HomeMy WebLinkAbout1986-07-17 - Orange Coast PilotPG•CAITa•M
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THURSDAY, JULY 11., 1986
Fair plus theater eqUals gridlock
Beach Boys show
near fair creates
a traffic nightmare
BJ PAUL AJlClllPL£Y
... G. JEANETTE A VENT ............
C.OSU Meta traffic officials• wont
ni&btrnua were ~iz.Cd Wedoelday w6en thousands of rock \o• roU tam
and e>r.qe County Fair,..oet1 con·
vCfled on the faif1tOWMh and ldja-
cent amobitbea1« at the ame time.
''It'• been pidlocked for two lO
three houra," Police Lt. Oift'McBride
uid Wednetday evenina. ''Every
s1qle park.int space it la.ken with
hundreds of can still waiuna to set in."
Traffic and law enforcement of·
ficials saw an invitation for trouble
when they learned the Beach Boys
were ICheduled at the Pacific
Amphitheater the same niaht that Jan
and Dean would play in the fa.if·
arounds.
Can Wtte backed up for miles on
the SS ·freeway{ but the California
Hiahway Patro reported no ma1or
problems. ........... ., ..........
One of MYeral th011MDd trapped motortat. •bowa b.18 fnaatratton dmtni &rtdlock alone ralr Drift. Some waited up to two hoan tn •tand8till traffic.
Llkewi1e, Costa Mesa police en·
countered no major accidmt.J, ~
(Pleue .. TllAPftC/ A.2)
Coaat
David Aalelgh of Laguna
Beach celebrated hie
"third annual 25th birth-
day" wtth an unusual
party./A3
Nation
House reaffirms $11. 7
bltllon In across.-the-
board apendlng cuts that
were thrown Into ques-
tion by the Supreme
Court./A5
World
Syria saya French and
American hostages In
Lebanon were being held
In an area controlled by
Lebanese mlllttas, not In
the Syrian-controlled
Bekaa Valley./ A4
INDEX
Advloe and Games
Boating
Bulletin Board
Business
Classified
Comics
Death Notices
Entertainment
Opinion
Paparazzi
Police Log
Public Notices
Sports
Television
Weather
83
81
A3
85-6
C4-7
84
C7
82
A7
81
A3
C7·8
C1·4
82
A2
Councilman
takes heat on
third term bid
By TOM WRIGHT
1-year oil-drilling ban
off state's coast asked Daily Pilot Correapoadeat
Ctty Councilman Ben Nielsen. one
of the supporters of a 1984 Fountain
Valley initiative hm1ung City Coun·
cit members to two consecutive
terms. was accused dunng Tuesday's
City Council meeting of using a
loophok an the law to ~ubvert the
an tent of the voters
Nielsen took out nommat1on
papers Tuesday, making ham the
sixth candidate to seek one of the
three council scats up for election th11
fall. If re~lected, Nielsen will serve
his third term on the Caty Council.
(Pleae eee PfIEL8£1C/ A.2) Ben NleJ.en
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Ot•Dl9fNlt .....
Oil exploration and dnlhng off
ulifom1a's coastline would be
banned for one year under a plan
proposed Wednesday by a con-
gressional subcommittee.
A prov1s1on calhna for a onc·ycar
dnllina moratonum was added to the
lntenor Department's appropna-
ttons bill by the lntenor Subcommit-
tee of the House Appropriations
Committee.
The drilling ban would be 1n effect
during the fiscal year from October
U.S. bike race isn't over
till the last rider finishes
Crew of volunteers at HB headquarters
keeping tabs on the scattered cyclists
ABC Sports was wrapping up
175.000 feet of film. crowds that had
greeted the winntrs in Atlantic City
were gone and media acro'l'I the
country turned 1hc1r attention to new
events.
But the staff at the Huntington
Beach headquarters of the 1986 Race
Across AMenca was still manning the
phones Wednesday. trackan$ the last
of the cro'ls-<ountry cyclists and
fielding d1m101shmg press inqumes.
While attention focused on the
contestants when they wheeled out of
Huntington Beach July 6. a national
network of volunteers and staffers
worked behind the scenes handling
the logisucal challenge of tracking the
3.107·m1le race
Unlike a stadium or arena sports
event where all of the part1c1pants arc
1n one place, the crosS--OOuntry
cyclists c;prcad further apart as each
day pac;scd.
When winner Pete Pcnscyres
crossed the Atlantic City. N.J .. finish
hne Monday. last·place ndcr Dan
Wesolowski was more than 1.000
miles away
To l.ccp tabs on 1hc CO'}testants
throughout the race. orpnazers
placed crewc; at 73 stations along the
rouce
According to Kathleen Burke. who
headed the Hununaton Beach head-
quarters operation. 11me stations
were located al in hotels and m
parking lots, motor homes and tents.
1986 through September 1987. A one·
year moratorium, however. would
have little affect on Southern Cah-
fomia tract! since lease sales arc not
scheduled for those areas until 1988
The proposal could be blocked
when the full Appropnauons Com·
m1ttec reviews It next Thursday, said
William Schreiber. aide to Rep.
Robert Badham, R·Ncwport Beach.
At least one conarcssman -Rep.
Ralph Regula. R-Oh10 -plans to
introduce a subcutute proposal to the
committee that would delete the
drilling ban.
PAUL
ARCHIPLEY
PERSPECTIVE
As each racer amved at a station. a
phone call to headquarters provided
1nforma11on that staffers fed to their
computer.
The computer kept track of each
racer's locauon. his average -.peed
and other data for the media and
other inquincs
A wall-sized map of the lin1ted
States showed the route and locauon
of each 11me station. with tin) bulbs
hll.ht1ng the way
(Pleue eee HB CUW / A2)
"The messaat here is not to be
complacent." Schreiber said. .. But, at
least at this point. Southern Cali·
fomia appean to be secure for at least
another year or maybe longier."
Schre1bcT said Badham and other
local leaden will be tobbyina ex·
tens1vcly m the com1ni week to
ensure that the moratonum is a~
proved by the full Appropnations
CommJttee.
Tius week the lntcnor Depart.
ment's chief negotiator, Stephen
(Pleue eee YSd'9/A2)
Political • fever a
sign of
HBtimes
By ROBERT BARKER
OfltleO.., ........
Four months before the City Coun·
c1l election and even before can·
d1dates could take out nom1nat1ng
papers. "Think Klink"' signs bepn to
appear in Hunungton Beach.
The 'lmall posten bordered with
red and blue sars were affixed to
utility poles and traffic signal
'itanch1ons. They eenerated a lot of
cunos1ty "Who''l Klink?" was the
u'lual question
NB group seeking higher bridge sues over widening The \1gns also captured the interest
ot lex.al election officials; It seems
they '1olated ~veral state and local
ordinance<.
By STEVE MARBLE
Ol .... O.., .... IWI
A coahuon of Newport Beach
rcs1dcn1s flied a lawsuit Wednesday
against the Cahfom1a Department of
Transportation 1n an effort to halt the
widen ma of a 50.year-0ld bndge
The span, known loc~lly as the
West Channel Bndgc, camcs traffic
HBnursing
home clients
face ouster
By ROBERT BARKER
Of ... O.., .........
The owner of a Huntinaton Beach
nursina home cited for health care
violations !Ul1d Wednesday he plans
to do everything possible to avoid the
ouster of 80 elderly and infirm
patients from ha. fac1hty
The Huntington Beach ( onvalcs--
ccnt Hospital lost its ccrt1ficat1on
after state m~pcctors found that
patients "were not clean. were not dry
and were not aettma the naht diet and
med1cauon," accord in' to Jacquchnc
Lancer. d1stnct adm1n1,trator for
hcensina and certification for the
natc Department of Health Services.
The decert1ficauon means the nu,..
1na home wu disqualified from
rec11v1n1 Mt"di·C'al and Medicare
funds for 1he patients 1n the 'killed·
nur"nl b<'d' at the fac1hty between
Delaware and Ronda 'treets near lhc
Five Points area
along Newport Boulevard (rom 1hc-
mainland to 1he Balboa Peninsula.
Sandy Willford. a boater and
orga011er of the coahuon. said the
Cahrans project 1s poorly conceived
and would create danaerous con-
d1t1ons for boaters travehna under the
bndje.
The bndae now 1'l 'lO low that
boaters have difficulty squeczana
under it at high ude, said Willford.
noting clearance 1s sometimes as little
as five feet.
"At high tide the Harbor Patrol has
to take down its antenna to get
under." he said
Boats occasionally get stuck under
the bndge and several boaters have
bumped their headc; while passing
under 1t. he ''ud. Boaters often must
wait for low '9 before attempting
passage
Willford said the bndgc o;hould be
raised as wt•ll a'i widened
"Our p<>\1tion 1\ 'don't do anything
unless you·re going to do 1t nght.'
Once 1he bndgc 1~ widened, there will
never be an opportunity to raise It,"
he said.
The lawsuit seeks an 10junct1on
against the C.altrans project. ten-
tatively set to be undertaken in 1988
Caltrans officials could not be
reached for rcaC11on to the lawsuit
But a Newport Beach official said
(Pleue eee BRIDOE/ A2)
Employees from the pubhc works
department have been rem~vm1
some of the •ugns on traffic si&naJ
pole\ that they believe may distract
mot on st\
"lfc; no h1g deal," Deputy Caty
( krk C onn1e Brockway wd today
"Fvcf) election we have these land of
things I was just going to wnte him a
(Pleue eee POLITICAL/A2)
Doggone! Traffic
on freeway nearly
thwarts puppy love
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OfltleO.., ..........
Jennifer OaJc was thinking about
'4ttina another dot. but 'he didn't
expect to find one stranded on a
conacsted Los An&elC1 freeway
But that's euctly how Qalc mtt her
newel\ pet - a youna female pit bull
T}\e Newport Beach woman who
sel)S v1tam1ns. was dnv1na to Lo,
Anaclcs on bus1nm last week when
she saw the fnahtencd doa pacma
franucally on tht center d1v1der ot tht
San Dieao Freeway near Centuf)
Boultvard
Without he italln&. Of.Jc pulled her
white Chevrolet 8la1er to the middle
of the frttway. parked 11 and bcpn
:;;;;.;;;;;;...-..~~:._..:.:..~:::.i...;;.;:,_...c._.,~!::....;,.,,;.;:;:t.....oi..L.i....,.ill::~~~~~~~~~ chas1na after the doa
the other side of the frttway." Osle
said "By th1'l time, everyone WI'
'ltoppana on the fiuway. cha11n1 after
her and calhna for her to stop"
Radio traffic reponcrs hovenn,a
above told l"teners fmm their heh-
coptcn that freeway dnvma con-
d1t10M included a dot and a woman
dodaJna ca" on the 40S
"I mu•t have run about halfa milt
from where I left my car when sbt ran
an front of a van and got hat." Oalt
u1d. "The dnvcr stopped and I WI
1ust ~rtamma"
Other motonsts who had 101ncd the
chaK amvt"d Wlth blankets, ropn
and essorted rc'ICuc equipment
C">IJe took the d<>&. which wa
'-"C•nna nc1thcr nor a collar, to a
nurb\ ho p1tal but was turned away.
(Pl ....... PA Tr&NT8' / A.2) Jeonlf er O,le'1 dol· Freeway, •bow. beT affecdon after betn1 re.cued. "l sartcd runn1n1aner her but then
'he 1umpcd ovcrthe ctntcr d1\lc1cr to f Pleue eee P'll&W A YI A2)
{I \ \
..
I
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8 * ~ C099t DAILY PtLOTI Ttturaday, July 17. 1988
TRAFFIC NIGHTMARE AT FAIR •••
h..aAl
api&e lhe deluae of vi itors.
•·11•a 1uch • Jridlock we wtrc ~led ~ ""ere '° few prob-.._ •• Me.Brideuid. ··we had abnut
a thousand can with no place to ao."
Oae 10.year-old boy did lose a
couple of teelh whco he ran into a
bariicr at Memmac Way and fajr.
vtew Ro.ct before cro~•na the trttl,
McBridewd
Fair spokeswoman Jill Lloyd said
the fair temporarily shut down 1t
parkiQa lot, but was ablt to reopen when day visitOTS bepn leaving.
.. It was preny po.eked from 6: 30 to 8
p.m .," Uoyd aid. "We filled our loll>.
Oranp Coast College and ( 'o!lta
Mesa Hi&h School. .. It tool. some pcopk I 1 i hour~ 10
&e1 into the faJrgrounth "
The fa1rarounds lot which alw
SiffVCS the amphttheutt't, provides
about 6.100 pa1d pa~ and l.000
din spaces. Lloyd said. Another 500
spacenreavailablcal the hiah school
and up 10 2.000 paec1 at OCC.
Y1s11ors were forud to find pa~na
on stdt strttts and walk Iona dis-
tances to Lht' a.rounds bounded by
Ari 1 ngton Dre ve, Newport
Boulevard, Fair Dnve and Fairview.
At 6 p.m., the fair had welcomed
16.701 vu.itors. Lloyd said. Dunna
tbt' next three houn another 13,909
pa sed throulh the tum5tiles.
At the same time, 14,000 were
heading into the amphitheater for a
schedult'd 7 30 p.m . Beach · Boys
)how
"Faur Dn.,,e, &1rv1tw and New-
port were at 1 dead standstill,"
McBnde said.
.. Thepeo~c "-ho did thi1didn't ~t
lQ&elhn,"
Fa1ar:_o_unda Gent Manaaer
NOiti Biric>iik aala .. We had booked
Jan ind Dan Iona before tht"
Amphitheattc booked The Beach Bo~ They juat ChOIC '°book on top
of ic."' Banosik said the fair ti tnvol~ed in a contract diSJ>ute with
the Amphitheatre and bookilll is one
ohht> i ues •
S teve Redfearn, Paci fie
Amphitheatre JCftCral rnanqer, said
be had no ch0tcie. It was either book
The Beach 8oY1 Wednesday or aivc
up them up to a competJtor, The
Irvine Meadows Amphitheatre.
''The Beach Boys arc as popular as
the Ora nae County Fair," he said.
BRIDGE WIDENING •..
Redfearn said tr.me wu heavy,
but be did not believe j1 was any
wone than that aencntcd for Eddtc
Murphy or Tom Pcuy, who per-
formed earlier this yca.r.
Whilt'.police were directma traffic,
cuy. traffic efll,ineers chanaed sianal
liming sequences to atd the now, said
Rock Miller, traffic en.Jincer for
Costa Mesa.
From A l
the problem t!> one ol money I und-
ina has been allocated for w1den1ng a
section of the bndge but I hat mone>
couJd be lost 1fthe scope ot 1he proJ« t
is changed. said Pubhl \\ ork~ D1rc<.-
1or Ben Nolan.
Reconstrucung the enttre bndge
also would create a maJor traffil
problem an the nty. he \31d
Willford and other res1dcnh on the
west side of the bridge ~gan lobb> 1ng
Caltrans for a higher bridge 1n 1982
"We've certainl> followed all the
rules. We've talked to< ah ran\, wl.''ve
talked to the ut}. w<"'ve talked to
Bcraeson and Fergu .. on Jnd Jame'>
Roosevelt and Badham and so on "
said Willford. reeling oil the name'> of
local pohuc1an'> and rnmmun11~
lt'adt'rs
A maJont) ol rc~1denh 1n the arl'a
t'ven agreed 10 C'>tabli'>h a ~pcltal
3S<;t>~~m,.nt ~·~1nr1 '" '""' ".,,., ol lhl·
added expen!le, behtved to be about SI S million, he said.
"Now we have no choice but i.o
stop the whole project ... he said.
Caltrans, which has responsib1l1ty
for the bndge. bas announced plans to
double the width of the bndge from
65 feet to 130 feet. The four-lanr
bridge would hold Stlt lanes as well as
pedcstnan waJkways on e11her side.
The w1den1ng would be done 1n
phases -first one side and then the
other.
Willford said the project not only
eliminates the chances for raising the
bndge but will create a dangerous
"wind tunnel effect" for boaters
pa~sing underneath
The wider bridge could create a
s1tuat1on whtrc boaters would have
10 deal with wind gusts up to 75 mph.
according to the lawsuit.
CaJtrans and hi$hway patrol or-
fic1aJs diverted visitors to Fairview
Road and Harbor Boulevard ftom the
405 freeway to remove pressure from
the SS eJul
When the main lots filled up,
visitors were directed to other park-
ing.
Officials also blocked ofT College
Park because of residents' complaints
about traffic there during past events.
Despite the city's best efforts,
tempers were short among many
trying to gel in.
"A lot ofpeoplt'Just give up and go
home or go somewhere else ... Lloyd
said.
"It was quite a zoo," McBnde said
late m tht' evening.
Those who did sec the show said 1t
was "great," McBnde added.
I-YEAR OIL-DRILLING BAN ASKED ...
From Al
(mies. \.\alkcd out ot meeting' be-
cause no agrceml'nt\ ltluld he
reached. ~hre1ber ..aid
The negouauon .. haH· Ileen undc:r
wa-. for ahout 'ii\ munlh\ but tht"rt'
has been little progrev~ 1n rl'lt·nt
v.eeks
Badham. for one, wa\ not 'urpn...ell
b) the lack ot agreement among
negot1atur!>
"He'<, pleased to '>l:l' thl' \al1J1\\ ol
h1\ argument that \OU don 'l negotiate
10 good la1th \.\Ith a loaded gun at your
hc:ad " \thre1bcr said "They (the
( altforn1a rnngrc'><.lllnal delegatec;)
"l'Ol 1n v.11hout an~ bargaining 11111b .
.\1.lord1n1.1. 111 the .\\\OC1atcd Press.
lntt·nor \nn.'tan Donald Hodel wa!>
not plca~d b~ the Hou\C subcomm1t-
tec'" action Wednc\da)
In a preran:d \tatemcnt. Hodel
'a1d .. f hl' p11llt11. al dC' .. lfC'i of tho..e
who seem not to carc about the
nation's energ) secunt} pre .. a1led
and the)' torpedoed what could have
been a maJOr stt'p toward consen~us
Al issue dunng ncgot1at1onc; is how
much of the outer conunental shelf
i.hould be opened to dnlling vroupi.
up and down the coast, including
Orange Coast communt11e'>. have
betn acuvely opposing any plans that
would allow offshore tracts to be
leased for oil dnll1ng or ellplorat1on
PATIENT S ' F UTURE UNCERTAIN ...
From Al
The l utofT ta J...c'> dln t \Utt 'I
lea .. 1ng man .. pat1c:nt.,' Jhrlit\ to pa'
in Jeopard\
The decision to delcn1h the: h°'p1-
tal wa.. made b\ kdl·ral health
official'> upon thl· rc.u1mml·ncla11or1 ot
the •natc health d1:partmen1 l 1nlt·r
said
A team '1'i1ted thl' nur\1ng h•1nw
dunnB thl' v.eek ol J unc: llJ and lound
"c;1gn1fi1.an1 nur,1ng prohkm' ..
Lincer <.h1. ,.11d
Robcn 71nngralx· f'Hl'\ldl·n1 111
Delma < arc < entl'r' Int "hll Ii
operatl'\ 1h1.• nur"n!I h11nH ,,ml h1·'
recCt\l'd .. numl'HIU\ 1n4uinn' lrc1m
panic'> l11nn·rn1n~ flUf(htt\l' ol thl'
falilll\
/1nngrahe 1ndH.Jtl'd th.11 flt:"' o\.\11
er' m;I\ he: ahlt· to llt'l thl· !Julm
rnatllinl and a~ain bnc1nll' d1111hll-
tor \late and kdl'rdl lunding 10
tinanu.· lhl· tarc of lhl· patll:nt\
/1nngrahc a dtrl'lhlr of thl' Hunt
1ngton Bcalh < hamhc:rof< ommcrce.
\dtd ht: ha'> hc:en ar11ve for about 25
\c:::tr'> 1n \l'nmr twalth tare: service\
111' nur\1ng home doc\n't have lund\
lo \Ml' tor thl" XII people without \late
Jnd lederal PJ\mt·nt\ he 'Wiid
\1. 1thout elahoraling he ..aid he 1\
d111ng t'\l'nth1ng ht· rnn 10 a\lnd
rc:l1K:at1un ol lht• old\ll'f\
L1ncer ... ud \l,ttl' 1n'>fX'llnr' "ho
made th rel'' "11' 1n rcccnl month'> in
\pnl lound I (1 pci11cn1<, v.11h hcd
\Clfl''· \Onll' ol '' hom 1H·rc alleged I~
improper!\ trl'Jh:d Othl'f'> were d1r1\
or l) 1ng 1n \oiled linl·n 'he said ·
..,he \Jill that tht· l.tl tlrt} la'>t year
\1.-J\ llll·d 1.·1gh t llflll'' hn -.wlatton'>
and It ncd S::!ti (JOO
/Jnngrabc.· v.ho declined IO rnm-
mt'nt ahout 'pecific charges. cla1ml·d
that the\ 1olat1on'i were 1rchn1lal and
in\t>hed admin1strauvc problem'
.\ ne"" management team came: on
board 1n mid-June and ha'i turned lht•
horn\.' tnto a ··.,hin1ng" fanltt). /111n
grabt-~1d
"It \ running vel') n1cel} nov.
Tht'rc are no problems:· he '><lid
\fark Landn. 34, who ..aid he v.a'
hired a\ the new admin1strato1 on
June 10 "to 'itra1ghten out problem'
for Mr /inngrabc" .. aid patient'> Jrt
not in danp,t•r
"Thn arl wl'll fed and well carl·d
tor" he.,ard
T hl'n: an· l7 other resident'> in lht:
rwr•>ing hDnll' v. ho are not thrcak·ned
h\ the funding lutoff Landi') ..aid
NIELSEN HIT OVER T HIRD TERM BID ...
From Al
I ountain \Jill'\ rt•,11k11t l l·o Jom·'
ii( l U\UJ 'ld\Ul 111 fl . rr" ng h I\ I '11\.t
po\1t1on on th~· pr11hkm' tctu\ed h\
( It) C ounul n1l•mtwr' v.ho llPl'I
\tep dc1v.n
Thl' 1nll1Jt1\r \\,I~ lll'll'''·'" oil
lording 111 II\ \Jlt>ll\• •f' 111 J...l'l'P llll'
po~t:r o! ut\ g11\\'fnm1.·n1 frum
re\llng 1n 1h1: hand' 111 lh•· k\.\ •
.lon1:' unlllcd \.1l'l\l'n \'Ith th;i1
\tatt'ml·nt .ind 11lhl'r' th<tl l lll'd Ion~
wrm C II\ c •>unul ml·mhc.·" hn11m
IOI! lllmpl.H:l'n! .inJ lo\lnl! llu II
rt'r\fX'l 11 \\ "' 1 Ill· nn·lh of re\1cJcnt\
'\.h qut,111111 t11 \11u. Mr Nielsen
" II ~ou j!1·r1111rll'h ml'ant all tht'> wh>
.ire: '"11 n ..... ll(lllll ing the: w"hes ol
l'llJlllJ l1111r1t.11n \'Jlln \OIC:r\., ..
ltJfll"\ .1\h d
'\;ll' \I'll \,lld ICJd,t\ hl' lo\OUld fl'·
,p .. nd '" I •llt'' u111u\fn al th1·
,q1pr 1pr1.1tr I rrnt•
\u111d1n~ 111 < 11; \lturne) .\IJ11
llurn' 111~ 11111tt1l1\c l'Xcmptcd all
111t uml>< r 1 .111d p;1'1 < 11\ ( oun1. ti
111, 11 t11. t\ Ir• •Ill hnn~ fl·mo1.cd trom
11f11u· .1111.'r ;i '>l'lond term An)' ncv.
lountil mt·mhcr elected after thl'
1n1t1at1\t' wa' approved 1n 1984 can
onh \l'r\c 111.0 consecuti ve termc,
l hl' 1>rdrnJme was written by a non-
partl'>an group. Fountain Valky
< tllll'n'> fur< 1ood Govemment
Uurnc, 1n1erprets the law to mean no
prl'\l'nl or pa\1 member of the council
\\llllld he. \Ubjl'('I to llS prOVISIOn\
"I \l'O < ounulman George ~ott
hn olU\l he v.a\ a <:ounc1lman from
I ~(1•1 t11 I 1J1!< may ..erve as long a\ he
" rt•-t•ll'l tt•d " Burns said
FREEWAY POOCH ...
"II\ not tht• way I would hav<'
~ntttn 11 hut that, .. the law 1hat wa\
pac,<,cd ·· Burno; \aid.
Hurn,· 1ntl'rprctat1on hold\ that 11
v. tll he.· .11 lea\t eight years before
.tn~om· ~•II he.· affected hy the two-
tl·rm ltrn11. and then onl) 1f an
1ntumht·111 111\l'' this 1n th!\ >ear's
Clc:l I llln
From Al
The\ then' 1'11lnl ,1 nl·.irh\ H·tt·11r1o11'
hosp1lctl and v.crl' lurnl'd ,1\.\,c\ ,1~•.11n
becau'ie Ogk v.<1\n 't larn 11111 .111\ l•"h
or chel k'>
~he dr<nc to \t't' ht·r t11rn1t•1
vetennanan <ti till' \h1·rm.111 '>.ii.,
V etert ndr. ( Ir n 11 I hl' '• iu nil d111L
believed t11 I'><' .1hout 1·1tt.ht month'
old. c;ufTered a hrokl·n kl th 1 nd lqi .rnd
pavement burn' Jnd 111Hl1·rv.1 nl \IH
gery Satunfa>
Two p1 n., h;1d tn he.· pl.H 1.·d 1 n 1 h1·
broken bone and ~ 111 ht· 1.t lo.1· n 1111 t 111
follov. up \urgl·r. 111 tv.11 mnnth'
\\hilt" Ogk s.ml \hl' 1ntl·nd<, to 1.1lo.t•
1hc dog into hc:r hornl' \hl' du1.·\n I
ha1.c enough mone' 111 PJ\ l11r th1.·
nearl> S 1.000 in 1. e 1 h1 ll'
"I would )O\.(' to lo.cl·p her hu1 l 1u'>t
don 1 ha\ c tht: munn t11 p,n I• 1r ltll'
\Urger. .. ( >gk \aid
MAIN OFFICE
~ h•
VOL 79, NO. 188
' t I
\Ire .id '''llll' l(lllup' and 1nd1\11j.
1.1h h.1 • 1.011tl' to hl'r .ild J.\c1.ord1ng
I• I >1,111~ 11a\l11n J rctep11onl'it at thl·
\ l'tl·1111.11' • Ii n11 ~·\era I pel a\\11n;1
1H111\ 11.1\1' 1..1lkd 10 pledge monn
tt•\o\,trd thl' pa\11\cnt nfthe hill
"H111 I 1h111~ \ht· \till need'> 1111111·
n\nrl<'\ It"'' \t'I' l''lpcn\lvC vet bill ·
< 1a\111n ,,1111
I ht· \1111n1o1 pll hull whose JCI blat k
llloll I\ .ttu·nll'd h) \.\hltC'. will \l;t)
"'11h 1 >vii' 1t lwr h•HIH' whrre '!he""'''
..... 1111tv.11111h1·r d11g' -Rugs) an 11·
,~·.ir-ohl "ho·, hJlf< •l'rman <;hephcrd
.ind h.1lf v.oll. ,inJ I t•pke a 3-year-old
v.tw "p.1r1 hu~I..\ ind pan wolf
\tw' lht· 1 ult"'' thing and I kno\.\
1hn II )(t't ,1l11n~ grt•at · Ogle ..aid
\ n.1me .dfl'a<h h,1, hct'n S<'lectcd
l11r 1 hl' nnH'\I rx·1 -f rccwa)'
:\1d,l·n ;ind two other incumbent\,
I red v,,..... and Jame'> Neal, ha'e been
1. hullcngl·d h\ Robert Hollie John
I homp\on and Laurann Cook
C ook w,1, the first candidate to file
her nomrnatron paper!I. The deadline
In lilt• f(lr tht: clco1on 1s Aug. 8
Apology
\omt• loprcc; of Wedne!>day'c; l>atl)
Piiot v..t·re printed and delivered with
the.' Page 2 from a previous edn1on 1n
the lml <,('t'lton We apolog11e for the
crror
D11tr Piiot Deft very
I• OuarentMd
""~'''~' tt, Justcall 642-6086 "01 ..... t'7<' pe~ Dy
\ ;,() ~"' • tor.>r• 7' m
•nd rt>lft tf •• be 1"4>-...:1
• \\hat do you hke about tht' Daily Pilot? Wh1t
don 1 you like" Call the number above and your
mt\\ag( will l'lt' recorded, tran1Cn~ and dt
hvt'rtd 10 lht' appropnate editor.
The \.'\mt 24·hour answenng ~rv1ce m1y bc
u~d 1e1 rec:ord lene~ to the ed11or on any topic
1 ( on1nbu1on to our Letters column mt.m include
1he1r namr and telephone number for venficat1on
Tdl'> U\ what'~ on your mind
S.1 .... 0.y 0 ttj ~. I
f .... t)O "<' •9(_....,. ,~ 1t., ti, ' a m •" Ctrt''L't'•
...... "f1 '°'" ., • t• ~ ..... .,,
Clrculatton
Telephonet
Early cloutls hover over Coast
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w .. ,_ 11 N Smog Report lenf~ .. 61 MlllMW N .. f•go IO n ..,.....,.. 71 :: ~a...... ' ,..,
l'lliglt9'1 71 6' l'olutM4 .Cendlrd ..,.. 1.1*1 0. 100 llOGltlool '° '"' ..,
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Jldt_.._ 97 72 ·~ 93 .. ., 50 S-8-:11 lo MecAtln..t ~ 26-42 llythe IClt 19 ~ T'OOA\' K-Clty 92 76 ln1na. hc:lcllebd ..,,,_, · , 25-42 Cllltllnl .. U hcondlOW 11 441M, 24 Laguna IMdl. 42 (IO<~I l.onO 8Mall 75 .. u LMV90M .. 74 t.Hpm
l"tla Aodl IMS 14 LOI Mgelel AlrpOl't 2&-42 Monf\Wll " to '-IC! lllQI\
Loul9-M 75 ..._.,~ .. II ....,. ...
MetnpNe 91 11 .....,leectl n 13 f1tWI IOw 2.02 Liii 07 ......,. llMcll 17 '° Extended Onlerto .. u ~.:t'iow .. 41Llll, I .I ~ .. •• 75 ll'lllm 8pttllgl 10& 1• 12 IMPM. u ~tPMll ti 71
Mollly .......,. MCI --0.,. w!lll ~ a IO 8-ld lllOll ., 21 p.111. ... ........... " 14 .. .. .... Ot!Mncl 12 13 nlgl\I MCI mornitl9 _., IOW _..,. len lerftlltd!M " 12 ""' .... tocley .. 1;04 P.lft., ,.._,...... ..._Y°"'Qty IO 10 ..... lllgl'9 .... Ille~.,. to= ... °*"" .. IO " .... Liii. 9lld ......... 118'0411.lft. ~Olly .. 71 70. l-lnlllelOwendlllld-«lt v hn.Joee ., . .. .._.,.....,.,, .. 441 p.111 , ... o-N t2 71 ~In Ille='°' 10 mld-IOe l-hnta Anl .a ... ,,.,. • ' • ., Liii. Ind ,.... ... " Ofllfldo M 76 ........ -to cnlO..eo. a..11 CNz 71 12 2:1111.m
POLITICAL FEVER IN HUNTINGTON ..•
From Al
ltner requesung that he remove tht'm
when he came in to take out his
papers. He said he would take the
posters down on his own," she said
Khnk -the man behind the.' s1ins
-1s 39-year-old Timothy Klink
making his first run at pubhc office .
Ht' owns a corrugattd box manu-
factunng company 1n Orange. And
he's a self-professed "amaLcur" seek-
ing one of four council seats. Thirteen
other candidates already have taken
oul papers. Election officials sat the)
exi>«t about JO candidates be in the
race v.hen tht' llhng deadline expires
Aug. 8.
Klink !>aid today his supporters
also are "real amateurs" and put
posters in the wrong placrs through
their zeal or from a lack of knowledge
of campaign sign laws.
"I bct I've talked to 500 people and
80 percent can't name the seven City
( ouncil members. About 70 percent
can't name the ones they vottd for
last time ..
His platform. he said, is 10 kc~p the
cit)' unified not splintered into
separate gcoarapb1c uruts.
Jn another race, Oranac Couoty
Deputy District Attorney Tbeodo~
Johnson has taken o ut papen with
tht' 1ntent1on of challengjng two-term
incumbent City Attorney Gajl Hut·
ton.
In 1978, Hutton defeated incum-
bent Don Bonfa and Jerry Bame. She
defeated Bonfa, her only challenaer.
again 10 1982.
Bonfa, now a pnvate attorney in
Huntington Beach, said today he may
con~1der running for the scat apm
HB CREW TRACKS U.S. BIKE RACERS ..•
From Al
.\ nearby blackboard wa!> updated
<:ontinuously to reveal at a glance the
\tat us of each contestant.
Whtie some staffer<. took calls from
11m1· s1a11ons, others fielded pre'>'>
4ucc;11ons and walk-in inqumec;
Ealh da) of the race brought ne\.\
myc;tcnr'> Wednr5da} contcc;tant
Deb Haas had disappeared
Burke had been on the phone to
\tlan11c Cll} to tht' Haas famil> 10
vanous llmc stations Haa!> -and
her entire suppon learn -wa<,
nowhere to he found.
"We haven't heard from her in o'er
'0 hour'>," Burke said "Her la<11 call
v..ac; from l.1beny Tenn
" f he '>Uppon team I\ general!>
nght behind the nder, \Ut has a repair
\JO and a pace car. c;o a problem
v.1>uld havl' had to alkct the v..hole
tl·am"
Haas eventually reappeared \ht·
had dropped out of the race in l 1hen)'
and though I the time sLat1on had lold
headquarters. They lhought she had.
Another near-cns1c. averted
Most of the people 1n hcadquaners
were cycling cnthus1a'ih 1hcm,efves
Since many of them were volunteers.
tht'} had to he doing 1t for li)\e ben
tho<,t· v.ho were paid v.ouldn't get
mh
Burke. v.hu u'K'd to tompctc
hcr'>c:lf ,., a friend of John Manno.
who founded the Ral c Acro<;c; .\ \.1en-
l3 in 1982.
"He helped me gel '>Orne sponsor'>. I
d id some press rclcac,e\, that c;ort of
T R 0
thing." she said of 1hc1r past assoc1a-
11on. "This year. he asked me to help.
i.o here I am .
"'iincc I used to compete myself. I
lhink that"s part of the love of doing
1h1~ ... she said "You want to help
~our 'famil) · ..
Now president o l Irvine-based
BurJ,..e ( ommu n1lat1ons. she
promote!I road racing cvt'nts for a
l1"1ng
Shawn Nelson o f Buena Park. who
arnved daily to the hcadquaners at
Two Wheel Transit Au1honty, could
recne 1hr spon's top riders. relate
anecdotes of past races and explain
details about the 1ncreas1ngly soph1s-
11cated bicycles in use
Since he wasn't bc1ng paid for his
services, 11 qu1ckl) became obvious
he v.orked out of loH for the \port,
100
For e\ample Pen\e~re-; bike CO!ll
upwards of SI U.lXXJ, Nelson said. The
state-of-the-art carbon fiber disc
wheels cost another S 14,000.
Many of lhe racers shave thetr legs.
so 11 they fall off and scrape them,
pull1n~ the tape off won't take a legful
of hair with 11 and the chance of
1nfect1on 1\ d1m1n1!ihcd
Pense) re-. howc1.er. shaved his
arms, too
"Shaving )our arms 1s getting
prctt\ seriou\" "lel\on said
Wade Waldron of Westminster,
another volunteer. handled walk-ins.
helped on the phone banks and ran
errands. "I'm a gofer," he sa1d.
p I c A p
"of hft' t omcs tan with Rqn
Spoonfr' Hawanan Traditionals. Easy going
coordinatt:t. thar capturt all tht color and
.-.pint of P'.lrnd1~, on tht fin est fabrics
avaalahlC"; tn Rtyn\ own e:xcl~"nve pnncs
Even Dave Hadder, working in the
nearby niche for A BC Sports. was a
cycling enthusiast.
p
ABC shot the enurc race on fi lm
rather than videotape because it
offered higher quality, Hadder 111d.
Last year, crews shot I 7S,000 feet
offilm for the two-hour program that
aired last spnng. Total cost of the
prOJeCt was SJ7 million. It was the
third most expensive feature film
shot by ABC , he said.
Hadder's JOb was to keep track of
the nders for the two camera crews on
the road
He alc;o maintained logs to aid the
editing process to come before the
1986 race airs next March.
Working up to 26 hours without a
break, Hadder had a cot, a small
ref ngerator and a television set to
help pass the hours between calls.
"This 1s the second year we've had
th1" ~tup." he said. "In the past, they
trted 10 cover the ra~ from the road,
but they didn't know where the
people were.
"It's not always the leaders we get a
story off of."
For the crew at the Main Street
headquaners. the story was windina
down. Official finishers had to reach
Atlanllc City wuh1n 48 hours of the
winners in both the men's and
women's d1vis1ons. After that. the
headquarters would close shop.
"When Shelby Hayden-Clifton
crosses thr fint'lh line, we're packina
up and going home." Burke sa1d.
"We're pooped."
E A L
s,..,... \tnrt tloun Mon ·f n 10 9, Sal 10-6 ~n ll-~
-------~--·
• ~ttratioa .nu -under way July 21 for nearty.J;OOO fall temesterctaues ia more than 100
1cadcm1c and vocational al'Q1 at Ora.nao Coast
Coll* in Costa Mesa . Rq11~t!on by tittmil wdl run thro~ "UC. 13 in the Adm1P1on1 Office; white open rqiwation on
a watk·an basis will be held Aua. l 4 and l S. fill class
ICheduks have been mailed to all household• in the Coast CommW\ity Collqe Oislnct.
More than 2S.OOO 1tudenu are e~tt<l to
enroll thu fall at OCC. tha ~t 1in -tampuJ
commun1ty colleae in the nation C•ll 4 Z.S772 for
registration inf ormalion.
Boomerang tUng la Irriae
lrvine Valley c.ottcse Community Services will
offer ''Boomerana F1ina. ... a two-day workshop. July
26 and Aua. 2 from 9 a.m. 'o noon on the collqe'a
SOCQCr field. The history of boomeranas and
aerodynamic principles will be covered by ins\t\.le-
tor Bob Kley owner of 'Ranp West.
The workshop will constst offield training, with
indi vtdualized instruction in throwina and catchinJ. as well as how 10 use the wind to advangaae. The fee
is $301 which includes two boomera~. a text and
throwing auide. Call 5S9-3333 for details.
Beelleeplag coune offered
A workshop on the world of beekeeping,
including information on how to tum the hobby into a profitable business, wiJJ be presented July 26 from
8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Room 0.2 of Saddleback College
in Mission Viejo.
Future bc.ekecpers will obtain experience in
puttina together hive bodies and will study the
work in& ruves ofa professional beekeeper. The fee is
$2S and participants arc requested to bring a sack
lunch. Call the college at 582-4646 for further
infonnation,
Ma•eam ezcurslon planned
An excursion to the Norton Simon Museum in
Pasadena will be conducted by the Irvine family
services proaram July 26 from 11 a.m. to S p.m.
Featured artists will be Goya, Rembrandt and
Picasso.
The tour will leave from the Heritage Park youth center at 460 I Walnut Ave. in Irvine. The cost
as SI 0 per person, which includes transportation and
admission. Call S59-0464 for more information.
Insurance .emlnar set
Irvine Valley Collqc Communitl Services will
offer a seminar on "Making Sense of ifc Insurance
and Annuities" July 26 from 10 a.m. to noon in
Room A2 l 0. Life underwriter Terry O'Neill and
attorney Richard Saavedre will be the instructors.
The seminar is ~eared toward explaining the
revolution in the ltfe insurance and annuities
industry and explaining how it can be used to best
advantage. The fee is S2S and addttional infor-
mation may be obtained by calling 559-3333.
Relationship study slated
"Exploring the Many Sides of Your Rcla-
tionshtp," a course for single adults, will be
presented July 26 by Saddleback College in Room
BC-8 of the Mission Viejo campus.
Participants will learn how to resolve conflicts
and create harmony and intimacy. The fee 1s $35 and
more information 1s available at 582-4646.
An Invitation
Att.ntion organization presidenn and 1«reta"-s1 We
want to II.Ip make your upcoming ewrm, mMtinga, Mminan
and fundroiwn wcceuful. Send brief CWIOUnCemenh
inclvdlnQ titM, ploce, cost (If any) ond a phone number for
additional information to: 8ulletln Boord, Dolly Pilot, P.O .
8ox 1560, Costa Meta, 92626.
Repom of your club or organization's octivitles -wch
as comll'l\lnfty ~ projects or elect6on of offk»n -
lhould be dlrec:l'ed to th. community news editor at th. 1Gme
oddreu. Non-returnable block and white f>hoto9rapfu ore
wekome.
CAL ENDAR
TIJunday, July 17
• 4:30 p.m., LaJUD! Buell Human AifaJrs
Committee. Community Center, 384 Legion St.
• 6: 30 p.m .. Lapa Beacll Board of Adjust·
meat, City Council Chambers, SOS Forest Ave.
• 7:30 p.m., Laatuaa Beacb C.ble Televlalon
Committee, Community Center, 384 Legion St.
PoucE Lo G
81 LAURA MEU
Of .. ..., ........
Throwina your own binllday pariy may
not setm lOO presumptuous.
But arrivina on a wheeled ltl.in, dubbin,
younelf ''KinJ." and en1crin1 on a <Srum
roll?
That is euctly what Dav d Raleip did
Tuesday ni&ht at Ron's in lquna.
R.akiah wu celcbratina his "third
annual 25th binhday:•
lnttoducin, himself u .. Kina David,"
Raleiah entered lhe popular Coast Hi&h·
way restaurant in Laauna Beach for the
Mardi Oras patty al\cr steppin1 off a
hipway rollina two-cat train.
''Kc aot off the train and the crowd
parted, as in 1he Red Sea, and David raised
his hand to greet bis subjects." said
Matthew Michaels, a fr:icnd ofRalei&h's.
Ovcl' 400 people attended the annual
party dressed as everythina from ••flesh
and leather." court jester or visitors from
Venus. A couple from Venus refused to
give their wt names because, "On Venu1
there are no last names."
King David gave his entrance speech
dressed apP.ropriately as a &littering
Arabian sheik.
Inside the restaurant bands played
popular music amid floating colored
balloons, 5-foot-tall papier·mache masks
or devils, clowns and jeaters dcooratcd the
walls and grand piano-shaped cake was
rolled in on a float.
So what's a little extravagance?
A singer and musician, Ralei&h traveled
to Laguna Beach from WasJi ington to
spend a summer performing at Ron's in
Laguna. His popularity seems evident. He
has released a gospcl album called "Totally
Psyched," and also works at the Trees
Restaurant in Corona del Mar in addition
to a number of stints in northern Cali-
fornia.
"David loves people. He wants to sec
.. Kini.. DaYld Ralel6 (left) arrl•• for Illa
blrthhy celebration afLapna Beach rataarant,
................. 0....
wlalleLee aad MeJa9e (rlCJl!) flew lD from V•-.
where DO oae llaa a 111.t a••e,
people happy and havina a &ood time.
With his talent he Jives so much 10 these
people," said Michaels, "he is ever-
vescent."
Well, with ongoing Jive entertainment
both inside and out the restaurant.
includingjazz and popular music by "lip,"
and never-empty plates of Cajun food, it
seems natural his guests would be happy.
"He likes to do th1n11 an a bi& way," said
Michaels.
Last year. Ralei&h &reeled his guesu at
the pany lhcmed "Fantasy in White," by
riding up to the restaurant doors and inside
on a white horse.
Althouah anyone aQd everyone is in-
vited to the elaborate ce.lebrat1ons, thas
year's attendance of 400 didn't come clOIC
to last year's boomint attendance of800.
"We expected 1.200 ... said Michaels.
But all in all. everyone enje>yed them·
selves, be 1nsi1ted. And instead of every-
one moving toward the streets at 2 a.m. the
crowd simply rlftcred.
''Where the party was once, it wasn•t
anymore," said Michaels.
Until next year.
Artists work~homeplan uildei-fire
By LAURA MERK
OfltteDllltr ..... •-
laguna Beach artists would be able to
live and work in the same place under a
new zoning ordinance. but neighbors of
one such proposed project aren't painting
the City Council's action as a welcome
change.
The ordinance. which juggles zoning
requirements to create areas where artists
can both live and work in their homes. was
approved unanimously Tuesday by the
Laguna Beach City Council.
The council hopes to reverse the trend of
artists fleeing the An Colony. Many of
them have been moving inland because of
skyrocltettng rents.
At the council's request, the PlannanR
Larry Parrtah
Department recommended amendments
to both the residential and light industrial
code requirements.
Basically. the zoning allows live/work
projects wuhin 400 feet of Laguna Canyon
Road, north of Woodland Drive. The
density standard for the residential zoning
was increased from one unit per 2.000
square feet to one unit per 3,000 square
feet. Res1dent1al parking standards, in-
cluding covered parking areas, must be
met.
The council also limited the number of
people a resident can employ to the
equ1V1lent of one full-time position. Artists
could receive approval from the Design
Reveiw Board to hire more but a a pubric
hearing would be required. .
Retatl permits allowing artisu to sell
their work from the home would be subject
to periodic rcveiw. the council decided.
And. if the artist's apartment.is sold it
must be used by another artist
Laauna Beach sculptor Hal Pastorius is
trying to get approval for a 12-unat
live/work condominium project for ca.
nyon Acres Road. The project is backed
financially by nine artilu. ·
However, tbe Canyon Aerts Home·
owners Association vehemently opPOses
the project becaue it claims the proJect it too dense and not compatible with the rest
of the nti&bborhood. The group recently
submitted a petition to the city with 100
percent of the resident'• siJnalures.
About 20 people who bve in the area
were at Tuesday niaJ'lt's meetana to o.noe
again au their concerns.
Althou&)l lddressina the srou~fs que.
lions about the project, the counal stceted
clear of moldina the ordinance around
Pastorius's plan, which will aooo bC
considered by the Oesiin Review Board.
V cm Spitakri. owner of lhe lot on wtuch
Pastorius hopes to build, said he felt a live/work development would provide the
perfect buffer from the traffic noises from
1.a&una Canyon Road.
•• J t&fCC there should be a buff Cf from the
mam artery into town and the rui'dent1al
uses. I cannot think of a more compatible use than 1he live/work proJcct." be said.
County's supe~iso~s laud Parrish,
approve extra three-week vacation
By LISA MAHONEY
Of 1M DeiMy ,... It.fl
Orange Count)' Administrative OtTtecr
Larry Parrish received a S5, 700 thank you
from the Board of Supervisors on Wednes-
da)'.
Collling in the form of a three-week paid
vacation, the bonus is intended to reward
Parrish for. in Supervisor Bruce
Nestande's words, "keeping the county
together dunng a very tou&h year."
