HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-19 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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FAIR
Serving Newpott lhtch, Cotti Meta, Huntington &etch, lrvtnt, Laguna ltech, Fountain V"lef llWI 1out1t Or .... CMlltty
ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA MONDAY AUGUST 19. 1985 ,., L ENTS
AIDS causes turmoil among gays
Their sexual. SOctalbehavtorchanges;
education. research focus of campaign
By USA MAHONEY
Ot .. D.-, ........
AIDS bas created turmoil for the
gay communuy in many ways s1nce
the first victim was diaanosed in San
Francisco in 1980.
The realiu\tion that the typical py
lifestyle predtSposes homosexual
males to a mysterious killer disease
Coast
Hare Krlshnas provided a
taste of Ind la's culture
during a Festival of lndla
In Laguna Beach./ A3
Nation
Weekend chemlcal leaks
In Indiana, llllnols and
West Virginia force 1,500
to flee./ AS
World
The latest retaliation car
bombing this morning in
Beirut kills 22./ A4
Sports
Sunday was a bad day for
local baseball teams -
the Angels and Dodgers
lose./81
Buaineu
Orange County's Rock-
well division may get part
of B-1 contract .I A9
~
INDEX
has forced ~ ID IOCW and
sexual behavior Stnc:e its method of
transmission was discovered onc-
and-Qne-balf yean ago, local gay
activists said.
Homosexuals a~ tumma away
from anonymous and unprotected
sex in favorof datina, steady panners
and prophylactics. they said.
Fear of coniiacung AIDS has also
brouaht facuonali.2.ing among pys
and lesb1ans;o a halt while they
concentrate on getting suppon for
research and educallonaJ campallfls
to fight AIDS.
Homosexuals are uruted 10 a single
purpose now as at no ume smce the
Gay Rights Movement of the 1970s,
said one observer. And AIDS is the
cause. Not o~I must py acuvists
fight for the · lS of AIDS victims,
but increased iscnrrunation toward
the homosexual population ieoera.Jly
hasplvanizcd its members to protect
their bard-woo CJ vii n&hts from bems
eroded by h yster1cs and
"homophobes,·• sa.ad some Orange
County pys.
litina AIDS bu fotced pys to
co forward and be recosniz.cd by
put> ·c bcaJth officials, reliaious
leaders and politietans who can help
them "push for mcreased fundmg for
LISA
MAHONEY
P£RSPECTIVE
educauon and researeh into the
disease.
"We are no longer a aroup of people
that exisu in anonymity," 1rvinc
physician Don Hap.o aid. A loq-
term benefit of this vuibility may be
increased acceptance of bomoea-
u.als, IO~ pys SIJd.
Unlike heterosexual ttl.ationsbipa,
PY couples have not bad to be overly
concerned with 1aua1 res:polllibility.
Because the natu~ of their liaiJons
precludes the possibtlity of prea-
nancy, they have not used bunCT'
forms of birth control that have alto
(Pleue ... Ame/.U)
MADD
backers
march
inOC
Drunken driver foes
begin 4-month walk
across United States
From naff and wt.re reporti
Confined to a wheelchair, Phyµis
Chew rolled throu&b a beach pe.rkina
lot along PaC1fic Coast Highway on
Sunday near the spot where she
almost lost her life to a drunken
driver 20 months ago.
"The guy was goin& 85 mph with
his hahts off. I didn't see him until be
was about 12 feet i.~ front of me," said
Chew. a Huntington Beach resident
who hasn '1 been able to walk since the
accident.
Chew and other v1ctuns of drunken
dnvers paraded through Bolsa Ouca
State Parle 1n Hunungton 8eacb as
pan of a four-month walk across the
nauon sponsored by Mothers Apmst
Drunk Dnvcrs.
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
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Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Tetevlson
Weather
84
A3
A9-10
85-7
84
87
0.., .... ,.._ "r Terrt ll-
P11MeDCen on lala Bella wa•e to •pectaton en route to winning the Jud&e. •Choice award In Sunday'• parade.
About 50 people ancludtna a
v..oman who said she used to dnvc
while 1ntoJUcated J01oed the march,
which Wlll pass throu&h IS states
before cnd1ng Dec 9 at the L10coln
\.femonal in Washington DC. whe~
a C'.!ndlchght vigil will be StaJcd.
.... 87
A8
87
A6
A7
A3
Patriotic paraders rekindle spirit ··we want 10 develop pubhc aware-
ness and dispel the 1mprcss1on that
M '\DD has accomplashed aJI 1ts
goals," said Janet Cater. president of
the Orange C'oun1 x chapter of
M .\DD "Then .. s sull a lot to ~
done ..
87-8
81-3
A6
A2
Goats get
reprieve
fromN~vy
By LISA MAHONEY
Of the OellJ ...........
The U.S. Navy has no plans to
shoot Andalusian goats remaining on
San Clemente Island, a Navy spokes-
man in San Diego said today.
Rather than slaughter the 200 to
300 goats sttll on the island, the Navy
will ask an animal nghts group to
consider contmuing a trapping pro-aram that has removed thousands of
goats m the last several years, Ken
Mitchell. Navy spokesman said.
Mitchell's statement amounts to a
victory for the Fund For Animals.,
animal advocates who have fou&ht
for years to keep the Navy from
shooting aoats on the island SO miles
off the Oranae Coast
The Fund has been pcnodically
allowed to trap goats there, but only
after bitter debate between the animal
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Ot .. O., ........
Boats decorated in red. white and
blue adorned Newpon Harbor Sun-
day afternoon for the 25th annual
Character Boat Parade.
Sponsored by the Commodores'
Division of the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce, the pro-
cession this year featured an "Amen-
ca the Beautiful" theme with awards
., (PleaM eee OOAT/A.2) ()ecar llori.a
presented m several categones.
Among the winners were: Richard
Croul's The New Balboa. Ron Soderl-
ing's Lido Lady and the Balboa Bay
C'lub's Papa's Toy won Best Decor-
ated awards in separate categones.
A Judges' Choice award was pres·
ented to the lrvmc Co. entry. Isla
Bella.
This year's Judges mcluded New-
port Beach Mayor Phil Maurer.
Police Chief Charles Gross, Judge
Calvan Schmidt and Norman Loats,
deputy supcnntendent. Ncwpon-
Mesa School District.
But boaung enthusiast!. pantc1pa1e
1n the parade for more than a chance
to win trophies. says Richard Luehrs.
the chamber's citecuuvc director.
"These people also want to be
involved in the harbor CQmmunity."
he said this morning,
Hispanics lament
lack of political,
economic parity
President of LU LAC predicts self-imposed
deadline will not be reached by end of 1990
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Ofho.ltr .... ....,
At the tum of the decade, Hispanic
Amencans ralJied around the cry that
theywould achieve political and
economic panty by 1990.
With only five years left on the selt-
1mposed dcadhnc, Oscar Moran,
national president of the League of
Unated Laun Amcnca.n Ciuzens. 1s
bqinnmg to dtsplay some doubts
"It's already 1985 and we're not
even halfway there," S8ld Moran.
after speakin& to the LUI.AC chapter
in Costa Mesa Fnday night. "We
haven't made the progress that we
were supposed to. We've been lulled
b) a few v1c1ones "
A San Antonao re~1dent, Moran
was elected m June 10 represent the
125.000 league members lprud
throughout 41 states He expects
more chapters to ~ formed an 47
states b) Octo~r _
Moran remarked the leaauc and
other Latino groups would need 10
double their efforts 1f 1990 1s truly 10
~"the ~car of the Hispanic."
A.mong the setbacks troubling
Moran 1s 1hc high dropout rate among
H1span1c teen-agers. and the 1nab1hty
(Pleue eee BISPA.PflC8/A.2)
Tosmoi:e or not in Irvine
Smoldering controversy will be dfscu8Sed
on Tuesday tn Irvine City Council chambers
By PHIL SNEIDERM.AN
Ot .. Dlllr .........
Irvine City Council members will
cons1der Tuesday whether their oty
should enter the smolderina conflict
between smokers and non· molcers
by jo1nina other communities that
have adopted more stnnacnt amolc-
ing rqul•tion
EarlieT thtt ye&f 1 ordin&Dcet ftlU•
latina smokioa in public J>lacet and
private work areas lo V&f'Y1nt deftces
were adopted by lJ\e cities or Ll&una
lbch and Newpon Balch ana by
Oran County 8oatd of upervit0n,
who O\ltnCC unincorpora&ed areas.
In May, &be lrviAe couoetJ asked It st.a.tr to pt.her information on mok-
ina laws CftaCttld by other dues. On
July 9, the councl.I wttuctcd the st.aft'
to draft a proSX*d Irvine amokina ordinance, modeled after the law
adOpced by Lapna Beach in Febru-
~ lrvine lllCU\U'O dctcribcs tbe srnotina or tobecx:o u ... positive
daQlef' to bcaJtb and 1 material
anno~ inconvenience. dilCOm-
f'on and a health b.uard to th0te wbo
&te_j)ftttftt in COftftned ·~ ...
The pro&>C*d law prohjbiu mok·
ina in public ckMton, public meet·
ina rooms. thcl auditoriums.
r.ubhc restrooms and indoor ~rv1ce
ncs, such as m banks and JfOCCry
stott . II limitssmok1natodes1gnatcd
public areas 1n hospitals and other
health care f1e1hues and says such
faaht1es should make "a reuonable
effort" to ass1an pauents to rooms
according to their smok101
prcftrence
Rest.au.rants wt th capaetty for 40 or
more patrons would be rcqu1rtd 10
clcsipatc at least ooe-qua.ner of their
scattna a a non-smokina area Bar
and "Outdoor seatina areas would be
excluded from the cakulauofls
((the ordinance is approved, Jrvint
employers would have 90 days 10
implement a written moklna policy.
At the IC&Sl, the policy would
prohibit moluna in confettnoc and
mcetina rooms. cluuooms.
aud1tonumi. restrooms, hallways
and clcvaton. At least half the space
in employ~· cafetenu, lunchrooms
and loun4C" would be designated
non-smokllll areas
Also. employees would have the
n&ht to de~1gnate tbctr 1mmed11te
work areas as non·smoltina ion
The Irvine propo~ stipulates tbit
emplo)ers $1\ould not be required to
incur an) expcnx to make structW'll
or otheT pby 1cal modificauons to
provide the non-motuna areas
By tbe1r own adm1 on, t-..o of the
lrv1nc council mcmben m e "bile
thfte do not. At the July 9 mec\lJ\I.
howe~cr. Ma)or David Baker, a no~
smo~er, dttlincd to vote on lbe i.s&ue.
say1"f the law firm W1th whitb ht is ''~atcd d~ '°me rk foT the
to <."CO 1ndu try
Luehrs said last summer's Olympic
Games may have taken some of the
wind out of the boat parade's sails.
But the parade has rebounded.
"This year 11 seemed to me that the
enthusiasm level 1s back 1n the
harbor. There were more boats par-
ucipating than m the last five "car\,"
he saJd.
The Character Boat Parade was
(Pleue eee BOAT/ A2)
"The easiest ~a~ 10 get away with
murder 1'> to get drunk and run
someone O\tr in your automob1lc,"
said Roland L'Heurcu>.. one of the
pan1c1pants in the march
L'HeurcuJt. ~5. spent seven months
on his bad. last -.ear after suffenna
(Pleue eee MADD/A2)
Queen Return.a Crown
11.lde.ll• ar.,.an, 17, bad no eoooer landed tbe Job of Ill.a
Bmatlnctoa IJeacb on &ahlrdQ wlan • recetnd a 11 ttw
role la tlM road prodaedOD of "42Dd Street." Ill= ~dowa from tlae throne~ •=tranl I• aut alne lllODtbe wtth tla 1ll(1a •
llrop.n'• crown WW 10 to flnt nuu,er-ClP J ~
,
\
A2• Or Cout OAILV PILOT/Monday, Auguat 19, 1985
Back to school
Theee five Ora.nae Cout Collete etadcmta,
spotted outalde the etudent boobtore.
seemed Jen than enthuladc about retarn-
lng to cla.uee today. From left u.llorma
Aguilar, 20, of Fountain ·Valley; Damien ' . \
~. 19, of Fountaln Valle!Y, Darryl Oe'Do, 19, of Totin: &ace Daaahe • 18, of
eo.ta 11 .. : and Dan Barrett, 19, o Tu.attn.
Fall lnatractlon t>eian today at Ora.nae
Cout. Coutline and Golden Weet collel(ee.
BOAT ...
From Al
'>IJrtl·J h\ 101.al boaters wh o were
in1rrl''oll'lf in Kt'rnng together to enjoy
.i \lmplc l rU1'>e in the harbor. Some
decor:iu:d tht:1r boats in outlandish
de,1g.n' w attract attention
··Thi\ parade allow!> the character
boatc, to tn and outdo ea1.h other."
l uehr' ~1J .. 1 he) like to strut their
\IUll •·
Fear of INS keeps aliens from Del Mar
DEL MAR (AP) -Threats of a
raid by U.S. Border Patrol agents has
prompted illegal aliens to flee their
Jobs at the Del Mar Race Track and
(cf\ track officials concerned about
Lhc future of the thoroughbred racing
season.
"I sec them an the process of mass
exodus nght now." one trainer said
Sunday. ·•w e might have enough to
take care of today's racing program,
but we can't operate hke thas for any
period of lime."
According to Joseph HaTJ>Cr, the
track's executive vice president and
J.eneraJ manager, as many as 300
11Jegal aliens fled their jobs last weelc
after im m1Jr8tion officials s~ud they
were planning to raid the track.
HISPANICS SEEK ECONOMIC PARITY ..•
From Al
ul Litino~ to reach higher economic
brad.et\ \1canwh1le, the number of
H1span1c'> in key go-.emment pos-
111om h,1.-, <lwandled.
\1oriin call ed for President Rea~n
to appoint more Hispanics to v1s1ble
pmh .... 11h1n his admin1stratton
"\\ l. "'ant the Reagan admlnis-
11 .. 11on 10 kn<.t"' that 40 percent of the
I I l\pan1~ \mencans voted Re·
puhltlan '>O let's have some rec1 -
pmcll) ··said Moran. "0.) God. they
bl.'lll'r rnpo nd "
LI 'L .\C'c, campaign for poltucal
clout bas taken Moran to Washington
D.C. to defend affmnat1vc acuon
laws that require federal contractors
to hire ethnic minorities. League
executives are also negouaung with
lawmakers over a new draft for
ammigrauon reform.
Addit1onaJly, Moran plans to meet
with California Governor George
Deukmc11an next month and other
government leaders in hopes of
bndging the e,ap separating Hispanics
from the mainstream.
"LULAC 1s the largest and best
contractor for'bridge bualdanf.' m this
country," be said. "We won t main-
tain the status quo."
As part of that "bridge building,"
LULAC will begin enJjstjng Navajo
Indians in Arizona. reachmg to a
rninonty group that Moran says has
much in common with Hisparucs.
"They've been largely ignored, but
who else could share our work than
those who've felt the feelings that we
have," he said. "We're looking for
new coalitions and new groups tOJOin
the effort."
AIDS CAUSES.TURMOIL AMONG GAYS ...
From Al
pru~cn c flClll\C 10 preventing the
'Prt·a<l of se\uall) transmitted di!>·
ease~
Edul.:1l1on campatgns within the
ga) community now promote safe sex
-using rnndoms and practicing
'>t'\ual art<. that don't culminate in
mten.nurw \a1d Randy Pesqueira of
Orange ( ount) 's AIDS Response
Program
· .\II ol a \udden. gay men had to
loc1k .it thcmseh.es and sa} 'What are ''l' doing and how can we change "' he
s.i1d 'It ..... a.., \t:I\ difficult for them.
tor unc: 111 accept that . sexual acts
"'<''H· lx·i:n .Kcustomed to for years
• ~t·rl· nu"" bnuming deadl}' All of a
'uddrn 1h1ng<i that you're doing arc
thing'> th.it"' ill kill )OU .. he said
Hag.in agree<, .\IDS. he said, "has
lJU\Cd a great deal of looking to
1ur-.t·hc~ tu ••>he 1h1s issue yo u're
~g1nnin~ IO '>Ce a dramatic change m
neha\ l(•r lh<it 'Aa~n·1 there a year
J~l)
< 1,1~' Ml· n111 JUSt changing their
•l'\u.t1 hl·ha ~ l•>r tho-;e surveyed say.
I hl'\ ,tfl' al<,o adapting soc1all}
·< 1.1~ ffil'n hcgan to se nously look
JI cal h other and realized that
Jnon' mous -.e, was no longer safe
:ind 'a' l1fr threatening." Pe<;que1ra
,;ud
.,, .1 rt''iult many ga)s have turned
c1~.1; lrnm prom1stuous behavior.
prrlcmng tn'itcad long-term and e\-
llu,1 \l' relatmn<;h1p<;.
"Monogomous relauonsh1ps are
'>ort of on the increase nght now:·
..a1J Hdgan. ""ho lt\eS in Laguna
Rl.'alh thl· .,oual lenter for Orange r 11unl\ homo..eituals
'iJ11.i Pc~ucira. "we too. like other
ix·r\11n' lan date can court each
1thl·r ~an karn 1ht1m aC\ as opposed
1111 1\1 ..e,u.1h1) I o;ee men doing that.
v. n ha' 1ng to change 1n the age of
\ 11 >\ '
TUESDA l" -r_.o of tbe major
Just Call
642-6086
Dally Piiot
O•ltv•ry
I• Guarentffd
QC Congressman hires
anti-gay psychologist
By tbe A11ociated Presa
A conservative congressman sitting on a House subcomm111ec wah
JUrisd1ct1on over AIDS research has hared a controversial psycholog.ast who
believes homosexuality should be outlawed
Rep W1l11am Dannemeyer, R-fullerton. hared Dr. Paul Cameron as an
ad viser on homosexuality and AIDS. which falls under his JUnsd1ct1on as a
senior member of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health
and environment.
Cameron was expelled from the American Psychological Assoc1at1on and
repudiated by the Nebraska PsycholC>gJcal Association
The Lincoln, Neb .. psycholojlst says he believes homosexuals should be
quarantined to stop the spread of acquired immune deficiency syndrome. He
also has IJnked homosexuality to cnmanal behavior, including mass murder
and child molestation.
"He has grossly d1stoned and m1sreprel>Cnted other people'~ re'iearch,"
said Dr. Natalie Poner, assistant professor of psychology at the U n1vers1ty of
Nebraska. Porter was one of six Nebraska psychologists who asked the 65,000-
membcr national association two years ago to examine Cameron's work
She said she believes Cameron'-s reputation makes him an anappropna1c
consultant to a legislator. That op1n1on also 1s shared b}' gay nghts leaders.
obviously, and many psychologists
"The idea that a member of Congress would lend some credence to this
man's ideas as fnghteninJ. really," said Ron NaJman. spokesman for the
National Gay Task Force 1n New York. "The congre'isman is being abused by
this self-proclaimed expert."
Dannemeycr said. however, that he secs Cameron as a victim of those who
have lost their "moral compass " Cameron 1s a "man of conscience," who
condemns homosexuality as perverse behavior, the congressman said.
Dannemeyer trusts C~mcron as an adviser, he said, despite his expulsion
from the national psycholC>gJcal group and repud1at1on by the Nebraska
orga1uzauon.
Dannemeyer said he hared Cameron for this month only to ad vase him on
AIDS and other p y issues. He will pay Cameron $2,000, Dannemeyer saad.
Backed by Cameron's advice. Dannemeycr last week anoounccd he will
send a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Hecldercallmg
for a national ban on blood and organ donat1o'n'i hy maJe homosexuals,
includmg monogamous gay couples
cb.u1e1 AIDS 11 forcJ.JJI opo• tM p y
comma.ally I• more IJJvol~mnt Ill
I.be po/11Jcal proce11 aad proltt1Ja1
tbelr -civil rl1bt1.
What do you llkt about tbe Dall) Pilot" \\-bat don't you like? Call tht
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Tell us wbat'a on your mind
Kar.n Wittmer
GI"• N a l M1V1,.Qf''
Clrculatlon 714/142-4333
Clauln.d .ctv.,1l•lng 7141142·5'71
Afl other department• 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
Frank Zfnl Ro.emery Churchman
Clrculatlon
Telephone•
fa • t •I ,,,
Rober1 L. Cant,.11 Donald L. Wllllema
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A 1Jvet11Slrig ()r !Or
Circu111111on
Man&Qftt
P99flr alevlna
Clntt1f1"° ()rec.r°'
T ~ C>ey C "' 1 0. ~ I'...,. "If' ... n.t~ Cll"'llOl'•'1 tlw
11*•• ,,,_ le Nlllllh41<1 by,.,. O•ltl't\I" I I'~ °""""'"' , ..... ..,., .......... ,,..~ .... ,..,,.1 !flfOUQ/1
r ..,., ... """' ... ·~ 4 .,,.,'°" " "" d n.,.,,dot.,. 9'14 ~Y' I.,. ll'>"C pal p.,1)1¥""0 jlla•l It •t ll(l ~"1 l\.e, •• ..,, P • 1• r: •• .,._ , .... ,,,..9,u
VOL. 78, NO. 231
I
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Fair skies through Tuesday
Fair Tueday tlt~t for lat• n~t and morning low cloud•
and local fog. Hf• from the lowtt at the beach• to,.,..,. 90
watrMr valleys. OM 55 to 15.
In the mountain .,.., fair tu.day tlt~t eome f~ low
ctoud• lowtt coastal a1QPM Tuttday moml58. High• In mlcf 10• to m«S ao.. Lowt In the mid 40a to mid 1.
From Point Conoeptlon to the Mtxtcen Bord« -Over Inner
watera: Ught varlablt wtnd• night and morning hour8 th~
Tueeday With welt to eouthweet wind• 8 to 18 tcnota during afternoon and ewnlng houra.
U.S. Tempe Ultle llloca " 13
~:.=-7t N IO .. .. "-lllC>tlOC* H 72
~ .., 54 Memplll9 t:l 11 .. .. ....,.. 9MCll .. 17 ., 17 Mldlnd~ .. .. 80 Moll«• .. 4T .......... Tl n I. a ~ f!Jb, fllONTS ~ IO I I ,,....,,.aul .. H Attainta 11 10 NMIWlle .. 11 ·.t-1¥ 1~~ ~ wa1m _ lold...-Attentle Qty 71 11 NtwOl!Mnt t2 74
Aullltl 102 76 NtwYOOi< 7t 72
hlllmOr• 73 .. Nol'tolll, Ya 81 14 S11owt•' Rain F •un1es Snow Occluded ,.... Stat'l'in"'' ...... ~II IO .. Nor1ti li'latt• .. " i..:..:.:. .. II Ok--Ol1y .. 70 TO .. Cetlliln• ~ Tl 41 Omlllla 14 13 Calif. Temps l ong llMCfl 11 .. ... IO 52 OrlllnClo t2 76 ... ~ 12 M 90ll!Ofl 16 .. Pti11d1~ n 81 .. IO MonfotM .,_,,.. .. 71 PlloeNs 1oe 16 HIQll. IOw lor 2• llOU<$ endlnO •1 5 Mont...,, 10 64 .,..., 17 .. =::r. .... 13 13 IO a.m Heedlee t07 ~VI .. IO 11 13 l!lakertlleld .. u ~8Ncl\ ., .., c..., 17 II Potu.nd,O. 13 8t fUlell• ee 54 Ontario 17 11 ~Ofl.IC .•a 76 ~Ice 80 87 ,_ .. 13 P.itn~ tot ., CNttelton,W V .. .. ="City I& .. ~,., tt 16 Puadena ... 11 CMtto4te.N C .. 16 Tl 41 lo.A~ 79 13 A~ 16 68 E: 54 ao Aeno IO 44 Otlklllll<I 15 eo San BwnMdlno ., ., n 66 Alcillmotld t2 10 PuoRol>IW aa 54 let10at>tlel ... 11 .. .. S-~o 16 67 ==~ ... IO lanJGM 18 .. a..wnd 16 M 81 loull 13 " 71 68 IMlaAN 12 .. Columblla.SC 17 .. 81 ...... Tllftll)e ti 78 Aeno IO 44 SantaCNI 72 .. Columbo.t9.0ll .. .. SallLAM~ .. • S--to I! 17 SanUI Metia 14 It c-d,NH ,, II 8anAnloftio " n a.-73 5t T.,_V.ii.y 72 aa o.IM-Ft Wont\ 103 7t a.n Diego 16 17 Sen Diego 76 .,
T0<renoe 78 II 09ylon .. II 8an Frandloo 12 eo SMFt-.cio 12 eo Y~Vly II 62 o.n.... IO 61 SenJuen,P A to IO 8Mta llattlat• 72 58 OMMOlnM 11 .., ltSleM-H 51 810Clill0fl 83 51 Detroit ., 64 S..ttle T3 M 8antow 100 e& Tides OuluUI 117 44 = .. 38 ~I 114 51 EIPMO ta 16 72 46 9lllho9 Ill •7 E~ 13 16 Spoll-.. 112 Blyt,,. m 7& TOOAY ,..,... IO 42 ~ .. .. Fltel low 564e m 01 F9t90 17 46 T~• 79 83 ~low t2 II pm 62 :::~ 12 •• T-101 ~: Surf Report e t5pm 1.3 74 112 Tlllae M
Or.-Ftll ,. 66 WliflfllnGtOll 74 :; LOCAnoN ICD IMAN TUHOA'I ~.N C TS It WlcNl• " 12 tOem 5 1 2·3 ,.., Ftmnlgtl Hstfotd 11 12 wa...e.rre 7• 83 HuMlnglon IMUI 2-l ,.,. Flret low 8 30 a.m 01 Helene ... .. ,.._ Jeitty. H9wl>Ol1 2-3 ,.., ~lllgll 1pm 54 ~ to 74 40!11 Sltelll, N41WPOt1
2..:l fall S--Olow 7 21 pm u 22nd Str..C. IMwpol1 Houelotl M 11 Extended == 2-3 lelt Sun NII lodey at 1 36 P m , r1-tnd191~ ea " 1-41atr 10· Tu..oey al 8. 1e a m and .... llQlill at Jec:bon,MI. 13 good 73'1pm ~ 13 15 ._ nlgtll and momlng low clou09 S..Clement• 1-3 good Moon Mt• !Odey al t ·62 p m • ttlel ,,._ .. 45 bec:Omlno moelly ~--..... Wll1• *ftP 82 .... Tueecley at tO lie a m. 1111<1 -IQllll M "-Qty n 12 noon. Lowe 68 to• "'tlle To.. ,...... clltec90n. ~ 1023pm .... v .... 104 71
GOAT TRAPPERS VICTORIOUS ...
From Al
advocates and Navy brass. The island
is used for target practice by wars haps.
The last sweep, which ended July
26 with the capture of 550 goats, was
allowed only after Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger interceded on the
Fund's behalf.
"That's incredible news. That's j ust
great," said Fund attorney Dana Cole
said after learning of Mitchell's
comment. Cole said be recctved a
telephone message from a Navy
official this morning but bad not had
a chance to return it.
"I can't tell you how much man-
euvering has been going on" in high-
level Navy offices over the fa te oflhe
goats, Cole said. "All I can tell you is
we're very thriUed."
The Fund wilJ be looking forward
to worlung with the Navy on saving
the goats, Cole said.
Fund President Cleveland Amory
was enroute to New York from San
Diego and could not be reached for
comment, his assistant Manan
Probst said. To date, the only official
word Lhe fund has received from the
Navy was an response to the group's
proposal to continue the goat rescues,
she said.
"We have a letter from them saying
MADD MARCH IN COUNTY •.•
From Al
multiple fractures 1n a colhs1on with a
drunken dnvcr. He said the dnvergot
only 45 days in jail.
A woman who joined the crowd of
accident v1ct1ms said she Joined
Alcohohcs Anonymous after black-'°' out on the: road following a dnnkang bout
.. The reason I'm here as to march
against people lake myself." she said.
"I'm lucky I never hit anybody. I'm
lucky I never got killed."
The march began Saturday at Caty
Hall in downtown Los Angeles. wath
Mayor Tom Bradley and actors
Henry Winkler, Kate Jackson and
Jamie Lee Cunas leading about 300
people on the inaugural mile .
"We simply must remove this
threat of madness from our !>OC1ety,"
Bradley said before the st.an of the
walk, which heads toward San D1ego
before swinging cast.
"far too many families have suf-
fered the tra,edy of ha v1ng loved ones
maimed. inJurcd or killed b} drunk
dnvers there as no excuse for 1t,"
Bradley said. "You can have a good
time without getting drunk and
~etting behind the wheel ofa car. This
1s the message we want to deliver
across America."
MADD founder Candy Lightner
saad the group will carry two wmbols
through Amenca: a "Declaration of
Canna'' scroll signed by part1c1pants
and a family photo carnage wtth
pictures gathered on the trip. The first
to sign tbe scroll was actor Burt
A person afraid to f;ice the world 5i ng:J.e
is frequently the vict im of a men·
tal crisis. No one is immune to the .ad9 26
stresses of modem life that can ~
they are lookine at all the a1terna-
t1H•!>:· Probst said
Mttchell said the Navy 1s not
enurely convinced that the "trapping
program will be completer success-
ful." The military wants al the goats
removed from I.he island because they
are eating up the habitat of several
endangered species.
The wal > goats have become ac-
custommed to heanng the trapper's
helicopter o-.erhead and run mto
caves to hide, all involved said.
But Cole said he 1s confident
1rappine 1!> the answer for eradicating
the prolific breeders
Reynold'i
Cater !ta1d MADD has ac-
complished some of tts goals in ats
five years but saad that too many
people stall treat dnnk1ng and dnvmg
hghtly
"In the bag areas hke Los Angeles
and Orange C'ou nty where the 1ails arc
full. people don't go 10 Jail, ' Cater
said. "Their license may be
suspended but they'll probably con-
unuc to dnve anyway This leads
them to belie ve that society doesn't
take thas problem senously.
"We have to let them know we do
take at senously It kills people, It
ma1mes ~yle and 1t could happen to
you," said Cater. "The drunk driver
kills more people than any other
cnmanal in the country."
cause abnorma l behavior. Each sit-la stud t
uation is different. That's why .; YI' ~
there are different sleeps 15· -th~ ours a A n-.r
ways to help. The WlfAJ
Information Center at Capistrano
by the Sea Hospital has a free book·
let on mental crisis. It outlines
the many option s you have
available. Hospitalization
is on ly one of them . Call
(714)831-1787. You'll
receive this useful b<x)k·
let in abso lute confid ence.
We've helped people cope
with the problems of
today's society for over 25
years. We understand .
Howto
Harx:lle a
Mental
Crisis
-------------& •
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/MOnd8Y. ~t 19, 1085 * M
BULLET IN BOARD
~------
Colleg~ chorales
seekiQg singers
Krishpas h~s·t festival in Laguna
Audillona for Irvine VaJley CoUqc's mutcd-
vo1ce cb~l Jroups, the Chamber Sinaen and the Sym~horuc Chorale, arc now bcana conducted by
a_ppo1ntment. Also, members are beina souaht for
the Women's Ensem~le with no audition requried.
The Chamber Sinaers, who recently returned
from a ooncen tour of West Gennany Switzerland
and Austria. ~h.eane Mondays from 71 to IO p.m. in
Fine Arts Bulldana 200. The Symptionic Chorale, a l~r aroup, rehearses Tuesdays at the same hours
wblle the Women's Ensemble sinp Wednesdays:
also from 7 to I 0.
. Con~ct the college at SS9-9300 for further anfonnat1on.
Con•tractloa •omen meet
.The Sad<n~~ck-Capistrano chapter of the N~t1onal Assoc1atJon of Womeo in Construction
Wlll meet Tuesday at 6: l 5 p.m. at Reuben's
restaurant in Tustin.
Paul Ware of Fint American Title Insurance ~ompany will discuss his profession. Those
interested should contact Chris Neblett at 558-9272.
The charae for the dinner mcetmg is'T17.50.
We.tern art emlblt alated
. The Pomeroy Gallery of Fine Art will conduct
ats e1ahth annual Western and Americana exhibition
and sale of original oils Saturday at the gallery 5651
Lincoln Ave., Suite A, Cypress. '
Artists will be present to discuss their works at
the program, which will run from 4 to 10 p.m. and
will include a champagne buffet. Call 827-1010 for
more infonnation.
lmmaalatloa cllalc .et
A free children's back-to-school immunization
chnic will be held Aus. 27 at the Carmen Yuppa
Conference Center, 18819 Delaware St., Huntington
Beach, across from Pacifica Community Hospital.
The clinic will offer children from six months. to
16 years vaocination for diphtheria, tetanus, polio,
pertussis (whooping cough), mumps, measles and
rubella (German measfcs). Call the center at
842-0611, ext. 224, for further infonnation.
Coaaty Jatrmen dae l.loaon
. Law enforcement officers in Orange County
will be honored Aug. 27 when the American Society
for Industrial Security hosts Law .Enforcement
Appreciation Day at the Revere House, 900 W. Fint
St., Tustin.
Glen B. Craig, director of the law enforcement
division of the state's Dc~rtment of Justice, will be
the key speaker, along wtth Orange County District
Attorney Cecil Hicks and Sheriff-Coroner Brad
Gates. The meeting will begin at 11 :30 a.m. and
reservations may be made by contacting Ed
Klosterman at 538-3563. .
Mule boz group meets
The annual meeting of the Musical Box Society
lntemauonal wtll be held from Aug. 28 through
Sept. 2 on the Queen Mary in Long Beach Harbor.
The 2,500-member society is a non-profit
organization dedicated to the restoration and
preservation of music boxes. Membenhip infor-
mation may be obtained by calling Kathleen Eric at
548-1542.
