HomeMy WebLinkAbout1985-08-27 - Orange Coast Pilot--- -=;._-~ _____,__,_
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a.rvtng Newport leech, Coeta Meu, Huntington leech, lrvlne, Laguna leech, Fountain Yafftj Md South 0r..,.. County
CALIFORNIA TUESDAY A UGUST n 1'18'.i ~s C.ENTS
ewport, ~ounty OK airport pact
plit votes by City Council, supervisors
reac-settlement on JW A flight limi~
By JEFF ADLER
ud ROBERT HYNDMAN
OllNDel!yNottlMf.
Years of legal turmoil pitttng
Newport Beach residents against the
Orange County Board of Supervisors
Coast
officials
oppose
drilling
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of Ille 0...-, l'tlol lie(!
The Orange Coast's elected leaders,
with one notable exception, today
announced their formal opposition to
oil dnlhng off the Orange County
shoreline.
The announcement reflects the
position local officials will take
Saturday w.hen lntenor Secretary
Donald Hodel attends a he;;:f on
the _offshore -4ri Iii ng pro 1n
Newport Beach.
Council members from Laguna
Beach, Newport Beach and Hunt-
ington Bcact~ signed the position
document along with San Oemente
Mayor Bob Limberg and four of the
five Orange County supervisors.
and its plans to expand John Wayne
Airport ended today when super-
visors unceremoniously approved
the same legal settlement adopted by
the Newport City Council Monday
nt&ht.
ihc settlement, comprised of a
ii
dozen comphcated legal documents,
places limits o n alrport expansion,
ni&hts and numbers of passengers in
. return for ending the .laW$u1ts that
havedoued airport-related issues for
nearly 2(f years.
"In approvina this compro mise
aareement. this boa.rd will be directly
address.ing the future air transpor-
tation needs of a rapidly expanding
county, providing the necessary base
But Supervisor Bruce Nestande
declined to sign the document,
though he said he opposes offshore 011
drilling. Newport cleanup patrol ,,
upon which Orance County can
continue to depend and prospeT ·•
said board Chairman Thomas Riley,
who called the ai7,0rt issue his
"mission impossible. '
Newport Beach Mayor Phil Maurer
hailed the compromise as bem&
"cruly h1stonc" mrnutcs after the City
Council approved the settlement vote
Monday night
"For 20 years, this c1ty bas svffercd
under the thumb of lhat airport,'
Maurer said. "But this 1s the first lime
we have had an aarcerncnt Chat IS
b1ndini. We are going to be controll-
ing an airport that is not even in our
bounds."
Despite words. of support for the
agreement on aJI sides, neither vote to
raufy the agrument was unanimous
The City Council approved the
settlement 6-1 with Councllman Don
trauu disacnuna. Strau sa.id the
compromise allowed more con-
cession~ than d.Jd the expan 1on plan
Newpon Beach successfully blocked
an the courts an 1981
The settlement, Stra\,lss wd, "1~
not fau to Newpon Beach residents
and, 1n the lon1 run, may be damaain&
to the cny"
When county supervisors took up
(Pleue MC AIRPORT/ A2)
Man.believed
to be Stalker
seen on train
Woman passeriger. ---brakeman observed
suspectonAmtr~
By STEVE MARBLE
A man matching the descnption of
the Night Stalker was observed get-
U!li_Off a north bound~ t.rak. tra.IAlll
Santa Ana the same da:r the killer shot
a M1ss1on VteJO man in the head and
raped his g1rlfnend.
A'M1ss1on Viejo woman nding the
train and a brakeman on <\mtrak
train 83 were emphauc that the tall.
sldnny man who dnficd into the
crowd Sunday at the Santa Ana
stauon was the Night Stalker. Sante
Fe Solithem Pacific Corp. spokesman
Mike Manin said.
Night Stalker and claJmed they were
pos1t1ve this was the same guy," said
Manin, who noted that ra1lroad
police have been alerted LO the
Sighting.
He said the Amtrak tram. which
cmr.loys Sante Fe workers, made
car 1er stops in San Oemente and San
Night Stalker may haw
kidnapped four children.
-st0ry0rrPage A:r
Juan Capistrano before reaching
Santa Ana at about 6:30 p.m Sunday.
The train was the last of the day
making the full tru> ftom San Diego to
Los Angeles' Li nion Sta non.
The Ntght Sulker sightmg, ~
poned to Santa Ana polJce after a 90-
minute delay, 1s o ne of more than
2,000 unconfirmed s1ght1ngs or lips
received by authonues hunung the
killer The posll1on paper calls for the Bea h tak d f th I Orange County coastline to be ... c •weeper aa T&Dtaaeo eear Y
protected 1n a dnlltng moratonum mornm, houra today to com6 the NDd on
until the year 2000. the wat aide of the Balboa Pier In
preparation for the ezpected onalaqht of
beach.Coen later In the day. Temperaturea
at the ahore were expected to be In the 70..
The man was weanng a cowbo} bat
and boots. a whne shirt, and was
carrying two suitcases, Martin said
"Both the woman and the
brakeman had seen pictures of the
A\ Santa .\na pohcc spokesman
dechned to dtscuss Sunday's sighung
(Pleue tee ST ALDll/ A2)
"Orange County's coastline de-
serves the same protection wisely
afforded to other v1s1tor-scrving and
environmentally sensitive areas such
as San D1cgo, Malibu, Monterey, Big
Sur and Mario County," the paper
says.
"Public sentiment in Orange Coun-
ty could not be more clear ...
residents oppose offshore oil dnlh ng
by a margm of 2 to I."
The position paper cues the threat
(Pleue .ee NEST ANDE/ A2)
Coast •
U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston
says he doesn't want
more oll-drllllng plat-
forms on the California
coast, but national poli-
tics may dictate other-
wise./ A3
California
Ex-Nixon aide
John Dean
reportedly
in Irvine crash
By LISA MAHONEY
Of !tie o.lly l'llot .....
Former Nixon adviser John Dean
may have been involved Monday in a
freak traffic accident on the San
Diego Freeway in Irvine in which a
-woman was cnucally injured .
A man identified by the California
Highway Patrol as John W. Dean Ill,
46, of Beverly Hills, struck and
dragged a woman who had been
ejected onto the road moments
earlier, critically injuring her.
It couldn't be confirmed ~hat Dean
was the same man who was embroiled
an the Watergate scandal during
former President Richard Nixon's
tenure in the White House. Dean later
(Pleue 9ee NIXON/A2) John Dean
HB engineer's bail forfeited
after he misses 2 Court dates
International manhunt continues foe figure
suspected in nuc!ear trigger smuggling case
By TONY SAAVEDRA
Of IN o.lly No4 le.fl
Richard K. Smyth 's SI 00,000 ball
bond was forfe11ed Monday as an
international manhunt continued for
the Huntington Beach engineer ac-
cused of illegally shipping nuclejlr
tnggcnn~ devices to Israel
Smyth s trial was also postponed
mdefinttely by U.S. D1stnc1 Judge
Pamela Ann Rymer, placing the case
in hmbo as Smyth and his wife.
Emihe, remained m1ss1ng for more
than two weeks.
The couple. last seen Aug. 9 while
leaving for a weekend tnp to Catalina
Island. reportedly fled the country
and do not plan to return. said a son-
in-law last week
Sm}th has missed two coun ap-
pearances and failed to sho" up .\ug
::!O forthe start ofhis tnal on 15 coun1~
of violating arms expon laws and 15
counts of mislabeling the atom1t
tnggers. called krytrons •
"We are in a holding pattern ·said
Sm\th's Los A.ngeles attome) .\Ian
Croll af'ier the mecung with R}mer
"We'll wait until e~ther Smvth sho""
up or someone seek'> to reacuvate the
matter "
Judge R~mer who issued a no-bail
arrest warrant earl\ tht'> month after
Sm) th failed to ap.pear for a pretnal
heanng. granted a go' emmenl mo-
tion to forfeit the bail bond
Smyth used his $9::!5.000 home a'
collateral for ht<; bail bond .\ss1stant
L'.!'> .\ttome\ Wilham Fahe~ said he
was unsure whether Smvth s houc;e
would be seized ·
Crtdnors are alread~ ming to
foreclose on the heav 1h-mongagcd
Cotull Circle home used t<l obtain
loans tor Sm\lh s defunct Hunt-
ington Beach clC<'tron1cs firm. ac-
cording to rela11 ves
"~a}be we 'll1us1stand1n lane wtlh
1he other cred11ors ... Fahe' !>aid
Th<' five-bt'droom house wa\ put
up for sale rcponcdl} 10 pa} otl
Sm\lh·s bu!)tne~s debts and attome)
lee'>. fam1h members have ~1d
Ho\1.-·e, er. (roll '><ltd the house was on
the market before m) th was indicted
h' a federal grand 1un Ma~ I ti
( roll added he sull has not hc.-ard
lrom has client and he refu~d to
comment on family statements that
Richard and Emilee Sm)th have lt'ft
(Plea.ee eee SUSPECT'S/ A2) No bodies were found at
an alleged satanic burial
slte./A4
INDEX
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Bulletln Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann-landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Publlc Notices
Sports
Televlson
Weather
A10
A3
84-6
87-9
A10
89
State doubts Nicaraguans
have released U.S. couple
Weinberger
ends contract
with NB firm
810
A9
88
A7
A8
A7
A3
810
81-3
A9
A2
By ROBERT BARKER
OflMO...,Notllllfl
The whereabouts of a former
Oran,e-Coast College instructor and
his wtfe, who were captured by the
Nicaraguan Navy Au~. 7, remained
unknown today despne assurances
from Nicaraguan officiaJs that the
pair had been released.
St.ate Department offic1aJs in
Washinaton s aid today that
Nicaraguan officials told them that
Leo R. LaJeunesse and his wife
Dolores were f rced Saturday and bad
set sail in their 65-foot yacht Wahine
for Cost.a Rica.
But State Depanment represcnta-
t 1 ve Norma Harms accused
Nicaraguan officials of lying in the
past and said U.S. officials won't
believe accounts unul they see the
LaJeunesscs.
"If they d on't put into the Pon of
Limon (about a three days sail from
Nicaragua) tomght, thert wtll be
more concern." she said. •
Gwenn Swanson, a daughter of the
LaJeunesses, said from her home in
Minnesota Monday that her mother
was suffering from dysentery and that
the Sandanistas had taken her
parents' life-savings
I
"I'm outrased They're innocent
and they'rt being treated ltke this. hke
common criminals," sh~ satd
Swanson, who graduated from Costa
Mesa High School tn 1976 and
attended Orange Coast College two
years. also claimed she doubted
repons that her parents had bttn
freed.
"It would be great, but I don't
believe a word of 1t." sh' said
Swanson satd she believes her parents
arc being held ~use they arc
American c 1t1zens . .._"The\
(Nicaraguan officials) are ant1-
(Pleaee eee CAPTURED/ A2) Leo LaJeuneae
By tbe Assoclat~ Press
Defen~ ~ n·tJ n < .l'ipar \\
\\ c1nherger ..a1J t1"1a) he '" killing
1mmed1ateh an .\rm' program to
field a ne" a1r-<lt•lensc gun tx•t:au~
tht• weapon'o; Jl('rformame " "not
W1lnh the CO\t ..
The acuon wao; l'XJX.~ ted to ha\ e a
'\ubstanual 1mp.tl t. both linan11alh·
and 1n lo'' of prt"St1ge lor the
"<'apon·s builder foord .\t•m<,pace & < ommunicauon\ l urp bast.'d in
"-lewport Beach
Ford .\ero<ipal'c "h" h began "llr~
on the v.eapoq an t Q1R ha<. ahout
(Pleue eee SOT./ A~)
Creative finaneing keeps Laguna scho-ols afloat
Non-:tradtftonal fundin alternatives range _
from partnerships to land developer's role
As che Lquna Beach Umficd
School District prepares to educate
the city's affluent youth for another
year, it finds itselfbatllina beck from
a financial precipice with a variety of
oon·tradiuonal fUndin' alt.crnatives.
Ora.nae County's uniest school
distnct wa st~ by t.hc Senano-
J>riest d«lsion of 1977, knocked ofT
balance by Propo itton 13 in 1978
and whittled to the bone by a studetlt
• enrollment that bcpn a 1teady dc-
clJne to 1976-77.
Serrano-Priest's mi ion to equal-
ize e.ducat1on for all tudcnts took tu
money from nch distncu to balance
opportunittc:s an pOOroncs. TbaUt.alc
---
Supreme Court <kc1s1on combined
with the tax hmili!'J measures of
Proposition 13 and 1tate fundma
reductions that ao hand-in-hand with
slippina enrollment to make ends
m.,,nty bard to meet, said Clyde
l9velady,1hcdistnct'sbu inc man· aacr .•
As proarunt disap{>Cared, ex·
tracumcular oppottun1t1cs declined
and equipment became outdated; the
Wl)CU inaatin&Jy threadbare, the
achoo! dJstnct bqan to fiaht bad: by a
variety of means to set the fund 1t
nccdedtoprovukat.sfewcrthan 2,200
students with a aood education.
To' d.a.te, there i1 an lndcpendcnt
orpni on to raise funds for educa-
t proarams. partnerships with
1 · uuons hke the la•una Beach
Muse of Art to provide an and
thca~r c sses. J01nt venrurc w11h
the city fo o rt".auonal im-
provements a a no rofit corpor-
ation to provide extracumcular and
enrichment proaram o n a fee best
To cut costs. the school d1stnct hu
taken to contntctina wtth out'1dc
compa.na~ for s~nt transpor-
tation, ,lft?UndS maintenance and
moat of Hsjuutonal "1"VlCC. To raise
money for capital improvement.._ it
l\u ta.ken oo lhc role or land
d~veloper 1n ~lhna off' two 1urplu
school sites..
"It'\ difficult to be cfficicn• when
you're mall 1n numben of kid "
Lo..-clady sajd Allhouah t hen can
LISA
MAHONEY
NEW S BACKG ROUND . ,,
be c!Jmin.atcd and tcbool itt Id. a
small d1stnct 11111 has the same per
student co u .of'or maintcnanc-r and
upkeep as any o•~r. he Kid.
And you can only elim10a&e so
maoy poslt\ons and prosrarns before
the quahty of education bcaJns to
detenoratc, Lovelady said •
t..quna. ..,tuch tJ upecu nA '!. 1 a•
. '
<;tudents to enter tts lour ~·hooh th1 -.
September "could take on lin<'tht»r 2.000 kid and he a lot mon·
efflcient " he \aid
ThtS )car. the dt<;tnct Wiii fC'Cel\ ~
S:!,S 11 a )car for each 'itudent from
the state, 11 m(lor funding source,
Lovelady s.a1d With its spa~ cnrol·
lment. the d1 tnct could ca,11) fill th<'
..cboolJ wtthout hJ!vtng to add pn'"
.,.m, But -1ft~ d1 tnct had mort'.
s•udeni -thet additional revenue
re«1' ed picf tudcnt ~ould ao a Iona
way tov.-ard 1mpro,·10 aam1 school
bu1ld1n and perhaps hmna an
a 1 tant upenntcndent to tak.e~me
of the PfT urc off' Lo'·elady and
upenntendcnt 81lly Bame th<"
d1stnct's onl) other adm1n1<.tr'lt0f
Maintainana quaht) rducauon 1n
an emliattled \ChOOI d1 inc• began in
l"'N "llh the formation of iln
Edul'3llonal Foundation, bcuer ~no"'n tl)da, as ~hoolpowcr The
toundatton ha\ ra1'>e'd SI 00.000a year
1or· dt<,tnl't educational Pl"OITlms in
1he pa<.t few \tar\ throu&h popular
e' entc; hkc tts annual I O.k1lometer
raC't' 1hrouah LilJUM Rt"ach
.\ panner.h1J' \\tth t~ Lquna
fk'a~h Museum of Art has provided
tlcmt'n f\ ~tudcnl'\ with an tnstruc-
11on l~u)he pa 1 fhe \C'a~ and a new
o ne "'uh the Moulton Playhou~ ti
e\~ ttd to r '1uh1e the d1c;tnct's
a1hn1 theatt'r art5t cumculum af\cr
\elf' n1 dN h nc under an t"VCT'·
C'hanama rouod llftempantl') 1n,.ruC'-
ton
To provide a full rana;t of utracur-
m ular achv111t" and summer pr<>-
(Pteue ... D TIUCT / A2)
I
'I
,-~~--~-;-------~~----)~.\~\~--------------------------,
Aa * 0.•91 Co.t OAtLV Pf_LOTIT~. Auguet 271 1"5
AIRPORT SETTLEMENT ·msTORIC' .•. ham Al
lbe lsaue today, Superv1t0r Bru~
Nestaftde wu the lone atandou(
votina -tpinst two of me ftve
provii.ions. • .
Nc:stande, who voied in fivor of
key provisioas a f\u uyint he f.avortd tbc tettlement in prinaple, spoke
qaimt prov11 on1 which require lbo
oowuy to remain neutral to localina
an ldditional airport 11te in lbe
~\}' &0.-tM-Joint-cmlian· miliwY use of the Marine Col"PI Air
Station•• El Toro.
"'To be honest, I wilb Newport
Bach would have tquared the iuue
and no1 aone into the community and
created 1tre11 over somethina that is
not aoina to hapJ)en," Nettande aaid.
Supervison Hamett Wieder voted
for the qrument after expreuina
ooncems over the fate of McDonnell
Specifics of airport
settlement outlined
Tbe 1eulement ~to by the NCWJ2QrtJkaciLCily ~
Councy"l Bol.ra oTSUpemiOn call• for the liriiited expention of Joho Wayne
Airport in two phuet
Tbe flnt pbue ruos tbrou&b March 990 and the tee0nd, with an
npanded airport tennioal, run• throuah th~.Year 200S: Durina the tint phase, up to 4.1$ mUhon pusenaere will be
accommodated each year. (Tbe atrpon will serve about 4.1 million passenael'I
thi1 year, city official• aaid.) After 1990, the airpon capacity will increase to 8.4 millioo pusenaert a
year. The oounty had .OµJht a hiahcr annual Umit of 10.24 million.
Doualu employees. .
The employees contend that the
1enlement could jeop&rdiz.e hun·
Cindi of Jobs at the Lona Beach-baaed
aircraft manufacturer becaute fli&hu
by the firm's MD-80 aircraft wouJa be
limited to 39 fliahu per day at 1W A.
The total number of comm~ fli&httwdl be hm1ted to an averqe of 55
a day until 1990 with an incraae to 73 av~ daily ni;>t• af\er that.
Additional flahu will be offered•• in u ves to a1rhnet usina quieter/ell.
The noiser jeu wiTI be limited to 39 fliah per day for the 20-year life o the
plan.
Durina the debate in Newport
Beach, Maurer and other council
members araued that the com-
promite was the best the city could
obtain while protectina the intereau
of NeWPOrt Beach residents.
"Pe0_plc who arc critical o! this
qreement...sbould keep in mind tbat
it is a compromise, not the Jund we
would draft unilaterally," Coun-
cilman Bill Aaee s:aid.
Other council members, who have
been tiJht-lipped throujbout the
neaotiabons, had effusive praise
Monday for the compromise.
"I thmk there arc no losel'I in thts.
We a.rt alJ winners," Ruthclyn Plum-
mer said.
"It's an excellent document," John
Cox Jr. sa1d.
.. We can live with what we know 1s
the ultimate aoal of tnat airpon,"
Jackie Heather said. "I don't know
The expanded terminal will be limited to 337, 900 IQ\Wl'C feet. A proposed
five-level l 0,000-space parluna 1tructun: will be scaled back to 8,400 spaces on
four levels. A curfew on the hours for 11rpon depanures wtll remain 1n effect for 20
yean. •
The county airees to re$C1Dd its official opposiuon to 1 new au:pon site and
will not oppose the posS1ble Joint-use of the Marine Corps Air Station 1n El
Toro. •
Also, the Board of'Su_pervisors ~ to blck af phcat,ions for Fed~ral
Aviation Administration tundina on behalf or aroup seeking an additional
airport 1ito.
Efforts wdl be made to reduce and control ae.oeral avtauon aircraft noise .
In addiuon, Ncwpon ~p. by qReina to. the 1ettJemeot, commits to
JOlnina the county in defenchna the settlement apinst any future liuaation. -RohnBya4mo
what rm .01na to do without the
ajrport to kick around anymore.''
· Tbe City Council'• approval fol·
lows the Sunday endorsement by the
Airport Worldna Group and Stop
Pollutina Our Newpon. The two
Newport Beach ciuzens croups that
were both opposed to airport ex-
~10.sion were included in the neao-
t11uon1.
The settlement must now be sub-
mitted to the federal Aviation Ad-
ministration and the a_fTected couns
for concumnce, which is expected.
However, I federal lawsuit namma
the county, McDonnell Doual11, the
airlines now servina the ai~rt or
those who have been wan-listed
remains to be resolved in a Los
Angeles federal courtroom.
NIXON AIDE JOHN DEAN .••
homAl
wrote the book Bland Ambition about
that scandal
Dean's full name. age and city of
rcS1dence. appear to match that of the
man lasted in the CHP-s repon.
California H1&hw1y Patrol spokes-
man Paul Caldwell said Nona L
Wolverton. 26. of Costa Mesa. was
drivinaher Volkswaacn Buasoutb on
the ficcway past the McArthur
Boulevard exit when she was cut off
by a truck that abruptly moved into
her lane.
Wolverton swerved to avoid collid-
IDJ with the truck driven by Keith A.
May, 32, of Vista and slammed into
the center divider.
The woman's Volk.swaacn over-
turned, accordina to Caldwell, and
she was thrown over the divider and
into the nothbouod side of the
freeway where she was hit by a
Mercedes Benz dnven by Dean.
Wolvenon was draged about 100
feelbefon.Dean wu~e to stop the
car. Caldwell aaid.
She wu taken to fountain Valley
Community Hospital's trauma
center wbere she remains in critical
condition with bead, lea and pelvic
an~uries, a hospital spoketWoman Slld. .
Neither Dean nor the truck driver
were hurt in the accident, police said
STALKER SEEN IN SANTA ANA •.•
From Al
and said the anformauon had been
turned over to the Oranac County
Shcriff s Department, which 1s
probina the attack 1n Mm1on Viejo.
An aswlant believed to be the
N1&ht Stalker ishot 29-ycar-old Bill
Cams an the head two times early
Sunday and raped bis girlfnend.
Cams remamed 1n cnt1cal cond1t1on
today at Mission Community Hospi-
tal in Mission Viejo. ,
The attack occurred on a quiet
residential street less than a mlle from
the San Diqo Freeway Like many of
the other victims, Cams Jives m a
yellow, smaJc-story house.
The Niaht Stalker hu been linked
to JS attacks. He has slain 14 people
since March. accordma to a Los
Anaeles County Shcnffs task force.
Members of the task foroc today
asked Southern Californians to look
out for a car stolen in C.Cntral Los
Anaeles on Saturday
ihe car 1s descnbed as an o~.
1976 Toyota station waaon. with
Cahfom1a license plate 482 RTS,
according to Los Angeles County
Sheriffs Deputy Steve Lee.
He said a similar car was seen
lcavina the vicinity of urn's
Chrisanta Dnve reStdencc in M1ss1on
VteJO.
Police throu&hout Orange County
have been defuaed with telephone
calls from worried residents since the
latest Niaht Stalker attack, said
SGT. YORK BATTLE GUN ••.
rromAl
2,000 people 1n Orange County
work.in& on the prOJCCt.
During 1983, the latest fiaures
immediately available, the Sgt. York
accounted for about 13 percent of the
company's 14,300 workers. The pro-
vam accounted for S48S million, or
about 32 percent. ofFord Aerospace's
contract award\ for that year The
other money went to its aero-
nutron1cs. space m1u1ons and west ·
cm development laboratones pro-
arams.
The Arm y had already invested
S 1.8 b1lhon tn the Sgt York au n
system and will now have to saJvaac
for parts the 65 auns already de-
livered, We1nberacr said.
The decision, one of the most
dramatic mid-stream halts to a Pen-
ta&on weapons program in recent
h1Story, will save rouahly $3 b1U1on,
he told reporters
Ford Aerospace pubhc1sts in New-
pon Beach and Wuhmgton wen: out
of the office or closeted 1n mecuna.'
and unavailable for immediate com-
ment, secretaries said.
"I have decided to terminate the
Sat. York D1vad Army air-defense
weapon sy~tem," Weinberger ~1d,
adding that recent independent oper-
ational tests "dcmon•trated that the
system's performance doe! not effec-
tively meet the arowmg military
threat.
Orange County ShenfT Lt. Dick
Olson.
"We're really aeuina an increase 1n
calls and so arc all the area police
departments," said Olson. "People
arc womed and I can understand
that. We've beefed up our patrols
because of this."
Olson said mvcst1ptors, working
1n cooperation with the Nia.ht Stalker
task force, returned to carn·s resi-
dence today to agam sift throu~ the
house for possible clues. He did not
say what officers have found inside
the residence.
It 1s believed that the Night Stalker
may leave a tell-talc trademark be-
hind or scrawl mcssaaes on the walls
of victim's homes.
"The tests demonstrated also that
while there arc marginal improve·
ments that can be made to the Divad,
these are not s1an1ficant compared to
the capability of current air defense
weapons and therefore. not worth the
add1uonal con
"So we will not invest any more
fu nds m this sytem."
The Sgt. York, known more for·
malty u the Divt1ion Air Defense
Gun or Divad, has been under
development for more than seven
years. Oc1ianed to protect armored
columns from air attack, 1t consi•U of
two 40 moi cannon -mounted atop
a modified tank chassis -linked to a
computer and radar.
SUSPECT'S BAIL FORFEITED •.•
From A l
the country
tahey also dcchnea to talk about
the search he1n1 conducted by the
U.S. Customs Service, Interpol and
other aaenc1es. He alw refused com·
ment on rcporu that Smyth's dauah-
ter, Dawn R1wold of Irvine, and lm
wn, Ernest, have been aranled Im-
munity for their testimony ap1n'1 the
electronics manufacturer
Fahey said no char&e5 are pend1na
against family members. hut he
dccltned to ~Y whether any arc be1na
considered
Smyth. a con,ultant for the Air
Force and the Nonh Atlantic Treaty
Ora;tmuit1on. 11 suspected of 1llea,aJly
transporuna 810krytrons 10 an Israeli
. '
company 1n Tel Aviv. between Janu·
ary 1980 and mid-December 1982.
Smyth, pre11dent of' the closed
M1lco fntemallonal Inc .. pleaded not
1u1lty, mainta1nina that he was un-
aware that special State Department
approval was needed to ship the
krytrons, which arc also uled for h1ah-
1pecd photocopy1na mactunes and 011
dnlhna equipment.
DISTRICT BATTLES THE ODDS .•.
Prom Al
arams like those d11maf\tJed by Prop-
os1t1on 13, school board member.
and concerned cmuns last year
created L.£.A.R N., Laauna Ennch-
ment and Re.ource Network. a telf-
1upport1na. non·profit co~rauon
that offers after-school ennchmcnt,
summer clatses and athleuc chniet tr, L.quna Beach .. rea tehool chll·
Contract10~ for certain serv1cet
inttead of' pey101 ulanes and bencfi tt
to tehool empfoyccs hu saved the
d11trict about SlS0.000 tn the east
two to th cu ya rs, t.ovetady uid. Tht
di1tnct aJtO bepn encourquia
teachm and administrators to takt
early ~en'-IO tbty can be
~ wit.b I experienced -but
alto F09tly-pcnonoel.
To flnao« a now twimm1n1 pool to
replace the uiJa one at the hiah
school, d.lttrici ofnci.aJ1 have Joined
handl With the C1ty Earimated eott
(or 1111 and oonttruetion it 11
million. &od diflnct adm1ni1tn1~
------
arc look1n.s for vant money to
finance their half of the deal
To pay for needed capital improve-
ments to the d11tnct's older tehool1,
Lovelady and Barnes have a.one into
the real estate buam~Much of the
past year has been spent finahnna
detail' o( the sale of the former Abso
School to a croup that hopes to
renovate 1t for senior ho\.-1n1-
At thcl umc ume, Dames and
Lovelady have topped their educ.a·
t1oqal hat• with those of land de-
velo~s to preptrc another 1urplu1
"t.t on Alta Laauna Boulevard for
"le The vacant parcel 1n the Top of
the World ociabborbood 11 tdeaJ for •maJ~·f1m11)' fiomcs, b\Jt dtvelopet'I
wary of the ciry'1 many restnchons
an.d ~uiremeou have not been
wilhna to purchate the propeny
without an appro"ed lt'Kt map in
place
rr 1emna the land wall rcpeir
cracked concme an the h1ah tehool
quadranale. or allow other needed
renov1uon1. then you can call Love-
lady Mr Devetoecr A tentauve lrlct
map for the Alta Lquna sue bu been
prepared and II up for COnlJdet'lllOn
at the nut Plannm1 C'omm1u1on
meeuna.
''It takes all of our time ar1d ability
to ~ 1eratchin1 to keep th1nas
IOIDJ.' Lovelady Did.
till, Lovelady believes better
umcs are ahead f'or the achool d11tncl
despit.t rts conunued enrollment de-
cline. Selhna Ahso School wilt mean
almo,t S2. 7 million to tho district, he ~id. And, altbouah Lovelady i1
mtklna no P\lblic prediction• about
how much the Alta Laauna 11u may
bnna in. it should be 1u""bat.ant .. 1
T& nnrt atate lottery wsll also
relieve aome of \ht fitcal preuure
borne by tbt ditlt'lct, he predicted.
St.ate income Crom the aalc oflot&.e1)'
ticlceu Jw bocn promited tn pan to
educ::auon. .. Ir 1"e can 1ell tbotc two picca of
property and .F.' the lottery on lin
we'll 1urvtvc. Lovtlady 1d
Sticky on Co3.st; cooling slowly
U .S. TemJNI
The ,.,._. for 8 p.m. EDT, Wed., Aug. 2
I
.
Surf Report
Tldm
TOOAY 2.34e.m
t'10&.lll , .. , ...
l'CMpm ...,...,.y
'1ttl low S: 10 a.m. ..0 1 'WI 111111 t:ff e.m. •.I leoo<\l low 1:40 p.m. t 1
8-lcl lllOll l:At p "' •.•
""' .... loelay .. 7-tt p "'·· ,... Wldnalclay at I H a.m. and -again
at1 "'"' ,,._ l'tlel IOdef at .. 11 pm ..... al S 20 I m WadNed4ty and ..... aotll\ 8t IMp.111
CAPTURED COUPLE RELEASED? •••
Prom Al
Amencan. They hate us with a
passion." she said. ,. .
Representatives in the office of
Rep. Robert Badham. who have
uf"&Cd the Amencan Embassy an
Managua to push for the releue of' the
LeJeunesscs, said the couple had
trouble with their boat's en&Jne and
were seized near Little Com Island.
Leo LaJeunessc, SJ, was employed
at Oranac Cout Collcae from uilina th rouah the Panama Canal,
1966-8 t, tint u an a&ficulture and they decided to Hve in Florida wbere
biolOfY teacher mcrtben -u an he-wrote a book. de\Tole<t"lime to
usoaate dean of instruction for photoaraphy and opened a res-
media services. Before that be was an tauranl
qricwture teacher at Costa Mcu About a month qo he appHed for a
Hiah. Job I t cmnae Coast Collqe. They
Collqe oflic:W1 u.id LaJe'Ulet.se wero sailina from Florida to the
and his wife, a former 1tudent at the Oranae Coast, where be intended to
colleae left the acbool to take an return to teachina. when they were
around-the-world voyqe. But aft.er captured by the Nicarquan Navy.
NESTANDE REJECTS OIL PACT .•• -
Prom Al
011 dnlhng would pose to the local
economy and environment.
But Nestandc said he disaJrced
with the incl u,ion of two poi nu m the
document.
One atteacs that "Oil reserves off
the Oranae County cout are suffi-
cient to fuel the national economy (at
current rates of consumption) for no
more than two or three days."
But Nestandc said that point could
be disputed.
"I don't believe you really know 'W~at's out there until you drill," he
said. .
The other point Nestande took
inue with concerned Ora.f!JC Coun·
ty'_s ~llinaness to allow offshore oil
dnllina "were there a clear national
emcrsency."
''I don't knowwhythatshould be 10
there," Nestande 111d. "It can take 10
yeal'I to prepere to drill for oil from
st.an to fi nish. How are we aoina to
know of an emeraency I 0 years 1n
advancer'
Nestande said he has learned to
avoid sianina any documents unless
he aarca with everythina in it. .. r don't beUeve you lhowdaive the
opponents somethina to pick at." he
Did ... But I do support alternative
sources of encfl)'.
"J believe the ocean a natural
resource and I say we should leave
that natural resource alone."
NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY
20% OFF
AbL -POTTERY.
•
SALE INCLUDES:
• POTTERY • REDWOOD TUBS
• SAUCERS • WIRE BASKETS
• BARRELS • STRAW BASKETS
• AND POTTING SOIL TOOi
AM LING ' s
Newpon Nursery and Garden Center
(letwMn MllcArthur and JlmborM)
OS*' Mon. thru let •~:ao. lundey t .00-5:30
1600 .... coat Mw,ort bellotl, ~nae• (11•> 844;is10
r l •
BuLu 1 IN BoARO
'Pennis le11on1 set
~1n Fountain Valley
Real1U"ation bea!nl..SepL.lA& for iectrut-&etloftt
offered by llieefty of Fountain Valley Recreation
Department. Cluses bqjn the week or Sept. 23.
The elaht-week classes are offered to cbktlrcn aan eiaht to 12; teens, 13 to 18 yean; and adulu on
all skill levels. Fee 11 S2l for adulta and SlO (or
childnn.
The Sept. 14 reaistration for for Fountain
Valley rnldenu onl_x. Otben may reai•ter besinnina
Sept. 16. Sian ups will be taken IO a. m. to noon at the
recreation center. Call th~nJ1 center at 839-S9$0
or the communjty centerat 9~3-8321 for additional
1nform1tfon.
CPR worbJJop .et
Eam cardio-pulmonary resuscitation cen.lflca·
uon followina a four-hour workshop Sept. 28 at
Oran~ Coast Colleae.
• CPR for Citizens" prepaRt participants to
take action in unexpected emeraenciea and th<>te
completina the session will receive a certificate
inCPR from the Americaft Heart AJSociation.
The workshop run• from 2 a.m.. to I p.m . in
OCC's faculty house. Fee is S 15 per penQn, and SlO
for two. For more information, call 432-5880.
HU1JtbJ6toa cl ... of 19/JIJ
The Huntlnaton Park H1&b ScboolefaAofl9SS
will hold iu 30th reunion Oct. 19 at the Grand Hotel
in Anaheim. Information is available by callin,
(213) 928-6772 or 923-4222.
£alan• pa1JeJ vacaaclm
Laauna Beach is seeking volunteera to aerve on
several city committees.
There are vacancies on the cable telcvisioni
park.int. traffic and circulation; recreation ano
community services, seismic safety and diluter
preparedness and senior citizens comm.ineet.
City retidents interested in ICt'Viq on 1
committee can obtain information and an appli·
cation in the city clerk's office at City Hall, SOS
Forest Ave. "
The deadline for returning appllcatlona is Sept.
12.
T-he C1ty-CooAC1I W'lil conduct 1nterViews at its
Sept .. 1 7 meetina.
Newoomen to meet
The Newcomen Club of Ne~ Beach will
hold 1 aeneral meetina. Sept. 4 with a j)OOl-ajde
luncheon. A beach party 11 planned at Bia Corona del
Mar Beach on Sept. 22. •
· Women livina in Newport Beach for leas than
two years are welcome to join. Additional infor-
mation is available by caJhna 6S(). 74SO or 640-4418.
Romance Yrrlten
The Oranae County Romance Writen of
America meets the flnt Saturday of each month at
the Sizzler Res1aurant, 1401 N. Harbor Blvd.,
Fullerton. The Sept. 7 meetin~ will feature an awards preacn~tion for the aroup s second annual un·
published writen contest.
Lunch beaina at 11 :30 a.m. and the meetinp
starts at 1 p.m. The aroup's address P.O. Box 39S,
Yorba Linda, 92686.
Ualvenlty women
The American Assoc1at1on of Univenity
Women, Huntinaton Beach Branch, is planruna a
brunch Sept. 7 at the Huntinaton Landmark. The
brunch o~ns the _Foup's new year, with the theme
"Womens Work/Women's Worth," and the year's
proaram will be presented.
The AAUW is the lal'lest and oldest national
orpnization workina for the advancement of
women and education. It promotea equ1ty for
women, education and self-development. New
members are welcome and additional information 11
available by callina 846-4226 or 962-3504.
' Tueeday, Aq. 27
• 7: 30 p.m. Lapaa Bea~ adlool board, achoo!
d1stnct offices, SSO Blumont St.
Pouc£ Loe
.
--..
..
Otanot C:O.t O~ILY PILOT/Tueeday, Augutt 27, 19'5 * .U
Kidnap
cases
-tie o
Stalker
Police believe abduction
Off our children may ~
the work of Night Stalker
LOS ANGELES (A P) -Authonue1 an:
1nvestipJtn1 four abduclJons of ch1Jdren
they think m1pt be the work of tM w-
calkd "Nl&ht Sta.lkcr" who 11 betna blamed
for k.ilhna 14 people and ma1m1n1 othcn
throuJhout Cahfom1a
Three of the younaru:.ra were taken from
t:Deir btds, while the other was ludnappcd
from a schoolyard, authont1es said Mon·
day. All four were molested and lcf\ to
wander aJons streets close 10 freeways
Each of the ludnapp1n11 occurred in the San Gabnel Valley or adjacent northeast
Los Anaeles, where the N1aht StaJker has
kdled five times.
Freeway mlahap ·
A 20-yeu-old man•• Toyota plckap had to be cut
&put to free h.lm from the wreoU,e after he atruck
a tire on the 8anta Ana Freeway ud cruhed lnto
Mme treee alone the freewa1 Monday mornm,. Le
Dao. no addreM a..U.ble, •uffered cut.a and a
The luller, known also as th< VaJIC')'
lnttudcr and Walk-In Invader. 11 believed
responsible for 34 attacks, 1nclud1n1 14
slaytnp. The ,tnna of en mes al50 include\
rapes, beatanas and kidnappinas. broken collu'bone after the 8:45 a.m. accl.dentjaat
aoath of the i.a,una Freeway lD' Int.De. Dao wu
taken to 111.Mlon Commanity Roepltal l.n .U.lon
Viejo for b'•tment. Bl8 condition wu not a.....U-
able tbJa mOl'llt.nc.
He was 11ven has name becau~ of the
way~ enten homes quietly to cal'Y') o ut h1\
attacks · ·
ln two of the four kldnapftn& caSH, the
----------------------------------------------• molester entered ha vtct1ms homes late 111 Sen Cranst h re' d ~~~~~ :r(~~f~r~ ~;;rn~r.~r :;.~enna . on pus es 1.0r en sh~~t~e~t:S~:dfi:dedh~fl:~~·;'.~d
• Sunday m their home 1n Minton V1c10 55 of new of f:shore 011 plat,C'orms m~~~~~!jn'~~~~~.A;~~~Cam\.i~. J. ~ _ renamed an cnucal condauon today at
-~~~-~~------------------------M1w00Commun1~H~~~Thc~~n But hefears-U.S. poi1t1cs
may prompt expansion
of rigs off state coastline
From 1taff ud wire reportt
U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston said he wantS to
keep the CaJifomja cout free of any more
oil-drilling platforms but warned that
national politics may diet.ate othel'Wlse
Cranston also told residents of the
northern San Dieao County cny of
Occan11de that he does not believe the
Reapn administration as giving enouah
consideration to the environmcntaJ nslcs
involved in opening coast.al areas to
drillina.
wo rtor hospi~tZCd.
Hodel: U.S. needs domestic oil w~~t.~~ir.t°:r :::i:! ~~y '::ef~~~h~
attack, wh1eh was seen near the house.
From 1&aff aad wire reports LosAnaelespohccCmdr. Wilham Booth wd of 1 March 20 ludnapp1n1 of an 8-year·
lntcnor Secretary Donald Hodel lold park ranacn dunna Monday's v1s1t lo the old Jirl 1n lhe Ea&Je Rock area, fi ve mile\
Golden Gate National Reaeauon Area that the nat1on cannot allow itself to be d1etated to nonh of Los Ansclcs. "We &re C"Um1n1n11t
by fore1an 011-producina countnes while vast reserves of 011 arc ofT the coast. carefully and cont1nu1n1 to do so to ttt 1f
"I'm not willina to sacrifice national secunty, but I'm not wilhng to sacrifice the there 111 connection."
California coast either," he said. Asked 1f the child's detcnpuon of her
Even 1f the I 50 tracts designated for 011 exploration off Cahfornaa were chanae<S. he usa1laot matched that of the Night
said. the views from Bia Sur. Point Reyes and other env1ro}lmcntal havens would be Stalker ... Booth replied .. Thed.esc.npuon 1\
\8f eguarded close eoouah " •
Hodel will be 1n Orange County Saturday for a town hall meeting at Ncwpon City The 11rl was kidnapped from her bed a\
Hall. He will meet with city officials and the pubhc to discuss the proposed explorauon her parents slept in the house. authonue1
extension. said.
Nine of the 150 tracts proposed for exploration arc located off the Oranac County Last m on\h, OctectJve Lou14' < uullo
coast. · wd invcsttpton bebeved the umc man-
Thc c1t1es of Hungmgton Beach, Newport Beach, Lacuna Beach and San Clemente who lodnapped hcr•aJIO broke into a hou~
have formed a coahuon to oppose funher offshore dnlhna here and arc workina to defeat in suburban Arcada on June 27, took a t-
Tbe Cahfomia Democrat's ,tops in the proposal. year-old 11rt from her bed and mol~tcd her
Oceanside and San D1e10 on Monday were The meeting with Hodel 1s scheduled to begin at 9 a m. Saturday Two other kidnapp1ng-molesuatron ~rt~amo~h~~3S<i~tou~P~1t~~ ---~~~-~~~~·------~--~~~--~------~~.a ~ycar~~~rl 1nMon~bello a~9 observen say the sweep 11 an early re-year-old boy 1n Monterey Park. may alto ht'
election push by Cranston. who 1s expected Dcpanment of the lntcnor which would cn1es along the Oranae Coast related to the Naaht wkcr pohce 1n tho..c
to seek a fourth six-year term in 1986. open aas and 011 exploration sues three suburban Lot Anfeles c1ues ta1d
ff C lntenor Secretary Donald Hodel will I th M h I M p The offabore dnllina issue 16 a hot topic miles o the ahfom1a coast discuss the proposaJ with local officl&l.s n e arc ontcrey ark ca~ lht
to C&lifomia residents in the because of a Nine of the tracts proposed for new Saturday durinJ a town hall meetms fa mdy's home wu ransacked and the CJ
tentative aareement between the Cahforn1a exploration arc located off the coast of scheduled to begin at 9 a m. Saturday in the year-old's younger brother wu lrlt 011
con1tessionaJ dcleplJon and the U S Oranac County and opposed by most of the Neutnnn Beach City Hall harmed, police Octccuve Thom 1'ialtJl'olllr;i ->"" u1d last month
Freeway widening delay protested
By JEFF ADLER
ot-.o.., ..........
The Oranae County Transportation
Commission agreed Monday to appeal any
pouible delay in w1den1n1 the congested
Sant.a Arul Freeway throu&h the hean of
Oran&e County.
On a 7-0 vote, the transportation panel
ajt'CCd to ask the California Transportation
Commmion at its Sept. 26 meeting lCl
restore fundina in 1987-88 for the des1an of
addauonal freeway lanes and the acquts1
t1on of naht of way between the Garden
Grove and R1 versa de freeways
The state comm1u1on has oroooi.cd
dclay1na the first phase ofihc proJect by o ne
year. until 1989-90 The Wlden1na. ul -
umatcl> totaling S500 m1lhon in improve-
ments. includes seven of 22 1nd1 v1dual
county transpon.ation projects slated for
'>Ultc funding
The state transportation comm1Ss1on.
which SC1' pnonues statewide for Lranspor-
lallOn pro1ech, has proposed delayina the
Santa Ana Freeway widening project, one
of22 pro1ects tha1 could be delayed because
of a shortfalls in both state and federal
h1ghwa) funding.
''The funding crunch shouldn't delay our
h1 ghc<st pnonty proJccts Everyth1na in-
volvi ng the Santa Ana Freeway we: want to
keep on track. We want to keep the prOJcct
movina and act the improvements done,"
OCTC Executive Director Stan Oftehe
explained of the commission's action
Statewide about 260 proJects of the 1.400
appcann1 an the states current five-year
transpon.ation improvement program face
s1m1lar delays
Other county pro1ects facing almost
certain delay at the hands of the state panel
include the S 16.6 m1 lhon widening of
Pacific Coa'\t Highway ~twee~ Ncwpon
Beach and Huntington Beach and the
w1dcnina of the 'ian D1eao f reeway
between the Santa Ana and(_ orona dcl Mar
frttWa)\
• • •
In the Feb 2S Montebello ca!.C the girl
was taken from a bench on an e~mentar•
school campus, mole•Hed and abandonrd
about two houn later near the Santa
Monica Frcewa .. Detecti ve l>an lflbba d ">aid .
A reward 1n exce\'I of SJ5,{)(tl h.1 .. hc·1•t1
offered for 1nforma11o n leading to 111p1u1t·
of the man de5CT1bed as ha vma \;Ufl)' h:111
and suuned. pppcd teeth
Detectives have withheld much 1nlor-
mauon. fcanng cop,cat ~layrn&-.\ or J
chanac an the killer's method\ The '.1w
meanwhile hu caused a w1dc<tpread ~art·
with police rt'portma more call\ from
c1t11ens and 'iouthem C ahfo m1an\ heeding
wammas to lock door5 and window'
.\ week before the Orange Count> <allih Ir;
the killer 'I truck m \an f' ranc1~:0 Prt' 1ou\·
I\ he v.ac, ~he,ed onl\ 10 tx Opc"rating 1r1
c,uburban \Biie)\ nonh and ea'' Ill I H \
.\naelec, ••
Two killed .as motorcycle • • • Thieves broke into a home 1n the
I 0200 block of La Hacienda A venue
and stoic Sl .250 in audio and video
equipment sometime .. nee Thurs-
day. lhc v1ct1m told pohcc
Offic1al'i al the Oak v1e~ Chi Ide.art'
(enter. 17341 JacQuelyn. reponed
that O\ er 1he weekend bura,lar\ ,tolr
two lYpcwnte~ WOl"\h s-800, two
t.alculator\ 1.1.-onh S300. and food
wonh SI 50
8alboJ Bouk.,..i1d Jwo~r ~un1la'
mom1na to find h1'I l ,11 011 firt· P!tlr. t
repon' \aid tht' hlul' I t~X4 < hn rttl1 1
( am arn v.ould pr11hJhl' bnk1 l.irt•d ,,
total In\' collides with pickup truck
A m otorcyclist and hi• PlllCnaet' were killed early th.it momlna when
they aJlete<Slr fkiled to stop at • red
traffic siana and oollided with a
pickup ttuck In a Cotta Mesa inter·
sectJon, police reported.
Ktith Darin Lane, 26, of Yorba
Linda and his J*len.ICf Randy DarneU Breland. 22. of Placentia were
pronounced dead at the ecene by
paramedics rnpondina to the 12:SO ~· m . accident at Newport Boulevard
Int.Jae
£nierina t.hrouah the front door, a
thief stole $300 in cash from a home
in the 100 block of Topeka on
Monday, the victim told police. • • • A headliaht mJOrtedly was taken
from a car i>erkecf aJont Allq,heny on
Monday. The Iota wu csumated at
S$0 to 1200. • • • A resident atona Woodrulh ~
ported that she had received many
~nc phone wls on Monday. . . . ' An attendant at the Keril.l&e E.c:.on·
omy 5e'mce '8lion. I~ Culver
Drive, reponed that someone atole
8.S aa.llon1 of auobnc on Monday.
The lou was estimated at under SSO.
Coetall-
terco eQuipment vaJUod 11 S914
w reponed stol n from 1 home in
tM lSOO block ofOranao Avenue on
Saturday.
f
•nd Mesa Drive.
The driver oft.be pickup truck. 68-
ycar-o&d Ou Mumy Stocb of Costa
Mes&, IUJtained I CODCUISIOn, frac-
tured ribl. and small head laoerationa
after the motomcJe barreled into the
front fender ofh11 vehicle.