Parrish, who was lured away from a
similar position in Santa Barbara last June,
has done an outstanding JOb despite his
initial unfamiliarity w11h county o~~
ations and the added burden of Jatl
overcrowdin&. superv;1sors agre~ a lepJ incen~ve proararn to award Olhef
They showed their apprec1auon last hiab-pcrfomunJ employees.
week by upping h11 annual salary from ln the mcanttme, Patton came up with
$90,000 to $99,000 making him the the idea of cxtta vacation for Parrish.
county's highest paid official. Parrish already is entitled to three weeb
Ncstande also wanted to give Pamsh a vacauon this year. In return for the one--
SS 000 bonus for his efforts to reorganize ttme addition of another three weeks, he co~nty depanments while keeping the promised to remain with the county for
aovemment's day-to-day business run-another year. somelhin& he aaid he intends
nina smoothly. to do anyway.
But County Counsel Adrian Ku yper Parrish said it has been several yean
killed the idea on legal grounds. G1v11~1 since he took a vacation of any conse-
cash bonuses to government employees 1s quence. . . .
considered a gjf\ of public funds. he told He gave up his accrued va~uon tn
the board last week. Santa Barbara when he took h1s present
Board members directed Kuyper and position In Orange County
Penonnel Director Russ Patton to develop
One of six in HB gang rape
asks to change guilty plea
in the 200 block of Grcenmoor. • • • A man going through his pa~nts'
prage in the 18000 block of Antioch
Drive asked police to destroy a
corroded machine aun shell he found
Wednesday at approximately 9 p.m.
CoataMeu
300 block of Anade were slashed.
causina about $800 in total damage. • • • City parkina meters we~ snapped
off and stolen from two locations -
S6th Street and Seashore Drive and
30th Street and the beach. The total
loss in coins and equipment came to
more than S 1.000.
Wednesday at a Glenney~ Stred
address. the victim told police. • • • Constructton equipment known u
a Rammer was ~J)Ortcd stolen
WcdnesdaY. on Club Drive. The loss
was estimated at S 1,800. • • • A robbery was ~poned early
By PAUL ARCHIPLEY
Of .. a.lr .........
As a Superior Court judae prepared
to hand down an 18-year sentence to
Tommy Gomez, who pleaded auilly
to a r98 I pna rape in Huntington
Beach, Gomez told the court he
wanted to withdraw his plea.
The Santa Fe Sprinas resident was
one of six men who pleaded &uilty to
panacipatina in a rape at Hu.ntin1ton
State Beach thal led to an innocent
man goina to ).ail for 31h yean before
the ~I assailants were brouaht to
justice.
Attorney Ron Brower had worked
out a pica barpin for Oomez thaa
reduced the charaes to one count of
rape and a count of forced oral
copulation in cxchanae for an 18-year
sentence.
But Monday. as Judae Francisco
Bantlnpn Beach
A aunman with strawberry blond
hair and a mustache escaped Wednes·
day afternoon Wlth $180 from a
clcaninf establishment In the 18000
block o Beach Boulev.,-d. The man,
armed pouibly with a two-inch steel
revolvclj stuffed the money 1n the
front or ht\ pants, wttnes~s told
pohcc. • • • Thieves used a screwdn ver to pry
open a rear door 1n the 2000 block of
Catamaran and stoic two auns valu~
1t SS I 0 and jewelrv valued at $300 . ' .
Briseno prepared to pass sentence.
Gomez asked to withdraw his auilty
plea.
Briseno scheduled a July 21 hcanna
to consider Gomez' request and to
find a new attorney for Gomez.
Brower said the oourt might not
permit Gomez to chanae the plea.
"Just because a person wants to
withdraw his pica doesn't mean he
can," Brower said. "I believed 1t was
in his best inte~sts to plead 1uilty,
and I still do."
If the coun permiu Gomcz 10 plead
not auilty, he facies several more
charJCI and, if found 1uilty, he could
be sent to prison for more than I 00
ycan, Browcl' said.
Gomct 24', and several friends
were on the beach in 1981 when the
aana rape of a wom1n and the beatina
of her boyfriend took place.
Bufllars broke 1 aide window to a
residence in the 18000 block of
Aorida and atolc a television set ond
stereo valued at $600. • • • Ajetski valuedatSI..SOOwasstolen
from a maroon 1984 Toyota truck in a
parkina lot at 16060 Beach Blvd. • • • Someone stole S 140 1n aHh hidden
1n a bathroom drawer 1n a n:11idence
1n the 9000 block of C'hn11ine The
thieves broke a rear SC~t'n to enter the
home
tmne
A vehicle wa, reported dnvina
David Navarro, 2S, also of Santa
Fe Sprinp, was sleeping nearby when
his friends attacked the couple.
Navarro was arrested and con-
victed of the crimes. He kept quiet
about his fnends, believing they
would come forward and verify his
innocence.
After he spent 31/J years in pnson,
new evidence surfaced pointina to the
others. Navarro then helped pros-
ecutors gather evidence apinst his
friends.
The attack was described by Depu-
ty District Attorney Jeff Robinson as
"v1c1ous, brutal and anim11·1ike -
about as bad as it acts."
The man was hit and kicked until
he lost consciousness. and the woman
was held down at knifepoint while the
men took turns raping her. Robtnson
said.
b1cychsts into 1hc shoulder of the road
near Barranca Parkway and Jefl'tty
Road Wednesday about S p.m. ••• A mate and female suspect, idcnt-
1fyana themselves as Dcpanment of
Defense aaents. were questioning
nei~bors on Lucero West about a
resident on that street Wednesday at
around 3 p.m. • • • Three stop ~•an, valued over $400
were ~tolen nc r I 42 I 0 Cul ver Dnvt
~metime Tucl.dav or Wedne~RY ••• A bnefca<Je and ca\~ttcs volucd at
SI .9SO we~ 'tolen from a re 1dtnC'C
An 18-year old man was admitted
and released from fountain Valley
Regional Hospital Wednesday after
being struck on his bicycle by an auto
driven by a woman who ran a stop
sian near Elden A venue and Santa
Isabel Street. Driving a red Ford
Station wagon, she (eft the scene
without stopp1nf· • • A Bullock's security agent at South
Coast Plaza arrc~ted a woman for ·
shoplifting two handbags and • slcirt
and dress valued at $25'7.99 Tueiday
at 5:45 p.m. The woman placed the
items in a diaper baa and storage.rack
beneath her ycar-ola son's stroller. • • • A white, male suspect approx·
imatcly 48 years old and weanna a
white shin and red shoes reportedly
exposed himself to a I 0.ycar-old airl
and a 4-year-old 11rl near the swmpat
the Boys C1ub. 2131 Tus1in A venue. • • • Unknown suspect.~ took a stereo
radlo. 2S eassene tapes, two i~kcn.
sunaJasses and some aJass. 11n uems
valued aa S-41 S from an unlocked c r
perked ovem1&}11 Tul"'sday 1n an
apanment compkx at 2078 Thurin
t. ••• An amplifier. electnc aultar and an
acou•tac aultar valued al S880 ~
stolen from an apanment at 710 W
18th St. durlna the day Wcdneaday
The front door lcnob wu twisted Wlth
a channel lock plier or s1m1lar tool.
Newpon Beach
The ttr't'\ on two <.-ars park~ <>n the
' •
• • • A sink was stolen from • City
rcstraom at A Street and East Ocean-
front. It was worth SI 00. • • • Someone called in a bomb th~t to
Englander Communications, 1151
Dove St. No bomb was found.
Lapn&Beacb
A bomb threat was left on a
telephone answenna machine
Wedne<iday on Mountain Road. The
v1cnm told police be was robbed by a
man described as about 23 years old.
5 feet. 5 inches tall and I SO pounds.
The suspect Ocd with S 18 in cash. • • • Police arrested Oco~ Joseph
Woods, S 1, of l.quna Beach OD
suspicion of dnV1na under the in-
fluence of alcohol. Woods was ar-
rested at 12:50 a.m. Wednetday on
Legion and Gtenncyre streeu.
Copscrash,butcapture
suspect in freeway chase
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sheriffs
depuues and California Hi.&hwaY.
Patrol officers chasina an allqed
drunken driver were involved in
se{>lrate crashes before the motori11
beina pur1ued ran out of ps ind
quietly surrcndettd early today.
The cha.c that covettd JO miles
over five freeways began late
Wedne!lday when a deputy~. dt ..
patched to the tuffcd Pepper m.r in
Paramount, pvc cha~ to a rad
Chevrolet that "tctteehod out of the
parkina lot" and sped aw_a)'. 'lid Los
Anaeles County hentrs Deputy
DttW8asey.
After it 111 ended an W~t Los
Anacles. Sh1wn Scott. 2 t J of Lona
Beach was booked at the ukewood
hcntrs Station for 1nvcst1pt1on ot
felony hit and run and felony dnv1n1
under the mfluencc of alcohol . Ba~y
said. Scott wai. httna htld in lieu of
U,OOObatl.
As the chase bepn, a deputy
followed the rtd cvy lhrouab a rtd
ai&na.I 1n Paramount, 12 mllea
southca11 of l..o$ Anaclcs and the
un1denuficd dcouty's vehicle col·
hded wt th a ~an.
A CHP patrol car, emer&Cncy liabtl
fl11hJna. pcd onto the Harbor f""'n:i1>
way en route to the chate area on the
nearby Santa Monica when the Pltrol
car driver chan.gcd lanes to avold a
sJower·mov1n1car1n rronl of at, laid
CHP t. Mark .
But the dnvcr of the slower car
made an abrupt lane cNinae into the
OfP unit's path, cau •na the oft'i«r lO
lose control and 1~ervt off the
lrttway. down an embankment ind
into a ttand of trte Lunn said.
I
· 1
I
.
M * or-..a....OM.YPM.OTl~.JWY 17. 1tee
' Sew up big savings.
10 Filipino nuns released
by militiamen after 6 days
MARA W!,_ Philippines (AP) -Moslem militiamen
today freed 10 t!i!iofno nunsbeld.eaptlv~f'Oraixdays, and
a letter from a kidnapped Amencan mll&W>ntr)' wi.med
he would be killed 1(tbe military tried to mcue him.
and work on their suns.·· Oe Despite the letter. Southern Comma~ M~. · n.
The nuns were unbanned. They said they were
treated well by their capton. and uac:d the dmc to~ to
know the Moslcms. "It was a beautiful experience, the
Carmelite mother superior said aftcTa teary~ reunion
with fnends.
Joae Maeno moved a bat.allio~ of 400 men 1nto ~ IRA
today becked by armored vehacln. a tank ·~ attil~.:
''Thls is to brint pressure to bear on the kidnappers.
Mqno said. . 'al 0 r.1,,.~--Pa Lanao del Sur ~ov1nc1 ov. ---..11.u n~
prunpn as well as military and church 0~1 ~ no
ransom was paid for the nun~. Church .oft'1a&ll 1&ad the
kidnappers kept two hand radios belonp.na to the nuns as Hours aner the nuns were freed, the military releued
a lcuer written by Brian laWTenCle, 30, the Pretbyterian
missionary kidna~ped from his Marawi apartment
Saturday. He 1s believed held in the interior of Lanao dcl
Sur province by Moslem captors.
"a souvenir." The nuns said their abductors_threw a farewell pany
and serenaded them Wednesday n1ahl
Lawrence. o( Madison. WiL, warned apinst any
armed auempt to rescue him. "If the military tries to act
m~. I will be killed, so let's not do that," he WTOte.
The nuns wete kidnapped r-~day from theira«luded
c:Onvent 2 miles from MaraWJ city by a aroup led by a
diacrunlled employee of a .1ovemmen~ food qency.
Anny Col. Raul Aquino, area m1lataTy,comm.ander
and not related to PTC11dent Corazon Aqw!'o, ~d the
kidnap leader, ArapSi f>l;saodalan. rema1ned U\ the
Lanao del Sur mountains wttb about I SO men.
The missionary $lid the view from the straw hut
where he was beina held included .. plenty of youna rebels
with arms and ammunition .... The fellows like to clean
U.S. troops
to aid raid
in Bolivia
Syrian vice president:
Hostages are under
controlofLebanese
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -About
I 00 U.S. soldien flew to northeastern
Bolivia today to provide support for
impending raids aptnst juiwe-bued
drug labs, aJrport officials said today.
Three U.S. C-130 Hercules tran,...
port earners carryina U.S. military
technicaans and medical personnel
left Panama durinJ the nit.ht and were
expected to amve to<lay in the
provincial capital ofTrihidad.
A U.S. Embassy official denied
reports on privately operated Boli-
vian radio stations that the drug
factory raids already had begun.
The official, who spoke on con-
dation of anonymity. said Bolivian
and U.S. pilots were waiting for the
support personnel to amve before
launching the raids, which could
begin later today or Friday. The back-
up personnel were not to join the
pilots tn the raids.
PARIS (AP) -Syrian Vice Presi-
dent Abdel ffahm Khaddam said
today that French and American
hostages in Lebanon were bein& held
in an area controlled by Lebanese
militias, not in the Syrian-rontrolled
Bekaa Valley.
Khaddam said he did not know
exactly where the Americans and
Frenchmen were being held and had
no information on two hostages said
to have been executed.
"We are only sure that they arc not
there where the Syrian forces arc." he
told a news conference. "I can assure
you hostages arc not in the Bekaa."
There have been unconfirmed re-
ports an ~banon that the hOStajCS
had been an the eastern Bekaa rcgJon
at one po ant but were moved Iona ago.
possibly to Moslem west Beirut.
The Synan Vlce president said
Syna has been malting a "sreateffon"
on behalf of the host.aies and will
continue to do so as a matter of
principle.
Khaddam made the remarks at the
end of a tw<Klay offiaal visit to
France devoted to improv1na
bilateral relations.
France, which has been seek.in& the
release of hostages, has increued
efforts to improve ties w1tb Damas.
cus and normalize relations with
Iran. Both countries are thouaht to
have influence over the aroupsclaim-
ana to hold the hostages.
When two of nine French hosiaies
were freed June 20 by their captors,
the Revolutionary Justice Organiza-
tion, French Premier Jacques Chirac
publicly thanked Syria.
U.S. officials say this 1s the first
time the Amencan malttary as being
used in anta-drug operations on
foreign soal
The anti-cocaine campaign, which
could take two months, wall be based
at a remote jungle camp tn 8en1
Pakistan storing uranium
for peace, not nuke bomb
province near Trinidad WASHINGTON (AP) -Paka-
About 80 members of the Bolivian stana Pnme Manastcr Mohammad
anta-drug force known as the Khan Junejo said today his country
uopards will take part tn the raids. has no 1ntenuon ofbualdmg a nuclear
according to a U.S. Embassy officer. bomb. and that its uranium cnrich-
Bolivian authorities said the ment program as for peaceful
Leopards will raid cocaine processing purposes
labs an Bena, an area about the si1e of "I can assure the people of the
New Jersey, and Chapare, where a United States the government of
group of the U S.-trained druJ agents Pakastan has no intention of going for
escaped m January after being sur· (a) nuclear weapon ," he said on NBC·
rounded by armed farmers who grow TV's "Today" show
the maximum limit of 5 percent, and
that is going to be for peaceful
purposes," he said. Nuclear resourtes
arc being developed by Pakistan to
provide electricity. he added.
At a state dinner Wednesday night
an his honor, June,io said his country
has "offered vanous ideas for the
rcnunetation of nuclear weapons" an
the region .
the coca plant used to make cocaine. Junejo. whose government would __:=:=====================================!.-..L..:.....:...:__:_.:...._...::..:..:..:_.:..::.........:::......:_~.:...._..:._, lose U.S. financial assistance af Presi-
JuneJO said today he would agree to
sign a non-prohferauon treaty iflndia
also agreed to sagn at.
The Reagan admanistration, con-
cerned about the spread of nuclear
weapons to other countnes, hu been
urging both Pakistan and India,
which arc traditional nvals, not to
add such weapons to their arsenals.
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dent Reagan determined at had built a
nuclear bomb, was asked why Paki-
stan was attemptmr. to develop and
store ennched uranium.
"Our enrichment program 1s up to
Sandinista& deDJ.anding
U.S. pay 'war damages'
By tlte Auoclated Press
MANAGUA, N1caraaua -The lef\1st Sandinista government wants the
United States to abide by a World Court ruling and pay war damages for ill
support of N acaraauan rebels, and is callin1 on Washanaton to initiate talks a
top official said. Deputy Forcian Minj1ter Victory Huao Tinoco told a ne~
conference Wednesday that Nicarqua's demand 11 based a ruhng by the
International Court of Justice in Tbe Hque, Netherlands, condemnina U.S.
support for the Contra rebels. Act~na on a complaint filed by Nicaragua, the
court ruled June 27 that the United St.ates support of the anti-Sandinista
fiahtcrs violates the U.N. Charter and should be ended. The court further
ordered the United States to pay restitution to Nacaraiua for damaac the rebels
had done.
Church worken arrated Jn Bl Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-Nineteen Amencan two Canadian and
two Australian church workers arrested while accompany1~g war rcfuaces into
a restrict~ area wtthout. permission will be d~poned today, a member of the
group said. The Rev. M1auel Campbell, an official with the Roman Catholic
archbishop's office . saad the reliaious workers had accompanied some 600 war
refuaces tryina to return to their homes near Aguacayo on Tu~ay Col. Oscar
Armando Carranza. accused the refuP.! and the church workers Wednesday of entering a military "conflict zone' without pemussion.
IRA Informer ca.e conviction• overturned
BELFAST, Northern I re land -A judge today overturned the convictions
of 1.8 Belfast m~n who .were fo~nd guilty in 1983 of lRA activity based on the
testimony ofa smaJe witness. Five of the men were released immediately from
prison, and two were held to fa<:e unrelated cbarie1. The other 11 already
served their terms or received suspended 1entenc:es. Four other men convicted
in the same case lost their appeals. Lord Chief Justice Lord Lowry ruled that by
conv1ctina the men, the lower c,ourt had over-estimated the credibility of witness Christopher Black.
Lawyen •eek to vl•ltjalled actlvl•t.
. JOHANN~~URG •. ~uth Afnca -lawyers said today they will ask to
v11lt at least 700 Jllled acov1sts after a court at.ruck down a aovernment ban on
allow1n1 ac.cesa to people detained under the month-old state of emeracncy
The provincial Supreme Court 1n Durban on Wednesday upheld the leplity of
the st.ate of emersency imposed June 12, but also ruled that people detained
without charie under t~e emeriency decree must be allowed to ICC lawyen.
The coun declared voad several clauses definina "aubvcnivc statements "
which have been banned under the st.ate of cmeracncy. The n.tlma could ret~lt
an somewhat more open debate by 1nt1-aovemmcnt orpna1~t1on1 and fuller
reporting of such debate 1n the media. An aade to M1n1ster of Law and Order
Lou11 le Granac said the aovernment had not dccaded whether to appeal the
judamcnt on access to detainees and the "subversive statement" 1Nue.
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nullified by Supreme Court
W ~HJNGTON (AP) -The Houte voted over-
wbelm1naJy today to rtaftlnn St I. 7 billion in acrou-the-
boetd IJ)endull cuu that ~ made wt March but recently thrown into question by tbe Supreme Coun.
A jo~nt moluuon wu approved 339-72 after Dem~lic, and Republican leaders said failure to stick
by th11 year.11pendina cuts would hurt efforts to reduce future def1C1ts u well
Senate 1ea.<krs said final action could come Friday or early next week.
The .deficit for the cumnt fiscal year. which ends
Sept 30, 11 expected to be about $220 billion even with the cutblck.a.
Rep. William H. Ol"ay 111, O.Pa .• chainnan of the
Hou9C Bud&et Committee, said abandonina the earlier
cuu would add SI S billion to $20 billion to the deficit for
fiscal 1987. Under the Gramm-Rudman law. Conareu is ~uired to stay within a deficit limit of'S I .. billion next
year.
Rep. Lflln Martin, R-111., said reaffirm1n1 the March
I cuts wu responsible action "insurina that the be&inninp of deficit redu~on are in place."
Rep. John Conyen, 0.Micb., an opponent of the
Otamm·lludi'DU law. a.raued W\SUCCelltul~::;t tbe vote wu .. a put opportunity to tum the whole • beck in."
A few other OJ>POncnts joined him, but deblie ended in
lea than half the allotted two houn with the lopiided
vote.
Senate M-.jority Leader Bob Dole. R-Kan., said
Senato action would follow suit -rhc Houie will Kt. we
will Kt. it all t0Wtds too~." Dok said. But be warned
the bill is .. a aood vehicle for posturina .. by lawm&km.
President Reapn'1 budlet director. James C. Miller m. cndoned the action, Which Reapn must sip, in a
speech today to a Chamber of C.Ommercc bRakwt ... ,
expect quick affinnation," he said.
The Gramm-Rudman law, which wu desisned to
balance the budaet by filCal 1991 , 1mpoted automatic
spendina cuu on March I that trimmed 4.3 JICTCICDt from
many domestic prosnms and 4.9 percent from military
spendina. The cuts totaled S 11. 7 billion.
But the Supreme Court ruled last week that the
automatic procedure was unconstitutional, and tbe cuts
were void unlcu Conaress voted to approve them. The
court allowed Conaress 60 days to take action.
Drafting of final tax ref orni bill begins
WASHINGTON (AP) -Twenty-two House and Senate tax writers, fresh from a White House pep rally
with President Rcapn, bepn draf\ina the final venion of
the most thorouah ta.x code revision in a aeneration today.
They are aareed on lower rates, but undecided on how
much to shift tile tax burden from m1ddle-ancome people
to business.
Rep. Dan Rostcnkowski, O.IU., lcadtna the 11 House
bargainen. and Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore .• headina the
I I-member Senate delegation, said before the nego-
tiations bepn that the future of fully deductible
Individual Retirement Accouou ts the most con-
troveBial item facing them.
Re ti no
The popular white calf dreu
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Meanwhile, Rostenkowski and Packwood said tbey hoped their difficult barpining will not be complicated by
dally meddlina from the White House.
"We hope that the president will not be commentina
on the bill day by day, section by section as we 10 alona,
and I think he will refrain from that," Packwood said after
a breakfast session Reapn hosted at the White House for
the barpinen.
Rostenkowski said he sugacsted to Reqao that be
"withhold comment" on the day-to-day neaotiations.
Rostenkowski and Packwood have tried hard to
create an atmosphere of bipartisanship, goodwill and
compromise.
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eommunist ~TV
opponents btikra.JWICY after
atsumiilit
W ASHJNGTON (AP)-Oacntlla
laden IPOltina .. I'm a Coat.ta. too•
buttons at a "freedom f*abten _.
mit .. received encou,.emeat IJf
their anti-communist 1~
from t0me of the nation'1 sop policy makers. .
The .rebels ptherod Wednetday for
a meettna sponsored by tbe American
Security Council, a comervative
aroup that j)f'Omotes defmlO iMUeS.
Rebels from Nicaitpa,, Afaui·
stan, Anaola. Camboaia, Etfliopia and LaoS were liven a boolt by
officials includina Ocfente Sec:Maty
Caspar Weint>crser Senate M.;onty
Leader Bob Dole, it-Kan .• and Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y.
"J am proud to be on today'•
proaram ... (with) repmentatives of
democratic resistance forces around
the world," said Dole, who outlined bis work an the Senate to ensuie that
tome of the aro: money.
Wcinbcfltr that the rebels
have "come to America for aid and
encourqemenL Our meuaee must
remain what it.has always been: We
shall not abandon you. ..
M0tt of the ~ttrillas were pleued
with the reception they received.
"lt is DOW J>e~Ved that w~
too cares about freedom fiahten,
said Jeremias Chitunda, an associate
of Jonas Savimbi. who iJ fi&btioa
An1ola's Marxist iovernmenL
The "rm a Contra, too" buttons
were inspired by President Reapn,
who uttered the phrue in lobbyina for
support ofa S I 00 million package to aid the Nicarquan Contras battling
the leftist Sandinista aovernmeot.
., ............ .__
PITl'SIUROH-LTV~· ...,.., OlwollM CD•lf'"/1~ .... ~·.W'*YithM 'l«~~·--~or;• !_ol~ ........... .-rt'll~-*""'Jilwl."°TMNlloallUll"dle ••-asrcWFFZ•
tbl ~=="~ 11111 IDd CM11Y bmh Wt Ova' .. llWllil ,.W CD JI I ii ..!If wl ~ proMnu that ds\ldat?d = .... , ... w ...._ MW David carrou, a .,oteemn for LTV Co., a ..-..ii. ........., ol the 0.U...bMed company. UDder 00f'i41' U. I CG Pl•Y
CODUa_ IO.,... but ii protected 6-om c:mtitor ......... wbiJe i1 WOttl OUI
a plea to pey nt bills. Tbc petition WU filed tbit momiat 1n New Y ort., Cami us.
CIYIJ #tll moaltorbJ6 -.eacr proJPO•ed
W ASHINOTON -HOUie members ~want 10 dole down tbe U.S.
Com...u.ioe on CM! Ri,ahts are ~ a coapessicml civil riebts monhori111~ to take au place. ~llation Wiii iatioduoed Wodnetday IO cratea~Offic:eofCiviJRiaht1AMalmenttomonitorcivilnpt1
eolotcemeat. ivestipte denial or voti1t1 n,bts and pp. 6ictt oa
dilC:rimmation. The &ill was spont0red chidly by Democrauc Rep&. A..-us
f. Hawkina a.nd Matthew G. Maruna. tiotfl of California. Hawk.im ll
cUirman of the Ed\atiOn and Labor Committee. and Martiaez beadJ the ~r1 wbCommjtue on employment oppomaAitia.
Penfa6on .,,.peac& LJtton coauaoi.
WASHING TON -Utton Industries lnc., which did S 1. 5 billion wonh "of
businett with the PentaJOn lut year. is 19inJ to bave to convince t.he Defeftlc Depenment to allow 1t to continue lip1na the lucntive c:ontracU. The
Penuisoa indefinitely suspended Utton.1 t¥ CC)Wltry's 19th la,..est ddentc
contractor, from receivina new Defente D\lli.oal Wedneldly after one oftbe
company's subsidiaries lll'mS to plead plitty in a fraud cue. ltoben ~' • Litton spokesman, llicf the compuy would bave no reepontc to me
suspension beyond restatina its intention to satisfy the Pen1110D's conoerDJ.
'1be suspension is for a temporary period pcndina completion of a thorouab
review of the underlyina f.acts surroundioa the onaoina lep1 proceedinp,
unlcu sooner terminated in whole or in pen," the PentaaOD announcement
said.
GarN6e •trl.ten relue to J'etam
PHILADELPHIA -Strikina prbqe ooUecton defied a beet-to-wort o~ today u I o.ooo other city woBerl continued a tw().week-old walkout.
and Detroit'• mayor planned IO .eek a court order apimt 7 ,000 workers wb0te
leader vowed "to shut down the city!' No union memben were reported to
have crossed picket lines today at any of Philadelphia's six prbqe truck
depots, said the city's deputy m.anaaioa director, Ken Arrinaton.
I ..... 0
TONIGHTI AT7:3P PM.
JHOROUGHllED RACING
NIGHflt; MON.-MT., 1HIU JULY 21
• 10 ~ Podc.d Roell
• Begont Dining at~ pya.
• bole'~: Exoc:tos . Pwfild SOc . Daly Ooubae
• Plsily of fbtcing . t
TOl•GHTI
111•01 Glllml IPICIALI
FaDAD•lllOll
(62 years of age and old er)
This Nig ht's For You l
OIAHGE COUNTY RACING MIR
4961 erae.laAw. l.osAlomitos n~/995-123~ • 713/~31 -1361 .
t
• 1n
HARDWARE·
Who says you can't be .
more than one place at the same time?
'b.I may have products Of services that are useful to
different people at diffefoot times.
So it's 1"l)Ol1ant to be found in all those places whem
peopte look tor ')00. kYJ chanoos are they will look 1n the GTE
'$llow Pages. Becal '98 they know tt'S the most OOf1l)lete guide
to area businesses around.
~they find~. the dlancm are pretty good that ~1
make a sale. Because 85% of the people who use the 'mtloN
Pages are ready to~
Sounds pretty interesting, doesnl it? Then Vltf./ not disa ISS
some~ these opportunties wtth yo.x GTE~ Pages
representawe? '#ell be glad t> stON ~how~ can be in
more than one paoo at the same tJrne.
GTE Directories
•
\
87dteAUedaM4P,..
LOS ANGELES -The nabon'a .oooDd·larattt but carrier ,..d 1t
conducts naorou1 vehicle inapectioM and was 1urpri.ed by a California
ffi&hway Patrol recommendation tlaat it be barred from o~una in the ~tate •
.. Our buxs are looked at very, vcry hquently, cicrtainly as ftcguently, af not more freauently than (commctcial) 1111>1anet are," 11id ROIU Rydell,
Tra.ilways l.ine1 ~nc. '1 vice president for public ielations. Tbe CHP"s IOutbem
division cited allesed 11fety violationa found on 10of16 vehicles checked 11
the Los Angeles yard of Trailway1.
Ho•pltal. pat1eat. Dee tozlc 1u leak
LOS ANGELES -K.ai1er Permanente Hospital in Woodland Hills
suffered two leaks of poisonous JU wruob sllahlly ntjured two dozen people
and prompted an evacuation or the fint floor. Twenty-one employees and
three patients suffered eye tnitation, nautea, headaches and sore throalJ aft.ct
ethylene oxide, a poisonous ps used for aterilizina su~cal equipmcnty wu
detected at 6:3S p.m. Wednesday. city fire spokesman J1m Wells said.
Bradleyfwoald lmpriHa cocaine dealen
IF YOU CARE ABOUT THE QUALITY
SACRAMENTO -Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley is callinJ1~or
maDdatory prison for possession or sale of as little as five arams -less a
sixth of an ounce -of cocaine. Al a news conference Wednesday at the
Sacramento County courthoUJC1 Bradley called cocaine abuse a .. modem
pique." The Democratic candidate for aovernor acknowled&ed that hit
P.roposal could crowd more inmates into the state's prisons, but said it iJ
'better tQ"be overcrowded in the prisons than fo,r these (people) to walk the
streets of this state and destroy the Jives of so many people who are now caught
up in it (cocaine).'' OF YOUR POLICE ,·. ·sERVICE; A.T·TEND
THE COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
MEETING, JULY 21st AT 6:30 P.M.
•
Nine plead Innocent In crou bumlag
LOS ANGELES-Former state Ku Klux Klan leader Tom Meuser and
eight other white supremacists have pleaded innocent to charges stemming
from a I 983 cross burning in the San Fernando Valley. Municipal Court Judge
Alban Niles scheduled an Oct. 9 hcarina for setting of a preliminary hearing
date. Metzger and four other defendants, Stanley Witek, Irvina Alcorn,
Winston Burbage and Erich Schmidt, entered thetr pleas Wednesday after
asking that conspiracy charges against them be elevated from a misdemeanor
toa felony.
RUFFELL'S
uPHotsTERY 11c. Duke asks ..... , ..... c......... t t t .,___1122_ ..... _11._11 .. _cm_a_IDl-_SQ._ll_M-'4 s a e cu
the shores interiors
2tl«l Nor'\ $'-! JOYC1 CMOl ~ ~ a.cxt1. CA 92003 (7\4) 6'2·22~ -----
ties with
S. Africa
SACRAMENTO (,AP) -Gov.
George Deukmejian, an a major shift
of position, is urgina the state to
di vest itself of all $12. 5 billion in
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ investments in firms doing business r with South Afnca.
Ameha doesn t know tt yet, but
she s depending on you . Actually. she's
depending on all of us to brighten
her future by providing a depend-
able source of reasonably priced
electricity
To meet the challenge. we
at Southern California Edison
want to remind our customers
about the importance of using energy
wisely.
Last year we helped more than
160,000 customers find wa\s to save on I
their electric hill~
This ye-M wed like to help you . For
infonnation about
our free Home
Energy Surveys and
other energy and money saving programs,
call Edison ·s Conservation Action Line toll-
free at 1 800 952 5CX52
By using energy wisely, we can
/
make thing5 better for AmeUa and
all the other Amelias to come.
Thanks for your help. Together
we can brighten the future.
Southern Ca hf orn1a Edison
\ ' ,
In an eight-page statement
Wednesday to the University of
California Board of Regents, Deu-
kme11an called for the divestment of
about $2.5 billion of the system's
stocks and bonds in companies with
commercial ties to the South African
nation, and caJJed for a "phased"
.wtthdrawal of all state pension funds.
The total $45 trillion Public Em-
ployees' Retirement System and State
Teachers' Retirement System have
about $10 billion invested in firms
doing business with South Afnca,
said Sandy Simpson. chief aide to
Assemblywoman Maxine Waters, 0-
Los Angeles.
Waters introduced the relatively
maid anti-apartheid bill that Deu-
kmeJian vetoed last year. Waters' bill
would have banned only future such
investments. Deukmejian said an his
veto message that he preferred the
case-by-case policy be had just estab-
lished by executive otder.
But Dcukmcjian said Wednesday
he would 5eck legislation for a total
withdrawal.
The Republican governor wrote,
"Rqrettably, the leaders of (South
Africa) have ignored our warrung, as
well as the cries of virtually the entire
free world to end apartheid and
auarantcc basic human rights to the
south African majority."
He did not mention his earlia veto.
Deukmejian called for a "phased
full divestment (that) would be im-
plemented in a prudent, orderly
fashion. This would allow our invest-
ment managers the time and flexiblh-
ly to find alternative investments of
comparable financial worthiness."
Bishop raps
AIDS bill as
inhumane
SAN DIEGO (AP)-An an1t1at1ve
urg10g isolation oi AIDS v1ct1ms
from society was described as an
unholy measure that would sweep
aside human nghts 1f passed by
California voters in November, the
Roman C.tbolic Bishop of San Dieao
wd.
"This initiative's messaa-e funda-
mentally contradicts the aospel
values of human dian1ty, freedom
and com~ssion," Bishop Leo T.
Maher sa1d in a statement this week.
"From 1 Christian moral point of
view, we need to express our concern
and our compassion for persons wt th
AIDS, for their families and for their
loved ones."
The measure, backed by supporters
of politjcal extremist Lyndon
l.aRouche, would require that AIDS
victimsand thosewhocany the AIDS
virus be subjected to quarantine and
isolation laws aovcrning infectious
diseases.
A Jroup known as the Prevent
AIDS Now ln1tiat1ve Committee
quahfied the measure for the ballot by
tathcrina more than 500,000 ••an•· tu res.
"The prov1S1ons of this an1h1t1ve
appear. to ~ harmless, but 11 would
mult an widespread suspicion. mas--
trust and, eventually, paranoia," lltd
Mahcr. leaderof360,000 C..tholics10
the San DI~ diooesc, which 1n·
cJudcs San Dieao and lmpenal coun-
ttes.
"Underlyina tb11 tn1t11uve are
unfounded . fear and c•treme 11-
noranet, neither of which ahould be
allowed to away publk op1n100. .. the h1~hop \lid.
•
On land or sea,
drunken driver
can be deadly
Three bills have been introduced in the state
Legislature this year in an attempt to give water-1oing
law enforcement officers the same authority over
drunken drivers their landlubbing counterparts enjoy.
Th~ sponsoring legislators are not joyless
teetotahsts, they a.re people who have become aware that
the fatality rate directly related to alcohol abuse on our
state's ~and and coastal waterways is alarmingly biJh.
According to a reponby the state Department o(Boat1ng
and .\Yaterways, in. appro~mately 35 percent of the fatali_ue~ where toxicology mfonnation was available.
the 'Vtchm was at or above the legal level of intoxication.
And that is probably just the tip of the iceberg.
Because of government's traditional laissez.faire at-
titude toward boaters and the general acceptance of
drinking and boating, comprehensive statistics on
alcohol-related boating fatalities are not available.
Clearly, there is reason for concern. t.he drunken
boat driver may be more dangerous than "ibe drunken
~utomobilc driver. For one thing, experts say, the drunk
1n the car usually knows his way home. If something
doesn't surprise him, he'll probably negotiate the route
successfully. Not so, the drunk in the boat. He has few
landmarks, he probably does not have extensive
experience and he will be subjects to bounces and bumps
that will complicate a situation already made tenuous by
the alcohol.
The Jaws, which treat drunken boating like drunken
driving, will help.
But they may be difficult to enforce. Our police
flotillas don't have the manpower allocated to dry land
law. That's where an idea offered by public relations
account executive Peter E. Bretscbger of Cochrane
Chase, Livingston and Company, Inc. comes in.
Bretschger handles the PacTel mobile access
telephone account. He saw first hand how mobile phone
uses responded when they were asked to participate in a
network of citizen freeway watchers will toll-free access
to emergency dispatch services.
Why couldn't the same thing happen on the water.
where virtually every boat is equipped with a radio.
Bretschger, a sailor, thought?
Why not, indeed?
If every sane and sober boater were acting as the eyes
and ears of the harbor patrol and the Coast Guard, many
boating fatalities could be thwaned.
Bretschgcr's idea is a good one. More than that. 111s
probably the only way Jaw officers will able to enforce the
new drunk-boating laws when they pass.
Optnlooa exprMMd In thl• apace are those of cti. Dally Piiot Other views
expr...-d on thlt page are thoae of their autho<s and ertlsts Reader
comment It Invited. The Dally Piiot. PO Box 1560, Costa M .... 92626 Phone
&42~eoae.
Theater traffic assailed
To the Editor.
Until Monday, June 16, my
areatcst objection to the Pacific
Amphitheatre was the noise that
rattles windows and shatters all
attempts at pnvate entertainment
indoors or outdoors an the highly
noise impacted area of Mesa del Mar.
Monday. at approJumately 7.15
p.m., I had occasion to witness the
hiahly volatile traffic situation at the
intersection of Baker and Fa1rv1ew
(j1Ut one of many). Can were bumper 10 bumper from
Newpon Boulevard 10 beyond the on
and off ramps of the San Dicao
freeway. The intersccuon al Baker
and Fairview was 1otally blocked by
can en route to the Pacific
Amphitheatre. So cqer were lhc PA
patrons to act to their destination lhat
they. disrtfirded 1he si1nal liahts
makina it impossible for anyone 10
make a lef\ or right tum or ao straight
By Ute A11oclated Pren
Tod~y 1s Thursday. July 17. the
I 98th day of 1986. There arc 16 7 day!>
lcf\ 1n the year
Today's h1ghhaht 1n ht'ltory.
Five years ago. a pair of walkways
above the lobby of Kansa' Cit)' 's
Hyatt Rcaency Hott! collap'>Cd dur-
1nJ a dance. ktlhng 114 peopk and
uuunna more than 200 other\
On this date:
In 1603, Sir Walter Raleigh wac;
arrested for suspected comphc1ty 1n a
plot to dethrone En&Jand', King
James I.
In I 821 , Spain ceded Honda to the
United States.
In 1898.dunnatheSpanish·Amrn·
can War, 1hc Spaniards surrendered
10 the Amencan111 Santiago. ( uba
In I 94'S, Pres1dcn1 H arry S
OAANGF COAST
Daily Pilat
P,.1,to ""1.1 ..,,..., 11, I "• ,,. 11 ti
J)I) w 0..1 SI ~ •• ,, .. ~-{.A
A.Jd•U\ W• l()Cfl(.r? Ir R •
1 t)() G<Xt•t MM.11 C A G;>t1;>1
ahead.
There was a great gnashing of gears
and squeahng of brakes -tot.al
d1sorienta11on -and no one 1here to
control the situation. Eventually one
mo1orcycle officer showed up but the
situation was far beyond his control.
he circled the intersection (seeming-
ly) uncertain what to do.
I hope the City of Costa Mesa and
Nederlander West arc well insured
should tempers and 1raffic collide
The citizens of this city would be well
advised to ensure 1hat thtS is lhe case
before we find ourselves behind the
eight ball again.
I was one of many in Mesa Del Mar
who were willing to .. work" with the
PA but have found them unwillinJ to
"work" w11h us. Now they must GO.
VERONICA GRAMS
Cost.a Mesa
Truman. So\ 1el Premier Josef ~tahn
and British Pnme Minister Winston
S. Churchill met at Potsdam
In 1948. the Rt'publtc of Korea was
founded.
In 1955. D1'int'yland made 1t<;debul
an l\nahc1m
In 1975. An Apollo 'IP3Ct'Shtp
docked w11h a Soyuz spacecraf\ 11''1
orb11 1n the first link-up of m kind
The three Amcncan astronauts and
two Soviet cosmonauts aboard then
J01ned hand~ 1n greeting
Ten yean ago: Bnta1n's Queen
Elizabeth officially opened the Sum·
mer Olympics 1n Montreal. although
24 countries htid boycoucd tht' games
Thought tor today· "Moral an-
d1gnat1on "Jealou'iy with a halo" -
H.G Well,, EnJli\h author
( 1866-1946)
ft life" Wlttmllf
Pu bltlll\411<
'ref\11 Zlnl rc:1110t
fOfft Tell
M1nt11gll'l(j l:d1IC\f
OOfl ,..,..,
C1ly Ed1l0<
TOfft Clenln
,,._.Editor
Crelf IMn
°tl>Ofll Eo11or
ltobef1 Cent...tl
Produc lion l>tf tel Of r.,,., • ....-.
C rculelt<>n Man ..
..... .,. MuleftnMy
Ad-tlllf'IQ Owec1.,.
~ ... , .. .tn.
Ctualf..O 0.rtelOf
~ C0111t OM:V '9LOT,.,,...,, *'1t 11, tlM * AY
·'The bill for a sJngJe San Franc/llCO {n»ene bank) .. _.. •• •••..,,.
and dinner In Laglma NlgUel wa• 85,959. (That'• for nine db'et!tot9.J
.iAmlWa
~News! ~s~~T~ ~x ReFoRM PL~N MQ~NS nte~R WlllP~Y LON9R TA.~es,
~
r)
I ,
Penalty I
fordrugs
1 is left
hanging rHe RIC" WIU.. ~y L~R TAleS, AND 1lle GOVeRNMeNT WILL STIU, CO..L~ ~ SAMe k>eVeN\R ' •
04•1 New8 ~· SFf\dleei.. 1181 Yes, you.
Unfortunately, the Fed
does know how to party
WASHINGTON -The old car-
toon stereotype of bankers -top-
ha1ted fat men 1n striped pants.
chomping cigars and riding around in
long limousines -ts being given
crcd1b11t1y by the Lucullan tastes of
lhc Federal Reserve System
Internal Fed documents obtained
b) our associate Michael Binste1n
suggest that the central bank could
use a few financial watchdogs prowl·
ing through its marbled halls. Some
au$USt members of the Fed are
evidently trying to make Nero look
like a skinflint.
Consider the 1mpcnal expenditures
made by some of the 12 Federal
Reserve Banks across the country
during a recent 18-month period.
And keep an mind that these extrava-
gances were compiled by the Fed"!>
board of governors in Washington -
hardly a hostile Junkyard dog. Herc
are the most odoriferous examples of
wa,te
-~an Francisco The rc$1onal
reserve bank spent an astonishing
$45.131 1n 1ravcl expenses and other
costs for various functions honoring
the retirement of the bank president.
An add1t1onal S6.772 was spent for a
func11on JOintly hononng the outgo-
ing president and hts successor.
-For meetings 1n Hawa11 and
Alaska. the San Francisco regional
Fed laid out S60.466 for travel and
other expenses in volved in two
meetings of the nine-member board
of directon)
-The bill for a single San
Francisco directors' meeting and
dinner in Laguna Niguel was S5.959.
(That's for nine directors. re-
member ) There was a more modest
directori.' meeting and dinner in Las
Vegas CSl.700) a nd a mere S375 for
boat rental an connection with an
"offic ial ofT·slle planning meeting" in
Los i.\ngcles. according 10 1hc Board
o f G o Hrnors· 1nves11ga11on.
J1c1
AIDEISOll
and JOS£PH SPEAR
-The Chicago regional board of
directors spent $6.618 for a meeting
at Calloway Gardens in Pinc Moun-
tain. Ga. -far outside tht' hoard's
temtory.
-The Dallas board of directors
went even farther afield. spending
S 16.311 on 1b nine-member junket to
New York ('11y The tab included a
"S3.293 88 payment to one of the
directors. without a statement of
ex.penscs. for the cost of a dinner for
40 people at a club" of which hts
brother is a member
-The Cleveland regional board of
dircc1ors spent S6.609 on a dinner for
bank t'mployees and guests
The Fed's board of govcmo~ in
Washington is responsible for over·
s1Jht of the regional bank\, and has
laid down an official pohcy of
budgetaf) restraint But a rccenl
internal Fed memo. outlining the
profligate spending by several of the
12 regtonal banks. acknowledged
resistance to econom111ng out 1n the
boondocks
"Some reserve banks ... have
commented that the poliq is too
rcstnct1ve for today's .. environ-
ment ... the memo ~tates. It adds that
re' 1cws of reserve bank expenditures
h) headquarters examiners over the
pai.1 two years "have resulted in
concerns that some reserve banks
ma) either not fully understand or
ha\e at t1mt'sd1Srcprded tht' policy."
This chantable view of the satraps'
e'\tra' agance wa~ coupled with a
warning that m1&.ht conceivably aive
pause to some o(the free spenders out
m 1he field. "Inquiries on expen-
ditures continue to demonstrate con-
gressional interest 1n the efficiency of
reserve bank operations. n
That mar not be cnouah to cause
the rcgiona bankers to choke on their
stogies. But it might Just lead tbem to
thank twice.
Footnote: The Federal Reserve
System 1s sclf-supponina; 1t pays its
way from fees charged for its services
to the na11on's banks. But any surplus
must by law be turned over to the
T rcasury. so indirectly, its extrava-
gances arc pa1d for by the taxpayers.
WATCH ON WASTE: Attorneys 1n
the Justice Dcpanmenl's land ac-
quiSJtion section have been k~pmg
bankers' hours. according to a July 2
memo from their assistant chief.
Thomas P. Carolan. Some of 1hem
amve an hour late; others leave a
half-hour early. "Unfortunately. the
result when coupled wnh extended
lunch hours tS less than a seven-hour
day," Carolan wrote ... It 1s apparent
that a ma1ority of the attorneys tn this
section arc engaging in this practice."
HALL OF HERO~: We saJute
John Jeffrey McPartlin and his wife,
Anne. who quit their JObs and spent
three years undercover for the Fish cl
Wildlife Service, nabbinJ SO 11lcgal
bard smugglers in a sling prOJCCt
known as .. Operation Falcon."
McPartlin. former head of the Mon-
tana Wildlife Federation. and his wife
dealt with crooked bird dcaJen in the
United States. Canada and Europe,
posing as bird smugglers themselves.
Since the convicttons m 1984, the
McPanhns have been the target of
threats and personal attacks by ruth·
less poachers of endangered birds of
prey.
Jack Anderson and Joseph Spur
write a s)'lldlcated column.
Deukmejian needs to tack
for shifting economic wind
~A( RAMENTO -When George
DeukmeJian took the oath ofofficc as
governor in January 1983. he found
that he had inherited a mess -a $1 .5
b1llton state budget deficit that
seemed certain 10 forct' him to break
his campaign promise not to raise
taxes.
But much to the surpnsc of JUSt
about everyone an Sacramento, the
Republican governor pretty much
made good on his promise. Oh. sure.
Deukme11an did a quick shuffle Wlth
ta'\ laws that he himself mtJht well
have been dc~nbcd as a tax increase
-1f he had s11ll been in the
leg1slaturt' and a Democratic gov-
ernor had been doing the shuffling.