Bop Clab breakfa•t .et
Area Hare Kttlbnas pve the public 1
tuie oflnda'1 culture dunna a FC"ttival of
lndta Saturday and Sunday ln 1.quna
Beach. Princaples of Buddiam incJudlna
reincarnation, Indian an. music. vea-
eterian food and literature on the Krilhna
movement we"te displayed and shared with
thousands of visitors who strolled thro~
tents erected at the south end of Main
Beach Park. AJvin Marlden1 president of
the Lquna Beach temple, aaad the festival was des.ianed to familiarize people with the
Krisbnas and their search for spiritual
happiness. ..People are not so much
interested In aoina to the church(es)
anymore, so we put on festivals, .. be said.
"Oun is not a mission to conven. h's
basically to &Ct pt'.Ople to undersland Urere
should be a Sl)lritual chmension in their
lives." Members of the Knshna sect,
dressed in Indian prb, prepared food,
played traditional Indian music, chanted and stood ready to answer visiton ques.-
tions both days. Thousands of pieces of
literature on Indian philosophy, culture
and reliJion were aiven away, Marsden
said.
Ajamilla Du, below at left, entertains
passersby on bas harmonica while Udill
Spencer. 10, preparet to serve f~ drinks.
Enjoying the festival from the comfort of
bis stroller is Gopal Krishna.
The Boys Club of Laguna Beach has started
ticket sales for its second annual Breakfast by the
Sea, scheduled for Labor Day, Sept 2, in Heisler
Park near Myrtle Street.
Congressman appeals for hostage release
'
The breakfast includes pancakes, ham, orange
juice and milk or coffee. Tickets arc $2.50 and may
be purchased at the Boys Club from iLS members or
at the event, which will be held from 1 a.m. to noon.
Call 494-2535 for more infonnation.
Monday, Aug. 19
• 6:30 p.m., Cotta Mesa City Coucil, City
Council Cbamben, 77 Fair Drive.
• 7:30 p.rn., lrvt.De Fbauce Commhaloa, City
Council Chambers, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
Tue.day, Aug. 20
• 6:30 p.m., ln1H City Condi, City Council .Ownben, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
Po ucE Loe
WASHINGTON (AP) -A con-
gressman sar,s he appealed to top Syrian
officials as a 'court oflast resort" for seven
Americans kidnapped in Lebanon but the
Syrians claimed that for the moment the
case is out of their hands.
Included in that group of Americans is
David Jacobsen, 54, of Huntington Beach.
Nevertheless, Syrian President Hafez
Assad and Vice President Abdul-Halim
K.haddam appeared sympathetic to the
plight of the seven capoves and pledged to
work Tor their release, Rep. George O"Brien
said Friday.
The Illinois Republican met with Assad
and Khaddarn last :t'eekend in the SY!1an
capital of Damascus to enlist their aad on
behalf oftbe hostages. The Amcncans were
abducted in separate incidents over a
period of months in Lebanon.
They arc believed held by radical Shiite
Moslems, probably an Lebanon's Bck.aa
Valley. That portion of the war-tom
country 1s under the control of Synan
troops.
Jn an interview with The Associated
Press, O'Brien said Assad and Khaddam
denied any knowledge of who 1s respon-
sible for the kidnappings. where exactly the
captives arc being held, and the health and
living conditions of the host.ages.
The congressman represents the Johet area. where the Rev. Lawrence Manin
Jenco, one of the captives, was raised and
where bis fanuly stall hves. Jenco, a Roman
Cathollc pnest, was director of Cathohc
Relief Services an Beirut when he was
abducted an January.
O'Bnen said he split off from a House
Appropnauons subcommittee tour of
Eastern Europe last week to make a
personal appeal to the Synan 1ovemment
to help the captives as the Synans had done
in the TWA Flight 847 h1Jackmgearherth1s
year
U S Ambassador W1U1am Eagleton
accomparued O'Brien to the meeungs with
Assad and Khaddam.
.. I told him (K.haddarn) that at appeared
to us in Illinois that the intervention of
Syna bad been material and substanual in
effectmg the release of the TWA hostages."
O'Brien said, "and I thought possibly that
same intervention could locate and free"
the kidnapped Americans.
.. And that's why I was coming to ham
(K.haddam} -because I considered ham
my court of last resort," O'Bnen said. ··1
had no place else to go."
The congressman satd K.haddam and
Assad, whom he saw later. were "gracious"
and ''deplored'' the bdnapp1ngs.
But be said both men maintained that
their government has Vlftually no com-
mun1canons With the uny extremist
Moslem facuons believed to be holding the
Amencans .
O'Bnen saad that while the Synans have
contact With the larger. rccogmzablc
group), "the)' have no contact ~1th the
hnle ones ..
He said he also was told "there 1s no wa\
we could intervene in a vigorous, s.a)
VlOlent. wa)' because these people ~
prepared to go to God themselves and tale
an)body who happens to be there along
with them ..
The congessman said he would meet
w11h the Jenco family an Johet on Monda\
and bncf them on has talks
In add1t1on 10 Jenco. the ~mencan
capuves are Jaco~n. director of the
~mencan L:navers1ty hospital. Terr)
~ndel'50n. l-h1ef Maddie East correspon-
dent for The Associated Pre-ss. Wuham
Bud.le\ a l Embass} poht1cal officer
thr Rr' lknJamin Wear a Prcsbytcnan
m101ster Peter Kllbum. an .\.mencan
l nt' ers1i.. librarian. and Thomas
<-iutherland dean of agnculturr at the
un1verm ..
Stranded women abducted A $300 stereo and $525 an Jewelry
'·were stolen from a li&ht blue Toyota
Cress1da parked m tlle lot of South
Coast Plaza on Fnday
Runtlncton Beach
Police apprehended somt'one for
I pt.t1'C-1natchang at the Red Onion
restaufant.16450 Pac1ficCoas1 High-
way, on Sunda) The S40 pu~
~meooe .stole a black Peugeot It).
~peed b1cycte worth S300 from thr
unlocked p~ of a home 1n the
I 8"700 block of Beach Boukvard
~meume 1n 1hc past two 1Ao-etk\ at knif epoint, tric;>. arrested
Fountain Valley police arrested
three men early Sunday who alleaedly
abducted and robbed two women at
knifepoint.
Detective Darryl Nance said the
women, a 22-ycar-old Hollywood
resident and a 25-year-old Anaheim
resident. told offioers their car broke
down in Garden Grove, and they
accepted a ride from three men wbo
Newport a..cJa
Someone stole the wheels ofl' a red
1983 Ponche. parked in front of a
home in the 1600 block of 16th Street
over the weekend . The car was left
sittina on two mllk crates. The losa wa• estimated at $1,SOO. • • • A SlSO car stereo and S42 in
c:asac:ttc tapes were stolen over the
weekend from 1 blue 1972 AMC
Hornet parked in the I SOO block of
Superior Avenue. • • • A buralar &to1c I SI, 200 brass
andiron 1'rom a home 1n the 2700
block ofWtveCreston Friday nilbL
PolJC:)C re~ru wd tbc awpec1 1.bo
did $330 in :r:t· • • Someone stoic 318 1n jewelry, a S.O akin. and a $30thinfrom1 home
1n tbc 1100 block of Bayfront on
TbW'lday.
lntJa•
A man was mated for lewd and
offered to take them to a phone.
Once they WCf'C inside the car, the
women told police, the men refused
to. let them ~t out. The men held
knives to thw throats and took their ·purses before lettina the women out oear~Avcnucand Ward Street
in Founwn Valley, the women told
police.
Nearby, the women were able to f1aa down a patrol car. The robbery
lascivious conduct in a pla)'lround at
I 7S02 Jordan ~n Thursday. • • • A car stereo was reponed ttolcn
Saturday from 1 Toyota parked at the
comer of AJton and Red Hill. • • • furniture valued at more than
$,400 was f'q)Oned 1tolen from a
home in the 3800 block of Parkvaew
on Saturday. Police reporu 1&1d the
victim IWpectl the culprit lO be hJJ
Cil-tirlfriend. • • •
Walter Jurkowskj wu booted It Oranec County Jatl on curday for
allqcdly 1tealina a tboppina can
from a parldna lot It tho comer of
Alton and West Yale. . ~ .
Danny lee Wlu and and 0.Vld
Witlaim Brown were booked at
Orant!t County Jail on twday for
poaelioa or narcoticl.
c... ....
A woman, wor\ina 11 the Oran
unty Fau11wndt on unday "'"
suspects' car was spotted nearby, and
the tttrec men were arrested without
incident. Nance said. The purses were
recovered and the weapons seized, he
said.
Michael Scot Seider. 18; Francis
McOinlcy, 21, and Dcnrus Burback,
19, all of Santa Ana, were placed an
Oransc County JaaJ on susp1c1on of
armed robbery and abduction
ported that someone stole her purse
conta.inina $130 in cash. a $500
diamond rina. and $72 an mis-
cellaneous items. • ! • Someone stole 1410 in cas.h from
the cash drawer of a Mobil service
station, JI 9S Harl>or Blvd., on Satur-
day • • • four businesses were buraJamed
in a complex at 3303 Hart>or Blvd. on
unday. The thieves sot away wtth
thiu clectnc typcwntcn worth
Sl.400. • ! • Someone st~ JSOO in Clothina,. a
$300 chair, and 1 S6S bathroom t
from the locked prqc of a home in
the 2SOO block of EJden last wecl.
Pol.ice rcporu Wd lbe suspect paned
en~ to the llf"llC with a key he
Obt&lMd from tnSJde the borne. • • • Je~lry won.b SI. 960 wu rcpon.t'd
olm from 1 home in lhe 300 blork nf
uonse on Friday • • •
Fountain Valley
A rc51dent an the 17700 block of
Montezuma reported Fnday that
someone took h1s pct rabbit from its
cage, killed at, and threw the animal in
the bushes to the s.idc of bis home • • • Someone stoic a TV from a home 1 n
the 8500 block of La COSJta on
Sunda) The loss was csnmated at
i400 • • • Someone slashed two tares on each
of three vehicles parked an front of
home an the 17300 block of Santa
Lucia on unday The damqe was
estimated at $500. • • • Tools and a tool box worth $1 00
were stolen from a locked storqt
shed located neJU lo a home an the
8600 bloc~ of El Rancho on Sunday.
Ff re causes $7 .000
to Huntington business
A fire of undttemuncd onam
caused $7.000 damqc unday at a
Hununaton Bc.ach plumbina supply
buttn
Hunt1naton Beach Fttt De~
ment spokeswoman Manha WCT'\b
said the bllR was reported at S JO
pm. at Gttn' Plumbi 222 Adam
A"c· he said the fire broke out an a
warehoutt area.
No t"Junn ~ rq>oncd.. and the
cause rem11ned under 1nvattpUon
today, Wenh ta>d
• The bu anC'\ 1\ owMd b) frank
Loverde.
• •
contatnang$15 an cash was recovered • • • A beige Chevrolet V cp \talJon
wagon and a llaht blue Bu1d. Rcpl
were bur&lanzed wblle park.Ni 1n the
15000 block of Tnton o'er the
weekend In both anCldents the th1el
got aw&} w1th $150 car sterros • • • Someone Stole two &UnS \3lurd II
SSOO from a home an the lOOOi1 Mock
of pnt sometime in the past month • • • .\ burglar stole an S85l clt"\tm
typcwnter from Ztt Medical , ~l\1
Murd}. on Sunday mom1n1 Polt\t'
reports wd the suspect sma~h<"d the
front w10dow to pin entry • • • Two female Juveniles v.err Ill
prchended Sunday.for shophf\m'-at .i
T U'ICl store. 9882 Adams A -.c J hr\
were cued and rel~ and thr ~ ~11
1n cosmeucs they allcgcdh stole ~err
recovered • • •
Lapn&Beacb
Two men WCT'C a1Te1ted t-arh
\aturda\ on susp1c1on of lewd con-
duct Police arrcst.cd Carlos Camilo
t-..epner. 15. and Gcoffre} .\Lan Ha ll
1o at 115 a m at Heisler Parl. • • • .\n unknov.'tl suspc'Cl smashed the
v.1nJsh1eld of a car parked earh
.iturdav 11 lrv1ne Co"e The '1ctnn
\did an obJCC't appart'nth had bttn
thro .... n through the wind~h1eld • • • .\ man told pohcc he wa' attacked
b) t"'o men armed v.1th a ~n1fe at
m1dn1Jht unday at HctSkr Park The
attackers reported!} demanded
monc) befort n~ang on foot The
'1ct1m ~ufTcrtd manor abfll\lons to
h1\ back • • • I\ Thaha Strt'Ct resident rt"poncd
1hr theft Fnda) of a ~cllow I 976 Ford
Pinto
CoWJtal.a held in motorist's death
GLENDALE (AP) -A man
involved 1n a minor tf'lffi(' aca<knt
was lnlltd Saturda) as hf' rca hed
1n11de h• auto for papeT lo JOt do•-n
the ICC'dent detail\ and another
vehicle rear-ended has car. nflic1al'
tatd.
Louts Garcia, 21 . of IA' ~n elM
wu killed instantly whtn a "''
tr1vtl1na about 30 mph m hed into
h11 automobak on the Glendale
frttw•y al 12:)q am . Cahfom1a
Hiahwa) Patrol Officer Janet Eniter
•
\aid
"The '1cttm ~u tn\oOl"ed 1n a
manor tratTk •~cadent and he v.b
~mall 1n 1ck h1 vehicle. stand1n1
on thr n&ht 1de rca h1na into tns
"chide. ~hen it was nrudi:," ht 1&1d.
und1 < hfT, 26, of nahetm
hookN for 1n"n' uon of man-
\lau.ahtcr, EnaJer \ald
Details of the on11nal minor M"C1~
denl V.tf'f unavailable, lht om
said
" .
\
A• Orange COlllt OAILY PilOT/Monday, Augutt 18, 1085
Crash victims soribbled notes
TOK. YO (A.P) -Mmutc1 before a
Japan Alt lio jet cnsbed into a
mountain tut wttk. passenaer
H1rouuau Kawqucbi dashed notes
ltrOIS seven .Plies of a pocket
calendar dctc:ribsna his thou&hu as
be was abc;ut to dJe, b11 family says.
"Be aood to each other and work
hard. Help your mother " beaan
Kawa,uoha, S21 as most of the S24
people aboaro the Boeina 747
scrambled for oJtyaen masks and life
vests.
"rm very sad, but I'm sure I won't
make it. I don•t It.now the reason,"
Kawqucbi wroce lD the notes ad·
dressed to bis wife, Keiko SI; lus
dauahters Manko, 24, and tiiyoko,
17; and his son, Tsuyothi, 21 .
Only four people survi"ed tho Aua. 12 era.sh. the worst siDJ,le-planc
accident ever. Kawqucbi was amona
the S20 people killed.
NOtlllf that five minutes bad
passed 11nce the plane went out of
control, he conunued, "I don't want
to take any more planes. Please Lord
helRmc." •To think that our dinner last ni&ht
was the last time," he wrote.
Kaw~chi, who lived i.n the west-
ern city of' Kobe because of his work
with a shippina company there, had
boarded the Tokyo-to-Osaka fli&ht
after a visit with bis family in the
Japanese caphal.
In a description of bis surround·
inp, which investjpton called valu-
able evidence, be wrote, "There wu
smoke that seemed to come from an e~plosion in the cabin and we bepn
mak.iaa a descent."
··Wh.at will happen from beret'
Kawquchi asked.
"Tsuyoahi, I'm countlna on you,"
he wrote to tus too.
"Mother, to think somethma like
th11 would nappen," be penned to his
wife. ••1t•1 too bad. OoOdbye. Pleuc
take aood catt of the children ...
.. It'• 6:30 now "he noted. At about
that timebthc pilot was messaa;ana he
was una le to control the plane,
accord.in& to Japan Transpon Minis-
try ~rds.
"The _plane is rollin1 around and
desoen~ina rapidly," he described.
Kawaauchi 's 17th and last sentence
wast"I am arateful for the wlr, happy hfe have eajoyed until now. •
Western White!lousebugged
The Jumbo jet crashed into a
mounwn 70 miles northwest of To_kyo.
The notes, shown on Japanese
television, were written across the
PllC1 of a amaD appointment calen-
dar. At times the writ1n1 was nearly ill 'blc.
SANTA BARBARA {AP) -Hot1eflies. The pmi-
dent's secunty people can t act the buas out, so they've
aone undcrcoVer.
the budJet, be wu asked about rumors that horseflies were
runruna rampant at the ranch.
"I made a personal inspection yesterday and can
readily attest to you there are insects there. I did not see
personally any bonerues nor was J attacked by any," be
~wquchi's ton telephoned his
mother and sisters from the crash sice
to read tbe notes, Mn. Kawaguchi
said on televiJ1on Sunday.
The cover-up involves an mtncate net-work. White
House press secretary Larry Speakes confirmed.
~urity officers -especia.llr those assiped to
outside patrol at Ronald Reaaan s ranch near Santa
Barbara -are usin& mosquito nets, rcponcdly purchased
an l~e quanttttes in Santa Barbara, to ward off J)C1ts
attacltina an swarms around the ~ch.
said. . . "However, I did see several unidentified msects
swarmma at close ranac." They weren't bees -killer or otherwise -be noted.
"Some of the people wbo have rqular ouuide duty at
the ranch, not includ.ina the president. are wearina nets
over their faces to keep the annoyances down," he
confirmed.
Kazuo Yoshimura, 41 , an
architect, wrote, "J want you to be
strona." on the back of a company
document, said his family, who
reported findina the bloodstained
paper amona bis belonainp.
Speakes was bu~ about the presidential pests by
rcponers attending his news briefing Thursday.
After fieldina questions about affirmative acuon and
H11HhN1ws.,,~~~~~~~~~~~~
A Sllpped Disc Can Be
Misunderstood, Palnful
BY DR. JAMES McEACHERN
Pilot struggled
to save JAL jet
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U.S. urges South Africa
leaders 'put up or shut up' .
By TIM Alaodac.d Prttt
W ASHJNOTON -The Reapn 1dm1n11trauoo " ur1u11 So~th Afncan
oflk1als to "put their money where their mouth as" and offer s~fic reforms
toward endinJ apartheid and the maasivc violence it has sparked. N~~~ ~wity Adviser Roben Mcfarlane said Sunday. that black So1:1th AuJUUD
should accept the aovemment's offer to neaot1ate, but AJ\ah?nbeBiahop Desmond Tutu of South Africa sa1d his people have only a cfiotce tween
endurir\I oppression and overthrowina the w~ite minority aove~m~nt 'by
armed insurrection. Tutu said the church tradiho,nally ''enables Christllns to
say there is a time which is justifiable for Chrisuans ~~ ovenhrow an entire
aovemment. But 1 hope we have not come to that yet.
Daredevil roll• over fall• lnto court
NIAGARA FALLS Ontario -A daredevil who walked away from lus
P.lunae over Niapra Fills in a .barrel with only a cut said the 176-f.oot fall waa
•like the best roUer-ooaster ndc you had when you were a 10. Steven r.
Troner, 22 of Ba.n1n'1on, IU., faces arrai$f\ment. Aua. . 28 m Onuno
Provincial Coun a maximum fine ofSS OO for pcrform1na an illcaal stunt. and possible charaes 1by American authoriues. Lyina inside two "Oreek pickle
barrels" placed end-to-end and surrounded by Jiant inner tubca1 Tro~ter
became the 1eventh known person to plunae over Horseshoe Falls ana survwe.
Storm• nlp plane•, •ma•IJ Kan••
Heavy thunderstorms whipped up 70 mph wmds m Kansas after others
sm. ashed trailer parks, k.illina. one man and tossina an<?ther 100 feet, fl~ppcdf
planes and turned out liahts for S0.000 homes in M1chipn as the rema.rn~ o
Danny drenched the mid-Atlantic Coast. The last remnants <;>fDanny, wh1~b
did minor damge as a hurricane in Louisi.ana before spa~llJ tornadoes 10
Alabama and SOuth Carolina and floodma parts of VUJ1rua and North
Carolina. was expected to move offshore today. As Danny mo~ed toward the
coast Sunday, it continued to soak parts of t:"'onh car~lioa, Delaware, Maryland and VirJinia. More than Sl/1 inches of ram fell on Richmond, Va., on
Sunday;the National Weather Service said.
MlN llllnol• w.ln• teen pageant tltle
A Tl.ANTA-Miss National Teen-Aaer 1986 is Rhonda Cullison. 18, of
Decatur, Ill. She won the crown, alona witll a SI 0,000 scholarship, a personal
ap~ce contract and a Mazda GLC on Saturday. The tint runner-up was
Miss New York Oracelyn Santos of New York City. Second runner-up was
Miss Nort.b Dakota, Carla Cbristofferson of Tolna. Fifty-two contestanu
representina every state, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico competed.
7,000 attend Newport Jazz nnale
NEWPORT, R.I. -Youna hs&eners dominated the crowd of more than
7,000 that turned out for the finale of the NC Jan Festival at seas1de Fort
Adams State Park. And It was the finale of the finale. Texas blues auitarist
Stevie Ray Vauahan &. Double Trouble, that brought out the bag response
Sunday. Jazz lovers clapped and danced to the performance by Vaughan,
drummer Chris Layton, bassist Tommy Shannon and organist Reece Wynans.
Poll •how• 76% favor death penalty
LOS ANGELES -An overwhelming majority of Californians suppon
the death penalty, and most believe in it so strongly that the execution of their
mother or an innocent person wouldn't change their minds, a new poll says.
The Los Angeles Times found that 7S ~rcent of the l,S68 people polled in a
telephone survey favored capital punishment, SS percent of them strongly.
Only 9 percent said they were staunchly opposed to the death penaJty. Most of
those polled, however, said they believe crime could better be reduced throuah
non-punitive measures such as JOb trammg, better schools and drug
rehabilitation rather than execuuon. People who own guns for self defense were
the stronaest supponers, with 88 percent favoring the death penalty. Following
in support were re&Jstered ·Republicans, with 87 percent; and labor union
members, 86 percent.
Brlnlr'• otnce robbed of $54,000
SAN FRANCISCO-It must ha vc taken muscular thieves who stasaered
off with $54.000-m quarters-from San Francisco's Brink's Annorcd Car
office, police reported over the weekend. Investigators said the haul weiJhed
about 2,700 pounds. Police said one or more crooks bu!l1arized the Bnnk's
office in an mdustrial area by entering through the ceiling of Jhc building
Saturday night.
Anlmal-lovers demand non-meat burger
. SAN FRANCISCO -A herd of animal-lovers marched to a different
burger over the weekend -one made of vegetables instead of meat. At a
McDonald"s yet, that bastion of beef. "We Want a Veggie Mac!'" said a sign
bung in front of the Powell Street McDonald's. one of the most crowded
downtown streets. The protestors were armed with petitions asking the folks
who run McDonald's to add a vegetanan version to the menu. Surrounded by
cutouts of cows beanng the words, "meat is murder," more than_a d()Jen
members of an Oakland-based anunal-rights group marched at lunch-hour
Sunday at the fast-food restaurant ·
Reagans to plclr up vacatlon pace
SANTA BARBARA -President Rcapn and has wife, Nancy, arc
beginning a more act ave. second week of vacauon as they travel to Los Angeles
to meet family and fnends. Smee they disappeared from pubhc view a week ago
Sunday to their 688-acrc ranch in the brush-covered Santa Ynez Mountains,
the Reagan s nave held to a ltght pattern of leisure activity. ln keeping with the
president's recuperation from colon cancer on July 13, the couple has taken
walks each day about the property, forgoing their normal horseback rides. On
Tuesday, they plan to travel to Los An,eles for three days, where their schedule
includes three private dinners for family and friends.
Car bombing•' death toll l• 118
BEi RUT, Lebanon-A car bomb ripped throufb a restaurant in Moslem
west Beirut today, lcillina 22 and woundana 77 and tfl8&enng fighuna along the
Moslem-Chrisuan dividing Green Line, pohce said. The blast came a day after
Christian militia commandcn vowed revenae on their Moslem foes for a car bomb~a ~t kill~ SS people, mostly women, and wounded 119 in Christian
east Bc1~t. s Antelias suburb on Saturday. That was the fourth car-bombing in
the Cbristtan sector since May. AJtoaether, 118 people were lc.illed an tho~
attacks.
300 dle ln CIJliiae ferry dla•ter
PEKING -About 300 people on board an overloaded ferry boat
drowned after they surged to one side to watch a fistflaht and capsucd the
vessel, a P~k.ina ocwsP,1pcr said t~y. The accident happened Sunday on the
SonJ)lua Riv~rtn thec1ty_ofHarb1n an no~cast China and was reponed by the
Pek1na Everuna News. The newspaper 111d the boat carried more than 300
passenacn and "only a few" who were on the top d~k man~ to swim to
safety on shore. Tbc boat connects Harbin, population 2.3 m1lhon, with the popular au mm er reson of Sun Island.
Addrea to Mo•lem• enda Pope'• tour
NAIROBI, Kenya -Popt John Paul fl flew to Mof'OQQO today to deliver
an unprcocdented addrest to Moalem ¥Outh1 and meet with Kina Hassan 1J in
a aesture of peace and collaboration With ,lsla1n;, Africa's la~t rclijjon. Skies
were overcast as the pontlO'wu seen off in Nairobi by President Daniel Ano
Moi and a military band which played the '•Hallelujah Chorus•· ftom Handcl'I
.. Mc ~ah ... J~hn Paul, whom the churcb oonsiden the 263rd suoceuor of St. P~tcr, 11 vmnna Morocco at the 1nv1tallon of Hassan, who 1s reputed to be 1 direct dcscend&J\t of the Prophet Mohammed.
CIJurcll laden, Botha at bnpaue
PRETORJA, South Af'nca -Top South African church leaden mt1 WIG
Pruidenl P.W. Botha today •. and one said later they found themldves 90 far
apan on how to deal With racial uon:st that ·-we hardly bqan to communicall
at all." The meetina was ct!Jed to di1CU a year of black ano .. penheid riou
wrucb have IU!led more tba.o 600 peoplo. Bilhop Desmond Tutu. snubbed Jiit
month when he aslced for a onC'On-ooe mccona. refuted to attend. Botha met
the Rev. Jerry FalweUt lhe OUUPo.kcn American fund&mentali1t m1nil1er for pnv~te ta lb before 1oaay'1 mocuna. Falwell emef'ICd upbeat. "Thia oounaty 11 makn11 p ;• bt told rtPonUI
,
Otange CoNt DAf Y PILOT/Monday, Augu.lt 18, 1"5 Aa
Spills force evacuation of 1, 500
Nitro
MONSANTO
By Th Auoda&M Prat
Wctkcnd chemic:al leaks tn In-
diana. llhnoi.a and Weit Viflinia'a
··chemic.I valley" forced the ev1CU-
at1on of about 1,500 people, closed a
highway aod sent more than t• people to ho pitals.
the west aide of Muncie on Sunday
mo~ Oft'leials said the tan.kerwu moved
af\er the earlier incident to a railroad
aidiq behind the factory, Bora-
Warner Corp.'a Warner Oear
Division.
ni"'t, then 1 think lb.at somebody ia
1u1hy or arou neab,encc ...
Roben LiblOna, a Conrail 1)9kes-man in Pbiladdplua, wd officials
had cJQrcd the car at Pendleton. He
said tt was left on the lldinaat Munne
IO it could be in: pectCd by its Owoe1"1,
Celanese Chemical Corp. of Houston. Jn Indiana" . leaks of flammable vinyl acetate uom a Conrail tank car
forced the evacuation or l 000 Pendleton residents Saturday .;iaht
and about 440 workers at a factory on
"I don't think anybody waa ad-
vised." said Kenneth Thorpe, vice
president and ~neral mlJll&Cr at
Bors-Warner. 0 If, in fact, this ia the same car that wu at Pendleton last
In We11 Vil'Jinia, 10 people wett
htjurcd. more than SO were evacuated
and a l 2-milt stretch of lntentatc 64
waa closed for three hours after a tank
Lola Laurel Bawee, cla~ter of comedian
Stan Laa.rel. alta lD tbe '1925 Ford plckap
Al' I Jt ltl
ued lD Laurel and Banty ftlma. The •ehlcle
wu one of the can eold at aacdon Sunday.
Bidders buy stars' cars
LOS ANGELES (AP)-A 1929 Duesenberg roadster
that appeared in the motion piQure "Gable and Lombard"
drew the high bid of$362,000 durina a celebrity car auction
at the Ambassador Hotel.
Mark Smith of Ft. Washinaton. Pa., owner of Old
Philadelphia Motor Co., bought the original roadster
Sunday for his company, said Maryjane Zelicskovics,
spokeswoman for the event.
But not all the cars, props and other movie and TV
memorabilia brought six-digJt prices.
A 1920 Ford stake truck used in the movie "The
Grapes of Wrath" sold for $4,300 to an unidentified
collector. Ms. l.elicskovics said. The Triumph used by
Fo nzie 10 "Happy Days" went to Matty Shaughnessy of
Hyannts Pass, Mass., for $3,200.
The props and vehicles from ftlms and TV shows such
as "Chinatown," "The World's Greatest Lover" and
Smokenders makes it easy.
"Hogan's Heroes·· were from the collection of Pacific Auto
Rental and "Movieworld" Museum .
Pacific was the premier movie and television studio
car rental qency for almost SO years.
Auctioneer Rlck Cole, presiOent of Rick Cole
Auctions of Studio City, called the response from the
crowd of 10,000 "overwhelming."
"The movie cars that were sold here today arc the
largest collection ever offered of Holl~ood auto
memorabilia," he said. "You might conSJder this the
world's ultimate garage sale." I
Among the props up for grabs were the one-man
submarine from the "Voyaae to the Bottom of the Sea" TV I
series; the balloon basket from from the film "Around the
World in ao Days," and the spaceship used 1n the I
television series, "My Favorite Martian."
Just give us one hour to prove it.
Have you ever t11eo to Quit or thought aboul
1u11t1n9 smok1nq?
Would you Qui! 11 you could be free of the urge
and desire to smoke?
Would you Quit 11 you could do 11 without scare
tac11cs shock treatments cold turkey withdrawal
drugs climbing the walls gaining weight
Pmbarrassment or willpower?
We can hetp you We ve helped huno1eds ot
thousands ol smokers since t 969
Ma1or corporations have c;e1ec1ed us 10 help
their employees
Our program meets 1he 9u1dP.hnes of lhP U S
Surgeon General and has been dccre01tecl
Even 1f you feel you ought to Quit bu' 'flJU clon'
really wan1 10 anend a free me~tino
ATTEND OtfR FIRST MEETING FREE ...
NO COST OR OBLIGATION
-c .... m ........... c ............. icm' ~ 30•:~..!"' me
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Tuesday, Aupst 20 and Tivsday, Aucust 22 7:30 PM . -
truek leaked tOlUC' Wf u.r trioudc on
the road.
The inctdmt ha~ about two
m1lcs north of IMtJtutc, '1\e of a toxic
chemical leak at a Uofon Carbide
Corp. plant last wttk. wd Kanawha
County Sheriffs Lt. D.E Drennan. Mcanwtule, four people were
treated at Cent.revtlle TowtUh1p Ho,.
pita.I near Cahokia, Ill., after a
mechanical failure at the Amax Zinc
Co. released a cloud of' sulfur oxide.
TMisuits
add up,
top 1,300
HARRISBURG. Pa. (AP)-More
than six years after Three M1le Island
became known for the worst U.S
commerc1al nuclear accident. area
residcnu arc aoina to court 10 droves
claiming health problems from
cancer to Al OS.
The number of lawsutts filed this
year has climbed to well over 1,300. More than l 00 were registered last
week alone.
The deluge of suits apparently was
triJ&ercd by reports in February that
inJUtY claims filed in the first years
after the March 1979 accident led to
at least $3.9 million in se ttlements,
even thouib the plant did not admtt
liability.
Since those reports, the court h.as
been swamped by new personal
injury claims . against plant owner
General Public Uuhttes Corp. of
Parsippany, NJ .. and ~veral other
TMl-rclatcd corporauons.
The suns blame the accident. m
which some nuclear fuel melted m the
TMJ Urut 2 reactor. fo r causing
emotional problems as well as physi-.
cal ailments
Lawyers say millions of dollars arc
at stake in the suits. althouab the
plaintiffs do not say spcc1ficalfy !low
much money they arc seeking in
damages.
Hut more 1mpo nant. according to
some plaintiffs, 1s the possibility that
court tnals will shed some light on a
nagg10g question: What was the
accident's effect on the health of area
residents?
FMC
ALLIED CHEMICAL
FtKE CHEMICAL
rJ
__ \....:i,_......__.
Institute LI
UNION CARBIDE
S Chat1eston
FMC
UNION CARBIDE
BeDe
DIAMOND SHAMROCK
EI DuPONT
Carbide troubles
split community
INSTITUTE, W Va. CAP) -
Uruon Carbide Corp. took 1t on the
chin from about 300 Kanawha Valley
residents. mcludma an an&f)' Carbide
employee. JUSt a da~ after 400 other reudents rallied and cheered for the
chemical company
At a meeting three blocks from a
Clant that leaked two toxic chemicals
ast week. sending 135 people to
hospttals. worker Enc Howard ac-
cused t.buompany Sunda)' of staffing
its plants Wlth emploYl:CS untrained
to handle emergencies.
Even so, he said be was detcmuned
to keep ·h1s JOb at a Carbide plant in
South Charleston. where a smaller
leak Tuesday sent foul odors tbrouib
pa_rts of Charleston. but no one was
mjurcd.
••1 can get another Job. but b)' God,
I can't get another ltfe! But I m not
going to qwt." Howard shouted at
company officials. "I'm JOlOJ to be
one of the employees mak.in& sure you abide by your safety rules."
