseh e' .\m"a' I th rev.
v.ell enough to v.1n -we were do"n ~-0 before I tT mc out of the game in
the eighth in ng -hut lost pumng,
me a1 4 '• • ·
I'm finding that 11" d1ffault heing
an O'er-500-pit,her on a dub that• , , ,4 Rallls cut Mclntyre;Dick~rson still out Most import.ant, could Brock
duplicate his success 1n a vastly
supenor footbaJI league?
"I thuught he did a good 1ob." said
Robinson ·He did a couple ofthtn~
I realh hkl•d
The tempe-rsture1n Great Falls was
in thC' lov. -'Os 1lnr night and with the
v.1nJ~·h11l lador was in the high 30s
"~ ,t adualh ht"Camt" a fun challrnge
11"\IO[! t(' IO\ent nrv. v.a\S to 'ila\
v.arm r' en thing trom towel\ O\ er
llUr 1a'e' to n tra c;pnnt'i on the
~1dehnl' v.1th 11rn or three Jackrts on
The Rams cut roolc..ic running back
Marlon Mcintyre on Monday, paring
their trainina-amp roster to 84
players.
Mcintyre was the Rams' eighth·
round draft c hoice. A 5-1 I. 230..
pound fullback, he eined 250 yards
on only 50 carries as a senior at the
U niversity of Pmsbur&h.
Rams Coach John llobanson also
announced Monday that veteran
Angels call
forllowell
The Anaels have recaJtcd third
baseman Jack Howell from their
Edmonton farm club of the
Pacific Coast Leque and o~
tioned utihty player Darrell Mill-
er to the same team, it was
announced Monday.
Howell, the lcadint hitter in the
PCL with a .373 averqe. will be
playina for the Aft&t[s for the
a«ond time lhis season. He was
called upon MaylOa.nd played 1n
t2aamea, hinina .t58. 1•
At Edmonton Howell had 13
home runs and 48 runt-batted-in
wbtle playma in 79 pmcs.
Milltt has playcd _ c.ach of the
outfield po u1ons for the Ansel
a well u tturd buc and catcher.
Ho tllO terved a a pinch runner
= 1<and a • ..-·-*' b_iuer.
agaanst St. Louis. inside linebacker Carl Ekcm's ankJe
injury may be more troublesome than
oriainally thou&ht.
''The kind of injury Ekcm has can
be a real J>&in," Robinson said. "You
think he s ready, but the thina just
doesn't heaJ like you'd expect."
Robinson said Monday there have
been no "encouraging develop-
ments" in Rams running back Enc
Dickerson's-holdout.
Monday marked the beginnang of
the third week of Dickerson's hold-
out. He has said he won't report to
camp until he gets a three-year
contract added to his present con-
tract, which runs out in 1986.
After sevcraJ months of hard off.
season work. four weeks of training
camp and one exhibation game.
Robinson is sure the answers can tx-
yes.
"He's made pr~ss 1n ever)
area." Robinson said "I think he
understands what we're doing.
"Ht<. sta11st1cs "ere nl'l outstand-
ing. but thr) 'II gel belier v.hen our
pa'i!>1ng attack gets a httlr more
elliut>nt lt''i ~till earh and v.e ha'e a
long v.a~ to go ..
·1 think he did an dlClt1"e JOb.''
~1d Houston { oach Hugh< ampbell
v. ho !>av. Brock while he wa'I a coach
(Pleue Me BROCJI/B~)
Rememhl'r thl\ Idaho Fall-; Club is
~J'>tralh made up ot ( ahtom1a
hallpla,er1, "' 10 .\ugu'it "cather
hlc v.hat Wl \(lCnenced wa<; ve"
unu1,ual
Ekcm and comerback LeRoy
Irvin, who is sufTerina from a hamstr-
ing. won't play in the Rams' second
exhibition aamc Thursday nlaht
Riggins a
John Rigins and Nat Moore will return
to their teams for the upcomina National
Football Leaaue season. Joe Oc-
Lam1ellcurc, who has played 10 l 7S
stniaht sames, and Alfred Jackson will
not.
The Washin~on Redskins announced
Monday that Rigins bad qrecd to terms
on a one.year contract. The pect. aocordina
to SOUft'CS. is wonh $8$0,000, the most
ever paid to an NFl. runruna blck for one
season.
Moore also urcod to terms for another
1e110n with the Miami Dol~bin . The wide
rcceiVcr had pc-eviousJy wd that the 1984
KUOn would be bi lasL
Oelamicllturc, a tniard who was part of
the BufTalo Ballt' ";-Eieetnc Com-pany ..
offensive hne that helped OJ. imPtOn run
for 2,003 yards an 197 l , wa cut by the
Ocvcland ltrowns.
"Every once in a whtle, the vocabu-
lary still me ses him up a little bit. but
rees to S_850 000
Jacbon, the No. 2 receiver for AtJanta
last year and fifth on the club' all-time hst.
was cut Monday by the Falcons.
Rigjns, 36, ran for 1,239 yards and
teorcd l 4 touchdowns in I Cl 4. The 13-ycar
veteran mi$1cd three pmc last season
because of il\)ury and there had been
speculation that he ml&ht not return 1n
198S. Even RtUJnS admitted that there wttt umes last ~car when he lhou&ht he ma&}\t ~
ncarina the end.
"Durina the season, 1 st.artcd to sec the
babt at the end of the tunn 1,·• Riqinasaid. "There~ ti m a Wttk or t..,o, if I oouJd
havePo 'blythouabtofawayofaraciou
ly bowina out at that time ... the idea ~nt
thro~ my mind."
The Rechlc..in unsure of Rtains' plans,
traded their No. 1 draft ~ho1ce uns r to
New Orlcan for runnana k rt
Rote rs.
But R1wns as now read\ to pla\ or at
least soon Mil be. R11&1n'i ..ays he's n,1t \Un!
whether he Wlll play an 'iaturda} ·., exh1-
b1t1on pme apinst thr I o~ '\ngcles
Raiders.
''t:.vcry)'carlaotoc.amr.and point to the
(rqular season) opener.· he ..aid "1 ha
)'t'&r1snod1fic~nt. lfposs1ble. I cruld play
OD turday, but l'UJUSt Wiil and~'( how It aocs."
Moore, 33, holds M111m1 can'\ r rttorJ'i
for rcttpt1ons (421 ). rttc•' 1n1 yard
(6,41S) and touchdown catchc (60). In
1984, has I Ith ~n 1n the "'IFL. Moore
cauaht 43 p1s~ for 573 >lr<h and 1~
touchdown a a be<'kup tor 1.000.vard
rttc1vcn Mark Duptr and M '"' \lt)'tOn
Dcl..am1ellcure, J4, is a 1 l·ytar \Ctcran.
His 175 con uuvc pme pla)td lies him
wuh punttt Ray Gu~ of the R11dt'"
-
(Pleue taee DUNllf/82)
Pilot boating writer
suff et's heart attack
.\lmon l ockabe\ thl' Dail\ P1lot's boating
wnter for mam \enr-. a'> well a'> a rnntnbutor to tht"
Lo .\ngclc'\ T1mt'., pons °'le\ lion. the San Ot~o Lot and 'anou\ ht'l311ng JX'nodicals.
1 current!) tn ~nou<. cond1t1on at Hoaa Memonal Ho'lp1tal an "'lcw-
pon ~ach after suflenna no acute
heart attad. Fnda\ mominJ
He remaans m intcnsa'c arr,
but 1 1mpro' 101. accord101 to his
wife of~ }C'll''\ \ u1m1a
pacemakC'r wa'I implanted a a
temporary fC"aturc. and Lockabcy 1s
not C'(pttted to be able to ha"e v1S1ton until he
lea"e 1ntens1"e care and sub-intcnw\ic cart.
"RiJ_ht no1ito he'\ up thctt rntcna1nm1 all tht
nur.<'\ and wtann h1m!Clf out Wllh all ha dany
jokes,'' \l)''i h1\ wife ··eut he ha a tendcn y to pu h
and do that."
· Dr. L&rn Baum head •medical team tntharac
of loclt.:abcy
' . '
82 0rMge COMt DAILY PILOT /T~ay. Augu1\ 13, 1985
FooTs~u
---
UCLA wo·rking to bowl over competition
LOS ANOELES (AP)-UCLA 1s the onl)
schooJ that can dai ma thrtt-pme, New Year's
Oay-bowl wtnnina streak cntenna the t 98S
colleae football season
Bruins Coach Terry Donahue he knows it
V--'On't be easy to make it four 1n a row.
UCLA almost cenaanl)' would ti.ve
mis~ a New Year·~ D1y bowl pmc had 1t not
been for a 29-10 upset of cross-town nval
Sou them Cal, the Pacific-IO Conference cham·
pion, an its final rcgular-scason pme.
5tan1n1 UCLA quarterback fiaures to be either
Junior Man Stevens. a product of Fountain
Valle} Htdl, or fifih·year senior 0 v1d Nome,
neither of whom has much expcnence.
"We're undecided niht now." Donahue said. "We would like to seulc the issue and act
ourquanerback named, but we very well might
have to see bow it aoes as the season unravels."
runnina backs here. Green as ~nainly an the ~me category in term of where he 11 now."
Amona other offensive standouts rctum-
ana are wide receiver Mike Sherrard. who has
caupt 91 catches in the last two seasons, and
guards Make Hartmc1er and Jim McCullough.
"We're real excited about the upcomina
season and very pleased about the growth and
development of the program over the las1
several ye~rs." he S&ld. Donahue begins his
10th year as Bruins coach Sept. 7 when UCLA
faces dcfend1na national champion Brigham
Young at Provo, Utah.
The Bruins won the conference title the
previous two years and earned Ro~ Bowl
v1ctoncs follow1na both seuons.
Donahue's career record of 71·29·5 1anks
I Jlh amona acuve NCAA 01 v1s1on 1-A coaches
and he needs only iwo wan) 10 set a school
record for career wtns 8111 Spauldin& auaded
UCLA io 72 vic1ones in 14 scasom startm& in
1925.
Stevens started three games early lasi
season when Bono was mjurcd and completed
43 of his 84 passes for S83 yards and three
touchdowns while beina intercepted four times.
Norrie was seven of 17 for 46 yard11.
The staning tailback figures to be
sophomore Gaston Green, who spent most of
hut year as a reserve before gaining 134 yards
against Southern Cal and 144 against Miam1.
Abo returning is plllce-k1cker John Lee,
who sei a single-season NC AA record with 29
field goals in 1984, while missana only three
attempted thrce-t>Qinters.
"He's the best we've ever had," Donatiue
s~ud of Lee. "Our offensive strenaths are Lee,
our depth and talent at running back and our
depth and talent at wide receiver. Tbe biaaest
question marks on offense arc at quarterback
and in ihe offensive line, we have no eitperience
at center or tackle."
"Whenever you're involved in a program
like 1h11, 1\'s very satisfytng and very rcwardinf_:
The only negative part about at lS that peoples
citpectations become h18}\er. But I'd rather
have that than not have it.." he said.
The Bruin finished No.9 with a 9-3 record
last season, ancludin, a wild 39-37 victory over
Miami in the Fiesta Bowl.
Whale the Bruin~ have some outstanding
talent returning from last yt'3r's team and
recrutted well, there are 11 lot of question marks,
not the least of which 1s the quarterback
Steve Bono. last )Car'\ $1gnal-caller. was
graduated and as now playing for the Minnesota
V 1kinas of the Na11onal Footb.111 League. The
"I think he's the best running bad.
prospect we've had since Freeman McNeil
(who played at UCLA five years ago),"
Donahue said. ··we've had some outstandin11.
Donahue also pointed out that enterina fall
pracl1ce, the Bruins are without an established
punr.tr
SPORTS BREAK
Corona's Fryer,
Laguna's Naess
set for Far East
Corona del Mar High's Jeff Fryer and m
Laguna Beach High's Coby Nacss have
already made some marks on the high
school level in Southern California -now
they're out to mak~ some tracks an the Far East.
Th.c two ar~ part of a I +man hi$h school
aggreaauon under thecoachingofDamjen H18}\'s Mike
La Due in a 10-day tour ofSeouJ.
Korea and Taiwan, ofT the mam-
land of China.
-_Fryer averaged 23.1 pornts a
game for Corona del Mar as a
junior as an off-guard, and
although he'll be at a WJng this
winter, wall direct the attack at
point guard.
Nacss. also an All-Sea View
League rho1ce as a 1un1or, re-
mains al the post where he clicked
FTJer at an 18.6 pace.
The two are the only Orange
C't>unt} players to survive a 60-
man tryout for the team recently,
and have been busy trying to put
together the necessary funds
SU\ Ce,
Fr)cr says he has raised
SI , I 00 of the necessary S 1. 700
from throughout the Corona del
Mar community, and has been
able to gain another S200 working
on has own, when it has been
possible to squeeze 1t mlo has
Naeu schedule.
Each has been involved an some 50 games this
summer wnh all·star tournaments and play with their
own school'c; summer programs
·· 1t's for the expenencc," sa}'s Ff'} er, ··but the coach
sa}s he'd like to win some. too."
The team wall be mecung vanous 16 and 17-:tear-
old all·star team~ an the Far East. in addmon to college
all-star teams.
··our coach sa)s -we'll facing some prett} good
teams," conunues the Corona del Mar resident. "We
figu re to\ 1s11 a lot of places whale we're there. too"
The tnp 1s under the ausp1cies of International
Spons Exchange, a non-profit organization
They're scheduled to return August 24.
Quote of the day
Bobby Valenttne. manager of the Texas
Rangers. on why musclebound Don Baylor of the
New York Yankees. who has been hn by patches
14 tames this year and 172 tames in his career,
seem1n~y doesn"t bother to get out of the way of
the dehvenes. "'Why should he? That would be
111.:e a car trying to dodge .a squirrel."
Ez-USC All-American ~ea
LOS 4-'\/GELES -Nate Barragar, an [!]
.\II-American guard and captain of the • • t
Southern California football team in 1929. •
died last aturday 1n nearby Santa \fonaca.
the school announced \1onda). He was 78.
\,o services wall be held, the school said, adding
that 1n lieu offlowers. donauons can be sent to the Nate
Barrager Football Scholarship Fund an care of the
Southern Cal o\thlctic Depanment.
Royals win; gai n on Angela
Mark Gublcu and Du Qulaeaberry • combined on a seven-hitter for Kansas City
Monda) night as the Royals dealt Boston a
3-2 defeat io gain ground on the Angels in
the Amencan League West. Gubicza, 9-6, won for the
ninth tame in his last 11 decisions and Quisenberry, a
product of Costa Mesa High School and Orange Coast
Collegt'. collected his 26th save. tops in the AL ...
Elsewhere, Pat Tabler drove m three runs, two with a
base~-loaded single to hi~hli~ht a five-run Cleveland fi~t inning in an 8-5 verdict over
Baltilmore . . •. Texas edged
Toronto, 5-4, as Wayne Tolleaon
drove in Steve Buechele with a
one-out single m the bottom of
the ninth inning against Toronto
relief ace BUJ Caudill . . .
Milwaukee edged Detroit. 4-3, as
Earnest Riles collected three hits
and drove m the decisive run with
an sinJ!e during a three-run ---___.J eighth inning ... Ron Hu1ey•1·
eenbeny second homer of the pme broke a
lie and tnggered a seven·run seventh inmng that gave
Pbll Nlekro of the New York Yankees his 295th career
victory and extended the Yankees' winnin~ streak to a
season-high seven games with a I 0-4 win over the
Chicago White Sox . Mmnesota's Tom Bruanaky hit
a solo home run to lead off the bottom of the eighth
inning and hft the Minnesota Twins to a sweep of its
double-header with the Oakland. Home r,uns by Roy
Smalley and Mark Salas supponed Bert Blyleven'1
four-hitter and led Minnesota to a 4-3 victory in the first
game. Steve Howe was the winner for the Twins m the
5-4 decision in his first appearance for Minnesota,
Meta, Cardin als continue pace
The New York Mets, behind lef\-1 • hander Sld Fernandez, and the St. Louis
Cardinals, W1th southpaw Jolla Tudor
wa nnang for the 14th time an his last 15
stans, continued their torrid race m the National
League East wtth v1ctoncs Monday night that kept the
Mets a game an front of the Cardinals. Keitb Hernandez
drove an three runs and Wally Backmu had three hits
and scored three umcs for New York 10 a 4-3 victory
over Ph1Ladelph1a Fernandez was rolling along with a
one-hatter - a two-out bloop I single by Garry Maddox m the
second inning -before Rick
Scbu opened the ninth watb a
double. followed by a bunt single
by Mike Scbmldt. Then
McDowell gave up the three-run
homer to Wilson . . Darrell
Porter supponed Tudor's five-hat
effort with a three-run homer 10
cap a five-ru n fifth inning for St.
Louis in an 8· I victory over
Oaney Pittsburgh . . Steve Garvey
doubled home two runs in the sixth inning and Mark
Tbormond and rookie Lance McCallers combined on a
e1ght-h1tter for San Diego, which handed Cincinnati its
fourth straight lo\s, 2-0 ... Tbad Bosley hit two home
runs. 1nclud1ng a two-run shot an the eighth mning,
enabling Chicago to snap tts seven-game losing streak in
an 8-7 dcc1s1on.
Auto_ r acer dies from injuries
TORONTO -Auto racer Manfred • W1nkelhock of West Germany died Mon-
day of injunes suffered Sunday when the
car he was dnving an the Budweiser GT
endurance race at Mosport Park, Ontano, slammed
mto a concrete bamer. a spokesman for Sunnybrook
Medical Center announced.
W1nkelhock, 30, suffered ··m~ssive head 1n1unes"
from the accident and died at 2:30 p.m. EDT.
Bruins send 6-8 Pitts away
LOS ANGELES-Carl Pins. who last m
sprina s•aned a national letter o. f intent io
play basketball at UCLA. has been released
from the letter becau~ he didn't meet
"certain entrance requirements necessary for ad-
mission" to the school. it was announced Monday.
Pitts. a 6-8 forward-center, has t"o years o(coUege
eligibility remaining. He averaged 23 points and 14
rebounds per game last season in leading Los Angeles
Trade Tech Junior Collcge10 a 21-8 record.
A UCLA spokesman said he had no information
regarding Pitts' plans for the upcoming school year now
that he won't be attending the school.
Veee reacquired by Sockers
SAN DIEGO -Forward Julie Vcce, m
left without a team after the termination of
the Las Vegas Americans franchise, was
reacquired Monday by the San Diego
Sockers. team oflic1als said.
Terms of the three-year pact were not revealed.
Vece, sold by the Sockers to the Amencans last
year, tallied 50 goals and 21 assists in 39 games for the
Americans du ring the past Major Indoor Soccer League
season. when ihe Sockers captured the title.
Chargers release five players
LA JOLLA -Five players. including m
veteran defensive back Ba II Kay and former c II•
Canadian Football League standout Larry
Crawford, were waived Monday by the San
Diego Chargers, a club spokesman said.
Other players released by the club were wide
receiver Derck Graham, a rookie free agent out of
Princeton, rookie linebacker Kevin Will, a free agent
from St. Mary's College of California and free agent
safety Jeff Davis from South Dakota.
., Kay, picked up by San Di~o last November after
he was waived by the St. Louis Cardinals. staned at
comcrback for the Chargers in the last three games of
the 1984 season. A s1xth·round draft selection by
Houston an 1981, Kay staned nine games in three
seasons with the Oilers before being waived pnor to the
1984 season.
Crawford, also a defensive back, intercepted 29
passes an four seasons with the Bnt1sh Columbia Lions
and earned all·CFL honors in 1983.
Cuba hand Bowa his release
CHICAGO -lafT} Bowa, who has • the career highest fielding rcentage for a
shonstop 10 ma1or-league ristory, was put
on waivers by the Chicago Cub~ on
Monday for the purpose of giving him his uncondi-
tional release.
The Cubs made the move shortly afier breaking a
seven-game losing streak with an 8-7 victory over
Montreal. Bowa entered the game as a pinch runner in
the eighth inning and played the ninth at shortstop.
Bowa. 39, was batting .246 this season wiih no
home runs and 13 runs batted an.
Television, radio
TELEVISION
7.30 p.m -BASEBALL: Angels at Seattle,
Channel 5. '
RADIO
7:30 p.m -BASEBALL: Angels at Seattle •
KMPC (7 10J.
7 30 p.m -BASEBALL: A\lanta at
Dodgers, KABC (790).
WEDNESDAY'S RADIO
12.30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Angels at Seattle
(doubleheader). KMPC (710).
Area teams
successful
in Europe
l'wo Orange Coast area-loaded soccer teams in the 16-
and·under and 18-and-under classifications, coached by
former area high school standouts, have i:ctumed reccn~ly
from a successful two-week venture in Europe with
competition in the Danish Games.
The Beach Cities teams of Bruee Silverman (I 6s) and
Bnan Haney and Brad Webster (I Ss) combined to record a
12·3-I record in a fi~ld wh~ch included over I O.CJ09 players
representing 16 nations wtth 130 teams per class1ficauo11.
Silverman's club put together a 7-1 -1 record, winning
the consolation championship after going 1-1-1 in the
opening round. .
The 18-and-underclublost atsopcner, then won twice
to finish second in group play and went on to a
quarterfinals berth 10 the championship bracket.
The 18-and-under team included Thom McClane
(Huntington Beach). Drew Krum (Corona del Mar).
Robert Long (Hunting.ton Beach). John Gcdiman (New-
port Beach), Mike Recupero (Huntington Beach). Kevin
Wolfe(Newpo.t}Beach), Ian Van Hoven(Coronadel Mar).
Clarence Turnat-(Huntington Beach), Rich Robison
(Corona dcl Mar). Mike Parisi (Corona dcl Mar), Steve
Muzzy (Corona del Mar}, Mike Benditti (Corona del Mar).
Kevin Rosen (Irvine). Oreg Cippolla (Irvine), Jeff Berger
' (Irvine). Pat Merrill (Corona del Mar).
The I 6s included Chad Husted (Huntington Beach).
Matt Tomlin (Corona del Mar). Steve Ross (Huntington
Beach). Rich Pethigal (Corona del Mar), Ryan Kelly
(Corona de! Mar), Bruce Patison (Newport Beach), Brian
Lou (Orange). Mike McMalian (Newport Beach). Vince
Matteucci (Corona del Mar). Chris Chaves (Corona del
Mar). Greg West (Corona del Mar). Gary Gnmm (Costa
Mesa). Geoff Barrows (Corona del Mar). Neil Tachik1
(Costa Mesa), Scou Redington (Newport Beach). Greg
Galusha (Corona del Mar), Jeff Cannon (Corona del Mar).
They ten on July 15 and spent a week training in
Holland before competing in Denmark the second week.
Players were required to raise $1 ,490 cachk to cover
meals, uniforms and other expenses.
Countries participating mcluded Sweden, Norwa).'.
Denmark, Germany. The Netherlands, England. Bnwl,
Iceland, France, Belgium, ltaJy, Spajn, Nigeria, Ireland,
China and the United States.
Silverman and Haney prep~ at Newport Harbor
Hiah and Webster at Edison HtJb. Silverman went on to
Orange Coast College and San D1ego State; Haney went on
to Cal State Fullerton and Webster went to UCLA
followi ng his high school career.
Silverman, a La Habra Heighs resident, says they plan
on doing again next summer under the auspicies of World
Spons Connection.
Wohl named
new Net coach
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)-The New Jersey
Nets announced Monday they have once ~n ended a
search for a successor to Stan Albcck, and wiU name Dave
Wohl as head coach of the team where he ended his playing
career ei$ht yean ago.
LeW1s Schaffel, the Nets executive vice president, told
the Star-Ledger of Newark that Wohl signed a three-year
contract Monday worth less than SS00,000 ..
Nets spokesman Jim Lampariello said the new coach
would be announced at a Tuesday news conference.
Ex-Tulane star says he was framed BROCK ANSWERS •••
From Bl
for Edmonton in the CFL. "He'll
have no problem adjustina to the
NFL"
The toughest adjustment, Brock
said, is just getting used to a new
offense. Williams def ends
point-shaving and
rigging charges
'-E\'. ORLE \1\iS l.\P) -Fonner
Tulane L n1ver<.it:t ba\ketball player
John "Hot Rod" \\ ilhams was the
'1<'llm of a frameup h~ fellow team
members jealous of hie; ab1ltty and
despera1e for mone) to PP> for their
drug habits. ( h11:ago attorne)
\11chacl C1ree n said \1onda:t
Green is representing Williams.