But certainly DcukmeJian dealt
with thc problem without ra1S1ng
maJor stalt' taxes, something few
observers eJtpectcd he would be able
to do He held down state spending
and insisted th3t the deficit could be
paid ofT over a two-year pcnod.
instead of JUSt 1n one year
While he dc'ICrvcd considerable
credit for that. he was helped greatly
by an improving economy that aener·
atcd enouah additional revenue to
pay ofT the deficit. Clearly. the
economic wind has been at Deu-
lr.meJ18n'<i back during hts current
term n~ governor
That economic wind may be ~h1ft-
1na around now u. Dt'ukme11an runs
for a ~ond term 0 1hcr bttezes arc
mining to swirl. too. and whtther 1t'11
DeukmcJian or hts Dt'mocrat1c
challengt'r. 1 om Bradley. who 1s
1n•uaura1ed next January to ~rve u
aovemor for tht' rest of this decade.
that chief t'xccut1vc 1\ ltkely to work
1n poltt1cal. social and . economic
cnv1ronmt'nls that will he tn,rca 1na·
ly turbulent
A• lhe federal govtrnmcnt 1s fol'C'td
10 confront the problem of its budact
defirn morcd1rcctly, tht' nowof11d to
SIO\t' and local government 1~ ~urt' to
he -.(r1ou'I) affected \tate govern
mcnl ne-.1 ytar ol<>o 1~ ltkcl\ to hump
\
MARTY
SMITH
up aga1n~t a con<i11tut1onal spending
ce11tng approved b> votcn in I Q79.
That might pctrm1t a governor 10 gain
wme tmcf puhltc acclaim by propos-
ing a refund 1n <itatc 1a:11c'). but unless
the 197q cons111u11onal amendment
1s changed 1t will make hash of ht'
cfTort<i tu halt the dttcnora11on of
'>talc h1ghwa>' and other public
works and to cope w11h wor~ning
pollution problems
This fall's campaign debate ovt'r an
in111a11vc to \trcngthen Caltforn1a's
tox1cs-cun1rol law~. re$1lrdk~s of how
the vott' turn" out. Wlll mcrt'ase public
concern., over pollu11on. 'itate 1.ov-
crnmen1 will more frequently find
itself 1n s11ua11oni. where 1t mu~t
choose be1wecn prote(."llO& the tn·
v1ronmcnt and prott'<:t1n1uobs
lmponan1 pockch of Cahforn1a's
economy are a1hna. too. becau~ of
dcc:hn1na pnccs for 011 and farm
product\ Agnculturc: 1\ tht' <il3tc'
No I 1ndu~tf), and ( uhforn1a '"a top
011 producer. tnuhn only Tcxa\,
Ala ko and lou1"1n1t. nd whatc\er
hun1 lht'~ indu~lnc' ha' an advcrv
1mpa1;t m 1h1~ !ilalt.
And while othtr '.('Jml·nt\i of the
\tate'\ economy ha"e cnJO)'Cd more
pro,pcnl\ 1n l'f'('C'nl yea'"'. Call·
fom1a·, economic rnmpc11t1ven~\
rematn\ a m111cr of rnnctrn A recent
lca1~lattvt' ~port notrd that while
C ah(om11 1ndu$1nc con11nuc to
desi&n and develop nev. product , the
manufactunna of tho~ prodUl'"
of\en 1c, undt'rtaken 10 othtr \late\ or
othcr nallon\ panly bt'cau..c of lowcr
produ~ 11on rnc;I\ cl~v.hcrc
' •
Other woes will be affiu.·tang the
state more dunng the ne:11t four year\
If law enforcement officials arc cor-
rect. the title of the r.opular television
show "Miami Vice· ts fas1 becoming
outdated. The program's producer<.
should be be thinking about renamtng
1t "Los Angel~ Vice"
Kingpins 1n the mul11-b1lhon
dollar, mult1-nat1onal cocaine andus-
tr) arc said to be sh1ftin1 the hub ol
tht'ir operattons from M11m1 to Los
i\n_gelcs. One U .S. Customs Sen ice
official has been quoted by the Wall
Street Journal as S3) ang Lo Angele'>
1s ltkt'ly 10 become .. the ne'\t battle-
ground" 1 n the wars bo1h among drug
dealers and between them and police
authonues
Social strains caused b) 1mm1gra-
11on will increase. espccinlly as Mex·
1c0°'> drepening economic cns1'i 1n·
creases the northward now of tllcgal
aliens. So will be the deb:ltt' O\Cr
another in1t1at1vc on the Novt'mbt'r
ballot. the propo$3I to have Enghsh
declared as the official 'ltatt' languaae
The problems, while cittrcmcly
difficult, arc not beyond 1hc effon'> of
Cnltfom11ns to wive them. Even 1ht
worst difficulties have 1hc po1tnt11I to
ere.ate heroes as well a\ tht' potentlAI
10 make aoats out of poltt1c1an~ who
try to fashion ways to find solu11on'l
The hu e budJet deficit ~ukme11an
1nhcritrd when he took office ncarl>
four }Cars 110 made him II lt'a'lt a
minor pubhc hero
Perhaps the late t crop of problems
will provide another su<'h opportunt·
I) for him or for Rrndlc~ wh~vcr 1\
elected 1n November to ~rvc "
aovemor But tht' room (or poht1cal
mancuvcnn' sccm'I hkcly to bt' more
hm1ted dunna the nex.t four ycar5
1han 1t'<i bttn the la'lt four Eventl arc
clo 1'\I in on Cnhfom1a and the
chanct'I that the 1ovemor will be
made a goat look 1rcntrr th n the
'hanct\ that ht'll b«ome a hero
Martt. mu• la pollllt•I tdltor ti
MC'Claklay Newt Servi~
In French and Spanish the word
"senout" has a mean.ins that docin't
correspond with any of IM synonyms
aivtn for that word in Ena!ish. ft
means responaible, reliable.
trustworthy reflective. The otb.er
day,JamcsJack.lon Kilparrick. who is
a serious man, made an unseriou'
sugesuon about bow we should deal
with dope traffickeri. It repa)'I bard
attention to the mcanina of the won'.!
to understand 1t1 ram1ficauoni lO the
eurTCnt 11tuation.
What we ouaht to do, said Mr
Kilpatrick. is catch a bunch of dope
ttaden, try them, convict them, and
then han& them in public squares.
Now if you heard that from the
mouth of, oh. the early or even the
middle George Wallace, you would
smtJe and say, there be goes apin, the
same man who sugcsted the best way
to deal with proiesten standlrta m the
way of a buJldozer is to buUdoLe
them.
But Jack KiJpatrick really means tt.
It is an ex.pression of bip dudpon
and aJso a concrete recommendation.
He has heard described. and he b.as
witnessed, the tortures cxpencnccd
by those taken in the biological and
psychological death agonies of df\.11
consumption. It isagony whether you
go on to die or go on lo live.
Kilpatrick's point is that if ever
there was justification for cxccuttng •
murderer. there is ju11ificauon for
ex.ccutang those wanton murderen
who d1stnbutc narcotics th.at cau1e
wof"5C pain than any pain experienoed
by the muraer's pistol shot.
Now recently we saw almoo euct·
ly that happen in Mala)'$1a. The
c:11ccuuons were not, to my knowl-
edge. public. but they may as well
have been, given the attention 11ven
them in the world press. Two Austral·
1ans, cau&ht with mcrcbandtseable
quant111cs of heroin, were tried.
convicted and. after due process U$1"I
up almost three years, hanged.
There was the usual outcry from
the anti-<:apital punishment set and
even a few othen. but the government
of Malaysia stood iu ~ound. pointed
out that there were signs aJI over 1he
place warnina potential drug
merchants of the fate that would
befall 1hem. lnterestingly1 the locaJ
~uivaJcnt of the Amcncan Civil
Liberties Union. whtch opposes ap1-
tal punishment, announced that drug
merchandising was a crime so
heinous that opposition to capital
punishment was officially suspended
when applied to that crime.
But Mr. Kilpatrick's suggcnion "
not serious. It is oot responsible. It 1s
not reputable It is not viable. Why"
Because tt 1s absolutely predictable
that st Wlll not happen.
This has nothm$ whatever to do
""h the enttrely different quesuon.
\hould 11 happen? If to mo rrow I
needed to vote yes or no on a national
plcb1sc1tc. "Shall we adopt the
K1lpatnck Propos1tton''" I would
un01nch1ngl) vote yes. And after. oh
a couple of hundred hangings. tht're
would he a very itharp decrease rn the
merchand1~ang of drugs. It wouldn't
cease. any more than cnmc m G~t
Bnta1n ceased when they used to hang
'ou for steahng six.pence.
But 1n modern America. death
\Cntenct'~ are taken much more
-.cnou'il)' than the> were 200 years
ago. when ex.ecut1ons were com-
monplace and public flOS&Jnp a
regular feature of city hfe. There arc
stall a lot of people out there who
maintain that there arc no flaures to
sustain thc propos1t1on that capital
punishment reduces tht' mc1dcncc of
murder Well. let that Ont' go. But 1t
v.ould be hard to find anyone who
would dispute the conclusion that a
lot of publtc hangings would dry up
the a'iscmbly line of drup passing
undt'rthc eyes of the l\mencan public
on a vibrant ~treet comer
But this 1s not going to happen We
arc too frozen 1ns11tuttonally. 1n our
views about execuuons.. let alone
puhhc tltecu11on, So then. why make
tht' ~uue,11on'> If 1t were done 1n the ~pint of fantasy ( .. One day they
passed a law ... the next day, the
~·Msump11on of drug.'i dropped by 90
percent"), that would he one th"in
But Mr. K1lpatnck was bema -in tht'
i\mencan usage -scnous. But not
~nous 1n the continental sense.
Coke consumptio n ts up 600 per
cent 1n many Amencan c1ttes. In
Pakistan. the momma paper advtll'S
us. the arowth of popp1M 1s up 4'00
percent over la t yt'ar A lot of that
stun 1s dC'lttncd for Amttican blood
Vt''i~ls ~nd we can'I stop it. and
arcn't \topping 1t We are sub51d121n1
a cnmana.I clu'i. ovn'flowina our
pmoni. corrupt1na the pohcc and 1he
court\. <kpktin& our ~ of
detective'! and Judics. and ac-
romphshtnJ nothing.
Either bnn' on the Kaffold (which
we aren't 1om1 to do). or tcpli.rc
(which ~ probably aren't Soma to
do) We can, then. look for more of
tht ~me Much mart of tht' umc.
Wllllam Bet11l~J It a .,.cllcatf'41
COl•maltl
----------------------------------------------------------~---"
Kids have room for expression Buyers can't sue
over home change Teens s h ow originality, individuality
in their 'personal space· decorations
By PATRICIA BEACH SMITH
~ ..... ---
SACRAMENTO -"hl·n £ nca
Leake redid her room recenth \he
wiped out her fam1I~ \ \Uppf\ of tin
fotl.
Moll> Hills draped black m'lltng
from her ceiling. Scan Malone)
furnished his room wtth C"l'r)'thtng
from antique signs to beer fl<l'>tcrs
.\nd among He1d1 Hansel\ fa\Ort.'J
turn1sh1ngs in her .. ne~ .. room " a
ru bber chicken
Bci.ond seeming!~ ohhgator> f)<>\I
r'> ol musical group.,, notl'' from
h<n friends or gJrlfncnd\ a '>tl·rco set
.i nd for the luck~ onl'\ a tl·kphonc
"REGENCY"
there 1sn'1 much rhyme or reason to
the way )'Oung people arc hkely to
decorate their rooms when left to
their own devices.
"Kids have so httle freedom 1n
their lives I thank they at least should
he allowed to do their rooms the way
they want," said Nan Leake. Erica's
mother.
So Enca was allowed to "up-
holster" her ceiling -wtth 11n foil.
Memorabilia from her favorite mu-
s1c1ans. Bob Marley and the Wailers.
a telephone shaped hke a pairofhps.
and vanous sports awards also decor-
ate her room.
"I think of my room as a scrap-
book ... said the 14-)ear-old Sacra-
1,;ftti-•\ftr..C.l:Jt'V.)'O"o()(\(>ft1j• ~Htft)..,,191 F\O\
1 Qe \r ~ J()fj ")f ;.-,19'1'\ , •• ,._ flOf'I f Otet~I ....,1•r
f'f'l'J'I )a-f:Jtn 1r~.-j .;h~ft pAr,,.,,~ V"lft•vet f()I ..,Of~ or
V"l<"'t0,.,t"J8tJ "1r:>fY)("ro"•ti~· ,trunvr·i<>nfnoi
""' .... fl NO'X2 'tt 't\.ttf 'o• '\4t'llllt'Jt 1Of8or,g~o1t
'ft II \<:.olfdr:Y .. ) 18f't:J&\ 41Uff'°)f Jfft)f()l'JU9
~ ,, t u :.it r "-'' .#Off .,, """ '"" g o '.or· or fll'\el t •o.-.vrry, ... ..,_,...,_., .. ,r \t'"'0' >' 1'4'• 'l'f"Clt:J'.!
'"' ~~·
.\ EAOEQSINCE !QoJ ~ ~"'
17837BEACHBLVD '
HUNTINGTON BEACH ._ .. ________ 1-....»..ff'l.:JA~l..MQO'~ ,...,,.,,,,~
mento high school freshman. She
plays on the school's volleyball,
soccer. and softball teams, and 1s a
student-<:ouncil representative.
Enca and a friend did her cc1hng.
.. First, we unrolled about 12 rolls of
the stuff." she said. "Then we crum-
pled 1t up and stapled 1t to the ceiling.
It took about 2,000 staples.
.. Why did I do 1t? I just wanted my
room to be different. I don't mind
being different. For instance. I wear
wrestling shoes. Nobody else I know
docs. Other kids think I'm crazy. but I
don't care When I grow up I want to
be an architect. or maybe a lawyer. I
ltke to fight for my rights," she said.
She didn't have to fight for the
decor of her room "My parents ltkc
m> room." she said. "Anyway,
the) 've ne .. er !>aid anything bad
about 11 The only thing is that some
of my friends with braces and fillings
"8)' the ceiling makes their teeth
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tingle."
Another mother, Jeanne Maloney,
ellplained her dec1S1on this way:
.. We've always included the kids in
our house projects, and that meant
encouragmg them to help Because of
11. they've learned 10 repair and build
things and use their 1maginauons"
The duaJ theme of her son Sean's
room is sports and music. The 17-
year-old Sacramento high school
junior is on his school's tennis team.
and plays golf "just for fun." he said.
He built a we1ght-ltfting bench
from discarded pans. He also made a
skateboard from scratch. An asson-
ment of instruments in his room,
including a drum set and guttars.
attest to his musical interests. For
diversion. he has several collections.
including a large assemblage of beer
posters. cans, and bottles.
''They're all empty." he said with a
grin. "I only collect imported beer
stuff. I get 1t from friends and relatives
as gifts" His collecuon of buttons -
wh 1ch messages such a-; .. Alberta"
and "You Belong in the Zoo" -are
pinned toa T-sh1n 'itapled toa board.
.\n enameled antique ''Auto-Lite
Resistor Spark Plugs" sign 1-; the start
of another collection
Moll) Hills' collections. of e"el)-
1h1ng from bones to dead flowers in a
gray-walled ~tung. unnerve some
people. she said. "I also have a skull.
an from the Southwest. and an old
<;ehool clock I found 1n a garbage can.
It doesn't work. but I like 11 anyhow."
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
homeowner who builds an improve-
ment on the r.roperty, such as a
swimming poo • and then sells the
home can't normally be sued by the
buyers for in1unes caused by the
home improvement. the state Su-
preme Court has ruled.
The court unanimously rejected a
suit on behalf of a 22-month-old boy
who was cnppled and suffered per-
manent brain damage when he fell
into a shallow pond m a San
Fernando Valley home where his
family was v1s11tng tn May 1976. The
pond had been built by a previous
owner of the home.
By a 5-0 vote. the court said the
builder of a do-it-yourself home
improvement who has transferred
possession of the home cannot be
sued for negligent construction unless
the seller concealed the danger from
the buyer or knew of a hidden danger
and failed to disclose 1t.
The other two jUStices. Joseph
Grodin and C'h1ef Justtce Rose Bird.
agreed that the su11 should be d1s-
m1sscd but on the narrower ground
that the jury in the case had made
findings effecttvely cleanng the
builders of the pond from any
respons1b1h1y for the m1ury. They
said a suit against a former owner
might be aJlowed m a dLITerent case.
fhe homeowners. Jon and Marion
Kubtchan. built the sh.allow pond and
a surrounding 12-inch wall in l 972.
They sold the home in l 973 to a buyer
who leased 1t to the Reid famil(, who
rebuilt the surrounding wal . The
child. Clanton Preston, was injured in
the pond while his family was visiting
the Reids.
In the Prestons' suit against both
the Reids and the Kubichans, a Lot
Angeles Superior Court ruled for the
defendants after being told by Judie
Robert Letteau that a seller of
property who does not hide danacr·
ous cond111ons is normally not re-
sponsible for later mjuries. The state's
2nd D1s1nct Coun of Appeal dis-
agreed with Leneau and reinstated
the su11 but was overruled by the
Supreme Court.
The opinion by Justice Malcolm
Lucas noted that the former ownen
had no c ontrol of the property when
the child was injured and could not
have taken precautions at the time of
the accident 10 prevent it.
"In contrast to the professional
builder or contractor who m all
ltkelthood cames extensive in-
surance as part of doing business, the
'do-it-yourself homeowner 1s unlike--
ly to contemplate that hts weekend
project may expose him to liability
for an unltmited ume." Lucas said. t-;::=============================:::-1 Grodin's separate opinion said a BRING A LITTLE of the OUTSIDE·INSIDE! seller who creates a dangerous con-
'd -d1t1on might be held responsible until
..-.{"~ dlacoe.Jlt off to discover and correct ti. Smee the
T; ~~ 10% the buyer has had a reasonable chance
r e.,, . total co.t Retds had already discovered the 1 J__.I '""tMo cond1t1on of the pond in this case and
r da ,,.,..,.._, had also been cleared by the Jury, '" z·n OW S · Grodin said. the builders of the pond
could not be liable. •Cato• Pit IO Elllathll Opula&
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-
Different saws
for diff erentjobs
Keyhole or coping
saws best to cut
around the curves
By ANDY LANG
An I ... ,,_
When you think. of a hand saw.
your mind automatically envisions a
fairly sizeable crosscut saw, the kind
found in most home workshops. But a
crosscut saw, like its partner. the
npsaw, as primarily for making
straiaht cuts. And sometimes you
don't want to saw straight.
A keyhole jfW lets you cut along
lrTCJUlar and~urvtng lines, while a
copina saw, as its name implies. can
cope with any curve you can throw at
ll.
Besides its ability to cut neatly
along irregular lines, a keyhole saw
can start cuts in the middle of a pac~cc
of wood, gypsum wallboard and other
similar matenaJs. It as especaall)
useful when you have to make pocket
cuts an paneling or anything else that
already has been nailed or glued an to
plac.e. When cutting curves with th as
saw. you should cut perpendicular to
the surface. To cut shapes out of the
middle of wood, drill a small hole to
give the keyhole saw a starting place.
Not only is at excellent for the quack.
small cutting job. at will work in
places where a larger saw wall not fit
The compass saw as very much lake
the keyhole saw. It also wall make
small cuts when only one side of the
matenal as accessible, but the keyhole
saw as a bit thinner and finer. It's a
good idea to buy a special handle that
comes with several different. special-
use blades. In some of these handle
sets1 blades for cuuang metal arc also
available.
A coping saw cuts antncate circles,
anqular shapes. sharp an&)cs and
curves in thin wood, plywood, hard-
board, etc. Its replaceable blades arc
thread-like wire. Using a spiral blade
permits you to cut in any direction
without having to tum the handle, a
definite plus in close work. When an
interior cut is needed, a hole as drilled.
the blade threaded through the hole
and then attached to the frame. Of
course. this hmats the use of the
coping saw to a cut fairly near the edge
of a panel. The keyhole and compass
saws, not being 1n a frame. ha ve no
such hmitataon.
When you have to shorten a screw
or bolt, cut through a nail or make a
piece of pipe or hardware fit. a
hacksaw 1s sometimes the only
answer. Stanley Tools reminds do-at-
~oursclfers that when you arc work-
ing with a fine wood and 11 must be
held firmly by a metal va!IC, you
should sltp 1n scraps of plXwood so
that they act as ··cushions.' A mini-
hacksaw docs anything a regular
hacksaw docs. but reaches areas
conventional hacksaws cannot.
There arc deep-throat coping saws
and what are called scroll saws and
fret saws. These have fairly large
frame depths for special work and
usuall) have their blades mounted
with the tcetH slanting toward the
handle. This enables them to be cut
on the pull stroke rather than the push
stroke. That's somethanf to keep in
mind 1n using all spec1a -work saws.
When the teeth of the blades slant
toward the handle. the saw is meant to
be pulled. When the teeth arc slanted
away from the handle, the saw as
meant to be pushed. Usually. when a
{}{}~
IMPROVEMENTS
saw cuts on the pull stroke. 1t aids an
extra fine work. such as cutting
scrolls
Man} other special kinds of saws
are available for particular kinds of
work. Amon& them are the back saw
and us panners. the miter box saw
and the dovetail saw. All have heavy
blades with suffcncd backs and arc
used for fine cabinet work. The names
of the miter box saw and the dovetail
saw tell clearly what their principal
uses are
Other specialty saws include those
used for pruning trees and shrubbery,
cutung firewood and cutting floors
and walls
(Do-11-}oursclfers will find much
helpful data on a vanetyofsub1ects m
>\nd} Lang's handbook, "Practical
Home Repairs." which can be ob-
tained b> ~nding $2 to rlus news-
paper at Box 5. Teaneck. N.J.. 07666.)
Lumber&
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Extra in·s /ranee tab ·
ensures· OU~1 collect
if the company fails
By JACK SIRARD
llllC ...... , ........
Q. My rec:eat llom~r'• ID-
praace bill bacleded a 1arcbrae for
CIGA, ~ell I now •odda1 alM9t.
WUt II It ud wlaat types of latenace
don tt affect? -R.O., Duis
A. CIGA stands for the California
Insurance Guarantee Associauon.
which was created by tho state Leaislatu~ in 1982 to head ofT
problems from bankrupt ansunncc
companies.
If a company fails, the guarantee
association scnlcs unpaid claims. and
assesses each insurance company for
its fair share. State law requ1rcs the
solvent insurance comparucs operat-
ing an California to recover these
assessments from the1rpolicybolders.
According to John Gates, necutivc
director of CIGA. the association was
created an 1982, but 1t d1dn'l have to
put assessments on the S22 in1urancc
companies operatin& in California
until last year. That was when Gbltier
General and Ideal Mutual iQSUr.\DCC
compames went undtf' for. a
cum ulative loss ofS40 milhon.
These special surcharaes are ap.
plied to all types of insurance except
hfc and d1sab1hty. The charge for
automobile insurance as 0.1 19877
percent of the cost of the ~hey. For
homeowners or business insurance.
the rate jumps to 0. 72 percent, and for
workers· compcn\allOn n's 0 15 per-
cent.
According to a local in-;urance
salc-sman. a homcowncr's pohcy wt th
a renewal premium of $300 would
ha vc a surcharge of S2 16 The
!lurchargc as non-refundable, and
docs not apply to the agent's com-
pensation.
Gates says has group as~sscs only
the amount that's needed, but that
w1lh several companies aoina under
recently, he expects that •urchatles ~
wtll be contJnwna. The bankruptey of
Transit Casualty Co.. which was
betcd in M1uoun and operated out of 1
Los An&des, W111 cost 1 ClSW'l.nCe •
companies about S.00 million na-
tionwide, he said.
The problem that many 1nsura.ooe J
sales people arc having is explaining
to their customers that while in-
surance rates have been slcyr~·n
on their own. they're being c
even more money because o
insuran<ie companies are failina.
In etT~t. poUcyholdcn of solvent
ansuranc~ companies subsidize thOIC
of the irresponsible bankrupt firms,
one insurance aaent said.
Q. Wbt an blwettly mertp&ea, •
ud laow do th)' wort? --1.R..
Sacramea&o
A. Biweekly mortgages are yet l another way of home finance that
have been wnttcn in Canada for a
Ion• tame. but many industry experts
say at may take some ume before they
become popular an the United States.
In a nutshell, a blwceldy mo~
lets the home buyer make a payment
every other week rather than once a
month Two biweekly payments add
up -to the same amount as a single
monthly payment on a conventional
monpge.
The biweekly mortgage usually it l offered at an adjustable rate. It speeds
up the ownership process, and can
save a homeowner thousands of
dollars an inierest costs.
One banker fiaured that by us.in&
biweekly payments a homeowneTwill
pay off a SS0.000. ~year mortpfe
with a 10.25 percent interest rate Ln
201/J years. and save $41 .000 an
interest costs
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1275 BRISTOL, COST A MESA
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'
I
'Fringe' Lagunans to get parking break
I)' LAURA MEU
Of .............
People Livina ouwdc the Laguna
Beach city Um1 but within the
school district'• boundanet wtll now
be eliaible for pennits that allow them
to park downtown while byp1ssin1
the expensive chore of feeding hungry
parkina meters.
The Laauna Beach City Council a~ Tuesday night to sell non-
residents the permits, which allow the
holders to park at the meters for the
maximum time without depositing
coins.
Residents p1y S20 a year for the
permits.
Althou&h at was recommended lhat
non-residents pay $60 for the annual
pnvtleae the council ioettased the
price 10 $100. Council memben said
the difference was JUSttf'ied because
non-residents do not pay city taxes.
Senior c1t12ens liv1oa outside the
city boundaries will pay S25 for the
permit.
In other council busine . Coun-
cilman Bob Gentry said the National
Church Residences oflaJuna Beach,
which as building a 71-unatafTordable
~nior housing prOJC<:t at the former
Ah50 .chool sate in South Lasuna,
needed another S 117 ,000 to bq.ln
construction.
City Manager Ken frank cxphuncd
last-minute financial setbacks arc
common when dealina with projects
backed by the U.S. Department of
Houstni and Urban Development
The ch urch aroup has asked Avco
Community Developers and another
backer to also contribute to the
additional costs.
The church requested $50,000
from the city. but Frank said the
council should shoulder only one-
third of the total, or about $40,000.
from the c1t>'S hou ina_•n·heu fund.
There 1 more than $400,000 accum-
mulated an the account, delipcd to
provide funds for affordable f'ou ina.
Councilwoman Bobbie MinJun
wd the My has contnbuted $75,000
in cash to the Pl'OJcct and about
$288,000 in waived hou ina in-lieu
fees. With the additional constnbu·
taon, the c:1ty will have patched in
S403,<XIO
Although the project as in county
territory .11 1s the first low-income
pr<>Jt'Ct in the area.
In other action, the council:
•Appointed several new members
to c•!J commattees. Raul Pemandei
and Denni. Halloran were sel~ted to
fill the two vacanc1 on the Cable
Tekvision Commhaee1.._ Daniel T. Bross and Wayne A. TDllTI wtte
chosen lo 1Crve on the Parkint.
Traffic and Circul,alion Committee.
Jane Chcroske was appotnted to the
Recreation Committee. Oloria Roth was appointed to the Ene~y and
Environment Committee. Lida P.
lenney (who will be runnina for one
of three council seats in November)
and Marsueritc K-Stanton were
appointed to the Housina Commit-
tee.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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WEST COVINA: Sfln Bernardino Frwy Md Vincent PhonP A 18 919-1971 COSTA MESA: San Diego Frwy and Harbor Blvd Phone 714 540 8242
Oprm Monc1Ay lhru Fnctay 10 9 Saturday 10 6 Sunday 12-6
'
TV dish
wi t1i.
limits
debated
8)' TOM WRIGHT
D91r"9IC.1 ; tent
AJthou&h tcchnJ~ experts warned
the Fount.ain Valley City Council it
couldn't lc~slate physics, the council
tned with the adoptioo of an ordi·
nanoc est.ablishing city standards for
the construction of television satelhte
dashes.
The council did listen Tuesday lo
the experts who said the ori11naJ
version of the ordinance would make
1t 1mposs1blc for Fountain Valley
residents to receive quality television
signals.
James Roberts warned the council
the oriainal ordinance would result in
an flood of requests for exceptions
based on hardships. Roberts and the
other technical experts admitted to a
vested interest since they aJI build aod
sell satelhte television receivers.
The ordinance standards are b11cd
on recent FCC standards. which place
the miniumum width of satellite dish
antennas at eight to 12 feet.
Roberts said the report offered a
national average.
"An eight-foot antenna could work
in Omaha. because the satellite is
more directl y overhead, but in CaJi-
fom1a we're on the penphery of the
signal. he said. "We need a larser
;lntenna to gather an satellite signals."
Councilman George Scott rcc-
otpmcndcd the ordinance be changed
IQ allow a maximum dash size o(IO
feet an diameter. The ordinance stall
includes a prov1S1on to request exec~
uons 10 the city standards based on
hardships. because of location or
other factors
OCCand
Coastline
grow, but
GWCdips
By MADGE HAMMOND
D..., "'91 Cw; 0 I ~ ....
Orange Coast and Coastline college
summer enrollments are up this year
over last summer. but Golden West
College's summer enrollment 1sdown
7.6 percent. .
Second session figures boost Or·
-ange Coast's summer enrollment
even higher than an increase reported
earlier, Gene Farrell, dean of adman-
1stra11 vc services, told the Coast
Communaty College Board of
Trustees at its last meeting.
The 12.133 summer registration 1s
up almost 1,000, or 6.9 percent, over
last summer, according to James
Carnett. OCC's director of marketing
and community relations, and the
number of new students is up 10.3
percent over last summer.
The count. based on how many
classes a 'itudent 1s enrolled in, is up
1.4 percent. indicating students are
not taking quite as many classes on
the average as last year. Carnett saJd.
Coastline. which has approJUmate-
ly half the enrollment of Orange
C oast. ha'l a )4.8 percent increase an
total 'ltudents registered this summer
over last year and a 34 percent
mcrea~ an total scats. Colleae Presi-
dent W1ll1am M . Vega told trustees
that the college has a 25 percent
mcrea\C an new student registration.
Despite recruiting efforts, Golden
West College's summer enrollment as
7 6 percent below the fiaurc for last
)Car. said Fred Owens, director of
business services for the colleae.
Carnett told the Daily Pilot he feels
the college's promotional activities
played a role 1n summer growth and
that Orange Coast officials expect a
very strong fall enrollment. of a~
proximately 25,000 students. based
on early mdu:atJons
The college's promotional efforts
were concentrated to a large extent on
mak1na high school students and
their parents aware of opportun1t1es
at the college
OB ITUARIES
Vesste Locka b ey
succumbs at 95
Vess1c Lockabcy, widow of Floyd
Lockabey of Placentia and the mother
of Daily Pilot boatma writer Almon
Lockabcy. died Wednesday at an
Anaheim hospital. She was 95.
Pnvate funeral <1erviccs wall be at
Westminster Memorial Parle
Mr'! Lockabcy was born in Coryell
\aunty. Texu, and moved with her
fami ly to ~n Bernardino 1n 1924. She
ond her husband llad resided in
Placcnuu \Ince the early 1940s.
5hr 1\ survived by four sons
Almon of Balboa. Ted of New
Meiuco. Doyle of Pe&aluma and
Floyd Jr of San Gabnel. She also
leaves three daullhtcn Theda Mac
C lou of e,,hop Virainaa Peterman of
Oitnard and ( ollecn Taphn, of
Bishop
M". Lockat'lc y al'IO '" •urv1vcd by
20 srandchildrcn, 12 StCf>'lt'lnd-
ch1ldren. JO src11...,..ndch1ldren and
five areat, 1rtat-arandch1ldren.
Adduionally. she leaves three m ·
ttrs, Maraaret Meador Ht,tcr Peck
and Ola White. all of lkthany. Okla
It takes more to sail Au101
Locuan "Shut up and steer the boat!"
That's a familiar command 1n
yacht racing -usually from the
tactician to the skipper.
Sure, the skipper has the final say
on sail trim. sad changes, maneuvers
and taclics, but in 12-mcter racina
such as in the America's Cup, the
skipper usually expects his tactician
to tell where the opposition as. who
has the riaht-of-way an a crossina
situation, when to tack. when to Jibe.
The skipper's JOb is to keep h11 eyes
glued on the shape of the sail and to
steer the boat for optimum speed.
And the bottom hnc 11 that the
slurper gets the praise for a successful sa1 -or the blame for a loss.
Tactician for skipper Rod Davis on
EaJle is Ooua Rutello, 34, of Lona
Beach who started out u a suCQCSSful
collClf ate pilor and hat 1incc come a
Iona way in his yachtma career. He
was tactician for Davis In both has
Conaressional Cup victones.
"J steer the boat and Ooua pos.
1tions the boat on the race course,"
says Davis of Rastello.
Of course, R.astello also has to
depend on the naviaator for some of
the infomlation he passes on to
Davis. James Alsop, 43. of Hunt-
inaton. N. Y. 1s the naviptor aboard
Eagle. He constantly plots the pos-
ition of the boat on the race course.
watches for wind shins, reads the
water, and calls the !Jlyline to the next
mark.
USYRU'S Offshore
Championship set
The United States Yacht Racing Union wall inaugurate its Nauonal
Offshore Championship, hosted by the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.,
Sept. 5. 7.
The cven1.cons1sungofan I I-boat fleet-one from each ofUSYRu·s 10
areas plus an I I th crewed by the Academy will be sailed 1n Luderr44 yawls on
Chesapeake Bay. Competitors will sail for the Lloyd Phoenix Trophy
Selection of the area representatives (owners and crews) wall be made by
the USYR U National Offshore Council from a maximum offive nominauons
per area, based on nominees' saalinf resumes.
According to NOC chairman ack LeFon. the obJcct1ve 1n establishing
this new championship 1s to promote amateur racing in offshore yachts of
which the owners arc active crew members and/or helmsmen.
The championship 1s designed solely for amateurs competing regularly
and successfully at the local level. It is not for so-<:alled grand prix racers.
"Nominees should be regular racers 1n ·the area from which they are
nominated. and should have exh1b1ted racing and seamanship skills that
warrant consideration for ~lec11on to the national champ1onsh1p," said
Le Fon
The three-day regatta will begin with a practice day (including a required
pracuce race) folJowed by five races on the second and third days Cour'ies will
be windward-leeward-windward with legs from two 10 two and a half nautical
miles The sconng system will be announced.
Each of the 10 USYRlJ area represcntauves will determine -ut
consultauon with NOC -the method ofnominauon appropriate to their area.
For funher informauon, contact your US YR U represcnta11 ve. based on
the USYRU year book, or call USY RlJ Offshore Office (40 I) 849-5200
There arc 11 men an a 12-metcr
crew but the skipper, tact1c1an and
naveptor arc: Lhe key men -some·
times called the afterauard
Other crewmen on Eagle and the
chores they perform:
Jerry Kirby 30, Newport, R I. 1s
the bowman. i hs job ·~ to supervise
all headsail changes and spinnaker
trim and Jlb1na Calls dmancc from
hne dunna startana maneuvers.
Mike Pentecost. 30. San Pedro,
mastman Raa.ses and lowers sails
during sail chanies and controls
spannakecr pole. May occast0nally
lend a hand at 'nndang a winch.
Mastman, taller, Hart Jordon. 25,
Oakland, lends o hand in raising and
lowering sails
Hard on the wind
l<Jmo Wortlungton, 26, main hcet
tnmmcr
Al Palcw1C1 36., and Hal Sears. 40,
annde"' They work the two-handed
"b1C)clt" wmche$ that the trim the
headsa1ls and Jib.
Mark\\ tlson. 30 and Make Toppa.
30. ta1lcrs In concert With annders
theJ maintain a fine tnm on the sa1l1.
Charles Dwyer, 31 . pitman. Works
an forward hatch passing uals up and
down and packing them as needed
Also helps with spinnaker pole,
pump~ bilges and stands by as backup
grinder
Stephanie Elliott. D~a RIU• and Theresa Funaro •trap
their ...Ua In cloae, hike o11t and hold tlilht u they practice
racing their catamaran .. Cuatom Natra•• for the Pacific
1000 aerlea atartlnf'July 23 off Southern Ca llfornla .
BOATING BRIEFS
M 0 RC starts Friday A~:a~.~~"~·:.~. ~::1.!n~~.::~.~=:~~"""
m1d5ummer aquatic .. block part>" will fill long Beat.h's 5horelmc VillagC'
Manna and the adJau.•nt park w1lh morl· than 100 new boat\. Jul> 15 through
.\ug. 3
\an Diego Yacht Club will be the
scene \ta111ng Fnday of the Inter·
national champ1onsh1p for the Mid-
get Ocean Rac1ngClass(MORC)w1th
\Cvcral local ~kippers and crew-;
e'<pccted to compete
The MORC conmts of boats 30
feel and under racing with a special
handicap system
On the local scene. s1>. }'3Chl dubs
have scheduled compet1t1on for
e\.Cl)thing from d1ngh1c'i to ocean
racing crafi.
Bahia Connthian Yacht { luh will
stage the founh race of Its Angel man
~ne-; for Performance Handica p
Racing Fleet (PHRP) yachts o A
Saturday, Balboa Yacht ( luh will
host the Ullman .. B'. regatta for
l ido-14'> on Saturda> and the 'l1xth
race of the 66 Senes on Sunday;
Vo)ager5 Yacht Club w1I \Cnd the
PHRF out 1n the fifth race of the
Bogan Series Saturday. Lido l<;le
Yacht Club will conduct its Mid·
'lummer Regatta for one-design boats
Saturday and Sunday
[)own Dana Point way ( ap1strano
PAPARAZZI
Bay Yacht Club send PHRF yachts
out on the fifth race of 1l!. Ocean
Racing 5enes Saturday. and Dana
Point Yacht Club will conduct a one-
des1gn regatta for small boats Satur-
day and Sunday
Huntington Harbour Yacht Club
will be host to the Sabot II Northern
( hamp1onsh1p Jul}' 22-14
Southern California Yachting .\~
soc1a11on calendar
Loi An1ele1 -Loni Beach
Long Beach Yacht Club -Cat
Harbor race (Island Series No. 5-6.
IOR, PHRF). ~aturday. Sunda}'
Santa Monica Bay
Cahfo.rn1a Yacht Club -Summer
Regatta (keel boats). Sa1urda}'. Sum-
mer Regatta (Women One the Water
CPHRF). Saturda}
King Harbor Yacht Club -
~allol) C upquancr final'> \aturda)
Sunda}'
Pacific \.ianna' 'ratbt C tub -
Memorial Ran~ < Pll R r IOR I ~un·
da).
Yacht Rau ng I lnwn -3Sth
annual cruise. July 2117
Hollywood Bowl
bash for the 65th
By MARY LOU HOPKINS
DMIJ "°4 C«Tu "a,......t
Ten thousand red. white and blue balloons floated into the air a\ the Los
Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra played the "Star-Spangled Bnnnl'r,·· opening
the Hollywood Bowl's summer sca'ion
"Tonight we(voluntecrs)arc cdebrat1ngour J'ith annivcr\ary, and 1hc
ph1lharmon1c's 65th summer at the bowl ," said Sharon MeNalley ofC orona
del Mar. Hollywood Bowl Volunteers chairman.
The opening concert was conducted by Bntash-born Jan Lalbao-Keonlg,
who began h1scareerasa pianist. He took over for Lawrence Foster, who had
canceled his bowl engagement because of illness.
Many oft he more than 1,400 people auending the con1.en began arn v1ng
in the bowl about 6 p.m. laden with the trad1t1onal p1cn1c basket'> to dim· on
everything from gourmet foods to Kentucky Fned Chicken
( ompltment1n~ the fleet ot rcnl'allonal hoal\, both power and <,ail \.\di tx·
from 50-75 booth displays by retail t·4u1f)llll'nl lkalL'r'> ;and \en-ll L' wmp.1n1c\
latcnn& to pleasure boat enthus1a!lt'i
1 he park setting. the sunny ~um mer v.l'alhl'I .ind '>penal dearnnl~ 'kill'
pme~ make the Jubilee an C'<ldknt <KlJ\11111 lur a tarnil) outing and hoal
\hopping. Jl(Ording to the SJ>j>n\urt ng °'outhcrn < alitorn1a Manne \\\1~ 1.1·
lion otlic1<.1l'i
"1orc than 11>0 plca'iurl' hoal\ o\l·r _11 kl·t in lt:ngth \\tit tx· a\atlahll 1111
1n\pcc11on 1n lht' Y..aler al the manna d1xk' \n .1Jd111onJI .'.'OC>-plu\ 1ra1k1 .ihk
hoal\ Y..tll he 01td1'ipla .. in the adJal·ent parking area
1 ht· \hon.· d1splayc, v.111 1ndudl' cntr~ lc:\.d outboJn..l runahuut\ high
ix·rtormancc .,i.,, hoats and runabout!.. fom1h ""L'l'kl·nd cabin 1. ru1'>Cr\ and 111)l·n
Lm !..pit and 1.·ahin model sportfi<.hC'rml'n \ \l'kt t111n uf fa mil~ lah1n l nmcr\
and a number of long-range olT'>h orc <sJ}orl h\h1nl( yachlc, will be al the dod.\
\mong the sailboats 10 he \hown arc cn1n-lcvel d1ngh1es. lam1I )' da~·
,,llll'r\ and w1.·ekcntl cru1..er\ a~ v.dl a\ lon11.-ranKc ollshore tru"1ng ya1.hl\
fh c '>ho"" will be open wcektla~' trnm noon tu 8 p.m and on 'ialurtla>'
and ~unda)\ lrom 10 a.m. to 8 pm Adm1~\1on \\.111 be $5 for adult\. S2 tor
1.hlldrcn 6-12 and l h1ldren under 6 fret'
Flight of the Lasers is Sund~y
"c.trl> llJO boat~ arc C'<pccled lo llnl' up l'<.l'>l of the Balboa l'a' 1hon
C...unda) forth1. I pm 'itan of the ( h;1mhcr ot < omm1.·ru··, Flight ol the La\Cr'>
It v.111 bt· lhl' 51 st ··flight .. spon\ort•<I h\ lhl' C ommodorc\ < lub oft he C
of ( hut 11 ha.,n'I alwa)'\ been thC' \port\ 14 lnol l .l\l'r
Finally an
invention to
·right yo~r cat
Those who have bree1ed aero the waters for any len&th of time may ha\'C
noticed that it 1s not uncommon to 5oC( catamaran a capsiZJDI under nifTbret1e'
or aust,~g wind~
Artd catamaran sa1lo"' an: painfully .aware of bow 1.ryina and dift!cuJt it
can sometimes be to naht the craft Often 11 takes two people, bl.It someu.me It
may rcqwrc the helpofsatJors from anolbcrcran. lflt fan't fonhcomina. Hon
may tread water for a long period of time
But John(. ate can naht one in I I. 7 seconds. Alone. In fact, he bu a video
movie of this remarkable feat and has been showma it to intem~ Hoble C'at
clubs in the western U.S. .
Cate himself, a former Laguna Canyon resident, doesn't feel that b11 feat at.
all that remarkable
"Even a 100-pound woman could Naht 11 almost as fast," says Cate Thai
1s 1f he or ~he. or an><me else had the advantage of nu catamaran ngbuna
accessory -wh1(h he has patented
(.ate, 42. had experienced the problem years aao when he sailed the Lake~
of New Mexico on his own catamaran. He dcadcd there had to be an answer
and took his inven11vt> mind to the dra.w1na board.
In time. he came up with a h&h'tweiaht dcvaoe that made it aJl look simple.
The first demonstration took 50 seconds. He refined it, and the tee0n.J
pcrf ormance took 22 ~conds. Again back to the drawing board, and this us;ne
he &Ot 1t down to 11 7 seconds.
Cate, who was reared 1n Palm Spnngs said, .. This may look simple, but)()
does a safety pin " He explained that the 1w1n-hulled catamaran as connected by a trampohne
arrangemnt On capsmng. one hull and lhe sails arc usually part1all)
submerged and the other hull hangs in the air. h often takes nearly 200 pounds
and some acrobatics to tum the craft upngbt, usu\& a strap or line paned over
the upper hull. he explained
"My wife. Karen. and ( bought a Hobie Cat about five years a&o," said
Cate. "We soon became aware oflhe d1fficult1es when we c~ps1zed. In fact, we
spent two-and-a-half hours capsized because I couldn't nght the boat and then:
was no help around on t~e lake. I reasoned that there had to be a better system.
"This 1s why many sailors go out with a two-man crew. but my hope 1s that
this device can open up solo sailing and racing," he added.
The maJOr ingredient in Cate's invention features a lightweight pole about
10 feet long. The accessory consists of two adaptor plates mounted in front of
the trampoline. and the pole has a nng at each end so 1t can be secured to the
adaptor plate. II ndes under the trampoline while sa1hng.
When the catamaran o\fenums. the crew member pos1llons the pole on
the submerged hull and climbs toward the oppome end. This applies pressure
down and outward on the hull. bnng1ng the mast and sails up and the
"airborne" hull down. Cate explained .
Cate has also provided an optional nylon ladder for persons wc1ghinJ 100
10 110 pound~. The ladder 1s suspended from the free end of the pole. With 11.
less arm strength is needed 10 use the nght1ng acces,ory, he explained.
Tht' c\ent started 1n 1<115 a<1 the Flight ol the Snowbirds, fcatunng a
p1l turcsque 11-loot d1ngh }' that ""a'> 1nd1genou<1 to Newpon Harbor The event
1n its he)'da}' drew a'> man)' a~ 150 boats tor a midsummer sudden-death race
around the harbor thal became a popular spectator e' cnl and v1nuall} ued up
other hafbor traffic for a cuupk of hour;
Coast Guard offers boa ting classes
Thr U ~ Coast Guard Auxiliary. Flotilla 15-1 will conduct two Boating
\ale\\ and Seama'>nh1p classes at the Valley High School library. 1801
Green\ 1llc St . Santa .\na. slartmg Aua. 25
The 12-weck sailing class begins Aug. 25 and the class tor power boa ten
bt·gin'> Aug 27 Both clas~c; will run from 7 tu I 0 pm "lav1gat1on as offered
\A.It h both cl3\SCS
Reg1•ma11on ma) be made on the opening night of both classes Fu rther
1nl orma11on ma) tx: ~d b) cal ling Orange { ou nt:r numbers 554-15511
961-0710. or !<42-9978
Lecture to discuss m edicin e at s ea
How should you behave 1fa shark approaches you.,
What 1<, the be'lt wa y to avoid seasickness?
Wh) do so many people show up 1n emergenc} room!i w11h fish hook'>
embedded in 11ome part of the body.,
t.-. 11 puc,<,1hlc to avoid the bends.,
\\ h;it \houh.l thl' '>ea farer include 1n his emergenq kit.,
T he'c arl' 'nmt' of the questions that will be answered al the ( osta Mesa
\1ed1lal < l'nll'r Ho.,p1tal ""hen Mark Monroe M D presents Medical
Emcrgenl ll'\ al \l'J on r hursda} JUI}' 24, from 7 to 9 p.m.
Dr ~onrot· a lt:n1fted \CUBA diver and member of the Nauonal
.\<,soc1a11on of I ndcrv.atcr ln,tructor~. will e>.plam how to deal w11h -or
better }Cl -J\ rnll \Onll' ol thl· L'mcrgenne\ lhal can anse while sWlmmmg.
fishing. ~1hng. \( l A.\ J1, ing and olhl'r \l'ahound s1tuat1ons
Mc Nalley and Dee Edward• ofNewport Beach had prepared an A.mencan
huff et offned chicken. com bread, potato salad. baked bean'>. and deviled eggs
for fnends. which they served dunng pre-concen fe~11v111es
( omm1ttec memberOl1a Q1htD made apncot and bluebclT) pie ... and. of
course.apple p1es complct10g theAmencan menu
Dolorea Kuatln (right) ezplaJna organ to chairman Meredith Porter.