On Saturday, 400 Carbide su~
porters paraded lhroU&b South
Charleston in sup~n or the com·
pany,. which provides 6,000 of the
I 0,000 chemical ind~obs here. ··we were here first, if anybody
doesn't like Uruon Carbide, they can
move out." Carbide employee War-
ren Pauley said durin& the march.
EdWln Hoffman. an orp.niz.er of
Sunday's 2'h-bour meetina, said be
dtd not see a serious split in the
commurutY.
··1 thouabt the people who went to
the parade were a small portion of
C.rbtde worken lD the valley," be
said. "They're fearful for their .iobl.
but they don't undersll.nd you 'have
to have safety and job&. Thein WU
Just a knee.Jerk ruction, from yean and generations of oonditionina.."
Sunday's mcetina was sponJOred
by People Concerned About MJC. a
group formed after a medu't iso-
cyanate leak in Dec:lcmbcr &om a
Carbtde plaht killed more than 2.000
people m Bhol'll. India.
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LOU ISIANA SPECIAL TIES
lM AWNE SIA· Tlln S4 llJll
LOlml 995 DINNU 1 LB
Happy Hour
3:30-6:30 M-Thurs.
TGIF 11.00 Happy Hour
3·6 p.m
130 E .17thCOSTA ME SA
HOURS I lam to 2am
(714)646 -8855
Plan your b111iaes1 meetings
in our private Iheme rooms.
-
b
David Rakes
is Back
at
Reuben's ,~
of · ~::-11
Newport BMcll
With hl1 popular
plnao bar entertainment
Wedneaday thru Sunday
251 E·. Coast Hwy.
673-1505 .
LASAGNA BUFFET
Every Tuesday Night 6-10 P.M .
15. 95 Includes salad & garlic bread
Our famous burgers
and New York steak dinners
Wednesday thru Saturday
Lunch 11-3 P.M . Mon-Fri.
SPECfALS DAfl Y
Live Entertainment
Friday w/Blu Rivard
Saturday w/Blu & Bobby Brennan ,... ...... _____ ,
at4~
AESTA Ao\NT
'
Am•t•ur
Nlght-\lledn .. d.ya
Udle1 Nlght-
S.turd.yt 9· 11 ,. .M.
\llell Drink• st .00
Early Bird Dinner
Specials '6.25
Complete dinner including soup AND
salad, garlic bread, sherbert and coffee.
Served 3·30 to 7:30
Monday thru Friday
17502 Beach Blvd. at Slater
Huntin1ton Beach 842-5505
f eaturlng fresh fl sh
-
~ or . cho\ce of
..-, " O\nnef W\th d 0essert. -
complete P or Sa\ad an b pm sou 4 to
-A weekl 1 oays
l 801 E •
......... ..,,, ON THE PENINSULA Balboa
•Of Mice and Men'
Robert Blake-anii&ndr Quid •tar ln John
ltelnbeck'• ol&lelo, "Of l1loe and Ilea," on
tile KBC llondaJ NtiJat at tile llo.S• tonJfbL
Nurses can look
professional and
stay on a budget
DEAR ANN LANDERS: So you
think nunea ouaht to look "pro·
feaslonal," do you? Well, I would love to
but I can't afford it.
A nunlna uniform com $50.$60 in a
uniform 1tore. I can buy a white T ·•hi rt
andchino1forS20. Nuninashoesare
$40-$45 a ~ir. White sneaken can be
1 purchased for S 15 and I can throw them
in the w11hina machine.
A11
LANDERS
I work in an emeraency room. You wouldn't believe what we set in
there. Last niaht I came home with blood1 Betadine aolution charcoal 1treakl
and tar on my "uniform." A patient vomited on my shoes. The stuff never
comes out quite clean even with bleach and bru1h-1erubbina, 10 the life of an
outfit i1 about two months.
How can I afford $50 uniforms on an income of$20,000 a year'? Tell me
and I'll do it. -NO HOUDINI IN D.C.
DEAR D.C.: I reaearclled tbJ1 one my111f ud learned q1llt1 a lot. I wot to
a C1lJc1101bop tbat 1peclallae1 in utform1of111 klDd1 ud came acro11 u
auractfvt cotto1 ud pollt1ttr nur11'11Ullform that aold for tU.H. (It laad
bee redaced from tH.t .)
I alktd aboat dorabWty ud wu told, "11aJ11111 fine a lllllform 11 yoa will
find uyplact. Tilt qaaUty of tbe fabric ud workmu•~t:!• 11cellent."
Tlaat ulform fort 18.H wW lut foar tlmu lo11er your wllJte T -1.ut
ud clltno1 for UO ud will look a beck of a lot better.
Nanu' 1boet la Maraball Fleld'1 coat Ul. Tbty do aot 10 on 1ale, bat tlley
wlll 01tla1t tlle 1neallert by at lea1t •OO percnt ud are bnltllJer for yoar feet
tbu 11t1ker1. Alao, yoa wlll look 11 lf y0111rt a profu1lonal nar11 ud not
RAQinl lD a track meet. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been rcadina your column for many years
and remember your pointina out that danacrous driven have certain pcnonality traits.
In a recent issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, aJt<>UP of Harvard
Medical School psychiatrists have profiled accident-prone dnven. I hope you
will print the findinas, which were very much like your own.
Hiah·rilk dri ve!.:14i1pl1y less control pf anaer and hostility than the
averaae person. TheVil'e le11 mature, less tolerant and less wilfina to conform.
They are 1aarc11ive and may have deeper psycboloaical problems.
I hope driven who see themselves in the above will, for their sake, 11 well
as the wcll·beina of others, take note. -I CARE JN W. Va.
DEAR W. Va.: So do I. 89 bere'1 a cap111le dt1criptto1 of i du1ero111
driver la hmcb-bucket lu1aa1e: -and It could be male or female: bot·
tempered, 1on-coaforml1t, rl1\·tak1111, bottlle, malt wlll every tlme, reaent1
beln1 told wbat to do, an1ry aboa'1be way life ba1 treated bJm or ber ud never
walkl away from a flpt. • • • I DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband died suddenly two months aao. He
always bou&ht ahead and had two pairs of expensive shoes that he never wore.
I I took tbe sh<>C$ m yesterday and received full credit. I just thouaht your
readers mi&ht like to know there arc sull a lot of nice people in the world. -
R.S. IN AUSTIN, MINN.
DEAR AUSnN: Of coarse tbere are. And tbere are aome smart
mercbut1, too. Tbat 1tore coald not bave boaabt 10 mucb&ood will tor a
million dollan.
Pigs' pal named 'Mr. Short Snout'
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) -Mayor Bill Workman, who once
proclaJmed "People are Just pigs with
short snouts," has been named "Mr.
Short Snout, USA" by a aroup tryina
to impro·ve the imaac of pigs.
"We looked all over the nation for
the top Pia booster," said Jack Tate,
curator of the Greenville-based Shon
Snout Society.
Workman, who once said helped
earn his title throu&h the two official
"Pia Days" he proclaimed in the city,
Tate said.
"We've bad a lot of people help us,
but he has led the ~ck -he'• Numbfr One," Tate wd.
FARMERS INSURANCE
Hive 1 Sift Summer uaam IUIUICE ~ Founded 1957
(l · ..
111·7740
~41 Old Ntwport Blvd, Newport Beach
The pro-p14 society undertakes
charitable activities. has it• own
newsletter and last month rated an
article in the Wall Street Journal, two
mentions on NBCs Today Show and
an article in the Atlanta Constitu-
tion's weekly mall&Zine.
"It started by six people donauna a
total ofS17,~,t" Tate said, and h11 ~ledaed S25,tJUU to the Chamber of
Commerce's downtown business
center. Tate said the first in1ta1Jment
will be delivered Tuesday -a$5t000
check with four pink P\&S marcnina across It.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY INC.
For The Rut of Your Lift
1922 HAA80ft 81.VD .. COSTA MCSA--541-1156
RUL
IEW lllLD_IS ...
(CUii) DlllllE
and tn~..-~ ~ DlllEWI ••••uz 1 ~ .. IU'llf.s •1 e.so complete dinner
37 FASHION ISLAND Thi• WednMday A~Ult 21 NEWPORT BEACH ( 714) 644. 2030 R...-vatlon. • Meat.
BALBOA Val t Parklng 673-7726 I I Consumer adHce and help with
problems come in the _Dail~ P1lor Al
Your rv1ce rolumn Daily Plla1
r,,
~ m nc•+s
-
<>r.,. CCt.11 DAILY PILOT/Mond A.7
'When{notlf.lnmycase)youlosej'C)urkeys,allyouhavetodolsclap
your hand and, If your keys are within 10 feet of you, the thlngplaya a llttle 80IJ6. ·
Can life-taking eve
be considered as a
kindness to victim?
Medical science has learned a lot about t>rolonging
life and, in the process, complicated one of society's most
perplexing questions: When is it permissible to
terminate life?
Certainly, there can be no situation in which a law.
abiding culture can permit murder and retain the
personal security necessary for freedom to flourish.
But our society has institutionalized and legalized
several forms oflife-taking. We have endorsed the death
penalty for those citizens -murderen -whose
aberrations arc sufficiently heinous to merit our
unmitigated social wrath. We also permit the execution
of traitors, though we haven't killed an¥onc for
espionage since the Rosen bergs -at least, not in public.
We have legalized abortion, though it is perhaps the
most controversial provision of our entire body oflaw.
We allow the taking of a life when it can be clearly shown
that the deadly act was committed in self defense. And,
of course, there is war.
But we cannot rationalize the killing of a person who
wants to die but cannot commit suicide. Our inability to
accept euthanasia has made murderen out of some who
truly killed out of kindness and suicide victims out of
others. ~
A Aorida man, Roswell Gilbert, 76, killed bis wife
in March. He says she was suffering from Alzheimer's
disease and begged him to let her die. He was convicted
of first degree murder in May and sentenced to 25 years
in prison.
Last week, Reid Logan, 78, of El Toro, called (><>lice
to tell them he had just killed his wife and was going to
kill himself. Police investigating the murder-suicide
determined that Logan killed his 78-year-old wife Edith
to fulfill a pact they had made. Her mmd was crippled by
Alzheimer's disease and his body was damaged by two
heart attacks. He could no longer care for her and she
would rather die than go into a nursing home.
Could these tragedies have ended better? ls it
pbssible to allow people to choose their own time and
own way of dying Without creating a lawless society?
Does the acceptance of death as an elective procedure
imply a social disregard for the inherent value of life?
Novelist Kurt Vonnegut conjured images of a
society in which places called ethical suicide parlors were
as commonplace as hospitals. With people living longer
-and sometimes desrrately dismal -lives, are such
institutions inevitable.
Can organized r~ligions .ever aC£Cpt a c~nccpt so
contrary to the belief m the Will ~f? higher ~mg?
By accepting death as a rea11st1c alternative to pain
and suffering, do we undermine the strength and
resiliency of the human sfirit, that quality we have
cherished as the will to live.
Longer life has presented us with a moral dilemma
that when resolved, will be used forever as an indicator
of the kind of world we Ii ved in, in the latter half of the
20th Century. .
Opinion• expr..aed In thl• apace are thoee of the Dally Piiot. Other v1ew1
exprNMd on thl• page are thOM of tl*r author• and artl1t1. Reader
comment 11 Invited. The Dally Piiot. PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92828. Phone
&42~8088.
'
LETTERS
~LIPS,
'{OUR HAtR,
o~, DARLlN~. YouR ... UM ..
0\.000Y ume
~os ...
Loseyourkeys?Clapyour
hilnds and they'll answer
But better explain
the whole thing to
your spouse first
1 ran acros$ an ad for a marvelous
pdaet that appeals very highly to the
pdset treak in me, and could be quite
useful as well. The lhina is a ljttle sort
of electronic watch fob you attach tn
your keys.
When (not if. in my case) you lo~
your keys, all you have to do is clap
your hands and, if your keys are
within IOfeetofyou, the thing plays a
little song. That sounds truly great to
me. All you have to do is track the
keys down by following the sound of
the music. The ad didn't say what
song the thing plays, but I suspect it
must be I.he "Ha!Jelujah Chorus.··
I sent off for one. Actually. as many
things as I lose each day I probably
shouJd have sent off for five or six.
After the order was in the mail, I sat
down and began to think about the
ram1ficauons of my acuon. Take a
little tnp with me into the land of
1maaination ...
Shuffic, shuffle, CLAP!
Shuffle, shuffle. shuffle. shuffle.
CLAP!
Shuffle, CLAP!
Ann looks at me and says "Why arc
you doing that?"
"Why am I doing what?"
"Shuffiing and clapping." ,
"Well, I'm shuffi1ng because I'm
wcanng my rubber flip-flops and rm
clapping because fve lost m.Y keys."
"But, you're aJways losing your
keys Surely, you don't feel that that
event 1s wonhy of applause? You
never clap for me when I find them
for you. Nor. for that matter. when I
BILL
HARVEY
find your wallet, your readina &lasses
"r r,our checkbook.."
' No, no, you don't understand. If J
wander around the house and clap my
hands, my keys will hear me and sing
a little sons to tell me where they are.
Then, we'll have a quiet little reunion,
and I'll be very careful not to lose
them apin."
"Have you been into I.he rum? ..
"No. L11ten, this ts the 1ospel truth.
Wben I find my keys, I'll prove it to
you."
She very quietly edaes over to the
telephone. P.ick.s it up and dials thru
numbers.· Hello, 91 l? This is Mn.
Harvey ... Yei, qain ... do you think
you could send over those nice i:nen
with the whttc coats and the nets?
If Fred and Joe are on duty, they
know the address. and he seems to
hke them ... Well, this tjme he said that
if he applaudJ, his keys sing to him.
Pretty bizarre. even for him. Maybe
he's been watchma too much TY.
Thanks. I'll keep him busy until they
get here. I'll taJk to you again soon."
Ifl managed to find my keys,, I'd be
able to prove the whole thtnJ and
reestablish my credibthty; but tf not,
fd be in deep trouble. I don't think rd
be able to convince Ann that she
should walk around the house clap-
ping her hands and listening for
music while I go off with Fred and
Joe.
Wb1le I feel the whole concept 11
aood. I can foresee at least one
problem. Assume that thu th.101
really catches on, and everybody acts
one.
Now, assume that you're at your
local opera house, and have just teen
a presentation of the Barber of
Seville-. It was 1 marvelous per-
fonnancc, and the audience respondl
with wild applause. As soon u the
appplause dies, all of the keys in iM
place break into a perfectly. l)'J\cbron-
tzed ind harmonious rendition of the
Hallelujah Chorus.
WouJd the human mua1cians feel
compelled to applaud the keyi' rendi-
tion? If they did. the keys would only
do the whole thina all over apin, and
the entire voup mi&bt be trapped
tbett all ni&ht. Pro6ably the only
solution would be.to locate your key's
tiny electronic can and stuff th.tm
with conon before you went any-
where you .could reasonably be c.x-
pccted to applaud. Either that. or Pl
the little loudmouths.
Another qaation that baa occurred
to me is: Do they_ keep track of the
number of claps? If you clap once, and
they sing once, do they sin& I 0 times lf
you clap I 0 times?
Would the slap offeet on pavement
set them off as well? If so, Joaen
could forget about carryina those
httlc radios with them.
J can think of some other appli-
cations for variations of this pdaet.
For example, suppose you slap at a
mosquito. If you connect, II would
play a victory march and. 1f you
missed, it would emit a Bronx cheer.
What the heck. I'm aoina to order
10 more. l'IJ put five oflhcm on each
side of my hvma room and 1f m)
stereo breaks down. I'll applaud.
CoIIUDll11t BW lluvey Uve1 1JJ
Bu~Bud.
Heartfelt thanks of AFS L r·.c. •th . t. travelers to people of NB OSS 0 181 ln OUT na lOn
To the Editor· .\big"thankyou"tothe commit· ~uels ap~neasemen t efforts As I try to fi1od some suitable words tee that organized the actt v1t1c~ 1 ~ ,t-'
to express my thanks to the very dunngour stay in Newpon, and to the
wonderful people of NeWJ?On Beach chapter for paying our way into
for the warmth and affection shown Disneyland.
to me and the 34 AFS exchange A very special ~'thank you" to all stu~ents of (Arizona) Bus No. 18 the wonderful people who gave so
dunng our unforg~ttable, most much of themselves during all hours
trcasurable and ,happ1es.t ever three-of the day:
day stay here, Im n:mmded of the .. My most heartfelt thanks to Mr.
words of Shakespeare. and Mrs Oeding and family for
"Thanks, and thanks and ever opening y~ur home with open arms to thanks. Of\ such good turns are M God bl shuffied off with uncurrcnt -pay, but me (bus chaperone). ay css
were my worth as 1s my consc1ence you aJI.
firm, I should find better dealing." I conclude by ~sm~ the words of
Yes, I wish I could express my Shapespeare again: Farewell, ~or
thanks in a more tanaible way than ever and ever ... If we shall meet ~in.
JUst mere words. why we shall sm1le. lfnot, this ~rung
My thanks go to the community was well made." , ..... -
chapter president forthtconcem and RAY SANC HEZ. AFS BUS
courtesies extended to u . Thanks to ~CHAPERONE
the f~mily memben of Newpon for AND 34 EXCHANC1E STUDENT
housing and befriend1n1 us. Yuma. Anz.
Getting the point of it all
A. Can only repon that a California
stockman named Richard E. Ayres
holds a p1tent on fiberaJas'J cattle
horns that can be strapped to the
headi of rodeo animals.
'" tlci to the first model, .. Slld the onainal Henry Ford. Th11 wasn't
about can. He said it to explain htS
ICiCl'et for happy mamqc.
ORANGE COAST
D1ilyPilat
O. Why did the lawmaken in
Mobile, Ala., make it illcpl to wear
htah heels on that city'' trccts?
A. To keep women in hiah heels
from sujna the city if they fell
The sun 11 le\Uflj mailer. It's lost
about lSO mtles of radius in the last
balf century.
L.M. B•Td 11 1 tT8dlc1ted
coJIUIW1t.
\
..... • lllO
Explains reason for former Soviet critic
George·Kennan's switch to apologist -
The Journal Policy Review bas
perfonned a public service by pnnt·
ing an an1clc in the summer issue
analyzing the ambivalent statements
of one of the most influenttal intellec·
tuals of our time, George Kennan.
Profes~r Paul Hollander of the
Un1venit)r: of Massachusetts does a
long-needed task of collecting some of
Kennan's 'more outrageous remarks.
Hollander asks, "What changed I.he
United Stites' premier
K.rtmljnoloaist from critic of the
Soviet Union, when he wrote his 'Mr x· arucle ID Foreian Affairs 1n 194 7.
to apolQlist for the Soviet Union
today?"
Professor HoUander's percepuve
question deserves continuing dts-
cus ion ind debate because Kennan
was the theoretician of the policies of
unilateral nuclear disannamcnt car-
ried out by Defense Secretary Robert.
McNamara ftom 1961 to 1968. ru
aivc myanswcrand suu~t that other
studcnu of Kcnnan1sm do their own
probing.
George Kennan and a handful of
othen in the establishment elite ~re
chanacd dramatically by the Soviets'
launci'.ina of Sputnik. which the
whole world saw on Oct. 4. 19S7.
followed by the Gaither Repon which
was compteted one month later. bu•
wu classified "Top Secret" for 1 S
~art while us k.cy portions ~re
tclttttvely le.aked to &f'OUJ>S such as
I.he Counc:d on Fomp Relations and
()nl Eaton•• ''Pup<ub" taentisu
The lcaUd paru f ottc&St \be b.or--
ttndous speaer or a n~
Sov1tl Union and tbcn painttd a
picturt of blac despair or our abilaty
to build the 1trtnath 1\CClCll&I)' to
mttl'that threat. h convinced &bmc
who read 1t that. in a 10l\J"f\JD arms
rvt, tbe Unned tates could not
compete successfully with the h1ghJy
disciplined Soviets. who had the
advantage of a dictatorial aovem·
m~c Gaither Report inJcctcd the~
ehte intell~tuals wtth a paralyzmg
dread of death by nuclear t0cinera-
t1on They concluded that acx:ommo-
dat1on of the Sovtcts, even pre-
cmpuvc surrender. was the only way
to avoid thts fate, and that they must
never permit patnollc Amencan
ciuzens to thwart their plans.
By 19S9 Kennin had SWted tus
program of companna the Uruted
States wttb the Soviet Umon 10 such a
way as always to downarade our side
end uparade the communist stde To
achieve tlus objective, be dtdn't
hesitate to read Ood's mind, declar-
ina. "We must concede the pou1b1lity
that there miJht be 50mc atus
involved in this cold war which a
divine power could oontem{>late only
with a sense of/tty and d111ust for
both panics, an others in which he
miaht even cons.ider UJ Wl'Or\I." fn October l9S9, Kennan shared
his lou of faith tn Amcnca with the
Women's NanonaJ Dcmocntic Club.
His pec:ch revealed his ditda1n for
U.S. institution and his dcfcausm in
the face o( the Sovitt threat
"lf you ask me," Kennan wd.
"whether a country 10 the state this
country 11 in today -with no hi&hty
developed ICnJC ofnatM>nal purpotc,
wt th the ovef"hcln)ina acc:cnt of hfe
on penonal comfort and amutemcnt.
with a ckarth of public lervi~.and a wfeit of privately tola ~try. Wlth
a chaotic uanspona.boa wtth
an educational mtc:m wheft quality tw beca Qtcnsavtl)' .cnfk'ed to
quantity -if you a me -bc1.bcr
such a country has, over the lo ND, aood chances· of compcuq ttfltb a
purpo1eful. serious and dnciptincd _____ ,
PHYLLIS
ScHLAFLV
soc1ety such as that of the Sovtet
Union, [ mull say th1t the 1nswer 1s
'no: ..
In February 1965, Kennan shared
his loss of hop( 1n the future wtth a
New York. audience of 2.000 UI these
words ··1 plead for ~mcthmg tt-
sembltna a new act of fa1th 1n the
ulumatc human1t) and sobntl) of tht
people on the other s1de Our le
hope hes tn the poss1b1ht) thlt lht
advenary. too, has leamtd some-
th1n, from the stenhty of past
conflict. that some rehancc can be pla~. 1n the a~ustment of mutual
differences. on his readiness to ab1-
ta1n, voluntarily and tn self-tntettst.
from I.he wildest and most senscll!\s
acts of physical dcstNcuon If th!\
poss1bthty fails us, wt have httlc to
fall back on."
Herc is a chief atctu\CC1 of the pre-
Reapn forcif,n policy pleadint for an
"act of faith ' m the "bumaruty" of
the Sovieu., who ha~ proved time
and apin. from K.atyn Fottst to
Budape t to A(lbant~tan, that the)
have no humanity, and tdbnt u~ that
"our sole hope" tn the funm bes (not
10 our own ablhu but) 1n lbc
wtlhn&ne of the SoYl u to .. at.
ta1n .. from usina the -apons they
have bwlt.
The answer to tbt profcuor'a
question about ~by Kennan chau:;d
is that be 11 a man without faith in
America or bOPI in the future, and IO ~ has let a cloU of sr itola him bom rulhy. Fonunatcly. no-
bod)· impottant ll Us tna to hun
Ufm!)Te..
l'tlUll Sdwtl .. • •TMke'*'
~ ......
JacK
AltEISOI
.mdOAll VANAllA
Quarrel
hampers
research.
on AIDS
French claim part ·
of credit, royalties
for screening test
WASHINGTON -French med1·
cal otlic:ials have accused the United
Statet of 1tealina their re1earch for a
blood teat ulCd to screen pauents for
AIDS, the fri&ht.enina virus that h11
stricken actor Rock Hudson and
killed more than 6,000 people since 1t
WU fint detected four yean llO
Tbe chspute about who should &C't
credit for the blood test bu been
sunmerina beneath the surface, ap.
parently bnnJina to a standstiit
cooperation between French and
American 1C1entuU searchm& for a
cure for AIDS. That miaht e~plain
wby Hudson bad to Oy to Pans for
treatment. and why that same treat·
ment wun't ava.tlable bett.
The feud bu pitted the French
Puteu.r Institute ap.tnst the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Scrvicet, and now Pasteur offietals
have quietly threatened to take the
United Stat.es to coun 1f us demands
for recosnition -and royalty riabu -aren •t met.
The details are C:Ontalned 1D a senes
of Health and Human Services
memos. seen by OW' associate Corley
Johnson.
Retearcb by docton 10 both France
and the Uruted St.ales led to the
identification of the AIDS vuus. the
first step 10 finding a cure Dr Robert Oall~L of the Nanonal lnstttutes of
Realm, and the Pasteur lnsutute'5
Dr. Luc Montqruer arc credited with ·
discovenes that led to the 1solanon of
the vtrUS.
An AIDS blood-teSt lut went on lbt
market in March. But wblle Gallo's
aame wu oa tbe U.S. patent Mon-
~1er's was left off. ~nd wnh 11
million lats a.I.read> sold -some ol
those in France -ro,aJucs h.tH·
netted the Uruted St.ates 11 5 mtlhon
France hasn't earned a franc from the
U.S.-made test kit.
That led to an &ngr} lc.-ttc.-r <.c.-nl July
4 from the Pasteur Insutute to Health
and Human Serv1cc.-s Secrttar)
Margaret Heckler. protesting thr
patent &JVCn to Gallo and the l\n·
tional lnsututes of Health
"The French att cla1m1ng the~
were the true m"cntors -not Dr
Gallo, and that he got the ncces~r)
mfonnauon for the 1nvcnuon from
I.he Pasteur Institute dunna col·
laborauve effons between the In-
stitute and NIH." U.S. officials v.rote
mone memo
Gallo c:alled the French allepuons
"outrqe<>u~" and said that the
French have been unable to adequate·
I) reproduce the AIDS '1rus And
accordina to one government memo
other U S researchers ha\e charJed
the French wtth rcfu\1ng to sharY
ccrtatn .\IDS mfonnauon, then
sccrctly fihng for thcu ov. n te\t patt"nt
in Europe
But at an Aug 6 meeting betwC'Cn
U.S. and Pasteur Institute offk1al\
the French presented two documt"nh
supporung I.heir claims One wu a
report by Montagn1cr th11t v.as given
to Gallo a )Car ?xforc his patent wa'
filed. The other was a rc.-ce1p1 s1aned
by a National Institutes of Health
doctor for a sample of '\ID '1ru'
sent to the L nittd State\ b' thr
French
At the mccu ng. the French \C't ,
one-month deadline for the l S tt
meet three demands· full rtt<>1n11101
that Montqruer 11 the true 1n,cntor
a cut ofaJI past and futu~ ro}ah1e\ for
the Pastcur Institute. and a nev.
patent with both doctors· names on n
If the ultimatums are not met ont
memo warns. the Frtnch v.111 sue on
the arounds of "depnvat1on, or 8
pol11t wa) of cl11m1ng theft "
Thatapparentl~ doe\n'\ wom L ~
offietals, "'ho be he vc the)' can rt fut<
the chaJ'se 8ut the~ arc concerned
about the rcpereun1on~ of,uch • s.-11.
1ncludin1 the pos 1b1ltt~ of a "cla '
acuon by AJDS v1cums "
"Rcaardle1softhe French motJvt "
one official wrote, theu "oral denuipd
deserves the d~amt) of an <nl
re poJ\IC thcrcb) avo1din1 an} bo•·
1n1-1n elrcct contemplated by the
French."
Footnote Gallo calls the rumon ot
a 1Ctennfk feud "poppvcocl ," and
ms1st that reK.trehen around th<'
wor1d are cooperauna on a curc for
~'8AnER THE OOME: <..:onam~
bas sun1~ed bomb threat tem>rut
and Sen J0c Mc:Cvth). hu1 n ma
have finally met us match
cockr'olc~\. -.ftrr a number of
coqrcumen complained thnr of.
&a •"m bei takca over
roKbcs, the l4nporth Hou Of'RC(
Buildi -in danaer or becomi
Wuhifll10D's nt-west luxury "
bo r· -\hut do n
fumjpted. Md...,.,.,.. ul IMlt V• A
U'f qMblefl .,.,.. ......
...
Al Orenge Cout DAILY PILOT /Monday, August 19, 1088
'Kid movies' put Hughes on top
By 808 THOMAS ·-···· ............. Wle&nny knaek tor m1n1n1 lht youth olTice masbn all. Ke has wrineo and
markeL direct~ "16 Candles, .. "The Break·
John Hushes" the man who wrote fut Club" and this montb'a Univer· LOS ANGELES -The most m-"Nauonal Lampoon·s Vacauon," saJ releue ••weint Science.•• Ob-
demand filmmaker of the moment is "Mr. Mom" and "National Lam-v1ously be ls doina somethina !\lbl
a 3S-year-old former d writerwtthan n's European Vacation," box· At his Paramount studio office the ~miliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil other day. K uahes was alowina about the~ for "European Vacation"
-1 auess a lot of people in the
country wanted to sec that family
aaaan" -and awaitina the rcact.100 to .. Weird Science."
.. .. "****'Real Genius' is a genuine comic
gem and a jolly 2ood time:'
-Mlkt 01Jfk, USA TODAY
Meanwhile he had just fini&hcd
production of"~tty in Pink." which
he wrote and produced. And be was
P.reparina to direct his script of
'Ferris Buehllcr·1 Day Ofl" atarrina
Matthew Broderick.. The new movie
1s the flip side of his somber "The
Breakfast Club," he explained: "A
story of the absolute joy of beina
youna."
With bis ol~fasbioncd glasses and
bland face, John Hu&)les looks like
the campus brain, except for the liaht
brown hair that cascades down the
back of bis neck. Although bis
comcdlcs are filled with wild situ· -------------.----------------1 ations, be seems downri&ht sedate, 1f
Liff IS A 0£~H
HN ANDY• Kll''HARD CR.!NNA
A _~OU!"f J'!C!U.~'J
•Bllll
Mann Brea Plaza
529·5339
*COSTA MESA
Edwards So Coast
Plaza 5'0-271 1
*EL TORO
Edwards Saddteback
581 5880
MISSION VIEJO
towards VteJO TWln
830 6990
*NEWPORT BEACH
Edwards Newpon
Cinema 644 CflflJ
*ORANGE
Cinedome
634 2553
~
Stadium OrtVe In
639 8T10
*WESTMINSTER
Edwards Cinema
West 891 3935
v WESTMINSTER
Pi!Ktflc s H1 Way 39
Or In 891 3693
"O,As.su ACC(PT(l
, .. nt~ lloGN.f.l,lf "'
not square.
"I aucss my pictures reflect my
Midwestern sensitivities," be said.
"I'm just a straight old Illinois boy."
He ~w up in a Chicqo suburb as
··a nonnaJ ·s0s kid" in a family that
didn't have a television set until be
was 13. "Read a book," he was told by
bis parents. They also thought it
senseless for a boy to sit in a dark
theater on a bright summer's day.
"The only movies I saw as a child
were by Walt Disney and David
Lean," he remarked.
Hughes went from the University
of Illinois to the ad business, writing
free-lance articles at ni.aht. In 1979 he
quit the agency to wor\ for National
I..ampoon, which was booming into
films on the strength of "Animal
House." His first movie script was a
disaster -"National Lam~n's
Oass Reunion." "That tau t me
that I had to retain control o what I
wrote," said H ughcs.
(it PRESENTED IN =---;CXJ;:.;;:;_..~==-==:;-'I )
"'Pl~nted .nCone·•·
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edwards MISSION VIEJO MALL 495·6220
SD rw. ·-1.A()WN ;A_.!• Bt'W[[lloA(.5.,:,0..,c \ •H·
............ ftll
"llCITI fllm"INI ........... ........
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The amuina lrint of hits fol-
lowed, all arounded in the sensibility
of that .. normal kid."
"I love the Amencan family. I love
writinJ about ordinary people. 1 find
thete lS l ateat deaJ Of humor ID the
commonplace," Hu~es llid. "Take
I rquJaraituation wtth rtaulat people
who have rqular lhou.ahts, then aave
it a twist. That's my idea of comedy.
"J love Nonnan Rockwell. Every-
onccan relate to his paintinas because
he relates to the life that we all know.
Wbeo I was yo31 admi.rtd Picasso,
Braque, Kamin and Miro, but in
my late 20s I ized that Norman
Rockwell i art, too. He created a
fabulous record of American life.
"I have discovered that the thin~
people lau&h hardest about in their
own lives a.re private jokes. My
method i1 to take commonplace
thinp and tum them into bi& inside
jokes that everyone can eltjoy."
Unlike some comedy directors who
like to lC$t their films before au·
dienocs, Hu&hes 1s "not a big preview
man.•• He prefers to trust bis own
instincts. but be usually bas a preview
in the San Fernando Valley. "That's
about as American as any place,
tbou&h a little bit ahead of the rest of
the country," he said.
Moneytalb
Patrick llcOlnnla Oi118 Lenore S~me on the M>urce of her
cub wtn4fall ln '"~nryth.lni ln the Garden" at the Irvine
Com.manlty Theater. Pinal i)erformancea are Friday and
8ata.rc1ay at 8 p .m. at Turtle Rock Community Park with
ticket l.Dformation a..Uable at 857-51'98.