"'ho 1\ accused of two counts of fixing
Tulane games again\! Memphis State
and ~out hem M1s'i1\~1pp1 and of three ~ounts of rnnc;p1r1ng to fh ba'ikctball
game'i.
o\m(lng thoc;c scheduled to tcstif:t
aga1Mt W1lllams arc three former
teammate\, ( lyde Eade; and Jon
John'ion. tesufying under arantc; of
1 mmun11~ and Bobb~ rhomp'ion,
te"1fy1ng 3'1 part of plea bargain
Part of the pro~cutaon.,~ evidence
a1a1nst W1lhams ic; a "•deotapcd
statement taken on the n11)lt he wa'i
arrested
Green said 'You wall hear him ~Y
W1thin an hour of hie; arre'it and
without a laW}cr JU'it a kid from
SorTtnto, 'I didn't do nothina
WTOn~"'
When Walham'i mention'i taking
mone)'. he's talk1n1 about mone)'
11ven to him 1n violation of NCAA
reaulat1onund not bribes from filuna pme~. Green said
rn add1t1on. videotape of the
Memph15 State and C\outhem M1ss1s-
s1pp1 sames arc e~P«ted to be
introduced tn evtdt'nCe
"We have three basketball coachei.
who have looked at everv one of these
films wtth a thought 1n mind that
John W11l1ams dad something
wrong:· Green said
"You will hear they '1ewed the
films. how the} looked at the films.
and thcy·rc going to ~~ "Th1!1 kid
d1dn"t do anything wrong. "
In the state's opening arguments,
-\ss1stant D1stnct Attome~ Bruce
Whutaker said ever) step ot the
consp1raC) and bnbcr) sccme wa'i
carried out with Wal hams' full knowl·
edge "not because the} had to. but
because they wanted tb."
"You listen to all thee' 1dence and
to" hat the judge has to tell you. then
the only JUSl contlu~1on 1s that John
W1l11ams is guilty on all fi ve counts,"
Whmaker said.
As its first witnc~!I. the prosCl ut1on
called FBI agen1 Wilham L Holme\.
assigned for the past I 0 years to the
gambling unat 1n Wn,hington. DC
In earherte'itimon:t Monday on the
optn1ng day of the trial Thompson
ou1hned the plans he and othe~ made
to fi'< thrtt 1985 college ba~ketball
pm es
W1lhams, 23. accused of Khemana
to ng the outcome of thr~ 1985
games and of shaving points m two o(
them. showed up at the counhou~
with his mother They dad not c;pcak
to rcpone"
Five potenual Jurors said either
that ~rv1na on a ;ury would caust
them undue hardship, or that they'd
already formed an op1n1on about
W1lhams' autlt or innocence He fact's
two counts of sport'i bnbcry and three
of ct'>Mpiracy to commit 'f>O"' bn~rv
-----------·-----
•
,.,........,.
Former Tulane bu.ketb&l.l plafer John .. Hot Rod" WUJJ.ama
la eeconed to court by bJa attom91 and family member.
Alt.houP.1 he didn't do anything
cJttra cxcttini, Brock was encouraged
by his NFL debut.
"Overall, l knew what was aoma
on," he said. "I made a couple of good
passes. I ~ust have to be more
consistent.'
Brock, who has bought a home in
nearby Villa Park for hlS wife and
three children, 1s cnJoying has first
NFL camp.
"It's excitina, sure," said the soft-
spoken native of Gadsden, Alabama.
"It's new. I'm work.ina with new
peorle and a new offense.
" think it's comina along really
well. We've put io a lot of thinas and
l'm catching on."
"We've got more situation offenses
than we did in Canada," he said. "but
as far as our passing game goes, I feel
pretty comfortable.
"So far. I feel prcny comfortable
rcadfog defenses. It's not much
different."
Of course, the hard part remains:
producina on the field in a rqular-
season pme with millions of poten-
tially ult.ra-criticaJ fans watching.
"I'm aware of the situation," Brock
said. "I know that at my age I don't
have a lot of ycan to develop. I have
to produce now.
"But I've been so busy lea.ming. I
haven't had ttme to worry about those
thinp."
DUNN'S STREAKS •••
From Bl
Back to ~k~. 1 think that's the
core of our cf ub's problems. There
aren't cnou.ih streaks. Rather, there
are too many on the neaative side.
· One other 1nterc t1n1 thina h•J?-
pened lut weekend. All the details
cannot be mentioned because they
could JCOpardiu the pos1uons of
some people. But let's JUSt say 1t
didn't ta1n much here unday and we
still aot washed out. 11ie team never drawt well on
Sunday ni&hts ln Idaho Fall because
of a tron1 Mormon follOWlftl. And
our brass was somewhat dtsturbed at
Butte's front offioe.
The pme on unday at Butte was
called bcocause of wet arounds Read ~tween the hnes and fiture it out.
For most of the players now1t'sju t
a matter of time before they sec their
final pitch or throv. their last ball in
professional baseball. Some will be
able to move on. Tbc croblem here is
that there arc few p ayers who are
havinJ a an=at _ ~r. lt cosu an
orp.nmllon $4,000 to purchase the
contract of one of our players on this
indcpende.nt tam.
So realist1cally, it 1ppeat1 most of
the players wdl be 1CCint profcuionaJ
competition for only a brief amount
oft1me.
A lot of 1uys •~ tired and not
havina much fun. So I &utU that
should make me feel (onunatc, which
tt does, bccnsc I'm bavina the time
of my life and I don't miss • th.ins.
Unfonunately, Auaust will be OYcr
before I know at.
1
~ C081t DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, ~ l!.i tU
·· FoR TH£ REcoRo
~
MA..IOa L•AGU• L•ADIAS
~~ a.ATTINO cm., bllh>-eov.& eotton.
.lSo; er.rt, IC.lnM' Ctf'f, JSJ, Heltoenon,
New YOtk, 346, Melt"'91\', New YOl'll, SlO
1.ecv. lll1tft'IOl'e. m
POUltTM llAC8. 7 ~
c.tlt!C lwtt l~Hvl 1,.4' 'a•tfli M004I ~) lllVMt l..M...,_ !fttol
..... 100 ,.... uo
Dorsett ash Cowboys to
trade him to another team
Tlfflt 1 U I• l.
• • . . • •
MAJOR L•Aou• ITAH1>ttot0$ ~u.w.
WHT OIV1$tON
•UN$-+4andtrton, Haw 'l'otk, tt.
lllPl\efl, •e11imor., 7'1. Whltekar, O.troll, 11, Wlnttetd New York. 1i. Molttor. Mlf·
W84Aaa, 1t.
Rl~lllne!V, New Yo<ll to, Muuev,
h ltlmore. M, Wlnflekl, New Yorll, 71,
Rll*tll. leltlmor•. 11, 8eYlor, New YMk 7S.
(ll"lnl ..... ,
J•nlet Olb\Oll
JeM $1ttn0!'•
MlctMlli. 1'""111
M·3'--10 »-~n
M·~n '7·*-r73 11·'7+14
31-36--7• ,,..,,...1.
Pl"" Uc.a. 1 111 mill& CeMllo IMcCerr .. 1 1>20 1 20 4 • "''......_Dul (01111 .... 1 soe uo
JOviai IP lllCavl l 00
Time I 4t JIS
U UtACTA i..•11 i>e•d 'ld 00
IOCTH ltACI. t lurlo419• Ol.iidinlw~11 (We<refl) t 40 i 40 4., (epleln ..... , 10..hOulMVI) , .. uo
10.el OwMtv ISol 11 t40
DALI..AS <AP> -Dallas Co boy
holdou& NnniQJ blc l'ony OortCu
sa)'s he has told team pttSld~n• T~-.
Schramm that the ccam hould con-
s1dtT ctld.ina him txfore the N11ioul
Foo&b&ll t.aaue rtgUlar season bt-
p.n~
aootherteam.••
If l1'lded Ooncn "' he would prefer to play for Don Shula wilb t.M
Miami Oolpbuuorfortbc Pittsburab
ltt~rs who play oruy 20 mil from
hi bomctown of Ali ua~ Pa.
Done11 has been setkina 10 ~
nqotiate his contract with the C-0
bo)• He bu bttn involved in a
di pule wil.b the Jnt.ernal Revenue
Service over more than $400,000 in
beck ta1'ts the lRS says be O'NC and
h been upset Jhlt bis fioancia!
problems have been pubhcized by the
news mccha m the Oallas-FOf1 Worth
~
w L f"d. Ga .,..... .. 41 sn 1(-lCltv '° ., uo J 0.klend ~' 52 .m s ChlutO S4 w .$00 ·~ MinnelOte so " .,, 1, S.1t11t Sl '° 45' 1' Taw.a1 .., " )t2 21111
l•tt OMIMI TOl'onlo 10 42 62S New York '3 •1 sn ' Detroit !I u $11 1l
MITs-.oeot. '°61on, IU. Mellinf*t,
N•w Von. 1 ... ; WUMlft, Ke n .. , Cll\I, I),
'T•tPLES-Wttton, Kanwl (Jlv, 16, 9ut
ltr, Clev•nd. 11, Puctletl, Mlnne\Ota, 10 c-. Mllweul<H. I. Fernenci.1, Toronto, 1.
HOM! ltUNS-Flsk. Cl'lleaoo. JO, Oa ~VIM, Detroit, f61 Tl'lomH, S..ttle, ,S,
lelt>Onl, tean..-1 Cllv. ?4, Pra.tev Sta111e, t•
$TOLEN BASE" Hender\Oll, New
S11eTOt1Aln 04ltl ltlcherd
Jiii JtHuld Vlveca waci.
Lynn Hurd·"-
TtmmlaGr•en
Krlttl Atrlnoton
H .. lhtf' F '" Jutle Cott
Kev LOllifl
,. .... 74 ,..,._,. )7•,,_,. .. ,._,.
>9·3'-1S
•·17-75
ll·31-7$ .. ....,,
Time 117
s•v•NTM llACI. I ,,,, ,,.,, ...
Bari.no (M(Her-1 t 40 S 60 1 90
l ron1lno <M.cerronl I 20 4 40 c°"' .. i.o 1o.n11tv (Hewte\'I 'IO
Ttme IQ 21!.
U aXACTA 1~·11 oalcl 1161.SO
U l'ICK ltX C3·6·7 ··~ SI MIO sl, llUO wlll'I 24 •Inn.rs (five PIO<tttl Carrvovtr
OOOI '76,»9 19 '
llOHTH llACa. One mt141
Dorsen and Schramm met bntfl)'
dunn.a the pas& ~-eekend and DorKtt
says h~ is no close'r to reacbioa a contraC1 qrecmcnc now than he .,,..,
two weeks aao.
Schramm confirmed that Dorseu asked for the tnade.
Iott on 5' S4 509 lettlmore SS S4 ,905
MllwMaa 50 SI ~ C....,...nd J1 ,, w
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11
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17
PITCHING If ci.<lllon,1-elrl\H O.ti.· lend, t-2, 3 23. Guldrv. New Yorll, I~ 4,
301
Terr I L vn C•rltt
BarbMuclle
P•trlcla Gonaler
C•thv J011n1ton
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Av-Ml'I IPtnc.avl 2 40 Time l JS )IS
U t:XACTA (3·41 H id "1900
HINTH •t.Ct:. 1 111• m11n
"He keeps sayina he's bttn ~mbar
nasscd and that he m1&.ht.be better oil
somewhere else." SChramm ia!d
"But J told him you don't JUl t pull
down the' cu1111n on a bad ex·
pcrienot becaux you're traded to
Oorstu wanu a new contraci Iha&
\l.Ould inclU<k an annwt)' chat
eventually would pay J\im S6 4
million.
SHllle 6·J,.,..... 5-4
Ml~oto •·S. O.lllaftd l·•
Clev•nd I , hltlmort S
Kenwl Cllv '· to.ion 2 Tun S, Toronto 4
.Mltwauts.aa 4, 0.frolt S
New Yorlt lO, Clllca90 •
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,.,_. C•WIWlk.lt U·S) 11 SMttlt
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Ctev•nc1 (ltomero l·ll at a.mmore
(IOddidler 10-13), (nl
Ken$11S Cllv IS.bemeff!I 13·S> 11 loslO<I
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New Yorll (BV11rom t-l) II Chl<-.O
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Tcwon10 (Flltr •·O) al T•••• (RU&Mtll D·t), (n)
O.klend (John 3 •I •' Minnesota (Vlol• lMI, lnl
Detroit CPtll'V t2·1ll et MllweukH
<Vuckovich 6·1), (n)
w.-...'1'1Getftff .,...._ 11 SM!lle, 2
0.11.land al MlnM$Ole, 1
Ctt11t1eno et leltlmore, lnl
Kenlea Cltv el lo1lon, <n> New York ti Chlc:eoo, lnl
Toron10 et Texn, (n)
0.1roll el MllwaukM, (nl
Wt:ST OIVIMON w L ~ 6S '4
SeoDltllo st S2
Clnclnnell S7 u
Houslon Sl S9
Ati.nt1 " '° S.11 Francl&eo 4 ..
t: AS1' DtVtltON
New York '1 .,
SI LOUI' " 43 MonlrHI '2 .,
Cl'llCloo SS S4
Phllede!Phle Sl S9
Pltlll>urllh 33 7S
Mel*V'• kwH DedeW'l l , Atlanle 0 Chlceoo a, Montr"I 1
New York c, Pttlledelotlla 3
St I.out• a. Pllltburoti 1
S.n Oltllo 2, Clnclnnell 0
OnlV 9•met &el'ledultd
TMl9Y'& Gemes
I'd. Ga
"S'6
S32 7 m • "' 14~
450 16
312 73)
615
'°" I sst • 505 l2
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Altenl• (Bedroslen S-10) et OMeers
(Henll!Mf lM), (n)
Hw1tt11 (Hlellre •·t) et Sen ,,encbce
(ICrutiew 7·11, (nl
~ (Hettleth f ·S> et Ollc.e ..
CSeMerMll S·S>, lnl 1'11111_,lllil (HIHllM S·lO) al New Y~
(AllUlen S·l), (n)
~ (R......,. 2·11 et St. l..auh
(,.,.,..r ll·•l. (n)
ClftdllMtl I Jlr9wnnt t·t l st SM '*99 ,....,. lJ-61, Cn) w.-....,.,o-
Ali.nre el Dedeln. lnl
Houston •I Sen Frencl&CO
MontrMI at Cl'I~ PtolledtlPhle 11 N-York, In)
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ClnclMetl ., Sen oi.oo, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Mltrtnon 6, AIWs S
fllllS1' GA.ME
CALlflO.NIA SaATTLS ett rl'o 111
Oownlno rl 4 I 2 0
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Two out wnen wlnnlno run scored
Oame Wlnnlno RBI -Plradtev (I) E-+4owall O~Snttlt
L09-Cellfornle •. SNlllt 6
2&-Hendeoon, Devit HR-Jackson ( 111,
Devil (10), How .. (21, Bonnell (l), Hen·
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Callter'llle ., -__. ._... -Ill•-> G•me Wlnnlno 1181 -Oownlnll It>
E-0.Cinc.t OP-$Nttle 2
LO&-<alHo<nle 10, S..llle I 2&-AOevls,
O.Clnc:el, Herron, SdloflelCI )~COlllt
HR-OOWnlno 1121. GT!lotne& (251 S&-
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VendlerO I 3 0 0 0 0
llTilome• l 2·l I 0 0 J
MYOUll9 I l·l 0 0 0 0 1 Ha...-OOWlllM (21 bv Lewlt , P8rlldlrt
11Y Slt!On ~t T-l'«I A-s?.09!
NetleMll.eewe
BATTING (210 el bel,>-Mc:Gee SI
Louis, .lS., ~. ~ ..121, Herr,
$1 Loul&, 320, ,..Mier, Clnctnnell l06
GwvM, Sen Oleoo, .l04
RUNs-MurDhv. Allenla, 90, CMmin
St Louis, to. o__,., ~. 11
McGe., SI. Louil , 71, Reines. MonfrMI, ,.
R81-Murl>l\v, Allen11. 13 Herr, SI
Louis, IO; J Clerk SI Loul& IO, Per"tt
Cwtnn.11, •• G Wll&on, Phl141dllcll\lt, 1) HIT~. SI Lou"• 1 .. , GwvM, Sen Olevo. 131, Perker, Clnclnnelf, t)I.
Htrr, St Loub 1?9, Perkw, Clnctnnelf, 12',
Hernender. New York, 11•: ~ff'!', St Loul&,
12S, J Clerk, SI l.oul•, 11•
Carwr Hit LMcMn
(flvwll\ A"""" 12) I Tv Cobb 4191
2 ~-Pelt Rose 4171 3. Hiink A11ron 3711
4 Sten Mvl l•I 3430
S. T rl& SONktr lS IS
6 Honus Weoner 3430
1 Cert VHlrnm,kl J.419
I. E' Cid!• CoUln• 3309
9 WIMle Mav' 3'll3
10. N•o Lalole ns2
11. Peut Wener l IS2
12 Ceo An&on lOl 1
13 Lou Brock 3013
14. •·Roo Carew 3009
lS Al Kallne 3007
16 ltot>erto Clemanlf 3000 J1·act111e Olaver
Ll'nLE LEAGUE ALL·STA~S
Melon ( 11·12•VMf'S old)
WESTE•N 9'1iGIONALS
lat S.11 ISenwlrdlnol Tadltlf's Gemes
S 30 o.m -Ulen v& Monll"4 I pm -Ntw Mexico vs Norl~n
Cellfornle
Wedrle&dev'& Glime&
S..30 om -Arllon• "' Cok>flldO Oreoc>n winner e om -toeho " W1lnlno1on·H1wa11 win,_
'Thuncle't'& G•mtt
S..30 om -Ulal'I Monllna •tnner v\
Norll'lern Ce11tornla ·Ntw Mealco winner
I o.m. -Wvomlnv·AIHke •Inner v&
Soull'lern Cattlornla · Nevecse winner
F rlele't' \ GamK
S JO. 9 o m -Semlllnels
AtM boetlne
NlWP04tT HA•BOtl YACHT CLUB
LAMr Jvnklr Ole~&
IWe1t.n1 R"'9Mhl
I Occlle1Jon Overil'lru11er IJOlln Per·
nidt, BCYC) I ''> -nil, 2 Unc1t Joe uev
SIOke1 8YC) 11' .... l 8el MoOile IWortll· 1no1on Heuolllon, NHYCI 17~ • Tues·
IUlv·s Chllcl 10.en 0..,11, CVC) 26 S ROCI
Gr11\em. eve 21
Meveneft Treollv
(llNt tlf1 IO 11111111)
Chrtnv Glllellt !BYCI
BALBOA YACHT CLUB °"""'" Derbv LfdO 18-l GloO Me"nell IABYCI 1 Paul Blenl< (BYCI 3 Tim Mutvenev
IBCYCI
Defender 12-t Cr.ucto. WOOds ICPBYCI
Sebo! A-I Tim Cen.i (NMYCI
S.bol 8-1 Ro«> MtHr'olt CNHYC)
S.bol Cl-1 Cr110 Btnllev COPYC)
S.bOI C2-I Leloh Elll\ (8CYCI
Becc. Eiits !8 CYCI
S.bol Cl-I Ca.,en Hed141v lBTYCI
ETCHELLS 22
I Ye Bird (COlln Oeesl'lel, Rovel Prine•
Allred, Svdnev, Auslralle), 2 Au&olce
<FINI Wl'llle, NHYC) 3 Oownunder tNl"I Niel"". NHYCI, • L .. dlne Ladv IGHlon
Orlfr, BYCI, S Mornlno Slckneu (Jonn
Burn\·Jolln Koe1tac1tla ), SFFYC>
WHTLAKE YACHT CLUB
Sidnev S.llet
(MtleMI dlemoleftJHol)
Junler "*' I Cruet Shoe (JOlln Slurmen. CVCI. 2
Scoll 8.cker, CaPO B•v YC 3 Soauhtlll Facl~v !Teo Roeen ICYCl • B1t1v T\emen, CYC, S Smol<in !Kan Hoomtnn
CWestla~e YC I
Senlw Flaa!
1 AttllO'I JOllV (Wl&llekt YCI 1 LV<kV
•n lht Skv (Mark Barnaro ICYC> J
Lal'lllne Boet Co !K vie Stonec10he<. Wt\!·
lakt VCI 4 G-lc IKt111n Oumen
IA8YC), S. Blue Me• 1J1mes Htnoroc,.,on
IWtsllekt YCI
Mullan CIHl.
(Per1>etue1 Trool'l• t
I Wl'llll Etole IJlm HOl(len Wllllekt
YCI
OANA tl'OINT YACHT CLUB DeM l"elllt SertH Na. S
Cl•u A-I SHno Sl'lol (Ron OurnH ,
CPBYCI, 2 Ptul'I'\ Crarv 1800 Mclnlvrt
'OPV.(), i. ROiier !Slevt Frenle IOPVC).
Cl•n B-l Lunuea (Bl1lne Rorick.
OPVCl, 2. Mucl'lo Gusto (Joro• Moralet.
OWVC); -3 0111m•nolu (Jff'rv P\lrce!I,
OPVCl
Clan C-1 No Y No (8111 Beron.
OPYCl. 2 Vutoer Boatman IOICll Am tower, OPYCJ, 3 Clalre De Lune IP•ul
Frarlef, OPYC).
CAT·27-I Oevbree-11100 Ge111
CP8YCI, t Mnterv IRICh Gaull. OPYC)
3 Toucll·N•Go ILtovd Fonvth. CPBYCI
l.ITTLI SHll"S l'LIET
ln>lftatlellel Wits
Cl•H A-I Ce n1a1e IBrOOll Gittoro
L5F, 2 Rockt t tMark ll!e1wel,, ORYCI
Cleu 8-1 Cerdlnat 5>1n <Lerrv Shiro
llU, Seel 8MCll YCI ? GUliUM (Jim
Slleen (Ne""' Y() Non·N»lflnall-1 T,... Ge•ewev (Merk
Tennison ILSF), 2 Seeedltr IRCIO Oo>tt>v
IA8VCI
Jodv 9'0M1nthtl
.Niie Larwn
NldLv LeRoux
OenlM Marllnei
Pally JorlUln o.t><a M<Heffle
Suwn l(rOllll'ff'
eeovL•~ lkrt 8randwvnnt
Helen HoPll In'
Lucv Ceit•MOO
OewM Kortoeerd Reoecc:e Braclle'f
Lul.ono llMIW
Nancv Tomich
Judv Fu"I
Sherri Stetnn.uer
Gr•c• Sl•rr 8ecky HerO.t
J'"nl,_,. Graff
Pam Allen
LI" Kluv«
Mell CevenaU91'1
Patti P•tenon
Klmbertv Dirk'
Oentw 8aldwln
Jutla Klntr
O.octv Klno Ura AboOd
D•n• Chtncelk>r
()()(Mn LeC>onn41
Kerin Mundl~
Gabtlll Mettoc:k l9·•l-to
Lls..t Kellvv
Kelli AntOlock
°'"'"Kine Nancv TevlO<
Nlt>a Fout!
Jan Klel..-n
GIN HuM
Lor1 8rodl
Cl'll'ISIV ~1,tv
MonlcaWMl'I
Sue Con11n
SI& Seman Mee Mellon
MM Hethtwav
e·TanlTetum
Olene Lano
E&elf)e CerM>fl
Cethv Lff
Robin AU!ler
Cl'lrl&te Teno
Barb Hlooen&IMI Joen Delk
ROO«>le Tl'lornlon
Lind• MelOn•
3'·40-19
ll·0 -79
'1·»-79 .0·3'-79
40-39-79 3'·4l-1'1
41·31-79
•~o
•1·39-tO
l9·H-t0
C2·3l-IO
•2·38-IO 41·39-IO
•1·39'-tO
•2·31-tO 39·41-IO
42·39--tt
'4·37-81
41·CO-.I
'3·3t--11
41·CO-.I
39-0 --81
'3·»-11
C1-~
41-~ 41-~
42·'1-IJ
41 ·41~
4S-lt-Cl
42·•1-«l
41·•1-tl
'4·1'-43
4'1·4}--8.4
46·»-M
4'·.o-14
•l·u-tS •2·43-t,S 41·4s-t6
-~7
4S·o-ta
J«TV F4N'd llWttatfOMI
(at Val, C-..)
Morrl& Halalskv
JlmColo.rl
Merk Pf•ll
Dale Oouelau Miiier Ber!MW
Cralo Sladter
8errv JM<k-4
Georee8urn&
Steve S.tt•ntrom
Huber1 GrMn
()oft Poolev TomPurlHr
Lerrv Mil•
8Ut Kretrtf't
Chtrle&Coodv
Tom W•l\kOOI
JOlln C00t.