S10cka wu reported in fau con·
dit.ion this momma at Fountain
Valley C.Ommunity Hospital.
Trifflc S&t. Alan Ktnt said a
witneaa estfmated the cycle waa
• • • A thiefatolo jewelry worth SI kl 20
from a home in the 2.SOO bloc of
Eldon on Friday, the vtct1m told
police. ' • ! • A thief 1tolc a J37S black leather
j acket from a Nordstrom depertmcnl
store ln South Coest Ptua on Mon·
day aft.cmoon. • • • A S400color television and S2U an
kitchen applltncea were reported
1tolen Monday from a motor home D&tbd in the 200 block of V1ctorta
SllUt lut wee • • • A man io a wbcelchalr wu 1p-
Jftbel\ded on Sunday for all Jy
neaJJ.aa four pain of pe.nta at a n
A llobUck 1&ore in South Coest Plaza.
He .._ cued and rcJeued and the
paau ~recovered
roaatala Vallq
OoJ( c:lubt Mrc reported 1totcn
from ou de the pro abop of a 1olf
travehna-. fast as 80 miles per hour
north on Newport Boulevard when 1t
tm11hcd into the truck heading cast
on Meu Drive.
Neither motorcyle nder wa1 t.'ear-
ina a helmet, Kent s:ud. Breland wt'\
thrown about 170 feet, landinJ be-
neath a bush on the h1aJ'lway
shoulder. Lane wu found near the
riabt rear fendcT of the pickup ttuck
Lt. Tom Durham wd both ve-
h1clea ~ deatroyod.
course at 10401 Warner on Monday ..
The loa.s came to SI ,200 • • • A child's thtte-~hccl motorcycle.
worth S I 00, w repartcd stolen from m front ofa home 1n the 16909 block
of ML Hope uut on Monday. The
v1ctJ m'1 ~nts tokt police they were
in ide the houte when the 1ne1den1
occumd. • • • Someone reportedly 'tole a SHO
v1deoca lLt r'K'Orckr from a trailer
of the National Recover) Network.
17100 Euclid, on Fnday nl&hl. • • • Aftt'I' pryin.a open the
oompanmcnt. a thld' tote tool a lo~chair and an air pump ftom a
motor ~ome parked tn tht 10'°°
block ofOarficld A~cn on nday.
Thf loet wu ti mated at S573. • • • A idc01 in the ~ ~ock of
Ta n ~ Monday that sh
h.d 1 \led many ne phmw
I dunna lht dav.
' ii'
LapnaBeach
Pohce rc,ponded to rcpom Mon
day of a cow caught in barbed wire
near El Toro and Laguna Canyon
roads Officers at the !ICCne, however
found no lrappcd bovine · • • • A wet ~u11 and fiM wctt reported
lost or ttolen Mond1'y at C"'rescent
Bay • • • ThrtC' 'ho11uns ~ st9len ovl'r
the pa,t )'Car. a Monaco Dnve
res1den1 told pohcc Monday. The
guns 1oacthtr were worth an esti-
mated S 1.080 • • • About SI 000 worth o( hnen Y.3\
"olen ffom 11 South Coa1t Haahwa\
location. the v1c11m told pohoc Mon-
day
Hanthacton Beac:b
A S4SO rifle was stolen from a hom<'
1n the 16000 b1ock of Villa Yorba
early today. • • • A thief stole a car jtc~o and
tte tapes, WOrth SS64. from a
red..a.nd-black Volklwa&rn Rabbit
oonvcruble parked an the lot o(
Huntinit n City Beach on Monday •ft.ernoon. the vtCttm told Police. • • • Vandal pray-painted a blue 1979
TO)"Otl PlClcuP parRd an the 21600
block or Z.mora Lan on Monday.
The dim was estimated at SJOO. • • • man., or LUGC11 Och. 8911
Ada.mi, ~ported tha.t th1c"n 1tok a
of tomaton and 1 ca~ of
muibn)om1 from the 1t room of
the ita~ '°'"eumc s.ancc Thu.r1day
The lo wa e t1matrd at S700
• • • .\ dark blue I ~77 fl.kn edt'c, 1.1.-a\
reponed stolen Imm in lron1 nl a
home 1n ('od ( 1rcle on \und.1\-n1gh1
Newport Beach
" re4'1dent in lhe :!OOO hlocl ol
Promontory Dnve reponed thal o"er
the weekend his aolf du~ were \tolcn
from 1n fron1 of the pro \hop at the
I rvinC' Country ( luh I NlO t JJ\t C nac,1
H1atiway • • • .\ vandal acratched 1ht p;unt on a
red 1979 BMW 320t on \und11'
doana an "t1m11ed $2SO 1n Jam11at' • • • .\ resident an th.e 900 blod ol l
. . .
\ "r~ \or~ ( ti\ rt'\ldt'nl ft'()nttC'd
that her pur\C (ontJin1n1t \ rl'd11 '.11d \
and SMl in l &\h and hrr tmrli.l\t
worth ~I 00, v.rrc \tokn fmm hr1
hotel at 11 0'7 lamh< fl'<' Rn,11! 1111 -,..
Saturda .. night . . .
i\ rt,1den1 11lon1' \q·n11l.1 I .111111
reponl'd thal h1<i \4\IJ L,Oill\ ,., hoat
co\er wac, \tolen trnn1 h" h<1,1111.1il('r
~unda} while 1t wa\ p<ttkrd 111 th
I I 00 block of Bat•k fb, I >n' r • • • .\ i 1 l.000 \liver ~·rv1lC and SI ''IC
in chin• .,,..CN' ttponed \tokn 1111
\.tturday from a hum<' 1n tht-.:ioc1
block of Vista ( 1100
• Officials identify Marine
who died in copter crash
From tl&fl ... wire reperu
Mahtaf') offic1als h.ne 1dent11icd
the Manne killed 1n Sunday'• Cf9'h of
a 1konky upcr talhon ~hcopter
u Lance Cpl Jonathon.J>Ndhommc.
2 t of LaU C'barks. La. He d cd unday ,.,hen the< H-,JE
~and troop U'ln&port nt down
t!\ Lquna Halla whale on 1 fl111'it from
r~ntyn.inc Palms 1n tht Mo,av('
D:xn.
Thrtt of tht •urv1"'0", I ti Lt
BNQC Houtu, H . of Warminster. Pa ~ . Ktnncth Moffitt. l 1. of
Hendcnon. N C.: and Lan~ Cpl. anin OraboW'lki, 21. of Santee,
ahi. ~ relcatcd Monday a.f\cr
f'('(C'1\-1n1 1rntmen1 tnr minnr an
1une\ al the (I 1 mo ho\pllal \tall
t V1d1 < onkel \aid
Tht pilot. MaJ Rohcrt fire\!, lt1n
~. ()f Ptn cola na . rcma1m-d 1n
'\tablccondn1nn at l.('ln1 fka h ~J\itl
H P1ta1 111;herc: he ... ,., ~inf ll'"l'~led
for a broken len arm. C unkc ia1d
Th fi.,.c mt'n aboerd wt'rf' \lll•
t1oned at thr New R1v<;1 Ma~,nt:
C'nrps u ~tat1on in JM:k'«1nv1llt
N < , and had taktn pen 1n mill ''
cu·n:ltcS 1n 1ht de n
W1tnn~ \pot\t"d 1mo~t 1nJ n
<'•olo,1on near the main rotUf JU\I beto~ the cndl, bul Conkel kl
nrvr"11. r:nton had not )C\ d tcmHn J
(~ dent
' l
M Or-.. eoi.. DAil V Pt&.OTn......_, Augu9t 27, 1985
Discovery thunders into space
Wea th er conditions
were the worst ever
for a shuttle launch~ -
CAPE CANAVERAL"' Fla. CAPJ_-
Snuttfe niscovery ound a bole an the
clouds and rocketed away from Earth
minutes before a rainstorm today to start a danng salvage mission in
which space--walkina astronauts will
tty to "bot-wire" a derelict satellite.
The weather conditions were the
worst ever for a shuttle launch.
Two hours after hflofT, the
astronauts reported they were havina
trouble ttmotely clos1na a sun shield
tntended to protect an Australian
satellite, one of three commuruca-
lions payloads in the carao bay.
The shield i1 made ofllabt·weiaht
tubina and fabric, and the crew said
the tu bins ap~ntly brushed qainst
a c.mcra on the ship's robot arm
became def onned and then so~Cd
on the satellite anteona. Miss100
Co11tr0tbepn scettnra wayw g.otve
the problem, which could bloclC a
launcbina of that satellite if not
corrected:
The twtcc-<lelayed shuttle mission
bepn spectacularly as the I 00.ton
space plane thundered off its launch
pad at 6:S8 a.m. EDT and dashed high
over the Atlantic Ocean, spewi~t a
700.foot-lona tail of flame and light-
ing up the dawn sky.
"That's a black cloud,·· Discovery's
commander. Joe Engle, radioed as the
Suitor courting
friend or trouble?
ORLANDO. Fla. (A P)-When Mike Mulligan put a bag over his
head for a 1oke as he visited bis swel:thcart's office, six gun-toting
shenfl's deputies and a heHcopter swooped down on him.
Someone who saw him lea ve his car, put on the bag and pick up
another containing Oowers for his girlfriend called the authonties,
thinking he was up to no good.
"He was jus1.going to be cute and come back and say 'Flowers for
Stacey,' rhen take the bag off hlS head,-said his girlfriend, Stacey
Herrell. "He was1ust trying to be nice. .
"Whoever called the cops was really stupid. It's real embarras$-
ing." .
Mulligan, 26, ofOrlando, could face misdemeanor charges. A 1951
state law passed to control act1v1ucs of the Ku KJux KJan prohibits
anybody over 16 from weanng a hood on someone else's property
wtthout penn1ss1on.
"Somebody could have gotten killed," said Sheriffs Sgt. Gary
Durrance ... Everyone thought It was a big Joke, but II wasn't runny. If
someone bad anything that looked like a gun, 1t could have been
devastating."
.
shuttle darted t.htouah a larae cloud
on its way to orbit. Disoov~ aot off' just in time for a
niabt Ul which the five-man crew is to
ckploy three oommWlic.tiona auct-
lites and uy to repair a fQUrth. Five
minutes after liftoO: thc...bolein th
eloudJCt.Osed an-a heavy rain deluged
the launch pad.
A tropical disturbance dumped
rain on the spece center throuahout
tbe early momana. Tbe 1stto11&uts
wore rajn slicken when they arrived
at the launch pad.
"There were some holes in the
system, some very larp ones, in fact,
SO to 100 miles in diameter," said
launch director Bob Sieck. .. So we bet
on the come that we would be able to
thread the proverbial needle and Jet
throuah a break in the weather dunng
the laubch window available to us."
Asked if the launch team had
violated launch rqulations that c.11
fora 15,000 fOot mlioa and no ra.an ot
!Witnina over the shuttle ffiabt path, S1eck replied, .. If you want to use th~
-tenn -puStrthe limlr. ycs~ut exceed
the limit or violate launch criteria.. no.
11 was obviously a m~naJ situation,
but an l«'q)table one, •
He said the ceilina was actually
13,000 f Cl:t, but that the clouds at the
lower level were thin and the
astronauts oould have clearly seen a
runway hen: if they had to make an
emeraeocy return shortly after liftoff.
The launch had been eet for 6:S5
a.m., but when forecasters predicted a
hole would be over the launch pad
shonJy after 7 a.m1 the launch time
was changed to 7:0) a.m.
Satellite rescuers
are 'Ox' and 'Fish'
Warning rhe SurgeoR General Ha s Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ,
Kings, 17 mg ... tar". 1.2 mg. mcottne, Menthol. 18 mg ... tar". 1 .2 mg. nrcoune:
l.Jgh~. 10 mg. "tar", 0 .a mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.
1985 8&WT Co
(50 FREE PER. CARTON!)
.
25 great tasting
cigarettes
for the price of 20!
Richland
t l 1J
;. .
..J
2 5
Teachers start_ striking,
coJJ,tracts up in six states
BJ TIM Alloda&ed Preti
eaCliera kcd picket lines in three school d1suicts in Ohio and
Michipn today, idlina 36,800 students, as. neaotiators lrie~ . to wrap up cont.racta in•t least six states befqre classes begin for almost I million students.
Also, Linden Mich., school officials early today settled on a three-year pact
with I 03 tcaChen, but the oP._e_nfoi of classes fot 2,300 students was J>OStp«?ned
until Wedne5day. About 1,600 teachers in flint, Mich:.o voted Monday naaht to
strike today, and the scheduled first day of ,ICb.ooJ 1or 31,000 suiden~ was
postponed. The 190 teachers in the Beecher dastnct sttuck.1 and ~.000 chµdren
aot an extended summer vacation. The lack of contracts an Philadelphia arid
Chicaao threatened the scheduled start of classes nc" t month for more than
600,000 students.
Val.on Carbide ret1pon.e Jmprove.
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. Va. -Emergency officiaJs save ~n1on
Catbide Corp. h_iib marks on deaJjng with the com~y's ~nd l~~ •r:t two
weeks here, a sp11l of bydrochJoric ac1d that was con tamed wt th no lDJUnes or
evacuations. The spill Monday night1 about I YJ miles from downtown
Charleston, where 60,000 people were attending festival and a rock 'n' roll
concert, was at a different unit of the plant where a spill AuJ-13 sent some
reaidenls fleein~ After that leak, and another two days earlier at Carbide's
Institute plant, officfaJs criticized the company for delays in reportfog. Not this
time.
'Mercy Killer' call• ralbJ6 atJfalr
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. -Roswell Gilbert, 761 who lost a bid for f~om
durina appeal of his conviction in the "mercy killing" of bis wife, says the
decision by the state Cabinet was "grossly unfair." Two previously undecided
members of the independently elected Cabinet, situng as the Board of
Executive Oemency, refused to go along with Gov. Bob Graham's
recommendation for the retired enginel:r's conditional release. In a news
conference at Avon Park Correctional (Jlstitution, w~re he is serving a ljfe
sentence for the March slaying ofhis wife, Emily, 73, Gilbert said, "I didn't tio
it just to act rid of her. What I need is compassion, I guess, and beUefthat what
I say is the way it happened. Morally I had to do what l did. The decision's very
disappointjng and I think it's grossly unfafr."
WomaJJ '• body foatJd Jn AJuka park
DENALI NATIONAL PARK. Alaska -The body of a 20..ycat-old
woman hiker who had been missing sancc Thursday was found in the Denah
National Park on Monday, the National Parks Service reported. Gretta
Berglund of SL Helena, Calif., apparently drowned in the Sanctuary River, a
parks service spokeswoman said. Berglund's body was sighted in the river from
the air by a search heHcopter.
Juran hear MHler plaJJ trlp with •PY
LOS ANGELES -Unaware the FBI was eavesdropping, Richard W.
Miller sought lessons from his Soviet lover in the art of dealing with Russian
agents, according to tape recordings played at the former agent's espionage
trial. In the tape played Monday for U.S. District Court jurors, Miller also
compared the plans-for tutoring on'the subject with the script of "My Fair
Lady," the musical involving language lessons. "You're gonna have to teach
me what to say," Miller told Svetlana Ogorodnikov in the tape. Their
conversation, overheard through an FBI bug planted in her car, was taped one
day before Miller went to his All bosses and confessed his affair with her.
No bod.le. found at 'satalllc' alte
ATASCADERO -Police say they found no bodies in digging in one area
where children said infants had been buried after beioa killed during satanic
rituals. Police cordoned off an area Monday near tbe former home of a fugitive
couple charged with 33 counts of child molestation to search in three spots for
I 0 to 15 bodies, acting police chief Sgt. Bill Wanon said. The rural home
formerly occupied by Rodney Allen Pbel{)S, 45, and his wife Linda, 45. They
fled last year after four co-defendants, including their daughter, Deborah
McCuan, wen: sentenced to between 240 and 268 years in prison.
W•nnaJJ will op,,_e Metro Rall -LOS ANGELES -Ref . Henry Waxman said he will actively oppose
funding the initial section o the Metro Rail subway unless he is completely
assured there will be no tunnelling through areas of potential methane gas
pockets. Waxman 's district includes a large section of the proposed commuter
line. Previously a backer of the project, Waxman on Monday said rus new
concern stemmed from the explosion of a gas pocket under a Fairfax area
clothing store earlier this year. Twenty-one people were injured. The issue
must be settled by next month, Waxman said, or he will urge the House of
Representatives to vote against start-up funds for the first 4.4-mile section of
Metro Rail.
All •a BugattJ Royale can •howm
PEBBLE BEACH -Oassic auto buffs had a rare treat when all six Bugatti
Royales, a giant car of graceful proportions produced between 1927 and 1933,
were shown t<>jether. "This will never happen again," said Bill Jacobs of
Chicago as he viewed the cars at the annual Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance.
Arranged in front of the Del Monte Lodge Sunday were the swooping hoods of
the 1933 Park Ward limousine and the 1927 Coupe Napoleon, brought over
from the Muscc National de !'Automobile at Mulhouse, France: the 1931
Weinberger cabriolet from the Ford M uscum in Dearborn, Mich.: the 1931
Kellner Coach from the Cunningham Automotive Collection in Costa Mesa,
and the 1931 Bertine de Voyage and 1931-32 Binder Coupe de Ville, from
Harrah's Automobile Collection in Reno .
Nigeria '• mfiltary government topple.
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast -Nigeria's military government has been
toppled, a general announced orr Nigerian radio today. He accu~ the re.gime
of Maj. Gen. Mubammadu Buban of abusing power and failing to bring
economic reform. Brig. Gen. Joshua Dogonyaro. was identified by the British
Foreign Office in London as the officer at military staff headquarters who was
an charge of assign ments in the armed forces. It was not immediately_ clear ifhe
was the coup leader. In a broadcast monitored in tbe Ivory Coast, Dogonyaro
said Nigeria's air and sea ports had been closed until further notice.
Lelldfng aJJtl-apartJJ~lerlc arrated
JOHANNESBURO,SouthAfrica -TheRev.AllanBoesak.,oneofSouth
Africa's leading anti-apartheid clerics, was arrested today. a day before he was
to lead. a march to demand the release of jailed black leader Nelson M~dela.
Boesak., the mixed-race president of the World Alliance of Refonned
Q\µrcbes, was picked up outside Cape Town near the campus of the University
of the Western Cape by security policemen. A police seokesman in Pretoria'
said Bocsa.k, 39, was arrested under the Internal Security Act, which allows
indefinite detention withouJ charac.
Clu&ncellor KoJJI revle'fn •pr .candal
BONN, West Germany-Chancellor Helmut Kohl opened an emeraency
Cabinet session today to review West Gennany's wideruna spy scandal. and
prosecutors announ«d that they had beaun invcstiptina a sixth person. l.,;1er
today the •ovemment was to report to Parliament on the spy affair, which
some oolit1cians call the worst espionqe c.se in the history of Jbe federal rep~bfac. .
RaJ.abow Warrior report denoatJced
WELUNOTON, New Zealand -Prime Minister David Lanae today
denounced as inoonsJStent and .. transpuent" a ~n clcarina France of
involvement in the bombin1 of the Oreenpcace flaasbip, and said France
should recall hs ambtssdor. Lanae said a French aovemment report issued
Monday on the CJtplosion that sank the Rainbow Warrior and killed a crew
member in Aucklatad was a ··n.mboyant declaration of a breakdown in the
relationship, .. betWttn New l.caland and Franoe.
'
DatclJ baJ.!oonl•t. re.ca~ by Olp
FALMOUTH, En&1an8'-A ~o 1blp bound for New York pulled thru
Dutch ballooruat11eekJna an Atlanuc speed record from the ocean's ~foot
waves about 900 tni!C$1hort of the EnaJ&$h coast. The Ever Oreet. a ·43,()()().ton
container 1bap rqistered in Panama rescued Henk Brink, 43, bis wiA Evclien,
30, and Evett Louwman. 45 lat.e Monday after a faulty valve forced them to
ditcb their balloon In the ocean. Their waterproof sondola pitched in the waves
for more than four houn before they were retcucd by the 1hlp, which wa
suidcd to the acene by a Bntish Royal Air Force surveillance plane. '
• •
~
I '
'
w a a :: :c::;;:::::::±
Or~ Coat OAfLY PILOT/Tu.day, Augwt 27, 1N5 Al
' -~-----------
Sweat g~aads cause CF disease? -
Carmel coneless
. CARMEL (AP)-The Carmel City Counctl tw put the freeze on
ice cream c:ones In this affluent raort town.
The c:ouocil ~ Friday not to allow 1M Carmel Creamery to
opeo an ice CJQJD parlor inside the ci1y lliru1s btcauw of concuns it
would lead to too much aidewalk hner, use too much water and add to
an overabundance of ea ti~ establishments in town:
"We stopped the T-thln &bop prolifcratioo, thank God, bul we ha.vc..to~ up our auan:S." · cou.ac:ilman--Da¥id M&Jlldei.
He said~~ city rw to protect its quality oflifc, eveo io the face of advene pubJ1e1ty.
"lft.hey sold eve~ in alus and did away with the Ice cream
·cooes themselves, l would ao alon& with it, .. said councilman Bob
Stephenson. "B~t I find ice ~m cc:>nes objectionable downtown." Altho.~ etty officials said a Ptunar'Y. concern is a water shortaae
-not a dislike of cones per se -some disqrec.
"Obviou'1y, in my heart, I feel there's something here against ice
CtUm and they just won't say it." said Carl zcrbc, attorney for the
Chocolate Dreams shop that has been rebuffed in its attempts to sell ice cream cones at its.Dcean A venue location.
RlVERSlDE (AP) -The diseue
cystic tibrosis may be cauxd by
malfunctionin1 twcat al&ndSi ac.cof'd..
ina to 1 meUchc:r who Mys that
flridioa i important. but ref'l.lses to
call il I tnahhfOUlb. "What we have hett is nothir\I that
will impact on the patient immcdi,.
atcly," uid Dr Paul Quinton~ a
professor of biomed1cal sciences at UC Rjverside, who e research
focuaed on the cellular level of the
disease.
''It is certAJnly ~rovess," Quinton
said Friday. "l think·wc now have a
much nronacr iodicatton of what'11
aoins on medically."
Cystic fibrosis is a congenital, fatal
diKUe characterized by malfunc-
uonina of the p&ncrca.s and frequct.d
respiratory infee11ons. '\.
ft is the most common fatal
hereditary dueue am<?~,J
C.UC.StaM. It-a ~ one-tn-1,800,
while one in 20 Caucujans cany the
defective acne. If husband and wtfc
both cany the ieoe. one in four of
their children will conltlC't the dis. ease.
Q\.link>n discovered cysuc fibrosis
IS a hereditary mal{Unction Of cen.am
cclb in eX«nne aland&, such as sweat
&lands. His research team identified a
connecuon between the abnormally
high salt content of sweat m cystic
Robinsons
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on com1ortable ~"9 ON IAU·PRICID Reg. S6.SO.S47 60" x 84 • Reg $17 50
100% nylon shorts in IUMMl•MNTI 14. 10-$37.60. Fill in 60" 1ound. Reg. $15.
assorted colors:S.M·L Orig. $24-$62 AJter sale all your Norttake needs at N.99 _, ..... Sizes
Robtnatre Sportsweat 140. $14 99·$45 99 From an QTeat savtngs. No special and colors wU1 vary by
all stores except assortment of famous orders. Roblnson's China. 67. store. Robinson's Table
Santa Monica and make~3·13. lnside all stores except Palm Linens. 29. ciu stores
Sherman Oaks. Robinson's Red Bag. 52/179 Sprtn~ except Palm Springs.
librom suflbal and infecuoos m
their lunp. The 1CJC11tist Mid lbc
milfuneoon in sweat i.llnds -re-
peated in the lunas an.a other vital
orncs, Jead!D4 to their damaee. -~ ttee-thtt ... ~fforder ••
Quinton ·~ .. we Loped to eee ·,tis
olthe underlyina~bkm 1n a vane\y
of related tissues Tlus has proven t0
be the cue."
the C)-suc Fibroees FoundlUOo m
Roc:hille, Md., called it one o1 tbe
most imponant bireatth~ ia t.be SO , )'Clt'J llDCO phylJciau fint do-
ICl"lbed the lethal' dillorder.
Quinton said the si~ificance io bis
d1scovery wu that •in the pest ~
have been forocd to look at a lot of
thinp, not k.nowrna where the prob-
lem was. I think thiscenamly helps by
ehm1nat1n1 the multitude of
po 1bibt1es. It provides a focus."
Roben Beall, national director of
a..11.aid it~~"'°" euitina
cyrtie fibrotis findina &ioce tba1 of the
S~l _ the ILJnd•nlC)'1lic1ibrotis
diap05uc exam. a Q\WU!r cmtury
qc>."
Thouah the dUorder bu eluded
effective treatment u.ntiJ now. Joo-JCVtty of cyttic fibrosu patxnll bu
been io~ Even to a~ lif'es~ ., only 24 years. t~iy.
cyUJc fibrosis patienu suffer chronic
tuna 1nfectJ0111. as well u a heavy
build-up of mucous in the lunp.
$12.99 $348
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llATH SHllTS WALL LOU .....
Reg. $20. Save 35% on our Reg S6QQ Save 50% on
3fl x 74" bath sheet trom the·Nova wall lounger in
Fieldcres~ in tust quality fQWn Herculon oletin
100% cotton teny White. Wide-wale corduroy
Robmsbn's Reclln1ng navy; sable. silver. cham-
pagne. tearose or peach-Chairs 174. all stores
glow Colors will vary by except Horton Plaza.
store Robmson·s Towels. 31 Mission Viejo. Palm
all stores except Palm Spnngs and Sherman
Spr1ngs. Qaks•
$14.99 $448
THIRMAL CARAFE BARCALOUNOIP
Reg $30. Save 50% on our SWIVIL llAll ltOCKIR
imported thermal crua1e Reg sm Save 43%
m white. red or blue on our contemporary
Robinsor\s Housewares. Commander rocker
12~all stores except Palm reclme1 in Herculon •
Spnngs. aletm velvet Med.1Um
blue. gray or chQGolate 2/$77 Robinsons Rec Im.mg
CIRAMIC Chaus.174 all stores except
TAaLILAMPS Horton Plaza Misslon
Reg S99 each $45 each. V1e10. Palm Spnngs and
Save 60% On ow glazed Sherman Oaks·
cerarruc table lamp m
assorted colors. with $149 6'x9'
coordmatmg parch· TUTURID
ment or linen shade WHITI WOOL RUG
Robinsons Lamps. 72. Reg S6C() Save 50%-60%
all stores except M1SS1on and more on contempo·
V1e10. Palr11 Spnngs and · rary textured white wool
Sherman Oaks rugs. Avmlable in 4 x 6
$39.99 R·eg S400 $99. 8' x II"
Reg Sl 000 $499.
aRASS SHILL LAMP 2 x 8 Reg 5400 $199.
Reg $150 Save 60% All s1zes me approximate
and more on our solid Robinsons Area Rugs 90
brass pharmacy floor all stores except Mission
lamp AdJusts trom V1e10. Palm Spnngs and
32"·55 .. From lmpenal Sherman Oaks•
Robinsons Lamps. 72.
al~stores except Mlss1on $299 6'x9'
Vle10. Palm Springs and WOOLalRalRS
Sherman Oaks. Reg S600 Save 50%
$148 on IOO'>o wool Berbers
imported trom t: TUUPCHAIR Germany Choo from
Reg $299 Save 50% on assorted sot1 soll
our occastonaJ chau and stnpes 3 6" x
covered tn 100% cotton Reg $400 $199.
duck. Assorted colors. 8 3" x-116" Reg Sl200
Robinson's Occasional $499. Sizes are approxi
Seating. 1Q4, all S1ores mate Robinsons Area
except Horton Plaza. Rugs. 00 all stores except
Mlsfilon Vte)O. Palm Spnngs Mlss1on V 1e10 Palm Spnngs
and Sherman oaics· and Sherman Oaks"
"No payment unttl February.1986, on all area rug. carpeting, fumiture and matttcm J?UfChases of S200 or mbre on your Robinsons charge (subject to credlt approval)
... .-Sale ls Wednesday. .Auaust ?.8. SelecUon vartes by stora Quantlttes are limited to stoc~ on hand Intermediate markdowns have been taken on some ltems --
YOU CAN NOW CHARGE YO\M ROBINSON'S PUROIASE ON THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD
__...AS W~ AS YO\M ROBINSON'S CRlDIT CARD ••
,..
04
M OtlnOe Co.I OAILY PILOT/Tueeday, Mtgutt 27, 1oaa·
Samantha was special
Family, friends. TV co-stars
recall her eager friendliness
MANCHESTER, M&lne (AP) -Samantha Smith,
ibe-I ;J..)'ear-okt td¥oeate of world peace and upirlna I.V
actress who died in 1 plane crash, wu 1 friendly, normal
your111ter wbo kept her celebrity in penpect.ive, py
schoolmates and friends.
"Sbe wa1 such a aweetbean. You coaildn't ask for a
nicer penon," Sandra SmaU-H\.llhes. who had been
Samantha'• acienoe teacher, said Monday. Other students
"really either liked her or were in awe of her.••
"She wu a really nice pcraon -a arcat friend," wd
Elizabeth Warren of Readfield, wbo 1hared a locker with
Samantha at Maranacook Community School. "She
didn'tact likcahe was different from us, she acted the same
as everybody el1e did."
But Samantha was different enoaiah to ponder
superpower relations at the qe of 10 and write to then-
Soviet leader Yairi Andropov about world ~· By 13,
she had vtsitcd the Soviet Union, earned an internauonal
reputation as an ambassador for peace and embarked upon
a career as a TV actrcts~
In her letter, written to the fall of I 982, Samantha
asked Andropov, "Why do you want to conquer the whole
world, or at least our country?"
Excerpts from the letter appeared 10 the official Soviet
•
media. and Andropov wrottblck to Apnl 1983. 11)'ina bis
country wanted "ooth1na of the kind.'
Samantha bad been 1n London last week filmina an
A8C-TV aciion·advcntu,..lhow, .. Llme Stree1t" 1Ad wu
retumuia home with her 6ther when their Bat Harbor
Airlines plane crashed aDf e•pJoded Sunday ni&bt u it
a_eproached the Aubum·Lewiston Municipal AirPort. All
cl&ht pe6'tt 011 board ~killed. ---
in the thow, Samanlba pla~ed tho da\llhtet of an
ioaurance invcstiptor, played by Robert W!'ecr. Wqner
issued a statement from London aayina that ·&he touched
the world\ and she touched UI, too. We arc quite simply
devaatatea.••
''She was 1ucb a normal kid in liAbt of all that fame and
fortune/' said her tehool achi1er, William ~ble. "But
when sne heard kidt atereotypina Sovieu, she'd uy ahe
met really nice people."
Preble said Samantha bad "guts," ta.kina on assian·
men ts like going to New York to speak before a larse sroup
of people.
In Auausta, a few miles from the Smiths' home in
Manchester, Oov. JOICph E. Brennao said in a statement
that Samantha was "an inspiration not only to the youna.
like herself, but to &ll of us.
Dr. H. Bunt Richardson Jr .. 1 ~ activist from
Winthrop and fnend of thl.! Smiths, wd Samantha would
be remembered "for the cleanliness of bcr thinkina, the
wilhnaness to question, the easer friendliness and the
lovtngness she showed 10 boldina out to other people."
Crash prObe takes ·mon~hs
. .
AUBURN, Maine (AP)-The cause of a plane crash
that killed Samantha Smith, the 13-year-old whose VIP
tour of the Soviet Union gained her an international
reputation, may not be known for months, an investigator
says.
"We arc quite confident that everyone died upon
impact," said Patrick Bunley of the National Transpor-
tation Safety Board, one of more than a dozen NTSB and
Federal A v1alion Administration investigators tent to the
scene.
in a hilly, heavily wooded area; Bunley said Mondar.
Despite a fire that heavily damaaed the ~.
investiptora should be able to determine whether CllJlDC
failure played a role in the crash, be said.
Small commercial planes arc not required to carry
fliaht data rccorden and coc.lcpit voice recorders, known a.s
"black boxes" and desianed to survive the impact of a
crash, Bursley uid.
"It will be a matter of months" before the cau1e of the
crastf can be determined, he said ..
Soviets send
condolences
to mother
Youth eague snewspaper
recalls guest's ·bold heart·
. MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet leader Mikhail S.
Gorbachev sent a telearam of condolence to Samantha
Smith'• mother today, and national newspapers paid
emotional tribute to the American schoolairl who toured
the Soviet Union a1 a guest of its president. '
The you th leque ncW1paper K.omsomolskaya Prav-
da euloaized Samantha. 13, who died in an airplane crash
Sunday night, as "a small person with a bold hcan." It
devoted more space to the story than 1t usually docs to the
death of a high-ranking Soviet official.
In a telearam to Jane Smith, Gorbachev said: "Please
~pt deep condolences on the tragic death of your
dau&htcr Samantha and your husband Arthur.
"Everyone in the Soviet Union who knew Samantha
Smith will remember forever the 1ma1e of the Amencan
Jirl wbo1 like millions ofJouna Soviet men and women,
dreamco about peace an about friendship between the
peoples of the United States ~d the Soviet Union," he
said, accordin& to a Tass newa aacncy report.
The Soviet reaction to Samantha's death reflected the
fame she acquired in July 1983 when she and her parents
took a two-week, whirlwind VIP tour of the Soviet Union
aa auests of then-president Yuri V. Andropov.
Komsomolskaya Pravda devoted almost a quarter of
a paae to a black-bordered article about Saman\ha that
included a photoaraph of her ringing a bell aboat<ta Black
Sea tour boat and a shot of the cover of her book "Journey
to the Soviet Union."
Other national dailies -includin& the Communist
Party orpn Pravda -carried a Tass dispatch saying
Samantha was killed Sunday ni&ht when a commuter
plane crashed in Maine as Samantha and her father were
retW'Dint to their Manchester home from London.
The Beechcraf\ 99 turboprop plane grazed tall trees
about a half-m1le from the airport, then crashed and
exploded a quarter-to an ei&bth-milc short of the runway
Bursley said the lut communication from pilot Roy
Frauohofer came about 1 S minutes before the crash when
he made a routine llll&lher ~ucst.
Samantha Smith la •hown lD ·London lut
week ftlmtna new TV Hrie., .. Lime Street."
Samantha was eulogized by a Soviet commentator on
national television Monday niaht. Her death also was
reported durin1 the evenina news, which sho~ film of
the crash lite.
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\
'
Gl
fOUo\l llOUll LENDER
Poverty level is ·
lowest since '76
Improved economy
raises 1. 8 mtllton
Americans over line
WASH1NGT0N (AP) -lm-
provemcntSin the economy helped
hf\ 1.8 million Americans above the
poverty level last year as the nation's
poverty rate showed its first signifi-
cant decline since 1976, the Census
Bureau saJd today.
"The bottom hne is, we have verx
good news to report this morning,'
said Gordon W. Green, assistant
d1 v1s1on chief of the population
d1vis1on.
"Economic recovery and inOat1on
arc important factors in the continu-
rng decline of poverty."
. The number of Americans living
below the poverty level dropped to
33. 7 million in 1984, he said, for a
poverty rate of 14.4 percent.
That was the first statistically
significant decline si nce 1976. The
poverty rate in 1983 was ori11nally
calculated at 1 S.2 percent, and recent-
ly revised to 1 S.3 percent, for a drop
of nearly a full percent.age paint from
1983 to 1984.
There was a slight decline in 1978,
from 11.6 percent to 11.4 percent,
which statisticians did not consider a
significant chanJe.
"Poverty has increased over recent
years, but things arc tumina around
now. The big question, and I wish I
could answer it, is what's goina to
happen in the future," Green sa1d.
The poverty threshold for a family
I
of four last year was SI 0,609.
At the same time -the poverty rate
dropped, real median family income
rose 3.3 percent to $26,430, the
second increase in two yean.
Some decline had been widely
anticipated both in and out of
government, due to the improving
economy. Even Robert Greenstein of
the pnvate Center for Budget and
Policy Priorities, a group often criti·
cal oflbe Reagan adminiatration, had
predicted a decline in poverty.
Other findings of the new study
included:
-The poverty rate for whites
dropped from 12.2 percent in 1983 to
11 .5 percent in 1984, and the rate for
blacks fell from JS. 7 percent to 33.8
percent.
-The poverty rate among chil-
dren under 18 declined from 22.2
percent in l 983 to 21.3 percent in
1984. The rate among people aged 6S
and over dropped 1.8 percentage
points to 12.4 percent.
-Both the number of people
below the poverty level and the
poverty rate dtclined 10 the South
and the West. while there were no
sianificant cbanaes in the Northeast
and Midwest.
The rate for the South in 1984 was
16.2 percent, compared to 17.2 per·
cent in 1983. For the West it wa.s 13.1
percent in 1984, compared to 14.7
percent in 19'83. The N"ortheast had a
13. 2 percent poverty rate in 1984,
compared to l 3.4 pen:cot in 1983 and
the Midwest had 14. I percent last
year" compared to 14.6 percent in
198J. .
In 1983, poverty had edged up 0.2
percentaac points to the 1 S.2 rate, a
d1sappointmcn~to administration
officials who.had hoped for a decline.
While critics denounced the fact
that. poverty went up in 1983 -
contending It was a result of cuts in
social programs -Wllite House
officials considered the small increase
a somewhat positive step.
In the 198~82 penod, poverty
levels increased 1 percent or more
annually.
A decline in poverty rates this year
sounds promising, Greenstein said,
but, he cautioned, the drop is largely a
function of the economy, with the
poverty rate declining as unemploy-
ment dropped in the last year.
Now, he warned, the economy has
stalled, so this drop may be a one-step ~vent, follow~ by a plateau without
improvement 1n com111J years.
In addition, Orcenstetn said, even a
siuble reduction in poverty could be
considered disappointing in relation
to the unemployment rate.
The 1983 poverty rate of I 5.2
percent meant that an estimated 35.l
million Americans had . incomes
below the poverty level. Americans
arc considered to be in poverty iftlleir
income falls below a cert.am level
which chanaes from year to year.
Colidom ads going up
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An aerial
advcnisina bHt.z dcsianed to discreet-
ly expose 1 brand of prophylactics wiU
end over the Labor Day weekend.
Airplanes will be back in the skies,
weaving a JOO-foot banner rcadina
"Plan ahead with Ram1ct."
Manufacturers hope the P.loy will
attract buyers amona the millions of
bcachaoers and bolten Ilona the
Southern CaJifomia coast.
The advertislna method is the Idea
of Oeorac Oori, vice president of
Schmid laboratories Inc. =f ittle Falla, N.J .. the natlon'uecond l st
manufacturer of condoms. ucts
are marketed under the RatnlCI
name.
"We're takina to the au m a fit of
·desperation," Gori said. "Smee the
networks and rnost radio and tele·
vision stations, newspapers and
magazines won't accept ou!'Mivert1s-
1nL we had to "txplore other avenues
to act our mcsaaac 10 consumers."
ihe aame women's m~ioes that
carry ad1 for feminine by11erie Sl)flys,
home prqnancy tests or the Today
(emaJe contraceptive sponp refuse to
carry ad1 for male contr1ccpt1ves,
Oorl said. Playboy and Penthouse
mqannes arc the only publications
that accept condom advertising.
Muse Air ~OKs smoking
DALLAS (AP) -The nat1on'1
only no-amokma airline will l0tc that
b1lhn1 Sept. l, Mute Air offici1l1 uy.
Muse An, which bad banned
smok1na on its Oiaht1 since at wu
rormcd four years "°' decided to allow people \0 liaht up afler 1 survey
showed ~ICf\ICrl prefe~ amok· '"f: its official111id Monday.
'Our aoal is to make our product
appeal to the .,.eatcst naimber of
pt0plf and to provide a plea11nt
travel c\pencnu for all our ~ucn-
acrt." 111d Ron Thom ton, a Muse Air
vic.c! president
"Puaenaer 1urveys have 1bown us
that the public cons1den tcvttal
factora. such u price, convenience
and 1ervice more important th.an
non-mok1r\I.''
Thornton 11id the no-mokina
p0Ucy mar have discoufl&Cd up to 3S
percent o(,,potcntial puaen t1 from
Oy1na Muse. which was purchased in
June by Southwest Airlines
. .
. -
2
LB' s Opera Leaguers
opt for country music
l
Members and Jucsts of Opera League of
Laauna were definitelr an a western mood
tor the reccnt Summer Serenade at Moss
Point ... The Arcadians . ~re prov1dm1
country music for the cloagina and square
dancina I 20 attendees.
AJthou&h ... ope.ra mus1c was not entirely
forsaken 6y the aroup (the original suppon
group of Opera Pacific.) Kim AUmaa
entertained with arias accompanied by
Sam Giallul, accordionist.
Ullle Hlllde was chairman of the
"roundup" and saw that the western atlJrcd
pany,oers had a wide variety of food
selcclJon on the chuckwagon ... roast beef,
shrimp, ham, turkey and chili were beina
served up.
Jamlttoe C1Cl0r1ed by ltlwood LdayfteW,
MHrtee Tacltet, Get1r1Mle McQlatect, ~ve Barry and Ma.ti Or10a attendina wilb
husband I"... (he was Opera Pacific
president for three years.
Circulauna and meeli1'1 the folk were
ltare• and David Dtalen (he is JCneral
director of OP and 1he la hcadina its new
outreach proaram. Also there were &*le
Mlakin, Lquna mayor, MlcMel and
ltaWeo Lawler, Belea Lawler, Drew and
Llada Lawler, Mu1M and Barry Law·
reDH, P~ylllt and Barry WW.ts (he's
League president), R .. y and MUJ Butoa,
Jacob and P~ylllt Outott and Dortllea and
Robert Ha1tla11.
Some of the guests includina BelM
LyoD1 and Gayle Wllyolar bad alto been at
Coule and Aaclrew ~o '1 lovely
Laguna spot the evening ore ... Summer
Serenade was back-to-and abated the
Orange Coul DAILY PILOT/TUMday, A~ 27, 1NS A1
Others assisting with arrangements were
artist Louise Volo11lln, who decorated the
tented party area with western posters;
VtrliDla Lamber1, neima Toomey, Dorrie and Bob Ba1t1Dp, Freda CovlD&tft,
Mickey Buaa (with hubby G'rald ... they
recently celebrated their SOth), Teresa
tent with Fliahu of Fantasy, the CoDeae of
Art benefit -~~--:'L--.......,. · · Paparazzi is edited by ViiU Dean lntae Ortoa, Karen and Dani DICldera aad BODlde MISLln. Llllle Rinde aad llaa.rtce Taclaet.
'Passive' daughter holding
great deal of hostility inside
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My hu~
band and I are at the rope's end.
Please advise what to do with our
daughter. She 1s our only child and
soon will be 12 years old. The g.irl is
very {>retty and docs above-average
work an school.
Att11
l.uDEIS
our house because some say 11
changes the taste and/or the con-
sistency of the cereal when milk 1s
poured over it. We would like your
opinion. -SOGGY IN SAGINAW
DEAR SAG: I have never seea
uyoee poa~mllk lllto tile ~wl flnt
a.ad t~H add cereal. So I tried It tills
moral.as. I eaded up will-too little
All we ask is that this child
straighten he r room, make the bed.
and wash the dinner rushes. She
doesn't talk back - in fact, she 1s
quite picas.ant -but she simply
refuses to do her chores.
milk mto the bowl and then add the milk, tlllea too macll cereal. To eacll
cereal? • 1111 own, bat I'm 1olllg to coatlllae to
This actually causes arguments at • pat tlle cereal ID tile bowl first.
We have restricted her TV, play-
time and allowance, grounded her.
refused to let her use the telephone -
noth ing seems to work. The bed stays
unmade, clothes heaped. up all over
her room and books and papers
scattered everywhere. The dishes stay
unwashed two days in a row and then
I have to do them. because I can't
stand it anymore.
. '1ftllf teet When ;,dOc.tor•
Any suggestions you ha ve will be
mighty wefcome. -GOING NUTS
IN LA JOLLA lteed a I Toe and p..rc.h
. nt of sun\ons. Hee ... •-A\dne. \nfant DEAR LA JOLL: Your daupter 11
wbat 11 uown 11 a pa11lve·a1·
gre11lve personality. These lolkl
don't yell or make a fu11. Tbey 1lmply
don't do uytbln& ud tbelr pa11lvlty
drives people cr11y.
Treatme ~<-~ "'wcu \ \unes Palo. Nal\ Pro~.-· t 0etorm\t\es. n
I 1111eet family counsella1.
Tbere't a lot of qatet bo1tlllty under
U..t pleasant ntertor. Wbee yoa fllld
oat wbat lt'1 all aboot, yoo wt1l be able
to deal wltb lt.
d Ch\\dren s fOO an d foot.
of the Ankle an o o \A,. RY GR our
p..RSOR p.
N l w r 0 R l " Mc.CARltR o.r. M.
GARY S. W~t C\\ff Or\ve
( 1901 su\te #3 DEAR ANN LANDERS: I know
you arc sick of the question about the
toilet paper and which way the roll
goes on. I agree, 11 1s a little stale now.
so here's a new one for you. Do you
pour the dry cereal into the bowl and
then add the milk? Or do you pour the
NeWPort &each
(1t4) 63t-4099
WE CARRY RESORT WEAR
ALL YEAR ROUND
Pft,."f01J~*lRIP TO .HAWAII
*LUAU PARTIES ·
DO YOUR SHOPPING HERE,
ENJOY YOUR VACATION THERE ..
• LONG A SHOAT DRESSES
• MUU·MUUS A SHIRTS
... In llzee 3 to 24 and 34 to 38
•MEN'S MATCHING SHIRTS
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• BLOUIES
... llZM 8-20, 38--U
•,PANTS
... lhort & average length. llzee 8-20
• LOYEL Y GAUZE DREllE8
... 1 ~ cotton, one llze flt• all
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GEAR UP FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL ...
..v1tn pants io ckets shirts and walk snorts 111 '"
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56 FASHION ISLAND · NEWPORT BEACH · ( 714) 644 5070
Creative Cuisine Recipe ,Contest
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Enter Your Favorite Re cipe And Wini
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1. QUICK AND EASY/00-,...HE,...D DISHES-Rec1pes for tooks on the go or rhose causht w1rh
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J. MASCULINE TOUCH-M en who ire en1oytng rhe kitchen share your fa~onte reetpe
4. GOURMEf-Recipes you use when you want to impress the epicurean in your life
ONTEST RULES
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I
·'Officials of the Los Angeles Amateur Athlt!Uc Foundation. des}Jtnated
uccessor to the Olymp1c organizing commltttt. estJmated It wllI talce
them at lea t 15 years to pai'cel out illl the proflt . • ·
Guard against
panic inf ace
of serial killer
The attack on a Mission Viejo couple Sunday
attnbuted to the fiend we have come to know as .. The
Night Stalker.. has brought to Orange County the
palpable fear our neighbors in Los Anaeles County have
known for weeks.
There is good reason for caution. The killer bas
shown the ability to range from San Francisco to south
Orange County in search of victims. His targetS seem to
be chosen only for their proximity to the freeway and
their location m quiet neighborhoods. And his record is
chilling; 36 people have been attacked; 14 have died.
... -
SEAR CHLIGHT
. .. . .. ,,
• But we must suard a~inst the escalation of healthy,
protective fear into nundlcss panic. Already, this
newspaper has begun reoeiving telephone calls falsely
reporting ••Night Stalker" attacks in Orange Coast cities
-even during daylight hours. It seems impossible for
two people to hold a conversation without discussing the
crimes and the measures they are preparing to take to
ensure safety. NormaJly peaceful people are considering
purchasing guns, people with guns arc loading them and
people with loaded guns are ready to point and shoot.
The opportunity for disaster abounds.
We must keep our wits about us. The tragedy that
this demented man has wrought would only be
compounded if someone were to mistake a neighbor or
casual passerby for the dreaded intruder and shoot him
dead out of fear.
Discussions of wind shear
ignore metal fatigue factor
· Caution and precautions are in order. There are
several thin~s we can and should d o, police advise, until
they get their man:
• Lock au doors and windows.
•Install deadbolts where possi_!>le. ,,
•Leave porch lights on at night.
•Be aware of strangers in the neighborhood.
• rleport any suspicious activity to police.
Interestingly, these are the same procedures the
police encourage citizens to follow under normal
circumstances. They have been tested and proven. We
should take a measure of security from that, remain
calm. remain alert and let the police do their job.
They always catch these guys, and they'll catch 0 The
Night Stalker," too.