Nicole Quinn handed out
1weeta.
Earlier. McNalle y said she had been working for the bowl for~ven yea,-.;.
"I was president of Corona del Mar H •ah PT A, and I asked my f nend Era I
Perry to get involved (with the PT A). and she agreed 1fl would help with the
H B Volunteers."
Sharon serves on the bowl's board ofd1rcctor<1, and she 1!> 1n charge of mon.·
than 2,000 volunteers including members oft he Carnage Clubs and Area
Ciroup4!
Mc Nolley. who commute" to Los Anaelcs from Corona del Mar at lea'>t
twice a week, 1sal\O active with the Orange County Ph1lharmon1c ~1rt>
"I ha ve fun do1na thc\C thingc;,and Tam at an age that I don't have lodo
anythin& I don't want to do," Mc Nalley ,.1d w11h a laugh
Opening niahtcha1rman Meredltli Porter ofNcwpon Beach. and her
comm11tcc planned an "Old-Fashioned P1cn1c an the Park" theme for the
evenina Tunes from the p y 90\ and roanna 20s era dnncd throuah the bowl
from a barrel organ (played hy Dolorn J(a1tln), a barbershop quartet. and
5haron's son, JH MeNalley and Brian Wllllam1 (The Blue Duo) play1na their
basund ban tone sax duo
And Bill White strolled amonap1cn1ckers play101 the ukclelc
Olp Ou1nn·s vanddau&htcr, Nlcole Qal.Da, 8, of Costa Mesa, was the
youngest of I 00 bnahtly clncf youna hosts and hostess d1stnbuting to
concenaoe~ pieces of individually wrapped candy donated hy Sees'< and}'< o
ARer the final note oftheconcen . featunna Flutist Jean-Pierre Ram pal. in
a pr<>Jrlm that included works by B«thoven, V1vald1, Mozart. Bernstein and
Pre van, the crowd ~lowly made their way out of the bowl
"ihat wusa lovelyevcn1na." commented HB volun1eerVlr1lala
mallwood c t Corona del Mar.
Paparanl 11 e41tH by Dally Piiot Style Editor Vida Dean. Ginny mall wood and Dee ttdwarde. Sharon and Dr. Michael Mc1'alley.
'
Or1nge Coat DAILY PILOT I Thurad1y, Jul~ 17, 1886
Iler bee set for ABC
NEW YORK (AP) -Lind.a El· souroe, who sp0kc on condition of I~. the populat but non-con. anonymity.
formist TV joumalistandanchor, h .. ABC as expected to announoc that
t\iracd ~n CBS' mott lucativc Ellerbee would come to ABC the
offe-randi stt to join ABC News next middle of ocxt week. The avcemcnt ~k. a urce close to the neao. can't be announced until then, eo-uauons saf'-cord.Ina to an 1ndusll)' source, be-
Elktbee s main w11nment will be cause NBC ha the naht to match any
to wntt and nchor "Our World,·· offers for a 3<k1ay period. That
ABCs new historical news p~ penod expires July 22.
tbat will compete with NBC's 'The Ca.Its to Ellerbce's home were not
Cosby Show• on Thursda)' night returned Monday. Sourtt-s at CBS ~nnina th1t fall. tht' source said. ~•d CBS executives had not been
he also will do her former "Today" able to reach El lerbee. reatun, .. T.G .l.F.," on ABC's "Good But CBS insiders said they believed
Momma Amcnca" on Fndays. Ellerbee was set to tum down CBS'
In addition, she will be host of an offer. which was for her to anchor a
hour news proiram two nights a week rt'vamped "CBS Morning News"
foUowina .. Ni(\hlline." That show 1s program that would be called "Across
tatJCled to began thi~s iwiian~l~eir.~sajij1d~1~hiciiAiimien!j· ca~. "i!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~l
.,.. • ruc11 001.1Y srmo Ta. ca&ISl
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SADDLEBACK 1'
581-5880
H TDllO AD AT AOC.l!.llHD I
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1240 240, u o
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I VIEJO MALL
· \h I •'l ,,~,O
s D FWY ro C:MOWN Villl• •' ' .. •mn_..
''flntS HEWl'S .. , orr· <K·lll
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II 45 I 50 • 00 615
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NOW PLAYING ... u
UA-. ~021
COSTAlllESA
EOWWOI Cinema C.n1t1
FOUNTAIN YALLfY
£C!'Qrds fO\ll'IQlll Yll'*'I
839 1500
LAOUNA HIU..I Of'ANOE
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(l13)6t1·0833 634·2~~
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IWWilllAMS· PETER 0100.E
CLUB
PARADISE
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•NI 154-Ull mwuos t11WJSTTY
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Reunion of
Army band
setatOGC
The )14th Army pec1aJ Sctvica
Band. which performed 1n the Euro-
pean Theater fro~ 1946 th~ah
1949. will conduct 1t1 40\h muuon
concert at Oflnat Coa t CoUcgc
unday aftt'mOOn, July 27. .
Tht' conccn begtns at 4:30 pm. 1n
OCC's fine Art.$ Rccatal Kall.
Tickets. priced at $6. will be sold at
the: door
Armed forcci. Network (AFN) was
home for the 314th Sand. The 314Lh
performed 70 AFN bi& band jau
concerts during itli three years of
existence. It al'io offered numerous
star·studdcd tours and conccns
throughout Europe.
The band replaced the Glen Miller
Special Services Band as the: Armed
Forces· special scrv1ocs entertain-
ment group It ~ormed Sunday
afternoons on AFN's radio program,
"It's All Yours." The program was
earned throughout Europe.
Th1rty·fivc former members of the
band wi II be in Orange County for the
three.day reunion They'll stay at the
Mamoll Hotel m Newport Beach.
Former band members will be com-
ing from 18 different states as well a
Sweden and England.
ft'alUred pcrformt'rs include intcr-
nattonally known bassist Red
M11chcll. trombonist George Masso.
composer and p1an1st Phil Spnnger,
and vocalist Janie Thompson. Lin
Anson. lirsl director of the band, will
conduct.
Jazz greats slated
for Irvine concert
From New York City to Los Angt'lcs. some of the most venerable
namc<o 1n Jall will perform al tht' Pacific Coas1 Ja:n Festtval Sunday.
i.\ug JI , at the Irvine Hohda) Inn
fhe event runs from 2 10 I 0 pm 1n tht' hotel''> three ballrooms.
Admission for tht' day.long event is $25 Parking ts free and a no.host
bar and buffet will be a' a1lablc.
Ft'atured art1~1s include the Gerald W1l~on Orchestra Short)
Rogt'rs Qutnlt't. Ro nn1t' Matthe"'s Tno. Waller Bishop Quintet.
Claude W1lhamson Tno. Bob Brookmc)'crQumtt't, Frank Morgan All·
lar Se·rn·t. Pepper Adams and the Jack Sheldon Qumtt't, Feather wnh
Weaver Copeland and Company. and Robert Conti.
The groups. each performing lwtCC dunng the fe~tt\al wall be
ret.0rded 1 .... c b) Fantas:r/( ontcmporary Record.,
(oopt:ratt,c-spon'>Or'> of lhc event arc Orange Coast C ollcgc
( ommunll) Services. KLON-FM, NBC National Radio. Irvine
Hohda}' Inn. Yamaha Pianos. and Trend Records and Tapes
T1cketsareon sale an()( C's Community Services Office located an
the ~tudt'nt Center Building Hours at 9 am to 7 p.m. weekdays. and
8 a m to noon on Saturda}'s. V1-.a and Mastercard holders ma)
purchase t1ckcl\ by phone Tickets arc also available at 1h~· Ir. inc
Holiday Inn
For further 1nlormatton phone 432-5880
"RUTHLESSLY FUNNY
FARCE."
ORANG£ COUNTY llGIS'Rll.
\l1tha<tl Rur~lt
• IOll ·-•MJlWISru -NOW PLAYING -... .. _ 1:=:'·-T--• .. -, ..... ' .. 111., Jj ~ ... .......... ·~· ....... 191 )6'1 ... _ ~-··Al .. ,...I>-.
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exhilarating
masterpiece?'
-Derlcl ea.-1uaa.
NIK'·TV, L08 A.~OELr.8
-CINE·FI OONE-
UtEAKEAS ARE BACK
STADIUm a
Ut 11 Zl11Sfl'llt !Im ltff•'I"'
"°"...c&• UNDIUI TMC s CM .. UIY MOC* ('Pa-U)
Alto Wlldc:ah (Ill)
--~THC oa&ATllOUS DSftCTWa to• ll'lut Off eHt (~c1)
Onld eowte
l.AlrY••nt ~· ll'lut ll'olt•rt•lll II !ll'O·t J)
n••IS-u.&U OAY~f ... 11) SHOWS A"f (1100) tl 1t)l·>o7 0 I0·05
TOP 0'* INJ IHOW$AT 112 H)(I U)I ta 7 JI 6 I SI
'""41.JUS .. Oft.R (It, Pfutl Down • Out
lit eeveriy Hllh (Ill)
KA•Aft KIO U C'NJ (U II) (2•:11) 4111 7 , ••• ,,
•alplt M.ccltlo KAllAft IUD II "'9,
ltlut QuklllllHr (~)
Dl'IVl ll•S D...-1 • WUtft/7 JI W••• I Clh .. flll Ullfft 12 I IU E U•"" !ft._, I
Friday, J1l7 It
~ (M.arch 217April 19): Scenario h1&hli&hU change, movement.
fl1n111on,. s.pec11I reading mateml. Member of opposite sex bas maoy qu~t1o~s. 1s drawn to you. Travel 1s pan of scenario. Gemini, Virao, Saamanus people play roles.
T~~R~S (April 20.May ~0): Family discuuion centc,., around bu~get
-dcc1s~on 11. reached c,onccm1ng sal.e or purchase of luxury item or art obJCCt.
Domcsttc adjustment 1s featured. Libra, Scorpio play siarnficant roles.
GEMINI (May 21 -J une 20): Agreement could be broken -streu self·
reliance, realize you'll get "second
chance." Define terms. be rcahst1c,
avoid self-dcccpuon You'll get pub-
licity and this could aid 1n ach1ev1na
goal. Pisces playo, role. SYDNEY
CANCER (June 21-July 22) 0
Emt>has1s on patience, detcm11nat1on. MARR
wtlhngness to accept challenge of added •••••••••••• respons1b1hty Focus on basic tasks,
employment, people who rely upon your Judgment. sincerity. Capncom,
another Cancer play paramount roles.
LEO (July 23-Au~ 22): Member of opposite sex will urge you to "throw
caution to the winds.' Spotlight on speculat1on, physical attraction, vanety,
vigor. tendency to act on impulse You'll finish major project and have
reason to celebrate.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpt. 22): Stres~ independence.~reat1v1ty, ability to get
to hcan of matters. You learn exactly where you stand, you'll be at right place
at "special" moment Transacuon is completed -know it and don't
"hnger."
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.22): Remember lam1ty obhgat1ons, realize that one
you helped in past needs reassurance of your loyalty. Sense of direction,
purpose wall be restored. Shon journey could involve reunion. Trust your
hunch.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No' 21 ): Curb tendency toward extravagance. If you
wait, you"ll have opponun1ty for genuine barpin. If you rush. you could
spend recklessly and quality might suffer. Gemini, Sagittanus play key roles.
SAGl'M' ARIUS (Nov 22-Dec. 21 ): What seems a roadblock actually
works to your advantage Means security •~ improved, you aTC less likely to be
v1ct1m of accident ()Cle high, you'll rcah1e momentum is swinging m your ~~~ -
CAPRICORN (f)c( 22-Jan 19)· Look behind scenes. dig deep for
mformauon. do some personal "detedl\ e work." Young relat1 ve. nephew or
niece. plays major role lnqumes will be made concerning possible vacation
tourney
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 18) Wash comes true. family member confides
asp1r:lt1ons You'll be an poslllon to help one yo u love. Emphasis also on
fnends. hopes. desires. powers of persuasion. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio people
figu~ prommentl)
PISCES (Feb. I 9-March 20): Techniques can be streamlined. you'll get
glimpse of what occurs behind scenes You obtain privileged information.
professional supenor lends suppon Clandesune meeting relates to romanct'.'
V1fiO native play~ role.
Grandma 's magic
usually returns
"I don't want to go to arandma's.''
The first time you hear yo11r duld
aay it, &t's as shocking as dancing on a
JtllVC, sp&n.ina on the flag. or knock· ma app(e pie.
How dare she disfavor this woman
who looked into her scroungy, red,
wrinkled newborn face as she lay
toothless and bald and said proudly.
"She's beautiful." How dare she
diecard this woman who let her bake
cookies with d1ny hands and pound
on her piano with sticky fingers.
When dad the magic go? She used to
be an the car before her parents had
their coats on. Grandma hid Easter
eggs behind every bush. She let her do
"grown-up" things hkc mow the grass
and iron towels and pick tomatoes.
(She would never know what grand·
mad1d with all thq_scgrccn tomatoc!i..)
When did the magic gol! Maybe at
was the day she looked anxiously out
at th~ "big table" 1n the dining room
and grandma saw the look and said.
"Maybe you should stan eating with
the adults now." (Before that. she had
food fights in the ki tchen with her
cousins.) A door closed that day ..
ever so softly ... on childhood and she
never even knew 1t. Had she tned the
door, she would have realized ll
swung only one way. She could never
go back apm. The tnp through the
door leading to the "bag table" was
awkward, not nearly the fun she
thought 11 would be. There was cigar
smoke that made her cough. The)
talked about washing machines and
poht1cs and who was 1n a "famil y
way.·· And at was bonng beang an the
crack between childhood and matun-
ty
From that day forward, grandma's
house was never the same. The player
piano sounded out of key and wasn't
any fun anymore. The front steps
weren't an adventure. They were
ER11
BoMBECll
broken down and a rather pathetic
to)'. Playing at her dress1n1 table was
ch1ld1sh and lhc makeup seemed old
and stale Rolhng out cookies was
dull Children's conversation was
silly and adult conversauon was
mcaningles~
There was nothing to oo at grand-
ma'!>
Why dtd the magi<. go''
It wa!i. llmc. It was ume to move hie
alona. There were experiences to
ga1her, fncnds to cultivate. inLcrcs~
to be indulged and dec1s1ons 10 be
made. There wen! thin~ she had to
do alone .. awa~ from the family It
was time to expand her world
.\nd grandma\ house·> For several
years, 11 d1mm1'lhcd -along w11h
grandma Both became \mailer with
e\Cl} v1s11 She took along books to
cushion 1he boredom and feigned
homework to ka'e early
It wasn't until 1;hc had children ol
her own that she had time to renect on
the hou~ and its occu pants and what
they had meant to her .\nd she
hungered for II In de'>c nbing 1110 her
o"n children. "The rooms were '>O
la fic yo u could '>k.ste 1n them .\nd
there was this wonderful piano that
)OU played with )Our lee1 .\nd th ose
magnificent step'l that I pla)ed on fur
hours·· l he magic had returned
··1 don"t want to go to grandma\·
Let the doorclo~c \oft I\ C 1randmJ
The\ 'II tx· hack
Orange Cout DAIL. Y PILOT -
BOU> DECLA&Ell TO It. GU
Both vutntrable. North deala
NOITB
WEST
•KZ
'V A?e• 0 1e•a
• 108 7
t 1a
'V QJt82
OKQ6
•AKQ
EAST .,., ..
'V 10 5 3
0 J108
•&•3 SOUTH
•AQ1081\
?IC
A92
•J982
The b1ddanl(.
North Eut South Wnt
l • Pua l CV Pus
2 • Pus
4 NT Pass
ft NT Pus
Op<>runl( lead
3NT P ... &• Pua
Pa111 Pua
~Vt'n O~ V
Wht>t ht>r you are dedaranl( or de
fending, life I'\ mu ch ea.<oe r 1f you
know where you art> going This
hand from a Learn matrh illustrates
our point.
S1nct4 he had a five card heart
sun and a weak doubleton in
spades !'l:orth eschewed an oJ>('n
mg bid of one no trump IJ\ favor of
one heart That led to problems
when South responded one spadt>,
since a rebid of one no trump would
have been an underbid while two
no trump would have bttn a
.,tretC'h Both l'ionh'l temporized
b} bidding a three-C'ard club ,u1t.
and six no trump was reached at
both tables. at one after the auc-
tion shown above
CHARLES
Goaoa
Ou1
SHlllFF
could not look for better, ao he took
his ace and continued with a dia-
mond. That, too, wa5 won m
dummy, and when the ten of hearts
dropped declarer had 12 tricks
wtthout a finesse. one spade, four
hearts, three diamonds and four
clubs.
At the other table West allowed
the king or hearts to win. Declal'er
crossed to the queen of clubs and
led the queen of hearts, and West
ht>ld up once more Now declarer
wa8 In a dilemma
Why buy two dinners when one will do?
Both Wests made a pa.,s1ve d1a
mond lead. and both oec1are111 cor-
rectly JUdged to go after hearts
first. They won the opening lead an
dummy and continued with a heart
to tht> king. One West decided he
He had only 10 tricks available,
and to make the two he was short
to fulfill h1 -s contract, he needed ei-
ther two winning spade finesses or
it right view in hearts. But which
heart was J(oing Lo come down on
the third round the ate. in which
CllS(' declarer had to lead a low
heart from the table, or the ten, m
whath event IL was necessary to
continue with the jack? He opted
for a low heart East's ten won ano
a spade shift assured a two tricl<
defeat Bul at was really no guess
Had West started with three heart.a
to the ace, he could have won the
sernnd 1 rick in the suit to defeat
the ront ra<'l
i::~~· $Cf: \l otl ~-a r.. trs • :::: DEAR ANI'. LANDERS.I've
never seen an)th1ng m your column
about my pct peeve
I am a senior c1t1zen who eats out
wt th fnends a couple of times a week.
We all have good incomes When we
go to a restaurant one couple order a
single salad She eats half of 1L and
passes 1L to her husband and he
finishes 11 They do the ~me w1th
soup and dessen They claim the\
cannot cat such large pon1on~
If ll 1s the amoun1 of food that
bothers them wh> can't they ask for a
smaller pomon and be prepared to
par the full pnce')
would like to hear )Our opinion
on this subject It looks to me as 1f
they are cheap and 11 1s embarrassing
10 be 1n their t.:ompan). -DON'T
LIKF CHINTZINESS.
DEAR CHINTZ: Cheap? Surely you
jest. Wby should anyone throw out
either food or money?
The couple who cannot handle large
portions of food should consider
H klng for one order of u lad, soup or
de11ert -"to be shared by two." I
know of no restaurant that would
refase socb a request. This woald be
lnflnJtely more appetizing to ob·
servers titan pa11lng a bowl of
wiflDlshed so11p or a plate of half.
eaten salad or dessert to another
party. • • • DEAR ANN LA NDERS I decided
to wnte after reading an an1cle from
.. Sympathetic 1n Flonda.'' I. also
ha\C an emot1onally disturbed ~n.
··Jason:· who 1s 6 years old. He. too,
has been dt.lglloscd as hypcracuvc. I
ha\C taken him to four ps)ch1atns1s
and tned three different kmcts of
mcd1ca11on for hyperactivity. So far
nothing seems to work
Jason has a violent temper and
breaks everything he gc1s his hands
on. I can't let ham outside by h1msel(
because I never know what he might
do
My main problem 1s that I'm afraid
he will seriously injure his 1wo
yo unger brothers. J already caught
him push mg the baby down the stairs
and kicking him. When I talk to Jason
about his behavior he says he is sorry
and won't do 11 again. Ten minutes
later he as doing the same thing.
Spankmg makes him worse. He never
cries. in fact. he laughs at me. This
makes me funous and caust•s me 10
do and sa y things I alh ashamed of.
I have: been going around 1n circles
with this boy for almost two years I
don't know what to say or du
an) more I \\<OUld appreciate an)' help
}OU can gJ\c me -LOST I"'
WI CONSIN
DEAR LOST: Your state bas one of
the flnett medical centers in the
country. It Is usoclated with tbe
University of Wl1coaala la MadJson.
Take yoar son there for evaluation,
first by a aearologlst and then by a
behavioral specialist. I also suggest
tbat you consider taking Jason to an
allergist. Hyperactivity may be
caused or auravated by certain
additives lD food.
Please let me know tbe result of
your visit. I really feel for you, dear.
If tbe doctor suggests family counsel-
ing along wltb medication, I hope you
wlH follow tbrougb. • • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I "as
ama1ed to read m yo ur colu mn that
ANN
UMBERS
I' percent ol l ..., u111cn\ 20 \Car' ol
age f\\-rlh eighth gradt• cJucat1nnc. or
les'>) arc lunl'l1tHIJ1l~ 1llrl\'IBtt· (an
~ ou tell nw where lhec;c people Ii H'' I
find 1he figurcc, m1nd-hogt1,l1ng _,...
FR IN R0.\"10"-.L
DEAR RO: According to Karen
Norton at Laubach Literacy Artion.
Utah bas the lowest rate of lllittrates
----......... ClA•. ~ ----
o:= ~-o:· ~~' :: °""'"'•or,. *a..r ~· ~-4•
G U M E 0 5
I I I' I 1
1
f II I N B I ! I I I
PRAV O I' I I t I _
~'°' ...... ~· •!di -..... ...,,.._. "°""9
...... I --..... IN 61' OI conw•r•et•o" • t\Ot O••O r-------~-"'°",.. l ef*l!O
t--.... IK--..Ll_1..,IN__,Gl_1 .. ,,,..l -1! Oto -~··· ...... _ . ..,
· :.::Y,;; ::C ::Jr::!• :· r I' 1· I' ;
o · , .. ,. I I rol I I I
The states with tbt highest pt>r-.-----------------------------,
eentages of Illiterates are Kentucky J 0 DAY IS with 32.8 perC'ent, Tennessee 27 6.
~';!~';::~la 27.5 and Arkansas with c R 0 s s w 0 RD p u zz LE
Alarm makes aut o
safe from th e c ops
ACROSS
1 Sports name
5 Spree
9 Garmen•
14 Periods
15 Soon
60 Surcea~
61 Freeway
mess
63 Ancestor
64 Afghan crl\'
65 Greek leller
66 Harrow s rrvar
67 SIMChfll>
PREVIOUS PUZZLE lot. VED
.\ craft~ chent an San Antonio
· repons he wired his car's windshield
wiper to an electronic alarm system
So when a lav. officer li fts a wiper to
put a ti cket •hereunder, a taped
fem ale voice ~creams, .. Don't touch
me'" And a deafen mg alarm stans to
whoop.
Wh~ should 11 routinely take a week
for a fir'lt-clas\ letter to go less than
250 male~ between Ottawa and Tor-
onto') It does.
Thr two things that gi ve the moc;I
people the most trouble. debt and
matnmony. have this in common -
both arc far easier to get into than out
of. So observes our Love and War
man He'd not abolish either. certain-
ly But he docs make the point that
debt and matnmony arc too little
understood by the young.
Q. In a major league baseball game,
an umpire can throwout any pla)'eror
any manager Who else"
A. Any spectaior
Q Docs Nie Bible discus~ .. the
oldest profession .. .,
A. At length In •m places in
Proverb~. for example, 11 tells ho"
prostitutes entice their customers.
Q The larg1•c;t son of mammal that
ever lived. the blue whale, still cx1s1~
What ahout the largest known
primate'>
A. That would be the gorilla,
hkew1~ still a \Uf\ 1vor
The old Norw word "odd1 '" meant
"point of land ·· Some Norsemen
who li ved on llp'i of penrn'iulas.
thertfrom. wt'rt named "Odd " And
that mt>n1kcr has t'lecn passed down
to a very fe~ .\mencan men c.1111 \o
known ;\ k )'our granddad 1f he''
ever heard of 3 man named "Odd"
Sir 1f comp.11no1c. nd1rnle your
1.auoo. rtm1nd lht'm that both -\he
Lincol n oand John F 1'..rnncth hkc
w1~ sponed ta ttoo'
Our C h1cl Prottnmlr\alor 1ha1
dreamer thank'> the ~pan· YI M'
~1cnt1c;t~ wall rnme up v.11h a,~., 110
'
L.M.
BOYD
graphrt la\l'r rrlinl'd enough 10 p1n-
pmn1 from nn high 1hc whereabout"
ol milr1J11.1nJ ~ro'c' and opium
pnpp\ p.lll hl''>
Onl\ k1n~d11m in l uro11'' that
makl''ll'f\'n11m1.il ll't' 111cr11"n1n.,t·I,
" Rrn.11 n
T t•ll the mo!.; thll\(' panrnkt''I will be
a lot hghtu 11 s lntle duh \O<fa '"
m1~cd 1n10 tht" hatter with the milk.
16 So1ttal"y ont'
17 Stnplings
18 Form
20 V1vac•t~
21 Holds
22 USSR city
23 Forward
25 Paving preCP
27 EQu•ne QP.'\•
29 Fri mov1:>rs
30 Stick
34 Fall mo
36 01spro11"
38 M ingle
39 TV worker
42 Accent"
43 Seal
44 BetorP prt>I
45 Weapon
46 Portuguese
com
47 GoodbvP
49 Croc s co1 1son
5 1 Standar<l'>
54 Procure
58 1ns41t eQQ Q D1dn't tht• nwunlam mrn 111 tht·
old 'W ec;t "' \' longer than other ,
people'' 3
68 Jap1tnPst1
coin
69 0Apresc;
DOWN
1 Prt>lia IOr
donna
2 Thin ii~
3 Tough IUC.~
4 Asce11r
5 Speed un•1
6 Forest oxf'!n
7 Bu1ld1nq
pro1ec1
8 Being
Q Chule
10 t>ao
11 Burden
12 Allowo;
13 Elt1en1
19 Wfl1gh1 units
}4 Encrrclfls
• 6 VPrt•C•I P•f'f
~8 Trawl
.\ That thn J1d \\.hen th\' ._,-4-l----l~-+-
na11 onal l1k niX·c1ann wa., 42. the
mountain men"> hk l'\pc.'Ctanq "a'
64. E:.xeru~\' J1et. than .1ir -\Om\· 17
thing l cpt them &rnng
20
Q Dt'ath \allc' "nPt rrall\ a trm·
valley. nght'' 23
A 'io sa) 1he ha11 'pllttcr' •\ 1ruc
''alley 15 eroded h'r "al\•r Death
Valley wasn't It\ 11 grabcn, .1 &rt•at
trough lefl from uphca\al
Ou.•ter plca\C' note What \ou·, e 1----t--+--
heard ahout cottagc.-cht't'\C as am' th 39
<\hall cup ol 11 hll'I rnorr t .1lnnr~ than a mt'd1um ~11rd Jleitaln ._4_2_...~_....._ __ _.., __
[!ye dt.~ \Of\ \a\ ~OU \hllUld watch 45 tele\1\ion from a dl\tant·c l"~ual to at
least fi \t' 11 mr\ t hl" w 1dth nl •he
screen
··(ho" t\kin wnh nnodlt•'" 1s
rt'dundan1. In ( hmc\t' ch"an-mcin 1\
nOQdlt's, fned ~6~,~~-+--+--+---+--
Whv Ito" n" 11 rnl.r' 4 ' mu\l ll'., It 64
\OU \mile. 1t onh 1al..C'' 17 mu'l h·'
L.M Boyd '' e "adh••trd 67
rolumal•f
'
:;o Mon oan
.11 In three parts
12 GfOIOSt'
source
i\ 8 ot NB
34 Ron~ pref
1S ~tulCh
37 flfl•l!litQltPI
38 C•tv 1n
LOmbanh'
40 Born
41 Negat ve •n H•Qh·r.'lnkeid
10
Hindu
48 Pitched
49 Presenrs
50 Cowbo-, oea·
52 tmb«lle
53 Otst>ursed
54 Roman
emperor
55 Raised
56 A.n arurr
Si' D1stanr
59 IRS W (\fl.P•
62 Lat: uf"lror
, 1 1.3
---~----~-~~--~~------------------------------------------------------------~------------------------~~~-~~~--~~--~ ..
by Bii Keane
"Satellite dishes look like knocked·over
beach umbrellas."
llARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
"You got It right. mom is baking cookies!"
PEANUTS
WELL l1M GLAD TUAT'S
OVER ~ IF AN'f'ONE EVER
MENTIO~S "si,.t~VAL CAMP''
TO ME AGAIN I'll l(ICK ~IM 1
-&\1 -./
·"j
GARFIELD
TUMBLEWEEDS
DRABBLE
ROSE IS ROSE
il.-\E. TIAlt-G iO ~ 16 l(E.AMIN
CALM I 'LL CALL OR .
BIG GEORGE by Vtrgll Partch (VIP)
"Whaddya mean, you heven't 1 thing to
wear? That's MY llne."
DENNIS THE MENACE
;
J
(
~ . r
by Hank Ketcham
by Charles M. Schulz
I CAN1T TMINK OF
AN"f KIND OF CAMP
i'D LIKE TO 60 TO!
MOW ABOUT OlOCOLATE
OHP COOK.IE CAMP 7
• •
by Jim Davis
by Tom K. Ryan
1H~LJ IHEf~ MOLt'THS.. tAOS~ Fe~~1Hl~'mf~7Hf 6-A-rl:~ '( iO THE 1LMMV: ..
by Kevin Fagan
by Pat Brady
BLOOll COUNTY
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
SHOE
NO' I HAVE TO TALK TO
MR DRIVER ABOUT SOME
BUSIN ESS MATTERS
ANO THEN 00 e.ACK TO
THE OFFICE'
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
lfY,. Nff I« Ml IOlll
~-~--7'1M~ ow At1tlflJ:I 1'11/116 ~ 0-'fHl~MP
lfllWtCMr aM tMJ .fMt_
I
by Jim Davis
by Lynn Johnston
UNLESS, OF~, rra CHANGED.
)
»J~ ..
I KNOW THIS.THING WITH KIM
HAS FLOORED 'IOU AS MUCH AS
IT HAS ME ' I HOPE V0V WON'T
USE IT AS AN EXCUSE TO 60
OUT AND GET DRUNK I ONE
PROeLEM IS ALL I CAN~ HANDLE AT ONE TIME' .-
by Tom Batluk
WE 1...£FI °™REE ROO~
STRANDED ... A'f HOME Pl.A1t. f
_....'--_ _,_
·~
DOONESBURY
'
NO. THc
/Q(/)O/AM· ...
t~~~. I K)O()C;"Xi'
f~
j
by Garry Trudeau
APPA/lENTLY, MY ~l(i45
A COi.JiU flM:Rlr5.
lt:~HIS
INVf1ROON 70 Me IUeil
I Aa»RSJ HIS Tl1lE
"~---:.
BankAmerica posts $640M loss
NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe nation's
second·tarsest U.S. bank holdana
company, BankAmerica Corp., said
today it had a net Joss of $640 million
in the ICOOnd quaner of this ytar
surpassina ha year-earUer loss by 89
percent.
Separately. Bankers Trust New
York Corp. ~d its net income rose by
19 percent an the KCOnd quarter
compared with the same pcnod la!t
~car.
Bank.America, parent of lhe sec-
ond-b1gcst U.S. ba.nk. said ns loss 1n
the quarter compared with a loss of
PBS host
challenges
IRS claim
WASHINGTON (AP) -Louis
Rukeyscr, host of "Wall St~t Week"
on Public Broadcasting Service. is
challenging an lntcmal Revenue Ser·
vice claim that he and his wife owe
nearly $500.000 in wesand penalties
becau~ the I RS disallowed losses
from some of their tax shelters.
Louis and Alexandra G . Rukeyscr.
"ho hve 1n Greenwich. Conn .. filed
suit 1n Tax Court disputing lhe entire
deficiency claimed by the IRS. They
were billed an additional $63,777 in
taxes for 1980 and $339,079 for 1982,
plus interest and penalties totaling
well over $50,000.
The alleged deficiency for 1980
grew out of the IRS' refusal to allow
the Rukeysers an investment tax
credit on master recordings the)' had
purchased The IRS contended the
investment was made with a motive
of reducing taxes. not making a profit
The agenC} also "refused 10 allow a
deduction for a S36,000 loss claimed
as a result of the investment 1n the
recordings.
S338 million an the eccond quarter of 1985.
Durina the ~od quaner of this
year, the San Francttco-besed banker
took a loan loss provi11on of $988
million, increasina hs reserves for future loan losses to S2. l 9 billion, the
company said.
"We are very ~izant of the siu
of thiJ increase, • Aid Samuel Armacost, BankAmerica president
and chief executive officer ... Still, the
action rcnccu the unmiSlakable reali·
ty of thete conditions aod the effects
Lhey miaht have on our portfolio over
Loula Rukeyaer
The I RS rejected the Rukeysc~·
deduction of $786,428 for losses
growing out of their investment in
four limned partnerships involved 1n
real estate leasing and the !>ale of
commodities and secur111e~
time."
ArmaC()tt said the dcc1t1on
&temmed mainly from lhc imp&c:t of
the oil prioc Jump on reaJonal
C()()nomie1. dePftSSC<i oommercial
reaJ estai.e markets and Third World
debt problems.
Annaco t wd that with the in-crease, the loan lou reserve rep.
resented 2.67 percent of total loans
outstanding. exceedina the ratio for
most other mAJOr banks.
Net intttest revenue declined to
$984 million from $989million1 year
earlier. while non-interest revenue
"* b)' 17 percent to SS.O million.
Total non-interest expenses dipped to
S l .12 billion from S 1.13 billioo 10 tho
second quarter or 1985.
Armacost sajd BankAmenca hid
eliminated l ,200 jobs durina the
second quarter. and Uld a tol&l of
S,OOOworkers would be cut bythecl\d
of the year.
.. This. t<>acther with our onaoina
huina freeze and expen$C reduction
pr()IJ1lm, will allow us to meet our
pl of reducing totaJ corpor11.e
expense ror 1986 to below the level or
198.5, .. Armacost said.
. Network's outlets tell
how to start business
By Jiif HATRcOcK
o.llf""'C.• ' ...
The current flood of Californians
leaving the office or plant to start their
own companies shows no signs of
abating despite Small Business Ad-
ministration statistics which show
that eight out of I 0 businesses started
fail within two years.
Recoanmng the need for bu'1ness
guidance o utside of the classroom.
Entrepreneur Magazine has started
licensing Start A Business o utlets
across the country. The stores spec1al-
izc to materials targeted toward
entrepreneurs who are looking for
help in starting a business.
Stephen Oakley, national sales
manager for the magazine. recently
opened a Start A Business in Orange
to service Orange County. It carries
26 7 manuals produced by the staff of
Entrepreneur that deal with every
·aspect of stantng and operating a
business. ..aid Oaklev. The best-
selling product has been a set of
bus1ne!>S encyclopcd1as which sell for
aboutS200
Manuals. ba..cd on the assumption
1ha1 the bu~ er ha!> no business
!
l ,
~
backJround. teach the basics of
starting a business.
"The number of people who fail in
their own businesses is staggering and
the main reason they fail is they don't
know where to go to acqum: the
necessary tools and information to
get started properly and keep o n the
nght track," he said.
Since the store opened an January.
27 others have joined the network.
which Oakley said will sell I S0,000 to
17 5.000 manuals worldwide an 1986.
"&rv1ce-typc businesses that are
recession-proof arc the most popular
n~ht now, particularly specialty re-
tailing.'' Oakley said.
The htcraturc also discourages
some people.
"Lots of customers look at what
yo u need to. do to work for yourself
and decide not to go into business
But it's a lot better to spend a few
dollars on some hteraturc instead of
plunging into a venture on!) to lind
that tt requires more effon and
money than you arc willing to
H\\CSt." he said.
OTC UPS & DOWNS
UP'S AMP DOWNS NEW YORK (AP) -The followlfl9 1111 sllOws the Over • tne · Counter 1lock1 end w1rren11 that have gone up tne most end down tne mo11 l>esed on percent of change tor Wldnn· d • v No &eeurllles trading below S2 or 1000 lheru ere lnclUded. Net end i>ercenlage cNlllGll ere tne difference between the previous c10sl110 price end Wednesdlv's lest or bid o r I c I
NYSE UPS & DOWNS
NEW VORK (APJ -Tiie lo119wlno 1111 1110w1 lhe New '(orlr. Stock Exchange 1tocks and warrents lhat have oone uo the moSI and down Ille most bit.ad on rrcent or change reoardleu of volume or Wednesdev
No 1«urll1es lradlno below U ere Incl· ·11dld Net and percentage chenoes ere the difference l>*tween the prevlou1 closlll9 price end Wednudav's 2 om
o r I c e
Ne me ~ RobsP\wCon f:=ePe 1 20of ~amesRvr s l~ ~El~·
So.sin PS MAI Basic n loml\Mtll wt I ANA 2 17of I BlocrtH ' GlbrllFln
I ~~o:'" Wevne Gou Nevl'1er
1 NtJilr wtA ~K~ ·lhn111 o~ A<~ll N Pt1arm ~~~l~o '
'4 an1ron S roEnov
Pct
8: ~ll: UP I .I UP I 7
Uo 1 ·i UP 1
UP 1
Up 1 1 UP I UP ~g p
8: 191 ~g •
~i .1 u: ~,
~g t 7
UP '7
BURNHAM
Scott Burnham
cited lJy Nexus
Scott T. Barabm, executive vice president of Nena l>e'Y~
mat Corp.'1 c-entraJ division to Irvine. ha1 been awarded the firm 1
outstandina achievement award. Bumbam, who ovttSICCS and
regulates the d1v1saon's rut estate ponfolio, WU honored ror
significant contribution ta Nexus' suc:cess and for c.ttc:cllcocc in
business lcadenhip. A native of Newport Beach. Bum~ resides in
Corona del Mar. • • • WlUlam Batlaad, manaftment con ultant and former AROO
public relations manager, has Joined Alica It McGarve7,lae. in Irvine
as account manaacr. Butland will mana~ a search division for the
firm and will work closely with the .,ency s maJorcltenu on finanaal
relations. The Laauna Niauel resjdent bepn his public ~tauons
career 1n 197 1 with Atlutle llicMlelcJCe • • • Sarma Oiol1D1 and Riaanl ~have been promoted lO ~or
art director and art director/art department manager. respectively.
for the R.L. Coectl 6 Co. JD lrvine. Ozolins 101ned the company 10
1981.Cook.tn 1983 • • • LetUe Krntur has been •pPOtnted v1n&$ operations manqer
for Irvine City Savta11u.ctLou1n Irvine to hare, tram and supervise
all customer service representatives. Prev1o u!ly, Krcuu.er WIS with
Far Weit Savln11 for fi ve years. • • • Mac McNelll has been named managang director of T1lte
Newporter Raort in Newport Be.ach. McNcall will direct daily
operattons while overscc1na the resort's renovation program. Before
JOtn1n1 The Newponcr. he wu a.eneraJ manager of the Saint Paul
Hotel to St PauJ, Mann. McNeall will reside a1 the resort. • • •
COOK KREUTZER McNEJLL
Roger A. JollDsoo has been named a partner at lhe Newport
Beach office ofKennetb Lenntlaal" Co. He JOtned the firm's Century
City headquarters 12 yea~ ago and helped open the Newport Beach
office in 1975. Johnson provides accounting, audningand consultma
services for chents 1n the real estate and linanctal services industries. • • • Rob Norn• ha~ been promoted to v1~ president and Southern
Cahfom1a regional manager ofNorril, Beu• 6 Slmpso11'1 Southern
California regional headquarters in Newport Beach. Norris joined
the commercial and andustnal real estate firm an 1980 as a
commemal real estate spcc1ahst. t re was promoted to regional sales
manager in 1984 • • • Hobart 0 . Deuy has JOLned the Newport Beach rcs1denttal
brokerage office ofGnbb" EUis. Previously, Denny was Califomta
..ales manager of Woolaey Marlne Prod.cc.. • * • Harry E. Wllllam1 has announced has upcomtng retirement as
"ice president of plant opera11ons at StacoawUdt, lnc. an Costa Mesa.
The Leisure World resident will step down Sept 30 He plans to
return to ht!> prior business of manaa.ement consultant. ••• Gary E Pyles has Joined Abl~ C.mpater as western regional
sale\ managt'r 10 L4 Jolla P)les wa'I fonnerly w1lh Loral lutrnnent1
in San Diego where ht' was computer systems marketing manager . • • •
:***********•························· ! EXECUTIVE GOVERNMENT :
! RELATIONS & LEGISLATIVE REPRESENTATIVE :
: will represent your firm in legislative :
• and governmental issues, client *
: relations and contractual matters. :
• contact • • • : 714/675-3800 : • • ····~·································
..
J j
NYSE COMPOSI TE TRAN SACT ION.)
Stock prices advance
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock pnces put
together a moderate advance Thursday. continu-
ing their bid to recover from the market's early-
July selloff.
Analysts said some ind1v1dual stock' wcTC
responding to upbeat e.am1ng.\ reports for the
second quarter.
Traders also appeared to be doing some
selective shopping for .. bargains" for the second
straiaht da} after the steep decline in stock pn~s
that began two weeks ago.
However, broad measures ofrconom1c acuv1-
ty continued to show the sluggishness that
contnbuted to the market's drop earlier in the
month
The Commerce Department reported that
hou.,1ng starts dropped 0.8 percent 10 June, to their
lowc'it level since November 1985. So far 10 1986,
hou'i1ng has been one of the strongest sectors of the
economy
The Dow Jones average of 30 mdustnals rose
7 60 to l. 781 78 In the la'lt two trading days, the
average has recovered 13.08 after falling 140.33 1n
the Prl.'\ IOUS eight SCSSIOn) .
.\d,ancang issues outnumbered declines b}
mor<' than 4 10 3 on the New York Stock Exchange
WHAT AMEX Om WHAT NYSE Dm
NEW YORI< (AP) Jul. 17 Prev NEW YORK (AP) Jul 17 Prtll Todav dav TodTu ~~ Advanced m }18 Adv~~ Oecllned 74 Otcl m ¥ncnan~ 1;~0 ¥ncnano•d 01a11uues
New nlol'll New fowl 1~ 0111 lt,suei 4 Ntwnons 24 New rows 4S
AMEX LEADERS
NEW YOt<K (Al"l -Sales. ' pm Thursoav orlce and ne1 cnanQe of th• 10 m o s I
active American Stock E xcnanoe Issues, lr adino nallona tlv at mor e 1nan Sl N1mt Conslon n WebcorEI Wickes LorlmarTel n BAT Ind
WanoLabB ForestLb s HornHar HomeSnoo n
Lionel
v w:
"
"· n s: 17S, I"· '3,
GoLD QuorEs
Lest ,,
2~ S'i') 76>4
J
,,,.
I '-'I 1 'h 'I~ • 'h •;..
METALS QUOTES
t\,
i :~ +9.
NEW YORI< lAPI Soo1 l"IOl'l«•OVt met.i prleet
'rl\Jfleley A~ SO 3~ '*111 I* l>Ound NV C.-• 'IOQI rnontn c:IOMd Wed c...., ... ~u· .. '*''• • °"""" us -1~1iona C..... 59 00 <*Ila pt< pound NY C-• IOC)t
rnO<lth QIOMd Wed Leed • 2 1.24 cenla • pouno
ZIM • 41-4-4 '*'" 1 pouno o .. 1v.,,.o Til' · '3 4730 (metelt WMll eomc>ollle ptiee pelf 11> I a.... · U 035 per -HW\dy & Hermen ....._ SS 03t p., troy ounce NV Come• apo1 monlll
CIOMdWed
........, S2t000-'2800011«7&1bll..-~YO<" ,.._.llw!ft "437 50·'442 00 dom41&tl<: rnercnan1 l•oy oun<l•. N V
NYSE LEADERS
NEW YORK CAPI -S.les, 4 P 'l" rnursdav price and ntl cNll9' ot tne lS mosl acllve New YOf"k Stock Excf'lan~ luuu . tradlno nallonallv 11 more than Sl Name vlLTVCp Amer 1'& T IBM Bonk Amer ~SX Coro
hevro ndD~ds
Na1111 lam nm ann Co
;el :dllOn JR Ntb uoSdPL MavDSI BoroWarner
Dow JoNES AVERAGES
NEW YORI< (AP) -Fln1I Dow JonH
v e r a o • s I o r T n U,.U .. d a~
d5 m~1m"1",,~~ 17iT7i+
n m~ 6j m22 ill·ll:t l ~ 6t"Ha 66 ~ i.9' Sj UUH 2: lridus 16.~. Tran 3 494, ~~,~~k it~.=
1;~f' 1m1ti!MWD
NEW YORK CAP) -Most active ov,r tne-counter stocks suoofled bv NASO
List or AJ:,~~ 2~, &J~,,., Aslred ~'t\ Ja2uar 1, I , 8f16 Xlex 1,1 , 18 -'" M I 1, , ~''I + • 4 gla)CH s , 141-. IS + ,
SC • 10~ -• Henley 18 • -• Dalsvsv I 9:\9 -~ l11tel 83S,li00 18~ ~ Coa!SI 803,800 a•. + I.
To 1 b:Jtt t uz.s
\.
from t,hg, Ro\:tl rt... lt"lhJU.da.~19n
~t ud\O Ill o::irinql vollay t,ha
wo 1 ld ~ f'\l ICl.St... h~nd.8'Zwn t.1~
olwoy~ tha p:z1~ Lg1f\.
011d 0 lwo:y-ei thcl lat gcz~t,
!WlacL1on
~ 'blOl"h q~ fO~IOO l'!llo~. '71't/M~ 5070
wv~'K>Od V1\~ 1001 ~bMi ,21:Y~ :>27~
~eodoM 5c:>~th lft)la.tl'C ,818/X>'t 93~~
rnoa t11rufh 10t..o9. '°t.ufdny l0t.o6 C. ~ f\Q?n lo~
' I
·11111
Ange
face
Jays
BOlsiered by a strona fint-half
lbowin& and a three-day mt dunna
\be AU-Star break. tbc AJrtell beciA a l ().pme bomeswwt ioalsbt apins1
the Toronto Blue Jays at 7:3S at
Anaheim Stadium. •
The Aqds. winners of six of their
last eiaht pmes. find tbemtdves in
the division's top spot for tbe ICCOnd
TooW•t'•..-•
Toronto (Key 8-6) at AJlcela (Sut-
ton 8-S).
Time: 7:3S.
TV: None.
Radio: KMPC (710).
Friday's pmc: Toronto at Aft&els,
7:3S p.m.
straiabt year, botdins fif'St place in the
American leaaU;e West by l'h pmcs
over second-pfaCe Texas.
It is, however, Car from a com-
fortable position.
The Angels lost the division title a
year qo to Kansas City, which had
trailed them by 71'1 games at the AU-
Starbreak.
This time they arc bopina .an
improved starting pitchina rotation,
with the return of John Candaleria
(2-0) from the disabkd list and the
recent strona performances of Kirk
McCaskill (10-5) and Don Sutton
(8-S) to~ with All-Star pitcher Mike
Watt (9-1). will be eooucb to bokk>ff
the surpnsina Rangers, the White Sox
(7'h t.ck) and the defend.in& world
champion Royals, who after 1 recent
losing skein are in founb plac:e (8'h
pmcsback).