Oeve Stoctl Ion
JC SNed
Joev Stndeler
O..ne8um.n
Hele lrwln
Jom Hetloro
Bob Gl!4Mr
Howerd Twlllv
H•I Sutton
Lon Htn1111
Leonerd Tl'lomo'°'1
Garv McCord
Ed Sl'lffd CeMn~t•
Pl'lll RO<lilerl Ed Flori
Dev• ElchelO.roer
Jerrv Pall
JoM Mel'laHtv
Andv Norll'I
Dow Fln<rw11c1
Oen Fonmen Bruce Oe.,,lln
)3-3)-66
31-~7
lJ-~7
U ·Jr-.1
:U·:U--.1 l3·ls-.8
l3·3s-.8
ll·ls-il
1'·3+-11
lS·:W-.9
:U·ls-69
33·36-69
l3·36--69
l4·3s-69
lS·~· )4-l.t-70
l6·J.4·70
32·»-70
lS·lS-10
1'•36-10
J.4-3'-n lM6-n
u -11-n
:ll·lS-13
11·36-13
M-36-7•
37·37-74
)6·--74
31·31-14
J'l·36-1S 17·ll-1S
ll·37-7S
l6·3'-7S
36·3'-7S
38·38-76
36·40-16
39·37-76
31·3'-76 l9·:it·n )7·40-77
G.Ol dtn Be l\ne r t M cH e r u u t l
llorolnla '"' I Oom<llOIAI I Oomlnen1 LM 1Sol1&l
Time 1 .. 415
1000 •20 600
UO HO
S.00
n DAILY DOOela U· 11 Mid f.27 40 AlltnOlllCe W,AM.
Aams lc:twdUte
&artltbltlen
Thu"°"" Auo IS -SI Louil l"<>mel. , om
Frldev, AU9 ?3 -11\ Pl\lteMIPl'lll at
COlumt>u&, Ohio, C:JO o m
Stturdev, AuO ll -New Enot•nd
ll'lomt), 1 Pm •~r S..Mll
Sunoev, ~I I -Denver (llome)
Pm
!.undav, Sept IS -al Pttl .. dlll>l\le 10
a m
Mondev S.01 ?3 -e t S.•111• 6 om
SunlUIV ~I '9 -A1i.n1a lhOmal I om
SunlUlv Oc1 ' -Mlnne&Ola (l'lomel Pm
Suno.v Ocl 13 -a l Tame>e 8av 10
a m
Sundav Ocl 20 -e • Kenw• CllV 10
a m Suna.v Oct 27 -!Mon Frenc1Ko
thorntl 1 om
~•v Nov 3 -Ntw Orteenl ll'IOmel
I pm
Sunotv NOV 10 -•• N-Vor" Gian!&
10 e m
S..ndt v Nov 11 -el Allenla 10 • m
Suno.v Nov ?4 -Grffn Bev ll'lome) I om
S<;ndtv O.c I -ti New Orleenl 10
• IT'
Mondav Oec t -a l Sen Frencl)CO. 6
pm
Suno1v O« IS -St LOUtl ll'lomel I
pm
Mondev, Oec ?3 -LO\ Anoetl\ Rlldetl
1nome1 6 om
I All ,,,,,., Peclllcl
MondaV'I tnnucftom
I AH IA LL
Anwncan ~
OETROIT TIGERS-0.~1.o Oouo
Blor ollCM<, for aHlellmefll Rec.elled
Hal\on !.•rnmon& oultlelder Nul'lvllte of 11\t
American A\&OC .. llon PurcNned lhe con·
!reel OI Clluclo. C¥Y otlc"41r from Haft·
11 le Ool ion.a 8oO Melvin cat ct.er IO
NHllYlll• &ublecl to 24-l'IOur rec.N
T~ONTO BLUE JAYS-Stoned Todd
S101111mvre, otlefl¥
NaltaMIL.._.
CHICAGO CU8s-Pleced Lerrv Bo•e,
1nfltlder on welven for 1ne ouroow of
oMnv him I'll& uncondlllon.t , ... H• Re·
celled Shewon Dunllon, Infielder end Sltvt Enoet end Oevt Gumoer1 ollchen, from
Iowa of Ille Ame<tcen Anoclalfon Swllched
Brian Oevt11 ou•flelder from ll'lt n lo 60-oev ot1ebled llsr
f'OOTIALL
Ne"-!F ..... ~ ATLANTA FALCONS-Cul Alfred
J1ck'on •nd Perrv Tuttle, •Ide recelvao
and Mlkt Miiier, O<Jnl«.
BUFFALO BILLS-Sloned Enon R1n·
'om 110111 end Cul Jeff Nlaon, oelelv, Mike
Jonn1ton, kicker, Raf\dy JOlln&on runntno
IMKI\, Rudv Pl'llHIO\. ouerd, 1nd Joe Cun·
nononam, llol'll end Acoulrecl 81encherO
Monl(J()mery. llrwbeektl". from me Sen
Frencl&eo • ..,, lor 1n undltcloMd tu1un
dr•ll cnolct
CINCINNATI 8ENGALS-We1v1d
W•'fM f>ffc• -rterbeclt Gerv Wllli.m&
1no Oerrtll Smlll'I, wide recelven &¥nerd
Kono Uneoetktf'. Ind Louis Geri• Quef'CI LOI Alam"9I CLEVELAND BROWNS-Cul Joe De
MONDAY'S •ESULTS L1mle4turt -•d Ttrrv Mino< Cllfen,I,,.
t9"" el fl·llitlhf _,,..._... l'Meflllel t>eCk Ind JoM Vernetco oun•ar •nd Riekv
FIRST ltACI. 400 vercn FN ci.. wide receiver
FrLV1Mnv (Odrck&I') 4 20 2 60 I 40 DENVER BRONCOS-Welved Sttvt
Prt&llOOU$ Pel tL•di.tY) 300 1IO ~._, klclo.er, 8uoctr Funck, --~ CllV (Edward$) • 60 ttrbKk. Oen Lvncl'I. Ru&~ Gellon, •nd
Time 20 09 MIO Mlio Niko offensive tlnemen. Slew
U t:XACT A 14·61 oeld t 11 00 Pnct wide racetve<. Jim Jovc:e. a.fetlilvt
SECOHO 9'ACE. 110 vi rd& lfnemen Tommv TllurM>n, llneoecller, •nd
1nti11rett (Garcia! S60 HO 260 Net CHwr, dlftnll.,. ~
SHms True (M .. lleldl 340 ?40 GREEN BAY PACKERS-Cut Leoti'
Kio 0.klJC• (WIHlem') ? IO H•"''· euero Gerv Hoffmen, tacl\le, Clltl
Time 46.39 LfWI\ tlneb6cker Georee SmeM, ~
52 aJtACTA (.l·21 oel4 il7.20. 11c11i., I nd D••• Orescnier. euerd, ~r._
TH .. O RAC•. lSO vardl Allen, ultlv Curt COie. llotll tnd. Morrb JOl'ln&on. 911erd Pieced Del Roaoen, hell Kita K•I• ICerlowal 18 00 tO 40 160 bac~ eod Rlcl'I Wlnoo, llMbedler on the
MH Baron !Mexfleldl ls.60 11.00 lnlurtd rt)tf'Vt lbl
L .. vem Sl•ndlno IWtlllel 6 .0 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Cul Mlc.llMI
Time 11 tl. Gunlhtf' ruMlno beck, Sklo Lene, wi.rv
l'OURTH RAC•. 3SO Vlrd&. John Bollk. cornert>ecjo,, Rulul Slev'"' end
Hmmllh189 (Hrmnl 1100 11 40 3.60 JOl'ln Marll'lt ll. wtdt recelvtrl. Herper Rocket Tenner <Olderldi.1«1) 12 20 3 60 L•Bel ctnttr and Cl'lerlts ltotllnton.
Ho(l8ful Times (Garcte l 2 40 '"""' Time 119' n IXACTA (S·l ) oald '""00 INOIANAPOLIS COLTS-W•lved Slevt Parlltf' deftn&lve tnd Carnon ~ Ind l'IPTH 9'ACa. 350 verdl G-Unotr•ood. cornerbeelo;& 1nd Jeff c neuto& Jov (Oidef'ldi.Mnl 360 3 20 2.60 t ooti. 1tntt11Ck«
Min EHi« Scooo IBerdl ,. 00 12 00 Sur• Etv (Lectiavl 400 LOS ANGELES RAMS-Cut Meriofl Time 111' Mclnlvre ruMlllO Deck
17 IEXACTA 11 JI Peld "lt)O MIAMI OOL~INS-S.llntd Nat Moore,
SIXTH 9'ACt:. 170 varcb widt receiver Cul fbv Hoot. ~llv•
~II em Ls ICmobll) UO l IO l 00 !leek
M1Ckle1rnahem (Ft~oe) 11 00 uo MINNE SOT A VllCINGS-Sloned Tlm
MOOll NeoMw IOlderlckl-lft) 1 IO MMDer ttntt>eeker. end Kirk Lowdermllk.
Time 46 31 ce<lltr
., IXACTA IS·1l Mid nsoo. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOfl.-Welwcl
SIVIENTH llACt:. UO 'latels De Pw
0 11111-.-.......~ cl-l•I '"" s.-••A G-oe Crumo, dtf9n\lvt ef'O. ve • .... IJWT'O"._.. - - -•~1 and Arnold Garron. ~&lvt De<a' Go Tll'O 8119 IHermonl 11 00 ~IO Erl< SCfluberl ·•nd Cl'lrlt """'"' IMe<'8 Wt• t>te Panlitn (Ed'#erd&I l 00 11ia.,, •nd Bii 8on11111 llnetMldlw time 17,'7 U IXACTA (J·Sl peld s77 00 NIW 0-LEANS SAINT$-Sletled 0.YICI
alOKTH llACI. ISO Vllt'dl lleCklev, -toe ~wr
Mlll't ~ Get Away Qulcl1 CBroolul 140 3 60 l IO SAN DIEGO CMAltGERS-Walwel I ll <•1 Mlftll'MI) A&k Oolc>v (Mellfleldl • 40 ) 20 KH end u rrv Crewtord ~ lllectu, NATIONAL L•AGU• "IHT ROUNO SU.OLIS Fall Coov (Cr .. otf'I l 40 Oere11 Grehern wlci. r"Kalver, Ke"9n Wiii
Henrik Svndllrom !Sweden) def °"" Tl 1176 Jeff 0 I I IV O..W.. >-lrJwt O Se9•t !Canedel, •· 1. 6·2, Mlirc Flur cu s I me. · .... -llMOKk« and av'· " •
ATLANTA LOS ANGl&.IS def P9ul AlllWICOM (US ), J·,, 6 4, • 4, '' IXACTA ll·CI oeld --$AN FRANCt$CO 4'ERS-We1"'9CI C..r
Mrllllll •rllDI Chrl• ~ldhtlm (C.1114') Clef Jonethen u ...CIC MX (l·S 1·0!'·2 S-3-71 Nici ,..., Moore. rvn11ln0 tiiaca. GwdMf Wll·
4 0 0 0 Ouncen •• 4 I I 0 C:•rlef CU.$.), °'"'· 1·•· 1·•. (hlO Hooo '4'4 '° •Ith 41 wtnnel'\ lfl11t "°""') ""'• Cltftn'lve Deel, Md UO't1I 4 0 I 0 Cffetl39 4 0 1 2 CU S ) Clef. it.IW Ftemt119 (U.S.), J"6, •·>, NlHTH •ACI . .00 Yard&, Mume>flAv daf9f\1lve end
4 0 0 0 l.endr11 Cf • 0 0 0 6-1. lhl"llftll l(rl&hnen C~) def •oe.r1 •r••en (Merl) 1100 , 00. uo Sl!A TTL SEAHAWltS-<'Ut l.Vk• t o o t Gurrero If : 1 l O G,,_ (US.), l ·6, ,-3, •·1, Mille I.tech A1ur• HoCle Too (I.twit) 1M 4.10 ,.,..trkl99. eun•er Wl11tem $cofl, ~
I o o o 8rock 111 1 O 2 O cu$ I def. JOl'l11 $8(1(1 (Us ), 1 '· 4 6, 6 t. Meke An A-r•nct <Cr .. 09!') 1 '° ~. Morrl• erown •nd L-wWr..,
ACTlnou9M*NI ..
MAim ITAT'llmfT
The~..,_.,.
dolng~-METAO CENTRE OFFICE
BUILDING, 11110 w.,,,..,
A-. Fountain Vdey, CA 92708
Conaolldeted C•pltel
Proc>ert... IV, 2000 Powell
StrMI. Emtryvllte, CA Neoe
Thia b\19lneu la con-
dueled by• limited 1)811net·
~onaolld•tad Ceplt•I
Propertlee IV. • Celliomle
llmlted P•rtneral'llp, By·
Consottdatad C•ptt•I
Equities C«p .. • Colored<>
COfJ>Oratlon. By vie. Pr•
dent Thia 1tat~t WU flied
wltll 11\e County Clefll ot Or· = County on July 23, ,..,.,
Publlthed Orenge Coast
Deity Pilot July 30, August IS.
13, 20. 1815
T-751
NlJC Nemet
ACTTTIOua 9UStNlH
N.u. STA TDIEfT
The toaowtng persona are
OOlflg bualneel ..
CARR I NGTON
FINANCIAL. 290 1 Leflyette I ~ ~ Beach. CA
M Joel Cerison Aeelty, In·
c:orsxw•led, • C.Ufomte COf·
poretlon, 3027 Royce Ln
Coate Mesa. CA 92628
This bualn"' la con-
ducted t>y: a OOf'PO'•llon
M Joel Carl9on. Inc., M
Joel Carteon. Pr•
Tt111 at8tetnenl WM Iii.cl
whl'I the County Clefx ot Or·
•nge County on July 23
1985 ,.._
Pubttsned Or•nge Coul
Daily Piiot July 30. August 8.
13, 20, t985
T-752
Pl&IC NOTICE
~==' Z20Weet..._...,
Sen CMego, CA 121~
Pla lntltl PATRICIAN
APAR'TMENS LIMITED, e
Catlfomta llmlted partner·
lhlp
Defendant STEPHEN G
I OPPENHEIM ANO NANCY
OPPEMH£1M
Cue No 511151
SlWONS
NOTICE You heY9 lllMf\ ewd. The~_, dectde
...... )'OU without ,_, '*"9 hMfd .,.... )'OU ,.
epond wttNn JO.,.. ,_....
ltte Wonnettoft Mlow.
If you wtsto to Nell tne ao ·
vlc:e of an enorney '" 11111 matter. you s~ld do so
promptly so ll'lat your writ·
1en response, It any, m•y De
llled on lime
AVISOI U.ted hll Ndo ct.-fNl'ldltdo. El lrltMIMI puede
deddlr contr• Uct. tin ev-
dlende • menoe .-Ud. reeponda ~ITO de 30 dlM
LM la In~ alque.
$1 Usted "-SOllClter Ill
conM )O de un abOgedo .,,
eate uunto de~• neceno
1nmedletamen1e. da eat•
me ne ra. su raspuestl
escr1ta. Si l'l•Y elguna ~
ser regtstrlld• • '*"po
1· TO THE 0£FENOANT A
CIVIi complaln1 t\as ~ flled
by tl'MI pte1nt1lf ag11nst you II
you WISh to oetend ll'lts law·
suit. you must w1tl'l1n 3IO
dayt "'"' tl'lls summons 11 serlled on you nte wtll'I 11111
court • wnuen retQC>nM 10
tl'MI complatnt Unless you do
ao your Oelaul1 will t>e
entered on app11ce11on ol IM
pteonUlf 8fl<l lhll coun may
enter 1 llJdOemenl egeonst
you tor Ille relief Oem•noed
In Ille compleint. wnoch
c;oyld resun In gernishm«tl
ol weges. talllllQ ol money or
I pr~ Of other rellel r•
Q\14161~ WI tl'le compleinl
Dated· OCT 24 1993
Ken11eth J . Oerrtaen,
Depllty C!efil
Croa key, Hotf111an a
KleuMI'. 2°'t CefltUl'J Peril
I
f .. l. SW. '100. Lot Aft-
...... CA IOOll. Attorney fof f'Wlltlft
Pubhahed Or•noe Coest
I 04uly Piiot AUQust 6 13 20
27 1985 I T·770
I P\BLIC NOTtCE --1 flCTITIOUS IUSINEU
NAME IT A TO.-JfT
The IC)llowlng l*'90M ete
odlng~u
TRI· THERAPY REHAB
8202 Velen<:I• Onw ~I·
tngton 8-:fl CA 92647
Mery Jo KMf9f 1202
Velencle Or..,. Hvntlng10ft
8eec:h CA 92e4 7
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duC:!ld by Ir\ lndMd\* Mwy Jo I<....,
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with the County Cieri! ol Or·
~ County Ofl J\lly 10, ,._,
Publlahed OrW109 Cou1
Dally Piiot .Nf"/ 30. A~t 8
13. '°· 1A5 T 781
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VISION AUOCIATU. A
MEDICAL OlllOUP Ht
Nonh T.-lft Avtnue, Sula.
103, Senta Ana. CA '2705 McClut• Medal Corpor
•tlon, tlKI Monti T '*"' A11--..e, Swte 103, Gente Ana.
CA 827~
Thi• ~SllWIU It COO•
<k><:ted by e GOfJ)Otet1on
MoCkn M«lleal Corpor-
•llon, Mercer McClure.
Praeldenl
Thie stetement -tiled wttl'l the County Cterli of Or· anoe County on July 11 • 1t85 ,.11a
Publllhed Orange Cout
Dally Pltot July 30 . .\ugust IS,
13, 2o, 1945
T-782
MOC NOTICE
ACTITIOUl9U ..... tum ITATl'-.n
The tolow4ng penone •a
doing bu91neee •
B£NNETTIAMERICA S
CUP CHALLENGE 97 111 l
8aywlde [)f,.,. Ste 200-A
C«ona Oel M8' CA 92625
P 0 Box 519 l Balboa
laleod 92662
Stanley Rou 305-E
Promontory om. ~
8-ctl.CA~
Thia ~etneH 11 con-
ducted by en lndtvlduel
Stenley RoM
This stetement -filed
with the County Ctent of Or-·~ County on July 10. 1985 ....,..
Publtsned Orenge Cout
Dally Piiot .klly 30. Auguel IS.
13, 20. 1985
Pl&.JC NOTICE
FICTmOUa ., .......
MAll!aTAT'DRNT
The fo4lowlng pereot\I _..
d<>lngbu~
NEWPORT ECOLOGY 22
Hermitage Lane, N P B CA
928e0
Donna MM Ron41 22
H«mttage L8M ~
Beacn CA 92980
Tni. bualneu ra con-
oueted Dy" en IOdMdual
Donna M• Ronu
Tiits ste1emen1 was filed
Wlll'I Ille Courtty Clerk of Or-
~ County on Juty 1e ,..,.,
Put>llehed Orange Cout
Dalty Piiot Aug.it! 13 20 21
Sec>lemt>er 3 1$85
T·775
MUC NOTIC£
FICTITI0\11 atlaMSS
NAME ITA TntlNT
The toll~~ ere
Clomg t>u11nes1 H SUB
SHACK .-5 1910 W Balt>oe
Blvd Newport Beech Ce tt-
1orn1e
Vetonice Fern•noez. 150<!
Runtend Menl'l1111111 8Mcl1
CA
This t>u1meH 11 con-
Oucted by 1111 tndMOuel
Vetonice Fernendez
fhtl stal~I WU fifed
Wltl'I the County Cler'lo. of Or-
•nge County on July 1e
19&~ ,.,m
Pubhsned Orange Cou1
Oeoty Pilot July 23 30
Aug...st 6 13, 1995
T-737
MllC NOTICE
FlCTITI0\11 .u..-H
NAME STAT'OENT
Tr>e IOllOWlng pet'SOl'IS ere
do-ng DuSlnMe as
PAUL S BEEF KORRAL
1~42 WHt St Gerd110
Grove. CA 92640
~ancl'let 1 Proceuors
Inc , • Cellloml• COfPOl'8llon
Thts bualn11sa la con
dVC1ed by e oorpofallOO
Rancher s Proceuo rs
Inc Duene DaWM>O Pres
This st.etem«1t was hied
Mtl'I tti. County Cwk of Or·
·~ County on Jul\; 19 1985 neteu
Publl9hed Orang. Coaet
Dolly Piiot July 30 A~111 ti
13 20. 1"5
NI.JC NOTICC
Aennoua.u....u·
...-1TanwNT
The lolloWl!lQ Pft'tofll e1 e
OOlng ~u
CAPTAIN TATTOO 'l809
W McAnhur 8lv-cl Sv<te
I 14 Sant• Ana CA 11:n~ Oenlel J Tubervllle 431
W 47th St N Y N v 10031'
Thll butl,,..1 •S cl\n
duet.CS by en tndr,.ldual
o.tnlel J Tub«vllle
Thie 4t819"1'enl wn l11M
wttll ttltl Countv Ci.ti. ot Ot ':'ax; Coun IY on Jutv :> :' ,..,.,
Pu~ °'~ eo.11 Deitv Pttot July lO AU\)Uet 8
13 ~ tOIS
T ·1!1<1
T-741
NI.IC NOTICE
ACTtTIOUa•ll•N NAii! IT • .,.....,
The tollOWlng per.on. _..
dotng~aa:
X-l SPORTS, 150 S
Hert>of BM:l., s.nta Ana, CA
9270.
o-i Scott Foe.. 291 ~
nmg Cenyon Rd .. Cofone def
M4t, CA 92t25
, Thia t>talneee 11 con-
ducted by' en~
DMrl Scott Fo.
Thoa stat_,, -l'lecl
wtttl the County ~ oC Of-
~ County on ~ I ,..,.
Pul>lllhed OranQe Cotlll
Detty Piiot Auguec 13. 20, 27
Sec>temtier 3. t9&5 T-ne
"lCTmOOl.,._.U H._ ITATEmWT
The 1ollowlnQ ~ 11r•
d<>lng ~ ..
I( CT 4 ASSOCIATES
3421 vie Oporto, Su11e 200.
Newport 8Mcfl. CA 92ea3
Mr Kevin G Alr"f 17058
E COltma Roed. •229 He-
c:leoO• Heiof\IS, CA 91745
Mr Wlttfem L Clemen1.
720 Heliotrope Corona de!
Mer. CA 92663
This bustneu oa con·
duetecl by a gen«el PM!·
neishtp
Wiii""' l Clement
Th•• statement was hied
With 1"9 County Cler1i of Of·
~ County on My l9 ,,. ....
Put>liaheO Orenge Coul
Dally PtlOt JUiy 30 Augusl 8
13 20 1985 T -748
Pl&IC NOTICE
ncnnoua .,... ..
..... ITAT'fmWT
The lollowlng ~ .,..
dOlng bu91neM ..
FAST LANE MOTORING
ACCESSORIES t580 N
Newpo<1 8MI . Cot1e M_.
CA 92627
Bnen Eett "-"'9Y· 326
Ogle 51 A Cotle Meee, CA
92627
Tl'l11 buso,,.,. 11 con
ducted by
Bnen E Jetlley
Tiiis Statement WM flied
wttl'I 1ne County Clerk of Or-
~ County on July 19 ,.,..
PubllsNKI Or•• Cout
0.•ly Pilot July 30 August 8
13 20 198!>
T 7•2
• a
J
Oninoe Coe.et DAI LY PILOTITueec:tay. Auguat 13, 1985 -"l
.. ,
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, 88
Orange.Coast film Company
makes big splash in sports
Dyna-Comm shoots video productions
of non-traditional sports competitions
By JIM HATHCOCK
Olllly '1lol C-M~
Alan Gibb~ \\-Ould love to take you
wind surfing or let you expenence the
excitement of JC! skung -without
ever Jetting )OU wet
Gibb}'. execut1"e producer of
Dyno-Comm. and his producuon
team travel m search of surfing,
motocross. wind surfing and slrnng.
What they capture on film, they
d1stnbute through cable and network
telev1s1on.
They've had success filmtog so-
called part1c1patory sports, those that
aren't traditioanl fare for the
networks.
Gibby and his staff JUSt finished
shooting the OP lnternattonal Sail-
board Champ1onsh1p last month at
Diamond Head on Oahu in Hawaii.
nallonal for producuon of a special
using foota~e from some of our
productions. 'Gibb) said.
Dyno-Comm, with offices 1n Irvine
and LaJuna N1&uel, ia1ned earl}
recoaniuon by using water cam-
eraman Dale Kobeuch to shoot
movang footage amid the competitors
and by usang land-based cameras to
capture the hfestrle on the shore
along with the wild maneuvers of
freestyle Jet skung at the Coors-OP
World Jet Ski Finals.