Opinions expressed In this space are those of the Dally Piiot Other views
expressed on this paoe are those of their authors and artists Reader
comment ts Invited The Dally Piiot, PO Boll 1560, Costa Mesa. 92626 Phone
&42·6086
Outraged by the prospect
of oil platforzns off Coast
To the Editor· Dannemeyer has received so much
oil money he can't make the distinc·
t10n.
For explanation
of fatigue, consult
the encyclopedia WiLTER
8uRROUGHS . One of the th1nM I do_ to_ ti)' to
provide interesting •nfonnation for
Searchhgbt readers 1s subscribe to a whole group of national publications. preciably lower tha n the stress 1n·
Once in awhile there is unanimity tenlo1ty that would cause fracture
10 the stones they carry and n a single application." ou want to know what the pred1ct1ons they make. -1~ the week --" tome is talking about, there's
just past, all of them have borne down way you can educate
on aircraft problems and ·aircraft yourse . a piece of wire with a
pred1cuons. I'm sure you'd be small diamcte . o need to go to the
interested in some of the points made. hardware store. Just reach in your
among them the big talk about wind desk and get a paper chp. Now. pick
~hear and airport radar to detect it. up one end of the clip with your right
The one thing no one seems to hand and the other end with your left
cover vef) much is the effect of metal hand. Now straighten the chp out,
faugue then fold 1t back again, slowly and
In the little library adjoining my gentl).Doth1sscveralt1mes.AfterlO
office there are a number of books foldings and unfoldJngs. what do you
bordenng on "engineenng." But after know? The metal is fatigued and
fumbling through several of them. r comes apart. You can do the same
went back this week ro the old reliable thmg with a thm sheet of metal or a
-The Encyclopedia Bntann1ca. metal tape. Now, back to the airJ)lanc.
Listen and learn: Says the encyclopedia:
'"FATIGUE OF METALS is the "The majonty of mechanical fall-
progress1vc change of structure and ures of structural and machtne parts
mechanical properties of metals occurring 1n operation can be at-
produced by frequently repeated or tributed to fatigue. A flumber of fatal
Ouctuaung loading. Specifically, the accidents to airplanes were found to
term 1s applied to the progressive be the result of fatigue, mainly of wing
deteriorauon of the cohesion of spars; the accidents 1n 1954 involvmg
metals as a re~ult of which fracture is two of the early Comet JCt airliners
produced by the repetition of stress were attnbuted to fatigue failures m
cycles of maximum intensity ap-the pressure cabin. Thus in the design
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
of .aircraft, particularly long-range
transport planes with expected ser-
vice lives exceeding 30,000 flying
hours., structural fatigue has emerged
as a major design problem.
"The physical appearance of a
fatigue fracture is significantly dif-
ferent from that of a fracture
produced1>ya single •oad~pplication.
Moreovef", fatigue fractures occur
suddenly, without noticeable per-
manent deformation, and thus ap-
parently without preliminary warn-
10g, unless the surface of the repeated·
ly stressetl part is kept under careful
observation for incipient and growing
cracks."
There's an historical surv1:y which
mentions that the term "fatigue" was
introduced into the 41!1engincenng
literature in 1954 in the Proceedings
of the Institution of Civil Engineers.
following a suggestjon by Joshua
Field, fellow of the Royal society.
then president of the instJtution.
Well, I'm not about t<J try to initiate
you into the background of the reason
for wind shear except to point out that
without metal fatigue, there's no wind
shear possibJe. The vibration of a
piece of metal, tiny and thin, but
repeated man y thousands of times.
may very well result in separation
when h it with a strong force such as a
blast of wind.
Please, m y friends, don't argue ~ith
me. I JUSt read about it and you can do
the same.
Waltu Burroagb• 11 tbe Dally
Piiot's lou.adlag pobU1ber.
r am outraged a1 Rep. Wilham
Dannemeyer's support of oil drilling
everywhere along the coast. As 1
collect signatures for pctll1ons against
the recent backroom deal 10 sacnfice
54 \Cjuare miles 10 dnlhng off New-
port and Laguna beaches. 1 am struck
b~ how eager people are to sign and b)
hov. angf) the) arc at the thought of
011 platformsclosc to these incredibly
beautiful beache'>.
People are not oppo~d to all
dnlhng hut the~ are dead !>Cl against
dnlhng in the environmentally
\en.,111,e area betv.een C a1ahna and
our coa\llt ne II '\ tno bad Rep.
I hope everyone who enjoys our
beaches the way they are will wnte
immediatel y 10 their congressional
and Senate representatives. urging
them to include the tracts off Orange
County's coastline in the dnllmg
moratorium
Otherwtse, people like Dant-
nemeycr will force us to have these 011
platforms anywhere the 011 com-
panies want
ROGER OWENS
Laguna Beach
Carolina Senators pushing
pork barrel coasta,1 project
L.M. Bovo Aim to override Interior's veto of jetties
----
--_-.._r experts fear as environmental disaster
want to marry a doctor? ~AS;llNGTON -=__ For years
we've lx·en po1n11ng out a surefire
T 1""en become one ViOUrself Wa)tobnngthefederalbudgctdeficit 11 J · .I. 1 d own: <itop costly pork-barrel pro-
Ject'i before they get started.
If )OU want to marry a doctor.
\Oung lad-.. <;tudy medicine. Seven
out of I 0 female phys1c1ans marry
doctors
The J<>tnl'> in a ~tor k's legs lock up
.\l'>o the stork has a son of built-in
g}ro'>cope wt th which ll unconsc1ous-
I) keeps its balance A ~ber 'ltork can
stand on one leg for hour'\
..\'\ton1sh1ng v.hat people through·
out history have done to the bod1c\cof
their dead They've bandaJcd them in
hnen, ..ailed lhem down hkc halibut,
packed them m quicklime pumped
them full of preservative\. mounted
them on ships' bows left them 10
wither in tree houses. and haked and
buned them vanolJc;ly The Kukuku
wamors of New Guinea '>moke tht'
corpses of their deceased tnbe-,men.
smoke them hke lulms and 1hen paint
them with ocher
The deodorant makers m1g.h1 tell
u'l· If your sweat glands were
\tretched stnught 1n a one long tube.
the~ 'd measure eight mile~
Q You never <;ee a ~old1er t·ftrry1ng
nOcs with fixed bayonet 1n < IVll 'War
films. Why not1
ORANGE COAST
lailyPillt
I
A. Wasn't invented. the bayonet,
until three years aft.er the ( 1v1l War
ended.
Q..., What make of car had 18
sparkplugs"
A The 1923 MacFarland
Nobod) has ever figured out why
Lake Wakat1pu in southern New
Zealand nscs and falls thrte inches
every five minutes
The 1d1om throughout history has
been loaded with referencel> to food.
Listen, turkey. Sugar daddy He's a
hard·botlod egg. That's applesauce
Am"t got the bread. man. Our
Language man 1scomp1hnga list Any
oth<'rs?
That".1 exactly what the lntenor
Depanment tncd to do last year to the
Arm) ( orp<> of Engineers' grandiose
plan to build a pair of huge jetties at
the Cape Hatteras National Seashore.
a fragile 'ilnp of bamer islands
running for 70 miles along the North
C arohna coa\1
Th<' 1cu1e'i were intended to keep
sand from filling in Oregon Inlet, a
channel u\Cd by fi'ihermen going to
and from the l\tlanuc Ocean
lntenor rclui>ed to grant the Corps
of Engineer'\ a land-u'iC pcmut to
build the Jellle'> But now North
Carolina·., two R~publican ~nators,
Jesse Helmc; and John l·,a'\t, have
sponsored lcg1<,la11on that would
ovemde the department's veto.
Experts fam1har with 1he plan
MO!'(' than 58 JSercent of the world's predict that the JClllC'> would tum out
radio ~tot1ons broadcast 1n English. to be an env1ronmenu1l disaster. They
Just standing still at the~uator,
you're moving 1040 mph b«au5e of
the rotational velocity -that'~ I 7
ti mes faster than the world' land
speed record.
Ch1mpan1ee5comm1t murder.100
L.M. Bor' ,. • •yadltllff
colomol11.
'
FnMDN ... , .. , ...
....... (Al!Or ,,_,..,
Olly .....
=·~
also argue that even If the PTOJect dtd
what the Engineer~ claim 1t w11l -
which l'I debatahle -the tost (more
than S 100 m1lhon) would far
outwe1&h the benefit<,. And they
accuse she Enginee~ of cooking the
figures •nyway.
Fifteen specific complain~ were
upressed 1n a letter to the Enamecrs
by a top Wb1te HouSt budger officer
Our a.ssoc:11tc Donald Goldbera and
Corky Johnson obtained a copy of the
let&cr. Kerc are the h1.lhh&hu:
-" t rtVJCW of the CCOnom.ac
analysis prepared by the Corps of
En11nttrs d1~lo~ the u~ of inJP-
propnatc study methodologies, ques-
t10Mblc a umptaons and lack of
documcn&atJon." the budatt offiClal
suited "1 be 'upportin& d.tta shows
that the proJect costs will sulxt.antial·
ly exceed 1u bcnefit5 1f more acnerall)'
accepted procedures and reasonable
assumptions arc applied."
...:.: The Engineers hyped the pro-
JCCtcd benefi ts by using the highest
possible estimated cost of dredging,
the alternative method of keeping
Oregon Inlet c lear for fishing boats,
the official charged. "Using a more
reahst1c assumption, such as the
historical average dredging costs.
would show the project to be un-
economic," the lener stated.
-The White House official was
also skeptical of the Engineers'
cavalier brushoff of envaronmental
problems the Jetties could cause. "We
are concerned about the divergent
opinions of the Corps and . the team
of coastal experts retained by the
National Park Service, a!> to the
environmental impacts of the pro-
je<:l." the letter stated. "Should the
prO!CCl not work as modeled by the
Corps. there could be: Mgnificant
adverse environmental impacts
which could add substantially to the
total cost of the already eitpensive
project."
-In a P3rting ~hot, the budge\
offict.al observed dryly-"We arc
concerned that ubmis 1on of such a
defective repon may indicate that the
internal review proces$CS of )'.Our
office and of the Corps are ineffec-
tive"
The Enarnccrs. ~urc in their
historical role as provider of pork for
mcmben of Congre • responded to
the White House lttter by hauahtlly
dismi ~•na the C1"1t1c1sm u "'totally
unsupportable ...
But the £oain.ee.D ma)' have a fiabt
onthe1rhand1th1 tJmc.Jn nAua.tS
letter, William P. Hom. umtant
I ntenor JeCrtW'y for fish~ wddhfc and
parks reiterated the department'•
OPOO$bion to lbe O'l'qoo Inlet jcuaea "Our cootinuioa concemJ abou1
thta pro~ project have not bcc:n
ahcrtd.' Hom wrote. ..(It) would
'
and JOSEPH SPEAR
result in permanent adverse impacts
to National Parle and Nat1ona1
Wildtffc Refuge lands under the
jurisdiction of this department.··
WHO'S NEWS: Twenty-five years
ago. young Dorothy Godlewski sur-
prised her father in Detroit with a
long-distance birthday call from Mo~
cow. where she was working as a
secretary io the American Embassy .
This past week~ she was the one
who was surp · -with a SOth
birthday pany thrown by several
hundred friends here in WashitTston,
where she's office manager or the
President's Office of Consumer Af-
fairs. Decorations included P.Osters
and buttons of Ms. Godlewtka's face
supcrim{>Osed on the Statute of
Liberty, in accordance with the party
theme, "Save the Lady."
MINI-EDITORIAL: In 1ts ob--
tession with the seemingly indestruc-
tible drua traffic, Congress sometimes
behaves as irnttonally u the 1unlues
it's tryina to save. The Ho use, for
instance. recently lipped a prov11ion
into the Defense authorizatson bill
that would allow Navy personnel to
arTeSt dope amuglen ovcncas. Not
only would this require exten 1ve
trafoin1 in law enforcement for the
sailors setettcd. but it would mean
they'd hnc to be on caJI for Iona pcnoda for any rcsuttina coun ~ses.
1nstcad of on duty with the fleet. AU
thin contid.ered.. it would be wbcr
to lea"c the war on dNa smuglcn to
ci vilial\>land.Jubben .
TBOlllA8 &LIAS
coJnmnlat
THOUS
Euas
l
Divvying
profits of
the LA
Games
Should surplus
be restricted only
to youth sports?
Once it became clear that the 1984
Olympics would posl phenomenal
profits, there was no doubt the Games
would leave a major legacy in
California. But should it be limited to
sports, and sports for the young, at
that?
Those are the key questions now
before the I 7 trustees of the foun-
datfon set up to take charge of the
Olympic profits. There ~ strong
feelings on both sides.
Through six years leading up to the
Olympics, organiz.ers pledged over
and over that the local share of any
SUIJ>lus would go to "youth sports" in
Cahforn1a.
But the local share turned o utlo be
at least $105 million and there's a
growing feeling that's just too much to
speJld on Ljnle leagues, gymnast1cs
teams, Boys and G irls club sports and
soccer teams.
As the first $2 million in checks
were mailed to selected bencfician cs
last month, officials of the Los
An$elcs Amateur Athletic Foun-
dation. designated successor to the
Olympic orpnizing committee, esti·
mated 1t will take them at least 15
years to ~reel out all the profits.
While it's clear youngsters wilt get
the benefits of most of the profits,
o ther potential projects are starting to
surface. Some of the foundation's 17
trustees have mentioned causes from
the arts to senior citizen centers to
Ethop1an famine relief.
The trustees already have altered
their charter to allow for a $2 milhon
grant to pay for a 1987 cuJtural
program patterned on last year's
Olympic Arts Festival. featuring 496
performances by artists from 26
nations.
One trustee who Objected to the."
bylaw change was Howard Allen.
chainnan of the Southern California
Edison Co., who told a reporter.
"Thts leaves the door open to other
changes. not only for future requests
of the same type, but for requests of
other worthy types ...
Allen and other businessmen on
the board believe trustees like Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, who are
also politicians. might be subject to
pressures to spread the money among
other non·sports organizations.
"I felt the pnvate sector made the
money and the private sector could
decide where to spend it," said trustee
John Argue. a lawyer and president of
the Southern California Committee
for the Olympics, the group which
ong.inated the Los Angeles bid for lhe
'84 Games and has iust started a
campaign to bring the Olympics back
in 2004. Argue opposed putting any
poliucians on the board.
The foundation, whJch already has
$50 m1lhon m hand, is entitled to 40
percent of the Olympic profit, ex-
pected to reach $225 million when all
bills are collected. Another 40 percent
. goes to the United States Olympic
Committee and 20 percent to na-
tional federations governing Olympic
sports.
So far, more than 300 grant
requests have arrived aKd the foun-
dation hasn't yet set up a formal
application procedure.
Among the issues those requests
raise are these toughies:
•Should the organrz.ation try to
solve societal problems linked to
miquided young.sters or merely fund
l}'lTlnasiums, sports fields. coaches
and uniforms?
•Should grants ao only to existing
a.roups or should the foundation set
up its own leaaues and competitions
in California, a state that's already
o ne of the prime recruiting grounds·
for college sports programs?
Trustee Wilham Robertson, lca~v
of the Los Angeles County l..atflr
Federation. says he will ellamine
requests "on thetr ments, not necess·
anly limited to sports."
And trustee Yvonne Qrathwaitc
Burke, a former congresswoman, said
"I think it should be: a real lcpcy. The
emphasis should be o n youth, but not
o nly youth."
But other trustees are adamant that
the foundation not stray from sporu
They cite the charter of the Inter-
national O lymAic Committee, which
says, "Any surplus derived from the
holdinaoftheGamesmustbeapphed
lo the promotion of the Olympic
movcmen1 or to the development of
spon"
Says Anita dcfrantt, a former U.S.
Olympmi Who directed one of the
O lym()I v1naaes last sum mer, .. The
intention wu to do t0metbina
spcc1aJ. It is absolutely phenomena)
what the (foundatJon) can ac-
compll h (in pons)-or they can be
JUSt another founda11an "
71iomu Ella•''• S..u Maka·
ba1e4 Nl•m•l1t .. 1ute lallft.
The· uninhibited
Spider Woman
goes after stardom
By gJM MD..LS
............... Wl'tM
NEW YORK -Actreu Sonia
Brap undoes the clasp holding back
her wild, waist-lensth hair, eases onto
the edge of a coffee table in her
publicist's aparttnenl and crosses her
lep. As a photoarapher triqers a
camera, she brushes out the still-wet
mane.
"Ever notice how when famous
people are runnina from the
paparazzi, they put up their bands
like this?" She lauahs as she gestures,
her arms makina a perfect frame
around her face.
Best known for uninhibited and
undressed roles in South American
sex farces, Miss Braga is anything but
camera shy and adores attention.
And while she's as popular as soccer star Pelc in her native Brazil,
there's a touchina note of the ingenue
when she says she'd Jove knowing
that one of her heroes, such as StillJ.
had seen ODC 0 her films an(Jlibd It.
Most moviCJoera secinJ her latest
movie, the crittcally acclaimed "Kiss
of the Spider Woman," have loved ·
the 3S-year-old actress who plays
three of the four female roles in the
film.
Her funniest part is Lena
Lamaison, the star of a comically bad
Nui propaganda movie. The movie
is recounted in jail by a drag queen
(William Hurt) to his cellmatc (Raul
Julia), a polit.\f;a,! activist. Shown in
flashhAcks, the' film within the film
depicts Leni's dilemma as a member
of the French Resistance who falls in
love with a Nazi officer.
Director Hector Babenco turns the
Leni Lamaison story iruo utter camp
but Miss Brap says it presented
unusual acting challenges.
seriously as an actress, but without
sheddina the sensuality and humor
she brought to the ti lie characters in.
"Dona Fforand Her Two Husbands"
and "Gabriela."
While Mias Bf'141' is slowly but
inexorably bccom1na known to
American film audiences, she has
Iona been a star in Brazil.
One of seven children from a lower
middle-class family, she first ap-
peared on television at 14, and got her
biJ break in the Brazilian production
of "Hair." She went on to star in
Brazil's popular TV soap operas,
which play every night an pnme time.
She says her role in the TV version of
"Gabriela,·· wh.ich prccecded the
film, was a breakthrough for Brazilian
women, who previously had equated
beauty with Doris Day blondness.
"Through my success in 'Gabriela,·
Brazilian women realized they could
be S-2 . with frizzy hair, brown eyes,
wide hips and be beautiful," she said.
Unlikeller other films. Mrss-Sraga
UF'E IS A DEACH
JOHN CANOY · l\lCHAl\D CIUNNA
"°·"' A P~OUN! !lCTtJ.R:! "
MCN PLAYING
aom.anca
has no nude scenes m "Spider
Woman." It also was her fint film in
EnaJish, which she barely spoke when
the movie was shot. Now, a y~ar and a
half later, she converses easily an the
lanauaae. althouah she occasionally
gropes for a word: "Is 11 eyedrop or
dror eye?"
" had to learn line by hne," she
said. "Sometimes, as an actress. you
really have to change the · hoes
because you don't feel comfonable
with this line or that line. My problem
was_h~w to ch•oac words L don't
kno_wr·
.. The most entertaining
movie this Summer."
-l'~A TOD . .\ Y. Mil• Cl.arll
PEl·WD HOMAN •
/'1E-Wfl's trG
#Vl~TURI
..... mo•oa-11
ut-1110
"llU
UA MOVI.$ 4
ttG-4021 ..... "° UA lllOWIS I
...
CDIAllOS
lllClDlnlQ:
5Sl..o&S5
"\J UIU
MIC f AHlfl SQUAii( (lU) Ill.OW _,.... "first, I bad to realize that that f!rl
who did Leni Lamaison, she wasn t a
good actnss,'' Miss Braga said. "Sec-
ond, it's not a movie, it's a memory of llllA ,,._ B<u u. TOflO OflANGE
a moY!e. Third, a homosexual is Plan S29-S339 Eciwaras E T01o Cll'f t.nt••
"1.4ttl
-..sTllD& EDWMDS llMtlOI
EJ>llMDS WO> TW
llMftO ......
talkina about that movie. Fourth, I'm IUEMA """
581
9SOO
634
2SS3
fi . UA MoYtes HUWTIM8TOM NACM 1.U@1$i ""' IJl.JSOI
CIGCM
'34-ZSSJ not real1 y sure that that ilm c:usts or 962 4991 EOwtlOI Wun1vlOlon --•:...
he's malcin' it up durina the movie COITAlllUA Clllem18'4 0388 OIWlll -.tUW "Wlll-fR
because it s so similar to what towaro1 Bnlto1 111V111E Paoinc s OtlllQI (l)lllMDS TOMI mwMOS CIEM happened in the prison cell." S40-7'44 Eow1r0s Un<vt1s.1y Ol•vt-ln COfTtJ IDT
Miss Braga drew her inspiration COSTAMHA ~ 1111 834-9361 "1-4114 n1.Jtl$
from several sources, includina Joan ~,0'""'"" =="Coul ~» "IL Tm "Wiii-ta CrawforA Bette Davis, Gloria 9N-•1•1 4911111 llrtwHI •1 mi CDIMDS n Tl*> 'Acn: 11-1anu1.fl
v. l:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~il~-t500~~~~m~.xu~~~iit;:~ Swanson and the character of Oak --·-•PlllllTU • NUT ITllU
Ar<;ten in the 1930s "Aash"jiordon'
se~Thcrc is one see~ ·sunse\ * PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES *
Boulevard' tha\ was my guide for * BARGAIN MATINEES I FfRIT 2 Pwformanc• Mon•v
Leni Lamaison," she said. "It's when Tin S.tur•v (bee" Holl•ys l Spec. E•11mtnt1)
she's in bed after she tried to kill -· 1-.s111 loK9 • the writer left Gloria Swanson, and !uf17 ••• 1· .. ·•·
herself. He comes back, and she's like
this." Miss Brap leaned back and ._.. .,._ ,_...
threw one arm lanauidly across her ucac TO TMI
forehead. "And he comes to see what •UNll ""' l!!P Hlftlll!ff '"" happened. She starts to cry, cry, cry, liiiiT 11•
and you see that she 1s cryina ~
beautifully." TMI DUOOH 1111 Film cntics have continually com-1y •,,.. "'' , ..
pared Miss Braaa to Sophia Loren, ,... ~
Briaitte Bardot and Marilyn Monroe, IU~ UNfAl rNt.,
a comparison the Brazilian actress '"'we ... ,.. .... ""'
finds rather irksome. "Why don't
they call me the Brazilian Jack
Nicholson?" she said. "I think I'm aa
sexy u be is."
Miss Brap wants to be taken LAKEWO D
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movie that holds itself apan
from t.he crowd."
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,. I
PUHY WINXERBEAN by Tom Batlu1< DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau ...
THE
FAMILY
CIRCUS
by Bii Keane
"Daddy! Your stuffing's coming out!"
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"That's a dirty trick! Scaring him out of the
chair by turning on the vacuum cleaner!"
DRABBLE
~·RE. ~E. wrrn tJoQMAN 1~ ... 1'6 Rlb~T. M., .r..~o
~~. MAAAbf.R or i~E. Ol~~AAILtR, 1-\f.Rf. .
• 11-\f. Ol6MANIL£R. .. 1€> 1'-'t. iOOG~fbl ___ __,,_ __ .., WQ.~?1L.f,R lROU!iolO II
GARFIELD
TME LONE RANG.ER ~A~ TONTO,
THE GRE(N MOR.NET MAc.:> KATO,
AND BATMAN MAS ROBIN.
TME CAPf.P AVENGER NEE~ A
SIDEKICK TOO
MOON MULLINS
BIG GEORGE
f "(;r I
J ~1 I fl J~ l\
i
"Whaddaya mean you can't eat shark?!
Shark wouldn't think twice about eating
YOUI"
DENNIS THE MENACE
· by Hank Ketcham . ~..__
J
l 8'2.,
t
• !I r
" 4
~~\ .. ~-.... ....._
1YOt.J WATCH.THEflRST "THING SHE'S GONNA 00 WHEN l
WALK IN 1-IE OOOR 1s'MAJ<E ME TAKE A BATH I''
by Kevin Fagan
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
iuT·TuT, f<.AYO -·
NO SNACKS
8'EFORE
DINNER -·
you'L.L LOSE
)"OUR )'ou'~E R IGHT1 PLUSHIE --
J Ml~HT AS WELL W.AIT
,AND Do Tl-IAT WHEN .APPETITE· ..
.., d.
~r32
JUDGE PARKER
You SER\/S" DINNER.
•• iJ' J. . ' ••
by Harold le Doux
PEANUTS
BUT AflOOND ~RE
'TlaT AIN'T EA~ ..
ITfUJ'QJ
MJr105AY
IW'ITHIN6/
'
by Charles M. Schulz
--~~~~~~---.
ARE WE WALl(IN6
TO SCHOOL A6AIN
TMIS VEAR?
NO. WE1LL 6E ~DIN6 IN A
''MOBILE AITTNDANCE MODULE~'.. THAT'S WHAT
TME'r' CALL A SCHOOL BUS
MOW WILL WE KNOW
WHERE TO G~T ON ?
LOOK FOR A 516N ™AT
SAYS, tMOSlLE ATTENDANCE
MODULE STOP II
by Berke Breathed
l¥'PMElmY
1flH A 8/T
Of A
'I06t.Kr-r .,;;;;;:.-=mo:;)
/IMP .
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
NOW, WE Go OOVJNIHIS
HALL ·· ANDlb °THE
Rk3HI.
TUMBLEWEEDS
ROSE IS ROSE
1rs ~ 056 ...
W£ CAN'T ~IHP™E (.~~~
l BRIDGE
Both vulnerable. South deals.
WEST
• Q 1095
"'K 92
0 Q1098
• 73
NORTH + K63
<::>A 5
OKU•3 + 1096
EAST
SOUTH
• 84
+ AJ72
c:::> QJ 108743
OJ
•Z
• <:?8
0 A52
•AKQJIU
The biddinr:.
oudl w .. t Nortll Ea1t
1 + PaN t o S <::>
4 • Pue 5 + Pue
Pue P ...
Opening lead: Two of ·Q
No one will claim that South
ended up In tht beat contract. But
few wlll dispute that hla play wu
top drawer.
Art.er Eaat'a thrH heart pn
trnpt, It became all but lmpouible
for North·South to r each their opU
mum apot of three no trump. At five
duba, South had to product an
unuaual safety play to HCW't bll
tonlract. •
[XJN'I YOUlfilNK1AIS fS A
LOVELY W100L,EU~ '?
by Tom K. Ryan
HE?Av'erJs NO,~! rr~ A
CON~~R'fl"-E l'CJfn:Rf\.l' LEASH! --~--~--~~~~----• c.otJVau1 JU? i
WIN BY LOSING HEART
West led the two of hearts, and u
soon as dummy hit the table. declarer
saw that he would have no problem if
West held the ace of spades. However,
if East held that card the contract was
in Jeopardy unless West could be kept
OMAR
SHARIFF
off lead until dummy's d1amond<J
were e tabhshed to take care of at
least one of declarer's spades.
All would be weU 1f declarer could
duck a diamond into Eut. incc Ea t
had at least seven hcaru, thou&h. he
rated to be shon in diamonds.
Declarer found an elcpnt method of
.d1sposin1 of his unwanted third
diamond.
He played a low heart from dummy
to the fint tnck! East won tbe ten and
returned the suit. Declarer completed
hiauchanac oftncktby sluffinaa lo..,
diamond while winnina ""1lh the ace
on the table.
The contract sttll ttquired con-
11derablc care. Dttlarerdrtw JU tone
i
I
by Pat Brady
round of trumps before cashing th<'
ace a!ld king of diamonds. When East
showed out 00 the second diamond,
declarer's thoughtful play was re-
warded. He ruffed a diamond high.
crossed hack to the board w1th the
CHARLES
Go REN
nine of trumps to ruff another
diamond and SCI ur a Iona card in
dummy. He was sill able to return to
the board with a trump to Pilch one
space on the 13th diamond. ln 111
declarer lost only one hean tnck and
one spade
Por laformalloo abo.t CMrlet
Oor 11 ltW MWtktur rw llrille
playttt, wril.6 Oona 8t14tt lAUer,
I HI CIHarnl11.. Ave., Cla·
oamlasoa, N.J. IH'7'1.
. t
l
Angel pitching
gets homered
in worst way
Murray's 3 homers,
Nine RBI lead the way
in O's 1 7-3 lau her
By CHRIS MONAHAN
Olly,... C--1 '' ''*"'
There are no two words lo better
describe what happened at Anaheim
Stadium Monday night than: Eddie
Murray.
The switch-hitting Oriole first
baseman put on an incredible hitting
show, going 4 for S with three home
runs and nine RBI as he and his
teammates shredded the Angels in a
17-3 rout before a crowd of 2S,80S.
Mumy hit a three-run blast in the
first from the right side of the plate, a
solo shot in tlie fourth from left-
handed and a grand slam in the fifth,
also from the left side.
Sandwiched in between, in the
second inning, was an RBI single. He
also flied out deep to center in the
seventh and walked in the ninth.
After his third home run, the crowd
cheered and ctianted "Eddie, Eddie"
until he came out of the dugout and
tipped his cap.
Said Reggie Jackson, who has hit a
few home runs himself, "He had a
good month tonight. He was player of
the week an one day."
The grand slam 1s Murray's third of
the year and the 12th of his nine-year
career.
Ballimore(McGreaor 10-1 l)at
All&!lll (Witt 11-7).
Time: 7:30 p.m.
TV: None.
Radio: KMPC (710).
It is also the thlrd three-home run
pme of his care6' and the sixth time
an his career that he has hit home runs
from both sides of the plate.
l'he nine RBI ties an Oriole club
record set by Jim Gentile m 1961 . It is
two short of the Amencan League
record and three short of the rruljor
league record.
His power output gave him 24
home runs and I 02 RBl for the year.
His RBI total ranks him second i.n the
M8Jor Leagues behind Don Matting-
ly of the Yankees.
Murray's home runs ..>ltCrc the
biggest part of the damage, but he had
help with the Orioles other seven runs
as Floyd Rayford (9th), Gary
Roenickc (12th), John Shelby (3rd)
and Rick Dempsey (9th) also took
Angel pitchers out of the ball park.
"There were a lot of balls hit well
tonight," said Murray. The ball has
been carrying well recently. We've
looked at the box scores and seen all
of them hit on the West Coast.
"I hit three in Toronto and three in
(Pleue .ee ANGELS/82)
Dodger double play
Dod.l(en' Steve 8az throw• to flnt after
forefnc oat New York Meta' Tom Paciorek
·--
t
Diiiy Piiat TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1985
. Tennie ottk:a.le uve to cell •nd telc• lhota. R
Cowboy• etlll undefMted In edtlbltlon pa.y.112.
. at aecond bue In flnt lnnlnc. LA topped
Meta, 6-1, behind FernandQ Valenzuela.
Dodgersf
wal[ets
get filled
~EW YORK (AP) -At'tet a 6-J
victory ovet the New York Mets, Los
All&elcs Dodgen Manaser Tom
l.asorda had one band on his
5COrCC&rd, the other on his wallet.
"Leads arc like money," Luorda
was sa,ring. "You never have
enough. ·
The victory Monday night, follow-ina a two-pme skid to Montrul,
moved the Dod#rs 7"1 umcs ahead
ToaJ611t'• Game
DM1en (~uss 11-8) at New
York (Fernandez S-'7).
Time: 4:3S p.m.
TV: Channel fl. ..._
Radio: KA8C (790).
of the San Diego Padres: who lost 4-3
10 Phllldelphia, in the National
League West'. The Mets, meanwhile,
fell two games behtnd the SL Lows
C'.ardmals in the NL Ea.st with their
t.lurd loss an five pmes.
"I know n's a cliche to say you have
to t.ake one pme at a time," Mers
catcher Mike Sctoscia wet. but
clichcs were made for a reason. If we
stay consistent, day in and day o ut. I
f«I very confident about our
chances.··
At the same ume, the Mct.s were not
calling It qwts.
"There's no cause for alarm," Mets
·outfielder Tom Paetorck said ... The
race 1s an front of us, and we'll be the.re ..
(Pleue eee DODGER8/B2)
-Cubanito is-looking:-for bigger and betlertioxers
Unranked Perez shines
with sixth-round TKO
By scoring a sixUJ-round technical knock-· Perez. who gave 8arton (16-3-1) a first-hand
out over-"Irish" Paul Barton in their djsplay through almost six battering rounds
scheduled I 0-round main event, Perez (30-1) before finally succumbing.
has earned, what he feels, another shot at a It looked as 1f Perez was sull favonng the
contender (his only loss came al the hands of nght in the early rounds, as he flicked left J&bs
Hector "Macho" Camacho). in Barton's face while never ra1!>ang the right
-and the left wasn't too bad either.
One combination after another sent Barton
to the canvas midway through the fifth. He
managed to get to his feet by the count of seven
and showed some courage by hanging an when
most others would have called tt night, and a
punishing one at that.
~ "The bell saved him an the fifth, but I knew
I'd &et tum the six th," said Perez. who notched
his 24th KO. "He htt me with some good
punches. but I was able to come through."
By JOSEPH DUDEVOlR ''I'd love to fight Camacho again, or any through the first two rounds.
lrleis "Cubanito" Pcm feels be's being
ducked. He says cha mpions do n't like to fight
unranked fighters who can dethrone them
with one punch.
contender, but they won't give me a shot," But in the third round Perez started to
said Perez, a resident of ~nta Ana. "They unload on the hapless Portland. Oregon
don't want some unknown guy to put them native
down with one right hand." "I was JUSl fcchng him out 1n the
"He was a tough guy w1th a lot of
determination." said Perez of his foe "I hn
him with a lot of good shots and I thought he
wasn"t going to get up."
Banon warued to conunue, but the nogstde
doctor, Michael Ccluca, put a halt to things
when he saw the heavy flow of blood golJl&
Lnto Banon's nght eye.
What's next fo r Perez'? "I tlunk I've 1ot a
fi&ht lined up With Jimmy Paul before the end
or the year After that I'm hoping somebody
will gJve me a shot. I want to eventually bring
the ulle back to Orange County where it
belongs," he said.
But if thing$ keep goin~ in the manner they
did Monday night, the big boys arc going to
pave to reckon with this 137-pound hght-
wc1ght, who sta&ed yet another impressive
performance in front of 1.450 fans at the
Irvine Marriott.
For a while opponents didn't have to worry begmning," said Perez. "In the third round I
about Perez slipping them a nght. He had started throwing the right a httle more and It
injured his right hand in training and after worked fine."
surgery repaired the damage. Perez was sull If 1t worked "fine" in third. .It worked
favonng his right and used his left almost ··good" an the fourth round. as Perez staggered
exclusively for the past few months. Barton wi th several solid shots to the head. By
"But now the right hand is back." said the fiflh ro und the right was working "great"
ln the sixth, Barton Lned to make a ·fight of
1t. landing some shots of his own and forcing
Perez to back ofT a little. But Perez regrouped
and put the pressure on again. not letung up
unul referee Chuck Hassett stopped rhe bout
wi"th I :20 left 1n the sixth after Perez opened a
large cut over Barton's nght c\e.
Pf$tcz collected $3.000 for the wm while
Sanon pocketed S 1,200
Eagles (19-45) hit
the Wall of Shame
Note: Tnals and tribulations of a
minor league baseball player are
documen.ted by Richard Dunn. one
oft he Daily Pilot 's Angels wnters and
a correspondent for the past three
years. He's trying to make 1t to the Big
J..nsues and ~ns with Idaho Falls
in Class A. This 1s the ninth in a series.
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho -As the
season comes to an end. somebody
finally got the nght idea and created
an Eagles' Waif of Shame in our
clubhouse. h's the perfect tombstone
fo r a ballclub that has yet to win 20
games this season.
Throughout the ups and downs this
season -mostly downs -we've
battled hard and stuck together, but
there is a chance we could finish with
the worst record in the history of the
Pioneer League.
Our catcher. Rob Canepa, saved
the broken bat WJth which he singled
off a Great Falls Dodger pitcher
whose fastball was clocked at 94 mph.
The bat hangs at the top of The Wall
and sars , "I ,000: I for I off 94 mph
fastbal ... Canepa's a good guy and
fine receiver and his bat is fairly solid
but the bat symbolizes the way Great
Falla pitchers truly owned our hHters
throughout our seven-game series.
During the losing streak -1 forget
which one -the Idaho Falls Kiwanis
Club tried reverse psychology on us
by sendinJ us a card saying "It's hard
to soar wtth the EaaJes when you fly
with turkeys". They thought it would
make us mad and perhaps we would
go out and play harder, and of course,
win.
The losina streak continued,
though1 and the card is now taped an
the miodle on The Wall.
During our photo session earlier in
the year, our short rehefpitchcr, nght-
handcr Ben Townsend. posed an a
left-handed position with a lcft-
handcd glove.
The photo also hangs on The Wall
w1th a toy d inosaur taped next to It
that says "This 1s how Ben 1s 1n the
mornang." The hangings on The Wall
go on and.,-i, and proves one thing:
We may bE'thc misfits of Lhc league,
but we know how to have fun.
When you're 19--4S, you look for
. other ways to put a smile on your face.
Last Sunday the pastor of the
baseball chapel invited us to attend
his sermon and be recognized an the
crowd. A dozen of us went and
afterward were the c.cntcr of attention
during the potluck lunch the church
provided. Some of us were asked to
speak to the audience and gjve
instructions o n baseball.
I was the first one asked so I was
ltttle off guard. However. I broke the
ice cleanly and it turned out to be f.
pretty fun gathering.
later that day I had lunch at the
ho me of one of the families that
attends all the home games. It was an
experience -they Ii vc out in the
country with five young daughters -
and it's nice to be treated welJ in this
town. The only problem was that J
shaved that morning and had to pitch
that night. It's a sin to do that in m y.
book, and to this day I'll always
believe it was the reason I didn't have
enough ps an the nin&h 1nn1ng and
lost to Pocatella.
To end on a positive note, my
season could be extended an extra
week if the independent Salt Lake
City Trappers pick up m y contract for
the playoffs against Great Falls.
Rumor has 1t I will.
'
~ ,_ ....... " ""'0.,.,.... They'll verlfv It'• hot
The lil&b echool-(ootball eeuon baa bepn with pre-con-
didoalila c1r111. on Monday, 1o be ro11owed by TbZ
ftnt ottlctal day wttb pada ln pracdce. Marina '•
VlJdal• foand rhe weather nch that one player wu loo
for abade ander hla T-shirt and Junior Michael Jepeen wu
at tbe water cooler when not woTklDC on a .. f ootworll drill."
At 35, Youngblood calls it quits
Jack YOUCl>lood
r
By JOSEPH DUDEVOIR
Olly ""' C..1 I J • I
Jack: Younablood; a pivotal r.,ure
with the Rams for 14 yean. retired
from rlayina this momina wttb a ~a news conference at Anaheim
Stadium.
It bcpn in a 1emi rious. semi· nervous. 1Cmi-jotrinaJy fuhion with
ieammatea Bill Bain and Mel ~ns
ktep1na lh1nas IOO!e, but Qn« the
conference bcpn. Younablood1 known for h11 macho appearance 1.00
ways. was unable to tltll)e an cmo-
uonaJ scene.
"I always tned to play thu pmc
Wlth all my bun and an m y abthty and
I've 1one throuah a Iona and gruelling
dcc1s1on. I hon6tly thouaht and
prayed I could be the Jack Youn4·
blood you saw last year but God d1dn t
fet it happen so I'm aoin& to reure." the
3S-year-old Younablood ~•d "l'm not willma to 10 out on the
field and aivc Ckol"JI• Fronuerc,
Coach Rob'inson and the fans any le
Ofl Jack Younablood. !IO I'm IOJDI to
put 'cm on the shelf. ..
Younablood aclnowlcd cd the
media. u y1n1 .. Thank )'OU for maklna
me bi.ucr than life somcnmes. Tiu
isn'ttbecndofsom thtl\I; I'm 10ato
ntend llustosomcth1naclx. n wand
fresh.
.. ,.,e bun amun<S for. J4 yran and
I'll always be around ..
"lt Wis cxtn:~y sad for me -when I re~ched the co uSJon and tned to
1 nteltectua111C it Ute lt'S hard to let
go of somcth1na that has been ~
1Tward1na.
··1 only wanlcd to play I 0 ~e~r" '° I
wu able to ruch th" aoal and when I
started playina I alwtyt 1d to my If
I wanted to walk out wb1lc I was sull
on top."
Younablood said he c.tme to the
final conclu ion unday e"cnin&.
Rams Coach John Robinson ~td:
"h 't not ad. ifs JU1t chanstd h 's Sid
when a auy reurn from pro pon.s and
donn't have an~hcre to to. but with
J1Ck, h~'s only 1011'\1 \O 1but up··
Free spendin
taking its tol
EDITOR ·i; NnTE -Spons 1s
pay ins the pnce for a det·ade of tree
spending This sn:ond o(a three-pan
senes rraces the incrt"ases in salane~.
1elev1s1on mone} Jnd franch1'>t'
values
By BRUCE LOWI'IT
If the 1920s were the "(,olden .\gc"
of sports, the 1970s and 1980s will he
remembered as the "(1recn Age." the
dawning of milhon..<Jollar contract\
for athlete\ and muh1m1lhon-Oollar
pncetags for franchises
"When I 'ilaned gut 1n I %2 If a
gu} wa\ mak.1~5.000. that wa\ a
lot.' The) had no leverage,.. ..aid
lawyer and pla}er agen1 Bob \\.ooll ·
Then new leagues -the .\meman
Bask~tball .\ssoc1at1on the \\. orld
Hockey -\ ssociatwn -c;tancd
o;pnngin' up.
"That s when the 1n\anm stanw "
Woolf said "Nothing wakes people
up more than compct1t1ve b1dd1ng
Tt'ams that wouldn't have given a
· player a $5,000 ra1M" were giving him
$50.000 JUSt to kf'ep him ~relt..
Sanderson had signed for thrtt )ear;
with the Bosto n Bruins (ol the
National Ho~kc~ league) tor
SI 0.000, S 12,000 and S 14,000 From
there he went to clo'IC to S ~00.000
with rhe (WHA'')) Ph1ladelph1a
Blazers."
Then big mone)' started lOm1ng
fro m te.lev1Mon
~
Starting an 197 the NFL got Sb40
m1ll1on over four }Cars from ABC
CBS and NBC. the current contract
will pa) more lhil.(l three ume'i as
much. S2 I b1lhon over five -.ears
Ba\eball's telev1S1on nghts went
from $250 m1lhon for the old live-
}ear contract to SI I b1lhon for the
lUrrt'nt !>Iii-year package
• The "I BA has JU!>t completed tour-~car contracts that bro ught 1n S 121
million from C'BS and cable '>)'Stems.
up trom $74 million the preceding
four }Cars.
In the past de<:ade at:cC1rd1ng to
., anous league and umon sources. the
average salary has nsen from $74.234
to $152,000 an the 'llHl from s10.ooo to S332.000 in the NBA.
from SH .000 to SI 57.819 in the NFL
and from S40.8 3Q 10 S '\2Q 408 in
maJor league baseball -inaea~ of
I 04 percent to 706 percent
It was only a aenerat1on or so ago
that the S 100.000 baseball plaver
am'ed Joe DiMaagto, wsn Musial
Ted W1lhams, Hank Aaron
"Nobody bcwudgcd the stars thm
(Pleue .ee P'RltE/83)
Pro Surf Championships
begin in Huntington today
The O p Pro urfing C"hamp1onsh1P\. l\menca's lafJOt \urf contest
v.1th I SO surfe~ competing for S60.000 1n cash and pnzc~. bc&Jns th15
momma at the Hunun~ton Beat·h pier and conttnues throuah Sunday
The Cahfom1a Tnals. which bcstn today. att de 1sned to pal'\"
down the ncarl} 100 local contestants Th" onc--on~nc compeuuon
wtlt det~1ne which ( ahforn1a~based \Urfers will mttt the
antemat1onal rompct1tors who amve Wedne~y
C'hn~ Craven of C'o ta Me . '-1ho fini'lhed third in h1' d1v1s1on in
1he most recent Na\lonal holast1c Surfers <\ soc1at1on (N A)
comptt1t1on. has been chosen b) Op re~nt amateur com~1ton
The World Tour Tnal , bq:innina Wednesday matC'h ,urfen from
Japan. Au!ltraha. South Afn~ and En&)and who rank m the top 50 on
the A~uon of urfina Professional~ Work:t Tour rat10g~
Tht ehm1nat1on e~ent dettnnint the cont~ttnts ad~anc1 n1 to
men't and women·, tn1ls
, , Men) quartcrlinals and womeo·s ~mi final bqin Saturday. and
will ~ followed by the final <;unday. ~ coml)tt1uon • unday abo
featum a nostal11c; tonaboard d1 vmon.
This tear·, Op Pro event 1, e~pccttd to draw 300,000 pee
wboc.tn v1cw the coml)tt1t1on trom the Pt rand from bl~cn o
, ~dCJ of t~ juda ' platform and con ta.n &n".L There 1 no c
• for pcctator adma 1on.
J
Calling the shots
,puts tennis ball
.in umplres'~court
Prem AP dl1patoltu
STRATTON, Vt. -Loretta Parotta ~
will never Corset her first confrontation r:r.ml
W1th an &nlfY ~f essional tennis star. •
"Eddie Dibbl shouted at me 'Lady, art you sure
about your call?'," she recalls. "i was teared. 1t wu
humillatiaa -one of the best players in tho world
queationiaa your call and then 1tandina over you to
make sure you checked the ri&ht mark on the coun."
That was seven years 110. Parotta, who will be on
the lines when the U.S. Open Tennia Cbamp1onshiP1
bqins Tuesday in New York, bu listened to dozens of
saumina pro tennis stars since then. incJudina Jimmy
Connors and John McEnroe on the same day at the recent International Tennis Tournament here.
"It didn't bother me," says Parouat who bu
doubled as a cha.tr umpire dunna the J)Ut mree yean.
.. You have to be very thick·skinoed. You can't take it
penonally. "I make 100 calls in the counc: ofa tournament.
Every close one is questioned, but you can't worry
about what they'rt sayina, It's a judament c:all. You
have to be very comfortable with yourself. You have to
bave sclf~onfidencc. You have to be strona and posiuve."
Like Parotta, most tennis officials are volunteers.
Ken Farrar, chief of officials for the Men's
International Professional Tennis Council, says that
some aren't cut out for the job "and we have to tell thim
don't come back."
Another dozen a.re trying to make a li.vina out of
officiatina. Only two are employed full·Uf1:1e ,bY ~e
council and usually can be foond 1n the umpU'C 1 chair
for the final of m-.,or tournaments.
The hope · 11 to increase to I 0 or I 2 full·time
officials by next year, Farrar says.
"The players arc I 00 percent for'it.." he says."They
all say we've got to have professional officiatina."
• Still, Farrar says officiatina has improved con·
sidcrably in the past decade as the salaries have aone up
to $500 to $800 a week plus expenses for a good chair
umpire. "Ten. 15 years ago, an official used to come off
the clubhouse porch with a gin and tonic in his band,"
he SI}'!· ·The Open is the best," Parotta·says. "They are
constantly evaluatinf. the officials, and if you don't get 1
hiah rating, you don t set invited back ...
To qualify, officials must pass tests for eyesiaht and
beanna. They must have loud voices and aood hand
signals and must, Farrar says, "sell thetr calls" without
hcs1tation.
"A good umpire is like a benevolent dictator. He
controls the match but maintains a rapport with the
players," Farrar says. -we don~t like lo see cDnfront.a·
lion. The idea is remain low-key and not be notiocd.
Quote of the. day
M11'11D Dav( involved 1n Denver attempts
to obtain a m~f:~eaaue baseball team, on repor_ts by former 0 d A's owner t.hat the team will move to Denver next season: "He's an old
reprobate. No self-respecting fi~h .woul~. be
wrapped in the comment of Charlie Finley.
Barnwell traded to Redaklna
OXNARD -The Los An1eles [!]
Raiders traded starting wide receiver •II• Malcolm Barnwell· to the Washinaton
Redskins Monday in exchange for a
second-round draft choice.
Barnwell, 27, h.0-been a starter for the last three
seasons and was the Raiders' top pass catcher amona
wide ~ivcrs in 1984 with 45 receptions for 851 yards
and two touchdowns. He became expendable with the continuin1
improvement of third-year man Dok.le Williams, who
had the best averaae per reception. 23.1 yards, among
the Raiders' re<:eivcrs last year.
Williams moves into the startJng naht-s1de
receiver's spot, completing a transfonnation for the
Raiden at wide receiver.