Westminster wine District 62 Junior All-Star LL cbamplonsblp
Another surprise in the first half of
the season has been the play of Wally
Joyner, who comes off a start.in&
assignment in Tuesday's All-Star
pme in Houston (the fint time a
rookie had been so honored by fan
voting).
Weetmlnater defeated Ocean View, 14-13 Wedne.clay at Fountain Valley JUab In the Little Leaeae ot.trlct 62 Junior (13-year-olda) All-Star
champlonahlp .iame. Amona the day'• play, Weatmlnater'• Tony Qa.ln-
tanar (upper left) •oea hJCh, but Ocean View'• KeTID Klehn la N.fe. Klelm
(apper center) takea throw u Jeff Claul alldea, and at upper rtabt,
Weatmlnater'• llarcu Bedola (26) la hit by the ball u DaYld Le6off
attempt.8 ta&· SteTe llartines ~eta back under Klelm (lower left) and
Quintanar tac• oat Ocean View • Joah Gln•rlch.
Joyner, who bu replaced the
retired Rod Carew at first base, is
currently lcadmg all Angel bitten
with a .313 average and is second in
the league 1n RBI (72).
Coaches Forget the clippings, go with desire
knew 0 f That hungry feeling wa s k ey t o South's Shane Foley on your side. The South old 1fyou remember H~ did and won 28-13 Wedemeyer, an All-Amencan half-d g . t -t 0 c t All St e 1fyou m1~scdthegame,or1f backatSt.Mary'sCollcgein.1944-45 ru Use VIC ory a range oun y - a r game }OU'dlike1ocheck11 outaga1n.1t's ROGER andaprowiththeAll-Amenca
available on cable telev1s1on. Costa Football Conference.
M1d-July. lt'sso bori ng I once •The recent Orange County All-Mesa Copley cable has the game on c •But I know you're not too old for
That's what state's
prosecutor contends
regarding Bias case
UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (AP)
-A longtime friend ofUn1vers11y of
Maryland basketball star Len Bias 1s
probabl}' the person who provided
the cocaine Bias used before his
death, a prosecutor said Wednesda)
night.
Pnncc George's County State's
Attorney Anhur A. Marshall Jr. also
said Wednesda}' that investigators
have been told Maryland coaches
were aware of drug use by some
athletes. athletes may have switched
un ne sa m pies to a void being detected
as drug users and that the grand Jury
has heard allega11ons about po1nt-
shav1ng.
Investigators have wanted toques-
tion Bnan Lee Tnbble. a former
Maryland student believed present in .
the dormitory room when Bias col-
lapsed June 19.
.. I think 11 would be safe to say we're
stanng at him very carefully."
Marshall said. "I think among the
people at the moment we believe were
in the room, he's probably the person
who broufht the drugs in ...
Tnbble s attorney, Wilham Cahill
Jr .• told The Washington Post he was
not surpnscd his client was the focus
of the inves11ga11on ... He's the onl}
person who has not been sub-
poenaed." Cahill said.
Bias died of cocaine intox1ca11on.
An autopsy indicated that he ingested
cocaine of very high punty and may
ha ve free-based the drug. according to
the assistant medical examiner who
performed the autopsy. Dr. Dennis
Smyth
Free-basing 1s a way of smoking
concentrated vapors of cocaine for a
more powerful high
Students. athletes and academic
advisers have told investigators that
some Maryland coaches were aware
of drug use by some athletes. Marshall
said.
In one case. he ~1d, .. 11 has been
rcponed that one student has basical-'
ly admitted to using his (urine)
sample for others." The student is
"not directly connected to Bias," he
said
Marshall said the invest1gat1on has
taken new d1rect1ons ba~d on new
1 nformnuon pthercd, including al-
legauons of point-shaving by team
members dunna out-of-state games.
Point-shavina occuf"i when a team
tnes to win a aame but by less than the
number of point"i they wert favored
by 1n the betting line.
lnvest1ptOI'\ have heard allega-
tions that Tnbble and possibly other
people. "ma}' have traveled with the
team or at lea'it been at the scene of a
couple of the out-of-state pmes, and
as a rtsult ,,f that then: have been
some statt·ment'i made that maybe'
po1nt•\ha\ 1n1 Wl'i in volved,"
Marshall '·"d
/
Jumped out of an airplane fort he sake Star football game, despite the South Channel 20 tonight at 7; Community AILSOll his brother. Charlie, whose battle
ofbreaking up the monoton}. going without nearly a dozen onginal Cablev1s1on for Newport Beach-· against amyotrophislateral sclerosis
•Stan Thomas has taken over "choices." drew 7.000 at Orange Irvine has 1t Fnday night at 6 on (Lou Gchng'sdisease) has brought
duties as the new CIF Southern Coast College, causing game offi cials Channel 3· Group w has 11 on fonh national attention.
Sectton Comm1ss1oner, but withJUSt to run out of game programs and Channel t ion Fndayat 6 p.m.;and •Charlie Wedemeyer was named
two weeks under his belt, there's little concessions. Rogers Cable Systems 1n Huntington California Hi~Schoo.ICoach oftbe
to reponexcept that the change at the •The Shrine Game. which is Aug. 2 Beach has 11 on Channel t O Aug. 2 and •Shnne offic1alc;, 1nc1dcntally. de-Yearby Cal-Hi Magaz1oe after the
top is apparently well-received in-at the Rose Bowl. claimed fi ve of the sat 7:30 pm. c1ded 10 pick the coachcc; for this 19~5 season and has r~ti~ from
temally. South's bl ue chips. and several others •The Shrine Game inc1dentallv. ~car'sgame afterdctermin1ng which acti ve coaching, but has nane--year
• Don·1 took for the Cl F football decided they did not want to pla> includes Fountain vaitey High·s • "a' thcv were going in termc; ot strugle againstthediseasc has been
finals to return to Anaheim Stadium •Which. of course. proves out once Lance Zeno. Mater De1's Gary Cos-pla.,ers one of tremendous courage.
now or later unless 1t'sat least in a more the theory that desire can wh1pa ton and Irvine's Greg Gerardi as well e For instance South ( oach Bob •He'll be honored at theShnne
double-header format. They· re still newspaperclipp1ngeveryday oft he as Capistrano Valley quaner~ck Baiz of Claremont was named onh Game Aug. 2at half\1meand 1f
trying to recover from thHinanc1al week. Scoll Stark and Dana Hills center after 6-8 quanerback Dan ~vkGw1re nothing else , it's certainly an excuse
bath they took when Long Beach Poly •Oh, besides having that hungr} Darren Baird They repon to camp on ofC'laremont \l.3S chosen -thu\ the to wander up to Pasadena for the
and Edison played before around feeltng.11's best to have a quanerbad. July ~4 for the state's Nonh-South shin-tail effect pme Besides., 1t'sa lot better than
8.500. 1n the mold of Newport Harbor's game •Ob\ 1ousl~ 'ou kno"' \ou·re too iumpmgout of airplanes.
Skipping Into training
Dal1u Cowbo,.. rookie tlebt end Ro n Heller jumpe rope
d urlnC tralnlftC camp. For more on pro football, eee C2.
l l I
Another slow day for U.S.
Soviets have doubled their
gold lead at Goodwill Games
MOSCOW -While the boxing contro,ers} con-
tinued to be the center of attention at the Goodwill
Games. sn gold medals were decided Wednesday. four 1n
tennt'i and two in Judo.
The onl) Amencan gold medalist was Caroline
Kuhlman a Un1vers1t) of So uthern California JUn1or
who beat Beverl) Bowes. a Un1verstty of Texas senior.
6-4. 7-S. for the women's singles tennis tttle.
The ~o' 1ct Union co llected five golds for a total of? I
and t 60 medals overall The United States· gold m tennis
boosted ti\ gold total to '\Sand I OS medals overall
Simon and Wnght were late sul-st1tutes for the
barred fighter-.
The So' 1ct l n1on·s .\ndre1 Chec;noko~ captured the
men·s \tngles tenni<i title. defeating Manan VaJda of
Czccho.,10 .. ak1a 6· 3. 6-2. 6-4
o' 1ct<i \\etlana Parkhomenko and Lan<ia
Sa"chcnko t<)(')k the "omen·s doubles champ10nsh1p "uh
a 6-3. 6-' '1ctof) O\er Iva Budarova and Marcela
Shuharc;ka of C rcchoslovak1a. And Soviets Sergei
uonvuk captured the men's doubles title. outlasting
VaJda and 1'.arcl No~arck of('7echoslo"ak1a 6-7. 6-4. :!-6.
6-3. 6-4 In iudo, \O\ 1ct\ swept the golds. with Gngorv
Vcnchc .. pinning ~tc .. en ( ohen of the United States at'\
minutes. 7 ~ccond'i, for a 10-0 victory m the over Q5-
k1logram final. and V1ktor Poddubf)t dec1s1on1ng
Batdzh1nn1am Oddvosn of Mongolia in the 95-lologram
final. The unbeaten l Jn1tcd Statc'i men'c; volleyball team
scored its third 3-0 triumph. beating C 1cchoslo~ak1a
I S-10. I 5-7 I 5-10
The l r S still has 10 bo«ef"i remaining.
Flyweight Anhur Johnson alrtad} has rcalhcd
Saturday'c; finale;, while bantamweight Bernard Pncc.
hghtwc1gh1 Romalh'i [111s, light welterweight Rm Jones.
haht m1ddlcwe1ghts Mllhacl Moorer and M}lon
Watkin'>. middleweights Part...er White and Lorenzo
Wnght. light heav)wc1gh1 Michael Simon and super
hea~y""c1ght Kilbert Pierce will tlt' in semifinal bouts
todat The final wect...cnd of the inaugural Goodwill Games
1s hapina up to feature TV covernge of some dramatic
head-to-head aold medal contests between the United C\tat~'i and the Soviet l ln1on in basketball. volle)hall
bo~ing. we1ahthfting and JUdo. coupled with add111onal
tclqenic events. such as gym nas11"' )'ach11ng. row 1 ng
and the unusual spon of motoball
Turner Broadcasting Syc;tem CTR ) began 1t\ 1 lQ
hours of< 1oodw1ll Games tele' 1c;1on l·ovcragc \aturda).
\
Jul' 'I "tth thl' ma\\t' c and colorful opening ceremonies
in l cnin \tad1 um The final weekend of Games· coverage
"111 begin at noon Fnda~ and conclude wtth the closing
ccrcmon1c' 1n \1o'><.n" 'iunday night, featunng the
athlete\ "hu part1npatcd 1n the events of the final days
.\ part ot the weekend coverage Wlll be the
appearance ot RE-.. Ted .. (Captain Courageous) Turner.
president ot fBS and winner of the Ame~cas Cup in
1977, as a rnl\tr rnmmcntator for the yachting compet1-
t1ons on F-nda' T urncr ha., been named "Yachtsman of
the Year .. lour time<; h' the New York City Yacht Club.
The (1aml'' "h1lh arc to-produced and sponsored
b) TB'i the \0\ 1c1 M1n1stry for Telev1s1on and Radio (Gostel~rad10) .rnd the \0~1et Ministry for Physical
Culture and ~port ( o~u1sp-0rt). were conceived by
Turner follo"ing the \m 1ct bmcott of the 1984 Olympics
in Los ..\ngele'> The game" represent the first major mulu-
spon l \ ·~o,1ctcompct111on 1n IO years(c;mccthe 1976
01) mp1cs in \1ontrcall
.\nothl'r 'IX'\ 1al tek' 1<;1on highlight of the weekend
rn\l~ragc "•II tx· the "omen«, g' mnast1cscompct1t1ons on
fnda' and \aturda' afternoons and the gymnastics
C\h1hit1on \ln \undJ' afternoon
U.S. boxer reinstated ,
fights tonight in semis
MOSCOW (AP) -o\mencan boxer Harvey
Richards. who said he had lost his motivation to
continue fighting in the GoodWlll Games after beina
d1squahfit'd by a Soviet referee. was reinstated
toda)'
The: decision was made by a four-man
compet111on JUf) consisting of U.S. team mana&cr
Pat Duff} and three Soviets. and approved by Col.
Don Hull of the United States, who 1s president of
the I ntemat1onal Amateur Bouna Association. The
iun ruled that the fight was a no-<1ec1s1on.
The unanimous decision to reinstate Richards
meant that the hght heavyweight from Spnnafield.
Ill .. would fiaht 1n a semifinal bout tonl&ht apJn t
A.ndrc1 Karavaev of the Soviet Union.
1t alc;o assured him of cam1n1 at least a bron.u
medal in the box1n1 tournament -"II l<>5if\I
~m1finahc;1s receive bronzes
The dec1s1on overturned the ruhna by referee
\ un Froio" who had d1~uahfied Richards for a
low blow dunng the second round oftus~u.ancrfina.l
bout qamst Nils Hauspard Madsen of Otnmark
on TuMday.
... .,,. .. '-Ub~-.----=!~ ........... .-.-.....-..-,_..--.:...:...-.-. .... ..-.... ___________________________________ ~~---------------------------~--------~·~---~----
•
I •
OH1noe Cout DAILY PILOT/ Thurlday. July 17. 1988
•
It's July . . . and that means·pro football
Home cooking
just too much
for the Fridge
Bears '~PerTY must
get down to 3 ()(), -
orhe'lllos e 6 ,0 0 0
PLATTEVILLE Wis. (AP) -
William "The Refrigerator" Perry's
bulk was a hot topic at the opening
sc sion of the Chicago Bears' training
camp Wednesday, with Coach Mike
Ditka expressing doubts about
Perry's 300-pound ideal wciaht.
At a news conference late Wedne~
day, Ditka said Perry weighed 325
pounds when he wei~ed in for
practice before the team s first work-
out. The coach said he wasn't worried
about Perry's weight and was sure he
would get it down before traintn&
camp ends.
"He worked out religiously until a
week ago. and then he went home to
South Carolina," Ditka said.
"That's usually a catastrophe. The
chtcken population ofSouth Carolina
goes down measurably."
In another development, th e Bears
announced early Wednesday that
defensive end Al Harris, who sat out
last yea r's championship ~ason 1n a
contract dispute, had signed a thrce-
year pact and would repon to camp
today.
at the Bears' mini-camp m May.
"I didn't sec his wei&bt. but be
looked a littJeoverwciaht to me," wd
Vince Tobin, the Bean' new d~
fensive coordinator, after the 9().
minute momin1 workout. "He aot
kind of tired durina practice and he
was drauina toward the end."
Perry was one of the favorites of the
200 or so spectators at the south-
western Wisconsin campus Wednes-
day, when tempmttum climbed into
the 90s.
The hulking lineman pined na-
tional fame in his rookie season lu t
year when D1tka used him on off'en1e
in goal hne s11ua11ons -runnin1 for
touchdowns, catch1na a pass for a
third. and blockin,.
Terms of Harris contract were not
disclosed.
"I'm hoplJlg for a spillover effect"
in ncgot1auons with free agent Todd
Bell. said Bears General Manaaer
Jerry Vainisi.
Bell also sat out last season and bad
not yet signed.
Tobin said Hams 1s "one more
good football player. but he's still got
to compete for a position."
Practice began at the University of
W1sconsin-Platteville football com-
plex without five veterans and th~
unsigned draftees.
Rama rookie Chrt• Pancheo (abo•e) mo•ea another Ram
hopeful out of the way during practice th.la week. National
Football League campa open ed acrou the country thia
week. Below, Chl':'t.~:" Coach Mike Dltka heada for
hi• quarten, while Cowboya tackle Randy White
uaea a towel to do pull-ope.
Word on Perry was that he had lost
more incentive money than weight.
Under his contract, he loses S6.000
unless he weigh!> in at a relatively
svelte 300.
All veterans and rookies were to
report Tuesday, as Ditka wanted to
get a head-stan on preparations for
the Bears' Aug. 3 exh1b1tion game 1n
London against the Dallas Cowboys.
Payton and cornerback Mike Rich-
ardson were among the no-show
veterans.
Ra111s' hopeful
knows feeling to
be the underdog
From AP dispatches
H1' first da\ of "orkoul\ 1.1,1 th thl' [i]
Ram' "a" a bit O'el'\\helm1ng but rnoktl' c -•
runn1n1.t hack Chui ()ch1.1,anke has a good
background for h..indl ing that kind nfnpa1cnce
\\hen he 1.1,a\ 7 ~cars old he "'as put 11n an airplanl'
b) ht\ Korean mother and "a' fl o""n t11 meet ht' nc''
pa rents 1n Hutchl\on Minn He ha\ not \t'l'n ht\ nawr.il
mother \tnlC
He can recall some oftraumt1' 111 h1c. llll' in 'i11111h
Korea. hut he e'>larwd muc. h ot
the d1scnminat1un he Y.oul d haq·
faced had he sta\ed H1'> fathl·1
was an \mencan and 1n Kofl'J
where rac. 1.11 punt\ " almmt Jn
obsession the pro\rt·uc, tor good
fortune "'ere not 't:f\ hnghl
"I "Ill al"'a~'i haH' good ..ind
bad memonc" · \< ln,ant..c -w1d
"J"on·1nerforgl·t l knm,l ha\t'
a hetter li te mer here There·, a
lot ol prCjUdltl' "-C "-Cfl'll't
Schwanke \.Cf\ Y.l'll-lo' ed
.. And "'e "-Cfl" po11r I .Ill" l'\Cf\ lien . hut kctthur
"a" a real deltca< \ I feel 'en lortunatc to he ht.•n:
\( h"ankc J ~ 11. 211 pounder who \et a numtx-r
ofc,t hool ru\h1ng rnorc..l<i..11 lhc tin~ l n1,cr\lt~ of\outh
Dakot..i at Vcrmlllwn 1c, a longsh111 to make th1· R..im,·
fi nal 4 ~ man r,quad But he'> gumg to g1\C 11 h1'> tx·,1
shot
··1 "-a'> a l111k in hit in ,IY.-l' ~ondt1\ hut \OU get
over that 1n a hurn ·· he c;a1d "I kno"" 1t\ an urh1ll
ba1tlc. hut ma.,tx· I tan opt.·n <,ome e;c' ··
~tnlc his plane nde. < hul made the moo;111I hi\ ltk
in th1c; count() I k \ made hie, parentc, Rohen Jnd
Ma v1' c;chwankc "1'11' proud ol him and ol \mcma
"When )OU talk ahou1 "'ha1 he-., acrnmpli'\hcd
you'-.c got to talk ahoul 1h1\ countl") ·· Rot>en
Schwan!l.c told the \lt inneapoli' Tnbune la'it ~ear
"When I look at him I real Ill' hn" great this rnuntr. ,.,
He come<, from a place "'ht.•n· hr "ould ha'c l')(:cn
discnm1nated agatn\t and \ou ""ondrr somet1ml''
'What could he ha\<' h<.'.rn mt•r 1hnl' •· .\nd tht•n \ou \l't·
what he t'I here ·· ·
He began pla) 1ng agl'-grnup 101 thall 1n 1un1or high
and pla~ed three H"M \ at H11tc h1c.11n H111.h \, hool
Quote of the day
'I could go 111 (anal \trl'l"t and 1rcll ahout all 1 the Nobel Prt1t' winner' ~l 'l' had ht'rc and
nobody would pa; attention. Rut it I \aid th t•
football coach m11t<:alled JU'it one pla) duri ng tht' '
enure season. that "'ould be fro nt-page nev.s." -
Tulane Un1vcrni.. President Eamon M. Kelly
•
Howe says he may retire
l:>.\"-i JO~f \tn·c HoY.e "ho in six •
\ears "ent from Rookie ot the Year to the
io"er minor kagul''> a' he fought a
recurring hattlc aga1n\1 cocai ne addiction.
ma\ rcttre from ha'lchall after fa iling to pass a drug test
· I think I lought prett\ good." the 28-ycar-old
rehcl pltt her '>aid Wl·dncc,da\' in the wake of his latest
c;uspeM1on "But I 1h1nk wha t I'm fighting may be too h1g ..
\ lt''>t aJnHnl\tl'fnl \.1onda) morning by the San
Jme Ree'> ol thc < l,1,., \ ( ahforn1a League. for whom
HoY.c hac; been p1tc. h1ng tht\ r,ca'ion. came up positive
·\nothcr urinal\'" taken ~onday night by the Bees was
nega11 .. c the \an Jo\c Mercury-News reponed.
l fr alvi t1111lo. a 1hircl te'it adm1n1stered b; the
Aac,chall < omm1\\loner" oflit:e A spokesman there
''ould not d1\tU\\ 1h11\c result\
~1 ll hele l\.l,11t h. a 'Pokeswoman for Syn tell, the lab
"'hcrt• the fi r<.1 te\t v.ar, done. c;a1d it was possible for
tt•<>ts I \hour<. apart to ha-.c dilTerent results because of
the time d1tlcrente
The Bee' annc111nlcd the positive result Tucsda}
and team Prcc,1dcnt Harry ()teve placed the former
.1rchever for the l m \ngele' Dodgers and Minnesota
Tw1n'i on the 111-da' c..11<,ahlcd list
No football for Mccallum
(}\NA RD f-or 30 day c,, U.S Navy [il
Ensign l\iapoleon \1c( all um will face twice c II •
da1I> mspectton<, on the practice fields of
1hc l n\ .\ngelcc; Raiders.
\fter that. accord ing to McCallum, he'll be a
fullt1mc na\al ofliu•r Mth no l1kelthood of pursuing his
pro foo tball dream' in the 1mmed1ate future. ~c(cillum fin1<,hed hi s college career at the Naval
.\cadem} a<, the "I.IC .\A's all-purpose yardage record
holder. but a fi,_c .. car commitment to the m1hta l)
'itands between the running back and an National
f ootball l eague career. '"1 " goa ls arc Just to work as hard as I can and learn
"hat 11 takes 10 pla} on this team." McC'allum said
\l.-ednewa} after reporting to the Raiders' camp at the
Ox nard Hilton Inn
U.S. cyclis t sparkles in France
\1 Pl RBA<.~f RE<\. France -(1reg •
I cmond hecame the fir'it American ever to
Y.1n a mountain <,tage 1n 1hc Tour de France
c~d1ng clasc;1c \\t'<lnesda} but his French
team leader Bernard Hmault kept the overall lead with
anotht'r hnlltant de monstration of power and tactics
Lt'mond·., '1t tol) came in the Tour's roughest
<.tngle stage over thrcr ma1or mountain passes 1n the
PHenee'I. en di ng a1 rhc top of a lourth major chmb
Hinault kept tht• m erall lead by JUSt 40 ~cond'i
ahead of l emond after 'itarting the da} 'i. stage w11h an
ad\.ilntagc of 5 m1nutc'i and 25 SC<'Onds
If in a ult had \tarted the day with yet another
surpn'ie attack foll11"1 ng a long breakawa) by France's
Dom1n1quc \mou,, wh o led O\er 1he fiMt two passes.
the T oumalc1 and the A spin Hinault W8' the only nder
to \ta .. near him
Two players who asked not to be
1dent1fied said the defensive tackle
checked in at about 330 pounds at the
we1gh-1n before practice early
Wednesday. That's what he weighed
Pa}ton had personal reasons for
ski pping the first few days of camp
and would report by Thursday or
Friday, Yainis1 said
Television execs
support NF£ stand-.
NE\\ YORK (AP)-Two network
executives. stating what other tele-
v1s1on people ha'c said before them .
testified Wednesday that their deal-
ings with the USFL were done stnctl y
on a business basis without an}
interference from the NFL.
from an NFL offic1al.~and former
ABC commentator Howard Coscll
testified that Arledge had told him
that NFL ('om missioner Pete Rozelle
was "all over him" about the
network's decision to grant a contract
to the USFL
The test1mon} in the L'SFL's SI 61J
billion ant1tru~1 su it against the NFL.
came from Wilham Grimes. pre~1-
dent of ESPN cable and Frederick
Pierce. who was president of A.BC
Inc unttl last Janual) Both ne1works
televised USFL pmes 1n the lea~ue's
three sprin~ seasons
The tele' 1S1on issue 1s a cn ucal one
in the two-month-old tnal. which 1s
e'lpected to go to the j ury next week.
The USFL maintains that the NFL
pressured the three major networks to
deny 11 a contract for tts switch to the
fall and 1s asking that the NFL be
harred from at least one of the three.
Their test imony was the same as
Neal Pilson of CBS. Roone Arledge ol
ABC and Anhur Watson of NBC.
The NFL 1s expected to fi nish its
case Thursda) wit h testimony from
ROlelle. who was on the stand for fi ve
days as a USFL witness early in the
trtal. Ro1elle 1s expected to testtfy
about a 1984 meeting with Donald
Trump. oy,,ner of the New Jersey
Generals at which Trump claimed in
te<;t1mon) Rozelle offered him a
l 'S FL franchise.
"No. none at all," they continually
replied when asked by NFL attorney
Frank Rothman if the) had recei ved
or heard of any NFL displeasure
about their dealings with the USFL
Howe .. er. Jim Soence of ABC
tcc;11fied earlier that he had heard
Oil Can Boyd still in hot water
B05TON -Suspended Boston Red •
So" pitcher Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd
threatened to shoot when Chelsea police
stopped him to search his car for narcotics.
sa)s a detec11 ve
·He kepl 1ns1st1ng he had a gun and he wasg01ng to
shoot so mebody," Dctecttve Sgt. Jack Ph1lhps said of
his enco unter the previous evening with the pitcher in
an interview broadcast Wednesday over Boston
telev1s1on station WNEY. He said a search uncovered
Boy
ha ve an} dope."
no gun or drugs.
"At this point. we d1djust an
immediate search of the area."
said Phillips. "We didn't locate
any gun. That was lund of our
concern, especially when he tum-
ed his back and reached into his
pockets.
"Weapons 1s the first thing
you look for. Dope 1s secondary
We came up with nothing.
"He Just beca me crazy. He
kept screaming that he didn't
Boyd, who walked out on the team last week when
he "'as denied an All-Star game slot, could not be
reached at his home telephone or through the Red Sox
office fo r comment on the sergeant's allegauons.
Boyd was dn ving home Tuesday night to watch the
.\II-Star game on television when he was stopped by
police tipped he might have drugs tn his car.
.. It was more an inquiry than anything else,"
Ph1lhp'i told The Boston Herald in an 1nterv1ew
published today. "I didn't anticipate this le.ind of
problem with him."
Ph1lltps told The Herald that he and his panner .
Sgt Kenneth MacDonald, tailed Boyd's Me rcedes Benz
in their un marked car after spotting the pitcher in what
they called a known drug area in Chelsea.
As a result. Boyd, 25, has been suspended
indefinitely by the Amencan League East leaders that
need his I I ~6 record. the police tn the Boston suburb of
Chelsea have filed a complaint of assault and battery on
a police officer and disorderly conduct, and he
complains the poltcc twisted his money arm.
"I just want to pitch. man," Boyd said Wednesday.
"I can't pitch."
General Manager Lou Gorman said Boyd would
remain suspended until "certain issues are clanfied to
the sat1~facuon of the Red Sox organization
Rathman sign• 49era• pact
AN FRANCISCO -The San Fran-
c1S<.:o 4Qers ha ve s11ned their second draf\
choice. Nebraska fullback Tom Rathman.
the team announ{'~. m
Rathman .• 11 third-round pick whose fou r-year
rnntract ts wt>nh a reponcd $800.000. 1s the ~cond of
13 4Qcr., draft choices to s1an James Madison
hnehacker Charles Haley also has alfCCd 10 temu
The 1eam also announced Wednesday It hai. s11nec1
free agent Ernest Fvans. a mona \aft'ty from Rice.
J
,
Ex-UCLA star Brown quits
KANSAS CITY. Mo. -Thcous [il
Brown, the Kansas Ctty Chiefs running c II•
back who missed the 1985 season after
being felled by a heart attack. has decided
against trying to play again
Brown, 29, had medical clearance to resume his
career, and he said there's no quesuon in his mind that
he could play well. But he said tHat since doctors can't
guarantee he won't suffer another bean attack, he will
retire out of concern for his wife. C'hns, and their young
son, Theotis Ill.
"I can't have them up in the stands wondering," he
said in an interview pnor to a news conference he
scheduled on Tuesday "That's just not fair to them."
"I feel I could go out there and perform, and
perl'orm more than adequately," Brown said. "I would
be more than just one of 45 players. Football 1s
something I love. It's been a huge pan of my hfe. It has
shaped it. It tauplt me how to set goals. rcsponsibihty,
teamwork. But it's not as 1mponant as my family"
IAAF reinstates Nehemiah
ATHENS. Greece Renaldo
Nehemiah, the Amencan hurdler who lost
his amateur status when he signed as a wide
receiver with the San Francisco 49ers. was
reinstated Wednesday by the lntemat1onal Amateur
Athletic Federation
The IAAFs dec1S1on came af\er Nehemiah
pledged 10 give up professional football. Nehemiah, the
world record holder in the 11 0-meter hurdles, lost his
amateur status 1n 1982 when he signed with the NFL
team
Television, radio
TELEVISION
Noon -GOODWILL GAMES Men's
basketball (from Spain). women's team handball.
men's and women1s yqchung. men's Judo (3
hours, delayed), Channel 5
5:30 p.m -BASEBALL Dodgers at St
Louis. Channel 11
7 p.m. -GOODWILL GAMES Boxin&.
women's gymnasucs. men's basketball (3 hours,
delayed), Channel 5
7:30 p m -HORSE RACING· Recap of
day's races, from Hollywood Park. Channel 56
10 p.m. -WRESTLING. Channel 56.
11 ·30 p.m -GOODWILL GAMES· Recap
of day's compet1t1on. Channel 5.
RADIO
5 30 p.m -BASEBALL· Dodgers at St
Louts KABC (7QO).
7 30 p.m -BASEBALL Toronto at
Anaels. KMPC (710).
FRIOA V'S TELEVISION
Noon -GOODWILL GAMES. Box1na.
men''I volleyball. women's yachtina (3 hours.
delayed). Channel 5.
I,
. -. -
GlrJe• butetball ca.mt
0_ Two airll besketbell tamps Wlll be held 11 the :;-_!~ BIJ.!fr Boys 1od Girl~ Club in Newpon
._.,b with fundamentalJ of the pmc tressed
.Tllhc fi~t teuion. fur aradea four throuiti SIX,
W1 , beain Monday and n.in tbro\.llh Aut. I.
Session two, for eevcnlh tbroup ninth &raden.
Will be held Aua. 4-1 s.
The c.~ps run from S:J0.11 a.m. Monday
tluquah fnday. The prioc of~b camp is U for
I 0 days·of instruction.
Foryner pro beslmboll player Diana Meier
will <hrcct the camps. She is the 11hletic director
for the .8oY' and Garis Club.
T ·shins will be given to the firs1 18 grrls that
srin up. Each &art will receive a scorecard of her
performance 11 camp. Pri1es and awards will
also be aivcn away.
_The Boys and Girls Club " located at 2SS5 Vista dtl Oro.
.For funher infonnation, contact Lori or Diana at 640-6650.
Rancbo Saatlaao track cUnlc
A free track clinic wi11 bt conducted by former
Olympian Willyc White at Rancho Santiago
College Thursday. July 24, beginning at 2 p.m
Thi.' cl1nac rs open to youngsters ages 8-18. The
cl ante wall cover some basiC' techniques of track
The chn1c will open at 2 with a showing ofa~
.\AU Junior Olympics film in Cook Gym-
na~1um. Following the movie, participants will
move 10 the Crack for the cli nic. An autograph
and photo session will bt held following the one-
hour chn1c
Whtie as the national spokesperson for the
AAl 1 Junior Olympics. She was a membtrofthe
1956. '60. '64, '68 and '72 U.S. Olympic teams.
winning a mt'dal rn the long JUmp in 19Sb She
also served u an alternate rn 1972.
For more rnfonnatron. phone 66 7-3385
Rancho San11ago College (formerly San1a Ana
College) 1s located at 17th and Bristol s1rec1s m
Santa A.na.
Corporate triathlon relay
Orange Coast area businessmen Wlll be among
the compct11ors rn the Corporate Challenge
Triathlon Relay scheduled for Sunday. July 27.
hcginnmg al 9 a.m al the Los Angele~ Coh'>tum
Olympic pool
The event, open onl) to businessmen, w11h
\peciil eatagol) for company prc&ident~ and
chief "ecu11ve officers. ~111 rmlude a three-mt It
run. a 10-male hike leg.a third ofa m1lnw1m and
J three male run. 1n that order
Collaeum off-road racin g
Off-road racing tn six d1fleren1 catagorics will
be featured a1 the sixth evt'nl 1n the ntnc-event
OIT-Road Champronsh1p Uran Pn\ Saturda~
beg1nn1ng at 7 30 at lhr Los Angele\ ( oltseum
Grand na11onal spon trucks. featunng defend·
rng ~nt's champion Roger Mears and currcnl
ltadrr Ste1oe Mrllen from San<a Ana will ht·
JOtncd on the 2(>-racc program b) motocros'
hrkl'.'s, Volk~agen Super l ,bOOs, 1hrcl' and four·
wheel .\TY~ Od}'SSt")S and thr new full-bodied
L'ltraSto<:k class
.\ pre-race .. Meet the Ori\ er\ .. autograph and
photo ~\Stern wlll precced the racingactmn from
fl.. 7
T rckets are on ..ale a1 1hc ~ports .\rcna 00\
nllice acros\ from the ( ollseum and al all
T 1c.kt·1ron ou1lc1s Telephone ordt'r~ ma) al~o be
made by phontng 634-1 300or1213) 410-1062
Jr.ante cb&rD9loaUJs-
The 23rd annuallnttmational Karaic am·
pionshir>11 featunna 2.600 men. women and chddrcn from all SO 11.ttes and around the world,
will be Satutday and Sunday at the LonJBc8<:h Attn.a.
Rccoaniud u the world"s larstst and most
pmliaious katate tournament, lhc t"Ve:nt will
Include bta (individual forms) and frcettyle
compcmion fot men, women, children and
teams from bl1d: bclta down.
Pre.liminary tournament action will be 8 &.m
to 10 p.m. on Saturday, 8 a.m. to S p,m on
Sunday, with the finals on unday from
7:3().10:30 p.m.
For lnfonnauon phone (213) 68~24S6 or
(818) 792-6408.
Men'• pro team. toarne7
The world's bc$1 men's tennis players will vie
for the SS0.000 singles first prize at the Volvo
Tennis-Los Angeles tournament. Sept 15-21. at
the Los Angeles Tennis Center on the UCLA
campus.
The tournament. fonnerl)' the Pactfic South·
wesl Tennis Oi;>cn. as now in its 60th year and
past winnel'1 include Jimmy Conners (four
times). Pancho Gonzalez, Jack Kramer, Don
Budge and Roy Emerson.
Qualifying rounds for the 32-man singles field
will bt Saturday and Sunday. Sept 13-14, with
both singles and doubles act)On continuing with
both day and night sessions throughout the week
leading lo the finals of both Sunday, Sept. 21 at
4~m. .
The pre-tourney qualifying rounds will bt free
10 the public. with loge and gtncral adm1ss1on
scats ($6) and box and reserved scaling (S8)
available for the week of action.
Some procttdr. from the event writ go the lhl·
CT A. which directs other tournaments and
clinics and ards in junior tennis dt'velopment
For 1nformatron phone (213) 208.0730.
Cbrlatlan beads cy cle fleld
-'\Ian Chns11an ofHunun~ton Beach. current-
ly holding on lo m.th place 1n qual1f~ 1ng tor the:
U S. vs. the World American Cup C'hallcng!.'
wall be among the compe111or\ rn the second
quahfy1ng race 1on1gh1 at 8 al .\scot·~ \outh Ba)
Stadium.
Christian. the l I <; ~hamp1on. wa\ reccntl)
disqualified in a scratch event al the Gardena
oval.
Mike Fana from Colton 1~ currentl) rn the to p
~pot. wrth othtr challenger~ for the .\mtm·an
(up squa.d. 1nclud1ng Brad <h:le) of \an
Clemtnle. Robcn Pfetz1ng of Santa .\na Jnd
Sten· Lucero of Rr verndc
Other <\~01 event~ upcomrng tncludr:
motocross Fnda) at 7 pm . ~pnn1 car\ Satull!:n
at 8 p.m. and stock car\ I figure eight and o' JI)
Sunda) at 7 pm
Del Mar dlscoant dckets
Discount 11cke1 book\ for !he 19l!t> Del M:u ho~ rallng season are on sale no"' through
opening day.(Wcdnesda). July 23>
The books, pnced at$20forgeneral admr\Smn
and $45 for clubhou'lC ($5 1,,s than llJ
1nd1v1dually purchased admi~!Qfil.. for each>
may be obtarncd at thc Del Mar t1ckct oflicc 111
hy sending a self-addrc~sed <.lamped en,clo1~
~ tth check or monev order pa~ able to 1hr !kl
Mar Thoroup.hhrcd ( lub. P () Box. 700, Dl.'I
Mar,92014
Mater Dei tops Servite field
Rembert have been s1dehncd recently
due to an ankle spra10 and a shoulder
Mater Dei High basketball Coach bruise. respectively, but are termed
Gary McKnight and his defending "questionable to probable" by
Ch · M h d'd · McKnight for this weekend's play. C'IF S-A ampton onarc s 1 n t Mater De1, which lost four starters get to be one of the top high school
By BARRY FAULKNER
Oe4ly l'ttot Clf'r11p I ndeftl * Frlct.V's Flnt Round
(II Sefv1tl H lttl)
9 • m -Ocean \flew v' Sr 8em1rd
10 JO -Mllllken YS LOl AtemllOl
Noon -Plu\ x Yl Senla .Ana
I 30 -Corvalll,, Ore. Yl Mater Ott
l -Dominguez vs. RoUlng Hiiis
4 JO -Merine vs lftrbum Del
6 -Founrein vaitev va Lono Beact> Potv
1 30 -Crt$DI v1 Servlle
,,.., ...... ~ ~--.-~~~~=-..,..~~ ~ ~~~~··
. . . ..
MAJOR LaAGU• STAMDUltGS
Anwlc.en a....
WIST OM SM>N
W L ~ M
.. " ..SS2 ,, •1 .SM lYt .., .. M5 7~
fO .. Ml IYt
)9 Sl AS 10\"I 31 Sl .ao HYlt ,. st J11 1si,a,
Botton Nt'N York
Cllvtland
l1trfmore
Toronro
Ottroll
MllwaUltff
£AST DIVIStON
1' 31 so 39
.. 39 .. " ., '3
0 ..
0 45
WldMMtlY's kwH
No gamea sehedUllG
TNa't'' °'"'"
1 ' 10
10Yt
13
Jt\l'J
TOl'onro (IC.•Y 1·6) 11 ~(Sutton t ·S), n
Chleaoo (Dolaon 7·1) 11 New VOfll
IR11muu111 10·2), n
Ttllll (COl'r1t 6·7) al O.troll (Terl'lll 7•1), 11
Mln11HOl1 tVIOle t· 7) er a.111mor1 (llo6-
dlco.er ll·Sl, n
C11vetend CC1nc1tofll I·" el K1nM1 Otv
ISet>erl'l111en 4· 101. n
Bo,ton (NIPPlf 4·Sl al s .. 1111 ILanoslon t·6).
n
l<r1daV'l G-
Toronto at """*'· n Cnlcego er New Yorlc, n
Tues •I Derroll, n
M1nnewra er 81trlmort, 11
Ctevllend at IC.1n'8• Cll'f. n
Boaton et s .. 11111, n
Mllwaukff er 01ktand, n
Nat\onal LMtu9
WU.T DIVISION w L
San Fr allCISCO .. .0
Houaron 47 4t
Sen OleQO •S 43
Allenra '2 ..
c1nclnn11l .0 ..
Dodeln •O ..
£AST DIVISION
N,w Vork 59 2S
Monrreal • 46 • Pl'llladelphle •7 43
Cntca110 36 ..
St Loul' 36 so
Pltr,burgh 35 so
WedMldlV'a Scores
No gemes lCM<luted
TldaY'l Gamea
..a. G8
.545
534 I
Sil 3
.477 ' .m 6
I
.102 .sa 13 .,. 17,,
479 23
.419 24
417 741..,
Ood9tr' fHersl'llser 1-61 al St Lou" (TudOr
& SI. 11
Sari FrancllCO <Krukow 11·SI •I Chicago
ILvncn 1-0l .Allente (Mehle< 10-1) ar Montre11 /Youmans
9-Sl. n
San 01190 (McCuller$ 4-31 at Plllsburgn
tRnoa.n 9·Sl n
Pl'llladeloPlla (K Gron 6-71 er Cinclnn111
(Wel'h l -3), n
New YorK (Oted• 11>·2) a1 Houllon llh•n
6-6) n
Frldlv's G•mn
~ 11 Sr Louis, n
San Frencllco at Cl'llceoo
Artan11 et Monlre1I, n
Sen 01eoo 11 Plllsbur11h. n
Pnlt1detPn1a at Clnclnnall, n
New York 11 Houstoo. n
TOP 10
Am.,-lc•n LN9Ut
(hseCI on 210 •l·l>lh)
G A8 A H Pct.
Bogg,, Bo\lon 80 300 S6 109 363
Malllnglv New York 89 311 61 130 3.41
Puckell Minnewta II 31? 6S 129 331
Enter New •fork 81 29S 31 99 336
R•ce. Bosron 87 350 S6 117 XM
You"' Miiwaukee 7J 27J 45 90 330
Fietcner. T oas 79 767 48 as 318
Ba Int\ Chicago U 337 SO IOS 314
Be1t Toronto U 351 59 lll 316
Fernanoe1, Toron10 90 J13 5-4 111 316
L vnn 8e1t1more 65 131 41 13 J 16
H-Aum
Canseco Oakland. 23. Berlield, Tor0<110. 11,
Ln Pem sn Oetrolr, 11, P111liarulo. New YOl'tr., n Hrl>ek M1nne.01a, 20, JavMf', Aneal,, 101 t< •ngman, Oakland 20, Brunenskv, MlnneM>la,
18 (,aell• Minnesota, ta; Preslev Seetlle, II
Runs B11t1e1 '" Canseco Oakland 78 Jovner. Anoels. 7l;
Bart1etd Toronto, 65. Belt, Toronro. 65, Presiev.
Sea•tle 64 Mell1n11tv New York, 63. Hrbek
M•nneso•a 62. Rice Bosron, 60
Pltc'""9 II Declliorul
Clemens Bolton IS-1, Wiiiiams. Teus. 7·1
Rumunen New York, 10 1, Schrom
Cleveland, 10·2. Haas Oakland 1-1, Mason.
r ues 6·2 Nieves Miiwaukee 1-l, Elctll'!Orn,
Toronto 1·)
N1ftonal LNVU•
( 8•Md on 210 •l·l>lhl
G A8 A H Pct.
o,,.stra New York 77 112 40 74 349 Gw-111~ S4n 01'90 81 343 60 117 ~I
Brown San Fran 13 269 l6 91 331 Broo~ s Monrrtal 1• ?U A7 96 333
Ra•nt\ MontrHI 79 317 SI 10. 333
Su, OoclMrl 14 l3l 47 107 .321
0 1>ente11 Atlante 82 ?73 32 IS 311
Bau H01>\IOn 87 3?2 43 98 304
Slrawoerrv NY 13 7SS •1 16 298
Ritv P 11snur Jn 81 l02 33 19 295
H0tneRun1 Oav \ rlnu,ron '10 Schmidt. Phlledeie>flla, 19,
Marll'laa, Dodlltn. 111 Horner, Altan11. 11.
:erie• New Yori.. 16, Parker, ClllClnnell. 16,
Slvbtn, Oodllln. IS; • are lied wllh 1'
AunsBattffln
5cnm•d• PnllaeletPhla, 66. Ce-ier New York,
05 o,,.,, Houslon 60, Horner. Alfenra. 56, O~• \ "'"franc•"" 55 Parker, Clncrnnell. SS,
Brooks ¥.onirol 54 Wallectl, Monlrt•I. SI
Pttcl>lno (I DeclaHIM)
~er "andez New Vork 12·7. Oieda , New
for• 10·2 Carting, N@w York, 9-2, M<:Dow111,
Nt ,. V.:ir~ I 1 Bur•t Montre11, 6·2 LeCon,
Sa<' F raoc ,sco 9 l Gooden, New York. 10·4.
Kru•ow ~er F'ranc1sco 11 S, Rawrev, Pnll•clll·
P~•a 11 s
M • M
Mt H "' H1 2l 4' 297 ts IS
"'11 .. , ... q
\SI It 41 m • n
llO " 46 m • s. -,. .. 1'l6 ,, 5' .u • 10
)SJ 15 M
" 12 " .,, .., m
ll'fTCMtNO
... fllct. n ,,
17 JOI "' .. » "' ,, .71Q
t1 Ml 30 ,,,
U 7U
'' 1S1 .., 1M
21121 • m , •• 214
ti .212
411 .%71
• M U SO W•L laA CAl~MI m~ IJ ' t 2-0 U2 Witt lS? 133 46 124 t· 7 J.01
Md:attdff 1~ 113 '9 Ht 10-S U2 Flnll\t 16 16 to 11 I 0 U7
Corbett ··~ 35 I• n 2 I 3/M FOfJl9f' 31 l6 I) n •• 1 ,_., ~ 1~ 17 II If M 3M
Fltdler 17 It t 7 H Ul
SUiton IOSoll> 100 ·It 61 l ·S u•
1torne11k1c 101\1) 11' '2 31 S· 7 SJ 1
Cook P, 1' I 6 • 0-2 9.U
T.-. nP"> 7ff 214 S Ii •·'9 Ut kYft' Moo<t I, Corbett I, FOl'lltr •
LrTTL• L•AGU• ALL·STAJlS
IMIW DMl.left
DISTRICT '2 TOUltNAMaNT .,_I
(at ~ VllW Mtll LL
tW.,... w • flraewav> W ....... y',~
FOU'llal11 Va .. v Not'ft'I 12, Hunllnolon Vllllrt 1
T ..... 1 Gelne
S:JO -OoNn View "''· S..vlew l<r1daY'• Geme None K.MdlMd,
S.turdllV'l GMle
10 a.m -Hunllnoton V11tev ..,. Ocaen View· Sea"1itw winner.
MeMllV'a G.me
S:JO p.rn -Fountain V 1tlev North ""·
Salurdev'a winner •
<NOTI:: If Fountain V11te11 North IOW\
MIHtldav. anotw -wlM be P11ved Tundav I
A,... 2
(I t MlftM P'l rtl, H ........... hec:ll) (I..__, GAMml
w.-..V'aGame
NOM lChedVle<I. T.....,., Game
S:30 -Stanton n CVPf'IU Federal "'*""' GefM None tehedu*I 1
S.IUt'dilY'I ~-10 a.rn. -Wtttmlnater .-. Sranton-Cvpreu F'~ll winner
(NOTE If Weilmln$1er IOMI. •llOIMr ~me
wllt De Pined Mon<llv) •
Junier DMslen
DISTIUCT 62 TC>UaN.,,,...NT
(I t flauMalft v.-. Hlllll
W"""418V't ker'I
WHtmlnaltr 1', S.1vlew 13 (Westmlnsrw
win' Ofstrlcr 11111. IOll•nces to MKllonat Dlllvl
lefW DMMen
DISTittCT '2 TOUltNMWHT
(at JIMMll x. Hllll, w"'"""'•> (Edwwda Md TntMll 1'"9eh)
W~Y'I~
Oceen View 21, Wnlmlnller 4
Tonltht'I GalM
S -OcMn View n . W11tmfnsrer (ctlam·
olonltllP, winner 1<1v1nces to Mcifonll p11y)
HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
PutM 5'am·n·Jam ~IMMI
(•t UC~
TuesdlV' s Sc:eo"ft
Soutn CoHt 57. Soulh Bev 49 (Rfeky Buller.