For LA, 'Tamara' is another play
By JACKIE HYMAN an elaborate decor and has a top ticket ,.ttie........,..,,,_ price of $75 -and a maximum
LOS ANGELES -At first u audience of 125 per perfonnancc.
sounded like a gimmick - a play The story tsset in 1927 !nan lta.lt~n
performed in a house, with scenes villa and deals with passion. pohtacs
taking place in various rooms at the and death. AmonJ the actors who
same time and members of the have performed in 1t arc Karen Black,
audience dashin& up and down stairs Anjelica Huston and Theresa
following the actor of their cbo1cc. Saldana. J
But "Tamara," a mystery-drama There arc often more celebrlttes 1n
that opened in May 1984 in a three-the audience than in the play Such
story converted Amencan l..qion stars as Gregory Peck and Arnold
ball in Hollywood, bas proved a Schwan.cne&$er have raced up and
critical and financial success. down the sta1rs along wnh everyone
"The LA production has just gone else.
through the roof, .. said co-producer There've been six awards from the
Barrie Wexler. "We're doing 100 Los Angeles Drama Cnt1cs' Circle,
percent sold-out business in the dog and wnteups in Newsweek and
days of summer." People.
He said Mayor Tom Bradley had Now a second producuon of
agreed to proclaim Aug. 13 as "Tamara" is (>lanned for New York,
"'tamara Day" in honor of the show's possibly openmg by ea.rly November,
SOOth perfonnance. and a Londaon opening -in con-
" A one-year run in LA is like a junction with producer Michael
three-year hit run in New York," White -is contemplated for the
Wexler said. "Word of mouth spring of 1986.
reached critical mass.~ "We have had a tremendous flurry
The play by John K.rizanc w~s of inquiries, people wanting to \)Ut
staged originally on a smaller scale 10 down option money, from Mexico
Toronto. In Los Angeles, it features City, San Francisco, Dallas, from
lUXU'tl' JHfATalS
Fnt Two Miii-Sllewiefs * OllL Y 12.15 U111eA lltt.tl
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Paris one from Hungary, and one
from' Cocoanul Grove in M1am1."
Wexler said.
In New York, Wexler said he'5
taken an option on a locataon, the
landmark Seventh Regiment Armory
on Park A venue and 68th.
Some members of the Los Angeles
cast are expected to join tbe New
York producuon, Wexler s.atd. in-
cluding Marilyn Ligbtstooe and An·
Jehca Huston, who plays the utle role
of Pohsh painter Tamara de Lcm-
p1cka. She also is featured in the
movie ··pnzz1's Honor."
The onl y anticipated changes in the
play wlll be to adapt 1t 10 ••tbe tntenor
geography" of the facility, Wexler
said.
The top ticket price will probably
be about SI 00, which, as tn Los
Angeles, will include champagne and
a lilht supper.
Wexler's co-producer, Moses
Znaimer. also is in volved in a new
production expected to open in
Toronto in mid-August. called ··A
Tour of the Uni verse."
"This is not a play. It 1s another
interactive venture," Wexler said. He
said the audience will enter a space-
port, be loaded into a space shuttle
simulator and travel around the solar
system.
"It's quite different from 'Tamara'
but bears a close first-cousin rcla-
t1onsh1p.'' he sa1d. "Our belief 1s in
the '80s and ·90s audiences will want
environments in which they can
part1c1pa1e and play."
Another future project 1s a part1c1-
palory program for commencal tele-
v1S1on. but Wexler said 1t was too
earlv for him to release any details.
"The most entertaininl(
movie this Summer."
I \ ·\ fl llH \, \11~rl lu1~
. PEl·WEE HERMAN .. ~
P1E-WflJ t•G
AIVl~TURI
STMIUI o. ...
1»·1770
•-.a
UAMOWS 4
Ho-4021
~T
EDWMDSR To.<>
Sll·'500 ......
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551·0'55
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11.l'NA PMll O..lf Ut1C f AS*ll SQUAii(
121·4070 (213) "1·11133
....UP&ll ...........
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'5%-4993 l30-6HO
....u•u .........
EDWMDS HAltlD TWiii ~
631·3501 H4-2SS3
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EDWMOS TOWN COOD EDWMDS Ct1MA WCST
751-41,. n1.3935
.,. ... 1111 • Ml.IT ll1IQ
Tom Hanks and john Candy
are buildin1 a bridp
between two eulwres ...
even If no one wants it.
-
I-
Ori• Co DAILY PILOTIM ond , August 19, 1985 A8
COMPLETE NYSE COllPOllTE TRANIACTIONI, A10
/
B-1 parts may be made in county
Governor picks Irvine
nian for state board
Rockwel~ s Anaheim plant may build
electronics system for the B-1 bomber
From 11aff and wire reporia
One of Rockwell lntemat1onal
Corp.'s Oranae County-based
divisions may benefit from the $8
b1lhon B-l bomber contract awarded
to Rockwell last week.
However, 1(the contract 1s awarded
to the Anahfm division, It 1 not
expected to ~ult m the h1nng of
a4d1t1onal employees, Rockwell
spokesman Tony Longo satd. The·
Chet Van P'~, left, and Pete Petenon .
systems can be built by 1he ex1stini
workforce, he said.
The Air Force, movU\a to complete
the conaress1onally authonicd
purchase of 100 B-1 bombers,
awarded the corporation an $8 b1lhon
contract for 82 of 1he giant bomber
airframes.
The Au1onet1c' Strategic System
d1vmon of Rockwell's Defeo~ Elec·
tron1c Operations m Anaheim will
be b1dd1ng to provide electronic
systems for the bombers. Rockwell
spokesman Lonao said. The
Anaheim d1v1sion built the systems
for the fint 8-1 bombers produced by
Rockwell ·
The product$ include instruments
panels for the cockpit and aft station.
Althouah the clectrontcs systems an
built m Anaheim, the bomben them·
selves art assembled m Palmdale.
Ra~ L. Price oflrvtne's Ptrtdl&D Groap landteape an:hnects and
planners has been •PPotnted to the Callforala S&.ak a.ant of
Ludlcape A..rdltec11 by c.,._ Geora• l>nk.meJLu. Tb~ board ~lllates State ltccnsure and ~Orte$ reJUllttOns o( the prOfC'JSiOn. A
Architectural co1npany .
announces na1ne change
Van Fossen & Partners Architec-
ture has become Van Fossen &
Peterson Archltectsto reflect the part-
nership between Chet Van Fossen.
president, and Pete Peterson, partner
in charge of design.
The pair have more than 20 years of
experience in the architectural field,
working on pro1ects ranging from a
Van Nuys shopping center to a
remodeling proJect at the Orange
County Courthouse in Santa Ana and
res1dent1al communities throughout
Orange County. • • •
Care Enterpnscs in Laguna H11Js
announced that revenues for the
quarter ended June 30 were $60 9
m1lhon, an tncicase of 80 percent
over the $33.8 million reported a }cat
ago for the same Quarter.
Net earnings for the second quarter
increased by 16 percent to $953.000.
or J 7 cents per share, from $823.000,
or IS cents per share, for the same
penod last year.
Boyd W. Hendnckson, president
and chief operating officer of Care,
stated "the mcrease 1n operating'
f'CSUltS IS pnmanly attnbutable to
~provements in revenues due to
increased pauent days. number of
beds operated and h1~er Medicare
reimbursement and pnvate pay rates
Care Enterprises 1s the fourth
largest pubhcly owned operator of
skilled and intermediate nurs10g care
fac1lmes. Care operates 12.831 beds
in I:! I fac1ht1es in Cahfom1a. Utah.
Ohio. West V1rgin1a. Anzona. Mon-
tana and Ne\\ Me\ICO, and has no
beds under construcuon.
In addition to be1n$ a nattonal
provider of rehab1htauve services,
Care operates 10 home health care
centers and six pharmacies . • • • Charlton Ass0C1ates, an lrvtne
ngid disk manufacturer, bas signed a
SI 0 million supply agreement with
two major d1sk-dnve manufacturers,
Computer Memones Inc .. and Ol-
1vetti.
OTC UPs & OowNs
NEW YORI<. (AP) -The following llst st10w1 tne Over • lhe • Counter
stock1 and warr1nt1 1~1 have gone up lhe mosl and down I most bued on pereer11 of ~nge for rldaiv No securities lradlno below n or 1000 11'\arH art Included. Ntl encl percenlaQt cnenoe1 art Irie d~I~ belwten lhe 1>revlous Clos no
orlce and Frldaiv''u']!f or bid Pf'lce.
~ Mii~'= La&:i. I'" Up Pel ~ Vlvl~n •,; VJ Up ~11Sys Vt ~ Up .
• turSal " lh UP .B alePOwer 112 Up . lecrafl I 11'1 UP • n 1sv \j, UP •
I CPI s 2'h S-1 UP .
PRICE ALSTADT SPAIN
pnnc1pal wtth Pend1an. Pnce serves on the advtsory board of the UC
Irvine extension program and the Newport Beac~ Eavlrollmeatal
Natare Center. • • • John AJtatadt hM Joined the rcglonal public accounting finn of
Parke, Guptill & Co. of West Covina as a supervisor. He ts a former
senior accountant for J .W. Ste1aJJ CPA & AHoclates of Costa Mesa.
and formerl) worked with Stegall, Parke 6 GaptiU of Newport
Beach. • • • WUUam Spalll has been named nonhcastem regional sales
manager for the dlstnbuted systems d1vts1on ofCIE Sptems, IDc. of
Irvine. Doaa Hallam has been appointed to manage field and
customer serv1~ for the dlVts1oo 's line of IBM plug-in compatible
replacement producu pain wtll be based at the company's rCgJonal
HALLAM FLEMING BERTOLET
sates office in Pro" 1dence. R J Hallam 1s an If'\ me res1dent who wtJI
be based at the finn's In-me site • • •
David FlemlD& of Costa Mesa has been named national sales
manaier for Santa Ana-based Aslcs Ti1er Cofll., which manufactures
athlellc shoes and apparel Acmmg 1s a former collegiate runner and
worked in track and field promotions for Nlte before JOuung T tger as
nanonal accounts and promotions manager • • •
Joan BerlOlet has benn named markeuog man.ager at the J M
Peters Co 10 Newport BcAch, ac:cordina to Job T. MartlD. vice
president ofs.ales and marketing Before J01n10g Peters. Bcrtolet had
been "'cc prc-s1dent of markcung for Cnsmar Homt'S m Santa
Monica. The Readmg.. Pa.. native graduated from Bud.nell
Un1vers1t\'. She 1s a member of the Sales and Mar~eung Council of
the Building Industry Association and belongs to the Amencan
<\ssociauon ofUn1vers1ty Women
11 IPL S~lems 211'11 11• UP J • 10 Gemlec P 4''• 1"1 UP l
12 illver .IJco fl• 'h UP • ·---------------------13 (r1t~Trne!~" 11 '~ s-i: 8~ I .
11l ~~" 111ill 1:!£ ~~ l1 1 General Motors cuts
9 O.kHlll l~ ~ Up 1 j.! ~ \pltGLrnrc J 1·16 S·l6 UP 1 • i t t t 7 70/
H ar:r~ciciG~'~ls 2~ 8: lU B teres ra es 0 • 70
Namt L•$1 ~ha
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NYSE UPs & OowNs
By JOHN CUN~1FF
Al .__..._ Mlil)'91
:-0.E\\ \ORK (.\Pl -In a marlet
v. here .phrases SY€h as "lov.est pnce'i
1n town" and ··til'.tge discounts" float
from balloons and fl} from banners
General Motors has come up wuh the
real thing - a genume bargain
A.s most automobile bu\e~ knov.
real bargains are ranues in an\
market. no matter hov. hard the ~lier
shouts In fact. the harder a merchant
shouts. 11 seems. the less hleh 1~ the
customer to get a good deal
However. a 1 7 peretn1 1ntere~t
rate. which GM nov. offers ~"'In man\
1985 car\. ad,ert1ses 11~lf loud!\.
clearl) and cred1bl). espec1all~ when
some rates are double that. and v. here
bank card users ma} pa) clo~ w ~ll
~rcent on short-term debt
Consumer!> tod.a) are acutel' a"arc
ol 1ntr-rest rate . and the~ rYJ t
strong!' to an) changes Tht'\. lno'<'
that a point hert and a point tht're
soon adds up 10 mort dollar\ than
there are' 1n the budaet
o\sl housing ~ople "ho almost
staned to death when mortgage rate'
reached the upper teens a fe" )car·~
ago. con' inctna m1lhons ol v.ould-~
bu\W that a new roof au~r their
heads "a" less important th•n •'~lid ·
1ng banlruptc'
In ta\ t t\ er since tt -..as lt'arned h'
hard t'\fl('nence. that tntere't ra1e'
could reach into the double dlj.lt?. tht·
.\mem~n public bas probisbh ~n
more 1ntere~ted 1n financ1na rn\h
than ticket pnces The" lnov. for
eumple. that "'h•le s~ 5 a month
m1ghtn"t seem lrke much. tt amount\
to S 1.100 1n fou r years
fhe} are equallv •"arc. of course.
that when intertst ratec, att cut h' a
s1m1lar amount that the '8"1n1 will
be 1denucal. and for hou~holds
OPE
spending do~ to their budget hmu
ttial c'1n sound hke a raise from the
bo'>S
ln tact. for the median household
earning less than S30.000 a year and
II\ 1ng at the hm1t of 1t.s income. a
U\ 1ng or a raise of that SIU 1s
<.ub~tanttal GM sa' s 1t Wiii do better.
.t'eraging S 1.550 to S2.:!50 a "etuclc.
Because of this -and 0£ course
because oi a large compan.b 's ab1ht}
to borrov. ai better rates than are
a' a.table to consumers -in-hou!oe'
financing has ~oml' a more import-
ant factor in the markets
Of the SI 7l 6 b1llton ofautomob1k
cre-<111 outstanding last year S54 6
b1ll1on wa'> held b' finance com-
panies. most of them affiliated Wlth
cannalers Few pnvate finance com·
pan1es can or apparent!) v.1sh to
compete for such loans
Thal S54 6 b1lhon figure 1s almost
double that ofl 980. 1n spite ot the faci
th;u commercul.I b&.nls. in hne With
tht'1r easier mone) pohc1es. hav~
grov.n 1nC'reas1ngh act1,e in the field
lntt"rest rates. that 1s. hAve become
J m.arleting tool. and General Moton
h1,pe1i to ust them to mo\C 1ts
n' ntof'\ of I 9 ~ cus and cleu the "a' tor the tntroductton of newa
modt"I'
He"' .-.cn"tl"f' .\mencan'i arc ta
1ntc.-1 '' rate'i will determine how well
< 1 ~1 dor' w1lh Its ne'o' merchandJ\Jfll
tHogram
Rut 1nd11 .. at1on'i -trom housmi,
rcu1ler,, travel compan1e~. the auto-
maktl"\ themsclvt''i -sugeir.t the
:-cc,ponsc v..·tll be Mrong
••Dun
FOR L
Call 6·12 4321
to ... ub~rr1tw
Dlily Plllt
Nt'lt ' ·~
CH D1N1 ER
Mondn 1hru Fridav
l l A. t to 9 P ~ .
A • CJS 7· 195l
-
... } .... J -(
lllllY'I GLlllll PlllU
S toc k prices mixed
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnces closed
muted Monday after moving within a narrow
range in very hght trading.
The quiet session extended the market's
recent lackluster performance. which analysts
have attributed to the tlpical summer lull in
trading and to Wall Street s uncertainty about the
economy's course.
"A lot of the so-called potential buyers arc
waiun& around to see what comes out 1n the
economy," said Eldon Gnmm. senior vice
president at Birr, Wilson & Co. ~
Last week the government issued several
reports on the economy for July, but the market
showed httle reaction. Some traders said they
expect t~ same result this week when additional
data. including a repon on the second-quarter
gross nauonal product, are released
Tbe Commerce Pepanment Monday said
personal income rose 0.4 percent 1n July. an
increase in line with economists' expectauons.
WHAT AMEX DID WHAT NYSE Orn
NEW YORK (AP) Auo. 19
'1
9 12
AMEX LEADERS
GoLo QuorE s
METALS QuorEs
NEW YORK (AP) AUO 19
NYSE LEADERS
Dow JoNES AVERAGES
NASDAQ SUMMARY
famou.5 lab<U.s ...
•
lilly Pilat MONDAY. AUGUST 19, 1985
The Mt--ty the t~hMtdlvlalon In tM1tFL R
For the aecond time In• week, McEnroe defNta tendl. n:
Angel stoppers spring leak against A's·
~ f"llot llMtoe 117 111111• ldtw..U
Brian Downin« dlvea back on pickoff attempt (top} and Dick Schofield can""t ta&ndle throw aa Alfredo Griffin ateala.
Dodgers glad to get out of SF
LA' s second loss in row
pares NL West lead to 8
SAN F-RANCISCO (AP) -Ron Rocnicke
and Dan Gladden didn't have revenge on their
minds when they conspired to defeat the Los
Angeles Dodgers, but the two San Francisco
Giants felt good about it just the same.
Rocnicke, who reached the majors throu~
the Dodger sy}tem, walked with two outs m
the bottom of the 10th ofTTom N1edenfuer,
5-4, stole second and scored on Gladden's
sing.le to left for a 2-1 victory Sunday.
ihe loss, the second in a row for the high-
Oying Dodgers, dropped their lead m the
National League West over San Diego and
Cincinnati to eight games.
"I stole on my own," Rocnicke said of his
first stolen base of the season, a theft that made
the winning rally chck. "I had to go with two
outs, or else it would have taken 3-double l{}-
~ore me.
Toda7'•Ge.me
None~uled.
TWtDAY'a GAME
Dad.-• a1 f>tlUadetphla.
Tinw. '4:35 p.m.
TV:C..,.....11.
R8dlo: KA8C (790).
maybe it would have been different. But as a
pinch-hitter, I'm just up to bat and try to get on
base."
Al\er-Roenacke walked on a 3-2 pitch and
stole on a 1-0 deli very, Gladden It ned a 2-0
patch sharply to left for the game-winning
blow. On his previous at bat, Gladden was
strucck on the back by an Orel Hershiser fast
ball.
"I didn't thank he was throwing at me,"
Gladden said. "With the count 2-0. I was JUSt
looking for something fast and up. It's nice to
beat the Dodgers, especially in front of a .big.
erowd.u
and Mike Krukow, but 1t was Mark Davis, 4-7,
who earned the win with two scorelei.!I
innings.
Krukow was touched for an unearned run in
the sixth. thanks to a throwing error by
shortstop Jose Unbe, but Bob Brenly led off
the eighth with his 16th home run. tnggenng
Hershiser's downfall.
With one out Hersh1ser struck Kruckow on
the nght ~nst with a patch The ne).t pitch
plunked Gladden. who started toward the
mound. Plate umpire Frank Pulh warned
Hershiser, bnngmg an automatic SI 00 fine.
"There was no intent on has part ... Krukow
said. "He hu me with a breaking pitch. If you
want to bu a guy, you throw a fastball The ball
JUSt got away from ham ..
Hershiser concurred, blaming the mound.
"'I slipped when I landed on every pitch that
inning.," Hersh1scr said. "I was mad at myself
after Brenley hit a nothing fastball I should
have called the groundscrew out, but I didn't.·· lld•I!!
The Dodgers headed for Phrladelph1a foda}'
and the start of a senes Tuesday night.
All three games with the Phtlltes. Tuesda}.
Bllflpen unable to, fiOldlead as Oakland
squeezes home game-winner in 4-3 win
By CHRIS MONAHAN
~,...C•n ,,,.,.,,
You probably could have gotten
great odds betting on the Arigels nab'
around the sevenl~ inning of their
game agamst Oakland Sunday.
After all, the Ansels had a 3-1 lead
with Al Holland and then Donnie
Moore coming in to pttch, and 1l was down 1 perfect squeeze bun\ to score
Sunday, a day on which the Angels Davis.
had a 9-0 rec?rd. "We worked tt out 10 the dup>ut
Well the A s took that bet and beat ahead of ume and 1f the third
the odds -and the Angels. Oakland baseman was fieldtn$ the ball, 1 was
ralhed for two runs 1n the seventh and ~ gotn&all the way to third." said-Davis.
squeezed home another 1n the e1&hth "Donnie laid down a great bunt and st
to win .• 4-3, t;>cfore 28,793 fans at went ofTLtke clockwork."
Anaheim Stadium. . Said Colltns. who had tut tus tint
The key players in the win were career grand slam Saturday ntght in a
Qnc-ume Angels Bruce Bochte and losing cause. ..I was looking for ~vc Colhns and Angel nemesis something in the stnke zone or even
Mike Da~1s. . 1ust out of 1t, JUSt some\}ljn& I could
Boehle s con1nbut1on was a two-get on the ground.
run homer off Holland 1n the seventh "Yes, I have squeezed before, but
to .~1c the score at 3-3 never with two stnkes. Ifs sull a lot
. I wasJUSttr)'lng to hn the bal.I, hard easier than h1tt10s a home run
into the gap and 1t ca med out, said tbou&h."
Boehle of his home run. "(Dusty) Angel Manager Gene Mauch said,
.Baker told me what kind of a patcher "We're supposed to be the best
he was and that he had trouble getting bunttng team 10 baseball a.ad they
left-handers out. so !. thought he out-bunted us. J expect us to play
might make a mistake. ABC baseball better than anyone and
"The ball was up m the stnke zone rm amazed, even shocked. when we
and out over the plate and he htt 1t out don't
of the park," said Holland . "When he .. • hit it, r d1dn'tth1nkit would carry out. They ve had lhat play (Davt1
But the ball ca.mes well here in the going to third) for five years, ever
daytjme and obviously he had since Billy (Martin) and Oete (Boyer)
enouoh on it There'll be another got there ihey plar,ed the pme the ume . .,,.. way we play 1t best.
Davis and Collins were the key The heads-up play made a wmner
factors in the eighth when the A ·s of roolue pitcher Jose RtJO. 2-1, who
scored the wanning run against worked four innings aJlowing only
Moore, 7-6. one hll. ~teve Onfr~er~ pilched the
Davis led off with an infield smJle final 1nnin1 to set his suth save. ·
and as Donnie Hall bunted to third ··vou have to up your hal to RIJO
baseman Jack Howell Davis made who shut them down and gave us a
raced all the way to thi~d. chance to come back," said A~
Then Colhns, with a 1-2 count, bud (Pleue eee AJltG&L8/B2)
Evanswtns
Riverside
Off-Road
RIVEAStOE (AP) -Vtter'an
drMf Walk• Evw of AM18IOI
CMtCaMe ..... troulMe Oft .... ..., a.p 1inct ~ the stron·•
~....,.Chai':' rect • Sund8Y'• Turbc>-W SCORE
Oft-Ao8d ~at AMl'-
8lde tntematk>nel RloNay.
£v.w • .e, toot< tN leed Mlfw9y
thrOYgh the 12-lllp ft9nt lind Md
no prot>Mme untl the ..,,_, lllJ>,
wMr1 ..,.. engtne begerl to emoke
heevtfy. But by-the tlmeEYM11 U-
-Dodge pickup truck c-.ne by tor the chect<ered fteg, the tmaking
had stopped and E~ ~on tor
victory.
"Beaung the Dodgers feels food . but 1t
wasn't a special motivatton. I I'd started.
The paid auendence of 29.181 was the third
highest of the season at Candlestick Park. The
fans were treated by a duel between Hersh1ser
Wednesday and Thursday evenings (begin-
ning at 4:35), are scheduled to be televised BUI Ruuell, J>odCen tumble.
Frank 'Scoop• v..-.. of
BonMll, WU MOOnd tn & CMw'otet,
with Rod Hall ot Reoo. third In
another Oodg9.
John Clark Gable, ton Of the late
Clark Gabte, ftnfthed _.. down Jn
the 11andJngs Md waa never a
f8ctor tn the 9Y8nt ln hie Ford
F·15o . Dickerson . threatens
to sit it out
enttreyear
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Holdout
running beck Ertc Otdcereon uya
he wttl" alt out the .,tire 1985
NatloMI Football L~ .... on"
the Loi Ar9I-. --do not neaotfat• • guttanteed ext9nlk>n
to fM contr9Ct.
"l'M here~ whoee ....on. I wtA.
-t-me.n, t hope tt ~·t oorna..to that.·· Mid Olckereon from hie
home In 8-ly, Tex.
OJckenon, who Mime Ramt
vtoe PNlldent John .... wrblllty
~llld hkn tM ..-.on, hill
bleft Wiiting foit .. __. 11 d8YI at
Ne T .. home tor the ...... to r~to•.,_• "1The Nnnlng b-* .. ll'llllboet'l!llltil•~edMt bY
..... epperent drop In puMc •-.n
and .. ..,... of IMatortll ~
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do nae .. 1n ,,,, hoUlltt Ind that
.... loWlt ,,,, molllf out -..;
........... lown .......
out," llld DlilUr90n ... , ptle@to ~
~----... u.w,nora•1•t1dlllt._._
been ..... d at .. "'°'*'' '*"'· • ••And e.otl time tt Gtblrl .. ," M
iilld. "One tN N WI IO
......... dollre). .... -
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..
Alcott: A matter of desire and guts
BUFORD, Ga. (AP) -Amy Alcott said all
week it was going to come down to desire and guts
-her trademark on a golf course.
of regulation and Sheehan fell 1ntoa tie at 274 when
she massed a five-foot par pull on the final green.
Alcon and Sheehan, who each had final-round
69s. each b1rd1ed the first extra hole before Alcott
placed her tee shot two feet from the pin o n the
par-3 17th.
added that she got nenous on the back side but
didn't know wh'Y
"lfl do get $cared. l always mess up more than
1f I Just go after ll ... Sheehan said And, at dtd.
After overcoming a three-shot deficit on the
final three holes of regulation, Alcott knocked in a
two-foot b1rd1e putt on the second playoff hole
Sunday to beat Patty Sheehan and capture the
$200,000 LPGA Nestle World Champ1onsh1p of
Women's Golf.
"There was a lot of pressure out there this
week," Alcott said. "'Maybe I wanted it too much,
but I was sman enough to let myself play.
Sheehan h1t11ng second. ~as on the fnnge of
the green. about 25 feet awa.,, and her pull wasn't
close. Alcott then b1rd1ed to claim the nchest
LPGA pnze -S65.000 -and Sheehan took
second place mone:r ofS35.000
"I had a good feeling all week,"" said Alcott, the
-only player to appear 1n all sax World C'ham-
p1onsh1ps. "I knew I had to be patient She kind of
opened the door for me on the last hole "
The victory on the hilly. 6.007-yard \touller
P1nelsle Resort golf course was the 24th of .\Icon '>
career and boosted her career earnings o'er the
SI 5 mil hon mark
It was her third tnumph of the }ear but her
first since winning the Moss Creek lnv1tat1onal in
May
Alcott led or shared the lead throughout 1he
tournament unul Sheehan appeared to ha' e taken
control by building a twcrshot lead oHr .\Icon
halfway throu$h the final round "I've been saying all week 11 comes down to
desire, guts and who wants it the most I Just played
the best today, I guess."
Alcott had two b1rd1es on the final three holes
"It's a bummer feeling when you"re w10n1ng
all day long and '>Crew at up."' s.a1d Sheehan. who
Beth Daniel. who also started the da' ttcd hH
the lead. !ltruggied to a 73 and wa t1t'd for third
Foul play costly to Raiders
TwD touchdowns ciilled back
in 14-9 loss to Washington _
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Much to their chagrin. the
Los Angeles Raiders scored three touchdowns ap1nst lhe
Washinaton Redskins, but finished with only nme points.
And nine points wcTCn't quite enou&h Sunday as the
Raiders dropped a 14-9 decision to the ltedskins m their
NationaJ Football Leaaue cxlubit1on same.
How can a team scort three touchdowns yet finish
with only nine points? Easy, if two of them are ca.lied back
because of penalties.
"If we don't make those mtStaltes, that's 'wo more
touchdowns we have," Coach Tom Flores of the Raiders
la.id ... You just can't have those things in prof es ional ball
or an_y other kind of ball."
The Raiders led 9~ early m the 5CCOnd quaner wh~
quanerb&ck Jim Plunkett fired a S6-yard 'ouchdown pa
to rookie wtde receiver Jcss1c Hester. However. the play
was nulllfled because of a holdina penalty called aaaanst
tackle Sbtlby Jordan.
And early in t,be finaJ pcnod, WJth the Reider& ahead
9-7, rescrvequancrback MarcW1l9on threw a 49-yard TO
paas to Wtde ru::icivcr Doleac Walliam1. Bu' an ulcpl
ronnation _penalty wiped out that score.
The Raiden finally lost their lead when Michael
Mon on tc0rcd on a three-yard rweep oflen end with 4:SS
remainina to save the Redskin theat ICCOnd V1Ctory in as
many pn:aeason outinp. The Raiden fell to 0-2
of the Ra1de~ in1sscd a 47-yard fietd goat
"What he gives you 1s a guy that's a great athlete,"
Washington Coach Joe Gibbs said of Schroeder. about to
began has second NFL season "'Fora guy who ha n't pla)cd
very much. he's vef) poised and seems to know what
you're talking about He's a vet) smart football player Ht"
showed great matunty ·•
Schroeder completed three passes to Joe Ph1lltps for
33 yards and another to JefT Moore for 20 yards on the
winmna dnve
Schroeder, who as com~tma with Babe Laufenbera
for the backup quarterback JOb. played the cn\lrc ~nd
half and completed nine ofh1s 12 passes for 70 yards with
no mterccpuons .
"h was fun comma bad. here and pla)'lna.:· said
Schroeder, who played at UCLA in 1979 and I 980 before
Sllflin& a ba~ball contract with the Toronto Blue Ja)\.
"Doina wt'll ts what I needed. h helps a lot when the folks
are here to walcb you play."
The Raiders scortd then touchdown -at leut the
only one that counted -the fiRt tame the) had the ball,
movina 34 yards on cal.ht pla)S after a 27·)'ard punt return
by Oe Montaomery. Marcus Allen aot the TO on a -0ne-
yard plunge
Los Anaeles made ll 9-0 early 1n the second quamr,
&Cltllll I safety when Wash1nglon rookie dcfCIWvt back
Tory N1:11on was called for holdt~ bntbacker QuenC)
Williams of the Raiden m the Red \tins' end ront-durinaa
punt.
Holding m the end zone is an automattc ~fet).
For the third conaecuttw 'fe*,
Ivan 'lron Man' Stewst "'°" the
Nllaan MIN-Metal Chaflenoe for
~ pickup truck•. swnrt,
40, of l.tkeetde. had ., eeay
vk:tory ln h .. Toyota alW Roger
Meara' Ntaan t1\JOk bfoke a powlt'
steering bett and a watW' pump
half-way through the eecond lllp.
Stenrt took home $4,4$4 fOf
victory over Toyota tMmmate
Frank Arclero, Jr. Third ptlloe went
to John~ In a Mtt.Jbllhl
Yorba Landa'• Vince T)elmeellnd,
28, drove ht. Pontiac Areblrd to
the victory In the UltraStock GP
c1Ua.
.,. .. 3 1 Thank.I mainly to the passina of backup quancrba k
Jay Scbroedcr. the Redskins moved 70 yards an I I plays to
t.be wino in.a touchdown.. The march bcpn after Chn Bahr
The 'Red kins sot thctT fint 'ouchdown on an cisht·
yard pus from quanctback Joe The1 ~n to uabt end
Don Wamn with 22 ~nds rem11n1na 'before haJf\tmc.
W · on moved S4 yards on'tJ'ntt}>la) and two
pas 1ntmere~ ptnalt1cs wl\1ch totaltd JO of tht-arJ,
Tbe feet of RecSalrtn ~Joe TW-eu McD••
mtanaled wttll IWI tackler -Jt.a.l4eri• Rod Martie. -
Young Miami fan
off era a warning
. to holdout Marino
Prom AP d!spaklao Ell
Dan Manno used to bl" one of I 0-year-f •
old Paul Gerber's favorite footbi&ll playe~. 8
Not any more
"He'd better be back or his fans arc going to w lk
away from ham." the younJster said shonly af\er
Manno walked out of the M1am1 Dolphins' train1na
camp
"When he comes back. he won't hear muth He'll
1ust hear 'boo '" t-or the !lt.'Cond year in row.
~me of the National Football
League's best players have siayed
away rrom training camp. Most
prominent amon' them are Marino and Enc Dickerson, who
spent last season ~ttmg new
standard<\ for passing and
rushing.
But there are other\ of almost
equal importance to their teams
Mark Haynes. the New York
Marino (11ants' All-Pro co mcrback; Mike
~gletar). the All-Pro middle linebacker who's the
heart of the Chicago Bears defense and two of has
teammates. strong ufety Todd Bell and ou ti11de
linebacker Al Hams. auard R ( Thielemann and
defenc;1 ve end Don Smith of Atlanta: both New York
Jets' starting tackle'>, Marvin Powell and Regg.ie
McElro} and four of Manno's M1am1 teammates -
tight end Dan Johnson, linebacker Bob BrudzJO!.kJ
safety Glenn Blackwood and Jack-of-all-positions Jam
Jensen
Quote of the day
Pat Williams, Ph1ladelph1a 76crs general
manager on Nonh Carolina State basketball
coach Jim Valvano "At N .C. Slate they had a big
scandal -three of their players were found tn the
library." ·
Soviets take European Cup
MOSCOW -Pole vaulter Sergei m Bubka, despite falling short in an auem.pt
to break the world record, helped the Soviet
Union win both the men's and women's
European Cup track utles Sunday, breaking East
Germany's longtime bold on the champ1onsh1ps.
The East Germans were second 1n both the men's
and women's team standings. The women had been
European track and field champions since 1970; the
men since 1973 The West German men were third an
the two-Oay tournament The 21-year-old Bubka leaped 19·0'1• to take his
event, but massed three tncs at 19-9 Sull. his Jump was
four inches better than runner-up Ph1hppc Colle1 of
France.