Rookie Jessie Hester. a first-round draft choice,
h.as replaced OifTBranch at the other starung position.
Branch is on the injured reserve list.
Portland Breakera az Ralaton
• PORTLAND -John Ralston, presi-[!]
dent of the Portland Breakers and generally f II• rcprded as a founder of the Umted St.ates
Football League. has been fired by the
owner of the financi.ally troubled Portland franchise.
Team owner Joe Canizaro replaced Ralston with
Jack Galm1che. the Breakers' vice president.
''I'm gone." Ralston, 58, wd Monday from his home in Menlo Park.
Canazaro. whose team lost all its players to free
agency and ha~n't met a pa yroll since late June. said:
"We'll be making ¥ announcement at the proper
time " .
"As have most of the teams. we've reduced our
staff to the bare minimum. John's a fnend, and he's still
trying to help," Can1zaro said from New Orleans.
Cowboya remain undefeated
JR YING, Texas -Rafael Sepuen Ell
booted a 24-yard yard field goal with three f II •
seconds left Monday night to brina the
unbeaten Dallas Cowboys a come-from·
behind 15-13 National football Lcag\le prescason
victory over the winless Chicago Bears.
Th1rd-stnng quarterback Steve J>elluer completed
three passes on a dnve to the Chicago I I-yard line
before Septien kicked the winner.
Sepucn beat San Diego last week on a 47-yard field goal in overtime.
. .....
Bell leada Blue Jaya to 4·9 win
a .. , •• , a.n homered for tho fourth Ill conteCUtive pme and O~ lora.. a late subttttu~ into the atartina lineup1 doubled
twice and drove in two rum Mooaa~t, • lcadina Toronto to• 4-3 American ue victory over
Minnct0t1 •.. o..r,. Bntt hom for the fourth con.ecuuve pmo and drove ln four runs. while Bal
McAa• and Dan W... knocked in twnruDt lPi«:t u
Kanas City trouncccl Teiw. 9.2 . . . QarUe Moen
lina1ed bome the liebtt4k:inc run dwi.na a thn».run eiahth innina that tent Mil· waukee to an 8-3 victory over
Oeveland for a spilt of' their twi-
niaht doubleheader. Milwaukee's
victory snapped a four.pme la.
iq streak and also ended
Oevelaod'• flve-tame winnina
striq. n tbe first aame. ''"' WlllMI hit a sacrifice Oy in the
bonom of the ninth innina to aive
tbc Indians a .-.3 victory ... Claw
Davta hit a two-run homer and
Bell drove in three runs to lead San
Frana1CO to a 7-4 victory over Montreal ... Oree
Walker hit a solo home run with one out in the bottom
of the 10th ionina, powerina the Chicqo White So:x to
a 7-6 victory over Bostor ... JIU Be,...,.er pi«:bed
seven suoq inninas. Danell Enu bit a two-run
homer and LM "'1taktr alJo drove in two runt to lead Detroit to a ~3 victory over Seattle ... Sine Kiefer
raced to the plate as Deve CoWu lqpd out an infield
bit with two out in the I Sth innina. and the Oakland A's
bad them1elves a 3-2 victory over tho Nbw York
Yanktet.
St. Loal8 blanlr• Cincinnati
Dauy Cox continued his seuon·lona • mastery of Cindnnati Monday niaht
tossina a six·hitter to aive St. Louis a s:-0
National Leque victory, their si:xtb in 1
row. Ttl'I')' PeMletoa •inaled home 1 run and Oult Smt~ bunted in another to nelp the Cardinals maintain
their bold on fint place in the NL Eut. The Cardinals
improved to 76-46, the flnt time they've been 30 games
over .SOO since 1968 ... Elsewbc~. ClaW Davia bit a
two-run homer and drove in three runs to lead San
Francisco to a 7-4 victory over
Montreal. Dave LaPolat, 7-11,
allowed six bits and three runs
over seven inninp . . . Gerald
Ptl'I')' sinaled home Dalt Muptay
in the ninth innina, aivina At.la:nta
a 2-1 victo~ over Pitubur&h in
Bobby WlM 1 debut u the Braves'
rnanqcr. The win broke Atlanta's
losina streak at six pmes ... Jau
8amHJ'1 sinaJe with the bases loaded and one out in the ninth
Smttb . innina scored Tom Foley with the
tic-breakin• run and pve Philadelphia 1 .-.3 victory
over San Dieao ... Steve Z.,el pined his fint m~or
leque victory by hittina a three-run home run, addma
an RBI sinaJe and scatterina seven hits u the Chicago
Cubs defeated Houston, 10-4.
PETE ROSE
COUNTDOWN
Cl011'1J6
ID oa
·Ty Cobb
Wbat Rote dtd
Mo1day:
Hcwas I for4in
the Reds' 3-0 loss
to the St Louis
Cardinals in Cin-
cinnati.
Kini• •tin ftnt-round pleb
INGLEWOOD -The Los An&eles "ti) Krnas' two fint-round picks in the l 985 ,
amateur draft have agreed to terms on
multi-year contracts with the National .
Hockey League team, the Kinas announced Monday.
No details of the contracts with Craia Duncanson
of Naughton, Ontaho, and Dan Gratton of Brantford,
Ont. were released.
Televlalon, racllo
TELEVISION
4:35 p.m -BASEBALL: Dodgen at New
York Mets, Channel 11.
11:30 p.m. -TENNIS: U.S. Open biah· hghts, Channel 2.
RADIO
4:35 p.m. -BASEBALL: Dodgen at New
York Meu, KABC (790).
7:30 p.m. -BASEBALL: Baltimore 11
Angels, KM.PC (7te).
Biondi puts on pressure
.with a third gold medal
KOBE. Japan (AP) -American
swimmer Milt Blond1 won hiJ thild
·aofd' me&l· "fodiy, while· Dmili)i"
Bilozm:he of the Soviet Union woo
four ln aymnuticti brinaina hiJ total
to&utattM World UnlvcnityOamea.
Americana won three of the day's
Ove swtmmi!\& events and broke two
of tho three Oimes reoords that fell.
But Soviet l)'mJWtics victorica
pve the Soviet Union 12 aolds
overall to ci&bt for the United Stain.
South Korea and the Netherlandl
each had two.
Aside from Bilozerche's four a<>ldl,
bit teammate Valentin Motilny woo
two in ~~ and the Soviets
won one in swimmina.
BUozerchc who won the team and
all-round individual Jold medals on
Sunday, ad.d~oldl on the tide
horse, rinp. el b&n and floor
exera1e1. an earned a tilver behind
Motilny on the horizontal bu.
Mosilny also tied for the sold on the
side hone. .... China won 1t1 firat 1old when Huana Wofu tied wtth Bilozerebe for
8nt ln the floor exerciJCl1 and Cuba
won itl fint with Cuinuro Suarez'
victory in the vault.
Bidhdi won the 100 meten in 49.14
aeoonda, behind the world best of
48. 9S be set earlier this month, but the
crowd cheered when it wu an-
nounced as a world record, betterlna
the 49.36 set by American Rowdy
Gainca in f981.
Both Biondi and silver medalist
Stephan Caron of France broke the
Unlvenity Games record of SO.SI.
Biondi of Moraga, Calif., earlier
won aolds in the men's 200.meter freestyle and the 4 x 200.meter
freestyle relay and took a silver in the
JOO.meter butterfly.
The US. quart.et broke the pmea
record of 3:49.64 in the women's 4 x
I 00-meter freestyle relay, winnina in
3:49.10. The SOvict Union wu sec-
ond in 3:51.17.
The Soviet Union's Iaor Polyanski
won the men's 200.metcr backatroke
in I :S9. 76 seconds b~e aames record of 2:00.42, but au·
short of his o~-World o 1:58.14. Sean Murphy of da was
second iin 2:02.69.
In the women's 400-meter freestyle
final, Patty Sabo of Dearborn, Mich.,
won in 4:16.23, followed by Hun-aary's Andrea Orpsz in 4: 16.88.
Carmen Bunaciu won Romania's
tint aold oftbe pmes with a victory
In the women'• l 00.meter backstroke
In 1:03.67J._ed&lna Jolanda de Rover
· of tlf~ N~metfitid~ who was second
in 1:03.7S.
The U.S. women's bukctball team,
meanwhile, consistently workirll tbe
ball under the basket for aood 1hota, whi~pcd Britain 17·36 today in 1
prehminary match.
Led by Katrina McClatn, J 9, of
Charleston, S.C., who acored 16
points, the Amencans notched their
third victory with a persistent offense
and an aure11ive defense. Amanda
Spry, 20, was the top British scorer
with IS.
Ten teams, divided into two
aroups,arecompetioain the women's
event. The Uoited States and Soviet
Union both lead in their aroups with
three victories and no louea.
With quick 1oals by McClain and
Chl.llA Perry, i ·~ of Los Aniol~ and
sharp p1s1CS rrom Guaril ~neryl Cook. 22, Of lndi.anapolia, the U.S.
team built a 3S·23 halftime lead.
In qt.her action, the Soviet women
defeated Canada S9·3S with an effec.-
tive zone defense and fut counter· attacks, especially by Elena
Tchaouuova, who l<:Ored 16 points,
and au.ard Olcc:ia Barcl, who bad 14.
C&nada came within one point of
tyina at 20-19 in the 12th minu~ after
a tllree.point aoaJ by auard Lynn
Polson. But repeated points by
Tchaoussova and forward Olp
Yakov1ena made the halftjme score
32·19. The shorter Canadians continued
to press the Soviet zone throuahout
the game, usina fast pus work
ccnte~ around Polson, who scored
nine pomu. Forward Beth Cochran
netted ciaht points, but the Canadian
women couJd not effectively pen·
ctrate the Soviet defense.
Braves name Wine manager
ATLANTA (AP) -Bobby Wine,
eaJlina it one of the hijhliabts of bis career, WU named manqet of the
Atlanta Braves for the remainder of'
the l 98S season Monday followina
the firina of Eddie Haas.
"Lots of thinp can happen in six
weeks," Wine· Said at a news con·
ferencc shortly before Monday
niaht's sched1.1led game with the
Pittsburah Pirates.
Bobby Wine
in 1he throes .of. a m.pme losin.a
streak. Atlanta won only one of its last
13 outiaas.
Wine, 46, said he intended to have
an apreuive team that wouJd be
runnma. stealina and bunting. ~
"We mi&ht run into some outs, but
we're 10101 to be agressive," said
Wine, who has been the third base
coach this season.
Haas wasn't available for com·
mcnt. "We've aot nowhert to ao but~," Wine laid of a team that bu stru ed
throua;h a dismal season mired in d\h
place 10 the National Leaaue West
race. "The playen are embarrassed
about the way things have been aoina.
~ ... "We're not aoina to die."
ftnt season u a m.,;or leaaue man-
qcr.
GcneraJ Manaaer John Mullen said
Haas was 1oin1 to take a week cS'ff;but
that the manaaer would liave a job in
the Atlanta orpnization as long u be
wanted one.
Mullen said team owner Ted
Turner, who il on a businc11 trip,
phoned Monday momina and told
him to make the chanae.
( j Hass~ 50, a member of the Braves
orpnization since I 9S8, was in bis
Haas departed with a 50-71 record,
22 games behind the frontrunnina
Los Angeles Dod&ers. and left a team
Tanner: Pirate_s took drugs
·instead of NL East pennant
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Pittsburah Pirates Manaaer
Chuck Tanner aarees his 1983 team, reportedly riddled
with cocaine problems, would have won the National
Leaaue East championship if players "rve heard
mentioned" hadn't been involved witb drugs.
Several current Pirates, speaking on the condition
they not be identified, recently blamed the team' 1983
second-place finish on drua problems. Tanner, in response
to those charses, said be has no evidence linkina any of his
present or former P.layers with drup.
But, he said. 'If a ballplayer 11 usi~ drugs, he's the
same as an injured player. If a player is injured and you
don't know about it, and be keeps playing, it has to hurt . .. .....you.
Tanner noted that Montreal Expos President John
McHale recently blamed cocaine for his team•s failu~ to
wio the 1982 NL East title.
Buebalrs recent druaproblems, Tanner said. aren't so much a reflection of cbanaes in the sport and
skyrocketing player salaries, but chanaes in society.
"The pme hasn't ch.an1ed that muctl, the world bas
ch&nJed "Tanner said. ":Y-he problems that arc prevalent
in baieb&ll are prevalent in ~icty. In ~e business worl4.
the peroentafc usina drugs miaht be h.iahcr, probably u
hiahcr, than m baseball." .,
Tanner said he recently talked to Cardinals Mana.ger
Whitey. Henoa and both ~ t~at it i~ almost
impou1ble to detect when a player ts usma cocaine.
"Youjustcan'ttell "Tannersaid. "hurcubelldidn't
know it (in 1983) ... if I bad known it, I would have done
somethlna about it, I would have tried to help them."
T!e 1983 Pirates, not considered b)' many expens as
serious pennant contenders, led the NL Eu1 ~late as Sept.
17 but lost eiJht of their lut 14 pmes. They finished in
second place, six games behind the division-wi nning
Pbiladel hia Phillies.. "I ::fon•t think there's any question drup cost us the
pennant," said one player. wbo spoke recently on the
condition he not be identified. "Look bow many auys had
off-ycan."
ANG·ELSHOMEREDBYO's, 17-3 •••
Prom Bl
Minncsota1• but that was the fint (curtain cau)."
Was be thin4ing of a fourth borne
run, a feat oofy IQ.men have ever
accomplished. in his final two at·bata.
"I was aware ofbittin1 for the cycle
for home runs and of possibly hittina
two from the left side and two from
the riaht. I don't think that's ever
been cfonc before.
"I went up thert aoin' for it I had
three, why not try it apin? Anything
Angel Manaaer Gene Mauch ... I Uke
the way be carried himself ever since
he's been in the leaauc."
Said Bobby Grich who hit his
eiahth home run of the year in the
fourth innina. "That's the most
awesome display of power I've seen in
my career."
The seven home runs is the most
ever aivcn up by the Aqels in one
aame and it means that Ansel pitchers
have aiven 22 home runs in the lut
eiaht aa,nes.
Orioles' 17-run attack was Alan
Fowlkes. Fowlkes, relicvina
Candelaria, p ve up four home runs
and seven of the runs in his three
innings of work.
* ANO•L NOT•I -Anoela' Madleal o.tff,;
hit in the air has a chance to ao out ~~~~!!!!!!~======!!========~~~~~~~~~~~ hq~. ~ :·1t·~ n<?t every ni&ht Y,OU. ~~ to dnve in rune runs. Otliel'WlJe 1t s JUlt
another game. It wu nice to have the
other fans chcerina me and rootina
for me to hit another.
The lou, combined with Kansas
City's 9·2 win over Texas, cuts ttic
Anaels lead to just I y, .aamca.
Third beaeman Dwt OtCMeM contlnuet to De
troubled with Ille M in In Illa lladl. Of Illa '-'"""• MatlaW .... ~Nici, "I 41oft'I IMl'l't t ctu.. ~ ht con.. out In unttorm, l'lt'I lie 2·> daVt 1w1¥." MM~, MCOtld MMmlln .._.
Of'tdl, wtlO mftMd ~v'I ttrm1 Whtl •
hydration, wea Mela In It. H~ MoftOl'I'. "I
1 wollt UC' ($undty) and tlll celllfte Wit Olnnlne,"
Mid Orlell. "I oon•t know Wlltl II Wit" ... Add
Orlcl'I: Ht Hhlndad Illa llllllM atreu to .,. ""* with 1111 tourfll IMlftt llllma NII , , • Add
madlc:al! ...... llltdler .,... ~. wflO llU
not .Ct°'" tlflCt Jllf'I' 22 MeluM of nerw
lrrll1tloft In hit ten k-. w1I IOlfl "*"°"'°" fol tome re11a111111111on wor11 Dtelnntne lodav. Ctt· 11911. wtlO llld .ntw~ 1urttrV AU11161 S, wltl llklllY rt1o111 tilt Antell Steftn'IMr I wlltll
1111 rotter t11MllCll to .o ... .,.,. . , . flOf'l'lltr'
AllMI report; Orlole .Ctdlef 0. 41 .. Ilea two wlM and ltlrtt Mftl 111 lllt !eat ftw ._..,IMICIM Coming Soon ...
ell to ampus
I
\. ~
A special aection with editorial on
academica, fuhion, activitiee, apon.
and echool activities. '
Tuesday, September 3rd
To advenlae ln thla eeotlon, c.all 842-•821
"Not only am I happy with EddJe
Murray . tonlaht, I'm haP.PY with
Eddie Murray every nisbt, 'said Bal·
timore Man1.1c.r Earl Weaver.
"That'• what MVPs are made of. It's a
shame, as valuable u he's beel1 to the
Orioles, that he ba1n't won one. He's
been there, rookie year on tf\couab."
· "That man is a 1ood hitter." 11id
The benefactor of the Orioles'
ofTen•ive barraae was Dennis
Martinez (I J • 7). He went the first
eia)\t inninp, aivioa up si:x hits and
three runs. TwO'of the bits led to their
onty Nfttral bt pveup home.run to
Bobby Grich and Juan Beniquez.
John Candelaria (~1), one of five
Anpl pi«:hcrs, took the loss, lastina
just l 'f>inninp, pviqupsix hitl(two
home runs) and six Nns.
Probably the biaaest victim of the
·DODGERS DROP METS, 6-1
riomBl • . • • •
The Dodatrs en,pneered their
Mondayni&ht victory over New York
behind the p1tchin, of Fernando
Valenrucla and W1tb the help of the
h1ttln1 of Pedro Guerrero.
• Valenzuela, I ~8. wtnt the distance
on 10 tlits. winajna bia nfntb ttraiabt
dedslon. while Guerrero went ).for-4
with an R8f and 1 Nn ICOfed The Oodaen scored four in the sixth
lnninJ off Mell ri&ht~der Ed
lyoc:h. 10.7, then tdOtd two mo~ in
the seventh.
"He's won 01ne 1n a row," la10rda
said. "Hc'1 a clever, courqeous
pitcher. He's a cloter, and he doean't
lose hi• poise."
Valenzuela survived a mild scare in
the ninth inoina when 'the Meu
loaded the buca with one out. Keith
Hernandez led off wnb a sin,Je and, one out la~r. Dlrryl Stnwbeiry b.lt 1 c:hecked-swi~ infield sin&le. A DJoop
afftl)e to riaht by OeOllC Foster
Joaeied the ~ brinaina up Ray Kn~t, who hid tinaJed two innin carher
"How close wt! f 10 taklna him
. The OrtoMI' attnlllt llltCIW O.... _._
• It IM Otf!f Orloltt' alerter wlttl 1 wlMfnt .... ,... ........... """ ............
.900 ~ (IM) ... Tonftfll't ttlfflllt !tltefltr ipr ~ Orloltl, AllNI Wit IC!Mt ll\c•a .... tMlft Into IN tttM l7•S l#etlfM ... Intl 1t1t A,,...., lnclucflftt t 10-2 tnlt1I ti Anafllll'll
Sl.otunl •.• ·laltlmort llW1t• ,cat ... . ~ Mt mltMCI Witt .... ..,,. In Ill• .... .,. CM"', hM t cun'tftl .,,.... If ... CDflMCUflW ..,,. w s.m COMKu1M .,...,..
ou1r· luorda ukod himtcll. uru tell ~u bow dote I wu to takiDa him out
1! you ~U me how dote they Mre to
ICOriOJ. I run."
Al at -turned out, no• very dote.
Valerm1ela Sot Kni&bt to pop to
shallow center, and Raliel Santana,
wbo bad l•O hits. Uned Out to
V.aletmada.
Alona. with ntatl.a, both Pld~k
and Stm¥r1>my had two hit• off
Valeruuela.
The Mets took a I.() I d apinst
Valenzuela in the third lnruna.
t ,,
1
, .
~ • • " .
MAJOR lAAOU• STANDtHGS ~l.Mtut
Toronto
New YOl'k
Dttroll
h llln\o(t
l9ol1on
Mllwau11 ..
Citvtltnd
••n-ocvrmw W L
71 Sol
.. Sol
u '° '° ~ $1 ..
SS '1 .. 17
•AIT OfVISION
71 47 .424
, ....
' ·~ \4
14 .... ,4
n SO Stl 4
t7 $1 540 IO'h •s s1 m 11~
SI 64 415 It ....
S6 .. d• 20"'1 44 to lU U\l'J ....... "-"
h ttlmort 11 C.lllOfnle l
Cltvtiend 4-i. Mllwe!A .. l·I
Clllctoo 7, ~'°" • 110 fnnlno11
l<tl!MS City '· TIXH 2 Toronto 4, Ml""9'10le l
o.frolt '· S..111e )
0.kltlld l , N-York 2 I IS lnnlnQ\)
Ttd9V't0.....
h lllmott (McGrtOQf' 10-111 et AftMtl
(Wiii l 1-7), (11)
8otlOll <Trulfllo l ·2) ti C~ !WwO·
le S·Sl. tnl
TtMS ,(Nom 4 II et Cll!Qoo (autM 1)-tl. lnl
TorOlllO (Flier 7•01 ti MlftfMll(lle (VIOie l)·IOl, In)
l<MMI Cl!'( (JtcltlOfl 12·7) at Mii·
wtuk .. (Cocanower )•31. <n>
O.tro4t lTenana 7·111 el S..111e (YounQ 1·14), (nl
,.._ YOl'k (Guklrv 16·4) at Oeltland (Jonn l·SI (nl
W ..... V'I~
Toronto at Mlnnttolt
8otlOll al Citvtlend, Cn)
· Ttx.H •• c nic.oo. In) Kanu1 Cltv et Mllwaut.ff, (nl
Only OI,,..,.. llChtOoltcl •
N•tten.1 L-.ue
WIST DIVISION w L Pct. G8 DM9w1 73 ., 5" s.n Oltoo 67 SI Sl6 ,....,
Cincinnati 64 SI us 9 Hou\lon S6 67 455 ,, ....
Atlante SI 71 419 12 San Fr,ncl11eo .. 7S .390 251 ...
•AST DIVISION ~I. LOUI\ 76 46 623
New YCWll 7S 49 60S ,
Montr .. I 69 56 5$1 , . ..,
Cllk.aoo 61 61 soo IS Pf1Aadtll>hl1 SI ·6S 4n .. ....,
Plll~gh l9 " J2'J l6V.
MelmV'• sc.t'ft ~4.NtwYorll I
San Fr ancl1<0 7, Montreal •
Plllladtti>nla 4, Sen o reoo 3
St Louis l . Clncrnnall o
A"-nle 2. Ptttsl>uroh I
cn1caocr 10. HoullOfl •
T .. Y', C0-1
Oed9W'l IAtuu ll-11 al New Yori.
IFtrnandll 5·71, n
San Frenclsc.o !81ut S-6) et MonttHI
IYouman• 1·11. n
San OltQO ITh\Jrmono S·1) et Phlla<ltl
i>nl• (Oennv 1·101, n
SI Louil (Tudor 15·8) .. , Clnclnna11
(McG11flo1n 1-1 l. n
Plt111>uroh lRnoOtn I• Ill el Allanla
(8t0ro1lan 5· 111, n
Cll!Qoo 18oltlh0 0-21 e r HOU\ton
(Nltllro ,_10), n
W..,...V'iGtmH
Clllc.oo a l Hou1lon
Plttit>uroh at Allenl•
Sf LOUii a l Cincinnati, n
A.MERtCAN LEAGUE
Ortoles 17. Aneats ,
8AL TIMOttlE CALIFOltNIA
W11>11tn1 2b
Lecvr1
Rlc*tnu
EMurrv It>
0-lD .MKYno Oh
Gron Ph
Ra\'frd JO
GRonckN
Shtfl>V ct
Otmc>avc
al>rhlll abrhtN
5 7 2 0 Certw It> S I I 0
S 2 2 0 8'<1\Qu1 ct 4 1 I 2
4 J 2 2 Jta.snr1 l O o O
5 l t t Ptlll\ ct 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 Oownln9 If 1 0 I 0
l 0 0 0 R J~ Oh 4 0 t 0
2 0 0 0 Grlcn 21> ) I I I
6 I 2 I JK.Howl 31> J 0 0 0 Siii SchOflldu •OIO
S231 8oone c 1 000
3 J I 2 NerrOll c 2 0 0 0
Hri«Ck l>h 0 0 0 0
Tehlb 43 17 17 16 T..... >I J 6 l
k trt l>V ""*'1111 ~ en 140 oa-11 ~ 200 100 000-l ~ Wlllftln9 A81 -R~Plltfl (1')
OP-8elllmort 2 C.llfornle I L08-
lhlllmor• 7, Ca1llornle 1 28-Alpkan
HA-EMurrt v l (24), 8tnfQue1 (7), Sl\ell)of
!31. Anford (t ), GltCMtnlcke <121, Grich (I), Oemp.-v (f ) SF-AIPlten.
IP H It la aa SO ......,_..
OMartntt W, 11·1 • 6 ) J ,
TMarllntt I 0 0 0 0 c;....,.,..
CeOO.larl• L,2· l 12·3 6 7 7 I 2
Fowlkes l s 7 1 l 4
Holland 2 1·3 1 0 0 I 2
0 ~ I I 0 0 0 0 LS.nchet 1 4 J J I I
H8P-Wlooln• l>v Cen<ltl•rl•, Grich 1>1r
OMarllner WP--Can<ltlarl•, Fowllltt,
HOiiand T-l 00 A-25 IOS. ...
ANGEL AVERAGES
8trll0ut1
Oownlno
Car-
ScOllltr• J_,
Jeck ton
P•lll•
OtClnc:et Grk:ll
G"1ltt'
8oont
Narron Howd
Sdlofleld
Wlllono
Henctrlck T .....
aATTING
A• • H H• ••• Pct.
"' .. " 1 JJ 2'S m '° IOI 17 •• 276
332 51 91 2 l2 273 .. 10 17 I 6 .264
l09 s• " " S9 161
360 .. 9) 20 64 251
317 •9 ,. I 17 _, ..
l4l 40 ... 13 St 245 w S2 90 • )I 245
74 • " 0 l 24)
)45 11 aJ 4 )9 ,., m 12 ,. s 13 130
I? 12 18 , 1 .2'20
l34 3' 67 • )6 .201
204 14 39 • 11 191 21 , , I , 095 4,1,. ill 1049 117 SIS .2SO
PITCHING
IP H aa SO W·L•aA
lt'J) t I 10 0-0 I 10
6f'J) 61 1S 41 7·7 I 4' as 11 2s 3' M 110 I~ 1•• 1' 1)6 11·7 301
l•l'I) 171 ~$ 41 lJ-6 l7'
10'.'> Tl 24 37 H l 14
~ 40 IS If 2·1 3'3
ll'2 144 $1 S2 S· 10 4 30
141 ,,, 4' 74 t • 4J7
l7 44 14 14 2·, 4 JI
S) " ,, ,, 2·0 •..n
1••1) 21 t 1' 2· I 7'1
7 • 4 s 0-0 '00
HollenO
Moor• Cllburn
Wlll
ltorntnl<k
Luoo
C«befl
$14tlOll
McO .. klW
ltM
S.11CM1
CancMlarla
Fowlkes
Tellll llJ1 1111 417 SU 11·~ J.JI
Mt/fort 12, Clll>urn S, S.ndle1 I S.vn
SielOll I
NATIONAL L•Acw• ~6.Mltl l
~ ... Utt .... 'tORI( .. ,., .. , ...
Dunc:1111 n S I I lkklM ft> 4 0 0 0 Caotl )&> 4 I l 0 PKloA rf 4 I t l
YftdrllCf s l 2 I Hrnno1 II> 4 0 ' 0 ~«<II 4 I > I CIW'I., C ) 0 0 0 ~If 0 0 0 0 SlrWllf'tl cf 4 0 2 0
arock lb 4 I l o P'Otttr If 4 o 1 o
Manhel rf S I I I 1(111.0111 lb 4 0 I 0
~It< · l t <t I knter. u 4 I 2 0 •
S.x21> 40 2 I Lvndll> 1000
VeleN!tt 2 0 0 I L.Mclll> 0 0 0 0
GorfNnl> 0 0 0 0
Ov1111r on I 0 I 0
$Wlp 0000
T..-» • Ii • T"""' a) t 1t I k«tlrw ....... l.M~ ----6 .... v... .., .. --1 Geme w111n1no Itel -Sdotda w.
DP-LOI Anotltt 2, Ntw Yortl 1. L08-
L01 ,.,,...,.. t , Ntw YOl'll 7 26-<iuwrwo, unc1r .. UJ1. sa-s.11 1211 s--ca11t1, Lv~. Vt*11UIWI SF-Veltn1ueltl
lft H IUa H SO u. .......
Vtltfl&utle W, lt-1 f 10 1 I
.... Yn L\'ncll L,10-7 S 1·3 f 4 I I
LMCfl i·l > 2 0 0
Gonnen 2 o O O 1 o
Sltk I 10010
Leech pltc:Md to a tlellert Ill 7th lnnlno
WP-lltlen1""9 T-141 A-43,063
MAJOR L•Aou• LIAD•llS
Amertain L...-
8ATTING <•ti l>elll-eooes, 8oll0ft,
.J.st; 8r•ll. t<.,,... Cltv. .>51, Htnditrton, ,.._ Yor ... )40, Mtlllnlllv, ,.._York, lJI,
L.ecv, h ttlmor1 • .316.
RUNS Hendtrton, ,.._ Yon., 106:
ltlollen, e.lllmort, "· Murrtv. a.111more , , .. ; Whlltker, OIKrolt, N; W~. New
Yorll, IS.
A81-MalllnOIY, Htw Yn, ICM, Mui• " rav, 8altlmort, 102; Wlnfltlo, New York,
• ..... Toronto, 17. ltk*MI, 8alllmort, 1'7
Hrrs-e.... ao.1on. m. """"*"· ,.._ Yn, 1'3; Wlllon, KeMH Cltv, lg; ~edlrf. S..1111, 151, er.It, KtnMs Cltv. 1• OOU8LEs.-Mlltlnolv. ,.._ Yorll, lf.
8udlner, 8oston, M; 8ooo1, &osfOll, n,
c -. Mllwau11 ... 32; 8rell, K.nsa• Cltv,
30; Wtlll•, Chlceoo. 30; Devis. 0.klelld, lO.
HOME ltUNs-Flsk, Chicago, lJ;
Evant, 0.troll, 2', e.11, TorOlllO, 27.
8al0onl, ICMMs Cltv, 26, G llloma1,
S..ttt., 26, 11:11111'1\tn, Otttllnd, 26
STOLEN BASES HendtNtln, Htw
York, $1, ....... ,.,...., lfi Wlhon, Kenw•
Cltv, 3', 8ut•, Cleveland. 35; MoMO\',
··TOl'onto, 31
PITCHING I 10 dtcblom>-Cawll,
......, 1·1. lM 1 GuldrV, ,.._ Ycwll, 16-4.
2.92; Sal>trtltOtn, l<tMaS City, 16-S, Ul,
81rlu t, Otkland, 10-4, "6; ltlbrandt, Kansu Cllv, ,,..,, 2 7'; lt-..k:ll, ,......
ll-6, "'· STlllKEOUTS-8 lv1tv111, Mlnnnota,
160; Mon-11, Ottrolt, JS2, F hMliltr,
Ollcaoo. 147, 8urn1. Cllica90, 131, Witt, ,......,K.
SAVEs-Qul.enbtrrv, KanM• Cltv, JO.
Hernandlt, Ottrolt, 27, Howtll, O.lli.nd,
23, Rlolltlll, N-Yorll, 23; 8. Jamts,
Chk.aoo, 12, 0 , Mten, ~ 22.
~ ..... &.......
8A TTING (300 el tleh)-McGtt, St
LOI.Ill, .360; Htf'r, St Louis, .l24; o-Twe,
Oedelrl. .3111 1t11M1, MonlrMI, .Jl(I, Gwvnn. Sen 0!9oo, .306
ltUNs-Murlll!V, Atlante, tS. lttlnn,
Montrttl, 92, Coltman, St Louil , •· c;.u.nw., Oedelrl, N1 McGtt, SI. Loul1,
IS. R81-Muri>I\.,, Allanf1, 90, Herr, SI
Loul1, 17. Perlltr, Cincinnati, ... J Clarll,
St Lou11, M; G Wiiton, PhlladtlPhl1, I I
HITS-McGtt. SI Louis, 160; Gwynn,
S.n OltOO. 149, H•r, SI Loul•, 146, llalnn,
Monlrtal, 141; Ptrller, Clnclnnell, 141
OOU8LE~trr, SI LOUI\, JI,
WallKI\, Monlr .. 1, 30, Perller. Cincinnati,
29, Htr11tndl1, N-York, 11, G Wllsoft,
Pl'lhadtlOl'll•. 27
HOME ltUNs-Mu<Ptw, Allanl•. Jl, G"""", o.....n., >01 P•rlltr, Cincinnati,
23, Scl'lmldl, Phlledt!Phla. n. J Clark, St
Louil, 21.
STOLEN BASES-Colt!Nln, St LOUll,
... Reines, MonlrHI, so. LOPft. Chic.too. 42, McGlt, SI LOUii, 42, Aeaus. Clnclnnall, .,
PITCHING ( 10 dtcl110nll-Franco, Cfn·
ctnnall, 11-1, I"'· Gooden,,.._ York, 20-l,
17'; Wlldl, o.....n. 9·1. 2.101 Her1NI«,
~ U.J, 1.l71 8 urkt, MonlrHI 1·2
1.71, H1W1'.ln•, Sen Oteoo, 1'-4, l 02
STAIKEOOTs-<;ooOan, New Yortc, 112,
llyan, Hou1I011, 178, Soto, Clnclnnell, 171,
VIMl!l!Mla, ~. 1711 Oarllno, Nt\111
York, 135
SAYE~HrdOll, ~trul, 32, 5"'11h,
Cnlc:aoo. 11, GotMot, San Oleoo. 71.
Suiter, Atlenta, 20. 0 Smith, Hou1ton, 19
Power. Cincinnati. If
,,,.,.,.~
STAT• CHAMrlONSHIPS
(I t WesflNrt T..WS Qui))
0,... ~ FINI
Frt"ll APtctltfla (Frtsnol a.I. CllarlH
Fltchtr IHunllnolOll 8..utl. 6-4, 7·S
<>OM Otlltlln FINI He11k Lk>Vd (An.th41m)·8ud 01vf1
(Wtallakt) a.I Sttvt Fulctlko·Gltnn
Euoenlo (UPlend), 7·6, S-7, 6-3
Women's tournament
(et ~,N.Y.)
~Flllllh
"
8arbar• Polltr (U $ ) Otf Htltn Kelftl
(Canada); 4·6, •·l . 6-2 !Poller win•
t12.000, Ktlftl win' 16.4001 OtutlMt ,,.,.,,
Gebrltl• Satletlnl·M«CIOt\ Per (Arotn
llna) def AndrH Hotlkoe-Ketrl11e SkrOll\ka
(C1tc.hoslovatcla), S·7, 6·•, 6·3
... ..,.
Cat lfWlt I
127
Evtllo Ptrt1 lS.nle Anal Guttevo
L-1 !Lot A~•I SPiii oraw uo
Jot Ruelas (Wt1tmln11tr) a.I Jttu\
Louno llllW•leol KO 12:21 l'WI rouno> 1• lrltll Ptrt1 IS.n11 Anal Ott Paul 8erlOll
(Ortoon) TKO I I 20 6th round)
140
TtrT\' Burton (Otltleno) o.t Roonev
CaP91 (Sen 8• 11tOlno I SPiii cltC
IM
TllOmt1 Ptrtt CS.11te Anal Otf CllnlOll lttvmvt l,...,,tda) KO (SI lrO found) Heeo•.,.,
Av.rt "'"°"' (COtftPIOlll a.I Mlllt eer-.. (SKrt mtnlOI TKO (2 01 ?no round)
-
DllMM
MOetD~Y'I a1WLT1 mst" u.-v ,....., "'"T uca. • '°'*""" A• Siio# ((tlt.otl 17 IO .a.oo l'-00
Acct\lel (lttdrOUI 14 00 7 20
1teol1 HOIW IOl1Yttt1l J 60 T1nw: 1;11 4/l
s•COMO uc•. 6V. ·~ Atomic I.a.I IS!evefltl 1 20 UO UO
Corrt Paluno (SOlltl S.IO SCIO
Qo..te Vo (MeH) f 00
Tlmt; 1'11
'' DAILY DOUeLa 16 •I PelCI M30.tO
TitlllD •ACI, Ont mlle
Im Slnh 10...~MY't) 4.00 UO 2 20
J-Sl.llW (Mete) 4 to 2 60
Fr-ie #Mrelt (Vtltftluelel 2 40
Tlmt. 1.l6 J/S.
U •XACTA (6"11NICIUl00
P'<MMTM ua. • tunono'-s1en Off 1s1.-1 uo 1 oo , '° PtumMtre (OllvtrMI 20.40 ~ 20
len:iarll.i1 IMcHerouel 2 60
Tlmr. 1:10 315
"'"" uc•. Ont m11e Eed'1 80ld L..edV (C>Nnl 13 40 I 40 S 00
Vitti Score (P9dro1e) 1110 140
Pr°"' ,,,. (MeM) • 20
Tirne-1 :JI l / s.
U IXACTA (3·/> NICI '312 SO
MJ(TH llACI, • lwtonv' JetllnllllOme (McHe,._I L60 S 00 ).20
J K'• ltunawev <Werdl ll 60 10 20
Populer All (Pedrou ) 3.20
Tlmt: 1:\1 4/S.
RV.NTN IUCI, 6\.'a furlOnO•
Ovltv Old• (~O •HY't) uo 2.60 2 20
SmerMll Ui> ISi.v.MI UO 2 40
lt!Wh Fedor (Ollv-1 2 40
Time: l." 11 s. &S UtACTA C:M) H id MO.lO.
•2 MK SIX (4 II' rt-2-3-1·3) N ICI
12,027 to ,. •!Mino llC:kefl h lx ~"'I
Contolellon Ptck Six Ptld S70.40 10 974
•IMIM tlc:to.tta (flott helnftl
' •IGHTH aACa. l-l/161h mflft.
IN Ste You (Mela} 7 00 uo 3.00
Sllowcrtek (Toro) uo 4 00
SllerP $lneer (OtWlouiMY't) SAO
Time' l·C 215
NINTH RACL Hlltth mitt\
Etwloul 09lltW IMcHro> 77 IO 12 oo 7 60
Good TllOUlfl WllP¥ l T Ot'O) I 00 4 IO
Ntllve Ad (Mesa) 00
Tlmr. 1:0 415.
U IXACTA (6-11 Hid "'17.SG.
12 OAH.Y DOUa&.I (2 ... 1 Pllld SIOUO
Alttndanct. lJ.010.
Nf'L &JCMMllCI .......
'NATIOMAL CO.P'•aENCIE
West
W L T ll'ct. "" ..,,. , 1 0 MW SI
S.n Frencfleo , I 0 6'7 ..
Attanta I 1 0 .33.l " ,.._OrlHn• I 2 0 .l33 ., ••st N.Y Glanh 4 0 0 1.000 95
Oalla1 4 0 0 1.000 ...
wawno1on 3 0 0 I 000 " Plllle°"9flla 2 I 0 667 u
SI Louil , 1 0 ·"" 31
CefllrW
MlllM'IOla , l 0 661 67
OttroO I I I .500 44
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667 ..
.l33 " 333 12
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661 60 .647 62
647 n
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Sunoav. Stc>I I -Oenve< (hOl'nt) I
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Sunon. S.PI IS -el Phlleo.!Phla. 10
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Mondev, Sept 23 -et S..llle. 6 Pm
Sundn. Stc>I 29 -Atlanta (llOtnt), I
Pm
Sundav Ocl 6 -MlnntSOle (llOtntl, 1
pm
Sunoav Oct ll -at hmc>a a.v. 10
em
Sonaev Ocl 10 -al Kanlas Clt\o, 10
em
Sunday, Oct 27 -San FrenclKO
(l'\Of'M), I pm
Sundav, Nov J -New Orleans ll10tMI.
I pm
Sunoav. Nov 10 -a l New YOl'll Glenh,
10 a.m
Sunoev Nov 17 -et Allente 10 • m Sunoav NOY ,. -GrHn 8ev (hOl'nt) I
pm • Sunoav. Otc I -et New Orieenl. 10
am
Mol\Oav Otc 9 -et Sen Franclito. 6
Pm
• Sunday, Otc IS -SI Louil (l'\Of'M), I pm
MonOev. DKi 23 -Lol A~ RelcMn
cnomel. 6 1> m '
••ld9n sc:McMt
•""1ar *"" Sunday Saot I -Ntw York Jtl\
lnomtl 1 pm
ThUf'MSIV. Stc>t 12 -e1 Kanus Cllv S
1>"1
Sundav. Stc>t n -S.n F renclaco
ll'lo!'MI. 1 Pm
Sunday, Stl>I 29 -el Ntw Enoltnd 10
e m
Sundn. Oct • -K•nlH Cltv (hOmt) I
o m
Sundav. Oct ll -NeWl'onMns lhOl'ntl 1 o.rn
Sunoav, Oct 20 -el Cltvtltnd. 10 • m
Monoav. Oc1 :It -S.11 Oltoo lllcl!NI 6
om
SulldlV. Nov l -et S..llle, I 1> m
Sulldav, Nov 10 -ti San Oteoo, 1 p m
Surws.v. Nov 17 -Cln<1n11111 CllOn'ltl. 1 Pm.
S!Jnday, NOY ,. -Denver ChOmel I
D "1
$undav, Otc.. I -11 Atlanta, I om
~v. DK I -•t Denver I Pm
s..nda'I', DK IS -\a41111e (l'IOt'nel 1
om
Sundev DK 13 -a l LOI Al\Otltt
ltll'lll, 6 Pm
Ke4'9tlt
NATIONAL AAU CMAMP'IONSHIP$
Ctt .... ONIM) Al"M~ ,. __ ..,....,.
Oar Mnl\I (CMOM Cltl Mal) lllltd Ill
It.eta , fourt" In lllltltlftl> 12·---~ Ale•I• Me$lll (CMOM dill Marl. llrll Ill ""• ..
MMdil't'• trw.acc11e1111
aAS•aALL ....... ~
ATLANTA 8RAVE~lrt0 EOdlt
Hut, tnaneotf. Mimed &ooclv Wint In· tiff Im manaotr
aAS'taTaALL
NatltNil ........... Aauc.laMll
ATLANTA HAWIC$-Sloneo JO/In
a.111e, ouaro, to 1 ll'Nltl--r con1rac1
BOSTON CEL TICS-Announceo 11\11
• M.L Cerr. OUArO, rt1lrld tnd wll oecornt 1
lCOUI . ·c L E v E L A N 0
CAVALIEllS-AMOUnctcl Ille reslontllon
of Otvld Walklna, vice president of markt1-
1no and uift.
~OOTaALL ................ Lttwt
LOS ANGELES ltAIOEllS-TrtOtO
Malc.olm h rnwtll, wide receiver, to IM
W•Vllnoton ltldllllM for • ,,.. MKOlld· rouno «alt c:holc.
ATLANTA FALCONs-tl .... * llta,11
G'-"erro, _..,, o.Mv Mllltr, i..lcller.
end Vlnc.t Courvl .. , wide reai-Plececl
Mlllt L.tndrum, 119111 eno, on lnlur.d -CINCINNA T1 .8.li.NGAU.-Trao.cl O.vlCI
VerJ«, wldt r-iver. 10 lht Gr_, 81v
PKlltrt lor an undllCIOMd Oratt cnolct
OENVl:R HOHCOS-Sl9neo Oetn
Mlreldl, tadl.lt, to • Ml'lt\ of _.\'..,
contrK11 R .... tael Rav Ale11endt<, wldt
recttvtr, AntllOnv Woodson, llntotdter.
Wlltlur M del.. ¥ftJY, WlllWO Scluum,
ltdlle, Jev ~I 9nd Doll Summen, tlOlll
enct1. and Don 8rtc11111. PUnltr Plactd
Marlllernt Gravit t nd 81Hv Hln$Oll, of·
fan•l,,. llritmtn, end Aa rOll Smith,
llnebeci..er. on Ille lnkH'90 reserve 1111
GllEEN 8AY PACKERS-TreeltG Scoll
&runner, o~rltf't>eck, 10 tllt SI Louil
Cardinal\ lor an UllOltctowO orefl dloite
Rtltuao Kurt KePlldlkt ou.erd AMn
Ruoen Cltfe1"lve eno Otto.rt Fowler.
11nt0actter. eno Lennv Tavto<, w1oe rt·
Ctlvtf
MIAMI OOLPHINs--RttH..0 Eadie
Gercla , lliCktr, Sltvt Polltr. 11....0.Clltr,
llev Conortn, ru11n1,,o !Mick, Ktfl
SoullltrlellO, letlllt, Ad•m Hinds, safetv,
GtorQt ShcYlflOW. wldt rKtlYtf', •llO Dan
Snerp 119'11 tno PlactO 8rven Clari.
quarterlMICll., on lht walvt0-lnlurt0 lltl
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-AnnounctO lht
rttlrtmtnt of Ard\lt MaMlno. -rtertla<t.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-$19ntO
Don 8taou"o•,, llnetleclltr. end Ceoroc
JOl\eS, wlOt rece4Ytr NemtO Ravmond
Hamltlon ull1tan1 c:oacn Rtt.aMO Roonev
~•. Oeftnalvt Dack Nltt. L-e4tvn eno
Jeff Holtmen, offtn1lve llntmtn
NEW OllLEANS SAINTS-Rtt.e\eel
Tim Wll$011 eno Jlmmv •-s. runo1no
l>eell\, Don ThOrP, no._ tecklt, Grt11
HarOlno Ind 80llOV JOMIOn, ~Iva
o.ctu, and Jerrv W'-ter wloe rtctlvtr
NEW YOttK GIANTs--Retea* Tracv
Ht ndtnon, wide receiver Don HalMltltcll.
119111 ,no, Er1c Schul>efl 0kiellr Joe
PrOllOP, PVntt~. 8Ub0e Green. II~~
Mark ~GOii, Oeftn\IVt baek, end Don
Gooaman. runnlno Dack ~ Larrv
Wlnterl eno Ken Oenlet, oefenalve IMl<lll,
on fnlurecl rHervt
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Rtlffa«I 81K
Elko end Ktllh Guthrie, Otft<1slv1 linemen,
Timmie Wart wlOt rtetlYtf', Mark
SltYtntoll, Olftn\IYt l!Mmen. Marvin Wll
llama. 11on1 enct, and Mark Wlhon ~fttv
PlactO 8o!>ov Mlcho 11on1 eno ellO Vlnct Olbv llnttltclter, Oii ,,.. lnluf'ecl ,_..,, 1111
SAN FRANCISCO 4'ef1-Rt1ta..O Scoll
l!lerry, o~rltr1>1Ck Plect<I Fulton
Kuvi..enoan. llntl>acker. end Cherie\ Huff
dtftn\IVt t>Kk, Oii lnturtO rtstrYt
ST LOUIS CAllOINALs-itelee..O VIC
tor Htf1fn allO 8111v Davi\, deftrlilVt IMlt kl,
Rlcharo 01ws011, center 8tnnlt Smith and
Rtno Pttltr-$Oll. Otftnslvt IKllWI, IC 0
Dunn. llOf'll tnd, Kurt Allerman. llMOac;ller
encl Kt!ln Cttntoll wkM receiver PlactO
Quentin Walker rUflnl119 t>Kk. on lnturtcl ,_,,.
TAMPA 8AY 8 UC
CANEERs-lttt.a..O (;leM 8 ulnocn
ouaro, 8vron er•1>11•. Otftn•lv• eno and
AnthOl\v w .. hlnoton, oet.n"ve t>ecll
Pieced Mark Colnev, ••ftlv, on Ille lnlurtc1
rtMNe 1111
WASHING TON ~EOSKINS-TreOeo
Charil• Brown. wlC)t rtetlvtf to lht
Atlante Feleon' tor It C Th~nn of·
ftnalve 11-n HOCKEY
Nt"-'el Htdll\' L• ....
LOS ANGELES KINGS-SIOMCI CrelO
OunctniOtl end Dan Grallon. It'll wl1191, to
mulll·vH r contrecl• MONTREAL CANAOIE NS-TreOtO
Ron Flocltl'lar1, etnier 10 tlle SI Louis
811.tH In exchanot for Perry Gand\tr . rlOlll
wino PHILADELPHIA FL YEltS-Slt ntd
Mlllt IC~. Med coactl. lo a thr-VMI'
conw.ct 1x11r1slon TOttOHTO MAPLE LEAFs-sloneo
Wenoel Clark Ot4en-rH orwaro, ro •
1nree-vttr c:on1rec1
IOCCllt ~ ........ S.Clel' i....,.