The production team has also
video-taped motocross 1ns1de the Los
Angeles Coliseum and jet skiing at
Lake Havasu on the Colorado River.
"When I sold a spot, I usually
ended up producing it. That sparked
my interest in production ani:I since
then I have made it a point to stay
well-informed on the rap1dly-chan1·
mg production technoloay."
The continuing success of Dyno-
@omm 1s annbutcd by Gibby to a
production team that works t<>&~bcr
and never lets eios obstruct pro-
duction of artistic yet v1ewcr-oriented
videos.
Gibby acts as executive producer,
Gl\rY Langenheim, associate
producer; David Eastwood, super·
visor of producfiolt' ~sonnel; and
Steve Jam. syndicatibn and. pre·
production manager.''fhe four of us
work together to give the viewer the
best possible production," said
Gibby.
' A Dyno-Comm crew worb on a dolly
while ehoottna the OP Pro Surflnc
Champtonehtp at Ba.ntincton Beach.
The production will be aired in
January or February, 1986 It was the
second year Dyno-Comm has
produced the event for telev1s1on
A native of Laguna Beach. Gibb}.
and his associates. started Dyno-
Comm two years ago when they shot
the OP Pro Surfing Champ1onsh1p at
Huntington Beach.
In 1983, Dy no-Com worked out an
agreement with Ocean Pacific
Swimwear of Tustin. which led to
contracts for the OP Pro Surfing
Championship and the World Cup of
Sailboarding.
Gibby studied business for two
years in college before taking a JOb
selhng cable spots.
. "As far as I know. we are the only
production company of this type in
Orange County. We have to go up to
Los Angeles for studio and post
production work but enjoy spending
as much time in the fncndlier, more
relaxed atmosphere of southern Or-
ange County." Gibby said.
"After that we just kept shooting
for higher quality with each con-
secutive event. Now we have worked
out an agreement with CBS Inter-
Dow Industries sold
By FRED VOGELSTEIN
Of lt\lt Delly l'llot ... "
Dow Industries Inc. of Laguna
Hills, one of the fastest growing,
pnvately held compames m the
nation was sold rccentl> for an
undisclosed amount.
Dow, which constructs infor-
mation-secure buildings. was
purchased b) Keene Corp . a
subsidiary of Bairnco Corp. of New
York City. The transaction means
that Dow 1s now.a publtc compan)'.
QQw president Ri chard R W1ll1ch
said he was pleased with the trans·
action because ll gl\ es Dow access to
a larger pool of capital He ~1d the
money is necessary to ensure Dow's
future expansion.
Dow. which grew from $300.000 m
revenues 1n 1980 to S22 m1lhon to
1984, was listed as the fastest growing.
privately held company 1n Orange
County by INC. magannc tn 1984.
Willich said he expected the growth
trend to continue m 1985
The demand for Dow's product has
developed the past five years as a
result of the dramatic nse in mfor-
mation theft from computers. accord-
ing to Willich. Many computers are
used by defense contractors and
therefore contam classified 1nform-
t1on vital to national secunt} Those
concerned have been searching for a
SMALL BUSINESS
way to put a stop to the thievery.
Willich and his team of engineers
believe they have found a way.
The 13-year-old company makes
its buildings secure by putting steel
plates and non-conductive materials
1n the walls. floors. and ceilings.
The construction acts as a shield
preventing elcctromagnct1c signals
from traveling through the walls
Those signals often carry the clas11ied
to formation that foreign or domestic
informants mtercept
Walhch. a former heutenan1
colonel 1n the Marines Corps and a
former consultant for the Apollo
space program. said the signals are
emitted from "inually all electronic
devices but computers are the main
cause of the problem.
In fact , Win1ch agreed, had 1he
computer todustry not become so
large 1n the past decade. his com pan}'
probably would norh.avt' broken free
of its "mom and pop" status 11 had
until 1980.
As more and more companies have
begun using computers. the demand
for keeping the information ~ecure
has blossomed, he said.
"Information theft today 1s an
astronomical problem and getting
bigger," Wilhch said.
While 80 percent of Dow's clients
are defense contractors. Wilhch said
he expected his clientele also to
expand to the banking industry.
"Today. anyone can dnve up to a
bank in a van full of electronic
equipment and monitor all the trans-
actions from the cash machinesY. he
said
When banks realize how big a
problem informauon theft 1s, W1lltch
said he expects contracts from
financial insmuuons to make up
about 50 percent of the company's
bus mess
Dow also shields bwJdtngs from
electromagne11c signals. Most of the
demand C1llStS in the medical research
field in which sens111ve electronic
equipment needs to be protected
from outside elcctromagneuc inter-
ference
Although electromagnetic sh1eld-
1ngaddubout $ IOa square foot more
to the cost of a building Willich says
most companies think the secunty Is
worth the extra cost.
Eugene A Cafiero. Keene presi-
dent, said Wtlhch and his manage-
ment team would continue to remain
1n charge of Dow's day-to-day affairs.
The new arrangement makes Dow
the mnth com pan) Keene has ac·
quired since 1983. Most of them have
some 1n"o lvement with elec-
tromagnetic sh1eld1ng
Compound interest adds up
Suppose }'OU ""ere ollcn:d 1he
following choice of wagec. fur ")days
of work .
•A flat S 10,000 or
•A penn} the first da} IW() LCnts
the second da}. four cent-; the third
day. and so on. with each da} 's pa\
doublinj.
The SI 0.000 ~oundc, \Cry attract-
ive, doesn't 111 And working for
pcnOJCS C\C n when the\ ·re doubling
each da:r can't possibly add up to as
much can at'>
Well the fact 1s that the doubling
penn1e'i ~111 add up 10 $5.368.709 12
at the end of the 30th da>
That's a vcr; simple 1llustrat1on of
the power of compoundin~ a
phenomenon some call "the e1&hth
wonder of the world "
Earning compound interest on an
1n .. estment 1s simply earning interest
on interest.
The interest earned each vear 1s
RALPH
Scorr
added to the pnnc1pal amount, and
over a penod oft1me a small amount
can grow into a surpns1ngly large
amount. In the tllustrat1on the com
pounding rate 1s l 00 percent per da)
A more down-to-earth eumplc 1<.
putttog S 1.000 mto some in vestment
If the in"estment earn\ 8 percent
annuall). your SI 000 will grow to
S I0.063 to 30 years . .\t a I 0 percent
ra te. 1t will gro~ to $1 7.449. at 12
percent to $29,960
Certain hand calculators can qu1ck-
I} compute accumulated sum'i for
specific interest rates. You can also
use a ver) si mple method and get a
close estimate
It's called th e "Ruic Of 72," a
formula that tells you how long It will
take to double your money with
annual compounding at vanous rates
of return
D1 v1dc 72 by yo ur rate of return:
"our ans111-er 1s the number of years It
will take to double yo ur money. For
example.$ 1,000 investtd at 8 percent
~111 double to $2.000 in 9 years;
invested at I 0 percent11 will double to
7 2 years. and at 12 percent it will
double 1n 6 }ears
The other '>Ide of the tom 1s
annauon The yield on )Our invest-
ment must el(cced the rate of1nflat1on
or ~ou lo~ ultimate purchasing power
Ralpb Scott /1 • certified public
accoant•ot w/tb offices Lo Ne•port
Be.cb.
e great rate advan~
' "• I
Open your accou nt today. Call the toll-free Financial Line now: 1-800-423·BANK.
IOO Vear. nf S.(e(y • Asad.I Over S7 Bllhon \\-Ith 1R l)fl\ces Wr\lln Orin ( ounty: tasu~ Hill
Great American e:i~1~ ,~~~ ~~~;:,n valkv ~·au: ~::;1
)bur advantage bank. Balhol ~nln ula Huntln con Be II Mnnar .. h Bay
Capl\lrano lk"h IAauna 8t h ~wporc Stach
Pt..,., .. ,.. Olfc t ..... , I ~ ... .., '°'"'"
Orlfllf
San Clc!Ylfnlc
Sin Clemence' Avtnl<U Piet>
San Juan Caplurano
Woodbrld t
An&u• Chater and Bart Con-
ner at pro ..Uboard com-
petidon at Diamond Bead ln
Ha wall.
AEA to meet today
The A mcrkan Electronics Association will spon or a seminar on
.. Just-in-Time Production" today at the Hotel Meridien in Newport
Stach. The guest speaker will be Floyd Burghard, director of
Northern telecom's quaHty data system division in Minnetonka.
Minn. BufJhard will discus how ju.st-in-time production can
a.chicve ma.ior improvements in manufacturina efficieny. For more
information, call 851 -1133.
• • • The National Association of Private Placement Syndicators
meets Aug. 21, at the Hyan Hotel, 1700 S. Harbor Blvd .. Anaheim at
7:30 11.m. for a breakfast meeting. Cost is S l 0 for members; SIS for non-members.
The guest speaker is Peter J. Madigan, an attorney in the
Ncwpon Beach area, specializing in ~aJ estate law, real estate
syndications, and business law. Madigan is tbe author of a textbook
ar:id yarious articles on real estate law. Madigan will speak on "1984
L1m1ted Partnership Act; Update on its Pitfalls and Practicalities . • • •
The OranJe County Chamber of Commerce has scheduled its
first Small Business Conference on Sept. 19 at the Sheraton Aoaheim Hotel.
In cooperation with University Extension Services, Cal State
Long Beach, U.S. Small Business Administration, and Coastline
Community College, The Right Conference: Learning and Network-
ing for the Small Business Entrepreneur is designed to provide
educational and networking opportunities for Orange County's small
business community.
The keynote address will be &iven by state Sen. John Seymour,
with Ron Smith, editor of Entrepreneur Magazine, as the Luncheon
Speaker. The cost of the all day conference is S75, with pre-
registration before Sept. 17, set at $60.
Call the Oran~e County Chamber Office at 634-2900 for
additional information.
-l11111:11diIU5Hil~-------
Single Professionals
• Who prPfer living amt
sharing life as a c:ou ple ...
·CALL TODAY 756-9434
A11d let a social agent find that special mace
who seem.; co be eluding wiu.
RnsoNAuzEo
1'.EI.ATIONSHIPS
Ask for G~orgla
Mun-F'ri 12 8 pm • Sat llJ.4 pm lk:!l Cnm u11 Drive Newpurt Beach
A ccclf"''1 lnsurtd up to
II I)(),()()() Minimum 1"1fl
uf I year u1tb IJf, 000
minimum Applwt ffJ term
uf I }'ti4r Subs//"111111
/lf"l;llty for ttlr~J' u1tb ,
iJrt1utlf Ann1U1fyu11d 1>11.rt'iJ
I
Orange Oout DAILY PILOTITUllKtay, AuQuat 13. 1985 ..
There's a time to buy, a time to sell
By JOHN CUNNIFF ..,........... '
NEW YORK (AP~-The weight of
stock matket advice by broker\.
relatives, friends. touts ond tipstert. is
to buy, because in buying are the
dreams. commissions. glamor and
quality off en more aaan 1>rospects on
the upside and apparently less li1k on
the downside."
That advice 1s rule No. l 1n the new
Investors Manual published by the
National Auoc1ations of lnve11tor1
Corp., which hus had 45 years
expcnence developing and operaung
the co untry's inv~tnicnt club move-ment.
O'Hara .ay• the manual iJ ditle"'o'
from any others pubb1hed, us anfor-
matton havina been acquired and
tested over the ycan by thousands of
investment clubs.
aOod rules for in nn invest """ ularty, an lood tames and bad:
~1nvctt &II camanp; and invest In
growtb companies.
Uoaque tbouab thoJe rules mi&ht
be, I.hey arc perbaps matched in value
by that ranty in invettment boo
that i,, tome sound., Ob)cctJVe rules to
&U1de 1nvestors when lfity SU peel it II
time to sell.
glory. ;
But when do you sell, and why?
Unless his advice has been &ood.
your broker might be reluetant to
advise unloadinaa stock he urged you
to buy. Relatives and fnends lose
interest during bad markets. Tout!.
and tipsters seldom concern them-
selves with selling.
"Sell because an issue of equal
Thi~ OM rule !.hould account for 90
pc:rcen1 of all sell transacuons by
ind1vidval investors, says Tom
O'Hara, chairman of the NAJC,
which has no axes to irind or to
comm1ss1ont. 10 earn, its chaner being
non-profit ·
Those procedures, O'Hara says.
have helped the mostly amateur
investment clubs beat the Standard &
Poor's SOO.stoclc indeJL in 20 of the
Pllst 2S years. lnyntingas little as S 10
or $20 a month, many members have
built ponfolLos 10 the hundreds of
thousands of doll.an -and some even S l million or.more.
Tbe manual, offered at $1 2 from
the NAIC ( l SIS East 11 Mile Road,
Royal Oak, Mich. 48067), has three
A second tetiOn to coo ideueUinao
the manual pointt out, is when
advet'le mll\asement chanp an
made. You m1aht &lso con 1dtr
selhng when profit marains are de-
chmna or the financial struC1ure of a
company is deterioratina.
OTC UPs & DowNs
NEW YORK (AP) -The follQwlng 11,1
sl'lows tilt New York StC)CI( Exchange
atC)Cl(a •ncl t'''"'' lh1t have 90ne up the moat Jn dOwn the moat baHd on peretnl Of c noe regardless of volume for • Mondav.
NEW YORK (AP) -The lollowlng 11•1 'how' tna Over • the • Counter •tocks and warrant• that l'lava QOM uP Ille mosl and down the mo•t based on oercenr of ~han9a for Monday
.!jo s~urlll•• trading belo~ s2 are lncl-d'lfl::'efc:1 ~Pw:r.cem:gep~~Po"u~' ~r:,I~:
No secur·ltl•s trading below s~ or ICIOO '"•ras are Included. Net 1nd otrcenta9e Cl'lang,, ar• !I'll difference belWfff! the Of'av1ous Clo• ng Price end Mond1v 1 last or bid orlce price and MOndav s J p.m. price.
N1me ~~f cf,g Pct. j UnEnRas ~ ~ · ~P 1~.4
Grut;l'an Up 1 ·8 l ~~~co pfK l/• l/• Up . 1 hoc:f:PoN ij ~ 8~ 2:1 j
tl'llrnrita ! v. UP rl~~•,iP pf :1: ~ 8~ .9 J
Patrfck r 11. 1/e Up 9 oya.~11 s 1 1h . lJ. Up .9
CO Oi i If• 'It Up 9 1l1 an asrch 1 11' UP .8
orlln 'h 1h UP l er'y Pho 7~ ~ UP .
lo r ~ 'le UP . lj c lrtd ~ 1/e Up 4. n :'!< 10.25of l 1h i" UP 4. 1 'rle ai ~ . JI/) 8~ :. 1
:kfjy ~n9 v. r% Up ~ i It or:;~rg wt ¥: :~ 8~ l: ~ llmo Pff v. Up . a JB l.4 Up .6 ' l'h Up c 4 ~ n ng ~ UP A s
UPS Narne Ltsl Cl\Q Pel.
terraMlnEx g ~ 11·16+1l-16Up ri·• l11tallgBl.ls 1¥1 ¥1 Up . PearreHlll't 3 1h 5l't UP . ~taneerlnt l/e 1h Up . lllngRs un 112 'h Up 6. ownAuto s 4 · 'h UP 4. alrfdNoble 4 'h UP 4.
Mi,J1ua1011 l I/• UP ... D I/• ~ UP , ~ercaPtron I 111. Up 1 · OeclsnSn 'I• 11• UP . Rexon V. A.lo Up . Wiiton 'h 11• UP . ~S Ind l 34 l'I• UP 1 .
elkomGM 7 + '1-16 UP 1 ·' ntecom 112 -\\ Up .6
WnHoldl!lr: 34 234 Up ·i Balglums d ~ 'I• UP . ~omacra ter 1/1 •n-Up 1 . lcom ~ 11. UP 1 . airline v. 'h Up . GaloobTov 1 l."l 1 UP 9.
HtlraCi>t ¥t 11• UP 1· llcro o Inc ~ If• Up . OOnoeeoLvl 3 1/• 3~ Uo .c
Pel lU
B l
11'1 I :~ l~
ff :' a
., 14
'· 15 '· 16 0 11
H 1~
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DOWNS N~e LT _51'1~ i~;fc~; 1 •~ = l~
avamonSL J'h -l'h orum w1es 7/e -111 Quantron x ~ · - 1 'I• SrrrtonValv rh -~ ~~.u~~fd lh =-7-~1~6 ~romovlsn .,.,, HookerEnt 'I• 11• ~unogen~l 11. 'I• uantumO a v. 'I•
ncllnslll ~
San Bar 7 "" Oallak CorP 43,co 1.l'l Alr\hPlnt wt 2 7-16 11. ~lleCareCom 2111 'I• iewSandwh 2h 'I• nvlronSv' s 20•1• -2
ummaMed ~ -'I• NatlGold un ii. -'I• A!'11tctleE11v -'n CBT Bsh s -2'12
FULLY SECURED
interest Paid Monthly • covernment securities
Fast LIQulClltv • 12 ·36 months
Bonus Rates on Jumbo Accounts
Ratft subject to change
, I --,~J
NRG FIN.tL~CIAL
( 714) 759-8484
INVESTOR'S CLUB
MEMBER BONUS!
Members are entitled to receive one hour free co nsultation
with independent Certified Financial Planner. What have
you got to gain( Find out free! Call 720-1082 .
• 27°1';
Annual Yield
Philip Ht1mnl(mn Prr\1dent Ro\•· Th1 .. 1HI "" 1 \ • •' 1•11 "d•·r11
Ralph RodhP1rn \ 11 t• Prt•.,1dt•n1 111d (), 1uglJ, Bull•·\ \ • f'<t·\11Jrnt
.710% .500%
YIELD RATE
Compare our one-year CD rate.
Instant Interest makes a difference!
Join. the Investor's Club. E.1rn morP rn w, to
enioy later! Our unrqut-ln.,t.mt lntt.>rf''>t plJn
applie~ 5% ul vuur 12 month 1nwr<•c.,t l11
your openrng·ddY investment ot "'I (JOO or
rnort"' Call or drup b\ todav. vVh\ \\'.J1t tn
JOin thf• Club when you l'<lrn 1nll'rt''>l c1n
intere~t from Day One(
WESTMARK•~
SAVINGS BANK
One Coroora1e Plaza Newoort C e11t1>' ~ • .i ~2 1 <:
a ~ .... omoary 1NvSE P~f<
'I I • '•
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ull w mpoullJlfl)l 11 bt-11
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American Saving.5 has been helping
Californians invest for the future since 1885.
It actualh lets vou tk:tcnnine the si1.t»
tcnn and rate 'of \'Ot1r CD invc~tn1ent It's that J
Throughout the last century, we've
remained committed to pioneering
smart, afc investments like the Money
Matrix CD account.
11 .,
CENTENNIAL 1885iiii1985
sin1plc. All the n1orc reason to call or visit
your nearest Amcncan Saving:-, office.
and put 100 rear. of American strength
behind vour future St.'Curity
AMERICAN SAVINGS
AND lQAJ\J ASSCOA~
..... ·---------· ·------
•
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TlllllY'I GLOllll PllOll
~ Stock market mixed
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
turned 10 a narrowly muted performan~ today.
giving up most of its early gams 10 afternoon
trading.
Trading was rclatl\ cly light.
The light pace of trading 1s typical tn August
But analysts ~ 11 also may reflect uncert.ainty
about the economy.
So,me ,.Wall Streeters feel the economy ·~
rebounding significantly from its sluggish per-
formance in the first half of 1985, while others say
1t 1s continuing to grow slowly.
The pace of economic growth will likely affect
where professional money managers invest.
The latest economic signals from the govern-
ment were mixed.
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK <AP) Aug. 13 NEW YORK IAP) Auo. 13
~'~ ''"ll! ¥~= m New tllilhs II New Iowa 10
AMEX LEADER S NYSE LEADER S
&elected WOl1d gold ~ Tueedey .._... moM"'O lllltno 1321.SO. up ll.86
LOftdeft M'lemoc>ft fhtlnQ 1328 so. off $0 16
...... '11«n00ft fbllng .,28.74, up 12 29 ~rri1Wt ftxtno'329 79,upleM NEW ~RK (~P -Flnel Dow-Jone\
.;.'::"" 1e1e e1ternoor1 bid 132830.ucia1 eo. '32• eo ~•r•:" A.1~ ll.
M9Mr a ...__1328 76. on so 16 Ind 13 ~ fl• R\1' ~ 132t to.°" to 1a T'rn . · 7 ~ ...... IM IS4S25.offl0 16 II 155. u~. . NYC-gold 1C10t mon1'I Mon IS27 10. on a 1 40 tk 543. . Hf. ' . . r~.n ~~·~'k 1 ,41 • METAL S Quo1Es
NASDAQ SUMMARY
famou' la b<z.l,s ...
~ brzoch 414 {)Jtih'On ~lond.. 71\'Utll 5070
\loCICNOOd"'\tcgz. 1001~~'2\~.3Z7~
pollCldcira 5Z~~leN...,. ,018130't 9~-'
mon thru Oi \Oto9. ~t.utday lO t.o6 l 9Ufii0y noori to~
. ...
~__._ _____ ,,_,,.,,_...,_ ____________________ ................................. ._ _______________________ ~--~---..::..-. ____ _
' Oranoe Cout DAtLY PllOTIT~. August 1J, 1115 *In
a
• I lm"" 5 ·D•n. Sb Oollan • Ad.t ml\ • .rnrd l'uh 11111 110 portion ol pnl'r\('nt '* N!fo~. • Addltlona! Iii. may i. fh1td\btd for $2 00 l'arh
• Pun. mutt be met~ 1n thl' ad • °''" 111>1 applv 10 rh" rl'al eatatl', rrn1tl. Of' htolp wanted claali&atloM or a111omobikt pt1<'N over 12000
• .\v111lo1W" onh 10 prtvltt' p•rtv ad"'°mw-r• wilt"' rm'rcb&ndlle •
Call 642-5678
. . -..,.. . ". -......
h ' ~ .\. .... , . --
., ·~ I, '.>\·· ~ . . .~ . . .,
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' .. . . ~'?