Pintor captures WBC crown
MEXIC 0 CITY -Challenger m
uuadalupc Pintor, a hard-h1tt1ng veteran,
won the World Bolling Council super-
bantamweaght crown Sunday in a bloody
but unan1mour, decision ag<unr,t fellow Meiucan Juan
Meza Pintor. a former bantamwe1g,ht champion. M:nt
"KJd" Meza to the canvas three tames, twice 1n the fifth
round and once 1n the 10th
Both fighte~ hat each other w11h cverythmg th ey
could possibly muster and in near exhausuon when the
J 2th round began The two ended the fight with nasty.
profusely bleeding cuts over their eyebrows
Meza also suffered cuts on the mouth near the end
of the fight , which at tame~ was almost a brawl.
ANGELS •..
P'romBl
Manager Jackie Moore "Th1<, role is
something he isn't real fami liar with
He jUSt proved U\ right It ,., great to
sec his hve arm and f kno"" 11 ., no fun
hnung ofT of ham·
The heroics al\o saved former
>\ngel Tomm y John who war, pnch-
1ng for the first 11me agam'>t has e"-
1eammatc-; In lour-plus inning\
John allowed wt h1tc; and three cum ~
and stood to be the lo'>tr. unul
Rochtc's r,hot 1n the ~venth
* ANGaL MOTES .lllnoet medlce1 rel)()(!
Tnlrd t>e.emen O.Vt 0.Clncft, Wl'IO •• ~ri•~ discomfort "' 111, INK~ !>4.turO.v nl9111
ofl..-run<""9 ovt a oround t>e~ '" t~ '"" ""'"9
•OOk ~v off Men.oer ~ Mtuc:ll Miid
"'"' w1r1 no tomooce11on' i nd ,.,., D.Clr>cn lilt ne wovto oe OK In 1 dtv or two DeClnct\
.... glv•n 1n 1ntl-inf11mm11orv lnltcllon end I\
...., 1 d1v to·Oev De'I' •noei medlca1 ,._,
pert 1 PllcMr Mill• ~ w1• 111mlntd SunOlv t>v Or L.r#h YKvm l llO #H OltOllOMCI H
na vino • •119111 caw of 11nalnlllt In "'' rlg!lt
\l'IOUl<Mr M• wea olven orel meolct 11on i nd "
nQt ••~ltd to min 1nv 1terh Tlmet ere
ct>tnolno dfl>I 111 1 CNlll09 of oot1c1 frO<To 1111
hlJM aavatl era Ille Anoeil l llO Gtn..-11
Mtna0tr Miii• ~ert Nlv• bt9un ~t.etlno
r911el olcMr 0..... MMrt'1 contrect !or nell
veer. Tne ....-01v"' '' tllel Moore 11
lnttrHltd In r•meln11111 en Al>Otl •nd 1na1 in.
,
PETE ROSE
COUNTDOWN
Clo.la6
Jnon
Ty Cobb
WUt Rose dJd
a.Dday:
He bad a run·
SCOri.nf hat an the
1 sixth 1nnina and
another single in
the ninth as the
Reds routed
Houston 1n the
Astrodome, 8.-3.
Murphy takea over homer lead
Dale Marpby took over the maJor •
league home run lead when he cracked his
33rd to tngger a four-run sixth inn mg that
earned Atlanta to a 6-3 victory over San
Diego JO the second game of a doubleheader Sunday.
Grala Nettles' two-run homer m the first innin' gave
the Padres a 2-1 victory in the openCT. M urpby s solo
homer an the founh inning ac~ounted for the only
Braves' run . In other National League games, Pete
Rose'• run-!.Conn single sparked a four-run sixth-
inning rall y as Cincinnati went on
to defeat Houston in the
M trodome, 8.-3. Jay Tibbs, 6-13,
was the winner, going five annmgs
and giving up two runs on five
hats, while Nolu Ryan, 8-11.
dropped has seventh straight de -
c1s1on. The Reds moved into a
virtual tic for second place 10 the
West with San Diego. eight games
behind the Dodgers At Busch
Siad1um, Terry Fru coaa'1 two-
Mu.rpby run single off third baseman
Terry Pendletoa'1 glove 1n the 10th inning gave
Montreal a 6-S victory over St. Louis and JoaqalD
Andujar. Francona's hit kept Andujar, 19-7, from
becoming the major leagues' first 20-pmc wanner .. ,
New York. however, remained in a tic for first JO the
East wtth the Cardmals as Bill Madlock drove m three
runs with a pair of homers and Don R.oblnaoa ended a pcrso~ e1ght-gaanc losing streak as Pittsburgh de-
feated the Mets, S-0, at Three Rivers Stadium. rormer
Angel Pat Clements completed the shutout, allowing
two hits 1n three innings for his first save with the
Pirate~ . At Wrigley Field, Tom Foley, Mike Sekmldt
and Juan Samuel homered to power Ph1ladelph1a to a
9-S victory over the Chicago Cub.,
Tlmmons leaCls U.S. to victory m SEATILE -The United States
national volleyball team, led by Olympic
gold medalists Steve Timmons, Craig Buck
and Pat Powers. beat the Soviet Union 3-0
Sunday, winning I 5-3. 17-15 and 15-8.
The match was played before the largest crowd -
14.138 at the Krngdome -ever to watch the Amencans
play in this country
11~ 1ut1 "''"' 10 Ott 1n1no1 oolno ""°""' •alM>f'. r>a• 111.,.,,. '' IP111 '"' All9tl1 wlll 119 bvn ·
O..Wlno ttie of! te•M>" •1 ~ 1no wttll ,.,."V of '"'
club'• otlltf POtenll•I fr" toenn. lnc:llldlnO llM c;.,_ 1r1d teeOv Gnc:I\ Seid Mtucn on •ht
tremtndou' turnaround 1n l rlll11 Oewlllne"•
O\llllno .. II', 11.111 1 IMI 11\t l a llllltr l'lea Mt c1n
""' ""' enO 1"4 .,.,,, "'"' S•nc• rve ~nown
•rien ht "" 10 wor~ on t 0e11v II It t """ ~u,iv1 ll'llllO A \ Oftlgr>eltd llllttr 0.W
K....,_., ml1MC1 ,,1, wcono 111mt In • row
World record stroke
Sundav. I ontv two oemes ht OH mltMCI In
1995 1(1 en ovti.d I l>.c~ "''"'It tWlntlrlO In Fl'ldev nlollf'"t ~
PRO FOOTBALL
Newport Harbor ~ product John Moffet •wlma t.be
breutatroke ln the 4lM> medley relay ln Tokyo for the U .8.
at the Pan Pacific Ga.mee Sanday. He and Rick Carey, Pablo
Morale. and Matt BtondJ, Mt a world record 3:38.28.
Blue Jay• &Ive An1ela a hand
Jeue Barfield hat a bases-loaded •
triple and Georie Bell drove in four run
wuh a two-run homer and a pa1ro(sacnfice
flies Sunday, powerina ToTonto to a IQ..6
victory over Kan~s City at Exh1b1uon Stadium The
setback prevented the Royals from cuttin& into the
AnJ.el ' 21/i-pme lead 1n the Amencan Leque West,
whale the Blue Jays retained their five-pme lead an the
East ... In other AL action, Doo MatUDaJy stretched his
hatting streak to 16 games with a tie·breakinai, two-run ... > double 1n the seventh inning. ~_. g1vtng New York its fourth
. ~ 1
Lf .
• 'Y
: ,
stra1Jht tnumph, a 4-2 victory
over Boston at Yankee Stadium
The victory was the Yankees'
11th 1n their Last 12 pmcs and
kept them five games behind
Toronto . . At Tiger Stadium,
Nel100 Slmmou, Clllet Lemoa
and Marty Ca1ttUo l\1t solo home
run$ and Ou Petry allowed three
htts tn 7¥1 innings as Detroit
Barfield blanked Cleveland, 4-0. Petry,
I }-11, walked five and struck out five before WUUe
Henwadez came on for his 25th save ... Pinch hitter
Jerry Hairston delivered a tie-breaking two-run single
in the seventh inning to lift Britt 8111'111 and the Chicago
White Sox to a 8-4 triumph over Milwaukee al County
Stadium ... In the Metrodome, Mark Laa11toa allowed
four hats in seven 1nn1ngs and Spike Owen started the
scoring with a two-run single. leading Seattle to a 7-2
victory over Minnesota ... In Baltimore, the Orioles
had a 6-0 lead Wlped out when their game against Texas
was rained out after three innings. The pme was
postponed after a S2-minute wait and rescheduled for
this afternoon. onginally an off-day for both clubs.
Meara break• victory drought
LONG POND, Pa. -Rick Mears. • recovenng from senous foot and leg
inJunes, took the lead five laps from the
end and captured his first victory sn more
than a year Sunday at the Pocono 500 lndy-ar race.
Mears. injured ma racing crash last September an
Canada, won a duel from Al Unser Jr. in the SOO.mile
race on Pocono lntemauonal Raceway's 2.5-mile tn-
oval. Unser was racing with a broken right ankle held
t ether by two su ·cal pins amd had to be helped into
and out ofh1s race car.
., · Mears' March. fielded by"the
Penske Racing Team. crossed the
finish line 2.1 seconds ahead of
Unscr's Lola
Al Unser Sr., one of Mears'
teammates and the younger
U nser's father, was a close th a rd 1 n
another March. That moved the
4S-year-old elder Unser into the
CART-PPG season point lead.
moving past Mario Andretti and
Mean Brazilian Emerson F1tt1paldi.
who came into the event tied for the lead. one point
ahead of Unser.
Bobby Rahal. who also challenged throughout the
race. lost any chance he might have had to win when a
fiat tire forced ham to pit JUSt two laps from he end. He
finished fourth
Television, radio
TELEVISION
6 pm. -PRO FOOTBALL: Denver at San
Francisco. Channel 7
RADIO
7 30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Oakland at
Angels. KMPC (710).
TUESDAY'S TELEVISION
4:3S pm -BASEBALL: Dodgers at
Ph1ladclph1a, Channel 11.
TUESOA Y'S RADIO
4·3S p m. -BASEBALL: Dodgers at
Philadelphia, KABC (790).
I TENN IS
I...__ ---=--_-_
Penn State
now being
challenged
RtSiilg Eastern tea~s include
Boston College, West Virginia
From AP dJapatclaea
Despite Penn St.ate's pQOrest season since 1966 and
Pill's collapse from a No. 3 prescason rank.1!18 to 1t4' first
tos1na record since 1972. Joe Paterno thinks Eastern
football is better than ever "1 don't thank that the quality of football in the wt
has ever been as excellent as 1t as now." say, the Penn Stat.e
coach. "The East has never gotten the proper credit it
deserves." Penn State fans, used to !l«sng the N.1ttany Lions ~s
Beasts of the East with 12 Lambert Trophies in Paterno s
19 years, wercn 't thrilled ~hen Pitt came along to challenge
an the mid-1970s. They hke 1t even less now that. ~ston
Colleae and West YirgJnta arc annual bowl participants
and Anny, Navy, Rutgers. Syracuse
and Ter19\-ple arc knocking on the
door.
Paterno. on the other hand,
thanks that "pa.nty JO Eastern foot-
ball Jenerally as good for the game,
but 1t may t.ake some time for our
fans to appreciate that fact. Our fans
may have bc<:ome a httle bat ~po1led
and accustomed to u~ dominating
year an and year out.
"I thank they are begJnning to Paterno
understand that there arc many good
football players and good football teams an the East., and
because of the improvement in facilities. young coaches
EAST Ci]
and recruiting. Eastern football 1s going to be very
competiti ve." It was every bat oflhat last year. although fit\,h-ranked
Boston College was the only Eastern represent.auve 1n the
Top Twenty. Ann( and West Virg.aniajoined the Eagles as
bowl teams and al three won.
These are the key quesuons for l 98S
•Can Penn State and Pitt return to pos1t1ons of
dominance? •How will Boston College manage without Doug
Fluue, maJOr college football's all-tame passing leader?
•Will Army, Rutgers, Syracuse and Temple conunue
their 1mpro~ement?
Boston College. I 0-2 a year ago. gets a chance to prove
something right away The Eagles open aga1nc;t defending
national champion Bngham Young in the Aug. 29 KJckofT
Classic. And even though BC defeated Southwest Conference
champion Houston. 45-28. in the Cotton Bowl, Coach
Jack Bicknell says that "a lot of people reall y don't believe
we're for real nationally.
Driscoll leading Etchells
Two Marblehead, Mass. skippers are leading the
Etchells-22 World Championship Regatta after two days
of racrng·out of Newport Harbor Yacht Club Fifty.fi ve
yachts from four countnC1 are co mpetmg.
Leading with 5. 7 penalty points under the Olympic
scoring system is Ted Driscoll of Eastern Yacht Club.
Marblehead. He won Saturday's first race and finished
third Sunday Dave Cunas, former World Champion and also from
Marblehead, finished seventh and fourth for 21 penalty
points · -Other standmg,s were not available pending a rash of
protests
There 1s no racing today The reP.tta resumes Tue~ay and continues through Saturday with a day off on
Thursday.
McEnroe sweeps
past Lendl again
First Win
for Green
From AP dl1patcbes
MONTREAL-Top-seeded John
McEnroe beat Czcchoslovaloa's Ivan
Lendl for the second tame tn a week
Sunday, captunng the Player's lnter-
nauonal Tennis Tournament and lt'I
SS 1,000 top pnze Wltb a 7-S, 6-3
dcc151on marred by arguments.
Ashe did an Vermont last weekend,
McEnroe wore down his Lencll , who
is ranked No 2 by the Association of
Tennis Players.
Lend!. warned by umpire Jeremy
Shales when he argued an out call in
the dec1r,1ve game of the first set. left
the court an protcsi....after the third
game of the second set.
Lcndl was at double-break point
when he felt a serve by McEnr<>c had
gone wide and he demanded a let be
played After a heated discussion Wlth
Shales, Lcndl sat down and dried
himself off Wlth a towel, wh ile
McEnroe waned 1mpat1ently for play
to resume.
lt was not unul the tournament
supcrv1wr and referee appeared to
discuss the matter that Lendt re·
turned The point was replayed and
McEnroe won.
McEnroe, whose only service break
an the first set came in the 12th pme,
earned his eighth victory on the 1985
Grand Prix tour. His tnumph was the
second straight at the Player's Inter-
national.
McEnroe also broke LendJ m the
bard-fought ei&hth pme of the ~
ond set after (our break points. He
finished with a nouri\h, capturing the
ninth game at love.
* F lllol stops Stockton
NORTH CONWAY, N.H. -
Jaime Fillol won two tiebreakers and
came from behind in the second set to
beat Dick Stockton. 7-6, 1-6, in the
final of the Mount Washinaton
Valley Tntemational Tennis Oassic.
Fillol, 38, of Chile. picked up
$8,000. Stockton, 3S, of Dallas.
earned $4,000 tn a match that lasted
two hours and 20 minutes.
Fillo! clinched the first set by
wanning SIX of the last eta.ht points 1n
the tiebn:aker.
Balanced AFC West is easily the class of pro football
Yrom AP dl1patcbe1
The toughc,t d1va1 on an iwo footMJI'> No
contc'lt -at'~ the AFC West, which has put
three teams into the National Football Leaaue
playom each of the last two sea'Ons
So toush ''that d1 v1s1on that the San Dtqo
Ch11JCf1 went 7-1 apanst teams oua1de the
d1v111on but 0-8 ap1rut their AFC West
brethren.
So t.Janced 1t this dms1on that the Denver
Broncos. picked to fint!lh founh br fifth.
wound up fint with a 13-l record, thanks to an
op90nunl1tic dcfen.e that forced 1umovcn an
bunches and an 1mprov1na John Elway at
quattttblck..
Youth favors the Bron~01 l.aJt year, much
of the success wu due to aecond· and tbird-
ycar plaren blc.e Elway; Sammy Winder. who
ruihed for I , I Sl yard1, t1Jht end C1attncc
K.ay, safety Randy Robb1n1, hneblcker Rick
Ornnison. and kiclcer, Rach K.arli• and Chm
~orman
They ,hould improve with another y~r of
matunt> especially Elwa>, who was throwina
w11h confidence and authonty JO tra1n1na
camp. and K.ay. already called by Reeve~ "the
best blocker in the NFL" and now a threat as a
receiver as well
Winder, however, uriderwcoun eme,...enC}
appendectomy 1n late July and could m1u the
•tart of the reaular season and Robbins broke
h15 arm irt-tfte fint exhibilJon contest and will
m1~ hlJf the \CaWn Gerald W1llh1te. who ran
for 371 yards and cauaht 27 ptHc'I for 298
)ards last season, wall replace Wander with top
draf\ choice Steve Sewell of Oklahoma
bacluna ham up
Denver's defense ran.kc<! 2Sth 1n the 1'1Fl
last year in yard but yieldtd an AFC-low
I 5.1 pomtt per 11me The main reason was l I
1ntcrcepuon1 and te•m records for fumble
recovmes (2•} and quarterbeclc sacks (S7)
rf the Broncos WCTC lucky, btncflmna from
turnovers and uncxpla1nt<f funny bounce''° were the Scahawks. who1t 12-4 ~ason
rcmarkahly paralleled Drnvcr'\,
AFC WEST Ci]
~attic led the NFL with 38 interceptions,
2S fumble recovcrie1 and a plus-24 takeaway·
11vcaway ratio Defensive ends Jeff Bryant
and Jacob Green helped pToduce o team·
record SS sacks Safety Kenny Easley tnter-
ctpted I 0 passes. retumina two for touch-
downs.
Althouah tl\e offense ranked 18th in the
lcaaue, Dave Knea threw for 32 touchdowns as the Scahawks set a team record for points
(418) teve 1.arFnt hid 74 rccept1on1 for
I, 164 yards and 12 TDs
They did 1t wnhout Curt Warner, who led
the AFC 1n rush1n1 an 1983 but tnJured ht
knee 11'1 the Ra10n opener and m1ued the
remainder of the teatOn
Few team' would call an 11 -$ season, which
included a playoffbenb a d111ppoantment, but
the Los An,elC1 Raiden look on 1984 u
---~-•
dcc1dcdly \Ub-par They were 7-1 nudway but,
but only 4-4 over the second half u tlijunes
and aae took their toll.
The age 11 still there -quarterback Jim
Plunkett W'lll be 38 this aeason, wide recciveT
Chff Branch 11 37 and defensive end Lyle
Aludo 36. But the team still hasd eiaht Pro
Bowlers.
ComeTbacks Lester Hayn and Mike Hay-
nes head up what is arsuably the best
secondary 1n foott.ll, and defen11ve end
Howte Lona and linebacker Rod Manin att
All·P~.
On offense, Coach Tom Flores must dtttdc
bet~een Plunkett and Marc Wilson u his
1tan1na quan.erback. Both were injured much
or 198,,
Kansas City was the ICOUflC of the diVUton
late last ~ear, beatina Denver, SeanJe and San
Dlqo the final three weekends to fin11h at 8-8.
"r'm very pleated with the way we completed
last KUOn." says Coach John Mac:.kovic, "and
I think 1t wtll prove lobe a foundation foru to
build on."
Comins off a 4,34S..yard puama per-
formance in 1983, quartcTblck Bill Kenney, a
product of Saddleblck Colleac. broke his
thu.mb in the prcseuon last year and miucd
the flnt s.i• p'tncs. Later be rtirtjurcd 1M
thumb and bad knee and &houlder injuries.
After beck-to-back lotina teaJOns, San
Dicao Characrs owner Ale~ Spanoe bu
opcn.ed bis checkbook He 11aned all 14 draft
choices then com.led USFL defecton T ru-
malne lobnt0n and Tim pcnc:er and bcp_n
ncaotiatina with two other USFL players,
Mouy Cade and Gary Andcnon.
'Tm commititd to filhna the void on thu
ball club and rm not finished, .. wd Spanos.
"We have a Ion.a way to JO ...
Johnson is uPecUcf to juice up a oo tonaer
tcmt)'1n1 pu11oa attack.
Dan Fouts bu thrown for morT yards
p3.8S4) and T0s (201) th11n any tell-Ye player
1n pro football. but bas mtucd n1t1c pmes the
I t t-o n ith in111ri
•
Softball
CITY 01' NaWP(MtT a•ACH
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M °'M09 Cout DAILY PILOT /Mond , Auguat 19. 1185
' '11JQ[y Wll'1mRBEAN
--
AND~ENf.~ OO'f ~E 10P OF OUR W€DDIN6 <NJi RtON\ 'fl-4€ "1U.,Z£R. I
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
''I love beaches 'cause there's always
an ocean near them!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
~11111~1
"A very irate person named Tony Is calling
you from the new mall construction srte!"
DRABBLE
GARFIELD
MOON MULLINS
JUDGE PARKER
TAKE AN
UM&'RcLL.A··
IT L.OOl<'S
by Tom Batluk DOONESBURY
BIG GEORGE by Vlrgll Partch (VIP) ----
"Th• w•r'• over, you twol"
. .
DENNIS THE MENACE
OE
~KNOW 'fb..I'~
GEn')JG Ot.P WMEN ...
PEANUTS
m.<f,~IW llptmody1'!5
potaglYllCO..
I
by Gary Trudeau
by Charles M. Schulz
by Hank Ketcham ....... ---------------..
BuT If 'lQJ OON1 Hll lHE tw.t.,JaY. I CAAT HIT IT~· -
by Kevin Fagan
I LOOKED IT UP AT THE
CITY MALL ...
VOUR G~ANDFATMER
LED THE GREAT
M16RATIOH OF '79 ..
00
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
TUMBLEWEEDS
BRIDGE
OOTITSFOR I KJ~eN .
i ACTUALLY I MAiJt IT ALL
i UP .. THERE WAS NO
I MIGRATION OF '79. AND I
I. OOtfT ~ KNOW WMERE I TIE CITY MAU.~
,.__ __ ~
by Lynn Johnston
ANSWERS TO WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ
by Jim Davis Q.J -Both vulnerable, u South you
hold:
WMEN TMff(E'5 NAPPINC:r TO •<M 'V A8 <>1Ut2 •IU754
PO AROONP Hf.f:\£, l'LL 00 tT The bidding has proceeded:
Soatla Weat Nertla Eaat
1 0 P... l • Pua
7
What do)'ou bid now?
A. -The reuon you opened the
hand with one diamond rather than
one club wu to make it. eaay to
show ~l>f your suit•. North's
response hu given you no reaaon lo
change your plan. Bid two clubs.
Q.2-As Sout.h. vulnerable, you
hold:
by Ferd & Tom Johnson •AQ~05. 'VK ¢Q54 •AK983 The btddmg has proceeded:
IN iHAT CASE I'LL ....... ........----s .. tJa Weet N-"' Eut
/,AKE A CAB -1 • Pue l c:::> PaN ~ ~ • Pue Z c:::> Pua
Whal action do you t.ake?
A. -Partner'• bidding haa not been
very encouraging. However, North
1hould have a good •Ix-card suit and
your hand rat.ea a move toward
game. The obviou1 choice la a ralae
lo t hree heart.a-your 1lngleton
klnr ia adequate aupport.
-------=:.:::~~--::..-.J Q.•-Aa South, vulnerable. you
by Harold Le Ooux ~0~:~ "111014 ota •AM
'e_Y_T_H_E_w-,,.-~-I-J_U_ST_Fl-N-1SHED TAU<JNG TO The blddln1 baa proceeded:
MRS LAGRANGE ON THE PHONE •St-E SAIC N..U. Eut 8"&11 WHt
YOU STOPPED TO VISIT HEA. THINKING~ l • p.,. I NT PUI
MIGHT HELP IN OUR 2 c::> p.,. 1 SEARCH S:OR MY
NATU RAL. PARENTS' What action do you t.akt?
-, ( ~ A.-You havt a near minimum for
~ 1our oot no t.rump r ponM and.
de pli. the fact that you have H ·
cellent 1uppon for panotr'• aecond
1uit, your latk of a rutnn1 value
make• it. unllktl1 that. you b.ave a
ramt. Put -even tbr heart.a
could bt too high.
Q.~-A• South, vulnenbl . •ou
J
hold: ?
•Q1054 'V AQJ85 0 J61
The bidding haa proceeded:
•1 What do you bid now?
Nortla Eaat 8e•&li
lNT Z O ?
What action do you lAke?
A. -You side 1urely has a game in a
major auit or three no trump aod, if
you want Lo find out whkb, you
should at.art with a cue·bid of t hree
d~monds. However. your best bet
for a profit. that might. be equivalent
to your vulnerable game ii lo dou·
OMAR
SHARIFF
ble t.wo di&mondtl Eut la roinr to
find a worthle11 dummy and we H ·
pect him to be hard preued lo make
even five trlckt.
Q.5-Neither vulnerable, 11 South
you hold:
•7 c::>AJM ¢Al.lot5Z •Ke
The biddlnr hu proceeded:
S .. dt Wett Nert.It Eut
1 0 P... I• p.., .,
Whal do you bid now?
A.-You pod hand hu bten Im
proved by t.he (act that. 7ou have a
blah honor Jn partner'• auit. Jt. la
now fully •orth a rtVtl'H bJd of two
hearu, and tha& ii tht act.Ion we
would ebooat.
Q.t -8oth vulnerable, u Soutb you
hold:
•A17 Ollt ¢7 •AIJ~
The biddlnr hu proc..ded:
S...Ui WM& N.tll Eu&
l. ,... l 0 ..... • • , .... a o ,.,.
A. -Partner's slrengt.h-1howing
rebid has put your hand in the 11Am
zone. so a bid of three no trump it
woefully Inadequate. Since you
have already told partner qi your
good club auit, there i1 oo point In
bidding clubs apln. A cue-bid of
three spades would ahow your out·
side values while t.elling partner
that your lnt.ereat lies beyond
game.
CHARLES
GOREN
'•..,...a&Jea.a...ic..,._ o ... · ....... ...,,....._.
,., ..... Writ. c ..... ltWp Letttr,
1• caw..••-A .... c=··• ·
-· N.J.•n.
• ~ 1 inf't, S Ooa St> OoU.r• • Ad. · I I I
I · ""' ' ••it r ,.At '• •ul no I"'"""' ol po mrnl • rt'lundaW.. • Addtticlnal ._ may )It pur<"-ted fot t2 00 l'IC h
• 'r11 "' tnU11 bt 11\(lud.d in the d • l>. I h . 1 IC'~ 001 •pp ' ''' t • '"'' " "'"· rrmal. or tll'lp wanted clu.lflca\Jclal °" automobilea prtted O\'fl 12000
• ~ Y1tl;il.Ji. uni\ tn 1•m 111' puh ~•hrr h.M'ra W"lling inttchandi.. •
THI DAJlY PR.OT cl "sa1~1eo omcc HOUR& f~~ .. ,
I OO AM !>OOPM
.....,_ Coutirer M I
eOO AM &OO PM
~ ..
• I ,
~ .
' j • . ..
f ' I•
f ... .
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Fiii lllllT
&UlYlll If YHI
lllL llTITI IY
llL Tl·llLLlll I
Plllllll. llLL
PITllOI Tlllll
111·1HI
llAll 0011111 ' Submtt what you haw to
trade lot equity In cs.tux•
2BA 2b• condo on bMut
l ul Kunapall BHch,
furnlahlnga lnclU<*S.
.... PH. ,,.,.111e.
112-1171 bytl••
H.V. HOMES
Carmel MOdel
for Sate.
Super
Condition.
Carmel MOdel
for lease.
$1<400/mo.
No pets.
Call:
640-LONC
_ONGS
OF NEWPORT
DIADLINH ~~All()ll ~---J>i"l\f IHI • ffrg i .... ....
' """ 'l~ 1· :: , .... , .,.,
Traditional
Realty
831-7370
COLDWeLL BAN~eRO ----INTIUHU Mtl,IH
Foreclolure on thll e yr
old Chrla Abel home In
NOl'th Laguna. P~ lo-
cetlon, Mt In among hlll1
w/panoramlc OCMll view.
W•rm wood Interior.
Prkled under m1rb1 .........
let U1 ..... Y11
Sell y .. ,,.,.,.,.
c. .....
642-567,
for Information
& surprlslngly
low cost.
c ~ u D [ D I I I' I I I'
GE "·, O'""() I If #I\ I
WMttX R
I .. I• •
-
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, Auguat 11, 1te5 •
Call 6 42-5678
...
-
'
'
. .
• OnlngeCoMt OAllY PILOT/Monday, Augult 19, 1985
--11 ° • b Mn a."'meat llala';__;~ llM l!la Waa... llM ltl• Wu tM 1111 l t lp Wy... HM ltl1 Wu!!4 II" l tl1 !u!!f UH !tl1 Wut.. !!II
,._ .. hwtultMI tell Banking ·-lllPl&amllT OIUllTm -uw DUY 1m•Lll
ltw • .&;;; ;: lW XfA· SCRAM·Lm ;: ::-; TAI ' u amen DMn AllllTllT Ctothl"\= ,,...,. Acct , DI c It IMlclnO full time If..... tOf 3 oflfldrtn (2 eohool llYllL"""" =· t:, r.:= + fl a,'.'Y popeny ~~~ % <t-=~~ ~!!!'Tiii A90 an~enuel oollectora In .the Irvine LOAN Pl"OCU8INO 9Q41d) !NH\ pttf, prtvrm. l'epty In ~· 1407 !. ANSWERS .ndtt marl(,.. ·-M!; Tll • .. u•1 ~em~.0u' ......... ~ .,.. to'*"°"" oontlnu· oir,ir•• ll'lllMd . .......,_ s "-Y .-. Ut• "°" ... 1-_coee_•_~ __ . Ccf~M:::.~-w .moMoW ,_,.w11 " .-tor\9"M 1tMd pert· ltl Ad 1· ca.. --··---.. .... OUt oolltctlon 9'bw on ·~ ......-~ k 1 IOft'le COC)klng, °"*· oo... '*-· .,._ Adduce-trtown ,,.,. wtth cuh Of .... i. "-Ponalbt ltlee Wift A Mlf-etartw '0 uiiet In <:lud• phontt, flllng cMllnQu.n1 eccounte. At ~In 2i::'~ d~ ngpref Sat1rylwll WLIAIO
M/l't3IO/mo417-Ml1 ~-~ You put up the moiwy elude pick up Ind'* tri. development I con-Mon-Fri km·&pm se pertotourllquldatlOnyou Cl.!~AL ·PoettlOn plut bOefd CIWI Mery~ Pr1mlt'Wt '°" 1'1 & ...... --~--,.._..,,_1 WANTED end I'll do tM rMtl llvery of ade, pulllng trOI Of bud~ '°' OWMd p/hr attl1 North Coata will ti. lnYOlvtd with GOil" .1:9iiable at.o. Mt-3~8 tnd tayou1 876· 1125
Stir. a '*'I *t:i:: Cot-"lk.tt 'YOU don't need a 530-7141 t .. tth .. te, proc .. •lng AMI Eetete proper11ee. Mt.. M1ul & Son•. t1otlng borrowere by ... :r .. =bMclh-~ ~r-ct"':·.~gwcttMwtte. lhrtl .... , :':tr·~..:_ =~da~~ =~c~o r'=rr:f':. H&-1s10 Kar.,, ption. to :O~ ~:: ~r~;:-~1:~5 Nt~~.·:~:,1~:,:on~~ SAlE:UHI Ulll
looeuon aan. cell ~ .~Ji~ T.1.'i · fOll mu.t ti. utrel'l'Mlly or-budget tor own~ AMI llUTIHYllJll !.~t>orrc>wet.tll• BuenaPatk ·13t-1300 xint reteMS-'239 1__...1m
21M7......a. need ' .. "'-but 1 gantud, reepoNlble and E1tat• pr0per11ee Need• mlec. minor ft9elrt ror d Banta Ana · 561-1212 rT••••
•OH THe MACH ehr the WAHT~ you • ' TlllT Miii able to work .. 11 with to lnd1p•ndentty r•· Nllboet ctiert•r ""' 1 reoommen ectlon 11 Equel Oppty Employ« 1111111 lo< right pereon whO ~u.ll· .,... ~ .oO I YU W• tKJy Trutt DMd9 othtta. March a cornp1i. deta. a.S-7100 = ~~ ~ HOSTE.SS/CASHll!A PM ~~~ ~~ n:d. :l:t ~ua::~ EJc~
SCle. '"*' & mot9. seao' liM9 .... ltm '*'° ~ Ann. Llae You'll ai.o be rtaPQnllble OU'T Fiii TUT °'~" cOllectlOn pr.ctlol •Mt, family ooftM '"°" A·~ ·s L ~ N '• c N A ., peld 1ralntng cau + Cll ....:.. '41-7567 .• --I ,.... ....... C.it w·~·t1Mft Sml1h, to. for •tabll91\lng tlc:tller a ' ptootdu ...... ..., .. Clll Oeor~ e&0-6736 •. H·-...:. • ..:. ... ..,.· ,,.., prlv. Qr, C11~t.,-Mon·'''· • _,,. .... t ...w 7 t -·-·-·-flllng t)'lttme ror the 111 .... · 'llT I ll'••ltu ...... COl'-IOn • .,.._..,_., "' I EOE .. &:L W ... ..,.. _., -• ~ dAtpartrMnt n 1 ., am -., ........ -· Hotat duty nu1'91ng 11 hOfM 1814 9-381 .... U _... IAILf Pl.IT • Minimum 2 )'Ml't bank· lawt. Thie po.itlon ~ 911111¥111 DOCTORS l NURSES, Mt'IH CD816""6AWXAfib. ltlJ Wut• 1100 P,I. lt11NI 11'19 upe<leno. In a not• 1101111111 T qui,... xlnt V9rbt.1 l writ· "' 4000 Birch It 1:.........-------~. :c':~u""' f(lll)ADS •MYllTUI* o.m•na,o..tn21 ·=~~'tiou•• llLLIY ~~:11~n:=O:,:'.'k~ 1111uon11TIL N...,ortBHcha&i-2112
81*111111w.11
ARE FREE Produc11on/Medl• Cootdl· ....,._,... plu1. Salaty Witt not •x· hll ~:~'r:i~lng• llPlll UlllTAIT Full ttiM e&i.e P09ltlon
M•twe Med LCY. ldMI nator with •tlm1ttng, •t1ent~ to a.tell TILIPlllll cHd S 18,000. pl yr poeltlone: ng tor chlldrena ..., "' ivallabt. at th• p.,,._
tentnt. W9ntt 18drm apt Cd: pnnt ptoductlor\ end tr1l· AIDE F 11.....in PIT ,...., • ~~~~& :.;~.,, Pl .... ~ ~ reeume llOllm .,,.. p/hr lull 11,,,. no exper ny11ver Wo<k tn 1 lrltnd·
CdM. Nftpof1, Coeta ~ •XJ**'°9. Congenlal tMOhWln wtilchr. :.m1brd •~In flllng PfT or FfT. Cho+Oe ot to F D.l.C .. 1ttn: ,,.,_,. r~ ·87&-«17 ly t>MYlll\JI omo. ttklng
M .. e . Approx H80. co-woncer1, good t>en-+S250 mo. 845-2'51 eortlng 4 ga,ht<lng 'in-hOUrt,. yourt Call T H net, Po. Box 75't9, N9w· Full tl!M, 11pm-7am · coun1er1 phon• ad•
&4!"6SIO Ml•ll'll ente. hnd t>Oground ANS SERVICE exper P'9f fotmttlon I• a muet. A e e o o I a t • i T • i • : P 0 ' 1 B • 1 0 h · C 1 •T /llllTIU OPPIOl/UTI PAOllll Qr.,, )ob tor friendly Mmn. prof '*" w/oet ~~=o: ~:rd '5.t Cordboltde. Immediate •Good typing akllta. m1rketlng, ess-ee10 92858-744549 EO.E Wknd., 12 hra p/Wk. FuU ume temai. outgoing lndlvldual.