CHICAGO STING-Sloned Hu!Mlfl
Birkenmeier, ooallt, to rwo OOt_;Yffr <Oft lrtCll
COLL.a Ga
LIVINGSTONE COLLEGE-Na~
Oevle Corjn '"'Mini hM4 Ibo~ coacn
SLIPPeltY ltOCK-fllel'ltd 8oO 8artett
head tieskttt»all cOKtl
STONY 8ROOK-Htl'NO Dave C•tclltf'e
end Jim St•!otr'weld eWttenl tootllell
COtCllft
Stronger boats,
crew ready for
America's Cup
Money also part
of skipper's drive
to regain trophy
HOLJ..ANO, Mich. (AP)-Suona·
er boats and crews will be t..b.c order of
the day wben Amenca's Cup racma
move. ror the first time in btStory
from the Atlantic Ocean off Rhode
Island to the turbulent waters of the
eastern Indian Ocean off Australia
And· the skipper a.nd executive
director or a well-heeled u .S. syndl·
catc say lbcy_'ll be ready.
Thomas F Ehman Jr .. e~ecutJve
director of the Amcnca 0 Cballenae •
says about SI 0 m 1ltion of an anllca-
pated S 12.4 m1lhon,hasbeen nused to
mount the challenge to the Austral-
ians in early .1987.
The yacht Austraha n won the Cup
for Au~tralta 1n 1983 with a victory
over the U.S defender Liberty in
waters off Newport, R.l. That broke
spon.s' lon1est winning strcalc at 132
years.
Ehman said losing the Cup was the
best thing that could have happened
to 12-metcr yachting tn the United
States.
.. It drew us ou1 of a complacent
mode," be sa1d "There's no question
that 1t gave us a kick in the pants."
John Koh us, 34, slupper for the
America JJ syndicate, wd the loss
didn't affect the pnde of U.S. sailors
too much.
"It wasn't a slap tn the face for the
sailors," said Kohus. skiP.per of
Courageous, which 105.l to Libert) an
U.S. dcfe~dcr tnals two years ago "I
think it was a slap 1n the face to U S
pndc an technology ..
In .the races late ncitt yea~ to find a
challenger to the Australiudefender,
and in the Amenca's Cup races in
January 1987 the~ will be few
llmilannet to the races off" Newport
in ~un past
Ont or the m<>1t noucable cb.ancts
Mt 111 he 111r1 nd speed and waves, Ehman
saad. Winds off Rhoc:k Wand ranp
from 8 to 12 kno Off Fmnantk. 1n
~6tcm Austraha, the winch will be
blowmJ 18 to JO tnou, he ta
"You not onJy have to go fast, )Ou
have to have 1 boat that holds
t<>ðer," Ebma.o SI.id at a rec.cot
fund-raasma event at a yacht club.
"Boat mamtcnanoc 1$ ao1na to bt a
nuijOr deal," wd Kolius
The 24 3-mLlc course also has been
cbanacd. ln~tead of s1.1t legs, ~ff
Austraha will ~vc elJht lep to ~
way for busy \hipping lanes That
means more turns for the bpats and
l~s ume for crews to pret>are for
them ..
There'$ boul'ld to ~ other changes.,
too. but mosi of them won't be ~n .
The) involve technol<>gy and ship
design that att closely held secreb
Ausltl.lui II \I.On with a con-
trovcrs11l wi n.ged keel. which its crew
hteraJly kept under wraps when the
~hip was hauled out of the water m
Newport.
"I thmk l~t come race tune, yo u'll
sec a lot of different wing keels," said
Kohus. ··we make 1t a prac11~ not to
talk about the keels "
The Amcnca II syndicate 1s the
onl) one of about half a doun L .S.
}achung organtz.auon' making a run
for the Cup that has put a boat 10 the
water off Austraha. On land, the
synd~tc has buih a base of oper·
afiOiis that mcludes new crew quar-
ters. a complete machine shop sh1~
ped from the Untted States and a
drydock with a blue \lnn to keep a
boat's undc~1des hidden.
The syndicate ha~ built two vesscb
-US-42 and US-44. They have
wlect agamst each uther off Newport
anti arc now on their way to Australia
for a wanter of sea tnals.
Budd-sets-world
'
record in 5 ,000
LONOON (AP) -Barefoot run-
ning star Zola Budd shced more than
10 seconds off the women's world
5.000 meters mark Monday -after
secretly en ten ng a trade meet to a void
the aoti-apart~e1d protesrs that ha ve
dogged her since she moved to Bntaan
last year
The South Afncan-bom athlete
now a naturahzcd Bntoo, stonned
away from I ngnd Kmuanscn to clock
14 minutes. 48 07 seconds and beat
the Norwcgian's year-old mark of
14:58.89
Budd's tnumph was a bonus for the
fans. d1sappoantcd t~at double-world
record bolder Steve Cram had been
forced by IDJUr) to pull out of a bid to
break the two-mile record.
Budd had not been listed as an
entry.
..\ veil of secrecy was thrown over
the 19-ycar-old runner's appearance
at the C'r) st.al Palace track because she
has been dogged b) ant1-apanhe1d
demonstrators opposed to South
Afnca's policy of racial separation
Her bid to win the English crO'i)-
country mle 1n February ended wncn
a demonstrator ran on to the t•our\C
and forced her off the track. U'>S than
a weclr. after a s1m1lar attempt to stop
a track race m Edmburgh in July,
Budd had to run behand a cordon of
police and sccunty guards when 'iht
won her first Bnttsh Amateur .\th-
lcuc Board outdoor utle at B1rm-
angham _
Because of that background. or-
ganuers of Monda) 's intemat101\al
meet. at (r)~tal Palace said they
deCldcd not to announce that Rudd
would be runmng
"ff there had been an an-
nouncement, v.e ma} ha'e had a
problem. but this v.ay she was abk 10
run without the usilal ""om. ahout the
anti-Budd bng;tde .. said Doug (1ood-
man. cha1nnan ot the Bn1esh .\th·
leucs Promotions l nit
"We took a rntculated. d1plomat1C
dcc'1s1on to dodge anu-apacthc1d
demonstratOl"'I We are not t1')1ng to
cheat an)one. but doing wha t "-d\
besl for the public and 1he dthle\e<, "
Watcht'd b' her mother. T l.l\'>le
"-ho am' ed from 'iouth ..\lnc;i earlier
1n the da' Budd shared the PrT·
arranged palemaling ~uues "1th
"°nsuan~n for eight of tht' I~ lap'>
ht-fore !the opened up a s1gn1faant
ll<IP
Verplan~ favored
in U.S. Amateur
\\-EST ORA "lGE N.J ( API -
Scott Verplank y,on t feel near the
pressure tl')'ln$ 10 defend his l \
l\mateur golft1tlc that h1'\ opponent\
will f~I tr) 1ng to uli..e 11 av.a, trnm
him. says two-time champion Ja,
1gel
Verplank, who rec~hth became thl'
first amateur in thrt"C dc."Cadcs to"" in a
proft'ss1onal golf tournament. OJX'nc-d
defense of has L S Amateur 11tk
toda}' at lhe Montclair Golf ( lub
"I would sar ~011 \I.Ou Id ha' e to be
the favomc.' \aid the 4 1-\t'ar-old
Sigel of Bc~n. Pa "In strolr pla'
he would he the o'erwht'lm1ng
favonte In match pla) he 1r, the
fa.vonte. but not as much '
Stgtl 5.l1d there aR some e\cellcnt
playC'rs tn the field of ~82 ttolfer., and
the winner JUst m1Jht b( dctennanc-d
b) who gets the r\iht brcdl'
However, he added th.it pl<h 1ng tht
defend1nachamp1on can he a 1rouhk-
some e\pt"nence tor an' goiter
·1think11 s v.ondertul IO>ume tntu
a tournament .ts delendang ~ham·
pion .. ..aid \1gct, v.innt"r 1n 1411~ .ind
I~ 3 and he \3\' one of th.o'<' v.1th a
'>hllt at v.inn1ng th!\ ~ear ·11h1nk \OU
put <& lot ol prC\\Uf'l' on \.Out
opponent I thtnl 11·~ an d1h.10wgc
hcing dcfend1 n~ champion '
\ erplanl of Dallu adm11<, he will
hc a largt't tor an\ [tolfer 1n the
tournament
"I'll be a '>1111 ng d\11 ~11ut then: ·the
:; 1-~car-·old \ erpl.1nl. 'kt1d l \C'I"\·
one " 111 v.ant a \hot at me
.\nd there '' good rca<.<m tor th1H
.\mone 14;hu heat\\ l·rplank 1t.1ll ~.un
1n)tant rt'<\)f{nltlon. tor at ka't • d~'
\1gt1 Randolph and \ crplanl
Joined IOrtt\ \ the l nttC'd \t.\lt'\
captured the \\ alli..cr l up la\I "<'t'li..
and all the mem~r'\ of the l \ tram
and the.' ~uad from (1n:a1 Bnu1n and
Ireland art' entered here
FREE SPENDING TAKING ITS TOLL IN WORLD OF SPORT-S ••.
-----hom= 81
due," ~d John Sisk, a senior v1c:e
presldcill and director of network
broadcutlngat thc J. Walt.erTho mp.
son ad"enisinl aicncy. 0 They were demiao4s then.'1
1 Now SS00,000.1-year men ride the
beocb, players bke Dale Berra of the
New York Yankees, John Walhan of
K.ansas City, lva.o OcJcsus of St
LouJS and Oeorac Hendnck of Cah·
tomia.
ln 1972. th1'cc yurs after sianinJ a Sl.4 million, 6 vc-ycu contract wuh
the NBA Milwaukee Buck(. Kareem
AbdW-1lbbll dncnbed bukctball ., "bia buaiocu ... a money pmc" and
aid S2$01COO or more a year was not
an CM:e111ve salary.
The 1980s brouaht SI mllhon a
)'Cit Cor such 1W1 &s AbduJ.Jabbar
a.ad bueblll'• Make bmjdt, Dive
Wtofiddand Ron Ou1dt')'. They were
ju.st catchlna up to soettr. •h1(h pvc
Pelc an estimated $4.5 m1llton for
three years startina in 197 S.
Now the upper bracket starts at $2
million a year -Abdul-Jabbllr and
Larry Bard m ba~kctball; Schmidt,
Winfield, J1m Race and Oa1e Smith
in bascb&U.
C.a.n $3 mdhon be far behind? Coll~ Playeroflhc Year Pat Ewtna's
opcnuia bid to the NBA New York
K.nicks this summer wu $30 milhon
over 10 years.
Whtie salaries e~latc, franchucs
1ell for ~td prices, cities bet for
upansion teams and m11t1on.a.trr
businwnien ftn.a.nce new lca&ue1.
"We thibk we can do it bener ... wd
Job.n Dikrou who, alona With
brothen Gcorae and Deno, bou,&ht
baseball's Denver Bean of the Ameri· can Auoctatlon. ttnamed them the
tknver Ztl>hY'fS and att tttkioa an
upansion rraoc~asc. ..Obv1ousl)
we're not aoina into this to I~ S2
m1mon or $4 million. ... I'm not
saying. 'Well, I JUSt want to do it and I
don't care what it's aolna to cost ...
Making money. however, " not
alW11ya the objoct1\'e
.. Heaven knows one doesn't lake to
lose money, but ru trade the break·
even point or 1 poor matJSnal n:tum
on an investment in a bascbalJ club
for the cxt1tcmcnt. the c.nlbusi m,
the thnlls that one icts in ownana a
buebell &eam or a.ny nuuor spans
enterpnsc," said Jack Kent Cooke,
who UJCd to own ~ NBA's Los
An Les. l&kers and NHt's Lot
Aqel Kin&S. 1tJll owns the NFt.'s
Wurun&ton Red k.io' and i1 1«1cina an upaMlon bud>all franch1ac for
the nauoo'a caJ)ttal. "'Tbe profh marain on the
Redskins tS th10Jy marainaJ but. oh
bo)', ~bat fun it 11 ..
When J Walter Duncan and Ron
8111nd1 na obt111ned charter frandusrs
1n 'he Un.i'ed Statts 'FootbaJI l..cque,
each had to how a SI S m1lhon letter
of crtd1t A year later. m 19 4
Duncan sold the Gtnera.Js to Donald
Trump for SI 0 m1lhon and B ndtna
w ld the CXn ver Gold to Doua
Spedd1n.1 for about SI I mill.t
In 1976. when Tampa Ba)' and
Seattle JOtncd the NFL, an t'lpan ion
franchise cost S 16 ~ millio n ln 1984
the Dallas Co1i1oboys. Denver Broncos
a.nd San Dteso C'h.Jrscn wcrt '°Id for
$60 malhon to s 0 mm1on I PICC'C
The New Or1cans Saints, who have
neverbadawinninateason. -wtruold
to auto .,.dcale,,h1p mQn:att Tom
Bcnt0n Jr ,. t June r for S?O 2
mlUIOD
.. , nC\'cr have owned 1 ptt>f~onll
football tc.tm and nevtt have httn
inkmlcd. but I de>n't want 10 Yr thC'
team leave Ne"' Orie.ins." (\(on"''"
said at the umc.
"'The rca30ns for bu)ing • 1cnni t111
all the way from profih to an
citpenSJve eio tnp," ~id "t'lhnaton
Mara, Ownffofthc New York (11an1'
..,.h~ father, Tim. bousht the '\Fl
team tn 1925 for "2. ~ ' " au\ that
has cnouah mone) to bu)' a team anl1
is look1na for alJrofit v.ould do ht'tt('r
buyin11ovcmmcnt bond "B~ I don't think I f0<1th:ltl
fraM"Blk 1s e,·cr 'IOld for le\~ thnn 11·,
bouaht for. t0 I thtnk the) ma' l't'
than\:ina 11 lcatt • hnk abOut 1t ., a
lona-tttm in'cstmcnt:•
When New OrlelnS ~u grantw •
Nauona.I Basket n. Anoc11tmn
franch1x for the 197~ 75 trason. 11
cost 16.1 S malhon In ~ paJt ~car
the Denver and Malwaukcc fnnclu~ nt for SlO malhan
ap~ "nd tn tht NHL the un~1
,.
l II\ ~l')Ut' wttt wld for$~ m11hon 10
I ~.,ti and mm•cd to Denver, lhen
wrrr \<ild again for $9 milhon in IQ 2
and mo' ed to Nev. }('r;c, t l.o~wii.
thr la\1 "-Hl lran,h1~ to ch~~
hand\. ""'' '>Old 10 Ham Ornc11 for SI~ mil hon in I ~I\'
"I l'louJht the \e;am 1t1 make •
dJnm har~n:· Om<'\I ~11J ''It
sound!. com\. hut that' "'hJI hip·
pencd 1 wa' born and ra1~t.I tn
Edmonton .t.lrt'amed llf hoc\;~ and
haxbe.11 all m' hk
.. lt01.I011ni m ont\, butt don't ha\t
an tOl.I of ~1 nor an OUl\\'t of
trep1dation 'ou don't 10 •n'o an
"liHL dub, uni \ tt' 1n New \ ork,
pu o or Montrtal or w meplact
hlc thAt. if you're thiru.ina of anve,t-
ment return onl)'."
In 197', bucblU't Chi o \\'bate
11 ch.a bancb for S lO m1lhon
.... '
COMPLETE NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS, M
a £. )
Laid..:off empIOyees get a hand
Local attoriley named
to Roosevelt fo.undation
Robert R. Harwltl has been elected to the board of the Roosevelt
~ Warm SprlD11 FoudatJoD.
Hurwiu, an attomey, 1s a partner in the firm Hurwlt1, Remer &
DIVtaeelllo of Newport Beach. The firm represents Tlte Daily Pilot.
"We are especially pleased to have someone of Mr. Hurwitz's
stature Join the foundation Board of Trustees," said Jamea
Rooaevel&, foundation president. "He has an outstandin• r~ord of
public service and we believe his contribution to ach.icv1ng the
foundation's goals wtll be equally outstandinJ." he added. The Roosevelt Warm Spnngs Foun<18f1on provides guidance
and support to the Roosevelt Warm Sprlnp ID1tltute for
ReubllliatloD at Warm SprlD11, Ga., which founqed 1n 1927 by
Roosevelt's father, Pre1Jdent Fruklln D. Booaevelt. Th<: foundation
recently announced a mult1-m1lhon dollar expansion proaram for the
institute which will create an intcmat1onakresearch and conference
center to focus on the ccad1cat1on of polio and other d1sabhng
diseases around the world.
xerox workers receive free training
in how to find and apply for new jobs
·,
By JIM HATHCOCK
o.-,~c-~
When Xerox closed its Irvine
Centralized Refurbishing Center in
June, more than 200 workers were
permanently laid off.
Many did not know how to search
for JObs since they had been working
for Xerox for more than 10 years. said
Carol Hatch. admm1strat1ve analyst
with the Orange County Job Training
Partnership Agency.
Hatch was contacted by the OranJe
County Central Labor Council 1n
May to reamer the La1d-otl workers
for Job Training Panocrsh1p AJency
services such as vocallonal
assessment and counschng, JOb
search techniques, resume writing
assistance, can-the-job traming pos-
itions and classroom tramin&.
One of agency's federally funded
programs provides the services free
for workers who have lost their Jobs
because of plant closures. Before the
Xerox plant closed permanently on
July I, more than IOOofitsemployees
had s1ancd up with the agency for help
in finding new pos1uons.
Jeffrey Bodenschatz of Santa Ana
was an assembler/tester/repairman at
Xerox for I 7Jears and one of several
who indicate an interest in returning
to school for vocational tra1ninJ.
"I'd like to get into the serv1c1Qg of
computers," he said.
ln the past, matchmg laid-off
workers' needs with public services
-such as the agency's that arc
tailored to update job skills and keep
people working -has been diflit:ult
partJy because employers have been
rclu..:tant to announce publicly and in
advance, that they will be closing a
facility, according to Mary Yunt, of
the Central Labor Council.
"The Xerox Co~rauon is one
example of how we ve been able to
systematically connect laid-off
workers with JTPA services," Jerry
Dunn. JTPA planning manager. said.
"Companies ant1c1pat1ng layotts
can cont.act the Oranae County Job
Tfll/n1ng Partnership AJency t~ ?r-
aan12e job search, vocatJonaJ ta1nll\&
and placement services for their
employees," he said.
BUSINESS NOTES
Hurwitz attended UCLA and UC Berkeley where he received J'llS
bachelor's of law degree in 1950. He is a member of the Orange
County, Los Angeles County Amenc~n and Federal Bar Assoc1a-
uons.
He is past president and director, California lnhentancc Tax
Ap{>ra1sers Association, California ~nhentance Tax Referees . As~
soc1ation and the Newport Beach-Irvine Estate Planning Counc1l. A
ccnificd spec1ahst on taxauon law, he has been a lecturer on
inhentance tax law at Pepperdane School of Law and 1s author of
numerous anicles on the subject
0 Healthspa
opening
In Mesa
A veteran of World War II. Hurwitz ~rved with the U.S. Army
in Eurqpe was military governor of an Amencan occupied county in
Austna for one year af\er the wa(s end.
In addition. he 1s a trustee. Newpon Beach Library Board,
dir~tor, Orange County Chapter. Amencan Hean Assoc1a~1on,
member Amencan Legion Post 291: World Afl'.lJrs Council of
Orange Coun~: Town Hall of Los Angeles: California Historical
Society. Sierra Club, ACLU and 1!> presiding chair and director of the
Southern C'ahforn1a R~on. National Conference ofChnst1ans and
Jews. • ••
Archie McGill, former president of of AISAmencan Bell at
AT&T. has been appointed to the board ofd1rectorsofMSI Data Corp
ofCosta Mesa
McGill's appointment brought Lhc MSI board 10 ~vcn
members.
The 54-year-old McGill. pres14ient ofCbardonney Ioc .. a venture
capital investment and business firm based in Ne\l{.Jersey. McGill
was previously president and CEO of Rothschild Ventures, the New
York investment arm of th~t Bnt1sh and French-based company.
MSI Data Corp. sells and services the world's largest installed
~of ,ponablc data-eolkct40JJ systems. according to William J.
Bowen, MS l's chairman and co-founder • • • The appo1Dlment of Paul J. Schneider lo the pos111on of chief
financial officer for MST Data Corp. was announced by Cbarlea S.
Strauch, MSl president and chief executive officer
Schneider will direct the company's worldwide finance
functions repon1ng to Strauch He will also serve on MS l's corporate
operaung committee.
Schneider has 24 years financial management eitpenencc.
26th annlve~
Gene Kadow. preeldent of the California ....
Auoclation of RealtOn, ral.a a fia& on a
new pole commemorattnc the 25tla an-
niversary of the BunttnatOn Beach-Foun-
tain Valley Board of Realtora . .Aulattng
Kadow are. (from left): Wlll Wood8, ex-
ecutive officer of the Bunttncton Beach-
Fountain Valley board; and Cl&rk Wallace,
preeldent elect of the National Auoclation
of Realtora.
Jack Lalannc's American Health
& Fitness Spas is coming to town.
Under construction at Harbor
Boulevard and 19th Street in The
Courtyard Shopping Mall in C.osta
Mesa, the new heaJth spa will include
almost 40,000 square feet of coeduca-
tionaJ facilities wllen completed in
January.
The $2 million spa will include a
coed gymnasium floor as well as an
exclusive "ladies only" gym and an
Olympic-S,tZe swimming pool. The
facility w1U also feature maJc and
female drcs•ing facilitiC$ and a separ-
ate dressing area for busjness people.
"We have found that there is an
interest for this type of feature by
business people who like fint-dass
accommodations: more like first-
class. accommodations on an air-
plane," said Carmen Baratta, presi-
dent of Jack Lal..anne's American &.
European HeaJth Spas.
The new spa WJJI aJso feature an
indoor jo~ng track and an aerobic
and cardiovascular room with
monitoring units. Aerobic classes will
be offered every hour. There will aJso
be steam rooms. saunas, and'1bir1-
pools. IOCIU~lng five years as exeCIUJVe VICe president and Ch ief financial
officer of HCC lndustnes. a publicly held electronu: component
manufacturing company ID Encino He was a partner 1n the big eight
CPA firm ofTouche Ross pnor to JOming HCC • • • Weapac Flnanclal Corp. of Newport Beach has appointed Edwin
J. Mine as president of this California-based sponsor of real estale
investment trusts, efTecu ve Sept I, 1t was announced by Janet S.
Deckard, chairman
There's a s~ortage of quality stocks
Migc bnng.!> over 27: years of expencnce an «vclopment.
construction, acqu1s1t1on. marketing and management of com-
merc1aJ real estate to the pos111on. Deckard said.
The new president JOins Wespac from August Financial C'orp ..
Lopg Beach, where he was s ·en1or vice president responsible for the
acquisition and management of over 65 commerc1aJ and mdustnaJ
propen1es with a value in eitcess ofS350 m11l1on. Pnor to that. M1ge
was chief operating officer of Orange Coaat Developers and Keni
DevelopmeDt Corp. in Ncwpon Beach , where he was responsible for
thndmtnlstration and financial conlrol of the corporation<;.
Educated in Cahfom1a, M1gge holds bachelor's and master's
degrees from California Polytechnic College and a law degree from
UCLA. He also completed his doclOral dmer\at1on at UC Davis
Gordon Nell Elsey Ill, who served as president of Wespac
Financial Corp. and 1s president ~f Wespac Investor" Trusl. ha~
resigned from Wespac Financial Corp. to devote all his time to the
operation and hqu1dat1on of Wespac lnvcsto~ Trust and the
operation ofh1s Phocni~-based real estate company
MONEY SENSE
By JOHN CUNNli:-F
NEW YORK CAP)-A shonage ol
good quaJity corporate stocks?
With close to SSOO b1lhon of shares
traded last year on the New York
Stock Exchan$e alone. that hardl}
seems a poss1b1hty.
But measured in certain ways, an
argument can be made that lhere 1'>
now a shonage of stocks. that the
muauon may be worsenm$. and that
the net effect 1s to keep pnceci higher
than they otherwise might be
FederaJ Reserve staus11cs show
that 1n JUSt 1984 about S73 b11l1on ID
shares were taken off lhc market by
mer,gcrs. leveraged buyouts 1n which
equity often becomes debt. and stock
buyback programs by corporations.
Those figures arc net -alter
accounting f9r new stock issue\.
If the sarlie trend con11nues this
year -and it appears 11 is -the net
share retirements for [984-1985
"'ould more than offset S 141 b11l1on
1n new ~tock issued 1n the pnor 15
'tears
· These numbers were researched by
Wright ln~estors Service. which ad-
\. ISeS and manages accounts made up
maml> of blue chips stocks, and
which researches factors that affect
prices.
Further evidence of the shrinkage
of shares 1s a decline in the number of
stocks listed on the New York Stock
Exchange over the past 10 yea rs. after
having c.-xpanded al a 2 perccnl
annual rate over th e prev1ou\ four
decades.
Wright observes that while mergers
have been a fact of life for decades
they usua~y didn't involve the very
largci.t companies. It isn't so any-
more, s~me of the biggest names in
business have become takeover
targets.
In the 12 mqmths ended June 30th,
Wnght notes, 26 companies have
been removed from the Standard &
Poor's 500-stock index as a result of
mergers or acquisitions.
Since June 1984, it continues,
mergers have removed more than $50
billion of S&P stocks from trading:
several more b1lhons of dollars have
disappeared through repurchases by
companies still listed in the index;
and several b1lhon-<iollar deals in-
d1cate more shnnkagc to come.
Lower interest rates. undervalued
equitiesl and incrca~<.tcash fl<:>w as a
result or the economic e1tpans1on are
among the reasons for the big-
coq:u>any mergers.
.Kmona the effects 1s the replace-
ment of equity, or share ownership,
with debt. Whatever the reason,
managements today seem willing to
leverage their operations with greater
borrowing and less share ownership.
ln the shon run, says Wright, the shrin~e of shares argues fur rela·
tively tugher stock prices.
But longer tenn, 1t says, "the takmg
on of excessive debt by management
increases the level of risk in the
economic system and runs counter to
the deflationary trend of the 1980s."
Getmoreoutofyour IndividualRetiremen-t Account
Have }ll\J rnm1den:d the value ol deadhnl'. 11 1" to your advantage to Automatic re1nvecitment of 1dll. that make 1t unnecessary, such as zero the highest rates.
vour lnd1 \ldual Reurement .\ccount make ;our contnbutron as early as tunds 1s another wa} to get the most coupon instruments. These instru-Investing for lon$-tcrm capital
recent I)') possible It for example, you con-out ol your I RA asset!> rr interest or menls arc sold at a substantiaJ gains in your IRA IS less advan-
l f~ou ha\.t 1n1.e,trd 1h1: maximum tnbute 1he ma•omum S2.000 to your G · d1v1dend pa)'ments credited to your discount from par value; they make tageous because long-term gains are
$2.000 each yt·ar \mc.e I YX2 -"'hrn IRA 1n the beginning of the year -.. LORIA account don't stan t:arn1ng more no interest-payments until maturity taxed at more favorable rates outside
new guidelines enabled almo<>t every-and 1f It earns a I 0 percent, or $200. promptly, your nest egg won't grow as when you receive par value. your IRA.
one with earned income to c.ontnbut1: return. vou'll owe no taxes on those w much a!> 1t could. Keeping track of With zeros you not only avoid the When you reach retirement and
to a tax-deferred I RA -and \OU have earnings However 1f you're in the 50 IENER when pa)ments will be received and trouble of having to reinvest interest. begin making IRA withdrawals, all of
been quick to contnbute in January percent tax brackel and you wait until dec1d1ng where to reinvest them, you can also lock in the rate at which the income you withdraw will be
each year. your IRA as'i-Ct<t now total the end of the year to make your however, takes time and requires aJI interest will be earned. Thus. you taxed as ordinary income regardless
$8,000 plu s earnin~s. $2.000 contnbut1on -and you keep effon can rest easy knowing exactly how of how it miaht have been Wlcd
As'iuming a I 0 percent return. the the money 1n a taxable account where ~our I RA as early as allowed 1n the tax One solution: Choose an IRA that much a given sum of money will grow outside your IRA. Thus, you lose the
value of your nest eg would be 11 earn\ S200 -)Ou'll owe S 100 in year. you'll earn tax-deferred income offer\ automatic investment of any an a aiven amount of time. advantage of a favorable Iona-term
almost S9 JOO. and b~ the end of taxes C50 percent of S200). So you 151'1 months longer than 1f you wait payments credited to your account. Since your IRA allows you to capitaJgainsta.xinan lRAaccount-
1985. 1t would grow 10\I11,21 IJ. \ave SI 00 'iimpl; by funding your until the Apnl 15 deadhne. <iome brokerage account IRAs will shelter earnings that would regularly which allows you to exclude 60
If your 1 RA 1s a lot ~mailer, the I RA early, and all the money you save Over 20 year~ -based on a IO automaucally sweep -on a daily or be I 00 percent taxable at your percent of the gains from income
following idea~ may tfelp )ou ach1e\ e in taxes rt'mams growing in your percent yield -your IRA will be weekly basis -any credit!> into a ordinary income tax rate. it's to your taxes. As a result, you would pay onl)'.
better result'i in the futu'c account to gi ve you an even larger wonh at least S 16,000 more than the money market fund advantage to invest IRA funds for 20 percent tax on Iona-term pins 1f
Although you can contribute 10 retirement nest egg IRA of a deadline funder. Over 30 Another way to avoid the prohlem high interest or short-term aams -you're in the SO percent tax bracket.
your IRA as late as your tu filing You'll also find that 1f you fund years, you will be $42,000 nchcr. of reinvestment is to choo~ vehicle!> income that the JRS normally ~esat (Pl ....... IaA/85)
. '
~~~~~-====--==========-:=..::;==:::::::.._:::::::.._====..-=====-===:=-=================::::.:-=======
e great ~te advan..,.,.
I-'I t= -SYEAR --------,
I 9 .00 ~~·:·_.._I _8_.6_4_ ~;;"' I 10.20 ;_~_.n'_..__9_._7_5_~~'"'
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1IOQ)i( IOI Ot, '°' .. ·~· &ll'ICI ,,, .... $1 .... lrllt•ol COl"OCIUllCltd l!IOl'J!\ly Oii. iM >as DH'1 , ... cur11~1 fJll l,l \lilli!tl.10 '""'r J!?(J'I ,..,.,,,, hl••llllVll11laiMIC• $1000~ 1(11 ... ISM SIOO 000 IOI • •" ! 'QllTliltOh•IMltn.i~h DIA •,....., .. tlof~.f;nDllO!!'lla' 'l•>lltHa~m li.ll\I .{<on oit oe"I ,·1n1 .. tr.t alftll H ~ Qt ·+, ,
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Oran t
\an C ltmcntt
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S n Ju•n apl,.rano
Woodbrldgt
I '
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Orange Cout D_AILY PILOT/TuMday, Augul127, tH 5 ••
IRA .•• hompacelM M UTUAL FUND S
You lhould nc\ftt buy mun eipal
bonds in an IRA invcttmcnt bec8u1e
they a~ •lrady c~cmpt from federal
!Un. ind they acncrally offe r lower
interest ratca than tauble bonds.
I low you choose to invest m your
I RA will depend on the 1iu of your
mvc tmcnt portfolio outsjdc yo ur
I RA and your risk tolerance level, 1mona otfm' fhctors.
If you have few investment•
outside your IRA and arc not com-
fonable with 1 lot of nsk, yo u would
be WISC to fund your lRA COO•
~rv1t1vcly w1t.h fixed-income mvc~t
mcnts that offer h1ah 1ntcrc'lt.
Gloria J. Wlt oer I• Vice Pr••ldeat
ud Gro•p Maaa1er, Marhll1J6 Com-
CUHlc1tJoa1 at MerrJll Lyacll,
Plertt, Ftll.ller It Smllt lac. .
NIW YO"K CAP) -~ fOllOw.lnt 1111 w1 the Ovet -• Countw :t'°ocka end w1rran11 thlt ave OOIMI uo
lhl rnos'of f!OOWJ?., ll'lt ~! beM<I on "l'foe11J.cv,.ft ~=~no tielOW-h <>< 1000 .~ .. .,.inc: . ., •net "'~"' • ~ '''J"-dl •I~ ortv • c:lC> no pr c. ~ ~::i,:., or~~
Na~ r.f C"i. Pc ~~:0111n t ~6 7 fi ig nd I lrd a ,,.. P
"' W'I I IM.. g
P WI ~ 1'99 0 "'1 ~ p C p v I p Fnofjkwl •1. ~Q ~ un ~ ~ P
t reel ij g
lT An~monv ~-l i· ~ Hg tr.mo v I ~ ollP 1~4 ~ p ~fir~ ~T' A ~ lit Hg lit'.~!nut>&Slm• I \Z (jp ~•CP SV'J ,..., IJp
-----------------
Rely on tinanc1a l
•
au\.'1ce b) Syl\.'aa Porter
"At a
low rate
that will catch
your interest''
A«Ofl"tl l111J1rwl "/) IO
lf()()JJ()(J WI"'''"'"' '"1fl
IJf I 'fM' 111/j llf, ()()()
mJnltr111"' Apphls 111 '"""
of / _>10ar \11hsl1Jlf/11il
{'frnlllf.~ /IW rorfl w'lfh
iJr,mvl Anruw l J1fld has1·d
in t he Daily Pilat
Our home loans are for Orange _
County home buyers and ownetts.
-l. If you are buying or refinanc.mg a home ---'--
in O range County see us first [earn
exactly which type of loan 1s best for ,• •
you. Fast appraisals. quick dec1s1ons, #
minim um roan points, at b1ghly com· _, • '· ,
petitivE:' interest rates.· Westmark. The ~ • •
best homp for your mortgagP loan' And,
jf you're located in tln<'~her c.ou nty, give
us a call anyway' ~-
WEST~~
SAVINGS BANK
One C0<oorate Plaza Newoon Center 17141 720 1082
a ~company (NYSE·PMK1
.089%
YI ELD
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RATE
' 2 Months $125
Unllmlted Use • No Dues ··Full Time
or · .
70% Oft All Initiation Fees
" ( "'1'ln1"1J1.,~· "Pr
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k11/r ~tn ,,,., lh• u~r
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THE SPORTING HOUSE
•,,,,.Su • o.,. "'• • rij • ""'' t-•• '' •"' •n s "•" " • • •• ''"•"'\I t w ••l' t P OQ I,..' ·~DC ' A • ••
t t•1.1 yuv1 bOC1' • .t"O •S•w • S ••..., .J• I •Jlies11u .t"" ••t.1' .... •'-.u•.., ' ... "" ., -.c· or ••
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3601 Jambpree Newport B~ach 17141 752·0565
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141
Market edges upward
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market edged
higher in quiet trading Tuesday after movmg
within a narrow range for most oflbe session.
Volume picked up from Monday's very slow
pace, however.
The market again displayed the laek of
conviction that has dominated the past few
sessions. Some brokers said they look for the tre~d
to continue at least until after Labor Day.
While pre-holiday trading is typically slug-
gish. analysts said ·investors arc parucularly
cautious because of unccn.ainty over whether the
ec-0nomywill pick up steam later this year, as some
economists have foreca!t.
But few economic mdicators are scheduled to
be released until Friday.
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Om
NEW YOtlK (AP) Auo. 21
AMEX LEADERS NYSE LEADER S
GoLD QuorEs
METALS QUOTES
faro~ la b<Z.1.s ...
Omnge Coat DAILY PfLOT/TYelldey, Augulf 27, 1NI
• ' Utia. S Due. 16 Dollatt • AdJ mo tltHC'I url~. but "" p«tion r.C pnntC'nl 11 r«'funclll*t. • A~liloAJ ._may be put(baMd few 12 00 ..... h
• Pri(f':t m11111 be tndudtd Ill I~ ad • I>.~ not •pph 10 tlv.o rf'al " 111r. 1rn1al. or Mlp ,,.n'*' c..-&abOnl or au~ pw.d ~" t 2000 Call 6 2-5678
• '"•Jlabk\ onh In pn\lal«' Pf.I'~ •d•trl ra W!llt11g mtfthudiM.
..... .. .... JleMJt.... 1111 .... latuabW ............ "" ;iAMrt.las;.,;:;=-:;, ..... •i.;:';.=af::,.._~1:;;;m=--~;;;;;;.;..-................................... _
!ntral llU C.M t.2fs1mo ep ren1 Cetta .... 1214 l!!J!!! nit c.rta ... ftM •!J!!! a..c. Z21t Aue ..
.... WILL.... ~rr· =-~~ dbl g#. mo. •NEWPORT HEIGHTS'. LOXcOHbOXvlitNOW * ... atii. -let ... on 112 ~ Gat~ 10 MeM v.-,17 195 ~ S)f-7t70 ywd, "° P9tt. 908 W Br 2ba lem-nn, 2 trplel. 28r 28a Ov•r pool, te20, 38t 1720 l UP. Sit 1'Ai&e 11060 horu prop, w/poot.
Country Ck.lb. 58drm, • • Wllton. 1815. 54~ 7983 adutta. no '*' 11150. .ir.-me & t-. Oct r;a1 Pool Ho ~ 142-6210 S8t 28a <>ce.ttronl 11111 1450. pk& M2-l2SI
ftmUy room, den and for· UllU mlU 38R 2ba, no pMI, kldl Ole. &4&-0446l(213>47~7714 G8' w/opnr. Ml!;ito, WIO, POOi. Patlo.1'J)6C. )(... 28' 18a . SIH1"v_wy_taroe __ 4..,..8dtm--COf=--ona-
l'rl_, dining. Ov9' 3,000 8E8l BUY ~N TOWN l900/mo lndude9 gat· 38r 2 ba. 2 trplca, hOt tub~ Spit M $960, 549-2447 1 a 28dtm A,pta ~ 119'' 181 OcNnff'ont Ma0 CM11Merhometo1tW .NllW
tq. ft. of ~ R9-24JC90onoometlot. t.tener. 808 Joann St den. mlcto-waw. cMd & 1Br 1aa. 1920 w.u.o., 1556 & Up 557-2141 38' 21-"Be Ocntmt 113" cpta. ctoee to beedl. Xktt
duced to 309,000 LMOelMnOrm.d!NnO& 854-t742 petOKl1450 64fr1378 upstta Fng.nopeq'480 •tBr 1919 w.-.oe,c 28'1811 M60 location. f375, cell
751-3191 kite::' =~ly 38flfltl'I, 1V.ba, COY patio. 38r 2ba frplc; O/W, ape Sierra Mgmt 560-1015 l "'°" New Ct"P1 l !*nt ~Br 281 HOUM 642·= 21$-<674*42 C:::. SElECT weloOIM ,;? 500, Aoent etec bltna, 2381 Rut~.. gardnr S 1375 Drive by 211--1 llL ma l!s No '*' 175--9291 '°'*1Y wen1 M/F to hlllp find & ..... PROPERTIES 540-5937 ' No pM&. S950 533-2874 2001 Highland &4M511 •1 .. a·•----·-38t 2 ba DPUC. 112 ti* to CC>ffr'lt 3M C.M ,_ tJy
3 •• c.tt btwn 1pm-5c>m --·-.,.._. bdl. toe upstalra untt 911 ~ 546-'MO • rMft It•.__._ 4Br ba ...... Vefd•. 18d 1ba 1 ow ¥9Cant 1125/mo 2 9d 1"' be 11050 Oownetan untt c.nu ... ... . I IU ov:9t;; tt ~'!.... bltne, ordnr Ind s 1300. 4 Bdrm 2~ t>a. f'pr1c. 1 l>ftt nice S550 •a. 715&-8557 twnh•. 9'1CI gar. lndry SIOO 535-7108 Wotldno M• w 38r 28e
1 :J • ... _ 831-6207 « 853-5424 boll. comm pool & t9Mll. --1 all bit in Nilwpt 1Sc:h APt. nr bet\. *•111111111111 ~ pvt E ~ .'/f,J .. ~ ay LASTI 2 Cat gar. S1500. mo. 28<1 1ba ow .. QUtet, 1)111. rm. pe7~ w 1~ 1 M60'1~ 1 Bd tba. end '292• utlla. 83.1-7024
ptan 1, 2Br + Oen. au.Id-~~ ~,.-!,.r7•970 OI ft w/8 mo IM, avail 911 tmall pet o«ay. seC>0 mo TSL MGMT 642· t803 e>af, doM to bell. nlC9 la•-•--~ ed gate. Po()ta, t.W.. ...__ ...,, ......-Stuart, 642·S35e eft &pm 973-e33& OI 642·&eee QUi.t loc wa --
$10,000 R9d9CoratJng Privat• beeetll 8eyYMiwl I.......... B~YCAEST Spec:Joua 3 Bd 2 Bdrm 2ba ~ UV 2Br 181 cMll upper t480 MoMwia Q;c:; prOilU =ni ;;&. eonu. . ..._,.m 8'h% 11t. Lg comer 2Bd 2ba, frplc: a.ntN YH Ou llOIM wlformal dining a S725/Mo-1 M ctwnetelrl Unit. No I*• $$95/mo + TIL ~ M2· 11a ed ....nkr ..oommut• from
1279,500. Call 831-ae38 f4ln09d petlo, pooll, NC fffi It .... W1tta lam rm A neat toe In an w/eatport a x1ra pr1tng a.oo Mt:> 641·9352 ~ to OOMUlt on 3 'I'
OU PL EX 1 Bd ,1 ba •• $45,000. 673-3800 xtnt .,. ... $1860/mo. A.gt apece No peta 54&-8572 Studk>. pttv 91\tr no kft 111111 ,_ IUll oont(ai;t 4 "Y wet 8tw ,_
s210.ooo 717 FERNLEAF SP~CES AVAIL. for MW ttlERENT 644-7211 2Br 1'..\8I Studio 9nc1 S2751M Ind ut11 11l/1Mt
3 w~~ ":!:' -=· or apt'° S)50 ~7
e.4()..8182bye>wn.r mobile~~ !ti It. BAYF.RONTgorg90Utei'.11-garage·'700tmo.' 2025 E-ai<leCM 546-1291 gat.MUSl~S9s0/mo ' ....
C.. lltu l Coeta Meile, Hunt. e..ctl · tom built 38t ,._Den HrM Pomona MMM9 ..J 2 BB l 'hBA wl~ New 211 Oe\'ld a.t · lt12 ti 121. ct!t~~ :,~c;o : =~~Ion w/40' dock avl a51-1M3 2Br 1Ba. 571 Joenn 2 ~· crpb, d'l)a. bltlnl."9nced TSL MGMT 142·1803 1 &A EACtosEB an:
1111 ftlll lllUll e All Ar ... & Pnc.. BAYRIOGE CONDO P1an tona mu '510 No peta. ~~~t~1•r,,:uc' ~ oc:wtfront AGE MOIMO S4-"50
BeeutfflJI 48dnn, w. 8a1h 1.ac!!9t fnJ!J • Oc>eri 7 Days 9am-7pm B, 2Br 2811. 2 car g#. nr Sien• Mgmt 550-~o,5 667 VlctC>fl'a .. e.. S&3!> d~. 48drm 2ba, fltwt
oncok»-111e. L.a.ro-ytrd --rR'oOslr.c.U. 675 8860 PoOI St 175 7M-6577 Of 29r 2ea. 2.car gar Frplc. 2439 Otanoe .. O" .$850 claaa condition. all wltll petlo. A1rlum court Xlt cond Inc Sl9 &eO. t5% • 859-5606111 rn1g micro WID' dal'l-.hr , · am•nltl.. S 17007Mo
yard entry. Price recwc:.d dn t159 !500 4V7-e287 Or Stop By •ir•-uy POOi Sp. se5o AYI 911 utll Pd eaa;:1eA Avail )'M(1Y Brok• 87~ l==----~--.---:ii~"2' to S 189.900 I« fut .ule. ' __,. · • Stip1 UOO N-«nkr No 1--_.;... _____ _
Call Patrick Tan ore 9 Unite. CdM, 2 bfka to 2111 h.,.rt lh4 3Br 3Ba. prtv comm Bch. 545-M90 or M0-9911 peta 640-53-4 l UOO DELUXE 1~~;:;::=:;;;;=:•
&31-12e8 wet•. lhat_P. 4-2br + Balboe Penln&ula FM t.nnla accM8. $1900/mo 2BR "2ba condo Frplc. Br. DR. trplc, patio,-
2-1br. wlll trade.1795K Etldel 3B 281 IN (714)770-6237 or Wul\erl dryer,:rrlg.alf, ftlffBllWE l12001mo87~
Licata lnWlt. 831-8811 ' ;,d, ~. ~C81 ~ Avi (918)927-5855 pOOI vu. tennll, MCUftty Want a eelec11on of gr•t . •LIVE OH WATER•
lmST .. s 911 Kida Ole s1f25/mo Obi gar/fr...,. & --~ 3-'850/mo &3l...o89 tlvlng? W• cen on. any-· 9oet aMp •VWI CNrm-.. · ~ ,_., thtno from• amall apt to 1ng ....... nt 1br no-• ____ _,.... ___ _
Valuable Laguna Beech Celt 645--0968 for "W'· reaaons to mow 3bdrm mtOllTllll ...-• 4Acl hM If looklnQ In r.ta .,.,_ · ,...... • 572SqFt163()/mo.
RFIMr.l<R .. ~ :, . . ·~. .
I II + f&ll. II.. property tor eale. Apart· MIU• OllLfT $111 ~e: ::.,s~ 1~!.ldt P1Uo. nr l>Mchl ... ,640'5 CM.NB.or HB think ol u. inf.~ u~.:c-397S Birch. N•wport IHHI I• lilt 8"111 ltr la.It HvdwOOd ftra, ·nreplace. m9ntl & atorea wit!\ Ger. Nr beeci\. 1 ... 7705 . tty TEUIEIT Ill-.... first toe that choice of &wt\ 541·5032 Agt ==--=-------1-new dahwtt/ldtch range Coast Hwy trontag•. _._'"" Eaatbluff Condo 3Br ~IMnQ lllUl~S-916 Sq Ft O•n'I ltMraJ llU ...... 1112 ~ plumblng. new St•r.• from bHcl). 1~.a•1 111-1110 1'..\81. Quiet.,~ Encl 2 2Br, attac:Nd gar,. fncd TSLMGMf 64!-1603 Br 281 -+ frplc: gar Ii MW ofcl~. gmd nr Ho. Hmtl-114'MWI llAITillDllTllll root('&3).~'patlo, '87 .O<>O-own«motl-Meu V•rde 3Br 28• cat gar No pets L ... patio. re dfleorat9d. '2 NBREALT\' e7S.1642 carpe(lnglfM#5574 C.M.S91e/rnol32~161
AN 2 Bdrm, 1bl unite. •tu ML... bl!:''i:'ls~~5t v«y vattid Exclu""-Agent auper clean. Beaultrui $1075/mo 974-1299 or ~·~:5~~;'1°· Weetlid9 1Bdrm Unlum lDfll lll-IMI CdM'a *' ~ S.25-
Lo cat •d In San SouthofttleCoatHwy& i1y111-A&•eUllTI. Jl~Morrla. 752-1100 yard F/P 2 car garage 637-4725 Utlla Incl No peta PENINSULA . S11001nduU,AJCfpl(.g.
Bernardino. AMume tllt-z.oneO R2 Qr .. t IQc;atlon ...._ Intl.la wl-.ct <>Pf\r, gdr Incl no 2BA 2BA. den, ape. lr91'Ch 28r new decOr. OW M20 $500/mo. 64~2 • mall 1'8r apt. )ult 1 hM )Mhor 2855 E eo.t
tatlng financing and ··-'k to et,.,• & ..._ ...... • 141-llH '*' S1150/mo lat, last. doors Oecorat9d In all ·No pet• Nrnew~ · ..._... •"251 ........ Utll ...._.17s-e900 ._.. .........
OWe 2 old .... "" __.... $150 d9P 545-6035 att S ~hlte 51300 mo. iO" cenl•r & rec park Dau ftiat 2721 to""'' -mo 7"7 .-.-,. -·,.-·-. 1. ... th.n 2 yra · Super rent11 property -WILi Tl Ollllllll Btalft Fuaiu.. -~ • S40-8 87 L'619)753..0719 Incl, no gar· nb pet•. ag1 EXEC OfflC~; ctoee to
Full prtca $770,000 complat•IY furnlah•d. 4Br eeta1,. xtra lrg lot. • MESA VERDE &2nd Street 875-0595 1 -\ f nr aclUt1 fK9f . 108 29th St. , Frw./a, ~ 200· eq. ft.