~· ,.. '
•,... ~
...... t.r lalt law-UH .i...UW ~.Vat. Vaf. Alutlleats:-Wiiil. ._'Will •at
...... 110 Xlt ~.Inc s19,g:: 15% C..ta.... UM ....... &itailla Bit c.ta... 1114 ._g fin Otflc:• tor .... ll'lUr,
' A E E M A R K E T dn. S15e,500 4$7-6291 E·.ide ettr 1&. OrM1 tOC. VERSAIU.f Full Security 29r He EMGfd:fm'. ~ ~fm NEWPORT HT8· rM 1be. ~ I HIWbor .,._
ANAL VSI& OF VOUR a O N B ti PrlV Wit & pkg. Nw cpl. Condo. t Bd w/mlnl Qui.t loclitlon saoo. c.11 lf2'!m0-2 8d 11.t tit pool. 1150/mo 7 H __,Imo Cel ID-7'102
REAL ESTATE BV 6 1wnerM pt ru Grdnr & weter pd No OCMn "'9w, ,_ pelnt, Olole 8H·4000 Dye, TowM<Me gmblt lndfy TUsUnA"'9.642'-T151 Diiie 1PC81fone ..vllllinl
MUL Tl-MILLION S • .,u,f000U;,._. Ult !.!_1 P9tal&25. 751-3498 crp & window oovermoe. 640-24~ ~ rm all tin.-~ ' OC"''"H~TYALY ~ 109111
PR 0 0 UC ER. CAL L ~. .-ow -w ... -· 1dnt IOo. 17$5/mo ' 20 ""' rnvn *· e&o.l2lo AIN'lt--PAT A IC K TENORE Po1ltlve oa1h flow MeM V91'de 38r 28a, BAVCAESTSpacloul3 8d 28t 28a w/vailted c.1i.. 78Tht.lnn 18' tBe, epect, w . utfl. *· ,...,_,_
e3M2M w/eum"19'rentall Prime euper CIMn. heultNI l'lome wl fonnel dining & dbl ger wlopnr. Frpto T8L MGMT 642·1800 lndd. 1750. 8&0-0581 i9ldaM·-----
rental aree. Partial OCMn yard 11100/mo 11t, lat, tam rm A l*t IOo 1n"' MOO. 2Br 18a. bNm $mt 18' 1 pereon onty CONDOS .... -t. 811
& .,.y vu. llc>Otadel. Jdnt t 160 dep 545-8035 aft 5 Xlnt ltM. $2000/mo. Agt ceffa. f(plc, git sen. 2 New gpt a peln1 '49$ W/poof., IPa. -= -
cond 3Br Up, 2Br Own. Meea Verde lovely age 48' 844-7211 penone, no peta. 1et, lul 1e1&e w1111eee 876-8291 J:'~~,.:: ::'1760 "'U•oo••s+•ORE..,.,1or~".._~~
Gar. Aaeumabte In. 8/P d tlo 1 IOo 8/t & MC $225. 850-1 1500 S1F 3-422 Via Udo
1330.000. 873-()125 r1;I,~NO:::::751-389& VIII• BalbOa. LMge 1 bdrm •SBr 2Ba. ""' deoof. ....... ~!~NNING 28' -::~-Npt 8c::f\. ~2 . •a WllM m.lllT , ......... f .. condo, MC:uruy bldg. petlo gll' dahwlhr trplc: 1725/mo 2 8d ,.,~ b• .....,,
ThllhomehMQUalltyand _.. II e.. New e..io. 2 mttr ad, 2 l850mo.yrly.84 ,-3873 $950°NoPetaMG-.24Cl5 IWMM, encl ger, lndfYlti•••••••'--•UJ warmth. 38drm, 28a with 128 Apartment IAC w/teni '..\tit, gar, WIO hkkp. w .. tclltl 38t aaa, ~ rm, patio, 111 bit-In-.
tamlly room, formal din-32 4-pie• lote,8K unit JV. 11100/mo 831-4092 frp4c 2 car gar grdn; •FRESH 28' 1P.., new 7'3 w ttth·
Ing room with lkytlght, San 8ern area n8-:C)317 Mot fflt to NB 3bt 2.,_ S 13f 5 + IMt A dep ~1ta l drpe, lndry fac. TSL MGMT 642· 1803
new decX>fator P.-.. LL Wu • gourmet kltc:h 1725 wor1h 873-1734 ..,75. No peta 498-41127 SpertcUng c:IMn 28drm
paint art<! Wind<>'# eovet1.1~p;;;-.-.iiji--.,..-'!ii;m;;;,. more 53Mt90 Beet I• YRLY 2bt 1ba 1 ear,.., 2 •NrSCPtza. S.A.28'28.a 1'A8a SM& A" U1111tlee Yard la large, private and Genuine lnveetor wlH P41Y ..-• Condo. POOi, ep., cwpor1 peld refrig, ow-oe 1 beautiful. StU,900. castiforyourpropertyf« Rare houee rental $450 blka to Mnd, StOO. mo. $700Nope1a722-801t cNidok °p.t1 ' 751-319t right price °' tenna. No bMm oelllnge hrdwd fire lncidt all utll. No peta. . no I
$SELECT gimmick• Patrick Tenore accent old worldwlde Open Houae Wed 5-7pm, *~ E'llde 8adl tor 1 19e0 Wabce 842-'90! e31.12tsa. charm 53M190 Best Pee 302 35th St. Nwpt 8ctl pereon. All utlla pd '475. Tll l'llTlllll
PROPERTIES SHARP a. dean. 4 BR neer Yrty 28t 18a, 0"'11!· view, Small pet ok. 7ao..aaea 2 BR. 11ABA wtger '635,
So. Cout & OCC. Wkly deck. Bch lo\ blk •SHARP Weetllde 28t new crpta, drpe, bttlne, MUI flm -+ gardening a.rvlc:e.. St 175 1850/mo. 87~ 18a, encl gar. Fncd yd, lenced ywd, wet• paid. llOllll per mo. Ma-9950 lut ha patio. W/0 .room. New 867 E. VICTORIA
3 Bdrm, 2 Bath owner· a la tab SBt 28a /dell & bar New ~ crpt1 & drpe.. Tlte kitchen ll3M 120 Mon-Fn 1·5PM
unh u~talra w/muter c:rpt a. w drpa painted Hlgll oe11inga enh..:. decor & btt\. No P«•. MUS1 -lffll 1-
bdrm & bath plu. nr• lnltl r....u... In/out New stove & oven cozy Ill condo w/patlo eland Credtt CMctc. M75 •H
piece. 2 Bdrm Income Dbl er eover.d patio '375 avail 912 53M190 +MC dep n<>-5829 Want a Mfectlon of or•t
u n 11 down I ta Ir• I~ IMO 211t Lrg ~ backyard. ~ Beet Rlty lee •STUNNING LQ 1. 2& 38' :~~ !*'emC:.•ap~r~
w/flreplac•. Seasonal lege Park area. Near A-rhlntt r -1-L.. 28a Grdn Apt. Pool 1525 ~ hM If look rental, rarely vecant. Lrg 3 be. winter rental. Schoola 11175/mo. 2.410 -•l'ISQ9 1825 & 1725. 710 W 18th • · Ing In auumabte 111 T.O. Call 1850/mo. 645--3757 or Col........,. Or 845-3453 CM.MB.or HB think of ua
MARIA BERCOVITZI (818) 355-7749 ._.. . 3Bd 3ba. 2 car gar, no nm tor that ~ Qf
MARILYN TWITCHELL. h ..__._ .. ...,. Spaoloua, attractive a ..... -.-a.. f~t... .. -~ P«a,n-.emkr lnSIM a'il la..t llVlnQ IMS--Twnhme. 3Elr 28a. 2 car !!!r9:.~~••n ... ..._ 9/1 &42-75281780-1418 TSL MGMf &42-1803
FURNISHED or u,.rURNISHEO
f1lW.S$ CllTUS, TtaSi SlllllH,,._ ....... ..,. .......... ... ..., .. '-
~ GE 759 . QJO O ltu11J Uf2 get, pa11o, utH hkup, frplc. llJ-3Br 28a wlln quiet Com-NB REAL TY 1175-1842
ltallt ier-aal. · -itallt fer lalt tlNOLORDSIREALTORS 1080 sq ft. 1975imo A'il Pnlaa.U 2117 1)1ex. Lndry tee $750. A'il Wll1Ull llLUll
-...-.-....... --..--.-..--Fut tree t.,,.,.,t provldre nowt (213)258-.5479 IUIT .-12•• s..>t 5th. &41-1861 1 BR 1555/MO
Newport Bud\ So.
1700 16th Strtet
(at Dover)
642-Slll
Cnnal · IOU latral 1112 ~-__,_..,.....,., __ _. Into 539-8194 Beet Atty Dau Put 1121 Ouplell w/frplc garage $585/ L bell4lt T8d Pool & Spa. No peta ::::::;;;;;;=::: ____ l!lll ___ ,1c.r.a W ... '1022 MOT A LIST AGENCY oc::;; 14# §6f hi: inCfa Nrbct1S800911 #2550tM 1be :iobltrn.. frplc'. 845-8122 833-8917 f(Ul)ADS
ARE FREE
Cat.
COLD We.LL
BANl(eRU
IW.IU PllfflllU .......... Franch w1tom rea~
wt1h 73' on main chal'lnel,
4 BR, 8 BA. Art studio,
gymnasium, library, love-
ly pool & many amenities.
By appointment.
'""IOIO
HUI Hin ••+1 .... 1 3 Bdrm. 2 bath owners unit
upstairs with master
Bdrm & bath plus fir ..
place. 2 Bdrm Income
unit downs1alra with llr9-
place. Seuonal rental,
rarely vacant. Large ....
sumable iat TO. MARIA
BERCOVITZ/MARILVN
TWITCHELL
GE 159.9100
----
* IPYIUll1 * Preferred area 2br abode ttudy trple 2ba more YIUl(IT 171-1111 Must .... UTIUU fllW N~w.,Ort Buch No.
Largest 2 aty 5BR, 5ba & quiet at kids 1575 at S875 53M190 Best,.. ,.·~--• I ...... 2112 3118 Avocedo 2Br 28a. 1000 sq ft. gar, 880 IN1nt Avt>n'*
bonus rm. f)OOf '499.500 53&-&190 a.at Alty fee I ...... .,..... • -1Sl ~ M2· 1tol Jae. Redecorated. No (ell 16thl ... y .. lffr 2Bdrm & 3Bdrm Units ut. IMck .... MUI FUIT peta 1895. 831-11107
Ctrl f8I avalleble lmmed In Hunt· 3er, ibe COOdo, quiet STEPS TO BEACH. 1 ...,......,_ ... 8 -645-1104
all 78Q..l'468 lngton Beac:h. Priced area, 2 car Oat. pool, BR/den/Iba. Ltg rooms ~u "" Dau Ptiat •A •Im!!-•••••• IG-1111
CdM 2 Iota w/French Mor-from $700 to $850. • $950/mo 846-1156 bttln klteh, tum OR un-MUI I .. f11n IMtbAa.11 2tlt ••-an11--•ai '38;'5°.l!~~ot':~~-~~· '"811 IULn 4Br, 3ba, tam rm. din rm. turn s1soo1mo 1173-5595 .~!!'•,•• .... II 2er 2ea Beech Hou.. W II L™ ~~~~~~~~ _. "' -· ,.,. PllP llAIAlmll big kttch. gat. huge back I rt lncli _. tr Frpl. 1750 mo #4930 ,.. ~ FOUND 9old ~ ~/~M~~~~~.;~ O~~~~ f ~7d FE~~~~: l14/ltM111 ~:'tiy ~~f =·~;n be elbnPT. 2 dre to bd\. 1 F~p:~e:,c:'::O-p;!~ Tllllll11U lf..UIO 30~ ~~ ::rg~ It ~22. .
loaded with charm, eur-640-3182by0wne< 1aJM1 bJ&U fiil peraon. Ltd klteh. Utlla 18drm SnO-S795 Attractive 1 Br nr l140+wttagl,nodepo91t. FOUND Kitten, blk & ~~~d~::. ~~~d Jumtne Creek 2 Br & den. wzum ~~~ F~~l !~J1~~ r.t ~~f:°ti.tfo~:eo-=~-~~t~ &45-rrJ: =1~s:i>~i:.96-IM82 bwr ::: ·~·m:
U,._.l()UI: t1V~l:S ~~"'4:0 1s~1:.~. ~ 3 + sundecil a. •kytmt~ Jog 10 bead\. Small tee ' Extr• IO attract. dplx 2Br. lut lw~ 2?ff latWl!!I Catlllina &~ Leg
Realt0ta, 675-6000 831-8638 Of' 640-6188. Frp. I. Best areal #2 2 fee TIUlllT llf..UIO w/IQe patio. encl gar, 2nd ""2alfield · ~ BALBOA ISLAND: Fum. Bch497-4830 TIUUIT llf.. .... Just blka 10 ocean 2br hse from bctl, 45th et. 1 1Br. pvt balcony, encl~ heel. 1 BR. $450/we9k -+---------
--------NC: ~1~~ ~J~ ~~~ c .... ••t •u UH modeflzedkld•okSSOO'• ~~..a~5t 2~~~~2~~~ f&aYIPAlmm 2~2i0~. =.~ar .. d~t.673-2757 Lg:::,!: .. ~'":.
-
•• -a ii•• S 1, 135K 759-9070 Agt eaalty yours 539-6 ,90 ' Sparkling clean large ,._carpet, no pet• $650. Ooeeintront 1Bdrm Furn, NB. R9wwO. 850-6829.
-• ---------2Br 18a a.1c1en,.01950ac1oua Best Alty fee Winter nice 3Bd 20' to Apta.forfamllleaw/1or2 Dolores 840-5504 Sleeps4. $475/wldy. A'il ,__. Blllt ...... / In $97 ,900 Sl~te Family Home and enc:t. pat o. 1 mo. 2 bch ll!ew patio w 10 children near pm Heat 8117..s.c>t. 831--0527 ....... : . ""' w ~
3 Bdrm, 2 bath with at-45 SHp. Trade tor: Comm Gaslwatel' pd. 675.-8295 ••••• 1u.... 242 gar&g. ' s 12oo1mo P•ld No pets •ARLINGTON APTS• CM on Neiwpor1 81 btwn
tached 2 car garage. Prl-lnduat or? Try cunt Agt EXEC Hm. 3BA/fam rm, •••• -__ .. ••H 108 011v9 548-3535 2Bdm, 1'1•8a · se95 Quiet, 8')ec:ioua. Vacatin 22na1bctl ......_ 875-1171
vate patio & community 631-4321or601-4341 pool 4 Pvt bNCheS _._. •-.. 2Bdrm 2ea s720 Very clole to bMch ... &ala 2.917 or 548-7137 REWARD
pool. Close lo freeway & ,. __ , • 10•.. $2250/:o•.673-5354 Agt P:11o. oar. dawahr #8414 Aprtant1, Uat. 398 w. Wiison 831·5583 2Br 1~B• Twnl'IM $675 . LOST Gold .... 8'11C81et
near Oranga Coaat Col-.,.. I tu ... • ee -Sony, no pell ~ Arr~ houM, norfll Watct\ GrMt .entlmental
tege. If you've waited for •SA YEIM Ull&ll LARGE 3BR 2'Aba, steps TIUIEn llf..HIO Ctaual 2H1 SUWlll YIL' •1,1 anor.. etMpa 8· value R9wwd 497~718 an exceptlonal value • a.a ltul 4Bd 1v. Bath to ocean. $1495, no pets, Wcalfield .. Oays I 83&-0405 or __ . _____ _
hefelllate.4&-7171 on~l-<1e-lac~L1t~yard 960,...229,960-42.26 lmae ZZ44 04111UTIPTMOI EV911731-7528 SCRAM LETS
THE REAL
ESTATERS
with Piiio. Atrium court Ott PCH 312br w/lott appla * ••EITALI* * Utlls paid. lM #8404 fee .... ,..,. . wn llT1 .. tab .. •
yatd entry. Prloe reduced provided kid/pet fine CALL US REGARDING TIUIDT llf.. .... Like btand newt All utlttlel live where you have a •NSWERS
to $175,000 fOt' fast sale. S900'a Isa optional IAVINE LEASES ialMa Iliad 21 paid. Poot, gar, no P«•· *Spectacular apt• lme lttl n
Call Patrick Tenore 539·6190Best.Rltyfee I .._ !Bdrm 1585-$585 *1 ,281 1a 28aeultes Flrmln46';<;0;d.9a1. Scwoe-VIM
*lllPEU Tll* 631-1286 lnlll h•t 11117 New 1bt apt, parlt'g, yrty 2Bdrm !Ba $690 •S~ t~ Pen. '30•tmo.+ v.uttl. Dryer. Magnet l ~,1"•µ IUlllYll+ITllll 111·1100 tse, $700. plmo. Aft. 301 AVOCADO •Flreplaoes 67s-7419 ADVANCE FM LJltlmJ • ~r 0 Above CdM State Beac:h 7pm, 497 -5752 . 241 W. WILSON *Private balconies or Grendma gave me aome •IU Ill IU Yll We've Sotd Oull We have ft:== Exquisite $1500 #8« 1 fee La HI IHck 2341 lal... 831--0960 G1rdetl patios 0vr 45/rmrnat• lhr nlcely good acMoe. She Nld,
Senaatlonal views from adv $$ to spend & time TIUHn 111-lllO 281 COttw oo:;:;; view p-:•nJ• 2707 Apt tor Rent • 1 Br 1565. = ~ ~=t 8&'.n~.'! "Vou . never know wNt this unuauat, well bullt 3 for Open Housea. Let UI -.-· ' •--• CIOM to SC Pt:z.a Call ftY 111'1 · . life will bring, ao don't
story duplex above China be your dedicated Bkr. ltwprt lffc~ lOll C..tl .... 2224 fp'goBarage, walk lo boh 1 BR'. c:arJ>C)(1, MW drps 1 Bob 55&-1817 •3 Lighted tennis courts car Pool, ctoee to Hnt make a Cleta for anyttltng
Cova and beach. Owner 1--.aa= I"-. -PWSH CONDO 28f 28a S 1 w/utll 499"2181 t 1124 w Balboa •2 Swimm.' ..... pools bch. Smokers OK. no pet. more than a month in A(). RTI -1&11n-w.i . crpa. . •EASTSIOE• "'V Refa 213/694-8073 llam VANCE" ocoupled 3 Bed. w/frplc '40-1 a....a--1 •u• Den. Upgraded cseeor. Avall 9/15 3Br 3Ba. lower Blvd. S800 mo. 873·5198 3B 1._.,Ba $885 l 28' l8a •Stream• & ponds to 8Pm keep c:alllng ---------on topmost floor. a 2 bed. _,,_. Luatl Greenbelt In Blufft, Oller· pool stream• & Temple Hiiia. Ocean & r •Sorry, no P«•
rental on middle level & a FllllLISRI 3Br. 2,,...,., S215,000 ,... tall• Obi car gar w/opnr. nit• lite YU. I yr IN. 3 Br 2 ba. trplC, gar, yrty, 1 Sll60. 2080 Gard«! Ln. •Furnlshlnge avatl M/F Resp/mature Pvt rm ........
guest ltudlo w/pallo at we have 2 Condominiums By appt only · 505 Fl0ta Mlcio, W/D hkups. S1000 $2100/mo. 49~8858 hae to boh, Lndry, bnns, No pets. Agt. 64&-5605 ba,lndry Step to bet\ Avl ltr Salt 4112
3'round level. A spacious that a bank aays sell. Ted Hubert ~ltr 758-1540 AVAIL Sept 31 549-2447 llOOO mo 675-5306 eves BACH $510 & 1BR 1810 WHV NOT CALL 9/t $325/mo 646-8326 one of &ange count"
Immaculate property Lender wlll tlnanc:e with ILlffl 1122.111 LUX CONDO AVAIL NOW LapH Billi 2250 OITl 11'1111 lilO PRVT patio, c:atport . Ml-1111 MIF snr 2~r 2ba C M. $325 finest Auto Disrnantllng
/aeperale l1undry & 2 low down. Both are 2 2331 Vista Huerta ~8<f1ba 28r 2Ba. Over pool, ...u ME II llUll 1 yr lse. utlla pdJ, 6759fee PTOOOPL,ASRPEAA quMlet, "°p1pe11. mo '4 utll. Call Kevtn Yard for Sate Long ......
car garage. $850,000 Bdrms with nreplaces. 1 Owner consider term• atreama & fella Obi car r... TILIUn lll-lllO · ... nea SUWlll YILUIE 645-7879 Of' 259-1234 ictnt varlanoe Contact
-
Wl\H RrR~ INT has ocean view & loft. Property Mart 840-9019 gar w/opnr Mkro W/D 2+2 panoramic view prvt 2650 HARL.A 549-2447 15555 Huntington VIiiage Emle or Ray, ~
llOMt., hoc. c~::_ now before they're By Owner lovely SBr 3b• Spit lvl S9s0. 549-2447 ' ;&:nf'iT'980~;~~ Ull llU nwlL Duplex 2 bt 1 .,_patio. gar. Lane, from ~~ Diego M:r ~';f ~~ n.-..;m:~~o lulat11 Oft. 4114 . ~EAL ESTATE g . Dvr Sh/Ba Ml Quick 1BR den 2 .,_1ht large . Magnltloenl 2Br + Oen W·alde, pref. couple. F~. nort f 8eec:h good locatlon 'NB/CM ~rimn-&a;Slimiii~ '31-1400 saleS245K~&-1273 yard. New palni1cpt1 ..... L. -•t FrpL gar *1295 #6758,.. "495. mo. 5'la-3l35 ~c~C:detl. wea1 on aree. 5350 ... 12 'um ILL 1&11 ••1111
H.V. HOMES
CARMEL
MODEL FOR
SALE. Super
condition
CARMEL
MODEL FOR
LEASE.
$1400 /Mo.
No pets.
Call:
640-LONG
....... DIGS
OF NEWPORT
673-7761 or 640·LONG
Traditional \/ery cle•n. $875/mo. -IC• ·-mum 171 ..... EASTStDE 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, . Reta please 673-2507 YllllM Ulltlll
DISTRESS SALE Npt Hot• See It 243 E. 22nd St w . FF 36r. 2'Xba. quiet ., .. $575/mo, NO Townhome 2br 2.,., den. ........t Hts hm to"'' wl....,., Eatab game route. Part Realty 38d, den, 2ba $210,000 den, ofc, dbl gar. gardener 4 MllU Tl IUOl1 PETS 831-3t55 tam rm, pvt patio, dbl ··-.-.,.". ett0r1 ..
631_7370 652-2416 or ne-1081 2Br 1~ ~ ()pix. Mo pets. S 1300 no pet, evt lmrnecs. 2Br 2ba Duplex w/gar g.,-. stove dbl oven, d/w, Fem 25-35 lbflba turn. time Or1. Hi 11retum1. IT'l I Olll ITUU 1950 A Meyer. $700+ 650-8504 or 837•1458 $900 ez term• 111608 fee Eatelda 2Br 1ba, gar, trash comp. wood burn-wl pvtenl MOO 5.48-60e7 local area.$$ I traH\
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Bach Condo. Lux& aec:. Lo sec: S
750
·
549
-
3
•&4 s 18So Baytront 3Br 2sa. TILUDT · llf..Ull :~a :r:, ~-~ 11
" ~~ 1:;1~~~.'::• P~~' n~~t°& Y$c? c=~ ;:xtr~· ~"'' ~~ •SA Yllll •Tl down. OWC. Bkr/Ownr ~;.-;•a1i:;:~ h:~~N~ 40' allp $300 extra. 21 Yrty 1Br t8a, On Bay. aide E'alde deluxe Twnhae. 2Br S 1075 &4r..41• S50 dep 432·7366 csay 12·5. Mon-Fn S.-5 Mr
• 1
••,IOO $69,900.839-11122 t .. 1 ... 1_22 .. 2 BalboaCove.673-1464 view. Sate. otean $825. 1, .. B Gar..,._17151mo •t Wo11er714/838-U20
-pe •· "'g • ~ " Upstalra 673-1943 " •· -.-Lapal lllb ;i Prof to 11'11 2br 2ba CdM c .innMeflt Shoe> wfth Beaulltul 2 atory family lllffllT 1111 *3B 2,~Ba E'tde twnhM 3Qr 2be trplc DIW. apa 2543 Orange. 842-2520 duplex on the Bluffs on....,
home. F1mlty room, fOf'· 1111,111 2 ~pa, ape, dbl ga~ 2&;,d~r ~1::· ~~~I C.naa ••• ... 2?21 llltll'f. ltaua.c l +lu.... $800/mo 111/IHtlHC. = ~~ =· ~~ dlnl":, ~ourb•~~· 3Bdrm, tr.noh doora. $1200Nopeta722-8011 Cellb,!,1~5pm LllRllll2+2 .... $550/molg 18d 1baApt. FP,gar;.rr011= 756-07S4eallM Terrific terms Mu.ise111 s~.:k~I~ eool pool ~ ~ge~S:t~~~~Call •MESA VERDE lrg 4Br Baycrest 38' tam rm lrg Walk to beacl'll #8508 t• nrSC Plaza. Eaaytwyac· TILll R99P fem stir lovely COM 7141&48--7975
bubbling not ape. Ve<y .. • . 3Ba Exec home $1200. kltch, encl Y,d. Gd sChla TILDEn Ill-IHI oeua~~~~:..FER legert Inc~ i?lt ~m ~ul~thti.i~~ •'TWAIT WM~~ prl'Vate, wtry nleel Call L•rry 548--5880• Agl s 1 3 5 0 I m 0 . 0 y. 3Br 28a. So ~t HWy. FIP, TSL MANAGEMENT 1.1'.«a 48( Kim Yrty 1 mo+ ... utlls 640-4262 nu IT"' UTI
Call 13-546-2313 3 8d 2be, boat ttOl'aga. 835-7001, Evea 873-0677 nu carP«. dkk. rrdnr 642· 1803 Winter. No lee. Bkr Rmiiite CdM Ooeanatde If you are unMppy and THE REAL
ESTATE RS
If it's got
wheels you'll
move it
faster in a
Dally Piiot
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 ancr~
a friendly
ad-visor wllr
help you turn
r.our wheels
ntocash.