SC 191
Orange Cou(llV 62. Buff•IO 61 (Adem KHle. oc. 1'l Sin Francisco S4, S•n FernandO ValleY S3
OreQC>n IO, CornPIOO 49
Los Angeles 84, Valencia a:J
M•d vetltv 13, Merro 47
Wvoml1111 "· ROCl<fisl'I SI Metro dlll. Nortnern Cet, torteir (Norll'lern Cit
lellld ro 'howl
Pa .. dllne 61, Wei"lde 8t111ers 65
Fresno 69. Sealltt 65
Missouri 53, Sulll!f'\llrs 46
Buffalo def Nort~n Cet, ronen
WeclrWsdllV' s Sc..-.s Orenoe Countv 67. Kentucky JV 62
M•d Vaflev 90, Bufl•IO 4
Wvornlng 7S. Soul!'! 8av 48
Soulll CoHf 56, Rockll1h SI (Rfckv Buller,
SC, 24)
t<tnluckv 66, San Fernando Valley 43
V1ctorle Perk 70, Sen Francisco 65
Kentuck'f M, Vlctorfe Peril 51
Orl!IOll M, P111dena 63
WHt,lde Bta11r1 54 Cornoron S3
Seattle 63 Pro Juniors 54
TodaV'I Gemes Main Gym
I om -Soultl Co.st " wvom11111 2 20 -M1nouri v\ 11a1enc1e
3 40 -San Francisco v\ Kentuc• y
5 -Oreoon vs We$1'•dt Blarers
6 20 -Ventura vs Sealfte
7 40 -Lo' .Anoelts v' Benema•
9 -M•d va11ev vs Nor1nern Ce!
Hontl Gvm
1 om -South Bev v' Rockt•s"
7 20 -Banarna' "' ~uoet'll&f\ 3 40 -Sen Fernando Vetlev vs V1crorle
5 -Comoton n PHadena
6·20 -Pro Junior "' Frtlno 1 40 -Vatencla vs Suoers1ers
9 -Oranee Countv vl Merro
FrklaY'a GlmH
Main Gvm
3·40 -Poot C w(nner vs Pool 8 winner
S -Poot 0 winner vs Poot E winner
6 2Q -Mid Vallltv vs Oranoe Couni.
7 40 -Los Angeles vs M•n our
Nar1tl Gvm
6 20 -Metro v' Buttaio
7 40 -Bahamas vs V1ienc111
S.turOllV's Gemoa
Main Gvm
10 11.20 • m -semtttnat,, 17 •O P,.,
conwt111on, 2 o m -lhlrd Pla~e J 40
cl\amPIOl'lll'llP
o.. .......
DAvn''I Loata• (......_,. leed!) -•
OMlt, tA$ ....,. ltol O.rrlltCU09, It llllll!lto, S
....iaowtall, 1 Mll9ut. :a callcl l!llM, •IJ MM wM. ~ ,,_..,.,, s twlllitl.1 t -. 1111 tune •WPOM" LAltOIMG -~ ._,.., 10.....,., s l'WlowleM, tt• NftO OUI, n ~
DAMA WMAaP' -t Milt., lOf """"" JOO ban, 31 ~ecuoa.' _.,,o, 1 lleDUt, If reo
flVI, .,, m.ICll&l'el, , t(lftflO llllltk' ,... ...................
SAN 09900 -Cuvam.ce L.aluJ, &.OS AHOILIS -~ C•IYOf'I Cr.-.
JedllOll Laila. SAJll al aNNtDIMO -G~ V~ ._..,,
Santa Ane .,....,,left!• A/la RIV• (IOUft'I fOl"ld. I
alYlllSKMI -Htmtl LAIQ, Fl,llmof Ulb.
TULMll -eone Creetl, • Orv Muao•
Creek. t<Mll River (IOUlh foO.), I(.,,, "'""'
(Falrvl9w ~ 10 KJtl -llouM. JoM• ~ lf'ldoe to F•lt\IH D•ml, Nobe Youno
Creek. ~1111 Cl• (UOOW and IO-),
South er.-. Tuie tu .. ., (middle tork, nonn llWl '
south fork• o4 metn fork, C.C.r SIOM -> MAOIU -Safi JoeQuln Rlwr (mlddll I
IOfll), Soteller L•k•. $1trkw•lllff Wllt•. ·~· -8lul ..... (I.SM!' 11\d lowtr) • '"YO -!laker CrM!l, alt ""-CIMk.
1 1"'°9 Creelc (lower, ml<ldle&"' I/Id lnrallt 1 Ill. ~Oft C,...., lndlolt a CrMI\, l.1111
Sab!'IM. Lone Pint CrMk, Nol'1" LPI. Rock
Cr• lltock Cr"" Llltl to Ille end o4 the roipdl.
Roell Creek Lake, ~$ Cretlt, TMOC)H
Crlllk, TIMmllla Cr .... , Tuttle C,_. MONO -8rldoloor1 R~Olr, 8uckeve
CrMk, Convict Crllk, Convlcf I.IQ, DNdlnln
Crlllc, Ettery l..lkt, ~°' La••· Glut Cree1c. Gren• L•k•, Green Crllk, Gull LAl\I, Hiiton
Creek, June L.akl, L" lflnlne er.-. L.• Vlfling
Crffk (IOUlh fOf'k), Ullll Watklf' Rl\19', Lundv
Lakl, Mamt. L.ak• Mammoth CrHk, Mllrv Lak•. ~ Crllll. Miii Cretll, <>wens '""'" !Benton Cronln11 111<1 81v Sc>rln11sl. Reverse
CrMk, Ro«>lnM>n CrMk, Roc;t.. cr ...... (Par•dlll
CamP ro Tom's Piece. Tom's Pleet ue>tlream 10
ROCie Creell LA!ltl. Rush Creetl. Saddltbl9
Crffk, s.odleOall L•k•, si.wtn Crtelc, SllWf'
Lekt, Sw1voer CrMll, T1-l..lkt, Tr~
Leke, Twin L8kll 8ridllePOf'I IU-and
IOW41!'), Twin Lele .. Mammoth, lflr11i11I• c,....
luooer 111d IOwer), Vlr9lnla takes (u-Incl
IOwtrl. Walkltl' River tCl'lrfl Fiii camPOround to
town ol W1tl<tr. Leavlll Meade>wa ClmQ9l'ouncl
to Sonofa 8ridM)
WldneldeY's tnnM~
••saaAu.
Al'Mt1cM LMtue Mil.WAUKEE BREWER5-Sklned GO«ntn
Thomes, oeat11neted hflllf', IOI' 1111 remelncllr ol
'"" ~'°" NEW YORK YANKE!iS-Actlvll.0 Joe
Nlekro. ollchl< trorn Ille l~-dlv dls.atllted lftl.
OU1r!Oflted Alfonao Pulldo, Pltc:tler to COIUMOul
ol tht lnternalfonaf LMoue
TEXAS RANGERS-S1114cs Pel Garmen.
rnlrd bu.man, 1no u1lonect htm 10 Saresot1 of
Int Gulf Coeal LMGUe
aA.SKtETaALL ...........................
CLEVELAND CAVALIER5-ff1med Dick
Helm end 8rfan Wlnlln 1ul111n1 coachH.
DENVER NUGGETS-Slontd Mark Alarlt,
forward
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS>-il .... ted
Ir" 1gen1s Greq Grl"om. Joe Dawson, Lu\IW
Gooowln, 8r'IO wr1on1. 8uckv C1W11111, Ori.Mo
Pnllllps, SllYI Kenllvort Ind Darren TlllL
PORTLAND TRAIL 8LAZERS--Cut 10rw1ro
G1rv WlNltmlOll and 11uerct1 Tonv H-1on,
Don Jeme1. Mark Owen and Renc!V Schiff
f'OOT8 ALL
NatlenllP:MlltllllLM9N
RAMS-Sl9ned Etb41!'1 W•lll. cornerbtcll
8UFF ALO 8ILLS-W1l"1td WIM Grel'll,
Ctfller
CMtCAGO 8EARS-S111neo .,., Herrl1, OI·
tensive end, L-8erne1 encl Jeff Powell. wf41
r.ctJYlf'I
Cl.EVELAND BROWNS-Signed Dwrol
Rav. Mifelv
DETROIT LIONS-Signed DoVll Hollle, or
tensive end. Jim Rttcnwefn offen1fv1 llUMO,
Don Sn11<1er, offen,1ve teckte Sie n Beker, wide
rteef¥1f', •nd Ron Ze4t Brewer, futlbeck
INDIANAF'OLI!> COL TS-Stgllff St1v1
Wrl111'11. ottenlive Unemen
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Sioned Jell
Wlckenl'lem, cioertef'tioad<, end JoM Stuarl,
offensive reek 11
NEW ENGL.ANO PATRIOTS-Sloned Brent
WIMlam•, de19M1111 end
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS--Walllld ROI> Ben·
nett, t1ekle. S111ned Ktlvln Edward• wide
receiver, and Kelln Slanberrv, 1at.iv
NEW VORK JET5-SloMcl R_, Attx·
1nder and Cart C.rr llntt>edlan, ancs . ..,Y1nce
Amola. runnlno OKI< NEW YORK GIANTS-Slilned Ron Brown
•nd Solomon Miiier. wlell rlCllven, Steve
Clsowstr.f. tac:ttlt, Jim LuebOef'I, dlrlensfvt ttnd
•I'd Jerrv Kimm.i. ilntOecker
PHILADELPHIA EAGLE!>-Annouf'ICed lhal
Norman Br1man ha' reec:t1ed an •11"-nl to
1>uv our co-owner Ed Llet>owfl1 meklno nlm the
M>le owMr DI lhe club Named Herrv Gem!Me
pres tdlnl inc cnl.t op1nlfng officer. Slllned
Junior Teutetetsi end 8o«>ov Howard, running
backs to two-veer contracts
ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Srgned Chertle
Baker llntl>acker
SAN FRANCISCO 49F~S-Slgned Tom
A11hmen, lullblclo. ro • four veer conrreci Ind
Ernest Evens uilerv
SEATTLE SEAH.AWKS-Stgned Peul
McOon•ld arid DevlO Norrlh Qutrllrblckl,
E ddle AnOerwn Hfetv Oon F alrblnks and
AIOnro Mill. defensive •nds. P•uf Mtlea. runntno
1>1ck JOl\n McVelgh hnel>lcker ano Mlcllnt
Bteci.. offenalve rackte
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS-Signed Kevin
Walker delen,lve l>ack Mlkf' Crawford running
1>ec~ 8ttn Reed d4rlen11ve enCI end Tommv
8ernnercll Punter
WASHINGTON REO~KINS-Stoneo Wfftev
'f'/llllems running Dack
HOCKEY
N•~I Hecltev LMOUI
NHL -Announced '"' rellr..,.,.nl ot Ron
Wlci.., referee
programs in the nation hy enjoying from last year's squad to graduation
the sun. surf and other traditional (6-9 center Stuart Thomas, 6-5 for-
Southern C'ahfornia summer-time ward Jam D~er and guards Tom
pursuits. Peabody and Jim Mounce) have lost ~----~---------------~~--------------------~----~~~~------~ --~~--~----
For example, this summer's sched-four times this summer, including a
ule has the Monarchs. who saw th~ir three-point defeat to Fairfax, rated
59-game winning streak end with a No. I in Southern California in some
I (. h · t • s pre-season polls. oss to rens aw 10 ast ~cars tale All but the Fairfax loss. were played
Regional Final, 1ump10g rom gym to with a depleted roster. either due to gym compct10g against some of the top teams in California and t~e West. in1unes or rcsuog top players. accord-
ard otor Problems
dynamometer hlle tc>
t.tiuld, ·-· ,..,. controls TRI-TECH MARINE INC.
Cotto Meta 646-6918
JOI""-' llM H tin 1-JJ-11
They currently are compet10g as a ,.....:.10;.:!~:!...;.:to'--'-M;;...:c""Kn=-1 ... h_t_. ____ _
combined unit with Ocean View High ------------------------------.
1n the Puma Slam-n-Jam lnv1tat1onal
at UC'LA. which runs through Satur-
day.
But 10 addition. the Monarchs witl
play in the Boeges--Av1a Summer
Tournament Friday through Sunday
at Servile High. the Great Western
Shootout, Saturday through Tuesday
at Cal State Fullerton and will travel
to Phoemx next week for the Ba~kct·
hall \ongress Invitational.
"It's been intcrc!iting,'" satd
McKnight of the congested sched-
uling (they arc also entered in an
ongoing summer league at Dana Hills
High). "I just go from one day to the
ncitt and look at the bracket to see
who we play next.
"We wtll have games until Aug. I
when they (players) get a three-week
break and can he kids again.''
McKnight added.
The 16-tcam Serv1te tournament,
considered Orange County's premier
summer event. will also feature
among others Corvalhs A1gh. the top
team 1n Orcaon lut season. perennial
pow<'rs St. Bernard. Vcrbum De1 and
Lon& Beach Poly. as well as three
other Omnge Coa!il area entnes
Ocean View. Manna and Fountain
Vallt•v r tu· Mona rt h~ open at 5e-rv1te
afUtnM ( orvalhs at 1.30 Fnday and 1f
v1ctor1ou~ would met:t the Santa Ana·
P1u<; X winner.
Matrr Dc1's leading 'ICO~N th1~
.. um mer. 6-1011, ~n1or center 1..tRon
E-lhi. and h ' 1unior forward Kc' 1n
In the
Arlington Theater
C»ITAMEIA
PAl&OllOCNDI
JtJLYll•JO
IO&MOU
~"" INl'ODIATJON:
7W/7Sl·l247
'86 t5ranae County Fair
It's Cow-Lo11al
l
* Now Thru July 31st •
AMLING ' s
Newport Nursery and Garden Center
--
* Free Local Delivery *
OpH Moo. tbru A•t. 8:30-~:30 ~und•Y 9:00·6:30
lM>O uat coHt hl1bway · o.-wport b•aC'h, C'allfonlla • (7 1 t l 844·9&t0
(betw•en m•t>srtbur aad Jambor•~)
I
•
1
I •
I
--------~-·~~----------.,_.... ...... --------...... ------------... --~-----------~ .... ~
* 0r8f91 Ooelt DAILY PILOT/ Thunday, JUiy 17, 19Be
pc Fair handlcap
I
or._c.-yp.r
l•I Wt MIMllM a.a C:.W.I T0•1rrt umttn ..... t .................. ,
l'lrlt ..... ~
41UAJn"lllMOllYI
,..,. llACI. • Vera Purie n.r. ....,.. * ""' w1» c i.1m1ne ~ic. I Hofne 91~ (IMWI (11 '1 De111dt Wiii (~•utlnel J ,.at o. .. ICerdot•l
• Owt1oft Ututi I S A~o (lroeltt)
6 ...,_. TrMlllon (Lewltl 1 ~ ,._u (CrMOtrl
I VIII Lou (Hullt) •
'' JV.I• #Noon ••rt tLecke11l
6 ltOM'' Joy (M4anMNJ t10 7 ~,All (llltlde) 11IOI • ~ •• ,,.. <'"~'*'' in ' Ml llevortto <lnrlwtt) m 10 Oelewar• lltr~ <'•'*tori HS AIMU....
11 9fltllt T~ C°'eblel 111 122
12 ~ s.m 11t-.t1 1n
13 H91tuva Game CCa•tMOnl 111 HS
\4 NOClle ltVtllm 11 .. IPNITI) 12) 122
ltlD MOON ltUNNllt (l·ll Held welt tn 0000 effort, l,.,,.,,ov.t tott 9lld LIPl\am 1lldt\
111JOerO, lt.OHT 6N STYLI (?• l) No C"-nc» .. ,t
In rouet'I trip, OrOM tllOtllel' llOldl, '°"'Laa
ALL <•·l> ~' uP IO Utrlnl IOll•Olll, IOl'9 oY«duf tor tNldtfl win LONOSHOT·
GREIOY
JIJM"M Uc:a'. 6'1 ,rlM'lei .. f'\lr ... t lUOO
T1trff ....., Did n111" Cletmlne Prlet1 ~,ooo.
f ll.000.
1 Protni. COerri.o> 114
f f\Qlut' .. ~IV ( ) 11•
l P:alrv 0.. Molller <~1 ... 1 tlO
• ~IOI"! """"1fl CCett.-> 11• S 0 I( flMV (Llottam> 114
• VICIOfla '9rt (lltdl) 11 I°'
NAT\MAL MOMUTY CS•2> lxlra oulct. llllv
wit heve •riv da'l119ttt on ltllt llundl, ~n llOICI
1wav, NOfllLA (4·1) ~P fllY trOft'I OOldell
Gate P:i.lds -.Ced In CO!'We!lllW '"4; YK· TotllA l'OaT l6•1) l uv wlnnw tl'llt...,., ta1t °"'· trainer Nt lier tPOllact wal. L.ONGSHOT ltHANTOM MOON
T£UY
TURRELL
IOO«t solid tonl9hl, YUIKOWI ST.._ CN> a.1
tftorl ovl\ llllt 111911« Ill llOlltloft for • t!IMa of "" our ... TOUGH IMJC>Ulutt ()oil Lost •• C:hotllCt In .. ,, • one beet. IO •Ol.llJflW .._ Nna to UM
tn t11lt ""I LOHGSHOT: llOLO NAHTl'QUO$
NINTH uce. 61-\ 'UflMv• ~ .. tli.soo.
Allow•nc• Tllr .. .,..,.. 06d and uo. I s.n. llllvlll
(l(Nftel) 117
2 Corre P•IHllO (St.,.llno) II 111
3 Marw ltoed\ (l leckl 11104
Hollyivood Park
racing entries
T_.,.,...,.
(Qrfef• ., ...... 14 ............. ,
trlrlt ... f) I IJJ'I\.
l'•ST lt&CI. 6 l\.lrtono~. ttur.. $12.000.
Maldtft fttllet afld f'Nl(ec llYM Yffrt ~ end UP •rto In Ct ltf. Ctalf'nlne Price 132 000 Jft,000
1 Her ltoval Gntot (l'\ncaY) 114 2 lrltll l(rbttn (Ollv~) 114
3 OfmH91o'• World (OetrlOO) I 14
4 P'lvlne Glau tLllll\am) 1
11
1
4
4
S 1'1 a, Femous (KMMll
• IO ot.I t•lenl (0¥Ci9) NM.._.
~ 11 ltUll Geof'91e Jon CIMler) C2l In
P'OUltTll •ACI. ' F~ Puoa 9',SOO.
Thr" ., .. r old ltttlft ci.1m1no Pric:. st,000-
sJ,OOO
S8VINTM aACI. 1 lll• Mlln. Pune 5',SOO
Ttvee VMn Old end Ull rT\9~ C191mlno Price
132 ,000·111,000
•Time ~re (Cl~otl 11104 s Fall Flv« (Oft-> 11•
• Powtrl..-Evft (PellerMltl) I 10
' Doctor1 8rew (Pettartonl 114
7 Pflrnt Performer (Cattenonl 114 I '"°fllllO HUlllrlU (OeiehoulMIYt) 114
' llfrtl'letl T•" 1ai.c111 a lot Hollypark
racing
results
CMAL TAt..INT CS-21 Cel'M 10 lleM letl el IN• •i."CI, c•n ,_..,, JUSTA MOOH SAltl
f)-1) e>r.wt Miii 10 Ille one he !let 10 Offl, taHtlit Of Mme, ll'ACI O&Tll C6· I> Verv quick Md CM! IHI llllt dbl~ H f<My ?2 tine shOws
L04't4$HOT PERFECT TltAOITION
SICOMO RACll. 350 Veras Pun• M 700
Alow•."Ce Xwo ..,..,., OICI I Win_.. Foe Cltulrl 1n
2 l,,._.lratlon (Hunll llt > Elllotlcal (CrMoe<l 1n
• Vlc10N Cllett's (Le<kev) tn s M/tfllv P:lne "Mn (Mele<) m 6 E11celslor ROCket (Garcl•I in
7 Enl-•oe (Ceroore l In I ~91'\ Too tPeullnel 1n
INTOUl'AGI (7· 11 Well o.tCkeO In Los
l'llllO$ July l . Cardoza rl<lff 1onlo111, VICTORY
CHllllU Cl· I l Welt bred colt wlH be verv IOUQft
wllh ,_.1 of le" effort, MIGHTY ll'IHE MAH
I• 11 NaedeO IUI °"'' encl shOul<I H rn e share with ball LONGSHOT EXCEL$10R ROCl<ET
THOROUGHllRllDS
THlaO RACE. 6 , Furtonos Purse lS,SOO TN'M veer\ old eno up me1oeni c1elmlno Price
s 12,500-SIO.SOO l Rao MOOl't Run,...-Lll>hem t I 1 110
2 CrHdv <llrinkerllolfl 1n
3 Haoen' Haro CGreo•e> 121 11S
4 R1oht In Stvtt ICH 1anon1 t2l tlS
S Wiid Wiiiie tGerrldol llS
1 F-w•v (Pettw,on) 117
2 FenlH'f Flnllh (91blfte) II•
3 o.Mft Town 1seo11) It•
• Prlnceu PNttrl• (OouotH) 11• S To .. IMPfft\!Ye (C•stanonl 117
6 Klno• Logo (Patton) 11112
1 Frtendlv llrltetlft (EnrlQue.11 11'
TO al ~tlllVI IS-11 Good Cat-te
form tor thl• 111111. fll• batter In this MM>t,
conle11llOv• ""'· OISlltT TONI (l -1) Winner •• Pomona •l'IOWed •Offd UP Norlh to bit
IGWMr, mav never look Mc:k, KING'S LOGO
l4· ti tmPfeutve maiden wtnn« bucklno •" the °"°' reoullno •oe1Mt wlMerS. LONGSHOT
F RIE NOL V BRITCHES
P'IP'TH ltACI. 6 l Furtono• PurMt M,SOO
TnrM vH n old eno uo fllllfl •nC! mer••
Cla lmlno Price •70,000 1 Chermlno 810uom tCu tenonl I IS
7 GOOO New• ()olt (OOUQIH ) l IS
) Jull<e CSlt>lllal 1 IS
• $hKl<v\ FOllvl Ctemmer1no1 "110
S Teke Mii Homa CEOwerOsl 172
6 CH I To Port (Htouer•) 1 IS
7 Slemore Melor (8rlnt.erllolfl x 110
JUTI<A (4·1) Aw1v •Ince la" On no• COUfltv
Felr ,,_t, •oeed to c ... r tnls t..ici •ncl wlll 1.iootn ltnd easier, CHAlllWNG BLOSSOM CS-21
Even .+tort In Oee>ut lmPfovemanl PUil !Ills f1Uv
rioht tllef'e el the wire. CAST TO ~T ll -H
SPffd one beck In strelohl met<*i tlfft rites •
look LONGSHOT: GOOD NEWS DOLL
I Sir Tekl (Doutill) 120
f area N Bruce CO•ffldol 11~
3 8 tweiro (Cel'vtntftl 11117
• Geuant hn <•leek> 1t 1 U s Bold Oave Alkt (PatterlOft) 115
• S•loe's ev Thr" Clammarlno> .ells
1 Dou• WIMt (0. JHl.d) 1 IS I Prince Amtler1 (Enrklue1) 113
t 1<-.c!v E11dlante (Plitton) •lOI
KaNN•OY ••ot&NGI (S-2l TroY• .. ,,
oelr, ciutck ~ wlH heve tlle IHd ano can handll
11\e dl1tence white dletetlno own oeoe, MAO N'
altUCIE (4· I) Strlldllno oYI lonltht, lntarl\111111
Ol'O\llKt Ml OOOCI flour•. SUOIS av TH•••
CIO·ll Not a bed effort IH I et Lot Alemllo• oval,
COUIO De the uoMller LONGSHOT· PlttNCE
AMllERT
lllGHTH R&Ce. 6 FurlOnOs Purte. Slt,SOO
ThrM yHrt old •ncl uo Clalmtno Price· 170,000·
'11,000
1 TO<toh En~ <Ollvereu
2 BOid Na"teciou1 tOrteoal lA ROOMY (81tekl
• Yukon's Ster <LIOll•ml
S CM Seo llov (CHtenon)
6 Makero CMuntell)
7e Le Retain (Slt>llle)
I Ack Acll Oettvar1 <Enrlou.,I
e-eern,1e1n. Block. Formen
Glutleno ti el e111rv
110
116
IC 111
114
116
1)0
ll• 110
Suuenan
ltOONEV 17 11 E~tr• sharp o•ld ano e11
trvrnete olvH lftll oalr eoo.o one.two ounc:h,
Orange County Fair results
Or•nee C.Untv Fair
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS
(tftl .. ll•dl'I mlHd ~)
OUAltTERHORSl!S
l'IRST RACI. 400 verd1
e.oolnos MIU (Whit•) 1(1no Of The Perede CLeckevl
Ne1ure1 Plee1ure (Hunll
Time 0204
IU O 5&0 loO JOO HO u o
AISO Ren ICh•t>ons Folks M111reu Kele Win
He Ctn, Master Shi"'· Molavi Mist, Rel• Bella
&ebY, A•l1 Ceoer
Scre1elled None U EXACT& 11 St oe10 UI .0
SECOND ltACE. 870 verdl
krernl>lll'!I Joe <Pullnel
EicoenO The Peet IF•gueroal
Rooar Vouno <Gerc111J
Time o .01t
400 u o 2.0
l lO 300
3 60
.4tso Ren CH h Killer M10n1on1 Po•lcv
Ben sieno H•O• Lark •mer•cen Alhlett
Scre1eneo M•Ck1t s m evhem &uo\
Alore1nouon1 S.m\ An~I Cocnon De Le •t
IS EXACTA 14·11 oe10 ISOOO
THIRD RACE 6 furlong\
Princess Lar~ I Pelltrsonl
~P•"' S•eeier 1011vtrH1
No Prestrv1•1ves Aregvnd•I
Tome 1 173
910 H O 470
6.0 •IO HO
Al10 Qafl Tt1t\1\ l<.oHv s Wor•o
Beware Tne Queen Btlh \ C1ent
Scre1cneo TIHt>e Me Anot1
SS EXACTA 1·1l oa•d \l~I SO
FOURTH RACE b luriono\
Youno T 1rtar Enr·ouu 10 ..0 '40 J 60
S.olOrs Envov 1MunM1•l1
E otrem111 <CHtanont
Tome I 12 0
&20 6IO
'60 2 60
Allo Ran Heoov &llo.er , Scotero Secre11co11.
Ht '\ A Orll1tr, Berter, Aomen Weve
!>crat<l'ltd P11vou1 Svmateu\
OH DH d neel tor \tcOllCI IS.110r\ Envoy &
E.<lrt rn•''
P'll'TH RACE 6 i lurlono\
1n A Perede (81ec1<J
011tenl Runner !S1t>llte t
T11 A Laov 10o1.101au
Tome 1 19 t
960 400 400 l 00 280
0 0
Aoso Ren Shae Snot B1t>v GolO C•ef!Ofl For
>/>v Susen Taoocne Str1oh1ne Fo•• Curv·e
Bav Pear•v Gra., Steel
Scretcneo 01me11010 t Wor•o Mer.on\
Dream
IS EXACT& 14 11 oa•o ~00
SIXTH RACE. 6 •urionos
S1no1e• B1ac10
Hache a Tet h•la O<•vare\
Mr ReaClor 1 Pallt r\Ofl
Time t 11 J
1s10 110 seo
'.0 l20 tOOO
Al\O Ran Luov Masaoaoo, Arllstic Veniure
Racue1 Honlno Bev Beau·, Hooe WooOla no
Wev Tw '' T"e Menage Scretcnto None
IS EXACT A 8 l De•O 1718 SO
SEVENTH AACE 6 luflO"O\
Grev Seotemt>er S11>111e I • <l-0 J •o 2 40
Suooen Sau 1 warr~nl 9 20 4 80 Bon Fire\ Sister IL 1>11a m1 180
r .me 1ll2
Al\O Ae11 Coootr Venus ll' 1'1 rt Luc~v
N.CC.11 N11ura Vtlvtl
Scre1c11tc1 ArMI\ Lift Be•u CO<.trenl All
Knlont Netee
IS EXACT& ll 71 01110 II,.. SO
EIGHTH ll&CE. I 1116 mites
H•tamoto t81eckl l 60 l.<l-0 7 IO
SOfl Of Rare ll<H nell 4 .0 l .O
Rooe Tender !Ferne ndez> 160
Time 1 •7 • Also Ren Preserve11ve Jolly Jo\n Prootr
Oellvef'v, ColO Nose. E •Clu11on Screlcned None
IS EXACT& 11 •> oelO 143 SO
NINTH ••cl 6 J lurlOllV\
Aorne t (Oovere\I
F.ne KuOc>s 1ve1enwt•e1
l'ortvef' A 81urr (S1t>1lle l
Time 1170
Alto Ran MIU Benson Ah•aoe. un1verseltY
Scretcned None
U .. ICK SIX (l ' I 3·7·41 Peld 17 07100 w11n
lwo w•nnen Csrx 11<>ne\1 U P•O SI• Con1ota1ion
P•i4 1707 IO with 20 wonnert five nor~1
TENTH RACE. 6 , h.1r10no1
Cllv Of Uont C81eCI</
Green R•ver (Hentlev Jr 1
Tur" To Erin COouole\I
T1mt 119•
6 40 400 )70
1210 blO s 60
A1sc Ren Pirele ' Re nsom in \•Ot Tl'leParl<Homt< Mesllt' Neill 801towon
K•nci u111rna Don B Merrv B•ut E veo Go••• !>cralcPleO Sirtek1 To &e So10 .Au>en Ao r
Contreveneo
'2 DAILY DOUBLE 14·21 Pe•O l60 20
IS EXACT& 1 41 oa•O 1707 SO
Cuesta hires ex-OCC standout
Form er Orange Coast Colle ge baseball pla)er La~
Lee, \.\ho h11. 335 as a se cond baseman for the I Y~I
Pirates· sq uad . ha!> been named h ead baseba ll coac h at
C. uesta C ommunit)' College in Sa n Luis Obt~po
Lee . ~6 "'h o had 39 RBI and scorc.d 38 runs. wh ile
stnktn~ out Just five tim e'> 1n 181 plate appearances and
also go ing 7 for 7 in sto le n base attempts for <>< C pla)cd
two years a t Pe pperdine U nne r s t1y
H e late r p layed profe<;s1o nall'.r for the C. la !>s !\ L't1ca
Blue S ox. the team 1mmortaltzed 1n the best-sellin g R o ger
Kahn no' el ... Good Eno ugh to Dream."
The \Wl!Ch-httt1ng Lee finis he d Wt th a . n I a verage
fo r the 1 e n t Blu . . who w on the Nt·v. \ o rk-
CALL 642-5678
Prnn League C h a mp1ons h1p that year.
Kahn. a n o ted ba!;cball novelist. calle d l .ce .. Pnn cl·
Valiant a<, clutc h h 11tcr ••
After a tryout th e fo llo wing )'ear w ith thl' \t·attk
M a nners. Lc.·c rel1rcd a<, a pla;rer 10 pursue a rna l h1 ng
career
A gra dua te o f S an Luis Ob1s'po High, L t'l' SPl'OI 1wo
)ears as an a ssistant at Cuesta before accepung a !>1mtlar
positio n last year at (al Po h San Luis Ob1spo
Lee who came 10 cX ( a fte r o ne )'Car a t Santa
Barbara ( 1ty C ollege, w1ll return with his \ue'lta team to
the Costa M e sa-base d sch ool nl'\t 'ipnng for the Pirate•,'
ann ual Easte r lo urnaml·nt
IF CALLING FROM NORTH ORANGE
IF CALLING FROM SOUTH ORANGE
1 Smooth llld (IMnmarlno) 11111
$ANS ltlVAL (4 ti s-ci. relt, •net huttnno
ollOI rnav l>t tnoullh htclor1 10 PUM off mlld
ue>Mtl, MAHY lllOAOS 13-1) Conaltlend cam•
e>etoner Ye'v tCMll!fl Wilen right, •-• one to
bHI, ..OWllt,UL •VH C6 I) U~ Mr"-1
cll«k •Ml would be llO WflH'IMI For alt the
marbles In wide -lliMI LONGSHOT FALL FLYER
TllNTH RACE. 1 FurlOnos. Purte. '6,000
ThrH •ncl tour YHrs Old Clelmlno Price M.2SO
I Fetlnetlen <SCottl II•
2 RtcNorOs Gotcha (llleck) 111°'
l Svmeic1.11 (Oouole1) 11'
• Prooar 1n1e11t (MunHIO 114
S Dean's EHY Mortev tGerrldo) 11'
6 Bright LHdar <OllvarH) 112
1 Coureoeous Rebel ICa1le110<1) 112
I Leoacv OI Hooe ILIOf\aml 1111
SVMASCUS 13·1) Orlllad In "'8rD fethlon
Nort!I el GOiden G•I• Pf'lor IO lhll>Plno, ,.,.s
Jtrono consideration, ltlCHAllllD'S GOTCHA
<S·2l Mav have 1no11t clan actlle on lhls bunch.
exits ttkt dlllence heal. credll•ble oarlormance,
.. IGHT LllAOER t•· 1) HH °"' • oelr of Cellenle win• t>eck lo Mc:k, c:langarou• LONG·
SHOT LEGACY OF HOPE
9HT alT ROONEY (Elolll!I Rlct l
PRICE .. LAV POWERFUL EVES (Ninth
!tee•>
x-c>enolH eoorMllce lockey
Preclslonlst
headsfleld
for Sunday's
Gold Cup
C hampio n sprinter o f 1985
Prec1s1om st . 1s a s ked to carry 127
pounds whe n h e heads for his second
consec utn c Grade I v ic to ry o f the
)-ear in Sunday's S500,000 H o lh-
wood G o ld C up.
The weight allo tte d Fred W
H ooper'r, ho m c bred 1s the highest
Precm o n1st has bee n gi'c n since
r unner-up to G rc1nto n in lac;t year's
S an Bernardino Handicap.
Winne r by a neek over Gre in to n 1n
this \e ar's San Bernardino. the 5-
'ear -old son o f < ro 11e r annc l(cd
H o ll\ v.ood Park 's (1radc I Cah-
fom lan by h a lf a le ngth o 'e r R o land
Sahm'c; S uper Drnmo n d 1n h1\ las t
s tart
Jn that test P rens1on 1.-.t. at 126.
l Onccded n rnc pound s to t he runncr-
u p. Ht•,., c.e1 10 g1,c thl' sam e w e ight
hrcak 111 ~upcr Dia mond in the I 1/4-
milc C1old (up
\clUnd-h 1gh wnghtcd al I :!O, last
)lJr°\ Holl}v.ood Turf (u p v.1 n n er
.\lphaha tim seek-. his first sta ke<,
~ucces" o f the sea son in the Gold < up
Ownt·d O\ the J uddmo nte Farm., o f
P rince lti.h<t lcd '\bd u lla h the
p rt'domtnt•nth
1urf-ratt'd \On ul Vcrbaltm \A,On 1n
allowance comp:rn}' o n the dirt earl>
1n the )'car and. m ost rcccntl)'. ran
'>t'tOnd to ~upcr Dia m o nd in the Bel
\tr H a ndicap. a lso o n the main track.
The 11 1-)ear-olds and up n <>m1-
natc d to the Gold Cup, trad1t1o nal
h 1ghl1ght o f llo ll)'wood Pa rk'r, spnng-
\Ummc1 \Cason
540-1220
496-8800
SICONO ltACI. 6 furto1191 PurM J 13.000
lllllles encl merH 111r" vHrl Old eno uo Clalmlno
Price. '12,SOO-I 10,500
1 Solelldldlv Luc:llv CDovolH I '" 2 LadV Noemi (Plncavl 116
l Olent Fency (.Jesu•I 11•
• •lllv J"n (8taekl x111 s ltov•t T"rHOI (Soll•> 116 'PUP!tWlck Ledy (Harnandezl 116
1 Prlma vere Dancer (P11ttf'son) 116 I II Maok <Gerr1d9) 11'
t Nol A Strew <S•••ns> 11•
10 Dlsel'I Dew (\/eleniuele) "'
TMlltO lt&CIE. S', lu<IOnOl PurMt 116.000 NWIOel\ flllles two y .. r oldt Clalmlno Price
U0,000-145.000
1 Ladv Mu•or•v• <Escooer> 118
2 Chamc>eone Al Oawn tTorol 111
3A Score For us (Ce1tenonl t 11
4 Or Socti. It To Ma !Merel 116
SA HoU'I Get (Sollt ) 111
6 ltomen Gem (~1evtn•I 111
1 Ledy PalrOfl• (l(ffMI) 111
I l•Wt<• (Plnc:•Yl 111
t SOulh Of Frenc• (81ackl x 113
,OURTH ltACll. 6 turlono• PurMI 1?2,000
Fllllfl lllrM YHrt OICI Clelmlno Prk t '80,000·
'1S,OOO 1 Lecay Linn (Harnanot1) 113
1 Ftloht At>ove (0eleh0unevt9 I 1S
3 Wltcn.rv (McCerron) 113
• Helrltu Htlren (Solo) 113 S MefYI '$ Prtoe tSteYtnll 113
•Mitten Sl•fi<lnarv l~ker> Ill
11'1'TH ltACll. 6 furronv• Purse 112.000
Malden FIMtn •ncl meres tnrM veers old and uo
8r.O In Cellt. Ct•lmlno Price UZ,000-121.000
I Tot>ln's Angel lWerrtn) 11•
? SurOfOl''l Quftn (lemmerlno9 x 107
3 Eutarn Glamour <Veltnrut48) 114
4 Clno1.11n10 IOrteoe) 11•
S Ftv Me To The Moofl (Sleven•l II•
6 TtM Me The Time (1(.-f) II•
7 Oynemo Oertll'!I (SIC!llal 114
I wne 01 Tell Ya tCl~OI) AllS
9 CPllld .At Pley <CHtenon) 114
10 Kav C" Humb\.IQ (Crowoe<) xllS
SIXTH RACE. I mile tur1 Purse 523 000
Tnree vHr olcn Cte lmtno Prk• '62 SOO·sS7 SOO
l O•mon's Gema CSollS) 116
2 Spece Shem <McCerron) 116
J Exotic Art>ttor CHernendell 114
4 Ooutlle Que\I CV1len1uetel 114
S Northern Va'°' (0.lallOusuveJ 116
• GH llC l(nloflt COlivere\I 11• 7 Counl Eric (81ac:kl 1 111
SEVENTH RACE. I mile Pur.1 I 13,000
Maidens thrH veer 0101 encl uo c1e1mlno Price
'37,000· •71.000 1 V1oor10fl (Orleoel 114
2 Ml1rn1 Kio ( Valtniutlel 117
l Trell 8elenct <Soto> 110
4 We'M See CC>elallouueve l 11•
S Erin's Dl•mond (So41sJ 114
6 Meolc FICIOlt 1s1evenu 117
1 Not>le Peuer (Torot 114
• YIOPIYO IMcHerOue) 121
9 Ooclor T Are <Hernenotrl II•
10 ~PY Sales (P1ncev1 170
11 Fu t F11no <t<•-11 '"
EIGHTH ltACE I • milts turf Pur\t U S.000
l'l111e1 eno mare' '"'" vte rl 01<1 ano uP .411owenc•
I ltuttle• N BHUI (Sohs)
2 Dewn Of Hooe 1s.o101
IOI
IOI
10I
171
l Of>,14!w\enne ISttvtn\)
• Pe<fec• Maleh IMcCe rrOl'I
S Arl1t>re Ladv (81ac" < IOJ
119 6 Jullt Wrller IOetanouuavel
Orange County Fair
jockey standings
(Threutltl TuttOev'' r•<••I
Antonio Ca\lanon
Rav Sit>•"•
Mer11n Pldroza
Cortv Sleet< Alex Fernanot1
Terry Lllll\em
Lu•s Otteoa
Jeck l<ee~
T rov C.rel>lt
EO<ht DtlahOuneYe
Win In\
Mh. hi 2nd ~d % % so 10 (0 l 70 "' JI • l s 11 •1
31 6 l 4 16 JS
33 S 6 I IS 5&
It S 1 l 4S 73
70 S I l 25 •S
37 • 6 7 ll ~
l3 171 0936
26 l 1 I 17 73
6 ) 1 0 so 61
HelvWMd P~
WIOHISDA Y'S ltlSUL TS
(61"d .. ., ... ., ........... " .,_....,
l"lllllST ltACI. • lurtonot
Fu nlonelltv (Htf'nenaerl
LHdlno L.•U (Toro)
OenGer·, Reoaroi (Steve111)
Time I 10 •
4300 1UO •20 460 ,60
220
Also Ren ltllh Zuni. Cese MQntv. Gaatt ne,
Pell Dav Scrltldied N-
SllCOND lt&CIE. 6 lurl011111
Dominant Roni (81aCf1
Jecarl (Mer•l
Ernie l(lno !Crowd«)
Time 111 l
uo 3.20 uo 7 IO HO
l 20
Also Ren Tusc•n Knlohl, Petrov,
Chucktecalor
Scretched· Mhter Striae, Rullno Position
U DAILY DOU8LB <• 11 PalO J119IO
THMO RACE. S '> lurlono\ "'I.It Adted (Ollvere\l COOi Telkar (McCerronl
Neturel Oeo (Ce11enonJ
Time 1 06
uo SIO oo
lOOO HO HO
Alto Re"· PelllHI. Bola 8•f9•fn, 0.COClt,
Troe>oihtrt. O•rbv Chick, Bold N' COOi, Etrerf
Arlr11u
Scrllclled None
n IEXACTA (7·11) oe10 •UI 60
P'OURTH ltACIE. 6 f1.1r1011111
Gordon' I Commeno COeteno u1uv1l
RHd Mv Lio• lV•ltft•u•I•) Power Forwero (Merel
Time I 11 3
1380 HO llO
llO HO
7 70
Alto Ren llOld Lffoet P 8 I Cnolce, Lucky
AOvocete, tr11h Juu lce
SCretcheO St••di•"""' n EXACT& (1-1) oald HOO
P'll'TH RACE. I I 16 mile\ on lur1
Mar1leve tTorol 14 IO 7 IO • .0
Medi• Girl (Pinc•• Jr l • 00 4 00 Plum Teuv (McCerrOfl l l lO
Time 147 1
Al10 Re11 Alverelte Solt Oawn, Tenv•'\
ltot>erlo Scralchtd None
•S EXACT A I I S> e>e•O 110S 00
SIXTH RACE. • lurtono\
Mv P1ttctt1teoe <Pmcev Jr I
ln•ofre<I Too COt•eoa)
8iotlmt 8ov cs111111e1
T1m1 117
5 60 u o l 60
IHO 1 60
100
Also Ren Cheroot. GOlcMn Soruce, Troy·,
Aot1e1or Eltven Awev Jumo1no Jell.Un, Well
Told T1~rr· DISlenrt Neme Of The G•me ~
Vo
Screlcned Oenche•, Cove Of Sanker•,
S.01tnerlan, 8uc:l's Brother Joe
J1 EXACTA 11-1) oalO 110700
SEVENTH lt&Cl. 6 lurlOnO\
Miocene 1 Snoem.tl<tf' l • ao • .o 1 to
Oul1tt Ltmlls (Hlouerel 400 760
Monc1a r11te IL10heml l 00
T•mt I 1? .Also Ran Zemt>cnl Pan. Throw Homt,
Peruvle11 81•0• Troul>le T Scratcnao Norquin
S.S EXACT A 14 Tl pelO 191 00
n PICK SIX 7-7-7-1-7 0 P••O 17,133 60 wltn ~ wtnntts 1t1ve he>ftesl C1rrvover •96.ld H
EIGHTH lt&CE. I mite on 1url
81ue Ruor (Stevens ) •IO 310 2 to
Ftoellno Reserve (Velenzuelal 4 <!Cl l 00
Prince Trut IMcC•rrOfl ) l 00
Time 13)3
Also Ren E\lele P04Y Tt1t Ster Vtdeo
!>c••tcneo Htoemony LUCl<v N G<Mrt ts EXACTA II SI oe•d $5700
NINTH lltACE I • m1~
Boos•t< <S•evenu
Trevel CCemoesl
Maren SPft<I IOt•eoa>
Time l SI
1 60 • 70 JOO 900 4IO ~00
A1so Ren L•Olllhtwevnolme Ster Mal1ttlel, Galle fll Mlndt<I. Wh10t>ev Tee
Scretcneo None
15 EXACT& 17 71 oe10 \ 112 00
Allenoa11ce 16 1)0
SAIL INTO SAVINGS
4 lines, s7&0 or s5ao
7 days... with prepayment
Private Party ONLY No Real Estate, Commerclal, or HeCp Wanted
c. ...... ltal lltatt Ftr S.lt l11l llt1t1 Ftr Salt lntt1l 1002 C.rtH •el Mar 1122 C..ta .... 1114 lrriat IM4 ...... ..... lllt lnptl! ..... lllt C.... .. Illar JIU
La111l lAz I lia11al ldoz lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili i665R oecor P«f901 on WN'f WT tllnl ·--'..... IUYllW •COAONA HiOHL.ANDS . Ullllliii ._.,._ .. _. __ .. ._ ~ ~=. ~&w~~ e..tei<M3bdml.2'~b•th IYI... Hwt>orvi.w3bd,Cennel. e.iow mnet Aid from ~2t>a~.den·~c,~
1114
...... Tllll.
. .
Spectuclar penorernlc YllUYIA..Ut Sun 12_,. SI 7,.9-9070 Just lllted. New carpet & 1 _ _.._. __ .... ___ 1 Alr cond.eotnerlot.~ $319K 10 S299t< fixed 1 .. all
WI U" Tll -n "" ~ paint. CoY«ed patio + _. ... , n---ly upgraded. Prlnclptee prloe fOf lmmed .-. gtir. 1 Imo lee. ,..v
vl9w lot ~Ing New--~• Beet ""Iced d,._,,, HouM more. Fon p(IVate ltlow-lltcltl H tftt lllrttf only. UH,000. Call Nantucket model, 38R .-rty Augutt. 873-933e port Harbof A unique ,.. property located In htgh Your deught«'• preyw1 38r 2Ba $387,500 ... 321 Ing o.11 Rutty Guinther Tri-level, 1740 eq ft 3 780--0235 28A wllrg llde lo1. MCMt •JASllll 11111*
MCurlty .,. .. wt1h 24 hr are anawered -Total r• _ ... , ..... ..._.. PolnMttlt Open Wed-831·1~98 Bdrm. 2'~ Beth, tamlty If .... W1ll.lff In lmmed. lncludH: 28R 28A, den wltlot tub, guar~ g•t•. Aaklng model 28R + loft, 38A -3 I 1&1• 11111 Sun 12-5 SI 759--9070 I·~~ ~w~• room. air cond., 2 car -Guwded oomm. comm gu bbq, beetn celll, lky-$795,000 cdl. Few ad-atelta on 'h acre w/N B • ' gar~ Nciuded patio 4Bdrm, 2Be, '299.500. poo4 & Cennl9. 833-3e22 11 Guerded Exit
dltlonel tnfonnetlon. cat1 eddr .... All thll •t only 1110.GOI C..ta •na IJp tcr1plec1, tiled foyer: Totelly returbtlMd. Uk• cw 831-5510. Uk for Fran .:: ll800/mo.~7804 2~8. Prlnclpeleonly $280,000 Agt &40-5580 IE.cpanalv• Vim above lllTAIW _; ___ 11:_,:' pool1, view of lrvln• new, many 1men1t.... •tL 11 p•rk toward F11hlon Rench, 3 yra old, tao00 landac.pe allow-• 3BR. 38A NEWLY DEC
1111nd. harbor & ocean (llllYU1M,IOO) But. luMu 1142 $159,900 ~9244 enc• to •ult buyer •mt COM Cott1199. Garg, yd,
CLA991FIED INDEX 642-5671
FROM NORTH ORANGE CO. ~ 1220 co.