Slngl9 story, 2 Bdrm OP£NHOUSEO,t,l'-Y. l~lt • Jiit FAMILYHOME tmmec3Br2'1t811Condo •3Br 281. new d«:o<; MARINA $460/mo AgtWsynefS.46..8818 lnddlofefurnl300.mo
T di , } home. Many posalbllltlee. 292,-Java Ad CM. _ IC 38r. 281. lrg yrd. quiet Nu decor pat gar """"' pa110. gar. dViwahr1 frple -496-9-482 noon-S 30 pm • !491> W a.k• Sutt• 3 ra tiona c edd MCOnd It ¢Ondo: 28" atrHt ~·mode led IP• S11s01mO &4~· S925 No pets 640-24D5 I ' .. L -.. ... ..,., m . .
Realty sri'5,000. SALLY S~P: Call Rick 957--0908 2 • p()OI. apa. tennll. $1060/mo lncll,1rdnr Can Om• U • IC• •n br ,ba, be4m cell., Colta Mela. Ca i262t
LEY/ JOYCE OABOLT $249·500 f\exlable'tlfml .S1450/mo yrty. 551-3398 \faten9 281·7853 LeaM' Newport Shoree * * Br pat , gar , fl>llrple, RIO, gar S795 * 556-3900 *
631-7370 J M4 OESIRAB\.& P£NIN. P'T. Od9m IM 3br 3ba 3BR 2ba, f= gar 1 BR condo OYerlooltlng new carpet. no pets $850 100 Ha....,.. Pl 64U7~ El141cu11W !'Mk ~
Ute airy 5 Bdrm. Sept 10-newer kitctt ,bl gar S750 113001rno ~ 9~3~=~ 5575lmo. OolOf• 84o-S504 tat Ii C111t ••tr• CM ~ centiw S
150
*111 ILIFFI* Traditional ·June 10. Avail untum. tdda 53Mt90 Agt '• Lo 38d 2t>a wlprtv eoc1 •ARLINGTON APTS• 2715 mo SS0-2290 anvtim.
"On The Park" spec 3BR. Realty s20001mo. Ag\.875--1771 M v 3B den 2B 2 11 andk, 1 blk to bch S 1400 •STUNNING Lg 1. 2 & 3Br Spacious. CIMn, quiet 1 Fteel us Poetage 1tW'flP4J1 · FRSpttM~popul & · • r. • a, p, yrtyavl911675-6t73 2BaGrdnApt.Poo1$525, VerycloMto~ RoU (100) 22 oenta for
...dom ottered P1an ~E" 631· 7370 LIDO ISLE: Lcwely turn gat. grdnr s1100 No pets JICllS UALn ~25 & $725 710 W 18th 28' t'itBa Twnl\M $675 121 to Oct lit Ho llneal
n.t.. 38Jl'.2.ba. avt s.¢.June 850-7428 or 5'4S.9578 -Sorry no pets 539--0490-2151 ~ BIYd. CM
wlp'ft crt yd ..,try. "'""•---.-.----Tl---$2200/mo 875--5068 MY EXECUTIVE HOME 2 NEWPORT HSE RENTAL 8d 3ba, ~ ~s~·avlno . . 0 C. AIRPORT AREA
awnt 1~9.000 Ind laf'd. ~---.., 4 8d 3b + G From $400 pvt gueet hae pets.n·am r Nr· t>ch 28r 28&. bltlna, b----....---""""'~
Winter 2 Br 2t>e. dbl defllng MtVOa .... te< ...... •-'t11 utll pd =10., 111,IOO · ... UDOISLE a., • tP,• .. ._•r· to0Geahmlat3br$12509/1&42-7528n60-1418 patio. encl gar $725 180'·226'111lft,10taof
141-MJttaeJ Large 2 Bedroom. 2 beth -..... OT frplc petlo no ~ ' pa lf450/Mo 54&-9950 k/p'.s 539-6190 Beet lee $565-.$745/Mo t..ge beaut, Oulet ~21 .,. .. g. i-w • Montloeno Condo New ~ ,.~. • • . OTHER YRL VS AVAIL 18d & 28d ·all blt·lns •ARLINGTON APTS• ~ ok. 852*93M
carp•t and d;epu, JuUtard In Unlwralty Pant· S l200IMo 875-' 143 Npt H9f't• area ciMn 28<1 0 --s rr...i... Must .... /"\.. . ._. __ ......,,. for r.ntf
,_.,,..___ u-.. Vlll II 38d 2b 1ba. yd. ~tlo. $735/Mo ceanln1yr1y 2500/mo 3~A··~ .. -v~~=-to .. ~!:... .. ahoWI Hkl • mocs.I ........... age · rm. 9 ·• + ..... I .a.. i-L NO PETS 548-8680 Avl 9/10, 4BR 3ba. Fi rm """ ,,........... _, ... .._. ....,., 1u · p.,,, 11\ate 400 1C1 "·~bl · pr~ '97.500 and owe t>onua room. POOi table t , .. ,.,_ 640-6D80. 875-7673 TSL •IT 142-1181 2Br 1·~Ba'TwnhM '875 ~.~o/~~~ G'a:"'prkg 'iey Lve ,.,,._ 8'°"1S30 COLDWC?U
BANl(C?RO ----IUIHUY su1.-Totalty prtvat9 2 BA home
with apa Md rMdy for
unit to be bullt over 3 C9f
gatage. Lovely garden _ -J*lo Is jue1 It..,_ aw•y
from bay beld\front. A
~home .......
IUffllftl·YllW Charming and ln'lmeiculate
woodey new ltltlng wltll
rnegnmc.nt 180 deg view
from 21)d atory Hvtng
.,., 2 8drma a den or 3
Bdrm. Catll.ctral c•ll· lfl09CI family t.oom. JMo
yard wit!\ fruit t'"'·
Owner may carry 111
Trvat Deed. 1445,000
-
WATlRFRONT
tlOMI ~ a-.
AEAL ESTATE
ta1·1·
flll lllllT
Miii.Tiii If THI
llAL llTATI IY
llLTl·ltLLlll I
Plllllll. llLL
PATllOI Tlllll
U1·1211
RFIMfalC R
' .•. \ l ' I'' •
2nd. 'l stay Earthtone CeaeraJ . 2 sHARP&c!Mn4BRnear S0try.nopet1536-0490 SN3rmNBofllca1or2 carpets. Air cond acrou om nt So Cout & OCC Wkly Spr1W1lr19 oceel'l1;11 hm Refg. No kltctt no 9tnleg
1185,000 . bHCh •re• •PP•• gatderllng aervic. Slt75 2b• frple dlh'#Stlr 11025 meatiBJIU SUWlll Yll IE S~5g;~~,n~lt~lar•,'~~I = nt~ =~; Inlet least ••altr provded $&00'1 won't per mo. 546-9950 yrly 539-6190 a.st fM ~ • 759-t383 Mon thN ~t 64&-2474 ·
t8124 CuW9rOr. Irv um S3M190 B4lt fee 211 ll.a&.IW1121. stPU YllW1 W TIWlll•S WIY lll7 u1wa
111-llOO LANDLORDS/REAL TORS Garage top .,.._ lee• Oupleic wl frplc. gar. 880 OHfft hf Ifft In:"':.!.~ N~~
I •-· L 1_9 Fast free t.nant provtdr1 5457 • S875 yard• pet IM#5420 Frplc. wult9d oernnga. dbl ~'S:.:= ::;:' PoQI. l'lllppy tamtty .,,... Intl.la BH ~======:::. ..,.,. -c· -AH.,... AH~ n· LE•Elf 111-a•H TIUREIT llMllO gar PoOI & apa. No petl. * 1 & 2Br. 1 & 2811 tult• S375 780;--2690, w &If m C:2 Xlc. --------*Ill DI011111 * Info 539-6194 Beat Alty " ._ 18drm $12()...1745 •Spacious townhouMS pvt bth. CcMlr9d pstlo
Eastbklff t>eauty .-$old Ex.cutlve Cond~. large START SAVINGI 3 lllT PINIOY1 28dcrn 2'~81 •d. S29731~ •Ar9P1ace1 · ~~ ~· pvt ~ = Water & treat! pd
Traditional
Realty
631-7370
lumllh9d 1>f unrurnlahed new 1 Sdrm In South Budget In time 4 lc:hOOI E· 2Br nMtled In Helghtl onty ..,..,.... • *Private balconies or ......... l I "111 • S225/Jl'IO S\a P 130 E
H 1gh1 y up g, • d • d Coast Springe. get•d aide 2br . bale abOde ~75 mot fM46454 Garden patlOI emplyd lady 494-734& 17ttl St CM So\1-7817
yw/"Homet & Garden" comm. p()Ola,ciubhou,e, $575 othet• available nwm -lll-UIO ~tFteld ....I.. ... ,, Btttb..... C:-IMftia.I .
luah landtc:aPing w/lrg IP•. avl lmmed 1850 yrty *llM110* A r -l L.. ...., - -• yards • sec gate, Avail a•s •w.n Not far to 009atl 3bdl'm 2 JUt•n•• U111I•, IPllmlTS 1\3 Ugnled t9nnls court• IUUll 111tl . lntal1 -·
lmmed. Only S329.900 -w 111a1••-1T stry wl tacuz;zt & gar $775 • Like brand ne'4f1 All utlttlet * 2 Sw1mmir19 pools Wkly rer1tall now IVall ShoplSt~i&flOe Call Patrick Tanori r" ---53M190BestlM •SJrMtN&ponds S140/wk&up 2274 ~ 5281qtt/S316mo , ... 1111 PDRm ' 631-1266 114/llMlla FEE GUARANTEED PLC lalMa •••i• 2'07 1:'~mPOOI. garsU5~~5 •Sorry, no pet• port Blvd C.M. 646-7445 c Mesa C-2 83.2"-4190
Not. naw, 3 Bdrm. pool. r D • • 2"". 28d 18 ••90 •Fumlsl'llng• avall SU 1111 Ll~ff ... ,.,. -epei.. and OC*lJl/hlllllde lalMI blu• 2281 UI ttat AMS Oceanfront 3Br Wlnte< rm a .., ~ _ iN
vi.w, love to ent«taln? A\11 Sept 15 $975 ullls 301 AVOCADO WHY NOT CALL 3026W Coat Hwy.New-•••ft··---You'll love this home. $925/YriY. Charming Older WILi Tl llAllU.I lnci 673-472-4 2• 1 W WILSON IH-1111 port·eeacn. rwtrtg TV -~
$42S.OOO _:;;~------2 Bdrm ... gar epaoa. 28r281$750 ,.._.8613 631-0960 ~-I $140-WklQl,no~l -·--• UYOlm-IY.... Pillo. 57S.30e3 TILUflf 111-lllO ., •••••• .,, 2122 SuWlll YILUIE ---15W75. month
U/lllll()Uf ti().Mfl 2 Story lvy.~ver9d, clap-l.llldlty..3 Bdrm.·~~ ....... 2Bdrm 1 Ba,. tln1~ -we ........ • Jiu 1~555 Hunttngton-Vitl8ge Saaatt . BAYSIOE I/ILL.AG£ Realtors~ . ard ~stone rngRan home Rel• & etedlt 8')pl s 1000/mo 2 block• to GU.. Lane from San Diego lntall HM 300 E Cout Hwy Npt Bch
farmhouM, 5000 ~· tt req 'd $1800/Mo Vall Z23f l>MCh 675-8989 IPllJIOTS Frw-#ay nor1hOIBeech ltl668AYFAONT38<126a l I na-1111
on 113 acre lot. 5 Bdrm• 873-5470 9Y9S Agt s G ER'S f d to .. cFad...__ ·-" on +, llbrary, 5 bathe. t1uo-· IUY •llT Tl IWll OE I N urn)ahe Immaculate. lar~ Garden "" """"'· '"""'' furn home wtnte< ,_,,., NEED STORAGE SPACE? , OOIAIFlllT playroom. land Included Sovth Bayfront apac;loua 2.atory 3+2 frptc. gar & TownhOuM. Frplc & pool Apts Baautirully land-_McFadden ___ 67S.-81161l818)281·eo82 FllST lllTI FIU
LIT '890,000. 646-3580 upper of duplex. 2 Bdrm pOOI $900 mo Fee•ee.43 S 1195/mo 873--0899 s c a P e d g r o u n d • • I mat 21 ff -. -----Sat• Harbor s.lt Stor11Q1
3 bat!\ + small d9'\ -· ram 11• ... o • rt •-uL p()Ol/apa patlold.Ck No ' Vacati•• All ll'Zel Into ns.-2307
98 fMt on tl'le aand Ill Oft 'l l .. lanelll• S2500/mo Yrty. (lum?). •-~" r ~ -• pets • Or~ Tr• tBr Condo. ·It t l 2907
Prlvataget•gu•rded com-S-429.500fee 01"$250M L/H Elevator & boat allp. Bait ell 224 28f18a. 122 25th St ·~ 18drm $595-$e05 on Slream. $575 ptmo •a
1 hanaetanh munlty. Raduced to NII 3brl3ba/3ear pp 6447070 Lora Vance Realtors • blk to bell $700/mo 28drm 2Ba $750 545-63-40 1tt 5pm NWPT PENIN 2 & 38r Nr ;;;iiiiW;m-...,;;;;.moli;;;~;w.-
by out ol state owner 873-4062 pays rent utl 1 642-M14 2250 Vanguard S40-9&26 ----
1
oceanfron1 F\aduced SPIF\ITUAL READINGS
Now Juet $449,!500 HARBOR RIDGE ~2K m«I !Ike a l\ae w/appls ----r1 ltada 27'9 Wi!IY rates o'll« Labor A<Mcle In Alt Mattwa & ~%m1g9elow..,_.val "'~·••t•u u 22 Jull a blk 10 waves OCEANFRONTSharp~Br Day675-49l2 8kr Counseling 1815 So. El (714) 673 4400 Speciacular .,.iew. AIC. _,.,.. 539-6190 Best Alty lee garage, No Peta S925 ~lfield 1 &. • 4 r m. r1y ---Camino RMI. Sen Clem
2Br. 2ba. den. 7ao.-e755 YllW •• mn Tl IE TO •ir•c11 • 2 Winter 67l-7666. Winter No ••• Bier ..... 11 •• LIC'd. 492·7298
UI .. •-1 Stalae..loh 2Br, gar l II ~ •+ WINTER RENTAL Fantu-flMfU IP&ITlllm 575-4606 lbrt ztU Ff•' US Poetage atempsl
..,_ morel S1000 mo -.&750 Gar, bltlnaS795 IM•7381 tie 3Br 2'"'81 upstrs Unit Sparkling clHn large 1Br & 2Br Oul)leic Garage Roll ( 100) 22 cents tor Olearh a..ff TM Inf TllDllY 111-lllO TEUlllf 111-lllO on und nr 45th St 1 yr Apt• foe lamllles wt t oc 2 Vrty S650 & ~75 8111 to $275/mo urns pd Hunt $21 to 0c1 111 No 11nee1
Palatl8f' FRENCH COUN-· old. All upgrades l dee· cnildrlfl near park Heat t>eh Dys 542-0291 Of I Ben loc/PCH rtqulrM 215e Newport Btvd. CM
TRY TUDOR, more than 2Br 181 Duplex. flr9Place. s750 4br 2b• 011 Adams orator tum S2500 mo paid No pets 731-8'488 E~ 111 last. MC dep M~ -..
-.gent. 5300 aq It. 11 dwage. 1trtum S7151mo frplc newef' kit 2 oara Agt 544-2-48A M-F 9-5 2Bdrm 111,ea $695 --'" S8 2S Avl now I Wtt F•ad .., rooma OoNn & City No pets 838-3399 S3M 190 a..t Alty fee ___ ___ 2Bdrm 281 s720 2 Br 1 '" ba. patio gar or 546-4333 otc uk foe Ben -;;;;;;;~iiiii;;;.; .~ t t rtattll Oaf • ., 5583 Hoag avall Sept 1 -·-• Llgf'tta ... _...•a• OupleX '3br/2ba s1275 & PRIVATE BEACH CONDO • 398W Wiison .,..1. S750 0 731-0595 Bal Penn 1 2 l!>lk to bctt. ~';! ''::'•s:1r:: ~! 28r 1ba '850. Olahw9hr. 38R 2ba. 2 car gar. ale. a.tL--I 1 • 27H Apt for Rentl Br S565 m - -bd w priv ba Jndry fac
--------$"""'.000111 • _ ... of t...._ 424 PolnMttla. 873-8.478 en<' unit R9dec $1175 _._ I H ~OM to SC Ptza Call Spacious 3Br 2B•. gar I $450/Mo 673-8127
--------------.,.,... ~· ,,. IM or IM oPt Agent N r t rea t 8 frPlc CIOM to l>Ctl Yrty --~ Herbor :!rc bargalnS. L.AAGE3BR2'hba.lt991 261-8565.957-<Ml69 2br 1baSt200mo.yrty.no B<>b~5&-~ S13501mo 675-4912 0t CdMlhraptS432~
FOUND ADS
ARE ~EE
Cal:
..
ltt u ...... y ..
St11 V .. p,.,.,.,1
Cll ca...aw.
64t-S67'
for Information
& surprisingly
low cost.
'=~=· S<C\l~~-4~b0~· -----t-.i lot NY I ~
• .__ ........ "'floe ·-.......w-•• ............... _.._.
I SHURTH I
I I I I* I I
l SOVNll
·~:~~= ~'~~pet•. lllULIW. WCI gar . Incl utll 873-5429 • ...,.rt~' 4-Ptt1 754-179?__ Bllr --'s~o2:;.fy "=2e7
oc1eo-e102 NeecSA·t~bruoo.ri10000ozy2erM50 fM#993-4 lalMI ;'L.ilii't7 i~j.~y L:~1s~;_Lr~ 2~1 F9m stu1ove1y•brhMon
• •~i~\·? Inell amart ftr plan appls TILIHIT llM .. O Ptaia1ala 2707 --view Nr pvt l>Ctl & 1enn11 Bal Pen Pt N-sm«r S304 K~d: kid/pet yrty OC*il\ ae im.. 4f 1 ,w/garage 28r1'A8a'895Wahl dryr Yrly $1250 No Pala ·deoe7S.7•1.!_•'16 __ -~---• 53M190e.1AltyfM ~bi mo Bay VI••· Wrk dshW'ahr ~:..=• 540-81871(519)753--07 19 I F 10 111r w same 8eallt --~~-~~~
HARBOR VIEW HOME OCEA3 N&F~08dNrmT ~~EISn 2:,~~poo4::.t~P~: 979-8371. Hm 973-8278' B:~:-:1: 1BF\4610 •,2Brlc 1~.~t Hts~ ~:~/'~"~e ,;::'°:32~1 Found Bird call to CS.-
l'.'\200 tq tt 4 Bd 4bl all on ~ ,..,.,_ no peta $975 543-723-4 -Tt SUJ 211 rp · .,....,ony. car.,.,.· I ~ acttbe Vic Satlto ~
7 upgr•d•i ~ 're-excluelv• get.ct com-__ · 2B~ ~:.: BeJt>oa Plef ~ ~~':· ~ 1795 No J>911 722~ 11 60-88 I& CM 8125 642·9'21
modeled. f5 -~ rnun~~Mo •••mll.S** Only $7~~1 1M#8758 TO~AREA~=-~i=1
•CUTE 1Br lii-yrly Hrt>rV19WHms ~t rm FOUND bwnl'#tlt 5nelt ..
.-.. -97• _70 CALRL US REEAGARSEOISNG TllDEIT lll-llM 2650 HARL.A 549-2447 $800/mo 3 711-A W ~~ c:,a~-~75 tnc1 I "IC Mesa V•OI Gott •-........., I VINE L __ 811boe 675-4912 _ Cour• 540·9936
11 ...,!Al~~ find • WIY llllW IUIDTI lnlH Ootf •ultJ :LJ.: ~~~.gat 28R~/~/w, Brand new 28r 2Ba Apta L~src::t'Ch n;: ~ ~1 FOUND !em brn/wht Bull
Nwpt Ben NEWER MOO-Luec:Noul 3+2+frplc:. gar 111-l• $800/mo lncutll 673-5429 pvt P9no ger 3&1 E 18th tor~. 505St Andrews incl tM Dick 5'4&-4258 T•ner Vic Santa Ana ERN pool home at 1 Only$11009115-•t423 -~ •---L 2._. --H St. u 25• 646-9794 ~for Scott 26t·2288 __ u _ Canyon Rd & Royal Oak
rMaoNlbte pr1oe In I TILUllT IJl-lllf _ 99M• -Ctrtal •ti •u 2'J----MM prof tnr Mme 3Br Anah Hiiia D74-4280
QUIET preetlgtoul .,... naoe oc;;;; view. 28( 1b8. baJGOny, ,,..,, OUAI. SPAOlllS I 2b•. "" CdM Ger. Found gray/wtlt 111119"
w/good achOOll, good Celtl •na mt ,fplcooSfn::· ~':~2 m Cf'Pll & floors. no J>9la Eut91de upet81rs 2bf 2ba \pat NIU\ ''~h• nr, :''~ ~?~~ utl VC1y 16th & IMM CM
'*CJhbof'I anc:t • ~ COX 80NBO XVXIL Row 1 ut ~50 1nc1 utu 64()...403() dtw. P"' deCi( in qu1et 1. two bi"droom 1ph v. BIWfl nee c:o11 645-2G88 ~~ :-"'.:n: 28r 2Ba. Ovu pool, * 18r, prtvate & qui.t Duple• 3br/2ba S 1275 & &;.e,!.n Was H~~9'j94 at • M ... .,,.,. 2 .. fld""' lbatt\ Found MONEY N.-r 17th atreeme & tan.. Oct c;w Reno-& ,.mg. Gaa & 29, 1ba SSSO OlshWshra ''"(' I l'IOUM COM ...,75/Mo utll C ~o:rr HERi!..: gat w/opflr. Mien>. W/0 , water pd. Ocean vtew 424 PolnMttl&. 873--6479 ~ 3BA 2ba dup .. x incl 720-0283 ~2~~· M .. a Call
..._....t °' yout...._ Spit M $950 549-2447 $175 tit+ MC 497-6287 ..._ Po.11. wd ~~.gar. M F 25--35 C-M -c>t 1325 -----
'f04X•-·"'T o"'JoY''"-__ Laro-3 Bdrm 2bath. .... w 10 Ncup 0 1ws11r y81d SCR•M Lm rwwdl In• MODERN 2112~11111tM D•PTWlflLR pta.c• aund•ck Ou!« $975 &31-3648 ~1tt~tut,t=1~;ut11 ft • laflal 3 bdnn +den, pto-Trtplex w/f(ptc, gar & 2Br 2~·. frplc, ger M50 11325/Mo 759-1353 on 1st yur's rent nn " ::: r .. elorially dHorat•d bulltln• 911. teel MCe Wilk to bMCh F"ff241 beectt 28d 2ba d4lf\ LARGE 1BOAM 1BA FURNISH{D or M F Eaa• C M tiPt qui.t. •NSW£RS
home In 1 ~ __ ...,. ·---. mo111 11 ....... N.ar 'Squeelcy CMel\ On Vic-matur. r~ S270 " .,..w/ahugiaywd, ~ •~•• ,.,...... fp, petlO gar 11296/Mo tone nr Nwi>t Ave $495 fURN1SH£0 mo •• .., urn ~5005 """*". EntoY
poof, epa + muGt1 rnot'ltl 28' tBa Ip 0p4x. NO peta. Avl 9/ l 720-~ Ho peta 19()..2962 ~. VIiion
Onty 4 yr• ~. an 1950 'A ~· "60+ r STUDIO. Utll1 pd, ltlnt IOC. --•• , .. ..a YllW -fllES M F lhr I09 bMul 4t1t "-· GOlNO OUT
AMOLUT& VALUE for eec. '550 5494484 den ~....... hm NO P9t• A9ta.. $475+ -:'_ -.-000 ,. K lltt-w-lrvme '38~ • 1~ utll & Preity young gift 10 !\et onty $319 9" wfTIAMSI • ..,... d9P S7'-679e 2Br 2 ..... 1 aq g#. _,...., ·~ dee> Av.it 0112-857 2384 roommtt• en. • b'9
• ~or~ --c..i 29t Uta. gar, no ~ ~t• t1250/IM Jae Red«oret.cs No SI L .--1 .. 1n ...._
Patrk*'T.no,;-i3'-.:;2M, 2118 .,_.,,... Apt E •twt38 or Mt-1554 Cttta •na 2124 P4Jta loll5 ~ .. ,... M~ ~ ~=r ~ o~ · """'
M26/mo 54~7913 ltwpr! ...... -:*:"~· S300mo 998-0118 \s~::, '::n"°o:' llTIT-HUI WOODLAI• Ya&.AGI .. ..., ... l NB Apt ..... Hb. 2Bd 2b9.. ........ fllf
Hos-a A01.e.31-2242 :u.u lfplc, dbl eer a pM a•·--•nn• ~ pool ptefpr0f30 • S400 1&11•1•ms oat11009/1&Fw•lo423 Am•--. $2000-c>141-0lt4 •••n .... lu Jua C.~171 tftlt..f.nll. * 1ILDllT _, llMlll N-&Mr lt\r 58<-;;;. ..,.
3i88eciKOl™ii' ;'iJiim;;=~ t1160 Beyffont 3Br 2k =~=:~:aso·ec:-,:°""1 ===~'"' A1Nrt1Mnb to bell Gar, W/O, ktefl Hr.~= .. ~r::a
hOf"9 °" • I04 ~· 40' ...,..._ ~ 21 c..ncaaw llJ1£TSl'tWl Nrwpor18nchSo ~~·~1 NoEmptoyeea No ~-::::.,:~•SHARP W__,. 2 a.tb0eeo-tn-t464 .... •INl•UWY-1700ltiftl\t11•tt Oowl"'9wPnt,._t9d ~ Noa..no ::r~ttv '°;· = ~~.-;',r~~~ 1:~cs.:i.:' =: •-• •••• r,10<1wn ~ ... ~~~ Mr~(;\~
l)lWencl.-IMltlO..• en ~::: "'.: ::k"= drpa/orptl. flr•place. : ••H::. =:: 642·5&1] Prd mei. 45• ctw Ar. ree4~\aoe...,.. ~alre a downataltt tt9nd C"9dt1 Check sen bed! ~erd I 1025/mo Y"Y Ntw Po,, 8~~ No pool, nr 9G "1a a 406 Ao1 I tOOI 22 oente tor ~tlo !Mk• tor ~ • .-: dip n0-66'2t o y • 151·I4 7 • or ua. 1111 I llf W&Ta -.. 1'~f1 lrv;nt A~tnw 432· nee Ill 2 30prl'I S21 to Oct ,_. No .,_,
fort-* ~-tMno --~-731-311&. .. Hiit • 1•• lf>1h1 Rmm' Fem-38d,.. •'-' 111 NllwPOn &MS. CM _
142-1111
_..,,.,.. loM. 1 ........, t.mtM. Wfltt/cttyr, a-. a.ii tl'ltnga ,_. wtth ow.,. Ta sp•p _., lotJ·tlU• 6.tS-llO.t Jl*tobdlS350N&vtle ... .,. IO'MttllnO to•? s...21.000. Mo .... , • ....,. 38cSrm 21• Montlcellol ....,...
~~!!~~~!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~u..:~:.:~:•:!0t~no.62)==:S~t.:pe:t~IO~ "Of 650-1015 ll'llot W1r11 Ada Mtc:t\Mt,.,._ ...... tt2 *b do It wel
...
' --
\
~I 1e1, ...... .. •••• , ...... 1111 •••• ...... "" ...... , ..... , ...... • ...... , ...... II!! ... , ....... 1101 ........... . • ...
T ..;!_ _ ttll amt=~~ mo. um 11L &mmll lllMlll Bant11"\w..a Cttrtca1 HllTI...,.. Mr 1newenot PAIT Tiii •••er.....-ln.uranoeAgcy513-11l5 Account• recelvebl• & O.C.Co.hNpos.fofl~ L~nll OLlllYDllT MlnYAll..... 111.~IKlll poe1t1one evtllabte it th41 :..i;,=.= UllllTILlll =~~'1ur':ir: :e'~'%1::~=2~ Tht .!'!1~or tn. tt,e~:~~~ v=~~~,,.... ~d~;' ~::,,r :~ =:in:"t,:,-:-=
C.ilWeyMMlttMwl 1 .. 15**1H8rettaurtnt L-v N~49s.oeoc> am.... Ftderel Otpoell In-~te,tM,.dtc.hete (114)1H·11N ~ar:-Corp"'-~:!; Sunday mor~~'.LE.em 154-4128 neecta b9Ck off1ot per-u II •~ttt/llt ... -el · eurence Corp. hat tob lor YQU. Ow dMalon .. ..., ••open .. ...,. n "4..60 pet tiour P"'9 OM --chali.nQl1 ltlon ... ... ,.. Wheel AltgnfT*\t, Brak... ln\l'Md openlngelorpet· of bank ltquldellon cur-ln1urano• Dept. Th• eltowena. Mutt haw u Widow hat mon.v ror =it be ablt if:i'and'9 Fl tlme poeltlon evell Tune 1JP NewPQf1 ~ '°"' ~th the followlng r~tly hu opening• for OllftlLlll entry leWI INSUMNC! IW;t oet or plcll-up eno .... , ID'• f10.0001up No I pr.i C&ll Col NOW 11 t>uay H B .CPA Ctr. 3000 E. Cout Hwy. exper MV9f'tll clettl .,,,.., WtlO p I oarrler ~ CLEAi< ,.qui,. IM lol-be ....... 11 yMtl old aeoUred .Wflh pottnli.I red11,...1no S*WtY· Call ~(2'13) 92~1M23 • ~~:' ~~=--= Cofone ct.I Mer. • Min 2 Yfl baN<lng exper ewrllQt typing IPMdt_ ;! 1 ;:,ed H.ip boYI • ta;'1rt0 ~~ Cell 8NOt 142..m3
OM Mllllon plue .ight Otnlton ~ 973-7~ tncl;g phone rtllel, &m TIU lllftll In 1 note d9')t. or loen &Of WPM. The rob!;~arfi', and glrlt eollclt new • ,~nf'wtty ';;fit; pollclte -,... (1 l4)Jil).13'1 Seit ldi. 11em1 142-$818 Want Ada C•ll 842;6't8 typing llilng .,rand• a .nd llOht rec>e)rt, Nfi'port d419t. •rt • grH .. ~ al 1ubtcrlpllon1 on t!*r & premiums ..... e,.r/P·T ltrtry
-----1 ...,.., ore rMtnt Formtr Tll. t Ctr 3ooo E. Cout • Ablllty IO ty~ min peckegt fncludlng ....,If, I Pl?« rout ... Mutt enjoy • Xlnl V9f1>al & com-need9dlnve11~:1 t-;-,t,~~
-----------.--· • .u .. .., ........ ,...:one ct.I Mat 40 WPM & vltlon ooverllQt. YOAJ work..... wfth 10. 13 yr _ .. _.__ ..._ ......... ore •xper req . ..,_, .... , • ....,. • s1rong \'Wbel a Wl'ttt.,, would Ilk• mor• lnfor-"~ ~ ~ ,,_._,..,., _...., CdMer. Good phOnltftt-
' SS.50 to se 25 hr 10 llert Beby9fttlng communication lkltlt. matlon call pereonMI. at <>Ida. ~2., n.xlblt h •Mutt be conecltll06out q114'1t• end OMI'-' MC-w/r~ •V«Y e mot. & Exi>.atlence CALJ.at i." Bantttno aper II rtqUfrtlO 915-5'00 !01! WodL _.., -&-•MMM to dttallt. retltfll 9XP9f'; req. H/or.-
SYDNEY
0MARR
1 opponUr\lfylor edv~ chlkSCart wotktr needed for thlt PQeli1on MW-eomc;;,1~ ~ Al I TECHNICIAN In OW' 7~pm. S1100/mo '3?
ment. Apr>ty In petton tor church Sund919 oniy. mum ..i.ry wm not u -CLERICAL 842-4321 ..-.. 208 ln~rence Dept ~ wllf lnawence bene. '°' I NOW~c:;::: Or e 4&-1 1:00 am. 7M-t4511 :r ~:::· .fZrv ~ OLllll nPIST . • ~!.:::.tor. 790--0505 ... for Cl
, 7141752--6015 UUU UY OlH rlor ••!* a education 111111 OUST lr\tlurtno. on all ,..i •Pim! .. .
WHERE CARINO ~MF D I c. offer• e gr•t Ortet w .. 1ern Savlngt, l&ILY PILIT .. 1a1e loent neeclt tom.oM for oll'lee
IS THI! CUSTOM! . bentfi1 PtCtc lnctud OM of Cellfornle't !Md· • PleclnG com~Ye & couri.r 1:30-<':80 Mon• &I 11111111 Ing 0.:111 & v~ Pldi: Ing financial lnt11tuttont Hablllty lnMKance on Fri. C.r req • mllMQt pd
TM Or•w Co&at Del"' *BILINGUAL ~ It ....,., would lllct hat an lmmedlttt open-OllTl•ISOYIM l'.D.l.C. owned P'oS*tY 131~15
W ....... ~.... A 'Z• -....... ,., CLERK TYPIST -.-· ·--Ing tor • Cl«k Typltt In , 'Tiii • Revt4Jw of propwty f()( -.a~y. qa1 PllOt 11 looktno for Mlp n *SECURITY GUARD mar• Information, PINN our Cotta M ... branch OLlll Al adequate cowreoe. PIT Moct.la, 4otort a~
A.RIES(March 21-Apnl 19): A new fncnd provesloya lt~. Focus on ~Ill Ad-·~ wl~·r; *HEAD DISHWASHER ~7a~1 .. perE•OoEnntl at ·-· . TM Dal"' PllOI hat Im-• MalntalnlnO tlctclett F~TV: corrynerKld 2 •11 ~.:..~Im diplomacy, persuasion. and timing. C'ycle is such that you win conte~ts, .,.,."... I • .,...,400 Thi• 11 an .,,,ry i.Til't ~ ., In • curren111atue • a --·
rttover lost articles and vindicate acuons. Tauru~. Libra, Scorpio c pie* l'P and <»-For app1 pltHe c111 -•t lllW 111on Y0u wllt INm tM mtdlat•S:::,ngJ:,.?'r • Preparetlon of monthly Toll tree 1(I00)6M-F1LM
fi I II~ or ade, pulllng &45-6000 ext. 521 M·F _. • vatlout typM of loan•. tonier 0 r...,.,.• persons iaurc promment y t••rthMtl, proc.ulng 9at'll-<6pm. Temporary produo11on pr.,.rlng r..i mete loan Work In our t>Yty Cll'OWll-• c;~\., Input 11111Pl'11111T TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20): Odine tcrm5, rcali1e posihon 1s ede, end a vari.ty of work, general handyman. documenlt, malntlln d• tlon o.c>atlment. Mutt be Candid , .. m 11 ha •P-mum-faceted corp. hat
strong despite doubts evmccd by one who is pompous. Answers llrc o1Mr dut!M. Cendld•t• Banking con11 & el4tC Peld on pertinent t1i.. u w.i1 u depend1bte •nd able to ,0 r~•t• ~x erl:ice need of btlght, bubbly
found behind scenes -you arc on brink of valuable discovery. mutt be ext~ or-lllllT &llllTllT •xP· 1173-11397 other ~naral dullH. h•ndl• h .. vy phone• ~~Ing 11 a :fue Maxi-vlvaclou1 pareon to
Romantic involvement provides excitement, lends spice. ~:~~· ~~ ~ LlelllAlm IHllllPll/llm TYf';3 of 50 wpm 11 ,.. ~ ~r~~-!: mum MJary 11 S19,000.. ~,.~ht ~r=
GEMINI (M ay 2 1-June 20): Lessons recently learned can now be otMrt TlmtOIU ror N.8. L.w Arm. Mutt qu r · Mond•y • Friday. call plyr. Th• F.D.LC. ottert • 91,.8818'' ·
effcctjvcly utilized. Emph1uis on pressure, deadlines, rcspons1b1hty, $.nd reeurM ~tn: Lita A Mlf-11.ner to ualtt tn have law office exper. we offer competitive 842-4321 ror appt Aak p,ree1 1~~alp~=
intensified Jove rtlationsh1p. Long-di~tance communicatio n relates to Smith, 10: tM deYeloprnent ·a oon-~107 Mtarlet, and excellent for Tr.oey nclud ng llllPTINllT /TntlT
travel. Capricom plays role. 1ro1 of budget for owned t>eMfltt For lntervi.w, p covetage. If you would 8uey AMI !tt•t• offtot
CANCER (June 21-July 22): What seemed a lost cause 1s revived 11&111 OIAIT RMI Etttte pro'9rtlll IUH/1111 llOI appointment. P'"M call M DE~t ~·~t·oo Ilk• more lnlMmatlon, Mutt be rtlt•blt er1d NMdt to !net.pc ndtntly Leticia Tampa et: on -Fr · · · pl .... call pereonntl. •t preeenlebi. Wltl tretn -to your ad vantage. Emphasis on special requirements. mcluding l&ILY PILIT ,....,ch & cor trol of Buey "':need• talented 542-62117 975-5400 EOE but ex~ prtf•,.a'
taxes and license. R each beyond current expectations. You are going P.l.lt11llO budget tor ~d R .. 1 =~ meJt:'= 8:'i (7~) llt-•no llUftlY ll•ll 12-6. Mon-Fri. c.11 Joen
places. Aries plays key role. O.tta •u, Oa. 11121 Eat•t• f.op1r11e1. NMda Dlolc et &lone> Lube & (11•) 711-4171 Part time mutt have good ady "-*'·fut, depend. 831-12M
LEO (July H-Aug. 22): Sccnano haghhg.hts new stan. mdepen-~:;;, ~~~n~y d:,~-Tune, 1560 Newport driving ~ecord, for H.B. & r .... Nwpl. Bohl c .M. • ·~~~-
dencc, self-esteem Break from past patterns ,,roves ad~antage~us. . You'll alao be r~tlbte Blvd, C.M 831-11148 lllUT WEITERI noritt 833-1887 M-F 11-1 ., ... 844-5498 & j
Focus on partnership proposal, special document, cooperative prOJCCt. Advertl!I~--for ettebltltllng tlctcler & SAYllll IELIYllY PllUll J&llTlll W&ITll _!,___ __
manta! status. Aquanan figures promtnently. a OLUalFIEI tlllng ayatemt for th• llL/Llll IPIOl&UIT Part/full time 14.00 plhr, Permanent PerMlmt. n-T
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt 22): You could receive two offers llYDTillll budget cMpe/1!Mn1. (2 peopltbWlll tr.in. Good Equal Opportunity plua mlfNot. Mu11 hive 7-9:30am M-F. Coeta llMP ...,.
simultaneously. Sttck to what flou know. i.tcer clear of get-nch~u1ck • Minimum 2 YM'• bank-opprt. lck 831-9148. Employer M/F/H Clf. 497-2172 M ... (819)5711-3984 Beauty Hlon. Friendly
I " 1 · I · C ., · Full-tlrM Ttlef>hont Salee Ing experience In a nott Econo Lube & T>'ne 1550 energetic & f&thlon con• scheme. ntualton nngs true. 10 ow lntl1a 1mpress1on. anccr nauvc IS Poeltlon. S•IH ... dept. or loan dept. Newport 81. Coet• ;...... Clerlcal *"" nn• Ulllll&PI UlllTllT ec:loua.
loyal, wall prove 1l. perl•nce preferred. •Mutt be conecltntloua & FILI GUHi Underwater Boat cleenlng. lmmedlet• epen1ng wl a lllllT I T&nH LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22). Populanty surges upwards. Member of Typing '5 wi>fT'I. Good 111.,,tlve to cMllll. wmm WHIH TM FecMrll Oepotlt In-Mutt be Scubt cert'd. Wiii land •rct'tlleotutal .... 1111
opposite sex, previously md1tferent, becomes staunch all,Y. Emphasis Salary plut Commlulont •Strong verbal & written 15.18 plhr. 1urance Corp t\u four train. 873-3830 firm ~n upper level •--------
on travel commun1cat1on settlement of dispute. Gemma Sagittanus and a.nellt Program. communication •kllla. Part time, 3 hr min. Good opening• for fll• clerks. 1T1Qmt potltlon Vari.c:t lllOIPTIHllT
fi' . 1 · ' can Kathi.an Olaon for • Experience In flllng. Promo t Io n a I op-To quallty you mull hive llmll tb lttl s 1 ~ persons igure prominent Y • an lnlervt•w appoint-toning & gath«lng In-~unltlea. Newport 2 yra taper. In filing, tof1· t>e Independent, drtw a reapon• 1 •• 1 •ry Reel Ell•I• lnvut SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No'. 21) E"ents transpire that elevate sense of --1 formation la e mull. School•. Food Ser-Ing a chectll~ all torm• taxi cab OMV printout commeneuret• with u -ment/Property M1mt
F h I Y Id " ...... • G klll perience. Contee! Wm Co .. require profttllonal secunt} ocus on propeny, ome. ong-range prospects ou cou IUlll llAIT • ooct typt"f. • • vtoee. 2995 BMoh St., C. or doeu"*'t•t on. fxP« req. Apply 1401 So. Cit S>itrlck. 7141641282 attitude & apptttance.
receive favorable settlement M oney picture bnghter than onganally NILY PIUT For more nformatlon M ... 5H--3273 EOE In 1 benk't note dept. I• a Hwy. Lag. Bch. (Up11alrt) L•UL lllln••y llghl typing. 756-4901 anticipated. Another Scorpioflays role 330W na s pleue call F.D.l.C. Per-OU'T Fiii ,...IT ptua. The F o.1.c . otfera • ttmll ., -., 2 · 'f I . .-y tr .. t aonnet (714)975-~00 •n grNt t>eMfltt packeot r 11t"-1tlon a tax at 11•-11•-/nPSIT SAGITTARIUS (No\. --Dec. I ). D1vers1 }'. anny1c. discern CostaM .... CA llllT ••• , lnciudlngOenttl&Vlalon $CASH DAILY$ or "' -.......... .
motives, 101t1ate dialogue w11h a very special person Scenano (714)&42-4321 • cov•rage. Piette call Apply t-5 Mon-Sat. 129 ~~it~~-·~~~;: Pan tlrM. ~a.ch
h1g.hhgh1s 1nvest1gat1ons. tnps. v1s1ts, reunions. Check calls. messages. AIDE F. uve-1n PIT uslttl , ... ~-•''~ •l~_,-..l\ llllElllll 1 peraonnet. EOE Cebrllto. Cotta M.... IUmt 10 Hiring Panner, ~~T~~.::~:ro;:q&
appointment schedules. Gemini figures prominently teaotltrlnwhlehr.~m/brd ,........ ~·p 975-5400 DRIVER 5000 Birch St, Suite 873 -5348 1ny de y
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19)' Y ou'll recei~e pf\ representing +S250 mo. &4&-235i e.\•''' IELL IY OLDI nrtlT 2900, Newport Beech. 9am-6pm.
token of appreciation An1d1: that had been m1ssmg will now be AIDE to panl&l dlubi.d \~' to. aulat 1n typtng. flllng xint oPPOf\untty exltt 11 Ca. 92890 O LUHI
)ocated: Be d1plomauc buJ aJso daspla} confidence. You need not ~ lady & ahopptng etc. 3-4 TELEPlllll 1nd other ei9rlcal duti.. tha bMullful trvlne Mar-IUJmUIOE Plan ~I ~oordlnatt ec-
intam1dated. Taurus plays roll'. -hra/day 848-8753 Typing 80 wpm r9Q. Own rlott Hotel IM a full time llOUllO tlvltlet. Nee. An beck·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb 110: What appears a setback as merel y APARTllmlUIAIU USI THI PIT or FIT. ChOlce of car • mutt. Call Judy, DRIVER Ou11" lnetu~: current tun time oppty ground Ev11/Wknd1
• temporary deJay • .Kno\\ ll. dtSpla~ 1i&ht1ng sp1nt. You make sagnaficant 21 Unlll, CQsta MeM.. No ~:C,~ 1"::':i ~ :1 ~~ &42-.4321• ext. 3 '8 tor ~~~v1':c,:I' i::;n't:S = exlat to jotn tM .ng1neer-14 85/hr &«-4884
gains. views arc vmd1catcd.}1.>U are going to wtn Pisces. V 1rgo persons ~ta. Exp«i.nced, Mml· DAILY PILOT tnarJtttfng. II~ ai>Plt. •••ii OIAIT Wayne Alrport. Appn: •no dept. of IM 500 room RELIErWORKERI •
play oulSlandmg roles. retired. 855-0US -"FAST CARETAl<ER-r .. care hm, -c1nt1 mull be peopi. lrvln• Marrlotr Hotel. BEHAVIOR MOD needed PISCES (Feb. J9-March 20). Look behind scenes, check source c RESULT" 'IAILY.PILIT onented l have an 1dnt Knowledge of boller. tor dlHbltd chlldren
bl I Lo h Ap1 Manager ouplt Hvt -ln, Ill• hMkpng. drMnQ record. chlller. weldlng. & r.. 957.,e190 material. rcahze you arc gaining valua ea I) vc relations 1p grows w/t'l.fJ lor buutlf\il 9e SllVICE Mature fem 432-7829 DUU1YPllT Apply rn per.on ·Tutd•y-trlge<ttlon preferred. tn-•~-------stron~r. money s1tua11on solidifies Psychic 1mpress1on 1s -on target. Unt1 Garden Apt.I, CM Dl•tCTOIY CARPET SALESMAN Permenent PIT, entry level Wedneedey e-12 noon dlvldutJ mutt be Mff· Re9!1Uran1
Follow through. SaJa'l: bonut+ Apt. No " dra~ry E•S* tielplul. poatlon w/ohance for Im-Thurtdey 4:S0-9pm. ttarter. HI Pllllll f /T
IF AUGUST %8 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, creative. pet• 2-'914Wlcdyt9-4 Drew, oommltalon call mediate advanc.ment In 1800 Von Karman. lrvlne. Apply In peraon Tutd•y· UlllU P/T
sensual. stubborn. onoinal and of\cn center of controvero;y Aries. Leo. l/I AA-• .... IT For Result Biii 54M191 • beeutllut. motivating •t-EqutJ Oppty Emplyr Wednetd1y 9-12 noon nMded 11 H41mt~-·1 .,.. _, __ 'rn motpti.ra Clll 1157 • f938 Thurldey 4·30-8pm. .,
Aquanus persons play important roles 1n your lafe. You a« perceptt~. FIT, PeclflcVlew M«n<>rl&I Service Call Chlld Cart, Aget 4 & 7 + ror 1niervi9w EXCELLENT INCOME l800 von Karman. 1rv1ne. Rettaurant. 24 1 E
sensitive. sentimental. cnt1cal and >OU seldom substitute quantity for Park. Call Pit. 844-2700 llt• htekppg. My CdM FOR HOME ASSEMBLY Equal Oppty Emptyr Cot ti Hwy· Cd M ·
quality. If single. you could marry this year. If married. there could be ART/GRAPHIC GALLERY 6 .. 2•5671 · ~00~\:~:i =-~:1 only OIWOTlll 1Vf~ .. ~:g3~~N[x~ ~~ IUlmUIOI TUllll .. __. .. ur-~t73--0i20 an add1t1on to family. Mamed or single. you make significant changes managflf + aai.a. Send ,. s>erl•n~. pr•f•rably ~,.,-._,. ...
which include travel and creative endeavors. December will be , .. ume 10 Box 131 Dally ht. JU OltRI Oare Autstut blllngual. Call 497•7557· ffll Olll I L:~nd~:'~Ti':.O :P lllllY· W&ITIUlll
Piiot PO Box 1590 C¥ R.aponetbi. peraon, oom-OIUllTlll Ollmll PllUI In a pharm~tlcel com· I PIZll PlllP,
fortabi. w/chlldren; In-F.0 .1 C. It Miking full time lor ftlh market flah tXpet piny. Mull have Calif. Ptrt 11,,,.. lrvln• area
lanll to 7 yra, to Ulltt In coll«tora In the lrvlne raq H.B. 973-1122 · driver• tie. Mttry 786-.4812 Of' S1tvt
dey c&l'e progrem p/tlme. llN to periorm conllnu-lffwport PtlarmtceUtlcal or Joe 552-0233
n.xlble hrl ~25 out COIJtt¥tlon effort on Front office pereon want-897 w 18th tt. N.B.
t 01111. &asti IPT IOI "' •I " • t. Gar•11la1 1 .. 11 Cltulal · _Pa_l_at_la_.1 _____ FIT a PIT 1v111. 240-9073
dtllnquenl .ccounta. At ed for Wholt111e HNllh 842-76, 1 Retteurant
pert of our llquldallon you Cllnlc. Per1onabi.. pro-" Ollll I UllTllHll wlll be Involved with con-f .. alonal health Of'lented MANAGER-French Paa1ry Elcper AP91y Broedw1y
ttc11ng borrowtre by lndMclutl Wl1h gen«al of-Shop, ~8124Beectl Bar & Oriti, 261 Broed-ltnict Clean Upe•Tree Trimming Home & Otf~ c1 .. n1,,'g by OUTHERN PAINTING & ex 4117-4911 Ive meg . $2 17 per day jMARINE Ol9MI Mect11n1C -· Yard Malnt • Haullng JODI Pie ... can for tr• DECO RA TING. 1nt1Ex1 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii phone to reaotv. delln-fie• tkllle. EllHn Kltrlltlnt ~ way, L.ag. Bc:h. 4117-3072
quency probltrnt. You 419-1133 MEDICAL R .. taurent
wlll review borrower• fll.. FILL n• '" OllllPUITIO/ WIST COOK & recommend action u Fltlme. bu•y office.