t ••• ' • ::"~.!~~~~· ::f'a~ IUlll UY $1360 mo. 213159 2820 lllTllT. 1175-4606 2br 2ba t>eautltvl n/smkr want to gel out on your •W•llT llm1'I &42-4300 24 hre. 3Br 38a, prlv comm. Bcn. fllTllTIO YllW 1595/mo 2 Bd Iba patio. t8' & 28' Duplex Garage. $450~. ~ny 963-5588 ~~ c;:r fl~ ~ : r.<>: 111..... 3 , tennis ecceea. S 1900/mo of Harbor, Catalina & city pool, lndry rm. E-tlde toe. Yrty $850 & 1875· Blk 10 --commun1cat1ona right
3Bdrm, frenctl d oore, 3 Bdrm ~ba. brand new 1"· (7141770-8237 or lloht1. Lge 2BR 1'~ .,.. clOM to to 1Jt1 bctl Oya 542--0292 or ltatall WHt.. ~ here 1n So C.llf. Potef'·
large atd. Stcyllghta. Call 1•:r,E-~d~=-··~~ <9111>927-51155 Beeut. deeor. Avall AUQ 1 M9 E. Bay 73 '-8488 Evee 2 8( 2 s: houle. din-rm. Ital In Sht ngu,. '"'
R .. ~~1-1268. ~·o~N.DAILV .1S.1AL· Belcourt HUI: Large 3BR forSt750/mo Cell Karen TSLMAMAGEMENT OIZYITlllllllO yrO tor small dog, oar Y'Nf You need l100K
BEAT Call 845-0968 4ba, 3 car gar. Deluxe at 780-1901 Iv meg 842-t803 Steps to Mtldal #11759 tee Reta 646-288~ and qualllicatlonl Call WM~"
I ( t .. , ' ~ • • 3Br 2~a. dbl gar. nice ~~:f~a ~-~M =j Neer beech. entire t1t Lrg b8ChefOf apt w/lrg tanln Ill-IMO Mature Med Secy, Ideal _650-2462 IOI' app_·i __
d fr 908 w TV ... 2u.1 •7 .. _ .. 1.,. noor, 2 Bdrm, den, trplc. patio In gd loc:al '365/mo tenant wants tBdrm apt • yar • no 1· · 1·.,. ~ mo v _... '"" gar. $1400 72<>-9422 AQt 859 W t9th C.M. 2br Iba. g.r, lndry, ad IOo. CdM .' Newpor1 Coate "i""' p 1.., OOYerStlot bay Wlleon, $8 5. 545-7983 1800 Clay St $750 mo · · T . r... .. -r• ... •.·SK. LUXURY TOWNHME Cozy .mall rum Studio -... ..... &4&-6318 °" 497-8478 . Meta. Approx 1550 ~~n· i'mt1"'..il'!T9ililii .. -.~ vu, tab. 6~._~. M25 . 4 BR 2ba, IQ tam rm w/wet 2Br 2ba, trple. POOl..1. ape, Pooi E plyd fem only. -•• ..-~ ,
A.Mum. nn. ,.p e31-4M bar & frplc:-0/W, d••· tennis, no pets. •1300 N/amkr $..00 Inc util. 11 · Frple, utlla pd •84&Uea r 18a. MHr Hoag vw ., ...... _le 3.,._,.. we buy Trull Deed• new lntr paint. Nr S.C mo. 833-7890 wkd}'S ~ .. 999 1llDllT 111-UIO Dshwshr WID rm gar. ,.._._, .. ,.. 11 n--SPACIOUS tllgllly up-Plaza~ ~bl A.-lhopa. -tut;~.,...,._ etc No p.,1 $575 _ 1st. H•l apl to ll'lr w/1table b1M. r_, s.m
graded TownltOJD• * r 11ooi mo, 557-43611 Brllnently <Melgned 2-3bt ,.~1 • -•t ..,. .. •WI 1111 S48.-039o pet'IOn. By 911 857-2232 Cell Wayne Matthewt
bdrm 2'Aba, ~. tennl1, 1 NB hm rental h'plc: loft .,.. I Ill au S5751M 28d 1ba 111 bit· 754-11828
walkto bet\. ~ will AT LAST! quiet yd 1750 kid• 111. MUil lltl Ins laundry room near 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Step• An .... fer
MC. Prine onty. 873-2829 53M190 Belt Rlty... .. nltt Hunyl 48~... ~end ahOf>t . to t>HCtl 112001mo ... , nu ••• , ...... Siii
Days or 64MM8 Eva ..... IHtll Fab 2BR 28A, 2 cw gar, .,:. -~IT 1u .... 741 W. 18th &47-3850 Agt 10 CLERICAL
Trl-levelcondofor .... by lentMJM... ape. No pet1 $1300, '~ fr C TSL MGMT842·1603 ....... IU. G~=~~C:~2~L Bvayome.OMCl9peronto own.... Moving. mutt Mii, a ... ....... tae/grdnr. 409 112nd St. 2 8d 1ba E·licle. New rpt. Newly redeCOr•ted 2Br 3 Bdrm 2ba ue>per untt nandle phOnH and
2 bt, 2'A ba, trplc, pool fHI I •no 673-1732or831-12118 f'r9lft pnt, lndry tac. up-$620 38, s720 & Up WI Dhkkp !(,.bale trplc Ot"--lat l _1 .. 1yp1ng and other du,lel. $14'4 500 71~2~18. 1talre No peta $575/mo ....._. • .... ., 5210 • 1 oOo · 11-I I -" m1nium 1 yr olfloe ax· . . TELERENT Gardener kept 3bt hM 271·0 E 18111 Pl Drive by .......... No pets ..... ,. gw Mu.t wt , Imo 3000 1SU m 562 I ~ c;.tl &4 t-1158,
.. 1..11 ... •--llM under $1000 OCNn nrby henc:al 844~2 ' Bach, 21t David • • • .... -53M190 Beet Alty fee t I; Nwi>t Hat• Clean TSL MGMT 842-1603 209-.q. f\. t617 w .. tclllf. * -• * , •1 O blks to Btufft Stove, frig, _ MB ~ 1·5032 Agt -.-~ s• PARK. 2 BR 2ba. fl,.. • Wlde91 Setectlon ITI•••-...... 2Br 1 ~B• HSO. u crpta drpa pvt Yfd & AVAIL NOW 2000 eq ft . Full ' part time PoaltlOn•
place, air, akyllgh11, • Updattld o.aty -.-Joann St. Adlt• pref. patto' Sml Pet Oii 1 Plf· NwPt HrelOfltl 4 Bdrm 2 '350 plmo Awfox 180 Stan• at S4 $0 p/l'lr
MUCH MUCH MOAEI • Alt A,_. a Pr1Qee 2+2 wltrptc, GI' & ~ Small pet~ 945--8453 IOf'I 0nty 1445 lnc:l all utlla be wl ocun view. no 9q. ft Tfltephone & S.C· Mull nave ne.t. ctean ap-
US.OOOtot>o. 8&7-1+4& •Open 7 Deya flem..7pm NewPof1 C,_t #5681 fee Nftlef 2Br 1._.Ba Twnh•. t dep. 213/927-lln2 yard 3t5 HolmWOOO Or retarlat S.rvlc. •vell pear Muat be 18 yrl of
C.M S29S/mo 8'> rent. 675 8860 11LllllT 11....... ft 102 18111 Wallace M50 O DO Br 288 11550/mo Call Au11 I~ a.ge 0 M V Aepoft req
Lovely prk, n.w cpt, age • •+ 1-...sTATI No pet• 87M291 P~H (k;aded2 decor' 831-57751831-8000 Executlw off!Qe apace 751·2680 a..s Mon-Fri
""'for Ieng. u """· Orily °'Stop By An e.menltlea. Prvt ofc 28r 1ba age IMno .,. & ~ pool. atream• " Beaut11Ut1y decorated 18' w~ & lrvlne, N B -* umTllY/
117,995. Call 13~7870 JIM ....... llN & Sl300 #esot !*lo. encl OW No '*"' falla. Obi car gat wlopnt. Condo. ocean/bay VIEW, c.11831-.3180 Sam~ llllUl.,,.
Obi-wide Drtftwood 421, Balboe ~ F• TtLIUIT .,....... MOO. plmo. 854-2717 Mlcto. W/Dtlkupa $1000 Incl W/O, refl10, OIW. 572 Sq Fl SSSOtmo
ee.ctl&PCHA·10owner Avail $11 extra enarp E· 28r 2Be.. 2 «*OW Ff'P'C AVAIL~t 31 549-2447 AIC, Vitia 8alt>M 1975 3975 Birch. Newport TheJollyAogerCorporwit•
S76.000.536-5742 llde2btoourmetkltencl Lll-t.11..,._ micro, W/O, dahw1t1r' PooLP1tlo,trp1c,x.1ge mo 840-4772 9Mc:t154t-5032AQ1 offlClllloottlngfoun•·
I C A A S E C C>Manftont 2bt 2ba. den, oar MHf kldt 539-1190 Harbof ~Townl'loutie. Pool,~ U60 Avt 811.1 t6 28dtm Apta Eallakte BrW'd "" OhOIOe .,... t 1e Sq Ft Gen I perten04ld eecretary '°'
II 1> J ,. I •2t Or1nwood ~ a Belt AltylM 3Bt 38a, • 2 cer oar. M5'-M80°'1to-M11 "55' Up ss1.2941 38t 3Ba. trp1e, •tw. ofe/Meotoal grnd flt No tl\e °'*'9tl0nl o..,.rt·
. _ . . . PCHt7s,ooo.J3Mr42 eeauuru1 31drm 2aa. ~:197°eU;~2o-o'tS:'Y tndry':~1rt11Ct12car CM U181moas2 .... u11 ;!.~='°':ta:
.....,. ... ....., trple, dbf w _, :..,,9f.lt0 • if, t,;. :> 1,:_~7 ,~•t• CdM'• .,_. ornc. 1425. • ~ men-~_L _A_v_v_E,,,,,_1 1, avwntbOO-"fl ... opent. Lot• of ltor.oe, 2Bdrm.28a+Dan.Comm WOODLAJ• v•••GI . Stt001nclU1M,A/C,J*o. ner. and gef*al orftoe I I It r ~ • d Nw cathedr .. ~2 ~ pool. Stepa to l>Ctl 8r.n4 MW ~ .,.... janltot 21155 E Coeat k~ P1'IOf word t ~.= E tM {;:Ms few at9d 1)9tio.. 11100/mo Aot 642-38&0 Alt Altl Mlllll 28r 28a. 'trpa., patio.. ~ 87M800 anvtlme proceealng ' on Une ' I:' .... 1810 lln<Jeoaped. Nl>edi · Pvi a11p p..ioee Sbf l\aa _,xekltcfl, vtiulted cefl-compuqr llkllle a deftnlte I R ' 0 E R • Grandma Qe\ft ""tome good deta!Ae oell --Good nelgftborhood. 2 ( 1 ColN' ., Olll la/dtll sty• apts OUllt. ~ ltf!n& Ing• l&504t50 No Pf'• l«Nety fUm offtol • poeit-plual XII benefl a
i ,. I I I 11C1Y1Ce 8fte ....,, "You newr iPACU AVAIL. for new WlfklnQ di.lance to al l:~/~S1~~,:: c1GtttofraewayilSo,Coastl'wu11tttonly111111111ato tht m -1rreor Tto-1713 tbfy etw "' SecnMary '" wondng~lona~a
. _ . . . knowwllatlltlllW411tll'lng,todon'I moblehom9~1n 1onool• 11276/MO. 93M190e.tAltyr. bMtl\Can1uavl!WlltNOPlTSPUASl llTl-llll ~ Aeoaptlon .... Mr QfOW!no~ ~ --------.mu• • oat• IQf tnylhlng more 0o9ta MeM. two" Beldt 4t4-2411 or tM-7170 ..., • IHI • ~ -• ,.... OC Atrport Pvt Btti & 1 n P •, • 0 n b, w" I G H A l £ M I tllan • l'llOl'ltf\ '" -" a UlgYne Hiie. Por -Tml I )'r lee, U1ltl pdf t7.._ trtG-7"4100 8 30am"'4·00pm r ! r I I O ~u'-.. ~n.:~:···~ ~allacell~1870 =.r .. r:_::::o, H:::o~~pool~ r::r.. == mum llMlll mTIW 111&&.f--. ~ ___ .,, _ __,,,...1-.i.-l~ UH Yard4peUIOO,.M2,.. ~~~.,::'11 1•11111 -..111 28Ral5312~0r NEWPOM ll HatbOf' 1lMI .........
• ,,,NI NUAo'A(tfO uttll, r r ,. r i• ,. I' J UAf60fiGi Honn lPt TILllllT llMMI •NH1M• us.""· -•• ... =°~~.,,. only : :::ro'::.1= .,...
'"114'11 "M''' HOUM AHO 21.000' Of WT8T~ 1BA•def\/*-8elt bet ~ Sbt Sba ....... CMw'ltlng t810Newpcwtll 114/1111111
a •'K.u1.111.r 1rtnn TO I I I I I I I I oommercfal rant al• N9w P'H\tlOP ON a ctwm fr'PIC,..., ~ .. ••• LIDO DnUXE llf •ttlMJM.1L v " •·~ '"'" . . . . . . . _ ~.ooo Groat ~ ••• c>erld No ci-t• fr10d klda/pet 1115 at ,_ -·· 11 m.t Ml·11U 28r. DA, trptc peuo Fll\d •Mt :JCl:U want 111 l"''LITl-.m a. •u•ll• .... -.. UMllBkrN:t-1220 111atmo.Stetee0 MM1t0a.tNty... sun•~ ... nn cw,~a..1·•
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• Orlft09 OoeM DAILY PILOTnu.d~. Auguat 13, 1986
... .... llM W..W llM l!la !g"4 llft ltlt Wut.. llll ltl1 Wut.. llll l!lt !u!!f llft Wt Wulti ' 1111 Dnt llll faraitue IOH llltttlll•H•I '-tlll
_.,._a•-·---, ..... I ••• --·-uu--·--·1-1 mm lrg l1moy;:a u AppralMd 11\Hntturt ... MOVING. Stcrttary/ MIR.,_ ..ant-•-• lftl.IH11 ..-.... --,.,...,., A•n&af ....,._. ..,,. puppy. ~re lhota, MehOO~~uw typing desk, NO. cMlf The Onit,.e Colet Ody ClothlnQ Mfg nee,ot AOOl NwPt Bdl.,.. Pll't llme Exp'd L.o•n Ptoc .. 1ot IOI~ "*'ic.I front Of· bp'd, mttur•. Soma 17()..()102 1·303-256-7tlt.2t5 W. twin oom • 1171 125. Sllarpl•x •. Cop,.r .-.iotll~Mtpln Ale. ~Wit. menual CallOatot, 720-1042 l'IHd•d ror growing nc. Fvlltlmt f46.ta24 wor~rooeiNng, com· ••-Wlll~>J•. IVOtYlQOldtrmdreetlng 1200. LadlH Nordic•
lttd O.Ot. 1Y9tem now, IMrn com· 111 --"ntndll Co Xlnt Hlery •--;•aya ..,.., puC• ttl<>nhand ptef'd. -~" -cable/deek & QNlr •1H. bOOta S25 Pre ekllt tl&. '*IDOll•.ibllftlllU. .ut ii!: pu1• tater. Dut1•ult0ln-1111-. ., ..... n &. cornmi..ion for tti. -•n -11t •··~ R.E. tn"9ttmenta. 1 I*· fOt IO' klJCury Ytolll, •~ fttt IHI Mileti 3 d,.w. btdtlde Offor 78t.l301 ""9of elude pflontt, flllng. PIMMnt bulY ;r:oup SQC· right Ptfton S.nd rt-M90ufne !)l.lb!WI« Mttll ton office 3 ~ wMk .. lary & benelttt. Full tablt •a& Round matblt --oiud9 .plc:t( us>-"' dt-MO!i·,rl. e.tn-~ SI. Uet In Ntpwort Cent• tulMtO'Ad I 125C/O entry t.vet l*tof'I to Saltryoptn HrOCAK~ lime. mu.t NYe I~ Jl'urrylrgflmdog.MlnHurt colfu 'table UO WHAM1'1okelt·ll30,r.-
llwwy of ad.a, putting p/tw atatt. Notth CO.ta Madi t·2 dayt p~ Dally Piiot PO Box 1860 an._., phones. tnltr poft 'fff..810o boetlng ·~· Reta r9e1. rebbl1 l hutcl\. ,, .. to 414-9592 or 4t4-481A ~ ... 11ng, TllllO ti
l'Mf'tMeta. pr~ng M.u Maul a Sona, I Ea p • r pr t f • r r • d eo.te M••· Cal tH2t latlon data Into com-(Not • llvt aboard) good l'IOmt S3f.~702. --S30. flCtl 882·2727
aide, end • ~ ot "6-1810 Kinn I 840-1122 ' pu and flll ord•r• AOllTllY M7,tff0 WANTED· Prtvat• Party Couon & Lov..-at. ~ Wl\eelehalr 1RoUii blue
other ca.o.. Candl'dat• DentaM>rtho LOCKER ~OOM C::S~N 714/281-7 192 ll'YIM Mattt .. lng company ,.. ITATlllllY wentt ilnglng bird In Gd cond Dining rm t&te 11lntcond Si35i13-272T
"""' bt utrernety or-INTIU,_ Mena lub n • --qulr .. HCrtt•ry with ceee 75t-1802 135 042-5137
gartblld, '9lip0nllb6t and mtac minor ,..,. t0t NPl/llm ~ture N-.mtcr Call llln·llll Mii bootlkMC>lnsJ•xl* Mutt Store In C<IM needt s.... Glrtt c.mopy 9.c1 ii25 Maslca last. 224
aCtt •o wor1l .... with aall~t Chart• fleet. N 8 720-f145 Al 752.1903 In Coete ....... (tt-1 Ptut type eo wpm, with tn. Ptt90n, Jl'IT. 5 O.yt. Xlnt YtUtontAMAZON Parrot, w/dreealng table S100 2 !8TRINd iXRJo
ottMrl "'"7100 Dentel/Ortho Rtce,pt LI• mllll Mon-Fri) phont a It ty~ ablllty to organln Oftlce wortllng eondt. Eapeolalty hind tamtd. talk•. nlct Slmmont Queen II Hid.. LA PREMERA S125 ~ ~ Ann• UM Oll'T FIM Till Btnenta. 4\4 Oya Exp Monday thN Frldty ex.p nee S5/tv 142-3 proe.dur• for growing fine cilltnt•. 875-1010 !*ch/a.gt 497-&123 .. bed• S140M, Cuttom 0504289 call •ti• 5prn
Mliull&IT 111111 •••1 Req'd.NBIA2·2828 ParadlltCaft .... 1237 uon111m compeny.e.45.2906 ITUWUTPIUA n .... rnldellbfarytabltl135 Ii t'9ralt1H/ -
1111.f....., .,.. RITA&. U•rnllllf •llO&L UlllJUT oo you haw • good ,...._ llOlnllY Mtdt matu,. '*eon for I HY IPPLWllll g0o4-2111 ~c I 1221
p.f.a.a 1lll 111111111' PlffMnt tMy group pr~ With llrnltad X.Ray Permit ~;:'o~::.~ ~,t~:~ M1turt (Lady Friday). 1 A=M o1r P1M P{tlMlm"'!/tflao L!8 9574133 1 lft fllllnllll "•A a pt .•• ,,. blntt tlce In Newport Centtr. ror t>uty Orthopedic o r. rtenttd compa Mada peraon omoe. Conaultant on or ,. ., mt. LES 857-8133 _., ury an c1 • ltltll ..... 0.. 12111 SIU IY Nead full time front ort!Qe rice luff tlmt &AW824 ~ !*ton Who n~.. tti. bNlt only. F" not tlload· alntananct man. For * l&LEI IALEI * dMk ,250 '-011tlie4 dr1wer w/look
pal'ton. Mutt bt «Mntal abOY9. 81lary plut com· Ing 1800 t-5, 5 deya. appt. 9&3-9775 ~rlgettton S 129 & Up p=aroll top S75 A~ S15 845-1414 TEUPIHll ·~· e..o.1122 llllOAl llOIPTillllT peny paid '*'9flt• Call CM. PhonH, typing, wunen SH & Up 11 ~ypro 2 oom-PlaaM/~UI I AIDe F. ~ Prr, ...,.t -----Cal"Mf opportuntty, full Nano or Joe (7 14) need auto, e1c. e.42·3864 SUMMER Dfywa gaa/tltc SH l Up e '* :
tMdler In wNc:hr. rm/brd PIT or FIT Choice or lllYEll .time. Internal medlelne. 260-t~ tor .,_.ionat In-u--uy ALL APPLIANCES s~S:'g~~~aottwar• Antq upr • C. Kurtzman +'250 mo 045-2351 houri le ...,..,..1 Call T ti. lrvtne a~ DtOvery s--Sallll)'oommtntur11twtth ltrvlew. EOE -• JOBS , • .._1.., . .-....... & Co Ctbl,,.t Grano AAte "'°"' 7·11 to .... Attoci'at9a Ttl•· vtc.needlc:ontrac:1 df'l'I· WlttltxP 850-4322 NEWPORT CENTER .... ~! .......... ~ ~ 845-1•'1•
Adtt ,,.. cont to w/c matttetlng ~70 .,.. with amall p.u or car ID UI 1111111 uon /lfm If you can type. want IO --_.... lu•t• ltlM Gulbranson Splnet. ltlnl
733-25!7 No •llP nee: • within So. CA. Mutt be 21 P at\l Full tlmt tor food market· ~~.,·~~ 1=11 tt;! EARN UNIQUE FURPilTURE cond S800 954-lU2 --------l&lllO·lllllWAIQ Y"' Old CA. drl1N1 lie: .. be AM & M ~ Hr Ing organllatlon In lrvlM. oeul,.,.; Pleaet oell tor an 1947 S. Main St. O lllWll• lllYIOI FIT PIT Permantnt. l1>lt to worll long hours. plus mlleage ·25 1 PIHtant phone ptr· l(lttr~ift 11 840_5500 MONEY Stntl Ma r Jnt!rz 1214 ~rd.at I
Ml/pen time. Day, anet-Crown Htroware. Corona Pey be.Md on ml•m l STtolllll tonalhy, front office IP-Salary approx S1100 B':' Fd~r s.: ~~:r L.adY'i°ilCt ACStAEMXU ™Brown &litom n ..
noone,9Yee&'Wkndahltta del Mar. 873-2800 ttope. Ai>PtY 11 1 092 ReoeMng a marking new peerance, type 55 wpm · · PRIZES an · PENDANT WATCH, col-Sult wet suit, worn one.
avlll. Lt typing req. No CASHIER -Part·tlme. WW Cowan, lrVilfi. eeo-1500 merchandlM. • plua aocuratety. Xlnt btn· llOlnllY IH-~120 leotor'a Item S750, and Boot• & hood. Aaldng
axpet. nee. wlll train. train $4/hour. Mra. HUii nHll llUYHY NHll •fits. Call 558'"'4781 NEWPORT CENTER TRIPS Open 10-e. Sun 12-5 pockel wateti.a. Guaran-S225 OBO 875.,.059
Coeta M .... 831"°140 camp e.46-0032 eo.ti M ... Arehlteotural Resp perton to cart for If you want to IMtn abOUt Montgomery Werd 17.0 teed A 1 857-1,445 ......... lllYIOI firm Mtl<lng trrend per-Ll4t lnat. hll Infant at our CdM home, tht atook marktt. type 50 Cu ft RtfrlQ«ator w/lce V, la •, T~C>Pt'ltort vlrl• GllLI Ull WHIU aon to work 20·25 hra 111·01M 3 day wk, 7:30 to 5:30, wpm. enJoy dat1 pro-THIS maker, gold colof S150 Mlactlluff•I 12JI lttrtt 1232
oue lhlttt 25431 CabOt Co-Educational, rtaldtn.-p/wk Pref Arch. ttu-IUIY--IUHnl own tran• 640-1948 oaaalng, tront office po.-"4-2117 681( Parquet ber w/bfau Nikko Stereo ayatam
Ad, 1100.°Lag. Hiit. ~~ .. 1~~~-print~~ dent o.p.ndabte car a 11.-...1n & ,..., •• f-RESTAURANT ltlon open. Salery 8'>-~llUU[1) C t root rill. 51x40x20 S275. btand new. won game .. "" ......... "'' .. ,,_ muat Duties Include er-... :'"': N 8-..... V:...,.7 prox St 100. S1500 """"'9(.1\ taj8 tr1 5~8000 thaw seoo 548-2900 APPLIANCE TECHNICIAN call &31-99~ rand•. tlllng. 111• orflce new ..... n .. '"......... lllll OMl/flll n.. 840-5500 APPLE llC. t2" Xms;; ~----'-:::--..,-:m Good WOtk AIVV4 p-~,... .... .,. """.... Ell!* pref. Mon thni Fri· hlhtrlla Ill• Monlt"', --...... are, ... c. Ark welder. 110 volt $85 .... ti a-al Exp . deelr.b.:.t;1 ;c)i nc11n&1Y ............. ....,...... th I Lt. hllttry day only Kitchen & AOln&IY/P·TI•t ·'PA.IT ... ..,.,.. •. """"";,,!"!iiii~·~·"""-" req, M ... or Female San Buay Pr0!*1Y Mgmt of-*FU OLIH * PIT 11AM-3PM wkdayt, counter help. P/tlme, Mutt b• eaperlenced. IUH.Y seoo. call e7&-t312 ~!e~i:o~~x~~c'f 8 Ft. DYER bltJdV 1715
Juan CIP. 4t3-5189 nc:..ritry tevel, aocuret• Mu•t have eome typing ex-ear re~ Miieage pd Mon thru Friday, 1 tam to HaYot good typing akllla. ~ • Faraltart IOZS torchee S 150. 548·51142 Oara & oar loctc1. Excel-
typing 4 gtn«tl oftloe patience wlll alio have 1-0415 2 pm. Call o.atge btl. Be peraon•ble and hlvt ".~~ m~."'or9'.i~: a ft couc{ atdptd Gold dredge, 2 antq pin· ~t cond 98"4·2080 lllll911T IUUlll aklllt req. Cell Marclt bllllng rMp Startt at lllH DLfll 11am or att 2 pm only. nice appearance. 5 dlyt to go ptactt like Ma,glc earthtoMt set obO. 2 ball machln ... barstool•. 8 PORTABOAT /New 21 Units, CO.ta M .... No before 12noon 957·8191 '4 50/hr 75'1·2880 Mon th Fri 432-0970 I* W.-(11AM 10 2PM) Mountain, Kft"tta .. ~ry wr"'"'hl 'ron bar 110011 d~ .. ,, keto•-... h .. t~. sac. $400, VOLVO Prop o«a. ~. teml· · for the counter & phonefor Call Linda 875-2311 "" ...... --• -. .... ... ·• .. retired. 855-066S OLEll nPIST draftlng/graphloa aup-Rn&IL ULH 9 to 5 WEEKDAYS Farm, or win Prize• and $20.. + mlec:. 720-1457 mite. 497-6123 S35ea 730-8428
Flu.olll pllea. Exp. not ntc. Wiii· LIYl IT&LIAI FMI! Awerdt, Call ua now! We 8'117' Antq.French Baker'• John Wayne Tennie Club UHi UYU AUTO MAINTENANCE Good grOW1h position In Ing to leam linportanl. . SlllnllY/TfPllT htY9 MYerll open Inga In Raetc. Brua & wrougl\t h I d 1325
• Part-tlmt flMt vehlchl• Opetatlona Dept, 11 Cot· AIYEllTlllll Start S4. p/hr Apply 11 Fornal'2 an ltallin RHI Ettate Appralaal ~~2M~.333H .8 . or F . V. Iron $800 873•2757 ::~.1~73.~!2';'bera P 2 '":~.~~3792 m.intenanoe pottlon, ex-porata Office or rtt· Matter Blueprint. 23.4 :~ w~· 1~'!~ rorma. SS.00/hr, neer '" ~
pertenoad Individual rt-tturent chain. Position AOOlllT DIOITtVf Aacher Ave, Cotta M.... outgoln S&JM ....::::.....: Airport 833-7850 Jim -·-•.PU••._. quired tor WUh. Wilt requlr• xlnt typing tklllt, 540-9373 10 _........ 1 IUl9W&ll -~al MNtclng of cart exper w/word pro-N••d•d for Cllaplay P/T & FIT Oayt & Evea, 11m-1n IFG full time, e ECE unite. SS.