K OT
CLASSIFIED OfflCE lo+OUAS T....,,._Se<Wle M-F
I 00 AM·5 30 Pt,1
S.turcley I 00 AM· 11 30 AM Bu...-Count• M r
I 00 AM·S 00 PM
OIAOUNH -· ·-· .. -. ,..,_. ·--'-•· -·
o• ., .. ""' '-' I I Ji 4 ¥ """"",. ~., l'"" ~-·--...... , .. ,,,,
'""', •• II# ,,. ,.~y
\jti ",. ......
-·---~ a· II
CHECK YOUR AO
,.,. o.1:!'f.!'!l~.~.D~~, ••
t enc ¥f llfe<I." HO••w-., OI' .. ~ ., ~"°"' 6o O((~ "'-•" ''~ •'W"f' t~ •O l "f.0 o+r• ef'lrd l ~· I OU' .,, de l'f' •..otl
ftU tt'\ ,,.,,~<et••.,. fO MJ )it1t '~ 0•11v P~W>• •<c•o'' no •l•b~tH11
tty .~ .. ~'0' " •" .0.,.,,1..,......,
ll)f •"-<" I "'l 't bif rttOOftt•.,..
t• H ' tO' ""-<ot' of f""9 ~· e-t 1"4•~ O<CVOolM O\r ,... -''OI
t '" ' ( ... Of\ " bt • • ... .,, '°" .,_. , , ,, "'W---•·.,....
A~y efttOu~I "'°i oe•d ""'tf'hfli JO
,,,.,, n '~ultt1'1 wO• Of •vbtl<t to,
out f\01 •1,.-i1t4td IO f efl'K a tf't•'"' C~lftoct •' t '°"' of ,,... ..,nff d 11M eM• .r ~t.. •' (olecl•Ot'I
COlh •"'O •"• U e \CW'4t0W If•
beyond Extra 11rg1 4 bdrm. 2 beth hOme A.-, _ INtL 790-3070 or 7CI0-93H "'°'" __ ..,...,Im!'" ... ~" trplc. laundry, patio
decks !Of enlertalnlngl 4 model, lrg lot, quiet lo-".... -eu • CUFF um S15001mo, 144-4993.
BR & private ape ~~1~ ~= ~ ~~ =· WlliiW&lll ftlW 3 cw 4 Bdrme. 5 bathe, lg ACCESS TO PVT BEACH
14'-IOH 1 ~~·~\: R Fam rm, 311' t>oet dock l&ITLlt country kite. tern. room. 3bd, 2ba, dbC ger, f=. •· ,. ; · Priced reduced leo,000, 5Br 58a, 4 frptc:a, !Mld'1 = xttaa. lmmeicul•t• BY OWNER Yllfd. no pet1 I 400. ...-rLll1D .t-_,._, now '517.000 c.lt Hm qrt,., 3 car gar. Walk to Tenna MDOt'-'*· Woodlue Condo. 8.o 78().1830
... , ~-8-46-3798. wt1554-3880 bctt S7211K ()pet! Set 500 ~Ad. '42-9282 o-ted COIM\. a..u1 !eke ......
llWNIT lllllTS MESA VERDE 380, 1~BA 'rri 11-.a 1-5 l Sun 11-3. 31132 YU. CtlcMOl loc. 2BR 29A. Custom bultl, 38R 3\hBA a..utlfUI cultom home Country kltc:Mn lg yd • at . 1_, Hoity Dr. So. LAguna. CUFFHAVEH BY OWNER 111 bltlne +Mg, w/d, orpt, trptc CloM c bctl &
Privet• pool & •P• new paint, new' carpet: BY OWNER! Scon-l.Md Co. 499-1800 Chennlng 4bd, 2ba, utra dr~. bllna.. Hf SC ~. j 20001,,! yrly
Gourmet kitchen 'the mini bllnda, reoently ,. Condo Kf'OM UCI, 2bd, Lllua -Ml~~H large lot, t>Mutlfully lancf.. Ptu. I 120,000. l38-t053 Avt nowt AG' 873-5364
beet of ewrythlng L8'QI mod•l•d. by owner, 2'~ba new p.inc. patio, 1c1ped. 1339 ,000. i..--....---. ....... --""'T-:-..'2C ----------
femlly room wt1h ~ $139 500 751-3724 ale, h'plc. Mow In now! EXEC 831..0133 'ilr,i:'mlmrnltt~;lir";~ OCEAN. CANYON VIEW. piece 4 bdnm, 3 bathe ' ' 1140,000, 8~51 KIT£ HILL ,.. ex-38r 2k 2 c:er gar. OIW,
French doora & lot1 llUI I Mn Ulm 4bd, 3t>e OYll 3200 eq ft lrttr t• ...... ...., clull"9 o-ted community, Cr9dn rating.. Avt now.
morel 4Br 28a fixer High on • Good l<>b•. rellebtellll'Vloea, 1279,900. 643-3318 3BR Moneco --'259,!IOO drt.le by 21 Belmont ¥W S10H/mo. 180-0189
LINDA TAGLIANETTI bluff 143,000 Down Int-ting tl\lnga to buy. (213)898-0IN IOt. 1325.000. 78().1468 SPACIOUS 280• 28A
759 -9100 -. ~--
UllllU nl.lllm
CtaelC Udo hOrT'9 In good
location wt1h tunny IOUth
petlo Slngle 1tory. 3
B•droom1. motivated ....., $34&,000
1'14)673..4400
1135,000 Call btwn 12-1 11'aalltllere...-.rydeyln latab Ouplu, frptc, d/w, ·"""' & M (802)«5-1411 clualfled * LEASE WITH * ,.__. +2u ---------~ -...-·· .,. oer gar. Ml/CtllMI 1717Jaamlne,11200, for -, 9')pt 7~12, avall .. t.
ftU llR -------oo;;n CRY s;c;; GnGiO ,.__..• ... 11 • ...
1375 blll pd ptiO bMlc "99I '" ~ 53Mt1e1 Aat,.. 2 WU cOAbO
---------Nealmo Imel CO¥lf'ed
pool hOme. lt'I Y908nt lalllN ...... 11• patto.c:i-mrtlnQI
-:itha'='0::.1:=-.J. iiiii111t• 2er 1aa. eno oeraee.
'290,000. C.... 7Q.1S01 8metl 28r Yrty-jj75 mo. lndry l'llilup, btend MW 1:v~L.ESau:.7Ki!c. UUT WlllDI Avt &.pt 111 11:t-5I08 ~~ '=·ar':iso-:0
Pool, 1pa, ctubhouN, IUI. m&ft ltJ.Mi pet1 l50-0220, Mt-41111
~Aot~.22-1~°'·1 GW P..Wala IHT •3& 2\tk fmly Condo,
*--111Taa.* dbl get, FR. pool, epa. &ILlfPI• ... , -tenntl 11095 NO peta
Lowfy 38t, fM\ ""· 38a. 28' IBa, 1 C9' QW90I, 722-«>11 Of 722--8 140
End Unit OWC w/'tow -= area. Mutt '"
28' 2Ba. ~· ~ yn S83S AL 38r 28&, 2 cat~=· .. btttnl 1875 0 E AVAILABLE
Tll.llllT IJMlll * lMge 2 Bdrm 1 lath
Ouplu. a..:J:i 211t-C f)tecentla 5/mo. No
pet9 545-7"3
3 Bdrm l Ba. Vwy = .... No peta. Raf'• .
Rear f erd ecce u .
22·1910 ..u, ..
3BR 38A, 2 car gw *850.
Dr1Ye by 2411 1Ntne Ave
Call Steve 8314274
DOUBLE DEALS
Affordeble 2br klda Ole
'575 beak: dlCor ctoee to
~l pn
•NM111* Or~2~5rm 2ba hm 11911 fl kldl l
pet Ole cell 53 191
A;tfee
l!ASTSIDE 2 Bedroom, 1
Batt\ wt1tl I:'~· 1795/mo. 2 lkr
E/ltde 28R 18A, 1:7, .-Id
yWd, -hlcup. 5 Ind 1:1e--· + .. ~· 1 or 175-34S2
E. llOE 280, 18A G~, 'f:.· 215 ~. •limo,~ avdabte NO • '4M71S.
IE'llDEI ~ NN1 lbd,
3'Abe. • tllrlOld rd w/r:'· 2 a. J::: II t 11 mo for rmm-.. Appt '4M>Me
E-16de IM9lf"9 3lw 2be
tncd yd kldl ger ftPO
more ttOO ott11 r1
53M1i1 Agt ...
I~· l . -~. ' : ! .
let U1 ..... Y•
Sell Y ,.; p,.,,,.,1
Cel ClwlfW,
642-5671
for Inform at ion
& surpr isingly
low cost.
down, 10.&%. $245000 NfWPORT HEIGHTS · ,_
f• 0wnr1&11r 144-1fto rwos1ory, 3bd, 2t>a. up-1ILllDT 111-1111 Your ftr9t pet, --~-.,-,--,--· Qradte AEOUCEDI NOW fl fob
lllT
ULllA~
41>d, 3b•. By Owner
1410.000 875-51MI
•
J
BELCOURT MST DOY• l 1H ,!IOO ...... 2408 I~~!.:~~~~ you r ,.., •
28' 2'~8e + den condo, I• . vour flr9t C8f
2300 lq ft OQNn ¥W ~·Udo tale 58r 38a ......... , •
1389.ooo 0wrw 1&M1MO 1375,000 91 • 10 a t 40• 21t 2ea. ""° gar-oe. dtw. your ftr9t home :i~,:-:;~ ~''i'tM. L clu1lhd'• you r ftr9t choice.
J
•
INTO
~. SAVINGS
The Daily Pilat has a new way to
turn you r Hidden Trea sures int o CASH
with a $7.60 Classi f ied A d.
9' 60 or $5.60 'TI e with prepayment
4 Lines-7 Days-$7.60
No changes i n copy or cancellation.
Private parties 0'11y . No Commercial, Real Estate or Employment Ads. There
is no price limit to what you con advertise.
If yo u need to sell your car, boot, couch, high chair or any unused
merchandise call the Daily Pi lot Classified staff or use the coupon below.
642-5678 ... ___________ ,_.._, ______________________ ...... _._, ...
NAME
ADDRE SS
PHONE
CITY STA TE
AD COPY 4 line minimum, opprox1motely 4 words per line
ZIP
AMT ENCLOSED c 1rc1e onf VISA or M C
...
SAVE
up lo $1350*
• .. 12 ........... .
IHt ., tt 1100
...... tltltattl.
· Month 10 month
also available
·f urnished
unfurnished
• Fitness cen1e1~
tennis, sw1mm1no
Modfltl~ opf n 1!111ly '! 6
Sorry 110 pels
Newporl Bf'llC h No
880 lrv•nl' A~fll'luflt
596-Lacy sleeves an<1
yol!e make lh1s KM car
l __ ,..,..,...'9!11.,.lmP' d1Qan SP"C••I Knit lrom
"9Ck down 1n ") ply fin
gtinng y.m1 U1rect1onr.
SIZE!!. 8 14
Send S3.25 plus 75~
pos1ege handling tor
each pattern ...... ~-=-~1 t:t=.:c=....
l111~hl b
145-'104
'"11rn """--. ~ ,_ ... ""'"' .....
Newpo1 1 Bmh So L .... 1••tl BB _N_E_W_F_OA--ON-LY-Sl-
1700 161h SHHI ml&. .. A 'I 96 ~ luN-colQf Cata·
111 Oovtrl "-1tecf ey log of Crefta -panemt
M2·5n3 Cemlle I t Mot1tZ. booM suppl CfrNel ~ & Nal\#'81 "'lncate CfOU 11t1d1 nf\f!d~nl
SAT JULY ti, t-4PM l111cl'I hC>Ok !ll.nlung and
Are you o subscriber to the Doily Pilot? c1rc:1« one NO ~=.': ~7:~~mot --•------A cluatfted ad ta.,. ... ,.., to -
L~~~~~~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~m~ ~~~~~~c ~U WEM 1~m~h~~~~~-~=R~"'=" ~=..,,="=~="'=t11=·~=' ~=' ~1 tM c1eee1n.ci menu11 A A F T s your waU.l, t_oo_. ----------
----------------------------
(
• ..
C9 Orlin,ge Colet DAILY PILOT/ Thur~. July 17. 1918
~ I n1 .. llii•ll !!p MH !!z:Hl;J•!!!. Mii hll I e latll ... '.-----.:":::•= ONYBW..,,ITDMY Nlfllftm!m M'"""'~ ;:o;;&90m:a.... !:-.... ws1'M ........... '411 -"""°"' ........... ,.,..LOOI! ..... oonlrOI °""'" '* df/fl1rl OOf 1t111-= ~;,,_.JU91-. tho• a pet C111•llty " a;;:__ · -bl 29 Ot older ...... PM'l'I,...... ,_.. *"' 00099; ... '"'° •; . MCM. NI JIM:DO • 14'4", ~ oond. 400 '14 WWW NXil
,. ••••..:: .._ ._,, 641 llOO .. tr• """4 ,_.too" ....,._ l*'9 eofallv ..a otio. a5'-7eot ""· VotYO ... 9"0, '-'d. e/o, .. .... ._ .._ '° :::..... A. lllCIP *-" drlvlnt. J•cord, dll whlMe . -.nt = VnMl..-Y Awlieto ~ .. .. et\W, '-*"' lftr, OMIPW & MOVINOI •ooo 090.
........... ~ In I*· IMt\lt9 per90n, -.,, :: Cllwt. t7'M0'21. :""din=-w. ......,.eNp,veL IMO,... J:':.,... ~ 7 t, "'°°""I ~. NJIOC ~'7'• ... t Pf" ~~ __ ~~~· 1 emt••--11«>i>~toonct.c.no. 111700, ~~~~-lhOt8. t2t0 ,....'*:::; :!'811.~· •. r::'· !:fl ___ . ..-.... I W "'--~· j ~,IT~.A""'1 !Mr.971•2* .._.. .. ___,., 411-0131, ..... 1TOIH!ft 133-1ICMO#f7'4MO e-..._..t ...,._, rv"Y """------·----~__;.-t-12. Cctft Mel&htlon-ANT~U• ... ._tno ----!Oedllll,lolW,_,, ..... .._. sue aJYS & GALS .... r?o e. 1N1 et. CM t..:. ~ "°· ~: Lot9 (If ~~. AKc voNoe PUN , ·~.,c:.:, ""' -• .. 1s1i•ii·~"°iiiii•i11r Te6MW'kii\ round t<*ltnQ t*9 l2S ltCft lx1mi9. 50 o-11 mo•. '"'· edoret.i., eidt eond, wl10' ZOdlt a • .W 1172 111
N'T ._. ..... ice= TR•va ....... ..... 142....... • ••ttr hHt•t wood t1ee1i., ... lhy, pfayM, sato. eng, '"·'°°· 640-6071 ...... , .......... ,,., "' lo l..alUM. lltlled 11'1 ft ...... .... doon. --·....,.. ..-9271 Of 7M-INS llPOft bllr ~· ~ & pelntlng lmmed ~llnr for 15 NOW AVAii.AiU! ~UTIFUl SOLID oell AV UN & oddl & -.: '11 ~ 24 w/del, ' nee. Ute~dut-.,_,,ST ge1a to E'*'09tlC ~needed bMroom eutte 111nga 72Mntor544-m? ,:',l!~!.~~!n IPICIAL GAIAOl IAU IATI Vt/No '-ta oo, Mt mn ::..::...~~. c::: :.~ u~lqu:te1:: :.~ ~M= =f,~~ WROUGHT IAOH PATIO ~~not~~ ONLY 60t/llne. CALL Mw.71. ~&e...Ef:e ..... Price~._ -=--~e:':._,w ¥~::fa· ~~n1:::. 'r.: C:O:~~ ~:!':'...:-:J~ ~~·~~1:~·~ _..,_:...._1::: e-ia ..... lllllaL.... 4 ~~~--~ 2S2•Herw Colee.._
pen ... ad\<enced during PtMNnt phone ~ a v.ntty & ohllr ' S4tl i ,C\lefl1~· Exlnt ~tty POODL£8-A..P£0Plf. lib. mlac furnllu,. dinghy w/S ~MWlhe .. m1 MT-GAAPHICS-PHOTO 2 ... !reining petlod. muat. no~,. 833-9097 ......... ,r. wm ... _ & Pood .. pup9, Teecu", llltc:Nn' Olothla. a.tur~ bellY.:.., + tw .......... ---,..----..........
ASStlTAHT. Oood pey, M119tbe180t0Wf,unin-quired. ldetl for home-more. lkletbh~.71f.1t18 Toy, Min. tHO up. ~1-?HOfMtyf)lrdefln::,.. fMt'ibllce,~ C.Uled1time _.Pd lnter•tlnG~ "omptnw cumbered, Mii groomed mekera, high 1chool ELEGANT 7' ~ nciw u 546-2Mf tley 111+ 12 Wte Lane. Hel a 0::: = e1100 Wiit ... o:Y· for 9F'oiiRB~0ill78.,..H .. 5Cl .. T'"Ndl~iiii. "if
• mu1t.. ~• •H• 1 ,,_to ttwt lmmed. F0t Mnlon, ~ 1tudent1 couch, looH Piiiow, ~ llll s~ a ......... ~ UTATI! .... ,,; ' • •1000: 4M-MM ton, tOK fnl on .,.. .,,..
pereone1 tntervtew c-'I & moonllQhtertJ Houra: green. beige,"*• '200. ~ ---Anttquea. Sat M . furn, dotMa, U gin•. I 1taO. Cell
IA.L.80A FUN ZONE Sue Short et ~70 Of Monday-f'rlday 5:30pm entlqued cfw I large & 1nXL!i &;p;; :!,,~~h=l:n..:::. ~·t;:· Untlonecf Ifft hltcih, lkl ecM>, rNeic. BAY IOAT 11' • CIW6c 2 f33..1113 ~ .!'~ ~ 1n per-.on at the to 9'00prn, Saturday ~mirror to~ lmmSOundMovi.c.m.. l200bche31-4441 ~Av.. o.lly. 60I 9082.Adeleeirdt ooclcpft, In bOMI, tMk 'II-&-• worti -'"""' N9wpor1 Sheraton, 4645 9 00.m to 1;00pm St.,., 175 MOh. 845-5582 era. uoo. 7»-1524 Alli Hemllton & ~ dedc & trtm, newty GWr· ••••• , ....
C.. :,:r:s:-°' ~ MecArtllUr Blvd, Hwpt at 14.00/hour plue FRENCH PROVINCIAL for Bttan. laalt ............ MOV1NQ to ~I SAT ONLY iOj ,,._, 12700 ... for l+, 4WO, >Cn -4 CJt.
JlmrN9 It Fun Zone 8cfl from 11AM to SPM, bonuW. Prtvat• dellk I 2 dw"a. mirror Wnp = llll HouWloid It.,. 21812 hluda Cll'de Chuc* 78().211& a&no trw, A.JC, 'MO MMN. ege 21+yn Thun & Fn only. Parente phon•. ce1ual attlr• night atanda rwOn.t,e.' ~ !•I!!! 1.254200. s.t...aun ~2 Hamiton & 8'.llNt(I 111111 WUUI 11' ~ fltel,.,..., door
welcome al Int......_.,... Home wonierw ~ N w HB ~2138 • eti kii IER!"'?lt Ol880N Model'n. 435 o.tlle Detlum6dlfter -.o roea1er MontUt 70HPu--~.,..., ....,, amlfM l9ehevlor thellClllt wented tum trip guwanteed. For Int~ c.il Maty . ' rnoetty btedc 8 ..._ a.ctt1c tao<> ii=: 11~.;: OWi\ lie ~ .. 14Soo 17w1Te• .-.0 CW. Ult wN.
for • Ctw11tllln grOUJ) -·"···-en ... 5:30 Mon -Frf. Of Kng a BR .... oomplMe Old PtewcaiMM244 YAMAHA~l100 -.. --llM plac'e ••t dllhH q. . Uc.13COAOO. hon'9 w/I de\:ltopmer.------• ••• t-3 S.t al 842-s178 w/bdaprd & llnena. trtp6e or 64&-3028 ARIA Cl_... ISO 1 &; Qmr llil:I cook..,. and fn11o. ' a.tic '84 Ctt1 Oran 17' 111,1M
tally d6ltbeed c:hlldfan Help wanted tmmed Own Trainee drw wt mlrrora & 2 MUST SELL. 5'&&-4071 Sun 7 /20 7am-3pml . Sportmen Al IMhogany
Good hrl. 549-471.2 lranapcwtatlon "45-0881 ORANGE COUNTY AREA nghtttndl 1380 548-7108 Oet1ing rr.. kltt9n1, t Pl U.I ~from 80&.IP to TH rrt lhow winner. ~ ••• 11m1 .MllTllW. Ho .. ~ rlMded MATCHING ~ gotd, wM•h.!,~ dart(, .... nwl'8ttPoec Ad. ss:~~tfNt)tOtrllOe :11.000+ ....... SfU..
THEODORE
-PIT ewe 5-10pm NB We'll train you In one Of blactt NII eofa. l<>YeaM1 long • Ult deek t tquee. NMcJ., 10,000 Obo. ln-7°'8
.,.. &40--4' 11. 10-:2pm '"• 1p.c:l1lll•• llll•d chair.' tll xlnt cond. 12so: FREE beautlful black I stEIAwXv '28 t U66Et •man UU• cheet ·~0n t°l ~. 25:Met2 dY9
ROBINS
FORD
~Now Available
Earn extra cul'I for c»-
llllery THE HUNTINGTON
BEACH/ FOUNTAIN
VALLEY INDEPENDENT
~ 1 day a weelc. No
cotlecUng, no 90llcltlng.
Muet have depandabte
car, truck or atatlon
wagon end ln1ur1nee
Cell 842-1444, Uk tof
JoAnne Craney
Mull be US cltli«t. below You'N NrW one 559--0614 wtllt• 3 )'911" Old, colle Gr1nd·RMt04'ed, ebony Ant~ f\I mucti' mote ~ HOBIE POWER SKIFF
•• Tll •• m weekend Mell month In . MOVING Mu9t ... Nowt rnlll, iOYHbl• QOOd flnllh. IPPf'llMd l10t<, Qlauware [: •• boolc•i Goe1. 11311 Galaxy 15'40 HP Yemaha, full
20b0 HARi<•• IL •l•
CO\IAMl \A •.\/ ·C•
1oea1 Army ReMrve unit. Evwy1hlng In Mint. Cond. watchdog. M 1-MI t. an &pm 731·51H Comer of 23rd-& o:=. DriYa. w_.t of ~ cover, ••oeflent conct, YIU
Av&llable tn lrvlne .,.. ="~~'=-=·~ Oak Oay bed S300. O• 1111 Di ibi l,.,U.1 I I Saturdey IAM off Hell. SAT. 7/19, ~-d-e7'3-C)7~, H-42-5216. '78 DOc;; fm ..,, i
$300 lo seoo. No collect-llr•ment plan •P•C• roll top 0.-Oatc Wall Colora Oftnge, callco, tOf· EXERCIHE BlkE = Sf '-'-· • 8EASWIRL 19&4 18' Ton llr new -...
Ing ~ hours a day. avallabtetravel GI 8111f0f unit <3 pc> 1575· lolae-IMll. 852-1003 mt old (loet momen-ANTIOUES&Coltec1ablel, ~ •144 110 Cud~ cabin, 110 In. mak,111n'.ect 1 owrw bOdy
Monday thru Frtq1y after-colleg•. etc .• Avall1bl• ::~~b·~hlt~·~.~~~r:: FREE TO GOOD HOMI! 2 tum) 115. ~Ina plno ,.,.. •tend o.lc Murphy F::nitur1. beby "*"· I exc~ ~:f~'"°° mint, ndi s 18 °1hort
noon Saturday and Sun.-apeolalllee are: gray aofa/lv 1ett Stun-White kltt9na mill & pong table $50. 536-e 1<>4 b41d, comlo8, booQ, tooll much morel F~ I Sat· bloek. SS&O 080. Mw1
day morning Call •OentalAulstant nl br'Mll l ... ··Coftbl female, 1ong 'htlr. Cell II alrcornpteM.,drlMPNU: u"'-YM.464ePMeOO. 8KIPJACK 28' Twtn eng, MllbyFrtday492-o641
&42-4333, Uk lor Kirk. •Vehlcll Mec:ttanlc Mtno$300+ ~n ..t S660+ 722·9038 / ttNe, echtaln ere weld.,, chlldrena Vega. Turtle Rode. m'-'t cond, many xtru, 3 ·n Cuetomtllld GMO~ lfla~t 0.nt •Stoclt/Pal11 Specl&Hst bat atOOI $75 872 230I .... ctothae. LOTS MORE. ax'-trailer Newport lllp dow 'II S'AT pane11na •111.JlWI •Food Slfvtcl Speclltllst 1 . • Fr .. to QOOd home, long 2150 Rural Ln. SAT. Ito 1 -INd llfl *241<, pp,' &73-0385 ~ an. '+banal\' To ..-, In PfDmOtton1 ... PUet Army RelerYe Recruiter· MOVING. Nice furniture hair black mall kitten. 11" Wert4 Pertl•ltt -546-0179 carpet, 4 chain+ • dlrec1 mall, bllllng and r..: ·330 Bay St Co.ta Miia S40-102& tor Nie Din Ml, bdrm, &73--5381 Like new condition. *50--Clinnlng Pot, Ital j()gger, ov1ng Sale Set/Sun. new tlr11, epeotel pelnt,
newing efforts. newa-1 Co111 ~.CA 92626 Dana Point 49s..1801 etc Call after 3 p M $150. c.n 554-5540 crab net, harnmoc:k,ltmp Clawfoot tub, 1ntlq111 SOUTH COAST 24' hltcn, rack. tl7s-M11
eland H IH, & boat PAINTER EXPERIENCED Huntington 8cfl 912-8821 720--8081 1111111 2 Speak E f .... ~· mlac. Sit tum I fremed prtnta, :rileunctl, x" cond, NB b'""9tt lt\owl Maintain con & Needed for local contrec-~ TDfo 788-5251 & WEEKS OLOt Trained TE 320 91 .P.I. Model &, 20 Pr.eldant Pf. ~. Pr'lg, more. Ouelltyt 'IOCated 0. Anz.a lllp M •• 1.!.. -..,
tchedullng of OE. Can-tor Must have referen-Tustin 7314'81 I MW. SALE 5'0-IM7 watta '2oo"To, 20/2~ Drlelera. lhefliw ttbtaa 620 Myattc Wey. PCH to # 91, 3r7 fr98tl wat9red ~MINO ..,."
dldatea ahould have ces 722•1777 Santa Ana 557-8590 All furniture mua1 gol J ... lry/fan/Art ~70/Deya bot hitting t>ectcpack.'c1othae: Par11 to Skyttne lo Myetle ~d, mull 1111, l-~ ... ~ ... ~~-!!!!'!:~Tl~W~~
dlrec1 hand• on mag•-I ARMY RESERVE Call 758-5631 . Qlauware a ml1c: /obo, 84M223. 2 dr Mede ,..tor1no
rJne Clrc ()( dlf9C1 mall PART TIME Nurte1 Aide, 3 BE Al.l YOU CAN BE SLEEPER IOfa, •hrlmp IOZS Trutrrtatt • 0:30am Sat. 481 C&br'llo
0 •a..... lllt .. 7 4 S1S50 175-3179 ::;::::~11z.~o ~r=~~ri~~=yar:= WICKESFurntturetlu lm· ~_,!,1~;~~i:.11~ Dcf!:!!'!:!lfUl3~ Ll'k-.niiiJ 7111 (OfflMn9)631-2305 • j NftNNXiiti20. f21t=.1UMdulJllndf '18 CAOl~LAC Conv.
3-8 Mellnda 646-3914 432-8014 medl•t• opening'°' 000 Only j 1700 BOMBARD lnfiilt& fr DRYER $50/FREEZER Mat1nl T~ '50. multl colored new 1111. need• WO<tt $2000 or
--·-Part llme-Whsman a Stock/Ooc:t. $3Ml2•~ p~XlnSt ~-,; • ~ •• ~ (714) ~ +8 HP mot + • , ISO. TWO e ft. Sofa'a LObllet lrapa SSO/ee, Good oondltton S725 Help me find storage tor
1 Cathy S40-8242 ~ -""""' • eictrut Uk• N':w ~ 150/M , drepea w/rod water licllt Jaclcetl 58e--3048 n 17$-3175 CLERK . 8adl Bay Llquc>f Yertfytq Olerts • L--.1!.. tan gl ... top din. aet w/4 Men"s 18k )'ltlow gold 84 S15. et\andellet 115 dee> 175/0bo, lnduetNI cen-•---------..,,.--..,,----.--~~·
NeAr John Wayne Air-lfC--.&H ctir1 S275, unique ll:V. Audemata Piguet watctl 2-2802 ortter benc:tl $50, dtahee °'** S20, en\/tm e1erm 25' Claaalc Folk boat. Aat" la,.nM iiii
po'1 Wine knowledge NO SELLING! 2 Clerll• !Lti;n Aid 1 plated tamp 1125, an-2 men·a cuatom made Ptwtr INta 7 1 as. at 1801 Mannw Or. 115, tooll to 110, boet ~Yon oek. 10t\c> XCFXROUE8 pref'd &4 2-4774 needed to verity 1-. tlque pltehef & bowl $85 diamond I Seooo call f()( ttmee ~7 gaer to 110, propane Volvo lnbd. extra Mila. phone orders Hourly LAR Antique fancy sharp 25" TV $350, arM obo f04' all '/:: . .g902 18' Edlaon, gtMt ;;c bay ' · atow 125. muet\o mM to full COiier, beautiful COnd THE MILANO IS HERE OlllTll ftl.f Hours 5 30pm-9 OOpm carved couch Totally r• rug1, planl1, colbolt blue boat. good COnd S8000 GARAGE SALE. Bedding, $5-$25, llnc:Mn ut...._ Call for Spec lhfft AT BEACH IMPORTS
For Oty Cteaner1 In CdM Sat 9 OOam-1 OOpm FOf done & beaut Claw Foot· gl... MOVING, CASH OIL PAINTINGS: 7 20x24 obo 148-0588 dye, d,_..,., table&, c:oueh, up to I 10, -.C d/w $50, 17905 912-2801 752~
Now accepting IPPll· I interview cell Irene after rou~d oM ta~/ctlalra ONLY 869-9140 + 3 11x 14 O..lglnat1. 875-5837 eve. bo<*cuea, freezer. 180 emall eppll~. ISO. •77 ISLANDER 3I Loeded ALFA SPIDER 1913, IYory,
cat1on1&75-&114 I 530pm642·5678 1880s & oek lldeboatd WROUGHT RO PTO Bought direct from Gal· 19_5 Beytlner, 110 wltnr. Lexington, C M. No bench .. 120-1 50, Rec lklr-..y hlngmutdll 381< ml, hard top,
-Nice old pine Houallr DIN NG sri N A I lerlel, unfrerned Mull Hllcond Newfullcowr, checica. T1111-ThUf18-6 548-9100 teekllnl ahowar t..ic i, ~1050 StO HS
... eee e e ee ee ee e e • e e eee eee f " ~pbo:d ~~~ glua rect1 table + g~aa cn:i~ s:~ a LanO Nwpt Ounee ~-Bait OFFICE Fum./equtpment Albaeor•YlllOW1all j1g1, holly IOll 818-50o2 P P. lmporta, 752-0aoo e • 1 mp. c w/culhlon1. Excll quality 2ox24·s s1e5 ea~ tank, pump, dlc>th finder, N.-. 35 HP Jonnaon Mtr lurM , flahlng polea S2· '&-4 ISLANDER 31 ,:1 AUDI '63 5000 TURSO
• ( \HU I( op I 't H<I I \. J I \ • Aulium IOll s 195 extra arm cl'lllr & $850 t lx 14.1 S85ea or CB, lei bo•lairlk. porta SaJlboat Cat 18'. Skllt, $12. Wed-Set, 490 Cotta •.<.partnerlhlp E.lllnt cond Wilt wlbrn lthr Int, l<o. • • I Ill APPU&IOll lide lbl avatl 759-1929. all for $180 Call Randy pol~, llp• 2. $&485 obo. anow & water. 54~ M ... St. 548-8832 • IOldedl ~Harbor' lul~ loeded, & garaged, • MANAGER • LES Ill t1•a •11eelluHa1 IS btwn 10.5sm,5a1-1410 ~(•ft(~·,5) Sat,July19th10-1.HMhld Eclectlo YerdSllllMotDf· S3000 obo aoct ...,~ s10.eoo,ce11nt-1110.
• ...1 • • • ~ I · Item•. drMMr, 11ereo. cyete 1 t Edltl With monthly 7&8-2713.
: : REFRtG side x aide $325 ;eX(eoX BAV ctUe; l•t l1ttri1l1 6030 19 5 Ft WELLCRAFT, 110, Toyota Truck Ur•• & er, co1:.Ct1.bi:~· toola: Lido 14• extt oond, quauN =r
\pplt• 11111111• ..,,. no\• 1.,.1111! ,11• Stove-Mlcrocom1>ln1tton ould like to puret\aM • IUlllL Ill UW Daycrul1er/1kl boat morel 351 Monte Vlata Noteoetd )ewefry finding• d ''
: • q1t1·d (,., 111.1t1J1!•'11tt·tt1 I""'''""" : $325 TV colof 19'" $150 membership t~dlYldual $75.00 wllrllter Only 225 hrs SEARS REEL POWER etc. Sat 19 t :em. 2309 ~::~~ t~~ui~~G~'. e e All xlnt cond 968-7507 or bullneu 673 19~ 548-6170 S5.995 87~ 11 MOWER & CATCHER. La Linda Pt NB/CM Call 714-533· 7242 SIMPL y THE BEST
• I u•f t\ 11111.d· 11111 .. 1 I.. ·•·If • 5 ptece double bedroom t• ~l 604 11' SUUY •17 -GOOd condition $50 Moving Sale· HHhld LIDO 14. W/TRAILER Salee · s...vtce · ~
• molt\ 111,-lf ttrf!111111nl. fl, \tlil1· •11111 • IPllllT FIHZll 11ll Ml, antique vmlle/gold IC ••~ S OMC 180tlp martM radio 548-8130 ltema, tide by lide rlfrlg GREAT SHAPE, MUST ~~g~~~~~g.
: ltOAI nmntNI \1•1•ltr 111t• 11111 , 1 '""l'" : llff HM Hl-ff 11 $300si~.Ji~~:wer ~~~;!~~~~ nth & Itel in prime~ Feutai• S200 Pro)lc1or TV, din-SELL, $1050 MAKE NEWPORT BEACH
• -wodun~ "'11h w11tlt-e Faraitan 1014 BANDSAW $300 port •llP Prof melnt Valley 11 .,,. Ing table & mlac ltema OFFER, &42-4412 AdjecenttoFaehlortl-.nd e e ARTWORKS-JP COST 548-8836 $8500 OBO &51·5040 _ -Sat 8·3, 1821 Port LIDO 14 W/TRAILER S850 Open 7 Deya aw ..
• Hrl1.d1l1· '1•lt11 1,. \ ,il1d 111 ,.11,,. • I Ill F111"11E Seucapea, A PENA 24, LJIHll AQUARIUM, rabbit hutet\, Abbey, 8"-428g 15 ROGUE RIVER DORY ~
• u111I tn•Urt111• 1· •• llllhl • LES lll·IUI Lllho w Moore Seti-Wooowonclng Home Shop ..... car atereoa. turn. FP MOVIN(J SALEI 1350 ·-wn n-·· • • graphs J Kalish Olla, 0et11 Industrial TOOis N-COYll', ,,.. paint TOYS, gd lllda ciolhea, a JUL y 18. 18 & 20 -r •~
: ~ .. uffl'r ,.,,, ll•·tit , 1tmp.111, lwtt : 'he~:~oa~:DS~~tr;m~g 786-1446 Misc Incl carv chlM11 873-3934 0-8 & IOU more 9AM . &PM EVLEUSDEMRS2-31~ DELIVERY DEPARTMENT a
• rftt' 111..Juclinl[ 1'11 I ' I I WOOd <1-" S15 & 1100 CARPETl3rottaofneoiwtop Nwpn8ctt 7t4/544-6575 S1Lyman19"8ay L8Yncl'I Magnolla/Helll8u1hard. 315CadarSt ot!Proepect v McLAREN'S BMW 1 ' '1' '1 '"'"' "111 e """ II R all 122 Off 11583 TNk Clrae. Sat !Furn, micro, drawtng tbl. FIG 28 FT, LOA, comp4 r•
: h oltdtl\•. 11wtlu.tl .111d d1·111ul 111 : 733-9207 Iv mag ~:d~~~IQ~~ ilrmPf:. ietFuaitart =•~11 ~~~'!w~~ only8-3 NoMtlyblrda ctothlng.andlollofmlac llOfed NB dock 1vell-M-Ftlff8,8-Stlltl
• 'urttwl'. l.01111• 111 o~r.t111 .... d.1n ,111tl • (µ2..()418 an Bpm col<>< belOI 840-2254 A Etsir•••t 6047 cloee eacrow Beat oner D b I 8 bl•· b• '' o ff er 621S. Eucfkl St
• Oltl1·dl(I' • .tlo"'"'' ,. • 4 Piece ltvtng room Ml. 2 61sPLXY CASES Glau 673-7045 wknd/evH 0 your uying and sellinlT 752•2584l&S0-72e1 I Fullerton, CA • Md h Cual king comforter, dull h 1 "" -714-&808300
I • never u • Mrt tones, ruffler. lh•m•. C:fll"' print lop/front 1-8'. 1-5' lone. 253-4892 Claya at t e c assified market NEWPORT 28' I • \ftp \ 111 111·r.1111 I 11•·· thru • coSI $785 sell $285 ., elec l~hted. stor..,... • Excellent condttlOn well 2 l3-881~701 • l 952~254 Mauve/Ivory Pd $700 -.--~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii • · httr' 2 fl(I t1 Oil 1, 111 : Sac 1250 OBO 720.1704 below 150 ea 531-0533 equtppeo, cieen In & out. e 4 poster queen lize w11er p I •-tt Newport allp, m~I Mii, LARGE SELECTION Of e ORAN&f COAST PUILISHINC CO, : I bed, exit cond $150 obo •P&IUIT If TIE* ttl naiaala .04t 733-t296, eve/wknd• NEW & USED BMW'SI
: C 330 W. Bay St. : I 9~~~;~~r~:~;fo~ *~~·M* IOYll~::J:.uen s:.;;:~ ~~~~ :=; =~ L~u~~
• osta Mesa, CA 92626 • 8"90f1&&'loveaea1 Good H1ve4tlck•t•onAug 20 ComeSeeUsAtTne CMap Call DwlQht dy• SERVICE&LEASING e EOE : I cond Pleld/earthtonea Wiit tr1de for 1ny night Newport Anlmal Shelter 759--0781 , eva 49•-3865 3670 N. Chen)< Aw.
• • S175 both Jenice other than Aug 18 lhru 125 Mesa Dr Coate Mesa S .... /lki INta--LONG BEACH
e • • • e • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • 720-0684 23rd. 548-3036 644·3656 (No Cherry eldt-405)
: : : : : I : ....
;--==;;;;iiii Ctat•t/C.•nttt llltdrical ..... 2 Paiatiai
&iv.ways, palloe, paths, P&lllSI ELECTllC •Block walls brickwork QUALITY PAINTING $2.40 per day
Th•I'• ALL you P•Y lor 3 llnea, 30 d1y minimum
In lhl
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
CALL TODAYll
IUFIR LOIS
Youf
&erv1oe Olfec10<y
Ree>reMntatlve
U2-4121 Ht. IOI
•1c No fob loo small Oualtty w0<k free est concrete Comp patio• Spec tn old l'IOUMI & graf-
AMI Mickey. 536--0553 •425513 988 740 t 15 yrs expet 646-4834 tltll removal. Beat any
IClt1ala1 ltmct --LJO'I ELECTllCIAI BRICKWORK Smell Jobs btd, gu1r woo 675-8088
HOU9eCIMning, carpet• & ,Desires e~tre weekend Newport Coate Mesa. --SEE ME LAST
upholatery. windows. e1c work 545 0350 lrvlM Rel'a ~75-3 175 t wtll beat ANY Bid. Work
Klrb~ Malnt ~ 1-5272 NEW/REPAIR Ouetlty No BCRICK Concrete-Block quar. 722-7537
HouMCleanlng 14 yrs exp 1obs to small reuoneble ustom Work Low coal SOUTH CtTYS PAINTING
retlabte, rNI. lree eel, own Free 891 lie d 63 l 2345 'llc.lbonded Bob 635-4384 ResldH~epalnte Int/Ext
trans Pina 845-9886 Delle R Stucco-Flnllh Ceblnetry Free est. 853-8048
LORl"S CLEANING SERV ... ,... No Job to amaJt Alt lypea Par;ria
Homes-Boate-Offlce a n'NC~OA TES Tree trim 'Free eat Lie 631 -2345 f
Over 10 y11 exp 842-05 19 Dvmp runs C M /N 9 SUPERIOR QUALITY & FA THING INTERIORS
We'll keep you ship shaoet area Jim Why1e 642· 7206 REASONABLE PRICES H~~~l-~/STRIPP~NG
& yrs ex.perlence retleble •GEN HOME REPAIRS 548-1452 tlc•493790 C 173-15 2
own auppllea Free est Patnt Drywlll C1fpentry Plaulq
Jean 646-2342 ett .. etc. Gery 645·5277 PTL i •m•t ·2-4-.-,-D .... ~.,-... -1-... --
--------CHtracttu ••HANDYMANi• *'·1 llYlll* •AHp4umblng&hae~ Larg• or smelt t do It am Aenatlul ...... 9 I WILSON & SONS P11 531 .5579 or Iva m-o CLEAN & EXPERT DRAINS CLEAR From 115
RtetowNoRPX1UTE6 R;.1:e1r~1e R~~~,;~~ a .. u., 8:;.~51~:·x~~ F~~i2~:'·
u:-1~;~~Ext p:~~~5 ,.~O Y'' exp 8'46-1 740 l T HAUUl'JG . MOVING U ABC MOVINGu ---------
·'t -HlflCliH Gareoe & Yard Clnupa Oulcll & Cateful T138041 PMJ 11~ .. & lail•i•t Jon &4~8192 LO RA TES 552-0410 cXLYPSOJ'REE EST
aniino Ar .. ~"' I THE b 1cAXtdSOudLAs HAULING • CLEAN-UPS ITllW. llLUIE Aellat>11 wtciy IYC. l'9Pelrl. ~rtac:l"9 • Aoonng & 7 Days Lowear rat• _ •YIM-. M7-n53, 24-H,. Waterproonng• 631~199 BUILDING CORP Cullom Call Barry 722 9173 ••..u.•• -
__ Remodetlng & Additions Orange Co 0..tolnal ..... U. /WJtM INt ltnic" 543 9387 I #489423) Lt1•Hlfi11 Student Mov.ra Tnaured ~ I U
THE BOATKEEPERS Up •20Yearlln ArM0Uallty 'Ltwacart Lie T124-431 141-8-427 xaa•,,..o:;gn.mr
to 45' Complete Servic. REMODELING & REPAIRS GARDENING NEW Waret!OuM StDfage Top Ouaflty I.ow Prtoa
Oeck ... br' ..... blfo--hull1 All Typea Stor ... Offlc)ea. College atudent, quality -Fr" Mt Lie: 631·~&
Intro. Offer sea 880-4852 H~tc Llc'd/lna'd * wor1I Jett, 848-9401 hn!qs.nic• T"
laal•"' me" I Palombo Con11 968-3~ L1nd.C.p1ng Sprtnkier• ~/lid; for 11!;; YJ
1 Pello decile & COYer• So<I eteen~pe 20 yra 1n In ctt• & Ill• M*PQ lor !.XPERT CERAMIC Tlllng
Suaan • Secn1arlel Serv Q1rage 11Df1Qe bltlne area Tony 1o4g..a124 the eld-'Y (714)833-2000 Otatlnctl\le, Affordable
WOfd PrOOMalng/TYi>tng I By IM hr or by thl job Stll"llorll ',____. H l<ltehenl. bathe. 722-9783 S57·93M 840-1&21/Hm MICl'IMI 472-e148 KC TREE SERVICE ...,._....., Or'l'9 Top Trim Removll Oual Lolllno c:.re I ex" IOOd T ........... __ e!ren!rL GEN CONTRACTOR Serv Uc/ln1 frM Ml Of11199 Rleidlntlal c.r.. ,..,ntMli~ ...... I.! __ _ ~try s;:vic;; I Exp tn Remodel• Rea • 869-8283 Of 531-1811e 874-8315 ()( 538-3131 JXvcEE' TRti' stRVIC@
Repeir·Rernod'l-Addltlon1 Comm Loe ref"I #282137 tSHIKAWA LANDSCAPE Trimming "9moval Ylfd ~c 548-4HO Contect Gery 8-42-2277 Sod Clean upa Melnt Paiatla1 cteenupa, h4Mll 548-0521
0oora-Moldlf'9-Bey 1Aoom Addlllon .. Remodel Sprlnklera ••o 850-4147 FtNE PXfN+INd By Ridl Wld CJ ... & •• Wl~e Pltlol Doort Wlndow1-Patto DUSTY'S L.anOaeapellewn ardSln04' 1&yr9ol~ tw t__.,
Addition• Ou.itty Wonc Cover1 Deck• Frank, Main Serv W\cly/mon1h/ CUllOtMrl Lie 2...... LET THE SUNSHINE IN
u n 44e Paul 541-eeto ee&-1101 uc.uaoe11 1 llme Fr" .. , 2•1-tMO Thtnk-Youl M3-41 ~4 Sunlhtne window cteanlng
Docn-Aec*r·AltetatlOne •SUNRISE CONST * C&B LAWN SERVICE A.A A PAINTING Int/Ext Lid Celt (7141 &48-5980
C.bltWt•Panel·Loc:ka...tc FWnocM!tng I Addhlona MOW• EDGE TWICE MO LOWEST PoNlbte ~ Commerelel/Reetdantlal
35 Y'9 exp wry 1-42-ose7 Bra concret• pe11o• S20·S25 548 sn2 10 Step~ te2~235 1_11...,.. l30 • 2..-t "'° ----~Lie 0!51217 .,.,,, ~, O<y OARAOE door ~i.t. ,11\-.-SHAUB & LAWN CAAE ...., • ERIOA EXPERTS Calli Wln<Soww 914-5124
"--'mt lie tna Hex· -n lendlCeplng, 1>W1 Clnup O.tflcuh repalra A lpeCl.alty
•-"~f 213 • .,.,,_ ...... 1 t P!!rw I Fr=:t ....._ B•lboa/NBlCM US· 1118 lie 121851H 631-9795 ,.,_ ....,..,. ~""' ~ ....,.,., .,...,, ..,....... 1 1'f'1114• II ttl~ 1'1lt11
,,.._ Srntl Remodel end 8y NormM1 The Doorman Tiffi GLASGOW PAINTING ~ .a•t Rl'~ult •rn",. ....._ .....___ o ... a Fir 867 ~ I lnt1E11t 30 Y'"I ••i>er , Addlt .... ,.. w• .,.,..... · To(>C)ed/ramo\lld CMill\-ref'• 642·5214 tfirHtMv ''"''
IU-1171, I 1111, ID lllHtric&J UCI N1W ...,,, 751-3-478 PAINTER NE£0S WORKI
~ wfTRACK RECORD RE.SIO/COMM'L/IND 2& C!Mfl Up1•Tr .. T(lf)plng Int/ht c.etllng1, r•lln cab
Realdenllal Commerc111 yn Do my OWf' #Of1I l IC Shac>ing RMnOvtng ' HMJI 1115) YT1 ••P , wortl guar
Gefw httll«l 142 8537 1:>71Y>41 Al &48-8126 Mii<[. MO·lU.1 011vl• Painting 9&4·3837
""'VWI' I' n11r
'i>f'l"tlllt \'
I tll "41 '.r.71! ''" 12]
J
'
FU
SUCCESSFUL
CITIZEN
How mvch will yovr son or daughter know about busineu when
opplying for their first full-time job? Plenty, if he or she ho' ever
been o newspaper carrier. Through route experience he or she
is already o lop oheod of their classmates. While they all
master tdeos, the boy or oirl with o newspaper rout• i' able to
pv1 them to proct1col use. !kisiness? Corrien learn the baste
leorn the bosic prtnciples from the first day of starting to d.liver
newspapers Th.-y buy at wholesale, sell at retail, make
collections, k"p thetr own books, and deal with people face to
foci Corriers quickly find out that "profrt" and "Ion " ore
more than textbook termi..