' FAST PROF SERVICE. . MIKE 850-3283 est1m1te 842-&74e Lie. lnaured. 831-e430
That't ALL you Pty lor Roger Pecker 845-7194 C ,_. c•-a-U ·1 OWllFtll 311.,.. 30 d•y minimum _ omp,..,e ........ p, gen Houaect .. nlng. Honett, ''f;'•g
' In the lrl•al malnt. tr .. trimming, tr.. dependable, •fllctent, l""i-tililP~·-~lf"ft'lll9W"l'I~ UYUTillll
S , HIS Mauro, 831-4997 843-9402 attar &pm F HI 0 INTERIORS ·---UlllT1ft necMl&ry You potMM PUT T1111 Wiil 12-8·30 wkdyt Every .,.,. DlflY tmet -HANGING/STRIPPING ...,..., ..
" i.....~~!"l'l'l"'l'~ ... Y,,_ THE IARIEIElll Jaalt1rial v1sA-MC 873-1512 Needed for Ntw Homtt
and Recruitment
knowledge of coneumer Opporlunltl•• 1vallabl• Our betutlfut """' room
credit coflectlon prec11oe with tM LOS ANGELES ~~2~:1. fxi>«. r9Q. hotel hae an lmmedlell
& procedurN ae wetl u TIMES Clrcul1tlon De-• opening for • full lJme PILOT & t c-Lawn & Gtrden MJ.lnt By JANffORIAL c(ElNiNG FARTHING INTERIORS
oeaaorl ... 8311· I 188 . men college trained In Commerclal-R .. td'I Bldgt. HANGING/STRIPPING
SERVICE C t landacaplng 989-2120 Good raft 831-8194 VISA-MC 873-f512
I e"'Jt8ft 1 S Malnt, clean-up1, mowing, A A.A Malnt. LOWEST ANDYS WALLCOVERING
DIRECTORY R=r-~::.ild~ tree trim. Fr .. EatfmltMI PRICES. Comm•,clat & lnttallatlon & Removal
Ooora-etc 549_41190 Mr. Eatrada 845-3381 Aealdent111 882-3235. Int painting 548--4013
CALL TODAYll 1-BUIU) OA REPAIR -• Tht ltttl ..... -JANITORIAL .-C.L.~~G -Wallc.oveilng In Ill Fiii Liii Wit~ tlalrl relllng• L1wn-tr .. ·t hnib lntllll SE'AVfeE. rr .... t G~ tltllatlon Real. Contull·
Your Dally Piiot tdOOrt, V.:indow~. moldlngt Tree trim & Removal .631-5M1 818/335-59 an1 Aulgnmnt 591 -9590
S~rvlctOlrectory 1••18t06 Don 982-8202 Lawn main,.& Roto11111ng L1••1ea1l•1 EXPERT Pa~rh1nglng at Repreaentallve --Sprlnkler Install .. reptlr _ • R Ratff wok G 11 •-.• a2l tit. IOI Complete patl0t Covef't' Free 11Umat89 5'48-8065 LANOSC PE-MASONRY C ~-f M .. , ~~63 ;· ._ Declet . Coner•.. walk-Landacaplng, all ph.... • °' ' ·
I 11111ya Block wall• Room done. Brlci<. block. atone. Plaiter/h~lr ~ --add'n 15yr HP 848-483,. • lree HI. Mike 499-4072 - --coHt IJ ---,.., Rick 881•9594 fnl./Ext. pet pluterlng. * BOOKKEEPING b Cuttom RMldent11I Work arptntry, fencing. win-_ cuttom texturing. qulllty
M & J dy 15 v Y P.aoot-0.Ckt-Remod•llng dows, plumbing, merute. ADD PIZAZZ to home/but work Probltmt-No Prob-
.. ~~ ,, .. u991 989_ ~;~•7 RC Construction &48-4031 tub encl. haullng, etc. custom axt. potted plant lerntl 13289&4 554-7931
__ __ _ QUALITY FINISH WORK nd Yet J•ut le Lord 1rrangement1. 875-1522 A , I t tbl ~mall B~tln~111 Boo~eep-I Entry & French Doors our llc#30405) 836-8244 SprJnkltrt : All iyp.1 Incl ~= ~~rk~L~ ~bonded. j,a~klln·~~: t,.8~9; Speclalty llc#3911432 DECKS-WOOD COVERS fir• prtventlon Lie I 1'°807 44 t-1424 __ _ _lcorum Const 831-7975 eomp.1111ve Pnc.e • M442&74 49.5-3299
Computerized payroll Repalr-Ooort-Alttrallont 10 y .. rt ••per. 764-1620 Ltck I~ met ,.• .. •• .. •,...'-.. l• .. •._ _____ __ :~~~:,-; tfa~ra ~"7~~~51 Remodel-Panel-Locks-etc *GEN. HOME REPAIRS tocklSocfoR 24 llr 1if 111-1110 .,,---.-· _ _ Wlndow-Fencea-Cabln9' Paint: Oryw11t. C11pentry •Good Jobi done right\' Acta1tlcal illat• 35 yrs .. p Jerry 642-0587 11C. Gary &45-5217 PTL All ~:t~mlcet Wiier htettrt. OlspoMll
EXqultlte Acouttlce '!!I.. · Car~iCifuiaL EN Home Repelrt, etec . u DRAINS CLEAR From i 15
eprav-<S or remove Dry-PONOEROSA CLEANERS rpentry, plumb. sheet PllllA.!f_ Faueete, Olepoul. HHltr,
wall Repairs 847-7901 Clean this am entertain ock rep11rs. 5•7-1772 BRICKWORK. Small Job• 861•11804 M&M 722-GOM
M•tUoa!~ltaMtll-this Pm 731-1539 HANDYMAN LARGE tnd Newport. Cotti M .. •. Expert Sefvloe & Rtpatr r -C -C --tmall I DO IT ALLI lrvlM Raft e75-3175 32 yrw exp. ~'llComm.
*NEED REMODEL? t alll tacrttt 531-55711 Pit 0t Ive mag M••lllY I ITI""• Lie #409035 9&4-99111 FrM Nllm1tes ~ -_. 100•1. Flnancln~ Driveways, patlot, patht, OME REP!<~ Carpent"' New & repair All typet. NEW/REPAIR. Quall"'. No ' 11c No job too amau · · ' au '' * QUALITY WO K Reu Mlctley 536-0553 fences & glt89, Ir .. trim, tllty Low prlctt jobt to tmall, r~abi..
Beach Cltlff Remodeling ump runt C M & N B. Lie. 831-2345 Fr• .. t .. lle'd 831-2345 P~~2t~!s81122 C~n• Cut rea Jim \Vhyt• 842-7208 llnlit ltc11t1rlal
Chlld h Oc Plumb -Eleot.-Car~ntry -lt-.1tn Cuatom Resldent11I Work care my ome. nr p D d bl *A f MY111* "'1
Clean-nmety-Reuonab1e •lrport N 8 & c M aree. ~:~e~;ul 121~73:1.! CLEAN a EXPERT 1"X•a•c""s;c;:--.. -.,-1iJ-s•vt_,.Gt-..
751-8943 llc#44 15•3 retp refs 852-95311 -----Over25 ~.,.experleoee 18'9, rteumet, reportt,
•REMOOELiNG CHILDREN$ CORNEA Baalla1 Lie. T-119,429 730-1353 tlc Pleue call &46-983e
•RESTORATION IPretchool 1 Daycare, In LT AXULINd -MOVING .aec MOVING t
E C my home 20 yrt exp rera " •R PLA EMENT avail loc neM Ptecenlt• -Garage & Tard Clnups Quick careful T~8048 & REPAIRS ' Jon 645-8 t92 LO RATES ..,.2 '" 10 (FrM .. umttea 24 hrt) & Victoria 722-8097 __ _ . '"' ...,..
1 price for design, pltns. IExl* Chlldcare my Home '* CLEENCO * ITUY1H OllLlll
tnglnffrlng, eonllruc-Westcflfl area. age 3-up Clean-ups & Havung ITlllm llYlll QI, lion, can uve you SSS rift Bart>era 5418-7800 Fr_ee_ .. _1 B .. s.5730 John Orange Co Orlotnat •-~-~-......... --
931-3045 &42-0289 OU~LITY cti Id I --HAUU"4G & MOVING Stu~I Movers Tntured 1 .. -.. ...... ..-...-..--• * *HOMETEK * • C 1 care n my Prompt Service. Thank Lie. T 124-438 84 t-1427 Archlt.cta & Con1rac1ors otta Meat home. t<:l'fl/ out L I 5•0· ,., ... • I IHmfng1/fun! 8•9 2098 y WW. LI>..., NEW WarthOUM S1orage lltc .. •ltteaiaf I · LIGHT HAuuNa-Movtne •"'""'..-------els Svt co 4 2-1827 Color Aa1l1t1 DI.Imp run• 1yerdtg•1Qtl ll11le ....... ,
H1g A/C, Ref rprt hi EF laglln 1 dlyt Dave 846-1918 Plano cm. D2-i215
Aman• A/C lyt IC 459263 1&11ii;d Prof will do vour ---r'RASHBUSTERS-1.1!!'r ~~~A As~· kiJt -FREE COLOR ANALYSIS Conti & Rttld'I clean-up,
__ iv For lnlo ftfl ~5-3151 free Ml Vic 722-&240 p J t1-• VJ•1 p Ar .... AeP•lrt ---• • .... ~~ihiilii ....... "" ...
ac1ng • Roonng • EJectilcal Bult~ ltmce FifJe PX1Nt1Nd By Al£ * <riot IUsiAess
Waterproofing• 831-41991 PAlllUILRTllO Prof MASSAQETlltrepy ~i!t=-~9J::•~~ ~~IC,!!,~.~%~G,"r
8ty met Ou1H~w011( frM .. l lor ltreu, haad & bl4k· Thank-You. I "3.-411 .. L'~..-.. T.....i"" .. _....._. --•255 · acn.a 990-1504 CarOlt .._,_, , ........... ,. .... LOii welght NOWI e. allm ... 1 _ llel-7401 AAIH&OW PAINTING Financial, Legel. Etc
for...,., lffw Vlelon ~ESIDICOMM'UINO 2t Btatt Cleaalq OvelltY la our poflcy Call Anne 54M233
Hypnoelt c.nter 955-0449 yra. Oo my own WOftc Lie ROOlN s clfl'NtNd 850-&948 JEFf Uc 8488 w .. I ..
vi ... MC accepted _j t1 '7804 l Al 848-8128 SERVICE t thr~hly A A A. PAINTING Int/Ext ftiCCdi WlndOW WUfi:
• Ut lsctrt ltmtt C .. lln h<>UM 540-0857 LOW!!T poeelblt pra Ing. FOf epet'kllnQ.& clMn
24 Hf UC Reild'i c:;; f0t Are you took Ing for • '* ~O Stec> SeMc&. M2-3235 ec:r--. Call ~ t
ttM Elderly Lux environ-l&LI EIOllTI, LTI. pendtbi. ci.&nlng w -CUSTOM Pein tly Jim Are Your Wlndowt c1eenl
ment Doctor on cell •Eecorta •Bodyguard• Vk:e? Sheri, 780-1445 Lmw ratM for tfMler•. Belboa Window WNf\lng OellclOu• ,,,..,. 7&0-1843 •Fltn. Coneult1nt1 -iouvte. patlO M4ft., Iron ,... 803 Baltiot 81 17$-3 !35
HIGHLAND 8HORES CdM • Driven 499-4554 &II " tlOf rr .. ..,, A4-4243
t
' '
I 'Of• clMn hM 133-14 13. OAH SAL'nA PAIHTINO For •d •ction • ' tH~ CLEANING MY WAY I.IC #4.25ta4 " " ltmn rtAcFREPAiR ;;:;: I THRU 8Ct100ll Oep . Ctlf Anytl!M 914-2017 c·· a RXRifOR MARINE'. old Wood. chain ttnk toc refe 54Ml57 dtl
We will heul out. ci.an a f!ree ... Grf9. ee8~1 ti ,.,_ c---J 0 IHT/eXT PAINTING
paint WIY bott bottom for ..... tom ie.nmg H<>mMo HOUMa a Apt. "-' ra• Daly n:a..t 110/~" Incl paint a "IGari•aJtt• o~n upt tr .. •t OUlllly work 89M155 rlU
materjale A tlnct No -Kalhy. 847•7e6J after 3Pf'll PAINl'ER HEEDS WORl<I lft y.onn
.. u. chatgM. Pi.a• calf Ill EVEN1No cteentng lnt/ut. oelllngs. """' cab nu· NUI\ '°' ~tm 573·&320 Allt 'Topped/removed Clean-M~Outl Of Reouiat (2t) 'f't •JP · ~ Iii'* 642 5678
111 ebo\11 plCil uptdtlllV9fY uo Mw lawM 751-3419 Cen Blft 548·9804 aft ~ Davit P ntlng N'-3837 •
' Advtrtltlng SelH It
rapldly expending local
de ify new1paper .
Agrutlvt , 1tlf-dl1-
clpllntd lndlvtduata m1y
etrn excellent Income
j M!ar:y L..J:Ofl\ITllul
benefltt and advanc.-
ment opportuntty. Agen-
cy or newspaper ...
perlence n1ce1ury.
Strid reeume Attn: Peggy
Bi.vll'lt
IUIUOIAIT
l&ILY·rtUT aaow.a.,st.
httal ... ,OA
ltmlllatlty with coflectlofl pertment In our dOOf to llllOAI. brMkfut eook. P ......
llWf. Thi• potttlon ,. door newepaper t&lee Front Otflct. Flt or Pi t. apply In petton. Tutd•y-
qult• xlnt ..,_till & Mii· program. OuarantHd N.wport Beach WedMtdey 11-12 noon,
twi aklllt. Prevtoua b.nk-hourfy WllQ9 plut corn· 841-5073 Thurtdty 4:30..epm.
Ing or fln1nce exper. 1 mlttlon. H"oure: 4PM to 1800 Von t<1rman, lrvlnt
plut. Salary wlll not ex-i-PM Training It BABYSITTINQ/Mothtrt EqutJ Oppty Emplyr
CHd $111.000 p/yr. provided Poltrtll•I LO Help«, 5 O•y p/Wlc, own Aeefaotent
PIUM tend your reeome Mm S300. p1u• per WMll.. Irena. 2· 7~Mon-Frl. LI to F D.l.C., 1t1n: Pereon-For an Interview, call: cooking. In 11119. Call HITlllll I
net, P.O. Box 75411. New-1157-2391 txl. 1204 Ktty GI... 7198 W&ITllllll
po r t Be a c h , C I . t~ Beech HOUM II ao-
112858-7 «5411 EOE lllY IT& Ulllllll ceptlng appllc:atlonl for
I ITTDl&ITI llTll full time waltr ..... lll'ld OllPITll IPIUTll $6,p/hr. All ahlftl . 2500 hott ...... Apply In ptt·
Cer.., motivated, good Sen Joequln Rd, llllTI ~· 919 Sleepy Hollow
working condltlon1, Corona del Mtt e«-&053 ~. LAQuna Beech. No medical & dental Int , 5 valltble In Newport phone call•
dty WM1c. Send reeumt ENERAL ACCOUNTING BHch. E•perlence 1=--------
PO Box 1 le8 HB 92847 Entry t.vel poelllon evllll· pref.,red, but not Retteurant
Attn· Don Downey able lor enthutlullc lndl· ~ry. Mutt have d• HIT /lllTlllll
New In town? C11u l!led
SELL Idle Item• with t ~ help you meet meny
. Oe11y Piiot Cl&lltOed Ad of vour nMdt 842-5&78
vlduel In exclutlve privet• pendable treneportatlon, Energetic p.c>plt fOf daya
club In Npt Bch. Buto 11\d be owr 18 year• Old. & tvenl!il4.50 hr +
llCG1 aldltt, 10-key a dal• St'ien dey ct.livery with benefits. In pwaon
eotry IXPtf Mlpfut, wtll-no colltc11ng. Call 10AM 2-8pm. Ho • Hu1 RN-
Ing to train. We tt• Mete· ~PM Mondey • Fr1dey. taurant. 18850 Oovgtu
· .. Ing a bondeble, en«getlc 842-4333 Or. Irvine. Off Mee Arthur ••• •••••• .. •Daily Pi IOI·. F,~,,.!o, ':;';kt •n lllT111&1 :.:;.nd A41glttry Hotel .
g MAGIC ISLAND. Mdad by Huntington •u •a Olflll • • Apply In pereon OI' call 8Mcti City School DI•· -e • 976..otoo M-F 10.7PM trlct. 11315. • S 1835. fflce eupply company • OOLLEOTDI WUTEI • pthr. Apply 11 20451 hat full l part time po.-• • llHULIPf101 Cralmer Ln, H B . ltlon• wall. Wiil trlln
• • pttuant ptiOM manner. 1164-eaaa OeadllM ror Newport Statlonera,
• Part time opeoing in Legune Beach • flllng, vuloua ofllc• applying 8130185 883-1200 Becky Smith • E •~oo h f • dutlel, FIT, non-emoller.1--------1---------• area. aro up to ~· per our or • ONSIT! Photographlol. lllU &1• ""-'IWt ltttltrMt
• collecting lot monthly tubtcriptiont. : 3303 H11bor Blvd, Unit FIT a PIT, alt ttllfta. 80fM 11 detf~i. poeltlOn•
• :E•perience preferred but oot re· • 1:-5. Cott• Meu It hlkpg. Mil for eppt. tvallablt.,emlllantywlth e ·quir ed. Mu1t be at leHt 18 yf'aH old. e 540-oee8 VILLA WEST 831-3555 wine l ohMM MlpfUI.
: : Call 10 AM • 4 PM. Mr. Kirkland.' e 1111111. lfflll Nyrslng APPLY IN PERSON. e , e 407 E. Coat Hwy .• CdM
· 642-4321, Eli. 207. • Co111 MtH compeny ORT. 111111 &1111 SALES-II Forrualo
: • nMdt pereon to tnlWtf Pert time 7-3:80, 3-11:80 "TM Baker" • OllOIUTill llPT, • phonte, do llghl typtng l & 3:30-7:3o. Country lallan B•k•ry & cef• • • mleo. ofci work. Hrt. Club Conv Hotp. • 1•2·••21 Ill • 9-.4:80 or 8:30-6 Mon thr s4t-.3oe 1 loce1ed In IM new lrvlne • Fri ... h 842 9980 Ranch Matte .. compi.x In : : ·.., r. • Hurting ,uhlon lelend nMdl
• ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • OIRL FRIDAY wanted PIT. I.I 'I daytlrM ~ &
• 330 w Bey a1,..., eo.11 -..-CA 1m1 • flell hoora,1tt1t lmmed Med-Surg, C~ltloal C.,.., • ft• r n o o n I • v t n I n g
• ANEOUAL.OPPOATUNIT'V EMPLOYEA e L~m ... 860-1630 Emergency Rm, or care euptrvltlor. FIT & PIT.
e • HAIRSTYLIST for Hair Unit. C011a MtA Mtdlcel Cofltact Sutan 841).42711
I • Productlonl 250 E 17th C.,t• Hole>. 801 Vic-ei.. •• •••••1•••••••••••!• St Colle M..a 54a.344e torte St, Colt• Mtu llSlllUUI 11~1, P1*lat elk f0< W:J:. ShoP It &42-2734 ull time ..... poelllon 9 i e e • e e • e • 1 being rem tied. If .. llU ev•H•ble 11 IM Pen-
• IULll &II Ci.rlcal, no typing. QOod ny .. ver. Wori( ln•trJend·
: Ml PH Tllll : &TTllUIT& ..... $1w;'1~·;~~~'•· ~o=~ul p= ":c,":, • anu Lllllll •• a .-i'Jt*t • P9rlon1blt reeponet...... o,..t )ob for frtenc:11v • -nu. LMI 11 fill-• No exp nee. E~nd• • lfFlll llLP • ou19olng lndlvldual • ---,r e 14.85/hr 944 •8&4 opening Af>Ptf In Pl'90n et ""
•If you are ln HiRh School or Jr IDgh • HOfPltal "',!',~::n'r'~n• per; Pennyuver, 1 H O
:and would Uke to earn $25.00 t.o : llllUlaMUI tonail'Y:n· aom. lite "•c•ntta Ave, Cotta •$50.00 in commis.-ilon and mo~ each • u.n.IOLlll typtngl ottlcedllti.-.,.M_ .... _____ _
:week-give us a cell You can .work : lllmllY•lllll :!':.°' co~~r:pr::; UUl/•11111
•PART TIME tn th aftemooru and • Coate Me.. Medtcel ~.. 1297 Logan tture m.lndld HI••
•'everunp and !rttU hav~ ti.tM to enjoy • c.nter H~ 30~ Ave, C.M. 540-1set ~No~~M=
• your summer. W~ offor c..-omplete • tot1a 8i42•27~ • ..,. .., e:mon evall '"~ulre •l tra.lniJli and provid~ tranaporation : 11111 M •IWI SAT /SUH t to a. Af>Ptf 1n tngt:' c.ri~~ '::
plus '1'Ut prlz.cs, tripa, and plenty Of e ••anat• ~Npt ~W. COelt tr~ new J.C. ~y'e
: MO~~Y! ThiA ls not • paper routo J IS/hr + m1i.eg.. Mutt • • tr14) HM.tet
• and tt 11 not ven day• a w k Com. • hive own cul Cell .. .. AL(S PIASOHS-Freneh • help us g t n~w customen for our• Ctvtttle 731·5232 lit• ~plno, •hipping P1911Y SMo, .._.,. 9ch
: ~w paper and have a good ~: HouwtMnlng bUttnMt ~=1~ Khr11f1MIMO-e 124
•while you~ dotna lt Come out a.nd • c:c'J:l:'~~ Ordtr •ULU111L1Pmm t what w~ are '8Jklng about and : Y ... M.111 8.,.._ C*"'Y Co • you'll be alad you dJd. Call today and • Hn~: ,',f "c~~:,\!J Dr•ftfnO/OttOMO ---1' "* ~~
• JC&rf tamolTOW! Call Mr Earl • home wtth Oleebtad w4ll treln. 'fT It.rt M 0 ... ctncty to "'*"
• s-48·70~8 or 241 -8432 I of'llldren en .. 190 pfhr. AWY MMt•.,.. out1111. >Un1 oomm • Pflnt, ~i-4-AloMr Awe, etrvctu1' etarUng .tU\
: OAANOE COAST DAil Y PILOT lllTW.0/WAlllll C M. 640-1313 • 10001mo Ulwy, .+ ct.it,
uo w .., .. ._ Coe!•...._ CA ttUJ For O c lnt.etlor Plem ~ lno.nlMt+ emot
: AN 1ou4l OH'OllllUNlt"t w!"lOYUI t Company, EJtoeftent drtv· Find whet ~ wtn1 1t1 1tocll PfOG'WI\. Cell Oflflt
-..•••••••••••:•••• ••••••••• tngreoordreq'd.W.0150 o.lly PllOt fltdl len:ja,(7 U )U248U
.
. . __ __,,_=
I
Onange OoMt OAfl V PILOT/Tu.dly, ~ 17, HM -
"
2' Stn
28 Woodwl,,01
29 -Mar Ctl
31 -A"1V 32 p_,NCUI ..
33 Wulltlel·OUI
35 Go1opo1
37 S-'° Cont.o-11•
•I Olegr8m ,
•6 Apc»lh•
•• Wyomlrtg •
Gr..-ict -51 Grtmac..
S2 Downtrend
53 Lllltn • mtt• S•P_...w
55 Slmpi41
S 7 We4Qht unll
SI Pocton.I r.ot ..
_..tauon
S8~ IO -C~
83 ~
•
YOU J..'T,DalM.T =-=~ ~°""' ~ftAHOMfOW~A'I ....... ....., OflC~ A8Staew(HT UlH OATfO a.~ CA llW1 COUNTY Ofl ~TO••~ JAHUAAV4, 1MI UNI.US Plalntlff; PATRICIAN l.OeAMCllll.al
-·-:---YOU TAK! ACTION TO APAATMEN8 LIMIT!D, a C.. ....._ 11' U:. ~-T'NCT PROHCT YOWi PAOP· Cllltamta lrntt9d '*11*-CITl1'110M laAL llW841 f t 6ATY, IT MAY 8! SOLO AT lhlP P111 fl "°"' f'tnfttal NOTICI 18 H!AHY A PU""'IC BALI. It' YOU o.ncs.m: ITlPHEN O. C_.., 8M C....
ONIH THAT THa ~ NttO AN EXPLANATION OPPENHEIM ANO NANCY (UANDOllllDn') TAIN VALL&Y ICHOOL Of TH NATUM Of nit MPENHEIM (,._ ADCWnOM}
°'8'TM:T IW ~ "* PAOCHOIHO A0AIN8T C... No. 811151 M the...._ tit. ..,....
IW folowlng ,.... ~ YOU. YOU SHOULD CON· MWO. ANTHONY IANCMU,
wtlf "°' be nMCNd for TAC'r A. LA.W'nlll ~ Y• '-" ..._ ..._
0'1• oom purpoeea: MO'nCI Ofl UU ~ 111ia-...._...... A. par.an~~ ta.
AOOM9 0-1' tnCl 0-ltal Oft 8ic>•••itlw tT, 1llS, .....--,.. ..._. ,.. deetated ''" from 11\e ~ 0. NtOlAS al 10;00 A.M. •t the M.-n ...._ ............ ,_ ,... CMtody end control oC tile
SCHOOL IOc4lteO U t300 Entranoe: BAUMQAATNfA .......... • ........ ._. petent-. • ~ "*"'-· F~llln &. ROUP. 1111 Town tnd ..... ................ ....... To: Eugene Bryant (al-V9*Jy. Celltomla. . eountiy Aoed, 130. Qr--. If you ~ t. o _. ltlt eel--leged natut al f 11her)
TM lowd of T~ of CelforNa In 1M Qty of ()r. W. of tin ~ In t.._ --~ "'*"°"""
.,. F<IUntaln "*" ""'°°' .... County Cl Otanoa. lnlltW, )'Oii 9hcNld do ., ClndY 8ainch9 all• Cindy DelC1tc:t reaoMa to 1-ttl8 ,,. .. of Ca1fom1a. under tN ptomptfy ao thld 'f04lt wrft· Matte ~ (momat) ·
fllcllttea ao ~ ~ '°"' of a... purauent to *' ~." ainy, mey be wtlerMbout1 unknown and undet IM twma MCI oon--the tarml of thole oartti1n Ned on tl!nl. 10 all pettone tllllmlng to be dltlon1 1tat1d In tr11 ~ Condlttona. MCI AVllOI u...t ._ ... -. the tether or mother of Mid ~of ltlt lowd, "-1.nctlOnl r9COl"CMd on ..,,,,, IJ~ ..... minor P•rto"• 1bo111
Allolution No. •10 91pt9mw 1 1t10 1n 1001t ..,.. .....,.. Ud. • .. ~. The minimum monthly l3ta ~eoea· 11e.n1 in. .._.. • ....... .-Ud. l9y order ot thle COurt you
..... ~t lot IM term Qluatvia, ot ~ ~ 118' llW dlMl'l de JOdllla. trl hlf.oy olMd 4llhd ,..
ofthlllwi!Nllnot beleal of 0r.,. County. Cell· &..ele W..1ual•'t..... =· to~ before the lt\ell SSH.00 I* ,.._,oom, fom1a. ~&.Roup, SI u.d dlMa aolcitv 11 ~ In Depett· permontt\.~motittlty. A Lew Cof'poj~t Mat·~ de un ~ tn "*' 238 Aln i-310 of the In ---.. TM r omey T«--iuRTL-rR'OCK _.. aeunto, 6eberfe nae.no ~ tntfu.ir court, IOClflld peymtnt fOf eubeequent TEAftACE COMMUNITY lnmedtctament1, de .. ti at Ctlmlnel Cour1t Bldg. 210
pertoda ""Y bled~ In-ASSOCIATION. pureuMt 10 manara, 11.1 rHpuHta W. Tempi9-Lol AnoelM. CA. nuely al the DlaV1tt't die-~ 135' oC the CM1 Metfta. 11 My llguna. puede 000 t2 on OCTO"tER tO,
cntioft. A Security~ COdl of 1M State of c.fl.. ... reallttada I \tempo. 1885 11 8:30 A.M of that
Oepoait 11'11111 bl ~ rom., WIU SELL AT PU8-1· TO THE DEFVH>ANT A dfly, then and U.. to lhow
prior to OOOl,.,.nq' LIC AUCTION TO THE c:MI ccmpteilnt haa be9rl m.d '*'"· If any you have, why lnfO(matlon c:onQll'ntng HIOHEST BIDDER FOA byttllplalnt'"~you.W Mid l*90n "'°''Id rw>t be thl PfQpOMlll lhould bl Id-CASH, peyeb1e at time of you wtstl lo def9'ld ttllt tew-detlered ff'le from lhe COf!...
chimed IQ: FOUNTAIN VAL· .... In lawf\.ll ITIOMY of thl Mt, you mull, within • trol of hie per1rtt1 ~ding
LEY SCHOOL Ol8TAICT, UNI*' 8t&tM, all natrt. ttt1a, d8Y9 aftlt 11\11 M#'ftl'llOtll II to 1111 petltJott on IMI '*91n. 172t00AI( STREET. F0UN-and lm.r.t In thl r~ MNed on you, Ne Wl1tl tNI For hlikK9 to attend, you TAIN VALlf'V, CALIFORNIA dlecrlbed property 111tu.t.d tour1 a written reeponaa lo may be deemed gutt1y of I 92708, TELEPtfONE: ~ 14) In Mid County and St11« thl complalnt. tJnleaa you do contempt of court 842-HS 1, ATTENTION: Lot 55 of T...ct 7383 u .,, your clefUt wttt bl You are hereby notln.d ol
CAAOl. JONES atiown by map on ftle In 1rtllted on 11001k:at1on of the the prOlltalonl of CMI COdl
'OUMTAIN YALLIY ~11631peoee~of plelnttft, and tNa coun may SS 237.5 wtMc:fl prO\llde the ~ DllTNCT 90AN> M•. recorda of Orange en• a )udgamant aglllnet lUdo9 ltlal ~the min« O' TRUITlll, Cieri!, County. Callfomla. you for 1111 rell9f demanded lllncf the pwenta, II preeent, ~ ef ,-,....._ Tiie purported 1tr11t ad· In the complalnt. which of tlll right to have oounall
AUQUll 22. 1885 c1191 and other common COUid ,_.. tn gernllhmanl preeent Tiie court may ~
PµbleNcl Oranoe Coaet dealgnaUon, It llnf, of the of~. tailing otmoney or point counaaf to ~t DalrJlliot Alo* v. Sip-,... pr~y ctea«lbed propedy « otfler,....., T'9-1tllmtnor..,.ornot-*"** 3. 10. l885 above. for which tlll under· queatad In the complalnt mlnOr It able to afford ooun-
T -810 llQned mak• J10 r9p(911rt· Dated: OCT '24 1083 tel, and If lt-v are untbte to --.-llH-.. -lllft-TM'_c__ allon « warranty, ta; 5598 K..-... 111 J, Oa1rt9an, afford oounMI, ahall ac>POlnt
.... _.... "'11"4 OMt.y Temice. Jrvlne, Cd-De11iu1r Ct.fl ~-to rt()fMlnt the
'°""'MN VAL.UY lomla. Croah1. Hoff•u &. parent• -. Tiie ~ owner of IC....._, .. c.ntwy f'ft Tiie petition fifed '*91n ta ICHOOl. Dtl ',_' llld real ptperty at the ti.me ._., ...,._ 1100. Loi M-f« the l>llf'PC)ll of freeing ~OP of the Awnenl I.Jen wae· ...... CA la?, Attomef the 1Ybjec:t child f« place-
MIOUITIOM or DAVID L WHITE AND LYN-lot,._.., rnent for adoption
INTIJfT TO LaAM NOA WHrTE Publlahed ~ eo.tt Dated: JUL 2e 1985 IUNILU8 DllTNCT Sllld Sala wtU be made Dally Plot Augtll1 e, t3, 20, '1'ANIC I . ZO\.IN, 9'.
MAL "'°""1'Y without wwranty, ~ « 27. 1945 Kunlpo, DaputJ
-NO .... lrnplled, reoatdlng lllle, poa-T • 770 0. Witt W. Cllnton, Coun-
NOTICE IS 'iiEREBY ...ak>n. or encumbl'ancee. • PtllJC NOTICE =-=LMTJ e.,, .. · GIVEN THAT THE FOUN-to pey the IUm of put due IJ =
TAIH VALLEY SCHOOL ~.:..~:· DEPARTMENT OF 210 W. T1t111ple ltr .. t OISTlUCT haa declared that .._ ~ lnter .. t I~ THE TREASURY (._..) Loi ~ ~ the followlng ,..., property the ~ st 420 00 INTERNAL REVENUE #ornla 90012, t74·1n1 wtll not be needed lor DATED: Augwi 14: 1aa5 SERVICE County of Loi~ At:
ctuaroom PIJfPOll8 TURTLE ,_OCK TER· NOTICE°' KAUO tomef tor D1partMant of One Claalroom and the ..._.._ llD IALE ~..._ .. ._....
Graphic• Arta Room In MCI C~' ' Aa-Under the auttlortty In '°' Publlahld Of Coea1
Bulldlng "B" of the E~ ~IA~~~ Internal Rewnul Coda llC· Dally Piiot AugUltary:. 20, 27, tlonCenter located at 17210 _ , -~ tlon 8331, tn. property de-September 3, 1985
OM StrM4. Fountain Vai19V, ~ 8 --~ ICribed l*ow flU been NU· T -765
CellfomlL 1111 Town a ._ ee for nonpayment ol 1---------
Thl Boerd of Trutt ... of = '!.:=) .eo10 lnt*"el revenue tu• due PlBJC fl)TlC[
the Fountain v~ Schoof " ~ from Peul O & Joenne --------Otttrlct raaolYea 10 INN tlll Publlthed Orange Coea1 Laraon. The property will be rJCTIT10US -.. .....
r.cllltlea eo ~ abo'le Dally Pilot Auguet 2.7~.s.>-IOld---at PoblkY ~Ion u ...._ ITATIMENT •
under the t.-ma and oon-tember 3, 10, 1985 provided by Internal ~· The followlng peraona ar•
dltlonl ltated In the Aeaot-T-795 anue Coda 11Ct1on 8335 Md dot bu'"-u :
utton of the Boerd, Aeaot-•-.,,. ..,..TICE related regulatlona. Date T~PRA PROPERTIES, utton No. •11. .... ...~ nu Bid• win be Opened: Sep. ~792 Jamea Circle, #C. The minimum monthly IC 1_,4 tember t3, 1985, Time Bl<la Huntington Beaoh, Call· ..... peyment tor I.he term • wtll be Opened· to am, Ptace fomla 92649
of the ..... .,...., not be..,. ~A=• of. saw. 2400 Alllla Ro.d. o.otoe Thomaa Pratt. Jr.
I h • n Tiie f--....... * Laguna Niguel, California. 4792 Jamn Clccle •C. 1720.00/month/elanroom ...... ...."'.'..~:." ~ ur T1tl1 oftered· Only the right, Huntington Beaeh, ' Call-a n d ...,,ng .,., __ 11· ' Utle and lnterNt of Pauf 0. fomla 112849 1384.50/monlh/Grephlct 2915 Rldhlll Suite f'·200, Laraon Ind Jeanne Lar.on Thie buelnen Iii eon-Arta Room The minimum Coeta Mua. Callfornl• In and to the pr<>P*fty wlU be ducted by: an lndlllldual
monthly ..... peyment for 92&28 oNered for ••I• II r•· G THOMAS PRATI, JR IUbeeqUlrtt pet1oda may be Byron M Tarnutzer, queated , the lntemel A911· This atatemenl waa llled
ecljusted annually at the Ola--Trull•. 900 Via Udo Nord, enue SeMoe wll tvmllh lo-with the County Ctenc of Of· trlct'a dtacratlon. A Secur-:=1 Beactt. California formation 1bOUI poulble ange County on August 18,
lty/Claenlng Dapoalt will be enwmbranc:.1. which may 1945
== a.
~ -·---1:1
~·
·~
DcATH Nor1 cEs
required prior to oc:cupency_ Tad Rodrlguez. 2930,Eaat be UMfvl 1n ~ermlntng the '21411t SORIN
No commlallon ....... be Or1ngawood Avenue. vwua of the lnterwi being Publllhed Orange Cout Sally Sonn, ~
paldanylloanaadreallllata Anatta1m.ca11tom1a 92aoe 80ld. Oeaerlptlon 01 prop-Dally Pllo1 August 20, 27, away August 26
bl'oker In thla reoatd. and Marahall A. Mancillu. eny. Lot 71ofTract11291 u September 3 to 11185 ' there ltlall be"° dlduetlon 2582 Vl1ta Oflve. Newport per ·map raoortitd In Book • • T.783 1985 Survived by
from .,., propoul In ct.-~·~II~ 4 tO. Pagea 24 to 27 of Mte-Io vi n g husband
termlnlng the highal1 ,.. ~~ by:uat.~~ ~: oellaneoua MIPI In oftlca of Pta..JC fl>TICE Abraham Private ~bla btddaf. · ..--r.cordef of Orange County b "a) be Th SeeMd propoulll to ..... nat9N9 M«• commonly known u ftc:TrnOUI llUllNEU un to urs-
aeld proper1y rnuat be r~ Marlflall A. Manc:lll• 29201 Bobolink Drl111, NAMI ITATE•NT • day. August 29, 1985,
oal"'9d by 1.he deeagatld of· Thia 11•,__,t wu flied Laguna Nlguel, CA. Property The followlng perl0n9 are Harbo'r Lawn-Mt
llcar at the Fountalrt v~ with the County C*1t of Or-may be tnapaeted at· Oflve doing t>o--. u 0 I C School OlatriC1 Education ange County on Augu91 t 5, by only. Subml.-on °' Sida. I NH 0 v AT Iv E n 0 0 R Ive em e le r y
Center, 17210 Oa1c Slt9el, 1985 -AH blda muat be aubmltted MMNUNAHCE, 2031 E Harbor Lawn-Mt.
Foun1aln Vf!llwr, Cellfomla. Publllhed 0 '= on FOl'!n 2222. Sealed Bid Walnut Avenue, Orange. 0 I 1 v e Mort u a r y 92708, "° tater than 2:00 ~· range27 .,~ f« Pureh ... ol Seized Prop-Callf«nla 926e7 directing. pm Friday, September 13, IOt Augult . ......,... erty Contac:t the oftlca tn. Chanott• Helen Oalazyn, ----"----1985. tem 3. 10. t7. 1985 dlcated below IOI' Forma 2037 E Walnut Avenue. Or-MARTIN
Before eocaptlng any wrtt-T-802 2222 Ind lntonnatlon about ange, c.lllomla 92887 Go d A Mart a ten Pf'dpoael9, the dllegeted the property. Submit blda 10 Th,. bualne11 la eon-r. on · 11\,
offtQer atlalj 'eatl for oral bid-PlBJC NOTICE the perwon nlhled belO'tJ ducted by: an lndMdUaJ res1dent of Newport
ding. Any penon who hu before the time bide wffl bl CHARLOTIE OAl..AZYN Beach Passed away
ller.tofor• aubmltted. writ-ITATIMOIT °' opened Paymen1 Term•· Thia statement WU flled August 24 ·~·Born
i.-e6d f'M'I IWbmlt an Ol'al Wf1ltDaAWA&.. 1.oM sio. ~ be aocompan Wflh the County Clerk of Or· J 9• O · M bid exoaedlng by at leut ftlla f'AJn'NE.RIHlf' by 1he Ml amount ol the bid ange County on Augutl 14, une 2. 1 1 l1l on-P«oeQt ~%) the hlg'-1 OPEMTINO UNDO 111t total• s200 0< teM. tt the 1985 treal Quebec, Canada.
written bid. The hlghelt flCTmOUI ...._.. total bid la more than '200, f2all1 Survtved by his wife ~bla bidder ahall be ...._ aut>mlt 20 peraint of the Publllhed Orange Coast L ill . Gordan '9Qulred to execute the form 1 amount bid or s200 whleh-Dally Pl10t August 20. 27 Aue Me· sons. J d
of i.ae. euen lormet hal The IOilo'Mng oerwon hu ,,.,... ta gr .. 1., 0n' aooep-September 3. 10. 1985 . artm. r; an hefetof0<• beltn approYed wttl't0r1wnaaageneralpart-1anc:eofthlhl0heltbld.1he T-786 James M. Martin;
by the Board di Tru1t... ner from the pert!'l«lhlp C>P-balance due, 1l lily, wtn 111i11ni 'C NOTI"r: m-andchldren James The Boerd of Trust ... eratlng unct.r tlll flctltloua deferred aa lotlows: Balance ,-~ w. D' ' ' ahall INk• the determine-bull,_. name of R.C. S. On due within 8 houra lrom Jr • Sean, and St.ep-
Uon u to whlthef to ..... the Panlnaula at 28t3 Vitia opening Of 1111 blda. Form of ITATEMENT Of hanie. Sisters, Lillian
lllld tldlllal within ten (10) Way.· Nawpor1 8Meh. CA Paymerit:Allpayment.mu1t wrrHDRAWAlfi.OM Thoralakson; and
dev-•ft• '9Ce1Pt of bide. 92ae3 be by ealtl. oertlfled c:Mek, 'Afn'MPIHIP Mm.am La~r Mr Information concerning The fletltloue bualneaa cHhler'a or 1reuurer'1 OPIMTINO UHDEfll . · · the propoaat lhoutd be .o. name statement f« the part. ctleOk Of by • United Stat• ACTITIOUI IUllMEll Martm was a member
drenedto FOUNTAIN VAL· nerahip.wu fifed on Juty 27, poetal. bani!. •xpr-. Of NAME of the Jewel City Ma-
LEV SCHOOL DISTRICT. t9M In the County of Or· tal...,.raph money order 1 Lodae No 368 17210 OAK STREET. FOUN> FILE NO F251590 'Mak:i eheck Of money order Th• follOWlng person hu soruc I:) • • ' T MN VAL LEY, CALI· anruH Name and Add,.... of peyable tb the Internal R91!· wlthdr1wn as a genl!'ll part-Glendale, Ca, mem-FORNIA , 112708 (7 14) the Peraori Withdrawing· entJeServloe nerfromthepartnerlhlpop-ber of the CryptJc
842·8851. Attention Keith Momaon, 1 t33 Gold· Nature of Tute· The light. eratlng under the flc11tlous Masons Santa Ana CAROL JONES enrod Ave .. Cofone Del Mar , title. Ind 1nter•t of the iax-bu~ name of SeYen Councll, N 14 a Life
,OU MT AIM VALLEY CA II~ payer (named iboVe) In and Star Shin Laundry, 11 12791 o •
ICHOOl. DtlTRICT 80AM> Signed. t< .. th M«rllon to Ille property Is offered 10< Western, Ste G. Garden member & past Presi-
°' ~ITDI. Cleft! of the Publllhed Orange Coalt Nie 14ibjact to any prior Grove, CA 92&41 dent of the Gold
9oef'd Dally Plk>t Augult 20, 27, valid outatandlng mort-The lletltlou1 bualneaa Coast Shnne Club Oat« Augual 22. 19&5 Septembet 3. 10. 1985 gegea en<:umbf,ancN or name stllement fOf the part-0 _ al h• Publlahed Orange Cout T-787 othef i1ena In lav0< 01 thlfd nerahlp wu flted on 218185 member rwy Arc Oafly Pltot Augult 27. Sep-partlM eoain11 the t1.11peyer In the County of Orange Masons of Calif •ember 3, 10, 11185 NlJC NOTICE that .,.. 141perlot to tNI lien FILE NO F-288242 Council '73, Krughts T-IOll ol the United Stat•. AN Full Name and Addr11t of T '-· Santa Ana --------IC·,_ property ,1 olf9fed for aa11 the Per~ Withdrawing emp._, Pta..JC NOTICE P'lCT1TIOUI 8UllNHI ""-'*• II" and .... II" and Elin Eraav91. 720 Jamee St.. Conunandry No 36. a ,.,.._ ITATDllJfT wltl'tOUt reeou<M aga1na11111 •A. Coet• MeM. CA 92827 member El Bekal
IC-1-I The followlng per90na ara United St•t• No guaranty Signed Elin Erllvu Temple U1 Anahetm f1CTITIOUI _. ... ,, doing bUllMH u · Vie· Of -.rranty expreaMd or Publltned Orange Coalt .,.__, ' ..._ ITATE•NT torvllle Aeaoclat ... 3200 Implied. 11 mede 11 to the Dally P11o1 Augutt 20. 27 and Past rn=atdent of The foltowtng per.one ere en.tot Str.-t, Sult• aeo. valldlty of the title quality, September 3, 10, 1985 the Costa Mesa
001ng bu11n .. a u . Coela Meaa, Ca t2e2e quantity weight, ala, or T-789 Chamber of Com-
DIAMONO BAR HILLS, 3t51 DSL Service Compan)I. condition• of any of the 1111111HfC MnTU'r: meroe Funeral ser-Al~y Awnue. Suite N, 21711t L..ake F0<•t Ofl\19. Et property, Of Ill flt..-tor l"UDL ""'""" • Coate Mui, Callfornla Toro, Ca. 92e30 (A Call-any uae Of purpoee No flCTrnOUI 8'.llMll Vlces will be held ~829 fornla Cofporatlon) o1a1rn w111 be COl\lldered for Wednesday August
Bfameliaa Umlled, 1 Can-Thi• bualM11 11 eon-aHowance Of adfultrnent or -~1 ..... _!.TATE....,-28 lOAM at Pao fie adlan eorporat"lon. 1887 oueted Cly • gel*al pert. tor reaciaalon of the Ille .... ..,...,...ng paraone are '
. Yonge Street, T«onlo. On-nerlhlp b&Md on I allure of INI prop-dot:lwbullneaa u VI e w Mort u 'a r y
tar'IO, Canada MAS 1Y5 Oonehue SeMt>er, Daniel erty to confOMl wtth lfnY ex-~ PO~ii.~Y·l~ Chapel. Interment Thl1 bYllftMI 11 con· W Donanue. Chairman of preued or Implied rep-._,.age · · Paci'flC View Mem· ducted by • oorp«ltlon the Board reeent1tlon 92....., n)J 1'ark ln lJ f 81'~ limited, ,,.,,,ey Thi. atatemenl waa fllad Q. ,.,.,.,, ""--Of· Donn• MM Aonla, 22 o e':' o
A SleWI, Vloa Prlaldent With the County Cllr'k of Or-ftoer, MOO A•ll• "°"· Hermitage L.aN, Nawpor1 flowers contnbut.iona
This 1tatemen1 wu fifed ange County on July 28, Laotina *fuel, CA t'Jlll BeeohT · CbAA 92&e0 1 to the Shriners Hospi·
wllh tlll County Clart of Ot· t985 71"'°"4112 hl1 utlMH • eon· t I p If. V "-·--ducted by an lfldlvlduat a ac IC 1ew ange .......,.,iy on Augult 21. .--Date 8-21-85 ......... __ M.a ~ Mort"'""" direcuno t985 Pl.fblfahed Orange Cout Publilhed Orange CoMt ""'"• ,_. J• ID nM117 Dally Pilot Augutl 20, ·21. Da1ty Piiot Auguat 27 1995-Thll lttlltment WM nled 644-2700 Publlalled Orange Coat September 3. 10. 1985 ' T-799 with the County Cllr'k of Or· ------
Dally Piiot Augu.et 27, Sep-T-780 :15 County on Jut-; 11.