Milke room/gueat hOU.. '*co., 2107 No. Broad· opening, d1ye. 7S0-1305 For more rnformatlon ...... 11 IHllWllll COMPANION 11v1-1 n llUlfAITOlll M~S 9.5 Apply In penon ~t8~~
to '3001mo 831""'220 FOUND: f9tn Pit Bull, 7· 10 303 s A CA pt ..... caH 1'.D.l.C. Per· ....,, • wknde Fri 8PM·Sun SPM '1T, mu.t have 2 Y't t>IP lfPIOl ldllllt P • n n y 11 v •'' Li.,.. 191 mo'• old. Vlo. l ptlncid* w~ 1 • ant• na. AP&JITllllT IAIAlll eonMI (114) t76-i&400 FIT PIT P•rman•ftt. Nwpt Ekh •rt•. N--emkr, IUIT ....... Pl1c•nt11 Ave, Cotta .... ftU & Sliter, H.8. 840-5~1 H oe. 21 Unite. Cotta ~. No! Sanklng ~o:.,H~:~r~ Corone ttane req'd. 541-3025 ,,,._2 yre ,;_elnt. ~ C~':k~n=et~~ 1_M_ ... _-.,..-.-.::=----
"' --·-. • UCL Found Germen 6hepe(d, •• •• ~n.,&1,IYO/I =~!arr~· Mml-ue11un11 CAGl11E~ Pert time Wiii 0111ntLMY OATlllH UMIY&IJ eon wftll good MCr91aty UUt b Ill MAA .... 1mo:4'1-2ea OoY9t Shortt.,... N.8. -.... . TlllllOIU . -• . ASSISTANTS needed '°' Oood office lkllle, 45-50 •klll• • bookk .. plng P.opi. with •r a •.
...., ~1.ceeo -..... J"'"" = C••,..,..,111 Apt M1nag•r Co1.1pl• The Irvine offloe of tri. tr~ln. 14/hour. Mre. buty hllr Nlon In wpm llCCUf'a1• typing knowledge. Aak for Jene, Sh1klee, Amway, etc, ex· AH.I~ ... 1 ftlf ,,.. ..,.,, n "'"""' w/exp for t>MutlfUI 98 Ct.mp a.IS-0032 .... 1111111111-• 731·eee>0 peri.not to join N1tl0t'laf VIDW I I Found In Npt Htt. Y~ng otncel1I lnglo<an•x• Unit Garden Apte, CM Ftdtr•I O•poelt In· Newport, '"S-1187 n... Company In .. lee _.
Executive Omo9 apace-"'"' labrtdor lheph«d perienoed MCHt*'Y tor Sal1ry-..bQnu1+Ap1. No lure no• Corp. hu 010111 Su~ltoraty & l"IOI NHllllL aolty, Prove yOUraelllor
Wt11cllff l lrvlne, N.B. mix r~ gold dog With • the 09«atl0n1 dec>lrt· pet• a.2,..914 Wkdyl '""' lmmed. opening• tor Pl'· N.B .• , ... Man• kitchen OOUlllLOll , .. taurant ex.per. MO. Part Tlf'M, l!'lenlnQ• +one : few monthl In man~
Call 131-3180 81m-4pm. curly tall. a.2.111& ment. Thll PQlltlone ,... •n·t in••Ltl 10n1 with the following I oHllt• f\lnotlone. &end P 1 1 .., LllGI llPllYllll "41kand day. 75"1·8822 ment or COfporet• poa·
67t -l't "30/mo 'ound powtr tool fell off qulr• good tyi)lng ekute, " .., exper: ttturnt to P.O. lo• 128. art t me carr., coun • Prete< pll1 tupervleory lllon Wiii ti. your•. Mr
""'!! • In c .r.. • • pi..ant phone man-Wiii train. lnt«Vtewt Mon· • Min 2 yrt banking·~· olo DellY Piiot. P.O. Box ore wanted. Help boye exper. 8111tndlng IPIUTlll Hudton n2..-. 3875 Birch, Newport trvctc C.M. Frt. mot,,,. ,,., end geMrll office dey. 492.2005 In 1 not• dept. or loan 1580 C.M. CA 92928 1nd glrle eollolt new b.cttround l'Mllpful. PBX a Cotnputt< Con-L--,,......,,·~:::r=:":"r"-::---:-::
e.ICfl e.1-5032 Agt Ing. Oeeorlbt &42..U52 kn~. Prior WOfd dept. 1ubecrlpllon1 on th•lr Apply In pe<ton Monday· vwtlonl. AH ehlfte. FfT. ISAlES PERSONS·l'r9nCt'I
9 1 e sq 't G • n • j LOST: luff Cocker Span. proo-.ing I on lln• AITI llOUllO • Abttlty to ~min. paper rout ... Muet en JOY tulday.Wedneieday a-i2 Join our 11m11y. 640-1777 Putry Shop, Newport
ofo/Medlcel, grnd fir No. 'CMIMI' eppnt 5 yrt olcl, oomputer tldlle a d•flntte Wheel Allgnment, Brak... 40 WPM ......... working with 10· 13 yr noon Be 1 oh . K ti r I et 1 n e
c.M. $111/mo 832--4111 lonQ ~Mhtt. Vic. 11th pf1.11I Xlnt ~n•flt• I Tune Up ~ Tlr9 •Strong verbll I written Uftl111111 old• Early evenln9 tioure Thurld•Y 4:30-lprn. Cueto"*' Servto. 840-8124 a TUetln. CM 831-38119 workl"" condition• with• Ctr, 3000 E. Cout Hwy, communlcetlon akllle. work deye/ 111xlbt. hrt. 1800 von Karmen, lrvlnt. ULll ~----~=--CdM'1 beet oftloM. 1425-' · · growing oompeny. Apply corona ct.i M11. Banking exper. le r~ulr~ AOllln DIOITIYI Comml11lon only. equal Oppty l!mplyr ov.r 1~ count• a phon.. ULll/P• Tiii S1100 Incl utll, A/C, pl(g, LOST ChOO biwn lrg tt&n· r n p • r 10 n b t w n for thl• poeltlon. Maxi· Cell &Noe Em•l•Y tor driftlng/grephlot Mature women, tml Lido
J1nltor. 2158 E Cotat d.,.d Poodle. enewr1 to 8:~:00pm &ITI Tiii lllYIOI mum Nlaty wtll not e1t· N,~d~ :fe' 0 ~~ t ~o:'~~ 842-4321 eKt. 208 IOlllOLUllH euppll... !xp. not nee. gtH ehop. Apprx 25hr wk
Hwy 87M900 lllytlrne ~7':#.,:=.e~urn. Tll .llUY IMll 110. and tight repelre. N9WJ1C>rt ceed S20,000. f,'yr and NHd•d. Good t'loura, Willi~ to learn Import· Clll 10-1pm 875-2425
!XEC. 01',IC!; Cotta S 17Ml *111-.M1 AH Tire Ctr, 3000 I!. Cout will ti. blMd • rlctty on ~::~'1~:1an3'~ .. 1o!~ Oll&lll Ol&IT good pay. Call Aobbt.'1 ant. Full time. Sten &4. 81,..
M.... doM to Frwye. LOST Oolcl Meat\ lltaoelM """"' • Hwy, Coron• d .. Mer. ~ exper. & educatlOn. d a I I y n • w •pap• r . lllL y PILIT RIG l Mop a.S-0757 plhr. Apply Muttt Blu. nL111&1lmH
Appx240eq.lt.lnold•Ofo W1toh.Ol'Mtatntl1Mntll '""'' F.D.l.C.offertagr .. t A"r•Hlvt, Hlf·dl•· Hou••K!!P!R 2 d print. ™-Flacht< Ave, l! .. I! C"' WANT "·rn ... -. -o 559-3900 value. Rewetd 497-3718 11•11--•·11 ti.nefltl Paok• lnclud· • ..... I •Y9 Co1t1 M .... 540-1373 NO !XP nl N "' • '" _..,., "' ...,,. To Pl art-vour Ing Dentel & VIiion peck. clpllned lndlyldulll m1y per wwlc. Mon a Fri, 15 EDI Hourly ealaty, com·
o.k epca/tone NtV/rnlnl ACCOUNTING CLERK fo°ll'>I Rf''>ull " • 11 you would Ilk• .,rn ex04llltnt Income OllmR llLP/P·tf•• per hour. Mutt epeak 11110 lln mlu lon • bonuN1. NB
1tor•/m1llboK•. ldMI Ptr1tull JOll Exper In ~ting, rnenual mor'e lnlorm1tl0n, plMM (ealary + commlaalon). Bakery on Balboa lel1nd. Englleh. !Jl!*'d l Al!Fe. Four peopl• nled~ to flll 100. Let ue trlln you 10
loo. 850·2290 Anytll'M, A/R, tcnowl~Qt ol aging ~wrvt<·~ DireNMy 01 11 p1r1onne1 at benefit• ind 1dvanc• 01ye. C1111ppt 873-felS Can ev.e 780-1580 open1ng11nS1nt1An1ol· m•k• BIG SIS. Cell now
Smlll 1BR tlOuM Comml Pll llHUIMYI t'latpful. a.SM222 ad C11JI :'\low 915-MOO. EOE :'n~ op~~;~ief~: OllTllll llRYIOI IHttkH,.r/P·TI•• floe. Noexper nee. 1920. 722·1245 z~. 117 I!. 23rd St. ~~~Tc~l!~=fp &OllllTIPAJULI 642·5671 SEll tdt• Item• with 1 P•rlence nt cHury. OLllllPAITTill lhlut NB hm. Gent clean· ~:ii w~,trei~:~:r:rt: ULll
S7251mo IM, &42-0317 tor..,. et 1 ea'Mp. Aa6c· Detlll minded per-.on to 1111 • bf. lU Delly Piiot Clualfled Ad. Send rtturM Attn: P.;gy Ing, 1tr111d1. own trane I 882.5&'3 Tlr•. end Auto hrv1ce
• Of 213/824""'508 ' Ing 1700. Call Cerol Account• peyable poe. Bi.vln1. The Dally Pilot hll Im· drvre llc nee. Pr.v expr I Newport Tire Center,
811/302·2629 d1Y9. ltlon In t>uey Orenge -•-• oe•-IMdlltl oPtnlng lor Cut-eng. IP"k'g ~. Call PART TIME 3000 E Cout Hwy, CdM .,C.aamlal 2131892-4138 .w. County Ad Agency. AIP I . 1.,, ,1.,014 ._. -· tom.r s.rv1ce c1er1c to Terry Ke11y &41..teee For F.v. Sk•tlng cen11t . ... t -1 .all ..-_...... 1 .... 10 -.I.: •••LY•• -work In our buey Clrcul•· Floor Ouerde. en14;k ber. Sai.. ul •• L......-,w/mcollt~ ----requr..... • ••••••••••• • ... ,._, ttonOe~•rtment.MuetM IMlll.PlllTllll Bob or Terri 847-0022 w·-1u1w·-11 5.._;91 /&HO: ..,. ... , key by tOUOh, 'Yl:llng • • • IH W la. It .., '" .... 5 '""" OtlQt wan11 to m"t m1t1.1r• mutt. !x'*lent fringe • • • ., d1pen 1bl1 end able to 1vall. at MIMlon Plue, PAllT Tllll With oer tor wick« buk•t 528eqttll318mo.r .... womanlor tov.loom~ beMftt• 8endreau,.,,.fo· • Ottttlt11,0A hand•• l'IHvy phonH COOK, COUNTER& lunch Mrvlc.. 8:30·1PM,
C. M.., e-2. 832""' 190 nlonehlp. Into ISO'• Mra. B;.eok•. PO Bo~ : DDLLIOTll WAITED • with• plealant , ... phone DELIVERY DRIVERS poeltlone 1vall1bi. 1t tri. Mon·Frl Eern 1pprox IQ11v•. 1 .. n1t1n, mute~ 8710, ~port Bffctl, e e voice 20 Hour• plweek needed. FIT or P/T. Dilly Piiot new1p1per 1160.4200. wkly. Mull lttrlll ftU s.nd ph, 1et narM etc. to CA 92861 e e Clertoll Mond1y • Frld1y. Call PIUH 1pply within. working S1turd1y and ti. neat, pereonabi.. and MA" u.aa &11 Roger, Ad 130, Delly Piiot ' • Part time opening in Laguna Stach • IUll TYPIST &42·4321 for 1pp1. Aak 31952 o.I Oble1eo, S J.C. Sund1y mornlnga. Eern energ•tlc Apply b1wn
• .., PO 16e0 Cotta ~ &Olllnl UlllYUU • area. Earn up to 16.00 per hour for • If you're 1 Mlf·et•rt1t and for Tracey 881·1 1.4.50 per hOUr plut g11 1oem-12pm or 2·4Ptrl 11111 _. Cat2828 Mut t h1ve •icperleno•. e e fJeitlblt abou1 )Ob ueign-1nowtnot. Mutt t1av1 lot'l'e Kitch_,, 3077 So
&55478 a month. lrYIM .,.., 37 hr/Wk. Call • collecting for monthly 1ub1criptloo1. • rnentl. tri. r:.O.l.C. t111 1 llLIYlllY PllllOI ln1Ur1no. lerge cer or plck~p end Harb or, Sant 1 A n1
BAYSIDE VILLAGE lallaHI On 40lf !Ot lj)pt. eeo-0727 • Experience preferred but not re· • Job for you. Our dlvlllon full 11me, 18 yra/oldtr. Ill. TIOl 1 OLlll( Met leut 11 yeere old 979·0747
300 E. COllt Hwy, Npt 8cl'I -· ·--: quired. Muet be at leaet 18 keau old. • of b1nk llquld1tlon CYt· Broedway Flower Shop, The lrvln• omoe of the Call 8ruot M2·4S33 llOlln••y 171· 18*1 AU O&ll 1111111111 F W ..... t "-~~__.I e e r~11y ti .. openlnge for 2150 11erbor Blvd, C.M Federel Depoell In· RID MECHANICAL T!OH. ""
--------1 ¥111111 a1aOllllll or M ~· -"" •.. • Call 10 AM • 4 PM. Mr. lrkl•nd. •. Mvetal clerk typllt wtlo Oentll/Ortho '*>ept eurence Corp hu Im· Pen tll'M, looking '°' r• F/tlm•, lgt ofc work, ·--tt s~ .. Ing omce of SAU. ~'G•· . 642·4&21. E•t. 207. aYerage fypplng .. ..._.... e--nte, 4'"" Oya exp pt\onea. f"YOlng . p,.., IUIO -.eutt••• vv• &t1.b garM route. Pat1 zlne Need orMt~ non/ • " .. • PM 'rrM ~ ---....... ,. PT\9dlat• opening• In our llrM Neede 10 ~ 11mtttar •XPI' 8,r ;,.got w .. 1.
SPtMITOAL M!XBIAds tlm .. effort. HiQh retume. emk.r. 1xper NllOr for : : ~:P, · grHt .Db~~etft'; R~'d. NB &42·2828 1n1ur1nc• Dept. The w/prototype tabrlo1tlon port Porteri. 645-1272 Advice In All Mi tten a L.oo&I ., ... Wiit trlln. Ylfltd dutlee from typing • OllOIUTlll lln. • pack. Including dental DOCK ATTENDANT IC· entry level INSURANCE & ....,,,bly, •Ito t•11ng , _______ _
CounMllng. 1815 So. EJ Aexhre.NoUctown.Pey to funotlon org111lzltlon. • 1 .. 1 ... 11 Ell l VIiion cover1ge. If you oeptlng epptlcltlon• t-5 CLERK r~ulr .. t~ lol· of aame. Contact Oon llllnUY
Cemlno AMI, San Clem. for from proflte. Clll 8un· Mery°' ten a.5-710.. e ~ .. ,.. : would Ilka mor• lnfor· 3333 W. Coaet Hwy NB lowlng exper. Devit , l 'Q1rdt, Inc. PfT, 3 d1ye p/wk,
Uo'd. 492-72" d•Y 12·~· M1c:3t~~ Mr • ·· · • matlon clll peraon,,.i, 11 llllYll : ~!~riP.:r~":t~ pollcl• &4µeeoTill. mutt 'Yfto-~f,5•moktt
VOi.i don'1 ~ a gun to Wollt< 14 ..;1111lfl•d Ade ere tne : ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • e 975-~00 EOE Now hiring full a part time & premlume. PUT
"drew !H t" when you Kl1oh9" for c•t•lng or 1newer to a 11.1ooeNlul • 8:. V:o~L•g;;io~~.~~~Co'.,2~7 : Clertoal drlvere for tha South • Xtnt vetbll l com· TIUPIHI UUI HHllITT
place an Id In IM Diiiy butl1n"•d· l•1 r~N & fullyt g1r1ge or yard .,.., It'• • • • PILI OLllll County Dt•l·A·Rld• Pro-munlo111on tklll• llOO + •••• •1...... II.II p /Ill, Piiot Want Adlt Cell now •Qu PP• n ewpor bettt< way 10 t•ll more I , • The FecM<it t In· grem. Paid 1ralnlng. Uni-• Mu1t ti. conlclencloue • .. "•
1 &42-5871. 8Mch. (714) 97~203 people! •• •• • •••••••• •••••••• •••• eurenoe Cor~ tour form• &4.25 plhr llat1. & lttentlv• to d~lll• •• Trell ut7;i::' :::;t'°rnpr:; ------------------------·~---------------~open~~~~. UMf15 ~.n~~~~~ WI~~, ~~~,~~ I ~ ~ To QUal!fy you mutt have DRIVERS. croee country ~"::.?t:1;0r>" Wiii (71•) 112·171 Prior Mlll1ery Of law En·
} j P' .... i 2 yre •llPtr· In flll~, tort· No exp. nee. C1llf. lie. • Verification of PART TIME.. type, fll•, toroement pr•I Retired
I' I ' I Ing & checking II form• '*4 Meo<lregor Yacht• lnaurarioe on ell real ooou. hlhld errand• ror pereone ancour~ to . ·;;;.7 of dOCUmtntlllon. Exper. 183°1 Plec.nt11, C.M. ' •let• loene Nl .. man It W .. tollff "'rn. apply. • -11 :::1· In a bank'• note dept. I•• " PEDUS
plue. The F.D.t.C. off•• 1 llUYlll 11011 • Pliolng oompretlenetve Appx 10 hre p/wk. SUO SECURITY SERVICE U oJ....a-.. fl k U1blllty lneurenoe on p/hr. 831-6331 0 0 ftflMlll• I• INt .. lat. lar•ealat IHH Cl11afa1 Palatlat fn':~1~:.i ~~~ OWi Oii llOlllOY F.D.l.C. owned property 229 So ~;m"· rg
$2.17 per day
That'e ALL you pay lo< 3 llnee,30 dt)'I
tntri.
DAILY
PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CAll TODAYll
All FOi LOii
leni1t coverage. Pi.... call llltac• P1l4 • Review'of property for PIHi Wiii
HARBOR MARtNE CIMn Upe•Tre. Trimming Wiii ci.tn model "°'"" a lnt.,/Extr. Cue1om/rMld & per.on,,.i, EOE Oall PrH '"" • ~~~t~T~r,::,:: p!~r~'': ~i~: s10111n llAll
We Wiii haul out, clean & Y11Md MEa'!'!~•3H2'!'!'ng •Pl'• experi.no. a h•Ye comm'I 30 yre •KP, redlo 975-5400 (l H)lll· 1771 In • current etatue treln. Clll J1.1 ....... 882-5843 538-9402 p1lnt any bolt bOttom for IK .,...,.. .... ref'e. 499.7904 Valeri• dlep1tohed, St lie 470520 .. ,
110/per rt Incl. paint& •II Compi.t• CIMn-Up gtn'I B111t l lttla1 tr .... tlm•t• 957 .. 093 OLlll TYPllT Hll ITIH ITIOl I • =:tlon Of rnonthlY 1101"81111T lllY. IT&. am110T ~::'~!rg!. ~:;:. :!fi m1tnt, tr .. trimming, tr .. Cpte to hN lit Fn your hrM J.0 . INT /EXT PAINTING Good growth polftlon In HLIVHY Wiii • Comput., Input ~or buey medlc1l front of· Good .. i..man, I> ... pay
for epptm 873-9320 Aak Mte. M1uro, 831-4997 Prefer 1 mo or long.i HOUMI a Aft. Reu. ,.,.,, Oper1\lon1 Dept 1t Cot· pert a lull time 1va11. S5.50 Candtd1t" mu1t hive ap-floe. Full tlm•. &4&-8824 ptue g•nerou• com·
UI lboul pick up/del~. TllE IAllEIEll term. Reta 944.9375 Qu1Uty wor . 895-5755 r:r~t C:!J:. ~~~:~ p/hr1 l1Q. Hiiie. 788-3784 G~~~r~tr. :~:,1~~~; 11101m1111T s~':'ce·:.PP:ru'~,rn'i!n
lrl4al lawn & Garden Malnt. By Jaalttrlll PAINTER NEEDS WORKI r~ulr• xlnt typing aktlla: FRIDAY TYPE WORKER mum Nlary le I 18.000 .. P1tm pert time.NB. Real Cltlter Carwalh, 1 1 .___. '"*' COit• trained In Int/Ext, oelllnge, relln c1b. exper wl word pro-D•tlll oriented, lite p/yr. T~ F.O t.C Off.n a Eet•t• firm ueke Beac:h Blvd, H.B.
enTICI landacaplng. 981·2120 JXRITORJAL CLEANING K2S) yr1 exp., work guar. CMllng 1 Plue Vart.d bkkpng,n.xlblt. n-emkr gr•t ti.nente peck•, enthuelutlc r.i11bll t .. m HIPPIH I HOIMll
BRIDAL QiltiNERY. SERVICE. Free .. t. Oreg. Davi• Pllntlng ~3837 g•n•rel office. dutlH, M·' ... MS·9328 lnctudlng Dental a Vtelon pl1y., Light 1cc:ur1ta
H111, t11ru. ve111 a 14;. TlltlrtHIHH 83t·588181S/335-51M PtJtril( 20-30 lire p/Wk to 1t1rt. llllULlfFIOI coverage. If you would ~~2~g 581 wpm, n· w~~·t1F~lu;~0,·~~~;~:
oeNOrlee. 839-1188 lewn-trM-ehrub 1n1t111. JANITORIAL CLEANING XRTFJJ wm develop Into full time , .. uni phone menne<, Ilk• mor• Information, .,,..,..er, f:o eppeerence 54 75 plhr to etart North
C1rr1t7 ~~:n ~~. ~ R~~:;:~~~ For ~=r:,;1~ ~.:~~·· ~AN~~~/mt~:~?!f =~l;m~:r:ly In perlOn ptlllng, verloue office g~:'~g:eonnel, 11 ~~11~:"d1ncl~~~:: ~= Cotti M .... Ron or Oen, ElCpert Cerpentry s e& Sprlnkllf lnetell., rep11r. . VISA·MC 173-1512 Tll 'ILLY IHll 110 dutt•. FIT, non .. moktt, bookkeeping lunc11on1 "68·1510 Your Delly Piiot Repelr·R..,,od'l·AddttlOne FrM •tlm1te1 548-6085 A.A.A. M1lnt. LOWEST • • ONSITE Photogr1Phlct, LIUL UOlnUY 15-$8 per hr. end tire. ere •--.-,-A,-1-.-.-.-.-,--Servlot Olr.clory 0oor ... tc 548 .... 980 PRICES. Comm«clll & ANOYS WAlLCOVERINO 1l0tJ lllletft jyt, 3303 Herbor Bfvd, Unl1 tor lltlg1tlon & tlX 11· 1 to 5:30 PM. 5 dlyL
Repreeentatlve . 811•~u Ralldentlal. 882-3235 ln111J11tlon I Remov11 lnfH E·5, Cotti Meu. tOrnay Non-emok•r. St1rt lmmect. Cont1ct Store In CdM nMde Sate. 142.tl21 Ht. IOI BUILD OR REPAIR AMERICAN HANDYMAN Int. painting 54~-4013 540-0888 Nwpt Bctl. s.nd ,_,,,,,. OenlM 714/47&-0282 Pereon, FfT 5 Daye Xlnt
-------• dc!~'!t~~ r~1~, C1rpentry. fencing, win· Lu•1e•fi•t Expert w111covertng In lH/HO·OH1 HllUL lfftol ~r;:r''lt. Pru::· 2:, lllOYATillllT ~:k~~!,~:~~1i.~:ly
•478 fo9 Oon &e2...a202 dowe, plumbing, merllle. LANDSCAPE-MASONRY etallatlon. Reu. Corieul1· OLlll TYPIST lull or . part tlmt. &4.00 Newport &Heh, Ce. ~or private club In Newport 1--------IAc tut> enCI, hlullng, etc. Landecaplng, 111 ph.... int ANlgnmnt 581-8590 for the i.gai dept. to ullll p/hr. 505 30th St. Sutt• 92880 Beac:h. Mutt hive good ITIOIOLlll
ctnllH • Complete tc•tlol. CoV9!"1. And Y• Jeeue le lord done. Brick, block, atone, PAPERING 1 PAINTING In tyi>tng, flllng and other 203, N.B. 573-7911 phone minn., a muet. Oep1ndabl• en•rgetlo * BOOKKEet"INu by Oeok•. onor•t• walk· (llc#30405) 836-82•4 lrM Mt. Mike 499-4072 0 1 k Rell A I' clerlo11 dull ... Tyi>lng SO Liv.In Car• for Elderly Computer exper. helplull. young man nMdtcl for
Marge a Judy 15 Yure w1~ Block w1111.4 RO:;' DECKS-WOOD COVERS. Rick 881-9584 u• ·J:~ 5s&-733o • •· wpm r~. Own car • lllWL IPPlll lady on ti.aoh In w .. t Call 875-0900. ltght etoek work end ln-
iexper., lrM Mt 989-1987 add n.15yrex.p&4--4 4 CompelltlvePrlcM. LOCk il Lnl mutt. Call Judy,Fulltlm.pot1tlon1v1ll.ln Newport. Dan, worki---------voicing. Afternoone
IC t 1 d 11 Rep1lr·Ooor .. Alterillone 10 yeere exper. 7~·1820 !JI' H Ou111ty W1llp1p1rtng. &42-4321, axt 318 tor emlll, bl.It buey office. 851-3331, evee a.5-7237 FW1auriant 20·25 tire plWk. &4 p/hr ompu ., /• I P•vro • Remodel P1MI L.ock .... tc Loc~foR Work gu1tenteed. Call lppt. Pltlunt phon• Plr· llllUIHI clMl'.Call Nouvelle Via, ~~~·cf.~r. 9n712,'t;{ w1ndow·Fen~-C•b1net •GEN. HOME REPAIRS All Kay ServlcM fol tr .... 1. 993-7531 HAHi HUT eon1llty & typing a1c1111,.. LIU N•llll '"'" urne. Apply 1n per-.on Miu MlcnM1t. 752-eeo.
..,,__ ___ ,.....,,,.,..-__ 35 yr• exp Jtfry &42-0587 Pllnt. Drywall. Carpentry 895-2893 TICl\nlque Paperhengere lllLY "LIT quired, computer a Exp'd loin Proc .. eor et Cinoe, Mon·Frl 1--------
1cH1tlc1l C.Ui111 etc Gery M5·5277 PTl I CtlooM tM beet IOt your bOOkkeeplng knOWled~ nHdad for growing 3.&pm. 2241 w Cou1 ·~~op.~~~-1 C1~I CltHl•L HANDYMAN LARGE and IH~ home or office a.o.e288 OUllTYPllT h•lpful ProolrHdlng Flnanc:111 Co. Xlnt Nlary tiwy Newport &MCI\ SUMMER i:~~·::::i~:· ~-PONbtRo§X c(EANERS 1m1ll. I DO IT Alli BRtCKWORK. Smell )ob• . PfT, trlvel oriented bu•I· ex~ .• plu•. Mutt enjoy ~ghc:°~~ s~ ':: .RESTAURANT
well Repelre. 947.7901 Cl11n thle a.m. ent.n11n 531 ·5579 Pit or Ive mag. NewpoRn.,. Co.,•7
1! 3M17~n, P111t11/ltt'1b nMe nde gen'I ofo clerk. :~~':fv:=J:,~ ~:~;': eume to A'd I 125 C/O lllLL Olll/"11 Tl•• JOBS tt'llt pm 731 ·1538 lrvlnt. • I . v .,. "' - -good tyi>lng l phone ' .,. l.Ultl111/l••t4tl1 . . HOME REPAIR Carpentry c B s lnt.JExt. Pit plute<lng, •kill• MMntl•I 875-2250 Call Bob or su .. n, II Delly Piiot PO Box 1e..., lxper pref. Mon thru Fr1· E·RN .............. """"iP-ICtatat C .. cHtt 19"Ctl I git .. , tr• trim, uitom rick· ~one c:uetom texturing, quality ' Herb Mitchell ANOClatM, Cotti M .... Cll 92828 d1y only Kltohen I "
Beac:h Cit ... Aemoaeong Oflvew ti th dump runa. C.M. & N.8 Block.ce>ncret• tuoco work. Probi.ma.No Prob-OLRI nPtlT 831·5551 11111 ..
111
•• _.. counter h•lp, P/tlm•,
Fr• •llmet., on room aye. P• oe, P• •1 . .,., Jim Whyt• &42·7208 Refe. Fr• •t. 54e-e.492 lemel •3288a. 554-7831 P-ma..._..1 PfT, ... t.., , __ , lfll•ai IPPIOI -._,_ Mon thru Friday, 11atfl to MONEY eddt11on1. kitchen a or etc No Job too tmll .. '....,, .. , ·' ,....., _. Fltt.n & Awning lnltallttt. 2 c·•1 "' •-f
b•th• 673·8122 R ... Mickey 53&-0553 Plumb ·Elect.-Cetpentry UlllllY I ITIOOI Home or Apt'e. Int 1Ex1 poetlon w/chance for Im· p /time Job lncludae Exp. Mlpf\11. 645-2244 11:~· or ~ft -.a2eo;: ;;ry·
CLU• c P•lnt-•tc. D•p•ndlblt. New a repllr. All typee Petch Wo<k. llc. a bonded. med .... ~·u1,·, .. ~,. Vmlnotm«lotlv1tl~taltn· bkk-: typing, non-arnkr Mont", ...... 2..0S70 PRIZES Cuetom R"ld~U•I Work • IH Aue. Paul 720-0139/.w Oulllty. LowprlOM #140807. 441·1424 ...,. '" ,.. :l.(l 57 IUllAL PlllT IPO " " -
c1 .. n-Tlmely·RHaon1bl1 cfiildcar• my home, nr 6C lle.831·2345 moepti«a. C.11957· 838 only 43 -04 R-t~, lneuranoe, or-...... ,. .. 1......... TRIPS 751·6943 llc•U 1543 elrpon,N.B.&C.M.er .. , lllallaJ P1tohWork213/438-4425 for lntervlft HAIRDRESSl!A I MANI· .....-.. Pll' I S di CI
*REMODELING --rnp. rel• 852-9539 LT HAfiltNG . boVINd le"I• DIH JMlttt Repair pluter, dr,:•11· CURIST w1ot1en1ei., C.M. ~:~:? :.i .. ~~ (~:: Cd~.m:7s-7~~5 :11 4;,: • ..