The b.nefm af managing o newspaper route ore an equation
for o futvre successful citizen A oreat number of today's
prominent men and women started their public cor .. rs os
newspaper comers. And they all vouch that a newspaper route
gives o boy or girl o head start on the future
Boys ond ~·rls I 0 yAors and older who may be 1nlerested 1n routP.
wor~ should conloct 1he Dooly P1lo1 c1rculot1on deporlment 01
6<12 -4333
Daily !!~!!,ON DEPT.
330 WEST BAY ST P.O . BOX 1S60
COSTA MESA, CALIF 92626 ,-----------------, l Y•s. my son/dovghter would like I
tnformotron on a Doily Pilot rout• I
HIS/HER NAME IS ______ :
I ADDRESS __________ ,
I ________ ZIP __ j
I PHONE·--~~-~-.AGE _I
I ', PARENT'S
I SIGNATURE. I
L----------------~
' )
7011 (7 14)111-lltl
.. s'""Lt•E•k""c .. ttt-n-c·ru!Mf--•.7•1. Trao.-lntl we6come
23 rt daycrulMr 280 Mere OPEN SEVEN DAYS
110 gd cond, never In Ult 1::;~~ii~;;; water $9500 &31-8278
lailMu•• 2 Mls+RXL wlRbSORFtR
Gutra. 5 7 aquer• met•
.. 11 1200/beat otler
~ 720--089~ -
,~ ......... l ~. ttemendOul
I l~n 7911 .-Ctton of NW &
YIGIT 11 lt•I c.r•Nlly P14tf>•r.O
Jec qu.. Cuetodlen preowned 8MW I In
(714)850-5432 .. OC*
U,./Dtcb/ ftrlfl It dc:iM ~ e di• 7122 •.noe "'*'·-,you , _________ ._....-.-.. purctt~.Jrr'BUW.
•SLIPS• -MARCUS CHANNEL ....
18 FT $80 25 FT S150. ~~
150-8145 ~-llllt-I'
Fii 1111 llAllU 30" Slip Avall1bi.. Prefer (71•) 111-1111
.. llboat 175·2258 20t w ttt.; .... Alla
MOORING 30' ott lhor• , (Balboa llland) + 27' SAIL BMW 318-1 84
BOAT bolh IOI' $15,000 Elocelltenl cond, YW'f low 818 914-14&8 ml. 30K ml, Hieing s 12.500, 175-1353
SLIPS AVAILABLE
Sine 25' and 30'
Call 842-4844
8-5'>m. Mon-Fri
•he. TrUJ,..tatln ca.,.,. 1• •14 winn.o.oo m u
air, oer-ator, awning,
413, llpa 8. M\9 • ~
nt1W Mu.I Mii "9&0
Obo 818·287-8734
... ..,.1111
btm IOll
•lllTllW* HONDA '74 CB310T 8K
ml. AH onglnll, Cherry,
run1 Uk• new S&OO 0 80
548-5187 Of 7&0-8585
lllTIWJ '81 HONDA CB400T Hewk
25K ml Oulctclllvar faring,
Dunlop !lltH, 01 .. n
cond 11000 OBO
84t-5e87 Of 7&0-8585
'81 Yemaha S.C. 7&0,
look• Qflet, rune greatl
Low low mll 11100 080
&-41-9788 ... , ..... , ....
5 yr werranty, 3 month new
130H (71,)H0-3081
Aatt Lea.-t010
w.11 I LUSlll
lUllAIU
llHD.I DOMES TIC I ,OAl!IGN
lllllY
UUllLWll
10~2 BEACt1 Bl VD
114/HJ-4100
...... 1111
Blk. aunroof, 5 apd 4,000
ml $17,500, 780-8ee1 -·-·11111 SMlcw.tSlllefa i.t our
computer find the
preowned •uto you're
lootilng 104' 100'1 111t9C1
by anxlow.....,. OA Mii
your• f&11I
8uY9f/Sallef Connecilon
'87-1111
CELICA '79 arn/tm caea.
ale, 5 apd, Llfback
13200 Obo will flnanca
IM0-7180 Danny
DATSUN '7& 280Z
Dec>end•ble running car,
need• woo J2200 Obo
873-9511
r or C1t 1r""t A4
ACTION
CaU
DaHy Pilot
AD-VISOR
642-5678
..
TH I rl()f_HI I
) ROBINS
'' 11,/ [1
......
T HJ r1~1llQI
RO BIN S ' ~ c '1 :;.
I ·-. •
\ V1 ,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Bowd of Olrectora of the MeM
Consolidated Water Olltnct wUI, at tte Regutat MMtlng to be l*d on
August 14, 1988, c:onekSer the edoptlon or NegatlYe Oecieratlon M-4
currently under preparaUon, for the fol\owlng.
PftO.ll(:T: Arlington Dr1Y9 Tran9mfnlon Water Mein
CIP 8e09. MC-804
LOCATION: Anlngton Drive S.tween Fairview Roed
and Junlpero DrMI
P9'0l'ONINT: M ... Coneotldated Watet Ollttk:t
19e5 Plaoentlo AV9nue
Costa M .... CA 92627
Telephone (714) 831-1291
Coples ot the lnltl&I study ere on me and avallable for ln~lon at the
office of the proponent
The August 14, 1988 Regular M .. llng of the Boetd of Oireeton wlU
begin at 7·00 p m In the meelfng room of the MeN CoMolldat9d Wai.
011trlct office located at 19e5 Plaeentla Avenue, C:O.ta M ... C.Ufomta
Ouestlona end/Of commentsahould be dltected to the proponent on or
befOfe August 14 1988
DATED July 1, 1986
Kerl Kemp
Genefal~
MESA CONSOUDAno WATER DtlTNCT
Published Orange Cout Dally Piiot July 17, 24, 1988
,AC-.c ... , I •ALNlll c ...... , ...... ,
~:..u. ... '"' .... M+mlO
"9 ar-. OOMt IWLY pjLOT/ ~ • .-17, 1911
0 NABERS CADILLAC Q --2100 HARIOR ILYD., COSTA IESI
(114) 140-1100 (213) 111-1288
• Best Prices • Convenient Location
• Great Location • Super Service
•Courteous & Knowledgeable Sales People
0 STERLING MOTORS WEST
Chevrolet • Porsche • Audi
_.I E. C11st llwy., 11.,.rt h1oll
173-0100
Highest Quality Sales & Service
EARLE IKE
VOLVO
The Best Car
Buys in Orange
County are at
the dealers listed
on this page
r.
NO'i:VO
f%) v Al\\,1\' .i hu~c..· 111\l rtlon
,,; 1\l\.\.,1'' Ji.,u•unt pnu:'
HIGH VOLUME DISCOUNT DEALER
SALES, LEASING PARTS & SERVICE
28802 Marguerite Parkway • Mission Viejo, CA 92692
(714) 582-2880 (71•) lM-1210
,At ES • ~EFNllf • l E-.Acll'JC', •PARTS • BC10( SHOP
t 9o~' ll.irhM l\hd . l mid ~k'J i 14 td l-XXX0
0 HOUSE OF IMPORTS
• EH• of Ownersnlp terms
• Lease convenlence-12-72 mo
• Select from 100+ new end pre--owned
• Delivery In Europe option
dlal Mercede•
714/213 137 .2333
Senta Ana (5) FrHway -g,
a.ach In Bu911a Park
fD CONNELL CHEVROLET
2121 larMr lltll., Oest1 •na
Over 23 Years Serving Orange County
Sales • Service • Leasing
546-1200
MONDAY-FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
SJIClal Parts Lilt 541-1411
8:30 AM -9:00 PM
8;30 AM -8:00 PM
10:00 AM -5:00 PM
0 THEODORE ROBINS
FORD
O S<)t1tl1(~()llflt)1~MJ-.VER [NJ~. TED JON~ FORD/ISUZU
Your full 1ervire Ford & uuzu deeler
U.S.A. 's # 1 Thunderbird Retail Dealer
Modern Sales. Service. Parts, 8-0<ly. Paint & Tire Oepts
Compettt1ve Rates On Lease & Dally Rentals
VOLKSWAGEN/ISUZU BUICK Laius JAGUAR· ISUZU
2010 llar'" llY4., G11t1 1111
••2-0010" 1•0-1211
o SADDLEBACK
Sales
Leasing & Service
Parts
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
CALIF'S 1 & LARGEST VOLKSWAGEN DEALER
NEED WE SAY MORE?
Parts Open M-Sat 8 S 30 Sat 9 -4 pm
Service m-Frl 7 30 6 p m
11711 BEACH ILVD HUNTIHQTON BEACH
714/ 842-2000
6
flUE NA PAP~ ANAt-if IM
1-800-831-33n 714-380-1200 "fAI 9 Ar A "
fD JIM CLICK AUDI/RENAULT/JEEP ir---
~ ~ ,..
WE'RE OUT TO BE # 1 !
IRVINE AUTO CENTER
41 Auto Center Or . Irvine
714 951 -31 44 • 800 428-7485
SA~ ~~l!~ ~Af.!G $
''Where Professional A ttltude Prevails··
8pec:leU1lng In EuroJ)9en Delivery. Excellent Selection of
New end cerefully prepered UMd BMW'• always In stocl<
835-3171
208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana
Corner of Broadway & let St Now Open Sundays
0 STERLING
SALES -SEIYICE -lllSl•G -,HTS
Overseas Delivery Specialists
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
BMW -ROLLS ROYCE
1540 Jamboree Rd.
Newport Beach 640-8444
G)JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS
1301 Ou•ll St. -New C•r Loc•tlon
1001 Ou•ll St. -R•u,. Div/a/on
0 World 's Largest Selection of 0
Mercedes Benz A
833-9300
Salta . u111t1 . r1rt1 . Stmc• . 1o4y sr.o,
• Great Selection • Low Prices
• Ea•y Fincr:nc:in9 • No Gimmiclca
• c-nv• I • r AC'INf, • PAhT<; • t-oov c;rlQP
4
18
J9
PACIFIC
OCEAN
COflON1'
OE~ MAR
' WE LEASE ALL MAKES & MODELS
CALL US FOR FLEET PRICES
Just o Short Drive Awoy ...
33375 Camino Capistrano 493-3375
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO 831 -1375
o COMMONWEAL TH
VOLKSWAGEN
&):._ 'f' AMIL Y STORE SINCE ·53· ~ Sales · Service -Leuing
SfUS'roL AT !DINO!R· Ml·OllO
J
--------.. ~--------"-':-.:.--..-.=:....:......c...._. ........... _________ _
0
the PROFESSIONAL APPROACH
71 4 -979-2500
2925 Harbor Boule vard
• Costa Mesa. CA •
G UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE
HONDA
2880 Harbor Blvd.
Coat• Meu 540·0713
3 Block• So. of <405 Fwy.
C) 808 LONGPRE
Orange Councy's Otc»st & Large-st PontJa< De•lel"Shlp
ec kKh 9M:l. & !M Gllt*n Grow F~
f714 .. Z ... 11 f714J 616-ZIOO
W• perform •II Ponttac: warranty wortt. ~n:Uess ot
whe,. you Of19ln11lly purctwtM!d 'fOU' c.tr.
OPM WDAY SVDI .... uwn&. .........
• Sales • ervice • Leasing
EASr to FIND .. EA. > tu DEAL WITH
2 b/11 aortb of aata .4aa Freeway oa Beach Blvd.
6211 BEACH BLVD. BUENA PARK
( 714) 521-3110 (213) 921-8681 • a marJlOl1
PONTIAC
• TRANS AM
• flR[BIRO
• sooo srr
• PARtSEIH.
• BOfffVll[
• CRAN> PRIX
• sat8llltl COfMRTIBlC
• T 1000
• CRAHO AM
Wt Stll uctttlltlt
a marJlOl1
PONTIAC
~
2480 Hlrbor llhd.
Costa Mna Newport Beach
714/549-4300
amag01
SUBARU
SLASHES
e PRICES! e
ON ALL
1986
M·ODELS
IJUR 1M'f CIRC\NSTAIUS
W[ Wll
NOT BE UNDERSOLD! ---·---
SUBARU
2UO Harbor llhd.
Costa Mna Newport BtKh
714/549-4300
G ORANGE COAST JEEP/RENAULT
# l ,, ,..., ,,,,, ,,,
'"' JH, SI/ti '" I run OD1n2e. sALEs r Loa~t • SERVICE ,.,. MAA-•••O • LEASING , sQ-• ACCESSORIES DEPT
e (r CAMPBELL
.. NISSAN/~~
• Low Prlc" • No Gimmkkt • Gr•at S.l•ctlon
• Frl•ndty PMpl• • bcell•nt *vie•
l 8835 8eoch ~levord
(714) 142-7711
Huntington leoch
(213) 592°1463
....., Excellence In Sates Service & Leasing
v-orange County'• No. 1 No Hassle Oealertl
WE HAveMAXEY DISCOUNTSlll
(714) 147-8555
18881 Beach Blvd., Huntington Bch.
COMPLETE RACING COVERAGE -
2S~
THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1986
Me$a drivers find ample parking
Unfortunately, it's all on city's streets
as amphitheatre. fair traffic gridlocks
ficials saw ID invitation for trouble
when they learned the Beach Boys
were scheduled at the Pacific
Amphitheater the same ni,abt that Jan
and Dean would play in the fair-
arounds.
"Jt's such a andJock we were
surpnscd there were so few prob-
lems," McBride said ... We had about
a thousand can with no place to IP· ..
By PAULARCBIPLEV
Of .. 0.-, ,... .....
Costa Mesa traffic officials' worst
ni&htmares were realized Wednesday
when 1housands of rock'n'roll fans
and Orange County Fair enthusiasts
converged on the fairgrounds and
adJacent amphtthcatcr al the same
Coast
David Raleigh of Laguna
Beach celebrated his
"third annual 25th birth-
day" with an unusual
party./A3
California
Gov. George Oeukmejlan
urges the University of
Callfornla to divest Itself
of $2.4 bllllon In stocks
and bonds In companies
with commercial ties to
South African./ A4
Nation
City employees are or-
dered back to work In
Philadelphia, white De-
troit tries to end the strike
by Its city workers./ AS
World
The Reagan adminis-
tration rules out ban on
nuclear weapons tests
and Is approaching new
talks with the Soviets./ Al
Sports
With a day off In the Major
Leagues. Little League
takes the llmellght. /81
INDEX
Advice and Games B3
Boating B1
Bulletin Board A3
Business BS-6
Classified C4-7
Comics 84
Death Notices C7
Entertainment B2
Opinion A7
Paparazzi B 1
Police Log A3
Public Notices C7-8
Sports C1-4
Television B2
Weather A2
Patients face
ousting from
nursing home
l luntington facility
decertified: residents
can't use state funds
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .... Delly Pllel .....
T ht· owner of a Huntington Beach
nur~1ng home, cued for "significant"
health care problem~. said Wednes-
da-. he plans to do everyth1ngposs1ble
to avoid the ouster of a~1na and
infirm patients from his facility.
The fate of the oldslers was 8P-
~ parentl:r put in )eopac;dy this week
'-when the Huntington Beach Con-
\alc'iccnt Uosp1Lal was decertified for
alleged unsatt~factory nursina con-
d1t1ons
The decert1ficat1on means 1t was
d1~uahticd from rtee1vina Medi-Cal
and Medicare funds for the 80
patients 1n the -.k1lled-nurs1na beds at
the fac1h1:r between Delaware and
Florida -.treet'i near the Five Points
area.
The l utoff take'! effect Aug. 5.
lca\ln& man) patients' ah1hty to pay
1n JCOJl.'.lrd:r
Jalquchne Linccr d1\tnct adm1n-
1\trator for lu:ens1ng and ccrt1fica11on
for the \late Department of Health
~n ICC\. ~1d 'llate 1Mpcctor\ found
1h:u patient\ "were not dean, were
nnt dry and were not 'cuina the nghl
d1c1 and med1cnt1on.'
>\ tl·nm re\ l\1led the nun11ng home
.tunng thc week of June 30 and found
""gn1ficant nur'ling problem\," 'ihc
~·d lfoht-rt /innarabe. prt''i1dent of
(klma <arc ( entel"'. Inc u1d he''i
rcl l'l\ed ·numerous mquine\" from
(><lrt1c'i rnnrcmina pul'C'ha«" of the
fim h I\
time. "h's been aridlocked for two to
three hours," Costa Mesa police Lt.
Cliff McBride said Wednesday eve-
ning. "That means every single
parkina S?.tCC is taken with hundreds
of cars stJll waitina to &et in."
Traffic and law enforcement of-
Can were backed up for miles on
the SS Freeway, but the California
Highway Patrol reported no major
problems.
LikeWlse, Costa Mesa pohc:e CD·
countered no m..,or accidents,, de-
spite the deluae of visitors.
One 10.year-old boy did IOIC a
couple of teeth when he ran into a
barrier at Merrimac Way and Fair-
view Road before cros ina the street,
McBride said.
Fair spokeswoman Jill Uoyd 111d
lhe fair temporarily shut down its
parkma lot, but was able to reopen
when day visitors bepn leavini.
Carnival of colors in the sky
The aun aeta o•er the Zipper and Sky Diver
rldea at the Oranae County Fair Tueaday.
The acene wun'l u aerene Wed.neaday
ntabt when thouMnd• of fatraoen and
thouaand• of Beach &or• concertcoen
deadlocked on C08ta Mesa • •treeta.
Cycle ends for race workers in HB
ABC Sports was wrapping up
175,000 feet worth of film. crowds
that had greeted the winners in
Atlantic City were gone. and media
across the country turned their atten-
tion to new events.
But the staff al the Huntington
Beach headquarters of the 1986 Race
Across A Merica was still manning the
phone banks Wednesday, tracking
the last of the cross-country cyclists
and fielding d1mm1shing press in-
qumes.
While attentton naturally focused
on the contestants when they wheeled
out of Huntanaton Beach on July 6. a
Puppy love
no accident
for rescuer
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
OfhO.., ........
Jennifer Oalc:.. was thinkm& about
getting another doa thouan she didn't
expect to find one stranded on a
conaested Los Anicles freeway.
But that's exactly how Qale met her
newest pet -a youna female pit bull.
The Newport Beach woman. who
sells vitamins, was dnv1na lo Los
Angeles on bu11ncs last week when
she saw the fn&htened doa pacing
frantically on the center d1V1der of the
San Dicao Freeway near Century
Boulevard
Without hc11t.atina. OaJe pulled her
white Chevrolet Blazer to the middle
of the freeway. parked 1t nd bepn
chasina af\cr 1he doa
national network of vol unteers and
staffers worked behind the scenes
handling the l<>&1st1cal challenge of
tracking the 3.107-mile race.
Unhke a stadium or arena sport'>
event where all of the part1c1pants arc
1n one place, the cross-country
cyclists spread funher apart as each
day passed
When winner Pete Penseyres
crossed lhc Atlantic Cuy. N.J .. finish
hne on Monday. last place nder Dan
Wesolowski was more than 1.000
miles away
To keep tabs on the contestantc;
throughout the race, organizers
placed crews at 73 stations along the
routt·
Anord1ng to Kathleen Burke. who
headed tht' Huntington Beach hcad-
quaner\ operation. time stations
were housed 1n hotels and 1n parking
lot!.. motor homes and tents.
i.\s each racer amved at a station. a
phone call to headquarters provided
1nlormat1on that staffers fed to their
computer The romputer kept track of each
racer''> locauon, his average c;pccd
and other data for the media and
other anquines
..\ wall·S11cd map of the United
"It...., pretty packed from 6:30 to a
p.m .. •• U~111d. "We fill«! our lots, Oranat t Collqc and Costa
Mesa Hiah School.
"It look some people I 'h hours to act into the fa1rgrounds."
Tbe fall'arounds lot, which also
MTVCS the amphitheater, provides
about 6, 100 paid space and another 3.000 dirt spaces, Uoyd said. Another
SOO spaces are 1va1lable at the hi&h
school and betwC'Cn 1,SOO and 2.000
spaces are at the coUeae.
All ot the lpACa were Uled, (ori:i ..
visitors to find~ oo tide ltreltl
and walk.int lo~ dis&uc:a IO ti.
sroul\ds bounded b)' Atlinsioe Dri~e.
Newpon Boulevatd, Fair Drive ud
Fairview. ,
At 6 p.m I the wr bad welcomed
16,701 visiton, Uoyd 11id. Ouri"i
the next three hours another 13,909
passed throuah the turnstiles.
At the same lime, 14,000 were
headina mto the amphithata for a
(Pl_.. ... OIUDLOCK/.&2)
Customs to fight
cocaine in NB
Agents to combat
smuggling of drugs
from Harbor post
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. 0.-, ..... ...,.
The U.S. Customs Service will
form a unit in Newport Harbor this
summer 1n an attempt to crack down
on cocaine smuggling.. a ranking agent
said Wednesday.
A four-memb<!r unu 1s planned to
be m operation by the end of August
to help combat high-seas drug smua-
Jlers, said Alan Walls, a spectal agent
m charge of investigations along the
coastline of Orange and Los Angeles
counties. ·
"It won't be a task force wuh a
fancy name, JUSt a presence." Walls
said. "A little muscle. That's all."
The mvest1gauve unit probably
will be housed al the Oranie County
Shenfrs Harbor Patrol d1v1s1on m
Corona del Mar whe~ the U S. Coast
Guard also mamtams us head-
quaners, he wd.
Walls said th.at cocaine tra.ft'ic in
Oranac County bas ioeftUCd rapidly
m the {>&St two yean. as it bas aJona
the enttre Pacific Coast.
Busthna pleasure boat barbon like
Marina del Rey and Newport Harbor
are l)Opular pteways for drua smua-
glcrs. he said.
The West Coast has become a
favored port of entry to South
Amcncan cocaine deaJers who have
begun 10 shy away from Florida
because of stepped.up enforcement
there. a fcdera.t "drua asent said.
In early April, 1.700 pounds of
cocame worth an atima\ed S.SOO
million was 1elled in adna&ope:ration
in nothcm Oranae County. Two da)'•
later. nearly SI 00 million iq cocaine
was confiscated in El Toro. I
Although enormoul, the drua bulta
were predicted to have little dfect on
cocaine traffic. police said at the time.
Ncwpon Beach police oonfiJCated
nearly S tons of marijuana &om a
sailboat that pulled lDto Newport
Harbor last year to take on fuel The
(Pleue eeie CUSTOMS/ A.2)
Redevelopment
for CM triangle
g11ins backing
By G. JEANETIE A VENT
A S32 m1lhon redevelopment pro-
ject proposed for Costa Mesa's down-
town triangle has cleared another
hurdle
The comb1na11on res1dent1al, com-
mercial and hotel proJeCt offered b:r
the Mola Development Corp. of
Hun11ngton Beach was apprO\cd
Tuesday night 3-2 b) members of the
Cit} Council. who also serve as the
c1ty"s Redevelopment o\gency Mal)'
Hornbuckle and Dave Wheeler op-
posed the plan
PAUL
ARCHIPLEY
PERSPE CTIVE
States showed the route and loca11on
of each 11me station with tin) bulbs
lighting the way
A nearby blackboard was updated
continuously to rtveal at a glance the
status of each contestant
(Pleaae eee CYCLE/ A2)
Under the plan presented by de-
veloper Frank Mola, the 41/J acres
bordered by 19th Street, Newpon
Boulevard and Harbor Bou.Jevard
will house a I SO.room hotel, 58,000
square feet of commercial space and
150 apanmen1 units.
o\ fter reviewing 12 architectural
proposal,, the Costa Mesa Re--
development Agency tclected a
scaled-down version of the Mola
prOJCCt and began e:Jtclusjvc nego-
t1at1ons w11h company officials July
:!. 1985. The project was then ap-
(Pleue eee TRIANGLE/ A2)
Panel urges
off shore oil
drilling
moratorium
By ROBERT HYNDMAN
Ol ltM DellJ ..........
011 e\plorataon and dnlhn& off
( ahfom1a·~ coastline may be banned
tor one· >ear under a plan proposed
Wc;dnesda:r b> a congrcSSJonal sub-
rnmm1ttec
A provision calhng for·a one-year
dnlhng moratonum was added to the
In tenor Department's appropria·
t1 ons bill h> the lntenor Subcommit-
tee of the House Appropnat1ons < omm1ttee
The dnlhng ban would be 10 effect
dunng the fi~al )'car bcg1001n1 Oct.
I
The propo\11 however. CO\lld be
blcxked when the full AppropnatJons
< omm11tce reviews ll July 24, 111d
Wilham 5chre1bcr, aide to -Rep.
l{ohcn Badham. R-Newpon Bcact\.
i.\t least one conarcssman -Rep.
Ralph Rcaula. R-Ohio -plans to
introduct' a -.ubst1tute proposal to the
committee that would delete the
dnlhnaNn
"The messaac here 1s not to be
complacent ·· hrc1bcr said. "Bu\. I\
least al this point, Southern Cab·
fomia ap~ars to be secure for at I
another year or maybe lonscr."
~hrt1bcr ~1d Badbam and otber
locAI leaders will be lobbyina a-
tcM1 vely 1n the comint weell to
l"n~urt that the monitonum is p.
proved by lhC' full Appropnati
Committee
o\ccord1na to hrc1ber, talk or •
pro~'9Cd moratonum came up
ZtnnRrahc 1nd1uted that new own-
( Pl cue ... PATl&MT8/A2)
"I started runnma af\er her but then
he Jumped over the center d1v1der to
the other side of the ft'C'Cway.'' Qale
~1d "Rv this time. everyone was
(PleaM ... DOO/A2)
..., ..................... 1( ......
'Freeway' ahowa her appreciation to new owner Jennifer O,le of Newport Beacb. •
< ahfomia·, co t don
\lrl\ f ru tralCd by the tac.l or propm
1n negnuations with lbc ln
()(panmC'Tlt conccma whac
(Pteue ... OPPlllOa.S/d)
...
..
0Nnge COMl DAILY ptLOTI nu.day, July 17, 1988
upervisors award Parirish
three-week vacation bonus
A mtnlstraUve Officer credited
oroutstandtn obtn tough_year
busineu nu\nina owothJy.
But County Counsel Adrian Kuyper IWlcd the ada
on lcpl around$. Oavana cash bonuses to aovemment
employees as consackred a Jift of pubhc funds, he told the
board la~t week .
., LllA IU.BONEY .............
0... County Administrative Officer Larry Parrish
received a S,, 700 thank you from his bosses, the Board of
S.••rvilon. on Wcdnetday.
Board members directed Kuyper and Personnel
Director Russ Patton to develop a lqal inoentive
pf"OIJ'llm to award other h ah performina employees.
In the meantime, Pauon came up with the idea of
vacation time for Parrish.
C.omioa in lhe form of a thrtt-weck paid vacation.
I.be boGus is int.ended to reward Pamsh for. 1n Supervisor
~ Nnsandc's words. "keeping the county toaether dliiriat a vuy touah year ...
Parrish is aJready entitled to three weeks vacation
this year. lo return for the one-time addition of another
three weeks, he promised to remain with the county for
another year. something he said he intends to do anyway
Pamsh said 1t has been several years since he took a
vacation of any consequence. Panisb. wbo was lured away from a s1m1lar position
la Santa 8aJ1)ara last June, has done an outstanding Job daDi~ bis initial unfamilianty w1th county operations
and the added burden of Jail overcrowding, supervisors
He gave up accrued vacation time 10 Santa Barbara
when he took his present pos1t1on In Oranae County.
Parrish did manage to shp across the border into
Mexico for three to four days this year, but a longer respite
was cut short by the Jail overcrowd1!ll cns1s. ~ Tbcy showed their appreciation last week by upping
bit annual salary from $90.000 to $99.000 making hJm
the county's biahcst paid official.
All but Supervisor Thomas Riley supported the
vacauon bonus.
Nestandc also wanted to give Pamsh a one-umc l5,000 bonus for his efforts to reorganize county
depanmeotS while kecpmg the government's day-to-da)
Riley agreed with fellow board members that Pamsh
has done an excellent Job. but he womed that graoung the
e'\tra vacation lime might set a poor precedent.
DOG SAVED BY NEWPORT WOMAN •••
hoaAl
stoppina on the freeway. chasing after because Ogle wasn't carrymgan y cash
he:r and calling for her to stop.·· or chocks.
Radio traffic reporters hovering Desperate. she drove to see her
above told listencn from their heli-former Vetennanan at the Sherman
copters that freeway dnving con-Oaks Veterinary Clinic. The ;oung
ditions included a dog and a woman dog, believed to be about c1gh1
dodaina cars on the 405. months old. suffered a broken left ~r must have run about half a mile hind leg and pavement bums and
from where I left my car when she ran undcrwenr surgcf} aturda;.
in front of a van and got hit.'' Ogle said. "The driver stopped and I was Two pins had to be placed in thc
just screaming." broken bone and will be taken out in
Other motorists who hadJotned the follow-up surgery in two months.
cbue amved with blankets, ropes Whale Ogle said she intends 10 Lake
and assorted rescue equipment. the dog into her home, she doesn't
Oale took the dog. wh1ch was have enough mone) to pa)' for the
wearing neither tags nor a collar. to a nearly SJ .000 1n vet bills
nearby hospital but was turned away. "I would love to keep her. but l JUSt
They then visited a nearby vetennary don't have the mone) to pa) for the
hospital and were turned away again surgery." Ogle said
Already. some groups and individ-
uals have come to her aid. According
to Diane Gaston. a receptionist at the
veterinary clinic, several pet associa-
tions have called to pledge money
toward the payment of the bill.
"But I think she still need~ more
money It 1s a very expensive vet bill."
Gaston said.
The young pit bull. whose JCt black
coat as accented by white, will stay
With OaJe at her home where she hves
with two other dogs -Bugsy, an 11-
year-old who's half German shepherd
and half wolf. and Lepke, a 3-year-old
who 1s part husky and pan wolf.
"She's the cutest thing_ a_nd I know
they'll get along great, .. Ogle said.
A name already has been selected
for the newest pet -Freeway.
OFFSHORE DRILLING MORATORIUM •..
From Al
tracts should be opened for lease
sales.
This week. tn fact. the lntcnor
Department's chief negotiator. tep-
hen Gnlcs. walked out of meetings
bcc•usc no agreements could be
reached. Schreiber said
The ncgot1at1ons ha"e been under
way for about six month!> but 1hcre
has been little progres!t 1n m.cnt
weeks.
Badham . for one. was nol \Urpn"><.·d
by the lack of agreement Jmong
neaotiators.
"He's pleased to see the vahd11y of
his argument that you don't negotia1e
in good faith with a loaded gun at your
head," Schreiber said. "They (the
California congrt.-ss1onal delegates)
went in without any barga1n1ng
tools ..
At issue 1s how much of the outer
continental shelf should be Opened to
dnlhng. Groups up and down the
coast. including Oran1" Coast com-
mun1t1es. have been acttvely oppos-
ing an} plans that would allow
offshore tracts to Ile leased for 011
dnlhng or e'plora11on
Dnlling mora1onums were put 1n
place for four )ears until Congress
lifted the ban la!>! \Car when Go"
George DeukmeJ1an· cnt1c1lt'd wide-
spread moratonums a~ a solution to
the ofTsliore dnlhng cont rovers}.
.\ccord1ng to the Associated Press,
Interior Secretary Donald Hodel
reponedly wa'i no1 pleased by the
subcomm1tte's action Wednesday
In a prepared statement. Hodel
'iatd "'the political desires ot those
"'ho ~cm not to care about the
na11on "i; energ:. secunt) prevailed
and they torpedoed what could have
been a maJor step toward consensus.
"Franklr. they put crass P9ht1cal
cons1dcrat1ons ahead of the nation's
well-being." Hodel said. I
The moratonum area covers
almost 6.500 separate 9-square-mile
tracts. It stans at the edge of state
waters which extend three miles
from shore and covcrsd most of the
central and northern pans of the state
as well as protecting the few tracts
under cons1derat1on off Southern
Cahforma .
Some oil companies believe that
waters offCalifom1a could con tam as
much as 10 billion barrels of crude.
The collapse of 011 pnces th ts year and
cuts 10 e"plorauon budgets have led
companies to concentrate on the best
prospects. and that has made Cah-
forn1a all the more desirable
TRIANGLE REDEVELOPMENT IN CM ...
From Al
proved by the Cll)''s Planning Com-
missaon. which sttpulated the hotel be
deleted
The commissio ners were con-
cerned about the overall dens1I\ ol
the pro)ect. and the m1,ture of
rcs1dcnt1al . commercial and hotel
space, according to R Michael Rob-
inson. the ctty's senior planner
However, the Cit} Council re-
instated the hotel and approved 1he
project last month, 3-2
The approval carries w11h 11 the
stapulataon that the developer bu) out
ciustin$ propeny owners in the bu'i1-
ness tnangJe. Bu1ld1ng permits can-
not be issued "unul the parcel 1s
assembled under o ne owner," said
< ele~te Brady, attorney lor the re-
development agenc)
Howe\er. several owner' 1ml1lated
the' 11.ould not sell al the pme Mola
Development is offering
··The) 're not going to pa) what the
land 1s wonh.'' Kun Hcrhcns <,a1d .\
property owner 1n the triangle for
more than 20 )Cars. Herbens 'ia1d his
land was not for sale
"You're going to ha...c to condemn
1t." he told agenc) member\ "r he
offer made lo my'lelf and four other~
was not an oiler (Mola) ofkrcd less
than 75 pcrct"nt of tht" profes~onall~
appra1<;ed \ alue ·
Alben ~ulh' an \P<l~C\mJn lur
Wells Fargo Bank al\o a propert'
PATIENTS FACE OUSTING ...
From Al
owner in the triangle. said. "Our
concerns. as the plan 1s presentc·I.
does not provide parking adequate
for our needs We have presented
proposals for remodeling. but ob-
v1ousl) 11 fell on deaf cars and bhnd
e)es Funher our propeny is not for
sale. You'd hJH' 10 do a condemna-
tion prcxceding. ·
.\rgu1ng fur the project. ( oun-
ulman Donn Hall \31d, "Whatever
decision we make. somebody's not
going to l1kt• 11 Some people will think
1t'c, too small or 100 big. Planning 1s a
'>UbJect1 vc proces-.." he said.
Hov.e\ er agcnc) members did
agree 10 authorize another appraisal
of the triangle property
--
Sunny afte;Fneon fo~~cast
U.S. Temps .. " ...... 11 &2 .....
M llO
to 12
.. 11 ... ..
17 1t ., 11
ts 17 1 1 ..
t1 70 .. 71
t2 71 IO II to ..
t7 .. .. 71 t2 7' ... 11
14 87 1«1 II
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"Y ........ -~· "'°"" us 0.00 "' C...-<:•
t5 ..
17 17
... $$
IO 14 t3 n 71 It
92 53
IS IO .. It " .. t7 75 a M
13 72
ti 72
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11 17
t3 11 t3 74
... 17
72 57 " ... 16 75 71 M IO 71
71 55 to ..
77 ~ .. 63 12 ..
• n a M
.. 11
t2 • ... " II U a M t2 71
•1 74
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14 16
r, ~ --~~~~~~~~--
:: ~~ Eztended
.. 75
t2 11 NIOfll -lftOtNno IOw __,. -the 13 74 _....,.._ ... ~Ntne
t2 7' Ille_,,"'°"*" ........ ~'* 11 rs ...,__ Ngr>e II\ 111e ......, 1111 to mid
I 1 S2 70. ~II\ tN "'°'* SO. IO ~ 12 74 ... ....,.. Nglle In IM IOw IOe to IOw to.
.. 75 o-Ngl>t !Owl "' Ille ~ 509 to
.. 74 miCMOe
t2 IO ~ MofllOll
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t1 et Ton-
11 u y--~ N 4f 10I 7t .. u
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11 ..
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75 ...
1 1 u a s1 • IO 12 .,,
Surf report
.. " 104 tO
72 '3
• ea M A 105 ,.
'3 tO ., 67
M M
72 Ill ,. 67
... Ill
f7 " .. 12
Tldea
TOOAT
1'09 .. "' 7\41 I.Ill.
11;44 Liii
t:alplft. P'tmAT
l::02 am.
1.41 I.Ill.
12:90'-"'· 7 21 -.m
M a
IO • . ..
" u a N
.. .. .. -..
0.1 I.I 1 4 .,
-01
II 21 u 16 IO rs ..
.. Ill ,. .. .._, -IMlir a 9-'04 P-"'-Md ,.._ ,_. 6:14 Lift.
12 ..
71 M
.._,.._'OdeJel 4•4 1 pJ'ft. Md-.
·-.. 1:41 Lift. .
CYCLE COMPLETE FOR WORKERS •..
From Al
Whtie some staffers took calls trom
ttme stations, others fielded prcll~
questions and walk-in inquines.
Each day of the race bTou&ht new
mystenes to solve. On Wednesday.
contestant Deb Haas had disap-
peared.
Burke had been on the phone to
Atlantic Cily, to the Haas family, to
vanous time stations. Haas -and
her enurc support team -was
nowhere to be found.
"We haven't heard from her 1n over
30 hours," Burke said. "Her last call
was from L1bcny, Tenn
"The support team is gencrall)'
right behtnd the nder. such as a repair
van and a pace car, so a problem
would have had to affect the whole
team."
Haas eventually reappeared. She
had dropped out of the race an Liberty
and thought the ume stat1on had told
headquarters They thought she had
Another ncar<ns1s averted
Most of the people in headquaners
>Nere cycling enthusiasts themselves.
Since many of them were volunteers.
the)' had to be doing It for l~Evcn
those who were paid woul 't ge1
rich.
Burke. who used to compete
herself. 1s a fnend of John Marino.
who founded the Race Across AMcri-
ca an 1982.
"He helped me get some sponsors, I
dad some press releases, that sort or
thing." she said of their 'past associa-
tion. "This year. he asked me to help,
so here I am.
"Smee I used to compete myself. I
think that's pan or the love of doing
this.'' she said "You want to help
your ·family.'
Now president of Irvine-based
Burke Commun ications, she
promotes road racing events for a
hving.
Shawn Nelson of Buena Park, who
amved daily to the headquartel"$ at
Two Wheel Transit Authority, could
recite the sport's top nders, relate
anecdotes of past races and explain
details about the increasingly sophis.-
t1catcd b1cyclC$ an U$C.
Since he wasn't being paid for his
services. at quickly became obvious
he worked out of love for the sport.
too.
For exam_plc. Penscyrcs· bike cost
' upwards of$ I 0.000. Nelson said. The
state-of-the-art carbon' fiber disc
wh~ls cost another SI 4,000.
Many ofthe racers shave their lep,
so 1 f they fall off and scrape them,
pullinJ the tape off won't take a leaful
of hair with it and the chance of
infection 1s diminished.
Penscyres, however. shaved his
arms, too.
"Shaving your arms is aettina
pretty serious." Nelson said.
Wade Waldron of Westminster,
another volunteer, handJcd walk-ini.
helped on the phone banks and ran
errands "I'm a a<>-fer," he sa.id.
Even Dave Hadder, working in the
nearby niche for ABC Sports, was a
cychna enthusiast.
He also maintained logs to aid the
editing process to come before the
1986 race airs next March.
Working up to 26 hours without a
break. Hadder had a c-0t, sma11
rcfngerator and television to help
pass the hours between calls.
For the crew at the Main Street
headquarters. the story was windana
down. Official finishers had to reach
Atlantic City within 48 hours of the
winners in both the men's and
women's divisions. After that, the
headquaners would close shop.
GRIDLOCK FOR OC COMMUTERS. • • From Al
scheduled 7 30 p m concen by the
Beach Boys.
"Fair Dnve. Fa1rv1ew and New-
port were al a dead <;tand!>llll,"
McBride !.81d.
"'The people who did th as didn't get
togethC'r ..
City officials were out in force
trying to m1nim1ze the traffic Jams.
Rock Miller. traffic engineer for the
c11y ofCosla Mesa. said city workers
met 1n ad,ance with police. C'altrans
and h1ghwa)' patrol officials to work
on preventative planning procedures.
While police were d1rcct1ng traffic
Wedne\day night. cit) traffic engi-
neers chanied signal t1m1ng se-
quence\ to aid the flow. Miller said
(ahrans and h1$hway patrol of-
ficials d1vened visitors to Fairview
Road and Harbor Boulevard from the
405 freeway to remove pressure from
the 55 exit.
When the main lots filled up,
v1s11ors were directed to other park-
ing.
"We--n-1mping people will be
pointed to remote spaces before they
realize how far they are." Miller said
Wednesday afternoon.
"It'll be one of the larger predicted
major traffic Jams we've had." Miller
said.
Officials also blocked off College
Park because of residents' complain\!>
about traffic there dunng pasl events.
Despite the etty's best efforts.
tempers were shon among many
trying to get in.
"A lot of people JUSt give up and go
home or go somewhere else." Lloyd
said.
.. It was quite a zoo." McBnde said
late in the evening. "There were a lot
of unhappy people.
"When you're paying that &ood
moner, for tickets, you want to sec a
5how ·
Those who did see the Beach Boys
conccn said it was "great," McBndc
added.
Correction
The name of Elaine Craft, a
candidate in November's Hunt-
ington Beach Cily Council clect1on,
was misspelled in an article in
Tuesday's editions. The Daily Pilot
rearcts the error. ers may be able to get the fac1hty
recertified and again become e hg1ble
for state and federal funding 10
finance the care of the 80 oldsters
year was cited eight 11me'i for \.101-
ations and tined $26.000
Zinngrabe. who dechned to com-
ment about 'ipcc1fic charge\, claimed
that the" 1olat1on\ ~ere te1. hn1cal and
1nvohed admin1\trall\C prohlem!>
Mark Landry, ]4. who said he was
hired 3\ lhc new administrator on nrr!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ June 10 "10 straighten out problems
Zinngrabe. who's a d1rcc1or with
the Huntington Beach Chamber of
Commerce and who's bttn active for
about 25 years 1n senior heahh care
scrv1ccs. said he doesn't have funds to
~ for the 80 people w11hou1 <;tate
and federal paym,cnts
Without elaborating. he ..atd he\
doma everything he can to avoid
relocation of the oldsters
There arc 37 other residents in lhc
nursing home who are not threatened
by the funding cutoff. sources said
State health department official
Linc.er said state inspectors. who
made thrtt v1s1ts m recent month'> m
Apnl found 16 patient~ with lled
tores, some of whom were allegedly
improperly treated Others were d1ny
or lyina m ~tied hncn, she ..aid
She disclosed that the facility la\1
~~~e Daily Pilat
llAJN OftfltCE
JJO W9'1 &r, St Coela ... ._ CA
.... ~ 9oa ISi() ""911 "'-A n~~6
>\ ne"' management team came on
board in m1d-Junt· and ha\ 1urnt·d 1h1:
ho me into a ''>hm1ng" faultt\ /inn·
grallc \aid
"It'., running \er. n1u·h nnv.
There an· no prohkm\ 'hl· c,a1J
tor Mr ]inngrabe." declared that
patients are no t 1n danger.
'"The\ are well fed and well cared
for .. he-~1d
The decision to decertify the hosp•·
tal wa\ made by federal health
oflic1als upon the recommendation of
the 'itate health depanmem. l.1nccr
'>aid
CUSTOMS IN NEWPORT •..
From Al
hoat allegedh had '>31led from < ol-
omb1a and "-3\ bound for 'ianta < rut
The anu-~muuhng unit would
develop 1nlormat1on on boat\ and
hoat owners Wall!. 'idld
Although Wall., \aid U S. Customs
has been working with the Shcnffs
Depanment on lormal1on or the
10vest1gau ve unit. a Shenff's spokes-
man said the plans are in the
ronnatave stages only.
"Ifs so premature that to even talk
about 11 doesn't make a lot ohensc,"
said Lt Dack Olson.
o:r..~·
I le Quer81ftteed
a..i.dedl M2-M79 ~ & ~"v• ~2 '32• Just call 642-6086 ""°"""' f...,.., " '°" 00 llOI N¥9)'0IM~O,, SJOpm CA o.tot. 7.pm
~' 1Nl 0.•"9' eo..1 P\,bl"""Q Cor-f·•·· 'I•
---..... IOlll '""""' ...... 11 .. ~ _., .......
_,.. ,,......, ""'' be reptOOur.-> ""'""'·' -·· ~ ~ OI ~Y"tCl'tt -
~°"4 C'MIW pc)Slllgle PlllCI II CA otll ~ A '"'"'" (~ ,._. 8001 SvolCf('!""' l>t ca .,, S~ " ""1"'" •
Dy ...... 7 00 "'°"""•
YOL 71, NO. 111
What do you hke about the Daaly Pilot? What
don't you hkc'> C'All the numbcT above and your
messaae wtll be recorded, ttanscnbed and ~
hve~ to the appropriate editor.
The same 24-hour 1n1wcrina ICrvia may be
used to rccord let'ten to the editor on any topic.
Contnbuto" to our Letten column muJt include
their name and ielephone number for venficauon .
Tells us what's on your mind
•
' -7
""" ¥0ll' OQC)y -be -...a
.. 1\Meley -Suttdly "
yQI dO no4 •«-"°"' eopy Dy 1 a m ca• o.lolt
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pirit of Paradise. on dx finest fabrics
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