!ember 3. 10, 17. 1985T ,..1111 .eo 1 Publlltted . Ol'ange Coalt P'\ll.IC fl)TIC£ "8JC NOTICE Dally Piiot Auguet 13, 20, 27.
SeCltember 3. 1M5
Mt.IC fl)TJC( ~A~.. ~:A=· T-775
,re nnoue ~ ~ ::::= ::---TM to11o1w1ng per.one er• NI.JC NQ11C(
MAim 8TA (A'IOP8 ENT£RPAISEI dot~ bUllneae ... ni. folowtnQ ,,.,..,na .. (8) TAAVEL·CHAIA MAN~ W STGAOVE PLAZA, 'tetiJtOUI llU8INlll dolnG bualne98•' ~ACTll"fN<l (Cl HOLIOAY 7111 Garden Gr0\19 BM!, MAm 8TATIMINT
flllTN!SS F1A$T. 1484 CHAIR CoMPARY, 1211 = :t:.."i' Grove, Call-The=::'*""'.,.. c='C:::...C.::1~·~~~~ ~Sulek! Ling~ SPOAT8. 150 8 Jo11ott NM1 Z)emann • 71t 1 Oarden Gr~ BMS. Harbor BMt., 8mrt1 Ana, CA
'4M Moo. loutn etroe 12~8~ Paul.,!•=· #200. CWden Gr~. Cell-t2704
Aoed, trvlne, Callfornla P«1 leeefl~ t2te0 fomla 111t41 OW'l acott foea, 2'8 E• t2715 Thi. bu9i I con-Thia bYtlMat II con-ntng ~ Ad ' Cot"one del
TIM ~ It con-ducted ~ OUC1ed by' • llmlted 1*1Mr· Mar CA 92125
... .--..~ ....................... by 1n tNp Thia ~ 11 con~ ,,__ -· ...... xu-G " ( 0 0 "Y PAUL L.>.WA£NCE SU'""'I UHO ... .-...... .... N ZIEMANN M!LOUS ...,... duc:.ted b,c an ,,_._
TNa at41tement WM fMld TIW ttatemant WM ftled Thia •~tement -fMld OWi Scott ~
wltf't "!' ~ 0.... of Or· with the CounC)' Cllttl of Or· With the County ~ of Qr. Th!J 11~ wu tllld
Wtgt f'l"""'t on AuguM 14, lrtOI County on Auguat 14, Mge County on J4//tr 29 wtth the County a.tr of Or-
tM5 19U 1115 lr'OI County on ~ t. ,.., ,... "lllJIG7 tM5
Pvb11tMC1 0...,. COMC P'ul*hld Or Co.I PWl!tMd Orange Ooeat ,__
Dally Piiot Auguat 20 27 Deity PllOt A~~ 20 21 Dally Ptlol ~ 20, 27. Pvbllttlld °':Ta'. CO..t
Sep,..,,.3, 10, ttu' '~-3 'fo.i91a' '~3. I , IMS DallyP!lotAUQIU9t 3,20,27, T·715 ' ' T·l'2 T·764 a.otami. 3, ttl4
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery • Mortuary
Chapel • Crematory
3500 Pacific VlflW Drive
Newpo<t Beach
e.t•-2700
, HARBOR LAWM·
MT. OLM!
Monuary • ~tery
Crematory
1825 Giiier Avt
Costa Mesa
540-555'
NRCI UOTHmRI
UU UOADWAY
Mo..TUARY
110 Broadway
Co.ta M ...
e.t2-9150
A
' l
.T
Farm family seeking
aid of philanthropist
A 400,000 loan
requested to off set
debts, price sags ·
COAL VALLEY, 111. (AP)
David Schroeder took his first wot>
bly steps in the house he still lives an
today. He milked his first cow here as
a boy. And as a youna man. he
brought his bride here from her farm
three miles down tbe road.
Good years f ollowcd. But when
-mounting-debts Gd sasJlrfg crop
prices threatened the survival of the
farm and a way oflifc for Schroeder,
his wife, Anita, and their nine
ch1ldrcn, he swallowed his pride and
took bis troubles to the want ads:
"Philanthropist sought. Young,
productive faithful 1Uino1s farm fam-
ily looking for $400.000 at low
interest to consolidate dcadJy ~high
interest loans. Collateral: S 1,000,000
farm."
His family had tilled the same soil
for 75 years, and· now 1t had come to
that,~ classified ad in The St. Louis
Post-Dispatch. It may be the longest
of longshots -a pica for a good-
hearted benefactor wtth bucks to
spare.
The Schrocders believe such a
person 1s out there, although no-one
bas come forward.
"We basically feel~ trc's some-
body out there who will s w enough
... concern for us th ould be
willing to take a chance wt us," said
Mrs. Schroeder, 40. "We feel there's
somebody who still believes in the
family farm."
'EvcrybOdy says JUSt survive,"
Schroeder, also 40, added. "That's all
we want to do."
So far, about 20 callers have
answered the ad, placed by
Schroeder's clergyman brother. Ed, in
his Ed's hometown newspaper. St.
Louis is about 225 miles from Rocle
lsJand County and has a lot more
readers and, presumably, a lot more
wealth.
Some calJers offered financial ad-
vice. Others promised to send a few
dollars for groceries. But no one has
I
offered the dcsi red loan at 6 percent to
8 percent interest.
While the Schroeders' pica may be
unusual, their phght is not.
Along with thousands of farmers
across America, they are trapped in a
fierce fi nancial squeeze of hipt
interest rates and low commodity
pnccs. Meanwhile. the values of
farmland and machinery have plum-
meted, reducing their collateral.
The Schroedcrs' fann, with its
Amcncan Oag-<iccoratcd navy blue
silos Jutting into the open Mid-
western sky, is fightjng for survival
against harsh statistics: More than
43.000 U.S. farms were lost in 1984,
almost I 0 percent of them m llhno1s.
Others arc on the brink o~urrender.
The Schroeders' 830 a cs, about
two-1h1rds of which are rented. are 15
miles east of the Mississippi and a
short car ride from where Agricultttrc
Secretary John Block raises hogs.
Al first blush. it looks like pros-
perity reigns here. Golden com stands
at attention, 8-foot-tall stalks throw-
ing shadows on the road. Deep
summer-green pastures roll to the
horizon, Cows grazcJaztly.
But the irony is that good times on
this fertile soil led to the bad. The
Schroeders poured their profits into
improving their farm. Now they can't
pay their debts.
"We really st1ll thmk we can make
1t," said Schroeder.. his temples
graying. his skin tanned by 12-hour
~.._.......
DaYid and Anita Schroeder and nine children want to lr.eep
Coal Valley, W ,, farm that'• been In family for 75 yea.rs.
days in the fields. "But we need some
help. Every year that passes us JUSt
bleeds us some more ...
Schroeder's farm 1s half dairy, half
com and soybeans. Each has spelled
, trouble.
He estimates: a bushel of com sells
for SI less than it did five years ago, a
bQ$hCI· ofsoybeans-for12. 501-e--ss. and
milk for S 1.20 less per I 00 pounds
tban rwo or three years ago. •
The Schroedcrs, whose children
range in age from .l8 years to 6
months, have laid claim toithis comer
of earth for three generations. Today,
five Schroeder mailboxes line the
rural road, one of them for hlS 85-
year-old father. Henry.
Schroeder's grandfa1hcr plowed
the ground before World War I.
Henry took over before the next war.
buymg the land, building a wh1tc-
framc house and making a home for
his seven children, including his
youngest. David.
Schroeder took over the farm 19
years ago and expanded it in the last
decade: Two steel silos, a milk parlor,
more Holsteins, a liquid manure
system and other roachincry, totaling
$300,000. 'The family also rented
twtcc as much Land.
It was a risk in an already nsky
business. Schroeder has no excuses.
"All r can say is the trend was for
any improvement .... lt was pretty
much the thing to do," he said ... It's
pretty easy to look back now and say,
'Nobody shouldn't have done any·
thing.'"
Trouble began in 1983 with a
devastating drought. Smee then have
come more dry weather, k>w prices
and)intcrest rates that topped 14
percent
"I've never seen 1wo (bad) years
back to back," Schroeder said.
"We've had three.''
Despite the tough times, signs of
optimism abound at home.
On the refrigerator, next to a
counter crowded with homemade
pies made with apples from the
family's orchard, arc P.OStcrs with
ch iJdlike figures. One says, "lfG6d be
with us, who can be against us?"
Another says. "Every cloud has a
silver lining."
Government loans have kept
Schroeder going for two years. But
while the family can meet the $85,000
yearly interest payments. it hasn
made a dent in its debts.
As the Schrocdc~ sec it, the doors
are shutting. one by one.
The Farmers Home Adminis-
tration. which gave them operating
loans, has no more money· for
refinancing loans, the Schf(>Cders
said.
And while the bank "never said.
·This is it,' they said they're not going
to lend us any more 'llloney,"
Schroeder said.
Tim Fritz, farm representative for
th.cir bank, the Sl8tc Bank of Orion,
said the Schroedcrs' circumstances
were all too familiar. "The whole
floor fell in at once" for farmers, he'
said.
The Schrocders have options. They
could pare their operation, but then.
they say, they wouldn't produce
enough to erase the debts.
The advertisement remains one
hope, albeit a slim one.
"I know there arc millionaires in
America,'' Ed Schroeder said. "Many
don't need to make a profit on their
investment.''
The Scbrocdcrs, too, have faith.
"I'd hate to have to pick up our
family and move," Mrs. Schroeder
said. "We've put a lot of ourselves
into this farm . We are a Christian
family. We know the Lord's going to
provide. whether it be on this farm or
somewhere else ...
BS.by Hope's 'fantastic'
Blood tranSfustons
before her birth save
dytf!_g Infant's life
SAN FRANClSCO (AP) -Hope
Wicker was a 19-wcck-old fetus no
bigger than an orange and dying of
anemia when she received •her first
blood transfusion, according to doc-
tors who say the innovative treat-
ment for the now heaJthy 81h-pound
fireball may help save thousands.
The infant who underwent six.
hour-long prenatal transfusions of
about a quart of blood total, and \wo
more a few days after birth, reported
for a physical last Thursday at UC
San Francisco.
Bearing three small mark!! near her
naval from her transfusions, she wa
pronounced m excellent condiuon by
Dr. Julian Parer. the obstctncian-
gynecologJst who undertook the pre-
canou!> prenatal procedures and de-
livered the squealing Hope by
Caesarean section July 12.
"She looked JUSt fantastic. You
couldn't tell her from a normal baby,"
he said.
Doctors said more than 30.000
fetuses m the United States a year die
spontaneously durina prqnancy or
1mmcd1ately ancr birth for a vanety
of reasons, and treatment techniques
u~d for Hope could have far·
rcachina 1mphcauons for such caxs.
"lt'sone mon:cxampleofwhat you
can do wilb technolasy for ~pie
who art desperate for a ch1ld, • Parer
said.
But hecau~ of the sophist1cat1on of
the procedurt and neass1ty ofa la~
team or nurses and spcc1ahsts, he S1Jd
prenatal lt1nsfusionsprobablywill be
done primanly m major medical
centers
Hope·~ mother, Donna Wacker, 32.
had sutTered a st1llb1rtb and m13Clt·
naac due to a bjood o0nd1uon docton
wamtd would Pl'C"'ent her from ever
hjY1n1 a child Ftndina hef'5C.I( plq·
nant apunst la t year, he wa
Dr. Julian Parer llold9 &-week-old Hope Wicker of a.a Joee
to whom he 1••e blood t:ranafualona before ber bt.rt.ll.
Her condition stemmed from a Rh
blood sen.sithat1on that caused her
immune system to reJect Hope's
blood, much the way a hean trans--
plant recipient reacts to a donated
orpn. Drugs can be taken to prevent
the problem that approiumatcly l 0
perocnt of American women arc at
risk ofcontractina. but nothing can be
done to oorTCCt it once It occurs.
Although Parer had cautioned her
in a prqnancy rune months earlier
tbJt technoloay didn't yet exist to
safely tnnsf'uaie the blood of a such a
tiny fctu tJus llmcth y qrttd to try
"This wa very much a saJ
o~t1on," said Parer, addina that
without transfusions Hope probably
wq_uJd have died an two weeks
were a;ven at each transfusioo to ease
pain, lceep the fetus still and make it
ca icr to pinp()mt the transfusion
.~t. he said.
Improved uluuound tecbniq~
since 1979 ma_kc it easier for doctors
to find the location to iruert the
catheter to pump bfood into the fetua,
without nsky X-rayi and ~tion
t"luired in past procedures. Pam
said. Evt'n so, at each trans.full.Ion
Hope faced a 5 percent cbanCIC of
sometluna aotna wrona.
"It was acary;• aaid Mra. Wicker.
l "I knew evcrythioa was SoiQI to be
OK when I heard Hope cry 'io me
delivery room," said her fat.b.cr.
Michael Wacker of San Joee.
.....:::::==::=:==-· womed
'The fetus wcl&hed about half a
Pound and was the size of a larac
OrJ.oit. Small d of medication
UCSan FrandJcois~Jlknown for
trtattna feta_I d1sordcn. anoe 1979,
24 of the 30 babie havtna prenatal
tranSfusion' there have survived
,, J l
'
...
-
C ALIFORNIA fUESOA'Y AtJf.U~f U lllH', 'I', Cf_NTS .
ort '· istoric·'
e era1r ort
Cout
U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston
says he doesn't want
more oll-drllllng plat-
forms on the Callfornla
coast, but national poll-
tics may diet~ other-
wise./ A3
California
No bodies were found at
an alleged satanic burial
slte./A4
Nation
family, friends, TV stars
and Soviet offlclals eu-
loglze peace envoy
Samantha Smith./ A~
Third time's a charm:·
Shuttle tnuAders Into-
space./ A4
Supervisors were expected to endorse
accord over flight.limits this morning-
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Of ... .,...., No4 .....
The Newpon Beach C •t> Council
voted Monday to drop ltugauon
against John Wayne A1rpon ex-
pansion plans through an agrccmcns
with the Orange County Board Of
Supervisors The sut>erv1sors were
expected to endorse the settlement
this mom ang.
The Cuy Council approved the
settlement 6-1 ~th Ma>or Phil
Maurer calling the compromise
"truly h1stonc."
"For 20 years. this Cit)' has suffered
under the thumb of that airport,"
Maurcrwd ··But this is the first t1me
we have had an agreement that is
binding. We arc going to be controH-
ing an a.irpon that LS not even tn our
bounds.··
Maurer said the ag:rccment benefits
the city's rcs1~ents by lJm1ting the
number of thcl no1S1est commcrc1aJ
nights. ihe total number of passenacrs
served and the 1zc of the tennmaJ.
The lone d1sscnung vote came
from Councilman Don Strauss. who
~1d the compromise aJlowcd more
concessions than the proposal New-
port Beach successfully blocked 1n the
courts m 1981
The settlement. Strauss said. "1s
(Pleue eee AIRPORT I A2)
Mali believed
'tO be Stalker
seen on train
i;J
Family of 11 seeks •
phlf anthroplst with
$400,000 loan to save
their farm./810
World
Newport cleanup patrol
Beach aweeper takea adT&Dtaae of the early
momln& houn today to comti the aand on
the weat aide of the Balboa Pier in
preparation for the ezpected onalaught of Woman passenge r.
beacbCoen later iJl the day. Temperature. brakeman observed
at the ahore were expected to be in the 70.. suspect on Amtrak
makmgthe full tnpfrom ~n Dicao.to
Los Angeles' L'n1on Stauon
The Night StaJker st&hllng, re-
ported to Santa .\na pohcc after a 90-
mmutc. dela ... 1s one of more than
:!,000 unconfirmed s1ghungs or trps
recc1 ... ed· by authonues hunting the
killer
Nigeria's military govern-
ment Is toppled./ A4
Chancellor Helmut Kohl
leads Cabinet review of
worst espionage case in
rman history./ A4
Spof\ta
Angels victims of seven
home runs by Baltimore
In 17-3 loss./81
The OP Surf Cham-
pionships at Huntington
Beach begin today./81
Entertainment
Brazlllan actress Sonia
Braga ls weaving a career
In the U.S. with her latest
fllm, ''Kiss of the Spider
Woman."/A9
Business
Laid-off workers receive
a hand In finding new
jobs./84
INDEX
Bridge
Bulletln Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Crossword
Death Notices
Entertainment
Horoscope
Ann Landers
Opinion
Paparazzi
Ponce Log
Publlc Notices
Sports·
Televlson
Weather
A10
A3
B4-6
B7-9
A10
B9
B10
A9
B8
A7
A8
A7
A3
B10
81-3
A9
A2
HB _engineer' s bail forfeited
after he misses 2 court dates1
International manhunt continues for f igure
suspected in nuclear t rigger smuggling case
B)' TO!)IY SAAVEDRA
Ot the D..,. ""°I Stefl
.. Richard K Smyth's S 100.000 bail
bond was forfeited Monday as an
international manhunt continued for
the Huntington Beach engineer ac-
cused of illegally shipping nuclear
tnggering devices to Israel.
Smyth's tnal was also postponed
indefinitely by U S. DISlnct Judge
Pamela Ann R)mer, placing the case
1n limbo as Smyth and his wife.
Emilie. remained missing for more
than two weeks.
The couple, last seen Aug 9 whale
leaving for a weekend tnp to Catalina..
Island. reportedly Oed the country
and do not plan to return. said a son-
m-law last week.
Smyth has missed two coun ap-
pearances and failed to show up Aug.
20 for thestan ofh1s tnal on 15 counts
of" 1olating arms e~pon laws and 15
counts of mislabeling the atomic
tnggers. called krytrons.
"We are 1n a holding pattern ... said
Smyth's Los Angeles attorney A.Ian
Croll after the mecung wtth Rymer
"We'll wait until either Smyth show~
up or someone seeks to react• vate the
matter."
Judge R>mer, who issued a no-bail
arrest warrant earl\ this month after
Sm>th fa1led to appear tor a pretnal
heanng. granted a go"cmmcnt mo-
tion 10 forfe11 the bail bond
Smyth used his $925.000 home as
collateral for his hail bond. Assistant
U.S. Attorney Wilham Fahey said he
was unsure whether Sm\>lh 's house
would be seized. · .
Creditors arc already trying 10
foreclo!>C on the heavil y-mongaged
Co1u11 Circle home used to obuun
loans for Sm)'th's defunct Hunt-
ington Beach electronics firm ac-
cording 10 relat1 ... es.
"Maybe we'llJUSt stand in line with
the other creditors." Fahey said
·The five-bedroom house was put
up for sale reponedly to pay oO
Sm\.th's business debts and attome}
fees. family members ha' e said
However. Croll said the house was·on
the market before Smyth was indicted
b) a federal grand JUry Ma) 16
Croll added he still has not heard
from his chent. and he refused to
comment on famll) statements that
Richard and Emilie Smyth ha'c left
the country. ••
(Plea9e eee 8USPECT'S/A2)
State doubts Nicaraguans
have ~eleased U.S. couple
By ROBERT BARKER
Ot 1M Dally Hof llell
The whereabouts of a lormcr
Oranie Coast College instructor and
his wtfc, who were captured by rhc
Nicaraguan Navy Aug. 7, were still
uncertain today despite Nicaraguan
officiaJs' assurances that the pair had
been released.
State Department officials m
Washington said today that
Nicaraguan officials told them that
Leo R. LaJeuncsse and his wtfc
Dolores were freed Saturday and had
set sail in their 65-foot yacht Watune
for Costa Rica.
But State Depanment represcnta-
t 1 ve Norma Ha~ accu<,ed
Nicaraguan officials of ymg in the
past and said l S 1c1als won'\
believe account~ un they o;ec the
LaJeuncsscs.
"If they don't put into the Port of
Limon (about a three days sail from
Nicaragua) tonight, there will be
more concern." she said.
Gwenn Swanson, a daughter of the
LaJcunesscs. said from her home in
Minnesota ~onday that her mSJther
was suffering from dysentery and that
the Saodan1stas had taken her
parents' nfc-sav1ngs.
"I'm outraged They 're innocent
and the> ·re being treated hl.e this. like
common cnminals .. she said
wanson. whq graduated from Costa
Mesa High Scpool 1n 1976 and
attended Orange Coast College two
years. also claimed she doubted
repom that her parents had been
freed
"It would be great, but I don't
behc"c a word of u." sht said
SwaMon said she b(hcves her parent'i
arc being held because the~ arc
.\m~racan c1t1zcns .. fhe\
1N1caraguan officials) are an11
(Plea9e see CAPTURltD/A2)
By STEVE MARBLE
Ollhe0..,."'941Ull
A man matching the de~npuon of
the Night Stalker wa!> observed get-
ungoff a nonhbound Amtrak train 1n
Santa Ana the same da> the k11lenhot
a Mission V1CJO man 1n the he:id and
raped his g1rlfnend
A M1ss1on V1eJ0 woman ndsng the
tram and a brakeman on A.mtrak
train 83 were emphatic that the tall
skmn)' man who dnfted into the
crowd Sunda} at the Santa A.na
station was the Night \talker Santc
Fe Southern Pacific Corp '>pokesman
Mike Manin said
The man was v.eanng a cow ho\ hat
and boots a while sher1 and wa'
caIT) mg two <;u11cases. Manin said
·:Both l~ Yvoman and tht
brakeman had r,een pKtures ol the
Night talker and claimed the) wt>rt
pos1t1vc 1h1) was the same gu) .. said
Manin who noted that railroad
polict.• have been alerted to the
s1gh11ng.
He said the .\mtrak tram "hit h
emplo\S Santc Fe v.orl.e~ ma1k
earlier stops 1n an Clemente and \.in
Juan Capistrano before rcal.'hing
Santa .\na at about 6.30 pm 'iunda\
The tram was the lai;t ol the da\
Leo LaJeoneaee
.\ Santa o\na police spokesman
declined to discuss Sundiy's s1Jhung.
and said the informauon had been
Night Stalker may have
kidnapped four chlldrai.
Story on Page A3
tu med 0' er 10 the Orange County
Shenffs Dcpanmcnt. which 1s
probing the attack in M1ss1on V1e10.
.\n assailant hehe .. ed 10 be the
'\1ght Stalker '>hot :!9-.,,ear-old Bill
(ams in the head two times earl)'
Sunda~ and raped his gtrlfnend.
( .tm.., remained an cn\Jcal condition
toda~ at l\11\s1on ( ommun1t) Hospi-
tal m l\11~<,1on \. lt'JO
The attad .. oc~urn:d on a quiet
re\1den11al strct't less than a mile from
the <ian Diego Frec"'a' Like many of
the other '1ct1ms. Carns laves in a
'l'lloYv. single·stol) house
The '\1ght ~tall.er has bttn linked
to H attad..s He has slam 14 ptople
'>Ince \.1arch accordmg 10 a Los
.\ngeles ( ount' <ihenlTs wsk for~
Members of the task force toda>
J'l..ed Sou them C ahfom1ans 10 look
(Pleaa eee STALKER/ A2)
1 Wein berger/
ends contract
with NB firm
From staff and wire report•
' \ ttt·r '«.''en 'ear'> and SI 'I h1lhon.
Ptien'>I.' "le~renin Ca\par
\\e1n~rger ha\ pul a damp on
tunhcr purl ha~' 01 the contro-.erstal
"gt 't Mk hanlf gun \\embcrg said
toda\ the go' t•mment 1s canceling the
ma\,1ve 1.ontran 'I.I.Ith Ford .\cro-
'pal't' of "'-t·'l.l.pnn Beach
Ot1it 1als at fMd .\ero\pacc &
< 1lmmJn1lat10n ... <. orp arc e\l)('Ctcd
ll' rcleast' a \tatC'ment later toda)' on r
the cani.:ellat111n ot future Mders.
.iccordmg ICI Don namm rt"g1onal
.. pol..esman fnr Ford .\erospal:e
Right now wt' Jrt" re-.1ew10g the
(Ple&K eee SOT./ A2)
Creative.financing keeps Laguna schools afloat
Non-tradttlonalfundin alternatives range
from partnerships to land developer's role
As the Laauna Beach Unified Supreme CQ1Jrt dtt1S1on combined
School Dastrict prepates to educate with the tal hm1una mCMures of
the city's affluent youth for another PrQpos111on 13 and state fund1n1
year. 1t finds itsclf battlina back from reductions that io hand·tn·han4 with a fi nancial piuipice with a variety of slippina enrollment to make ends
no~tradJ\1onal fundin' 1hernat1ves. miabtY hard to meet. said Oyde Oranae County's tiniest school Lovelady, the d1stnct's bu 1ness m1n-
d1slnct was stuna by the Serrano-r
Pne5t decision of 1977, knocked off As ~ms duap~. ~·
balance by Proposuion 13 in J 978 tracumcuw opponun1 ucs declined
and whittled to the bone by a srudcnt and equipment became outdated: the
enrollment that bq&o a steady de-carpeu inausmaJy thradba~. the
chne 1n 1976* 77. school di tnct bcpn to fiaht back by a
ScTTano-Pricst's ml ion to equal-variety of means to set the funds it
iueducation for all students took tu neededtoprov1deitsfcwcrthan 2,200
money from rich dlstncts to belancc students with a goOd cduatton.
opponun1t1c11n poor ones. That stare To date. there is an indcl)t'ndtnt
f
orpnszation to raise funds for educa-
tional pr<>1rams. partnership with
mst1tut1ons hke the 1..a4una Beach
Museum of Art to provide art and
theater cla'I~. JOlnt venturts Wlth
the city for m~or rccrcauonal im-
provements and a non-profit corpor-
ation to provJde extracu·mcular and
cnnchment ttroarams on a ftt bas".
To cut coct , the school d1 tnC'\ has
taken to coruract1na with out 1dc
companies for tudcnt tran por·
ta11on. around m&Jntlnance and
most of1tsjan1tonal"Serv1ce. To ra1$C
money for capital improvements, it
has taken on the tbl of la ad
developer in w;lhna ofT two ~urplu
~hool sues. .. Ifs difficult to be cffit"lent hen
you'JT sma 'in numben of lud "
Lovelady u1 Althouah teadtert can
t
..
~ ·" LISA
MAHONEY
NEWS BACKGROUND
be ehm1natcd and school ~1tcs t01d. 1
small d1stnct still has the same pet
student costs for ma1ntcnantt and
upkeep a\ any other, he S&Jd.
And you can only eliminate ~
man} po 1\1001 and ptOtrtms bt"t~
the quahty of education ~n' to
deteriorate, Lovelady said
t..aauna, wh1<'h 1\ c~pect1n11 2. t 84 ..
studenu 10 tntcr us four \Cho<'I'"' th1c.
Septemhcr "could take on anothl'r
l,000 lids and ht-~ Int more
efficient " he said v
nus \'~r. the d1stmt v.111 ~l'CI\(' $~.517 a \CU for each c.tudcnt from
lhc Stale . II mtJOr funding SOUl't'('
LovelAdy said With ll'i 'ipGTY enrol
lmcnt the d1stnct ec>uld ea\ll) till 1he
tehool1 "'1\hout ha,,n, to add pro-aram But -tf the dtc.tnct had more
students -thtt add1uonal ""enue
rtt'Ct\C'd per tudent would ao a Iona
W3}' toward 1mpro'''°r.a&1n1 school
bu1ld1np and •perh h1nn1 an
an1stant supenntendc t to take '°mt
of the J)f'C1c.urr off lo-.:clad) and
upennttndc-nt Btll) Barnt" thc
d1<1tnct'' onl> other admm1.,1rator
Ma1nt11n1n1 quahty t'd~n sn
an embltdtd ~hool dl\U'fct bc'Pn 1n
4 • I
IQ"4 v.1th the formation ol an
Educauonal Foundation ~tter
known toda\ '' CX.hoolpowcr The
tounda11on ha' rat~ SIOO.OOOa "ear
IClr d1.,lnrt edul.allonal programs 1n
the pa<,t tev. .. ears thmu&h popular
e' c-nt~ hle 1t~ annual I O-k1lomcter
rac..l" throu[lh lil~una Be ch
.\ partnc,...,h1p '-"1\h the Lquna
Reach Mu~um Cll .\n ha~ provided
elementai; tud<'nt\ v.1\h art in!\truc-
uon for the pa .. t fht \Cars and a ocw
ont-v.1\h the" Moulton Playho\l!le "
c~~ted to r~"11fh1c the dtMricn
a1hna tht"ater an cumculum after
\IC ~ of decline under an cver-
chan&1n1 round oh rymsll'UC'-
tor\
To pro' 1dc a full ran of exU"ICur·
m ular a t1v1tin and ~ummtt fltO-
(PI--... Dl8TUC1' I A.2)
...
AIRPORT SETTLEMENT ·msTORIC' ...
l'romAl
001 fair lo Ntwpon &ach ~~1dcnts
and. in the lona run, may be damqina
tD the city."
Strauss s.a1d an exp&itdtd tcrm1na~
meuunna up to 3l1,900 'QU&.rC Ccct,
11 much larser th&n the proJ>O'C(l
240,000-square-f 001 facility~ppcmd
by the city an 1981
"Do we rcall)' need 1 terminal that
is more than I 0 time$ the tze of the
prcscn\ one'>" he said
Strauss also ,,.id a larae airport
terminal could hinder the search for
another airport sate an the county and
allow for more tliaht increases after
the year 200S, ~hen the compromi~
settlement e\pu·es.
But Maurer and other council
members araucd that the com-
promise was the ~t the city could
obtain whlle protccuna the interests
of Newport Beach rcsidenu.
"People who arc cnuca1 of th is
agccment...should keep in mind that
11 lS ~compromise aareement, not the
lund we would draft untlaterally,"
Counc1lman 8111 Aaee said
Other council members, who have
been ttJbt-IJppcd throuJ,tlout the
negouauon!li, had effusive pTaJ!>C
Monda)' for the compromise.
"I think there ere no losers m this
We are all winners," Ruthclyn Plum-
mer said. , .
"It's an excellent docum~t,'' John
Cox Jr. said.
"We can hvc with what we know 1~
the ultimate goal of that a1rpon,"
Jacloc Heather said. "I don't know
what I'm ioing to do without the
airport to Icicle around anymore."
The City Council's approval fol·
lows the Sunday endorsement by the
Airpon Working Group and Stop
Polluung Our Newport. The two
IS ,
Specifics of airport
settlem·ent outlined
The settlement aareed to by the Newpon Beach City Council calls for the
hm1ted expansion of John Wayne AJrport in two phases.
The first phase runs lhrou&h March 1990 and the second, with an
expanded airport terminal, runs tfuouah the year 200S.
Durina the first phase, up to 4. 1S million passeniers wiJI be
accommodated each year. (The alrpon will serve about 4.1 million paue~crs
this year. city officials said.) After l 990, the airport capacny will increase to 8.4 million p ssenaers a
year. The county bad souaht a hiaher annual hm1t of 10.24 miUion.
The total number of commercial fliahts wdl be hmued to an a veraae of S 5
a day until 1990 with an increase to 73 avcrasc daily fliptts after that.
Additional hi~ts wtU be offered as mcenuvc to airlmcs using quieter Jets.
The noiser jets Will be limited to 39 fhahts per day for the 20-year bfe of lbc
plan.
The expanded terminal will be limited to 337. 900 square feet. A proposed
five-level 10,000-spacc park.an& structure will be scaled back to 8,400 spaces on
four levels.
A curfew on the hours for 1.1rport departures Wlll rcmatn in effect for 20
>C&f'S. The county-arees to rescind its official oppos1t1on to a nc"' airport site and
will not oppose the possible JOant-use of the Manne Corps Air Station In El
Toro.
Also. the Board of Supervisors agrees to baclc apphcattons for Federal
A v1auon Admm1stral1on fundm& on behalf of 11oups scck.10g an addttiooal
aU"pOn site. Efforts will' be made to reduce and control general aviauon aircraft noise.
lo addition, Newport Beach, by agreeina to the settlement, commits to
J01nins the county m defending the settlement against any future htigat1on.
-Robert Byndmao
Newport Beach c111zens 11oups that
were both opposed to airport ex·
pansion were included in the nego-
tiations.
FQllowing the expected approval of
the Board of Supervisors this morn-
mg, the settlement must be approved
by the Federal Aviation Adminis-
tration and the affected courts.
The settlement ends five separate
but related lawsuits pending in state
and federal courts.
STALKER SEEN IN SANT A ANA •••
FTomAl
out for a car stolen an Central Los
Angeles on Saturday
The cat IS dcscnbcd as an oranse.
1976 Toyota station wagon with
Cahforn1a license plate 482 RTS
according to Los Angeles Count)'
Shcntrs Deput> Steve uc
He said a c;im1lar car was ·seen
leaving the-vicinity or \am~s
Chnsanta Dnve re.,1dence 1n Mission
VitJO Police throughout Orange Count)'
have been deluged with tel ephone
calls from 'worried residefJts since the
latest Night Stalker attack, said
Orange County ShentT Lt Dick
Olson "We're really getting an increase an
caJls and so are all the area police
dcpanments," s.a1d ')Ison "People
are womcd and I can understand
that. We've beefed up our patrols
because of this."
Olson said invesllgators, working
in cooperauon with the Night Stalker
task force, returned t0 Cam's resi-
dence today to agam sift throu~ the
house for possible clues. He did not
say what officers have found inside
the residcn~
It 1s belicveo that the Night Stalker
may. leave a tell-talc trademark be·
hind or scrawl messages on the walls
of victim's homes. Olson said Sun-
day's attack was linked to the Night
Stalker by evidence fo und 1ns1de the
home. The evidence as confidenllal,
he Said.
'Olson said 1nformat1on concerning
the possible sighting of the Nigh t
Stalker on the Amtrak train has been
passed onto his department. He dad
not elaborate.
"People want to know 1fhe's left the
area and we don't rcall> know," said
Olson. "The way he's moved !round
up to now, we don't know what he
mlaht do. 1 w1sh we did."
Martinsaid the man getting off the
train in Santa Ana apparently had
vanished by the time pohce were
alerted. He said the conductor of that
train notified a ticket counter sales·
man in Anaheim (the next stop after
Santa Ana) but that the salesman may
have failed to call the police.
The conductor himself called
authorities after the tram reached Los
Angeles about 90 minutes later.
Martin said.
Sticky o~ Coast; cooling sloWiy
South«n c lfOf'nl• It lk>wty coding on. but 1tlct<y Nit w111
11111 bt the rule In moe•weu Wectneeday.
A Attang high pr...ufe 9)'ttem OYer New Mulco wm oontlnue to pump warm, mOlil alf OVet Soutntm Centoi nla lnto-
Weclntedty, the Nlt!Of\.i w .. ther s.rvic. .. Id.
The cooling marine laY9f lncr .. Hd Mrty today, and the fog
and low cloud• are eltpected ti> be even more extertllve on
Wedneedey morning, the weather MrVloe aald
Hight Wiii range from the 70. at th• beacMI Wedneeday to
th• 901 In th• warmer valleys.
U.S. Tempe
Hlgll. 10W IOI :U '*'ta 111\0lng •I I LO<hvll .. 77 5il am ~ 83 ta
"' Le MlllN8-11 11 ,.
Al DAiiy ... 17 Mttwe.111 .. 11 5t ~QU. ta .. Moi.-11 Pe4i! II .,
" 12 N411twffle 83 •1 ... """°'. 13 44 .....OrlMnt .. 73 Att.,,I& 71 " ...,.von. .. 76
A tlenllO Cl1Y •1 ~ NOf1oll.V• II 72
"'OHTI ~~ .... ,
W11m -Cold...,.
Sl'IOw11e ~Ml Fluu-.1 Snow Occkld•O..,.. S1e1oon11y Ay
AA*lll 101 71 Olt~Clly .. 70 Calif. Tempe Surf Report leitllflof• u 10 0....... 71 11 ~ n .. Orlan6o 13 72 l!MwCll 11 .. ~ .. 70 Hl9fl. lqw tor 24 "--encllnQ st 6 ~OCATIOM ICZI IMAN ... .. eo l'llOanlll ICM .. a m lkMllon 70 63 ~Me ,. .. .... ~. .. .. Hl#lt "ttoft IMdl 2·3 ,.
lullalO 12 83 ... 12 !ut•• 11 " ,.,_ Jtitty, NNpott 2-4 OOod
CUC* 13 6a POttlancl. Or '° M ,,_ 103 .. 404flt~.~ 2-4 OOod
~Oii.SC 13 11 ~~~ 13 70 ~ " 14 22nd .,,..., N9wpor1 2-4 OOod
CIMw*lon W v ti ... =rCl1y IS 11 lo.~ .. 71 == 2-4 OOod
CMnott•.N C 11 70 t2 67 0.......0 71 67 1·2 po«
~ " $6 "8flo tl S1 ,_ "°°"" 103 eo ....,, Clem9nt• 1·2 ....
QlloilOO ,. .. l'llcflrnond .. 71 "-' llufl t2 M -*'IP• a-nett 74 .. II loule 71 !Ml "8dwood en-, 75 ., ..... ....., 90Utll
cw..-7.,. 57 SI '"«•TMllH 83 75 "-> II 67 C-0...0h 71 57 Sall Lall• City 101 74 ·--0 14 IO Tide. Concotd,N H sa u StnAnlCINo .. 72 a.un .. 74 61 o.llet-FI WOf111 14 16 8tn.luan,P,. to 13 ..,, Dl9go 13 t1 .O.yion 1S 51 SI Sl•Mar .. 71 " IM Franol90o .. M TOOAY o.n-17 .. ... 11 .. IO 52 ._ ..... .,.,. H 59 Flrll IOW 2.S4a.m ..0 7 O..Mol ... ,. 61 8/>r~ 13 93 llOOlllOfl ... ee =:::r'IOW •1oam 4 3 OM roll 1& eo SIOux alle ,. 112 Hlofl, IOW IOI 2• "°""9 encllng el 5 p m Dltlutll H 61 SC>Ok-.. 61 e-1ow 1oe 7t Ulpm. 2.•
flPNO .. ee 8yr-H .. llanop 100 52 9-ld lllgll t •CM pm .4
FwlMll\lta M 43 Toptilea IO as etyfMI 109 m WS0.80AY FatQO ., •I r-.. 1• C•lalln• II 87 '1fll IOw , 3·10•,m -0 1 Flagtt•lf 13 41 TulM ... ... Lono 9MCfl 91 97 ~IOw 1:31•.m 4-5 Otano Raplclt 78 57 WMfltng1on H 72 MOllfOYI• 103 .. 2;.0pm 2 I OtM IF•lla 13 53 Wicllll& 83 112 MOlll.,.ty ~1 1141 S.cond high 1:4epm. •·• Gr..mbo<o,N C 82 .. Wlllc-8atr• ,, Ml Ml.WM--. 112 97 ~l0td 111 Ill Ont.,IO 100 711 aun Ml• IOd•h a1 7:2t pm . n.. .....,,. 12 as Eztended Patm Springe 105 12 w.or...oey •t e· Lm. Wld -. egtlf\
Honollllu 80 77 p~ ea Ml 1Ll.,Up.m.
"-°" t2 70 ~ m 10 Moon fl-1:::1 •·11 pm. Ml• •I
lndltnaciol4• 73 5'4 hnll«nwdlno 101 1• 3 20 a_m W..:J y and t'-llOAin al
Jecl!Nft,Mt .. .. F lir •110991 !ale nlgllt end mofnlftg 8tn OllOtlet 105 ee IHpm
J9CktOlllllf .. 83 72 tow CIOuda Wld log -1119 coae1 San.JoM 79 511 ,,_ " •• Tlllnd~ ll'l<OUQll l•l11tdty ~ Senti Ari• 115 u Kat> ... City 111 57 ':n8:."G omlll9mld 70.-INCOUI S....taCtw 711 " LMV911u 1CM 15 10 I mid t0e In IM Inland ~ TlllWMV..., II ...
LIU .. Roc:li 13 .. ~ rnotlly In ,,,. eo. Y~Vly 80 511
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"9W9 11or ... 111ut1ra1i0n&. eo11ona1 man11 or •dv9tl-,,_I• ,,.,..,, may t>9 •tOtOdl.lc:ed ..,"'°"' IC)9C>al 119'· ~ ot COOytlQllt own1t Editor Controller
•0 am 1"'1.•J ~OU' U <., *
.. oe » ·•"•~ Robert L. Cantrell Donald L. WllOame
Sec:ono c·•H POtt•Ot pa.o at Cotta A.I.a C•~lor~
(UPS IU •llOOI SubM:f'OtlOn by can.., S6 2S "N)l>tlloy
Dv ,,,.. S7 00 mont""'
CAPTURED COUPLE RELEASED? ...
From Al
Amcncan The} hate us with a
passion." she said
Rcprcscntauvcs 1n the offi ce ot.
Rep Robert Badham, who have
urged the Amcncan Embassy in
Managua to push for the release of the
Ldcuncsses, said the couple had
trouble with their boat's engine and
were seized near Lmk Com l'lland.
The island as near the port where
Sandanistas receive m1htal)' ship-
ments from Soviet bloc nations.
Badham's aides indicated that the
m1htal) sens1t1v11y of the area prob-
abl) had something to do with the
incident.
Leo LaJeuncsst. 53. was employed
at Oran&c Coast College from
1966-81. first as an agncuhure and
biolo~ teacher and then as an
associate dean of instruction for
media services. Before that he was an
agriculture teacher at Costa Mesa
High .
College officials said LaJeunesse
and his wife. a former student at the
SGT. YORK BATTLE GUN .•.
From Al
dcc1s1on made b) Caspar
Weinberger. and we e'pect to release
a statement from 'Washington this
afternoon .. Flamm s.a1d
Officials at the '1c~pon Beach
branch of the aerospace firm received
the message this morning that the
prOJCCt was ofT. Flamm said
Weinberger said 10 the an-
nouncement delivered to Ford Aero-
~pace heads 1n Washington D C that
the'ant1·a1rcraft system was of "hm·
1ted range and rellabal1t> ··
Weinberaer said that tests have
indicated that the '>)~tern's per-
formance "does not efTec11vcl) meet
the itrowmg m1htarv threat," and that
there as "marginal improvement''
that can be made.
Flamm said that 65 of the guns
have been delivered The govern-
ment onginally ordered 146 of the
guns in the weapons programs con-
tract
The Sgt York battle gun, named
after World War I hero Sgt Alvin
York. 1s designed to protect armored
columns from au attacks It 1s made
up of two 40mm cannons mounted
on a modified tank chassis ana hnked
to a computer and to a radar system.
Flamm said
In the preliminary plans for aqu1r-
mg the weapon svstcms. the Arm y
college, left the school to take an
around-the-world voyage. But after
sa1h ng through the Panama Canal,
they dCCJded to hve in Aonda where
he WTote a book, devoted time to l photography and opened a res-
taurant.
About a month ago he applied for a
JOb at Orange Coast College. They
were sailing from Florida tp the
Orange Coast. where he intenaed to
return to teaching, when they were
captured by the Nicaraguan Navy.
had hoped to or ( 618, but tests I
conducted mdcpe~tJy concluded
that there were some problems with
the system. which resulted in the
rcducuon of the order, Flamm sa1d.
"That was the ultimate goal of the
Army, but they only · ended up
ordcnng 146," Flamm said.
The message relayed to offictals at
the Newport Beach branch simply
informed them to halt the massive
prOJCCt in mid-stream. Flamm said.
"We arc awa1tina formal instruc-
tions from the Army on what to do
next before we release a statement.''
he added.
SUSPECT'S BAIL FORFEITED ...
From Al t
Fahe) al~det.11nr-c.! to talk about
lhe \earch bcina lOnducted b) 1he t ~ ( u~Q'.ltns Service, Interpol and
other al(enc1c" He al"o refused com-
ment on report\ that Sm yth'\ dau&h·
ler Dawn R1s vold of Irvine and }11s
'ion. Ernest have been granted 1m·
munlly for their testimony against the
electronics manufacturer
Fahe> said no characs arc pendma
aaa1ns1 family members, but he
dcchncd 10 say whether any arc being
cons1dtrcd
Smyth, a consultant for the Air'
Force and the North Atlanttc Treaty
Organ1zat1on, 1s suspected of1lleaall y
transporting 810 krytrons to an Israeli
compam 1n Tel Aviv. between Janu-
ary 1980 and mid-December 1982.
Smyth. prcsjdeot of the closed
M1lco International Jnc., pleaded not
guilty. mamtainin& that he was un-
aware that special State Department
approval was needed to sbap the
k.rytrons, which arc also used for h1ah·
speed photocopyina machmcs and 011
cfnlhn& equipment
DISTRICT BATTLES THE ODDS •. ."
From Al
gram\ like those d1\m;in1lcd h) Prop-
os1u on I' ~hool hoard mrmbers
and concerned c1t11cn~ la~t year
treated L Fi\ RN . Laguna Enrich·
ment and Re\mircc Network. a ~II ·
<1upport1ng, non profit corporation
that offe r, afier·~hool cnnchment .
'lummer classe., and athlet1l (lan1n
for Laauna Reach.area \( hool th1I
~ren
C ontracuna for lcrta1n ~r" ace"
1n'ltead of payma ~lane!I and tx-nefil'>
to .chool cmploy~s has ~ved thc
d1'ltnct about S2SO.OOO in the put
two to three year.. l.o"clad)' ,,-.1d The
dt"nct aim bcpn encouraamg
teachers and :.idmm1\traton to take
t:.irl y rellrtmtnt w thev can he
replaced with It\\ exix-nencc-d -hut
al"o IM., l o'ith -JX"l"O nnel .
To tinanct'a nev,;\w1m mrngpool 10
rtfllace th~ •&•na on~ ~ the h1&h
\Choof. dastnct ofli c1a lc, have JOmed
hand'i w11h tht Cit)' fattmatcd coc,t
for de'1an •~d con .. 1ruc11on is SI
m1lhon and 01\tnct adm1n1siratorc,
arc loolung for grant mone) to
finan<!e their half of the deal
1 o pay for needed capital improve·
ments to the d1stnct's older ~hools,
Lovelady and Barnes have go ne into
the real e\tate business. Much of the
p1m year has been spe nt final121n1
details of the ulc of the fonner Ahso
School to a group that hope' to
reno\ ate 11 for ~n1or hou'11 ng
At the umc time BArnc1 and
Lovelady have topped their educa·
uonal hats WJth those of land de·
velopen to prepare another surplu
11te on AJta Lquna Boulevard for
11lc The vacant parcel 1n the Top pf
the World nc1ahborhood tS ideal for
$1naJe-famaly homes. but developers
wuy of the city's many rcstnct1ons
and requirements ha\'e not been
wtllina to purchase the propeny
without an pprovcd lflct map in
place.
If sclhna the land will repair
cracked conrrctc 1n the h1ah acbool
quadrangle. or allow other need~
I
renovations. then you can call Love-
lady Mr. Developer. A tentative tract
map for the Aha L&auna site has been
prepared and 11 up for oons1dcrat1on
at the next Planmn& Commmaon
rncctina. "It takes all of our time and ab1hty
to keep scratching to keep thmg~
aoan~' Lovelady said.
Still, Lovelady believes better
times arc ahead for the school distnct
dc$p1tc its contlhued enrollment d~
cllnc Selhna Aliso School will mean
almost $2 7 million to the distnct, he
said And, althOuah Lovel&dy is
makln1 no public predictions about
how much the Alta Laauna 11tc may
bnna 1n, u should be substanua1.
The new state lottery wtll also
relieve some of the focal pressure
borne by the d11trict. he predicted.
State income from the sale of lottery
tlckctt has been promised an pan to
education
"If we can ~II those two p1eces of
property and ~t the IOttCt)' on hnc,
we'll surv1vc.' Lovelady sa1d
c
Clrcul1tlon
TelephonH
Product1or> Circula1ton
Manager Manager
Howard Mullenary Peggy Blevln1
Advertising Olrectot Class1l'9d Director
NOW THROUGH LABOR DAY
VOL. 78, NO. 231
20% OFF
ALL POTTERY
'FREE"
Local Oellvery
,.
AMLING ' s
Newport Nur ·ery and Garden Center
(e.twe.n MacArthur and JambOr")
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8:30-5:30, Sundey 9:00.6:30
1600 .... ooaat highway • MWpott t>Mch. cautornl• • (714) 644-9510
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