' & INCkt. 756-8801 oeulng • piu. Varlad advertlalng ..... at rapid· Plllllt amll&ITI c:all Susan 640-4279 Shorthand or •PHd· p/hr, Ina. benefit•. rllMa, llTI •oamo ·gen•r•I office dutlea, 1y expanding local dally athletlc girl• netded to Retell Salel writing, typing 5o-eo vacatlona.. Aleo pe11 time 20-30 Hr• plwk to ttart. ~aper Aggreulve, valet tor upbeat Newport wpm, grow with our com-AIDE. '4.50 p/hr. Huotg.
Wneel Alignment. Brall... Wiii CltvtloP Into tull11me Mll-diaolplloed lndMd-~ Rettaurant. Good IOIT FISOIUTilll pany & ktep up with a BMch. 847-521A
Tunt Up. Newport Tire poaltlon. Apply In perton Ulla may earn exe.u.nt P•Y. grMt way to •lay In busy C>OaL Should have --T------0--1 SYDNEY
0MARR Ctr. 3000 E. Coast Hwy, 9am-4pm, at; Income (aal•ry + com-shape. Call Kim, days wlll train peraonablt 3-5 yrt txper. Salary ELEMARKETIN
Corona det Mar. Tlf JILLY 111111110. mlulon), beneflll and 64-4-2652 or Be1h. poised applicant with commenaurate w/exp. PllfllllllAL an• n11 HHIAE 11Ht 1111 tt l advancement opportunl-897·4348 eve•. ..1e. expe"' for Brldal 979-0375 Aak for Nancy. TILDlllf OLISll _...,, - t t yt, ty. Financial, newapa.per Consultant. Xlnt ulary -.--.......... ------=---------=-Well "tab. Ft. Vly llfm
and llght reptlrt. N9WPOf't lnlH or agency experience PUT TIIE oppty for enthul111t1c IEOlllITT 1101 Mekt highly motivated
Tire Ctr, 3000 E. Cout l1•12IO-Oll 1 neceaeary. No pl\one Newspaper Clellvery , motlvattdperton.C.M. 538-9402 aett·alarttN'tocloMNlea Wednesday,Au1u1tl4
Hwy, Corona del Mar calla. Send reaume to 2am-8am, Ute van nee. 859-5559 5.48-3995 trom company eupplled ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19), You have rare opponunit} for ··new
AITllllTIYI lllYIOI OLlll TTPtST A1tn Howard Mullertary Xlnt money. Newport lllTIOlll• -lllYIOI ST&. AmH. letdG •· No cold ca1,11,ng. deal .. Emphasis on creat1v11v, gett1no to hean of matters. a vanety of nMdt runner & Ilg ht for tn. legal dtpl. to uallt Be a ch • r •a Ca I I .... Ex pet. w/rett. S5 hr+ time rtat oar"' poa t on . ' h iv d d ' Janitorial wont Laguna In typing, rtllng and other llllll HUT 759-0630 anytime. llnllL NllTlll & 112. Sun. off. Union 76, avall. Cl•Y• & ev., contacts and expenences. H1ghhg t 1n epen encc, p1oneenng ~p1r1l
Beectt 497-1112 clefical duties Typing 80 IAILY PILIT PAIT TllE 8'>PfY In perton, 2407 E. Nwpt 8eh .... 7151 Salary+ comm1111on + Leo plays top role.
wpm req Own car a Coast Hwy. CdM. Servtce Stitlon bonutts 751-2777 TAURUS (A1,ml 20.Ma} 20) Accent on hk!IL}le. residence.
Auto mull Ctll Judy . llOW.l11StrHt poaitk>n• avallable at in. F nservtc.11 dAttend TILIPllll community act1v1t1es. sccunly, safety measures. You get almost TILIPllll IPllATlll 842-4321, ext 318 for Ctst11111, Oa. 12121 oany Piiot new•paper SALES ~nt, Self-~ Cuhler: Bi... ··~In NIAi.FL 1111.,ou everyth1no yo.u. desire ... 1f diplomatic. Seen. ano h1ghhghLs teaching. Full tlmt, tome training eppl working Saturday and Peopl& wllh Herballfe, M/F. F/T-P/T. Apply· 'V m~~, , P 1 h bl nee lnauranc:e & good llAllE Dl&ST Sunday momlnga. Earn Shaklee, Amway, etc, ex-CMvron Station 2590 know anything about learning, 1ntu1t1on, ability to dea w11 pu IC.
b•n•fll• Call Tracy. IT "4.50 per hour plu1 gN perlence to loin National Newport Blvd CM tportt, and can Mii on GEMINI (May 21-June 20}: Key is 10 d1vers1fy. to keep options
842-2000 IAILY Ptl. FIU Tiii PAY allowance. Mutt h•v• Company In aalet ca-· the telephone. Your fu-open, to communicate and advenise. Emphasis on movement. --------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PUT TIIE Wllll large ear or plck·up and paclty Prove yourHlf for ltn. Stttlta &tha4. ture It with tti. moet euc-relatives, visits. shon JOUmcy!. You'll gain through reading, wnung.
Auto Opportun1t1e1 evallabl• be at 19111 18 YMft old. a few montl\s In managt-Full or p/tlme. Appty •1 ceaatul Sport• Advlaory Another Gemini plays significant role Part-Time Driver ror well COllSELOlll ..... h 1 ..... LOS .. NGELES Call Bruoe 8-42.,.333 ment or corporete poa-Freewav ({ti.won. 3180 Servtoe In Amet:lc&. c.11 2 J l 22) ·1 h h h d 1 "tabllahadCo.HouraM-Parttlmeearrtercounaet-TIMEs"'c~rcul~lon De-A&DMECHANICALTECH ltlon Wiii bt yours. Mr. Harbof1BIV<l.,,ltS.DFrwy. Stolh,7&o-1513 CANCER (June 1-u y : At oug t ere arc cay'i. an
F 1-5PM OMV Repor1 r• ora wanted Help bOyt patlment In our door 10 Part lime, Looking lor r• _Hudson. 752-6804 abundance of red tape, the funding will soon be made available. Keyt~ ~~r'N~ ~';JC:,r' and glrlt 1011e11 new door newspaper aa1ee tlree NeedstobetamHlar UUS/P-TIIE SllPPIHI preparation. attention to details. ab1ht} to ··decipher .. small pnnt
BABYSITTER Tues thru
Fri. my home CM
84~ 1883 If no ant all 5
BANKING
1ubac:rlptlon1 on their program Guaranteed w/prototype rabrlcatlon Mature woman, •ml Lido PAOIAllll Turn your You·n tocate what you need m surpnsmg manner.
paper rou1es Mull enjoy hourly wage plu1 com-& assembly, also testing giltahap Appnt 25tlrwk Reap. person, male or fem. unusables LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): C1rcumsta11ccs take ~uddt:n turn In your
working with l0-l3 yr mlaalon Hours 4PM 10 or same Contact Don can 1o-lpm 675-2425 for full ttme tob. Wiii train Into favor. Spothght o n being at right place at nght time. significant changes
olds Early evening hours 9 PM Tr a In 1 n g 1 • Davis L Garde. Inc 445.3350 intensified romance. What ~ra-ev1ously was out of reach 1!> now work daya/ !Jeidble hrs. provided Poten11al to 645.,.880 Sales USilble v•
CommlHton only earn $300. plua per w.-t Slllllll SllPPfll I HHrv,11 cash. call available.
TELLER Call Bruce Emaley For an Interview. call PUT TIIE P/T R••i ,,..... Warehouse .,-ali'\ant. D II Pil t VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Answers arc found behind scenes
642-4321 ex1 206 957-2361 e111 1204 TEUPllllE UUI ....,. ••rua Mon-Fri 7:30am.,.:30pm. a Y 0 Family member confides "health problem." Discuss diet, nutrition.
GREAT WESTERN SAv-' IUllf Ol&ST IEIL IFC WIST 1100. -r it•liJ/wt $4QQ MO ~:,~ ~~~~~~rt~rNtf.'n~ classified general care and possibility of checking into hospital. Taurus, Libra,
INGS. one ot cantomla'a IAILY PIL•t needtd ror edmlnl1trat1ve Wt"'Trali • 986-1510 642·5678. Scorpio persons figure in unusual scenario.
leading flnanelal lnatltu-1 offices In Newpon Beteh. Gall lllek I II... • Your Ares LIBRA (Sept. 23.0Ct. 22): Romance nourishes tn .. oul of way ..
Ilona hu an 1mme<11a1e 1________ we are ...+!Ing an lndlv. If 11 • Your Own Houri •1 p·1a1 place. Define terms, perfect tec hniques, get nd of supertluou!> ma1cnal
opportunity tor• Tetter In Gl--fl ·-wi-with nice Iron! office ap-· (71•)112-1111 •Exciting new product : •••••••• II y I , What you wish for will be transformed into actuality. You're due for our Costa M ... branch ••-~ vs pearanee & goad per-p II llllE-ll thll relieves pain 1 OLEll PllTTlllE aonat11y who poueae • • .,,., Mr Sims. 973-8817 Peasant money surpnse. You should have ea.ah goodottloeakllltwlthtM hard working 90r ... 1ve • -• SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Focu!> on law, po'-"er, authonl).
hanelllng experience, TM Dally Piiot hu Im· ability 10 handle heavy Public Retttk>nl Dtreo-SAUi Tllllll • JIU, .. mu • intensified relatio nship. You'll have added respons1b1ht}. also chancc
preferably In a flnanclal mediate opening for eu.. phonea Prev recep-tors needed tor demand-We are Meklng aggreselve • ITIU LIMm Ftl I_. Mt • to increase income considerably. You'll receive unu\ual ofTcr. pos111on
Institution and you muat j 1omer Service Clerk to tlonltl exper preferred Ing Or1nge County firm men & women 18 & over. • -nu, Liii • F'llTllll : will be elevated.
enjoy extensive public work In our btlay Clreul.. send re 1 um e 10 Requlr .. knowledge of We will train you In an • IC tt· h Sch I J Hi h 2 S I h contael. Light typing and uon Depenmetit. Mus1 be Kinderctre Learning N111ona1 Media & eblllty exciting new carMt You • you are in ig 00 or r . g • SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. I). pol 1g I on travel education.
10 key are required. ~dablt and able 10 Center, 160 Newporl and execute aucceearul must be 8 aetf atarter, •and would like to earn $25.00 to : communication, ability to overcome distance. language bamers. W hat
handle hHvy phonH center 0r . Suitt 220. P R Program under with desire tor aueoeaa •. $50.00 in cornrnmions and more each • seemed out of reach is now within your grasp. Love plays prominent
We'll reward your wlthapleaeanllelephone Newport Bueti. Ce. pressure Houalnglndu1-Noexper.nee.Callbtwn role.Ariesnative fi~resinscenario. enthualaemwlthanexc»t-vote• 20 Houra p/week 92660. attn' Sue try exper a must Xlnt 9-3pm. 841-0690 •week-give us a call. You can work • 22 J 9 y h . h lent compenaatlon pack-Monday _ Friday. Call __ pay & benema Send Re-: PART TIME in the afternoons and : CAPRICORN ( . -an. 1 ): Ou ave new opportunity w ere
age and tM opPQftunlty 842.,.321 for appt A.Ill HAIR DRESSER, MAKE-aume to AO 11&. Dally SALES TUJIH • evenings and still have time to enJO· y • employment is concerned. Keep recent resolutions concerning J1e1.
for peraonal and PfO-tor Tracey. UP ARTIST, MANI -P1101, PO Box 1580, some oftlce work. nutrition, general health. Member of opposite sex pa}'S meaningful
ttsllonal growth. If you're CURIST w/lollowtng. •ta· Costa Mesa, Ca 92628 Call Bill 548-8181 • your summer. We offer complete • compliment. i$ dedicated and sincere.
lntet•ted. please apply Ill& EmY OnllATH llon rental. ,.1n1 COM toe -: training and provide tr8,nsporation : AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18)· Emphasis on coopera11on. JOint
In person to· Full-time Type 50wpm. Call 97&-97o3 for appt llUL EIT&TE WT Sates • plus grea\-priz.es, trips, and plenty of • etTons. n"rticrpauon in community pro•cct You'll be c<5ncerned w11h 10-kty Duties Include HOUSECLEANER needed Sueoeu1\ll AE Agl Mekt WlfTHSl/WlfTlll • • -~ Order Entry, invoicing. Tu.Fri $5 OO/hr, mutt aggrnslve lk:entad I*· with ear tor wtekel' baeket • MONEY! This is not a paper route e long-Standing relationship. with possible panncr!lh1p and v.11h CHEAT
WESTER II
SlYllHiS
3200 Park Center Drive
Costa Meu, CA 92628
Equal Opportunity
Employer M/FIH
IAITlllfl·WlftlH
Clt9f'lng Co pert time,
$4 35 p/hr plus llpa
Apply In person. 2919 E Cout Hwy CdM
U.erti1la1 lala
$2.17 per day
That's ALL you pay for
3 llMt 30 da)"
In the
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TOOAYll
ASIFtR LllS
ComputerJitd payroH.
toeta r9C /pflY, Inventory
& others, o.ttt 97t-0551
a..utlul C.W•1; Cquilitt Xoouetb
apraytcS or remove Ory-walf~.147-7901
ACOUSTIMAH 6411-2733
Paint 15-20$/IOPIY .25· so. eq. ft. Orywill ,..,.,,.
Data B ... Maintenance. have OWfl ear 850•4119 son 10 aupefVIM otttce. lunch aerviee..8:30-1PM. • and it is not seven days a week. Come • mamagc. lntu1l1on will nng true.
$7thr C M 556-2030 , eacrO'IYS .., anow prop-Mon-Fri Earn approx. • help us get n ew customers for our •. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): rhosc who rely upon your Judgment
DELI HELPER IHSfOLWElll arty Mutt be tarn-s150.-s2oo. wkly Mutt •. n' ewspaper and have a good urn· e • will showfoatatude. Be diplomatic, realm~ you eventually will p.1y N d d G d h Illar/QC, salary S 1000 t be neat, personable, and f · f Mon.-Frl 8 30-2.00. Call .. • oo oura, bonus. Send resume to eneroetle. Apply blwn • while you're doing it. Come out and •. expenrdscs .... _ou'll be mo~ a,~a~ o . body image, o general appearance.
btwn 8-1030 842-5297 ~OOCI pay Call Robbie's Dally Piiot ad• 122, 10am-12pm or 2_.pm. • h •-"·' bo d ofwa rove. Accept socaa mv1tat1on. llUYIRY ag & Mop 548"°75~ _ PO BoK 1580, Costa Mesa, Lori's Kitchen. 3077 So. • see w at we are '4 .uung a ut an • IF AUGUST 14 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are completing ma)Or
Newapaper dell very, LEIAL SIOlnlllY CA 92828 Harbor. Sa nu Ana • you'll be glad you did. Call today and• project. you'll gain added reC0JJ1it1on. you could actually he f11rtin&
2am-8am. Ute van nee. tor lltlgatton & tax at-l.,·~~.i.:~~~-1 PJ.l9:7~9a-01!7ll4P7Jw11. : start tomorrow! Call Mr. Earl : with fame. You are creative. 1mpuls1vc. attractive, have ab1ltty to Xlnt monty NewpoF1 torney Non-smoker· , • • 548-7058 or 241-8432. • express ideas an aniculate manner. Gemini. Virgo. Sag1t1anus per<ion~
Beach area Call Nwpt Bch Send , .. ume • • · 1 l'l'. Y h b dn f h 759-oe30 anytime to Hiring Partn9f', 5000 • ORANGE COAST DAIL y PILOT • play important roes an your 11e. ou ave an a un nee o c ansmn.
Birch St. Sult• 2900, Sell with EASEi muat type, non-amoket • 330 w Bey s11ee1. Cotta M-. CA 92927 e are drawn 10 drama. and you have natural knack for showman~h1p
Find whit you want 1n Newport BHch, Ca lt'a •BREEZE 8-40-4775 • AN EOUAL OPPOATIMITY EMPLOY£R • During Au.ust, emotional responses intensify, love rela11onsh1p could
oa11y Piiot c1au1t1ee11 112~ c1au1t1ee1 Ad• 8-42·5e78 sei1 ld1e 1tem1 6"2·58711 •.• •• •• •• • • •• • • •• • • • • •• •• •' excted ori&Jnal ex.pectations. New suan is made in October
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Be P-1 Of the ChlnC1W
Boal Pttede AUO tlthtll TM awwd wtMlng "Ship
HOUN" II fOf .... Great
FamlfV ll'unll 17M111
Cal&marrWl 18' Mee Gr•
ogot, 2 Miit, xlnt cond.
w/tr1r. Sall tn. Bay $950
Mutt NII. "8" 641-8077
All 10t11 ot people uM
claatlli.d ada to Mii 111 tort• of things 642-5878
THEODOR£
ROBINS
FORD
lOt>O HAAllOll Ill V O
C".>~l" Mf!>A 641 OOIO
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A
LINE
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tlHt 0.lly Pflot offk». S. IW,. to
tnc/ude your phOM numbM or ad-
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SS Mut't ... •o
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ATIENTION st :C~'~~:i~ield Preferre~~~n E~PLOYEES:
' enroll men~. t~~irthcomlng ;'.!~s be available to
coming soon! for Import . open ant information
'
'·
OR ANGE COUNTY
. e ·s oreo1 nee
COD
Cout
A furniture-manufac-
turing plant wlll pay
$64,000 In connection
with a paint aplll that
contaminated the San
Diego Creek In Irvine./ A3
California
Chances are the long-
overdue state lottery wlll
start on Sept. 27./ A3
The Navy Is looking for a
few good microbes -the
kind that help clean up
toxic spills./ A4
Nation
Chemical leak accidents
In Arizona, Washington
and New Jersey route
hundreds of people from
homes./A4
World
Two women and two girls
survived the jumbo jet
crash In Japan that
claimed 520 lives./ A4
The Israelis have re-
leased 101 Lebanese
prisoners, mostly Shiite
Moslems./ A4
Sports
Rick Honeycutt plays and
wins a "video game" for
Dodgers./8 1 .
Ex-Tulane star John "Hot-'
Rod" Wiiiiams says he
was framed./82
Tony Dorsett asks to be
traded from the Dallas
Cowboys./83
Entertainment
Orange Coast College's
summer musical Is short
and sweet with a rooking
beat./ Al
Bualneu
Oyno-Comm makes a big
splash In sports video
productlons./84
INDEX
OtlllJ ..... ,.......,"" .. .,..
Rep. William Dannemeyer a dclreua Lapna Hllla Community Council on oll.
Mesa officials hoping to fill
v.acant city manager's post
By TONY SAA VEDRA
Of !he 0.-,, ..........
Three. possibly four Costa Mesa
city officiaJs have applied for the ;ob
bemg vacated this fall by City
Manager Fred Sorsabal, who has held
the administrative reins for 15 years.
Public Services Director Bruce
Mattern, Development Services Di-
rector Dougla.s Oark and Assistant
Development Services Director Vic-
tor Newton confirmed Mondiy they
have submitted resumes for the job of
overseeing the city's 650 employees.
Assistant Caty Manager Allan
Roeder, considered to be a likely
candidate. declined to comment
Monday on whether he 1s scckmg to
fill the shoes of his mentor.
"I don't want to sec this become a
popularity contest," said Roeder, 33.
"The process could really be thrown
out of whack real quick 1f people stan
makmgjudgmcnts."
Sorsabal, highly regarded for his
subtle yet finn hold on City Hall.
announced last May that he would be
retiring Oct. 25 to possibly serve as
potentate for the 5.000 Shriners 1n
Orange County.
If selected for the one-year
Shnners' term, Sorsabar said he
would postpone pla is to stan a
management consuft · ng firm, an
endeavor that would nost likely be
more lucrative than 1is $78,800-a-
year Costa Mesa ;ob.
The City Council n lunctantly ac-
cepted Sorsabal's restf nation, hiring
Ralph Anderson and Associates of
Sacramento to condv ;t a statewide
search for a new chief administrator.
Mayor Norma Hertzo~ said the
hunt was limited to Cahfomia be·
cause council members wanted a city
manager familiar with state laws
governing such things as redevelop-
ment.
Hertzog added that she was loolong
for a strong. energetic leader to work
alongside the council.
The deadline for subm1tung re-
'iumes was Aug. 5.
An unidentified spokeswoman for
Anderson and Associates said the
number of applicants, and th'e1r
names, were being kept confidential.
Resumes forwarded to the caty will be
reviewed during closed-door
sessions.
Sorsabal said Monday that the
council would not receive a candidate .
list unul Sept. 3. He also reported that
the applications would be separated
by the consulting finn into three
categones: h1ghl)' qualified, qualified
and unqualified.
Sorsabal added that he would be
willing to delay has departure 1f a
successor 1s not,tured by Oct. I.
Roeder, who began in Costa Mesa's
public works depanment before
bcmg promoted to assistant city
manager in 1979, said he had mixed
emotions about the open JOb.
"For me, it's tough because I have
such strong feelings about Fred
leavmg," he said.
Mattern. 43. has led the city
engjnecnng depanmcnt for the la.st
seven years and lately began enter-
taining the thought of stepping into a
city manager's pos1t1on. He added
that for now he was not lookmg
outside Costa Mesa
"I wanted to go through the process
. at least to let the powers that be
know that I am interested," Mattern
said.
Newton. 54, has worked as a
building official for the last six years
in Costa Mesa. Unlike the other
(Pleue 9ee lttlAMAOltR/ A2
Dannemeyer calls U.S. pla n restrictive
but Coast cities oppose it as permissive
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of .. ~ ..........