1tAESTORATION aar-o• a Verd Clnup• ~~!.. llKE A PAAIT. •tucoo, Ilk• new, r• .... 111on·70130. 4 Dey wwlc. di -o' I fOf appt THIS
•REPLACEMENT IClt11l11 ltmce Jon &45-8192 Mu11o for enl oocuton wri.t • Won<*'ful Wond &45-5924 pen n9.,. !'1a:KP•r .. "'" .. -~,-au-r_an_. ,-----1..-,...24... Pl .... of Shopping, right It .,...... .,_ ~lllAIER "" REPAIRS Otrlo•/Hou11 CIH nlnR * ClEENCO * o.n I Tony. .,,,. ..... a I your flnQertlpe 9V9fYdayl llltl&L lfflll Lorl'I Kitchen hu tM '°'" \}UWlft
(FrM •tlmet .. 24 tire) ttoneet w/rele Petty A ci.an-upe & 11aulfng. •.-tat 2• .. , 0. 711· 1llO Delly P"llot CIHtlfl•d CIH tlll•d Ade ar• th• ,__ F IOWlng openingl ....... ,~ ""'t
t price lor deelgn. plane 6PM·9AM 984· 1097 Fr•.., a.5-8730. John ...... •oood !Obi d ri..h .. -Ade. To place your Id. an'"' to 1 tu~I Group prac1-. UhlOn ' ... "'
englnffrlng, conetruc· D It *l· 1 •'111* ~DI,. 1 cell &42.&e7a and let 1 garage°' yard...., tt•e 1 l1l1nd. Aeoeptlon /In• IUOll/PllTllll NILY 17
llon. can uve you SSS tc I .... HAULING a MOVINQ N PERT Wlllt hMIWI tpONI. bettt< Wly to tell more eurano•. Part time. OllTllL TUllll ··-· 1831·3045 842-0289 Pelle Cfftn Prompt Servla.. Thank O~~~~ca.. DRAINS Cle.AR From i15 Oluetned Ad·Viaof ~p ~ ~tQ25 MY1t be c1Mn cM I q · .. ...,.1,.r, 1HrHOM~!K11t.. BllCOOY 1t11rc ... 1 ~• -yout-i.WWll", S:.$0;Tne Lie: T • 118.428 130· 1353 lraue.Tt, Of•po11l.1. Helter, .you.. 11•1Aai Um lletl tpMklng. Wiii ti.
Archltecte & Contractors W11erpr0ol deck cOatlng LIGHT HAULING·MOvlf\9 •· ... BC· MOVING •t U 1·9804 MlM 7412·90ee ~· ...,.. trained on Hoti.rt equip-If you .,.• IOOICI~ !Of' •JCttl
•• 4 ( di 3•) " D •1 p•lat' IMwrt frHttft, P/T ment. SUndty kfn..~:30 ependlng money, or llke IUI Cn lllltalll Drainage rep1lre. rebullt Dump runt y9/ gate ag• Quick caretul T 138041 , E.xl*1 a.Moe ' Aep1lr •. • • • • • •• . I r I I "'".... •• ... ....... ~ m M 0 n • T ti " r to QO Piao.I Ilk• MllQIO
,. .1 S S _ .. ., Allen Oeoklng 157 .... 510 7 d •• Dtvt &45-1 HI LO .... TES .;.2-0410 . 32yrtexp. Relld'l/Comm. • wn u-. t·' K tt a-. "... VI ~ 4V2•vvc!71 ,,,. • -UC #409035 994-8111 " tf .... ,.,.. :30em-6pm. Good ltttt· mvvn .. n. no ...... , Htg A/C, Ref rpre hi EF D!n!lL IMJ .. 1eniet ITU-MU.Ill • 1111,.. ...-.. Ing w• a btMftte Fann, 0t Win Prl!.• and
Amana AIC •Y• 1c 459283 ~"'.*Clai tsrYWtJI PrOf. UXiiAdE n;;apy ITIMiii ••a P17!~ : au PM TIDI : -. W llRID llJYll . ~=~~I w:
A11hlt Spec1111z1ng In Comm1 tor etr ... heed & bedt· ()fange Co Orlalnal *Jarell Pallt-llr•• e mu LM• ,.. A -· *' • AM I PM af\lftt. Houtiy CIMn cut, per90nable, r• c . M., H. 8. 0 r T. v
P1r111ng Ar... • Aepelre ~ad •89Reald'23 1,A1,,3~~~2 .. •t echea. HO-HI04 caroi. Stud.nt Mov9rt. Tnaured £$P~tnge. ta Special. • -WW.. a.. • ,.,.II • pllJI ml'-8t "4-2511 lltble, needed tor morn-&42""333
Aeauriac1ng.s .. 1co1t1ng .,.., "" ..,.., .., .___. Lie. T12~S. &41-t427 •S75-24951t8314072* •It y in ffl"h C!-h l u . • • Ing dellveri... Mon-Fri.,...,...,.,..,,..,...,,..,..----~-SAVE MONEYll 831-4199 jlJHtrlr' lt•t Cart ilftTICI NEWW1rehouM8tor• e ou are "6 ~ OO or Jr. nilhe TIL&llllfll'fl 5em·1:30pm. Muat htve TUOlll IUlllTUY ___ :,~~~u~~'!"'!"~-tft:~:ritt::"'l~:C: r.,.--, ....... ..------...._1/Alttt1tlt11 • and would like to um $25.00 to• Coupte to Mlilt Motat v111d lie. Copy ot OMV r• flret a MOOnd grad• A1ttutln P&lllll ILllTlll r::n 'T1~=t~~ •ult........ ou•• .... -WOf'tl At co;;;t : $50.00 in commissions and more ead> • MantQtrt. Nftpo(t Beech cord end ~ •noll•h 18 11,, Chr1tt1an mtnletr)'
Ou fl~ ..... .. -L 2-121i -·r C M • k ~ --" y e llM !xpet, l'MllpfUI. ,. epe&klnQ. Uary CC)tn. &42·1111 Ken• Mtch1n1e1 E"9lnet • w ....... "•-·· To t!Ye In lout fS3.. Pr.no lAeeOn9 -" Prtc•. N•wport/ . · wee -ve UI a ....u. ou can work • tired ~om• Phone A~ Loil'e l(ltcnen, 3077
1n11a11ed w11ren1 1599-•425$1 ta-7401 Salon a Muelque ., .. Nannette 831-4110 : PART ME In the afternoons and• 1-12 noon. a.2.a262 ao · Hwt>ot, aant• Ane •-m--,-.. --.,..--,-.• --.--
se99 werrenty 722~ NEW/REPAIR. Ouellty. No ..... Cltulat u.. A. Zeoc:Nnl. I A. -Tilt • ev~n.tng1 and still have ~ to enjoy : 970.0147 -4 Yr I 2 Vr olcl ~
ltHtJ ltm ct 1rr: :r:.o ~ R8BIA1i e tf.XNINd Palatla1 R11fd.ntl11/eomm•rci1i • your wmmer We off r complete . Chrletlen Mlnl•try
-• SERVICE'. a tht'OOuQnly PINI PlWTINd .... AICi\. 8tQ JOI CANCELED • trainl and . d • llTM FWtautant &42·•1•1 l~~~~i:1~ ellmj RESID/COMM'l.llNO 29 dWI tloute. MCM>e&1 ard Sinor. 18 yr1 Of :re Cheep Pflola. "42·2078 • ng provi .e tra.naporatfon : ••••• lllT&lllll TEl.!PHONE/IALE8 H~°t.'/:!::&-0....ayr:2~:l 0~1S::.~i ~blt~5.:= ~~o!r uo.~411• ;,,.=_ -.'--! ~~~t~~ ~.ai;!~r"Zu~I Av1llab1~~N•wport "::p:::Pon~' ~; 12%·11%·11% •--~I,._ IM111 :__ Vice? Shetl, 7to-5 RAINBOW PAI= ~~;V~~* :~11;;:: e and ft ii notleven daya a Wi k. c.ome e luch EKperlenu ::1r avellabtct Mon • Bf ... ~ "911 IMI 1111111, LTt. CuftOtn c.anino. HOf'llitlo" °= .. our Jc 1611 typing ftMdl t7a.4431 • help UI t new C\J.ltomen for our . Prtfarr•d. but not pm sm~ =:..:. .......
Lie. Prtv m>me ror t;IO«ly *ElootU *lodyguwd9 ~ uoe4t• Mt NO-JEff uc : newspaper and have a ood Llme : ~~·,=~~ POt1 leectl. · Tou1' ..,. WILL TUii WM1c1Montt1 Amb. or •Fltneea Coneuhinta Kathy. 147-7857 aft• 3Pm A.A A PAINTING tnt/&t UCenMd Typing ~ while vou're doin It. Co nd e --·· 81do 2nd ftoOt No calla ~amb 540--4 101 Kathy •C>rtYert 4""'4564 l!XCElLlNT H$EKPNO LOWEST poeelble prtoe ~~~...!'.:. ~\': • J g me out • and be tNfll 11 yMt• Old. • • . • At."12:30 PM Mon. tt'lru
24 Hr UC Aeeld'I c.r. '°' -.~ . NMcta. 5 J!! loc:el 10 ,., ~. 1124235 ........... MM : lee ,what w~ are talkina about and :· =i:a.~c.n 1~: •n• umy UUI ~~,o.:·:= ~he Eldet1y. LI.Ill environ.. •xp iw.. ..: ~: ... .,. iCUIToM Pelntlng by Jim ...... ·-, • you u be glad you dJd. c.n tod•y and .... PM M • F"rtcs.y C.M./ N.B ..... Wiii train. .,.., l24-1lt0 Mr. Q., ~.~..!...on,~11.1 ....... -· Hom.aomc.c 1ngby L.owt1t•f0tat1utt... AICeo18 WhiOW wMh! :•cart tomorrow! Call Mr. Earl • 142 . 1424671 -~10;~!."D-8 .... .:.A:""s Cd_,,M TQ9Ptd/remowd QeM. JOOI P*-c I for free touvft. Pillo tutn .. Iron ,.. Ing, For ~Mna & ·deen • M8-70S8 or 24 l ·8432. : 111111... ..._ _ P ll
,., ...,""" ""' "" \IP.'*' lftM. 71t441t ..Clmat. "42• 7.. •et. heeet ~""'4243 l!CreeM. Call 5'1-0121 e OAANGE COAST OAJLY PILOT e Haw you"'"' WllDlll ~ ~ ':'1.:::
19Ell Idle lleme with • C&8 LAWN UAVJCE ~Ing Hon•t, DAH IALYE~ PAINTING SCOTT a.ye QI Notlfl e W 111r ..,_ c:e. .._.,CA t1t17 : to ... ~_,. do VCffEAIEHCID In ~ ofb No ..,., nee. Wiii
Delly Piiot fted Ad Mo#~'*-mo a»-o.t>end•blt. •fflclant. Lio U25t24 Bafboe Window WaeNna : AH °""~ ~ !'\.~~" • It ••II I Call NOW. 8'*" ' C)f.-y '""· ttlln '°' ..... Ml .....
M2..et71 SM &4U111.fTM1te l4-"40211ft•lpt'fl c:anAnytlfM..114·2011 I03Mbotll 11~135 '-'•••••••••••••••• .. •••••• Mt·M71 Colta,._.142·f4M ~ .. 41Q _ ·-
. . ,
*YDLT* r1• 11&1Y lllYlllll
{714)8&2-1680
3 ... 8 C.rnpue Or
Aero.a from 0 C. AJrport
(714) 879--9330
1824 Or~horpe Way
Anahtl"Q. CA 92801
(714) 836-9281
200 \ E. 4th St., Ii 112
Santa Ana, CA
•laMllu.... 1111
i' an;;:;Q "™" Pool Ta~. title new. '2500. Pool Tb4 L.IQtlt fix·
1ure seoo . ...wooe
_J
---
PACIFIC VllW
-..oftlAl PARK
C4NNtery • Mortuary
Cha_,.1 • Crematory
3500 PacitlC V..w OrlYe
~port BMc:h 14'-2700
A
Orange Coal OAIL y PtLOT /Monday, ~t 19, 1885
ACMll
1 GtM I a.al
s can .. tn0\'9f
9 Humble
u 811ndu
15 AdjYtanl
111 Aecsium
dltc:O.,..,
17 H11angue , a Mecn1ne IYP9
19 Legel 111111
20Denoemov.
21 -Haute
23 LAf\letn
2' Loom e>artt
2e MoMlm ¢l'ltel
28 Fuel
29 Got rl<I Of
33 Mad IOC>ll 3' F1U1t
37 UnMmlted
38 Au1o part
39~0duee
'°Or-. bOdy ,, Tlw Anar
'7 Olmtn"'* 43 Pet~OI
'0"9 IQO « Cll11tl~
'f ShfN
47 ugnt bl.Ill>
"'9P«•Of
"HulhflM
S2 F'letlt)
SS Fe«
5 7 Anion• ,,.,,
SI Fnend9'\1p eo lntunou• ,, F\owlt
S2 Renee Qlf!>
S3 F"1rn
S.C $1111 pl\1tm
SS Sn1n., se Cates
67 Othet folka
DOWH
I Mutlllg
2 o.c, ....
3 BMlttlO
'Oemotk>n
5 Creyon
S M ... •anQ'V
7 ~
• ()japet IQed
• Ber\"'8
10 Faonc
,,~
12 For,,,., n11n41 01
T'llaltano
13 e.tnend
-... 22 LOl\Q-ol<lmlel
' bird 25 Ollllll'IOnd
27 ll\10Y9 2tPtlt~• 30 lndemn11*1
Hive you reed today a
Claulli.cs Ad1? If not,
you're miA1nQ tM beat
bwgains In town!
11 Femi .. w"
)2 Sii "''
l3 Cat !>el tvoe
)4 11,t odl)Olnl
JS Aio-141 City
lf "'"•0.111"9 I.Cle><
39 BundHtd
40 illrinwm.-
•2 mQOt•!lQ
43 hn,ard
•S w.,__, pro
48 SOftQ ll"OU9
,. Un•fti9ated
•OPent~ so ,.., Zole
SI ci....y
~2,.,,...
S3 Mio-1
llUll-t•
~ NB IWderlt
~ ~iw.y.
59 .......,,Nleel
r : '
-
88 O~COut DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 19, 1085
"8JC fl>na "8JC fl>TICE NI.JC fl>llC( "8.IC fl)TIC£ MOC fl>TICI'. Ml.IC fl>TICE MUC fl>TIC£ Nl.IC NOTICE ...:. .,. .. =: :~:eo. c~ c:. ~ ~· ~ AVO Wltf, -~ ~ ~ No11oe Of 0.. OIV N lt\at ...i.d bldlt ... 010. 1 ... ~ " ........ ... •U.. ••"'· The Hun•= ... ell ~Tustin. CA lullntM
.. ...., '"""' Ule tigtlt lttllt Ind lntWt In erme .... the a.•-. CA. -. ~ '** 8tld Ulctlon to ... to be~ "Y tN a.y C*1I IOQt!Pled. 'elluf• 10 eubmlt PMAN a C~ANV. INC .. IJnlOn HiQll Otltrlct Tl\e ,ICtlUOUt .. "9wMI .... -.,14 {o ;.. the 09l1flltl ,... 9'11 ~ °' united ...., .., ,..... be recordld In IN QOUnty tM Cl1y of ll'Vln9, Cel llCCll91abtt~ • l:>9 O•f•ftlHt. C••• Ne . propoa•d budget tor Ntime,....,,.. to~ WM
No ~ OUJ r:.i.~ anuet.s In City Of ~ie:.r..:~~"= · -u.trTLMOCTOI\ _,. ~· tN , ... Pf'°'*'Y II fOfnlalOrf\wl\Wllng .. plent, Cll.IM Of r llon Of bid 44f714, le,.,tor Court, lOI'"" '#Ill 1:>9 evallat* fOI fllld In Ofellll ~~ In tn. IUC*'IOr eoutt Of 9c11 Coun ot Oro not ..,,._,by "'°'1 UU loca1ed ~ MtV!CM. mat«lala, PREVAIL NO MUS 0' C..ty .. ~ ltate Of pubHo tnepectlofl al H 8 October 1, 1N5 -:::!:!,y~~· lot~~,~=~ d"".~on..!-o5 ~~.,::?:.,~'. g1.TiJ~2:'"couNn :~~~ ... ~ ::o:~~~wi: c-c:--.. ...,_, ..._ ~= ~~1~W::!'. F·=~ ....... y~ In the Mi let of tii•f OF wit -., '° en ...-1HS HCflOW • _.. T,...., .. ottw 1111\'11 Ind laclltt"9 1713 91 ll'll C.Ulorni.a latlor tNt ,...._.. te _..... H ti' ion &.tell ltom .. of 11\9 ~ ... ~,.
v tiA a1 •NK ' ~ 'ri of TrKt No 7028 :::=bk:! to be~ MT .... l'Yi lfTWTAT8 TRUIT n10111uy lll•r•lot. •• CocM. IN Olf*tl ~elttng -Of 1M Ctwtl C.-, Aun ':°" to AllllUll SO. Truet. lsteO Mon .. Vllta. ~ic. • iweoy DIY9n lhtt In tll• Ctty ot Newport Bid•°' oftwt to be In writ-DUD ~ .. dprovtded .., ,'"' coontr.ct ~..'..~ ot pw diem w11g91 tnd1· ••••• °' Calfform.. '"• in&" betwMn IM houra of CNno0uk' c~~~ Coo11tnic-tht u~ WlH Mii •I e.cti u lllown on I ....,. and wlll be r909Mld •t ....... -,._ ocumentt. or onlltNC· ,..,.,..1y ltld OY9t'llme wortt n ~ •lff NII it I 00 • m 111<1 4 30 P m . • """
Prlva1• Nie 10 Ille~ recorded In IOOk ;:/, d; klf...id oflloe It rtllJC NOTICE __. 1•11.,..., fll !Ion ol Mylord Road tfletocalltyln*"lclllMwork ,_... .... ., oorftpMltM T"-publlO hMrlng on 111111on Co. lno .. 139&0 Mont• bel1 • '"V"._, • • lnY ~Awe.. Ha...,... logelher w lt ll •P· lltobeperformedl\Ubeen ~enlhil10dtd9Jof r ed budo•• tor Vllta.CNno.CAt1110 ::!nrm.i!~ ::r's!: ~1.,.~ i:: ::'1on ":,_:-:J' =:'; Loen No. IANNONE. fW AH1 ....... CA H711 (114) purtenance• therllo. In Obtlined trorn the Dnc101 ~. -· et 1t.to ~O:f-8: will be held 11 Jerrold Col•. 4 000
petlOr Coun on or .,,. the Otfbl ot the County ,.. dtt of.... . 4t11: Computer No. IU"41U1 ltrtct toCOrdtnOa with IN of IN °"*'"*'' Of lndu ······~ A.II., '" t h 10251 Yorktown Ave . Hunt· Mec:A11hut. HewpOt1 a.di. Und:ayof~l>OIJ.,,~tlht go''* ot Orltl09 County. ~tld thll 2tlh dlV of ~T'ICICW ~~~"'T.1~t !f:!,,:~~:90~~ ::::•tt,~:f~:~ ;:..::::=-.::::.r= lnQton ~~,,85c:1~.!: c~~11,,..."' ~ ::::20:o1':firoe:::;· ':'!':11oommoniy k~ "1t~!~ADO RUI a ,.,.,....IA.LI 1H5 . ' • • llcWork• tNCl1ycter110ftNCltyof .,. loGeled et m ~tier ' cNctedbylQllM'llP1'1'*·
Suite 30, Santa Ana Call-., 1taa Clarldoe PtKe, llMCULl..AN. M CITT YOU ARI IN DU AULT M-te2 OAT£ Of OPENING BIOS IMne end wlU be Mede..,.,._ CenteMIM Wfl't, ""'•-, Publothld Orenge eoe-lhlP ' NOEA A DEED Of' TRUST Blda wlM be ~ at IN able to any lnter..ied petty Ctty ef Tuatlft, C.-nty fll Dally PllOt Augult 19, 1H5 fNI '1ltemtnl ... fllecl
PWUC NOTICE PtB.tC NOTICE
R 80LUTION NO. 1
NllOLUTION Of' TMe 90AM> ()fl DIMCTOftl OF THm MY• RANCH
WATIIR DllTIUCT Dl!CLANNO lfTWJfT'IOM TO lllUI CON-
IOUOA ttD aONO• Of' aAtD DtlTNCT (N•a 1-C_,.)
WHEREAS, Ille Board of Olrecton of ll'vine Rancf'I Water DlltriCI ("l::!J dMml
It pr0per thel conlOlld•ted bonds (tN "SeflM 1985 C..R Bonda") be lot the
purpoea of, and In an amount 9Uftlden1 to ref\ind "BONDS Of IAVIH! RANCH
WATER DISTRICT. COHSOUDATlD &ERIES 1"4" (the "Settee 1 .... Bondi") In
tN amount ol S70.000.000. ~-.J:P Of pofllonl of the authortnd botMSI Of cenaln ln\of~t OiatOCtl (ttle "I lmf)roven'lent Olllrtc1.a") N follows.
lmproYemerlt
District No
102
105
108
109
121 141
t42
3(203)
208 221
241
242
250
290
lnclUded
Amount
I 4. 135,000
10,MO.OOO
10.e10.ooo
1,200.000
9.850.000
5,250.000
115,000
3,475;000
2,406,000
11.eeo.000
1,740,000
80,000
7,980.000
sot,000
A TED 1113111. UNLESS .,._ tc llftTIC( oltloa oflhe City ()erk ollhe upon requee1 The contr90-°'llfttl• ..... of CMttomle, M 8417 with ,,,. County OWk Of Or·
OU TAKE ACTION TO ..--"" City Of lrvlne loclled It tor and any tubeontfectOf "" 1t.11td::.~·•d•. ' anoe County on .Nly 22.
AOT!CT YOU" PROP· NOTtea TO 17200 Jambor .. Ro•d. under him ~I PllY not .... cm.tt• Of ,...,_ 19&5
fllTY. l'T MAY BE 80l.D AT CMOn'ORe ~ Irvine. Calltorn11, 92713, thin the ICMIGllled preva"tng 111y d11a .._. IMMw. l't&JC NOTlC[ PUBLIC IAL~. IF YOU MAM~ until 10.00 am on Auguat r11M of WtoM to tll work· Oeecrlptlu1 2 CHll ITATf•NT Of'
EEO AN EXPlANATION ( ..... t10'!~"7 22, INS 11 whlcll lime and men empioy.d In the •x.cu-, .. letera, 1 Ice C:reol'ft a •• .-...-.... .....,
' THE NATURE OF THE u ,c C) piece bide wlH be publlefy tlon of tile contrect mM!lf, 1 Mtoto Weft oftn, .. ,._.,_"' ...-
PROCEEDINGS AGAINST Notice la ~eby olvtn to o PI n Id In Co u no 11 LABOR REGULATION: 1 hMo eddfMI al'llP a UN Of' 'fCTITIOUI I( ,_
YOU. YOU 8HOUlD COH· CtedltOrl of th• wltllln Chemberl Bid• 9Mll be Thi contt.ctor INll comply -~. S lptoot Nft 8UllMlll MAIM NOTICI °'
ACT A LAWYER. n8INCI tr~•> that a 1ubmltted In 1uled with all the requtrement1 Of dfink ....,..,_., 1 '""°" The~ P•r•on• OC.'°'-unc>ff AND
On 8127115 •110:00 A.M. t.111 treneler .. obOut to be anYllopM rMlked on the 8eetlon tn751ogetherwlth ... tlocoftMrneller,2Hunt· hth'•.,. .FlctltlOUI tBheu.':::! LACIC °' AUTMONT'Y O Fl A N O E C O U N T Y macM on pweonll ,,,..-. outllde, "Bldl for CON· ell o1hef appeteable r9qY!r .. er feM, 2S MeU11 lrop. I A Ptr1nert ESCROW u the duly ep-hef.tnener Mlettb9C'i_....., STRUCTION Of MYFORD menta of the Callfornl1 ~chelrt 1 Admlr .. Name. DIAL-ONE ORANGE Dow venue ' 1
pointed TNll .. under and The twnee and~ ROAD CIP521~9 L.aborCode '*«TV, 11 Cef1<. COUNTY PRECISION Calltocnl• oeoorW Plll'tnet·
pYl"IUMt to DMCI of Tn.1. ~ of the Intended LOCATION OF THE DRAWINGS AND SPEC-. Ina llallt tan.. t Com-PAINTERS. 1090 VIMlla Dr ' lhlp. conelatlng of King
AeoofOld on 8114181 .. ,,..,...,ors ate: ROY E. WORK The wot1l to bl per· FICATIONS A NII Mt of miniW food....,, Mum«· ~ M=ll~a92:~~neoa 8=· '!M~ 'T":..of !':
OOCMrnlnt no. 11238, Book FOSTER end LA VERNE formed hereunder It toeeted drlWl::c and epectflc;atlona OUI rnlMellanecnH ,... Nlme referred IO abov9 WN Duk• Timbef Conltruotlon
t41!tl, PllQI 1420, of Offtclal FOSTER, 3202 New York In the City of INIM. County 11 •va •ble fOf l~tlon tauu1nt _It~\ t... pflc'*9, 11•• ... In "·an,.. County on Co., Inc. end Jerrold R Cole,
Aeoordl In tlle ofltce of the Av Cotti Meea. Callfoml• of Orange •• Myford ~ wtthoul chorge It the offloe rnue• u~ etc. ..... "' ..-ti.cl ~ Aeootw of Ortnge County, The loCOtlon In Celltornlii from AT &S.F.A R 8'1dge 01 the Dlr~Of' ol Public 0..-. thla ;Ith .. , of F•bru~ 8 1083 FILE HO and wtltoh car on
c.tlfomla. UIOUl9d by: AN-of the Chief executive oflloe to MICMlle Drlw Worll• of the City ot lrvtne Aut~t. ,.... F 209370 ,_ II 2H 1 Dow A¥9nUI. DREW C. IANNOHE AND or pmdpal ~ office DESCRIPTION Of WORK; Cornpi.te lell ot Hid draw· LARWIN IOUAM l TD.. Jornet J MelcM, 2204 Tuttln, CtllfomlJi wu dll-
JEANNE c . IANNOHE. HUS. of.._ lntlftd9d lreN..,Ol 11' The wor1I 10 be perf(lfmed Ing•. apeeiftcltlona and bid Ptalfttlff Meyer Pl . Cotti Meoa, CA aolwd .nec:11ve June 2 l, BAND ANO WIFE AS JOINT a.me • above ' ahall lnciud9 but not be llm-doc um• n ta m 1 y be lrwln Kattf{lan Attorney 92827 1985 Alter that date, no
TENANTS, WILL SEU. AT All otlw bulin.. namee lted to Con1truc11on of purchaMd from file Depart· 825 South Euclld Avenue: John M Biegel, 1090 vi .. partMr ol the Pllr1nerthiP
PUBllC AUCTION TO THE 8tld addr ..... UMd by "" GrlcflnQ, PrMQ, Cutba and ment of Publlc: Worn, City Anaheim, CA 92802 1n1 [)( Coal• MIU CA hu outtlor1ty to bind ""
HIGHEST FOR CASH. l~ .,., ..... or wttllln IN put Gutt8t'I, StormsDreme. Trlf· Of lrvlne, 17200 Jetnbor.. Publ!IW Orange Coaat 92~~! bullneN WM con-~~. Jf.
ebkt at ttrne Of .-In~ ttve yeu .,, HOM lie Signal•, lgnlng and Ro1d, lrvlne, C1lllornta, Delly P1tot August 1~. 28, ducted by• r'*al partner· Put>lllhed Orange Cou1
money of the Unl1ed StatM) TN neme(1) and butt,_ atrlpl119. Engineer'• E1tl· 92713. A non·retundable fM 1985 lh~ 1 •, •99 Delly Pltol A•"'ult 19, 1H5
at et1eipman A.,.. lfltranoe llddr ... of lhl traneferM(I) m•t•$2.071,000.00. of 135.00 wlll be chatged tor M-700 .. ,." • .'ai~t w•• 11,_... .... ~"
to CMc Center Bulld~. 300 ere: CHANG YAM •nd COMPLETION OF WORK; NCtl Mt ol d~m•n•• ..... ... _,_,, -_, E Clwpman A.,.., Ofenge. KONG EAP 340 4 w All worll la to be compi.ted Or1wlnga, epec;lllc;atlone and wtth lhe County Clerlc of Or·
CA 111 right. title and lntereet Cheetnut. Senta An•. Cati-within. 1eoconeec:vt1¥eworll· bid doc1Jmen11 w01 be mllt-Plate NOTICE •noe County on July 18 oonll9)'9d to and now held I01nla Ing d•YI trom the dlt• 191Cl-ed, upon receipt ol reqUMll Publlthed Orange Cout MftflCE
Mt.IC NOTIC£
by It under llld DMCI of Tha.t the property pertl-fled In the Nolle• t o no Iller then ten (10) colen-NOTICE Dairy Piiot July 29. Augull 5, P\8..IC nu ·
WHEREAS the Board of Director• haa bMtl pt...,,ted with • p<opoeed Truat In the property lltu-nent hereto II deectlbld In Proceed. dar d1ya prior to the dote M1 tHVmNO ..,. 12. 19. 1985 -ftC---TmOU-----.-BU-... --.-.-
rMOlutlon providing'°' the 1-...nco of the S...lea 1H5 C..R Bonde, Ind ated In Mid County, C.--general u Stock In TrOCS., AWARD OF CONTRACT l0t opening blda, lor 111 lld• Notic.11 heret>yglventhat M~ N.um ITATl..wf
NOW THEREFORE, the Boetd ol Olrector9 ot IAWD DOES HEREBY RESOLVE. tomta. deocflblng tN lend FlicturM Equipment and Thi Owner reoervM the dltlonal cherge of S5 00 the Boatd of Trust ... of the The fol._......~ we DETERMINE AND ORDER u loffow9· therein: Gooctwtti of 1 oenlln Baltery right. after opening bida, 10 SECURITY FOR COM· Coe.at Community College Ml.IC NOTICE """'"'V
hcttoft 1. The rMOluUoo p<ovidlng lor ~of lhesertM 1985 C..R Bond•. N LOT 48 OF TRACT 1112, buolneeo end 11 located at-refeet 1ny Of all bids, to PLETION OF WORK. Thi Dlatrlcrt ol Orange County, doing butlneea at.