Oji dolling off Cahforn1a's
coastlfoe is needed to help the United
States end its dependence on forci~
oil, said Rep. William Dannemeycr,
R-Fullenon, who called a proposed
driUingcompromisc an abomination.
Speaking Monday before a mcctmg
of the Laguna Niguel Community
Council. Dannemeyer said, "I see no
reason ... why we shoUld be reluctant
to develop ttus resource Lhat we so
desperately need."
Dannemeyer was one of 11 Re-
publican congressmen who have
asked President Reagan to kill a
federal proposal that would open
about 2 percent of California's outer
continental shelf off California for oi.1
exploration and drilling.
Dannem~er and others want the
enure coastline opened.
(Pleue Ne OPT8110lm/ A2)
Gas tax money
for transport
·use only urged
New OCTC c hief
cites roads ' n eed
a nd state s urplus
By JEFF ADLER
OllM ~ ......... -0ran¥>e County Transponat1on
Comm1ss1on C hairman James
Roosevelt caJled Monday for con-
s1derat1on of a state consutullonal
amendment rcqumng that all money
collected from gasohnc sales taxes be
spent on trampon.auon improve-
ments.
In a speech that began his )'ear-long
term as OCTC chairman. Roosc,el1
said at ··makes sense" 1ha1 mone)
collected from motonsts through
gasotme uues ·~go entu~ly m10 main-
tainmg and improving the transpor-
tation system.''
He said a s1gnificant portion of tbe
gas taxes now collected by the state
arc funneled into the state's acneral
fund for health, education. welfare
and other programs.
.. In the pa.st 13 years, during which
ume ga~lmc and diesel pnces rose
d1sproport1onatcly following the otl
embargo, the total sales tax division
has amounted to more than a btfuon
dollars." Roose-.. ch sa1d.
He also pointed out that while there
1s an acute shortage of funds for state
and local transportation nttds, the
state's aencral fund 1s running a l111e
surplus
Ho1Aever. Roosevelt said that the
propo~ consutuuonaJ amendment
v.ould include cond11tons rcqumng
(Pleue 11ee TRA1'81T I A2)
$550, 000 claim filed
against LB schools
By LISA MAHONEY
Ol-o.llJ .........
Former Laguna Beach High ~hool
Athletic Director Walt Hamera has
filed a $550.000 claim agamst the
Laguna Beach school d1stnct <>'-l'r
··inaccuracies" he sa)S exist ma lettc:r
three trustees d1stnbuted among Or-
ange. Count) educators and athleuc
directors.
Trustees Jan Vickers. Carl ~h1A-ar1
and Charlene Ragatz wrote a letter
rebutting a Los Angeles Times stol)
about Laguna Beach athleun that
appeared last Ma) In tl. the trustees
referto Hamera -who was quoted in
the anicle -several umes.
When the lener appeared in the
nev.spapcr v.tth references to the
former athle11c director deleted, the
trustee'> ordered Supenntendent 8111)
Barnes to d1stnbute unexpurgated
copies to all d1stnct personnel and
high 'iChOOI pnnc1paJs and athleuc
d1re("tors throughout Orange Count}
( omments about him m the lencr
arc uni rue Hame~1d Tuesda'r He
(Pleaee eee CLADI/ A2)
Bridge
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A9
A3
84-6
8 7-9
A9
Blood pressure testing said inaccurate
89
82
88
A6
A7
A6
A8
A3
83-9
81-3
A6
A8, 10
A2
Study concludes 24-hour monttortn more
reliable than 2-mtnute test In doctor's office
By PHIL SNEfuERMAN
OftMo.ly .........
That familiar two-minute test in a
doctor's office may not be the most
reliable way to diagnose high blood
pressure. a UC Irvine study con-
cluded.
The study indicates a 24-hour
testina period dunnJ which a po11ent
wears a computenzcd monitonng
device is a better method of dcterm·
in& bi&h blood pressure, the UCI
researchers said.
The finding. researchers said, is
important because high blood press-
ure, aJso called hypertension, 1s the
leadma cause of peart attacks and
strokes in the United Stales and 1s a
JNJOr cause of death amona people
older than SO.
The study wu conducted by Dr.
Michael A Weber, a Newport Beach
resident who is a professor of medi-
cine and director of the UCl Hyper-
tension Center at the Veterans Ad-
mm1strauon Hospital in Long Beach.
The research team, also included Or.
Jan I M Drayer, associate professor
of medicine. and Dina K. Nakamura,
a research associate.
"Today, the measurement ofblood
pressure as 1t'sconvcnt1onally carried
out 1s unreliable." Weber said.
''There are ways of 1mprov1ng 1ts
rehab1l1t) by repcatmJ the measure-
ments on thr~ or four occasions
Now we can make a more accurate
d1aanos1s of high blood pressure in
bordcrll ne cases "
He clled an Amencan Hean As-
Teen-age slayer's fate ,
mental State unresolved
Lawyer says Gabriel Deluca sUpptn deeper
Into self-made hell while waJttn his trial
Oabncl Deluca lS u pefl>lu1na to
Judith Sanden today as he was 14
months aao wbcn the teen r was
COnVlctcd of murder.
Deluca. a dark~ycd youna man
with tallowy skin and dark. matted
hair, pend ht1 daya in the county
Jail's medical ward or 1n a p&dded
asoladon ceu. clcpendjna on ho his
moodswi •
Sanden, a cnminal dcfcn · at-
&omey in nta Ana, A•d he ha.a
watched her chcnt hp d per and
dttper into a fri&htenioa abyss or non~rtality -a scf f·made hdl.
It is ~nd her. to txplain what is happcnana to tum or to do much
about it. ·
Dtluca sometimes crouches on the
floor. rcf'u na to &alk or look at hi
vi it n One obscrfer said bis behav-
ior sttms more like tha1 oh doa lhu
a human.
metimes h seems to pull
him lf tottthcr. mwnblifta about
dim "'"' thi1 like hi fate. But
-
much of the time he appears to be 1n a
foa, content to s&art at the floor.
Occas1onall> he tS CO\<Crcd wtth
scratches from drqaina bi finaer-
nail down his fltt.
Sanckn aid tic 1 OC\<cr sure what
to ~'peel Ocluc 19, l\ confined to Oranac
County J1d. He 11 shumtd back and
f1 nh bctWC!Cn the medical ward and
an 1t0lahon cdl ..,h~ he 11 tripped
naked 10 that he will not ir\)urc
him1elf.
He ha' apparently tncd to kill
hunxJf at ~ t thrtt Um OnC't he ,la,hcd hit wn t and wrote "God It -,
soeta11on estimate that 60 m11l1on
Amcncans -more than 1/4 of the
adult population -have high blood
prcssu~. Despite the h<h dangers. We~r said only about half of those
Y.ho suffer from hypertension arc
aware of 1l because the disorder has
v1nuall) no nouccablc symptoms
Hypertension can be t~ated easily
with med1cauon. he said
Trad1t1onaJly. phys1c1ans ha'e
d1agno~d high blood pressure
through the fam1har arm cuff test
performed in a doctor's offi~ Weber
sa1d most doctors mstruct a patient to
come back on two or thrtc different
STEVE
Lo"e" with blood on a mirror an h1\
cell.
A year qQ 1n June, Otluc.a was
conV1 ltd ofblhna lda Jean Hu.ton.
a Hu:ntinaton 8eacl\ mail camC"T v.ho
tw m\U"deftd Jan 3. 19 4
Hutoo. a mot.her of t~. wa
siabbcd and dubbed with a ba\Cball
betonlbedoOmcpofDcluca' houte.
OcJuca d,...ed tbt YwOman's body
throuab \ht bou and out to the
prqc, wbercbe htavut her bod u\to
h~r Pott office cv.
l..,... ... a.Ana· /A3)
da)\ to lht'cir. a high reading before
treatment I\ prescnbed
But the l Cl re~archer said some
lc\S COOS( IC'OllOU'i doctors may base
1he1r d1agnos1\ on JU"t one re~d1ni
He ..aid the 'ipot<heck method 1s
protiabl' not the most reliable wa' to
d1agno'l(' h\ pencns1on
For one: thing. a patient ma\ ~
nen ous about \ls111ng lhe doctor
re<,ult1ng 1n a nse in blood pressure
.\nd thoup.h \Orne people use home
blood pr~\\urt te'ilmg de\ I~'>. the
mea\uremcnt'> are mo t often taken
at n11tht and o n weekends, when
(Pl eue eee BLOOD/ A2)
Mesantied
to series of
OCholdups
.\ C ost.1 Mesa man aJTC.<;ted unda
for dn"tnl a itolen car has M-cn
1cn1at1veh linked 10 as man) a'i 40
robbene' m Onnae County in the
past month 1ncludin1 tbrtt rttent
holdups 1n f<>untain Va.Ucy.
Rohen Ancm Bandaruk. a J7-)car·
old ""dent of the Colle,e Park
tommun1t). al ly confi 10
pultina robberies thro t the
county but tokl poh~ the wea n ht
u~ dunna the boldu .. ac1ually
110 aun
Bandaru is btina held on su pi.
cion of tbrtt ro~ in fountam
Valley, four m re Oranat and
"-iolAl o( .,_,..~----
(Plaee -aoe••T I A2)
Balsa ehiea development
foes to form human chain
Catiuns who are ~llf\& plans for a
marina isl the Bolsa cruca wetlands, Will protest the developmnent on
Wedftetday by formina a buman
chain on the beach where a ocw
navipble channel would be cut to link the marina and ocean.
More than 300 people mostly
membcn of Amiaos de Boisa Cluca
and the Siem Clubl.~ljoin bands at 6 p.m. alona an 8uu foot stretch of
beach they claim will be wiped out by
the channel.
"Tbjs is one of the mo$t popular
state ~ks in Califomtl," cxpla1ned
Lon'llne Faber. a member of the
Bolsa Chica preservation arour.
Faber saad the cbanne will
eliminate up to 800 feet of Bolsa
Chica State Beach and ftlllht force the
closure Of the State park etrk for up to
two years while the dredaina work is
bc:in& completed.
"We want to bnna this to the
Lagunan was bludgeoned to death
A J...aauna Beach man whose body The body of Greaory Mark
was found Sunday an an open field in McGowan, 30, was found early
Lquna Hills was blud&concd to Sunday in a field I\ the intersection of
death, an autospy revealed Monday. Hendon and CUmberwell Streets.
attention of beach uscn who arc
unaware of the 1mpect on their
recreational opponunatacs, .. -said
Fabtt.
The manhlands are separated from
the ocean by the beach and Pacific
Coast Hiahway. Tentative develop-
ment plans by St&D&l Landmark call
for construction o1s.700 homes and a
1.800 slip marina.
In return for development nahts,
Slpal would help restore 600 acm ot
the wetlands as a preserve. The
eroject has the backina of Oranae
County aovemment.
The wetlands is located on umn-
corporated county land. but 11 sur-
rounded by the Caty of Huntioa1on
Beach.
CLAIM FILED AGAINST SCHOOLS •.. Prom Al . .
taid he filed the cla1,.m Aug. 5 because
he fears the letter may hurt has
chances of findtng a teaching or
coacbingjob outside Laguna Beach an
the future.
.. ljust want to clear my reputation.
Wbo knows what effect n (the letter>
had?"
One reference in the letter partku-
larly concerns him, Hamera said.
Trustess accuse Hamera ofaccepllng
a $200 gJft also ajven to each coach by
the Football Boosters while teUfoa no
one tha1 monetary gifts vtolate CaJi·
fomia Interscholastic Federation
rules.
Hamcra said he was told by
ROBBEiY SUSPECT ••.
Prom Al
Fount.am Valley Detective Dann
Bean said Bandaruk matches the
descripuon of a bandit who has been
plguing the city since the middle of
July. He said police believe Bandaruk
is responsible for a string of robberies
that ended Aug. 7 when a man held up
Clothe~ Quarters, 18110 Euclid St.
In most of the crimes Bandaruk is
suspected ofbeangmponsiblefor. lhc
Joss was less than S.200.
Bean said 1t appears the Cost.a Mesa
man would prey on businesses in one
city and 1hen move onto another.
Principal Robert Hughes that the 11fts
were allowed. but ne pursued the
matter end informed Hughes of the
rule vtolation as soon as he dis--
covered it.
"They say I never told anyone.
That's not true," Hamera said.
Hamera, who has worked as an
English teacher at the high school for
12 yean and been athletic director for
11, resianed a year ago from the
extracurricular position because of
the athletic program's financial dif-
ficulties and dissatisfaction over
trustees hiring a coach -former San
Francisco 49cn player Cedrick Hard-
man -without consulting him.
The school board has not yet acted
on Hamera's claim. School officials
could not be reached for comment
this morning.
OFFSHORE OIL PROPONENT SPEAKS •••
From Al
ln has first public visit to the
Orange County coastal area since the
plan wa~ announced July 16, Dan-
nemeyer said the proposal by l n 1erior
Secretary Donaftl Hodel was "an
abomination. a nuisance."
If Hodel's plan were implemented,
Dannemeycr said, 1t would exclude al
least three prime 011 drilhng areas.
But while Danncmeyer opposes the
plan for being 100 restrictavc. elected
leaders an Oran~e County oppose 1t
for being too lenient.
They cspccaally oppose the opening
of 54 square miles off Orange Coun-
ty's coasthne and arc asking .that
those six tracts be preserved an a
moratonum until. at least, 1he year
2000.
Laguna Beach City Councilman
BobGcntrysaad the potenual hazards
MANAGER •••
Prom Al
candidates from w1thm City Hall. he
is not a department head. But he
figured 1hc search would be "more or
-Jess wide open."
"I thought I ma} as well throw my
hat m the ring and sec what happens.··
Clark. 38, would only confirm his
applica11on and declined to comment
on the search. He was assistant
development director before becom-
ing head of the department an May
1981 .
011 dnlhng would have on the local
economy are 100 great.
"We are not opposed to offshore oil
exploration, we arc opposed to near-
shore oil exploration," Gentry told
the more than 150 people gathered at
Crown Valley Community Park.
Gentry said offshore dnlling poses
problems related to potential spills.
aar quahty, boating and fishing.
As an elected official an Laguna
Beach. Gentry said he was respon-
sible for protecting the economic
well-being of the city, which includes
prolecttng the tourism industry.
"Last year. we had a m1lhon more
tounsts an Laguna that they had an
Maui." he said. "It's a very important
industry I <ion't want 10 hear some-
one say. 'This year we're going to
Cancun because we get black feet an
Laguna (from the oil).' "
But Danncmeycr sajd 011 platforms
have been in place off Santa Barbara
while 1hat caty's tounsm has con-
tinued to grow. Gentry, an response.
said w1thout the pla1forms. the tour-
ism could have develo~ even more
Dannemeyer also said drilling plat-
form1 are safer now thanks to im-
proved technology.
"I'm not suggesting an oil platform
will win a beauty contest," he said,
"bllt they're bc:ncr now than they've
CVCT been."
Dannemcyer repeatedly wd 1he
most important factor an the offshore
011 drilling controversy was the Unit-
ed States' need to wean itself of its
dependence on foreign oil.
Dannemeyer said he would rather
explain why drillin$ platfonns had 10
be installed off Cahfomia's coasthne
than explain to parents why their son
has to fight in the sands of the Middle
East to protect U.S. interests in those
oil fields.
"Resources are finite, but we have a
challenge 1n thas country to develop
our resources to lessen our energy
dependence," Dannemeyer said.
William Schreiber, an aide to Rep.
Roben Badham. said rcporu indicate
lhat the sax tracts off Oran~e County
proposed for offshore drilling ar~ of
limited to moderate value to oil
companacs.
Badham opposes any compromise
plan that would open areas off Orange
County to dnlltng, Schreiber said.
Badham was mvated to anend
Monday's meeting to Laguna Nifuel.
but was to North Africa v1s1ting
NA TO anstallat1ons with the House
Armed' Services Committee,
Schreiber said. Badham 1s expected
back next week .
The Laguna Niguel Community
Council hosted Monday·s forum but
docs not intend to take a ~sitaon on
the 011 dolling issue untJl Aug. 26,
according to its president, Jim Krem-
bas.
The community council as an
elected body but maintains only
advisory powers 1n the unin-
corporated community.
TRANSIT CHIEF SEEKS FUND BOOST ...
From Al
that any dcc1s1ons rcgardang the
cxpendnurc of gas-tax dollars be
made locally in each of the !>talc's 58
counties.
Similar proposal<; an past years
have died at the hands of state
legislators But Roosevelt said 1he
idea 1s one that .. fits into the
commJSsi on's d1rect1on to do belier
wnh what we have and 10 ancrcasc
transpon.auon dollars without ra1S1ng
taxes."
Constitutional amendments can be
placed on the ballot by the state
lawmakers. who must approve a
proposed amendment by a two-thirds
ma;ority an both houses. or by
Citizens through the IO ilia ll VC
procedure 'Io place an 1n1t1at1vc
measure on the ballot requires the
signatures of about 630,000 registered
vo1crs statewide
Rooscveh. the eldest son of former
President Frankhn Roosevelt, rep-
resents lhe pubhc on the ocrc
board, 1he county's transportation
planning agency
BLOOD PRESSURE TEST-'INACCURATE' •••
From Al
readings arc trad111onall)' lower
"Blood pressure vanes a lot from
minute 10 m1nu1e," Weber s~ud.
"People can be badly misled 1f they
depend on onl} one reading "
The UCI study involved the use of
a hagh -tcch device developed for
medical ~1ud1cs of space shuttle
astronauts The instrument.
produced b} ln.1ne-bascd Del Mar
Av1on1cs. employs a convenuonal
blood pressure arm cuff. It 1s con-
nected to a four-pound recording
device that can be worn on the belt or
with a ~houldcr harness.
Weber ~1d lhc device was sci 10
inflate the cun and take a blood
pressure read1n1 every 10 m1nu1cs for
a 24-hour penod -even whale the
~ubJCCt was asleep A computer wac;
used to analyic the rcadang.s and 10
help dctcnn1nc whether the subJCCt
suffered from hiih blood pressure.
The UCI study involved 29 men
who previously had been diagnosed
v.:11h hypertension and 29 male vol-
unteers who were tested as having
normal blood pressure.
The researchers found 1hat 30
percent of 1hose diagnosed with htah
blood pressure were probably normal
and should not be taktna medtcauon
for hypertension. They also found
that an equal percencaae of "normal"
subjects had some readings in the
high blood pressure ranae.
Weber said a number of physicaans
arc already usana the new 24-hour
blood preuure testina technique.
But he conceded that it requires a
substanual investment. He saad two
'Brush fire near Brea
blackens 1,440 acres
By dae A11odeied Press
At leas1 1,440 acres of brush were
burned by early today a' a fitt
continued to evade containment in
Oran County canyons n('ar Brea.
authonttes S&Jd. Then was no e1t1·
mate of containment.
Winds spread flames throuah So-
quel C,anyon Monday aficmoon but
clied down overru&ht T•o of the JOO ~ fll'Cftahtm on tbe lines suffered
minor ir_uunes earljer in the day
, Tbc fire jumped iu control lane
" about 4 p.m.. Monday bo1.b io Soqud
( anr.on and at the Gt Iman Truck
Trail, saad Fare Department
spokeswoman Alacaa Dav11.
The fire broke out Sunday 1n
adJacent Carbon Canyon, spread fint
to Telearaph C•nyon and had been
almost contaahed at 800 acrts Mon-
day.
Backfires set an the Gilman Peak
area of Chino Hills State Park
mAna&cd to halt lhe advanc:ina Oamcs
in Carbon and Telqraph canyons.
"No tructurcs were threatened
dunna the fire and no 1nJunes have
been reportrd " oflktal! Mtd
tcst1ngdev1ccs and the accompanying
computer equipment could cost
about SI 0,000 and require a doctor to
charge about $200 10 $300 for the
procedure
Weber saad he expects insurance
companies to begin coverina the
pauen1·~ cost because of 1he potential
health benefits.
Three septuplets
expected to go
home next month
By Ute AHocleted· Pre11
The three ~urvlV1n1 Frustaa sep-
tuplets remain in stable condition
and are expected to ao home by about
mid-September, a spokesman for
Childrens Hospital of Oranie County
said Monday .
.. There has been no chan.at." said
hospital 'pokesman Doua Wood.
He 111d the babies, bom 12 weeks
pttmature on May 21, are ellpttted to
remain in the hotpital's newborn
inten11ve-care un1t untU they pin
enouah weiabt to leave the bo1p1tal by
the middle of nelll month.
At the parents' ~uesi. no ad·
dational det11ls an beina liven out.
Wood sa1d.
The babies, Stepbtn, Richard and
Patnaa Ann. are the children of Patt1
and Samuel Fru1taci of Rivenidc.
All of the blbscs suffered from
hyahne membrane d1aeaae, an ail-
ment that cau1e1 lunp to collaptt
after eacb brath One wu 1tillbom
and th~ died between May 2'4 and
June 9.
~!~~~J,.~i!!!!?.U_ciwa:Yon Coast
COQtll v&neyt tonlOhl bYt Sout'*n C1llfornl• wlll he\19 a .unny afternoon W'tdneed•y and w1mw ,.,,,.,.,_,u,.., the Nellonel
WNthW 8ervtol Mid,
The ctoud pattttn It ~ C*IMd by 1 weeJt tro<lgtl of low pr..,,. O'i'fl the r9Qlon, bYt the trough 18 WMlltinlng and
moytng ... tward and th1t wlH ~ Clearef -'<IM anel •alight
lncr ..... In we.rmth.
Along 1he Of•no-Coaat there wtll be tow ctoud• tonight and
wee1,,..01y l'nOfntng. Sunny Wadneedey afternoon. Hight In low
70. nMt the beeCn.e OthelwtM hight 15 to 93 Wedneedty
LOW157 to &4 From Point Conception to the Mexican 80f'dlt Ind out 80
mll• -Inner waten, llGht v11l1bi. wind• tonight ana
Wedneldey morning becomfng eouthweet to we.ta to 18 knot•
Wedneeclay afternoon Southweat IW9fl 1 to 3 fMt. Clear
WedneedlY evening.
Out• wet••· Moatly Wll1ebll wind• 12 knota or leea through
Wednetd•Y wtth combined .... 5 to a , .. ,. CIMr W.edneed1y
evening.
U.S. Tempe
"' " Allleny 11 41
~ ee 56 Ill ..
Md!Oo'• N 63 Allenta to 13 A-.Clr, .. ~
4uelln 17 71 .... ~ aa 12
9lrmtn0llAll'I ~ 70 ........ <* 71 54 .,... •& 51 eo..on 71 to
.. ftlllo 78 u
lul1lnG!Oft V1 12 61 c.,., 74 40
CheMllOft,9 c to 71 Ctl ... on.W I/ 91 Ill CllllflOU•,NC t2 70
~ 73 50 =.., .. 72
" • ~ IO 17 CcllumM.Oll H 71
Conoonl,N.H 71 " o.11 .... l'lwon11 100 ,.
o.ton " 73 ~ 12 50
O.Mw-II 12 o.cron 71 87
Oulutll ... 641 .,.._ 93 Ill '*blink• 12 53 ,.,go aa S& ::~ IO 49
IO ff ~, .... 57 47
HerdotCI 12 54 ~ .. .ti
Honollllu to 78 Houmton 92 77
am eHAN 1·3 ,...
1-3 pocw
1-3 poof 1-3 pocw
14 poot
2·3 poot 1-3 pocw
Tidea
TODAY
14bprn
7 5711>m
~toA'f
3·18am
9 41."'
225p"' 93epm
102 10 10 12 71 .. u eo .. u
71 &I
70 M .... 12 Ill
16 eo .. 11
b 81 to &I 72 86
.. 50 to 32 17 54
27 I I
Of 4.1
24
14
&.n -· IOCley " , 42 p "' • ,... Weclneedey al • 13 &m Wiid Mia 8Q111r1 II 741pm ~ Mtt loday 9' 118 pm, rleel
W911114111day •1 4 04 a,m and Mlt 11Qt111 et 7·02p"'
Just Call
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VOL 78, NO. 225
NOWTHAOUGH(ABOADAY
20% OFF
ALL POTTERY
SALE INCLUDES:
• POTTERY • REDWOOD TUBS
• SAUCERS • WIRE BASKETS
• BARRELS • STRAW BASKETS
• AND POTTING SOIL Toor
~FREE•
Local O.OY9ry
AM LING ' s
Newport Nur ery and Garden Center
(Between MacArthur and JamDof .. )
Open Mon. thru a.t. 1:30-8:30, Sunday 8~oo-&:80
1800 Nit coul highway• newpott t>Mch, celltotnle • (714) 144-te10
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