pr_,ted to thll Boerd ol Olreatora concurrently herewith, la ~oved N to form. IN THE CITY OF COSTA 2108 w Oceenfront ~ waive any lnfe><mlllty In 1 contract document• call f()( Calllornlo, wlll receive -1-STAT~MENT Of S&K PAINTING, 3272
The totel P81 value of the Ser ... 1985 C..R Bonde 11\all be estebllthed al tN time of MESA, COUNTY OF OR-pofl BellCtl Clllfom.a bid, to make awatda In the monthly progr• peymenll ed bid• up 10 but no later ABAMOOMMINT Of low• St • Coate M.... CA
aate thereof. N lhat amount IUfflctent lo l'9f\lnd the Sertae 11184 Bondi In ANOE. STATE OF CALI· The Bual;,_. name uMCI lnter•t of Ille Owner and to bOMd upon the eng"-'• then I I 00 am Thuradey UIE Of ,ICTITIOUI 92828
acc:ordanc:. Wtlh the terms and coodllk>na of auch reeolutlon Pf'<Mdlng tor...,.._, FOANIA. AS SHOWN ON A by Mid tranlferOll at Mid re;ect Ill other bid• •tlm•I• Of the peroentege Sept 5, tN5 et the Plircn.. 8U81Mtll NAMI ~~ewn 1~ ~
and IUeh total pet value llhOll be oompn.d of 1111-11 obllgetlona of the Included MAP RECORDED IN 8001< location 11 .. SEASIDE PROPOSAL GUARANTEE ol worll completed. Thi City Ing o.pariment of aald COi-The following per ion a ~ t =a t · a
lmPfOvemtnt D11trtct1 In lhe Pf'opot1lonl of aucn amounts llUfftc:lenl to ptovlde tor 50, PAGES 32 TO 341 IN-BAKERY" AND BONDS: Each bid thall wlll re1lln ten ( 10) pef'cent of lege dlltflct localed et 1370 have abandoned the UM of ~n St Whal'
the refunding of their reepectlve ahar• of the Ser1el 1984 Bonda c Lu s 1 v E OF M 18 -8llCI bulk tranafer 11 In-be 1ccompenled by a each progr-payment u Adam• Avenue Coetl the Flctlttou• BuilnHI 3272 S ~ ~
The provision• fOt Ille Inter.et to be borne by the Ser1el 1985 C..R Bonda, CELLANEOUS MAPS. RE· tended to be c:onaummeted Clf'tlfled or caehler'• check MCUfily for completlon ol M .... Caltlornla ., Wtlleh Nam 8 y 0 R KT 0 w N Celll =e I.. Olla
convealon lrom one lnterMt ,.,. determination met"°" to onothef. mlndatory CORDS OF ORANGE •• the office '* ACTION or by • cotporltO _.,y the balance Of the work At time aald bid• will bl pub-HOMES 10092 G II Id repurchaM and remetl(etlng, and other !Mtune of the Ser* 1985 C..R 8ond9 lhell COUNTY CALIFORNIA. ESCROW INC 800 North bond on lhe form fumllhed the requeal and Ul*'IM of llcly opened and reed for ar 1 Thia builneH II c;.on-
1>1 conceptually aa M1 lor1h In the propoeed '910iutlon and will be more fully detailed The at;.. addt... and Tuatln A~enue' Suite G by Ille Owner u guarani• lhe IUOOlllful bidder, the PURCHASE OF PHYSICS ~":ca Huntington Beech, CA ducted by: huat>end and Wlf9
end deftnect by me1na ol 1n Indenture to be entered Into In connection wttti the.... other common dlllgnatlon, Senti An• cai1tornla Or~ that bidder wtll. II an award City Wiii pay th• emount ao EQUIPMENT· GOLDEN TIMI Flctltloua 6u•lneaa Stev90 T. Whetry "*'
of the Serles 1985 C-R Bond• The Indenture°' a model thefeof lhall be adopted-· If any, of the r.., PfopWty angeCountYon01 a1ter's.p. la midi_ to him In IC-re1alned upon compliance WEST COLLEGE Neme referred 10 lbove wu Thi• •~-'~.;:' 1 Or
concurrently with the adoption of the reeo!Utlon of laeuance. ~ . ..:. 4•••r1 b • d 1 b o v • . I a !ember 5 1985 cordence with the terma of w.tb the requirement• ol All bid• 11• lo be tn K · l•led 10 Orange County on with ''Cou nty Julyo 1-
lecttoft 2. Thal Monday, 1111 28th day of Auguot, 1H5 et the hour of 8:00 p l"ft"OI pufpofled to bl-2094 llA· Thia ~ Iran.fer 11 aub-his bid, promptly MCUr• Government COO. Section cordence with the Bid Docu-24. 1985 Fl E 8llQ9 nty on 1 •
aald d•y (or u eoon thlfeefter •le reaonabty ptectleebte) tn the Boerd of~or• TIONAL AVENUE, COSTA tec1 to Cllllornl• Uniform Woncrnen·1 Compel\Mtlon 14-402 and the provlllont of menta wtlldl are now In me ~ove;1t>e< 1 · L 1995
Room of ln1lne Ral'dl Water Oletrtct, 18802 &erdeefl Avenue. Irvine, Cllttornla. be MESA, CA t2827. Commerclll Code Section lnauranoa and llablllty In-the contracl document• and may be aecurlld In the ~hill~~ :cNemee 1178 '211•15
end lhe aame ere hereby ttxed by 1hi1 Boatd of Dk'ect0<1., the UIM and place tor a TN underMgned Truot .. 8100 euranoe, eicecut• a contract pertalnl"ij to "Subttttutlon olflce of lhe Olrec1or of Mein Street llA lrvl,;. CA Publllhed Orange COU1
hearing on the PfC>POHd reeolutlon of !Nuance dlaclllm1111y Mobility tor any T~ neme and addr ... ot In the requited l0<m and of Securltlel · Purcnaatng of .. Id college 927 14 Delly Pltot July 29 Auou-t 5,
lectlonS.Althell1MandplacefllledlnSectton2oratenytJme0tP'*»IOwt\ld'I lncorIICI-of the "'"' th• peraon with whom tumllh satlafectory bond• PROJECT ADMINIS -dlatrlCt Diie Slmb<o 1801 Gal-12. 19 1915 M..a53
t<iCh heaf•ng may be continued, any perwon lnteraeted, lndud•ng .. per.one owning addreta end othef common dllml may be nled la AC-tor IN fajthful performance TRATION .\llqueet1onare1.. No bidder may withdraw 11_. Terreoe C<Hona del
land In the lnc:iu<*l lmprovemen1 D11tr1Ct1or1ny peraon ottler#4M lnterllted 1n the dlllQnatlon, If any, .,_ TION ESCAOW INC 800 N of • con1rect and tor Iha llve to thl• projecl prior to hll bid'°'• P«IOd '°'forty-Mer CA 92625
Serlel 1985 C-R Bonds, may appear end be heard concerning 1ny matter M1 forth hetefn. T"'tln Avenue S~l1• G. peyment• of clalm• of m• opening bid• •hall be five (45) d1y1 alter the date Th•• bualneat u COt\41---------
ln th•• reeolutlon of ll)tentton Ind the propoeed raeolutton of 1aaiance or any matt•• Said Ullwlll 1:>9 maoe. but Santi AM. Celltornl• 927o5 terl1lm•n and laborer• directed to Mr Sage Davis. Mt fOt the opening thereof ducted by 1 8 um7ted pert-Pta.JC fl)TIC(
material theteto lnclUdlng the ~uon of wtlether the burden on the llnda of any of wtthOUt convenenl or ..,. and 1111 lelt day tor 1111ng thereunder Said c:Mc* or Aaaocial• Project E.ngl..-The Board of Trull MS,._ nersntp 1---------
thl Included lmPf'ovement Di•lrlCt• WOUid be 1ne1MMd ovet tN bufden thel would rat1ty.o;pt-Of Implied, r• a.Ima by any creditor lhall bidder' a bond ahall be In an II (714) &e0-36S5 aervet the pr1vllegeol reject-Thi• l1atement was fllecl ~TITlOUl llU ... U
be DOrne by such Inc~ l"'Pf'O\llmll'll D11tr1Ct _.. 111 bondt 'IOld ~ltely gordlng title, pou 1nlon. Of be September 4, 1895, amount ol not Ille than ten BY ORDER ot the Clty Ing any and ell blda or to wtth the Count Clerk of 0 ,_ NAMt ITA~NT
lectlon 4. The Secrllary I• dlr~ed to publ•ah notic. ot llUCh '-ring by encumbrances, to pay the wt\ld'l la the buslneea day (10)P8f'<*ltoltheamoun1of Counclloflhl Cltyollrvlne. walveanylrregularltleaorln-nnoe Count Yon July 18 Thlfollowtngperaon1are
PUbllahlng a copy of the resolution of Jntlfltlon once a weell for two 1UCQ11111W wee11a remaining p<lnctpal tum of before the conaummltlon the bid The Faithful p.,. Dated July 28, 1985 lorm11111 .. In 1ny bid or In 1995 Y · doing bullneu u
1>11rtuat1I to Section &OM ol lhe Clllfomla Government Code. In a newepeper ot the note(•)~ by Mid dlte ~above lonnonce Bond lhalt be not CITY Of IRVJME, IY: the blOaing Publllhed Ora Cout HUNTINGTON PET-VET general ci1cu11uon publlahed In OrAOQe County The tlrlf put>lleetlon th .. be at leNt Deecl of Truat. with lntereot O.ted Auguat l3, 1985 leM than one hundred ( 100) NANCY C. LAC!Y, City LLE A. n'EVl!Na. Vice Oaily Pilot July 29 "ruouai 5 7 t4 Adama St., • 101, Hunt-
fourieen 1141 day• Pflor to the 11me nxed tor tl\e '-1ng The s.cr.tary II fut1hef thereon, u provided 1n Mid Ro, l . , .. ..,, La v-P"C*lt ot the total amount Clent Cl\ellClllOt, BuafMe1 Al· 12 19 1985 · ' l}Oton BMch. CA 92848
directed to poat 1 cooy ol the r•otutlon of Intention In thr .. publlc pl-wtthln note(•). edvenoeo, If any. , .... y,.,..._.,... Chene of the bid price named In the Publlahed Orange Coul faire, Coe1f Community M-851 All11on Naito, O v M ,
each Included Improvement OlatrlCt for 11 leaal fourt1«1 ( 14) daya ptlor to the time under the terma of the Deecl YMI Kong lap TrMe-contr.ct. the Labor and Ma-Dally Piiot Augu1t 13, 19, College Dl1trlct 778 Cibola Ave Cott•
lilied for the heiring To the eit1ent the s.ttetary Ml, prior to adoption hereof. of Trull. 1 .... chargee and ..,...;. • terlal• Bond snell t>e not.... 1985 Publl•"ed Orenge C0..1 M .... CA 82828 ·
aceornpll•hed any of auch publlcattona or poatlnga directed by lhl• Section. the ex~ of the Truat• and Publllhed Orange Coast than one hundred (100) per-TM-772 Delly Ptlot Auou11 12 19 Ml.IC NOTICE Thia bualneaa 11 con· same.,. hettby r1tlfoed ot 1111 tru1t1 crMted by said Diiiy Pttot Augusl 19 1885 cent of the total amount ot 1915 ed by an lndlvlduel
lectlon S. The Secretary 11 directed to hla • certtllad copy of thla raeoluuon wi1h Dffd ol Truat. to-wit · M-897 the bid Pfloe named In the PUBLIC NOTICE M-671 K·1tt57 Alll9on Naito
the Cat110<n11 State Treuurer, together withe COC>Y of the pr()l)OMd resotutton ot S20,98CU6. contrect Only bonda laaued ITATIMl:NT Of Thi• 11etemenl WM flied
taauance The benell<:lary undef aald by cornpaniN which are I( 1WT7 f>ta.JC NOTICE ABAHDONMOIT Of' th the County Cieri! of Or-
ADOPTEO SIGNED AND APPROVED thll 12th day of Auguat. 1985 Deed of TNlt herllofore ex-P\8.IC NOTICE rated "A" or "A+" In the NOTICI Of' Ull! Of'~· County on Jut./ 18
,_A. l wan, ""*"' .. VINI RANCH WAT£R otaTMC'T end of tM 8-d of ecuted and dellvered to the "Beat Agent'• G~ to Liie PUel.tC IAU LEQAL NOTICI! 8U81NEH NAMI ' Olf~tora thereof underWlgned • written Dec-CITY Of' 1RV1N1 lnllUf'ance Companlel, the Of' PE9'IOMA1. ll"ROPOllD ,...,... The followlng peraon• ,..WU
a.tty J. ~. ~tafY 19'VINE RANCH WA TE9' 041TIUCT end of tM 9oel'd laretlon of Default and De-CALWOfllNIA Belt Key Rating Gulde to "'°""1Y BUDGET ,Ofl hive 1bendoned IN UM of Publl1hed Orange Cout
o1 DlrectOB tlleNof mand for Siie, and a written NOTICI INVJTlNO Property Cuu11ty Com-(~ DetalMf') HUNTINGTON BEACH the Flc11tlou1 Bu1lneu ally Piiot July 29, Augutt 5,
Publlahed Orange Coaat Dally Piiot Augult 12, 19,q9115 Notice of Default and Elle-BtDI Pi'nlM, Of lilted In the Fed· Jn the rnetter of: UNtON HtOH N•m• DOW A VENUE 12 19 1985
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'JR AN<.f-'JJUN TV C A llf0RNIA MONDAY A U(.lJ~f 1'J 11'.i8'> /, (,f ~4··.
AIDS causes turmoil among gays
Their sexiiaf, social behavior chan es;
education, research ocusof campaign
By LISA MAHONEY
Of .. ~ .........
AIDS has created turmoil for the
gay community in many ways since
the first victim was diaanosed in San
Francisco in 1980.
The realization that the typical py
lifestyle predi$poses bomoseltU,lll
males to a mysterious killer Cliscase
Coaat
Hare Krlshnas provided a
taste of India's culture
during a Festival of Ind la
In Laguna Beach./ A3
Nation
Weekend chemical leaks
In Indiana, llllnols and
West Virginia force 1,500
to flee./ AS
World
The latest retaliation car
bombing this morning In
Beirut kills 22./ A4
Sports
Sunday was a bad day for
local baseball teams -
the Angels and Dodgers
lose./8 1
Business
Orange County's Rock-
well division may get part
of B-1 contract./ At
INDEX
has forced c~ in soaal and
sexual behavior stnce iu method of
transmission was discovered onc-
and-one-balf yean aao. local gay
activisu said.
Homosexuals are tumina away
from anonymous and unprotected
sex in favorof datina, steady partners
and prophylactics, they said.
Fear of contracuna AIDS has also
brou&ht facttonalu1na among gays
and lesbians to a halt while they
concentrate on getting suppon for
Second In a series
research and educational campaigns
to fi&ht AJDS
Homosexuals arc un1!-Cd in a single
purpose now as at no time since the
Gay R1gbu Movement of the 1970s,
said one observer. And AlDS is the
cause Not o~ must p y activtsts
fight for the n u of AIDS vtet1ms,
but increased 1scrumnatton toward
the homosexual population 1enerally
has galvanized 1u members to protect
their hard-won c1vil riibts from being
eroded by hysterics and
.. homophobes," said some Orange
County gays.
Figbtmg AIDS has fotced pys to
come forward and be reeogruzed by
public health officaals, rcltgious '
leaden and pobt1c1ans who can help
them push for increased fundma for
LISA
MAHONEY
PERSPECTIVE
cducatJon and research into the
disease.
"Wean: no lonaer a aroupofeeoplc-
that eiUsts tn anonymity," lrvi1lie
physician Don Hapn wet. A IOQI·
term benefit of tbts visibility may bt
increased acceptance of ho1noec1·
uals, 10me P Y1 said.
U nlikc heterosexual relationsb.ipe.
py couple have oot bad to be ovetly
concerned wnh sexual responsibility.
Because the nature of their liaiJonl
precludes the poss1bility of ~
nancy, they have not uted burier
fonns of binh control that have abo
(Pleueaee AIDS/A2)
MADD
backers
m arch
in OC
Drunkendrtver foe$
be in 4-month walk .
across United States --------
From staff ud wire repof'U~
Confined to a wheektwr. Phyllis
Chew rolled through a beach parking
lot along Pacific Coast H1Jbway on
Sunda)' near the spot where she
almost lost her hfe to a drunken
dnvcr 20 months ago .
.. The guy was g01n1 85 mpb with
his hghts off I didn't see him until be
wasabout 12 feet in front of me," said
Chew. a Huntinaton Beach resident
who hasn't been able to walk s10cc the
accident
Chew and other v1cums of drunken
dnvers paraded through Bolsa Chica
St.ate Park in Huntmaton 8c:acb as
pan of a four-month walk across the
nation sponsored by Mothers Against
Drunk Dnvers
Bridge
Bulletin Board
Business
.!Aslslfled
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
84
A3
A9-10
~Nle,...."rT..tC
PallM .... 08 Jala Bella wa•e to•pectatonen route to wtnnm, the Jaqea' Choice award in Sanday'• parade.
About 50 people 1ncludtna a
woman who said she used to dnve
while 1ntoucated J01ncd the march,
which will pass through l 5 st.ates
before ending Dec 9 at the Lincoln
Memonal 1n Washmgton D.C. whetc
.i c.indlehght "lgtl will be s~ed. 85-7
84
87
87
AS
87
A6
A7
A3
Patriotic paraders rekindle spirit .. We -.ant to develop pubhc aware-
ne~s and dispel the 1mpress1on that
M .\OD has accomplished aJI its
goals." ~1d Janet < ater pres1dcn1 of
the Orange Count) chapter of
M .\OD "There'\ still a lot to be
done ..
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Televlson
Wea the
87-8
81-3
A6
A2
Goats get
reprieve
from Navy
By LISA MAHONEY
Of !tie°""' .......... T he U.S. Navy has no plans to
shoot Andalusian goats remaining on
San Clemente Island, a Navy spokes-
man in San Diego said today.
Rather than slaughter the 200 to
300 goats still on the island. the Navy
will ask an animal rights group to
consider continuing a trapping pro-
aram that has removed thousands of
i~ats in the last several yea~ Ken
Mitchell, Navy spokesman sa1a.
Mitchell's statem~nt amountJ to a
victory for the Fund For Animals,
animal advocates who have fouaht
for years to keep the Navy from
shootina aoats on the island SO miles
off the Orange Coast.
The Fund has been periodically
allowed to trap aoats there, but only
after bitter debate between theanirual
(Pleue ... OOAT/A2)
By ROBERT HYNDMAN °' .. °"" ....... Boats decorated 1n red, white and_
blue adorned Newpon Harbor Sun-
day afternoon for the 25th annual
Character Boat Parade.
Sponsored by the Commodores'
Division of the Newport Harbor Arca
Chamber of (',ommcrce, the.-pro-
cession this year featured an "Ameri·
ca the Beautiful" theme ..,ith awards
presented in several catcgon es.
Among the winners were: Richard
Croul'.s The New Balboa, Ron Soderl·
ing's lido Lady and the Balboa Bay
Club's Papa's Toy won Best Decor·
ated awards in separate cateaories.
A Judges' Choice award was pres-
ented to the Irvine Co. entry, Isla
Bena.
This year's Judges mcluded New-
port Beach Mayor Phil Maurer.
Police Chief Charles Gross. Judge
Calvin Schmidt and Norman Loats
deputy superintendent. Newpo11-
Mesa School D1stnct
Bui boatmg enthusiasts pa111c1pa1e
in the parade for more than a chance
10 wm trophies says RKhard Luehr;.
the 1.:hamber's e'\ecull"e director
---rrrhese-peoPleaiso want to be
10volved in the harbor commun1t\ "
he said this momrnit
Hispanics lament
lack of p olitical,
economic parity
PresidentOfLULAC predicts self-imposed
deadline will not be reac hed by end of l 990
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of .. Olllr ........
At the tum of the decade. Hispanic
Amencans rallied around the cry that
thcywould achieve pohucaJ and
cconomi~rity by 1990.
With o five years left on 1he self.
imposed cadhoc\ Oscar Moran.
national president of the League of
UoJted Latin Amencan C1t1zens. 1s
bef.nning to display some doubts
'It's already 1985 and we're not
even halfway there," satd Moran.
after speaking to the LU LAC chapter
in Costa Mesa Fnday night "We
haven't made th.c. progress that we
were supposed to We'"e b«n lulled
b} a few v1ctoncs ..
A San .\ntonio resident. Moran
was elected in June 10 represent the
125,000 league members spread
throughout 41 states He expects
more chapters to be formed 1n 4 7
states b) October
Moran remarked the league and
other Latmo groups would need to
double their elTom 1f I 990 1s 1rul) to
be "thc.)ear of the H1spamc ...
Among t~ setback.,-troubhna
Moran 1s the high dropout rate among
H1~pan1c teen-agers. and the inability
(Pleue eee HISP A.N1C8/ A2)
To smoke or not i·n Irvine
Smoldertn controversy will be discussed
on Tuesday in Irvine City Counc ch a mbers
By P&n. SNEmER.MAN
Of .. ~,... .....
trvinc City Council membcn YiilJ
consider Tuctday wbelher their city
hould enter the moldcTina conflict
between smoken and non ... mokcn
by jol.nlna other communitiet lhat
have adopted more atrinaent amok-
ina rcaulations.
Earlier this year, ordinances~
launa mokina in public ~ and
private -ork areu to varytq ~
• were adopted by the dtiel or t.una
Beach and Ncwpcx:t Beeclt tna by Oranae County Boerd of'Supervieon,
who ovenec unincorporated areu.
ln May, tbe lrvinlcounalutcd its
staff to pt.her iafonnation on smok· lnl laWI eMCted bY other cities. On
July 9, tbe council instnacted lbe staff
to draft a propoeed Irvine amoktna
ordinance'. modeled aft.er the law
adopted ~ Llpna 8eKb in Febru·
~ Irvine llMMUft cbtribel the
smolrlnl of lobecco u ••a PQlitivc
daqer to health and a material
annoyance, i111COD~ dilcom·
fort and I ......... huard to \1'ole wbo
art_JW'Cleftt tD COllflaed ~"'
The "= law prOlllbiU amok· inc in ;lie;1ev1ion, pubtic meet·
ina room' o.._ auditoriums-
1
r.ubhc restrooms and indoor service
1nes.. such as 10 banks and JfOC:Cry
stores. It limits smokina to des1anated
pubhc areas 1n hospitals and other
health care faollttes and says such
facihlle$ hould make "a reasonable
effort .. to wian pattents 10 rooms
accord 1n1 to their smoluna
~fettnce.
Rettaurants wt th capac1t)' for 40 or
more petrons would be rtqu1rcd to
destpate at least one-quarter of thetr
1auna as a non· mokma area. Bar
and outdoor seatina areas would be
e•cluded from the caJculattons
If the ordinancic ts approvcd1 Irvine
empleyen would have 90 aays to
implement 1 written mokJna policy
At the lbe pohc:y would
prohibit smokiaa 10 oonfmncc and
meetina rooma, c1aurooms.
audttonum ~trooms, hallways
and ekvators At lea t half the spa~
1n employees' cafet.cnas. lunchrooms
and loun4es would be dt11pttcd
non· mok1ng areas
Also, employ«S would have the
na,ht to dc-s1anate their 1mmcd1ate
work areas a non· mokina lOnn
The lr'Vlne proposal stipulattt that
employcri hould not be required to
incur any Ul>(n~ to make structural
or other ph)''1cal modificauons to
provide the non· moiling areas
By thtu own ad mi ioo, two of tht
Irvine council mcmben moltc while
thtte do not. At the July 9 m«tt"l-
howc'fcr, Mayor David Baker. a non·
smoker. dcchncd to vote on the 1 :ut,
sayif\f the law firm W'llh .,b1 h he 1
lUOClllcd docs some ~ort for the
toba«o indu try.
'
Luehrs said last summer's 01) mp1c
Game) may have taken some of the
wind out of the boat parade's saals
But the parade has rebounded
"Th1\ )ear 1t <;<:emed to me that the
enthusiasm level 1s balll. in the
harbor There were more boa\\ par-
11qpa11na. lhan in Lhe last fu.e.-~
he said
fhe ( haracter Boal Parade wa)
(Pleue eee BOAT/ A2)
· The :a~•e~t \.1.3\ to get awa) wtth
murder ' to get drunl and run
\omt'one l\t'r 1n \Our aurnmobile ...
..aid R Jland L'Heureu>. one of the
p.irll.Z I pa Al~ tfHM ffiarefl
L Ht'ureu\. 25 \pent sc"en months
nn his balk last )ear after suffenng
(Pleue 11ee MADD/A2)
l-
. .....
Queen Return• Crown
Ml9e0e arc.an. 17. bad DO 800l1 r landed the job of au.
HaatlD.ctoD ._cb oD Sata.rday when abe recetYed a better
role lD the road production of .. ,2nd atr-.·· ..._..
otmppeddowa from Ill tlm>ne 11118 "":!~--fwlM nat atne lllOGtba wtth the hJa1a· .. .na •.
Brotan•a crown wUl 10 to Rtwt nmner·ap J l:a;.
A2* Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Monday, August 19, 1985
Back to echool
Theee ftye ~e Cout Collefe at1adeDta, ,___ __ ~talde tlae atadent book.tan. Apllar, 19, of J'omatatn Valley: Darryl
Gebo...19. ofTIWlDt a.ae DaaOe~, 18, of eo.ta lleea; and Dan &&nett, 19. o Tilatln.
J'all lutnaction ~an today at <>ran.ae
eeemed le11a than enthulatic aboat retarD· 1nC to clUM:8 today. From left are Norma
ACuUar, 20, of J'oantaln Valley; Damien · Cout. Coutllne and Gold en Weat collefea.
BOAT .••
From Al
staned by local boaters wbo were
interested in Jettmg together to enJOY
a sunple cruise in the harbor. Some
decorated their boats in outlandish
designs to attract attention.
"Tlus parade allows the character
boats to try and outdo each other,"
Luehrs saJd. ··They lake to strut their
stuff. ..
Fear of INS keeps aliens fr om Del Mar
DEL MAR (AP) -Threats of a
raid by U.S. Border Patrol agents has
prompted illegal ahens to flee their
JObs at the Del Mar Race Track and
left track officials concerned about
the future of the thoroughbred racing
seasdn . .J sec them in the process of mass
exodus right now," one tramer said
Sunday. "We might ha ve enough to
take care of today's racing program,
but we can't operate like this for any
penod oftime."
According to Joseph Harper, the
track's eitecutive vice president and
J.eneral manager, as many as 300
11legal aliens fled their jobs last week
after immifration officials said they
were planning to raid the traclc.
HISPANICS SEEK ECONOMIC PARITY •••
From Al
of Latmos to reach h1,gher economic
brackets. Meanwhile, the number of
Hispanics m key government pos-
1t1ons has dwindled.
Moraricalled for President Reagan
to appoint n;iore His~nics to v1s1ble
posts within his administration. ··we want the Reagan adm101s-
tr .. uon to know that 40 percent of the
Hispanic Americans voted Re-
publican, so let's have some rcc1-
prooty.'' said Moran ... By God, they
better respond ...
LULAC's campaign for pohucaJ
clout bas taken Moran to Washington
D.C. to defend affinnat1ve action
laws that require federal contractors
to hire ethnic minorities. league
executives arc also negotiating with
lawmakers over a new draft for
immigration reform.
Additionally, Moran plans to meet
with California Governor George
Deuk.meJLaD neitt month and other
government leaders m hopes of
bridging the pp scparaung H1span1cs
from the mamstream
.. LULAC as the largest and best
con tractor for 'bridge build~' in this
country," he said. "We won t maio-
tam the status quo."
As part of that "bridge building,"
LULAC will begin enlisting Navajo
Indians an Arizona, n:aching to a
minonty group that Moran says has
much in common with Hisparucs.
"They've been largely ignored, but
who else could share our work than
those who've felt the feelings that we
have." he said. "We're looking for
new coahllons and new groups to join
the effort."
AIDS CAUSES TURMOIL AMONG GAYS .•.
From A l
proven effecti ve 1n preventing the
spread of seitually transmitted dis-
eases.
Education campaigns Within the
gay commumty now prom6te safe sex
-using condoms and practacmg
sexual acts that don't culmmate an
mtercourst', said Randy Pesqueira of
Orange County's AIDS Response
Program.
"All of a sudden, gay men had to
look at themselves and say, 'What are
we doing and how can we change,"' he
said. "ft was very difficult for them,
for one~ to accept that sexual acts
we've been accustomed lo for years
were now becoming deadly All of a
sudden things that you're doing are
thmgs thal w11l loll yo~." he said
Hagan agrees AIDS. he said. "has
caused a great deal of looking to
ourselves to sol ve thJS issue .. you·rc
beginning to see a dramatic change m
behavtor that wasn·l there a year
ago."
Gays arc not JUSt changmg their
sexual behavior, those surveyed say
They are also adaptmg socially.
"Gay men began to serious!) look
at each other and realized that
anonymous sex was no longer safe
and was hfe threatening," Pesqueira
said
As a result, many ga ys have turned
away from promiscuous behavior.
prefemng instead longllterm and ex-
cl usive relat1onsh1ps.
.. Monogomous relat1onsh1ps arc
sort of on the increase nght now."
said Hagan , who laves an Laguna
Beach. the social Ct'nter for Orange
County homosexuals
Said Pesqueira. "we too hke other
IX'rsons. can datt'. can coun each
other. can learn intimacy as opposed
IO JUSl suuallt) I see men doing that
We're havana to change an the age of
·~.IDS."
TUESDAY -Two of tb~ trJ-1or
Just Call
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-Id
OC Congres sman hires
an ti-gay psychologist
By the A11oclated Pre11
A conservative congressman sitting on a House subcommittee wilh
JUnsdaction over AIDS research has hired a controversial psychologist who
believes homosexuality should be outlawed.
Rep. William Dannemcyer. R-Fullcrton, hired Dr. Paul Cameron as an
adv~r 01t.ftom-0Seltuahty and AID .. which ialfs under his junScfictlon as a
scmor member of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on health
and environment.
Cameron was expcllcd from the Amcncan PsycholC>g.Jcal Association and
repudiated by the Nebraska PsycholC>g.Jcal Assoc1at1on.
The Lmcoln, Neb .. psychologJSI sa)s he believes homosexuals should be
quaranuned to stop the spread of acqu1red immune deficiency syndrome. He
also has lmkcd homoseituallty to cnm1nal behav1 or. 1ncludmg mass murder
and child molestation.
··tte has grossl y distorted and misrepresented other people's re~rch,"
said Dr. Natalie Porter, assistant profe ssor of psyc hology at the University of I
Nebraska. Porter was one of six Nebraska psychologists who asked the 65,()()()...
member nauonal association two years ago to examanc Cameron's worlc
She said she believes Cameron's reputation makes ham an inappropnate
consultant to a legislator. Thal opinion also 1s shared by gay nghts leaders,
obviously, and many psychoto11sts.
"The idea that a member of Congress would lend some credence to this
man's ideas is fnghteninJ. really,'' said Ron NaJman, spokesman for the
National Gay Task Force in New York. "The congressman 1s being abused by
this self-proclaimed expert."
Dannemeyer said, however, that he secs Cameron as a victim of those wb<>
have lost their "moral compass." Cameron is a "man of conscience," who
condemns homosexuality as perve~ behavior, the congressman said.
Dannemeyer trusts Camero1ras an adviser. he said, despite his expulsion
from the national psychologJcal group and repudiation by the Nebraska
organization.
Danncmeyer said he lured 01m~ron ror this month only to advise him on
AIDS and other py issues. He will pay Cameron $2,000, Dannemeyer said
Backed by Cameron's advice, Dannemeycr last week announced he will
send a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler calling
for a nauonal ban on blood and organ donauons by male homosexuals.
mcludm.g monogamous gay couples.
cbu1e• AIDS 11 lorcbl1 •poi, tk P Y
comaumlty I• mon l11¥olvema1 Ill
Ute polltlc•l procn1 ud pro1eet1JJ1
lbelr c1 .. 11 rl1bt1.
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VOL. 78, NO. 231
J
...
Fair skies through Tuesday
Fair TUMdey •xOIPt for ltlt• night end momlng low Cb.Id•
end IOOll tog. Hlahl trom the 1oww 10a et the bMcn.I to near eo
wwmet .,an.ya. Lowe 66 to 15. In the mountain .,..., fair Tueeday tl(Oll)t aomt fog or low
cloud• lower coutal llopee Tueadey morning. Htgh1 In the mid
70. to mid 80t. Lowe In the mid 40a to mid SO..
From Potnt Conception to the Mexlcen Bord« -Over Inner wet.,.: LIQht vlllable wind• night and morning hours through
Tueaday wlth weet to aouthweet wtnC11 8 to 18 knota during the etternoon and evening hou1'9.
U.S. Tempe
Tld~s
fOOAY 5.64•m
12.11 p.m 8'15 pm
TUHDAY
10 .. ,, ..
12 .. .. to
10 ..
107 '° .. . ., It
IOI ~ ... , .... 11 ., .. .,
71 ..
12 ..
71 .. 14 61
72 M 71 ., ., 52
0 I
6.2 u
Arel 1Wg11 12: 10 Lift 5. 1
Arel low e:30 Lift 0 1
~high 1 p.m 5.4 ~-721pm U Sun Mia 1oci.y at 7:36 p m • ,...
T....oay Ill 8 18 Lii\. and ... lgllrt at
7Mp.m.
Moon -lodey Ill 1:52 p "'-· ,... T~ Ill llt.541 Lift. Ind ......... 91
10 23 "·"'
GOAT TRAPPERS VICTORIOUS •..
r r omAl
advocates and Navy brass. The island
is used for target practice by warships.
The last.sweep, wh ich ended July
26 with the capture of SSO goats, was
allowed only after Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger interceded on the
Fund's behalf.
"That's incredible news. That's just
great," said Fund attorney Dana Cole
said after learning of Mitchell's
comment. Cole said be received a
k lephooe message from a Navy
official this morning but had not had
a chance to return it.
"I can't tell you bow much man-
euvering has been going on" in high-
level Navy offices over the fate of the
goats, Cole said. "All I can tell you is
we're very thrilled."
The Fund will be looking forward
to working with the Navy on saving
the goats, Cole said.
Fund President Cleveland Amory
was enroute to New York from San
Diego and could not be reached for
comment, his assistant Marian
Probst said. To date, the only official
word the Fund has received from the
Navy was in response to the group's
proposal to conu nue the goat rescues,
she said.
"We have a letkr from them saying
MADD MARCH IN COUNTY .••
From Al
multiple fractures in a colhs1on with a
drunken driver. Hesa1d thednvergot
only 45 days 1n Jail.
A woman who joined the crowd of
accident victims said she joined
Alcoholics Anonymous after black-
1n$ out on the road following a
dnnking bout.
"The reason I'm here as to march
against people hke myself," she said.
"I'm lucky I never hit anybody. I'm
lucky I never got kdled."
threat of madness from our society."
Bradley said before the st.art of the
walk, which heads toward San Otego
before swinging easL
.. Far too many families have suf-
fered the traJedy of having loved ones
maimed, injured or killed by drunk
drivers there is no excuse for it,"
Bradley said ... You can have a good
time without gettrng drunk and
~etting behind the wheel of a car. Thi'>
1s the message we want to deliver
across America ...
The march began Saturday at City MADD founder C'andy Lightner
Hall in downtown Los Angeles, with said the group will carry two symbols
Mayor Tom Bradley and actors through America: a "Dcclarataon of
Henry Wmklcr, Kate Jack$0n and-Qu-i~scre!Higncd by partJClpants
Jamie Lee Curtis leading about 300 and a fa mily photo carriage With
people on the inaugural male. pictures gathered on the tnp. The fiest
"We simply must remove this to sign the scroll was actor Burt
single
age26
they are loolon$ at all the alterna-
uves, ·· Probst said.
Matchell said the Nav-x is not
entirely convinced that the 'trapping
proftl?m will be complete)' succcs~
fut. The military wants all the goats
removed from the island because.they
are eating up the habitat of several
endangered species.
The wily goats have become ac-
custommed to hearing the trapper's
helicopter overhead and run into
caves to hide, all involved said.
But Cole sajd he is confident
trapp1n$ 1s the answer for eradicating
the prolific breeders.
Reynolds.
Cater said MADD has ac-
complished some of its goals in it.s
five years but said that too many
people still treat drinking and dnvina
lightly.
"In the big areas like Los Anaetcs
and Orange County where the jails are
full, people don't go to jail, • Cater
said. "Their license may be
suspended but they'll probably con-
tinue to clnve anyway. This leads
them to believe that society doesn't
take this problem seriously.
"We have to let them know we do
take 1t seriously. It kills people. 1t
manni:s~~e lllRtireowanappen to you," said ~er. "The drunk driver
kills mort people than any other
crimmal an the country."
A person afraid to face the world
is frequently the victim of a men-
tal cri sis. No one is immune to the
stresses of modem life that can
cau se abnormal behavior. Each sit-
uation is different. That's why law-student
there are different sleeps JS hours a A!'.nr
ways to help. The ~
Information Center at Capistrano
by the Sea Hospital has a free book-
let on menta l crisis. It outlines
the many options you have
available. Hospitalization
is only one of them. Call
(714)831-1787. You'll
receive this. useful book-
let in absolute confidence.
We've helped people cope
with the pro blems of
today's society for over 25
years. We understa nd .
How to
Handle a
Mental
Crisis